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                  <text>Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mol')day, June 28, 1999

Rachael Morris installed as queen

Wedding

Rachael Ann Morris , daughter of ·
Steve and ·carrie Morris of Rolland,
was installed as honored queen of
Bethel No. 62 of Middleport, International Order of Jobs Daughters, at
the Harrisonville Masonic Hall
recently.
The Installing Officer was Jessica
Johnson. past honored queen of
Bethel "'o. 62. Grand Bethel third
messenger and Supreme Bethel
muskian. Assisting was Jess ica Yen-

ham, past honqred queen of Bethel
No. 40 of Marietta and majority
member as installing guide.
.
Others participating were Pam
Morrow, past honored queen and
past Bethel guardian and majority
member of Bethel No. 40 of Marietta as installing marshal, Jenn ifer
Cornelius, past honored queen of
Bethel No. 62. Middleport, as
installi ng chaplain ; Ann Mattox.
majority member of. Bethel No. 73 ,

Gallipolis, and guardian secretary of
Bethel No. 62 as installing recorder,
and Jane Wise of Harrisonville OES
as installing musician.
The officers that were installed,
in addition to Morris, were Meghan
Vcnham, guide; Lindsey White,
librarian; Maggie Molden, treasurer;
Emily Dillard, senior custodian.
Following the installation, Bill
King narrated the flower ceremony
for the outgoing honored queen, fo llowed by the signing of.the Bible by
Johns·on. The ceremony concluded
with .the officers forming a li ving
cross. Refres hments were served in
the dining hall, which was decorated
in the honored queen's theme of
angels wi th ani tudes. The colors of
sky, blue and lavender, were used to
decorate the tables, with birthstone
ange l bears, which the honored
queen gave as gifts to each of her
officers.
·

exposure on movie screens

Community
Calendar
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club meeting Monday. I p.m. at the
home of Ann Webster.
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, regular session,
Monday, 7 P-Ill - Southern High
School.

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Ridenour

POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission meeting' Monday, 7:30 p.m. at. the Veterans Service Office, I 17 Memorial
Drive. ·

-NEWELL-RIDENOUR-

I.

I

COOLVILLE : Jea nie Mac bridesmaids. Doth wore tea length
Newe ll and Floyd D. Ridenour were burgundy gowns with rose bodice
mnrricd on Jan. Y at the Vanderhoof acce nt. The allcndants carried bouBaptist Chu rch in Coolvi ll e, with quets of cream and burgundy roses
Pastor John Long pe rformin g the with ivy, and hunter green accents.
double-ri ng cere mony.
Alex LaBonte, and Breanna . HayThe bride is the daughter of m(,l.n , co usin to of the groom, were ·
Elmer and Darlene Newell and the llowcr girls. They wore cream and
groom is the son of Keith and Li la hunter green dresses.
Ride nour, all of the Chester commuMall Ridenour was his brother 's
ni ty.
best man, and the groomsmen were
Escorted to the altar by her fathe r Brian Bailey and Eric Sim. They
and given in marri age by her pa~· we're in black tuxedes. Casey Ride,
ents, the hri~c "(ore a gown of can- nour, son of the bride and groom,
dlclig ht silk fashioned with a beaded was the ringbearer. Music was proI&gt;\Jdicc that was adorned in seed vided by Kelly Eichinger.
pearls and sequin s. It had short .filled .
Regi stering guests were Jennifer
prin cess sleeves with sheer windows . and Julie Hayman, cousins of the
or appiiqucs trimmed in pearls, and groom.
a skirt featurin g a large layered bow
A reception honoring the couple
in. back which flowed into' a chapel was held at the Tuppers Plains Elell' ngth trai n.
mentary School gymnasium where
The bride wore a band of silk refreshments including a weddi ng
!lowers in her hair from which fell a cake were served under the direction
veil of bridal illusi on made by the of Karen Werry. Gue sts enj oyed
bride's mother. and carried a cascsd- dancing.
·
in g bouque t of cream roses wi th ivy,
The bride is a graduate of Eastern
· and burgu nd y and hunter gree n High School and is a child care giver
accents.
in her home. Her· husband, also an
Jenny' Ridenour, sister-in-l aw of Eastern graduate served a four year
the groom was matron or honor and. tour of duty in the U. ~- Air Force,
~&gt;ore a lloor length burgundy gown
and is now employed by Allegheny
w1 th rose accent on . the bodice. Po'wcr Systelns in Parkersburg, W
Laura Brown was the maid of honor, Va. as a lineman . They reside in
and Misty Newell , a cousin was a Chester.

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education special meeting
Monday, 7 p.m. at the district's central office i.n Pomeroy to rank building design firms.

NAMEI) .AMB,&lt;\SSADOR- Julie Spaun of Pomeroy has been
named s_tate 4-H ambassador for Melg~ County, She will represent
the county at event\' such a- the Ohio State Fair, state camps and
recognition programs throughout the year. More than 100 teens are
participating In the 4-H ambassador program to enhance their public speaking and personal presentation skills. Here Spaun Is pictured with Jeff King, assistant director of Ohio 4-H Youth Development.

Velvet fabric from
Missouri
store
goes Hollywood

COOLVILLi; - Vacation Bible
school "The .Ultimate Adventure
with Jesus" through July 2, 6:308:30 p.m. at Whites Chapel Wesleyan Church;·· Coolville, for children preschool through I 3.
MIDDLEPORT -A.revival, Th~
Messiah in the Tabernacle, by John
Moxley, continued through Thursday, 7 p.m. . nightly, at the Victory
Baptist Church.

across the country. .
Ms. Brahirisky, owner of
Esther's, sold yards of multicolored-stri ped velvet and cotton ball fr inge to the makers of
" Austin Powers: The Spy Who
Shagged Me.''
The material was used to
make costumes for the movie.
" it 's a hidden treasure in St.
Joseph," said Nancy Kirk,
ow ner of a·n Omaha, Ncb., fab.ri c store that acted as a liaison
between Esther's and the film's
costume ·designer, Deena
Appel. "They have one of the
great stashes.''
Appel also scoured vintage
stores.
The film is filled with psychedelic Nehru jackets; HotPants, go-go,dancer boots and
crocheted minidresses.
Ms. Brahinsky's big break
was typical for Hollywood: She
met someone who knew someone who knew someone WhO
makes movies.

On a day the store was
closed, she was· repairing the
front door when Los Angeles
businessman Larry Quint came
by and ·asked to have a look. .
Quint was impressed and contacted Ms. Kirk, who regularly
provides fabric for Hollywood
productions.
.
Ms. Brahinsky, who didn't
see the first "Austin Powers"
movie, sold about $1,000 wonh
of fabric for the movie.

Indians beat Royals 6-1, Page 4
Relations with ·ex not a good idea, Page 6
FBI still tracking ranway killer, Page 3

Today: Showers
High: 80s; L~:eos
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: eos

•

By BRIAN J. REED
In connection with the Oh io DHS partnership Howard both noted that the program was still new.
Both bids were the only bids received for the
Sentinel News Staff
agreement, the commissioner.• also approved con"While we realize that something like this takes respective jobs, and were tabled pending review by
The Meigs County Commissioners approved a tracts with the Meigs County. Chamber of Com- time to organize, it's still results-oriented, and we'd -Engineer Robert Eason.
partnership agreement with the Ohio Department of mercc for the provision -of economic development like to see higher placement rates next year, when
Th~ commissi~ners appro~ed bids from ~sphalt
Human Services for the operation of the state's and tourism services, for the period of July I, 1999 we consider anot~er contract renewal," · Davenport Matertals of Manetta and Mtdrll cport Termmal of
Ohio .Works First program during their regular through June 30, 2000, at a rate not to exceed said.
Gallipoli.s for bituminous pavh.,;· materials for the
$175,000 per year- $25,000 per year more than
. In other action relating to the DHS partnership month of July.
meeting on Monday.
The contract was presented to the board last was spent during the past year for those services.
agreement, the commissioners approved a PrevenThe board approved appropriation adjustments
week by Meigs County DHS Director Michael
The commissioners also approved a $220,000 tion, Retention ·and Contingency program to totaling $907.60 in the prosecuting attorn_ey's budSwisher. Under new welfare legislation, county cor\tiact with Rio Grande Community College for accompany the Ohio Works First program.
get, and $836.34 for the Department of Liller Concommissioners ate given more control over the way employment,. training and education programs usi'ng
Th.e PRC program provides discretionary fund- trol and Recycling.
ing for client emergencies and other one-lime need
The commissioners approved a request from. the
welfare funds fr6m the state are spent on the local TANF funds.
level.
,
The CROSSROADS program will be made avail- cases, and is designed to prevention welfare eligi- DHS to enter a contract with Brinks for food stamp
· The two-year contract includes a unique provi- able to OWF cl(ents who require job training, and bility, retain employment and provide contingent . delivery and security services, with P~Design ~or
sion which allows the county to spend funds from will be accessed through the college's Meigs Center assistance. .
the develop~ent of an ·~terne~ web s~te, an_d w_tth
the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families in Middleport.
.
,
In other business, the commissioners opened the ~rosecuttng Attorney s Offtce for mvesttgattve
(TANF) program for economic development and
The commissioners discussed the Rio Grande con- bids for Round 13 State Capital Improvement Pro- _servtces. That contract, for one year, totaled
tract at· yesterday's meeting, with Commissioners .jects- a. bridge replacement and a series of paving $27,000·.
tourism, as they relate to job development.
Swisher said last week tha.t employment and · Mick Dave.nport and Janet Howard agreeing that job projects. A bid for $83,225 was received by _the
. A contract ~ith Veterans Memorial Hospital to
employment training are s)ressed in _the new pro- placement rates for . the first year of the program Ohio Bridge Corporation &lt;if Cambridge for the perform paterntty blood tests on behalf of the DHS
gram; which places cligiblity limits on cash benefits were lower than they expected.
replacement of a bridge on County Road 1, and The was also ap~roved: .
.
and sanctions on those cash recipients who fail to
Davenport said that the program's placement rate Shelly Corporation bid $335,380 for the paving
. Prese~t. tn ~dd1t1on to Davenport and Howard,_
find employment or job training.
of lS percent was disappointing, although he and projects.
·
· was Clerk Glona Klees.

Middleport to seek grant, loan funds for sewer improvements
By BRIAN J. REED
S.ntlnel N-• Staff
Middleport Village Council agreed to seek
$455,000 in grant and loan funds for sewerage
improvements when they met in regular session
on Monday evening.
Becky Hayes of Floyd Brown Associates met
with council to discuss a meeting earlier in the
day at Buckeye HillS/Hocking Valley Regional
.. Development District, a Marietta agency which
will assist the village and EBA in seeking the :
grant funds through the Community Development Block Grant .program and loan fu.nds
through the ' Ohio Rural Water Development
Authority's Water Pollution Control Loan Fund.
WIINNING THROW - Kevin LAyne, of R•clne, Ia pictured
The village has been advised by the EPA that
ibove m•klng • winning throw lit the P.olnt Pl....nt Sternwh•I problems with dry weather overflows must be
R-aatta Une Throwing Contlllt S•turd•y. Lllyne reclevecl • tro- addressed to eliminate discharge into the Ohio
phy •ncl $125 for hla ttlforta.
River, and the construction of lift stations and
other improvements to the system have been .
deemed necessary "to eliminate problems and
EPA violaiions.
·
'Hay~ui!ljhat .lb~ CDDG prgaram_ will pay .

'I

'!

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News S11H
The fate of .a new highway between Athens
and Darwin may be decided Friday by the s~·s
Transportation Review Advisory Council of the
Ohio Department ofTransportalion.
TRAC last Friday gave preliminary approval
to $6 million for engineering, environmental
work and right-of-way pirchases for the Route 33
project. The TRAC also reviewed numerous high- .
way proposals including the Ravenswood Connector and Lancaster Bypass, portions of the
overall effort to improve u;s. 33 from Columbus
to I· 77 at Ravenswood, W.Va., which are beipg
considered for actual construction.
TRAC voted to allow a piblic comment period until Friday when it will, meet again to hear
testimony from groups and individuals opposing
and supporting the Athens-to-Darwin and other
projects. The TRAC will likely make its decision
that day on the fate !If the project, TRAC coordinator Michael Cull said.
Meanwhile, the cost of the Athens-to-Darwin
project has incree~ed from SS6.1 million to $77.9
million. The inciease is due to environmental

------'-------------- -----·
•

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work which resulted in moving the proposed
route to avoid a branch of the Shade River, Cull
explained.
·
The Athens-based group Coalition Against
Superfluous Highways (CASH), which opposes
the highway, submitted a study of the project,
compiled by Resource Systems Group, a Vermont
engineering firm, that TRAC forwarded io the
Ohio Department of Transportation.
Todd Acheson, who lives near the proposed
project corridor, told the Athens Messenger that
he is concerned about the proposed right-of-way
pirchases, stating that once that begins "you've
pretty much reached the point of no return."
However, he did acknowledge that perhaps
some headway was made in that highway officials
are examining CASH's study of the highway pro- .
posai which raises concerns about the project and
recommends upgrading the existing U.S. 33,
rather than building a new highway.
Acheson is currently involved in a lawsuit
challenging the rughway proposal.
Pomeroy attorney Steve Story, cochairman of
the Route 33 Committee of the Southeast Ohio
Regional Council, said he is di'sappointed that the

project is being held up, but said he is pleased that
TRAC and ODOT recogniz~ the project as part of
· a macro corrido(, connecting one interstate high way to another, instead of just a separate project.
"They see the big picture," he said.
"The silver lining is that the Lancaster Bypass
and Ravenswood Connector got approved," Story
said: "In a sense the Ravenswood Connector is
the most important project," he said. "That
uncorks the bottle."
Meanwhile, supporters of the highway, including county and state officials from counties along
the Route 33 Corridor from Columbus to Jackson
County, W.Va., are planning to make sure their
concerns are heard at Friday's meeting in
Delaware.
. Meig~ County C:Ommissio_ner Mick D_avenport
slltd a group of Metgs Counllans, mcludin~ commissioners and Economic Development I?n:ect_or
Perry Varnadoe, are convoymg to the meetmg s1te
to support the proJect
Davenport said the -petitions and letters
received earlier from Meigs County residen~ will
be presented again to the TRAC for constdera~
lion.

·Racine gearing up for annual July 4 -festival

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

up to SO percent of the total project cost, and water system, noting that the board was conti~that loan funds at low interest or no interest uing to have discussions with John Musser of
through the loan fund would be used to make up Pomeroy Village Council and John Anderson,
the necessary match for the CDBG grant, as Pomeroy Village Administrator, regarding the
well as other grant funds that will be sought for possibil ity of a water purchase agreement or a
the project.
joint municipal water system.
Hayes said that she will likely seek Issue II
Sarah McGrew, coordinator of the Ohio Unifunding on behalf of the village later this year.
versity College of Osteopathic Medicine's
When asked by Council member. Beth Stivers Arthritis program mel with council to discuss
8s to the cost to the Middleport water custom~r, . possible grant funding for a walking path at
Hayes said that no immediate cost to the cus- General Hartinger Pink. McGrew said that such •
tamer would be involved, and that, if the loan is · a path would be helpful for arthritis patients
approved, the low interest rate of approximately · who walk as therapy.
3 percent would help keep the cost of debt
The grant, available through the Ohio
retirement at a minimum.
Depart111ent of Transportation, provides up to 80
The loan application could be considered as percent funding for walking paths. It was noted,
early as July, and, if approved, construction however, lhat the grant is the same that was concould begin as early as November. The loan sidered for a combined walking path from Midwould involve a five-year deferral, and then a dleport to Pomeroy, and that engineering studies
10-year repayment period.
and other prelimipary costs had been deemed
Jean Craig, president of the Board of Public prohibitive by council earlier this year.
Affairs, presenied several invoices from FBA
Mayor Sandy lannarelli reported !hat 25 letfor payment. She also discussed the village's
Continued In ·s-Ill' Improvementa• on ·

'ROute 33 projects subject of Friday TRAC meeting

The answer: 18 seconds.
By JIM FREeMAN ·
.
"If you're not out In 18 seconds, you're not getting out," said J. David
Sentinel News Stiff
Schroeder, the state's fireworks administrator.
"Freedom-. Into the Nul Century" will be
Schmeder believes the experiment at a Maryland military base may be
theme of Racine's annual Independence Day
••'"""" enough to require the S4 fireworks stores in Ohio to keep their
celebration.
le•,~l~=~:.in a separate building from the stores customers enter.
Since July 4 falls on a Sunday this year, the
1
customers could shop by looking at empty boxes of fireworks
parade and flag-raising have been moved to
intheshowroomandthenhavethefireworks!oadedintotheircars,hesaid.
early afternoon to allow churchgoers time to
Stale lawmakelli two yem ago approved tougher fireworks regulations
participate in the events.
required stores to install smoke exhaust and sprinkler systems, add exit · Line-up for the parade, which will follow the
doolll, and hire security guards to tell customelli it's against the law to.brlng same theme, will be at 12: IS p,m. at Southern
matches or tobacco inside.
·
High School followed by a flag-raising by the
The measures followed an explosion and fire at a fireworks store that
Racine American Legion Post602 at 12:45 p.m.
. killed nine people In southeast Ohio
The parade will begin at I. P·lll·· traveling
on July 3, 1996. .
.
.
down Elm Street to Third Street, from Third to
Allyone Oller 18 c:an buy fireworlcl · Vine, to Fifth and then on to Elm and;back to
at Ohio stores, but they must sign a the -high ichool.
· .
.
•
.
••ting
th
·
'II
take
the
fireFloa!S
will
be
judged
In
two
categones,
rehform S
works out of ey
theWIstate within 48
gioua and patriotic. Awards for religious floats
hours if they live in Ohio.
are: firat place, S!OO bond; second place, $75;
1 Sections - 10 I'IJes
Most fireworks retailers don't
third place, $SO. Patriotthink there is 1 need to keep their ic float prizes will be
products in a separate building.
$100, $7S and $SO,
"What is to prevent a lunatic from · respectively, for tho first
going to a gas station and taking the
three places. Trophies
hose and throwing a match on it, or ·will be awarded to
11010eone doing it in ihe Wai-Mart
antique tractor entries
charcoal brlquei section?" said for first second and
Wei
of third pi~. ·
·
William
·met', vice president
Winners in the horse
!U.T.::~ ~~Ji:!:t2.&gt;·· which division will also· be
welmer uid his company
. awarded trophies. Mon·
Lottenes
about $90,000 to install smoke~ I . etary awards of $1S,
·
· · · Oh'
$10 and $Swill be given
QUIO
evacuatton systems 10 Its stx
tQ to the best decorated
stores, which operate under the
Pick 3: 4-2-8; Plclc 4: 8-2-3-6
name Phantom Fireworks.
bicycles. No . fourBllekcje 5: 2-2CJ.22·25-34
wheelers
will
be
WJ'N .
.
~e said Ohio's store safety allowed in the parade.
requirements are the most strict of Winners
will
be
Dallf 3t 6-4-1; DilDy 4: 9-4-8-4
o 1999 Olllo Yttley Pllbllllll'l eo.
lilY state where the company oper- announced ~I 4 p.m.
~===========~~·t=es=-~------.,.....--J
RACO's sixth annual

BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (A P) songs. It's the lirstr\lcording by the
Wl&gt;en Jim Nabors underwent a liver actor in 20 years.
.
transplant fi ve · years ago. tie .was
Nabors, 69, said the CDs feature
. surpri sed it drew so much auention . a mix of old gospel songs and con" I got about 200,000 10 300 000 temporary Christian numbers ,
lcncrs and prayers," said Nabors · including a " Lion King version" of
television's Gomer Pyle. "'The reali: The Lord 's Prayer.
·
ly had never set in before that so
Nabors, ' fom1ed his own record
rnany people cared what happen ed comp any for the effort. Another
to me. ··
motivation: the success of friend
In part, that reali zat ion propelled Andy Griffith, whose own gospel
"When He Spoke, "· Nabors' new collectiOn sold about .2.5 million
lwo- CD compilation of thristia'n copies a few years ago.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Commissioners approve Ohio Works First contract; related services ~lso approved

TOLEDO (AP)- Setting fire to a store filled with fireworks, state fire
officitlls wanted to find out how long customers would have to get out safe-

Jim Nabors releases new CD of Christian songs

-PageS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vo lum e 50 Numhr·r 17

Safety inspector wants auL'"
regulations on fireworks sales

WESLEY RYAN AND MORGAN DANYEL HARRISON
BIRTHDAYS ENJOYED - Wesley Ryl!ln and Morgan Danyill Harrison, children of John and Janel Harrison recently celebrated birthdays.
'
Morgan turned one year old on June 10 and Wesley was three on .
Judn~ 11. A Rugrat_ party was held at their home in Rutland with cake
an ICI_I cream betng served to family and friends. ·
W Their mater~al g~andparents are Danny Gillispie of New Haven,
. · Va. and Jam~ Gillespie of Mason, W. Va. Paternal' grandparents
are Roger and .Dtana Coates and Johnnie Harrison, all of Pomeroy.

Andre Agassl moves
to Wimbledon
quarter-finals

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

Hopes for a q~ick sale of items confiscated from Fred M, Priddy, Rut·
land, were dashed this morning during a hearing in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas.
· Attorneys for 47-year-old filed a motion to stay his sentence, halt the
execution of 'a forfeiture agreement with the Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office, and admit him to bail P."nding his appeal to the Fourth District
Court of Appeals.
·
·
Judge Fred W. Crew III declined to suspend his sentence or issue bail,
halted an auction slated to begin this afternoon stating he was unsure
of the state's autliority to conduct the sale.
'
l'riddy, who was arrested in April following an investigation by the
Major Crimes Task Force, Meies County Sheriff's Offiee and other agen·
cies, pleaded guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana and was sen\enced to eight years in prison.
As part of the plea agreement, he agreed to forfeit m_ost of ~is belongIngs including two houses, land, and numct'ous &lt;;Ill'S, firearms and other
Htems. The items were to be sold at a four-day auction starting this afternoon at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Representing Priddy in court this morning was Shelly L. Kennedy of
Port Clinton who filed the motions Monday afternoon iri the Meies County Court of Common Pleas. They are also appealing Priddy's sentence in
the Fourth District Court of Appeals.

Do

1

Sports

June 2t, 1000

Weather

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) The story line is pure Hollywood.
·
·An obscure, lillie fabric
store gels discovered for a big
break in the mqvie business.
It's all because Judy Brahinsky had fabric on hand that is
reminiscent of the 1960s.
Tucked away in the comer
of Esther's Fabric C(). are rolls
of imported velvet fabric .with
stripes of hot orange and avocado green.
A relic from the days when
it was co nsidered groovy rather
than gaudy, the velvet material
is go ing from obscurity to mass
. RACHAEL MORRIS

Tuesday

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•

Frog Jump will be held at 5 p.m. at -Star Mill their frog with their rental ticket. All frogs are
Park. There will be two divisions: junior (ages to be treated humanely. .
1-15), and senior (16 or older). Registration
For entertain, the &lt;;ountry Remedies and
will be $3 for juniors and $5 for seniors,
. H~rvest Time bands w1ll perform on the Star
There is no limit to the number of frogs that M1ll Pnk stage.
can be entered. Prizes will be $40, $25 and S~-0,
Country Remedies l&gt;Vill perform at 7 and 9
respectively, for t~e first, second and thtrd p.m. Band members are Dale Baker of Tuppers
place winners in the junior ~ivisio_n and $1~. Plai~s, Iva Slater of Albany, Randy Slater of
$75 and $50 for the longest Jumps 10 the semor Manetta, Buzz Slote~ of Albany and Ed_Green of
division.
.
.
. · AI~any. The ban~ wtll also be perforrn.mg at the
Each frog gets three jumps, 30 seconds for Me1gs County Fatr. .
its first jump and then 30 seconds to complete
Harvest lime .will perform at 6 and 8 p.m.
its third jump.
.
Band members mclude ~!bur Donohew and
The distance measured will be from the c~n- Everett Grant, both of Racme, ,Allen Burdelle of
ter of the pad to the stopping place of the thtrd Ravenswood, W.Va., Denver Richards of Walker,
jump. The longest distance wins . .Once the frog W.Va., an~ AI Burdette. .
.
is placed on the ~ad, it cannot be touched or
. _Consptcuously ~nl thts year w~Il be the Iracoerced by any obJeCt. · .
d•_tiOnal fireworks dtspl~y by the Racme Volunt~
Rent -a-frogs wt"II be ava1"I abl eat a cost of $3 F1re ~,....ment. A fi1re de partment spokesm!U'
andreniers will get $1 back when they return said the problem stems _from new licens~ng cost
mcreases and testmg procedures that were not
addressed in time for the
- Fou~h of July.
It 1s hoped that the fireworks will return next
year. .
Craft and f~ booths
will be sei up throughout
the day starting at 11
a.m. Craft space is avanable with fees going
toward upgrades at the
park. To reserve -a space,
.contact Krista Smith at
N · 1 Bank
Home ationa
at
949-2210.
The Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club will hold
an antique tractor pull at
2 p.m. at the park.

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T\leeeay, June 2t, 111r. - •

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-0112-2155 • Fax; 0112-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings,· Inc.
ROBERT L. WINGETT Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

n..Sentinel w.Jcomu l•rt.n ro fh• Nttor ~ ,...,. on• btofil,_,. otr.iu. Short l•ltw8 (300 wottM or leu) ltaw tM NM ciiMM of Mlng pubiWtN.
7}-p.t
,.r.rrw~ and•Mr m.y N ~«1. &amp;ch ahould lnctudfla •fll'lllu,.,
MJd,..., and d•ytlm• phon• number. Sp«::fy • dat•lf lltetw'e • ,.,..,.. ,w to •,..
vloue •rlkl• or ff'ltw. llall to: ,._.,.,.. to lh• lldHor, nt. Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomwoy, Ohio am: or, FAX to 740-112-2111.

,.tt.,. .,..

Editorial views
Excerpts of recent editorials of sta!ewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers:

HMOs facing new and powerful adversary
The Columbus Dispatch, June 27
Like Gen. George A~ Custer at Little Big Hom, health 111aintenance organizations must be wondering where all the Indians are coming from.
The laies• group to don war paint is the American Medical Association,
which intends to form a un'ibn it hopes will help doctors deal more effectively with_liMOs.
The 290,000-member association is dropping its anti-union stance
because doctors say they feel like David against the HMO Goliath. The most
·common complaint one hears is that medical decisions are being made by
accountants. A local surgeon ·contends that yes or ·nci .decisions are some- ·
times made by HMO staffers who don 'I know what the surgery in question
entails.
If this campaign to organize doctors catches fire, HMOs will be facing a
new and powerful adversary.' The best defense would be for HMOs to show
they are in a partnership that enables doctors to practice good medicine with
only reasonable restraints.

They did trample on more than a few civil liberties
. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, June 24
"'-- -Wai-Mart is a smart corporation founded on Am~·s love of a bargain.
But one link in this smart chain made a dumb move on June 11 in Cleveland Heights when it searc1led employees - down to their underWear after register receipts came up $3,000 short. Store officials didn't find the
missing money, but they did trample on more than a few civil liberties and
the good will of a community that had welcomed Wai-Mart's arrival last Jan uary.
·
.
·
.
Instead of merely questioning employees or leiting the police handle the
job, two store managers ordered 37 employees searched. .
Wal-Mart has tried to make amends by firing the overzealous supervisors
and apologizing to workers. With two employees retaining a lawyer, this
could be an expensive reminder that workers do not lose their presumption
of innocence when they arrive for work at Wai-Mart.
.

