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Tuesday

Monday, May 11, 1 -

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Weather

Is sex .unhygienic and degrading? Many readers think so;
Ann ·'
Landers
IY9'7, Lol AllfCics Tlftla
SyNiicllC and Cn:atlN\

s,..o;....

Dear Ann Landen: "Sexless in
Canada" said she ended her 16-year
marriage because she found sex
"unhygienic and degrading." You
wondered what had happened in her
life to make her so ·bitter and suggested maybe it was her husband.
not the .sex, that she couldn 'ttolerate.
Blaming her husband does not
help, and findi ng another man will
not solve her problem, either.
It's far more likely that her atti-

tude toward sex was formed when
she was very young. I know because
I married a man who also finds sex
unpleasant, disgusting and degrading. He felt that way with .his first
wife, diuo with -several girlfriends
(before and after his first marriage),
and now with me.
He is a loyal spouse and responsible father, but it's a lonely life I
lead. This is not the kind of problem
I can share with friends or family
and still protect my husband's dignity. He started coun5eli' .g three years
.ago and has made S;)me progress,
but it's a slow, cos•:y and difficult
road we are on. -- S ' in Conn.
Dear S.L: You sound like an
intelligent, patient woman. Hang in
there, and give your husband as
. much support as possible. AI least

he's trying to correct the problem. that I can love someone without in its proper place -- a process of
Many men wouldn't. That letter having sex. But it seems sad to me procreation, nothing more. Some
from "Sexless in Canada" prod~ced that people feel safer in platonic derailed, sick minds have the pera fireStorm of mail: Here's what relationships. It may be safe, but it vertcd notion that sex should be
some other rea~ad to say:
certainly is lonely. I· hope "Canada" "entertainment,fl and because of
From Virginia: I have been mar- finds someone who sweeps her off such twisted thinking, we have
ried for 35 years and always hated her feet.
ended An~~ crazed civilization.
sex, even though I love my husband.
Dayton, Ohio: I have been marLoe
: Sex is more trouble
I was never sexually abused, nor did ried for 20 years to a wonderful than it's worth. My husband is a
my parents give any signals that se• man. I don'tlike sex and agree with decent man. Sex is not his top priorwas unpleasant, but for me, there is the woman who wrote to say it is ity, either. A platonic marriage can
absolutely no connection between unhygienic and degrading. I consid- be very satisfactory -- and a lot· tidilove and sex.
er myself balanced and very well- er. We do lots of things together. but
Sex is a duty. I may be in the adjus•·:d. Why do you assume that if · not that.
minority, but I know many women a wu1nan doesn't ·like sex, someFort, Lauderdale, F1a.: I went
who feel this way. Check it out. Just thir:: is wrong with 1her or that the from one louey nilatir~ship to
because we do not get pleasure from rna riage is no good? You'd be sur· another with at least seve" men and
;ex does not mean we are unbal- pri&gt;•d how many wivts go through never enjoyed sex with any of1hem.
anced.
life faking it.
One day, I decided to broaden my
Salem, Ore.: I've been in prisou
Scottsdale, Ariz.: "Sedes~ in horizons and forged a wonderful,
for 12 years and have discov~red Canada" is simply putting sex back loving relationship with another

Social Security changes recognize
changing lives of older Americans
BY ED PETERSON,
llllneger
Social Security
Office, Athene

retirement, up to age 70. In 1998,
benefit~ increa.o;e 5.5 percent a year.
the figi!I'C rises gradually until it
reaches 8 percent in 2007.
This means that older people who
want to continue working tod:iy can
do so with the k!IOwledge that !hey .
are increasing the benefits they can
count on all much as 25 pcn:cnt And.
·for people Who retire in 2008. as
much as 35 percent.
You .OOUid note also that the age
at which a person retires with a full
benefit is scheduled to gradually
increase from 6S to 67 by 2022. This
chan.. ~ius ~people will be
, drllwong SOCial Security Jo_nger. ~
age for early retirement Will remam
at age 62 for those who prefer it

In 1940, an American could
e~pect to spend 1 pcn:cnl of his or her
adult life in retirement ..
Tnday that figure is 26 percent(
and a lona retirement has become
commonplace. The highe&lt;l growing
seamen! of the population are people
age 85 and above.
. ·
1'hese fads drive the Older Americans Month theme. A Living Longer,
Growing Stronger in America. Ouring the month of May, Social Sec~rity joins other agencies and organozations in focusing public aaention
on issues related to the expanding
horiwns for older Americans.
Social Security changes over the
yearx . generally recoanize the
increased vitality and longevity of ·Retirees should be aware of pension
older Americans. For example. the offset rules
retirement ~ the earnings limit
designed as a measure of whether a
person is 111:tually retired from the
work fon:e. has increased OVF the
years. This means people may tam
more while still receiving Social
Security benefits. ·
Today's benefiCiary age 65 and
older may earn up to SI4.SOO before
benefi!J are affected. Earnings over
the limit reduce benefill $1 for every
$3 in· excess earninp. For those
under 65, the limit is $9,120; benefill are dccrelled $1 for every $2 in
CXCfll eaniinp. BenefiCiaries aae 70
anlf older are not affected by the
retirement tesi. The increased eaminp lilnita recognize the need for
pe11er iiiCOIDI tbat IIIIIIY worting
betteflcl... face. and the likelihood
thai people may work puc • 65.
Another featlii'C thai alfectl older
worUr&amp; is the ddayed retiaen111nt
aediL Belefill - incl1 sed each
_ . llltli IF 65the penon dllaya

.,

High: 70a; Low: 40a

woman. I am not suggesting that
becoming a lesbian is the answer for
your correspondent, but it was for
me. (I'll bet you won't print this.)
Kahoka, Mo.: My 85-year-old
wife and I still enjoy an active sex
life. A divorced woman I know
ended up on welfare and kept having
babies. When someone asked her
why she kept doing that, she said the
greatest enjoyment she had in life
was taking a good hot bath and
jumping into bed with a man -- and
the kids just happened. Apparently, .
she never saw the connection.

FIRST MEMBERS· Holly DeLong, Pomeror,
left, end Belhlny Amberger, Syfac:uM, were the
flm two Melge County roung people, to piCk
up packets Thuraclar to .Join the MW Melge

lbmt11'"VolunT11r1" proio1111. Giving out the
packets, lilted, II Amy L _Miller, held of the
llbrlrlee' chlldren'e ..vice.

Fivt;J internationally known writers
participate in spring literary festival
ATHENS • Thirteen is a lucky essential human 111:1ivities."
number for literary fans in SouthBrown is best known for her four
eastern.Ohio, as Ohio Univenity will novels, including "Before and,After",
mark its 13th Annual Spring Literary · which became a 1996 film starring
Festival by hosting five intemation- Meryl Strecp and Liarn NeeliOn. Her
ally renowned autho111, May "13-15, novel "Civil Wars" won the Janet
on !he Athens campus.
·
Kaka Prize for best novel by an
The writersQpoetq Kenneth Koch American woman· in 1984, and she
and Su5an Ludvigson, novelists ha~ been cited as Qfle of Ms. magaRosellen Brown and Ron Hansen and . zinc's 12 "Women of the Year." The
essayist and poet Reg SanerQwill author of numerous collections on
present readings from their works and poetry, essays and stories, Brown has
formal lectures. All events take place. won awards from the 9uggenheim
in 1941rvine Auditorium on the cam- Foundation and the National Endowpus' West Green. Sponsored by the ment for the Arts. She is a f~~~:ulty
English Department's Program in · member at the School of the Art llllliCreative Writing, the festival is free tute of Olicago.
and open to the public.
The American Southwest is the
"Each of the writers in this group backdrop for much of Saner's work,
is bringing a lifetime of accomplish- including his two books of essays,
ment and artistic integrity to the fes- "The Four-Cornered Falcon" and
rival. Added to that, they have each "Reaching Keet See!." Saner, a raeexpressed such warmth and enthusi- ulty JJ1C1Jlbcr at the Univenity ofColasm about coming lo this particular omdo, was the 1997 winner of the
event that I predict it will be very Wall111:e Stegner Awanl from the
exciting for all of us; said Festival Center for the American· West for
Director Joyce Barlow Dodd. coor- "sustained contribution to the culturdinator of special programs in ere- al identity of the American West •
Saner also is the author of four
ative writing.
"This festival celebrates the books of poems.
impootance of art in our lives, and
Hansen·is the author of four novreminds us that writing and reading els, including "Attic~·, his most
are extraordinarily powerful and recent work. and "Mariette i!' Ecsta.

....

'

.

You Don't Need 'Th...
Be Rich To Start
Investing, But You
Need 'Th Start
Investing For A
Chance 'Th Be Rich.

Students recognized
Three local Hocking College !IIUdents were recipients of Hocking
College Foundation Sc;holarships.
Receivina d)e scholanhips were
Leanna Davis, Langsville, a police
science studenl; Oifton SisSon, Syracuse, a drafting and design student,
and Andrea Ord, Letart, a nul'lling
lludenL Stacey Warden,ltal:ine, also
received a Hocking ColleJIC Foundation Scholanbip.
.
In addition, Jacob Davis, Mid·
dlq10rt, was awantiid the iack 0.
McClenaghan Scho~llip.

Call Me For Details!
· Karl Kehler III1 CPA
Investment and Tax Consulllnl
740-992-7270
Securioia olfe"d dl....... HJ&gt;. \loll
rn-...1 Securb,..!!!Jtlc· Adv....,
Sctvlca oiJcrod lh"""" HD. \loll
Advioory Scrv~ Inc. 6333 Naldl 51110
llichway 161, Founh Ftaot,1rvi•TX
7W8-{m) 871).6000

Society scrapboo-k
Open House to be held
Free cholesterol screeni11g will be
offered al the Veterans Memorial
Hospital open house to be held from
4 to 7 p.m. Monday. Refreshments
will be se,rved.

been selected as a student advisor for
the summer JIICCOIIege orientation
program at Ohio University.
From more than 250 applicants,
Torres was chosen along with 31 other students to represent the university during precollege. Student advisors
play an instrumental role in the pre·
college experience by ilssisting new
students and their parents in planning
for fall quarter, answering questions
about adjusting to college, and introducinil new lludents to the Ohio University community.
•
Torres is thedaughterofNormaA.
Torres, Middleport. She is a junior
·majoring in social Work.

Jlee/ "JIG.. 7Jiahe/es"
I

y·

IN

•

Meigs Countts

WASHINGlON (AP) '- Despite
three years of billion-dollar . mail.
profits, the independent Postal Rate
Commission Monday reluctantly
a8reed to a post olface request to raise
the price of stamps by a penny. .
The increase could take place later this summer, although the commission urged that it be held off at
least until January.
"The commission is reluctantly
granting the Postal Service request to
raise the price of the first-class stamp
from the present 32 cents to 33
cents," said Ed Gleiman, chairman of
the commission.
The commission chided the Postal
Service for not delaying its request in
order to provide more up-tCHiate
information on costs and expenses.
But, in the end. !he commission
agreed 10 much of what the Postal
Service had asked for.
It approved the I-cent increase in
first-class letters and a series of
increases for other types of mail.

ri1l'l
ILJI

Bicentennial rep·resentatlve
·outll·nes· a.ctivi.ty to.council

ier lc:ltm. Cum:nlly, e111:h extra ounce
costs 23' cenl5, and the commission
22
caiThalledfor reducinthatglhltth~lc: cents.
1
means
w to
oneounce lener
would 110 up
33acents,
ailei6ii welilliaia 'tWlrOiances would
cost the same to mail a.~ it does now
_ 55 cents _ and lettel'5 heavier ·
than that would cost leSll.
On other rates, the conuilissionrecommended a 12.3 percent increa.o;efor parcel post, somewhat more than
the 9.2 percent asked by the post
olf~ee. For periodicals. the post office
wanted a 3.9 percent boost, but the
commis~ion recommended 4.6 percent.
Advertising mail rates a.•ked hy
the post office were reduced by ·
about one-third by the commission.
'The commission also sharply cut the
proposed increase in.book rates. _
"These changes will provide
added funds 10 ettable the Postal Service to proceed with. its plans 10
spend $.5.6 billion on equipment and
service enhancement programs in
the 1998 faacal yew,".the commi~ion
said in announcing its decision.
But !he commission noted thar it
had asked the post office, in light of
it~ recent profits, 10 delay its request
and send~ liJHO'date information
for the panel to consider.
That would have meant adelay of
aboul three months.

1
third of the usua cost
She sAid thai special consideration
is given to communities' that do not
· was u1ready have a marker, as weII a.•
to promote .~.
uoo 1oca1c~munaty
discu.~sed when Mi!ldlcport' Village • cll!nmunilies that devote their markCouncil mel in regular session on ers to special historical events, such
MQnday.
_
as events reliuing to women's histoNi~hola Morella, _So~lheaster_n ry and black history.
coordmal~ for tile Oh!o Bacente.nnaMoretti will be working with spea~ ce~brauon, ~~ wath councal. to cial state bl~ntennial commillees in
~~sc~s the s~te s_plans forobservang each county in !IOIIthea~em Ohio to
ats bacenlennt~l .. on 2003; and how promote their events.
local commum11es can ~se the celeIn other. business, council
bration to.promote tounsm.
approved the expenditure of appro•Moretti. :'" Eastern H1g~ .sc~l imately $700 to renovate the
graduate. saad that. commumues wall restrooms at General Hartinger Park.
~ve the o~porrumty to develll!' speThe facilities are a frequent target
caallocal bacentenmal events, samol_ar of vandals. and required the replaceto thos_e M1ddl~port conducted for als ment of fixtures and light~. Responown bocentenmal on 1997.
sibility for the facilities has been
. Morelli al~ ~n~ourages commu- turned over to the Middleport Youth
mtacs lo use exaslinll festivals ~ League. Gene Wise of the league
IJ!her eve~ts 10 celebrate the Ohao attended the meeting to discuss the
b1cen~nmal • .and to ~o~ those repairsandongoingvandalismprobevents in a Bacente~mal cal_endar of lems.
events and on the Bocentenmal ComMayor Dewey Horton noted thai
mission's internet website.
_
the police department was unable to
Moretto al~ descn~ a spectal monitor the park any more than it
program de~1gned to 1ncreas_e the does now, and tl)at the community
number of h1s1~ncal ~ tn ~e must assume some responsibility for
state for the b1centenm~l. ~nd sa1d policing !he area for vandalism.
cll!P'lrate spon~~~ woll make
The body held an extensive dis·
It possa~l~ for commumt&amp;es I? place
cussion abot!t containing operating
the faamh~ bronze markers m thcor cost• in various departments, and votcommumtoes for approxamately one- ed to retum a second-hand mower

.

-

The postal governing board
declinedtoasreetolhedelay,therate
commission noted. "even if that
. meant foregoing the u.~ of information that would more accurately
reflect operating realities,"
The commission said it is "unfor·
lUnate that the two agencies were 1101
able 10 cooperate...
The cum:nt 32-cent price to mail
a first-clllliS letter touk effect Jan. I,
1995, following a year in which the
IJ!Bil agency lost nearly $1 billion.

,;;SS,ern

• ICI DIRIPOII
,

llelgl County
CornmluiOner C.ndldlte

Paid for by 1he Cll1didllt, 34845 Crew Rd.. Pomeroy, OH 457ee

Hospital

,-------------------------------2520 valley Dive. (304) 675-4340

,-

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t

PleasantValley

•••
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3: 6-4-9; .Pidt 4: 5·2·1-4
Buckeye 5: 1-3-19-20-21
W.fA.
.
I
IWiy 3: 9-8-2; Ddy 4:7-4-2-8

'•'

; OJ991 \)~~it&gt; VaUoy l'll&gt;iiolti"' Co.

•

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I

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tG Darrell Jenldna, school custocllen; Kenny Wiggins, Meigs Litter Control offlcer; Roger Minley ot MenleJ Recycling; end Paul Kilutf, school malntenal1f:l. The four men _ . recognized
tor epeclal contrtbutloM to the milk Jug recrcllng project. The luge werw collected In • Snider
&amp; AIIOCiatellnc., $11,000 pi1Jground equipment contot- not won br Bradbury this year.
The 103 BI'ICIJ)ui'J etuclenta collec:tecl195 milk lugs per ltildent tor a total of more thin 20,000.
The winner In the Ohio and Indiana contest wo Centril Elementlry In Chllllcqthe, with 286
stuc1ent1 collecting 284IUIII per student tore total of 81,224. Brlldbui'J studentl collecting the
moet Jugan p1c:tu1wc1 here meklng the presentations. Tiler aN from the left; Krltn King, Josh
KIIMB, Amber ShiM, Joseph Howard; Dllmond McClure, Chlr11N Stlnley and AahleJ Litchfield.
·
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•

~secc:m::~rse~~n~:::
cenl~·lllldition,thecommis5ionrecommended cutting the price of heav•

. ..
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•••
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As e g11tuN of eppreclllllon, 8tudents It Bradbury Elementary School~ golden IUD•

to
cards by a penny, keeping them at 20

Open To The Public
Thesday, May 12, 1998

I truly want tO Than_
k the Melgl County Vottra who
aupporttd me In the May 5th Prl1111ry Eltctlon.

omm ss oners
table ·request
for·pool. repairs
'

Price Increase
for first-class
stamps gets OK

HOSPIT
Speaker: Ed Holsclaw • "Mr. Diabetes"
Wellness &amp; Rehab Center
Refreshments Will Be Served

Hometown Newspaper ·

cen
more

\\

7 p.m.

:

Cubs' Wood
sets record
in strikeouts
Page4

a1

Good Afternoon

THE

'

High: 80; Low: 501

90045

cy", which has been made into a film.
He also has written a children's book,
a collection of stories 1.1111 •anthologies. He has received a
Guggenheim· Fellowship and two
grants from the National Endowment
lOr the Arts:
.
Lud~igson is the author of seven
books of poems. Her latest work,
"New and Selected Poems", will be
published '!Cl'l year. Her writing has
appeared regularly in magazines and
journals such as Tilt Atlantic Monthly, The Nation and Antioch Review.
She has been awarded pants from the ·
Rockefeller Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and the
GUQenheim Foundation':'

I'

Sports

Is wrong right again? Page. 2
Southern girls win sectional _
title, Page 5
Teaching important lessons, Page 10 "(

... -·-....

~

Tomorrow: Cloudy

Send questions to Ann Landers, Cre- .
ato111 Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calif.

Meigs County yoong people have
the opportunity to join a new organization, "VolunTeens" being organized at !he Meigs County District ·
Public Librury and its branches at
. Racine and Midilleport.
Young people who have completed at least the sixth grade in sehoul
are invited to join the new group,
members of which will worlc at the
county's three library facilities.
"VolunTeens" will assist with sto- ·
ry times and special programs; help
maintain the children/youth area:
help to .shelve paperbacks, magazines, videos and audios, and will
perform other duties about the
libraries as needed.
Members will work iri two hour
scheduled time slots lll!ring the sumll)Cf reading program'l'if'lbe libraries
from June I to Augl!ll 7. Theme of
the summer program is "Drop Anchor
in a Good Book".
Amy L. ~iller, head of the
libraries' chilcmn's services, reports
that the "Volunteen • organization
will provide opportunities for )'ClUng
people to spend leisure lime this aurilrner in helping others in addition 10 .
giving them work experience and a
chance to learn more about libraries.
To take part in the new prograin,
young. people are invited to pick up
an application package at the Mei ..~
County District Public Library, m
Pomeroy or at !he branc:hes in R-;ii\c:
and Middleport, The completed
packets, as well as a reference f~
to be filled out by someone other thail
a relative of an·applicant; are to be
returned to Miller by May 18 and
may be taken 10 any of the three
library locations.
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by Bob H.oeflicn

Did you know that !he Rev. Clyde tioo, to the Saturday night reunions
V. Henderson of Middleport is on May 23 to shan: with all of your
observing his 60th yemo in the min- classrnali!s !here.
isuy?
Spcalcing of alumni reunions, tickDuring his long career he has been
pastor at churches in Pennsylvania. ets have gone on sale for !he annual
Tennessee, Virginia and in Hunting- Pomeroy High Alumni Banquet and
ton. W. Va., as well churches in Ohio Dance to he held Satunlay night, May .
at Proctorville and he was pastor of 23, at the Meigs High Schout . The
the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene banquet SlariS at 6:30 p.m .• but the .
for 17 years He is a past president of doors will be open at 5:30.
The tickets II!C $12 a person and
Crusade for Christ in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
. may be purchased at the Swisher and
In his earlier years in the minisuy, Lohse Drug Ston: and at Francis
Rev. Hendei!OII served as an evan- Aorist.
The Pomeroy organization will
gelist. Cum:ntly he is pastor at the
Carleton Church which is located on award the Bob Roberts Scholarship
and the Charles Gibbs Scholarship
!he Kingsbury Road in Pomeroy.
So big congratulations to Rev. this spring. George Hall at the organ
Henderson who is today marking his · will be providing music during !he
llanquet and afterWards for dancing.
80th birthday.
And. by the way. color photos will·be
Since this is alumni reunion month lalcen of reunion classes in the time
for . many in Meigs County, you between the banquet and the start of
might be interested in a project being the dance.
carried out by Mrs. Debbie Call, a
member of the front office staff at
Mrs. Margaret Maxine Bealmcar
The Daily Sentinel:
of Syracuse has been returned to
Debbie is getting together a Meigs County.
"remem~ when" alumni page to be
She had gone to Baltimore, Md ..
published in The Sentinel on Friday, where she used to live for .a visit and
May 22. The idea is to salute one of unfortunately experienced a stroke
your favorite alumni of your high · and has been hospitalized in Baltischool through a published photo.
11\01'1!· Her brother-in-law, Marvin
Through the picture page you can Krider. and her daughter and son-in- · remember your spouse. c1\ild. grand- law, Bill and Peggy Tippie of Syraparents, teacher, special friend or cuse went to Baltimore, recently to
whomever. Maybe you have an inter· return Maxine to Meigs County.
esling pholo of that persOn ina cheer- She's now at the Pomeroy Nursing
leading outfi.l or a $ports or band uni... _and Rehabilitation Center. Pomeroy
form. A senior piclllre from way . The - room number is 123 and. of
back there would work too.
course. she could stand seme encour. If you'd like to participate. do con- agement.
tact Debbie at the Sentinel Office,
Did yoti enjoy seeing "The Wiz992-21.SS, ext. I. preay quickly. The
ard
of Oz" again .... yep, many of us
deadline for gelling on lhe page is this
have
seen il again, again and
Friday. May 15, at4 p.m. There isa
again ....on television Friday niaht?
charge of $6 per photo.
Since there is so much interest in ll's one of my favorite movies
the reunions. perhaps. there are a lot because no one, but no one, ever sang
of you who would like to take part "Over the Rainbow" better than the
and then take a copy of Friday late Judy Garland and the movie also
night's newspaper, the May 22 edi- contains my theme song, "If I Only
Had ·a Brain". Do keep smiling.

Today: Partly sunny

'VolunTeens'
being organized
in Meigs County

Beat of the Bend ..

Mer 12,1998

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Shiff
The u.~ of Ohio's 200th birthday

!hat

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based •
B
L be ·
pure
orom aum um r on
&lt;;hester, due to high estimated repair
costs.
Councilman
Steve Houchins nQI:..
.
ell that expenditures for the year, so
far; we~ significant, and stressed the
importance of closely monitoring
purcha•cs.
.
Councilman Roger Manley suggested thai council implement a
change in the approval of purchases,
stating that any purcha•e over $500
shollld be approved lly council, rather
than the $5,000 limit now in place.
According to Clerk Bryan Swann,
· the villageis in better financial condition than it was at this time last
year.

By BRIAN J. REED
. one of two bidders for a new system.
Quick has suggested that &lt;osts
Sentinel News Staff
A request for financi~l a.•sistance could be saved by using the county's
to repairthe London Pootin Syracuse existing computer hardware. Howwas tabled by the Meigs County ever. Quick said that other expenses.
Commissioners on Monday.
including additional personnel and
AI the board's regular meeting, peripheral equipment, could raise
Mayor George. Connolly requested cost estimates.
financial assistance from the comDenver Curtis. service officer for
missioners for needed ·repairs to the the Disabled American Veterans. mel
with the board to check on progress
poo I.
.
Connolly said that $7,000 would in making the veterans service office
be required to sandblast, repair and on Mulberry Avenue handicapped
seal cracks in the lloor of the pool pri- accessible.
Hoffman said that he had disor to its opening later this month. The
work would take approximately a cussed the condition of the building
week to complete.
·
with owner Robert Wingett, who said
Commissioner Fred Ho~f
an
at he would he wolhng to modofY,
made a motion to provide $4,
~
building t_o mak~ it ~om~l.i~nl
funding for the project, but that w h the Amencans wal)l D!sabahto~s
motion died for a lack of a second.
Act. but that he would requore a fiVe'
AI first, Commissioner Jeffrey year lease and higher rent in orderS?
Thornton said he opposed providing perform the work.
general fund money for the repai111.
The county now pays $175 pet
He referred Connolly to the Com- month for the building. and Hoffman
munity Development Block Grant said that the eslimat~d rent would "!
program instead. citing "di~ financial $450 after renovauons were comneeds" of the county.
plete.
,
•
'Tm for funding projects, if we
Thornton saod he would prefer to
have the money," Thornton said, ~e the office mo.ved to a new locathen requested that the commission- uon,_and sa1~_tha_1 he h~d looked at a
ers atlea•ttable the request until the poss1ble facd1t~ on Rac.one.
commissioners at lea.~l find a source
Machacl Swosher. dorector of lhe
for the funds which would not place Meigs County Department of Human
a hardship on the county's budget.
Services: announced that the county
Thornton said that the commis- had receoved a grant for $125.000 to
sioners' contingency line item. which be used ;o fund two positions in t~e
was· used to provide $6,000 for pool area of work force development.
reDain in Syracuse last year, will - -The posaltOf!S wall l&gt;e provoded
likely be used to augment the coun- through the Me1gs County Chamber
ty's self insurance fund before year- of Commerce .or the Commumty
end. ·
Improvement Corpor~tion on a coilAfter Hoffman's motion died, tract basis with the &lt;Ommissioners:
Thornton made ~ motion to table the
Swisher said he wa• una~le to
request until next week. which was detail the nature of the posat1ons,
passed.
·
becau~ they would be filled ~nd
The commissioners also tablejl supervo~~Cd by the contract agenc1es,
action on a new computer sys~m for although he did say they :--ere fundthe county auditor and treasurer ed a\ a part of the county s efforts to
offices. bitt met with Donald Quick ·comply with recent welfare reform
and Joe Skubiak of Manatron Inc..
(Continued on Page 3)

dent desks, chairs and other classroom tables; Viaro Manufucluring for
computer tables and sluckable chai!S:
Martin Public Seating for computer
furniture, laboratory stools and a cot
for the nurse's station; Contract Bu.~iness Interiors for office fumiture and
window treatments; and Wenzer
Corp. for mu•ic room furnishings.
ln other action. the hoard

to

I

I

I

approved the advertising for price
· quotes for appljance.•. and approved
various cll3nge orders for.conlractors
on the district's building program.
Job descriptions for the district's
three elementary school secretaries
were approved for the upcoming
school year, in light o( the consolidation of the district's three elementar)' schools:

-'

QUEEN CROWNED- Kelll Bailey, dill!Dh111r of Gret snd Jocelyn BelleJ of P - oy, was crowned Eaetern High School's prom
qu..-. on Slturdar. Slit wae crowned bJ Slrl Putman, prealdent
of the 1unlor clln. Al10 pictured II Prom King Nlthln Radford,
son of Charles and Jeenettl Redford of Rscl1111. The prom was
held on the Bltnnerhallltt S~ In Parkll'lburg, W.Va.

