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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 10, 1998

Thursday
June 11 , 1998

Sports

Reds, Indian~ post losses, Page 6
Struggl!ng to be family's C!IJChor, Page 7
A mustcal day at the museum, Page 8

Bulla go 3-1
with
NBA
flna1a vlcto,Y
Page 4
·:.

Weather
· Today: Storms likely

CELEBRATE THE SAVINGS.

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High: 80e; Low: 60•

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Tomorrow: Pll'lly cloudy
High: 801; Low: 70s

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DURING
OUR
...
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t&gt;
1.969

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:rg~

JUNE 8th THRU 13th
MON., TUE.,
WED.
9 A~M.
'TIL ·a P.M.
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THUR., · FRI., SAT. 9 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M.

cte::r 1)

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·Merchants slate
summer events
within Pomeroy

Fireworks store
·owner sues Hall; ·: ~
'; t

~~~u~c!.,~~£~~2

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

SPiCIAf;l PJliC

Sentinel News Staff
A concert by the Communiversity Band, an an-in-the-park display. and
programming for the Cumberland Princes.~ visil~ were among the summer
~ti~ities discu.o;sed at WedneWy's meeting of the Pomeroy Merchant~ Assoc1all0n.
.
Dianne Lawson reported that ihe Communiversity Band concert, spon·
sored by Peoples Bank, will be presented on Wednesday, July 15 at7 p.m. ·
Whether it will be held on Court Street this year or in the amphitheatre is
• yetto be decided.
In conjunction with that event, an art display will be featured in the mini. park with Susan Clark and Anna Chapman in charge. It will be open at5:30
. p.m. to allow time for visitors to view the art both before and al'ter the con·
cert.A report wu given on visits of the Cumberland Princess to Pomeroy by
Chapman, the association president.
.
The boat has been here only one time and the schedule of more visits is
. incomplete. Chapman said that she has.requested pa.&lt;~SCngeis. visit the vii·
lage during morning hours mther than early evening when they are tired from
the day's activities. ·
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She also reported on the Victorian costuming which is being made for the
greeters and tour guides. A grant wa.• received from the state to make the
costumes. Chapman displayed one of the period hats which will be worn with
the bustle dresses.
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·
· The association approved spending up to $50 for heart-shaped ornaments
to be given a~ favors to the boat passengers. The~ were designed by Sabra .
Ash.
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· It wa.• reported that new banner.; in red. white and blue. bearing the Ohio · ·
Biceillenniallogo and the dutes. 1803 to 2003. will go up in town this week.
They will be used aclll!is from the blue "Pomeroy" bannefll currently on the
period light posts around town. .
.
The gift of the keystone arch of the old Wildermuth Brewery on Cilndor
Street wa• noted and a disc!JSSion wa~ held on how and where it might be
used to enhahce the village.

OVER 25

NOW.AVAILABLE WITH
TOTAL DRYWALL
•
SPECIAL FINANCING
FANTASTIC SAVINGS .
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ENTER OUR DRAWINGS TO WIN

* $20,000 Sears Gift Certificate *
_B aby Grand Piano * Hot Springs~
Portable Spa * RCA Satellite System
* Plus Many Others ~
·

BANNERS GOING UP_ Pomeroy Ia getting 1 little more col·
orful thla Wltk. Ohio Bicentennial banneraln reel and white with
blue accent ... golrig up downtown. ~ hang on the roda
lltllehld to the period lamppoata oppollte tile blue and white
Pomwoy bllnlllln. Here, Toney Dlngesa hlnga one up on Court
Sb11t, aaalated by JOih Bertela.
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burned in 1996, ~illing nine people, claims in a lawsuit he wa~ supplied with
fireworks more powerful than indicated.
'·
A SIS million suit tiled by Dave Pruin in Lawre~ County Common Pleas
Coun la~t week names the BJ. Alan Co. !JfYoungst\)wn a~ a defendant, along
with Todd Hall , the bmin·injured man accused of starting' the fire.
.
· Pruin opemled the Ohio River Fireworks store in Scottown that explo&lt;l•
ed on July 3, 1996. In addition to the nine killed, II people were injured/ ·
Pruin's suit comes on the heels of ientative senlements reached in two
earlier civil suits thadire survivors and victims' relatives.filed against Ptuill
and his suppliers. Three fireworks.suppliers wlll pay S1.3 million in a par:
tial senlement.
:
Pruitt's suit ~laims the Youngstown company sold Pruilt exhibitors' fire;
works while misrepresenting them a~ less-powerful consumer fireworks. •
Pruitt says the supplier failed to warn him that the fireworks were misla:
beled. The law~uit also claims the fireworks were inadequately packaged,
making it ea.~ier for Hall to start the fire with il lighted cigarelte.
· :
Hall, 26, of Proctorville, was charged with starting the blaze. But the
charges were dropped when he wa.• found incompetent to stand trial. Hall
was committed io September to a state mental hospital.
.
:
William Weimer. aiiQmCY for B.J. Ahin Co...told The. Herald Dispatch elf
Huntmgton, W.Va.. on Wednesday be couldn't comment on Pruiu~s claim•