Angry constituents Close to home

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

The Daily Sentinel A coverup of an enemy of Israel?:?
1948

Tue8day, June 29, 1999

•

•

Commentary
'&amp;ta6{is~tf in

'

By Nit Hantofl
Morton Klein, national president of the Zionist Organization of
America, claims that in a previous
column I tried to absolve an
enemy of Israel who used to be in,
of all places, the State Department.
Klein's target is Joseph Zogby,
former head of the Palestine Peace Project and
later a mell!ber of the State Department's Near
Eastern Affairs staff. Zogby is now in the Justice
Department's Civil Rights Division.
Klein's charge that Zogby is an "extremist"
enemy of Israel -- repeated in a number of newspapers -- is . based on two articles · written by
· Zogby in the Arab-American literary journal AI Jadid and 'in the
Washington Report on Middle
Eastern Affairs.
Zogby · was writing about his
experiences in the Palestine Peace
Project -- an organization of which
Kl~in greatly disapproves. It sent
young American lawyers, law professors and Jaw students to work
on the West Bank with those Palestinians who were involved -despite opposition · from other
Palestinians -- in developing a
democratic society that respects
huml!l rights.
A New York University law stu'dent in the project, Michael Hanna,
provided legal advice to .the Palestinian Hum~n Rights Monitoring
Group and wrote a report for it that
criticized the attempts of Palestin- ·
ian officials to compromise the
independence of the judiciary.
One of Klein's accusations is
that even while Zogliy was at the
State Department, he was involved
in a conflict of interest because he
remained_ part .of the Palestine
Peace Project. 'n fact, Zogby 's letter of resignation was dated Aug.
30. He entered the State Department on Sept. 3. .
Klein alsO charged that Zogby "was arrested in
Jerusalem in 1994 for.interfering with an attempt
by the police, implementing a court order, to seal
off two rooms in ihe home of a convicted. terrorist."
The home in question, in East Jerusalem, consisted entirely of the two rooms. The home's
owner was an 82-year-old Palestinian and his 72year-old wife. Because one of their sons had been
convicted of a crime, the family was expelled
from their home, which was then sealed ,. under
·the Israeli practice of collective punishment. .

By the summer of 1994, the convicted son had And it has issued a report entitled "Routine Tor;
served his prison term. Under Israeli law, the fam- ture; Interrogation Methods of the General Secu.ily home could then be unsealed, but it wasn't. rity Service."
Two nonviolent Palestinian activists unsealed the
As for Zogby's use of such terms as "coloniz.
home, but Israeli authorities moved to reseal it er" and "alien oppressor," Dr. Naomi Khazan,
and arre5ted them.
former deputy speaker of the Knesset, has
The owner of the home and two of his sons had described Israel as "an apartheid state."
returned to the neighborhood when they heard
Once, when I was in Israel for a symposium,
their home had been unse~ed. They were arrest- on? of the participants was . a prominent Israeli
ed and beaten. Zogby amved, and as an act of phtlosopher, David Hartman. I had never met
civil disobedience, refused to leave· the home In · 'him. During a break, he walked toward me in the
order to attract attention to the injustice to the corridor and, without even saying "Hello," aaked,
family, which was not breaking Israeli law. He " What has been the most important development
was put in a Jerusalem prison.
in the history of mankind?"
Zogby's detention was protested by the United
I said, "Due prO'cess."
States consul general, and . after eight hours he
"Right," he replied, striding on.

Ohio weather
Wedneed•y, June 30

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was · released. He was not charged with any
offense.
Klein also accuses Zogby of calling Israel a
"colonizer," "an alien oppressor" and an
"abuser" of'Palestinjan rights.
More specific charges .in this vein are regularly published by BTselem, the Israel Information
Center for Human Righ15-- founded in 1989 by
Israeli academics, journalists and members of the
Knesset. It has . documented "administrative
detention of Palestinians with no due process....
Detainees are·provided with no information, ·nor
given the opportunity to refute the allegations,"

Thlt is what Zogby was writing about; and in
Israel, he met lsmelis who believe in due proces.1 -.: :
and are concerned with ensuring that the Jewish :
state adheres to its· democratic roots.
:
Zogby thereby freed himself of previous stereo, · ,
types about Israel:
·
.
.
.
1
Morton Klein might have overcome some of .. · :
his OWJI stereotypical thinking if he had studied' '
the work of the Palestine Peace Project.
_ _:
Nat Henton Ia 1 natlonelly renowned ·~
authority on the Flrllt Amendment and the rea( " •
or the Bill or Rlghla.
·

i

The Akron Beacon Journal, Ju(le 22
Copyrlghl1llllll NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSI!I. •·
Sen. ·George Voinovich has been impressive in dealing with the steel
'
.
·industry's request for federal assistance in its battle against foreign imports.
The Ohio Repul)lican has encountered angry constituents close .to home.
Ohio leads the nation in steel production.
.
Voinovich recognizes the pinch that steelmakers faced. He supports legislation that would permit the feds to respond mQre quickly and flexibly to
foreign du.mping schemes. He also understands where to draw the line. The By JOHN McCARTHY
Hood, a . Canfield Republican,
which would eliminate "closed
~
loan program WQ_uld amount to aiding, selectively an industry that enjoyed Auciclllted Preaa Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
shops" in Ohio. ·The unionized
record levels of production last year, The quota bill would violate internaThe Republican-controlled Senate workplaces in which all employtional trade rules that play to the strength o.f theAmerican economy.
The Senate will begin consideration of the egregious quota bill today. last week passed a bill that backers ees, whether they belong to the
Steelworkers plan to rally on Capitol HilL Sen. Mike DeWine and others · say will make public construction organization or npt, arc required to
will skip the complexities of the industry, the role of technology, the global work available to more contrac- pay union dues exist in 29 states.
Backers . of the proposal say . .
UniO~
overcapacity, the many steel customers in Ohio and elsewhere who actually tors, but Dem.ocrats and unions see
it as another GOP assault on orga- workers should h~ve the final say
·
·
benefit from the competition.
·
.nized labor.
·
over what happens to their money . .
The ra~ks of the uninsured are growing
House
Bill
101,
sponsored
by
Hood's bill has languished in the
The (Findlay) Courter, June 23
.
Rep.
Ron
Young,
R-Painesville,
House Commerce and Labor Com- .
Congress should ·act now to help the 43 million Americans who have no
would
prohibit
a
contractor
from
mittee since February.
health insurance.
·
requiring
union
membership
or
the
But Democrats and unions see
The ranks of the uninsured are growing by 100,000 a month. And this is
payment
of
union
dues
on
publicly
Young's bill as a test of Taft's willhappening during a timeof strong economic growth, despite continuing congressional attempts to expand coverage. Imagine what will happen come the financed projects. It also would ingness to back 'the unions' cause.'
..,..
keep government from discrimi- Ohio AFL-CJO President William
next economic downlum.
For individuals, being uninsured is a problem because too often it means natin~ against contraclors who Burga and Senate Minority Leader
B~n Espy both have sent Taft letjects such as roads, libraries and tie that could be renewed between
health care foregone, small warning signs are ignored and minor illnesses refuse to hire union workers.
Now,
it's
up
to
Gov.
Bob
Taft
to
ters
urging
him
to
veto
the
bill.
schools. Labor unions estimated Republicans and organized labor.
allowed to become costly crises. It's a problem for families because unpaid
decide
whether
to
sign
the
bill,
"During
a
recent
speech,
you
that' workers could lose as much as That fight spilled over into the :·:
medical bills are a leading cause of personal bankruptcy. And it's a problem
veto
it
or
allow
it
to
become
law
vowed
not
to
dismantle
labor
$1,500
a year · without prevailing Senate chamber in 1997 during the ·
for_the nation because uncompensated care is an unfair burden on doctors,
·
without
his
.
signature.
Spokesman
unions
in
this
state.
wage.
·
prevailing wage de.bate when
hospitals and ·taxpayers.
While HB 101 does not 'dis"There's 'no major, massive bill scores of angry union members
· TheSe problems cry out for remedy. And happily, a bipartisan remedy is Scott Milburn said Taft hasn't
avatlable. We thmk Congress should create a new refundable tax credit to decided what to do with the legis- mantle' unions, it is a' step in that to take .away everything all at packed the room and Finan splin-..
lation.
direction," Espy, D-Columbus, once. They're chipping away little . tered his gavel trying to quiet ·
enable all Americans to buy decent heath coverage.
In March, Taft became the first wrote Taft.
by liitle," Blirga said iri an inter- them.
' '
Republican governor to speak to
Burga sees Young's bill as the view last week.
"You never have a House Bill · .
the.Ohio AFL-CIO legislative con- continuation of an attack on labor
However, Senate President 101 without stirring the pot. It's' •
ference.
He told about .500 union that began with a bilf lawmakers Richard Finan, R·Cincinnati, sees mission impossible,'' he said.
By·The.Aaoclated Preaa
.: 1
Milburn said 'Taft will study the · ' ·
'foday is Tuesday, June 29, the I 80th day of 1999. There are 185 days left members that he would not support passed. in 1997 that would remove it quite differently. He said
attempts by the Legislature to dis· Ohio's "prevailing wage" law on Young's bill, as well as the pre·) bill and weigh the concernS' of tax·
in the year.
.
· mantle unions, a surprising posi- new school construction.
Today's .Highlight in History:
vailing wage cutback, are good \ payers anll unions before making
That law guarantees that con- deals. for taxpayers and workers . his decision about the bill.
· On June 29, 1767, the British Parliament approved the Townshend Rev- tion for a member of the GOP.
enue Acts, which impcsed import duties on such things as glass, lead, paint, · He was speaking specifically struction workers get union-nego· alike.
"There are a Jot .o f factors th·at
paper and tea shipped ·to America. Colonists bitterly protested the Acts, about a bill sponsored by Rep. Ron tiated pay on public building proBut.he realizes the political bat· go into play," he said.
which we~e repealed in 1770.
On this date:
.
ln 1776, the Virginia state constitution was adopted, and Patrick Henry
made governor.
In 1941, Polish statesman, pianist and composer Ignace Jan Paderewski
By S•r• Eckel
ancient need to galva- they do' at some point become simply ours. And' _
died in New York at age 80.
I opce interviewed a drummer named Layne
nize group energy? Or is while it's wise to try noc to be brainwuheil by •
In 1946, British authorities arrested more than 2,700 Jews in Palestine in
Redmond, who had written a history of women
it simply because it's a movie magazinea or patriarchal ~ely, ultimate·an ·~ttempt to stamp out alleged terrorism.
.
pleasant diversion from ly you must ~pec:t your own wishes •• whether.
· Jn 1949, the government of South. Africa enacted a ban against racially and drumming called, "Wilen the .Drummers
Were Women" (l'hree Rivers, 1997). Redmond
studying microbiology?
that wish is to be a cheerleader, marry a cultural
'mixed marriages.
wanted
to
be
a
drummer
when
she
was
a
girl,
but
This
question
that
has
icon,
or run off to a cabin in the woods and bake
tn 1954, the Atomic Energy Commission voted against reinstating Dr. J.
. her parents forbade it because drumming was for
intrigued .me for some brownies.
Robert Oppenheimer's access to classified information.
time-- how do you sepaBecause that's the ultimate feminist act-- being
In 1966, the United States bombed fuel storage facilities near the North boys. ~she became a cheerleader instead.
After many years, Redmond moved to New
rate what you truly true to youl'liCJf. The idea that feminists must fall •
VieJnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong.
believe in your heart into one neat little line is not one that is promoted.-.; ! ·
. ln 1967, J~rusalem was re-unified as lstael removed barricades separat- York City and eventually began. performing a
series of monologues called •"! Wis A Teen-Age
_
from what you've been by feminists·· it's promoted by those who 'want~:::! '
mg•the Old City from the Israeli. sector.
.
Cheerleader."
.
conditioned
by
society
to
believe? And do you prove feminism·wrong. These are. the people wh«Ciii !
tn 1970, the United States ended a two-month military offensive into
In,
the
monologues,
Redmond
poked
fun
at
her
even
need
to
separate
them?
say that a woman can't be a feminist if she dis· ,
Cambodia.
I remember the bizarre reaction I had when plays any sort of complexity if, for example, sho· ·· 1
In 1972, the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty, as it was being meted · cheerleading pas~ but when we last spoke she had
out, could constitute "cruel and unusual punishment." (The ruling prompt- begun to re-examine it. And the more she pon· John F. Kennedy, Jr. got married. I had never believes in liberal politics but chooses to stay mar- •''
dered the issue, the more she realized that cheer· thought abo~t JFK Jr. he just wasn't my celebri· ried after her husband has an affair. ·
· :·,I
ed states to revise their capital punishment laws.)
· '
. ly as dippy u $he had origi· ' ty crush of choice. And yet I definitely felt let
. And it's this myth that fell)inism is a narrow;.: 1
In 1988, the Supreme Court, in a 7-1 decision, upheld the power of inde- leading wasn't near
pendent counsels to prosecute illegal acts by high-ranking government offi· nally thought. "I lived in a small town," she down when his engagement was announced, and little box of beliefs that makea so many women
explained. "And the high school football game I know many other ·women who felt the same shun the term. lt'a what makea fcminilm aeem 1
clals.
·
·
Ten years ago: The 'U.S. House of Representatives voted unanimously in wu the central event of the community. I wu at way. The years of being told by "Extra!" and confining, a rejection of aoniethina .. men,· mar~ ''•
favor of new sanctions against China because of ita crackdown on the pro- the center of that. I was galvanizing group energy. People magazine that JFK Jr.'·was The Best Guy ' riage, lip gloss. But feminism ian 't about S&amp;ylnj · ~ 1
And that wu a very powerful thina to be doing. made their mark. The media had told us so many no -- it's about saying yes. A1!d ·it's not about ~; :
democracy movement.
times that John-John was our dream man that we. denying your contradictiona and complexities, it'• 1 •
· Five years ago: In a British T\f documentary, Prince Charles said he was and it was a very ancient thing to be doin&amp;-"
I think about that statement a lot. Because for finally just nodded our heads like glassy-eyed cult about embracing them. Because they are what
faithful in his marriage to Prin=s Diana "until it became irretrievably bro·
me
it gets to the core of why feminism liP tricky. members: "We love JFK Jr. Must marry JFK Jr." make us human. They are what make us women.
ken down."
.
·
If
a
woman wanl5 tO be a cheerleeder, is that Until the myth became the truth.
Copyright!'" N!WIPAPIA INTERPRIIE AlaN. • '
. One year ago; Studenl5 at Beijing University peppered President Qinton ·
l;lecause.
she's
been
conditioned
by
patriarchal
So
how
can
we
separate
our
true
desires
from
lltnd oommentl to the lutllof In Cllre Ollhle' ~ ~!
with polite but critical questions about America's human rights record, 1ii·
society
to
·stand
on
the
sidelines
and
be
a
pretty
the
ones
manufactured
by
our
culture?
We
can'~
•
newepaf)e!'
or lind her · ..mall It Hl'lleu•~ ~
wan policy and views on Otina in an exchange televised live across the vast
little piece of fluff? Or is it because she has an really. Whatever the root of our wants and needs, maol.com.
nation. ·
.

Legislature fires another shot at unions ~:
ll

House.Bi 101, sponsored by Rep. Ron.:..
Youn111 R-Painesville, would prohibit a ,.
· mem-:.·''
contractor firom requiring union
b
ership Or the payment of
dUeS On::·;
Ji
· "
publicly manced projects. ·. It also would _, ·
k · ·
"'
eep government from discriminating ...
against COntraCtOrS WhO refuse tO hire .'
Uni'On wo•k.
ers,
·
.. ·
'1

__________________ ______ ...

Today In Histor)t

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'

Feminism is about saying yeS;'

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Rain

..
A-

Partly cloudy skies will
prevail on Wednesday ·
By. The Auoclatecl Prell
.
:Lower temperatures and clear skies are expected in Ohio tonight, as
high pres5ure builds,
·
Lows will mnge from the lower 50s to the lower 60s.
:On Wednesday, it will be partly sunny and pleasant, with highs in the
middle 70s to the lower 80s.
.
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 100 set in 1934. The record l.ow was 48 set i!l1923.
Sunset today will be at 9:04 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at 6:06
a.m.
.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. Areas of fog developing towards midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s, Ught and variable wind.
..
·
Wednesday ... Patchy early morning fog. Otherwise partly cloudy. Highs .
in the lower 80s.
,
•Wednesday night ... Becoming cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows
in the mid 60s.
Exteudecl forecaat:
.
Thursday...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Friday... Partly t;loudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms during the day. Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the upper 80s.
·Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s and highs near 90.

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls
1,1 nits of the Meigs County
Emergency
Medical
Service
recorded 11 calls for assistance
Monday. Units' responding includcd : lj.i ., "; •~- ~ :.~
...
....
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:53 a.m., Eagle Ridge Road,
Chester, Jack Devore, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
·
10:40 a.m., Laurel Cliff Road,
Pomeroy, Mabel Tracy, dead on
arrival;
4:37 p.m., Rose Valley Road,
Syracuse, Thcker Williams, VMH,
Syracuse VFD and squad assisted;
~:40 p.m., Minersville Hill
Road, Eli White, VMH, Syracuse
squad assisted;
8:13 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Ceqter, Middleport, 9J;Prge Cremeans, Holzer Medidii'Ccnter. ' .
POMEROY
.
9;59 p.m., volunteer fire department and squad to County Road
,7A, motor-vehicle accident, Angie
~

The Paily Sentinel
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George 0. Blankenship, 69, Mason, W.Va., died Sunday, June 27, 1999
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
•
.
· Born Dec. 25, 1929 in Rock "Castle, W.Va., son of the late William Pre·sJon and Virgie J. Stewart Blankenship, he was relired from Foote Mineral
Corp. A U.S. Marine Corps veteran, he was a member of the Foxhunters·
Association.
Surviving ~re his wife, Patricia Ann Reed Chandler Blankenship; a son
and daughler-m-law, Greg and Tammy Blankenship of Sandyville, W.Va.;
two daughters and sons-in-law, Charlene and Bud Rollins, and Pam and
Marty Collins, all of Parkersburg, W.Va.; a daughter, Sheryl Moellendick of
Parkersburg; a st~pdaughler and her husband, Joann (. and Steve Danger- .
field of ~ason; et~;~ht grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and three stepgrandchildren; a stster and brother-in-law, Eunice and Woodrow W. King of
Letart, W.Va.; a sister. Corda Williams of Akron; and two brothers and sis,ters-in-law, Leonard Clarence and Cordelia Blankenship of Ripley, W.Va.,
and Dayton and Mary Blankenship of Akron.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeml Home,
Mason, with the Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating. Burial will be in the Sun·
rise Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeml home from 6-9
tonight.
Military gmveside rites will be conducted by Stewart-Johnson Post 9926
of the VFW and the Smith-Capehart ·Post 140 of the American Legion.

Herbert E. Rowland
Herbert E. Rowland, 75, 14 Cruze! St ., Gallipolis, died Monday, June
28, 1999 at his residence.
·
Born Oct. 26, 1923 in Coalton, son of the late Elba and Marie
Humphreys Rowland, he retired after 30-112 years of service as a milk carrier with Broughton Dairy Co. He was also retired from Star Bank.
·He was a member of Teamsters Lo~al 505 in Huntington, W.Va., and
was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II. He was a member of VFW Post ·
4464 and American Legion Lafayette Post 27,
Surviving are his wife, Phyllis I. Criner Rowland, whom he married
April 19, 1952 in Richmond, Ind.; and a granddaughter.
· ·
He was also preceded in death by his daughter, Beverly I. Lawrence, on
Nov. 26, 1996; a sister, Margaret Lambert; and by a sister in infancy.
Graveside services will be 1 p.m . Thursday in the Pine Street Cemetery,
with the Rev. David L. Hopkins officiating. Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis, from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday;
·
A flag presentation will be conducted by VFW Post 4464 and American
Legton, Lafayette Post 27.
·
Memorial contributions can be made to the National Kidney Foundation of Ohio, 1373 Grandview Ave., Suite 200, Columbus, Ohio 433122814.

Mabel Tracy

-0.-

MllpC..,
IJ v..u ..~........""'"-'"".s».lS
~·26
-:S$6.68

Vandalism reported to pollee

·

A report of vandalism and a possible breaking and entering at Jeff's Carryout in Pomeroy is under investigation by the Pomeroy Poli&lt;;e Department.
. The department received a complaint early Monday that a window had been
broken and a cash register inside the building had been knocked off the counter.

Man jailec! on munlple charges
A Pomeroy man was arrested for DUI, open cpntainer and littering, as well
as domestic violence and menacing in incidents over the weekend.
.
Allcording to the Pomeroy Police Departmen~ Roger ~'{an, 36, Pomeroy,
was transported.to the Southeastern Ohio Regional Jail in Nelsonville on Satmday on the charges and is expected to appear in Meigs O&gt;unty Court on Tuesday.
Hart was charged with the traffic violations and littering shortly after midnight on Saturday and for the domestic violence and menacing charges after a
complaint against him was made at approximately 4 a.in. on Saturday mom- -

-

Accidents Investigated · ·

'

~

.

•

A Hartford, W.Va. woman was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
treated and released, following a single-car accident on East Main Street on Saturday.
Melissa Lynn Fields, 31, was transported after she struck a utility pole near
East Locust Street.
·
Serious damage was reported to her 1993 Chevrolet.
Matthew F. Morris, 22, Long Bottom, was cited for assured clear distanCe
after he struck another vehicle from behind in an accident at the intersection of
Sycamore and East Main Streets in Pomeroy.
Acoordin~ to the. Pomeroy Police Department, lqbaia Chowdhury, 31,
Madtson Hetghts, M1ch., was stopped at the lraffic light at -the intersection on
Sunday and was ~truck from behind by Morris.
·.

Hartford woman cited in crash
A Hartford, W.Va., woman was cited following a omi-car crash on Counly
Road 7A near Pomeroy Monday around 10:02 p.m.
Angela Sue Stewart, 32, was southbound when she lost control of her 1987
Ford Escort which struck a guardrail, sustaining heavy damage according to a
Meigs County Sheriff's Office report.
'
She was transported by the Pomeroy squad of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical ·Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pome.roy where she was
treated for minor injuries, the report stated.
. ·
·
She was cited on charges of driving under tbe influence, failure to control
and no seat belt.
A Reedsviile man was cited after a one-QI' accident on state Route 681 near
Reedsville shortly after midnight this morning.
.
Dustin Millone, 18, was eastbound when he .lost control of his 1987
Otrysler LeBaron which struck a mailbox, rolled over a hillside
landed in
a ditch, according to a Mei~ County Sheriff's Office accidCnt report.
The car sustained heavy damage. Millone was cited on a charge of failure
to control.

Sewer improvements

. FBI: Name on wanted posters won't
change despite new Information

Stewart, VMH, Central Dispatch
squad assisied.
RVTLAND
1 p.m., VFD ~nd squad to state
Route· 143, meitOf·vehicle accidellt,
Melissa Stanley, Meigs County
Continued from p1ge 1
'helipad pending transfer to CabeiiJluntington Hospital via helicopter ters have been mailed to Middleambulance, Centml Dispatch squad port residents in violation of new
and Scipio Township VFD assist· ordinances 'relating to high weeds,
trash and "junked cars on private ·
ed;
·
8:49 p.m., Beech Grove Road, property.
Stivers said that the letters will
Barbara Phillips, HMC;
10:53 p.m., Painter Ridge Road, be followed up with court action if
Ki,mberly Holiday, tr~ated at .the residents fail to comply.
Outdated license plates for cars
scene, Central Dispatch squad
parked on village streets have been
assi.sted.
seized by the police department as
SYRACUSE
12:42 a.m., VFD and squad to well, and those cars will be subject
state Route 124, motor-vehicle to towing, she said.
Sam Eblen asked that the police
accident, Mark Spencer, Grant
Medical Center · via helicopter department enforce an ordinance.
ambulance, Central Dispatch squad passed last year relating to loud
boom boxes and other stereos.
assisted. ·
Eblen said that he and his neighTUPPERS PLAINS
bors
in the Hudson Street area have
4:37. p.m.1 Locust Grove Road,
Mandy Grueser, treated at the noticed an increase in noise from
. the stereos during the warm
scene.
months, al)d that he ·has reported
the complaints to the police depart ~
ment.
Holzer Medical Center
lannarelli asked that Eblen
Dlsc:harge5 June 28 - Richard invite his neighbors to the next
Marcus, Mrs. James· Wallace and council meeting so that the issue
son, Mrs. Timothy Halley and son, can be discussed with police perAngela Steele:
_
sonnel.
(Publilhecl with permission)
lannarelli also reported that sevBackstreet Boys member Kevin
eral juveniles had been prohibited
Richardson played Aladdin and a· from using General Hartinger Park
Ninja Turtle at,Walt Disney World
for . the remainder of the summer
before the group's rise to fame.. .

. Hospital news

Man cited in accident ·

amt

Correction
Katherine McDonald, 17, Middleport, was cited for failure to control following an accident in.Pomeroy last Wednesday. Ann M. Sisson. another driver
m tbe accident, was not cited. as was repcrted in The Daily Sentinel:
,

HOUSTON (AP) - The ·FBI says
due to persistent disciplinary prob·
.)ems. Council discussed Stivers f{afael nesendez·Ramirez's name
reported that' July 4 fireworks isn 't as important as his picture.
The alias Rafael Resendezwould be set off from the riverbank
Ramirez
will remain on the agency's
in Mason County, W.Va. this year,
wanted
posters,
even though the· FBI
to avoid propef(y damage and to
on Monday confirmed several media..
improve safety for spectators.
Pat Custer reported that a light reports that the name is just one of
on Vine Street was 'in need of more than 30 the man is thought to
repair, due tp·damage from a fallen have used.
"The picture is what's very
·
tree earlier this year.
important,
because that is how ·he's
Iannarelli issued a reminder that
going
to
be
recognized," said Don K.
the installation of atxive-grounil or
Clark,
special
agent in charge of the
in-ground filtered pools requires a
Houston
bureau
and head of the task
permit, and that fences at least six
force
pursuing
man linked to
feet high must be constructed eight slayings in the
three states.
around the pools for safety.
The suspect, who appears on the
· Present, in addition to lannarelli FBI's 10 Most Wanted List, has been
and Stivers, were Council members charged wilh two slayings earlier lhis
Rae Gwiazdowski, Steve Houch- month in Illinois. He also is wanted
ins, Roger ·Manley, Robert Pooler
·and Robert Robinson, Clerk Bryan ·
Swann, and Myron Duffield, mem- ·
ber of the Board of Public Affairs.

for questioning in five Texas killings
and a 1997 homicide in Kentucky.
The suspect's real name is Angel
Leoncio Reyes Recendis. according
to a bit1h certificate. The 39·year-old
was born in Izucar de MaJamoros,
Puebla, MexiCo, Clark said.
·'the mother listed on the certifi:
cate, Virginia Recendis, told a public ·
notary on March · 9, 1960, that the '
child's father .was Juan Reyes, the _
FBI said.
Because most of the public know!
the wanled man as ResendezRamitez, Clark · said, the FBI will.
continue to use that name.
"We've got a lot of fliers oul there
all over the place with Rafael
Resendez-Ramirez on them, " Clark ·
said. " I don't want 'to confuse the
public.''

Stocks
A'm Ele Power ................~ ......38'4
Akzo ..................... ...............:... 42

AmrTech ...............................87~

Alhland 011 .........................3t'*t•
1

AT&amp;T ...................·..................54 .1.

Borg-Warner .........................5811t

Bro~~ghton ...................................·

Champlo'n ................·...............7';,
Charm Shpa .................. ~ ••...••.&amp;'t.Jl
Ctty Holdlng·................ ,....... 28'*J.a
,-.,.1 Motul ....................82 1'/,,

STAR WARS EPISODE 1·
PHANTOM MENACE (PGI
7:011 l 8:40 DAILY

52 lllllleki ..........................S109.7Z

Ganrtett ...................................72

Rcactcr Ser v1ccs

Kroaer ...................................26 1.
Umfted ..............................~ ...44'/,,

IIIATIHEU SAT/IUN 1:20 l 3:20

-..u...........................

