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The Daily Sentinel
Page 10

Tuesday, Aprll27, 1999

This granny charges family for services - does she have ot~er problems?
DEAR MABEL: This does not
sound to me like most family relalionships. ora your mother grow up
very poor? How is her mental
health? I hesitate to say more·
because I don't know her background. All I can say is, it's very sad.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
tempted many times to write to you

tab!e. The tiny thing hesi tated, stagWhen she pulled them out of .
gered arou nd, weaved back and class last year, she said she would be
fonh on the table top, and then ·got ho!lle schooling them. Ann, she hasthe hi ccups. When we, tried to figure ' n't done _any schooling at· all. The
out what was going on, we sniffed kids do nothing but play video
the jar and found out that the fruit games and watch TV _all day The
juice had fermented and our little bat younger one, who is 12, has asked to
was drunk. -- L.H. IN HAWKINS , go_back .to school, but Kelly refuses
and then, she charged me $12 for
TEXAS ,
to send her.
·
you think about a grandmother who "water, detergent and electricity."
&lt;,'bout more serious subjects. but the
DEA~ L.H.: Not many people
The 14-year-old is already so
charges for baby-sitting her grandIs this n\)rmal behavior? When- 'inebriated-a nimals stories did il .
get close enough to a bat to deter- · lazy, he 'has no interest in doing any- ·
children? l'ln not talking about reg- ever my mother needs a ride anyMany years ago, .when we went mine whether it is drunk or sober: thing when he grows up.
ular day care, Ann. I mean babysit- where, she asks me to drive her, and campin g in the Pennsy lvania woods, Thanks for the scientific research.
I don 'I know what will become or
ting on a Saturday night once -eve(}' I wouldn't think of requesting pay- my 10-year-old brother found a
Dear Ann Landers: I am having these children if th,ey don 't get an
two weeks.
·
ment. She_ always says, "You have- , small bat asleep near the cabin. He a serious problem with my hus- education. I could report Kelly to the
I ~now my mother doesn' t owe more money than I have, " whi ch is brought it to Mom and asked where band's sister, "Kelly." Kelly has two authorities, but it would create a
me baby-sitting privileges, but it true, but that' doesn't mean I'm-rich. he might keep it for a while . She . children who are not getting any tremendous problem with my inI don't know what to make of gave him a quart-sized cannin g jar m ed ucation whatsoever. She refuses to laws. If I don't get involved, I will
- seems to me she is very peculiar
about money. For example, last year, thi s, Ann. When I see the way my which 'she ·had kept fruit for th ~ trip, put the children in public school never forgive fllY~elf. I really care
our home needed some electrical frie nds are treated by their mothers, and after punching holes in the lid, because she 's afraid of gangs and about these kids, Ann. How can I
and plumbing work done. I asked- I ·am hun that my mom is so differ- we put the still-sleeping bat inside .
drugs. She won 't put them in private help them? -- NO .- FUTURE IN
my mother jf we could' come to her ent. Please tell me what you think
Several hours laier, the bat woke school beca use she "cannot afford TEXAS.
·house and use her shower and wash about this.--MABEL IN MICHI- up, and we let him out on the picnic it."
DEAR TEXAS: Please insist
some clothes. She sa id, "Of course," GAN

_that your husband become involved
at once. Tell him if he won 't, you
will. \ben, do it. If the mother of
these children -- or your in-laws ·gets mad al you, so what? Somebody has to save them , and it just
may be you. Please pump op._your
cour~ge, and do what needs to be
done. You will never regret it.
Do you have questions about sex,
but no one to talk to? Ann Landers'
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager" is
fmnk and to the point. Send a self
addressed, long, businesS-size enve-

lope and a check or money order for
$3 .75 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann . Landers, P.O. Box 11562 Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4 .55.) To find out more about Ann ·.
Landers and rea&lt;j her past columns,
visit the Creators Syndicate web
page· at www:crealors.com.

Meigs Local District-to ·observe right-to;.read and math week
Sc hools in the Meigs Local District w·i iJ ha•;e a variety ofongoing
activities nexr week. May 3 ~7, in

Middl eport's theme is "Cele- younger students, and take a trip to
brate"designating each day a differ- · The Middleport Library. The eighth
ent hpliday.- Monday will be wear a graders will study a unit on the Civil
mask for Halloween, Tuesday bring War and do-different activities deala ornament for Christmas, Wednes - ing with Martin Luther King's
day' wear red, white,. and blue for speech.
.
.
Independence Day, Thursday wear a
David Gaul, principal of Me1gs
hat for Easter, and Friday, bring a Middle S&gt;hool, will give a daily
birthday care for birthdays .
quote fqr students to -ponder and
The students will decorate their there will be a schoolwide book fair.
doors penaining to· one of the five
Meigs High School will be
holidays. Other activities will exploring career options 'and
include an assembly, . around the requirements. Students will print out
world-math activities, alphabet infonnation from the web sites and a
game, egg and spoon race, daily copy will be given to each student.
' trivia question, scavenger hunts, They will use a newspaper each dayguess the candy in the jar and birto· integrating newspaper anicles into
lessons.
·
dav oanies on Fridav.
Bradbury 's theme is "Get on the
Teachers involved in the proRight Track by. Reading" with activ- grams include: Bradbury, Shannon_
ities to included a slogan co ntest, Korn ; Harrisonville, Paula Chancey ;
daily drawing for door prizes, race Middlepon, Liz Story and Teresa
· car demonstration, door decorating Carr; Pomeroy, Janet Hoffman,
· contest, dress-up day, and hot wheel B.ryan Zirkle, and Becky Triplett ;
race using estimation and standard Rutland , Linda McManus; Salem
Center, Shirley VanMeter; Sal is bury,
RESOLUTION SIGNED -A resolution deslgnatl11g May 3-7 as Right to Reed and Math Week In Meigs
measu~ment .
Barb
Mathews
Crow;
Meigs
Middle
Local
schools was signed this waek. Administrators and participating school representatives at the
Rutland 's theme is "Study of
School,
Ron
Drexler
and
Pam
Vogt
;
signing
were from the left, seated,- Ron Drexler, William Buckley, auperlntendent; Wendy Haler, asall·
Space" and the classes will 'have
Meigs
High
School,
Tim
Lawson
tant
superintendent;
and Lester Manuel; and standing, .Elizabeth Story, Shirley VanMeter, Barb Mllth·
,guest readers on Wednesday and
ahd
Lester
Manuel
;
Title
Direc
tor
ews
Crow,
Janet
Hoffman,
Tlni Lawson, Bryan Zirkle, Teresa Carr, and Pam Vogt. Absent were Shannon
Thursday, and space videos for
1
·
grades 3, 4, and 5. The children will ·and _Assistant Superintendent Wendy · Korn, Paula Chancey, Becky Triplett, and Linda McManus.
be taking home "bookworms"for
use in recording their reading at
home. They will be introduced to the
sun and planets through decorating

observaijce of Right-to-Read and
Math Week.
At Pomeroy Elementary, stud_ents
wi ll learn about Neil Annstrong and
John Glenn .and their pan in the
NPiS A space program. They will
have a Troll book fair, daily trivia,
door and writing contests, principal's reading challenge, and plane·tarium day.
They will also he having special
treats like astronaut sandwiches,
space juice, and family ice cream
with all the toppings. Their theme is
" Readin~ &amp; Math Are Out Of This
World."
Salem Center will be "Goirig To
Camp" The various activities will
include reading the book, Berenstain
Bears Go To Camp, there will be a
craft day, Five Little Campers fin·gerplay, make animal. puppets and
:drinking cups, tell ghost -stories, and
·make samores. Grades K-1 will have
a hidden picture puzzle, and grades
2-5 will have a word search
.puzzle.
,
Contests will include coloring
projects, books read each day, question of the day,math problem solving, books read for the .week, marshmallow estimation, and ' knapsack
game.
doors, a n art day, a space lesson, an
Salisbury's program will include alien dress-up day, and writing day. . ·
door contests, silent readi_ng, sloganStudents will be holding a canned
contest, bookmarks with slogans, food drive for the Meigs County
and a book swap. The best math stu- Cooperative Parish. Another activity
dent of the week and best reading .will be to celebrate space with a
student of the week Will he recog- read-in. Students.are to take blankets
. nized.
·
and/or pillows , books, and goodies
Rain forest food will be served in and have a quiet reading pany.
the cafeteria, and the Columbus Zoo
Meigs Middle School will have a
will be brining the "canopy crea- variety of activities during Right-to- I
tures" to school. Monday is Wel- Read &amp; Math Week. The sixth
come to ihe Rai n Forest, Tuesday is graders will have ice cream sundaes
Math Estimate Day, Wednesday is in which the ,students will figure
Salisbury Blue and ·White Day, cost, capacity, time, and volume
Thursday is Read and Count Button measurements. The seventh graders
Day, and Friday will be Rain Forest will have 'math games, mind benCreature Day..
ders, computer games, geoboards,
Harrisonville's theme is "Score and they will also survey the school
Big With Reading And Math." propeny using graphs, chans, and
· Ongoin g activities will . be daily maps.
sports math trivia questions, daily
The eighth graders will measure
door pri ze drawings, "Sports in the the -heights of buildings using shadNews" school-wide newspaper pro- ows and proportion.
ject, "World Series Writing" contest,
Sustained silent reading will be
"Touchdown Readers" minutes held throughout the building. :The sp&lt;;nt reading project, "Just For Fun" sixth grade will read and discuss ·
basketball shoot-a-than, "Math novels and stories about or to their
Baseball" activity,. jersey ·day, ball mothers. The seventh graders will
cap day, and estimation contests.
write tributes to their moms, read to

Southern, Eastern lose, Page 4
Beau doesn't want marriage, Page 7
Changing vacation plans, Page 6

Today: Showers
High: eo.; Low: 40•
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 60•; Low: 40•

Philadelphia outduels
the Reds to take a 10
Inning, 1-0 win
-Page 4

'

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 Nurnher 250

Smgle Copy - 35 Cents

Clinton .offers.new gun-control measures, explosives restrictions
By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Aaaocr.t.d Pnn Wrtt.r

years," also proposes banning juvenile possession of the Brady law, would cover dynamite, blasting caps and
•Mandatory prison sentences of th ree to I 0 years and
semiautomatic assault rifles, halting imports of all high- the like, not materials that-can be blended into an explo- $10,000 fine~ for adults, including parents, who allow
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - One week to the day after capacity ammunition clips and lim iting an individual's . sive mixture. In' Littleton, Colo., the student killers used children access to guns .
The adult could be held liable whenever a juvenile
.lhe Colora4o school shooting. President Ointon pro!":'.'Ellll~ homemade hand
and pipe bombs in .their ram•
posed gun-control legislation today to raise the I_egal age es to one per
page through Columbine High . crime is committed and the adult "knowingly or reckfor handgun possession from 18 to 21 and hold negligent month.
School. In Oklahoma City, two tons lessly allowed it to occur," said White House spokesman
parents liable when their children cOmmit crimes with
In addiof explosive . made frol)l common Barry Toiv. He added ·that the legislation's standard of
jUI!S.
tion, Ointon
fertilizer were us~ to blow up the reckless conduct would be " a difficult. standard to
Buyers of explosives would also be subject to the renewed ·
federal building in 1995. .
meet. "
.
Clinton
raised
this.
provision long before the Littleton
. same Brady law background checks as gun purchasers. measures
Ointon also propa6ed:
"It is criminal how easy it is for children in America that died in
•Mandatory
child-safety shootings and it is not meant to suggest thai those
killers' parents should be blamed, Toiv said.
to obtain guns," Hillary Rodham Clinton said at a White the last Conlocks on all guns sold.
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, who repreHouse ceremony, where she led her husband and an gress.
He
•Extension of an existing ban
assembly of lawmakers in a moment of silence for the suggested he
on juvenile possession of handguns sents South' Dakota, where guns are popular among
community of Littleton, Colo.
. was counting
to include semiautomatic assault ranchers and sportsmen, was skeptical about passing any
' The president said his proposals would amount to no on outrage
.
_rines; also a ban on importation of new restrictions.
''I'm not sure that gun legislation is what we need,"
more than minor delays and minor hassles for sportsmen · over the Colorado sbooting to.push them through this all ammunition magazines that hold more than 10
and legal gun owners.
year over objections of the gun lobby.
rounds, an extension of current law banning imports of Dakhle told reponers Mqnday. 'He suggested the school
shootings were -a societal problem stemming from
"It's going to be a hassle for them. It's worth iL It's ,
"It's not just the culture of violence that has to those made since 1994.
worth it: We're sorry - it's worth it," Ointon said. change. It's the culture of hunting and sport shooting
• •Background checks on buyers for all gun-show parental and teacher neglect and violence in the media
and on the.Intemet.
·
"People's lives are at stake here." .
that has to stop financing efforts to frighten their mem- sales.
·
·
.
"Those are the kinds of things we better be looking
In extensive remarks preceding the president, Mrs. bers," Ointon said.
•.A lifetime ban on gun ownership for people who
at,'' Daschle said.
Ointon said she doubted the administration:s ability to
"It's not going to be easy,'~ said Sen. John Chafee, R- · commit violent crim~s as juveniles.
Andrew Molchan, director of the National Associa"create a perfect set of solutions that, if followed, would R.I., a supporter who scoffed at crjtics saying schOol
•A three-day waiting period for all handgun purchashave prevented what happened at Columbine High violence is a cultural problem.
· es, with an additional two days if law officers need them tion of Federally Licensed Gpn Dealers, said the 7,000
School.''
·
"This isn 'I about schools ... this is about this distort- to complete their investigation. Until last year, the Brady gun dealers he represents suppon a lifetime ban on gun
But, she added, "That does not mean . that we are ed interpretation of the Constitution 'that convinces oth- Act provided five days for police to conduct background ownership for anyone wh&lt;J commits a violent crime.
·But the rest of Clinton's package, Molchan said, "is
:either hopeless or helpless."
erwise rational citizens that it is their inalienable right to checks on buyers if they needed that much time. Now, it
-; The president's. O!llnibus -crime package, which .the be armed to the teeth," Chafee said.
limitS them to three days, but most checks are instanta- an unfortunate diversion and, in our view, a dangerous
~ite House trumpeted as "the 'm~t comprehensive
The explosives provision, which aims to treat the sale neous. Never before has there been a minimum, manda· diversion that takes energy; time and thought away from
the real issues. '
Jun legislation any administration hils pot forward in 30 of explosives the same way gun sales are treated under tory waiting period:
1

Com-missioners approve Edwards Road closing
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New• Staff
.
The Meigs County Commissioners voted to vacate a portion of a Chester
Township-roadway d~ring their regular meeting on Tuesday afternoon.
The board held a: public hearing on the proposed closing of Edwards
Road, which was attended by seven· people who live on the road. .
The roadway was the subject of a recent civil lawsuit in the Coun of
O.EVELAND (AP)- A national official with the AFL-QO gave a: dubi\Ammon
Pleas, according to Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes, who atten~­
.ous adricvemenl award Tuesday to a company where a lubpr union says
ed
'f:uesday
's hearing.
workers have had their fingen mangled due to a lack of safety tquipmenl
The
lawsuit
involved a dispute over ownership and access issues, Lentes
Linda Chavez-Thompson, vice president of !he nationa!'Afl...CIO,Iead a
said, and Judge Fred W. Crow III did not determine ownership, but did grant
_delegation of about 15 injured workers, union members and community SUJ&gt;'
access to one of the residents of the road.
•
·
)Xll1ers to three companies owned by Drcison International Inc. They tried to
The
trustees
in
Chester
Township,
in
ihe
mejllltime,
have
been maintainpresent company 1ept llfllllalives with \WO aWards~~ were IUilled away.
ing
the
r
oad,
and
re&lt;;eived
mileage
credit
from
the
state
for
the
road, but have
· '"They threw us out because they don't w1111t to fiear .tl\ey're bad employno
record
of
ownership.
·
.
·
ers,"Oiavez..ThomptiOII said after police were called to keep the protesters
According
to
Lentes,
the
issue
of
ownership
of
public
roadways
has
oft' Drcison's property.
become an issue across the state, and the Cllester Township Trustees requestChavez-Thompt1011 wanted to pre5ent Dreison with the AFL-QO's
ed
the closing of the roadway in order to avoid liability and possible tres"Wane Health &amp; Safety Violator of the Year" award. The second award was
passing allegations.
·
from Oeveland members of Jobs With Justice, which determined that the
In
other
business,
the
commissioners
passed
a
resolution
declaring
this
company deserved its award for worst employer of the year.
week
as
National
Crime
Victims
RightsWeek
in
Meigs
County,_
and
B!'OthThe two awards marked Workers Memorial Day, which is being
er resolution declaring April Child Abuse Prevention Month.
·
observed nationally Wednesday.
.
Lentes,
and
Victims
Advocates
Connie
Dodson
and
Christi
Lynch,
noted
·"They're bringing thiid world conditions to. Ocveland. We're opposed to
that
the
local
victims
assistance
program,
administered
through
the
prosethis sweatshtp." said Sleye Cagan, coordin~ of the Oeveland chapter of Jobs
cuting attorney's office, planned activities this week, including a special d_inWith Justice.
..
. •
ner 'recognizing crime victims.
· ·
Dmson 1epresentatives refused to comment Tuesday, .eferring all questions
'
Commissioner
Jeffrey
Thomton
commended
Perry
Varnadoe,
Meigs
to their altomCy, Andy Meyer, who did not r~:tum phone calls. Dreison, which
employs 500 worldwide, owns seven companies that. make prod,ucts for the, County "!X'nomic development director, and local resident Patty Pickens for
their work in trying to attract a v-eterans home in Meigs County.
lnlflSportalion. aaricultural and mining industries.
PROCLAMATION SIGNED - Melga County Commlsaloners
The state announced last week that the home; which was sought by sev- Jeffrey Thornton, Janet Howard and Mick Davenport are pic·
" When people are not protected on
the job because a company wants to eral southeastern Ohio ·counties, would be located in Brown County.
-tur:ed signing e proclamation declaring thla wNk National Crime
Thornton said that lie was disappointed by the decision, saying that spec- VIctims Rights WNk. Alao pictured are VIctims Advocates
Citt comers, that's.· wrong,'' Chavezifications for the home were changed during the site selection process, and Chrlatl Lynch and Connie Dodaon, and Prosecuting Attorney
Thompson said.
that some sites, including the site in Brown County that was selected, were John L.entM.
James Fl'lher, 37, of Cleveland, said he
proposed after a state-imposed deadline.
Today's
WIB fired from hi5 .T!echanic's job for ·
• Authorized .an_advance for a hazard mitigation grant account;
"If we have to follow the state's rules, they should have to f9II0w their.
2 Sections " 12 Pages
being a whislleblower again!~ Drd!;en.
• Tabled action on the sale of an emergency sq uad , pending review Jlf a
owo rules," Thornton said. "I think that the people in Meigs County were
He said be W8'l the (X)III(liUIY's Ooatpabid
by Robert Byer of the counly 'EMS office.
·
cheated by the decision."
lional Safety and Health Adrt!inNnitim
Present,
in
addition
to
Thorpton,
were
.
C
ommissioners
Janet
Howard
and
The commissioners also:
tepr ertlalive tind openly aitici&gt;Jed the
Mick Davenport.
• Approved several transfers of funds for county depanments;
(X)IIIJliiOY for not having enough safety
metiSIIRS in place.
Fisher said he was fired after leaving Work wilh pennission to attend
A Rutland Elementary class has a $pecial Powderhorn Elementary School students likely
an OSHA conference. He said the
connection to the Colorado community devas- attend Columbine High School.
U.S. Department of Labor was investated by a school shooting last week.
Jenkins said on Monday that several' of her
tigating his firing.
·students in the fifth grade class of Donna former students had continued iheir long-dis"Lots of people get ~urt at DrciJ.enklns have been writing to students at Pow- lance friendships with the Colorado students,
Lotteries
son," Fisher said, pointing out some derhorn Elementary School in Littleton, Colo., and that one former student, now a junior at
of the protester.; who have been
as a sP.,cial year' lons project through Weekly Meigs High School, had contacted her about
QQIO
injure(! on the job. ,
Reader, the children :s newspaper which is dis-. the incident last week.
PlckJ; 1-2-S; Plck4: 1-2-2-7
'Thnya Degan, of l'lmla, said She la!l
·
·
Jenkins said that her students had etpressed
tributed
in school$.
Boacb1 5: 8-21-26' 29-30
pert
of
her
risJtt
index
finger
in
a
July
·
The
school,
a~rding
to
Jenkins,
is
located
concern
for the Colorado community, but were
W.YA.
accident She said lingUIIded madlinery only a short distilnce from Columbine Hi&amp;h · handlins the news well.
· Dally 3:'6-2-6; Dlllly 4: 4·0.5·2
CIIRd her finaci" to be pulled into
School, where two Sludents killed 13 people
A sctiool-wide assembly to address student
0 i\J99Qblo \IIIIey hbibili., Co.
heavy machinery. ·
and themselves in a shootin&amp; rampage last concerns about the incident was .conduc.ted at
week.
Rutland Elementary School last week, accordlenkiti.s said that the 23 students wrote let- · ing to Principal Rusty Bookman.
·
ters to their pen pals on Thursday, following
CONDOLENCES _An extra large card,
the tragedy, and expressed their sympathies and elCp!WAing aympathlM to the realdenta of
good wishes to t~eir fellow students.
Uttlltlm, Colo., 11 being circulated by the
According to Jenkins, students in .her class Melga County VIctim• Aael"anct~ Prohave been writing to their peers in the same gram. Here, Chrlatl Lyncl:l, VIctlma AdvoClllorado school for seven years.
cata, helfMI Becky Ellla algn tha card. It will
· It is, therefore possible, that studen!f from be ava!lilble to atgn at the office of the
Rutland Elementary in years past have ~rre- Proeecutlng Attomey, and at 1 apeclal
sponded
with victims or their friends, 'since tlma of crime dlnnll' on friday.
-·-

presents
award to Cleveland company

Rutland students send condolences to Colorado school

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to ~-profit
POMEROY -- Immunization
groups wishing to announce meet- Clinic, Meigs County Health
i'ngs and special events. The calen- Dcpanment, 9 to II a.m. and I to 3
dar is not designed io promote sales p.m. Tuesday. Each child to be
or fund raisers of any type. Items are accompanied by parents/legal •
printed as space permits and cannot · guardian, to present shot record.
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
TUES.DAY
POMEROY -- Free diabetic
POMEROY -- Auxiliary of Drew . screening, Wednesday, 8:30 •to II .
Webster Post 39, American Legion, a.m., Veterans Memorial Medical
2 p.m. Tuesday atthe.bltll.
Clinic.

e

CHESTER -- Meigs County
RUTLAND -- Rutland Friendly
I'Ioliness rally, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at . Gardeners, open meeting, Rutland
Chester Nazarene Church. Speaker, . Church of Christ, Wednesday, 7:30
Rev. Herb Grate.
p.m. Representative of Waterscapes
to speak.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
~
Public Library Board, Tuesday, 9:30
MIDDLEPORT -- The Middlea.m. at library.
·
pan Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m. Wednesday, at the home of
RACINE -- Rac ine Area Com- Gaye Perrin. Ida Diehl will review
munity Organization, Tuesday, Star . "Jewel in the Evening Sky" by Mary
Mill Park., 6:30 .ni.
.Ann Minata.

.
seize drugs, money il rakl
&amp;entors Lawmen
A
search or several

guided
of Pomeroy

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

TOURING TOWN - A
group of Hnlor citizen•
from Marietta racielved
guided toura of Pomeroy
on
Tuesday,
giving
Pomeroy's VIctorian tour
guldtl a chance to ahow
off their co8tum... Hare,
Tour Guide Mary Powell
explain• the architecture
of the downtown area to
one ol the groupe.

iml"Ti WINNER - B. J. Smith, centll', winner In the Melga
County Right to Ufe oratory conteat, took ftrat place In the Ohio
· COfllpetltlon h ..d In Columbus Seturdliy. She now quallflee ~
fMirtlcl.,._ In the .Mtlo1111l oonteet which will be held In Mllwllllk•, Wlec. on June 20. Wlnn• there will r.celv. a 11,500 echol·
arahlp. Here AI Harteon, chairman, pr...nw Smith and the local
run!!Sf-up Michele Hupp with pltlquee.
·

. 992·7834

.
Hol:Jer Clinic ... Keeping the Promile/

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Aprll28, 10110

Weather

Good Afternoon

---Community Calendar---

•

WednesCiay

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multi ~~ency

Rutland~area

locations overnight yielded large quantities of
marijuana, oocaine and cash, Meigs County Pros-&lt;c:uting Anorney John R. Lentes announced Ibis
morning.

·'

l.entes and Sheriff James M. Soulsby said
their offtceS, in conjunction with the Middlepori
Poiioe Department, the Major Crimes Task Force
(administered by Lentes' office~ the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investigation and Identification, and
001ine units from Alltens and Mason Cooniy1
W.Va., panicipoled in the search.
As a resuh of the searcheo, 47-year-old Fred
Priddy, Rutland, was arrested and is being held in
tht Meigs County Jail.
· Lentes said Priddy is being held pepding rhe .
filing of fonnal charges and fu~her stated that
Priddy has a previous felony drug ronviaion. -

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'

9ommentary

P~ge~

Wedneedey, Aprll 21, 10111

'£sta6{tslid illl948

By Wlllam A. Rullher

Our post-Christian age simply doesn't know how to cope
with a tragedy like the mass murder of 12 students and a teacher
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
and the suicide of their two
killers at Columbine High
School in Littleton, Colo,
ROBERT L WINGETT
Some marvel that such a thing
Publlther
could happen in an affluent community -- as if
wealth were a talisman capable of warding off
DIANE Hill
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
•
COntroller
sucl\ an event.
QeMrliiManeger
Others blame the easy availability of guns, and
call for still more gun laws ·- though only the
forced confiscation of . al~ 200
· million
privately
owned
weapons in the country (which
nobody is calling for, and which
would be impossible in any
case) could seriously restrict
that availability. Passing .more
laws may make some people
feet' better; it will do nothing
else.
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
Still others point accusatory
·
fingers at the parents of the
newspapers:
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 Vlr.!·2150 • FIX: Vlr.!·2157

thing as evil --just ignorance.
The Judaeo-Christian tradition had a sharply
different view. There existed in the world an affirmative principle of e-:il, which was the exact
opposite of good, and which contended with good
for control of the world. In the medieval centuries
this was personified a8 the devil, often depicted as
dressed in red, with cloven hooves and a forked
tail. Originally the devil had been one of God's
angels ·- Lucifer ("the Light-Bearer';), immortal
and in possession of free will, who rebelled
against God and now leads a band of rebel angels
like himself. He hates the human race •• God's
special creatibn~- with a passio,n, and works con- .

would draw examples of hatred and violence triumphant. As a model, he w?uld suggest the .most
abominated man in recent h1story -- perhaps m ail
history: Adolf Hitler.
.
And these two youngsters, 'now wholly
obsessed by the principle of.evil, would spend an
entire year plotting to kill as many peo.ple ~ possible with four guns, and level Coiumbme H1gh to
the ground with 30 bombs. And then, of course,
kill themselves. What a triumph for the devil! (If
there really was a devil.) .
Did the Judaeo-Christian tradition have ways
of oombating this "affirmative princi,ple of evil"?
Indeed it did -- wonderful ways. It taught us. to

0

Digging his own grave

.

