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Pomeroy • i!tlddleport • Galllpo118, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV ·

Sunday, Mly31, 11198 '

Weather

An essay on ·the pea, a mighty ·mite

•

VIEW PRODUCT· Vlliton to AEP'a Mountal.,_. Plant view an
type of eroalon control product
: 'rf\lde from COli ISh produced at the plant.

' :lppilcatlon of Sellbees, ·1

.AEP's Mountaineer Plant
hosts ·seabee demonstration
. 'NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - American
EleCtric Power's Mountaineer Planl
demonstrated a new type of erosion·
control technology Wednesday, May
20. More than 175 people gathered 10
view Seabees. honeycomb-shaped
b)licks made from recycled coal combusiion byproducts, which line a
2;000 foot sei:tion along the Ohio
· .Uv~r behind lhe plant.
· "These smooth, . interlocking
blpcks are projected to last twice as
lonj as standard riprap, have a more
~1hetic appearance ~ are a ~at
way to recycle coal combustion
byJiroducts,". said Kevin Dennis,
Mo)lntaineer Plant environmental
engineer.
Seabees' interlocking design seals
them in place. Common erosion contrOl, called riprap, is composed of
stones placed along an embankment.
-When a wave comes in, it taes sand
:bac:k out, which can wash riprap
away. In contrast, when waves strike

Each block covers aboul one
square foot of area. The blocks along
the riverbank are eiJihl inches thick
and weigh approximately 55 pounds.
The riverbank project behind
Mountaineer Plant consists of
100,000 units and has been in place
for one year.
Also,' 15,000 units were installed
along the main lake at Cedar Lakes
Convenlion Center in Ripley last fall
by;~ group of ISO stu~nt volunteer
members of the future
..
Farmers of America. Lighter, four ·
inc'h thick blocks 'weighing llllliiRd 29
pounds make up the Cedar Lakes
shoreline project.
.
AEP. a global energy company, 1s
one of the United States' largest
investor-owned utilities, providing
energy to 2.9 million customers in
1
Ohio, Indiana.
· Michigan. West Virginia. Virginia.
Tennessee and Kentucky. AEP has
holdings in the United States, the
a ,
.
United Kingdom and China. Wholly
: . ' Seabee, the honeycomb design owned subsidiaries provide power
.c!if{uses the returning :-"ave. l~ste~ engineering, consulting and man.of:washing away, sand 1s depos1ted m agement services around the world.
~oles, building up a dune in front The company i~ based in Columbus.
·of ll1e Seabee 10 fiu1her bond lhe seal.

POOND RIOOB, N.Y. (AP)Euy 10 lfOW and good 10 eat, peas
also sl)ine in lhe scientific and liter. aiy heavens..
Whal else bullhe pea did AuSiri:
an monk Gregor Jollann Mendel
select for his blukthrough nperiments in genetics?
And Hans Chrislian Andersen
chose lhe pea lo test lhe delicacy of
a princess and thus her royal blood.
For, as · his fairy tale says, "They
could see $he was a real princess now
that she had felt one pea all lhe way
through 20 mattresSes and 20 mor~
fealher beds."
So, if Rabelais was lhe fiiSI 10 say
"looking as like as one pea does
·anolher," you might add, as you cultivate your patch, peas are small, yes,
but oh my. Like beans and lentils.
lhey have been prized from early
times as a powerful source of protein.
In truth, peas have a lot of diversity, and iiome are only distantly related, if at all. There are tall and dwarf
plants and white, yellow and green
seeds, some sinooth. some wrinkled.
There are edible podded peas; like
snow peas and sugar peas, and there
are black-eyed peas, chick-peas, and
the lovely ornamentals known as
sweet peas.
.
•
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Here in the North, peas inspire the
gardener 10 perform the .yearly ritual
· of sowing them on St. Patrick's Day,
March 17, if the ground is clear of
SRQw. They don't mind cold soil and

• J.ACKSON • Like most people,
I!'nlgetting sick of hearing that everything I eat will make me sick. Or kill
me. Or do something otherwise
unpl~asant 10 me.
~irSt it was apples. Then hllll1·
bu!ier, then chicken. then eggs. and
,;O'on and so on. Milk is bad for you.
Grapes are too. Don't drink coffee,
· don't consume this, stay away from
that. Pretty soon. the list of food.~ we
can safely eat will be down to abOut
two items, at least one of which we
piobabty won't like.
• rs this really our furure, where
every bite is one tnken in fear? The
answer is no. The outlook won't be so
bleakiflhenextthingeachofusbites
into is' one big spoonful of commOIJ
sense.
Ask yourself this: If all of our
foods are poisoning us, then why~
Americans enjoying the longesl averase lifespan in the history of
mankind?
_ Why can we see football, baseball
and basketball players !OdaJI who are
2SO pounds of muscle and run .like
deer? Why aren't 'we reading news
-ounts of millions of people keeling over after lhey made the mistake
of eating breakfast. lunch, or dinner?
· ~ Despite all the warnings about the
dangers of food, lhe simple fact is we
enjoy the most safe, wholesome.
healthful food in the world. ·
fs this to say that there an; zero
concerns? No. Even with products 8!1
safe' as· ours, there still is room·for
Improvement. People do sometimes
get ·'sick or even die from a foodborrie pathogen. And even one single
'

.I

. food related health incident is too
many. But if you believe all the sOcalled experts, you'd think food relat·
ed sickness was the rule and nOI the
exception.

meat•

·tu-1121,3 Sq. I'Ll

WHITE
. TAN
.BLUE
*IN STOCK COLORS

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oit.

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IORS • ·
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NEW IDEA HAY RAKES ·
4150 w/Dolly $3860.00, •180 w/Dolly $4100.00
4170 w/Dolly $4100.00
NEW IDEA DISC MOWERS: 15406, 5407, 5408, 5409
NEW IDEA HAY TEDDERS: 8' Tedders $996.00
NEW IDEA 5a09 DISC BINE $13,000.00
. 8'3" Cut, Hyd. Swing, ~": Rolla .
KING KU'n'ER Finishing MOwers SO", 72" i4"
KINO·Klln'ER Rotary Mow.ra ''thru 10'
KINO KUTIER .Heavy Duty
*.

·June 7 .

Bale Wagon Co'l'plete Pkg. $1915.00
NEW KINO KU'n'ER 80' nLLER $1015.00
NEW KIJ!IO KU'n'ER 72"
$1245.00 - ·

Call (614) 221-6331 for-Appointment nmes.
Member, Ohio Ollhopaedic lnstiMe

GA

•

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By JIM ABRAMS

SELECT HAND-HELD OR BAG
PHONES ARE]UST $9.95 .
A MONTH GETS ,Y()U
1ll5 MINUTES A MONTH
FOR ONE YEAR .

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Special ShareTalk
Promotion

Add • :Znd IIW for
just SUS • n_tonth.

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Come ;, nud get 600 anytime l1o1111S mi11ute.~ ~l11riu~ ofir Summwime
Snviugs Eve/11. We also have grt•at.1leals 011 t'lro~!es. Offer .
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Utltad Sllln Celiullr
10~4 N. Illidge SL .
715-4t41

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· Soutlltm Ollio Communicllions
. Cilllic: 1'1111
408 E. Huron

285-!1001

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A pop·uJar entry

This1131 Model A Ford, shqwn by Amold Priddy, seated, was a popular entry In the car ahow
held Saturday on the upper parking lot In Pomeroy. Cars from the earliest days of motoring
Into the 1990s were on dlaplay for the ahow.

State poll finds less · confide~ce
in Volnovich, ·legislative efforts
CINCINNATI &lt;AP) A
One thing had not ch_anged: Presstatewide p(lll finds that Gov. George ident' Clinton's approval rating.
Voinovich and the state Legislature Roughly 64 percent of the 739
have lost popularity since the over- Ohioans questioned by phone said
whelming dereat of Issue 2. which they approve of the job Clinton is ·
would have raised taxes to fund doing.
schools.
•
·
In the Ohio Poll last January, Clin•
r ~,-An.• Ohio- Poll ~releaAed- $wldaji.....JQI1,~~tllapproval rating.
found that Voinovich's latest approval The poll ha.~ a margin for error of 4
rating was .5 9 percent, down IO per- _percentage points.
·
cent fri&gt;m a similar poll in January.
The poll is sponsored by The
The Legislature's approval rating · &lt;:incinna~i E_nquh:er and the lJniveralso fell, from 63 p:rcent ih January s1ty of C1ncmnau. The lnsutute ~or
. 10 SO.percem in the poll conducted Policy Research at the unovers1ty
May 13-27.
·

United Sloln Cellul•
New llol1on Shopping Collier
4010 Rhodes Avt.

456-8722 or 18001124·1715

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does the polling.
Ohioans rejected Issue 2 by a 4-loI margin in the May 5 primar'y.
Voinovich, running for the U.S. Senate this year. supported the measure .
Although Voinovich's approval
f'.ltins declined. the percentage or
lhOJ!e. 'iiW..!'-Ai!f'll w4lflli~
performance _re~amed ,about the
same. The m_am ~1fferen~ 1s a l:n:gcr.number ol Oh1oans ~aymg they_re
pot sure how g_oodofaJob he's domg
-. 1~ percent1n the late ~l poll. 9 percent m the January poll.

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Charleston man drowns in Mason County

oday's

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The way ptofle ralh
around hert~

z... 1'1111 Shopping Centtt

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Good Afternoon

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CELLULAR.

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. .. . ........ ·~ ..... _, .. ?.i~g·l~ S?er:l:i~.:s:~.d!l

with b¢1 India and Pakistan: both
· visit 10 China. later this month even
were hit · with aulomatic sani:tions
more important. China is a close ally
WASHINGTON - Republicans after their tests. "We are ready to
of Pakistan and ha.~ been accused of
say the nuclear tesling .showdown a.'l!list in any way.-bill you have to do
supplying its government with milibetween India ;and Pakistan is a ir in cOIICtn."
tary technology. · ·
.result of a "massive failure" of Clinl?efense Sc:i:retary Wiliiarn Cohen,
He said Clinton "has indicated ·
ton administration foreign policy. on CBS' . "Face the Nation," also
across the board that we are better otT
But Ointon officials reject lhe notion. empha.~ized that. the · United 'States
' n01 simply trying to isolate, be indirsaying it is simplislic to think the. cann01 alone resolve the South Asia
ferentto, criticize or condemn indiUnited States can sOlve world prob- nuclear crisis.
vidual countries but to engage them
lems without help from iL~ allies.
"The ootion that the United States
in tonstructive dialogue." ·
"We've lost respect around the ~~tting alone can dictate terms to the
world." Sen. Fred Thompson. R- rest of lhe world is va~tly overstated.
Bui the China visit ha~ been quesTenn.. said Sunday on NBC's "Meet We need to have our allies," he said.
tioned by some who say it is ill-timed
the Press." " You see us warning the
when Congress is investigating
Indians riot to iest- they test, twice
"Unilateral ~lions." said Sen.'
charges that Chinese ofllcials tried to
- '!'laming the Pakistanis not to test John Kerry. 0-Ma.~s.. on ABC's
influence American pill icy,with ill~­
':This Week with Sam Donaldson
- they lest. twice.·:
gal contributions to the Democratic
"This wil.~ a maSsive failure of and Cokie Roberts," "are proving
Party and suspicions that lax overforeign policy," Sen. Orrin Hak:h, R- ·increasingly futile und somewhal
sight of a satellite deal with China
Utah. said on CNN's "Late Edition." self-destructive." On the Olher hand, by thiise who are iUdulgin1 in nation- allowed China to improve its military
Hatch said rhe administration he said. "sanctions univel'lllllly alislic chest poundins."
rocketlechnology.failed to detect· wljming signs that arrived at. multilateral sanctions. are
BOih Republican Sen. Jot.n
"To go to China right now I think
India was preparins · nuclear tests, an extraordinarily important tool."
McCain of Arizona. and Democrat would be the wrong message. " said
and, after that happened, wa.~ unable
The United States will seek such Daniel Patrick Moyn!han of New Sen. Richard Shelby.· R-Aia .. on ·
to persUade Pakistan not to follow punishment.when il head.~·• meering York said it posed the worst threat of CBS.
•
suit. "No · ~at intensive, effective in Geneva this week or the foreign nuclear war since the 1962 Cuban
Separately, Newsweek said in its
effort was iaken to lry and solve the5e ministers of the live pennanent mem- missile crisis.
edition on the new~stands today that
7'
ben; of the U.N. Security Council"It's a combination of the prolif- federal investigators believe they
problems," Hatch said.
•
"We flatly reject that," Bill the United States. Russia. China. el'llion of·weapons of mass destruc- have enough ·evidence 10 seek a
Richludson. the U.S. llll!ba«ador to Britain and France.
tion. and derives ·o f radical Islamic erimin.al indictment against ~ATIC.
BOB'S LOOK·A·LIKE- Jack Richardt of GaiHpolls, left, I'IICt·
the United Nations, said of the
. Yet the aciministl'llion and iL~ crit· funllamentalism, which could spread China's government-owned aircraft
ad
as Ernie Null tipped his hat to the crowd'l applluee duriOII '
thrOughout the region, and it's very maker, for illegally giving aircraft
.
.
ics agreed the crisis wa.~ grave.
the
Bob Eva.ns laok-a-llu contest In Gllllpoll• on Saturday. N11!L
...:._:_lfui!!id.J:!il)U!Il had been firm _ . '"l'his.1here should·be·no.mistake- 11erious," McCain ·said on ABC. - production macllinery provided by
won
flrat placa In the conllst, held during Evana' 80th blrthditif
·
· about it, is very serious." said Coheq. · Cohen said.the events in India and McDonnell Dougla.~ to ·a Chinese
.celebration. Ev1n1, known for the national chlln of /'Htaur..,_
"The road to Allllllgeddon is paved Pakistan mude ~,President Clinton's cruise .;nissile factory.
bearing hla name, started •• a flnner aalllng uuuge from 1 delhi.)
ary truck. (AP)
•,

Aaaoclated P1 Ia WriW

PLUS:

conclnued ,._ D-1

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Vandals set excursion
boa-t loose from levee

TES:

'f:!te

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·GOP-Ieaders ·chide 'failure' to stem testing
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S~4.95

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio •

Department reported some power voltage line but d\d not require hoS·
Scattered power outages and a outages . in the western end of the pital treat_ment.
pole ban\ fire were reported follow- county. ·
'
The 0hio Department of Transing storms that swept through M.eigs
. No flooding or road closings were pofla!ion said state 'Route 32. was
County Sunday night.
reported. The EMS rain gauge closed this morning at lhe U.S. 35
A small pole barn belonging to showed mree-tenths of an inch of r.Un intersection in soulhern Ohio's JackJeuie Jewell, Nelstm Road, caught- fell overnight in Pomeroy.
son County becaii5C lightning darn·
lire after it was struck by lightning.
· Thunderstorms that hit Ohio aged a utility pole. .
according to Salem Township Vol- knocked down lrees, damaged utili- .
The·road was eltpected to reopen
unteer Fire Chief Dick Lambert.
ty poles and may caused at least one this afternoon, ODOT spokeswoman
The 20.by-12 foot building and its death. Part of one highway was Holly Snedacar-Gray said. There
contents, including antiques and Olh· · closed today.
w~re no downed power lines ~n the
er. fUrniture items, was destroyed by
A 14-year-old Cleveland boy. area.
.
.
the blaze, Lambert said. Jewell's Michael .YaJidek, was struck by an
No other road closings were
no;arby home was not damaged.
electi;i!' wire and killed while riding . reported, Gray said.
The Rutland squad of the Meigs a bicycle about6 p.m. Sunday, Lake"We had some reports of some
County Emergency Medical Service wood police said.
downed lrees, but nothing extensive
responded and treated Jewell at the
Police Sgt. Edward Hassing ~d really," she said.
scene, Lamben . said. The Sa.lem it is )105sible the wire came down as
. In southwestern ·Ohio. funnel
Township VFD was assisted it the a result of high winds. but he said the · cloud sightinss were reported Sunday
scene by the Wilkesville VFD.
· matter was being inves\igated.
in Clinton County, but no tornado
A power line was reported
A companion, Shawn Meyer. a was confirmed. A btun was damaged,
knocked dowri near Tuppers Plains, student at Harding Middle School in ani! shingles were tom off a couple of
and the Meigs Counly Sheriff's Lakewood; was grazed by the high· · houses ·.
The National Weather Service
was 10 inspecl the damage today
before decidi'ng whether it was
,
.
caused by a tornado, meteorologist
Sam McNeil said.
.
Conneaut police dispaiCher Taylor
Cleveland said patrolmen on duty
La.~t week's visit to Pomeroy by thC Cumberland Prince5s wa.~ marred
lheie · confirRted a funnel cloud
by vandals, who apparently cut the pleasure bout loose_from the levee area
movedover the downtown or the city
in Pomeroy.
in northeastern Ohio. He said a city
Two members of the boat's trew were asleep on the boat at the time
resident reported a tornado touched
it was cut from its moori~~&amp;s early Friday.
•
down in a city lakeside park, but there
Passengers from the boat's Thursday eJtcun;ion were taken back to . was no damage and the report was
Huntln1ton, W.Va., by bus earlier Thursday evening.
·
not confirmed.
Members of.the Middleport and Ma.'IOII (W.Va.) fire deplnmenL~ were
.
. .
called to nOiify the sleepins crew Ill j~pproximately I a.m., accordina to
-Park.clouds: WI~ a~Jijajl_char· .
Miildfeport ~ Jftlllh*'l, w!ICillllld no·resctit .u&amp;!mJIIi-wete" ..~~'lfillf'f
~s
required OIIC4! they were on.the boat.
· ·
northern
Oh19
and
through
dOwnAccordina to repons. the boat was approaching the Pomeroy-Mason
tqw~ Cleveland tarly Sunday
Bridse when rescue crewt boarded. "
.
evenmg.
The Huntington-based e~tcursion boat will be making regular visiiSIO .
The National Weather Service in
Pomeroy doring lhe suni~ monihs, bringins passengers 10 Pomeroy for
Cleveland
reported minor property
tours and shoppins.
- _.
~ge and many trees down.

740 446 t-777 or 740 446 2484
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Hometown Newspaper

From AP, Staff Aeport8

Gallipolis, OH 45631

MF 35 Dal., 35 Ou, 1 pal., 135 Oaa, 159 Ou, 150
Dat., 240 Dal., 245 Dal_., 255,.285, 275, 18510 20·
FORD 3000, 3800, 2800; 2000, 5000 1810
IH 574 WILdr., 484, 350 480, Cub .
AC5060
NEW SHENNIU 4/25 Uve PTO &amp; P.S. Available
NEW MF TRACTOS .
.::::J.
. . ~. 4243, 4235, 281 , 253, 282, 231' 240f230
VICON 450 Sq. Baler.(u• very IIHie)
J.D. 330 Round Baler, Htaton Pt; 7, NH 478
NEW IDEA BALERS • Rebates Until the End of May

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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2150 Eastern Ave. u

a1 .

Outages, P.ole ·barn fire ·
left in wake of sto'r ms

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Bulls
beat
Pacer, to net
series victory
Page4

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JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT,
. INC~·
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55 Township Rd. 508 Quat off At. 52). South Point, Ohio

to all areas of the contests ~~ailable
to members.
Leaders~1p workshops were held by past national FFA
officers ~ others.
~~ of the
.convention was Bu1ldms the
Furure·. Voting delegates for the
Oallipolis chapter were 1im Howard
and Bridgette "Bikins who voted on
new swe offices and other mailers.
The Gallipolis FFA chapter was
recognized for its contribution to the
CROP prosnm ..

· foods safely.
..
result not in a sick stomach but
So, what do you do lhe next time
il • full one.
•
you read, see. or hear that IOinelhin&amp;
..:Apin. me spectacular record ·o f about 10me food can do pnebocly ·
fODCI.safety we enjoy does not aile- 10111e hum? Consider the IICIUI'Ce,
vi. . the need to improve 10 even con1ider the rilk, and COOiider lhe
Vf8ler level• of whole10111eneu. · odds. Don't tate food ufel)' lilfltly,
SpkiiiJ that improvemenl is an but don'll!e IIC8feilsw1y fiOin everyllllpina effon by fumers, food thing you like. To ,.,..W.. an old
~
. UOI'f, retailers. and sovem- · sonE_ "Don't worry, e111 happy."
.... .,encles. ltlllo needs to be I
(11111-tUtldt .. Wkited liD
p(fllrlty for all of us as consumers. •,.,... frtead _. t.ldlllll nadet f!
Ai)t:r all, u ·the end wen, we need miDe, L!IADD NIIICt) .
· to Illite 10me of the responsibility for
J:IJD IIDrleA Ia area orpalza· :
handlina, preparing, ·arid -storing doll director of.._ 111111 Bure1u.
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48"X''t"

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~'overwlielinlnj' mlliorjty of those

SJJ49*
N.In-~

South Point Family Medical Center

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00 comments...

High: 70a; Low: 50a

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Hentoff says h~'s not·unjust, Page 2
Memorial Tournament results ,·. Page 5
Rules to follow if traveling, Pag·e 10

Meigs County's

Sale

For Initial evaluatlana or follow-up vleltl,
we offer monthly office hours at

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·-Gallipolis FFA attends state conventlo~
. • GALLIPOLIS • The Gallipolis
FFft recently sent silt srudents 10 lhe
~ FF" Convention in Columbus.
·.StlldeDIJ attendil!g wei'!: Tim ·
· l:foward. Bridgette Elkins, Jason
, Music, Jason PuP, Ginger Canaday,.
aild Kale Saunders. Students attend·ed.all five seuions of the convention.
. Speakers included Scott McKain,
:Dr. Joinna Kister, Shannon Wilcox,
· ~ Dr.. Rick Rigsby.
.
. . The Slllle offiCerS gave their retir, mg addresses and presented awards

SALE

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Tomorrow: Cloudy

4143 • 8001, 4844 • 10001, 4884 • 18001

The numbers are on your side.
There are 265 million of us in the
United States. three meals a day (I
-won't count those snacks at night in
· front of the TV), seven days a week,
fifty-two weeks a year. That's over
289 trillion meals a year that we eal
The overwllelming ·majority of those .
meals result not in a sick stomach but
in a full one.
Again, me spectaculu record of
food safety we enjoy does not aile.
viate the need to improve to even
greater :levels of wholesomeness.
Seeking that improvement is an
ongoing effort by fanners. food
processors, retailers, and government agencies. It also needs to -be a
priority for all of us as consumers.
After all. as the end users, we need
to take some of the'responsibility for
handling, preparing, and ; storing
foods safely.
.
So, what do you do the next time
you read, see, or hear that something
about some food can do somebody
some harm? Consider the source,
consider ~e risk, and consider the
odds. Don't take food safety lightly.
but don't be scared away from everything you liJte. To paraphrase an old
song:· "Don't worry, eat happy."
(Tbls news tUtlcle Is dedicated to
1 aood friend IIIII faithful reader of
mine, LuAan Naace)
Kilp1 Htll"less Is lftl orpnlzl.
lion director of lhe Farm Bureau.

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Hlgb~

the JfOUrKL Lll:kina wood ashes, you seeds lhout an inch apart and then
.can we commercial lime cr bonemeal cover them an inch deep. To foil ,
to achieve the needed alblinity.
birds, I spread a layer of dead leaves
Sowing is simple. lust make a fur. over the row 10 hide iL
mw. nr hench. in the.onjl. lllllitinnlrthe::::;....,.~~~~~!""'~"':"':"':"1

Totll Joint RlpiiCimelll
Support and
lnfonnltlon Group '
11 you l)ave had or are consid·
ering having a !Dial joint replacement and would
,to learn
more join ua at Joint Co1nnec-1
tions, a support and edu-cation
prog1ram for anyone l.ntei'8Sied In
replaceme!lf. For Information
mee1ting times call 304il525·1

Junet ,

Today: Partly cloudy

Joint Connection. ·

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

:Oo
. I eat it or don't I ???
By KIM H~RLESS

so, wilh fava (or WUICID') beans,
they' re lhe firsl'annual veget•bles to
get ~wed outdoon. They usually
have sprouted by early April and are
ready to eat in June. If snow lingers,
you can wait to plant and still get a
good, but later, harvest.
I've found peas fairly simple 10
grow, but over lhe yean have sharply
narrowed my selection 10 snow peas.
This is because the usual run of green
peas requires a 101 of space for a harvest or more than just a few meals.
You do a 101 of shellin&amp; for a cupful.
· Snow peas; on the other hand. are
edible pod and all, thus making for
many more meals. Gourmet chefs
recom!llCnd them when lhe pod.~ are
praclically flat, but I've often let the
peas inside swell a bit and found the
eatins still very sood.
Peas like a "sweet" soil, so I make
good use of ashes saved from llle' ·
wood stove and fireplace 10 prepare

Monday

1!.

Sentinel

i'!l .

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Southern Ohio tornn..nicllionl
Hill1011 Centlf
2475 S&lt;:iolo Traol
215-$000

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celebration proveS::':
Bob Evans is alive and well· ·

~Wit;nmers. boaters anc,!Jjsherrnen a.~ canoe overturned. Morgan reminded
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. The body·of a 72-year-otd Clw1eston summer approaches.
everyone thai no matter how safe or
I Section • 10 Pqn
He
said
that
Price
was
appmntly
man
wa.~
ria&gt;vered
in
a
fann
pond
on
small the body of water seems, to use
·Vol. 49, No. 28
lim ·Hill Road Sunday- ·afternoon. an experienced fisherman whose a lifesaving device.
GALLIPOLIS (AP~Bob Evans is alive and well at age 80, as a pOlice
·
officer
who recently st pped him for speeding can attest.
IICCOrding to a Point PleaAant VolunEvans'
son. St , :aid the officer seemed surprised when he saw the
Fire Department spokesman.
· sausage king's dr' er's license after requesting it.
.
Diver Joe Veith found the body of
· "He asked · ·
was carrying another piece of identification," Stan
Clyde H. Price·Sr.,' around 3:0S p.m.
Ev'ans said Saturda a1 a community binhday celebration for Eyuns. ".b ad
· iii about six feet of water. the
~d
he thought he only needed the one."
·
. spokesman said.
"I need this," Evans said about the party. "You see, everyone thinks I'm
weekend 1.~ a
Price had apparentl.y been fishing · · A 12.year old Oallia County boy reportedly died-over
dead."
.
result of 1· han&amp;ina incideni a1 his Ohio Township lls· nee,
ing to
when
hiboat
overturned.
Authorilles
w
Evans
opened
a
12-seat
diner
in this community about 90 miles souththe
Galli1
COuniY
Sheriffs
Departmenl.
·
·
11id it appeared the man may have .
The
Oallia
County
911·fim
received
word
on
the
accident
at
II
:4
ta.~t
of
Columbus
in
the
1940s.
Bob
Evans Farms now ha.o;,35,000 elllJIIoy- ·
for a while, but the
'been in lhe Lotteries
ees workinl! in 408 restaurants and plants that make sausage and other food
euct 1111011111 of time Is not known. Saturday when the mother of Joseph .Bennet, 1109 Davis Road, tol
products.
.
·
The fire deputment NlpOIIded to pillchen that her son had been hunsi1Y a nylon dog leash.
Evans no longer has an active role with the company.
A
narralive
repon
prepared
by
911
said
that
the
boy
had
went
out
to
play
. . the call wilh Silt rtrefiJh!cn and I div"Bob loves southern Ohio," former Gov. lamesA. Rhodes said at thew- '
er, alon&amp;:th Point Plelsant EMS. 10 minutes prior'to the call, alld when his father pUlled into the driveway he .
ty. " He's done 11101'¢ for it by accident than most people who \\'ere elected
Muon · ty Shaitra Deputy Carl . observed that hisiiMI wu hangina from the porch with a dQg leash wrapped
have done on puiJIOSC."
. .
.
Peta-l•lnWIIipti~ the lncldettt. II'OIInd his neck.
·
11le
juvenile
-11'1111p011ed
by
LifeflightiO
St.
Mary~s
Hospital
in
Hunt"He sold sausage to my grandmother out of a bucket. I have no biuer
Dally 3: 3-7-8; D11117 4: 6-4-9•1
Muon olunty COIIMCI' Dr. Brefriend than Bob Evans," the four-term governor told The Columbus Dispatch
o 1991 Oillo Volley.Plblolll"l Co.
ton 1.. Morpn'said·toclaY the IOCident in&amp;IOO,•W. V..,_lllppi'OJtimllely 12:~ p.m., where he was later pronounced
1 for a story Sun'./!Y·
....,_ _ _ _..;..._....;;._ _.._. should ierve u. , reminder to alt
'ft

teer

' •• Abo, COMI loll wish - of a•
' WIII-Mortlocolloos:
ChillicOihe. New Bo11on. Jackson, WMrty.

Birthd~;~y

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Apparent h•nging accident
fatal to Gallia County· youth

de,Jd.