Kman ••··~·····&lt;~••"•'""''''''.......... 15;.4

.

o... ....................... ...
- .r • enw Ia •

omonte. If,_

ttl-

Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 18't.

ova .........................................32

·OM V•lley ...........................31'/tt
Prem Flnl ...............................:. 13

Rockwlll ........ ,.................erl'lt•

3155. We •• clleck J•r ..., ......
•Ill - · oornciiH llwern11ed.

FID!Shell ...............................581/,,

: ·· ·Newa Dellartmenia

Shoney•e .................................2f.•
Firat star ...............................2711
WMdy'• ....... ,................. :...••2t'J.
WorthlngtOn .......................131•1t,

' Tile .............. "-l-l155. Deport-

.... a .......nJ
~

Mo....t ........................Ext. 1101
N..._ ...................................- ........Ext. llOl
erl:xt.U04

Othw Service•

Ad•n&gt;eoftl•l...llr.....................................lxL 1104
Clrplllloi ..............................~..Ext.ll03

0• ollk&lt;l Ad&amp; ..., .........................lxt. llOII

j

A 49-year-okl Coolville man drowned Monday evening after a boat he was
in flipped over in a pond off Vanderhoof Road, Coolville.
Dead iS Herbert B. Ater of 1155 Vanderhoof Road. Mr. Ater and a 16-yearold nephew were frog gigging when the boat lhey were in flipped over, tossing
both into the pond, according to an Alhens County Sheriff's OffiCe report. The
youth was able to swim 10 safety.
Ater 's body was found after a 45-minute search of the pond by the Little
H.ocking Diving Team, Coolville Fire Department and Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical Service. He was pronounced dead at Carnden-Oark Memorial
Hospital in Parkersburg. W.Va., by lhe Wood O&gt;unty, W.'w., coroner.
Alcohol is betieved to have been a factor in tbe death; the repon stated.

Mabel Delores Tracy, 75, .Pomeroy,'died on Monday, June 28, 1999 at
her home, following an extended illnes~..
·
She was a retired nurse. She was born on March 1, 1924 in Oklahoma.daughter of the late James and Stella Kennit West. She attended the Lau·
rei Cliff Free Methodist Church.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Jay and Melva Tracy,
Pomeroy; a daughter and son-in-law, Sue and Chester Stone, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and a brother, John West of Summer, .Wash.; six grandchildren
and four great grandchildren.
·
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Pat
Tracy.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, July 1, 1999 at 10 a.m . at
the Ewing Funeral Home with Rev. Charles Swigger officiating. Burial
will follow at Rockspring~ Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
Memorial ·contributions may be made to the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church.

MATINEES IAT/8UN 1:00 l 3:40
IARCIAIN NIGHT
AUBnN POWERS (P013I

....,., . . . . . - · - 81 (740)

Coolville man drowns

lob,Evana .... ;.................,·..... 19'1.

·...........................
-MIJp c.-.,SZ7.30 •
, 13 \YteU.
26 w..u .........................ID.82
' 52 \\ileb,,.,..,,•.,,............H.Sl05.!6

Correction Polley

Local briefs:

S.nk OM ............................58"J,,

MAILSU!IICRIPI'JON.

'

Notices I

George 0. Blankenship

'

•

I Death

&amp;e.ra ..:................................44"/,.

--• •

Stock reporta are the 10:30
a.m. quolft provided by Advellt
of GalllpOJII,

7:20 l1:20 DAILY

•Worker's Compensation
•.lnsntance
•Self.Pay .
•Medicare
•Medicaid

• Particapating on most
HMO!MC() Plans .
• Accepts new patients
• Usuolly available within
1-2 days

�Sports

The Daily Sentin,!\ •

notch 6-t
.victory over Royals.

~ Indians

Red Sox, Rangers, :
Blue Jays get wins~

By DOUG TUCKER
reall y well."
. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) He got his only lhree strikeouts by
Allhough the Kansas City Royals fannin g the side in "the third after a
lost the game, it wasn 't because of leadoff double by Rey Sanchez.
"He was spotting every pitch."
their defense.
The Royals turned in six terrific , aid Damon, one of the three strike. defensive plays - including three by out victim s. " His curveball was on
left fielder Johnny Damon - during the top half of the plate and ran into
. , lhe Cleveland Indians' 6- 1 victory my hands. His changeup was very
• Monday night. ·. .
.
effecti ve. I kn ow I chased a couple of
•
"The· RoY,als. really played well. them."
: They have an outstanding young
Kansas City 's only run came on
:.club 'chat is going to have a good Mike Sweeney's leadoff homer in the
• ' future. Those were some very nice fourth .
:Plays," Cleveland man ager Mike
Se xson connected off Jay
:Hargrove said.
Witasick (3- 6) in the fifth and is hitCharles Nazy, one of the major ting ·.329 with seven homers and 21
leagues' winningest pitchers the past RBis since breaking an 0-for-24 skid
five seasons, pitched seven steady June 9.
.
" Nagy is a preuy good experiinnings. He allowed five hits "as the
Indians completed a 3-4 road trip in cnced pitcher," Royals manager
wh.ich Nagy won two of the games. Tony Muser said. " He doesn't throw
. . "Charley' s relaxing and not try- anything strai ght. He throw s lots of ·
AT SECONDsecond baseman Enrique Wilson
.ing to be perfect with everything," breaking balls when he's behind in holds up his glove for the benefit of umpire John Shurlock, but
Hargrov~ said. " He 's finding out the the count. "
Shurlocks gives the sale signal lor the Kansas City Royals' Ray
name of the game is gelling people
· Damon threw out Travis Fryman Sanchez, who slides into second base with a double in the third
out, not how you ge t them out. "
tryin g to score from second base in inning of Monday night's American League game in Kansas City,
Richi e · Sexso n hit a two- run the second inning and got Jim Thome .zWuh.llelllr.llewtwhlliewlwnllddwi•lllnJlsLJIWt:.ou.n~,;6~~;-;.~l.,,,lj(A~P~:;lL...------------homer and .Kenny Lofton singled in when he tried to score from second in
.. Jerma ine Dye has pl ayed Carlos Febles a perfect behind -thetwo runs a! Nagy ( 10-4) won for the the third .
tremendous ri ght field .for us," Muser bac k nip for the forceuut.
seventh time in eight dec isions and
Damon, who has four assists this said. " Beltran makes a great catch 10
Thome, who scored two runs, left
did not allow a walk. Nagy is the season, cras hed into the wall catch- start the game, and that· just -shows the gam e in th e sixth with ti ghlncsS
second AL pitcher with 10 wins thi s · ing Omar Vizquel's foul ball in the great co nce ntrati on and focus. in his back.
season. ·, .
fourth.
Johnny played extremely .hard and
"" It 's one of those things,"' said
" I just threw my pitches and let
Carlos Beltran made a di vin g made two good throws. "
Thome, who missed fou r games with
people make the plays behind me," cat ch for the game's first out on
With a run.ner on first in the · a back problem in May. " It will go
Nagy said. " I'd developed some bad Lofton's sinkin g liner just inche s off eighth, shortstop Sanchez made a away an.d then it mi ght come back.
habits last .year and it just became a the grass in shall ow left-ce nter.
backhanded stop of Manny And I mi ght not "have it for a month
kind of a gri"nd . Since I figured it out.
In .the Tift h. right fi elder Jermaine Ramire z's grciunder behind second. or two. I could go to bed tonight and
I've started throwing preuy well. Dye made a lunging' catch of Enrique Without looking back", he gave it could feel good tomorrow."
Since then , things have been going Wil son's drive.

American League
roundup

:
•
:
;
•

Padres, Pirates, Mets, Braves tally wins
The Sao Diego Padres stole one
from the Colorado Rockies.
· Running at every opportunity, the
Padres pulled off a club-record ni~e
steals en route to an 8-7 victory over
the Ro"ckies on Monday night.

National League
roundup
By The Aasoclated Press

Scoreboard
Colorado {Brownson 0:21 a1 San Francisco (Oniz

Baseball

4:05p.m.
All anta (0. Pere z 4-5) at Montreal &lt;PavaflO

8-~) .

AL standings
E•stern
Bouon .... .......
Toronto ..
Baltimore...
Tampa Bay .......

i'J:l,

...45

2~

.616

..........45
. ... .37
.... 32
32

31
41
42
44

.592
.474
.432
421

New York ........ ,. ...

Cenlral Dlvi~ion
CLEVELAND .................... 41J 25
Chieaao .................... , ...... .. 36 37
Kan.sas City ... .
.. ............ J I 43
Detroit .....
.. .. .3 2 44
Minnesota ....
..28 46

J78

.... 43
.. ........ 38
...... ,...... 36

33
37
39

. .. .......... J5 40

The Padres, 13 games under .500
not quite two weeks ago, improved
their record to 35-38."
Damian Jackson; who came to
San Diego from Cincinnati in the.
Greg Vaughn trade, matched the
Padres' -individual record with five
steals, including home on the back
end of a double steal in the sixth.
· " We can ' t wait on the three-run
home run," Jackson said. "We' ve
got to take the game."
They •nccded every run, because

ln . last Saturday 's races at Kanawha Valley bragway in Southside,
W.Va ., Chuck Sanders of Point Pleasant, W.Va. drove his 1982 Camara to
victory over Tom Oldaker of Buckhannon, W.Va. and his 1967 Camaro in
the Pro Division.
In the Modified Division, Greg Sauvage of Pomeroy used ~is 1970
Nova to beat Nick Parkins of St. Albans, W.Va. and his 1963 Nova.
In the Pure Street Division, Cherry Strawther of Winfield, W.Va.
drover her 1969 Nova to victory over Marc French of Middleport and his
197 I Caprice.
.
·
In the Junior Dragster Division, Mike Chandler qf St. Albans knocked
off Derek Baum of Poineroy. .
In the Pro Modified Division, Dave Hudson of Marmet, W.Va. drove
hi s 1989 Berella to .the win ov.er Ted Adkins of Bluefield, W.Va. and his
1990 Berella.

(See NL on Page S)

los Angeles (K . Brown 9-4) at San Diego
(Boehringer 5-l ), 10:35 p.m.

WNBJ\ standings
Eastern Conference

w

JwQ

New York
............... 5
Orlando.................
·c..... ~ 5
Detroit .............
.. ... 5
Chnrlolte .. ,...
.3
CLEV ELAND . . .
..... 2
Washmgton ........
. .... 1

.480
467

Monday's scores
BOston 14, Chicago I
Toronto 3. Tampa Bay 2
CLE,VELAND 6. Kansas C1ty l
Texas 9, Anahe1m I

L
2

i'J:l,
714

J

.625

4 . 556
4 429
1 ·m
7

125

.'
I

2
4
4':

Western Conference

Tonight's games
Baltimore (Guzman -'-6) at Toronto (Hent Ken :C.6), 7:0.5 p .l;ll
Minnes01a (Rndke 5-7) m CLEVELAND !Burhn
7:05 p:m.
DetrpJI'(T1JOmpsol! 6-7") ill New York (Cicmcm 7l). 7:35p.m
Chi~·ago (Na varro.6-5 ) at K a n ~ 11 s City (Apptcl (1.
6). 8:tY.i p m
Te:rcas (Burkett 1-) J Ill Anah~i m (Qiiv a re ~ 6-5 1.
10:05 p.m.
.
Seilttle malamil 6·2) at Uakl.1nd IOqui st 6-61

1-n

Hou§ton ..
Minnesota
.S acra me n1 n

.7
....

5
.5

Lm ·Angde~

~

l'hocni :rc :...
Utah ....

' 2

1 .875
.667
J 625
4 555
5 .ns
5 286

1

2

/

2

2'
4
4'

Wednesday's games

Wednesday's games
~as hi ng t on

ill Charlotte. 7:JOp.m .
Houston 111 Utah. 9 p.m.

Transactions
Baseball

4), 8:0!1 p.m.
Te~~;as (Glynn 1-2) at Anaheim ( Hill ,\. 7), 10:.\!1
p;m.
Seaule (Fusero J-7) at OaklaOO (Hudson 2-·1),

IO:lS p.m.

NL standings
Eastern Division .

n

l"ulll

Atlanta .

................. ..47

L . f&lt;l.

29
New York ........................... 43 33
Philadelphia ... ~ ............ ,...... 39 3.5
Montreal .............................. 28 44
Florida.................................. 26 so

.618
.566
.S27
.)89

.J42

Central Dl.-lslon

CtNC!NNATI ....................... 41 ll

.S69

Milwaukee .. ,.......... .......... :....34 40

.S68
.SI4
.soo
.49J
.459

Weltern Dl~islon
.. .....43 33
San FrandKo ...... ,................41 3!1
San Diego ..................._. ........ J5 J8

S66
539
.479

LOI .4nae~

472
466

• Houston ..,....
..... ..42 32
Pinsbur&amp;h .............. ............... 38 36.

Chicqo ....................... :....... .36 36
St. Louis ............................... J7

38

Arizona ..............

Col .,..to ..............................J4 38
......... .J4 39

American League
,
,
ANAHEIM ANGELSo Pl~tCed RHPTim Belcher
on tl)e 1.5-doy disabled li5t. Reassigned C Fausto
Tejero and LHP Jmm Alv8ru frQfTl'Erie 'of the
Eastern L..e:ague to Edmonton of the PCL.
·
· CLEVELAND INDlANS: Acquired LHP Jo1h
Santo5 from the S~tn Frnnci~co Giants to complete an
April trade.
'
SEA'rTLE MARlNERS: Released UfP Allen
Watson. Recalled' LHP Jordan ZJmmerman from
lill Tacoma of the PCL.
TEXAS RANGERS : ·Placed OF Tom Goodwin
4
on the 1.5-day disabled li1t. Rt:called OF Scarborough
1
m Oklahoma of the PCL. Sent RHP
17 Green fro
Loaiu to Oklahoma
21 Esteban
TORONlO BLUE JAYS: Activated RHP Chri1
Carpenter from the 1.5-day diubled lin .Optiontd
RHP Tom Davey to Syracuse of the International
League.
Netional Leacue
4
DIAMONDBACKS: Activ111ed LHP
s GregARIZONA
Swindell from the 1.5-day dis11.bled list. P.htced
S'h . RHP Dunen Holmes on the 1.5-day disabled lilt .
8 ' retroactive to I Line 24. Opd oned-LHP Nick Dir:rbrodt
10 T1.1cson of the PCL. Sem RHP Dan Carlson and
LHP Ed Vosberg to Tucs o~ . Recalled OF Dar11r:
from Tueson. Traded OF Mike Stoner to the
2 Powell
Anaheim Angels fQI' OF Jason Herrick. ·
6'1:
ATLANTA BRAVES: Announced the retirement
1 of Paul Snyder, director of scouting and player devcl-

,.,

opmem.

CINCINNATI REDS : Reassigned OF Andy
Burress to Chauanooga of the Southern LeagtJC".
Atlanta 13, Montreal .5
COLORADO ROCKIES: Opti oned RHP Mark
New Yoric 10. Aorida 4
Brown w n to Co \orado · S1Kin ~1 of the PCL.
.
Pituburah 3, Pbil&amp;delph ia 2 110)
HOUSTON ASTROS: S1gned RHP Jim BWTen,
San DieJO ~ · Colora6o 7
'
IN F Frank Alfien and RHP Jason I.Alham to minorleagtK contraCt, .
MONTREAL EXPOS: Placed C Danon Cox on
Toni &amp;hi's gamts
Atlanta (Smohz 8-2) ·at Montreal (Hennanson 3- ' tlw 15-day diu bled li1t, rt!troaeti ve 10 June 27.
Purchased the contrACt of C Raben Machado from
7). 7:0S p.m. .
.
.
New von. (Henh iser 7-5) II Aorlda tHernandez Ottawa of the lntern:atiol\ill League.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Placed RHP Mike
l-7).7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (SchillinJ 10.4) at ~u sburgh (Silva Willi11ms on the 13-day disabled list. Recalled RHP:_
M llrc Wilkin s·from Na1hville of the PCL.
2-S). 7:0S p.m.
Arizona (8ene1 4-8) ~ CINCINNATI (Aver~ S61. 7:05p.m.
Basketball .
Milwauktt (Woodard 8-5)"' Ch k ogo (Tapani 6Natlonal Ba•ketlntll AMOCiaiiOn
3). 8:0!1 p.m.
NEW JERSEY NETS: Named Don CaJey coach
St. Looh (Acevedo 4·.1) at Hoo lton (Reynolds 9-

Monday's scores

61. 8:03p.m.
.
Los Anacles (Vnldri 5-71 at San Diego I Ashby 7·
41.

10:0~

p.m

Colomdo !l one~ J-6) .o.t San Fmncbco tRuerer 6-

]). 10:05 p.m.
~

Wednetday'sgunes

Milwaukee CAbboll J-7} 01 Chi cago {Ueber 6- ~ 1.
2:20p.m.

""

RETURNS VOLLEY- America's Andre Agassl returns the volley
ol Australia's Wayne Arthurs during Tuesday's fourth-round action
at the All England. Club, where Agassi's victory put him into the
quarterfinals. (AP)
Stc if, Graf was leading· Bel gian qual- matL: hcs p&amp;W ng Todd Martm vs.
ilico Kim Clijslcrs 6-2. 4· 2.
Goran lvani, cvic. Greg Ruscdskt vs.
Vc nu' Willtam s and Ann a Mark Phili ppoussis. Pete Sa mpras
Knurnikova never got on court for . vs. Dani el NcslOr, and Li sa Ravmond
Ihei r hi ghl y nmic i pa1cd Ccmrc C ourt vs Ale xandra Stevenson. ·
•·
match.
In suspended matches, Cedric
Boris Bec ker, the 31-ycar-old Piolinc Jed Karol Kucera(J-4·. 5-7, 7thrce-ti mc champion back for a last 6 0·5). l-0: Nathali e .Tauziat was up .
· hurrah. and Patri ck Rafter, the two- 6-3, 0- 1 ag ain st Dominiq ue Van
time. U.S. Open f' hampion. had. their Roost ; and Mirjana lu cie was ti ed 5match postponed until Tuesday.
5 with Tamarine Tanasugarn .
Al so put off fo r a day we re lhc

I

NB'~t~~as:e~~ar:~~essful,"

what he would be doing .when the
Casey's

taking it one game at a ttme , but
we're still trying to go on a winning
streak," said Chasity Melvin whose
15 ·poin!S helped lead the Rockers to .
a 70-51 victory Monday night over
the Phoenix Mercury.
' Cleveland dominated the glass,
.

outrebounding Phoenix (3-5) 40-2 2.
The result was a 48-26 scoring
advantage in the paint, an 11 -0 edge
on second-chance opportunities and
a 16-4 margin on fast-break points.
"I thought we played very aggressively, and we like to see that aggres.

sion on the noor. There was nothin g
Oagrant that could be construed in a
bad way;" said Rockers coach Linda
Hill -MacDonald .
·
The Rocl&lt;ers' Rushia Brown who
pulled down eight rebounds. as did
Mery Andrade. said the win was
.

esse ntial for Cleveland.
;
During the lirst hal f. both teams
fought for every point and went in}o
hal ftim e with Cleve land up 25-24, ·
The Roc kers broke open !he game
with a 23-5 run earl y in the second
half.
.

