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PageD8•jl

Sunday, July 18, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Monday

Diet plays important role iil stress management
are for job srress. These illnesses cost

repair and replacement Good sources Tuesday, July 20 at 7 p.m. at the C. H. and more. Call the E.rension OfTicc
include mea.~. eggs. poultry, fish or McKenzie Agricultural Center. We ' ll at 446-7f!J7 to reserve your spor.
(Becky Colllna Ia Gallla Coundairy. Larger amounts of protein or offer laSty new recipes , tips for
ty'•
extension agent for family and
protem supplements are not recom- snacking, ideas to help you stock
consumer
sciences, Ohio State
mended. however, b&lt;-cau&lt;e too much your Y2K pantry, rhe scoop on rhe
University.)
protein puts an additional burden on new "cholesterol lowering" products
the kidneys.
Drink plenty of. fluids and limit
salt. Stress tends to cause the body to
C~INNATI (AP)- Scientists from Procter &amp; Gamble Co. and the Unimone levels, the nervous S\ sletn. retain sodium. and' warer and iose
versity
of Cincinnati College of Medicine will collaborate in obesily research
me·mory and thinking. physicai &lt;oor- potassium through rhe kidneys. Drink
that P&amp;G is supponing with up to $5 million, the medical school announced
dination and metabolic rate , It can at least eight glasses .of water a day.
Thursday.
caus~ blood cholesterol, blood pres- Limit high sodi um foods su~h as
sure and uric add levels 'to rise. 1.:ured m.eats, ca'nned soups, diet
' · The -project is designed to provide a belter understanding of how appetiteThese, in turn , may increase thr risk drinks and salted snack items. This
controlling neurOir.Ulsmitters in the brain help control eating and body weight.
of cenain diseases or conditions. helps the t&gt;ody keep its sodium-potas"
. The researchers said they hope lo .Jeam why higher-fat diers can increase
including ulcers, hypenension. heart sium ratio in balance.
'
disease.
cancer,
immunodeficiency
Eat
five
or
more
servings
of
fruit
.
body
weight and if the body becomes more efficient in storing fat when givGoOdarham Is a lull-time styldiseases and even the common cold. and vegetables daily. They areri&gt;~ in en a steady diet of higher-fat foods. Stephen Woods, director o.f the univerIst/hairdresser at Sassy ScisDoes all of this bad news add to your B vitamins, and the high potassium, sity's Obesity. R search Center, said the researchers want to find out why a
sors, 2239 State Route 141, Galstress
level'
fiber and water content alsq help keep high-fat diet can -cause a person to ' eat more and become ·obese, and learn
lipolis, and is now accepting
A
positive
outlook
on
l·
i
fe
and
a
your
sodium-potassium balance in how body fat may alter the secretion of hormones that affect hunger.
II'Ppolntments ·Tuesday· through
healthy.
active
Body
are
key
factors
order.
.
·
·Saturday. For an appointment,
in
how
we
respond
to
stress.
Good
Limit
intake
of
fat.
The
lipid concall 441-1880. She is a 1999
nutrition is always important. hut tent of the blood often rises in reacgraduate of'Gallia Academy High
. especially when· we ·_rc under stress. tion 10 stress. This·. along with other
School 11nd Buckeye Hills Career
The body uses. nutncms somewhat 'fisk factors. contributes to the devel- '
Center's cosmetology program.~
Louise B. Nickels
'rffie ;ifrea 's Largest Selectio11
She Is the daughter of Debra an!l· ·
. differently when under stress. Here ·. opment of heart disease. Fewer highJames Gooderham . . ,n school,
are, some ways to he sure that your . fa.t foods. plus a lifes(yle thai includes
rrlain-'Diamori4:'Designed
'llhe was involved in the Nationbody IS ready lor the onevnablc bump regular exercise, laughter, prayer or
al Honor Society, the Vocational
'" the road .
.
. meditation and not smoking, help
lndu~trial Clubs of America, and
GALLIPOLIS _ L · B N. kEat at least _rwo servmgs of good lower blood fat leve ls .
was In the top 10 percent of the
.
ouose . tc
qualny. protein each day . Under
Want to learn more about healthy
class and on the honor roll. She
els, mao I and messenger clerk,. at
stress,
our
bodocs
tend
to
doven
proeating'
Attend "E nloying the Fruits
won third place in the BHCC
Ho lzer Med1cal Center, was named
tem to energy mslead of musc le of the Season,". a free program on
Cosmetology hair competition
May employee of the month, accord-· •.
·
ing to Charles I. Adliins Jr.. president
·
·
·
ana chief executive officer.
·
Nickels, who was born in Vinton.
(Continued from D1)
began ·work at HM,C in March 1979
Blue mold forecast- There are
in housekeeping as an aide. In 1996, ful sanitation of your field·equipment
\. _ . she was cross-trained for the mail a,nd boots. Re.member that bleach no confirmed&gt;c ases of blue mold in
0
~
room . and was mad.e mail and mes- cannot sanitize clumps of soil; thefe- Ohio; :how~ver. Pennsylvania . and
senger clerk i.n 1997.
fpre , all ihe soil must be washed from Connecticut have been added to the
Before her employment with the equipment, and then sanitized list of states with confirmell cases.
• c:
f/)Q)
HMC , Nickels graduated from with a bleach solution.
LasL Saturday,' a high risk source
::lo
.J:J ·Fairdale (Ky.) High School. and then
Most of t.he cases observed last passed through our region . Please
E..J
enlisted in the U.S. Air Force as an week started showing symptoms report any suspected cases of blue
::) 0
administrative clerk specialist. Later, within 7-9 days ·of one of the few mold.
'
o:E
()Q
she attended Gallipolis BusineSs Col- rainfall~ this·su111mer. Tobacco farms
·(Jennifer L. Byrnos Is Gallla
lege. Her other employment includes that~'received their first' substantial County's extension agent for agriFederal Mogul from June 1972 lo r,ainfall just last weekeqd, should be
culture and natural raaourc. . ,
June 1973. She is also active in the ·on the lookout for signs of the disOhio State University.)
ADDITION TO STAFF- Steve Employee Activity Association at ease. For rhe few who may be topBradbury, R.N., recently joined · HMC, and held offices such as trea- ping in J he next few weeks, topping
the staff of Holzer Home Care of surer. For the past year, she has been ~ stress in combipation with drought
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits,
Holzer Medical Center. Employed president.
can also prompt black. shan~ activi•
, at HMC since 1986, Bradbury has ·' She currently resj des in .Vinton. · ty: For more inf'orrnation on the con"
'!'e offer monthly office hours.
·
worked at several departments She has rhree sons. Paul, Lee and trol ofblack shank, please call the
at the hospital, including trans- James, and four daughiers , Hope OSU Extension office at 446-7007.
port; . rehab and cardiac· step- (who attended rhe Ohio School for
' Ag news
down unit. Bradbury . and his
·
~._
the
Deaf),
Susan,
Ellene
and
Paula,
Tobacco
Twili•ht
Tour Is schedwife, Cneryl, who is also a nurse
a
at HMC, have a daughter, Taylor. and nine grandchildren , who all Jive uled fo~ Tuesday, July 27, beginning
in the area.
at 5:30 p.m. Although the tour is
Supervisor honored"
She enjoys bowling. playi ng in the scheduled to take place in Crown
· CHESHIRE- William L Ball, a church softball league, attendmg Vin- City, a driving tourto observe irriga- ·
Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute
m'!lntenance supervisor at the Ohio ton Baptist Church, and picking rasp- tion practices will begin at the fam1
Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek ·berries and blackberries. She says the of Matt and Noreen Saunders and
Plant, recently'received his anniver- best thing about HMC is the people continue on to Keith and Sue Corbin's
sary award for 30 years of service to who work there .
and Jim and Candy Baughman's. At
the company.
·
As employee of the month, Nkk- 7·p.m., the ~agon tour will take place
Ball joined OVEC on June 23, els received
$100 U.S. Savings · in Crown City at Mike and Edie
1969, as a laborer in the labor Bond. a reserved parking space des- . B.ostic's and Veri in and Joanne
depanment. In 1972 he transferred 10 ignated in her name, a complimenta- Swain's. For the ·w·agon tour, parlicithe maintenance depanment, where ry meal in the hospital cafeteria, her pants may park at the road side rest
he progressed through the various pic lure in !he hospital lobby, and her on Route 7, where refreshments will
.
maintenance me·c hanic classifica- . name engraved on the 1999 employ- .. be served after the program. 'Due to,
tions. In 1994, tie was promoted to a ee of the rnonth plaque, also dis- the drought and tobacco di.seases. this
maintenance supervisor.
played in the lobby. .
schedule .is subject to change.
By BECKY COLLINS
GALLIPOLIS- Stress: okay, no
definirion needed. We all know whar
ir is and how ir feels. The pressure
from rhe demands of work, family
and personal life can really take a toll
on your body, mind and spirit.
Keeping control of it is a neverending challenge. Today, nearly oneof
health claims

Amencan busmesses some $200 hi Ilion per year in medical bills and lost
productivity. Medical researchers
estimate rhat stress is linked tu 65 ro
90 percent of all illnesses and disease .
Stress. when allowed to rocket out
of control, can negatively affect rhe
immune "system , h~an funct ion. hor-

D
. is.ease Persists Despite

..

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' -A

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v

Larrabee.
"These arc simply potential

aircraft or part of it," he said Sunday. .He said the targets were in water 60
•
,
to 80 feet deep.
Late Sunday, the operation's definition WIL'I changed from "search and
rescue" to "search and recovery"- a minor revision on the surface, but
full of meaning for those who held out hope that the three were still alive.
After two days of sean:hing, investigators made the announcement that
the three were presutiiCd dead in waters off Martha's Vineyard.
"I have spent some very painful moments wi!h the families tonight,"
said Coast Guard Rear Adm. Richard M. Larrabee. "I think they unckrsl;lnd. Tiley have been ~ery appreciative of what we have been trying to
do."
'
. The pline piloted by Kennedy, 38, and carrying his wife, Carolyn Besset'ie KeMedy, 33, and her sister Lauren Bessette, 34, was reported missing
.
. early Satuiday morning.
Kennedy took off from New Je111ey on Friday night on a trip to his cqusin
Rory's wedding Saturday-on Cape Cod. The plane was to inaj(e a stop on
Martha's Vineyard tO drop off Lauren Bessette befori: continuing to the

Buffington I''Sia~d re-enactment .:dr&amp;\A,f$. 'l arge crowd
I

By JIM FREEMAN

•

Sentinel Nawa Staff
Hundreds of spectators applauded the i.Jevitable
"Union victory" at., the reenactment of the Battle. of
... Buffington Island near Portland Sunday afternoon,
Spectators lined the crest of a hill overlooking the
ready-made "battlefield"
.the site
-last month's Log Jam Festival while at
least 150 Civil War rcenactors, represinting both Confederate and l.Jnion s&lt;ildiers, perfor'!'ed a Jiving history represen~ng the July 19, 1863, defeat of Confederate cavalrymen serving under Gen.
John Hunt Morgan by Union cavalry,
infantry, militia and naval gunboats on
the Ohio River.
This year's event was probably the
largest event to-date based ori the ·number of people attending. Orga~izers said
more than 300 reenaclotli regtslered for

at

•

the Civil War.

.
He focused on the need to protect the Buffington
Island Battlefield from a gravel-mining operation and
lo find to . the remains of those ·killed in the battle, in !he
"great bivouac of eternity."
owe our· ancestors this duty, to find

.•

P

'

·remains and properly i,nter them," he said.
Another speaker, representing the Sons of Con federate Veterans, said many of the great battlefields ar&lt; ·
threatened with extinction. Reen.actors, ·panicularly
Confederate reenaclors, are victims of a "great historical revisionist movemenl," making history politically correct.
He said the Sons of Confederate Veterans are
·"under attack for flying the battle flag of their ances- .
tors because the flag is ' being misused by hate
groups."
.
.
·. The park dunng the weekend was hke a small
town, featuring suttlers, photographers, and other
businesses-:-with their proprietors• in charactercatering to the reenactors.
Margaret Parker, presidenJ of the Meigs· County
Historical Society which sponsored the event said
over 300 reenactors were fed Saturday . night with
fresh produce for the evening meal pr~vided by local
growers.

By JIM FREEMAN
·
a single South Carolina peach to join up with the 7th South
Sentinel N-• Staff
. .
Carolina Volunteers, .a Confederate infantry ou!fit. .
The following afternoon, quartermaster Clint Parnell of
What on earth, I wondered, could possess one to put on
woolen clothes and march about on a 90-degree day portray' Lexington, S.C., outlitled me with the proper atlire,light blue
ing a Civil War soldier?
· y;oo)eit pan.t s with suspenders, a long-sleeved, lightweight
For several years now 1 have photographed the annual cotton shirt, a pouch for cartridges, a ·~It with bayonet scab.reenactment of the BaU!e of Buffington Island, I've watched bard and percuss.ion cap· pouch, canteen, a gray cap and a
the event grow from a handful of reenactors to . Sunday's reproduction .58-caliber muzzle-Ioadins Enfield rifle, the priseeming record of at least 150 reeriactors--not counting mary weapon of the Confederate soldier.
women, children and other non-combatants-and every year
That day I participated in a living history tour, sponsored .
1 wondered what it would be like to join them on the battle- by !he Meigs County Historical Society, in, which General
field. ,
.,
Morgan's raiders. chase off the local militia. The following
Friday afternoon, while once again taking pictures .of the afternoon, adding a dark gray wool jacket to my uniform, I
reenacto,rs seiling up camp, I mel a conlingent of South Car- ' participated in the main reenactment held at Harris Farms
olinians, new to this particular reenactment, who invite&lt;! me south of Portland.
·
to join them for thiweekend's bat~e, giving me the bounty of
· The 16-or-so members of the 7th SCV, joined by myself

•

._ ·
/

Today's Sentinel
1 Section • 10 Pages

ve.
Gall.ipolis OH
(740) 446·2282

vie~

'and a few reenactors from West Virginia and Kentucky, waited in the shade along Groundhog Creek until we got the order
to march out onto !he battlefield. We waited SOI!Ie more as the
battle started and when our turn to join the action started, we
fired, fired, and fired again into the advanJing Union s.oldiers. We lhen retreated, firing as we "advanced to the rear'',
fired a few mpre times for good measure, backed up and fired
again.
.
Eventually as the ranks thinned, I ran out of canridgessmall paper p~~,ekets of blac,kpowder poured down the barrel
of lhe rifle-and the steel of the Enfield got prelly het·to the
touch. Given those conditions I felt ther.e was only one lhing
left to do-die gloriously on lhe field of honor. So with the
next Union volley, I simply fell to the ground, lay there as the
· Continued In "Reporter Exper/enctl" on page 3

Chester/Shade Day includes· historical demon~trations and displays

6
7&amp;8
2

Editorials
Lo!:al

L---------------------------------------------------------------~
.,~~-~toW~Mad" '
I

.
targets and don't nCccssatily n:present.an

Good Afternoon

Now

5:30p.m. to 10 p.m.

Sundlly
1 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Cape.
· .
.
"We know that the aircraft was-not equipped with any survival equiprnen~"
The wedding was poslponed after the plane was reported missing. Instead, he said.
.
rhe family held Sunday Mass to pray for the miSSing.
Investigators had few clues. The search has turned up bits of debris, iQdud·· Larrabee noted that it would be difficult for a person to survive more than . ing a piece of Ultren Bessette's luggage, but no substantial wreckage. A radio
18 boius in the area's 68-degn:e waters. :
signal that searchers had hoped was an e.mergency beacon from the plane .
· ,,. ·
turned out to be a faJse alarm .
·
As •the nation agonized over the fate pf the glamorous son of America's
"
political royal family, hundreds of people used airplanes, boats and all-terrain vehicles to search for any evidence of the plane or its occupants.
The Kenn.edys stayed close to tl!eir Hyannis Port compound. Some
walked on the be~ Sunday afternoon . Ethel Kennedy, the widOw of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy, joined other family members who went boating.
:"'_.~.·-'. .
~ennedy's sister, Caroline Kennedy, 41 ,Ethe lass! sur.:ivor of Camelo_t,
4!\lf'
watted out the search wi.'h .her h.usban\1, dwin chlossberg, and thetr
three•children at thei! home on New York's Long Island.
•
She had been extremely close lo her br9ther.
As children together in the brjef years of John F. Kennedy's admin·.
· istration, they were . ahout ~ and 3 years old when !heir father, the
nation's 35th president, was assassinated in 1963.
.
. The· di~appearance of his son, publisher of Ge&lt;irge magazine , sparked
the same type of emotional, around-the-clock news coverage that
accompanied the death iwo years ago of Princess Diana.
~·
·
Mourners left flowers at the Brookline,' Mass., binhplace of his
.father, at the John F. Kennedy Library .and Museum in Boston and on
the steps of John and Carolyn Kennedy's apartment building in New
York City.
,
Some experienced pilots said that il relatively new pilot like Kennedy
-who received his pilot's license last year - may have been ill·
advised to fly at night, while others said it was n:&gt;utine.
A source friendly with the Kennedy fatnily told The Associated Press
LOOKING FOR CLUES- Pollee debrla and lt,~ggaga lllfllhed ·up that Kennedy had intended to fly earlier~ in the day, but hjs sister-inoftlcera eumlne an Ham found earlier. JFK Jr., lnHt, hla wife ana Jaw, .an investment banker,.had to work late.
along Aql,llnnah Beach Sunday, alater•ln-law are now preaut:n&amp;ll Jim Hall ;' chairman of the, National Transportalion Safety Board, said
near , where Kennedy aircraft dead. ,
Sunday the cr.ash investigalion could take six to nine months.
'

a

•

The Children's Clinic
~801 Jackson Avenue
\Point Pleasant, WV 25550

·

By ERICA NOONAN
AaloclltlM p,_ Wtllw
AQUINNAH, Mass.(AP).:.... Divers made preparations and a high-teeh vessel with side-scan sonar contiQ!!ed scouring the bottom of the ocean today 19
lin;;! out what happened to the plane tha! carried John F. Kennedy Jr.,' his wife
ilnd her sister.
'
.
·
·. . •
··
Divers planned to sean:h at least two Joc8tions ·pinpoinled by the. Rude,
a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research vessel (pronOIIIICCd Rudy).
A team of 10 divers was being briefed this morning and was expected to
be begin diving later today, police and the' Coast Guard said. They were
upected to leave a Vineyard Coast Guard station at Menemsha about no'on.
The search for KeMedy's missing plane, which has covered almost
·9,()()() square milts, on Sunday produced no major finds but authorities were
focusing on ".a couple of rargets;•·eo,..t Guard Rear Adm. Richard M.

Classiftec!s
Comig ·

'

Ohio

'

Reporter experiences battle from re-enactors'

• Hours:
Saturday
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Middleport • Pomeroy,

·-

Kennedy, passengers presumed dead; Rec.overy continues

Calendar

Mondlly - Friday

.
Hometown Newspaper

s

'9 MONTANA EXT 4 DR

99 Century Limited

•

.
·.
CONFEDERATE DEAD HONORED - Conthe even!.
A Saturday mormng cere111ony
· tactarate dead ot'the Civil war Bettie of Butflnhel,d at Portland Park to hon~r the b~tgton laland wera remembered ovar tha weektie s combat~ts from both s1des; wtth
and with thla lmprpvlaed memorial comprlaed
groups pla~mg wreaths at the : battle
ot Contactarate flags arrayed near the new
mo~~ment:
ak . ,, • D 'd V M d
BATTLE CI:REMONY- Approximately 20 wreatha were marker dlaplaylng tha Confederate units parthe :•~n s['" :' wasffi avl f th. e . - praaented during a ceremony held Saturday morning at Port- tlclpatlng In the July 19, 1863 battle• .Hare,'
eft,Ve e 1g e~ ran mg(S~~c)ertb
\tnsland ·Park to honor·Civll war combatanta of the Battle of Butt· C.My Wohlfeil· of llllanaaeaa, Va., a ·aoJdler In
0
tferhansSo eservf eh u . · "e mt 1 aryflngton Island. Here, aome otthe apaakera gather for an In for· the High ,Prlvataa Man, lltllnda . at attention
aiTIJ o t e
ns o t e man .eterans o mal photo ;,pportunlty.
near the memorial.

-l~

AfterHot~rs ·

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
ttlgh: 90s; Low: eoa

tJB~mds

MC names its
May top staffer

Kyger Creek Little
League tourney
continues
-Page4

Meigs sweeps two from Lancaster, Page 4
. Ann on raising children, Page 10
~eigs, Gallia unemployment, Page 3

Today: P. Cloudy
High: lOs; Low: 70.

P&amp;G takes part in obesity research

Wtdding

Sports

July 111, 1111111

Wea th er

3

Soorts
3

Weather

Lotteries
OHIO

.

Pick 3: 5-4-6; Pick 4: 8-8-7-6

TOLL FREE:

Super LoHo: 1-2-20-23-30-37 ,
lOcker: 4-6-3-4-6-4 ·

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Daily 3: 4-9·3 Daily 4: 3-1-1-4

w.yA.
0 1998 Ohio V.lky Publilllina C11.

By BRIAN J. REED
. Sentinel Nawa Staff
·
Demonstrations and displays,
$Qfertainment and Ohio's Harmonica Championship were
highlights · of Chester/Shade
Day, held Saturday to benefit
the Chester/Shade Historical
Association.
·
·
The event was held in and
around the Chester Courthouse
which is under renovation, th~
Chester Commons and the
Chester Township firehouse :
Two Conestoga. wagons, an
antique radio display, an arl
show, and demonstrations by
craftsmen and craftswomen
went on throughout I he day.
The Tuppers Plains VFW post
. conducted a flag-raising cere·
mony to begin the event, and
local entertainers, including
m&lt;tsicians, singers and square
dancers, P.,rformed throughout
lhe day.
·
Thelma Case Hayes Roy
Miller and Alfred Wolfe' all of
c·hest~r were honor;d as

.

"Meigs County's Finest,'' for being
the oldest in attendance.
Historical present.ations included
"Tales of Chester/Shade," the
enactment of true dramatic slories
from
the
history
of the
TimeChester/Shade area, and
line, a .pantomime reenactment on
the Chester Commons which
eheapsulaled rhe years of 17~01890 and involved over 40 part1C·
ipan~.
·
The Timeline was organized and
narrated by Debbie Snyder of the
West Shade area.
.
Lester V. Horo.wotz, author. of
"The umgest Ratd ?f the Ctvol
War;: spoke aboul h1s book and
about Morgan's Raid through
Meigs County._
Horowttz als~ appeared at
the Me1gs County Lobrary and at
the ~eenaclmenl of the Battle of
Buffmgton Island, wh1ch was also .
PERIOD COSTUMES - This waa
held over the weekend at Portland one of several period coatumes
(see related story).
worn by participants In the
Bruce Myers, longtime member Cheater/Shade Day parade, and
of· the Chester Volunteer Fire other evanta held around the
Department,
was the grand mar· Chester· Courthouse on Saturday.
.

a

KIASHUTA INDIANS- Among
thoae repreunted In the nmellne
during Cheater/Shade Day on
Saturday evening were thaae
Klaahuta Indiana, the peaceful
natives mat by early aettlera In
the area. . . .

t
/

shal of the Chester/Sha~e parade,
and drove the department s n~w fire
!ruck m lhe parade, The parade ~I so
mcluded eque~tnan entnes, bo~y des, and walk1ng entnes tn perood '
c;ostume.
.
. Ryan Tackeu of Wollard was the
f~rst~place w1nner of the Ohoo Har·
momca Contest
. He has participated in the event
soncc 1t began three years ago. Gene
Goodwin of Pomeroy, a first-time
entrant, was the secon\1-place win ner,. and
Raymond
Horsley.
Lucasville,_ ~un thord place: After
the competouon, Marvon Monroe of
Sunbury~ a member of the Buckeye
Harmon1ca ·Club on Columbus, .
enlertaoned the.. crowd with a
demonstrauon . onvolvong_ several
un1que har monocas from hos colleclion .
,
.
The da~ s ~ven.ts concluded woth
an illumonauon _ceremony ~t the
courthouse, whoch mcludon!l a
patnot1c song along under the dorecContinued In '(:hester/Shade
Day• on page 3

..

�•

er
Backroom
meetings
may
result
~n woman v~ :
The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6fisr.d in 1948

·1-11 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
7~-215e • Fu: 082·2157

...

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

~' '

DIANE HILL

CHARLEIE HOEFliCH

n.. Sentinel aslcoe•uu,.,.,.

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-~~ Oliile &gt;fl111ifl; or, FAX lo 14D-IIN-2t/f1.
'

Leaving one child behind
means we've all .failed
By STATE SEN. MICHAEL SHOEMAKER
"How were they when you saw them last?"
.
Several years ago a Methodist minister related that retort as an effective
method of reducing the number of visitation requests his parishioners ~o~ld
leave him with each ·~unday morning.
-On- the surface, it may seem to be a'wee bit harsh from a man of the cloth.
: However, he was serving a congregation· of 6,000 ·and the tactic of placing
some responsibility back on the laity of the church was probably a method
·ohanity retention.
As the national and statewide debate over public education heats to the
.boiling point, the preacher's challenge might be more appropriate than .ever
before. ·
·
. ·
\-buchers, charter schools, private education, alternative schools, home
schooling, hooked on phonics (math, Spanish, rope jumping, etc.) all present
interesting challenges to the traditional schools that -most of us knew ·as kids.
Many parents desperately grasp f&lt;;&gt;r any possible option that will improve the
educational opportunines for their child. That search sometimes means "get
my kid out of the p~blic school."
.
Every option mentioned has been tried with varying degrees of success.
The jury is still out since most pf these e~,periments are relatively new to the
scene. Supporters are to be. complimented for their commitment to kids and
·
their willingness to work to.improve the system.
·. One prerequisite for taking a student from a existin~ school setting
should be answering a simple question, "Why do you want to leave?" My
personal reaction is to give a blessing to the exodus if we all then work
together to fix the problem that triggered the move.
In Ohio alone, 1.8 million young people depend on us each day to help
educate them. Leaving one youngster behind means we have failed mi~er:
; ably! Just,like the clergy's ailing flock, it's often easy for us to tell someone
else about a problem and then walk away.
, ,
·
.
Unfortunately, the shortcomings of the public Sc:hool system will eveniu·
ally haunt us all. Trying an alternative isn't wrong, turning Ojlr backs on kids
in less than' desirable CO'!ditions is downright sinful.
George Beverly Shea sings it best... "Titere were ninety and nine that safely lay in the shelter of the fold; but one was los.! on the hill far a~ay, away
from the streets of gold." Batting .300 will get you into baseball's hall of

fam~:.~.i~;~f~s=::~;,:~:.v~~,.,,.,...nratli.17r"

D/Mrlct In 1M Ohio S.n.tr..)

..

''

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•

· ltlfo~"f,ot-l OVE.f(l.i&gt;At».
,.

..

~OCK IT TO j.UM

SOCK lT TO UIM.:'

..