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Com1nentary

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OHIO Weather
1\Jesay, June 2
forecut for dllvtl""'

3
MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
'EstiiDtrs!Ui in 1948

Bill to thwart Chinese business in U.S.
By Jeck Ander1on
and Jan Moiler
WASHINGTON -- After ft ve
years of gettmg nowhere m thett
multiple probes of the prestdent, Btll
Chnton's crittcs have finally fDUnd
somethmg to legitimately hang thm
hats on the Chma connection.
Unfortunately. the probe of Chnton 's Chines. ties m1ght also
devolve mto a Sill), nasty game of
parttSanshtp 1f the Repubhcans tnke
thmgs too far

111 Court Strtet, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

' A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher

Haven't we seen thts show

DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Gener11 M1n1gtr

Battle ongoing over cost
Qf ~edical record copies
ey JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI -They arc sull fightntg m the LegiSlature over what you
-or your lawyer - should ~ave to pay for cop1es of your med1cal records
a;; a pauent
Depcndmg on wh1ch s1de ot the argument you h~ten to, tt should cost
anywhere from nothmg to $1 per page for coptes.
,
. The battle has escalated m recent years in Ohto and other states as hospttals have dectded to employ outstde compantes to handle requests tor coptes
of pat1ent care records. The hosp1tals say that hts helped them free their own
, taffs from the burden of mcreasmg requests for records from pat1ents, thetr
lawyers and msurance compan1es in disputes mvolvmg msurancc coverage,
"'"dents and medtcal treatment
Nobody IS arguing to end the current pract1ce of prov1dmg mcd1cal
record&lt; free to doctors for the purpose of patten! carl), or g1vmg the records
tree to state agenc1es such as the Bureau of Workers Compensation for proccssmg
But hospitals and the record -copymg compames want to charge pat1ents
and thCJr lawyers $1 per page for the first I 0 pages, 50 cents per page thereafter, plus a search fee of up to $15, postage and shtppmg costs.
Oh1o Senate PreSident R1chard Fman, R-Cmctnnatt, backed that proposal dunng the last leg•slattve sesSton. But tt ran mto oppoSttton and was cut
oul of pendmg leg•slatlon
, Sen Loms Blessmg Jr.. R-Cmcmnatt, ts draftmg legtSiattOn he hopes to
mtroduce soon that would requtre hospttals and copymg services to charge
qnly 15 cents per page, plus apphcable taxes and postage costs, to pat1ents
m thetr representattves
'We don 't want to 1mpose any financ1al dJfficullles on the hosp1tals or
those comrames, but at the same lime, we don't want them nppmg people
off" smd Aaron Ockerman, JegtslatJve atde to Blessmg.
.../
Hmp1tai off1ctals say the record requests eal up valuable staff t1me and
the pnce ol cop1es should reflect that If appropnate costs cannot be charged
tp patients or their lawyers, the expenses hkely will be passed along m htghcr med1cal care costs, sa1d Mary Yost. a spokeswoman for the Ohto Hosp•ta I Association
'We'd have a problem wnh 15 cents," she sa1d
"We thmk at-cost, plus a J;easonable profit, IS what the markel's ·all
allout, " sa1d Brooke Cheney, a Columbus lobby 1st repr osentmg the copymg
compames at the Stalehouse,
, Cleveland lawyer T1m Collins has a pendmg lawsUit accusmg 30 hosp•\als and SIX copymg compames of chaFgmg _excesstvc pnccs to lawyers who
feprcsent patients Coll1?s sa1d he thmks chargmg Sl per page, plus search
qr "retneval " fees, IS outrageous
.
• "Let's all step back and give tt the g1gglc test A dollar or two a page, ..
he smd. "If there's a retrieval fcc m many cases that fcc ts patd to the hmR'ial What would you call that 1Our lawsUit, calls 11 a k1ckback " •
, The banlc IS bemg fought m state courls In September. a Cmcmnau
J~dge ordered a Pmr[ield hospllal to prov1de a pat1ent\ lawyer With recnrds
~;o p1es a1 20 cents per page plus tax for a total ot SIS 44- rather than the
S125 that Mercy Hosp1tal Fa~rfield wanted.
: In March, a Columbus JUdge ordered Ohto State Un1verstty Med1cal Ceqtcr w g1ve .a patient cop1cs for no more than 25 cents per page- rather than
tjlc 93 cents a page the hosp1tal wanted.
The US Department of Health and Human Semces declared m 1992
that hospitals that submll Medtcare clmms could he reimbursed at a rate ol
7 &lt;:ents per page for cop1cs they make for rcqutrcd pccr-rc~tew org.mtzatJons
A 1994 survey found that 20 states and the DtStnct of Columhm do not
s~t caps. Alaska and Anzona d1d not reqUire fees for records cop1cs, and at
least 15 states allow unspec1lied "rca.,onahle costs." the •urvcy hy Profcs-.
s11mal Educatton Syslems Inc 'round
There have been at least two attempts m the Oh10 liouse smce 1992 to set
copymg caps, but both d1cd tn committee

before•
To the surpnse of many, voters
have shown they don't much care
what two consenting adults d1d
behmd closed doors, even 1f those
doors lead to the Oval Office Nor
are volers 100 mtcrested m tbe parnculars of a decade-old real -estate
deal m wh1ch the preSident and first
lady managed to lose thctr sh1rts.
But they should care about the
poss1bil1ty that the preSident sold out
our nauonal secunty on behalf of a
well-connected dqnor who allegedly
shared senSitive technology wtth lhe
Chmese
·
·
Lora! Space and CommunJcatJOns Corp Chatrman Bernard
Schwartz has dented that the nearly

since 1995 was
tntended
to
mHuence pohcy. And he says
he 's gomg to
keep on gtving,
even as mvesugators try to
learn why Clinton
granted
waiVers allowMoller &amp;
mg Loral to
Anderton
cooperate with a
. rogu~ regtme above the objections
of hiS national secunty staff
In the rush to get tough on Chma,
however, a small group of Repubhcan lawmakers are on the verge of
ovcrreachmg on the China tssue and
d01ng somethmg profoundly stup1d
and counterproductive m the
process
Sometime m the next two weeks,
the US Senate w1ll debate and pass
a defense authonzatton btll As part
ot that debate Sen James lnhotc. ROkla . WI(J tqtroducc an amendment
to proh1h1t the Chmese Ocean Sh•ppmg Company (COSCO) from Jcasmg space at the Port of Long Beach
lor a cargo tcnmnal ' Fu.rthennore,
the amendment w11l bar Pres1dcnt
Chn(on . Irom stgmng a wa1vcr

allowing tb~ lease to go forward.
The space that COSCO covets
used to be the site of the Long Beach
Naval Station ..Bul COfi8J'CSS closed
it down a few years ago as part of.a
senes of base closures. The Long
Beach pon authorities have been
~king ever stnce for a new tenant
to fi II the votd.
They thought they had a perfect
fit m COSCO, whtch has leased
space m Long Beach for the !13SI 17
years wtthout incident But the com- ·
pany has grown m recent years, and
they need more space. So they proposed movmg two IJitles up the
coastlme to the old Navy site . .
It sounds simple enough. But the
&lt;peeter of a Chinese company taktng
over a former US. Naval statton
was too mucll for the demagogues
on Capttol Htll Inhofe and his alhes
cla1m the cargo termmal gtvcs the
Chtncse government a ''strategtc"
foothold tn the Untted States, and
worry that Chmesc "spies" will be
•nfiltraung our shores through the.
sh1pyard
Th., GOP IS supposed to he the
party that Ia vors local control B~t
tnstead we have an Oklahoma senator who thmks he knows what's best
for the ctttt.cns or Long Beach. And

IToledo I 76" I

•

In a letter to the Washmgton
Post, Asststant f\ttorney General
Eleanor D. Acheson clatms that m
a recent column .I "erroneously
suggested that the Just1ce Department's Internet, Ktds' Page w1ll
turn ktds mto 'speech pohce.'"
She neglects to mcntton that the
k1ds betng adv1sed by the Just1ce
Department !In how to deal wnh
their famtly members' btgoted
speech range from kmdergar1cners
lhf&lt;mgh f1fth -graders Children
that young arc not ncccssanly
a&gt;tute evaluators ol b1goted
remarks. particularly when they
arc asked to report those commcnts. secondhand, to people outSJde the famtly
Older k1ds .tre not very rchahlc
on th1s score either
Nonetheless. on the K1ds' Page
(wwv. usdoJ gov!kJdspagc/bms-k5/home- mtru htm), a message
Irnm Janet Reno says·
'K•ds hkc you have to deal
With the preJUdice of their tanuly
members
If this happens tn your home.
you m1ght try talkmg lo your parcnt&gt;. teacher. rchg10us leader,
counselor or some other adult With
whom 'you feel comfortable. "
But Eleanor Acheson emphames m her letter that. 'iThcrc's not
a word about monnonng. rcportmg
to the government or any other
Orwellian scenano "

Yet. 1f adults hy relalmg tales from home
the child attends fanctful enough to have quickened
public . school: the interest of Ch!lfles Dickens.
t~e teacher an!!
In a cla.~s ass1gnment •on thetr
the' priticipal arc · famtly lives, one ftflh-~r'ader
agents of the know wrote a VIYtd descnptlon of
state That IS her mother who, on awaken1ng
why when stu- each morn mg. lunged for the bottle
dents on a pub- of boole under her hcd, and slaned
he-school n,cws- the dnnking that ke)ll het sodden
paper arc ccn- for the rest of the day.
Hentoff
sorcd by the
The mother in question never
admtnJStratlon.
. drank hquor Her child was not
they have a First Amendment case mahcious in .writing that fieuon;
m the cnurts agatnst thnsc agents ~1ke other k1ds I've known whll
nl the govcrnmcnl
have transmognfied their parents
Pnvate-schnol students have nn on paper. th1s child wanted allen-·
such nght
linn ut school The school felt 11
A puhhc-&gt;chool counsclnr IS had tu cxplnre what the ch1ld had
also an agent nf the government.
rcpnrtcd. and summoned the parFurthermore. there arc ·a num- ent. who. on qucstt'onmg. was
bcr ol · poht1cally corn~ct" teach- acqutttcd.
ers m the J.md who -- on hcar~ng
Meanwh1le. as both nalional
what a cluld reports as "b•gotry" and local organtzalions combat the
at home -- nught well warn thctr censoring ol "offensi~e" books in
" politically correct'' principals
the classroom and the school
Parents cuuld he summoned for library -- "Huckleberry Finn," for
a conlerencc on the hurm they arc example-- the Justice Dcpanment,
~mng their ch•ldren by preventmg w1th the hest of mtenttons, ts 1rythem [ram adJUSting lU'a multJcul- '"I' Ill nlcrt youngsters to blow the
tural society
wlusllc on language m thetr own
There 1s an addtttonal problem homes
m cntrustmg very younll k1ds to
What 1f a Vts1ttng UI)Cie cxlolled
report on t~etr parents' speech ,
the v~rtucs of "Hu&lt;y~lcberry Finn,"
From my own cxpcnencc and despttc tis usc of the word "ntgfrom obscrvatton, I know a num- gers" -- to show ihe prcjudtccs of
bcr ot young children with very 1hosc times - ~ and read from lhe
hvcly •mag•nattons. who grah the novel'!
1
attention of the1r peers and some
And although pnvacy is becom-

Malinda Christy, 91 , Middleport. died Satufllay. May 30. 1998.
She had lived in Middleport for the past 17 years and formerly resided in
the Portland and Barberton areas.
She was a member of the Middlepon Nazarene Churcb. a member of the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens and lhe Amencon Legion Ladies AuXIliary 128 of
Middleport.
•
She is 511rvived by her husband. Manley Ch9sty. a brother. Lawrence
Blosser of Ltttle Hocking; a stepdaughter, Margaret Sommerfield ?f Westervtlle; 1 slepson, Clifton First of Aorida; and several slepgrandchtldren.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Albert Jay F~rst , and by
II brolhers and three sisters.
Services wtll be I p.m. Thursday in the Zak-M1mbarren Funeral Home.
Doylestown. wtth.the Rev. Gregory Cundiff officiatmg. Bunal wtll follow
m Newmans Creek Cemelery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 68 p.m. Wednesday.

IND

Vis Msocisttld Press

Stormy conditions linger
in area through Tuesday
r;Jy The Associated Pre..

Sk1es will be cloudy in Ohio tonight. Lows w1ll range from 50 to 55 m
tbe nonheasl to the upper 50s in the southwest.
, In northwesl Ohio, there will be a chance of showers and thunder.;torms
toward daybreak on Tuesday. ·
A cold front dropping south from Canada will move across lhe state dur•n!! the day It wtll produce mostly cloudy skies and a chance of scattered
lhunderstorms across the state. Aflernoon highs wtlfrange from 1he mid-70s
1~ the north to the low 80s southwest.
The record h1gh temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather stalJOn was 96 set in 1934 The ji!COrd low was 41 m 1894.
Sunset today wtll be at 8:53 p.m. Sunrise TueSday will be at 6:05 a.m
Weather forecast: '
,
Tonight. Partly cloudy. Lows m the mid 50s. Light and variable wind.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy wilh a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Breezy Highs m the upper 70s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Tuesday night...Panly cloudy with 1 chance of rain and thunderstorms.
l,.ows m the mid 50s.
l;lltended forecast:
· Wednesday...Partly eloutly. Highs in the mid 70s.
.
· Thursday... Panly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s and h1ghs from the m1d
(Qs to the lower 80s.
Pnday•..Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. ·Lows in the upper 50s
imd highs in the 70s.
'

Ch,ampion -, add~

office
supply firm to -IJoldings

mg mcrcasmgly curbed by pnvatc
and governmental orgamzauons,
the htghcst c~pectation or prtvaey
a ns -- or should remain -- '"
the h 1mc
, \
In her letter, Eleanor Acheson
cues an admirable part of the Justtcc 'Department's · Internet K1ds'
Page thai "gtves kids facts about
nut ctv•l nghts laws, cnme-preventum prugram~. the cr~mmol
JUStice system and crnnc-fighttng
tonk"
.
Lt would be 1lluminatmg to cttc
nn that page, for children of all
ages, Supreme Court deciSions
about privacy.
The section could alsh underhne the need for all of us, •ncludmg kuls, tn underst;md the history
ul lrce speech m this country
It IS a htstury thai IS tumultuous.
abraSive, exh1laratmg. h1gntcd,
explosive, hurtlul and open to
fierce. free rJ:~;pnnsc
And as Supreme Court Jusllce
John Harlan satd, we cannol "forbid panicular words wtthout also
rynning the sub~tan11al ri~k of suppressing ideas '" the proccs~ ...
I gave thiS kmd of htstory les:
son to a fifth-grade class in a New
York public school.
They waoted more. The Justice
Dcpanmcnt could help $em DUt.
Nat Hentolf Is 1 n1tlonally
renowned 1uthorlty on the First
Amendment 1nd the rest of lhe
BUI o# Rl&amp;hlll.

•• HUNTINGTON, W.Va.-Champ•on lndumies Inc. has purcha.~ all
lbe stock o(l'lu!IJIIIfiOII's of t,\Qfiantown Inc , and Thompson's of 1Bar·
bour County Inc., · which both do
bJJsmess together as Thompson's
Office Furntlure •and Supplies of
Morgantown and Pbilippi. W.Va.
Champ1on patd an undisciQsed
wnount of &lt;hares of its common !!lOCk
'" a transactton e~pected to be
;ccounled for as a pooling of interests, Champton officials said,
: Prior penod financud informalion
w1ll not be restated due to the immatenal effect on Clfampion's financtal
!latements. Chainnan Marshall T.
Jl.e yoold~ &amp;atd.
Thompson's IS now a divtsion of
Champion's office products sub·
!ildtary, StatiqnersJnc .. and continues
10 operate under the lbompson's
name
Thompson's ts a leading office
furniture and supply conipany m
northern Wesl Virginia and joms

The Daily Sentinel
(lJSI'S 113-MI)
A C...U Co. New p

Publislled everj 0111000,

,er

loloodoy """"P

F•MIIy, Ill Coo&lt;! Sl, I'OIIIquy, !lll10o

~ dlo
~lil-t Co.

AlhJO valky l'lltllloJUow
ScaJnddtu- poidol ........,, OIJJO.

, - . 'l1lc llooooiotod , _ llid dlo lllllo
t'kwspapct AslocllhOIL
1
Send lddreN 4:0m:dltlftl to The
• Oa1ly Senhnel Ill Court Sl • f'oMtroy, Oltio

. ,_•••nn
45769

SUISCRIFriON RATES
lyC.rrlorwM--

OneW..k

The New Republic neither liberal nor conservative
By Jo1eph Spear
Today's dtspatch smacks of
inSide JOUrnaliSm, and I apologiZe
for ,that. I beg your mdulgehcc
because the sad story I herewtth
d1scuss has somelhing to say about
_sociery !II l~e
It concerns The New Rcpubhc a
feiSty, unpredtctable, wmy, brash,
always mterestmg pohttcal magazmc that has been k•ckmg buti m
Washmgton
for 84 years.
'•
_ .It ts netther hberal nor conscrvattve, chooses tts targe-ts tndtscnmt-,
nately and lashes them w1th
4 . , , __
panache
It IS often an extremely pleasant
?
read, but sometimes n ts mfunat•ng It seems bhnd: for mstance: to
the benefits of nat taxes a futhng I
fmd dtff•cult to ab1de.
I have been rcadmg TNR otf and
•
on for 30 years, rehgtoosly for tile
8y The A..oclated Pre11
past 10. In 1996, tl was my pleasure
; Today tS Monday, June I, the 152nd day of 1998. There are 213 days left to testtfy on the maga1me's behalf
in the year
as an expert Witness m a It bel case.
: Today's H1ghhght In H1story.
It thus depresses me 10 read that
: On June I, 1813, the U S. Navy gained its motto when Cap(. James one of the magazme 's ydung star
~awrence, commandet of the U S. fngate.Chesapeake, satd "Don't gtve up reporters. Stephen Glass, has been
ltv.: sh1p" dunng a lostng battle w!lh the Brilish.
fired for representmg fictton as tf 11
:: On thts date
·
were fact.
; • In 1792, Kentucky became lhe ISth state of the unton.
According to the matazme's
·• In 1796, Tennessee llecame the 16th state.
cdnorsl he lit~rally conmucled
' · In 180 I, Mormon leader Bngham Young was born in Wh!lingham, Vt.
from thin atr stortes about characI'
lers and inctdents thai did not exist

'

.1..... :...,

.....

Today in history

~

or occur From
~R concluded "to a moral cerOne mghl he made lhe mtstake
1995 to 1998,
t;llnty" that lhe s1ory wu "not the of imbibing too many beers and
TNR published
product of keen observation or confessed to other staff reporters
tl
of
hiS
intrepid reponing.
that he had been "clcantng up" hts
p1eccs.
The enure anicle wu malic up sources' quo1es to make them read
In at 'tcast
out of whole cloth.··
better. He was dismissed lhe next
three of those
I haven't the sr.:Jce for !!11 tlt!;__dqy. What I will never [orgellshow
articles, , the
details, hut suffice n lo say lhat Mr. totally Ooored I was by the audactpubhcatlojl
Giass was a clever practitioner of ty of the unethtcal act
reports, th~re 1s
the fal!uhst's an.
·- What Stephen Glass did was
ev1dence
of
"For rea5ons known only to not too dtflerent from what other
fabncat1on
h1m," TNR cdilors wrolc, "Glass wnters lamenlably hul routmely df
moMntcd whal appears to havo been
Aulhor Joe McGtnntSs, to Cllc
Th~cst arc
under exhaus~
Speer
quite an elaborate effon. "tnclud1n8 but one example, pubhshed a book
(IYC r !~W
the falstfication of dacumcnls and about Ted Kennedy m 1993 whtch
Th deccpttons came to hght. reporter's nmes, to trick our editors carried this dtscla1mer.
accord1ng to New Rcpubhc ed1tors, and elude our fact-checkers."
"Sonic thoughts and dtalogue
after the magazmc published a
What lessons can he drawn? I 1 attributed to figures m thts narraGJ,ass art1clc about tecn-agt com- can thmk nf two:
. • ttve were created by the aulhor
puler hackers who had allegedly
-- It ts vtrtually tmposstble for an based on .. research and h1s know I:·
brpkcn mto corporate systems and edttor to catc~ the lrue con artist, cdae of the relevant people, places
demanded payoffs to cease and one who mtncately concocts hili and events."
desiSt
dcccpuons.
How much of a leap is 11 to gel
Reporters for Forbes Dtgttal
Bob' Woodward would attesl lo fro111 McGmmss to Glass?
'
Tool, a Web sne of Forbes maga- this. He was runnin1 the WashingIs p1ass an anomaly a slrange
Ztnc. tned wtthout success to venfy ton Potu's metros.taffin 1980, when permutauon m an · ~ssentially
the detatls m the hacker p1ece and Janet Cooke fabJ1Cated the story of bealtlty system? Or is he a precurnottfted TNR, whtch m turn spbkc •an 8-yei\T·Oid herom addict named sor. one more harbinger of a vtnuIO Glass, who m turn created a Web "Jimmy."
ally real and very scary place that
stte for a fake corporation whose
I will also atlesl 10 it. I was we seem to be somg to?
computers · purportedly had been columnislllck·Anderson's editor in
J-ph Spar 11 1 aylldlcated
broached and provtded a company the early '80s wllen we hired a writer for Newsp1per E•terpriR
votce-matl number that tn fact was young reP9f1er who turned in dynl· Aa-latlott.
to hts brother's cell phone.
mite copy about the eccentricities
· One ,thmg Jed to another until of world leaders.
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' '

CL.,VELAND (AP)- The jackpol for Wednesday's Super Lotto
drawing will be $16 milhon, the Ohto
Lottery said.
There were no Super Lotto game
tickets wtth the correct s1x-number
combinalion from Saturday's drawmg with $12 llltllion al slake.

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PRICE

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Sub!cnbers ncM dtsirln11o pay &amp;he earner lillY
u m1t m ldvanctd•rccl ~The O.il)' Sen1incl on
1
a thooc. siK or 1.2 month basil Ctedil will be
rgrvcn camcr each week.
~(J sublaipltOn by m•d permitted i• IIUI

~~: •na tiM: 1ublenp1iotl

Champion's rapidly growing office
products group jn the Mountain State,
lt;d by.J!unttngton-basetl Stationers.
Rose €ily Press in Charleston and
Capitol Busmess Int~riors jmned lhe
Stalioncrs group in Nfay.
The ,,combination of Stattoncrs,
Gopito~Business Intenoo, Rose City
Press. Champion Clarksburg. Champion ·s Chapman Printing dtvJSions
· and Thompson's g•ves ChampiOn "a
pn:-emmcitt presence lhroug:hout the
state," atcordtng to Reynolds.
The llllll'ger with 1bompson•s is "a
conlinuing commitment 10 DUr home
slate," Reynold• satd. "Thts should
enable 11!1&gt; to funher .increase our
office products 1mpact m West Vtl"
gmt~" L·
Champion. whose stock ts traded
on the NASDAQ under the syf(lboL
CHMP, h4il'sules of more lhan S108
million tn tts most recent fiscal year.
Thompson's has annual sales of
approximtiRiy $2 milliqn.
Hunun,ton-based Champton
opc:ratcs through reg1onal divtstOns m
13 state~;. including Ohto and West
Virginia

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u•

..

Ohio schools finding ways_
to help disabled students

·Squads answer.25 calls

By ELIZABETH NEUS
Gannett He- Service

follow state tn surance moodates. •
Aboul 122 million Americans are •
covered by ERISA plans.
"There is defimtely another tranSi tion
going on, but I &lt;jon't thmk most pfthe
proposals on the table will change the
way managed care works They' ll be
margmal changes," satd Larry Levttt.
d1rector ot the Chang•ng Healthcare •
Marketplace proJect at lhe Ka1ser :
Famtly Foundatton.
;
Not to those who m1ght have to ;
undergo those changes Some beheve •
the legislauon would undercut the
very nature or managed care
,
" It's fee-for-serv1ce m wolf's ,
clothing," smd Janel Newport. v1ce :
president of regulatory atlatrs for ;
Pac1tiCare Health Sy&lt;tems, whtch
covers 4 m1lhon people m I0 states
One example Ka1ser Permanente.
one of the natiOn's oldest HMOs, cur- •
rently h1res doctors who work only ;
for Katser. unhke other managed care :
plans who contract wtth doctors who ,
may work w1th other HMOs, as
well. Katser may have to work with·
doctors who do not have pnvlieges at·
tts hosp1tals.
" If tt becomes an open-ended;
unhmned, Qpen-access model where
anyone can self-reler to any (doctor)
at any lime, that becomes htghlY.
problematic ' sa1d D1ck Anderson,
v1ce preSident for health pohcy at
Ka1ser
Newport 1s concerned that plans
may have to accept doctors that do
not have the required credentials board cert•ficauon, for example Not
all doctors are certified by thetr profe&lt;&lt;~onal boards, a gruehng process
that unul recently was not seen a'
necessarx for a phystCIUn 's career
"ThiS goes beyond the nlea of
coordmated care," she smd "It's
more of a prov•der-protect1on bill
than a patient-protection b11l. "
The h.tblhty ISsue tnggers the
most explos1ve commenL~ from those
who oppose portions of the JegiSia!
tton- bus mess groups m.parttcular:
although the managed care mdustry
also IS agamst the habihty c1auses
All say g1vmg patients the ab1hty
to sue thetr HMOs adds another set
of tempting deep pockets, prompting
suns that m1 ght not have happened
otherwise and mcreasmg the costs of
managed care plans
"We'll tell our members to cease
and deSist offenhg health care coverage" •fthe habtl1ty clauses surv1ve1
smtl Bruce Josten . ex..ecut1ve v1ce

preSident for government affatrs at
the U S Chamber of Commerce
" You"ll see a herd effect of businesses movmg out of health care."
Please, Reardon satd
Suppose you're a pauent with
chest pa1os.
'
" If I call the (HMO's) medtcal
director and say I'd hke to send you
1o a cardtolog•st, and they say no. and
you go home and -d1e, they're nol
haj:Jie l I put th1s as fmrness to
patients, .. he smd. "They h1de beh1nd
the facade ol saymg !hat's a coverage
deCISIOn Nonsense. That's a med1cal
deCISIOn "

Although HMOs threaten 'to
mtcromanage doctors 1f they have to
JOin m the potential habihty, Reardory
doesn't beheve tt 'They'd g•ve th,e
dec1s1on-makmg back to the doctors

Meigs announcements ·.

Hospital news

.