· to .host 19t h. annua I Qh.10
• Qutl aw Sprln
• tS
K- c Raceway
. peedwee k'
·

wife, Dwynne, said. "We'd talk · By SCOTT WOLFE
are e&lt;pected to be throwing "rooster- dictates. A similar format is planned Eagle/Kri..,r8
· Rodooy D""''"· ""''.0""'' · Harriion
about it and he'd get upset, and then Sentinel Correspondent
tails" of mud off lheir right rear tires for lhe Hobby Stocks depending o"n Eagt';\"G';:.,.,W•••· Woo""· Jr. Holbrook r'"'~~.~~·""~~~11 "' 2~;,,.,.,_ Stan Shoff
he'd have a Crown Royal."
The 19th annual Ohio Outlaw as they pitch their 1200 pound chas-' the number of cars signed in .
Bob Teeple. Gib•onbu&lt;g. Tom Teepl&lt; Eagle!B&lt;ownl I
9B
The Nets, impressed with the.
way
.
Sprint
Speedweek
sponsored
by
the
sis
into
the
turn•
of
K-C
Raceway's'!,.
K-C
is
located
I
2
miles
south
of
Gombler/Smilh
· Brenda B"'"'· M" ""'" 11 ' · Ind.. Buster
~
Boston Reid, Kokomo. Ind., Dr. Gale Kew.cl MllXm'IJGatne42
h
dl
d
h
h
he an e l e_t~am, gave · tm a All-Star Circuit of Champions will mile high-,banked oval Wednesday Chillicothe at Alma off U.S. 23, two 5~ealth/Goene9
Rob c"'"''· Millersb"'i · _Bob Ch&lt;ney
reported $1_.1 mtlhon m_ulttyear con- invade K-C Raceway Wednesda" night.
miles out Blain Highway.
Shane Stewart. Bi•by. OK Stewart Racing Mw&lt;im1Fi•he147
1 F d
J
J&amp;J/Wesm.1rll :rc
Man y Lin&amp;. Millersburg. Bob Ling
tract ast n ay.
night as the fourth leg of a seven day
This Wednesday the field will be
Following is a pre-entry list:
n m Alii•••· Cri der, ill&lt;. t.o" Motoripom M"'imJM&amp;M·R"'hso
_ The deal would make Casey the series paying over $200000 in prize trying to set a new mark in lhe II . 19990hioSprint
M:uinVFisheri 4
JimDamon.Conn&lt;aut.JimDamonHREIHintSI
.. secon.d .. Jowest. paid COach ·in the money.
·
Spud week prt-tnlritsal of 6llll99
Randy Kinser. Bloomington, l n~l.. Kinser Racing
Jerrod Hu ll . Si keston, Mo. GuY Webb
second bracket in an effort to eclipse
00 Jason Slatler, San Jose. Calif., Statler Racing Mu.in~Kinser l S
Eagle/Wesmar63
,
NBA. That fact, however, does not
All seven races are at seven dif- Kenny Jacobs' ' tt :450 record , an MMlmiBBiley Bros2L
•
Chnd Kemen31l , Fremon~o Jim Hartl e
Greg W!l sQn, Semon Ridge-. Bob Hampshire
concern him.
rerent Oht"o tracks wt"th Cht'llicothe
f
.
h
Ed Lynch, Jr.. ApoJio. Pa .. Ed Lynch Sr. J&amp;JIKJ stler17
Ma:rc inv'B &amp;R72
.
h I'
,,
average 0 over 127 ffil 1es per our J&amp;J/KrincrUZ
.
' Joey Saldana, Brow nSburg. lnd ' .SIC\;t: Mo,;
Eric Hy!ong. Brewster Andrews Raci na
" It'~ more ~o~ey t an ye _ever being the . fourth stop featuring a with straight·away speeds of over · Joe Gar:ne, Rochester, Ind .. Wnrren Johnson SteahhfFi sher i7B
Fisher1Dfaime88
made m .my hfe, C.asey S81d. The $30,000--pl~s p'urse and $5,000 to 135
Eagle/Gaene3
Blllt.:h Schroeder, i_eipsu: , 8 UI('h SchrOeder
Rocky H odge~. Bargersville , lnd ' Jr. Holbrook
62
Jd
d $34 000 h h
'·
Ja1on Dukes, Findlay, Dukes ~ ac ing Ma:drWKi stleri S
Eagle/Gaene92
' · year-.0 .earn~ . ' . W en e win ·fOr the winged SprifllS.
Drivers from SiX StateS and as far Eagle/Fo,;co4J
.
Bri an Car lso11. Lin de n. lnd . 5~ Molo~pCJrl!
Mark . Keei!: ar'l . Fre m~nt. Chucl Scei nbrick.
coa~hed ~emple, Umvers~ty.
.
Rains washed out the first leg of away as California have pre-entered
Jonathan St~vens. Chillicothe, Trncy Ste vens Dynumite/Gacrce
•
J&amp;J/Kisder92J
.
l_f yo_u don t ha_ve. s.IX (champt- the . sert"es . at Ft"ndlay Oht"o's f "'d d
. h d "II be I' Mit,;im/Guertt"4K
.
ISH Pllil Gress man. _C(ydc. Jr Holbr oo k .
Danny Smilh . Omu.,lle. lnd , l:knny Ashworth
Or n-e ReS ay ntg t an WI
e 1Kelly Kinser. Bloomington. Ind .. Kin~;:or Timber Ea gle/GIIerll"20
Schnec/Kri ner99 ' ·
onshl~) rmgs. you d~~ t have a co~- Millstream Speedway., Also Sunday, gible for the $9,675 point fund paid Stealch/Gaerte5
Briah Ellenhr•ger. llu!ler. Pa . llrin n 'EIIenDerser .
Alvin Roep ke. El more. Alvin RC&gt;t::pke
mand~ng pr~se~ce, , ~asey , sal~ , much-needed rain showers hit the K· at the end of the week .. Any Sprint Mal?~:~~tle!erd, Monc lo\'11 , o&amp;s Racing J&amp;J/fo~~erl lkl
lnd . J'"' Kelley J&amp;J/Dowke r
refemng to . ac son, w O won SIX C Raceway grounds, helping to aile- car that meets the All Star specs is
Kenoy Jacob•. Holmmille. Jombs Mo&lt;o"'"'"' •.:=~~~
NBA lttles wtth the Ch1ca~o Bulls.
viate the drought conditions at the welcome to · compete for nearly
~~~~~
N~gollaltons for Casey s contract track and gelling much-needed mois- $30,000 in prize money .
offoctally began last Monday, turc into the racing surface.
The schedule of events for the
although the season ended on May 5.
The unofficial opener of the series Sprints includes w3rm-ups . at 6:30
Team president Michael Rowe said came Saturday at Eldora where followed by time trials. Racing starts
the Nets had to s~end ltme lly1ng Brownsburg, Indiana's Joey Saldana at 7:30 and will" start with qualifying
heats, a six-car dash and C, B and Amembers of Casey s staff back and was the winner.
forth for interviews and presenting
Over 50 of the hest open-wheel , Main features as the size of the fi eld
the "Could
proposaltltohave
the Nets
.
o"pen-cockpil drivers
beenowners.
done any
.:.:;.;,;;...;.;.:.:.;:;,;_.;_
_ _in_the
_country
_ _.;.._ _ _.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.
.
quicker? It could have been," Rowe
·said. He said the team reached an
(Coininucd from Page 4)
understanding with Casey last
Wednesday, but delayed a news con- ·colorado closed a five -run deficit Meadows (5-9) for a 3-2 lead in the
ference· unttl Monday out of respect with two solo home runs by Dante fourth and made it 9-2 when he confor the neighboring New York j:licheue and a two-run shot by Larry nected off Vic Darensbourg in the
fifth .
Knicks, who were in the NBA Finals Walker.
"I've
never
stolen
five
bases
Leiter (7-5) allowed three runs
until, Friday night. "We' re big
before because I never had a coach and seven hits in 6 II~ innings , strikKnicks fans, " Rowe said .
Kei.th Van· Horn said that Casey like Davey Lopes to help me out,'' ing out eight and walking three.
Braves 13, ~xpos 5
doesn't have the best-known name in Jackson said.
The Daily BABY Senlinel is a
Rookie
Ben
Davis
hit
a
clutch
At
Montreal.
Andruw Jones
· basketball, but said the.team needed
Special Edition filled with photographs of local
his experience and . his controlled two-run double to cap a four-run homered twice, including a three-run
fifth
for
San
Diego.
and
John
Vander
drive
off
Miguel
Batista
(6-5)
in
a
kids· ages newborn to four years old.
ego. ·
Wal
homered
off
Pedro
Astacio
(7five-run
first.
He
also
connected
off
The
BABY
Sentinel will appear in the July 14th
"Our coach doesn't need to be a
6).
Woody
Williams
(4-5)
won
conAnthony
Telford
"in
the
seventh.
It
·
issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild
celebrity in order to be an effective
secutive
starts
for
the
first
time
this
was
Jones'
first
multihomer
game
of
or relative is included.
coach," Van Horn said. "I think he
Complete the form below
has a great ~nderstanding of the . year with the help of · Trevor t~e season and seventh of his career.
Hoffman, who gained his 19th save.
Ryan Klesko went 3-for-4 with
and encloee a snapshot or
·game."
·
The
Rockies
helped
the
Padres
by
four
RBis, and the Braves had 16 hits
. The team's owners did not appear
wallet alze picture plua a
off six pitchers.
at the news conference, although making five errors.
$5.00 charg! for each
The Padres are "playing about as
Kevin Millwood (9-4) won his the
Marbury,_Van Horn and Kendall Gill
photograph.
II mol'!lthan
good as they can play·, and they're third consecutive start, allowing five
showed up. Casey took no offense.
one
child
11 In picture
"I'm here. That's all I care not doing anything wrong," Bichette runs - two earned - and seven hils
encloae an addhlomtl
said. "Everything seems to work."
in five innings.·
.
about," he said.
·
$2 per child.
Pictures
mull
·
Pirates 3, Phillles 2
Elsewhere in the NL, it was the
·He said next season - his first as
(ENCLOSE
Adrian Brown singled home the
be In by
a head coach since he briefly New York Mets 10, Florida 4;
PAYMENT
Wednesday,
coached the Los Angeles Clippers in Atlanta I 3, Montreal S; and winning run in the bottom of the
WITH
Pittsburgh
3,
Philadelphia
2
in
10
lOth,
and
Greg
Hansell
(
1-0)
won
for
1989- depends largely on how well
July 7, 1999
the
first
time
since
May
29,
1996,
PICTURE)
innings.
his leading players recover from the
Pictures can.
Mets 10, Marlins 4
when he was with Minnesota.
injuries .that plagued. them last sea-.
be
picked up
Robin
Ventura
hit
three·rUn
Kevin
Young
singled
off
Steve
son. Jayson Williams js walking gin:
homers
in
consecutive
at-bats
and
AI
Montg_omery
(0-3)
with
one
out
in
after July 14th
gerly on his broken leg and teamLe.iter
won
his
fifth
straight
start
to
the
lOth,
and
Jason
Kendall
popped
_mates Van Hom arid Kerry Kittles
were .among half a dozen. players lead New York to victory at Florida. out. .
Warren Morris singled off Jim
Edgardo Alfonzo added a, doubl~
Send To:
injured this year.
and
two-run
triple
as
lhe
Mets
won
Poole
and
Brown
grounded
a
l-2
"This is not going to be a journey
The Daily Sentinel
without some speed bumps," Casey for the 16th time in 21 games. pitch up the middle, giving the
"BABY EDITION"
said. "It'll be fun . It'll be exciting. Florida has lost II of 13 overall and Pirates their fifth win in six extrais
2-8
against
New
York
this
season.
inning
games
this
season.
We'll .win."
P,O, Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ventura homered off Brian
.. ....... -- -· ---- ·
Class acts·
CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp;AGE(S): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;,..___ I
DENVER (AP) - Star passer
If the 992 Exchange Ia a Free Part of Your
John Elway of lhe Denver Broncos
was the first quarterback from the
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
famed class of 1983 10 win the
PARENTS'NAME~--~--------------~------------~-----NFL title.
·
Holze~ Clinic lh Gallipolis
Elway led the Broncos to Super
COY&amp;~~~~TE~====================~-------Toll Freel
Bowl victories in 1998 and 1999
The Above Information Will Be Used In Ad
before ·retiring at 38.
No _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Submined By:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Dan Marino, the last active
, member of the NFL QB class of ·
· 1983, signed a two-year contract
ex1ension in 1999 with the Miami
Dolphins.
Holser CUnic ... Keeping the Pro,We!

EXTRA!

COMING WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, •••

--·-·-·-·-·-·----------------------·-·-·-·-·-··-.

Football

,

______.!..____::~~:::;:;:_J:j

,.he Daily .
BABY Sentinel

Tonight's game
Sacr.unenw at Min_nesota. 8 p.m.

Detroit CMoehler 6- 8 ) 31 New York !Pettine 5·S).
1:0!5 p.m.
' Thmpa Ba y (Rekar 5-]) at Boston (Ponugnl 4-6).
7:0!1 p.m.
Baltimore IMLiu ina 9-4) at Toronto (Well s S-61.
7:0!1 p.m.
Minnesota iMilton 2-71 at CLEVELAND (Wright
6-4), 7:0!1 p.m.
~·
Chicago (Snyder-7-6) at Kansas City (Suppan 4-

L.e.:._l::_:_::::_~=--~_:_:

Melvin helps R·ockers tally 70-51 win vs. Phoenix Mercury

NL games...

Monday's scores
CLEV EL AND 7b. Phocn1x .'i l
Dctroi1 91. New York 7 1
Orl ando 6K. Houston 66
Los A n ge l ~ s 102. Uwh 70

I O: O~p . m

-Casey's
.new title

I

Basketball

S07

:from

serving so well for the fi rs t couple of Pierce at 3-3, then closed the match
sets," Agassi said. "I started to draw with a backhand winner just seconds
a bead on his serve early in the third before showers returned.
set. And he was starting to feel a lit" If you told me two weeks ago
tle bit of my presence on the return ." I'd bj: in the quarterfinals, I wouldn 't
Agassi, who won his fi rst French have believed it," the Yugoslav -horn
Open last month, is a serious con- Dokic said. "Beating Mary today
tenderto rec laim the Wimbledon title proves I can beat the top players.
he "won in 1992. If he succeeds , he You' ve got to .think you are unbeatwill be the first since Bjorn Borg in · able. I've got a great confi dence right
1980 to win both titles back to back. now. It 's anyone's tournament :""
"Of course there will be a lot o( · Defend ing
champion
Jana
nerves, a _lot of pressure," Agassi Novotna and Lindsay Dave nport
said. " But nolhing can compare to advan c~d to a quarterlinal "matchup
the intensity of pressure and re\.ard with straight-set victories.
that I felt the weekend of Roland
Novotn a, the seeded fi fth , swept
Garros. So I'm sure I will be pre- France's Nathalie Dechy 6-3, 7-5,
pared to deal with it."
while No. 3 Davenport ~a lli ed from a
Agassi will next face Brazil's slow start to down .No. 13 Barbara
Gustavo Kuerten, the former French Schell of Austria 7-6 (9- 7), 6-1.
Open champ who beat Swiss qualifiBoth matches were halted
er Lorenw Manta.7-5, 6-4, 5-1, 6-3. because of rain in the fi rst set for 2
Kuerten hadn't won il grass-court hours,-40 minutes.
match until last week, tiut he is
While Novotna struggled to put
increasi ngly confident on the ·sur- Dec hy away in the second set,.
. face. He lost only his first set of the · Da venport came back fr om 2-5 down
tournament against Manta, who in the first set. She saved three set
stunned 1996 champ Richard points at "4-5 and three more in the
Kraji cek In the third round .
Uebreak, then crui sed through the
""I'm a grass-court pl ayer now," second set.
Kuerten said. " I didn ' t expect at all
Th e sc hedule for " Super
to be here in the quarterfinal s. It 's Monday" featured all 16 men's and
going to be only bellcr for me. I don' t women"s fourth- roonu matches. But
have anything to lose."
because of the rain delays onl y five
In women's play, 16-year-old were completed hy the time play was
Australian qualifier Jelcn a Doki c called off at 7:30p.m.
continued her surprising run by beatThe Ce ntre Court match betwee n
ing seventh-seeded Mary Pierce 6-.4 , Britain 's Tim Henman and Jim
6-3, to reac~ the quarters. ·
Courier was halted by a downpour
Dokic, who ousted top seeded late in the day. Henman, seekin g to
Martina Hingis in the first round , avenge a loss to ,Courier in the Dav is
won five straight games to win the Cup, was up two sets to· one - 4-6,
fir st set after trailing l-4. Dokic took 7-5 , 7-5, 4-3.
controlofthesecondsetbybreaking
Seven-time ·women's champ

1

J.). 8:05p.m.

S66

Nets drop
:'interim'

Sauvage stands among latest KVD victors

2-2), 7:05p .m.
St. louis (Jimenez 4-7 ) at Housron (Hamplon 9-

21

By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Andre. Agassi kept alive his bid to
become the first man in 19 years to
win the French Open and
Wimbledon in the same year.
He beat Australi an qu alifier
Wayne Arthurs 6-7 (7-5), 7-6 (7- 5~ .
, 6: 1, 6-4 Tuesday to reach the quarterfinals at tbe All England Club.
Agassi, seeded fourth , became the
first player to break Arthurs after I II
DON CASEY
·
straight service games.
The match was interrupted for
more than an hour because of rain,
the first major rain delay of the tournament after a virtually dry first
week.
Only five of the 16 fourth-round
matches were completed.
Arthurs. a left-hander ranked No.
163, went . into tl)e match with a
streak of 98 straight service games
without a break.
Agassi, considered the best
returner in the game, failed to break
in the first t"wo sets, both decided by
tiebreaks.
It wasn't until the third game of
.BY AMY WESTFELDT
the third set that Arthurs finally
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.. (AP) dropped serve. On break point,
. - Don Casey is relaxed again , Agass i ripped a backhand return that
which means things are hack to nor- kis sed the sideline for a clean winner.
mal for the New Jersey Nets coac h. . He pumped hi s fi st and shouted,
Casey, whose laid-back demeanor ""C' mon! "
is the opposite of his· predecessor.
Agass i broke two more times in
· John Calipari, was introduced as the the third set 'and once more. in the
· · Nets' coach at a press conference fourth. He ended the match in style,
Monday.
hilling a perfect topspin lob followed
The Nets had a 3- 17 record w.hen by a soft drop shot. He the.n bowed to
·. Cali pari, known for his temper, was his fans at each corner of the court.
Arthurs fini shed with 25· aces, but
fired in March. Casey, a veteran
.assistant, became the "interim coach Agassi had 15 return winners.
and led !be team to a 13- 17 r~cord
"His serve is so big and he was
with most of the leading players on
the injured list.
"I think he can make us play
hard, " point guard Stephan Marbury
CLEVELAND (AP) The
said. "His personality allows you to
go on the court and give it everything Cleveland Rockers pounded" the
you have. You're not dealing with a boards and felt at home as 11hey
coach that 's screaming and yelling." picked up another win and tried to
Before Phil Jackson announced erase starting ' the season with seven
two weeks ago that he was going to straight losses.
coach the Los Angeles Lakcrs, Casey
"I think now we' re jelling. We ' re
and his family started wondering
·. · .

In other AL games, Texas route.d
Anaheim 9- 1 and Toronto ed@4ld
Tampa Bay 3-2.
:
Rangers 9, Angels 1
,:
Mike Morgan (9-5) came wit£i,n
one out of his first shutout in $ix
years, scattering seven · hilS at
Anaheim.
Morgan, whose last shutout Wajl a
five-hitter" for the Chicago Cubs
against Colorado on July 15, 1993,
allowed a two-out homer In the ninth
to Todd Greene. Morgan struck two
and walked one. in his first complete
game since Sept. 26, 1997 for
Cincinnati at Montreal.
Chuck Finley (4-8) . gave up
homers to Juan Gonzalez, Royce
Clayton and Rafael Palmeiro "as
Texas stopped Anaheim 's four-game
winning streak. The "Rangers have
won I0 of their last .I J. decisiqns
against Finley.
Blue Jays 3, Devil Rays 2
Tony Batista homered and Chris
Carpenter (5-5 ) came off the disabled list to pitch fi ve strong innings
as visiting Toronto stopped a threegame losing streak .
Carpenter (5-5), sidelined since
June 2 with inOammatioti in hi s ri$ht
elbow, allowed two runs and seven
hits. Billy Koch pitched the ninth for
his ninth save.
.Dave Eiland (0-4) al lowed all
three runs and ei ght hits "in seven .
innings. Tony Fernandez was l-for3, dropping his major league-leading
average to :400.

( ~ill o ne

,662
.41J3 . 12'1.
.419
18
.421
18

WtStern Division

Texas ...... ..
Seanle ..... .
Oakland .. .
Anaheim .. ..

7:05 p.m.
Philadelphi a (0 gea .4-6) Ell Piusburgh (Schmid! 75), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (R. Johnson 9-4) at CINCINNATI

Ol~lslon

:.1: L

Itam

~6) ,

7:05 p.m.
New York (Reed 6-3) at Aorida (FernandeZ 2-5),

"We have guys who ·can run ,"
said Davey Lopes, the Padres' first
base coach who had 557 stolen bases
· in his 16-year big league career.
"When a team gives you an opportunity to run , you ' ve got to c&gt;ploit it."
The victory extended the Padres'
winning streak to I 0 games. the
longest in the majors this year, and
moved San Diego past Colorado into
third place in the NL West. The
streak is one short of the team record
that the Padres matched last June 719 en route to their first pennant in
14 years.

By The Aasocleted Press
Jose Offerman knows that when it
comes to power, he's no Mo Vaughn.
That's why his first grand slam
and inultihomer ga me was so satisfy ing.
" I had to feel glad. Everything
was working real well for me," he
·said after his career-high six RBis
helped lead the Boston Red Sox
defeat the Chicago White Sox I4-1
Monday night.
Offerman , who came into the
game with one homer this season and
23 in 3,845 career at-bats, hit" a solo
homer off Mike Sirotka (6-8)" in the
fifth and added the slam off Bryan
.Ward in the seventh, going 4-for-1\.
Nomar Garciaparra went 4-for' 5 as
Boston got a season-high 21 hits and
won for the fifth time in six games.
" You expectthat "allthe time from
Garciap arra. b~l you have to try and
get the other guys out, " Sirotka said.
At Fenway Park, the big story was
Offerman , signed by Boston after
Vaughn defected to Anaheim . Boston
won three of four from Chicago and
outsco"red the White Sox 43- 10.
Bret Saberhagcn (4-2 ) made his
second straight scoreless start since
coming off the disabled list, allowing·
si x hits in seven innings.
He walked none for the fourth
time in seven starts. Sixty of his 79 ·
pitches were strikes.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Agassi beats Arthurs, earns
Wimbledon quarterfinal berth

Tuesday, June 29, 1999.:

•

•

Tuesday, June 29, 1999

DIAL ·

National Football LeaJUt
ATLANTA FALCONS: SIJned LB Jeff Kell y..
CINC INNATI BENGALS: Released FO
Anthony Clr:ary. ,
.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Signed P Tonun)'
lbrnhardt to a three-yew contract

992·7834

·

'

"

\

•

----

�'

ByThe ·Bend

The Daily Sentinel
.

·

.

29, 1999

· Tuesday, June

Pomeroy •

Business Services

PageS

Tuesday, June29, 1999 -:

•

Thank you for a lener that shou ld be appetite. Within a few weeks, I was KIML.
police in Oklahoma City have bener
cli~Yped out and taped to the makeup
once again brimming with desire for
DEAR KIM: I think it 's a hoot. things to do than chase after prostimirror of every divorced woman my husband , and we are enjoying Here it is: A Kansas truck driver was tutes who are accused of not giving
who reads my column.
each other more than I ever thought arrested in Oklahoma City _ after their clients thei r money's wonh.
complaining to police that he didn't
·
If Oklahoma took a page out of
Dear Ann Landers: I've read a possible.
..
lot of letters in your col umn about
I realize this may not ·work for get his money's wonh from a prosti- Nevada's book, it wouldn't have
1997,
women who have lost interest in sex. everyone, but t~ll your women read- tute. .
,
such problems. It could refer the
Here's
one
with
a
suggestion
that
ers
matter to the Better Business
if
they
lack
sexual
desire,
they
Authorities
said
the
24-year-old
Dear Ann Landers: I could have cal closeness.
inight
help.
.
might
try
getting
off
the
pill.
·
CONman
called
pollee
at
8
p.m.
to
comBureau.
Here is my message for ·"Co nwritten that letter from "Confused in'
Following the binh of my first TENT IN PORTLAND, ORE.
plain that the woman left before he
· Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets
New York," . the woman who was fused" : Quit kidding yourself. Get a .
too,
lost
interest
in
sex
.
For
DEAR
PORTLAND.:
You
told
was
fini
shed,
and
he
wanted
half
of
child,
I,
·
and
Doozies," has everything from
sleeping with her ex-husband . She life while you still can, before you
six
years,
my
husbahd
and
I
strugthem
,
and
I
thank
you.
I
hope,
how.
his
$80
returned.
the
outrageously fun ny. to the
thought they had a chance to gel end up 50 years old and alone, hav "He to ld me that she was his date poignantly insightful. Send a self
back together, even though he had ing put your life· on hold to see if gled over this. We tried everything - ever, if they get off the pill, they will
romantic
bubble
baths
and
weekcheck
with
a
gynecologist
about
the
and
she did not perform the services addressed, long, business size envethings would work out with your ex.
remarried .
that
he had asked for; so he wanted lope and a check or money order for.
next
ends
alone
.
We
went
to
counseling,
best
thing
and
not
leave
it
to
It has been 18 years since I Meanwhile, he has a wife . He didn ' t
our
marriage
but
which
strengthened
luck.
his
money
back," the police officer $5.25 (this includes postage and
divorced my ex-husband.· He said wait for you . Trust me. I have been
did
nothing
for
my
libido.
Also,
I
Dear
Ann
Landers:
f
have
wrote
in
the
report.
handling) to : Nuggets, c/o Ann Lan-.
after we parted tl.at he needed me, there and done that, and I am STILL
had a com plete physical exam.
.
·enjoyed
the
"stupid-crook"
items
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
pub..
The
man
was
arrested
on.
a
and it was .lattering and exciting to ALONE BUT HE IS NOT
Finally,
you
Out
of
desperation
,
we
Have
printed
from
time
to
time
lie lew~ness complaint. The officer 6061 1-0562. (In Ca nada, send
know . th~t he still found me attracDEAR
STILL
ALONE:
and
just
came
across
one
(
think
is
also
arrested the prostitute on a com- $6.25.) To find out more about Ann
decided
that
I
shou
ld
go
off
binh
1i vc. Ye··, sex with him was eaSier, Nobody can drive a point home as
control
pills.
We
didn't
want
more
pretty
funny.
It
's
pay-back
tiine
.
·I
plaint
of engaging in a public act of Landers and read her past columns,
·more comfonable and safer. I guess well as someone who has "been
kids,
but
we
wondered
if
the
horhope
you
will
print
it.
I
read
your
lewdness.
visit the Creators Syndicate web
I needed hi s attentio n and the physi- there," . and you ·certainly have . . ·
mones' were affecting . my sex ual column in the Kansas City Star: -Back to you, Kim : .I 'm sure the page at www.creators.com.

Ann Landers

tov-:a1J~: sl~~'~n_a~B~.~ tote -~~~~ .

53560 S. R 338
Portland, Ohio
17Llln\ 843-1252

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
I ~!PIItoiMI'I'ttM9.U
Beulig

BuUdozer &amp; Backhoe
Service•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading ~
Seplic Systern• &amp;
Utilities ·

1740) 992·3831

Wahama High School alumni celebrate annual reunion banquet
Maryland; Georgia Howard Milhoan from Parkersburg ; Norma
Roach Hall from Hamilton, Ohio;
Luther Smith from Point Pleasant;
and Mary Ann Kay ler McGreedy of
Parkersburg.
Jim Stewan,president, welcomed
the guests and following the' invocation by Mrujorie Clarke Walburn, ,vice .
president, the Wahama Band Boosters SCflled dinner.
Prior to the business meeting a
silent prayer was held for Mrs. Dorthy Russell Dawson, an alum, and her
husband Burrell who were involved
in an auto accident that morning. Mrs.
Dawson is the sister of Jim Stewan.
Pat Roush Noel, secretary-trea. surer, gave the 1998 repons with
approv-al.
. Marjorie Clarke Walburn introduced the first Honorary Waharnan,
Linda Noel McKinney. She was recognized for · her outstanding contributions to the success of the Wahama
Alumni. She was presented a certificate for framing.
·
•
Mrs: Walburn, the scholarship
chairman, announced the' $500 alumni scholarship winner was Betsy
Keathley, who was unable to attend
due to a previous commitment. The
Marie C. Roush $500 Scholarship
was presented to Randy Tompkins
and the class of '55's $200 scholarship to Eve Hendricks.
Jim Stewan conducted the business meeting with the introduction of
classes. He asked for nominations
from the floor for new officers.
There were none. The present officers
will serve for another year.
Pat Roush Noel presented four $50
gift certificates to winners Joe Paugh,
Betty Burris, Francis Young _and
· Kathleen Smith.
During the evening, happenings of
yesteryear were commented on and
former principal Donald Foglesong
was introduced.
Pat Roush Noel presented gifts to.
the graduates of I 920 through 1930.
There were poster pictures of the
Reunion classes that annuals were

available for. In keeping with the
theme of "What You See Is What You
Ge~" Polaroid pictures were available
for anyone wishing a picture memory of the evening.
,
The affair was closed with the
group singing the Alma Mater led by
Sonia Roush.
Other Alumni who attended the
banquet were Joe Berry and guest of ·
Charleston, the class of 1940, as well
as Mary Thabet of Mason, Eugene
James and guest of California, and
Maida Cook Rairden and guest of
Tennessee (1940); Nellie Smith of
Hanford ( 194 I); Geraldine Greer of
New Haven, Mary Walker Workman
of New Haven, and Lawrence Lieving of Sarasta. FL(l942); Gale Berry
and guest of Charleston, Annabelle
Hudnall of New Haven, and Maxine
Tucker of Pomeroy, Ohio (1943 );
Ralpti sayre and guest ·of Parkersburg, Joyce Carson of West Columbia, Lorna Johnsoq of West Columbia, and Orpha Fields of New Haven
(I 945); Pete and Betty Burris of New ·
Haven, Wal,lace·Stewan and guesi of
Kentucky, Betty Rice Of Hamilton,
Ohio, and Charles Yeauge( and guest
of Mason (1946);
Dorthy Sayre of Hillard, Ohio,
Enid Layne AdamS and guest of New
Haven, and Sarah Gibbs of New
Haven ( 1947); Lawrence.Stewan of
Middleport, Ohio, Eyalee·Fry Wolfe
of Mjddlepon, Ohio, Barbara Lieving Zerkle .of New Haven, Danny
Yonker of Mason, Evelyn Weirick of
Ravenswood, Kathleen Roush of
New Haven, Verla Roush Harrah of
Mason, Frances Stewan Young of .
Dunbar, Kathleen Cook. Smith of
Arkansas, Mary Sayre of Point Pleasant, Adalee Henshaw of Vienna,
VA, Jane Foreman Abbott of
Pomeroy, Ohio, and Jim Sprouse of
Chester, Ohio (I 948) ; Charlotte
Yonker of Mason, and William Ch3p"
man of Kirkland, IL (I ',150); R.
Eugene Weaver and guest of New
Haven ( I952);
Ben Roush of Letart (1953); Alice
Howard Leach of Washington, WV,

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o•
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·BPM

.

Gov. Jesse Ventura makes
donation to charities from
merchandise profits
RICHFIELD, Minn . (AP) Minnesota charities are starting 'to
benefit from the sale of Gov. Jesse
Ventura 's novelty merchandise.
On Monday, three charities
became the first to receive $5,000
grants from Ventura for Minnesota,
!no,, the nonprofit organization that
licenses Ventura's name .and likeness.
"This is just going to be the start
of something that's goi ng to really,
really continue to grow and ... help
Minnesota," first lady Terry Ventura
said while bestow ing a g rant. She