•

G•
h k ,•
d · .,_ • ·
IVe t .,an S to pro UC~IVIty
·

'

Imaginary

Today In History .
By The A..oclate&lt;l Preas
Today is Monday, July 19, the 200th day of 1999. There·are 165 days left in
the ·year.
· Today's Highlight in History: .
On July 19, 1969, Apollo II and its astronauts, Neil Armstrong, Edwin
"Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins, went into orbit around the moon.
On this date:
In 1553, 15-year-old Lady Jane Grey was deposed ·!IS Queen of England after
claiming the crown for riine days. King Henry VIII's daughter Mar)'
pro• claimed queen.
In 1848, a pioneer women's righls convention convened in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
In 1870, the Franco-Prussian War began.
In 1941, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill launched his "V for Victory" campaign in Europe.
·
In 1943, allied air forces raided.Rome during World War 11.
In 1975, the Apollo and Soyuz space capsules that were linked in orbit for
two days separated. ·
.
In 1979, the Nicaraguan capital of Managua feli!Q 'Sandinista guerrillas~ two
days after President Anastasio Somoza fled the country.
·
In 19~, U.S. Rep. Geraldine A. Ferraro (0-N.Y.) won the Democratic nom- ·
ination for vice president by acclamation at the par\y's conven6on in San Francisco.
. ,
.
. ·
. In 1985, Christa McAuliffe of New Hampshire was chosen as the first
schoolteacher to ride aboard the space s~uttle. (McAuliffe an~ six other crew

was

. . . . . . .,""""'""' ';""':"

i~' ""''~·'

By o!OHN CUNNIFF. ·

NEW YORK (AP) - Strange that. so. many explain it all away in vague, impersonat'.terms.'
. The improved produ,ctivity, which fin.allt' :
people, includi'ng those who should have known But the real explanation lies som~here in the , began showing up by the 1J1iddle of the decade;· · ,,
better, treat it as s_om~thing that s,neaked up on American spirit of enterprise.
. was acknowledged by some but denied .by many. .
us. Stra_nge, because tens Qf millions of workers
Translated into economics, the·,growth of pro- The latter clung to the notion it was temporary ·
werere.sponsible for it coming.
, '· ·
ductivity, or. ,output': per hour of work, began and JiVOUid end with a thump.
.
'. We ~peak of productiyity, or more precisely, growing again. · ,.
,
,·
.
Among the 'tast to concede the issue - · that ·
rising productivity, the econ01:nic factor that has
More goods were produced at less and less productivity. growth was indeed undermining '
raised AmeriC&gt;i!ns' living standard beyond what · cost, "allowing ' for higher wages and , profits to Some old-fashioned ideas about the American ''
could have been dreamed about two decades finance innovation.·
·
. A.. economy ·- was the Federal Reserve, which had
•'
.. ago.
At first it didn't show up in the statistics, and been issuing repeated warnings.
, ,
· So thoroughly has it changed, the fo'rtunes of it became a ritual of economists to examine· why " The red alarm flags have not all bee!\ low- ·
some workers that they can barely recafl what it the rising productivity wasn't showing up in the ered, and the Fed has l.egitimate fears about the ··
. was back then. ·
··-' statistics.
•· ·
·
ability of enthusiastic consumers to keep spend- ·
· To refresh me,rnories, tlie ·1970s and early
A thousand reasons were givep, none satis- . jng· beyond their means, but' it ·has now decided' ,
·
to. wait·and see.
"·
'
·
· 1980s were a time oflnflation, high unemploy- factory:
ment and recession. ,
'
• . .
The main evidence of the improvement could
Having raised interest -rates slightly on June.
Accompapying, the.. woeful ' statisti.cal ·evi- be found in the way the economy behJlVed:·fnfla 30 to try to keep'the nation's longest peacetime
tion. and ,borrowing costs sank. Unemploy-· economic expansion from overheating, it imme-'
dence WaS a psychOlogical factor hard tO mea'SUre but probably even more sigqifieant.
ment fell. Profits rose. And entrepreneurship diately announced it was changing its policy bias .
Americans had lost pride of product, and · thrived,
1. ·
to neutral and away from further increases in .
Japanese indu~ttialists ·claimed to be No. I.
. According to old-line economists, such things rates.
· ,.
· .
Challenged, A!Jlericans were forced tO correct should not be happening, and so their forecasts
In 'effect, it recognized the .role of rising pro- '
their problems, creating and harnessing new l)ecame routine: Falling unemployment e~enlu- ductivity in allowing fast economic growth with- : .
technologies. ·
.
ally will light' the fires of inflation and bring the . out inflation.
··
.
.
Labor and management learned 19 get ·along. . expansion to an end.. _ ..
.
· With ·high-tech industries now changing the ..
Losing market share, Americans carmaket·s and
It didn :t happen - . or it hasn't happened yet most fundamental ways of doing business, prosteelmlikers were forced to {llodernize. Entrepre- -. and that's•because ris,ing productivity, aided, ductivity growth. may not yet have reached its'
neurs took risks.
by low-cost •imports aild faOing commodity zenith.
The politicians will take the 'credit' and the prices, made it possible. It took years for it to be
.It suggests that while e~pansions don't last
economists, profiting from ._·h'i.nd~ighf, .will acknow !edged.
forever, this one might yet have a long way to go.

.,

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~lTTO~fM...

'

boundarie~

By lan Shoahis
·
.
Not being religious, itdidn't surprise me to be
surprised by a story in the San Francisco Chroni'cle, concerning an effort by local Orthodox Jews
to persuade the city of Palo Alto to allow them to
construct an "eruv."
An eruv, as the -newspaper explained it, is a
boundary extending the walls of an Orthodox
Jew's home, allowing him or bet to· "engage in
· neighborhood 'life without breaking religious
bans" on ~clivi ties forbidden outside the home on
the S~bbath .
..
I was confused. Is this boundary imaginary?
Then why is permission needed to "build" it? I
read further, and realized that it wasn't imaginary,
but symbolic.
..
What the Orthodox Jewish community wants
to do is place poles and twine in certain places,
marking their, I don't know, expanded living
rooms; I guess.
.
.
OK. But if I was walking in ·that area, and
tripped across one of these twine walls, would I
be breaking and entering?
And if. that string is broken, would the devout
folk on the far side of. the twine suddenly find
themselves shivering and naked somewhere east
of the Garden of Eden?
Is the city of Palo Alto ready for that kind of
responsib'ility?
The story reminded me . of stories about the
Amish, another devout people, who are deeply
committed Luddites.
.
The stories have it that some Amish, in order to
get around constrictions of having electricity in
their homes, place televisions in t~e yard, powered by outside generators, which they can watch
without fear of wh~tever it is they fear i.vill happen if they watch a television located under their

.

'

and other beliefs

roof.
,
Madalyn Murray O'Hair (the missing, presumed
I should be careful with my .observations on . dead old atheist) had tried to get the FCX: to ban
these things, I know. . --. .
religious 'Jlrogramming. 11 • • .
1
· AfteF all, I live in S;m Francisco. I think of my
This rumor is untrue. The FCC has been asked ,
overly twee city as Manhattan Lite, but to the rest about this alleged conspiracy "more than 35 mil·
of the country, San Francisco is the New Gomor- lion times in the last 23 'years."
.
.·
rah. ·
.
.
Hence the.press release, as a public service.
When I buy .my Mexican beer from the surly ·
I've al59 heard rumors that Ms. O'Hair was
Russian merchant in the early evening. frankly, murdered by the Catholic Church.
.
sometimes I do wonder if I'm the Antichrist.
Wgy the pope would care about the activities
At least until! get to the video store.
of an aging godless Texas broad is beyond me, but
But I have something in common with my then again, we all draw the line somewhere, I
religious brothers and sisters.
gue~.
.
· . ·
· ·1 too . have strange beliefs. I believe," for_ / t he FCC sure took her seriously, or at least
instance, that ifl set the lime on my clock .15 min- took the people that took 'her seridusly seriously. ·
utes ahead, it will spur me to get out of bed in the
So long as they're symbolic, and city councils
morning when the alarm goes off.
are not asked to mike decisions about ihem, and I
That this belief has no basis in reality, and in don't trip over them, hey -- ·an your lines are OK
ac.tual fact, does not spur me to get out of bed with file.
. when the alarm goes off does not deter inc from
continuing this practice.
·
· But then we're all haunted by superstitions and
rumors.
I
Who reads the astrology colurmis every day?
We all do. Who believes in astrology?
Nobody. We believq that deaths come in
threes. I don't even know what that means. We
believe that ·the stock of Amazon.com has real
value.
I was up in the gold country ,last weekend, and
happened to pick up the fine (if thin) newspaper,
the Amador Ledger Dispatch.
·
In its back page&amp; (A7, to be exact) was a press
release by the Federal COmmunications Commis- .
sion. (fhere was no other byline; apparently the
FCC magically has the ability to make its bureau•
cracy speak as one.)
The story was released ta counter a rumor that

Thought for Today:

"An optimist sees
·
opportunity in every
calamity.
. A pessimist sees
calamity In .every opportu·
nlty."
•• Anonymous.

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Death Notices

Ohio weather

Margaret H. Clark

Tu••tt•y, July 20

Margaret H. Qark, 81', New Haven, W.Va .. died Saturday, July 17, 1999
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
Born Sept. 6, 1917 in Mason, W.Va., daughter of the late Olarles and
L.ula LeMaster Oliver, she was a homemaker.
.
She was also preceded in death by her husband. James Oark; a son,
Charles Oliver; a sister, Phyllis L. Hargraves: and two brothers, Robert Oliver and Lewis Oliver.
Surviving arc two grandchildren; an&lt;! a sister, Beatrjce B. Kennedy of
Middleport.
.
Graveside services were held at 1 p.m. today. Monday, July 19, 1999 in
the Kirkland Memorial Gardens, with the Rev. Mike Finnicum officiating.
Visitation was held in· the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, fmni noon, 12:30 p.m. today, Monday, July 19, 1.~-

I Ma&amp;aR.I Id lwm- I ,.

·I Columbue J?t",.. I
•

yace ;

. Controller

General M1m1tQer

By Jack Andereon ·
The event will give Bush a chance to well tnlo next year, but the ~lerated c:aJ11palll! •
•nd Doug!.. Cohn
size up a potential running mate, Eliza- calendar has ~hed everrthmg ~
:•
It happened to papa; it could happen to
beth Dole.
The way thanp arc goang, bolh bckets mar ~ ,
you.
· Her fast start as a presidentialaspiranr decided by March, long before the conventions :
Remember 1991-92, when President
has slowed, but she remains a powerful and a full eight months before the Novembercleco ; '
George Bush 's approval rating was over
campaigner. SQme mulling over a Bush- lion. .
,
:•
90 percent, a result of his successful exeDole ticket applaud the combination of
Iowa and New Hampslure used to have the ;
cution of the Gulf War?
,
Bush's personal appeal · and Dole's early voting all to th"?'sc!lv~. .
.
::
Remember what they called the
p()Htical know-how: Republican strateNow, other states, mcltJIImg_ btg on~ h~e ":'~" •
Democratic presidential contenders,
gists would count on her to pull· him ifomia and Michigan, are movmg thetr !?"manes :
including Arkansas Governor Bill Clinback up if his popularity sagged in the up to February and March to attract candidate and ;
ton?
polls.·as it well may over time. And, above all, mcdj.a,allention.
,
.
.
.
They called them the Seven Dwarfs. Two of they like the idea that women voters are drawn
·.~ocates of s~r cam~~ penods, on th~ ;
those dwarfs became the next'presi&lt;!ent and v~ to buth. Bush won a second term a5 Texas' Bri!iJh model, arc gelling thCir WISh.
' ··
president. and President Bush followed in the governor last year with 65 percent of the
~ the l:kmocratic _side, _front-runner
footsteps of Davy Crqckett who, upon losing his· women's vote. Or...
·
Prestdent AI Gore and hts advisers are constder;
:. Christie is ready.
. in~ a number of vioc-presi~ntial po!iSibilities;
·seat in the House of Representativ'es, told his
Tennessee constilllents: . "Y'all can go to hell;
Gov. Christine Todd Whitman; the pro- notably the former Dem~c senator from New
I'm a-goin' to Texas."
,
choice Republican from New Jersey, is ready if Jersey, Bill Bradl~y. to get htm out of the_way alld
Now, the' George W. .Bush
Express may not be heading for a
similar derailment. but the fates
are not kind to hubris, so this
Texan has avoided the swelled- ·
head disease as adroitly as he ~as
avoided answering the tough questions. In fact...
· •
-- G.W. ~ush has a hand o.n the
brake as well as the accelerator.
Sources tell us that Bush
abruptly fired press secretary
David Beckwith apparently for
.,
misleading reporters into thinking
he raised less money than he had.
. The. result was ,a second-day
cycle of gee-whiz stories when the
figure turned out substantially
higher.. In ·another election year,
_that would have meant job security for Beckwith.
Instead, the press secretary's
tactic was dubbed "slick" and·
"Clintonesque," adjectives Bush
did .not want identified with his
campaign. Meanwhile, ..
-- G. W. is a-goin' to Iowa
Bush had planned to skip the
Iowa straw poll that traditionally
has been a .summer fund-raiser
looking ahead to p(esidentialnominating caucuses ' six months
later.
. But this year's event, scheduled
· for August 14 in. ~es, is a -popu- ·•
larity contest ihat c.ould- set the L------"--~---'-'--------,-------,.-'------=-====:L..:_...J
. tone that decides who the nominees will be.
the eventual Republic.an noniiflee decides hill lock ·up the lop spot early·on. But the pressure foi ·
· !Jush realizes _its significance and is going conservative 'base is secure enough for him to ' a woman is strong, they agree, and the name$ ,
all 9ut. · ·
.·
leap to the cen!er.
,
most frequently mentioned ino;ludc both Califor·
With some $36 million in his campaign c&lt;ifClearly...
niasenators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer;
fers already, our squrces say he will spend $1
. --This could be the 11'\le year of the woman. ,
New H~~hire. Gov. Jane Slliheen and MwY- :
million or S2 million on the visit, and consider , Saurces tell tis thatleiiders in both parties are land Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kenn~y Townsend, the
.'it money ·well spent. Besides...
·
plotting strategies with il woman in the No.2 slot. el~t of Robert Kennedy's children.
-- Elizabeth Dole will ,be there.
Usually, such war games would be left untif . Townsend could' be the one.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 19, 1999

.Levy Foster

~·
'

W.VA.

()~- ·~~s..m., Clouolv Clouolv r...... -

...

~
..

J-ow pressure expected
Pl.

-

,._

to. trigger thunderstorm
8y The Aaaocl•ted Pi-ese

2

Local Briefs
Transformer fire repprted
A transformer fire along Easl Main Street in Pomeroy late Sunday
·evening resulted in a brief power outage affecting reside'nts of Pomeroy.
Syracuse and Racine.
Firefighters were summoned to East Main Street wh~re a transformer
behind Key Motors caught fire, accordirlg to, Pomeroy ·Fire Chief Oris
Shank.
Firefighters were late-r summoned to the Kroger store after receivi1,1g a
report of smoke in the store, he said, It is believed the smoke came from
the store's air oonditioning unir which may have bUn affected by- the
transformer fire. No darlage to' the store w~ reported, Shank said,
~ Pomeroy, Middleport and Syracuse firefighters responded to the calls.

·Announcements
Gir.l Scout fair judging
Meigs County Girl Scout fair judging will be held Saturday at the
County Fairgrounds. All projects must be in place by 10 a.m .
For more information on exhibits, contact your troop leader or Debbie
Cooke at 992-3771 as Soon as possibl~ . ·
.
Girts may exhibit up to six· projects. one in each of the following
worlds: World of Well Being, World of People, World of Today and
Tomorrow, World of Art, World of Out of Door and World of Girl
Scouts. Girls exhibiting may purchase a junior fair exhibi~or pass for
$2.50 .
\
'
Mei~

Levy Foster, 85. Vincent, died Sunday, July 18. 1999, at the Marietra
·
·
Center in Marietta.
.A homemaker, she was boru March 9, 1914. in Jody, W.Va., daughter of
the late William and Grace Perry Hudnell.
.
She is su..Vived by three sons, c;:harles Foster of Belpre, Walker Foster of
Mineral Wells, W.Va., and Thomas Foster of Weston, W.Va.: tbree daughters, Kathleen Bcnneit of Charleston·. W.Va., Georgia Feathers of Weston,.
and Mary Wigal of St. Albans, W.Va.; a sister. Nettie Hudnell of Charleston,
W.Va.;· a son-in-law, Jim Ferrell of Vincent: several gJ:andchildren. '
' She was preceded in death by her husband, Claude Foster.
Graveside services will ·bt: held Wednesday, 10 a.m. at· the Heiney Cemetery. Reedsville. Arrangements are by the White Funeral Home in Coolville.

Ralph Graves

Eastern High sports jackets available,
All fall sport athletes at Eastern High School (football, volleyball,
golf'arid cheerleaders} may pick up athletic packets in the high school
office Monday through Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Last year's softball players may pick up their softball patches dur=
ing the same hours.

Ralph Graves of Pomeroy, died Monday morning, July 19, 1999, at the
Holzer Medical Center ·in Gallipolis. Arrangements will be an pounced by
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Tommy Lee Miller

Shade River L'odge to convene
The Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM .• will have a special meeting'
at 7 p.m. Tu~,sday.
.

Tupper Plains VFW sets mfleting

The Tuppers Plains VFW Pot90SJ 'wilt meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
: A low pressure system dropping acRJ~;S the Great Lak~&lt; will br_ing
(Showers and thunderstorms to Ohio IOf!ight. .
'
at
the
hall. Names will be drawn.
·
Tommy Lee Miller, 50; Tcmia Ghana, South Africa, formerly of the
. . · Overnight lows will be 65-70.
.
Cheshire area, died ~ne~pectedly Thursday, July '15, 1999 at his employ: Hot and humid weather will continue.through the. early part of the week
ment.
.
.
Letart Township Trustees will meet Monday. 6 p.m. at the offi'ce
with highs in the upper 80s to low 90s. ·
· ·
·
,·
Born
on
Feb.
25,
1919
al
Kyger
in
O;lllia
County,
he,
was
the
son
of
the
building'.
'"
,
•..
'
·
: The record-high temperature for this date at the ·eotumbus weath~~ st~;':;
!ion was 98 degrees in 1930 while the. recOrd low was ·so in 1979. Sunset . late Leon and Delores Little Miller. He was employed as an engineer maintenance manager with. Kaiser Aluminum VALCO Plant in South Africa :··
tonight wiU be at 8:57p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:19a.m.
The Taylor reunion will be held Aug. 1 at noon at the Po plar Ridge
• He is survived by his wife, Linda At,kinson Miller, Temia Ghana, South
Weather foreatst:
'
Fellowship
Hall.
•
Africa; daughters, Tina Miller Savage of Maryland, and Chandra Miller of
: Tonight ... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. A thunderstorm or
Seattle, \Vash.; one granddaughter, a. sister and brother-in-law, Susie and
two,also possible until midnight. Patchy fog developing. ulws around 70.
Light and variable wind. Olance of rain 30 percent.
Robert Sigman of Bidwell; three brvthers and sisters-in-law. Larry and
The South Bethel New Testament Church will be holding vacation
Tues&lt;bty...Partly cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms. Hot and humid · ~uise' Farley of Long Bottom; Phil and Denise Miller of .Rutland; Chris and
Bible
school July 25-29 fro!Jl 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. This year's theme is
with highs around 90. Chance of rain 30 percent.
. .
'Cheryl Miller of Gallipolis; seve&lt;al aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and · "Son Ca~tle faire ." ·
.
•.:
, Tuesday night ... Partly cloudy. Wws in the~ upJl!'r 60s. ·
couSins.
. '
, _..,.
'"'
·
,
There
will
be
classes
for
all
ages.
including adults. South Bethel is
.
Extended forecast: ·
Funeral services will be held at n ':a.m. 'Q!ursday at the old Kyger
lo&lt;·atcd on Silver Ridge Road which is directly across from' Eastern
·. Wednesday...Partly cloudy, hot and humid. A chance of-., thunderston,n
Freewill Baptist Church with the Rev. Don 'Prjceofficiating. Burial will fol"
Schools
on State Route 7.
in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 90s.
.
·
•
low in Meigs Memory Gardens in Pomeroy. Friends may·call Tuesday from
Thursday... Hazy, h~t and humid, Lows in the upper 60s and highs in the
, "
7 to 9 p.in. and Wednesday from 2'to 4 and '? to 9 p.m. at the Fisher Funerlower and mid 90s.
.
·
al Home in Pomeroy.·
~
;.
~ I'!
•
•
Meigs Local Chapter 17, OAPSE. will meet in special session at the
, Friday... Hazy, hot and hum)d. ~ws arou~d 70 and highs in -the lower
Meigs High School Library, 7 p.m. July 26 for purpose of ratification
lmd mid 90s.
1•
• .
.
, •·
'
'
"
l
.
of the contract. Announcement that the meeting will be held tonight

Letait trustees .to meet • .

.

.·.

Taylor reunion plan'ne,q

Vacation Bible school set

Meeting time correction

·Unemployment in Gallia, Meigs reflects area trend·
U~ in Galli;l8l'ld Meigs
oounties increased in June, reflecting the
iru ' · of joblessness shown statewide
Wring the month, aaxxding to the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services.

Chester/Shade Day .

Coj!tlnued from page 1
lion of'Anna Blackwood.
Proci:eds from food sales, fund
·· raisers and memberships sold at
Chester/Shade Day will be used to
complete the ·courthouse renova-

tion project. Fini~_liing the new
flo9r in the building, a security systern, ~aseboard and interior tiim ·
' '
.
and sl,dcwalks are among the prostill to be

was in'correct.

·

'

.

·

Obituaries

"Ohio's WHierlying 'v,uiables, such
as unemployment claims and industry
employment trends, remained stable in
June, indicating that Ohio's jOb market
Oblluarln ire pa1t11nnouncementa arranged by loCI! funentl homes. Obftuortea
remains strong." Mermis said
••
publlahed •• requested to accommodate thoU deltrtng mare Information than·
OBES reported that Gallia County's
Ohio's rnte also was slightly higher
II provided In lhe accompanying Oellh Notices.
.
,,
imemployment level for June ~ 9.4 than the natiorlal figure of 4.3 perrent.
percent, an increase of.l.3 pen:ent over It's just the !iecond lime since October
May's jobh~"' tate of 8.1 percent.
1992that Ohio's jobless rate was higher
For Meigs County, OBES noted that than the national percentage, Mermis .
· Levy Foster, 85. Vincent, died Sun~ay. July 18, 1999, at the Marietta
unemployment was up 1.7 percerit in said. Qhio. also h~d slightly higher
Center
in .Marielta.
,
"
.
June, to 11.9 percent. The May jobless unemployment than the national rate lust
.
A
homeJTlaker;.she
was
born
March
9,
1914,
in
Jqdy,
W.Va.,
daughter.
of
rate for Meigs Was 10.2 percent.
.
July.
the late William and Grace Perry Hudnell.
'
•
bK&gt;tases were noted in other south·
The state's rate was up slightly from
She
is
sut'\'ived
by
three
sons;'ChQrles
Foster.
of
Belpre,
WalkcrcFoster
of
.. em Ohio counties, with Athens at 4.4 the 4.4 percent of June 19?f!. Over 'the
Mineral
Wells,
W.Va.,
and
Th&lt;irrias
Foster
of
Weston,
W.Va.;
three
daughpercent (up from 3.7 percent in May); year, the number of Ohioans Werking
, ters, Kathleen JWnnett of ·Ch~rleston, w.va·., !Jtorgia Feathers of Weston.'
' lb:kiqg. 5 percent (4.7); Jackson, 713 . increased l;&gt;y 166,00l from 5.4 million,
and Mary Wigal of St. Albans, W.Va.; a sister, Nettie Hudnell of Charleston, ·
pcn:ent (1.7); J..awn:nce, 6.9 percent The number unemploy&lt;&gt;;i has increased
W.Va.; a son-in-law, Ji'1) Ferrell ofVinoent; a•grnnddaughte[ with whom she
(5.2); Scioto, 8.8 percent (15); Vmton, by 13,(ID from 248,(XXJ.
·
resided, Sheila Westfall of Reeds vi lie, another .granddaughter with whom
10.3 pe,ra:nt (95); and ~ngtqn 65
Among Ohio's ss·oounties, ·the June
she
sometimes resided , Lisa Foster of Parkersburg, W.Va .. and seve,al other '
percent (S.4).
.
·
jobless rntes ranged from a low of 2.4
·
.
.
.
· ·
grandchildren.
The jobless rate for Ohio lust ptontlf percent in ,Delaware County to a high of
She
was
r
receded
,in
death
by
her
husband,
Claude
Foster.
was 45 perCent, up three-tenths of a per- 1~.2-percent in Morgan QJunty.
Graveside
services
will
be
held
Wednesday,
10
a.m.
at the Heiney CemeCf-111 from 4,2 in May.
Ten counties had rates at or less than
tery,
Reedsville.
Arrangements
are
by
the
White
Funeral
Home in Coolville.
·The rate traditionally ~ in 35 percent in May. Eight had raies high, June because Of graduating sllldents -er than 8 perceq!. The counties with the
TIMEUNE - Gerald Powell, ,Pomeroy, Richard Eubanks and
entering the worid'olre, OBFSAdminis- highest rnles, otiierthan Morgan, includ- Wilbur McCormick, both of Jackson, and Stacy Worley, make up
traior Janies J. Mermis said However, · ed Meigs; Vinton, Adams, Gallia, "Timeline," a barbershop· quartet ·which eniertalned at
Continued from page 1
sionists.
.
·
this year the increase was slightly high- Scioto, Monroe, Guernsey, Huron, Pike
Chester/Sha~e Day on Saturday•.
· . "'Union tro'ops' marched · over; and . During this experience, I ques er than expected.
and Harrison. ·
watched the remainder of Ihe' battle tioned which side I should be onHospital news
. ftom that vantage point. ,
;
Union or Confederate. At the end 'it ·
V~Mtn•W
.
.A -confession: 1 still don'.t .know came down to a.beggar'schoice-1
Sunday dn~ioos- I)n Waning. Pomeroy.
' ', (USPS 21J....l
,
what
possesses 1hese people to act went with the side that had extra :
Communil)l Newapaper Holdlnp. lac.
-....July ••- Mn. Cut Wm• """ son,
the way they do', but :1 have learned gear. Most recnaqors, it turns out,
\leia J~ WiUilm Cunningham.
·
Published e\lery afternoon, Monday through .
·Brtbl- Mr. and Mrs. Oiffixrl Beatty, son, Jackthat
to ·the person-::regatdless , of ·portray BOT!-! sides, depending on :
~riday, 11 t Court &amp;t, Pomeroy, Ohio. ~y the
,!M; Mr. and Mr.~. Richard Pcym, son, J\meroy.
which side they represent- they are what sort of soldiers are needed.
'
Ohio \\lley P\l~listiing Compiiny. Second cJw
~Jut, 17- Lin&lt;D Oui&gt;ti&gt;Oe
postage paid a1. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Beegle.•• -~
greatly iqterested in history and in
Meaber: The Associated Press a~ the Ohio
Birlb- Mr. and Mrs. Curti'! Marcum, son, Jackaccurately
· repre se nJing the Civil
. Newspaper Association.
son. , '
.
, l'vltm..ter: Send address corrections to The
·
War
era.
'[hey
are'ooncerned that the
.
.
.
.
July
18
.kti&lt;
Jewell,
Em&gt;!
c-.
Daily Sent,nel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohto
Mrs.
Curti5
Marcum
and
:w:Jn,
Mrs.
Qifford
Beatty
and
li~ing
.
his.
t
ory
th ey perform wip
45769.
•
son. MrS., Richard Peyroo and'son. ; '
- 'SUBSCRII"nON RATES
•
eventually be targeted (or being
INrlb - Mr. and M~ Chris ~ daughter,
By Carrier or Motor Routt •
Gallipoti&gt;.
'
· " tcac~ing violence" or for "glorify·one: Wcck .................................sz.oo
.One Month;...............~............... $8.70
ing guns." Even more- parhculary
One Ytar, .................................. $104.00 1
12:30PM
for
the , Confederates-they fear
SINGLE COPY PRICE "
Daily.......................... ,.............. 3S ~nts
(heir pastime will be vilified by
TARZAN ~~ 1:oo, 3:05, 5:11,
11:20
Subscribers not dc:siriQg tb pay the carrier may
"politically
c.
o
rrect"
historical
revi:jFonilyllnmtt!d)
Slai!IIJ
diem.
rn
Tooy
Gd!o)'.
im"'
··
rem1t in e.dvance direct lo The.Daily Sentinel on
lliYeL IWeOIIilrll. G~&gt;C&lt;sl, Wall"~~ 0. lml ',
a, three, six or J ~ month basis. Credil will ~
g1ven canier each week. ~
•
Am Ele Powei ......................36'1.
IUPETI "
1:00,3:05,5:10,
No sub5cr1ption by mail permiHed in ueas
Akzo ........................................ 44
tfiiOMnct
7:15,9:20
where home canier service1is available.
AmrTech ;................... ...........75'/,
Publilher re.Hrv~ tht: right to adjust rates dur•
HuiiiOgan.
Ray
~na
Gates
hl:fadden
Ash Oil ..................·.................. 43
ing the subscriplion penod. Subscr1ption rate
- 'i•:AI ''"6 '
7(22{99)
changeS may be implemented by changing tbe
AT&amp;T .~ .... c..............................55'!.
BOX OffiCE Will OPEN AT 6:30PM ·
. duratioo of the subsepption.
Bank One .........;...................60'/,.
,
FOR EVENING S"OWS, .
HAoR~~OI~JC:A
'o'ltiNINE.RS
-These
men
.
wiue
winners
Bob Evans ............................ 20'/,
'· .
, MAILS~BSCRIPfiON
12:30
PM
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MAnNEES
Ohio · H11rmonlca · Championship, an annual evant at
Borg-Warner ....... ;.................54'1.
Imide MeiP C011nl}'
Chester/Shade Day. They are Ryan Ta.ekatt, Willard, first place; .. ·
Champion ........... ...................... ~
WILD, WILD, WEST (PG13)·•
13 Weeb, ...•.•....•.• !............ S27.30
7:1 5 &amp; 9:40 DAILY
,
Charm Shps .......................... 6~1.
Gene Goodwin, Pomeroy, second place; .and Raymond Horsley,
26 \Yeeb ....•.. :................... .$.53.82
SAT
!SUN
1
:IS
&amp;
3:40
City Holding .......... ,...............66/•
52 Weeb ........••.••.••.••....... .$105.56
WE PUCII ~ 1:15,3:15,
Lucasville, third place.
·
, NO BARGAIN NIGHT
•' ·
Rltn Outside Melas County
Federal MoguL .....................53 r.
(~IM'In)
610)!1 Falla i 1\hf\ Beltt !hi!.¥'eJ 1'r.la:x '
13 Wecks .................! ..........$29.25
Ga~tnett .................................76'1,
MUPPETS
FROM
SPACE
(G)
26W..ka............................ $S6.68
AIUGTlrtl ROAD "11:45, 4:311, 7:00, 8:35
Krrillrt .....................................1571•
'7:00 &amp; 9-. 00-DAII.V
. $Z Weeks ......................... .$ 109.72
Units of the Meigs County Emer7:59 p.~. Saturday, volunteer fire
(Horror)
Jell Brii!JeS,T"' Robons,Joao Cum, HO(le Daii&gt;
Kroger ..................................... 31
MATINEES SAT!SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:00
gency Medi((al Service recorded 13 ca~Js . department to state Rout~ 681, ~rush fire;
Lands End .............................. .49
I I :08 p.m. , VFD to Kroger store. p3s- ·
for assistance Saturday and Sunday. Umt.'i
S8UTH PARK: (R) 2:00,4:00,8:00,
Reader Services
Ltd .........................................46'/,
responding iriclu~cd:
sible air conditioner fire, no injuries
c:--·_, ,-,--- Ull:lll
· 8:15, 10:10
Oak Hill Finl .......................... 18'1•
CENTRAL DISPATCH
reported. Middleport VFD ana Pomeroy
,
M•lie
Driwr,
Isaac Hayes
OVB .................... .'................. :32'1,
Correction Polley
, 2:35,~ a.m. Saturday, Anne Slreet, squad assisted.
·
·
Our main concem In all stories is to be
One Valley .............................38'/,
Pomeroy, Terry Chambers. Veterans
RUTL\ND
\
Kturate. If you know of an error In a
Peoples ............ ;................... 2BY.
Memori&lt;d Hqspital;
2:47 p.m . Saturday, Dexter Ro~d ,
atory, call 1-e newsroom at (740) 992~
Prem Finl ............................... 13'/,
8:43 .a.m. Sawrday, Overhronk Cen·
Oshel Edwardli, treated at the' scene. Ccn~
liS!. We wiH c:bec:k your lnfonnatlon
Rockwell ............ .-..................57'/,
ter, Middlepor1,~ Hel en Davis, VMH;
tral Dispatch squad assisted;
. EVES WIDE SHUT (R)
·~make a coi'RC:tioa if warranted.
RD/Shetl ..... :..................... .... 64'/,.
6:31p.m: Saturday, Pearl Slreet, Mid8:59 p.m. Sunday. ' McCumber Hill
6:45 &amp; 9:40 DAILY
453
1
'
Sears .................................... . 16
dleport, Opal Pugh, Holzer Medical CenRoad, Beulah Collier, treated at the S:Cene.
MATINEES SAT/SUN 12'45 &amp; 3:40
· '
Nawi Departments .
.
'
2'•
Shoney -s...................... .......... •
ter, Middi&lt;IX&gt;I1 squad assisted;
SCIPIO TWP VH&gt;
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT
' The malo numb&lt;r Is 992-:!155. Depart.
FlrstStar ................................ 21'1
2:53
a.m. Sunday, Bn;m dway Str_fet,
2:39 p.m. Sunday. Shady Lane Road,
9

Levy ·Foster ·

.Rep.o rter Experience ...