•

Analysts detiat~ risk
for managed HMOs

WASHINGTON - The d1re predictions about the impact of pending
managed care legtslatlon are even
more apocalyptic than usual, even by
the relattvely low standards of healthcare lobbytsts wnh lo~g practice m
seemg the worst •
The end of managed care as we
know •t' Employers wtll drop all
health care coverage! Premmms w1ll
skyrocket and med1cal costs soar
once more! ChntonCare w11l nse
agam!
"AlthougH people have the best
interests at heart, the unmtended
consequence wtll be one-Size-fitsall," satd Karen lgnagm. prcstdent of
Marvm Gene Come~. 62, Lancaster, died Saturday, May 30, 1998 m Doc- the Amencan Assoctatlon of Health
Plans, an HMO tmde group "There's
tors Hospttal North, Columbus.
a
lot at nsk here."
Born Feb. 28, 1936 in West Virginia. son of the late Lennex and Chessie
Or not.
Comer, he was a reured conslruction worker, and a member of Carpenters
"We don't know where we're
Local 200.
going.
We're m transttton.'' sa1d Dr.
SurviVln~ are his wife, Betty Newsome Comer, whom he mamed Nov.
Thomas
Reardon. cha1rman of the
9, 1959 m Columbus; two sons, Bill Comer and J•mmy Comer, both of Lan·
caster; two brothers, Jerry Comer and Melvm Comer, both of Mount G•lead; board of the American Medical Assoand three sisters. Ltlhan Maynard of Rae me, .and Wanda Comer and Kather- ciauon. " But we will always have,
quole. managed care "
me Comer, both of New Orleans, La
p.ngress has several bills in hand
He wa.~ also preceded in death by a brother
Services will be II a m. Tuesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home. that would require managed care
Vinton, with Elders Sam Franks, Don Lawson and Raymond Stapleton offi- plans be more flexible, from requtrciaung. Burial will be in the Marcum Cemetery. near Wilkesville Friends mg them to cover emergency room
care, allow patients to see spectahsts
may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
Without a referral, and prov1de mformallon about doctors
Much of the Jeg•slatton also proposes g•vmg people other avenues to
complam about poor serv1ce or
dented clatms, as well a• the nght to
COLUMBUS (AP) Two abled students ha' grown 13 percent sue their managed care plans for malpracttce - somethmg not now perdecades after Congress forced to 218,977
Roland Lane, a teacher at subur- m•tted by law
schools to provtde an appropnate
"The good plans already do thts
pubhc ed'ucat10n for d1sabled stu- ban Worthmgton K1lbouroe Htgh
stuff.
These are the things that ought
dents, Oh1o teachers' are learmng new School, satd some students are getling credtt for work they really did- to be taken for granted," sa1d Joanne
ways to accommodate them.
Hustead. d1rector of legal and pubhc
Such accommodattons include o't complete.
readtng lests aloud and accepling
"There is a problem with diplo- policy for the National Partnership
answers orally to accommodate chil- ma•." Lane said. "There's no differ- for Women and Famtlies
The number co~ered by managed
dren who have difficulty reading or ence between a special-ed A and a "
care
ha~ rJSen dramatically: In 1997.
wrihng. Lynne Hamelbcrg, special- regular-cla~s A
85
percent
of msured people under 65
education coordinator for the subur"What does a diploma now mean'
were
covered
by manage\~ care plans.
ban Worthington schools, told The What do grades now mean'!"
Columbus Dispatch for a story SunBut Dcvtne sa1d whether tt be a up from 77 percent tn 1996 Even
day.
regular- or special-educatton pupil, many in Med1care and Med1cmd,
Children 100 easily distracted in die goal of makmg accommodahons government msurance programs for
large classrooms may take lests in to test students IS detennme what the elderly and the poor, are 1h mansmall groups oriildividually in the they know. To t~al end, Devme may aged care.
But the tranSition from the old feeschoollibmry. Chtldrcn who are hard restate or rephr.t.&lt;e questions for spefor-servtce
system, where a pat1ent
of ltearing may wear a recetver whtle ctal-educattOn puptls.
could
see,
whatever
aoctor he wantthe teacher wears a microphone and
" For some students, I may even
those With sight tmpairrnents may use have to pull the answer out of them," ed and was usually retmbursed by the
a magmfier.
she satd. "The bottom line is that insurance co,mpany. ha.~ been a rocky
The premtse behmd accommoda- they knew that answer, they had it one, and the batkla~h is under way.
Horror stories abo11nd of pauents
tions, satd Denny Devtne, a special- back there. They just didn't have the
who could not get the care they neededucation teacher I* the 'a~Mtd!en stralegies to retrieve it "
ed;
President Clinton recently showBexley schools. "is to level the playJohn Herner, dtrcctor of spectal
cased
a woman wtth breast cancer
ing field."
education for the Ohio Department of
who
had
to call her HMO 123 limes
But some 1eachers are critical of Education, is a pasSionate defender of
to
find
answers
to ba&lt;~c quesllons
1he accommodations that are made accommodauons.
Many see the attempt at 1mposmg
for the growing numtler of tltsabled
He especially diSagrees with the •
new
rules on managed care plans as
students, who even can be e~empted idea that a chtld who look tests dtf·
part
of
a contmumg effort on the part
from taking the state's profictency ferently or d1d dtffe~nt homework to
tests.
accommodate a disabihty should be of both the Whtte House and the
Figures obtained by the newspa- dented the high-school dtploma that mdustry to make more conSistent the
confusing rules by which health-care
per show t~at whtle the n~mbcr of other.; get.
Ohio students ha.• fallen 12 percent
"I JUsl have difficully denying a cover.llle works.
Most states have pas.'&gt;ed some ~er­
smce 1980 to about 1.8 m1lhon stu- kid something through no fault of his
ston
of some of the protections called
dents. the number of Jearmng dis- own
for in the federal b1lls. but those laws
do not apply to all insumnce plans
Multi state employers - mcludmg
most of the country's largest - are
Units of the Meigs County EmerPOMEROY
governed by a law called ERISA.
3:20 p m. Fnday, U.S 33, Mary which exempL• them lrom havmg to
gency Medical Service recorded 25
calls for assistance Friday. Satunduy McConanay, VMH,
9:09 p m Saturday. State Roule
and Sunday Umts responding m~lud­
248. ChesJer. motor veh1cle acc•dent.
ed:
pany gone on amval. Chester VFD
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:52 a m. Frtday, Bridgeman asststed
PomeroyOES
Street, S.ymcuse. Clarence Adams,
RACINE
Pomeroy Order of the Ea.•tem Star
Plea.'ianl Valley Hosp1tal;
2:39 p.m Saturday. Hoschar 186 wtll meet Tuesday, 7 30 p.m. at
12.34 p.m. Fnday, Nonh Second Road, Leonard Stover, lreated at the the Shade River Lodge !n Chester
Avenue, M1ddleport, Lucille Hendrtx. scene.
With a potluck dmner at 6 p.m
4: II a.m. Sunday, SR 124. MtckPVH, Middleport squad asststcd;
3.14 p.m. Friday, Sooth Fourth ey Tucker, trealed at 1he scene;
PERS
9:49 a.m. Sunday, Cherry Street,
Avenue, Middlepon. Fern Roush.
Pubhc Employees Rettrement
Lany Spencer, HMC;
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
System meeting Will be held at noon
8:37 p m Sunday, DewltL\ Run on Thursday at the Me1gs Mulllpur9.39 p.m. Fnday. Mount Olive
Roall, Elizabeth Bartoe. Camden- Road, Mildred Krider, PVH
' Center. The speaker w11l
pose Sen1or
RUTLAND
Clark Memorial Hospilal;
be from Med1cal Mutual and Blue
4:03 p m. Frtday, Staneart Road. Cross. Those attendtng should make
12·46 a.m. Saturday, Middlepon
Police Department, Johnnie Owens, Pamela Cheadle, O'Biene..s Memor- lunch reservations through the center
VMH;
ial Hospital.
at 992-2161
SALEM TWP. VFD
pa a.m: Saturday: U.S 33,
9:37 .p.m. Sunday, Nelson Road.
Pomeroy, motor vehicle acctdent,
pole barn fire at Jettie Jewell resi- Clariftcation
Neil Gtlcs, VMH;
2:34a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy Pike, dence. Rulland squad a~sisted.
In coverage of Eastern High
TUPPERS PLAINS
'Rachel Lee, VMH;
School's awards a.•sembly, the name
10:40 p m. Sunday, Pine Tree of Judy West was ommed as a recip9:20a.m. Saturday, Rockspnngs
ient of the Navy Schola•llc AchieveRehabilitation Cen1er. Pomeroy, Drive, fallen power line.
men! Award. Also receivmg the
Becky Brown. Holzer Medical Cenaward was ,Salutatonan Brandon
ret:
.
Buckley
2:55 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Veterans Memorial
Nursing Center. Middleport, RoseSaturday admtsstons - Anna
mary Isner, VMH. Middleport squad
VIIR'swtlt, Pomeroy
as.•il&lt;ted:
Satunday d1scharges - none.
4:35 p.m. Saturday, Tuppers
Sunday admiSsions - none
Plains, Delphia Stover, St. Joseph's
Sunday discharges - none.
Memorial Hospital;
Holzer Medical Center
9;04 p.m. Saturday, Willow Creek
Dlscharaes
May 29 - Edith
Road, Pomeroy, Christy Phahn,
Smtth,
Elaine
HIU'Vey,
Mrs Eber
PVH;
Pickens
and
son,
Maxine
Antal,
Mrs
7:58 p.m. Sunday. Lynn Stree~
David
Pam
and
son,
Virginia
Bower.;,
P~meroy. Anacla Campbell. HMC • .
Mildred Lamben, Mollie Bai~n.
MIDDLEPORT
Curtis
Gtlben, Frieda Holberg. Alma
I:3S a.m Friday, volunteer fire
Talbot,
Tammy Rtchards, Della Wildepartment and squad, North Front
son,
Martha
Monis.
SCree~ boat adrift in river, no injuries
Blrlh - Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
ieportcd; .
Richard,
son, Coolville.
II: 12 a.m. Friday, D1amond
Dlsc:hii'Jft May 30 - Jody
Street, Paul Steinmetz, VMH;
'Bailes, John Rife, Mrs Robert 'llllk4:36 p.m. Sunday, Riverside ington and daughter, Patricia Russell.
Apartments, Sal!llra Cwtertmewitz,
Diltll•raes May 31 - Paul
VMH·•
'
•
Absten, Mrs. Woodrow Richard and
10.011 p.m. Sunday, North Second son, Bobby Reavis, Wanda ScarberAvenue, Larry Hendncks, refused ry, Irene Osborne.
treltlllent
(Putlllllh~ with Jlermlllfen)

Marvin ·Gene Comer

The Justice Department says I'm unjust ;
By Nat HentoH

Malinda Christy

•

the cittzeps of Long Beach don't
seem to mmd gelling 1 new cargo
tenmnal that will employ 300 AmerIcan workers and only a small handful of Chi ne'c nalionals
Unlike the· Loral siJuation, the
casco bid has the support of the
Pentagon. which has found that leasmg the property to a Chmese company poses no threat to nattonal
security. We're talkmg about shtppmg containers, after all, not salelhtes or miSsiles.
But that won'l mean 'much to
lnhofe and hts suppcirters. They're
well aware that China-bashing plays
well with the voters back home, no
m~tter how misguided the attacks
are. Yet such grand-standing only
serves to undermme a very legitimate questton of natuJnal "ecunty·
whether our admtntstratton sold
technology to a hosttlc foretgn government m exchange for a few wellplaced campatgn donauons.
MINI EDITORIAL-- The longawaited tobacco sculcmcnt has yet
to be approved, but already mcmbj:rs of Congress and tile Chnton
admmistrat1on arc fightmg over how
to' spend the spotls.
But tf the tobacco debate IS really
about helpmg ch1ldren, as the pohttcians clatm. we have a suggeMIOrl
'Donate atlcasl a portton qf the halfbillion revenue windfall to one of .
the worthiest charnics around ·' the
Children's Mtraclc Network.
Launched in 1983. the network
has ra1scd more than SI bilhon to
over 170 chtldrcn's hospnals across
the country Although 1t's a nauonwJde network, the money you gtve
stays m local hands and helps local
k1ds whose parents can'( alford (O
pay for thetr medtc,al care
Thetr annual telethon concludes
Sunday, May 31, tor those wlto want
to gtve Your money wtll he far more
effective than the vanous plans
bc.ing proposed by our money-hungry lawmakers on Capttol Htll.
JKk Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally SeJnel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 1,1998

•

Youth golf
Many area young lad1es are gettmg ready for the Meigs Jumor Golf
League wh1ch Will start on Wedne~­
day, June 3. Boys are welcome too
RegtslraliOn w1ll begm at 8:30am
Metgs County Golf Cour.;e. The
league is for boys and g.rls between
the ages of 8 and 16 For further'
infonnauon, one should call Cheryl
Thoma.• al the golf course at 740-,
992-6312 or Carol McCullough at.
992-5322
-:
Tournament planned
,
Stgnup lor the annual Me1gs•
County He.Jrt A&gt;socJatton GolfTournament w1ll be held on June 18 at I
p m. Lunch. a stejlk dmner and door
pnzes are mduded m the regiStraiJon
fee of $42 lor members and $50 for,
non-member&lt; Registration can ~
made by calling the Meigs County,
Golf Course at 992-6312.

�•

~

The Daily Sentin~\:"

·sports
Chicago returns to NBA Finals

0

•

0

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
•CHICAGO (AP) - If thos "Last
Dance" ends with a sixth champi·
orlsho p. the Chicago Bulls will have
earned a lille like never before.
, The Bulls went to a seventh game
in 'the conference finals for the first
tune •since Jordan was ringless
Showing their consoderable experi·
en:ce in the final fi ve minutes. Chicago. beat the Indiana Pacers 88-83
S~day night to move on to the NBA
Fonals
" 'The fi rst order of busmess is lo
1elllnd1ana they gave us one heck of
a series and congratulate them on
their effort," coach Ph1l Jackson
said. " It was a diSappointment 10
them. I know, but ir was a great
series."
The Bulls relied on some of their
usual tricks - Michael Jordan and
Scbttie Pippen - and a big conrri·
buuon from their streakiest player,
Tom Kukoc.'
They won this one Wllh a m1xture
of poise and expenence. They scored
nine of the game's final 13 points,
made fewer miStakes in the final fi,·e
mihutes and grabbed almost all the
offensive rebounds all mghl long
" ll's about heart, and you saw a
lot of heart out there on the basket·
ball court," JOFdan said. "No one's
taken anything away from us. We still
have what we have and an opportunity to maintain ir."
'11ie linals begm Wednesday night
at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City.
This will be rhe first time the Bulls
have played the same opponent in rhe
finals in consecutive yeal'i. Their fil'it
four championships ·were won
againslth'e Los Angeles Lakers, Port·
land Trail Blazers. Phoenix Suns,
Selmle SuperSonics before they won
th~i r lifth last year against the Jazz.
"'We're gomg m with a lot of confidence," Jordan sa1d. "Look at our
recbrds. We haven't lost in the Finals
- ·and
that's a great
confidence to
t
•
have. Sure. it was a bailie to get there.
No one said it would be easy, but
we·re there. Now let's just do the
JOb "
'rhey did the JOb Sunday after the .
Pa9ers toed the game at 79 heading
mt6 the final five minutes.

ByRON SIRAK
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Fred
Couples doesn' t think he's a g~al
player. If he keeps playing like this,
he may have no choice in the matter.
"Ernie Els is 1 great player. Nick
Faldo is a great player." Couples said
Sunday after a closing69 put him at
17-under-par 271 in the Memorial
Tournament, four strokes ,head of
Andrew Magee, five beller than
David Duval and six in front of Jim
Furyk.
"I 'consider myself right beneath
them. which is fine," Couples said
about Els and Faldo. "Great is - you
just don't throw the word around. So
I consider 'good' not too bad."
Even Couples' modesty can't hide ·
what he has accomplished this year
- and in his career.

·,

Jarrett gets past
.
Gordon to win
MBNA Platinum 400 . :

lfourth-quarter
.t;ally drives Bulls
past Pacers 88-,83

• I

' '

Pippen scored on a jumper after
grabbmg one of Chicago's 22 offenSive rebounds. and Jordan drew a
double-team and fed Luc Longley for
a corner jumper. The Pacers. meanwhile, were committing three
turnovers and missing a shot.
A putback by Antonio Davis made
it 85-83 wllh 2. 12 left. but Pippen
came right bac.k with a running hook
shot with I :59 left - although he
mossed a chance to conver1 a threepomt play.
Mark Jackson threw away a pass
on Indiana's next possession - one
of 13 miscues by the Pacers. The
Bulls would miss their next two
shots, but they managed to run time
off the clock by grabbing offensive
rebounds.
The Pacers got the ball back w11h
about 30 seconds left still trailing by
four. Derrick McKey took the first
open shot that presented itself and
missed. Jordan rebounded, the Pacers
fo~led Ron Harper and his free throw
with 8.9 seconds left completed the
sconng.
. " We' re good enough to beat
Chicago, and we knew that all
along," Pacers coach Larry Bird
said. "We had them where we wanted. We wanted to stay close. We just
didn 't make the plays down the
stretch."
Jordan, who struggled with his
shooting at limes, still linished with
28 pomts, nme rebounds. eight as.,sts
and two steals. He shot IS free
throws, making 10. ·
"His jump shot didn't work but
his free throws did," Bird said. "He
pul his head·down. went into traffic
and drew fouls. "
Kukoc contributed 21 points,
including 13 in the third quarter When
no one else was producing, and Pippen had 17 points, 12 rebounds, three
assists and two steals.
Reggie Mille~ led Indiana woth 22
points, but he was nowhere to be
found late in the fourth quarter as
Jordan guarded him lightly. He
anempted only one shot in the final
12 minutes.
The key sJalislical difference was
reboundmg, as Chicago grabbed SO
to Indiana's 34. On the offensi~,

YESI- The Chicago Bulla' Michael Jordan lhowa his pleasul'l II
the tum of events In the final minute• of Game 7 of the NBA East1m
Conference finals Sunday night In Chicago, whel'llhe Bull1' 118-83
win put ~m Into the NBA Finals for lhe third ltralght year. (AP)
it was 22-4 in favor of the Bulls.
"Our Clefense held strong, and
defense wms championships." Jordan
said. "I think that was very obv1ous.
"We banged the boards very hard.
When you're shooting that bad
(Chicago was outshot 48 to 38 percent), you have to go to the boards.
It gave us many opportunities to .
shoot the ball (76 anempts to lndi·
ana's 56)."
The Bulls will have two days to
prepare for the Jazz, who went
through' their eighth straight day
today without a game.
"We may be a little tired, but our
hearts are not tired," Jordan said.
Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf
has said he would,be inclined to offer
all the players one-year contracts if
they win another championship. But
Pippen says he won't accept a oneyear deal, Jackson insists he's leaving and Jordan, who will be a free
agent. is considering retiring.
.So much uncer1ainty led to the
Bulls' appearanct Sunday nighllhat
the learn was greeted on 1ts home
COUr1 Sunday by a mood or desperation.
The United Center was strangely

quiet JUSt a couple minutes into the
first quaner. a mood of apprehension
so strong it was eerie.
"I thought during the introductions that this could be the last time
I high-five M1chael." teammate Jud
Buechler said. .
The collective state of disbelief
only grew worse as the Pacers were
hilling their first eight shots of the
game in opening a 20-71ead en route
to a 27-19 a~vanlage after one period.

By DICK BRINSTER ·
DOVER, Del. (AP) - Jeff Gordon has always said he wants to win
as many races as he can.
.
And that hasn't changed despite
what happened Sunday at Dover
Downs International Speedway.
when he lost an economy run to Dale
Jarren in the MBNA Platinum 400.
But Gordon, who has won 32
times despole being only 26 years olci
knows something else is more valu·
able. He wants to win another Winston Cup championship - t~is year.
"Finishing third Was great today,"
he said after handing Jarrell the victory by refusing to take a late gamble that there was enough fuel to fin·
ish 400 miles. "We'd much rather get
those Winston Cup points."
So. he stopped for a splash of ga•
with eight laps remaining after lead· .
ing 375 of the first 392. As a result,
he increased his lead over Jeremy
Mayfield to 47 points.
"We can't jeopardize top-live
finish," Gordon said. "Sometimes
you can't do anything about gas
mileage."
It was the second time in three
weeks that Gordon ha• lost because
he was low on fuel. He gambled the
first r.ime, two weeks ago in the
NASCAR all-star race. and lost. But
no points were at slake in that event
at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
The loss here did linle to temper
Gordon's enthusia•m. In facr. he
considers it another step on the road
to what he hopes is his third series
championship in four yean.

a

"I think we carried some momen- .
tum· from Charlotte, and I think
we' re going to carry some out of here ,
to Richmond." Gordon said.
•· ,
His loss in the NASCAR all-star
event at Charlolle Motor Speedway ,
two weeks ago - when his tank '
went dry while he wa~ leading with
a )ap remaining - was followed by
an impressive victory a week later in
the Coca-Cola 600. Now he heads fill" •
RichmondJnternational Raceway for. '
the Pontiac Excitement 400 on Saturday night.
• ,4
Although Gordon wa.• not sur- ·'
prised when crew chief Ray Evern.' ·!
ham told him they' d have to stop for :;.
fuel. he was stunned that his Chevro-' "
let devastated the field.
"If you had asked me if I thoul!hl
I would have had that dominant a cac ·'
today. I would have told you YOil · ·
were crazy." he said. "We did all we ,
could do to get to Victory Lane. But.
that's the way life works."
Jarrell realizes that, and couldn 'I
help but recall what happened in this .
race a year ago. He led 2SS laps in.
what then was a SOO-Iap excursion •'
over the Monster Mile, only to Jose ,
when Gordon hit him when he ,,
slowed for an accident.
But he took no particular pleaNre
in what could be clas~s'1ed as
redemption at Dover.
"I don't know if anyth ng owes
you or you get a p!lybac " Jarrell
said. "But I've been wnili g to win
here for a long lime."
Indeed. Despite some terrific
(See MBNA 400 on Page 4)

0

Meias junior Clay1on Ohlinger
fired a one hitter in his first vmity
start as Meigs defeated Miller IHJ in
a TVC makeup blseball game in
May. The game was called after five
innings.
Ohlinger gave up a lead off single
to Jesse Hamilton in the first inning
and then walked the number two hitter. But Clayton retired the next 13
batters in a row before hilling a bat·
ter with one out in the fiflh.
Meigs took a 3-0 lead in the bot·
tom of the first inning. Jeremiah
Bentley walked, and Tony Dugan and
Rusty Stewart followed with singles.
Three walks and a hit bauer later the
Mmuders were on top 3-0.
•Meigs added IWO more ru!'S in the
top of the third inning, J.T.
Humpllreys doubled, and Collin
Roush followed with a single. Brad
Davenport reached on a fielders
choice. Nathan Hallbill walked and
Pat Martin singled to make il a 5..0
contest.
Meigs closed out the scoring in

Clutch rally pushes .
Reds p~st L.A. 6-5 .

homer It tied for the second longest
home run in SkyDome history.
"I think the ball ended up in
somebody's caesar salad as one big
crouton," Indians manager Mike
Hargrove said.
One out later Mark Whiten followed with a solo shot just over the
fence in left agamst Hentgen (7-4).
Hentgen wa• not that impressed
by Thome's shot.
" Big deal. I' ve given up five
home runs in a game," he said. "Gi
ing up homers is something I' ~
ne
my whole career. What i d the
game for them was all those singles
I gave up with two outs."
After Sandy Alomar Jr. and travis
Fryman singled. David Bell hit an
RBI single to score Alomar. Omar
'

~

0

Vozquel followed with another run·
!~_Coring single to make it4-2.
Hentgen allowed four runs and
e1gh1 hits in .
·nmngs a.• his fourgame win ng stre was snapped.
Nag !lowed hi major league~
l~adl
Oth horne n in the first, a
lw run shot by Ca os Delgado.
'He made one d pitch to. Del·
g o," Hargrove sa . "What's he 72 ow? If he's 14-4 nd g1ves up 40
orne runs I'll guess we'll have to
take that."
'
Nagy got into a ooe 1. bases
loaded Jam in the fifth. but lowed
just one run on Delgado's RB field·
er's choice.
" I thought I threw the hal ' , "
Nagy said "I allowed runners all
game but I made some pitches when

By JOHN NADEL
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Reggie
Sanders wa• determined not to be
called out on .another pitch he thQught
was outside.
Not only dili Sanders avoid such
a fate, he struck the key blow Sunday
as the Ciqcinnati Reds rallied to beat
Los Angeles 6-5 for . !heir , third
"We banled.'four rttns n
straight victory over the Dodgers.
chute,
and I didn't hold it.
Sanders led off the ninth with his
"The sun's going to shine to·~•J'
founh homer off Scoll Radinsky (1.
2) to lie the game 5-S. Barry Larkin row, this is California. Sbmetlme:~o
then drew a one-out walk; arid scored they hit them at people. sometime(
the winning run on Dmitri Young's they don't. Baseball season is like a ,
~
double off first baseman Eric karros' roller coaster."
I had to."
Dodgers manager Bill Russell
glove.
.
· The Blue lays had the tying run at
"My whole approach was to get gave Radinsky a shaky vote of consecond with one out in the seventh on base," Sanders said. "(Rndinsky) . lidence. ·
but Alex Gonzalez was caught steal· gave me something away. They had
"He's our closer," Russell said.
mg by reliever Alvin Morman.
"He was the setup guy {last season).
been doing that all day."
"Aivm came in and did a grenljoh
And with a great deal or success. ... We lost our closer. (Todd) Worrell.
· with the guy on Second base. He got Sanders had a single in four at-bats and we looked within. We ,have
us out of thai Jam and then the before the ninth, and had been called (Antonio) ~una and we have Radiooffense just took over from there," · out on strikes three limes by plate sky. So we'll use them accordingly."
Nagy said.
umpire Jerry Layne.
~una gave up a two-run homer to
Manny Ramirez made it 5-3 in the • "I seriously thought they were Brei Boone in the eighlh- Boone's
e1ghth with an RBI single. The lndi· balls," said Sanders. who: homered second two-run homer of the game
ans added three insurance runs in the over the right-field fence on a 1·2 -to make it !1-4.
f.
ninth. Alomar doubled, stole third pitch. ''(Layne) said they were pitchThen came the decisive 'ninth. 1 •
and scored on culcher Kevin Brown's er's pitches. He had been calling the
Larkin scored easfly wheri ·
throwing error. V1zquel added a sac- outside pitch on me all. day."
Young's liner went olf the glove or
rifice Oy and David Justice had an
The blown save was tHe second in Kanms and into foul territory. Young '
RBI double.
three days for Radinsky and his was thrown out trying to stretch the 1
Jose Mesa pitched the final two rourth of the season. He gave given ' hit into .. triple.
mnings for his lirsl sa\•e.
up four straight two-out singles in the
(See ~EDSon Pap 5)

Rtan Williams completed his
sophomore year for the Mariella
College Pioneers. Williams is a 6foot-0 pitcher al)d outfielder for the

.

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to. AI!Fic:l , 14, Bonds, $an Fra~t~:11t.:u,
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I

(Continued rrom Paae 4J
"Renie got up there and tied it son. He added a sinale in the third.
up, the situition pre~~ented itself for
The Dodpni took I 4-0 lead in the
~ .. Young BDid. "It wp an iMide fint when ·Raul Mondesi hit 1 2-0
fa!tball, I hit II rigbt at (KatTOS), it piteh rrom Red.~ S~aner Mike ~em·
was a tough chance."
linger into the left field bullpen for
Youna. rrom nealby Oxnard, had his second Cllf'Cel' arand slam.
a lot of family and friends in the
Chatles JohnROR w1.~ credited with
crowd of 41,306.
1 double in the lot Anples second
"I know 1had about 30-sornethina • when second baseman lloone lolt his
on the poss list, numerou~ othen," he popup in~·~·
later scored on
said. "It's nice to Jel a aame-winninl Jose ViZCitnO I sacnfice fly to give
hit, period. It's double satisfaction the Dodgers a .5-2 lead.
gelling one at home."
.
Vlldea, one of several Dodgen
Danny Graves ( 1-0), who retired mentioned in the ~nl Rcandy John·
the Dodaers in order In the eiahth, ~ trade apeculat1011, _lllowed elahl
earned the victory. Jeff Shaw pitched htl~ and I~ rttns tn seven-plus
a perfect ninth for his 16th save.
inn111as. He walked three and lllniCk
Boone hit his finllwO-iun homer 0111 six.
•
off 11arter lsliiiiCI Valdes in the sec·
Remll'!l"r P~ up IIX hill and
, onc1. He hit his secottd ofi'Oiuna af\cr five runs 1n 4 113 1nnlnas.
Valde• lllowed a leadolr sin1il by
Note~: The Dodaen open I~
Willie a - in the eiahth.
pme ~lnat ~ McOwue
Boone has nine homers this sea· and the SL Lou11 Canltnsls on ~--

••

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&lt;l'

The 1999 0 .0. Roush Memorial
Golf Tournament encled in two way
ties for first place in both the ladies''
and men's divisions.
The annual event is played annu-·
ally over the Memorial Day weekend
at Riverside Oolf Club in Mason. II
is played in memory of Grant 0...
Roush, the father of Riverside own·
er Gary Roush. Grant pa.~sed way
shonly after Gary and his brother,
Bobby. purchased the club in 1974. It
was at this time the tournament was
established in his memory, and the
matoh is still a regular annual event
on the schedule at RiveBide.
This year's ladies division was lied
with net scores or 149 ror 36 holes,
with Mary Burton of Mason

•

lop 20 shot below 68. 'The victory
was his. Just like in the old days.

-·-

ra.nr A • lpaS1%
lnr
Fred
em

61-67~7-m..JJI

Andrew

67-71-68-69-l.,

D.:r.\ id Dtnal SI..WHXJ

74-66-67·69¥&lt;!16

Smn:

$66.2 7~

Ted Tryha. $M.l7'i
Em111~ Eh Sh6 2n
Cnug Stad le-r: $46 640
J ~&lt;oprr Pamt~ d;.. 546.6-W
Rnt'lert o.•mron S46b.U.I
&lt;ilen Day. S46.MO
Tnm Lehman. S4h.MO

Br:v.J FRI. I I ~ b~O
S IC\eJone~. $1 ~ 620

Fmllilnk, $'1,2411

1J.(,l). '11). 71•21!

S~ewllft Cud;

75-6970-71•215

$9.:2..u.l

5&lt;.-.oV&lt;tJtbnk $9.2411
Hamson Fnzar. W 240
Edward FryMI. S9

72-70-71 ·72·2•' .;•
61.-69 7S-7lall5 ~o 1

z.a

7l· 70-69-7la115 ..

66-72·72-71-21!

TIYWW ~. $9.240
Orr! Kraft. S7 ().M)
Ktnny ~ny. S7 o.40
IJnb Etile!i 17.().W
Joe)' Smdchtr. S11J.40

61 -1"· 76-611.216

68 - 7~ - 72-7 2-2 17 .