Bailey, Buckley
l.ead Ea~tern
seniors during May 24-graduation
Kelli Lynn Bailey ha• been named two-year member of the junior cham·
valedictorian of !he Eastern High bcr of commerce. She ·was recently
School gr'aduating cla.o;s, and Brandon named "Best of the Class" by WSAZ
Matthew·Buckley the salutatorian.
NewsChannel 3 during ceremonies in
Huntington,
W. VL, and was a particBailey is !he daughter of Greg and
Jocelyn Bailey of Pomeroy, and ipant in the Governor's Scholars proBuckleS' the son of Bill and 1\vila gram at Ohio UniverSity.
Buckley, also of Pomeroy.
She has been in coneen band for
Bailey has been actiVe: in school six years, marching band for two
govemmentaoo aithletics durins her years and is a fiiii'Ching band section
high school career. In additi~ to leader. She is also a recipient of the
serving as the senior class ~rer. AriaAwanl.
This year, she was named both .
she was sophomore class vice presi·
homecomina queen and prom queen.
dent ·
'
She has tieen a member of the aiu- During her sophomore year, she was
dent council and earlier Ibis ljlring, a honiecomlng altendanl.
was pan of a poanel discussion about
Active in athletics, llhe i~ a twoteen voting on Ohio Public Televi- year member of the varsity softball
sion, for the Ohio First \\lie J11011111L team, twO-ypar member of the
,, Atwo-y-memberofthe Nadon- reSCI ve softlt.ll ~ played reserve
al Honor Society, she served as sec- volleyballll)tl is a duee-year varsity
retary of that orpniZIIion; and is a cheerleader. She received the all·111:a-

I·

Council President Beth Stivers
sought and received permission to
place signs at the entrance to the village on behalf of Beta Sigma Phi
sorority. and announced a !pCCial carnival event at Oveabrook Center on
May 16.
Manley said that he planned to
donate several large trash receptacles
for use by the village.
The mayor's report of fines collected was approved in the amount of
$2,706.05.
Also present was Councilman
Robert Pooler and Brent Manley, the
village street supervisor.

BOS(irJ BWSfuS.
,.,., 1Ufnl
.#
· .,
b •"""
ure IuS

Five firms were awarded bids for
furnishings when the Eastern ·Local
Board of Education mel in special
session last week.
·
The furnishings will he used in the
district's new consolidated elementary·schoul and the newly-renovated
high school building.
·
·
Bid~ for loose furniture were
awan!ed to Garrison Brewer. for stu-

I

demic TVC award for four years.
Meigs County Academic E~cellence '
Award for five years and was named
to Who's Who in American High
School Students for four years.
Bailey plans to auend Ohio UnivCI'llity this fall, where she will major
in pre-medicine. She plan• to enroll
in the Ohio University College of
05teopathic Medicine after she gllllluate.• from au.
Buckley served as senior clas.•
president. as well as president of his
freshman. sophomore and junior
ci1158Cs. He i~ president Of the
National Honor Society, of which he
is a two-year member.
A nine-year me~of 4-H. he
and his family ~Ad
ter United
Metllodist Olurch, where he is il
member.
.
He is a. six-year member of the

r

man:hing and concert bands, and he business major.
has been a section leader. He n:a:ived
Bailey and Buckley will lddrels
. the Patrick Gilmore Award for his
!heir
classmates during combil!e&lt;l
band activities.
He plans to attend Ohio Universi- commencemenllbaccalaureate exerty this fall, _where he will pursue a cises on May 24 at 2 p.m. '
V'

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel ·
'£sta6f!Jktl in 1948
111 COUf1 Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

·!1
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publl1her
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Managar
1710 S•nlln•l

DIANE HILL
Controllar

.,.-1-.
(3110-..,. -)

to II» odltor !tom-. on o blwd- ollojlla.

luvo IINI--... ol IMitlfl INC&gt;'r'"«&lt;. 1)pod .,_
- , . pmorrod- oil,.,. be odltod. &amp; t : h - - • ....,..,.,-...
ond doyll,. phono ,..,,_ 5poclty o do,. It thoro"• • , . , _ to • PfW"""'" . "' loltor. -~ to: Loltoro to ltN Editor, 7bo S...rtnol, 111 COut1 SL, ,...,_, Oltlo

Short-.

48768;

or, FAX

IG 514-ft2.Z1S1.

Predecessors have
stopped 'factory farms'

,

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Page 2 :
Tuesday, Mly 12, 11911 :

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Molter
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, RGa., ts back to his old ways .•
The definitive proof came last
week ~t a closed-doo. meeting to
dress down wayward Rep. Dan Burton. R-Ind .• for his decision to release
the private prison cn~versauo ns of
fel on Webb Hubbell.'
Whrle Gingnch, hke many
Repubhcans, worries that Burton has
lost control of his probe, he still
encouraged his fellow House Repu~
licans to ratchet up the rhetoric. AI
the meetmg of the GOP caucus, he
counseled hts colleagues to "focus
on the crimes that are being commuted at the White House ... to forget the
word '~&lt;:andals,' and start using the
word 'cnmes."'
Too bad the House Repubhcans
refuse to focus o~ the cnmes that
have been comm1lled in their own

ranks.
We bring you today one Jay K1m.
a California Republican who in 1992
became the first Korean-American
ever elected to Congress. He was
qutckly hailed as a harbinger of a
more di verse and inclusive GOP.
With his conservauve philosophy and

rmpressive
business background, Kim
seemed headed for political
stardom.
That was
··.~
then. Today,
Mr
Kim
wears an electronic momtorMoller &amp;
tng
brac~let
Anderson
around
his
ankle. The kind
cnmmals who are under house anesl
wear. Kim. is serving a two-month
sentence after pleading guilty to
accepting more than $250,000 tn illegal foreign and corporate contributions to his campaigns. He os allowed
to travel between his home m Northern Virgmia and hts office on Capitol
Hill But that's all.
Sound bad? It turns 'out Kim got
off rather easy, judgmg from the government's Feb. 6 sentencing memorandum .
"These crimi nal violatipns were
substantral, prolonged, deceptive and
vaned," the government writes .
'"Defendants' (Ktm and his wife.
June) crimes also became more

"• ~.·~
. 'd
:
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_
,1

s~histicated once the press inquiries
and cnminal investigation began. Not
only did thrs delay detection of
defendants' crimes, it also enabled
defendants to continue to conceal the
illegal iund raising from the v01ers in
subse.quent elections."
While Kim ended up pleading to
misu~ meanors, prosecutors in Los
Angeles lobbied unsuccessfully with
their Justice Department overseers to
indict the Kims on felony charges.
the Los Angeles Times reponed.
Kim's supporter.; .. like President
Chnton 's supporter.; tn 1\le Democratic campaign imbroglio -- have since
tried to characteriie his misdeeds as a
series of technical snafus and oversights, not some sinister plot to subvert the Jaw. The record suggests otherwise.
Prosecutors took special note of
Kim's handling of an illegal S12,000
corporate contribution from Nikko
Enterpnses Inc. -- hoth of which were
dcposrtcd rn Krm 's personal bank
account.
\
When investigators found out
ahout the check, Kim called the pres-.
idcnt of Nikko Enterprises and urged
hrm to ·say that the &lt;heck was a personalloan and not a campaign contn-

'TW&lt;&gt; II'IDIIS"T'RtaL'S SR&lt;&gt;Ke '11fe

roo,ooo MaRK "toba'f oto~ ·
r-teWS Of THeiR MeRGeR.

bution. "Because thts was untrue, the
president of Nikko adamantly
refused," the prosecutors note.
"After this conversation, an elaborate ~&lt;:heme to·conceal and cover-up
ensued," the memo continues.
Instead of returning the money, Kim
tssued a $2,000 check to the Nikko
president Wtlh a note, signet! by Mrs.
Ktm, clatmmg the check was partial
payment of the "loan."
One might think that such actions
--documented in detail by the Justice
Depanment -- would spur the Republican Party to cut Kim loose. But not
in the Gingrich GOP. The Speaker
who's vowed to make the Clinton
"crimes" an issue in every speech he
gives this year has responded with a
deafemng silence to the news of
Kim 's transgressions.
So, in an incredible show of
chutzpah, Kim ha• dectded to take
his case to the voters. He is rurining
as a candidate in the June 2 primary,
even though he's not allowed to visit
his own district thanks to the ankle
bracelet
In fact, it took Rep. John Under, · •
R-Ga., the charr of the National .·
Republrcan CongressiOnal Committee, to convince Gingrich that the
party shouldn't endorse Kim in his
primary. Although the party nonnally
endorses incumbents when they face
a primary challenger, the party is
staying neutral in the race between
Kim and state Rep. Gary Mdlcr.
Fortunately, state Republican officials haven't bc:en quite as gutless -most of them 11ave come out against
Kim and endorsed Miller.
"There is no question that Jay
Kim deserves no place in the House
'' said
ought to
Politically spellkin
that could happen to
Republicans
is for Kim to lose in the primary. And
according to private polls, that's
probably what will happen. If not,
Democrats will have a perfect come- ..
back each time the newly combative
speaker lashes out against the Chnton

"crimes."
Jac:k Anderson and Jan Molter
are writers for United Feature Syndialte, Inc.

being carried
When we sit down with ourselves
away by a to wqrry ahout illiteracy rates, global
ravt&gt;hrng
wanmng, chemical warlitrc, afid 01her
Roman. Not mtllcnnral rssuc~ . arc we anxious or
only
that. reassured? "The world's gomg to hell ,
below this in a hand~art .., remaps we say to ourrmagc are the selves. "hut I"m still here'"
words
When Newt (Jin~'Flch compared
tluck. blunt. the state nl contemporary America to
and mtcnse. the collapse uf.the Roman Em puc last
but
watt. week in Sun City, Anz .. dtd the 6,000 .
reach deep- Rcpuhlicans who had gathered to hear
Shoales
cr"
him speak hang their heads and weep'/
At frrst No' They cheered' They applauded!'
glance thts seems hkc a &lt;ommcrcral They waved "I heart Newt" placards!
for Viagra, and one in rather poor ta,tc The prospect of doom encrgtzcd
at that. But an offended customer. them!
accordmg to the Assoctatcd Press.
And President Clinton! The more
said, "1l1cy'rc using rape imagery to na\ly rumors fly around him. the more
establish some son of tnrKld m thctr popular he becomes!
coffee shop ..."
Mayhc we secretly welcome IRS
Don'! you sec·&gt; It's not offcnstvc, audns. as proof of our existence.
it's relaxing! Why arc we tuning in to Mayhe mad rage ts healthy, a realJerry Springer in droves' Is it because ltmc actmg out. Mayhc the recent
we 're titillated' No' It 's because ofthe mega-mergers of banks and entertainmner harmony we experience every men! conglomerates ts proof of the
ttme we sec a woman with a secret sex human desire to be as one.
life whack a cross-dressing signilicant
Maybe HMOs. rather than being
Olher on the head wrlh a foldmg chair. soulless capitalist cnd!ics that put their
Why is "Scinfcld" so popular"! Is tl own hlittom lines ahove their clients'
because it's a show ahout "nothmg""! health, arc actually makmg us
No! It's a show ahout people shghtly stronger, healthier and more •elfworse than ourselves who do awful rchant!
things and get what's coming to them!
The evidence 1s everywhere. The
We hke that. We really, really like t~at. economy's booming, ga' prices are

going down, we have an erection pill. •
Now that "Scmfcld" ts going off the • ,
air, we arc free to embrace the whiny'
self-centered urhanitc within. If only..
the nf!:tuhhics would go away. we'd
be Stllmg pretty.
Our ~ulture 1sn't coaNJning, it's • ·
toughening up. So.:tcty's open
wounds arc scabbmg up nicely. We 're" .
enfolding oufl&lt;Civcs in a thick armor of ·
Monica Lewinsky jukes, and arc sallying forth to take on the w1..td.
And when the next generation of .
lean and hungry harhanans comes
streaming over our equivalent of the:' ·
Danube to take down our tired old edt·
ticcs, we'll he ready.
We'll he fined up at the hordcr-,
with our scaldmg lanes, sleek Beetles, •
and· folding chatrs. Wtth Jerry .
Springcrmcdiatmg the mva&lt;ion. we'll .. "
knock them down hkc tcnpms. Our
cholesterol and bl&lt;~lll .pressurc levels' :
will remain low, our waistlines will be
slim, and we'll live far beyond our -.l
allotted years in a blissful hn1.c of rage
and n:senlmcnt.
(!an Shoalcs • new book, "Nqt Wet
Yet." is available from 2.13.61 Puhlications. PO Box 1910, Los Angcle.&lt;, .:
CA 90078. The toll-free numher is 1: . .
800-992-1361.) 1
lan Shoales is a syndicated
writer fiN' Newsp11per Enterprise, .
A~iation.

The rapidfy receding right to privacy
I

"You are charged with rattling coins In your
pocket when your opponent wN trying to putt.
How do you plead?"

Today in·history
By The Associated PrJu
. Today is Tuesday, May 12. the 132nd duy of 1998. There arc lbUJ!ays
left in the year.
- W'
Today 's Highlight jn History:
On May 12. 1820. the founder of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale,
was born In Florence, Italy.
On this date:
In 1870, Manitoba became a Canadtan province.
.
In 1932, the body of the kidnapped son of Charles .and Anne Lindbergh
was found in a wooded area of Hopewell, N.J
'
In 1931, Britam's King George VI was crowned at Westminster Abbey.
In 1943, durmg World War II, Axis forces in North Africa surrendered.
\

,Meigs County Court

OHIO Weather
Wedaesday, May 13

Wh·a t '·c rimes' will GOP. expqse?·

Everything wrong is right again

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

'
AccuWcather•
forcatSt for

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - What did fonncr Govs. James Rhode s and Rtchard
Celeste know that current Gov George Voinovtch doesn 't'
.
How to put the brakes on a large-scale fannmg operation, say opponents
of the growmg trend rn Oh10 toward rndustnal -strength agnculture.
A coahu on of several groups asked Vomovich last week to stop the
growth of " factory farms" until co ntrols on the farms are tightened .
It was the seco nd ume rn two months that the groups called for a morn"
tO!IUm unttlthe Legislature or the Ohio Environmental, Protec uon Agency
enact tougher rcgulauons
"
"Grven that other sta tes and the federal EPA and USDA (U.S. Departme nt of Agr~culture) are workmg out srtc assessment and management procedures fnr these types of operatr ons. tl would be prudent to stop and watt, "
s:ud Charles Brunkhart, admmtstrator of the Village of Forest.
Fnrc\l is m Hardin County in northwest Ohto, near several current and
planned Buckeye Egg Farm operatiOns.
Whrle Vmnovtch has acknowledged the stale needs tougher regulations to
dea l wrth farms that house mtllions of chickens or thousands of cattle or
hogs. he says he doesn't have the authority to interfere in the regulatory
process.
The factory farm critics disagree
They cite a section of agency regulauons that says the director of the
Ohio EPA " may take into consideration social and economic tmpacl of the
arr contaminants, water pollutants ur other adverse envtronmental impact"
be fore rssurng perrmts or approvtng plans.
Contrary to Vmnovtch's opimon. the governor's two predecessors used
that sectiOn of the regulation to deny permits to large livestock facilities,
says Nancy Raeder, of Caldwell. She is co-chairwoman of Concerned Citi?.e ns Commtttee of Southeast Ohr,. which is fighting a proposed large hog
fann m Noble County.
Under Rhodes, a Republican. the EPA stopped Cohio Inc. from opening
a hog operalton in Urbana m 1979. The decision was upheld on appeal.
And the EPA under Celeste, a Democrat, blocked an expansiOn of the
Mad Rrver Egg Farm in West Mansfield.
Carol Hester, EPA spokeswoman, says she 's not sure whether those
,
examples arc accurate, or whether the situations were similar to the ones By fan Shoales
Susan
Carpenter-McMillan
has
today
·
quit
her
job
as
Paula
Jones'
adviser.
Ms Hester sard lawyers for the agency arc trying to figure out when and
She's gorng to head a national camhnw that section of the regulatton has been used .
But even tf he could stop largl!""p6ultry and livest&lt;&gt;&lt;:,k operations from paign advocating chemical castration
cx pandrng or from commg into Oh10 in the first place, Vomovich satd he for chrld molesters Asked to comment
on Wednesday. Ms Carpenterwouldn't do 11
••
•
McMillan
said. "I'm trying to wind
'There are a lot of controversral thmgs m thts state, " Vomovtch added .
I get lcuers every day : 'Governor. do thrs Governor. do that ' I don 't reach down from thi s...
It's nice to know there's at least one
mto that admmrstrattvc procedure."
Instead. the governor proposed new restrictions last month on the mcga- gal outthcrc who knows how to relax'
! know whenever I'm slrcssed mit
1 ~um s
.. 1 thrnk we put together a very good recommendation to the Lcgrsla- from the ngors of draftmg inappropriturc:· Vnrnovich sard "I thrnk tt"s evenhanded. 11 deals wtth the problem ate comments. respondmg to the curdied rage of readers. or simply waxing
and they should move forward and get that legislation passed.""
sarcastic.
I ltke to mellow out with a
But Richard Sahlr. a lawyer for those lighting the mcgafarms. noted that
little
lobbymg
lilf the death penalty.
Vninovrch released hts prorosal on April 14 -the day before the EPA gave
Bu&lt;kcye Egg Farm permissiOn to add 4 5 milhon chtckcns to us Croton speakmg out for hcheading. or advoeating lloggmg lor httenng. !thought
farm cast of Columbus
"While we apprectate that the govcrnm has fmally entered the fray, hts . it wa• JUSt me.
But wait! Prcstdcnt Cltnton. on the
efforts must he hoth trmcly and clfccttve rl Oluo's rural environment is to be
advice of the Pentagon. wants to
preserved." Salih sat d.
repeal the moralllnum on land mines.
He's probably just trying to wind
down from the Paula Jones case.
Amcncans everywhere arc reachBerry's World
mg beyond Pruzac, and mto their own
morbid psyches.
In South Pa&lt;adcna. a collage tn a
Starbucks coffee shop caused conniplions among certain south Califomians. It seems that an clement of the
Starbucks decor features the likeness
of the old statue. "Rape of the Sabine
Women," fcatunng .a plump woman

' I

Pomeroy • M~ddleport,· Ofllo

Tuesday, May 12, 1998

fly Sara Eckel
I once dreamt that people were
standing on the lire escape outside
my wmdow, watching. I tried to tell
them to go away hut no words would
come out. Finally, my slumbering
body sat llp strarght. I screamed
"GET OUT! " and woke myself up. ,
· That was about a year ago, and
while I don't recall ever having that
- dream agarf!, I'm sure I will . And
I'm wtlhng to bet that more than a
few re.aders have had stmilar'nightmares. There's just so much to be
paranoid about these days .
Take technology. I'm no Luddite
-- I love my PowerBook 1400cs as
much as the next guy"-- but the conventences of the informalion age arc
definitely ·commg at a cost. It seems
that everywhere we go these days
we leave footprints. Marketing com·
panics keep track 'of our credit-card
purchases, our magazine subscrip- ·
lions, even the Web sites we visit.
Employers mcreasingly reserve the
right to read our e-mail and listen in
on our phone calls and voice mail.
Some have even installed monitors
. in the bathroom to make sure we are
washing up.
,
And the innovatipn~ keep com-

ing. Those West
Coast technology types might
seem cute and
harmless in their
Hawaiian shtrts .
and "Teva., but
make no rotstake. They are
working on some
life-altering stuff.
Eckel
At Microsoft, for
example, the tcdrics arc developing
a computer with a built-in videocamera .I a machine that watches
you as you watch it. And you
thought " 1984" was just a book you
had to read in high school.
I •ve been tossmg and turning
ahout th1s stuff for a while now,
though without a clear idea of exactly why it is so upscning. Kenneth
Starr's investigation has lent some
focus to my fears. Once he started
subpoenaing the cocktatl dresses
and bookstore receipts of a former
White House mtern, I knew I "could
look forward to more nights of starmg at the ceil mg.
Now, &gt;¥• all have 'our opinion of
Montca Lewinsky -- how call we
not? We've read her e-mail, listened

1

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was

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•I Columbus! !WO l

.

Lawrence Deem

Unstable air will push
daytime highs into 80s
By The Aaeoclated Preas

.

Scattered thunderstonns are possible across Ohio on Wednesday a' an
upper level system pushes into the state, the National Weather Service said.
Temperatures under cloudy skies will range from' around 70 in the north·
east to the low 80s in the south.
·
Low tonight again will be in the 50s.
The unstable air wil! continue to provide a threat of thunderstorms through
Thursday. forecasters said.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather statio.n was '90 degrees in 4881 while the record low was 34 in 1941. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:36 p.m. and.sunrise Wednesday at 6: 18 a.m.
Wealher rorecasl:
Tonight.•. Mostly clear. Lows 50 to 55. Light and variable wind.
Wednesday... Panly cloudy and warmer. High5 near 80.
Wednesday night. .. Partly cloudy. Lows in the 50s. ·
. Extended rorecast:
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday...Mostly clear. Morning lows 55 to 60. Highs in .the mid 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy aod continued warm. Morning lows 55 to 60.
Highs in the mid 80s.
·

Meigs annount:,~ments
Road to close
County Road 3- Depot Streetnear Rutland will be closed for
approxtmately one week to repair a
slip. According to County Engineer
Raben Eason, the detour will be
County Roads 12 aod 13.
Correclion
The name of Zachary Weber.
fourth grader at Salcm..Centcr, was
unintentionally omitted from a listing
of students recognized for academic
excellence. He was, however, named
and pictured with the honored group
from Meigs L~x:al Schools.
Oj,en house planned
Home Health Care of Southeast
Ohio located' at TUppers Plains will
..._ hold an open house Friday,' IO a.m. to
7 p.111. Free blood pressure and free
glucose ttsling will be offered. There
will be refreshments and door prizes.
VIsit canceled
A visit of the Cumberland Princess
to Pomeroy today. has been canceled
because of the high water. The next
visit is scheduled for ~ay 27. according 10 the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
Rellred leachen

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Mary
Johnston. Haley Johnson, Leo Lanier,·
Carlos Campbell.'' William Parks.
Grover Turner. Geraid.White, Virgil
McWhorter, Belly Gardner, Jamie
Richards.
Birtli - Mr. and Mrs. James
Stover. sbn. Gallipolis Ferry. W.Va.
(Published with pennlssioa)

Discharaes May U -

Pubhshcd every aflcmoon, Mondly lhrouJh

Friday, Ill Courl St , Pomrroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio V.lley Pubhahin8 Company/Oannen Co.•
Pomc~! Ohio 45'?6'9. Pfl, 992·:ZIS6 Second

ctus po~~•• p1id 11 Pomaroy, Ohio.

M. .t.r.: TIH: As&amp;OGiated Prtu, and lhe Ohio
New!plpa Auoc!alion.
POS'I'MASTIR1

Send addrus comc:tkHI1

to

ne D11ily Sentinel, IJI C:ourt Sl , Pomeroy,
'Ohjo 45769.

·

0.0 W..k ........ ............ .:..... ......... $2.1~
One Moolh ..............................................SII.?II
0.0 Ym ........ .... ........ , .................... StiM.l)ll

llWeeb-.............................................. 127.30

26 w..u .....................

..............:........15!.112

__ ,..c...,.

5 2 -...............................:............... St05.56
13 -

, ............................................. $29.2.5

26 w..u ...............................................156.611
52 w.u ............................................... St0\1.72

T~day's

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were two tickets sold naming all five
numbers in Monday night's Buckeye
5 drawing. and each winning ticket is
wonh $100,000, the Ohio Lottery
saiq.
The wmning tickets were pur-

MeigS EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medtcal Service recorded four
calls (or assistance Monday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1;29 p.m .. South Third Avenue.
Middleport. Fred Smtih, Holzer Med·
ical Center, Middleport squad assist·
ed;
·
3:25 p.m .. U.S. 33, Pomeroy, •
Leroy Landers, treated' at the scene,
Terry Day. Veterafi,~·Memonal Hospital, Pomeroy squad assisted;
9:26p.m., Hill Road, '""tart Falls,
Dcssie "Boggs. VMH. Racine squad
assisted.
RACINE
3:59 p.m., SR 124, Diane Jones,
VMH.

livestoc·k report

Bob Evan• •.•• ~ .......................20~

CoMPROMISE

Borg-Warrwr ...........:-.............39"'

QUALITY

I·

a,.

ON

chao;ed at Magic Ctty Pit Stop in Barberton and Eastgatc Shell in Akron.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$340, I90. Play~rs will share
$336.764.

·-

You Don't Need To
Be Rich To Start
Investing, But Yo.u
Need To Start
Investing For A
Chance To Be Rich.
Call Me For Details!
'

Karl Kebler III, CPA
. Investment and Tax Consultant
740-992-7270
Securilies offered through H.D. ~st
Investment Securities Inc. Ad..,isory
Service• offered thtough H.D. ~st
Advisory Services, Inc. 6333 Nonh Stale
Highway 161, Fourth Aoor, trvmg TX
75038{972) 870-6000

when il comes 10 securing

your ~nancial Future, put
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.