Tt.e Younptown ':Vindicator, April 21
Slobodan Milosevic is digging his own grave if aerial photographs turn
ou(to.be what they appear to be: mass graves.
.
Stories about Serbian brutality, rape and pillaging in Kosovo have already
made it almost impossible for the NATO allies to envision an end to the
Balkan war that allows Milosevic to remain in power. The confirmation of
ma$5acres would seal his eventual fate. At the same time, it would assure a
longer and more costly conflict.
·. Even as Russia attempts to rehabilitate its international image by brokering: a deal between NATO and Milosev.ic, any agreement seems highly
;fnljkely. ·
.
. ·

Letter to the editor
World War//
rttenactment group starting .
;1\ World War II reenactment group is starting here. The group, which will
belong to the World War II Historical Reenactment Society inc., one of the
oldest World War II reenactment groups in America. Upon joining, members
join for the fee of $20 per year. Each person then P,urchases their uniform,
eq~ipment ~nd weapon and may take 12 to 18 monlbs to do so.
The society has American, British, Russian and German units. The unit
here will be based upon the German Africa Korps which fought under General, later Field Marshal Rommel in the western desert of North Africa
agldnst British and Commonwealth forces from March, 1941, to November,
1942,
.
During the war, Rommel and the Africa Korps became a le~end both to
frieitd and foe. Since the war, more books and more movies have been written;about Rommel and the Africa Korps than any other general or military
from either world war. During Desert Storm, a captured Iraqi major was
sealed inside an American colonel's armored personnel carrier. On one wall
·wu a picture of Rommel. The Iraqi major .asked the private guarding him,
"W)ly does your commander have a picture of your enemy?" The private
smiled and said, "If you knew as much about Rommel as he did, you would ·
J'll)t:be sitting there. •
·
'
·
· tofore than 55 years since .the war in the desert, Rommel and the Africa
Ko!PS is still a legend around the world. The soldiers who fought on both
. ·ii&lt;IU still get together every year in Egypt. This reenactment group based on
the :Africa Korps.will to the .best of my information be the very first, which
will be something for the history books. When movies such as Saving Pri,.;ate Ryan are made, they use.such groups to provide extras. For information
·wrile to WVo/2, 100 Unio.n Ave., Pomeroy OH 45769-1000.
•
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·
DIIYicl Edwllrde
·
·
Pom.roy

-.;...__-Today In Hlstory;...__IIV 'l'he AMOCIIttcl ,,...

.
'
today is Wednesday, April28, the 118th day of 1999. There are 247 ~ays
left:in the year.
•
·
: 'foday's Highlight in History:
.
.
0n April 28, 1945, Italian dictator· Benito Mussolini and his mistress,
Clara Petacei, were executed by Italian partisans as they attempted to Dec
the country.
·

•

..

ighs in the 60s forecast
region during Thursday

COLUMBINE .
HIOH SCHOOL
Aprll20, 1999
love God and our neighbors, and to overco!De evil
stantly to destroy it.
with
good.
·
Wo~t of all, he can approach and sometimes
But
we
are
too
sophisticated, nowadays, to
win over human beings, who are not immortal but
who, like him, were endowed by God with free hang such lessons on the walls of our classrooms,
will. He is ingenious, and knows their weakness- or even allow a short nondenominational prayer
es. He has been at his dirty work since, in the Gar- . each day, lest we offend the iender scnsibiliti.c i
(and alleged First Amendment rights) of t.he class
den of Eden, .he persuaded Eve to try the apple.
How would this affirmative principle of evil . atl)eist: Such lessons must be Imparted, 1f.at a1!,
manifest itself to a pair of late teen-agers in Lit- by each student's parents. Apparently Eric Harris
tieton, Colo.? He would search out youngsters not and Dylan Kiebold somehow missed them. ; .
well accepted· by their peers. He would try to CopyrightI - NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
enhance their sense of being different -- and then, . William A. Rullher Ia a Diatlngulllhtcl Fellow
insidiously, suggest that they were better. From of tha Cllremont lnatltute for the Study df
··
the culture he and his minions have polluted, he Stlteam•nahlp and Political PhiiOIOphy.

drastic measures to reduce our use of
fossil fuels, the president warned,
"9,000. square miles of .florida,
Louisiana and other coastal areas will
be flooded."
.
This is~ stuff. And if it's true,
then the Anierican people probably
wouldn't object to the sacrifice the
president wants them to make to
avoid this looming . ~lin'latic cataclysm.
·
But what if it's not true? What if'
the science of global warming is
unclear; is, as yet, inconclusive? Then
it would be absurd for the go~ernme~t
to move full speed ahead With pubhc
policy that aims to reduce consumplion offossil fuels by making it two or
three or even four times as expensive
forAmericans to buy gas and electricity.
Which brin~ me to two recent
studies by scientists who actually subscribe to the global warming orthodoxy.

. The mor~ recent of the studi~ was there should first have bee~ a.nse I~
released thiS week by the 01mate C02 levels, followed by a nse ul ~em­
Prediction eenu;r, a division of t~e perature levels, But !It• Scnpps .
Nati~n~l ~an1c and Atmosphen.c rese~h found the oppos1te to be ':"'e.
Admm1strat1on. It says that the contl.'
L1ke .the NO~ study, the ~nPJ;lS
nental United States has actually got- stu&lt;!y d!dn't rece1ye much no.tice m
ten cooler -- r~ther than warmer -- the mat~stream pre~. But 11 was
over the past th1rd of a century.
reported 10 The Washmgton Post b)'
This study wasn't widely reported Curl Suplee,
.
in the media. But Seth Borenstein of
"That seq~ence of e~ents," he ·
Knight Ridder News Servi&lt;:e noted wrote, "appe~ to &lt;;&lt;&gt;ntradict the funthat this findmg "runs counter to what damenlallog~c of s1m~Ie greenhouse
... scientists have been th~zin~."
~arming ~heories, wh1.ch argue th;at
It was the same · thm~ w~th a mcreases m. hea~-trappmg gases Will
rca:ntly reie~~ study by sc1ent1sts at be foli?,wed by htgher surface temperScripps inst1tuuon. o~ Oceanography. atures. .
.
.
,.
They took Antarctic 1ce co~ samples
~e _mteresling t~m~. about both
from the last three giac1al cycles stud1es IS that the SCientists who pr&lt;; ·
(transition periods between ice age duced them have. gone .out of th.e1r
and plane~ary warming) for ·purposes way to say tha~ the1r ~ndm~ -- wh1~
of ascertammg the relation between appeared to JOurnalists Borenste\n,
rises in atrnospheri~ levels o.f carbon Suplee and you~ truly to contrad1CI
dioxide levels and mcreases m plane- . the global warmm,g orth~xy -- ~
tar}' temperature.
not really mcons1stent w1th global
Based on global warming theory, . warming theory.

The Asaoclattcl Preu
A high pressure system moving its way through Ohio today will clear
the southern part of the state of clouds and rain by Thursday.
It will be mostly clear tonight in the north, but it will be cloudy with
tslto\\rers likely through midnight in ·the south. Low temperatures tonight
be in the 40s.
!.
II will be sunny in t~e northern part of the state Thursday and partly
sunny in the south. Highs will be 60 to 65.
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 85 set in 1914. The record low was 28 set in 1967.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:22. Sunrise Thursday will be at 6:35.
Weather rorecast:
Toni~)lt. . .SIIo~1ors likely; mainly through 3,a.m. Lows in the upper 40s.
10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Thursday...Partly cloudy. Highs around 60.
Thursday night...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
Extended rorecast:
cloudy. Highs in the upper 60s.
clear. Lows in the mid 40s·and highs 70 to 75.

Helen Mooshian, missionary and world traveler, will be speaking Sunday, 7 p.m. at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, State Route 143, Pomeroy. The '
Rev. Victor Roush, pastor, invites the public.

into DOE labs now call GAO reported that required background chec~
the security breakd&lt;?wn were performed for.fewer th•n 10 percent of vis:
1nd Jan Moller
"total," and the House itors from "sensitive" countries. Word of this
Amidst all the conspiracy theories that have
Commerce Committee is apparently got around. t;IY the mid-1~, th~
been floated to explain the. theft of top-secret
making the case that number of visitors from "sensitive" countries ha~
nuclear information from government laboratoDOE's problems go much · more than tripled.
.
'
ries, one explanation has been largely overlooked :
DOE
promised
to
do
better,
but
thin~
got
The
deeper
than
a
single
spy
at
sloppiness.
worse. As late as 1997, auditors reported that
From documents we ·have seen, plus interLos Alamos.
At a subcommittee background checks were being performed on less
views with oversight officials, we can conclude
that the only surprising aspect of the belated spy hearing on Tuesday, Tom Bliley, R-Va., said "the than 5 percent of all visitors.
· Security controls over foreign visitors did not
revelations is how easy it must have been for for- historical pattern is clear: · internal Department
them from obtaining access to sensitiv~
preclude
on
security
matters
either
gets
dismissed
criticism
eigners to get the information they were after.
information,
For example, Los Alam~ often·
For example: Between 1989 and 1995, nearly or white-washed until some evenr crystallizes
10,000 pieces of equipment-- including comput- public attention. Once public attention shifts... the allowed unescorted after-hours access to controlled areas to preserve what one official
ers, printers, plotters, sophisticated lab instru- Department returns to business as usual."
described
·as a "campus atmosphere."
Said
Rezendes:
·
"These
problems
span
five
ments, hoists, furnaces, lathes, drill presses, fork- .
J equired paperwork was never comBecause
lifts, an air compressor, a photo copier, a boat and presidents, eight Energy secretaries and the Cold
a semi-trailer -- simply "disappeared" frolll the War. Ail have responded inadequately. Negative pleted, DOE officials were often not always
Department of Energy's Rocky Flats facility in evaluations were burie\1,. and whistle blowers aware of what was being discussed, or who it wa5
being discussed with. in 1994, DOE granted thcit
were punished."
Colorado.
'
·
Los Alanios and Sandia Jabs exemptions to back•
Buried?
The database at Rocky Flats was also a mess.
There were incidents: in February 1991, audi- ground-check requirements. The FBI agenta.
Access was loosely controlled, . and employees
had arbitrarily' deleted or altered the records for tors found that Lawrence Livermore lab was assigned tO' the lab were 1!0 disgusted with the w~y
missing ·more than 12,000 classified documents. DOE waa handling security that they left. · •
hundreds of items.
·
A 1991 audit was also dJI!Ilaglng: It revealed
The database wu the corne11tone of a proper· Only 2,000 have sin&lt;:e been recovered, and DOE
that
while the DOE had regulatiOIIS in place to
has
performed
no
investigation.
ty manage111ent system that was, in short, a disasprevent
the transfer of weapons technology \'~'
DOE's first major problem was with security
ter. But more disturbing than the missing equipment wu the DOE's attitude when these breach- clearances. In the early. 1980s, government audi· materials to countries affiliated with American
es were discovered. tn 1994, the General toni reported two field offi&lt;:es contained more firms performing classified work, they followed
.
Accounting Offi&lt;:e, which had written several than 4,600 clearances that should have been ter· them just 2 percent of the time. .
· The prof!lems and anecdotal evidence ell
reports on Rocky Flats, found that the agency 111inated. More than 600 employees at the Los
hadn 'I even bothered to investigate and instead Alamos lab had 'Clearance badges, but ·did not pointed to · one conclusion: counterintellige11~
allowed the fJU:ility to write off ne1rly S2S million have active clearances listed in the files. In other efforts at DOE were practically non-exislent. In
cases', the files contained incorrect names and · 1996, for example, one person wu assigned ~o
of the lou.
monitor the thousands of visitors who .came to
Vic Rezendes, the GAO officer in chll'ge of clearance levels.
The agency had bigger problems to deal with. lAls Alamos every year -- and oversee the l,QOOauditins OOE'asccurlty, told us that Rqcky Flat's
inventory problems raiaed serious security ques- On four separate occasions, InveStigators warned pius overseas visits by Los AI!1J11oS sci~tists.
Things became farcical earlier this year when
that information from the DOE's classified server
tions in hil mind: .
.
"My point ia that if you can get a trailer out of was showing up on the unclassified server, which Los Alamos received ·an "excellent" safety rating,
a secure fadlity, 01' a complller, how hard is it to was accessible via the Internet.
despite 45 separate incidents in which classified
There was also the matter of controlling for- material was compromlaed.
get a piece of paper out of there?"
Officials investigating Chinese penetration eign visito11 to the labs. As early as 1988, the . CopyRght1 ll8tl, Untied F-1 Syndicate, In e.

· Joan Irene Ward, 44, 75 East, Albion, Ind., died Monday, April 12, 1999
in the Elkhart General Hospital.
'She was born July 10, 1954 in Three Rivers, Mich., the daughter of
Edward E. and Faye Frays Ward. She graduated from Mei~ High School in
1972 and moved to Albion, .
She is survived by her father, Edward E. Ward •of Three Rivers, Mich.;
her mother, Faye I. Gull) of Edwardsburg, Mich.; three sisters, Barbara Ward
of Wolflake, Ind., Gloria Andrews of Edwardsburg, and Glenda Thram of
Centreville, Mich.; one brother, George Gum Jr. of·Pomeroy; and sev~ral
nieces, nephews, cousins, aunts and uncles.
·
·' ·
. She was preceded in death by her stepmother, Cathy Ward.
Funeral services were held Thursday, April 15, 1999 in the RosenbergSchipper Funeral Home Ltd., Sturgis, Ind., with the Rev. Cal Kolzow of
Trinity Lutheran Church officiating. Burial was in the Salem Lutheran
Cemetery,
Memorials. may be directed to the Am~rican Cancer Society.

William Kenneth Welker

By KATHERINE RIZZO '
Altociated Preas Writer
_ WASHINGTON (AP) - Milk
does a body $OOd. However, it ffi'IY
not do as much gpod when it iX)mes
to the i!onsumer's bottom line, an
Ohio co.ngressman says.
. ·
; . Republican Rep. John Boehner is
vowing to fight an effon by New
I;:ngland and the South to. insulate
t~ir regions from some of the ups
and downs of'milk prices.
He said Tuesday that special
regional dairy agreements should be
allowed to end when an Oct. 1 expiration date arrives.
"Expanding dairy compacts and
extending them into the next century
. is not in the best interests of Ameriean agriculture," said Bochner, the
only Ohioan on the c;ommittee that's
going to consider legislation dealing
with milk price regulation.
"The future prosperity of American farming will be built on freedom
and free markets - not government
control and price fixing."
The regional groups, or compacts, that Boehner opposes are

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ-lliO)
Comnnmit, Newapaptr Holdlnp. Inc.

•

Published every lfternoon, M011day through
fridly, 11 t Coort St., Pomeroy, Ohio, b)' the

Ollio Valley Publishing Company. Second c:lw
·
Mn~~bcn The Auociated Press and the Ohio
New~p~per Allocialioa.
Pamautcr: Send address ,corrections to 1'IH!
Daily Sentinel, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio

pOsuae paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Southern High School Class of 1989 will hold a lOth year· reunion •
dance on May 29 at the American Legion Hall in Racine, beginning at ,8
p.m . Class members who received invitations are ask,ed to 'RSVP, and
those who did not receive an invitation are asked to contact Melanie Van- ,
Meter Quillen at 949-2121 or Sherry Teaford Riffle at 949-2S40, Those '
attending will be asked for·a $10 donation at the door to pay the cost of
the DJ and the use of the building:

Big Bend Service Unit
The Big_Bend Girl Scout Service Unit leaden~' m,eeling will be held
Thursday, 7 p.m. at Trinity Church, Pomeroy. Program and finance report
training will be held.

·Wesleyan Bible Hqllness Church
The Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church, Middlepon, will hold a weekmeeting, Saturday through Monday, 7:30 p.m. nightly with the Rev._
Sieve Manley from New England as guest speaker. Pastpr Doug Cox
invites the public.
•
e~d

Most reserves in first ~
call-up are Ai.r Force ...
By ANNE GEARAN
Asaoclated PraaB Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Most of
the reserve forces headed for the
Balkans as the United States draws
deeper into lhe Kosovo conflict will
be Air Force pilots and others trained
. to fly and maintain military aircraft,
The Pentagon annou~ced Tuesdaylt will call up to 33,102 reservists
to active military duty as part of the
bombing campaign against forces of

~f~~~~ian

William Kenneth Welker, DDS, 93, Columbus, and formerly of Gallipolis, died Monday, April 26, 1999 in the First Community Village, following
a brief illness.
,
Born Feb. 3,1906 in Gallia County, son of the late William E. and Nancy
Lodice Malaby Welker, he was a 1926 graduate of Rio Grande College whO
taught for several years at Pomeroy a~d . Gallia Academy high schools.
He obtained his dentistry degree in 1937 and practiced in Oak Hill until
joining the U.S. Army Dental Corps in 1940. A veteran of World War II,
where he received the Bronze Star, Combat Medical Badge and ,Silyer Star,
·he returned to private practice in Gallipoli' in 1945. 1n 1947, he received the
rank of major 1n the Regular Army Dental Corps, transferred on~ year later
to the Regul~ Air Force Dental Corps and remained with the service until
~his retirement In 1961. He returned to Gallipolis and resided there until he
and his wife inoved to Dublin, Ohio, in 1985.
, The charter president of the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club, he was a member
intended io stabilize milk prices.
of
Omicron Kappa Upsilon, the 'American Dental Association, Masons,
Compacts allow states to band
American
Legion Lafayette Post 27, Gallipolis Elks Lodge' 107, the VFW
together and set what they consider
and
the
Retired
Officers Association.
a fair price. A commission fundedSurviving are his wife of 69 years, Mildred Allison Welker; a son, Dr.
with dairy producer contributions
William
A. (Jane) Welker; and two grandchildren and four great-grandchilthen establishes a price higher than
dren.
·the federal government's.
He was also preceded in death by three sisters, Pearl Lewis, Lora McCarOnly · one now oper~tes. It
ley
and Ruby Houck. ·
includes Connecticut, Maine, MassA
memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in t~ Burkhart Cen- ·
' achusetts, Ne'\' Hampshire, Rhode
ter
Chapel
at the First Community Village, 1800 Riverside Drive, ColumIsland and Vermont, though some
other states want to join and south- · bus. Burial will be in Mound Hill Cemetery, Gallipolis, at 2 p.m, Friday.
ern states want a version of their Arrangements are by the Southwick-Good Funeral Chap~!. 3100 N. High
St., Columbus.
own.
·Meanwhile, the Nonheast compact will expire Oct. I unless CDnBy ALICE ANN UWE
Economists had predicted a modest
gress renews it.
rebound in March. However, many
· . On Tuesday, Reps. As3 Hutchin- AIIIOCIIIkld ,.._ Wrfblr
WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Orders 10 remain concerned about signs of wealt· son, R-Ark., and Bob Etheridge, Dfactorics
for big-ticket durable goods ness in U.S, industry. .
N.C., joined Sens. James Jeffords,
from
refrigerators
to tanks ·recovered
American manufacturers have been
R-Vt., and Patrick Leahy; D-Vt., to
start pushing pro-compact legis)a- sotnewhat in March from an end-of- liun by wotld economic troubles that
winter slump.·
began in Asia nearly two yeam ago.
tion.
·
Orders rose 2 pereent to a seasonal- Export sales have plummeted, an~ Jowly ~djusted $197.7 billion, with priced imports have increased competiimprovement showing in mOst sectors, lion for oonsumers' auention here.
the Commeree Department said today.
U.S. factories have cut hundreds of
The increase foilowe4 a much big- thousands of jobs over the pas1 year.
Am Ele Po- ....................... 40'!.
Akzo ...................................... 44'1. ger decline in demand. for durable Many businesses would have been
AmrTach ...............................67'!. goods in February, altbough revised much hardCr hit if nol for the fact that
Aah 011 .................................. 42~
figures released today pegged that drop Americans, still enjoying plenty of jobs
ATIT ..............................,......53'1. at3.9 pereent, not as bad as the 5.0 per- and high stock prices, continue to
Bank One ............................. 59'1. cent decline first estimated.
spend briskly.
Bob Evana ........................... 18'Y.
Borg-Wamer .......................56'•
Broughton .............................13':o
Champion ....... :........ :..............&amp;..
Charm Shpa ...........................4Y.
RliTLAND
Units of the Meigs County EmerCity Holdlng ..........................30'h gency Medical Service recorded
12:18 a.m., McCumber Hill
Federal Mogul ...................... 48'1•
Road,
Beulla Collier, treated at the
seven
calls
for
assistance
Tuesday.
Ganna1t ................................ 73~.
Units
responding
included:
scene;
,
Kmart .................................... 15'!.
7:40 .a.m., New •Lima Road,
Kroger ..................................56 1 ~"
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Landa End ......., ....................39'1•
8:17a.m., State Route 681, Tup- David Wiseman, Holzer Medical
Ltd .........................................43'!. ~rs Plains, Guy Calaway, Camden- Center, Central Dispatch squad
Oak Hill Fln1 ...... ,.... ,............. 17"1• Clark Memorial Hospital;
assisted,
ova............,...........................43)1
2
p.m.,
Overbrook
Nursing
CenOne Valley ..............................38't.
Peoples .....................;.......... 25~ ter, Middleport, Dorothy Young,
Prem Flnl ..............................12'• Pl~nt Valley Hospital;
Rockwell ....................1.......... 50~
6:33 p.m., Laurel Cliff Road,
RD/Shell ......................:........ ,57'• Pomeroy, Dennis Robinson, treated
Saara ...........................-••••••••••44\
Shoney'a ................................ 1'A~ at the scene;
8:04p.m., South Second Avenue,
FlratStar ..........................;... ,33'·
Middlepon,
Mary Rager, Veterans
Wendy'a ................................ 27'4
Worthlngto,. .........................13'f.. Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
-t Stock reporta are today'•
5:2S p.m., volunteer fire depart10:30 a.m. quotas provided by ment and squad IQ Laurel Cliff
Adveat of Gallipolis.
Road, automobile fire, Bob Collins
owner, no injuries.reportc!J.

March durable-goods orders·up 2 percent ·

(~

7:00 l 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 I 3:20

:(~

Consl~er

your family.
·Consider pre-need funeral planning.

· Correction Polley

CREMEENS

New• Department•

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••t
exlt..IMI ut:
Geotnl MIDIII!ot.... ,.... ,..............ExL 1101

RACINE

f1ew"'"''''''''' .................................Ext. ~102

or ElL 11011
'

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"Our Family Servi":B Your Family."

Guaranteed pre-arranged funerals so your costs
do not exceed today's prices.

Other Sarvicu
A..trlillq. .................................Ext. U04
Clftll..doe ..................................Ext. 1103
Clelollltd Ad&amp; .............................ExL 1100

.&amp;

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NEVER BEEN KISSED (PG13)

W~iKJ£&amp;fr~;J£;2-.~~~~Y~~l!~ .:

Reader Services

-

..'·.

NATO leaders in Wuhington for
last weekend's 50th anniversary· ·;
summit repeatedly pledged to inten~
sify the airstrikes and said there are · ..
no immediate plans for a grou.nd
campaign. A ground invasion of · '
Yugoslav territory would require · •
buildup of forces from other branch- ··
es of the military services.
·· '
The reserve call,up that Presidem' · •
Clinton approved Tuesday allows fot
up to 6,100 Army reservists, 1,000 · ·
Marine reservists, 892 Navy·_,
reservists and 10 Coast Guard·• .
' . .·:
reservists.

EMS units record 7 calls

5. _ ........................... l109.7'Z

·

President slobodan
The non-volun)ary call-up is the
first since N!U'O began its air campaign to win autonomy for Kosovo
on March 24 and the largest since
240,000 served in the buildup to the
1991 Gulf War.
Up to 25,000 of the reserve forces .
will come from the Reserv~ win~ of
the Air Force, the Air Force Reserves
and the Air National Guard. Other
branches of the military reserves will ·
play smaller roles, the Pentagon~ said.
Tlie reserves call-up will happen
in waves, staning immediately with
2,116 Air For~ Reserves who will
help in the aeri,jl refueling of NATO
warplanes, said Maj. Gen. Michael
Kudlacz, Air Force direetor of operations and training.
A few of those reservists ·are
already in the Balkans as short-term
volunteers, and more will arrive this
week, Kudlacz said. :
" This call-up responds to our
immediale needJpr tanker support. It
is just the first i~ement of the larger cOmmitment" needed to maintain
military and humanitarian missions
in and aro~od the disputed province
of Kosovo, Kudlacz said.

Later waves of · Air Force · '•
Reserves will fly and support addi; ,.I
tiona! strike planes such as the F-16
and ground attack planes such as the ,
A-10, Air Force officials said. A fel'i ,.
Air Force military police may al59 ·
get the call.
..
The emphasis on Air Force per= ~
sonnel reflects' the fact that aircraft,· •
including fighter jets and bombers1 • ,
arc proseculing the daily bombing ~ .
missions on Yugoslavian fuel depots, ·
bridges, communications towers, airfields and.other targets.
·:
U.S. Gen. Wesley 01rk, the top,.:'
NATO commander, has asked th~ ·Pentagon to dispatch another 3~ ~
planes, one-third of them refuel in!! ;: ;
··
Planes.

Stocks

tl \Yeekl .......... .:.................$29.2.5
26 \Yeekl ............................$56.68

't~Jt

•

Class reunion

.
ner opposing· regional
milk-price legislation

By JICk Ander.on

I

~

C~

DOE s.loppiness makes foreign theft easy:

,,

0

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-•

Missionary to speak

Maria W. Yagla Waldnig. 73, Syracuse, died Monday, April 26, 1999
inPieasant Valley Hospital.
She was born in Columbus on March 13, 1926, daughter of the late
Robert and Manha Paso Yagla. She was a homemaker and volunteer for the
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. She was a
member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-la\'(, Debra and Alan Petro
of Valparaiso, Ind., and Melania and Joseph Holman of Cardington; four
sons and three daughters'in-law, Roben Jr. and Debra Waldnig of Centersburg, Steve McOaskie of Columbus, Barry and Sheila McCiaskie of Lewisport, Ky., 1'om and Sandra McOaskie of Bethlehem, Pa.; 12 grandchildren;
a father- and mother-in-law, Julius and Flo Waldnig of Racine; a sister and
brother-in-law, P.at and Jim Moore of Racine; and broihers and sisters-inlaw, Bill and Alfie Waldnig, and Ted and Elizabeth Waidnig of Mechanicsburg.
.
She. W'IS also preceded in death by her husband, Robert F. Waldnig, in
January 1999.
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in the Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Father Walter Hei~z officiating. Burial will be in the
Sacred Heart Cemetery, .!'omeroy. Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral
Home, Pollleroy, from ~-4 and 7-9 p.ni. Thursday, where a vigil service will
.be held at 3:45 p.m.

v ~ -"'(
~ .,~
·.·.·
·
SI.Mv, Pt. CIOuCty '
Showera T•torma
Aaln
Aun1ea

/

•

I

. r..~

Contradictory science heats up deba~~

By JoHph P.erldna ..
Scientists are a recalcitrant Jot.
Once they've latched on to. a theory,
it's hard for them to let go. Especially
when research grants hang in the balance. ·
So it is with global warming. The
prevailing wisdom --for the moment,
at least-- is that human consumption
.o f fossil fuels has increased atmosphcric carbon dioxide levels, which,
in tum has piecipitated a dangerous
· plane~ warming trend.
This scientific. theory has a
tremendous public policy implication.
For, on the basis of this theory, the
Clinton administration has committed
the United States to cut its greenhouse
gas emissions by 30 percent over the
next 13 years.
Indeed, said President Ointon,
"The scien&lt;:e is clear. and compelling.
We humans are changing the elimate."
And unless the government takes

•

:·••

The Olive Township Fire Department of Reedsville will have a rib d1n- :
•
ncr Saturday, Serving will begin at 11 a.m.
•

Joan Irene Ward

Parti'es should resolve

The Sandusky Register, April 22
·J{esidents of Brooksville, Ala., recently petitioned to have their community declared a new town, founded on Christian principles and beholden
on[y to the laws of the King James version of the Bible.
Pizza mogul Tom Monaghan announced last week his plans to build a law
sc~ool where prospective .Jawyers would be schooled in the .law from a
Christian perspective.
·
.
Both of these actions seem to be well -meaning attempts by God-fearing
peOple to live their faith and bring the word out of the pulpit and into their,
daiJy lives.
.
What could possibly be wrong with these ideas?
Separatism for any reason, be it religious or race-based,,eats away at.'the
fm(ndation of our country. America was founded by people"Who had suffered
· under a government which was inflexible on matters of faith.

