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Pege 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mason County Home aryd Garden Tour planned for Saturday
1'hree OUtslanding homes and a
beautiful garden will be featured on
the Home and Garden Tour. spon·
sored by the Mason County Com·
munity Educational OutreaCh Service
on Saturday, June 12. The tour will
be from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Tickets with maps for the entire
tour.may be purchased at a cost of S5
at any home on the day of the tour.
Homes on the tour will be designat·
ed by signs.
This year's tour includes the
Mount Vernon-style home of Dr. and
Mrs. Breton Morgan and the French
country style home of Carol and Jim
Shadle on Route 35 in the Southside
~of Mason County. The garden of
Carol and Dan Jones in Meadowbrook of Poim . Pleasant and ihe
modem, traditional home of Tina and
John Rail'!len of Stoney brook Estates,
Sandhill Road, Point Pleasant.
The Mount Vernon-style Morgan
home features distinctive craftsman•
ship, including an octagonal roo111
w~th walnut woodwork and English
made oriental wallpaper. A foyer has
French wallpaper found only in the
White flouse and three other locations
in the United States. The house was
built in the mid 20's by entrepreneur
Harry E. Shadle, owner of the Mor. gan Lumber company and supplier of
the wood used to erect his marvelous·
home and farm buildings, known as
the Mount Vernon Farms of West Virginia. Directions to the home: Take
U.S. 35 toward C)jarleston from
approximately 7.5 miles from Hen·
der~n.
,
, Carol and Jim Shadle's home sets
in a dip of grassy hills in front of a
cool, green lake. The ex terior architecture of the house is French Coun·
try and the interior reflects the creative
talents of the Shadles. Caro!'s.use of
color and fabrics and lim's work with
decorative moldings and panels make
their home welcoming. Every room
has received the magic touch, including the "I Hate Laundry Rooms." Car·

ol calls their home's decor a duke's
mixture. Directions to the home: Take
U.S. 35 toward Charleston for
approximately seven miles from Henderson and watch for signs.
Dan and Carol Jones have lived on
Meadowbrook Drive in Point Pleasant for about 20 years. They own a
ranch style home with an extra lot.
Both are retired and love to work in
their yard and vegetable garden.
There are several flowerbeds in the
fronf of the house .that offer many
'blooms from spring until the first
frost. The side lot has a vegetable garden in the center with flowers sur- ·
rounding the lot along the fence line.
The backyard has a focal point of a
rock fish pond with a fountain. There
are many water' plimts in the pond,
surrounded by inany flowers that
enhance the pond to a place of interest for anyone interestea in flowers.
The entire yard is feqced in with ·
flowerbeds lining the fences with vari. eties that even the homeowners do not
know all the names. Your visit may
bring the Jones family some new
ideas and you may get an idea yourself. Directions: From Point Pleasant
take Sandhill Road, travel approximately one mile and tum left onto
Meadowbrook Drive.
John and Tina Rairden reside in a
new two-story, modern traditional
home 'located at 13 Stoneybrook
Estates. The many windows provide
a bright and airy interior that highlights the oak staircase with a catwalk
balcony. Four bedrooms and three
baths.are eclei:tically decorated. The
Rairden's built their home in the mid
1990's and it was one of the first
homes in Stoneybrook Estates. Directions to the home: From Point Pleasant, travel along Sandhill Road for
approximately three miles, tum right
at the signs.
· For more information about the
home tour, contact the West Virginia
Extension Service at (304) 675 ~0888
or Judy Chapman at (304) 576-2933.

Meigs County's

I

.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- All hourly and salaried employees at Century
Aluminum in Ravenswood were given notice earlier this week that they were
to report to work today in the event of a "no" vote by steelw orkers on a current contract proposal, according to a repon in The Jackson Herald.
The announcement was jointly made by Century Aluminum and the Umted Steelworkers of America Local 5668.
The current agreement was scheduled to expi re on May 31; howevp;sPmpany and union officials agreed on an 11 -day extension to allow tim~r the
ba llots to be printed and mailed to the membership and then returned for
counting. It is estimated the ballots will be tallied by late this afternoon.
Union leaders have been advising their I ,550 members not to accept the
contract offer. According to Local President Jerry Schoonover, the biggest
reasons are the changes in the insurance benefits and the out-of-pocket ma ~-

, . . At approximately 2:30a.m., Miranda Jo Moon, 16, of Henderson, and
' Justin Hudson, 17, of Southside, were killed in a 1991 Chevrolet Cava. 'lier driven by Moon . The vehicle was traveling west on Little Sixteen
Creek Road in Southside, when it apparently entered a right-hand curve.
The vehicle came out of the curve and c.ontinlied left, then went off the
left side of the roadway, traveled up the shoulder and struck a tree headon.
. .
The accident remains under investigation. Assisting on the sc.~ne were
the Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department and the Point Pleasant EMS.
The automobile was. a total loss.

Salem Center VFD wins grant

ESSAY WINNER - Daniel Thornton, a Meigs Middle School stu·
dent, was a regional w!nner in the recent "Loserville" Essay Contest
sponsored by the Ohio Attorney General's Office. Thornton, second
from left, is pictured with Attorney General Betty Montgomery
Meigs County DARE officer Mony Wood, and Meigs County Sheriff
James Soulsby:

SIIIIAIVIIIIIIIS Onlr 59,000 •lltl
WAS $185,995

A grant in. the amount of $3,393 has been provided to the Salem Cen·
ter Fire Department for the purchase of protective clothing.
·
According to State Sen. Mike Shoemaker, D-Boumeville, the VFD
grant was awarded under the authorization of House Bill 215 and was one
of several awarded by the Ohio Department of Commerce.
Shoemaker said that the ~p ~nment of Commerce received numerous
applications wonhy of consideration. Close to 505 depanments requested grants under this program, but by statu)e, the department must limit
the amount awarded to no more than $10,000, unless there has been a natural disaster. This allows the Department of Commerce to award as many
as 120 grants. .
·'
·
According to Shoemaker, these grants should prove useful to the recipients since the average annual budget of those fire departments was approximately $26,197.
.
A computerized ranking system is used to determine wllich departments
will receive grants. Factors considered in ranking included the department
budget, total resident population, geographic size, the number of fire items
and compliance with state mandates. Additional consideration was given to departments requesting funding in order to meet state requirements
for protective clothing and breathing apparatus.

Sale Price $1

Storms rake portions of Ohio
By The Associated Press .
Strong thunderstorms producing'lightning,.high winds, heavy rain and
hail hit portions of western Ohio Thursday and early today. There were
reports of minor flooding , downed trees and· power lines and fe)!l roofs
blown off.
There were no reports of. injuries.
In southwestern Ohio, the sheriff's offices in Hamilton, Clermont, Warren and Butler counties reported numerous trees down and roads under
water. Mothball-size hail was seen in Clermont County, where the roof
was blo'wn off a house in Miami Township.
Scattered power outages also were reported throughout southwestern
Ohio as trees knocked down some power lines.
Wind damage was reported in Seneca County in northwest Ohio, where
a grain silo was blown.across a road Thu~sday night.
·
There also were scattered power outages in Hardin County, along with
downed· trees, the sheriff's office said.
.
Moderate damage was reported in Maple Grove, where a garage roof
was tom off, a concrete block. barn was blown apart and an oak tree was
toppled. Hail, a quarter to half-dollar in size, was reported by the National Weather Service.
Near Ada, a strong thunderstorm produced frequ ent lightning and winds
gusts of up to 45 mph.

$13,995

Racist fliers spur ·investigation

STEPHANiE ANN EVANS
versity, majoring iA' physical therapy.
Vaughan is a graduate of Meigs
High School, and is the granddaughter o f Catherine Colwell Shenefi eld
of the class of 1947. She will attending Wright State University majoring in finance.
Morin graduated from Moran
Hi gh School. She is the granddaugh-

ter of Delma· Riggs Nelson, class of
1945, and will be attending Miami
University '!'here she will major .in
middle childhood education .
Fetty,' grandson of Wanda Gard· ·
ner Fetty, class of 1945, is a graduate of Athens High School. l-Ie plans
to attend Embry-Riddle Aeronauti·
cal University where he will major
in aerospace engineering.

MARBLEHEAD (AP)
.• prompted Gov. Bob Taft to ask for
Racist fliers left on dozens of cars . an investigation. .
·
at a parking lot near Lake Etie has
The fliers, which included
derogatorY. cartoons and pho·
tographs . ~~ blacks and Je)Vs,
were distributed over the weekend
at a boating access point owned by
the state. The access point, which
has about 200 parking spaces for
Today~s
~ars and trailers, attracts people
2 Sections • U, Pages
from all over the nation.
Police learned about the fliers
Calmdar
8
after Ray Brown, a Lucas County
9-10
Classlfteds
sheriff's sergeant, filed a com·
11
Comics
plaint.
Brown, who is black, said he
2
E41todala
Loql
3
doesn't plan to return to the site,
_....,...,_ _ _ _ ___."-::&amp;-!- but was "ecstatic"to hear the gov4
Sporfl ·
- - ernot was concerned.
Weather
3
. "Good for the governor," he
said. "I'm glad he thought it needed to be looked into."
Lotteries
Taft asked Satri Speck, director
OHIO
of the Ohio Department of NaturPkk3:'S·l-5; Pk:k4: 9~-8-1
al ResourceS, to investigate and
Buclu!ye 5: 3·6-10.15·29
"do whatever is inthe state's powW,VA
er to stop ihis from happening
again," said Scott Milburn, the
DaUy 3: 1·5·9; Dilly 4: 4·5·5·6
governor's spokesman.
0 t999 Oltio Ylltt.y hblilhln1C..

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

Membership open in hospital foundation to ·Meigs County residents
elects the board of tru stees of the
hospi ta l, individuals who live in
those counties must pay dues of $25
per person no later than June 30 by
check, cash or credit card . Memhcrship dues ar~ considered .by the hospi tal to be a charitable contribut ion.

Foundation members will .be
notified of the annual meet ing and
elec tion of trustees to be held in Sep·
tcmbcr at thc .hospital.
'
For :more inforniation residents
may co ntact the Community Rela· ·
lions Department, 592-9300.

· N's 'Moneyl rie,'
quits network
.
.

outer spacs:.
Dobbs has been host of CNN 's
ni ghtly financial wrap-up show,
"Moneyline," and is also president
of the spin-off financial ' network,
CNNfn.

and ~,;ompany an opportunity to meet a nd assess the situati on to dctenn~ne

the approprialc course of action. even if there is a "no" vole. He said the obje~­
tivc of the notice was to avoid an inadvertent work stoppage at the redUe·,
tion plant and fabricati on plant facilitieS .
Century Aluminum 1s Jackson County's largest employer. and also emplo~s
many from Mason. Meigs and Galli a counties.

Man charged

ment.

a

NEW YORK (A P) - Amid
reports thai he. c,lashed with the network's top executive, prominent TV
financial journalist Lou Dobbs has
quit CNN to launch a new lliternet
venture devoted to the coverage Of

He descnbed the proposal as clearly not a concessionary co ntract,
The economic package for steelworkers includes a $l .OQO SJgning bonu• .
a pay increase of 35 cents per year' for four years, 25 percent pension in crease
to $8, $10,000 increase in life insurance for all active and future retirees, $5,0
per week in S&amp;A benefits, and $90 per year increase in safety shoe allowance.
With employees reporting 10 work tod•y, Posti said it will give the utilon

SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. - Two teenagers are dead following a single-vehicle accident early today, according to the Mason County Sheriffs Depart-·•

The Shadle House

Sale Price

Lou Dobbs, host of

If approved, the new contract would impose a deductible of $200 for an
individual and $400 for a fa mily on insurance. Beyond that, the company
would pay 85 percent of costs, with an annual maximum co~ t of $1,500 for
individuals and $3.000 for families.
While he is opposed to the proposed contract , Schoonover said he is hopeful there will not be a work stoppage at the Ravenswood reduction and fab rication rolling mill plants. Century spokesman AI Posti said the company
ha·s no plans to operate the plant, however, if an agreement is not reached.
"It was our last and best offer," he to ld the·Herald.
Posti said a strike would be a very serious threat, adding it is difficult to
start and stop the facility. To do so would be at an enormous cos t, Posti said.

Two Mason County teens
killed in one-car accident

DICniYISIIIII, •lr II,OOQ 11lles
. ..

must be at least 18 years of age, a
resident of Athens, Hoc king, Meigs,
Morgan Perry, Vinton or. Washin gton Coundes, and pay annual membership dues of $25.
In order to become a voting
member of the corporation which

imums.

with shooting
at his Wife ·

'14 LINCOLN COiftNE171L

Membership for 1999-2000 is
now open · in the Sheltering Arms
Hospital Foundation, Inc., the corporation the op.erates O' Bi ene ss
Memorial Hospital.
. .
ln order to be eligible for mem- ·
bership in the foundati on, residents

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Century Aluminum vote. may be tallied today

.Four awarded scholarships by Rutland Alumni Association

Erin Rente Morin
ANTHONY R. FETTY
Four scholarships were awarded McConnelsville.
by the Rutland Alumni Association
The. students are all 1999 gradu· at its recent banquet held at the Rut- ates. One of the qualifications was to
land Civic Center.
a direct descendant of a Rutland
The scholarships went to High School graduate.
Stephanie Evans of Reedsv ille,
Evans, a graduate of Eastern
Bridget
Mari e
Vaughan
of ' High School, is the granddaughter of
Langsville; Anthony R. Fetty of Ruben Edwards, Rutland class of
Athens.. and Erin Renee Morin of 1954. She plans to attend Ohio Uni -

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 50 . Number 6

'

the dangers of smoking and to promote the state's new "Loserville"
anti -smoking campaign, which is
aimed direct ly at young people.
"Each of these kids understand
why .you th smoking is a losi ng
proposition," Montgomery said.
':These SJ~ entries represent the most
talented and gifted DARE students
m the state."
A national settlement between 46
states and the tobacco industry which settled a lawsuit by a group of
state~ trying to .recover health. cos ts
asstrciated with smoking - banned
nearly all outdoor advertising. The
agreement also all owed states to
replace tobacco billboards with antismoking billboards, with 1he tobacco industry pick ing up (he tab.
The producti on cost of the billboards - about $155 ,000 - should
he defrayed by the tobacco industry's repayment of the state's legal
e~pen ses from liti gating the' tobacco
lawsuit.
Thornton is the son of Roger and
. Elaine Stewan of Middleport and
Bill and Karen Thornton of Gallipolis .

Stars defeat Sabers, Page 4
.There's too many names, Page 8
News of area graduates, Page 12

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

The Morgan House

Sports

June 11, 1999

Weather

Tomorrow: P. cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Daniel Thornton wins DARE regional essay contest
A Me1gs Middle School student
was recent.ly named a. regional winner of a statewide DARE
"Loservill e" Essay Contest.
Daniel Thornton, a sixth grader at
Meigs Middle School, attended an
awards ceremony in Columbus
where he ·and five other fifth and
sixth graders were honored as
regional winners in the essay contest.
The studentS' wrote essays about
the dangers of smoking to coincide
with the Attorney General's antismoking "Loserville" billboard
campai gn.
"Smokers are losers because they
spend money on somethin g that
might kill them ," Thornton wrote in
his essay. ·
Thornton and the other regional
winners received a commendation
from Attorney General Betty Montgomery at a press -l.:o nfcrcncc wilh
their families, teachers and principals, state legislators. and DARE
officers.
Hundreds of essays we re su bmitted from around the stale. The contest was held to rai se awareness of

Friday

Thursday, June 10, 1999

Dobbs will leave CNN on Frida y was looking forward to the opportuto launch Space.com , a Web ,site nity to bUJid "the world's leading
devoted to educating a~d informing. Web site on space."
-·
users about outer spai:e, CNN said in
Just two weeks ago, Dobbs was ·
a statement Tuesday.
in vo lved in an unusually public tiff
In the statement, Dobbs said he wi th CNN president Rick Kaplan.
-I

F •

/.

. ,I

'

•

- DISCUSS VIClLENCE - Law enfq.r9ement
officials, school administrators and te'achers,
and other social services workers met Thursday to discuss potential violence in Meigs
County schools, and how to handle such· inci·
dants. Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souls-

by is seen at right with Pomeroy Pollee Chief
Jeffrey Miller, Southern Local Schools super·
lntende~;~t James Lawrence, Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley, Middleport Pollee Chief
Bruce Swift, Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes
and VIctims Advocate Christie Lynch.·

Officials discussing plan to deal
with possibility of school violence .
By BRIAN J. REED
die port.
"It's imponant that we thmk abou t
Sentinel News Staff
A meeting with school officials, the unthinkable," lcntes said. noung
law enforcement·officers and repre- th.lt inany communities have a fal se
sentatives of seveial other agencies sense that school violence in local
met Thursday to discuss an unthink- sc hools is not a problem .
Reference was made to thi s
able subject: violence in local
spring's eve nt s at Co lum bine H1gh
schools.
It was the first of a series of meet- School in Littleton, Colo., where stuings organized by Prosecuting Attor- dents went on a violent spree. teav·
ney John Lentes, who said that its i.ng a teacher an d students lying dead
purpose is to prepare a plan on how throughout th e schoo l building.
Building secunty. a chain o f comto deal with a violent situation in a
mand, c merge~cy response, mental
local school should it occur.
Administrators and teachers from health assistance. law enfo rceme nt
all three local school districts, the backup and media issues were all disAthens/Meigs Educational · Service cussed at the meeting, as were some
Center, Department of Human Ser- mci dcnts of violent bchavwr. or
vices, chlldren's services division, potentially v10lent behavior, wh ic h
Juvenile Court, comity and village occurred in local scho0ls d'urin g the
law enforcement officers, the county past school year.
"All of our agencies are working
health department, local eme rgency
medical services, and mental health to identify and get help to our tr()uagencies were mcluded in the group .. blecl. children ," Lentes said. "Howwhich met at the DHS offices in Mid- ever, we must plan on how to deal

with a violent situation should it
occur."
"As we all . know, we have our
share of troubled chi ldren. and with
the· easy access to guns, we cou ld
have a tragedy similar to other school
killings here," he added.
While the . group discussed the
advantages and disadvantages of
'placing officers in school facili ties,
there was no indication made at the
meeting that such measures were
even being considered. However,
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said that he
plans to train up to s i ~ qualified
deputies in the area of school security and potential violence on the part
of school students.
·
It was noted that there were uni formed officers on the Slaff at
Columbine High School on the day
or the shootJngs. and that qfficcrs in
school buildings are hecoming more
common. Gallia Academy}. l'ligh
(Continued on Page ;JJ I

An Albany man · was jailed on
numerous charges Thursday after
allegedly shooting at his wife during
a domestic dispute Thursday morning.
.
Jerry A. Stone, 41, Carpenter Hill
Road, was charged with two counts
of felo ni ous assault, one count of
having a weapon under a disability,
and a felony count of domestic VIOlence.
Deputies of · the Meigs County
Sheriffs Office responded to the
Carpenter Hill Road residence of a
neighbor, Michael Haendiges, where
the alleged altercation took place out·
side.
Stone is accused of threatening to
kill his wife. shooting at her with a
9mm handgun as she ran for help.
and then shooti ng at her after she hid
inside an automobile, striking the
automobile three times, according to
a Meigs Co unty Sheriffs Off1ce
report.
The incident ended when Haendi- ,
ges emerged from his house with a
shotgun: fJred shot into the air and
made Stone unload the gun . accord ing to the report.
The sheriffs repon indicates Stone
has a pri or domestic violence convictiOn and a past conv1clion fur tral ·
ficking in drugs, either .of . which
would make it illegal for him 10 possess a firearm. Under Ohio law. a second arrcs r for d.omcstic violence i.;
consid ered a felony charge.
Deputies recovered a 9mm hand gun and a .22-calibcr handgun ncar
the scene.
·
Felonious a-;sauh is second-degree
felony punishable by up to eight
years in prison. Felony dome stic
violence and possession of a weapon
under a disability are bqth fifthdegree felonies punishable by 12
months in prison.
·
Stone is being ·held in the Meigs
County Jail, pending an appearance
in Meigs County Court.

a

RUSSian force
on the move
for ·. Kosovo
By LAURA KING
Alloclated .Press Writer
BLACE, Macedonia - NATO
troops along the border in Macedonia were waiting today to enter
neighboring Kosovo and · Russian
troops headed toward the province
after Yugoslav troops began leaving
in trucks , armored cars and buses.
Even as debate in Moscow continued about Russian participation in
the peacekeeping force, an Associat·
ed Press photographer saw a Russian
convoy in Ruma, a Serbian town 35
miles west of Belgrade.
.
The private Beta news' agency
reported that a convoy · of Russ ian
troops numbering up to 1,000 and in
armored vehicles, transporters and
trucks crossed over into Serbia from
Bosnia at midmorning and were
expected in Kosovo by the afternoon.
The Ru'ssian vehicles were
marked KFOR, the insignia of the
Kosovo peacekecpi)lg force, Beta
said.
Led by. a Yugoslav govern ment
car,. the convoy co nt ai n~d more than
50 vehicles, flying the Russian colors.
The Russian governmen t earlier
denied that its troops were headed for
Kosovo. Later, a report from the
Russ ian lnterfa~ news agency said
1,000 Russian peacekeeping troops
were to fl y today to Kosovo.
Hours after the Russians crossed
over from Bosnia, NATO spokesman
MaJ . David Scanlon said up to 200
Russian soldiers were headed toward
Kosovo and. would return to Bosnia
after preparing for the arrival ,of the
(Continued on Page 3)

BIG WINNERS - Sonny Folmer and Keshla
Norman, both H, are Bllllf'! with Folmer's
horse, Ruby, and the ribbons and trophy they

Drctugnt home from the Wellston Lions Club
Horse Show last wetkend.

Meigs 4-H members net honors:
from horse show at W,ellston
Two Meigs County· 4- H members
. returned home from a Wellston horse
show with 17 ribbons between them,
and a trophy for high point winner.
Keshia Norman and Sonny
Folmer, both II, an ended the 52 nd
Annual Lions Club Horse Show in
Wellston, and returned with several
first, second and third-place rosettes.
Foltner was the high point winner for
the show.
In addition to that .trophy, Folmer
and her horse, Ruby Rides Again,
brought home third place ribbons for

the youth walk trot , yo ~th b~rrels. ""walk trot and horsemanship, .third
and youth Western horsemanship . place for open halter, open Western
second place ribbons for JUnior poles pleasure riding and youth Western
and junior barrels, and first place rib- plea•ure riding, fourth place for open
bons for Wes(ern horsemanship and · class poles, and fifth place in youth
senior barrels. She is the daughter of barrels. The daughter of Sherrie NQr·
Don and Carol Folmer of Pomeroy, man, Athens, and Kelly Norman.
and is a member of the Meigs Coun- Shade, she is a 1111~ mber of the Silver
ty Young Riders:
Spurs 4-H Club.
Norman , who rod~ her horse .
Folmer's father noted that her
Touch o' C10namon. was awarded horse. which she calls Ruby, has her
first place honors in sh,&gt;wmanshlp own story to tell: she was rescued
( 13 and under), and open showman- from the Last Chance Corral, a sancship. second place ribbons for yout h tuary for aili ng and abandoned horses near Shade.

..

�•

Friday, June 11, 1999

Commentary
Th~

,rlday, June 11, , .

Saturday, June 12

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc~
ROBERT. L WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gen1r11 M1n1ger

DIANE HILL
Controller

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••tc.,.. ,.,.,_ to 1M .JHotlrom ,...,. "" •lwoMJ,.,.,. ol top-

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to • ,._

vtou• .rlkl. Of',.,.,, .,.,

10. ~ ro .._ .,._,
Ohio U1f!J; or, FAX lo 7•.-ztST.

, This unit of the National Archives, called the
Information Security Oversight Office, reports
annually on the progress of a presidential order to
declassify government secrets. ISOO trumpeted
the 4,010 figure to President Ointon as proof that
intelligence agencies had reduced the number of
people who could classify.In fiscal year 1997, the
report noted, " they again responded (to your
request) by reducing the number by over 400 individuals."
It sounds wonderful on its face, like Americans
have reuon to believe the government is becom·
ing more open on all but the most serious intelli·
gence and military secrets. We wish that were the
case. But the report fails to mention the number of

By Jeck And-n
end Jln Moller

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-11112-2158 • Fax: VV2·2157

n.. Stntinel,

Ut Coutt

st,

,_

administration 's achievement of declusifying
diiCIIments "extraordinary." Between 1996 and
1998, the first two yean after President Clinton
issued Ul Executive Order on the subject, "the
agenciea have declusified .56 pen:ent more pages
than in the prior 16 years combined."
But the problem is that the whopping 400 mil·
lion pap released during thO&amp;C years still constitute just a small pen:entagc of the billions of
pages worth of government secrets •• a number
that grows every day.
Time and again, the General Accounting
Office has pointed out the folly that governs clu·
sification decisions. In one report, they found that
"the informal rule of thumb followed was, when

Few self-inflicted wounds
contrillute more to successful
espionage against the United
States than the government's
own ridiculous methods of clasllifying offi~al documents.
Too many people are empowered to wield the
little rubber stamps (now· computer keys) that
make secrets of mundane material, and they exer·
cise their heady prerogative with wild abandon . .
The result is that genuine secrets important to
national security become cheapened by their association with the chaff: documents that get overclassified because of potential political embar·
rassmen~ ignorance, carelessness or r------'--------;, --------------'----------~-,

~i:plyp:.J'~~:~ucr~!~ e~~~ AJ~~~;

HILLARY•S

VULN~RABLI:

1lllnette~d

·Letter to the editor

•

One-car accident leaves driver injured

0

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R&gt;INT. ..
0111118

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w.VA.

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FASTEST
WAY'TlJ

IHot, hazy conditions

ITHACA?

forecast for weekend

Sunny Pl Cloody

-

T·-

RUl

FUrloo

Snow

leo

Hot and mcreasingly humid weather will continue across Ohio through
the first part of the weekend .
Widely scattered thunderstorms'will continue during 'the morning hours,
mainly across the western half of the state. Otherwise, hot and hazy conditions wtll occur with showers and thunderstorms redeveloping during the
afternoon across the entore state.
The htghs will range from the upper 80s to the lower 90s statewide
Early this morning, the temperatures ranged from the middle 60s to the
'Dllddie 70s.
During the late evening and early morning, severe thunderstorms devel:oped across southwestern Ohio. The storms included 60 mile-per-hour wind
:gusts in Buller County, marble-sized had in Hamilton County and rain accu'mulatuins on the region of up to 2 inches. Some damage was reported.
Record high for today is 9S in 1933, record low 35 in 1972.
! · Sunrise Saturday 6:02 a.m., sunset 9 p.m.
' .
Weather forecast:
,. ~ Tonoght...A chance of ihunderstorms early, otherwose partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 60s. Light southeast wind Chance of raon 30 percent.
,, Saturday... Partly sunny. A chance ofthunderstorrns in the afternoon. Hoghs
,in the upper 80s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
· : Saturday night...Mostly clear. Lows in the mod 60s.
Extended forecast:
•,
,. · Sunday...Continoied warm with a chance of thunderstorms. Highs 85 to
90.
~. Monday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showen; and thunderstorms. Lows
.
1 J~ the mid 60s and highs in the mid 80s .
. , Tuesday ... Partly cloudy. A chance of showen; and thunderstorms in the
.afternoon. Lows 60 to 65 and highs in the mid 80s

.Amendments win approval·

From the back benches to the shadows

· · COLUMBUS (AP)- After hearing about it for 3-112 months, a House
'committee has voted for changes in a bill that would introduce competition
into the $1 I billion electric power ondustry.
• 11le changes put in by the House Public Utility Committee on Thursday
were ones that Democrats and Republicans tn the Senate agreed to place in
the bill, subject to further negotiations The hearings were scheduled to continue today, but Iegoslattve leaders pushed the meetong back to late morning
so the party caucuses could meet in pnvate ..

Middleport mayor's court
Sandy lannarelli, acting mayor of
Middleport, processed I 6 CljSes in
Middleport Mayor's Court thi11 week.
Forfeiting bonds were: Carol E.
C lonch, Gallipolis, $53, speed; Col'.1n C. Roush, Middleport, $47, speed;
Fay DeWees, Grove City, $49, speed;
•Jerod Gilmore, Middleport, $52,
·speed; Franklin L. Mullins, Jr., Ironton, $52, speed; Doreqa Card,
:Racme, $60, assured clear distance;

Today In History

.The.Daily Sentinel
; ,

·

(USPS ZI3·NO)
c-..ltr N""P"per HoWiop,J..-.

I'Ublllbed ovtry afternoon, Moadly dlloul)l
Fridly, Ill Co\ll1 St., Pomeroy, Obio, by 111o
' Oluo \\!ley Publlahinl Oxnpany. Second daa
tr..:t~id at Pometcl)', Oh10. •
The Auoaaied r.... and the Obio

New.pop.r Allociotion.
· Pi• 1 r1 Send lddreu c:omdioat 10 1be
O.oly Senllnet, Ill Co\ll1 So., p_,.y, Ohio
45769.

SUIISCatmON IIATES

a, Carder er Motor R..ee
One Wock.................................$2.00
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Reading between the ·psalm

Cloudy

By The Aaeoclatld Pre••

1•.