and three volunteers determine who
receives them.

CHEVALIER'S
IRPET CLEANING
'
'•

..

• Salisfadion Guaranieed
.2room mfnimum

. 378-6438 992-0077
1-877 ·626-3693
·'

'

•

~ 1 8199

Services
Site Preparation
Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

Umestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

demils and a rompetitive prqu;al.

1 mo~ pd

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
.GUIIERS

740-992-6215
22

'mo. pd.

Y"·

Local

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

•New Homea
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

740-985-3813

St.. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, OH

Culverts: 4" - 48'' in stock
Grovelless Leach
I00' • 1ooor Rolls 1" &amp;3/4" 200# Waler Une
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators Waler Sloroge Tonks

a·

'

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

7122/11n
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
_$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top Una. .
Lie. 11 oo-so 11MIIfn •

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00

•

~iding

8. S11#il

.Auto-Ormen ~
711.~ IIJ&amp;wi{j,p4•

Contractors Welcome

Life Home Car Business

,.
t

: Albarty, Ohio
,

ROGAN - Gf~
.

''

RNER --

tniUranca·Sez vJces

PUBUC NOTICE
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
A Public H.. rlng on tho
annual budget lor tho year
2000 lhall be held on the
7th day of July, 1999 ot ·7!30
P.M. at the Townohlp
G,oroga on Joppa Road. The
budget moy be vlawod ot
the home of the Clerk by
eppolntmant prior to the
Budgat Hearing and until
the 18th. ..••

PUBUC NOTICE
. Tht public htorlng for tho
Bedford Townohlp budget
for 2000 ond the ragulor
monthly malting · will ba
hold on July 13, 1999117:00
p.m. ot tho Townholl,
Tho Budget for 2000 will
Ill ovallabla for lnepactlon
upon raquaat.
Barbaro J. Grua..r
Bedford Townohlp Clerk
42n4 Helwig Ridge
Shode, Ohio 45ns·
(8) 29 lTC

:BISSELL BUILDERS,
•
INC.
'

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Now Rentlnl

Agrtcunural Ume,
Umtatone • Gravel

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Dirt• Sand

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740•992-5232

..........,
6/22J!l9 1 mo.

Cool ftda
Summer?

. lp.IJ IIOW far

IHE MAPLES
Must be 50 years
of age &amp; meet
HU,D inc'ome

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Under New Mgmt.

· lomlliJ 1/tlitl'l ··
Almt~~pllere

740o99:Z•33ff0

Of 4-H

INGEU CARPEl

And Sullivan Show
SHADE RIVER

-Hoal-

•

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

SMITJrS
COltfSTRUCTIO

.Coli today about opeelal
prieeo thro lufr..on
Quality Built Horuoo

·
21 1mo.

•Deep cleans safely
•DEODORIZES leaving carpet
smellng frqsh
•Ufts maned carpet pile
•'Dry" cleans so you _.. use
carpet nght away ·

*New Homes

. · Supplies

Call 98S·:J8:JI

thelea.U,..flo:
cal-pet cleaner

..

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Linda's Painting

New Roofs • Rt:palrs •
· Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting• Plumbing

of painting, and let
me do It for you.

Free Est/matt~~
Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

985·3561

• We service aU makes • Used AppUances • We sell
parts • W1l1 dellver .
51645 Bl
Rid e Rd., Lon Bottom, Ohio

Sunsal Homa
Construction

Feed &amp; Show Supplies

No,. Stocidntt ·

THE APPLIANCE MAN

wamv.S""'elll mne. com

'!===:::·~

TOM STOBART
toder at ·

further lnforrutlon .
E"O

*Jfandicapped

Now

Complete Line

Cheater, Ohio

*Additions .
*Remodeling

for

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

985 4422

guidelines.
Cell
740-992-7022

Care for Elderly

' New Homes • Vinyl
Now Conotructlon &amp;·
:' Siding •New Garages
. : Replacement Windows , Remodlllng·KIIchen Coblneto
Vinyl Sldlng.Roor..Dteks·
• Room Additions
Goregee
• Roofing
Free E1timate•
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
'
740-742-3411
~ FREE ESTIMATES
Bryan Reeve•
" 614·992-7643
Srllart Reeve•
' (No Sunday Calls)

. . .., .

Help Wanted

Wanted: A .few good people who are willing to
assist people with developmental disabilities
with daily living activities . .Must have a GED/high
school dlplorna and a good driving record . Will
be accepting applications at the Ash Street
Baptist Church in Middleport on Wednesday,
June 30th frorn 1 0 am until 3 p.m.
CALL: 1~531·23011T'S THAT EASYIII

•

214 Eaot Main .
Pomeroy
992-6687

Business
Services

5/25/99 2 mo. pd.

"I'M
BACK"
Ken Young Former Own• of

Take

the pain out

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message: After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

.

Senior Citizen
. Oiscounf

JONES' .

TREE SERVICE

tfer-r-1 ~ 21/lr-. TruJ
O.l(d

Oetl~~ cfer-u-ice
ALMOST an~hing
Call for details

We deliver

740-992-0038
DEPOYSAI
PUft

WICKS
HfiULING .INC.

All Makes Tractor &amp;

We Deliver

Equipment Parts

Limestor&lt;e, Gravel,
Sartd, Fill Dirt,

Factory Authorized
· Case-IH Parts
D e alers.
10011 St. 1ft. 7 SOUih
CODivfll•, OH 4fi71l3

Agricultural Lime,
Mukh, Top Soil ·
(Low Rates)

740117....1

740.992-3470

CREDIT

"'*mt111btr
Qaollty Is Job OM

Credit • Slow CredH • Bankruptcy

9ft47H . . .UOJ

· WORYRYIN&amp;!!I

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

:QU4LITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

No Emblr111ument ...
You're Treated with RelfM'CII

FORMERlY OF 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY
'
IS NOW lOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6MILES NORTH Of POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD IB

Larry S_c hey

Yard Sale
f

··

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE
.

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa
6/29/mo.

-992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

'

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACfORY DIRECT PRI CES
.'

'

V.C. YOUNG Ill

.ROBER'!' BISSELL
CONSIRUCIION

ELIM
HOME

': 1·100·311·3391
[Free ·-Estimate•

:Many stones and pfiotograpfis of significant events relating to tfie
history and development of'Rutland willbe featured in tfie publication.
If you prefer an altemative to regular advertising copy. perfiaps you
mig fit consider an historic actourll and pfiotograpfis of your business .
We will be fiappy to assist you in designing an ad.

'.'

FrH&amp;fltMIH

1·740·985·3949

E•pM1enced Per~ cn wanted To
Help Put Together Abo'Je Ground
Pool, 740·446-95!55. Ot Daytime,

1-88&amp;-!1&lt;11-21111!1.

740-446-36«, Asl&lt; Fe&lt; Dave.

Bartender Wanttd ; 7-40·441·
1428.

local Trucking Company Seekmg
Qualified Truck Onvsrs Good
Pay And Benefll5 Send ~esume
To : Driver. P.O 8 011 109 Jack·
son : Otuo .45640. Or Call t -740-

ktll, Something For Everyone!
Lane All. 1522 S.R. 141. Thurs·
dOy 1111 II, Ffldo)r lll2nct
Wednuday, June 30th , &amp; Thurl·
day. July 11t. 9·5. Rlln /Shine. 2
Mttes North 01 Holzer Hospital On
S.R. HIO. Ladlea &amp; Udiu Plus
Silt Clothing, ShHII, Cushions.
Planters , Pursn, Misc. Kitchen
Items , Microwav1 , Wing Back
Chairs, Stalnlen Steel K•tchen
Sink. ROdctng Horll. Witton Cake
Pans, Miac. Furniture Items.

Gutters
DownspOuts

Gutter creanlng
Painting
.FREE ESTIMATES

Capitol NUlling, 1 ·1100-57~.

Comput., Ultfl Needed. Work
Own Hrl. S25K -1801&lt;1 Yr. 1·800·
"76-8653 Xnn. www.lcwp.com
Drfvet'

CONTINENTAL EXPRESS
CDL Class AWith 6 Monlhs
El&lt;!lOr. Driving School Greda
Considered. No NYC · Homo

on TFN

POWER WASH
Trucks ·tractor
Trailers - decks - driveways
Equipment Cleaned &amp; Oegraased
JEFF STETHEM

PHONE: (740) 9854218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

FREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

J &amp; LInsulation

·a Siding
•Vinyl Siding

•Roofing &amp;Seamless Gullet
•Replacement Windows
•Concrete

•Room Additions •Gmoges
•Decks &amp;Boot Docks
James lleeseell

PH1(740)992·2772

Hoof Hollow Far•
Horoeo &amp; Tack
New &amp; Used Saddles
Also riding lessons

740·698·3290
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005
Personal•
I. Walter C. Smith, will be re·
aponslbta lor no debts but mv
own only.
STAR1 DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Mealing Ellg l ~IB Sin·
gles tn Your Area. Call For More
Information. 1·800·AOMANCE,

Aogional &amp; Long Haul

.. · EOE
800-293-0700 Or 800-695-.W7~
Drivers wanted
Eam S30.000 +1st 'Mar
14 Day COLTraining
Call , __ 253-1101 .
Free Tuition aveHable.

No experience necessary.
CDL Holders call
1·800-958-2353.
Orlvero ...
A CAREER ON THE MOVE!
SWIFT TRANSPORTATION

, :OOptn Frldly.

Friday, 133 Bunernut. New heater,
tool cabinet. car ramps. desk &amp;
eMir, hObby hOrsa, sewing machine, vanity &amp; b•nch, 'cabinets,
lawn furniture, collectibles, lear
blower, much mort.
Huga· 3 family yard sale, Friday &amp;
Saturday, 9.-m-7 LMgabergei'
baskets, furniture. glassware and
houtehold goodal 2100 Carroll
Street, Syracuse.
Huge 5 lamUy, starting July 1 for
several days, 9am·? Happy· Hollow Rd ., Rutland. Lots to cHoose
from.
Huge live tamlly yard sale- Flat.woods Ad., PomerO)I, Ohio. Saturda~. July 2. 9:00·":00. Clot!'!e&amp;,
fumllure, misc. Rainor shlne.
July 1-2. tour tamt~.. SR 248, bot·
tom of'Chester hill.
July , .5, 9:00·? Emerson John-son residence, Portland, Ohio.
Variety of items and sizes.
July 1st thru 5th, across lrom
Bashan lire house.
Sayre Farm, Adams Ad., Racine .
July 1·3. Waterbed , nousehold .
• petite to pius clothing, tomatoes
and cabbage, 740·24\·-1322.
ThrH romtty- J u~ t-4. 9:00am5:0opm. "" mile west of Forked
Run Stale Park on SA 124. 6:Jl92
SA 124, long Bottom. lots ol nb
clothes and other Items.

.

Star I' Dating Tonight! Have run
playing the Ohio Dating Game. I·
801)-AOMANCE, etdenston 9681 .

30 Announcements
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9'Wasl Stimson. Athens
740-592·1842
Quality clothing and household
Items. $1 .00 bag sale avery
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:()()-5:30.
.

·'
.'

Exp'd ltnup'd DfiYWt

• T•m• Wanted!

SwHt Poyt Up To 5YIIrt
For Exporloncod Drtv~n~ l
No Experlenct Necessary!

COL Training Available
Whh Road Mastert

..........................
lllti:Witi'ITI~my

•

Hetma:

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30
IP.M. To IP.M.
Grandview Inn
GrancMew Avenue
. Souon Point. OH

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

• .$Wtft Often: Great Pay &amp;
Beneflla, Rider ProQrams.
C'on~stenl Miles, Job SlabHity,

Equipment,
Tu111on Rel-csament.
Exp'd: UOO t4t 4051
lnoxp'd COli Ron:
, -8()().131 •, 300 .
(-n'JI:mln 23 Yrs)
DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:
Assigned

286·U63 To Schedule An lnrer·
view.

Met:Sieal Assistant or LPN. need·
ed tor Doctor's Ofhea lor la mporary employment Send resUme
c/o E822, Pt. Pleasant Aeg1ster.
200 Main Street, Pomt Pleasenl,
WV 255 50Motorcycle Mecl'1anlc N~ede d
Inquire At: River Front Honda, Or
Call, 7~ · 2240 .
Need an honest . dependa ble,
person to lilll: in with elderly gen•
!Ieman. Some personal care
needed . Room , Board , Salary
si.I)Qitad. (304)895-3942.
Needed Immediate ly. Installers
And Service Tachs Wlrh Two
Years Exbertence . Top Wages .
Insurance. And Uniforms Provu1ed Apply In Persor~ At Comrort
Air Systems Inc 407 Third Avenue, GaiiJwlis.
Now Taking Applications For
Drivers F.or Gallipolis &amp; Po mero~
Only, Domino's Pizza.
OUTDOOR CAREERS
•Employee Owned COmpanyoColnPO!Itlve Poy l Benellll
-&lt;)lft'IOM Workl In 49 S~tel
Must Enjoy Physical Outdoof
Work, Possess Strong
Leaden;hip Skill&amp;, Have
AGood Driving Record, And
Be Fleic~ To Travel To
Various Work locations.
OSMOSE, INC.
Clll For Information
ToU-Frw 2" Hra f7 DIIYS
Hn-&amp;7H731

EOE MIFIDN
Vltlt Our Webalte At

www.oamou.com

OWN A COMPUTER1 .
PUT ITTO WORK I
· S25 -$75/Hr. PT/FT
I -888-8\M-6401

www.work·from·home.neVturin
Pi'umbers And Pipefitters L.U. ·
.t577 Will Be Distributing Appren·
ClassAOTR:
lice Applications Beginning J un~·
Single Driver, Late Model Ken· 28th Through July 9th Applica·
wor1hs With Reefers. Wast Coast lions Can Be Picked Up At 1236
Carrier.
Gallia Street, Portsmout.h. onlo
From 7:30A.M. Un1114 :00 P.M.
CtassBOfR:
$35.00 APf,lliCalion Fee. EOE.
Team Straight Trude:. Late Model
Freightllners With Sleepers. Must Postal Jobs io $18 .35/Hr., Inc .
Have Air Brake Endorsements, Benefit&amp; , No EKperience. For
800 Mile Radius, Home O!llver- '-PP· and Exam Into, Call 1·800 ·
ies.
81 3·3585, Ext.8826. 8AM·9PM. 7
Days Ids,inc.
Both Position s:
POSTAL JOBS To $18 .35 /HR .
Al•all 25 '!Vars Old
INC . BENEFITS. NO EXRERI Atleaat 2 Yeart ExperienCe
ENCE. FO R APP. AND EXAM
GoodMVR
INFO. CALL 1-800·8.13.·3585 ,
Weekly Pay
EXT U21 0. 8 A'. M. ·9 PM , 7
Heatth Insurance Available
DAYS Ids. inc.
Work Wall With The Public
Guards· must be able to
For More Informatio n Call 800· SecuritY
work
any shift including most wee·
437-8784. HrB. 6:30A.M.-5 ~M .
kends . Must have clean pol1ce
Early Interve ntion Parent Coordl· record, good work history, reliable
nator, Pan·Time To Provide Sup- transportation , vali d orlver's II·
port Services To Parents Of Inf- cense. home phone and must
ants !Toddlers With Disabilities. have Plack steel· toe safety
This Will Include Parent Educa - shoes. $5.75 per ho ur 32·40
tion, Personal Contacts And link· hours per week . Call 740 · 669·
age With Other Resources. Qual· 2874 Monda.,... Friday, 8am-4pm
lflcatlons: To Be Willing To Obtain b appointment.
Knowledge About Laws. Parents SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
Rights And Procedural Sale- COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free '1·
guards Related To Early Inter· 800·339·4204
-ventlon, Parent 01 A Child With A For .AppointmeOrnt·1·615·367·6153
Come To
Oisablilty In Gallla County, Ability Nashville. TN And To
AuditiOn For
To Effectively Co mmunicate With Major
Record P rod~rs .
Families And Are Professionals.
Please Send Resume By Ju ly .9 Skilled Nursing Facility seek ing
To: Gallla County Early Interven- an AN for lull· time on 1 1•7 Shift
tion P.O. 8oK943, Gallipolis. OH We are also accepting applica 45631.
tiOns lor part time LPN/A,N. Rock·
springs Rehabilitation Center ts a
Evening &amp; Wee kend HHA 's &amp; 100 bed skilled and intermediale
CNA's Needed For A Growing 1 I I T W
Home Hialth A.ge ncy. Will Pay eve . acl tty: e have an e•cel·
lent sUrvey history and a ver~
Shift DIHerentlai. In Meigs County, stable slalt. This IS an excellent
Call
740·992·7900,
&amp; In Gattta
County,
for the nght cand•date
7, 0,4, 6 _3808 . Or Stop opportunity
lor personal and .profess •ona l
. By 762 Second Avenue. Gallipolis growth. Submit. resume to: Aock _Fo_r_App_;_llca_lton_._E_O_E._ _ _~ I springs Aeha bilita lion Center.
Experienced LPN In physian of- 36759 Aocksj:!rings Ad .. Pomeroy.
flee . drop resumes ott at 3009 Ohio 45769: Carol Greentng, D• Jackson Ave. between the' hours r~etor ol Nursing . Equal Op por~
o1 8:30-4'30 304·675,1637.
tunlly EmpiO)'tlr
E_x_p_er-ta-ri-co_d_T_tm_b_e'-r-C-ut-ta-r.-E-x-- 1 The University Of Am Graride in'·
perle need Skldder Op8rato r vilas Application's For Part-Time
Needed, 740.682_73 t8.
Non-Tenure Trac¥: Faculty Positions In The School Of Education
FIELQ SUpERINTENDENTS
For The Academr c Year 1999 ·
Centra l OH Recycling co. Seeks 2000. AesponslbiHrles Of These
' Suprs. Respons ible For Dal ly Posil ions Include . But Are Not
Oj)s. 01 Job Sl la. Muet Have Limited To. Teachrng Basic Edu·
Construction Supervision Bkgrd. calion C0ursds And Basrc SpeSpaclflcally With Material Han- cial Education Courses. A Doc·
dllng Equip.: Conveyor Be lts , torate Degree Is Preferred. Mas·
Shredders, Crushers. Etc. Strong te r's Degree Corlsiderea . Must
Human Relations SkUts In Adcti- Have At Lea st Three Years 01
tlon To Proble m Solving With Teaching Experience In A Relat·
Governing Agen cies (OEPA). ad Field. All Applicants Mull
May Require Trave l Based On Submit A Letter 01 Interest .t.nd
Job Site. For Immediate Consid· Resume Including The Names 01
eration, Call : 614·825·620 9 Or Three References On Or Berore
Fax:614·785-9464Ann:AB.C.
August 15. 1999 To Ms . Ptryllrs
Mason . PHA. Director 01 Human
FILM /TV INDUSTRY, LOCALLY Resources, University Of Rio
HtAING . No ExperienCe Neces· Grande, MCSF-27', Rro Grande .
Silfy. Wo r~ ·Behind Scenes. Pro· OH 45674. Fa,c 740·245-4909 E·
duction Assistant, Set Construe- Mail omasonOymrgcc My EEOJ'
tion. 323-857-0954.
AA Employer •
HELPWANTEO
Truck Driver For local Arecl.
Must Have Class B With Hazmac
Gallla -Meigs CAA Is Currently &amp; Ta11k Endorsements. Gooo Pay.
Accepting Preappllcations For Benefits. Weekends &amp; MaJor Holi·
Temporary Summer Workers In days Ott. Send Replies To· CLA
The Following Occupatlorial Ar- 477 clo Gallipolis Qaily Tribune,
.825 Third Avenue. Gallipolis. OH
eas.
45631 .
Maintenance
Wildllle Jobs to $21 .60/Hr. In"*
Cluntng
Benefits. Game Wardens, Secur.
Laund~
ity, Malrytenance. Park Rangars, ~ ~
Cter'cal 10111ce
exp. needed . For App. an~
Wt Have Work Sites tn Gallipo· No
Exam
lnfor. Call t-800·813·
tis, Spring Vattay, Rio Grande ~nd
8A.M·9PM, 70ays
Other Areaa 01 Gallla County. AU 3585,Ext.8827.
J6bs Are 40 Hours Per Week Ids Inc.
$5.15 Pir Hour And Art Eicpect: WILDLIFE JOBS To $2 1.60 /HR.
ed To lest Until At L.east Late INC. BENEFITS. GAM E WAR•
August And Possibly Into September. Computer And Other Job ~i~1NcE.siA~~R~I~GER~A~';i
Related Treining Is A~811ab le As EXP NEEDEO. FOR APP. AN(}
Pan 01 The Work Scnedule.
EXAM INFO. CALL 1·800-813'
3565. EXT. 14211 8 A.M. ·9 ~o.(
GMCAA Encouragn Females 7 DAYS Ids, inc
Age 16·21 To Appi'Jf ' For These
Job Openings.
150
Schools
Instruction
To Obtain A Preeppllcatlon Call
740-446-1018 Or 740·992·2222 EARN A LEGAl COLLEGE DEOr Vlsh Thl Rio Grande Off~a 01
QUI CKLY. Bacl'le!Clra,
The Ohro Bureau 01 Employment GREE
Masters,
Doctorate. By Carre·
Sorvices.
spondenee Based Upon Pr+or Ed·
And Short Study Course.
Applicants Must Be Residents Of ucation
For
FREE
lnformatron Boo.klet
Gallla qountY Oi' Meigs County, Phone . CAMS.AIDGE
STATE
Be Age 14 ·2t, And Mel! JT-PA UNIVERSITY 1·800·964·631~.
Ellgl&gt;~ty Requirements.
180 WantldTo Do
Gat,lla ·Meigs Com.runtty
Action Agency
,t.pproved 'Master Licensed Elac·
8010 North State Router
trlcian, WV025956. Free Esti·
Cheshire,·Ohio 45820-0272
mates lor Ruiden'ttal Servlcu.
1

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
July 1s~ . - 2nd . 2 miles back ol
New Haven on Union Campground Road. Rain Cancels ..

80

Auction
ar,d Flea Market
Bill Moodispaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auctioneering Services. Consigninent auction- Mill
Street, Middlaport, Thursdays .
Ohio License 17693. 740-989·
2623.
Flli&amp; MARKET
712 IOA.M.-6 P.M..
713 10 Ul. ·4 P.M.,
714 I P.M.·5 P.M..
Auction 714 -7 ~M .
Ariel Theatre
426 5econd Avenue, Gallipolis.
Ariel Fund-Aalser "No Dealers
Wide VarietY Of Used 'Tl'easures
And AFew Antiques.
DonaUons Welcome
Caii740-446-ARTS
For Prompt Plelc·Up.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time 8uctioneer. ~omplete
auellon serv ice. licensed
166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia, 304·
n:l-5785 Or 304-n:l-5447.
Wedemeyer's Auction Service.
Gafti&gt;OJis, Ohio 740-379·27~.

1

PUBUC NOTICE
As required by grant regulations,
a copy or the Title V Block Grant
·Application for the Office ol Ma·
ternal and Child H•atth has been
placed In tha public llbrar~ In
eaeh county seat and the Seere·
tary of States Offlc8 for rev iew
and coment.·ComrRents should
be rorwacded 1o: OMCH, 1411 VIr·
glnla St . E.-. Charleston, WV
25301'3013.
STOP YOUR HAIR LOSS. Buy
PROPECIA Over The Phone . I·
407 -859·4051 Doctors Are 90 Wanted to Buy
Standing By. For Men On~l
WEIGHT LOSS. I Lost 90+ ·AbsolUte Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
Pounds In 6 Months! I'll Help You ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets,
Reach Your Weight Loss Goalsl ,Diamonds,
Antique Jewelry, Gold
Toll Free 868-781·9624.
Rings . Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Ete. AcqulsiUons Jewelry
40
Giveaway
· M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Seconcl
2 Kittens : Long Hai red, Both . Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.
Male, To Give To Good Home A!')tlques: top prleea paid. River·
Only, 740·.WI.OI 18.
ine Antiques. Pomeroy. Ohio,
6 Kittens, 3 Males, 3 Females, 5 Russ Moore owner, 7"0·992·
2526.
Weei&lt;s Old, 740-446-4737
Clean Late Model Cars Or
FrH klftens, 740-~· 1122 .
.Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East· ·
Kittens. 740-448-n30 . .
ern Avenue, GailipoHs.
60 Lost and Found
W•nted To Buy: 1973 Meigs
Found: Chow, ~ear leo~ . Call to Year Book. If Anyone Has One Or
klentlly. (304J458-16151451H727.
Knows Of Anyona Please Call
741).742·251 2.
Found: large furry dog , Cheste;
area, mostly black with tan
shepherd markings, 740·992·
EMPLOYMEN1
3422 or 740.867-3545.
SERV ICES
Lost: 35mm camera &amp; ease, bel·
waen Bob's Market, Mason &amp;
McOonald's, Pomeroy, reward , 110 Help Wantld ·
catt740-99Hno.

$2,000 WEEKLY! Ma ilin g 400
Brochures! -Satisfaction Guaranteed! Pos\age &amp; SUJtpfies Provided! Rush Sell-Addressed
Slamped
Envelope! GICO. DEPT
70
Yard Sal•
5. Box 1438, ANTIOCH , TN.
37011 -1 436.
Gallipolis
AU students- lull and part time
&amp; VIcinity
openings In customer servlct1
salts dep. $10. ~ per hr appt No
2 Family: July 2nd; 3rd, 4th, 48 '!Xperlefce· w~ll train. Condhions.
BCKnett Road, ~anauge .
epW Must be 18. 'C all 304'4854300. www.work forstudents.eoml
975 Addison Pika,. July lot, 2nd, . on
I
Furniture, Gls Stove, Relrigera·
tor, Large Tranipollne, Clothes. AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
Plus Sized UniiOrms, MISC.
5ntrtey Speal1,'304-675- 1429.
ALL Yllnl- Mutt
AVON has 1 place'for vou l Join
loPoldlnA-.
the
11 .bea uty company! Enjoy
PfAQL!NE: 2:00p.m.
your
own business: Buy your own
1111 lily ....... , . ...
products at coat. Call 1·800-4·
II 1o run. SUnclly
AVON or 740-594·~ - · 2:00p.m.
Frldly.llondar odlllon
Be your own boss. Work at home .
• tO:OO o.m. Sotunloy.
24 nour meiSago. 877-267...000.
Baby ltema A Uore, 8 Miles Booklng/Aco untant. Gallipolis
Down 21,8, Thursday, Friday July Company hu an Immediate
Ist, 2nd, i-5.
opening for a full-l ime E•perltnc«t Bookkeaper. Send Resume
For G-n 01 My Hurt Holy Tt· by July It t, 1999 to: CLA 478%
bornoclt, Ju~ 2nd, 9:00A.M. At Gallipolis Dailey Tribune , 82e ·
U728 State Route 55_., Bidwell,
Craftl, Baked Items, Clothing, Etc., Third A.,., Gall~ls, Oh. 4563 r
B09kk8tjper: Two Veers On The
Lerge Salt: LOll Of Oithll, Job Exp.,lance And References
Cooltware. T.V., Air C0ndl11onera, Riqulred, This Posltlon Entails
443 MllchiM Rood, July tot, 2nd, Computar Based Books, Payroll. ·
Rlln !Shine.
.
Job Costing, And Multiple -Companies. II You Work Well With
Monday June 28th, Thru·Friday PUblic ·Are Honest, And Sincere
July 2nd, Clothes, Toota. Crlftl, About Want ing To Work An d
Shutters. Toddler Bid Dllhea. Grow With The Company Please
Curtains. ShOes, Boat Seats, Forward A Resume To: ChrlsNama Brand Jeens. Bathroom llln's Conllructlon, 1"03 Eastern
· Sink And Cabinet lounger, t914 Avenue , Gallipolis, OH 45631, No
State Route I4I, Gallipol~ .
Phpne cans WMI Be Accepted.
Lost: 4 Year Old Black lab, A litttl White Chest, Nelson Blue Col·
tar Tag, 740-367-7681 .

_

EQUal Opportunity Ernptover

_;,.;_..:.;,;...:.:.:::::..::::.::~~-

JOB LISTING ASSEMBLY AT
HOME!! Crafts, Toys, Jewel ry,
Wood . Sewing, Typing ... Great
Pay! CALL t-800·795·0380 'Ext.
1201 (24 Hrs)

\

1

·

~t-nd&amp;

Pomeroy, ,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
810 South Second Avenue. Mid·
dteport. ..kJne 29 tnrougn July 5.
All Yard S.ltl Mu1t h Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm tht
dey bttort the ad Is to run,
Sunday a Monday edition-

TRI·STAIE MOBilE

Product1: Start your own I~

CNA, LPN, Olldtd. Good pay,
Murty. bOnus for weeQnd work.
Must be licenaect In WV. Call

I

f

7

Home Sutlneu. Work flt11iblt
Hours. EnjOy Unlimited Earning•.

Tupperwart, Longaberger 811·

IOOFIIII
IIEW·IEPAII

Etd. 9735.

lnsurnnce Company. Callus for more

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
NOW HIRING

'

• NewGof191•
• Elaelrlcol • Plumbing
• Rooflng • Guttara
• Vlnyt Siding • Pointing
• PoUo • Porch Dtcke

insurance fiom Auto-Owners

Public Notice

July 1't and 2nd
1 Mile South of
Tuppers Plains on SR 7

Spring 0Kn Speda/
2areas $45.00
3areas S54.95
4areas S69.95
5areas $84.95

I

• RoornAddltlonol - l i n g

A~

Gallipolll
&amp; VIcinity

Howard L Wrltesel

949-2168

YOUNG'S
.CARPENHR SERVIa

985-4473

r

Public Notice

110

Hauling

-~mo. pd.

members

uy f~om the.Ciassifieds!

Call
992·2155 and Speak With
Dave Harri~Ext. I 04
o.r Kathy Wllllamson~Ext. 10$.

29670 Bat~han Rold
Racln•. Ohio 45n1

I0- or ZO-year level term life

(8) 29 1TC '

Help U• Celebrate The :zooth
Anniversary Oi Rutland.
A Special Souvenir Edition Will Be Included In The
Sentinel In Mid-July. ·

SElF STORAGE

Protect. the ~rtant
people m your life. .

1-'

KCB
SAYRE
TRUCKING ' .EXCAVATING
Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer

The Dally Sentinel • Page

place an ad Call992-2156

1-800-809-7721

3i1t/99 TFN

HILL'S

dricks, Mason (1965); Nancy Pr,Pf- Charleston (1974); Bruce HendrickManha Henry Coleman and guest of
fill of Mason (1966); WilliamAnhur · son of Mason (1975); Rita HenMason, Jim Stewan of Chester,
of New Haven ( 1967); Chris Han-ah, drickson of Mason ( 1978);
Ohio, Phyllis Scott and guest of New
Haven, Ruth Lieving Roush of
Mason (1968); Juanita Friend and
Drenda Roush of Mason, Tracy
guest of Cottageville, Beulah Roush Nutter and guest of Evens,
. Let~, and Ronnie Flowers 31)d
guest of Virginia (1954); Neil PickHutchinson Knapp of Point Plesant; WV, and Zelma Harris Walker and
ens and guest of Maryland, Peggy · and Mary VanMatre Chapman and guest of Evans (1979); Ty Roush of
McDaniel Edwards of. Mason, Marguest of Belpre, Ohio (I 969); Pamela Mason (1980); Megan Harrah of
Weaver Elias and guest of New · Mason (1998) and Randy Tompkins
jorie Clarke Walburn ofMiddlepon,
and Pat Roush Noel of Pomeroy
Haven (1973); Tim Roush of Park- of Letan and Eve Hendricks of
(1955); Barbara McDaniel Saunders
ersbur~. and Mark Miller of_ Mason (I 999).
and guest of Columbus, Ohio, Larry
. Lieving and guest of Sarasota. FL.
Larry Edwards and guestof Rutland,
Ohio, Doris Elliot Coffee of Vinton,
Ohio, Dania Tolben Jackson and
g0est of Mason, John Mitchell of
Columbus, Ohio, James Fry of
Pomeroy, Ohio, Denver Gibbs and
guest of J,.etan, and Phyllis Anhur of
New Haven (.I 959);
row havt the option ri protecting your family
Arawanna Tye of Mt. Sterling,
Ohio (1961 ); and Barbara Zuspan of
Mason, and B.onnie Staats Smithson
or a business partner with low-ca&gt;t
of Letart ( 1964); _Mary Foster Hen-

"ou

To

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 .

•

Middleport, Ohio

-r7;0=:=:V.;a:r:d:~:l:e=:::1r-~1;1;0~H~•~Ip~W~a=~~ed~~~1~10~;H;e~lp=.W;a~n=.t~ed~

~~ Southern Ohio Disposal

Having sex with your married .ex - husband is not a way to get him back

The 1999 Wahama Alumni Banquet was held May 29 in the · high
school cafe teria at 6 p.m. The cafe·
teria was deco rated in the traditional
red and white school colors. Pat
Roush Noel and daughter, Linda
Noel McKinney, covered the tables
· with white cloths, red napkins, red
and whi te year markers, crystal candle ho lders, red .candlcs and,rcd and
white fl ower arrangements.
There was a tabl e decorated
exclusively for Wahama Elite, who
are grad uates from 1927 to 1939.
The
group includes Evelyn
Fog lesong Proftlt of Mason ( 1927);
Addie McKnight o f Hartford
( 1928); Sarah Foster of Mason
( 19:29); Donald Foglesong of Mason
( 193 1); Leona Jaque s of New Haven
and Mildred Fry of New· Haven
(1933); Alice Miller of Hanford and
Heneriua Bailey of Pomeroy ( 1934);
Leola Roush from New Haven
( 1935); Survilla Johnson Gilland of
New Haven and Barbara McDaniel
of New Haven (1936); Clara Rollins
from Capehart , W.V. (1937); Dallas
Walk er of Mason, William L. Zerkle
of Mason and Alfreda Meredith
from Belpre, Ohio (1 938); and
James Hart uf Hurri cane, Earl Diehl
fro m Charle.&lt;ton , Ruth R,oush Walker from Maso n, MarJori e Batey
Hoffman fro m New Haven, Lilah
Ze rkl e from Maso n, and Robert G.
Cla rke from C harleston ( 1939)
The 50 year anni versary class of
1949 were se ated at a table with
memorab ilia of yesteryears. They
were presented red ·carnations cor·
sages fi nd boutonnieres . Members
seated at the table were: Rosanna
Fry . Barley from Middlepon, Ohio;
Hiram . Richardson from Gahanna,
Ohio - He rm an Henry from The
Plain s, Ohio; Earl Henry from New
Haven; George Roush from Gallipolis, Ohi o; '{ommy Simmons from
Middleport, Ohio; Max ine Fields
'from Hanford; Juanita Ward fn,&gt;m
New Haven ; John Chaltin from

.

(304)675-7927.

i E &amp; S Lawn Service: Design, tm·

ptamantellon, and Service.
Available tor Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planting. Free esu:
mates. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Grog· MilhOan: 3041875-4826 .

�P~

8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 29, 1999
•

The qDally Sent inel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

~.--~~~------------~T

Pan.LIP

320 Mobile Homes
for sale
FINANCIAL SERV $FREE' GASH

420 Mobile Homes

NOW$ From Wealthy FamHuts

Clear ance Sate All Displays
Must Go OownPaymenls as tow

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobtle homes air

