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;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;P;;omeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

Benefits make UITs popular with.investors
by professional analysts who perform thorough analyses of each security
_UITs (unit investment trusts)
before it makes it into the UITs portfolio.
·
are gamtng m populanty as more and more investors
• Some investors may think that since securities in a urrs portfolio arc
become familiar with the benefits they offer.
fixed, !hey are left to the wills of the markets. Actually, they are actively
First appearing in 1923 as "fixed trusts, • the numsupervised and a se&lt;:urity may be removed for credit reasons so investors are
ber of ~nit investment t.rusls in the market increased
not stuck with a 'time bomb.'
substantially in the 1930s, partly in response to the
• Some investors may view um as not very liquid. The truth is that urn
1929 stock market crash.
have immediate liquidity and proceeds are available e~h and every business
Declining in number over the next two de&lt;:ades,
~y although, as stated above, the value may fluctuate with market condi· .·
they regained popularity in the 1960s as a means for
!tons and may be worth more or less than the original cost.
investors to participate in the tax-exempt municipal .
• Some investors may be skeptical of UITs because they don 't publish ·
bond market. With stock and corporate bond um
their net asset values daily in newspapers like mutual funds. However, urn
conceptualized in the 1970s, this little ·known invest·
must calculate their values daily and provide regular statements to unit-hold ..
ing concept continues to achieve acceptance today.
ers, just like mutual funds. They do not publish their daily net asset values '
, . Unit investment !rusts re~mble. ,mutual fu_nds in several way's. Both are because there ale so many thousands of different series of UITs that active-·
mvestment compames that mvest m portfohos of se&lt;:urilies on behalf of ly trade, no newsp.~per can use up the space to publish these.
·
investors who share a common financial objective and 'both are sold with •
Daily unit values are simply a phone call away. Last, some investors may .
prospe&lt;:lus. om, however, also liave some important differences.
!hink um are ~rely concoctions to make the people who sell them prof-:
. The primary difference is that a urrs portfolio holdings are fixed - ' ·•table. The truth 15, UIT expense ratios for bond portfolios on average are t~ere i~ no shifting around of securities as opposed to a mutual fund portfo. less than one-fifth those of mutual funds- about 0.3 percent of assets annu·
ho, wh1ch can change as the fund manager buys and sells its holdings. That's ally. And, they can be purchased with a low minimum investment, usually
the ~eauty of a UIT. No shifting means fewer management fees which $1,000.
.
.
•mph~ that UITS can be great loc;'ls to diversify a portfolio in a very cost
The fi~ step in purchasing a urr is.to determine your investment objeceffective manner. Of course, as With mutual funds, UriS fluctuate in value tives a~d nsll tole':"nce. Once you and your investment professional have ·
Winners of
cake ba·klng contast held during the Gallla Counmay be worth more"or less.than your original purchase price at maturi- detennmed that un1ts of a UIT fit into your investing picture, he or she can "
.tv Farm Bureau's "Fun Night" held recentrly al Bidwell-Porter Ele- and
ty or sale.
~elp you find the one that's right for you. All investments, um included,
mentary School included, top photo, from left, Fun Night Chair· /
UITs may not be as popular as mutual funds be&lt;:ause investdrs either sim- mvolve some type of risk, some UriS more than others, so he sure to read .
man Pat Parsons; Stephanie Daines, first place winner; Jan 1
ply have misconceptions about them or they do not know they exist:
the urrs prospectus carefully before investing.
.
Burleson, second place winner; Bill Howard, standing In for hla
. • Som~ investors may view portfolios of UITs as securities haphazardly '
wife, Jackie Howard, the tl'!ird place winner; and local Farm Bureau
(K. Ryln Smith Ia an lnvaatmant exacutlva with AdvHt Inc. In ita
l,undled together. In reahty, they are not bundled but rather hand-picked ~lllpqlla otnce.l
'
:
President Vickie Powell, In the bottom photo are winners.of the
event's pie baking contest, from left, Fun Night Chairman Pat Par·.
sons; Jackie Graham, first place winner; Elizabeth Butler, aecond
place winner; Ann Baker, third place winner; and local Farm
&gt;
Bureau .President Vickie Powell. Not pictured was. Farm Bureau
, MARIETTA - The Board of ing commitment to enhancing sharePeoples Bancorp operates 35 Ohio and West Virginia: The First;
Organizational Director Jill Smith. The following businesses and
Dh
1recadotors
oedf
Peop1
es
Bancohrp.
Inc.
holder
vatu~
and
effectively
managfinancial
service locations ·in the National Bank of Southeastern Ohio,:
.
individuals donated door prizea to the Fun Night, Including
1 a reso1u110n aut onzmg •ng o.u~ capuallevels. Under current states Of Ohio, West Virginia, and
ave
P
wiih three Ohio.offices: and Peoples·
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Jim Fratey'a Firm Equipment, Carter
the
repurchase
of
up
to
290,000
conditiOns,
the
purchase
of
our
outKentucky'.
Peoples
Bancorp's
b.
a
nkBank
FSB with four Kentucky;
l:!t:~.t,:'j~;s::h~l n~rn's Tractor Sales, Altizer Farl)'1 Supply, Au.to Zone,
shares,
or
approximately.
5
percent
of
standmg
shares
IS
an
attractive
invest·
ing
subsidiaries
include·
The
Peoples
offi
es.
'
•.
0
I·Bob's .
Pat's Posie Patch, Kroger, Bob Evans Restaurant
the
company's
~utstandmg
common
ment
for
the
company."
.
.
Bankinj_
&amp;
Trust
c
..
with
offices
in
IC
;:
at Rio Grande, Parson&amp; &amp; Parsons Hog and Tobacco Farm, Mil·i
shares, from lime to lime m open
In addition, the company intends · - ·
·
:·
:dred Donahue,.Jackle Graham, VIckie Powell, and Jean Ann Vance/
market
or
privately
negotiated
transto
continue
the
previously
aimounced
:
l ·and Ruth Roes for entertainment.
act10ns.
purchase
of
approximately
15,000
•
The .timing of the purchases an&lt;) treasury shares per quarter for
.Q
the actual number of common shares issuance in connection ')'ith Peoples
~
purchased will depend on market Bancorp 's stock option plans. The
~
- I:
conditions. This stock repurchase continuation of this 15.000 share
program, effective immediately, will . quarterly repurchase program may be
.c::J
ctmtinue through Dec. 31, 1999.
amended or eliminated in the future.
E
:I 0
Robert E. Evans, Peoples Ban- · Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a bank
'0:2
corp's president and chief executive holding company headquartered in
00
officer said that the action is "refle&lt;:· Marietta, with over $870 million in
tive ofPeoples Bancorp's long-stand- assetc.
G~P~US -

the

..

Peoples Bancorp board authorizes stock repurchase

Joint

Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

.

COLUMBUS - Producers Live- marketing agreemcms, packer cons·t?ck Association re&lt;:ently unveiled tr~cts, alliances with providers, marProducers Technologies Inc·., a new keting planning services, crop insur~
service subsidiary, at the coopera- ance and lives10ck mortality insurtive's annual meeting.
ance.
This new ·company will. be a cat•.
alyst for the region to coordinate risk
Financial risk. management ser·
management and production man- · vices such as insurance products and
agement services, said Dennis Boil- financial planning products
also
ing, president and chief executive be offered through Producers Techofficer of PLA.
nologies Inc . Services that are being
One of the subsidiary's primary · considered include life · insurance,
focuses will. be on risk management' property and casualty products, estate
services. These services will include planning, financial and retirement
marketing risk management services, planning, and investmem services.
Another major focus of Producers
insurance services and financial plan- .
ning services. The marketing,services Technologies Inc. will be on producwill include futures and hedging ser- tion management programs.
vices for both li vestock and grain, ·

g:B

.For initial.evaluations or follow-up visits;
we offer monthly office hours.

APRIL 23, 1999

TAWNEY STUDIO .

New PLA-based service
.tackles risk management

5i

Specialized Care for Total Jo~r1/ Replacement

us copy your old family
pho•IOI. Special 2~'1 for
s1&amp;.!1s_ Reg. $19.95. SAVE $$.00.
also do pueport photot,
ldentHicatlon photoe and one day
Hrvlca on photo finishing. Witch
Satterlee while

•

•

. .•
•

,&gt;

_(614).221-6331 for Appointment Times

424 SECOND AVE. , GAWPOUS, OH.

Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute
/

•

------------------------~ :

•

will

a· a~onth for only

Appointments made at 84 Lumber
. GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. L111T)' Lowe has been appointed manager of the 84 Lumber Co. store in
Gallipolis Ferry.

~,~

.

• 1.'

Meigs County's

........
.

By BRIAN J. REED

~nel

,

r..w. Staff

What happened in Littleton, Colo., last week coulll happen just as easily
in Meigs County, according to Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes. .
Speaking to approximllely 125 Democrats at Saturday night's Jeffersofl/JacksonDinner, Lentes said that children everywhere today are troubled,
ahd'th~t parents and the community must gefi nvolved in an attempt to curb
teen VIolence.
·
· "Parents must take responsibility for their children. How does a child build
30 bombs and his parents not know about it," Lentes said, referring to last
~~k's incident in Colorado, where l5 people were killed in a school shoot·
mg.
. "Our first lady is right," Lentes said.
, ~'It takes a community to raise a child."
, Lentes said that he encounters many school-aged children through the.
work of his office who would be capable of committing a similar crime, and
said that while his office has been criticized for being 'involved in non-traditionai areas, such ·as abstinence education programs, all work with school
children is important.
Lentes' remarks were part of an introduction of State Senator Mike Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, the keynote speaker for the evening.
·: Shoe!llaker, himself a former school teacher, said that a "lack of communications" between children and adults, particularly parents, is partly to
blame for the increasing IJIOblems of school violence.

acne

~

.'

"I'

Qinton adminitllratioo iQSist they have no intention of
livlng 1up on the air campaign. At the three-day NATO
il!mmit that ended Su,ilday, the ll!ministra~on's op~­
tiollto committing combat troops remained finn.
· Harry Sum111~rs. a retired Army colonel who writes
about military affairs, said NATO's high-end estimlle of
200,000 troops is lik'ely to become its low-end estimate
once it takes into ac:count .the . threshold for. pain the

"· ··~, "-- ~. ~ .. '

WIRELESS COMMUNIQAT/ONS

·. The way people talle
around here~·
·

'·

10
·· .'guelftMe

St\otl Uni1H Statn CfWII- on tlw Mlftrltt 11 WWW,IIS((,(OIII
I
. GALLIPOLIS - Lois Breech
Ofltr rwqulm 1 nww -WUI' MfYke 'llNimtl'll. _..,lng diiiVft, c.s, tolls lnlil Mlwork lliMIItB
not hv:lucltd. Qhr mtrictlont .,._, tpPI)'. Sit ltln for details. Otltr tJCpllft ~110, 1199.
•
from Gallipolis was among 80 trav- ·.
el professionals from the U.S. and
Plrtl I Ill
Canada who toured Colonial
JIn Touch Celulor
Cioalc PIIZI
Hilltat&gt; Centll
WilliamsbJrg, Va., and surrounding
32 E. Wotor St.
408 E. HUIIIfl
2475 Scioto T01U
sites in March to familiarize them
(7401 779-6919
285-600t
285-5000
with local lodging, restaurants, recre. WMI!Iy
ation and attractions.
Unltod Sllttl Ctlutor
usee Wol-Man )Qolk .
Unltod • , The tour was scheduled to give the
Zone l'loD Shopping Con1or
~ W.t Enmlt A..,ue
8ollDn
Shot&gt;l'
l
ntl
Centll
t 1114 N. Brklgl St.
·
941-4)069
professionals, who represented the
771-4t4t
' :~=t=il24·7771
American and Canadian automobile
associations, information theY. could
SALESMAN OF THE MONTH
a..plle
pass along to their clients who plan · - Rocky "RJ" Hupp of Long
usee we~Men Kiosk
,
to visit the area.
Bottom hal beel'1 nlmed aalea2t45 Eattem Aveooo
AIM,a1 "' ~r11ooltloM: Now aOtion, Jecklon. ·
Tanya Williamson from Hillsboro m1n of. thl month for Mlrcll at 1---..;.~~~~740
~1•;•~•·:t06:6;__ _ _ _.,._ _ _ _~---.;·~F«:,:yo~W:,:c..:m:..=•=ICI~wo:::-:.ovor::!80~11U111orizod==:.=•::,-:locatl;:ona:.·________
and Lois Walls ofChillico'the accom· South1aat Import• Inc. In .
panied Breech on the tour.
Athen1.
·

.I ._

~Comlp

_....., c- .

1111--

J

\

.

ADDRESSES DEMOCRATS - State
maker Wll ' the keynote apeakar . at · Saturday nlght'a
Jatfliraon/Jackaon Dinner. Ha Ia pictured with Proaacutlng Attornay John Lentee, Party Ch1lrman Sue Ml!laon, Sheriff Jam..
Soulaby and Malga County Commlaalonera Janet Howard and
Jeffrey Thornton,
In his remarks, Shoemaker also discussed the selection of a Brown County site last week for a new.veterans home.

Meigs, Gallia, lind several other Southern ~hio counties had bl~ for the
proje&lt;:t, which Shoemaker said was first the vision or former State Rep. Mark
Malone.
·
Shoemaker noted that the S.iected site was close to Cincinnati , the home
of Gov. Bob Taft.
"This was supposed to be a Southeastern Ohio facility," Shoemaker said.
"Our veterans got cheated.
The govemor and the selection committee need to look at the people of
Southeastern Ohio and·explain to us why that home went to Brown County,"
Henry Hunter, vice chairman of the Party's Executive Committee, presen ted information about proposed legislation addressing redistricting of
· House districts and reapportionment of Congressional districts, which takes
place every ten years after a U.S. Census is conducted.
, . According to Hunter, the legislation is designed to avoid "gerrymandering," the division of political districts in a way that would give one political
party an advantage over the other.
The legislation has been proposed by the League of Women Voters, and
Hunter distributed petitions in favor of the legislation, which would abolish
the state apportionment board and allo~ the Secretary of state to redraw districtli~es using a list of strict guidelines.
Meigs County Commissioners Janet Howard and Jeffrey Thornton and
Sheriff James M. Soulsby were also recognized, as were visitors from Athens,
Gallia, Washington, Perry, and Vinton Counties.
Party Chairman Sue Maison served as the emcee foi the evening.

Yugoslavs ·have shown during the air war.. NATO ling peacekeeping ground troops. The official NATO
thought Siobodan Milosevic "would fold at the first position is that it won't do that until Milosevic bows to
NATO's demands, which include pulling oul of Kosovo
push," he said.
James Anderson, a. national security analyst at the and ai'CCpting a NATO-led peace force.
conservative Heritage ·Foundation, says it may take
"As much as I wish he would stop the fighting, the
500,000 NATO ground troops to conquer Kosovo'if the killing, and take all his troops out tomorrow, we don' t
·mission requires seizing Belgrade and fighting through· have any evidence th~t's about to happen," Bacon said.
out the country. To seize Belgrade but not occupy the "Should it happen it would take him '!Orne time to get
entire country would take up to 200,000 troops, he says. the troops out, and I think we would have plenty of time
It would '-'ke many weeks to build up 10 that level. · to mobilize" a peacekeeping force.'
· .
NATO has fewer than 20,000 troops in the region now.
It remains possible, however, that NATO leaders will
Solana also warits a fresh assessment of how many change their minds and decide to launch a ground war or
!t00J1S might be· required if their mission were to keep a use lj'oops to resellle Kosoyar Albanians without a peace
negotiated peace in Kosovo rathe• than to impose a agreement. It is that possibility, remote as it seen\s now,
peace by enaaging in a ground war. The estimate last that motivated Solana to order a reassessment of what it
summer was 25,000 to 30,000 troops for a peacekeeping would take to enter Kosovo, either in peace or in commission. ,
·
.
hat.
As Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon sajd. I@St . Pentagon officials said they were 'not sure whether
wee~!, current conditions are a long way from the "per· Solana also asked for an estimate of NATO casualties.
· mis5il(e envlronment"that NATO wants before commit·
. The new NATO assessment will not he a war plan.

Nor will it commit NATO to using ground troops. The
idea is to review all ground options in light of new cir·
cumstances in Kosovo, ·so that if NATO leaders were to
decide that their strategy of limiting the war to airstrikes
was not enough, they could weigh the alternatives.
Unless' Solana decides otherwise, the new assessment
will not include such details as what propo(lion of any
ground forces would be American or whether they
would enter Serbia from Hungary, Albania or Macedo·
nia.
·
·
Much has changed sinc.e NATO military authorities
made their first assessment of ground options:
- Four weeks of allied bombing has largely isolat~
the Yugoslav army and spe&lt;:ial pb!ice forces in Kosovo
by destioyingammu nition, fuel and other war resources
and knocking out many of the bridges, roads, airfields
and raillin.S needed to resupply the troops inside Koso·
vo. NATO also claims to have hit several dozen Serb
tanks and other armored vehicles and severed many
communication links.
.

~!~~5' 0 stro~~ 0~~ v~!!~d~~! :~ac,~!~~!! .~~~~a~~~

.,,'.

c-.

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel New• Stefl
. Saturday's sunny and warm weather contributed to the success of the
Sixth Annual Flower Festival of the Racine Area Community Organization staged at Star Mill Park.
Several local growers were on hand to display and sell flowers, master
gardeners were .there to distribute materials on growing plants and con·
trolling insects, ~nd crafters' came with assortments including markers
and accessories for enhancing flower gardens.
The ali-day event kicked off at 10 a.m. with a parade through town ,
Prizes went to the Meigs County Democrat Club pulling Antiquity's
"tanker" complete with buckets and step ladders, first, ·for a $50 prize;
Hou;t's Country Kitchen, second, $30; and·AB&amp;T Auto, third, $20, both
floats featuring floral displays.
·
Others participating in the parade were the .Racine and Syracuse emergency squads and fire trucks,. antique tractors, a horse; state legislators
Mike Shoemaker .and John C~rey, and one of lh~ "hot-s~ot". home deliv.
THEME_ Taking aacond pl10eln Jllrade entrlel at
ered meal trucks from th~ Me1p Cou~ty Council on Agmg.
. tha- Racine Flowll' Fntlvll Slturda,y Wll the AB6T Auto ftOit
1'!-e 1998 Flo~~~ Fesuval Que~~ H1lary Turl~y,a~d cll!!did~~ for Ih.'s ...featurfng ti .ftoww·fllled trailer, -~-With .a ' glrtih-planter,
year 1 ~ueen rode 10 open convertibles~ and making 1.ts fi~t appearance '" Allen Moonf Wll the drlvar.
the fesl!val parade wu the Southern H1gh School marchmg band, reorga·
nized this yeou: under the dfrection of Greg Vance.
.
In ceremonies at noon Jody Hupp; daughter of Steven Hupp of Winfield, W. Va, and Laura Hupp, R~ine, was crowned 1999 Flower Festival
Queen. She is a senior at Southem High School.
,
Other candidates were Christa Circle, Janey Hill, Sarah Roels, and
Jenni Howerton.
Entertainment included a performance by the Midnight Cloggers,
Steve and Beverly Pottmeyer of Marietta doing country and gospel music,
the Backporch Swing Band and Mel Hemmelgarn in a comedy routine
· using puppets and balloons.
· . Baseball and other games took place throughout the day, some under .
the direction of the Carmel United Methodist Church.
,
·; There was also a kiddie tractor pull sponsored by. AI Country Crafts
of Syracuse.
·
The winners receiving $7 for first, $5 for second and $3 for third were:
io tile 35 to 55 pound class, Stephanie aark, Racine, first; Bobb.ie RifOe,
FIRST APPEARANCE :- Southarn High School'a marcl!lng
Racine, second; Breanna Manuel, Mason, W. Va., third; and 56 to 75 band waa a naw addition to tha Flower FeaUvll Jllrede. Reorgapounds, Megan Williams, ~ine, first; Brillany Young, Racin.e, second; nized thla ynr under the dlractlon of Grag VanCil, the band doing country and goapel, ware among
and Dustyn Johnson, Portland.
made Ita ftrat 1ppearance In a community avent.
Racine Flower Faltlval. ·

1

Travel professional
takes Virginia tour .

.

ower es va a success

~lana, has asked the military to reassess what it would
~to win al111d war in Kosovo, even as NATO and the

.

-OR.get 300 minutes -a month
· for $32.95 ·a month.

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Democrats hear about ·school v·iolence issue

UNITED STATES

'

announce retir-ement
from Broncos today
..;_page 4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vo lu m e 49, Num be r 248

. : NATO's civilian chief, Secretary-General Javier

Lots Breech

IJ

Tomorrow: Rain
High: eoa; Low: 50s

BY ROBERT BURNS
AP "llltary w.-r
WASHINGTON (AP)- Last summer, when NATO
saw a chance it might send ground troops into Kosovo,
allied mili~ authoritiea estimated it woul.d take up to.
200,000 sold1ers to defeat the Yugoslav army. Now, after
a month of allied· bombing 111d the depopulation of
· =~o, no .. one knows whether that estilll&amp;le is sti II

•

·'

Baby naming causes problems, Page 10
Pet Adoptathon this weekend, Page 10

NATO seeks better estimate of ·ground force needed in Kosovo

S20.95 a month.

The sonof Larry and Ruth Lowe
of West Liberty, Ky., Lowe is a 1983
gradua(~ of Morgan County High
School. He started with the 84 Lumber chain in January 1995 at its Morehead, Ky., store.
He and his children, Macie and
Justin, reside in Gallipolis Ferry.
Additionally, Earl Hall has been ·
· named co-manager of the 84 Lumber
store in Jackson, Ohio.
The Delbarton', W.Va·,, natiYe.' is.
the· so~ of Earl and Brenda· Han of
York, S.C. He is a 19\l() graduate of
Birch High School and served four
years with the U.S. Marine Corps.
He began his career with 84 Lum. ber in March' 1998 at its Millon,
W.Va., store. He is currently residing
in Jackson.

(J Southern splits games, Page 4

Tocley: R81n
High: lOs; Low: 50s

's

180 minutes
'

April 211, 111110

Weather

By K. RYAN SMITH

.

Monday

Sunday, April 25, 1999

•

0-1-9; Dally 4: 9·0-3-8
CII9990Wo \Wioy M&gt;lloloi11Co.

By BARRY SCHWliD
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASlliNGTON (AP) - As NATO celebrat·
ed its 50th birthday and brandished its might
over Yugoslavia, cracks &lt;showed through the
brave front.
In a polyglot alliance that no longer con·
fronts the Soviet bear, unity does n_ol ~me easily.
"This·summit was an impressive demonstra·
lion of unity despite the fact Utat some skeptics
feared it would 1101 he wise td' h.old a summit in
times of \"&amp;r," said German Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder, 'elected 9nly last year and hence new
to the bloc.
But even Schroeder, like French President
and
Belley Wife Clowned Prom J-:= Chirac, who is more vocal in his inde·
Queen and King at Ealtarn High pc
views, did not yield submissively to the ,
School on Saturday night. Slit 11 the nanl-1111\1: leadership of President Ointon and his
daughter of Wlllla •nd .,lana Burk' of
British Prime Mi~isler Thny Blair.
. Tuppers Plalnllo he,lhe aon of Joa and
Mfliitary inlerventions must be legalized by
Kly . Ballay, Ch....r. 1111 thlme for
mandate as a rule," the German leader
the evening wee "Love Between Two
reflecting a widespread view that NATO
Stlra."
- ---1-t...•h the authority to stop merchant vessels car-

peacekeeping troops to Kosovo without at least U.N Security Council for peacekeeping opera·
the.approval of the United Nations.
. lions, Chirac said: "NATO cannot and will not
Where a smaller NATO could close ranks be able to act without the authorization of this
easily to confrontthe Soviet Union, the now 19- international organization."
meml!er alliance, with its door open 1Q even
The United States contends .the authority to
more members, lias to ·struggle to work ldgether intercept oil tankers at soa and to deploy NATO
when the issues nQ longer are black and white. peacekeeping troops in Kosovo is derived from
Even the otherwise airtight bonds between f' U.N. embargo aqd other Security Council resthe United Stales and Britain were loosened ~utions .
·
over the questio~ of whether NATO should send ·
Asked at a news conference whether NATO
combat troops to Yug&lt;&gt;slavia to try to deliver a wo ld need a new resolution to intervene outknockout punch after more than a month of side the territory of its members, NATO SecreNATO bombardment.
tary-General Javier Solana said, " No."
France and Britai" had signaled before the
Basically, the U.S. view on peacekeepers
summit that they favored using grou"d troops in prevailed, but the communiques and other state·
the inconclusive conflict, bot Ointon much ments NATO issued at the summit reflected
prefers depending for now on an air campaign; some of the divergence that marked the private
so the contentious issue was shelved.
deliberations of the leaders.
There was no way, though, to disguise the
Initially, the Ointon administration had in
fissures over the American initiative to mount a mind a NATO force, supplemented by troops
blockade to keep oil shipments from getting to from Russia and sdme other non-members.
Yugoslavia. Stopping neutral vessels normally
This was transformed at the summit .to a
is an act of war, and Chirac registered his reser- statement that " NATO remains ready to form
vations.
the core of an international military force."

�•

.•.

