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. . . 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 22, 1999

Wednesday

'"

June23, , . .

Weather

Becky

8elr

Melgl County
Ext8nllon
Agent, Fllllllly
~n~~eon.- ·

Science•

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• Aie

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CommWIIty

Developn..nt.

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cakes some of your favorite
desserts? Does the idea of eating a '
ll!i&lt;:e of scrumptious spice, luscious
\cmQn or a delicious devil's food
cake make your 'mouth water? If so,
why not make one tonight? We know
'lhat cakes are simple to prepare by ·
!Ising mixes, but they are also quite
easy to make from scratch. You just ·
.need to remember a few simple .
,uidelines.
There are two basic kinds of cake
:. butter cakes and foam cakes. Butter
'Cakes are made with butter, shonenillg or margarine, flour, sugar, eggs, a
liquid and a leavener such as baking
fOwder or soda to make the cake rise.
· Ditferent fl avorings are used for
different types of butter cakes like
cocoa for chocolate, vanilla for white
and ye ll ow and various fresh fruits or
fruit flavorings for other appetizing
cakes. '

oblona, loaf, cupcake or specialshaped pans may be used. Grease
booom and sides with shortening.
Fill half-full and pl&amp;;e in middle of
prehe!Hd oven. Don't let pens touch;
there should be one-inch cleiiDIICC
around each pan.
Bake the minimum amount of
time, then cheCk for doneneSs. If a
toot.hpick inserted in the center
comes out clean or if you lightly
touch the cake with your fingertips
and it sprinas back, it is done. If it is
not done , continue baking.
·
When done, lake the pans from

the Qven, let them stand on a cooling

nK;k for ten minutes, then remove the
cake from the pans to finish cooling
on the rack
Foam cakes may be angel food,
sponge or chiffon cakes. They
depend on beaten eggs or egg whites
for the leavening. Angel foods have
no additional leavening, fat or egg
yolks. Sponge cakes use whole eggs
and pos~ibl y some leavening. Sponge
cakes make excellenJ jelly rolls or
strawberry shortcakes. Chiffon cakes
are a combination of buuer and foam
cakes. They use separated eggs, Jeav-

ening and fat.
When prepari ng an anael food ~ZWD frosting, a cooked ,frosting, a .
When preparing foam cakes, do cake, there should be no traee of d,ustillg of powder~ sugar, some
not grease pans - the egg whileS need grease or egg yolk on the bowl or the type or alazc; or ~ tro,sted.
1111
to climb the sides of the pan for vol- beaten. Egg whites will be bealen
Cakes s~ bC f?Yeial for storume.
until foamy, then sugar will be beale n age .. Cooked frOSdrlg cakes should
Leave the oven door closCd until in two tablespoons at a time until the not be ai r tight. Unfrosted or butterthe minimum baking time has whites are very stiff.
creant frosted cakes can J,le frozen.
expired. The cake is done when
The dry ingredients will then be
If the cake has a whipped cream
cracks in the top of the cake feel dry folded in carefully by bringing a rub- topping, a cream fi lling or cream
and no finger imprints remain after ber SJ&gt;iltula down the side, across the cheese frosting, it should be stored in
touching. Immediately after remov- bottom and folding over the top until the refrigerator to prevent food poiing the cake from the oven, tum the they are no longer visible.
somng.
pan upside down to cool 'for at least
Make sure cakes are cool before
Baking cakes from scratch can
two hours. This allows the cake to storing or they will become sticky. provide a fun IIJld Oavorful treat for
solidify at its highest volume.
Cakes may be frosted with a butter- your fam ily. Why not give it a try? ·

Legion baseball results, Page.s
Fath.er- in-law's inappropriate advances, Page 7
Internet taxation inevitable, Page 6

Tod•y:Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 80s
Tomonow: Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 80s

31
'Meigs County's

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Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohto

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Tradihonally butter cakes were
made by alternately adding the eggs ·
and liquid to sifted dry ingredients.
Many recipes today are designed .to
use the one bowl method where all
· jngredi ents ara combined with a
mixer on low speed for 30 seconds,
. then on pigh for three minutes. Layer,

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Community ·
Calendar

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TUESDAY
· RACINE - The Racine Area
Community 'Organization. will meet
Qll Tuesday at 6:3'0 p.m. at Star Mill

By BRIAN J. REED
S.nUnel N-• Staff
.
School officials are paying ·close .attention to
the results of the fourth-grade proficiency iests
. which were released last week. The leSt ·was
MARIETTA (AP) phase of a $7 million Marietta College administered to fourth graders in Ohio public .
residence hall conatruction project is about to get under way here.
schools in Man:h.
The first phase includes building two residence balls and a student cen·
·According to the Ohio Department of Educa·
ler. A second phase will involve the conarruction of two new buildings.
tion, til) percent of the students met the final proThe project is part of a larger five-to-10-year campus reslructuring plan ficlent standard on the reading portion of the test,
that will cost 1!11 estimated SSO mi.lion, Marietta. College President Larry a 12-point improvement from results a year ago.
Wilson said.
The reading portion of the test is subject to
Some of the work is expected to begin in the next week. Plans
close scrutiny by lldministntors, teachers and parinclude more than doubling the size of Ban Johnson Field House to 111ake ents, bcc:auac of the Fourth-Grade Guarantee, a
it a full-service recreation center with an indoor track.
provision of Senate Bill 55, which will require
Funding for the projects will come from a combination of sources. fourth gradet;S to pass the test before thH are pro·
Marietta Col.lege currently has about 1•100 students; ·
·
moled io the fifth grade.
·
new gu.,antee will so .into effect in the
aNaNNATl (AP) ~ A paper manufactum will pay an $(!0.000 penal· 201J0.2001 school year, but will allow promotion
ty and j)rovide 11101e safety training becen• of an accident that Jed to a work· 9f llludenta who fail the reading.portion if tbutu·
er's death, officials announced Tuesday.
dent's reading teacher and principal agree thll the
Miami Valley Paper Co. Inc. also agreed to more safety and health inspec-1 · child is prepared academically for the fifth grade.
ti~ the Oa:up.cional Safety and Health Adminiatntion said.
.
Another part of SB-SS requires school districts
. A Feb. 22 chemical explosion at the Pranldin plant burned the face, neck to offer intervention .services to students in the
and hands .of Robert Pennix. The Somerville resident later died from ·the .firs!, sea~nd and third grades not reooing at grade
·
injuries.
level. Districts ue also required to offer intervenIn March, OSHA cited the compa- tion to students not proficient in three or more
ny for what it called inadequate tnin- ueu of the proficiency tests.
ing about chemical haDrdl and pro· Students are not required to attend the inter·

,.

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RUTLAND - Bicentennial com·
mittee meeting, Civic Center, 7:30
p.ni. All interested residents invited.
POMEROY - Catholic Women's
Club meeting Tuesday with mass at 6
p.m. with covered dish picnic at the
social hall to follow.

of .Priddy forfeitur·e, process not unusual

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Company settles OSHA citations

Check out the other
Road Show offers ·
atyour Chevy;. D~aler!

.CHESTER - Winding Trail Garden Club meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Ill' ,..the home of Debbie Mohler..
POMEROY , - Meigs County
Health Department immunization
c)inic Tuesday, 9- 11 a.m. and 1· 3
p;m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Cenler, Pomeroy. ·Children. must be
:a:companied by a parent or guardian
With child's shot record,
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laws.
The company,
35 miles north
Cincinnati,
manufactures
piper and tho coatings U!ed in

~=rations.
"'-"'UJ- 88)18 SOII1e

:WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - America~ Cancer
Society Community Cancer lnforma· ·
lion Center, open house, II a.m. to I
.p.m. Wednesday, at Holzer Home
(:are of Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Mulberry
Heights.
,,

Cf8Bhts 81"6 SulcldBB

HAMILTPN. Ohio (AP) -"JVo!ice
thinnonth, uouthwest Ohio coroocr
hu ruled thll a vehicle wu used to
commit suicide. But statisti~ show
that means of self-destruction'is still
rare.
· "lWo cases don't make a ·trend,"
Butler County Coroner Richard P.
Burkhardt said Tuesday.
Aooording to the Ohio Depai'tment
of Health, three people committed
suicide with motor vehicles in 1997,
the most recent year for which statistics ue available.

Lotteries

tHURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Carleton College
Board of Trustees annual meeting
'l'llursday, 7 p.m. at the home .ofPresldent Robert L. Wingett. All board
members are urged to attend.

omo
Pk:k3: 7·1-9; Pkk4: 7-9..{)..7
S.cke)'l5: 1-4-15·23·3S
W.JA.

DaiiJ 3: 11-6-5; Daly 4: 5-4-3-3

S-10.2WD
.
$2,000 Cash Back·
or
$163/Month 36-Month Leaset
$l63 Due at Lease Signing

,•

. REEDSVILLE Riverview
· oSrden Club meeting Thursday, 6:30
p.m. Potluck dinner at Belleville
bam Park in Reedsville.
·
fkiDAY
· RACINE
Make-up day for
';'loothem Local spans physicals Fri·
lllay, 2-4 p.m. for boys and girls
. p ooes 7-12 at Dr. Hunter's office.

(Tax, title, license and registration are extra,)
,.

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Malibu•
~1,500 Ca:sh Bac;;J&lt;":"''I'&gt;J'•
•f\'

t·; .

&lt;;f;

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. .... ·~·•·
'J· '

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,1,;;., ;·.~·~·-·t.

.:... ·;..._,.~-

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.$199{Mlonth 3:6#MS'rtth Leaset.,.: ,.,
$1,3~$ Due at Leilse Sigrung
(Tax,'1:ide, license and registration are extra.)
. ''

By JIM FREEMAN
Slnllnel " - -...
,.,.,.
The Meigs Local Board of Education, meeting
in regular session Tuesday night at Meip High
School, took a big step toward seeking the con·
struction of three new school buildinp: a middle
school and two elementary schools.
The board voted unanimouslr to request per·
mission of the Ohio School Facihties Commission
to participlle in the State Oassroom Assistance
Program, a~ which hu helped conslnK:I a
new K-8 elementary school in Eastern. Local and
is helping fund conatruction of a new . K-8 in
Southern L9cal.
,
Current)y the state is proposing to pay
$25,421,604, matched by ·a local share of
$5,701,000, approximltcly 3 mills, for a total of
.$31,122,604 for the building project.
Included in .the molion wu a request to place a

.

See Your Local Chevrolet Dealer Today!

By JOHN MoCARTHY
AnaciMid " - WiiiiW

CX&gt;Lt.JMBUS (AP) - The state's chief regula-

. MIDDLEPORT - Women 's minIstry meeting Saturday, I p.m. at the
ASh Street Freewill Baptist Church.
-'II women from all churches are
invited to attend and participate,

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when the Sena&amp;e'voled to accept House changes to
·a lons--taht bill to bring Wliipcdlion to Ohio's
electric power indultry.
The Public UtiHties Commission of Ohio will
have to hire llleaal elalit new staffers to handle the
~ ol documents utility companies expect
to ftle in their pJ111110 make transition from a rea·
ullled market to a competitive one.
Then, before the end or next year, the livemember CXIIIIIIIiaalon will have to decide how
much in reauJator-approvcd lnVCIImentl each utility can cllim from cuatomen.
"It would be Uldul to have a worklhop,"
PUCX&gt; Chlirman Alan Schriber said after the 29-3
. Senate vote qn Tueaday.
.
Oov. Bob fift made Schriber the point man in
the dlln•IOill between tile utilities ·and their

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'Cull 8ICk oft'lra IIYIIIIble only to l'llldenta of FL, GA, NC, SC and Sellct counties of AL, IL, IN, KY, MS. OH, TN, VA and WV. For more details
-.r~~a~~ dllvll y from partlclpdJlll dealer lltoc:k by G/30/99. Not IMiilable wtth special GMAC finance or IIIM4! oflert.
.

'

cd 10860-cHEv. 'ibu
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at .
mu

lM d.ir.9l.tit

t8-10 ~lll .bMicl on 111118 Chellrolel 8·10 2WD and MSRP of $14,273; 36 monthly paymlllll total $5,888. Malibu paymlllll buecton
~IIIli and MSRP
of •17,4116, M111011111ly fM¥11111111 total $7,8M. Option to purc:halellt lease end br 111 amount to be determined at J. . . llgnlniJ. GMAC must lpRrDVe ~Mae. Ayallabl
1y to
re tldct Ill of FL. GA, NC, SC IIlii Mlec:t oountlee of Al, IL, IN, KY, MS, OH, TN, VA and WV. For more dlllalls Ct1111·800·G50-CHE'I. 'fbu mutt tllklll..1all deHVwy frOm ~on II
dlllll IIDdc 11r 7/1.1 " tDr MtlllbU and 7131/G8 br 5·10. MIINge
of UO per mile- H,OOO mil... Leuea paya tlr malntiiiiiiCe, rlpllr and ~~eceu wear If~ ng
lwi ....... ..ty 1111 11 II liable tDr till unpaid monthly paymllntl. Payments may be higher In aome states. Not available with customer cuh offers.
· eue

cha•

C1111M1 QM Corp. Buc:tcll up, Amerlcallll'

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bond issue before district voters on Nov. 2.
and retract the bleachers. During earlier discus-.
·
f
· the work was.p1anned to coma
• ·de WI'th re fi n·
The board also met With representatives o two ston,
building design firms: SSOE of Toledo and ishing of the gym floor.
·
Columbus, and Schorr &amp; Assoc. of Dublin. lWo
In personnel matters, the board hired Joe
weeks ago, the board met with representatives of Gilkey as a bus mechanic and hired Dale Harrison
Marr-Knapp-Crawfis Associates Inc. of New as reserve volleyball coach for 1999 season. The
Philadelphia and McDonald, Cassell &amp; Bassett . board also accepted the resignation of .qary L.
Inc.
King u a substitute employee and the resigaation
The board scheduled a special meeting for of Michael Childs as a teacher at. Meip High
Monday, 7 p.m. at the district's central office in School. In addition, Patsy A. Thoma was hired as
Pomeroy to rank the design firms for further con- a substitute secretary.
sideration.
In other business, the board approved final
The bleachers in the Meip High School gym· revised appropriationa of $18,897,907.84 for the .
nasium will receive an extensive facelift under a 1998·99 school year and temporary appropriatiOns
$94,300 renovation project approved by the board. or$ 19,002,803.23 for the 1999-2000 school year.
MARS Inc. of Corinth, N.Y. was contracted to
Present were Superiritend~nt Bill Buclcley,
conduct the· word during September and October. Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus, board President John
The existing bleachers will be refinished and mod· Hood, board members Scott Walton, Roaer
emized, and an electric motor installed to extend Abbon, Randy Humphreys and Wayne Davis.
munity through its fiOO!I hazard mitigation pro·
gram. Mayor JoAnn Eads said thll she hopes the
village can complete most of the work on the project befof1! the celebration, including the comple·
lion of work at the Harder cabin, which h~ been
moved to a site next to the Civic Center. ·
The theme for the bicentennial celebrati011 is
"Old Stories and New Bcginninp." Events for
the ~:~~lebration will include Myrides, pie baking
and cake de()orating contests, a flower show, an
herb show, a 'craft sale, ind entertainment, all
events which are usually planned for the town's
homecoming celebration.
Special ev~nts for the bicentennial are also
being planned. A parade will be held at 11 a.m.,
followed by a religious service at the Civic Ccn-

ter.
A farmers ' market will be set up at the Civic
Center, and anyone who expects to have excess
produce, and those who sell goods at other farmcrs' markets, ue asked to anend the Rutland
event. There will be no charge for the farmers'
market or the craft sale, in an effort to encourage
partir:ipation.
. .
Councilman Jay Dewhurst will coordinate L
classic car show, and Maureen Bums of the Rutland Department Store will oversee special window decorations and other improvements to the
business district for the celebration .
The committee also plans to coordinate a speContinued In .• Rutlend '*-nf'Mnlllr on
page 3

PUCO focus moves to regulatory agency
tor thouaht of the workload he had just taken on

POMEROY - Gospel concert,
"t'Jather by the River" with the EanhCll 'Vessels Saturday, 7·9 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Parking Lot. The concert is
'!(IOnsored by the Pomeroy United ·
Met~odisr Church. In the event of
iuin, '!he co~ will be held at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church;
Second Street
·

The state also released the resulls of the sixth·
grade proficiency tests last week. Those tesll
w~re less encouraging, with 33 percent of an estimated 126,87S students meeting the proficient
standard in all five resting ueas.
Compared to lut year 's sixth-grade class, sisnificantly higher pen:eittages of 1999 students
met proficienlle~els in mathematics and citizen·
ship, and higher percentage&amp; of sixth graders in
1999 scored at the advanced level in mathematics.
There was a decrease in the percentage of sixth
graders who met proficient score standards in
writing and science.
80 percent of sixth ft..,._rs, compared to 89
...-the writing jlortion,
percent last year, passed
while reading scores remained the same al 53 percenl Math results were up five points from 47 to
52 percenr. citizenship up six points from 66 to
72, and science results down from SO percent to
47 percenl
,
Local sixth-grade scores were as follows:
EASTERN LOCAL- writing, 79 percent; reoo·
ing, 48 percent; math, 61 percent; citizenship, 52
percent; MEIGS LOCAL- writing, 78 percent;
reading, 44 percent; malh,'37 percent; citizenship,
76 percent; science, 40 percent; SOUTHERN
LOCAL- writing, 73 percent; reading, 31 per·
cent; math, 21 percent; citizenship, 4S percent;
science, 34 percent.
.

Rutland Bicentennial plans reaching final stages
By BRIAN J; REED
Sentinel " - Staff .
PI- ue now being finalized for Rutland's
2llllth birthday. A committee of Village Council
members, businea owners and members of community organizations held a meeting on Tuesday
evening to continue planning for the event.
'I'be bicentennial celebration will be held on
August 28 during the community's annual homecomins event, with activities centering around the
Rutland Qvic Center. Other activities lllld points
of interest will take visiton throughout the community. ·
In addition to being a birthday celebration, the
event will aive Rutland residents and visitors a
chance to 1ee the many improvements to the com·

It's a great time to buy or lease the Chevy ofyour dr~ams!

SATURDAY
• SNOWVILLE - Snowville Unit·
ed• Methodist Church homecoming
Saturday, II a. m. There will be a pic·
ni&lt;: luncheon.

vention sessions, which will begin in ' Meigs
Co'unty next week. but distri~ts are required to
offer the.m.
More than 51,000 fourth graders across the
state are involved in district intervention pro·
grams to better prepare them for the fifth grade.
Statewide results of other portiona of the
'fourth·grade test also reflected general improve·
ments. Those test results show thai,· comparcid to
1998's founh-&amp;rooe ·class, a significantly higher
percentage of students met the proficient standard
in each of the five test areas.
65 percent passed the writing portion, · com·
pared to .S9 percent last year, S1 percent passed
the mathematics section, compared to 42 percent
last year, 71 percent passed the citizenship por·
Cion, compared to 57 percent last year, and 53 per·
cent passed the science portion, an improvement
of 4 percentaac points from last year.
Fourth grade proficiency test results in Meip
County, by school district, were reponed as fol tows:. EASTERN LOCAL: writing, 79 percent;
relding; S1 percent; math, 4S percent; citizenship,
63 percent; .and science, 44 percent; MEIGS
LOCAL: writing, 60 percent; reading, 51 percent;
·math, 31 'percent; citizenship, 6S percent; science,
44 percent; SOUTHERN LOCAL: writing, 43
percent; reading, 40 percent; math, 31 percent;
~itizenahip, 42 percent; and science, 25 percent.

r--:::.-eSe_n_ti-.n-e"""l ~':mp&amp;nydeniesitviolatedany Meigs Local Board votes to participate in building program

•

: " TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
l'lains Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
!1053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Name drawing will be held.

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Good Afternoon
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Sldlotll • 1.... .• -..-

, CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM special meeting Tuesday,
7 p.m. with work in the EA Degree.

Concerning the sale of approximately 1,000junk cars
confiscated near Rutland, Lentes described the sale as an
emergency meuure, saying that even prior to the drug
case, the Ohio. Environmental ProteCtion Agency and
residents of the Rutland area had contacted his office
concerning the junk can.
·
"The EPA and (Meigs County Health Department)
wanted the cars disposed of; we wanled to. get rid of
them," he said.
. ·
Lentes said he was considering paying to have the
cars towed off and destroyed, but found they could be
sold for $4S each to a car crusher, Randall Hall of Marietta. "We could not afford to auctioll them off one-by·
one," he said. The sale yiell;led $4S,OOO, he said.
He acknowledged two of the can were sold separate·
ly to a Pomeroy resident, but said that wu an private
agreement betw~n the resident and the car crusher after
the vehicles were out of county ·control. "After he (the
.car .crusher) bought the cars, he could do whatever he
wanted with them," Lentes said.
·
Lentes also sold a herd of cows included in the forfeiture agreement to a Danville area resident for the
lump sum of $10,000. "We're in the business of law
enforcement, not .in the business of talcing care of ani·
.
Continued In "Priddy~ on pege 3

School offici;~ls examine fourth, sixth grade proficiency results

Park.

' POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board .of Education regular meeting
. Tuesday, 6:30p.m. in the Meigs High
School Library.
·

Smglc Copy- 35 Cents

By JIM FREEMAN
your family should noc benefit from
his wif~ to keep her residence."
Sentinel N - Staff
criminal wrong-iloing."
"We could have tried to take .it, but
Although the ~nt drug-related forfellure of i tems
Lcntes explained ·there ue two types
didn 't," he said, adding that hoo the mat· ·
from Fred M. .Priddy, 47, of Rutland, represents an of forfeitures: criminal and civil._
ter resulted in a criminal forfeiture, "We
unusually large haul for local law enforcement, there Is
A criminal forfeiture Is done throueJ!
could have gotten less, but then again we
nothing unusual about the forfeiture procedure illelf, the courts with the state having to prove
could have gotten more." He remarked
according to Meigs County Prosecutor John R. Lentes. that confiscaled items are linked to drugthat the county' ~as several signed doc:uPriddy was artested in April following an investiga- related activity, Lentes said.
menta from Priddy yielding the items for
lion by local law enforcement age,ncies and subsequentHowever, a· civil forfeitUre, such u
. forfeiture.
ly pleooed guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana. that being ilsed in the Priddy CIK, is genThe forfeiture had nothing to do .with
He was sentenced to eight years in prison and may face erally an agreement between the state
his sentence, Lente&amp; said.
an additional two-year federal charge, Lcntes said.
and defendant that is not filed in the
"The sheriff's and my .initial concern
As part of the plea agreement, Priddy forfeited courts, he expllined. A civil forfeiture is
is that we've got a bad guy who thought
numerous items including real estate and two houJ!CS, quicker and carries no burden of proof,
he was above the Jaw and sent hi!" away
more than 7S vehicles and almost a thousand junked Lentes said. However, the money raised
for 10 years," Lentes said.
vehicles, over 160 guns and numerous other items through.a civil forfeiture· must still be reported to audi·
In particular, questions have sorfaced concerning the
including bulldozers, farm tractors, knives, motorcycles, tors and apptopriated before it can be spent.
sale of some forfeited items including junk cars and a
furniture an4jewelry.
"Priddy knew the procedure, knew a forfeiture would herd of cows, and the use of items, particdlarly vehicles,
Meanwhile, the topic P,f Priddy's arrest lllld forfeiture be fonhcoming," Lcntes said, ,remarking ' Priddy had by law enforcement officers.
has been the subject of constant street comer speculation been subject to a similar forfeiture during an earlier fed·
Lentes said he realizes that people are asking quesand discussion over the handling of.the matter.
. eral case.
lions about the forfeiture. "People should ask questions
"lf someone commits a criminal drua offense, any
One problem was that the homes, vehicles, guns and to see that thinp ue on the up and up," he said.
· assets acquired through drug-related ~ivity or its pro- other items were not in his name, making the subject of l "I want to explain that this is not an unusual thing.
ceeds can be forfeited to law enforcement," said Lentes. a.forfeit,ure difficult, Lentes explained.
This hu been overseen by the Ohio Attorney General's
"The thoory behind forfeitures is to take money from
"We went to the table with him to reaolve this," Office every step of the way. They have been involved
criminals and use it to fight other criminals. Also, you or Lentes said. "In exchange for his agreement, we allowed in it and they do this sort of thing every day," he said.

1• 1 J~t L

·''''

Hometown Newspaper

'

D~spite siz~

••

-Page4

•

Volume 50. Number 13

''

belt Arlzona,
88118 has five-hit

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J

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·•to • ;..... .... ~ .•

.,

..
•

'

biaaat customers that led to the puaage of land·
mark bill, which industrial users had pushed for
·most of this decade.
.
fift said he would sign the bill, which leava
the PUCO in charae of implementing most of the
changes the bill makes.
:'The Public Utilities Commission h~ the
expertise to undentand what are velj complicated
i•ucs," Taft said.
The Senate f.aed its version or the bill on May
19, but the legislation on the floor Tuesday w• far
,different than whll went~ to the House.
In private Ialka guided by Schriber and Speaker
JoAnn DaYifllon, R-Reynoldaburg. and, repraen·
tativa of the utilities and indllllrial usen compromised oil several lingering iss~ Consurnen'
Counsel Robert 1bngren IIOOd In for residential
CUIItotners in the Ialka.
·
The ·Houae added provisions allowing residential customers to buy electricity in municipal
aroupe, make it easier for utilities to collect the cost

•
I

'

of lost investments from consumers, and require
the utilities to ICparale their marketing divisions
from their tnnamiasion and distribution units. Both
thole functions will remain regulated monopilies.
Sen. Bruce Johnson, whO also satin on the talks
thll produced the compromise, WJed his colleagues to concur with the House changes, even
tboilgh he didn't ape with everything thll cham·
ber did. The Senile had VOied along straight JIIII'!Y
linea, with Rq!ublicalll prevailing, after the privMe
Ialka broke down in May.
·
"Uke it waa in the Senate, It Wll I very diffi.
cult aeries of nepati0111," said Johnson, R·
Columbus. "I would have to say thla bill may be
the best consumer packPte in tile country."
Sen. Robert Hlllll or Younptown, who with
fellOW Democrata Rhine McUn of Dayton and
Grea DiDonato of New Philadelpltia voted qailllt
the bill, disagreed with Johnaon 'I UICIIment.
Haaan said the bill aave utitilia and the bi&amp; users
all the breaita.

--

•

.-··

•

l

�•

·Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Esta6fislid In 1948
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-DH-2158 • Fax: 1182-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
DIANE HILl
Controller

,. , --pall-"'.-.,)-. tlw-- of,.,

n.SentlneliW'oG,..,.,.,_ lo IM«&lt;It«INm,..., Oft• bt'OMI,.,.otrap.

~--,.--.u

l

I

publlehed.

-..t. - - - · . , . . , . , . ,

- . -~ pllono numbor. Spocl()lo dMo " " - ' • o ,.,..,_to • ., loft-. MIIU to: t..,_ to 1M ~Hor, n.. Sentinel, 111 Cvurllf1,
-~~ Ollio U78; "'• FAX to 7fD--.zi/S7,

.
'

Letters to the editor
Lead arsenate dangerous
in home garden

'

PegiA2

Wtdn .. day, June II, 1 • ·

Latest scandal: Who talked to Woodward?
By JICk AncWMn
in 1992,the anonymous gripes came swiftly. The
and Jln Moller
president who prized loyalty above all suffered
If there were any questhe wounds of a thousand cuts delivered by
tions left about Bill Clinanonymous quotes: If only he had taken my
ton's much talked-about
advice, we wouldn't be in this mess. It also haplegacy, last week provided
pened to Newt Gingrich, whose troops couldn't
some answers. The punish- ,
wait to second-guess his every decision once the·
ment, our president is learn·
popularity ratings plunged.
ing, doesn't stop at acquitFor Clinton, the worst indignity may have
tal's doorstep.
come on Wednesday, when hts loyal poodle of a
last week began with a historic victory in vice president went to Tennessee to announce
Kosovo, yet all the talk in Washington was about himself as the "family-values" candidate for
two Bobs •• Bennett, the president's rumpled pit- president. A dearer distinction could not have
bull of a lawyer, and Woodward, the famous been made. lllect AI Gore and you'll never have
investigative reporter whose recent book about to worry about your daughters becoming White
scandals is flying off shelves in the capital.
House interns.
Who talked to Woodward? was the question on
So what's a president to do? Here's the leader
everyone's lips. In "Shadow," a book recounting of the free world, riding a historic economy and
the toll of the Watergate scandal on successive flush with victory in a far-off conflict his critics
prestdents, Woodward gives intimate details of lampooned as a losing proposition, and he barely
private discussions between the president and has a friend left in Washington. Just deserts, most
Bennett .
would say. But what if Mr. Clinton, he of the
"Mr. President," Bennet1 is quoted as saying, famously volatile temperament, decided to get
"I find your explanation about one of the women even?
frankly unbelievable. This is what impeachment
Let's assume for a minute that Clinton did not
is made of. Your political enemies will eat you speak to Woodward. It's probably safe, consideralive if there's anything in that deposition that ing Clinton's distrust --make that contempt-- for
isn't truthful."
the press. Maybe the leak didn't come from BenEven O.J. Simpson's lawyers sbQwed more
loyalty than this.
Clinton, through his spokesman,
has denied speaking to Woodward
You $Tii.L
for the book. And the loquacious
Bennett, fearful of being fingered as
~'T6eTiT,
the source, has denied eyer violating
~You?
attorney-client privilege -- ,a backhanded way of saying it wasn't him.
But that hasn't stopped the buzz, the
search for a culprit, the deconstruction of a scandal that still has the
power to push a war victory onto the
capital's back-burner.
The book also continues a long
Washington tradition: If victory, as
the saying goes, has a hundred
fathers, then defeat is surely an
orphan. One by one, the bit players
in the Clinton-Starr melodrama are
scrubbing the tarnish off their own
reputations under the cloak of
anonymity. Why, it wasn't my idea
to have the Starr report read like an
issue of Hustler magazine, Starr's
aides are reported as saying. And
surely it wasn't Bennett's fault that
his client was a lying sack of
manure. Message to Starr and Clinton: You guys are on your own now.
We've seen this play before. As
the Bush campaign was petering out

neu. We have no reason to doubt his word. But
let's pretend that Clinton thinks it came from Ben' nell. Let's pretend the president decided to sue for
breach of lawyer-client confidentiality.
We posed Ibis question to Paul Rice, a law professor at The American University and an expert
on attorney-client privilege.
"I don't think he could challenge the legal
fees, but he could have a cause of action against
him for breach of confidentiality."
·
It's not an idle notion. When the president
leaves office, he and Hillary' will owe at least S10
million in legal fees. Figures released in February
by his legal defense fund (new numbers are due in
August) show that $4.5 million of that has already
been defrayed by contnbutions -- but the bills
have also grown in that time-frame. It's safe to
assume that at least a quarter of that money is
going to Bennett.
'
;
Don 'I bet on it happening, however. Because
here's the kicker.
"The question is going to be one of proof,"
says Rice. "And this is like a marital dispu,te.
When you get two people up there, it's a simple
question of who seems to be the most believable."
Who do you think wins that battle?
Copyrlghl111811, Unllecl Feature Syndle81e, Inc.