I llenollolfl~:::o'J

IND.

Fund-raising ban worthy of consideration ~!~~~~~~ :a~~n~~:~;~(

i:]l:;;;;;~t ~;ld,:;;;;;~ a;;Jj~iirsed.

Rib dinner planned

Marla W. Yagla Waldnig

·E ditorial views

The Columbus Dispatch, April 26
_
respects. But the critics are curi- .
This looks bad. But nothing is illegal about term-limi.ted legislaiors rais- 01lsly unconvincing when it
ing campaign cash on their way out. Lobbyists apparently are fed up and ~omes to specifying what the
want new restrictions on lawmakers' perpetual quest of cash.
parents co~ld have taught their
Legislators guilty of lame-duck canvassing for contributions ... should children that would have prequit this practice or prepare to face a vote on legislation that will close the .vented the slaughter. We shall
door for them.
return to this point.
Why, Statehouse ·lobbyists wonder, should .they be solicited for money by
Finally, and ~mewhat more .
lawmakers who aren't running for the House or Senate, who:instead may persuasively, many commentaseek another, local seat or no seat at all? ·
·
·
tors blame the culture of vioThe idea of banning such fund raising is worth considering, but a dis- fence in which our society, and
tinction should be made between caucus leaders who arc responsible for the particularly our young people,
future of their entire team, and lame-duck lawmakers responsible only to are now engulfed. in the form of
themselves.
films, TV fare and pop music,
Better yet is the solution devised by the Ohio State Bar Association's the message blares forth day
poiitical arm, which voted J'llCently not to attend fund-raisers for lame-duck . and night: "Hate your neighlawmakers.
bor! Kill him!" Without quesdil'~"erences
~ion, this m~age reaches. and
':/J 1
mflames certa1n young mmds. · ·
The (Toledo) Blade, April 23 ·
But why some and not others? Why did so many
By a narrow majority the state Supreme Court upheld an appeals court's hundreds at Columbine High resist it, and only
voiding of a law passed to limit employer liability in on-the-jo~ injurjes.
two succumb?
The law, a rehash of earlier legislation that failed constitutional muster,
So a great many people wind up dismissing the
said employees coul~n't sue for on-the-job injuries unless an employer did two killers as "sick"-- as if that explained anything.
something to "deliberately or intlntionally" . kill or injure them. But it . ~at is missing here is the understanding that
defined the criteria Of those words so narrowly that the majority said work- there is such as thing as evil in the world. We tend
ers were left with scant chance of recovering damages outside the workers' to think rathe~ well Of the society we live in; Most
·
compensation system.
of the people in It, we are sure, have good intenOhio has had problems.furing business and industry to this state because lions. A few may not, but even they are not "evil"
of skyrocketing tort awards. Labor has a history of demanding the unrea- -- merely misled. (lbey were abused as children,
sonable without any long-term regard. AI the same time, business has a his- or suffer from post-Vietnam syndrome, or whattory of irresponsibility on worker health and safety issues without fire at ever.) Questioned on the subject, many people
their feel and cudgel on their heads.
would admit that they doubt there is any such
· For the financial health' of Ohio, both sides must work together to resolve

••

IJeath Notices

The lesson of·Littleton

The DailY, Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneaday, Aprll28, 1999

.

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50447 SR 124
Racine, OR 45771

D~le and the gang art doing it AGAIN!

Saturday, April 29, 1999 we are having a fret grilled hot dog day, 11 :00 am - 4:QO pm
BUT remember we've MOVED' We are back down on the F.um in Racine.
Go through !Ucine on 114 e,t, were about 4 miles outside of town, on the righ1.
Special on Roses $12.99
·
·
·
Door Prizes Drawing Sat. &amp; Sun.
'
Remember Mother's Day: Lots of Plants to choose from or Choose a Gift Certificate
'Buy 3 Flats qr 3 Hanging B.. kers ($7.99 Value) for.$21.00
.
COME ON OVER AND JO IN THE FUN

. '

or&lt;" Mon.- ~~.;.;o~40 $~~·-f6'a'2 12:oo to 6:oo

On Sunday 1-3 Hall Keen Meigs Co. Exte.,sion Agent will be
available to answer any.questions

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The Daily Sentinel

SpOrts

Page4
VVedneaday,April28,1999

Southern pounds
Alexander 15-8

GETS DOUBLE PLAY - Seconds after retiring the Philadelphia
Phillie&amp; Rico Brogna, Cincinnati second sacker Pokey Reese fires
the baseball to first base to retire Ron Gent end complete the sixth·
Inning double play In Tuesday night's National League game In
Philadelphia, 'Where the Phlllles won 1·0 In 10 innings. (AP)

Southern hurler Benj1 Manuel
went the distance to picl: up the win
as Southern defeated Alexander 15-8
h~re Tuesday mght m Tn-Valley
Conference inter-dtvtsoon action.
Coach Mick Wmebrenner's
Tornadoes (I 0-5) have been on a tear
of late, brmgmg out the heavy
antllery on offense. Southern had 14
htts off Alexander pnchers Jason
Warren, Ryan Lawson and Eric
Gabnel.
They combmed for five strikeouts, four walks and made three
errors. Manuel ptcked up the win
wtth etght runs, II hits, eight stnkeouts and SI" walks.
Southern went up 2-0 m the first
mnmg on a lead -off walk to Adam
Wilhams After Josh Ervin reached
on an error, Adam. Cummgs had an
RBI smgle. Jesse Lillie btl a fielder's
choice to bnng home the next run
!11 the second, Josh Davis was hit
by a ptlch. Williams smgled, Ervin

"

-

Chevalier.
J. McGee, N Kosha, and C Cagg
each singled for N-Y
Evans picked up the win as
Eastern went to 8-7 on the season.
Evans fanned eight, walked one, and
gave up three hits. Cagg suffered the
loss.
to Tnmble
Eastern
goes
Wednesday,
hosts
Wahama
Thursday, and goes to Waterford
Fnday.
lnnjng 12l&amp;lJ
Eastern ...................581-24=20-15-2
Nelsonville-York .......000-00=0-3- 6
WP-Evans and Karr
LP-Cagg and Dupler

wtth two runs In the first, then
Eastern went up 3-2 in the founh on
a Coleman single, and single l&gt;y Joe
Dtllon. Wes .Crow brought home a
run on a fielder's chotec. Dustm
Huffman walked to load the bases,
but all tlu'ee runners were left' stranded Dillon brought home an Eastern
run in the sixth with a 6-3 ground out
after Wtllford had trtpled. That score
came after N· Y had gone up 7· 3 on
the previous frame.
N-Y hltters were S. Schultz With a
double and smgle, Ben Robey a double, Justin Bateman a triple, and a
smgle and triple by D. Barneue.
K Lindsay got the wm for N-Y m
rehef of E. Glass. They fanned five
and walked three. Lyons came on m
rehef of Smtih and despite a good
effon suffered the loss. They fanned
three and walked three. All three
strikeouts were credtted to Lyons.
Southern goes to Tnmble
Wednesday,
hosts
Wahama
Thursday, and goes to Waterford
Friday
lnoioa mlilll
Eastern :................. 200- 10 1-0=4-8-0
Nelsonville-York .. 200-041 -1=7-6-0
WP-Lindsey and Robey
LP-Smtth, Lyons (I st, LP) and
Wtllford.

.Moon says he won't try
to Lf.nseat Grbac as starter
for Kansas City Cl)iefs
Penn plans to stay at OSU
By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - If
Warren Moon plans to unseat Elvts
Grbac and become Kansas Cny's
No I quarterback, he's keepmg n a
secret.
The 42-year-old Moon, after sign·
• tnll a two-year contract as Grbac 's
backup, was saying all the nght
things Tuesday.
"Elvis is the guy playing from the
outset here," he said "In order for
this football team to do well , I've got
to support him just like everybody
else does Believe me, I'll be behind
htm and answer any questton he
might have."
:
One of the most prolific passers in
~ NFL hastory dunng a 15-year career
• wtth Houston, Minnesota and
: Seattle, Moon is advenised as notliing more than the backup to Grbac,
who has mtssed 16 games the past
two ~easons because of InJUry and
ineffectiveness
If he does spark a quanerb~ck
: controversy, It would be nothmg new
; for Kansas Ctty. Last year, Rtch
• Gannon played better than Grbac
: when given the chance and became
• the favorite of most fans and many
·
:. pl•~e!'i.
I' llut Oannon Stilled a free agent
I contract with Oakland when the
~ Raiders offered . to make him their
; staner.
•
"Quarterback controverstes only
: come when one guy doesn' t do well
• and the other guy does well ," Moon
: said. "ff that doesn't happen, that's
· where I step in. But we really should. n't even talk about controversy until
: it gets to some pomtlike that. Right
•

that someone stole it out of the team's
dresstng room shonly before the stan
of the UConn game.
"When you get to a situation hke
that, I know a lot of players say thts
might be the best time to leave, whtle
your name's out there and you're on
top," Penn said

American League
roundup
. . Baseball Writer
Roger Clemens had no chance.
H1t hard m the first mmng by l he
Texas Rangers, he left after the second because of a bad hamstnng
He will get another try to set the
AL record for consec ulo ve wms,
however, thanks to his New York
Yankees teammates
Clemens' 17-game wmnmg stnng
was kept intact Tuesday mght when
the Yankees rallted for two runs in
the ninth agamst John Wetteland to
beat Texas 7-6.

In iarfs notch 8-5
ver Athletics
'D

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Manny Ram~tez had a career year
last season. Now he's aiming to set
new standards
Ramirez h1t a two-run homer givmg htm 28 RBis for the month as the Cleveland Indians defeated the
Oakland Athlettcs 8-5 Tuesday mght.
"He's some kind ofhttter. He's m
the elite group," Oakland manager
An Howe said. "He has no real
weaknesses and lie has power to all
fields."
Ramirez, who hit 45 homers and
had I 45 RBis last year, htt his sixth
home run of the season in the first
mnmg agamst Tom Candtotll (2-3).
Ramirez is seven RB!s shon of the
major league record for Apnl set by
Juan Gonzalez last year.
"He's hot nght now," Indtans
staner Charles Nagy satd. "He's off
to a great stan. It seems he's picking
up right where he left off last year.
It's a JOY to watch ail these guys htl.
I'm just glad I don' t have to face
them."
.
Nagy (3- I), who lost to the A's
last week m Clevelllfld, pitched 6 2/3
mmngs to earn the victory. Mil&amp;
Jackson got the last out, throwing
only one pitch to retire Ben Grieve
with two runners on, for hts fifth
save.
"Charles was jdst fine,"
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove
sa1d "He struggled wtth his command but he dtd gtve us some length
tomght and we ptlched well enough
to close it out "
Cand10ui left the game with two
outs in the first mnong because of
swelhng In hiS left knee, the same
knee that gave htm trouble m spnng

trammg He faced two &amp;atters after
Ramirez homered.
"He has a history of surgery on
that knee," A's tramer Larry DaviS
satd. "He has managed it very well
until now. It kind of comes and it
kind of goes. It takes a long tome for
it to go away."
Candootti satd he expects to llJake
hts next stan, 1f the swelling g~ICs.
down.
•
" It's not that bad, 11 JUSt wasn 't
stable," Candiotti said. " It was
messong up my mechamcs."
Cleveland broke the game open
with five runs in the thud, all against
reliever Brad Rigby. Davtd Justtce
htt a two-run single, and Kenny
Lofton, Jim Thome and Travis
Fryman also drove in runs.
Jason Giambi hit a pair of runscoring doubles and had an RBI
grounder for the Athlettcs. John Jaha
hu his fifth home run and had an RBI
single.
Giamb1 had three hits for the
Athlettcs, who have lost four of fi"e
against Cleveland this year after wjnnmg the senes last season, 8-3. : •
Notes: Htdeo Nomo, recently
relelfsed by the Chicago Cubs,
worked out for about 15 minutes for
Indians manager Mike Hargrove and
pttchmg coach Phtl Regan before the
game. Nomo, the former NL rookte
of the yoar, will puch m a simulated
Oakland's Malt
game Thursday
Sta1ts was held out of the stanmg
hneup for a second straight game due
to a grom mjury ... Cleveland shonstop Omar Vtzquel was back m the
lineup after missmg the past three
games woth a stramed nght quadnceps.

Pirates S, Braves 3
At Atlanta, Jason Schmidt pitched
seven sohd mmngs agamst his for·
mer team as Pinsburgh snapped a
four-game losmg streak
Schmidt (3-1 ), 1-3 woth a 6 30
ERA agamst the Braves smce they
dealt h1m to PoUsburgh three years

save
Dodgers 3, Brewers 2
At Milwaukee, Raul Monde s1 hu
hiS NL-Ieadong etghth homer and
Kevon Brown survived a shaky stan
as the Dodgers snapped the Brewers'
four-game wmmng streak.
Mondes i, dropped from cleanup
to fifth on the batung order, hit a full count pttch from Rafael Roque (0·2 )
into the left-field bleachers for a tw orun shot in the sixth, erasing the
Brewers ' 2-1 lead
The Brewers took a 2-0 lead off
Brown (2-1) m the first on Jeromy
Burnuz's sixth homer, but they blew
three other chances to put av;lay
Brown and the Dodgers.
Padres 6, Mels 2
At New Y"Ork, Greg Myers enteredthe game after catcher I 1m Leyritz
Wllfo hun and hu a tie-breaking tworun double as San Diego handed the
Mets their third straight loss
Reggte Sanders added a two-run

homer and drove in three runs for the
Padres, who play 22 of thetr next 34
games on the road after stanmg wtth ,
12 of 18 at home
Andy Ashby (4-1) won ht s fourth
consecutive stan smce losmg the
season opener He allowed two runs
and five hits m SIX innmgs, and
Donne Wall and Bnan Boehnnger
fimshe&lt;l woth hitless relief
Cardinals 7 Rockies 5
At St Louts, R~y Lankford homered m hts first stan smce offseason
knee surgery as the Cardmals won
for the ninth tome m 14 games
Lankford, who had batted only
twoce thos season, hit a solo homer m
the second mnmg for a 5-0 lead . St
Louts used four hots an&lt;J lhree walks
to score four runs in the first agamst
John Thomson (0-2)
Darren Oliver (2- t) gave up four
run s and eoght hns on etght-plus
mnmgs The Cardonals backed htm
woth four double plays
•

- By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
LOUISVILLE, Ky (AP) - So
Car, the tramer hasn't been around,
.nor have the owners. And the assts•
• tan! trainer made only a bnef stop at
. · Bam 45, where Godolphin Stables'
· Worldly Manner and Aljabr are stabled at Churchill Downs
Is lhts any way to get ready for the
· Kentucky Derby?
· · "We'll $ee what happens," said
f;nc Coatneux, an assistant to Tom
Albertran1, who IS the assistant to
tramer Saeed bm Suroor - who

EaSCtrn Dlv1slon

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s 722
8 619
11
9 sso
10 10 lOO
s 14 261

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Central Dn•ls1or1

14 5 717
9 7 563
10 10 500
9 12 429
6 II 151

CLEVELAND
Ch1ugo
~trmt

Mhmesota

Knnns Cny

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8
8

Gil
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6
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9 550
12 429
12 400
12 400

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Career Bird Houses
Hand Painted Flower Pots
and .Bird Feeders

2'

l

'

Toronto 10, Anahetm I
lktrott 5, Statile 1

CLEVELA.ND 8. Ot~kland 5

.

Today's games
Boston (Rapp O-Il at Minnesota (L.ncoln

' • J 15 pm

2L{ways &amp; !forever
518 East Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-1161

San D1ego (Huchcod. 1- 11 a! New York (L.r:iter ).

2 ), 1 10 p m
P11t1burgh (Peters 0-1) at Atlanta (Giavme 0-l)

740prn

Thursday,s games
ChlcDgO' (farnswonh 0 OJ fl Aonda (Sanchez 0lJ 1 O.S pm
-Anzonn (Dua l 2 1J at Housmn (Hnmpum 1 ~ 1),
Colorado (Kllc l·l) at St Lou1s (JmlerYZ 2-0)
I 40 pm
San D1ego {W11lmml I 0) at New York (lone~ l 0) 1'40 pm
Los Angeles (Valdes 2·0) at M1lwauktt (Eld~d
0-0), 2 OS p m
San Frnnc1sco 10rllz(2·2) at Montreal (Pavo.no ()..
1) 70.S pm
CINCINNATI (lkre 1·0) at Phal~dclph111 (Loewtr
1-1), 705pm
Putsburp (Stlva 0.01 at Atlanta CMadduJ. 3 OJ
740p m

Basketball
NBA standings

,

CLEVELAND (Bw1&gt;oi-Q) 01 Oa~land (()quiA 2-

1),4 05pm
• Deumt {MIIcki 1- 1) at Seattle (Henry 2:0), 6·35

Enjoy An Afternoon At the Meigs County Fairgrounds Near
The Dog Shelter

pm

• Kllflsas CJI)' (Suppaa 0.3) at Balt1more (FJ'J&lt;:kson

0-•7~pm
)
New York (Peltllle Q-0) at Texu &lt;Morfan 4-0),
K 15 pm
· 'Toronto &lt;Halladay 2-Q) at Anaheim (Hill ()..I),
10.05 p m

Come To The 1999 Pet Adoptathon
Saturday, Mar 1, 12 noon to 5 pm
Sunday, May 2, 12 noon to-5 pm

•

NL standings

••

Meet Some Wenderful Dtts-Who Need Homes ~~~~
Balloon• for the klda
.,.~

Atlanta

Philtldelph1a
"New York

NHII•

' MonueaJ
~ r;~onda

Adopt a dog and get one-half paid on Spcly/neuter
and fmr dog food samples
·

.' •· .

.. sr

Louis .

•~OIISIOA

Talk to McGruff, the Crime Dog

, t!lburfh .
-..fl!wau ee
' Ciilc:f:o

. Jtear the band on Saturday at 2 pm

'CINC NNATI

A veterinarian.will be on hand to ali.'Jwer q~restions about pet·care
Free literature on pet care
by '"•
Humarut So&lt;NIT, rlto l'lon/a Shore Animal
Leap.e, titrul P~'"""" Cftarll"'••
EHryone toel~omel

•
, Snn Francisco
Anr.ona
· Loa An&amp;elcs .
·snn D1ego .
&lt;.!olorado

.

..

Gil

519

,.,

7
8
9
12
14

OMskMt

12
11
9
9

6)2

sso
333

300

~/

I

s~

25 20
2.1 20
21 ,22
22 23
.. 21 j 24
12 J4

O.lroli

Milwaukee
Charlonr:
Toronto
CLEVELAND

-·-

Cluc.ago

-

6

667

,.,

lOO

..,

S19

10 474
7 10 41 2
7 11 389

630
622
SSii
SS6
511
489
467
261

3'1

5~
6~
7~

17

Thesday's scores

Buffalo 4, Ottawa 3 Buffalo wms sme~ 4-0
New Jersey 4 P1nsburgh 2 senes 11ed 2-~
Phoen1x 2 St LoUJ s I Phoenrxleads sene$ ~- I
Detroit , , A.noheJm 0 l:krrou WinS sen e! 4-0 •
DallAs~ Edmonton 2-'0T DallllS WIRIIenes.,..

Mldwttt DllfiWon

:t-Kouston .... . . ..
Mm~teiOta .

Dallu .
Den....
Vancouver

,..

:II'
34

u
22
17
14
8

.~

3

J' ,
5

0

Tonight's games
Carolm11ut Boston 7 p m
Toronto at Ph1ladelph111, 7 p m
San Jose at Colorndo, 10 p m

No games lbul'sday

Slumpmg Todd Walker h1t a tiebreakmg, two-run single in the
eighth mnong and Minnesota beat
Boston at the Metrodome
Walker, who hit 316 last season,
began the game m a 2-for-19 rut. He
had a hu-and-run smgle on the fifth
and si ngled for a 6-4 lead m the
eighth
Rtck Aguilera gave up a pmch-htt
homer to Reggie Jefferson m the
mnth before get(mg hts founh save
Blue Jays 10, Angels 1
Struggling Pat Hentgen held
Anahetm to three hils m seven scoreless mmngs and Toronto stopped Its
four-game losmg streak
The 1996 AL Cy Young wonner
missed the final three weeks of last
season because of shoulder tendim-

r.&amp;.

739
13 711
17 622
489
370
11
JH
38 17.

li

(iJI

·~

l~
~~ ~

17

ti s In hiS prevtous three stalls each no-decisions - he gave up five
homers and 14 earned runs m 14 1/3
mnmg s

Pat Kelly homered on suppon of
Hentgen ( 1-1) The vosotorrg Blue
Jays stole four bases m a four-run
forst mmng
·
Tigers S, Mariners 1
Brad Ausmus, Dam10n Easley
and Kanm Gama homered as
Detrou sent Seattle to us fifth
straight home loss
Justm Thompson (3-2) won hts
third straight deciSIOn HIS streak of
19 straight shutout innmgs ended on
Butch Huskey's RBI smgle m the
SIXth

7~

19 581
21 m
2l soo
2l' 489
lS 444
16 .200

CHICAGO CUBS Activated RHP Kur1 M1ltcr
from the dls.abltd Natlooal
l•fl Plii.Ced RHP Man Karchner on
Leaaut
.tM 1!i·d•y dtsablcd hst, retroa~:twc toArtl 26
FerRIUtde1 from the 15-ilay dtsabled hst

MQNTREAL EXPOS ActiVated LHP Steve
Khne from the 15-day disabled list
SAN DIEGO PADRES Sent 38 Oeor1e Anu co
RUicho Cucamonaa of the Cahrorma League on a
20..day rehabthtron a1111nmenc

7

9',
11

II ~

Basketball
Natioul Ba•ett..ll Auoc:laUon
NEW JERSEY NETS S•aned C Wllllam
Cinnlnaham ror the remamdr:r of the season PIKed
F Ke1th Van Hom on 1he Lnjuud hst
SEATILE SUPERSONICS Acuvaced C
Vladimir Stepan!D from the InJUred hsl Placed F
Rashard Lt:w1s on the injured ltJt

13\
24'-:

Football

,

Natkwtal Football Lna•e

BAl;TIMORE RAVENS SLMned WR Qadry
a one-year contracl
CINCINNATI BENGAL 5 Wn1ved WR AlonE.o
Clayton Srgoed WR Ores A1n1w011h LB Louis
1-lampton WR Qumcy Jack.soo, TE Jotln Jenninas,
Ol Grea Krause. WR TctTy Murph)', rmd NT ChiMl
Pesues to rhr«· year contracts alld NT Martus Dow
and WR Geoff Nouy. to two-year conuncts
CLEVELAND BROWNS Agrttd to 1crms w1th
DT Jerry Boll Released C H1cham EI-Mashtoub
NEW YORK GIANTS S11ned WR Rny Curry.
C Grcc Oavu and CB Reu1e Stephens.
NEW YORK JETS Stsncd QB Stott Zolak
l sma~l t o

,..3
4

5'·

Thtsday's scores
CharJour: 108, Toronto 98
Oecro11 92, Boston 85
Phlladelphta 80 CLEVELAND 71
Mmml95. New Jersey 76
OriBndo 88 lndrnna 87
Dallas 84 Vancouver 7S
Sacramtnlo 104, San Antonio IQO..OT
Sc:alllc 90. Utah 8S

Tonl&amp;ht 's K•m..
WashlnJton at OThmdo. 1 30 p 111
New Jrrsey ac Dcuo1t, 7 MJ p m
New York at ~danta , 1 .' 0 p 111
Phoenht at MiriMSota I p m
ToroAIO at Mrlwauket 8 30 p m

HO&lt;key
N•ttonal Hocke)' l...usut

ANAHE IM MIGHTY DUCKS
Maxm1 Bnlmochnyktr.

Sl g ~d

LW

Batley "He was very wt lhng . handled the track well an\:1 was very
relaxed the enure ume I always felt
Joke there was somethmg there 1f I
asked."
Kent Desormeau~ . who was
aboard Derby and Preakness winner
Real QUiet m 1998 , gets the nde
aboard Al]abr shou ld Baffen's filly
Excellent Meetong not be entered
today on the Derby. Desonneaux was
aboard Worldly Manner m the colt's
last race m the Umted States - a wm
m the Del Mar Futurny m September
"He's a rangy colt, and dcfimtely
has what 11 takes to wm a Kentucky
Derby," Desonneaux saod of Worldly
Manner. " He 's got long, Outd stndes,
and he's powerful The on ly quesuon.
ltke wnh the others IS the stamo na "
Another Derby questoon was
answered Tuesday, when a Judge m
Lottie Rock, Ark , cleared the way for
Arkansas Derby wonner Valhol to
run The JUdge ordered the $300,000
first-prize money awarded to ow ner
James Jackson
The wmner's share was wothheld
pendmg a stewards mves t1gat10n mto

whether JOcke~ Boll y Paton used an
electncal devoce 10 make Valhol run
faster

PUBLIC NOTICE

Joe Jones of Thunnan claimed
victory over ~andy Parson of Teays
Valley,
W Va in the Pro DIVISIOn
Transactions
race Saturday at Kanawha Valley
Dragway m Southside, W Va.
Baseball
In other actton:
Ameriun Lu1u.e
T'liD Casto 0 f Mason, W•Va.
SEAm.E MARINERS Acllvatell RHP Mark
t..iler from !he 15-day dhabled "" o... goaled INF used his Mustang 10 beat Mike Scott
GlOmar Guevara and p Mehrn Bunch for 8Sillll- of Shmnston. W.Va. and his Mustang
ment
1
TEXAS RANGERS T"ded INF Raroet in the Modtfied DiVISIOn.
Boornlaalto the Seattle Mllnners f()l' cu h consatera, _ Marc French beat Carl W1lson
uons
&gt;
,
•
TOROrii'O BLUE JAYS Recalled LHP Steve
in the Street DtV1SIOR.
Soncl~r from Sync•"' of ih&lt; '""rnollonal League
Sara Watkins of Galloway beat
Op&lt;ioned OF Anihooy Sand&lt;ro 10 Syracuse.
Jeremy Fi•her in the Jumor Dragster

19~

26

second In a field of 10. If either wins many ontangtbles."
Saturday, 11 would mark the first time
Which IS why u's tough to figure
sonce Regret on 1915 that a horse has what might ~appen when the gate
won the Derby wuhout racmg as a spnngs open and an expected full
three-year-old.
field of 20 three-year-olds go I 1/4
" It sure IS an interesting twist, miles for the firslttme.
tsn't it'" satd trainer Bill Mott, •who
" I hke the way they 'Fe takmg 11 as
has been to the desen and won the a challenge," satd Ntck Zito, who
Duba1 World Cup twtce woth Ctgar. trams Derby horses Adonts and
"They know what they're domg, they Stephen Got Even. "They ha~e a lot
have all the tools to get 11 done, bpt of obstacles to overcome, but they are
we 'll JUS! have to see 1f ot's enough pulling a new spon on 11"
It ' ll make the race a lillie more
And 1f one wins'
mtrtguong. though."
"If they won, you must take your
Godolphm ts one of the strongest hat off to them," satd Ztto
stables worldwide, but it's JUSt start·
If workouts count, there 's been no
ing to dabble in Derby fever This indocatoon that Worldly Manner.
mtght be the !25th Kentucky Derby, clearly the beuer of the Godolphon
but It's Derby No. I for the sheokhs. colts, IS capable of wonning the
"The Kentucky Derby os the most Derby.
dofficuh race to win and thos IS the
On Sunday, Worldly Manner and
mam challenge for us ," Shetkh Aljabr were far from ompressove.
Mohammed S31d last month at news Worldly Manner, who won three of
conference m Dubat. "We know how four ~tans on California as a twotmponant tl IS, but 1f we don't try ot, · year-old, went 7 furlongs m a plodwe can't won tl."
dong I 29 4-5 AIJabr, 3-for-3 on races
If they don't wm, it won't be on m England and France, worked 5 furaccount of a money shonage They longs on I 04. On Tuesday, both ga lsecured Jerry Batley to nde Worldly loped I 112 miles.
Manner, and the jockey reportedly IS
jlatley, a two-ume Derby wmner.
guaranteed an upfront payment of saw the good s1de of World! y
$70,000, the wmnmg JOCkey's take Manner's Sunday workout
from the $1 mtlhon Derby purse.
"He fimshed unbehevabl e," satd
D. Wayne Lukas, who sends out
Cat Thief and Charismatic m search
b
·
of h1s fourth Der Y win , says It's
tough to buy the Derby
"The DubaJ group, by my artth~
mettc alone, have spent some $20
mollion to get horses to the Derby,
and that doesn ' t guarantee anythmg,"
satd Lukas "It's not money geniuses
or computers trying to make marnages m heaven, etther. There are so
.
Jones, Casto

win KVD races

PMadelph1a a1 Toronto, 7 p m
P:imburgh at New Jersey 7:30pm
Boston a1 Carolina, 7 JO p m
San Jose at Colorado, 7 30 p m
St Lou1s al PhoeniX 10 30 p m

~aP.i~=~o:r~~L~t~:,~.~;r.rpH_.::

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Western Division

14 7 6{,7
11 10 524
. 10 10 lOO
,9 10 474
6 10 ~15

h

3h

6',

8
9

f\ondu Chrcago 0
Los An1eln 3. M1lwnuker 2
San Fnmc1sro 3, Monrreal 2 (10)
: San Ditso 6. Nr:w YMk 2
.. ' Prusburib. 5 Atlanta 3
St L..ou•s 7 Colorado 5
' \Houston II Anzona 0
1

Cenlnll Division
29 17
28 17

II

scores
.•. Phlladclr.uuThesday's
I CINCINNATI 0 (10)

'

x·Atlanta

.l·SIIi 1\niORIO

J!o: L f£1.