•

Leading Creek Conservancy Di11trict water customers on State Route
143 from Bailey Run Road to and including Wolf Pen Road are under a
boo! advisory until further notice followmg a water leak Thursday on Wolf
Pen Road

o·

•

SINGLE COPY PRICE

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Bob Ev1n1 ............................19'4
Borg-W1mer ...........................96
Broughton ............................16'·

l.lnila End ......~ ......................42'4
Ltc~ ........................................ 45-,_
Oek Hill Flnl ............................ 19

OVB .......................................32~
OM Vlllty .............................31,.

PeopJtl ................................ 26'1..
Preen Flnl ..............................1471.
Aockwell ........................,......80%.

ADIBhell ...............................58"1.
Seara .....................................48\

Senators send budget
· proposals back to House
COLUMBUS (AP) - Cleveland 's school voucher program likely will be a choef topic of discussion
when House and Senate negotiators
\Jegon meeting next week to work out
differences between the or versions of
the next two-year budget.
Republicans in the House want to
restore language restoring the program, which gives some low-income
Clevelanders up to $2,250 to send
the or children to private schQOis, to a
kindergarten through eighth-grade
experiment.
That was the intent of the Legislature until the Ohoo Supreme Court ,
ruled last month that the voucher program was unconstotutional because it
violaled a constitutional prohibition
agaonst lumpong unrelated items into
a single piece of legislatoon.
Senate Republicans revived the
program when they started work on
the budget. They limited the program
to kindergarten through fifth gradethe way it stands currently - to
avoid another confrontation with the
coun
" I think our members would hke
to put the voucher language back 1n
there," House Speaker lo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, saod Thursday.
~son commented a(ter the
House refused to concur with the
Senate verswns of both the $22.6 billion general operatong budget and 'the
$17. I bollion educatoon budget overwhelmingly approved in the Senate
this week.
, "The Senate did a lot of good
work .... but tt's in the best interests
of the House not to concur," said

Committee to meet
The Meigs County Farmland
Preservation Commottee will meet on
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Annex.
Republican get-together
The Meigs County Republican
get-together at Star Mill Park, wdl be
held Saturday, 4 p.m.
Bible school planned
J'he Middleport church of Christ
will have its Bible school, June 2125,·9 a.m.- noon. The kickoff will be
Saturday from 9- I 1:30 a.m. and the

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded nine
c:,alls for assistance Thursday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :41 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middleport, l'rancis T. Ralph,
Veterans Memonal Hospotal;
9·12 a.m., Side Hill Road, Rutland, Elwood Phillips, VMH, Rutland
squad assisted;
10:11 a.m .. Baum AdditiOn,
Chester, Betty Toney, VMH, Tuppers
Plains sqUad assisted;
. 10:47 a.D)., Zuspan Hollow Road,
Middlepat;t. Vera Stewart, Pleasant
Valley Hospotal;
9:17 p.m., OBNC, Virginia
Grimm, VMH;
10:23 pin., Bradbury Road , Middleport, Arlene Davis, Holzer Med·
ical Center.

Warthlngton ..........................12"

Name omitted

Stoc:k reporte 1re today'a
10:30 a.m. quo111 provided by
Adveat of Galllpolle. ·

The name of Brandon Smith was
inadvertently omitted .from a list of
names of Sorlthern Junior High
School students receiving awards for
obtaining aHA's, all year,

' ,

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or EaL 1106

. othe'r' Servlcee

M ........................................Ext. 1104
i:tm~Jatloll ............................... ..Eal. 1103

c;::lllllfled ~..._ ..,,...................Eat. llOI

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closing program woll be held Friday,
June 25, at 7 p.m Tl,lere wolf be a
cookout and swtm party at General
Hartinger Park in Middlepon.

Russian force onYugoslav
thePresident
move
Slobodan

(Continued from Page 1)
more permanent Russian peacekeepmg contingent
The development carne amid continuing debate in Moscow between a
U.S. and a Russian delegation about
Russian participatoon on any Kosovo
peace force The Russians - partlcularly senior officers - ins1st they
will not put their troops under NATO
command, somethmg NATO has
insisted on
It was unclear why the Russoans
were movmg toward Kosovo,
although It possibly was a symbolic
move to demonstrate Russoan determination to he part of Kosovo operatoons under its terms
The enlry of the first NATO troops
into Kosovo from ne1ghbonng Macedonoa, origi nally expected early
today, was pushed back, possobly as
much as 24 hours, NATO sources
said, speakmg on cond111on of
anonymity. They dod nor specofy the
cause of the delay.
British paratroopers, the spearhead
of the internauonal force that will
eventually number 50,000, camped
along the border, but showed no sign
of preparing to move as dawn broke.
NATO and Yugoslav haison offi.
cers were conferring early today, trying to c:oordmate movements m a
comphcaled plan that calls for peacekeepe rs to move onto .desognated
areas as soon as Serb-led forces pull
out. The talks raised the possobohty
that coo rdonatoon problems had
oaused the NATO delay •
The commander of NATO forces
m Macedonoa, Bnu sh Lt. Gen.
Mo chael Jackson, plan ned to be on
Prostona, the provmc1al capotal , by
Salurday, saod Bnt1sh mli11arv
sources who spoke on co ndoto on
anonymity.
Without cotong a source, a Bntlsh
newspaper. The Daoly Telegraph.
reponed the operation was delayed
because some contnbutmg natwns,
mcluding the Unoted States, said
they were not ready. ·
NATO spokesman Jam oe Shea
denied reports of a delay, however.
"In fact, everythin~ os ~oin~ e~tre me­
ly smoothly," he said today on Brussels
Yugoslav troops began theor pullback from Kosovo on Thursday,
prompting NATO to suspend ots aor
. campaign, which started March 24.
The U.N , Secunty Counctl then
adopted a resolution authorizi ng a
heavily armed secunty force to enter
Kosovo to restore peace and begon
reconstructoon.
The Yugoslav withdrawal continued today. In Prokuplje, cheenng residents threw flowers onto several
dozen Yugoslav army vehocles heading northward. A sign on one buolding read: "Long live the Yugoslav
am'oy, death to NATO fascosts."
In Brussels, NATO satd 4,000
Serb molitary personnel had left
Kosovo by today
• Citing unodenufied sources, The
New York Times 'reponed today that
U.S. and NATO officoals envoston
Kosovo will become an onternation·
al protectorate and could gam mdependence after a few years.
Yugoslavoa has deeply opposed both
scenanos.

of

About 150 trucks, other army
vehicles and cars piled high With luggage and bo.es carroed soldoers
across Kosovo ':; northern border
Thursday at Merdare. The convoy
included armored veh icles · and
mobole anto-aorcraft weapons.
The pnvate Beta news agency saod
20 carloads of Serb covihans JOined
the convoy, theor vehocles packed
with lugga~e They were apparendy
fearful of living on the province
without army and pohce protection.
Kosovo IS on southern Serb1a, the
domonanl republic on Yugoslavoa
Although Serbs regard it as the beanland of theor nati on, ots prewar populan on of 2 I million was 90 percent
ethmc Albanoan
The cnsis bega n on Febr.uary 1998
when Molosevoc cracked down on the
Kosovo Loberauon Army, which has
fought for Kosovo 's ondependence
NATO began bombong Yugoslavoa
after Molosevoc refused· to sogn a
peace agreement crafted in Rambouollet, France
Sonce the bombong started,
Yugoslav troops have been accused
of wagong a systematic terror campaign to drive out the ethnic Albanians. Serbs say they had to quash a ter·
rorist-led secessioniSt drive.

No winner in Buck~ye 5 drawing

Hospital news
Holzer Medlc81 Center
Dlschllraes June 10 - none.

Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
McNeal; daughter, Crown City; Mr
and Mrs. David Rafferty,, daughter,
Jackson.
.
(Published with pennisslon)

MONDAY NtOHT II CAll LOAD
NIOHT· All V!HtCI.H lf,OO

"There is the nsk of ill-doscophned
or uninformed small groups," he srud
But the major threat is hkely to
come from monefields, although the
troops had been well bnefed on precautions for av01d ong them
All of the esumated 40,000 soldoers and specoal police are supposed
to clear out of the southern Serb
provonce wothin 11 days.

The group woll contonue to meet
throughout the summer, so that an
School on Galh(lOlts has a unoformed "acuon plan" can be developed prior
officer on the premises dunng school to the bego nnmg ul the ne-. school
year on August
houn;, one member noted

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all five
"Good News @ gospelrock" will numbers selected in Thursday noght's
be the theme of the Btble school at Buckeye 5 draw mg. the Ohio Lottery
the Middleport First Baptist Church. · Sat'd .
Classes for four year olds and up woll
There were !52 Buckeye 5 tockets
be held at the church from 6 p.m to woth four of the numbers, and each os
8·30 p.m .. June 21 through June 25. worth $250. The 4,176 tickets showTo register or get more informatoon, mg three of the numbers are each
residents may call vosu the church worth $10, and the 39,138 uckets
office or call , 992-2755
showing two of the numbers are each
worth $1.
The Ohoo Lottery woll pay out
$1,293,16550 to winners in Thursday's Pick 3 Numbers dally game.
RACINE
Sales on Pick 3 Numbers totaled
8:30 p.m., volunteer fire department and squad to Cornell Road,
brush fire, Tommy Greathouse property, no injuries reponed, Bashan
VFD assosted.
RUTLAND
5: 13 p.m., Parker Run , Jack Jenk·
ins, treated at the scene .
T-UPPERS PLAINS
11 :28 a.m., New Hope Road,
Chester, motor vehocle accident,
Kellsey JohnsoA, Camden-Clark
,Memorial Hospotal, Chester VFD
assisted.

AND

The troop pullout began hours
after NATO and Yugoslav generals
sogned· an agreement, a follow-up to
the peace plan that Milosevic accepted last week after Russ1a and the
West presented it as essentially nonnegotoable.
In an interview with the British
Broadcastong Corp , Maj. Gen .
Richard Dannan, commander of the
Bntosh conungent, said there was a
danger that peacekeepers moght
encounter small groups of Serb soldoers who had not been fully briefed
on their obhgation to withdraw

(Continued from Page 1)

Plan Bible school

OCTOBER SKY

Molosevoc procla1med victory Thursday, despite the death and destruction
wreaked by the aor campaign and the
immonent amval of a huge foreign
force on Yugoslav sool
"The people are the heroes," he
saod on national televosion , onsostmg
he had succeeded on retaoning Kosovo as pan of Yugoslavoa.
In Washongton, Presodent Clinton
declared victory and praosed NATO's
unoty, warnong Milosevoc that
airstnkes would resume of he reneges
on a peace deal to allow more than
860.000 ethnoc Albano an refugees tQ
return to Kosovo Most fled to Mace• '
donoa and Albanoa
.
He also saod the United States
would provode no reconstruction aid
for Yugoslavoa as long as Mtlosevoc
was in power

Officials discussing plan

E·Ms units answer 9 calls

- n l MllllpC ........................En. 1101

lfiWl, ............................................ Eal. 1102

Rep. E.J. Thomas, chairman of the
House Finance Commottee.
Economic development incentives
sought by Republican Gov. Bob Taft
and supported by Republicans m the
GOP-controlled Legislature also likely will face more opposition 'from
Democrats.
"If we really want welfare reform,
we can' tjust have welfare reform for
poor people," s..... Dan Brady, DCieveland, saod Thursday before the
Senate vote on the welfare-heavy
general operating budget.
"We have to have corporate welfare reform."
Brady's comments preceded a
vote 'by Republicans to reject hos proposal to hmtt an extensoon of Ohto's
enterprise zone program to three
years, instead of the five cpntamed in
the budget.
Brady poonted out tl:\at the head of
the development departme'l! conceded that he dodn 't have l nough
mformatoon to say for certam whether
the program created as many jo~ as
were promised by the companoes that
got the incentoves. He also noted that
a report commosstoned by the Legislature two years ·ago recommended
only a three-year extension
Repubhcans argued that wothout
the incentives , Ohio could lose jobs
to states that do offer them.
A simolar argument surrounded a
GOP plan to gradually reduce the
state's tax on business mventones
Republicans say the tax - unoversally hated by Ohoo bus messesalso puts .the state at a competitive
di sadvantage.

Meigs announcements

sr.oney•a ............................... 2'FiretSIIr............................... 211').

11-

...tuh±u•m

, I

AT6T ..................,..................53~..

A Long Bottom woman was injured in a o~e-car accident Thursday
on ChesterTownshop Road 91 (New Hope), the Gallia-Me tgs Post of the
State Hig~way Patrol reported.
Krista M. Johnson, 29. 36494 New Hope Road, was transponed to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital on Parkersburg, W.Va , by the Meogs
ElMS followong the 11 :40 a.m. accident, accordmg to the patrol.
Troopen; said Johnson was southbound, I .6 miles north of State Route
· 248, when the car she drive went off the left side of the road and over·
turned.
The car was severely damaged, and Johnson was cited for failure to
control
'
Troopers cited David L. Nance, 17, 29001 Bashan Road, Racine, for
failure to control followmg a one-car accident earlier Thursday on Sut·ton Township Road 126 (Horse Cave)
According to the report, Nance was southbound, five-tenths of a mile
nonh ofTR 109 (Carmel) at 6:15a.m. when the car he drove went off
the nght stde of the road and struck a bridge. The car then continued on
and carne to rest in a small stream.
Nance told troopers he swerved to avood collision with a deer at the
time of the accident The car was severely damaged.

II !ln-2155. Depert-

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Akzo ......................................441'.4
AmrTech ...............................68'1.
Aeh 011 .................................40'Y.

Gannett .................................71 4
Kmarl .....................................15~
Kroger ....................................54'4

.......................... ..,..•
........................ .StOP.72

Rcaclcr Scr vices
~·

Am Ele Power .....................41 1 ~•

City Holding ............................ 27
Feilenil Mogu1 ..................... 50"1.
7

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26 '2 -

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Champion ...........: ...................7\
Chlrrn Shpa .........................~ 5"\r

'2w.w ..........................Jim-'6

..

Suzanne Kincaid, $.53, speed
Fined were: James Whoteside,
Langsville, $15 and costs, speed;
Gregory S. Wall, Middleport, Stdo
and costs, public mtoxication, $100;
crimmal trespassong; Douglas Mowery, Middleport, $100 and costs,
public into~tcatoon; Brian A. Roush,
Middlepon, $100 and costs, open
container; William E. Chevaher, Middleport, $200 and costs, drivmg under
FRA suspensJOn; Tiffany Gallagher,
Racine, $25 and costs, defective
exhaust; Charles McCloud, Middleport, SI 00 and costs.. cultivation;
Patrick S. Steele, Middleport, $200
and costs, driving under FRA suspensiOn, $500, carrying a firearm
· under the mfluence, $100, obstructing JUStice, $200, resisting arrest,
$200, Heemg and · eludmg, $200,
reckless operation, $250, nding an
APV on the highway; Carolyn Sue
Darst, Mtddleport, $100 and costs,
menactng thr.!'ats.

OM Ytar.... ,,,_,,,..,..............,,,,,$104.00

~t~mit In

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District today issued a "Phase llMandatory Water Use Ban" for its customer11 in Letart Townshop.
The water use ban prohibits outdoor water use with the e~ception of
water usc for the production of food, maintenance of pets or livestock, or
watering by commercial nun;eries at a minimum level to maintain slock
(to the e~tent that othel water sources are not avaJiable or feasoble).
The Syracuse Water Board is also asking residents to stop outdoor water
usage due to the current dry spell. Residents are being asked to stop watering their lawns or washong cars.
Both restrictions will remain in effect until further notice.

Leading Creek Issues boil advisory

•I Columbue Iertw 1

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GETTO

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WHATSTHE

·A Chester History by the 17's

I•

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"secrets" for anyone to guard properly.
"When everything is classified,
then nothing is classified," wrote the
late Supreme Court Justice Potter
Stewart, "and the system becomes
one
to be disregarded by the cynical
, (Editor's Note: The follo ..ug "GS Sllbllfiltu by Chllrles H . Knight of
or
the
careless, and to be manipulatChester.)
ed by those intent on self-protection
or self-promotion."
Stewart was writing abo~t the
' I may be presumptuous in the belief that my history has a better perspective than youn; but my anceston; made a livi ng in this dirt you folks call Pentagon Papers case in 1971, when
Otester well before your predecesson; were struggling through the Dark the government tried unsuccessfully
Ages and before the Mound Buolden; stood upright, so I guess I've earned to prevent publication of secret documents on the conduct of the Vietthe right to comment on the short history y~u folks have made here. ,
My friends call me .Cy (more properly cocada to the rest o~ you). A hosto- nam War.
The weakness of the governry by the l7's lets us view from a dostance both on tome and m depth (about
r 1/2 feet) the changes you hum ans make and gauge them as permanent ment's case was demonstrated when
i~habitants, and not just passen; through as you are.
a lower court judge challenged the
, It's funny .• humans see us as the temporary fleeting visitor, just an eerie Nixon administration's lawyers to
wailing transient to be viewed, swatted at, and marveled about. We marvel identify the mo11t sensitive secret in
back at you because you are always so different each time we see you, mak- the whole mass of leaked docuing rapid hurried charges through life, rushing to and fro, each visit more ments. The lawyers conferred and
speedy, less leisurely, and consistently worried only about yourself ·· busy decided on the material dealing with
while accomplishing little, talkative while unden;tanding seldom, building "Operation Marigold," a secret
little while destroying much. You despose us for damage to "your" trees 1966 attempt to negotiate with
while or visit harms mfiniteso mally smaller numben; of trees than each 17 Nonh Vielnam through Polish diployears of development does. Who really is the danger to our woodlands, you matic intermediaries.
Never mind that the communist adversaries individuals who have what is known as "deriva- in doubt, classify the information at the Secret
or me? .
But I digress -- I write here to discuss a Chester history by the 17's.
obvious) y knew about Operation Marigold; the tive classification authority."
level." Furthermore, the GAO noted, "the penal·
I am truly your Y2K bug, visiting just a few months early before you judge also discovered that this super-sensitive
These "derivatives" may normally classify ties for underclassifying far outweigh those for
meet the year 2000, each in your own way. Will.the computen; fail? Will the secret had been published long before in newspa- material only when it uses information from an overclassifying," meaning that su~val-oriented
planes crash? Will the banks close? Will the electricity stop flowing? Yes, pers -- and described at length in President John- originally classified document. But in some cases, bureaucrats tended to produce more secrets than
you humans worry about the most mundane matten;. Gain the cicada per· son's memoirs.
they can make their own classification decisions necessary.
'spective: Will life on earth cease? Will the sun fail to shine? Of course ilot.
The heart of the problem is the number of fed· on original material, using guidelines laid down
Clearly, the classification system is in amlin·
Will neighbor fall upon neighbor? Probably not. AI least not because of the era! employees who are authorized to classify by the top rubber-stampers. Thking these people ued need of an overhaul. While the Clinton
year 2000 or the cicada. You know so few of your neighbors anymore that documents at one level or another. Currently, into account, there are more than one million fed- administration should be lauded for making
you wouldn't know who to fall upon.
there are believed to be more than one-million eral employees contributing to the mountain of important headway, officials still fail to underNot like it was just three trips ago for me. 1948 was the year here in rubber-11tamp wielders, sources told our associate secret paper that is proving so hard to protect.
stand the obvious: Only when the number of
Chester. The "great war" had just ended and your children were being born Dale Van Atta.
ISOO reports that there were 6.4 million deriv- both "original" and "derivative" classifying
at a pace rivaling us. The baby boom was upon you. The world was safe for
How can that be? After all, the latest report ative classifications in fiscal year 1997. It esti· bureaucrats is drastically cut back will Amcri·
democracy again. All was well. Since then you have hardly had a squabble, delivered to the president by a small offic:e con- mates that· every "original" classification deci- ca's legitimate secrets be given the protection
have you?
cerned with classification says there are 'only' sion produces an average of 40 such dlrivatives.
they deserve.
Strange, just two visits earlier, you were getting ready to make the world 4,010 "original classification authorities."
unn.c~ Fellurelyndlcote,tnc.
The report is right in calling the Clinton Copyright
safe for democracy, too -- 1917. Between those visits, your stock market
went through the roof and you hit the depths of &amp;pression. Sound familiar?
We just lay in the ground "chewing on" your roots while the ground shook
with the market crash.
I have visited only seven times since the ondustrial age moved in and By WALTER A. MEARS
one independent usually votes with doubt and just follow," Hasten said.
This year's RepubUcans
the Democrats. Since just six GOP "That is the difference between a
through rural American, and while I hear that rapid and violent changes have AP Speclel Conwepondtnt
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sam defections can deadlock the House, majority mentality and a minority don't want lost year's out·
occurred since 1880, I observe few here on the hill at Chester. When my
Rayburn
was Mr. Speaker, the leg- Hastert's agenda of challenges mentality."
anceston; emerged in 1880 and Hew over the town of Chester, the Shade
come. So Hastert and
Gingrich might have yelled at
River flowed and the little town hustled and bustled with several shops, an· endary leader a congressman includes sometimes rebellious coninn, a livery, and a cemetery on the neighboring hill. Today, I Hew down crossed at his own risk. To get along, servatives, moderates worried about them. He once dismissed his GOP GOP floor leaders tried to
their budget priorities, spending lim- detractors as "unruly children," and begin passing appropria· .
IQver the town again and the Shade River flowed, and as I buzz the town I go along, was .his firm advice.
Joe Cannon ruled as speaker with its that would compel politically stupid. Hastert said at the start that
see a hustle and bustle of its own, a gas station, a restaurant, and a cemetery
lions bills early, pltJnni(lg
the power to give and take commit- unpopular cuts, and a commitment wasn 'I his style.
on the neighboring hill.
Perhaps the more the years go by, the more you humans are like us. We tee chairmanships and personally · to reduc:e taxes in the bargain.
"I always try to talk with reason to lu!.ve two done before
buzz frighteningly about, often in a terrible frenzy, we wail at length about block legislation, until the House
And that's to deal with the bud- and straightforward, as honest as Memorial Day. Instead,
ourselves and our needs, but we then bury oun;elves back into Mother Earth; rebelled in 1910.
get, the 13 appropriations bills that possible," the Illinois congressman
Tip O'Neill was a nationally are the only ones Congress is legally said when he was asked whether they nm into a slowdown
believing and trusting that the world will survive not only without us, but in
known face, his leadership as speak- required to pass each year. II doesn't he'd laid down the law at the GOP by consenatives demand·.
spite of us.
er shaped by long-practiced skill11 as always happen; undone bi1111 get conference.
Hope to see you in 2016. Good Luck.
CyK. Dllh a bargainer and vote-counter.
He said Republicans emerged ing spending cuts and 1uul
lumped into resolutions to keep the
Newt
Gingrich
was
a
fierce
.
.
In the Hille of Chteter
government' financed. In 1998, Pres· united. But details are yet to come to shelve both.
(AI told to Chlrtee Knight, Knight Hill, Cheater) politician, leader and symbol of the ident Clinton was able to force some on just how to handle appropriations
Republican rise to House control of hill spending priorities onto the within a $538 billion ceiling for
after 40 years, then undone by hill, Republican Congress in those cir- spending set by the appropriations and succeeded in forcing comproand their, errors.
bills. That does not include Social mise.
cumstances.
J. Dennis Hastert is none of the
This year's Republicans don 'I Security, other guaranteed benefit
Party unity is more easily
By The Anoelattld Preae
above.
want last year's outcome. SO Hastert programs and interest on the nation· pledged than held, when the issues
' Today is Friday, June 11, the 162nd day of 1999. There are 203 days left
He is not the first low-profile and GOP floor leaders tried to begin al debt.
move from goals to specifics, on
in the year.
speaker of the House; there have passing appropriations bills early,
Hastert's plan is said to involve spending and on other measures.
Today's Highlights in History:
been many more little-known than planning to have two done before shifting about $7 billion in spending The House is to debate gun control
On June II, 1776, the Continental Congress formed a committee to draft famed ones. But none of them vault- Memorial Day. Instead, they ran into among appropriations bills to malce legislation this week. Hasten favors
a Declaration of Independence from Britain.
ed from the ranks to the No. I job as a slowdown by conservatives them all palatable enough to. pass. a version Democrats and GOP mod·
On this date:
suddenly as he. A GOP House poll demanding spending cuts and had to "We're standing together an~'re erates say is too weak, and some
' In 1509, England's King Henry VIII married Catherine of Aragon.
shows that among Republicans shelve both.
united," the speaker said, to Sil:y · other Republican leaders oppose
In 1919, Sir Barton won the Belmont Stakes, becoming hon;e racing's beyond the Beltway, Hastert's
'
That led to Hastert'11 unity lecture within the spending limits, present outright.
first Triple Crown winner.
deputies are better known than he is. to House Republicans on Tuesday. spending that would dip into Social
· In 1942, the United States and the Soviet Union signed a lend-lease
The problems Hastert faces The speaker told them that they Security funds, and try to cut taxes.
EDITOR'S NOTE - W.br
agreement to aid the Soviet war effort in World War II.
would strain even a speaker with needed to get behind the agenda set
It may not work, but if it doesn't, R. Mlllr8, vice prelldlllt 1nd
• In 1947, the government announced the end qf household and institu- powers beyond the persuasion he is by their leaders or risk losing control and Republicans can hold their lines, epeolal oorr...ponclent for The
Jlonal sugar rationing, to take effect the next day.
.
using to try to make the GOP major- of the House for lack of a GOP they could do better politically than AaiOCIIted PriM, hll report·
In 1963, Buddhist monk Quang Due set himself ablaze on a Saigon ity work like one.
record on which to campaign. .
in earlier budget disputeS with Clio- ld on W.ehlngton and nltlon·
ill!reet to protest the government of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh
Republicans outnumber Democ"Some days you have to give too, who has vetoed appropriations 11 poll\lce for mor• than 30
~·
0"!'1em.
,
rats 223-211 in the House, and the your leadership the benefit of the bills that didn't meet his priorities yura.
~: In 1977, Seattle Slew won the Belmont Stakes, capturing the Triple
bown.
: In 1978, Joseph Freeman Jr.becarne the first black priest ordained in the
urch of Jesus Quist of Latter-day Saints.
In 1979, actor John Wayne died at age 72.
begiMing in the guise of "Infants" ··lll)lall, win·
Psalm?"
In 1985, Karen Ann Quinlan, the comatose patient whose case prompted By George A. PllglnZ
She said she was having trouble getting to
Right away I knew what she some, atlrlclive and utterly harmlesa, unable to
historic right-to-die court decision, died in Morris Plains, N.J., at age 31.
meant This Psalm, in the begin- hurt us.
In 1986, a divided Supreme Court struck down a Pennsylvania abortion sleep at night I suggested she read the Psalms
before
going
to
bed.
The
words
of
these
ancient
ning verses, is one of the most
One little act of marital infidelity (or two) aw, while reaffirming its 1973 decision establishong a constitutional right to
songs
can
have
a
wonderful
quieting
effect
on
the
what
damage can it do? A few moments of enjoybeautiful
and
poignant
In
the
,.bortion.
mind,
often
bringing
on
11leep.
Psalter:
''By
the
waters
of
Baby·
ment
with Playboy magazine •• nothins wicked
• Ten years ago: The government of China issued a warrant for the arrest
I was thinking particularly of Psalms like the
Ion we sat down and wept when about that, certainly. A "little" cheating, a "little"
~f dissident Fang Lizhi, who had taken refuge inside the U.S. Embassy in
23rd
("The
Lord
is
my
shepherd,
I
shall
not
we
remembered thee, 0 Zion."
skirting of the law, "litde" ains like indulsing Jn
~ijing.
want
..
"),
the
90th
("Lord,
thou
hast
been
our
But
it
ends
on
one
of
the
most
resentmenll now and then •• whal'i 10 dangei'QIIS
• Five years ago: The United States, South Korea and Japan agreed to seek
clwelling-place
in
all
generations
...
")and
the
9tst
bloodthirsty
notes
in
all
of
literaabout
such things?
.
.,unitive steps against North Korea over its nuclear program. A car bomb
ture.
It
pronounces
1
blessing
on
anyone
who
will
("He
that
dwelleth
in
the
secret
place
of
the
Most
What's
10
dangerous
is
that
these
little
thina.
)lew up outside a lu~ury hotel in Guadalajara, Me~ico, killing five people
grab a baby of the Israelites' Babylonlan captors grow Uld get bigger. And as they get bigger, they
High ... ").
in an apparently drug-related attack.
and
throw the infant ·on the pavement: "Blessed become more alarmins.
1
had
not
thought
to
warn
her
that
some
of
the
, One year ago: Mitsubishi Motors agreed to pay $34 million to settle alleThe reason the psalmist wanted the Babylon,
kations that women on the assembly line at its Illinois factory were groped Psalms breathed slaughter and a spirit of destruc· shall he be that taketh thy children and throweth
them
against
the
stones."
tive
hatred
••
like,
for
example,
the
!39th
Psalm:
ian
babies to be killed was 10 they wouldn't gro.w
Jnd insulted and that managers did nothing to'stop it.
Try
to
sleep
after
reading
that
lyrical
passage(
"
Surely
thou
wilt
slay
the
wicked,
0
God
....
I
hate
up
into
adult Babylonians who would be as evil ai
• Today's Birthdays: Opera singer Rise Stevens is 86. Actor-producer
Revolted
by
the
brutality
of
these
more
gruethem
with
a
perfect
hatred."
their
fathers
had been 'and threaten the Israelite
:kichard Todd is 80. Author William Styron is 74. Actor Gene Wilder is 64.
some
Bible
stories,
my
friend
was
now
having
nation.
·
Or,
even
worse,
the
109th:
"Let
his
daya
be
Jl.ctor &lt;llad Everett is 63. Comedian Johnny Brown is 62. Former auto racer
more
trouble
than
ever
getting
to
sleep
at
night
I
few
....
Let
his
children
be
fatherless
and
his
wife
They
had
to
be
destroyed
while
they
were
stili
llackie Stewart is 60. Country singer Wilma Burgess is 60. Singer Joey Dee
~s 59. Actress Adrienne Barbeau is 54. Rock musician Frank Beard (ZZ Top) a widow.... Let there be no man to pity him nor to · tried another approach. I told her to take these sto- small, before they could become ruthless despoil;
ers. The lesson for us Is that we must deal in the
211 50. Actor Peter Bergman is 46. Football player Joe Montana is 43. Rode have compassion upon his fatherless children. Let ries more allegorically.
An
allegory
is
the
expresaion
of
truth1
of
same
way with the little sins in our lives.
his
posterity
be
destroyed."
Jnusician Dan Lavery (fonic) is 30. Actor Josh•a ,Jackson ("Dawson's
human
existence
by
means
of
symbolic
figures.
Not
exactly
words
to
lull
you
into
the,
peaceful
If
we
can learn to read the more troublesome
Creek") is 21.
Understood
allegorically,
that
chilling
pauage
Bible
passagea
in this f~hion, we may all be able
dreams.
·
: Thought for Today: "It is only believers in the Fall of Man who can realabout
dashing
the
Babylonian
ba6ies
against
the
to
sleep
better.
·
The
next
time
I
saw
my
friend,
abe
was
breath·
ily appreciate how funny men arc.'
Capyllghl1..
NEWSPAPER
ENTIRPRtll!
stones
can
teach
us
this:
ing
slaughterings
all
her
own.
"
A
lot.
o(
help
you
- Malcolm Muggeridge, British author and commentator (1903·
The enemies In our life often come to us In the AIIN.
were," she said. "Have you ever read the 137th
1990).
Potr~Moy,

Water limitation advisories posted

Daily Sentinel Government has far too many secrets
'£sUI6(is/id in 1948

nte SenUnel

Local News in Brief:

Ohio weather

Pege •\2

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEVER BEEN KISSED (PQ13)
7:00 l 1:20 DAILY
1:00.3:20

$1,280,515 In the Red Ball promouon, a whole ball was drawn, so no
bonuses will he awarded to Pock 3
wonners.
In the other daoly game , Pick 4
Numbers players wagered $394,651
and woll share $205,900.
·
Sales on Buckeye S totaled
$314,940 Players woll shale
$118,898
The Jackpot for Saturday's Super
Lotto drawong os wonh $24 million.