Thill ill in response to Gayle Price's letter to the editor of June 15 concerning old bug killers (lead arsenate) are the best.
'
As the local agricultural extension agent, I must strenuously recommend
against using lead arsenate in the home vegetable garden. While it is true
that lead arsenate was an effective potato beetle killer, it was also di:scovered
that it it:~detrimental to human health. Continuous use of lead arsenic causes chronic health problems due to both the lead and arsenic components.
Lead arsenate manufacturers voluntarily decided decades ago not to reregister their products with the Ohio Department of Agriculture Pestictde Regulation Division. Unfortunately there was no recall of existing supplies
already in homeowners' and commercial growers hands. Most pesticide
recalls today require the sending back of unopened containers for proper disposal.
,
The chemicals methoxychlor, diazinon, pyrethrins, carbamate (Sevin).
rotenone, Bacillus thuringiensis -varieties San Diego and tenebrionis, and
thiodan are all currently registered wtlh the State of Ohio and can be legally applied by the homeowner. Unfortunately, potato beetles may become
res!stant to these chemicals. T/tis is why crop rotation, cleaning up plant
restdue at year end, general cleanup of possible overwinter hidmg places
around the garden and hand picking off adult potato beetles during April and
early May are so important. A homeowner fact sheet, #2204 "Colorado Potato Beetle in the Home Garden" is available through the extension office.
There are additional chemicals available to the commercial potato grower, however they are reslricted chemicals. A restricted chemical can only be
purchased by an individual who is properly certified or licensed by the State
of Ohio Department o.f Agriculture Pesticide Regulation. Classes (extension
given) and testing (given by Ohio Department of Agriculture employees) are
offered at least twice a year in the local area.
The Gallia-Meigs-Jac~&lt;st?n Solid Waste District with the Ohio Department of Agricultu,~C has scheduled a Pesticide Disposal program for April 6,
2000 for Meigs County residents. It is hoped that all outdated, unwanted
pesticides will be turned in for proper disposal.
• •'
,
For further information about Colorado potato beetle control, pesticide
applicator testing or tummg in pesttctdes in Apnl, 2000 please contact the
extension office at 992-6696.
Harold H. Kneen
LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
dunking stool, the common law pun- who malcc war upcin old women the second volume of a histocy of die
OSU Extenalon Agent, Agrlcultura &amp; Natu1111 Resourc• By
AiliOCiated
Praaa
Wrltar
ishment for that medieval crime, and beware ... Let all pious ladies ,who Washington press corps, says "Paul
Pomeroy
WASHINGTON (AP) - Anne male colleagues paid her $10 fine.
hawk pious tracts into young gentle- Pry," Mrs. Royall's first newspapet,
Royall attracted controversy as if she
Isaac Basse~ doorkeeper of the men's rooms beware, and let all old founded in 1831, "depended upon
Senate for decades, described her, bachelors and old maids be married cheap paper, cast-off type and youns
While driving from Racine on June 1, I saw something that really ruined had been magnetized.
One of the first woman journalists unflatteringly, as "homely in person, as soon as possible."
my day.
orphans to set the type.". She he•lf
Mrs. Royall had been married, to a called her workers "runaway apprenAt the Village Hall In Syracuse they have a flag pole with an American in the nation's capital, she was known careless is dress, poor In purse ... vulflag and some other kind of flag that was so faded it was beyond recogni- for persistence, energy, strong opin· gar in manner," and absolutely deter- Revolutionary War veteran. Left pen- tices and tramping journeymen pript·
,..
,., il •
•
mined to sell her newspaper.
niless and squabbling with her in· crs.'"
tion. The American flag is tattered and tom. I have never seen a flag so muti- ions and equally strong prejudices.
In
a
story
told
by
reporters
over
"If
you
refused,
you
were
called
laws at his death in 1813, she eventulated and still flying.
"As her so-:m:e '0{ ll~dihood, her
This situation is very sad as somebody should have had this flag replaced many generations, she once roosted all of the ugly names in and out of the ally struck off across the country and paper ooncentra!Cd IUgely on gossip
at least by Memorial Day if not by Flag Day which was June 14. Who is in on President John Quincy Adams' dictionary," Bassett asserted. It was established herself as a travel writer. and polemics on corruption and reliclothes while he was swimming in said she charged members of Con- In one book. "Sketches, Life and gion," Ritchie wrote in his first
charge in the village?
Our servicemen fought for this flag. More respect should be be shown for the Potomac River, apparently in the gress a higher rate for a subscription Manners in the United States," pub- "Press Gallery, Congress and the
'
the flag of our United Slates. If someone in the village government would buff. Mrs. Royall, the story goes, than ordinary members of the public lished in 1826, she describes Wash- Washington Correspondents."
refused
to
move
unltl
he
answered
and
that
many
gladly
paid
her
price
ingtonians
as
filled
with
"impudence,
have asked some of the veterans organizations they possibly would have put
Mrs. Royall published "The
her questions. The president com- simply to keep their names out of her ignorance and pride."
up a new flag.
Huntress" from 1836 until shol'!ly
That ranked as about the most before her death at 85, in 1854. ·
DenYlll' 0. Curtla plied, with only his head showing paper.
"Our course will be a straightfor- gentle thins she ever said about those
Dlabled American Yatarana above the water.
But the story of Anne Royall and
Bidwell
Setting up shop in the Washington ward one," she announced in the first who lived and presided in the John Quincy Adams' clothes has kept
of Presidents Adams and Andrew edition of "The Huntress" in 1836. nation's capital.
her name in circula'tioit for generaJackson, Mrs. Royall nagged, carped "We shall oppose and expose all and
"She had an Inquiring mind, tions.
I am writing this letter in response to the letters concerning Sand Hill and railed at politicians and clergy- every species of political evil .... We loved gossip, and possessed a sense
Ritchie tends to classi~ it as folk·
Cemetery.
men alike. The adversarial tone of her shall advocate the liberty of the Press, of duly as well as a volatile temper," lore rather than the strictest facl
I have several generations buried at Snnd Hill, one of whom is my moth- reporting was telegraphed by the the liberty of Speech, and the liberty Jeanne Fogle writes in "1\vo Hun- because Adams never mentioned it in
er. When she was laid to rest in 1976, we were told by the trustees that we name of one of her publications, of Conscience."
dred Years, Stories of the Nation's his voluminpus joumll,. ,
could plant a rose bush on her grave; over the years they have repeatedly "The Huntress."
She then decreed a rather eccen- Capital," published by Vandamere • The' president, hbwem, did swim
mowed down the rose bushes. We contacted and complained to the trustees
'
Waging war with local clergymen, tric and personal enemies list: "Let Press.
as often as he oould in the Potomac,
about this, and what happened? To this day, there isn't a rose bush on my Mrs. Royall was convicted as a all pjous Generals, Colonels and
Donald A. Ritchie, the associate which then ran just south of the
mother's grave.
"common scold." She avoided the Commanders of our army and navy Senate historian who is working on White House grounds.
I would like to address the rather generous donation that was given a few
years ago. I understand it was $32,000. If all the work is voluntary, such as
the letters have said, where is the money that was donated?
My family has also donated over the years and when we had complaints,
By Sal'l Eckel
they fell on deaf ears.
a writer whose work has as a source of shame. On the contrary, it's a
When a women 's-studies professor asked me
appeared in the New Yorker source of pride.
I would hke to know tf your pubhc trustees meetings are publicized?
to
give
a
speech
at
her
university,
I
imtially
turned
It shouldn't matter that Memorial Day was coming up, a cemetery is a
and the New York Times.
Sports, in particular, are taken very seriously in
place I go all year long. It should be maintained all year long. I have been her down. I knew she was asking me to speak
Another is the head of this country. They have their own section of the
development for a televi· newspaper and a pretty good-sized:i:bunk of the
there many times and the gates were broken and benches were in a sad state because I am a femmist columnist. But the
thought of standing before an audtence AS a femof repair.
sion-produclion company. evening news. The Super Bowl is a holiday on a
Another is a graduate stu- par with Christmas and the ·Fourth of July. And
I will say one thing to L.M. Bissell, trustee: I have complained over the inist columnist filled me with fear and dread.
dent and mother of two. wh'en Michsel Jordan retired, .the event wu treatyears and it fell to deaf ears. I hope your letter is truthful in that you willlill· Because I have a dirty secret: I write for women's
r
Another is a foreign oorre- ed with all the solemnity of a departing head of
ten to the families who have loved ones buried at Sand Hill Cemetery. With magazines.
And
for
some
reason,
I
have
always
felt
that
I
spondent for German televi • stale.
the help of everyone, it can be a beautiful resting place.
'
"'
Cindy Smith was committing a great act of treason by writing sion. Another is a civil-rights lawyer. Attother
We treit sports as if they were important •• as
Gllllpolll about dating dilemmas and relationship how-los. I recently completed a fellowship in epidemiology Opposed to liejnJ grown men 10d women playing
worry that my thoughts on abortion rights and pay at Johns Hopkins.
gamea. ~d that•s,.why Geor:ge Will •can write
equity will somehow seem less valid if readers
With all that incredible brain power and cre- bookS iboul biiHbilll and still be l .crioua guy
This is to publicly thank Middleport Mayor and Council and all the work- also know that I am author of "My Smartest Love dentials, you'd thinli my friends would have bet- wh,o ,is allowed to comment on the news. But
ers responsible for the very fine job of cleaning our cemeteries in the village. Move" and "Keep the First-Month Feeling."
ter things to do than answet my women 's-maga- what if Ellen Goodman "(Ct;e1o, wri~ a celebrato.
The grass was nicely cut and the trash removed. Also, a big thank you for
So why do I do it? Well the short answer -- and zine questions. But when I call, they gladly close ry boolt on, say, makeup or cheerfeadinJ? Would
paving the road to Riverview Cemetery, which was in terrible condttion. the one I always give at cocktail parties -- is that their office doors and tell their secretaries that we srant her the same respect?
,
THanks for a job well done.
this
ill
how
I
earn
my
money.
And
that
is
absolutethey
are
in
a
meeting.
They
love
telling
me
how
It
seems
that
one
bial
trii1JCCnds
political
affil'
.
Em11111 Clllwotthy ly. true -- I make a lot more money writing their husbands proposed to them or about the year iation, Whether yoU, .are a f!l\!lling liberal or a
Middleport romance advice than I do nitpicking public-policy they went on a spiritual retreat Not one of them staunch oonservatlve one of the most pervuive
1
issues.
has ever said "Oh Sara; my brain ill wrapped beliefs in our culture llthat if women like it, it's
But lately I've come to realize that the money around the Brazilian currency crisis, why don't dumb. If it's feinililiiCi,,ll'l ,dii1i1,ti;;, ..;,';;;,
excuse is just a front. After all, there are other you pester someone else with your silly little
Which is wh~'JIIY ~omCJ1'*;'11fiP,Zine BUill
magazines
I
oould
write
for,
other
ways
I
oould
questions."
comes
from. Because lt's·a WOMEN'S m111azine.
BY The A••oclllled Prw•
earn
income.
No,
the
raw
truth
of
the
matter
is
So
if
all
of
these
smart
women
really
love
talk·
Which
means it's dumb': Anlll1m
' wnting about
Today is Wednesday, June 23, the !74th day of 1999. There are I'll days
this:
I
write
for
women's
magazines,
because
I
ing
about
lipstick
and
bad
dates,
why
do
J
feel
things
that
WOMEN
'
,
II'!!
'
inie~:eatl!d
,'In, · which
left in the year.
like
writing
for
women's
magazines.
shame
about
writing
on
these
topics?
I
think
it's
means &lt;jumb thlnp.'But who,decided that? Who
Today's Highlight in History:
Needless to say, the thought of making that because even a card-carrying feminist like myself made tilt: rule that says writina about the way that
On June 23, 1868, Olristopher Latham Sholes received a patent for an
admission before of a roomful of women 's-stud- can be seduced by the idea that women all fall people love and grow and find fulfillment
invention he called a "l)'pe- Writer."
ies majors was pretty terrifying. I was supposed to into neat little cateaories. That we can be a goofy requires leu, intellisence th&amp;ll , writing about
On this date:
be
a role model. Their school had paid a lot of girl who has a crush on the guy In executive sales grown men burUnatoJeip QlljCcls in space? Who
In 1836, Congress approved the Deposit Act, which contained a provision
money
to have me oome and speak about femi- OR we can be a successful professional. That we made that rule?
, ..
for tumins over surplus federal revenue to the states.
nism.
And
now
I
was
going
to
say
-·
what~
-·
that
can
care
about
politics
OR
we
can
care
about
Not
lillY
of
the.women
I
know
.
.So
I
will
say it
In 1931, aviators-Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from New York
it's
fun
to
call
your
friends
on
the
phone
and
talk
clothes.
That
we
can
read
the
Economist
OR
we
loud and say it strong. I am a woman's m111azine
on the first round-the-world flight in a single-engine plane.
can read Cosmo.
aboUt guys?
writer. Hear rile roar.
In 1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was established.
Actually, my friends helped me out of this one.
But why should women have to apologize for CGjlyfWit111811 NEWSPAPER ENTER~RISE ASIH.
In 1947, the Se11ate joined the HoQse in overriding President Truman's
Because
I
realized
that
they
are
very
smart
and
their
more frivolous sides? After all, inen don't. If
llend comii*U to 1t1e lllthor Ill illr. of t111t
veto of the 'lift·Hitth:y Act.
new1p1per
or 1411d htr •m•ll at artMU•
man
has
an
overweening
interest
in
sports
or
a
serious
women.
One
is
a
former
daily
reporter
and
In 1955, Walt Disney's "l..idy and the Tramp,"the first animated feature
ft!IOI.com.
·
cars
or
electronic
equipment,
he
docsn
'I
treat
that
columnist
for
the
Jersey
City
Journal.
Another
is
filmed in CinemaSoope, opened in theaters.

., ~Wednesday, June 23, 1999

gam~:

Death Notices

Weather

Burdell J. Black

· Ohio weather

Burdell J. Black, 97, Pomeroy, died thts morning at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced later by FISher Funeral Home.

~rn•ursday, June 24

Naomi R. Hoschar

MICH. •

Naomi R. Hoschar, 73, Middleport, died Monday, June 21, 1999, at Overbrook'Center in Middleport.
.
·
She was born Nov. 3, 1923, in Mason, W.Va., daughter of the late Frank
M. an~ O~a B. ~li~er Hoschar. She was a member of the Middleport Church
of Chnst m Chnsuan Union.
Survivors include a sister and brother-m-law, Dorothy R. and John
Btgelow of Middleport; three nephews and a niece.
She was preceded in death by three brothers, Leonard B., Rufus C. and
Elmer Hoschar, and by a sister, Virgmia Hoschar.
Services will be held Friday, 1 p.m. at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with the Rev, George Hoschar officiating. Burial will follow in Riverview
Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

'¢fiat· •·~-~

lllmj · Pl. Cloudy_ c:tluqy · Sliawn T·ltatml
t

.,..

Alln

Flulli11

Snow

Ice

,.

·~~"'

-&lt;i4

• j

'

WarmeY temps bringing
chance of
thunderstorms
''
By Tht Alaoclated Presa

It will continue to get warmer across Ohio - and that means more
unstable aii',JI\d a greater chance of thunderstorms, the National Weather
Service ilal)l· ·... ••
The ~ury is expected to dimb into the upper 80s on Thursday.
:pl'hundc:rstornns.are possible statewide 10 the afternoon.
Storms rell!ain in the forecasts through Saturday.
Overnight low will be in the mid-60s.
The re&lt;:ofd-high tl!inperatute for thts date at the Columbus weather station was 96 degrees in 1948 while the record low was 44 in 1918. Sunset
tonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:04 a.m.
\
.
Weather filrecast:

sho~~;,~~·~!~~i'Cl!ou~1dy~.s inLows
in the midMostly
60s. Ught
south
the morning.
cloudy
withwind.
a chance of

·

in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 80s. Chance
rain 30 percent.
, '.
,
Thu~y nigltt ...A charice of thunderstorms until midnight, otherwise
partly cl9udy. ~ws in thc "mid 60s. ·
•· • ' -,, .•
Exteaded forecast:
Friday.. .IIIrtJy• clo~ay;' A chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon.
' Highs near 90.
Snturday...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Lows in the mid 6Qs and highs near 90.
• Sundiy...Part1y cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the lower 90s.

Addresses cemetery issues

My name is Sara, and I'm a Cosmo writer

Appreciates improvements

Today In History

•'

Naomi R1 Hoschar, 75, of Middleport, died Monday, June 21, 1999 in the
: Overbrook Center in Middleport.
'
:, Born November 3, 1923 in Mason, West Virg10ia, daughter of the late
: Frank M. Hll5Cbar and Ora B. Oliver Hoschar, she was a member of the Mid: dlcport Church of.Christ in Christian Union.
~ Surviving are a sister·and brother-in-law, Dorothy R. and John ~igelow
of Middleport; tbree nephews, Charles and Nora Hoschar, Larry and Wilma
, Hoschar and Paul D. Hoschar; and a niece, Sharon Hoschar. •
; . She was also preceded in death by three brothers, Leonard C., Rufus C.
~.and Elmer Ho,sc;har; ani( a $ister, Virginia Hoschar.
; .. Services will be 1 p.m. Friday, June 25, 1999 in the Foglesong Funeral
• Home, Mason, with the Rev. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be 10
: the Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call at the funeral home
: from 2-4 and 7,9 p.m. Thursday, June 24, 1999.
1

f: The Daily Sentinel
. .., EMS logs 3 calls

Stocks

-..ion

!

-·-·-

' I

'

•

•

'

I

,

I

.."'-------------'
•..
"

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Elva L. Rood, 84, Reedsvtlle, dted Monday, June 21, 1999, at the Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
A homemaker, she was hom May 31, 1915, in Reedsvtlle, daughter of the
late Seldon and Nettie Rood Randolph.
She is survtved by a son and daughter-in-law, Foster and Tracy Rood of
Reedsville; one daughter, Marjorie Rood of Reedsville; five grandchildren;
ftve great-grandchildren; one brother, . Claude Randolph, and one sister,
Loretta Long, both of Reedsvtlle.
She was preceded in death by her husb'and, Harrison Rood; a son, Austin
• Rood; two sisters, Nora Buchanan and Georgia Mays; and one brother,
Qyde Randolph.
Graveside services will be held Thursday, 1 p.m. at the Randolph Cemetery in Reedsville.
Friends may call tonight, 6-9 at,the White Funeral Home in Coolville.

Strickland joins House push for fair
prescription
pricing for seniors
Congressman
Ted
"It is not fair to charge
Strickland JOined House
the highest drug prices
colleagues and seniors
to the group of people
groups today in pushing
who need them the
for the passage of the
worst and can least
Prescription Drug Fairafford them. Drug comness for Seniors Act,
panies have one of the
which has recently come
hightest profit margins
of any industry in Amerunder attack from drug
companies who claim
ica.ln fact, drug compathe bill would elimainate
nies make more in profreasearch dollars.
its than they spend in
The legislation ts
research," satd Stnckaimed at ending the Ted
land. "It is time for us in
price gouging that causCongress to put the
es seniors to be charged twice as health of our senior ciltzens ahead
much for prescription drugs as of drug compny profits, and pass
HMO's and other corporate cus- , this much-needed legislation."
tomers.
N
Earlier this year, Strickland
Citing the need to balance released a survey of drug prices in
research and profits witb fairness, his district which showed that
Congressman Strickland satd, seniors in southern Ohio generally
"None of us want to put drug com- pay twice as much for prescription
panies out of business, and none drugs than do drug companies'
of us want to prevent important favorite customers, like HMOs
research from taking place. That is and large insurance compamies.
not what this bill seeks to do. This Drug companies sell drugs to
bill corrects an unfairness in the large customers at great discounts,.
drug companies' pricing policy
This forces seniors, who frethat forces senior citizens to risk quently do not have prescription
their health by choosing which drug coverage, to pay tnflated
medtctnes not to take."
prices for the same drugs.

Man accused of causing baby's
death testifies in own defense

ELYRIA (AP)- A man accused
of unintentionally causing the death
of a baby broke into tears as he testified that he shook the infant only
to try to revive her.
Brian Cruz, 36, of Lorain, ts
accused of violently shaking 5month-old Taylor Stevens on Aug.
3, 1997. The baby died the next
day.
Cruz testified Tuesday, during
the fifth day of his trial on charges
of felonious assault, involuntary
,manslaughter and two counts of
child endangering.
The jury trial resumed today in
units of the Meigs cOunty Emer:
(IJSPS ZIJ..MO) •
gency Medical Service recorded
•
C·mml""tY N~r H'*"-loe.
.J1!ree calls for assistance Thesday.
:
Units tesponding included:
,
Published euoy aften10011, Monday through
cENTRAL DISPATCH
o
Friday, 1)1 Court 5I, ""'-&lt;&gt;r. O~lo, by tho
Continued from page 1
•
Ohio V.lley;hb!iJhioJA &lt;;otnt¥Y· $&lt;~..,..
9:03 p.m.1 Village Green Apart• =~!4ht1o~n~rQJ.;;Ohio.
, ....
menls, Pometoy, Brandon Spaun, mals," he said. "We were paying
someone to take care of them."
,
a: The Auodlled PR.IIId lhrOhlo
Veterans Memor\al Hospital;
1\vo houses seized in the opera~ ~-::~=~ conec:~lonl 10 1be
11;36 p.m., call to Beech Street,
: Doily Sentinel, 111 eoun s1, Pomeroy, Oblo transport to VMH.
'
tion were placed m the name of
t
45769.
·'
POMEROY
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, but
!.
SUBSCRJmON RATI!S
8:41 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili1
117 Carrier or -orRtation Center, Very I Howson, VMH, Lentes said the transfer was made so
the sheriff, actmg in his official
'
One ...............................S2.0II
Contra! Dispatch squad assisted.
f •
One Mmh ................... ~ ............ SB 70
capacity,
could obtain insurance on
One Yeao................................. S!OUIO
1 ,
SINGLECOPYPRICE
the buildings pending their sale on
·, •
DaiiJ; .......................................15 Cents
the courthouse steps. Ltkewise, all
Sut:lila'hl'l IKM de11rlng tq pty tbe earner may
of the vehicles were transferred to
- I n .......... dirmloThe Doily $cmlorton
1 dne, aiX ur 12 montb besil. Crcdil will be
the Meigs County Board of ComAm Ele Power ......................42~.
Jivtn c:anitr each week.
missioners so titles could be
No ..
1&gt;1' mail pennlned In .._
AkZo ...................,..................41 \1.
wbeNitome caflier ",rvk::e isavailllb...
obtained.
AmrTaoh ...............................&amp;&amp;~.
Plillilhet _,... llle
IOidjoiM rallS dur·
Some of the seized vehicles were
Alh Oll .......................~··•••oo•o•40'•
' , : 111 111o -,.1oo pOriocl S..bocripcioo ..,
AT&amp;T
.......
,
.............................
55~.
transferred directly to the Meigs
- . . . lnay bo 1111'lo0Mnled by dlupn&amp;llle
duiOIIoa of llle llubocrijrlloo.
Bank Pn• ..:...........................57~
County
Sheriff's Office and the
Bob Evans........................~•••197/•
Prosecutor's Office for law enforceMAIL SUBSCRIPTION
Borg·W•mer .........................~~
1 -Mdp C.U.I)'
ment purposes, Lentes said.
Broughlon ...................:........ 161.
13 .........:. ................ lzr.JO
Lentes said that with the excepChampJoh .................................&amp;
211- ............................$5382
tion of one old Bronco, the county
Charm Shp8 .......................... 5nh.
5Z
City Holding ..........................26':1.
has never had 4-wheel-drive trucks
1 3 -............................mll
Feden11 MoQu1 ...................... 53'/•
or ATV's for drug eradtcation and
26 ...........,•• ,;,................~
Garlnett.................................. 73~.
snow emergency purposes. Also,
52 ........................$111972
Kmart .................................... 15'·
' '
'
two of tl,te .seized vehicles can be
Kroger ..................................55'1.
used as c'hlisers includmg a lateRender Services
LanCia End ...............................42~"
model Impala SS now bemg used
"
Ltd .........................................4.5\
for the county's Drug Abuse Resis0.11; I;IJII Flnl .......................... 18'!.
': :
Comctlon Polley
ova ..........................................32 tance Education (DARE) program.
' Ollr....,. ...,.,.. Ia llllllorloo to t. be
One Valley .............................39'!.
nte. If ,.. or •• ti'I'Df II I
DARE program guidelines sug·
: , ..,, coli ... _ . _ ot ('7o40) 99:Z.
Peop~ta ................................ 27'.1
gest that DARE officem drive cars
., aut. We ... · - , •• lotlonnotloo Prem Flnlouooo••"'' ''''''"''''''''''''3'• or
vehicles that have been snatched
,\ _._.. o_l~wornot...
Rockwell .............- ................60\
from drug dealers and that are dis·
RD/SJiell ................................ 59'/o
Seara .....................................46\
tinctive from ordinary police cruisNeWa o.Mrbi...,W
,ti n.
.....
bet-..
ft2.21Q. Deport·
Shoney's ................................ 2\
ers, Lcntes. The Impala SS, while it
_ U. . . . . . Ift!
I
'Fira1Star...............................28"1.
has a similar silhouette to a Capnce
,; Gnoni .........................1.,ExL 1101
Worthington ..................:••••••12'1.
cruiser,
has a distinctive, sporty
: ~ N........... _ ..,.......................,...... ~t. 1102
,
"
er ExL 1106
,
Stock raporll ar1 today'• appearance.
'fhe remainder of the items wtll
"
10:30 a.m. quote• provided by
be sold at auction beginning Thes1,
Other Se,rvlcet
,, Ad)llat of Galllpolla.
)' M"rtllllii........:..................:....:.ExL uN
day, 5 p.m. at the Meigs County
. : em· u-...................-.............ExL noJ
Fairgrounds with other dlltes sched• Clooolllerl Adl............................ ExL 1100

Local briefs:

Patrol tickets driver In collision
Mark L Miller, 40, Parkersburg, W.Va., was cited for failure to yield
from a private driveway by the Galha·Metgs Post of the State Highway
Patrol followmg a two-vehicle accident Tuesday on State Route 124 near
Portland.
Troopers satd Mtller extted a dri,veway at 3:15p.m. and colhded w1th
a pickup truck driven by Todd A. Perry, 23, Portland, who was westbound
on 124 Perry was passtng another westbound vehicle when the collision
occurred, accordtng to the report.
The colliston caused Perry 's pickup to travel off the right stde of the
road and into a ditcn, whtle the vehicle driven by Miller stopped partially in the road and in a private driveway.
Troopers said amage was moderate to Perry '&amp; vehicle and to the ptckup driven by Miller, owned by West Virgtnta Electric Supply Co, Huntington.

Announcements:
Veterans Service Commission to meet
· The Metgs County Veterans Service Commission w•ll meet Monday,
7:30p.m. at'the Veterans Servtce Office, 117 Memorial Dnve, Pomeroy.

Elva L. Rood

Tattered flag disgraceful

boo"-

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

'i --~~~--~~~==========~~==========~

r-

Early newswoman hunted big political

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Lorain County Common Pleas
Court wtth closing statements.
Cruz said he was playfully tossing the baby in the air when he misjudged the dtstance on the second
toss and fat led to catch her unit I her
head bounced off the ground.
"I loved Taylor. As far as I was
concerned, I was her father. I loved
her," Said Cruz, who was living

with the baby's mo,ther.
"I didn't shake her because she
was crying," he said through tears.
"I shook her to revive her. Maybe it
was the wrong thmg to do, but I
didn "I know what to do."

Evangelist to speak
Evangehst John Elswtck will speak tonight at 7 at the Fellowshtp
Church of the Lord Jesus Christ in Racme. Pastor Charles Bush invites the
public.

Reading program slated
Rutland Elementary School will be the site of a summer readtng pro- ·
gram called "Summer AR Inshtute." In COnJunction wtth the Accelerated
Reading program, students at Rutland read and passed computerized tests
on 1,030 books from October to May. In order to contmue the momentum
of the program, the students now have the opportuntly to conltnue readmg during the summer. The school library will be open on six Monday
mornings from 9 a.m. to 11 am to check out books and take AR qu1zzes
Peoples Bank, the school's partner in educalton, donated over $250 for
the purchase of 100 more quizzes. The first session began Monday. The
program is open to any student at Rutland Elementary School. Information and a schedule are available by con)acting the school durtng the open
library hours.

Meigs Local to hold special session
The Meigs Local Board of Education will meet in special !lession Monday, 7 p.m at the 'dtstrict's central office in Pomeroy to rank butldtng
design firms.

Expo committee
The Town and Country Expo 1999' committee will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs a\unty Fairgrounds, 9range building. All wei·
come .