Monday·, Aprll26, 1999

.commentary

Weather

'

The Daily Sentinel Cuomo's HUD badly in need of reform j

By Jack ~n
to an aaency when wealthy special interests man· Buffalo, Chicago and other cities -- the bank fott-:
'Esta6(islid i1J 1-948
and Jan Moller
aaed to attract and· maintain the anention of top closes on the house and collects the balance of the,
It wos far from your typiofficials. Michael Kuzma, a lawyer studying loan from I'HA.
,
cal buttoned-~wn lobbyists'
housing issues for the New York state legislature,
Not surprisingly, mortgage ~kers love the:
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
gathering: Balloons flying,
traces the agency's problems to a 1994 policy lender select policy. Bankel'll and ansurance com;-,
740..1182-2150 • Fax: 082·2157
whistles blowing, bull horns
known as Lender Select.
panics spend more than $170 million a year lob-:
bellowing and · choreaLender Select allows bann originatina Iii bying the federal government, pressurhig officials:
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
graphed dance routines.
FHA-backed loan to Hlect their own appraiser 10 like Cuomo to make their lives easier. It's no·
'
Neckties weren't officially
value the hom'e •• a small but loaded part of the coincidence that the policy was first unveiled at~:
ROBERT L WINGETT
banned, but none could be spotted in a large FHA loan process_ The old policy required HUD meeting with the National Association of Mort-:
Publisher
roomful of activiststo select appraisers on a random, rotating basis, gage Bankers. It got a standing ovation_
National ·People's Action had their annual making it difficult for lenders and appraisers to
Thus it's no wonder that Cuomo didn't want to:
DIAlfE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
meeting in the nation's capital two weekends ago. get in bed together.
hear the other side of the story. It must have been;
Controller
Gener11 M1n1ger
It was a chance for housing activists .and commu·
Kuzma and others who track FHA loans . much nicer playing to adoring crowds in South•
nity groups from around the country to gather in a attribute a skyrocketing. default rates to lender Africa, where he and several top HUD official~ :
single place and press their conecrns to ·Amcrica's selectr which makes it much easier for shady spent three days touring the countryside, laying:
leaders.
·
·
There was just one notable
name missing: Andrew Cuomo,
secretary of the Department of.
Housing and Urban Development.
He had better things to do than tell
these activists how he planned to
fix the government's most badly
broken agency. Cuomo was in
South Africa, advising that country
on how they, too, can be like HUD.
. Maybe it was better that Cuomo
didn 't address the group. Several
The encompassing question is how well American use their stock market of the officials who did show up
largesse, which si nce the early 1980s amounts to a burst of new wealth never got an earful from the activists,
experienced before.
·
.
·
who are continually calling for
Will they .use it well, as in additional productive investments, and in . reform of a department that's ·
securing retirements, paying down debts, financing e&lt;lucation, improving become a mainstay on the governhealth, contributing to charity, aiding the poor, etc.?
ment's list of agencies at "high
Or, as the poet warns, will they lay waste their good fortune by frantic risk" for fraud and abuse.
coming and going, and getting and spen!ling?
Without much currency or clout
In shOrt, will they make the right decisions? Or will they fritter away their .in a city that ,respects both, the
good fortune on trifles rather than on junior's college tuition?
NPA has used another weapon to
The need to answer that question becomes more pressing every day, or at push its point in Washington: Fear.
least on every day the market hits new highs. Take profits now? Or wait for Officials and lawmakers who
still higher returns? .
.
,
ignore the activists do so at the
Any sensible investor must recognize that seeking more might be to make peril of becoming the next target of
less, and in the worst scenario, losing most of the gains amassed in recent their angry demonstrations.
years.
Squishy•palmed bureaucrats visit
Since the early 1980s, the annual rate of return from stocks, measured liy with the NPA because they don't
the Standard &amp;'Poor's 500-stock index, has been more than 18 percent, want pickeiers lined up in their dri·
meaning stocks have been doubling every four years.
veway after a long day's work.
The impact of that is bigger than ft appears. It means that $1,000 invest- Past targets include former Housed in 1982, with dividends reinvested each year, would be worth more than ing Secretary Jack Kemp, Labor
$16,000 now. That's never happened before.
Secretary Alexis Herman, the real.... '
)'ou might think, therefore, that investors· might be happy' to sell and tor's lobby. Most recently, Sen: Phil Gramm, Rlenders to scam the .govcmmei11. FHA-backed wreaths and spe~king· at college campuses. .
,
secure their profits. Ah, but there's the challenge. At the very time appetites Texas, was the villain-du-jour.
The
housing
se~;Tetary even brought some i
lenders
want
homes
appraised
as
high
as
possible,
should have been sated, temptation is growing.
Education Secretary Richard Riley showed up since the government pays the tab if the loan good news: A $75 million grant that will pay for•
Some considerations:
this year, and was greeted with jeers and npise- defaults. That creates a pe~:Verse incentive for home-improvements and mortgage loans for :
--Now, seemingly late in the market's ascension, some stocks have taken makers. Bul the man they really wanted to see
SOuth Africans trying to achieve the dream n{'
to soaring more in a day than old-line stocks &lt;tf yesteryear gained in a year was Cuomo, son of the former New York gover- banks to select appraisers that will rubber-stamp homeownership. While it may have been a nobtc
inl1ated
home
prices.
·
or even a decade.
'
nor and a rising political star in Washington.
The losers are the unwitting homeowners who Besture, it left Kuzma wondering aloud .OOut iht
For example, shares of Qual com Inc. rose more than $54, or nearly 40 per
The activists wanted to know why his depart- just borrowed money for a ho..Se that's worth secretary's ·priorities.
· _.
cent, in one day last week. In after-hours trading last .Wednesday, IBM, a rel- ment has been lax in policing the Federal Housing
"It
is
outrageous
thAI
he
wqu]d:f.\y
off
to
h4;li1
much
less
than
its
assessed
value.
And
if
the
·
ative old-timer, soared 10 percent.
·
.
Administration, an agency established . -to help ajlpraiser should happen to "overlook" serious, the South Africans when ~UD)
is
allowing
·bail
'
.
i
• •
•
For investors· accustomed to smaller gains, the possibilities of taking low-income families become homeowners but
structural
damages,
borrowers
gel
stuck
with
lenders
and
realtors
to
use
FHA
as
a
get-noll~
another fling are enticing. And for those who missed out on earlier gairis, the which has strayed badly from this noble mission
huge, unexpected repair bills. Should an FHA quick scheme all over the 09untry," Kuzma sale!.
lure may be overwhelming. .
.
in iecent years.
--Investors seem to have ·rediscovered the big-cap industrial strength ·. The FHA is a classic example of what happens · homeowner find it difficult to make repairs and "If (Cuomo) wantS to solve problems, we have
"
mortgage payments •• a pervasive' problem in plenty for him right here in Buffalo." '·
stocks, including IBM, Johnson &amp; Johnson and General Electric, Alcoa,
'
. ;,
•
' '.L1
Bethlehem Steel, DuPont and International Paper.
. Such stocks, which used to make up tlie market's base until the Internet
Age made them look like wallflowers, have been re;~Sserting themselves.
Some are up 30 percent so far this year.
so ·help check inflation.
:' ; '
.endured two decades. of deficits, countries.,
_;Strong suggestions are developing that small-capitalization stocks may By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP
BulinAnllyllt
Those
unfortunate
"other"
coon·
To
compete,
u_s.
concerns,
wh~;
topped
by
a
record-high
monthly
fig·
make a move higher_ Overlooked by traders, many of these companies NEW YORK (AP) - Almost ure of $19.'4 billion in February tries, he suggests, might hive trade pay m.uch higher wages, must seek
some are future blue chips- are selling at discounts.
everything
you've
read
about
trade
hardly
point
to
weakness.
_
·
surpluses,
but not a one of them can cost-cutting efficiencies. Many have.
Moreover, the economic condition of the world, which markets.are said
deficits
concerns
!heir
negative
qualmatch
the
tJ.S_
economy in its overall succeeded, although some busi~
"If February's trade numbers
to·reflect, may be improving. There are signs that the worst is probably over
ities.
By
popular
consensus,
they
are
point to anything," he says, "it is the strength. And ' nol!ody can deny he have been forced to go abroad, anll
in Asia. And Europe too might be ready to stir. ·
·
bad,
very
bad.
others to close.
' ,'
profound problems abroad, not at has a point
While this would mean more competition for American gOods, more
Broadly
speaking,
deficits
are
said
At
least
for
now.
In
effect,
the
U.
Thousands
of
workers
in.
the
U.S:
.home."
Deficits
exist,
he
suggests,
importantly, it would mean that foreigners once again would be able to
to indicate an overindulgent populace because America is strong and 9thers S. economy is keeping much o.f the steel indus1ry have been laid off qr
afford American goods. In all, a plus for the U.S. economy.
Third World economies afloat, ·forced to' endure lower wag~·
If you adhere to some old fashioned ideas you might believe none of this that buys more than it produces, run- are weak.
ning
up
debts
that
allow
foreigners
to
absorbing the exports through which because of impori!J from China, Rlis-;
But,
critics
ask,
don't
imports
should be happening. You'd be eKpecting both the economy and the stock
amass
dollars
that
eventually
must
be
compete with and destroy American they seek to recover. Right now, sia, Southeast Asia and other low"market to be getting arthritic about now.
redeemed.
wage areas.
· .. ,
companies and jobs, undermine prof- many are in economic trouble.
Don 't.give up on such notions for a·while yet, because they have a tenThere's,a
lot
more
to
do
with
the
In
fact,
it
can
be
argued
that
it
is
These
lost
jobs
represent
one
of
the:
its
and
wages,
and
hurt
domestic
dency to reassert themselves. Economies don't grol" ,fore~er without rest,
subjec~ mainly economic and gener- growth?
·
the
abi!ity
of
the
United
States
to
major
dangers
associated
with
oontin-and stocks don't ascend in a straight line.
1
"It makes no sense to argue that endure continued deficits that keepo ued trade deficits, and no amount .q{
Right now, some stocks are incredibly overpriced. Their performance, in ally designed to lose your attention,
but
whatever
they
are
you
can
be
sure
rising imports hurt U.S. growth," he economic disaster from lpreading theorizing about the positive asped;i'
fact, tends to hide the fact that most stocks have not been participating at all
they're
,negative.
Few
have
a
good
of deficits can assuage the pain.
says.
Imports raise real wages for throughout much of the world.
in the big gains..
·
word
fot
deficits_
Unable·
to
afford
to
buy
the
goods
American
workers
by
keeping
down
Free-trade · advocates; howe"l'r,
A situation of that sort- lack of breadth, the analysts say-· is viewed
And·
yet,
you
can
find
defenders,
they
produce,
weak
economies
must
.
contend
that steel 's probl~ms are
prices,
he
says.
They
force
U.S.
comas ·prelude to a correction. On the other hand, and there always is one in ecosuch
as
Dan
Griswold,
who
helps
export,
mainly
to
North
America
and
within
the
industry rather than with
panies
to
produce
more
efficiently.
nomics and finance, the economy could re-boom.
·
direct
trade
policy
studies
for
the
to
a
lesser
extent
Europe.
In
this
\vay
the
ll:ade
def.icil
,
And,
therefore,
they
help
us
remain
Nobody can decide but you. It's as if the two hands are clinched, and you
·
Cato
Institute,
a
libertarian
think
In
such
ways
do
supporters
of the
competitive.
•
·
they
.
seek
to
trade
their
way
to
·are asked to decide which one holds the peanut. In this case, however, the
tank.
To
him,
trade
deficits
make
trade
deficit
defend·
it
from
critics.l\s
Americans should be thankful ·strength.
decision involves junior's tuition and maybe your retirement, too.
sense in today's world.
While doing so, they flood their Griswold puts i~ "Would you ratljer ·
they are prospering with a trade
He maintains that these deficits defici~ he says, "rather than suffer- trading partners (the United Slf,tes) have Japan'~ recession and trade surfigures - the United States has ing with·a surplus like 5!1 many other with low-priced goods, and in doing plus, or our prosperity and (jeficit71'
By The Aeaoclllted Prna
Today is Friday, March 26, the 85th day of 1999. There are 280 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 26, 1979, the Camp David·peitce treaty was signed by Israeli By Nit Hentolt
the tradition 8ll)ong Am~rican abolitionists of
al concern about the largePrime Mi~ister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat at the
A black inmate in a Michigan prison, reading scale survival of slavery as
paying cash for freedom. l'or example; "after
White Hotise.
·
.
about the drive by American schoolchildren to we enter the 21st century.
Frederick Douglass escaped, abolitionists·legal!&gt;:
On this date:
purchased. his freedom to shield him from tho
buy back slave~ in Sudan, has sent information
Meanwhile, in a remarkIn 1804,.the Louisiana Purchase was divided into the Territory of Orleans about this liberation movement to some 14,000 ably obtuse reaction to ·thCI!C
Fugitive Slave Act. And the .Catholic Church tiU
and the District of Louisiana.
also bought people out of slavcry.lndeed, Sudlll) ·~
inmates in Michigan prisons through a prisoners attempts to buy the freedom
In 1827, composer Ludwig van ~rganization.
of slaves, the United Nations
only Cathplic saint, Mother Bakhita, was a slave
~
Beethoven died in Vienna.
freed by purcha&amp;c."
·
Among the resulting supporters of action to Children's Fund has declared
In
1875,
poet
Robert
Frost
was
born
thai
"the
purchase
or
a
free
the
slaves
are
inmates
who
belong
to
the
Bu~
Jacobs
emphasizes,
"raising
money
.
~
to
"The man who never in San Francisco.
Nation of Islam -- directly contradicting their human being is absolutely·
free slaves is not the solution. There must bd
teUs an unpakllllble truth In 1892, poet Walt Whitman died in leader,
Louis Farrakhll), who denies the very intolerable." II does not
political aCtion."
· :
'at the wrong tim~' (the Camden, N. J.
eKistence of slavery in Sudan, the government of offer, UNICEI' adds, "a lasting solution" to the . OQnald Payne and Sam Brownbac:k are trying
right time has yet to be In 1911, playwright Tennessee which has . honored Farrakhan as a religious problem and may encourage "additional taking of ld II!Ove Congress to take action. And the ac;hoolc
was born in Columbus, Miss. leader.
slaves."
cbndren's movement --starting wi\h fifth gflllc~ ,
'
discovered) is the nuln Williams
lri 1958, the U.S. Army .launched
Furthermore, UNICEF, in tin unwitting tribute in Barbara Vogel's class at the Highline Commu- .
While Jesse Jackson has yet to mount or assist
whose success in life is America's third successful satellite, in a public campaign against chattel slavery ·tn to George Orwell's "newspeak," charges that this nity School in Aurora, Colo., keeps adding free;
Sudan, Congressman Donald Payne (0-N.J.), a redemption effort implicitly accepts that human dam fighters. More and more studEnts across th&lt;
fairly well assured. ' Explorer Ill.
In 1964, the musical play "Funny former chairman of the Congressional Black Cau- beings may be bought and sold.
country, from elementary schools to law schools;
- Agnn Reppller, ·
To rescue victims is to accept their victimiza- hav~ been rais;ng money'. ·
·::.: :
cus, ~as recently the first. to sign the American
Atnerlc:.n IUiylllt (11a8-11150). Girl" opened on Broadway.
.
'
In 1971, East Pakistan proclaiiJied its Anti-Slavery Group's National Emancipation tion?
The Colorado kids -- who have, raiml o.qu
independence, taking the name Bangladesh.
Since 1995, Christian Solidarity International $50,000 .. would like to com~ to ,Washington .q
Petition -- a document in the spirit and letter of
In 1982, groundbreaking ceremoni~ took place in Washington, ·D.C., for the 19th-century abolitionist movement.
in Zurich has paid for the emancipation of over speak IQ JesSe Jackson if funds can be obtaineq
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
Addressed to the president, th~ secretary of 5,000 women and children througll its Slave for the trip. They have written to the president's
In 1997, the bodies of 39 members of the Heaven's Gate techno-religious state and the head of the United Nations, the peti- Redemption 'Program. CSI's head, John Eibner, spiritu3l adviser to osk him ·to join them, but t~
cult who'd committed suicide were found inside a mansion in Rancho Santa tion demands that the Sudan immediately release responding to UNICEF,,says: ".What would be have yet to receive a response.
_; ;.
Fe, Calif.
103 slaves w)lo are listed with their names and intolerable would be to leave the children in slavDoes he agree with Farrakhan that this is all
Ten years ago: Voters in the Soviet Union filled 1,500 of more than 2,000 ascs, thereby puning a human face on the massive ery. That they should remain where they are beat- anti-Islam propaganda?
:
seats in the new Congress of People's Deputies, beginning embarrassing enslavement of blacks in the south of the country en, raped, mutilated - t~at is intolerable."
- But where also ue the Congrcuional leaderf
The American Anti:Siavcry Group. in of both parties? .Where are thoac rcllf.ousleadet)i
defeats for the Communist Party.
by go.lernment-backed armed militias.
Somerville,
Mass., has been an lmpi&gt;"-nt force in who became situational ethicists With regard "Ill
Payne has also introduced a concurrent resolu·
-Five years ago: U.N. peacekeepers in Bosnia-Herzegovina destroyed a
raising
funds
for Christian Solidarity Internation· the pRsidenl during impeachment? SuRly, slav'
Serb bunker following a seven-hour exchange of fire. The Senate passed tion in the House calling for the release of all the
President Clinton's education reform measure, the "Goals 2000" bill, 63-22. slaves. A companion resolution has been submit· al. Its founder and president, Or. Charles Jacobs • cry should clearly cry out for their attention. And .
·
One year ago: President Clinton stood with President Nelson Mandela in ted by Sen- Sam Brownback (R-Kan.). Payne's • who first began to raise American awareness of his. Between fund·raisen.
N1t Htntoff It 1 lllttonallr renowned 'i ·
a racially integrated South African parliament to salute a country that was. measure is now before the House Committee on these classic crimes against ,humanity-· notes that
International Relations, chaired by Benjamin UNICEF. of all organizations, should be involved IIUtllorlty on till Flm Allllndmant end 1111 ~
"truly free and·democratic at last."
of 1111 Bill of Right•·•· •
Today's Birthdays: Retired 'Army Gen. William C.- Westmoreland is 85. Gilman (R-N.Y.), who is a primary sponsor of in rescuing child slaves.
Copyrlflhltllt
NEWIPAPI!R
ENTERPRISE
A88N
..
In
an
article
in
the
Boston
Globe,
Jacobs
cited
'Payne's attempt to raise national and intemationSinger Rufus Thomas is 82.
·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The wonderful trade deficit?:

Today fn History

Slavery persists; where'.s Jesse Jackson?

Thought for Today:

Notice~

Local briefs:
Man airlifted following accident

Audrey A. Bradbury .

Dhlo weather ·
Tue8diiY, Apr. 27

Audrey A. Bradbury, 86, Kyger, died Saturday, April 24, 1999 in the
Overbrook Center, Middleport.
Born Sept. 30, 1912 in Cheshire Township, daughter of the late Hollis W.
and Ethel M. Thomas Rife, she retired from Gallipolis Developmental Cen·ter.
She was a member of the Gallipolis Chapter of the Order of the Eastern
Star 283, Eno Grange 2080 and the Kyger United Methodist Church.
She~~ afwso preceded in death by her husband, Wendell Bradbury: two
sons, Wllbam D. Thaxton and Larry Thaxton; and a sister, Ada Ward.
S~rviving arc: a son, Richard (Linda) Bradbury of Columbus; two daughters·m-law, Judith Jenson of Lancaster, and Geraldine Thaxton of .Westerville; six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Evelyn Roush of Rockledge, Fla., and Erma! (Grover) Cremeans·of Cheshire.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Weth~rholt. Chapel, GalliP?Iis, with the Rev. Charles Mash officiating_ BurIal will be 10 the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Friends may call at the chapel from
. 4-6 and 7.9 p.m.. today.

" OlD.

o[ Columt&gt;uol#•/1111• [

John Robert Maidens

It's your decision
a very tough one

!

Deatfl

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

ft~
.._ ...

. uds, showers are likely ·
for area through Tuesday
~ Tht Auoclatld

PIUI
; ?hio skies wiii be cloudy tonight but no significant amounts of precip·
1tallon are expected, the National .Weather Service.
·
: On Tuesday, however, storm clouds will push across the slate from
south to north. Showers and lhundestorms are predicted for most sections
of the state.
'
: Lows tonight will be 35-45 and highs on Tuesday in the 50s north·and
60s south.
: The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 89 degrees in 1948 while the record low was 26 i.n 1972. Sunset
\Onight will be at 8:20p.m_ and sunrise Tuesday at 6:37a.m.
· Wulber forecast:
: Tonight. .. Mostly cloudy with a chanCe of showers. Lows 50 to 55. East
wind 5 to I 0 mph. Chan~ of rain SO perceni_ ·
: Tuesday,..Showers likely. Highs in the mid 60s.. Chance of rain 70 percent.
· Tuesday night .. -Showers likely, with a chance of thunderstorms, Lows
SO to 55 .
E:doded forecast:
"
cloudy with a chance of showers. Highs near 70.
"
cloudy. Morning lows near 50.
70 to 75.

•
n
Sentenced
t
0 · l"f
I e In
.
.
·
•
.·
rlson
pastor
1or kllhng
. ,
.

e

Y, JA.MES HANNAH
A..-oclatld Preee WrHer
.,.DAYTON(AP)-Thefamuyof
a pastor· gunned down in his church
lashed out today at the 'min convjeted of the shooting.
"Kenn~th Nance, 59, was sen·.
tented ·today to life in prison for
aggravated murder in the sept. 16
shQOting of the Rev. Andrew
IPfton.
. '"You killed the messenger, but
tho message will go on," Lofton's
d'a ,ught~r. Candace · Henry, told
Nance before sentencing. "The
devil did not win this round."
' Henry said a life sentence for
l'f.ance would bring "a small poriion of solace" to the Lofton family-:
· Asked by J11dge Dennis Langer
oJ Montgomery Co~nty Common
PI~ Court if he had anything to
say before • sentencing, Nance
r~plied, "No sir_"
··
· "What you did, the way you did

11, where you did it was wrong,"
Langer told Nance before imposing
thesentcnce.
.
.
Nance plea~ed gUJit)h,Apnl.l3to
shooting Lofton, 65, at Christ Tempie lqlostolic Faith Church in suburban Trotwood.
As part of a deal with prosecutors, Nance was to receive a manda·
tory life term and be eligible .f0 r
parole after 20 years. Prosecutors
dropped a reference to usoi of a gun,
which would have added at least
. three years.
' Nance, a member of tbe church
choir, had sat quietly during the
Bible class while Lofton explained
the Book of Revelation and urged
his Bible students to prepare themselves for the afterlife. Lofton had
been discussing the "lukewarm"
age, whim ~ople were not vigorously following God's word.
Police said that after the class, as
people were talking to Lofton,
Nance pulled out a .32-caliber
r.'----------=-:_, ·handgun and shot the pastor several
'r.
times. Nance later ~urned himself in
~.
to police, aut.horities said.
• &lt;USP&amp;ltJ.Nt)
The shooting shocked Nance's
• c~. N·~ t ,.. HdWop Ia&lt;neighbors, who described him as a
: l'ublllllcd """~' .a.,_ M""""y .,,....,
kindhearted churchgoer who chauf. ~ri~y. nt Court ,sa., Pomeroy, au.. br""
feured his · elderly friends on
·=~=~~~·~errands. They said Nance loved his
. ·
1110 _ , . . ,_ ..,. ,. Ollio . pastor all,d was deeply religious;
~~;;..":',:,.. _ _ ,.,. often .mcC)Iing wiih friends to .study
• lloily S.otinel, 111 Court §•. ,._roy, 9Jolo
I he Bible_
·
69
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,,,

John Roben "Bob~ Maidens, 86, Mount Vernon, former! y of Racine died
l'riday, April 23, 1999, al Whispering Hills Care Center, Mount Verno~.
H~ ~as born May 11, 1912, iri Morrow County, son of the late Charles
Hamson and Hattie Belle Cox Maidens. He lived in the Mount Vernon area
for 20 years, coming from Racine. He retired in 1977 from Harsco Corp.,
Marion, where he was a welding foreman for five years. He also worked at
Galion lro? .Works and Power Equipment Company of Galion, and CooperBessemer m Mount Vernon. He was a graduate of Iberia High School.
He is survived by his wife, Mildred Louise Rinehart of Racine, to whom
he was married on June 21, 1935; two.sons and daughters:.in-law, Richard E.
and Carole Maidens of Galion, and Dale K. and Roberta Maidens of Syracuse; fou,r grandchildren; ~ix great-grandc~ildren; one brother and sister-inlaw, S. Eugene and·Evelyn Maidens of Rockford, Mich.
He was preceded in death by a son, John Joseph Maidens_
Funeral services l"ill be held Tuesday, 1 p.m. at the Mark A. ScJtneider
Fune':'ll Home in Galion With burial following in Iberia Cemetery, Galion_
Fnends may call tonight, 6-9 at the funeral home.

A Long Bottom man was tmnsported to Grant Medical Center, Columbus, with injuries suffered in a one-car accident Sunday on County Road
28 (Bashan) near Chester, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Higbway
Patrol reported_
·
Gene Fink, 28, 50455 Bigley Ridge R()Bd, was airlifted from the 11cene
of the 1 p.m. accident by MedFiigbt, according to the patrol. Fink is listed in serious condition according to hospital sources.
. Fink ~as a passenger in a car driven by Daniel J. Murphy, 19, 50498
B1gley R1dge Roa~. that was northbound, one-tenth of a mile south of
State Rou~e 248, when the car went off the right side of the roadway,
struck a d1tch and overturned, troopers said.
.
Murphy was also injured, but refused treatment at the scene, according to
the report. The car was severely damaged, and Murphy was cited for fail·
ure to control.
·, ·
The patrol also investigated another injury-related accident on Saturday at Lebanon Township Road 144 (DeWitt's Run).
. ·
Driver John T. White, 17, 44107 Care Road, Coolville, and his passenger;
Benjamin R. Wolfe, 16, 50802 Joppa Road,'Reedsville, were both trans. ported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS following the 8
a.m. accident, troopers said.
· Both were later treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said.
Troopers said .White was eastbound, four-tenths of a mile west of SR 124,
when he lost control of the pickup truck he drove, went off the right side
of the road and .struck an embankment. The vehicle then overturned
according to the report.
•
'
The pickup was severely damaged, and White was cited for failure to
control.