1.!1mited t1me only at Oakwood

992 2167

220 Money to Loan
Georges Ponable Sawmill don t
11au1 your log&amp; to the m1ll just call

304-675-1957
Interior &amp; Exteuor Pamtlng Ex
perlenced References Reason·
able Rates For Free E&amp;timate

740-388-8041
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction
New constructton &amp; Remodelf
Drywall Siding Roofs Addl
tlo ns Painting etc (304)674

Unloading Millions Of Dollars To
Help Minimize Their Taxes Write
Immediately WINDFALLS 847 A

as _.99 Interest as low as I tt

FINANC IAL

Good selecl•on ~;&gt;f used homes

(3041675-n83

LOANS

SERV

CASH

Auto Loans &amp; Mort

son $295 month ... Deposit

w•th 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

385-9621

4623 or (3041674.0155

MONEY PROBLEMS? Wo Can

New Bank Repo s Only 3 l eft 1

Need A Home For You r Loved
One In Quiet Home With 24 Hour
Care? 7-«1-441 1238

Help! Up to 100K No Fees! Low
Rates Quick Results Call 1 877
746 9009

230

Professional
Services

0250 For Appointment

Will do House Cleaning Ha ve
Refer e nces and Experience!

The complete clea ning service
Carpe t Uphols tery We:lls Ce ll·
ings an d also Po we r Washin g
For a free estimate call Clearly

Cle an at (304)675 4040 Guar·
anteed Wor1d

(7401 388 8421 or (740) 446

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

2646 Leave Message

No Fee Unless We Wml
t 888 562 3345

Wrll Repa1r Lawn Mowers Farm
Tra ctors And Machinery Also
U ghl Welding Call Evenmgs

800·383-6862
New 1999 14x70 three bed room
mcludes 6 months FREE lot rent
lnclu(les washer 4 dryer st(irtlng
delu xe steps and se tu p Only
$200 74 p er month w1!h $11 50

down Call 1 800 837 3238
New 3BA S499 down, 1189
Month Only O•kwood Homea,

Nitro, WV, (304)7511-5865

recommend s that you do busi
ne ss with peop le you k.now and
NOT to send money through the
mall untn you have lnvestlgafed
the offering

ADULT INTERNET
Prepaid Access Cards Hot Item!
"No Competition "Real SS$ Maker

Star Up $499
110().829-2371 Dept 97.

' D~trlbutorshlp

Area Coke /Peps1
New Ma chines! Proven l ocator
Big Profits 1 BOO 440 2371

BAKE CUSTOMIZED COOKIE
GIFT BOXES Seriously Wa nting
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chise /No Royalties Details 1 877
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1 877 945.0862,
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$90 000 YEARLY Repair

lng NOT Replacing Long Cracks
In Wlnd&amp;hields Free Vtd eo 1

800 826 8523

US

www glassmechaniK com

/Ca nada

EARN UP TD $540 AN

HDU~

Send Us A One Page For m We
Oo The Rest No Dl(&amp;el Sellmg
Free Information Package 1 800

310.8745 Ext 27 24 Hrs
For sale thnvlng young florist
and g1ft shop centrally located
Parking excellent Many fme gifts
Located m newly restored h1storl
cal building Priced to sell 740

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 (.800
731 7233 EXT 2603
ITS
HOT' ITS
GROUND
FLOOR' IT WORKS! Become A
METABOLIFE 356 tm Distributor
Today! Fastest Growing Dietarv
Supplement A&gt;.lallable Free lnlor·
mallon Free Call 888 863 8859

METABOLIFE tm INDEPENDENT
DISTRIBUTOR
Approval
tN3455081599
Need A Loan! Try Debt Consoli
dation $5 000 $200 000 Bad

Crodll 0 K Fee 1 90p 770 0092
Ext 215
For sale newly reslored two
story historical brick building Lo
catad two blocks from the Oh1o
River Perfect to start your own
b usiness wllh beautiful living
quarters upstairs Pr iced at

Thrs newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which IS In vlolatron ol the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwelltngs
advertised m th1s newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
-opportunity baSIS

~t

310 Homes lor Sale
3 Bedroom Ranch Home 1850
Sq Ft 24x48 Garage Shop 16
Acres County Water 11 Miles
From Gallipolis CA Built In 1991

$95 000 Nog 740 379 2635
4 Bedrooms 31/2 Baths formal
LA/DR Flmshed Basemef\t Cus·
torn K1tchen/ Cherry "'c abtne ts l
Sunroom overlooking small Pond!

$189900 (740) 441 5118 or mora
imlo Leave Me ssage Appt only!
7 Year Old 3 Bedroom Ranch
Home 2 Baths 28x30 Attached
Garage 69 1/2 Acres Will Sell
All Or House And lot Meigs
County S150
For Information
Call 740 992 3537

ooo

sol ldatlon Stop Collecti on Call s
Reduce Payments &amp; Fin an ce
Charges Avoid Bankrup tcy 1 ~

800.270 9894
Bad Crodlt 7 S!art Genlng Ap
proved For Cred it And Loans To
morrowl MC N lsa In 7 Days 1·
BOO 546 6566

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Montnly Payments 20 50% Save
ThOusands Of Dollars In lnlerest

Non-Proll TCC 600 758 3644

CREDIT PROBLEMS? VISA

CARD ~ Guaranteed Approval

No Credll Check • O%APA Ro·

qulrements 18+ us Citizen Ha11e
CheCking Account Phone Appro ·

Gallia Mason
Meigs Area Stop By See Pete
Peck - View Our Beautllul Homes
Beside Auto Zone Gallipolis, 740·

446 3093
Repo Doublewrde Save Thou
sands! 1 800-383-6862

330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL 6 Stall Horse Bam
3 Bedroom House Fence 740

3811-8504

For Rent 2 Sdrm Mobile Home
$275 00 mo plus ut1Htles
$275 oo secunty dep. references
located In Ma son Call
req

(304)675-1911
Two bedroom mobile home In
Middleport, $275 plu s deposit,

74().992 3194

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 .bedroom apartments fUr
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pets 740

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Regrlgerator Included 740 4462583

Off SR 141 West Galha County
Lots Of MejldoW, With New Sheds
/Barns And Fencing Ready For
Ammals LOts of Road Frontage

20ACAES
Great For Recreati on /Hunting
Wooded Wi th Road To Wayne
Nat1ona l Forest Make Me A
Deal! 5% Down land Contrac t
W th Approved Credit Free

Maps 1-1100 213-8385

2 bedroom aperttnenl 1n Middle·
port, we pay water, sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per

month $100 deposit 740 992
1806

2 Rooms &amp; Bath $225/Mo , In
eludes Utilities, No Kitchen 1
Bedroom &amp; Bath Includes UUNties

NO Kitchen 740-446-2477

2704 740 992 5696
Completely remodeled house 4
bedroom family room llv1ng room
kitchen utility room &amp; bath base
men! w1 th bath new carpet
throughout central air, beautiful
view of nver, call 740 992 9012
appointment only

HOMES FADM $6,000 Fore
cJosed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 K For Current listing Call

$14 000 Or 9 Acr85 $12 000,
Public Water

Danville

Briar

Ridge Ad 7 Acres $13 000 On
SA 32 5 Nice 5 Acres $16 000
Publtc Water

Gollle Co Huntarsl Off SA 218 •
Wilham&amp; Hollow Ad 68 Wooded
Acre s With Stream $40 0 00
Cash Price. Public Water Frrend

ly Ridge Ad 15 Acres $t 4 ooo
CitY Schools

1 80031t 5048 Ext 3865
By Owner Ex cellent Lo cation
Very Attra ctive Pri ce $80 s
to 11 PM
Plea se Call From

e

Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Info Take 10o/.
Off Ust Pnce On Cash Buys!

(3041675 4608 or 875-3991

Apartment for rent 1n Middleport
no pets 740.992·5858

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres, VIllage Mlddlepo{t
secluded and prlvale appoint
ment call740-992 5696
Th ree bedroom house In Pamer
ov newly remodeled country set
tmg air and heat pump outbulld

lng 740 992 7745
T. h ree bedroom hou se for sale
one and 112 baths, fully furn1shed
mce yard close to park 4n Sy
camore Street Middleport call

140 387 7000

lor Sale
1973 Ramada 12x6 5 Mobile
Home 2 Bedrooms Central AJC
Must Be Movedl $5 000 Even
•no~

740-24!&gt;9392

1985 Nausha wllh 8x20 Expando
2 Bedroom s 2 full baths Fire
place New Carpet (740)446

3493
1988 Redmond Danville 14x70
Al so Ha!l Expando Very Nice

Must Sell! Asking $14 000 740
388 8335
1991 14fltc72ft Shingle Root Vinyl
S1d1ng
Ex c e ll~ nl
Cond1tton

$1 6 500 00 (740) 448 811 3
1995 14x76 Only 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Food Disposal Olshwash
er Va ulted Ceiling Llvlngroom
Window Cover ings Ail Electric
CA , New Fl oor Coverings

$19 000 74().448-7860

DON T BORROW MONEY! The

Payments of $239 mo (304)751
5560
B·L·O.W Q.U.T
$499 Down All Singles, $999
Down Doubles, Super Low Payments, Limited T ime Oakwood

Homes, Barboursville WV 304·
736-3409

Equal ~ous~ng Opponunlty

Christy s Family Living apart·
ments, home &amp; trailer rentals
740·992 4514, apartments avail
able furnished &amp; unlurntshed

Water and Electric Ready For

Hook·Ue Nice Loll $1,000.00
Each Call304-n3-11H.
Bu1ldlng site just off RT 33 144

fl x 302 11 1 acre $15 000 304·
962 3n2

360

I

Per

sons, No Grass
No
Lawn First Floor For An Ap
pointment To VIew Phone 740

Real Estate
Wanted

Anthony land Co

RENTALS

qulred 740-441-0952
For Rent

Mason 2 bdrm garage

apt Nice $350 00 plus ullll!les

oo deposit

references req

ph (3041675 1911
Frenchtown Apartments Now
Acceptmg Applications For 1
Bedroom FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And Hand
lcapped Equal Housing Opper
tunlty 740 446-4639

3418
Furniehed Upstairs Second
Avenue No Pets, Utilities Paid

740-448 9523

( 740~384

Renl $300/Mo 1 600 363 6862
4 Bedrooms All Electric A/C

Nice 1 br apt kit furn WID
hookup $300 + damage dep
304-675 3100 or 304-675 5509

North Third Avenue, M i dd l eport~
two bedroom furnished apartment
depostt and references required,

for

rent

1· Bedroom

540

Three bedroom home In Chester
updates new furnace references

River B&amp;nd Place accepting

sidized apt for elderly &amp; handl·

capped E 0 H (304)882·3121
Tw1n Al~ars
now accepting
applications for 1BR HUO sub·
aldized apt tor elderly and hand·

lcepPod

Three pedro om house

$350

monlh 1350 deposit no po~. rei·
eronceo required, 740·992·~979
aNer6pm
Three bedroom, twO bath carport
on SR 7 acroaa frorb Forest Run

Ad $375 montll, depoolt lnd ref·
erence1 required call 740· 742·

8313

'

.

~CilH

304-675-8879

Space for Rent

Mobile home site available bel ~
ween Athena and Pomeroy call

74().385-4387

and deposit, 614·501..S339 afler
600

Pond

Supplies

Sun 1 4PM Mon Sat 11 AM
6PM Fish fank!Pet Shop 2413

I'JIIscellaneous
Merchandise

-- ~

-

Household

Good•
Appliances
Fte cor;adltloned
W••hera, Orytrs Ranges Aefrl
gralort, 90 Day Guarantee!

French Clly Maytag, 740 448·
n95

86 lroo Z 305 tuned port fuel Injected automa tic, while w1th red
In terior 7 1 000 actual mile s,
black out on front and bact!; runs

1955 Chavy Belair, 4 door 6 cy·

Motorcycles

!

_

I

Rocket Motor, $600 Call Alter 5,
304-675·5612
1N4J.tfHIO CARS FROM $500

750 Boats &amp; Motol'll ' :
Tax

Repo s For Listings Call t.SOO·
319-3323 Ext 4420
1982 Ford Granada V 6 automatic runs good $650, 740·

992 1493

Asking

530PM 740-448-9066

1'990 lincoln Continental, Black
With Black Interior Moon Root

Allordable Dental Plan Wllh Ac
cess to America's Largest Den·
tal Networks About $3 Per Week

$3 000 740 245-5659

No Doducl1ble No Walling Period,

1990 Lumina Priced Below loan

(WWW happyjacklnc oom)

Cov·

ered Choice Of Dentist 1 888
227 3752

570

Value 1900 In Parts 93 ooo
Milos $1 750 OBO 740 4481127

Musical
lns,lrurnents

Breakthroughtll Lose 10· 200
Pounds Easy, Quick
Fa&amp;t
Dramatic Result&amp;, 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free Sam

P A Equipment

For~Sale

Like

New Peevey XR 1200 D Powered
Stereo Ml.. r With 128 Digital Ef·
tecta On Boardlf 4 Band Eq And
4 Aux Sends Per Ch 300 Wa11s

Per Channel 0 4 OHMS $750
Peavey MD • 8 Slorao 8 Channel

Cruise ConlrOI Till Steering Ga
rage Kept Wllh 80 ooo Miles
Asking $4 295 Calf 740·448·

And Sum Monitor Outs $200
QSC MX 700A Pwer Amp 350
Watts Par Ch 0 2 OHMS $275
(1) Peevey 15·10·H 3 Way
Speaker $150 (2) Fender 2· 15 H

4223

Mixer With Reverb Stereo A B

(3041675-4546
BIG SCREEN TV Take On Small
Roquollid t-800 716·1857

0Ualt5• With Hom Main Speak·

Candle Creallons,
638 Brick S1reet

ers $800 Pr (2) Peavoy FH 1
Folded Horn Low End Cabinets
No Speakers $200 Pr Contact

Rulland OH 45775
740-742 2512
Candles Of All Styles And Typos
Will Do Refills Ovar 70 vanelles

M~k

AI740.446-661B

580

Of Scents Hours Monday Sat
urday 1 a 9 Sunday 1· 5, Also,
Making Body Lotlo~s &amp; Shower
Geist

12 Ft Cattle Trailer Practically

ion Alum1num Fibered Roof Paint

New With Middle Gale &amp; Divider
&amp; Side Gate, 740·388-9946

$25 21 5 Gal White Roof Pqlnl
$57 69, Anchors $5 Doors &amp;
Windows Gas &amp; Electric Water
Hearers Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts lntertherm Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett a Mobile Home

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

Credll Approval JD 1219 JD7~0
NH474, NH469 NH486 ~aybl ne
JD335, NH630 NH8~0 MF1!60

Supply, 740 446 9416 Gallipolis,
Ohio

NH851 Round Balers. New John
Deere Round Balers Mower Con
dltioners O% 12 Months 2 75%
24 Months 3 75% 36 Months
4 75% 48 Months 5 5% 60
Months Carmichael's Farm &amp;

FULLY LOADED PENTIUM
COMPUTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl
1 · ~52().8384

Lawn Inc 1-600.594 1111 Gall"
polls OH We Dollverl

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM
BERSHIR OR TIMESHARE? WeU

Cat· !553 Sheep ~ Foot Roller
$31 000 Cat 215 Track Hoe
$31 000 45ft Parts trailer $1 BOO

Take ltl America's Most Sue·
cessful Campground And Time·
share Aesate Clearlnghouae Call
Resort Sales International 1·8()0..

16ft Tronl Box $3 000 2 000 Gal·
!on Water Tenk $800 00 427
Chavy Truck Motor $750 00

423 596724 HoltS

Mise Steel Beams Pipe Vlbrat

Boal Mo·

lng Tamp fils 416 Cal Hoe 16ft
Ttent Box $3 000 00 (740) 643

12 H PMurrey Mower (304)882

2644 After

e Pu

alter 5 00

(7olll).fl43-2916

Gravely Walk Behind With 30'
Mower And Sulky $550 741).245·
9589

Locust base post $2 25 each or
500 or mora $2
each 304--882

740-448-~525

Call Ron Evans

1 ·~537·9528

Prlmaatar~ free

DlrteTY Summer

Wanted to Buy

Old Motorcycles. Motoracooters
Motoracooter Parts (Cushman
preferred) Contact D Mitchell ~
5568 80th PI No Plnellaa Par~

Fl 33781 721-464-7408

630

Available Call United Pharma·
ceullcara Now For Info f ·800 ·

733-3288 COD'S IPr•pay/Major
Credit Cards
Two 8x7 Steel Garage Doors,
Like New, Non lnsullated 1 Sec~

Livestock

Uaed Dell Computer For Sale
Windows 3 1, 5 Years Oli:i, In·
eludes Harddrlve, Keyboard &amp;

1998 Buick Century Custom 4
Doors $14 ooo 1997 Chevy
B~zer LS $18000 080 740 367·
0157 Dr 339-2809
1998 Chavy Cavalier, Z 24 Aulo
A C PW , PO Lock SunRoof
C:D Playar (304)113-5117
t998 Pontiac Trans-Am Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced to ,

$22 500 oo Great Graduation
Glhll (740)-448-4548

AUTOMOTIVE Japanese En·
glnes And Tranmlsslons Uaed I

Rebuilt Super Low Prices, And

Imported Directly From Japan

Cleaned Tootad, And Year war·
800 535 9889

FACTORY WHEELS, Alloy, Rally,
800 994 3367

WorldS

MOBI

Complete Inventory www acker
wheel com
Seized Cars From $SOO Sport,
Lutcury &amp; Economy Cars Trucks,
4x4 11 Utility &amp; More For Current

listings Call 1 (100 311 5048 Ext
1163

720 Trucks lor Sale

WeJicran

•8

760

Autii PirtlJ &amp;

slzo short bed truck $350 00

C.i!.IJNC:H
CHOMPF

~ ~

New gas tanks 4 bOdy parts Dr&amp; ~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Pass
Pass

Pass

lent condition $7000 740 742

WAI-IT TO?! SINC~ '
WHEN HAVE 1 EVER
HAD A CHOICE A601JT
AN'I'THING?

avo~ I

I

apeech
23 Toronto•
place
24 Batter
25 Part ofl
trou.. rleg
27 Small .,.,.,
32 Prefix for
"gram"

35 Tailor a tool

I-lOW A60VT
THE PIANO
LESSONS?

aahore

Porcelain
clay
43 Cloae relative
45 Cenary'a
home
47 Dtea•
41 Draliagcy
49 - - fault
(overmuch)
50 Peach center
52 Rodent
53S.If...t....
54 The (Ger.)

3Q

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity C~r cryptogram. are created lrom quotat1001 by lamous people past and pretent
EliCh t.tter In the c~r 1tan01 lor lnol'oer Todllly1 clue 0 6QIJII/tt C

' X' L

IMJ Z

QFN

KAEKE

OBMUFZ

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MY

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BWLT

UKZZXAU

EN A ' Z

F K W N

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LTJKRY'

BAEWKG

WBLXWKO,
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YNQ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Twelve for twenty lhree rl doesn I lake a gen1us lo
see lllafs under fifty percent " - (Sports announcer) Dick Votale

'::~:~:~' S©RdllA-~£trs·
- - - - - - - - - 11111t4
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low to form four lfmplo words

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UNSCRAM81.E lETTERS
FOR tANSWER

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Sle1gh- Afoot- Basal - Flaxen - FAIL to TELL
You'll build o big rres4 &lt;gg w~n
)'IIU so.. widr rho clo111(iods

:J

!TUESDAY

8 x38 Furnished Camper On P•
vato lot 50 x100 Cenlral Air&amp;:.;;

qri" ·~

.•

1 attended an assert1ve act1on class We were told
that we reveal a great deal about ourselves by what we
FAIL to TELL

JUNE 291

Baal Run Road $15,000 PhOn, '' 1
Call 740 446 1203 740 44&amp;!' t
I

, If

l'•

SERVICES

·...:.--~-:---...____. '
Home
~

810

~

Improvements

I1'---;;J~~~~~--Uncondlllonal lllollmo guaranteai'

~

1

Local references furnished Et·' ~
tabfl&amp;hed 1975 C&amp;t 2~ Hra (740fl.-l
446 0870. 1 800 287 0576 RoQ·
era Waterproofing
..,

1

- - - - -- ..
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years EJ-.....
parlance All Work Guaranteed,

French City Maytag, 740·446
nes
C&amp;C General

Home

Ma rq.

tenence Painting vinyl sldinQ',
carpantry, dOon~ windows baths~
mobl~ home repair and more f1!r

lree Sl!lll)ate call Chet 740 911~
6323

M&amp;R General Contracting

"'&amp;

1990 F 350 crew cab dually (XLT

Electric , Carpentry, Porcheis .

Livingston s Basement Wa"t
Proofing all basement repalta
done free estimates, llfetlfllt
guarantee 12yra on Job expatil

Outl!andlng Angus And Chlan·
guo Bulls Reasonably Priced,

l __.;..:.;.:;...______,____ _

Slate Run Farma Jackson, Ohio

Lariat) diesel, auto goose neck

Troller Soi·Ups, And Air CondtJ

740-286-5395_

hllch bodllnar, 123K mllea bll
gray, $8,000 740 992 1506 daya
740·949-2844 ......_

441 ·1401

tloning, Also, Maintenance 7481

''

R.tnbow BuiW..
...
Build new or repair old no Jgtr
too small or large Major ore!)4t

cords
IWV029582.
C~l~
(3o4)456.1 0119 BP 15281oe:! '

85 Ford Plck· Up F-150, Short
Bad 300 6 cyl 4op 96,000 miles
Above Average Condition! (740)
388·0148

840

One 1988 KW Ono 1988 Weal·

new 11Mc1 or repel,.

Electrical and
Refrlge111tlon

Residential or commercial wlrlng \l
Master lJ,;'
cenattd atectrlclan RldehOcr~ ­

Eieoulcaf WV000306,
1788

304·87~··

.j

I

'

GAlli

the

bt-

oft PRINT NUMBE~ED

Bath IShowor, Ono Ownar 740 1
245-9316
; :J

4349

WOlD

~,

'1:11' LETTERS IN SQUARES

!

Electric Sewer,

atce!lc

18 Percu111on
Jnatrument

thrOIII
20 Rallied
22 Put Into

I....,-.1...;...,1"8:-1,....-..1._"1--1

1998 Sunllne Solforll Camper '
Sleopo 8, Dual A•lo Gaa, A/C :

Water,

1umrner

13 Anclant
Jewlth

"Golf shouldn 't be so tough "
w1fe told her husband "I
..-~....,.~~~~--. thtnk a golf course IS JUSt a pool
P 0 C R IT
lhallmoved·--· · · - - ·
Complete 11oe chuckle quooed
by hl11ng In 1he mrss1ng words
1.-.J.--...L.-.J.'-...1..-.1.-.J
you dovelop from Slep No 3 below

1996 Dutchman 33 Fl With Ex 1
pando In living Room Vtry Gooo:l
Condition Ready To Gal 740-t •
446--4257, After B PM
• ~

Heat,

IOUnd
fl Lilla (auff )
10 Buddhltm type
11 French

By Phillip Alder
Constder a trump su1t of A-K·O·
J-10 10 yo ur hand oppostte 9·8· 7 m
the dummy. You have five trump
tncks. (And 1f 11 were a no-trump
conlrllcl, you couldn't get more than
those five wmners.) However, tf you
can get dummy votd of a stde su1t
and ruff a loser 10 that su1t, you generate an extra !rump lnck The five
winners remam in your hand, plus
you have the ruff. Note, though, lhal
tf you are votd of a sutl m your hand
and ruff there, you do not generate
an extra tnck You are usmg one of
your five wmners
If you can take a ruff m the shorter trump hand, It 1s almost always
the ngHt hoe of play
In today's deal, you are m four
spades. You start w1th only three
losers· one heart and two dtamonds
However, West leads hiS s10gle1on
d1amond, East wms w1th the k10g,
cashes I he ace, and gives West a ruff
Back comes the club Jack . What
next•
You have suddenly been presented wtth an extra loser Now the only
concern ts your third heart However, as dummy has only two hearts,
you can ruff 11 10 the dummy.

'

1990 26 Dutchman camper, alec· !
trlc tront jack new twin banerleaJ
20 awnlnp, TV, 1tereo system, ~
miCfow~ roof alr, four new 6 ply 1.

fires $7500 740 742 2228
tngs

• profit~

2 ActorGul3 Singer Jtnft 4 Cath dre5 - - a million
e Caught
7 Of a lung
membrana
I Abnormal
retplretory

34 Waahed

PEANUTS

- ~

2321

1 Endlna for

The ruff Is usually right

:

11

DOWN

East
Pass
Pass

• }

'92 Terry Resort 24 trailer exc"'

511 WIN counaelor

wHh • 1ore

R Auto Ripley WV (304)372· 1

•'

\

l'luN&lt;:H

30!1o'

n3-53t41eiiV8 message

I 6

North
2•

•

18 Uk e -

There are two rules to follow
here Draw as many rounds of
trumps as you can afford, and ruff
htgh 1f poss1ble So, after winnmg
w11h the club ace, draw two rounds
of trumps usmg honors from your
hand. Then, play a heart to dummy 's
ace (the honor from th~ shorter side
first), return a heart lo your kmg, and
ruff your lasl heart with dummy's
spade Jack Finally, ruff a club in
hand, draw East's last trump, aod
chum.

Fiberglass cover fits cttevy lull f

once (304)695'3887

(y

KNOW51T u:xJP 1

~c~vc~~~~n~~~7~40-~~~s-~5677~~--~-;

1990 Dodge 0· 150, Plck·Up 318,
Aulomatlc LWB Dual Exhaull
Air, Good Shapol $3 900 740
448-8168

Asphall Trucks Call Allor 8 PM
140 446-4267

e.IJT~~

BIG NATE ,

=B~u~dg~,e~t-P~r~lc~e~d~T;r-a~ns~m~l~s~sl~on~~
and Engines, All Types, Actus :
To Over 1o 000 Transmissions

Charloals Bulls 14 Monlhs Old
Big Enough For Service $500,

ern Star Du111p Truoke Good

OOOU5\~t&gt;!

- ~

Accenorles

$1800 Call aNer &amp;PM (304)576
2'113

Used Frlgldalro Air Condlllonor,
8200 BTU s, EIICellenl Conditio~. Registered miniature horses,
740 379·9110 No Sunday Call&amp; good blood llnos, 5 mer10, 3 sial·
P~a ..
nons, 2 marta ore bred back,
Waterline Special 314 200 PSI 740-742 2050
$21 95 Per 100 1• 200 PSI
840 Hay • Grain
$37 oo Per 1oo, All Bran Com
prHaloro fltliras In SIOCII
Squoro Bolo&amp; of Ha1 For Sole
liON IVAiit, INYIIIPRIIIS (304)875-!1072
Ohio. 1-801).537·9528

(!)~I

I• :

To Good Home 25% Down At·
fordablo Rstas 740-388 8358

1995 S·10 LS, Exlondad Cab, 4
Cylinder, 5 Spud Air $6 800
740-44$·19H 740-388-8637

,..!ll\€. ~ t-10\
~ow MIJC.I\,

1

1981 Chevy Plck·up Shor!Wheel

1,

""ye:.~, 1&lt;\0iii.EJ:

Ft With 4 Cylinder •

With Trailer $8 900 OBO 1988 •
18 Ft Bala With 4 Cylinder &amp;
Trailer $3,500, 1977 21 Ft 1
Checkmate, 4 Cylinder &amp; Ttallor l\
13 000, 1990 16 P18)1!1mtt. Whh 88
HP Evlnrude Wfth Trall&lt;if $3 fiOO ,
1978 Slfngrey 18 Fl 4 Cyun&lt;telr
With Trailer $2,500 740·256·•
6160
- •

Base, 8 Cyt, 3 Spd

wfextraa

VIANT IT.
PEL1Vf~fl&gt;1

•

Mariner With Trailer $5 500 1988 ,

gan Installment Plan For Horses

Roglllorod Anguo, elghl cow &amp;
calf palrt, eight 1 &amp; 2 year old
holfera, axcolla"l bloodlines 740
742-3033

J

(3041675·3218

Ttii,TY- Ttf~ff
GfNTS TO MAl~
Ttff L.fTTf, ....

11 Fl Stratos Fish &amp; Ski With I
115 Suzuki &amp; Trailer $4 000, 1984 ,

Old Mara 112 auarlar 112 Mor

~40-446'4053

lion Glasa Tor Spr)nga, $100
Each Or Bolh $175, 7~0 446·
4514

CDPiayer, Towing Package, AI ~
loy Wheels Power Seats

91 GMC Sierra 112 ton Extended
Cab low miles excellent condi
lion $10 000 740-742-2321

4 Arabian Mares One 10 Year

TV Callaaene H·VIagra AI .so

1996 Chevy Bla zer LT Leather
Interior loadad, ACIPWIPDL,

BORN LOSER

1979 26 H Twin Englno Thunder·
bird With Tralfor $1 2 500 1984 ,
19Ft Concord Wflh 91 200 HP )

790

$5 200 080 7olll 992 1506 days,
740-949·2644 eves

•

J S ~arlne IS Loaded Up Oli\
Used Trade Ins Ready For Sale ~

t994 Corsica V~6. Automatic Air

silver w/maroon Interior ate ami
fm cassette cruise good tires.

'

J

~$~~~~~1~
-~~2~7~~~~==9~---- ~

1994 GL Taurus, 59 879 miles,

Sl~,

NOvl l"~fllf, I&gt;H&gt;
YOU AL.S'O

i

2 Door AUIO AC
$3,~95 1994 Corsica V6 Auto
AIC Loodedl $3 695 Cook Mo
tors 740-446-0103

Steel Buy, San Acker Wheel 1

820

5 Pounds A Weak Aa Seen 0{1

Caval~r

See The New John Deere 200
Sarles Skid Steer Loaders. 7 5,-o
Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 1 800·594·
1111 Gallipolis OH We Del1verl

Rapid Walghl loss! FEN PHEN
Combination 100% Safe Only
$24 95 Buy 2 Got 1 Freal Lose 3-

uJ 4

ranty Foreign Engines, Inc 1

JDC Financing, Carmichael's

JET
AERATION MOTORS

H~ Mileage $3 500 OBO 740·
381t6408

oa

32451304-962-2077

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; rep1111rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

Pont1ac Grand AM Teal

lc .Air Condnionlng $3 495 Cook
Motors 740-446-0103

610 Farm Equipment

Vinyl Skirting Klls $299 95, 5 Gal·

1993 Dodge Shadow 5 Speed V·

'

Gambler Inti midator 29 ft bass
boat, dual con soln 200 hp •
evlnrude motor, fullv equip
bought riew in 98, Ui8d apprOJi·
lmatety 10hrs priced well under
book 304-na-5998
1 •

Conditioning Loaded $3 695,
1994 CavaHer 2 Doors Automat

019COUnl Mobl&amp; Home

Huge Inventory

1992 Corsica very good cond

$2600 304 576 2749

t9Q~

FARM SUPP LIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Don't Call Us We Botll Lose! 740·
446 8308 HQ0.291-oo98

t990 Pontiac Grand Prix $1 450,

740 448.0519

OBOt740-256.6034

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

From GallipOlis OH On State Route 141,740.379-2501

To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces Heal
Pumps Certified Installer II You

1991 S 10 iB 000 Moles $2 995

6 lp adod Nice S!treo $2,600,

Homa Grown Sweet Corn And
Tomatoes For Sale 10 Mile,s

COOL DOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added

1990 Mercury Sab'e GS Sedan 6
Cylinder, Automati c 4 Speed
Transmission AM/FU Stereo
Tape A1r Bag Air Cond ttlonlng,
Anlllock Brakes Power Door
Locks Windows Drivers Seat,

N?

I

740-245 9391

West

ASTRO·ORAPH
Wednesday, June 30, 1999
Look for sohd mvestments or
j(lml ventures thai have profitable
pptential tn the year ahetd. Your
pOssibilities for generating income
from plac es bestdcs your usual
soum:s look extremely good.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
l!ven well tnlenlioned advice or
cOuRSCI llOUid act you in trouble
IOday Try not to make suggeslions
to fnends, especially on how lo htn·
die thcilr 110mmen:ial or financial
affail'll Cancer, lreal yourself to a
birthday gift Send lhc required
refund , form and for your Aatro·
Graph ~rcdictlons for the year ahead
by math"&amp; $2 and self·addresaed
atamped envolopq to Aatro-Oraph,
do lhia Mwtpllpcr, P.O. Box 1758,
MuRII)' Hill Station, New York, NY
10U6. Be sure to al!llo your Zodiac
oip.
LEO (fuly 23·Au• • 22) Some of
your opinions mialtt 1101 be too pppular with your 'peers or companions
today, 10 don't •ttempt 10 ltllpOI!oe
your vrcws on albers, especially
onea who lends lo be hostile

,.

VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpt. 22) Feel·
ing oluggish is usually due more tn
part lo a lack of exercise lhan from
small ailments. Don't put tl off any
looser, pt off the oouch today and
start movlnglhe body.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)
Overindulgence mtghl be your
nemests today and lhal1n&lt;:ludes eat•
lng habits, phystcal actlv1ttes or
even your spendmg 1nclt nations.
Keep a hd on hid habtla.
SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24- Nov. 22)
Sprmalns untnnounced activttiea on
your llpOIISC could meet wilh a chtlly
taponse at Ihis time Have IXlnstder·
atlon for whal ohe or he mtght have
planned.
SAOITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) Think twtce before pusing on
tny information today whk:h cannot
be substanlllted or ve11fied You
could lnedvertenlly etuse unneccs-1
sary trouble
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Normally, you always have a strong
grip on your financtal apend1ng, but
this mlpt nol be the cue today Be "
careful in all your lfKinetary affai11

•

57~

CHIPPIN'

POST
OFFICE

,

1998 Marada Sport I 3l Mer·
cruiser 110 In The Water 5

character
13 14 Small a 11 ,._, go~dtll
Ill Uluml17 Taka to court
II Helf a -?
21 Mote,_
23 O'Hare'• locale
(abbr )
26
• pert thll
26 "
Spjlnlth
2t1 OWn (Scot )
30 Men
31-nt
33 Marauder
311 Uver tprud
37PeerGynt't
mother
31 Ca.mlval
performer
40 Menttllmagt
41 Gulcl8d

Puzzle

41 F - 11811
... , . . , _
41 Mlnn 11 ola
C8pltel ~2 wdl,)
51 Aclad IIIIa a
wolf
55 W.ll-gtOOIMCI
511 GIM:III epoch
(2 wcl8.)

Openmg lead • 3

YfS,

j

1990 Ford Taurus SHO 5 sp ,
good oondltlon $3 500 work 740742 2444 hOma 740 742 8004

TIGHTWAD

"

Trailer Included Very Low Hours
EI(CI!Itlent Condttkm $4 500 OBO ~

3 White washara Kenmora G E
Whirlpool $70 Each Kenmore &amp;
Admiral Dryers $60 Each, Whirl·
pool Refrigerator, $60 Call Alter

plano Or

FR~

South
46

WHAT'S THAT

t

Times Ltke New Many Extras! If

Mol~cycll,

PAW'S CHIPPIN' IN
FER TH' FlSH

I

programming

7 Awltd
12 "Selnfeld"

Vulnerable· East West
Dealer. South

•

BARNEY

Boat Of Equal Value 740 446 1
41s2
1995 Kawasaki 900 ZXI Jet Ski

lrmlted time offer, call 1·800-779·

Honda ·eo·

-- &lt;

1992 Searay 220 Mint Condlllonj
Cuddy Cabin &amp; Many Exlresl Low
Hours 740 388- 9991, 740·388·
9515
'
1993 Cobia 11 112 RL118boul U
.!!a"'

CoD 740·446-1741

ACROSS
G folbll8
IWI at •
I Genue at ante 44 Upper 11mb

•A

't

fOr Sale

New Will Trade For A Pontoon

I

And Pre·Existlng Condllions

• K 4 2

• Q J 10 6