Bur 0CCASIONAI..Jx
WE Do ON PRICE.
SPRING SALE

K,M ...................................18'-

J&gt;:lily ............................................ ... 3$ Qnla

•

Commissioners

Qao~•r .............................11'-

'SINGLE COPY PRICI

MAILSUIIICRJmONS
Mtfp(;eoo!J

Sandra Watterson

Jody L. Howard, Pomeroy, speed,
$15 plus costs; James E. Bush,
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costsi
Walter A. King, Albany. scat belt. S25
plus costs; Mary J. Wolfe, Parkersburg. W.Va .. seat hell. $25 plus costs;
Christy K. Ward. Langsville. seat
bel~ $25 plus costs; William P. Davis,
Syracuse, driving under suspension,
$50 plus costs, three days jail sus pended; Jeff C. King, Pomeroy, DUI.
$1 ,000 plus costs, six months jail suspended to 30 days, two year OL suspension. two years probation. one
year vehicle immobiliz;uion ; no OL,
$200 plus costs, six months jatl suspended to 30 days, two years probation; marked lanes, costs only;
John R. Young, Chester. DUI,
. $850 plus costs. I0 days jatl sus. pended to three days, 90-day OL suspension, one year problltion, jatl and
$550 suspended upon completion of
residential treatment program; driving under no insurance suspension,
$150 plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to three days concurrent, one
year probation ; Eric Paxton.
Pomeroy, falsification, $50 plus
costs, 30 days jail suspended to five
days, one year probation: speed. $25
plus costs; Tina Chevalier. Pomeroy,
contributing: costs, 30 days jail suspended, one year probatron, restraining order issued; Chnstine K. Schaefer, ·Syracuse, passing bad checks,
two counts, $25 plus costs each, restitution, three day~ jail on each su~­
pended;
William Eakins, Pomeroy. disorderly conduct, costs, 30days jail, t)Vo
years probation; indu&lt;tng pantc,
costs, two years probatton, six
months jatl suspended to 30 days;
Robert M. Parrish. Salem. W Va.,
expired OL. $100 plus costs. three
days jail and $50 suspended if valid
OL presented within 30 days; Shawn
M. Engle, Portland, stop sign, $10
plus costs; Cory N. Mayle,
Zanesville. driving under suspension, $100 plus costs, three days jail:
S.at belt, $25 plus costs.

Two tickets share ·Buckeye 5 prize

IKES scholarship
The Ken Amsbury Memorial
Scholarship of $500 will be awarded
to any ~igs County student by the .
Saridra Taylor Wauerson. 57. Point Pleasant, W.Va .• died Monday, May
Meigs County IKES. Application
deadline is May 25. Send applications I I, 1998 in Cabtll Huntington Hospital, Huntington. W.Va.
Born June 7, 1940 in Mason CQunty, W.Va., daughter of the late Carl B.
to Meigs· County IKEC in care of
and
Mildred Rainey Taylor, she was a homemaker.
·
Clary Dill. 48 I90 Riebel Road, Long
She
auended
the
Gospel
Lighthouse
Church
of
Point
Pleasant.
was a memBottom,' Ohio 45743.
ber and·offtcer in the Col. Charles Lewts Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution. and was a member of the Alumni Association of Point
Pleasant.
Surviving are her husband, Glen Dale Wanerson Sr.; a ~on, Glen Watter. (Ccinllnued froin Page 1)
son
Jr. of Point Pleasant; a daughter, Kelly Watterson of Point Pleasant; a
changes.
brother, Lewis (Kay) Taylor of Gallipolis; and spec tal friends, Gene and Bar·
The board also:
·
• Approved an appropriation and bara Dunlap of Point Pleasant.
•
Services
will
be
I
p.m.
Wednesday
in
the
Deal
81
Brown
Funeral
Home.
certification request from the ProsePoint
Pleasant.
with
Brotheri;
Howard
Sharp
and
Bill
Banks
officiating.
Burcuting Attorney's Office in the
· Open house slated
ial will he in the Barton Chapel Cemetery. Apple Grove, W.Va. Friends may
amount of S1,130.58;
Home Hca!th Care of Southeast
·
• Met with Swisher in executive call Ill the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
Ohio, Tuppers Plains, will hold an
session and subsequently approved
open house Friday. 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.,
the hiring of Julie Buck Howard as an
with free blood pressure checks and
income maintenance worker at the
glueose screening. The Meigs CounCOLUMBUS (AP) - lndranaHogs 1.00 h1gher; sows 1.00 high· ty Chamber of Commerce will hold
DHS, with Hoffman voting against
the action;
Ohio drrect hog prices at selected er; cattle steady.
a ribbon-culling cerembny at I0 a.m.
Summary of Monday's auctions
• Approved a transfer of funds in buying point' Tuesday a• provided by
the amount of $5,000 within the the U.S. Department of Agriculture al Hillsboro and Creston:
To speak
Hogs:
county home budget to pay bills and Market News:
Evangelist John Elswick will be at
Markel hogs; 39.00-44.85; light the Mount Olive Community Church.
Barrows and gilts: 1.00 higher;
make payroll:
• Authorized the payment of coun- demand mooerate to good for a light sows 20.00-l6.10; heavy sows 26.00- Mou111 Olive Road, Wednesday 7
31.35.
ty bills in the arnoont of $201,373.84, ' run.
p.m. Lawrence Bdsh, pastor. invites
Feeder pigs; 11.00-30.00 head; the public.
with 281 entries.
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
• Approvell a four-day economic points 41.50-43.00, few 43.50; plants 26.00-36.50 cwt.
All boars 16.00-26.00.
development training session for 42.50-44.50.
Swisher;
Caule:
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 37.00Slaughter stcers; choice 62.00Present at the mce\ing,Jn addition 41.00:210-230 lb!t. 33.50-37.00.
to the commissioners, were Clerk
Sows: firm ' to 2.00 higher with 67.00; select 57.00-63.00.
Slaughter heifers; choice 61.00Gloria Kloes, Prosecuting Anorney most advance on weights under 500
65.75;
select 56.00-62.00. '
John Lentes, and Miele Davenport, lbs.
,
U.S. 1-3 , 300-400 lbs. 25.00Feeder cauic:
Democratic candidate for commissioner.
Yearlings steers 44.00-80.00:
26.50; 400-500 lbs. 26.00-28.00:
500-600 lbs. 28.00-30.00, few over heifers 45.00-73.00.
Calves sleets 80.00-95:50; heiferS
600 lbs 30.00-31.00.
70.00,82.50.
Bo11rs: over 300 lbs. 15.00-18.00;
under
300 \bs. 19.00-23.00.
Am Ele Power ...................... 4n.
Estimated receipts: 28,000.
Akzo ..................................... 104\
AmrTech .........:.....................45\
Prices from Producers LiveAehland 011 ..........................54'1•
stock Association:
WE NEVER
AT6T.....................................5"'•
Tuesday's ~l}!ruls:
Blnk OM .............................. 56~

Charm Shpa ..........................4"•
CIIY ttolclng .............~ ............43~
F.a.r.t Mogui .......................M~
Gannett .................................88~

RATBS
ly Cal'lltror- R•le

PubUiller 11111'\1111,.. riP. 10 ldju11 rletl dur·
Ina 111&lt; -.lf"''O po!lod. Subtcrlplloo n10
ciiiiiJtS I'AIY bi impltnt~1ted by chtn&amp;ina Ute
dur1Uon of lhe a~ion. ,

Carmel Guy Robinson. 80. Ravenswood, W.Va., died Sunday, May I0,
1998 at Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
He was born Jan. 18, 1918 in Braxton County, W.Va., son ofthe1ate W.W.
and Elsie S. Jackson Robinson.
He was a U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, and owned Ben Franklin
stores in Ravenswood and Ripley.
He was a member of the Presbyterian'Chureh in.Ravenswood, the American Legion. president of the First Federal Savings &amp; Loan, the Jackson General Hospital Board and Jackson County Development Authority, the Commission on Aging in Jackson County Board. Senior Citizens Building Com·
miuee, Ravenswood Lions Club, Ohio Rtver Festival Commillec and the
Retail Merchants Association.
He is survived by his wife. Retha Long Robinson; two sons, James C.
Robinson of Salem, W.Va., and Ronald L. Robinson of New Haven, W.Va.;
four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren: two sister.;, Reva Hoover '
of Huntsburg, and Wanda Pierson of Columbiana; and a brother, Gale Robin•
son.
He was also preceded in death by a granddaughter.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in the First Presbyterian Church.
Ravenswood, with the Rev. Dr. Wallace Wilson officiating. Burial will follow in the Ravenswood Cemetery. Fnends may call at the Roush Funeral
Home, Ravenswood, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
' In lieu of flowers. memorial donations may be made to the First Presbyterian Church of Ravenswood, or to the Senior Citizens Center of
Ravenswood.

Champion .............................13\

S~ISCRimON

No 1ubsalpti011 by mall permlllld In ,,,...,
wtllrallbme e~rner lti"Vb It avalllblt.

Carmel Guy Robinson

Broughton.............................. 16~

'

s..btcri'*' aOt dealrtna toP"~ the c:arr~r ma~
remit in ~IMI diretl 10 The Dilly Sentinel
01111 lhtM,IIX ot J2 month buis. Credit Will be
&amp;i'lft curilr eldl wett.
"

Meigs County Re!ired Teachers
luncheorr .meeting will be held Saturday, noon at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. Program wtll be.on vocal
mustc. FQr reservations call 7422141,29-2723 or ~85-3890.

Lawrence Deem, 81, of Marietta. died on Sunday, May I 0, 1998 at Marietta Memorial Hospital.
.
·
He wa' born in Meigs County on April 6, 1917, son of the late Homer
and Ruby Smith Deein. ·
·
·
He was a retired truck drjver for CCC Highway Inc., and a veteran of the
U.S, Army. He was a member of American Legion Post 64,l)lld the Tcam·sters LOcal 637 .
Surviving are hts wife. Mary E. Deem: four sons and three daughters-inlaw, Larry and Sharon Deem of Vermilion. Steve Deem of Baltimore, Md..
and Joe and Teresa Deem and Chris and Rhonda Deem, all of Marietta; and
eight grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
He was also preceded in death by a sister, Zelma Stewart.
Services will be announced at a later date by th~ Hadley Funeral Home
in Mariena.

Stocks ·

jUSPS 21.J.9111)

Starr's 'llachinations, but they aren't · :
exactly heroes in the war on privacy. . ·
After all, if they weren't keeping : :
such meticulous track of their cus- :
tomers' reading habtts, there would ·.
be nothmg to subpoena. Rtght now ~
tho bookstore owners may wax poet- ·: ;
.. VOX
tc ahout the First Amendment and ,
Nicholson Baker's novel about the nghtto privacy, but they arc the '
phone sex I can sec why a person ones kecpmg files on us.
might tint want this to be public
Most of us arc lucky. We will •
information, but it is, at least, a cnt- probably never ntp on the cvcnmg
ically praised novel hy an extremely news and find Peter Jennings
gifted writer. I, on the other hand, informing the world that we cal •
have ourchascd " Seven Laws of Fluffcr-Nuuer sandwtchcs, own a · :
Spintual Success. " Now THAT'S Carpenters hnx set, and rent , :
cmbarrassmg
"Wayne's World 2" at least once a ;
FcJnunatcly, Starr doesn't seem to month.
.
, 1
be gelling very far with his hookBut we do have to live Wtth the . ~
store probe. After initially cooperal· fact that such information is loose in .. ~
mg with die independent counsel, the ~orld -- and that there arc high- ,
Washington's Kramcrbooks is now rankmg government officials who ·
refusing hilT\ any more information, may actually'want it.
and so is Barnes and Noble. And
Pass the melatonin. It's gmng to
although a federal jUdge did not be a long night.
,
1
. entirely squelch Starr's subpoena,
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated :
she dtd atlca't say he had to show a writer for Newspaper Enterprise •
compelling reason why Lewmsky's Alsocilltlon.
literary taste
relevant to his
Send commenlllo lhe 1uthor In . •
investiga&amp;ion. .
care or lhis newspaper or send ller '
·The bookstores arc certainly e-maU al 111neumaol.com. 1
• • :
...
domg the right thing by resisting

W. ·Baker

. Clarence W. Baker, 70. State Route 681 , Reedsville, died Monday, May
II. 1998 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was bot:n April II , 1928 in Delaware, Ohio, son of the late Frank and
Mary Sisson. ~aker. He was a retired steelworker from tlie Keene Corp. in
Vienna, W.Va.
· He is survived by two sons and daughters-in-'law, Roger and Belly Baker of Coolville, and Larry and·Barbara Baker of Reedsville; three daughters.
Sharon Reedy of Fredericksburg, Va., Janice Castle of Guysville, and Jean
Baker of Reedsville; I~ grandchildren and f~ve great-grandchildren; one
brother, Carl Baker of Canton; and three sisters •.Ethel Cluuer of Massillon,
Hallie Rockhold of Portlaod and Lillie Baker of Canal Winc~ter.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Rita Baker; three brother.;,
Charles, Ernest and Robert Baker; one siste r, Beatrice: and a son-in-law, Paul
Reedy.
Services will he I p.m. Thut"Sday in the While Funeral Home, Coolville,
with Pastor Teresa Walldeck officiating. Bur;ial will be in the Reedsville
Cemetery. Friends may call .at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.
·

IND.

The Daily Sentinel
••

in on her phone conversations, and
sn&lt;!Oped through her bookshelves.
But whether we are prO-Monica or
anti -Monica is not the issue. The
issue is, how well would any of us
~o under similar scruuny? Lewinsky
ts reported to have purchased

Clarence

MICH.

1be following cases were resolved
last week in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Jeremy A. Hill,
Racine, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Robert C. Salt•man,. Racine, stop
sign. $20 plus cost~; Richard L.
Thornton, Racine. failure to control.
$20 plus costs; Ronnie E. Taylor.
Columbus, speed, $30 plus cost~ ; seat
bell .• $25 plus costs: Chadrick Lee
Goble*"Syracuse, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Rit hard Raley, Reedsville, driving under the infldencc. $500 plus
costs, I0 days jail suspended to three
days, 90-day operator's license suspension: criminal damaging, costs,
live days jail, restitution; Rival
Sovine, Scou Depot, W.Va., seal
belt. $25 plus costs; Cecil L. Sovine,
Winfield, W.Va .. seat belt. $15 plus
costs; Diana Lynn Green. Pomeroy,
seat bel~ $25 plus costs: April M.
Reitmire, Pomeroy, seal belt, $15
plus costs; Lorraine P. Aeiker,
Pomeroy, speed. $30 plus costs; Marshal Wooten, Middleport, scat bell,
$25 plus costs: Stephanie M. Keyes,
P,ortlanJ, seat belt, $25 plus costs:
Minter V. Fryar Ill, Syracuse,
seal belt, $25 plus costs; Rolland C.
Gibbs, Letart, W.Va.. seal belt, $25
plus costs; Roger D. Arix Jr., Chester.
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Philip J.
Edminston. Langsville. seat belt, $25
plus costs; Edward L. Diddle,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
Kevin P. Holter, Racine, speed. $30
pluK costs; John . A. Holsinger,
Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Paul D. Milliron. Racine, seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Michael L. Liule.
Middleport, $15 plus costs, seal belt;
.Roger D. Barnhart, Pomeroy, seal
belt, $25 plus cost•; William P. Davts,
Syracuse. seat hell, $25 plus costs;
Clifford E. W:hiuington Jr.. Rutland.
seat belt. $25 olus costs: Walter D.
Arnold, Pomeroy, window tint violation. costs only; seal bell. $25 plus
costs; Debbie L. Cremeans. Middlcpon. disorderly conduct. $20 plus
costs: .

NOW IN PROGRESS

Kroger ........................ ,'1, •• ~.....41'Lanct. End .......~ ....................
Limttld ...................:..............33'1..
Oak Hill Flnl ........................... .28

35'Paula K. Dillon

ova .........................................35

Associate Agent
Jim Rogers &amp; Associates
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Naplla .......... ~ ..~ ..,................30}.

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Stock reporta are the 10:30

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•

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/

•

Tuesday, May 12, 1998

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

.

·

Meigs softball team
sectional_ champions

. Page4
12,1998

Fans 13 Dodgers.

thoughtful and he understands the Padres 2, Mets 1
way things work. On the other side of
Kevin Brown outpitch,ed .former
the thing, I don'tthink I've ever seen Marl ins teammate AI Leiter, and
anybody with that kind of talent I Wally Joyner singled home the gomight have 33 strikeouts by.the All- ahead run in the eighth inning at San
Star break."
Diego.
Wood showed he could hit, too,
Brown (3-2), who started Game 6
with· a pair of RBI singles. His of last year's World Series for Floribaserunning might need a bit of da, won for the first time in live
brushing up - he was caught in a starts. Leiter (3-2). who started Game
rundown after taking a wide tum on 7. pitched a five-hitter.
his tirst hit
New York had its rour-game winWood extended his scoreless . ning streak stopped. The Mets had
streak to 21 innings before Kelly not played since Friday because of
Stinnett homered in the seventh. rainoots.
WOQ&lt;l broke the strikeout reeord by Astros 5, Marlins 2
fanning pinch-hiller Yamil Benitez
Houston won forthe 12th time in.
with his 108th and final pitch.
. 15 games. taking advantage of a pair
"I knew about the record, bull felt of sixth-inning errors to beat Livlm
I was going to make a clean cut of it Hernandez ai the Astrodome.
after the seven th," Cubs manager Jim
Hernandez (2-3). the MVP of last
Riggleman said. •·Going in I didn't, year's World Series, struck out nine
but the way it went I was sure of it." in his first regular-season complete
game. He gave up II hits and walked
three.
Braves 8, Reds 1
.
Shane Reynolds {3-3) struck out
The Braves set a franchise record
by homering ih their 23rd straight seven in eight innings. ·
game as Andruw Jones connec!ed Phillies 5, Dodgers 2
Matt Beech earned his first win of
twice and Andre~ Galarraga hit a
the
season, helping himself with a
three-run shot at Cincinnati.
Jones gave Atlanta its record with pair of hits at Dodger Stadium.
a three-run drive in the first inning. · Philadelphia won its fifth in a row.
Beech ( 1-2) gave up live hits in 6
The NL record is 24 by Brooklyn in
2-3
innings. He went 2-for-3 and
1953. and the New York Yankees and
Detroit Tigers share the major league scored a run as the Phil lies outhit Los
record of 25. The Braves have hit43 Angeles 15-5.
Giants 7, Expos 2
.
homers during their streak.
Barry
Bonds
and
Jeff
Kenf
hit
Greg Maddux (5-2) won his third
consecutive
home
runs.
leading
San
straight stan as Atlanta won for the
· Francisc6 over Montreal for its fifth .
12th time in 14 games.
str~ight home victory.
Cardinals 7, Brewers 0
Kirk Rueter {4-2) pitched six
Todd Stottlemyre struck out 13 in
strong
innings against his former
eight ~pressive innings a' St. Louis
stoppeo a four-game losing streak. team. The Giants defense turned five
Milwauk~e lost in its first visit to double plays. Pirates 5, Rockies 2
Jason Schmjdt won his fourth
Busch.Stadium since the 1982 World
straight
decision, pitching Pittsburgh
Series.
· Stottlemyre {4-3) allowed two past visiting Colorado.
Schmidt (5-I) did not win his fifth
hits in eight innings. and retired his
game last year until July 25. The
final 18 batters. He walked none.
Ray Lankford broke an 0-for- 14 Pirates won for the fifth time iri sev,Jump with·a two-run homer and two en games.
Backup catcher Keith Osik, who
doubles. Brian Jordan and Ron Gant
also homered a' Scoll Karl (4· 1) began the day O,for-12 this season,
failed to become the firstleft-hander had two hits and drove in two runs.
in Brewers history to stan a seuson 5- Jose Guillen added three hits and
stole a base.
0.

"7he G.han:png Co~ceplion Of
7.he Jl(anayemeiJ! Of9mpolence ''

•·

PEREZ OUT· Cincinnati Reds shortstop Barry Larkin (11) tags out Atlanta Braves baserunner Eddie Perez on an attempted steal In tl)e

second Inning of Monday ·night's game In
Cincinnati. The Braves won, 8-1. (AP) ·
.

·s enators rebound to ·b eat Capitals ·
KANATA. Ontario (A P) Things finally went right for the
Ottawa Senators: They scored four
goals against Washington goaltender .
Olaf Kolzig, their power play clicked
three times and they finally did·some
hitting.
That added ~p to a 4-3 victory
Monday nigltt over the Capitals,
Ottawa's first win in three games of
their Eastern Conference se mitinal

I

'·
.:

J/(eef "Jlr. 7Jiahefes"

Redmen place four players
pn AII.-MOC baseball team .

Gallla·Melgs Community Action Agency ·IB accepting
requests for . temporary .summer workers and eummer
proJects. Thaae workers are available to government·
agencies and nonprofit org.anlzatlorie. In Gll!lla and Meigs
counties at no charge. The workslte must eupply adequate
work, supervision, tool&amp;, materials and suppllee. Workaltee
mu&amp;t also· comply with applicable health end aatety
regulations and JTPA regulations.
·
.

• Mid-Ohio Conference

To obtain more Information and a workllte eurv
pleaae '
call GMCAA at 740 446 1018 axt. 25 or 740-992-6629 ext. 25
or fiX a requeat to 74().367·7510. Submlealon Or a workalte
aurvey data not guarantee aealgnment ot workere. Workera ,
·will be alloCated band .on avalllblllty, geographic locltlon,
type of.work, and other program factors.
.

'
0

Pleasant Valley .
HO'Spital

Gaiii•Melga Community Action Agency
· P.O. Box 272
8010-North State Roqte 7
Cheahll'l, Ohio 45f20.0272

·•

Equal Opportunity Employer

ner. Fresh.. Ohio Dominican: 38Josh Lunney. Sr.. Cedarville; SS-.
: Selected by the MOC coaehes
David Calez, Soph.. Walsh; lnfJa.son Ridgeway. Sr., Ohio Domini~ By The Associated Press
can: OF-Joe Thomas, Soph., Rio
• First Team
;
I B-Jayson Pratt. Soph .. Grande; Chris Stanifer, Jr., Mt. Ver:lhawnee Sl.; 2B-Ricardo Dcliz. Sr.. non Nazarene; Kyle Mackie, Fresh.,
Tiffin; 3B-Brian Sheets, Soph,, Mt. Ohio Dominican; Ryan Bishop,
ltemon Nazarene; S5-Cory Hogle, Fresh.• Malone; C-J.K. Waers, Sr.,
Sr.• Shawnee St.: lnf-Chris·lcemari, Mt. Vernon' Nazarene; Rich Gulick.
. ir.. Mt. Vernoh NtiZlii'Cne; OF-Scott Jr., Ohio Dominican; DH-..Shawa
Marple. Sr.. Ohio Qominican; Joe . Sommer, Jr., Rio Grande; P-Jake
, tomlinson, Sr., Walsh; Brandon A Isaacson, · Fresh., Ohio Dominican;
Kyle Miller, Sr., Urbana; Gary SbmDo.~s. Soph., Shawnee St; C-Aifrel'o Qniz, Jr., Tiffin; Ben Biery, SOJ)h.• ley, Sopll., Rio Grande; Ry~n
Walsh; DH-Brian Yoak. Jr., Mllll McDaniel. Sr.. Tiffin:
b,te; P-Andy Heimbach. Soph .. M'i. . Honorable Mention
.
Yemon Nazarene; Ernie Daniels, Jr.,
Sean Barrett. Scott C-rawSbawnee St.; David Byard. Soph., ford, Mike Waddell, Mt. .Vernon
Mt. Vernon NtiZlii'Cne; Jeremiah Ann· Nazarene; Jeff Carper, Craig Smith.
;.rong. Jr., Mi: Ve(lliln Nazarene.
Urbana; Kevin Green, Jamie Lam:· Player of tile year: Ja_non Prall, bert, Rio Grande; Dan Grummitt,
Josh McGraw, Shawnee St.; Rob
~SL
·
i_
of the year: Keltb Veale, Hill, Mike Volz. Jim Williamson, !
Mt. Vernon Nuarene.
. Malotie; Tim McDonald, Brian I
McGee, liffin; Jose Santana. Ohio
; SeCOnd 'Jam
•
I B-Chad Reber. Fresh., Dominican.
~io Dominican; 28-Brian Karsh-

• All-League Te11111s

Workers are age 14-21 , 110rmally work 40 hours per week, ·
and are paid $5.15 per'hour. All wages and·related coati are ·
paid directly by GMCAA and all .worker&amp; are covered by
Workera CompenHtlon. Workert will be available In early·
June and will work for approximately 10 week1.l·,CAA I&amp;
al&amp;o &amp;eeklng community proJect• tor a mobile work raw.
·

Speaker: Shrikant-Vaidya. M.D.

2520.Valley Dive • (304) 675-4340

Buckeyes overlooked as hosts of NCJ.tA regional

NOTICE

7p.m.
. PVH Cafeteria

I

q._•

'

.'