�\

I

Sports

,

The Daily Sentinel:
Page4,
Frldav. June 11,199f

·

'

: ~ stars' 4-2 victory over Sabres ties·Stanley Cup finals at
, By KEN RAPPOPORT
DALLAS (AP) - The Dallas
: . Stars have l~t the ~orne-ice advantage and poss1bly M1ke Modano, and
;, they ' re going to Buffalo for the next
two games of the Stanley Cup finals .
·
It could be worse.
1lte Stars pulled ihemselves out
,.

i

of a tough spot with a 4-2 victory in
Game 2 on Thursday night, tying the
be~t-of-seven series at a game
ap1ece .
.
" A good win. We are back in the
series ," Stars coach Ken Hitchcock
said, relieved 1hat his learn doesn 't
face an 2·0 deficil in the series,

which resumes in Buffalo with Game
3 on Saturday night.
,n.e St~, who lost the opener 32 1n oven1me, played hke Jt was a
desperate situation. ·
" I think we came out 'pretty well
again, just like we di&lt;j in Game 1,"
said Craig Ludwig, one of the S1ars'

didn' t know if he would be available
for Game 3.
A rel"m by ESPN said Modano
broke hts wrist and was out for the
rest of the series. But Stars 1rainer
David Surprenant, reached by The
Associated Press three hours after
the game, dismissed the repon.
•

"He is not out for the series:"
Surprenant said. " Doctors will be
evaluating him (today)." ·
Stars public relations director
Larry Kelly also had a negative
response 'to the ESPN report.
"They didn't get that from us,"·he
,
(See FINALS on Paae 5) . ;

·:·Sting, Liberty, Comets ·&amp; Sparks win WNBA season openers
.By JOSEPH WHITE
else.'"
Holdsclaw had her moments,
WASHINGTON (AP) - No. 23
!. was the key. Not the number worn by starting with a nice fallaway 16-fooi'· Chamique Holdsclaw, but the num· er from the left wing for lhe Mystics'
. :ber of pOints beside Dawn Staley 's first basket 1:09 into the game. The
· ·name in the boxscore. ·
two-time national player of the year
Holdsclaw had a nice game in her with Tennessee sat for five minutes
. WNBA debut Thursday nighl, but in 1he second half with leg cramps,
• her 18 points and . six rebounds but on the coun there were flashes of
· lacked the impact of Staley 's 23 her scori ng ability as she made seven
·.· points and seven assists in the of 14 shots .
The Myslics were 3-27 last year,
Charlotte Sting's 83-7~ victory OV&lt;lliJ
the Washington Mystics.
losing all four games to the Sting by
. " I think Holdsclaw is a very good ·an average pf 25 points, But
player," Charlotte ·coach Mary nell Charlotte has improve!i. too. and
Meadors said. " But every time she , Staley showed she is the solution to
sco'red, Slaley scored one right on the team's inconsislent point guard
play 1he last two years .
top of her.''
The noisy sellout crowd was
" Dawn Staley is not one of lhe
announced as 20,674, even !hough best point guards in the world for no
there were hundre&lt;js of emply seats reason." Darsch said. "And you got
on each level, and Mayor Anthony lo see it tonight. "
Williams declared it " WashingiOn .
Staley scored 15 points in lhe secMyslics Day.·· But Williams and resl ond half, finishing 10-for- 15 from
of . lhe fans couldn 't do whal tbe the field and 3-for-~ from three· point
Mys1i cs needed to do : Give · range . She showed no effects .of the
Holdsclaw more opportunities with knee injury that sidelined her much
the ball.
of last year after· two successful sea" We would like Chamique to sons in the now-defuncl ABL.
Staley said her WNBA debut was
have lhe ball a linle bit more,'" coach
, Nancy Darsch said. "She cenainly eas ier because all the attention was
draws a lot of attention, and if she directed' al Holdsclaw.
doesn't get her. own shot, she's usu" It's kind of a disadvantage (for
ally going . to gel one (or somebody her)," Staley said. " We' re coming in

'
here, , we're hungry. The pressure Johnson . Teresa Weatherspoon and Miracle.
Lisa Leslie scored 19 points, ,and
Tina Thompson added 22 points the Los Angeles Sparks scored 1.00
wasn't on us, it was on them to win." Kym Hampton added 15 points
The Sting shot 65 percent in the apiece for the Liberty.
·
and 12 rebounds, and Sheryl points for the first lime in tl!eir threeThe Rockers; playing withoul Swoopes scored 18 for the Comets. year history.
second half, making nine i:onsecu.
tive shots during one stretch. The slarters Isabelle FiJalkoski and Eva Taj McWilliams led Orlando, one of
The Sparks took command at the
scored was tied 63-63 with 9 :16 Ncmcova, were led by Merlakia two expansion teams this season, beginning of the second. h•lf,
·with IS points.
.
remaining when Charlotte went to .a Jones' 14 points.
outscoring the Monarchs I0-2to take
· . Comets 77, Miracle 63
Cooper, the two·time league a S8-4S lead. The Monarchs weren't
zone defense, forcing Washington to
shoot from outside and spurring an
A sprained ankle slowed Cynlhia ,. MVP, sprained her right ankle in closer than nine jl&lt;lints after that.
18-4 run that. mcluded consecutive Cooper, but not the Houston Comets. practice Wednesday and limped
Tamecka Dixon and Ukari Figgs
Cooper had 24 pomts, seven through warmups and most of the each scored 14 points for the Sparks.
three-pointers by reserve guard
Stephanie McCany to put the game rebounds and seven assists as the · game. Nevenheless, she was 7-of·l 0 Latasha Byears led the visiting
.
- two-time defending WNBA, chanipi,- · and played all but three minutes.·
away• .
Monarchs with 19 points and scv_en
N1kk1 McCray led Washmgton · ons spoiled the debut of the Orlando
Sparks 100 Monarchs 78
rebounds.
with 22 points, and Muriel Page had
'
14. Andrea Nagy had 12 assists.
,
Tracy Reid had . 15 points and
'
'
eight rebounds .for the Sling.
In other WNBA openers, the New
York Liberty beat the Cleveland ':
Rockers 87-60, the Houston ·Comets .
defeated the Orlando Miracle 77·63
and the Los Angeles Sparks beat the
Sacramenlo·Monarchs 100-78.
' Liberty 87, Rockers 60
Vickie Johns.0 n scored 17 poinls
as New York won i1s third conseculive home opener.
·
The Liberty won without leading
rebounder Rebecca Lobo. who
Stroll through the Country Store. Have a down home cooking in the newly
injured her left knee early in the
renovated Dining Hall or just open the Window to the past lzy waJlde:rin~io..J
game and did nol return.
New York shot 50 percent from
through the grounds and enjoying our many exhibits.
.:l,~
the field, including 8-for- 11 by

.

Baseball

' AL standings

-

EaJirrn Division

»:

.

.579
.569
.443
407
.379

Cenlral Dt,.ision
20

.649

•

••
•

••

•

.,

,.

CL£VELAND ..................... J 7
Chicqo ................................27
Kansas City ..........................25
~roil .. ~................ ... ............ 25
Minnesota ................. ...... .....21

';
8
10
11 '11

29

.482

9 ~1

32

,439
424

12
13

.362 ·

16'h

34
37

Wutcm Di~bton
Texas ..................................... J5 2)
Seaule ........ ,................. -. ....... 30 28
Ollkland ........................ ....... JO 29
Anaheim ........................ ...... .28 31

...
•

!ill

L &amp;1.

... Jl 24
. .. JJ 25
Toronto ..... .................. ' ...... 27 34
Ta~Bay ......... ................ 24 35
Ballarnore ............
.......22 36

New York
- • Boston
......

.603
.511
.508
. ~75

5
5'h

•'
••

-

June 12 &amp; 13, 1999 9 AM • 5 PM

''·
'•
..•

Gas &amp; Steam Engi,tie Show :

•
••

••

L

&amp;1.

.627
.525
.511
.411
..18]

!ill
6
6'1J
lth
14'.S

Ctnlral Division

Houston .................. ............ ..15
Chicago .............................. J2
CINCINNATI ..................... JI
Piusburgh ............................ JO
Sr. loui1 ......................... ·.... 29
Milwaukee ............. ...............26

23
24
24
28
29

.60J

..571
.564

517
.500
33_ .441
25
21
29

2'·)

5

•

9':

~•o

.14

. 58~

.5.10
.500
,464
.414

2
5
1
10

CLEVELAND9

Today's games
(AL vs. NL)

•
•
:

Chicago Whitt! SoJC {Parque 6-51 n1 Chkngo Cubs
(Ueber ~- I ), :\:20 p.m.
,
Tampa ~ny (Win J-2) 31 M&lt;ln\l'ent (Batisla 5·11.
1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Ynnkces (0. Hernandez 6-5) ar Aorida
(Meadows S-5), 7:05p.m.
. ,
Kansas Ci1y (Rosado J-~l nt Pituburgh (Benson
4- 4). J:OSl!.rn.
N (Gooden 2•2) ·al' (:lNCINN~TI
(Pnc~Av,. LA
ms .-u), 7:0--'p.m.
Toronto (Hamikon ().. J) 81 Philadelphia (Wolf 0-?) 7 J5
• :. p.m.
Boston (Rose .3-0) at N_Y. Meu (Yoshii.5·5), 7:40
p.m8 8 1 (P
s
.
umore anson ·· 4 ) at Atlanta -(Maddu" .5·3),

-.
•
•
•
;

•
,.

•

•

:
,.

~
•

:
•
:.
rl
•

•

•
If
C

S:
~

~

.,..

,.
•
•

.

'

'

Baltimore (Guzman 2-4) a1 Atlanta (Millwood 6--

# 3), 1:15 p.m.

5.

Chicaao White Sox. (Sirotka 4-6), a1 Chica&amp;o Cubt
- C'Il1lchlel2-7}. I :l!li p.m. ·
-..
Lot Ant;elel (Valdes S--4) 111 03kland (Ragen 3·
2), 4:05 p.m.
~ ' 1'ampl Bay &lt;_
Callaway 0-0) al M~ntrcal
"i (llonnoinon l·5), 7.0S p.m.
-.,
Ton.Hllo (Eicobar !Ji.)) at Philadelphia (8'yrd 8---J ),
"' 7:ln p.m.
·
tt;
N.Y. Yan~s (Clemen~ 5- I) ar Florida
.., (L-..o. ).l~ 7:0l Plm.
,
•
•
KMW City (Suppan .\..4) at Piruburah (Silva 2": J), 7:ln p.m.
'
~
CLEVELAND (Nosy 7.J) " CINCINNATI
• (Homioch 5·5&gt;. 7:05
•1
Mln.eaota (H.wkins 2·7) ai Milwaukee (Eldred
.; 1--4), 8:05p.m.
;
· SM Dic:JO. ~Ashby 6-4) at HOUIIoll (Lima 10-2),
ol 8:05 p,m.
~
Detroit (Weaver 6-3) 11 St .Louis (Acevedo 4-1),
,. 8:10p.m.
a•
Colorado (Atlado .5-.S) at Tcx.as (Sele 6--4), 8:35
; , p.m. .
oi-;
San Fr.-.cisco {Rueter 5-l) at Sentcle (F. Garcia 7·
·~ 2), 9:0S p.m.
Arizona (fkncs 4-.S) 01 Anaheim (Finley 4-6).
• . 10:0.'1 p.m.
;

e.m.

•••
"•
...
f!

...
Division !-first team
, · P- Katie Chain, N. Canton
Hoover; Jessica Miller, Medina ;
· Kate Leary, Pickering10n; Erin
McCiincy, Hilliard Darby; Alison
Blake, Hamilton Ross; Laura Day,
lakota Easi; Crissy Rapp, Batavia
Amelia. SS - Jessica Wegesin,
Wapakoneta ; Megan Beshalske.
Oregon Clay; Tracee McCoy, Akron
·'·'Ellett; Lacey Reichert, Amherst
'· 'Steele ; Katie McBroom, . Logan;,
- Sarah Melvin, Cin. Sycam ore ;
Rocky Senko, Westlake. I B- Ieri
' Keller, Grove City. 2B-Erin
Wiedema'lln, · Ketteiing Fairmont.
·Kristen Mills, Steubenville.
·· ·
Second team
P- Becky Vossberg, .Akron
· Springfield; Stephanie Williams ,
Robyn
Hilliard
Davidson;
"'Swedersky,
Northwest;
Sarah
Division 11-first team
P- Mindi Nash, Wintersvi lle
'· Zoellel, Cin. McAuley ; Meli ssa
Stemen, Wapakoneta . C- Megan l~dian Creek; Angie Gomez,
McGaughy, Canton GlenOak; Carrie Archbold ; Megan Meyer, Vermilion ;
Eneix , Pickerington; Ginger Price, Arnie Leffew, LaGrange Keyslone ;
Marysville , Amy Yiuger, Lexington. Katie Lamport, Poland Seminary ;

SO£cer·
. MaJor Ltaaue Soecer ·
LOS ANGELES GALAXY: Released
lawrence LozZMo.

F

CoUege

Leah Black, Rocky River; Nikki Klenke , Coldwater. Pam Poff,
Scott, Col. Ready ; Chrissy Beck, Talmadge;
Tammy . Trainer,
Chill. Zane Trace; Erica Brickey, Lewistown Indian Lake.
Portsmouth West; Molly Bin z,
2B-Tracy Lee, Fostoria. SSSpringfield Kenton Ridge ; Tia Tiffany Evans, Mari on Elgin; Jessica
Jenkins. LaGrange Keystone. OFBenning,
Nonhwestern. · CLyndsey Coriell, Minford. 2B- Kristy Bap1is1a, Bellevue; Rachel
Jennifer
Jenkins,
LaGrange Testa, Akron Hoban; Julie Metzger,
Spring. Kenton
Keystone , SSKristine • Himes,
Ridge. Ashley
Zoarville Tusc.
Norm~n . Philo.
Valley ;
Alida
Honorable
Morrison, South
mention
Point. OF- Kelly
P - Reb e kah
Simms, Shelby.
Sherman, New
Cari
Dean,
Concord
John
C a n a I
Mar~y
Glenn ;
Winchester;
Graham ,
Deana
Mckee,
Tri Dresden
Newark Licking ·
Valley ; Jessica
Valley.
Bush,
Dayto n
Second team
Northridge; Jo
P-Re nee
Ann Harmon,
Whaley. Carroll
Proct.o rvllle
Bl oo m -C arroll;
Fa1rland; K-erri
Tammy
Blair,
Ohler,
Bell e.
Delaware
Benjamin Logan.
Buckeye Valley ; STEPHANIE EV.A.NS-Eastem H.S. lB-Laura
Entler,
Ellisa
Hurley,
Alliance Marlington; Maria Lump, Portsmouth West; 28 - AIIie Graf,
Chil. Unioto; Heather Bradley, Poland Seminary. 3B- Kendra
McDermott
Northwest;
Tara Losey, Greenfie ld McClain . SSRosepapa , Bellaire. C-Jessica Ashley Ball , Mogadore Field: Renee

Sunday's games
(AL•s.NL)
CLEVf&gt;LANO at CINC~ATI. U 5 p.m.

Division UJ-Iirslt~am
P-Shawna Murphy, StrasburgFranklin;
Autumn
Kaufman ,
Sugarcreek Garaway; Keri Perkins,
Convoy Crestview; Erin Rau, Old
Fort; Lindsay Gervais, N, Ro binson
Col . Crawford; Stephanie Hanman,
Kinsman Badger; Heather Loomi s,
N. Jacl&lt;son Jackson-Milton ; Jess ica
Price, Richwood N. Union ; Brooke
Bower, Morral Ridgedale; Candace
Sharp, Willow Wood Symmes
Valley; Carmen Monlgomery, S.
Charleston Southeastern. 2 BAshl ee Toeller, Crooksville. 3BSarah WoiiL Sand. St. Marys;
Jennifer Bunon, N. Lewisburg Triad.
SS-Amy
Dixon,
Chil.
Huntington; Stephanie Campbell ,_S.
Charleston Southeastern. OF- Kate
Gase, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon,
Second learn
P-Sa rah Langsdorf, Hannibal
Ri ver; Monica Cyphen, Southington
Chalker; Jessica Butter, Franklin
Furnace Green; STEPHANIE

EVANS,
REEDSVILLE
EASTERN; Jakki Schneider, Sidney
Lehman ; Kelli Strayer, DeGraff
Riverside; Laura Haas, Cin. Summit
Country Day. C-Dina Bartemas.
Steub. Cath. Cent. ; Jena Whitcomb.
Loudonville ;
Leslie
Bowen ,
Rockford Parkway; Amy Price, Van
Wert Lincolnview; Sara Ebbeskotte,
SS- Joy
Delphos
Jefferson .
Wilkinson, Van Wen L.incolnview.
OF- Karie
Ryan, · Sherwood
Fairview. Katrina .Gibson, Marion
Pleasant : Annette Gibson, Milford
Center Fairbanks.
Honorable mention
P- Kelly .Hoyt. Tipp City Bethel;
Audrey . Barnell, Mowrystown
Whiteoak; Stacy Adams, Belp~;
Heather Phillips, Rockford Parkway;
Kri s Commisso, Defiance Ayersville;
Debbie Brothers, Fort Frye. I BIsabel Boswell , Cin. Country Day ;
Jess-ica Hibbard, Fairport Harbo~
Harding. 2B - Ashley Holcnka, ·
Shadyside, SS-Amanda Rawlins,
South Webster; Randi Whitman,
O ld Fori: Brandy .Bower, Morral
Ridgedale . C-Mindy Davidson ,.
Sycamore Mohawk ; Kelly Bonon,
Millcreek-West Unity Hilltop. OF-Caodice Charlton, Newton ; Brandi ·
Papiernik, Mineral Ridge.

a

Jamie Baker and Jeff Brown to plate
the runs.
Adam Cumings led off the second,
with a solo homerun over the left·
cente( field fence. Mike Mollohan
then hit 1he next pitch out al about
the s.ame place for an 8-0 Mei gs lead.
Meigs added a solo run in the
third. Adam Williams reached on a
Belpre error and moved to second on
a wild pick-ott attempt. Bentley then
singled to make it 9-0.
Meigs plated eight more runs in
the founh to take· a 17-0 lead, Two
Belpre errors , two walks, a fielders
choice and singles by Heath
Rothgeb, Mollohan (two hits in lhe
inning), Smiddie, and Lillie and a
sacrifice fly by Cumings plated the
runs.
Belpre dented the plate in the bot-

allowed he firs1 Belpre runner to
reach base off of Benilcy. A single by
Kurt Whitlatch, a Meigs erro,, a walk
' and two wild pitches and a pas sed
ball plated four runs,
In the top of the fifth , Meigs sent
10 batters to "the plate scoring six'
runs for a 23-4 lead. A sing le by Kyle
Smiddie on base got the inning start, ed. Heath Rothgeb then reached on a
fielders choice. Then Bentley, Bus1er
Penix and Mollohan singled before
Jesse little launched a three· run
home run ov er the right-center field
'fence.
Belpre added three more runs in
the bottom of the· fifth. Ben Polin
struck out, but reached on a wild
pitch .. Back-to-back walks and a
double by Steve McGuire plated the
runs to make it' a 23-7. game.

. sixth: Penix singled and came into

score when Little doubled to right.
Belpre scored its last run on a solo
home run by Mike Lauer.
·
Mollohan led Meigs at the plate
with lhree singles and his home run .
Little added a si ngle , double and a
home run . Bentley had three sing les.
Penix had two single s, while
Cumings homered. Also getti ng singles were Kyle Norri s, Nick
Denwiller, J.;.ff Brown, Jamie Baker
and Rothgeb ,
Bentley was the winning pitcher.
Rothgeb pitched the final two
innings. The two combined to give
up three hits, strike out II and walk
two.
)'late • Ellis was the staner and
loser for Belpre, Lauer, McG uire and
Whitlatch also took turns oh the hill

walked five and hit a bauer. 'Lauer .
led Belpre at the plate with his home
run, McGuire added ·a double and
Whitlatch a single.
!nnjgs llililb
Meigs ................ 621-860-1=24- 18-2
Belpre ................... 000-4.3.1-0=8-3· 7
Jeremiah Bentley (WP), Heath
Rothgeb (6) and Adam Cumings,
Busler Penix (4)
Nate Ellis (LP), Mile L~uer (2),
Steve McGuire (4), K;urt Whitlatch
(6) and Ben Poling, Steve Sprigg (3)
Homers
Meigs: Adam Cumings solo-second inning
Meigs: Mike Mollohan solo-sec·
ond inning
Meigs: Jesse Linle three run-fifth
inning
·
'

Church Services Sunday 9 AM

CALIFORNIA: Named David Esquer baseball
coach.
NEBRASKA -OMAHA: Announced the resignation or Mary Yori, women's softball coach. ·
NORTliERN ILLINOIS: Announced the res.ig·
nalion of Frank Del Medico, baseball coach .
ST. PETER'S: Exrended the contract of Mike
Granelli, women's basketball coach.
STONY BROOK: Named Nic:k Macarchuk
men 's bakc:tball coach and signed. him to a five-year
comrac1.
WlN'rnROP : "Extended lhe cOOtract of Oregg
Ma11h"i men 's basketball coach, one year throogh
2003.
.
WOFFORD: Named Sieve Traylor baseball
coach.
·
'

Charloue ............_......., ........... ,]
New York ............
.. .... 1
Detroit .................................... 0
CLEVELAND ........................ O
Orlando ................................. 0
Wn~hington .. ................... .. 0

0 1.000

Iii!

0

1.000

0
I
I

.000
.000
.000

1
·I

.
.
FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE

JER

I

.000

1

.l"a~'s

IT'S A

~l

SAL~

IBBEE
.

.

the Dealer Beldnd T.lJe Deal

That .M"a.kes T.IJe .R.E.A.L Di«ereneel
. LITII:.E SWINGS- Meigs' Jesse Little takes a cut at a pitch durThursdey'a American Legion game in Belpre, where the guesta
~;;iJI,iecl a 24-8 mercy-rule win. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

' .

to

Western Conference
Houston ................................. 1
Los Ansetes ........................... l
Minne soln ............................. 0
Phoenix ............................ ... 0
U1ah ..... :................. ~ ................o
S:•cramen10 ............................ 0

0 1.000

o 1.000
0
0

a
1

.000
.000
_()(X)

.000

ellow Jackets rally
top Lou isvi lie 14-1'3
n season opener

'
'''
I

ThurS(Iay's scores
01arlolle: 8J . Washinglun 73
New York 87, CLEVELAND 60

BUFFALO POPCORN
"'~\\ CHICKEN

Washington at Houston. 4 p.m.
los Angeles at CLEVELAND, 7 p.m.
New YOJk at Charlotte, 7 : ~ p.m.
Dt-tmit m Millllesota, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Utnh. 9 P·"'·
Phoenix at Sacramemo, 10 p.m.

Transactions

~.x:nano.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Ollimed OF Scott
Humer off waiven rrom the New York Mcts.
PI1TSBURGH PIRATES: Optioned RHP Marc
Willin110 Nashville ofrhe PCL. Purchased the contntct or RHP Greg Hansrll from Nashville. Moved
SS Pat Meam from the 15--day 10 lhe 60-day disabled list.