67-71-68 · 7~a279

8r.od Ekler. $.'.71&gt;0

70..12· 70...75-!17

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67-7.l -70·7(}.:2HO
71-71 66-70.280
70·70·69-7 1• 2HO
n -71 -M -71• 280

Don Pool"). U 1~8

TtJer Wc.ld~ $~ . 1 48
DuvM! TOIIIS s~ 141
Doog Ttwell S.,.l oiK

71 -JJ. 71-71•218
70-74-71-7\-.28, ,

70-73 68 70.28 1

Brtlt Qu1J;Ir)'. S 19 .SKO

j

Mt-7S-65-7S•11.t •

JoM Hu\tntt. Sl:! ol77

Brtnt Gethrrpr. SS.7M

Fronk Nnb1lo. SJtU63

•

74-61-fll.. 7&lt;t-214 ••
6K-67-73 , ..:!... ~

Lt-n Mlllll~ Sl!.471

Marl; Bronl,;, S~ 1M

8ot'l iwuy SJO ~1

Jay HIMl.'l, Sl9~'i KD
Mark W•~he $ 19 .~ KO

11 ·10-69·14oll4 '

68-69-72 -70•279

6H ·10-70.1l• 280
7 1-72 -69-61}..28 1

Juslan ~ Sln 863
Neot l LancaSirr. SJO.K61
' Kui;. Tnplc:U $)().K6l
Clvn Perry, SJp K61
Bohb) Wd tns. U0.8tl3
Stc\'t' 1.-o.,. «) SI9.\KO
Dan Forsman. S 1 ~.5 1!0

N~ek Faldn. Sl :' !-411
Julin Cook. Sll477

71~- 76-70-216 ..~
72-6174-72-216 ~ ·
{)6.72-13·7)a116 · :
M -70 76-72-l87

Jim Fur)'k. SH~ .600
7-4-68-67-68•217
Brandel C'lmmhW. $8] 600
71 -72-66-69.,::!11
Dol\ 1s Uwe Ill . SK3 61M)
66-11-66-7],.278
Tim Herron Stl6.27!17l-72 ~7 611• 179
M11rk Calc;~vrc c hla

68-74·70-72-214 .
71-1l.U.73-214 .,..J

Ste-ve S!nt~rr $12.477

Here are the fi nal scores and
money winnings Sunday from the
$2 2 million Memorial Tournament
played on the 7 ,163-yard, par-72
Muirfield Village Golf Club course.
coo~
Ma~:ff . Sl~7 .600

72-- 7 ..21! .
12 73·61·71•114

Larey Mtn. SI'\ 620 .
Btlly Mayrutr. Sll.4~
Lee Junn·n. Sll 47'1

M-70-7 1-71 allt l
71·69·6i-7 1al8 1

67-7 1 70-11•281
71-@-68-73• 281,

71 12-ft~ 7'\•2111
7)·1 1·1 1·67•282
69-7$-61.1().182
69·16 67 1Ua282
72 -10-hll-71a282

flo). fJ9. 70-74• 2112
71 -71 · 70-71• 2113
t.H-71
72o:2R1

n

F;.~•on .

Brold

72-7)-70.7:\•lll •
7)-67-74-74•20 ,.

74-71-MI-7ol• 211
73-69-71-7!i•21Ui
71 -14-68-"•2111

$5.14K

Phd Blad:.mar $\ loll!

JeiTGallaJhrr. S ~.l41
Joe OzW.i. 54.KII-I
Esaebilll Toledo 1-' Btu
Jtm Caner. StKIW
M1kt Hulhrn S4.H2
Ga111'tel H)tftMtdl. $.1 .7~2
Fnank Ltdoltcrr. s.&amp;.75l

7~-10-72-72•289

H-'10-11·11-209

74-71-69-73·289 • '
70-7!i-7o-n.m :·
69-15-70·76--"'90 .
ll·'70-69· N-290
H-69-14· 71•19 1 '
7.a-MI-12· 76-291 •
70-7'-70-18•24JI .

J~J T MPl!(!Crt ~ ~:20

Oa\ id Edw:mk. S4 fL'\(1
K('Y tn Su!hertand. $4.6;!0
VtJII)' Sm,t\. $ 4A6ft
Du1id 01,'fln. $.1.-1611

66-74-13 '19.29:! j
71-70..76-74•2V3
1~ 10 10 1..291 '

Jeff Sluman, $-' ~
Po )'nt Slewart S-1 .3~b

67r72 74-8)• M

Sie' e Pate

~ ~1 2

11·10 · 1 " · 1 1•29~

'

'0

(73+76=149) tying with Diana Bod·
kin of Point Pleasant (76+73= 149).
Due to the e~tremely busy tee ume
schedule, the ladies as well as the
men decided to share the champi·
onship rather than wait to play the lies
off for a lone winner.
The men's division was tied with
net scortes of 130 for their 36 holes
of play. Chuck Johnson of Point
Plea.•ant, W.Va. (62+68) tied with
Bob
Mcintosh
of
Athens
(68.t62=130). JQhnson is an employeee at AKZO-Nobel while Mcintosh
is a retired construction worker and
resides with his wife.
A total of fifty players s1ar1ed the
tournament in the two divisions with
most of the field completing play in

spite of Alumni functoons, proms, and
the coping of visiting guests from out
of town. The match wa• completed
under sometimes threatening skies.
however, the weatherman held back
the stormy situations in order for the
players ro finish the round Sunday.
All the playe"' were treated to a
steak cookout followmg the play on
Monday's round.
Following are the top six in the
ladies' d1Vis10n and the top 12 in the
men's.
Ladles Division
I Mary Burton, Ma.wn. W.Va 7376= 149; I. Diana Bodkin, Point
Pleasant 76-73= 149; 3. Wilma Bobb.
West Columbia, W.Va. 75-88=163; 4.
Teresa Cremeans, Middleport 76-

85=164; 5. Bobbie Dotson, Point :
Plea.~ant 79-85= 164; and 6. Sue Har, •
bour. Letart 80-85= 165
, ,:
Men's Division
I. Chuck Johnson, Point Plea.at~f • · ·
62-68=130; I. Bob Mclntosh, Athe... ,,,
68.{;2= 130; 3. Mitch Roush, Mason , ,
65-68=133; 4. Ryan Norris, Letan '·
Falls 69-67= 136: 5. Gary Rousb, •,1
Mason 66-71=137: 6. ScOII Hussell.
Cape Girardeau, Mo. 71-67=138; 7. ,
Bruce Jenks, Bidwe1170-68=138; 8: ·'
Pat Harbour, Letan, W.Va. 70- "'
61!=138: 9. Denms Lambert, Point ;
Plea.~ant68- 70-138; 10. Dave Helly, . ,
er. Glouster 67-71=138; II. Jimmy
Stewart, Point Pleasant 70-69= 139;
12. Craig Harrison, Racine 6673=139.
.

·Meigs softbal/ers defeat Wellston, Miller

local college power and Is a former
graduate of Southern High School,
where he excelled un4er the tutelege
of coach Mick Winebrenner.
The Ohio Division champions
Williams. the son of Jack and Judy defeated Wellston 14-2, and Miller 4~i.ll,i~~ ~f Syracu~. enclec! the sea- - I. Tile .4!!Y ~~ ,finished Vtilh
son w1th a .400 bantng average and a 14-8 record overall.
a 1.000 fielding percentage.
Meigs jumped out to a 1-0 lead
The Pioneers won the touah Ohio against Wellstoo. Amber Vinina sin·
Athletic Conference, composed or 10 gled and moved to second on a
NCAA Dlvis'ion Ill schools in Ohio passed ball. Vinina then scored the
with aiS-3 M:Ord. Mariena went40- games fll'llt run on a single by Brooke
IO overall and finished fourth in the Williams.
NCAA Division Ill Mideast Regional.
Meigs scored three runs in the sec"We had another strong season ond innina to take a four run lead on
and I am proud of what this youna only one hiL A~ Huris led off the
team accomplished in 1998." Marl· inning with 1 dolible. FoUr walks, a
etta College coach Don Schaly 111id. around out and a sacrifice later it was
"Next ~· we hope to. take another 4-0.
step and returilto the Worl~ Series."
The Marauden plated sinale rttns
The Pioneers hav e newer missed in the third and founh innin1s and
an NCAA Division Ill Regional blew the game wide open in the fifth
since 1975 and they won championships in 1981. 1983 and 1986.

'

' 'I

\

.•

l4 .

You D6n't Need-1b
Be Rlch 1b Stan
Investing, But You

to•nJ. Litt 1\ntcl~:~ll,

Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Galllpolla
Toll FrMI
DIAL

~

:m.

But things changed dramaticall y
in a maner of moments late on the
front nine.
Duval and Love both made a. double bogey on No 9 and Magee made
bogeys on two out of three holes
beginning at No. 6.
Couples. who' made a two-pull
birdie on the par-5 se1•enth hole,
rumed the front nine wit h a fou rstroke lead.
Then. moments before play was
suspended for the lirst 11me, Couples
made a bogey on No. 10 when he
missed a three-fool pull and Duval
pulled within three strokes of the lead
with birdi~ on Nos. 10 and II.
But no one got closer than that as
Cotiples twice came out of the weath·
er delays to make a l!irdie and prove
that the Couples or old was back.
He even viewed the gusty wealh·
er as a definite advantage as he took
a lead into the final round for the
third lime th1s year. .
" The wind blowing was a bonus,"
he said. "I dodn 't think that anyone
could shoot a 66 or 67 out there."
And he was right. No one in the

-

Both divisions feature ties for first place

Sentinel ~dent
The Meigs Marauder sotlball team
played two makt-up games in a rare
double~r in May, with single
games against two different teams on
the same day.

MBNA 400•••

21: Wmooclr., Pilllhurah, 20, .t11p10, Hnu11nn, 20;
Rcnkria t-londa IR, ~yna~. CINCINNATI I\ R
Wh11e, Montrt!\1, 12 , Clayton, St l.ouh, 12;•. ,
U.Shio:kb, So uouiS, 11, 8 l.rRoo, CtNCINNAl' ~ •
BAmNG. 8 Jorda•. St louiS. 172, Oll.'l'ud. 12.
New York. 171 . Gwy11n, Snn Dtc,:o, 160,
PITCHING (1 da:ii iOfll) Sc!Mnidl, ...lb""rah,'
T!mben!lc\•, CIN&lt;..' INNATI, 3~M . K\!nilall , l'uts· 7· 1, Jn~. 17" , Tnw;IL-..:1, Ql~.;aau. 6·1 , K.~7. J
!:l_h, ?4~1. Ainu , Hou-tnn .J!i l. Bichclh:. Cui· Millwood, Atlanta, 7-2, 17M, :t~t~l; ........ Huui·
1
'""· 1-1 1111. 1 ~1. - ' "· AII..L 1-2.
3 01.
,
R&gt;.UNS R1gtn. HnuMoo. 4't.• 01ippl., ; Ju11t:1. ~~·
Olavu":. Allllllla, 1·2,
2 IM, 0 . Mu.Jux, A1 1 •
lanla, 47 , Gt~ lllrra1a. Atl11nta, 47 , McGwm: , St. lunla, 7·2. 17M, I R\
~»UI!t: 46. Giltrwtlll:, Phtllll.lol,tMa.. 4$, M.wlk.,-~
Sun
STRIKEOUTS. Schlllina, Phn-.lclrhia, IIIJ,
1-rmti.1M:u, +2: 1.. W11llu.-r, CQicwadu. 42.
Wood, OI11.11JU, ll,,, SUMtktmyfe. &amp; Loui1, Rl , R· ,
MDI : Mt.:Owtre, St Lnuill. 6M, Ca~ltlla, ,J. Martinet. LM An~b.14. Nnmn, l.oR Antrk•, 7~. 1
Mtllkt, S I, GulwrDJn. Aclanta, W, Ainu, Huu~tnn, K Brown San lliqo 71 Reynu~ Hou~un 10
Oull'-., Junes, Ati~~Ma. 47. BnrMM, S.1n Fmnt;'"
SA Vi-~~ Sb11w, CINCINNATi, 16. Hurfnt~~n, ,
• ·~ . Broanu, PhiladelphiA, 44; o. Vauahn. Sill s.n DiDJO, 1~ . Beck. ChiCIIJII, I$: 8 Wngoor
Dle11u, 44.
Hoti!IIUft, 14: tkn. SM FI'Uidk.'4,. 14·
~ '
HITS : Bli.: hcne. Colerado, H2, (ilnnvtllc,
' •
Phllllckll'lhia. 72, Chirret Jonr1, All~t•lu, 72, M~trk
~ • ,. ' '
Otll&amp;!e, th lcaao. 72, So111, ChicliJU, 10. Bitlll"·
.:.!.
""""""· 69. Mo.:u... s .. Franclo:o. 67: K&lt;llll1~1.
PmroburJh, 67, Oularrup, Allutu, 67; Gwynn. San

.17".

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5.

Mason hosts G.O. Roush Memorial Tournament

By DAVE HARRIS

(Continued from Page .5)
effons at Dover, Jarrett had been try· have to race each race ·ror the cham·
ing for II yean to tame the Monster. pionship. and it doesn't maner ir it's
All he had to show for it were 22 in May or whenever." Jarrell said.
defeats and the knowledge that vic· "You don 'I want to look back when
tory often is an elusive commodity on the year's out and say, 'If we hadn't
1IUide that mistake or taken that gama competitive racing circuit.
"It's tough to win a race in this ble. we would have bten the chamdljy and time," Jarrett said after his pions.',.
Jarrell bliat feUow Ford driver Jeff
second victory of the year and 17th
Bunon
by 13.117 seconds.
o' his career. "You have 10 have
After the Chevrolet of Gordon
eilery_thing so your way.
"We've had cars in a few ri1ces came the Pontiac of Bobby ·"-nbonte,
that were capable of winning, but ooe which came all the way from 36th.
thing or anoth~r kept us from doing His wa.~ the final car on the lead lap:
th't. But at this point last year we had Mayfield. who lost the points lead
only ooe win. and we wound up with when Oordon won the Coca-Cola
seven. and we know we've 8otalot 600, wa~ fifth in his FMI.
Derending race champion Ricky
more chances."
Rudd
was sixth in a Ford. POie-siller
Jarrett thouaht Gordon's team
made the right deci~ion on fuel, even Rusty Wallace wound up 18th in his
if it cost them the race. A third-place Ford.
Jarrell collected S89.9SO from a
finish enhanced a point~ situalion that
purse
of Sl.7 1million. He averaged
could have been far worse had Gor·
don rttn out of fuel with three or four 119.522 mph in a race sloy.&lt;ed by cau·
tion ,fi ve-times for JS Jups~
. ~la~slert .
!"To win the championship, you

NLieaders

If the 992 Exchange Ia a Free Part of Your

Sepu, Seanle, 137. Bro~~u•. Nev. York, :r n, Ed·
"""""· Analoeim. l lO. D. Ieier. New Ym, )l9
RUNS D. leoa. New Votk, II . Griffey It ,
Se.. le. 47, Grie¥e, OUIIOd. 44, Dudwn. Cllicllo.
44, Thome. CLEVELAND. 41. A. Rodri..... Sao·
lie, 42. Loftmo. CLEVELAND. 41: KooloiHcl!. New
York. 42, J""' OoiWIIIcz. 'Teus, 42
Rll· .lu• Gonzalez, TexN, 71. &amp;lief, DrfnMI,
47, Grirr.y Jr.. Seol&gt;lo, 47, Thomc, CLEVELAND.
4) , O'Neill. New Yolk, 43. A Rodtl- Sanlo,
41 ~ J K ~nJ , K1n1u Ci ty, 41 , JuU1cc, CLEVe• •
LAND, 41
.
HITS: I. Rodtlaua. Tm1, 7S. D 1-. Now
Yon. 12 , A Rodrlpet. s-tile, 11 : Jllll 0 I I I '
71 , · ......... 70; MtCioci!Am, ~

(Guz""" ).

K ~ 7.

San FrllDI:ll·

ALieaden
er, MIMCIOII, :\67. 8 Willi

CL£VELAND (Wri1hl J-J) 8l DllrvilCFtorie ).

1-4), ·~, ..
OHiood (OqoiK

(Yoahn4-1) ,.,

CINCINNATI (Windtrlltr

Toaiiii1'••-

6), 105pm.

M~o1a

co(Darw~n.a.l ), IOO~pm

c.,

(WMefidd 6-2) • TOfOliO&gt;

N.Y

Cu ~

Houllon (Rr:ynokb , . )l ilt s..n D;cao (l.nftll~
.0), 10:05 p m.
'

Chh:•o Whill: Soll8, Detroit 2
CLEVELAND 8, T""""o l
Botton 13, NY. Yankm 7
SaniOII,TompoBay6
TeltU 9, Bllrifi'IOI"t _,
k10, OOkland 4
Alllhei016.MI-S

-

1-6) 2 20r m

Marllltl'Z. Dn ~ tnn , 6-l

at Oucur:l•

,.,7 I

Sunday's stores

0), 7 :0.~ p.m.

( Mcudt~ll .._ ~ )

18 4 l. ?~rn•
1l
Mnntreal &lt;PnAnll 0 -01 ;u

S.tunlay•s....,...

New York, 611

Mnrtlnrz, St:aulc. 19. &amp;lmond!l Anuhc1m, IH , Ju,m
OlJRllllc:l, Tt:lillliii, IK , Ret)e, 0.1~.;,110 IM
TRIPLES Ourh:.m. ChtL:nJo ~ . 8 Willl :1n1 ~.
New York , ~ : orrc:rm1m Ka•"'" Clly. ' : Oan;ld·
J'llltTil , 8n$1nA, 4. Damon. Kan.~UJ City " · V J~h.,.,
Nt w Ynrk , of , 0 lu11Jtmmn, A•nbcml, 4. Greer.
Texas. 4; t.ormn. CLF.Vt:LI\ND, 4
HOME RUNS· 1\ ROOnJu.:r:. Sc.illlc 20. Gnf
rcy Jr , St:nllk. 19. Ju.1n G n nt. ;~lc1:. rcaa~ 17 .
Can~~o-.; u, Tnrnnlo. 17 l:;u lc y,, l~tr.ml . 16 . N
Vnuahn, BMiun. I~ lltmnc. CU~ YI:.I .ANU . ll .
Pultn..'f. Kun!ia~ Cny. 11
Sl OL~N BAS~S T Gnudwtn. h: 1111~ . 21:
Hentknun. Oakland. 19, ll L Htmccr. lklmli. Itt:
Lafton, CUVli:LANI) l:t. St.:wt\fl , TIJfii!Mu . lol. ll
Jt:1cr, New York, 14, CIUI~~t:~.'o, Tllrl'flln, 14
PITCHING (7 deL:itiUihl ) DWell•. N~ w Yurk.
7- 1. K1~. 4 )4, Cunc New Yurk. 7-1 K7 ~ . ~ ,,, P

NY Mel' (MIIcl1 1· 11 011 Pi111burah (Schmlt.ll
0\.'trol! (Thompson 7-1). 10!pm
·

T•.,..,nto (Car'Jl(nler

Wllluun~ .

DOUBLES I RO\Jneutz, Te.luts 12. 1'hnnll!,
CLEVELAND. 21. JUJI!It:t:, CLEVELAND. 20. 1:

Sl lAHJis 1

Sun rmnci ~ O 7, A.rlrona 4
Om::q;u Cub1 4, AdutM:.l

4-!!i) :n MmncJotl 1Scrnfi n1

Tex1a !Wtlt +: 1) nl Ta"'4t·' Buy (J J1llmsun 2-2).

Ctntral Dllvkio11

CLEYELANU
Mtnnc!!Ofa
Chu:1.gu
[).:lrotl
K u n M~s C.ty

(C&lt;~ ndtonl

o.o, 1 l"pm

f.a'iltrn I»¥1Mnn

Day. 70. B

CINC1NNATI6. Los 1\ng&lt;lc• !

RYAN WILUAIIS

"

Scoreboard

the fourth inning. Dugan reached second on a Falcon error and scored
when Ryan Ramsburg singled stole
second and third and· scored on a
balk. Humphreys walked moved to
third on the balk and stole third. He
scored on a sacrifice ny off the bat of
Roush.
Ohlinger slrtJCk out live, walked
two and hit a batter to pick up the
win. Meigs had six hits. Martin.
Dugan, Stewart, Ramsburg, Roush all
hid singles. Humphreys added a
double.
Jon Hinkle was the starter and loser for Miller, he struck out three,
walked six and gave up six hits.
Hamilton had the only hit ror Miller.
his lead off single.
The Marauders finished the regu·
lar season with a 14-8 record overall.
lapiplllllllil
Miller
000..()()::()..1 -3
Meigs
302-3x=:8-6-0
Jon Hinkle (LP) and O.J. Boyland
Clayton Ohlinaer (WP) and J.T.
Humphreys

MC's Williams hits .400, has
perfect fielding tor Pioneers

•
ninth Friday night to allow the Reds ,
to score twice and tie the game, and. •
they went on to an 8-4, 12-inning vic- •
tory. '
Radinsky. who as 10 uves; :
remained in the
ngeles dugout
for more than an our a Sunday's •
game ended.

lnd_
i ans notch 8·3 win over Blue Jays
TORONTO (AP) - Charles
N~gy and Pat Hentgen don't care if
they allow home ru~
. . As long as
they keep winning.
Despite giving up h s 20th home
run this season, Nagy ( 2) won his
fourth straight decisoon, allowing
seven hils and three runs in 6 1/3
mnings as the Indians beat the Toronto Blue Jays 8-3 Sunday.
"I'm not concerned abollt giving
up home runs," Nagy said. "I was for
awhile but there's nothing I can do.
If I give up three runs on three home
runs I don' t care as long as I win."
Cleveland gave Nagy all the support he needed in the four1h innmg.
With one out, lim Thome hit a 483-foot shot that landed in Sightlines
restaurant in center field for hiS 13th

He was second at the Byron NelThe victory wu the second in
1998 for Couples and the 14th or his' son earlier this month when he hit
into the water on No 17 and made a
career. inc:ludinJ the 1992 Masters.
triple-bogey
6.
The victory put Couples on the
Couples' bad bacl; twoce had to
brink of the kind of yean he hid back
in 1991-92 when he WI.~ the No. J. endure severe-weather delays late in
ranked player in the world. He now the final round, but he made three
has two firsts. two !ICCOOds and a birdies on the back nine - the nine
that had doomed him ·twice this year
third in 19G8.
"I reel like I can play." Couples, - to ease to victory.
"To win on Jack's course, in
38, said. " Sometimes I feel tired and
Jack's
tournament, ne~t to winning
old. but other times like today..." his
voice drifted off. the look on his face Augusta, this is it for me," Couples
finishing the thought-his words failed said as he sal with tournament creator
and course designer Jack Nicklaus at
to define.
Couples won the Bob Hope Clas• his side.
"I'm playing as well as I can play
sic in January and finished second in
the Masters by one stroke arter mak- right now," said Couples. who has
ing a double-bogey 7 on No. 13. Lat· battled a bad back and a series or peter in April he was third at the Hous- sonal tragedies - including the
death of bolh his parents - since
ton open.
winmng the Masters in 1992.
Couples started the day with a
three-stroke lead over Davis Love Ill
and rour ahead or Els, Magee and Ted
Tryba. Duval was five strokes back.
Magee pulled within a stroke with
two birdies in the first three holes
while Couples was making a bogey
on No. 2.

Ohlinger's one-hit ·
pitching leads Meig·s
to 8-0 win over Miller

0

Jordan surpassed Kareem A,bduiJabbar's career playolf sconng record
of 5,762 points early in the second
quarter With two baskets.
Miller hit two three-pointers in the
final 30 seconds of the first half to
help Indiana pull to 48-45 at the
break.
Kukoc hit four straight jumpers.
including two three-pointers. early in
the thiid, then drew center Rik Smits'
founh foul with jusr under five minutes left and hit another three-pointer with 2:40]~ft ,for.a 68-6ll,el!d. ~~~
Indiana came bac~ and Jalen 'Rose
scored the ftf!ll four points of the
four1h quarter to make it 69-69.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1, 1998

Couples outpaces Mag.ee to win Memori_
al· Tournament

Monday, June -1 ,1!!! .

'

'

~. June

•

inning by plating SIX runs. Shannon
Price, Stephanie Wigal, Melissa
Ramsburg and Ashley Rupe al ~ had
singles in the inning.
Meigs closed out the scoring m the
shllh with two runs Ojl two walks. an
~rror and a sacrifice.Wellston scored
sm11le runs in the fifth and sixth
mmngs for their runs.
Amy Hysell was the winning
pitcher, she struck out seven. walked
five and scattered five hils. Abby
Harris hud a double and a single to
lead Meigs, Wigal had a pair of smgles, Vining, Price, Wilhams. and
Rupe all had singles for Meigs.
Alisha Martin. the starter and loser for Wellston. struck out six, walked
six and scallered five.hit~. Martin had
a double to lead the Rockets.

In the game against Miller, the
Marauders spotted the Falcons a 1-0
lead in the r;,.,.t inning and took
advantage of a pair of two run
innings to post the win.
Jones led off the game with a single and a stolen ba.~. A Meigs error
plated her with the game's first run.
Meigs took a 2·1 lead in th1rd with
out the benefit of a base hit. Julie
Spaun and Amber Vining walked and
both scored on a Miller error to give
the Murauders the 2-1 lead.
Me1gs added a pair ot msurance
runs rn the SIXth mning. Tangy Laudermllt walked with Rupe entering a.•
a courtesy runner. Wigal singled and
both runners movep up on a passed
ball. A ground out and a error plated
both runners.
Laudermilt picked up the win

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sinking out six, .walking two and .~:
scattering seven hits. Kelly Oilkey; "
Laudermilt, Wigal and Williams had '
singles. · 4
1
Jones, the starter and loser for ·
Miller, struck out four. walked live '
and scattered five h11S Jones al!d ~
McCormick had a pair of smgles each .~
for Miller.
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lnpin1 totals-fint JllH
Wellston
000 011 0=2-5-S '"
Me1gs
131-162-x=l4-9-l ,
Amy Hysell (WP) and Amber
Vimng
'1
Martin (LP) and Leach
.,
Innlae W•!t.second J11H
, ('
Miller
I()().()()()..0= 1-7.J H
Meigs
002-002-x=4-4-2
Jones (LP) and Cook
·
Tangy Laudermilt (WP) and ;,
Casey Sanford
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Bml!
WEDNESDAY, JULY Ill, 1. .
,.he Daily

Meigs JGL
to· start play
Wednesday

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BABY

Many area young ladies are get·
ling ready for the Me1gs Junior Golf
League which will stan on Wednesday.
•
Registration will begin al 8:30
a.m. Meigs County Golf Course. The
lea~ue is for youths eightto 16 years
old.
For funher information, coil
Cheryl Thomas at the golf course at
740-992-(!312 or Carol McCullough
at 992-5322.

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The Daily BABY Sentinel is a
Special Edition fllled with photographs of local
kids· ages newborn to four yen old.
The BABY Senttnel will appear in the July 1st
_"''r',lssue. Be sure your child, grandchild
or relative 11 Included.
Complete the form below
and enclose a snapthot or
wallet size picture plus 1
$5.00 charge for each
photograph. If more then
one child is In picture
Pictures mull
enclg..-.n additional
- be In by
$2 per child.
-Ffld1y, June
(ENCLOSE
PAYMENT
12th,1tl8
......."" WITH
PlctUI'IS can
PICTURE)
be picked up
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Rutland to hold
SK run &amp; walk
on June 13
The ' Rutland Redneck SK
'Run/Walk. sponsored bylhe-Rutland
Civic Center, will be held Saturday,
June 13 at 10 a.m.
Sign-up ·and preregist(Diion will
s13!1 at_9 a.m.
Entry fee is S I0.00 for Those reg·
istering by June lOth and SI2there·
alier. Age aroups are 13 and under,
14-to-18. 19-39. and 40 and over.
Race T-shir1s will be awarded to all
entrant,.
Award.~ will be given to the lop 2
male and females overall. and to the
top two finishen in each •ge group.
Entry blanks are available at Peoples
Bank, Fllnllers Bank, and other area
businesses.
On the day or the race, entrants
should report to the Civic Center at
9 a.m. Any entrant who collects $50
or more in donations in support of
their walk will receive a free T· shin.
All proceeds of the race going
towards improvements 'at the Civic
Center.
·
For inrormation cpll742-2)21 or
742-2233.

...-•r'••·
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after July 2nd

Send To:

The Daily Sentinel
"BABY EDITION"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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CHILD'S NAME(S) AAGE(S):

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PARENTS' NAME: -------------------~

CnYA~~~~n~====;================:----~--~
• The Above Information Will Be Used In Ad
t!I•hmle No----------- Submilled By., _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Monday, June 1, 1998

\

Monday, J~.:~ne

Fun, food and fitness

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.