The Oaily Sentinel

--Cmkr
A.

.

0

no.

Stocks

.Meigs EMS logs 13 weekend calls

meat exteaskms an: ·
Genel"lll Maaager. ......~ ................ Ext. W.01
New~ ............................................Ext. 1102
or Ext. 1106

Other Serv~,c:es
Ad.-ertislng. .......................,..........Ext. 1104
Clrculatlon ........................... .......Ext. 1103
Cliilsslfled Ad• ............................. Ext. 1100

Wendy's ......: ....._..................~30 ~5

Worthington ........_._. ..............._. 15 '

••••••••••••••••••
Stock reports are today's
10:30 a.m. quotes provfded by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Middleport, Dennis Hart, VMH;

10:39 a.m. Sunday, Pa&gt;k Road, Dar·

win, Ann"Griffith , Pleasant Valley Hospi ~
ta I;
.
8 :02 a.m. Sund ay, West Mah1 Street,
Pomt!roy. NOrma • Snyder, V¥H.

Pomeroy .squad assisted.
J'OM E;.RUY

TARZAN (G) ·

brush fire, no inj\lrits reported.

7:10 &amp; 9:00 DAILY

SYRACUSE
11 :50 a.m . Sunday, Rocksprings
v, Delmar
· Rehabilitation Cen.·1cr. Ppmem_
Baum, VMH:
II : 12 a.m .' Sunday, VFD and squad to ·

East Main Streel. Pomeroy, · transformer
·fire. no injuries r.e poned .

i

'~

jDma) JoM T~ytjta, Madeoi'&lt; Slowe,Jalt'es Cnrnwell
MaHiloees Sb()WII Everyday

ALL TIMES

.ALL

•.
•,

�The .Daily Sentin~!

Sports

1999

Monday, July 19, 1999

Cone pitches perfect game for Yankees; Reds, Indians lose

•

Meigs Legion crew,~

Major league
baseball

sweeps Lancaster-=

By The A..oclattd Preu
After missing out on a no-hitler
three years ago. Davtd Cone finally
gol a second chance. This time. he
was nothi_ng less than perfect.
'' You probably have a better
chance of wmnmg the lottery than
this happen mg." the New York
Yankees rigHt-hander said after
pitching the 14th perfect game m
moder~ major league history and
16th overall with a 6-0 decision over
Montreal on Sunday.

in doubleheader
By DAVE HARRIS

NICE STROKE, EDDIE! - The Pomeroy Indians' Eddie Fife Jr.
(right) gets congratulations from third base coach Bob Blackston
after hitting a two-run blast off Eric Van Meter in the ftrst inning of
· Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament second-round
opener against the Middleport Astros. Fife's homer was the first of
three the Indians hit en route to a 20-2 win. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

..

CONTROLLING INFLUENCE - The New Haven Reds' Cody
Knapp tossed a three-hitter at Point Pleasant Fruth's Pharmacy in
second-round action in the Kyger Creek Little League Tournament
_S unday. Knapp also struck out five and walked one to lead the Reds
to a 12·2 win. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

ln... dians, Blue Devils,:Reds, Falcons win
Kyger Creek
L.L. Tournament

nn an ar~)r and gut tu tlurJ -lln h.bL:~ ·
KL'\ IU Srnllh. \~ho walked before
luad tng '"a lks. ~cotcJ h~ h~at1ng th e Aurn ... and 111 0\'CJ to thtrd as Kemper
.mnor·\\.C:.ITIO£ Well~ thnl\\ to prtl' h· '&gt;t,llreJ . dtd .t~ KL·mpcr d1d on a \\1 tld
·~r

Br.tn'""' Fackler .11 the plate

Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Atnencan Legton
baseball team will be on a wave of
momentum heading mto the Etghth
DIStrict Tournament tonight afle r
sweepmg a Saturday afternoon dou ble header from the _Lancaster "B"
squad.
Metgs posted a 19-9 win. after
falling behmd 5-0 m the first inning
of the first game. Adam Cummgs
slammed two home runs and had
four RBis to lead Metg s m the first
game win That contest was called
after five inmngs due to lhe 10 run
rule .
'
In the secbnd co ntest. Metgs
jumped out earl y and held off
Lancaster down the stretch to post
the sweep Metgs tO&lt;'k advantage of
a strong pllching and plate pcrformance from Mtke Mollohan 10 ptck
up the wm. Jeremiah Bentley had a
four htt game for the winners.
The two wmsgtves Metgs a 11- 8·
2 mark -overall at.d 8-7-1 m conference pia~ .• Mctgs on the heels of a
f1vc game wmnmg ~ treak Will play

At hen&gt; (24- 11 ).I n .fi rst round acll nn
Monday evcntlig at 5 30 at Athen s
M...:Combs (they went 1-3) and . Ht gh School The two team s spill
Du~ltn B1ars (1·4 ).
Brd~N c ll" s hitters

were Burns.

w~nt

Ward (they

In the !&lt;oel:nnd. Ross Shan::n ·s
fr n/erHO J~ !&lt;. lll~lc to ce nter held ~c nl
1-r rL Bcm u)tt h(Hil e With Ihe run thai
~a \ e Rtd\\dl , 1 1·2 lead

Sharrett (they went 1-4).
Inning !Qlah
Gallrpol1s ........ 202 5-32= 14- 11-1
BJdwell l
.. 213-000=6·4· 2

Lancaster pulled to wnhin 1(}.8 in
the top of the fourth on a double by
Gressitk and a single by Alexander.
But once again Meigs answered
with another btg inning. Nick
Dettw.iller was hit by a pttch to lead
off the' inning. One out later Bentley
reached on a fielders choice. Heath
Rothgeb and Adam Wtlhams both
smgles. Cumings then launched oi
two run home run to left field.
Mollohan and Little both followed
wuh smglc s. and' a Lancaster error
made u a 17-8 game .
Lancaster cut it to 17-9 in lhe top
of the fifth mnmg on a pair of walks,
a single by Carhsle.
But Mctgs ended it the bottom of
the fifth ·after the first two batters
were ri:ured Wtlh~ins reached on a
fielders chotec, and Cummgs htt his
second home ruo of the game to end
11.
•
Jamie Ba~cr went the route . 10 :
pick up the wm. he scattered 12 htts: ·
walked · ftvc and struck out one.• .
Mollohan had a double and two sin.: .
gles to lead Meigs. Willi ams and&gt;
L1ttle each add ed lhree singles.
Cummgs added hiS two home runs
and fou1 RBls Baker and Rothgeb
two smgles and Bentley a double.
J W Turner was the staner and

put New Haven ahead 2- 1.
The Reds padded thetr lead to 3- 1
, when Cody Knapp's hne-dnve smgle
past thtrd baseman Juslm Smith scnl
Litchfield home.
Fruth's cut New Haven 's lead in
half. m the second when Derek
Newell , who tnpled to the right ft eld
corner, scored on Ltlchft eld's error
on Zack Thon.as · grounder a1 thtrd.

WP - Fackler

Ftrst-inmng two·run home runs

by lndtans Eddte Fife Jr and Daylon
Jenkms was but a hmt atthe thunde r·
stonn to come

The Astros, behmd 4-0.when they
came to bat for the first ume . made a
bad to get 11110 eontentlon . Man

t..P -

Van Meter

Blue Devils 14. Bidwell 1-6

thlc w a pllch wtde 'before unmten -

July 19, 1999 -

mnings.

Meigs County Commissioners

umptres tnlormed lum lhat Lntle

But Gallrpolrs n oted lor fi ve runs League rules don't allow rntcnuonal
rn the '~' fourth and sh UL out thF walks

D.nmmo 's-s pn~ snred crew m Ihe la&gt;t
used two wald pttches w arn vc at · 'three tram~:s Cn route to an e rl!ht -run
third base. scored on a double -s 'teal vtctory
•·
. '

Apparemly encouraged by throwrng Barry the Strtkc, Burns se nled
hack 11110 the pllchmg mode But
attempt . lhat rcs'!hcd ' 111 Da vtd
In !he ·ll rst a wtld p11ch dunng Barry drove Burns· 1hird p11ch to left
Poole's bemg throw n out at seco nd 'tyle r B-.1rry's at -bat se nt Kyle cc mer for a double that se nt Hudson
Imboden beat s~orts t o p Jere my Hud so n home wnh the Blue Dev ils· and Cunnmgham home Barry later
Blackston's throw to the plate to tnm frrst ru r:1 Jaim e Jones' s&lt;llTIIKe lly "l'OJCd on a dcad·ball situation m
t ~ND·

se nt Bclrry home ""tth the next run
The hcgrnnrng of the end o.f the

wh1ch Burns ' wtld pitch was wedged
the. hacks,to p fcncrng.

.un,orcJ Jones tn thl' pl.l\1...' fnllll\\ll1g

The Blue

Dc v 11 ~·

lead to a four-run gap 1n the tlmd a \llld pitch dunng Ronn y Butn s .11- Barry
(4-4).
when Enc Van Meter, who reached hat
C unnm gham

New York
Bos1on
·' Toronto
Tampa Bn)'
Ba.hm10re

"4337

554

4
7

6\)0

14

"

I~ ··

616

46 483
407
37 55
36 l4 400

Delrnil

MtnncSOia

'-'

10
20\
20':

54

"''

wnkm D6vlsion

.l l
560
46 45 505
. 44 47 484
4l 48 467

Tuu ..

"'

Oakland
Settde

"

Anaheim

5
1
8'-

NL standings
Eutun lli"lJion

"
l~!ca

Y!' L fiJ.

New York
Philadelphia .
Montrtal

!ill

57 36 61\
570
ll
49 41 544
33 ll 115
34 I S8 370

4

"'

~

Flonda

•••
21'.

22':

Ctntl'lll Dl"lskHl
. 54 11
ll 18

"

591
m
46 45' SOl
45 41 5110
. 41 41 489
43 46 483

Houston
CINCINNA.Tl
Piusl;turgh
M•lwaukec
St louiS
Oucago

2

•
•••
9'

10

Wrsrern Dhulon
~I .

San Franc1sco
Anzona
San Dieso
Los Angeles
Colorado

41

554

...

~n.

49 44
46
4t 49
41 49

2' ·

511

'9"9

456
456

..

·-

·

'

6·

..-

Sources o( fundrng arc as follows :

•

FEMNOEMA - $463,565.00
CDBG/ARC · $146,700.00
Sahsbury Township· $17,800.00
The project wtll consist of:
Elevation, tloodproofing, acquisition/demolition of impacled homes:
In areas of

NL CINCJNNATI1 Colorado 2
Housron '\ Oerto11 2 (10)
N Y Yankees 11 A~anta 4
P1Usburgh l l , CLE 'EtAND 10
Toronto 6, Aon da I
Ta.mp11 Bay ~ NY M~ts 2
Mmnes01:t 8 Oucago Cubs 0
Seattle 9. San 01ego I
Ph1ladelph1a I I 8 os1on '
Los Angeles I l An~lnl '
Snn Frnnctsco 7. Oakland 2
An zona 8. Te~a!i 6 ( 1OJ
Bnlumore 2 Mom rent 1
p.111waukee l I Kan~as C ny \
St loUI~ 8 C hlla~o Whue Sox 6

..

•.

Toronto~ Attaola l
8 o51oo I ! , Fl ortda 9
Philadelphm 1 lampa £la) 1
1'1' Y Yt~nL:e~ li Montr en l 0
Deuo11 9 CINCINNATI 8 t tOI
Mm~sota

..

·.

ily of the human environment and accordingly the Meigs County Commiss ioners have decided not to prepare an

•

~

at least 15 days after the publication of this com·

NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST RELEASE Q}l FUNDS (NOI/RROF)
' TO ALL INTERESJ'ED PERSONS, AGENCIES, AND/OR GROUPS:
'
'
"
On or about, but not before, August 4, 1999 the Meigs Counly Commissionors, will request the State of Ohio 10 release
Federal funds under Secuon 104(g) ofTttle I of the Housing and Commu~ity Development Act of 1974, as amended; SectiOn
288 ofTitle II of the Cranston Gonzal~s Nattonal Nfordable Housmg Act (NAHA), as amended; and/or Title IV of the Stewart
B. McKmney Homeless AssiStance Act. as amended; to be used for the project(s) descri~ed above.
The Me1gs County Commiss1oners is certifying to the State of Oh1o, that Meigs Counly and Janet Howard, in his/her offic1al
capad ly as Prestdent, Meigs County Commissioners, consent to accept the jttrisdrcllon of Federal courts if an action is brought
to enforce responsibilities rn ·relation to environmental reviews, decision-makmg, and achon, and that these responsibilities
have been sat isfied
'

...

The legal effect of the certification is lhat upon Jts approval, the Meigs County CommiSSIOners may use t~e Federal funds, and
the State of Ohio will have satisfied its responsibilities under the National Environmental Pohcy Act of 1969, as amended.
The State of Ohio will ac~ept an objecuon 10 its approval of the release of funds an acceptance of the certification only if n is
on one uf the two followmg bases (a) the cerhficatron was not , executed by the County of Meigs chief executive officer or

other officer of the County of Metgs approved by the Stale of Ohm; or{!!) !hat the County of Meigs envtronmental review
record for the project indicate.s, ~mission of a ~tep or fa1led to make a deciSion or hnding required by HUD regulation at 24
CFR Part 58; (c) the grant rectptent has commmed funds or mcurred cosls not authonzed by 24 CFR Part 58 before approval
of a release of funds by State of Ohio, or (d) another Federal agency acting pursuant to 40 CFR Part 1504 has submitted a
wntten findmg that the project is unsatisfactory from lhe slandpoint of environmental qua lily
Wnttcn objections must be prepared and submitted m accordance with the required procedure (24 CFR Part 58), and must be
addressed to ' State ol Ohio , Environmental Officer, Community Developrpent Di VISIOn; PO. Box 1001 · Columbus Ohio

.

'

Objecuons to the Release of Funds on basis other than thos~ stated above wttl not be considered by the State of ·Ohio No
obJccHons received after August 23, 1999, (which IS 15 days after it is ant1crpated that the State will receive a request fro

release of fupds), will be conSidered by the Stale of OhiO
The address of the ch1ef executive officer
Janet Howard, President
Meigs County Commissioners

1~

'·

•

..

Tonighl's games
(AL vs. NL unless otherwise noted)

, Aonda (Meadows 6·101 ac BO$\OR (Ohka 0-01

710S p m

• Philadelphia (0gea 4--9) at Tampn Bay (Rekar 6
4), 705pni
' Allanta (Olen 0·1) at Toronto (Escobar 8 61.
?~S pm

bined nouce

43266-0 101. '

.

.

No further environmental review of such projecljs proposed to be conducted , pnor to the req1,1est for release of Federal Funds.
'J'he Me1gs County Comm1ssioners plan to undertake the prOJect(s) described With the Federal funds cited above Any persons,
agenc1es, and/or groups. who have any commel}tS regardrng the environment or who disagree w1th this finding of No
S1gmf1cant Impact decision, are invited 10 subm1t wrinen comrm:nts fo'r consideralion to the Meigs County Commissioners,

Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769)&gt;y 4·30 p m on AuguSI 3, 1999, which

'"i St La ms !

Oakl:~rnl ~

'

CornmisSroners, Court Ho'use, 100 East Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~
'·
'\

Mtl waukee

"' for Release of Funds will not constitute an action stgnificantly affeding the qualIt has been determined that such a Request

'

. • ·NL Los Angeles (Dn:tfor1 7-81 at F&gt;msturgl1
(Stlva 2- 7) 7 O'i p m
• Dcuon (Weaver 6 51 :u CINCIN NA11 (Harmsch
9!6), 7 05 p m. ••
: Mont~al (Powdl 0- 1) al N Y'Yan kees tlrabu 6·

ll.7l5 pm

• N Y Meu { Dol~ I 1-t ) at Balllmore (1 Joh nson
7·ls p m
' Kansas City (Wnas1cl.: 1-6) aJ Ch1cago Cub5
(frochse l \-!2) 8 05 p m
• ChtcngO Whne So;o; (D:mel.:er 0-0l at Mil waukee.
("eterson 0.0) . .8 O'i p m
• CLEVELAND (Langston 1-0) at Huustotl (Holt
1J9), 8 05 pm
· Mmnesot&lt;t (li nco ln \-9) iU St Lmn s (Mcn.ker
1~3),

2;4).8,10pm

,

, Sari Franmco (Brock. 6-7) ar Tcx11s (Gl y-nn 2-1),
· 8 ~1S p m
' • San D1ego (Clement 5- 8) at Anahe1m (Hrl l 3 8)
1605pm
1
1 ' Colorado (Aslauu 9-8) at OaL:Iand (0qul~t 6-7)
1~0.5 pm
Ama na {8 Anderson 2· 1l at Sertnk {MediC 00}, \00Spm
'

(AL vs. NL unless otherwise noted)
Ph1ladelph1a (Byrd 11-6) at Tamp~ Ray (Arro;o
2 ~ 5), 12 3S p m
NL Los Angele s {Brow n IJ-6) at P1tubursh
{Schnudt 8-7}. I 3~ p m
Kansas Cny tSuzuk.1 0 1) at Ch1 cago Cuh~
{Serafim 1- t ), 2 20 p m
Snn D1e~o (Ashb)' 8 -1) m Amtltelm (Fmky ~ (}\ ,
4:'0S p m
Colomdn tK1le 5 flJ .11 O:~k t and (RogL'H -Ill
4 OS p m
, Detrou (Mhdo -'.&lt;Jl nt CINCINNAT I { P1m1~ 6
n 705pm
t
Flonda IL HcrMI\llc1 ~ -Al at Boswn (Ro~~ ~ -2)
7Q.~pm

~

NY Mets (l.e uer 1:1-f'l) at Bal 11more tPonstln fl .
6) 7OS p m
· At lama (Gia\lne 8 H)at Toronto 1Cwpcmcr 6-'i)
1:0~ p m
. Mont• eat ( fhurman ' ·b) a1 N I( Yankee$
tf£1emens8 4 J7Hpm
Whll~ So,. {S1rotka
11-~J. 8 0~ n1

t 'Noodatd

r

;

· Doug Brocail t3·31 pllched a per·
feet nmth and Doug Jones got the
fina l three outs for ht&gt; 13th save in
16 chances Danny Graves dropped •
(0

6-4

.'

'

AstflJs 2, Indians 0
AI Houston.• Mtk e Hampton
p11chcd a four-h iller and C raig
Btgg10 s1nglcd m one ru n and scored
another to !e:ad the Aslros to a sea·
~o n ·h 1gh scvcmh strmght wm

\~a~ the first . him' thl
Hen: 1.., Lhe .1gl'nd.1 lot the upcom-.
sltULk 111 .1 ~C'Hn tun not 111~ \\cc~
...
Br.mdon W.trncr t't) the pC11e on .1 that hdpL·d them tally the earl\ \\Ill
~ l'nnight : K\ge1 Creek vs. :
V.JIJ prl\:h dunng De rek Smll h" .It·
Mcanwhtlc. Ju ~llll Saunder·... \, ho Mlddlql()r\ RL'd" d ( 6 r 111 Barl oW4'" ·
lnnina .t2ti.li
h.H
~ t1 uck ou t the ~ 1dc m un1ct rn lhL' Vmu.~nt \.., Sout h.... e~ lern at 7 30
Fruth ' ~ .
...... 11 0·00= 2·J·J
,\ \\lid~ pll l" h and l\\0 l' ll ill ...... l!l:liiHJ Jnd fi ft h. fou nd hi ~ plllhlllg rIll
Reds .......... J05·04= 12· 11&lt;! hc.lpcJ hnng m two mnn: Tu n. . tll;11 m t; tlumcnt,tlm lnn JttngHC~Itolour
Tueo,;da~: l·cdcral Hockrng vs .•
WP - Knapp ""
g::h c ll\111 ~a ~-0 lc.td
h,t..,crunnc r~ .tnd kccr111~ 1\w Wc~t C.t..,tcrn F.1glc" lll 0 p m . Rutland.:
LP - ' Newcll
Alter a ~cumd t n ntn ~ lh.tt ~.m VtH~Int.lll'\ I rom .11.h.mun~ hc')(lllJ R~.., J .., ' '" Ptllnt Ph:asant State F t1m1 a(
Falcons 16, Home' Care ~1edi~al 0 both tr,un o., hill er~ fct ll t'd l -2· l tht:: :-.cc7md hasc The ,llt ..;t lr&lt;lm.._c wa ... thl' 7· ~0 p m
Ju stin Saunders's Tunc - ~t rt.kco ut Falum~ .~nm.~ d tlu e~.: mu rl' 1n the o n! )\ {mi.! 111 \\ h 1 ~ h Home · Carl' put
\\ cdnesda~: Pomeroy lnd ta ns v~... :
LWO· walk. prt chrng wa s but lhc l!p ul ' tlurd I he fDurth w;~s whe n SLo\1 two runners on and got dllY to "C''&gt; Gallipolis at () r m . New Havea -,
th e tccPerg that chdl mJ Pmnt SluaU c1 ~ two-1un bl.1s1 hl r t~lltLc n o nd
,
Reds "S Green lr vm s Glass at 7 30::
1
Pl easa nt Home Care Medic al's 1cr ne.tr the IJght pole hclpL'd lr\' ll,.s
lrvm ;;, hrtte!".. were Shrader ( ~·21 p m
t

AL leade,rs

cs tn g(: t to tlu rd ba~c. ~1.:o1cd thl.!
~amc.., hrst run bv bc.llrn~ Glh.:hc r

That

F ,t k on~

RATTING J~· tcr New York 111 T 1·ern.mder
foronro. ~68, Gam~r:ura Huston \ll.&lt;l R
Pal me\ro Te)(as. ,\4 8 Surbotr Hnh1 mon' 1'7
Bern1e Will tams New York \ \..j S Grl'en roromo
Hl M Ramii'Cl CLEVELAND Bl
RUNS Lofton CLEVELAND. 82, R Alomar,
&lt;Contm ucd fru tn Page -1&gt;
CLEVELA ND !:10 Je«er New Vorl.: 7R S Green
Toro n1o. 74. M Ram1rez. C LEVELAND , 74 .
throw home. Rothgeb then &gt;tnglcd to the fen ce Josh So llee f\l llowcd wuh \VIlli oms and Rot hgeh each added
Gnffey Jr, Seaule. 7'. Durham ChiCago 12
RBI M Ranurc z.. CLEVELAND. 98 Gnffey ~1ght and moved to seco nd when the J smgle. a sacnfKe ll y and ~ mg lc ~ h~
' 1n g h:~s
Jr , Seattle 84, C Delgado Toro(1to, 81 Juan
mi
splayed
the
hrt
He
B!.
!
n
Me
sser
ly
ancl
Ca
...
c)
Ra1ncr
Rtcc was the losmg p1tchcr v.tth
nght
fielder
Gonutu. Texa~ 82 M Ordont':z Ch1cago. 71.
Surhoff. Balu~ . 76, R Palmetro, Teus. 76
three stra1ght walks , i.tnd a Jarrod help fru m Grc ss u.:k The two gave up
later sc ored on a pass~d hall
HITS Jeter New York I ~ I , Surhoff. Bal11nnre
Mei gs increased the lead to B·O 111 Cole srn glc &lt;.: ut 1t tu \3 7.
13 hn s walked SIX , ~tr uck out ll\ e
1'10 Bot.tran. Kansas Cuy. I I 8 M Ordonez ,
Me1gs ended the scun ng m the &lt;~ nd hrt ,\ bdttcr So llee had two stn·
ChiCaJO, I t8 . S1ewart roromo, 118. Randa. Knnsas · the th1rd mmng on a Mollohan UouClly, 1·15 Bttnte Wtll iams. New York 115
blcandahom e runby JP Harm on
llitht nnm g on a so lo home r~n lw glcs 10 lead Lan caste r Grc&lt;stck
DOUBLES Greer. Tex il$, 27. S Green. Toronto
Lanc
as
ter
scored
a
run
in
the
top
Mollphan to cent er fi eld
"
addeJ hts double Carl"e· Mc»e rly.
27 T F~mandcz , Toronto, 27 ~C De lgad o Taronro
26 Mtke S.Jeeney . .K:msas C11y 25. Thomas
of the fourth wtthout the benefit of a
Molloh an picked up the wm w11h Ratner. Cole and Turner each added a
tlucagd~ 25. 5 ace ued w1th 2.&amp;
htt. On a walk, a 'ground out. a ft eld- help lrom Den wlller. The tw1' com- smglc
'
TRIPLES Jeter New York 8 Durham
Ch11.:a go, 7, Feb l~ . Kansas City. 6 , Damon Kan sas ers chmce and a Met gs error to make btncd to gtve up etght htls , "''lk lnnin~ totals-first~
Ctty. 6 R~~onda , Kansa5 Clty. 6 Offennan Boston. fr
11 an 8- 1 game.
l'oUI , hn llnc and sllt kc ou t lh rcc . L.tm.I'ICr .
....... 520-11=9-12 -2
6 are'ned wtth 5.
Mct gs
190-72= 19-11 I
HOME RUN S Canse co. Tampa lhy ll '• Metgs added h vc more run s m th e Me tgs pounded uut l.l lil ts led h)
Gnffey Jr Seaule 10 S Green Toronco 25. M fourth mmng On three walks, a do u· Ben tle y w1th as ht: reached base .til
•t 1
Batteries
Ranurel., CLEVELAND, 25, Juan Gonz.al~z. lex!U
Lancas ter J.W Turner (LP ) Jos h
25, Palmer Detrml. 24. C Ddgado Toronto , 22 R blc by Bentley, and singles by · five limos up wllh one walk . three
Palme1ro, Te11. as. 22
Rothgeb. Harmon and Nom s
singl es .and a d'nublc. Moll ohan l::de n (3). Rusty Htncs (4) and Mtkc
STOLEN BA SES St~wart Toronto 29, T
Anthony Gre ssick fin ally reached added two dou bl ~s and hiS home run Hagley
'
Goodwin T~~~.a s 27 Encarnacto n. Deuon. 24
BLHunter. Seattle. 24 Lofion. CLEV ELAND, 2~
Mollohan wtth Lancaster's ftrsl hit Hannon a Single and a home run
Meigs : Jamte Baker (WP ) and
R Aloma.r CLEVELAND. 23 Brady 1\n~rson
wtth one out m the fifth. a dou ble off Brown • had a doub le. Norris. A dam Cunungs. BuSler Pcmx (-I)
Bnlnmore. 22
'
PITCHING 0 I dem10nsJ P Maruoez Boslon
15·3, 833. 251. Petk.ovse k, Anahetm. 9-2. 818,
•
I 74 Mu suna Bal umor~ 12·4 750 3 57, CQ ion
CLE.VELAND. 8-3. ·n1.4 95 ' Cone, New York . 10·
I
4, 71 4. 265 , N;~gy CLE.VELAND II - ~ 687 H O
Fr~dd ~ Gama Seattle 10-5 667, 4 86 Clemen s
New York , 8-4. 667, 4 98
'
StRIK EOUTS P M11rt1 nez Bos1on. 187.
Mtlss1n11, Balurnore, 107, D Welh , Toronto. 106, C
Fmle) . Anahe1m 101 Cone Nc~ YorL: 97 Set~.
Texas 95, Colo n. CLEV ELAND. 93
SAVES R 1-tcrn a(\dez Tamp~ Ba) 27
....... .&amp;.
.
Wentland Texa s. 21 Taylor 0.1k land, 14 M
R1vera Nev. YorL: 21 PerLI\'al Anaheim• 21 M
Jackson CLEVEL'\ND 20. Mesa Seanle 18

------------------------------------~--~--~~------~------------------~------~------------------~--~.