DAVE HARRIS
l"§entilnel Correspondent
' Hi s10ry was -made Saturd ay
=~ve~Jing when the Middleport Yell ow
semi·professional fonl hall
took the field for their first
if~;.~- And when the final whistle
~
the Yellow Jacket.s had posted
exciting 14-13 come fro m behind
' over the Louisville Galaxy.
'Louisville scored just over a
~P.l.ilute into the contest on a 63 yard
return. The extra points were
~~~~~and 1he Galaxy held a 7-0 lead,
they took into Jhe locker room
halftime .
.
'The Yellow Jackets got on the
~li&lt;l•ard with 1:25 left in the third periwhen quarterback David
tijlirdwic:k hooked up with Chuck ·
on a 16 yard scoring toss o_n a
tlfolurth and goal play.The extra pmnts
~wer-e no good.
,
Louisville put together a 53 yard
12 play~ drive to take a 13-6 with
' remaining in the game.
·· But the Yellow Jackets came right
~b1t~ek however 'nd put together a 54

f.

Quarter ·Pound Sausage ·Patty

Basketball

Football

Stars were also more physical
time, outhitting the Sabres 48In ·the first game, 1he Sabres out. the Sta(s 60·44.
. "They had a few shifts where
really took it to us ,"' Buffalo's
McKee said, ''.so I guess that was
difference."
• But Modano suffered , the injury
a hard check from McKee.
"I think it "''S a pretty clean hit, "
~lcK:ee s·aid. "He was going wide on
turned into him. l hit guys
aoung .mc board all the lime."

JACKSONVILLE J~GUARS : Signed La ,
Amhony Hicks.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Si&amp;iltd WR Sean
M""'Y·

89¢ Bags Of Ice

Hockey

•

NMional HO(kty LtiJut
CAROLINA HURRICANES : Announced an
affili111ion agreemem wilh Cint:innati of 1he JHL for
the nut lhree sensons.

"

..
•

Supercab, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM Cass, Tilt,
Cruise, Only 10,000 Miles

4X4,

2 DR, Premium, Sport Package, V-6, Auto, Air Cond,
All Power, low Miles

V-8, Auto, Air Cond , AM/FM Cass, Tilt, CruiSe, All Power, Leather,
1 28,000 Miles

·"

1995 FORD• AEROSTAR

. XLT,

v:a, Auto, Air Cond, _,"I\MifM Cass, Tilt, Cruise,
All Power

,

$

V-8, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM Cass, Tilt, Cruise, Ali Power, .

·

•

NationiJ F901btll Laaue
ARIWNA CARDINALS: Signed RB Terry
Banle lo a one-year c:omracc.

~'i. LOUIS RAMS: Named William Bryant ptlb·
lie relations.nuisrnnt.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Announced the
retiremcnt.of DE Chris Doleman.

1997 FORD FISO
4X4, V·8, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cess, Tilt, Cruise,
4 New Tires, More

.1997 LINCOLN MARK VIII

'

·*Made By Gallia County~ Own
Steve Evans Country.Sausage

National Basblball A110ttation
NBA: Fined lhe Dalla! Muericb and
Sacramento Kings organiution't $2S,OOO each (or
providinc el!.pense-paid lrips to players.

yard play to win the contest. Once
again Hardwick hit Vog1, this time
from- 3S yards out to pull Middleport
to within 13·12 with 4:18 left in the
game.
The Yellow Jackets went for the
win on the extra poinls, and
Hardwick hooked up with a wide
open Terry Qualls in the end zone for
the win.
No other details of 1he gam~ were
available. This week the Yellow
Jackets will travel to Columbus.
before returning home on Saturday,
June 19 10 play Belpre.

1997 FORI, F150 '4 X2

~

'

;

,

Lynch, Perry; Natalie Winkelfoos.
Bucyrus. C- Megan Piar, Carroll
Bloom·Carroll; Staci Douglass,
Bellbroolce. OF-Kim Griech,
Tallmadge; Lindsay Hug, Norwalk ;
Jamie Odom , Swanton.

~~_!.~s Legi.~.~.~.~i~~·~ ~~~~~. ~~~~ .~~!~Mt!~IM~· ~~.~; .~.~~~.!~!~~~."'

: Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs, while Belpre falls to 1-6.
:, Meigs ptiunded out 18 hits. batted Meigs will travel to Logan ·tonight,
a~und three limes , and rolled 10 an and to Somerset for a twinbill on
impressive 24·8 win over Belpre in Sunday.
Meigs jumped out to 6-0 lead in ,
American Legion baseball · action
Thursday evening !'I Belpre.
·
I he first inning, sendin'g 12 hatters to
~ The game was called after seven the plate. Meigs took advantage of
innings due to the mercy rule.
four walks, a hit batter, two errors

Demonstrations of
Dewey Taylor 11 am •1pm Com Grinding,
Broom Making &amp;
and
Rope Making
Everett Wedge Band 1pm •3p~

P

•
• p.m.

if,

Eastern· ConferenCe
.
»: L &amp;1.

Baseball
Major Leque Ba•baH
MLB : Named Marcel Lachemnnft pitching
coach oJ ohe USA P A G
b b II
an m ames ase a team.
Amcrkan Leagut .
AL: Named Jason A. CIUT coordinator b~ball
infonnnti on.
' ·
~NAHEJM ANGELS: Sent SS Gary DiSarci na
to Erie of 1he Eastern Lea&amp;ue on a rehabilitation
7:40p.m.
aniJnment
Minnesota {Perkins 1-3) al Milwauktt (Kari.S·.S),
MlNNESOTA TWINS: Activated SS Cristian
i:~!:l~eao (Williams 2·J) at Houston (lkraman Guzman from the IS·d3y disabled list. OpliOMd INF
l 2) 8 Ol
Cleatus Davidson to New Bnlain of the EaJtem
• • : p.m.
leaJue.
Detroit (Miieki 2·.S)nl StLouis (Bottenfteld 9-2).
NEW YORK YANKEES: Signed ss ~h Taylor
B: ~~~~(Kilt: 4..1) at Tuu (Helling 5_61• S:3S and auigncd him tD Staten Island of the New von.
Penn League.
p.m.
N
Arizona
(Reynoso l-1) at Anaheiin (Hill 3-4).
ATLANTA a:~~~-~~
'lh
10·05 p m.
- I
to terms WI
'san francitoo (G~ner o.4) 11 Sellltle (MDyer 6 _ , RHP Man Butler. SS Patrick Manning, OF Sean
4) 10·0$ p m
Zumwalt. RHP Andrew Brown, RHP Dten Evert,
·~ An8e~ 1 (C. Perez2-7)~t0akland(Oquist.S· UO:: Bryan Celani, LHP Benjarni~ Kozlowski, C
4), 10:).5 p.m.
Kevtn Green, LHP Thomas Ctutm, SS S1ephet1
.
Rasmussen , C Bryce Tervec:n, C Alva ThompsDn,
Satu' "'-'ay's o•mes
UIP John Fosttr, RHP Shanin Veronie, c Jeffrey
•-u
e.Rodriguez, CF Joseph Francisco, 38 Steven Fiore, C
(AL vs. NL)
Shaun Arg:enro. SS Jan Calais. OF Mike Ce:lli, OF
Bolton (Rapp 2-3)11 N.Y. Meu (LcitB l-5), I: IS Nick Cnx:ker, LHP Mart Gawer and C RAymond

.

OTfAWA SENATORS: Annuimced an 11ffilia·
tion agreement with Orand Rapids or 1he IHL.

Saturday's games

S:m Diego 2. Oakland I

;
,

•

2B-Lea Dono, N. Canlon Hoover;
Emily Cooper, Hamilton Ross. 3BEmmy Yoho, Marietta. SS--(iinger
Holcomb, Hamilton . OF- Nicol
Ellis, Brecksville; Marcy Frank ,
Amherst Steele; Steph Gordon,
Clayton Northmont Jessica Liedtlke ,
New Philadelphia:
'
Honorable mention
P- Erin Brubaker. Ashland ;
Kristina Bush, p, kala Watkins
Memorial ; Jessica Peden, Green ;
Sarah Newland, Springfield South.
C- Leslie Lichty, Defiance : Bridget
Farrel, Hilliard Darby; Erin Malloy,
Cin. Sewn : Liz Rudy, Akron
Springfield. IB-Lindsey Nugent,
Butler.
2B-Maegan
Vandalia
Swisher, DeSaleS:; Meredith Burlew.
Lakota West 3B-Jen Tisevicn, N .
OF-Missy
Canton
Hoover.
Cunningham, Warren; Gina Yono,
Grove City; Ashley Wood. Canton
GlenOak; Laurie Lynch, Louisville;
Yoder,
Dover;
Alea
Annie
Bruggeman, Kettering Fairmont

Entertainment On Stage

Houston 77. Orlando 6J
los Angdes 100. Sacrnmtnto 78

Thursday's scores
(AL vs. N{.)
Milw ;mlc:~ 1~ .

1um

2

-W e!tern Dirisloo

....................... .35
San Fmnci~co .
. ....... JJ
lm Angeles ..,., .. ..... ... .. .. 29
Colorado . .. . ... ... .. ......... .26
San Olcg.o .. .
l4

•.•'
•

Sunday's game

COLUMB.US, Ohio (AP)- Here
are the 1999 AII·Ohio High School
Girl's Softball teams as voted by the
Ohio High School Fastpitch Coaches
Association:

WNBA standings

»:

. Arizooa ....
~

.

.

Cast of 17 area all-Ohio softball honorees includes Evans

New York at Indiana, 7:30p.m., if necessary

.. ........... 31 22
New York .........
. ......... 31 28
J'hiladeJphiB
......... ... .... 30 28
Monlrtal ............. .... ....... 23 ' 33
:..... 2] 37
Flotida ..............

••
•
~ •••

Indiana at New York, 9 p.m.

At .

Past

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomer·oy • Middleport, Ohio

&amp;.Mem Divlskln

Atlanta ....

~

NBA conference fmals

7~

• NL standings

••

Basketball
Tonighl's game

'0

••
•

Tampa Bay at Monlreal. I :35 p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia. I :35 p.m.
Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 1:.\5 p.m.
Bos1on at N.Y. Mets. I :49 p.m.
Minnesota Bt Milwaukee, 2:0.5 p.m.
DeD"Oh m St. Louis, 2:10 p:m.
Chicago Whire SoJC at Chicago Cubs, 2:20p.m.
San Diego at Hous1on, 2:35p.m.
Colorado at TeJCas, 3:05p.m.
San Frucisco at Seaule, 3:35p.m.
Los Angeles at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.•
N.Y. Yankees ar Florida, 4:05 p,m.
Bahjmore ar A1lanra, 8:05 p.m.
Arizona ar Anaheim, 8:05 p.m.

A Trip To

WV State Farm M

Scoreboard

":J

goal-scorers. " But the difference is
we continued to pl•y throughout the
game. in Game I, we didn' t play the
complete 60 minutes."
The Stars' victory could be costly.
1lley lost Modano, an All-Star cen·
ter, to a wrist injury the last 10 minutes of the game, and the team said it
•

1-l

Friday, June11, 1999

"

Phone
7 40-992-2196
~Host-

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport ·

Clean.r

•

'

�'
---

Pome&gt;roy • Middleport, Ohio

hge 6 • The Dally Sentinel

~eigs

Friday, June 11, 1999

Cou.nty schools
boast
18
aii-TVC.
diamond·
players
Hocking Division baseball

~Meigs County thrived in the recent Tri-Valley Conference balloting for
~ball and softball as Eastern's Stephame Evans joined Southern'S Adam
W1lhams as the Most Valuable Players in the Hocking Division soflbalf and
llaseball voting respectively.
Also earning honors in the coaching ranks were Southern's Mick
Wmebrenner m baseball and former Eastern graduate Roger Bissell. who now
roaches Federal Hocking softball . Bissell joins Waterford 's boug Baldwin as
eo·Co~ch of the Year.
. Evans dominated the pitching ranks for Eastern the past couple of seasons,
Wtnnmg 30 games the past two seasons tor the Eagles. Evans helped Ea~tcrn
to a second place fimsh '"_the league, and pttched the Eagles to the DIVISIOn
Ill dtstnct runner·up pos1t1on, where they were defeated by Green 2- 1.
Eastern had claimed a 2·0 win in the first round district game over Adena. a
aame in which Evans pitched a no-hitter.
Teammate Valerie Karr and Juli Hayman shared first team honnrs with
Evans .. Karr, a top hitter on the team was part of the Evans· Karr, Eagle pitching battery at catc her. Eastern's Kristen Chevalier. a sophomore. was a second
learn nomtnee.
Southern's Kim Sayre and Kim Ihie earned first team honors. while
Laraine Lawson made second team.
In TVC baseball. Southern's Adam Williams. batting .442 for the year with
1110re than. 40 hits, earned most valuable player honors and was the league's
top vote gclter. Williams was an integral part of Southern's success over the
pest four years.
Adam Cumings. a junior catcher; an'd Benji Manuel. a senior pitcher, wen!
also fir st learn nominees. Josh Ervin of Southern was a second teamer.
Ea.,tern's Josh Will, a junior, earned first team honors. and was part of
Eastern's successful rebui ld ing year. Josh Broderick, also a· junior from
Eastern, w,as: a second team nominee.
Winebrenner received the Coach of the Year award for· yet another sue·
ccss ful season as head mentor of the Tornad oes. Winebrenner IS in his 15th
year at the helm of theTornadoes. who !mve won a sectional title 14 of those
seaso ns.
· In the Ohi o Division . Belpre's StaCi Adams was the softball MVP with
Brent Ewing of Wellston claiming the basehall top honors . Pat Hendershott of
Wellston, w'ho w6n his 4tJOth game this seaS&lt;in, was coach of !he year in base·
ball and Ken Cox of Be.lprc and Sheila Ross of Alexander shared softball
coaching honors.

Brook~ Williams, 3b, Meigs ....................................................................... Jr.
April Higginbotham, P, Wellston ................................................................ Sr.
Second team
Stacy Adams, CF, Belpre ........................................................................... Sr.
Abby Harris, C, Meigs ..............................................................................So.
Michelle Sams, C, Alexander .............................................................. ...... .. .Jr.
Jennifer Mollohan, C,Belpre ..................... ,....................................... .'.......... Sr.
Lisa Seiiz, LF, Vinton Couniy............................................................... ...Sr.
Angela Jewell , 2b, Alexander.. ..........................................................
Sr.
MVP- Staci Adams, Belpre
Coaches or the Year- Ken Cox, Belpre; Sheila Ross, Alexander

1

Fimt team
Adam Williams, CF, Southern ........ .................................... ........................ Sr.
Keith Carroll, P/1 b, Federal Hockin 1l .......................................................... Sr.
Josh Will, PISS, Eastern ........................................................................... Jr.
Benji Manuel, P, Southern ........................................................................Sr.
Phil Faires, P, Trimble ................................................................................. .Jr.
Brady Trace, Pllst, Trimble ............ ..................................... .............. .:........ Sr,
Josh Wagner, CF, Waterford ...................... .... ............................................... Sr.
Adam Cu mings, C, Southern ...................,...............................................Jr.
Jon Sechkar, C/3b, Federal Hockinl: ........................................................... .Jr.
Randy Nelson, lb, Miller ............................................................................ So.
Dave Brown, C, Trimble .. ................. ........................................................... Sr.
Secnnd team
.
Josh Broderick, C, Eastern ........... ;.......................................................... Jr.
Casey Jones, OF, Waterford ......................................................................... Sr.
Thad Skinner, PISS, Waterford ........... .. ............ .......................................... Sr.
Josh Ervin, P, Southern ................. ............................................................Sr.
Cody McCoy, PISS, Trimble ..................... ........................ ........................... Sr.
Matt Edwards, Cl2b. Federal Hockt ng ............................................. :........... Jr.
MVP- Adam Williams, Southern
Coach of the Year- Mlck Winebrenner, Southern

Apostolic
Church or JosUJ Cbrill Apotlolk
·
VanZandt and Wud ltd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School- lO:JO a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.

Asse mbly of God

Hocking Division softball

Ohio Division softb.all
First team
Staci Adams, P, Belpre ...... ...... ........... .......................................................... .Jr.
Stephanie Wigal, SS, Meigs ........................................................,.............So.
Amy Dupler, C, Nelsonville· York ... .. .............. .... ........................................ .Jr.
Jenny Zi nn , SS, Vinton County ...................... ............................................. Sr.
Kristy King, P. Alexander ........................... ................................................. Sr.
Candi Malone, SS, Belpre .................._... ................................................. .. ... So.
Amy Jewett, 3b. Alexander..
.. .............................................. :.... .... ... Sr.
Jessica Cecil, P, Vi nton Counly .
.. .............................. .................... ... ... Sr..
Lee Ann Hatten, OF, Wellston ......... .. ................................... ................. So.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Friday, June 11, 1999

Llber!J A"&lt;mbly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday SCrvice.s· 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

First team
Cassie Harra, P, Waterford ......................... .............. ................................ ... ..Jr.
Stephanie Evans, P, Eastern: ..................................................................... Sr.
Lacy Hornsby, SS, Federal Hocking .......................................... .. ............... So .
Kim Sayret P, Southern ....................................................................~ ........Sr.
Juli Hayman, 2b, Eastern ....................................:-:;.......... :....................... .Sr.
Amanda Dillon, P, Trimble ......... ............................ ...... .... ...................... Sr.
Ash lee Jones, OF, Waterford .......... ...................................................... :...... Sr.
Val Karr, C, Eastern .....:........................................................................... Sr.
Alisha Highl and, P, Federal flocking .......... .......:.................... .....
.. ..Jr.
Kym McCormick., SS, Miller ............................................. :.... .... ........ ... .Jr.
Kim lhle, lb, Southern ••.•...........•••...• ;........................................................ Jr.
Second team
·
.
Tracey Forshey, SS, Waterford .
.... '.................................... .Jr.
Kristen Chevalier, SS, Eastern ................................................................. So.
Krystal Weaver, C. Trimble ........................ :..... ,.................. ,.....
.. .... ... Sr.
Cassie Leckrone, C, Miller ............. :................ ..........................
.. ...... ..Jr.
Jessica Calaway, OF, Federal Hocking ..... ............. ,.............................. . .:.Jr
Laraine Lawson, OF, Southern ................................................................. Jr.
M.VP - Stephanie Evans, Eastern
Coaches of the Year-: Roger B"isse ll. Federal Hocking : Doug Baldwtn.
Waterford
·

Bapti st
Ma~alha

Meigs' Stephanie Wigal and Brooke Williams earned first team honors."
,Ahby Harris·was second team. In basehall Jeremi ah Bentley was a first team·
er along wuh J.T. Humphreys.

Hope Bapllsl Church (Southern)
Pastor: Jim Ditty
570 Grant St., Middleport
. Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m. aiM! 6 p.m . .
. Wedne~ay ServiCe- 7 'p.m.

Zion. Church cif Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt .l43)
· Pastor: Roaer WatSon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

· Free Will Baptist Churd1.
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Servi~ · 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Tuppera Pial• Cburch of Christ
Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewart
Wor1hip Service'· 9 a.m.
Communion- lO a. m.
Sunday School·- 10:15 a.m.
. Youth· 5:30pm Sund ay
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

loll 160 .... ,
.....tht poiic~
•ur IIJhd for my
lir•ruf,
rlttft MJid, 'Tills .
isn ., you. ':1 silid.
'Ytl lir,

t!lv~rs

PPR

Hemlock GI'Q'ilt Churcla
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Worship M9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mt. Union lbptl1t
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School·9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wed nesday Services - 6:30p.m •.
Bethlehem Baptlst'Church
Grea t Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Gene Morris
· Sunday School · 9:~0 a.m.
Sund ay WorshiP.- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
. Wednesday B11::ile Study · 6:00p.m.

atest m sports .news rom the

Daily Sentinel

Old Belhei.Fne Will Bapdit Cllun:h
28601 St Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School· 1Q a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.
T~ursday S~rvices • 7:30

..

Ulllslde Baptist Churth
St. Rt. 143 just off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr. ·
Sundity 'Schoot '· 10 a.m.
Worship - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
VIctory Baptist Jndepeadant
S2S N. 2nd St ·Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- IOa,m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvices- 7 p.m.

1S~hp · 42-inch mower deck
·Automatic transmission

• 13-hp · 38-inch mower deck
5 -speed shift-on-the-go
transmission

Fallh Baptist Church
Rai lroad St, Mason
Sunda~ School·lO a. m.
Worship · 11 a.m. ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m. ·

•.15-hp • 44-inch mower deck
··Automatic transmission

Foresl Run Baptlln
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

MI. Moriah Bapttll
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOrship· 10:45 a.m.
Aatlqally Baplbt
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evenina- 6:00p.m.

•

GT225 Lawn and Garden Tractor

• 17-hp • 48-inch mower deck
·All-wheel steering

.· 22-hp · 48-inch mower deck
: lfydrostatic drive

· · 2'Q-hp • 48-inch mower deck ·
·Automatic transmission

' •'

Dexter Cburth or Chrlll
Pastor: Juslin Campbell ·
Sunday schoo19:30 a.m.
Norman Will. superintendent
Sunday worsll ip - 10:30 a.m.

Christian Un1 on
Hllrtrord Chorth orChn1t to
Chrisllari Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - 11 a.m. '
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday.Services M7:30p.m.

Laurel Clllf fine Motbodl•t Cburcb
Pastor: Charles Swigger
. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10::30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servia;· 7:00 p.m.

I

Reorpnlzed Chun:h of Jesus Christ
or Litter Day Saints
Portland -Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Surxtay School ·9:30a.m.
'
WorShip· 10:30 a.m.
' Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
The Chd.n:h of Jaus
Chrisl of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20·1 1 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Saci'amenl Service 9-10:15 a. m.'
Homemaking meeting, lst Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Chun:b
Pine Grove
·Rev. Donald C. Frirz
Worship· 9:'00 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Our Sa"VIour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pa.stor: David Russell
Sunday Sc~OOI· 10:00 a. m.
Worsh ip - .11 a.m.

.
St. Paol Lutheran Chur&lt;h
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy
· Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School . 9:45a.m.·
Worship - 11 a.m.

United Methodist
Grablm Ualltd Melhodltt
Worship· 9:30·a.m. (1st &amp;·2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday SeNice , 7:30p.m.

Ml Olive Unlled. Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkes11ille

Church of God

Mtlas Cooperative Parish
Northeut Cluster
Alrrtd
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday 'School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - Il a.m., 6:30p.m.

Rudand'Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
s,.nlcust Fll"ll Churdl ot·God
Apple and Second Sts . .
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday SchOOl 11rtd WorShip· 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·. 6:30 p.m.

Church or God or Pmph«7
0.1. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Paslor: P.l . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - ll a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Congregation al

Gract Epl1&lt;0pol Church
.
326 E. Main. St., Pomeroy
·
Rev. James Bcma"cki, Rev. Kathlrin Fosler
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday SchOOl 11 :00 a.m.
www.frognet. nCI/-deanery

161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992·5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter-E. Heinz
Sat. Con: 4 :45-5: 15~, m. ; ~ass-5 :30p. m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m., .
Sun. Mas.s- 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

ML Moriah Clurcb of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pas1or: Brice Uu
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday ~n-ices - 7 p.m.

Ca th o lic

Church of Chnst

H)'HII Run Holiness Church
StirKiay Sc hool ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service-7:30p.m.

Putor: Re11. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7,p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m. .

· Rulllllld F,.. Will Blpdlt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • to ,.m.
· · Evening • 7 p.m.
. ' Se . 7

l'omtroy Cbun:b ofChrill
212 W. .Main St. .
Minbiler: Danny Diu
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wofship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Episcop al

Hol in ess
Commanlly Choudt
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tilli1
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Wonhi~'O: OO a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Chesler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
, Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School· lO a. m.
Thursday Services • 1 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School ·~ 10:30 a.m.
Lona Bouom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - l0:30 a.m.
Reednllle
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
· UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m."
First Sund~y of Month -7:30p.m. serv ice
Tuppen Plains St. P1ul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Central Cluster
·Albury (Syn&lt;uoe)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
· Sunday School~ 9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
. Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Foml Run
Putor: Chad Emrick
Sunda~ School · 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.
Thurs&lt;la~ Servi«s - 6:30p.m.

Hanest Outrucb Minlstrln
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pailors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sul)day Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

. Hulh [Middleport)
Past or~

Vernagayt SuUill&lt;tn
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

T H I

N

G

R

u

N

s

L .I K

E

Sllnrsvllle Word orFallh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:J.O a.m.
E11ening : 7 p.m.

Agapt Ufe Center
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pas h.~rs John &amp; P"atty Wade
603 Second A11e. Mawn
773-5017
Servit:e ti me: Sundiiy 10:30 11.m.
,Wednesday 7 pm

Mlnrnville
,
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Pea.rt Chapel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Rejoklna Ufe Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Faith Chapel
923 S. Third S1., Middlepon
Pas10r Ernie Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7. p.m.

Pomero)'
Pastor: Connie Flares
Sunday School · 9: 15a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 il.m.

Rock Sprincs
Pastor: Keith Rad er
Sunday School -9: 15a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.
Rudaad
S'unday School - 9:30a.m.
. Worsh ip - 10:30 a:m.·
Thursdry Services. 7 p.m.

Clturch ol JesUI ChriSI,
Apostolic Faith
•
1/4 mile past Fon Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Me1er
Sunday -7:00 p:m.
Wed~esday - 7:00p.m.
Fnda y-7:00 p.m.

Christian Fellowship Center
Salem St., Rudand
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Worship· 11 :1 5 a. 1t1. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi.;e · 7 p.m.

Clifton Tabernacle Churcb
Oif!on, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hobson Christlals Fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Youth"Fellowship Sunday. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday.service, 7;1XJ p.m.

Nc:w Ure Victory Cen1er
3773 Georges &lt;;:reelo: Road, Gallipolis, OH
·
Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
· Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Yciu!h 7 p.m.

Faith Full GOipel Church
Long Bouom
PaS10r: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9·:30 a.m.
Worship . 9 :30 a.m.' and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Friday · fellowshtp Se rv1ce 7 p.m.

Salem Cenler
· Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School- 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10:1~ a.m.
Snowville
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Full Gospel Church ottbe Uwln&amp;Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. PastOrs: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

The B~lievers' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd., Ru!larn.l
Pastor: Re11. Margaret J. Robinson
~eN ice s: Wednesday,,7:30 p.m.
_ Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Dewaync: Stutler
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
. Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesda_y Servltcs- 10 a.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St Rt. 1:24, Racin.e
Pastor: ~il li.am Hoback.
Su nt.J ~y School • ·tQ1.m.
Eve ning· 7 p.m.
Wed nesday Services- 7 p.m.

Harri.mn1'111e CommunltJ Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30 a..m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

C•rm.ei·Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. ·
Racine, Ohio
Paslor: Dewayne Stutler
· Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Mlddlepon ,Commualty Church
575 Pearl St. Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Momlna Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · ll a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Middleport Ptniecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Failh Valley Tabernacle Chun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Eail LeiOrt
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuu First U ni(~ Presbyterian.
Pastor: Rev. KriSloa.Robinson
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Syracuse Mission
141 1 Bridge·man St., SyracuSe
Re11. Mik.e Tbompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eve ning · 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Racine ·
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a. m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Cool¥111e United Mttliodlsl Parish
Pastor: Hele"n Kline
Coolville Chun::h
Main &amp; Fifth St
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

Hazel CoO.mun'i tf Church ,
OffRt. t 24
Pastor: Edsel Hart ·
Sund ay School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Harrisonville PresbJterian Churtb
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Middleport P"sbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

\

Dyesville Community Church
Sunday School · 9:30 a.in .
Worsh ip · ·10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship • lP a.m.
Wed~~:sday ~rikcs' M 10 a.m.

· Morse Chapel Church
Suriday school · 10 a.m.
Worship· ll a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Ho&lt;ldnaport Chur&lt;b
Grand Street
~-~ nd~y School · 10 a.m.
" Worship · II a. m.
Wednesday Ser~ices • 8 p.m:

Faith (;osP.t Church
Long.Bouom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a. m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wedriesday 7:30p.m.

Seventh·Day Adventist
Sevmlh·D•y Adventist
Mulbeny Hts. Rd .• Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday SeN ices:.
Sabba1h School · 2 p.m.
Worship- 3 p.m.

Na zarene
..
· Middleport Church oflhe Nau.nae
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Chnrc:h or Ihe N•za~ne
Pastor: Teresa Wal deck
Sunday School · 9:30 u.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Syncuse Church or the Nau"nt
Pastor, Robert J. CQC n
Sunday Sch091- 9:30 a,m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.
Pomfroy Church of the Nazarene
Paslor: Rev. Uoyd 0 : Grirnm,Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship " 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
. Wednesday Se~ces - 7 p.m.
Chuter Churth of the Nazaftne
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WOrship ll a. m., 6 p.m.
'We.dnosday Services· 7 p.m.
M

Rulland chun:h of the Naurtne
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

Enlt'l'r!Je
Pastor: Kc:1th.Kader
Sunday,School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m., 6:30p.m.
Wedne~y Services· 7 p.m.

f11&amp;Wood.l
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • II a. m.

Port11nd Finl Church or Ihe Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Matson
Sunday Scltool -10:30a.m.
Morning Worship· 11 : I' a.m.
Sunday Service- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

A

· D. E E

United Brethren

Eden United Brelh"n In Christ
2 112 r!tiles north of Recds11ille
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley .
Sunday Scbool - l1 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wedne~ay Services· 7:30p.m.
. Wtdnesday Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

United Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev, Robert E. Sml!h, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:3Q a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServicC • 7 p.m.
Full Gosprl Ughthousr
33045 Hi land Ro!KI,· Pome roy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
,
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tue.'lday &amp; Thursday -7:30p.m.
Soulh Bethel NeW Testament
. Silver Ridge
Pastor: Ruben Barber
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship - 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Carteton lnterdtnomlnallonal Church
Kihgsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Su0day School -9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Nigh! Services
··reedom t."iospd Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3\
Pastor: Re11. Roger Willford
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wors~ ip· 7 p.m.
White's Chaptl Wesleyan
Coolville Road
'
P&amp;:llot: R:ev. Phil lip Ridenour
Su nday School • Y:3U 11.m .
W or~ hi p • lfLlO a.m.•
Wednesday Servict - 7 p.m.
F1irview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. Ri. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 7:00p.m.
Wed nesday Bible Study · 7:CXJ p.m.
Jo'alth Fellow1hlp Cru.ude for Christ
Pastor: Re11. Franklin Dickens
Servict: Friday, 7 p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant Jl[ is~er Jlf utter al ~onu .;Jl n,.
"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken'

264 South Second Aw.•Mid&lt;llepon, OH 457SOI
74().992•51 41

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

R

P98MOD7-H/B·1

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

www.deere.com

Bruce A. Fisher - Dtrector

590 East

Ma1n Street • Potneroy, OH 457611
740.992·5#1

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:francis FLORIST
MP!,g.s County~ Olde~t Flo.ri.st

Atla•ns,OH
Wakefield G8rage
US# 50 West, P.O. Box# 639
740-593-3815

. .......... OH
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Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn .
668 Pinecrest Drive
740-44,&amp;.2412

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P•rtwNbur.. WV
Latry's Cycle &amp; Tractor Sales

2706 Pike Street ·
304-428-7102

·.offer' end Ju~ 5, 1999. SIJbject to approwid ~edit on Jchfl Oee~e Credit ReYOiving Plan. tor non-comrne~cial usa. 10% ttown payment req uired. TaKes. height. setiJil and delive~~t charges could tncrease monmly payment. Oth&amp;r 1peclal rates and terms may be available. lncludmQ 1nstallment flnancmg and
fmancmg t.or commercial use. Available at participating dealers.
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Ml. Hermon United B~thrm
. In ~brill Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
sunday School.-. 9:30 a. ~.
Worsh i p ~ 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen-i~ ·7:30p.m.

Mt. Olin Community Churth
Pastor: Law'rence Bush
·
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
_Worsh ip · 10:30 a. m.

It's easy to find great .John Deere lawn equipment- just stop by your nearest dealer. And It's easy to find a price
that's easy on your wallet. But with so much to·. choose from, the hard part's deciding what to take home.

N 0

Cai•ITJ' Blblt Chun:b
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Putor: Rev. BlaQ:wood
Sund&lt;~y School - 9:30a.m.
Wotsh ip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnewiay Sen-ioe- 7:30p.m.

Other Churches

445 Lawn and Garden Tractor

335 Lawn a nod Garden Tractor

LX277 AWS Lawn Tractor

Reedsville Chun:b otChrtst
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday Sch9QI: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

TrlallyChrdl
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pas1or: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10~~

Satrid H•rt CaiiM&gt;IIt Church .

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Bndrord Church ol Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m. ·

La-Dle Cbriltt•• Chun:b
Sunday Schooi·M9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen-ice 7:30p.m. ·

Sliver R•n Baptlot
Pastor: Bill Little
. · SUnday School - tOa.ni.
Worship· II a.m., 6:30g.m.
Wednesday Sc:r-.:i~s· 6:3 p.m.

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Wetleyan Bible Holiness Ch'urc:h
15 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug ·CoJil
Sunday Worsh ip - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeN ice · 7:30p.m. .

Rutlond Church "of Chri•t
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hickory IIIIIs Church of Chrtst
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30,.m.
Wednesday Services- p.m.

. Racine Fint Baptist
Pastor: Ri ck Rule
Sunday School • 9:30 a:m.
.Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ~rvi~s. 7:00p.m.

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Pint Grove Bible Holiotu Churtb
1(2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9~ 30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service M7:30p.m.

Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

Flnl B.iptlst Church
Pastor:· Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepor1
Sunday Schoo l -9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

. Rqbln Keller
(Goon attendee)

· Rose of Sharoo Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd ., Rudand
Pastor: Rev. Dewey .King
Sunday sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
W~dncsday p,ra.yer meeti ng· 7 p.m.

Bradbuf')' Chun::b of Chrtll

t'lnl Southem Baetlsl
41872 Pomeroy P1ke ·
Pilstor: E. Lamar O'Bry'anl
Sunday School • 9:30 Jl.m."
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m. ·

First team
Brent Ewing, PISS, Weilstcin ....... :............................................................... .Jr.
Morgan Stevens, lb, Wellston ............ .... ......................................... .. ........... Sr.
Jeremiah Bentley, P, Meigs .......................................................................Sr.
Shawn Schultz, PII b. Nelsonville· York ............... ......... ................... .......... Sr.
.Shane McFearson, P, Vinton Coumy ........... .... .. ...................................... Sr.
Nathan Fenwick, CF, Wellston ...................... ...... .......
.. ........ Sr.
Josh Strothers, P, Belpre .......................... :.................................... ........ ........ Sr.
J.T. Humphreys, i&gt;, Meigs ......... ;.............................................................. .Sr.
Flynt Smathen;, SS, Nel sonv ille· York .............................. ........ :.................. Sr.
Daniel Jewell , C, Alexander ............................................ ........................... .Jr.
Zach Lustgarten, SS, Alexander....
...... ......
.. ................ Fr.
.
Second team
Brad West, CF, Belpre ....................... ....... ........ ,.. ......................................... Sr.
Aaron Ward, PISS , Vinton County, .. .. ...... :.... .".............................................. Sr.
Chris D'Augustino, P/3b, Alexander .... ... .............. .................................. ...... Sr.
Eric McG innis, 3b, Well ston...................... .... ... .................
· ........ .Sr.
Travis Smathers, P, Nelsonville·York. :........................................... :........... :.Jr.
Michael Hawk, CF, Alexander ... ...... ..................... .... .................... ............... Fr.
Brandon Burnfield, SS, Belpre .... ......... ........................... ,...................... .".. .. .Jr.
MVP- Brent Ewing, Wellston
, Coach of the Year -Pat Hendershot, Wellston

Calvary Plla:rim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Vi'ctor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship MII a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

Keno Churth orCbrisl
Worship : 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:;!0 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lsi and 3rd Sunday

Bearwallow Rklae Church of Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday Schooi ·9:JO a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
' Wednesday Servicrs- 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
East Main St.
Surlday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m.

Ohio Division baseball

Middleport ChUI&lt;h or Chriso
'th and Main
.
Pas1or: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School , 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
·Wednesday Servicn; . 7 p.m.

B1pllsl Church
Burlingham ~ 742-7606
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School• I O:OOa.m.
Morning Servk:e 11:00 a.m.
Evening Servi~ -6:00p.m.
Wcd'nesday Service-7:30p.m.

Rutland Flnt Bapllst Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Danlllt Roll""' Clturclt
3l057 State Route 32.5, Langsvlleo
Pastor: Dr. J.D. You.ng
Sunday school -9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 il.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer ~r11ice. 7 p.m.

Pomeroy W-• Clllll'dl of C•rill
33226 Olildren's Homt Rd.
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worsh1p • lOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen-ices · 7 p.m.

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fllt . . PIII I flY,
740-992-2644
740·992-6298

· tAr V• Se..d fowr TM~c. lV~h

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Searching for a
local church?

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Check the. Sentinel
.
every Friday!

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Friday, June

By The Bend
Ann

:..1
Lanue
r·~

to see her name on his mother's
chec ki ng account , .but he claims )le
hasn't had time to change it. After 12
years, I think someth ing besides procrastinmion is go in g on I rea li ze thi s
i&gt; a small maher, but it is affecting
nur re lat ionshi p He doesn't seem to
co re that thi s bothers me, and he
refu ses tu lix it When I told him I
was writi ng to you, he stormed our
the door Any advicc 0 -- NO LOCATION PLEASE
DEAR N.L. : Whe n yo ur hushano storms bac k in. tell him I said
it\ time he· and hi s mother took hi s
CX: - \ \ ' Ifc' s name . off the joint bank
!..Iecount and put yours on Twelve
ye ars of foot- draggin g i&gt; too long.
Insis t on it.

·• Dear Ann Landers: My husba nd
ahd I have bee n married for 12
'
yl!ars.
It was the second marriage for
ho th o f us. My husband takes care of
his widowed mother. runs her
· e.rrands. shops for l1er and handles
her fi nans: ial arfairs . My mothc r-inlaw's · bank account 1s m her name.
along with the names nf my hus banU
and his ex-w ife.
·. Ann . th is b ot h er~ me tu no
end.The issue is not 1 h~ m&lt;fncy. My
moth er- in-(a w 1:-. not a wc.:~J. t h y
woman She hns a lll (H.Jc..; t income.
My husband has nO t see n or spoken
r2 his former wife in severa l yea r~ .
Fl:om what I've hL·ard. she was nei ther a good wife nor a ,g ood mother I
told my hushand it hurt&gt; me dcer ly

f ',..

':·:·.,.m::!:t,.~·:":&gt;&gt;.··'·~,,,,,_..,

Dear Ann Landers: I am a college student wi th a problem.A guy I
know is spe nd ing the semester
abroad Before he left , he told me he
had romantic fe~ lings for me I let
him know I wanted to be a fri end
and nothing more He asked if he
could write to me, and I said that
Would be nne At first, hi s lcncrs
were friendl y and interes ting, but
lately, they are sound ing li ke love
leiters He tells me he misses me and
fantasi zes about us gelling marri ed
and havin g children Even though I
.have t.old hi m I am not interested in
marryi ng him, he continues with his
fantasies
I don't want to hurt hi s fee lings ,
Ann, but I am afraid when he comes
back to the United States, he will
expect me to be in love wiih him
Things have gonen compl etely out
of hand . I don't need any more stress
in my life How can I resolve this
proble m' I need your help ri ght
away -- PANICKING INN Y
DEAR PANICKING: The lad

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sounds bonkers My advice is to
write and te ll him that unless he is
willing to have a platonic friendship,
you cannot see him anymore Be
straight forward and emphatic If he
persist' with his fantasies, end the
relationship·
Dear Ann Landers: My "howwe- meet story is not as romantic as
some I've read ·in your co lumn , but it
is rather unusual, and I hope you
will print it.
.
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When I was 10 years old , I could
hardly 'wait for Saturday aftern oons
so I could go to the latest Tarzan
movie.
My older "sister, under parental
pressure, had to take me The tickets
cost 10 cents. We went every week '

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. Master's Degree
Thinking about ~S c:at Education?
·ng
or
pe
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l
in Couns~ •
Ad Now to Start

SATURDAY
POM EROY
Burli'ngham
Modern Wo odmen, dinner and
meeting . 6 p.m. Saturday at the hall.
Father 's Day to be observed . Food
furm shed . Everyone welcome.

: LONG B OTTOM ~ Hynm si ng,
liqith Full Gos pel Church, 7 p.m.
~iday. Music by the Clark Fam ily
S'ingers.

POMEROY - Enterprise United
Methodist Church, vacation Bible
school, Monday through Friday, 9 10
11:30 a.m .

Return
LANGSVILLE
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs ChapJonathan Meigs ·Chapter, DAR, reg- · ter 53, DAY, Monday, dinner at6 :30
·
ular meeting, annual picn1c, Satur- meeting ·at 7 p.m .
day, 5 p.m. at the home of Anna ricRACINE - Racine Board of
land , Lan gsvill!'. New elected offiPublic Affairs; Monday, 10:30 a.m. ·
cers to be installed.
municipal building.
· '
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
MIDDLEPORT - OhKan Coin
H1 gh School 's Aium"i dinner, SaturClub,
Monday, 7 :40 p.m. at the
day. 7 p.m. at the high school gymRiverbend Arts Council building in
nas ium.
Middleport. Public welcome, meet·
ing free, auction to be held. RefreshMONDAY
POMEROY
Right to Life ments.
me etin g, Pomeroy Library, 7:30
TUESDAY
P · '~ · Monday.
RUTLAND - Rutland Village
TUPPERS PLAINS - Technol - Council, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
ogy c o mrni~tcc, Eastern Elementary ·

RUTLAND ~palachian Ani sims ProJeCt meeting, Rutland Civic
Center, 6:30.p.rn. Those interested in
rarticipating in brochure , web page
and Artisans' Guild project arc to
t:ir'ing sample or' ph oto of product
' TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
lllains VFW Post ·9053, Thursday,
7; 30 p.m. with dinner at 6:30p.m.
: : POMEROY -

Heritage dinner
to be
s~rved at7 p.m. Friday. Thursday is
last day to make reservations. •Call
992· 3810, $10 for dinner. Heritage

at' the Meigs County Museum

INFORMATION SESSION

HOWARD
excAYAIING CO.

Marshall University

Graduat~

St. At. 7

swaa nn

I'

740·985-3813

Bep!hw

BuUdoaer &amp; Baclchoe

Ser11ice•
Houoe &amp; Trailer Siteo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
' S•plic Sylle~ &amp;

a•

.~

(7401 992·3131

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KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE
Now

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Care for Elderly

qo,D5D*

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Gra.nd Prix GT

• 3800 V-6 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• AMIFM Casltlte

qJ,I51*
• T-Tops
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM CD System

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Firebird With T·Tops
• Cruise/Tilt
• Aluminum WhHis .
•Loadedl

qa,D5D*
•Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

q1 '850*

• Traction Control
• Aluminum WhHII
• LoadeCII

Brand New 1999
Chevy Malibu
•1111 Steering .

• Next Generation Alrbaga
• Well Equipped

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Sunfire SE Coupe

• .Air Conditioning
• AMIFM, Stereo
• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakes

:~~~:=~=:

740-949-2044

Card of Thanks

Slzea 5.' x10'
to. 10' x 30'
Houra
' 7:00AM • 8 PM

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441-0829.

Public Notice

E~s.

53580 S. R 338
Portland, OhiO'

"''"'"'""'

PUeUC NoTICI!
.
The VIllage of Pomeroy .
deetree to receive Hlltd ·
bide lor gaeollne procluc18 :
unlttdtd plue (89 - ) ·
and 112 diHII fuel for - ·
y"r .,_rtod. All Hlltd bide
ehall bt received In the
Clerk'a olllce, 320 bat
Meln Sti'MI, Pomeroy, OH
on or btlore 11 :DO AM EST
June 21, 1M. The Pomeroy
· eounell ....rvu lhe rtghlto
accept or r.J-at any or ell '
bldt.
Klllhy Hyaell, Clerk
Vlllege of Pomeroy
. 32G Eeat Meln St.
Pomeroy, OH 45788

*New Homes

a-.,. """"

For Free Estlmstes
-

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CLASSIFIED81

~· ·

--...··-- -· . . .

110
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Help Wanted

.

WANTED: LPN (full~time) at two commullity group
homes for people with MRIDD in Gallia County. :
Hours: M-F, ·daytime hours or ·as scheduled for
medical appointments or issues. Requirements: .
current Ohio LPN License, NAPNES/OOPNES,
valid driver's license, three years good driving
experience and adequate automobile insuran~e. ·
Salary! $8.50/hour. Excellent benefit package. Send ·
resume 10: Buckeye Communily Services, P.O. Box .
604, Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for applicants:
6/18199. Equal Opportunity Employer.
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ft JD·COIIftiUCIJOI ft

Rllllllllber

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F'f' E•tlmate•

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Owner: John Dean
11'!1
--~~M&gt;..~I/A~Mo,;).,~~-..

~ Southern Ohio Disposal ' DIPOYI AI
Your locally based hauler for residential, ; ' · · PU'fl
state of the art equipment and 20 years
:in the refuse industry. Call today to see
·.how much you can save.

'

': :======1=·8=0=0=·8~0:9:·7:7:2:1:::::= ;
512Mit 1 mo pd.

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.... 'I'D • ..,
THE MAPLES

Must be 50 years
· of age &amp; meet
HUD income

guidelines.
Call

Swan Re""""

TOM STOBART
today at

Linda's Palniln!

· 740-992-7022

for
further infor~utlon.

'

·145 peopll .........

EHO

Rll•lar ..•e payeut

Take the pain out
.

NIH H ottei.tla.co.

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New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
· •. Room Additions
'
'Roofing
COMM~CJAL and miDEHllAL
FREE ESTIMATES

'

614-992·7643

_,...,.----;....
(No Sunday Calls)

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.ROIIRI IISSILi. ·
CONSTRUCTION

•NewHomea
Now Co11111Uc11on a'
•Garages
Rttftodtling-Kitchtn CtbiMta ' •Complete
VInyl Sldlng-RooiHlocQ.
Remodeling
Clllllglil
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Eoliniale• "
FREE
740-742-3411
ESTIMATEES
•' !
Bryan Re"""'

Apply IIOW fer

: every Saturday
: 11111tt 6r30 p.m.
: AMerican Loilon
'
Middleport ·
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Poat 121
Starltunt $ 1300
-Door Prize $100
· S1000 conr all for

.

SuaaatBoma
Construction

lanuur?

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"WUIW:Sume•Homs~com.·

Caol'l'hla

-BINGO

BijSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

; All Makes Tiactor &amp;
, Equipment farts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH P~rts
·
Dealers.
1
1000 st. Rt. 7 sout11

:commercial
and
industrial
refuse
:removal. Serving Meigs County with

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or painting, and let
' me do It tor you.
INTERIOR
BefOre 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740.915-4110
Free E1timates

985 4473 .

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SAYRE
"'
TRUCKING
Hauling
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
Ressonsble Rst11
JoeN; Sayre

740·742·2131

l!/1t,W TFN

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• Dual Alrbaga
• Rear Spoiler
• Well Equlppedl

lbanks to Raclrll!
IEn~mcy Sqllllli, Medic 4
Tbema]o/msotl, Dr.

Newmarlt and Emergency
·Room Personnel at
Veterans Memorial .
HosplraJ, Med Fllgbr from
Huntington, friends,
neighbors, churches for all

the prayers, cards,
flowm, bears, visits,
1PD""" calls and food after

., .

West Vlrqinla's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Oids,
And C"stom Van Dealer. ·

Monday - Salurday 9 am • B pm

Sunday 1

·8

my return. Also my family
for their care and concern
during my heart attack.
.Gratefully lbullrll! Wolfe

lVI

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.
6:30 '·•·
RUIWID
POST 467
·STAR BUIST
. $1300.00
$50.00 OR MOll
PIIIAMI

lEECH GROVE
ROAD

Howard L. Writesel

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Qaollly Is Job One
_ _.. .., __ .
1101
7

30 Announcement•

Alck Pearson · Auction Comp•ny,
full time au ctioneer. complete
11rvl ce. L lcenaed
a. West VIrginia, 304·
773-5785 0&lt; 304-n3-54&lt;47.
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QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Senlora Summer Dance
45 &amp; up with
"George Hall"
$4.00 donation
Unn.rtAu June 14th 6·10

FORMERLY Of 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33 .
6 MIUS NORTH Of POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 11
VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACI'ORY 01)\ECT PRICES

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.OOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutt1r Cleaning
. Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

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· 38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio.45769

CARPENTER SERVIa
'RoomAddfllontiAomocleltng

· • New Garagea
• El.elrtc81 • Plumbing
• Rooflng • Gullera
• VInyl Siding • PalnOng
• PeUo • Porch o.ekl
F-EallmaiN

Knows Of Anyone Pleaae Ca11

Sidewalks, PatlQs
Parklna Lots
. 25 yrs experience
FrH E1tl1118tM

740-742-8608

74G-742-2512.

FrH E•tlmatn

Joseph J.acks.
740..992·2068 .

No Credit • .S low Credit • Bankruptcy

WiRvmiG!!!

No Embarranment ... .
You'rtt Trttetaci with Rnpectl

Help Wanted
Activities Assistant lor 1oo

.

70 .

through Friday. EOUAL .OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

.
Temporary Position . Gandidau[s
t.tust Be Accurate A1 Data Entfy
.l:nd Poase1s .Microsoft · Skmf.
Position Requires A Sell-Starter
With Strong Interpersonal And.
Communlca.tion Skills. Purchasing
Beckground Helpful. To Recel"
Conlldentlal Co nslder•Uon Fqr
Any Posit ions , Submit Flesunw
To:

6 Family Garage &amp; Yard Sale :
10th, 111h , 12th, 9-? 4a67 S .A.
850, Rain /Shine.

to to rvn. Sllndoy
lclltloft . 2:00p.m.

Boqj-War...,. AutomotiYe ·
ATTNcHR Oep1 -¢LEAK
2160 Eas1am Allonue
GallipOlis. OH 45631
Fa.: 740-441 -3249

Frtdty. IIOnCtay • 10:00 a.m. 8tturdty.
ArbOr's At Gallipolis Will Be HavIng A Yard Sale On Monday June
14th And Tueada~ June 15th
Fr.om 8 A.M. To 4 P.M. A ~ange
Of Items From Clothes pf All Sizes
To
N lcknacka
And
Wheelchairs . Items For Yard
Sale Are Dontltlont From Em·
ployeu. Proceeds From Yard
Sale Go To Emptovee Smoke
Shelter.
Garage Sale;: 5atl.lrday June 12th,
8-3 , 621 1/2 Th ird Avenue. Next
To Grace United Methodist
Church Parking Lot. Car Seat ,
Baby Blankets, Towels. Girls 2T
Little Tyke Toya , 55 Gallon Fleh
Tank. Oah Kos.h Clotnes And
Lois Morel lO Miles Out 1•1. Fol 7.
low Signs , Tueaday Thru Satur·
day.
Porterbrook Lane, Saturday June
12th~ 8·&lt;&amp; . Clothes: Children;,
Adults , Toys, Infant Car Seat,
Play Pen. Beanies, Word Proces-

sor.

Saturday 12th,

9-5, 59 Hilda

Drive, Gallipolis . Baby- Items.
Clolt'lts, CoUeclables, Toys. Lo.ls

""""'
, tllh

Pomeroy,

&amp;

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
12th. t9 S. Locust St.,

Ch11hlre, household Items, tools,
Beanies, Walk Fit, Honda Dream

·M:C.. IIfo'e air condlllontr

342 Stech Slrttl, Middleport ,
C0'11, Bean ie Baby Bears . Home
tntertor, baby swing, carseat. toy
box, lOIS rnotl.

At1 Yonl

Sllto Mull Bl Plld

In

AciVInce . Dudtlne: 1:00pm the
dey before tht ad It tO run,

Sundey a Mondey edition·
1:Otlpm Friday.
Four family yard sale Saturday,

t r' l, Main Strell. Racine , adul1
and gtrrs clotMs. glrrs bike, t~ .
hOuathold Items and misc., rain

cancel a.
Friday &amp; S1turday, June 11th &amp;
12th, 3 family. flrat ont In 4 yra .,
wa ll to w4tl clean up, everything
from baby ciOitles to chest lr~z­
er. go to 338 to Racine Locka &amp;
Dam and follOw signs, ·Drew Flsh·
tr mldtfQ.

Garagt sale Inside, 1·112 mlle1

Hysell Run, Thu11doy &amp; frldoy,

~ouaeho ld ~tema, clothes . n1w
quiiiiOQI, 7.00.99:1-5275.

Pt. Pleetant
&amp; VIcinity
2100 Lincoln Avenue . Thur/ Frl/

Sat. Jowolry/Cto1hes, Lawn/Garden, LOIS ol

Mlle. 8AM~PM.

Carport Sale :Frlday /Satu rday,

9AM-3PM . 311 22nd St ., Pt.
Pleaaant.WV. All name brand

clolhlsslm2-9.

.'

.

iUIIIIMISTIIATIVE CUilll(: 1

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

i

bed

sk illed nUr,aing facility, Excellent,
opporwnity ror the right candldatl
to worll. with our residents and bt
a member ol our team. Hourt are .
even ings and weekends, part time
po·sitlon. Candld~lt must be out·'
going, ·caring, creative and willing
to exce l. Restorative experience
ano cerllfled nursing asslstaf)t
prelened and/or expel'lence WOfking with rehab/medically compleX
care needs. Applicants aend rt·
sume to: ~ocksprlnga ~ehablli1a ·
lion Centtr1 36759 Rocksprings
Rd ., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ann : .
Dena Warren , Actlvltie&amp; Dlrectdr
or apply · In peraon Monday

Yard Sale

June 12, 9am-3pm, David Spenc-

CREDit .

110

Lost Red Marlboro Bag . Has
Too ls In 11, VIcinity: Ramp Of Sll·
ver Bridge. 74o-446-8247.

Lighl Commercial &amp;
Residenlial
New Cons1ruction &amp;
Remodeling

New Roofs • Repaln •
Coating• Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Palatlng• Ptumblna

SERVICES

solid bl ., Tabby, ?40-992-,

Road.}oi0-446-2158.

Construction

JACKS ROOfiNG ·
&amp;CONSTRUOION

EMPLOYMENT

After5 P.M.•

Lost: 15 Month Black .Polled Lim·
ousln sun, O.J. Wh itt IKemper

H&amp;H

Gnrutie~

QruUity Driveways,

'/oar Book'. II Anyone Hal One 0&lt;

60 · Lost and ·Found

17401 691·9407
1740) 691·6029

22 .r .... Local

A....,., Galllpoltl.

(740~ ·2800

98!5-3467.

•Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
•Septic Systems &amp; Utilities

Quality Ctafltlllauhlp

.

Clean L.ate MOdel Car~ Or
Tr ucks , 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smltl'l Buick Pontiac, 1900 East ~

Window air condi tioner, runs on
110, naeda compressor , 7,.0-

.,,,, &amp; 1Millr Sil11

740·992·6215

·coNNECnON

2526.

WanleO To Buy : 1973 Meiga,

2 Yll· old, 740-843-SMe.

c-

FREE ESTIMATES
(7401667-6992 .

CONCRETE

Antiques , top prices paid , River- 1
lne An tiqUes , Pomeroy, Ohio,
F\uss Moo re owner, 740·992·.

Reg istered Fox Terrier (no pa ~
pers) , female, not good with kids.

Bacl&lt;hoe Serulces

V.C. YOUNG Ill

YOUR

Avonuo, Gotl""'ts, 7-28&gt;12.

tm

Boys 12.

YOUNG'S

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
&gt;Je r And GO ld Coln1, Prooraats, ·
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gokl
Fli ngs, Pre- t930 U.S. Currency, ,
Sterling, Etc. Acqulalnonl Jewelry. .
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 S.conf .

Free Kitten• Males and Female&amp;:
Very Tamedl To Good Homea

OfAQUNE: 2:00p.m.
tho day tho td

EXCAVATING

FREE ESnMATES

! Siring - Single NICk Steel Gui·
tar. (304)89!5-3900.
.'

Fo&lt; ll:&gt;u, 7.00.2-989:

Progre111ve top line.
Uc. I oo-so 1111t.t1n •

POWER WASH

BTETHEII@EUilEKAHET.COII

90 . Wanted to Buy

7505.

ALl. VMI lletaa Mutt
Bl Pold tn A....,_,

FRALEY

Ohio 7ol0-3?9-2?20.

Want To Si~ Your Stuff? Call FIIY- .
erskle Auction And Let Us senu

,

IRI·SIAIE MOillE
Trucks - tractor
Trailers - dacl&lt;a - drlvewaya
EQUipment Cteanod l DegJeaSact
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 1185-4218
EMAIL:

Gall '""~·

7880.

l'omeroy Eagles
·Club Bingo On .
Tlluradaya
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
. Paying $80.00

per·game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet

.
1

Wedemeyer's Au ction Service\ ·

Kittens, Calico, bl. &amp; wh., yet. &amp;

1 mo ..

ft

175N. 2n.d,Middeport,OH

•

Dalmatian pup to good home :
also~ Calico klltens , 740· 992 ·

wh.,

CaD 985-,S3I

Phone:
740-258-6147

7ol0-388-859!i .

0391

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester ·
We Custom Spray
• Vegetables •·Corn .
· · · •Soybeans
·

SliADE RIVER

f;:r

992·7021

· ••

2623:

Free Small Kittens, To Good
Home, 7 Weeks 010 , 740·"'41-

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
A
• Additions
llf.J Garages, Pole Bulfdlngs, Roofing, Siding fl!!l . '
•Remodeling
~
Commercial &amp; Realdantl.a l
CoU loday oboUI •i&gt;ecial . li!!l 27 yra, exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured
0
pne•• •hro/Uly "
~
1PhQne 740-992-3987
. Quality Buill Ho,..••
li!!l
'

smelling frttsh
•Uft8 matted C81pel pile .
•'Dry" cleans so you can use
C81pel rtghl awa~

181 11,18 2TC

(740) 843·1252

ft~ft.ftftftftftftft~ft

COMSTRUCJ'IOJI4 .

:~o~:'~S:vingcarpet

Public Notice

Beautiful Kittens, To GoOd Home.
All Colors. 4 Wh itt With Blue

74G-992-JJ60

Jerry L. Preice
Crown Citv. OH 45623

SMITII'S

•- _,, __ _,_

for certain c:ountlea.

Beagle Dogs To Giveaway, 7.40-

::::;:::::::~=.,..,=-=·:-:::"'::-.-::::::, ~ ~~~-·~ ~· II!!J I1!!J. M- ·-· -E!J'I!JI!fllm

Public Notice

YARD SALE

740..949·2217

fo&lt;l . 7.00.9&lt;9-2709.

7ol0-256-£881.

•Paving ·
•Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Patching
•Business
•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tenni~ &amp; Basketball Courts

Racine; Ohio 45771

3 kittens. 5 wks . okt need bOnle

llllffiliJ ,,.,

Chiller, Ohio

29670 Beahan Roed

era st.. AI. 143, 740-992·7941 .

Under New Mgmt.

985 4422·

SELF STORAGE

3 gray kittens. appro11imately 8

·wks. old, litter trainee!. Kathy Jeff-

40 742-8888 .

HILL'S

(Low Rates)

"

LEGAL NOTICE
The Rutland Townehlp
CIJ.ASSUFDEIDSI Truate11 will hold their
Public Buqet Hearing on
July 1, 11188 at 5 p.m. lol· ·
lowtd by lhelr roguler July
Public Notice
milling at lhe Rutland Fir.
On Selurday, Jun• 12th, Sl811on. The budpt will bt
1999 at 10:00 a.m. the Home evalleble lor public review
National Bank will off.,. lor the WMk prior Ill the clerk'l
1111 el public aucUon on the hom•.
Bank parking · lot the (6) 11 1TC
following vahlclea:
Public Notice
18115 Ford Ranger Vln
11 FTBR11AOFUD15588
1988 Ford Eacort Yin
NOTICE
Revlltd Code,
11 FABR3687GW149143
S.C. 2717.01 (A)
1994 G•o Tracker Vln
NoUce le hereby glv.n that
112CNBJ1 BY7R685097334
1880 Chevy 9·1 0 Vtn Tina Loulu Wendling, of
304
Syoamor.St., .
11GCCS1425L2151581
1991 Chevy Lumina Vln Mlddl•polt, OH 45780, hal
applltd to lha Common
112G1WL54TVMII228431
1992 Ford 1150 Pick-up Vln Pltll Coult, Probtll
Dlvlalon of Malga County,
11 FTDF15V2NNA42071
Ohio, lor .an order to
1882 Mltaulllehl Ytn change my name to Tina
#4A3CT644XNE013012
LouluW-n.
·
1886 Mercury Vtn Said application will be
lfl!MEeP51 85GIM111782
hoard In uld Coult, at 2:00
11188 Chevy 9·10 Vln P.M. on 1M 12 day of July,
11GCBS14E9J2133DZZ
The tonne of the ealt ara
30 Announcement•
Clth. .
The Homo National Bank
ra..rvea the right to r.Jtct
any or all bldl ·or to r.move
ony unit from th• 11lt at
Ome.
·
Racine Post 602
of
the
any
June 17th &amp; · 18th
mayprtor
be
above
vehlclet
Rain or Shine
to the eale by calling 740~nyonewlth
-210.
Home National Bank.· donation• or want to
Geora•
Lewren .. ,
rant e tabla ($5.00)
COllection Olllc.r
(5) 28
Cell
(8) 1,4,1,1111TC

.

2 Tabby Kittens, 10 Weeks , O ut·
door Or 1nooor. Utter Tra ined , 1
Male, 1 Female, 74Q.24s-!5104.

*.Jlandicapped

Agricultural Ume,
· Umellone , Gravel
Dirt • Sand

• We service all makes • Used Appliances • We sell
parts • Will deliver
S1645 Bl
Rl
Rd.
Bottom. Ohio

carpel cl.aner

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE ·

.

2 Rider Mower&amp;, Can ·Be Used
For Parts, T.v. Anten na. Neeoa
Smal Repa li, 740-446-&lt;1314 .

AKC 2 Yea r 010 Female ~eg l a ·
tered Sl. Berna rd, Good With
Ch ildren , Free To Country Home,

HOME

985·3561

Rutland, Ohio

mo.

TRUCKING

I e ...

~ltlOp

"A

THE APPLIANCE MAN

'

Mon • Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

"I'M
BACK"
Ken Young Fonner Ow111r of

'