JAMIE JEFFERS

-Jeffers observes
:;seventh birthday

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J ami~

Renee Jeffers celebrated her
, ..seventh birthday May 1. at the homl!
·'of her mother. Jennifer King Laud·- ermilt of New Lima Road, Har': ri~nvill&lt;!.
·
;,; , ·, Cake. ice cream and chips were
'"~erved to the following guests: her
··'' ln'other: father, Donald Lauderrnilt of
- -&lt;::olumbu s: sisters JoAnn·a and
1
"
"
. dparents. Do n",Amber:
paternaI gran
nie and Donna Laudermilt of Mid·
-:;a\eport: mate,rnal grandmother. Joan
,.;;r King of New Lima Road; Jeff King
JB. and Michael King of Harfr'_,)ij;onvil

The balancing "t .
Overweight is one of the major
health pro_blems in 1\merica today. An
estimated 32 million adult Americans
rue affected The overweight problem
is on the increase a~ American eat
more and e~ercise less.
Why be concerned about your
weight? Because, if you are over. weight. you are endange(ing your
overall health. Being overweight
greatly increases the risk of Hypertension {high blood pressure) diabetes, gall bladder disease, and may
also im;rease your risk for some kinds
of cancer. Eating a diet rich in fruitS
and vegetables, cuning down on saturated fats, and eating proper serving.
sizes is equally as important as physical activity in tile balancing act of
personal well-being.
1
What are the secrets? We sometime have a hard time believing that
simple changes made. in. diet and
lifestyle, such as a lower fat diet and
walking on a regular basis can make
a powerful difference in our health
and well-being, but they often do.
E•ercise is absolutely essential to a
~ealthy, happy life. To get the benefits and keep boredom from creeping
in,.alternate your workout activities.
Now tfuit warm weather is here, try
light gardening instead of walkil)g. If
you have access to a. swimming
pqol, try water aerobics, it is easy on
the knees and provides increased toning and muscular balance. How ever
. you choose to change your e•cri:ise
program, remember the rule, CHECK
WITH YOUR DOCTOR FIRST
BEFORE STARTING A NEW
EXERCISE PROGRAM. Take it
slow. change does tiot happen over
·night. Remember when you are eating to eat slowly, it takes several minutes for the brain to tell the stomach
that you are full .
If you are walking. do not worry
if you can not go five miles. Maybe
you should set your goal at two miles
for now., and gradually work up to
five miles. If walking is not for you. ·
look for activity that is convenient
and fun, you are more apt to stick
with something that you enjoy. Eating a balan~ed diet, exercising regu. larly, dealing W\th daily challenges
and unexpected pressures a~ soon ..,
possible, and a positive outlook on
-life. will reap the reward of a sense
''·of well-being and balance. These
good habits will ~elp in your quest
for
life.a long. healthy. and productive
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AMBER LAUDERMILT

;·~ Laudermil·t

•'•I " I

''bbserves 3rd
- birthday
,

Yogul'\ pops (Fun ror Kids)
Stir and spoon your favorite
yogun into a popsicle maker and
freeze. If you do not have a popsicle
'maker substitute 'a small plastic cup
with a plastic spoon inserted for a
handle.
(l'hls article Is provided as a service or the Meigs Count}' Health
Department's· Preventive Health
Service Grant, Jackie Stan:her,
' coordinator and Sharon Smith,
IISSistant coordinator.)

lio get a current weather
report, Check the

Amber Laudermilt celebrated her
:~1 ihlrd birthday April 20 at the home of
••·•~er mother, Jennifer King Laudermilt Grilled herb mustard steaks with
:~~gf New Lima Road, Harrisonville. seasoned vegetable kabobs
,., ~ . Cake, ice cream and chips were
2 well-trimmed bonele~s beef top
'J 1 ~erved to the following guests: her
•;;_u}other; father, Donald Lauderrnilt of
.,~cohimbus; sistersJamieandJoAnna;
~:~.atemal gmndparents. Donnie and
·
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, .. t;)(mna Laudermilt of Middlepon;.. _ The Episcopal Church Guild final- noon. with card playing continuing
·t,·~ rtt~tern~l grandmother, Joan King of
ized plans for the annual card party until 4 p.m.
,~:J'l.ew Ltma Road; Julte Kmg, Dave
a~d luncheon at their recent monthThere will be two categories: parN:.Reeves. Shawn and Bobbie Anne ly meeting.
ty bridge and 01her types of card
Reeves, Matt and Jake Older, all of
The afternoon of activities will be games. A door prize will be given
Page vi lie Road; Jac~ Jr. and Jeff held at the Grace Episcopal Church away as will game prizes. There will
- f[,ing: J.B._and Michael King, all of Parish Hall in Pomeroy on June 6. ~ a $7 charge which includes the
, .,11;u-r,sonv1lle.
.
The card party will follow a salad luncheon.
•et•r She is also the granddaughter of luncheon which will be ~~erved at
. For more· information call 992·,:~e late Jack Ki.ng Sr.
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· 2622 or 992-3867.

Sentt"nel

Ep1scopa
•
I card. party slated

betic Supplies At No Coat To
You . FOf Mort lntormellon 1·888·

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·, ,,, took a tour of tne Land Reformers
';.:':Jilursery in Rutland for its regular
.•.i. rnonthly meeting.
The nursery features a variety of
- perennials, prairie wildflowers and
4~ : medicinal and culinary herbs. The
,r.•.group also took a walk to one of the
.••,, manmade ponds that s4pplies water
-r l
the greenhouses.
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Public Notice

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL.and RESIDENtiAL
FREE ESTIMATES

· HUBBIRDS
HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO. GREENHOUSE
Limestone Hauling .
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utllltles
Estimates

(614) 992-3838

12/18/lln·

SCHOLARSHIPS • Mr1. Abbie Stratton, presIdent, on behalf of the Women's AuKlllary at
Veterans Memorial Hospital Wednesday night
p_reaented $1,000 scholarships to two Melga
County residents. Receiving the awards from
Mrs. Strattqn, left, are Shirley Lude, center,
Syracuse, and Taml Sheets, right, of Pomeroy.
Lude, a licensed practical nurse, Is employed

In acute care at veterMII Meinorlal and'la Currently working on her registered nursing
degree at Hocking Colllge. Sh..tl, 1 former
nur1lng IBBI1tant at Veteran• Memorial, Is
working on her medical assistant degree, also
at Hocking College.

YOU,NG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
·Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing·
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
·
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

'Godzilla' has .wobbly legs in second
weekend; 'Hope Floats' now No. 2
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Already . sive waste."
judged a disappointment as bl~
·
"Titanic," the most expensive
busters go, "Godzilla" held onto e
· cial effects movie of all time.
top spot at the liox office in its se
"had a human interest that a lot of
ond weekend, while the romantic sto- these other movies all but ignore,"
ry "Hope Floats'' made a strong Rockwell said.
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debut at No. 2.
"Titanic" was No. 9 .at the bo~
"Godzilla" made an estimated office, earning $1.7 million in its 24th
$18 million, with a weak $5,438 per- week.
screen average. according to industry .
The second-place debut for "Hope
estimates. Over the four-day Memo- Floats" wa.• good news for Bullock,
· rial Day weekend it had sales of whose "Speed" fame was threatened
$55.7 million and a $16,836 average. by the failed sequel "Speed 2: Cruise
Final figures were to be released ·Control."
today.
Bullock, who was co-e~ecutive
"Clearly the picture is not going producer, stars as a woman returning
to be around very long. It did not to her hometown after the breakup of
deliver the goods." An Rockwell, an her marriage. that storyline offered
analyst for Drake Capital Securities moviegoers a clear opti9n to monster
in Santa Monica, said Sunday. "A theatrics. .
special effects movie that ha.• nothing
"Deep Impact," which finished at
else going for it clearly is an expen- No.3 with $10.1 million, ha.~ earned
$112 million in four weeks on a frne•

Pomeroy, Ohio

OHIO' DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF MINES AND
RECLAIIAnON
IThe Ohio Department of
Na1Ural RH'Ourcea, Dlvlolon
ol Mine• and Recllmlllon,
will hold o public mHIIng Ill
7:00 pm on June 3, 11198, Ill
_ the Ohio Agricultural
,.'lloHarch 1ncl Development
.. -,center, 17 Standpipe ROlli,
;YJ.ckoon, Ohio; 10 dtacuao
•&gt;tri• probloma relaled to
mlnao obandoned prior to
;:. )977, lacetad In thl
•·.1Jacklon mining dlatrlct
, ,,,which lncludll the countiH
··-of Athlnl, G1llll, Jackton,
''"'Lawrence, llalge, VInton
.' 'i 'n d
W lillington.
' '1•5Jpre11nta!lv11 from the
~~'DJvlelon wltl 1110 dlacute 1
:: number of ablndollld mine
sn l...d recllmltlon project•
propo11d for tht dlatriCI.
·. puelllona mey be dlriCIIId
~~:to Terry Von Offertn of tlie
,., ..Oivlelon of lllnaa 1nd
Reclomltlon 11 (614) 286-

NotiCI

Public Notice
propcted Conrail AequisiUon.
raol lillie:
SEA conducted additional
environrMntalan'!llysia. consulted
SHulltld In thl T~:~=~:
further with Feder1l, · State, •nd
of lllllabUry, lfl the
loc1l agencies. and fully con1ld·
af llelga, end Stille of Ohio:
erect all comments recelv.d In
Sltullll In Section I, fraction
reapotlte to the Ot•h EIS in pre·
piling the Final El$ •nd in making
2, Town 2, R1nge 13, In the
Ita flnllenvironmental rKommenOCP, and d•ocrlbed 11
d ..lona to the Board . In making
follow•: Beginning 111 1
ltl ftnal deciskm, the Bo•rd wm
consider the entire environmenul
1t1kl at th• Narthweat
record, Including an public: comcorner of Jam•• . Sch-11·
mints. the Draft flS , tho Fin11
EIS, and SEA ' s fin11 recommendman trilct 1long the
ed environmentll mitigation. The ·Pomeroy and Athene ROICI
Bo.,d will conduct 1 form1l vot·
and 15'/• feel Northweat
ing conference on June a. 1998
lrom the h11d Will Of I
and plant to luue h:l finel written
culvert near tha · mine
deciskm on July 23. 1998
SEA 11 providing cople1 of
opening; thence IEIIII lllong
1he Final EIS to Federal, State,
lht
North boundery of lhe
-.d rogional1fencies Md county
eald. Jamea Schw..m•n
illdmlniatr.. m•forelchpotenti•llv
affected county, and to all partie• 1r1ct a dlllllnce 01240.2 feet
who have tpeclficaly requelted a lo a tllu; lhenco lOUth
copy. 1be b•rattl~ Summary
degrHI 37' Willi 200.7 ltel
eodRecommen~Environmentll
lo I ltllke , _ llle CUrb of
ConditkJnt IChtpler 7• are avail""' tn Spanish. SEA h~t tttab- tha brlcll ro1d; lhenoe
NIIhed • toM-free EoWonrnentll
Hollino ot 1·888o86fl·l 997 ITDD fallowing lhe I'Md North 33
fol lho hoorlna impalre&lt;l: 202- dogrou 20' WMt 132 feel of
515· 18961. lnformet:toneboutthe the pt•c• al befllllllng. n
propoHd ConraN Acqlliaition and
being part ql the trtct of
Final EIS eM 111110 W found at the
land
conveyad to D•n•
following Internet website ;
Hy .. l
by
George
httD; ljwme. r;l.fV~rger. com .
Schwegman and wife by
06to1 · N 1
a· ·
dHd dilled April 11, 1111,
and racorded In Dted 11oo1t
PubllcNOtke
111, P•u• ts, Aocorde of
.
Daedo of 1111111 Counly,
SHERIFF'S SALE
Ohio, and by D•n• Nyalll
REAL ESTATE
1nd wllo by deed dlled
CASE ~liMIER 07CV1:M
November 21, 1121,
STAR BAtiK NA
.
cilrivey•d to ll1y · McKay
1nd Rool• MoK1y 1nd
PLAINTIFF
VI.
PATRICIA J. WALLER, fl ..

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DEI'ENDAN'TS
COURT~liON
MEIGS CQUNTY, OHIO
211.
In pur1uence of 1n Order
Property ecldrtu: 33100
ol Sale 1o me dii'ICIIId from llltf Routa "· Pomaray,
11ld Court In the -1bove OH 41171V
entlllld ectlon, I will lllqiOH
Appralud Ill: 137,000.00•
tO •• a1 pulllle 1ucllon II Torma of S.te: Cllh
lhe Cou IMuHoon July 10,
" - • II. Saulabr
1 - .. 10:00 ..... of Hid
lherllf, Malge County
-,, lhe lolowlng,deeortbed

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
c•l .A 8&amp;1/f!!lrft&amp;f
~ggrrriO:uv.

.

''Encourage your child to read a newspaper every day, and
. one day that child will gxow up~to be kinq of tbe hill.'~
m:•~e

;\h.ltJ~ u~

wei;

grow1ng up my d1d taught :nc th.n 10
1t 1f1 spot'l\
to
you1· hc..d a\
as your body. He was :
a greal athlete and a RreOtt re.1der~ He ;md my mom ~clped me tr.11n nv nund bt re.1rl1n2 10 me .md t~.1ch1ng · me to re.ld. :
St.1rt reading to your k~ tod;jy, They're never loo young. And encourage them to re.1d i1 newspaper ~very day Newspapers •
When I w.ls

Happy 70th
Bilfhday
PhyllU }o&amp;eph,
Hal'fU, Baker

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_T he Daily Sentinel Gran&lt;Hill. b."~•tb•''P'·'"'~

e&lt;Mate ancl •nform loke nothrJR else

•

FelU, NaJJnie
Love, llcky, 1111, Pat,
IIICI

Who ~nows.

the heod st.1rt you ~'" could one d.1y help ma~e your ch;ld " f•ng or the hill':

It all starts with newspapers. ·
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110 ,

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guest.

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Of Westmoreland's ·
New Phone Numbers
Home: 304· 773-5333
Office: 304-773-6900
Tuesday, June 2, 1998
Sewing mac:hlne. COMOie TV,
Home Interior, gl_.,., mile.
Karr St., Syr1CU81
Watch for alg111

8-4.
141 Green Terrace Mobile Home
Park, Baby Items, Misc., Oak

.,._, 9-5. 1&amp;1, 2nd, 3rd.

1939 Chatham Street, Mon. Tues.

WICKS

(740) 367·0266

•StUmP
arJtidlng

s.t: 11).4

SL Rl124,
...lei'IVIIIe,OH

•

HAUUNG

them
•New aprlng pottary
Open TuM..frL 1M
Cloeed Sun•• Mon.

Yard sate : · -~~ unnlld MethO!I·
lsi Church, Church Sl., June 2nd,
3rd, 41h, 9 To 5, Plus Hor Dogs

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·JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

Gravel, Sand,

Fill Dirt
. 614-992-3470

POMEROY, OH.

"OWird L WrheMI

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleenlng
Painting
.FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168 .
5l2e/lfn

, . . EdrruJIN
No Job Too SIMI/

BrtsnMorrllon
(740) 115-3141 .

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15 North ll..n
Ruttond Ohio 48775 Dell: felilurl;na I
•
Amlah .
~Cheei..,Soft
Sam Ice
Cream .

Plant•.
TrHs&amp;
Shrubs

(740) 742-7405

Household Artlc:too.

TRUCKING

William Safranek,

·-

Chester, Ohio

....,...

tura. Boll!r ttoms, Ciolllel. Ml!c.
June

2. 3: 8:00 · !:00. 310 Nolgh·

..,_. __

Free Estimates

SAYRE
;TRUCKING
· a~nchlng
Umiitone l Gl'lvtl
Sepllc1 Sy.Cem~ · ·

,...,,Oif,..

Tntller a HouN Sites

Joe ,N. Sayre

,....,.&amp;-.14.......
742.;.;;.;·2-.138--.·_,

• Repla1ement Wmclows
. • SlaliOillliy Dodls
• Blown Insulation
• Gotapa •-o.d.s
U x-2A Pale iuilding
llarling at $5995
74CJ.IN·2m

I

==-------Do_no _ _ ......

Multiple Fa.mlly: Srar King Bod~

Cemetery· uleo oflals jot&gt; """'rtty

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Something For Everyone! Man,
Tues. Wed, Clothil. Shoes,
Toy&amp;, ToOII, Chlldrlr'IS Riding
Toys, Knick Knacks, Crafts, Etc.
191" Stale Route Ut , Gallipolis,

01110.

Pomeroy;
'
Middleport 1
&amp; VIcinity
812-11. Solem Cerllor 1 - on SA
124 on Salem School Lot Rd.. plus
sm . size clothes boys &amp; wom-

wUI. Earn $500·$1 000 per - k.

and is recession proof. National
corporauon wllh averege com· .

rniss+on of $500 per , .... Itt appointments, no credit turnd~na,

paid training, major mlldlcal. and

rellramenr plan. tf you art Uf'IOUI

about wanting a ~ -tunily, call Steve Smllh, 740·992·
7440.
DRIVERS WANTED

HOME WEEKENDS •.:14- .31
PER MILE
From Wellston To 10 State Area.
Paid Weekly /Oirecl Deposll
Avail. Vacation /Health In&amp;uranci Late MOdel co-nllon-

111 Alsignad Traclorl.

we Require:

-~

Yr.OTR E-ltnc:e.

!urn ln'llite Vour Friends To 'Vur
Home For A Prolesa1on11 Glam-

our Portrait Party, Caiii00-421-

8363.

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E•perttnctd Auto Mechanic,

Atleaot 5 ~- Erpertonc:e, eon.
Ea'l 1:00 A.M. -11:00
Tupperware, ckllhes. misc. Items. P.M. 740-381-11518.
Sit. 8111, Sun. 71h, ooon till ?. 740MB-~.
. Futlllmt Dookkeeper, 740-143·

Large yard ule Wilkesville,
hOuHhold IIams, Home. !nterior.

ltc:l:

5211 .

.Shallor'o. 4 - · out SA 143. Po-

1-2, tlllnHpm.
Two family, June 1·3, 9· 7 US 33
1101111 10 CA t8, turn left. go t 3/10
mile 10 BryiOn Ao., melle rlghl. lkst
-AIIo.. nogoliable.
""'""· June

Yard 1 Craft 1111- JUne 1-3,
-HIIRd.,llulond,ONo:

91113301

Pt.PI1111nt
a VIcinity

Ch. .ter

Gar1gt Salt·MonlTuts I Wed .
Tom Roach , 202 LOCUli. !lender·
aon, boys/girls cloll'llng, gllll·

wart/dllhll , pictures. platrorm
feed acilt, tOll . alum. boat,
miiC.

ANriOII t JC Ef.'E tJTS

005
PlriOnlll
LONeLY? CALL TONIGHT! 1·
-$70o4401 IXT. 2711, S2.H
PEII MIN. MUIT IE U 'RI.
SER\LU 111 ltl ICM

• EOE.

Sale ltaln 1Shine

pulc:hJrtll in cne-.SR 248.

BADMLDMBIR
· StAt. 241

Qualifications Include: M.S.W.
From An Approved School, Ptua

117 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, ~;!.=~~=~
740-992-2377.
meroy. on 45789 by June 30.
Juno 3·4·5. two tamlly, lots ol (740) 992-3883 lor morw irllormathingl. MW and used. Firll hou10tlon
-~
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C•ll for Quote Today
J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
INSULATION
• YmyiSiding • Sqlfil
• Foscia • St 111. .0
Gvlttr • Rciollng

Responsibilities Include lnpallent

Juna 1·2 MondaY &amp; Tuesday. · ''mendlltlon, copy of ~t aNI

x

(740)~t80

SOCIAl. SEfMCES

Garage oatt· June 1-2 . 9&amp;m·? .ELEMENTARY CURRICULUM
Coonty Rd. 119 oft SR 33N. Rain SUPERVISOR beginning tho
or shine.
1998· 1998 school rear tor tho
Meigs
Counl)' Educational S.rvGarage sale· Ma~ 30. June 1•2 • . -tee C.nteJ. ·Swmltiettar of tnt.,.
'172 mlle aboYe Fltrll fll&gt;lnls.
eft, r..ume. 3 lt11ero of roc:om-

$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per eq.)
3' Wide 10'1 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
For uHs on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildlnga &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
SOuthern Yellow Pine Conllructlon
Custom Engineering

do it for you.
Interior.
Before 8 p.m.
leave message.
After6 p.m.

GallipoliS Daly ll1buna, 825 Third Avenue, Galtjpo1&amp;, OH 45831.
DIRECTOR OF

CLA 434, c/o

Cemetery 81111· Tille I IIIII
posilion no one e111 will. Offer
service and product no one tiM

nenwtll. Rain « Shine.

aoon••
ua •••••• .
9" Rib Pattern

Take the pain out of

tocate. E•cellenl Benetll
,
EEO EmplOyer. Send Flnumo. o;

Avenue , 10• Table Saw, Vanlty

And Sin!&lt; DrMI Pre$&amp;. Some Fumi·

Tht Candle ShOll, SA 124, Mi·

WBI'I'I PAI.ftD ITEIL

Ll••••

Reports. Must Have Own Toola
And Possibly Be Wlllln~i­

L.S.W. Dutlao Will Include Homo
tot ·3rd. Ftt 218 011 At 7, g. Heatlh Evaluattona And &amp;ervlctl,
? Barbie Headboard. Bike, Deep M.D.S. Initial And Folow·Up For
l'ong Term Care, And Superyl•·
Freeze. Ctllldran. Adult Clothes.
lng 01 The Hoopltaro Doporlmont.
Morel
Competitive Salary And Benefits.
June lot .June 3rd, 9 A.M.·? 55 Ptoaoe Send Rnumo To; Ook Hill
Garllold Ave .• (At 7 South) I Rain Community Medical Ctnllr., AI·
tentlon: Brenda McKenzie, !50
Canctla.
Charlotte A~anue, Oak Hill, OH
June · tot. 2nd. 9;·oo 844 First 45856.

Garage 1a1e- June 1· 3 nut to

.
Attorney AT Law
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio
4/30/98 1 mo. pd.

. ' 985 4122

Equipment. Good Communlca·

tions And Written Skills, Ability
To Keep Accurate Recorda And

thing ~mag~.-. .
Int-.:
Monday Juno I, 5 P.M
. -II P.M.
AUYinllloltl Mutt Be Paid In TUHday.Juno2,8A.M.·12P.M.
AM!'C•· DHdltne: ·1:OOpm tho . ~ Comlort lm
dey INfore " " ad Ia to run, 605 E. Main Sl
Sunday l Mondo, tdlllon• Jacloscn. OH
1:OOprft Flldoy.
Or Cal Cathy O r - At
1·800-2211-4291 . _ _ __
Four family, June 3-4, Cecil Dun· · :..;;::..:::::..:::..::..._
can rasldonce. New Ha&gt;en.
earn SIO. -1200 Pius FrH Pte·

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Grav11
Dirt· Sand

Have A COL, Willing To Wori
Overtime, Ability To Tr-lhoot,

Good DfMng Record
en's, baby items. sm. appliances. · OfUg Saetn
flannfl sheet sets, turn., ewaryMe4l DOT RequilemlniS

Ch1pter 13

Chapter 7

Singers, Sando, Songwrtt"", 'tc.
All Slyles ·tAges. Mojor Rocprd
Label Execl'o, Seeking Now ""r·
lisls, Coming To Huntington. 101·
427-5490, 901-427-9514. ' •
AVON I All Area&amp; I Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429.
AWell Ealabllohed And Growing

June

&amp;

UPrCY

R. L. HOLLON

~nting,andletnne

•Ginel'll
ComNJCIIIII1CI · · R"kMnllll

•srMSEARCHCOMPETITIOII

Hospital, Long Term Care Unit,
And Home Health ServiCes .

To 5:00 McGuire.

NEW• REPAIR

•M11110nry

Er.1PLOYr.1ErH
SERVICES

Garage Sale : MondaY. June tst.
Tuesday 6J2nd, Wednesday 6/31
98. 928 First Avenue, Computer,

New And liaed Items, .June 151,
2nd, Mercerville, Co• Road, 9:00

ROOFING

•Concrete

ms.

We Are Seeking A Director For
06r ,Social Slrvlcoo Department.

T.-My 10:00 A.M. ·7:00P.M.

•Bobc:at Service

WaniOd: AUIO'O In Arty Condition,
740·388-SOU, Or 740·448·

Call

AndBakildGoods.

b&lt;&gt;rhood Road, GallipOIII, tp·Sk!e

614-992-5479

Top Soil,

.

5443.

Diagnose And Repair Heavy

Shop In Rio Grande, Monday,

P/1 C.tractors, lac.

Waves, And Scoltle. For More
Information Call Pam At 7..0.245·

100 Third Avftnue. 812i'ld, 3rd,

Etc.

- tO:OO o.m. Sllurdly.

360° Communication$

'-...

Limestone,

-

Wanta&lt;! To Buy: Attired TV
Jelly, Lucky, Waddle, Logo,

Beanie Babiea? We Have Z~y.

Company 11 Setll.ing H•tvy
Equipment 'Mechanlca. Mu1t

II 10 run. SUndOy
adlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondoy lldiiiOn

.CELLULAR PHONES

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

-·u

304-n:l-5033.

pnances. Dishes, Clothes, Tires &amp;

&amp; Wed. Furniture. Beds. Ap·

Clothing, Bedspreads, Linens,

HIUIIng, .~CIVItlng

YARD~E

Hi1 Buhl Morton Road, Jackson
Pike, House On Hili Behind Foodland, Tues. June 2nd, Friday ·511'1,

QfMUNE: 2:00p.m. '

l-800·950·3359
20 'i'rs. Exp. • lns.-Owner: Ronnie Jones

•a- try- of our
, many MWICenta
•Bring In your odcla I
• • 8lld
r.n11

•
J &amp; 0 Auto Parta. Buying
wrecked or IIIVIged vehlclll.

Mila On Teens

.... cloy boforw .... ad

:rr1m

-~·'

7!'l211Jn

Priies &amp; Fooct•for Kids
Members may bring a

P.M . ~

4th, 9 A.M. ·5 P.M. Woodburning
SU7o'l!, Chair&amp;. Lots Stult!l
ALL Ylnl Sllet Mull
llol'lkUn-.

DISCOUNT

GALUPOUS, OHIO 45831
·TOP

HlppvAd

The Racine Gun
Club Fishing
.Derby on
June 6th, 7-12

IIi~

ftlll SERVICE

COUNm CANDLE
SHOP AND MORE

Mod1l Cars Or

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Ent-

Sll"l

JOlES

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTJMATEES
985-4473 .

I'

~

Owner: John Dean

FULLY iNSURED

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
992-7943

120 E. FOurth Slnlll,
IIIII Flaar

Clnclnnllll, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
(1)-1,1,15 3 tc ·

FrH Estimates

SENIOR CITIZEN

carpenter.
Pay based on

Applications being accepted for parttime ·(40 hours per two week pay
period), day shift position. Licensed
as a social worker by the Ohio
Counselor and Social Work Board
required. Experience as a social
worker In a health care environment
• Is required. Send resumes to
O'Bieness ,Memorial Hospital,
Human Resources, _55 Hospital Drive,
Athens, Ohio 45701. EOE _ _ ___,
·. L---~_--=.;;..;;..

(614) 992-4277

"""

experienced

SERVICES ASSISTANT

-rdl74().245-5876.
70
Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

quo~

Ctft~~~~~· ~f.it~~~
•

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

I
. I

HelpW1nled

lost Ring VInton Alumni Ban·

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding iil.!!:
Commerc111 &amp; Residential
~iii~
"• I
'1:1 yr1. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
Phone 740-992-3987
~

experiencf.

~ate

Truc:ks, 1990 MOdels Or Newer.

C.lothll, Lawn Mowers, Oltltr

Opening for

PUBUC N011CE
There wilt be a mHIIng of
the floodplain variance
biNird on June 3, 1HI at
2:00 p.m. In lhe llelga
Counly Commleelonera
, office.

Clean

Road, June ,.,, 2nd , 3rd,
Bikes, Books, Dlsnes, Jewelry,

HelpW.nted

Public Notlca

992-6576.

5965.

10 A.U. ·8

TOOL
110

household, Osby Martin, 7•0·

Run

llflt.

: ~----------------------------------~~
MEDICAL SOCIAL

I

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

AHANDY

•

'

r

Don Sm; th
37814 Peacl1 Fork Rd .
Pome roy, OH 45769
992 -2735

Lost- two Dalmatians. brown male
and blac~ female, 554 vicinity,
kid 's pets . pluse call 740 -367-

Joe Wilton

1998 Martin Streat .

MAKERARW...
USE WANT ADS.

$25 service cJII.

.. 110

0

t

·Residential air
conditioning
·Aula air cond1t1on;ng
·Heat pump
·lnslallat;on &amp; se rv; ce

, • (5) 29, (6) 1, 2tc

Public Notice
J. lllchHl Deb-, OH
Sup. Ct.I0012t01
1.111*, Sampeon I
Aothfueo ,

reconlad In Dted look 131,

P1ge 1•, R-rd ol DMda
. . . . County, Ohio.
Prior· lnetrument referonce•: Volume 337, Pelle

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

ernAYanuo, Ga~.

992·5275.
60 Loat 1nd Found

Plumbing

Ruu Moore owner, 740·112 ·

2526.

One year old St. Bernardi Collie

3682.

Remodeling

Ina Antiques , Pomeroy. Ohio.

4ntlques &amp; etea.n uud furnltwe,
will buy one piece or complete

mix. 740·98&amp;·3884 or 740·985·

Dr•••"

"BuiW Your

. • House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $100
• Hedges trimmed' • Gutters cleaned
Call now for a
11wn care.. program.

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Llndscaplng &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

A'"'"'"· Gallpollo, 7-2lM:I.

Wante&lt;l To Buy : Uu&lt;l Mobile
Homes. 740·448-0175, ~·875·

SPECIALS

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

f68,0hl0 &amp; WHI VIrginia, 104·
n3·571S Or 304-773-6447.
90 W1nted to B_uy
AbsoluiO Tot) Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofuto,
Diarnondl, Antique -ry. Gold
Aings. Pre· 1930 U.S. Currency,
·Sterling, Etc. Aequilltionl Jowolry
· M.T.$. Coin ShOll. t51 Second

5597.
Fr.. Kittens To Good Home. 740ue 8806, Mtr6 P.M.
FrH KIHtlll To Good Homo Only,
LMMTralned, 74().2&lt;15-9357.

7977.