because he hadn't received a copy of the lawsuit.
· :
Daniel Ruggiero, a Ponsmouth; Ohio, auome)' representing Hall in.tbt
civil suits, also said he hadn't seen the lawsuit and couldn't comment. •
The suit alleges that Pruitt suffered severe emotional distress over·tht ·
deaths, incurred expenses for medical treatment and lost income because cl
the tire.
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Pruitt'~ lawyer. Roger Smith.of Huntington, was out of town this week
and couldn't be reached for comment.
·
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Aseparate lawsuit filed by survivors and viL1ims' relatives against the siatt
fire marshal's office is pending in the Ohio Court of Claims. llwt lawsuit
· alleges the fin: marshal's offace failed to shut down the fireworks store it
WWi unsafe.
:
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knew

v~'::,:o~h~~:e~:~:,:!~=:~c~~~':c:d~D~~: ·Dov~· hu~t~_n"g ~pponen~s. ~ur~. in__P.~.tit~Q. n~.·.J

-iOJI.:-Inpl~):ed at,Peoples Bank,,'t'JII handle 1he project for the association

and will annou!lce the exist and size of bricb available.
• ' ..
. ·~ COLUMBO'S TAPf!::.~tate elecIt was reported that·John Musser who is heading up the;arch relocation tions offiCials bave. begun looking
will be ~oldina meetings for public input. · .
over petitions coiuaining nearly
The Relay for Life of the American ·Concer Society was announced for
140.000 signatures turned in by a
June 20 and Lawsoniwted thatlumiQllljes are being sold for a $5 donation:· group try!ng to outlaw mourning
They can be pun:~a.• a memoriafor in rribute to a survivor and will be dove hunung.
used at the event to be held on the Rock Springs Fairground•. .
Save the Doves met a Tuesday
Donna Tillis, owner/manager of OffiCe Service and Supply, met with the deadline to tu~ in the ~titions, but
IIICrchants to express apprec:iation fcir support and announce that she will
orgamzers beheve they w1ll fall short
be combining her business 1ocations into the building in Middlepon formerly
of the 100.393 valid signatures need·
occupied by Johnson's Variety Store.
ed to put the hunting ban before vot·
It wa.' aeported that Ashley's Crafts and Gifts is opening in the Hartley
er in November.
bur-ild_i...;ng:..o_n_M_ai_n_S_tree_t_.- - - - - - - - - · :""""----..-....;S_:po:....,lte_s_w_o_m_an-R-itchie Laymon

1

said the gril!lp expects a.••· mliny as
half the signatures gathered by paid
petition circulators to be thrown oUt.
Dove defenders say the birds
should be protect~ because.they~
gentle, carry no d1seases and don t
damage crops. Hunters say the doves
are plentiful in '?hio and there i~ no
danger they will be hunted mto
extinction. They also say other states
treat the dov.es as game birds.
. Dove hunting w,as banned in Ohio
m 1917. allowed m 1975 and 1976

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and outlawed fgain until 1995.
·c~ t~ir 1'-~k. giving doveOres! Holubec, a spokesman for backers three to four II10!e weeks to
Secretary of State Bob Taft, said meet their goal. .
Wednesday that the group can con·
A pro-hunting group. meanwhile,
tinue to collect. signature~ up to 1_0 ha.~ challenged the validity of the
day~ pa.~tthe da~ an offiCI.al count IS petitions on techllical ground.•. Eleccert11ied by elecuons offic1als. Coon- lions offiCials said they will review
ty oo:aros of el~tions '":ill begin the protest only if the dove group has
checkmg the pe1111ons agamst voter enough signatures to put the is.~ue on
registmtion rolls within a few days, the ballot.
.
he added. ·
If the measure does go·before vtx·
The ~ounty boards will have ·ers, hunting groups have pledgecQo
between 10· duys and two weeks to .. II.
;-pend more than $2 million to oppose
. ,

GOP shoehorns tax cutbacks:·:.
into anti-tobacco ·legislation
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YO·U . CANNOT AFFORD TO BUY
UNTIL YOU STOP HEREI
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AM'
WE RECOMMEND THE ENERGY ·
EFFICIENT ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP
WITH ALL OUR MODELS.
IT HEATS .. . IT COOLS ... IT SAVES I

amoldntl- Willi Grimm In tiila May 1t file photo_.. ...low Rapubllcln s.ns, uucll Faircloth
of Nortll CarollfUI, 11ft, and ..., Senlona of
Alabama. (AP)
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AEP: rA.merlca's Energy Partner

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SE~RC ·makes high~ay · agenda

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Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 P111es
Vol. 49, No. 36
Calendar

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QenifiHII

7
1!-10
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ftdlfm:l·'·
Lot;•'

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lnter...,ction of US 33 &amp; Sf. lit. 664S .- Logan, OH

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Lottenes
OHIO

Sllper Laao: 1().13-21 -27-36-42

Klcbr: 4-4-~-1-8-8
Pldl3.: 9-9-7; l'ldl4: 6-1 ·!1·1

WJ'A.

Dillr 3: 3-1-6; .,.., 4: !1-U-11'-6
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That wa• a provision that chafed con·
By LAURIE KELLMAN
servatives who said it would run
Asaoc:latld Preis Writer
WASHINGTON - The Seftale afoul of the GOP's promise to cut
approved tax breaks for millions of . taxes.
· married couples and seif-employed ·
A group of senators led by Sen.
workers in an elet.1ion-year gambit by Phil Gramm of Texa~ offered an