:12
11
.. 11

..6
"" ..6

C~ntnl

'X·Indiana.

:t·Utah.. . ,

Ellltern DlwilkUI

:Ir.aat

NHL first-round playoffs

Friday's games

0-2i 7OS pm
EASTERN CONFERENCE
New York (Ht:!mandez 3-1 ) 111 Tew (Clark 1·2).
Atlantic Divblon
, ' 8:15 pm
:II' L f£1. Gil
· ~ CLEVELAND (Wnght 1·01 111 Oakland (Haynes :Ir.aat
ll•M111rru
31 14 689
, l·J.i IOOSpm
30 17 638
2
'
Toronto (Wl:lls ~-I) " at Anaheim (Belcher 1-IJ. x-6rlando
l
Philadelphia
26 19 S78
... 1.005 p m
7
24 21 S33
• -Deu:on (Bia1r 0-2) at Seatllc &lt;Garcia 2-0) IOJS New YOrk
Boston
18
28
391
13 ~
,Pm
ll
Washinston
16 29 3~
14 ll 311
17
Nr:w Jersey
lbursday's games
1

Hockey

Colorado (Bbhanon '·0) at St Lotus (Junencz 20) B IOpm

0-n

'" DH Tampa Boy &lt;Rekar 2-0' and Snunden 2·2) at
' Ch•ca,go (Parque 2 I and Snyder 2· 1), .S Oj p m
~
Kansos City {Rosado 0-1) at Baltimore (Guzman

,

e,,.,,,,,

Seanle 5-l and Mmnesota beat
Boston 6-5. Tampa Bay and Chtcago
were ratned o.ft at Comiskey Park,
and scheduled a doubleheader for
today.
Orioles 8, Royals 4
Baltimore held a team meeung
before the game, then improved the
majors ' worst record to 5-14 behmd
B.J Surhoff's career-high five hits at
Camden Yards.
Surhoff went 5-for-5 as the
Onoles won for only the second time
m I0 games. Needmg a tnple 10
complete the cycle, he doubled m the
seventh inmng and had an RBI smgle m the eighth
Mlice Mussma (3-1) outpitched
Kansas City's Kevm Appter (2-2).
Twins ti, Red Sox S

a

O.S

pm

I J5 p m

Tampa Bay :u Oucal!o-ppd , nun
Balumore g Kansas Cny 4
Muulesota 6 Boston 3
New York 7 Tens 6

Sak On Selected Items.

Thursday's games
CLEVELAND at Washmgton 7 p m
Ph1laddph1a at New York , 1 JO'p m
B o~ ton at M1anu. 1 W p m
Charlolte at lnd1ana, B p m
Dallas at Houston, 8 30 p m
Golden State at Utah 9 p m
PhoenUI. at Denver 9 p m
Sun A.nronro a1 Vancouver 10 p m.
Portland at LA Lakers 10 30 p m
LA Clippers at Sacramento. 10 30 p m

211.7 0Spm
Chtcogo (frachsel 0-2) at Flonda (Hermmde~ I·
2).70S pm
Los Angeles (Park 1-2) at M1lwaukec (Woodard
21) 70S pm

Anzona (8enrs 2-2 ) a! Houston (Holt 0-:\) 8

The.sday's scores

.• .

Sealtle at Portland 10 p m

San Francisco {Nathan 1-0) at Montreal
(Hermanson 2-l ). 7 O.S p m
CINCINNATI (Tomko 0-1) a! Phllade;lphm (Ogea

AL standings

, : Seal!lc

..

And 1f that also means leavtng
thelf first Derby horses tn the care of
the third-string handler, so be 11.
Neither Worldly Manner, purchased for $5 million from John and
Belly Mabee's Golden Eagle Farm
last fall , nor AIJabr, bred on the
shetkhs' Shadwell Farm near
Lexington, Ky., has raced as a threeyear-old
Instead, they ran March 21 on a
pnvate trial race m Dubai. Worldly
Manner. tramed by Bob Baffert
before the sale, was first and Aljabr

Tonight's games

Baseball

Oakland
Anaheim

..

probably won ' t show up at the Derby
because he's saddling horses on
Saturday's
2000 Guinea&amp; at
Newmarket, England
The shetkhs who run -Godolphin
Stable, the Dubaa ann of Sheikh
Maktoum al Maktoum's and Shetkh
Mohammed a! Maktoum's racing
emptre, have decided they want to
win the Derby. And they want to Win
11 thetr way, by pnvately trammg
horses at their track in the desen and
keeping them out of traditional Derby
prep races

Scoreboard

We-stern Ot\115lon

. . . . . ., •

Clemens pttched a perfect second
mning, then Hidek1 lrabu reheved to
begm the third
Clemens shares the AL mark of
17
straight
vtctones
woth
Clevehind 's Johnny Allen and
Baltimore's Dave McNally. Carl
Hubbell holds the maJor league
record of 24 straight vtctones, set on
1936-37 for the New York Gtants.
Welleland, MVP of the Yankees'
1996 World Series win, took over ·in
the mnth wtth Texas ahead 6-5 Paul
O'Neill hit a tytng si ngle and Chth
Davis had a sacnfice fly
" I was solely responsible for
thiS," Wetteland sa1d
In other games, Baltimore beat
Kansas City 8-4, Toronto topped
Anaheim 10-1, Detroit downed

.Dubai sheikhs to keep. horses out of Kentucky Derby prep races

•

b.

Clemens exited With the Yankees
tra1hng 5-0, but wound up Wtth a nodeciSion. His next start IS scheduled
for Sunday at Kansas Ctty, though a
stiff left hamsm ng might put htm on
hold
"The mjury has been there a
whole, off and on, but I thought I
could work through 11," Clemens
said "I wanted to go out and continue, but I thmk I probably would have
made it worse " .
Clemens beat the Rangers at
Yankee Stadium m his previous
stan, and had a chance to . set the
record in his home state
But wtth 50 family members and
friends m the stands, the first five
Texas batters reached base, and Todd
Zetle's two-run double made it 5-0.

1,, Tampa Bay (Alvarez O.l) at Chlctao (SJrOika I·

.,......-.

runner

ago, allowed stx htts and three runs
Trathng 3-2, the Pirates scored
three In the etghth on RBI songles by
pinch-hitter Keuh Ostk, Kevm
Young and Jason Kendall Moke
Williams pllched the mnth for hts
thord save
Giants 3, Expos 2 (10)
At Montreal, Stan Javter scored
on Ugueth Urbma 's wild pllch In the
1Oth mnmg as San FranciSco won Its
founh straight
Javier led off the nmth wtth a sm·
gle off rehever Steve Kline (0· 1),
Urbma reheved and got Ellis Burks
to hit a routine grounder 10 shortstop
Orlando Cabrera, but the ball went
through
Cabrera's
legs
for
Montreal 's league-leadtng 27th error.
Javter advanced to third and scored
on Urbma's wold puch •
Sa n Francosco reliever John
Johnstone (3-0) struck out the side in
the mnth for the wm , and Rob Nenn
potched a perfect IOth for hos seventh

[:Yankees edge Rangers 7-6; Orioles, Twins, Tigers also win

'l),20Spm

"

Montreal 2 m I 0 onnings; San Diego
6, New York 2, Plltsburgh 5, Atlanta
3; and St Louis. 7, Colorado 5.
Marlins 8, Cubs 0
At Mtamt, Chff Aoyd had two
smgles m his 1999 debut and Alex
Fernandez carne ofT the dtsabled hst
anr:l pitched four scoreless mmngs in
hts first stan stnce Apnl II
Floyd, returnmg from a spnngtraining knee mjury, began to earn
rhe four-year, $19 milhon contract he
Signed last wmter He songled in hts
first at-bat and scored on Kevon
One 's double, then smgled in the
sixth before depaning for a pmch

'

GETS IVICTORV- Cleveland pHcher Charles Nagy got evan with
tha Oakland Athletics for beating him last week In Clevelanct by
pitching 6 213 Innings Tuesday night to help the Indians bealttte
Athletics 8-5. (AP)
•
•

Nelsonville-York
beats Eastern 7-4

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) now, he's the guy. I think he's gomg
Scoonie
Penn dtdn't know what NBA
lo grasp the position and take control
team
wanted
htm, but he always
lmd go. I'm very confident he is
knew
Ohoo
State
did.
gomg to play well.
Uncenain
where
he stood in the
/ " Hopefully, I can help (Grbac)
June
draft,
Penn
announced
Tuesday
'/let a lntle bll beuer, hopefully I can
that
he
was
stayong
,for
hts
semor
seapush htm and take him to new
son
wtth
the
Buckeyes.
~eights," added Moon, who started
''I'm not too sure about all that
1p games for Seattle last year. "If
stuff,"
Penn said, referring to the varnot, I'll be there to take over the
ious
draft
predtctions. "l try not to
sl'ack That's basically my JOb "
get
onto
11
too much. I wasn't really
Moon has passed for 49,097 yards
too
sure
how
that would factor out.
and 290 touchdowns Before that, he
You
never
know
what guy's coming
paSsed for 21,228 yards and 144
out.
Who's
coming?
Who's not?"
touchdowns m SIX years with the
After
leadtng
Ohto
State on a fairy
Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian
tale
tnp
to
the
Fmal
Four, Penrl
Fdotbail League after not betng
returns
to
lead
a
powerhouse
team. A
drafted by the NFL.
season
after
sitting
out
a
transfer
year ,
On Dec. 16, 1990, m Kansas City,
when
the
Buckeyes
went
8-22
he passed for 527 yards - 37 yards
matching
the
school
record
for
losses
shan of the NFL's single-game
record - in leading Houston past the -and 1-15 m the Btg Ten, Penn was
the team's emottonal and spintual
Chtefs.
Moon spent the past two years at leader as they went 27 ·9 and finished ·
Seattle as both a starier and a backup second m the Big Ten at 12-4.
Penn had predicted the team
and admits it's not easy bc:mg No 2 would make it 10 the NCAA tourna"It's tough. Thore's no question ment - a remark that led coach Jim
tt 's tough. I've been a staner all my O' Bnen to comment that his pomt
life and I've been very su~cessful all guard was "nuts."
my life. But I'm at ·a point in my
But the Buckeyes not only made
career where you have to take advan- the tournament, they made it to the .
tage of whatever there ts for you," he national semifinals before losing tb
said.
eventual champion Connecticut, 64The Chiefs also announced they 58.
stgned vereran linebacker Marvcus
Penn averaged 16 9 points, 4 3
Pauon, 31 , ~o a three-year contract. asststs, 2 steals and 4 rebounds a
Patton spent the 'Jlast four seasons game, was named a thtrd-team allwtth Washington, leading . the American and was a co-player of the
Redskms m tackles m thtee Of those year in the Big Ten.
seasons. He spent the precedmg ftve
He became such a favorite of the
wit~ the'Buffalo Btlls, playmg m 144 . fans that' songs about him were
str,ght games.
played on local rl)dio stations. His
uniform No. 12 became so popular

·Astros whip Diamondbacks 11-0; Pirates defeat Braves 5-3
double m the seventh.
But 11 was h1s pitchmg that
impressed Houston manager Larry
Dierker
" I thought Shane 's control was as
.
;
.
:: : • Shane Reynolds beat the Anzona good as it gets," Dierker satd. " He
· . Diamondbacks With hts ann and his was sponing everything exactly
. : b~t
where he wanted "
:: :: Reynolds pitched no- hit ball for 6
The Astros had 14 hilS and scored
; • Z/3 onnings and drove in thtee runs as the or most runs of the season.
.; Houston routed the Diamondbacks
" It was a breakc 1ay for our hit~; l~ -0 Tuesday night 'at the ters," Dterker said.
; • j'\strodome
Cratg Btggio homered, doubled
•: · The right-hander held Anzona and drove m three runs for the
:·hitless unttl fanner teammate LuiS Astros, who lost shortstop Rtcky
:: ponullez hned a smgle 10 nght 10 the Gutierrez with a fractured left hand
•
h.
Gutierrez, injured when he was hot
•.• •~vent
:; : "(A no-hitter) crossed my mmd. 1 by a pttch m the founh, wtll be out4; · !Vas thtnkmg to throw one would be 6 ":~eks.
.
, ··
,
.; nice," Reynolds satd.
~ , We n;ed Rtcky, BtggiO said.
: : Reynolds (4-1) pttched etght Now we r~. g01ng to be wuhout htm
: mnings, allowing five hits and stnk- for a whtle
.
• • 10 g out five. He also contnbuted at
In other NL games, 11 was Flpt~da
: · the plate, squeezmg home a fl\n in a 8, 1Chicago 0; Los Angeles 3,
: : SI~· run founh and hmm g a two-run M1 waukee 2; San Francisco 3,

doubled home two runs anr:t Cumings
slammed a two-run home run to
make the score 6-0.
Adam Wilhams later had a three:
run home run in the fifth inning and
Southern added four insurance mark.ers m the seventh.
Southern hitters were Williams 33 with a home run, Ervm two doubles, Cumongs 3-3 and a home run,
Kyle Noms a doubl$: and smgle,
Manuel a single, Little a double, and
singles by Boso and Davis.
Alexan(ler httters were Chris
D'Augustmo wtth a 3-5 mght and a
home run, Zack Lustgarten 2-4,
Jeremiah Jordan a single, Michael
Hawk 2-4, Eric Gabnel a triple, and
L.C Grigsby 2-2 With two walks
lppjng llllllb
·
Southern .......... 242-030-4= 15-14·1
Alexander ...... 001 -302-2=8- 11 -3
WP-Manuel and Cumings
LP-Warren, Ryan Lawson (3rd),
Gabnel (5th) and Jewell

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. .

hammer N-Y 20•0

DeSI Relaford pmch -ran for
Ltebenhal and moved to second on
Eastern 's softball team filled the
Dave Doster 's sacrifice bunt
scoring
sheet solid, as the Eagles bat·
After Kevm Jordan struck out,
ted
around
in two different onnmgs'
Glanville hn a 0-1 slider mto the lefton
their
way
to a 20-0 lambasting of
center field gap for the wmmng h1t.
Nelsonvtlle·
York
Tuesday.
Glanville, who leads the Philhes
Eastern plated five runs m the first
with 24 hns, also had the game-wmand
eight in the second for a 13-0
mng songle agaonst Ronda on Apnl '
lead
The Eagles added seven more
17.
Followmg Schtlhng's lead, the for the shut-out victory.
Juii Hayman had a double and
Philhes bullpen did us job. J1m Poole
two
smgles for Eastern. Valene Karr
needed Jus! one pitch to retire Hal
had
two
singles. Suzy Mtlhoan had a
Moms before Francona went to h1s
double
and
single, Danielle Spencer
closer Brantley's first appearance
and
Becky
DaviS head two stngles
since complammg of a stiff shoulder
each.
Gettmg
one single each were
on Apnl 16 was an effective one as
Stephante
Evans,
Tiffany Spencer,
he threw four pttches, three for
Sheena
Gilmore
and Knsten
stnkes, to record the final two outs.
"Facing two bauers and getting a
won, that's bemg at the nght place at
the nght tome, " Brantley satd. "I felt
good I threw all sliders. I dtdn 'I have
to throw any fastballs but I felt
good"
Cmcmnall staner Denny Neagle
was Impressive 10 his second stan
Nelsonville-York fought back
sonce spendmg time on the dtsabled from a 2-0 defictt and defeated
list woth a stramed thogh He went SIX • Easter's baseball team 7-4 Tuesday
mnmgs, allowed five smgles, walked night at Nelsonville stadium.
two and struck out four.
.
Eastern pitcher Enc Smtth was
Neagle got. out of trouble m the nailed With a !me drtve m the first
first and third mntngs when the Reds inning and removed from the game,
tur~~d doubleplays.
throwmg freshman Chris Lyons into
That wa.;,a heck of a ~a~~· very the fray. They combmed for five
well puched, McKeon satd When stnkeouts and three walks.
you~ staff only. gtves up one run,
Eastern coach Scou Wolfe said,
you ve got to wm · espectally when "We've lost two close games the past
you got Schtlhn~ out of the game." two mghts, but we've played well.
Notes: Cmcmnau pncher Mark Tomght we played great defense and
Wohlers threw batung pracuce, but got good pitchmg from our pitchers.
strug~led agam wtth hiS control. He We just left 100 many potenual run s
IS sclieduled to pttch m a Simulated on base For a young team we've
game on Thursday
Phtlhes left played tough the past two 'games
fielder R~n Gant has 30 career home Three of our losses came when we
run s agamst the Reds , the most ble.;,. leads 10 the last mnmg "
agamst any club.
Former
Eastern hillers were Chns Lyons
Cmcmnatl
manager
Sparky woth a 2-3 night and two doubles
Anderson wtll be mducted onto the Brad Willford a smgle and tnple:
Reds Hall of Fame on July 16 . The Josh Wtll a double, Jeremy Coleman
Phlihes began a mne-game homes- a smgle, Joe Dtllon a smgle, and
tand. . Greg Vaughn IS 2-for-19 Jtmmoe. Putman a smgle
agamst Schtliing, oncludmg 0-for-4
Eastern (5-9) went up 2·0 on a
and a double play on Tuesday.
lead-off double by Lyons and ·a follow-up RBI double by Wtll. Sm1th
walked and was ptcked off second
with no outs, then Willford knocked
home another run
TheBuckeyes(l0-3)1teditat2-2

:wednesday, Aprll28, 1999

National League
roundup

Phillies get by Reds
Softball
Eagles
1-0 in 10 innings
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Even
when he doesn't earn the voctory,
Cun Schollong puts the Phtlloes m a
positoon to wm .
The Philadelphta ace pttched mne
shutout inmngs and worked out of
two late-mning jams, before Doug
Glanville's RBI single on the bouom
of the lOth gave the Pholloes a 1-0
vtctory Tuesday noght over the
Cincinnati Reds
Jeff Brantley (1-0) puched the
final two-thtrds of an onnmg to ptck
up the wm.
In the seventh, Bal'l)' Larkm hit a
two-out, ground-rule double but was
stranded when Schilling fa nned
Eddte Taubensee on five pttches.
One inning later, former Phil he Mark
· Lewis led off with a double. Chris
· Stynes entered as a pinch-runner and
moved to thtrd on a Pokey Reese's
sacrifice bunt
Schilling struck out Brian
Johnson and, after falling behind 3-0
to Mtke Cameron, fanned him to end
the mning. Both strikeouts were
recorded on 96 mph fastballs
·
"Schtiiing can ont1m1date you, "
Reds manager McKeon said "A guy
on third wuh one out and you don't
put the balltn play, that huns "
"That's Schill," Phtllies manager
'Terry Francona satd "That's a btg
pressure situatmn and he reached
back for something extra and got u
It's s,omething very spectal for a
pitcher to do that and I'm not sure tf
tt's somethmg you can teach."
Schtlling, who walked three and
struck out four in a loss at Anzona
last week, rettred 12 of the first 13
bauers he faced Tuesday, allowed
five htts, struck out none and walked
one
"There comes a 11me when you
realize that the game IS on the Ime,"
Schtllmg sa td. " When that happens,
you have to reach back You have to
make quahty pnches wnh your best
stuff "
Gabe Whole (0-2) walked Mtke
Lteberthal to start the lOth mnmg
and was reheved by Danny Graves.

•

Pursuant to Section 121.22 of
the Ohio Revised Code, the
Meigs · County Board of
Revision will meet to discuss
matters that have come before
the Board. The ~eeting wil~ be
held on May 3, 1999 at 11:qo
a.m. in the Auditor's Office of
the Meigs County Courthouse.
,

I

~::~-=~~~~~~=-~~::::;·:;:~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

Diviston

_

TO THE VOTERS OF MipDLEPORT·.
~

My name is Sam Eblen, candidate for Mayor full time. I am a native of Meigs
County, 3 1/2 years in Middleport. My quali6cations are: Retired from G.T.E.
directed and taught training schools. Business experience: credit union representative, reat estate assistant, construction supervisor. Law enforcement: 9 1/2 years
stat@ patrol ·auxiliary, rank captain, 3 years Athens County Deputy Sheriff.
Military: Sth Army Air Force in South Pacific. World War 1\vo, life time member
D.A.V. American Legion, member of Buckeye Sheriff's Association, member of
Middleport Park and Recreation Committee, instrumental in securing a grant for
General Hartinger Park of $27,000 to upgrade the. Park. My goal as Mayor is to
bring business and people back to Middleport, upgrade aU the departments in the
village to better serve the public, and.to see your tax benefit you and yoW'$ and
much more. Isn't it time for you to take c~arge and to support a candidate who
will support your views and ideas and not one for simply personal gain?
Sam Eblen, 3.8 Hudso~ Street,'Middlepo~ Oh. 45760, Phone 992-4103.
Paid for by Sam Eblen, candidate fot: Mayor.
.

.

,

,,

.

'
•

--

�'

r:&gt;• 6 • The D•IIY Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday, April 28, 1999

By EILEEN GLANTON

AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Pamela Williams and her husband have been planning
a summer vacation drive from their home in Philadelphia to Virginia Beach,
Va., and New Orleans.
But after watching gas prices soar roughly 25 percent over the past six
weeks, they 've begun checking out train schedules.
Mrs. Williams said it was inevitable that the price would go up. :'But I
didn't think it would go up so fast and so much:" she added.
Petroleum industry leaders say prices are merely returning to nonnal a(ter
month ~ of unprecedented lows, but the sharp rise has provoked some Americans to change their gas-guzzling ways.
' .
The latest nationwide review of I 0,000 gas stations by the authoritative
Lundberg Survey showed the average price was nearly $1 .23 a gallon. Three
weeks ago , it was $!.09, and ·in late February a stunningly low 99.8 cents.
·California, where heavy demand and extra environ menial regulations make
gas ~specially expensive, has experienced the sharpesHise. Premium prices
are now llining with the $2 mark, prompting state Attorney General Bill j:Ax:kyer to open an investigation into what he calls price gouging by oil compa-

n1es.
doesn't want to rely on buses or carpools.
·
The big jumps were fueled hy a combination of events: OPEC cuts in crude
" I have four kids," he said. " If I need to get home ·quicl::ly fm a game or
oil production, fires at Ca!Hornia rclincric s and heavy travel during the East- a concert, !like having that freedom ."
.
.
er holiday.
Modest increases in the price of gas rarely mfiuence commuters to gtve
Nel~ Crawford of Los Angclc, drives a Volkswagen. but a few months up their daily drive. said Jean Stimolo, executive director of Ride works Comago, she and her husband found themselves tempted by trendy sport utility muter Transportation.Services, a New Have.n, Conn., car P~?l coordt~tm.
vehicles. ·"!£it goes up a dollar a gallon, lthtnk we II see a change, she sa~~- But
"My husband said, 'No way. These 1hings are gas guzzlers. What are we it's a good economy. Maybe people are less sensttt.ve to gas pnces ..
going l&lt;l do when gas prices go up '?"' she said. "And sure enough , they did."
Some indus.try experts said drivers angered by the recent pnce mcrease
Now, she says the y' ll slick to the Volksw agen - no bargain allhe pump, may have been lulled by ihe months of ultralow prices .as an oversupply of
but more efficient than an SUV.
,
oil forced refiners and dealers to cut prices.
Fernando Mercado. of Lo' Angeles drives a Ford Expedition SUV, but he
"For a long time , it looked like prices would just relnain low forever,"
said hi s family has curtailed the usc or thei r second, smaller car. Now. he, said Roy Littlefield, executive director of the Service Station Dealers of Amerhis wife and their three children pile into one car for trips lo school anct·watk . ica.
.
.
" We have two cars. but now it's li~e we only have one . Even though it
Still, most travel industry professionals don 't e&lt;pect the price increases
is an Expedition, it is cheaper than tilling up another gas tank ," said Mer- · thus far to greatly affect summer travel.
cado.
·
"When a family offour is spending$100Tor a hotel and $100 for meals,
Some drivers say they won 't change Ji)cir behavior unless prices rise much spending $20 to $30 on gas is~'t a big factor," said Mitch Fuqua, a spokesman
higher. S!even Milaitis. who works in Manhattan, drives about 20 miles to · for the American Automobile Association .
work nearly every day from hi s home in northern New Jersey. He ;aid he ·

Appeals court won't block supervised day trips for Hinckley
.