/

••

Southern girls win ·sectional title

•

I Would like to Thank the
.Yote.rs·· for their Support in
the Primary Election.
JIM SHEETS

Free Public Seminar
Thursday. May l4. 1998

Both ·Eastern teams ousted

Tampa B8y stops Indians 4-2

the win. even if it 'was ugly."
crowd lends many helping hands.
His final save was a masterpiece. The fans wave their terrilile towels in
however, and it came when it seemed · unison and create deafening roar
the Capitals were going to spoil the after deafening roar to intimidate th~
night Rhodes ~lid across the crease enemy. .
' . But it didn't seem to work so wen
and made a dazzling pad stop cin Zednik with nine seconds left and Kolzig against the Capitals on Monday
night.
off for an extra attacker. .
" I thlnk we actually responded
Kolzig wa•n 't as sharp as he has
quite well in this atmosphere." Washc
been in the playoffs.
.
··Jf he(Kolzig) would. have been ingto~ coach Ron Wilson said,.
series.
,
standing on his head in the first peri- "We've got to make the adjust··we played better as a team," od - we were .really .outshooting ments. We know what the crowd'~
Ottawa ·coach Jacques Martin said. them bad {15-4) .- and if they going to be like and how they're
"We got a better effort from more would have come up with the lead or going to play at home. I think the nexJ
people tonight, and we were better a tie after the first period, it \vould game will be a different story altO"
defensively .~·
:.
have been a totally different game." · gether.
The biggest effon came from said Alfredsson, who leads the play"We came here to get a split. an4
Daniel Alfredsson, who got his sec- offs with ~even goals. .
we're not going to really change th¢
ond hat trick o( the Stanley Cup playThe Senators knew they would way we play."
offs. He scored·all three of his goals have to control play early and did Stars 1, Oilers 0, OT
possibility of winning the honor, in the lirst period against Kolzig,who with some tough checks in t~e openAt Edmonton, Benoit Hogue
deflecting praise to his assistant has been amazing in the,postseason. · ing minutes.
.
scored at 13:07'of overtime to lift the
coaches, Dick Harter and Rick He has faced 342 shots in nine play'"We knew they were going to Stars.
r
Carlisle. and to his players. ·
off games - an average of 38 per come," said Adam Oates, who
Hogue rifled a high wrist shot ovei
But Pacers players point to his no- game ..,:. and stopped 322 of them.
entered the game tied for second in · the left shoulder of Oilers goaltender
frills. democratic style of coaching a•
And now the · Senators have a playoff scoring .with 10 points and Curtis Joseph as the Siars took the
the impetus behind their success.
chance to tie the best-of- 7 series 2-2 wa.' held scoreless. "It wa•n '!like we · lead in the series. Game 4 will be
in Game 4 at the Corel Centre on -didn't show up. We even had a good Wednesday at the Edmonton. Cdlise:
. .
"He'S absolutely the coach of the Wednesday._ln other playoff actiop chance at the end to tie it.
um.
year," point guard Mark Jackson said. Monday, Dalla' beat Edmonton 1-0
" I think .we're OK. Obviously,
The goal came when Oiler~
"I think it'G a no-brainer, because he's in overtime 10 take a 2-1 lead in their you're frustrated with a loss. You're defensemun Janne Niinimaa - who
allowed us to be ourselves. "
Weslern Conference series.
not happy. We'll talk about some has .been a tower o( strength for
Bird · already had cemented his
Tfie playoffs continue tonight with things tomorrow, try ' und work on Edmonton - botched a clearing
future a.• a Hall of Farner before tak- Buffalo visiting Montreal holding. a · ,things we did wrong and get ready for attempt from his corner.
·
ing over the Pacers last year after 2-0 lend in their Eastern Conf~rence Wednesday."
Ed Bel four Qested Joseph in a ter:
coach Larry Brown moved to the series. and Detroit at St. Louis in the
The Senators have not lost in four rific goaltending duel, making 28
Philadelphia 76ers. The 12-t.ime All- West. with the teams tied at a game playotl' games at home, where the saves as the team5 each had 28 shots~
Star was the league's MVP three ap1ece.
'•
times and took the playoff MVP
The Washington-Onawa game
award in 1984 and 1986. He also was was close because Damian Rhodes
named the MVPofthe 1982 All-S tar was shaky in goal for the Senators
until the tinal minute. Rhodes, the
game.
key to the Senators' stunning tirsl·
Bird JOtns fellow Celtic Tom round upset of the New Jersey DevHeinsohn as the only two people to ils, allowed goals by Sergei Gonchar,
win both the rookie and coach of the Peter Bondru and Richard Zedni~ in
year awards. In 1980, Bird was the tirst nine shots he faced.
named NBA Rookie of the Year after ·
"I did everything I could. but it
. .
leading ihe Celtics to a league-best was just one of those nights when I
61-21 record. a 32-game improve- was lighting it.'' said Rhodes: who
ment over the previous season, Hein- had just 14 saves. "Sometimes these
sohn won the rookie award in 1957 games happen. It wns u )l~rd game to
Paid for by the.candidate: 40395 Christy Rd .. Reedsville, OH
play.
I
didn't
get
a
lot
of
shots.
We
got
·and the coaching award in i973.
..

"

'

..-------------------------'1

~ird named. coach of the \tear
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)--,- Before • to coach players with ordinary skills
the season started, Larry Bird said all in a league whose flashy style differs
he wanted was a player who would greatly from the" blue:collar game
keep his mouth shut and play hard. · Bird was famous for.
So far, that formula has worked,
''I'm nbt asking for that;" Bird
·giving the Pacers a 3-1 lead over the said after he was named to. coa~h the
New York Knicks in the Eastern Con- Eastern Conference squad tn thos seaference semitinals and earning Larry son's All-Star game. " All I want is
Legend coach of the year honors.
hard work in practice and for about
Bird, one of the few superstar 25 minutes. in a game .... If a guy
players to successfully make the can't give that, he doesn't belong in
jump to the coaching ranks, today the NBA."
.
will become only the second player
In hts first year. Blfd took ~.Pacin NBA history to earn rookie and ers team that mtssed the playotts for
.coach of the year honors, The Asso.' the ti_rsttime in eight. years to .i ts best
ciated Press ha' learned.
wmmng percentage m franchtse htsTwo sources close to the NBA tgry. The team 's 58 wins were secwho spoke on condition they not be ond-best in the NBA's Eastern Conidentified confirmed that Bird would ference.
be presented the IBM Coach of the
, "Who in their right mind wouldYear award today at Market Square n t ltsten to what Larry Btrd tells .
Arena.
·
them·&gt;" Pacer Reggie Miller once
Pacers spokesman David Benner said ... He knows what it ~ake&lt;to be
would not confirm the reports, but he a successtul player. and he s letllng us
said the Pacers will hold a news con- do the things to have the success.·~
ference today for a "major announceThe lndtanapolts Star reponed tn ..
ment" regarding the team &lt;111d the . today's editio~s that Bird is beli_eved
NBA. He and league spokesman to have recetved nearly halt the
Brian Mcintyre declined to discuss. votes cast~y NBA medta representhe nature of the ·announcement
tauves, wmmng m a landsltde !JVer
When Bird _took over the Pacer~ . Clev~land:s Mike Fratello and Utah's
la't year, there were doubts !he super- 1erry_ Sloan.
star player would have the paltence
Btrd has often downplayed . the

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

By DAVE HARRIS
led off the inning by getting hit by a
.
Sendnel Correapondent
pitch. she &amp;tole sci:ond and third. By SCOTT WOLFE
and Eastern is 9·9.
ble by Karr, the score 3-2.
Eagles eliminated
Meigs jumped out to a 3-0 lead CilSCy Sanford then walked and stole Sentinel Correapondent
Waterford felt the pressure. but
Evans retired the •ide 1-2-3 in the
Thad Skinner struck out eight
and held off Belpre to post a 3-1 win second, both runners scored wl1en
The Southern Tornadoes rolled to never-the-Jess got the job done at fifth and Eastern again lost opponu- Eastern batters and scattered four hits
over the second seeded Golden Ashley Rupe reached on a Belpre a pow~r-packed 13-7 Sectional crunch time. The Eagles took a 1-0 nities in the top of the sixth. by again en rout 10 leading the Waterford
Eagles, to claim the Division II Sec- error to give Meigs a 2-0 lead.
Championship victory over the . lead in the first when Juli Hayman loading the ba.o;es without pushing Wildcats to a 13-0 shut out win over ·
tionai·Championship.
·
Belpre scored its only run in the Crooksville Ceramics Monday night doubled and stole third base. Hay- horne a run.
the Eagles in Division Ill boys
M'eigs is now 10-7 on the season· bottom of the tifth. inning. Hinzey in the Division Ill Southeast
man then scored on a sacrifice fly by
Waterford then plated four runs in Sectional Tournament action at
with its fitih win in a row. The reached on a Meigs error. stole sec- Sectional at Racine . . The win lifts Chasatie Hollon. Kelli Baiely kept the sixth on two singles, two devas- Waterford. Waterford is 6-18 with
Marauders will now advance to the ond and carne into score on a single Southern to 20-3 overall, while · the ball rolling with another.double, tating eirors, and a walk. The Wild- three of the wins coming against
district tournament play this Wednes- . by Adams.
· · · Crooksville bows out at 13-5.
but Tammi Huck got Val Karr to hit cats surged to a 6·3 lead and held on Eastern, while Eastern is 2-16.
day at Unioto High School against
Tangy Laudennilt picked up the
Coach Howie Caldwell said, "This into a hard 5-3 ground out
for the win. .
Eastern hitter!\ were Erron
Circleville. Circleville advanced to win, in running her record to 8-3 on was an important win for us. We had
Eastern went up 2-0 after EHS
Eastern hitters were Mayle two Aldridge,.Joey Dillon, Dustin Huffthe disuicts with a 2-1 win over Hills- the season. She scattered five hits; some pressure on us. but the girls hurler Stephanie Evans, the only singles, Hayman a double, Hollon a man, and Kin Spencer.
boro last Friday.
.
struck out three and didn't walk a bat- played well in ihe clutch. CrooksYille pitcher in the league to beat the Wild- single, Bailey a double, Karr a douWaterford hitters were Thad Skin: . Tl)e win made the Lady Maraud- ter. Wigal had a pair of singles to lead
had one of the best hitting teams I've cats;handcuffed the cat paws over the ble. Milhoan a single. and a double ner with a perfect 3-3 night and two
1;fS three-for-three against Belpre this · Mei11s at the plate. Abby Harris
~n. We did a good job keeping our first three innings. Evans helped her and single by Chevalier.Greene had doubles; Ben Hiener with a 2-2 night
season. The Marauders had earlier added a double and Kelly Gilkey a composure and holding on for the cause by drawing a lead-off walk in a double and si ngle for Wa\ft!Prd~ and a home run, Wagner 2-3 with a
defeated·Belpre 9-7, and 7-4 in TVC single.
.
win."
the second. Evans stole second, then · while Lori Milner. Forshey. Parks, double. and singles by Jones and
action.
Adams wa.• the staner and l~r
For Southern, it was a landmark watched Suzy Milhoan draw a walk and Huck each singled.
Crock.
for Belpre, she gave up four hits, , 20-win season, a mark that separates and Jamie White load the bases
Stephanie Evans Slffered the loss
Waterford took a 4-0 lead in the
Meigs scored in the top of the first walked lhree and struck out eight. the good years from the great ones. when she was hit with a pitch. Kim despite a good outing. fanning two, first after Ea,tern stanef Eric Smith
inning. Amber Vining walked and Hinzey had a pair of singles to lead Southern will move on to district play Mayle singled home Evans. but East- walking three, pitching a six-hitter left the game with a pulled muscle.
stole second. Vining moved to third Belpre.
on Friday.
·
em lol't-1.h.e bases full despite gaining and giving up six runs, three earned. The Wildcats never looked back in
on a Belpre error and scored on a
Score by innings:
Kim Sayre again picked up the a 2-0 lca'd.
.
Huck picked up the win with relief ~acing to the 13:0 win.
error on the Belpre catcher to take a Meigs · 100 200 0-3 4 I .
victory for the 1,'ornadoes, scattering
Eastern lost another opponunity from Shara. They fanned three,
Ea,tern j:litching of Smith. Durst.
. 1-0' Iead.
Belpre 000 00 I 0-1 5 6 ,
eight hits across seven innings. ~he when it left designated hitter Kristen walked four, hit \one, and gave up and Spencer fanned live, walked
. Meigs increased the lead to 3-0 in
Laudermilt {WP) and Sanford
allowed seven runs, struck out nine, · Chevalier, who had doubled. and nine Eagle hits. Eastern had four three, and witnessed three Eastern
the fourth inning. Stephanie Wigal
Adams (LP) and Mollohan
walked ftve, and· received a good Mayle, who had singled, stranded on erron and Waterford two.
errors. Skinner fanned eight, walked
defensive effon from her teammates. the corners.
Eastern goes to Miller Tuesday three. and scattered four hits in pickSouthem committed only 01ie error.
· The Wildcats tied the score at .2-2 and
ing up the·win.
Ash lee · Toeller was the· losing when T. Forshex and Katrina Greene to SoiJthern Wednesday.
Inning totals:
pitcher of record allowing 12 runs on bit back-to-back lead-offdou scored
. Inning totals
Eastern 00 o 00=0 4 3
onlyiwoSouthernhits.Toeller.how- on the Greene two-bagger, while Eastern
110 100 0=3 9 4
Waterford4351 x=l3 9 o
ever, walked founeen batters and hit Green raced home with the tying run Waterford 000 204 x=6 6 2
Batteries:
Smith {LP),, Durst,
National League ·
two batters in pu~suit of the strike on a R. Paiks single, 2·2.
.
Baueries: Evans (LP) and Bailey
Spencer and Broderick
East Di~lslon
zone. She struck out three be2 overEastern regained the lead on a
Huck (WP), Shara, and Greene.
Skinner {WP) and Jones.
Pel.
GB
L
w
all
.. lead-off Hollon single and RBI dou.711
II
27
Atlanta
.545
~ 112
15
New York
18'
.5 14
7 112
17
Philadelphia
18
.361
13
23
Montreal
13
.342
14
25
13
Florida
Central Division
By FRED GOODALL
Pet.
GB
L
w
AP Sports Writer
13
.6~9
23
Houston
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
.543
3 112
16
19
Milwaukee
Rolando Arrojo showed the TamJ)a
3 1/2
20
17
·.541
· Chicago
Bay Devii ·Rays as much in an inning
.5
14
4
1/2
17
18
St. Louis
as
he had all season.
.486
5
112
19
Cincinnati
18
..
.459
20
"
6
112
17
That"s.saying a lot; considering the
Pittsburgh
·West Division
Cuban defector spent most of M.onGB ·
I
· ·/ Pet •.
w
day night shutting down the Clevel.l
.649
24
San Diego
land Indians on the heels of three-hit, ·
i1
.553
3 1/2
San Francisco
21
complete-game shutouL• against Min19
.486
6
18
Los Angeles
nesota and Kansas City.
21
.447
7 1/2
17
Colorado
"Most of what I have to say would
29
.2 16
16
8
Arizona
be
repetitive," Devil Rays manager
Monday's Games
Larry
Rothschild said after a 4-2 vicAtlanta 8. Cincinnati I
Pittsburgh 5. Colorado 2
tory over the defending AL champiSt. Louis 7, Milwaukee 0
ons, who have lost four straight.
Houston 5, Flori~a 2
"He was tested a litde bit·when he
San Diego 2. N.Y. Mcts I
gav~ up a run early: ... But the eight~
Chicago Cubs 4. Ariiona 2
inning was probably the most impres·
San Francisco 7. Montreal 2
sive
inning he·d·thrown all seuson,"
Philadelphia 5. Los Angeles 2
After
giving up a leadoff double to
TuesdAy's Game•
·
·
Kenny
Lofton,
who scored on Omar·
. Colnrado (Wright 2-3101 Pitt,~urgh (Loaiza 1-1). 1:35 p.m.
Atlanta (S moltz J-0) at Cincinnati !Weathers 2-1 ). 7:05p.m.
Vizquel's single, the "29-year-old
flpridn (•Hammond 0·0) ut Houston &lt;Bergman 2·2). 8:05p.m.
rookie got David Justice to hit into a
,,
Milwaukc-.: !Wagner Hl &lt;It St. Louis tMcrckcr 2-2). 8:10p.m.
force play, struck out Jim Thome anll
Chicagn Cubs ('-!ulhnlland \-1) at Arizona !Jlcnes 2-31. 10;05 p.m.
retired Manny Ramirei on a ground
Philad~lphia !Schilling 4·}) at Los Angeles tManinez 4-2). 10:05 p.m.
ball. •
N.Y. Mcts (Joned-3) at San Diegcr(Hamil!nn J-2). 10:05 p.m.
Rothschild, had already decided
Milntrcal!Percz 1-3) nt Snn Francisco !G.ardner 2-1). 10:05 p.tn.
. Anojo wouldn't get an opportunity to
American Leaaue
LOFTON TAGGED OUT· Clevelantl,'s Kenny Rays second baseman Miguel Cairo during
get his third straight complete game.
Eut Division ·
I-ofton,
right, looks back after being tag9ed out fourth Inning J)lay Monday In Petersburg, Fla.
And the way the·right-hander handled
L
Pet.
.GB
w
trying
to
steal second . by Tampa Bay Devil . The Indian• lost, 4-2. (AP)
the eighth left the manager feeling
'
7
.774
24
New. York
like there wasQ't much for the former nandez to get his fourth save in sev- walked two in eight innings. He lost game winning streak since April 18t2'
.661 . 2 1/2
24
Boston
Cuban
national team star to accom-, en chances. "He's too valuable ... lal· his bid to become the first rookie 19 against Anaheim.
1112
17
.~2 8
19
Brillimorc
plish in tbe ninth.
10 112
20
. .444
er in the summer. you' II regret it." · since Orel Hershiser in 1984to throw
. "I feel ~ike it's me against the
16
Toronto
"I
don't
want
to
diminish
the
II
20
.429
IS
In the only other AL games, Bal- three straight shutouts on Thome's world, and I'm not afraid of anyTampa Bay
CentraJ.Divlslon
importance of the ninth initing, but I timore beat Minnespra 4-0 and Texas RBI double in the first
thing," Arrojo said through a team
GB
L
Pc\w
can't keep running him out there nine beat Boston 8-Z. Kansas City:s game
The victorye gave the Devil Rays, · interpreter. "I saw them in Cleveland,
16
.556
20
Cleveland
innings at a stretch." said Roth- at New York was postponed by ram. who .were ·swept by the Indians in and !"know they've got good hitters.
5
20
'
.412
14
.Chicago
schild, who brought on Roberto Her. Arrojo (5-2) struck out six and Cleveland last week, their firsiiWO· {lui nothing intimidates me."
6
22
J89
14
Kansas City
6
22
.389
t4
Minncsot•l
8
22 .
.313
10
Dctroil
West Division
(;B
L
Pel.
w
"II should be noted that for us to
You look at that, you would think 14. 18-9 in tlie conference) will mosl ~
By RUSTY MILLER
13
.639
2.1
Texas
likdv have to win this weekend's Bie be sitting here with 36 wins, there's
that."
Griffin
said.
AP
Sportl
Writer
16
.543 . 3 1/2
AnLlhcim
The · other regional site~ Ten tournament at Illinois. They will only Jive. schools right now that
·COLUMBUS- Coach Bob Todd
5
18
.500
18
Seaulc
annou~ced
Monday are Clemson•• meet Minnesota (42-13, 19-9) at have 40 wins.'' Todd said. ··we're
said h became clear to him after
7 1/2
20
.429
15
Octkland
learning that Ohio State's new base- Louisiana State. Wichita State, Texa• noon Thursday in the first round of rig1lt ihere with ·everybody ~lse in
Mnn,:la \' 's Games
the four-team , double-elimination terms of a winning record. But they
ball stadium wa' not selectl!ll as an A&amp;M and Sfanford.
Kons~s City at N.Y. Yankees, ppd .. rain
tournament.
didn 'I take into consideration that we
Ohio
State
ha.•
a
state-of-the-art,
IIICAA
regional
tournament
site:
The
. Tampa Bay 4. Cleveland 2
Todd
said
the
tmdition~t"
national
had to play o~r first 23 games on the
$5-million
stadium
and
meets
almost
Baltimore 4. Minnesota 0
NCAA clearly plays favorites.
powers
almost
~II
in
the
somh
or
road.
Texas H. Boston 2
. "I used to keep my mouth shut or every requirement-to host an NCAA
. Only games s&lt;hedulcd
westhave
a
built-in
head
stan.
I'd ~ay I couldn't get a good read on b~seball regional - but was overTuesday"s (;14mes
.
it." he said prior to the Buckeyes' 11- looked because it's team i~n't a lock
Boston &lt;Rose I ·~ ) at Tcx.us (Sclc 5·1). ~:35 p.m.
.
J victory over Michigan State on for the tournament
Seattle !Moyer 2&lt;4) at Dcimit !Thompson "·4). 7:05p.m .
"At this point, we would considMonday night. "But, yes, I'd say
Oakland iC:mdioni 3-4) at Toronto (Hansm)~I J. 7:05 p.m.
er
Ohio
State a bubble team in get- ·
right
now
there
is
definite
bia'
and
Cleveland tColon J-1) at Tampa Bay ilohn:.un I-l l. 7:05 p.m.
ting
into
the tournament," said Wake
advantage
to
Southern
schools
versus
K:insas City cRus&lt;h 3-4) at N:Y. Yankees (Wells .1-1 ). 7:35p.m.
Forest
athletics
director Ron WellBaltimnr~ {Kamicnic..;ki 2-1) at Minnesota (li~\wkin:ro l ·~L H : O~ p.m.
Northern schools. And it's unjust."
An;~heim cOiiv•"~s 1-0) at Chicago White Sox tEyrc 1 -~l. N:05 p.m.
Ohio State · associate athletics man. the chairman of the NCAA
director Archie Griffin, who led the selection committee. "It' ·would be .
school's bid to host a regional, did- difficult to award n site to a team if
we were not certain that that particn't disagree.
· "Look at Aorida they have three ular team were going to be · in the
.
teams chill have regionals. Miami. tournament."
In other word.,, the Buckeye ~_(37Florida and florida State all got them.

Wood makes his mark in
the record ·book. again
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Not since The Natural has a
ballplayer made it look this easy.
Kerry Wood, a phenom if ever
there wa.• one, blew past the likes of
Nolan Ryan and Randy Johnson on
Monday night. The 20-year-old Cubs
rookie set a m,ajor league record for
strikeouts in cons-ecutive starts, fanning 13 in a 4-2 win against Arizona.
"I had no idea," Wood said after
just his sixth start in the big leagues.
"'Great, I guess. To me, I had another good stan and we won the ballgame. The record is great, but it's just
a bonus.''
Coming off his record-tying 20strikeout performance last Wednesday agai nst Houston, Wood needed
only seven innings to reach the mark
of 33.
Throwing high, 97 mph fastballs
and sharp, low-and-away sliders,
Wood passed the previous total of 32
strikeouts in two games held by
Ryan, Johnson, Dwight Gooden and
Lui's Tiant.
" He wa• very impressive," said
Devon White. who struck out leading
off the first inning. "When we looked
for off speed, he was throwing fast·
balls."
In other games, Atlanta beat
Cincinnati 8-1, St. Louis stopped
Milwaukee 7-0. San Diego defeated
New York 2-1. San Fmncisco beat
Montreal 7-2. Philadelphia beat Los
Angeles 5-2 and Piusburgh topped
Colorado 'i"2.
.
. Next up for Wood (4-2) is .the
record for strikeouts in three stratght
starts_ Ryan fanned 47 in. J974 and
Gooden set the NL mark of 43 tn
1984. Wood is expected to &lt;tan thts
weekend at Cincinnati.
.
Wood got his 33 strikeouts faster
than anyone had ever gotten 32. Tiant
· needed 19 innings, Ryan needed 17
2-3 and Gooden and Johnson each
took 17.
·
Wood won his third straight game.
In 34 1-3 innings, he 's struck out 58
and allowed only 21 hits.
"First and foremost, he is a great
kid." · said ROd Beck, who got h~s
IOth save. "'He's mature. he s·.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

..

To the· Voters of Meiss County:
- ·. Isincerely appreciat~ the
compli~entary votes
1·received on election day, .
·May 5, 1998.
Thank you for your ·support•

.

N'anc·y Parker Campbell
Meigs County Auditor .
Pd. for 11J 11-r Pllbr C1111phl,

.

1n
TH·E
HOSPI
•

· Open To The Public
1\Jesday. May 12, 1998
7 p.m.
Speaker: Ed Holsclaw -. ·Mr. Diabetes·
· Wellnes~ &amp; Rehab Center
Refreshments Will Be Served

Pleasant Valley
Hospital-

~

2520 Valley Dive • (304) 675-4340

21440 TanMnllun iliad, llaciM, Ohio 4577t .

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�Page

6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 12, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

•. r

Tuesd«~y, May

12, 1998

··-

The Dally Sentinel • Page7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Spring is mating time - owners need to have pets neutered and spaye&lt;~J

By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

For those of us lucky enoug h to
live in rural southeastern Ohio at
this time of the year, Appalachian
spring and summer - honored in
poetry, nr.vcls, and music - are
indeed J' ·)rious seasons. The emer·

gence a:· ~rises, the slow, , gradual
greening uf the delicate leaves, and
the spcc•al scent and warmth of the
hot-weather mq,nths stir all of us.
Spnng. however, is marred for
many of us by the increasing number of animals deaths -: random and
needless - which we sec evidence
of as the weather grows warmer. The
s1ght of wild animals hit by cars and
trucks is saddening, of course, but
far touching to me , at least, is ihe
sight of a collared dog or ca l,
undoubtedly once owned, probably
mis ~cd. dead or dying at the side of

.

the road. .
Spring is the time. when cats' and
dogs ' biological clocks tell them it is
time to seek a mate - they are
oblivious to the population explosio n among their kind and are only
follo'.liing their instincts. They are
ccrtamfy_oblivious to 1hc hazards gf
traffic .
However, as domesticated erea- ·

because they lose their interest (and hllre in Meigs County, where too
capacity) for breeding once they are few people have their animals
neutered. In apdition, they (ive far "fixed." Simple · mathematics will
longer because females (and males} tell you what one cat, breeding twice
do not develop tumors of the repro- a year, with a minimum of five kitductive track, ~nd females do not tens per litter, can produce in fi ve
become debilitated through repeated years. Do you honestly think those
breeding. Think back to the battered . fifty cats will end up cared for?
tom cat you knew who always What percentage of half-wild "bam·
showed up ir the spring to initiate or
·