Man cited in accident
A 21-year-old Pomeroy man was cited on charges of failure to control
and passing on a double yellow line following a ,one-car accident Sunday
evening on Pine Grove Road near Racine.
Shaun M. Seth was southbound when he passed another car, crossing
a double yellow line, and lost control of his 1999 Pontiac Grand Am
which ran intQ a ditch, sustaining heavy damage, according to a Meigs
Co~nty Sheriffs Office report. There was no C!Jntact with the second
veh1cle, according to the repor~t
. Seth refused treatment at the scene by the Syracuse squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servij:e.
'

Criminal damaging reported
··~by-"""""'

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Harley E. McDonald Jr., Middleport, reported the windshield on his
father's 1988 Ford Festiva was busted while parked at Harrisonville Elementary School Sunday afternoon.

·

Audrey A. Bradbury

,_ :_ Announcements:

I-

Book sale pfanned
Audrey A. Bradbury, 86, Kyger, died Saturday, April 24, 1999. in the
Overbrook 'Center, Middleport.
.
Friends of the Library spring hook sale will be held Thursday, May 6,
. Born Sept. 30, 1912 in Cbeshire Township, daughter of the late Hollis W_ 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday, May 7, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
and Ethel M. Thomas Rife, she retired .from Gallipolis Developmental Center.
·She was a member of the Gallipolis Chapter of the Order of the Eastern
Star 283, Eno Grange 2080 and the Kyger United Methodist Church.
Units of the Meigs County
She ~as alwso preceded in death by her husband, Wendell Bradbury; two Emergency Medical Service recQrd- Murphy, treated at the scene,' Tuppers Plains VFD and squad assisted;
sons, Wilham D. Thaxton and Larry Thaxton; and a sister, Ada Ward. .
ed
15
calls
for
assistance
Saturday
·2:44 p.m. Sunday, Vance Road,
Surviving are a son, Richard (Linda) Bradbury of Columbus; two daughand Sunday_ Units responding Harrisonville, Judy Freeman, HMC,
ters-in-law, Judith Jenson of Lancaster, and Geraldine Thaxton of Wester- included:
Rutland squad assisted.
ville; six grandchildren and two·great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Eve. CENTRAL DISPATCH
MIDDLEPORT
lyn Roush of Rockledge, Fla., and Erma! (Grover) Cremeans of Cheshire.
8:17a.m. Saturday, Dewitts Run
6:53
p.m.,
General Hartinger
Services will be 1 P-m. Tuesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral' Home Road, Portland, motor-vehicle acci- Parkway, Tela Meloy.
HMC, CenWeth~rholt. Chapel, GalliP?Iis, with the Re.v. Charles M¥h officiating. Burdent,
Ben
Wolfe,
J.T.
White,
Vetertral Dispatch squad assisted.
1al w1)l be 10 the Gravel H1ll Cemetery. l'nends may call at the chapel from
ans
Memorial
Hospital.
Racine
VolRACINE
4-6 and 7-9 p.m. today. ·
unteer Fire Depanment ani! squad
11:24 p.m. Saturday, Hill Road,
assisted;
four-wheeler accident, Gary ·Roush.
.
.
,.
,
10:58 a.~- ' SaturOay, Bucktown St. Mary's Hospital · via helicopter
John Robert "Bob" Maidens, 86, Mount Vernon, formerly of Racine, died Road, Letart Falls, Denzel Boggess, ambulance, Racine VFD assisled;
Friday, April 23, 1999, at .Whispering Hills Care Center, Mount Vernon.
Holzer Medical .Center;
·
12:22 a.m. Sunday, state Route
He was born May 11, 1912, in Morrow County, son of the late C!Jarles
7:57 p.m. Saturday, Maples 338, Larry Powell, VMH:
Hamson and Hattie Belle Cox Maidens. He lived in the Mount Vernon area Apartments, Pomeroy, Gladys
1:49 a.m., Sunday, Bald Knobsfor 20 years, coming from Racine_ He retired in 1977 from Harsco Corp., Blessing, VMH:
Stiversville Road, Zana Mid·Marion, where he was a welding foreman for five years. He also worked at
12:44 p.m_Sunday, Jones Road, dleswart, !reate~ at the scene.
Galion Iron Works and Power Equipment Company of Galion, and Cooper- Pomeroy, Juli McDaniel, VMH,
. REEDSVILLE ·
·
Bessemer in Mount Vernon. He was a graduate, Iberia High School and a Pomeroy squad assisted;
3:31 a.m. Sunday, state Route
member o( the 1930 state runner-up baseball team_He was an avid sports·
4:01 a,m. Sunday, Short Fourth 681, Louise Posie, St. Joseph's Hosman and trained and showed 5 gaited and fine hatness English horses.
Avenue, Middleport, Eula Jeffers, pital;
· He is survived by his wife, Mildr~d Louise Rinehart of Racine, to whom HMC;
4:16· p.m. Sunday, state Route
he was married on June 21, 1935: two sons and daughters-in-law, Richard E.
6:08 a.m. Sunday, Pine Grove 681, Melissa and Sara Barringer,
and Carole Maidens of Galion, and Dale K. and Roberta Maidens of Syra- Road, Racine, Timothy Dillon, St. Camden-Clark Memorial HospitaL
cuse; four grandchildren, Colin Raben Maidens of Lebanon, Va., Christi Joseph's Hospital;
.
SYRACUSE
Dayle and Petie Hendrix of Syracuse, LOri Lynn and Eric Case of Toronto,
1:03 p.m. Sunday, Bashan Road,
8:28 p.m. Sunday, VFD and
·Staff Sgt. Mark Anthony and Kathy Maidens of l't. Lewis, .Wash.; six gresl- motor-vehicle accident, Gene Fink squad to Pine Grove Road, motorgrandchildten, Brandon Robert Maidens, Celestia Dayle Hendrix, Jennifer transported to Grant Medical Center vehicle. accident, Shane Seth,
LeeAnn and Rachel Marie Veil, Megan Hay leigh and Mark A. .Maidens Jr.; via helicopter ambulance, Daniel J. 'refused treatment.
'
'
one brother and sister-in-law, S. Eugene and Evelyn Maidens of Rockford,
Mich.
NRA, administration agree on keeping
He was preceded in death by a son,.John Joseph Maidens. . ·
· Funeral services will be held all p.m. on Tuesday at the Mark A,. Schnei- firearms from juvenile offenders ·
der l'uneral Home in· Galion with burial following in Iberia Cemetery, By JIM ABRAMS
the possession of guns," said Deputy
Aaeoclltld Press Wrltar
Galion.
·
Attorney General Eric Holder, JusWASHINGTON (AP) - Finding tice's No. 2 official.
Friends may call tonight, 6-9 at the funeral home:
a rare point of agreement, the Clinton administration and the National
Among those initiatives, he said,
Rifle ASsociation both would prohib- are extending the Brady law, which
it )uveniles who co.mmit vi'olent requires background checks for~gun
cnmes froJ_D ever ownang a g~n. . buyers, to bar juveniles who have
SI'ORM LAKE, Iowa (AP) Dispatch during a campaign appear·
Otherw1se, they have maJor d1f- . committed violent crimes from ownU.S. Rep. John Kasich needs sup- ance in Iowa on Saturday. "Funda· ferences on how to prevent a recur- ing a gun.
pon from lqwa voters as he lays the mentally, these issues .have to be renee of last week's school shootings
groundwork for a presidential bid. thought through so we can learn in Littleton, Colo. President Clinton
But he didn't shy away from strong frpm them.
is backing several gun control meaor unpopular opinions during a two~
"Now is the time to 'talk it sures while the NRAsays the answer
day swing through the site of the through," he said, with discussions is to more strenuously prosecute
nation's first presidential caucus in among families, scllools, communi· those who violate existing laws.
February ioo!Jties and churches:
.
"The NRA and other pro-gun
Kasich, a' l!llburban Columbus,
At a forum,,_ sponsored by ·the organizations need. to support the
.Ohio,· RepUblican, told gathering$ Association for Public Justice .at administration's efforts ... to put rea•that he opposed federal subsidies for Dordt College in Sioux Center, sonable regulations on the use and
ethanol, a COJ;n derivative added to Kasich told the crowd of 50 people
galioline. · Eth~nol is especially that he believes calls for more gun
imp(,rtant to Iowans, who sec it as a control are a typical reaction to a
way to expand demand for com.
violent tragedy.
"I'm not against ethan111, bin I'm ·
Vice President.AI Gore lias called
not for any subsidies," Kasich l!llid, for tougher .gun-c;ontrol laws. But
adding th~t he's apinat similar ben- Kasich said Congress and the White
efits for sugar and peanuts.
HoQse . should not ·heed knee-jerk
' . "They tell me that's going to kill reactions to the shootings.
me in Iowa, but I'm not changing
DDLEPORT
my position to get votes. I hope
,
VILLAGE INCOME TAX
· 'you'll all forgive me and be for me
. ~n)'Way," he fillid.
.
·
. '
Kasich'~ candor wu appreciated,
althougti h's stance wu not.
"b takes a lot to tell people in
"
Iowa that you aRn''t 'fdr ethanol,"
said Dan Droog, 23, of Sioux Center. "ije shot straight ~ith us."
During earlier talks in, Iowa,
· .
Kasich said lut week's massacre of '
An Returns
1ft
students at a Colorado h.igh ac:hool
Y
er
should be a wake-up call, not a eall
deidllne required pa~ents
for new laws_
of a $25.00 rmatty.'
· "Rather than jump to a conclu·
Ire 00 excepdou lo
sion now about how bad we are or
how many laws we should pass, we
the penalty. II must be paid
whcthq any tem an;
should take ' deep breath and discuss it," Kasich told The Columbus
dpe or pot,

~eigs EMS

logs 15 calls

John Robert Ma"lden$

Kaslch doesn't shy away from
s1rong positiqns during Iowa trip

DEAD LJNE
IS
APRIL 30
mcd

There

,,.

•
•

�•

The Daily Sentin~l

Sports

•

Mtmday, Aprll26, 1999

RedS.•.

Monc!ay. Aprll28, 19991·

Elway ends 16-year
.career with Denver

GETS INAELD SINGLE- Boston's Jason Varltek (left) beals the
throw to Cleveland first baseman Jim Thome for the Infield single in
the· fourth inning of Sunday's American Leag.u e game in Boston,
where the Red Sox won 3-2. (AP)
.

BoSox edge Tribe 3-.2
BOS:JiiN (AP) - The pitching of time before he is one of the most
duel b~en Pedro Martinez and dominant pitchers in baseball. "
Bartolo Colon not only lived up ui
The two faced off last Jul y I 5,
expectations, it earned eac h pitcher with Martinez and the Red Sox win- .
hi gh marks'from his opponent.
nin ~ 1-0.
.
_.
"It is very special pitching against
. 'I remember our matchup from
him because he is a fellow country- last year. I was very excited to pitch
man and one of the best pitchers in today," Colon said.
the game," said Colon after the
Jason Vafitek had a two-run doulndian s dropped a 3-2 decision bie in the seventh inning off of
Sunday to Martinez and the Red Sox. reliever Paul Shuey (2-1) to give the
" I think I learn something new every Red Sox a 3-l lead.
1, time he pitches."
Wilfreda Cordero's RBI single in .
Martinez (4- 1), who retired 14 of the ninth cut the Boston lead to 3-2,
the ilrst.17 batters he faced, pitched a but Martinez struck out David
complete game and struck out 10 to Justrce to register the complete
become· the second four-game win- game.
ner in the American League.
"Champions finish what• they.
" He has good command from the start,'' said Indians 'manager Mike
first· 10 the ninth," said Indians sec- Hargrove. " You look for it to be a
a nd baseman Roberto Alomar. "He matchup of two &lt;)aminating pitchers.
throws lots o( strikes .
Sometimes these games don' t live up
"A b.ig pan of his game is he to their billing, but it did today.- " .
doesn't 'walk people. · He makes us
Jeff Frye's RBI double off Colon
swing the bat."
.
in the first gave the Red Sox a 1-0
Colon, also looking for -his fourth lead, but the Cleveland pitcher
win,, was almost as tough as worked his way out of a few jams as
Martinez, allowing one run on seven · the afternoon progressed. In the sechits and striking out nine in six ond inning, he struck out Frye with
innings.
runners on firSt second lind he
He received high praise from whiffed Damon Buford with ru.nners
Martinez, a fellow Dominican on secon\1 and third in the third
Republic native recognized as one of inning.
the top talents in the game.
In the fourth •. Colon put two men
"Colon is going to be bener than aboard with no outs before striking
I am today," Martinez· predicted. '' I. out Jose Offennan anq getting Frye
admired the way he pitched and I had to ground into a double pl~y ..
fun watching him. It is only a matter

By JOHN MOSSMAN
game.
DENVER (AP) - Boasting 'two
Elway reportedly considered
recently minted Super Bowl rings as announ'cing his decision two weeks
well as the game's MVP a-vard, John ago, but owner Pat Bowlen was ih
Elway is going out on top, much like Australia promoting the Broncos'
Michael Jordan did four months ear- preseason gam~ there . Then l&lt;ist
lier.
week the announcement was put off
!lui, unlike Jordan, Elway leaves because of the school shootings in
behind a team in good hands.
suburban Denver.
For years, the , Denver Broncos'
Qut of respect for the victims,
offense was a one•trick pony consist- some of whose funerals were scheding of Elway and
uled for today,
I 0 other guys .
the Broncos furGradually,
the
ther delayed an
Broncos became
Elway announceless of a showment.
case for one daz.
···We • re
zli ng quarterQack
shooting for a •
and more of a
mid-week press
d iversif ied
conference, most
offense with mul1 i k e ·I y
tiple weapons .
Wednesday,"
Now,
with
B r o: n c o s
CASEY AT THE PLATE - The Cincinnati Reds' Sean· Casey (lefij ., '
Elway's retirespokesman Jim
scoras
on a wild pitch by Houston pitcher Sean Bergman (right) In
ment set, the twoSaccomano sa id
the
second
Inning of Sunday's National League gama In Clnclnnatr;
time Super Bowl
Sunday night.
where
the
Reds
won 7-6. (AP)
champions, still
· · 1 ' v ·e
loaded with stars
talked to him and
such as Terrell
he told meOw hat
Davis
and
he 's going to do,"
Shannon Sharpe,
Broncos coach
JOHN ELWAY
Mike Shanahan
must ponder life
By TERRY KINNEY
fac ing just 10 batters. Pete Harnisch
without magnifi said. "But I'm
CINCINNATI (AP) - There was (2-2) got the win despite blowing a
cent No.7 .
not going to comment I'm goi ng to a lesson for rookie Scott Williamson 4-0 lead.
,'
Elway, the master of improvisa- let John make his announcement."
in his first save: It takes more than a
" It was ugly," Harnisch said·.
tion and the late-game ·comeback, is
Bowlen, while declining to con- strong ann to be a big-league pitcher.
(See REDS on Page S)
leaving football after 16 NFL sea- firm Elway's plans, said at a charity
Williamson closed the Cincinnaii
sons.
event .Saturday night. "I've · known Reds' 7-6 victory over the Houston
Elway all but announced his this was coming]or a long time."
Astros on Sunday by striking out Jeff
retirement Saturday in an interview
Bowlen bought the Broncos in B
h
agwe 11 • t e team 's career home run
with Denver TV station KCNC in 1984 and neve r has known a team
Evangeline Chapter
leader.
'
Pebble Beach, ·Calif., where he was without Elway. " I think it's going to
But that was after Derek Bell had
#1720ES, items. for
playing in a golf tournament.
be odd for all of us," he said.
brought Houston within one run with
"For so many years everything in
Running back Te.rrell Davis told a solo homer.
yard sale can be
my family has reyolved around me. the Denver Post: "Thi s really lets
"That was a rookie mistake,"
It 's time for that to change," the 38- some air out of your sys1em. It's Williamson said of his attempt to
taken to the Masonic
year-old quarterback said. "I really going to be tough to come back and throw a third fastball past Bell.
accomplished everything I wanted not see him in the huddle.
Williamson didn't repeat that misTemple after 4 R~·
to. There 's no real upside to coming"I really think this year we're take to Bagwell, who missed a slider
on . Thesday, April .
back."
going to face as much adversity as to end the game.
..
w, ,
Later in the day, Elway told The we've . ever faced. We're really going
" e ve a1ways been impressed
27th
'thursday, :;:.
Associated Press; "I know every- to. see how much resolve this ,team with his arm ," said Reds manager
.
.
-~
body wants to know, · but I'm not · has now." ··
April
29th
1
p.m.;
going io talk about it right now. ' Offensive guard Mark Schlereth, · Jack Mc Keon . "Right now, we 're
just trying to guide him through and
There'll be an announcement next however, took another view.
Please call
get him over the hump.
" I think in the early years, it was
"We keep telling him that, with ,
week. That'.s alii have to say about it
74~-2544 or
for now,"
a one-man show with John here, " the kind of stuff he. has, he doesn't
Sources close to Elway, speaking Schlereth said. "It's not like that any- have to throw 98 ·miles per hour."
for
pickup
or
on cpndition of anonymity; said he more. "
Williamson pitched three innings,
has told friends he is leaying the
delivery.

(Continued from Page 4)

"l!arly on, we got the big lead and
the• fans were in the game. Then I
lciAed it away, and they weren't.
~y were on me. But we came
bac~ ." ·
.Pokey Reese hit a tiebreaking
ho111er in the sixth.
"He'll hit his five or six a year,"
MeKeon said. "We woufd prefer that

10:05 p.m.
Kapsu Cr t)' (A ppier 2·1) at Ballimore (Muuina

2-1). 7:05 p.m

Easttm Division

»:
Ne~Yotk ............................ 12

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T"."P' Bay ....................... It

.706

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.. ....... 8 10 .444
Kansu City .....
6 10 .HS
Mrnnel04 a ............................... 7 12 .l68

at
=i·
742-2890, :~
992·3530 :·

2'~

2':

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4':
5';
6

Tampa 83y (Rekar 2-0) at OHcago (Parqllt' 2· 1},
8.05 p m.
Bo1tpn (Ponugal 2- 1l at Minnesota (Millon Q. J),
8:05p.m.
New York {Clemen$ 2·0) at Texas (Scle'3·1). 8:JS

pm.

Toronto (Hcntgl1'n 0.1) at Anaheim (Olinrts 2- 1),
10:05 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Nagy 2· 1I at Oakland (Candroui
2-2). 10:05 p.m. ·
ilttroit (Thornpson 2·2) at Seaule (Hiochlilfe 0.
0), 10:05 'p m.

Welltrn Dl.,lsion
Easler!) Division

II
8
Oakland .................... ,., ....... 9 . 10
Seanle ........
. ............ 8 10
Antirn :.

1

.

fum
New York .....
Philadelphi:l
Montreal .
Florida ....

'II

Saturday's sCores

BosLOn ,9. CLE.VELANO 4
New York 7. TorOnto 4
Oakland 3. Baltimore 0

City 4. Anaheim
Seattle 9. Tampa Boy-'
Te:xas 7. Minnesom 2 ,

g
8

~?IJ
5~6

I
1':

J~3

5

.. ., .. 10

.. 6' II
............... 5

S1. Louis
Houscon ..
Ml lwaukl!t!
Pinsburgh ..

~

Chicago ., ......

I)

SundaY's scores ·

...... 11

6

......... 9

8

.. 9

•

i

•
9

....... 7
....... 7

CINCINNATI ...

Bosron 3. CLEVELAND 2
Oakland 1t. Bnhimore I0
~aule 6, Tampa Bay 4
Detroit 9, Chicagq 4
Teu1 9, Minnesota ~
,
Anaheim at Kansas Cit)'·ppd .. rilin
New York 4, .Toronto 3 ( II )

.647

.m

6':

647
.529
500

2
2':

m

:\':·'

.•B8
10 412

•

S.&lt;:m Francrsco ... .
Arizona .........
LosAngcles.
San Oiejo " ...........
Colora&amp; ................

... 13
.......... II
..... 9

7
8
10
. .... 8 · 10
.. :... 6 9

650
.579

11:
J':
4
4'·

-174
A44

.400

Boston (Wakefield 1·2J m Minnesota (l{adke I·
·
·
·Toronlo (Carpe nt~r .2- 1) at Att.1hdm (Fi nley 1·2).
t0~5 p.m.
(LEVELAND (Gooden 0-0) at 03kland (Hertdia
1- t! . 10:05 p.m. ·
·

2). 8:05p.m.

¢

. .c

•
••

.27
.... 22 ·v
. IS 29
....... I&lt; )0
... 8 )7

V:lf\COU\Cf

77J
721

l'
7

.614

489

J

.

20

. 118

26'·

Dl~is:lon

I. &amp;!.

17
19

21
27

:28

.674
.IDO
.568
.52]
.400
J64

WI

NY-NJ

San Antonio 11 Sacramento, 10:)0 p m
Utah al ~altle, 10:30 p.m.

I I .744
18 . 600
ll ~ 21
22 ' .500
2J .477
25 4-'Z
J~
205

6
9':
10':
II ':
1.1''.
B '·

Saturday's scores
Chnrlot)t 97. New Jersey 82
Indiana 87. Ori ca~o 69
San An10mo 108. L.A. Lakers 81
Sacramcmo \OS. Dallas !02
Golden Stall' 9l Oem•er 7-l
L A Clippe r ~ 105. Vanc ouver 96
Detroit91. Toronto 8.~
Atlanta 8S. Milwaukee 70
R o~ lo n I! .\ , Washington 84
New York 82. Miami BO
Phocnix 95. Ho uston 71
·Phi ladelphiG 103 . .0rlan00 86
Utah 9R , Seattli:': 81
New Jerse)' 120. Indiana 9B
Portland 100, Minnesota M

II

..... 2 J 0

6

l

'-6

8

5

Wsun Conre«:nce
... 4 I 0 12 II
2
Dallas.
4 2 1 10
9
2
, Los Angrks
J 3 2
5
4'
4
Snn J o~
4 2 4
4 6
9
Colorado . ..
..2 2 I
4 8 , S
Kansas Ci1y
..
, 0 6 0
0
2 I~
,
NOTE: Thr« pomts lor 'o'lttory. oae pornt !Of ..
shoorout win and zero points for lou Sh()O(OUI
I SOW)~~ a sutnet of wins

Hockey

Ch1 ~1go

Pacific Dhislon

l · Ponland ..
.. ............ .. :\2
LA Laken ..
. .. 27
Ph ~nix ..
·.... 23
s~crame m o .
.... 22
Seanle ·.
.21
G11lden Stflle
19
LA Cl ippers
.... 9
~ ·diBC'hed pla yoff berth

7

..~22S4S
322
s 4 6
3 3 2
5 7 12
... 1 4 0
J 1 11

.

COLUMBUS
Mwnu
Tamp;~ Ba)

Vancouver at Dallu. 8:30 p".m.·

12':

341
.~I g

New En&amp;lalld

{.if

., .. 3 2 I

NHL first-round playoffs
Saturd3.y~s scores
Pittsburgh 4. New Jerse)' I
Phocnr x 4. St. Louu )-OT

Cnrolinn J . Bo,lon 2-0T: series t~ d J.J
Toronto 2. Philadelphia 1, stries tied 1-1
CCIIorndo .l Snn Jose I: Colorado leads K'nt'l I·

0

Sunday's scores

,

PittSburgh 4. New Jer~ey 2: Pmsburgh ll!:lds
~ries 2- 1·
· PhoemJt 5, St. L.outs 4; Phoc:ntx lends scnes 1- 1
Detroit 4, Anaheim 2: D&lt;;t.r.ou leads sene' .\.O
Buffalo 3. Ortawa 0: BufTal!) leads ~ene s J.Q
Dallas'l Edmonton 2: Dallu lcacb .ierle' .1-0

"

~

Saturday's scores
New England J. DC Um~d '!
Mianu I. Kansas Crty 0
D:lllas 2. COLUMB US 0
Chicago 111 Co lorado. pPd . ~hootml
Los An1dcs I. San Jost 0

Sunday's score
Jer~ y

Tampa 8 a)· I. New York· New

0

· This week's slate
W~tsd1y

Tonight's games
Carolino a1 Bonon. 7:30p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia. 7:30 p.m.
Colorado at San Jose, IO JO p.m.

Thesday 's games
Onawa Ill Buffalo, 1 p.m

COLUMBUS at Kansu City. 12 : ~ p.m.

·'

Fridlly

Dallas at Sart Jost. 10:30 p.m.

.

.S•&amp;urd•y

Lm Angeles at New Yurk-New Jerxy, 1 p.m.
M1ami at Tampa Bay. 1 p.m.
Colorado at New England, 7:30p.m.
,, DC United at. Chicago. 8 p.m.

WHILE SUPPLIES

15.1-17.6 oz.

.2 /$ .

LA T

JACK FROST

Sug~r

$ 59

.S ibs.

Limit 2 please

+--------.--------------~.••

Bologna

Ketchup

DEL MONTE.SQUEEZE··

c

•

oz.

28
Limit 2 please

LB.