~~~~~~
- ~~3~~~·--~ :
'

• A K 9 5
• K 9 52

6 A K Q 10 4

$2 900 ,

Wheeler

• 9 7 6

• Q 10

South

~:

atter5 pm

1970 Pontiac leman s Wfth 350

And

• 8 3
•J98 7 6 5
• 3
• J 10 8 7

:1

1996 Honda 300 4·Tracks,
4 '
1

Impounds

Eut

I

1990 Yamaha Big Bear 4x4 good
condition $1100 OBO call 741 1
742-4006 ask lor Mike
• ~

Pollee

We at

~

OBO 740-245-5100

mile&amp; very nice Inside and out
,will take partial trade In $4800.
740 992 1493

3430
~ee

•

1987 H D Softall Custom tots of j
chrome recently restores lo't.,.
miles, $1 5 000 740 992·3112 af·~
ter 5 or 740-992.()078

Chevy a,

~IS
~10::.:

1994 Ex plore r 6 Cylinder -4 ~
Ooora 4K4 Air, Br.and New Tow '
Pac kage Ru ns Great! S t s 500 t

Honda s

Toyota 's

• A 3
• 7 6 42
• Q6 43

AfSrlWr'

1989 4 WD Dually With Ulll lly(

06-29-IHI

• J 5 2

EEK&amp;MEEK •

Bed 6 2 Diesel Good Machaniel P
M 740-446-4257Afte&lt; 6 P.M ~

740

lion Call after 5 pm (740) 446·

$69 00 $100 of

.~

I

AUTOMOTIVE CARS $1 00
$500 &amp; UP POLICE IMPOUNDS
Jeeps And Sport Utilities 800
772 74711 EX1 7632

Non

I

94 white Grand Prix SE Coupe ,
$6700 740.992 2939

92 Geo Metro red runs good

11100, 740-992·2979 after epm

(304)675-2063

16 HP Simplicity Lawn
Deck t:ow Hours

-"

•

1994 GMC Jimmy SLS , Loaded ~
4DR , Excollon1 Condition Hig h
Miles $9 400 Call before 9PM,'
(304)675-7946
2· 84 Dodge Caravans , for part!j
$300 or make offer 304·675-338:.-,

e•collent $3500 OBO 7&lt;0 742·
3142

Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant

Monitor $20CI For Moro lnforma
11on een 304-n:l-!5841

MEf1CHANDISE

510

(~)675-6048

Fish, Birds,

MQO(eowner

Promotion Call now 1·688·265·

Now Taking Applications- 35
We st 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water

460

has had 1st shOts

wormed

$200 eaCh

2123

ap·
pllcaUons now for 1BA HUD Sub-

House

AKC Registered Black lab Pup
pies 1 Wk Olds Have been

Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

1701 State Roule 588 1 Mile
West Of Rodney Alex Acord,
741).245 9015

$300 Monlh $250 Deposit 2·
Raferances No Pa~l (740)·446·
9342

740-256--6336

am to 600 pm, Sunday1 0010
6 oo p m 740 992 2526 Russ

2293

Sewage , Tra ah $315/Mo , 140·
446 0006

5152

AKC R8Q1Btered Y&amp;IIOW Lab Pups
Shots &amp; Wormed Ready 41h Of

Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

pori From $249 S373 Call740
992•5064 Equal Housing Oppor

$600/Mo Plus Deposh 740 387
7802

Clean nice 2 br basementlga·
rage ref /dap no pets 304·675·

and wormed 740 992-6951

Ju~

1778

lmder 3 speed 76 000 actual

AKC registered long haired min·
lature Oashund pups first shots

Courl Gallipolis Call 74!1·446· 1
9832 7olll-446-4267

tor and Trailer, Camping Trailer,

740-992·0161

3 Bedroom 2 Baths House For

Antiques

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
ap;utments at VMiage Manor and
Rlverskte Apartments In Middle

Ntc. 2 bedroom epanment In Syr·

2560

304-675-4009

Gravely Tractor, ~2) Mopeds,

3518

encesl Call

Fnendly 74().381-()659

AKC rag mln lture Dac hshund

AnUque Iron Baby Bed, VIntage
Lamps, Mand Crafted Shades &amp;
Morel Collectors Closet

acuse $200 deposit, $28S per
month Includes trash 740 667
2 Bedroom House In Eureka,
$275 00 plus Deposit Plus Refer

&amp;

Parts 8 Supply

First Avenue One And Two Bed
rooms From $275 $350/Mo Se
c urltv Deposit Rererynces Ae

tunltles.

We Buy Land 30 500 Acrea
we Pay Cash 1 BOO 213~8365

530

446 9539

Furn1shed upstairs two bedroom
apartment large living room &amp;
kitchen nice and clean 740 992

BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE

740-742·2357

AKC Lab Puppies Very Loveable

Call Any Time, Johnson s used
Fu.rnlture

Monthly Payments Good Credit

$350

Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

Started! E~ecellent Hunting Blood
line, 74().446.008()

Used Furnl t~e /Appliances Off
Bulavllle Pike On Keeler Road.
740 446 4039 740 446, 1004

3711 EOH

All Electric

Meigs Co Q~esvllle 10 5 Acres
W1th Stre" m Great Getaway Or
Remote L1vrng Jusj $8 5001 Au·
tland Whites Hill Ad 11 Acres

red t·lopa looks good $1800 88
Ford Tempo .&amp; cylinder $800

AKC Female lab P'I)S 1 Blaclc 2
Yellow 9 Weeks Old $300 Shots

A1r Condlltoners, Used Different

Sizes Guaranleedl 740·888
0047

080. Has New Reese Hlloh Vary •
Tough! 740 245 5949 740 703, -~
740256--1631

Block, b rick sewer pipes wmd
ows lintels etc Claude Wi nters

for

Baby bed, Playpen Swing, Car
Seat Stroller Dressing Table

LTD 1-SQ0-213-8365
BRUNER LAND
740-44H492

Sell

2bdrm apts , total ele ctric ap
plrances furnished lauodry room
lac1lltles, close to school in town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts t49 or can 740 992

$1 ooo Down Land Contract No
Smglawldes Anthony Land Co

By owner 725 Page Street Mid
dlep ort house &amp; 3 lots must See
to appreciate wil l sell house with
out lots lor $89 000 740 ~ 992

ago

pies Call740.441 1962

Buy Homes From S10 000
1 5 Bedro om local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures F1nanclng
Possible For Listings Call 800

319 3323 Ed 1709

year

~--.;

1985 Chevy Van 350 Automatic,

86 A reblrd 6 cylinder automaiiC

$10 97 1, 10x100xt8 Was
$21850 Now $19,990, ll0&gt;&lt;135x1 8
$1000 (304)674-4877
Was 179 850 Now $48 950
Tired Of Going To Tho Laundry 100x175x20 Was $129,8 50 Now
Mat? can Me For A Free wasner • $78 850 1 8()0.406.5126
&amp; Dryer 1·110().383-6862
560 Pe.t 1 lor Sale
than

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos lor Sale

AMAZING IIETA~DUSM

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive

Neighborhood Only $10 500

Building
Supplies

Steel Buildings New, Must Sell'
40x60x14 W as $17 ,500 Now

line PillowTop Paid $1658 leu

8194

1 BR A/C Near Holzer 1st
Month Free With 1 Yr Lease,
Quiet Location , No Pets, $2791

15ACAES
HORSES ARE WELCOME

Sealy Posturepedlc Crown Jewel
King MaltiiSI· Sat Top ol the·

Pats 740-446-2602

7104 AlterS PM

45631

202 Cla rk Chapel Road Porter,
(1oiii~388-0 17:!, (1olll~7444

11" DlrecTV Sltelllte Systema·

References Required 740 992

Avenue City Utlllt1es $49 000
Send Respon se ClA825 cf
oGalllpohs Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

Mollohan Carpet Room Size Car~
pets Orlve·a·Uttle Save t Loti

1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment,
Oownstalrs 1 1/2 Baths Air Con·
dltlonlng All Utllties Included Ex
cept Electric Private Parkmg No

Syracuse, $250/Mo , Deposit &amp;

Garflel~

550

VI ne Street Call 740·446·7398
t -666-818.0128

992 2218

1 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment In

5 5 Ac re s Frontage

Washers dryers relrlge retors,
ranges Skaggs 4pplla ncts 76

_;_

'
'i,:=&amp;-:-::-::~-:-:-:::-=.:'
982 Ford F 210 4•4 $2 300 :

Sllaw FOr Sale (3041675-4308

SOla Chair Recline' nieel $225 00
(7olll)-4&gt;16-2165

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Buy or sell Riverine An tiques
1124 E Main Street on At 124,

Beautiful brick 3 br home on
lovely acreage mu st see to ap
prec1ate 304 273 9485

4BR 2BA $499 Down Ass ume

Oopt 4320 P 0 Box 4332 Valley
VIllage CA 91817 818·763 1000
Ext4320

To Everyone

(304)675-6335 6 9PM

from $279 lo $358 Walk lo shop

vel 1·800·737·0013 fuuod By
Merrick Bsnk, SLC U!
Debt Management Club (Not ·For
· Profit) Can Pay Your Debt&amp; And
You Don't Have To Pay Us Back
• EVEAI Sond SA$~ To DMC •

38R Trailer lor rent $250 month +

&amp; movies Call 740 446·2568

date Oebtsl Same Day Approval

"Credit Card DEBT' • Deb! Con

Remodeled, 740 387-o611

5 ACRES

320 Mobile Homes

pay-t&gt;Nis oom

2 Bedrooms All Electnc Newly

Near VInton SR 325 7 M1les
Past Danville 15 Miles Frorn Rio
Grande Perfect Home Site Coun
ty Water On Paved Road Nice

SSS OVERQUE BILLSIII Consoli·

ter Business Bureau· www help

At 35 /At 23 Interchange Call
Toll Free Number 868 443 7&lt;121
:And Ask For The CHilliCOTHE
CONNECTION Information By
Mali lncludmg A $1 000 Cerlifl·
cate On A New Home

REAL ESTATE

220 Money to loan
NO APPLICATION FEES!! 1 600
863·9006 E•l 936 ' Member Bel

No Pets Cantral Air 1•0 446

Mo Plus U~lllles 740-446-2957

Two bedroo m brick home with full
basement two story two car ga
rag e corn er lot In Middleport
740 992 2333

$114 000 740 8113·5281

2 Bedrooms S3251Mo + Utlltles

For Rent or p ale Mobile Home
for coup le In Gallipo lis Ferry,

23 Chllllcotlle Just Nonh Of The

All real estate advert1s1ng m
th1s newspaper Is subject to
the F-ederal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 which makes It tllegaJ
to advertise "eny preference
limitation or d1scrimmat1on
based on race color re llg~on
sex famd1al status or national
ongm or any mtent1on to
make any such prj!ference
hmllatlon or discrimination "

Required 740-446-0893

Single Pare nt s Pro gra m $499
Down Limited Offer Call for de
1a1ts (304)755 71 91

Homes And BEST HOMES, E•·

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

2 Bedroo m Trail er Gallipo lis
Central Heat &amp; Air w asher lOry
er Hoo k· Up Deposit References

$1 00 deposit (304)576-2241

elusive Dutch Are Located On

Bu.Jiness
Opportunity

ween 6 PM · 7 PM 740·4410754

New Bank r e.pos on ly 2 left we
f1nance call 304 122 7148

For The Best Housing Deal s In
Sout hern Ohi o TECUMSEH
HOMES
Exc lus ive Radlflan

FINANCIAL

2 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Rent Call For lnlormalion Bet·

431 3

Taka Rt 35 North From Gallipolis

74().441-()199

210

water and trath Included, 740
2 Bedroom MobiteHome In Ma

Homoa, Nitro, WV (304)751

$3995 Ou1ck delivery Call 740

- - (304)675-71 12

conditioned $260..$300. &amp;e wer

5685

471 51 19Eirt.45

Shrubs Tri mmed, Mulching ,
P•l ntlng etc Call Bill Leave

Merchandise

SECOND AVE , SUITE 1350
NEW YORK NEWYORK 10017

geges Bad Crodlt 0 K 1 800

Ope ning For Elderly Or Hand1
capped lady To Share Country
Home &amp; Expenses Call 740-446-

540 Miscellaneous

lor Rent

ALDER

_ __

;.;...

-to--

NEA Cro•sworcl Puzzle

BRIDGE

AQUARIUS (Jan , :ZO.Feb. 19, li
someone you meet today docs not

seem to accept you as you arc, don ' t
sweat ft, spe,nd t1mc with those who
do Putting on prctenttous '\,,,. o r
be1ng phony won't slond I he test of
hme.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
Instead of makina others sll up tnd
lake nottce today, embellishing the
tnoth a btl more thin you should is
likely 10 have the opposrte effect
ARIES (March 2l·Apnl 19) Be
watchful about expenses when In the
oompany of others. The larger por·
tlon of expenses you llOUid incur
loday might be because of others
' rather than from whit you do.
• TAURUS (April 20· May 20)
'!tam cffons mtght nol be u effective today u individual ones, so If
there's somelhlnJ Important you
wanl acc:ompllahcd, It might be
w1acr to go il alone.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Unlc
wh11e Ilea can somcttmes come
borne to haunl us. This m1ghl be the
cue for you today, 10 it's bettor to
tell h Uke II 11 when neot~S~ry or
make no comment al all

l

'

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

me ut or

Tuea~ay,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IP-S ~

June 29, 1999

•

Wednesday

Ten ways to beat the heat: Inexpensive tips on
how to keep comfortable during the summer ·