Groups launch education campaign on v·chips
By KALPANA SRINIVASAN
Asaocl1tad Press Wrltar
WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal
officials, advocacy groups and
industry leaders are JOining together
to teach families and educators how
to use v-chtps, as manufacturers
near their first deadline to install the
technology in new televiston sets.
. Two private groups were launching a national education campaign
today to promote the use of v-chtps
and explam the electronically coded
TV ratings system that goes with it.
While mostteleviston and cable networks use letter notations or agebased ratings to flag violence or sexual situations, viewers don't always
undet;'land what the symbols signify, sa1d Kathryn Montgomery, president of the Center for Media Education.
"The biggest problem ts that the
ratings icons are visible on the show
but there is not enough education 0~
what they mean," Montgomery said.
Her group, along with the Kaiser
Family Foundation, has created a
guide that explams the TV raltngs
system _and how to use the v-chip.
The gutde also provides a form to
offer feedback to the TV Parental
Guidelines Monitonng Board.
V-chips are intended to give
viewers, primanly parents, the
option of blockmg shows they find
objectionable. A 1996 telecommunications law requires that all new TV
sets 13 mches and larger must be
equtpped with the v-chip by Jan. 1,

2000.
Last year, the FCC tmposed a
July 1 deadline on manufacturers to
install the technology in at least half
their new sets. Accordmg to FCC
Commissioner Gloria Tristani, nearly all of them have met the deadhne.
Othe( challenges remain, Tristam
satd. The commission ts now working with the industry to make sure
that the ratings are bemg transmttled
so the v-chips will have something
to read, she said. Also, parents need
to be mformed that the v-chtp IS
available to them.
"Until we educate parents about
the v-chtp, they can 't use II to make
educated choices for their children,"
Tri~tam said in remarks prepared for
dehvery today.
As part of the educalton effort,
the Naltonal ASSociation of Broadcasters and Naltonal Cable Television Association plan to produce and
distnbule public servtce announcements that would direct parents to
t,he informational materials.
The Consumer Electromcs Manufacturers Association, the U.S.
Co_nference of Mayors and teachers'
umons also have agreed to help pro·
mote the materials.
The gutde answers such qucslions as whether consumers need to
buy a new televiston to get a v-chip
(consumers can purchase a set-top
box to use on old TV sets that works
the same way), whether violence or
sexual content will be blocked from
news shows

Rutland
bicentennial
...
Priddy forfeiture ...
uled for later.
When the auction is completed,
the Major Crimes Task Force,
administered by the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney's Office, will
receive half of the proceeds, Lentes
said. Under the task force's grant
agreement, the agency is expected to
be as close to self-funded as possible
through the use of drug forfeitures.
The task force earlier came under
fire when admimstered by the
Athens County Prosecutmg Attorney's Office for over-zealousness in
forfeitures, somethmg Lentes said
he has tned to avmd. "We are looking for the major drug offenders, not
the person with a joint in his pocket.
Our aim has been the larger drug
dealem like Priddy."
The money will be used by the
agency to pay undercover agents, for
traming and to purchase supplies
and equipment, he said.
The other half will be divided
among the participating law
enforcement agencies and has to be
use for training, equipment, education and special projects like neighborhood watch programs.
While the money can't supplant
the departments' regular budgets, tl
decreases the amount of money they
require from the county for equipment and other ttems, he explained.
The auctioneers, Ollie Opperman
and David Flood from Logan, will
get 10 percent.
"We have no idea what lhts will
generate," Lentes said. "We hope to
keep the task force vtable to get
another Fred Pnddy."

Continued from page A1
cial walking tour of the village,
which will htghhght historic homes
and other s;tes. A map wtll be prepared denoltng the locations of the
homes, and the home sites will be
marked with special signs.
The Civic Center Commtltee and
the Fue Department Auxiliary plan
to sell food for the celebration, and
plans are also underway for a church
\PRIIIG VAll [Y Cllll ',\;,
ll

"

H

I

I

446 ·45 24
. "' ' •. ,, •
(FRt 8118-THURS 8/24/99
101 OfFKl Will OPEN AT 6:30 PM

101 MNING SHOWS,
12:30 PM 101 SAT ' SIJN IWIIIUS
NOTTING HILL (PG13l
JULIA ROBERTS a HUGH GRANT
7.f5&amp;1:30DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 a 3:30
STAR WARS EPISODE 1PHANTOM MENACE (PG)
7:00 a 8:40 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:011 a 3:40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT
AUSTIN PO\'I'ERS (I!Gt3)
7 20&amp;HODAILY
MATINEES SAT!SUN 1:20 a 3:20
THE MUMMY (PG13)
7 011 a 8 30 DAILY
MAnNEES SAT/SUN 1:00 a 3:30
THE GENERAL'S DAUGHTER (R)
7:00 a t:30 DAILY
MATINEES SATISUN 1:00 a 3:30
NO PASSES NO BARIIAIN NIGHT
TARZAN (G)
7:10 a 8:00 DAILY
MAnNEES SAT UN 1:tO &amp;3:00
THE LOVE LmER (R)
7:10 a 11:10 DAILY
MAnNEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

ih the 'community to prepare beans
and cornbread.
Other events will include a beard
and moustache-growing contest,
parttctpants in penod costumes and
children 's games.
Another commttlee meetmg wtll
be held on July 6 at 7·30 p.m

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wedntlday, June 23, 1999

,

East Dlvlaion

.......................w

Atlanta ........... ..42
New York .... .. ... 39
PhUadelphia ... ':.. 36
Montreal ... ....... 27
Florida .. . .... : ... 24

L
26
31
32
39
46

Pet.
.600
.SS7•
.S29
.409
.. 343

GB
3

5

13
18

Central Dl.,.lslon

.......................w

Houston ..... .. .41
Ctncinnatl ... .... 36
Chicago .. .. ... 34
St. LOUIS .. ... .... 35
34
Pttt'Sburgh ...
Milwaukee ..... . 32
West Division

.......................w

Anzona ...... .. : .. 41

L
28
31
33
35
34
38
L.

Pet.

GB

.594
.537
4
.507
6
.500 6 1/2
500 6 1/2
457 9 112

.BOO, 3.20; Lima, HoUsron,
Bottenfield, Sl Louis, 11-3, 786, 3.72; Byrd,
Philadelphia, 10·3..7~9 . 3 24; Bohanon, Cot'·
orado, 9·3, 750, 5 n , RaJohnson, Anzona, 9·
3.. 750. 3 36
STRIKEOUT5-RaJohnson .. Arizona , 157,
Schilling, Flhlladelphla, 98, Hitchcock, San
Diego, 96 , KBrown, Los Angeles, 91;
Reynolds, Houston, 90, Astacio, Colorado, 81;
Oniz, San Franc1sco, 76. .
·
SAVES~en, San Francisco, 181 Wagner,
Houston, 17, JFranco, New Vorl~;, 17, Hoffman,
San Diego, 16, Shaw, Los Angeles, 16, Rock·
ar, AUanta ,·15. Ulblna, Montreal, 15

· American League
East Otvlalon

Pet

GB

30 577 ·

556 1 1/2
500 5 1/2
471 7 1/2
433
10

San Franc1soo .. ..40 32

Colorado .... .
33 33
Los Angeles ...... 32 36
San Dtego .. . .. 29 38

Tueaday·s Games
Milwaukee 5. San Franctsco 1
Phlladelphta 3, Pittsburgh 2
New York 8. Flomla 2 .
Montreat 2, Atlanta 1
St Low s 4. Houslon 3. 14 1nmngs
Chicago 13, Colorado 12
Cinclnnalt 8. Ari zona 7
San Otego 4, Los Angeles 1

Today'• Games
Milwaukee (Woodard 7·5) at San Fra nc1sco
(Ortiz 8·4), 3 35 ~ m
. Pittsburgh (Benson 5·5) at Philadetph•a
(Byrd 10·3), 7 35 p.m
Florida (Meadows 5-7) at New York (Le1ter
5-5), 7.40 p.m.
Montreal (Bat1sla 6·3) at Atlanta (Millwood
7-4), 7:40p .m.
·
Houston (Reynolds 8·6) at St. Louts (Acevedo 4·2). 8·10 p.m.
. ·
Chtcago (Mulholland 3·2) at Colorado (Asta·
C!O 6·5). 9:05p.m '
Cmctnnall (Avery 4·6) at Anzona (An.Benes
4'·7), 10·0S p m
San Dieg9 (W Williams 2·5) at Los Angeles
. !Valdes S·6). 10 35 p m
Thur1day'a Games
Pittsburgh (Silva 2·4) at Philadelphia
(ScllH1inQ 9·4), 1:OS p.m
· Montreal (Hermanson 3·7) at All anta
!Smaltz 8·2l . 1:1 0 .D m
Florida (L.Hernandez 3·6) at New York { Her ~
shiser 7-5) , 1.40 p.m.
Chicago (Tapant 5·3) at Colorado
(B.M.Jones 2·SJ, 3.0S p.m.
Cincinnati (VIIIone 1·2) at Houston (Hampton 9-2), 8:05p.m.
St. LOuis (Oliver 4-5) al Arizona (Daal 7-4),
10:05p.m.
San Diego (Ashby 6·41 a1 Los Angelos
(Drelfon 6-5), 10:10 p.m
·

NL Leaders

.......................w

New York ....... 40
Boston .
. 40
Toronto ... , .... 3S
Baltimore ...... 32
Tampa Bay
. 29

L Pot.
GB
28 588
30 571
1
37 486
7
37 464 8 112
41 414
12

, 6; Febtes, Kansas
5; Damon,
Cl1)1, s: Durham, Chicago, s: Randa,
Kansas City, 5; Encarnacion, Detroit, 4; Lolton,
Cleveland, 4; DManlnez, Tampa Bav. 4:
TPhHIIps, Oakland, 4.
HOME RUN~anseco , Tampa Bay, 27;
Griffey Jr, Seanlei ?6: Palmer, Detroit, 20;
MRamlrez, Cleveland, 19; JuGonzatez, Texas;
19, RPalmelro, Texas, 19; SGreen, Toronto.
18
STOLEN BASE&amp;-TGoodwln, Texas, 27;
Stewart, Toronto, 26; SLHunter, Seattle, 20;
Lofton, Cleveland, 20, RAiomar, Cleveland, 20;
Encarnacion, Detroit, 19; Vizquel, Cleveland,
16
PITCHING (0 Decl•lonerPMartlnez,
Boston, 13·2, 867, 2 10, Burba, Cleveland, 72, 778, 4 63, Muss1na, Baltimore, 9·3, 750;
3.64, Cone, New York, 7-3, 700, 2.73;
JWeaver, Oetro1t, 6·3, 667, 2 93; FrGarcta ,
Seattle, 8 -4, .667, 4.41 ; Wright, Cleveland,'6·8,
, 6.55; 'Golan, Cleveland, 6-3, 667, 5 33 ;
Cleveland, 8·4, .667, a 13, Moyer, Seat~
.6!17 4 65

....................... w

Pet.
.676

L
22
33
4)
40
44

GB

.507 11 1/2
.423 17 1/2
.412
18

aASEBAJ:L

Americen Leegue

NOTE: Three points for vk::tory, one point for
shOOtout wln and zero points for loss. Shootout
(SOW) Is a subset of wins.
·

Saturday'• Gemtl
Kansas City at DC United. 7:30p.m.
San Jose at Miami, 7.30 p.m.
New Yorlt:·New Jersey at Columbus. 7:30
p.m.
New England at Dallas·, 8 30 p m.
Chtcago at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Sunday'• G1m1
Los Angeles at Tampa Bay, 1 p m

ANAHEIM AN!lEL$-E&lt;tended lho con. tract of Terry Collins, manager. Activated SS
Gary OISardna from the 15-day disabled list.
OeSIQnated tNF llm Unroe for assignment.
BALTIMORE ' ORIOLE$-Reca llod 28
Jerry Hairston Jr from Rochester of the International league.
.
.
KANSAS ,CITY ROYALS-claimed RHP
Mac Suzuki off waivers from the New York
Mets.
OAKLAND ATHLETICs-&lt;:aBed up RHP
Chad Harville from Vancouver, of the Pacific
Coast League. Optioned RHP, Brett Laxton to
Vancouver of the PCL .
·
·

MARUNB-ActiWited , RHP
Archie Corbin from the 15-day disabled list
NEW YORK MI!Ts-ReOatted 'INF Melvin
Mara from Norfolk of the lntematlonalleagua.
Op1foned RHP Jason IIJngllaUMn l9 NOOotk
Recal.led RHP Oclavio Dolel from No~ol1c .
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS-P1aced OF
Armando Rlos on the 15-day disabled list.
Recalled OF Calvin Murray from Fresno of the
PCL.

fOOD ALL
National Football League
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Waived LB
Chike E~unlwe, WR John BUrden and t&lt; Paul
Cramer.
Pm&amp;BURGH STEELEIIS-Agreod to
terms w•th DL Anton1o Oingte and PK Kris
Brown

.

Wectnelday, June :JO
Tampa Bay at New York -New Jei'sey. 7 p.m.
San •Jose al Columbus, .7 30 p.m.

'·

NBA

........., .............w

L Pet.
GB .
39 31 557
36 34 .5 14
3
4
3S 35 soo
. 31 38 449 7 112

Today'e Games

NBAANALS .

(Baat-ol-7)

All gamea on NBC

San Antonia va. New York

•

Thur.dlty'• Gamee
Mlnneso1a (Radke 5~) at Chicago (Navarro
5·5), 2'0S p.m
Detron (N .Cruz 1-0) a1 Kansas CI1Y (Appler
6-6), 2:05 p.m.
. ·
New Vork (PeH1He 4·5) at Ta~a Bay (Aekar
4·2), 7 :05 p m
Cle\leland (Burba 7-2) at Toronto (HaRaday
S-3), 7:0S p m
Boston {Cho 1-0) at BaR1more (Musslna 9·
3), 73Sp.m
Oakland (Hodson 2.0) at Texas (Burtcet1 O·
3). 8·3S p m.
Anaheim (Finley 4·7) at Seattle (Fassero 37). 10.0S p m

AL .Leaders
BATTING- lFernandez, Toronto, .411;
Jeter, Ne¥" York, ·.375; RPa1me1ra, Tems, .354:
Garclaparra, Boston, 350; MAamtrez. CliNe·
land, .347, Vlzqu el. Cleveland, 34 5; SurhOH,
Baltimore, 336
,
RUNS- Lotion, Cleveland , 67. AAiomar,
Cleveland, 64 1 Jeter, New vork. 61; Griffey Jr.
Seattle, 60; CDelgada, Toronto, 58; TPh1Mips.
Oakland, 55, MAarhire.z. Cleveland. 54: ByAn·
derson, Baltimore, 54.
RBI- MRamlrez, Cleveland, 79; Grtffey Jr.
Sealtle, 71, Canseco. Tampa Bay, 62;
APalmelro, Texas, 60, SGreen, Toronto, 59;
CDelgado, Toronto, 59; JuGonzalez. Texas,
57.
'
• HITS-Jeter, New York, 99; Tfemandez,
Toronto, 99; Syrhotf, Baltimore, 98; Lonon,
Cleveland, 88, MOrdonez, Ch1cago, 87; Stew·
art Toronto~ 87, BeWilliams, New Yor1c, 87;
APalmelro, Texas, 87.
DOUBLES- Greer, Te)(as, 24; TFemBndez,
Toronto. 23: Ofleirnan, Boston, 22; Garda·
parra. Boston, 21 ;· $Green, To ronto , 21;
McGriff. Tampa Bay, 20; CDelgado, Toronto,
19; ThOmas. Chicago, 19.
TRtPLEs--.Jeter, New Yo1k, 7, Offerman,

'

AnlcmioJ

Wednndey, June 23·

New Vorl( (Clemens 6·2) at Tampa Bay
(Eiland 0·2 ). 7;0 5 p.m.
Cleveland (Nagy 8·4) at Toronto (Hentgen
5·6), 7·0S p m
BostOn (Saberhagen 2·2) 8t Baltimore (GUZ·
man 3-5), 7 35 p.m.
·
Minnesota (Lincoln 2·8) at Chicago (Sirotka
6-61. 8OS o.m.
Detroit (Thompson 6·6) at Kansas City
(Wilaslck 2·5), B OS p m
Oakland (0qU1si6·S) at Te•as (Morgan 7·5),
8 3S p.m.
.
Anaheim (Hill 3-6} at Seattle (Halama 5·2),
10:3S p.m

San Antonio at New York, 9 p m.
Frldey, June 25
San Antonio at New York, 9 p.m.
Sunday, June 27 ·
·
New York at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m., if
essary

tuesday, June 28
New York at San Antonio, 9 p.m.,
sary

Weatem Conference
_ .......................W
Houston ............. 5

2
3.
3
5
6

L Pet
0 1.000

08

Sacramento ........4

2 .667

1 1/2

Los Angeles ......... 3
Minnesota ......... 2
Utah .... ............. 2
Phoenix ............... 2

3 .500 2 H2
2 .500 2 112
2 .500 2 112

3 .400

Thuraday'a Gamel
u~an at sacramento, 4 p.m.
Houston at Detroit, 7·30 p.m.
Phoenix at Chartotte, 7:30p.m.
Minnesota a1 Los Angeles , 10:30 p.m.

Major League Soccer
L SOW

D.C. .................. 10 s
COIUITI&gt;U&amp; •.•.••.....•8 5
New England ........ 7 7
Tampa Bay .... :...... 6 7
NY-NJ .... ........... ..4 9
Miami .................. 4 11

ders, who was 4-for-4, Tim Brumfi eld , also 4-for-4, and Don Carmen who was. 3-for-5 wtth a
homer.
In action at 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Park, Gallipolis Chnsltan took on
tbc Middleport Church of Christ.
In the women's game, Gallipolis
Christian got thetr first win of the
season. 7-0. It was an outstanding
team effort by th e GCC women . '
In the men's game, Gallipolis
Christian continued to roll with a
38-13 hammering of Middleport.
Once again, GCC used an outstanding hilling anack to pick up
'
''
the VICtory.
First· Baptist took on Rodney
Methodist at O.Q . Mcintyre.
First B
the women 's
used a late

2
4 .
3
3
2

2

Weatern Conference
.......................W L SOW
Colorado ... ,..... 9 3
2

Pto
26
16
IS
12
B
8

Pto
23

'

•

""

'

Mrs. George "Grover" Cremeans
(Wife of Overbrook Resident George "Grover"'Cremeans)

1740-992-64721
'

'I

LJ

and ·professiOnal athletes in a
grand celebration of th e
world
of
sports.
Over the
past two years.
th e "Breakfas t
wllh
the
Champions"
fundrai scr has

ca ncers.
··with the money raised ·at l h~&lt;
year' s brea kfas t. we w1ll be able to ' ,. ·
fund one new researcher for the
Leukemia Soc tely." sa1d Rebecca
Dean. campa1 gn manager for the
"Breakfast of Champwns: ·
Bartrum . an '88 grad ua te or
Meigs High School and former AllAmerican at Marshall. will soon -be·
heading to .:amp with New Englan&lt;i
fur the ur.co ming NFL season.

GO FOR THE

4.57% APY
Annual P•rcentage Yl•ld available
with 1 minimum bllanca of

$10,000.00 or more.
Rite Is •ubJect to
· change dilly.

Collection.

Closbii 'Ciate ~1 . be
.J.uJy 9, 1999·
·Tbls' will include all

0:

'·

extensions.

'

.Howard E. Frank,
-Meigs ,County Treasurer

'• I

Your

'
'"·:'

Dutch

Standard

oe•l•r

.•,'
''
'
'

''

·PICKENS ·
HARDWARE

.,.. Located in the

nk. Pomeroy Foodland

'

700 W. Main St.

103 SoUth 2nd, Mason, WV

Phone: 773-5583

.992-2357

.

I·

among a select group of athletes and former amateur
who teamed up .for a good cause at
the Marrion India Center in
Charleston. W.Va., for Foodlanct·s
second annual "Breakfast with the
Champions."
The event which featured
Bartrum. Archie Talley, Troy
Brown, Mike Brimm, Mauri ce .
Gravely, Tommy Groom, and Carl
Lee raised $38,000 for the Leukemia
Society of America.'
BARTRUM

•

·'

,,
'·

York's Patrick Ewing looks on
as his teammates prepare for
battle in Game 4 of the NBA
Championshlp.Seriaa tonight at
Madison Square Garden. (AP)
their champagne. and parades.
" I don't think it·, a new scncs at all , to be honest with :
you;" David Robmson said. "We expected them to fight '
back. If you go through a scncs th mkmg you're gomg to
sweep· everybody. xou' re fools And we didn 't think'
-that."
.
~

Interest
Checking

~99a··aeai . EState

It's convenient location was one of the reasons my husband and I chose 9verb~k
Center over aiHhe other facilities. I can be at my husband's side In less .than 10 • .
minutes, ir.he needs me.
.. -,.
'
' "'
Exceptional care, Overbrook's trademark was the other n:ason Grover and l ·felt
Overbrook center would make a wonderful "home away from home" for him.
,
'

the victory, 1'7- 12. ·
In
the
men 's .gam e, First Baptist came
out quickl y sconn g seve n run s in
the first tw o innin gs 10 pick up .the
win , 12-7. In a losing effort , Rodney was led by Brad Harn s who ·
was 3-for-3 with tllree singles.
In action at the Church of God·s
field, the Church of God took .on
the Church of the Naza rene. In the
women's game ,· Nazarene won
behind some outstanding hitting,
14-0.
In the men's game, the Church
of God used some outstanding hitting and pitching en route to a 23j' victory. Ed Sanders was ·5-for-5.
Chuck Baker was 3-for-3 and gave
up just one run on the mound.
Action continues next Monday,
when Faith Baptist , the top team
in the men's standings, take s on
the current third place team. First .
Baptist. Also, the second place
Galltpolis Christian men take on
the fourth place Rodney men .

Tax B~Ju . are,:.o pen . .
for·the znd ball · ~·.

'

"The Overbro()k Difference'' ·

Today'• Gam11
No games scheduled

· Still , it was only '
one loss The three
other teams to fmd
themselves in thi s
siiUauon
sin'ce '
1980 re~ o vered-. '
JUS! fine and had :

FOURTH GRADE BOYS· The Syracuse Raiders capturBd the fourth grads boys portion of the East- •
ern Elementary basketball tournament. Pictured are, front, l·r, Joey Eakins, Michael Yost, Chris Cogar, _. ·
Kyle Wolfe; Back-Coach Ron Salser, Michael Runyon, Nic:k Buck, Jacob Hunter, and Patric:k Johnson. -

PICKENS
HARDWARE

"

3

OrlandO 71 : Cleveland 62
PhOenix 79, washington 7.6
Detroit 75, Charlot1e 69
Houston 84, Los Angeles 76
Saoramento 79, Minnesota 62

.......................w

.
at 13. Meigs still had the bases loaded when the final out
ROCK' SPRINGS-Meigs spoiled Chillicothe Post 62 was recorded. The game was then called due to dark a 12-0 lead, but stonned back to pull into a 13-all tie ness.
before ihe game was ,called after 5 1/2 innings due to
Williams had three singles to lea\~ Me igs, Rothgeb
darkness: · ·
'
added a single and a double. Liule a.pair of singles, HarChil,icothe jumped out to a 9-0 lead after two inning, ·mon had his double, Mike Mollohan, Boso, Deuwiller
Post 62 adfied tllret l)lOre runs in the third to take a 12- and Norris all had singles. ·
0 lead. •
Bialy had three singles to lead Post 62, Alphin added
But Meigs finally got things untracked in the fourth two doubles, and Annhurst two singles.
inning. The home team sent II batters to the plate scorMeigs will now traverto Lancaster for a doublehead·
ing seven runs. In _the inning Meigs had two walks, sin- er on Sunday.
gles by Adam Williams, Heath Rothgeb, J B. Boso,
Nick Dcl!willer and Jesse Litile. J. P. Harmon also came ·
MEIGS 13. CHILLICOTHE 13
up with a big. pinch hit double. Post 62 aided Meigs in
the inning with .a pair of errors. .
.
Chillicothe . 363-01 - 13 9 5
Post 62 made it 13-7 in the top of the fifth inning on
Meigs
opo-76 - 13 12 3
a double by Alphin and a wild pitch and a ground out. ·
Cumings, Mollohan (2), Dettwiller, ·(4) and DetBut once again Meigs came stonning back scoring twiller, Cumings (2), Penix (4)
si• fJinS as they sent 12 batters to the plate. Three walks,
Butler, Kline, (4) , Pfeifer (5) , Speakman (5) and
a hit baller, and singles by Little, Kyle Norris, Williams Alphin
and a big bases loaded double by Rothgeb tied the game

''
..

lhe first quarter.

By Dave Harris

..

'

1

Darkness stops Meigs, Chillicothe Legion squads

'

Tueldly'a Gam•

Eallern Conference

WIMBLEDON, England (A P) - Boris Becker
came bac'k froin two years off and two sets down .
The three-time Wimbl edon champiOn returned to
his favorite tournament Tuesday and barely avoided a
hasty exit. Becker overcame three match points in the
· fourth ~e t -'im·d rallied past wild-card Miles Maclagan
5-7,6-7 (7 -9), 6-4, 7-5, 6-2.
The match was Becker's first in a major tournament since he announced his retirement from Grand
Slam competition following a quarterfinal loss to Pete

..

Pet
ClB
800
.6!17
112
.57t
I
.250 2 112
.187 · 3 112
000 4 1/2

this is no sweep. We 're in a dogfight. "
:
San Antonio also commllled 20 turnovers and failed •
to outrebound the Knicks for the third straight game.
And for the f.irstlime in the series, the calls didn 't go .._
their way. After ~
shooting 66 free .
throws to New"
York's 31 in the ;
first two games, '
the Knicks had a
30-22 edge.
''
" All of a
sudden we ' re play-·' :
ing the exact oppp- '
site from what we
talked about for a
week! "
Spurs ,"'
coach
Giegg Popovtch roared
dupng a timeout in \

Sampras at Wimbledo n )wo years ago. Becker, 31 , exci ted she gets, the earlier my second one is com- lot out of her. She doesn' t have her eq uthbr~um back.
changed ht s mind but swea rs that this Wimbledo~ ing."
'
.
She looks emotionally crushed."
really, truly wi ll · be his last.
The only first-round upse t on the women's side .
It was only third time the No I women's seed has
''I'm still around, somehow, " .he said .
ranked with the greate st shoc kers in Wimbledm\ hi s- been eliminated in her opening match at Wimbledon, '
Just barely. Becker's first-round 'victory was so lory. No. I Mart'ina Hingis was drubbed 6-2, 6-0 by and also the third 11me dunn g the Open era that a top ·-'
harrowmg that his ·wife. Barbara. left before the ' Jelena Dokic, a 16-year-old qualifier ranked !29th.
women's seed ha s lost.her open ing match at a Grand ·
match ended. She 's ex pecting their second ch ild in
The match was Hin gis' first since an emoti onal Slam event.
mid -August.
loss in the French Open fin a.l. that left her sob bmg on
" It happe ns to everybody so meiJmes. " Hingi s ·
" She was getting very exc ited toward the end of her mother's shoulder.
·
said. ''I'm not that disappointed."
·'
" I think she's devasta ted by the French Open fiasthe fourth set," Becker said. " I turned to her a~d I
Among those advancing easi ly Tuesday were No.2
told her to be qui et, to calm down a lillie, because co," satd six-lnne Wimbledon champion B1llie Jean Lindsay Davenport and No. 5 Jana Novotna, the ·
. otherwise we have a baby on the ,court. The more King , a commenta)or for HBO . " I think it's taken· a ·defendmg champion .

.'

Eastern Conferef)Ce
L
1

AP Sp!)rtS Wrlter

tt

WNBA
.......................W
New York ............4
Detroit ............... .4
Orlando ........... ...4
· Charlo no •.............1
Washington ......... t ·
Cleveland ..._ .•..... 0

By STEVE!NWI"'E

The fifth wee k of t~e · Gallia
County Church Softball · League
c.onun.ued on Monday night. Five .
weeks in, the season is starting to
heal up at the top of the standings .
At Faith Bapti st fi eld, Faith
took on Vinton Bapti st. In the
women's game, Faith won with a
big final inning, 17- 16. Faith's
women scored II runs in the final
in.ning to pull out the victory.
Faith was led by Polinsky, who
was 3-fof- 4 with 2·home runs,.and
Twyllia Connelley who was 2-for4 with a hom~ run..
.
In th~ men's game, Faith Bapti st used a great offensive night to
win 26·5 over Vinton . Faith was
led by Issac Saunders who was 4·
for·S with a home run , Alex Saun- .

333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

San AntoniO 89. Ne~ York 77
Friday, June 18
san Antonio 80, New York 67
Monday, Juntt 21 '
New York 89, San Antonio 81 , San
leads series 2·1

ingly waiting for Mr. Whipple 10 intervene when more
physiealteams tried to rough them up. The new Spurs
were supposed to be different.
''They've been tested , they 've been through adversity. and their guys are going to fight just like we fight."
New York's Charlie Ward said. "Pressure can be a fac tor if you are mentally weak, but I don'llhmk those guys
are."
Sprewell saw a Lot of.San Antonio when he was in the
Western Conference playing for Golden State. The conventi~nal wisdom on how to raule them was simple:
Bang them around, get into their heads and theY'd CrllfJlble
·
:., thought it was an unfair labe l. It was just that way
because they hadn 't won." Sprewell sa1d. "Now that
they 're having success and winning, it's changed their
mentality."
But that mentality showed signs of vulnerabt li ly on ·
Monday night, when Duncan and the Spurs dtdn 't show
a killer instinct when they. needed it mosi.
· Can you tmagme Jordan goin g scoreless in the fourth
·quarter of a big game at the Garden ?.
Duncan was 0-for-4 in the fourth. Sean Elli ott was off
from the outside, gomg 3-for-9. Mario · Elie (six points
and five fouh) and Jarcn Jackson (score less) weren't
much help. Elliott , Elie and Kerr were helpless when
they tried to guard Houston , whose silk y 34 points gave
: new ,life to the Kntcks ' hope s· for their ~lrst championship smcc 1973.
.
"We came out expec11ng people to give us some thin g
hecause we were the big bad Spurs, and we' re not good
when we 're that way." point guard Avery John son said.
"You can stay around San Antonio too much and read
the papers and believe every thing that 's bei ng. said, but

Boris. comes back at Wimbledon, Hingis tanks first round ·match·

By Eric Wllltt

Wedne•dly, Ju~a 16
Tue1day's Games
New York 7, Tampa Bay 0
Toronto 4, Cleveland 3 ·
Balt1more 5, Boston 3
ChiCago 6, Minnesota 1
Kansas City 4, Detroit 2
Oakland 5, texas 3
Anaheim 4, Seanle 2

knew that wasn'ttho case. These guys are tough. But we
also believe that if we play hard and well, we'll win."
Ken: 's optimism might stem from the fact that he had
a certam teammate who wore No. 23 for the past few
years. Kerr played
on the Bulls team
that found itself in
a similar scenario
two years ago ..,_
up 2- 1, but coming
off a loss and fac.
ing a precarious
Game 4 in Utah.
Jordan's
Bulls · dropped
Game 4 as well,
only to recover and
win the next two
games for the fifth
or thelf six titles
this decade .
· The Lakers
of
Johnson,
Kareem
Abdultold repo.r ters Jabbar and James
the Spura expectBd Worthy won Game
the Knlcka to come back 4 10 Boston in
strong In Game 3. (AP)
1987. and Bird's
Cellics won Game 4 tn Houston agai nst the Rockets of
Hakee1J1 OlaJuwon and. Ralph Sampson Ill 1986. Bot h
teams won their title~ in siK games.
·
Unlike lhqse teams , the Spurs must contend with
questions abo ut their toughness.
·
The old Spurs were satd to be soft as Charmm. see m-

.Bart.r um participates in 'Breakfast with the Champions' : .
Faith Baptist men~ . First Baptist
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Meigs
Foodland's "Breakfast with the raised a c.ombined $80.000 to help :
·womeri top local church soU ball tab I e County
·s Michae l Bartrum wa s Champions" brings toge ther cu rrent find a cure for lcukemta and related .