FRESH HEAD

SUNSHINE

Lettuce

Do Food

HUD

•
•

••

]I

10
12
17

Eastun Conference
W I ffiWPu

Iwn
DC

ECKRICH SLICED

SUIIEIII GIANT
SANDWICH IliAD
240L 794

•
•
••
•

Waterford ·s oftball
crew downs SHS 8-3

........ )4

Piz·zas

•••

~

A-Utah
l ·San 1\nromo
Houston
MrnneSQta
Dallas
D(nver

Pork Chop~

.'

•

•

EASTERN CONFERENCE .

ChariOftl' ·,, Toronc:o, 7 p.m.
DetrOII at Boston. 7 p.m.
CLEVELAND at Plliladelphi a. 7 p m
Miami at New Jene.,. I p.m.
Orlartdo at Indiana, S p.m

!ill

.!!' L &amp;!.

TONY'S ITALIAN STYLE·

•

•

Iwn

MLS standings

San Antonio I I LA. ClipPm, 1_0:~ p.m.

1\Jesday 's games

Sunday's scores

' 14

Sacrametuo at Gokkn State,' 10:.30 p.m

7
17

Mid,.·est Dividon

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

••

•
•

-·-

6',

•
:•
::
•:
•·
:;
•:

Soccer

Prices Good Tuesday, April 27th &amp; Wednesday, April281b only

tiO RAINCHECKS

aNTER'CUT fORK
CHOPS $1.79 Ll.

fence . Southern led 12-6, but
Waterford threatened in the seventh.
The Wildcats plated two runs and left
one stranded before SHS hurler Josh
Ervin put out the fine.
I;rvin picked up the win with
eight strikeouts, one walk and ten
hits against him. The Tornadoes ·
made se ven errors. Thad Skinner suf. k red the loss with 13 hits against
.the seco nd inning In a row, the him, eight, strikeouts, two walks and
Wildcats c·ame back to take a 6-0 three errors by the WHS defense .
lead. Danny Jones hit home run s in
Southern hitters were led by
his first two at bats and 'Josh Wagner .Baker who was 3-4 with a home run;
hit another in the stretch .
Boso 2-3 with a home run; Da·vis 2Southern unleased its cannons in 4, : Manuel 2-4 with a· double;
the th1rd inning , highlighted by Cumings a home run, Ervin a double,
booming home runs by Jamie Baker Adam Williams a single and Kyle
and Adam Cumings. Baker's blast Norris a single.
was a two-run shot and Cumings
Waterford was led by Danny
nailed a three -run rocket. The Jones with a 3-5 night and two hits
Tornadoes took an 8-6 lead. The two leach from Justin Torres and Aaron
clubs went scoreless for the next Heiss .
\
· three . i.mings, then Southern added
Southern hosts Miller today.
an insurance marker in the sixth on !pgjpg l!!lall
. an error and double by Benji Manuel. Southern ............ 008-001-3= 12-13-7
Southern came back with three runs Waterford .. .. ... ..... 420-000-2=8-10-3
in the seve nth inning as Baker and .
WP-Ervin and Cumings
Josh Davis each singled, then rode
LP-Skinner and Jones
home on a 'J.B. Boso blast over the

NBA standings

x:Orlando .
. .... 29
Philadelphia ........... .......... 25
New York . .. .
. 2]

New York ac Olal01te, 1:30 p.m.
LA . Lakera at Houston, 8 p m
Wuhin&amp;cori II MIIWIM.Ik.ce. 8:30p.m
CIIICI$0 If Dallal. &amp;:30 p.m
Phoenu: ill Utah; 9 p.m.
Den!fer at Portland. 10 p.m.

I
4'··
4'·:
6

.622
.54)
.545
.5t 2
.500
.488
.267

Greg Vaughn's RBI single pu1 the
Reds up 5- 1 in the bottom of the
inning, but Houston batted around in
the lifth to tie it, with Caminiti hit·
ting a two-run homer:
Notes: Sean Casey, httless
Saturday- for only the secqnd time
this seaso n, was ·2-for-3 Sunday.

New Jer~y at Pit~Nah, 7:30p.m
Phocnut Ill: St. Lours, 1:30pm.
Dallas at Edmon1on. 9:30p.m.
Dmon at Anahtrm. 10:30 p.m.

Tooicbt'sca....S
Miami at CLEVELAND, 7:)() p.m

·. 644 .

his fifth homer of the sea-

fourth -

son .

two Day Sale

••

The Southern Tornadoes rolled to
a 12-8 Tri-Valley Hoclcing Division
win over the Waterford Wildcats
Friday night at Waterfprd.
Waterford (0-15), who .had struggled earlier in the year, but is now
playing much better, watched its
marksmen jump to a 4-0 lead in the
bottom of the first inning. Then after
Southern· (8--5) went down 1-2-3 for

Basketball

Boston ........................... 18
Washington .. ,. .......... .......... 16

.

•

Baseball Tornadoes
beat Waterford 12-8

San Fmnc r sc~ '(Nntha n 1-0) at Montreal ( Balr~ta
2-0), ?:OS p.m. ·
CINCINN ATI (Neagle 0-0) ;n Phillldelphn1
ISc:h illlrl( J- 1).,7:05 p.m
.
· Chicago {Sunders 0-2) 111 f-lortda (Ojala Q. JJ. 7 0~
· p.ru .
l.os Angele~ (A r01~1 n J. l) m Milwauktt (Roque
0-1). 7·05 p.m. ·
·
San Diego (Ciemem 0-2) at ~ew York ( Yoshri 1!). 7:10p.m
Pmsbllrgh (Schmidt 2· 1) at A\lonm (0 Perez 0·
· OJ. 7:40p.m.
.
Atizona (Reynow 1·0) il l Houston (RcynoldJ; ~1). 8:05p.m
Co l or~o (Thomson 0-1) at ·St. L.ouis (Mercker 20), 8:10p.m.

»:
x-Miami... .......... ·......... 19

15 1~

318

)(I

bases.
"This team is not going to heat us
with longballs that much , but by running."
Cincinnati got three runs in the
second on a wild pitch and RBI sin·
gles by Eddie Taubensee and Mike
Cameron. A sacrifice fly by Aaron
Boone in the third made it 4-0 before
Houston started its comeback on
Bagwell's leadoff homer in . the

. WESTERN CONFERENCE

At lanla {Millwood 1-2) at Aorida ISprin~r 0-31.
1 OS pm
A,nzoma (Smnlemyre 2.0) Ill Houston ( Li~ru~ 2- 1J.
1105 pm
•

Iwn

HoustQn 4, CINCINNATI 3
Milw·mukee S, PittsOurgh .\
ChiCago 2. New York 0
San Francisco 8, Colorado 4
Philadelphia 6, Montreal 5
Atlanta 8. Florida 1
San Qitgo 7, Arizona 2

.: 14

Ctnlral Divilion
Indiana
............2~ 16
Atlanta
...... 28 17
Detrou
.................. 24 20
Milwaukee .... ............ 24 lQ.
Char lour
.... 22 2t
Toromo ...
.......... ·.... 22 22
CLEVELAND
.21 22
Ch&amp;caao .......................... J2 JJ

Tonight's games

Allantlt

Saturday's scores

and Ken Caminiti.
" Six- runs should he enoug h to
win . but it isn 't in the modem.era as
much as it used to be," said Houston
manager Larry Dierker.
He wants hi; pitchers to do a better job of holding runners on base.
" We have some comeback ability,
but the thing that disturbed me was
that they ran against us at , will ,"
Dierker said of the Reos' four stolen

New Jt-rsey .

CINCINNAT I 7. Houstoo 6
Ptliladelphrll 8. Monlrcal 6
Milwnukee 4, Pinsburgh 2
&lt;:tunj!.O 8, f*w York 4
Atlanta S. Flonda 1
San FrancrscO 1 ~ Colorado 6
Anzona 5, San Dieao 3 fll)
St Louis 6, l..os Angeles 4

Western Dh·ision

Tonight's games

.

!ill

6

Central Division

O.icaso \ ~roit I
Killlll!

.!!' L &amp;!.

.... II
II

AIIW11D ...

Lct1 Angotle~ 6, St Louis I

Tuesday's games

NL standings

Teus .............. ,,... ....

-.

or

t

" People are going to say what
they want. I know I can hit," said
Reese. whose second home run this
season gave him six in three years.
"Hopefully, if I keep working hard ,
'I' II keep hitting."
Reese homered off reliever Doug
Henry (0- 1) . Houston starter Sean
Ber,gman gave up five runs and six
hits in four innings, but was taken off
the hook by home runs by Bagwell

Sunday's seores

Thesday's games

Af.. standings

Reds top Astros 7-6

.

they come in those types of situations - .a tie game - instead of
when we're leading 9-2 or somethi'ng
like that."
Reese, who inherited the starting
job at second base after J;lret Boone
was traded 10 Atlanta in the offseason, said he '~ a better hitter than his
.228 career average might indicate.

Detroit (Moehler 2-2) at Scal.tlc { Moy~:r 1-2),

Baseball

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

c

99

17.6 LBS.
Limit 2 Please

US NO.1

MIKE SELLS

Russet Potatoes

Po-atoe .Chips

10 LB. BAG ·

c.

c

50Z.

•

.'

• t

'

.

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•

·. The Waterford Wildcats, 10-2, threatened by putting Regina Manuel
defeated the · Southern Lady on first with a single. Dena Sayre
ToTadoes 8-3 .Friday night in high Walked, but both were left stranded. ·
school softball action in Waterford.
Kim ·sayre suffered the loss with
Southern took a 1-0 lead in the an inning of relief from M~nuel .
first 'Bnd held that margin until the Sayre fanned seven and walked five
top of the third, whe'il they went up in a one-hit effort and two unearned
2-0. Kim !hie walked and scored the runs. She also gave up two earned . .
second run of the game as a result of Manuel fanned two and gave up four '.
a Laraine Lawson 'single.
hits and four runs .
Waterford (10-2) tied the scone at
C. Harra posted the win with a ,
2-2 in the bottom half of the frame as four-hitter two walks and 10 strike- ·
Kfisten Hill•walked and Alecia Jones outs .
walked . .A two base error in left
Southern hitters were Kim !hie 2allowed 'two unearned runs to come 2 with a walk; Law~on a single and
home to tie the game.
Manuel a single. Waterford hitters ·
Waterford went up 4-2 in ttle fifth . were Jones 2-3, Hall 1-3. Hill 1-2
when M . Smith walked, Hall walked and Huck 1-3.
and scored on a Jones double. Southern host$ Miller Monday.
Southern cut the deficit to 4-3 in the lgnlag llllala
sixth on a Kim Ihle double, a 5-3 Southern ............... 101 -001.-CJo,J-4-2
Lawson sacrifice and fly out.
Waterford .............. 002-020-4=8-5- 1
Waterford came back to plate four
WP-Harra and Hill
runs in the bottom half of the frame
LP-Sayte, Manuel (7th) and
to take an ·8-3 advantage. Southern Davis

•

..

2% ·Milk or Skim Milk

$- 89

•
•
••

•

210Z.

Gallon

I
'

..298

.'

SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
.

'

PRICES EFFECTIVE Aprll27, 28TH, 1999 ONLY

~-

\

•

,j

�-

The. Daily Sentinel
Paa•t

"·-By The Bend

-

,,·- · . ..

Monday, Aprll26, 1999

.

70

Pomeroy,

Monday, Aprll26, 1991.

Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

PORTLAND, MAINE
DEAR BARBARA: I agree that·
your sister-in-law is being insensi·
tive, but you cannot control what she
chooses to name her child. In some
cultures, it is common for several
descendants to be named for the
same belov~d . relative, ·and often,
cousins wind up wilh identical
names.
It is considered a'n honor. Explain
to your son that ."Joseph" is such a
beautiful name that his aunt and
uncle want to give it to their child.
After the baby is born, find an
appropriate nickname and use it.
Dear Ann Landen: You recently asked your . readers, "Was the
affair worth it?" I have a different
view of this subject. I'd like to tell
you whether or not my husband's
affair was worth it.
l was married for II years to a

man who controlled every aspect of
my life: I th.ought that meant he
loved me . .I adored, worshiped and
obeyed him. I had no idea that he
had been carrying on a love affair
right under my nose for several
years.
When I realized what was going
on, I threw him out. I thought my
world was gone. I was 30 years old
with:four children, no job and no
college education.
With the love and support of
friends (and a lot of counseling), I
now know what life is. I have a great
job that I thoroughly enjoy ·I like
mys~lf and .am no longer living in
anyone's shadow. My children are
wonderful teenagers, and we have
fantastic times together They love
their father and sec him often, but I
doubt the kids and I could have had
this close a relationship without the

wi ll save yo u tim e!

tion s you want to ask , . any rece nt
There are times when yo u can . corresponde nce you received
take care of some Social Se curity from Social Security, and ..ape~­
business without talking · to ~ rep· cil and paper to write down inforresentative . Then you · can take mation from your call.
advantage of our 24-hour . ser:

Do yo u need to change yo ur
addre ss, sign up for direc t depos it
c\ r make an ap poi ntm en t to apply vices.
· for hencfits'' Want to know how
Serv ices such as getting an
work affec ts yo ur Soci al Securit y application for a new or replace·
·
benefit s'!
ment Social Security or Medi care
Don ' t bother with traffi c, park· card or the application to get an
in g ur waiting in line- let your es timate of your Social Security
fingers do the dialing. Call 1- bene fit.
X00-772 - 1213 to tak e ca re of
Last year over 75 million peoyo ur Soc ial Security business ple called us to get answers to
from the co mfort and privacy of their questions. They know it's
your home . You can call our toll - easy and convenient to call from
free telephon e numbe r 24-hours a home!
. day, every day.
Sometimes our phone lines are
: Social Security representatives busy early in the week and early
are av ail able to help with all your in the month , so., if your business
~ oc i al. Sec ur it y ·questio ns on
can wait, it 's best to call at aitoth· ,
busin ess days from· 7 a.m. to 7 er time .
p.m. They have access to the
However, if you are planning
same informati bn that 's available to file for benefits, you should
if you · vi sit ·your local Social call us as soon . a~ possible . ,
Security office .
You can help us serve you be t ~
But, if yo tl sti'll need to visit ter by planning ahead. Before you
our office , we ' ll schedule an call, you'll need.: .. your Social
~ppoi ntm e nt fo'r you- and · that Security number, . a list of ques -

'

'

To Be Published
Friday, May 7

Twice a widow. or widower?
Higher Social .S ecurity benefits
could be in your future
While vi siting a local se.nior
adult center, a 70-year-old
woman told me she had been widowed twice-once at age 48 and
18 years later at age 66.
When her second husband
died , Social Security automatical·
ly converted her spouse's benefits
to widow 's benefits based on his
re cord .
I asked her .pcrmission to check
her file to determine whether she
could be receiving a higher benefir on her first husband's record .
Sure enough, because her first
husband had a higher earnings
record , we advised her to file a
new claim . As a result, her benefit s were immediately increased.

CllEE 11\C 1:\ \ \II'U." ...
1X3 Greeting- 810.00

· ixs Gree

HAPPY
.MOTHER'S
DAY

Daily Sentinel

- fl3.00

(PICTURE)

When a spouse di es, Social
Security's prac ti ce i.s to automati·
ea lly convert the spouse's benefit
to a widow or (widower) benefit
based on the deceased spouse's
record. The conversion letter suggests the person should contact'
Social Security if she or he had
been a widow or widower from a
· previous marriage. In SO!lle cases,
the surviving spouse may be eli·
gible .for a higher benefit based
on the previous spouse's record.
Unfortunately, some people who
may be eligible for the higher
benefii do not contact us .
Some divorced women and
men also may be eligible for ben·
· efits based on · a deceased exspouse's record if the marriage
had lasted at least I 0 years ..
In some cases, these
Public Notice
.IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
MEIQS COUNTY, OHIO
Roecoe Mille, et at.,
Plllntllfe,
va .
.
ThoiNiaNtchotaon,elal.,
Dllencllinta
CaH No. tt CVF 44
NOTICE BY PUBUCATION
To: Thomaa Nlcholeon,
whoae 1111 known addreae
Ia , 4118a Hilla Roat;l,
Pomeroy, OH 45761, praatnt
lddraaa unknown, and
C. Ann Nlcholaon, whoae
teat knowa addreaala 41188
Hilla Road, Pomeroy, OH
457al, pruent addreae
unknown.
You are h~reby notified
that you hive bean named
Defendant• In the action
entitled R1110oe Milia, II ~1,
Plalntllla, ve. Thomu
Nlcholaon and C. Ann
Ntcholaon, Dafendama. Thla
•ctlon has bean eutgned
CIH N0 • CVF 44.• and 1a
" Ctyouo~ ~~rt
~lng
1 lncthe
o ega
oun •
o. •
ob)ect ol the Complaint
deinande writ cl raatttutlcn
agalnet the Dalandante,
Thomaa Nlcholee~n and C.
,t.nn Ntcholaon lnd coate or
~d
~
on.
d
.ou are requ 1re 1o
•newer · the Compte tnt
wl.thln twenty·elnht
(28)
•
daya after the laat
publication cl lhla Notice,
which will l;le publlahed
once each week for alx (8)
aucceaalva WHka. The lall
publication will be made on

the moment. I asked "&lt;;lark," )1
divorce.
classmate,
to go with me to the
I Iive simply. Pleasure comes
from finding a bargain, making my . prom, ana he said yes. We're n~
bill payments on · time and having tl!king a limo or anything fancy, ani!
quiet moments to myself. I no longer we are not daiing. We're just gooil
think material things are importani. friends. Who should ·pay for the din;Everything I have, I achieved on my ner'! .. J .H. IN LOUISBURG, N.C.;
own, and it 's a great feeling. Was' his
. DEAl{ J.H.: You pay, since you
affair worth it? Yes. It made me what invited him. He's your guest.
·
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggel!i
I am today. and I look forward to the
challen ges ahead. -· HAPPY IN and Doozies,'·' has everything from
INDIANA
the ou trageously funny to the
DEAR HAPPY: I have often poignantly insightful. Send a ,self
said, "When life hands you a lemon, addressed , long, business-size er\vemake lemonade." You are the perfect . lope and ~ check or money older for
example or ·someone who managed $5.~5 (this includes postage and
to do just that. I hope the women out · handling) to: Nuggets, c/o Ann Lanthere who are in your shoes will rec· ders. P.O. ·Box 11562; Chicago, Ill.
ognizc the possibilities.
·60611 -0562. (in Canada, send
Dear Ann Landers: Can you $6.25.) To find out more about Aan
give me some advice on prom eti· Landers and read her past columns,
queue? I am an 18-year-old girl, and visit the Creators Syndicate web
I don ' t have a regular boyfriend at page at www.creators.com.

In Memory

.'
(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)

Jn :Memory of my Son,
Steplien Smitli
on fiiJ '13ir1fiday

'HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

LQVE, JOHN, JOE
AND SUSAN

4f~lls6·fi171Sr

. Sadly :MimJ
Lout, :Mom

Mon· Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 4C) yra experience

In Memory
Ilappy 75th Birthday

Mae Durst
April26.
We aU love and mi.,
· you Mom, Alway• in

\

IJ

our hearts and on our:-

"'indl.
Ra-lph and all o
your sans

Deadlin~

For Thil Special Mother's
Tribute Is Monday, May 3, 12 noon
Fill out the form below and drop orr with payment to
The Dally Sendnel "Mother's Day"
111 Court St. Pomeroy; Ohio 45769

In Lomg Memory of
I.eonanl Bass on his
80tb blrtbday
If you were here,
we'd have made a cake.
Instead without you we
celebrate. Your Ufe was
a gift to us
' Sent f'nlm above.
Eac:b
we're
thankful for your
ilnconclitloaallove.
Al1l'lys In our hearts,
Wife, Ora, Children,
Grandchildren,
Great·Grandchlldren

.fCi'RcLE-o~;~-:.oo~RiitiN'o:.$io.;---8."ii;'GiEE"Ti;G';i;icT"u'Ri"~si3.oo-,
I
I

(PLEASE PRINT or TYPE)

.

I

MOTHER'S NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1I Y
. OURNAME(S&gt;------------------------I
I .

day

IYOURADDRESS:.:.·- - . : . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . : . . . - - - - - - - 1
. STATE: _ _ _.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I CITY,

I P H O N E : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - . ; __ _
I
MAKE CHECK PAYABLE TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL
.
.

L--------·----------------------------------..1
'

'

'

'r

\'

'

\,

100 1!.
until 1-ovOO'
Ohio 457H,
: p.m.
on May 10th and will open
Hmo 1nd r11d aloud 11 1:30
.m. on May 10th tor·the fol·
rcowing tatephotll ayatem:
38 Analog or low funcaonallty digital allllcna
11 medium lunottonlllty
dlgltalllallcnl
nction llty dl !tal
~~ fu
a
II
1 operatcr/attandant .Illdon with buey lamp · flold
and direct -ton Hlectlon
.......
to lletatlo e
,.,..,ccveroga •
n
8 pert digital voice mall,
100 INIIlboxll arid 30-hQur
llorogl
Stand alono call account·
lng ayatam
Integrate with e•llllng
peglng ayllom
13 Centranat votoallllll
3 fAX 111111 which may or
may not bllntegratad
Complete bid apeclfiOI•
Ilona may
:lg~llrle ·
County
CommiHtonara or from the
Dirac
. tor . of the Melge
County Department ·or
Human Slrvlcu during

':,j ::'l::r!f:

Longbo11om, Ohio
(740) 985-3677

740·992·2068 .

House &amp; 'Trailer Siteo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic SyllerrUJ &amp;
Utilitie, ,

ROOFING
NEW·REPitR

(7401 992-3131

PARts

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
:
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

..!h=~'·~·~·~,--~~·~
• a111 Eatate General ·

Public Notice
~[
1nd thll Dtftndante,
Mabel M. Pearman,
Deoea~d, Unknown hllrj,
d 1 v Inn,
·I• g aI •• a,
extcutora, exeoutrlx•!•
ldmlnl-01'1,
.
admlntatratrlxu and
aaalgnaee be required tb
111 up lftV tnter111 they may
have In Hid premiHI or ~
forever barred, that upon
flllure ofleld Dllendanll bl
pay or to ceuae to be pa(jl
Hid judgment within thr•
day!__!rl)m _~ll. rendition ""'
an Order of bale biiHued
.to the Sheriff of Melga
County, Ohio, to appralae,
adverllae In the Dall)'
Sontlnel and aell aald retl
..lite, that the pramiHa tie .
aold free .and clear of all
clalma, Ilona and Jnttireat Ol
1ny of the partlea harela,
thll the proceeda from the
a111 of aald pramlaaa lie
applied to tha Plllnllff..
..
judgment and for auc,,
other rallel to which USDA
Rural Development t8
entitled:
· ;
Said Dafendanta aN
directed to tha Complal~t
wherein notice under the
fair debt collection practt011
'101 lallven.
;
9al Dolendanta will lalla
notice that lt .be required \10
•newer o·ald· Complaint ....
- .
or before the· 24th day of
May 1M or judgment wDI
~- render-..
,
""
'"" accordlnnly.
...
USDA Rur11 Development
Plalnttit,
Stephen D. Mllea, Atte~mey
(3) 22, 29 (4) 5, 12, 19, 28
8 tc

NOTICI; OF PUBUCATION
Stephen D. Milia,
Allon'lly at Law
w.
18 Monument Avenuo
Dayton,Ohlo 45402
Mabel . M. Pearman, .
Decnaed, Unknown helrt,
devtuu,
legaun,
execulort, execut, and II
daceaoed, all helro,
devluu,
tegatua,
executora, exacutrtxu,
admln1lllnllora,
admlntatratrtxea and
aealgnua and w.hou
addreaaeo are unknown,
will hereby take notice that
on the February 10, 1M,
USDA Rural· DevaiQpment,
Iliad Ita complllnt In
F 0 r 1 c 10 1 u r 1
1 nd
Marahalllng of Uona In the
Common Ple81 Court of
Mtilga county, Ohio, being
""-CV·"12
CeH No. ....
-v
ega1nat
Mabel M. · Pearman,
Deceaaed, Unknown halra,
1ega t • n,
d e v Inn,
execulora, axacut pr1yln(l
for Judgment In tha amount ·
of $11,580.84 with lntaraat
thereon 1ccordlng to tha ·
Ierma or the . nQII from
December 11, 11111a until ,
paid and lor foracloaura· of
aald Mortgage Deed on tho
following deacrlbed reali
Public Notice
utale, or which oald ·
Defendanll, Mabel , M.
Pearman,
Daceued, PUBUC NOTICE I'OR sALt
Unknown helro, devlaeea,
In accordance with the
legallaa, axecutora,. exacut Ohio RIVIHCI COde, -~~
are the ownere of:
bid a will.be ,_lved by th6
· Situated In the VIllage of · Melga County Board 111
Middleport In the County of Commta•lonere In their
Malga lnd Stall of Ohio:
· olllu located Ill thl
Known 11 and. beginning Courthouae, Third Floo~,
on 1111 ~It aide of tile roed llcond Street, Pomeroy.
leading from Middleport to Ohl 0 457•ft til 1 00
Ruillllld, Ohlq, on Ilia New
: P.·~·
- un
Hill ROid at ~ North line of on Monday, MIY 10, 1Itt.
J
d lh
The blda will be opened at
Phillip 01111 1an ; enct 1:41. p.m. on the 111111 day
North 8-1/4 dagroel' Will 3 and read aloud tor the
chaine and 58 IInke to • lollowlng uoed ambulance
.alake it Ralph Spooner'• no longer ·needed by th•
Southwaat corner, tl!enoo Malga County Eme-eno"
North · 72 dagr11a Eait Medical•--•-·• .,.
along aald Spooner'• South
.....,,,,.. ·
'
llrie 7 chelna and 115 llnka 10 , 1882 :Eoon\lan, formerlY:
ueed ae Squad 14 Irt
.e etake; thence South 2 · Middleport. Serial Number
degreea Weal 7 chaine and 11'THI3114CHAOII5480 10·
11 IInke to the North line of 111 lei
aald 'Phillip Jonea lind;
10 M a minimum bid cl
N h
NOO.OO, ae Ia to the hw-i
thonce ort 72 degrMa bidder wttll no guilr- 4'1'
Well 8 c!lalna and 22 llnkl •Wltrltnty
,
to the place cl beginning,
No EMS or Em, 111 en 0~
contalnlngUacrte.
l!ljutpmant will blaold wttJr
Savlr~f! and exoeptl!'l. the · a.. Vlhlctt,
•;
aame rallrvlllone m e by
Vllllole may be aHn It
V.B. Horton In hie deed thl
Melge
Count.,•
datod J1nu1ry II, 11114, Emergenr:lc
Medro,d;
excepting ateo a-half acre . ·a.rvtA•e
~-, looat-.. on•
eold by Mert ha Ruaael to MulberryHalghta
11... 1~
Lucinda Dodaon off tha Memorial Drive Pamer~ '
Southwoat cornor or the Ohio 4a7n, du~ng noriNit
premleea horoln deiiCrlbld, bualneaa houra Mondtll·
the aame baing CQnvayad through l'rldiY, '
,._1
~ P.f'. Ezlae end wife· to . Allltlda mu•• be awlt!f: .
. .A. Hanlin, Truttee, by and INirked ••ld for U~
dHd dllld M1y 25th, 1177. Ambulance•, Till Baird Dt'
Alto excepting out of the,l County Commllllonera,
above deacrlbad premlaoai may aoaapt the belt 1114'
one an~ Otll·fOUIIh acrea rtllrvee the right to .....
(1·114) aold by Eva . Snyder any and/or all blda •114/0fl
and Nail Snyder, hor •ny part thereof, and to
huaband, to George waive any Informality In •'!V
Sprlngeton ond recorded In bid.
.
.
"..
VOlume e2, Page 523; Matga , (4) 11, 28 2 tc
County Recorda.
c

B~.SELL

BUILDERS,
INC. ·

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Gare,ges

bathroom, log home
· on 3 acres.

lnground pool 16 x
32. Also barn

740-843·5364

'7'73-5~00
Summer League

Guneri,
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTW.
FREE ESTIMATES

814-992-7843

In Ma;
'llletday .r~o Tap
WednHday • Men's League
lbunday. Mixed League
Sttrtl•l n111 J:JO P.M.