Republicans designed to improve amendment they figured no law·
the prospects of major tobacco legis· maker could refuse in an election
lation.
year.. II would offer couples earning
·ne tax cuts ·were added a.• an les.• than $50.000 a year a break from
amendment to a tobacco bill that Sen- the "marriage Ia~ .. penalty. a provi·
ate Majority ·Leader Trent Loti had sion in the tax code tbat forces COU·
. declared near death earlier this week. pies to pay more than they would a.~
11le voice vote approval Wednesday singles.
carne after Democrats nanuwly failed
The $46 bi Ilion tax cut over HI
to kill the amendment.
year.&lt; also would allow self-employed
"Stayin · alive. stayin' alive," Sen. worker.&lt; to deduct their .health i n.~ur­
John McCain, sponsor of the tobac· ance premiums from their taxable
co bill. declared with a grin and llolh income. beginning in January.
fisl~ in the air as he left the Senate
It would be paid for with money
chamber following the vote.
McCain's bill generdles.
"If we're raising taxes for tens of
The Arizona Republican's bill
would charge tobacco companies at billiotL• of dollars for spending, then
why not give pan of it back'/"
lea.~t $516 billion over 25 years, in
pan by raising taxes by $1 . 10 a pack. Gramm said.

known through new brochure ·
By JIM FREEMAN •
orpnizinl corridor committees and
Sentlnll Newa Staff . ·
local leaden and then by keepina iL~
A new brochure touting the South· . highway agenda visible to federal.
eastern Ohio Re11ionul Council's state and local offlcjals.
hig~~ay llgendil is JM:i.ng sent to slllle
The SEORC projects are Route 35
pohllcalleadef!l. bu ~lneMse.~ and oth·. at Richmondale in Ros.~ County. the ·
ers . to promote reaionlll highway Chesapeake Bypass in Lawrence
prCIJCCIS.
.
County, the Ravenswood Connector
The brochure follows a recent in Meigs County, Route 32 from
meeting of SEORC's Boord or Direc- Athens 10 Coolville in Athens Coun·
ton, which pas!ed a resolution to ty, Route 33 from Athens to Darwin
suJIIIorlall effortJ to complete seven in Atbens and Meip counties, lhe
main corridor projects in soutbertl . Nelsonville Bypas.~ in Athens CoonOhio.
ty. the Lancaster BypQliS in Fairfield
Accordina to Sa111 Crawford, County and the Pommoulh Bypass in
executive director of SEORC, the Scioto County.
SEORC •is al:10 supporting the
goal of tho council for many years
has ~ to have the major corridors completion or Route 3S from Galof I'IIUiel M2, 32, 33 llld 3S start lipolisto Cl)arleslon, W.Va.
IUid end at 1ft intenl.lle highway.
The new brochure incl~s 11
111e .council has done this by regional highway map displaying

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the highway projects and adjoining
links to other highways in other
states.
The front of the brochure reads:
"The key to a heahhier regional
economy and better future for the
people of Soutbea~tern Ohio is a
highway system on a par :with that of
the rest of ihe state. This means accelerated planning and funding for construction to fill in priority pps along
our four central hi1hway corridors by
the year 2003. It is this end that this
regional highway agenda . ha.• been
assembled by area interests seeking a
unified approec:h to beiiCrTIIent for
southeastern Ohio.·
· "The S.w e Depanment of Transponation has.developed a new highway project selection proc:ess that
(Continued on PIQ13)

McCuin and other st~pponers of
the amendment hoped thai it would
win votes for the ovemll bill fmm
conservative Republican.s uncom·
fortable with some of iL~ provision.•.
But Gramm llaid he would not
vote for McCain's bill unless 01her
changes also'are made, Seveml OOP
leaders still objected to the power-the
mea.•ure would give the Food and
Drug Administration, for example.
"lt~s a little more palatable," said
Assistant Majority Leader Don Nick·
les of Oklahoma, tiM; bill's highest·
ranking opponent. "But it's still a bad .
bill:'
Democrats and a coalition of
health care groups !laid the amend·
ment would spend too much of the
bill's money on IIIII ~lief at 1he
expense of smoking ·cessation programs.
Fonnerly staunch supporters of
the McCain bill complained that the
tax cut~ had destroyed
iL~ focus
.

Public hearings seek input
on management of refuges
From AP, Se.tf R1po.'U
The U.S. ~ish and Wild!ife Serv~ is .a.~king publ.ic input in puttins
together a gu1de for managmg w1ldhfe refuges on Oluo River island.~.
11le Ohio River Islands National Wildlife Refuse includes 19 island'
-with 2.S 10 acres of land ma.o;.~ - located along362 miles of the 981·
mile river. The islands were acquired through voluntary sales f10111 pre·
vious owners: the mo.'t ret.'Cnl sale wa.• in 1990. ·
The asency has scheduled public hearings throughout the Ohio River
refuge urea to get response on a comprehensive conservlllion piUI for the
. I nd
.
1sas.
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. The first be~ng will be Wednesday, June 1'7 at the Holiday Inn in
Kanauga. featunns an open house from 1-4:30 p.m.. IUid a public meet·
ing from 6:30-9 p.m. Another hearina. followin1 the 111me Khedule. is
set for Wednesday. July 22 ll the Community Buildina in Ravenswood,
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From whll it heln tt those KSSions, Fi!!ll and Wildlife will pepa.e a
praclialpide - called the COiolpltbensive Conservllion Plan - for
llllllllli• the refuae and piotKtina important wildlife habi111 - the ·