~

( II' ....

·'

National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS- Purchased
tne contract of AHP Dan Carlson from Tucson
of the PCL. Optioned INF EC1w1n 01az to TUC·

362 21 112

West Division

Texas
Oakland
Seattle
Anaheim

stn gles, and one uul later, David Justice smgled in a
run . Richie Sexson then hit into a,double play.
. " I got into some situatio,ns, bur I ~iay,~4joc us
and made my pitches," Escobar. said . " When you
face a good ieam ·you get excited . That helped me
fOc us:"
·
Notes: With the Indians in town , a loc.al TV station showed the .movie " Major League." ,
Cleveland star Manny Ramirez, who leads the
majors with 79 RBi s, missed hi s seco'nd straight
game with ·a bruised left index finger.
.
Manager Mike Hargrove said Ramirez was able
to bend hi s finger a little better Tuesday _and is
expected back for tonight's game.
Toronto's Carlos Delgado is hi:less in .25,at-bats.
LF Shannon Stew act robbed Ent ique Wilson of a
hit in the sixth with a basket catch.
Cleveland OF Mark Whiten. will be activated
from the disabled list today and OF Alex Ramirez .
will be optioned to Triple-A Buffalo .

(il9

Cennal Division

Cleveland .... . 46
Chtcago ........ 34
Detroit .......30
Ka nsas City ...... 28
Mtnnesota .. . . . 25

Dallas .................. 8 1
Ch~ago ............ ..7
6•
Los Angeles ... ......8 6
San Jose ........... .. 8 6
Kansas Cl1y ..........3 10

-

Critics expect Du.n can to step up and lead Spurs;.

By KEN BER~ER
AP Sports Wr1ter
NEW YORK (AP) - Micha~l Jordan was in the
same predtcament. So were Mag1c Johnson and LarryBud.
.
.
All three won the first. two games of the NBA Ftnals
at home, only to have the!r teams stumble on the road m
&lt;?arne 3 All three led thelf teams out of treacherous terntory and went on to.wih the NBA ~ill~. ' .
.
Your move, Tim Duncan. Wbat s 11 gomg to be m
Game 4?
.
.
.
.
The San Antomo Spurs, heanng que.suons abouttheu
fonuude and a tinge of doubt about their dominance,
face a .crucial Game_·4 tonight againsi the. New York
Kmcks. The Spurs sttll lea,:l2-l after dropptng Game 3
at Madison Square Garden on Monday night, but the
next game wt ll say qutte a bu about what these Spurs are
all about.
••It's not out of control, and it's not in control," satd
Du~can , commg off hiS worst game of the finals wtth 20
points ~nd a scoreless fo urth quarter in the 89-81 loss.
"It's nght there where if can swing either way."
When the Spurs break the huddle and walk to center
court at.tl]e raucous Garden tonight, their championship
quest will be somewhat in limbo. They need the kind of
poised, ,ef~cient performance that helped them win 12
stra1ght postseason games and go go undefeated for 41
.
days.
,
Another m6hdown under all the pressure that Allan
Houston, Latrell .Sprewell and the " Mecca ol Basketball " can offer will put them in a dangerous spot , indeed.
"I think ,we play the same way," Spurs guard Steve
Kerr said. "This stuff.is not easy. We were just kind of
laughin.g when people were talking·about sweeping. We

Gooden , winless in stx start s since May 18, gave
. ner on first , Omar
up
ihree runs, four hits and fou r walks in seve n
Vizq'uel flied out to
innings.
end the game.
" I felt good , but I'll t a~e a 10-9 win over that
"They 're a good hit·
ting team. but Escobar any time, " Gooden said .
Shawn Green; who was 2-for-3, homered off
pitched good, Lloyd
had a great inning and Gooden in the third and doubled off Ricky Rincon
I got lucky," Koch · in the eighth, scoring on Fletcher's ground ouL
Green homered twice Monday ntght and has 18 thi s
said ..
Tony Fernandez season
"It's good to be playing the Indians when you're
went 0-for-2 with two
walks for the Blue playing great. You don ' t want to be playing them
Jays, dropping his when you're struggling ," Green said. "They have
major league -leading three guys hurt, but we still don 't have a line up like
·
.
average to .411. Fer- they do."
GOT IT! • Cleveland's nandez's 11-game hit·
Jacob Cruz's two-out, run-scoring single in the
Kenny Lofton makes a ting
streak
was fourth cut ilto 2· I. but Geronimo Berroa hit an RBl
magnificent catch during stopped by Dwight grounder in the bottom half.
·
Tuesday's 4·3 loss . to Gooden (2-3) and two
Escobar got into trouble in the fifth but allowed
Toronto. (AP)
.iust one . run . Lofton and Vizauel hit consecutive
relievers.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Game 4 of NBA Finals is pivotal for San Antonio. New York

.
Page4
Wednesday, June 23, 1*,

TO RONTO (API- The Toronto Blue Jays had a
2-0 lead and Kelvim Escobar was .working on a onehitter. Catcher Darrin f letcher was still worried.
" We had a 2-0 lead ea rl y, .hu.t th at's nolht ng wtlh
a li ghtnin g quick and exp losive offen se like ClcYeland ," Fletcher sa td after the Blue Jays bea t the
Indians 4-3 Tuesday mght
Cleveland , avcragtng -a major league"best 6.8
run s, scored fewer th an four run S for the first time
in 13 games stn cc Jun e 8.
"To be hones t I wa s sinin g hack and waiting for
them to explode ," Fl etcher satd, " but Escobar was
sharp and the bullpen pitched great."
Escobar (7 -4) , wh o pitched se ven scoreless
innings against Anaheim last Thursday, allowed Just
two run s on six hit s in seven innin gs as Toronto won
for lhe eighth It me in nin e games.
. :Qraeme Lluydpttched a perfec t eighth, and Billy
Koe h finish ed for his se venth save, allowing an RBI
~rounder to Kennv Lofton . With two outs and a run-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Page 6 • Thfi Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 23, 1999
.

The Daily Sentinel

Taxing Internet commerce inevitable, panel concludes
By CURT ANDERSON
AP Tax Writer
WILLIAMSBURG, Va.- The government's eve ntual collection of its
share of Internet commerce-generated revenues is apparently as inevitable
as death and, well , taxes, members of a congressional Internet tax study panel said Tuesday.
Opening statements Tuesday from 17 members of the Advi sory Com·
mission on Electronic Commerce showed that a majority believe the Inter·
net ca nnot remai n effectively tax-free forever. Two members of the 19-member panel did not attend.
" We must not allow th~ Internet to become a tax haven that drai ns the
revenue governments need to provide the services that citizens demand," said
commi ssion member Joseph Guttentag, a top Treasury Department offi cial.
.Hi s view was echoed by the other federal, state and local government offi·
cials on the panel and, more importantly, by most of those representing the
husiness sec tor. The main point of contentio n between the public and private sides is whether state sales taxes levied on traditional purchases in stores
should be imposed on similar Internet sale s.
.
· " ! do n't know if it's poss ible in the long term to tax one form of commerce differently than another form," said John Sidgmore , a p.1 nel member
and vice chairman of MCI Worldcom.
··
But the business representatives said .they would adamanll y oppose any

By JERRY NACHTIGAL
Associated Press Writer
PHOENIX '- A federal appeals
court Tuesday overturned the bank
fraud convictions that drove Gov.
Fife Symington from office in 1997,
saying a juror who in sisted Syming·
ton was innocent was wrongly
removed by the judge during deliberations.
A 9th U.S. Circuit Court Of
Appeals panel ruled 2- 1 that there
was a " reasonable possibility" that
Mary Jane Cotey was . removed
· becau·se she disagreed with other
jurors about Symington's guilt, not
because she failed to take part in the

By DENISE LAVOIE
Associated Press Writer
GREENWICH, Conn. - Neigh·
bors who lived on a cul-de-sac near
Martin Frankel had complained for
· years about the numerous cars going
in and out of his driveway. They said
he seemed to be operating a business
out of his house.
But it wasn't until an automatic
alarm called firefighters to Frankel's
$3 million mansion on May 5 that it
became clear· what kind of business
he was running .
Investigators found a to-do list,
handwritten by Frankel. Item No. I:
"Launder Money," according to a
May 25 FBI affidavit filed in federal court in· Brid~eport.
They also found astrological
charts looking for answers to
Frankel 's concerns, including: ''Will
I go to prison?"
Frankel, a 44-ycar-old money
manager, has not been seen since the

deliberations.
.
" llhink divine guidance has been
at work here ," Symington said. ''I've .
always felt we were right , but! was·
n' t sure that was enough for rever·
sal."
Symington - who was sentenced
to 2 112 years behind bars but never
went to prison, remaining free on
appeal - is now enti!led 10 a new triaL
Based on what has happened to
o1her public officials who got into
trouble, Symington could not resume
serving as governor for two reasons:
The Republican resigned before
being forced out of office. and his

lax that si ngled out the Internet, such as a charge on World Wide Web access.
And the public officials agreed that e-commerce !axes must nO! hinder the ·
medium 's explosive growth or allow the government to pry into private transad ions.
Time and again, the co mmi ssion members appeared to agree on two prin·
ciples: that any Internet !axes be no di ffere nt from those on other fonn s of
commerce ; and that any system be as simple as possible to reduce the cost
of compliance.
··o ur challenge here is ri ot to res train the growth of the Internet but to
allow the Internet to nourish," said commission member David Pottruck, president of Charles Sc hwab Corp. " We need to find the balance. Government s
need money. Tax systems need to be fair. "
The commiss ion was appointed by Congress to recommend a future tax
policy for the Internet by April 2000. Lawmakers also imposed a three, year
momtorium on new federal , state and local e-c ommerce taxes, which expires
in October 200 1.
·
The two members who did not anend Tuesday were Ri chard Parsons, president of Time Warner Inc., and America Online President Robert Pillman.
The 45 states with sales taxes currently have no way to collect them on
Internet commerce if the sell er is loc ated in an01her state. Like catalog sales,
e-commcrce is governed by Supreme Court rulings saying one state cannot
force an?ther state to collect and .remit sales !axes unless Congress changes

term expired earlier thi s year, when comes to that to retry the case."
Gov. Jane Hull - who replaced
Symington, 53, was convicted on
Symington when he Slepped down fraud charges stemming from his forwas sworn in for a full term .
mer career as a Phoenix real estate
Hi s attorney, John Dowd, asked developer.' Prosecutors alleged he
prosecutors not to retry Symington. gave false financial statements to his
nming the government had spent bankers to get them to lend. him $23
nearly a decade and millions of dol· million to prop up his collapsing
Iars pursuing the two- tenn governor. empire in t.he late 1980s and early
" He 's lost the governorship . You '90s.
can' t do any more to the guy," Dowd
Symington testified that the errors
said.
were unintentional and should have
Prosecutor David Schindler said been caught by his accountants .
he is disappointed by the ruling and
He resigned immediately after hjs
might ask the full 11-meniber appeals conviction in September 1997. State
court to hear the case. But he added , . law would have forced him from
"We will certainly be prepared if it office anyway once his felony con·

day of the fire, and. up to $3 billion ly a charity to help sick kids, but
is now missiog from insurance com- investigators suspect it was only a
panies and it charitable organization. front for fraud .
Last month , insurance company
A federal grand jury in Bridgeport
regulators said Frankel's unlicensed has been investigating Frankel since
brokerage - apparently run out. of mid-May, the Greenwich Time
his mansion in this New York City reported last month. A sealed warrant
suburb - had siphoned off money , has been issued · for his arrest, the
from a .dozen small insurance com- New York Daily News reported Tues·
panies in five stales.
day, citing unidentified law enforce·
The companies, based in Missis- ment sources.
sippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, MisNo attorney has identified himself
souri and Arkansas, were placed in as representing Frankel, and family
receivership when they could not members in Ohio, including
account for assets invested with Frankel's mother, told The Blade of
Frankel 's Liberty National Securities
Inc .
Regulators said the insurers are
missing atleast ·$218 million, but a
lawsuit filed by some of the compa·
nies pu11he loss m $915 million ., ·
Also missing is as much as $1.98
billion from the St. Francis of Assisi
Foundation, which was established ·
by Frankel in the British Virgin
Islands last August. It was supposed-

Dangerous turn leads
to deaths of tourists
upside-down in 16 feet of water aboul
125 feet from the ·road. None of the
men was wearing seathelts. ·
The medical examiner awaited
dental records Tuesday from Massachusclls 10 confirm whether the bodies were those of Scott Renquin, 35.
Dan · Nelson, 32, and Roger
Des Vcrgncs; 31.
"We are partially relieved, but
mostly sad ," said Julie Renquin ,
Renquin 's sister-in-law. "Now we are
finally starting to mourn."
In· the past few months, almost a
half-do·zen cars have ended up in the
pond. Drivers who miss the stop sign
at the end of World Drive, where the
speed limit is 3? mph, and fail to turn
left on Celebration Boulevard can
end up in the pond.
"We're treating it as a single-car ·
crash, " said Lt. · Chuck Williams,
spokesman for the Florid¥. Highway
Patrol. "There's no evioence that
another car was involved and there is
no evidence there was foul play."
Investigators decided to look for
Condemned man
the missing men in the pond because
convicted of killing of the number of vehicles that have
LOS A_NGELES (AP) - A man ended up there.
· already sentenced to die il) Florida
The Celebration Co., the Disney
was convicted Tuesday of first· subsidiary that manages the town, has
degree . murder for strangling a· since built a wall at the intersection,
,. will :serve as an entrance marker
woman in Los Angeles.
·The same jury that convicted Glen and also prevent cars from going into
Rogers was to decide later w~ether he the water.
The men·~ families became conalso should face a death senlenee in
California or get life in prison with· cerned when they did not return home
from their vacation as scheduled on
out chance of parole.
.
Rogers, 38, was convicted of Oct. 2.
of
the
bodi.
e
s
came
The
discovery
killing Sandra Gallagher in Septem·
by
Orlando-area
after
a
long
search
ber 1995. The 33-year-old mother of
three met Rogers in a bar and her police and an Internet and TV cambody . was found later .in a burning paign to learn the men's fate.
truck.
Prosecutors claimed that was the
The following couples were
first of several killings by Rogers during a mpnth' long, cross-cquntry issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
crime wave in 1995.
In addition to his I997 Florida Judge Robert Buck:
conviction in the killing of a woman
Robert Adam Smith, 20, and
stabbed in a Tampa motel room, Tabitha Lynn Swearingen, 21 , both of
charges against him are rending in Pomeroy; Roy Lee Bailey, 50, and
Jackson, Miss. Another alleged vic· Anita Louise Callicoat, 34, both of
tim was found in Bossier City, La., Racine; Tyler Jason Wolfe, 21 , Midbut no charges were filed in that case. dleport, and Serena Joy Norris, 22,
An automatic appeal of his Flori- Murray City; Aaron Michael Drum·
da death sentence is pending and no rrier, 23, and Erica Dawn Dugan, 22,
execution date has been set.
both of Racine .

By MIKE SCHNEIDER

Associated Press Writer
ORLANDO, Fla. - The three
buddies came to Florida for a week
of fun in the sun .. They rented a fourwheel-drive vehicle, stocked their
timeshare with• $200 in food and
drink and then vanished without a
trace.
For months, their families back in
Attleboro, Mass., wondered if the
men were still alive, and set up a Web
site seeking information . Psychics
who contacted the families claimed
the men had died in the Florida
wilderness.
Now it turns out the three appar·
·ently misjudged a tricky tum at Celebration, the planned community
built by Disney about 20 miles from
Orlando, .
On Monday, nine months after the
vacalioners disappeared; divers found
three bodies and the men 's vehicle in
a pond. The mud-filled vehicle was

Toledo that they had not heard from
him in several weeks. He apparently
was not married.
Law enforcement officials said
Frankel used several aliases, includ-'
ing the mime of his bodyguard, after
being barred f~om trading by the
Securities and Exchange Commis,
sion in 1992.
All of the insurance companies are
owned by Thunor Trust, which lists
Tennessee-based businessman John
Hackney as trustee. Hackney did not
return a call Tuesuay.
. .
In the month s before the fire ,

Page7
· Wednesday, June 23, 1899

Father - 1n - law has crush on son's wife, problems follow
ii;;!;iiii;:;;iiiiii';:::::::::;;::;;;;;;:=::;;=::;;::::;;::-:;::=::;i1
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11

Dear Aan Landers: 1 have been
The &lt;Jjf~cult part about all this is,.
married for eight years to my high because of the time they now spend
school sweetheart. We have four tog'ether, my husband and his father
beautiful children, and I adore my have developed a much closer relahusband. The problem is my father- tionship. My husband is thrilled that
in-law, "George." He has a crush on his father is taking such an interest
in us and our children . I know the
me.
.
When it stlirted about a year ago, real reason is because George wants
I thought it was my imagination, but to be closer to me, but I cannot bring
the problem has escalated. George · myself to tell my husband what his
sends ~e gifts (which I return) and father is up to.
phones several times a week "just to
I' ve told George to back off, but
say hello." Lately my in-laws have he keeps coming on strong . .Please
been SP\'nding an inordinate amount · advise me. 1 am .. BETWI;:EN A
of time .at our house. My mother-in· ROCK .AND A HARD PLACE IN
:law suspecis nothing.
· PENNSYLVANIA

VICIIOn became official at his sen·
tencing two months later.
Six days into the jury's delibera· '
tions, U.S. · District Judge ..Roge&lt;
Strand dismissed Ms. Cotey and
replaced her with an alternate. Other
jurors had complained th at Ms .
Cotey, 76, was inattentive and confused, . didn't seem 19 un"t'rstand
some of the evidence .and wouldn't
explain her positions.
After interviewing Ms. Cotey arid
other jurors, Strand concluded that
she was "either unable or unwilling
to deliberate. with her colleagues," a
permissible ground for removal under
the law.
Ms. Cotey said later that she

Frankel spent more than $1 million
on shopping sprees at Baccarat,
Tiffany and Gianni Versace and on
trips to Rome, Geneva and London,
according to financial record s
obtained by !he Time,
Frankel's . slone mansion ·is in
Greenwich 's " backcountry," a
secluded area of multimillion-dollar
estates, woods and horse trails. Since
the fire, the long, hilly driveway that
leads to his home and several other
houses has been guarded by police.
Frankel, a ~ative of Toledo, Ohio,
had converted his home into a maze

DEAR ROCK: What you need
is a short course in assertiveness. 1
will give it to you now, no charge.
Tell George you find his behavior
reprehensible and to knock it off
pronto before his wife and your husband notice and that you do not wish
to have anything to do with him.
Make it clear: .no more phone calls
and only gifts the family can enjoy ·
nothing personal. The word from
Landers HQ is: "Get tough, lady."
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
of over 20 years left me and our son
three months ago. The reason? He
wants his independence and a
chance to do the thing s he didn ' t do
when he was· younger. "Gordon" is
·
. 47 years old.
We had a pretty good . marriage
until he told me he was unhappy and
had no feelings for me. He has been ·
livi.R¥ in his office since . then .
Money is tight for him , so hi s bach·

elor days are neither exciti ng nor dign ily and your head up. It sounds
glamorous.
as if your husband is suffering from
When Gordon left me, he said he severe depression and is in desperate
was interested in a much younger need of professional help. Counsel '
woman, but she is no longer in the ing and medication could be the
pi cture. He has severed ties with all answe r. I' m keeping my fin gers
family and lifelong friends. Up until crossed. Let me know what happens.
this, Gordon was a loving, responsi- Please..
ble man. Now; he doesn' t even . . Dear Ann Landers: My beauti··
attempt to see our·son.
ful young daughter is involved in a
I have a strong. feeling this is a .seriou s relationship with a nice
midlife cri sis. What else would young man. She is ·a virgin and
make a man behave like thi s' I have wants to stay that way . until mar-·
asked Gordon 10 consider counsel· riage . The young man· respe~t s her
ing, but he doesn't see any point in wishes an.d has agreed to wait. ·
it. He says counseling won'! bring
Here is the problem; Ann . They
his feelings back.
both tiave their own apartments but
.l am seein g a therapist and trying are very busy with their careers. The
to move on, but Ann, I really want to onl y time they have toge1her is late
fi gnt for this marriage and ourfami - in the evening. They often wind up
ly. Any advice? ·' DISAPPOINTED sleeping in the same bed. but they
WIFE IN NEW JERSEY
are not having sex. They insis1 that
DEAR N.J. WIFE: Don'!· beg they can .handle it, but that .altitude
Gordon to stay w1th you. Keep your does not seem realistic to me. What

do you think about this situation? •
CONCERNED MOM IN ARIZONA
DEAR ARIZONA MOM : If
you believe these two young people
are sleeping in the same bed and not
having sex, I have a bridge in Brook·
lyn that I would like to sell you.
Wake up and smell the coffee, dear.
When planning a weddin g, who
pays for whilt? Who stands where?
''The Ann Landers Guide for Brides"
has all the. answers. Send a self
addressed, long, business-size ~ nve·
lope and a check or money order for
$3 . 7 ~ (this inCludes postage and
handling ) to: Brides, c/o Ann Laoders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
60611 -0562. (In Canada, seno
$4.55.). '
To find oul more about Ann Lan· ·
ders and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at .
www.creators.com.

I

Epinephrine can be a life saver for allergic picnickers
you, run as far away from the scene
as quickly as you can . This is
because stinging releases a chemical
into the air that attracts other bees
and tells them that one of their col·
leagues needs help in defending
against an invader. That's you I
Jolui C. Wolf, D.O.
Avoiding additional stings is
1\ssCK:iate Professor
important, because the more stings
of Family Medicine
you receive, the greater the chance
that you 'll develo~ a severe reaction.
In spite of your efforts to avoid
Question: We picnic quite a bit
So, here are some things you can
getting
stung, you may still have that
during the summer. I'm always con· do to minimize the chances of being
cemed about getting stung by bees stung. First of all , avoid wearing undesired encounter with Ol)e of
that are abundant around our nashy clothing and shiny jewelry these stinging pests.
If you or somebody you're with ·
favorite picni~ sites at parks. Do ypu that attracts bees and other flying
·
'
is
stung
by a bee and begins to have
insects.
. have any suggestions that can help
·a
reaction
that is more than redness
Also, don' t · use perfumes and·
prevent ooe stings?
Answer: About 20 percent of the scented soaps and lotions when you and discomfort at the site of the
population have antibodies against are going outdoors. One very obvi· sting, get to an emergency room
MARY ROCHELLE JENKINS
bee venom. This means that their ous .precaution is to avoid going right away.
LAMM
Time .is of the essence because,
immune system is already prepared barefoot or wearing open-toed shoes
to put up a furious fight if another when walking in .grass or in the unless a drug like epinephrine is ·Mary Lamm ·graduates
administere\l promptly, the person's
woods.
~sting · occurs.
. ,
from Hocking College ,
symptoms
can quickly get worse.
. For about 3 percent of the popu,.
When you picnic, make sure to
I recommend that anyone who
lation, the reaction is so intense that seal all food in plastic or other sui\·
Mary Rochelle Jenkins Lamm
a bee sting can cause a serious - able containers until it's needed. has previously had a serious reaction graduated June 13 from the Hock·
sometimes fatal - allergic reaction. This will reduce the number of bees to bee stings keep the drug epineph· · ing College School of Nursing
rine within arm's reach because a with an Associate Degree in
in these people, a sting may result in thilt seek to join your meal.
shot of this medicine can reverse the Nursing.
When
you
are
finished
eating,
inajor swelling, difficulty in breath·
jng, and even Iifethreatening shock. dispose of food waste either by lifethreatening effects of what docShe lives in Minersville with
in faci , about 40 people die each burying it or resealing it until you tors call an "anaphylactic reacti~n" her husband , Terry, and son, Dim·
year in the U.S. because of reactions get ho111e. This will remove the to a bee sting. It will help open the itri Lamm . She is the daughter of
to bee stings. Fortunately, however, incentive for bees and wasps to visit · breathing passageways and keep the Roy and Rose Ann Jenkins ,
in mosi people bee stings do not pre· the picnic area and, thereby, make blood pressure up to a near normal Racine,. and the granddaughter of
level.
Mary Lisle, Syrac.use, and Gar·
sent a major medical problem.
your next visit more pleasant. .
This
is
a
prescription
medicine,
so
: They produce a small amount of
nella Jenkins, Vienna, W.Va.
If the bees come to your picnic
redness and swelling at the sting site aespite your best efforts, don't ask your doctor if you should add
A reception honoring her was
with some associated itching or dis· aggravate them . .Don't try to cha5e epinephrine to your list of picnic held at the Lisle home following
comfort. Usually, these annoying them away or frantically shake and necessities.
the graduation cerefllon'y . Attending were ; Rev. and Mrs . Wendell
but mild reactions clear up by them- · sw·at a1 them if they land· on you.
Stutler, Vienna; Leota and Bil
selves in'• a •matterj of' hour. or P\'r· Hold still and wait for th!om to fly off
'
"Family
Medicine"
Is
a
weekly
.
Kendall , Kay Siblani and Ben
haps as long as· a oay.
you, or blow at them - .but don't
column.
To
submit
questions,
Jones. Warren, Mi ch.; Keith and
Bee sting reactions are like many swat! I know this is hard to do, but it
conditions in that the first step in will probably keep you from getting write to John c. Wolf, D.o., Ohio Karen Lisle and Ni ck, Warrior.
University College of Osteopathic Ala.; Rayan Young; Frankie Huntreatment is avoidance of the sting in stung.
Grosvenor
Hall, nel; Wanda Rizer and grand·
the first place.
Conversely, if several bees sting Medicine,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
daughter
Kaylin All shouse ,
. Pomeroy; Esther Harden; Dick
and Betty Ash; Jean ·Stout; Freda
' ATLANTA (AP) - A suburban I?''
·
gorilla-like chest hair don't speak Wilson; John and 'Janice Lisle ;
·Brannon was incensed when hei unless they're removed from the Elm a Louks, ' Syracuse; Roy and
Atlanta mom has a message for the
makers of a new Austin Powers doll : ll ~year-old son picked a doll up in a packaging, but the quotation is writ- Rose Ann Jenkins , Racine ; Terry
and Dimitri Lamm and Jason
Oh, behave!
Toys R Us last week and pestered ten on the box.
McFarlane Toys, which manufac· Lisle and Mary Lisle .
Tamatha Brannon wants retailers her about what "horny" meant.

firrztly
· ~edicine

of offi'ces with more than 80 computer.. and wide-scree~;t televisions.
tuned to financial news ·channels.
When firefighters arrived last month,
they round a blazing file cabinet and
two fireplaces s.tuffed with burning
documents.
Phil Russell, a Greenwich lawyeF
whl) represents three of Fr~nkel's'
neighbo.rs, said Frankel increased
security at his fll~hsion a few months
ago, building a guardhouse and a six:
foot fence around the property, $d:
adding flood lights. He also stationedan armed guard outside.

Georgia woman wants Austin Powers dolls pulled from shelves

to stop selling the doll, which
repeats some of the movie superspy's tmdemark lines including:
"Do I make you
horny, baby? Do
.

.

"I can'·t believe this toy is
approved for ages 10 and up," she
said Tuesday. " It's perverted."
The underwear-clad dolls with

tures the doll, also makes a fully
ciothed doll with "softer" quotes
from the PG-13 rated, "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me."

Local University of Rio
Grande graduates announced
The following area students of of Nursing, Bachelor of Science in
the University of Rio Grande Nursing;
received degrees during URG 's
Terri Lynn Fife, Middleport ,
recent graduation ceremony: ·.
Brenda Sue Phalin, Middleport,
Steven V. Evans, Cheshire, and Candice Jean Walker, Rutland ,
Amy M. Roush-Shriver, Cheshire, School of Social Science, Assoc iate
Master of Education in Classroom of Arts; Shannon Ali cia Brown,
Teaching; Timothy Smith, Middle- · Racine , Kathl een Michele Dean
port, Master of Business Adminis- Goins·, Middleport, Cry stal D.
tration;
Smith, Pomeroy, School of EducaTrenton J. Cleland , Racine, Chad tion, Associate of Applied Science
Eric Griffit~ , Tuppers Plains, Sharon (Early Childhood Development);
Brian James Hoffman, Long BotK. Holter-RifOe, Racine, Stephanie
M. Sayre: Racine, Steven Matthew tom, School of Sciences, Associate
Wood, Middleport, School of Social of, Applied Science (Computer
Sciences, Bachelor of Science; Operations); Jamie Marie Barrett;
Rebecca Lou Ambrose Geyer, Rutland, and Rita M. Tracewell,
Pomeroy, School of Social Sciences, Cheshire, Associate of Applied
Business · (Accounting); Lauren
Bachelor of Social Work;
Kathleen Michele Dean Goins, Renee Hunter, Racine, Associate of
Middleport, Amy Elizabeth Redov- Applied Business · (Business Manian, Pomeroy, Christy Lynn Taylor, agement); Rose Ellen Barnhouse,
Syracuse, Jeffrey Alan Wayland, Middleport; Associate of Applied
Middleport. Sch&lt;?ol of Education, Business (Microcomputer ApplicaBachelor of Science; Patrick Alan tions . in Business); Juliette Allison
Newland, Reedsville, School Of Sci- Brown, Reedsville, Holzer School
of Nursing, Associate of Applied
ence, Bachelor of Science;
Amy Renee Durst, Pomeroy, Science (Nursing); Debbie Leach,
Andrea E. Moore, Syracuse, Middleport, School of Technology,
Michael Lee Vance, Pomeroy, Erin Associate of Applied Busineos
Beth Warner, Pomeroy, Emerson E. · (Office Technology); Beverly Dawn
Evans School of Business Manage- Stewart, Rutland, School of Tech·
ment, Bachelor of Science;
nology, Associate of Applied Sci·
Trina Hannan, Pomeroy, Stephen ence (Medical Laboratory Technolo-,
B. Roush, Cheshire, Holzer School gy),

Rock Springs Better Health Club
The Rock Springs Better Health potluck : Members are to bring
Club met recently at the home o( their own table service and lawn
Phyllis s ·kinner with Nancy · chairs .
· The program was presenled by
Grueser as hostess .
Vice President Phylli s Skinner Helen Blacks10n : Nancy Morri s.
opened· the meeting with the The female factor ; Frances Goe Lord's Prayer and Pledge of Aile· glein. Is breast pain dangerous'!:
giance. Officer reports were then Dorothy Je ffer s, . The health y
berry ; Nanc y Grue ser, Good news.
given .
Devotions were given by Helen for slackers; Suzie Mash, Say it
Blackston titled Give Us This Day. isn't' so: Lenora Leifheit, When
Our Daily Bread. Scripture used more is better; Helen Blackston.
·Dad knows bes1.
was Matthew 6-11 .
The contest was given by Phyl The Relay for Life Cancer Walk
has been postponed until July 23· lis Skinner and w·inners were
Helen Blackston and Dormhy Jef24 at Meigs High School.
The club picnic will be held on fers . The meeting closed with
July 15, noon at the home of benediction. Nancy Grueser served
Frances Goeglein . Menu is refreshments.