2
1'--..;,.;;=.;:...;.==-1

turc
dogswould
and cats
l0nger . certainly
-in time
the fights
males ~~ Public
~~~~~~
rhans.rhey
in thelive
wildfarbecause
are prone engage
to at that
of year.
Notice
they can count on us for their food
And what of the neighbor's beasourcc and are (if they are fortunate) glc who died when she was barely·
PUBUCNOTICE
taken to the vc lerinarian for shots six, exhausted by yearly litters? Her· Tho onnuel report Form
·
990 PF for the Kibble
and worming as well as for emer- owners thought the pups . were Foundatlon; ' Bernard
gencics. They need not reproduce adorable (though they admit they Fultz, Truat.., It avelleble
1hcmsclves. So why do their owners didn 't place all of !hem in homes); lor public lnopeetlon. at
not have their animals neutered? If and for some reason they fel_l thev Bernard V. Fultz Lew Ofllee,
they hope the pets will remain with • would be ."depriving"· Misty of 'the' 111'1' Weot Socond Streel •
"-oy, Ohio 457611,
them for many years and want .to chance to become a mother - many during regulor buelneoo
in&gt;urc a hcahhy life for the animal, tim~s over- if they had her spayed. houro lor 1 period of 180
just whal is the problem ?··
. So that brings us to summer ___: dayo · tub .. quont lo
Ne ut ered animals of either sex when we see the evide nce of spring publication ofthle nilllce.
(5) 6 7 8, 10 11 12 13, 14
wander from home less frequentl y mating everywhere, but particularly 15, 17, ; 8, 18,' 121(, '
'

v:

Best of the Class

Public Notice

Kcll i Bailey of Eastcrp Hi_gh ·
School. Michae l Leifheit of
Meigs High School and Evan
Struble, Crysta l Coleman and
Cy ntnia Caldwel! of Southern
High School were among 200
~f the top-ranked hig h schoo!
seniors honored as the "Best of
1hc Class"
hy WSAZ
NewsChan nel 3.
The top scholars from the
s ~ at i o n 's

1urcd

l

viewing .area arc fcam

public

anno unccmc n.ts

se rvi ce

that

were

vrdcotaped dunng a luncheon
held at the Huntington Museum
of Art on April 27.

··~--

The an·nounccmcnt s wi ll air

on WSAZ during May and
June.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
ROOFING PROJECTS
FOR
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOLS
bide for the
No. 970441n
focllltl.. of the
Boord of
Loco! Schoolo,
Moln Stre.t, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 will be received until
12:00 noon EDT Wed., May
11198,-and rtod publicly
~:::"~re~c~o~~rdad l,mmedlately
School ·
Po•n_•rc&gt;y Pike
Pomeroy,
45769
Salisbury Elementary .. ·
School
•
41765 Pomeroy Plkl
Pomoroy, Ohio 45719
Melgo Middle School
~1 South Third Avenue

eo

Now ulling merc:handtse b¥- rhe
&amp;kidl a case loti fo1 Auctions &amp;

a_nimals can be sol'ved easily - a(.,.
six months, and ev~n younger- fo(_;;.;:
less money than ·you would think.&lt;"
Why not consult with a vetennanan • ,
today? If you don't think you can
afford to have this done, drop by the ·
Meigs County Humane Society :
Thrift Shappe for an application for •
low-inc~me residents . .
•

cats" would find homes if they
somehow found thei[ way to a shelter? In most cases (and I think we all
know this on some level), shelters
can find home~ for less than 10 percent of those abandoned or given-up
pets.
The problem of cat and dog overpopulation and the. health of your

Floe llklll., 740-2!Se·1210.

Rick Pearson Auction Company.

~LII:-:::D~sa=v==1~ r-~IIJ...;,;,ac;;;;..II-B~IIDWBR~~
- c~LI-11-C---,j:,....
- B
....I..,;;;;SS.-E.;;;;;;U-..
-B_U.....
IL-D-:-Eil-S-,1-N-C•.., ....-.--FE-RT-R-IZ_E_R_ _

11181111

Mlddleport,Ohlo45710
partlculorly called to the ·anced or unr..eonoble 11
Middleport Elamentery
requlrtmente •• to: con- to the amount bid for anY:
, 158 Peart Street
dhlono olemployment to
lump oum of unit price hem
Mlddleport,Ohlo45780 . oboerved, bid bond
ofworlt. .
,
Tht contract d(!cumonlo, · cortlflad check,
No bid moy be withdrawn, •
Including copleo of the performoncoe end 1•h·••11 after the icheduled eloelng - ·
plane, epeclflcetlono, pro- moterlelo bon do u . limo for the r,ecelpt of bldl, .
poeel formo end _formo of dtocrtbed In tha contrect forotleollebdy •-•
,..,.cleyo. ·••
conlrtct and bond, are on documente.
TREASURER ,
file ond may be exemlned 11
The Ownor r"erv11 tho
Cindy Rhonemllt . •
the office of the Melgo Loclll right to l~pt or reject any~~~~::..----;;;~ ·.;
Schoo Ia, Admlnlotr•Uve or ell bldollld to waive any 11
Building, 320 . Eaot Main- lnformolltllt or Irregular!- • LEAN HOUSE
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio II. . In the bide ncelved.
457e&amp;. Ploeoe call the olflca
The Owner reoervee the
·WITH THE ·
•
I
to arrange for I time !O right IO reject any or Ill
c•l .a L'L'tetrftil!!&gt;'
exemlne the document• Bide, ond the right to
l.l'l..,..,,,.-,,_a~Q,
l&amp;t4) 892-2153). Ollie• dloregard all nonconformhoure art 9:00A.M. to 3:00 conditional
lng, nonruponolve
or ~~;::~Ca~rd~o~f~::!~::::; '
P.M.
Bide.
Coplee of complete eeto
The OwMr reoerveo tho
of the document• moy be right to re)oot ony Bid nat
Myheai1fdt
obtained et the Melge l..ocal accompanied by opacified
Schoole, Admlnletiatlve documeritollon end bid
thauks for the
Building, 320 Eoot Moln okurlty.
Street, Pomoroy, Ohio 4S769
The Ownor reeervee the
kindness and care
upon depooh of 1 chock In right to reject any Blil If H
from the doctors
the omounl of "-J'·flve ehowo any omtulono,
($25:00) ~olloro p11Jeble to elter1llone of form,
and staff of
the Melgo Local Schooli. eddltlone not called for,
PI•••• cell the office to I ccmdiiUortoor quoiiRclllono, Veterans Memorial ·'
arrange for procurement of or lrregulorltl11 ol any ldnd.
theoe documento. Office
The Ownor _relervee the
Hospital.
•
houre ere 9:00 A.M. to 3:00. right to reject any Bt4 Ifill,
P.M.
In hie oole dlecrellon, to
Frances Boyce
A pre-bid meeting will be conoldered to be unbol·

.

~=!c~~ea

KELLI BAILEY

.S'-

.

Services

'

ft .
~

M8 J

Roofing
It's NorToo Late to Get Tickets!
PHIL DIRT &amp; THE .OOZE AS
Meigs_High St;hool Gym ·
Sunday, May 24, 9·12 M
Tickets at Anderson Furniture

1998 Martin SlrHt
Pomero9, Ohio 45769

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emorlal

t

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We Give Mature·
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mo.ile Home
Owners Special
· Savings~

BIRTH ANNOUNCED - Jeff
and Melody McKnight of Bidwell .
announce the birth of their first
child, a son, born Tuesday,
March 10, at Sl. Maey's Hospital
in Huntington, W. Va.
•"'
Elijah Mi~hael McKnigHt
weighed !Ieven pounds, three
ounces, and was 19 inches long.
Maternal grandp11ents are .
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Patter•
son of Paint Pleasant. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Donald A. McKnight of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandmother is
Phyllis Burton of Point Pleasant.

Ou.r statistics show thai mature
drivers and horne owners have
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. So it's
only fair to charge you less lor
your insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save
aven more wilh our special
I·
discounts.

.. By

•nwn.,.ny you,. triiMIIe. ·

i.

· Grate

p;ahu ur Hi~ l~nd . •
.
4. TI11111k you lor tfk.• w11fldc-rful day-; we !l~d II'ICCI~, M)'
, pruycr. 'Ndl he ¥~-ilh )'IJII tllllil Wl' llllo.'t'l avant
'
5. The; d:~yJ ~1.· :\hilrtd we~ ·' wa'l. I hlftJ In M:t: y,-. ~tt~~in in

. Andrews, David C

of
Bottle

Julyi0,1961- May 5, 11!110 ·

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

'

They crossed a turkey with a
cpntipede. Now there's _ a
drumstick . for everyone at
ThankSgiving.

9.
10.
11.

11.
1.1.

•

.. ,

.• .•
~

..

..
•

•

•

happlrl!.'!.!l;.

i

,,, M11)' Ih.:- f .ord hk'-.; yuu •ilh lh" i!r*'\:.\ llntl WJ/111, lt1ViiiJ! hi:Jart. •

•I

L-~
- ----------~--~---~
- ------~1 \

TO REMEMBERYOi.1R LOVED ONE I.N THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING.• $1liF.PicrURE INCLUDED .

l

·'

•

F111 out the form below •nd drop off to

Tlte Daily Sentinel
With Fcjndest Memories
110 Court 'St., Pomeroy, Qhlo 45631

Please publish my·tribute in this speclaf~eiiiOiial Day Plip Oil Frld~y, May 2l ·

'

.

. · -

lltellllooohtplome

_ AN@

I Deleol'blrlh
I Veteren .

eutance ·Services

lllenlr

·

.. - .

Dotaof..-ln1

OYn

l'allthoo( •rrice

· I ' ..
~~~~~
I V' •• _ _ _ _ ___....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,._

R•tM

Joe N. Sayre

Make Check Payable To TilE DAILY SENTINEL

Over 20·years experience.
·
Free Estimates ·

614-691·5716

\ - or

~

614-691·7DI

•~

Call 614·843·5426 ·

41241111 . ..

PICKENS

PINE GROVE ·'
. FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grove Rd,
.Racine, Ohio 45n1

HAULING
Gravel, Sand,
Llmaatone, Dirt, Top
Soli, Anything you
need to haul.
No job too small,
Some too big.
740-949-4802
740-949-4903

740-949-2461

Pig GriiWir .........................16.25
12!1 Coinplm H...............1S.60

74D-667-6092

1aUahbn ........................sa.oo
!!taw Oicken .....................17.30
These prkes 011 for SO#Itilg

CHESHIRE

OPENING APRIL t

o(Mn24Hra.ADtty
7Dey•AWHk
Hat Breakfltst
Bllc111t S.nclwlch,
Hot &amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
tncllldlng PizZI
i-

12" $7."11 Ootuxo
All ToPPing•

carr In Ordero Accepted
7~367 "7838

'.

_Lanllscapinl
. Pruning
Clean and lnalall Gutter
Flowera,
Bruah 'Removal,
,lnateli NIW Bed•
Free Eotlmateo
"GoAn~re"

No Job too omon.
Mon.•SII.
(74b) 6119.e904

748·94&amp;-1012

Fa!.::=::.~

. DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Uma,. ,
Umaatone •. Gravel \
. Old • Sand . ,\ I

.. r

WICKS
HAULING
Umestone,
'G raver, Sand,
TQp Soil,
·

::n~

..,

Plants,
Trees &amp;
Shrubs

·

Serve Ice

Cream

leave message. ·

Open: Mon.-Fri. 9-11
'

Sat.~;

(740) 742·7405

12-4 ·

.HOME ·.
COIS,.RUCtiO_N .
New Conctruetion &amp; Remodeling
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

Free Estimates

I

•

PIIIIIH, Cabblgl,
lrOccoll, Clullflower,

Hanging lllskltS,
Phlox, ~leas.

Shrubs, Spruce TrHa

·open Dally 9·5

e wk okl 112 Lab &amp; 112 Garman
Shopha.O pups. 3(14·578-2;!39.

Free puppies. 4.02 First Street
Poinr Pleasant, 'WI/. ·
Free to good home. Medium size,

'ATTENTION DANCERS AND
MIXERS' ALL LADIES
Tired 'of men? Tired of 1¥0rrying

bout money? Wanl to be inde·
den!?
Club! New OWnetl
B • yll Fun armosphere.
Se

ua inquiries onlw. Ask for

neuteied male dog. Protectfve,

..

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

!

'

'·

'

,
'
'
•

I
'

'I

.,. . Homes
·
•Garagea
•Cpmplete
Remodeling
.
Stop &amp; Compare ·
FREE
ESTIMATEES ..

i' .•

. 985-4473

\

I

"Jil

7/22/tfri

~

....

• •

•

,.

LIIDA'I
PAIIftll

IOIERT BISSEll
'
! M!STRUCTION'
I

'

t

Taka the pain out of
painting, and let .me
do It for you.
Interior
Before a p.m.
leavem-g•.
Atterep:m.
'

(740) 1115-4110.,

FrHEstlmatH
411111 1 mo. pd.

TwO Classes TO Choose From I
Sa1urday, May 2,. ,998 Or Satur ·
day, May 16, 1998. Both Classes

Are From 9:00A.M. -5:00P.M.

Contact · Buckeye Hills C ~re'er
Center, Adult Services To Reg ·
iller.- 740·245-5334 Ext. 209. lui·

rion:$40.

Full blooded 51. Barnard to good
home (by Frtday), comes wlih dog

bo•. 740·985-3689.

Kittens to giveaway. 4 brown &amp;
whi~. 1 tiger &amp; 1

white, 2 black &amp;

ai black, 7•0-..1-o&amp;l5.

OJ Wantod
LaCamina MeJCican Restaurant
and Bar Is looking lor a OJ lor
one to rwo nights per week. Use
your· music on our equ ipment
Play lill musr Include Top 40,

Dance, Rock, Soulhern Rock and
blues. Call 740-446-959(1 to ar·

range intef'Vfew and auditio.n.

Two 6 weell old blonde Mittens.

Eaon $1,000 Weel&lt;ly. Sluffing en"
740·992-8745.
velopea. no ptior axpetience, free
send. SASE to: N .B. Oepl
60 . Lost and FOund. · details,
174-301 East Srh Ave. Suire 112
Beaurllull Blad&lt; lab. Call 10 claim Cotlicana, Texas 75110.
after Spm. 7•D-379-!M32
ExpMiencect Salesperson- Home

740·742·3411

IIIII,.BNANCI
SPECIALS

Found on Laurei.CiiH Rd., medium
size black &amp; brown with whit• on
chest male ,dog, vary lriandly &amp;
playful. carnol keep. please claom,

Fur.niahings, Carpet. Window
Treatments, Furniture, Resume
To; Tope: Furnii!Jre, 151 Second
AYef"IJe, Gallipolis, OH 4563t .

Foul'ld: Coon hound. 740 ·388·

Gallla · M•I•• CAA Is Accept ·
·ing Prupphcation5 For tempo.

740-992-6839.

• House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $1 00
• Hedges trimmed • Gutters ·cleaned
Call now fore
lawn care program.

'S

f.::

CPR &amp; FIRST AID COURSES
For Those Indiv iduals Workir'lg
Wiih The Public Al1d !Or Children.

perfect hou'ae manner&amp;. 740-448·
7943 Leave name &amp; number.

0464
Found: Pager in Patriol area .

740-379·2482

FOUND:

Small female tiger ·
striped ca~ at Foodland on Sat.

llay 9. owner please call. 304·
675-2208.
70
Yard Sale

2 Family Olt "160(3mi nor!h .ot
Hospital) onto Evergreeb then on
to Green valley . Exercise equ1p·
ment, gun racM, some·co)lectibln,
many items; must gol 9:ooam .?

Thurs., ,Fri., Sot...

&amp;I,V.niSateellluoc

• 10:00 e.m. S.tunlay.

'GREENHOUSE
NO'WOPEN FOR
SPRING.SEASON

s pups· Golden Retrlevir, Blaclc _

Lilbtadol mi• . .Call 740.38.8·0413

Be Paid In Advana..

•

'

Singers, Bands, Songwri(ers, Etc.
All Styles / Ages , Major Re cord
Label Exact's, Seeking New Ar·
lists, Coming To Huntington. 901 ·
427·5490, 901 ·427· 9514.

Spears, 304-8'75-1429.

DElDIJNE: 2:00p.m.
Ihe doy beloro lllo ld
It to run. SUndoy
odlllon - 2:00p.m.
Fridoy. Mondoy odlllon

HUIIARDS.

Syracuu llt2-5778

..........._ ...._ _ _ _ _~·-·--~------·- -·.......... ·:.4

COMPETITiON

15 North Meln
Rutland, Ohio 45715 Dell: fellurlng
Amish ·
.
eiii~ Chene•, Salt

Sluffed Ralltlitll 1Jem
. Oplnla.fri.1N
SII:1H; Clootd Sun. I lon.
Rt. 124. Mlnomllle. ott
·-_L-...Z7*~!:!•~•!!'!'--J

HUIIAIDS
IIEEIHOISE

.: ~ ·

L----------·--------·---------~

Fill Dirt

•• STARSE4RCH "

Sam. 304·576·2956 day. 304·
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
.
633·Sl.AM(7526).
1. .____.. .1_6_1_4-__,99_2_·_3_4_7;,·Q-.1~ -AV-,0:-:-N-,·-,'-:A-,11-A-,re_a_s--:,--:S;::-h-,irl:-ey

Gallipolis, Ohio 45831
• Top • Trim • Removal
. · • Stump Grinding
Insurances

tarS1:zt.oo
C.ndiH, Rtlllla,

Sunday 12·5 ·

il
\ ~ Jl
•''

I

•

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

~=~=:U~t

'·'1RUCKING

I . 9851422 .

~'·
Mowing, Mulching,

Ohio River
Campgrounds and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.
New &amp; uoed hemo. We
Buy - Sell - Trad.,_ Toolo,
tithing equip., TV'o,
CB'e, otorooa - · little bll
of everything. Located
on Ohio River Camp.
groull!fo, St. Rt. 124,
Roclne, Ohio.

;::::::=.-~
.: .: ~
- ~
- ~- L--~~
' 1•.L. HOLLON
COUNtRY

7. .t49-3006

I_
·

FREE
ESnMATES
'
.

FOOD MART

814-742·2138

OHIO RMISERYKE

· - - - - - - - ,.

I ·CilT·- -.------:-""----:------...e-.·___ Zip

.

R~
.
·I

Cell

I
I
I

mber
IN

I

~

-....

Ston!l. Low Aales)'

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I

ONo

· · ·Covering&lt;

·aox.

H1ullng, Excevltlng
&amp; Trenching ·
u.meitone &amp; Grawl
StPtJC'SYBtlmS -·
Trailer·&amp; Ho1111 Situ

Quality Service
For'AII Your
Garbage&amp;
Rubbish •
Pick Up for
Residential &amp;
Commercial
«No ,... left behind)

. I
I
f

Numberofoelodood-

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Profession;d ~r

THE CARD
1 1/2 mile south _o f
Tuppers Plains
Now has Be~rue
Babies- StiiC
Baseball-FootballBasketbaii-Siar TrackVideo Games &amp;
Rentals

SAYRE
t,_JRUCIING

\\

MA'( 18, NOO~

.

COttSTROaiOtt

'

, Chesta_r, 0 hlo

--------_.,._______I
I--,..· ... -----.------·
DEADL.It4E: MONDAY,

I.

Aulo-ONJnero ln~uranre
Life Home Car.Business
n. tr. P..U... "---'-'M

rcma1n
,
:\1 :1)' rill' li,/11 ul Jkll.:C ~hiui• t•l )'IIUf r• ..- fo!f \'II:IDi\)1.
MOl)' (;c.,..r.~ illl~h a:.uitk yuu ;Mid pWic.:lynullm)lir;l•llll !ill~.
Vnu wt'~ a li}!hl in our llll"lh31 tlnrm f••cvn ir1 '"'"' hr.-:.n'·
M&lt;l} Cill~l\ gr;M"t'\ ~hi~~~: IIVCI )'ltU r.... ~II lime.
\'1tt1 "''' in our lh41Ughb ark! prllyt"''!!lnr.m 1nbruit11% '" ni~th1

, · u•MI !'rum yC;ar lu } 'till.
14;. W~ M,:n(j lhi~ ITIU~!t~ wilh t1 .. 1Vi11- lei~' It" dc,..f m1 Jlld

.Nalllt of deoN...t

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992.:6687

I

a lu:.y~

Always In our heurL•,
John and Mona .o\ndrew.&lt;
•net •·amity ·

difference between .keeping
your chin up and sticking your
·
·
neck out.

·A colorless liquic:l'that turns
dark when you wash it. •

•
•

7, /"lruu:h nul ut ,j~ lll . )'•Ill ' II tun.'\'l"f ,·~~,. lu my IIC'an .ui\J mifld
K. Tha· •by,. m;~y \'11 1111: anti gn. taut rht• dtnt!i ~·c !ih:.R.'Ct will

throughout time.

*** ·
He who laughs: lasts.
***
You never lose anything by

,I

fl. Yo l11f' l"IIU~Oij!r.' :u...t tlr-.av.:ry 'itill tll\flin• '~" 11fl, ;rOO lbc II~RII.II')''
ul ~ Hill \lllik rrll~ U\' 'A&lt;ilh ~~)' &gt;~Jtd bllf:hk' f.

May (;od's angels
guide you and
protecl you

Gas

*** .
uttle boy's definition of water:

,,
d
't
' I
I

·~

LO~tta·s

CARPET
PLUS

••

·-.-

Mill mo. pel

. i

.-:.1·

I

Brian Morrllon
(740) 985-3948

.J
'

Pomeroy; Ohio

\'

' ·FrH Ell/NIH
No Job Too Sm./1

•

( ju~,f, hc;,Vr.' HI)' lllllf),

*·* *
I ·TI&gt;Rr&lt;•'~ a small but.lmportant

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I
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••

Wc 'hnld you in uur thuuglll" ancJ n~emurk."!! '""""·

2. May God ..:radlr )'IIU in ltis ilrnn:, no'il' and fuft'\ltr,
3. r=nn:vcr mi~'i&lt;d, llt¥Cf rHIJotfCR May Qnd hukl )'UU in !fir

•

RNER _,:,

••
••

-..to

Dave

being polite, but lots ol folks
are afraid to 'take tile risk.

News·" policy
In an effort to provide our readership with current news. the_Su_nday
Times-Sentinel will .not a~cept weddings after 69 days, from the dale ·o,r
the evenl.
We.~di ngs submitted after the 60·
day deadline w.ill appe~r during the
week in ·The Daily Sentinel and the
· Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
l'\.11 club meetings and other news
nriicles in lhe society section must
be submitted within 60 day.s Clf
occurrence. All birthdays musf be
submitted within 60 days of the
occurrence.

·· tryou .,L..,,1dod- ufttocl-lna •·au; ,.,...

j

•Bobcat S.e rvlca
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
COmmercial and
Reslclentlll

•

On Friday, May 22, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are
gone but not forgotten . The names will be placed in alph~beticai order and will
be similar to the sample below:

.

Help Wat:~ted

110

!11001111mopd

P/B Cbatractors, lac.

' ' I

We remember t!~Rse who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

992-2156

.

•
•,.

News Hotline

949-2115

Wanted To Buy : Used Mob il e

Homes, 740-446·0175, 304-6755965
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

9:00-12:005aturdey

"We don't want to make money, wejwt
' want to seU flowers. "
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Fleta
Hanging Baskets $6.13
Rebloamlng Ullea, Hotta, Peonleo, Bleeding Halll'lo, ,lie.
Variety of Perennials 9~
Fllllt &amp;Flowering Trees, Shrubs, Plnea &amp;Azalea•
Morning Star CR 30
Racine, Ohio

wrecked or salvaged vehic:t es·.

304·773-5033.

742·2103 .r 446-3622

!

992.e215

..• '

CRYSTAL COLEMAN, EVAN STRUBLE AND CYNTHIA CALDWELL

~~~Q~IY~~MS,IHC.

9 :00-4:~:~1!daya

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts. 8uy 1ng

Plan aliead. Call
today for free estimate

iliifln~'' Atilo Concrete Worll

I

0 :(;

31%1tmC

... •·.

Clean Lara Model CarS · Or
Trucks, 199d. Models Or Newer,
Smirh Buick Panriac. 1900 Eas1+

• Mowing !Residential &amp;
Commardoll
• Weedaaling
• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Maintenance

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""'!!Mf 6

992-8578.

LARRY'S LAWN.
CARE.

•Room Addition•
•Mow G•ragea ·
•llectrlcll &amp; Plumbing
• aoflng .
'
·~erlar &amp; Exterior

.

\'

Iii!!/

: 949-2188
..
- .
'. YOUNG'S.
~RPENTER SEYICE

··,

)

Joe Wlleon
(614 992-4277

Owner: John Dean

.Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· 'Painting
FiREE ESTIMATED

-~

"•un. rour Dr•••"

'

..r..

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

J

r:\

Free Estimates

Howard L. Wrlteael

I

Plumbing

614•992•5479
.. - r

..._,... _ ______ .

j

Antlquu &amp; clean u1ed lurnilure.

Will buy one piece or complete
house"'old, Osby Martin , 740·

..-

l

· . Remodeling

~

POMEROY, OH,

V1rlety, Qu1llty •nd Low Price ·

~~~~@~~ft~~~f7.)

__!::::==J

~.
Custom Homes

·. 113 W. 2ND ST.

Athens, Ohio
,4/30/96 1 mo. pd.

111:.
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
111:.
.E!!J Garages, Pole Buildings, Aqoflng, Siding. II!!!:
•
Commercial &amp;Residential . ·. .rtr..
ii'!i
" . 27 yrs. exp.
·
Ucensed &amp;~nsured _
Phone 740-992·3987
~·

•

•GarUge.•Decb

614-592·5025

Antiques , to·p price• paid, River·
ine Anriques , Pomeroy, Ohio.
Run Moore owner, 740·992·

ern ~ooe. Galipolis.·

Full line of water storage tanks Septic &amp; Cletarn Tanks
Water line -1()()' thru 1000' Rolla
Sewer Pipe - 3" thru 8", Gae Pipe &amp; Ragulatore

"' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFE·

William Safranek,
Attorney AT taw

740/985-3813

4" thru 48" plaetlc culvert In stock

360° CQmmunicatlons

1~~~- ~: 1..------~,,:.--~---....;....;~-~....

..r.. · ·

411111 mo.

___,;...;,.;..;.;;.;.,.~.;....___;:,;,;~

'

Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-441).2842.

2526.

740.985·3831

211-

'

Chapter 13
For Information ·Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

mCONS,RDC,.ION

~

Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, , 51 SeCond

GRASS SEED

-cc~~~fttJJ~ft~@~ ·s UE'S GREENHOUSE

'•

2A II 2A Pale Building
starling at $5995
.740-8112·2772 .

. •.. -.·. -

ver And Gold Coins, Ptoolsetl,
Oiamond1, Antiqu• J9'!'elry, Gold

Near Chester on St. Rt. 7

{No Sunday Calls)

I Chapter 7

m~3838
• _ i
(614E)atl992

I

• hpla-..tWtndows
. • Slallonary Daclcs
• llclwn lnsulalian

614:-992•7643 . .

773-5785 Or 304-773-5«7.

Wanted to Buy
Absolure Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·

SHADE RIVER AG·SERVICES

)

lull lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
l1cens&amp;d
tee,OhiO &amp; We11 Virginia, 304·

90

KRUPI'CY '-CELLULAR PHONES !.st~~~'IPLASTI!~pt~~~ln!~~~B3

EXCAVATING CO•.,

· Lime.tone Hauling
House &amp;Trailer
Und Clllllng &amp;
• 1 Grading •
S~J»Ic Syatem &amp;
utilities

•I

'

FREE ESTIMATES

·-

. HOWARD

•

•

Gutt.r • Roofing .

8

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

· lrlfts&amp;Strstton: Mastllt'ServlceTedmlclaa
· ,_
Olldoor Pow• f; ljlllllf Assoclotlon: .Certlfltd 2 Cycle i·
State Route 338 ; At VIne • Raclno, Ohio
•
614 949-2804
1 611

GARDEN SEED

a MUL~H

L~~--LIIIIJ L~~~~~;;;;.;_~=~ J, . ~-..:....;,~•.~
-- ·-~~-~
--- ~-.~~~.i' L.,__
~
'· " ·'
. ..

-

• faKia • Seamless

•

•· _ New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

•,

·.Echo ·Ry?b~=~~.::~ ·~ydra Gea r:

"'
74M854422

inyl
• ..- . . '
•-Vi Siding • ......,..

Business

a.

~nCheer,M•~rk,'o'hHiootlon

~---------1~=::::::;:::;:;::; . , ,
. J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

·

•Mowers ·Chain ·s aw• ·Weedeatars •Authorized
·
. .. Dealer For:
•Brlgg• &amp; stratton :MTD ·Murray ·McCollough

' •Rtsldtntlal ·

.

held' In ofthetheAdm!nlotrlllve
Offlcee
Melgo Loeel
Sehoole, 320 E11t Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, on May 21, 1988, at
10:00A.M. EDT. .
Attention of blddero le

Parts slid Servlcet!