~~~--~~~--~·
Bill MoOdtSJ)augh Auct.tonoor tng. I·
Comp lete Auctioneering StNic· l
e a. Co ns ignment auction· Milt '
St rl!llt , Middl eport, Th urs d•Y• ~ •
Ohi o L.ice nae 17893. 740-989, •

Auction
and Flea Market

40
Giveaway
RIVERSIDE AUCTION ' 1
2 ad~t temati cata. 2 bal7i female Every"
Saturday Night 7 fi.M., •
. kitt8f1S , 740-949-3018.
Crown City, 7ol0-~9

Truck seats, car seats, neadllners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets: etc.

East Stale Street
1At:hents, Ohio 45701

ELIM

No:J:.~~

•

·

750

R. L. HOLLON

I

Box 14300 , S. Glenburnie. New

7ol0-592·1 8o42

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Ludac.;;
.1;~~!:!~Y.·.L. Roush
-.
949-1701

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, FiU Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil

80

Qu ality clothing and household
Item s. $1 .00 ba g sa te ave ry
Thur &amp;diy. Monoay thru Saturday
9:CI0-5:30.

Albany, Ohio

Jones

OriVI . SS

Htghy Aw ,ovtd Govt. Grant. Call

Now To You Thrift ShOI&gt;!&gt;O
9 We&amp;! StimSon, A1hens

~ 2mo. pd .

~~- C•llll•d

.

~onnle

.

.
............... Irick
- htlo c.a.traatlaa

Phone Tol~Free: 1-BOOM2-9842, at. 20~ • World Wide Well Site: http:/;-.manhall.edu/mu8c
·
E-Mail: aervlcuOm•nhall.ed.

E-MaU: pnecehOmanhall.edu

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner:

Pa r ~

auct ion
166,0hlo

INGELS CARPEl

2513 Jackson Avenue • Point Pleasant, WV. 25550

Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

....

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

100 Angus E. Peyton Drive • South Cbarleaton,'WV 25303-1800

Ohio Rnldent1: Ask about reduced out-of-1tate

I

• LIW&amp; C.. • De r'p

College ·

l

...... . . .

&gt;I I

Sa lurday, 140

Waterbett, vanity &amp; Sink, G lr ii-

Clothoo, &amp;x-7.

lle&lt;' n, NC 28560.

Contraetort Welco11e

.?

Jad&lt;IOn Plkll, 740--446-2.134.
1 ~877 · 885- 38 32 Or Write To P.O.

1·100·311·3391
Free Estimates

100' ~ 1000' lolb 1• &amp;3/4• 200# Water Une
Full line of GaS Pipe &amp; Regulalois Water Storage Tanks

UlilitU.•

Goirv 0u1 Of s uo-. sale: 40%
Off Stare Wide. Wilto n Cake
Pans, O.J.' o Crlift Shop, 2390

Silli"f &amp; Sf#lif

Culverts: 4" • 48" iri stock
Gravelless LIIKh

740-992:.3470

Marshall University Mid-Ohio Valley Center

Tuppers Plains, OH

FH. 2 North/8 miles out by Ray·

burn Road. Bunkbedl, l•anl• ·
Bal&gt;IH. Nlnlondo&amp;Gomoo, Atarl6
Gatne~,Lota Mmel Tl\urllftVS..t:

30 AnnouncetTIIIIU

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

We Deliver

Join us at an information session on Monday,
·June 14, from 4:00-7:00 p.m. in the Mason County Library in
Point Pleasant, to get complete details on the programs. You can 'get start~ right
away... Filii Semester classes will start. in August. Pliin now to get the information you 11eed ·
and meet some of the professors who will be teaching in these programs. See you therel

1-

loc).FI.':IMANCE , .-11811.

WICKS
"fiOLI~G .IHC,

Mondty, June 14, 1999
, 4:00 -7:00 p.m.
Muon County Llbnry

Pt.P.....nt
&amp; Vicinity

Start oaung Ton ight! tiave fun

Ohio Doting Gomo,

9

YMCIS.Ie

Pwaonllll

ployina tho

This could be the opportunity you need. The Marshall University Graduate College is
giving you the chance to put your nights and .weekends to work right here In the Point
Pleasant area to earn a master's degree. MUGC will offer all couries needed for the M.A.
til·e gree in counseling or special education in the next 3 years.
'
Special Education courses will include those
necessary to obtain certification in Mentally
Impaired, Specific Learning Disabilities, or
Behavior Disorders. Counseling courses will
Include those necessary to obtain certification
as ·a.school counselor or to complete a Community 'Agency emphasis.

70

ANrWUN CE 1,1EN Tc;

Classes in August! ·

to dis&lt;:uss
p.m.
technology and rcorgant ze the committee. Anyone interested, welcome
to attend .

The Dally Sentinel • Page

8;
Friday, June 11 , 1999
Page

that slory; he added, "I certain!~
made a lucky catch when she fell for
me thai day " -- ~NE IN SYLVA- •
NIA, OHIO
DEAR SYLVANIA: I made a
lucky catch, too ·· thanks for providing !lie with a sweet story to end the
week.
/.
Is that Ann Landers column ~
clipped years ago yellow with age?
For a copy of her most frequently
requested poems and essays, send a ·
self-addressed, long. business -size .
envelope and .a check or money
order for $5.25 ·(th is includes ·
postage and handling) to: Gem s, c/o ·
Ann Landers, P.O. Bo&lt; 11562, :
Chicago, Ill.
606 U-0562. (In 1.
Canada, send $6.25.)
·

Affer we came home, I would try to
re:enact the vine-swinging scenes,
complete with the famous Tarzan
yell .
One day, 'my sister's boyfriend
arrived from out of town "(ith his
brother, Bob.
,
I was spying on them from the
tree when my sisler saw me and
yelled, "Get down !" I swung on a
branch, lost my grip and landed on
Bob. He caught me and broke my
fall My sisier was very embarrassed
and called me a "clumsy o&lt;. "
I must have made quite an
impression on Bob because 10 years
laler, he asked me (o marry him.
At our 50th wedding anniversary
party two years ago, when· Bob told

·

. FRIDAY .
POMEROY - God 's NET program, Frid ay's Fun , Food and Fellowship. 6 p.m. to I0:30p.m Friday
. and Saturday ni ghts. Free fooJ ""d
g·ames, locat io n Ma in Street.
Pomeroy.

Pomeroy • Mi~dleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Hubby
needs
to
clear
_
u
p
banking
mess
for
sake
of
marriage
r.:;;;;:;;;;;::;::::;;--.:.'7"____________
·
~-~:"'1

11, 1999

•

.

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE •
Equat Opportunity
A111rrnatM\ Ac1ton Employer :
All atuden1s - lull and part tt.mi
openings In customer servlceJ
..... dop. $10.35 ptl hi appt. ('lo
experience· will tra in. Condition~
apply. Must be 18. Call 304-485:
4300.
AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or Selli
Shirley Spears. 304-67!5-1429.
!
AVON has a Place for you! Joirf
the 11 beauly company ! EnJoY
you·r own business. Buy your own
products at co st . Cell 1· 800-4•
AVON or 740-594-4354.
~
A'IIOn Proelucts: Start your own tnl
Home Business. Work Flexibl•
Ho"urs, Enjoy Unlimited Earning&amp;P

. 1-888·561-2866.

'

CNA . LPN . needed . Goo.d pa~·
hOurly, bonus tor weekend wor
Must be licensed in WV. Ca
Capitol Nursing, 1·800-576-6348. ~
·Orlv"r·Long Haul &amp; Regl(ma&amp;
Have A Career In 2 Hours!· "Paid
Health lnaurance • Dental Plait
A&gt;Jailable '401K and ure tn ~
surance "Obtainable Salety
Productivity Bonuses Applies..
tlono ' Proce&amp;sed In 2 Hour~
L.asal Baqyjrementa: 6 month

ami

OTA

exper. 23 Yllara

ol

•lit

driving record C9ntlnen111

ex·•

p!ISS, In&lt;:.' (800)-293-0700 (800)•.
695-&lt;473, Recent Drtvtng Selloc( ·
Glllduates W.tcomot

•

DIIIVING POS1T10NS
AVAILABLE:

•

•

Class A OTR :
:
Single Driver, late Model Kt~·
worths With Rearara . Wtat Coast

carrief_

•

Cta.. BOTR '

•

Team Straight Truck , Late Modllf
Frelghtllners With Sleepef'l. Muat
Have Air Brake EndoreementS: ,
eoo Mile R1dlus, Home Denver..les.
•

•,.

Both Polntor~~:
Atteast 25 '/oars Old

...."'
-

Atll!laal2 'tears Experience
Good MVR .

WMI&lt;tyPay

-~Avallelllo

WOt1c Wott With The Public

J

'J

~

:l'I

For Mort lnlormotton
800~
437-6764, Hra. a:oo A.M. -s P.M. ·r'

Colt

.

~

Easy ~ork t EMcalltnt Peyt "•·~
umblt Ptoducta at Homt. Can:~

To11 Free . 1· 800-4&amp;7· $51&amp; Ex~:

.::12:.;_t70;,:_~---------· ·
::
Excellent Opportuntty to join n.''f

'•

u.it

long term health cart field.
ctnsed Practical Nurs11. Rotel· ~.
lng lhlftl. In termed lite care cen· ~
ter, Weat . VIrginia Ileana• ,,. ~
qu ired. Apply at Point P1t1aant 'a
Genter/GtntJII Eldtrclrt, StiW

c•

Route 82, Routt 1, Sox 321.-:
Point ""-'!, VN 25se0. EOii. · .: •

.

..
' "!• 1

�\

•

. Friday, June11, 1881

PomtrOY • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10• The Dally Sentinel

June11, 1999

Pomerooy e Middleport, Ohio

OOP

BRIDGE

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

Elm $104 ·$&lt;100 + "" Portrol1i,
lnvne Your Friends To Your
Home For A ProfessiOnal Glamour PO(tralt Partr. 1·800·•26·

Bartender wanted: 740-441 ·

140

11363.
J;;elry Sa._, Relall Hales and
Computer e..,_rlence Required .
Acquisition&amp; Fine Jewelry. 151
Second Ave. Gallipolis. Apply
Monday 1lwu Friday
Jollnaons Supermarket, 85 Vine
StrHt, Gallipolis, Applications
Being Accopbld For Cashier /Of·
lice A11l1tant Evenings And
Weekendl . Must Be At Lea st 18

Yea,. Old I High School Grlldu·
111, Work EKJHtrlence Required.

tnqulro Be1Weon 9:00 A M. ·1 oo
,

~M

Lady To Stay Wl1h SemHnvolld
Lady on Stturdl)'o And Sundays.
74().256.(1753
LPN Full· Time With Benerits For

20 Bed ICFIMR Faci111y In Chosa·
peake, If Interested, 740· 446·

4814.
Medical Processor
FTIPT No eoperlence necessary
Wil train. PC reQUired Earn 40K

Callf!OO.fi63-7440

Owner Relocating! Anxious to
Sell. Newly Remodeled! 3 Btd·

1428

10011\1,

Business
Training

on 12 acres, vmage Middleport,

secluded and private, appolnt-

men1, catl740-992-5896.

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

180 WanladTo Do
E &amp; S lawn Service. Design, lm-

f2•60 Homette . Suitable for ad·
ding to existing home or storage
structure . Good
condition.

plementallon, and ' Se rv ice .
Available lor Sprln'g Clean up,
fertilizing and plant1ng. FrH e&amp;ft·
mates. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Greg Minoan· 30&lt;167!H628

$1 ,500. Gall K&amp;K, (304)675-3000,
8AM-5PM1675-62n afler 6PM.

14 x70 HollyPark Moblltt'IOme,
2BR, l arge Bath/garden bathtub,
sepafate shower, large living·
room w/hlgh ceilings. new carpet:
kitchen has nsw top-ot-the-Une
gas stove. has gas heat, central
air Installe d In 1994, ·new steel
door&amp; &amp;storm doors. Asking

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

304-675-1957. .
H.S. CONTRACTING

ProlsssJM81Gontr!lcting SBMces

Remodeling, All Kinds 04

Rooll~

Shingles, 3·0 Lap Metal, Add On
Addilions, Painting . Free Esll·
matasl Residential, 740-441-o653

$12,000 00. (304~675-2319
1974 Kirkwood 12x60: 2 bed·
rooms, Good Condition. $4,950 00
Call· (1&lt;10~367-7308 EVOf11ngsl

Inferior &amp; Exterior Painting,. Ex·
perjenced, References, Reason·
able Ratea For Free Estimate ,

1987 Oakwood, 3 BR , 1 112 SA,

740-388·8041

Musicians· kK&gt;klng for lead guitar
and bassist lor group doing
country and oldies rock. John
Flick, 74().698-6212.

Newspaper Carrier N&amp;eded tor a
Sunday Route, Only Gallipolis
Ferry, Crab Creek , Jerrys Run
Road, Apple Grove, Ashland·

-

Upland Rood. Glenwood. 1-800·

982·6397, ext 1787, Leave Me&amp;·

Now Taking Applications For
Drivers For Galtlpoli6 &amp; Pomeroy
Only, llonino • Pizza.

NURSING LPN'I And STNA't
Due To Staff Changes Holter
SeniOr Care Center, 15 Now Able
To Accept Applications From
LPN's And STNA's Who Are Ex·
perlancld And Dedicated People
To Join Our Team. Ohio License
Requlrad. We Are Also Proud To
4nnounce That Applications For
Future CNA Classes Are Now
Being Accepted. Apply In Person
Or Send Or Fax Resume To
Rhonda Coe, AN D 0 N 380 Colonial Drive, Bidwell, OH 45614, Or
Fa• 740-441-1347 EOE.

Own a Cornpu1or?

Washer &amp; Dryer, New Heat·

Pump, Porch. Carport. (304)67518331675-3003.

lnlerior, Exterior Painting Pres·
sure Washing , Tree Removal,
Gutter Cleanmg, Lawn Care, Ae·
ll'Odellng, and Roftlng. (7&lt;10~4468602.
'

1988 Clayton, 14x70. 3BRI2BA,
Heat-Pump, Appliances , Good
Condition, Must Sell, $1 0,900

Call K&amp;K (304)&amp;75·3000 , 6AM·
5PM/675-6:m. After 6PM.

Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construcllon &amp; Remodel!
Drywall , Siding, Roots. Addl·
!Ions , Painting , etc (304)674·

1988 Clayton . Good Condition.

New Carpet, canual A/C. On rent·
ad lot. (304)675-51081576-2101 .

4623"' (304)674.0155.
Will Babysit In My Home, Week·
days 8·5, Toddler Thru School
Age , Have References, 740·4467519

1988 Rodmond Danville t4x70
Alae , Has Expando, Very Nice,

Must Soil! Asking $14,000. 740·
366.(1335,

Will Clean Houses, References

Ava-. 740-446-1634

1990 Clayton 2 Bedrooms, A/C,
New Carpet, All Electric, May

Will Mow and Haul and do Clea·

nup. (304)675-4538

Stay On Ren1ed Lot, 740-441·
0221

Will Stay With Elderly Persons In

1992 Palm Harbour. doublowlde.

Thofr Homo, 740-388·9658

24Jt48 Has to be moved. Asking
Price Negotiable.
$20,000

'

(304)937-2590.

FINANCIAL

210

1994 t 4x70 Sunsh ine 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Baths, Blue Carpel, Wf
D. CIA, $15,5001 Must Be Moved!
Wheels Are Ava•leble, 937·3794015 Leave Message

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

PU1 " to Worl&lt;l $25·$75.00/hr
PT/FT 1~888)-366-6708
www.ownblz.nel
Part time maintenance (man who

!r11 do IOOWfng}; part time manager
for a 20 untt apartment complex,
please send resumes or inCiuirles
to' Attention Carolyn Emmons,
801 Hawkins Drive, MI. Sterling,

Ky. &lt;0353

Postal Jobs/$1 8 35/Hr lnci benelite, no experience. For app I
exam Info call. 1-800·813·

3585,Exl.8826, 8AM·9PM, 7
dayl fdo,lnc .
~enlc Hilla Nur~lng Center Is
seeking a person with computer
koowtedgl In Mletosoft word, Ex·
eel, Lotua1 ,2,3, word Pro. and

Payrol Experience for our Stcre·
torr Payroll. rocep1ioniS1 Posllion
Please apply at 311 Buckrldge
Rd 8 OOim-4 30pm •
Seeking Certified Nurse AideS.
Part lime. Rotating shifts. West
Virginia certltication required
Apply at Polnl Pleasant Centarl
Genesis Eldercare, State Aoute
62. Route 1, Box 326, Point
Pteason~ WV 25550. EOE
Stcllled Nursing Facility seeking
an RN for Jull time on 11 -7 shUt
We are also accepting applica·
lions lor part Hmo LPNIRN. Rodi·
pprlngs Rahabllllallon Canter Ia a
100 bed skUied and Intermediate
level facility We have an excel·
lent survew- history and a very
stable start This Ia an excellent

opportunl1y lor tho right canctlclalt

for

personal and professional
grcwth. Submit resume to: Rock·
aprlngs Rehabilitation Canter,
36759 ROCklf&gt;rlngs Rd , Pomeroy,
Ohio •5769 Carol Greening, Oi·
rector of Nursing. Equal Oppor·
1Unf1y Employer.

199• Clayton 14x76 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Roman Tub, CIA, All
Electric. New 0 W. Storage Bulkl·
ing, large R~nted Lot, Very Nice!

recommends that you .do bUs I·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have lnvestlgalerl

$19,000 Flrm C811740-256-9351.

tho olferlng

1997, 18x80, 3BA, 2 Baths, Gar·
denTub, CA, 81CIO Building, on '

All CASH Bill II
Get $20 Bills For $12 5011
$500 ·11 ,500 /Wk Eooyl
Free $5 Barnplellnv. Req

renled lol (304)675-4871
Low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers. Limited Time Available.

1·800-997·9888, 24 Hrs

Part-Time Babysitter. Variable

Shilts, (304)882·3922, Leave
Message.

'

Restored Vtetonan t10m1 situated

&lt;lltltpallt CON« COii191
(Caroora ~To Homo) GaY
Todayl 741).446.4367, 1-80021~. . Reg ~1274B

.

2 ba111s. $62.900.00 (7&lt;10)-

245-5341

600-383-8882.

For Rani: Build1ng On S.A. 33,
New Haven. WVA 1,000 To
5,000 Sq. Ft 740.69fl.2813.

Good s81ectlon of used home&amp;
whh 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at
$3995. Quiett dell\18ry Call 7-40·

385-9621.

MliTAIIOUSE INT'L, INC. Is Dl·
lerlng Anyone Interested In
Working For Themselves, A Tre·
mendous Opportunity Toll Free
677·752-441 8 After 2 EDT.

230

Homo Show
'Trade-In'&amp;'Bell dt lila Seaoonl
75-12x65
'84-14X50
'9H6x80

Prolesalonal
Services

'95-16.00
'95-14x70
'98-161&lt;64

Tha complete cleaning ,service
Carpet, Upholatery, Walls, Cell·
ings, and also Power Washing
For a tree estimate call Clearly
Clean at (304)675·4040 Guar·
anteed WOOd

(888~736-3332

Looking To Buy Good Older

Homos, 1-600-383-6882. ·

InclUdes washer &amp; dryer, ak~Ung,
deluxe steps and setup Only

$200.74 per mon1h wl1h $1150
down. Call 1-800.837-3238.
New Blnk repos only 2 left we
finance call304·722-7148
~ Please

Helpl 3 Bedroom, 2
Bal'ha, just take over Payments!

1·8;88· 736-3332

1he Fedoral Fair Housing M.
of 1968 which makes II U.egal
to advertiSe "any preference,
l1mitat•on or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intentiohto
make any such preference,
llmnatlon or discrimination •
This newspaper Will not

knowingly accep1
advertisemer$1or real estate
whiCh Is In violation at the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwelllng 9
advenised 1n 1hls newspaper
areavallable onanequal
opportunity basis

For Tne Bear Housl~ Deats In
Southern , Ohio. tECUMSEH
HOMES, E11clualve Redman

Homos And BEST HOMES, Ex·
elusive Outch Are Located On Rt.
1

23, Chillicothe, Just North 01 The
At. 35 IRt. 23 Interchange. Call

Toll Free Numbor. 888·443-7421.
And Allk For Tho CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION Information By

Moll including A $1,000 Cartlfl·
colt on A Now Home.
Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

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

330 Farms for Sale

•a acre farm on Kings~ry

water, $140,000, beautllul view.
J30.945-ol505

REAL ESTATE

per-k. $1
r day, 740·9925038 ... 7&lt;10-982 ~.
Wanted· experienced fuh

PliR

time barber. a1 Mlck's S1yloCenter, Pomeroy, lntareated parties
call 7•0·992·2387 or 740·992·

3411.

WANTED: LPN (Full-Timo) A1

-1

Two Communlly Group Homaa
For People With MR/00 In Golllo
County. Hours: M· F, Dayllme
Hours Or As Scheduled For

Appointrnento Or l11uea.
Roquirvrnantt: CllrJenl Ohio LPN
Lleanao, NAPNES /OOPNES
Valid D~lver'a License, Threi
V.ara Good Driving E11perlence
And Adequate Au1omobllt In·
ouranco. Stiary: $8.50 /Hour. E•·
...... Poctrago. Stnd fie.

aumt To: Buckeye Community

Strvicn, P.O. Box 604. Jackson,
0H 45840. Dtodllne For AppNc·
ants: 11/18119. Equal Opportunfly
E..,.,..,

Wildlife Jobo/l21 .80/Hr. Incl.

-Hs. Olme Winlena, SOCurt1)', Malnten•nca, f'lrk Rangers.

No E"''. N - For app,/exam.
lnlo,
call
1-800·8133585,Ext.8127. 8AM-9PM,7dlys
tdl,lnc.

a Acreage

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

310 Homes lor Sale

740-31111-116711

3 Bedrooms. 1 Bath, Laundry'
Room, A/C , Garage, Nice Yard .

$38,000, 740.387.o241.

5.5 Acres Frontage, Garfield
Avenue, City Utilities , U9,000,
Send Response . CLA825, c/

5 room, 1 1/2 bath, laundry, full

Third Avenue , Gallipolis, OH

ba&amp;ernent.

~~Bat

pump 1 112 A·utll·

oGalllpolls Dolly Tribuna, 825
45831 .

lty hOOk up available lor trailer on
river on t24, Syracuse, 740·992·

3880.

e

Bradbury,
rooms, bath, full
basement. doubfe garage, central
Blr, big yard, 740.992·5907.
By ownei. 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appredale, will sell house without Iota tor $89,000, 740·992·

1UCRES
RE&gt;\D'f FOR HORSES
In The Country, West Gallla

County, Loll Of Meadow, .WI1h
New Barns And Fencing, Ready
For Animals Lola 01 Road Frontage. More Land Available. Now

Divided Into 5 &amp; 1o Aero ltact.

Take Both ·15 Acres For
$27,500. Double Wides Are Permitted. S% Down Land Contract

460 Space lor Rent

2 BA House al 2219 112 Lincoln

Commercial 1tore lront, 2.000
aquare feet, Main St, Pomeroy,

Avo

Pt. Pl.. unt,WV $275

month t deposlt. HUD approved,
reference required. Stovei'Refrlg·
erator Included . No pel&amp;

(30.)882-20" bo1woon 7:30·

2·3 Bedrooms, $300 month De·
posR l Referoncos, No Potal Un-

Mobile Mme ·ana availeblt bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

coln Ave. Homeatiad Really

(304)-875'5540
2BR. House. New Carpel. Newly
RemOdeled. $300/mo + ulllltltl
Extra Lot Fleference/Deposlt

(304)675-1070.

By Owner Sandhill Road,/Polnl
PleaaEiint. Brick Ranch - 3Bed·
roomi-2Bathl. Baaement, TWo-2

car garagee, """ Lot (740)441 ·
0818.
Gallipolis ArM : 2 Bejkoom Homo,
Atf&lt;lng 128,000, Firm, lmrilodla1e
I'Oot11aloni740-25H702.
House and Lol for sale 2 bed·

rooms. 1 balh, $800.00 Down! LoCS18d on Kriner Rd. Contact: De·
viii at 1·(100)-333.(1910

. $32,000,740-44e-2827.

5PM. (304)675-3469.

Tobacco

MFRCHANDISE

5150 Sloopor Sofa,
(304)675-2891

3 Bedroom, Central Air~ Full
Basement. Camp Conley. $350 +

Deposit (304)675-3230.
7S8 First Ava., 1 Bdrm., 1 Bath,
Newly ,Renovated, Washer Dryer

Hookup, $275.00 Ron1 Wllh De·
pos~ . 740-448-3481 Or 740-448·
0101 AHer 5:00PM.
Houu For Rent In Kanauga. 2
Bedrooms, $325/Mo.• $325 De·

posR, 740-448-4107.

Good•

Registered Umousln Bulls: Red,
Slack , Polled, 9 Months To 2
'!liar&amp;, 740.367-7600

Soporato, 740·367·0219, 740·
367-7272,

Square Balas of Hay For Sale.

(304)875-5072

Wallrllna Special: 314 200 PSI

THANSPORTATION
$21.95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Por 100; All Bran Compres$1of1 F1111ngoin Slod&lt;
, 71
Autos for Sale
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacklon, Ohio, 1-B00-537·95211
1966 Chevy Chevellt Super

o

Sport, 350, 4 speed , fair &amp; drivable condition, 32, 000 miles,
$3,600 firm, call days leave mea·

Building
Suppllea .

~.

Block, brick, sewer plpea , wind ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,

Air Condilionera, Used Different
Sizes, Guaranteed! 740-888·
0047.
~pp lla ncn :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Refrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

French City Maytag, 740·4•8·

n9s

1979 Olda. Cutlass. 260V8 'Jood

Con&lt;!Rion, $800. Phone (304)773·
5659, aher &amp;PM.

Peta lor Sale

1fll0·1ttOCARS FROM N00

7~742·8101.

Pollee

Washers, dryara, refrigerators ,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances,.. 76
VIne Streel, Call 740-446·7398,

1·888-618.0128.

Waterk)o, House , $32~/Mo .• In·
eludes Water &amp; Garbage, Deposit
&amp; Reference&amp;, 740·6'43·2916,

530

740-643-0122

Antique, Bottle, AdverUalng Sale

Antiques

And Auction 61261h, 9·4, Point

pte, 74().982-9989.

AKC Sib.rlan HU&amp;Iey Puppies.
Real Colors, Blue Eyes, $100
Each, Automotive Paint, 16 Oat-

ion: 7&lt;10 446 tte27.
AKC White Germin Shepherd
Pups, Pick: 1.fAale and 1·Female,

(304)875·n11

Goodyl740-361-7600.

2 Bedrooms, Addison Pike, $2201
Mo., $100 Depoo~. No Pets, 740·
446·1837, 740-446-3437

$5,500 Good Condition; 2 Aus'

18,000 BTU's Soars Air Condl11oNtr. (7&lt;10)-448-03110

for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur·
nlahed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

992·221S.

30, 6 Ft. Pins Troos, $30 Each,
7~7.

AMAZING

1 Bdrm .• Extra Nice, First Month
Free With One Year Lease.

$279.00 Per Month, Plus UtiiRI...
7&lt;10·446-2857.
Downstairs 1 112 Baths, Air con.
dltloning, All UIUties Included Ell·
capt Electric, Prl\llte Parking, No
Pol&amp;, 740-446·2602.'

Bedroom Apartment In New Haven for rant (304)682-2119, dayUmo; (304)882·2326, evening.

2· bedroom a'partmenl In Middle·
port, we pay water, sewer &amp; traSh,
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per

month, $100 deposit, 740-9927806.
2bdrm apts .• total electric, ap·
pllancas furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school in town.
Applications available at: VIllage

Green Ap1S. 149 or call ?&lt;Q-9923711 EOH.
663 Third Avenue. Gallipolis. 2
Bedrooms, $300 00 Plus Utilities
and one month Deposit! (740}-

245·9595
Apartment lor rent In Middleport,

no pels, 740-992·5656.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Drama11c Rasull&amp;, 100% Na1ural,
Doctor Recornmancled. Free Strnplos Cal740-441-1982
Condlo Creallona,
636 Brick StiNt,
Rutiond, OH 45n5,

Christy's Family Ll\llng, apartments, home &amp; lraller rentals,
740·992·.&amp;514, apartments avail- · furnished &amp; unfurnished.

AM

Per-

aona,
, No
lawn, First Floor, For An Ap ..
polntment To VIew, Phone: 740..