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Marriage licenses

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Page 8 • The ~ally Sentinel

~eclne8day, June 23, 1999

Wednesday, June 23,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Julie Spaun earns highest state 4-H honor
A local teen was named a State
4-H Ambassador during a special
induction ceremony held 1n
Columbus on June 18.
Julie Spaun, daughter of Bill
and Ruth Ann Spaun of Pomeroy,
formally received the honor during the 1999 Ohio 4-H Youth
Expo held at the Ohio State University:
"State 4-'H Ambassador status
is one of the highest honors
bestowed upon a 4-H member and
it carries a great deal of responsibility," said Jeff King , acting
assistant director for the Ohio 4H Youth Development program.
Only 74' 4-H members from
across Ohio Were named .'Sfate 4H Ambassadors this year out of

PARKER .HAGGY

SON BOR.N • John and
Heather Haggy of Middleport
have announced the birth of
their .first child, Parker Matthew
Haggy. He was born at Holzer
Medical Center on May 6, 1999,
at 5:52p.m.
The Community Cale ndar is ·
He weighed 7 lbs., 5 112 oz., published as a free serv ice to non and was 22 inches long.
profit groups wi shing to announce
Hla maternal grandparents mcctingsand special events. The
are Clyc1e and Elnora Weaver, ca lendar is not designed to proNew Haven, W.Va. Great grand- mote sales or fund raisers of any.
parents are Betty Fowler of .type . Items are printed only as
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Thomas ·space permits and cannot be guarand Betty Weaver, New Haven, anteed to be . printed a spec ific
W.Va. Fay Gardner of Point number of days.
Pleasant, W.Va. is the greatgreat grandmother.
Paternal grandparents are THURSDAY
SYRACUSE ~ Carleton .Col Emery and
Lelia Haggy,
lege
. Board of Trustees annual
Pomeroy. Great grandmothers
meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. at lhe
are Eula Odegard .of Pomeroy
home
of
President Robert L.
and Allee Kitchen, Middleport.
Wingen. All board members arc
urged io attend.

211.000 members. Each teen
selected achieved high standards
of excellence in six areas of
accomplishment and participated
in an ex1ensive orientation pr:ogram during the Ohio 4-H Youth
Expo.
As a State 4-H Ambassador,
Julie will participate in statewide
leadership, citizenship, communications , and public · relation s
experiences; serve as a 4 -H
spokesperson with elected and
appointed government officials,
t.he media, stare associations,
donor groups, civic groups, paren·ts, and volunteers ; and work
with other State 4-H Amba ssadors to strengihcn and expand
the 4-H program.

Julie was chosen to be an
ambassad or for her loca l accomplishments, participation, citizenship, and leadership efforts within 4-H and for community service
and leadership acti vites outside
of 4-H.
While in Columbus, she participated in W(Jrkshops on effective
public speaking, being a p'ositive
role model , working with the
media, working with elected officials and coordinating local community service activities .
· Julie , 17 , has been an active 4H member for more than eight
years. This fall , she will be a
senior at Meigs High School.
where she is a member of the
girl's varsity basketball and soft-

Brown, · Ritterbeck
receive.scholarships

Kristen Brown of Rutland and
Kimberly Ritterbeck of Langsville
were among 33 studen'ts at Hocking
College in Nelsonville who were
presented $500 Hocking College
Foundation Scholarships.
Brown is enrolled in the medical
assistant technology program whil
Ritterbeck is enrolled in accounting
technology.

Honaker birth announced
Amanda L. and Jeremy K.
Honaker, Nichols Road, Middleport,
announce the birth a daughter, Selena Nicole Honaker. the infant was
born on June 17, 1999 at O' Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.

an

to

our

ership with current news, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept
weddings after 60 days from the
date ofthe event.
Weddings submitted after the
60-day deadline will appear during the week in The Daily Sentinel
and the Gallipolis Daily Trib'unc .

MIDDLEPORT -

Women 's

ministry meeting Saturday,, I p.m.
at the Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church. All women from all.
churs:hes are invited to attend and
participate .

·

~ou am

':!ml on

lntemal :;!frdiciru!I:Mrdical

'I'

..

PAUL CLAY, ET. AL.,
EXCEPTING 1 plireel of·l'lll
CAS!! NO: 99-CV-011
eellte10 feet by liO feet off
DEFENDANTS
the rear of Lot No. 99 ao
In purehaaa of an order or doacrlbld In dHCI recordld
oolo to me dlrectld · from In Volume 304, Page 213,
aald court In the above anti· Melge
County · D11d
llad action, !.will axpoao to recorda. Further excepting
aale at public. auction on any portion of Lot 99 on
the front atepa ·of 1111 whleh a certain garage
Courthouae on Frldey 30th building may be located,
day or July, 1998 11 10:00 together with 11M right to
a.m. of the uid day, folloW· enter upon the aru adje'
lng daacrlbld reel eellte.
coni to tha building for tho
Sltuatld In the State of purpo11 of melnlllnlng the
Ohio, County of Melga, north wall end projection of
VIllage of Middleport and uld building, all ofWhleh Ia
boundld and dMcrlbld ao more epeclflcally d110rlbld ·
followa:
In dHd recordld In Volume
Baing Lot Number Ninety 304, Page 213, Malge
Nine (99) In Palmer'e County ciHd l'ecorde.
Addition to Sheffield, now lr::~~!'T"l=--"....,.....,...,
lncorporatld Into a part of ·
the VIllage of. Mlddlaport,
Melga
County, · Ohio.

In Lovins Memory ·
Of
Daie L. McGraw
He wenl lo be wilh
lhe Lord
1 year ago
June 23, 1998

Office :Mana.9er

•:Karen 'Bates

•Joyce .J{ol/on
Clinical a'ssodate

Put your anno
around him Lord,
Give him love,
·and render care,
And oave a ploce
be.ide him,
UniU I can be there.
Forever Loved
&amp;Mi11ed
by Wife DottU.

2nd Annual Mountaineer
Plant Classic Tournament.Pony League Ages 13-15
Proceeds · Wahama HS ·
Athletic Boosters
July 5 ·July 10
Wahama High School
Baseball Field, Mason, WV
$40 entry lee plus 2 baseballs
No all star teams please:
Team trophies &amp; tee shirts to
Champion &amp; runner-up.
For inter call
Tim Howard 304-882-3201
·or Lou Tholl)psan at
304-882-2247 .

265 West Union Street, Yftfiens

.

.
tpomeroy Clinic Jiours: Wednesday 7JO am- I2JO pm
.
at 505 :Mulberry Jieiqfits, tpomeroy ·
'For appoi11hne11ts please caiL .(?40) 9~P.-9320
or (740) 591.·1.678

•

"Sturdy as love,
Jv'ever wavered by tfie
'force
of crosswinds."
,

YARD SALE!
Thursday, June 24th
Corner of ,Main &amp; Tyr~Racine, OH
··

.

•

Jr"PC Medical ,C.aboratory
James Xesla'r Cardiopulmonary Center .
• 9owri ·Oncology Clinic

45780 '

•

I

'Temio.of Selo: Cannot be
told for lell lhl '2/3rda of
the lippralald
velut.
$5,000.00 Caehler'l chiCk
11 1111 time of .-... belence
celhltr'a llheoti· within 30
dayw. of confirmation.
•
Jemea M. Soultby, Sheriff
Attorney , For Plalntllfc
a-ge w. Anldty, Jr.
380 S. Fifth St. Columbua,
OH43215 ,
Phone No: (814) 821-1700

9:01)-5:30.

.3 3795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5212
11'22199 1 mo.
. ...

:~--~~·=~~-~·~ . ~
" ~~--~~~

Agt1cuHural Ume,
Umtstone • GI'IYel
Dirt • Silnc!

985 4422
Cheater, Ohio

Sptlng O.On s,.cJal

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Ellngo On
Thursdays

.211'1115 $45.00

ATS:30 P.M •

CHQALIII'S
"CAIPU CLEAIIIG

(7) 7 3TC

3areas SS4.9S
4111111S 569.95

Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
PJY!no $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$&amp;00.00 Starbul'lt
Prograllllll top line. 1
Uc. I D0-60 nn..,.,

Satta~$14.95

Satisladion Guaran!Hd
· 2room minimum
371-6438 992.0077

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

1-877-62'-3693 •

111wae11 mo. pd:

e

ELIM

.:Construction

HOME

light Commercial &amp;
· Residential
N$W Construction &amp;
Remodeling

2668.

:

I

COMIIDOAllllllfSiiJEIIIIAL

J
, -

614-892·7843
No Sunda Calls

.. '

I

·'

I

Equlpmenl CioAnocs &amp; bog.-

JEFF STETlP

!t
~

i

. l

PHONE: (740) 985-4218 • • l
'

. .SHADE lUVI!R

'

....

'·

..l

::::~:~m=·e~-~:o~~~;~:.:'o:4:5:7:69::::.-!
•

I

J

'

· Complete Line Of 4~H
Feed &amp; Show Supplies
And Sullivan Show
Supplies

Call 985·3831
,

21 1mo.

Linda's Painting

.: Coati•&amp; ~ ~utt~n •

'me do It foryo,u. ,

: Sktlaa • Drywall •

•
•.

..,.,..

:J&gt;alltlai •l'lumblaa

: ,:,..

'

949-2168

740-74;4-3411
Bryan Reeve•
Swan Reeve•

, . New R~fs • Repal!",~

•'

i

1

Thke the pain 'out
of pal,nting, and let

'

.FRE/5 ESTIMATES

I

Oloaeph Jacks .
i.

1

I

•740-992-2068

. l

j

),

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave •
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

'

-'

CIIDrr ·
CredH • Slow Crwdh • Bankruptcy

.

2851 .

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

...

ADVN-X:ED DRAINAGE SVSTE

WINDOW SYSTEMS
'

.· FOIMERlY 01= II 0 (OURT $TR~O, l'OMEIOY
IS NOW LOCATED STAll IOUTIU
:6 MilES IIOITH OF POIIEIOY AT coum ROAD II
;:

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

&lt;992-4U9 OR 800-291-5600
VINYL REPlACEMENt WINDOWS A'f.
'FACI'OlY DIREcr PRICES

;,;

..

•••

I

•
••

•

••

INC.

740·742-2249. .
Lost: German Shepherd Pup , !5
To 6 Months Old . Big For His
Size, Family Pet, Vicin ity : Evergreen Road , Bidwell, 740·446-

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
Rutland, Ohio

9n8.

Truck seats, car seats, headliners, .
true~ tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. mo.torcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc ..
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00

70

2 Family: Bitlersweet Orive, June
2161 ·241h. Hou"' 11 A.M. ·4 P.M.

Over 40 yrs experience

4 Family· Nice Household Item&amp;,
Home Interior. Fish Aquarium .
Baby Clothes, M isC. 78 Lower
Garfield EKtenslcin. Thursday,24·

40 742·8888

·Friday, 25 9:01)-?7

ALL V.nl Selet lluol

••I'M BACK"

Be Pllld In Advlnce.

Qf!QUNI!: 2:00p.m.
· lhe cloy boloro lhe od
Ia to run. Sunday

Ken Yo1ng For11er Owner of

edlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. llondliy edition
-10:00 o,m. Selunloy.
Girls Clothes Sizes 7-1o&amp;: Women's Clothes Sizes 5·9; Toys,
Crafts , 2 Dehumldlfle;s. Barney
Comforters, Sheets , ·etc . June

THE AP,.LIANCE MAN.
915·3561
.
• We service all makes • Used Appliances • We seD

241h, 251h, 9· ? 3228 Cora Mill
Road.
June 24th, 9·5 , 659 Kraus Beck

partS • Will deUver

Road . .

Rid c Rd., Lon Bottom, Obio

S164S Bi

ftetfiCft~et~CC~ft

Free Estimates

;...
~

lii!l

FRALEY .
EXCAVATJMG
r h r Mit_.•

INGELS CARPET

•Bulldozer 0
Backhoe Serulces

carpel cleaner

.No.,

.........

•#lfllll &amp; 1Hiilii'Silll
•Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
•Septic Systems jl Utilities

•Deep cleans safely
•DEODORIZE$ leaving carpet
. smelling lrt!8h
•Lifts matted carpal pile
•'Dr{ cleans so you can use
carpel righl away

17401 691·9407
(7401611•6029

992-7021
175 N. 2nd, Middleport, OH

We Have Work Sites In Gallipo·
HI, Spring Valley, Rio Glanda And
Other Areas Of GaJIIa County. All

•.. ....

740-992·6215

Hoof Hollow Far•

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS.
•. unERS

Rt 7 South

~1Z3

lttiMmber
Quality Is Job One
~7SJ , ~t101

.

Sayre Farm, Adams Fld .• Racine .
July 1-3. Watarbed, hOusehold ,
petite to plus clothing, tomatoes
and cabbage, 7~247-Q-22.

Stroel,

Mlddlapo~.

9am.4pm. ,

Two family garage &amp;ale; June

~!~~~~:~~~~~~[~~:.eo~~o~8~a~r:,';

of items, atzes.

Pt. Pleatllint
Attention : Overstocked Sale .
Rain or Shine EVery Thursday/
Friday. Lowest Prices Anywhere
on New PlayStallon 'Games, OVD
Movies, Disney Movies . Music
CO's, ee·a nle Bablll, Too Much
To List. 2nd House on Right ,
Blaine Lane. Gallipolis Ferry,

WI/. (304)875-4493.
Moving Sale, al Camp ¢on'ley,
every thing must go,lurnlture.telaphone,new eagles patchwork
animals, ball cards, new porll·
power router. tablesaw.Tv's VCR •
radios clothes, cars . sheets.
covers,
Wed .·Sunday 9am·
5:301!m: ....ryday .

·

Thursday, Junt 24, End of Lewis
Lane, Sandy ~11 . Lots of Every.

lhlng . .

80

and FIN Market

-S;tl;,., &amp; Sfl#lil
Contr~ators

Auction

.. Post Oftlce Careers••
Start $14 .08/hr. plus benellts .
FoT exam and application Into .
cal l 800· 280-9769, Ext.WV114 .
9AM-11PM. 7 Days.

CNA, LPN , needed . Good pay,
hOurly. bonus for weekend work .
Must be licensed in WV. Call

Own Hrs. $25K -$BOKI Vr. 1-800476-8653 X 7777. www.1cwP.com

Drlwr

.

740.2~

·

Ortvers /Independent: Flatbed
Contractors , TIT. OTR . 80% 01
Gross. Free Plates, Permits, In·
surance . Paid Road &amp; Fuel Tu·
es. ~vo. Si .oo Per Mile Loaded &amp;
Empty. Homa Weekends . 800·

621·2437.
Drivers: Free 3 -Week COL
Training . Earn $26 -$32,000 /111
Yr. W /Full Benefits . No Exp.
Needed .. P.A .M. Transporl Sp~­
clal Call Toll Free 1.877 ~ 230·
6002 Sun · Frl, 7 A.M, ·7 P.M.
www.pamtransport.com

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILAIILE:
AOTR:

Single Driver, late Mode l Ken·
worths With Reefers. West.Coast
Carrief.

Class BOTR:
Team atralght Tru ck, ·Late MOdel
Frelghtllners With SleePers. Must
Have Air Brake Endorsemen.ts,
800 Mile Fladlus. Home DeliverM

. ..

Bolli Poslllon&amp;:
Alleast 25 Years Old
Alleasl 2 Yaart Experience

Carpentry Remodeling AOditlons 1

Porches, Decks. 70-.W1 -t3t6.

E &amp; S lawn Sarvi'ce : Das!gn, lm·
Serv ice .
Clean up..
fertilizing and planting. Free est!-.
mates. Satisfaction gusrantead .
Greg Milhoan: 304/675-4628.
plamentJ~tlon,
and
A~allable for Sp ring

437,&amp;764, Hrs. 8:30A.M. ·5 ~M .
,-Easy Work! Excellent Pay! Assemble Products at Home. Call
Toll Free . 1· 800-467 · 5566 Ext
1~:170

Evening &amp; Weekend HHA 's &amp;
CNA' s Needed For A Growing
Home Health Agency. Will Pay

Shih Dllferemlal ..ln Meigs Coun~y,
Call 740-992· 7900. &amp; In Gallla
Counly: 740·446-3806 , 0&lt; $1op
By 762 Second Avenue. Gallipolis
For AppHcallon. EOE.

H.S. CONTRACTING
Professional ConrractlflriSBfViCtls
Remodeling, All Kind$ Of Roofing.
Shingles , 3--0 Lap Metal , Add On
Addit ions, Palnllng , Free Esfl- ,
mates! Residential , Call Afte r
6:00Pm. 740-441-()653 .
.
Interior &amp; E11ter1or Painting. Ell ·
periAnced , References . Reasonable Rates . For Free Estimate ,
~40-388·8041 .

Jlms Drywall &amp; Const ruction .
New Construction &amp; Remode l/
Drywall. Siding. Aools . Addl llons. Painting, etc. (3 0~)674· .

Skilled Nursing Facility seeki.ng
an AN tor lull time on 11 ·7 sh ih.
we are atso Bccepting applica tions for P$rl time LPN/AN. Rock·
springs Rehabilitation Center Is a
1ob bed skilled and intermediate
level tac luty. We have an excel·
lent survey history and a very
stable staff. Th is Is an excellent
opportunity lor the right candidate
lor pers onal and ·prolesslonal
growth . Submit resume to: Rocksprings Rehablli1at ion Cent81',
36759 Rod(spr ings Rd .. Pomeroy.
Ohio •5769 : Carol Greening, DIre ctor of Nursing . EqUal Oppor·

THE PILLSBURY COMPANY In
Wellston , Ohio, Is look ing For
Mo_tlvated People With , S!rong
Mechanical And Tro ubleshOoting
Skills. Located In The Heart Of

Tho Baau)lful Soulhem Ohio Hill~
THE PILLSBU.RY COMPANY Is
The Largest Employee In The
Area , Consisting Of 1-4" Acres ·
Under Root And Over 1,100 Em·
ptoyeea . Applicants Must Pas ·

sess The Folklwlng Oualllils:

'Strong Mechanical BaCiigfOOnd
'Knowledge 01 And Experience
In A Manufacturing ErMronmtnt
'Working Knowledge 01 Pneu ·

malic$ And Hydraul~s
"Knowledge Of Power Circuitry,
Abil ity To Use Diagnostic Equipment
·
"Ability To Perlo·rm Emergency
Repa1rs , Preventl~e Malnltnance
And ChangeOvers And To Trou -

4623 or (304)674.0155.
LPN Will Provide Child Care in
My Home. CPFI Current. 740.245--

5664.
Open ing For Elderly Oi Handicapped Lady, To Share Country ·
Home &amp; Expenses, Can f 4Q-446- .
0250. For Appointment.
Painting Interior &amp; ew:terior. plumb- :
lng, hauling (trash), lawn servic,e, .'
damoi!tlon , low rates . 740-591· ~

·

9617.

.

We clean homes or businessesno Job too blg or small. satisfac-

tion guaranteed . Call 740~ 742 -

9010.

wm

Do House Cltanlng . Hones t,
Dopondable. (304)77Ht 59.
Will do House Cleaning . Havtt
References and Expe ri ence/

(740 )- 388· 8421 or (7401·446·
~

.

.

Wll i ,Give · Plano less ons Tues:
day's Gallipolis, Point Pleasa nt,. ·
leon, WV Areas . Call Any ti me ~ ·

740-44 t ·9825, 304 -458·1 627 '
Lea-.. Message If No Answer.

Will Repair lawn Mower-a , Fa i- m
Tractors And Machinery~ .Als o
Light Wtldlng, Call Evenings,
7 411-44 t .0199.

FINANCIAL
210

Bualneu

mer&lt;.

,.,..,""""'0-:0:pport~.,.,u,.,.n,-:lty~~ •

Two Years As A Malnlenance

"A Pill TO LOSE WEIGHT'' :
"THERMO· LIFT' tml Coli For .
FREE 3 · Day Trial Pak. 1-688-: •

Mechanic Or E~ulvalent Educa ·
t!on In A Mtchai'llca 1 Field Re·
quired . Posltto'na On Various
Shifts. Beginning Pay Between

$9.60 To $11 .80 Per Hour, De ·
pending On E-lOra.
•

Shredders, Cru1hers, Etc. Strong

304~75-1957 .

Security Guards· must be able to
work any shlft..lnclucUng most weekends . Must have clean police
record, good work l'llsto~. reliable
transportat ion, va_lld driver's II·
cense, home phone and must
have black steel toe ufety
shoes. ·s5 .75 per hour, ~2 - 40
h'ours per week . Call 740 · 669~
2874 Monday· Friday, 8am·4pm
for appotnlment.

WANTED: MAINTENANCE
MECHANICS

For More' Information Call 800·

Georges Portable Saw~lll . don't
haul your logs to the mlll just calf , ·

Racine Pizza. E11press - apply In
person only arter ~pm . Thirel &amp;
Vine Street, Ractna.

tunlly Employtr.

GoodMVR
Weol&lt;lyPay
Ht~lh Insurance Available
Work Well With The Pubic

II Interested . Please Sand Re·
aume.To:

90

tlon To Problem Solving With
Go.vernlng Agencies (OEPA) .
May Requ ire Travel Based On

THE PILLSBURY COMPANY
2403 S. Pennsyivlnla Avenue
W81tston, Ohio 45692

Job Site. For lmNctiate Consld·
eratlon, Call : 6 t 4· 825·6209 Or

Attention: Human Resouroes ·ME

F"; 614· 785-9464 Ann: ABC:.

(304)675-7927.

· POSTAL J08S To I I 8.35 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS, NO EXPERIENCE . FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO. CALL 1-800· 613·3585,
EXT 14210. 8 A.M. ·9 P.M., 7
DAYS ids . Inc.

Most Weekends

Specifically
dUng Equip.: Conveyor

Approved Ma~ter Ucensed EleCtrician, WV02S958 , Free Esli·
mates tor Residential Services .

Oays.tds,lnc:.

Regional &amp; Long Haul
EOE
.
801l-293-0700 Of 801l-695·ol473

C~ss

180 Wanted To Do

Postal Jobs to $18.35/Hr., Inc.
Benefits, No E•perlence .- For
~pp. and Exam Info. Call 1·800·

Human ·Relatlons Skills In Addl·

1

741l-211&amp;o0870

Bo Ago 14 ·21. And. Moll JTPA
Ellglbillly RequlremeniS.

GaH~IIs, Ohio 740-379-2720.

fof You, 7411-256-6989.

Good Pay
KELLITRUCKING, INC.

B13·3585,. E•I.8B26. 8AM·9PM , 7

5/25/99 2 nio. pd·

1 (:!!rtment 1403, GallpoNa.

New Equipment
Call

bleshoot On All Jypos 01 Equip-

Wanl To Sell Your Slu!t7 CaR Riv-

WE NEED DRIVERS

ApplicantS Must Be Residents Of
Gallia Count~ Or Meigs County.

ply' AI scenic Hills, 3.11 BuCiindge
Road, Gaii~IIS, 740-446-7150

018:311-4;30 304-675-1637.

trslele AuctiOn Anel Let U1 Sell 11

45631 .

Services.

Computer Users Neiltded. Wo'r k

Ohio License f7B93 . 740·989·

Wanted to Buy

Wanted: Medical Olllc e Recep Uonisl /Secretary - Exper~nca Required Including T~p l ng Sk ills I
~aslc KnowledgE!! Of Med icaJ
Coding MAbie To Work Flex ible ·
Hours. Send Resume To : Box
CLA 476, GallipOlis Daily Trlbur'\8 ,
825 Third Avenue. Gallipolis, OH

GMCAA Encourages Fema les
Age 1 6-21 To Apply For Then
Job Openings.

Copilol Nursing. 1·80Q-57H348.

Welume

Gentleman Seeking Companlonstip From Nice Famalt For Talks,
Walks &amp; Friendship. Sand Re plies To : !5!53 Second Avenue ,

www.osmoM.corn

Part 01 The Work Schedule.

Positions Avai lable For A 7 To 3.
AN Supervisor, Wilt! Experience
Pay ; 3 To 1 1, LPN With Ex peri·
ence Pay &amp; Shift Differential, Ap·

2623.

Personals

Vlob Our WtOIIIe AI

Well established Bu ilding Mate·
· ria l Oistribuor located in Columbus. Ohio In Search of Delivery
GaiUa ·Meigs Co'"""nlly
740-245-1107.
Personnel Must have a COL.
· · Acllon Agency
Class
A or 8 Endorsement need·
6010
North
State
Route
7
All students - lull and part ti~e
ed. Experience a mus1. Se nd . ·
Cheshire, Ohio 45620-0272
openings In customer serv ice/
brief reSume to : Keith Egloff.
sales dep. $10.35 per hr aPpt. No
1200 Steelwood Road , Colum·
Equal
Opportuni'Y
Emp!Oy9r
·
experience· will train . Cond lllons
bus, OH o r phone 1-800 -589· .
apply. Must be 1B. can 304·485·
HOUSEKEEPING
SUPER · 4412, lo set up an appo intment.
4300. www.worklorstudents .com/
VISOR Due To Stall Changes EOE.
oh
Holzer Senior Care Center Is Now
Able
To Accept Applications For - Wildlife Jobs to· $21 .60/Hr. l.nc .
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls,
Supervisor
Of Hou5ekeeplng Ar'id Ben'etits. Game Wardens , Secur- ·
Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,
Laundry Experience Required . ity, Maintenance . Park Rangers .
Typing .. . Great Payl CALL 1-800We Are Looking For Dedicated No up . needed . For App . and
795-0380 E.t. 1201 (24 Hrs) .
People To Join Our Team. Apply Exam lntor. Call 1· B00-813 In Person Or Send Or Fax Your 3585,E•t.BB27, 8AM-9PM, 70a.ys
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
Resume To Roger Hittle 380 Co- Ids Inc
Shirley Spears, 304·675-1429.
lonial Drive, Bidwell, OH 45614, Or
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 .60 /HR.
AVON has a place lor you! Join
Fax 740-441·1347 EOE.
INC . BENEFITS . GAME WAR·
the 11 beauty company! Enjoy
SECURITY, MAINMotorcycle Mechanic Needed DENS,
your own business. B.uy your own
Inquire At: River Front Honda , Or TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
products at cost Call 1-800·4·
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. ANO
Call, 7411-446-2240.
AVON or 740·594-4354.
EXAM INFO, CALL 1· 800·613·
Avon Products: Start your own lnM Muslctans needed to form group, 3585, EXT. t4211 . 8 A.M. ·9 P.M.
7 DAYS Ids. Inc.
Home Business. Work Flexible
Hours, Enjoy Unlimited Earnings. ·an types of music . Bass pl~yer .
lead guitar player, drummer, key- 140
Business
1-888-56H!II66.
boards &amp; singers. Call Sandy,
Training
740-767-4287.
Band Groups: that play Rock
and/or Modern Co~ntry. Prefer
Galllpollo career Colie90
Needed Immediate ly. installers
Youth Band_s. Must be willing to
(C&amp;reers ClOse To Ho~) Cali
And Service Techs With Two
play on percentage . Call:
Today! 7~-4367, 1-60QYears Experience. Top Wages ,
(304)675-8349.
214-0452, Rag t90-05-12748.
Insurance, And Uniforms Provid Needed for Friday Nights and
ed. Apply In Pe rson At Comfort
Other Special Ev&amp;nts &amp; nmes.
150
· Schools
Air Systems Inc. 407 Third Ave·
nua, Gallipolis. .
Instruction
Bartender Wanted : 740· 441 1428.
Plumbers And Plpefltters LU. EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE'
Be your own boss. Wortc: at home. t577 Will Bo Dlslrlbullng Appren· GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors ,
tice Applications Beginning June
Masters, Doctorate, By Cor re24 hour mesoage. 877-267-4403.
28th Through July 9th . Appilca·
spondence Based Upon Prior Ed·
certified Medical Assistant n8ed·
lions Can Be Picked Up At 1236 ucatlon And Short Study Course .
ed for local physician's office. Gallia Street , Portsmouth, OhiO ' For FREE Information Booklet
Send resume to : P.O. Box 458,
From 7:30 A.M. U.ntll 4:00 P.M. Phone CAM8RIDGE STATE
$35.00 Application Fae. EOE. .
Racine. OH 45n1 .
UNIVERSITY 1~964·8316.

Albany, Ohio

005

Jobs Are 40 Hours Par Week ,
$5 . 15 Per Hour And Are Exptct·
ad To last Until At Least late
, A11gust And Possib ly Into Sep·
tember. Computer_And Other Job
Related Training Is Available As

5 People Wanted To Sell Avon ,

El(perienced LPN In phys lan of.
flee. drop resumes oft at 3009
Jadcsan Ave. between the hours

Wedemeyer's Auction Servlee,.

n o.ys

1o~n-871-8731
. EOEMIFIDIV

.To Obtain A Preappli~atlon Call
Forms At Home. No Experience ' 740 -446· 1018 Or 740·992·2222
Or VISit The Rto GranOe Office Of
Necessary. ·CALL TOLL FREE •
I·IJOQ-966·3599 Ext 2601 .
The Ohio Bureau 01 Employment

9111 Moodlspaugh Auctioneering .
Complete Auclloneerlng Ser\l.le·
ea. Consignment aUction· Mill
Street , Middleport, Thursdays.