for the U.S. attorney, said he was
Hinckley, 43, has been confined to
By WILL LESTER
uns ure whether Tuesday's decision St. Elizabeths since 1982 , Y&lt;hen he .
Associated Press Writer
WASHIN\}TON - John W. would be appealed. He said that in a was acquitted by reason of insanity in
Hinckley Jr., the man who tried to kill week , when the appeal court 's deci- the 1981 handgun attack on Reagan
Ronald Reagan , may begin lo take sion takes effect, the hospital will outside a Washington hotel :
Reagan , his press secretary James
supervised day trips from the mental · have discretion to decide when and
where
Hinckley
can
take
supervised
Brady
and two law enforcement offi hospital where he has been confined
cers
were
wounded in a shooting that
since 1982. A federal appeals court day trips.
·
Oflicials
at
St.
Eli
zabeths
were
not
Hinckley later said was an attempt to
refused .on Tuesday to reconsider an
immediately a.vailable for comment. impress actress Jodie Foster.
earlier decision allowing the trips.
Hinckley 's lawyer, Barry Levine,
U.S. AtLOrney Wilma f. . Lewis
Over opposition from federal
prosecutors; Hinckley won court per- said he would work wi.th hospital said Tuesday she was disappointed
mission in January for supervised officials to arrange a supervised day with the ruling, which appl1es not JUSt
trips away from St. Elizabeths Hos- trip for Hinckley. Levine said Hinck- to Hinckley but to all Washin gton
ley probably would · visit with his defendants acquilled by reaso n of
pital.
But the ·prosecutor, who said family and his girlfriend for dinner at insanity.
"Despite our disappointment, the
Hinckley · remains disturbed and a private home in the Washington
public
should understand that today's
area.
Levine
said
he
expects
that
trip
unpredictable. blocked him from takdecision
docs no,l allow Mr.
court
would
be
"a
precursor
to
enlarged
·
ing the outings by appealing the
liberties."
three-judge panel's decision to the
"Of course the Secret Service will
full U.S. Court of Appeals in Washknow wherever he 's going, and the
ington.
The decision did not rule directly public is not at any ri sk al all,"
on the merits of Hinckley's request to Levine said. "Mental .health profes- By DAVID. E- KALISH
leave the hospital but had the effect sionals who know him are of the view AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - AT&amp;T Corp.'s
of allowing such trips. Hosp itlll offi- that John Hinckley is not a danger to
profit rose 39 percent in the first quarcials and Hinckley's doctors have anyone."- ·
ter,
beating Wall Street forecasts as
Hinckley's lawyer; Barry Levine,
sa id that as pan of his treatment he
revenue
from cellular phone. corposhould be, allowed visits off hospital ·and officials at St. Elizabeths were
.
rate
phone
and other services more ·
grounds, supervised by hospital staff. not immediately available to discuss
than
offset
a further decline in its
Channing Phillips, a spokesman the case.
fiaphip long-distance business.
AT4&lt;T's profit of $1.72 billion, or
61 cents a share, announced today
alSO' benefited from the compan'y's
The following cases were settled ving under suspension , ·s200 plus acquisition of the Tele:cammunicarecently in the Meigs County Court costs, 20 days jail' suspended to three tions Inc. cable-TV company, which
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
days, $100 suspended, one year pro- was completed March 9. That was up
. Fined were: Christi D. Bartimus, bation: Darrell G. Michael, Middlefrom a profit of $1.24 ·billion, or 46
Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs, port, driving under suspension, $150 cents a share, in the year-ago period.
failure to display plates, $20 plus plus costs, five days jail and $75 sus- Today's figure excludes some onecosts; Charles E. Hensley, Long Bot- pended if valid operator's license pre- time charges against earnings.
tom, seat bell, $15 plus costs; po~­ sented within 90 days, one year. prosession, $50 plus costs; possession of bation; Charles A. Ritchie; Pomeroy,
drug paraphernalia, $75 phis costs, invalid tags, $25 plus cosis; .
Harry E. Ray, -Pomeroy, driving
three days jail suspended, one year
probation; Joshua Tolliver, Racine , under the influence, $850 plus costs,·
speed, $23 plus costs; seat belt, $25 10 days jail suspended to three days,
plus costs; · Eli1.abeth A. Specker, 90-day OL suspension, one year proAthens, spel'd, $20 plus costs: Dale bation, jail and $550 suspended upon
W. Hoffman, Pomeroy, assault, costs, completion of restdential treatment
I 0 days jail suspended, two years program within 90 days ; driving
under financial responsibility action
prob~tion, restraining order issued;
·
suspension,
$200 plus costs, 10 days
Laura D. Hensley, Long Bottom, stop
jail
suspended
to three day s concursign, $20 plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs; William . A. Smith, rent, one year probation: Robert L.
Poineroy, .possession, $50 plus costs; · Johnson, Racine, underage conCharles .0 . Landers, Minersville, sumption, $100 plus costs. 30 days
failure to. yield, $30 plus costs; Tim- jail suspended to three days, probaothy W. Alihouse, crimiral mischief, tion until age 21; resisting arrest,
$200 plus costs, five days jail sus- costs, 30 days jail suspended to three
. pended, 40 hours community 5ervice: days concurrent, probation.
Aaron E. Watterson, Crown City, dti-

Hinckley or any other insanity acquittee to c 0 me and go when they
pl ease . ., she said. "The only time
they would leave is when the hospi,
tal issues a pass allowing them to
leave the hospital grounds under
hospital supervision. "
Lewis said if the hospital ever
decides that Hinc·kley or any other
person acquitted l.or insanity is ready
for unsur ;vised vis its, the U.S.
attorney and ·the court would be
invol ved 1n the decision.
. .
A federal judge originally turned
down Hinckley's request for a Christmastime visit with his ·parents and
girlfriend in 1997. Hi nck.ley appealed
-to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia, whose three-

.

class,"' she wrote in her dissent.
judge panel cleared the way.
The appeals panel in January did
Last month, prosecutors asked
not
rule directly on merits of Hinckthe full, 11-judge appeals court to
ley
's
request to leave the St. Elizareconsider the case. But the appeal~
beths
campus.
Instead, the two judges
court on Tuesday let stand the first
·agreed with Hinckley 's argument
panel's 2-1 decision.
Circuit Judge Karen LeCraft Hen- that decisions about such visits
derson disagreed with the majority should be made by doctors, not
decision and said in Tuesday's ruling courts. Henderson , the dissenting
that the panel's decision allowing the third judge, said the courts should be
,
conditional release under supervision inv'olved.
Hinckley
began
pressing
for
· of inmates acquitted because of
greater freedom more than a decade
insanity is dangerous.
"It leaves to ho~pi tal administra- ago but had not won the right to leave
. tors, rather than lO judges as the Con- the hospital grounds. His lawyer has
gress intended, final say in whether complained repeatedly that Hinckley
to release among the public members is being treated more harshly than
of what this court has justifiably other patients acquitted by reason of
called an ·'exceptionally dangerous insanity.

Meigs County Court

ccnt.

The

revenu~

increases more than

offset a 3.4 percent drop in sales from
the company's huge consumer longdistance services. AT&amp;T's biggest
business has suffered from a longtenn decline amid competition from
a slew of tivals.
AT&amp;T also benefited from lower
costs resulting from a reduction of
18,000 jobs last year and lower network connection costs.
"Our focus on execution is working," AT&amp;T chainman C. Michael
Annstrong said in a statement. ·
The results come after a spree of
acquisitions and other deals led by
Anmstrong as he reshapes Ma Bell,
the nation's largest long-distance
company, into a diversified tel~communications conglomerate.

Girlfriend has no idea her steady fellow doesn't want marriage - now or ever

Dear Ann · Landers: My girl- .
friend and I have been dating for
over a year; and we ' ve been having
sex for the last 10 months. We 'are
both 18. She seems certain I will
marry her, although I have never
actually proposed. I guess· after we
had sex, she assumed we would
marry
The problem is, I . don't want to
continue this relationship any longer
Our personalities don't seem to
·inesh the way they used to, and she
is beginning to get on ·my nerves.
But I am afraid to break it off

Land transfers posted
. The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Right of way, Jerry E. Frederick to
Columbus Southern Power, Chester;
Right of way, Carl J. Circle to
CSP, Sutton:
Right of way, John Jr. and Sarah
Fisher to CSP, Salisbury;
Right of way, Tammy L. · and
John CreJ11eans .to CS!', Salisbury;
Deed , Donald C Shaffer to
Charles F. and Paula J. Chancey, Sutton;

Deed , Donald C. Shaffer to
Charles F. and Paula J . Chancey,

Racine;
Deed, Jeffrey A. and Jane L. leu
Morris to Jeffrey A. and Jane L. lett
Morris, Syracuse parcel:
·· Deed, Kelly B. and Melissa J.
Chapman to Mid State Trust IV, Rutland;

Deed, Jeffrey B. Tignor to Marguerite M. Bishop, Middleport
parcels:
·
Deed, Robert E.· Perrott to Diane
R. Perrott, Bedford;
Deed, Marvin L. and Sharon K.
Friend to Marvin L. and Sharon K.
Friend, Chester parcel:
Deed, Deborah La Shaye Wamsley to Angela S. Hubbard, Letart par·
cel:
.
Deed, Jay Hall Jr. Trust to James
E. and Krista M. White, Middleport ·
parcels;
Deed, Dale E. Taylor to Florence
Slover, Middlepon;
Deed, Charles and Martha K.
Wheeler to Virginia Marshall,
Pomeroy;
· ·
Deed, Robert and Margaret Wyza
to Malcolm Daniels and Jain Miller,
Scipio;
'
·
Right of way, Veronica R. Pullins
Bishop and Andrew G. Bishop to
Tuppers Plains-Chester. Water District, Olive, 3.85 acres; ·
Right of way, Ronnie D- and

Tanowa J. McGrath to TPCWD,
Orange;
Right of way, Matthew C. and
Edana S. McDaniel to TPCWD,
Lebanon ;
Right of way, Kenneth F. and
Gladys L. Mont gomery to TPCWD,
Lebanon:
Right of way, Robert A. and
Frances L Kuhn to TPCWD, Orange;
Oeed, Donald C. and Barbara
Mora to Alan and Edward Holter,
Chester parcels;
Deed, Genevieve Swartz to Vonda K. Garns, Pomeroy:
' Deed, Beryl A. Jr. and Linda Wil son to Beryl A. Wilson Jr. Living
Trust, Orange;
Deed, Brian D. and Lan R. Hamilton to Brian D. and Lan R. Hamilton,
Syracuse: .·
Easement, Sandra and Kenneth ·
· Rife to Ohio Power Co.mpahy, Rutland ;
·
Easement, Carroll and Barbara A.
Smith to OPC, Rutland;
Deed, Terry L. and Lois A. Deem
to Ted E. and Kelly L. Casto, Olive;
Deed, Gordon R. and· Mary P.
Atkins to Gloria K. Kloes, Scipio parcel:
Deed, Pauline Eynon, Pauline
Payne, Homer Payne to David W. and
Betty J. Collins, Sutton parcel.

foTTZify .
.:;J'\/Cedicine
o...

John C- Wolf, D.O_
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

In addition to its TCI acquisition,
AT&amp;T announced this morning a
partnership with Nippon Telegraph
and Telephone, Japan 's dominant
telephone company, to manage _communicatio.ns networks for muhinationa! companies.
AT&amp;T earlier this. week said it will
join British Telecommunications
PLC in buying a combined 30 percent stake in Japan Telecom Co.,
. Japan's third-largest long-distance
· and in.ternational carrier.
Last week, AT&amp;T offered $58 billion to buy MediaOne, the fourth·largest U.S. cable.TV operator, in an
· attempt to thwart a merger agreement
between MediaOne and No. 3 cable
compan y ·c~mcasi

.

Unlverelty
College of
OIIIOI*hiO
MediOine

Question: I have been suffering with a stopped-up nose, runny
nose, sneezing and itching eyes. I get these same hay fever symptoms
every fall, but I've never had them in the spring before this year. How
can I tell if this is a cold or a new problem with allergies•
Answer: The symptoms you describe indicate an irritation to the
mucous membranes lining the nose and ey·es. All of us have had these
symptoms as the·consequence of a viral infection we call "the common cold." Also, at least 15 perce~t of us occasionally have symp. toms of this type .as a result of exposure to noninfectious things
as pollens, pet dander, dust mites or other substances. In these situations·, the immun¢ system responds io the offending substances doctors call them allergens- as though they were harmful, ·cold-pro!lucing genms. The symptoms, which are a necessary· part of the
body's fight against a cold, signal an excessively vigorous and undesirable response to a relatively hanmless allergen.
Just .as you have noticed, sometimes it is. difficult to correctly
identify the ~ause of nasal irritation. However, you can make an
accurate guess by observing those around you. A "cold" is highly
contagious and, therefore, will shortly afflict those around you while
allergies are not contagious at all. Cold symptoms also improve in a
few days while allergies continue for as long as exposure to the
offending substance continues.
·
. Allergies that occur in late summer and fall are often called "hay
fever" although !'in not sure why since most of us get this without
working in hay, and "fever" is also not part of the constellation of
symptoms. The condition is more accurately described as "allergic
rhinitis" or more si mply, "allergies·," regardless of the time of year
when it occurs. Those who suffer f~om allergies have an 'immune system that responds more easily and more vigorously than is necessary
for the risk posed by pollen or other allergens. These indi-viduals, and
this includes you·, are at increased susceptibility for developing allergies to new pollens. I would guess that this is what has happened
you this spring. · . ·
.
In the northern and eastern parts of the country, spring allergies
are usually due to pollen from trees or spring grasses. Fall allergies
are usually due to the pollen of fall noweri11g native grasses that are
frequently descrilicd by the derogatory tenm "weeds." Molds, pet
dander and house dust can cause problems year round.
Avoiding the offending allergen is the best treatment for allergies .
Sometimes this is .a realistic option - for example, simply keeping
the ~t out of the bedroom. For other allergies it may be completely
unrealistic - for instance, s,~aying indoors in a climate,controlled
room 24 hours a day. Fortunately, there are a number of non-prescription as well as prescription medicines that help with allergic
rhinitis. The non-prescription products are generally safe and afford,
able, so they are the be~t things to try first. If the first,product you try
doesn't give you satisfactory relief, try another one. Remember to
choose one with different active ingredients, not just the saine drug
with a different brand name on the label. Your pharmacist can help
guide your selection of products.
.
Individuals who have allergies ihat ilre not relieved by non-prescription products, or those wh&lt;i have other medical conditions such
as high blood pressure, should see their family doctor. There is a cornucopia of effective troatments for this malady. Your doctor can prescribe one that is right for you.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly column. To submit questions,
write to Jobn C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Unlv~rslty College of Osteol'palthic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

.Jvfas

'

Mom 's favorite ch~olates.
no longer pink, breaking beef up
By The ,\ssodated Press
Tomato,
Beef
and
Bow
Tie
into 314-inch crumbles. Pour off ·.
· Here's a dish Dad and the kids
· drippings.
may like to offer to cook for Mom Pasta
on Mother's Day. Tomato, Beef and
I pound lean ground beef
· Stir in tomatoes, salt and pepper.
3 cloves garlic, crushed
' Cook over medium heat 5 minutes;
Bow Tie Pasta looks f~ncy, but it
~ cups chopped fresh tomatoes
st.ir occasionally.
takes only about 25 minutes· to get
(see note)
·
Meanwhile, cook pasta according
ready. ·
The techniques called for are as
3/4 teaspoon salt
to package directions. When pasta is
114 teaspoon pepper
done , toss it with beef mixture and
. simple as ·baiting water for pasta,
I 1/2 cups uncooked bow tie basil. Sprinkle with cheese. Garnish
browning ground beef and tossi ng in
fresh tomatoes. The details __ the pasta
with basil sprigs if desired.
Makes 4 servings.
2 tablespoons sliced fresh basil
colorful arrangement on the plate,
·3 tablespoons grated Panmesan
Note: a 28-ouncc can wh ole
the sprig of fresh basil to garnish peeled plum tomatoes, drained and
make the difference. Plus the loving cheese
. Fresh basil sprigs for optional chopped, may be substituted for the
thought.
frosh tomatoes.
The pasta could be served garnish'
Nutritional facts per serving:
In large nonstick skillet, brown
with a salad made from bagged, prewashed greens and followed by a ground beef and garlic· over medium 420 cal., 29 pro., 35 carbo, 18 g fat,
dessert of fresh strawberries and heat 8 to 10 minutes or until be.e f is 596 mg sodium, 77 mg chol.

The day ,
you've dreamed of
·is finally here.

,:

You've worked hard preparing for this day. You
decorated the nursery. You picked. out names
for your baby. Now, as you drive to the hospitill, the anticipation continues to build. What is
it really going io be like, you ask? We tum
anticipation into Satisfaction, making sure you
~eel comfortable and sllfe. We take the ti!lle
· to see that all..~our needs are met, and that
all your fears ate washed away. While
we're proud of our commihnent to providing.the latest in birthing technology,
it's our warm and caring attitude toward our
patients that really ~ts us apart. You'll know
as soon as you walk through the dQor_ You've
·made the right choice-the O'Bieness Birth
Center' at 0' Bleness Memorial Hospital.

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The following ·couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of

the family get-together, I discovered about the woman whose husha nd· "c ross-dresser ;" not transvesme.
that my best evening handbag was was a cross-dresser was right on tar- Tran;ve;tlle IS a label COi ned by the
missing. I am not a forgetful person, get. People often are afraid of those psyc hiauic· professio n and implies
and I organiie my belongings in who are diffe reni. whether the dif- that we are s1ck. -- JOANN IN NY
such a way that I know where every- ference is racial , reli gious or gender.
DEAR N.Y.: I'm sure your letter
thing is. 1 know for certain that the 1l1at is why minorit1e s arc the target educated a lot of people t&lt;;Jday P.S. I
handbag was stolen.
. of so much discrimination. Cross- would not use the word "s ick," but
I feel violated and betrayed. I dressers need protection from di s- cros.- dre&gt;~r ng is defiqitely a devJaknow who took it, but I feel uncom- crimination as much as any 'other ti&lt;;n from the norm . \,
Planning a wedding '? What's
fortable confronting her. What min ority.
should I do' I am at my wits' end. -The woman who wrote said her right' What's wrong' "The Ann
MISSING ITEMS IN N.J.
husband on ly recently. di scovered lie . Land ers Guide for Brides" will
DEAR N_J.: I trust you are was· a cross-d rCssc r. This is not relieve your anxiety. Send a sel fabsolutely certain who the thief is, u~usual. Many of us cross-dress as adde~ scd . 1ong. busme~~-size envc-.
or you could be in for some serious children or teens hut suppress the lope and a check or money order for
trouble. If you are .100 percent posi- desire as we grow older. By the time $3 .75 (lim include; postage and
tive, drop her a note saying, "! real- we. reach our 40s. the suppression handlin g) to: Brides, c/o Ann Lan. ize you have a problem that is out of can create deep anger and fru stra- · ders, P.O. Box 11 562 , Ch1ca~o. Ill.
your control. Plea~e send ihe hand- tion. My wife is tolerant · of my 606 11 -0562. (In Ca nada , 'e nd
bag back, no questions asked , and cross-dressing but not particularly $4'.55 .) To find out more about Ann
get some professional help." This understanding . We a\e in coun sel- Landers and read h er pa't colu mn&gt;,
should do ii.
ing, trying lO keep our marriage :v isit the, Creators Syndi cate '"- t'h
Dear Ann Landers: Your letter together. By: the way, Ann , we prefer pa ge ilt www.treators.cum .

Quick Cooking:
Tomato,
Beef a·n d Bow Tie Pasta
.
.

Sunday,

Marriage licenses

Judge Robert .Buck:
TrentS. Paxton, 19, Pomeroy, and ·
Heather L. Weaver, . 27, Belleville;
Jeremy Lee Nelson, 22, Thppers
Plains, and Christina Marie Causey,
19, Reedsville: Craig Marshall Hartman, 30, Belpre, imd Jennifer Leigh
Williams, 19, Long Bottom; Raben
Eugene Hawk, 27, and Shannon
Moodispaugh, 26, both of Long Bottom.
·

conclusion that you are both too
young to be making any lifelong
plans and that you want her to date
oth~r guys because you 'd like to
date other girls. Say, "We might end
up together. but we both need to
explore other options." An.d no more
sex . Period.
·
·
because it will · be awfully hard on
Dear Ann Landen: Every two
-her She has no idea that my feelings years, my family members gather
have coQied .
for a holiday weekend . I usually host
How can I end this relationship this event at my home because-! am
before it's too late? I do love my geographicall y situated in the midgirlfriend bUt don 't want to spend . die . These weekends are always
the rest of·my life with her. What's filled with laughter and fun .
the best way to do this w'ithout hurtThe problem is that ·ime of our
ing her?-- HOPELESSLY ENTAt:o/- relatives is a kleptomaniac. Invari GLED IN NEW YORK
ably, after she has visited, I discover
DEAR NEW YORK: There ·arc that something· is missing from my
times in life when · we have to be home. It never has been· anything
cruel to he kind. This is one of those valuable or ·expensive -usually a
times. Tell your girlfriend as soon as trinket worth about $10 - bu\ this
possible that you have come to the year, it was di fferenl. Shortly after

Treat spring allergies · with
over-the-counter meds first

DO'
'

Page7

'

Wednesday, April28,.1999

AT&amp;T's quarterly profit exceeds expectations
Analysts surveyed by First Call
had expected AT&amp;T to earn 57 cents
a share 1n tlie three months ended
March 31.
AT&amp;T said its revenue rose 9.9
perce nt to $14.10 billion from $12.83
billion .
While TCI's sales added to
AT&amp;T's totals. the nation 's ·largest
telecommunications company ,also
was ~uoyed by big revenue increases in seVeral e~isti·ng businesses.
AT&amp;T said sales from its cellular
phone service grew 40 percent , its
Lclccommunications mahagement
business grew 69 percent and its corporate phone ser.v1ces grew 7.5.'per-

The Daily .S entinel

By The Bend

Rising gas prices· prompt families to reconsider vacations

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~~Hospital

at 0' Bleness ~
Memorial Hospital
Drive • Athens, OH 4570t • 1~593-555t

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W~nea~y. Aprll28, 1999
Page 8

• The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprll28,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1999'·

Meig·s High School student Jessica Johnson;
named recipient of C_utler Scholars Award What with the dog adoptathon coming up this weekend, it's about time to
get the family together for a discussion on adopting a dog from the Meigs
. County dog pound.
.
·
It's adopt a dog weekend and t.here will be a variety of activities at the
pound on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds from 12 noon lo 5 p.m. on both Sal"urday and Sunday and yqu're invited to slop by.
Adopting a pel does tend lo be a serious matter. A dog will need good
care and like people, pels sometimes become ill or have accidents and must
have help.
· In reality, there are obligations and responsibilities involved. On the
- other hand, the effon and expense involved is trivial compared to the love
and loyalty you receive in return . .You just can't have a better friend than
y9ur dog-small wonder dogs become like members of the family to a lot
of pet owners.
If you live alone, then you won't have to hold a family decision making
meeting. You can just haul off and adopt a: dog which might be good medicine for loneliness. Shucks- you can even talk to your dog. And often, the
" dog responses you get are quite amazing .
Ann Boso repons that a hymn sing held Sunday a.l lhe Carmel Church as
a·fund raiser for Jeremy Rowe , Meigs High School student who was burned
recently during a welding class, was quite successful. ,
. There were a number .of si ngers on hand and the audience was quite gen.. crous in making con tributions. Ann thanks all of you for your efforts and
suppon.
And the beat goes on for local model train collectors. Local collectors
. · are in the process of planning their eighth annual train show from July 26 to
Aug. I at the Poljleroy Public Library.
Friends of the Library, a supportive organization for the Meigs County
libraries, will be staging a public book sale on Thursday, May 6, from 10
a.m. to .6 p.m., and Friday, May 7, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The sale will be
held at the Pomeroy Library and assisting members ofthe-friends group will
be the library ,youth organization.
· Public dances as fund raisers have kind of faded from the local scene
through the years ·but the Meigs Division of the Am·erican Hean Association
' is going to revive that activity.
The division staged a dallce on April 10 at Royal Oak Park and about 80
people turned out to enjoy tripping the light fantastic to the music ' of George
·
' Hall.
The association especially thanks not only the dancers who showed their
.' support but to Kroger's of Pomeroy for providing refreshments and John
· Redovian who arranged for the use of the Royal Oak facility.
· ·. "Our committee is already planning another dance for next year. .We
invite anyone interested in helping with the organization to contact the
American Hean Association at 1-800-209-1151, extension 381", comment. ed Susan Gerken, area director of the Meigs County assoCiation.
·
Some of the expens following the Littleton School tragedy, are now coming fonh with the. theory that the constant barrage of violence offered up
these days has a bearing on what's happening in our nation. Geez! what a
rocket scientist conclusion. Do keep smiling.

Society Scrapbook .

speaker
. . Guest
Becky Baer, Meigs County Exten.

sion Agent, will be the guest speaker
attbe Racine Adult Basic and Literacy Education (ABLE) Center on May
5-and May 12 at 9:30a.m. The center
is located in the basement of the
.. Racine United Methodist Church on
State Route 124 near Southern High
Scbool. The topic is "Child Dcvelopll}ent" and will be covered in two ses' . s!ons. The sessions are free and open

to the public.
· G AHS to present musical
The story of Joseph and his color.. fill coat is told in the musical "Joseph
and the Amaiing Technicolor Dreamcoat" on May 7 and 8, -the Gallia
·· Academy High School choirs will be
" P!'rforming !he drama beg(nning at 8
p.m. in the Washington Elementary
.. School Auditoril(m in Gallipolis.
The musical is filled with spotlight so los from Joseph , Jacob,
" Reuben and the Pharaoh. Through
, song and dance, the cast becomes the
storytellers taking you on a journey ,
. through timer back to the land of
Canaan and the days of·famine, scandals and dreams. Tickets will be sold
In the door both evenings. Price is $5
for students and $7 for adults.
-~

.

ful, tJe cordi.al, be genuinely interest·
ed in people, be generous with praise,
be thoughtful of the opinions of otlrers, be considerate of others feelings
and be alen to give services.
.
Refreshments were served by An~
Werry and Virginia Wears.
·
Council members hear reports
on spring rallies
Chester- Council 323, Daughters
of America, met recently at the hall
with Laura Nice presiding.
The pledge to the Christian and
American flag, scripture, the Lord's

Jessi ca R. Johnson of Middleport has been named the first
recipient of the Dr. James H. and
Ne.llie Rowley Jewell -Manasseh
Cutler Scholars Award , a four -,
year undergraduate scholarship to
allend Ohio University.
The award provides full tuition
and room and board plus a
stipend to cover struc.tured sum mer internships and study or
work abroad . Johnson is one of
21 Cutler- Scholars who will
anend classes on the Athens campus thi s fall.
Johnson is the daught er of
Kathryn Johnson of Middleport
and Charles Johnson of Holly wood, Fla . A senior at Meigs
High School in Pomeroy. she is a
member of the National Honor
Society, plays with th~ marching·
and co ncert bands, and earned
varsity letters in cross country

and track .
First alternate for the award is
Stephanie A. Evans of Reedsville.
a senior at Eastern High School.
She is the daughter of Teresa

Evans of Reedsv ille and John sc hool after allending normal ·
Evans of Long Boll om .
sc hoo l at Ohio University and she
"Cutler Scholars are serio us later completed nursing training
students who exhibit moral al the former stale hospital' in
stre!lglh of character: they are Athens . ,
st udent ~ with the energy and
· Dr. Jewell is a graduate ofHardrive to be deep ly involved in .ri sonville High School in Meigs
acl~lies in tlieir schools and County and of Ohio Univer~ity.
com munities," says Charles J. He earned a doctorate o( mM!:
Ping,. Ohio University president cine at Case Western Reserve
emeritus and exec utive director University and ~e rved in World
of the Ma nasseh Cutler Scholar's ,War ll as a lieutenant colonel in
Program .
.
the medical corps of the U.S ..
To be co n ~i dcre d for the Dr. Army Air Corps (now the Air
James H. and Nellie Rowl ey Jew - Force).
eii-Manasseh Cutler Scholars
After the war, he entered priAward , · :.t student mu st be nomi - vate prac1ice and specialized in
nated by a high school in Meigs childbirth and the care Of mothor Vinton counties . Each of the ers. Dr. Jewell is still inspired by
four sc hoo ls nominated . one the example of the country docse nior. The nominees were inter- · tor, a next-door neighbor, whom
viewed on the Athens campus by · he idolized as a youth.
the Cutler Scholars Selection
Now .nearin g the age of 90,
Commi11ce .
Dr. Jewell hopes the Jewell -CutJam es H. Jewell , long -time ler Scholars Award will make a
res ident of Mt. Clemens, Mich., . difference to young people of
and his late wi,fe Nellie Rowley southeastern Ohio by giving them
Jewell , were both born in Meigs opportunities they might not othCounty. Mrs . Jewell taught erwise have.