next 10 to 15 years: _
"We hope 1o purchase 16 Qthen u funds become avlillble.toe~jlllld '
the reru,e." said Janet Butler, outdoor rec:rellion planner ror the refu1e, .
based in Parkersboq. W.Va.
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�Th~rsday,

Commentarr
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The Daily Sentinel

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'Est@frs/id in 1948
111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

·CHARLENE HOEFUCH
• ·Generalllsnsger

DIANE HILL
Controller

. . nw Seat'-~ •••'c=•,.. ,.,.,. to tM&gt; ~ltor lnMt rutJert on • brtMd ,.,,. of topkl.
·. - - (3tJtJ- "'t.u),.... tilt -ohM!.. or 111/llfl pul&gt;tlohod. Typod t.t·
· - ~wn~- pooltnod ontl111/IM)' I l l - &amp;ch .Wd lndudt tllignt,., oddr,.t,

·, -tW I111,plloM """'""· Specify • dllto WtllttO 't • ,.,,.... to • provloflt onh:to
t- to: '--""" to tilt Edlto&lt;, flit Stnt/nlli, Itt Court St, Pomtroy, Ohio
. -

o&lt;, FAX IIJ 814-Jfl2.2167.

Election-year argument
begins over tax cuts
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
· WASHINGTON - Th is bcin~ an election year, federal taxes arc an
issue, and the argument is only bc~i nning over Rcrubli"an cuts ,the White
House calls too high - and conscrvatoves consodcr a rittancc.
One critic from the right said even the most ambitious reduction. the $101
billion, five-year plan GOP leaders have just pushed through the House, is
less money by far than Democratk Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill Jr.,
proposed in 1981 as a rival to the even bigger tax cut President Reaga~ won
that year.
The Republicans haven' t agreed on what they want to do in 1998; the
S'enale approved a budget plan with cuts of $30 billion over five years,
although that was done before the release of the·latest optimistic forecasts of
a burgeoning budget surplus this year.
.. ·So they'll probably bargain to the high side of splining the difference.
•'11le Senate is still a less conservative institution and frankly, a less reform·
oriented instii ution," House Speaker Newt Gingrich said.
Once Congress agrees on a budget resolution, setting the boundaries on
f~eral revenues and spending, it will have to deal with President Clinton on
the tax and aprropriations bills that will add up to t_he eventual budget.
' It is at that point that Clinton can arm his attempts at persuasion with
vetoes or the threat of them. They'll have to settle on numbers by Sept. 30,
five weeks before the mid-term congressional elections, or, as is more common, on spending extensions so the government won't run out of money
when the new budget year begins Oct. I.
:; :In his budget, (:linton proposed $24 billion in tax breaks for child care,
~ation and other benefits, ~ith _$103 billion worth of tax increases, two·
jlli_rds of that proceeds of sharply mcreascd ctgarette taxes under a tobacco
~fl lhat 'may not pass. It is snarled in Senate disputes and may be ur.done by
~ end of the week.
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i'" jCiinton keynoted the campatgn year by declanng that projected liudget
~1!9'luscs should not be used to cut taxes, or for anything else, until there is
~.-hecision - 1999 is th~ optimistic timetable - to "save Social Se~urity
fnlit" by guaranteeing its long-term financing.
.
i ·Add to those ingredients for political debate the Republican complaint
~llat on Clinton's watch, the federal government's share of the economic pic
)raS risen to historic, and unacc~ptably high, levels. . . .
. _
• , -GOP Rep. Boll Archer of Texas saod that under admmtstrntton proJecuons,
~·tl.xes as a share of the economy will peak at an historic peacetime high of
~-5 percent in 1999 and remain above 20 percent for as far as the eye can

By Ben Wllllnberg
Just 200 years ago. in June of 1798,
a book was published anonymously in
England. The ideas promulgated in
" An Essay on the Principle of Popula·
tipn" would come tb pervade scientilic
and humanist thought, ultimately deal·
ing with issues as apparently diverse as
food, disease, !he environment, ceonomics and demography, to begin a
very long list. The anonymous author
was soon unmasked: the Rev. Thomas
Robert Malthus, who would one day be
known lo many as the father of modem
demography. Since then, much of the
intellectual world has been divided
among "Malthusians" and "antiMalthusians," respectively worshipping and scorning his ideas.
Malthus' views evolved. By the
time he died in I 834, he might woll
have been considered (by today's standards) an anti-Malthusian, and perhars ·
a neoconservative one at that. After all.
he believed that welfare bred depen·
dcncy.
Malthus wrote across a range of topocs but is principally remembered for
his gloomy proposition that populatiun
will outgrow food supply, yielding dis·
aster. Why? Because (he said) food
supply grows arithmetically (I ,2.3,4.5
... ) while population grows gcomctri·
cally (I ,2.4,8, 16 ... ). This formula

ably have known betler. It is not a new
idea that the only serious resoun:e is the
intellect of man, that it is a renewable
resource, even expandable, and so
potent that it can provide substitules for
nonrenewable resources. (If fossil fuel
runs out, we can use nuclear 'Or solar
energy.)After all, it wa• beforeMalthus
that human intellect transformed useless black rocks into valuable coal. II
was human intellect that provided