RIYEIISIOE AUCTION IARN
Every SalurdtV Nigh! 7 P.M..
Crown City, 740-25&amp;-69119

ToU·Free 24 Hl'l

$BOO WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete Simp le Government

Thursday, June 24~h, Broadway

22 yr1. Local

Hone• &amp; Tack

on

·

,...

V.C. YOUNG Ill

l)ealers.

• Additions ·
•Remodeling
C..U t.odoy .aboul 1pocial '
price• th"' July
· Qualily BuUt Houoe•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Bollles, "ntiques &amp; Collectibles
Moving and Must Sell· 840 E.
Main Strnt, Saturday, 25th. 9am·

• New Garagee
• ElectriC81 &amp; Plumbing
• Roonng &amp; Guttere
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pelntlng
• Pallo &amp; Porch Deck•
· FrH Etlfmotea

Factory Author.i zed
Case-IH Parts

SMITII'S
CONSTRUCTJO
*New Homes

Tovs, CiolhH, Tools.

1:OOpm Ft1dly.

• Room Addltlone • A.-nodellng

Equipment Parts

Self-Addressed

Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH , TN .
37011-1438.

· Exper. o.Mng Sctiool Grads
Consklered. No NYC · Home

dey btfort ~he 1d le to run,
Sunday • Monday edition·

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

All Makes Tractor &amp;

Help Winted

26. 9:01l-5:00, TJ:s

SOIIJ'day June

leader&amp;htp Sltills, HB'ole

A Good DrMng Record, And
Be Flulble To Travel To
Various Woric locations.
OSMOSE. INC.
Coii .FOf lntonno-

Cleaning
Laundry
Clerical fOtfice

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

CONTINENTAl.. EXPRESS
COL Class AWl1h 6 Months

Chlldcare ; 1998 Centenary Ad .

a

Maintenance

Glau Ooo&lt;t, 740 U6 4623.

Clothing, Toddler Bed, Misc .
HousehOld nama. Rain Cancels.

&amp; VIcinity

DIPOYSA&amp;
PARtS

, ,

Friday &amp;. Saturda~ 9·5, Cherry
Ridge, Rio Granda, Child /Aduil

All Yard 811111 Mull Bt Paid In
Advtnco. DMdtlno: 1:OOp·. , lho

Stocki11~

-Hoit•h• leadiiYf da

Coo/v/1,_, OH

June 25 &amp; 28 Johnson's Mobile
Homes. 8:30 ·3:00 Ciolhes. 1ovs.
children$ items I

&amp;

Owner John Dean

1000 St.

Sale

. Yard

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity .

•
t.

.

Lost· mala Beag le, . bl-br-wh
(mostly white), name "f;laxter" ,
Leading Creek, Rutland area ,·

Free Estimates

No EmbaiTIIIIMIJI ...
, You'~
R~ 1ptctl .

t

111111

Found : small gray kitten~ Letart
-sandbar vicin ity, call 740·247-

Lo.0.74.-o...
-•....• ....
•·-32....t ....
o_. : . 1·100·311·3391

,f.

:rr;-..'""

. . .. .

New &amp; Used Saddles
. Also riding lessons

·••

woiimNIIU

4379.

100'- 1000' Rol~ I" &amp;3/4" 200#.Woter Line
Full line oi Gm Pipe &amp;Reguloto~ Water Storage Tonks

: ~ft~~~c~~nfitift
~------..1

JACKS ROOFING
' CONSTRUctiON

I

:'

;Painting

a• Grave/less Leach

.~

Lost and Found

Found : Pa ir Ot Mens Glasses ,
With Bifocals, VIcinity : Gallla
County Fairgrounds. 740-446-

Culverts: 4" -.48" in stock

lunaetlome C II CONSTRUCftOI C
C•stractlon ;.,
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
;.,
Hew Conetructloil •
~ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~ ·
Remodtllllf:KHcllon Cllllneta '
ft
Commercial &amp; Realdentlal
. ft
Vinyl Sk!lng.Roofa.Oocb·. ·
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
Garogeo.
C · Phone 740.992·3987
ft
Free E.tlmarea

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

I

STETHEM@~UREKANET.COII

tc.VIO.S..,..erHome.eom

PAEE ES'I'IMATES

I

· Trucks ~ lracior
Trailers - d8cks .: driveways

"""'"'"'"

9mut.. d

New Homes·• Vinyl ·
Siding •New'Garagea
• Replacement Windows
· • Room Additions
.
• ROilflng

''

I·740·985·3949

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleenlng

60

740·985·3813

Now

....

•I

Services
Site Preparation
Septic Sy~te'ms
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

ROOfiNG
NIW·IEPAIR
, '

•

74G-992-3360.

.IJSSELl BUILDERS,
INC;

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer

FREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,

Tuppers Plains, OH

*Jiandicapped

: Qlllllf Crtfttmuthlp

.KCB
.EXCAVATING

lmo.

St. At 7

3045.

OUTDOOR CAREERS
•Employoo oWned Compeny
oCompolld.. Poy Benellto
•o.mote Work• In 41 States
Mus! E"'IO' ~Sica! Outdoor
Work, Possoss Slroog

-Meigs CAA Ia Currenlly

Wanted To Buv: Book Cases I
Shelves That Will 51ackable Wilt!

v td&amp;dl

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

Now Taking Applica tions For ,
Ori~tra For Gallipolis 4 Pometoy
Only, Domino's Pizza.

A cc ~tptlng Preappllcatlons For
Temporary Summer Worker&amp; In
The Foll ow ing Occupational Ar·
eas,

Year Bool&lt;. II Anyone Has 0110 0&lt;
Knows Of Any one Please Cltl
14o-m-2s12.

Elki"'Iund to giveaway. (304)576-

Two commercial air conditioners/
furnaces for scrap, 740·742·

Adult Home, 700.992-5039

HELP WANTED
Gall ia

Rush

Now ac cepling appllcallons ror
VIU IOUS &amp;hiltS lor lhe EldoradO

888-720·2'127 9 To 5 Eol. 1/2111
Thru 6/25m, EOE.

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern AYenue. GallipoliS.

$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochures ! Satl&amp;factlon Guarant8edl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro-

Quart canning jars, 740·9927537. '

Care fo~ Elderly

. liiMitw ,;,;,,

Cte11n late Mode l c.ara Or
True-s , 1990 Models Or Newer.

FloOr model color TV, works, 740992-7916.

2456.

323-1&amp;12.

FUll IN THE IIUN

2526.

110

Gou Comrnunlly. Print Two
Morning Newspapers 7 P.M. Until
2 PM. Shift . Comp11itiv1 P•y &amp;
Bentfill Call BtN Elderton . et2·

Tr1ve1 Tht U.S.A. In A Rock ·&amp;
Rol l Almoaphare , If 'four Atltaat
18, Free To Trave r &amp; Can Laavt
Immediately Call Michtlle , At 1·

Antiques. top prieta paid , Rtver·
lne Ant iques , Pomeroy. Onto.
Run Moore owner. 7•0-992·

Help Wanted

NEWSPAPER PRESS FOA{
MAN, Will Polnl, MilS Six-Unit

Cooldng Requ&lt;ed, 814.-5-5235.

· M.U . Coin Shop, 151 Second
A.-nut, GalipOIII, 7-2842.

9 mon. f)ld 112 doberman &amp; 1/2

rottwelter , very playful 304·576-

110

Ohio Fairs &amp; Fntivals July Thru
October , Steeping Quarter I
Transportation Provldtd. No

Alngt , Prt- 1930 U.S. CuHtncy,
Slerllno. Etc . Aoqols~lo!&gt;o Jewelry

lor Michelle .

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

Under New Mtpnl.

' FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 667o6t92

EttO

EMf\IL: ,

.

H&amp;H

740·99l-70.22 for .
flrther IRformttlon.

. Giveaway

Help Wanted

FOOO COIICES81Q1j

AbtokJie Top Dollar: All US. Sil·

.,., And Gold Colnt, Proofntl,
Dlamonclo. Anllque Jewelry, Gold

4 kiUens-- 2 young, 2 older. 740·
992·6805 or 740·992·4050, ask

''

THE MAPLES

Howard L Wrltesal

OUMPTRUCK .
SERVICE

985 4473

10'

to 10'x30'

c.u
TOM STOBART
to4•r tt

High &amp; Dry
Self~ Storage

7:00AM-a PM

Sl~lli' X

I ••

gui4elinea.

Now·RentiJil ·

,Hours

740-949•2217

'

11 o

90 Wanted to Buy

Wanted To Buy : 1973 Meigs

WEIGHT LOSS . I Lost 90+
Pounds In Months! I'll Help Vou
Reach Your Weight Lon Goalal
ToO Free 1!88-781 ·9e24.
.

5128191 1 rno pd.

40

ROIERI IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHomea
•Ga.._gas
•Complete
Remodeling.
· Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

(8) 23,30

..
fr

.oo

. Two t/2 Rott Weiler, 1/2 Black
Lab, 12 Weeks Old, To Good
Home,7~74.
·

2H70 Buhan ROid

'86 Ford Pic~up Tr~ck, bam
shaped storage building, table
.chairs, dresser, 1g• cok,red
TV, VCR, boat motor,' mirrors;
tr~nk, glassware,
&amp; much morel

• ' 'Danny Carr IJ:zternal Medicine Clinic

Quality clothing and household
items. S1
bag sate every
Th~rsday. Monday thr u Saturday.

3/11/99TFN

; AlCina, Ohio 45771 .

meet
HUD inc,;me

Ja•••
lee1ee II .
PH1 (740)992•2772

. 740.992-3470

Clinical !Associate

9 West Stimlan. Athens
700.592·1 842

Joe N. Sayre
740·742·2138

·JELF STORAGE

of~ge &amp;

•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing &amp;Seamless Gutter
•Replacement Windows
il(oncrete
•Room Addiffons eGoroges
•Decks &amp;Boot Docks

Lime•tone, Gravel,
Sand, FiU .Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

•'Bonnie Lieving

New To '100 Til! II! Shoppe

Reasonsbti Rates

HILL'S

MU.t· be 5o .......,...... ;

J &amp; · LInsulation
&amp; Siding

We Deliver

Lab Co-Ordinator

1·800·809·7721

30 Announcementa

Hauling
Umestone &amp; Gravel

UliUtiei
'' (740) ,992·3131 .
•

ProrJi(ty ApptfiHCI For:
$25,000.00
.
Property Addrua: 134 a.
5th St., Middleport, OH

WICKS
TRI·S1: ;IIOIIU ~
POWEi :wASH ,
"fiCILIHQ IHC.'

•"Paula Cqm1ingfiam

'Financial StcretQry

Business
Services

ALL INTERESTED TEAMS

Clinical Section :Head

'.

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
SepCk Syale"" &amp;

''

In Memory

Witfi extensive post graduate training in some of tfie best :Medical Institutions in 9reat 'Britain
and U.S. in all sub specialities of Internal :Medicine including Jfypertension, 'Diabetes,
Cancer, Infections, 'Disease of tfie Jleart, J:.ungs, :Kidneys, 'Endocrine 9lands, 'Blood, Joints,
'Elderly and Intensive Care.
·

•Sally 'Erwin

Your locally based hauler for residential,
commercial and industrial refuse
· removal. Serving Meigs County. with
state of the art equipment and 20 years
in the refuse industry. Call today to see
how much you can save.
·

TRUCKING

••

·,

s""'"'"'
! Houae ·&amp; Trailer Sites

P1,1bllc Notlci

'Board Certified in Internal .:Medicine
•'fellow !/tmerican College of 'Pfiysicians
• Jv'CI 'Trained .:Medical Oncologist

•Lisa Compsoh

I n

Bulldour &amp; Baelcltoe

r:=========T=========:-r-==;:::=======-r:=========J
Public Notice
Public Notice •
Public Notice

e

9uardian angels

.
........

'UCAYAnNG CO• .
.-•

Start Oallng Tonlghll Have run
playing 1l&gt;o Ohio DoUng Game, I·
BOO-ROMANCE . .._.., 9681 .

•

MEIOS COUNTY
·SHERIFF:S DEPARTMENT
104 E. SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OH 45769
SHERIFF JAMES M.
SOULSBY
EQUICREDIT
CORPORATiON OF
AMERICA PLAINTIFF.
vs

HaleshOncol~gistParelI OMD, FACP

Ell 9735.

SAYRE

HOWAlD

'

Birchfield rcu~ion Sunday at th e
RACINE - Annual Albert and ;
Community Buildin g in Henderso n.· A basket dinner wi ll he Eliza Hill reunion Sunday at Star:
HENDERSON.
W.Va .
se rved al n ~ um . Fami.ly and · Mill Park . Basket dinner at 12 :30'
Desce ndant s of Sam and Melvina · rricntls arc mvitcd.
p.m . .Farnily and friends 'invited."

Public Notice

'

START DATING TONIGHT !
Ht\111 Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·

fnfarmalion . 1-100-ROMANCE ,

(740) 843.. 1252

JULIE SPAUN

Personale

Dttl In Yout Atta. Call For Mort

53560 S. R 338
Portland, Ohio

invited . Evangelist Harry Wingler
of Coolville will preac h.

LEGAL NOTICE
Tha Budget of Letart
Township will be ovallablo
Public lnapecllon
POMEROY - Gospel concert,' tor
between Juno 23 &amp; July 2,
"Gather by the River" with the 1999, by appointment only
Earthen Vessels Saturday, 7-9 at tho homo of tho
p.m. at the Pomeroy Parking Lot. · Townahip Clark, Joyce
23238 Hill Rd.,
The concert is sponsored by the White,
Raclna, OH 45771 .
Pomeroy
United
Methodi st
The Budgll Heerlng will
.Church. In .the event of rain, the be held ~uly 5, 1999 at 6:00
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers concert will be held at the p.m. lollowod by' regular
at the townohlp
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Pomeroy
United
Methodist moellng
building.
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 Church, Second Street.
(6) 23 1TC
p.m . Name drawing will be held.
Public Notice
RACINE - Teaford reunion
REEDSVILLE -,. Riverview Saturday at Star Mill Parle. A bas. LEGAL NOTICE
Garden Club meeting Thursday, ket lunch will begin at I p.m.,
Salisbury
. 6:30 p.m. Potluck dinner at with a pool party at the London trueteoa will .holdTownehlp
a public
Belleville
Dam
Park
in Pool in Syracuse from 6:30 to hearing on the Budget tor
the Year 2000, 11 the
Reedsville .
8:30p.m.
Townehlp
Hall
at
Rockaprlnga,
Ohio,
6:30
POMEROY - Caring &amp; Shar- SUNDAY
,
p.m., July 2, 1999. Public
ing Support Group meeting
RACINE
Pomeroy-Racine lnvhed to llltond.
·
Thursday, 1-2:30 p.m. at . (he Lodge 1.64' F&amp;AM will honor its Richard Bailey, Clerk
Meigs Multipurpose Senior Citi- wives and widows Sunday, 2:30 (6)23, 30 2TC
zens Center. Guest speaker will be p.m. at the lodge hall on state
Public Notice
Karen Johnson from Rocksprings Routt 124 at ·Racine 's eastern corRehabilitation Center.
porinion line. Cake and ice cream
PUBLIC NOTICE
will be served. All Masonic widThe Motga .county
. ows invited.
FRIDAY
Agricultural Society deatlea
RACINE - Make-up day for
to receive aealod blda .for
Southern Local sports physicals
REEDSVILLE
Annual the garbage collection fo·r
Friday, 2-4·p.m. for boys and girls !liram-Hayman Reunion Sunday the 1999 Melga County Fair.
Tho Fair will be held Auguat
grades 7-12 a.t Dr. Hu.nter 's office. at Forked Run State Park shelter 16·21, 1999 at Pomeroy,
house no. two . A basket lunch will Ohio .. All aeatod bide ahall
be ' received In the ·
PGMEROY - Peoples Bank, be served at 12:30. All welcome.
·aecretary'a office, 42455
Pomeroy, will hold a hot dog
Wood a fload; Coolville, ·
lun ch Friday, Il-l p.m. with hot
MIDDLEPORT- Restoration Ohio on or before 5:00 p.m.
dogs , sauce, chips and drinks . and Renewal services at Faith .July 5, 1999. Tho Metga
Any donations will be used to Chapel in . Middleport through County Agricultural Society
help rai se money for the Relay for Wednesday. Services will be held raaervea the right to accept
reject eny or all bide.
Life.
at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sunday, or
Debbie Watton, Secretary
and Monday, Tuesday and · Molge County Agricultural
SATURDAY
Wednesday at 7 pAn. The publi' is Society, 42455 Wooda Road,
Coolville, Ohio 45723
(6) 21' 23, 28, 30

!For tlie.cart 'Uiitli
tow'./t.,
.
a toudi of~s lurfoellnBs,
a toudi ofprofossimuz!competma,

To plo• e onod(ull992 - 21sb

A,":~' Southern Ohio Disposal

-'-------'------,----Community Calendar:-.:---,-----'------.
SNOWVILLE
Snowvi'Ue
United Methodi st Church homecom in g Saturday, II a.m. There
wi ll be a picnic luncheon .

005

• •

ball teams, National Honor Society, and Choir. She is also a mem ber of the Trinity Congregational
Church of Pomeroy.
Her 4-H experiences have
included being an eight-year
member of the Pioneer 4-H Club,
summer camp counselor at Canter's Cave 4-H camp, president of
the Meigs County Junior Fairboard, 1998 4-H delegate to
Washington, D.C., .delegate to
Ohio 4-H Youth Expo, 1998
Meigs County Junior .Fair Queen,
district award winner for health
and safety, and has competed and
won "Outstanding of the Day "
awards at the Ohio State Fair sev-.
eral times.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

EEOIAAE~

2:29-8542.

~

.

IE FREE FROit BIIOKINOI 111'
Just 7 Days! First Time AvaUabtt· ..
In USA. B'e Smoke Free Wltti ·

i::.
b~r:~a~~~~~:~~'.:ra:: :
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EARN $90,000 YEARLY Ropolt·' •
lng, NOT Ropleclng, Long CroCiis,

In Wlndlhle lds . Free Vlt:lto 1M1 : ~
800 ·826·85:23 US /Canada .• • '"

www.glassmechar1ht.com

"' .; '"

�.

.

~

WednMday, June 23, 1999

Wednesday, June 23, 168

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

I ,

ALLEYOOP

PHILLIP
ALDER

Business
Opportunity
INOTlCEJ
OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO

Good seleclion of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrOOms Starttng at

$3995 Quick dell•ery Call 740·
385-9621

recommends that you do bu&amp;l·

ness with people ycfu know, and
NOT 10 11nd money through the
malt unlll you

h.a~•

invasllgated

lhoolloring
A Local Cigar Route Best Locallona, No Seiling Possible
$100 000 + Par Year Only Work
2 ·6 Hta A Wk Great Product, $0

Down 0 A C Coil 1·800 ·552·
2719, 24 Houfs

Own A Mobile -Based Franchise
That Fhces The Nicks /Scratches

On Cars Without Painting The
WhO le Car Low Investment
FREE INFO PACKETt 1-800 696

2376 X310
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 -20 Locations S&lt;4K -$10K

+IMo

tncom&amp; · All

CASH! 100% Finance Available
1~3&amp;0 ·2615.

24 Hrs

Banks And Financial Institutions
Earn 60% Of Their Profits Tradtng
Foreign Currency For Vour Free

Roporl Call 1-800·392· 0843
S5 000 Minimum Required
EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do TM Rest No Direct Selling
Free Information Package 1-800-

310·6745 Ext 27, 24 Hrs
For sale- thriv ing young florist
and gift shop, centrally located
Pari&lt;lng excellent Many ftne gtfts
Located In newty restored historical building Pnced to sell, 140·

843-5281
FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1·600·
731·1233 EXT 2503
Need A Loan! Try Oebl ConsolldatJon $5.000 · $200,000 Bad

Credit 0 K Fee 1·600·770·0092,
Ext 215
For sale· newly restored , two
story, historical brick bulldtng Located two blocks from the Ohio
River Perfect to start your own
business with ~eautilul living
quarters upstairs. Priced at

$114,000 7&lt;10·643-5261
Uh. Oh Bener Get 01 Course
It's MAACO The Name Synony
mous Wllh Auto Palntmg And Bodyworks MAACO Is Now AwardIng Franchise In Seie&amp;t Areas
Across The U S II You 'Want To
Be A Part 01 The 11 Auto Pamt·
tng Franchise In America CALL
TODAY 1·800-296·2226 Fran·
chise Development $65,000 Min
Cash Required www maaco com

220 Money to Loan
$$$ OVERCUE BILLSIII Consol&gt;·
date Oebfsl Same Da~ Appro11al

NO APPLICATION FEESII 1·800863-9006 Ext 936 "Member Better Business Bureau" www helppay-bills com

•••cradll Card Problems--· Debt
C'Onsolldatlon Stop Collecllon
Calls Reduce Payments &amp;
Finance Charges Avotd Baok·

1\.lllcy 1·600 270·9894
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Families, Unloading Mil·
lions To Help, Mlnlmtze Their
T8118S Wrlle Immediately WIND

FALLS 847 A SECOND AVE.
SUITE t350 , NEW YORK , NEW

VORK 10017
Bad Credit? Start Gelling Ap
proved For Credit And loans Tomorrow! MC Nisa In 7 Days 1-

800·546·8566 \
BANKRUP-TCY $79+ Slops Gar·
nlshmentsl blvorce $99+ Also
Foreclosure Avoidance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStart 1
888- 395 8030 www lreshstartu-

oocom

CONSOLIDATE CEBT Reducod
Month~ Payments 20 50% Savo
Thousands 01 Dollars In Interest
Non-Profit TCC 800-758-3844

CREDIT

New 1999 14x70 lhree bedroom,
InCludes 6 months FREE lOt rant
Includes washer &amp; dryer, lkln~ng ,
deluxe steps and setup Onl~
$200 74 per month with $1150

sex familial status or national

down Coll-aoo-837·3238

ong1n, Of any mtentl0f1 to

AERO.COLOURS

$~.000

All real es1ace actvertiSing In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fatr Housing Act.
or 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise •any preference
llmHatiQn or d•scrlmlnatl0f1
based on race, color, religion,

PROBLEMS? VISA

CARD -Guaranteed Approval •
No Credit Check • O%APR Ae·
qulrements 18+ US Citizen, Have
Checking Account. Phone Approval 1·800·737-0073 Issued By

MerriCI&lt; Bani&lt;. SLC. UT
FREE CA&amp;H NOW
From Wealthy Fam"IE!s

Unloading Millions To Help
Mlnlm1ze Jhelr Taxes
Write tmmec:tlatety
Fortune
1626 North'Wtloox A11enue
Suite 249

Hc&gt;lywood. CA 90028
FREE MONEY! It's True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500 $50,000 For Debt Consolidation,
Personal Needs, Medical Bills,
Education &amp; Business Call Toll-

Free HI00·72H047, (24 Hrs)
WANT A VISA CARD?? $12,000
Plus, Unsecured Bad /No Credit
OKI No Deposit Required Everyone Welcome! Call 1-800·285-

make any SUCh preference
hm•tabon or d!ScnmtnaiiOn •
Th•s newspaper wtll not
knowmgJy accept
adverttsements for real estate
whiCh Ism v~alation or the
law Our readers are hereby
1nfOI'TTlft(j that 81! dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

New Bank Rapo'a Onty 3 Left, 1·
800-38~2

Now 38R $481 down, $111
llonlh. Only Oakwood Homes,
Nitro, WV, (304)7$-58115
New Bank repos only 2 left we

finance cal 304-722-7146
Smgte Parents Program $498
Down, Limited Offer Call for details (304)155-7191
Take At 35 Not'lh From Gallipolis
For The Best Housing Deals In
Southern Ohio TECUMSEH
On At

Homes for Sale

4 Bedrooms 31 12 BathS, formal
LAlOR, Finished Basement Cus
tom Kllchen/ Cherry Cabmets!
Sunroom overlooking small Pond!

$189 900 (740)·441·5116 or more
lmlo , Leave Message Appr only!
7 Year Old 3 Bedroom Ranch
Homl!!l 2 Baths 281130 Attached
Garage. 69 1/2 Acres , Will Sell
AU Or House And Lot Metgs
County $150,000 For InformatiOn

Call 7&lt;10·992 3537
Beautiful brick 3 br hqme, on
to11ely acreage must see to appreciate 304-273·9485

Buy Homes From Sl 0 000
1 -5 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
Possible For Listings Call 800·

319-3323 Ext 1709
By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·
dlaport, house &amp; 3 lot&amp;, must see
10 appreciale will sell h0use ,w11h·
out lots lor $89 000. 740· 992·
2704, 740-992-5696
By Owner 111 From Elm New
Haven Byrs old 3/4BR, 3 Full
Bath Heatpump, 75% finished
lull-basemeMI 2Car Garage, Cov·

ered POrch (304)882·3240
Completely remodeled house, 4
bet1rqom, family room, living room 1
kllchen, utility room &amp; bath basement wllh bath, new carpet
throughout, central air, beautiful
view of ri11er. call 740 992-9012
appolntmenl only

HOMES FROM '$5,000. Fore·
closed And Repossessed No Or
low Down Payment Credit Trou
bte 0 K For Current Listing Call

1·800-311·5046 Ext 3372
HOMES FROM $5,000. Foreclosed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 K For Current Listmg Call

23, Chillicothe. Just Norlh Of Tho

(3041675·4808 or 675-3591
Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres, Vtllage Middleport,
secluded and private. appoint·
ment call 740-992 5696
l

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
t4Ft X 70Ft Nashua, 2 Bdrms, 2
Baths CIA, Gas Furnace~ Factory
Fireplace
$8 ,000 00. After

5 OOPM 740 379-2366
1972 Homelte t 21156 1 Bedroom
1 Bath, Kttchen, Appliances.
Great For Camping, Hunting
Work Or Storage, $2.500, French
C1ty Homes Point Pleasant WV
304·675· 1400

1980 m h , electric, two bedrooms
underpinning stove. refrigerator
new air condllloner $9500, 740949-2452 leawe message
1983 Schult 14x64 2 Bedrooms. 1
Bath, Kitchen Appliances 2x6
Foors, Central Air, Great Condition, $10,500 French City Homes
Point Pleasant WV 304·675·

1400

ani, WV 304·675-1400
1988 Redmond Danville 14K10
Also, Has Expando. Very Nice,

Must Selll Asking $14 ooo 740·
388-8335 '
1991 t4ftx721t Shingle Rool, VInyl
Siding,

Excellent

Condition

$16,500 00 (7&lt;10)440-6113
1992, 14x70. 3 bedroom, Redman
mobile home, heat pump &amp; sklrl-

lng Included, 740-742·2795
1895 141176 Only, 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths, Food Disposal, Dlshwash·
er, Vaulted Ceiling Llvlngroom,
Window Coverings, AU Electric,
CA, New Floor Coverings.

350 Lola 8r Acreage
55 Acres Frontage, Garfield
Avenue City Utilities , $49,000,
Send Response CLA825, cf ·
oGalllpohs Dally Tribune, 825
Third A".lenue, Gallipolis, OH

45631
16ACRES
READY FOR HORSES
In The Country, West Gallla
County, Lois 01 Meadow With
New Barns And Fencing, Ready
For Antmals l,ots Of Road Fran·
tage More Land A11allable Now
Divided Into 5 &amp; 10 Acre Tra.ct,
Take Both -15 Acres For
$27 500 Double Wldes Are Per
miltl!!ld 5% Down Land Contract
With Appro".led Credit Free

Maps 1·800-213-6365

1-888·582·~

REAL ESTATE

31 o

410

FrenChlown Apartments, Now
Accepting Application&amp; For 1
Bedroom, FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And HandIcapped, Equal Housing Opper·

2 Bedroom House in Eureka,
$275 00 plus Oeposll Plus Refer·
encesl Call {740)·384·2560
2·3 Bedrooms, $300 month De·
posit &amp; Aelerances, No Pets! Lin·
coin Ave Homestead Realty

(304)-675·5540

Furnished upstairs two bedroom
apartment , large living room &amp;
kitchen. nice and clean, 740-992·

3418
Furnished, Upstairs, Second
Avenue. No Pets, Utilities Paid,

port From $249·$373 Call 740·

448.Q008
One bedroom furnlahed apart-

Over

Payments,

applications lor t BR. HUC sub·
sldlzed apt for elderly and handlcajlped EOH ~75-6875

460 Space for Rent
90X125 MoblleHoma Lot Mason,
WV $90 00 per month, Includes

992·2167
2 Bedroom Trailer, Gallipolis,
Central Heat &amp; Air, Washer /Dryer Hook-Up Deposit, References

'

2 Bedrooms. $325/Mo + Ulllitlea,
No Pets. Central Air 740·446-

4313
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, CA, Stove,
Refrigerator Water, Trash Fur·
nlshed, Very Nlcel S3SO/Mo ,

Deposll, 74Q-386·9686
2 Bedrooms, Air Conditioning,
Automatic Washer, Water ln-

cludad, $325/Mo • Plus Ceposll
74().441·1238 740-441-oooo.
2 Bedrooms, All Electric, Newly

R o - . 7&lt;10·3&amp;7-Gell .
2 BR. Furnlohod, Fenced Yard w/
In

Gallipolis

Ferry,

SJOO.deposll &amp; S300 monlh rant,
2 references (304)675-4044
Two bedroom mobile home In
Racine, $325 month. we pay water sewer and trash 74b-992-

.

Apartments
for Rent

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Regrigerator Included, 740·446-

1 BR A/C, Near Holzer, 1st
Month Free WUh 1 Vr L1111,

I Hc1moo,

Nitro, WV. (304)7&amp;5·

Bed, Phone 1740-448·3596
Baby bed, Playpen, Swing, Car
Seat. Strolltr, Orasstng Table .

Candle CrNIIons,
838 Brick Slreol.
Ruland. OH 45775.
Condles 01 All Styles And Typos.
Will Do Refills Over 70 Varieties
Of Scents, Hours Monday -Sat·
urday, 10· 9, Sunday 1-5, Atso,
GelS!

Cobra 25 Clossls CB Radio, 150
Wan Linear. K-40 Ant. wfMagnet·

1c Baoo $200 (304)675- t 2&lt;10.