MIIITIIAICI

SyriiCUie 992-5776

6J

Roofinr;J

CLELIID'I OUTDOOR

. HUBBARDS
· GREENHOUSE

Free ealleo kitten s, 740-992·

Used blkt frame and parts, 740.

Custom Homes

full ume auctioneer, com••
auction atrvlce. UctnMd

Antiques, top prices paid, Rtvlr·

Female rabbit &amp; bag or rabbit pel·
loti, 740-742·3011.

1·740·949·201-5

•Mower1 ·Chain Saws •W.edeaters •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlgga &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AN.D OTHERS!
lrltts &amp; 5trallan: Master Service Ttdlnldan
Outdoor Power Eljllp!MIIt Assodallan: (lfflfltd 2 &lt;ydt
State ·Route 338 • AI VIne • Racine. Ohio
•
,,., ,4\ 949·2804

·open Daily 9-S
. Sunday 12~5 ·

812 30th street.

CALL

Parts and Service!! .

Panll!'•· Cabb;lge,
Broccoli, Caullftower,
Hanging Baskets,
Phlox, Azale1a,
Shrubs, Spruce Treea

992-6215

tion ofthe publicity and expectations
accorded "Godzilla."
· ·
Chris Farley's final film, "Almost
Heroes." opened at No. 7 wit~ $2.8
million.
Here are estimated grosses forth~
top movies at North American theaters for Friday through Sunday:
I. "Godzilla,'.' $18 million.
2. "Hope Floats," $14.6 million.
3. "Deep lmpact, '' $10. 1 million.
4. "The Horse Whisperer," $7.4
million,
·
S. "Dulworth," $5.1 million.
6. "I Got the Hook-up," $3.3 million.
7. "Almost Heroes," $2.8 million.
8. "Quest for Camelot," $2.3 million.
9. "Titanic." $1.7 million.
10. "Fear and Loathing in Las
Vegas,'' $1.7 mil.lion.

RaCINE MOWER-CLINIC

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

• · long haired whltetyeuow kit·
tena, 'lwkl old , Utter trained.
Ready 10 gol 30o4 · 875· ,09.t or

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

992·5513

(No Sunday Calls)

40
GIVIIWIY
2 Dogt, Clemen Sh6pllord /Husky
Mix, 740-256-1433.
3 White &lt;lueb. 30U75-:r&lt;49.

BACKROB.DOZBR SERVICE

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

614-992-7643

After the tour, the club went bacll bring a house pl311t.and a specimen
to Alice Thompson's cabin for the for display at the fair.
., '
business meeting and refreshments.
The neil meeting will be held at
·Devotions, Psalms 119, were read by Debbie Mohler's home and members
Debbie Mohler.
will practice making arrangements
Roll call wa' taken with everyone for the fair.
,
naming an arrangement they would
Also attending were Karen Werry,
like to make for the fair, Evelyn Peggy Crane, Melva Tracey, Gladys
Holter read a ganlen tip for roses. It Cumings, Addalou Lewis and Valerie
was suggested that each member Nottingham.

Public Notlca.

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
'
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Alumln!Jm Welding

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

8n-W1.

'S

RADIA,.OR

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

~:;~Winding Trail Garden Club tours Rutland nursery recently
::!.~ ~ The Winding Trail Garden Club

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

1, 1998

eo · Auction
30 Announcements
1nd Flee MlrlrM •.
DIAIETJC PATIENTI: 'lou May
. Be Enutllld To Rtcel\10 YOur Dla· Riel&lt; Pearaon Aucllon Comi*IY.

loin or rib eye steaks, cut I inch thick
Salt
Herb Mustard
2 large cloves garlic, crushed
2 teaspoons water
2 tablespoons Dijon-style mustard
I teaspoon dried basil leaves
1/2 ICRSpoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme leaves
I. In I -cup lass measure, combine
garlic and water, microwave on
HIGH 30 seconds. Stir in iemaining
mustard ingredients, spread onto bolh
sides of beef steaks:
2. Place steaks on grid over medium ash-c.overed coals. Grill top loin
steak,s uncovered 16 to 18 minutes
(rib eye steaks I to 14 minutes)· for
medium rare tum occasionally.
3. Season ·steaks with salt. as
desired. Carve steaks crosswise into
thick slices. Makes 4 servings 0 86
calories, 8 grams fat per serving).
Seasoned vegetable kabobs ·
6 small {3 oz. each) red potatoes.
halved
2 teaspoons minced oregano
leaves {fre~h if possible).
2 medium yellow squash, cut into
Qne-inch pieces
3 tablespoons margarine, melted ··
· I large clove garlic, crushed
Salt and pepper. as desired
Place potatoes in a microwavesafe baking dish. Cover and
microwave ai high 6 to 7 minutes or
until barely fork tender. rearranging
potatoes after 3 minutes. Alteroately
thread cooked j:loiatoes and squa~h on
si~ 8-inch skewers. Combine margarine. garlic and oregano, brush half ·
It mi~tureover vegetables. Place on
grid beside steaks. Gnll kabobs I0
minutes, turning once and brushing
with remaining margarine mi~ture.
Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Serves si&lt;.

.

'

Furnlturo Dellwry, Futl-time. lmmlldlalo Openirlg. AI10IY l.llhtyta
Furnllurl, 858 Tllird ·AWl. Olltlpoo

Ill, at.

No"'-............

Groat Qvallty Hay NHde Cut &amp;
- · 7~t-1440.
rnalaller -2 Veart E•perltnct

Helper -No E.,..Mtnet N-•·
eary, Appty I" Ptraon, Co.ntort
Air S~lnc., 407 Tlllnlnuo, Olllpolle, 01llo.

Noeclad; Elqlerlencecl MIIUrt
Plantll At 0-lng Church In
Gallipolis, Muot h AYittablt
Sunday Mornlngt l E..nlngt,

~lion--~.
8llld To:
'"'
tertii
Lolttr l ~lone
P.O.
loa
345,
Oalllpollt,
OH
Hlctcorr Lint, Maaon, Tue. Junt
2. 8:111).? ctothOI·aN aiDa. loll ol 45e31.
mlec.
Opening~; Full-llme/pert·ltmt,
Hugo 4 Fat~~lly : lot ·Ont Thll wallrtlllt &amp; COOIII, Fr1z1oro ·
· Bouom 1ro1. 304·137·2-ltle or
- · -Juno 3rd.
All2oI-On
'
W.VII.
A.M. At 2, In 304-~-

�•

•
•

..
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Mon'day, June 1, 1998

~day,June1,1998 :

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

NEA Crossword
PHILLIP

ALDER

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

ACROSS

40 Actor Bruce l..

., eom.,. ..

1 Ololl.
7 One who II

can• ·•d

13 Ev.Mng pMty
1• CUlling tool
15 Congoilflllly

_____

.:..:::.......:.:..:..:;;::...;.;
Large black Tenn. WaMter, excellent trail horu, cau eve 7ll0-742·

• Ploasant Valley Hoapltit Ia look·
lng for a part·tlme Dietillan Reg.

lattrtd or registe red eligible.

Must be knowledgeable tn aeute
care and long term care patient
education and assessment
Computer skills pre ferred . Must

have good people skills Sant1
re auma to Bill Barker, Ani. Ex·

ecutlwt Olrector of Administrative
Service s, 2520 Valley Onve, Pt

Pleasant. WI/ 2:;550 ANEOE
Position Open For Part-Time Hu·
mane Officer For Galla County To
ln ves ligate Animal Abuse . Ne·
gl ee! A nd Cruelty Cases. Sue·
ceas lul Compla11on Oi Oh io
Pea ce Officer' s Training , Vatld
Onver's License And Dependable
Tra naportallon ReQu ired , Must
Love Animals Preference: ·Will Be
Given To CandkJatea With Prevl·
ou1 E•perlence And lOr Knowl·

edge Of Ohio Animal Cruelty
Laws. Pay By The Call Plus M1le·
age Liability lnouranco Provkled.
If Interested Please Subm11 Re·

sume Including Thflte References
By June 8, 1998 To Gallla County
Animal Welfare League, Inc , PO

Box 216, Gallpolls, OH45631

All real es1ate actveniStng In
rnts newspaper Is subject to
the Federal F..air Hous1ng Act
ol 1968 whiCh mak~ it 1llega1
to advert•se "any preference,
hm1tation Of' discnm1nahon .
based on race. coiOf, religion,
sex fam11ral status or natrona!
ongln , or any intenllon lo
make any such preference.
limitation or dlscrtminaUon "
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advMJsements for real estate
whiCh IS 10 VIOlation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
intormed that a" dwellings
advertised m this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baSIS

Homes lor Sale

PIOSTAL JOBS TO $16.35/HR.
813·3585, Ext 8474, 8 A.M. · 9
P.M, 7 Days lds,lnc
Registered Nurse For Reputable

Home Health Agency, 32 Hours
Week , Experienc ed Preferred,

740-441 ·1779
Scenic Hilla Nursing Center IS
Now Accepting Applications For
· Director Of Staff Development.
Tel11)0rary Full· Time Position For
The Months 01 July Through ,December. Ctrl!licatlon. LPN. Please
Apply In Person At Scenic Hilla
Nursjng Center M-F Between 8.30

48·1nch big aero en TV with' Ireo ·

options ava1 table. 1-888 · 928·

trash llllluded, 740992·2167

you r door. Call Homo Proclucll 0
1·81111-252·1602.

4yr o ld, 2089sq fl. Cape May
house on 2 29 acres. 3bdr. 3 lull
bathS, hardwood lloofl In dining
room &amp; Ioyer, oak cabinet s &amp;
t rim , 24x 30 delached garage.
12x24 building, located 2 1/2
miles out Jerry's Run Road In

Apple Gr...,. 304-578·4041 .
94 acre s wUh two st ory three
bedroom home, 1 &amp; 112 bath$, full
basement , asking S135,000, 740·

843-5453

Large selection or used ~o m 11. 2
or 3 bedrooms. Stantng at $2995
Quick delivery. Call 740· 385·

9621.
LIMITED OFFER
1998 Ooubtewlde 0 Down $285
month . Free dellve rv &amp; set-u p,
no land needed. Only 1t Oek·
woocl Homal Nitro, WV 304-755-

5885.

NEW 3 BEDIIOOII
($16,995)
OAKWOOD HOME S Barbour&amp;·
llllle 304-736·3409
Make 2 Payment s Move In No
Payments Alter 4 Veara , 1·800·
383-6862

(REPIO)
Set up on lOt, Best Offer 800·363·
6662
New 1&lt;4 or 16d0 Only make 2
payments to mov e 1n, no pay -

ments after 4yro 304·755-7191 .
New 1998 141170 three bedrOOfr\.
InclUdes 6 monthll FAEE lot rent
Includes skirting. delu11e Slaps
and setup Only $187 08 per
month with $10 75 down Call t ·

600-837·3236 .
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 leltl
SUit under warranty, owne r fl .
nanclng availabl e. 30 4· 755·

7191.
New Doubiew1de 3BR , 2 bath

$I ,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo I·
668·926·3426

·4·30

Older mobile home In Rutland, out
ol high water all utilities, two lots,
$6000, 740742·2010

Screen Printer Will Train , Must

For Sale By Owner Bulavllie Pike,

Single Perent Progrem. Special
ftnanc1ng on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
nomes Payments 11 low 11

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $21.10 /HR.
Inc Benefits Game Wardens,
Security. Malntenace, Park Rangera No Exp Needed For App.

And Exam Info Calll-800·813·
3585, Exl 6475 8 A.M • 9 P.M , 7
Days Ids. Inc

180

Wanted To Do
ANYODOJD8S

Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch·
lng. flower beds, land scaping .
sidewalk
edging ,
mo wing .
etc ... Frea Estimates . Call Bill

304-875-7112
Child daycare; county or priwte,
111 shifts. reasonabta rates , meals
proVided, have openings, 740·

992·3418

Brick. Morton BUilding, 3 6 .i.cres,
35 Ferguson Outsei, 74 0- 446·

4288.

Sl flO. Call now 304-755·5885

House for sale at 379 Salem
Street m Rutland, 5 roo ms &amp; bath
wllh garage and half baseme nt
Out of the flood area, call at 740742-3506 or 740..742-2065

Special 18XBO 3BR . 2 bath

3518.

~~------------~-- .
Dapondable l.acly Will Do House·
cleaning, 304-675-8736

Don's Lawn Care, Free Estimates,
Reasonable Rates , 304 -674-

4672.
Don)t throw your h.ard earned
money away? Rooting, palnllng,
carpentry, lawnmowmg, etc. Top
quality, free estimates. Russ

SPRING SPECIALS
1499Down
U Fixed Ra1oa
$191/Mo. l'llymonta

$23,000 740·256·6663.
Immediate occupancy · cozy two
bedrod'm, large leve l lot , central
air, .i.nderson windows, newer furnace! aluminum siding, located In
Mason, c all 773"-99 2- 3557 or
74()-992·304 I
126 Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy,' 3
bedroom home newer roof. newet'
furna ce.&amp; hot water tank , new
pai nt outsldf' , · handy man spe -

cial', $10,000 firm, 614·237·1162.
Loaded 28x80, 3br. 2 112 bath

Oaycare openings, any shill ,
$1 .70 per hour per child, county
certifjed, Long Bottom, 740·985·

$1 ,325 Down, $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; ~00 Skirting 1·800-691-8777

House tn C rown C•ty, Price

with all options , only S2 ,499
down, $362. per month. Free air &amp;
Skir1 1·B88--691 -87n
Lovely Country Home On SR 7
South W1th .6. Breathtaking River
VIew Very Private Setting On 2 11
2 Acres But Only 10 Mlnuteo
From Gallipolis 3 ·4 Bedrooms, 2
112 Baths . Hardwood Floors, 2
Fireplaces, New Heal Pump, New
Kltchen;-Many EJ:tras Won't Last

Longll $110.000 ·
Call Vi rgi nia L Smith Realty At

$17,195 on 3DR.

Free Dollwry &amp; Bot·up
Only AI Oakwood Homoo
NllrO, WV. 30+75S.5185
TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down $1 69/mo.
Free Set-up &amp; Delivery Only 3

LeHI Only at Oal&lt;wood Homes Ni·
tro wv 304-755·!1885.

340

Bualnesa and
Buildings

Commercial-Office or Retail, 87

Mill St. IAiddloport I ,450 Sq Ft.
$400 mo (or subdlvule to 1,000
sq lt . for $30000 mo ) Corner

Building (740)·992-6250 Acqul·
s1tions (neld door).

350

Two ·2 Bedroom Trailer On Bob

Lots

&amp; Acreage

4 Building Sitea·2 Acres each.
convenient vet privale, 6 miles
trom P.Jint Pleasant 1 1/4 mile on

Bethel Rd. off Sandhill, no single
wides $14· 16,000ea. or 8 acrea

1or $37,000. 304·675-7946 balore

B' Flberglasa White truck toppe r,

3br, Camp Conley area, $250
mo. plus depoSit 304-815-3230.

BTU, 220. $150. 74().949-2202.

AYOIIable 6/15/98 S225/Mo . Plus
Oepooll, 740·386-9946.

2 Bedroom Partial Utilities &amp; De~
posit, 2 1~ Spring Avenue, Pomer·

1

360

Real Ealate
Wanted

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
lrom $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; mov ies Call 740·446·2588 .
Equal Housing Opponunlty.
446-2515.

Rlghls. And No Devolopmonl Po-

ing, Garage, AHles, Basements,
Ught Plumbing, Free Estimates!

Middleport, call 740.992·3465 a1·
tar 5'00 or anyume weekends

Home In Gallipolis, References,

14044Hl244.
Professional Tree Service. Stump
Removal , Free Estlmalest In ·
surance. Bktwell, Onto. 614-388·

9648. 61+387-7010.
Wilt Babysit In My Home Or
Yours On Nights &amp; Weekends
Call Me For Services, 7-40-446·

e767·.

12di5 2 bdr, good cond. 30&lt;l-937-

14x7Q 3br $9 99 down . $198 per
air &amp; sk111ing 1·800-691 ·

6777
16x80 3br. 2 bath, $1 ,325. down,

FINANCIAL

210

Bualnea•
Opportunity

INOTICEI
•
- OHIO 1/ALLEY PJJSUSHING CO.

S205. per mo. Free air &amp; skirt 1·

888·691-6777
1986. 2 bedroom, gas heat. can·
tral air, 2 deckl!l, very good condl·

lion, mull sell , $7500, 740·i92·
1622.

Apartmen1s $295/t.lo , 740·446·

Sale, Valued At $250 Will Take

0006

Reasonable Otters, 740·4o46·

dleport, all ut1tltles pakl, $270 per
month , $100 deposit, catt74D~

992·78041.
Small 3rm wlbath, $225 mo Utll·

Hutch , maple, Basseu, glass

Illes paid except electric. DeposIt required. 304-875- I 365

doors top, $225, 740949-2674.

Twin Rivera Tower now accepting
appllcaUons klr 1br HUD subsidIzed apt. lor elderly and handl·

capped. EOH 304-675-8879

Large mirror 8ftx-4ft. Make offer.
304-ll75·1267..11ar~. '

Furnl1hed
Room•

Ltvlngalon 's bailment water·
proofing, all basement repair&amp;
done, fret 111lmatea, lifetime
guaran1ee tOyr1 on jOb expert·
-. ~75-2145

REAL eSTATE

310 Homes for Sale
3 BIGIOOinl, I Bath, LR, FR,
Kllc-..n, Laundry Room Wllh 3

Acl'll. Bulavlllo Pike, 740·«1·
0031.
~ Or I Bedroom Ranch 24x24
Gargo FA Wllh Flroploce lnserl
Kllcllon 01~ Cablnal, "-need In
Yord /Dock 151,000 740·215·
!f41,0rl.IMM"I•·

3br ··~ch , 2 ~oth , LA. FR. In·
gro1111d pool, ~olltno Acres on
Rood. ~1um.

an.-.

3br, IM;o roo ... T.V rfiOm, one
1-11 t~nced bodlyord, autaldl

,.,..,.ltd,"""'
Pt. PloUonl. 304·&amp;7S·

·
· -·1 nawty
loollfiln
low 80'1. 101 Mao1t11an
c~oll.

ma.

HOME lAake 2 Ray- ·

menll, auume loan, owner li·

nanctng - -· 304-755-7191
A - n - Homo Owne!l.
Areas largest lnventof)' 01 lntertherm 6 Coleman Hear Pump&amp;,
Air CondiUoners, Furnacas &amp;

$52 .000, Cat 418 $25,000 ; 04H

Hemmer, $25,000; 1972 40 Ton
too Ft Boom,
$45,000, Shoat Ft Roller, Doubto
Drum, 48 Inch, $3 ,200; 1993

It Seller In 1997 Show Oualllyl

740-379·9061 . 74()-379-9263

580

Frulte &amp;
Vegeteblea

hook·ups. Call aftei 2100 p m.,
304·773-5851 . Mason WI/.

460 Space for Rent

For Lea11

3800sq.ft . bulklmglocated on Rt.

410

HOUIII for Rent

2 I 3 bedroom, In Pomeroy. $300
par month, deposit required , no
pets, pay own uttllhes, call740·
992 -238 t Monday tnru Friday
9~.

2 Bedroom Conaga, On Bulavllle,
1/2 Mile From Porter. NO PETS,
Water ITrasl\ Paid , 740·388·

1100.

manu-

MERCHANDISE

510

992·3090 .

3 ~R 12 Ba $300 00 I rffonth, 304736·7295
4 room collage $250 mo . plus

$110. deposit Wo par, ulllltloo.
304-773-51 t8 oftar 6pm.
402 .E Collogo Rio Grande, 3
Bedroomo. 1450/Mo.. Dopolil Ro·
qulfl!l. 1 ·~1 .

Hou11hold
GoodI

Strawberries, PM:k Your Own, Caft

Claude Wlnlell, Rio Gnmda, Ohio
740245-5121 .
Strawberries: Taylor's Berry
Patch, 2864 Kerr Road, Bidwell

740-245-9047.

.crete Barrier; Arroa Boards,

5.9%Financlng

450 Case Dozer Power Angle &amp;

Tilt Blad 614 • 0 I I H
e.
" ua ouro,
$17,000 , Firm 740· 245·5439,

~-.go ..

7195.

.

L~ Drum Bot WOh casas Call

709 7 Foot Pull Type John DHro
Bnrslrhog. $750, 740388·9946.

Washera , dryers. refrlgeratars .
rang11 Skaggs Appliances, 76

John Deere

tree 25-lnch, TV. Call Home Pro-

Plantar Exec Cond . 2· AC 333 4
Row Air Plantera, Older John
Doort 6 Row Planltr, John 0oaro
2600 4 8oftom Plow 2-John Deere
12·14 ft Dilk UHd · Square

th ~""' f ld
.• "
I I"•· lut••_ , r• .,... r ay, 7~
992·3725.
Porlable Ughlad Sign wnouera
Reg. 1399 Special S349 · Free

I ·IIOC).499-3499.

Potly'l New a Utad Fumllln
We ,_haw Arnry s ..plusm
2101 Jollarlon lwfl
Open uo . $;00 - ·Sat
304-875-SOFA (7632)

Dellvety. Offer ••Pires June 8.

Plastic Lettero $55 Box (Second
Box Free) AAA Signa 8009533·
3453ai)YIIme.
'

Uud Furniture Store Below"Holi·
Inn In Kanauga. Beds.

Prl1111estar- SSO off installation
Firat month free Including free
HBO. Free promotion with rebate,

CouChes. Dreuers, Tlblll,

Deakl, Lamps

and dinette to your door·plus a

large outaide toys and baby
ltem 11 , •alk.,., tOddler car Hatl,

Vine S1rHI. CaN 740·446·7398.

day

$40074().446-2724.

3660.
Pomeroy Thrlh StiOp now buying

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

And Mo,tl Open

Hay Wagon With Side Boarda

Only $10 down delivers 1 com·

er, lilt chair, drtller; 7&lt;40· 992·

7ooo 4 Row

NO Til

Balers. Round Balers 8 .5% Fl·

nanclng on uHd Round Baiera &amp;
Mowar conditioners. New Idea
Round Baler t year old with Net
Wrap/New HoHand 472 Haybtne

EX . cond., now Hollend 174 HI)'· ,
blne Ex . cond. Carmlchaal'a
Farm &amp; Lawn. Inc. can 740·«62412or 1·800-594·1111
John Ooaie Skid Sloer Loader •
AU Sizt~ and Attachments In
atock 7.5% Financing Avallabto.
Cermlcheel'o Form &amp; Lawn, Inc.
Call·. 740··••2412
or 1·800·5114""""'"
I ~":.:':.:•--------Your Area Buth Hog Dealer For
Pana. Rotary Cunars, Loadere.

lA ·T ·W. IQ-4, 740+46-o478:2

600-263-2640.

TIIIOII. Flnllfl IAOWtrl, Etc. Cor·

Used Window Air Conditioning
Un11a, llillerenl
Guaran-.

Refrlgerators.Ontv S10 down ae-

michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway

:..

1-886-252·11102.

su...
liver• to your Goor. Free ml·
740818-004::..:::::.=::.7;.
. _ _....;___ .I crowava. Call Homo Produc:ll 0

530

AnHquea

Riding lawn mower with your

~':"t' ~~~ 11 ~~~Rio7 ~0~":·

°

~~.
2412 Ornl -~~
11 1

•

Vour Area John Deere Deeter

r or For Rolfdenlfot And Commercial
Buy or 11 II . Rlverlnt Anllques, Cholc. 0 a ',e. Pu.h mvParta, HUOO Buying Power M&lt;tana
Bedroom Houto, Central A/C I 124 E Moln Strte~ on Rt. 124• weld eetor.
lawn EMmoht.'Compacl Utility
' Only SIO down doliv·
The loweil lnltalled Price, Easy
Available
Till
Oct.
98
740·448·
Pomeroy.
Houra:
M.
T
w.
tO:Oo
oro
10
your
door.
Call
Home
ProTractori From 20 To 39 HP. All
Over Tha Phone Bank Fln~nclng.
......_ I OO
duc:ll I 1•888-252·11102.
SIUI Of 4 WO And 2 WD Farm
• m• 10 6:00
Su
Call Bennetrs Mobllo Homo HTG 2515
· P m.,
·-,- . to
Trac1ora, H~ Equipment, John
&amp; CLG 1-1100-1172·51MI7
I ·I BEDROOM HOM£8 FROM 6:00 p.ni. 740·992· 2526, Ruu Scootorl. Elaclrlc Whealcholrt, Doort Skid St10r ~ro. ChOd&lt;
$4,000 Local Clov•t. &amp; Bank IAo«a ·
Salol: Renlll, Trade, Now &amp; W~h loll AbOUi Financing Aa Low
Discount Mobile Home Parts -a
Ropo'a Call t ·800·522·2730. X 540 Mlecellaneoua
U11d. Bowman's Honto&lt;:~n~, 740· Ao 2.t% On Lawn Treotoro And
AcC:IIIOrlel Water Htaltfl, VI1709
446-7283.
Low Roto Flltlnclng On Now And
nyl Sklrllng Kilo f29i 95, An·
MerchandiH
Uood Equipment . Carmlchlll'a
chore. Wood &amp; Flhrglan Stopa. Small. 2br collaga..Camp Conley
Tlmbtrjock Sklddor Int .. Truck, Form &amp; lAwn Gallpoll~ OH 740Roof'Cootinga, Dooro, Wlndowt, area. 1200·. mo. plus deposit.
"Cl!OLDOWNI"
Loidor, 74().258-9301 .
446-24121-800-594-t111 .
Plumbing &amp; Eloctrlcal Suppllea. 304-67S.3230.
Cen..l Air Condtionfng Free E•·
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedge• And
llrnatool II You Don't Col Uo, Wa UHd Pool Slide a Diving Boord. 830
Uveatoclc
Morel Call B•nnett's Moblt.
Tlvlltll -.om llouH In Ctwltor, Both LONI 740-446•113011, 1-800. 7~2075.
'
Homo &amp;rppty Al H-40-44e-t4 te.
2tt-ooet.
I Yoor Old Quarter Horoa Slud
- """'""'·
'"""' updllol,
WI- a clrytr pair with frH vt- To SaifOrTrldo, 740-2&lt;15-l1557. •
leloa.
dtpoalt,root.
rtltrenc.o,
1-611·
Divorce Forc11 Sates -Take OYer 445-9921.
1/3 corot, n&gt;ur111 «&lt;amond IOIIIalrt. cuum ct..nor. Only ItO down
payrnontl, 1!!1&lt;, 2 bolh, ttnonclng
llzt 6, paid $900, will ialra S5~; dollvtlllo wour door. Call Home
old Raglltorod Walker
.....304·755-420 ' Mobile Home•
Marquis ,..ddlng 111112 carol , - 0 1-252·11102.
1:~~~~~ 1~~8:n:t/2 ~anda, beautiful '
, -;~~~ooiOjP~S~I
tathar 3 t~ and
olza 7, paid St400, will-toke ~;M;~i;;;;i~
for Rent •
1'1111 OOUBLE·WIOE
f1250 ; -~~lng gown Wilh ..11
I • 200 PSI
Stop by Oli&lt;wood Homo• of Nl·
olzo 7, paid •700 wtl tetre, f300; J&lt;•0?1in
~all Com·
2 lledroom Tralfor $220/Mo., In· 74().387-onll
tro, WV &amp; reglater to win tree
or740-84t-241t.
~
doublowltle, na glmmlcko. Only cludla Walor, S100 Depoolt. No
• Ollk aad ..,_ o1 Nttlv, ft. Pttt, 740·448·3437, 740·446• 40 barn I&gt;Mme, hand flown, 74().
French Alpine Goat llucti 1
13117.
.
843-5211.
WIOf\l 01d.I&amp;O 740992·7718.

j

--·

314 2

Dodge Rem 250 pick up , club
cab, 5.9 l, turbo dleul, auto,

PW, PS, PB, POL, A/C, LE pacf&lt;·
ago and good tires. $10,000. 304·
862·3823.

1989 Corwne Red, 70.000 Miles,
Very GOOd COndition, Clean Car,
$12,800. 740-44H189.
I 989 Dodge DaVJona $500. 304·
576-2046
1991 Camero RS, Automatic, Air,
Many Extra1! Good Condition ,
S&amp;,bDO ~Yelu• 6•c:rtk:e For
1991 Cavalier, Auto , Air, Good

IAIIea. $2 .500, 740·388·9062,
740-446·7278
$12,500, 740245-9460.

.

11

I
•
t
•

1881 Chevy •••· 350. Runs Good '

7~2751 .

'

t 965 Chevy Road craft van, AJC, '
Reece• f
hltc:ll. S2.ooo. 304-n3-9111 .
,

6651 .

I

--~-------- :

1994 Chevy 4 · WD Silverado, ,

47,000 miles. Ex. cond. 304·175· •
I

37~2688.