waterviaaqucductsto'ancientRomans.
It was human intellect that provided
clothing for Malthus from a subtropical
plant called cotton.
He was right. for a while, about
population growth, and is now spectacularly wrong. Glohal population when
Malthus wrote was about I billion pooric. Now it's about 6 billion. .
He wa.' right that population num·
bers move in a geometric way. He wa'
dead wrong when he -posited that in
favQmblc conditions such ·geometric
acuvity would automatically pmcc'Cd
upward. Demographers have otien
talkl'd ainu the "doubling" time of n
population. Now they are beginning to
talk about the "halving" time of a population. ·
Mahhus looked at lcrtility rates in
the then very young United State,, w_ith
plenty of open land · and natural
msoun:es in great ahundam:c. He noted

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tluf population Wider such conditions
doubled every 25 years. This served as _
a prop for his theoretical model in the
first version of hi.s famous essay.
The average American woman at
that time was bearing eight children .
But today, also in good times, the Total
Fcnility Rate (1FR) in America has
been averaging 1.9 children per YIOman
over the ~~ quarter of a century. (It
takes a 2.1 rate, absent immigration, to
keep population stable at "replacement" level.) The 'I1'R in the whole of
the' developed world is now 1.59 ciJil·
drcn per woman, according to U.N.
data. The European rate is 1.45. Rates
among the Less Developed Countries
are higher, above replacement, but tum•
bling rapidly; 21 soch countries are
already helow .t.':placement.
Due to the 'demographic momentum" still in ihe system (women of
childbearing age today were born 25
yeurs ago when lcrtility rates were
high). global population will grow
from 6 billion to about 8·9 billion
before leveling oiT, and then, quite likely, hegin shrinking.
We can excuse Malthus for not
anticipating such ropulation trends. He
had no way of understanding that. in
g&lt;xxl times or bad, modem 21~tc-cntu·
ry human beings-- tyrically urban and
educated. with contraception and·ab&lt;w·
tion hoth legal and avaiiable .. would
freely choose to have ~hildmn at well
hek&gt;w the rate of replacement. There
was no data to lead him in think scri·
ously ahout " ge&lt;)mctri~ decline in population.
To hi.' credit. he studied hanl; he had
an open mind to new adca.'i and new statistics; and his thinking changed as his
knowledgo,expandcd. ,
Ala.;., such is not the case with
activist environmental doomsaycrs
today. They should know· better, and
lcll)lct about what Malthus wrote 200
ycurs ago.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the Ameritan Entei')IIW II!StilW,
is the author of "Values 1\'Jatter
Most" and Is the host of the weekly
public television program "Think
Tank."

Democrats must go centrist locaUy
By Morton Kondracke
If the Democratio party is to avoid
being frozen out of power for the nc~t
decade ot more. it has to tum centrist
at the state and local levels a~ well a•
in Washington.

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rats
. don't
reverse
the
trend toward
GOP domi·
nance in the
states by 2000,
they'll
be
rcdostrictcd out
of any chance
to control Congrcss and the
legislatures for
at
leaso
a

that U.S. society is becoming ethnical· futum, Clinton ,;aid, Democrats have
ly diverse, older, heavily suhurhan· to preserve Social Security and
i7.cd, less dominated by families with Mcdil'arc ftw l&gt;aby hcx&gt;nlCrs, regulate
young children, more dominated hy HMOs, rcli&gt;rm educoti&lt;m and prntcct
generations accustomed to distrusting children fmm tolmcco.
government and increasingly inllu·
At the state level, Roconcr, Penn
ericcd by college graduates making and the DLC recmnmcndcd such cenmore than $50,000 a year.
trist idea.~ as targeted tax cuts; Jllll1nci· ·
The fastest-growing group of ships with churches to prnvide enrich·
swing voters. acconling to Kaman:k, · ing day care fnr young children;
arc "new economy" workers "wired " ensuring that welfare n.-cipients get
Kondracke
to computers. enmeshed in the global johs; educati&lt;m standmds and testing;
economy and accusto111ed to W&lt;M-king exranded cuomnunity pnlicing: and
decade.
in teams rather than in hicramhics. settin~ ur prolcssional ccnitlcatinn
And right now, acconlmg to Clin- ll&gt;ey are socially liheml, c-conomical· pruccs.o;cs so thut post-sccnndary stu·
ton pollster Mark Penn. in a gcncri.: l)i conservative and in fav11r of i:nvi- · dents can get their tr:.ining anywl&gt;en:,
ballot voters prefer Rcpuhlicans, 37to ronmcntal regulation.
including via the Internet.
34 percent, a.' the party to run state and
President Clinton dearly ha.' hecn
The New Democrat agenda, nf
local government.
trying to calihratc his arpealto both a course. is anathema to tr.tditinnal lih·
Moreover. Penn said. of the three dwindling New Deal consoituency -· cmls. who arc wedded to the New
top state and local issues of conc-ern to with inerca."&lt;Cs in the minimum wage Deal-Great Society formula of using
voters, Republicans have a traditional and defense of aflimlativc a.:tion .._ big gnvcromcnt, high tuxes and trade
advantage on two, taxes and crime, ~nd to the rising "new economy" harriers to delcnd the px~r.
while Democrats have an advantage ck-ctormc. with welfare rcfonn. a hal·
New DcmncrJts protest that they,
only on education.