446-9539.
First Avenue, One And Two Bedrooms, From $275 ·$350/Mo., Security Deposit, References Re·

qulred, 740-441-D952.
Frenchlown Apartmenta, Now
Accepting Appllcltlons For 1

port From $2•9·$373. Call 740.
992·5084. Equal Housing Opportunities.
Modern 1 Bedroom, Apartmant,

740-448-03110.
Modern 1 BR ali Utllllea paid 8X.·

Ntce 1 bedroom turnlshed apartment with private yard, no pets,

•

Wt1t 2 Bedroom Townhoult
Apartmtnla, Includes Water
Sewage, Traah, $315/Mo , 740·

Now Taking Applications- 35

Both And Get Discount. Great
Hunting Lend, Full Of Dear. Has
Road Acce11 TfJ Wayne Natlol'\4tl
Fornt. Land Contract Available.

448 0008

74().288.0Q81 .

handicapped. E.O.H. (30•16823121 or Af1ornoon,(31M)682-327&lt;.
lAMMI-.

Rl'lfetbend Pllce 11 accepting
appllottlonl now for 1BR HUO
Subsidized apt. for tldorly &amp;

lWin Rivers Tower now accoptlng
appllcollono lor 1BR. HUO oubaldlzed opt. for elderly and hindlclppld. EOH 304.(175-81179.

HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·
LAR? iT WOAKSI Agalnot!JiaD,
t!d!;a A m!tft3 wltbpyt SystemiC

poisoning RIO FEED I SUP·
PLY, 740·992·2164. (www.happy·
)aCklnc.oom)

3.1 V-6, loadod, $3,200, 7&lt;10·9853510.

570

Musical
lnatrum111t1

"'
For Sale: Pearl Concert Snare.
Orum(excellent condition), In·
eludes: case. 211ets sticks, mustand&amp;mualc.
$200.
sic

(304)488-1997.
Yamaha Stereo Keyboard, Do••

Every1hlng, Perfect Condltlonl
$125, 740--5

Frul18

a

P.M. 740-448-2398.

Vegelables
Patch, 740·245-9047, 2884 Kerr
Road.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVlSTOCK

COOL DOWN
Cenlral Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
Systmea &amp; Furnaces, Heat
Pumps Certified Installer. If You

Don'1 Gall Ua Wa Bo1h Losol 740.
44H308, 1-80D-291-D098.
Cub Cadt1 Riding Mower, Model
1672, 19 HP Kohler Engine, 60"
Cut Deck, Contact Jeff Harrison,
Director 01 Maintenance, Holzer

Medical Ctnter, 740-44fl.5305.
Dlsoount Mobile Homo
Parta&amp;S~
Hugal~

Vinyl Skirting Kill $299.95; 5 Go~
lon

~h.mlnum

Flblred Roof Palnl

$25.21; 5 Gal While Roof Paln1
$57.89; Anchors $5; Ooora &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntertherm. Miller &amp; Cot.,..
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home

Supply, 740·448·9418 GolllpOIII,
Ohio.
Oyhamark Riding Mower, 10 HP
New Engine, 32 Inch Cu1, $250,
74().446-Q519.
Ecf10 2100- - r wl1h blodo,
usei:l 3 nra., excellent condition,

$150 firm; !olaylog wringer wash-

er. ttl of

rln1e tubs, excellen't

plano br. 74Q.44fl.4525

Horfttao Pool Table By Brun'""'*
(Hal SiaiO Top, RegulatiOn Slza),

610 Farm Equipment

1997 Ford Aspire Low Mileage,

580 B Case Backhoe Extenda·
boOm $10,000. 7&lt;10-379-2427.
6000 Comander Ford Tractor
$3,Cl0p, 740-379-2427

June Used Hay Equlpmenf Sale:

•.9% Flnandng With John Deere
Crlldl1 Appro~sl, JD1219, JD720,
NH474, NH469, NH488 Hayblnt,
J0335, NH830, NH650, MF1580,

NH851, Round Baiera. New Jchn

Dsoro ,llound Billers, Mower Con·
dltloners. 0% 12 Mon1ha, 2.75%
24 Monlhl. 3.75% 38 Months,

• .75% •a Months, 5.5% 60
Months, Carmichael's Farm &amp;

Coli AOI1 Evans, 1-8fl0.537·9628.

Heavy Duty $75; Air Conditioner

110 BTU. Oood Condition, $125,
Armoire Wood $150; 740·379·
2720, 740-256.(1989.
.

Campera a - :
Molor Homes ,

197t Camper, 22Ft., Oo:ile

Axle, Sleeps 4, AC, Awning, Ful·
ly Equlped. Roal Nfct. S2iOO.
(304)488-1793.

1979·t91t Coachman . o r
Home. Dodge Chaasia; · -'48•
Slarte~ and Water H.a.,.r,

Pass

59

Pass

6.

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

.

..

,_

Mel•
11 -~~~~
Franch fly
13Wornout-

7 B1ggM
I lncamotlon of
Vlahnu
8 Ac1rauBalln
10 llal~ol

4 Cov.,.
5 Mountain

nymph
5Pif1orma

11:.,._,

dwloa

18 R.apy-¥01~
20 Ywta:ak
22 Dryar'l

'

On March 31 , I gave a deal in
which it w as poss tble to make all five
small slams. I eAded 1he column with ·
" Now we are looktng for a deal in
which all five grand slams can be
brought home. Have you seen one?"
Well , the first reader to rise to the
challenge was Dennis Dawson, who
runs Dawson's Bridge Vacations, in
Readmg, Mass . The snag with his
layout IS that West has 'only II cards
and East has 15 ! Yet Dawson correctly p omts out that the odds can be
improved by giving North and Sou1h
m ore of the missing honors. So, by
strengthening declarer's spades , I
have come up with lhe given layou1.
The auction is reasonable. From
South 's poin1 of view, seven notrump must have some play. However, as it is often wise not to b1d a
gra nd. slam unless you arc able to
count 13 tricks, orfe could understand
a final bid of six no-lrump.
In seven no-trump, the simple hne
is to take the diamond fines se . If it
wins, you have 13 top tncks vta five
spades, two hearts , four diamonds
and tw o c lubs .
Seven spades offers some other
poss ibili1ies, espec tally given the 43 trump break . But wharever declar. er opes to do, i1 wtll work here .
Seven hearts needs Ihe trump
fin esse and a 3-3 spht -- not good
odds.
Seven diamonds IS almost identt. cal to seven no-trump, except that it
also need s a 4-3 trump break.
Seven c lubs is as bad as seven
hearts, needmg a 3-3 trump division
and a finesse.

compenton
23=-ln

z•
&amp;ev•a•
258anpl d
27=r-·

32-

34Mantal

35~'-:w

3lllllaclaa~

play

43

Keaton

P:'bl*

48 Nonpoolll TV
4t Slgnelflhe
zodiac

soc-.untt
52 Soul, to

Sal•.-

53 Toclcllar
54-,10
Byron

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·.

by Lui• Campoe

CeW:Irity c't"ach~tam~ n ctMtect trom qUolationl bot ~~ ~. PM' IRCt ptWMn~
In tie cipher !Standi lor II'IOihef Todly'l due. V ~ 8

J y c

' EVCNU

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u . NEULUANCA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "11 takes throe 1o make a child."- e .e. cumming&amp;
"Children ha_ve more need of models 1h8n o1 crttlca." - Joseph Joubert

-

WOII
IAMI

I

I

MOSDIW

~I,~,;:;..-r-1.:.,.::.12-.-II

I

I

CILKN

ERTAT
5

1 I I' j

I

.

.

__
1::,'

•

mother was
so 1
never did anything wild or unruly. Her theory is lhal a good

7

.

6

e

Ie . I I I'
.

•

-

-

Complaro ""' dtuckla quoted
by filling In 1he miltlng _ .
you develop &amp;om lllp No. 3 below.

1
I' 12 1• I" 1
I' I' I'

PRINT NUMiftED
, ~lETTeRS
•

•

UNSCRAMBlE FORI
ANSWER
•

SCRAM LIYS ANSWRS

Don't tttst~r by hirh pricos!
Shop the clrml(ltd sectlm.

I FRIDAY

Appeal- Testy- Linen - Quench - CAN be SPENT

SPENT My mtserly friend says that the secret to savIng money is to earn il faster than il CAN be SPENT.

JUNE 11

Improvements

t984 International dump truck.

DT 488. Allison llrtornatic, 33,000
11on, $8,500, 740-982·2478.
1969 Chevy 4x4 , Silverado, 5
Speed (304)875-2159.
,.
1989 Chovy S-1 0 Plck·Up,
12.29~ . 00 Call. (740)·44 H 138-

Monday • Friday

1989 Dodge, lon, PS, auto, UfHI1y

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

•;

Unconditional lllellme guaran•.
Local reftrences furnished. £1·

1ablia111d 1975 Coli 2. lh. (7,«1j
446·0870, 1·600·287-057~.

111 Wo1orprooflng.

RPo•·~

Appliance Par1S And StrvicO: AI

Name Branda OVer 25 ¥lara Eapertence All Work Guaranteed.

French City Mor1ag,

740-~41·

•

WI-.

8323

1993 Font Extended Cab 4 WO,
XLT, Turbo Diesel, 11•,000. 740.

446-9317

'

..., . ASTRO-ORAPH
~·

'

·,,,,:

:.awrilay, June 12, 1999
There is a strong probabilily 1hal

:!~~ )'our entire circle

or

friends and

'~ •. . associates could be greatly expanded
.~ "'-' in

1ho year ahead. Plus, several new
• _friends you meet socially could 1um ·
~o:.·A .• out1o be excellent business contacts.
, ., .. , · GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Of
·- ;;:·.c ourse you won '1 deliberately try to
· "" hurt anyone foday, but chances are
~~ Mood that you could if you cvalua1e
'1!-! everything totally from your poinl of
.;;;view. Be open-minded. Trying to
&lt;1:. : P,llleh up a broken romance? The
· ..,,, Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help
you undcrs1and who! 10 do to make
the rela1ionship work. Moil $2.7S to
,., · Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 17S8, Murray Hill S1ation,
,-,.,. Now York, NY I OJ 36.
-' · · CANCER (June 21-July 22)
· When shopping today, if the S&lt;loles
don'ttip in your favor, keep looking.
~..Jfak e plenty of time to weigh and hal·

:! ;

old, RhOda lnlond Rod &amp; Wyon·
done rooeters, Brahma &amp; Polish

chlckonl, 740-992-7880.
Outatandlng Angus A'nd Chlan·
gus Bulla, Reuonably Priced,
Slate Run Farms, Jackson, Ohio

1994 GMC Jimmy SLS, Loadlld,
40R " Excellent Condition High
Milos $9 ,400. Call before 9PM
(304)675&lt;7946.
'

Realdtn11ol or commorolll wlrll!l.
-cenaed
lltrYice
or repairs.
t.lelectrician
. -Ridenour
Eltclrlcol, wvooo•-, ~·-• 7 1~ •
17841.

rI

111111111

Home

(7&lt;10)-4411-&lt;1053

.t.ctr..

45011-·a-

~

1987 Flaotwlng 24' mo1or - ·

Guinea ctiiCks $2 each, 2 monlh

Saddlf. $3,00b, 606·•7:1-1181

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Eut

North
1"
2J'

: ·

Livestock

Percheron Mare, ~aglalered 3
Year Old, l'ralned Harness &amp;

\Vest

VIOLIN lESSONS, SPANISH
LESSONS, DANCE LESSONS,
SWJMMIN6 LESSONS AND
READ''DON QUIXOTe"

Balhroom,Shower, 15 bide. '/tr-y
good condition, depend••·
·~500. (304)875-8901 .
'.

Farm &amp; lawn, Inc. 1·800·594·

74().288-5395.

dept.

.....,;,T..:E:,...:D~C..:E:.,....!T......~~ ~~.t~~ti_o~ ~ainst lemptation is

Doublo Roof AC (let ooldl. loll·
crowave, full kitchen, co tor TV.

· 111 t , Golllpoi~ OH Wa Dtillve~·

Black Angus Bull 7&lt;10·256--1821

a

3 Hobgoblin

~=,.
38 Submlollva

A K J 10

1978 3211. MotorHomo 31,000

CIC General Home , Main•
tenenct· Painting, vinyl 1ktlng,
carpen1ry, doors,
ba1fll,
mobf~ homo repolr Inc! ..,.. F«
lr• oatlmJio call Chi~ 740-992·

630

ahol
33 CoarM

Q J to

original miles. Onan Gener1i~r

1993 Chivy 112Ton Long Bed, v8, 4 Speed 'fW/bedllner, aldt, rtar
window, locking d1Horon11al, A.C..
AM/FM, Excallen1 Condlllon.
$7,000.(304)875-7829 Afttr SPM.

l.tavo Mossago,

Wllhtr $7~ : Whirlpool Aulomal·
lc Waaher S7S; Kenmore Dryer,

Now gas tanks &amp; body parll. &amp; &amp;
A Auto, Rlplly, WV. (30•);i7~·
3933or 1-800-273-11329. · ,

.llvrtgoilulldtn Spaco:
3(1x40'ite', Poln!ed &amp;1801 Siding,
GoNilumo Steal Roofing, 1S;x8'

JDC Financing, Cirmlchoal's

LI\UNPERINU" !
C.ET IT.,

and Englntl, Alll'ypea, Aq:oll
To Over 10,000 Transmlll"*''·
eve Jolnto, 740-2&lt;s-58n. ,

1798.

Ohau- 8' ala• liOolllbiO, light,

Speed Quaan And Automatic

Budget Priced Tranamlasltnl

bad, $3.800; concrete llniahlllQ
machine, 3' &amp; 2'; 740-992·2019.

(800~352·11M5

HEY 1
•MONEY

'

Bar, Mower For Formal! Cull, 74().
448·n87.

2 Yoat Old Registered Black Anguo Bull $800, 740-44Hl909.

Prlmetlll' fraa DlrwcTV Summor
Proirto11on. Call now 1·888·2652123.
.

Auto Plrta a·; _
Ac:ce..orlea . '

ter5pm.

c.,.,

1978 Ford F·150, 4•4, 109,000

GVW air brakes, 9' dump bed,
snow plow brackets, good condl·

1

1-10\ ~'(
f,. BLOI-ID€ ~'I'W"'( I

'(OU'I(f;

•

ConcolliOQ Trailer Cus1om ·ilutll
8 F1. x20 Fl74().448-2827, , ,

Mlac · Steel Beams. Pipe, Vibral·

Tractor, Set Cultl\lators. Sickle

KNCI&lt;J~ ~

River campsite tor tent and took
alta for boat, with water, ce{ient

1998 Nlasan 200SX 19,000
Miles, $11,900, 7&lt;10-379-2796.

Aclual Milas Average condition!

New H011ond 258 Hay Rlll&lt;e. New
Holland •n Hay Bind, Bolt Ford

PF&lt;J, l'lF"'I EVCX'I'Or-IE

tI

Equipped wtth Roo1 Air. R~no
goodl $3,500. (740)·2·~·582t.al·

$31,000. 45ft Porlllrallor $1,800:
18~ Treht So• $3,000. 2,000 Gallon Water Tonk $800.00, 427
Chov1 Truck Molor,$750.00

Hay Tedder 9 A. 3 P1 HI1Ch, Dou·
bioi M A Rake, 740-367-7600.

' '.

motor. swivel seats, live will

1988 Ford 2 Ton Dump Truck.
$800, 740-379-2427.

lng ;ran&gt;P HIS 418 Co1 Hoo. Wa1er
Pumpo. 18ft 'llont Foot $3,000.00.
(740)·643-0122 6:00·4:00 . alter
5:00 (7&lt;10).(143.2916

. r, '

Bess boat, &lt;10 hp. Mercury lrQflinl

For Solo: Shennlu 412~ (25 HP. 4
WD)-. Cell740-5924310.
$31,000. Cat- 215 Track Hoe

'

1998 BBS&amp; Tracker Pon1oon $011
&amp; Trallor, 20', $2,000. (304)t757930.
'
20 Ft. Boot Cuddly Cabin "lth
Trailer. $10,500. OBO. (304)t73·
5178. AfttrePM.
.,

awning, only 27,500 miles, 140.
742-2814.
.

Cot·553 Sheep Fool Roller·

"

1989 19 Ft Baytlner C8prlce,

1996 Chovy Blazer, 2 door, wllh
LS package. lOaded, 11,000 lrMes,
cal after 5pm, 740-992-4144

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Fully
Loaded! Prlcit Reduced to

'

Open Bow, 200 HP. 1/0, 'i/err
Clean, 740-245-92311

720 Trucks lor Sale

G.E. Washer &amp; Drw-er Almond
Color, 1200 OBD 740.387·7152,
Alltr5P.M.

allcks I mtac. $1,000, 7&lt;10·742·
2572.

$10K, sail lor $7,950, 740·948·
2045.

,,

' I

Engine, Good Condi11on, S2&gt;i!OO'
(304 )875-5091.

Lawn. Inc. 1-800·594-1111, Galli·
pol~. DH WO Dellverl

S••
The New John D11re 200
Seriea Skid Steer Loadlra, 7.5%

Repaired, New &amp; RetXJI" tn StOck

V-8, beaulllul car, sunroof, lilt

55-muddy
58
57 Very58 R11m0va from
manu8Cflpl

By Phillip Alder

15ft Trlhaul Boat, 85HP, Merfurr

Chevy chaaala, rooralr, ca(fatr.
Onan ganerator, gas &amp; e!Jctrlc,
refrigerator &amp; stove, good tk••·

Bike, Norodlc 11ock C8rdio Glide,

JET

1997 Thunderbird Sport Coup a,

70,000 milts, ACIPBIPS, deluxe

IUI~nded

47 Evang11111-

a

790

'51

Challenge
answered

MINT U

750 Boats Motors !
;
lor Sale

$22,500 .00 Great Graduation
Glftlf (7&lt;10)-446-4548.

1rad&lt;
- · :r wolk
· $8,888
Erocledllron
H..,.-Bullders
1-

AERATION MOTORS

$11 ,000, 740-446·2300.

74().258-1417, 740-258-6228.

Apartmeht Size Relrlgel'ator,
Ouftn Size Wlttrbed, Exercise
Shipper. Col174().448.2688.

1995 Pontiac Flrablrd A/C,' Au·
tomallc , V·6, T-Tops, 54,000
Miles, Excellent Condillon,

1997 Eagle Talon,28,000 Miles ,
Air. Cruise. Power Windows, Sunroof, Call Aller s P.M. 740·4467411.

Complete Air Conditioner, 3 112
Ton, 2 Gas Furnaces, 740-448·

7&lt;104, Cal Anylma.

Gra¥8ly, 740-256-1535.

PEPPY·

1995 Honda Shadow Ace, 1t00

760

Or Trade For A Truck, 40 Inch
Mower Deck For Walk Behind

•

'

more, $1,500, 740-992-5847.

---

45 AFL- 48Co-.clwl1h

Opening lead: • 4

IT WASN'T

CC, 2800 Mlloal Garage Kilp.t!
Like New. Many Ex1rasl (7101·
381H1972
I

1992 Gao Metro, Automatic, A.JC,

1992 Goo Siorm Gll(ld Condition,
A/C, Tinted Windows, 740·245·
5158.

•·Ii

;Jiry

patios, 74().992-5956.

Good Tires, New Brakes, $2,200,
740-368-8728.

THAI U
I TOLD YOU

'

1991 Pontiac Grand Prix, • Cylfn·
dar, $1 ,500 080, 740-448.0S19.

1992 Plymouth Acclaim For Sale

Strawberries, You Pick', Wa PICk
Closed Sunday, Taylors Berry

Case Window: Air Conditioner;
Works Ooodt $150, Call After 5

1991 Chevy lumina Eurosport,

1991 chev)o 6·10 4 Cylinder, sro
Shift, 85,600 Mites, $2,995, Neg ;

Of SCants, Hours Monday -Sat•

urday, 10·9, Sunday 1-5, Also,
Making Boay Lollona &amp; Shower
GaleI

1990 Mercury Sable GS Sedan 8
Cylinder, Automatic, 4 Speed
Transmission, AM/FM Stereo
Tape, Air Bag, Air Conditioning ,
Antllock Brake&amp;, Power Door
Locks, Windows. Orl\lers Seat,
Cruise Conlrol, Tilt Steering, Ga·
rage Kept With 80,000 Miles,

Asking $4,295, Call 740·448·
4223.

580

oondlllon. $150; 740-742·3701.
Bedroom, FMHA Sub&amp;idlltd
For Sale: Ustd Air Conditioner.
Apor1ment For Elderly And Hondlcoppod, Equ~l Housing Oppor· . Lorvt &amp; Srnlll. (304)8711-1837.
1unl1y, 7&lt;10~
'Grubb's Plano· 1unlng &amp; repairs.
GraciOUa living. 1 and 2 bedroom
Pr-ma? Need Tuned7 Call lho
apartments at VUlage Menor and
Rlverakfe Apartment• In Middle-

What's so different about the

74().7.2-2512.
Candlos Of All Styles And l'ypos,
Will Do Refills Over 70 Varieties ,

ESTATES , 52 Westwood Drl~e

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 740·448-25&amp;8 .
Equal Housing Opportunity.

METABOLISM

Breakthroughlll Lose 10·200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fast

flaaa, IlllkL 1 MlW1 Wl!bput
Systemic Poisoning JD NORTH
PRODUCE
740-446·1933,
(www.happyjacklnc.com)

·7&lt;10·245·5659.

Sll

Ex

(304)875-24031875-6735.

$250 00 Rent With $150 00 Do·
posit 740.446-0761

Apartments

7~0 .

(304)875-1183, Aftar5PM.

What' s So Different About The
HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL..,.
LAR? IT WORKSI Against

440

1992 Suzuki GSXR

1994 Honda 750 Magna
good condition, like new $4,~.

Registered Australian Shepherd
Puppiea , All Colora, 740·388·

I

. 4NT
5NT
7NT

cessorlol, $3a00. (304)875-127 .

1989 Toyota Supra Turbo, 81K ,
$7,000 . Excellent Condition.
1990 Chevrolet Cor\lette. Black
Interior. $13,500.
w/Biack

,.

•

7894.

1990 Lincoln Continental, Bleck
With Black Interior, Moon Roof

169.00, $100 of freo programming.
limited Uma offer, call HOO·7798194.

740-446-t530.

Chocked. $150 Each. 740 ·256·

(304)875-7948.

..

., .

Can $1,200,740-441 -1083.

males, AKC, Champion bloodllnos,
salt &amp; pepper, 740-667·3404

pooiV$275 Per Month (740}338·
9971
'

1270.

...........o.n.....

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

: '

1987 Grand Am, Air Condllloning,
Till, Cruise, AutomatiC, V•6, Sharp

740·949·2836 or 740-949·2045.

18" DlrteTV SOttlllle Sythlmt·

446 6656.

I8N

44 Actor

31 Colma wl1h •

• KJ 2

S.POO

1994 Harlay Davidson Spor1Ster,
883, 6,800 mllos. Excellonl Cl&gt;n·
dltlon Lots of extras (30•)(/.5·

$750.00 080 (7&lt;10)·256-9220

Schnauzer puppies, 2 miniature

2BR MoblleHome, LOCBIBd 1

1982 Kawasaki GPZ ~50,

I

t

42 Shwp101he

partlciH
DOWN
2t1 Olut
· a Elplonaga org. 1 Long fllh
30 Oanuo of frogo 2 Unclaimed mall

" 2

Mllea. Excellent Condition . ~*

1986 Hondo 210 SX 3 Wheller,
Serious Callers Only, Aner 4 't.M.

540 Mlecellaneoua
Merchandise

mile out sandhill Road. $250 de-

Good Condition, $100, 1981 Yamaha 850 Fully Drtlltd 28,000
Milos, $1,200, 740-441...()1128 ..

gallon of paint $2159 (304)875·
7158 alter !PM lhru week; any·
time-net

1990 Cougar, high miles , runs
great, looks good . V-6 , $2tOO,

tralllan Shepherds Cow Dogs ,
Malo &amp; Female Spayed, 8 Mon1hs
Old $400 Bo1fl, 74().446-4286.

$10.000111111. 740-949-2872.. :1
1980 suzuki 750 18,000 Mifta,

1981 Old&amp; Cu11oss : 1985 Cam·
ero. Bolh need work. Will sell to·

0583.

Tractor

1880 FLH Harley Davidson, r~.
while &amp; blue, lop and bot1om-

1986 Dodge con. 4 door, auto,

14 x70, 2 bedroom, lotal electric,
$250 rent, S150 deposit, no pets,
740·7•2·2714

Gas

MDiorcyciH ·

day 740·949·0405. eves. 740949-0506

Rat· Tarrier
Puppies. Tall a
Docked . tat shOts, wormed .
$75 00 each Call belore 9PM,

Ferguson

740

68785
.. 8 7 8
• Q9 8
• Q 10 9
South
6 A K

...........

Puatl

41=.

11
gat ill"
21 Depolllld
moisture on
23 Relrolo ahlp
2tl Elacblllad

Eut

• 8 76

· 740-992·2019.

1993 GE 500 E. Suzuki.
Milos $2,100.00 Low Mlioll (7 jo
258-179!

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10;00

135

92 Chevy Astro, loaded, mu11

AKC, black Lobs, 5 malts, 7 wks.
old, llrst ahots &amp; wo~med . $200,

- · 7&lt;10·992·5088

2 Bdrms . No Pets, Rental Re·
france Required, Water &amp; Trash 12 HP Wheel Horse House MOW·
Furnished 1 Mile From Gallpolls ' er, Hydrostatic, 36" Cut, Oldy But

a, Excenant Cond/Uon, $15,850,

1985 Honda Shadow V-70 Looks
Goqd, Low Mlleage, Neas Mlno'r
Work, $850, 740-441-1083

CFA Beautiful Persian Registered
Kittens, Male &amp; Female, White ,
Cream &amp; Blue, Firat Shots &amp; Vet

West
• 4 3 2
" Q 10 9
• 78 54

aUCIIIIva
7 Oroup olllona
12 Thriller wrllar
- l.eolwd
13Kindof14 Chopped (oil}
15 Sow or cow
15 - Poulo
17 AlrllnareguiiUng

ogcy.
·-I

• AKJS43
• 3 1
6 AS 4 3

74().379-2995
-

116-11·99

• 9

1998 Ford E350 Corgo ¥on,
•7,000 Milos, 16' Boll Wl1hnum Ramp, A~. Caasoni, &lt;460. Y.

1985 Honda V30, Trade Fdr 4
WD, Or $1 ,000; 40 Ft. Trollerl
For Sale Or Trado, H0·2f6-

1985 Bulclc Rogal740-258-1631.

131J

8 ·00 p.m. t•o-992·2526, Russ
Moore owner

Tax

gather wfth some new parts and 1

Pleasant Almory. Quality Dealers

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $280·$300, sewer,
water and trash Included. 740·
992·2167.

And

Repo'e. For LIS11ngs Call 1-800·
319-3323 Ext 4420.

AKC Reglatered Mlnlalure
Dachshund puppies. red &amp; dap·

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

a.m. 10 6:00p.m.. Sundl)' 1:00 to

Impounds,

North

1995 Ford Ranger, 5 Speed, jilt,
AMIFM Stereo Wllh 57.000
Milos, Asking $9,500, 7•0·3798270.

gina redone, Iota of chrpw\t..

(304)578·21.7.

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121.

Loftl (1&lt;10)·245-9213.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

7&gt;40-982·2·78.

1.977 International Scout, $700

4 AKC Boxer pups , ready 1o go,
$185'.

Hay a Grain

640

Taylor Ice Crtam Machine. 3
Head Ba1eball Card CCJIIectlon.
Singles &amp; Soli, 7-.2927.

580

3 bedroom house, Welzgal Sl. ,

Bldwol, OH 740-388-N75

Wo Buy Land: 30 - ~00 Acres,
Wo Pay Caa~ . 1· 800-213·83115,
Anflony Lind Co.

Household

Air Conditioner, 17000 BTU

Hud """"~Jiod, 740-742-&lt;l712

Kenmore washer : G.E. Dryer
Heavy Duty, $1 &amp;0 Pair, Or Sell

For Lease. 1835

3 Bedroom HoUH, In Rio Grande,
$325/Mo., Plus Deposl1, After
6·oo ~M . 740-2&lt;!HI156.

740-992·5833.

Rl81 Eatata
Wanted

Al~t.

740-379-2427.

550

1&gt;6, $.25 par lb. (3041736-4396.

510

Lot 2 u Acrea, water, Sewer,
Driveway. On Woodsmlll Road,

2 .2Q ~RETRACTS
For Only $22,000 Eoch. Taka

For Lease

490

"2BR, unfumlshed house, 507 1f2
2nd St., New Ha\len Call after

Road, An Area 01 Beaulilul

Call after ·4PM Wtek·DaJS,
(3041882-3108.

740-385-4367.

c

Siding , Now Windows/Roofing&amp;

-

74().992.(1783

Mobile Homo Lol F« Rant: Reier·
ences ReqUired. 740-258-1922.,_1

By Owner: 117 Ho'ward Street,
New Haven, 2BA, D· R,, Staal

Heat·Pump, Full B11ement,
ScrHn Porch, Storage Building,
1Car Garage, Weii·Malnttlnecl .

day pMno 740-992·5009, night

9:30PM on~

With Approved Credit Free capt electric . Galllpqlls Ferry
Maj)l\. 1·600-213-8365.
·Area. $250+deposl1 (304)675··
Beautiful, 2 Acre lot, Centenary 1371 J(304)875-3230.