Computer Graphics
Design•
All Landscaping

~ Public
~~~~~~J-::~~~~~::-r~~~~~~~:Public Notice
Notice

5

Auction
and Flea Market

. BICKHIIAID
DOZER SERVICE
•Septic Systems
-ilasements
•Excavating
CALl

1·740·949·20 15

4/15/111

Big' Close DUI and Yaid sate, fri ·
day· tS, Sat . 16, and Sunday.
Beac:h'a Auction HOute. 51811 Rt.
180 3miln,.pau Holzer Hotpitall
Shelving, Building aupplin, Gro·
caries, Olthel, Cameras , pora
pans , Rugs, china, ·1ables,

LOti ollllsc. 9 ji8 Daily

Pomeroy,

riuy position with work assignments which 11'181 include;
1
Malnlenance, OUice/Ciericill ,

Food Service, · Road Main·
Vehicle Malnrenance.
Applicalions must be a resident

tenanc•.

ol Gallia or Meigs county, age 14·'
21, and meet ~TPA guidelines .
Jobs will begin in early June and
last approximately tO weeks,
wage ral.e $5. 15 per hour, 40
hOurs per week, worllsnes will be
at various locations ~ both co"'n.
ties: High school students, high
schoOl graduates. co llege students. and those Who . have .not
completed high school are en.
courage"d to apply, GMCAA is
especially seeking apppltcants ,

oge.18·21 .

Preapp t!calions are available at
GMCCA otllce, high school offices, University . of Rio Grande
Cronroads Office, Hocking Col·
lege JTPA Otrice. B uc:k~ye Hilla

·Carter Cente r- Adult Educ;at ion
Offial and Srudent Setvlce Office,
ond OBE5- Rio Graode

367·

or

Gallia-Maiga.Communiry AcliOn ·
Agency
P. o. eo, 212 .
al10 North S111e Route 7
C,..,shioe, Ohk&gt; 45620
.Equal ()pportuniry Empt~r

Ml_d dleport
&amp; VIcinity
HVAC lnsrallers Neod&amp;d For Ex·
All Von! Sotoo Mull,lo POid In pondlng Company For lnllallaldvonco. DHdllno:·I:OOpm tho liOns 01 Healing &amp; Cooling E'IUIII'
day before the td Ia to run,

ment In Manufaorured &amp; Re1i·

Racine Area Comroo'nit~ Organ!·
zorion, Star llill Partr , 1111 14·15,
9am, S longaberger baskell, 2

• Pa&lt;t Madlcallnsurance

Sunday &amp; Mondoy odiUon· danllal Housing
1:00pm Frldoy.
• 3 Ylll. E•t&gt;Orience Needed
,. RSES Certified
• Paid 'VecatiOn&amp;

TV VCR, 2 compur,rs, upright
o Paid Holidays
~-. turriturv; Ctiljotmao ilBml.
diohel, books, ctoihing. dOnetiona ·
•1;-t W.[IOI
•
epproclorod,'Fronk ~toland, 7•0· tnterv""" Appointmenllo OntytiColl •
040·28511, Oovld Zirkle, 740·94U· Bonnttll Heating I Cootfn'g At
2031, ptck up available, pracoeds 7.•o·••e-9&lt;~8 Or 1·800·872·
applied to ocholarllhips.
!ee7, GallipoliS, OH 451131.

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Pllge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tueeday, May 12,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

~
••r~

ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHII,I.JP
ALDER
~~

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l'iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiioiiiiiil 320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Help Wanted
TEACHER ol Prnchool Hand1 ·
capped Students Nglnnlng the

IEDICAL SOCIAL
SERVICE

Divorce Forces Sales-Take over
payments. 2bf. 2 bath, financing
avoiloblt. 304-755-5566.

l t9&amp;-99 "hool ,.ear. Submi' let·
.., of nteres t. ratumt, 3 t.nera of

Immediate Open•ng For A Uedi·
c:ol Sccill Service FV ~Iion.

Social Service Oegreo Requrred.
Pleue Cal.C. Apply In Person:

•

Arbors AI Gallipolo

rec:ommendallon, copy of ~tan·
acrlpt i nd cuuanr cerdficatt 10

JoM Rlobol, SUporlr11rtndont, P.O.
BoJ ea., ""-"~'· Olio meo 11r
June t5. 7•0·812·3883 lor mora
lnlonnollon.

All real male odYertlslng In
lhls newspapef Is subject to
the Fodoral Fair Housing Act
ot 1968wnich makas nIllegal
to - s a •any prelerence,
limitation or discrlmlnadon
basad on race. cOlo.. religion.
sax famlfialstatul or natlonaJ
origin, or any Intention lo
make any sUCh peefelence,
HmitatiOn or diSCrimination. ~

Tha Villoge 01 Rio Grande ts Ac·
captlng Applicatio.ns Until Friday,
.May 22, 19$8 F01 Tamporary Em-

110 PiniCI"etl Drive

G!Oiiprria, Ohio 45831 .
74().446.7112
Need 1 ~siner in my hOme tor
1WO c:hildien, good pay, ref&amp;fenC·
ea requ ired, call 7,.0·992 ·3668
bo- 0:00am-2:00pm

Need a Monument Cleaned fOr
Nemorlal Day? Call: 740-258·
1579. Priced $5.00 -S1o.oo Depending on Cemetery Location.
New Breakfast Shift Downtown ...
Please Apply For Waif Staff Or
Kitchen Positions, Mogies, 39
coun Stree!. GaiHpoli•
Now /'llr lng aafe drivers, good
pa~. flexible hours. Apply in per.
son at Domino's in Pt. Pteasant
Now Taking Applications At Dom·
ina's Pizza, Gall ipolis. &amp; Pomeroy

LDcation•

Co~peny

' Oak HIII: Ot11o Trucking
Looking For Experienced Semi
Tractor Trailer Drivers, E•c:811ent
Pay &amp; Insurance Package, 740·
082-61113, Between 8-5.

OpttninQ For E11perieneed Marine
Technician, Apply At Big Boys
W&amp;Cet Toy1, C/'leshlre, Ohio, 740·
387-7802. .
Part-time waiuesa. E•Pit'lence r•
quired. ilpply at Holiday IM.

ployment Srarling Jurta 1, 1098,
And Ending Somollmo In SopiOm-

ber Or Ocr-. 11108, Depending
On The Available Work And

Wearh«. Person Applying Needa
Be At Leasr 18 v.ara Of Ag8S
And Have A Valid Ohio Driver li·

To

cense. tndividual Should

Be

This newspaper will not

knowingly accapt
advertisements for real estate
which is In Ylolation ol tile
law. Our readers are hereby
.informed tl1alall
ac:tvettl~ In this newspaper
are a.vallable on an equal
Of&gt;pOnunlly baSIS.

Moti-

YBUtd, Willing To Work, Like

Be-

ing Oui·Of-Ooorl, Willing And
At:le To Follow Directions. And In
Good Physical Condition. Rata 01
Pay Is $6.25 An Hour And A 40 .
Hour Week It E•pected. Work da~ II From 8:00 A.M. To 4 :30
P.M. Monday Ttvough Friday.
The Village 01 Rio Grande Is An
Equal Opportunit~ Employer On
The Basis Of Rac:e, Color. Religion, Sell, National Origin, Handicap, Ancestry. Or Age.
Applic:lttons May Be Secured At
The Village Of Rio Grande Mu·
nlc:ipal Building, -t01 E. College
Ave., Rio Grande, Ohio, Mondav
Through Frldoy 8:00 A.M. To 4:00
P.M. Interviews And /Or Hiririg
Will Take Place Before June 1,
1998.
Wanted ; Equipment Mechanic
Experienced in Heavy Trucks,
Equipment, And Hydrauli.cs, Satarv Commensurate With E xperi·
once. Call 1·800·339·8518 For
An Appointment Equal Opportunity Employer.

Pleaaant Valley Hospital 11 look·
ing for a part-lime Pharmaciat. WANTED : Medical AssistanJ or
Muat be licensed or eligible lor LPN for Phys1cian 1n office praclicensure in WV. Hospital experi· tice for month ol July. Send re·
ence Is a pfuJ. Computer lkills a sume to : Box CW- 7 c/o Po int
muat. Applicant should have Pleasant Register 200 Main St.
good communication and auper- Pt Pteasan~ WV 25550.
viaory akill1. Send resume 10 Bill
Barker; Alliltanl Executive Oi· 180 Wanted To Do
rector, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
ANY ODD JOBS .
2520 Valley Dr .. Pt. Pleasant,
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulchWV 25550. AAIEOE.
mg . flowe.r beds, IJ~,ndscap i ng,
Pleaaant Valley Nufllng 1 Ran• Sidewalk · .edging.
mow 1 n~.
bllltation Center ia looking for a etc .. .free Estimates. Call 8111
port·Oine LPN·Ph. Must be WV II· 304-675-7112,
censed. Uust be able to work aU
shifts, holidays and weekends. Care for the elderly da~. night or
Long term care experience pre· weekend. References. :l04·8 75·
Jerred. Contact Angie Cleland, 1961 .
Auislant Director of Nuraing,
Circle ·N· Convaleacent Home,
304-1175-52311. AAIEOE.
Has 3 Openenlngs Elderly Or
HandlcappeG Person In My
PT ASSISTANT
Jackson GenerarHospital, Rip· Home, 740-441-1536.
ley, WV, hat an opening for a li·
censed Physical Therapy Assis· Oon's Lawn Care, Free Estimates,
tant. The position includes home Reasonable Rates, 304·6 74heallh visits, Inpatient and out· .an.
patient p/'lyslcal therapy visiiJ.
E•perienced q~rpentar will do re·
Sind resume to Human Reeoun:· modeling, dec:ks, vinyl siding,
11, "Jackson General Hospilal, plumbing . Free estimates. Call
PO Box 72!1. Ripley, WV 25271 . Jim Shull. 304·875-1272. ReierEOE.
·
ences upon request
Scenic: Huts Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Applic:atlons For Furniture rep.air, relinish and r estoration, alao cua:tom ordetl. Ohio
Part· Time STNA'S. and Part-nme
Valley Retinishing Shop, LarrY
RN'S (Day &amp; Evening&amp; Shifta 1.
PhiiMpe, 740·9112·6516.
Please Apply At Sc:enic Hills
Nursing Cen1er, Monday -Friday Georges Portable~ Sawmill, don·t
Ft0m 8:30A.M. ..:30 P.U.
haul your logs to the mill jult call
304·615·1957.

-nga

3 Bedrooms, 1 BAth, LR, FA..
Kitchen , laundry Room With 3
Acres, Bulavi.lle Pike, 740-441 .
0038.
4 Bedroom 2· acr8t,

Slmllea
north of Pt. Pleannt. Asking
high SO'L 304-713-5767.
1 ·5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4,000 Local Gov't. &amp; Bonk
Ropo'o Call 1·800· 522·2730, X
1109.
Cozy three bedroom ranch In
Hide-A-Way . Acres, Galua Coun·
ty. Fotmal dining area, gr11t I'DOm,
laundty room, full attic. small foytw,
rwo cilr attached garage with remotes, all on one plus acre in
beautiful country setting with
Green Twp. schoOII. A real steal

in rho mid 90's. Call Will at 740·

In Pt. Plea..., 11r - . Brick. 3
bdr. living 1. dining room, largo
kitchen, lull ba-n~ 2-car
rage, on 9110 oc:re,. 1.5 mlltll"'"'
olry llmlr~ 304·1715-1436 or 30..

525-8318,

Lovely Country Home On SR 7
South With A PrMth•klng River
View. Vert PrMito Soltlng On 2 11
2 Acres .Bul Only 10 Minures
Front Goltpolla. 3 ·4 Bedrooma, 2
112 Baths, Hardwood Floan, 2
Fireplaeet, New Heat Pump, New
Kitchen, Many Exuas. Won'l Last
Long II $110,000.
Call Virginia L. Smith Realty At
740·445-8808 Or Coli Cora AI
740·24S·g430 For lloro lnlllrmo·

near

Three bedroom home In Racine,
one born, $39,500, 740-040·3228.

II VoY Have Any Qye&amp;llons,
Pleaae Contact Usa Shou At
740-+lt·/112,

Applic:ations·WIII Be Accepted
Fn&gt;m tA.M. To 4:30P.M.

Tlvee bedroom, beth and hall, in
Middlopor~ c:oll 740-992·3415 tlrer s:oooranylme ·
T.hroo bedroom. two bath homo
wilh 70 acres In Meigs County,
wood
free gas, above ground r,ol, dt·
tached garage. 1011 o ex1ru,
No Job Too 81~ Ot T9o
.
Conraci Joe Saunders At 740- $126,000, 740-867·0074.
448·2450, References AYiilable.

~~=N:e•w~:~~:1~~~:.:!.

210

Business.
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommends that you do buli·
people you know. and
NOT to aen~oney thr.ough tht
ma•l until you nave invtlligattd

""'230

A - AT GALLIPOliS
170 Plno&lt;:ml Drt;o
Goltipolil, OH 45831
74().4t6&amp;-7112
I

320 Mobile tiomes
Jor$ale

t2x80 New wiring, Recenlly r•

~~~~~~~·•:•~ap:p=r~ec~la:t~a.

14 x70 3BR. 1099 DoWn &amp;ONLY
1179 por n10. Froo air &amp; helkln·
ing. 1·888-Q28-342e.
1892 Breezewood 14180 2 BMroOms, 1 Bath With Awning &amp;
Porch On Rented lot, 7.(10-•41·

Professional

NEW lANK IIEPO'S Only 3 lehl
Still under warrantr. owner fi nanclng available. 304· 755,
7191 . ·

~~~;:~:,==~~~~
1 and 2

nished and
depoait required, no pets,
gg2·2218.

For lea1e, one badtOom, IWO car
garage apt. 11/C I 'F/A furnace.
$325 mo. cleposlr I orldit rei. call
oller 8 prn 740-.4555.

Single Parent PIOQram. Special
financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes. llaymtnla. at low 11

Gracious living. t and 2 bedroom
aparrmenll at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Uiddl•
port. From $248·$373. Call 740992-SOS. . Equal Ha'using Oppor·

·

S1M.Call now304-755-5885.

I ~~~yw~~~~i;;,;;:
I.

llbor~:~~

c:arnpor,

SPRING SPECIALS . '
$4HDown
Ufbrtd11-. Ptrym.nfl

$17,111&amp; .. 31111.

Ret&gt;o•

Double WidH And Singkl\\ldaa
WOnI Last Longl
Cal: 1-888-738-3332

340 Business end
Buildings
Building 32x78. 1110 Viand
Strati, Point Pleasant, Cal 7•0+It·8585.
•

350 Lots &amp; Acreege ·
(AmiffiON DEVELOPERS,
SMALL BUSINESS,
COUNTRY ESTATEI
83.95 Acres, Approx . e Ac:re
Lake, Mobile Home With Large
Add On Don, Gallia County,
County Water And Electric
$2,600 Per Aero. 740-388-111178, '

e. 1u -· s•ooo

lnd
t 75,orgon
3 wood/coal
080, aeat,
4' alocrlo
wllh -

Instruments
Spinet piano far sale, fair condi·
tlon, leave message after 5pm,
740--2201 .
.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
2000 lb. ·corn cribs, oMCellanl
:condilion, 12 ron auger, excellenl
concilion. 740-aae.erJ1
·
International GUO 7ft Hay Oint ,
:Gahl 95 Grinder Ulalt, John
.Deere 12ft Transporl Disc, au ex.
oond. 304-213-4215

BuildinQ:- Silet·2 Acres each,
convenient yet privata. miles
from Point Pl•aant 1 11.(1 mile on
Bethel Rd, oil Sandhill. no olngle
widea. $14·16,000ea. or a aetas
t&gt;r $37,000. 304-87S.70.a beloro
Opm.
•
4

e

~ Lots on Allison Lane for mort
Inti callafllr 5pm. 304-1175-51011.

360

'

1088 Ch"Y 4 WD. Shorr Bod ~
Wit/'1 Topper, ·to,ooo ·Miles On .•
Rebuih Engine. Has Lift &amp; Sl!ilr Kl\ J.
Clean ·Inside &amp; Out, $6,500 Firm, )
Call Allor 5 P.M, 740·245-5829.
I

~:·:· :1: ~o:~ ~~yager V·8, !~
Laturner $7,500 : · Cat 2t5
152,000: Car 215 135,000: Cat
411 $25,000; 04H $45,000; Hera
Powell Driving Hammer, $25,000:
1972.40 Ton Lima Truck Grade,
$45,000; 740·843-2015 Afttr· 4
P.M.; After 6 P.M. 740·843-21344.

One Bedroom Apartment, UtiUiiel
Paid, No Pet1, Reference• And
Dopolil Required. 740-448-1370.
Rio Gran«se, one room and bath,
$2!10 monlh Includes uriliDH, do·
po~t required, 1-8118-840.0521.

Twin Rlvlft Tower, now accept·
ina appllcaliona for 1br. HUO
tubtidizec:t apt. tor elderly and
nandlcapped •. Available Howl
EOH 304-67,HI711.

450 · Fumlshed

Rooms
Circle Molet Lowest Ratti In
Tow.n, Newly Remodeled. HBO,
Clnemu. Sl'lowtime I Oitney.
Ro11t, Or Monthly Rollo,

w-,

Con1truction Worktrl Wetcome

740-441·58U. 740-441·5187.
Sleeping rooms wiin cooking.

hook·ups. Calf after 2:00 p.m.,
304·713-5851, Muon wv.

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home 1lt1 available bet·
ween Arhens and Pomeroy, call

140·385-4387.

490

For Lease

Building 32• 78, 1110 VIand
Street, Point Pteaaant, Call 74~
448-8585.·

MERCHANDISE

510

~sehold

Goods
Applianc:ea : ·

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

630

Do-Wicla
311edroorna.2Bett.
11,885 Down
Pw Monlh
lncluclot Doli.ery And Sat Up
Cal 1-1100·251·!!070

sag

3 Sullolk Ewollll! Suitolk Lomba.
Joseph A. Peacney. 2 112 mUes
pootllaoon Ca. Falrarounds.
AOHA Mare, ayra,otd, lnctnthro
Fund, Wtll·broke, grea1 trtll
horse, Braodmare, 4-H shown.
$1,700. nogoliabl-. 304 ·875·

Lawn UoWer Black &amp; Decker,
Electric, Good Condilion, 740·
258;1818.
.

4-400.
Fair Pig1 Excellent Bloodline, call
740-245-5872, Or 740-387-0583.

Lilt Chair, Good ' working Condi·
tion,.I1So. 740·370-2720. AFTER
8P.,..

~s86~-ro~1~9~
. ------~-,

1983 Pontiac Transport Van, 3.~~ ~
liter V-e engine, AIC. cruise. 88k ~
miles, $7500 lirm, call 7-t0-992--";·
ro28,or evvnings 304·1102-3-480. • '

740 , Motorcycles

_

REAL ESTATE

•

3 Bedroom wlfull

760

Auto Parts &amp;

three

•?9843

35"""""
35 Part ola
Clo-11

' Type ol
monkey
7GaoM ....

South

West

North

I •

Pass
Pass

I"'

INT

37 Surrounded by

31 Uahl colton
fa6rlc

a Chemlalaufllx

I Soak.•fllx
10 lniMI'abed

21 Roblnaon 22 FMI

11 lllon-

12Ru..... no

contrhlon for

11 AI- lalltncl

23

3NT

'(l)J Wf:!Z£ ~INC:&gt;

we c.DiZOf.t\m'(

~"-CuP~!

BIG NATE

PEANUTS

a.nua ol anta ·~

24 Petformed

('

·~
251lff
21YMm
27 Auttl.

,,

unknown
21~
llke--

Eut

30 MalchM palra

All pass

31 Formerly,
IOt'mel1y

Pass

37 Phyalciana'

By Phillip Alder
Following on from the excellent
"Counting at Bridge," Mike
Lawrence (aided by the Pf08llllllming
skills ofF~ Gitelman) has produced
a second great product, "Private
Bridge Lessons, Volume I."
The disk contains over I 30 deals
on seven topics: endplays, squeezes,
locating the opponents' high cards.
mystery deals (in which the line of
·play is unclear), safety plays, per·
centage plays. and entries. As you
progress through each deal,
Lawrence asks you the questions you
should be asking yourself. (He also
makes useful observations about the
bidding.)
Here is one deal from the locating
section. Hide the East· West cards as
best you can. How would you play in
three no-tru!llp after West has led the
spade two?
'
Your controct seems 10 be on the
line at trick one. If you misguess the
spades, you will surely fall to imme·
diate defeat. Yet it isn't a guess.
Answer this question first: What
happens if · you make the correct
spade play?
·
You still aren't home. You need
both red-suit finesses to work. So,
you should place East with those
l&lt;.ings. And how many spades has
East got?
Assuming W~st's lead is honest.
East has five spades. If he had ace·
fifth of spades and both red-suit
kings, probably he would have over·
called one spade. The answer is
clear: Call for the spade king.
I agree wholeheartedly with
Lawrence when he claims thatlocat· ·
ing your opponents' high cards is the
. . ITK)!;t important topic in declwer-play.
You must have Windows 3.1 or 95
. on your computer. The disk is avail·
able for $37.95 postpaid from Mike
Lawrence. I3 I Alvarado Road,
Berkeley, CA 94705.

40P,. ..nt

·41 Agree
. 42 Fum genua
43 Strip of wood

cumncy

.47 FI-t
41 Yortctlllre

,._

.

53 Chuf'l'h

'"'

8824.

Block, bite~. • - pipel, wind·
OWl, llnlll' ttc. Cliuclt Win-.
Ria Grandt, OH Call 740·245·
5121.

560

.

1090 Chovy Lumina V· 8 4dr,
auto, till, c:ruiae, high mileage,
good running , depll'ldable, never
wrockad. 12,500. 304-862·3507.

Pets tor Sale

1990 Red Eagle ·Talan TSI a111.
wl'leal dr1v~,ps,pw, pi, a,mlfm
cau. 5spd, 15,000 miles.
304ce75-li856.

by Lull Campo•

c.brity ~ CIYPIOOtolllftl are Crulecllrom quol.ltiont by flmOuS ~. puc and prHCtnt
Eich t.tt.fln the clphtt' 1tanc11 for INittlel. Todl)l 'aclw: X ~z

s•.ooo.

1991 Geo Storm GSL E•, cond.
air. AT. PS. PB. 13.500. 304-875·
5403.
1991 Niaun 300Zx 2+2, 5 speed
manual. •EIIc. condition. CO ptayer,
t·lop, c:over. 31,000 mile1.
. S12.000, ~40-448-3131 .

p

c w8

WAXJD

OPTJDDZK

KII. JWZFPU.'

VFMB 'KKT

LilT

YMaBW

EMNKa'O

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "1. feel proud being CliNean ... we ha.;. n~~er had a
c:hampton be Number One on the wo~d in !.ennis ." - Marcelo Rlos

''·

s~~4llA-J&amp;£trs·

0 fDIIr

Credlr Problomo? We Can Holp.
Euy Bank Financing For Used
. Vehicles, No Tutn Downa, Call
V'~klt, 740.440-2887.

iinlltieei be_,,:-

orerrer home. 304-1175-5182.
• , ., f

I

:

•I'

Roctrr~ngo

lonors of tho
scrambled -rda be-

law to form fDUr

~mph! -rds.

•. I

GI D N0 I

I

,,
"',.''
I•

R0 GGE

•'
'
••,

I I I'·I

,.

My granny always told me
that a lrue friend never getS in
your way unless you are •••••

~---,r-wi:_N_I~-.. -,o-E-1'...,1 ~-~omptere

,. .1
•

•

•

•

•

FELL R161lf
OUT OF THE

•

••
"'e chuckle quotod

by filling In the miu1ng words
you do.olop from step Na. 3 below.

'•

..

0

'

,.

,,,"•.

DESK,M~AM ..
I

SCIAM UTS ANSWIIS
Ravish • Mixer· Omega • Martyr- MARRY HIM

A famous statesman said that his most brilliartt
gelling his wife to MARRY HIM.

achievement was

ITUESOAY

•

MAY12I

.ASTRO·ORAPH

.._jj

•'I

::::

IUT MILT
Ill ......;.........;; 1411H ., CLAY I. POlLAN _;;___ _ __
_PUll
__

wilh air lnd awning, 304-773',s535 ' o

'

'',.

OCWZWZW

.l•

e

,.

AFDDKT

'

w

ZFLK,

FB

EWO

-~---B~prn-· ------------~• ~•
c

Home
Improvements

I

r

'AKZZW

••
==-.;;.;.;.;.:.,::....,...;.
·
•
11il85 Wilderness camper 21", ·.;

810

,,

"·
•I

! ·

SERVICES

,,,

I'

1•

SUmmer Speciol: 11101 32' Doluxl
Terry 51h Wheel Trailer Now Ovti •
S25,000 Priced To Got $12,800 ~1
Ntor 5~11 . 740--..318. .
•

'..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
..

304·372-' I

Campers&amp;
Motot Homes

,,

_....,.,

Two now 2!15175 R15 Remingroo 1
tires, oritjnal cost $110, wont $75.
coli 740-985-4334. leave mea·

790

r

52 Sell

31133 Of 1·8()(1.213-0320, __~ ),
,_;..;..;;..:..::.:..:::.:..:=::.._

-·

;'
II

110 Cong,

~

10110· Dodge Shadow, white, lour
door, 'lir. lih, eu:., low milft, e•cel·
lent condition, $1~95, 740 -91i12·

Unlla of

Sla!MM

.. ...,

'WV.

,.

· 46 Sheth month
. 41

New gas tanks &amp; bad1 P.'I''L o &amp; •\ .

R Auto, Ripley,

,,

01'11· .
31lYPI ol varve

Opening lead: • 2

480 Ford engine, au1o ttiAimi., •
sion I transfer Cllt, can huf·'M
run 11, tOO. Yiu tatle out 304f •
578·2887.

4 A-n

so.-

1

Accassorles

;

dtftnM org.

. nothing

'.'

SouiiiOM L - SChooll, llo.r 171, .
do1achad gorage, prime lo·
fladne, Ohio 45771 , SlSO Ia an lcolliot• . 2 Bedroom, baotment,

~qual OIII!Oriuri~ Employof.

'

"''E"'.

....

....__ 1 _ _ . _ . .

.

.

..,1111ca•

P!Htt oond l~rlto
to Mr.
_,_.._..,_,
'

,.

J

Joe'tl¥-VCRFiftEolfrr.ltl
An WOrk Guo(an304-t71-1724

Livingllotl'l baaement wat•r·
proofing , II) ba1emtnt rtpairl
dQnt, fret estlmatet, llletime
guarantee. 10yrs on job ••peri- . 304-875-2145.

I&gt;"'NQtol&amp; E:ffltlrnr ~.!'~
. lr.l€-OFIT?

.

•
·1

Services

The 5autMrn Local School Oil·
trlo1 hao tho loli"1'ing coaching
pc11111ar11 OYIHtblf lor n.. 1898·
18 achool rear: ·alllstanl high
....... loollol. j - high loo1boll,
aooioltnt·hlgh ochool volleybell.
juniOr hlflll school volleyball. ju·
nlor high bo,o baake1ball (2
coachel), jun1or high girts bat·
- 1 . aul-1 high adrool girls
betktlbtll, tta•rve bllltba!l,
.. rtlty - i n g advioor, and
junior hloh school choortoadlng
tdvltot. All oppllcants mull pol..., or acqulte 1 spoftl medidne
and a CPR c•d.
" " - 740·040·280 lor Jurthor

,.I-ll-&gt;~\ ! ~

1g94 GMC Jimmy 4U, autQ, ..,
loaded, .(ldr, CD( cauette, tiC: . '
cond. 304·875-4230 dal• 30,.• i
875-4853 overinga.
'

··'

go·

2 Bedroom HoUse Burlthl.tt Lane,
Gallipolis, 1340/Mo.: W/0 Hook·
Up. Dopoalr Required. 513·574-

.'·

750

grators,
Day , Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 7~0·4487705,

Retiremenl
pet 112 Prlco I
n Print SS,OO
Sq. Yd. 740-448·7444, Mollohon
Cor pot.

1

1997 Honda X-fHOO Like. New!
Full blOoded Jtraeyl, ago 3·112,. Call Btlween 5·7 pm. 140·258duo July 14 2nd coli 1400. Age 8126 .
Personal computer: Cyril Penti· 3·112, not bred $300. 1emo. old
Yemaha V·Mu 1200. 13,000
un] . Proc:usor 186 · MHZ, 11· hoilar $250. 304-1175-3150.
Mil11, Extra Corbin Seat, BackJ
mqnitor, 24xCOR Rom. 48 MB
Oualily
BlaCk
Anguo
Bulla
11
·15
rest,
Windshield, Excellent Condi~.\
Ram, Microsoft moult; 32 bit monrn~ 304-1175-0248,
tion. $3,800, OBO 740·379-2825.
video card 2MB. 5altwaro: Micro·
oolr DOS 8.2.. Wlndowo 3.1 &amp;
Boats&amp;'Motors - '
TRANSPORTATION
several gamea. (Complete IBM
• for Safe • " · ,;
Comparible Sysreml $475. Call
304-675-5428.
1969 so, Imp 19 112ft d.. p.v"
710 Autos tor Sale
Pomeroy Thrill Shop ·now buying
beige . WI &amp;an~ i~rerior, · 6cyl: ~
large ouralde toys and baby ·a~ Muorang SVO, 5 speed, PW. 190hp. Mercrultt~ 1nboard motor J
itema, wa!ktrl, loddiBf c;a'r 1eats, PL. K., 13.000 on body, 1.000 on ~1fh trailer, life preservera i
I[C. Tuasday lhtaug/'1 Friday, 7.(10· new engine with Ford warranty,
bumpers. $2.750. 814-446·3814.
992·3725.
.
nice car, $4000, 740.Qg2-7514 or
11i17&amp; Taylor Craft 17ft. open~. ." ~
740-9411-2210.
Al SFumhuro
OOhp. Chryaler motor wlttailer 1 ~~
1110 ·1110 HONDA CARS FOR $800. 304-675·5010 ahor Spm or ·.,
· ~...,...,wv
·~'
auy, Sill, Trade
1100 Seized &amp; SOld Locally This leave mn~age. "
'
Monrh. Coil 1·800·522· 2130 ht.
Ulffd &amp; Anli~ea
1981 Hurricane Dadlllo.r~ 19' fi.
4420.
Furniture.
, 1o&amp;O HP Mariner motor,
304-713- 5341.
1980 ·IIIQO Trucko For 1100111
new 18811 and carpel, ra:;&amp;!ltd And Sold
Wfcas.s tne, live well, trolling
Sc:ootera, Elecrric: Wheelchairs,
Loc:olly Tlio Monti\
Salaa : Rental, Traaa, New &amp;
motor with remote steering, cigaren&amp; lighter, buoys, cover, t'Opts,
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 740·
rruc:tco. ..
1·8Q0.522-2730, X 3001,
446·12113.
.
deplh finder, ·skies. all nardwarr.
sssoo. 140·742·2190.
'
Side-by· side relrlgera1or, exer· Hl81 Corvette Clauic, 50,000
else bike, rowing machine, col· · Miles, Asking $10,700, 740·3e7- 1988 24ft. Pontoon 1989-SOHP -'
fee table, 2 end tablll, comprtl· 0218.
mo1or. hard top, stereo wllniiler~ ~
, I
aor, link top, Gravely grater. 304- -=-~::-:--:---~-- 304-6 IS· 7.146.
675-5114B.
1982 Curtaoo Supremo, 2 D. 280
VB. Good Condition, 11.800 Or Kawasaki STS Jet ski, ~till unDaf 1 ~
lleol Ollar, !40-it2..5118.
Waterline Special : 314 200
warranty, lhree seater, 83 horse·; '
$2U5 Per 1oo: 1" 200
power, boughr new July ol '97 , l
·$37.00 Por 100: All Bra11 Com· 11184 Old Cunau 305 V·8 ps, pb. three matching Ka.waaaki ski
preuionFitUngslnStock
$1,500 Firm. Can be 1een 11 vests and trailer au go wllh il
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES 2405 Monroe Avt, Pt. Plaaunr. 15000, 140·949-2203 or 740·949:
.lockian 01\io, 1-8()(1.537·9528
WV. 304·815·5010 a!tor 5prn or 2045, 'Will consider trede lor i
Jeave message
good pontoon boat
,,

My Credit, Atuume Pa~·
304-738-7205,
.
HOME M~ko 2 ptyltlume loan, owner fl· :
Miloblo. 304-755,71g1.

Livestock

Recondilioned

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa1hers, dryera, refrigerator~,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances. '6
Vin, Street, Call 740·448·7398,
1·600-499- 110.

•

l

Washeri, Dryers, Rangtl, Relri-

2 &amp; 3 bedroom, in FVmeroy, f300
per month, depoalf required, no
pe11, pay awn utilltloa, cal 740·
gg2·2381 Monday 1hru Friday
9wn-4prn

25311.

4·wo \

Now Taking Applications- 35
Well 2 Bedroom Townhousa
Apartmanra.$295/Mo .. 740·448·
0006.

Real Estate
Wanted

Wo Buy Land: 30 -500 Aoroa,
Wo Pay Caoh . 1·800·213·8385,
Anflony Land Co.

'

Kenmore wuher, needl work
$8§. OBO,· Kenmore dryer $85,
304-8112-2531 .

..

disk winner

1979 Jeep CJ-5 ••• good coild: ' ,
$2,500, 304·511·2088.
• ••

1992 Chovy BiBler 5-10, 4•4, V: •
e, 4.3, air conditioning, 94,000 • •
milea, $6800, c:all collect 740- i

•

1 Zooma
2 Jacob'a aon
3W-m ,

A&amp;econa

•:

Nice one bedroom furnished
apartment in Middleport, c:lean
and qulel no· po1~ 740-992-5833:

all uliibeo paid, $270 per
month. $100 depoolt, call 740·
Qg2. 711011.

I SHORE AM TICKLED TO
HEARTMATII

'
_· -{