Meigs Legionnaires ...

• Home runs
Mct gs. Adam Cum 1n gs ( 2) fo urth
11111111g one on f1fth mnm g. one on
~"'-

Inning totals~second game
Lnm:aslcr
, 000· 160·0=7·8·1

Metg&gt;

"42-510-x=l4- 13-2 1
Batteries
Pat R•cc (L Pl. Anthony GresStck
(41 and Jarrod Cole
. ,, Mtl c Mol lohan (WP). Ntck
Oettwlllet r5l and Adam Cummgs,
Buster Pcm x (5)
Horql' runs

Metgs J P Harm otf- thtrd tn.nmg ,
one on
Mt_kc Moll ohan-fifth tnnmg . none
on

..

Way to Tee It Up, . . ·
Do Some Pro Shopping.

•

RU NS Dagwell H o u~1o n fl -' J Rell ,\mona

..

7.8) ru

\l. alk ~r CoiNado 1-' K Y&lt;hmg. Pntshurgh
71 so~a Chll ilgo 70 l1•ggu• J-:! 0USIOn M M.1rk
Grace Chil ag o 69
"f
'
RBI Man 'W il ham) Anzona ~'i llngwdl
Houston 8.! Sosn ('hi(,Jgo KO L Walker
Color.u.io 79 M ~G.., ue Sl Lou1s 79 0 Jordan
'\llanl lt, 71 Blllilltl M!h\ aukL&gt;e 7l
HITS . L Guul.1la Au w n.1 126 (,'.tso.:}
CINCINNAT I 122 G1~ n\!1l c Plul11del ph1 ,1 120
' M.m W1llt:tms Anzona 110 Cmll u. M1lv. ,nl\..ec. r
114 lhgg10 Hou5ton 1'!1 Alt o n~o1 Nc11 Ynrk I I!
• DOUBL ES B1 ~1:10 Houston 19 K Young
Pll tsburl!h 28 Kent San I ra ncmo 2X K.1rr ns I m
Angeles- 27 CilS('} CINC INNATI 20 C Junes
•\ tl anH&amp;, 26. Marun, Pmshm gh. 16
TRIPI ES A Gonlalc/ rtonda b N l1crel .
Colorado 6 l'ilartm P111 ~bu r j:h 6 Rt..-..'51.: CINCIN ·
NA il ~ Ahrt'u Ph1lnJ elph 1a ~ M r-.tanmc7. "
Montreal 5 CamerpD CIN CtNNATI 5 Wu nn~L:
Anzo na S S Fm lcy. Anzo na 5 L Joh nsnn.
Chicago 5
HOME RUNS Sosa Ch1 cago 14 M cGw 1r~ St
Lcr u1s 11 Bag\\ell ~ Hou!t on 10 J Bell Anlona,
21. Burrmz M1lw a uk~ •16 L Walket Colorado
26 G Vaughn CINC INNATI B Mall W1lh.1m s
Anzo nn 21
STOLEN BASES tedc no, Ne~ YorL: 50,
Womack An zona 19 E . Young Los Angeles 14,
Cameron. CINCINNAII 2K. Henderson New Vurk.
27 D hd.sOn San D1ego 22 " K ~ ndall Pmsburgh.
22
PITCHtl\iG (II deciSIO ns) Bouenfic ld, St
Lou 1s 1-1·\ 824 4 0 1 Hamp1on. Housmn . l l- 3,
800 2 ~ I Sdulh hg. Pl11! udelptua. 14· 4 778 306:
Lima. Houston I '-4 7,6 '"i. 3 20, L1eber Chtcago 8-,
' 727 \ 5~ Smo hz Adama. 8-3, 727. 3 49 ,
WoodanJ Mdwou kfe, 11 ·5 687.4 10 Millwood ,
AtlaniR. I l-5 fiR7,327
SlRIK EOUTS Randy Joh nson Anzona. 2 19,
Sdulhng Ph1l adelpfua I \8 R~y no l d~ HOI.JSIOn
121 K Brol'. n Los Angeles. 120 1 H11 chcoc k, San
D1ego. 117 AstaciQ. Colorado I Ib: Ort1z. San
rrancuw I(N
.
SAVES Wagner, Houston 2J Hoflman San
D1~go ~~ N&lt;"n San Francisco 21. Shaw, Los
Angt•les 20 Url:lma Montre.1l 19. W1 ~ kmn n
t.hhuukee, 19 J F.m-u:o New VorL: 19

WNBA standings ·
Eastern Conference
'tl:

Iwu

9

New Ymk
l&gt;e1rm1

Md\\,tul~t·

• CLEVELAND (Coln o 8-1 ) a1 H oJII! l ~•l~
t Qcynolds 10-6) 8 05 p 111
• Mmn~:~o ~a !Radke 6·ti) at S1 Lou1~ thmcnt'/ 5
q l g IOpm

• San Flan~uco (E\It'S 6 01\ ) at T~'as n le1l mf. 6-7)
K•1"i tl m
• An1ona1R J Di msun9 -7);~t Xau r'r,lr&gt;1oyt'rH-"il

8
7
1

L

fl;l,

'
~

1110

8

467 .

foO()

-167

'
'
'"
'
"
Wt:stern Conference

Ch:tri UII~

Thesday"s games

· Ch1C.1go

bv A usmus

82 L

~ Ch1..: ago Whlll' So'- -I
ColuraJu 2
Sea nlc 8 Aru.onn 7 (10 1
NL Pmsbu rgh 6 Lo5 An)!elcs 5 I I 0)
Tuas ~ San Frn nc1sco 4
'
San Diego 6 Anaheim l
N Y Mets 8 Datu more 6

.•

Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of )969. as amended,
· "" .
Environmental Review 'Record(s) (ERR) for each of the Projecl(s) listed above have been conducted by the Meigs County
Commtssioners. The ERR(s) documents the environmental revtews of the project(s) and '!)Ore fully sets forlh the reasons why
such sl~tement is not required. The ERR(s) are on file and ayailable for the public's examination and copying, upon request,
between .the ~ours of 9·00 a.m. to 4:00pm. Monday thru Friday (except hohdays) at the office of the Meigs County

three more fUns that ballooned the
Reds' le ad, to 8·2
Jn the fifth . Sm1th"s error o n,. Fruth's .
Newell, Jacoh Savrc (hoth \\Cnt
J ·2) and Beckner ( I ·~~) were Fruth \
hitters

"l

K:msns Cuy ~ Ch1cago Cu b ~ -1
Hous1on l CLEVELAND 0

.

Detroit ble" a SIX ·run lcaJ . hut

mg \treak '"'1th two ho mers from :

Ton) Clark , anothe r from Dean:
Palmer and a pcrlectly e .ecuted bunt••

I

BAIT ING L Walker Colt.II;Jdo n:-; C:aey
CINCINNATI ~12 L Gon1..1lel. t\II WM '&lt;8 H
1Rodn guel, ChH.:ago, · 1 -K) Kendall P1~tsbu rgh 112
Cedeno Nt•v. York nz Glan HIIe l•hi100dlll11a

Sunday's scores

'

1

Brad Ausmus' squeeze bunt scored
the l• ebrcakmg run form the lOth at:
Cmcinna11.
'
The Tigers broke a four-game loS":

cconuilUed from Page 4)

NL leaders ..

• (AL vs. NL unless otherwise noted)

Laurel Cliff, Wtllow Creek, State Route 143, Slate Route 124, and ,Rocksprings Road
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
'
Estimated total cost of the Project

Mctgs County Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

!ill

"

Chicqo .
Karuu C1ty

)

$628,06~.()0

FORCED OUT - Seconds
after retiring the Pomeroy
Indians' Jeremy Blackston (cen·
ter), Middleport shortstop Matt
Imboden (left) throws past sec·
ond basemi!n Aron Fife in a bid
to retire Weston Fife and get 'the
double play in the first inning of
Sunday's Kyger Creek Little
League Tournamenl secondround opener, which the Indians
won 20-2. Weston Fife, who beat
the throw, later scored on a two·
run homer by Eddie Fife Jr. (OVP
pholo by G. Spencer Osborne)

t&lt;L

Ctntnl Di"lslon

Tnle I of Housmg and Commumly Development Act of 1974, as amended, See! ton 288 of Tille II of the Cranston Gonzales
Nal•onat Affordable Housmg Act (NAHA), as amended, and/or Title IV of the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance
Act , as amended, to be used for the followmg prOJeCIS{s)
'
Salisbury Township Flood Hazard Miligation.Activjues

h1ttc1 s were

L

49 45 52 [ '
4 1~ )
40
J9 51 419

CLEVELAND

The Meigs· Count)' CommissiOners, proposes to request the State of Ohio to release F~deral funds under Section 104 (g) of

Hud son
(2-3)
(2-4),
Larson,

II'

Saturday's scores

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS, AGENCIES, ~!'ID GROUPS.'

•

,.51 41,.

Eastltm Division

Jwtt

&gt;econd off Javtcr Valqucl 12·5).
htghltghted by two-run home" Irom
Rtcky Ledee and Derek Jet er
In other tnterleague game, , 11 "a'
BoSion 11 . Flonda 9; Toronto 3.
Atlanta 2, Phtladclphia 3. Tampa
Bay 2: Detroit 9. Cmcmnat1 8 m 10
mnmgs. Mmnesota 5. St LoUt&gt; 2.
J(an;as City 5. Chtcago Cuh; 4;
Hou&gt;ton 2. Cleveland 0. Mtlv.;mkec
5. Chtcago Whit e Sox 4: Oakland 3.
Colorado 2. Seaulc R. An.tnna 7 rn
I0 mmngs, Texa.-. 5. San Fran c 1~cu 4.
San Ot ego 6. Anahcmt 3. and the
Nev. York Mel &gt; 8, Ballmwrc 6
In the only NL ga me, Pllt&gt;burgh
heat Lo&gt; An gele s ti 5 m 10 mnmg'
Tigers 9, Reds 8

'
Luchficld 's chopper se nt Ru sse ll and offense
pad 111 kaJ to 9-0
Ju!&lt;.ttn Saundcr!&lt;. (2.J) Chns Mtller :
Kam Sayre home . Zerkle 's double to
H1s no·hHlcr wa~ welded to an
In the l1fth . th~ Falcon~ aggres· ~ I I 1. Man Moont::\ (I 2J a~d Mason
center sen1 Ord and Litchfield home l1' In·, G l a.,~ offc n,c that '-L'orcd m 1\I\C htlscrunnmg Ctmtmucd. Tommy Smllhi.I-3J
·
with the run s that traggcrcd the cacl1 1nnmg but the sc&lt;.:ond en 'route Saunders. ~Nho \\alked ar)d ,got to Inning Co lals
mercy-rule dec1saon
to a ! 1 vc·an nan ~ merl'y·rulc dcl'i.'oiton
thtrd on .1 \I,. lid pit ·h Jnd an error. lr"n 1 Gla,,
lD:l -17=16-7-2
, Knapp struck out fiv e and allo&gt;~ cd
In the op&gt; nt n~ frame. th e Falcon&gt; slolc home i\l th rche' c1 Kun" Hunt H11mc C.tre
. IXJO-OO=Q.-0-6
one walk while tos-.n• a thre c-hmcr ' howe J dartng on the oasepath ' "'Ic" tlun 15 yard' trom th e. plate af1d
\\'P - J S:tunt.kro.,'
Newell and Ylau ersoit combtncd to L !.!~H.h1ff hitter Tom m y Saunda.'\. fannl! h1s c:.tchcr Tomnn Sauntlcr..,
I P · Johmon
•
~ s1r1kc out SIX a nil walk l\lur for -" h 1) \\.,liked and u:o;ed t\~u 1,.1. 1ld pttch· ~astl~; heat Hunt' :, thn.J " '~' tlu: plate

Basketball

: (AL vs: NL unless otherwise noled)

Meigs County Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
(740) 992-2895

bases-loaded smgle sent ·Litchfield

and Chad Zerkle home Doubles by
Greg Russell and Kam Sayre add ed

AL standings

.~-

Ill to

run single off.thtrd base m ~ n Austtn Blue De11ls ' 1-0 lc .1d c.n ne 111 1hc
C u ~ n•ngha m . Barry and Larson
Dunfee 's left shoulder se nt catcl1e r ho11om of the fn st. Ky le. Kompcr. comhtned 10 whtff 15 and walk SIX
Ross Well and Blackston home wllh who reached on an tnlteld " '""' .md
Burns and Kemper combtneJ to
the run,s that rncrcased Pomeroy 's aJ"anccd Pn nn · snn1. bc~~ll the stnke outli ve and walk s1x. .
lead to 6-1. Mtddleport lrtmrncJ th.ll

;r

Btdwcll 1 cracked a 2·2 t1e 1n the , t1onally thro~mg a p1tch un the
seco nd and kd 6· 4 alte r thre e 1ns1dc corner for a stnk e Then the

Imboden,· who smgled to ·n ght and

Pomeroy 's lead 10 4· 1
In the second, We.storr F1fc 's

NOTICJi'.

In lhc thtrd. Knapp reurcd Fruth's
three Ju sun s - Ju stin Sayre, Justin
Lee an d Smuh - in order. In the bot·
tom of the inmng. Brenton Clark's

1005 pm

Baseball

Two batters later, Burns dectded
to rntentJUnally walk Barry Burns · .. r------;:!l':~~~~'m~T'F~~!"'':l'l':'~~m;;;o"'-:11:l'1'7l:l:!"'Fl'n!'"t'im'Fnl~m'

pttched the only perfect game in
He got through the ltr&gt;l mmng
World Senes htstory for the Yankees "llh th e help nl a dl\·tng catch m
1n 1956. He was among lhe 41 .93 1 nght field by Paul O'Nctll 10 rob
fans at Yankee Stadium who c8.mc Terry Junes of a hu In th e eight h.
out for Yogt Berra Day, hononng the Jose Vtdro hll a hard grounder up 1he
fanner Yankees catchmg great
mtddle wllh one out Secnnd base·
The two were batterymates when man Chuck Kn ohlauch. "hn h"' 16
Larsen p1tc.:hed his ma srerp1cce errors tht s season, ran 10 hts n ght to
agamst the Brook Iyn Dodgers on the backhand the hall. rl\oted and made
very same field 4 3 years ag o.
a perfect throw to fin~t lla~crnan Ttno
" I was JUSt thmkmg about my Manmc z to get Vadro
day." Larsen said ''I'm sure Davtd
·As soon as he hll 11. I sa td.
wtll thmk about this every day .of his ·There 11 goes."' ,Conc sat d "When
hfc"
Knobl auc h made the grcal play. l
Cone ( 10-4) was bnlliant in set· dectdcd !here "as some ktnd of
ung down the 27 Montreal batters. Yankee aura Mayhc there IS someHe dtdn 't go to a 1hrce-ball count a ll thmg to 1h1s magtc ..
day and struck ou1 10. but dtd need a
The Yankee; ga'c Cone all the
:suppon he needed \\lth a fi\c-run
couple of slrong defc.nstve plays.

Scoreboard

a

Middleport Astros 2'

Cone had to be thmldng back to
1996 when his career almost ended
because of an aneurysm near ht&gt;
right armpil . He made an amaztng
return after surgery. pitching seven
no-hu Innings at Oakland before
manager Joe Torre and pttchmg
coach Mel Stottlemyre dectded 85
pitches were enough.
'·'If Joe was gomg to leave the
deciSIOn to me , J'm gm ng back out
there and throw cau uon to the
wind ," Cone satd of hiS 1996 stan
agamst the Athletics. "J thmk Mel
and Joe dtd the right thing. trymg to
protect me . But I dtdn 't know if that
would be my last chance at one."
Watching Cone's performance on
Sunday was Don Larsen, who

Kyger Creek L.L. Tournament...

loser for Lancaster w1th help from

1-'3), Kemper and JUmped out to the early lead Andre~ Josh Eden and Rusty · Hines The
Miller, Mtke Hagley, Anthony three gave up 14 htts, struck out
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Grcsstck and Stephen Alexander all three, walked five and hll two
OVP Staff Writer
had smgles m the 1nmng and Bubha
Miller had two smgles and a tnple :
Second-round act1 0n m the K\ Qcr
Carlisle added a double
to lead Lan caster. Gressick added a ·
Creek Ltttle Lcaeuc To urna 1i 1 ~nl homer The Indian, als~ capnalllcd
In the thtrd. Bidwell ,got Burns
WP Barry (in relief of
Metgs staned to chtp away m the double and two singles, Carlisle a
began Sunday with the Pomeroy on five errors and three" ild puchcs. and Brad Aberts on and saw bolO get Cunnmgham)
bottom of the first Adam Wtlhams double and a single, Alexander two
Indians, th~ Galhpohs Blue Devtls. all of whtch forced Mtddleport to mto scorin~ post li on on a wi ld pile h.
LP- Burns
reached on a fielder's choice and smgles, and Dan Carson a single.
•,
Bec-a use Galhpohs starter Geoff
New Haven Reds 12
the New Have·n Reds and 1he Green change pitcher&gt; .
later scored on a single by Mtke
· In the second game Meigs opened
lrvm's Glass Falconscapt"unng wms
F~ckl&lt;r 's two- htt cumplete game Cunm ngham was forced to hold ·
Fruth's Pharmacy 2
Mollohan .
up a 13- 1 lead as Mike Mollohan had
The Galltpohs-Btdwcll I game. eflb n - Van Meter (1-1) and TF.h'ts Cody Ward:S slow· rnller to the
The Reds, after falling behmd
Lancaster mcreased the lead to 7- a no hitter going mto the fourth
whtch the Blue Devtls won 14-6. was Blucher ( 1-2) were the Astros· lone mound . Burns took advantage of Pomt Pleasant Fruth's Pharmacy 1-0 I m :op of the second. Miller tnpled tnnmg, but the v1sttors made tt mleralter half an innmg, broke into the and Magley smgled. Hagley was esting after that.
• the only Sunday contest not halted ·. hitmakers - neucJ hnn mne stnke- . that and scored
..
before , SIX mnmg because . of the· outs and SIX walks
·
Later '" the third. AbcrlS scored lead wuh a three-run first. broke erased on a ftelder 's ch01ce by " M1ke jumped oul a 2-0 lead in the' '
Middleport. whtch had Van Meter on Wllil pnch Ward made II to third -away with a five-run thtrd and Carhsle. Carhsle advanced on a stn- bottom of the first. Williams singled·
mercy rule
In the concluSion or first-round and Tnn Dexter on lh ~ mound. got on the pl ~y pefore Cunningham was recorded by mercy-rule win wtth a. gle 'by Gres_Sick and scored on a wild and mo~ed to second on a wild pttch. ·
pl,ay Saturday. the New Ha ven Reds six stnkeouts and three \\"alk from sent to first base ard Barry. the ~tart- four-run flounsh two frames later.
pnch.
·
. Cummgs walked and Mollohan
edged Pmnl Pleasan) Nattonwtde the patr
mg,thtrd sacker, was drafted to ptt~pIn the first , Seth Beckner drew
But Meigs exploded tn the bottom cleared the bases wfth a double.
.
Insurance 9-8. Green lr\·m's Glass . The
lndt.ms
hiller'
were Ward scored on Jone s' thrown\g &gt; fmt blood for Fruth's when he · of the inning sending 14 batters· to
Metgs scored four runs in lhe bot·
dol"ned Mason VFW 13-7. Kyger Blac kston . Wcstnn Fife .. BranJon error to s hu&lt;~stop That pul Btdwell sco red on Justm Lee 's sacnfice the plate scoring nine fURS. Jamte ·. tom of lhe second to increase the
Creek defeated Point Pleasant Grover (t hey, went 3-4). Eddte Ftle ahead 6-4
groundoul to second base.
Baker h~d two singles m lhe -mnmg, lead. Jeff Brown doubled wtth two
Hardware 12-5 and Barlow-Vmcent Jr (2-2), Jcnkms ,\.2-3) Wefl (1-3).
In the fourth. Duslin McCombs
In the bottom of the first. Lucas Jeremtah Bentley and . Mtke outs and Kyle Norris ·reached on an
mercy -ruled the Ohio Valley Day and Bryce Davts (bo th went 1- began the Gallipolis comeback w11h Litchfield 's sing le out of the reach of Mollohan had doubles Wtlhams and error Bentley smgled to score both .
Christian Defenders 21-0 before 4).
a douhle that se nt Phil Bokovitz shortstop Garrett Watterso n sent Jes&gt;&lt;: Ltttle chtpped m with stngles to runs and moved to second on the·
Federal Hocking shut out Pomt Inninll !!!!lili
home Mtke Larson's smgle to nght -Kam Sayre and Chase Ord home and go along with three walks ·and a hu
Pleasant Deal Funeral Home 7-0
lndtans .......... .420-( 14)=20-!6-0 center scnt.McCombs home wtth' the (See TOURNAMENT
p
S) bauer.
(See LEGIONNAIRES on Page 5)
Pomeroy Indians :ZO
Astros ..................... 101 -0=2-2-6 game-ty1ng run .
on age
The mnmg th.lt tllPk hL'tler th.m
ha lf' an hour h) pl.l j "J!&lt;. the ft)UJih
Pomcro: ~ IY h.mct ~ got I~ h1t"
111l'luJtnl': Sha\\n Oa\ \ t\\ll run

p11d1 ••nJ 11ed the game .11 2-2.

two games th1 s sea!'ion;
In th e ltrs t game . Lancaster

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Orlandi)
Washmgmn
CLEVELAND

222

14

Hou sto n
Sa• r:nm:nto
1..()~ Angeles
l\l1n ncsota

II

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II
K

f'hOCill\

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'

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10'
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!ill
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4'

6'

KN

106
'7 1

(&gt;47

\ .11

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K
K

Saturday's scures
1\l; nm:Sola 60 New York 5S
l' hfll.'m~: K-1 Los 1\n!!.~lt::~ 76
Chmh•u c 6 I wa~ hm gtt'HI ll.li

lktn,l l 77 CLEV ELAN D 61
S.1~1,un.:nw 7fl Or!&lt;~m l o 70

Sundav 's scnres

Nn1

'lllll.

~8 \.,1,1h .K1-UI

I ;I&lt;; i\n~dL·&lt; 7!( 1\,;u.\IOn h~

,

Tnnight '~ ~01mc~

Or!.m.tn .11 \\,l~tun!!IOil 7 I' 111
Utah .11 ( h.llil'Ht" 7 1(1 p m
S.IU.Jilu"i!IO at M1nnc~u1.1 S I'm
Hl1usmn al Phocm • )( P m

1

.

'

""
ALA llAMA BuREAl' nr Tm•PI~ II .1. l'RAI' t·I • nrn. RIIQQ, Box 4927 • Mo.NTGO MtaY, AL 36103-4917.
•

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By The Bend

The ·Daily· Sentinel

d

Monday, July 19, 1999

Pege6
Monday, July 19, 1999

Reader says giving children everything isn't always ·in their best interest
ents can do too much for their kids.
Kecp telling them. Ann . Maybe
some of them will get the message.
I'm sorry my parents dtdn ' l. -TRYlNG TO GROW UP fN CHARLOTTE, N.C.
DEAR CHARLOITE: Apparently. you've had the disadvantage
Dear Ann Landers: You have afraid th~y have done too much. If of too many advantages. Too bad.
oftoo told your readers that they do r d had to pay for my college educa- But at least you recognize it and arc
their children no favor 1:&gt;y giving tion. l111ight have worked harder for trying to repair the damage. I hope
them everything they want on a sil- better grades. If l had to pay for my the "silver planer" parents in my .
'er platter. I am living proof. I'm ·an car insurance and repairs. maybe r d reading audience recognize themselvcs and stop excessive gift givattrac tive 29 year old single woman. be a more careful driver.
My mother taught me to helieve mg . It cripples their c_hildren and
My parents paid for my college edutha1 a Prince ~hanning would come could make rhcm fureu:r dept!ndent.
cation: bought me every car I owned
Dear Ann Landers: Boy.. did
and made the dow_n payment on my along and take care of me . Well. he
you
miss the pomt with "Ticked Off
·
housc .r1
hasn't shown up yet . and I .am
l~x.as."
who \\'il~ raislng .hcr sis- _
in
0~ o'casio n ~ r ve tried to giv~ ~-unable to .Jive within my means. I··
tt:-r's
sun.
even
.though the mother
Mom and Dad moncv. hut thc v ~o:a1_1not manage my finances; and my
ron tinucd to rul!cct \\'elfare Jor.him.
•,
refuse 10 t.akc it. .
- :-.e lf t:r~tcc: m iS zero.
Tht: poinl. Ann. i·s thal the · moth ~
\Vhcn
"l
was
in
high
s~.:hool.
I
was
Before anyono.: caiJ .~ nic ~~spoiled
cr
is en~aging in ~riminal behavior .'
hrat. let me say I appfCtitlte evcry·A the envy of all ·'my" lnends. Now. I
1n
Tcxa~.
site l·an tx· chaiged ~itl_l a
thin g they have done for me hut I' m am the ~.me who is envious. Yes . par·

Ann Landers

.

We deliver

BY ED-PETERSON

Sc~urity

M&lt;Olager, Athens Social Security Office

a nd Medicare taxes and
report the wages once during 1~1!'
year.
..

•

lvJany ~ccns are workmg aHhc'ir
fir51 jobs this . suminer. Thecy may · SQCiai .S ecurily facts
.
need . information that will he lp
In 1999. a worker receives vne .
them understand the role of Social Social Security credi t for each $740
pf earnings. up to the ma·ximum of
Security.
Soda! Security Credits
fo ur credi ts per year.
·
During an employee's working
1o qualify- for Social Security
years on any joh covered by Social disabi lit y benefits. workers under
Sec urit y. wages are posted to age 24 need as lillie as a year and a
his/her Social Security record, and half of work earned during the )hree
he/she re~eives Social Security ' years before they become disabled.
earnings credits ' based' on t~ose ·
SoCial Security credi, s .. earned
wages.' These cred its are used later remain on the worker 's Social
to determine elig ibility for Social Security record even if he/she
~ccurity rctircl)len t or for dosahiiity changes jobs or has a period of rio
or survi·vofs bene fils .
earnm gs.
In 1999. a worker; rcceives one
If a person is paid ·$1, 100 or
Social Security credit for each $740 more in ca~h wages during a year
of earnings, up to the maxi mom of while performing household wo.rk
four credits per year. (Each year. (baby sitter, house 'cleaner, gardenthe ati10unt of earnings needed for a er. etc.). the employer needs to
Social Security credit w\11 rise as deduct Social .Security .and
avCragc car~ings levels rise .)
Medicare ta-xeS and report the
Two important points xoung wages once duri ng the year.
people need to know is that the
If a person works in a hotel,
c redits earned remai-n on the work; room ing hous.e.or boarding house.
... cr's St&gt;cial Securi ty .record even tf all wages paid rnus) he reported. '
he/she changes jobs or has .a period even if he/she earns le ss Ihan
or no earnin gs.
$1.1 00 during the year. '
.In addi ti on. the -number ofcrcd1f you hire your child who is 21
its a worker needs to be eli gible for or older to perform hou sehold work
Social Security benefits ·depends on for yo u. hi s or he"r earnings arc t.:OV ·
his/her age and the .type of benefit. c.red by Social Security. Household
Young worker's under age 24 need work ~one by your child who is
as '-little as a year and a. half of under age 21 IS 'not covered.
.
work- six · credi ts-earn ed during
T-ips that total $20 or - I:norc a
t h~ three ye ars before they become
mon th need to be reported to the
Jisablcd to qualify -For disahility cJ~lp l o)'cr hy way' .o f a written statc hc nclits if, the y become disabl ed ' mcnt
dnd survi Vors· hcncfits for thci·r ·
~oun~ fan_tili ~.:s. R1eti rement bend:it s "'"" No Need To 'Vail
takt: lo nger but no Iunger t h&lt;~n 10
. Thinki~g abciut applying for '
years of woi~k during a, worker"~ benefits at the:' Athen s Social Sccu~
work ing. career:.
·
'riiy office? Well before you ·!:!O. be
su n: to call to rnak'e an apPointment Then you'll be able to file ·
SpeCial Wag~ Rcport,~g
.
your claim a t 01 time thal"s co nv c~
S\llllC of the .most popular sumnient for you ... Wi lhout waiung. To
IIH.: r johs J"or (CCilagCI"S are ~aby s it ~
tcr. hou se c leaner, ga rdener or se t up an appointment just call 1lhlusc sitter. Social S~ c u ri ty ~lass i - R00-772- 1213. The hest ti111c to ca ll
1ics these jobs as househo ld work. is later in the month (between 7
If a tee n is paid $1, 100 or more in a.m. and 7 p.m ... on weekdays).
(:tsh wages during a 'year while pCr~ Remember the Athens orfice serves
lor n11ng this type ·of work, the people in Athens and Meigs Coun ·
emp loye r needs to deduct .Social ties.

a

~

'

,.

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for.you.
.