271M. 740.992·5896

1·

8Q0.383-eee2.

S27Molo., 740-387-7015.

Rd. 2

houoes, oil well, pond, well &amp; ci1y

·~!!!l!l,!!l'!!l!l!it!t!W--111 350 Lots

Sonilone. to spend lha nignr w1tn
1118 -~ldnlghi·Bim, 5 days

r

Taka Rt. 35 North From Gallipolis
All real estate advertising In
ttlts newspaper Is subject to

Pllol Program, - . -

2 Bedroom•. Kanauga Area ,

2

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 month&amp; FREE lot rent.

1!1,....,__..____..,.:

410 Hou- for Rent

1 Bedroom Furnished Aportman1.

can now tor eo.1 Soloctionl 1·

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl. SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345

Quarter Horse (Mare) $ 1.000 ,

,.,_,.to PsWa •

40-

ACROSS
1 fJesu ~ IIIII

•litlfll

1ance

... 1 .,

•:... t

.~;, .

.. _

•

luc values of any
cha~s ~ou make.

•

major .,.r.

LBO (July 2J,Aug. 22) Treal all
your pals with the.same consideration
loday, even if you secretly like one

better than all the others. Playins
favorites could cost you a friendship.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) Normally you ' re always I~X&gt;king out for
the tn1crcsts of fnm1ly members, but

today you could show more concern
for an outsider you're trying to
impress. rather than lhose who love
you.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl . 23)
Although you have a natural sense of
humor unc.J wit. you mu~t he ~.:ardul
nol to uy tn he l'unny utth4: cJ~.pcnsc
of another today. Making' a sensitive
person 1he hun of n joke js hurtful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) This
can be a proficnblc day for you if

you're on your toes when you see an
asset fallenng. You migh1 have to be
quick 1o jockey things around a bit to
,keep it in lhc block.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec.
21) Should thinas appear 10 be going
against a few pals in your group
involvement, you're the one who can
negotiate a tricky situation so tho1
everyone will benefit. S1ep forward
and do so.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Don't despair if It first i1 looks like
I

I

-

you're the one sllllo1ea wtlh all the
work o11he office today. It will ulti mately 1um ou1 to benefit you more
than it will all the others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) By
being kind and considerate lo all you
, encounter socially today, you could
be in for a pleasant surprise when you
discover you Rally enjoy the company of someone whom you' dtdn ' t
expect.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) If it
tokes 1be aid of key alljes to help you
accomplish something today you
thought you could do 0!1 your own,
don't be shy abou1 reqllCsting assis1ance. They'll gladly pitch in .
ARIBS (March 21 -April 19) Try
to eiJ.ioy all you oncouh1er for who
'.1hcy are and not merely for what they
m1ght have to offer you. Those who
appreciate pals and associates,
instead of exploitina them. are 1he
popular ones.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Although it may require some clever
maneuvering on your port to get 1hc
cosh rcgislcr to ring today, there ts

more than one source out there for
possible gains. Look around.

,.
\

..

I

�' I

..

Friday, June 11,1999

mm~

of the college's class of 1999.
Gibbs earned a bachelor of a~:ts
degree in anthropology/sociolo,!y
and English.
He is the so n of Patricia Gibbs
of Middleport and Greg Gibbs of
New Haven, W.Va., and is a 1995
graduate of Wahama High School
in Mason, W.Va.

They are among the 297 gradJates who will receive degrees during commencement Ceremonies on
Friday.

Inducted into honor society
D. James Taylor, son Of Mr. ~nd
Mrs . Don Taylor of Coolville, and
grandson of th'e late Merrill and
Barbara May Tayl or of Pomeroy,
was recently inducted into Kappa
Delta Pi , an international ho'nor
soc iety in education.
The soc iety was' founded in
1911 to recog ni ze excellence in
e\lucation, and offers membership
to persons who exhibit the ideals of
sc holarship, hig h perso nal standards, and promise in teaching and
TAMARA SHEETS
allied professions.
Tay lor is a junior at Wright State
Graduates Hocking College
Universi ty, with a major in English
Tamara Sue Sheets of Pomeroy educati on, ana a minor in religion.
will receive an associate 's degree
He is a 1992 graduate of Federin ·medical assisting duri ng com- al Hoc kin g Hi gh School and served
mencement exercises at Hoc king ·· for four years in the Uniied States
College on Sunday.
Air Force, wit h a two year tour at
She will also be named out - Aviano Air Force Base in Italy. He
Aaron. Sheets,
:standing graduate in 'her techn olo- is currently a staff sergeant in the
gy, having received the highest Air Force Reser~es at Wright-PatTo graduate
GPA i~ her particular field of study. tc rson AFB in Fairborn ,
Aaron Sheets, son of Jim and
She also received the All American
· Jennifer Sheets of Harrisonville. will
· Coll eg iate Scholar awurd. and was Named to dean's list
graduate today, from the Ohio State:
nomin ated for the National Dean's
~ ! ye a Hay nes, daughter. of Mr.
List tluring her tim e at' the college. and Mrs. Paul Hay nes of Coo lville , University College of Medicine.
The valedictorian of his 199 1.
She currentl y res id es in is amo ng I, I ~2 students.at Harding
Meigs
High School class, Sheet&gt; .
Pomeroy wi th her husband, Grego- Uni ve rsity in Searcy, . Aik. to
graduated
cum laude from John Carry Sheets. She is the daughter of achieve Dean 's List status for the
roll
University
with a bac helor of
George and Joan Hoffman of Mid- spring se mester.
dl eport
The Dean 's List honors students science in biology.
While at John Carroll, Sheets w.as
who have carried 12 or more hours
on
the wrestling team and finish•i:d
Washington Stale grads
and have '111 average grade point
fourth
in the national at the NCAA
Four Cool ville students and a average of 3.5.
Division'
Three National Champi Hocki ngport student are m.cmhers
Haynes, a sophomore majorin g
onships
his
seniof year.
of the large st graduating class ever in public relations, is a graduate of
He was a division three all Amt.':rat Washington State Community Meigs High School.
ican,
an academic all American, amd
College in Marietta.
Harding University is the largest
the
outstanding
wre~ tler at John CarThose local graduates are ; Brent private university in Arkansas.
roll
his
freshman
and senior years .
T, Davis, liberal arts transfer; TereFollowing
graduation,
Shens
sa Holsinger, bu;iness' manage- Graduates Centre College
will
be
doing
a
three
year
[ami ly
ment ; Robert Riordan. individual - · Anthony· Gibbs of Middleport
ized st udies; Aryn Tholin, business received a bachelor's degree from practice residency at Anderson
Memorial Hospital in Anderson, S.
managemen t, all of Coolville; and Centre College during recent Com- c.
.
Vikki Bai ley, Hockingport , social me:ncement exerci ses on the cam: service technology.
pus . He was among 239 members

--~_.;...------~---------_;_~- · ----', -'--~--'---'---News policy-------'--..

In 'an effort to provide our
readership with current news, the
.. Sunday Times-Se ntinel · will not
. accept wedd ings after 60 days
from the date of the event.
Weddings submitted after the
60-day deadlin e will appear dur-

.,.•••

.-.-.•.

All birthdays must be submitted within 60 days of the OCCllf-

ing the week in The Daily Sentincl and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.
All club meetings and other
news articles 'In the society seclion must be submitted within 60
days of occurrence .

rence .

Only black and white or col or
glossy prints will be accepted.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

Fruth wins
lifetime
achlev.ement
award

'Heart of h

Methodism
marks
150th year
in Middleport

All' bicycle
tour comes
to Gallipolis

FMIUNCI on Pege C1

.,.81

•PegeAI

One man

4 DR, V6, leather, 7 pass
WAS$29,470

Detalla on
pageA2

1990s

• Enfettal,..,,
PegeCI

•

tmts•

4 Dr,

Low: 608

Brothers
for the

•

99 OLDS SILHOUEnE GLS

HI: ,._.go

Marx

mt

30 Nouis11
=~==--

Steel workers reject Ravenswood contract

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.~ Steel workers at the Ceri- . The contract also included a $1,000 signing bonus
lury Aluminum Corp. ·plant in 'Jackson County have and a 25 percent inaea&amp;e in the factor used to calculate
rejected a proposed four-year contract, the union pensions. The average worker cams $14.16 an hour.
announced Friday.
.The plant employs 1,571 workc~ many of whom are
Members of United Steelworkers of America LoCal from Meigs County, Ohio1 just across the Ohio River.
S668 voted against the plan 1,238 to 286, said union . "We urged the Century Aluminum workers to give
negotiator Tim Dean.
thoughtful consideration to management's final offer,''
Workers oPjected to a proposed increase in employ- said Ernest Thompson, director of District 8. "Their
eea' health care.IXllits thai would cal up four months of a sound rejection sends i message there are serious Oaws
proposed 35-eent-an-hour raise, Dean said. ·
in this proposal needing improvement."

99 GMC All NEW SIERRA
1/2 ton, auto, air, cass, storni
gray WAS $18,895

City achoole launch
summer Intervention
for grade SQhool students
GALUPOUS - For some stu·
dents in the Gallipolis Oty Schools,
summer school has taken on a some·
what different meaning.
a asses that began this week at
Washington Elementary arc for
helping students do better in their
subjects - a traditional goal of
summer sessions- but·the ground
covered with a new program is the
kind students face on the state's proficiency examinations .for grade
school students.
Six teachers - Lori Billings,
Jayne Burger, Bridget Haffelt, Judi
Jerome, Joyce Preston and Julia
Rodcrus - are providing interven·
lion and ·rcmediilion of skills that
wi11111ist students in becoming profu:icnt
·
The classes, which end June 25,
pro¥ide students in the third, fourth
and sb:th jndes with . .illance in

WAS 5 sp, air, Black, cass WAS
$13,521
V6, all power,

627 :;s11,235 =~=51 .

Workers agreed not to strike and the company agreed
not to lock out employees while negotiations continue.
Meanwhile, the current Contract was extended, Dean
said.
·
·I f workers do strike, company officials won't try to
keep the plant running, said Century Aluminum
spokesman AI Posti in Monterey, Calif.
During a bitter 20-month strike that ended in June
1992, union workers were'replaccd with 1,300 nonunion
employees on the day the union's contract expired.

Before the dispute was settled, Ravenswood nearly
went bankrupt, itS chief executive officer was fired and
there were periodic episodes of violence. Much of
Ravenswood's can business disappeared.
Century Alum inum bought the plant after the strike,
and is one of West Virginia's largest private employers.
Posti said if the company- shuts down the reduction
facility at the plant, where the aluminum is smeltered, it
may IXllit too much to start it up again and 600 employees would lose their jobo.

Health Dept.,. prosecutor
team up to check
•
level of compliance
for tobacco purchases .

Carpenters for
Christ pitch in
to build local
church addition

POMEROY -The Meigs Couoty Health Department;:
and the.Meip County Prosecuting Attorney recently com•
TI~Senltnel 8tllff
pleted their ongo•
OAU.lPOLIS - Bryan Townsend paused from
ing random, unanhis labors in broiling mid-90s temperatures and surnounced compliveyed the activity of his co-workers.
ance buys and
"I lbink every man we have on the job here
inspections
of
w~ts to give something back to the Lord," he said.
tobacco vendors in
'"This ministry grows every year, and the~ are literMeip County.
ally dozens who go off every year to do this."
.
Teenagers, ages
Townsend, a public speaker from Talltuiep,
15 and 16, assisted
!Ja., refleded on the significance Of the work done
with monitoring
by the Carpenters for O!risl voluplccr organization
32 of the county's
thai is sending nearly 200 workers into Gallipolis to.
57 tobacm venput up an 8,700-aqliare-fool addition to the Good
dors. Six vendors
News l;)aplist Church on Georges Creek Road.
sold tobacco prod"l!verywhere we
some people go with us,"
ucts to underage
said Townsend, who's made about a dozen lrips
youth while twen:
wound the U.S. with the voluntcen,jluilding new
refused
chun!ltea or ~lions to existlnJ lllrUctUra u a
1,_ ~=:c q!CIII to
puai~~&amp;-the - · · . . . . . _....,~ CO'WI 1 ~-t0..diN~.~··~'Iitltilll, . ";!;,;:,:~:.::·~·· -~&gt;o~...!tl-""":..........
youth.
.
.Tobacco
oudets Ann
and
Ann
111g, writing, scietice1 matltliil'atics
"These guys ~me fJ:OIII different w::'!~~~:i~;,
and citizenship.
salesmen, teiiChers, farmers, jlllt about
receiving checks Crlep,
or th•- Meltl
· The awe tcstl fourth anct' sixth Y"'' can 11\ink of," Townsend said.
included conve· County Ba.d or Health, llll•d.
·
to
and Jon Jacobe, dlpldy. IMallh
pen, and performs "off-grade"
Ukc ;sev~ral oth~r volunteer~: this month's ~p to
me~ce 5 res1~as commiMio!Mf, and Nomia TOITM,
.testing in the third grade. The inter- the Galhpohs area 11 Townsend s second. He JOined
stattons, . foOd car.ctor or 1111 , _ , Melli• County
vcntion instruction l~unched by the others from the.oraanizatjon who buill Good Ne-:vs'
Stores, restaurants, HHitll O.panm~nt, look OVM
city schools 111ist ·third and fourth new sanctuuy 10 June 1982, after the congregation
and bars. 1\vo ven- IObaoCO product8 wlllell pur·
graders who failed the reading sec- outgrew th.e foi1JIIlr Cook O!apei, where the cburclt
dors suggested the cllaHd by . Juwnn.. In Melg•
tion in their testing, and fourth and . was eslabhshed in 1973.
adult in the store County.
sixth graders who failed in three
~e chun:~ ia planning a family life center.in the.
could pun:hase the
areas of their testing, explained lllldit10n, designed to house classrooms, a fellow·
tobacco products and give them to the underage youth.
. Mary Lynne Jones, who oversees ship ~all, a new kiJChen and conference rooms,
Tobacco products have been sold to underage youth
special programs for the distrigt.
explarned Good News' pastor, the ·Rev. Oiff CUrry.
tw&lt;t out of the past three compliance checks by two venJones said that 53 students frOm · The participation of the' Carpenters for Otritll
dors in Meip County. A chain of vendors have repeatedly
Washington, Green and Rio Grande w~ ~proved by the organization ~rseeing. ill ·
sold to underage youth during the past three compliance
clementaries are enrolled in the pro- adivJiies, and after·church members did the prehm·
reviews. During the most ~eCCnt checks, 83 peramt of the
gram. ·
.
·
inary work, the firsUel ofvoluntcers began work im.
unlawful sales of lobal;co products were made to female
Operated with federal funds, th~ the aile Thursday. .
· .
.
. youth. Youth answered all questions posed by the vCndor 's
prograin · is the district's first to
An in_i~al cstimalci placed ,the number of volun·
A HAND...;: T1lomU Kelp, t.n, and Bryan TOWIIMRCI, mamber8 or clerks and used no fake identification. ·
directly assiat elementary·levcl slil· · leers, harlrng from uound ~ country, at nearly 90
ror Cfvlat volutlltlr. orpnlzltlon, helped level what will
Section t 926 of the Federal Public J-lealth Services Act
.dents in improving.their proficieiK:y last week. Townsend saii! another 100 will arrive
a wall the lamlly 1.,. *'II' planned fOr the Good "-a Baptl8t ·of 1992 mandates that states have laws in effect making it
scores. The ratio of teachers to llu· this week in hopes of finishing the job by June 18.
. _ GaiUpoUa. NMrly 200 ·maml!er8 or the group will work on the unlawful for tobaa:o vendors to sell or distribute products
dents hu allowed for small ,group
Working in the midil of a heal wave has failed tO 1,7110 aquai'Hoot addlllon to the church.
to individuals under the age of 18. The state of Ohio meets
instruction during the three hours deter the volunteers from ~ir mislion u they
this mandate through the Ohio Revised Code Section
each day instruction is held, Jones donned shorts and wrapped Nndannu on their heads to combal earthquake. F1'9m tltal initial experience, more volunteers came 2927.02. This section prohibits the givins. 5cllins. or othexplained.
the combination of ellln:me daytime highs .and humidity that's forward to help congregations continue worshiping in new struc- erwise distributing cigarettes or other tobacoo products. to
Armed with results from the gripped the Ohio Valley for over a week.
lures.
.
any person under 18 years of age and mandates the postfourth and sixth grade tesiS, leiiChers
Chun:h member Hank Hallen, who's been assisting the group, . For !he current project, volunlccrs have been put up at the ing of $igns in a conspiCIIOIIS place prohibiting tobacco
work on the students' weaker perfor· overhe&amp;Jd Townsend~ reaction to the coQdilions ~"It is kind of Washington Elementary gymnasium, using the school kitchen but products to any person under 18 years of age.
inance areas while "the off-grade hot."
'
·
·
providing their own cooks to prepare meals. The group will join
Federal law requires thai all states make a substantial
gives you a prelty good idea of the
"'These boys from down in Altlbama don't P"Y any at~entlon to Good News members in worship service lhis Sunday and after-· effort to reduce youth access to tobacco products or lose up ·
areas they need to con~trate on," his heat,~ Hallen joked.
· .
,
, · wild are ~ioa l!eatcd by the church to a dinner at Gallipolis to forty percent of their federal funds for sullswice ~
Jones said. ·
"Well, they're sWeating pretty Jood," Townsend responded.
Deve~menlal Ce~ter.
.
programs. One requirement of the federal law is "random,
·
Carpenters for Chris! got ill start In the 1970s, when a group of
The group rests on Sunday, Townsend explained, and is back on . ·
Continued on 111111' A7
volunteers went to Guatemala to rebuild.a church c!cstroyed in an the job aaain the next day.
Good Morning

5 sp, pewter, 3rd Dr, More All power, sunroof, V6, Black Dr, V6, Black, leather
WAS $16,949
.
WAS $20,355
· WAS $23,755

:::; $14 · 11 5 Now $17 507 Now $2

By KEVIN KELLY

so.

~~~~~~

99 CHEVY MONTE CARLO LS
VB, leather, Sable, Black

V6, . loaded, Midnight Blue Jade. Green, V6,
WAS $24,605
WAS $19,838

Saver Thousalllls

950*
82
-a·'

99 CADilLAC 5£DAN DEVIW Loaded, White, leather int, only 15,000 mi, Was $32,900 ... NOW $29,850
98 CHM MONn CARLO'S V6, auto, air, tltt, cruise, AMIFM cess, Was $14,995 .........................$12, 900

.

erand New 1999 chevy .
Full Size Conversion Van
• Fiberglass Running Bds.
• Custom Alum. Wheels
• Loaded! ' .

• Vortec V-8 Power
• 4 Captain's Chairs
• Rear Sofa Bed

·
15
I
*
Brand New 1999 Chevy
82 I Astro Conversion Van.

'

.

.

• Air CondiUonlng .
• High Gloss Walnut Wood

• Rear Sofa Bed

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Ground Effects.
• Fully Loaded!

120 950*
.

'

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Air Conditioning

• AMIFM Stereo

'

It
••

2·850*
J

· • Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Caaune
• Sport Suapen1lon

&lt;'

'

.

Brand New 1999Chevy
XTREME 8-Serles Pickup
• XTREME Appearance Pkg.
•16" Aluminum Wheels
• XTREMELY NICE! ·

All New 1999 Chevy Silverado
Sportside 4x4 Pickup
:

• Exterior Appearance Pkg.
• Chrome Wheels
• Nicely Equipped!

(2 to moos..frDf11 Maroon- 1Sand4rlft)

.95CAD SEVILlE SLS Loaded, leather lnt, Was $24,900 ...................................... ., ......................... $18,900
97 WMINA V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass.• Was $13,900 ................................................. $f0,400
96 CADILlAC SmAN DEVIW va. leather lnt, loaded Was $24,999 ............................ .................... $20,800
96 CADILLAC SEVILLE STS loaded: leather Int. Was $29,900 .................................... .......... ............ $22,450
90 OLOSMOIILE DELTA II Loaded .............. :.............................................. .... ............ ........ Only $15,995
98 PONnAC GRAND AM V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass Was $13,900 .. ............................ $10,800
96 UNCOLN TOWN CARve, au'to, leather lnt, White, only 40,000 Ml, Was $19,900 .................... $17,450
93 BUICK LESAIRE V6, auto, air, titt, cruise, AMiFM cass Was $7999 ......·....................................... $6,200
95 FORD TARUS V6, auto, air, II", cruise, P. seats, PW, AM/FM cass Was $7900 .. ...... .................. $5,900
93 CADILlAC SEDAN DEVIW l,:oaded, leather int, P. Moonroof, Was $10,900 ................................. $8,450
96 PONTIAC FIRE•D V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, T-tops, CD p!ayer, Was $12,995 .......... ... ;...........$'11 ,860
98 CAMARO COUPE V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, Was $18,900 ............ .... ...... .................................... $14,950
98 PONnAC SUNfiRE 4 Dr, 4 cyl, auto, air, tilt, tinted glass, Was $12,900 ............ ........ ...... .......... ... $9975
97 SATURN SR 2 52,000 MI. Beige 4 eyl, 5 sp, AM/FM cess, tilt, cruise, Was $11 ,900 ................ $) 0,650
92 OLDSMOBILE DELTA II vs; auto, air, cass, tilt, cruise, Was $8900 ............................ ,...... ,......... $7,250
96 OLDSMOBILE 98 Loaded, leather lnt, one owner, Was $15,995 ...................................... ......... $13,650
CADILLAC SEVIW SLS, loaded, leather int, lc Garnet Red, only 15,500 ml, one owner, like new wes 127,995 ................. $24,850
HONDA ACCORD 4 Or, auto, air, tilt, cruise, Black Was $11,800 ...... .. ..................................... $1 5,750
99 GRAND AM 4 Dr, auto, a.lr, tilt, cruise, alum wheels, AM/FM cass, Was $15,999 .................... $13,880
91 PONTIAC IONNEVIW·Loaded, only 21,000 ml, Was $18,995 ..................... :.......................... .$16,950
96 POIITIAC GRAND AM,GT 4 Dr, 14,000 ml, loaded, leather lnt, Was $12,900 ................ ;........... $11,675

II

w

: Today'i ••
: 16 Sedloni • 1 :Z Pllgcl
Cllead1n

96 5·10 lWEI Loaded, Two:tone ·paint, Red/Sliver sharp, Was $19,900 .................................. $17,475

.

95 CHM SUIURBAN 4WD,Ioaded, LT pkg, leather int, Was $22,900 .................................... .'... $18,660
95 CHM G-20 Conversion Van, loaded, Was $16,900.-:.......................................... .'.:................ $13,850
97 5·10 PICKUP 4 Cyl, 5 sp, air, AM/FM ciass, Was $10,900 .............. .. ........................................... $8925
98 CHEVY 1/2.TON LWI Silverado, V6, liuto, air, tilt, cruise, 9,900 ml, Was$19,900 ................... $17,250
92 CHEYY.I/2TON SWI V6, 6 Sp, T11t, Cruise, Air, Am/Fin Cass, Sport Pkg, Red WAS $11,900 ... $9450
96 DODGE EXTCAI2 WD, L.atamle SLT pkg, Red Was $18,995 .............................................. .... .$16,550
91 GMC SIERRA SU ,., c.l! 4x4, loaded, Was $23,900 ................................ ................ .. ...... ....... $22,450
91 GMC JIMMY VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass, 4 WD, 4 Dr, Was$23,900 ............ ........... $21,560
91 OLOSMOIILE IRAVADA AWD loaded, 4 Dr, Was $24,900 .......... ... ........ .. ............................ ...... $21,850 .
91 PONTIAC TRANSPORT loaded, WAS $21 ,900 ............................................ .... :.......... ................ $18,990
91 GMC SONOMA 4 WD, EXT CAS, VB, auto, all, ttn, cruise, Alum whf&amp;ls, AM/FM caas Was $19,900 .....$16,925
91 S·10 IWER 4 WD, 4 DR, V6, AUTO, AIR, TILT, CRUISE, WAS $23,999 ................... ...... ,... $18,900
93 ASTRO EXT CONVVAN loaded, WAS $8999 ............., .............................:.... .......... .............. .... ...$7450
94 GMC JIMMY • WD 4 Dr, VS, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM-FM cass, 41,000 miles, ........... ~ ......... $14,900
94 CHEV (·10 Lwl Two tone paint, Red/Black, VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM-FM cass, WAS $11,995 ....... .'.. $9450·.
94 CHEVROLET 1/2 4WD LWI V6, auto, air, AM-FM WAS $10,900 ................................................. $7990
90 CHEVROLET ASTRO CON VAN 8, auto, air, cass, WAS $5900........ :............ :.......... .... .... .. .............. $3S50

1

!J•IIIeils
a..Jca

Edltoritll

Aloaalbl Rlva:
Obl&amp;lariel
5DOrts

.......
C6117

DH

M

~1

A§

11:1

0 11199 Ollto VOlley,_...,., (;o,

•

New agency partnership offers homes for moderate-income famllie~

By BRIAN J, REED ·
Development, Ohio Valley Bank and County.
.
Tim" 88ntlllel 8Udl
·
the Federal Home Loan Bank and
CAA earlier purchll!cd a lot in
SYRACUSI! - A putnerahip . Horne Creek F.ntcrpism, a Pomeroy' Rudand and maintains an option on
between ~raJ agencies and a local baled buildini finn, have teamed up · other Iota there, but hU decided,
builder will allow modentc·inCXli!IC In a apec:ial program that will con· instead, to c:oncenlnllc on OOIRuCIfamilies to purchase d\cir first . - · struct six new ltoliies in S)'liiCIIIC. ina the Meigs County homes at Walhomes.
Thole homes will. be 10ld to.qualify- · nUl PI-, on College 'Road in Syra~· Oallill/tdeiga Community · ing first-time horilcbuyers: .
CUSC-· The subdivision is owned by
Action Asc:ncy, ~SDA Rural DeVel·
A aimillt program will fund the Home Creek l!ntcrprjses, which will
opment, .the Oh1o Department of construction of four homes in Gallia ronstructltomes for the program.

72-ye.ar-oldyearsHobson Bridge to close Tuesday
MJDDLEPORT -

For 72

now,

above the roadway, m~lll will have an
easy ·transilion on and off the briilge," said
Meigs County Engineer Robert e.on.
"The wide lanes will make motorists feel
comfot;lable u they travel lite new

County Board of Commllaioncra pvc the
rcsplnsibility to the Melp County HighWf!.Y Department to oblain and spend {unds
Meigs County Village of Middleport.
for replacement of lhe briclp. , .
However, that ei'l will QOme to Jill end
County funding Ia compriJed l&amp;IJdy of
;tuesday when the bridae closes to allow ' structure.•
county bridge credits and comes to
~truction of a new span.
In addition, the new bridge will feature SZ70,073, EaiOD uid.
··, The weathered, deleriorating brldae was a sidewalk for pedcstriw and provisiQna
&amp;uon· said annual inspectio!W showed
built hi 1927 by the !ilale of Ohio. Ill two- for a future water lino requOalecl by the Vii· continuing deterioration of the bridge;
'ane,
truh spans ISS feel IICI'OII Lead- !age of Middleport, F,Uon said.
· aandbluling and painting were considered
iog Cnek near the Ohio River.
.At tbe time the exialil)g bridae was but hiitial cost estimates of reh-'&gt;ilitaling
Dial. Construction Inc. of SIOI:kdale Is built, it wu a atate-owoed sln!Ciure on the span were between $400,000 ·and
Jl:heduled to begin· construction of a new State Route 7. Followlna ·construction of $500,000 due to c:oedy environmental cOil· ·
$835,619-46 three-ap!ln, c_oncrete box ·the RL 7 bypass uound Mlddlepon and lrola. It wu then thai officiall began
·beam atruc:ture thalia ellpectCd to serve the Pomeroy, the road wu II'IDiferrcd into the .
Continuad on page A7 .
residents of Middleport for yeai'llo come. county system as County RO!KI Z1, In 1989, ·
,The new bridae will be built at the site of Middleport annexed the Hobaon area and
tbc ~~iatina bridae and a shon bypass route County Road 21 became a villase streel. ·
will be et~tablished uain,a nearby County
The ·ch1np of hands from s\lte, to
Road 3 (Leadina Creek Road~ Construe- county, and eventually to the Villaae of
lion of tho new bridae. will ~ epproxi· Middleport resulted in qullliona over
mately' 150 days.
whom wu respon•ible for repair or
"Since no part of the structure will be . replacement of the bridge. The Meip .
~e Hobson Bridae over Leading Creek has
~rved motorists traveling to and from the

•I

1

'i

-

J,.

Carol Costanzo of Rural Development said that grant funds are used to
subsidize intcrcsl and down payments
to those· who meet income and credit
eligibility requirements. Loans are
actually made through the Ohio ValIcy Bank and the Federal Home Loan
Bank, with CAA operating as a gobetween with the bank and,the buyer.
AIXOI'ding to Trish MCCollough,

executive director of CAA, those who
qualify are typically working-clasti
families and professionals who are
pun:hasing their first home. rathe(
than low-income residents, althouSJt
Iow·income applicants will be consid:
ercd for the program if they meel
requirements.
, .
"The pi of Ibis partnership is ~
Continued on pitgll A7

.

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