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

CONCRETE
CONNICTIOII

Trllltrl-hcu--mobllo .
.Homtt-dtckHIMwiYI .
Equ/pmfnt C/fWd" DfgrNHd

JEFF STETIIEII

Parking Lots

333 Page Street,
Middleport,
has full time
positions for
RN Vent Nurses
a vail able for aJl "
shifts and ' .
weekends.
Anyone interested
please stop by
and fill out an
application.

. EOE

Heating &amp; Cooling

Free E1timate•
'Professional Routine Lawn
Maintenance and Manicuring
' 'Residential &amp; CommorciBI
"Shrubbe!y Malm8!1ance
'Serving Meigs and GaiUa Counties
In Ohio and Mason County In WV

Need a lriend In the business
Call me at (7 40) 7 42-2842
l{emembvr
"Done right the first time"
. · "Priced right all the time"
Dora 't Need A Big Oae
CaU A Little One

. ....... h .. ~,._

L.ll...,.

1·740-742·2803 or
1-740-446-3622

Landocape Material,
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost
up to 8 ton

PHONE:

25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

(1.0) 885-4218

EMAIL:
STETHE~UREKANET.COM

FREE ESTIMATES

740·742-8608

38782 Sumciec Roll(

' Ohio 454768 .

SAYRE
TRUCKING

-Linda's Painting

·Hauling
Limestone &amp;Gravel
Reasonable Rates

do tt .for you
INT-ERIOR
Before 6 pm Leave
message, After 6 .pm

'lllke the pain out of
painting, and let me

Joe N. Sayre

992·5455

.

R. L. HOLLON

. Local
Television

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

80

Rick Pearson Auction Compal'\y,
full Ume au ctio neer. complete
aucti on
service. License,d
t66.0hlo &amp; Wesr'f: lrgln la, 30.tll·

Wedemeyer' s A.ucllon Sl!lrvlct .

Galll&gt;olis, Ohio 740·379-2720.
90 Wanted to Buy .

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. 511·

ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings. Pre- 1930 U.S. Currency.
Sterling, Etc. AcQuisitions Jewelry

TRUCKING

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildi11gs, Rooting, Siding
"Specializing In Log Ilonw• "
Commercial &amp; Residential
28 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured

~

Phone 740-992-3987

111!!1
~
~

lll!.'J

·

Jotin Dean· Owner

.

·~~

Alao Riding LIA!Inl

RoofRoUFU'IIU '

740-698-3290

l;t
,;r..
fl1l.!

ANNOUN CEMENTS

005

Peraonals

Start Dating Tonight! Have lun

playing the Ohio Dating Game. •8CJO.AOMANCE. oX1enslon 9681.

30 Announcement•
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May

Be Entilled To Receive Your Diabe tic Supplies At N() Cost To
You. For More lnlormattOn. 1·888·

677-6561 .

Going Out Of Business Sale : 30%

HEAD NURSE
Responsible for 24-hour adminiotration of
nursing services ou Skille"d Nursing Facility.
Must be 11n Ohio Licenoed RN, prefer BSN,
Administrative and Clinical experience in ·
geriatrics preferred but !lot required.
Contact Human Resources,
115 E. Memorial Drive,
, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
740-992-2104.
~

rM;\ ·

,..

---

LPN
(4,1,·;, '""" , e•tl

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESfiMATEES
985-4473

"THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP"
Tue1- Frld-v 10-8
Sat 10-4
Rt 124 Mlnertvllle, Oh ·
992-4559

7

WICKS
HAULING

fMi\'

---

;1/lllfllllf Rlilll~l ?f0·992-2J0f . '51

M70 Baahen Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1

.

•Room additional Remodeling
•New G~r~g~~ .
•EIKtrlcall Plumbing
' •Rooflng
.
l Guttan
•
•VInyl Siding l Painting
oJiatlo a Pordl Dlclta

'

SELF STORAGE

---

CARPENTER SERVICE

j

HILL'S

6,b\

YOUNG'S

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, I
..Top Soli, Fill Dirt
740-992-3470 '

'.REGISTERED NURSES
· ! Veterans Memorial Hospital is
~ooking for caring, d'edicated
Registered Nurses. Contact
.Human Resources,. .US E.
:Memorial Drive, .
·Pomeroy, Ohio . ,45769,
:740~992 .-21 04
'C::/

We now have 30 NEiiV
Candle making
fragrances !II
•Birdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

(UmeStoneLow Rat")

·Veterans Memorial Hospital is
l~oking for caring, dedicated,
Licensed Practical Nurses.
Must have current Ohio license.

740.949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'

tQ

10'x~·

HOUI'I
7:00AM ·8PM
. RW(III'IO.

FrNEI~miiH

V.C. YOUNG Ill
1112-!1215 '

Pomerov, Ohio
22 yrs. Local

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6;30 P.M.
Main SL,
. Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progrwalva top line.
· uc. II 00-50 ""~

.JUn' IN TID f'ORIJI'IUI!tO UPAJR8

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

Mizway Tavern
Euchre Tournament
Final
Tuesday April 27th ·

Off Store Wide. Wilton Cake SupPlies . Merclcens Chocolate. D.J.'s
Craft Shop, 2390 Jackson P1ke .

CANDLE- MAKERS .

ROIJRT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

IF YOU LEASE OR .PURCHASE QUTRIGHT
CYLINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRS
FILL OF GAS lllf ftlll AN AGA IDENTIFIE
CAP ftfl THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF.THE PROMOTION'. THIS IS A SA"I
Of , J0 $I 00.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WIL
END JUNE 21, 1999.

POMIIOY IIICII.IIOP
.
210 COIIOIII.
..
......,, 01110 41769
PIOII-740-t.,•MO. 01 10' ..J.IIII

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

Homes. Call 74 0· 446·0175,0r

JQ4-67s-5965.

Wanted : Cars. Trucks Any Con-

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

HORSES .
Buy, SeU, Train or Boord

~
~

Free Estimates

3/11/99TFN

dition. 740·388·9062. 740-446·
PART.

III.!!J

.

Wanl To· Sell Your Stuff? Call Alv·
Let U&amp; ~II II
For You, 740-2-989.
'I '

er&amp;lda Auc1ion And

985-4422

~

ft~~~~~~~ftti!'~le~ '

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac~ 1900 East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Wantla To Buy: used Mobile

Chester, Ohio

ft.)

740·985-4180

740·742·2138

- ~u.s . Coin Shop. 151 Seconcl
AYOnue, Gaiii&gt;Oiis, 740-«11-2842.

AgricuHural Lime,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

.~ft~~~~~~~ft~~
.~

740-446-2134.
.
New To Yw Thrln Shoppo

110 · Help Wan~

Home • Assemele Products .
Easy WOrk, E11.cellent Pay. Fre·e

Do1all&amp;t Send S.A.S.E. To: Nat'l

Homeoytrker's Association, P.O.
BOx 675, Ripley, WV 25271 .
Are You Energetic, Motivated .
And CarJng? Scenic Hills Nursing
Center I&amp; Lookmg For lndividu~li
WI'IO Are Curren11~ State Tested ·
Nursing Ass.istants To Work In
Our Com~rehenslve Care Faclll~.
Please ADPIV In Person To 3l.t
Buckrldge Road , Bidwell , OH
4561. .
•
AVON ! Ail Areas! To. Buy or Se0 .
Si'lrloy Spears. J04-675-!429. . •
Bates Bros. Amusement Co. FrM
to travel. Mus1 be 18yrs. or older

Call 740·266·2950 M·F. 8cOQ·
4:30.
.

Computer Users N~eded . WoJ.k
Own Hrs. $25K ·S80K/ Yr.' 1·80&amp;·
476-8653 X nn, www.1cwp.com:
Cosmetologist Needed, Bus1ne$s
Growing , Guaranteed Waga s
Plus Mont. 740-446-7267
,

9 West Stimson, ~then&amp;

Slug&amp; Shot
Matches

Marty's
Power
Washing
Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior
15 Y rs. Expe.U.nce.

742·1701

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

- - '" ..........
...................ell
..... l:ant·DIIIp

PallO C...llracllan

.....·~·-~
-=:r.J;clalllt,.
Je1re1nY .L.

Roush

949-1701

Dave's Garage
Fonner-"Velvet Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine , Ohio

a ·uallty clothing and houst.hold
items . $1 .00 bag sale eve r ~
Thursda~. Monday thru Saturda~

9:0().5:30.

40

Giveaway

5 Ft. Bathtub. 2 Ft. Gold lavra tory-, To Give Away.:(30• J895 ·

3972.

.

6 Month Old Male Puppy(will be
big dog), to a good home to run
ioose.{!l04)675- !907.

7

Month

Old

Australia n

·

$1$Make Money!$$$ Work At

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:

740·592·1842 •

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
. · BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodiapaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auctioneering Services. Consignment auction· Mill
Street. Middleport, Tnursday, .
Ohio Llcenae 17693. 7-40-989·

10t:I!Smtlll'n

ft J.D. CONSTRUCTION

of

Furntwre. Call
{J04)882-2089. Fo&lt; More lnforma'
lion.

2526.

For Free
Program Guide
Call 992.:2727

Light Hauling

Sate . Al l Types

Antlquea . top prices paid, River·
lne An ti ques. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owntt r, 740-992·

WJOS
TV27

DRIVEWAY STONE

Truclcl-triCIDt

Driveway•,
Sidewalk&amp;, Patioo

Help Wanted

Moving

Household

773-5785 0! 304-773-5447.
RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
E"ery _Saturday Nlgh1 7 P.M.,
Crown City, 740-2-989

Do~·$

III·STAIE MOBILE
POWER WASH

Quality
110

Pt. Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity

Begin• fat w-k

• Replacemleen~.~~:·:~:~01NSI ''
412 TfN
·~rnA
L---------~~
• Roofing

Overbrook
Center,

HOUSE FOR SALE
, ~ bedroom, 2

Muon Bowlln8
Lane• '

Howard L. Wrltesel

TFN

L..-----..J~!!ll

Joseph Jacks

Se,ice•

·:

992-5776

• Plumbing

up llag. For more information call

740·992-4t97.

2623.

SYIUCUSE

Free Estimates '

BnQjps
Bralldo•er &amp; Bukhoe

'DIPOYSIG

HUIIAID'S
GIEEIIIOUSE

• Qrywall &amp;

'I

di,:v,:::o:.,:rc:,::e,::d======::t-r===?~=:==::;:===""T==:========:.

llcond Ill. p

KEJTH
MYERS
INSURED OIONEit

H'OWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Ca.ll (740) 992-3632 to Pre-register

Public ot1ce
NOTICE TO VENDORS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEM FOR MEIGS
DEPARTMENT OF HUMANl·
. . SERVICES
The
Metge
County
Ce~mmllllo1111'1 wiN IICIIve
-ltd blda In their office
loclled In the CourthouH,

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

Roofing • Repairs
.
•Coatings •
·
Sidings • Painting

REMOVAL

·s· Mile Yellow Flag Yara Sail. ·
Pomeroy-Middleport. April 30,
Mty 1. Register now SS.OO. Pick

lxdud•• B•JJU., C. rar~ium.

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Reepectl

April30tlt-May lst
Regilter Now $5.00-PJck up Flag

Une 01

Vegetable &amp; Bedding Plants
All Filii $0.50

WORYRYIIG!!!.