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
mes5age. After 6 pm

740·985·4180

'~

/

fled IMddara at the Office of
Contract• of the Ohio

allaya, btldgea, and public
ptacH of lhe Vlllogt of

Pomeroy, State of Ohio, and
Its auccessora, linea for

tranamtealon ond dlatrlbu-

lion of the eloclrlc energy to

tha : VIllage of Pomeroy,
Slate ol Ohio, and the
lnhabttante . thereof the
llghl, heol, power-and ofhtr
purpotoea, and far tho transmlaolon and dlolrlbutlan al
the samt wllhln, through, or
acroaa said VIllage of
Pomeroy, Stall! of Ohio. ·
Be It ordelned by the
Council of lht Vllloge of
Pomeroy, Slate of Ohio:
. Socllon Ill.
·
Tho Rlghlll, privileges, and
fronchloo hereby granted
shall be In farce and effect
for a period of twelve yearo
from the date of tho pas·
aage of_this Ordinance . .
Tho rlghla, prlvllega~, and
franchlae hereby granted
shall nol be constructed to

Opportnnilit~s

. (SIGN·ON IONUS .INCLUDED!

, '

..

.Colu rnlJia

Gas® ·_

of Ohio

GRADUATE NURSES
NURSING ASSISTANTS. ·

(/

Lone-Term Ca1·e Opportunities

I

'

I

,
I

•

li'ree Ettimalet

7 40-339~4160
Free estimates

Sutan Reeve•

Public Notice
ratione.
· Section VII.
Thlt ordinance ohall be
accsplad by the Grantee
from the date of lho peaugo.
Paaaed In Council , this ·

21al day of June, 1999.
Joe Musser, President of
Council
·
Kethy Hyaall, Clerk of
Council

•

(7) 12, 19 2TC

Public Notice

CLEAN HOUSE'
WITH THE

CtASSIIFUEIOSi
'

. Public Notice
PUaUC:,!!OTICE

Tha annual report Form
990 PF lor lho Klbblo

Foundation,' B•rnald V.
•Futti, Truste8. Is avallablt
lor pu!&gt;llc Inspection al
Bernard V. Fultz Law Office,
111 112 West Second Stree~-·

or mora years of complete

service will receive 5 we~tks

paid vacation.
Saclton V: Any employee

HUDSON
On his 74th
..

Please apply or send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/O Personnel
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV. 25550
.Fax: (304) 675-6g75
EOE

\

~

Birthday today july
19th..
SadiJ! missed by bis
wife Mildred Children
&amp; grandchildren
In Memory of
RUBAL CALDWELL
who leh this world,
heaven bound
July 19, 1998
Death beckms with
outstretched hand, to an
unknown land, Mom took
deaths hand without fear,
for she knew Chris! was
near, she took jesus hand,
and entered the Promised
Land .
&gt;J deeply missed by

'

Tomato pickers needed
Thornton Greenhouses
$5.15 per hour
Ages 15 &amp; up

H0\\'3.rd &amp; Marvcnc Howie,

Bob, Manic and all
Grcatgrandchildren

740-247-4334
.,

•

In
of
. LINDA LOU
STEWART
Nov. 16
· The angels are softly '
guarding ·
A quiet and stienl
grave;
For In II lies a precious
one
We loved but could not
save.
The things you always
did for us,
I think of every day.
They keep you near
and dear to us,
Though God called
you away.
I often sit and think of
you,
And speak of how you
died.
To think you could not
say goodbye
Before you closed
your eyes.
Your weary hours and
days of pain,
Your troubled nights
are· past.
And In my aching hAstrt I
I know
You have sweet rest at
last. . ·
eut some sweet day
we'll meet again
Beyond this toll and
slrlfe
We'll clasp each
other's hand once
more
And have eternal life.
Sadly misseq
and

I"

r

Sat 9:00 to .12:00

....

SERVICE
Pasture Manageme.n t
Cattle Equipment
Open House
July 17th
9am- 2 pm

r

IISSElliUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • ViQyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement WindowS
•Room Additions
•Roofing
COMMIRCIAltMIISIDEIITIAl
, FREE ESTIMATES

740·992-7643

Call985·~•

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS
s;ll;,, &amp;St~IIU .
1·800·31 1-3391

Free Estimates .
Contractors Welcome
Alba,.y, Ohio

{No Sunday Calls)

WICKS .
HfiUUnG InC.

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

• Lawa can ........

• llainiiiiiUCe • PI••"••
• llalcblag
•
• Retaining
I Brick

Bashan
Road
Racine,' Ohio

· 29670

We Deliver
Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt •
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

wan

Palla CanslraciiDD
Degree Certified
Land":r;.:;c~a~~

45771
740-949·2271

••.

Sizes S' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

JeJ~~IIY_ L • ._oQsh

Hours

1701

7:00AM- 8 PM

740-992-3470

3
-

Welk, cisterns, pools,
trees, lawn &amp; gardens

ST. RT. 7
10 X 10 $40;
10 X 20$60.

740-742-2080
7116199 1

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

f

The-Water-Man
mo PCI

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Now Renting

HARTWELL
STORAGE

. WATER HAULING

33795 Hiland Rd.
· Pom~roy, Ohio

005

Personals

Gentleman

See~mg

Compan•on·

Ship From N1ce Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Fneridsh 1p . Sencl Re -

plieS To : 553 Second A~enue .
.6-partment t403, Ga!hpo~s .

_;:__~

Start Da11ng Ton!ghP'Have tu;,
play•ng the Oh10 Datmg Gam~ . 1-

SOO·ROMANCE . extenSjon 96B 1.

30 Announcements

·992-17t7

.740-992-52!2

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Pomeroy Eagles

'

Clu.b Bingo On

New To You Tnntl S/"lopoe
9 West Sttmson. AlhE!nS
740-592-1842
Qualit y CIOI·hlllQ and hOusehOl d
1tems $1 00 bag slUe e•·ery
Th ursaay Monday th ru Sarurctay
9,()0-5,30
•

6122.~ t

EMERGENCY 911

RefleCtive AOi:lress S1gns
Aluminum 6"x18"
Sh•Poed Complete $20 00

mo. pd

TOLL FREE 1-{Jn-489--4911

DEPOYSAG
PU7S

Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M .
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Pa~lng $80.00
p'er.game
$300.00 Coverall"
$500.00 Stirbursl
Progressive top line.
Uc. # OD-50 11 .,.;....

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/ 11199 TFN

HOWARD

R. L. HOLLON

Thla Ordinance shall be

PAUL "BIU"

~~

740-117-GIP .

tion time.
Section VI: Part time
employees are not entitled
lo any vacation pey.

In Loving Memory of

I

.

.,, 1000
Sr. Rt.
•.
. 7 Soulh
Coolville, OH 45723

who recdlves 5 weeks vaca·
tlon may receive no more
than 2 wePkt pay lor vaca-

John Musser, President
David B'allard
· Scott DIJion
;
Garl Walton .
Larry Wehrung·
George Wright
(7) 12, 19 21c
'
In Memory

·

A &amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

All Makes Tractor' &amp;
Equipmen·t.'Parts
' Factory Authorizer!
Case-IH·Part•
Deale••· ·

will recalvo 4 weeks paid
vacation.
...
Section IV: Full · time
employeea 1wllh twenty;llve

retroactive and lake affect
on May 17, 1999.
PAS,SED: July 17, 1999
ATTEST: Kathy Hysell,.

. . . . ...

Gtll'dl"g

Pom•roy, Ohio 45769, dur· .

lng r~ular buelnoll .houro
lor a period of 180 doye
subsequent lo publication

complete years of service

Various shins'available
Full-time and part-time employment.
Olmpetitive wages and benefits.

'

Garoges

740-742-3411
Bryan Reeve•

CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS

'•

New Conatrucllon &amp;