Dr. Greg Shepa;d, author an&lt;:! lecturer, recently presented his "Stand
Together Seminar" for students at Southern Hi gh 'School. In the morning
session, Dr. Shepard talked to grades 9 through 12 and in the afternoon.
grades 5 through 8.
· ·
Dr. Shepard is the President of the Bigger Faster Stronger corporation
based in Salt Lake City, Utah, and has presented mo~ational seminars in all
50 states. He is the author of several best-selling st re~h and conditioning
books for athletes and coaches.
·
The presentation was coordinated by teacher David Barr and paid for by
the Meigs County Substance Abuse Prevention Program (SAPP) through the ·
office ofProsecuting Attorney John R. Lentes. SAPP is funded by a grant
from the Ohio Depanment of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services
(ODADAS) and the Gallia-Jackson-Mcigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health ServiCes.
1
The program identified four pillars of life for true success and happiness:
menta), physical, spiritual and family-social well-being: "S ub'stance abuse
prevention-alcohol, tobacco and drugs- is a positive life choice and an
imponant pan in achieving success and happiness," Dr. Shepard stressed.
'

Prosecuting attorney guest speaker
at Meigs retired teachers' group
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John ·Lentes was gue.st speaker
at a recent meeting of the Meigs County Retired Teachers Association
held at Trinity Church.
·
.
Lentes talked about his involvement in educational activities in
Meigs County schools, the mock trials , the alternative ·school, and the
promotion of the abstinence program . This was follow ed by an explanation of wills,' trusts , and power of'anorney. He was introduced by
Jean Alkire, vice president.
Maxine Whitehead presiped at the business meeting opening it wi.th
lhe ·pledge to the flag and group singing of "God 'Biess America." Nel lie Parker gave the devotion s.
.
On April 20 a district me eting of the Retired Teachers Association
was held at the Ohio University Inn, Athens. Attending from the local
chapter were Whitehead, Parker, Anna RiCe, Grace Weber, Abbie
Stratton, Eileen Buck, Gay Perrin, and.Joan Cord.er.
.
Other members attending the local meeting were Carol Ohlinger,
Kath leen Scott, Helen Williams , Nonga Roberts, Bernice Carpenter,
Charles Blakeslee, Daisy Blakeslee, Dorothy Woodard , Maurita
Miller, John Riebel, Elma Louks, Rachel Downie, and Ida Diehl.

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740-742-8608

Lab, and X-Ray

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for more details, call ·

992·0060.
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
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GRAND OPENING

tfnjoy a Spring Celebration
in rromeroy
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/ift'/1 !tt»eet 1/"ctiM ifov.s-e
87 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760
Sale Every Thursday Night 6 pm- 10 pm

Quality Consignment Auction ·

1999

Furniture, Glassware, Fenlon, Depression, Po«ery, Hull &amp; M!Coy;Tools,
Collettible Fruit Jars &amp; BoHies, Coins &amp; lois ol Household &amp;Mil&lt;.
{!,~st;~lf,.,t.r /J/.1...,61111 Moodltpaugllll7693 .
(304) 481-3853 Non Smoking Fa1ility (740) 989-2623
Public Notice ·

YOUU SAVE MOHEr
li THf CUSSifi£DS
,AQ THAT'IID Rll .
Public Notice
:·

·Craft' Show· Demonstrations

NOTiCE TO ·

CONTRACTORS
·Sealed prapaula for the
Inllalllllon of Wat1r Une
l!idenalon, Gill VIIVII,
W'ater Mtttre, 1nd Flu1h
I!Ydrant, Gilkey Ridge
ACtid, Mtlga Co\lnty, Ohio,
will bt received by th•
Malgo
County
Commlaelo-• at their

olltce at lila Cout1houN,
Pom1roy, Ohio 45789 until·
tO:OO A.M., May 17, IIIII
and then at 1:00 P.M., at
Hid office 0JMMC1 and raid
aloud lor the lollov!lng:
Th• Inllallatlon o1 4800
UIIHI IHI ol 3" PVC CL..
200 Ptpa, two 3" Gate
Vllvt1, 8 Water Mtllra and
one Fluah Hydrant to be
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Becllotd Townahlp d. 231,
Mtlga County, Ohio. Plana,
Spaclllcatlone, end bid
form• mey bt aecuratl at
the omce . of Trtplatt

Quilt Show
Entertainment by Meigs H.S. Band
Tours Qf Holly Hill

Inn

City N~tional Bank· Sketches of
Pomeroy Mural .
Sidewalk Sales - Flower Sales

Get an average alze houSe
steam cleaned, high pressure
wash&amp;d &amp; scrubbed

Concessions • Wmdow Displays
Barbershop Quartet

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Farmers Bank- Vmtage. Display film
on
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GARAGE SALE

history of Pomeroy Mural

Ewing. Residence
300 4th St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Downtown Walking Tours and to round
out evening a Community Band Concert
beginning at 5:00 •
Britlg your lawn chafrs

Friday,·April30th
. 9am-4pm .
Saturday, May 1st
.9 am~ 12 ni'V\n

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

· Public Notice

Going Out Of Business Sale: 3m'. ...
Off Store Wk:le. Witton Cake Sup:
pl1411. Merckena ChOColale, O.J 's
Cratt Shop, 2390 Jackson P i k~ .

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NEW• REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

lack's
lng
&amp; Construction

9:00.5:30.

40

Giveaway

4 German Sntpnerd Pupples t '
Also, Long .Haired Ouhound.
7&lt;0-W1...q118.

Adorab!e Pupplel. Uhte(i Breed·,

-Complete Auto Service-

wm Be Medium SJzed, To Good
Homo! 7-.«12.
Electric wuhlng mach ine; two
wire pet cages, pet carrier; 140·

can relieve a

debtor of financial obligation• and arrange a fair
distribution of a88ets. Debtors in bankruptcy may

m-n11 .

Free Puppies : 1/2 Cocker Span.'
lei, Raccoon Road, After 3 P.M.

740-44 1-()4 17.

keep ••exempt, property for his or her personal

Free puppies to a go_od nome :

use ~

m111 , ready to give away. Call
Christi or Josh ·at 740·992·503!)
arter&amp;pm.

This may inclu.de a car, a
househ'old goods.
.

h,ouse~

clothes, and

For lnfonnation Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Safrane~ AttotneyAt ·Law
(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

Golden RetrieverfCocker Spaniel

Kllttn&amp;l 1 Solid Grey Male, 1
Orange
Bla'c:k Calico. Two -5

a

Month Old, 740.:15&amp;6253. ·

60

Loat and Found ·

~ ).D. CONSTRUCTION ~

V;C. YOUNG Ill

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings , Roofing , Siding

~

812-41215

· Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yra. Local

uSpedali10Utg In Los Hor~• "
Commercial &amp; Residential

POWER WASH

clnlt;. 7-40-949-2756.

Lost: ' Small Dog, Wearing Red

Licensed &amp; Insured
Phone 740.992·3987
John Dean; Owner

TRI•STATI MOBILE

Lost: redbone coonhound, on~nge
collar. "Grunr, Forest Run Rd. vi-- .

Collar with a 8tll on it. Needs his.

28 yrs. exp.

medication. {300)67!&gt;6351.

70

· Tratlora-houloo-" - dockl-drivftayl
Equ/plllfl~ Clflnftl. Dfg&lt; NMd

JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEII@EUREKANET.COM

Galllpolll

&amp; VICinity
29th, 30th, May 11t. 46 Burnett

Road, Kanougo.

CRED17 .
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repel • Divorced

. WORRYIID!!!

FREE ES11MAT!S

· No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

'

Hauling •
Limestone &amp; Gravel

Ressonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

· 4 Family: 4130th. 5Jtst, 2nd, 9·-~ ~
126-4 Gltotgea Creek , 1 114 Mite

From AOUll 7.

•New Homes
··Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE .
ESTIMATEES
985 4473

·

AJ.L Yllrd- Mull
le ,.kt In Ai:tUMIIOII.
PE!f!IM: 2:00p.m.

till.,-.
....
toto run.-,
ocl- ·2:00p.m.

Frldoy. lotondly ldlllon
• 10:00 o.m. Sttulllly.

Nlfil 30 ·May 1,3,4 lh. 8:301&lt;m lll
5:30Pm. El2 Ann Drive. Hospital
Bed. Miscellaneous.
·
April 30th, May 1st. State Floute
218 , 1 Mlle Above Merce~vllle 1
Harok1 Oavls ~ -

,__ _ _ _..;,:,;.
•~-....,r

RUTUND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
lEECH GROVE
ROAD
'GUN SHOOT
SUN., I :00 PM

Unda's Painting
~e the

pain out.
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR'
.
Before 6 pm leave ·
message, After 6 pni

740-985-4180

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Free Estimates .

Community Yard S.le: Friday 4130
&amp; Sa1Urday 511 , 3110 Mile Out
G«&gt;rges Crool&lt; AOid From S.R. .7
N. Home lnterk&gt;r. ~ Chair, Fireplace, Dresser, Boys Cloth&amp;S 4·6.

Jury Cabtnel. B - ~. Misc.
Friday, Saturday, 9 -Evening , 26
Chillicothe Road. GalHpoll.&amp;.
Household Items, Clothing, Mis·
cellaneous. .
Garage Sale : ·11184 S.R. 554 ,
April 30th, May 111, 3rd, &amp; 4th,
Raln fShlrw. 9-?

Hill &amp;

Neal 4150 511199, 9 To 4,
'

S1ate Rou18 e!IO.

Home Interior, Tors, CtothlnQ .
Prom Oren11. Misc. 8·4, May
111 If Rain ~ay 8tn, Adrian Ave·
nue. Off Fourtl'l Avenue Cion

3/tl/99 TFN

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

·

Everyone!

'173-5300

SAYRE
TRUCKING

.

4 Femmes: Friday April 301h, Sat·
urday May 1st. 9·? BulaviiM.
Townhouu, Corner Johnson.
Ridge &amp; A.ddlson Pike. Household, Linens, Oothes . Children
And Adults! Some Treas~o~res For

Maaon Bowlin&amp;
Lanes
Summer League
Betlna 1st WHk
. In MaJ
'lllesday • No llp
Wednesday. Men's League
ThDnday • Mixed League
Stertl•e n•t 7:10 P.M.

:

Yard S.le

~~~~~~~~~~~~

~or

WJOS

R. L. HOLLON

TV27

TRUCKING

local
Television

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand

· For Free

Pr&lt;?gram Guide

985 4422 .

CaU !}92-2727

Cheater, Ohio
1Cl125190.'fn

To

GDC.

Hvge .5 Family Salt: 4129 ·511 81.
9-6, 1at Drtve On A'Dn~ Oft Routt
7 On Bladen Roed. Numeroi.h
ll!mS.

.

Large 3 Femlty: 11a.e7 State Ao·
Ide 7 Sotoh, Ffldly 4130, SI!Umay
511' 9-?
.
.
.
. Saturday May 1&amp;t. 9·4, At The

Of

Comer
Aou1e 1eo, Buell Rldge
1
Sorrelhlng For Evoryonel
Saturday Only Several FamilY
Yard Sale : 8-5, 1015 Second
Avenue , Something For EverY•

onel

·

Thursday, F"dey 9:00·1 Old Pool ·.
·Offlc:e S.R. 16Q In Vtnton, Lots Ot

.· ~Rittl)

WICKS
.HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

Fill Dirt
740-992-3470 .

Top Soli,

~ Clolhoo (lWin lloyai ·Swifljjs,
Carrion, Walllots, llrOIIoJS, GlriO

"I'm Back"

(UmeStone-

CIQ"* iln 10.14, Lid* L·XL
Olottot. lflllllt• ...,.. e,.
- · ,_,., Lola Oll!llec, uems,

f\1 _'11 y(_.lllllQ Lltlll•_ 1 i ,11'.'1t ;• t" I

Nc1w THE APPLIANCE MAN

985-3561
f'.l iiS 1\li MilKI'S ~OI'IVIll At\
;\ppl!,l!ILv' Wl' St'IIIISl'ci ,Jppildlll'c
' 1' '' I '

I :; I i ! I( '·. i 1t \ I( 1' '

I '\ I I •I I' I ! .: ' '11
&lt;

'i 1 ;

wa- a

-~.
lrUCI&lt; 2ttl'·

Kc'll S Appil.!llCl' Sc·lvlc' t'

'· ) i ,, '

Dryer. An' ·
Uquo Dining· ~o'fll Sullo, Gaa
Range,Two Gun C~~Hnett, Tooft,

Single Sawing lollchlno In Clbl:
001. Now &amp; UMd C-no Topet

l VCR Tap11, Gluaware , Nlci
Na11 Loto 01
15'9 A&lt;1!!1i

-t..

oon Plko, I 0:00Am-5:00Pm, Fft-.
day """ Sltuftlly.

••

Wodnooday, Thurodoy. ·Frlday1

e:oo-s:oo, ~o~n Stale -

tea,

- - loolla.lllo1, "'*Of-.,,,
"J

'

.•·
'
•'J.

Items . $1 .00 bag 11le every .
Thurae!ay. Monday tlnu SaturdaY

~~fllC~~~~~~~ti;r

FIW ElllmlfN

38112 s...... Road,
' Olio 454789

7o40-5n-t&amp;l2
· Quality ctott\lng and nou&amp;ehollll

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

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

Marty's

9 WISI StimSOn, Alh&amp;ns

FornuJr-"Velvet Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572
•

.,.,,,-.... 197.
Don~

Now To 11&gt;u Thrift 5hol&gt;l&gt;e

Dave's Garage

April 30th-May lst
Jlegilter Now $5.00-Pick up Flag

Engt""rlng, 112 1!2 Court
Street, Pomtroy, Ohio. A
paymant of Seventy Five
($75.001 (Non•rtlundablel
dotla111 will bt raqulrld for
HCh HI 01 ptaM lnd lpec&gt;
·iflcetlona, check m1da
payable
to
Triplett
412lfN
Engllllltlng.
.
Each bid mull be accom- ·
panlecl by ahher • bid bond
Pomeroy Eagles
In an amount ol 1011% of lha
"Club Bingo On
bid aiiiOUnt with a auraty
ulllflctory to thelfor811kl
Thursdays
Matga
County
AT 8:30P.M.
Commttalonara or by certl·
Main St.,
llld check, caehlara chlclt,
.
Pomeroy,
OH
or latitr oi craciit upon 1 ·
aolvent btn.k In the amount
Paying $80.00
of not tau thin 10% of Ute
pergilmt
bid amount In favor 01 the
$300.00
Covtl'lll
lforeutd Mtlgl County
Commlutonera. Bid bonda
$500.00 Sllrburat
lhlll bt ICCOmpanlld by'
Prograaalve top nne•.
Proof· of Authority of the
Uc. II 00-50 11m111n
olllclal or agllll tlgntng the
bond.
Bldl lhlll .,. -led lnd
· marked •• Bid tor •Gilkey
CANDLE· MAKERS
· Ridge Road Wattr Une
We
now have 30 NEW
Extanaton ·Bid" and IIUIIIId
.... dal!vwld to:
Candle making
Malgl
. County
fragranceslll
Commloalontr•
•Birdhouses
• Bear
CourthouH
• Wreaths • Refills
Pomeroy, Ohio 45781
Attention of blcldtra ta
·
*THE COUNTRY
called to all ol the raqul,..
CANDLE SHOP•
menta contained In thll bid
Tuft- Friday 10.0
.packet, partlcutanv to the
Fedai'al Labor 8tanderda
5111().4
Prov111on1 and Davl•
Rt. 124 Mlnemlllt, Oh
B1c0n WIQII, VllriOUI
992-4559
Inauranct raqulremlnte,
Vllt10UI lqUII opportunity
provtalone, and the raqul,..
menta tor a payment bond
Roo
and parforma- bong for
1~ of the COiitriiOI prloa.
Na blddar rillY wttlldniW
Rl:)(l"ng • Repairs
hll btd within thirty (301
•Coating• •
daya alllt the actual dllla ol
lh• opening thereof. The
Sldlnga • Painting
Malge
COUnty
• Drywall &amp;
Commlttlontrl """'..
tha right to welvt any lnfor• Plumbing
. melltlu or to raJea1 any or
FITHJ
Estimates
all blda. · ·
Janet HOward, PrHtdent
Joseph Jacks
Malga
County
CommtHionara
740·992·2068
(4) 22, 28 (5111 3TC

Penlonal•

DIABETIC PATIENTS: Vov May .

Light Hauling
up to 8ton

740-992-7953

Jfappy 'llirtfiday george
alia "&lt;Tfie goqt Jferder"
::.Tpril 2/f
'Frcim your friends

It Wil 8t MuM 5J ~- f.Dn
....... ll&gt;u liMo&lt; .. l&gt; "" 8nt e.,.
"' ... Clmtif""'

Be Enlit!~ To Receive Your Oi&amp;J
betjc Supplies At No Coat To ·
You. Foi More Information . 1·888·

YfiRD SALE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

Rome Creek Enterprises

man is now a banlier man.

'740-698-3290

Pallo Ceartractlon

YELLOW FLAG

Duro-Last Roofing by .

(740) 992-0060

• Writing Wall I lrlcll

en-s561.

·. Commerical, residential
15 year guaraptee

"'
~
"'
'
"'
~ ~$~-~ ~$

E.

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM-8PM

Flat Roof Problems?

Hollller Meigs Clinic ,

.......
·--

Bay, s.ll,
Allo

POMEROY MICHIIE SlOP
250 COIIOI n.
· . POMIIOY, OHIO 457"
PHOHI-nG-992•2406 OR 104-485-3555

To schedule an appointment or

· :1(.

SAL ;

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS flff f'lill AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP nUS THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A SAJIIIfi
01 U, f0 $100.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZt
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.

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

T....,..,. Boa"'
Rkllnl.....,.,,

·LawaCU.-Ir..p

740.949-2217

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
$5,75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Cl)rd
Open
9·5 Weekday Sunday 1·5

25yJS experience
Free Estimates

Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday

29670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1

HilliN mo.

CONCRETE

JESSICA JOHNSON

Have Extended Hours Past

SELF STORAGE

(No Sunday Calls)

·-

Many 1$ items'' Many 5$ items''
-'
30% off candles!
.
"'
The Ohio Rive~ Bear Co. &amp; Wicker Buggy ~
Middleport Ohio 10 • 5 pm
-

S.lDEJ.Irfl .,

HILL'S

INC.

All Makes Tractor &amp;

:

Friday &amp; Saturday
April 30·May 1
.
•

J

40 742-8888

CONNECTION

Family Practice,

ACA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A IPICW ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES

Rutland, Ohio

Btdldooer &amp; Backh'oe·
Service•

V.ellow
Flag· Sale'• :
I.

I"'

·Bake sale planned by UMW
- · . Plans were made for a bake sale
• when the Rock Springs United
~~$~-~~$
; Methodist Women met recently at the
, church.
·
· The sale will be held Saturday in
Fl"
.
~ front of God's Net on Main Street in
.
.
. ~.q.
Pomeroy. Mildred H~dson and Rita
Laurel Cliff New Notes
.
Friday, April 30,
Radford are chairman of the sale and
Recent guests· of Ann Mash were · ...
will arrange the setup.
Chuck Mash, daughter, Loren, and ,..
: During the meeting which opened son, Zachary of Columbus, and Char9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and
: ~ith a reading of P'salm I by Dorothy lene Johnson, . and daughters, Kelli "".,~ '
Saturday, May 1,
Jeffers, prayer, and singing of hymns and Samantha of Reynoldsburg.
and reciting the UMW purpose, the
Jean Wright spent the weekend .,.
10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. ·
r(lember heard reponed from Norma with her daughter and family, Mr. and ~
, Baker, secretary, and Leah Ord, trea- Mrs. John Anderson, Kellie and Eric
Lots of clearance items 50% Of the
• surer. Prayer for the sick was given whose birthday was observed.
'
by D~ Rader and' cards and Pandora
Lisa Scranton·and daughter, Darlowest price and discontinued
Collins reponed on cards sent during bie Dorst and Arimas, Jordan and
the month.
.
~erchandfse up to 75% Off.
Dominick Scranton, spent the week, · A letter of appreciation for con- end with Mr. and Mrs. James
ttibutes and services was received Gilmore. Debbie Do~si spent her
All happening at:
·., from ·the Meigs Cooperative Parish. spring break here with her grandparIt as noted that the Rev. Keith and ents, Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore.
omce -.S ervice and Supply
~
Dee Rader accompanied a group of
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of
137C N. Second Ave.
:~
••Y9Uth to a lcthus retreat. The group McConnelsville visited Mrs. Clif- ·11rA
~
donated $50 for food. The UMW ford Jacobs recently.
"'
Middleport, Ohio ·
..
,;conducted church services 9n April
·25 in the absence of the minister.
• An open house to honor Virginia
i
Wears on her 80th binhd'ay was held
April 28 in the social room of the
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice •
,
church hosted by her family,
·Eaat Slda . St., B.A. t24, WHk lor alx IIICCIIIIYe 'P.o. aoidif IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS'
. ; The devotions and program were
MEIGI COUNTY, OHIO Mlnet'8Vllle, Ohio and the waeke, lh1 laat publloatlon Potneroy, 011 45768
given by Ann Werry and Virginia OFJeRRY
J. 'GAUEIIA, . UnltMWn IMino ol Edith E. btlng on ·the 111h dey ol ~40)11H730
ttomey lor Pltlnttn.
·Burnell acid,... unknown, May, 11111. TIM oer.ndllnta
Wears. A report of a lady who works
ET AL.,
will
11ave
-..ty-elghl
daye
Delandant
may obtain 1
ara ~nollllld,tllat on
PLAIHTIFFI,
16 hours a day to help the underprivcopy . of the Complaint lila
.
VI.
the 14th
ol April, 11111, from the dat ollaat publicaileged and cond~ct worship services
~~Weln form the ollie• of
~ J. a.-lllld Nomll lion In whlc to a~ Mid
I!OITif I. IIUANIU..
. was given.
Lllrry lpancer, Clark of
"'*'fo Plalnan., flied oompljllnt.
IT AL.,
: Ten cqmmandments for good pubthtllr camplalnt and olhlr DeniH L lunoe
Court, . M•I•• County
DEI'EHDANTI
Court Reg. Courtllou~. om~roy. OH
ranlf
In lila Court o1
CAIE'NO.
-.cv.o:M
lio relations were given. They
Common Plaaa of Malge 10042141
45711
L!QAL NOTICE
include, speak to people, smile, call
~~ 14, 21, 28
.
Dlfendanta ldhh e. COUnty, Ohio, bHt1ng CeN DeniH llunae LJw Ollloe
them. by name, be friendly and help- llu,.ll, at ..., .....,.. teat No. 11-Cl/-4134 ·
.101 e. Beoond at.
I I, 12, 18 IITC
' kn-n pl1oe ol raeldenca 11 Thla notice will run ona a_

\

~

"0'7
HegJIN
1

JUft IN TDD POll UIUNG ll&amp;PADl8

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

'

m

I

IJ

Stand together seminar presented
at Southern High School

Prayer, and the national anthem 'preceded roll call and reports from otlicers.
New by-laws were given a second
reading, and members were reminded
that the chaner will be draped for
Ethci,Hanat the next meeting. rytem- ~ .~ ~ ~ .-.-,.'W'..,_,.,
bers were asked to wear white.
~ ~$ ~· ~ 5.4 L ll $
Reponed ill were Scottie Smith.
and Alta Ballard. A card was read
from the family of ,Curtis · Riffle
father of Grella Riffle Davis. HeleJ
.
Wolf thanked m~mbers for gifts presented at the rally. A repon was gtven
on the rally held at Canton and the
one held at Pomeroy. Refreshments
were served by Virginia Lee, Goldie
Fredenck, and Margaret Amberger. .
Others there were Helen Wolf,
Deloris Wolfe, Joanna Ritchie, Julie
Curtis, Erma Cleland, Charlotte
Grant, Betty Young, Opal Hollon,
Thelma White, Mary Barringer,
Mary Holter, Everell Grant, · Gary
Holter, and Opal Eicliinger.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

•

'

�VVedneeday,April28,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

- edneaday, Aprll28, 1999

Pomeroy • Mlddl

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

rt, Ohio

)UEYOOP
ICY. OOP!

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

I

'1'111'11( ntiS

ON~'S COMIN'

1\ADUND/

lO

180
Bates Bros. Amusement Co. Ffee

_ Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

to travel. Mua1 be 18yr1. or older.

Call 740·26e·2950 M· F, 8:00·
~30.

DAMNO POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:

·s·

Mile Yellow Flag Yard Sale,
Pomeroy-Middleporl, April 30.
May 1. ROQister now $5.00. Pick
up !lag. For more lnlormation call
740-992..197,
Yard Salee lluat Be Paid In
Ad•onco. Doodl\no: 1:00pm lht
der before the ed Ia to run.
Sunder I Monday acUtlon·
All

I:OOprnF~.

Yard ••••- April 30 a May 1,
Dale Ellis residence on Titus Rd.
Small boy's clothes, misc. Items.
Hours 9-5.

April 30· May I, -474 Sycamore..
, Street, Mlddlepon. Dhl&gt; 9-5.
Yard Sale· Sherry O'B,rlen res!·
dence. Adams Ad .. Letart. Friday,
April 30 anti Saturday, May 1.
large &amp;election of clothing, ~aby
acceuortes, household Items,
etc. Co\1740-247-&lt;1024.
Dave Stout residence . 2065 W.
cc;~ege Rd., Synlcuse, May 1st.
Garage/ yard &amp;ale· Saturday, 5/1 I
99, 8:00-.1:00. Top of Chesler Hill
on SA 2&lt;48 Wreaths, swags, prom
dres&amp;es, Dodge tr.uck rims, rock·
lng chair, clothes, misc.
Large yard sale · April 30 and
May 1. 10am-5pm. Lillian Weese
residence, Oak Grove Ad ,
Racine. Beanie babies, exercise
equipment, stove, doors, lois of
nioe C\1)111\ng ..

Clots AOTR:
Single Driver, Late Model Ken-

worth• Wllh Reefers. West Coast

carrier.

Cia&amp;&amp; BOTR:
Team Slraighl TrUCk, Late Model
Frelghtllnera With Sleepert. Must

Have Air Brake Endorsements,
800 Mile Radius, Home DeiiYar\es.

Both Pl&gt;•ltions:
Atloast 25 '!Bars Old
Atletat 2 Years Experience
GoodMVR
Week~ Poy

Health Insurance Available
Work Well With Tho Pubic

For More Information Cat1 800437-8764, Hra, 8:30 ~ M: ·5 P.M.
Easy Work! Excellent Payl Assemble Products at Home. Call
Toll Free·. 1-800·467·5!566 Ext
12170
EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR
Trencher Experience Helpful,
740·532-2695.
.
Gallla Meigs Commun!1y Action
Has Used Olflce Equipment For
Sate. The List 01 Items Is Avail·
able At The Main Office In
Cheshire, Ohio ..Anyone Interest·
od In Bidding On This Equipment
May Pick Up A List During The
Hours Of 8:00 A.M. And 4:30
P.M.. Monday Through Friday.
For Funtter Information Call 740·
367-7341.

Moving sale and 4 fami ly yard
sale· April 30 &amp; May 1. eam 5pm. State Routi 124, one mile
from Soulhern High School, Curl·
man residence. Furniture, General Oiflce •/Sates. ExpertclOthes. fishing equlpmenr, Christ- . enced Preferred Fuii·Time, lm·
mas decorations, duck clothes , mediate Opening . .Apply: Lifestyle
Furniture, 856 Third Avenue, Galbird houses, household Items,
lipolis, IQ-2, No Phone Calls.
lots ol m~.
Spring rummage &amp;ale· Heath Local Trucking Company Snklng
Methodist Church. 348 S. Third Ouallflec:t Truck Drivers. Good
Avenue, Middleport April 30th- Pay And Benems. Send Resume
To: P.O. Box 109 Jackson, Ohio
May 1st, 9am-~m .
45640, Or Call 1-740·288·1~63
Three family, Beshen Ad , 1wo To SchadlH An Interview.
miles ort SA t24, Racine, Friday &amp;
Maintenance EmP,Ioyee. General
!)aturday, 1D-4
Maintenance Of Low ·Income
Apartment Complex. Electrical/
Refrigeration /Plumbing /CarpenPt. Pleasant
try /Custodiai/Groundskaeptng.
Computer A Plua Good Bfonsflt&amp;.
&amp; VIcinity Applications Available At Gallla
Nice Yard Sale: Roush Street In MHA, 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bid·
Mason. WV. SaVMay tst: Cioth· well. Ohio 45614. 740·446-0251.
lng, Toys, HousehOld, Mlacella· Applications "Accepted Until Ma~
neous hems, .And Morel
15, 1999. GMHA Is An Equal Opportunity Emptoyar.
Sat-May 1, New Haven Block
Sale, 107 Hazlewood Dr. Men
Special Selection Tools·Oid
Planes-Two Utility Trailers. Golf
Clubs. Mlecollaneous.
Yard Sale At New Haven. 30th
April; tat May, 9· 5PM. 1000&amp;51h
St.' II questions call -(304)882·
3779.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlapaugh AucUoneerlng.
Complete Auctloneeiing Servlc·
as. Consignment auction- Mill
Street,· Middleport, Thursdays .
Ohio License 17693. 740·989·
2623. '
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
'full time auctioneer, c:omp!ete
auction
service . Licensed
f66.0hlo 6 Wesl VIrginia, 304nl-5785 Or 304-773-54(7.
RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 1· P.M.,
. Crown City. 740·2-989
Wedemeyer's Auc:tlon Service,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top. Dollar: All u.s Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency.
Starting, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
~venue. Gall\pol~. 740-446-2842 .•
Antique&amp;, tOp priceS paid, River·
lne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ausa Moore owner, 740-992~
2526.
Clean Late Model Car• Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith BuiCk 1'\&gt;ntlac .. 1900 Eastern Avenue. GaiMpolls.

'I

Wanl To Sal\ 'loll' StuH7 Call RIVerside Aucttori And Let Ua Sell It
ForVOu, 740.258-6989.
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homos, Call 740·446·0175,0r

NO GIMMICKS
EXTRA INCOME NOWI
Envelope Sluffing ••• $600-$800
every week.
Free Oetaill' SASE to
International Inc:.
1375 Coney ta\and Ave.
Brook~n. Now York 11230
Now accepting appllcat!ona lor
night shift, El Oora&lt;to Adu~ Home
Baaic first aid &amp; BCII required,
7-10-999-5039.
Now taking applications for Drivers at Domino's Pizza, Gallipolis
a,nd Pomeroy Stores . Only, 740·
446-4040

Part Time RecePtionist Wfnted
For Busy ConStruction Office.
Must Work Wei~ With Public -Answer Phones, S;cnedullng, Etc.
Experience IN The Construction
Area A Plu&amp;. Please Send Ae·
sume To Christian's Construction, Inc 1403 Eastern Ave., Gal·
llpol\1,' OH 45631, NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE.
'Postal Jobs to $18.35/Hr. Inc.
Benefits, No Experience. For
App. And Exam lntor., Call 1·8D0913·3585, Ext. 8828, 8AM·9PM,
7 Days lds.lnc.
Recreation Director: Full Time.
High school degree or equivalent. Associate Degree preferred.
Certification In accordance with
regulatory agenciea governing
center. Comprehensive anetlts
package which lnclu(tes 401 (k).
Point Pleasant Center, State Ro·
ute 82, Route 1, Box 328. Point
Pleasant, WV 25550. A Genesis
Eldtrcaro Network. EOE.
RESUMES UNLIMITED Offers
Persdnalized Reaumea And
Much Moret Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared, 740-388-

3800.
Wanted· Secretary, must have
references, must be reliable, be
able to do talt8B, ledger and com·
plete o"lce work. Send re1uma to.
~0. Box 27, Pomeroy, OH 45768.

Wanted To

Gaorgea Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your tog• to lht 11'iK jU&amp;t call
30&gt;1-675-1957.'
Ha'¥'e 1 Opening Fof 2.t Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·
capped, 7&gt;W-«t-1536.

Interior &amp; e11terlor paln11ng, lawn
service, haul 1rasn. junk, demotiOn, house, bam, shecl, 59 1-9017.
Interior I ~xterlor Painting, Experienced, Rtferences, Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate,
740-J&amp;S-8041.
K&amp;G Cleaning, &amp; Painting Senile·
es Interior Extenor, For Free Estl·
mates, 740-441 - 1044, 7A0·441 0459 ..

Co&amp;matolog1&amp;1 - · Bualnoao
Growing, Guorentood Wages
Pluo Mm. 7&gt;10-441-1H7

Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. • Bedroom. 2 112 Baths,
LIVing Room, Dlnl"!! ~oom, Eal·ln
Kitchen. Lg Family Room. 740·
245-9337

320

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Will do babysitting In my nqme · t6x80 VInyl Shingle, Auume
In Maoon, W\1. (30&gt;1)7~1 .
Loan, I ·800-383-11862.
t973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·
bllo homa, 740-992-5039.

-

210

Business

Oppo~unlty
!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bust·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to aend money through the
mall until you nave Investigated
tho offering.
For sale\ Tho J001bol State Route
141. $125,000.00 OBO 740·4&lt;18·
3500.

230

Proleulonal
Services

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL IECUIUTY ISSJ?
No Fee Unfeas We Wlnl
1-8811·582·3345

All real estate advenlslng In
this newspaper Is subject to
tne Federal Fair Housing ArJ.

of t968 whlch.make\i It Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color. religion,
sex familial status or national
ortgln. or any li'nenuon to
make any such preference,
limitation or clle;crlmlnatlon . ~
This newspaper wi[l not
kAOWlngly accept
advartlsements for real estate
which Is k1 violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

RE AL ESTAT E

310

Homulor Sale

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue.
3BR 1 1/2BA., Faml~ Room, Garage, CenuaiAir, Patio, Porch,
sn.ooo. (~)875-2533.
3 Bedroom Home, 2906 Meadow·

brook Drive. Call (304)675-4380,
a~er4PM

3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Rench HouM
7 Yearo Old, 28x30 AHachod Ga·
rage, 12x24 Building, Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed, 69 1/2 Acrea Or
Will Sell House &amp; Loll Mtlgs Co.
740.992·3537.
3 Bedrooms, Set On 3 Acrea,
Large Rooma, 3 Bay Garage,
Close To Schoo! And Buckeye
Rural. $89,000.00.740-379-2112.
3 BA, 2BA, 2 Car Garage. 1 Acre
A Must See Letart. (364)882:
3518:
By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate. will sell hOuse wtth·
out Iota tor $89,000, 740·992·
2704, 740·992·5898.

j·~~~-~n~lng~o~~~~

HOUSE FOR
2 Story, Ntar
on 8th
Strett - Coli from
11 Pll.
(30&gt;1)875-4908 ore7~399t.

Washer Dryer

Batl\8, AJC, Aceeas To Pool. 7&lt;10-

«1~318

FIN ANCIA L

Aenov~tad ,

(30&gt;1)882·3652.

Three bedroom, hall basement
nome, country senlng In Pomeroy,
newly remodeled, asking $37,600,
7ol0-992-n45.

S&amp;S Lawn Care, Commercial &amp;
Residential, Free Estimates! 7&lt;40-

Nawtv

Hookup, $275.00 Rent With Do·
posit. 740· «6 · ~81 Or 740·4&lt;18·
0101 Alter 5:00PM.

Large Wh itt . Colonial Houae At

AeatorJ(I VIctorian home attuated
on 12 acr11, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and pr'lvate, appointmont. cal740-992-5598.

--- ·

1973 Ramada 12x80 Mobile
Home, 2 Bedrooms, Centra.! Air,
Range Top, Oven And RetrJgera·
tor, Good Condition, Call Alter
6:00 P.M. For Appo4ntment, 740245-8392.
1990 Royal Cove, 14K74.
2Baths, Skylights In Kitchen. Island Stove, Underpinning 6
Porch. $14,000, (304)992·22&lt;18.

199t 14x70 2 Beidrooms, 1 Bath,
New Gas Furnace /Heal Pump, 2
Porches. Many Extras! Asking:
$10,!100.00. 740-245-9120.

Tara AJ)II .. 3 Bdrma .,·· 2 Fun
«6-3481 Or
5:00PM.

7~0-448·0101

Afttr

New Haven 2Btdroom Home,
Garage. River Frontage. referenc11 , 08poslt, &amp; Lease. (304)934·
7482.
Clean. Efflclenl , 2BR. Referanc.,, Deposit, No Pots. (304)875:
5162..
'
Nice Small 2 Bedroom, 5 Room
Hou!le, Near Centerville /Thurman, Gallla Schools, County Wa·
ter Included; Plant A Garden,
$350/Mo., Plus Deposit , No In·
aide PttJI 7ol0-682-9032.
Onl Beclroo'm House In Gallipolis,

References Required, No Peta,
$350/Mo., • $300 Deposit. 740·
«1-1308.
Your Hon1e Is Ju11t A Phone Call
AWitf, 304-736-7295.

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $280· $300, aawer,
water and trash Included, 740992·2167.
2 Bdrm Mobile Home, Ale ,
$300.00 Month Plus DeposK And
UtiUtle&amp;. Refrence11 Required. No
Ptti. Cal 740-992·54n.

2 bedroom mobile home In Mid·
dleport. Oh., no pets. 740·9925«3.

2 Bedroom Trailer. Looted On
Jackson Pika, References Re·
qulrtd, 740-245-5582 Aher 5 740245·5890

1992 t4x70 Oakwood 2 Bed·
rooms, 2 Full Baths, AU Electric
With Heat Pump; 740·441~9119;
740-379-2796

Small 2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
$200/Mo. Plus Deposit. Bob Me·
Cormick RoacJ, 740 448 6844.

1992 14x70 Redmal'l trailer, 3
bedroom, 1 bath, fully c:arpeted,
storm windOws, $12;500, 74D-742·
2795 aher 3pm.

Nice 2 Bdrm CIA, Hwy 160, 4
Mllta N 01 Holzer. $300.00 Month
Plua Oepoall, Rtfrences . .Avallat&gt;e Mey 11t7&gt;W-«B-6199.

Low Interest Aalas for 1Bl Time
Buye~s. limited Time Available,
90().383-1\862.
.

Nice 3 bedroom mobile home, In
Middleport, Oh., no petJ, 740-992·
' 5858.'

Good selecllon of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at
$3995. Quick delivery. Call 740·
385-9621.

Trailer For Flent &amp; Lot For Rent,
·740-446-1279.

Make 2 Payments No Payment
After 4 Years, 304-736-7295.

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent.
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup. Only
$200.74 per month with $1150
down. Co\11-800-837·3238.
Nice Home Set Up On Lot. Make
2 Payments, Move In, 4 Vears
Lth On Loon. (30&gt;1)722-7140.
Price F!educed, 1998, SkYline,
Mobile Home. 14X70. Total Electric, 2BR, Shingle Aoof. Excel·
lent Condition (~)675-7045 .
1 Plus Acre, 2 BCirm Trailer, Well
&amp; c. Water, 2 Stor B. '$24,500.00
Applegrove, W. Va. 304·578·
2557 Makll Appt,
Oakwood Homes Barboursville.
WV. $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Down Double Wide, 30~·
736-3409.

330

Farms lor Sale

26 Acres MIL, 6 Stall ~orae Bllm,
3 Bedroom House, Fence, 740·
3811-8504.
'
50 Acre Farm, 3 Bedroom House,
2 lull Baths, 32ft. x 80ft. Barn,
Black Top Driveway. Swimming
Pool , was $205,000 .00 Now
$175 000.001 (740) 387-o219

340

Bualneu and
Buildings

Commercial BuUdlng In Hender·
son For Sale or Lease. Call
(803)386-9436.

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

10 112 Acree, 3BR, C.A., 2BA,
DB Garage, Basement. (304)675·
4575.
4.20 Acres ,t,pprox. 4 mlloa North
of Pt. Pleasant, on Route · 82 .
Good building site . access to
city water, 2 tenthl mile oft main
hlghwty. $25,000 (30&gt;1)675-5084.
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew, Gallla County,
$32,000 More Acreage Avallabfe,
7-10-386-6878.
Apple Grove Memorial Garden Is
now offering a limited time ape·
clat on Cemetery Loti, from April
( · l989, to July 1, 1999. Buy 3
ots, get 'he .,h free. Specra1
Sate· Companion and Individual
Grave Markefl. (304)576-2779.
Appro~mattly 30 Aorto, ~!~l ies

From Gall\polla; BtautWut Building
Sltea, Elect,.c &amp; Water Available,
COli Allor 4:30Pm. 7&gt;W-«8.7fi6 5.

lor Rent

Two bedroom, all electric, In
country, $325 per month plua se·
ciJrlty deposit and references,
7-10-992·7201.

440

Apartments
lor Rent

I and 2 bedroom apartments, furniahed and unturn!ahed, security
deposit required, no peta, 740·
992·2218.
1 llflrm., Extra Nlr:o, Firat Month
Free With One Year Lease.
$279.00 Ptr Momh. Plus Utilities.
7ol0-olo48-2!J57.
Apt for Rent; Water And Trasn
Paid, No f"ets. In Galtlpolls. 740J&amp;S·IIOO
2 BCirms , CIA, Gas Heat, Washer
Dryer Hookup, 1 Milt From Town,
No Peta. Alter 5:00Pm 740·448·
7456.
2 bedroom apartment In Middlepan, we pay water, sower &amp; trash,
you pey gas &amp; eloctrlc, $200 per
month, $100 deposit. 740·9927908.
2 BedroOm Apartment, Adjacent
To University. Of Rio Granda
Campus, 740·245-5858.
,
2 Bedroom Apartm'ent,
Grande Area, Close To College,
1350/Mo., lnctudn All Utllltlea,
Depoolt Required, 1·888·8400521.
2bdrm. ap11., total elactrlc, appllancu ftirnlsheCI, laundry room
facilities, cloae to school In town.
Appllcatlont available at: VIllage
Green Apts. 1411 or oall 7&lt;40·992·
3711 , EOH.

~09my

2 Bedrooms With At·
tachad Garage, Rodney Area.
$395/MO., DepoeK &amp; GQO&lt;I Rotor·
Onc:tl, 7~2801 ,
Tara Townhouse Apartments,

Very Spacious. 2 Bedrooma, 2
Floor1, CA. 1 1J2 Btth, Fut~ Cor·
pettd, Patio, No PatJ, Leooe Plus
Security Oepo ..t Required, 1•0·
·· 7&gt;W-«6-0101.
Twin Rivera Tower now accepting
application&amp; for 1BR. HUO sub·
aldized apt. for elderty and hand·
leopptd. EOH 30+675-6879.

460

Spice lor-Rent

Mobile home aile available btl·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
740-385-4357.
New Mobile Home Perk at Galli·
polls Ferry. Now accepting appli·
cations for loll on alte. (304)67!58908.

New Mobile Homi Park at Galli·
polls Ferry. Now accepting applications lor lot• on alto . (~)675·
6908.

470

MERCHANDISE

510

Houeehold
GOCK,Ia ·

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Waahera. ·oryera, Rahgea, Refrlgrators, 90 Day Guaranteel
~ronch City Maytag, 740·448·
ne5.
Beds, Full Size And Twin Com·
pltto. Couch &amp; Otak, Dryer, E~
lrlc Stove. Roollnor &amp; Table. 740446-97~.

For Sale: Reconditioned washera, dryen and refrigerators .
Thompsons Appliance. 3407
Jtcklon AYOooe, (30&gt;1)675·7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer11, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call 740·••6·7398,
1·689-618.(1129,

530

;~·-~,1:;• ~::m7.
Wanted
We Buy Land: 30 -500 A.craa.
Wo.Pt1 CUh. 1·800·213·8355,
,Anthony Ltnd Co. :

RFNTAL S

2 Bedrooms, Aefrlgeraror, Slave
Furnished, S150 Dtpoa\1, 58 MHI
Crook, Ga111~~tls,J'40-4&lt;18-3870.
3 Bedrooms Nlir Holzer Medical
Center, No Pots, seoo/Mo., Plus
Utllltloa, &amp; Dopoatt, Rtterencto
Required, 7~0·«8-0858, Altar 5
P.M.

Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apt .
Prlmt Downlown Gllllpotla Loct·
lion. No Pets. ,$300. • Ulllltlea.
.Reference Required. 740·446~
0008.
North 3rd Ave:, M\ddltport, 2
bedroom, ~~turnllhld ~p~nrritnt,
dopoa\1 &amp; ·retaranoae, 7~0,H2·
018~.

Now Taking Appllcallono- 35
W11t 2 ltdroom Townhouae
Aparrmenlt, lncludea Waler
Stwago, 'rraah, 1315/Mo., 740·
446-0008.
One Bedroom Apartment In Pt.
Pleasant. Furnllhtd. Very Nice
and Clean. NQ Pets. Phone
(~)675-1318.

One bedroom aperlmtnt In Mtd·
dtoport: ont bodro!im lumlahtd
· houMin tllll\pol&amp;, 740-811\!.fltet.

560

Pets lor Sale

Adorable female Cocker Spaniel
puppies with papeta. s month&amp;,
$135, 740-9(9.2451,.

Buy or aell. Riverine ·Anllquea,
1124 E. Main StrHI, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m , SUI)dey 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 740·992·2528, RUII
Moore owner.
Oak Buffet Fainting Couch,
Creaser. Etc. No Dealers Pleaae.
7411-448·3884.

540

........ _

1894 Plymouth Sundance, 4 Cy·
IInder,- Automatic, AC1 87,000
Mlloo, $2 ,(00 OBO, 740-2581233.

2006 Comdtn Avonue

Ptrkonburg, wv 28101
30&gt;1-485-1293
Puppies &amp; Kll18nt
FuN llno ol petsauppllel
Blchon Frlae AKC 1 Female, 1
Malt, 1'\&gt;alilble Delivery, 740·379·

28~.140-379-9061.

CFA Roolstored Himalayan Seal
Point· Kittens, Wormed, Lllter
narntd, 740-367-n05.
Cog Obedience Clasaea Now
Forming The Right Paw Training
Ctntor, 740·«6·1884 For lnlor·
' motion.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

18 hp. Cub Cadet 44' dack town
mower tor sate, good condition,