YflltD SALE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

TREE AND STUMP

.

~~~~for
the purchaH of 1 four·
whHI drive vehicle for the
~Malga
County
.,.partmant
of
HuiNin
Servlcee.
s 18 1 1 11ld
pee cat one or
vehicle
obtalnod
from
the INIY
Clork be
clthe
Board
of
Melg~
County
CommiHionare or the
Director of the Melga
County Department of
Human ·sarvlcoa during
normal working hourt,
Mondliy through Frlclliy,
The
.Commloalonara
rMIIVI the right to reject
any and all blda and/or
-.rt the blat bid for 1111
Intended purpoH.
Qtorla Kloea, Cia"', Malga
County Ccrnmteatonera
(4) 11, 28 2TC ·

YELLOW FUtG

Jack's Rooting
&amp; Construction

Wedlesday, AprU 28, 1999 ·
8:30 Ill • 11 :00 Ill
Sueenilg Test,
Nutrition
and
.
. Medication Ed~eationallnforn.llon

Publlc ·Notlce
·
NOTICE TO BIDDER8
VEHICLE PURCHASE FOR
DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN
RESOURCES
Sailed bide · will be
received by the Metga
County Ccrnmlealonerl In
their office loCIIed ·tn the
courthouae, 100 Eaat
Seconcl Street, Pomeroy,
00 p.m.
Ohio 457" until 1'01
on 1111 101h day
May,
1"'· and 111 ' 15 PM on that
data opened by 1111 Clerk of

Compl~te

No CredH • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

740 742-8888

!m Diabetk SuHnlng.

Public Notice
norm11 working houre,
Monday through Friday.
The
Commleelonere
reaern the right to ICcepl
or reject any or all blda.
and/or any pert thereof or
the blat bid lor the Intend·
ed purpo11. .
Metge
County·
Commllielonert,
Jan~t
Howard, Prtaldent
(4) 19, 28 2TC
Public Notice

'

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

VETERANS MEMORIAL MEDICAL -CLINIC

N

LOVE, JOHN, .
.JOE AND
SUSAN

Rutland, Ohio

, ,j

individu als may not kn ow they
Informati on about survivors
could be eli gib le for higher bc'ne- · benefits is ava ilable by callinE
fit s. And, we may not be aware o'f the Social Security toll· free numthcir eligibili'ty unl ess they con- . bcir, 1-800-772- 1213 and by visit·
tact us .
ing thi s 'website: www.ssa.gov.

Public Notice
the 24th day of May, tete,
1nd the twenty-eight (2a)
d1ya for a newer will
commence on that date. In
the ca.. ~I your failure to
anawer or otherwtu
reepond aa requoated by
the Ohio Rulea . "' Civil
Procedurt, Judgment by
default will be rondered
agalnat you and for the
rallaf demanded In the
Complaint.
·
Datld thla 15th day of April,
1M.
Angle BlaHil
.
Deputy Clerk
(4) 19, 28, (5) 3, 10, 17, 24

NOUJ Open For
Spring Sea1on ,

· II DAuto Upholsttry • Plus, lac
c

'--Social Security News: 800 Number: Information at your fingertips
BY EO PETERSON
Social Security Manager,
Athens

Yard Sale

•

·Sister - in - law's decision in namin·g baby causes family problems

Dear Ann Landers: Eight years very hard on me. Also, ,we have
ago, our first child died of SIDS. It another so n who , while he never
was a difficult time for my husband knew hi s brother, has seen pi ctures
and me, and even after all these ,of him and says prayers addressed to
years , we are not compl,etely over it. hi s brother Joseph. We believe havHere 's the prob lem . We had ing a cousin with the same name
named the baby "Jose ph ," after my · would be terribly confusing for him .
husba nd's grandfather. My busMy sister-i n· law is determined to
nand's brother and hi s wife are use that name, even though f have
expect ing soon and have learned it 's · spoken with other family members
a hoy The y rlan to give their son the about thi s, and they agre~ with me. I
; arn e name.
wo uldn '. t mind if they used it as a
I ca nn ot deal with this. The middle name, but my sister-in·law
thought of their little Joseph running 'doesn' t care for that idea. Am I out
around while 1111ne is dead would be of line, Ann ? .. . BARBARA IN

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Class A OTR
'Si ng le Driver . Late Mod el Keil·
wortns With Reefers . West Coast
Carrier. •
Class B OTA:
,
Team Straight Truck, Late Model
Freightllners With Sleepers. Must
Have Air Bra ke Ertdorsement\ ,
800 Mile Radius, Ho m~ Oellvtir·

....

Both Positions:
Atleast 25 'ltirs Old
Atleast 2 Vears Experience

SMp nerd . Spoyed , 740·i56- Good 1.4VA
6284.
Weekly Pay
Free puppies lo 8 good home ,
Golden Retriever/Cocker Spaniel
mh1 . ready to give a.way. Call
Chrlsli or Josh at 740·992·5035
after 6pm.
Sliver Sable MIKed Breed Male
. Long Haired Dog , Really Preliy
Outdoor Dog. Likes Children, 740·

388·0221 .
Lost: Cat.
Female,
Approx . 2 Years Old, Was
lng .Red Collar, Purple Name
"Velvet~ East 881hll Church
While Road "'rea, 7-40-446-9185.

70

Yard Sale
Ga Ill po II I
&amp; Vlclnlty

4 Families : Friday April 30th, Sal·
urday May 1st , 9·? BuiAvllle
Townhouse . Corner Joh nson
Ridge &amp; Addison Pike , House·
hold . · Una~s . Clothe&amp;, Children
And A.duiiSI Some Treasures For

E:ve:.::!ryo::"':::.i~-·- - - - - I
ALL 'f'lrd S.ln Muat

8o Pold In A........ ·
DfADUNE: 2:00p.m.

Health Insurance Aval)able
Work Wen With The Public

.

For Mora Information Call 800..

437-8764, H05 8:30A.M.·5 PM. :

'
Full · Time Finance Assistant U I
MIS - A. COmmunity Mentel
Health Agen cy Serving A' Three
County Area Is Shklng .Can4idates For The Poslllon Of
Finance Assistant. 11 /MIS. Ouafl·
lied Applicants Must ·Have ' A
Bachelor's Degree In AccountlQg
Or Related Field ; A Mini mum 01
Two Years Ell.p8rlence ,With Com·
p,Y.Jerlzei:t ·Accounts Pa~aJ;lle And
Cash Dlsbure;ements Processln~ ;
And Meet Agency 's Fleet In·

sutance carrier Driving. Requlro·

ment.s. Skills A'nd Abilities That
Are Preterr~ : Knowledge 01 Hl!p

And HAP Aegulallons Pretorre~ .
Governmental Accounting. Espo·

clally Mental Health Agenci es
With CMHC Software. Med lcatd
And Olher Thi rd Party Pa.ye~s
And Prior Experience With Lotus
1, 2, 3 WorkPertect 5.1, 6,0 And
Ex.perienqt With Grant FundlflQ
Sources Is Also Preferred. SenO·
Res umes To; Sharry GordoD
.
Mangaer Of Human· Res ourcea ,
Woodland Canters. 3086 Stal'e

Rooto 160, Gallloplls, Ohio 456JI,
•

EOEIAA Ernpb;er.

Phone: 740-843-5572

tho cloy boloro tho oct

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

tcUtlon ~ 2:00p.m.

Ganeral Office /Sales. E11.perl·
enced Preferred. Full -Tlma , 1011·

~ 10:00 e.m. Slturd.y.

Furnj~re , 85e Third Avenue, G~·

-.Complete Auto Seroice-

BAIKRU"CY

can relieve a
debtor offinanclalobligationo and arrange a fair .
diotriJmtlon of 818elo. DebtoNJ i1t bankruptcy inay,
keep "exempt" property for hi• or her personal
use ~ ThiS may include it cftr~ a l1&lt;~utte, clothes , ana
huuoehold goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

WilliBm Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

.. to run. Sundey

Frldoy.llondoy odttton

mediala Opening. ApPly: llle&amp;tylo

April JOth, May

lsi, 2nd , 9·? AI llpolls, ·II):2;NoPhonaCall&amp;.
•
152•1 State Route 7 Sruth. Cloth- local Trucking Com~any Seeklr\a ·
· lng , All S.lzas; VIdeos, B~o ks , OLiallfltd Truck . Drivers . GoOd
rtems , Too Many To List!
Pav Ana Benefits, Send Resume

Pomeroy,·
Middleport
l VIcinity·
All Yard Stitt llutt le Ptld In
Advenct. Otodtlnt: 1:DOpm the

To: P.O. Box 109 Jac&lt;son. Oh[o
4S640, Or Caii1 ·740·2BS-14113
To SchedUle M tnti!Vitw.
MAINTENANCE · · HEAV\'
EQUIPMENT .1Sonds Hill Coti

Company Is Suklng E~~.perlenctd
HeAvy Equipment Malntenanoe
dey btfore tht ed Ia to run , WOrker. Needs Tb l:iave Servlct·
Sunday • Mondty ldltlon· True~ And To ols. E11.perlenoe rh
1 :OOpm Frldoy;
Welding, Electrical noubleshool·
lng And Air Conditioner Service. ·
April 90, May 112, IndOOrs. behind Make Appllcallona At 38701 S.R.
Meigs Fairground . collector 160, Ha-n, OhiO; Monday Tho\t
Items, ~ o me lnterlof. glassware. Friday, B A.M. To 4:30 P,M.: Qr
Don't miss this one! 88m- ?
Call 740·384·4.21 1, To HIYt All'
pllcatlon Mailed To You. EEQ():
Apri l 30· May 1, •14 Sycamore EIT'j)kljOr.
.

51reet, Middleport, Ohio,9-5.

'

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BaJDOE

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page S.

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

Maintenance EmployH. General

Maintenance Of Low -Income
Apartment Complex. Electrical/

Rjllrlgoratlon !Plumbing IOirpen-

Olffct building· Mlnorovltlo, 500

Now taking applications for Drfv·
11 Oomlno's Pizza. G'alllpol18
Pomeroy Stores. Only, 740·

12xtt5 Moster Craft, two bodn&gt;Om,
ono balh, gao hoot, $4500 nagoU- · 740-992·t042.

446-4040

try /Cuatodtat /Groundskeeptng.

Computer A Plua. Good S.nafhs.
Appllcallono A•allable At Gallla
Mtf.', 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bid&lt;
wolf, Ohio 45814. 740·446-025t .
Apptfcallons Acceplod Unlit May
t ~. t 999. GMHA Is An Equal Op~nltyE~.

Ntedlng Cook and Bartendert

Cal: f1o10l 387.()219

Now ec.captlng applications for

night shift, Et Oolado Adult Home.

Beste first aid &amp; BC\1 required,

740-992·5039.
Earn $104 -$200 plus free portraits. lnvtta your ttlenda to your

home for a professional glamour
portnllparty. B00-426-8363.
Eeay Work! Excellent Pay! Asaemble Products at Home. Call

Toll Froo. 1·800-467-5566 E•t
12170
OPPORTUNITY FOR THE
NEW MILLENNIUM
· Gmwth Organization 6eeks
Torrnory Marketing
Manager For Local Area!!!
Guaran1eed Salary

m.soo To Stan.

Commlsston And Benefit

Program Avalable.
First Yea. PolenUal Of
$35,000 . $40.000
Seeking Positive, EnthusJaslic,
career Mlllded Individual

Phlebotomist· Immediate open·
Jngs for experianced phleboto·
mist, full Or part ttme. Responsibilities wQuld Include co llecting
specimens from nt,.~rs l ng home
patients In southeast Ohio Send
resume : The Daily Sentinel, P 0 .
Box 729·82. Pomeroy. Ohio

45769.

.

Postal Jobs to $18.35 /Hr Inc .
Benefits, No Experience . For
App. And EXam lnfor., Gall 1·800·

8t3-3585, EMI. 8828. 8AM·9PM ,
1 Days Ida,inc.

At This Oppo&lt;lunlty.
• Call For Personal
Alid ConlldentJ81Interview
1-a&amp;8-841-84S t
Vlsll Our Web Site AI
www magnoliagraphcs com

84 LUMBER
MANAGER TRAINEE
8-4 Lumber Company Is looking
For Career Minded Individuals
For Its Manager Training Pro, gram In The Jackson (0356)
Area . Manager Trainees Earn

Bo1woon $23,000 - $28,000 Per
Year Benefits Include Health And

Dental Plano. Disability And Lifo

Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel lnter\llew Mateuals
To Get .You Prepared, 740·388·

3600.
Total Tree Care Is Hiring Experienced GronP Men &amp; Top Climb·
ers, 740·339133n. '

Ing Position
Community Partnerthlp Coor·
dlnator: Applicants Must Have

A Minimum Of A High School 01·
ploma . Previous Experience In
Polley Council And Organizations
Serving Children And Families

Melntenence Worller: Applic·
ants Must Have A Minimum Of A

High School Diploma Or Equlval·

ent. Experience And Technical
Knowledge Of Maintenance, Elec·
trlcal, Plumbing And Carpentry
Preferred . Must Furnish Tools
Necesaary For General Main·
tenance Dulles A Valfd Driver's
License And Reliable Transportauon A Muat ·
Applicants For This Position May
Submit A Resume To Jeannie
Wllllams, Human Resource Manager, Access To Human Reaource Development, P.O. Box

3t8, Gallpollo, OH 4563t

The Deadline For Accepting AP·
plication&amp; Is Monday, M'ay 10,
t999 5:00 P.M For Additional In·

formation Call 740.44t ·30tO, 8:00
·5:00 P.M., Monday Thru Friday.
Acceas To Human Resource De·
veiopmenl IB An AA!EEO Em ·
plOver.

Christian woman WUI Do Child·
care In My Home Only $12 .00

Day For t Child, $20.00 Day For
2, Ect. CPR Certified, EMT Cert,
Pend ing Aefrences. 740·245·

9582

By Owner Well Maintained 4BR
B• -Level, 3BA, large Family·
Room wfFireplace, Llvlngroom,
Kitchen (All Appliances Stay),
DlningRoom, Utility Room. Central Air!Heat Pump-: large lot at
corner of Belle &amp; SandHill, 3 5
miles out. 2 Car Attached Garage, separate garage, 20X60,
3doors. palr)t room. lots of stor-

age. S160.000 shown by appt.
(304)675-5403

Electric Maintenance Service .
Wiring , Breaker 8o111es, Light F1x·
ture, Heating Systems, and Re-

For Sale By OWner: 38R , t 1/
2BA., large family room &amp; office,
upstairs totally remodeled, new
roof, guttering, water sottner &amp;
lots of extras. 2912 Anniston

model'ng (740)44t ·t401 .

Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Elderly Or Handl·

capped, 740-441-1535.

Drive, Pt. Pleasant, (3041675·
2608. Leave Message on Ma·

chM.

For Sale By Ownar : 4BR . 3000

SQuare Foot House . 4 Car Garage, 5 Acres, Very Secluded .

$199,999 (803)356·9438.

Interior &amp; eJCterior painting, lawn
service, haul trash, junk, demotion, house, bam, shed, 591·7617.

740-386·8041

0459 .
Lawn Mowing Service, Small
Garden Tilling, Clean Out Garage

and Other Odd Jobs. (304)675·
3528.
Painting, All Around Handy Mall!

Call Bob, 74Q.669-t803.

S&amp;S Lawn Care, Commercial &amp;
Residential, Free Esllmatesl 740·

44t-Q318

Will Do Lawn Mowing, Gallipolis,
Spring Valley Area , Dependable

CaiiTim, 740.446-8340.
Will sit with the elderly, by the
hour or weekly, reasonable rates.
10 years eJCperlence 740-949-

2543.

FINAN CIA L

210

HOME FOR SALE
WALNUT PLACE
SUBDIVISION,
SYRACUSE, OHIO

992·6810 evenings

HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER:
2 Story, Near Downtown on 8th
Street • Call from 8 lo ' 11 PM .

(304)662·3652.
Bestored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres, V1llage Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint-

ment, call740·992-5696.
Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. 4 Bedroom, 2 1f2 Batha,

Business
Opportunity

Three bedroom home wllh Iota of
closet space, close to school, on
corner lot. storage building. one
bedroom rental home Included,

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

'740.992-llt54.

recommends that you do busi· •
ness with people you know, and
NOT to sand money through the
mail until you have investigated
the offering

Three bedroom, half basement
home, country setting In Pomeroy,

AREA PEPSIICOI&lt;E.ROUTE
30 Now Machines Wlih High
Profit locations! Earn 100K Yearly

t-600·387·94t8

nowty remocrelad. asking $37,500,
740-992-7745.

Plu,a Oeposll, Retrences. 'Avail·
able May tSI.740-448-8t89.
Nice 3 bedroom mobJie home, In

MiddlepOrt, 011., no poll, 740-992·

5658.

Loan, 1·800·383·6862.

Avofl. VENDING Rio • Soli By 5I L-'--'--'--;;,;,;-~---1 10 ·20 Locations $4K -$1 OK.
Hillcrest two bedroom mp·
$4,000 +IMo Income. Finance
740-992-5039.
Avail Toll Free t-88&amp;-538-9508.
1974 Freedom 12x65 3 Bed·
For Salel The Jumbo! State Route
1ooms, 1 Bath , Remodeled ,
141 . $125,000.00 OBO 740-448·
Throughout, New Hot Water
3500

VENDING: Lazy Peroons Dream.

Fe~ Hours • Good $ Price To
Sell Free Brochure. 800 -820·

6762.

230

Profenlonal

ServIC8l

highway. $25,000 (304)675-5064.

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View, Gallla County,
$32,000 More Acreage AvaUable ,

740·388-81378. '
Apple Grove Memorial Garden Is
now offering a limited time spe·
clal on Cemetery lots, from April

t , t999, 10 July 1, 1999. Buy 3
lois, get the 4th tree , Special
Sale: Companion and Individual

Gravo Markers. (3041576·2779.
Approximately 30 Acres, 5 Milas

Restricted Residential lota lo·
cated A CQmfortable Distance.

From Gallipolis. Double Wfdoa
Ara .Permitted. 'Leave All Your
Caras In Town. Buy Yourself A
Piece 01 Ground• lots Start At
$8,750. 5% Down Land Contract
Now Available . Call For Free

Maps. t-80Q.2t3·8365.

BIIUNER LANO
740-441-1482
011111 Co.: 68 +Woodad Acrea

On Williams H!&gt;llow $40,000 Cash
Price. Just Off SR 2t8, Friendly
Ridge Rd., 15 Acres $14,000,
Public Water, City Schoolol
Teens Run Rd. 10 Acres $10,000
·$1 ,000 Oown + $t32/Mo.

Molgt Co.: Pick 01 ThO Woakl
Oyosvlfla, 10.5 ACieO With
Stream $8,5001 Danville, Briar
Ridge Rd . ·7 Acres $t3.ooo. on
SR 325. Ntco 9 Acrao $t7 ,ooo.
Public Watorc Rutland, Whites Hln
R~ .• 1t Acres St4,000 Or 9 Acr·
os $12,000, Public Water.
Call NOW For Fr11 Mapa +
Owner Financing Info. Take 1Q%
Off List Price On Cuh Buyaf

Tank, 50 Gallon Porch, Fridge,
Stdro, Air, Undarplnnlng, &amp; Wolf
Heater, Call740-2511-e87t .

1982 Fleetwood 14Ft x 70Ft,

$9,500.00, 2 Bdrms, 2 Baths, CIA,
All Elect., 2 Porchos, Very Good
condlllon 740·446·6t57 After
4.00 Pm.
1992 f 4x70 Oakwood 2 Bed·

740·992-7201.
Apartment•
tor Rent

410 HouHalor Rent
2 Bedrooms, Refrlfilerator, Stgve
Furnished, St50 Dtpcolt, 58 M!lf
Creole, Gal1fl&gt;ollo, 740-44&amp;-3870.
3 Bedrooms Near Holzer Medical
Center, No Pet1, S6001Mo., Plul

Ulllfttoo, I Oepool1, Roforoncoa
Required, 740·448-0885, After 5
P.M.
'-------:--:--:--:758 First Ave., 1 Bdrm., t Both,

frlgarator And Stove Included,

3 Bedroom Home, 2906 Mtadow·

brook Drive. Call (3041675-4360,
after 4PM
3 Bedroomt, 2 ia1h Rench HouM
7 V.aro Old, 28•30 'Attached Go·
rage! 12M24 Building, earn &amp;
Trac or Shod, 89 tl2 ~eros Or
Will Sell Houoo &amp; Loll Molgo Co.
740-992·3537.
3 Bedrooms, Set On 3 Acres,
large Rooms, 3 Bay Garage,

Close to School And Buckeye
"'""'· $69,000.00. 740-379-2tt2.
3 BR, 29A, 2 Car Garage. t Aero.
A Muot Su. Lotart . (3041882·
35t8.

car After 4 P.M . 740-245-t302

LOW lnterolt Ra181 For tal Time
Buyers, Llmltod Tfmo Avafloblo,
800-383-8882.
Good ooteotlon of uood
Wilt\ 2 or .3 bedrooms.
$3985. Quick dotlvory. ~-.-,,,;
38!5-9821 .

Make 2 Payments No Payment

After 4 Years, 304·735-7295 .

14H.P. Dixon Aiding lawnmower

Cftan. EHicfent, 2BR . Roforonc·
os, Deposit, No Pots. (3041675·
:.5t;:62:.·;;.;
· ------Ono Bedroom Houoa In GaiHpoiiS,
References Required, No P1t1,

S3501Mo .. + $300 Dapool1, 7•o441-1308.
'-'--'------:--:-:-::-

Throe bedroom hOUit In Mlddlo·
pon. no peta, 740-992-7853.
Your Home II Juot A Phont Colt
Away. 3()4,73&amp;-7295. ·
Mobile Holl!l8
Rent .

•or
''

-:-t":Bo~d-:-r-oo-:m:-::Tr-:al~le-:r-:S~ac-:lud~od~Lo:':"t,
BkJwel JPoner Area, $375/Mo., AH
Utillttel InclUded, 740.ol-it-Q720.
12•85 trailer In Tuppers Plafnl,
onlo, three bedroom, air, w11hlr
1 dryor hook up, no poll, goodh

$200.74 por month with s1150
down. CBII1-800-837·3238. .

ltaao roqutrld, 740·965·3522 af·
..:.*;;.;8;;.;'00pm.;;;;...:.·_ _ _ _ __

reterenc11, depoalt &amp; 6 mont

'

Apt lor Reht; Water And Trash
Paid, No Pets. In Gallipolis. 740·

388-1t00

.

2 Bdrms., CIA, Gas Heat. Washer
Dryer Hookup, 1 Mile from Town,
No Pets. After 5:00Pm 740-446-

74511.
2 bedroom apartment In Middle-

pen, wo pay water, oewer &amp; •ash,
you pay gas &amp; oloctrlc. $200 ~or
month, $tOO deposit, 740·992·
7808.
2 Bedroom Apartment, AdJacent

To University Of Rio Grande
Ca"'9U8, 740·245-511511.
2 Bedroom Apartment, Rio
Grande Area , Close To Collage,
$350/Mo , Includes All Utilities,

Deposit Required, t-888·840·
052t.
2bdrm. apt I ., total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room

faclllllea. c1011 10 IChool In town.
Appllca11ons avaltabta at: VIllage
Groan Apta. 149 or calf 740·992·
37tt .EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Waolwood Drive
from $279 10 $358. Walk to shop
&amp; mo•los. Call 740·446·2568.
Equal Houafng Opportunity.
Beautltul Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Ronl &amp; UtiiiUea, Inter·
view, References, No Pita, Leua,
Depoall, Non Smoker&gt;: Avollable,
4/t51991n City, 740-446-38&amp;1. .

and Whho, ahor1 hair. omafl

While,

$150aa.

~rtod.

Peek•A•POO,

Old St5o cau After 7 P.M. 740·
367.()168.

FARrJ SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESIOCK

610 Farm Equipment

AMAZING
METIISOLISM
Broakthroughlll Looo 10·200

7t7 N.H Slloga Chopper With 2
Row. corn Hold, $1,800.00. Afoo,
N.H. Sllag·e Blowar, St ,ooo.oo.
740-843-2265.

Pounda Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor Reoommended Free Sam·

pleo pa11740-44t·t992.
Baby Bod, Droning •Table,
·stroller, HighChair, and Car Seat.
(304)675-4548.
Beanie Babies For Sale, 740.245·
5+43.

Complete RCA 511011118 DISh Sys·
tam, 740-4411-7055.
CPOLDQWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To vour Furnace. 3 Ton lnataHad
$t,500: 2 t/2 Ton $t,350; 2 Ton
$t,250: Tho AbQ,o Includes Nor·
mal lnatallatlon. lllbu Don~ Call
Ur W.llolh t.o&amp;or 740 448 1308,
Or t·800-29t.Q098.

Cub Cadot t85 ,Low Boy 80'
Deck, NeW Engine, Clulch, PP,

For Sale: IHI12' Disk, Brffffonlt2'
Cultipackor, !loth E•coffonl. Goh
1' 920 Forage Wagon . Tim-Rock
Farm.(304)675-4308. ·
F.ord ,Oyna Balance Mowing Ma-

chine, Series 5t5 7 Foot Cut;
Massie

Ferguson

Model

12

Llve•tock

JET
AERATION MO'IORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Robulh In Stock.
Call Ron E.ans, t-800-537-9528. ·

Christy's Family Living, apar1·

730 Van• l4-WD8 .• •·
··go Chevy Astro van, all wheel·:

drive. PW, POL, goOd condition ~
S5500: '72 Mack truck. 237 an- .,
glne, runs good, good tires, '
$2000: 740.742·2675.
'

•e.ooo :

t994 4X4 Geo Tricker,
Miles, 4 Whlll Dr, Great Condl- .

lion. $4,200.00. 740-4&lt;16-8172, Qi740-25H25t .
.
1995 Ford Wlndstar van, 3.8L. V:
8 au1Dmattc, ai', cruflo, ti~ whHI,

4•HIFFA Fair Lambs; Quality ond
reasonaly Prlcodl Phono: (7401·
2SB-t330
7 year old Getting. Part Walking
HorH. (304)1578-3343. .
A.P.H.A. Yearling Flfiy; 2 Ylar Old
Filly, Exceflen1 Bloodllnea, 2 Year·
ffng Pony, 740-388.()321 .
Alpine Goats 1 Nanny &amp; 2 Kids.

11181Lfltl
HlrioY.EMclllon1
Low - · ·Condf11onf
Too Mucll
To
$t0.800.110. 740-441,.()872.
1995 Harley Oovldaon t200.
Sportstar. Excellent CondiiiO'f ..

.

new In December '88. Excelltrtt
oondltiOn. (304)8ll5-3165.
' •

;;,;H;;,;on;;,;d;;,;a;;,;;,;H:;.o;.ll.:;•;.:,:;.M;;.o;.;to:;;r;_S_co-o-t+e; ~

250cc Stareo &amp; Trunll:, All OriQI~
nat, Very Few Mide, Prtflr to..)

Trade For 4 Whoafor 01 Equal ,
Value, 740-245-0485.
'' .

750

Bosta &amp; Motor•
for Sale
, .

South Third Street, Mfddleporl.'
740-992·7727.

5084

Paula L. Sayre, Portlard. Ohio,
55845 S. R. t24, 740-643-5132.

lineal for mora Information Call:

(304167!5-5733.

Nice New &amp; U11d Furniture And

Furnished Upatafro 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Cloan, Ro1orencos, &amp; Oopcolt Required, Ulllflfea Paid, 74Q,
44t5-15t9.

NoW gutanU &amp; ~ parta. D I ',
Fair, Pigs For Sa to: 9 wko old, R A~1o, Ripley, WV. (3041372· ·
35·•5 lb. reedy to go, $50 . · 3833 or t-800-273-9329.
•
(304)895-35t5.

Condition!~- 740-37~t8.

aPartment• at VIHage Manor and

Appnancto, 740.446·1004, 740·
446-4039 Anyttno.
Nordic Trocl&lt; Log Shapor, Now

Owner Moving. New Queen Size

4 Ploco Whl1o Wlckor 'Bedroom
Sot seoo.oo 740-446-3664.

North 3rd Ave ., Middleport, 2
bedroom, unfurnished apartment,
deposit &amp; references, 7-40· 992·

Ot65.
Now Taking AppflcaJiono- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, lncludea . Water

Sewage, Trash, $31 5/Ma., 740·
446.()1108.
One Bedroom Apartment In Pt.
Pleasant. Furnished. very Nlt:l

tach8d Garage, Rodney Area,
$365/Mo .. Dtpoa~ &amp; Good Ro1or·
280t,

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

, _ Dfnicl8poc1of

PRO, ll, suPPLY

Large Squaro Bales Of Good Hay

And Sorvfct Supply. We Sol1
Whofoufe To Tho Public. Wo
S1ock Janltrol H.. tlng And Coo~
lng Equlpmon1, Duc1·\W~rk. Roolatera, And. Related Materials For
Yqu To lnatall vour, own or We

can Furnish A Llll 01 Dealara .To
Install For You. If VOlt Don't Call
Us, wa Both Losol 553 Jackoon
Pfko, 740·448·8308, 800·281·
0098.
Short Bedllner For Small Truck
$60, 740 448 05t8.

l\t Beanies: Chrlo1mu Boar,
Duck·Cat·Bird·JIIck·Pounc•·Ear·
ly. $tO for amoli on01. $75 for
Chrtllmu-. (304)875-1311.
blacll cuohlon, 740-992·5053. ·

'TWin Rlwrs Towet" now accepting

Upatelra, Thrte p:~oom Apartmsnl
At 851, S.cond Awanua, Galllpo·

Building

&lt;;..;.n

wui

AKC Shotllaa, sable/ whHo, lour

470

Fenced · Yard,

Nice

513·85t·0100, Or 740·
441·3898.

THANSPORTAT I Gr~

710 Auto• for Sale
t979 Camaro, Auto 350. Good
Engine/&amp; Body. Interior noeda
. work. Exterior "eed1 painted.

have paint. $t500. (3041875·

36112.

aabfol whfto, oyos IIOUilil. $200
each, ahota, 8 months old; 7jjj0-

698·1085.•

.CI-IARLE5 .. NOW,CAN I
'BE ON YOUR TEAM?

I TOLD 'I'OU, RERUN I
'1'00 1RE TOO '(OUNG

Pus
Pus
Pus

NEXT 't'EAR
6E TOO
OLD..

I'LL

l-

-

31 -onlll
33 8uckilo'
38-degree
40 Lone
Rotnger'a

-

companion

'---

--~

-h -· .,,.. ____ .. -

- ..

.

..

.

":"

per_lod of

41 -

42 Puworlul

~:

43 YDIWIMCI

mlrw
44 Galop, e.g.
48 Paint~
47 "-k(lor)
48 Thll, In
Qallcta

110 Pollee ""'-

saam.u..aunt

. 53 a-tio81
IUIII1

CELEBRitv CIPHER
by

Lui• Campos

.............,..,__ ................ _ ... _
Each ~!inti In the cipMr l1lndl for W'IOitW TOdly"ll cW; K ~ C '

~Ciphor-

' ZNI

ZNI'HG

ERNV

J p p

VLGR

SPJKE

IILG

SNNE

RJOGC . AR

LJ WG

JHRNPX

IIILGO.'

FGIIIIIAR .F

0 .· X .

NPX
ZNIH

JYIIGH

UJPOGH '

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I've never been 111rough psychoanalysis . I solve my
problema with the plc1urea I make. • • Steven Spielberg
.

.....
WOlD

I
I

RYPUYS

I I 1I I
2

RECIP

I PI

I

I~

E V 0' T Aj•

I
1: :~

"I've come to the conclu·
sion, " the husband stgheq, "that
life is like a ten speed btke .
,--::--::-::-::-:-:-:---.Most of us have gears we - · - ·

1
I• 1
•
•
5

•

6

I
.
.
It-"""'TI--,1':;'7-,-;Ie&gt;TI--.1--1-.NEZFYR

2omplete the chuckle quoted

_
•
•
•
•
•
•
by f•lling In the m1ssmg words
..__,_ _.__..__..._....._ , you develop from step No 3 ~elow

SCI&amp;M liTS ANSWHS
Don't (tl Sllllf by ltifh prict!l
Sloop the dmsl(lrd se&lt;1ion.

eam.,.,. &amp;

790

Guilty • Junto - Vouch - Jnbom - BIG HIT
can be welcomed by others even rf you aren'l
witty. Be a good listener and you will be a BIG HIT.

You

·- . - -----

I MONDAY

:1

Motor ·Homee

t967 Solf·Con1afnad Camper~
Sl11p1 8, Microwave, Air Condl· :

APRIL 261

,:

·.
•"

toner, New Awning, Excelllnl ~

1

t968 Paco Arrow Homo. ~
11. Lo.-dod, Like Now, tae.ooo;.J·
(304)675-3787.
. ,,.:
23 Ft Wlldorneu. Will

se\1 :

· ·~1 '·
Truck Campor 6 Ft. Sftope t~;
Stovo, llefrlg., Furnace, Dlnana, ~
lbflol, AN Antund Good COncll1iorl, t
$250.00. 740-245--~ '~
Chelp. 7*-2SM574.

SFRViCES

610 '

ltOIINt

lmprovt~~~~ents

'

..

t·I00-2i7-G578. 11DQ-

·-Pfoo!'.o!ll.
Applfo- Ptr18 And - : AI
Name lflrldi Over 25 v.are Exporlonco All Work Guarantea4,
Fronch Clly Maytag, 740-Ue.
rnll.
.
ClC Gonoraf Homo Main}
1ononct· Painting, vlnyllldlnt.

wfndowoabl
---~lind-. I

1995 Buick LoSabre Ouotom 4 carpentry, doort,
oooro, Blue Loadod , 740·812·
7512.
froo otlmalo coli Cha1, '7
63113.
•

Wtt!

Lfvlnfto1on't Saoimotit
Proo ng, an booarnen1 ropttl ·
dono. fr11 oo111..teo, llle11
.
guarantOo. 12yro on lob oxporh
onco. (304)e85-3187.

Rnldentlll or commercial

naw Mrvfot or

r~plfra.

Maolor

cenaed electrician. Ridenour

Eloctrlcol, WV000306 304-875·
t78e.

•

,.

ASTRO·GRAPH
Tuesday, April 27, 1999
.•. In the year ahead, Lady Luck
-could play a role in the backaround
'by dealing ou1 aces for you at cruclill
times when you really need 1hem.
Play your cards risht and you'll so
.far.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Should you get sinsled out today to
perform 1 special task 11 work, do,.o
wlllinsly and dili&amp;endy. Somo1hina
Jood is in ·s1ore for you if you handle the assipment well. 'J'ryina to
P."tclt up 1 broken romance? The
AJtro-Graph MIIIChmtiker can help
you understand wha1 10 do to' mate
lhc n:letionship worlc Mall S2.1S 10
~atchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
1&gt;.0., Box 17S8, Mumoy Hill Station,
New York, NY l(liS6.
_ OID.tJNI (May 21 -June 201 Try lo
break up your routine 1 bit today 111d
indulge in oome fun activitiea if you _
can. In reality, 1hia re&lt;reational
tnather will mate you m&lt;l(e prochlctivt! In lhc days to come.
,. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Let ,
your imaaination have me n:ip .
1oday and you COttld come up wi1h

some new ways to make the most of
your financial base. When you aet a
aood Idea, ac1 on i1 promptly.
LEO (July 23-Aus. 22) Good
1hincs happen for you today · when
you mate those you h4ve 10 deal wi1h
feel completely 11 ~ and accepted
•for who lhcy are. They'll respond to
you in kind.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi. 221 Give
, priority today 1o molten which can

make or

save

you money,. because

you are likely to be lucky 11 dlis
moment inlitite wi1h issues1hat deal
wi1h your financialafftlin.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Don't
be afraid 1o assume command today
if associates or companions look to
you for ICIIIIenhip in involvemen1S of'
mutual cottC«n. They know you'll
hllldle 1hinp bell.·
SCORPIO (O.:t. 24-Npv. 22)
ThrouJh 1 very unique channel,
somethina benerK:ial could develop
for you today, 10 be alelt. Thla mi&amp;hl
Involve a close , family member or
even a diawu nolative.
SAO!TrAltiUS (Nov. 23, Dec.
ll) Where- you JO and wha1ever

you do, yo~'re likely 10 be 1he center of attention today. This is because'
your wann, channinaself will be evi·
den1, matins you popular . amona
your peen.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
11te success you scelt can be y011n
today if you 'no detennined cnouah 10
reach YOIJr aoal• in spite of lhc odds.
Thnadousness breW down hard
walls.
AQUARIUS (1111. 20-Feb. 19)
Plans that are well-formulated now
can produt:c benefi11 later, so when it
comes to .imponantluues, like 1he
lon1ranae view of1hln11 rather 1han
the most expedient' .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Pay
heed 10 your lnslinc:ll1oday and don't
11ke lhinas 11 face value, espe&lt;:lally
in business dealinss. Mut:h can be
profitably gained if you listen 10 your

•
0

•'
Un&lt;Jerccwr

,."

•
•

ARIBS (March 21 -April 19)
Because you have lhc iobllity to see ·
bolii sides of M opposih&amp; issue, your
JudJftiCnt is quite keen today. Base
your actions on your imJM:Ossions and
nor on what Olhen think.

-'

' '

·'

.

inner voice.

• lr
_,...~

241vy=
unfv
25 8tofy
nil
'27 liMn•
dellr.
21Atl211 Akle: abbr.

'.
LosAngeoo

.

..

20 C:O..IIte

A PRINT NUMBE~ED
Qr tETTE~S IN SQUA~ES

During Winter. $tt,500. (304)578- ·
2345.
'

448.0S70~

Now Tlroo, 33,000 Mlteo, 42 Mlloo
Por Gallon, $5,700, QBO, 740·
44t-Q1t8.

•I I-lAVE A 6L.OVE ,

cenent Cohq,ltlon. Stored lnalde" '

-.ad 1875. Clfl 24 lh. [7401

1995 Toyola Tercel Automatic,

Eut

t997, 28FI. Torry Camper. Air,;
Hoot, Awnfn9., Eloc~lc JaCk. Ea-' •

Loc11 retertno11 furnr1hed. Ea·

1995 Chavy Corsica, Au1om.
Trant., A/C, Antllock Brakoa,
Good Condition. $4,500 .00 oeo
740-379-9t4t .

-

23---E-

11 Huntcarw

Equipment

IIAIEIIENT
WATEIIPIIOOFIIO
Uncondfllonal llltlfmo gutran1oo.

I

Nortlo

2•
3•
Pau

voice
22 Pronunc:l8llolr'
nwk
•

equipment

COIIIIIC*'
ITite1 Central fiOII*
11 Ukil tho

Or-...uc.r

Camping

760

,_MOO

1ti0·11111CARS
lmpounda, .Aild Tox
Repo'o. for Llollngo Calf 1-800·
319-3323 E111. 4420.

Pollee

1992 Pontiac Grande Prix, C1ll

3
Sltttlhertf Puppteo,
Bo Largo Oogo, 150 080; N.IO,
Long Halrod Daohound, t 112
V.oro Old, Malo, $50, To Qualify
Homo Only. 74Q-44to.()118. '

Auto P8rta &amp;

~~ Cll: (7401 ~ 18 12112

'JIII1·50S5,

Pet• for Sale

malea, shots, champion blood·
~noo, 3 months &amp; 5 months, $2110
each; AI&lt;C Cotllea, three mates,

Warnlf,
l&lt;ltche~.

Fertlllzar

560

Block, brick, sower plpao, wind•

740-385-4367.
Houoo Wl1hlri t5 Mfloo Of Borg

650 Seed &amp;

Rio Grande , OH Call 740·245·
5t21.
.

SUpPlies

ween Athena and Pomeroy, c1U

to Rent

For Sale. 740-379-2639.

1988, Cttebrlly. R- Good, Nlol
Work Car. 158,000 mllot, V·l
/lit ·11 ,500. (304)675-11084 . •
1992 Honda AccOrd, LX, 2 Ooor
Coupo, !5 Spood, 215K, $3,750
080.740-3811-9878.
'

111, Next To. Library, $350/Mo. ,.
Pl.. Depolf1, l'io PIJI, ca11 Deb·
bfe Or Judy N. 740-448-7323.
AKC Fftg~tttNI! lioidon Re1r,_
2 Yoaro Old, For Stud .StNico,
460 8piCI for Rent ·
Papers Av1llabte, Contacl Mike
Brower At 304· 773· 50tt Or
Moblfo homt alto avollable bot· ~Mol-.
Wanted

&amp; Grain

Farm, 740-440·111)4 Or 740·441·
0450.

owl, lintels, etc. Claude Wlntera,

Two bedroom apartment In Po·
moroy, no poll, 740-1192·5658.

Hj~y

programing, calf SM-*'2123.

550

tcoppod. eOH 304-875-li87D.

1\oo Young Poll Bull.' 0na Bflcll,
Ona Rod. 740-25H51 0.

Gran Hay At Delano Jackaon

Free lnatallatlon, 3 montha free

Floon, CA, 1 t/2 kttl, Fully Car·
potod, l'llfo, No 1'111, l,euo Pful
Security Dtpoolt lloqulrod, 740•
.we-3411, 7~10t
appflcatlono for 18A. HUO oub·
oldlad opt for -rly and hind·

AccenoriM
•• •
Budgol Priced Tranamlufon,.;
and Engtnao, All TYPOI, Access·
To O•or to,ooo Tranomlufono,
eve Jotnto, 740-245-5677.

640.

' PIIIMEITAR

We Are Prolesaion•l .lnstallatlon

Newly RomQdOiod t BR Apt.
Primo Downtown GaiHpolfo Loca·
lion . No Pols. $300. + Utllltloa,

760

Angus Buff for Salol (7401 245·

Fair Plga,•740-2ol5-9047.

EAGLES,
NATE'?'

OUl'_ P!&gt;YCHO CO'CH

DDE5N'T LET U5 TALl&lt;.
TO fLAYERS ON THE
CIT HEll. TEAl'\\ IF r
IALK TO YOU, JC'LL
BE BENCHE0 1

1894 ~our Wlnna Fling, 14', 1t5:
hp.. $5500. Fun 1&gt;011. Sot at 3811

Reasonable, ·740-245-0485.

(7401·245·5872 or (7401 387,
0563

Lt FE
ON THE

liking 18500. 740-742·230t.

New chill of ctr&amp;wers, new vanity
driller with mirror, all mahoganyo,
Battlecreek Trimcycle, Ilk• new,

plus Waohor &amp; Or'fer. $350. per

"'"''~ -"-

1991 Stratal with 120 hp. Evlnrude, loadtd,· e~ecellent condition,

DeluMI Ono Bedroom Apt. Con-

month. Non-Smoking . Phone

N-1 ·1-\1&gt;- I

...----..,

Motorcycles

Like Now Spalding Pool Tablol
$500.00 Phone (7ol0l 441-0888

Fair Pigs for Solei EMCellont Blood

TJIE BORN·LOSER

aaklng 1

Arlie Cat 454 Boarca1. Bought

9033

.'*'· ..

8, Rear Air. St2,000. (304)117$· ·
371fT.
•

menta, tlome &amp; 1raller rentals,
740·992-451•! apartmentl avail·
IIIli,, furnished &amp; unlurnllhod.
venient, Private Entrance. Cen·
tral Air and H111. Dishwasher

{)IN~

Y· :

3 Veer Old, Chi·Anguo Bull 740·

~. 740-446-7421.

IS ON MY STtAK!

. A'-~

1992 Dodge Cara•an, 4 CyHndorj:
Auto., NC, t08,000 MI., $2,750.110 ·
090. 199~ Dodge Cargo VarY :
$900.00 080, 740-2SB-t233.
•

$6,000. (304)675-3824.

4·H &amp; FFA Club Plgo, And Round
Bates Of Hay For Solo, 740·36,_.

'

2312.

2 yearling Charlala bulla, 740·
742·t903.

We.&amp;

Pau
Pau
Pau

.,._of

21

121ncoheo...t
13T.,..

7Noo ........

By Phillip Alder
Many times I've heard less expe·
rienced defenders, after wmmng a
trick but giving away the contract,'
explain, "I was sure declarer would
guess correctly." Peihaps declarer
would have founil the winning play,
· but why should he always be so
clever? Sometimes he will go wrong
In this deal, you are sitttng East,
looking at your hand and the dummy,
North. Defending against four
spades, your partner leads th~ club
I O· jack, two, seven. Declarer continues wtth the spade ace and anqth·
er spade to your ktng . What wo~ld
you do now?
'North's JUmp to three spades
should show · game-forcmg values
wtth exactly three spades. With four
trumps, you either raise immedtately or make a strorrg jump shift.
If I had been West, not liking to
attack a suit bid by an opponent, I
would have led the diamond five,
giving away the contract immedtately.
East must count tricks . He has
won a spade trick, and knows he can
give West one .. but only one --'club .
ruff. (Sou1h is known to have five·
spades from the bidding.) Therefore. ·
the defenders probably :ilso need two
diamontl tricks. This makes the best
play clear: East must switch to a,low
diamond.
If South puts up the king, he
makes the contract. Yet why should
he? If Wesl had the diamond ace, he
wouldn't have led a diamond at trick
one, but if he had the diamond
queen, he might well have done. So,
I think South would probably misguess, playing his three.
After winning with the queen,
West relums a diamond to his partner's ace, and the club ruff defeats
four spades.
Make declarer find the winning
play.

Club Cob Full Seat, "E•collon1
Cond)llon, $tt,OOO, 740·379, .

740

Far aale- uaed Snapp11
mower, 2e•, graas pick
able. May be lOin 11

Prcble1111? Need 1\Jnod? Call1ho
pfeno Dr. 740 4~8 4525

t993 XLT For&lt;! Camper Spoclaf'

condition,

54~....
6 CrOwn

-Make him
find the play

loaded, 302, Double Gal Tank,. .
Running Boars. BumP.er Roda •

excellent

.....

3 Cut

Opening lead: • 10 .

1993 Ford E•tondtd Cab 250 '
1\Jmo Oloatl, $t5,600, 740-448· :
9317.

Oak C8ttla Racks Painted Black.
Fila '871&amp; older Chi' 8' Bad. E•·
collon1
Condition.
$tOO.
(304)875-5373.

4 Year Old Paint Golding, $1 ,000,
740-367-722t .

Grubb's., Pla_no· tuning &amp; repairs.

U
2•
4•

1969 Chl'rofet Trude, Low Mffoo.
740-446-17.96.

1893 Chevy Conversion Van ,

......

..... 8 2

•QI432

Vulnerable: North-8outh
Dealer: South
:

llciatl!

1985 S.T. E•tond Cab, 4·Whoef·
Orlvo. 2.8 5 Spotd. Good ~
1999 Rockwood Pop-up Camper..
Elrcolfenl Shepo. (304)675-5137. ~

at:-'
lkynl'-'•

• A 7

l

720 Trucb for Sale

Square Bailor, 740-25e-6298.

Clutch Shaft. (7401367-7129. .

Stroot, Pomeroy. Phono 74QI·982·
2975. Brond -dock.,

I

mlln. Cill tftor 5:30 (3041 875· .
47&amp;4, $1200.00

lt0,500, 740-742-3013.

630

&amp;

Kadlddll

• 7 2

tQ7854
• 10

t978 Alrd Bmnoo. 740 448 65611.-• :

5x8 tin bed ullf1)' troffer wl1h sldta,
740-992:4t1# aftor Sprn. '

IOCII1 74().-4~8

5:00Pfll.

matron.

Aeglstered Wolf Pup, .. Monthl

Woterilnt Spacial: 31~ 200 PSI
$21.95 Per tOO: t' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per tOO; All Broil Com·
pn111ion Ffttlngo In SIOtll
RON EVANt INTIIIPRI!IES
. . . . . Ohio, 1·800-537-9528

Now t9 99 t4•70 throe bedroom,
·
Includes 6 montho FREE lot rent.
Includes wolher &amp; dryer, okfrtlng,

deluxe atepa &amp;!Jd aetup. Only

Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

Roomy 2 Bedrooms WUb At·

420
:r.~ -,"

540

Wanted· good u11d futon with

Latge White Colonial Hou11 At

Dog Obodfonoe Cia'u oo Now
Forrrllng Tho Right Paw Training
Contor, 740·448-t684 For lnfor·

Black&amp;Whl1t,
Gold&amp;Whfto,
S200oa. (304)875-1073.

Hookup, $275.00 Rent With Dt·
poo~. 740-446·3481 Or 740.UB·
0101 Altar 5:00PM.

Tara Apta., 3 ' Bdrma., 2 Full
Batho, A/C, Accooo To Pool. 740·
448·3&lt;18t Or 740-448-0tOt ,t.11er

9667.

740-446-38&amp;1.

and Clean. No Pots. Phone
(304)87!5-t:lle.

Newly Renovated , W81her Dryer

1992 14x70 Redman trailer,· 3

Grande Area, $33,000, 740.245-

&amp;:00 p.m. 740·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner.

• 8 6 4 3

84 Monto Carlo 305·V8. 80,00

JaCk Ruasoll temale puppy, brOWn

Oak Butfet Fainting Couch,
'Dresser, Etc. No Dealers Please,

Reference Required 740·448· .
0006.

bedroom, 1'!&gt;ath, fully carpoltd,
storm - · $12.500, 740-742·
2795a1tor3prr.

3 e.fdroom Home 1 ·AI:.fl Lot, Rio

Antique•

1897 Ford Xlll)tre, 4 cylinder•• ~• •
dual olrblga, o•oelten1 condl1fon,
niuot Mill $6900 080, 740.949-'
10\4.
.•

Eut
• K3

Bfchon FriM ,AKC 1 Ftmalo, t
Male. Dtlfvory, 740·3792t!'9· f40-3?HOI1,
CFA Roglatalod Himalayan Stll
Point Kfnanr. Wormod. Liner
Tratnocf, 740-387-7705.

Reglororo,d Puppleo: PoktneM,
BlackiY#hl1o, · $250oa. Shi1ZII,
Gold&amp;Biac~. $300oa. Miniature
Shauzo•t, B)ack&amp;S11vor, Salt&amp;
Peppof, $250oa. Unreglotorod:
Sholto.., 8fack1Whlte, Soble&amp;

Except Electric. Galllpolla Farry
Area . $250 month + Oepoalt.

REAL ESTATE

$77,000. (304)675-2533.

Vlno Stroot, Call 740·446·7396,
1-888-818.()128.

t Rid llnltot •'o

•KJtl5
West
• J 74

• A 10 t 5
t K 3

t124 E. Main Street, on Rt. t24.

Modern t BR All U1flltfos Paid

roomo, 2 Full Ba1hl, All Eloc1rlo
With Heat Pump, 740·44HI959;
740-379-2796

1 t/2BA., Family Room, Go·

Washers, drvers, relrlgeratora,
ranges , Skaggs Appliances, 76

EEK&amp;MEEK

Changer, Fully Loadodl WHI Tako
Pay Off, 740-446--4548.

Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a .m. 10 6:00 p.m., Sunday t :00 .to

380

TURNED OOWN ON
· SOQIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Foo Unfeas We Wlnf
t-888-582·3345

1992, 28X52 DoubloWidt In
Aoh1on Area. 3BR, 2BA. on t/2
Aero Lot. Price Reduced.
(3041576-2993.
1994 18•80 Sunshln• Mobile
Homa, Three Bedrooms. TWo
Bathroome, Walk-In CIOoall, UtiH·
ly Room. Eloc1rk: Hoa1. Pump, Ro-

OOOD USEO APPLIANCES

A!NFM CO Pflyor, 58,000 rrllteo.;
St0,800. Col (304)875-7tt8.
•

Monaoon Stereo, 12 Dlac-' CO

Beds, full Size And Twin Com·

Thompsono Appllo')Co. 3407
Jackson Aw...,, (304)875-7386.

*"

Puppltt a ll'lllohl
Ful h ot,peta oupplloo

304-465-tm '

For Sale; Reconditioned waah·
ers , dryers and ref(lgerators .

ll1or

04--

8oalll
• Q 10 I 8 5

77915.

pftlo. Couch &amp; Desk, Oryor, Efec.
trlc St..o, Recliner &amp; Tobit. 740448-9742.

u

19911 Ooclgo f(11repfd,

N
• .... 2
,. K Q J
• J 10

t998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Navy
Blue Metafile, 5.7 Lftar, LS-1 En· .
gino, Laathtr Interior, 10. 5pelkor

Two bedroom , all electric, in
country, $325 per month plus &amp;I·
curlly deposit and references,

2529 and feavo musago.

RENTALS

Comdlnf'Br1&lt;orlburg, wv 211 t 0t
2008

$250, 740-742·2050.

Rfveroldo Apartmonto In Middle·
pori. From $249!'$373. Call 741)992·5064. Equal Houolng Opportunftleo.

We Buy Land: ·30 -500 Acres.
We Pay Cath. 1·800·213·8365,
An1tlorll Land CO.

B.V. -Aquor11im

Buv or sell. Alverlna Antiques ,

Take f/'Or payments on t7 acroo,

Real E•tate
Wanted .

AKC While Gorman Shotherd
PUI)S, $3110,740-245-9213.

530

Grictous living. t and 2 bidroom

low down payment, call 740·992·

glne, A .C., Pwr. Lock Windows,

740-446-t279.

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

able. $13,900, call740-992-7727.

AKC Siberian Huaky Puppies,
Blue Eyoo, lt50.00 To $200.00.
Adult Fomale Or Mar, Puppy.
$50.00.740 446 8827.

Franch City Moylag, 740·448·

References &amp; Deposit (740l44t·
0772

·4.20 Acres Approx . 4 miles North
of Pt Pleasant, an Aou'te 82.
Good building site, access to
dty water, 2 tenths mile off main

1185 Noon
Loaded, Cold
740-441..()M4.

Trailer For Rent &amp; Lot For Rent,

(304 l67!5-t3711675-3230.

18•80 Vinyl Shingle, Assume

Appliances:
Reco~dftlonod
Waoh&amp;ra, DrY*ro, Ranges, Refrf.

t 0 112 Acres, 3BR, C.A. , 2BA,
DB Garage, easement (3041875·
4575.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

GOC!ci•·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

(304)675-4608 or 875·399t
Ranch House, 3/4 Acre Lot, 58A,
2 1/2BA, Den, UvlngRoom w/
Fireplace, DlnlngRoom, Kitchen/
Fully Equip , Basement wfPool·
Table, Deck w/27Ft. Above·
ground Pool, 3 Car Attached Ga·
rage . In Good Neighborhood In
New Haven. WV Call For Appt.

Household

24 Ft Round AOO.O Ground Pool,
Good Shape. 740-448-8t89

BEAUTlFUL

992-7953, 740·992·5404 or 74().

·510

.

1 Bedroom Partly Furnished
Apartment lower Main Street.

Call After ~ :30Pm . 740-446-75115.

cient. Thffllt bedroom, two full
baths, twO" car garage, river view,
dock nearby Ready nowl 740-

.

-~

With Zero 1\Jrnlng Radfuo. E•cof·
lent Condl11on, $700 (304)675·
5403.

Sites, Electric &amp; Water Available ,

New 1200 square toot energy effi-

r,1ERCHANDISE

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

From Gallipolis; Beautiful Building

Living Room. Dining Room, Eat-In
Kitchen. Lg Family Room. 740·
245-9337

3B~

CAI.I,I PLEASE.

Nice 2 8drm CIA, Hwy t80, 4
Mlleo N Of Holzer. $300 00 Month

1 and 2 bedroom apanmenta, furnished and unfumlstlld. security
deposll required, no pats, 740·

E &amp; S Lawn Service: Design, Implementation, and Service.
Ava• lable for Spring Clean up,
fertilizing end planting. Free esli·
mates Satisfaction guaranteed .
Greg Milhoan· 304/675·4628

rage, CentraiAir, Pallo, Porch,

11on, Inc. t403 Eastom Avo., Gal·
llpollo, OH 45831. NO PHONE

330 Farms for Sale

(3041675-7927.

In Counseling, Social Work Or
Psychology In OHIO. Preference
Given To Candidates With PreviOUI Experience ' In A Mental

ewer Phone~, SCheduling, Etc .
Experience IN The Conatructlon
Area A Plua. Please Send Re·
aume To Chri1Uan'a Conatruc·

735·3409.

6908.

1 Bdrm., Extra Nice, Flrsl Month
Free With One Year leaae .

Thllnoo, PC. LSW, LISW .Or PCCI

Mual Work Well With Public ·An·

1981 Clayton Mobile Home t4F1
X 70FI. $10,500.00. Serious In·
qulrleo Only. 740-446-4207.

at Galli·

polls Forry. Now accepting appllcatlona for toto on alto. (304)675-

Approved Master Licensed ElecHICJan, WV025956, Free Estl·
mates for Resident ial S8rvlces

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue.

Part Time Rocepnonlot wanted

(304)875·t65t .

992·22t8.

Psychology Assistant, Counselor

For Busy Conatructlon Office ~

Very Nice! Remodeled 3 Bdrms ,

Oakwood Hom88 Barboursville,
WV. $499 Down Single Wide ,
$999 Down Double Wlda, 30.&amp;·

310 Homes for Sale

3llR Trailer For Rent In Pt. Plea..
ant on Private lot. $250 00 a
Utllllies.Depoalt.
month+

AKC RtgiiiOiod Oalmatlon Puppfte. $t00.,(304)937·2929.

l, 740-949-2093.

gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!

180 Wanted To Do

310 Home• for Sale

pklytr.

law Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
adverttsed In this newspaper
are available on an eQual
opportunity' basis

Todayl 740·446-4367, 1·800·
2t4-0452, Reg 190-05-t274B.

And lOr Children . Must Bo Lf·
conood (Or Llcensura Eligible, le ..

COmepeltlve Salarlel And Bono·
Ills Offered. Please · Send
Reoumea To Sherry Gor&lt;lon, Hu·
man R11ource Manager. Wood·
land Center, Inc., 3088 Sta1e Route 160, Galflopflo, Oho 4583t Or
, · -call 740·446·5500, EOEIAA Em·

Is In viOlation of 1he

dfoport, Oh., no polo, 740·992·
5443.

(Careers Close To Home) CaH

Outpatient Theraplsis • Part-Time
And Full· Time Positions Avail·
able To Provide Outpatient Men·
tal Health S-ervices To Adults

-5otllng.

wh~h

2 badroom mobile home In Mid·

440

hr. .

Pay 10 $5.50 /Hr

adVertisements fOr real estate

Utllltlea. Aetrencu Required. No
Pels. Call740-992·~77 1

New Mo~l e Home

t Plus Aero, 2 Bdnn. liallor, Well
&amp; C. Wa1er, 2 Stor e . $24,500.00
Applogrovo, W. Va . 304·578·
2557 Make Appt

aquare toot, air condiUoned, very
- · $350 por rronth ptuo dOpct·

2 Bdrm Mobile Home, Ale ,

$300.00 Month Pluo Dapoilt And

Gollfpollo Co-r College

Preferred. Rata Of Pay Is $1t.OO I

Houaekeeper: Applicants Must
Have A Minimum Of A .High
School D1ploma. Experience In All
Areas Of Housekeeping Practlc·
es Preferred Must Maintain A
Valid Driver's License And Have
Reliable Transportation. Rate 01

trlc , 2BR , Shingle Roof. Excel·

Training

K&amp;G Cleaning, &amp; Painting Services Interior Ellterlor, For Free Esll·
mates, 740·441-1044, 740·441-

lng AppllcaUons For The Follow-

Price Reduced , 1998, Skyllno,
Mobile Homo, t4X70. ToiOf Elootoni COndition. (304)875-7045.

This .-spaper wiH 001
knowingly accept

• Business

APPLY AT:

ACCESS Hoad Start Is Accept·

Furnl1ure. $6,000. (304)675·1651 . .

140

Interior &amp; Exterior Painting, Experienced , Reterences, Fleasonable Rates For Free Estimate,

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER IIIF r:N
ORUG FREE ENVIRONMENT

Wayne County. Parfect lor
Marshall Students/1 5mlnutes
from Campus. New Carpet/New

28 Acres MIL:, 8 Statl Horae Barn,

SEE: CHAD SUMMERS
APRIL 27 • 2 P.M.-I P.M. OR
APRIL 21 ·I A.M. ·t2 P.M. a
2P.M.-8P.M.

CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE
WWW.84LUMBER.COM

Older 2BR Thlller on ·Rontod Lot,

3 Bedroom House. Fence, 740·
38H504.

304-675-t957.

EMAIL ADDRESS:
JOBSe84LUMBER.COII

Nice Home Set Up On Lot. Mako
2 Payments, Move In , 4 Year•
Loft On Loan. (304l722·7t40.

Ids Inc

$40,000 - $80,000. If You Enjoy A

84 LUMBER COMPANY
22110 ACY AVENUE
JACKSON, OH 45640

limhation or dJscrlmlnatlon
based on race, COlor, reJiglon,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
malole any such preference,
llmltallon or discrimination.·

Info Call 1·800-813·3585,
EK18827, 8AM ·9 PM , 7 Oays

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to thA mill just call

Pm.ldad.

to actvert1se "any pretereoce,

Wlldllfa Jobs $21 .601Hr. Inc .
Benefits. Game Wardens.Securlty,Malntenance ,Park Rangers .
No Exp. Needed . For App./Ex;am

Insurance, As Well As 401K And
Profit Sharing Plans. 84 Lumber
Promotea From Within With Co·
Managers Earnl,ng $30,000 $40,000 And Managers Earning
Combination Of Working With
People, Hands -On Work , And
Salu , You May Quali fy No
l&lt;nowledge Of Building Materials
Necessary, C~lege PreJerred. But
Not Necessary. Training Wilt Be

the Federal Fair Housi~Aot
o1t968 which makes ~ Illegal

RESUMES UNLIMITED Offars

•

Retail 5ales/Banklng
Experience Hetpfli.
Degree A Plus. 2 Years Minimum.
Protected Territory And
EstabliShed Accounts ·
Women Do Excaed1ngly Wall

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subjCict to

2 a 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $280·$300, sawor,
water and 1raah Included, 740·
992-2t87.

;

.•

·-------------- ---.--- -

�•

•

.page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Aprll26, 1999

..

Weather
Today:Showen
High: eoa; Low: 50s

Looking for your Racine Grange donates charter to Museum
"Eddie" at the pound
, By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

Not everyone reading this column knows that Eddie, one of the
major characters on the television show, "Frasier" was once a shelter dog. Turned into his local pound, bouncy, i;,..epressible Eddie
was rejected by his family because he was so mischievous, could '
not endure being bored, and was always up to something. .
Apparently, Eddie merely needed .to be occupied and give vent
to his passion for acti ng. If I can stay up late, I'll tune into "Frasier" just to w~tc h Eddie. This sweet dog made his owners life much
happier - not to mention financially secure'
You too could find your lifelong companion, your special friend,
at the pound. To show off our pound and to encourage people to
visit (it's NOT the place you remember from three years ago), the
Meigs County Humane Society is plann ing a very special weeke nd.
But don 't wait until the first weekend in May_to visit the Meigs
County Dog She lter. Your "Eddie" could be wai ting for you, now.
. The North Shore Animal League, with PETsMART Charities as
its official sponsor, has chosen May I and 2, Saturday and Sunday,
as Pet Adoptathon Weekend of 1999. Soci~ty volunteers are organIZJng the Adoptathon t n Metgs Coun ty, wht ch wi II take place at the
Rock Spr.ings Fairgrounds (ncar the dog shelter) from 12 noon until
5 p.m. ·
The mi ssio n of the North Shore Animal League, which
embarked o,n its first Adoptathon several years ago to raise awareness about animals _in need of homes, is to bring together shelters,
anomal c6ntrol factio toes. rescue and foster care organi zati ons for the
commo n goal of saving more animal s' li.ves.

.

This year's sponsor is PETsMART Charities, the ~rganization
that so generously provided the Meigs.. County Humane Society
woth $3.000 fo r our Spay and Neuter ·program. As cif March I,
thanks to PETsMART Charities, we were able to provide ovet 36
o pe rati ons~

.

·

The charter of abstinence from organization called "The Lincoln
alcoholic beverages signed in the League" because of Lincoln's
early 1900s by residents of Oak earlier abstinence pledge.
Grove near Racine was presented
The Lincoln Legion asked
recently to the Meigs County both youth and ad ults to sign
Museum.
pledges of abstinence.
The Racine Grange came into
The organization, which was
possession of the charter when it headquartered in Westerville,
purchased the Oak Grove Ohio, establi shed a chapter at
Methodist Episcopal Church · Oak Gr ove through the Oak
building after the church c losed Grove Methodist Episcopal
in 1971.