Reni0dei1!19-Kttchen Cablnoll
VInyl Sldlnttf!oolo-Dtcttt-

Vinyl -Siding(!£ Sofil .
Profc.ssional work at
an a!'fordable price

Clerk/Treasurer

REGISTERED NURSES

~~~....

SuasetBo••
Construction

Shingled Roofs

lhoroughfaree,

Pleasant Valley Hos~ital is currently
accepting application/resumes for the
. following positi'ons. ·
·Acute Care

'

DO-IT-YOURSELF
DENTAL CARE

Company, Ita aucceuora'
and aaolgna, the right io
acquire, conatrucl. ·main· ·
lain, and operote In the

100' · 1000' Rolls I' &amp; 3/4' 200# Waler line
Fun hne of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulaton Water SIOI'age Tanks
Mon.· J!'ri. g:oo to 4:

(740) 742-8888

lll'U'U.Su,.•eiHome.com

CONSTRUCTION

Public Notice ·

s· Gravelie5s leGdt

Free Estim.ates

740·742·8015
877·353·7022

REYNOLDS

• Gravel • Limestone ·
• Fill Dirt • Etc.
740-247-4~~2

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

·(toll free)

. 25 yrs exper:.

4!2 TfN

Dltnp Truck SerYke

Wal!(-in interviews July 23rd 10 am ·1
.pm at the Ash Straet Baptist Church
(Middleport) and July 28th .10 am- .1
pm at the Gallipolis City Library. Must
· have a G.E.D. or High School
·
Diploma and a good driving record.
Call1-800·531-2302.
IT'S THAT EASY! ,

.

.

94'9-2168

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES NOW HIRING!!

. I'.

.

1-740·985·3949

Connection

EMPLOYEES VACATION
STANDARDS
An Ordinance to eotablleh of this notice.
employHa vacation alan· (1) 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16,
dards lor the Village of 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 12 TC
Pomeroy, Ohio effective
M"Y 17, 1999.
Public Notice
BE IT OROAINEO BY THE -~==- ··
COUNCIL OF THE VIL'LAGE
PUBLIC NOTICE
be exclusiVe and the
OF POMEROY, OHIO:
The tax budgol 11jr 2000 •
Public Notice •~ Council of the VIllage of
Section 1: Full tlme for lhe VIllage of Rutlond II
Pomeroy, Ohio hereby employees wllh one com- available for lnaplcilon st
AMENDMENT TO
reserves lhe power to grant plate year of urvlca will the office of the clark, Civic
ORDINANCE ·659'
similar rights, privileges receive 2 weeks paid vaca· center, Rutland, Monday
An Ordinance gni'lfilng and lranchloes to any other tlon.
through Friday, July 1£1.23,
(Fronchloe)" to Ohio Power peraon or persona, fll' or
Section It : · Full lime from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m.
----~firms, CO'"f~~atjon or corpo:..
employees wllh eight com- dally.
plete yeare of oarvlco will (7) 16, 19 2TC
110 Help Wanted
. receive 3 WHkl paid vacation.
In Memory
Section ltl ' Full time
einployoea with fifteen

I

TREE SERVICE

Rutland, Ohio
Truck .seats, car seats. headliners.
(ruckJarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops;·
'
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seals . .
boat covers. carpets. etc :·
Mon • Fri 8:30 - 5:00
·-· Over 40 yrs experience

Concrete

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985~3813

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

FREE ESTIMATES .

as ·

• (

,, .

Gutters
Downspouts .
Gutter Cleaning
Paintin·g

8treetl,

Ohio, until 10:00 a.m.
Wedneliday, Augual .04,
1999
Fo.r Improving ooctlona
MEG-124-51 .57; MEG-2488.99, State Routes 124 and
248 tn Oliva Towne hlp,
Meigs · County, Ohio, In
accordance with plans and
.apeclllcatlons by grading,
dl.alnlng, paving with
11phalt concrete an a bltumlnous aggregate base and
by replacing two culverla.
"The data sol lor completlon ollhls work shall be
oot forth in the bidding proand
posal."
Plane
Specifications are an me In
tho
Oopartment
of
Transportation.
. Gordon Praetor
Director- of Tranaporlatlo~
(7) 5, 12 2T-C

:J ""

'

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer '
Services
Sile·Preparalinn
Septic Systems ,
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

accepted from all pre-quailDepartment
of
Tranaportatlon, Columbus,

·.1

~

Your

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION .
Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
990597 .
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Malting Date: 06/25/1999
T~1-G990(218); TE21·
G990(210)
·
Sealed proposals will be

thing for an auction. ,
POMEROY - Meigs Local
The Community Calendar is pubTUPPERS PLAIN~ '--- Vacation
'·
'JisllCd as :1 free service to non·prOfit Chapter 17. OAPSE. spec ial session,
groups wishing tu announce mecl~ Meigs High School Library, 7 p.m. Bihle School, "Ultimate' Adventure TUESDAY
POMEROY
'
ings and special events. The calen- ·Mont)ay. for purpos~ of ratificati on · with Jes us" Monday through .July
LupustFibromyalgia'
suppon
group,
23.
6
30
to
8:30p.
m.
St·.
Paul-'s
Unit·
of
t:ontract.
·
dar is not designed to promote sales
Tuesday. 6:30 to .8 p:m. iit the board
ed Methodist Church.
or fund raisers of any typ9. Ite ms are
room at Veterans Memorial Hespi ~ • '
POII(IERO'Y
Vacation Bible
printed on ly as sj1ace permits and
POMEROY - Righ.t to' Life tal , Pomeroy. ·
can not be guaranteed to he printed· a Sch oo l, First Southern Baptist
Church, 41872, Pomeroy Pike Road . me eting, Sacred Heart Churo1h. 7:30
spcc ilic number of days .
,.
· POMEROY
lmmunizati"on
Pomeroy. July 19 .to 23, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Monday.
·
Clinic
,
Mei
gs
County
Health
p.m. Call 992' 6779 or 992-6328 for
MONDAY
POMEROY
·
Vac
ation
~iblc
Department
in
Meigs
Multipurpose
transportation ·and regisJratinn .
.
School , Monday through Fri'day. ·"'Center, Pomeroy. Child must be
. LETART
Letart Township
RACINE Racine Village '6:30 to 8:308 p·. m. at Mt. Hermon accompanied by parent/guardian,
Trustees will meet MOnday. 6 p.m . .
Co ulicil.. Monday, 7 p.m. at he United Brethren in Chrfst Church. an~ present immunization record .
at 1hc office building.
Theme: "Son Castle Fair." Classes
, municipal building.
for children, ages ;.2 to '13.
MIDDLEPORT ~ The OhKan
WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS- Skin test,
'
Co in Club . Monday, 7:40p.m. at the ·
Eastern Local Board of Educa' ;
' CHESTER ~ Pomeroy Chapter
Ri verbend Arts Council · building . in g by Connie Karschnik, R. N.
tion,
regular meeting. 6:30 p.m,. on·'
186,
OES
,
7:30
p.m.
Monday,
at
Meigs
Coumy
Tuberculosis
,
Clinic
Auction , refreshments, open to pUb~
Wednesday,
·at the Eastern Elemenhall.
Initiatory
work
,
members
to
nurse, Tuppers Plains Fire Station,
lie.
tary
Cafelorium.
wear chapter dresses and take someMonday, 4:30 to 6:30p.m.
I •

Howard L. Writesel

1 mo. pd

Public Not.lce

JONES'
• sw.n~

Phone (740) 593-6671

EXCAVATING

St. At 7

• 'l!lltl

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

KCB

Linda's Painting

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

r-

740-992-0038

' Free Estimates

deferred were 17, the minimum school scene. because that's tbe
age for blood donors, or 18, \he . first time in their life they can
_ lc~al a~e for a tattoo -or piercing ·· donate, " Berry said.
'
Tattoos and "'4JY piercings are
without parental or guardian consent.
' ..
fumped in a category with
The Red Cross ne~ds 500 pints · acupuncture and electrolysis. It
of blood per day. It collected has been the No." 4 reason · for
65.000 pints in the first six months deferrals for the last two years,
of the year. ·
trailing anemia, blood pressure
"Losing 273 doesn 't sound like and use of antibiotics. according to
much, except these people could figures .supplied by Berry.
have donated three times " in six
Some question the need. Sean
months, Brosky said, adding that McNally, a new Western Hills
the· actual toll lost probably is graduate, said the tattoo parlor he
higher.
·
patronized during spring break this
For blood drives at Louisville- year in Destin. Aa., was "comarea schools,, "the Red Cross rou- pletely sterile and almost hos(5itai·
·'. · ·.
iinely'_.posis. ·a sign at the door like.''
about the deferral rule for people
A regular bio()d donor. McNalwith tattoos. Many ' turn away on ly said he ' knew the tattoo on his ·
the spot. "They don't even have a back - a Chirfese symbol mean'
chance to be deferred," Brosky · ing ."to seek"- would disqualify
said.
•
him for a year.
..
At L;exington-based Central . "I w~s wondering .at the ' time
.(entucky Blood Center, deferrals why I couldn' t donate, The needle
are-highest in the March-April and he was using came right out of the
September-October periods, tradi - package," said McNally.
tiona! times for blood drives ori
" I guess if there's · a surplus of
campuses, spokeswoman Marsha blood, better safe than sorry." he
Berry said. ·
'
said. But if the,re were a shortage,
Many of those iurned away are· ''I'd take
., the risk."

• •

ALMOST anything

Call
for -details
. .
.

'

Chris Wood wattcd in line 1&lt;\r a blood drive thi s year were turned
blood drive al Western Hills H&lt;gh away when they returned from
Sch01i1. ready ,to do his publtc ser- spring' break with freshly inked·
~, v1cc.
.
tattoos.
First. a scan of the li~t of·'dis,
. "'Everything has ripple effect
qualifiers : .lnemia , antibiotic on the blo()d supply," said Melissa
usage, abnormal blood pressure. McMillan,, spq,kesw.oman . for.
America's :· Blood Centers, an
. No problem, Wood thought. '
But. as he plunged farther down . umbrella organization based in
the list. he spied another disquali' Washington, D.C.
fier: lattoos.
Blood centers adhere to Food
Oops. He wasn't expecting that. and Drug· Administration rules.
"It came out of nowhere." said Anyone who gets a tattoo or has a
Wood.
piercing of a body pan other than
That was in 1998, his junior the ear cannol donate blood for 12
year. Wood, ,w,ho is bound for months.
Western Kentucky University in ··. "That's just to make sure that if
the fall , had gotteri a jester's head any infection ileveloped, it wouldtattoo on his hip while on spring n 't pose any l'otential· threat to the
. break.
·
U.S. blood supply. It's a layer of
At the same time, he unwitti~g, safety," McMillait said'.
ly disqualified himself. as ·a blood ,: . The lass of potential donors
dmior for one year. He · wasn ·.~ because of tattoos has been pal(malone . Blood' donation workers ble if not drastic, blood-center
say it now happens routinely. ·.
officials said.
The rage foi body art. induding
At the Red Cross in Louisville,
tattoos and piercing, is cutting into 6 percent of deferrals' this year
the pool of prospective blood through June- 273 people in all
donors . particularly teens and - were due to tattoos, piercings
young adults.
and accidental needle sticks,
At Iroquois High School in spokeswoman Lisa Brosky safd.
Louisville. about 20 students who Most were tattooed, she sai&lt;j.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey ,

tt~~~~ 24 Hr. Taxi
Ml Delivery Service

felony offense for securing the exe- as an exemption on her tax return .. Should I honor our original agreecution of an official document by This will alen the IRS because the , rnent or try to convince her our
deception. (That means .causing a child's Social Security number will _ daughter can grow up just fine as an
government assistance cbeck to be be shown on both r~turns and proba- only child? -- SAN ANTONIO,
issued by claiming the boy lives bly bring about an investigation. The TEXAS
DEARSAN:Asthe mother of an
with her when he does nol.) That cheat will be exposed without a
complaint
having
been
.
filed
.-only
child who turned out just fine.
doesn't even get · into the. federal
MARQUETTE.
MICH.
I'm
the
wrong one to ask. I noticed;
charges she could face for falsifying
DEAR MARQUETTE: Of however, that my daughter had
her returns. I resent the faci that I am
·
course
you're right My main con- three.
supponing this chiseler. -- ASSIScern
was
the child's welfare, but
"A Collection of My Favorite
TANT PUBLIC DEFENDER IN
of
readers
clobbered
me
Gems
of the Day" is the perfect little
hundreds
DALLAS
for
that
dumb
answer.
My
typewriter
gift
for
that special someone who is
DEAR DALLAS: You and several thousand others. Keep reading must have been on overdrive while impossible to buy for. Send a self
my brains were on furlough .
addressed. long, business-size envefor another one:
Dear
Ann
Landers:
We
have
an
lope and a check or money'order for
Dear Ann Landers: That mother
I
M-month-old
child
who
is
a
joy.
$5.25
(this includes postage and
is a welfare cheat who is defrauding
"Denise."
we
~greed
handling)
to: Collection, clo Ann
When
I
married
the agency that provides the benefit.
to
have
two
children
.
l-anders,
P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago,
as wc11 as the lnleinal Revenue Scr·
Well.
having
kids
was
more
work
111.
60611-0562
(in Canada, $6.25).
vicc·hy illegally taking the -boy as an
exemption. Thaf could be a criminal than I imagined. and the financial T&lt;1 find out more ab9ut Ann Landers
burden is huge.
.
and read her past columns, visit the ·
oiT~:nsc .
I
now
think
one
child
is
eno.ugl-t,
Creator~ Syndicate web page at .
My adv!..:e t«;&gt;thc woman who is
1
1
but
Deni
Se
wants
another
baby.
www.cn;ators.co"m.
ac.LUftiiY rui·sing the bo.y is to. list him

·$ummertime work and I Tattoo surprise: Many find body art bars them as blood donors 'I
Social Security information
Of that tntal. 185 were under first-time donors who do .not know
FRANKFORT. Kv . (A P) pre-registered for a Red Cross ·
age 30, she said. A fifth of those the rules. "panicularly on the high
·"f

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

EXCAVATING CO.

·tRUCKING

IJ!I1CibmeQ'?PWii

DUMP TRUCK

llm•"ne

B,.lldozer &amp; Ba ckho e
Sen•ices
l-luu!l~ &amp; Trailt•r Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
. Grading .sept.ic .Sptems &amp;

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Olrt ·Sand
ge5-4422
Chester, Ohio

Utilitie~

(740~, 992-3838. ; .

10/25100 tfn

I•

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room tiddittons &amp; Remodeling

40

Glveawa.Y

2 Ktttens 1 Wh1te. 1 Ti'ger , 740·
388·8595 .
3 Month OICI Mounta1n FteS\ Dog.
Has had all shots Call aller
5PM . (304 )675·6343
.
· .

5 Adorable K111ens 8 weeks old.
VarKlus colors {304)882·2012.

Free Kllt6n s to gooct home . 2
Grey Males, 1 SHiped Female.
(304)675·6799.

•New Garages

Kitten. Female, 740-441-9873 .

•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng &amp; Gutters
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

K11ter1s · .Black Ear &amp; Tan Body &amp;
Black Ta11. 740-446-3732 .

•Patio &amp; Porch Decks
Free fstlmstes

it"

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·621 5 "
PomeJoy, Ohio

22

yr~.

J.AJ rnl

Part t1me S1ber1an HuSky ·pupo les.
740-742-3174 .
To GOod .Home :. 2 Free M1n1atu re
Kittens. Fixed &amp; Has Had All
· Shots. 740-446·2:201 .

.....-60

l:ost .and Found ,.

Found: B laclo; Doberman . Mercer· .,..
ville. Ana . (740)-256 -9 342

TRI-STATE
MOBILE
.
POWER WASH

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Trucks - tractor
Trailers - decks - driveways

• New Home~
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING
Spring Clean Special
2 areas $45.00
3areas $54.95
· 4 areas $69.95
5araas$84.95
Satislaclion Guaranleed
2 room minimum
378-6438 992-0077
1-877-626· 3~93
&amp;18199 1 mo pd

Hoof Hollow Farm
Horte• &amp; Tack
New &amp; Used Saddles
Also riding lessons

740·698·~290

J &amp; L.lnsulatlon
· &amp; Siding
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing &amp;Seamless Gunet
•Replacement Windows
. •Concrete
•Room Addihons •Gmoges•Decks &amp; Boot Docks
James Keesee II
PH: (740) 992·2772

Equ1pment Cleaned &amp; Degreased

JEFF STETHEM

PHONE : (740) 985-4218
i

EMAIL:

STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

•

FREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumrier Road ,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

7/22/TFN

·cREDIT PROBLEMS???
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruplcy
Repo • Divorded ·

WORRYING!!!

No Embarrassment...
You're Treated wllh Respect!
Call Now for 1ns1ant Approvalll** ·

CALL Ml~ FORI
(740) 448 · - ..

lniiiJ&amp;.271-11171

Found •. Male Bo~r:er . near Rout e 2 • ,
Area , (304]675-7755 .
lo ~t· Girls p resc ript1on; glasses.
May have los t in . Mea1:lowbrook
Addrt1on. (304 )675-3447

70

Yard Sale
Gatlipolls .
&amp; VIcinity ·

2 Families! Yard Sale, 7/21,22. 4
Miles Out Bulavil!e _Pike t;n Right.

•
All Week i Lar ge Garage Sale,
949 Old Evergreen RoAd .. Mon- •
day. 7/1 9th Thru Saturday 7/24th ,
9-5.
ALL Yard Sales Must
Be Paid In Advance .
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
Is to run. Sunday
edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition

~~·~1~0:~00~o~.m~-~~~t~u~~"Yl·--- ·

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In •
Advance. ~eadllne: 1:OOPm the
day bet ore the ad Ia" to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition- '
1:OOpm Friday.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
Rummage 01 All Kinrls For Sale.
2745 , Hunt1ngton Roa d. Apple
Grove, WV. (304)576·2835 .

•

�..

P8ge 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 19, 1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomaroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

PHJTI,TP

ALDER

-13=2=

40Courl-

ACROSS

42 lOde

1 lly1llic*

.

7 .-..

.,.._1D Pta•1 w• Puzzle

..-.

f.:l::C...
53F--

•

prec1l'kln

column

Auc:tlon
and Flea Martcet

--ugh

&amp;;I
A~ong
co,..,..t.
AJxttOf'loteOng S.rvte·
es Cons•gnmenl auc11on- Iotti!

Street, Middl eport Thursdays

Ohio ltcense 17693. 740·989·
21123.

R1c.t. Pea~son Auctton Company
full time auctioneer. complete

auct•on

service

tte.Ohio &amp; West

Licensed

VKQin&amp;a , ~-

173-5785 0&lt; 304-773-5«7

Wedemeyer's Auclton Ser v•ce
Gelipr+ Ohio 7.....379-2720

Wanted to Buy

90

Allsotute Top Dollar AH U.S Sil·

VBf And Gold Co•ns, Proofsets
Diamonds. Anltque JeweJrw. Gotd
Rtngs Pre-1930 US Currency
St0&lt;1ing. Etc Ac®isollons Jewo1ry
U T S Com Shop, 151 Secortd
AwtfUII, Galipnlis , 740-446-2842
AntiQues. top priCes p a•O . Atver·

•ne Antiques Pomerov Ohio
Ross Moore o wner. 740-992·
;&gt;526

Buymg Standmg Cherry Hatd

Woodlmba". 7~256-6 172
Clean late Motlel Cars Or
Trucks low Mttes, 1995- Models
Or Newer, Sm•th Bu•clt Pont tac.
1900
GaiOpotis.

e.-.-.....

Wanted To Buy Used Mobtle

-·can 7-oo-«6-0175. Or 1·
~5965

Er,1P LOYMENT
SER VICES

110

Help Wanted

--~__;_;.:_::.,...:.,:..+.:.A Per~n .:ro Help On Paper Ro·
Ule, Must Hall'e A Oravers l1·
e&amp;nse, Be Dependable 740 742

2852

SIStanl Nee&lt;led Approx • To 28
Hours A Week Communscar.on
Sk1H5 &amp; Comouter EqJenence A
Plus• Send Resume To CLA 4 79
CIO GallipOliS Oa1ty Tt ibune, 825
Th ird Ave nu e GallipoliS O H
45631

Scente Hdl s Has STNA Posl1ons
Awallable For 2 ·1 0 PM I t O
P:M -6 A M P1ease Apply In Per ·
son 311 Buctmdge Roacl -

Cosmetologist Needed, Full &amp;
Part Time Paid Vacaltons Free
c E u HoUrs 740 446 7267
Dnvers/ COl ls A Must Be
Home Ever:;- N1ght, We Guarran· ,
tee At Least 40 Hoursf W~ek
Full Benefits Alo'allable In 3
Months Stop By Our Offtce Bet
· ween 9 30AM To 5 30PM And
Appty In Person , No Phone C~lls
Please! General Relt~se Serv1ce
&gt;t
97 Hubbard Ave , Glps Oh
~
45631
Easy Work! Excellent Pay' As
semble Pro&lt;lucts at Home Call
Toll Free 1·800·467· 5566 Ei.t
12170
Experienced cake decorators
needed Pick up applleallon at
Dany Queen in ~ddleport SenIors are welcome
Experienced Cashie r
Lbd&lt;er (304 )695-3603

~ lot real estate

Transport d11 ver lor t OO bed
slu lled nur s1ng laethty Pr ov•de
1ransportat1on lor phys1c1an ap
PO•ntmen ts ,consults etc Mu s t
ha¥e good drw•ng record, enJOY
wor kmg w •th res tdents and famili es Po stti OI1 tS pan ttme and
on ca ll IS r equ ~r ed Po s1t10n 1s
tempora ry at th1s ltme lnteresled
appliCants shOuld appty m person
10 R oc k s p t~ng s Reha b Cent er,
36759 Aockspungs Ad • Pomera;,
Ohio 45 769. 740-992 6606 Equal
()poortunoly

which IS 111 w&gt;tahon of the
law Our r&amp;aOers are tlefeby

1nlormed ttlat a l dwelllnQS

aCvenrSed '" ltiiS newspapet

-bas~

1995 4br 3balh w llrep lace
16x20 000. 9~ fronl patch secl uded o n 1 72 acr musl sell
$65 000 00 740-379-2643

wa nted Beau!lctan Must Have
Managers Li cense 1 Oay Per
Week StO !-n Hour Apply tn
Pe r son At Scenic H1ll Nursmg
Cenlef, 31 1 Buckndge Road Bid·

3 Bedroom 2 Bath Aancn W1tfl 2
Ca r Garage And Shop 11 Mtles
From GalltiJohs, Will Sel Wttfl 2 ·3
Acres For $7 5 000 Or W tth 16 ; ,
2 Acr es For $9 5 000 Call 7•0·
379-2835

-

'W tldllfe Jobs to/S2 1 6 0/Hr Inc
Benef•ts GameWardens. Secun
ty, Mamtenance. P.irk-~angers.
No Exp Needed Fo r App and
Exam Info Cal11 800 813-3585,
Eat.8827 8A~ 91&gt;M 7 Days fds

3BA Home La rge Aoom Eat m
Ktt&lt;;he ri N•ce ' Porch , AC, 3/4
Basement Lot S1ze 50X90
$32 000 (304)Ba2-3772

one.

4 RoQms &amp; Bath On Cornet lot
W1th Ex11a Btg Yard . Crown C•ty
OhiO Owner W•ll Carry With Reasonable Down Payment 740·446·
9878

Situations
Wanted

5 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. I 0 Acres
Rto Grande Area, $159 000, 740..
245-1217

Wanted. Someone to tear down &amp;
Jemolo'e shed for lumber &amp; root ·
ong (304)895·3390

Beaullful brrck 3 br ho me. o n
lolo' ely acreage must see to ap
preoate 304 273-9485

~

Business
Training
Gallipollt Ce- College

140

Suy t'tomes From $10,000
1 -5 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financmg
Poss1ble For Lj strngs Call 800
319·3323 Ext 1709..

~careers Close To Home)
Call Today I 740-446-4367

1-800 214 0452
Reg 190·05· 12748

By Owner ~ SandtHII Road /Pomt
Pleasant Buck/ Ranch 3Bed·
roorflst2Baths Basement Two
2Car
Ga~rages
Acre
tot
(740)441-0618

170 MisCellaneous
SLATE TOP POOL"TABLE $425
24 FT AlUM WALK BOARD
$250 304-675·4004

Restored ll tctonan tlome SitUated
On 12 acres Village M1ddlepor1
secluded and pnvate ,apporntment call7~992·5696

Wanted To Do

County Certified Oaycare ProvKSer Will Take Care 01 Your Child·
ten Wtth TlCI Good References ,
Trarned In CPA &amp; F1rst A.td
Please Call 740 388 97t1
E &amp; S Lawn Serv1ce Des1gn, Implement a lion
and Servtce
Available tor Sprtng Clean up
ferlthzmg and planlrng Free estimates Sa t1sfact1on guaranteed
Greg Milhoan 304/675-1,fi.28

Small, 2 Bedroom House tor
sale between Locks/Shell Plant
Apple Grove Needs some re (304)576 2642

1&gt;0'"

Three bedroom house lor sale.
one and H2 bathS lul!y furnishe&lt;l ,
nice yard close tcr park 477 Sycamo re Street Middleport, ca ll
740·367·7000

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1988 Clayton C la11borne 2 Bed·
rooms 2 BathS All Electnc Ex·
tras' 740 256 6938

Ge orges Portable Sawm1ll don't
haul VOUr logs 10 the mill JUS! -call
304 675-1957

1994 Sunshme 16x80 3 Bed
rooms, 2 Balhs, 740.245·1302

J1mS Drywa"ll &amp; Conslt uc!10n
New Corrst r uct1on &amp; Aemodelf
Drywall S1dlng Roofs Adel l ·
tmns Pam11ng etc (304)674
4623 or (304 )674 0155

1995 Dutch Mob•te Home, 14x70
Vmyl S1dmg Shmgle Aoof Steel
Doors 2K6 Walls Thermopayne
Wmdows, Deck . $18 800 740
250·6980

LevaRock , $130 00 H2 Ton Dehlo'ered and also Light Haul!ng
(3041882 3323

1996 Clayton 16x80 AC 3BA,
N1ce Take Over Payments
$292 (304)675 8165

Med1Ca1d And Wa1ver lndepend·
ent Prov1det P10gram Nurse For
In Home Care
VISitS And
Dresslng Changes ln Local A.rea
Ltcsensed Practical Nurse 740388-0822To Leave Message

1997 Fleetwood Mob1le Home
14x70 Heat Pump 740·367-0565
Or 740-820-3907
1997 R~dman branr::l new central
alf, two bedroom one balh S2
, 13 1/2 w•de hved m le ss
vears, reason for selling
"tllness', $16 500 f5ee at Brown's
Tra•ler Courl M!!'1ersv111e or call
Betty Lowe 740 9!J2 604S

Shrubt Trimmed, MulChing,

Painting , etc Cell Bill . L.eeve
Message- (304)675-7112.
W11i Sit w1th elderly male person
6PM BAM (304)675-2617

48A 2BA $499 Down Assume
Payments of $239 mo {304)755·
5560

FINANCIAL

• Local Trucktng Company Seek1ng
Cual1f1ed Truc'K Dr1.,.ers Good
Pay A.nd Benehts Send Resume
To Dnver, PO Box 109 Jack·
son Oh10 45640 Or Call 1 740·
286 1463 To Schedule An Inter
VIew

Medrt al As si stant Or Westmor·
eland's Olf1ce Monday thru Fn·
day - (304)773 5000
.
Med1cal Pr ocessor FPI PT No
Exper1ence Necess ary ' 40K.. PC
Required, Call 1-800 663 7 440

Need Ftve 'CatJie TV Safes Per·
sons lmmedrar!) ly Excellent
Pay Loc al Work Call Char!re 1
877 · 830·6583 Leave Na me &amp;
Call Bacto; Number
NOW HIRING
$17000 PER WEEKIPT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY)
Men And Worr'len Needed To Do
Telaphone Operator Work For
LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
' Day And Even1ng
Stults Avariable
• Full And Part Time Opemng
' No Exper~nceO Neec!ed·
We Train
Students Welcome
Apply In Person AI
•7 Pine Street

21 o

--

Now Taking Appl rc atrons For
Drivers For Galhpohs &amp; Pomeroy
Otlly, Domino's Plua
OTR Driver .Needed Late Model
Conventional , Competrt1ve Pay,
Phone 740 -441 0601
After
6 OOPm 740·441-0556

Business
Opportunity

Clearance Sale All Displays
Must Go DownPayments as low
as $499 Interest as low a&amp; 6.91
Ltmlled t•me only at Oakwood
Homn, Nitro , WV (304)755 ·
5885 '

Area Coke /Frrto lays lt.1plon
Great Income Proven Mach1nes
LOcal Routes Ava•lable
Gall t 800-627 9519

Good selectiOn of used homes
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms Startrng at
$3995 OUick delivery Call 740·
385·9621 ..
~

Avail VENDING Route
10 -20 LocalrQnS $4K ·$1 0~
$4,000 +fMo Income
·All CASHr 100% Finance Alo'ali
1·888·536·9508 24 Hrs

New Bank Repo's Only 3 Left 1·
BQJl-'383-6862

BUSINESS SPACE RENTAL Of
flee Space Or Sales Rooms For
Lease On 2nd Ave. GallipOl iS
Close To Courthouse &amp; C1ty
6UIId•ng 1, 2 3, 4 Rooms All Nl·
cely Decorated, A C Water, Sew·
er 8 111s Are Pard Make Your
Cho1ce Now You Must See
These Spaces Phone For ShowIng 740·446·9539

Professlo!VII
Services

REAL ESTATE
Ho~T,Jes

Gallo Co. Half 011 SA 218
68 Wooded Acres . $40 000
Cash Prace. Pubilc Watet Ft iiSI'Id·
ty Ridge Rtl 1 5 Acres S14 000
CotySdiools.

Double W 1de On Lot $250 De·
PQSII, 1·800·383·6562

for Sale

330 Farms for Sale

3 Bedroom House Wtlh 3 Acres
Land Few Fr Uit Trees , :;: Bed·
rooms , &amp; Bath Upsta irs 1 Bed
room Front Aoom Dlnmg Room
Room, Kitchen . Bath Down·
stairs Sits On Storys Run Road
Off Route 7, For More lniOfmatJOn
Call 740· 367·7576 Alter Noon ,
Pnce $49 500

Small sell sulf1c1ent 52 acre farm
w•th tow workrng natural gas wells
and 1wo good ~water springs one
delo'eloped plus TPW 20 minutes
I rom Athens, 10 m1nutes from Po
merov. two nrce buHdmg sites In·
eluding, 14t170 w•th 7x20 llp·out
house trailer $68 .500, 740 •992·
3564

Ad 11 Aeres $14 000 Or 9 ltt:.r
es S 12.000 Public; Water Dan
vtlle Bn ar A•dge Ad · 7 Acres
S13 000 Or On SR 325. 9 Acres
s11 ooo Pl1lhc watef
Ca ll NOW For Free Maps •
Owoet' Fsnanartg lnlo Take 10%
on lJsl Pnce On cash Buys'
BUILDING LOTS •
FOR SAL£

~

2bd rm apts . tota l electric. ap·
phanoes fumiShed. lc11 undry room
laclllbes clOse to schoot tn town
Apphcahons aW"a •lable at Vlllage
Green Apts '49 or call 740-992·
371 1 EOH.

Bearue Babtes $4.

Bu1 ldtng l ots For Sale New Ha
Y9ll Area (:»41882·3456
LOT .spRING VALLEJ' One
large l ol Appro• 101 'x171 Cny
Water Sewer Nat Gas EI~H:Iric
AU Ar e Atta il able Lot 11 '7 To
Vtew 740-446-9539
Pr~me

Bw lding Stte 1 Acre
( 144x302) Mason WV No Re
stncttons St5 000 (304)882·
3772

Pume R1ver Bank BwlCJmg S1te
(63 x300) Cheshire No Restr lc
t1ons &amp; Meets FEMA Requtre·
ments 740-367-7669
R1ver lor For Sale West Colum·
bta Area Po1n1 Pleasant Stde ol
Spilman Chur ch Call ! 304)675
t437

LAND
In Gallla Jackson, Aoss Metgs
And Athens Counties 5 To 75
~ere Tracts For Aes 1dent•al Or
Recreatlqn Lan~ Contract Avatl·
able, FREE MapS Anlhonv Land
Co Ltd 1 800·21:3·8365

360

Wa01ed tg Byy l ookmg IQ buy a
Home. Pnce Range $30 S·$40's
on land Contract w1th 10% down
payment' Immediate Possess1on
• Serious lnqunles Only' Call
(740)-245 5529
We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay Casn 1-ti00-213·8365,
AnthOny laM Co

RENTALS

Uo - - 740-446- 1340
Apanment !of rent m MiddlepOrt,
no P8IS. 740-992~5858

3 Bedroom House, lull basement
Central
Atr
Mason
• $375 obmonth (304j 882 36S2
Clean n1ce 2 br basementtgarage ref ldep no pets 304 675
5162
n ouse 101 Ment 111 t..oounuy
Furntshe!:f (304)882 3970

ro~:~ru)'

Needed Room mate Male or Fe·
male to pay 112 house hold ~Ellp
(740 )·446·31 03 or Leave Mes-

sage

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1 Bedroom Mobile Home All utll·
tiles Patd Cable TV PaJd $275
monlh (304)895·3603
114 Conllor Street. 2 Bedrooms,
Mobil&amp; Home Ren t, $250/Mo ,
St50 Depostt. 740· 388 8591
304-633·8937
1985 75 x14' 2 'Bedrooms, Wash er &amp; Dryer Ltke New Atr , Dlsh·
washet, $375/Mo , 740·446·2003
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob•le homes. a1r
cond111oned, $260·$300, sewer
water and trash Included, 740·
992·2167
2 Bedroom Trailer In Smail Trailer
Park References. Deposit Re·
Qutred, No Pels, 740-446·1104
2 Bedrooms $325/Mo .. Utd1tres
No Pets Centra l Air. 740 446
4313
2 Bedrooms, &amp; 4 Bedrooms $275/'
Mo Or $350/Mo , Pius Deposit,
On McCorkle Road Gallipolis,
740-446-6844
Two ~edroom one bath , to tal
eleclr t C ~ outs1de Ru tland area ,
$250 month , $150 depostt, call
740- 992-7788 after 5pm

440

Apartments ·
for Rent ·

I BR AJC Near Holzer, I Sl
Month Free Wtth 1 Yr LeaSe
Ou1et Lo cat1on No Pets $279/
Mo Plus Utih!les 74 446.29s7

lad1es gold &amp; dtamond Jewelry
rettred beantes. "'1'114Dw A!C 304•
882 -3339
Makna Concrete Saw Gas Pow·
ered . Used one t1me r $300 00
Lmcoln/225 Amp , Arc Welder.
$150 00 (7401-24!&gt;-9856
Parents•!• 57 s1rateg 1es lo r surVIVIng parenthood Make the mosl
o l 11 Send $5 00 c hec k or m o
36357 Kmgsbury Ad , Pomer oy,
OhiO 45769-94.W

GraciOUs Irving 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1flage Manor and
R•verstde Apartments '" Middle·
por1 From $249-$373 Call 740
992· 5064 EQual Housmg Oppor
turnties

Prtmestar- frH OlrecTV Summer
Promotion Call now 1-888 -265·
2123

P1101 Program. Renters Needed 1-

Resort ~hlp , Racme. OhiO.
Includes tndoor pool JacuZZI
boat rental etc $2000 call 93754.8.01 15

800383~

N1ce 2 Bedroom Apartment Ap
pl1ances and all Uhhhes Fur·
n1shed $375 00 per month
1304)675 4302

Top Soil Fol Sale

NICe 2 bedroom apar1men1 lfl Syr
acuse $275 per monlh, $200 depas•! 740-667·3516
Now Takmg Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Town~ouse
.(partments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash. $315 fMo. 740·
446-ooo8
One &amp; Two Bedroom Apartments,
Also ~ouse For Rent In Town No
Pets Oepostt &amp; Aetrences Re
QUlled 740 446·9342

a-

2 f:Jdrm s Refr~geretor Stove Fur
nlshed 34 1!2 Smithers $2SO 00
Mo nth Rent
15 0 00 Deposit
740. 446. 3870

s

2 BR WID Hook-up References/
Oepostt No pets (304)675 5162

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mov•es Call 740-446- 2568
Equal Houstng Opportuntty

;:~i~~·~or;;:~y t~~'lt~rg rea~~~~

740·992 4514 ~partments ava1 l·
able furnished &amp; unfurmshed
coUntry sett.ng e111ency apart
ment, completely lorm shed , all
ut1ht1es pa1d, please call 740 992·
2292
2 ,Bedroom Aparlments , Unfur ·
nsshed, Security Deposit, Reier·
ences Re(luired , 740·441-0952

Appliances
Recond1t10ned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aefn
graters 90 Day Guarantee•
French C1ty Mavtag, 740· 4467795

10 Speed Bike, Curtains, Bedd1ng,
D•shes Woorten Chairs Rocker.
Toys. Mise 91 Garfield Avenue .
Galhpohs, 740-446-o639
18 ~

OlrecTV Satellite Systems:
$69 00 . one mon th free mov1e
channels limited 11me offer, call
1-800.7711-8194
1999 20 tt car hauler $5400
t 977 Sea Ray Cuddy Cab1n
$5000 304 675 6397 or 937
3935-312 call .evenmgs
Al~ays l1red bored? Want to teet
bette r? Change your lrfe 1n 7
days! Find out Mwll Call 740·'
742-31 19

ATTENTION : We ' ll Pav You To
Lose Up To 29 Lbs (Or More)
87 People Needed tmmed1ateiyl
Offer Exptres 7/28 Call740·441·

~ -~1 .:.98:,:2::_..,----,---=:-=--::-::

Day Bed Comes With 2 Mat
tresses . Pop-Up Bed Frame Asklng $200 740.446 4397
Discount Mobile Home
Parts &amp; Supply
Vmyl
Gal·
ton Alummum Fttlered Aool Paint
S2S 21 S Gal Wh1ta Roo f Pamt
$57 69. An c ho rs S5 Doors &amp;
Wmd ows, Gas &amp; Eleclnc Water
Healer s, Plumb ing &amp; Electr~ca l
Part s lntertherm M111er &amp; Cole·
man Air ConditiOners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobil e Home
Supply 740·446-9416 Galhpolr s

5 Year Otd Aeg1ste red Ltmous1ne
Bul (304)882·3239
For sale· 4 year old herelord bull
74Q-949-2849
Gumea ChiCkS $2 ea ch l tght
~f ahma bamtams, 1 vear Ol d $5
eacn. 740·992· 7880
Aeg•stered minialure horses
gOOd blood hnes 5 mares 3 stal·
hons. 2 mares are bred back,
740-742·2050

TRANS PORTATION

'91 Plymouth Acclaim 4 door,
51500 OBO can 740.9411-2270

t 966 Pont1ac Cata lina Good
CondiUon. $700 740 256·1102
1970 1/olkswagon Beetle, Newly
Restored , Must Se.tl! 740 3677117

t989 -1990CARS FAO!USOO
Pollee Impounds. And Tax
Repo's For ltsl!ngs Call 1·800·
319-3323 Ext 4420
1981 Chevy Truck Short Wheel
Base. 6 Cv l S1800 1986 Cut·
l-ass 2nd Owner Must See
12 000 (304 )576·2753 Alter
6 30PM
1986 Old s Calars 4 cyl . 4DR , 5
Speed Low Mileage, Mmt Cond1·
t1on New BaUery, Mulfler,Brakes
$4.999 (304)882 3894

AKC Registered Boxer Pups 7
weeks
old,
$250 OOea ch
(304)882·3397

1989 Ford Probe 5 speed 1new
t11e,s new clutch some damage to
nght front 'fender ,S1500 OBO
74Q-992 2956

AKC Rollweller Pups · Champion
Ped1gree RaiSed With Ct'llldren
$300 to $400 (304)565 4402
For &lt;Sale Jack Russell le rrre rs
740-742·2050
Regtslered m1ni pmscher lemale
black and rust $250 740 949
,_30_26_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1

St Bernard pups 6 male 3 le
male $150 each, 740 992·2721

570

Musical
Instruments

FOR SAlE CONSOLE PIANO
Responsible party wanted to
make low mo nthly payments on
prano See locally Call 1·800·268·
6218

FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO
Responsible Pa rty Wanted To
Mgke Low Monthly Payments On
P1ano See Locally Call 1-800 ·
268·6218
Plano For Sale Spme11Console
Take on small monthly pay
ments Must have good credit
Can be seen loca ll v Call
{800)346 1775

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Black Berrreti $12 00 Gallon Also
Hay $1 50 Bale Friendly Ridge
Ad 740-25£·1145

1991 Dodge Daytona ShelbV NICe,
Cond 1!10n , H1gfl Miles $2 300
740·441 0176
• t 992 Shadow looks and runs hke
new 70K cold a1r automatlc.
sunroof, 4 cyhndar spoiler. red
$3650, 740·949 2045 even!ngs
1993 Dodge Splrll 4 Ooors. PS
PB Til t Crwse AIC Low M1tes,
$5 000 OBO 740·245- 9679 740·
446 2044
1994 Cavalier 2 Doors . $3 295,
1994 Corsica 4 Doors. V 6. Au·
tomat1c Loaded, 86K $3 650,
Cook Motors 741).44&amp;:01 03
1995 Sebr;ng 58 000 Mrles nPoW·
er Wtndows &amp; locks Moon Roof.
$12 500 OBO 740 446 2109
1996 Mustang GT Black 21,000'
Miles, 5 Speed, AM/F.f-1 Cassene · CD Player 460 Mach
Sound System loaded $15,900.
F1rm 740 446 9480
1997 Chevy Cavallef 2 Doors 5
Speed CID T11t Crutse Power
Sunroof 43 000 Miles $8 500
740 992·7102
1997 Fo rd Asplfe 14,000 M1les,
$4,900, 740· 256 1417, '740·256·
6226
1998 P.ontlac Trans Am Fully
loaded! Pr~ce Reduced to
.$22. 500 00 Great Grad uation
Gtltll (740)-446-4548
1999 Ponuac Grand Am SE 2
Doors Stl.,.er. Automatic, Loaded ,
ltke New, And Under warranty,
Bought New In March Of 98
$16 300 Or Best Oller 740 9927102

72 Ford 112 ton Trvcil. V-1 Auto

67 000 m,fes , Good Cond•t!On.
$2200 00 [740~318-3!134 u...

07-lt-•

MMsage1

• A J 4
9A9753

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

• A

·g.t Jeep Grand Cherokee lare·

BeSI Otter

!

3n-2566

For Sale Home Grown Melon s
Tomaloes at Troyer 's Wood
Crafts 9 mile s west ol Galhpohs
State At 141 b.aktn Ad

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
7 Fl Locus t Fence Po s1 $2 2 5
eac h 500 or more $2 00 each
(304)882 32451(304)Ba2·2077
FAIR SPECIALS
JULY 5 THRU AUGUST 30
Lawn TraciOIS SI SO Off On LT 's
S200 OfllX's And GT s, $250 011
300' s, $3 00 Off 400 s And Z·
Trak 's Financing A.s Low As
59% For 36 Monlhs Or $250 011
On Co mpa ct Ul•ll!y Tracto rs
521 0' s, 5310'&amp; And Gator s Free
De l1verv Carmich ae l Fa rm &amp;
Lawn You' Local John Dee re
Dea ler, Gaii Jpolls Ohto 740 446
241 2 Or I 800 594 1111
Antique Far m Tra ctor 1939 Mm·
neap oli S Moline Mmt Con d1 tlo n,
$2,500 606· 9 28·3599 Aft e r s,..
Ashland KY Area

720 Trucks for Sale
1950 Dodge 112 ton 318 PS, drsc
brakes
excellent condition ,
needs some work 1947 Dodge
heavy 1/2 to n all ongma \, runs
great cond1l10n 1947 Dodge 314
ton, dually llael bed rough co ndition . $3 000 lor all. OBO or sell
sepa rately 740·992 4494
1986 EICam1no SS, 43 000 actu·
al m•les 305 V8 1304)675·3 521 ,
After 6PM
1987 Ford Ranger Kmg Cab
L11l Kit. 2 9 V 6 5 Speed
Wi th Roll Bars Runs G reat
LOQkS Good 740·446· 9552, 740·
446-9169
199:ll S- 10 4 Cylinde r 5 Speed
Ca b 11 5K M tl e s·
$3.500 OBO 740 256 1427
EA~end e d

9 1 Ford Escort $1 500 080 89
Dodge 4x4 lull SIZe, $6 000 94
Ford 4x4 F 350, ton P!Ck·up fully
loaded &amp; more $1 7 000 86 Ford
F 150 , $2 200 OBO 74 0 99 2
5532
I

39 UnellptlCied
win

HIM HIS
II

"'""-'I '"-...,.....,

tonne&lt; org

9 Outerwear
10 Bohemian

19 Allll (ebbr.)
21 Clolm

11 Pace
12 Being

23 Theeuma ·

22 PltHul

24 Delinellle
25 Weeklncl- ,
welcoming
abbr

26 Aware of
12 wda.)
28 Harveot

Motorcycles

1987 FXSTC, low miles. lOts er
chrome &amp; e•tras . $15.000, 740..
992-3112 alter Spm or 740·99~·
0078
1991 Honda 250X For Sale Or
Trade , $2 500 OBO 740· 3ST7893
1994 Honda Tryke Teal Green,
Low M1les In Excellent COndition
Wllh Escapade Tra•ler, lots Of
EXIras 740-256 6574.
'
1998 300 EX 4 wheeler, extendia
warranty induded, 740-7,.2-2780

.

THE BORN LOSER

:)I&amp;IL f.\'( C.LJI'
~\Ia. IWI«.U'.

'·

1996 Yamaha Wavera14er 1100,
only 24 hours 1974 18 112Ft 1
BaJa Sk1 Boat recently reuphol~
:~~~ Both run great (304)675;

PBBS
P889

5NT
7+

29 Eye pari

30 Cleopatra 's

river
31 Adventurous

PBBS
All past

deed

37 Fold

38 One, in
Germany

41 Lopsided
42 Gratuities
43 Curved ""

molding

44 Jethro -

45 Retain

47 Singer Turner
48 Plaf.parl&amp;

By Phillip Alder
On May 13, ~or a moment, the
Dow Jones mdusinal average was up
IlLII at 11.111.48. All lhose ones
made me lhmk oF aces, so here 1s a