insistent, throw temper tantrums and
constantly be saying, "No!" The parent may feel betrayed because of the
child 's behavior.
15 percent, while a whole-house fan back. two for each unit). AA batter- him tune up the air-conditioning unit
Others have been known to have By DAVID DOBBS
Today's
Homeowner
Magazine
can
slash it by 50 percent. Practice ies maintain the settings if the power by cleaning filters , unplugging coils,
By:
children because of pressure from
For
the
A•soc:iated
Pftss
"Texas
cool"
ever goes off.
unblocking drains and tubing the
Becky Baer grandparents, spouses, their friends,
No,
it's
not
your
imagination
"Te
xas
cool"
is
a
morning
and
Cost:
$30
to
$50
fan
.
. and even, society. Auitudes about
it
definitely
is
getting
hotter.
In
fact,
evening
routine
that
takes
advantage
Benefit: Up to 20 percent off
Cost: $75 to start for a service ·
something bei ng wrong with you
call
because you are not a parent often the eight warmest years on record of cool outdoor temperatures at your cooling bill Cook smart
Any appliance that generates heat
Benefit 'Up to 40 percent off
are conveyed to people who are occurred over the past decade. But night and keeps the heat at bay as
staying cool this summer doesn' t
your cooling bill Seal air leaks
childless.
The places where cold air infilThere have been people who necessarily mean you have to pay a
fortune
to
keep
the
air-conditioning
trates
in winter are routes for hot air
Meigs
County Extension have had children so they could
running
day
and
night.
Here
are
I
0
in summer. And what's worse, hot
show them off or live vicariously
Agent, Family and Consumer
air is often accompanied by high
SciencesiCommunity Develop· through them. They di ctate what tips, most costing less than $25. that
humidity, making you even more
ment
their children will be like, what they will keep you comfonable and cut
uncomfortable. Armed with a flashwill do, and how they will do it. the typical $1 ,000 coo ling bill by as
light, exterior-rated silicone caulk
Why•do people want to become Children are individuals ·with their much as half. What's needed to get
and a couple cans of expanding
parents? Most people would proba- own personalities, talents and char- the temperature to drop? Only a little
tirrie
and
a
change
or
two
in
your
foam insulation , hunt down and seal
bly an swer this question by saying it acteristics. Parents should not try to
Set
the
dial
a
bit
higher
routine.
all leaks. Concentrate on the atuc ,
is a way to .extend the expression of conform them to their ideal expectaIf you have central air, set your
basement and crawl space; pay close
the love that they feel for their tions.
attention to anything that passes
spouse, they want to complete their
Some people decide to have more thermostat above 78 F (all temperathrough a ceiling or wall , such as
li fe by includmg a child , or they feel children so their chtldren can have tures cited here are in degrees
ductwork,
elcctncal or plumbing ·
that they could Jove and take care of siblings. Or they may want a child Fahrenheit). You ' ll save 5 percenllQ ·
!
conduits and kitchen and bath vents.
a child and ,give the child a good so they would have an heir or to 8 -percent on cooling costs with each
Other common leaky spots are
home All of these are exce llent rea- carry on the family name .. While degree above that mark. For a typical
household
,
setting
the
thermostat
around windows and doors . If you
so ns.
these are not terrible reasons to have
can rattle a window. tt's leaking.
Too many times, though, people children , they are certainly not the ·at 80 F saves I0 percent to 15 perSeal it with weather stripping.
beco me pare nts for the wrong JU Sti - best. Still others may continue to cent; raising it to 85 F will save 35
Cost: $6 to $2'5
ficat ions. We've heard the old say- have children m order to get a cer- perce.nt to 55 percent.
When you leave home for more
Benefit· Up to 10 percent off
' ng, "She became preg nant ju~t to tam gender.
than
one
hour,
set
the
thermostat
to
your
cooling bill Defeat attic heat
keep him " This is cert ainly not a
Being a parent requires an enor85
F
or.
90
F.
Reset
it
upon
your
much
as
possible
durrng
daylight
adds
to
your
c091ing
load.
An
oven
The
temperature in your auic can
good reason to become a parent. mous amount of time , energy,
return,
and
the
room
will
cool
down
hours.
It
's
very
simple
to
do;
At
baking
cookies
ci10
easily
raise
the
reach
150
F on a hot summer day, a
Marri age is hard enough without the money and responsibthty. Couples ,
'"only
15
minutes.
The
system
will
night
when
·
the
temperature
drops,
room
temperature
10
de
grees,
which
that
if left unchecked can
situation
responsrbtliltes and demands of a who are mature, financi ally responless
energy
du'ring
the
coolopen
windows
and
bring
in
cool
air
in
turn
jacks
up
oyerall
cooling
costs
use
drive up cooling costs by as much as
chtld.
sible and certain that they have the
So me mct'ivtduals have children love that can be devoted to a child down period than if you had left it with window fans or a whole-house 2 percent to 5 percent. Save cooking 40 percent. If your attic has less than
because the y want the child to love are probably ready to become par-" running at a ·lower setting whrle you fan . As soon as the sun comes up er (especially baking) (or cooler bours, R-22 insulation- 7 inches of fiberthe air starts to heat up, shut the win - · or cook outdoors on your grill. It is glass or rock wool, or 6 .inches of
them. The problem with this is that a ents. They likely are prepared for the were out.
Cost
$0
dows
and shades and keep doors also a good idea to run the dish- cellulose - you should add more.
child is not capable of showing Jove obligatiOns and rewards that having
Benefit:
15
percent
io
20
percent
closed.
'
washer and clothes dryer at night.
(The U.S. Department of Energy
until they are of toddler age. But children. can bring.·
or
more
off
your
cooling
bill
Use
a
Cost
$0
(plus
minimal
fan
use)
Cost
$0
says most homes should have
during that stage, a child can be very
fan
Benefit 20 percent to 50 percent
Benefit: 2 percent to 5 percent off between R-22 and R-49 insulation in
I A fan , which costs 2 to 5 cents off your cooling bill Use sunblock· your cooling costs Get cooler liahts the attic. To check what's right for
Incandescent bulbs don 'I con- your
per hour to operate, will make a ers
l;lO
io
region,
room feel 4 deg~ees to 6 degrees
As much as 20 percent of sum- tribute as much heat as unshaded www.eren.doe.gov.) Before insula!·
cooler. Also, a fan works well in tan- mer heal en~Crs your hpme as sun- windows, but they do fldd heat to a ing, seal around recessed lights,
dem with an air conditioner because light shining through windows. To house and can r'\i§C the perceived vents and plumbing and lay down a
By The Associated Press
the pretty layers before the salad is the dehumidifying action of the air cut "solar gain," add curtains or temperature, sending you to the !her- 6-mil polyethylene vapor barrier.
Jeanne Jones ' syndicated recipe- tossed and served.
conditioner provides drier air that blinds to rooms that get direct sun mostal to seek relief. To reduce this· When Insulating, place boards
makeover column, "Cook It Light,"
Seven-Layer Salad
the fan can then move around. In and draw them in daylight hours. hot-light effect and save lighting across the tops of the joists to walk
regularly offers lower-fat and lower-.
6-ounce package (8 cups) assort- frequently used rooms, install a ceil- With the shades draw11, a well-insu- costs year-round(;ilplace incandes- on, and as you insulate, don'.t cover
caloric versions of favorite food ed young greens, torn into bite-size ing· fan (set it to spin counterclock- · lated house will gain only I degree cerit bulbs with compact fluot-es- or pack insulation around a bare ·
preparations.
pteces
wise in summer). You'll save the per hour when outdoor temperatures cents. They use a)\out 75 percent stove pipe, electrical fixtures or any
Seven-Layer Salad, an appealing
most money by running the fan only · are above 85 F.
less energy and emjt;90 percent less other equipment that produces heat;
2 large ribs celery, thinly sliced
summer dtsh, is one of 200 revised
Pay special attention to west-fac- heat.
. ~··
1/2 pound trimmed radishes, when you're in the room. A motionunless the fixture is labeled as suit·
recipes in her new book: "Jeanne sliced
detector switch (around $20), which ing rooms late in the day. Shades ·
Cost: $12 io $2~1er bulb
able for direct contact 'l"ilh insulaJones' Homestyle Cooking Made
2 scallions, sliced
turns ·the fan on when you enter a and blinds to consider include roller • Benefit: Up to Sif)ercent off your tion. Otherwise you risk fire.
Healthy" (Rodale Press, $27.95).
6 slices turkey bacon, cooked and room and off when the room is shades (the least expensive option), cooling bill plus electricity savings
Also make sure your attic is ven" In these makeovers," Jones drained
empty, is a good addition. However, venetian-type micro-blinds, reflec- Snug up the ducts
tilated. Gable vents (around $25
wntes, "I have kept two goals con10-ounce package frozen green . if you have pets that move in and out live curtains and insulated curtains
Leaky ducts can cut into air-con- each, pius $75 per vent for labor)
stantly in mind: The revised dish peas, thawed
of the room, make sure the switch (the most expenstve, .at $100 per ditioning efficiency. 1Ductwork must can· lower attic temperatures about
must taste as good as the origmal,
can be turned off manually. Other- window). Two exterior options are be balanced between the supply and 10 degrees; a ridge-and-soffit ventiI 112 cups fat-free mayonnaise
and the re vised dish must meet cur112 cup (2 ounces) shredded wise, your pets can cause the fan to to install 11wnings or pl~nt shade return sides of the system in order lation system (an extra $200 during
rent nutntional guidelines for extra-sharp Cl)eddar cheese ·
run while you ' re away. .
trees.
,
for it to work safely and efficiently, reroofing) will reduce attic temperahealthy eating."
If nighttime temperatures drop
Cost $8 to $100 per window
so making a repair in one section can ture to around 100 F.
Place the greens in the bottom of
Her previous books include a large glass bowl. Add the celery, into the 70s where you JiVe, you
Benefit: Up to 20 percent off cause a problem in another. LeakWhen reroofing, use white or
" Healthy Cooking for People. Who radishes, scallions, bacon and peas might want to purchase a whole- your cooling bill Install a proaram· prone areas include the return pale-gray shingles instead of dark
Don't Have Ttme to Cook" and in individual layers . Carefully house fan, .which runs $300 to $600 mabie thermostat
plenum; where branch duct~ 'meet ones. These keep the attic cooler
"Canyon Ranch Cookmg. "
A programmable. thermostat lets the trunk line; and where ducts than dark shingles.
spread the mayonnaise over the ·installed. This type of unit goes in an
In thts book, her new version of peas, covering the top completely upstatrs ceiling, ideally in a central you preset temperatures for different attach·to outlets. Also_, insulate ducts
Cost: $25 each for gable-entl
Chicken Potpie has 8 grams of fat and sealing to the edge of the bowl. hall. When run at night with the win- times of the day, so air-conditioning that run through a hot attic with a vents; $200 for ridge-and-soffit venper
serving
dows open, the fan wi II pull cool air is working only when you are home. blanket of R-11 fi!Jerglass insula- tilation in a new roof
Sprinkle
in slead of the r"":- - r - - -- .....,
with
the into the house as it vents hot air out The least expensive thermostat mod- tion. Unless the dyct repairs are
Benefit: Longer shingle life. and
traditional 4'1
through the attic. Most models ·are. · cis ($30) let you set four cycles that, minor, it's wise to leave them to a up to 20 percent off your cooling
cheese
grams, and the
Cover the designed to slip in between joists for unless manually overridden, repeat HVAC pro. While the contractor is bill.
calorie count is
salad tightly easy mstallation. Whole-house fans , every day. Higher-priced models on site checki.ng your ducts , have ·
reduced to 411
and relnger- which draw only as much power as a ($50 and up) allow you to create setfrom 827. Tuna
ate at least 2 couple of lightbulbs, ar~ usually out- tings for each weekday and for each
Noodle Cassehours but no filled with a variable-speed switch weekend day.
role.
whtch
These thermostats come with
longer than and/or timer. If you install one, be
once wet ghcd
sure
to
get
an
insulated
box
io'
cover
complete
directiOns and are easy to
12 hours to
in al JUSI over
install Just remove the old thermoblend
the the portal in winter.
\,000 calories
Cost Ceiling fans range from stat, unscrewing the wire leads
flavors
and 41 grams
before serv- $30 to $200. Floor fans cost around attached to the terminals on the
of fat per serv$20, and whole-house fans run from back. Reattach those wires to the tering.
ing, i ~ reborn
minais on the new model (in a sysTo serve, $300 to $600.
wtth 622 caloBenefit:
Cetling
fan
s
can
tern
with separate AJC and heating
lOSS
the
rie s and 14
salad
and decrease your cooling bill by up to units there may be four leads on the
grams of fat.
spoon onto
Reductions
chilled
are similar for
plates.
this
upd ated
Makes 6
The Community Calendar is appropriations, personnel matters
sunimery salad ,
servings.
wrth 198 calories per serving and 7 '
Nutrition fads per serving: 198 published as a free service to and other business that can be
grams of fat. Serving it in a glass cal .. 7 g fat, 25 mg chol., 761 mg non-profit groups wishing to leg'atly conducted .
announce meetings and special
bowl lets everyone at the table see sodium, 23 g carbo., I0 g pro.
events. The calendar is not
. SYRACUSE- Meigs County
designed to promote sales or fund Board
of
Mental
raisers of any type. Items are Retardation/Developmental DisGiving bad news easier, more accurate, by e-mail printed only as space permits an\1 abilities June meeting Wednes - ·
cannot be guaranteed to be print- day, 4 p.m. at Carleton School.
By JOHN AFFLECK
Her co-author, Lee Sproull, is ed a specific number of days.
Associated Press Writer
moving from Boston this week to
SATURDAY
CLEVELAND (AP) - No one take a position at New York Univer- WEDNESDAY
Eastern
REEDSVILLE
likes to hear they dtdn't get promot- sity.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern High School Class of 1984 15 .
ed or their report was unsatisfactory.
It's important ' to examine how Local Board of Education special
year reunion picnic Saturday, 2
Delivering such bad news is no joy, bad news gets delivered because meeting Wednesday, 6:30p.m. at p.m. at Forked Run State Park.
either.
receiving accurate information the Tuppers Plains administrative Bring covered dish and beverage.
But bearing bad news is easier even if it's negative - can be tbe office to consider approving final
when done through electronic mail first step toward helping an organiinstead of fa ce-to-face or by tele- zatron or an individual improve, tbe
• Instructor: Bryan Hoffman, BA
phone, a new study suggests. Nega- authors said in their study.
The study · was published in the - ~~'.Ail~a''
tive comments also are delivered
·.(/{ltematlona/ Fitness Trainers of America Certified/
more ·accurately when delivered via June issue of Information Systems
e-mail, the study says.
~esearch, a journal of the MarylandMon$ ys &amp; Wednesdays /Noon &amp; p.m./
Stephanie Walls Sussman , the based Institute for Operations
study 's co-author, said the reason Research and the Management Sciseems obvious.
ences.
• Wellness Center Activities Room
"It's less stressful, if you have
In the study, 117 Boston Universomething negative to tell some- sity undergraduates were asked to
body, to not have to face them," she deliver information to a fellow stu• $4/class for non-members
said Monday.
'dent - who was in league with the
$3/class for members ·
When using e-mail " people don't re searchers - about a bogus resume
sugarcoat. They don 't sweet talk it. the student supposedly submitted for
They just tell it like it ts, " she said. comments.
• Early Bird Sign-up /Receive t-shirt with paymiml/
Sussman cautioned that the study
When the participants had to
isn't meant to ad vocate that people deliver only positive comments
• $30/non~members 18 sessions/
deliver ali bad news online. When about the resume, they didn't distort
- $22/mernbers 18 sessions/
negative comments are given face- the good news, no matter what form
to-face, it's often taken as a sign that of communication· they were using:
the news is important and the deliv- f~ce-to-face, telephone or e-mail.
crer cares about the recrpient.
But when they had to deliver bad
Sussman, an assistant professor news, participants tended to distort
of information systems at Case ·· the negatives to make the criticisms
Western Reserve University 's softer. There was significantly Jess
Weatherhead School of Manage- distortion in e-mail than when parmen! in Cleveland, conducted her ticipants were using the phone or
Amish
&amp;
speaking face-to-face.
research at Boston University.

June30, 1m

Weather

Athens defeats Meigs Legionnaires, Page 4
Ann looks at life decisions, Page 8
Fed set to raise interest rates, Page 7

Today: Sunny

High: ~; Low: eoa

Tomorrow: Showers
Low: eoa
High:

eo.;

Meigs County's

.By JIM FREEMAN
.
Shelly Kennedy of Port Clinton, wh~ rep_S entinel New• Staff
resents Priddy and his wife, Barbara, who
Any sale of the items seized from Fred M. Priddy was present in court Tuesday morning.
of ~utlan~ will now have to be done under Ohio's
Also present were Prosecutor. John R.·
ctvtl forfeiture law.
.
Lentes and Assistant Prosecutor Charles
Thal was the ruling of Meigs County Common Knight, who requested the motion be
Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow III, who Tuesday denied and the sale allowed to continue.
morning halted an auction by Prosecuting Attorney
The Priddys are seeking a temporary
John R. Lentes of Priddy's belongings.
restraining order and ultimately a permaLaw enforcement officers from several agencie~ nent halt of the sale. Specifically, Mrs.
~eizcd numerous items belonging to Priddy, 47, as a Priddy wanted to keep a Volkswagen, a
result of his drug;Miated arrest on April 30. He later black Chevrolet Impala and miscellaneous
pleaded guilty to a felony charge of possession of jewelry. During the proceedings, it ·was
marij~ana and -ras sentenced to eight years in pri~on .
revealed that drugs were found in the .
Sctzed were homes, property, hundreds of cars, Impala.
•
guns and other items, including bulldozers, motorcyDuring questioning by Kennedy, Mrs.
c!es, car parts and tools, furnishings and farm equip- Priddy said her husband wa. threatened with a longer
ment. The items were to be auctioned beginning prison term if he didn't agree to give up his property.
Tuesday afternoon and continuing through July 10 at
"He was threatened with 50 years to life if he didthe Meigs County Fairgrounds, with the proceeds to ·· n't go along with the forfeiture," she said. Also, she
be divided primarily between the Major Crimes Task said officials threatened to imprison her and their son
Force, administered by the Meigs County Prosecu- if Fred' Priddy didn't agree with the forfeiture.
Knight specifically questioned her about the owntor's Office, and the participating Jaw enforcement
agencies.
ership of the Volkswagen Beetle, with Mrs. Priddy
The action followed a last-minute motion for a saying 'her husband purchased it for her. Her husband
. temporary restraining order halting the sale filed by also purchased her some jewelry and a black Chevro-

manager for the Shell
IQ,emical Point Pleasant Polyester
trum~ confirmed this morning that
entire PET (Polyethylene ·
is up .for sale.
J1~~:~~~~~~~~:b~:u:!siness
will
the Point Pleasant
located in Apple Grove.
PET is a plastic resin that is used
making such things as pop bottles
wire coating. The joint venture,
''"''~' had been planned to strengththe
fell through for
reasons. The next step it to
someone to buy the PET busi-

neu.

Requests for bids will be sent out

to p~Jive buyers, Bids will be

. reviewed arid a choice will be made.
d t:i'&gt;uld h'appeli as si&gt;on as the
fourth quarter of this year.
"The important thing is that the
can begin immediately ·
we can find. a buyer

.
;

i
-:
:
•
:
•

that the PET business,
including the Apple Grove plant, is
an attractive 'business, and I have no
re~n to believe that closure is an
option at' this time," added Bowen.
Joe Ellison, an officer with the
Mason County Eccnomic Development Authority, remained positive
when hearing the news this morning.
"We have known for some time
that the PET business nationally is
very competitive and should the joint
not work
a sale was. an

that Goodyear at one time
attractive to Shell, who purc:hased
the plant. We made it through tha~
and there is no reason to believe
Shell won't find a buyer who will
also be a good corporate citizen.•
Overall, the PET business
employs approximately 650 people
globally.
The announcement made last
week about the increase in production for P1T · will continue as
·planned, Bowen said.
The Point Pleasant plant
announced it would triple production
of a polymer fiber by July 1.
Production of Q)rterra, the trade
name for pol)drimethylene tereph.lhalate (I"'T), will increase from
million pounds annually to 45
lion pounds, company officials
Corterra is a thermoplas~;t~~ic; .~!~"'"" 1
that is spun Into fibers
Shell Chemical also a~;~;~~~~
plans to build a plant in .
Mexico, expected to produce
million pounds of P1T an~1uaUiy.
is unclear about the status of
plant, which was expected to opc~r-J
ate ilY 2001.
The expansion of t~e Shell
in Point Pleasant will help fill
orders for ·a manufacturer in Spain
that has announced it will begin
delivering Corterra fibers to customers in Europe beginning in
October.

man
found in New York state
PEEKSKILL. N.Y. ~ State Police investigators have recovered the
body of a Gallipolis man missing for over two months. The body of Eric
M. Roderick was retrieved from the Hudson River near Peekskill on Sunday morning.
Authorities said that a boater spotted Roderick's body in the river
around 1I a.m. about 300 yards north of tile Bear Mountain Bridge, which
spans the Hudson ncar Peekskill. Roderick apparently fell from the 180foot high bridge on the morning of April 25 .
According to Mike Messenger, an investigator for the Westchester
· County Medical Examiner's Office, dental records were used to positively .identify'Roderick.
Roderick was a senior at nearby West i'oin.t Military Academy and had
planned to.attend medical school following graduation.
• Following his disappearance, New York State Police, military officials
~d other local law enforcement conducted a three-week long search of
the river in 'the vicinity of the Bear Mountain Bridge, but were unable to
: L ··~- Roderick's body.
Following the uQJuccessful seiiJrcb. military officials classified RoderRoderick's family held a memorial service locally for family and
friends.
. ·
Rich[!rd C. Roderick, ROderick's
father, said the family will hold a
private funeral once the . body is
retumed to Gallipolis. He said there
woul,d be no military burial.

·the lim.it

Stlns

JIIV5

\.'WRt.VI'I'I'I';.I'ill!1\.\.\.,_.

. ~

"

. Florals &amp; Gifts
Racine, Ohio 949-7673

1/Z Price Sale

·

~

~
~
s

I

I

On all items including
~ea.qm~nt Pottery
Pllgr1m ~~ass
. Dre,ms•c·ef
· Porte ain Do Is
Lovelite Candles
~
All Swaas &amp; Wreaths
~
!f · Floral ~rraagements
d
~ Sole does not include Furniture Special~ Items ~
~W'\&amp;\'\\:

'

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~•"'•~

'1 T" ' '

'.I

•

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Lottcnes

·-·

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S·S·S; Pltk4: 3-0-9-1
Buckeye 5: 15-20-21-:ZS-30

w.yA.

DaUy 3: 7-8· 7; Dell)' 4: 8: 1·1·3
.0 1999 Obio V.loy l'lolollolrl.. Co.

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let Impala, she said.
She said she did not know how the
money was obtained for the two houses
that were seized, and that she never asked
him how he got his' money nor knew how
much money he made.
.
"There arc a Jot of things here hasn 't
been done right," she said, adding that she
wanted the court to "make things right."
"I want th is sale stopped," she said,
"because things have not been done right." .
She also s)lid her husband had to
agree to make a videotape outlining the
belongings he handed over to the proseculor before he could' be allowed out of jail
on bond. Prosecutor's investigator Paul
Gerard said he produced the videotape in which Prid·
dy outlines the items to. be sold and in which he
allegedly states several times that the items were
obtained through criminal activity.
Knight questioned what Mrs. Priddy's statements
had to do with the sale, since she only claimed a few
items.
Lentes, questioned by Knight and then crossexamined by Kennedy, said the forfeiture agreement
was drafted under his direction and was based in part

.
.;'

~··- -~

'

on past for fe itu res un related to the Pri ddy case.
Lentes said Fred Pridd y w·as very knowledgeab le
of forfeiture proceedings, saying he ( Priddy) had
been through a huge forfei ture before.
The agreement was also known to Priddy's counset, Jay Wam sley, Lentes said.
SentenclngeniiJ'
The matter became more compli cated when Crow,
referring to an earli er sentenci ng entry submitted
during Tuesd a
•s he
gring, said he did not order th e
$'15,000 fine
osts of prosec ution to be paid
through the p eeds of the forfe iture, despite the
fact the entry bo re hi s signature.
Crow said he did not read the entry before he
signed it becau se a crim inal trial was underway at the
time .
"My understanding was that th e crim inal matter
had. nothing to do with the civil forfe iture matter,"
Crow said. "This court would not agree to payin g the
fine with forfeitur e money."
He ordered those portions o f th e sentenci ng entry
null and void, noting that Ohio Jaw prohi bits the paying of fines and costs with forfei ture money.
"My understanding is that the state has paid his
·
Continued In "Priddy forfeiture• on P1!9e 3

Dirt may start moving at the site .of the pro- of ordering brick early to avoid delays in the con·
posed Southern Elementary School around Sept. struction project.
9, according to a construction manager assigned
The board also passe(! a resolution approving
to the project.
the design and development documents for the
The Southern Local Board of Education met new elementary school as prepared by Peck,
Monday evening at Southern High School in -Shaffer, and Williams, the district's construction
Racine and mel with architect·Jack Pottmeyer of dQcument counsel.
Marr-Knapp-Crawfis Associates inc. and Ted . In other business, the board approved a com Walker, a construction manager from the Quandei mittee of coaches to develop a drug testing proCorporation.
gram and policy for future consideration. The disWalker gave an update on the site work and trict does not currently have random drug testing
bidding process for the, new elementary school for student athletes.
saying the site package should be put out to bid
Also, the board approved refinishing the high
the first week in August with dirt beginning to school gym floor with the district paying for
move aroun&lt;! Sept. 9 in preparation for construc- materials only.
•.
tion of the new building next to the high school in
In personnel matters, the board approved the
resignatiCjl,l o[1J-IQ'&lt;I'ard Caldwell as a teacher at
R~~ine.
. .""" '.
WaiRer said the remainder of the building pro- ~~u~~e.") H(j!it~"!!."?} ~ !lPPro~~ Ann SJsson
'jee(maybe ready (or' bitf"aie arly as mid October, to teach sctence liS part of the I 999 · SUmmer
as opposed to the earlier project time of Decem- School Program at the high school.
ber.
.The board approved, with board member Ron
Pottmeyer and the board also. made some Cammarata abstaining, placing Suzanne Camadjustments to the high school renovation plan marata orfl the substitute teachers' list for the
which will create an extra classroom upstairs and 1999-2000 school year.
enhance use of the biology lab.'
In addition, the board tabled hiring Sharon
The board also asked Pottmeyer to begin Wickersham as a DH teacher at Portland Elemenobtaining brick prices for the project in the hopes tary, giving her credit for one year of out-of-slate

Horton to _serve

. _,.,...'

~·,

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Former Mayor Dewey "Mack" Horton will be the grand Marshal of the
Middleport Fourth of July Parade. The
parade will be one of the highlights of an
evening filled with activities on Sunday.
The parade will step off at 6 p.m.
sharp, according to Myron Duffield,
president of the Middleport Community
Association.
·
·
Manuel Christy . will drive Horton
along the parade route.
.
The parade will form as usual in the
lower end of Middleport on Ash Street
between Beech ' and Broadway. The
parade will move out Beech Street making a right turn on ·General Hartinger
Parkway and then left on Second Avenue and up through
town past Dave Diles Park, around the "T" and disband
near Dairy Queen.
Five trophies will be awarded following the parade:
Best Walking uni~ Best Marching unit, Best patriotic
uni~ Best Bicycle unit and Best Equestrian unit.
Everyone is invited to participate in the parade as
usual, but Duffield said that partipipants are asked to
refrain from stopping to perform along the parade route
as it delays and · fragments the parade, creating long
delays and gaps.
"Continuity is very important for a

ContrQvers,sl envoy swom
In by Secretary Albright
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright presiding. James Hoimel, a
gay San Francisco businessman and
wealthy Democratic Party donor, was
sworn in today as U.S. ambassador to
Luxembourg almost two years after
he was nom inated.
He became the nati9n 's first openly gay ambassador at a ceremony in
the State Department's main recep· tion room .
De'monstrators. protesting ' the
appointment marched outside as
Harmel, an heir to the Hormel Meat
Co. fortune , took the oath.
Harmel has been a generous contributor to Democratic candidates and
the party. Since 1,997, he has given
S132,000 to the Democratic National
dleport on Tueeday morning, The Melga County Committee, $25,000 to the Oe'mocraSherlfra Dep• btrent waa continuing an lnveatl- tic Congressional Campaign Com. gatlon of the accident thl• morning, and W18 mittee, and $15,000 to the Democraunable to provide dlltllla.
·
tic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

work.~'

'

__...______ J. ____ ,___ ,..., ~ ........._

a

The community of Rutland will
parade and parade entries is available by
contacting Duffield at 992-4197. lim hold its Independence Day celebration
and Edie King and Roscoe Wise will on Saturday. .
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Serve as parade judges.
The evening ceremonies will begin at Department and Ladies ' Auxiliary will
7:00 p.m . in Diles Park conducted by oversee the celebration, wh ich will
Master of Ceremonies Tom Payne. Flag include the community's annual ox
Ceremonies will be under the direction roas~ a parade and entertainment.
Parade lineup will begin at 9 a.m.,
of the American Legion Post 128 of
Middleport. Chad Dodson will perform with the parade beginning at9:30. Par- .
the "Star. Spangled Banner," and Rev. ticipants are lo line up in the area of
Vernagaye Sullivan will offer the invo- Depot and Brick Streets.
Following the parade down Main
cation.
'
Stree~
parade awards will be give~ by
Following remarks by Mayor Sandy
the
Junior
Auxiliary. Tammy Taylor
iannareiii and Commissioner Mick DavenpOrt, parade awards and flower contest will perform the National Aothem,
awards will be made. Trophies will be and Eli Denison Post 467, American
Legion, will conduct the nag-raising
provided by Middleport Trophies and Tees.
ceremony.
The entry deadline for the porch and entryway decoEntertainment in the ball field area
rating contest is Wednesday. Entries should be made at
will
begin at 11 :30, with vocalists
the Middleport Department S!ore. A first-place award of
$50 will be presented to the winner in the form of a gift .Tammy Taylor and Bev Adkins. The
certificate for flowers for next year, with $25 prizes Big Bend Clqggers will perform at
12:15 p.m., and other entertainment.
going to the second and third-place winners.
Fireworks, provided by the Village of Middleport, to be announced, will continue until
1:45.
will co.nclude the celebration at 9:30p.m.
Karaoke will begin at 2 o'clock,
A variety of vendors, providing refreshments and serand
continue until5. Dwight Icenhowvices ·for the public, will be set up in the park througher,
an
Elvis Presley impersonator, will
out the evening.
perform from 5:15 until 6:4? p.m., and
the band Blind Side will perform from
7 until 11 p.m.
Fireworks will conclude the festiv.ities at II p.m.

SALEM (AP) - Police have
recovered 21 of more than 200 pay
phones that two men are suspected
of stealing to get at iea.t $10,000 in
change.
Police have questioned two men
who reportedly admitted stealing
the pay phones, valued between
$1 ,SOO and $2,000 each, from
· seven counties over the last seven
months.
"Maybe they felt it was better
than working," said police Detective Bob Brown. "They did it with
a harnmer and chisel. It took a lot

~--~---

teaching experience and approving her as varsity
cheerleading advisor.
Roger Hubbard was approved as volunteer
golf coach for the 1999-2000 .school year and
Mike Kloes and Charles T. -Chapman were
approved as volunteer assi stant varsity football
and assistant high school reserve 'girls basketball
coaches, respectively.
'
In other business, the board :
· - Approved a temporary budget for the 19992000 school year in the amount of $9,732,025.07
and. approved a resolution requesting a tin a ~ cial
analysis by the State Auditor 's Office.
- Accepted a $4,000 Appal.achian Regional
Commission Telecommunications Grant.
- · Approved replacing the '!wo 37-year-old
boilers at the high school and directed the supe rintendent to get estimates.
·
- Discussed grant used to reduCe t he stu"
dent-teacher rati o in grades one through three.
- S~:heduled a special meeting for July 7, 7:30
p.m. at the high school to consider personlll'l and
building construction matters.
Present were Superintendent James Lawrence,
Treasurer Dennie H;ll, board President Bob
Collins and board members Marty Morarity,
Doug Little, Dave Kucsma and Ron Cammarata.

~s Middleport parade Marshal Rutland to (:Jbserve
=-.,....,..,, .,.,~==o:r-=, Duffield said. information about the holiday on Saturday

Pollee recover over
200 stbltin psy phones

675~7222

~1'1'4E»..\.\.~

'

s

.i

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Southern board hoping to start moving dirt soon on elementary project

••

take it to

~

Hometown Newspaper

-Prosecutor sent back to the drawing board on Priddy forfeiture

------ Qommunity Calendar---

Burgundy 8 Brass

Reds down Arizona
for 8th consecutive
victory
-Page 4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 18

Low-Fat Cooking: Seven-Layer
Salad puts new twist on old favorite

~

Sports

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