COOL DOWN
Central Air CondiUoning Added
To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
SySII'fiiS &amp; Furnaces. Heat
Pumps Cerllllad tnatallar If You
Don't Call Us We Both lose! 740446-6306, I·BOo-291.()096

Discount Mobile Home
Ports &amp; Supply
' Huge tnvenlory
Vinyl Skirting Kill $299 95, 5 Gol·
lon Aluminum Flbered Root Paint

$25.21 , 5 Gal White Rool Paint
$57 89. Anchors $5. Doors &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntertherm Miller &amp; Coleman Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps. Bennetts Mobile Home

Supply, 740·448·9416 Gallipolis.
Ohio

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
8ERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? Wo'H
Take Ill America'&amp; Moat Suc-

Mower And Sulky S550 740·245·
9589
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

plono Dr 741l-446-4!525
JET
AERATION M01URS
Repowed. Now 6 Aobull In Stock.
Coil Ron Evons, 1·800-537·9528
Matching couch &amp; choir. $25, big
bed, no manress, $25, 740-742-

2757

Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy call

Oulel Location. No Pate. $279/
Mo , PlusUW!IIt, 740-4411-2967.
2 bed'room apartmtnl In Mlddlt·
port, we pay water, nwer &amp; lrllh,

you pay gao &amp; oloclrlc. $200 per
month, $100 dopoalt. 740·992·
7806
2bdtm. apta , total tltctrlc. appliances furnished, laundry room
faCilities, ctosa 10 at:hool In tQWn
Applications available at· Vlllege

Groen Apll 149 or call 740·992·
3711 . EOH.

toma11c, electric wlndowt, electric

Shots! Wormed! $125 00 (740)·
258-e\62

seats, excellent condition, runs
good, tilt wheel, cruise control, 4

Wanted lo buy· canary or cana-

good !Ires, $1050.

ries. 74Q-742·2545
What's So Different About The

HAPPY JACK 3X PLEA COLIT

LAR?

WOBKSI

Against

flul, IIJ:I&lt;i. A MlW Wl!bou!
Systemic Poisoning. JD NORTH
PRODUCE
740·446·1933
(www hoppyjllddnc com)

570

Musical
Instruments

Baldwin Snare Drum Wllh Stand
&amp; Case, Stick• &amp; Pad Included,

Excollent Condition. $350 740
448-9555
Lonoy Amp, PL 50 roberb, $100,

M6JAU10
740-388-9693or7&lt;10 742-4510

P A Equipment For Sale, Like

Now Peavoy XR 1200 0 POwered
Sloreo Mixer Wlih 128 Dlgltol El·
rects On Board!! 4 Band Eq And
4 Awe Sends Per Ch 300 Walls

Por Chonnel 0 4 OHMS $750,
Peavey MD • 8 Stereo 8 Channel
Mixer With Reverb Stereo A-8

And Sum Monitor Outs, $200,
OSC -MX 700A Pwer Amp, 350

Walta Por Ch 0 2 OHMS $275,
(1) Poovey 15·10·H 3 Way
Spookor $150, (2) Fonder 2·15·H
Dual 15• With Horn Main Speak

ers Seoo Pr. (2) Poovey FH·I
Folded Horn Low End Cabinets
No Speakers, $200 Pr Contact

Mlck Al740-446-6616

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

pets Drive-a-little Save a Loti

(740)·388·0173 or (740)·446·
7444

MERCHAND ISE

510

I~C . F Freezer, New OU11!Ing. Ma·

chine 4 Collector Barbie Dolle,
RCA VIdeo Camera. Heavy Outy
Kltcnen Mixer, Nlkkon 6006·
35mm Camera wlaccesaorlea ,
BTC Computer w/t7• Monitor &amp;

Epson Prlnler (7&lt;10)339-1802
Air Conditioners, Used Different
Slzea, Guaranteed! 740-886·
0047
Appliances·
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers, Aariges, Relri·
gratora, 90 Daw Guarantee!

1990 Lumina Priced Salow loan
Value. $900 In Parts, 93,000
Miles $1 750, OBO 740-.(46-

1127
1990 Mercury Sable GS Sedan 8
Cylinder, Automatic, 4 $peed
Transmission, AM/FM Stereo
Tape, Air Bag, Air Conditioning,
Anlllock Brakes. Power Door
Locks, Windows, Drlvera Seat,
Cruise Control, Tltt Steering. Ga·

rage Kopt With 60,000 Mllu.
Asking $4,295, Coli 740·446·
4223.
1991 Chevy Lumina Euro&amp;port,

31 v-e. loaded, $3100 080, 740985-3510
1993 Geo Tracker 5 Speed,

Ex·

cellent CondHIOO, 74Q-245·9154
1993 Pontiac Grand AM, Teat,

H1gh Mlleoge, $3 500, 080, 740•388-8408
1994 Cavalier, 2 Door, Auto, AC,
$3 495, 1994 Corsica V&amp;, Auto,

AIC, Loododl $3,695, Cook Mo·
Ioili, 74Q.446-0103

French City Meytag, 740·446·
7795

Vlno Stroot, Coli 740·448·7398,
1·888-81fi.0128

Two 9x7 Steel Garage Doors.

Used Furniture /Appliances Off
Bulavllle Pike On Keeler Roed ,

740·448-4039. 740·446·1004
Call Any Time, Johnson's Used
Furniture

Whirlpool Wosher Hea•y Duty
$95; G.E. Washer $95 30' Eloc·
trlc Range $95, Dryer $75, FF
Refrigerator $150, Refrigerator

Like Now $350, 1 Velar Worronty,
Washer &amp; Dr.yer Like New $150

Each. Skaggs Appliances. 78
Vine Street, Gallipolis, 740·446·

7398

Antiques

Court, Golllpolls Coli 740·446·
9832, 740-446-4267.
Antique, Bottle, Advertising Sale
And Auction 6126th, 9--4 , Point
Pleasant Armory Quality Dealer~

Noodod, 740-992·5086
Buy or sen Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, on Rt 124,

Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
a.m. lo 8 00 p.m • Sunday 1.00 to
6:00 p.m 740·992·2526, Run

Moore owner.

540 Ml-llaneous

plus Lamps, 740-....,..274
Llko New. Non·lnsullaled 1 Sec·
tlon Glasa Tor Springs, $100

Eoch, Or Both $175, 740·446·
4514
Used Dell Computer For Sale,
Windows 3 t , 5 Ytara Old, Includes Harddrive, Keyboard I
Monitor, $200 For More Informs

don. Col 304-n3-5841

Wolerllno Special 314 200
$21.15 Per 100, 1' 200
$37 00 Per 100: All Bross Com·
prosa~ Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jockoon, Qtjo, 1-1100·537·9528
Weight Lilting Equlpmenl For
Sale $2600. (304)675-7758, A!Wr
!5PM

550

Building
Suppllea

Block, brick, sewer plpta, windows, lintels, etc Claude Winters.

Alo Grande. OH Call 740·245
5121.

560

Pats for sale

A Great Friend Toy Poodles

AKC, Vet Chocked, $300, See
Plrentl. 740·3-.
AKC Fomalt Lab Pupa, 1 Bllcfc. 2
V.llow. 9
Old. S300. ShOll
Starledl Excolllm Huntlog BlOOd·
llno, 7&lt;10 ue 0080

w-

Merchandise
'HOST FAMILIES NEEDEDIII'
Exchange Sludtn11 From Gorma·
ny, Japon, England, FntOCI, Auo·
ala. Brazil. Sludtnll Arrl'll In Au-

AKC lab Pupllfoo. Por1oc1 Time
Of YHr To ll'lln And Enjoyl 740·
3B7-oe59

gust To Attend Local High
SchOOl&amp; For Further Information,

AKC reg .mlnlture Dachahund

I·BOo-785-4983

304-G75-4001

I

I

'

1998 Merada Sport· t 3L Mer-:
cruiser. 1/0, In The Wettr 5;
Times, Like New, Many Exlrasla
7~24~391.
:
Gambler Intimidator 20 ft ball~
boat, dual contolea 200 hp.'
evinrude motor, fully equip.:
boUQht new In 88, uaed approx~
tmately 1Ohra. prlctd well under •

book 304-773-5996

l

'

J.S Marino Is loaded Up On&lt;
Used Trade Ins. Ready For Sale:

1979 26 n l'Nin Engine TIIIJnder·{
bird With Troller $12,$00, 1984 •
19 Ft. Concord Wllh 91 200 HP 1
Mariner With Trailer $S,500; 1981 ~
17 Fl Stralos Fish 6 Ski With •
115 Suzuki &amp; Tlalllr $4,000; 111114 '

24 Months 3 75% 38 Months.

Co«s.Loodod. 74CH882-7512.

760

lrrl{lallon Reel Machlno, Includes
Reel,

e•

Intake Aluminum Pipe

A~d Coup~rs.

PTO Pump lnclud·
od $14.000, Please Col 304-9254753
Locust base post $2 25 each or
500 or more $2 00 each 304-882·

32451 304-882-20n

1998 Pontiac Trans -Am, Fully
loaded! .Price Reduced to
$22,500 00 Great Graduallon

Glftll (740)-446-4548.

StOfllgo 8Uikllll Spoco.
30'x40'x8', Painted Slael Siding,
Galvalume Steel Roofing, 15,x8'

door, 3' wolk door, 16.688
Eroctodllron Horse Builders 1·
(800)·352·1045
See The New John Deere 200
Series Skid Steer Loaders, 7 .!I%
JOC Financing, Carmichael's

81 Chevy Truck 112 ion, 80 Ford
1/2 tone Plck·Up. 85·Pontlac

Auto (740)·448·3243.
s.aopm.

altar

88-Ford Aeqrstar Van · $2000 00
Automatic Good Shape! 93- Gao
Metro. 90
miles. Factory
Warrant! 11700 00 Firm! 94·Geo
Metro· t 20,000 miles, Good Work

ooo

Old Motorc~cles Motorscooters,
Motorscooter Parts (Cushman
preferred) Contact D Mitchell,

5588 80th PI No Plnollos Pork.
FL 33781, 72H6H4Q8
Livestock

-4 Arabian Mares One 10 Year

Old Mare 112 Quarter. 112 Mor·
gan, lnstallmanl Plan For Horses
To Good Home, 25,... Down, Af-

fordable Rolos, 740-368 8358
45 Acraa Good Pasture, Good
For 35 Head, 5 Miles From Holzer

Hospital, AI. 180, 740·388·994e

pounds, Aepos &amp; Tax Seizures

For llsllngs CALL NOWI 1·800·
319·33231&lt;2\!ie.
Factory Wheels, Alloy, Rally,
Steel Buy Sell Acker Wheel 1•

800·994·3357

Worlds

Moll

Complete Inventory. www.ackerwheelcom
Seized Cars From $500 Sport,
Luxury, &amp; Economy Cars, Trucks,
41t4's Utllily &amp; More For Current

Llsllngs Coli 1-800·311-5048 Ext.
1163

720 Trucke for Sale
1982 Ford F·350 $2.300 060,
Has New Reese Hitch, Very

Laying Hens, 3 momh Old Arau·
cona PufletA 740-256-1815

Tough I 740·245·5947. 740· 703·
7778

AOHA yearling s1ud coli, sorrel.
while blaze. legS. good bloodlines,

1987 Ford F-250, 4x4, 6 9 dltsel
(lood Sheptl $5,000 OBO (740)·
368·6743 Alter 5:00pm

$1100 740·593·2288 days or
740·992- 7300 evenings/wee·

kancls.
Chlctlent, 3 Months Old 13 00 A

Piece Ducks 3 Month• Old, $6
APioct, 74Q-258-1233
Outstanding Angus Anct Chiaogus Bulls, Reasonably Prlctd,
Slate Run Farms, Jackson, Ohio

1987 Toyota SR·5 extended cab

4•4 pick up wl ullllty bed esklng
$3,800 080 alter 6 30 pm.304·
675-1414
1990 Chevy Silverado. 1989 Ford
350 t Ton Flatbed, Vtry Good

Shope, 74().446-8189.

7&lt;10·286-5395

1992 Dodge Dakola, 4 Wheel
Drl11e, 4 New Tires, Good Condi-

Reglltered Angus, eight cow &amp;
calf pairs, eight. 1 &amp; 2 year old
htller1, e11celltnt bloodlines, r•O·

tion, $8 ,000 . OBO (304)675·
7133

742·3033

Registered miniature horse&amp;,
good blood lines, !5 mares, 3 stal·
nons, 2 mares are bred back.

74().742·2050.

640

Hay

lc

Grain

Round Bales of hay for sale,

386.0148

$20 00 out ol the flold. (304)782·
2540

730 Vans 8r 4-WD•

Square Bales of Hay For Salt.

1979 Ft50 4114 E11tended Cab,

TRANSPOfHATION

Above Averr~oe Condlllonl (740)·

351·M engine, asking $1100,
74Q-948-3221.
1985 Chevy Van 350 Automatic,

740-258·1631

710 Autos for sale
'94 while Grand Prl• SE Coupe,
167o0. 740-992·2939
CARS $100, $500 I UP. POLICE
IMPOUNDS. Honda'l Toyoto'o.
Chevy&amp;, JHpl, And Sport Ullll·
111~ BOo-772-7470, EXT 7632

a

1994 GMC Jimmy SLS, loadod,
4DR , Excellent Condlllon. High
Mllao $9,400 Coil before 9PM.
(304)675-7946.

\l.Jf\~1:, ~

~ts

OIN·DI~?

BIG NATE
WELL, THAT'!&gt; NOT A

REAL DOG., 'li:&gt;U SEE .
THAT'S A POOCLE

1999 Cargo Mala 24 Ft Encloaocl ,
Car Trailer, Loaded, White With ,
Hllch, $5,400, 74Q-446-3005, AI· •
tar 6 P.M
'
·:

POODLES DON'r COUNT.

.,

Budget Priced Tranamltslont
and Engines, AU T)'Ptl. Acc111:
To Over 10.000 Transmlaslone •.;
Jolm~

eve
74o-24S.58n
--------.
Fiberglass cover fila chevy fuJ~

size shon bod trur:1c $350.00 304-';
..,.n..:3-..:53.:.1..,.4..,.1e..:ave;.:...mos..:.:.s..:ago::;,;__ _ _ ·'
New gu lanka &amp; body parts. 0 L •
R Auto, Ripley, wv. (304)37~·,
3tl33 or I·BOo-273-9329.
,

..·.

Campers lc
MotorHomea

790

27 Aluminum -

command

(2 wc:le.)

51 tau a bruth
54 Taunta
55Expnll.cl
56 Wl!lrtpoola
57 Concert cry

(building
111818rta1)
29 Unclaimed mall
DOWN
dept.
31 CorMdiM
1 Devil
O.LUIM
2 a-netrlcal
32 Romanlhrw
nne

3 Lucky cl!arm
4 Fraaler'o

network (abbr.)
5 Hint

Weat

North

Easl

P88s
Pass

24
36

Pass

Pass

P...

•'

PLAVER WJ.IO IS
WEAKEST DEFEN~IVELY
PLAVS R16J.IT FIEL.D..

1978 321t MotorHo.me 37,000'
original miles O.nan Generator.•

Double Aool AC (Ice cold), Ml-:
c;:rowave, full kitchen, color TV,•
Bathroom,Shower, 5 beda Very!

28 Give

medicine to

30 Sllc"34 Paid, aa • bill
35 Group of nine
Santa'•

38
38:,

3ti..Ma40Angry

42-ot

'"c.

Mit:"'

8Ae

53 WMt clrlnt&lt;an
My

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

r.nou.

c.ietHtty ~ ~·.,.. ... CfMMd from qo&lt;tatlllill by
J*lPie put and ~
E«tt
In !he cipMf stantt. for anolhlr Todly'l dtA N fHIUM W

'FBRPJWG
HCT

PLHIFLR

CHPIJCR

JCIL

PFLG

FHSL

h

Pbono.;
•

..

'
~~--~~--------.•
110
Home
••

and

'::~::~' S©ll~lA--lGt.~s·
lAIII
POUAN __..:..,_________
WOIO

ltll!otl

CLAY I.

~y

O lour
Rearrongo lolllln of
ICRimblod words

1fte
below to falm f011r llmple wordo

I I~ i i

LIL Tl 2

llloi~atJI.

r

I

I

--r.iY-'AT--"'-R
ri'N'-OT-i,
.....'"::,,
5
16

One woman to another " I
have no trouble finding a barr------~--.-.., ga1n but lots of trouble findmg
A CRY T
a use - -- It -- --- - •

1•

•

•

•

I

,, F
I 1
8 I
e
I' I--'·'-...&amp;.
.
...,....1.--..J

Comple•· •h• chuckl. quorod
by flllcng •n lho mowng -d•
you dr.eloo from lloo No. 3 below

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

Evolve- Nudge - L1mbo- Jaunty- MOVING

"'" ..,.,. wrlh lito drmi(rds

'It's never so much where we stand," granny lectured,
"but 1n what d1rect1on we are MOVING •

JUNE 23.l

·•
'

Unconditional llfeUma guarantH.;. •
Local raferancea furnlahed Ea- ;
~

l

•

Appliance PerW And SOrviCI ...,.

Ei-..
~

perlenct All Work GuiJanttttll)l

French Clly Maytag, 740·441"'
7795
••1
CIC General Home Main·
tenenco· Paln!lng. vinyl okllftO,

•

ASTRO·ORAPR

#

mobl~ home
onc1 more. For
froo esllmale call Cbtt, 740-882·
6323
LiVIngston'• Baaement Water
Prooflng, all banmtnt repalra

'

Bulld ntw ctr rapelr oltl, no )ob1
too email or large. Major credn

cordo
IWV0295f2
Call'
(304)458-1049. BP 15218012. ;
I

"PIPE' DAYLIGHT INOOOIIII
Brighton Any Botting Na!unlly';'
Kl1chonl, Hallwaya, la1hroom•F
Lllio A Bright Colflng FIRhrrw, lui•
Wllhout Electrlcllyl The Original •
8UNPIPI. • Binet 19&amp;1. Fret
Bcccbtn. UIOO IU 4"118112l!.

•

..

1
or " " " ' - w1r1na1

Rt~ldomlal
-ctnstd
- lltctrlclan.
or ropalca.-RldtnDur
Ill "
Electrical, WY0003011, 304·175- •
17811

1

HVVH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION· "Summer Is a promissory no1e Sl!lned rn June
due to be repaid next January."- Hal Borland

--~--~~~~----~1
BASEIIINT
,

Ao--

HE E

LVHC

IWEDNESDAY

SERVICES

""'lr

LIIFHYRPLT

You'R build o bf ne11 &lt;rt wiiM

~

carpentry, doors, windows, bllhl,

NBRLEG

SCilW LETS ANSWERS

Bear Run Rood, $15,000,
Call 740·441·1203. 740·«1-;;

Nome 8roncll &lt;Mr 25 ~an

YLFHSL

ZLC

P F H P

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

vate Lot 50'x100' Central Air~
Heat, Water, E'*«:1r6c, Sewer, On •

labllilhrld 1975 CaN 24 Hr1 (740)
446·0870, 1·800·217-0578 R&lt;IU·
er&amp; Waterproofing.
:

YR

HEPLWCHPBSLR.'

J PF L W

L-..1.--...L.

OOM6E5T PLA'f'ER
ALWA'f'5 PL~S
f1.16t.IT FIELv

--

lcnow
110 Yin
52~-of

0

WATERPROOFING

tJp ancla&amp;out

Going by
horae

2t Fluent

Opening lead: • K

_s7....soo:-:':-(304-.:.16_7_s._6110;.:...1_ _ _ _ ;
8'x38' Furnished Compar On Pr~'

Improvements

Tlllllhlllfl'l

em-

Paaa

good condi11on, dependable, ,

4348.

7 HMrtl!
"Norma-"

•
g
10
11

22 Famelea
24Sklnproblem

P88s

~e SAV5 THE

TRADITIONAU.V, T~E

• Ll!8rely
compoaltlon

12 Arorni
18 Fllmd~

PEANUTS

'.,

1994 Explorer, 6 Cylinder, .t
Doors 4x4/ Ak', Brand New Tow

Packago Runo GrooU $15,500
080, 74().245-51 00.

ONION~!

L'"' f.l&lt;:ltY,t !

Acceaaorlel

441-1401

65 Ford Plck·Up F·150. Shorl
Bod. 300, 6 cyl 4sp 96,000 mitt,

(304)675·!!072

Auto Parts

1993 S·IO Plck·Up Tahoe pock· dono, IToo 1111mateo. llltllmo
age, PS, PB, Air, 2 6V8, 5Speed. • guaranlee. 12yrs on job e~parl·
Toolbo•. 60K Miles. $5500 onoo. (304)885-3887
(304)675-1240
M&amp;R General Contraotlng •~
1897 Dodge Diesel 1 Ton, 4x4 Eleclrlc, .Corpon1rv. Porehll,
Ram 3500. Aoklng $25,000. CoM Trailer Soi·Upo, And Air Condf.l
Uonlng, Also, Molntonance, 74Q.,
alter 4 OOpm (740)-441 0996

Lorge Round Bales $20 A Bale.
74().245-9047.

"uvc:tt ~D

'(00-~oo, (:,(,W'&lt;~!

HP Evlnrude WHh Trailer $3,500; ~

1995 Z-28 Camarro, T-Tops,

1996 Chevy Ce•allor, Z·24 Aula,
A C . P W • P D Loci&lt;, SunRoof,
C.D P~r (304)773-5117

TH£ BORN LOSER

Wellcraft 18 Ft With 4 Cylinder ·!

1995 Buick LeSabre Custom, 4

Ooero Round Balers. Mower Con·

630

Lane green and brown plaid
queen-slze sleeper. witt'! Bassett
coffee table and 2·End Tables,

:~~~! :r~;.:~r;;~.~~·~.~~~r1·

1er 5 pm. 304-4511-2047.

ditloners, 0% 12 Months. 2.75%

NH851, Round Be .. rs. New John

maceullcals NOW For Informa-

Washers, dryers, relrlgeralora ,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

hOnda ,bOat has bathroom, ll'lltab

1976 Sllngroy 18 Ft 4 Cylinder '
With Trallor $2,500, 740·251 ~'
8180

Crodll Approval, JC1219. JD720.
NH474 NH469, NH488 Hayblno,
J0335, NH630 NH650, MF1560,

1994 Cavalier 2 Doors, Automat·

.-.....

48 Army

9

Well , there are some plays at the
bndge table thai remmd one of lemmmgs, and all 100,000 who make
them are wrong I
You are m four spades. The
defenders begm wuh three rounds of
dtamonds. After ruffing, how would
you contmue?
South's two-spade reb1d prom1ses
at least a St&lt;-card suit. W1th only five
spades , Somh ought to be able to
show another su1t, ratse partner, or
reb1d tn no-trump (Never rebid in a
ftve-card sutt unless you have nothmg else sens1ble to qo) So, North's
ratse on a doubleton ts recommended.
South can afford one spade loser•
but nol two There ts a natural incltnauon to lead the queen (or JaCk) for
a hnesse No problem tf 1he five
'mrssmg cards are dtvtdtng 3-2, bu1
what happens when lhere IS a 4- 1
hrcak wtth a stnglc10n kmg? Then,
lakmg the fmesse condemns declar·
er to 1wo 1rump losers, whether Wesl
covers or East scoops up the trtck
wnh lhe sttfi monarch
The nght play rs low to dummy·s
ace When the kmg appears , declarer clmms, concedmg one spade lnck
But tt the kmg doesn ' t drop, Soulh
conunues wrth dummy 's remarmng
spade and hopes for a ' -2 spltt
The key gutdelrne rs to lead an
honor for a finesse only tf you are
happy -- and wtll al worst break even
•• for Ihe next opponentlo cover wtth
the htghcr mtssmg honor Here, when
West covers the spade queen wnh hts
smgleton kmg. 11 coSIS South a lnc k .
makmg the play mcorrecl

1996 24 n.Pontuno boa\ w/90 ~.:

1994 Geo Prlzm Auto, PS,PB,
Sunroof. 70,000 miles. (304)675·
2039. $5995 080

June Used Hay Equipment Sale
4 9% Financing With John Deere

Condlllonlng, Loaded $3 695,

Actor
41 Grlddora • org.
47 Crow'o

can 't be wrong. "

:

lc, Air ConciKionlng. $3,495. Cook
Motors. 74Q-44&amp;-0103

Farm Equipment

43...,. sn-

u

By Phillip Alder
Back m 1975, thts graffito was
spoued tn Balltol College, O&lt;ford :
" One hundred lhousand lemmmgs

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1995 Kawasaki 900 ZXI Jot Ski;
Ttalter Included. Very Low Hour~ ~
Excettenl Condhlon. $4,500, OBO.

Wllh Trailer $6,800, 080, t988 ,
18 Ft Bolo With 4 Cylinder &amp; •
Trailer $3.500; 1977 21 Ft. :
Checkmate. 4 Cylinder 6 Trailer •
$3,000: 1990 18 Playtime Wllh 88

610

1994 Corsica V·6, Automatic, Air

21 f'lll!l wltl!

periiCIII

41W-' aMn.

The no-win play
that appeals

call740-446-17.t1

620 Wanted to Buy

Solo Chair Rocllnor, nlcel S225 oo
(7&lt;10)-4411-2185

,

NGW••LET'S TRY SWEEPIN'
OUR BOOKS BACK IN II

7&lt;10·949-2636 or 740-949-2045

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS. FEN·
PHEN ALTERNATIVE TR~PHEN.
GUARANTEED 100% SAFE
JUST RELEASED TO THE PUB·
LIC ONLY $2495 • 1 Monlh Buy
2 Months Gel 1 FREE I AS SEEN
ON TV CELLASENE, H·VIA·
GRA Available Call Unllld Ph8r

Sausaga. Ham, POrk ChOps, Hole
Hogs For Your Freezer, 740·2459047. 740-386·6466

nice $2,800 call 304-675-3624

THANKY FER SWEEPIN' OUT,
JUGHAID

1990 Cougar, high miles~ runs
great, looks good, V-6, $2100,

CARS FROM $500111 Pollee lm ·

tion I ·800·733·3286 COD'S I
PRE·PAY /CREDIT CARDS

'

1997 Yamaha Banshee 350 4 1
whetllr wfrwarse etec. atart, real~

condlllon $2,500 (304)675·71?2.
After6PM

Cor $1,000 00 (740)-441·0583

2123

Household

'

14 01 medlc:IM
111nfwtt
11U...
17 Nothing
11 ClrMIIHpecl
20 on.n..

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: South

AM!FM Cauetta wlequallzer.
S~nroof, 204,000 mll&amp;.a, good

Farm &amp; Lawn. Inc. 1·800·594·
1111, Gollipc&gt;~. OH We Oell'llrl

Promotion Call now 1·888·265·

862·3236

~Chqod

•AK

1989 Mazda 626 LX, 4Dr, 4 cyl ,
2 2L. Automatic, AC. PW. POL.

excellent condition, 740 992·

3342

• J

:

tock In deferential. Ukt new,.
used only 10 hra $2,900. 304:

t A 7 6 2

• IO 54
6QJ75t2
'f K J 3

1997 Honda CR 80, 11800. 19i4
Kawooakl lloyuu 300 4x4, $3200, :
FZR 50CC spo!l bike, $1000, I ~ ,
pu1 behind flnlst\ mower, 44" cut, '

,:::~
,,..__

male

., 7 4

~to Ptwla • PuD:te

34W-.
37811.--

25 UnHCorl..t

South

'

1989 Dodge Dynasty. 3.0 V·8 ou·

~ock

Mollohan Corpot, Room Size Car·

Sporlster, $7000, call 740·9e2· '
4572 evenings or 740·H2·3812 ;

4

3SSIIdll( -.)

1 Eunpun

lworda

• 10 8 8 3

• K
910652
t K Q 10 3
• Q9 8 2

1200~

1'50: cau 7.eo-&amp;43-M50

~

ACROSS

23 "C«tatnlyl"
24 Held In

• J 763
East

West

$650 OBO And 1&amp;e6- 2!10;
Foprlrax Good CondiUon, NMds~
Minor Work , $1,200 080. 740· •
388·8823 Allor 4 P.M.
;

1987 Kawasaki 300 Bayou ATV.-'

$250,740-448-8415.

Good Maytag automatic washer,

• 8

Rtglaltrtd Toy Rat Terrier, fe·
male, 7 weekt, Paper trained!

Sq Ft + Trim, Aluminum Facia

$115, 74().992·5907

1987 Toyolo MR·2 5 ap. sporl

• A 6

bike, Looks Good; Runs Good."

dayS

08-13·"

9AQ9B

coupe. moon roo1 $2 .200 OBO
304-67S.1.tt4 after 8 30 pm

Dutch Lop White Vinyl Siding 8

LOADED PENTIUM
COMPUTERS Poor Credit O,KI

578·2092

Nortb

740 MotorcyciM
"1982=-,Suz-&lt;*l,-,.,RS=1~75,..;,'=2"!Str~~...
~Dfrl-::::"~

Puppies. $150 Eoch , All COIOII
Ready To Go I 740-388-0583

Making Body Lotions 6 Shower

sowoge (304)773-5214

Goods

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740-

7104 Altere ~M

as S4H. lnlerell •• low u I.H

Antique Matching Dresser And

1985 Buick T lypo Regal. dlgllal
dash climate conrrol, h)'p&amp;r18Ch
chip $6500 30"·675-2714 01' 304

1987 Cougar, runs good &amp; looks
good, $1495. 7&lt;10·992·2854

for Rent

4BR, 2BA. $499 Down. A88umo
Pay111anto of U39 mo (304)755·
5580
.