deal m wh1ch dummy has ali four. It
comes from "Spotltghr on Card
Play" by Roben Darvas and Paul
Lukacs (Gollancz 1982)
How would you pian lhe play in
seven dtamonds? West leads a trump,
and East follows smt
In the coninved auction, South
opened with a weak two-bid, showmg a good stx-card sutt and 6-1 0
nigh-card pomts Note that although
Nonh had all four aces, he had to start
Blackwood w1th four no-trump
before proceedmg to five no-trump
(An tmmedtate jump to five no-trump
is the Grand Slam Force. askmg pan·
ner to b1d seven wtlh two of lhe top
three trump honors )
Unless you can produce, an unlike·
ly squeeze, your 13 tricks need ro be

1999 Chevy Z 71 SII\I&lt;Jrado 1500.
Red. New Body St)ie. AulomatiC.
All Power loaded 12 {)()() Mile&amp;
Sttcker PriCe $28 000 00 Asking
123.500 00 740.446-8142
•

().(E.!~: I

49 Bll I

two clubs and two club ruffs m the
dummy However, the ummg 1s
tmponant because after es1abhshmg
dummy's hean mne, you need to be
• able I'! draw truml)s. llus ts Ihe nght
sequence· trump, heal1 ace, bean ruff,
club to the ace, club to the kmg. club
ruff, heart ruff, club ruff, hearl ruff,
draw trumps, c...: ross to dummy' s spade
ace, and cash the hean mne , dt scardtng your lostng spade .
If you are feeltng tndustnous,
confirm thal1f you start trump , heart
ace, bean ruff, club to dummy's ace.
hearr ruff, you wtll fa1i After taking
your second club ruff, you wtll be
suanded tn the dummy wnh en ly one
way back to hand to draw the mtssmg trumps by rufftng the heart ntne!

BIG NATE

1993, 4 Cylmder, 5 Speed Trans·
mlss•on 39,000 Mtles out ot
Ford Ranger Truck $1 200
1304)675·3634
5 speeCI transm•ss,on lor Ford
Probe 89 9 1 6 cylmder, $200
080 740 992 2956
Budget Pnced Transmissions
and Engmes, All Types, AcceS's
To Over 10 000 Transmt~s1ons,
Jo1nts 740-24:;-5677

eve

New Replacement G.as Tanks 0

&amp;" A Auto, Ri pley. WV (304)372-.

SO Trede lor ·
52

NI&amp;~T5 60
..j1A'f8E YOU
Dt,H,YI,lAT I DO ..

1979 17 lt . camper sleeps
5 stove /oven fridge furnace exc
cond $2000 304-937 2832
1984 23Ft Prowler Clean lA
Good Condti!On W1!h Roof A/C.
740 256·6574

SLEEP SLOWER .

~

Anals-

54

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher

~are CJHied from QUOttn10ns by famous people past and PfKenl

~~in

s

"VYUIIPAX

s

AEGUVD

LWPOOUY

!he cipher stands lot' anothe r Tod8ys due T equals C

OODZ

p I

ZPBU .

T Y U S K

,D A

KPAAUID!IS

V D X . '

OZSNUY

s

H SRI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Thoaler 1s ihe most profound lorm ollocllonal wqtong

YIIAY NILf
PIZZUI

S@\\(llA -~~a £~s· WOlD
lAM I

-----"--141to4 ~y C\AY t . POLlAN
~Rearrange

leners

of

the

W four scrambled words be·
aw ta form lour airnpte word•

N.OFLYE
'

I
...,.,.
·R_H.--Ir-E..,K....-ll ~,'

r-s I&amp; 1 1 1 _
L...JL-.JI.-.1.,-J......J,..

Mother Ia teenager l[ytng
out for team "Anylhmg you are
g ood at wtll add lo your · '. • '- -

PRINT NUMBERED ~
LETTERS
•

1

I' 1· 1· Is I' I' I' I' I
II I II I II I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
You"N bUid a big """ rrg wh&lt;!n
you """' wrlh !he clasu(.rd1

Kmght- En nut - Spasm - Inland· MANKIND •·
Famous quote "To know what ts nght and nolle do 11
ts the w1cked cowa~dtce of MANKIND •

I MONDAY

JULY 191

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiOnal lrlellme guaranteE!
Local references lurmshed Es
tabhshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446-0870 ·t 800 287 0576 Rogers Watarprooftng

Tuesday, July 27. 1999
C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence- Patroting v1ny1 S1dmg ,
carpentry. doors Windows. baths
mobtle home repa1r and more For
free est1mate call Chat. 740 992
6323

Confronted w,rh several chotces
as lo whtch path w1ll lead you to
prospenty tn !he year ahead, n'll be
the one that offers you safe, alhctt
slow, s1eady growth There's danger
lurkmg dow" nsky roads.

Liv in gston s Basement Water
Pro ol1ng. all basement repairs
do ne, free ett1mates, hiellme
guarantee 12yrs on job expert·
ence (304)895·38~7

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) It' s easy
for any of us to fall m love wuh our
1deas or the sound of our vo tce, but
rarely do our hsleners feel the same

Res1d ent ral or commerc1al w1rmg
new serv1ce or repa11s Master U·
censed elect nc•an A lden our
El'ec trlcal WV OOO J 06 304 675·
1786

•

WDR

Home
Improvements

Electrical and
Refrigerption

.

OERRPAX

SERVICES

840

p A.

When it wot1&lt;s, it's so e)(hll8rattng " - (P laywright) Qavtd Hare

. , UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

FISHING BQAIING HUNTINQ
Or Jus1 Retaxmg In Your Own
Camper &amp; Camps11e Overtookin9
Blue lake To VIew 740·446 ·
9539

Aalnbow Bulldtf'l
BuUd new or repa1r old, no job
to o small or large MaJOr cr ed 1t
carrts
1WV029582
C au
(304)458-1049 BP &gt;528 8092

Folr
grode

CELEBRITY CIPHER

8

~

1995 Terry Tra ... el Camper 27
Foot Wtth Expando, CQmpletel)'
Loaded I Call After 6 00 PM 740·
446·6123

M&amp;A General Contractlng &amp;
Electr ic Carpentry, Porches
Trade r Set-Up s And Air Condl ·
llonlng, Also Mamtenance, 740·
441-0193
'

Author

tho chuckle quo;ed
.
. V' by filling 1n the misstng words
L....JL......I-..1.-.L-.L..-l you develop from step No 3 below

1987 2711 Southwlnds Motor
Home. 454 engme 39 000 m11es1
AIC, Seii·Contarnedl Generator
$18 ,000 (740)·388 8047

810

money

r-·7,. . . , ~,. . . .P~. .:I.1,.R---THI9:-A-rl--ll ~-~~~ple1o

3933 or 1·800 273 9329

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

.;

movement •

one spaae, two hearts , s1x daamonds,
FQr IKIIe· 1985 Pfocrafl bass boat
With tralter, 11 ' tong with 1989150
horsepower Johnson motor twa
frsh finders two live well motet
gu1de 55 lb thr ust loot controJ
trolling motor, $4000, call 740•
'
992·2650

790

Publlohed
Gretzky'o

Lots of ones
and aces

BOTTLE

1994 Astro Ext Converston - An
options like New Condition.
$8500 (304)675-3641

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

SWIIO ..nlon
Cuns

Opening lead: • 5

JI.ST GAVE

ASTRO·GRAPH
Well marntamed 91 Olds 88
94 00.0 m•les $5 200 Great lamJ·
IV car 304 675 3909

&amp;or

HONaRY l

1993 S 10 Tahoe 4K4 short bed
4 3 5 sp • low mtles, sharp
$8.500 304·n:J.5840

760

5
6
7
8

36 COmpel

• 6
•KJ10864
• K 7 4 3

56

HE CAN'T BE

1992 Chevy extent cab .ex&lt;~ S•l·
verado, 350 V-8 , auto. excellent
shape 740-949-2830

1998 883 Sportster. black excel
lent cond111011 74()..992-5828

. ...ling

~::!~olllte
IIlier

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer lloulh
Soulh
West Nord! East
Pass
2+
Pass 4NT

BARNEY

1988 Mere Topaz 4x4 Automatic.
4 Door. Real Nttal $1.800 (740~·

4

35A..,kl

• 7 3

I

3 Egypllen oun

32Amxeo-·o
llgnltuN
33 Sclry
34 Allect wllh

Sou&amp;ll

I

1987 Jeep Wrangler In Good
COnditiOn
New T~res And
Wheels Too Many Extras To
Men110n Must See To Appre ,
cuate 740-256-6574

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

23Sinalng27 Lovlng

• 3 z
• Q J 9 2

7~142

DOWN
Egypllan

1

21 CrooUcl

Eul
• Q 10 9 8
• K Q 10

1987 Aslro van 8 Passenge r..
4 3 V-6 PW/ PUCnuse , AMIFM ~
Casseue . Cold Alf Very Gooq_
CorObon. (304)675-5909

740

keyboerd

Q9

1986 Ford Aarostar Tranny Problem Won'l Slay In Park $600 Or

56 Hlp14 Symmer lllire 56 Klndolaoup
15 Pnc.rul
51 GilddiU of the
teSCheduiH
moon
17T...,..,tned
56 Prickly herb
11 Type ol croll

20UMe

A A I

do. .ea4 Slit cytinder, 75k, loaded.
exceaent conditiOn 740-992·6677
dayS Ot 7~-01 t9 .....95

Cannrng tomatoes a lread~ picked
740·247•2063

_;-v;,:

small monthly payments Good
credtl reQUired 1·600 7 t8-1657
enoL DOWN
v
C entral Air Cond ttronmg Adeled
To Your Furna ce Complete Du ct
Sy stm es &amp; Furnaces
Hea t
Pumps Cef!lf1ed In staller If You
Den t Call Us We Both lose1 740·
446 6308, 1 800 291 0098

Livestock

1967 Nova Ewcellent Co nrtllton
$1700 00 1985 Oidsmobtle Cut
lass 1 Owner $1 800 00 740·
446-4794

AKC RegiS:IItred Yorkshtre Mm1a·
ture Tamers F11st Shots &amp; Vet
Checke!=f, CFA Registered, H1ma
layan,. Pers•an S1amese Krttens
74(1.367 7705

Mollohan Carpet, Room Size Car·
pels Dnve-a·L1ltle Save a loti
202 Clark Chapel Road Porter
1740)·388&lt;&gt;173 1740)-446·7444

630

AKC Aeg•stered Boston Terners
Now Accept tng Depos1ts 740
388 9325

AKC Aeg1s1ered YellOw Lab Pups
Sho ts &amp; Wormed1 Ready 41h Of
Ju~ 740.256~336 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers , refngerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
V•nP Street , Ca n 740-446-7398,
1 888-81 8·0128

Ohio

Pets for Sale

AKC Golden Relrle\ler Pupp•es
Born May 9th $75 Each Parents
On Premesrs 740.446·1417

All Condlt1oners USed Different
S•ze s, Guaranteed! 740·88§·
0047

$k1rt~~~~~t~;~~95"5

Building
Supplies

3 AK C Yellow LaD Pups, Has
had Shots S200 00 eacht- (740)·
446·0080

Household
Goods

See The New John Deete 200
Seues SkJd Steer Loaders. 7 5.,.
JDC Fmanc mg. Carmtchae l' s
Fa rm &amp; La,vn , Inc 1-800 594·
1t 11 , GaDipolrs, 0H We Deliver!

t 965 Plymouth Valiant Aace Car
340 Eng ine 7 80 In 8Th Mtll.
A&amp;ady To Race Or Couto Be Put
On Streel For More Info Call 740446·3310 T1ll 5 30PM Monday
Thru Fnday Ot 740·367·0466 Af·
ter ~ 30P $3 500 00 OBO

6 Week Old Golden Aetneve1
Pupp1es $100 Each To Qood
Homes 740-682 7762

. MERCHANDISE

tnternat•onal 504 Tracror1 Power
Stee n ng. We th nes. T!:uee Pomt
H•tch .so Hor sePower Excellent
Cori!l $3.500 (304)675 3824

Waterline Spectal 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per lOO t• 200 PS
$37 00 Per 100 . AU Brass Com·
presSIOn Fllt1ngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENT,ERPRISES
Jackson Oh10 1 800-537 9528

2 Toy Poodles 1 Male 1 Female .
740 446 0325

Mobile home site available bet
ween Athena and Pomeroy call
740·385 -4367

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Hyd rohc: Hos a Mach1ne. Pa r1&amp;
washel La rge Assortment Sons
&amp; Bends Everytt'lrng Must Go
Ca ll So nny Today (304 )675·

710 Autos for Sale

560

Mobile home lot m Middleport ,
S100permonth 740-9923194
'

-f.;k;

\:1&gt;4~53-6196

Block bf!ck. sewer pipes, wtnd·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters
A10 Grande OH C8 11 7•0 · 2&lt;C5
5121

460 Space for ·Rent

Primitive Handmade Walnut Ar·
moire $300 Quarter Sawn Oak
Dresser. Belo'eled Mirror. $A25 ,
Miscellaneous Antiques , 606
928·3599

2359

Uttllty Trailer 5 Ft 110Ft T!tt Bed.
3 Years Old. Brand New 2x6
Treated Flooring $650, 080 740·
446· 7252 After 4 PM

550

Twin A1vers Tower now accepttng
applications lor 1BR HUD subSidiZed apt lor elderty and hand·
lcapped EOH J04.675-S679

E!IG • SC REEN Til

Gru bb s P•ano· lumng I rep alls
Problems? Need Tuned'&gt; Call the
pano Or 7"(}-446-4525

$60 00 K•nmore Poftable Drye r
$50 00, Ca ll Alrer 5 30PM 74 0
446--9066 .

740-446·9523

Buy or sell A1venne Antiques.
1124 E Mam Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
'am to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 10
6 00 p m 740 992 2526, Ru ss
f4.1oore owner

Fo{d Dextra Diesel H!Qh aM Low
Range R un s Gr eat $2 500

H06 Dozer Aecenl iy Rebu•lt
$8 500 Ftr m . .COO Gallon Tanks
On RubbeJ SSOO Each 7.0-«6-

Kenm ~;n~ Washer S60 00 , Ken ·
more Dryer sso 00 G E washet

Furn1s.hed. Ups1a11s Second
Avenue. No Pets U111111es Patel

AQtiques

t OO bl ol Wa lnur Lumber.
S1 000 1304)895-3390

'41 23

Very Ntce 2 Bedroom Apartment
In Cou ntry Senmg Washer lOry~
er Fng . Stove. Otshwasher Wa
ter And Garbage Patd, Tolai Electnc w l AC No Pets, Non ·
Smokers Only $.COO DepOSit
S4501Mo. 740 446 9585. 740

530 .

For Sale Shopsmrrh Mark V, wilh

(304)675- 3824

AERATION MOTORS
Aepalf9d. New &amp; Ret:ull •ln SlOdt
Cal Roo Evails I 800-537 9528

~I1Cat1 ons Setng Accepted For

510

- tnneapOltS
· Uohna
... · $21110:
U
UT
100.
$900. boft'l ctean Wtttl new pa~nt,
call HO 992 391 2 or 740·992 •
521 6

For Sale Ce-ram•c Molds And
Poomg T'"*' 740-388-3 183

JET

..

410 Houses for Rent

Retreo

Faunal 400 wdh .IOrQUt ampkfiel',

S20. 741). 25&amp;-6909

One bedroort~ turn•shed apart
men1 In Middleport, call 740·992·
9191

Real Estate
Wanted

~tty

1 Set Of t 998 Teen •e Bea mes

446-22051'9. No&lt; V•gmoa

W•ter •nd Ele.ctrlc Ready For
Hook~Up Nice (oil $1 ,000 00
Eaeh Call 3011-773-5186.

'

(

Mo-7~2&lt; n

llelga Co Rutland. Whttes Hill

1 Bedroom Apartment Stove &amp;
Regnge rator Included 740-4462583

To Everyone Galtla Mason
Me•gs Area, Stop By, See Pete
Peck -V1ew Our Beaultlui Homes
Beside Auto Zone Gallipolis, 7 40
446-3093

Bedooom &amp; Balh -

Wmdow Atr Uhh lte5 Pa1d $2851

New 3BR 5499 down, S189
Month Only Oakwood Homet ,
Nitro. WV, (304)7SS·5885

S1ngle Parents Pr ogram $499
Down llmJted Offer Call for de tatls (304 )755-7191

Be happy '" conlrol of )OUt hfe
)OUJ love yo1.1r mone'/ t01 t.ps
Ia• suc;.,ess send $6 00 ch or
m o '3(;357 K1ngsbufy Rd . Po·
merov OhiO .cs769- 9440

2 Rooms &amp; Barh $22SfMo lf'l·
ch.tdes Ultllltes No K •lchen 1

3 Room Upstan s F urntshed

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur·
nrshed and unfurmshed, secunty
deposit reQu•red, no pet s 740·
992·22 18

New Dream Home 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths loaded $314/M o Free
Delivery &amp; Set Only, C Oakwood
Gallipolis, 740-446·3093

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless we Win!
1·888 582 3345

310

7-....1~182

New 16x76 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths,
Must Sell I $500 Down &amp; $2231
Mo Only @ Oa~wood Gallipolis
740446-3093

New Bank repos o nly 2 lei! we
ftnance call304·722·7148

Approlo'ed Mas ter uoensed Eiectn clan WV025 956 Est1ma1es
for
Residential
Serv1ces
(304)675·7927

Gallpolls OH

Monday July 19th
Tues&lt;lay, J u ~ 201h
Wed!l8sday, Julv 21st
300PI.,t t!U600PM Only
Ask For Ms Hammon

B·L·O.W D-11-T
$499 Down All Srngles $999
Dqwn Dollbles Super Low Pay·
menls, L1m1ted Ttme, Oakwood
Homes Barboursville WV, 304·
736-3409

INOTICEI
1
OHIO '., LL .. Y FJUBUSHING CO
recommt ' nd · that you do bus1
ness w11 1&gt; r,l:! vp le you know and
NOT to :: -,,d money through the
ma•l un111 you have lnveshgaled
the oHenng

230

BRUNER LAND

31,0 Homes for Sale ·

E""""""

120

40 ACRES
Only $45.000 Great fof Reerea·
oon Or Hunnng Mosny Woooect
011 SA 141 &amp; SA 233 Can 8a Dow-~ Road Bu1lt To land Then
,On Into Wayne NatiOnal Forrest
!t' llown Lan(l Contract With Ac.pn wed Credit FrH Maps 1 80(}.
213-8365

are av3llable on an equal

larrv s

Fas t growmg bustnass lOoking for
milnager . also C!ashlers, full or
part hme Send resume c/o The
Da•lv S8ntmel , PO Box 729·75,
Pomeroy OH 45769,

.,

n.s newspaper wtl not
knowvogly aa:epl

B J · Remodehng Pamllng , In &amp;
Out , Carpe ntry, Cement , Yard
Work Decks Cleantng Free Estimates 740 256- 6827 Don 't
Fuss. Cali Us'

Computer Users Needeel Work
Own Hrs S25K $801&lt;./ Yr 1 800
476-8653 X 7771, wwW 1cwp com

this f'lello,.papt" IS s:tm;ecs 10
the F:e&lt;lelal FM Housing Ad
ol 1968 whlctl makes It llegal
to adYefbse •any Pteleteoc:e
~Of dlsc:nmlnaiiOn
based on race tDof religion
sex fam.-.al status or nabOnal
Ot'IQI'I. (II i!JI""'Ifl(enbOn to
make atrf sucn preterence
limttabon ar dlsc:nmiiOabon •

00

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell
ShifJey Speafs, 304-675- 1429

"

tonal fone5L 740--31'9-2760

AI real estate iiiMifti5nl01

Part-nme Expen&amp;nced Offa As ·

180

Billing clerk' needed for busy medIcal off1ce Applicants reqwred to
have experience m lCD 9 coel
mg, msurance bllhng and Med1·
care gu1delmes knowledg!lt of
hospital and nurs1ng home codtng
preferred Computer sk11ts rii
Wages ..compet111ve
qUired
1: based on expe11ence Send resume to P 0 Box 207 Athens
OhtO 45701

'*

..... ....,......eoe

EOE

Avon PrOducts Start your own ll'l·
Home Business w'ork flex•ble
Hours. EnJoy Unhm•ted Earn1ngs
' 1-888·561·2866

30:1 Ac:~ei Jo1n 1ng Wayne Na

Overtnook Cente r 3 33 Page
Street, WKidleport , has pafl tune
po$lhOftS IOf lPNs av3f&amp;able lor a1
shifts and weekenas Anyone Inte r ested plea se stop by and f1t1

•

ACtiVIty ASSIStant PQS tti On avail·
abte at Aockspongs Rehab Center Individ ual neeele d t o asstst
acltvlly director in plannmg and
cany1ng out the schedu led mdt·
vtdual and group achv tfles Per·
son must possess specta l mteresl m , and a pO,SII tlie a1t11ude
about working With shoft ancl tong
term care res1dents and the el·
derty, prov1de a cheerful oulfOok
and pos1ttve perspect•~e for lhe
residents Preferred education/
eKperience state tested nursmg
ass1stant. previous expenence or
trammg In a health care settmg
Part t1me pos11ion e...en1ngs and
weekends Send resume Jo Rocksprings Rehab Center 36759
Aockspnngs Rd , Pomeroy
1
45769, Attn Dena Warren, Actllo'·
ii!IS Onector or apply 1n person

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

440

•

way Be care ful

th1s isn't your down~

fall today Major changes are ahead
Leo tn the commg year Send the
requm:d refund fonn and for your
Astro-Graph prediclions by matltng
$2 and self-addressed stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, do th1s newspaper, PO. Box 1758, Murray Hdl
Stauon New Yor~. NY 10156. Be
for

sure to state

your Zochac s1gn

..

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) No
~mer how Important It ts for you t o
~pedl!e a crtttcal matter today. do
noe take any shortcuts Chances are ,
they ' ll prove to be counterproduc11ve

mstcad of helpful
LIBRA (Sept 21 -0 ct 23) Don't

assume or rely on fr1ends to go along
wtth whate\er plan you come up wnh
today wnhout first dtscussing H wtth
them They mtght not be avatlable to
comp ly wtth your wtshet

SCORPIO !Oct 24-Nov 22) By
givmg people w1th whom you ·rc
mvnlvcd more authonty than th ey
al:lually possess, you open your!O.elf
up for someone to lake advantage of
you loday
.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dcc
You can easily go off on tangents

21l

today and forger about the real pn·
at h;md, unless you lay out a
game plan regardmg rhe objecuves
you'ld ltke to ach~ve Don't play 11

onucs

loose.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
Ltsten to what others have to ~ay, but
don ' t easily leap Someone With
whom you'-re closely involved may
offer you advtce that turns out to be
hatr- bratned

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fch 19)
Although you mtght nonnally be ahle
to ma~e sound judgments when
under pressure, this ~..-~ not apt to be
one of those days Take the necessary
umc to contemplate Important dectSJons

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Forego experimenting wuh complicated melhods or today and thmk

long and carefully before you tum lhe
first crank There's a b1g dafference
between creativeness and produc~
ttveness

ARIES (March 21-Apnl19) Generally you're a preny good communtcator, but not today If you realize
your remarks are bemg mtsutlder-

stood, rephrase
1m mediately

your

comments

TAURUS (Aprd 20-May · 20)
Compl1cat10ns can qutckly develop if
you try to take on more than you can
competently manage today or wander

too fa&lt; afield from your area of e.per·
tisc Stay

within your abilities

Tonght

GEMINf (May 21-June 20) Just
because most of the lime you can
bounce things around wtth uncrnng

accuracy doesn't mean you con do so
all the time. Today, 1mpuls1veness can
lead to wrong conclusions
CANCER (June 21 July 22 1 Be
wary of stgnml any ty pe s of d ocu
m c nts. today w11hou1 full )' undcr standtng what )' Ou "rc gcum g y t,ur~clf
tnlo Tht s advt r c hold-.: dnuhlc where
money i~ tm ohcd

'

I '

�..
•
I

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

~uly

Mondtty,

Pomeroy • M'ddleport, Ohio

19, 1999

Tuesday
July 20, 1999

Sports

Detroit downs Reds for second straight day, Page 4
Male technicians &amp; mammograms, Page 7
Time out for tips, Page 7

Kyger Creek Little
League tourney
continues
-Page4

Weather

Chester Alumni Association presents scholarships

•

Canine-Humane
Communication 101

Nearly 200 members and gue&gt;ts
attended the annual Chester Alumn1
Ass(X;ral!on reumon held al the Ea~l ­

em Grade School Cafetonum
A blue and wh ite color scheme
was earn ed out wtth balloons. can-

By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

dles and Streamers used m Uccor.tt

mg the table&gt; The &lt;:;hester Garden
Clu b proVided flower arrangements

Wolfe Van Meier, Larry Carnahan,
Marvt&gt;clle Cowdery Warner, Martlyn ·Orr Newman. Donna Wh1te
Ohlmger. Jeraldtne Wood Hawk,
Kathryn Dtll Meredtth.
1954 Carole Connolly Barber,
K.1thlee11 Haym.m B1ssell Set.:kman,
Ann.t Jean Rose Phtpkers, NJra
Wolfe Hartman. Frana B~&gt; se ll Rt[tk.
OthC'r :.tlumm atrend mg were
1925. Howard Kntght, 1928,
Clara Freckcr Bacr. 1930, Thelma
Hayes. 1931 , John Batley. Nellie
Mtch.tcl P:.trkcr, and Ire ne Parker,
1933, Lula Ctrcle; 1935, Harry Lee
Batley. Sam M1ehael, Marte Hauck,
Llovd Dean, Mtldred ' Caldwell,
Ro~ald Osborne 1936, Esther
Frnlo..a Thelma B.tysmger. Kathryn
Dellt , R1chard Coleman , Mary
Kaull. 1937. Les Sponagel. ' and
Allred Wolle' 1938, Vtctor Bahr,
Arthur R 0~e
,
1940. Jake Gaul. Ltla Bah! Wtnh:Js 'hladys Mercc~tt'h . Gerttudc
Tracy Helen Marcmko Hen ry, and
Wilma White ~&lt;1 1l ard, 1941, Paul
B.tet R1chard F1ck. Sn Dorothy
H a" k Homer P.u ker. Howard Parkl'r HarphJ Oshorne. John LodWICk ,
anJ Bill Mcred1th . 1942, Lloyd
Wolk and Vt\lan Humphrey: 1943,
Norm.tu McCa tn and Chatl es
Humrhtcy . 1945, Frances Reed , ,
Maxmc Whitehead. Marlene Wolle
and , ~ack Etsc lste m, 1946, Horace
Korr Gle n Stout Betty Chevalier,
Ei lee n R11Liuc Kuhn
'947, Wilham Sordcn, Delores
Holt er Doroth y' Karr. Ruth Ann
Balde&gt;son . Robert Wood, Mary K
Ro se. Robert Mered ith , Dayton
Spe ncer, Cleo Smith and Woodrow
Mora 1948, Grace Ptckens Weber.
Howard Wol [e. Kathleen Moms,
1951 : Jean Dutst Howard Newell.
Howard Larktns. Kathryn Karr
Mor.t. and Buck Rhtxles
'

Certamly, communtcau on problems among people, whether
Robert \\'nod. pn:sldt!nt. extendcaused by differences m gender, ethmc and cultural customs, or JUSt
ed
a, welcome. and Max.ml' Whttc ~
platn lack of inlerest, can be annoymg enough-and can result m
head
led the group 111 smgmg "God
everythmg [rom a mild faux pas to d1vorce and all-out war. But when
Amenca accompanted by
Bless"
we attempt commumcauon across sPectes, we (huma ns and an1mals)
Dorothy Karr Jack E1selstem gave
are at a major diSadvantage. We talk, and they don ' t-at least not tn
the blessmg The steak dmner was
the way we understand
prepared by the school cooks and
What follows are some baste rules about communtcating wtth
served
by members or the P10neer 4dogs, the one speCies that seems most Interested tn ligunng out what
H
Ciub
we are auempung. m our coarse way to convey to them Dogs are
MKhclle Buckley. daughter ol
very social creatures and. on thetr own. m the world, don ' t work
Kevm
and Dwn~t Buckley .•md
alone but tmmed\ately bond tn soc tal packs The fam1ly dog constdgr!'nddaugh1er of Darlene Buckley
ers the human tamtly her pack'- even tf we are talking about one
and
the 1,\te Rog&lt;r Buckle) and Starperson and one dog. The human ts the top dog and does the lead mg.
hnl!
and Sandra Masser, v.as aw.mlthe dog foll ows - usuall y qutte happt ly
~
ed (he Chester Alumm Si.:h0l.trs lup
"
Vocalt zatlons are crucmlthem 1or the famtly ~qg As fa r as a dog
The Dale K.tu tt Schol.~rs l11r w.ts
1s conce rn ed a lov. -puched and g utteral sou nd emanm tng trom the ' '
,\warde d lO lt!H.'nl\ C.1sto son ol
pack leader IS a warnm g That sound means ''Watch 11. there be ~.; ri rc·
Mar~.;d]a C.t:-; to Wctkr ,l!ld gr.m&lt;.hon
fu l. You ' re pushmg It " Make thiS come out ol your mouth deep and
of
Nara Wolle H.trtnun an d the l.lh.Jt
s tac~.;a lo. don t let th1s sound ltke a whtne
Henry
H,utman anJ gH.:.lt-g: l ~l nJ son
A ha gh-pliL: hed lOne md1cates th.ll C\c rythm g ts OK fell the dog
o l the late Goldtc \Vnlk
he's a jewel a wonderfu l creature. smah ng e nthu s a ~tsllcallv as she
Ofl IO.:CTS' TCp Ci rl S WL'fL' gl\ l'll ,mJ
docs JUSt what you v.ant The hcttcr your t'mmg the LlcarL'r the
rcumon
dasses \'~re rccog ntlcd
(.::ommumLallon So 1f you see the dog 1s about do ~o me dreadful
Alumnt
.tllendtng
ll\llll th.:tr rr spL'(.&gt;
thmg , w:.trn he1 I hat 1s nm lmc with )OU You watch her approach the
tl\c rcunum classes \\elc
g.trbage l.'an sniff around s(Jc k her nose m. and then rumm-age
1929: Che&lt;te1 Kn 1~ h t .tnrl Syhtl
around . 1111 she comes up wnh a pnzc a discarded apple core She
Smtth
DoiS t B.ur
then chonip&gt; down on 1t. shakes tt . and fmally drops tt on the ground
Btl! Motl.tck. Josepht ne
1934:
You then s.1v 'NO'· m vour deepest. clipped lOne She tmmcdJ ately
R11l.:
h1e
L1111an
Williams P~ekcn~
bac ks oil · '
Elste Woode Hmes
But th~ _dog may return Why 1 B ccaus~ her 'vtew IS I am not su p1939: Elotse Ferrell Smtth Jack
posed to do that But why? Was I m the garbage too long ? Was the
Sorde
n · W1lm a M. M11ler. and Bob
wm mn g he~.:.t1Jse I lmgered? Maybe 11 was bec~use the human' wa ntDean
ed 1he aprk core h1msel1 '1 Who knows maybe. ne&gt;t t11ne I'll JUSt
1944: Maxtne Hawk Hunne ll
grab the dm ned thmg and run
Harry Holter. Wtllt, Parker. Gold.t
So 111 th 1~ lase the commumcati on (I rom you) was unclear If you
Btggs Frede1tck, Betty Lou Dean
don t w.ml her nosmg :.tround near or m the garhage iJt all. then tel l
George Holter. and Odic K.ull;
her the mome nt you s~e her domg thts Now thts may take a couple
1949: Jeanette Clark Lawrence
of t11ne&gt;. but eve ntually she Will understand
Jea
n Pooler Sexton . Lots SpL: n ~.x r
The key 10 a ll of th1s 1s cons1stency You must prm11de feed hack
I;Obersbach Phyllis Glasco , Donna
to the dog each and eveey time you sec her '" the garbage Never ,
'
.tlluw the'behav10r to conunue tust because you don't feel like barktn~ out the command " No1"
' '
- You wtll do the same thm g tf a love ly raggy- toy &lt;hewmg sessiOns
gets ,a little uut of hand and the ch3ir becomes the love object' Let
your dog know •mmed~ately thai chatr legs are not for chcwmg, but
Manlyn E. Ktbble of Tuppers her scmor rccnal at the Umvcrsuy of
raggy toys are JUSt fine.
,
Plams,
a ptamst, recentl y pre~entcd Rto Grande
By the same tQken 11 1s useless to dtsc1phne a dog when you have
She has studt cd muStc at the Umreturned home and found that she has chewed on the chatr leg It IS
ICrst
ty 'tor the past live years wuh
too late to get any teachmg done And pumshment does not teach. If
_Ednh
RoS&gt;, ptano, and Dr. Chnstoyou drag the unhappy dog over to the chatr and pomt to tt and ye ll , ·
phcr Ke nney. Jazz p1ano, an~ has
she may thmk that you· ~e angry because she dtdn 't chew all tbe chair
been
active wtth the Grande Chorale
legs or that she was not dmng her JOb properly and should have taken
Masterworks
Chorale under the
and
the legs clea n off! The dog's response - cowerm g wtth ears tucked
dtrcct10n
of
Dr
Merv
Murdock and
back-mdtcates not that she realizes that what she dtd twenty mmutes
the
Umversny
Jau
Ensemble.
ago was wrong She 1s tndtcaung only that she knows that what ts
by
Dr.
Kenney
dtrccted
gomg on nght now IS very !lltlm'claung ·
Her acuvmes have mcluded serv·
I! would be far better to create a sull-chewmg dog or place her
mg
as accompaniSt and mustc dtrec somew here wtth her raggy tog and nothtng else to chew. That way
tor
tor
the "Ltttle Buckeye Theater"
the ttwdung se ss10ns happen )Nhen there are the two of you m the
as
we
ll
as playmg pwno [or such
room
events as weddmgs, luncheons, and
dmncr banquets.

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

,on were Mr and Mrs Allan Gth son
.tnd son of Columbus and Mr and
Mts John Gih&gt;o n of Athe ns
Mr and Mrs Robert Alkire spen t
the weeke nd with Ray 'A lkire m
Columbus
Mr and Mrs ·George Lowery
were dmner guests Sunday mght of
Mr and Mrs Tom Lowery of Syra-

Debh1e

Carefoot ,

MARILYN KIBBLE '

News

Debbtc hosted a barbecue and fire-

Mr and Mrs T1m Stanph tll of

works d1 spl ay in the evenmg Others
attendmg were Gen and Jack Eller.
Do nnte and John Care foot , •Ken

ll llnms were weekend g uests of Mr

Shcm ,' and Donovan Dolos, Nanna

' MICHELLE BUCKLEY

JEREMY CASTO
l.

••

•

1952, Donald Mark s, Wilma 1927, .md Chester Kntght and Sybtl
Spencer Marks. Starling Mussar Joe Dorst Barr. class ol 1 ~?9 Hangt ng
R1tchtc , Martha Orr Lee Betty , baskets wen t to William Henry.
Smalley R,etd. Betty Newell : 1953, M.uvm l1.tcy. Ralrh Ball ard,
V1rgm1a Wtndon Tyler. Emm~ Jusc rhmc Oshorne Pauhne Parker.
Ritchie Rhodes Vtrgll Wmdon John Els1c Hmcs. Howard Knt ght MarGmther, 1955, Roger !(eller, Ralph lcnc Thompson Jean Durst . Phyll iS
Trussell, Janet Orr Mara: 1956. Jo hn Glasgo, I, loyd Wolle. Janet Orr
Rt ebel, Rose mary Keller. .Gene M.tra. Betty Smalley Reed Harry
R1 ggs and 1957 George Mornson
Ballcy, a nd Homer Parker
Lela Kmg Wtndon, Helen Hollman
It was 1 otcJ to JUSt ha ve mustc m
Wilson. and Kathryn Smtth Wmdon
the commg year rather than mustc
A discuss iOn was held conce rn - and do. n c1 n~ Offu..:ers elected for the
mg the trophieS and ptctuies that,. ycat 2000 wcte lt&lt;Hatold Newe ll. '
were 111 the Chester Grade School prestdcnt , Roger .Kellet v~ee preSIbu!ldtng whtch has been sold . It was dent. Qcorgc , Holter, second vtce
de ctdcd to have the ptctures lam11tat- prestdent. Maxme Whttehcad. sccre·
ed and cop1ed w1th cop1es to be d1s - tary, Frances Reed, ass&amp;
stant secreplayed m the Eastern Branch of the tary, Grace Weber. treasurer, JeraiMelgs County Dtstnct Library and · dme Haw k, ·assistan t treas urer;
at the Chester Courthouse
Ralph Trussel l. Starl mg Massar. B11l
G1ven specia l recogntuo n and Matlack V~rgtl Wmdon , and Je~ n
presented n owe rs were Howard ~exton. decorating committee.
Kmgltt , the oldest graduate , cla.-s of
Next )Car' s reumon was set for
1925. Clara Frecker Baer, class of June 3

Dunng her college career she was Hold s" Steve S1sson of Galhpolis
the rectptent or the ,Atwood Mustc on "It 1s Well Wtth My Soul". and .
sc hol ~rs h1p ,
the
UmverSity Beth Woolum of Jackson on "The
Women's Club scholarship, and var- Wtnd Beneath My Wm gs" .
She was Jomed by a UmverSity of
tous pnvate donor sc holarshtps She
graduated wtth a bachelor of sctence Rt o Grande Jazz En5emble. com-,
. .· ~gree m mus1c education and pl ans posed of Chns \Vyscarver, drum s,
a•teaching career.
Adam Bush. percussiOn. Steve StsManlyn recttal selections mclud- , son, bass; J P Lyon&gt;. trumpet. Dr
ed ''Norweg1an Concerto'·, "Ptano • Ke nn ey, trumpet, All tson Sword.
Concerto m A mm or", "Farewell to trombone. Morfica Zurcher, tramthe Plano", "Amber Waves". "Swmg bone, and Davtd Burroway, alto saxLow Sweet Chanot:· and a gospel ophone
Ktbblc "the daughter of B11l and
ptano medl ~y wtth Lmden Kelly and
Steve Stsson, vocalists
Mary Kth hl c of ·1upper» Pl ams
She accompamed Ltnden Kell y
of M1ddleport on "The Anchor

.tnd Mrs Virgil Ktng '
Recent vtsttors of Mr and Mrs
~nh Mahr were their grandchildre n
' M.1rty Foley and tamtly of Texas
.md Sandra Foley. Greg. Mt ckey and

Museum of Aviation at Seattl e and
VJ Jted Nel11e 's cous m . Eleanor
Avery, Wes t Seattle Eleanor IS
recove n ng lto,m tl~f fl u and near

Cheyenne o f Milwaukee

Alfred news
Nel li e Parker returned recently
I rom a plane tnp to the West Coast,
June 21- Jul y 9 She VISited her son

policy

1 In an cffott to Jli OVJdc nu1 tead c rshtp w11b ~.: un cnt ne'"'" th e Sun' day Tmtcs-Sentmcl wi ll ndt accept
wedd ings after 60 days from the
d ate o f the event

~ l

~

,.,w ."

\

'*

and C l= On July S they toured the I

pneumonta

Edward ts bUildmg a new house
on ht s land near Arhngton An electncmn. he IS workmg long hours on
a rush Jo b,at Everett, Wash

Weddtngs submitted alter the
•60-day deadline wtll appear dunng
1the week m The Datl y Se ntmel ,nnd
the Gallipoli s D311y T11bune
All club meeun gs and other
news arttcles 11'1 the soc tet; section
must be &gt;ubmttted wnhm 60 days
ol occ urrence All bmhdays must
be subl)litted wilhtn 60 days of the
Q(;currcnce

med Enc and Jan u n a tnp down the

Cal1 fqrma B1g Sur coast to Morro
Rock and through the v1neyards and
vegetable ftelds 1n central CaliforJIIa

She then flew to Seattle-Tacoma
Airport &lt;1nd VISited her son. Edward
Parker. Ius daughter. Tam mt , and ht s
Runntng record quite long
By The Associated Press
JANESVlLL.E, Wts (AP) John Evans' love nf Joggmg could
he constdered a long-runmng hobby
/1. \Cry long-run nmg hobby
Over three decades, Evans has
1oggcd ~orne 41,000 1T11Ies
How Ones he know 1 He's record·

cd rv~ry amlc he's run on ca lendars
.md "' notebooks stncc he started
Jnggmg on April t 9, 1970
"I Wilntcd tu ln sc ~ome wc1ght

Sn I ..,tartcd runnmg ," satd Evans.

.,

'- He Jo,t 20 pound; 11ght away and
h ~ ., Ol'\l'l

I \311\oi

gcuncd any uf 11 bm.:k
tuns about 40 1111lcs each

\\ 1,.' \!k

When he tsn t runn1ng . Evans
\pecw.l cducauon at Parker

tl'a&lt;.:hc~

Htgh School. works with st udents 111
hwlogy anp coaches freshmen boys
haskctb,\11

ATTENTION
·V ETERANS

]une25,1950~an.31,1955

Aug. 24, 1982-July 31, 1984
Dec. 7, 1941-Dec. 31, 1946
Any person who was on active duty with
the National Guard or Reserves during
these time periods and have a DD-Form214 is also eligible.
Please contact New Hav~n Post 140 or
phone 882-3101 after 5:00 , PM
Weekdays or I :00 PM on Weekends.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy • 35 Cents

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special' Meigs County Fair Pr~view E4ition. This Year's
Edition Premises To Be One Of The biggest And Best Ever!
Look For This Special Edition In You
Friday, August 13th Paper!
BE SURE YOU_R BUSINESS
IS A PART OF THIS
YEAR'S FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

charged In connection
with acid attack on potential witness
CLEVELAND (AP)- Two men were charged Monday tn connection
Wtth an actd attack on a wmnan who is a potenttal wttness m a [ederal
drug case
.
.Mann L Levy, 20, of Bedford, and, Buster B Young Ill , 20, of Cleveland, were charged wtth Witness retahatton, a felony that cam es a ma~lmum penalty of 20 years in pnson
~
They surrendered dun'ng the we,ekend
The. two are s'uspected m an attack on Raycme Smtth, 29 She was
worl(mg at a hatr salon m . nearby East Cleveland when the suspeciS
allegedly threw ·acta mto her face: .
Smtth IS a potential Witness tn a federal drug mvesttgatmn. FBI Spec~al Agent Robert Hawk satd Monday, and offictals are sull trymg to
detenmne •f that was the mot1ve behmd the at(ack
Authonttes are also conttnumg thetr mvesttgatton or the two suspect s
The two turned themselves 111 after an 11 -day 111vesugat1on that
became a · very htgh pnorny case" for FBI and local pollee offictals.
Hawk satd.
Bond for the two suspects wtll be set at a heanng 111 federal court on
Wednesday.

Appea~s

court reinstates family's lawsuit

CINCINNATI (AP)- A Columbus famtly has won remstatement of
tts lawsutt agamst the ctty and several pohce officers who chased a drug
suspect mto thetr home wtthout knockmg
The 6th U.S. Ctrcutt Court of. Appeals on Monday remstated the lawsun accusmg officers of unreasonabl e entry. arrest wnhout probable .cause.
unlaWful se1zure, excessave force and emottonal d1stress
Monday 's rulmg ts based on a 1994 chase m Whteh officers, mclud111g
some who were not tn umform. enterea the farmly 's home through an
unlocked door without knockmg or td entifymg themselves, court records
satd.
Pohce"'sm d they were wtthm thetr nghts ~ecaus e they were 111 'pursuit
As members of the farmly objected, officers handcuffed famtly member Ray Womack before realiztng he was not the suspect.
Followmg another search of the ~orne , they round the suspect
Fatmly members Betty Ingram and Patncta Colhns, who questiOned
pohee about what they were domg, were charged with obstructing offictal
bus mess The.charges were dropped after they gave up a $100 bond each.
The two sued 111 1995 , accustng officers of htttmg them A lower co11rt
ruled' agatnst the famtly 10 1997

Former school official found guilty
shooting into van~ could get 37 years
CINCINNATI (AP) - A retired school admtntstrator found gu11ty of
lelomous assault for tinng a handgun mto a mmtvan occupted by a fam·
1ly of four could be sentenced to a
maxtmum 37 years tn pnson.
Ebb1e Gadd , 58, of Fmrlield, was
found gutity Monday on four
counts of retomous assault m the
Feb 3 shooung.
Today's
He had pleaded no contest to the
2 Sections - 12 Pages
charge of tinng a handgun mto the
van occupted by Dame! and Pamela
7
Calendar
Devhn and thetr two children while
tt was stopped at an mt ersec t10n m
9&amp;10
Classifieds
suburban Spnngtield Townslup
11
Comics
Th e bullet shattered the glass on
Editorials
2
the passenger Sldc ,..and Mrs. Devlm
suffered cuts on her face.
3
Local

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

Gadd was arrested a few hours

3

Weather

•

Call
'
DAVE or KATHY
at 992·2155
F.OR MORE INFORMATION

The Dail Sentinel
·,

.
August 2 to Au gust 20. fro m 9 a m unul 5 p 111
She al so satd that 'apphcatlons wtll be tak ~n at dates to be annou nced
ror the latest round of the Communuy Housmg I m provet~ent Program's
how;mg rehabtlitauon and down payment assiStance program
-T~ussell said that her oft1ce ts currently m the process nt contac lln g
applicants ott the program's watttng IIsl. but that lundm g for the program
will provtde rehablluatton work for at least 3U households
Meeting With County Engmeer Robert Eason anU adm1n1strauvc assts- 1
~~~ Dav1d SPencer, the cOJmmsslllners drscussed proposed purktng lot
rmprovements at the annex bualthng , the tonner county home. adJacent to
Veterans Memonal Hospital
' The commtss10ners plan to pave the parkmg lot behmd the bu tldutg
where lhe grants and hous1ng office. litter control office veteran s serv~ees
orfice and county ex tenston office are nQw located
• departm ent can perform the work
Eason satd that the county highway
once the commtsstoners allocate the funds necessary.-- e&lt;tunated at $'1.000
-- [or the work.
Eason reported that the county wtll pave County Ro.td 75 Htland Road
would be paved thi S year to complement wmk bemg planned by the Vtl lage of Pomeroy. whtch will pave Mulberry Avenue and other stree ts