~~~~~40~~=~~·1~ZD~·----- · I

diepor~

NO, MA'AM._
I JEST GOT .

i

Auto, Air, 132,000 Milas, S1,600

DOWN

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

~~~~~--~~~~· I
1979 Cadge Van 8cyl, 2 fronl ~~
seats. good tirea, funs good .• 1

1

54 Cenlar

t A 8• 7 3
• K 9 3 2

1

03

,A

34Winby--

South
.. J 5
• A J 7

•

Niuan Pathfinder

51 F -

EUI
"'K 10 9
• K 6
• J 86

5 4 2
Q t0 4

I

740·448.03110.

One bedroom 1par1men1 In Uld·

est
? 10 7 2
B 6 3

I

1gaa

46Polca

33~for·

6 A 7 5

...

go GMC :;&lt;&gt;noma .. 22,000 milts.
4.3 V6, 11andard, sport" side bed, ·II
19000.00740·368.()1)13
••

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

....._.

7 lllll-.l liNd

32 c.rt.ln poaltl'

• Q J tO 9

W&amp;~1H!S
~~

OS Dodge Rom, 314 ton, 4•4, die- tel, 4apd, ll,d overdrive, 41 ,000 ~ ,
miles, $20,000. 79 Chovy 112 ton, •..,
automatic. 45,000 milu. 1 owner. 1
11500.00 741J.40li-10CI2.
1

.

44 Dyeing tub

28 Stop

.. Q 54 2

1183 Dod~e 0·150 Extended" ~ •
Cab, 6 '112' bed, good condition. ~ ;
$6395. 740-992-6154.
- •'
.:....;...;;;_;;
;_;;

1419

55 Repreaanl·

1 Sillier

2t Warship
251.anftl

•K&amp;

EEK &amp; MEEK----..,..--,

Facrory S·10 Wheols (7401 441-

14='

,.••~
••••

4111outblef

11 -Paulo
20 Gambia

_________ '.
__ ____ .

1600. 304-875-3888.

turd";

-----~----· . 1 AIIO trailer space on river. All

30 Acres With Timber Close To
GoiHpoiia With Good Homo Site,
$25,000 740-258-6574. .

12 It Reoding lla1bed. - e -;
4 h. racks. Rear~ 4 h. pial· ~;·
lorm lih. All work
. I1SOO.o¢.. '
1..0-361· 1025.'
... ~
1974 Dodge 1nlck. 1r2 ron llaibed: I
18 H.P. Whlzard ; 740.258' , .. 24.
.

13~=rt

lj

lllwt .
15 Clolhlns ...
18 GIWup- 158 Langth
17 Hlt·- lnlla. 5711aMet

ProfessionatGroomlng by Ap~
pointmantlf. Over 15 yra. ••peri ~ 1911' Chevy pickup. 1r2 ton. shari
ence, evening apPQintmentt bed, 305, auto., air, new tires.
available, 550 Socond Ave. Gtl· $1800.00080 740·245-9357
HpoHs, OH. 74().448-1528.
.
1986 Foid F-150 •x4, Shortbtd,
Ready mld ·Uay·S female 1 .5 302. V-8, IIPFI, 00 Auto. Air,
male while lab puppiet (regia· AMJFM ·Cauettt, Bedllner. Alu·
tertd oa yollow). High quality mlnum Wheela, New Green Silver
wilh local latllor. Hove beon hold Paint 70,000 Miles $5,300 080
• •
and loved dolly. Call 304·875· 740-3111·2825,
•
58011 for pricing and appoit987 Mirsublshi 24 Fr. Box Truck.·: · •
740·258-e/86.
_.- '.••
570
Musical

Apache, pop up

11oves: air comprestor, 1100: 5
microwaves. $20lllc:h; 1hetvlng:
!Ill piJah moworo, SIS oach: """
--------~·1111 typeaol momor~a~-.: &lt;hm
lbr "Apartmentt• Main St. Pi. hoist, teO:·vise, 110:2 gil fUr·
Pleasant, furnished/all utilities nace1; electric WtliOd chipper,
paid $345/mo. ldoa lo• single 150: RDII bell for oma1 rudl. SIO;
poroon. 304-675-2200,
CD'a (rockl abour 500 a111100:
_441 _ about 200 VCR tapoo all $150:
2 Bedroom A~rrm.nr,
740
~
obout 80 rooular Nln- 18pH,
15!8.
an SIOO : Sagos complete; $55
2 Bedroom uptlairs apt 304875• each: abour 60 new adult rated
21349
VCR rapoa, •7 oa&lt;h; olocrnc mo.
10ro; oloc~lc dlgll81: ocatto (pro2bdrm. apll., total electric:, ap· duct), ••oo: pop machine with
pliances lurnlahed, laundfy room keys 1150: ,_ Xerox coping ma·
lac:ilili&amp;a. dose to school in IOftn. china wlrh beoko, 1450 OBO:
Applfcalions ivallable at: Village 740-9411-1012.
.Green Apra. 149 or catl 74D-992· App)e II ComputerJDilk. ••cell.
3711 . EOH.
cond, Wood Bunkbedl excel! .
458 112 Socond Annuo; Galllpo· cond, Antiquo wood toolo, """'"
lla, 2 Bedrooms. AC, Appliances, oond. 740-379-2882
$425/Mo., 1225 Doposl~ Utilltios Btand Newt Greal GUt! CO/Video
Paid/40-448-2129.
atorage unit. Black and cherry.
N""or out ol bdx. $125. Holda up
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT to
9-tO diiCI. alao holdl tapes.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Can
U0·~82· 6838 after pm.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive COs &amp; lllpes not Included. 6
from S270 to 1358. Woik to shop
&amp; movies. Call Jo&amp;0-448· 2568.
Equal Housing Opporarniry,

Now Ooublowide 3BR, 2 bath.
11,325 Down &amp; $2!15 'par mo, 1-

8;18-928-3t21.

.t:ll

NOTICE .
French CIIJ Pol Groomfot
-Oponl

.:608::.:::;3·~~--:~---

Will mow yard1, clean out attiCI, apa•agn. beaamenll. Will haul 1atTmo~~ E·Zflnonclng
1unk ar trash 1~5, pick-up load. ~:~~~:.:~:~&amp;:
304-1175-21347.
948-587&amp;

FINANCIAL

1&amp;98 14170 thrH bedroom,

lncludH I monlhl FREE lot l'8fiL
Include• skirting, deluxt •tepe
and ottup. Only 1187.01 per
monlh wilh 11075 dawn. Call 1·
8QO.t37~

oa·

9393.

Arbors At Gallipolis Currently
Accepting Applications For State
Tested Nursing Auitanra. We
Aft Looking For Hard Working
Dependable Applicants. Benefits
Art Avoiloble,

New

3 Bedroom 1 112 bath, a-'4 ball·
men~ new roo!, llidlng &amp; windows
on 2.4 acres on Sliding Hill ·
TAX SPECIAL
Creek Rd. In Hartford. Has been
appraised . $27,500 . 304·882· Now 3br $9991down S1&amp;g/mo.
Froe Stt·UP &amp; Delivery. Only 3
3858 calbalwoen 8pm-9prn.
Leftl Only ar Oakwood Homos Nl·
tro wv. J04. 755-5885,
House t&gt;r IOie ar 2 -tmenfl. 3
bedrooms, 2 bllha, 2 kitchens, DW Repo 4 Bedroomo, 2 Balho,
nany •tra~ 740-it:l-201 0.
EaayTormo, 1-601).3f13.e8112.

CA. In-Ground Pool. 740·258·

STATETEITEDNUASINO
ASSISTANTS

Mllton·Rt aroo, Glenwood·3 bed·
room, 2 bath mabile hame w/1
acre land, c:iry water $32,000.
Call Naf)CY 304,1715-5540 or 304·
875-4024.
.

Froo Doltnry alloi.Yp
OnlyAIOalcwDadHomeo
~lro, WV. :1(N.755o5881

River View 3 Bedroom1, 2 Bath1,

faciliiYI EOE,

.

2 moll4 ADI·
.wtiltr fyppies , 1125,00 each.
COl: 740-379-21!13
Ful -

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

hospital &amp; _,_ 740·4.a·4113.

s

3BW8112.

For Saki By Owner: Buiavillo Pike,
Brick, Morton Building, 3.'8 Aeres;
35 Ferguson DieseL 740· 448·
4286.

batha, inground- pool, ca,

Will Do Landacaping And Car·
penter Work , Ftee Estimatlll
740·388-8Qe6.
w·111ha 1 . k 111 sh
u JUn or
away. 351
pickup load. 304-&amp;7s-503S.
Will Mow 1 Trim Lawnl, Ansonable Rates, contact Joe Saunders At740·"46·2•SO.

Make 2 Payments Move In No
Payment• Afler 4 Yean, 1· 800·

245-7221 to see this home.

Nict thrH bedroom ranch, lr, IWO

experience
inogymedical
Work,
gerontol.
or healthsocial
care
facility ia requi'red. Tuition reim·
bursamen~ nealrh. denral, vision.
haarirrg. lifo, and 401(kl with omploytr contribution. Point Pleasant Nunlng &amp; Rehabilitation
Centet", Stale Route 82, Route 1, ·
Box 328, Point Pleuant. WV
25550 . {A Glenmark-Geneals

UIIITEO OFI'EA
1908 Doubltwlde 3br, 2 ballta.
11 ,809/down 1259/mo. Only at
Oakwood Hona Nluo, WV 304·
756-5885.

NO!I' 3 Bodroom Home
Only 11110.00 Per Monti!
1-1100·251·5010

lion

Will do babylitlin~ fn my home,
across from Middleport park, any
shirt. 7.40-002·5073.

Large Hfaaion ol uaed homtl. 2
01 ! -~ Starting tt SMS.
Oulck delivery. Call 740·315·
8821.

Apartments
for· Rent

'

,~

2 I 3 bedroom mobile l'lomes 113 carat, mund damond IOfit~~ire,
1280·1300, otwer, warer and size e, peld $600. will lake 1550·
..ah Included, 74().1192-2187.
' Marquia w~ding set 112 c:arat ;
stze 7, paid $1,.00 . Will cake
Two bedroom mobile home. 1n $1250 ; wadding gown with wei I
I
CA. all olec:tric, S325, size 7, paid $700 will take. $300:
740-387-0286 or 740-040·2401.

440

310 Homes tor Sale

K&amp;S Remodeling Painting, .Roof~
ing, Call 740·441-6984, 304-675- Mlddlopor~ beaurllui1Wo atary, 3
6_0:.:2~1.:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ br, 2 ba1h, largo t.r. &amp; lr., oak
1doors &amp; tim, Smith'a .,....,m ooll
cabinets, Jenn·air range, dish·
,..ohar, doraohad {lllrage; Ill' a!&gt;
pornimln~ 74().1192-5243.

SOCIAL WORKER. Ouall1y,
Commitment . . .. the Keys 10 OUr
Success! Management level op·
portunity availabie. Requires a
BSW degree from an accredited
progtam ol aocial work. Must
have current license to practice
· SOcial work In West Virginia and

Hugo 2h80 3BR, 1 112 bath:
Srarting .ar ONLY $39,999. Many
options availabte. 1· BB8-e28·
34213.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

'

-.

ACROSS

'

~

....... .
own ideas today. it could cause you
• Wedne~day, May I 3, 1998
to tum a deaf ear to superior sugges·
In the year ahead, your material lions from co-workers. ,
position can be strenglhened through
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Subdue
enterprise and etron. but do not inclinations today to impulsively
become too daring or foolish. Follow , jump into joint endeavors before
your natural inclinations to succes~. testing the waters. Know euctly
: TAURU~ (April 20-May 20) A
· what you"n: gening yourself involved
treasured axiom says• ."a flird in the ·in. Be slow, not sorry.
·
hal\d is worth lwo In the bush. •• Keep
VIRGO (A1,1g. 23-Sept. 22) People
this in mind today in all of your com· who on: sincen:ly concerned about
mo~tial affairs. both larse and small .
your welfare might want to offer you
Taut;Us. treat yourself to a binhday · helpful advice today. Hear them out
gift. Send for your Astro-Ciraph pre· in detail befon: makins any moves.
dictions for the year ahead by mail·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're
inJ$2 and SASE toAstro-Ciraph, c/o not the type of person who ignores
this newspaper. P.O. Bo~ 1758, Mur· responsibilities. However, today you
ray. Hill Slation, New York. NY might step out of character and leave
I0 I'S6. Be sure to state your Zodiac what needs doing up 10 otheis.
sian.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-~ov. 22) Even
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) thouah material conditions are
Friencb who are in a position to assist improving, this is not the right time
you.miJbt bell off today if they feel to be wasteful or e~lnlvaaant. Focus
you're only co~ying up to them your effOrts on thrift and p~nce.:....
becMisc they are needed. Be sincere.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
21)
Today you mipt be a shade t~
you are unduly impressed with your

.

..

opinionaled fo[ your own good. You
may lhink you're impres.~ins others
··you are, but. not necessarily in the
right way.
,
&lt;::APRICORN (Dec. 2:f.Jan. 19)
Keep a lock on your tonsue today, or
else there's a pcl!lsibility you may not
be able to keep an imponant secret. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Do
not pennit your e~travasant whims to
gain the upper hand today. If you pal
around with ·big spenders, there's a
chance this could happen. Call your
shots for yourself. .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) It
will take II10I'e than your charismat·
ic personality 10 aet you by today
where important goals are coroc:emed.
Objectives can be achieved throulh
dedication, not smiles end one-linen.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) Usu·
ally, you're a· logical. methodical
individual, but today you might leave
important matters up to chance and
severely lessen your chances for sue·
cess;

..
'

'

I

•

··.f,
.&lt;
,,.

�.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel·
·

Page 10

.Tuesday, May 12, 1998 .

64th anniversary of Chester Cound,

I atlcndcd a production of "Faust"
at the New York Metropolitan
Opera. A staff nurse who had two
tickets had invited me to accompany
her. I could nut swy awak~ and slept
through the entire perfonnance.
We have humane societies fot
dogs and cats. Shouldn'·t we hav~
one for young doctors in training.
programs'/ .. M.D. in Santa Barbara,·
Calif.
:,
Dear M.D.: You bet. The ne~
breed of medical students are:
rebelling against such brutal hOurs :.
·and it's about time.
'

mailed out soon covering the various

activities being planned for the year.
Mass preceded the meeting con·
duced by Olita Heighton: vice prcsi·
dent. The pledge to the nag wa&lt; given
and reporiS were heard. Several reports

.

Lawrence Schiller, who co-authored "American Tragedy: The Unce~
sorcd Story of the Simpson Defense" with James Willwenh, said Simpson
wii'l he a mere presence and not a,character in the lilm based on the book ..
· "O.J: docsn 't exist in the film,'' be said Monday. "This is a film about
attorneys dealing with evidence and the real process that goes on behind thi:

on upcoming events were given. Anna
Blackwood reported on the Senior Cit·

izens renewal levy, and it wa&lt; note,d
that Sister Fidelis Bell visited over the
weekend when First Communion was
given to five children.
The program was given by Anna
Blackwood who used "Why D'o
Catholics Do That" as her theme.

'

An exchange of seeds. bulbs and.
plants was a fcalure of the Winding
Trail Ga;dcn Club's meeting held
recendy at the home of Valerie Notting·
ham. Long Bottom.
Hosta. glads. dahlias, diU, and ele·
phant ears were among the plants
exchanged with Alice Thompson giv·
ing tips for llowering plants. She said
that after digging the hole. pul in a mix·
tune of one cuP Epiloo saiL&lt;, three cups
bone meal, and bile cup of sugar.
It was noted thai Peggy Crane.
Gladys Cumings. Noningham. l'hompson Karen Werry. and Bea Bacca
al.te~ the regional meeting held
teeently at the Senior Citizens Center.
They repoited on a talk given by Scou
Damitz of Bob's Mmt on bedding
plants. and an anangernent dcrnortstratinn by Pal Holter.
Gladys Cumings presided at the.
meeling with Nottingham reading "A
'Pack of Seeds." Members made bas·kets in a workshop conducted by Pam
Milhoon of Basket Weave. Reti'eshrneniS were served to those rwned and
Debbie Mohier. Addalou Lewis, and
Melva TlliC)'.

Schiller is producing the three-hour special. which is to air on a Sunday
night on ABC. He hopes to stan lilming at the end of this year and get the
movie on the air next spring.
Schiller said Levinson, the director of "Wag The Dog," "has the ability
to bring humor, wit and irony into the most diffi~ult circumstances."
Schiller collaborated with Simpson on his jailhuuse book , "I Want to Tell
You," and is working on a book about the Jon Benet Ramsey murder case. '

'•

P .0 I N I

PLIAIANI

w-

c11oc- jubilee
.. ..~enary c I .,......,
. Celebration of the jubilee anniver·
sary of Sacred Heart Oudl was dis·cussccl 81 a recen1 mcc:ting of the
Catholic Woman's aub held rm:~llly
Ill the cfudt,
c.dlollt

. Janis
Macomber. community ser·
vice
chainnan. reponed that the collec.'
tion will continue until the third Satur·
day in June at which time it will be
delivcn:d. Janet Morris. .vomc~' s activ·
itics chairman. noted ;hat a yard sale
has been planned for J•tnc 6 in Rutland.
Opal Dyer gavc·the yr·~•h rcpon stating
that Eric Montgomery 1\lCeived fil'lil ·
place on his pcanUI butter brownies a1
Pomona judging. The junioos earned
$20 in a split the p&lt;11 they held recently
with Wanda Fcny being the winner, it was noted.
There wa.&lt; a discus.•ion on renova·
tim wOO; at the hall. Vicki Smifh. lee·
turcr. bunorcd the oldest month presenl
Dorothy Bolen. and rcmill!blii'LiiM
to fClllCtllber their II10ihcr.l on M001er's
Day. Next meeting will be on May 16
6:30
·

LAS VEG.AS (AP) - ~ annual
World Series of Poker got a royal flUsh
when red-hot actOB Matt Damon and
Ed Norton ~wed up to do·a little catd
sharking.
·
The actors. who play poker players
in the upcoming movie "Roondcrs,"
entered the oo-limit· '!Cxas Huld'cm
contest. wltich has an estimated puniC: of .
$1 million.
The duo tried to lit in on Monday
·with the other 350 players in the oolimit Teu&lt; Hold'em evenL bulthat did·
n't wm for long. Horilcs of rcponcrs
and gisglins girls swanncd about the
poker room with Ra.&lt;hin~ cameras

If the 992 Exchange Is a FrH Part of Y~ur
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel
DIAL

I992·7834

By .IM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Swtf
Meigs High School and Middle
School an: the targets of a S4S2,464
eneogy conservation project, follow·
ing Tuesday night's regular meeting
of the Meigs Local Board of Educa·
lion.
·
The board accepted a· !'fouse Bill
264 proposal from the Trane CQm.
pany of Columbus following a ~sentalion by Ron '1'homu. school ser·
vice engineer for Trane. ·
.HOiiSC Bi11264 is a stale program
in which energy conservation pro'
jeciS 11e paid for through energy sav·
inp.
The company proposed n:piacing
boilers 81 the two schools and mak·
ing lighting UJlll'lldes with a total cost
of $452,464.
Last month, the board met with
n:presentatives of Sabo 8t Associates
Inc. of Grove City who submitted a
proposal for·lighting !1J'811111es, boil·

pan of educational funding.
Buckley said the district will get
additional funding, but added thai the
state will exercise mon: control over
how the money is spent by districts.
"DPIA is going 10 run school dis·
tricts in this pan or the state," he said.
The district will likely have to use
DPIA funds to offer all-day. every_day
kindergarten. Buckley said, nccessi·
tating the hir1ng of at least three addi·
tiona! kindergarten teachers.
"You will have to addless all·day,
every~y kindergarten by your next
meeting, • Buckley told the board
members.
In ·personnel matters, the board
hired Carolyn Smith a.&lt; Elementary
Summer Enrichment Program direc·
lor and Donna Wolf as ~umrner
school math teacher.
Karen Walker was hin:d as middle
school volleyball coach and Linda
Lear a.~ middle school newspaper
advisor. ·

er n:placernent and renovation (II a
Theboardestiiblishedthesalaryof
tolal cost or S275,000.
.
director of transportation and main·
The Trane proposal is mort: tenance al S46.119 and cn:atlll! the
expensive because the company pro- position of .middle~ ;;chool assistant
poses replacin&amp;, 1101 RibUildin&amp;lhe principal/adminilllrative D.'lsistant.
boilers. The ne~ boilers will be · The board also accepted the res·
more efficient thali the existing ones, ignation of Ruby King, cook at
Thoma.\ said. More effiCient boilers Meigs High School, for n:tirement
an: available, but they arc 11101e purposes.
CRYSTAL COLEMAN
EVAN STRUBLE
expensive and frequenlly encounter
The following were hired a.'l submaintenance problems. he explained. stitule aides: Phyllis Witherell. DebAfterwanls, Superintendent Bill bie Cundiff, Melissa Conde, Nancy
Buckley updated the board . on Freeman, Kimberly Oliphant, Teresa
changes ip Disad'vantased Pupil Pauerson, Wanda Shank and Connie
Impact Aid fUnding for the 1.998-99--Soulsby.. ~
·ldtoof'year. ·· •
••
Hired a.t sllbstitutc bus drivers
Schools are awarded DPIA fund• were: Gary McKnight. Kevin Jewell,
Southern High School's cla.'ls of regional scholar in 1997.
delermined
by the number of student~ Oliver Norris. Ron Wililon. David
1998 will be led by three w-valedic·
She is a two-year member of the
on
public
assistance, Buckley Williams. Carla Milhoan. Ben Upton
torians and one salutatorian during National Honor Stx:iely where she
explained.
In
poor.
rural district, the Jr., Diana Johnson, Janet Hartley. Dec
the annual baccalaureaiC IUid com· serves as chapter vice ~sident, a ·
. mencernent exereise Sunday. 8 P·n:'· - rnemlll'r of the quiz bowl team. 5111- DPIA fund comprises an important Willis, Lou Hemsley · and Carlos
nt the Charl~s W. Hayn:'an Gymrta.'ll· dent council and Fellowship of Chrisurn at the htgh school m Racme.
tian Students. She has wolted in the
Co-valedictorian Cynthia Kaye school store for several yean;.
Caldwell. daushter of Mr5. Ch11,~1y
She. .will a11end Berea- CoiJege,
greenhouse farming and the othef on
Lavender. Sy~u.~. arid ~r.. How~ Berea. Ky.. on scholarship and plans By JIM FREEMAN
Pomeroy's downtown business area.
Caldwell. Rac1ne. ha.~ partiCipated m to eventually pu11!UC a degree in vet· Sentinel Newa Stiff
He also criticized an article in the
·
Becoming
"souvenir
savvy•
was
basketball, volleyball and soflJ!all. erinary medicine.
Columbus
Dispatch Ia.~ month con·
serving a.~ captain of both the vol·
Evan Tyler Strub~£. son of Mr. and the !IUbj«l at Tuesday's luncheon
Ieyba! I and basketl)all teams and Mn;. Michael ,Strub~£ of Syracuse. is meeting of the Meigs COunt~ Cham· cerning Appalachian illiteracy.
·The story is full of stereotypes
~eiV!ng numerous at~l~tc awards the ~~enior class president. president ber of Commerce.
Guest speaker at the meetin1 was including one comment that the "fiN
111Ciudt~ll Southeast D10tnct Second and two-year member of tbe school'$
Team _Sortball. All-TVC Volleyball chapter of the National Honor Soci- Becky Baer, Ohio State Unive1'5ily · thing Appalachians lenni in high
. and Dtstnct 13 .~VP V~lleyball. .
ety, editor of .the yearbook staff and Extension Agent for Family and school is that Route 33 · lead.&lt; to
Consumer Services.
Columbus,· McDade said.
She has partiCipaiCd 1n the ~e1gs school jr.lge correspondent.
She
said
there
are
four
tourism
McDade !IBid Meigs County is
County Academic Banquet and tn the
He is in the drama club and has
Soul~m Academic Banquet every participated in quiz bowl for four styles: ethnic art.\ and peoples style; "headed in the right direction" liS far
years1.nce I~'J. She serves as student years, being AII-TVC quiz bowl for history and parks style: active out· a.• economic development is con- ·
council ~·~~nt and has been ~ two years. He was Governors Schol· doors style; urban entertainment c:emed. He cited the recent opening
of the University of Rio Grande'~