Limited time only at Oakwood

Pounds Easy, Quick, Faat
Dramalic Results , 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam-

Prlmntar- hw DlrecTV Summer

304-ll75-1400

Clearance &amp;ale All Dlapla~a
Must Go OownPayments as tow

Regiatered Australian Shepherd,

1965 Bulcl&lt; Aogel74().256-1631

trrllrance ATP 125 Bellows Drive

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting

9342

1 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment In
Syracuse, $2501Mo , Deposit &amp;
References Required. 740·992·

_736-_3409
_ _ _ _ _~-

AMAZING
METABOLISM
Breakthroughlll Lose 10·200

a;

1971 CJ7 Joop Htrd1op,
Speed. Phone (304)875·2039 ••
$2500. 0110
'

1989 Harley Da¥tdaon

Gravely Walk Behind With 30•

740-385-4367

See At New Schutt Home Center,
French Cit~ Homes, 3411 Jack·
&amp;on Avenue, Point Pleasant WV

$238/Mo., ($23,9U19%/15 112
Yr&amp;) Toll FfH I·BOo-945-3040

$75.00 each . Call before 9PM
(304)675-7946

319-3323-Exl 4420

Loaded Asking S12,000 00 Coli
After 4 00 PM 740-+41·0996

House lor rent 1- Bedroom.
$300 Month $250 Deposit 2Relerencea No Pets! (740)·446·

2583

menta, UmUeCI Time, Oakwood
Homes, Barboursville, WV, 304·

191M 20 Ft. Gooseneck Traner.
740-379-2351

Pollee lmpoundt, And Tax
Repo's For Listings Call 1-800·

Lown. Inc 1-600·594·1111, Golll·
poi&amp;, OH We Doll'll~

4 Bedrooms. All Electric, A/C,
$500/Mo Plus Deposit, 740-3677802

1999 Schull 28x&amp;4 4 Badrooms, 2
Beths. CLN. Flreptaco, 2x6 Wols,

llol.o().W ().IJ.T

Rat· Terrier
,Puppies.
Tails
Docked. 111 shots, wormed

11180 ·IHO CARS FROM $!1011

423-5967, 24 Hours

Antique Iron Baby Bed, Vintage
tamps, Hand Cratled Shades &amp;
Morel Collectora Closet, 3rd,

Take

8194

Limited time ofler, caU 1-800-779-

1019

Proloct Car. $1, 500 (304)675·
1038

River Bend Place accepting ap-

plications now lor 1BR HUC Sub·
sldlzed apt lor elderly &amp; handl·
capped E 0 H (304)862·3121

deposit raqulred. no pals. 740·
992·2218

(304)875-8165

ten•. variety of cotors. 740 742

1971 Opel GT Great Condition
$2 ,500 1971 Cha".lelle , Good

4 75% 48 Months, 5 5% 60
Months, Carmichael's Farm &amp;

1996 Claylon 16x80 A c . 3BR,
Nice

CFA Regl1tered Himalayan kit-

11" OlrocTV Sl10111to Syo-o·
$69 oo. $100 ot programming.

304-ll75-5812.

cessful Campground And Timeshare Resale Clearinghouse Call
Resort Sales lnternallonal t-eoo-

Mobile Home Lot For Rent· Relar-

· 420 Mobile Homes

Sell\ Only SIOO, OBO, 740·245--

1970 Pontia c lemens With 350
Rocllot Motor, $800, C.N Alter 5,

mont In Mkldloport, call 74Q-992·
5304 alter 6pm

530

$292

3430

1 BOo-52Q-63&amp;4 • •

ences Required, 7.a-258-t922

Garage,

9239

tunlty740-448-4639

1 and 2 bedroom apar1mentl, fur·
nished and unfurnished, security

pearlng Antelope, Wild Horus,
Great Speculation I $195 On 1

From Gatlipolla. CA Bum In 1991,
$116,000 Neg 740-379-2835

4425

Windows, Cock. $18 900, 740·
256 6980

$499 Down All Slngloa. $999
Cown Doubles. Super Low Pay·

Acres, Count~ water, 11 Miles

Houses for Rent

125 Ttilrd Avenue, 1 Bedroom,
Available 7/15199, No Pets, Utili·
ttes Not Included $320/Mo 703451-2591

Vinyl Siding Shlngla Rool Steel

1f0 ACRES WYOMING. Llmlled
Supply At ,Prices Soon Dlaap·

Sq Fl 24•48 Garage Shop, 16

For Lease· One Bedroom, AC
Apt Corner of Second and Pine
$250 00 per month, plus UUIIIIas
Plua Security and Key Oeposttl
Reference Required (740)·446·

360

RENTALS

Deck 1 low Hours, Good Condi tion Cell after 5 pm (7o40}-44a

740-742-2512

For lease One Bedroom, AC,
Apt . 328 Second Ave . $250 00
Per month Plus Utilities. Security
depoatt and Key Deposit required! Reference Necessary!

Storledl Champion Bloodlines!
Ctll (7&lt;10)-31111·8152
CFA Persians 1 Male, I Female
Both Spade &amp; Neutered. Must

quired, 740-+41-11952

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo., 740-

Wo Poy Cash 1·800·213·6365,
AnthonylondCo

All

11 HP Simplicity Lawn Mower.«'

rooms, Flom $275 ·$350/Mo , So·

3516

We Buy Land 30 -500 Acres,

Cabinets.

(304)675-4548

74Q-288.Q081

Doors, 2x6 Walls, Tnermopayne

Homes for Sale

3 Bedroom Ranch Home, 1850

440-9539

NICe 2 bedroom apartment In SyJacuse, $200 deposit, $285 per
month Includes trash, 740·667·

230

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml

All Electric, Ideal For Senior Persons, No Grass To Mow, No
lawn, First F'oor, For An Ap·
polntment To VIew, Phone 740·

Both And Gel Discount Great
Huntmg Land Full Of Dear Has
Road Access To Wayne National
Forest Land Contract Available

Real Estate
Wanted

Kitchen

ples Coll7~1·1962

DOWNJOWN APARTMENT
FOAAENT

992-5064 Equal Housing OpportuniUes

440

TUIINEO DOWN ON

Christy's Family Living, apart·
menta, home &amp; trailer rentals.
740·992.-.4514, aPartments avail·
able, rumiShed &amp; unfll'niShed

,
2 ·20 ACAETRACTS
For Only $22,000 Each Toke

1995 Dutch Mobile Home, 14x70

anteed Work I

Equal HousllQ Opportunity

$30,000 OBO. 74Q-643-5462

3588

Clean at (304)875·4040 Guar·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, !52 Westwood Drive
lrom $279 to $358 Walk 10 shop
&amp; movies Call H0-446 2588

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Ri~erslde Apartments In Middle-

$19,000, 74Q-448-7880.

The complete CiBanlng service
Carpet, Upholstery, Walls, CeilIngs, and also Power Washing
For a frea eattmate call Clearly

$325 00 Month, Call (740)·448·
4859

7&lt;10·256·9523

Ohio River frontage, MeiQS Co., 8
acre with older mobile home.

503S

Professional
Services

Apartment tor Rani , 1Bedroom,
tBath , Central Air, Applicants

(7&lt;10)-4411-2325

Required, 741).446-0693
1986 Clayton 14x70 2 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Gas Nordyne 36M 10
Steer Gas /Electric Package,
Heat /Air, Spacious Interior,
French City Homes Point Pleas-

Apartment for ftnt In MfdcUeport,

curlty Deposit, References Re-

Aepo Doublewlde Save Thousands! 1·800.383-6862

B&amp;T Coonhound 2 !"'all old. woH

WOOd Moytag waaher (304)6755162

And Ask For The CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION Information By
cate On A New Home

$50 00 EliCh. (740)-4411-1142
12Ft

First Avenue One And TWo Bed·

Mail Including A $1 000 Certifi-

10 Window Air Conditioners,

Nol0icl'en.740-44&amp;-24n.

At 35 /Rt 23 Interchange. Call
Toll Free Number, 888-443-7421,

1·800-311 5048 Ext 3665
By Owner E11ceilent Location
Very Attractive Price $80's
Please Call From 6 to 11 PM

2 Rooms &amp; Bath, $225/Mo., In·
cludea Utlllllea, No Kitchen , 1
BeclnJom &amp; Bath
UtiiiUel.

no poll, 740-992·5858

Redman
Homes AndExclusive
BEST HOMES,
Ex~~~~~~=~~~~ IHOMES.
clUSive Dutch Are Located

310

1-

AKC Regiltlfld YelloW Lctb Pupa
Shots &amp; Wormed Ready 4th Of
Jti!y. 74().~ 63'111

'•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRJDOII:

ThUrsday, June 24, 1999 •
Do CVC1J11hing possrble in lite•
year ahead to mam1ain cordial rela1\onships wi1hrn your social ttrcles,
6ecause good lhings &lt;ould happen 10
you through those you know on a fel·
lowship basis
•· CANCER (June 21-July 22) False
l!ltnts of en1hus18Sm &lt;realed for the
purposes of prefehdlng to go aluna
with the crowd may only cause drsblptions 1n act1v1t1es w1th fnends

1ooay Be sl~re rn your partictpa· '
1,1~n Know where lo look for
romance and you 'II find it. The
Aslro-Graph Matchmaker mslan!ly
ff,•eals which 'igns tllC romanlically
pc;rfec1 for YOCI· Mat I $2.75 to Ma1ch·
~er, c/o lhis newsfaper, P.O. Box
1758, Mu'l'tr , Htll Sllllion, New
Ybrk, NY 10156
LEO (July. 23-Aug 22) If you
hope lo ,., tny1hing done ,today, try
lo OIJBft1ze your hours. Poor schcdulina will &lt;auie you much needle,.
WfSie of lime lhat could he dev01cd
to n•eantttJf~l cndcuvors.
VIRGO tAuy. B ·Scp1 221 You'll
ho· lnll&lt;ol oh,ut la1er if you dnn·1

own best

shm\ ,, '' ilhng:ness to rec•procnrc in
kind 1odoy wi1h lncnds who 1rea1 you
in a generou• fashron They'll thtnk
you rc JUSt ll taker ,
ognnt,

wasteful

spcndmg

extremely select1ve

could
dis·

rloguc ynu unless you cxcrctsc

.rplin&lt; rn your huymg huhits Whnt
1.:\luld add to the msult I!' that yuu
\\cm ·t C\CII feel gratified tty the end

"I I he doy
SCORPIO (Ckt 24-Nov 221 The
trtc.:k '" 111 put )tlurdn\e on whnl your
nund 1s rncuscd on today All the
goud rntcntwns in the world can't
hring uhout whnt dercnmnruion lo sec

your ideas thmugh to completion can

do.
SAOITfARIUS (Nov. B -Dcc
21) Unfor1unately, you may not have

your mind on whul you're domg
today and cause 11 number of comw
plications that should have heen
avoided srmply by poymg aucnlion to
1ho de1ails.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
S1rive 10 he fair and conStderale
1odoy. but doo't he foolrsh about 11
Placa1ing others is fine , hut only if it
isn'1 clone to 1hc dctnmenl of your

as

to your osso-

crauons loday. If you lrnk up wrth
those

LIBRA ISept 21-0ct 23) ExlrRV·

mterests

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feh 19) Be

who have no dtrec11on nor care

about the concerns or others, your
repulatron could gel damaged
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Keep
your chitchat lrght and breezy and
don 'I talk shop when at a sacral gnlh·
ering roday, because those m atten-

dance will get turned otT by anyone
promoling bustness deals.
ARIES (Marth 21 -Apnl 19) If
you decide to play hooky loday,
there's o s1rong probab1lrty you'll get
caught by the very one&lt; who you
don't wont to know Be prepared to
pay the consequence
TAURUS (April 20-Mny 20)
Once ynu dcpan from lho truth today,
you could gel langled tn your own
weh. Just lell things lrkc lhey arc,
even tf you hclreve a lrttle whrte Ire
nmy

sound better

GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20) Per-

sons who

have no record

bcmg m lhc wmncr"s l:lt1:1C

,,f

e ver

sh(luld

nnl hnvc tnlluencc over your mvc~t ·

111Cn1s ttlday You CClUld lrnd y1turscll
~.:aught ur m u w-rld !iChcmc

Geograplt&lt; Explorar ICC)

�•

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

••
•••
Wednesday, June 23, 1999 :

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~~~~--------------~==~~~~----~------~~--- •:
~

'·

rapoOOR
. - .

Eleanor Boyles, Starling, Sandra and
Florence Ann Spencer and Mary Chuck Massar, Mary Lou Lutz, Dan.
Jo Barringer, representing the moth- Sholia, Kin, Joe, Laurie, Ashley, Jcsers of Alfred United Methodist sica and Janae Boyles, Russell
Cl\urch, gave Cool Spot gift certifi- Archer. Myrtle Flanders, Kathy Jack-'
cates to the fathers of the church on son, Lloyd and Doris Dillinger.
Father's Day. Doris Dillinger read
"Fathers are Wonderful People." Nel- . Middleport pon:h and entryway
lie Parker read her son Eric's remem- contest l!lnnounced
brances of his father. Spencer read
The Middleport Community
"Dad" in the absence of Barringer Association for the second year IS
who is ill.
sponsoring a porch and entryway
Philip Boyles was honored on his decorating cont~st.
·
.
birthday with a party at the home of
The contest.ts to e_ncourage reS\·
Florence Ann, Ri chard, and Tim dents to beauufy thetr homes w1th
Spencer. Guests included his mmher, flowers and planis. Contestants must

Alfred news

Thursday

r---------------------------------------------~ ~
Woman sues tabloid over t3ifford affair •••
•
..;;;;fi,;,.;...._,~m.._-;...;,.;.,&lt;k••....J
said she told the Globe that she and •
MIAMI (AP) - A flight attendant whose affair wilt! 5pj)rt5Caster Gifford never had sex, just a flina·
Frank Gifford exploded into tious relationship. Gifford is martabloid fircworl&lt;s has filed a SI0 ried to TV talk. show host Kathy
million federal lawsuit against a Lee Gifford.
Johnson said Globe news editor
Canadian corporation that publishCand&lt;~Ce
Trunzo told her that the
es the weekly Globe. .
paper
only
wanted to write about
Su~Johnson, 48, said the
the
couple's
platonic relationship.
Globe
graphed the scandal
io boost ofits and pressured her Johnson said sbe signed an agreeInto seducing Gifford in 1997. Her ment with the tabloid in March
suit alleges false imprisonment, 1997 in which Globe officials
offered $25;000 for the Gifford
negligence and slander.
In the complaint filed in Miami story, and an additional $25,000
federal court Thesday, Johnson for a photo. of them tog~ther.

live within Middleport Village limits;
the front porch or front entryway
only will he judged; judging will be
on live flowers and plants only- no
artificial flowers or plants.
Contestants must register at the
Middleport Department Store by
June 3(} and judging will be held the
. morning of July 2. Winners will be
announced at the July 4 celebration in
Dave Diles Park. The
first·place
winner will receive a $50 gift certifi.
cate toward the purchase of flowers
for next yeat. Second and third place
wi nners will receive $.25 gift certificates for flowers for next year.

L_____________________________________________

June 24, 1000

Weath er

.••

Today: Showers

'

Tomorrow: Cloudy

.....••

Reds sweep Diamondbacks, Page 5
Ann: Sharing a lonely struggle, Page 8
Congressional effort for slain athlete, Page 3

High: 80s; Lo)N: 80s

..•
•'

High: 80s; Low: 80s

•

Sports
San Antonio wfns
game 4 of the NBA
Finals 96-89, leads 3-1

-Page4

~
~

_J "':

Meigs County's

HometoWn Newspaper

~

•

Volume 50, Number 14

ROBERT MOODY
TURNS TWO-

Robert Moody of West Columbia
celebmted his second binhday May
13 at Billy Bob's Wonderland in Barboursville.
Those in attendance were his parents, Jim and Lisa Moody; grandparents, George and Judith Starcher ·
· of West Columbia and George and ·
Marjorie Moody of Chesire, Ohio;
great-grandparents, Gay nell McAbee
of West Columbia·and Mary Starcher
of Pomeroy, OH; l;ddie, Michele,
Gabriel and Jacob Starcher, John and
Juanita Grueser, Jim and Pam Durst,
Lennie Haptonstall and Tiffany and
Brittany Hoffman.
'

,,

P0 WEL L 'S

PEPSI &amp; MT.

.

$4''

BIM·IO PM
298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

UMIT 2 PLEASE. ADD.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO'LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU June 26, 1999

PEPSI; DT•.
MT" DEW,.DR.
PEPPER~· PEPSI ·
OIIE, 7UP

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS

By JIM FREEMAN
Sontlnol Nttwa Staff
Meigs County ·is being touted as
"Ohio's South Coast" in a new webpage
designed to promote the region and provide information to prospective new businesses,
The new webpage at www.meigscountyohio.com contains information about
the .county including population and
demographicill data, and available business incentives.
·
"It used to be that businesses wanted
you ro send information on your county,
now they want to know what ,your webpage address is," said Meigs County Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe.
·
Varnadoe said the page was develope&lt;!
locally by Paul Darnell of PM Design.
"Ohio's South Coast Welcomes You"
states the homepage introduction.
Varnadoe said the term "south coast"
came about during a business meeting.

24 Pl. CUIE

Mondayt..ru
Sunday

RYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

••

(6'PK, NRS)

2/$5
BON~lESS ·~E.EF ·Ll$:~ f9
New York Str1p St~ak •• ·: ~

Single Copy - 35 Cents

1

PRODUCTS·

STORE HOURS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Meigs touted as 0hio's ·. South
Coast' on new internet web site

DEW

'

'

TP-C Water District reiterates
water conservation measures
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District Wednesday afternoon reiterated the need for its customers. in
Letart Tow.nship to conserve water.
On June 11, the district issued a Phase II - Mandatory Water Use Ban including all of Letart Township and·
par~ of Athens County within the affected area. The
measure bans all outside water use with the exception of
water for the production of food, maintenance of pets or
livestock, or wa~ring by commercial nurseries at a minimum level to maintain stock.
The next level of restriction would be ban the use of
all water except for drinking and cooking.
"Although the drought is the main reason (for the
restriction), there are other reasons besides weather creating the problems of water shortages in both Meigs and
Athens c0unties," said district manager · Donald C.
Poole.
In the Meigs County,. Letart To,.,;nship area, it is the
. size of the distribution,system serving all of the farming
operations using the district's water for irrigation of
flowers and romato plants, according to a district press
release.
·"The distribution system was built and sized to serve
homes with potable water. In 1997 there was a tank and

"People don't know where Meigs "'·"''""County is," he said. "I was trying to
explain to ·someone where Meigs County
is, an!l he said, 'Oh, you're down there on
the south coast:."
Varnadoe demonstrated the new .webpage. Simply typing in www.meigscountyohio.com on his laptop computer produced the site's homepage and links to
information on tourism, economic development activities, the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce and other sites
con~ining information he hopes wil!' be
helpful to grant writers and others seeking information on the county and its
communities.
·
WWW.MEIGSCOUNTYOHIO.COM
- County Economic pevolopm..,t
Director Perry Varnadoe demonatratoa the now Internet · alta
-.melgacountyohlo.com
doalgnlld to both prom~ tho coun·
ty and HIVO •• 1 eourco of lnfor·
matlon.

Continued In •w.ter district" on 1 e 3

J

USDA CHOICE

..
Bottom Round St•ak. . ·1.

$;. 7,

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BE.~FLI.

. '.C
.End Chops ......:.•!.~:. 8.9

JACOB STARCHER

PORK LOIN SIRLOIN

ENJOYS PARTY -

Jacob Edward Starcher turned two
on May 22. He celebmted with a party at Billy Bob's in Barboursville
with cousin, Robert Moody.
In attendance were parents,
Edward and Michele Starcher; brother, Gabriel Starcher.; grandparents,
George and Judith Starcher; greatgrandparents, Lennie Haptonstall,
Gaynell McAbee and Mary Starcher
and many other family members and
friends.

WHS Class of
'55· holds tenth
annual picnic
The 1955 Class of Wahama High
School met at the \Vest Virginia State
·Farm Museum for their tenth annual picnic on Sunday, May 30.
Sylvia Sayre offered grace before
the group enjoyed a delicious covered
dish potluck meal. Peggy Edwards ·
conducted the business meeting .
. Carol Roush read the 1998 secretary's
report and Sylvia
Sayre gave the trea,
surers report.
·
For several years the class of 1955
has awarded a $200 scholarship to a
deserving graduating senior to help
in furtherance of their education. It
was suggested that the class of '55
challenge other WHS gmduating
classes to consider this fulfilling

·

usDA CHOICE BONELEss BEEF LB.

s.159 ·c lb
.

LONGHORN

Rump Roasts....... . . ... o Y
BONELESS PORK LOIN
$2· 99
Butterfly Chops.. .
OSCAR MAYER
$149
Sliced Balogna •.•.~;.

Ch

'

ee~e.a·..

SUPERIOR'S

Fra

'

2/$14

·

s:s oz.

.
1. ·

$ 79
··

STOVE TOP
OVEN C
(·ASST. F.,aV.)

LB.

$ ..99
Good Afternoon
7·15.90Z,

4
.
99
••••••

'

Today's

DOG

~en

2 Sections • 12 Pages .

·FOOD

120Z.

(ASST. VlR.)

,.,,~$, 1
Lotteries

FI,.AL
TOUC
..
FABRI.C
SOFTENER

OQIQ

'

FRESH

endeavor.

This years officers were elected to
serve again next year. They are Peggy Edwards, president; Carol Roush,
secretary; and Sylvia Sayr,e, treasurer. Carol Proffitt was game coordinator this year and upon her suggestion a new game coordinator
was named. Marjorie Walburn vol:
unteered to fulfill this position in this
position in the ensuing year.
The door prize was won by
G~rge Zuspan. Carol Proffitt led the
group, in playipg games and presented
gifts to winners.
It was the unanimous agreement
to hold the picnic at the W.Va. State .
Farm Museum in 2000,
Classmates and guests attending
were: Jack and Mary Ann Winebrenner of Gallipolis Ferry; "Blink"
and Emma Jean Coffey Williams of
Pataskala, OH; David and Carol
Ewing Roush of Amanda,,OH; Neil
and Catherine Pickens of Nonh
East, MD; Janet Nicholson Robinson
of Point Pleasant; Eilene Fry Lyons
of Letart; Betty Neal Russell of West
Columbia; Dale and Marjorie Clarke
Walburn ;~nd Sue Cartwright Hall all
of Middleport, OH; Pat Roush Noel
of Pomeroy, OH; Luther an&lt;) Shirley
Oliver Thcker, Roben and Agnes
Roush, Jim and Carol Roush Proffitt,
George Zuspan, and Peggy
McDaniel Edwards all of Mason;
Charles '.'Chuck" and Geraldine Mattox Roush, Sylvia Blake Sayre, and
Janice Miller Bmdley all of New
Haven.
·

LAY'S POTATO
C"IPS
(ASST. VAR.)

, 'r•

Plunls &amp;

. •

,

Peac~s-~•••:89
C
,)$ .,
'

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•

"tot '

Ch.ease s·.••'. lei~~·. ~· ,.
vf

12

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.

.

oz.

,'

Dally 3: 5-8-4'; Dally 4: 8-1.0-7

$,J99

•

.

W,VA

'

'

3\~'

' 3
•.......~Z'
9·9 c

BORDEN AMERICAN : ·:: ·
.

'

Pick 3: 5-8-5; Pick 4: 5-9-9-8
Super Lotto: 1-3-7-23·30-34
Kicker: 7-7-6-9·2-2

'

.

112GAL

64

oz.

WISK ULTRA

. UIIITED VAllEY lEU DUIIII JUICI, CIIOC. Mill D1

8
9
C
Spaghetti Sauce... . ·
DEL MONTE
· . . 99 C
HUNT'S (ASST.

•

26·27.5 oz.

ueeze Ketchu' ·';..

KRAFT .·
MAYONNAISE

(ASST. VAR.)

(REG. OR LT.)

.

32DL

'

SJ

99

2/$

,• '

'

FESTIVAL (ASST. FLAY.)

Ice Cream .•.........•........
1!2GAL.

.

STOkELY'S
·VEGETABLES

"~ ,~{$1

·Borden Butternailk
••
.
""

2/$

a oz.
(REG~

OR THIN)' OR

ELBOW MACARONI

'

'

'

.' .

Win A

SPARKLE PAPER
TOWELS

$399

3 LIS.

3

.

acc

·BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

$400
· Free Cash!

.

..

..

-

-.,
"

The Ninth Annual Point Pleasant Sternwheel Regatta &lt;lien, and free for infants. Tlie fireworks cruise tickets Antique Bottle Show and Sale will be held from 9 a.m.
kicks off today with activities for the family on Main are $20 each and the race cruise tickets arc $10. Tickets to 3 p.m. at the National Guard Armory.
Street
·
Pleasant Valley Hospital's River Run begins at9 a.m.
for all events will be available Thursday evening at
with the one mile walk/run followed by the 5K at 9:30
For the first time, a Little Mister and Miss Sternwheel Fourth Street Landing;
.
Friday's activities. include stemwheel excursions·on a.m.
Regatta will be crowned on today at the State Theatre:
.
Throughout the (jay Saturday, Point Pleasant's DownThe contest, sponsored by the GFWC .Point Pleasant , the Jewel City Sternwheeler at S p.m. and 7 p.m. Tickets
Junior Woman's Club, is open to West Virginia residents will be available at Fourth Street Landing. The Mark . town Merchants will have a variety of games and activ·
ages rive to.eight and begins at 4 p.m. Late registration Wood ·Fun Show is scheduled at5 p.m. at the comer of ities for chil!lren.
The Cub Scouts will hold their annual Rain Gutter
will be held from 3:15- 3:30p.m.
Fourth and ~bin Streets. At 6 p.m., the annual stem·
Tamara Orate, 1998 Sternwheel Regatta Queen, will wheel regatta parade beglns at Central School and Regatta at 10 a.m. in the park. The GFWC Point Pleasrelinquish her crown during the annual queen's pageant marches· down Main Street. Parade awards are being ant Junior Woman's Club is holding sidewalk art at II
which be&amp;ins at 6:30 p.m. today at .the State Theatre.
sponsored by Point Pleasant Rotary Club and Country a.m. and childien's games at 12 p.m, in the park. From
Competing for the title will be Katrina Nicole Ash of Mart and Lanes. A Tae Kwon Do demonstration begins noon to 3 p.m., children from age 7 to 14, can test their
fishing skills during the BassMII!iters CastingKids com- ·
Reedy; Ashley Nicole Barnette of Given; Stacy· Nicole at 7 p.m. at the corner of Fourth and Main Streets.
Loyd of Buinsville; Kristin Lorraine Morrison of RipLoyal Order of the Moose 731, Peoples Banking &amp; petition on Main Street.
Boarding and departure of the sternwheel race cruise
ley; Sally Lou Roush of Letan; Ronda Lee Stewart of Trust and Akzo Nobel are sponsoring the entertainment
Spencer; Tiffany Rene Stewart of Point Pleasant; Amy , on the bqc from 7 p.m. to I a.m. qroups to perform at Fourth Street is from It :30 a.m. to noon. The cruise is
sponsored by Holzer Clinic and .food provided by DomiRuth Tabor of Point Pleasant; .Barbara Thompson of . include High Country Band, Staffhouse and Hunter.
Sandyville; Jaclyn Wells of Friendly; an4 Kimberly
The Flashbacks will 'warm up the main stage in Bat- no's. Also, the Jewel City Stemwheeler will have cruisNicole Woodall of Point PleasanL
.
tle Monument Park at 7 p.m. Their concert is sponsored es at 3, 5 and 7 p.m. with tickets available at Fourth
Sponsors for the pageant ~SCholarships Include Pleas- by Mid-Atlantic Construction. The sriunds of ~k-n-.roll .Street Landing,
The Mark Wood Fun Show, sponsored by City
ant Valley Hospital, Fruth Pharmacy, and Fox's Pizza · will fill the park when the Southern Rock All Stars take
Den. ·Peoples Banking &amp; Trust will host a reception for the staae at 8:30p.m. The All Stars concert is sponsored National Bank, will be held at I p.m. in BatUe Manu'
men! Park. From Ito 3 p.m., stemwheelers will battle it
th~ candidates Wednesday evening.
by WRYV ."The River" and th.e Wut Virginia Lottery.
out
during the sternwheel races O!\ the Ohio' River,
Cherry Ridge, Crazy Jane and Charlie Lilly will perFrom 8 totO p.m. a street dani)C, sponsored liy
Plaques
for the event are sponsored by Burlile Oil Com:
fortll from 7 to 11:30 p.m. on the river stage at Fourth Guido's, ·is planned at422 Main Street.
Street Landing. The musical entertainment is sponsored
Saturday's sChedule begins at 5:30 a.m. with the pany. '
The Clark 1Wins and Idle 'JYmes will take the stage
by Fox Hoe·and Dozer, Ace High Music, McDonald's of "Battle At The Point" Bass Tournament at Crooked
Creek Launch, sponsored by Budweiser and WBYO from I to 3 p.m. in the State Theatre for a gospel concert
Point Pleasant and Gino's Pizza and Spaahetti.
sponsored by the Mason County Ministerial ·Asaocia. The Jewel City Stcrnwheeler will be arriving in Point. "Big Country 99".
Pleasant Thursday evening. Depending on the time of
The captain's breakfast, sponsored by Bob Evans of tion.
Deckhands will show their skills during the .annual
arrival, there may be an excursion Thursday evenina. Gallipolis and the Lowe Hotel, will be held from 8 a.m.
deCkhand
line throwing competition, sponsored by AEP
11cketa for regular cruises are $5 for adults, $3 for chil- to 10 a.m. at the Low~ liotel. \Vat ViiJinia's Only

......

__

............_. ,...........

·~

·~

-

-"·~·~·-·

.....J···- ...

'·
--.....·--··---·---·-

________ ___
..,..., ~~

,

. .,

River Division, Kanawha River Towing, City Ice and
Fuel and Nibert &amp; Morgan Law Offices. Awards.for the
deckhand competition ~nd the stemwheeler races will be
presented at 6 p.m. on· the River Stage.· Trophies are
being provided by Farmers Bank.
Bass tournament fishermen will weigh-in their fish
and receive awards beginning at 4 p.m. at Sixth and
Main Streets.
American Legion Post 23, Shell Chemical and Turnpike of Gallipolis will present entertainment on the river
stage from 7 p.m. to I a.m. Performers include Paul
Doeffinger, Staffhouse and Hunter.
Silverthorn, sponsored by Eastman Foodland and
Ohio Valley Bank., will perform at 7 p.m. on the main
stage. From 8 to 8:30 p.m., board for the sternwheel
cruise, featuring food from subway, will be held at
Fourth Street Landing.
.
CountrY, music sensation David Kersh will take the
stage at 8:30 p.m. His appearance is sponsored by
WBYG "Big Country 99" and the West Virginia Lottery.
·Saturday evening closes will fireworks, sponsored by
·the City of Point Pleasant and Edward Kraemer &amp; Sons,
atiO p.m. ·
.
The annual Regatta Gospel Sing will be held on the
lawn of the Point Pleasant Library Sunday at I :30 p.m.
Featured singers will be The Johnson's New Generation
from Johnson City, KY, Jimmie McKnight of Dunbar,
and Faithful Witness of Charleston.
There is no admission and those attending are asked
to bring lawn chairs .
The Jewel City Stem.wheeler will have excursions
Sunday at 3, S and 7 p.m. with tickets available at Fourth
Street Landing.

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