Eason also satd that the county was 111 the process ot ohtamtng loan
funds from the state to replace o bndge on County Road i. Lead111g Creek

Road

t

1

The commt sSIOners met \\t th Roge1 Stewart ofExu· l TeleGiohc. a lol:al
long distance prov1der Stewarl sa1d that hts l1rm otleJs a r1..11e of 7 .5 ceuts
pe r mmute for all m-state long dtlitance
The co mm issioners met last wc~k wllh a represenr:.lltve ot ftrst Com murm:atton s of Akron. whtch o tt er~ a ne go tia ted pnce of 7 9 cents per
tmnute through the Count) Cu l! lllllS~Ioners Ao.;soctallon of Oh10 The
board wil l ltkdy change long dtstance uuners . accordtng to Prestdent
Janel Howard hecau..,e the county now pays as much as 25 cents per
mtnute tor long dt stance 111 some offices
The hoard al &gt;o
-- Appruv,cd transft.:rli of tuntls lor the l:ornmun1ty corrections program
1u vem le youth subs1dy grant progr,un and aud itor s office .
-- Authnnzed the expenditure of $i,'i00 for the Department ol Hum an
SetvJces In make personnel packets Y2K-comphant,
-- Approved payment of bills '" the amount of $37o.85U 94
Present tn add 1t10n to Howard and Lentes were Count; Comrmss aon ~
ers Je[frey Th ornton. and Mtck Davenport . and Clerk Ulona Kloes

·Meigs .C ounty preparing for
another lean budgetary process

CLEVELAND (AP) - A ruhng ts expected m about two _weeks on
whether a JUry wtll detenmne t[ Dr Sam Sheppard was Innocent 111 the
1954 murder O[ htS Wife.
. Prosecutor, want a JUry tnal tn the wrong[ul tmpn sonm,ent lawsutt
Sheppard's son tiled agatnst the state
. The Sheppard famtly attorney wants Cuyahoga Cmntn&lt;Jn Pleas Court
"dge Ron Suster tc&gt; hear the evtdencc
Suster met pnvatc!y wtth •the attorneys Monday to di scuss arrangements [or the Oct 18 trial. The JUdge he will rule on the Jury ISSUe Aug 2
In a case that helped msptre TV's "The Fug1ttve," Dr ShepP,ard
conv icted or k1lling hts wtfe, Manlyn, a! thetr home in suburban Bay Vtl·
!age. He spent 10 years m pnson before bemg acquuted at a retnal
He dted four years later, m 1970
Sheppard 's son, Sam Reese Sheppard or Oakland. Cahf.. could col lect
an esumated $2 tmiiion 1f he can prove hts father tnnocent of the beattng
death

•

A change in eligibility dates may make
you eligible to join The American Legion.
The change is Dec. 22, 1961 is now
Feb. 28, 1961-May 7, 1975.
Other eligibilities are listed below:
Aug. 2, 1990-Cessation of hostilities as
determined by the U.S. Government.
Dec.20, 1989~an. 31,1990

BY BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A b1d 111 excess of a half-m illton dollars was awarded to Rose's Excavating of Racane for the eXtension ofwnter serv1ce H1 the De xter a,rea
Bids· for the project. funded through the Commumty Development
Block Grant [ormula program, Appalachtan Regtonal Comm1sston :·and
water :Wd sewer 1mprovernent programs, were received from se veral
firms, and were opened by the Me1gs County Commtsstoners last week
On Monday, the commtsStoners approved the bid of Rose's Exc~vaung.
the low b1dd er on the prOJeCt, upon the recommendatiOn of proJect engineer Eugene Tnplett and Prosecutmg Ahorney John Lentes.
The Leadmg Creek Conservancy Distnct wtll extend water servtce to
so me 60 households through the project
· In addtt1on to Rose's Excavatmg's btd of $540,406 O'i , the commi ~s t e n­
ers rece1ved btds rangmg from $550.186 26 to $812.374 10 [rom oth er
contractors. The engmeer's cost estimate for the proJect was $565.000
Dunng the commtsswne rs' regular meetmg on Monday, Grants admmtstrato r Jean Trusse ll announced that applicatu,ms for a new grant program
through the Oh1o EPA, whtch Will provtde septic tank replacements and
upgrades, wtll be accepted at her o[[tce, tn the county annex buildmg . from

Judge in Sheppard case will rule Aug. 2

.md w1fe, Enc and Jan Parker, at

1.1\·ermorc. 'Calif Whtle there she
"sited Cleo B1ont a. Ltvermore. and
.tttended a birthd ay party for Lmda
Ott She and Jan shopped 111 Ltvermore and Pleasanton. She accompa-

,

Hometown-Newspaper

Meigs County C_o mmi$sioners award bid contracts

nea1

Scouts and ve te rans groups Old
Bags of Arlington. antique tractors
and fa1 m mach1nery Edward and

Meigs County's

Volume 50, Number 31

Arlmgton , Was h They attended a
Fourth of Jul y parade at Arli ngton
wh1ch featured a hag-ptpe band the
Arling toh School Band (Eagle&gt; )
commercia l tloo.ts, churc hes, Boy

a1
,•,

Area news notes
fnend ,

•

•

,Marilyn Kibble presents senior p·iano recital at UR~

Harrisonville happening._~
Sunday V I Si tors of V1rg:Jma G1b-

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 70s

Lotteries
OHIO .
Pick. 3: 9-1-0. Pi ck 4 : 2-9-6-4
BuckeyeS: 1-7,9- 14-29
W,YA.
Daily 3: 9-9-5 Daily 4: 7-0-6-2
{)

l~lt\ (lh ul

v .. Jil:y l'uhlt~lunl! C'l 1

'

after the shootmg when he wrecked
h1s car m Independence, Ky
He smd he was drunk and doesn 't
remember what happened
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Thomas Nu1Te will se ntence
Gadd on Aug 19
Gadd spent 13 years "' education
as a teacher. prtnCipal and admuustrator 1n Oh10's Lakota. New
Mtalllt , Km gs and Spnng[teld
school dJstncts

By BRIAN J. REED
the county will continue to face a
Times-Sentinel Steff ·
tenuous ftnanctal conditiOn as tt
Me1gs County's linanctal sltua- enters the n~w yea r and the new
lion may see a shght unprovement decade. due to a lack of grow th on
next year, but a t1ght fiscal belt wtll new con&lt;tructmn and the loss of ta x
' sttll be ttl order. accordmg lo Coun- revenue from perso nal prop~rty at
ty Treasurer Howard Frank
the Sou1hern Ohto Coal Company's
Frark. along wtth [ellow budget •· Me1gs Mutes. among othet losses
commtss1on membe~s Aud1tnr Frank sa1d that the county 's growth
Nancy Parker Campbell and Prose- on new construction Will be limited
cut)ng 'Attorn ey Jbhn Lentes, recent- to only about $9,000 next year. a
ly cert1fied proJected general fund low growth rate wmlar to that of
revenue of $J,222,98S [or 2000.
must 1ecent yeaiS
• That figure represents the mcome
Furthet compltca ung the county's
anttc1pated for the operation of the fi scal condttHln are new reg ulations
county government next year. pn- wh1ch w1ll re4uire Camrbell to
manly from the collectton of neal change the met hod "' which trailers
estate taxes and personal property and other manufac tured honles are
tax , as well as the one percent Itt taxed , and the method by whtch
those home• are assessed [or taxes
sales tax collected by the county.
The county commisstoners ,.,.. Appratsals--will-loe"""'eljUired t.n all
now 111 the process of examuung the newly-purchased homes. and homes
budgetary requests or orticeholders sold wtll · no Ionge• be subject to
and other department heaps, and are sales tax when tttles are tran s[erred,
charged wtth the respons1btlity of resultmg m the loss of sales tax to
balanctng those requests wtth anttct - the oounty wfters
pated r~venue befone the budg~t 1~
The •ommtsslllners have dt&lt;·
finally approved tn January.
cuss~d plactng an addttHlt\al sal~s
Several county deparuneilts have yeJ tax oi' at least a h.tlt pet cent o11 the •
to submtt the1r requests, ~htch were ballot lor voter +tPpH.wal Ill Novem·
sohctted m June
ber. bu t have not taken action to so
Accordmg to Frank. the county yet. The dects1un to pl.1ce that ta&gt; 011
,wtll lie about $200.000 ahead or last the ballot would have to be made
year. havmg benefited from last before Augu st 19 although the comyear's tax reapprmsals, . as well as miSSioners can levy such .1 sales tax·
access to $100,000 'whi ch wtll b• wtthout voter approv.il
freed from debt servtce.
"' Ac~.;ordlllg
to ComllliSSlllller
Last year, the Me1gs County Janet How ard , any tcvt!nue general·
Comm•ss•oners took oul a bank loan ed from an addnwnill sales tux
1!&gt; pay the cost or housmg pu soners would be used· to1 the co11structmn
10 out-of~county Jails and other
and operatw11 of a co unty 1ad, 1ather
expenses relat1ng to the operatwn ol than [or general cou nt y operating
the shenft's department Accordmg expenses.
to Frank. that loan wtll lie patd off
State law requ~res th.Jt the comafter the second-half rtal eslatt tax mtssmners ha ve voter approval
settlement later th1s month
before a sales tax exceedtn g 1/2 perFrank satd Fnday, however, that cent ts levted. •

FAMILY TREASURES .. Among the family treasures of. Bruce
Morris of Langsville a~e certificates relating to the military service of his grandfather, Nelson Ward. An 18-year•old Rutland .
township farmer, Ward enlisted for a hundred days in the Ohio
National Guard Volu~eers on May 2, 1864, at;~d served in Cpl.
Amos 0. Mauck's Co. D, 141st Regiment, until his term expired
in September. He · then joined the Ohio Infantry and served a
year. Among Morris' possessions is a certificate of thanks for
the honorable service of Pvt. Ward in the Ohio National Guard. 11
was signed by Pres. Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of Wa r
•
,
Edwin Stanton.

Pomeroy _
o fficials report on activitie$
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NewS Staff
Vtllage supervisors teported the1r
departments' rec~nt and pendtng
acuvittes to members of Pomeroy
'V11lage Counctl Moriday evenrng
Meetmg With counctl were Jack
Krautter, street supervi sor. John
Anderson, VIllage admtmstr.ator and
water department supervisor, and
Tax Admm1strator Jean Durst.
KrauHer and Anderson both
spoke on preparauens [or pavtng
work on Mulberry Avenue. Unwn
Avenue. and Butternut and . Lasley
streets The street department IS
worktng on lowenng drams on the
streets wh1le the water department ts
installing new water hne on the porlions to be paved Anderson smd

curbs and gutters shou ld be 11\S!all ed
before street pav1ng wod~ be gms
Amler son 'atd work~rs h.IVe
completed tepa~rs to a lift stati on 011
upper East Ma1il Street that was
caus1ng a sewage stnell 111 that
nei ghborhood Two resTdents uf th at
area storped 111 to thank the vill.tge
for havmg the work done Also a
waler problem r~Put t eJ 111 ttic Mm .:
ersvtlle area wa." 1esolved when It,
was d1s~.:oVt:1ec.l that .1 plugged p1pe
was tound leadutg thmugh the wall
of a restJence Th e ptpe was
replaced hy th e p1ope11y ow ner he
sat d.
Anderson .tlsn smd the w.Jter
department was puttmg ,, tr.tcklltg
sys tem 111 pl a(,::e In !lack watc1 ~.:om·
ptamts

Krautter sa1d the street departmtml has bee11 ~ busy cuttm g brush
, cle.tnng ditches and clea mn g drams
Anc\crson &lt;a id 1h e vtll age 1s
almost ready to award a contract lot
the samtary sewer' from Lcg10n Ter·
r&lt;~l:C to the MuJd leport Corporation
L111e That proJect wil l take almost a
. year to complete and should remedy
tllC problem \\ it h tht: sewer sme ll
flear Lcgwn Tenw.:e Also. pa11111ng
on the water storage t.Ulk on Breezy
Hetghts IS underway.
He sa1d the well fte lds aqutfer ts
holdmg up well and" checked on a
regular basts No wa1er tl!stnctton~
ate 'an!lctpated
Durst bnefly rerort ed on,, rccen!
tax adnun1strators' scmtn ar sh~
attended and s.ud she ts Clll;stdcnng

I

w.tys to tJIL rease cnmrltance wtth
th~ yJi luge s mcomc tax
Dlmng open discussion. councal
P1estdent John Mu sse r sa1d the
Me1g s Count) T"unsm Offttc
would ltke to bnng 111 a boat for .1
folt age LfU!se Counc1l OK'd the u s~
ot the k1 y lor the hoat The cmt of
tile tour will be dtvtded bctwem
MeTt!S Galila .md M.t~on counttes
c'"krkrtre.lsurcf Kathy Hys~ll
repoth:tl the tollow1ng ba!J.n~cs hlr
June ~ general lund $116 ~08 ~9 .
safely $'i; 1967(,, &gt;lreet ~1614 ~I.
state h1ghw.ty, $, X7i 01, lt~c.
$49.0-' I 1(&gt;, t.::cmctcry. $ ~ 012 58:
"ater
$X6.0D 711.
sewer
$36.69S 26.
guaranty
tHeter
Continued in

"Pomeroy Officials " on page 3

SUV considers Buffington Island ceremony •huge - ~uccess•
The ceremony to com memora te the I 16th
an ntversary of the Batt le of Bullington Island nt
Portland was held at II am, Saturd.ty unde1
sponsorship of the Oh10 Department So ns ol
Un 10n Veterans ' of the C1vtl War and tts I&lt;IL.tl
affili ate. Brooks-Grant Camp No 7 of Middleport.
Ke1th Ashley, Civil War S.tte s Cluunn.llt nl
the Ohio Department Sons of Unwn Vctcrnn!&gt;i of
the C1v1l War, was the emcee for the event
atte nded by more than I •o people
As hl ey opened With C0\1\Illents on the fatlu tc
of the Oh10 govetnment offtc1als .111d the U S
Army Corps of Engmeers to save Bull ington
Island Battlefield from the ravages of tnll\lltg
and termed the efforts .to save 1t as " ' JUSt anJ
nghteous cnuse·-one .JS JUst nnd nghteOU!S ,ts the
the one for wh1ch m~ n Iought 111 the CiVIl W.tr'
A sa lute to the flag was followed by an Ill Vocation by the Rev WTII1am MuJLIIeswarth ot th e
Me1gs County Pioneer and H1 stoncnl SocJt:ty,
Ttiere were two fc:uurcd S.["CHkero.; for the l'l'l·

emun 1 e~ Th e AdJul.tn l General nf Oh1n--the
tntended spe.lkcr--w.ls fotn~d to &lt;:a n n~ I and sent
M.11 Mtkc B1sh of McCo nne lsvil le a" the spcakt:l M&lt;ll Bt sh rcv1cwcd the LILtS of tht: ban It: and
t:mph.to.;lzet.l the unpoltam.:c of tht: battle 111 endIll g. llut ha Stl.ll t:g) hy the Confederacy to
111 V.1de the Nm th
Th e seumt.l spc.1kcr w.ts Bng.tdaer G~neral
Davttl V Mcde1t nt til e Snns nl Vett."rans
Rest!IVl' th e on ly ledc1n ll y approved nutton,J!
lllllHI.l 111 the Uuttctl St.ltes .wd the mdllaty
h l .tnch nl the Som ot Un1un Veterans ol the
C1vJI W.u Gen Mede11 -;ll~.:s:-~cd the s.H:nhl' L:S ot
the s~lldit!l:&gt;i 'lll hoth stdcs ol thL: wnr Ht:: dipc u.llly took 1:-.suc w1th thnse who see th ose\\ 1sh
111~ hl p!CM!IVC th1 " nnport.ull Amcnc1n hallie ·
lzcld a~ "1!vt 11g 1i1 !he p.1s1 " He also empht~slz~d
the l.ulurc ul 1he State ol Oh1n to loc ateJ the
gi.Ivc:-. nl the \lllknown dcml on the halllcheld
s1 nce the m1ht:uy te.lchcs th ,lt the ~ra,es ot all
sold 1t."rs Ollt' 'i :ILI t:d
A wrL'.Ith-l:lyulg Lllt:mnn~ h\ :22 lustuJa: .ll

and vcrernns' groups was &lt;-'onductcd Ead1 prcsente.l made hnef remnrks J:tartl t'lp.lltng. waL:
Edna Mason prcstdcnt &lt;lf the Kcntul'ky DIVI sam Unued Daughte-rs of the Confcder;~cy of
Owcnshoro, Kentucky nccomp~n1cLI hy Sue

Berry of tho Molly Morehe.td Charter United
Daughters of the Cnnfeder.1cy nf C .dhoun Kcntm:kv

R.oheh Croye. prestdem nf the O h10 DIVISons of Con fcdcrntl! VcLCrans of Worthang&gt;
ton, Oh1o. Mrs Gad Robinson 1st vrcc plt'SI d~nt ol the Oh10 D1v1ston Un1~cd Daughters ol
the ConfcJcrcay of Akron ,Jn:omp.uned hy )(.'\'
Dingman. 2nd 'I U: ptesJLicnt trom Akron . and
He len I{ Olen pn:su..lenl uf thl' Ohul DIVIS!Oil
nt Cuyahogn Falls MaY Frost. rtcs1dcnt of chc
Oh10 Department Auxtltary to the Som ol
Unao11 Veterans of the CIVI l W&lt;tr of Coolvtlle .
Mrs Betty Coen. rrestJent of the John S
Sion

Continued in
•
"Buffington Island " on page 3

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