51udent council for four years. She 1s ar leader for two years. a National style.
One thing al{ 'tour Slyles share in M~igs County Center as an example .
a two-year_member of the Nalional Day of Prayer panicipant and a
common is the desire for souvenirs.
MeiJs County Human Services
Honor Soctety.
.
member of 4-H for two years~ .
She IS a Red Cross Blood Drive
He has received the Ohio Regenl5 she said. Tourists spend about a third Director Michael Swisher said the
volunteer. has ~lped ~e Otambe.r Scholarship and will altend Ottctbein of their money on souvenirs, she anicle did a "disservice" to the
of Commerce dmnen. 11 a two-year University where he. m:eived the added.
APJllllachian region, and he encour·
'!acation Bible School teacher. a President's Scholarship. He will study
"You luive to produce what age people to write !ellen; to the
tourists will buy," she said.
·
Columbus Dispatch stating the arti·
llfesuard at t~ Syrac~ ~P'l! and organizalional communication.
was named M1s.~ Congemahty tn the
Saluworian William Albert Young · Be CJU~ive and original. she said. cle was unfair.
Racine Fall Fe.•tival.
11. son of Mr. and Mn;. Bill Young of Ways to do this an: by bivins unique
Palty Pickens. speaking in the
This fall .she will atlmd Ohio UniCondnued ,.. .-ae 3
logos. numbered limited editions or absence of Touri&lt;rii Director Karin
versity. where she ha\ received a
biographical information about the Johnson, said the Cumberland
scholarship. majoring in biolosy.
crafter. Souvenirs should be signed Princess tour b9at will make its first
·Ford recalling
Crystal Lynn Coleman. daughter
slop for fhe year in Pomeroy on May
by the crafter, she added.
of Mr. and Mrs. Dave K~1m;a of million vehicles
Effective promotion of IOUVenirs 27 at4p.m•
Racine, ha.• been in the county acad· ·
The National Ploa Hound AssoWASHINGTON (AP) - Ford requires close CCJOperation and comernie: banquet for several years in Motor Co. is recalling 1.7 million municlllion between the crafter and ciatiOii Days will be held June 25, 26
addition to the Southern Academic vehicles including' .wme F-series mailer, Beer llid.
and 27 at the fairground, she said.
•
Banquet. She was named outstanding pickups to replace faulty l'us nuts thai . 11le community needs to luive an
URG Meigs County Center coorjunior and received the Ohio Uni· clllild let the wheels fall off.
· active tourism a.\sociatiOn. ~sent. diMIOI'· Gina Pellesrino Pines said
versity Alumni Award and wa.• a
The: automaker is voluntarily hospitality training to local employ- open enrollment and registration at
recallinJ F- 1SO pickup trucks and ees.. building awan:llell5 throughout . the center went well. ·
The university is considering COO·
most F-250 pickups and the Expedi- the community about local products,
tinuing
'education ci~R.'&lt;Cll at the cen·
and
know
about
local
atll'liCtioM.
tion and Navi(!ator spon utility vehiincluding
a Kidll' College for
ter
raourees,
culture,
artists.
products
cles from model years 1997 and
youngsten
ages
7-12. she said.
1998. Ford spokeswoman Karea and services, she said.
Ron McDade, economic developShaughnessy said Tuesday.
She al110 pmented McDade a .
Today's
ment
ilirectnr, noted t111: tecent issue
Ford said there were 98 reports of
new URG T·shin for his effons in
l S«tions • 16 Pa1es
wheels separating from the vehicle of Southea.'lt Ohio mapzine features establishing the new Meigs Center.
Vol. 49, No. 16
two stories on Meigs Cc!unty: one on
and four injuries were reported.
'

•

McKnight.
Hired as substitute mechanics
were Dennis Tillis. Gary King Jr..
Ronald Mullins arid Rollie D. Stew·
art II while Coleen Whaley, Kay
Dodson, Jacqueline Hoover, Tammy
Jarvis, Tana Kennedy, Debbie Riffle
and Diane Hendricks were hired as
substitute cooks. Hired as substitute
custodians were Anna Welsh. Nancy
Blll't'ell, Marvin Roush. Lester Stew.
art .and Lonnie Taylor. Hired as substi!ute secretaries were Julia Sayre,
Jacqueline Justis, Patricia Clark and
Cindy Fields.
Hired as substitute teachers were:
Nancy Aldridge. Robcn Austin, Lor·
ri Bmnes, lise Burris, Clarence Ed ·
Evans, Kenneth ..Panner, Michelle
Gillilan. Robyn Hawk, Ami Jo Hold·
en, Beth Ann Hollanbaugh, Tiffany
Jones, Randall Kempton, Shannon
Korn, Ryan Lemlel', Rita Lewis, ·
Christi Lisle, ~ary Ann Neal. Lorre

Osborne, Gay Perrin. David Ramey,
Wanda Ray. Herbert Redman, Angela
Rigsby. Kelly Satterfield. Nancy
Scarbrough, Aaron Scheuer, Rita
Slavin, Jared Spencer. Teresa Va.~ko
and Michelle Winebrenner.
In other business, the board:
.. Approved a contract with the
Educational Media Resource Center
to provide media services to the
school district at a cost or $2.1~ per
student or $5.334.1 S;
- Approved a CORI!'IlCt with the
Auditor of State's office for General
Accepted Auditing Procedures
(GAAP) reponing for $30 an hour:
.. Met in executive session at the
request of.a parent.
·
Present were Buckley, Treasurer
Cindy Rhonemus, board President
John HOod and board members Scotl
Walton. Roger Abbott. Randy
Humphreys and Wayne Davis.

Rut'and.lie''l·eu''S
I
h
·
·
t
purc as.e reques
V' 1

1

·
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department discussed purcha.•ing
property from the village to construct
a new firehouse when Rutland Vii·
lage Council mel in regular session
on Tuesd;ly.
RalPh Bailes met with council to

propcJSe tiK ~artment'tJ!!!lChalie_o(

property adjacen'f to the civic center,
in front of the old Rutland High
School, 10 facilitate the construction
of a new fire house.
Council discussed the proposal at
length. expressing concern that the

. .. , •

area will likely be needed for park·
ing or other uses for civic center
activitie"' especially in light of the
renovalions a1 the center.
According to Bailes, the new
facility would be constructed in the
middle of the lot, with a roadway to
be f!ln51111Cted in_front of the build·
.ing( • ~ · ~
The department contends that a
new firehouse is needed because the
existins facility is too small for pre·
sent and future needs. and becau.•e
Continued on page 3

M

'

•souvenir .savvy• topic of chamber meeting

..,

• Wednesday. May 13. 1998-7 p.m.
State 1'heatte (Main Stteet)
• Tickets:-$7/PCrson Or·$5/Sttadents &amp; Seniors

..

· • Tick.ets Can Be Obtained
~t The State Theatre
•

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppcn;
CHESTER - Chester Township Plains vFVI 9053, Thursday. 7:30
Trustees. 7 p.pt. Tuesday at the town · p.m. RefreshmeniS. ·

Actors' take a
shot. at poker
.

.

Three co-valedictorians
to l~ad SHS:-graduation

Artist Series

ISSUC .

A collection ~ rood ror the rooc1
hank wa.• discu.&lt;scd when Star Grange
77K met rcccntlv at the GranllC hall.

CYNTHIA CALDWELL

scenes.''

'
•,•'

Single Copy- 35 Cents

.

90045

~~ -

Hometown Newspaper

Mei-g s Local Board approves
energy conservation proj-ect

By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Norman Mailer is writing the scrccnrlay and
'Barry Levinson is directing a TV movie &lt;1bout the OJ. Simrsim ca.&lt;e.
'
So who 's completing the all•star trio and starring as the tarnished foutball
Hall of Fa1ncr'?

It was reponed that the committee is
preparing tri-fold pamphlets to be

Lakers,
Jazz advance
In playoffs
Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.

DofA, to he observed
Plans for celebrating the 64th
anniversary of Chester Council,
Daughters of America, were made
when Chester Council met recently at Greenhouse toured by garden club
the hall.
members
It was noted that there arc two living
A tour of Karen's Greenhouse at
charter members to· be recogni1.cd at Portland was taken by members of the
the observance. The upcoming gradua· Riverview Garden Club preceding its
lion of Greta Riffle, who has received last meeting.
several scholarships fium the DofA
On the tour were Beny Boggs,
was noted. She is completing law Delores Frank, · Marilyn Hannum,
school this month. The anniversary of Mary Alice Bise. Ruth Anne Balder·
John and Mary Rose was also son, and Frances Reed. At the. green·
announced.
house members viewed a wide variety
Erma Oeland thanked the members of flowers, vegetables and herbs .and
for their participation at the rally. Law:a each one received a package of seeds
Nice, councilor, presided at the meeting and infonnation on planting and caring
which opened in tituali~tic fonn includ- for plants. After the tour, they went to
ing pledged to the nags, prayer, scrip- the home of Mrs. Frank for a meeting. . HELPING OTHERS - The Meigs High School Nursing Alllltlnt
ture and singing of the National
Steve Bcha, executive director of claaa recently vialted Children's Hoapibllln Columbua. While there
Anthem.
Carleton School/Meigs Industries, and they pre1811tad a collection of pop tlbl to the R-Id McDonltld
The 93rd binhday of Ethel Orr wa.&lt; Jared Spenc'Cr. a teacher a1 Carleton, Houae. The tabs will be redeemed and the ~ · uaed to provide
noted. During a Mother's Day program presented information on the 1.8 mill support for familiee of children ccinfinad to Children'a Hoapltal. PicMarcia Keller was recognized as the levy which was on the May 5 ballot. A tured with the Ronald McDonald Houae administrator, center top
oldest mother, and Julic Curtis a.• the film was shown on the program and the era students, left to rig'ht, bottom, Save Cline, Jennifer Husk,
Chrlatlna Neece and Tish Metheny; second r-, Sara Craig, Stefani
youngest mother. Readings included club endorsed the issue.
Bearha and Brandle Eliott, and third row, Andy Vance, Ginger Darst,
"Special Mom" by Charlotte Granr. · · ~':or roll call members named their Chad
Folmer, and Carissa·Ash.
"Mother" by Curtis; ''Mother's Day" favorite &gt;igns of spring. Devotions
by Erma ClclaDd, ..The Love of a were hy Gladys Thomas wl]o read
Mother" by Goldie Frederi~k. and '11toughts f1f Spring•· and "Bright
"Mother's Cooking"·by E.&lt;ther Smith.
Tomot]'Ows." It wa.• noted that the tm.&lt;h
At an earlier meeting announce- · pickup was handled by Nola Young.
The Community Calendar is pub- hall.
ment of state session to be held Aug. Marilyn Hannum, Frances Reed,
lished
as a free service to non-profit
16-19 in Cincinnati ·whs made in a let· Delores Frank. Maxine Whitehead. '
BEDFORD
Bedford Town··
ter from Helen Taylor. secretary. Ruth Ann Balderson. and Roy ·Han· groups wishing 10 announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is ship Trustees, 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
Report.&lt; on the health of several mcm· num.
bers wa.&lt; given. It was noted that · Buffet style refreshments were . not designed to promote sales or town hall.
Dorothy Mycn; had eye surgery. that served by the hostesses. Mrs. Frank and fund raisers of any type. Items arc
POMEROY
Meigs Cnunly
Mary Rose broke a bone in her hand.. Mrs. Hannum to those named and Ella rrinted as space permits and cannnl
and that Goldie Frederick is nut of the Osborne and Nancy Wachter: Mrs. be guaranteed tn run a specific num, Health Department. free immuniza·
tion clinic, Tuesday, 9to II a.m. and
hospital. Also reponed wa.&lt; the death nf Rccd received the door pnze. and each ber or days.
I to 3 p.m, Meigs Multipurpose
,Etta Will's husbdnd, Harold. .
members received a decorative magnet
TUESDAY
Center, Pomeroy. To be accompa·
· Doris Grueser and Deloris Wolfe ll)adc by Mrs. Hannum.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers nied by parent/legal guardian, to
ihankcd members for kindncs.&lt;es at the
Plains Regional Sewer District take immuni7.ation record.
·
ilcath.&lt; of their father and liuher-in-law.
board.
special
session,
Tuesday.
7
The llarmonville Sripio Alumni
Readings included "You Know ll's
POMEROY - Mass at 7 p.m.
Going to be a Bad Day. When ....... hy A.&lt;SOCiation will meet May 23 for its p.m., Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Erma Cleland. and "A Letter from ann4al banquet and dance. The Alvin Office to consult with legal counsel will precede the May Gathering or
Cousin Mother to Cousin Son" by Shutes Band will provide music for and discuss future project deveiOJI' the Catholic Women's Club. Tucs·
day.
round and square dancing. Dinner and mcnt.
Velma White.
Refreshments · were served · by dance is SIO, the dance only $4. Dinner
CHESTER - Meigs County THURSDAY
E.&lt;ther Smith. Eli1.abeth Hayes. and will be served at6:JO p.m. For reservaCoalition, Tu.csday.
·Conservation
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
tions.
alumni
arc
a.&lt;ked
10
contact
Ruth Smith.
6:30p.m.
Chester
Bowhuntcrs
Club.
Rachacl Lefebre. 742-3099. or Harold
· Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Soruo··
discuss ' upcoming · fund raisers to ity. Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Epis·
Graham. 7420-3033 by May 20.
combat proposed anti-hunlirig ballot copal Parish House.
Club members n.:IJan&amp;e lhinp
to
.
grow

Meigs County's

Send questions to Ann Landers, ere:
ators ·Syndicate. 5777 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif,

Community Calendar

•

Beat of the Bend column, Page 7
Local softball, baseball scores Page 5
Atlanta drops Reds 5-1 , Page 6

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low: SO ·

Where's O.J.?
. Not in his TV movie

Society Scrapbook
Banquet held at Bradbury
Chun:h
·
Bradbury Church of Christ held iiS
annual mother-daughter banquet
recently a! the church.
. The dinner was cooked and served
by the men·of the church at tables dec·
or:~ted with seasonal flowers: P1occ set·
tings were fan replica.&lt; made hy the
women of the church
A message ·in song wa&lt; given by
Jennifer Hicks of Tuppers Plains.

lions of dollars every year. A warn·
ing in your column could save many
an aspiring writer from learning a
cruel and expensiye lesson. ..
A.C.C., Pro Writer in Maryland
Dear Pro: Thank you for an
extremely valuable letter. You have
sa\'cd heaven-knows-how-many
dollars for countless would-be
authors who are easy prey for tile
sharks you've described, not to men·
tion the heanache and disappoint·
ment. Bless you.
Dear Ann Landers: You asked
for comments about overworked and
weary residents and interns. You
stirred up the memory of an incident
many years ago, when I was an
intern at a hospital in New York.
After being on duty for 48 hours.

Sports

May 13,1998

Tomorrow: Sunny
H.lgh: 80; Low.:SO

Dogs ca-n teach us im~portant lessons - if we would just learn
Things You Can Learn From Your sio nal writers organization, and late, Iars to see their work in print. Sad to
ly, we have seen a proliferation of say, they receive a few copies of
Dog
Ann
I. When your loved one comes con artists who promise to make poorly made books, or nothing at all.
best sellers out of aspiring authors. for their money.
home, run to greet him.
Landers
l\HJ . l..OJ AnJclcl Times ·
Getting published i; hard enough
2. Eat with gusto.
The same thi.ng goes for "literary
SyiMhc::aw: an.J Crc•l•lrli
without
these
sharks
cruising
the
agents" who advertise for clients,
3. When i!'s hot, drink lots of
SyftdtUIC.
water.
waters.
especially those who troll the Inter·
The facts are as follows: Any net looking for new writers to scam.
4. Take naps.
,
Dear Ann Landers: I heard
publisher who asks a writer to bear These "agents" charge "reading
S. Don't bite, just growl.
something on the radio this morning
some or all of the cost of publishing fees," along with fees for photo·
6. Give uncondttionallove. ·
and jotted it down . I don't know
7. Stay close 10 your loved one in and marketing a book cannot be copying, promotion, travel expenses
who the author is, but I'm sure any- times of distress.
considered a real publisher.
.. anything they can dream up to bilk
one who has ever owned a dog will
Real publishers pay writers for authors out of money. Would-be
&amp;. When you want something
relate to it. I hope to see it in your 'badly, dig for it.
their books, not the other wav writers also should be aware that
column ... Berkeley, Ill ., Reader
around.
Any publisher that actively any "agent" who pushes.an "editing
Dear Ann Landers: After fol·
Dear Berkdey: There's a good lowing your columns about assorted advertises for writers to submit man· service" or ... book doctor" is proba·
bit of wisdom in those lines, and I frauds and rip-offs. I would like to uscripts should be viewed with bly receiving a nice kickback from
appreciate your sending it on. I caution would-be writers about eJC.Lreme wariness. Naive writers those same editors or book doctors.
would like to give credit to the scam "agents" and " publishers.'·
have been.known to pay these fraud·
Scam artists are ripPtwg off inex·
author, however. Who arc you?
.
ulcnt
·'publishers"
thousands
of
dol·
I am an officer in a large profcs·
.periepced authors to the tunc of mil·
Please let me know. Here it is:

Weather

1.7

Thanks Southern Local Building Committee ·
.
The Bond lsaue for Southern Local School District waa a
controveral-.1 Issue for many years..I think There were niany
f~ctors which led to Its. final approval. First, we had a great
campaign committee. There were several lndlvlduala who
came to the Tueaday meetlnga and helped devise the
Information brochures. The committee kept us aware of the
queatlons the public waa aaklng, ao that we could send out
needed Information. ~any went door to door to hand out
Information. The local Churchea and businesses got Involved.
There were also aome great letters written to the 'editor about
the luue. The moat Important effortl were made at the polla
on Juesday, May 5. Every per.,on who voted for the Bond
luue made a difference.
· '
Thanka to all who were on the team~· Now let'a get on wHh
the bualneaa of making Southern Local the beat lt'l ever
been Ill
Brian Harkneu

P.O. Box457
Racine, OH 45771
(

'
'

Sentinel

C*'"'•r

7

n·illcds

IHH4

cmnn

1$

&amp;!Hmi*

2

Log!
Sporta
Wgthcr

J

+5-6
J

Lotteries
&lt;ugo
l'ld; 3: 04,: """'tl: S9~
~5:

1·3+16-21

W.VA.

. . , 3: 6-).5; DlilJ 4: 3-M-3

848-2741 "
·f

Good Afternoon

0 ltlll OliO&gt; Vollty PIIMJIH.. t'o.

•

DIRECTOR RECOGNIZED • . .lp

c-ty E-..lc Devel-

opment dlteciOr Ron McDidt, rlghl,- NCCiflllad Tu1111ay durIng the ......., monthly lunctt.cM ..-Jng alltte Melge County
ChambarofCO!nmelct br Gina Pelagi'liiO Pl-,dltecttw al . .
Unlvenlty Gl Rio G1•1de Illig~ Centlr. She Jill 1nnlad McDecllt
with a ehltt In Neog~~ltlon Gl hla wwllln Mtabllllllng tile C81olltW.

Community Association.discusses improvement projects
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SanllniiNe•• Sllllf

Villap beautifiClllion piOjectlllld
llpe(ial JIIVItams and activities wae
planned 11 Tuesday's meeting of the
Midcllepoft Community Auocillion
held in the c:onfetence room of Peo. ple5 Bank.
Mary Wise reported lhat Ann
Bonner, urban forester with the
Department of Natural R - .
Wall in town. rccenrly to look • the
trees whicllline Nonh Second Sawc.
It was her rccommenclldon.
Xa!tding 10 Wise, that the am be
removed becaose they have been

"bulthered 10 IJedly over the yean. •
She .ako said thai some ill't now
beJinnifll to die.
W'tse said Bonner also rccom·
mended thllonte die tftes have been
removed, IR!G lllould not be
pluled for. more thM 1 yar. Slle recotmnended apeciftc: ltindl of trees for
the - piMKinp. Witte IIOied.
While in Middl eporl. Bollner llso
viewed the rivedlltlk antlm.de rec·
tru plantin&amp;•
ommeadltions

them will be carried out by volunteers. There arc 37 aitcs to be planied -plus the beds al Diles Park. and
gardens around the Rio Grande
br.lndl buildina on Mill Slreet.
Mayor Dewey Hortiln said that
village workers would remove lhe
bricks from around the trees and
"'"'' in top soil ror the flower beds.
W'IIC reported that some plants have
been donated and tbe Community
AuoNtion set up $300 for the pur·
ct.. of lldditionalllowers. ''
Mei'dlants will be requested. to
It - decided that the trees will
remaili in plalle until fall•llftd !hat .weed and wllel' the plants in front of
pl•s for puttlnJ flowen- IIIOUnd their busines!ICS.

.__

ror

"report was given on the aix·mile
The front pordilenlrance decoral·
ina contest will be Judaed in July. it yellow fllg yard sale and another one
was reponed. Sheets of the contest was planned for theJirst weekend in
rules will be prepared by Myron OctcJber. It was noted that there were
Duffield, president, and PrW will be 7' puticipants in the recent yard sale.
awarded to the winners.
Gina Pines of Rio GnJ)de Uni·
versity,
Middleport Bruch. reported
It wa.• IIOied lhil ne~t week the
orange and lilack Raas will go up for "a run agenda rOc- the summer" not·
ins doll ~ill computer courses
Alumni week. ,
A celebration of Aag Day in June may be olfeml this summer and a
was diiiCII5.'!ed a.• wa.• the July 4 activ· computer lab will be in plalle by the
ities in the villap. Bob Giii'IIOI't i• end of 111111mer. She uid 8 COIIiliiU·
helding up the July 4 ·parlde com· . nil)' opea house will be held in liter.
mittee. Wise n:ported thai planning and spob of lailltive p!Ms for a
for the program is underway. Food "kids college", a wtek-long. half-a.
day event.
booths will be i~ opernt!on.

•

•

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