anc-ed ICdcral budget; NAFTA and UIO, have the interests of tl)c px&gt;r _in
What to do'! New Democrats like family leave.
,
mind. hut want to help by insisting
From and Colorado Gov. Roy Romer,
The president's centrism. Clinton that Jl&lt;Klf people help themselves
the DLC's co--chainnan and the gencr· himself and others at the gathering while ~ovemmcnt provides education
al chairman of the Democratic Nation· claimed, has suhstantially fn:ed the and training orplrlunitics.
al Comminee; think Republicans arc. Dcmt&gt;erJtic party of the old lahels
As lnng a,, the DeiiK&gt;eratic party
· helping by surging off to the right.
"soft on crime." "tax and spend," doesn't lose its soul in the prnccss, it ~
But the main mcssage,of thj: DLC "pn&gt;teetionist," "party of hig govern· has to li)OVC whcil: the vc~ers arc. Oth:
conference wa.' that Democrats have mcnt" and "wcllilre stutist."
crwisc, it can't provide a bolam:.: to
to understand new demographic and
Even the liheral-rnnninatcd House Rcpuhlicans, whOse bCdrock idea is
political trends and tailor their pro- .. Democratic Caucus has 'begun mnv· that everyone is on hi.~ own exccpl in
· grams accordingly.
ing to the center, with the party this the hcdmom.
·
Scholars and former Clinton year lending- support even to some
(Morton Kondnde h execu·
ndministration onicials Bill ·Golston prn-life sc&gt;eial conservatiVes in hopes tive editor or Roll C.U, the DN!IJIII·
and Elaine Kamarck told the gathering of regain in~ a majority.
per o( Capitol Hil.)
that the megatrcnds of the future arc
But that wa.' the pust. To win in the

Poor judgment by the news media
By Jouph Spear
It's bad enough when the practition·
crs of my trade cheapen public life
through the reporting of unconfi'mcd
grutage a• if it were l'ac~ bu't when they

Th~ii~% response to the cat poisonings that have occurred in Middlcpon
noted in the June 4 edition.
.
•- 1bc predicament with cats in Middleport stretches hack severn1 years. I
vc heard that the law forbids.kccping cn1s on a leash or chain. If this is the
ase. I would like to know what brilliant mind came up with the idea.
begin !0 pay homage to the generators
of
garbage, it is time to hoist the colors
Wily shoold ,·ats be exem_r,t from leash or chain laws when they arc far and fire a lew volleys,
tnorc of a nutsancc than dogs .
Take the way tbe med- h
Perhaps someone has decided that cats have a roaming nature and there· , ned · Pa 1 J
)a
ave
· n
·
"
1 · h"
·
hh
· ddc~
oaw over ua ones. ·
1
ore enJoy a natura ng t to rop open tra.' ags an
eca e '" ower - . Every fair-minded·pcr.on in Amcri. ca pcn:cives ulterior motive in -this
They arc a constant mena.:c to the hirds if one chooses to scatter a linlc woman's antics. She is the one who
. 1 have (!lund bloody feathers and bird beaks in my yard, as well as a stepped forward and identiftcd herself
ipn CllfCBSS with com strewn about the entrails.
as the "Paula" mentioned in a story
For many of u.~. the problem is compounded .hy well-meaning but mis· about Gov. Bill Clinton's alleged for·
uidcd neighbors who continually bring the cats into close proximity to mer lovers. It wa.•n't until he became
's dwellin1.
president that she ,rcali7.cd how badly
They mistakenly ~c the pilfering pusses as forlorn and in desperate need she ·was offended. liled suit and
f sustenance. Whenever we sec Puss-in-Boots come calling, it makes our informed the world of allel&amp;t abnor·
rils narc.
malitics in Clinton's anatomy. A' the
11 could be that these events arc an act of desperation rather than cruelly case wound its way through the couns,
the pan of someone wbo ha.~ decided that the town cannot or will not her memory of her traumatism became
bmpt to do somethia&amp; about the problem.
.
increasingly vivid, to tlic point that she
I' People need to yiew these events dispassionately and recogni1.c that now
recalls the terror she purportedly
C...:.y residents in Meigs County have a valid gripe.
felt when she reali7.ed Ointon 's body·
ell population needs thinned out.~ prob1cm is there's no pleasant guards canied weapons.
)lay to do it and most ell ownen aren't gotng to pony up a spaymg fee for
A federal judge finally ruled that her
:Jiteir feckless feline even if it is relatively inexpensive.
case had no merit and tossed it out. Her
• PasOnsrly._l hope Ms. Lemley's investigative trail turns ice cold.
Jeffrey Flelda procracted moment of fame spent,
Middleport Iooo should have faded into the Great
Void when: reside the likes of Fanne

t

yielded
a
VICIOus circle:
When popula·
tion outran food
supply. cata·
Strophe beck·
oned, often in
the form of
famine
and
pestilence. thus
reducing popu·
lation.
Wattenberg
Today,
the Malthusian
thesis (read: runaway environmental·
ism) is usually stated in a wider way;
Population is growing too fast, to a
level too high to be "sustainable," and
people will "run out of resources." The
resources are defined broadly. includ·
ing clean air, a non warming atmos· .
pherc, wetlands, endangered species,
suburban land and so on.
Practically speaking, Malthus has
proved to be wrong about resources.
TI~ey can and do often grow far he yond
the slowpoke arithmetic model he
oiTercd. Comruter--chip speed ha.' hccn
douhling every 18 months: that's a gcometric progression. The advent or trac·
tors, new seeds, mass irrigation and ferllli7.1tion sent food production rocket·
ing upward. ·
On this matter Malthus should proh-