. JU&amp;HAIDII WHAT ARE
YOU S&amp;TTIN' IN TH
.CORNER
1

I'M GITTIN'
READY••

··FER SUMMER

SCHOOL

31 COollo'a music

33 Ganlne cry
34 Finicky, In 1
way
37 GIMOUI

3 Ballwood trle
4 A Ger8hwln
5 C a t -'s
golll

6 Foot porta
7 Old ;rltherllke
lnatrumen~

8 Electrical unit ,'
9 Lion's name .;
10 Actress
':
BacaU
11 Actor
Borgnlne
' I
12 - Park,

n-+-1~+--1--1---1 ~ Colorado
j19 Greek
...-+~1-+-1--1-~ , loland

•
·,
' 22 Realm
24 Drained (of • J
energy)
,·
26 Kind ol careal t
28 Son of Adam·
30 Filii
I

Eaat
Pass

All pass.

J or t J or • 4

34 Mock

,

35 Singer
'
Franklin
36 Longing
1
38 Wrongful dis·
polsel81on ·
39 Lower • •
40 Actor
,

Ro~ By Phillip Alder
42 Coaroe flies •'
How do you reacl whe~ you lhink
· 44 Shabby
•'
a slam is in the offing? Many people
--+~1--1 49 FUm director'
Croven
get a na.~ty case of acrophobia and
'. ,
50 Aage
scllle for an easy game con1rac1. Bu1
52 Not home
t1
not halians. Considering it a heinous
53 Are you a ,.
man- crime 10 miss a slam, !hey race sky·
mouae?'
ward whenever the faimesl aroma of
-'
slam wafts across !he !able.
This week, I will 1ry 10 give you
some poinlers !hal will improve your
slain bidding.
by Lull Campos
When lhe wotd ' 'slam" is men·
I' J
~ CiphH crt:;:.,..,. ~•*' from QUOllbone by lt FTIOIII people. past and pruent
Eldl
in lhe cipher standi founolher Todfly..:Jw S equai1 J
tioned, most players immedialely
1hink about Blackwood. As you
•.•••
know, the key bid is four no-trump. &lt;1' 'JXLUU
XMALF
CYG
FUOUYJUUV
'
Ycl il musl be made eilher as a jump
.•
when )lOUr partner's la.~t bid was in a
WTYAJUF,
SA F J
I! T P U
CY
suit or once you, your partner. the
CWULTRCY
EUCVAU
v c u.
RAZ
barman and the gardener know which
suit has been agreed as !rumps. Then,
· '"I
My
WCYCVUL
ENYRX,
U G.
.l.lNE I~'I \liE. ONLY
use Blackwood 10 check that· the
opponeniS don't have·too many aces.
TI\1!-ICo Tl\...i':&gt;M\11-1'
'JTJCVTR . '
Do nol use il lhinking !hal you will
OOHU.. 0/elt!
bid a slam if you have all four aces.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'd lOve to work with Barbra Strelsand aga1n In ''
but otherwise you 'II slop in five. That
something approp~ate . Pelhapa, Macbeth." - .W~fler MaHhau
is wrong. You wheel out Blackwood
•only once you are confident you have
uoAT DAllY
the .values for a slam.
.,•
PIIlLII
The Nonh hand in loday"s diligram is near-perfecl for ,Blackwood, ·
When panner opens one heart, North
•
is inleresled in lhe lhree missing aces
and lhe club queen . However, as !hal
queen cannol be uncovered by nor·
mal means, il is reasonable to bid seven when panner admils to holding
•
·· three aces . At the worsl, you will
need !he club finesse 10 work.
WELHO
.
. Counl your winners. You have 13
via ooe spade, two hearts. one dia·
·.
mond, two clubs, four ruffs in the
'dummy and lhree ruffs in hand. So.
win Irick one, draw uumps, and
cruise home on a crosstuff.

.

1862 Honda Gold Wing Aspirf.;
coda Loaded Low M11oaga, Exot~
lent Condition. $3.000. 740-367·
7515
1984 Honda 3 Whooltr, $250;
Racing Go Car $150; 740·258·

...

1683.

1984 Honda V65 Sabre. IIOOc:c:_
14,000 Ulfea. w- Cooled, Sltlft •
OrNo, Ulre New. 74tl-44t-G443.
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1986 Suzuki 4x4 2!10cc 2 Wheal :
Drive With Racks, $1,400 740· •

~~~9-~23~MM~·------------- :

.

eo

1987 jluzukl RM
Cllrt bike, ~
rebuilt, new rear lire, good pte,... l
I

1991 Honda 250x 1 Wheaitf Loll J
01 New Stutfl74tl-44H419. ; ·.

303

1995 .Kawasaki 4 Wlllelor
2.
WD, Excellenl Condllion. 740· '
448-491111, rlltef 5 P.M.
;

.

1996 Suzutrl 414 King Quad, tile •
mlle1, lola of oxtraa. $4,500. 304· '
675-88511 allar llpm.
•

w

THE 'BORN LOSER
jl)~e; 1:&gt;

•

'
''

v u y.

OOS{It-1' OUT.I
fi.J..L ()l(l.l,

&amp; Moten
for s.le

Boahi

'I

~,2~ft~.~..~umt~num--:Jon
..._:-.:~.""•ra"'~~ar""".'"'2

i

folding seats, aluminum oari

t

a

.t

anchor Like new. $700./080. •
304-675-3581 .
'

I;
I:'1

15' Glaatron With It 5 HP ~r·
cury, 18' Starcraft With tOO liP r
Mercury 11 ,000 Ptoee. 740·44f•'
I

•

1916 Baja 160 lsla.at, 18' crcttn ,
bow Mercrulser 1/0 motor with 1

1991 Gap Prlzm • Doors, Auto,

Tracker drive on randem traHer.
good condHion, meka otltr. 7411-

. ..

"

Four wheeler for sale- 1917 Ka· ~
wasakl Prolrle 414, lllra now, 740- ,
992-4003 or 7of0.992-6M9.

1991 DOdge Spirit ES Uode All
Power. 3.0 LUer V·8, Steel
Wheels, Clean Car. Local OWner,
74G-44e·2532.

1992 Chovy Lumina, cokl air, tilt,
cru111, ABS, -triO wt-. PL,
loaded, I 05,000 mllao. extra

32 Motorists' org.

Heading for the
sfratosphere ·:

1982 Honda 750 Custom, excel: •
lent shape, $1050, call 740.949- :
2181.
•

•
I

1969 Tracker 20' Party Hul p,on- '
toon. t 00 hp Evlnrude. wjth
992·7024 -5:30pm.

~WN
I Religious
poem
2 lots and Iota

52

Opening lead: •

::: FER?

Motorcycle•

•atWr. 740-387-7518.

UT~~

211 Wam1111'otltle

A 3 .2

Weal North
Pass . 4NT
Pass 7 •

I

•

A 93
A Q 10 8 2

225·~ng:'J

57 Altral

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: 89uth

...

I 966 C havy 4 WD Air &amp; Aulo,.
Super Sharp $7 ,000 , 740·2541;

44t2,

1
9 4
• Q 10 e a 3

South

2532

750

• K•••Q

18

4-WDI

1978 Chevy 4x4 S W.B. V-B, •
Auto. Local Owner, 740·446·

740

Ell&amp;
I K Q 6 4

23 Drunkard

:

199t 2•11. Pontoon boat, 'ix. :

GRu F E E

1'1 I

I

.

..
,.

I

cond. 50HP motor 18.500. 304·
675-61158 alllr llpm

35 Horst Power Johnaono Good'
Condition. 1800. Coil ~ 1,•1&gt;
fiA. 304-675-5131.
&gt; ' &amp;

..

sharp, maroon . 4 door, $3995,

on Used Tractora;

Ford 5030·400 ~RS . , Fonl 7040
4WD WI Loader-1370 HRS .. Ku·
bote IA~30 50HP·800 HRS Car·
mlchatl Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc. Call
7~2ot2or t-800-594-11H

$1400, will aooopt reaaonat&gt;to off·

t 988 Buick Skyhawk, 4 cy~ auto
$500. 1988 HOnda XR250R. good

ad, $3.195. I 890 Cavalier 2
Doors, AC. $1 .795, 1989 Beretta
V·B Aulo. AC. 12.295; Cook Mo·
tors, 7~103.

Farm Equipment

Vans &amp;

Well
1 ..1 10815
. • .9 4
tJ10875

tic, ul&lt;.ftg $850 304-576-3030. 'I : 1

1991 Sl'ladow Convertible, Load·

$3,000 A Ploce. R40 Oitchwltch
With 600 Hro . S7,500; 740-6432916 Altar 4 PM .; After 6 P.IA
740·843· 2844; Fax 740·643·
1030.

Plano and organ, regular price

1987 Ford Escort Good Condl·

386-90112, 7~72711

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

ductS I t-1188-252·1602.

5529

Air, 6o,ooo Miles s2.5oo 740·

330 Hra .. l7,5oo: t989 F·6oo
Ford Diesel Dump Trucf&lt; 52,000
Miles; 45 Ft. Tool Trailer S2 tOOO:
Cat 553 Shoat Ft. Roller, 145,000,
30 ~1 . Vlbrallng Skread $4,000;
Mlac Full Tanks, Mile. Wattr
Tanka, Mlao. Steel Beams, Con·

plett living room suite, bedroom

1962 C~ttasa Supreme, 2 D. 280
V8. Good Condition. $1.800 Or
llest Otfar, 74()-992~588

Bedrooms, Excellent Condition,

6906.

Appliances :
Recondllloned
wa,hers. Dryers. Ranges. Refrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctly Maytag. 740·-4&lt;46-

2 Bedroom House For Rent Reference &amp; Deposit Required . 740·

oklo peta; dlpooll required. 740·

for

Trucf&lt;s, 4x4' ~ Etc.
1·800-522·2730, X 3901.

1991 Culla&amp;a Carolton ' 14x70 3

Atlas Copcoe Compre&amp;~or 185

Sleeping .rooms with cooking .
Also trailer space on river. All

Henderson, suitable

;roy Yorkles While BichOI\ Frlse

$52 ,000 ; Hera Powell Driving
Lima Truck Crane,

Locally This Month

$3,800, 740-448-8827.

Now In Stocil; Ulllil)' Traltara 5' xe· 400 FarmaH, gao. excellenl c:onGI• 5' xtO' • 5'x12&gt;, 78"xl8' Kesnts tion, new liras, fast hitch, $32110;
T•actor .&amp; Equipment, 740·44&amp;· · 740-985-3902

2 bedroom houH, clean, cerpeted. stove, no refrigerator, no In-

ABANOO~

Lalurner Grader $7 .500; Cat 215

740-441·5898. 74()-441-5167.

We Pay Cash. 1-800· 213· 836~.
Anflony Lend Co.
•

McMII $2,500 74Q-441 ·1821

Servlcea

AERATION MOl'OAS
Repaired, Now &amp; Robullt In Stocl&lt;.
Call Ron Evono, HI00.537·9526

APT AVAILABLE NOW

~.$250, 7~119

875-8446

We Buy Land · 30 ·500 Acre&amp;,

recommend&amp; that you do butl·

Profea1lonal

JET

1981).1990 1luclra For $100111
Seized AM Sokl

cond , low riding miles, $800

1110111. OH. 7 - t m.
Shtltll I Yoar Old. Fem* Wllh

730

Condition , 88,000 IAIIoo, Rollll •
$15,000, Reduced $12,500, 74(). '

HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·
LAR· kills fleas , tick, 111111 mites
llllluud systemic poisoning. J D
North Produce, 740·446·1933 .
(www.happyjiiCtrinc.oom)

pointments. over 15 yrs. axp&amp;rlence, evening appointments
available, 650 Sacond Ave. Gat -

••

1994 Toyota TIOO P.U. V· 8 Au· .
lomatic, $5.500; 1992 Ford F· I5Q
XLT 4x4 $5,500; 1991 Nloaao
~u . ,,,650. 1990 Ford F-150 414 .
Lerlat 1 Ownot. 740-«6-6189 8&amp;
D Aulo Sileo, Hw)'. 160 North.

'91 Mustang GT, good condition ,
new tires, 7401192·7366.

uon, $750, 740388·6621.

NOTICE
F - CIIJ Pol Grvamlng
-Opanl
Professional Grooming by Ap-

~EK&amp;MEEK

•

199&amp; Mazda B3000, 4x4 Extend· :
ed Cab, 5 Speed, Air, Excellent ,

HaM Tamed. Gentle Hedgehogs.
to Weeks Old, 740·446· 6571
AYiraga Welghtt 2 Oz. •

All« 4 P.M. 74044S.741MI.

ntll with· people you know. and

230

Grubb'&amp; Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problema? Need Tuned? Calf tht1
plano Or. 74().446-4525

papers, $50, 740-992-7853

304-576·2494.

711i Auto• for Sale

tires. runs good, $550, 7-40·992·
German shephe rd puppies , no

111t. cab, 350 , auto. ex. cond .

5137.

1984 Chevy Cavalier, like new

35

446-3548, 740-446-3413.

UNBELIEVABLE $499 Down Si
W 1999 Down DNI only at (OAK·
WOOD HOMES) Barbouravltle
304-736-3409

9787.

Oucks, Geese &amp; Chickens For

facturing, wood working. storing
or sales, will hnlsh to sun 304 ~

3 Bedroom Mobile Home With
-4x8 Porch , Fair Condllion , Must

NOT to sand money through the
mall until you have lnveallgated
... otllrlng.
.

$tOO, Drop Leal Table &amp; Chairs,
With 3 Loaves, $300, 740·4460119.
.

-mod.

Apache, Waahlngton, Ml 48094 .
Phone: 810·786-1439

RENTALS

mo tree

Range $75: Zenith Console Tv ,
Like New $200, Stereo Consolr

One bedroom apartment in Mid·

$125 each. 304·937-2929.

tential. Craig Landefeld , 80410

2929.

14 X70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
St 79 per mo Free air &amp; tree skirt·
lng 1-1188-928-3426

G.E. Washer, $75, G.E. Electric

Gold Chain Link Necklace For

490

Three bedroom, bath and hall, In

Mobile Homea
for Sale

1602

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

Wanted . 200 ·300 Secluded Acr·

And Remodallng, Rooting. Clean·

320

S2·1nch big ocreen TV. Only StO

tunltlas.

TRANSPORTATION

1160 ·1990 HDNOA CARS FOR
1100 Soiled &amp; Sold Locally This
uonth. can 1·8011-522·2730 Ext
4420

Beautiful Oalmallan puppies

Sale, 740-245·5622.

down dfllvers to vour door Call
Home Products 0 1·888· 252·

pori From $249·$373. Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal HouSing Opper·

Condition hay In the lla ld,
Orchard &amp; Timothy mixed. Here
In Mason County $1.25/bale .
304·!562-7387.

van In good condition, 740·992·
7083.

$100, 740-448-1032

2
KJ8753
• 6
.IAKJ74

oood tlrea, good shape,

Aus1rallan Shepherd Puppies, 1
Mala Merle, 1 Mate Tricolored ,

your door Call Home Products 0
1·688·252·1802

month, $235 deposit, can 740·
742·2837

&amp; Grain

1974 PlymOuth VaNam, 11c1ory afr,
factory 318 mopar. 69.000 original
miles, W!l lnlde tor lruek 01 cargo

CKC Rag ~al tarrier puppies. SIX
weeks old, shots and
call
74&lt;&gt;-643·5175 after 5pm

Free camcorder-with purchast of

Hay

AKC White German Shepherd
Pups $150. 74().258-8444.

Computer system with free print·
er Only $10 down delivers to

bedroom upstairs apartment, no
pets, mu-' have ref8fances. $235

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedrOOm
apartments at Village Manor and
R1verskte Apartments In Middle-

640

pies, 6wk s old, first shot s &amp;
wormed. 2males/2females. 304 ·
675-4183 or 304-875-1275

CFA Registered Himalayan Kit·
lena, Exira Nice. 740448-3188

2655

For rant· do'f!llown GalllpoHs. one

740-385-4367.

740-446-0231 .

740-448·4412

$100 to $)25.00 A Sell 740·379·

446-0008

A1dlng Horno For Sale (740)
-1484110

free matching tamps. Only $10
dow ~ delivers to your door. Call
Home Products
1 ·888-252·

Four Sets or Truck LUI Forks

Efficiency Near Walmart, 740·

Mobile home site available between Athens and Pomeroy, eall

Pete for Sale

Blue Point Siamese Kilten&amp; $50,

o

black half Arabian/

Raglllered Chi·Anguo Bull For
Sale, 740·985·3334, Or 740.985·
3838.

Complete living room suite wllh

1802

ESTATES . 52 Westwood Drive

Casn Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackbum Really. 740-

es In Ohio, With All Mineral

Mother Of 4 Will Babyolt In lAy

4784 After 5 PM

ConstructiOn Workers Welcome

6272

•

Good Condition . $225 304·675·

247·4292

AIC, basemen!, IY.t!ached garage

740388-6966.

Bunk Beds With Mattresses Very

posH, 3rd Stroot. Racine, Dh. 740

Philips, 740992-6576

Lawn Yard Work, Light Car~ntry

Call 740·992·6636 alter 6 pm.
COs &amp; lapiS not InCluded

3 bedroom. large apartment, $295
per month plus utlliUes, plus de·

polntmont, 74().992-5243.
l'b•ullcllng on Gravel Hill In IAiddlo·
':---- - -- - - - - port. many pooslbllltlea. call 740·
Older .. bdr, modflm central heat,
992·0052

Nook Recently Uodated, 74().446·

to 9 40 discs , atso holds tapes

Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740·992·
3711 . EOH.

Furniture rePaw, refinish and restoration. also custom orders. Oh10
Valley Retlnlshmg Shop, Larry

1ng. Call741l-«6·&amp;964. 304-Bn8021 .

Nevor out of box. $125. Hokls up

2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room
facilities, Close to scnool In town

Nice lot with duplex apartment

K&amp;S Remodeling painttng, Roof·

Brand Newt Great Giltl CD!video
s torage unit. Black and cherry

oy, OH

washer. detached garage: by ap-

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
51 21

AKC Sttlerian Female 12 Weeks,
Bolans GS 14Xl Riding IAower, I 4 Vet
Shots &amp; Wormed ,
HP ol4 Inch Cut Asking $900, Call 1100,Checked,
74()-379-2363
Kathy.
Daytime 740·446·3310, EWinlngs·
740·367-oote6

2 Bedroom Apt. Stove and refrJg

encea·upon request.

Spring Valley Area, 4 Bedrooms,
LA. OR. 2 1f2 Baths, Large Family
Room . Large Kitc hen &amp; Break

ceo.74().258-1446. ·

Included. 74 Court St. Gallipolis.
740441 ·2583

Weekly Rates, Or Monlhly Ratea,

haul your logs to the mllltust call
31)4.875- I 957.

&amp; 43" Work Benches. 4 Wheeler
$1 ,000 ; 6 Gun Cab~nat $150

From Universlly Rio Grande,

8323

~ e g latered

half quarter horse gelding, 9 yl'l
Old, $1200, 740-898·2183.

Bedroom Sullo 1300; 25" T.V. chacked, pedlgroes. $300·350,
180, Sec urlly Cab 62x36xl8 74()-61111-1085.
$100. Gas Furnace 165; 3 Molal
Shelves 36x18x75 $35 Each; 90" AKC Registered Shih· Tzu pup ·

1 Bedr!)Om Apartment, 2 Blocks

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled , HBO.
Clnemax , Showtlme &amp; Disney

5464

AKC Pomeranian pupptea, cream,
black, brownJblack , sable. vet

992·2218

,

Raise Your Day Old Dairy Holter•
$40 + "-ed Guaranteed 74&lt;&gt;-245·

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets . 37 3 Georges Cr!lek Ad

Sell Only No Trades, ' 740· 448 ·

304·675-6248

Block, br ick, sewer pipet, win d·
ows, lintels, ate Claude Winters,

•~

$3,800, 740-448-7318.

ltnd
46 Anec:jolntd
colleciiDn
18 Quantity
Fr. holy woman
17 Atty.r~ dog. ' 46 Slly ~
18 .,_ WHI role 51 Atlevlat._
20 Dakotalndfltn 54 CUng
21 Fitting return
55 Llkll bllby lood
(lrchltlcl
56 Taunla

•r

1991 S· tO Cloan. 89.000 Mltoo.''
1993 Chevy tull·llll Silverado

Ouallty Aegl1tered Black Angu•
a un s 11· 16 months. Car tl fi t d
Hetd . Cummings Angu&amp; Farm.

Building
Supplies

$225, 740-441 ·1507.

9767

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fut·
nil!lhed and unfurnished, security
dePosit required , no pets, 740·

450

550

560 ·

New Vivllar $2,80() Auto Flash

2952.

Mayba A Collage Bound Student.
It So, Call 740·245· 544 3 For
Mora information

W1th !iOmm Lono, cany Bag. And

lleanle Babies For Sale $10 &amp; Up

Mtddleport, I:Mtaullful two story, 3
br, 2 bath , large l.r &amp; fr , oak
doors &amp; trim, Smith's custom oak
cabinets, Jenn· alr range , dish-

Georgea Portable Sawmill. don't

ASAH I Pantu K· l 000 Camera

Apartment•
for Rent

9.5 Acres Wooded Land Has 2
Moen, Homes. With Adcllttons.
Fru•l Trees, Outbulldmgs, Good
Hunting, 740·388-9636, 740-388·

on 2 77 acres. on 22nd Street 1n
Point Pleasant S6o .ooo 304·
736-1616

Air con ditioner lor sale, 18000

Traler For Rant, 74D-446-1 279

440

Word Pmquw v
Do You N11d A Word Processor
For Soma Busi ne ss Work Or

740446-4410

. Traler tor ron; 74&lt;&gt;-992·9158.

740·245·9430 For More lntorma·
hon.

Jim Shull. 304-675·1272 . Refer·

State Route 141, 740-446-0906.

98 218 Area, $250/Mo.. Plus :le·
posit. 8 t-4 1tea From Gallipolis,
740-386--.

9pm.

ExperienCed carpenter will dO remodeling, decks, vinyl siding ,
plumbing Free asllmates Call

4x6 Awning For Sale , E~tcellent
Condltlont Can Be Seen AI 2959

MCCormlcf&lt; Road. $275/Mo.. Plus
Deposk. 740-44~8

740·448·6806 Or Call Cara At

Thur,..., 740992·9049.

VCR. Only 110 down delivers 10

3 Bedroom TraiJer Available 6115/

Double wide 3br, 2 bath, only
$1 ,325 down, $205 per month
I ·800-69 I ·6777.

Be Oepandable , 740·448· 2388,
740-446· 1361 Ask For lee Or
Chri&amp;

•

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260· $300, aewer, waler and

3426

310

Inc Benefits. No Expe rience. For
App. And Exam Info , Call 1·OOQ-

Hug' 28x80 3BR, I 1/2 bath.
Starting at ONLY $39,999 IAany

'

.s="&amp;..

.S Proopectar'o

740992-11824.
1992 Cull~so Supreme 2dr, 3.4
lllre, DOHC 24 valve , AIC. tilt,
cruise, red, 86.000 mllea. asking

$7,«10. 304-576-3030.

.SCIIAM-LITS ANSWERS

1993 Chevy Aatro Van CL Load·
ed Towing Package, Excellent

l)uiJlar - Emend - Troop - Insist - OURSELVES
Granily always said that the trait lhat makes us in -

Condition, 85,000 Milos. $1.500
Sharp1740-446-9278.
1993 Ford Tauru1 SHO 93,000
CO, Sunroof, Ex·
Clllent Condition, .All
740·
446-2075.

760

1994 Thunderbird, power everything, V·8 , aulo, CD pll)'er, bra.

-

Mjlea, Leather

Po-.

18,100. t 968 Wild-wood 3411
campe

bullt· ln
microwave,
queen-&amp;lze bed, new rerrlglretor.

. '.
•

113&amp;4

• .

1995 Plymouth Neon 4 Doors.
Green With Spolltr Automatic,

Air, 57,500 Milol, $4 ,500 OBO,
74025B-UIO. 74().258·6467.

1996 Monte Carlo, LS, V·8. Auto,
A~. PW. PL, Lealllor, CO, Kayleas
Entry, Cruise, Power Saats, R•

duced $13,300, Rttoll St5,000,
74()-37&amp;-2666.
1997 Ford Escort Sport Black,
Air. Crulli, Tilt, 5 Speed, 20,000
Ulloa, Patd $14,500 Asking
S10,500, 74().258-15711.
•
Credit Problema? Wo Con Htlp.
Eao~ Bank Financing For Uaad

Upton Und Cars Rt. 62·3 Mlloo
Soutl'l of Ltoft, wv. ·Financing

-

720

· 304-451·10119.
TR!Ckl IOf' S.le

teeo Volk1wagon Robbll Truck,

$500, 74().37'9-2254.

1986 Nilson 2 WD $250, 140·
:!M-1613.

1918 ChOvy C10 Gold Color 305,
V·l. Auto, Long Bod Sliding
7-2532.

- .llecll nor.

tell G.M.C. SIS 4 Cylinder, S
Spaid, Phone; 740-:!M-' 102.

1910 Nl111n Pldi·Up And 11188
Chevy Sitvwado Both Good Con_,,740-25H883.
tltl Chtvy 8·10. Tahoo pock·
6 Cyl., 5 IPIId, CUllOm
wftoefo, 4 now llreo. anly 11,000
oclull mllto, 13UO, 7.40·912 ·
1824.
1(10,

i
Ripley, WV. 304·37:f·'!

R Auto,
:11133 or I-8Q0.273-932t.

790

iS lhe CO'!rage to be OURSELVES

JUNE 1 I

• ••,

Campers &amp; . :_
·. ~
MotorHomn

1

1975 Corsair camper. 111ap1 I , (
4·burner SIIMI wlcwel), rtfriglrl· ~
tor 110Y or propana. shower, ,

fluohoble toilet. dout&gt;to tup, •

lltlnltu sink, propane furnacl •
wlwalf mounted lhlrmoelll, p,. ~
pane hot waler healer, lOti., C!'f t
storage apace In cJot.et , Cftl~·

propona l.lnko tnc-d. Tandoij '•
axlo. good cond . $1,600. 304.,...\
17~
• \ .~1
Shlall 18' 11W conlafntd - · ]
awning. very good condlllon,
~. 7-2tn. ·

810

Home
,.. ,
lmprovementa ,.,
. ••M•NT

...

~sday.1une 2:1998

Sf f1VICE •,

Vt_h lclea. Na Turn Downs, Call

Vlclrla, 7 - 7.

IMONDAY

•

gao tanka a body par~o. o

$5,500. 304-57S.9005.
1995 Dodge Neon White, 34.000
Miles, AIIIO, Air, Crulll, Tilt. Powor Door Locks, $5.600 740·379-

teres~ng

-·
•

!

rr

W.UEWIIOOf'IIO
, .
Unc:o- N1otirno auaro-.
Local relertncea furnished . Et·

1975. CltllM lh. (7!111·
ol46-01170, 1·800·281.0576. R"""·
.,. w.... proor.ng.
-··.

•• ,.,,!·

Appliance P1r11 And ~~~rv~~:a:'Ail .
Ntmo BronGo Over 25 Yon 1••
porlonce All Work GuoroniHO;.
Franch City Moytog, 740.4~·
7715.
•~
C&amp;C Gonorol Homo M119:
lant!!C• Painting , vinyl okllng;
carpentry, doorl, wk-1, belho; .
hob r1p11r _. men. for
lroa Htlntlll cal Chtt, 740-1112-

1323.

• ·~

840

.. .'

- In the year af.ead. new · friends
could function as conduits for oppor.
lunily. .Your most signifJCanl break~
will come lhrough people who like .
you.
:· 'OEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You
mayr not be able 10 rely on otheis
Rld4y, dpecially regardina an ambi- ·
lious objcclive. Trying 10 patch up a
~,pken romance'! The Asiro-Otapl)
Malchmuker can help you lllllimland
whlll to do to make the relalionship
wOrk. Mail $2 .75to Malehmaker, clo
!his-newspaper, P.O. BOK 1758, Murni)-~ Hill Slalion, New York, NY

up later when you go to !he bank 10 ·
make a deposit.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22) Before
geuinJ involved in a partnership at
this time, be sure you know your
potential allies. If not, a poor choice
may result.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Duties
and responsibilities won't like care of
lhemselves today, 10 don't lltempllo
ralionalize !hem away. Nealect spells
trouble funher down the line.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
Avoid Jroups or diques c:onlaininJ
hostile members today. lnslelld of try·
191S6. ..
ina to fit in. h11111 out with frierids.
• (;ANCER (June ' 21-luly 22) Be
SAOIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:.
u1ra cautious tlbout 111111e11 requirina
2t)
Don't blame olhen today if the
COlilmunicllion IOday.lfyou'recfto
lhinp
you ao after aie IIIII'CaC:hable.
leu, you might make a bia ~~tisllke
It's not !heir fault your expecwiona
it) what you write or say.
. ·
exceed
your possibilities. •
.,I!.EO (July 23-AuJ. 221 Be opli· ;
CAP!tlCORN
(Dec. 22-JIIII. 19)
~.-ic 1oday,_ but realillic about :
You're
entitled
to
)'O¥I'Owil
opinions.
coantina your blelsinp before they 1
become. realilies. You can add thlqs : but don 'I lhut otr • views and
I

lhought&lt; of otherli. Your besl lesson
lodly conies.from soiiiCOIM you feel
· is inferior. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. " 19.)
Today you might have extravagant
UIJCS. If you're not careful , !hey
could impel you 10 make a bild deci~ ·
sion where your budget is COitcented.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) A
reckless associate ini&amp;hl ~ncouraae
you to behit.ve in a similar manner
today. You could do aomethina fool·
ish !hal carries penfl!lies. .
ARIES (March 2t-Apnll9) You
might be ,loo eniotional ~bout a
development that should be reaolved
in a logical manner today. Don' t lei
poor judgment·rule the roost.
TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) Your
usessment of people mil!ht not be Up

10 par today, and lhenl's a chance
you'll ' pl8tc failh in IDIIIOOIIe who
miJht not _
measure up. •

..

at 50 Good

..

�•

•

'

•
•

: ·~ -: ·
~

The Daily· Sentinel

By The Bend

- ..·-· -' :_..
..

June 2, 1998

.. •

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: 601

Substance abuse among· health-care profe~s(iohals a conspiracy of silen.~o~e
Ann
l anderS

'"

,,., , t.oo ""''"' ""''

~==

c~·~

Dear Ann Landen: I just read
the letter from " Somewherf in Oregon," who said her 65·year-old husband had been abusi ng pills
throug hout his medical ·career. I
know where she's coming from.
For se.veral years, I dated a doe tor
who was an alcoholic. I' ll call him
" Ctuis." His behavior was accepted
because be always performed well
on his job and was an upstanding
member of the community.
Several times, I watched thi s man
answer a hospital page after a night
of drinking and leave my apartment

hung over at 6 a.m. to work a 24hour shift
Chris drove all over town sloshed
· ·mg
· out of his mind. He satd· hts· dnnk
was not a problem and he just ne.eded to unwind and " have some fun."
Some of the police oFficers who
stopped him when he ignored traffic
lights w·~ re former patients, so they
gave him a pass.
I might also mention that Chris
was married. When ·he met me, he
h' - ~ 'd'd • (I
insisted that ts wt e-' 1 n t un erstand him." He told me he never fell
about his wife the wa he fe lt about
me. How stupid 1 wa/to fal l for that
0 td r
me.
t . d ·t d h
1 am
at a 1oss o un ers an w y
our society puts up with alcoholand drug-impaired physicians.
. · The medical review boards will
not take away their licenscs ,fo r this
type of. behavior. Doctors wi th

severe addiction problems a~e still
practicing and no one says a YIOrd.
It's a cons~iracy of silence for which .
·
·
we all pay a pnce.
Unfortunately, it rakes a traged y
or a public scandal before ihe review
boards will take action against their
impaired members ... . Ex-Mistress
· New
· Orleans
of an M. D. m
Dear New Orleans: Substance
abuse among health-care profession·
als is an old and s.ad story. Their easy
d
f
great
. access to rugs, o course,',. a1
"conventen"ce," and very Itt e can
be done about it.
. Physicians write their own
scnpttons, and oJ course, alcohol os
ava'lable every· where
·
'
.
.'
..
To all the impatred phys1c1ans
wh~ arc readm g thts, I would ltke to
say, please constdcr the fatth and
. trust your patients. have placed in
you. If you have a drug or alcohol

problem, ~et some hel~ before you.
make a mtstake for whtch you wtll
never be able to forgive yourself.
D~ar Ann Landers.• 1n your co1·
umn, which I read in ,the Raleigh,
N.C., News and Observer, you satd
the only _safe talk shows arc Oprah
and Roste O' Donnell. I love them
bot h. Th. ey are educanona
· 1. .an d you
don' t have to worry if the kids tune

up by another netw~k and promtsed
to tone d!JWn the vtolence. We wtll
have to wait and see if be keeps his
word .
.
Many guests on that show have
clatmed that they were patd and
went through at le~st on~ rehearsal
of sluggmg ~nd hatr-pulhng before
the show airo.u
··' .
. .
Dear Ann Landers: Thts ts for
on.
parents wh~ t an Pllrttesd for . th~lf
That TV show where guests chtldre~ an o not mtel)_ to tnvtte
throw chairs and beat up on one the enure c1ass
a•other is disgusting. Almost
Please . teli them 10 have the
"
h . . .
. h
always, a lot of th.e language has to dec_e~cY to put t e t~votattons •n t .e
be bleeped out. The host, Jerry
tnstead of Passmgt. them
Springer; stands by smirking . Mean- sc oo1. 111e cos1 per s amp ts no .
while, his ratings soar. I find this a ing compared to the cost of hunmg
h,
f h
' ~ I'
S nccrport
sad c,ommentary·on t e taste o t e · someone s ec mgs. .. ,pe
•
viewers. .. M.W. in Raleigh, N.C.
N.Y.
. ,
Dear M.W.: Everyone has heard
Dear Speneerpoo1.· Thanks fpr
by now that Sprin~c r was fired . Of prcventmg a lot ~f heartache.
course, he ,was tmmedtatclr 'ptckcd You've done somct mg generous

·s

pr~-

~ahtl

Out;~~

.and wonderful by wntmg
·
Thank you.
. H
An alcoh()l plrfoblel)l 7. ow can
you help
.. yourse
.
. .or someone
R you•
l~ve? Alcoholism. H~w t~ H~C:~o
ntze It, H ow .~o Deal ..ynh 1 •ou the
Conquer It . Wi ll ~ tve Y .
answers.
f ddr
d I
b .
Send
essed , ong,
. . asci -a
h kust·.
ness-stze covel~~;~ (t~sci.=,~ud~~
money ord~ r::,ndling) to· Alcohol
~ os tAagc aLn d rs .,
1 nn an e • •·0 · B ~x 11562·•
co
Chicago 111. 60611 -0562. (In Cana·
d .. ct'$
)
·
a, sen . 4·55• · , , •
.
de

;~:~nr~.:::'~:opr:s~~~~~~~~.
~~~;.
r.
.