U95, call 740·992·2143 or 140·
992-6373.

$110. (304)675-5(92.

Jack Ruutl\ ltmalt puppy, brown
and while, ohon hair. smoll brood.
$250, 740-7~·2050.

Pet Sitting In Your Homel Aunt
Bova Creal..... 740-245-5599.
Registered Woll Pup, 4 Month•
Old $150 Call After 7 P.M. 740·
!167-(1168.

580

Frulla &amp;
Vagetables ·

FARPJ SUPP LI ES
&amp; LI VESTOCK

610

Fann Equipment

.AHice Cholmer, Good Condition!
7~Q-245-9595.
'
For sale: IH/12' Olsk, Brllllon/12'
Cuhlpacker, Both Excellent. Gth
I 920 Forage IJVagon. Tim-Rock
Farm.(304)67H308.
Ford Dyne Balance Mowing Machine, Series 515 7 Foot Cut;
Mault Ferguson Model t 2
Squtre J!aller, 740-256-6298.

630

5x8 un btd utH~ traitor with 1\deti,
740-992-414( alter 8pm.

2 yearling Charlalo bulls', 740·

AMAZING METABOLISM
Brththroughlll Loao t0-200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Reaulta, 100% Natural,
Doc:tor Rooommendtd. Frn Sampita Co17&gt;W-«1-t982.
Beby Bod, Draaalng Table,
Strot5er, HighChair, and Car Seat.
(~)875-4548.

Bttnlt Btblot Fo&lt; Sale, 740·245·
~.

Bolgt Twtod Sofa/ LOVI Stat,
Nlct $200: Refrigerator /Almond,
Excellent Condition, $200, 740·
386-9418 Altar 5 P.M.

PRIMEITAR
,.Df_lt*fot
Freeinlttlllitlon , 3 montha.fr"
progrorring, call899-2es.2t 23.
PfiO I I, Mlpay

'

We Are Prolllslonal Installation
And Service Supply. We Sell
W~olo&amp;llo To The P~bltc. Wt
Stock Janltrol HtaUng And CoolIng Equipment, Duct Work, Aagllltrl, And Rolttad Mltsrtall For
You To 1n11111 Your Own Or We
Con Fll'nltlt A ~l&amp;t 01 ~ To
lnllall For 'lllu. Jl 'lllu Doni Call
Uo, Wt Both LOlli 553 ·JICkoon
Pike, 740·(4e·8308, 800•281·
0086.
Rainbow Sw11per, with attachmanta, lorHfo. (~)875-1725.
Wanttd• griod ustd Iuton with
Qllh\on, 740·992-5053.
Woltrllno Spoclol: 314 200 PSI
$21 .95 Ptr 100: 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Por 100; All Bran Com·
prllllon Fltt\ng4 fn Stock
RON IVANB ENTERPRISES
JackiOn. Ohio, 1·800·537-9528

11=of
•dhnt

·EEK&amp;
MEEK
'

. '

'

1 USED 10 'THikl!&lt;. :t.
~ \,ER'r' ~CAl Pl!CJ.JT lf-£~RK£

'

.

Llveatock

7~·1903.

3 Year Old, Chi-Angua Bull 740446 8856,740-4411-7421 .
4 Year Old ""'lnt Golding, $1 ,ooo,
740·367·7221.
4-H/FFA 'Fair Lambs: Quality and
reasonaly Prlcldl Phone: (7o40)·
256-1330
A.P.H.A. Yearling Filly; 2 Year Old
F\1~, Exctllont Bloodllnos, -2 Year·
ling Pony, 7-10-388·0321.
Angus Bull lor Sale\ (740) 245·
5084
Fair Pigs lor Sale\ Excallem B\oo&lt;l
Lineal for more Information Call:
(740)-245·5872 or (740) 367·
0583
Fair Ptga,Call After UOPm 740·
245-i047.
Outstanding Angus And Chiangus Bulls, Reason!J;bly Priced,
Slate Run Farma. Jackson, Ohio
7-10-286-5395.
ve;y Nice Sorrel 8 'Year Old
Quarter Mare, Call Alttr S P.M.
7-10-379-2820.

~

Hay&amp;Graln

Lorge Square Btleo 01 GOod Hay
Fo&lt; Btla. 740-379-28311. '

650 8el!d &amp;

Fertilizer

Dako\b SOld Corn a Soy Boana
For Btla. (30&gt;1)875-11101.

TRAN S POilTATION

1998 Ford Aaoger Super Cab
Four Door, 4.0 Lltor. v-e. Auto.,
Air. SLT Pkg. 24,000 m1111: AI·
•
sumo Balance. (30&gt;1)675-7842.

&amp; 4-WDa •

'90 Chevy Aatro van, all wheel·

drive, PW, POL, good condition,
$5500; '72 Mack truok , 237 to·
gina, runs good. good Urea ,
$2000; 7,40-7~·2675.
'

....

....

~Tht (:J;(j;)Qt Df','(:,,

1978 Fonl Bronco. 740 146 e*.
1979 Chivy 112tori 4WD, PS. PB,
automatiC, too many new parts tO
1111, aak\ng $5500, prlr:o Ia nooot&gt;
able. 740-992-7551.

Wf\ffi '&lt;00 COJl.D
lr.£ lt\E I'I\O~E.
10 \i-LK (;)lf:a\LY

1890 Dodge Cargo Van 1800.00
060,740-256-1233. '
-

WITh N/0\\IU.

1993 Chevy Conversion Van. V8, Rear Air, $12,000. (304)875·
3787.

::---.7 __,_--

~U~ &amp;.IN{:)~

'BIG NATE
'I C.HUC.KLE! ::
Mf\1, WE ARE
~E~TII.OYINCI

THE TEA\'1
l'OU U~Et&gt;
: TO P~I&gt;.Y
·

FO~!

YEAH,
I

FEE~

SORT
OF MD
FOil-

THEM .

YOU CAN'T
TtiiE
WORRY IN&amp;
!'.BOUT
THOSE

WA~TE'

LOSERS'

--.....,,

1995 Yamaha Big Bear 4X4, 350
CC . Gun 'Rack and Scabdard .
$3!100. (30")273-2300.
Yamaha Blaster • wheeler, new
platon and rings, brakea and re· built carb., $1350, 740·992·2t43 ·
or 740-992-6373.

Autos

AN5WE~S TMT

f' ~::::'-:'::-::"':":":-:"--------

111110 ·1110CAAS FADM P00
PRollct Impound&amp;, And Tax
tpo'o.-For Llotlnga Colt 1·8003111-3323 Ext. 4(20,

·Campers &amp;
·
Motor Homes : •

21 Merchant
2211t23 1'1811 tnp

......

25 Future lllya.'

Weot

Nottlo

••

Pua

1.

Dbl.
Pua

tngrtdlenl

Eut
4•

'r7 G8d about
21 8lbllcal -

Pua

30 PlzDrla need
31 CoetMr role
37 Emerttull:

ablir.

--

By Phillip Alder
Over the -years, I have spent much
time deciding whether my readers
would flo; happier if I stuck to I 950s'
bidding, with 16-18 no-trumps, forc ,tng raises and strong two-bids , or if
I moved everyone into the 1990s.
As regulars will know, I lean
toward modernization. Yeti strive not
to offer incorrect advice, and when I
see anotl\er writer suggesting an
action I consider totally wrong, it
bothers me. Look at the North hand.
The dealer on your right opens one
heart. What would you do?
Now become South, declarer in
four spades . West starts with two top
hearts . How would you continue?
There is only one right answer to
that bidding problem; a takeout double. True, two clubs might work better, but it is markedly inferior. (If the
tive,card suit were spades, overcalling one spade - would be better.
Always strive to get a f1ve -card
major into the auction .)
With the vulnerability in his favor,
East .applied maximum pressure with
his pre-emptive jump to four hearts.
South niight have doubled -- and collected 300 .. but he preferred 10 go
for the vulnerable game.
'.Declarer realized that if he ruffed
the second heart, he would probably
need trumps to split 3-3. Instead, he
discarded a diamond.
If West had played a third heart,
South would have ruffed in the dummy, drawn trumps, and run the clubs
for 10 tricks. When West exited with
a club, declarer won tn hand and led
a diamond. His luck was in as West
couldn't win with the ace and give his
partner a club ruff. (That possibility
is less·likely than a 3-3 spade split.)

411M41nvulon

42W-..

. . ...,..org.

:C::n'eftna'-

4&amp; SlngleUme
47 PNpotrecl 10 .
drive
41 Clay
110 Compotee '
palnl52 Sao'* than
53 -lloiMI

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campo~

Celebrity C.., CIWIIODrlmi are ctMitcl from qlKUtionl ~ I~ plqW put and PtMenf
&amp;chlefteilnlhe~stendllorMOihef. Todly'ecW· / ~R

KZXYD

'F K

' K F .L -Y

FD

OZHli;FOE
UYG

KFLY

PSY

K F L Y' . '

z
RO

KS

DZJY

KZUASI

HFIHIID
ZOT

ZABZIID

LSJFOE

ZBZII.'

WYHWK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The perpetual swish olthe windshield wipers is the
soundtrack lor our llvea.: - Jean Shepherd
.
.

....
WOlD

I

8
~

ARMLOT

I WEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN

2~5.

-

.

ASTRO-ORAPH

.

Ll¥1ngston'a Bailment 'water
Proofing •. all basement~repJifl
done, lrta eat1mat11, Hlellme
guarani... t 2yra on job axperl11101, (!lO"IM-3887.
'

1988 Pontiac Grand Prix, two
door, automatic, 11~. very good
condition. 115,000 mll•a. 12000,
740-992·7689.

840

ElectriCII and
Rafrlgeratlon·

Roaldonlla\ or commorctal wiring,
new aorvlr:o or rope~•- Mtallrl.~
censed electrician. Aldtnour
Elootr\ool, WV0003Cie, 304·5?51768.

III IIII

LITS ANSWERS

Kettle- Rival- Newly- Eyelet- EVERY WEEK

1997, 28Ft. Tarry Campar. Air,
Heat, Awning, Electric Jack. EX·
cellent Condition. Stored ln1ide
Oonng Winter. $11.500: (30&gt;1)576-

BAIIEMENT
WATIRPfi.(IOFING
Unconditional llf.lme QLiarantM.
Local references furnfshtd'. Es·
tablllhtd 1975. Call 24 Hro. (740)
~~6-067o, t·800·287-057e. Roo.,. Waterproollng.

UNSCRAMBLE A!OVE LE ITUS
TO GET ANSWER

One dummy to another. " Sure I've got a good mechanic. That's why I keep going to him EVERY WEEK"

1998 Pact Arrow Motor Homa. -:1:2
ft. Loaded . Like New, $28,000.
(30&gt;1)675-3787.

Home
Improvements

.P~INT NUMBERED tEllERS IN
JHESE SQUARES

. SCIAM

1887 Sell-Contained c_.,;,p~;
Sleeps a, Microwave, Air Condl·
toner, New Awning, Exctllt"t
CondK!onl Call: (740)-445-4282 ,

1878 Hondernauc, excehant&lt;con·
d\11on, wlnd&amp;hltld, eoddlo bOQI In- · rid. 1750.
CoD 7-10-7~..510.

1899, Colobrlty. Runs GoOd, Nlct
Work C.ar. 158,000 milts, Y·8
o\110. Air • $1,500. (30&gt;1)675-11084.

Soullo

Now goa tanka &amp; body parts. 0 &amp;
R Auto, Ripley, WV. (30~)372 ·
3933 or 1·800-273-9:129.

8323.

amrm-

ftleR: abbr.
11 Anb-

211 Gumbo

JUST 60E5SED ?!!

Auto Patte &amp;
Acceaaorles

1983 Chevy Caprice; 4 Dr Bedan,
Nice fnoldo And Out. Runs Goodl
Appllonoo Parts And Strvlco: All
-7-:-40--:-2:-45---::9-585_.- - - - - -'1' Name
BranC;Ia Over 25 V.art Ex·
1987 camaro, Runa Good. perlence .All Work Guarantt~td,
$1,!100.00 740-446-1939:
Frenoh City Maytag, 740·4&lt;18·
1988 Chevy Corelca, IUIOmiiiC, ne5.
,
'
runs good, gOQd gas mileage, ~ C&amp;C General Homo Moln·
- .lroe. blut. 11186.
tenonct· Painting, vl_
nyl otd!ng,
carpentry, dOors, wlncfowo, bltlll,
1e87 Chrytltr Filth Avonut, "·. I
'
'
mot&gt;tlt l)omo ropetr and rrtanl. Fo&lt;
automatic, runs good, no n.11t, frH tsdmett cell Chit, 7~ft2a

sees.-

cantrt41

11F,_

North-south

Budgel Priced Tran1mlnlons
and Englnas, All Typos, Actlls
To Over 10,000 Tranamlstlona,
eve Jc;ntJ, 7ol0-245-58n.

810

•
7 Pour~
I Vubn.,rt

24 Doae

'fOV

lor Sale

'90 Ford Crown VIctoria, 302, auIOrrtii\C, PW, PL, PS, gOOd cond~
-~:OS. no rust, S2,50~. 740·892·

37~egaln

'{OU 60ES5?!-VOU\Ie
SEEN GIVIN6 Me

SERV ICES

71 0

~fodder

........ docl'-

1Uinger-

-'10 AR~e41Ce'a

Boats &amp; Motors •
for Sale
'

189~ Four Wlnns Fling, 14',- 115
hp., $5500. Fun boat. Seo at 399
South Third Street, Middleport,
740-992·7727.
.

790

......

ew.-·•

Debatable advice

TU(bo 0\tiO\, $15,600, 740-446·
9317.

760

·--·
4=~-

31 Part of
E • me&gt;
40 PaiiOVW

1987 Ford Ranger 4 Cyl., 5
Spetd, New Paint (Block)
$750.00. (304)576-9005.
'

750

...... .

35 Politician
Shimon of

.Opening lead: • A

Trucks for' Sale

1981 Halley LOw Rider, Too Moch
TO Llstl Excellent ConditiOn!
$10,500.00. 74o-441~72.

2 Snwud
3 Doctor'• olllce

3C laltylonlen
allodeoftlle

Dealer: West

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Navy
Bluo MotJI\Ic, 5.7 Liter, LS 1 Fn·
gino, ltalhtr lnttrtor. 10 Sptolfer
M.of)&amp;oon Ster~o. U Dl1c CO
Changer, Fully Loaded\ Will Toke
Pltf Oft, 740 U6 ~~-

Motorcycles :

• 10.

Vulnerable:

tel (~)675-5946.

7 40

. J.

DOWN
1 T-

• Q. 54
• K 75 ~

...

1995 Plymouth Grand Voyager'
SE Loaded. Full power. with quad
seating and rear bench . Overhead digital c:ona.ole . 2-1one
Green &amp; Driftwood . 3.3\16,
59,000mlles. Excellent COnd l·
lion . Great tor travel/vacation.
(304)675-4878.

33 GoiWIY

• 7 e5 s
• J 10 • e 5

••

\;'
1997 Camaro, 8.000 mllta.ljlod·

Vans

title

32•a-.t"

Soutll
• K Q 10 I

1995 Neon Hlghllnt ~ Dooro.
Loaded. Cold Air, $3.500 0)0,
740-44i-ost.
. •~

730

,,...a
w.w.-

21
25 Rhine liNn
25 -.John of roclc

• 4 z
• K 7 S

9 2
A K Q 73
• A 10 9 2
• 9 4

1995 Chevy Coralce , Autom .
Trans., AJC, Antllock Brakes ,
Good Condition. $~ . 500. 00 OBO
7-10-379·9141.

720

20

4

EMI

~)-

• A

•AQJ&amp;2

I Have a Fair Lamb For Sale, , 1993 Ford Extandod Cab 250

5 HP Go·Cart, $250, OBO r.o256-8189.

Afgana For Sale, $50. (304)875·
1374.

1992 Ponllac Grande Prix, Ca11
367·5055

'

17"-~"

tomatlc, alf. new engln.. lranaflw·

AKC Shettles, sable/ whitt , lour
males, ahotl, champion blo9d·
llnes. 3 months &amp; 5 months, $200
each; AKC Collies, three males,
aablel white, oyos DIWillll. $200
each, shots, 8 months old: 7•0·
896-1085.
'

B.V. lloullllldo AquoriiMft

,, Gel

able warranty, $2500 , 740·7~222581oiM ·.,..__
'

1892 Honda Aocord, LK, 2 Do&lt;ir
Coupe, 5 Speed. 215K, $3,750
060, 740-38&amp;-91178.

At&lt;C White German Shepherd
Pupa, $300, 740·245-9213.

14
15fllllrl8lile4

1992 Oodgo Spirit, 4 eyllndtr aU.

AKC Registered Golden RetrMr
2 Years Old, For Stud Service,
Papers Available, Contact Mike
Brewer At 304-773-5011 Or
le8YO Measaga,
.

Antique•

Owner Moving . NOW OUHn 8\zt
~ Pl.co White Wicker Bedroom
Stt. $800.00 7&gt;W-«6-31184.

Building lot In Syracuse- nice
neighbOrhood, all utllltlea avall-

1990 GEO PrtamElcolllnt COndlAll Steel Building Warehouse I 1\on Run&amp; Greou $2,!100.00 (7oiCII
Arena Blow-Out 60x100, 70x100, 448-&lt;4794
80x125, 100x150 30 ·50% Off
1990 Nlnan Stanu , bcetl•nt
0.8.0 .. 800-379-375(,
$hape, 4Cyl. 5Speod, $4 ,000.
Block, brick, sewer pipe1 . wind· 1985 Buick T l'Jpe Rooal, 3.8SFI
OWl, lintels, IIC. Claude Wlnlltl, Turbo Hyportoch Chip, Dlgllat
Rio Grande , OH Call 7•0· 2&lt;45· Da1h, Cllmolt Control. (304)675·
tsn/576-2092.
•
5121.

Red a white sweet potato plants,
Kenmore Dryer, saO. Whirlpool call 740·742·2773 or 740·742·
A.C. 1200 BTU, 170. (304)675· . ~6893.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
COOLQQWN
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Central Air Conditioning .Added
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drtva To Your Furnace. 3 'l"on ·Installed
from $279 to $358. Walk to lhop $1,500; 2 112 Ton $1,350; 2 Ton
&amp; movloe. Call 740·448·2568 .
$1,250; Thl Above tnctudoa Normal Installation. If 'rou Don't Call
Equal Housing Opportunity.
U• We Both losei740-44H308.
Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom Or HIOD-29HI098.
Apartment Rent &amp; UtWIU8s, Interview, Aeflfwncea, No Peta, L8Ue, GrHn Sofa &amp; Rocllntr Sot. Vor~
Dapoalt, Non Smokers, Available, Good Coridllon. $125. (304)8754899.
4/151991n City, 740-446-3664.
c
hristy's Family Living\ apart· Grubb's Plano. tuning &amp; repairs .
menta , home &amp; trailer rentals, Problema? Need Tuned? Call the
740·992·4et~. apartments avtll· plano Or. 7ol0-448-4525
able, tumllhtd &amp; W~fur'Ninad.
JET
Deluxe one Bedroom Apt. ConAERATION MOTORS
venlent, Private Entrance. Cen- Ropelrtd. Now &amp; Aobul In 'Stock.
tral Air and Heat. Olahwaoher Colt Ron Evens, 1·800-537-11!128.
plus Washer &amp; Dryer. $350. pe(
month. Non-Smqklng. Phqne
Llko Naw Spalding Pool Tablet
(304)675-5733.
:,.-;.;~=---­ $500.00 llhont (7&gt;10) «1.(1688
'Furnished \ipata\ro 2 flooms &amp;
9 h Cl
A1
"Now '"~ular kid&amp; jeans &amp; shorta,
at • ean, e erences, &amp; De· ·2 lor $~.00. Ste F-.ggy, 132' But·
poeK Required, Utilities Paid, 740446-1519.
'
tarnut, Ppmaroy, Ohio.
NordiC Track Ltg Shapor, Now
Condition\ $200,7ol0-371i-2211.

Modtrn 1BR All Ulllllln Paid
Except Electric. Golllpolla Ferry
Aroa. $250 month + Oepo~t.
(30&gt;1)875·137111175-3230.

i.t:d"tk*t

Wanted to Rent

House Within 15 Miles Of BOrg'
Warner, Fenced Yard, Nice
Kitchen , 513-851 ·0100. Or 74D4(t-3896.

. . . . • ruwr1a • Pualil
1 .,... ........ ~~.
7 .... -

1.~ ....

Apartments .

758 Ftrot AVO., 1 Bdrm., I Bath,

rage . In Good Neighborhood In
New Haven , WV. Call For Appt

Need Your Lawn Mowed? Call
Erin for the lowest prices In townl
Call Now, llmlled Openings.
(740)245·9454.

.....
_- ,_ ...
__·. or._..._' '

Gftg MNhoon: 31M11175-4828.
Electric Mtlnttnance ServiCe.
Wiring, Breaker Boxes, Light Fix·
ture, Healing Syattms, •nd Ro·
modlling (740)«1·1401 .

ground Pool, 3 Car Attached Ga-

Three bedroom home with lots of
closet space, close to achoot. on
corner lot ..storage building, one
bedroom rental home Included,
740-992-11 154.

For Sale By Owner : Well Main~
Wlldllle Jobs 10 121 .60/Hr: tnc.
,
4BR BI·L~vet, 3BA, terg'e
Benefits. Game Wardens, Secur·
1
w/Firaplace, Living·
Wanted. Cars, Trucks An~ Con· lly, Maintenance, Park Rangers. 1·r••&gt;m. Klt~hen (All Appliances
dillon. 740·368·9012. 740·446· No Exp. Naedod. For App, And
Dln\ngRoom, Utility Room,
PART.
Exam Info Ca\11 ·800-813-3585,
Alr/Hiat Pump. Lorge Lot
Ext 6827"BAM-9PM, 7 Days fda at corner of Belle &amp; sandHill, 3 5
Inc
miles out. 2 bar Attached GaEMP L0 Yf•1ENT
rage, aaparate garage, 26Xeo,
SERVICES
Wildlife Jobs $21.60fHr. lno . 3doors, paint room. Lora of &amp;torBenefits. Game Wardens,Securls6
ty,Malnlenance.Park Aange'rs . age. 1 o,ooo shown by awt .
No Exp. Needo&lt;lo For App./Exam (~)67 5-5403 ·
110 Help Wanted
Into Call 1·800·813·3585, cozy two bedroom home located
USMako Monoyi$S$ Work AI ~~th!,827' 6AM·8PM, 7 Day• In M850n, W. Vo.· attordat&gt;e, alu·
Home • AIStfTible Products.
mlnum siding, Anderson windows,
Euy Work, Excellent Pay. Fret 140
BualnHI
lmmtdlate poaaa16\on, Call 740Training
992·3557 "' 74 0.992-~t .
Dttattst Send S.A.S.E. To: Nat'\ ,
Homeowrl&lt;or'o AtaOclttton, P.O.
EXCELLENT CONDITION : 2
Boxe75. ~ WV25271.
Gotl\polltc- Cotltgo
Story, 3 Bedrooms. 2 112 -Baths,
Home) Call
Near Holzer, Immediate Posses·
(Cor..rs Clo.. ~o
Art You En•rotllo, Motl•ated,
"
.
And Corlnit? &amp;Conte Hilla Nurolng
Todtyl 740--7, 1-800slon. 7~72.
21 4-0452, Roo ' 90.-05' 127E Contlr taloalclng l'or lnd\Vtdulll
For Solo By Owner: ~BR, 1 II
WhO A,.. Currenlly-Statt Ttatod . 180 Wanted To 09
2BA .. largo family room &amp; oH\co,
Nuralng Aislstantt To Work In
upstairs Iotan~ remodeled. new
Our Comprahen1tve en FecMity. Approved~Maltar Licensed Elec· roof, gutttrlng, water softner &amp;
Pl•ast Apply In Patton To 311 trlclen, WV02!595G, Free Esti· lots of e~ttras . 2912 Anniston
!!.clkJ.IdQt. Road, Bidwell, OH matll for Rllldentlal Services. Drive, Pt. Pleasant, (30•}875·
- •
(304)876-7927.
2606 . Leave Me51age on Ma·
chile.
Attention Huntoro: Tho Ohio Yal· carpentry: DoCks, Porchia, Add!·
· ley Hunting Club-Hao Opening&amp; tlonl, - · 7&gt;W-«1-13t 6.
For Sale By Owner: 4BR, 3000
For 15 Members. We Have
Square Foot House. 4 Car Ga·
·IAned 1400 Acha 01 L!lnd In Ch..-n Women Will Dei Child· rage, 5 Aoroa, Vory Secludad.
Afo Granlill. W. IVf ~For a~~re In My ,Hotnt Only. 112.00 1199.91111 (1100)3118 e436.
tAeepondlft Hunltrl, ~- Oty For 1 Child, $20.00 Dllf Fo&lt;
iiiJp \1 . . Per ~·
If 740· 2, Eel. CPA Cortlnod, EMT Cort,
- · fOR BALE
112·7410 I'« MOre fliiOtollllton: Pon:~· Atlrtncn Call 740·
WALNUT I'UCE
Guided lllfta In Ohio, CIN!da, 1145.
·
IUIOIVIIION,
...__
IYIIACUII. OHIO
~
E &amp; I Lawn Sarvlca: Dtllgn. lm- New 1200- fool anergy till·
~·
pt•m•ntatlon, and Service. Clint, Thill bedroom, two full
---, ...... 804-t1&amp;-i48
Avllf&amp;~lt lor Spring Clttn up, beth&amp;, two car gorogo, rlvtr view.
..,,
flrtlllzlng and planting. Frn olll· dock nearby. Ready nowt 740Compu..r user1 N4tdtd. Work matts. S.atlsfactlon guaranteed. 992·79!53, 740·992·&amp;404 or 7-40·
Own
Hrt. x$2!1K
Yr. I -too4?H4153
7777,·!IBOKI
- .tcwp.oom

Ranch Hoote, 3/( Acrt Lot, 5BR,
2 112BA, Den , LlvlngAoom w/
Fireplace. OlningRoom. Kltchenf
Full y Equip., Basement w/Pooi Tabla, Deck w /~7Ft Above-

Link Certified Babysitter ava[l·
able on Greer Road. Fle•lble
Hours, Call Shanna, (30-4)675·
5081 .

~~75-5985 .

.

440

Do

PHILLIP .
ALDER

Thursday, April 29. 1999
_ Although you mi;ht have to&lt;&gt;¥er·
• come a few obstacles on yoor ambi·
' tious path in the year ahead, you will
achieve the successes you dcsin: if
you have continuity or purpose
· throughout.
- · TAURUS (Aprii'20-May 20) It'll
.. Only hold you back today if you te1111
' up .with someone who is wishy·
· washy or inconsistent. Avoid ' allies
' wbo 11f11 liabilities, ospeo:ially when
, lhc:re is an importanl assipment 1o
. SCI done. Know where to look for
' romance and- you' II find it The
AJtro-Oraph Matchmaker instantly
reveals which sians ore romantically
pe!fect for you. Mail $2.7' to MaJA:h·
maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Dol
17S8, Murray Hill Statioo, New
·York, NY IOIS6.
.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Ooi"'
into a job believins it'stoo difficul~
,or thlnkln1 you're simply not quall·
.lied to auccced Is a sure fonnulo for
failure . Don'l give in tn nesative
thlnkina beforc you even try.
CANCER (JunO 21-July 22) You
could be a bit too aullible for your

II

own good today, and someone who
knows you are fond of him or her
might use this to manipulate you.
Don't~ naive, you'll only get-hun.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) As much
as you mlshtlike to, you can'tsweep
_ the thins• you'd rather not face
~nder the rus. If there is a matter that
must be resolved, do so boldly.
VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept, 22) It's
best to poslpOne any dclic*. oasisn·
menl&gt; today if you feel your·mind is
too cluttered with unrelated thOughts
10 sive it your undivided onentioa.
'lOckie the Wit another day.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. 23) Don't

give in to

spur·of~the·moment,

e&lt;iraValanl whims today. Spend·
. thrln ways could loy the aroundworlt
for future financial p!'l&gt;blema you'll
wish you didn't have.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Follow throulh on ony promi.-s you
made today 10 someone whO II relyinl OR your wonl no matter how
inconvenient it Is· for you to comply.
The consequences would put you in
a'wonebind.
SAOI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Avoid any companions or lndi·.

viduals whose ethics aren't up to par
with yours today. A sly acquaintance
might try to coovince you otherwise,
but it'll be to yoor detriment
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
Superficial individuals aren't the
type of people you _c~n rely on, nor
with whom you can have any subslllltive relationship. Spend your day
. with people who likes you for who
.
you are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) In
a sibtllion where you need to be more
assertive, you could find yourself
beins a trifle too n:ticent. Unfortu·
nllcly. if you don't take c~rc of yourself, no one else win.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
problem you ltad with an acqualn:
tance who has perturbed you can be
rectified If you don't add frcsh fuel1o
the lire. Avoid mokin1 any snide
·n:marb about this individual today.
ARIES (March 21-Aptil19) If the
company can't aivo you whlll you
want, don't feel obli1ated to do busi·
neu with someoM just becMUe you
know him or hcr on a personal basis.

1ly other placet ..

APRIL 281

�. I

'
D~&gt;M,...,n , Aa. (AP)
resort, have lunch and hit a few balls
- Venus and Serena Williams are with the sisters.
putting their tennis prowess on the
"Every penny we make will go to
underprivileged programs," the
marlcet to help the poor.
For $150 each; tennis fans can girls' father, Ri chard Williams, said
take a bus ride to a posh Aorida Monday on the opening of ' the
Williams &amp; Williams Charter Bus
Service in West Palm Beach.
"We expect to do $15,000 to
$20,000 per outing," Williams said.
"I know it's not much money, but
it's a lot of money to .those proThe Community Calendar is pub- grams."
lished as a free service to non-profit
The tennis excursions to
groups wishing to announce meet- Grenelefe Resort, south of Orlando,
ings and special events. The calen- wi ll begin in August, he said.
dar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
HONOLULU (AP) - The head
prin~ed as space permits and cannot lifeguard for "Baywatch Hawaii"
be guaranteed to run a specific num- has dined with Gov. Ben Cayetano,
lrer of days.

Communjty
Calendar

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY - Free diabetic
screening, Wednesday, 8:30 to 1.1
a.m., Veterans Memorial Medical
Clinic.
·

Wednesday, April 28, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

ames in the News
scouted out story ideas and started
looking for a house.

David Hasselhoff said he alread y
has five episodes in mind as the syn·
dicated adventure show moves pro-

duction from California to the Aloha
State.
"I want to gel into the folklore of
Hawaii - the reat life .stories,·· the
46-year-o ld star of the series 'said
Monday. " I want to play off the pco- ·
pie."
The show, watched by 100 million people in 148 countries; is moving from Los Angeles after nine seasons because of increasing costs and
declining ratings.
Hawaii offered the show a $3
million incentive package plus free
airfare, hotel and car rentals. The

private sector also chipped in to outbid Australia.
The show will film in Haleiwa on
,Oahu's Nonh Shore and in the same
Honolulu folm studio once used by
"Hawaii Five-0."
·
CAIRO, Egypt (AP)- Britain's
Princess Anne has 'l:rrived in Egypt ·
for a four-day to'Ui of development
projects and ancient sites.
The Brilish Embassy said it is the
first visit to Egypt ti)l;..the 48-yearold princess, the only daughter of
Queen ''Elizabeth II. She arrived
Tuesday.
She was scheduled to .visit charities in Cairo, including the local
office of ,the Save the Children
Fund, of which she is presid_ent. She .

was also expected to visit pyramids
at Giza, the Valley of the Queens
near Luxor and an adult literacy project in Qena before leaving for London on Friday.
DALLAS (AP) - J.C. Penney
has k!lled Kenny- and the rest of
the round-faced "South Park" gang.
Penney spokesman Duncan. Muir
said Tuesday the retailer has decided
to stop ordering merchandise related
to the popular animated sho';Y after
getting some negative feedbaclc
from customer!.
·
. The Comedy Central show abo~t
foul -mouthed grade school children
has drawn criticism from conservil.live groups because of its language
and violence.

SAN DIEGO (AP) "Dr.
Laura," who dispenses tough talk on
morality in her top-rated radio show,
has some advice for hewspaper editors: Get away from gossip and
rumors and raise the level of public
discourse.
' ·
" Newspapers, magazines, radto
and television have gotten meaner .;.
and a lot more tolerant of vulgiuity
and viciousness," Laura Sch.- •
Jessinger told press executives .the ;
Newspaper Association of America ;
convention Tuesday.
· '·
"Your competition is rour God," :
she said, urging publishers and edi- ;
tors to make business decisions that
will auract readers "without selling
your soul. "

r---------------------------------------------------~·PEPSI
--------~
&amp;

P 0 WEll'S

DEW
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS ·

RUTLAND - Rutland Friendly
Gardeners, open meeting, ROlland
Church of Christ, Wednesday, 7:30

Monday thru.
Sunday ·

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary c;Iub will meet at 2
p.m. Wedneday, at the home of Gay
Perrin . Ida Diehl will.review "Jewel
in the Evening Sky" by Macy Ann
Minata.

c

8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

p.m. Representative of Waterscapes
• to speak.

Accepts Credit Cards .

YHE RIGHT YO LIMIT QUANYIYIES
PRICES GOOD YHRU May 1, 1999

. WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

.

HALVES, FRUIT
COCKTAIL, SLICED
OR HALVED'
PEACHES

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SH STORE FOR DETAILS

THURSDAY

POMEROY - AA, AI-Anon and
non -smoking group, Sacred Heart
Catho lic · Church, Pomeroy, Thurs-

il

day, noon . ·

FRIDAY

WILKESVILLE -

Wilkesville' '

Commu nity Center, Red Cross
Bloodmobile, I to 7 ·p.m. Donors

SJ19

•

must be 17 years old, weigh at least
II 0 p,ou nds and be in good health.

· USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

SATURDAY

Bottom Round

SALEM CENTER
. Star
Grange 778, Saturday, potluck supper, 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting,
8p.m.
HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville Lodge 4.11, F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. with homecoming
night to be observed. Refreshments.

Diabetes program
presented· to Rock
Springs Health Club
A program on diabetes was presented at a recem meeting of the ·
Rock Springs Better Health Club
held at the home of Phyllis Skinner.
Nancy Morris was chairman of
the program which included readings "How .Oral Diabetes Pills and
In sulin' Work'' by Barbara Fry;
"How Monitoring Improv~s Insulin
Plan'' by Dorothy Jeffers; "Diabetes
on the Go" by Helen Blackston:
"Monitoring and Activity on Dia-

betes" by Frances Goeglein: "Insulin
and the Storage of It" by Lenora
Leifheit: "Wearing an I. D. Bracelet"
by Skinner; "Before You Go" by
Suzie Mash. Following the program
Morris checked the glucose levels of
members.

Barbara Fry presided at the. meet- ·
ing which opened with the Lord's
Prayer and pledge to the fl ag . Blackston had devotions using Psalms 23
and readings, "What is Nature" and
"How Do You Picture God'"
New officers wi)l be elected in .
May, it wai'' noted , and contributing
at ·the Meigs .Cooperative Parish in
April was Dorothy Jeffers, with
Nancy Morris to contribute in May.
Suzie Mash was reinstated as a
member. The contest given by Fry
·was won by Skinner and Leifheit.
Refreshments wcre served by the
hostess.

$ 69

Ll.

$.

,9
S1rlo1n Chops ..~~:. 1
C
s. 99.
Franks ••••••••••• r•• 99
Strip ·Steak ••••••••L:. 3
FR!SH .BO.NELESS PORK

U~DA C~OICE .BONELESS BEE~•. ·.

S1rlo1n T1p Steaks ••
FRESH PORK

.

Cubed Steaks ......~·~.
ECKRICH FRESH BRATWURST OR

I lian Sau

$

.

ECKRICH REG. OR BUNSIZE

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF NEW YORK

ge~··

SJ69

.
$ 99

FRESH SWEET YELLOW &amp;

Corn ...............-::...
DEW FRESH SPREAD · . '
.

13.25 oz.

•••••••
(ASST. VAR.)

·~~~$1

2/$4

MALT·O·MEAL
CEREALS

5/SJ
,. .

Margarine ••••••• :~::..

PICKENS

'

.

9

IAL KAN .
OPTIMUM CAT
FOOD .

. 4/$1 09

-C

5.5 oz.

·

..

$229

.· ·.

PAPER
TOWELS

..
.Ice Cream .•......•..1f..~~.~.. .3. 2/$1
8
9
C
-Frozen D1nners.....
. ·
MORTON (ASST. ~AR.)

6•7s- 10

2/$

oz. ..

SINGLE lOLl

Win A

FINAL TOUCH
FABRIC SOFTENER

NORTH
BATH TISSUE
(DOUBLE ROLL)

$)49
640Z.

SJ 9 ~tMtT ,
6

·BANKROLL

This Week
Powell's Super
Value

$500
::. .

ADD.PURCH

Free Cash!

.

"•

•

69
12-140~ 1

Your Full Line Dutch
. Standard Dealer

Phone: 773·5583

'

. .... 1ft;.

KRAFT
VELVEETA &amp; SHELLS
OR DELUXE
MACAROHI &amp;
CHEESE DINNER

FESTIV~L

f03 Souft 2nd, Mason, WY

LITTLE DEBBIE
SNACK CAKES

89c

SJ49

Orange Juice ••• :.~z~.

HARDWARE

280Z.

(ALL·VARIETIES
IN STORE)

MINUTE MAID

.

'

149
S1rlo1n T1p Roasts....
·
Ll• .

oz.

HEINZ BBQ
SAUCE

·steak ••

U~DA C~OICE :ONELESS BEEF

PICKENS
HARDWARE

'

29-30

1·

\

Supplement to:

. The Dally Sentinel
The Gallipolis Dally·Tribune
The Point Pleasanl Register
.II.DI'"U. 28, 1999,

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