~~~O~N~~~~~~~~~~F=~~~

r:The

cat population needs controlled

Low pressure to trigger
stormy night in region

Thuric:tey, June 11, 1 •

Forget what Malthus wrote about 2.00 years ago:

rTIIc
.•.

•

Foxc and Eli7.aon the event mcnlinncd Pliula Junes 22 sis." And what docs Fox News do~/
heth Ray, but
times and -pn&gt;elaioncd her the "most- They ntler · Drudge his nwn weekly
the
media
wanted star" ut the show. A Post reader show. And what docs the prcstigiou.~
would
have
suhscqucntly d•-clarcd that the story National Press Cluh do? They invite
none of that.
stunk and •that ·'the n11.-dia undcn:Sii· him to !lC a tcatun:d luncheon speaker.
OoAprii2S,
•mate hadly the disgu.'ilthattheir watchOh, they made a big fu.'-' ahout
nearly a month
ers and readers feel" for tbeir coverage holding his feet to the li!ll, nnd he did
after her case
of such events .. thereby proving once ~'Cl S&lt;HnC hustile questions. With nine
wa.' dismissed.
again that the average American is inti· · television camcr.L• hx&gt;king 1m ._, he
she showed up
nitely IIK&gt;re intelligent than tbe average strutted and swaggered in a khaki suit
with her husncwspersoo.
and trademark fedura, be blu.'ilercd his
band. Stephen,
Take the way the media hu.&lt;S the way thmugh the barbs, gaining crediglutei of Matt Drudge.
.
bility with millions of viewers with
and her a.:crhi&lt;" 1'-1...--AI!~=
prolocutor,
The suddenly nc~urinus cyheJ11ns· e~~~:h moment be survived. He hragged
Susnn Carpenter
sip, a gift-shop retail clerk 11&lt;~ sn lung -that be "hrnke" the Monica Lewinsky .
McMillan, at the cekbrity circus ago, spccinli1.cs in rum&lt;w und scuttle· swry, when he, in fact, lilled it litHO
known as the annual White House Cor- . hull and in the "ciuting" nf stories that Newsweek. "I nm convinced that the
respondents Dinner, where . she wa.' •~her rcp111ers ' arc working em. He American puhlic hungers t&lt;.- uncditCd
mnbbed by onlookers. The crowd hoa.•ts thatllC ha.' 11&lt;&gt; edil&lt;ors, that he is information," he snid. And: "The Interroared a.~ she entered the cnvemous . free of the strict~rcs that allegedly net is !,~ling to save the news hilsincss."
dining area, bodice bulging fmm a guide the behavior nf prntcssinnal
Undiluted CJ'IIfll'rttm the IIKMJth of'a
headed teal-blue drc~'li. and She spent news gatherers. He works on the Inter· pretender and a ICX&gt;I, and the National
the evening posing for pho_tographs net, man. The lntenlcl is anarchy. Pc(,. Pres.' Cluh aided and abetted in the diswith the high and mighty and scores pic crave unfiltered "news" ali~J the semination of it. lndcixl, some mcm·
who would like to be.
lntemct supplies it wholesale.
hers cveit appluuded it.
.
Among those whose smiling pus.'
HC is, to .put it starkly, the precise , Drudge is wrnng alntt the Internet:
was cap1ured on film standing next to antithesis of someone the press should saving the news husincs.•.
.
Paula was none other than Sam Don· be promoting. So what do tbe produc·
Nothing can save the ncws hu.'ines., ..
aldson, whose occasional lack of good en of the celebrated ' Sunday news
Joseph Spear Is • syndk:ated ·
sense saddens the soul of the serious show "Meet the Pres.~" dc\?They invite writer for Newspaper Eat~~ :
journalist.
him on and introduce him as somoone Allocltllbi. '
;
. The Washington Post's main story who offers "expert onsight and annly-

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

That was the message cOnvincmgly delivered at a two-day "convcrsa·
lion" ~onductcd by the Democratic
Leadership Council last week with
~ c ..
- tax share of the gross domestic product was higher only in the last I 00 soate legislators and local ollicials.
Even though Pres1dent Clinton has
~tJo years of World War II, 1944 and 1945. When Clinton tohk ollice in
won
two natumal clcclions and contin:tAj'B, taxes accounted for 17:8 percent \lf the economy.
_
_
• , · Archer. chairman of the House Ways and Means Commot~ec. saod the ues to ride high in the polls. the elec=o.ily way to tum the trend is with tax cuts he~rinnmg now. He didn't set a toral picture helow the top has adccid·
cdly Rcpuhlican hue thut could
•uumher.
_
__
.
.
.
:.- : A conservatiVe cnllc ventured some on argumg that the Rcpuhhcan cuts become jl&lt;.'nnanent after the 2000
clectmn and 2001 redistricting.
•~visioned now arc "rcmarkahly anemic and will perpetuate a record-level
As recited hy DLC president AI
or resn'lrces from American families to the lcdcml g~tvernment...
'
From.
the grim litcts um thut Democ·~ ' Ronald D. U11 of the Herita~c Foundation said that to get hack to the rcvrats
controlled
2K governorships in
,...;quc share of the last Democratic Congte~s- IK.H percent in 1993 - the
1990
hut
now
have
cmly 17. They for~~cpuhlican Con~ress would have to enact a 5 percent tax rcducuon. $96 hoimerly held 71 Slate legislative cham: lion. in the next budget.
·
~ He noted that is live times the H&lt;1use plan and 15 times the Senate pro-, hers ~nd IKJW an: down Jo 49. ·
After the 1990 clcctoon. there were
:l pnsal. Nothing like that is going to happen.
.
_
.
38
.
states in which Democrats domi:• Utt said the House tax cut amounts In I percent ol pmjected revenues
nated redistricting hy holding either
~ over the neu live years.
·
. ~ "To 'rut these proposals into perspective," he said. "the tax relief they both legislative chamhers or one
~contain would amount to only a tiny fraction of ... Tip O'Neill's proroscd chamber and the governorship. Now,
ifivc-year tax cut ol' $627 hi Ilion. which was utTered in 19H I as an alternative Democrats dominate 23 states and
~epubhcans control 26.
~10 ... Reagan ·, $747 billion cut."
.
Moreover. in 27 states with a total
~
Reagan won, of course. And the Democratic strategy wa.' 'an attempt to
of
30
I Congressional scats, a shift of
hid him down, not a proposal founded OJ! dedication to ma.,sivc tax cuts.
But politicians can argue anything by the numbers. And will, a' they cam· four scats or less would change party
control of a stale legislative chamber.
poign for the elections on Nov. 3.
Republicans could scizc.total legisla~
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice pmldent and columnist tive control in California, which has
for Tile Assodated Press, has reported on Washington and nadonal pol· 54 Hou!iC scats; Illinois, with 20; and
Michigan, 16.
for more than 30 years.
The hottom line. is that if Dcmoc·