.the Creators Syndtcate web page at
www creators com AN N LAN.
DERS (,Rl · COPYRIGHT
. 1998
CREATORS SY NDICATE, INC.
·

Community calen.dar Traveling abroad? _Don•t forget Social Security
The Community Calendar is published as a free service 10 non-profit
·groupS wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar ts
not designed to promote sales or_fund
raisers of any type. Items are pnnted
as space permits and c1111n01 be guaranteed 10 run a specific number of
days.
.
MONDAY
POMEROY .. Friends of the
Meigs County Library wm meet
Monday. 7 p.m. at the! Pomeroy
Library.
SYRACUSE .. Suaon Township
Board of Trustees regular monthly
meeting Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134
Order of the Eastern Star regular
meeting will he held Monday, 7:30
p.m. with degree work on two can'
di,dates.

ship Board of. Trustees will meet
Monday, 7 p.m. at the office building
in Letart Fails.
TUMESIDDDAYLEPOR.·T

Middleport

Lodge 363 F&amp;.AM regular meeting
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
\.- ALFRED .. Orange Township
Trustees meeting Tuesday. 7:3.0p.m.
at the home of Clerk Osie Follrod,
Alfred.
.
POMEROY •• Metgs Cou~ty
Health. Departm_e~t free evenmg
immumzatton chmc Tuesday, 5-1
p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Cen·
ter. Parent/legal guardian · must
~~~:company child. Bring immunization record. For more infonnation call
the health department at 992-6626.
. RUTLAND .. Leading Creek
Conservancy District board meeting
Tuesday, 5 p.m.

CHESTER .. Pomeroy Order of
the Eastern Star 186 will meet TuesRACINE -· Racine Village Coun· day, 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River
cil will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the Lodge in Che.•ter with a potluck dinmunicipal building.
ner at 6 p.m.
. CARPENTER - Columbia Town- WEDNESDAY
.
ship'Board of Trustees meeting MonPAGEVILLE .. Scipio Township
day. 7:30 p.m ..at.the fire stalion.
Board of Trustees meeting Wednesday. 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Town
LETART FALLS ·• Letart Town- Hall.
'

-

.

'

By Ed Paterson
District Manager

without regard to ivhere the illness or been getting monthly checks on their but the benefit amount you receive
injury occurs.
·
retired father's earnings record. .
will 'be less than your fpll retirement
, If you are receiving Social S~cu .. You are in Canada traveling
Answer: The amount of benefits benefit.
rit)\ checks and you plan to travel out· directly between Alaska and anothJ:r · yqur children receive is not ·affected
Question: My dad, who is receivside the United States' this summer, U.S. state when an emergency occurs, . by . your ellfliings. Their payments in~ SSI benefits, will .be coming to
there are several rules you should and a Canadian hospital ·is easier to will continue until .they reach age 18 live with me;· Since his SSI check
note. For eumple, you should con- reach from the site of the emergency .. ( 19 if they're Slill in high school) or .. goes directly to the bank, does he .
side~ having your check sent direct· · than the nearest. U.S. hospitai. .
until they marry. However, if you hav.e to rcpon the ·move 10 Social
ly to the bank. You shoold also he
If you plan to stay outside the receive benefits as a ~other carin$ Security? ·
familiar with how your Medicare country more than 30· days, other for a child under 16 ordtsabled, your .
Answer: Yes .. An Supplemental
coverage works out•ide the U.S.
rules may apply. Call Social Securi- benefits_may be affected by your Security Income (SSI) beneficiary
First, sending your check directly ty's toll free number, 800-772-1213, earnings. Call Social Security at 1- must report any change in living
to a bank, "direct deposit:', has sev- . and ask for a copy of' the !&gt;ooklet. gOO- 772-1213 if you need more arrangements within 10 days after the
eral advantages. For instance, you Social Security: Your Payments information.
month ihe change occurs. If you
never have to worry about your While You Are Outside the United
Question: Tve been diagnosed don't, you could end up receiving an
· check being lost or stolen; It also States (Publication No. 05- 10137).
with HIV in'fection. Am I eligible for incorrect payment and have to pay it
Social Security benefits?
llack. Fi!ilure to report or filing false
. makes funds available to yoo even Social Security Q&amp;A
when you are not here to cash your
Question: Do yob automati,ally
Answer: lfy~rmedicalcondition reports-could result in a fine, imprischecks.
·
.
get Medicare benefits if you're eligi- keeps yoo from working, you may be onment or both. Also, you need to
If yoo get sick or hurt while trav- ble for disabilit)' benefits?
eligitile for Social Security or Sup- report your new address to Social
eling, you should know that. gener'
Answer: You have to receive dis- plemenlld Security Income'(SSI) dis-. . · Securi.ty'so that you can continue to
ally. Medicare does not pay for hos• · ability. benefii.~ for 24 months. then abili!y benefits. Fot more informa· receive mail from Social Security
pita! or medical services outside the you will automatically get Medicare tion. the booklet Social Security and when necessary.
.
U.S. However, there are three excep- benefits.
,
SSI Benefits For People With HIV
Question: I heard yoti can get a
tions. Medicare will pay for your care
Question: What identification do · Infection (Publication No. 05, 10020) Social Security ,number for a baby at
in a qualified Canadian or Mexican you need to get a duplicate Social will answer most of your questions the hospital at the time of birth. Is thft
hospital if:
Seeurity card?
and tell you how to file for benefit~. true?
· .
.. You are in the United States
Answer: To ·get a duplicate card · Call Social Security at 1-800-772· Answer: Yes, you apply. for a
when an emergency occurs, and and (one with the same name and num- 1213 to request a copy of the book· number after your baby is born and
its easier 10 reach a Canadian or Mex- ber), all yoo usually need is one type let or if you have additional ques- ii's very easy. When your hospital
.ican hospital than a U.S. hospital. ·
of identification and a completed lions.
representative or doctor a.•ks you for
.. You live in the U.S. and a Cana- . Form SS-5. The identifiCation must
Question: What i.~ the earliest age · the information needed 10 complete
dian 'or Mexican hospital is easier·to · be an origioal or a cenifted copy.
a1 which you can qualify for retire- your baby's birth certificate, all vou
reach from your home than the nearQuestion~ Can I go back to work ment benefits?
have to do is tell them to lu!-ve your
Answer. You can start your Social State's vital statistics offace Ahare the
est U.S. hospital regardless 'of wilhout affecting my c:hUikcn's pay·
d
ments
from
Social
Security?
They'
ve
Security
benefits as early a.~ age ~ 62. . .information
with_ the Social Security
whether an emergency CJI:tsts, an
Administration.

ss than five minutes and you'll
be hooked on the 400 Series!

a1

Meigs County~s

:

·Hometown Newspaper

nc1 ent.·spur_
s. VIS ng h·ours for CQUnty. home ·,
.

Verbal confrontation with facility's
· matron ·outlined to commissioners

l~tter circulated late last week, 'signed by "The Meigs County H9fllC · that I would be blamed for a.baby's death.

MC519 Material Collection System

·.

The versatile 400
liquid-cooled, 20· to 22-hp
·engine and 54· or 60-inch mowing deck.

Includes Ride is, LX lawn
Tractors; GT, 30d, &amp; 40b Series
lawn &amp; Garden Tractors, F500
Front Mowers, and all
attachments.

·:Pomeroy;.

sheriff .e xploring
·~new jail options

~VSO . eye

'

.

By BRIAN J. REED
would be requi~ annually in order
Senii!MII News Staff
to operate a new jaiL
.
- ···-----.1
'The public·may be asked 19 take
Soulsby's department now operan active role in financing a new ates on a general fund appropriation
coliilly jail.
· of approKimately $500,000.
Nursing staff, correc:Jions ofti.' .
Sheriff James M. Soulsby met .
with the Meigs County Commis- cers, and other Jlllrsonnel would he
sioners durillg their regular meeting· required. in addition to the eKisting
on Monday 10 discuss his depart- needs of the depanmentto cover the
ment's budget and the need for a new county's law enforcement requirejail facilit&gt;;:
· .
ments.
·
Acco!Qtng to Soulsby, 2S prisonSoulsby stressed the na:d 10 make
ers, mosr of them felons. are in the immediate repairs to the facility as
county's custody at this time, 10 of maildated by the Ohio Mtomey Genthem in the Meigs County Jail and I~ eral's offtU - ill(:luding the conhoused in other facilities in the . slfUCtion of a filiwall- in Older to.·
reaion, .such as '9alljpolis and. ~1-.. _prevc;pt the immc&lt;!iate clO!iioa of the
son ville: . ' ' . . ""' ' '•
Mail.• which is over I 00 yean~ old. . ..
Transp'oning those prisoners.
"We need 10 face reality,~ get
housed elsewhere, to court dates, for · off our duffs," Soulsby said. "I've
. example, . i~ beginniqg to place a bee~ in Qfftce for over eight years and
lmttendous burden on Soulsby's slalf _ made·tf!ree different proposals to the
and budget. requiring ~puties 10- eOml\liSsioners. Now. it's 'crun~h
RIL4Y FOR WNCH- 8afl' members ol ...
Amer10111 C.ncer Society. llild to i'IIM funds
work oveitime and causing addition- time.'"
·
•
Peopllll BMidna • Trum Co. olftctt In .._...,,
for the ev1111. Here, JOin Wolfll of the bank
al wear and ~ on the depanment's
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton
provided • hw funch to the public on Monday
..., _ lunch to Kim Phllllpe.
aging lirui~rs.
said that he had been pursuing pubto pt011101e June 20'1 Aehty tor Llfll. for the
Solllsby said his bigge!ll concem lie funding for a new jail, ioclilding
is that deputies who are transporting a prog~ that would provide 90 perprisonerstojailsouL~ideofthecoon- cent funding from the federal gov!Y are IIIII available to provide law etnmenL .
enforcement services 10 local resil.
l11111rance
dent~. ·
.
The COI\Imissionei's agreed to levy
The cost of housing thesc·prison- S150,000 against various county
ers in other jails-an average of $60 depanments who participate in the By BRIAN REED ·
the AHA to receive a grant from the Mobile Homes. our dream of a cat
per day - is also ,placing ~ heavy county's self-funded health insur; Sentinel News Staff
Meacham Foundation Memorial, shelter for Meigs County will soon be
burden on Soulsby's budget.
ance plan. in order to "stabilize" the
A mobile home, to be set up in a which funds animal shelter cxpan· a reality," Waill said, "The fund~ for
· ~llling Attorney John Lentes · plan's claim~ fund .
wooded area near Five Points, will sions and·improvements. The $3,500 ·the cages - perhaps the largeSt
said that he and Soulsby ha~ deterThe funds will be paid by the serve a.~ Meig.~ County's first shelter grant will purchase the cages which expen.se for the shelter - alleviate
· mined that the·cou!lty has two choic· departments a.~, "user fees,'' and .will for stray and abandoned cats.
' will be used to provide cats with Safe for us a major financial worry. Now
es: to continue transporting·pri!!Oners be paid into :he fund which is norThe Meigs County Humane Soci- and comfortable quarlenl'and to con- we can c:Oncentrate on the logistics of
a.~ it is now, or to..,pursue grant fund~ mally fed by premium payment.~. and ety voted at its May meeting to purtrol the spread of feline diseases.
turning the mobile home into a cozy
and local p,ublic support for the con. used to pay claims .filed by employ- chase a 1983 mobile home. at a disThe division of the AHA provid· home for cats and kiuens."
struction or a new jail ·facility.
ees.
count, from .Johnson's Mobile Homes ing the funding ha.• devell!ped the
"The shelte~ will be locaied in a
Soulsby said that two options 10
The plan has faced serious defacits in Gallipolis. and to set the trailer up operational standard• for aniinat shel- lovely, wooded setting, just off a
consider for jail futiding are · an recently. to the pilint that the county on land donated by a member of the ters· acros.~ the country. a~:c~rding to blacktop rood. and it will be.very ea.~y
increase in the local sit!~ tax, a.~ well has been unable to pay c:lain:ts from society.
' •
Alden Waitt. president of the Meigs to lind." Waiu said. "Mr;'Johnson said
a.~ a bond issue.
.
care providers.
Through a grnnt from the Animal County Humane Society. The divi- · that he hates to see stray animals on
A .8-mill .bond issue, if approved
The commissioners discussed lhl: Protection Division of the American sion .11lso monitors the treatment of their own, saying that numerous
by the vOters. would genenre approx- method of cofc;ulating each depan- Humane Association, the Meigs animals on more than 300 movie and strays help create a situation where
imately $2 million for the construe- menrs share or the SISO,O!JO, with County organiZRiion will purchase · television programs each year.
'nature is out of balance - and it's
tion ofa new jailfacility, bul ~Is- Thornton saying th;ll he fell the , cal cages to be used in the shelter.
"Bcl:ause of the generosity of the just .cruel.'"
by noted that construction is only a · sh~s should be as proportionate a.•
The local society was one of 15 the Meacham program and ·of Nick
Waitt said· Monday that survey
part of the picture: another $7SO,OOO
· (Continued on Page 3)
organizations nationwide selected by Johnson and Jim Walton of'Johoson's - · (COntinued on Pl(l8 3)
I

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Good Afternoon

.
Today's Sentinel
.

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.

I 'Sedlo•- 10 Paxts
Vol. 49, No. 29

450 Ttller

54 ·in . Frotll Blade

47 ·111 Snow Blower

CeiCmfar

10

C!asslrocs!s
ComiC§

H
2
l

Editrd·'·

,.

14-:,

•
c'.l'.lc 1/1 I'll '•'"'

Wgd1cr

Lotteries

.

..

(740) 446·2412. ,.'
1*101111 ... Wtth reQUirld IO!to down
lrlif!l, .... ind INlli.ordWQOI eould .!CO ' liiiJIIIhlr ..11111111.
may be
In Clllfol!!l&amp; ,... ...
,._for-...........
lnt:Uing
lOr .......... ,.. He
may-..y llr
1M --rtordtll!lll.
'

PayfJIII~

'

-on

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.

OHIO
.
l'lck 3: 8·9-4; Pick 4: G-S-8-0
Bucbye 5: 5-8-28-30-34

J&amp;VA.

paymont, . , _,

Nqllll1d

~Uti ll!lp.

)'IIUf

.lllllilfl

I

The pos.\ibility or using a villageowiled building a.~ the site of a new
county Veier:m~ Service Office w.a5
briefly discussed during a shon meeting of Pomeroy Village Council
Monday nlghL
•
Mayor Frank Vaughan said he has
met with county Veterans Service
. Officer Max Calc concerning the pus. sibility of renting the village-owned
· building at the junction of ~one!
• and Sycamore.street~ across~ St.
· Paul's Lutheran Church.
llllildilii: is,ia.-d or niPairi
that would need 10 be completed
before the building could be used as .
a veterans service office, VliUghan .said. He added that three parking
spaces on Second Street could he
reserved for the office.
. The goal is not to. make money for
the village, he added.
· The e~ isting ortice, is located on
Mulberry Avenue near the Meigs,
.Courity Board of Elci:tions. and hll:l.
· been the subject .o f complaints over
·access for handicapped people. · ..
· Vaughan sai!l the complaint~ ~
groundless beclll!se the worke"' there· ·
-are willing tog(! out to people's cm.
their homes or meet with them nut
door at the board of eJections, which .
is handicapped ~~&lt;.-ces,~ilile,
No action W3.\ taken.on the matter and . Vaughan said liJe Veterans .
Service Office Boaril has been looking at other locati9ns.
In other busines.~ . couricil :
-• Authorized Clerklfrellliurer
.Kathy Hysell to purchase two ga.o;oline-powered leaf blowers;
.
' • Postponed the purcha.se or a light
bar for a recendy purcha.o;ed police
cruiser. batteries and portable radi05.
pending additional i~forlnation from•
Police Chief Jeff Miller; ·
·
• Discussed possible improvements on village-owned property in
the Kerr's Run am~ including the pus. (Continued on
·

- · n.e

man

S119f11

668 PINECREST DRIVE

• 8tAtjoOt • ._I DAd ..... Ill John o,n f!eWMng Plln.
...... ,..IIIIIUIAIIII!Ilti al!lllglwlllvJut notlot. Lllgor moillllly ~IIIII III
t; 1 ....... (lllr-.Niy • • 11181.- ol procllclllndlti .. ~IIIIV

.. I

. f.osal

'S

CAR

Sentinel News Staff

ment by Sen.~. Judd Gregg, R-N.H.. mattef!l~ For example, the Senate wifi
and Patrick t:ellhy, D- Vt. Another halt a~:tion Wednesday while lawproposed change, sponSored by Sen. makers attend the Arizona funeral of
Richard Durbin. D-111.. would raise former Sen. Barry Goldwater.
the cap on fines companies would
Lou said he didn't know whether
· J xp!ii!:llng to the A.!I!C.rican ,peopk . · pay the govemi!ICIIt if,youlh.smoking ..he might .set .the.kllw:coJiill a.side~
why·this badly needed legislation that doCs nOt decline:
But he said an -amendment by Sen .
has bipanisan support could not
"If (Durbin's) amendment-pa•scs. Phil Gramm. R-Texas', that wourd·
advance on their watch.·· said White that. coupled with the Gneg amend- abolish the so-called marriage tax
1Jiouse,SpokelJIIU!II Mike McCurry.
p1en! that passed, could be thC deaih penalty would "improve its
·As Congress returned Monday knell of the whole bill," Loll said. "If chances."
from its Memorial_ f?a.Y iec:ess· wi~ ·ihoiithatwanttokee,tnllliJiagthis
l;'rosPects for sweeping tol_lacto
Sen: John ~cCam s t~ ~til bill continue to dO that, then I think legislation are even more bleak m the
behtnd IIChedule, Senate MaJonty that .lhC bill will si.nk of its own House, where leaders arc crafiinJl a
~'J!enlLousaidthemeasure•s weiaht."
bill they .believe carries a lower
survovalts lh!'eatened.by two ameitdDurbin spokeswoman Melis.•a financial and political price tag.
ments that IOUJhen ils terms for the Merz denied dull his amendment
"It's an election y,ear. and there's . ·
· tobacco compan!a and blow tiJI8I1 its would genenile ·more money for the an ll ·seat majority in the · House
appiaiiO a centrist cpalltion of law- ·government thJn McCain' s' bill. tl!al's always tenuOils," said retiring
makers..
. Instead. she said. it WO!,tld put the btlr· R~. Bill Paxon, R-N. Y.. past chair"Thc bill is tceterilll - teetering den of lowering youth Mmoking rates
of the Nal.ional Republican Conin the bllutc:e ~ - IS 10. whether on individual cornpaiVes,; rather than gres~ional Committee who may help
or not it's just aoina to collllpiC of its the induSiry a5 a whole:
'organize GOP campaigns this year.
own weight," Lott. R-Min., told . MCOiin's bill would cost tobacco "We would de-enersize Ql!r.base with
reporters. '' I lilean, how ;l"uch is . companies atleut $516 billion over i bi!l that raises hundreds ·ofbillions
enough? I mean. 8feed has JUSt gORe 2S years. raise the price of ciprettes . of dollars in taxes .witltoul giving
hog-wil!f here."
.
aLJ-.:
$1.1 () a pack OVCf five years and some of that t1llllleY back."
Plopcwntsol'the bill by ,..........n. allow the Food .net Drua AdminisR·Ariz., say it,has been knoc~ off. tr.aion to ~~~plate nil:otine. ·
cen~r by .succ:ess~ul attempts to
· With each pusina day, the calenchJinae it, The Senate liSt~ vot- dar becomes a bluer roadblot:k for
ed to strip it of Ieaal protection for the bill as iiJ claim on the Senate'•
~companies under IR ante~- time is challenged by other pressln:t

.

Broom

BY JIM fREEMAN

JilL~~ stalled ·tobacco legisla1ion. his
spokesman says.
WASHINGTON _; ~sident
" The president feels ihat the
Clipton is expected to ~ up the ' Republican leadership ~f Con~ss
pres~ure Ol) the Senate thi' • k to would have a very dtflicult ttme

AMocllted Prela Wrillr

I

51 · tn

:building .
:usage

Tobacco bi#l teeters.under partisan pressure

-.

. . By l-AURIE KELLMAN .

40 LoadPr

'

Comm.ission~rs,

I

.

.

·
'
·
Committee,• a)so intimates thu Vining's death was the result of his leaving
"I am there to help those people not to hurt them. Roger went to live with
the c:oUnly ho~~~C.
his family, which is the normal thing to do," she added.
"While the cause of the fire is 'not known, the present matrOn was aware
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes. who attended Monday '~ meeting, sugBy BRIAN J. RE~D
•
of
this
man's
carelessness
with
cig&amp;irettes
before
he
w~
pressured
to
leave."
gested
that regular visiting hoors be posted at the horne and enforced by staff.
Sentinel' News Staff
.
.
·
saying that although the county home is a public facility. regular hours can.
Enfoiced visiting hours at the Meigs County Horne will be adopted by the letter says. ·
A
member
of
that
committee,
originally
appointed
by
the
county
comand should be observed for the (Jtnefit of the statT and residents.
the Meigs County Commissioners following a weekend incit;lenl i!l whic~
missioners
to
investigate
the
operation
of
the
county
home,
accompanied
the
.
Lentes also said that he .would pursue criminal charges against those
acting superintendent Mildred Jacobs wa.~ verbally attacked.
woman
into
the
county
home
on
Satwday,
Jacobs
said.
.
·
involved
Saturday, and would request a restraining order which would PI"·
Jacobs met with the commissioners during their regular Monday meetJacobs said that members of the committee are on the property on an vent IIi~ involved from heing at the home or near Jacobs and her staff.
ing to discuss the incident, in which a female visitor nlleged!y blamed h&lt;t ,
almost-daily
basis, and that their presence has become disruptiv~ both to the
Commissioners Janet Howard and Fred Hoffman. along with Jacobs, halte ·
for the death of.Roger Vioing, 53, who was killed in a Memarial Day week.
residents
and
stalt
at
the
home.
.
•
consistently
denied that !lny county home residents have been forced from
end fire in Middleport..
.
.
Jaeobs
also said that the woman who initiated Saturday's confrontation t1ie home since the commissioners voted earlier this year to close the focil. · Vining was a resilient at the ~ounty home until moving into the home on
has called the county home regularly, makitig disparaging remarks.
•. ity. ·
.
·
·
·
·
. Pearl Street in Middleport, where the fatal fire took place.
The woman's,brother resides at the home, Jacobs said. . ~
.
·. To date, approximately half of the residents of the home have been moved
. Vining's 2-year-old grandson also died in the fire, tlie cause of which has
"(Sh~) said, 'if it were!l't for you, those people wou!dn't be dead;'" Jac~
to other housing, but Howard, Hoffman and Jacobs maintain thai the resinot been determined.
·
said.. in de!;cribing
the
Saturday
incident.
"k
really
cut
through
me
to
thmk
dents
left the home voluntarily.
•
.
'
A

Humane Society _plans to set up
Meigs County's first cat·shelter

•

'•

••

Giants whip
Reds with 13run victory
"' Page 4

"

'

..

·Sports

Sick to death of.'Gedzilla,' Page 2
Piplone wins in .french :open·, Page 5
Relatives~ unannounced visits, Page 10

Today: Partly cloUdy
High: SO.; Low: 601

·
Page 10
Monday, June 1, 1998

~

II

0.U, 3: 8-S-lj; 0.0, 4; '3-I ·G-9

.

rJQTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE

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