Church Sunday School.
The history of the abstinence
Racine Grange obtained the
charter goes back to Lincoln's charter when it purchased the
time . '
.. building at the dosing of the
In 1846 Abraham Lincoln church in 1971.
wrote of his pledge of total abstiAfter prohibition ended, abstinence from alcoholic beverage-s nence organizati ons faded from
and called for signers at a country the scene .
schoolhouse to do the same .
The charter shows the names
In 1903, the Anti-S'Iloon of many local residents.
. League formed a branc h of its

information about vaccinati ons, spaying and neutering, and gener-

al health issues.
. For those people adopting dogs that weekend, we 'will be provodmg pre-approved Spay and Neuter coupons for a half-price
operation, free dog food samples, as well as additional infoimalion
useful to new ow ners.

A staff m em~er of the Meigs Veterinary Clinic will be 'on hand
to answer questions about breeds, dog care and animal health, and
the dog warden will be there. to process licenses .
. Our volunteers will administer adoption questionnaires, talk
woth prospec tt ve famihes , and hand o'ut literature. Each dog will be
treated with anti-flea and tick medication aoid will be brushed,
ready to go home wi'th you. ·
.
.
. A~geJa Sharp, Meigs County Humane Society volunteer coordonatmg tht s event, has arranged for treats for the kids and refreshme~ts f or sale. The Columbus- based band, "Porcelain," including
Metgs County natove Paul Sharp, will perform on Saturday, May ) ,
Slartong at 2 p.m. There woll also be an appearance by an Elvis Presley ompersonator, and his friend , Safety Pup.
If you would like to volunteer to help her, contact her at 66934 16.

a

'

Meigs County's
v"'""'"

service required annual skin tests.

. TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Board, Monday, 7 p.m. at district office building
on State Route .681.
·

MIDDLEPORT ..:._. OH KAN
Coin Club regular meeting 7:40
p.m., Riverbend Arts Council building, Middleport. Meeting is free and
open to the public . Open auctian and
refreshments . ·Members, visitors

ings and special events. The calendar iS' not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num.ber of days.

ATHENS - Fimlrice commiuee, ·' w'elcome.
· Athens,Mei gs Educational Service
. Center, Monday. 2 p.m. offices, 507
MONDAY
Richl and Ave., Athens.
·
TUESDAY
CHAUNCEY - Revival MonPOMEROY
Atuxiliary pf
. day through May I,. Red town Free
R!JTJ-AND - Open door ses- Drew Webster Post 39, American
Methodist Church, State Route 13. siooi with State Rep. John Carey, Legion, 2 p.m. Tuesday at the haiL
north of Chauncey, with The Mes- Monday, 1)2:30 to 3;30 p.m . at the
sengers, John Elswick.
. Rutland village hall in the Rutland
CHESTER --' Meigs County
Civic Ce nter.
Holiness rally, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
RUUAND - Rutland Garden
Chester Nazarene Churc~ . Speaker,
Club, home of Dorothy Woodard,
RACINE - Free skin testing . Rev. Herb Grate.
Monday I p.m.
·
· clinic, Connie Karschnik , R.N.,
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse, ar
POMEROY - Meigs Cou~ty
· POMEROY - Veterans Service the fire station, Monday, 4:30 t&lt;&gt; · Public Library Board, Tuesclay, 9:30
Commission, 7:30p.m: Monday, at 6:30 p. m. All individuals in food a.m. at library.

·l't N""''"''

Mi!ldiPpntl • PonH.•toy. Ohio

) ·1'1

_ __,.

RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization, Tuesday, Star
Mill Park, 6:30 p. m.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Free diabetic
scree ning, Wednesday, 8:30 to II
a.t)L, Veterans Memorial Medic11l
Clinic.' ·
·

The New Haven and Mason fire departments responded to lhe call
1-erourtd 12:58 a.m. Upon arri.val, the building was fully invol.ved.
, Gary Cotton, owner of lhe restaurant, said he learned through the New
'Haven fire ~hief lhat the electri~al blaze began in the motor of a walk-1rl
cooler in the back of the building.
·
Cotton laid the restaurant employs 10 people, and he has not determined
if he will rtppen lhe restaurant. ·
- Further.information and lhe amo~nt of damage were not available.
On Sunday, the sprinkler in AEP's River Division at Lakin extinguished
a blize at the facility, Blake ~.
. . .
.
·
MitiOR and New Haven fire departments responded to the II :21 a.m.
call. When they arrived, the fire· wu extinguished .
._: 'Kejih'iJarling, the River Divisinn'lf·senerat m'atltlger, s.aJd there was a .. By BRiAN
_.. - ·- '•·
small fire in one of the offices that was put oul by the sprinkler system. A · senttn•t Nawa Staff
couple of radios were lost in lhe fire, but the water was cleaned up and the
Middleport Village Council
busineaa reopened Monday morning.
•
approved funds for a study of its
water and sewage service rates and
will apply for grant funding for
QNQNNATI (AP) '- The federimprovements to its water ahd sew1\fll'tiiOOfl al government has informed Gov. erage systems.
Bob Taft that there was not enough
Jlly Shutt, president of Floyd
uninsured damage in loniado-strick·
Brown Associalea, the village's
~n subilibs to warrant special assis:
engineering firm, and Becky Hayes,
tance.
also of FBA, met with Middleport
The Federal Emergency Manaae1 Section • 10 l'lacs
Village Council during their regular
meeting on Monday evening to disance will cover most of the estimatcuss needed · improvements to the
menl
Monday
insured
$82Agency
million said
in diunage
in Hamilsystem.
ton, Warren· and Clinton counties.
FBA has Conducted studies ofthe
The agency rejected Taft's request to
sewer system, which is a combined
declare them disaster areas, which
storm and sanitary sewer system,and the village water system, which
federal
would 'loans
have made
and grants.
them eligible for
has been subject to dis ussion
The communities will have to
because of varying levels of \blatile
IUI'If to the. stale to help with costs
Organic Compounds, chemicals
for restoring neighborhoods hit by
from an unknown source which
I nfll'llt'~.
the April 9 tornado, which killed
have contaminated the water in one
four people.
of the village:S two w.ells.
QHJO
"BaSed on a careful review of the
Council voted to · approve a
Pick 3: 0-6-0; Pick 4: 6-5-7-1
information available, it has been
$7 ,500 rate study, which is required
a.deye5: 1-4-16-21-25
detennined that the impact of this
by Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
W,YA 0
event is not of a ~verily and niagniRegional DcvelopR)eni Center, the
o.o; J: 4-4-0; DaUt 4: 2-7-6-3 ,tude ·that warrants a major disaster agency which will assist the village
0 1999'*'&gt; Yllley..PlbliJttlq Co.
declaration," FEMA Director James
in plll'llling grant funds through the
l. Witt wrote to Tall;
Issue II, CDBG and Ohio Public

RUTLAND - R~tland Friendly
Gardeners, open meeti'ng, Rutland
Church of Christ, W~dnesday, 7:30
p.m. Representative of Waterscapes
to speak.

~

' I'

=

,.

~~5~~~~~~~]
~=~~===;~~]

,,

By STEVEN K. PAU~N
Aaaoclllted Prau Writer

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CALL TODAY FOR
.MORE INFORMATION"

MONTH
haa bean daclerld
·a nd ~Tiau• Donation
.,.d In .,.. ltlempt to
the public about the
of donation, John~RuiMII, a volilntMr lor
.
Ina ,r Ohio and an organ
r.eolplant hlmNH, dlatrlbutad
tnformatlon about rthe atata'a
organ and tiMua donltlon ,_.
to ~latrar Sue
· alaon lut
Malaon
i)GIIICI that Ohio drlver'a lloana• Indicate a drtver'a 1111111~ Ngardlng donation, but
e,a1c1 that next ot kin ahould
:atlll ba llllvlald, baoauaa their
· ;Oonaant II 'ntqillrld before
Hll ba made at the
. me o1 .d llth.
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(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
H N SERVICES

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FUN FOR ALL- A Family Fun F._.; homed by thalhlga County Proucutlng Attorney, Holzer Medleal center, Melga County
H111th Department and the Ohio Unlvanlty eou.g. of Oateopathlc Medicine, brought atr11ma of peoplalnto Eaatarn Eleman·
tary School on Saturday. Over eo exhibitor~~, nnglng from llMith
can and public HI'VIce provldan to colleg11 and local bualnan,
u, pr-nted lnfonMtlon, hNith screenings and tevon to tha
public. Local girl acout troopa Mt up a camp on the front-lawn of
.the achool. In addition to Information and Mrvlcea, antartaln·
··mant, Including a baakatbltll exhibition, 1 live OJ and atorytalllng,
wu alao Included. Cory Dun, 10, of N- Haven, W.va., Ia pictured, left, ualng a Braille writer at the carleton School arnt Malga
lndu!lb'IH tabla, aa Sharry McCleary Ianda a hand.

approves

·WorkJ·~atns.

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, sewer ........

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Council also authorized' payment
to FBAof an amount up to $3,000 to .
- work with BH/HVRDD in preparing
grant applications. Hayes expla,ned
lhat the fees would, be reimbursable
through any grants~~joans received
by the _village. .
Shutts explained that their recent
survey of ~werage facilitiea shows
·. a need for new controls and pomps
at sewerage lift stations in the ·viilag~. which will oost an estimated
$280,000, .due to lhe condition of the
stations.
.
Jean Craig, president of the
~of Public Affairs, aaid that s~e
· would be meeting with reprcsentaliv"'' of the Gallia County Rural
Water District and Leading Creek
Conservancy District to discliSll the
possibility of purchasing drinkina
water from their operations, in _an
.attempt to address the VOC issue.
The board has already entered into
discussions with the village of
Pomeroy regarding such in arrange. ment.
Craig said that both Gallia County Rural. 'and lCCD have offered
proposals to the village in the past,
but noted that thole proposlis were
made in 1994 and cost projections

Craig also said that the Ohio EPA
continues to encouraae a joint
municipal water system between
Middleport and .Pomeroy to remedy
the VOC'problem. Last month's
VOC testing reflected an increase in
the VOC levels in water from 6Re of
the village's two wells.
During the discussi.on of water
service, Councilman Steve Houchins suggested that.the Board of Publie Affairs investigate the possibility
of the village's purchasing water
from the 'Galli a County system to
serve residents in Hobson, who were
promised water ~rvice ~hen the
area was annexed _some eight years
ago.
In other action, council .met in
executive session before approving
pay rai~s for village employees.
Hourly employees will receive
acr05S-the-board raises· of 4S cents
per hour, and salaried employees
will receive (aises of two percent.
Council conducted the first reading of a resolution authorizing mortgage releases for homeowners in the
Betsy Ross housing project; an,d the
first reading of an ordinance relating
. ·
Continued on page 3

Suspect's girlfriend purchased two of the guns used in school shooting

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PROG

The board also created the supplemental position of
coach; Mick Winebrenner, head baseball coach; and
Howie Caldwell, athletic director.
inarchmg band director which was filled by Greg Vance:
In ad~ition, it was noted that Donna Sayre, second
The following supplemental contracts were approved
contingent upon student interest: Ryan Lemley, reserve grade teacher at Syracuse Elementary, has transferred,
baseball coach; Gregory Vance, pep band director; Ryan . into the second grade position at Letart Falls. Brenda
Lemley, junior high boys' basketball coach (~venlh McQuire has transferred into the Syracuse second grade
position 'while Wanda Shuter has transferred into the
grade).
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Also .awarded supplemental contracts were• Kim Syracuse DH position vacated by McQuire.
'The board met with district parent Joyce Weddle who
Romine, yearbook; Dennie Hill, Title I treasurer; Dave
Barr, 1itle I coordinator; Vicki Northup, 1ille I parent presented board members with a letter addressing safety
resource coordinator; Kim Romine; 1illc IX compliance at the schools following the school shooting in Littleton,
officer; Dave Barr, handicapped coordinator; Joyce .Colo: She said teachers need to pay more attention to the
Thoren, food service supervisor; Shirley Sayre, guid- students and not give them mortuJetentions or send them
ance; 'Diane Dunfee, FHA; Daniel Riffle, transportation to the altemative-to-suspension'i::hool. She also said her
supervisor; Aaron . Sayre, . vocational FFA; Tom son has received a lot of detentions for things that were
Weilvermm Thoren, tec~nology . coordinators; Dennie her fault, not his, such as failing to send absence excusHill, general fund.
es to school.
Dennis Taylor of Shelly Materials Inc. Racine Plant
· The following ~ drivers were approved for supplemental routes: Larry Smith, Syracuse Elementary/Meip invited schools to the plant's "Community Appreciation
High School/Eastern Elementary; Thomas Hill, Letart Day" which will be held Friday, May 21,9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Falls Elementary; Daniel Riffle, Letart Falls Elemen- The event will include plant tours, towboat rides, snacks
tary; Wendell Ervin, Portland Elementary.
and prizes.
In other personnel matters, the board approved Jeanie
C.T, Chapman asked board members to consider
Allen and Rebecca Ball as substitute secretary/aides and repealing the district's current pay-to-play policy for stuapproved Mark Swann as a substitute teacher.
Continued on page 3

NEW HAVEN - New Haven's Village Pizia was destroyed in an
morning fire Monday, Mason County 911 Director Chuck Btat..e

Today's Sentinel

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35 Cents

Area organizations
hold a Family Fun Fest

Good

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Single Copy-

POMEROY - Immunization
Clinic, Meigs County Health
Department, 9 to II a.m. and I to 3
p. m. Tuesday. Each child to be
accompanied by parents/legal
guardian, to present shot iecord.

Feds deny request for tornado help

EDICAL
ELIGIBIL

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Hometown Newspaper

approved · in July, 1998, for construction management
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
services. The state money will be matched l&lt;X:ally by
The SOuthern Local Board of Education is hoping $4,042,000 from a 23-year, S.39 mill bond/levy issue
preliminary site work can begin on a new district-wide · approved on May 5, 1998, for a total of $9,810,988. ·
elementary school later this summer.
Pottmeyer said schematic drawings for the new K-8
The board met in regular session Monday nig~t at building have been approved'by the state.
SOuthern High School with architect Jack Poumeyer
Lawrence said board members have discussed holdWith Marr-Knapp-Crawfis Associates Inc. of New ing a ground breaking ceretiiQtly at the site possibly later
Philadelphia.
this summer.
- Initial plans call for removing about 18 inches of topIn personnel matters, the board approved five-year
soli from the buildina site next to the high school and . contracts for teachers Jennifer Roush and Wanda Shuler
replacing that with about 8,000 cubic yards of fill . In and one-year contracts for teachers Michelle Barr, Maraddition, some prcliminuy work may al'so be done' on garet Guinther, James Ryan Lemley, Tricia McNickle,
utilities in the area and on installing an additional 6re Daran Jay Rees, Carolyn Robinson and Gregory Van' •.
hydrant on school property.
The board reemployed Howard Dave Barr as admin- ·
We hope to have a bid package ready by May for site istrative assistant on a one-year contract.
Y/Ork and to sec dirt moving by the end of July, said
The following continuing contracts werC' also
5_uperintendent James Lawrence. Beginning the site approved: Charles Lawrence· and Julian Scott Hill, bus
work in advance of the main construt:tion should allow · drivers, and Tom Lane, custodian. A two-year contract
tbe building contractor to begin work soilner.
was approved for bus driver Kathy Miller,
· • The building project was held _up for apprbximately
The following .were approved for supplemental con~lx months pending the award of additional funding by tracts for the 1999-2000 school year: Dave Barr, head
the state. The additional $1,817,953 will be added onto football coach; Howie Caldwell, head volleyball coach;
$3,951,035 provided by the state under a school funding Alan Crisp, held girls' basketball coach; Jay Rees, head
plan. began in 1990, including an addition of $299,235 boys' basketball coach; Howie Caldwell, head softball

ment.
A.large group of descendants o{
one of the raiders was present)
Major General John H. Smith,
Adjutant General of Ohio, made
some brief rem arkS concerning the
bravery of the. soldiers. He notejf
that the first U.S. Congressional
Medal of Honor went .to Pvt. Par:
rott, one of the Ohio raiders.
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Calenda....----~___,_

new location, 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

groups wishing to announce meer-

-PageS

Site work may beg.in this summer on new Southern Elem_
entary

CHARTER PRE~ENTED - Keith Ashley, past master of Racine
Grange, presented a local charter pushing the pledge of l,lncoln,
described at the time as "the great abstainer" to Margaret Parker,
director of the Meigs County museum.

Community

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The Community Calendar is published .as afree service to non-profi t

Red Wings, Sabres,
Stars all going for
swaaps In NHL playoffs

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A plaque that was originall y · General" in Georgia and then tried served in the 33rd Ohio Volunteers
dedicated in the 1930's to the hero- to make their way back to Union along side of soldierS from Meigs
ic efforts of a group of Ohio Civi l territory.
· County.
War soldiers was recently moved
The group was finally capture,
Myron Jones, Jr. , represented
to a new location in the Ohio and some 'were hanged as spies Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7 Sons of
Statehouse, the rnuseum area.
while others were impri so ned. Union Veterans of the Civil War of
This plaque honored Union sol- Wa)t Disney Studios later made Middleport, as its commander, and
diers called "Andrews' Raid ers". this eve nt famous in a movie was accompanied by Keith Ashley
These men stole a Confederate called "The Great Locomotive of Pomeroy who represented the
steam locomotive called "The Chase". Some of these raiders commander of . the Ohio Depart-

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Local diamond results, Page 4&amp;5
Granny charges for services, Page 10
Time out for tips, Page 6

Sports

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Local men attend relocation of Civil War plaque at statehouse

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. Our goal with the Pet Adoptathon is to empty the dog pound, to
raose awareness about the wonderful dogs available for adoption
right here in Pomeroy, and to !Jrovide prospective owners with

Tomorrow: Showera
High: eoa; Lc&gt;w: 408 ··

April 27, 1SIIMI

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LmLETON, Colo. (AP)- The 1~-ycar-old
·girlfriend of Columbine High School gunman
Dylan Klebold apparendy bought at least two of
the weapons used in the 11tt1c:k. at a Denver-area
gun sbow, authorities said. '
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Investigators also were checking a report from
a Colorado Sprinp glfn detiler that the other gunman, Eric Harris, was among five teens who tried
to buy a' machine gun and another weapon last
•month. ·
. The Denver Rocky Mountain News and The
·Denver Post reported today that investigators
believe the girlfriend, Robyn K. Andenon,
bought three weapol)ll not long after her, 18th
birthday in November. The Denver Rocky Mounlain News said she was believed to have bOught
two guns.
Harris, 18, and Klebold, 17, committed suicide
after bursting into Columbine High Schct,OI with
guns and bombs a week ago today, killing 12 fellow studenll and one teacher. Four guns were
found in the school.
·
Ms. Andenon was questioned Monday and
aulhoritiea describe her as a witness, not a sus. pect. District Attorney Dave Thomas said.1he was
cooperating with investigators.
Prolecutors laid the weapons may have been
porchued teplly.
. "We think -three of them were provided by the
girlfriend of Klebold, " Marie Paulter, a J~fferson
Counly c:ltief district lltorney, told the Post. "She
boqht them because she wu o!der. She wu 18at
the time. She boupt the111 in November or
December,

"We're not sure she committed a crime under
"They were re~l mopey, Hke pun.~ kids wi~h
Colorado statute. If you provide a handgun to a the makeup on, It ke punk rockers, Bemstetn
perSon under 18, that's a violation of the statule. 1 said. "To me, it was just another bunch of kids
lfyou.provideashotgunorariOe,that'snotavio- who wished they could own everythmg they sec
lation."
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on the wall here. This is like Toys R Us 10 them."
The operator of the Tanner Gun Show, which
Bernstein said Harris ''was doing all the. talkholds shows in the Denver area several times a ing." .
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year, said the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
investigators still believe that sdmeon~ other
.and Firearms asked on Monday for a list of all of than Klebold and Hams w~ aware of thetr plans
the show's exhibitors.
in the days and weeks leadtng up to the attack.
Prosecuton think Ms. Anderson bought two
"There's a lot of munitions there," Stone said.
shotguns and a rifle. District AUorney Dave "Either somebody el~ brought it in or they
Thomas said prosecutors are not sure what brought it in arid stored it.... It's hard lo get that
knowledF she had about how the guns would be · in under your raincoat and not be noticed."·
·used. Jefferson County Sheriff John Stone
Stone said three b,oys who were arrested"near
acknowledged it was possible that she did know Columb!ne on the day of the attack have not been
how Klebold and Harris to planned to u~ the cleared tn the case.
auns.
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"I'm suspicious of their st~ry,". SIQne sal~ .
"She's not going to use those for pheiSanl "They are not out of the~~ t~ thts one yet ,
hunting." Stone told the News.
· ~so M~day, authontles ~d Klebold and
A man who was at Ms. Anderson home Hams had ~med for an even bogger bloodbath•.
declined to comment, sayil)g the family waster- P!?tting to kill hundreds ~f ~tudents,_ and then. to
rorized by reporters, the Post said.
·
htJack a plane and crash tt mto New York City.
Mel Bernstein, owner of Dragon Arms, told · lnvesiigators cited · a diuy they found that .,as
inveatigators lhat four teen-age boys dressed in kepi by Harris.
,
trench coats and a young womln came to his store
.The attack's bold, btZif!C nature led to spe~uin early March. They tried to buy an ~ -60 _latton lhat the. gunmen mtght have been taking
machine gun and a pistol equipped -wtth a drugs, bul toxocology tests revelled no drup or
silencer. He said he declined to seU the guns kl alcohol .iu their bodies, the county wroner 's
Harris because he wu too young. When the office satd.
young woman in the group tried to buy the guns,
makes it a little .more frightening lo m~ lhat
saying she was 18, he escorted them from the they were of sound mmd and not under lhe mflustore.
ence of alcohol and druss," Thomas told
Bernstein said the incident was captured ·on a MSNBC. ·, ,
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surveillance videotape that he turned over to fedColumbtne s campus remamed closed to
erll authorities.
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everyone except bomb squads and investigators.

mayor's race
Jean Craig is one of two Republi can candidates to have filed for the

Middleport Mayor 's · race, to be
determined next week.
Craig, who servea u the chairman of the Middleport Board of
Public Affairs, has' stressed coopera.tion among the mayor, village council and residents irr ihe community
as a solution to problems now facing . ·
the.viii age. ·
'"This election is not abOut the
prior achievements of any candidate," Craig said. "The candidate
chosen should not be one who simply wishes to be in control in order .
to promote his or her own ideas, but
one who will represent the people."
"Middleport is slowly dying from
neglect," Craig said. "Middleport
has problems that must be solved by
elected officials, not by idle talk.
The village collected approximately
a quarter of a million dollars in
taxes, and people have a right to
know what is being done with their
money."
'"The mayor is not the legislative
authority of a town, the village
council is. I will not make promise;&amp;
staling what Ialone will do, because
it must be a joint effort between the
mayor and cou'ncil and the citizens
of the village in order for the community to prosper."
"Running a village is not a oneman show by any imagination, nor
should 1} be."
Craig said that she would consider a monthly newsletter for resi- .
dents, if elected, and would seck
additional grant funds for streets,
water and sewerage projects.
Craig, who once served as a
member of the village council, and
as ( member of the Republican Cen- .
tral Committee, also said that she
would like to explore the possibility
of conducting 0pen town · meetinp
in addition to the village council's
business meetinp,

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