Letters to the editor

June 11,1998

-Local News in Brief:!
SEPTA inmate flees Reedsville farm

An inmate from the Southeastern Probation Treatment Alternatives CepBy The Associated Preas
.
t~r
in Nelsonville apparently walked off his job site at the Brinager Farm ail
A low pressure system coming off Lake Erie wi II produce thunderstorms
Reedsville.
.
Services for Ernest W. BowJCs. S7 j of Columbus. who died on Sunday, across Ohio tonight, some of them violent, the National Weather Service said.
Joseph
Sean
White.
23.
had
been
sent
from Hocking County for felony
Heavy min, ))ail and strong winds are possible. forecasters said.
May 31, 1998. were held Thurs4ay. June 4, 1998 atthe CI'O!iby Funeral Home
fiFeing
and
eluding.
said
Meigs
County
Sheriff
Jam.es M. Soulsby.
Lows will be in the 60s.
in Columbus.
Brinager
fann
employee
·reponed
that
Wednesday
around I p.m. a
A
A cold front will swing into the state by late Friday. Clouds will mix with
The Re.v. Gilbert Craig officiated, and burial was in the Glen Rest Memo·
woman in a red Chevrolet Serena with Galli a County tags came to the Portsunshine while the threat of thunderstorms will exist in the afternoon. Highs
rial Estates.
land farm looking for White. Soulsby said.
·
•
Born in Middleport, he was the son of Margaret Bowles of Middleport, will be in the 80s.
·
The
woman
said
it
wa.~ White's second day on the job and was directed
The record-high te~perature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
and the late Ernest Bowles. He gradullted from Moddleport High School in
to the Reedsvi lie site, he said.·
1958 and served in the lJ .S. Army for six years, receiving his honorable dis- tion was 95 degrees in 1933 while the record low was 315 in 1972. Sunset
Soulsby said deputies notitied both SEPTA and the Galli a County Shertonight will be at 9 p.m. and sunrise Friday 6:02 a.rn.
charge in 1964.
·
iffs Department and, from the dekription given of the woman and the vehi·
Weather forecast:
.
· He was preceded in death by a sister, Francis Eleta Bowles.'
cle,
it is believed the woman is .White's wife, Beverly. of Gallipolis.
Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Rain may be heavy a1 times.
. Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife. Beverly Jean; a daugh·
·Soulsby
said lhe case would be forwarded to the proseCuting auomey for
ter. Candice Greenwood of Baltimore, Md.; stepsons, Malcolm (Brenda) Lows in the lower 70s. Southwest "ind 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 70
possible filing of an aiding an escape charge.
Stewart of Stone Mountain, Ga.; Dale Stewart of London. England. and percent.
Escape charges will be filed against White in Athens County, he said. He
Friday...Partly cloudy with a chance of thunderstorm.~. Some thunderstorms
Tracey Stewart of Columbus; two brothers, James (LiQda) Bowles of Point
is
described
as a white male. 5 feet 8 inches tall, with red hair.
may be severe in the afternoon. Highs in the upper 80s. Chance of rain 60
Pleasant, W.Va., and Randall K. (Claudette) Bowles of Shaker Height•: and
.
Citation is~ In SR 7 accident
six sisters, Arlene King of New York. N.Y., Barbara (James) Setzc:r of Colum· pe=R
Friday night...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
bus, E. Olivia (Charles) Lockett of Shaker Heights, Jeanne Gross of Colum·
A 37-year-old Gallipolis man wa.&lt; cited on a charge of failure to main·
bus, Anita Bowles of Cleveland, and Marsha (Seti) Martinez of Cleveland; Lows in the upper 60s.
tain assured clear distance following a two-vehicle accident on State Route
Extended forecast:
brothers-in-law, Willie (·Doris) Hancock of Marina, Calif., Donald Hancock,
7 at Leading Creek Road near Middleport.
Saturday
...
Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Ronald Hancock and Jerry Hancock. all of Detroit, Mich.; David Hancock
Richard D. Datst struck the right rear of a vehicle driven by Shelley J.
Sunday... Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
of Columbia. S.C., and Thomas (Anna) Hancock of Columbus: sisters-inHaskins. Bidwell. that was stopped for traffic, according to a Meigs Coun·
law, Janie Johnson.of Fort Lawn, S.C., and Dohette Hancock of Columbia,
ty Sheriffs Depanment repon. Darst's vehicle scraped along the giuu11mil
S.C.; and two slepgrandchildren.
.and then struck a roadsign Jiost, according to the report.
No injuries were reported. Damage' to Ha.•kins' 1991 Ford Explorer wa.~
felt Singers of Columbus, The Sar- reported as light while Darst's 1996 GMC pickup truck sustained moder
Dinnersel
.
A baked steak dinner will be • gents of Richmond, Ky.; Bobby and damage, the repot\ said.
Linda Ann Jenkins, 55, of Pomeroy, died Tuesday; June 9, 1998 at Holz· served Sunday . noon at the Tuppers Mary lser of Lanca.~ter; The· Faith
er Medical Center.
· .
Plains Post 905J by the Ladies Aux· Believers, 'ana several local singers.
She was born on Jan. 2S. 1943, in Middleport, the daughter of Mildred iliary. Ailult~ will be $S. and children, including Manie Short, Sheila Amolll
A finding for recovery
been issued against the Meigs County
and Delivered.
·Mae Hanning Hubbard of Syracuse, and the late 'Dale William Willis. She $2.50.
Library Association by the auditor of state.
-was a housewife.
The finding, in the amount of $1 ,993, resulted from an audit of the librarylii
Alumni tkkets
She is survived by her husband. Darrell Gene Jenkins; ,;ens and daugh· Camp meeting
records
for 1996 and 1997.
·
~~
Additional tickets have become
ters-in-law. Darrell Gene und Lois Jenkins Jr.. and Doug! a' and Jenny JenkA camp meeting will be held at the
According
to
the
auditor's
report.
the
association,
whjch
operates
the
law
-ins. all of Pomeroy ; a daughter and son-in-law•.~stil)y Gaila?n a~d Jeff~ry Evangelizing for Jesus worship Cen- available for the Eastern High School
library at the county courthouse, did not remit an excess .of lines and pena(..,
Mundy of Tallaha.~see. Fla.; brothers. Dale W1lhs, Bob Wollts: Vorgol Doll, ter at Guysville. June 27through July Alumni Banquet on Saturday.
ties
to the trca.~urers of townships and villages from which the balances we~
The banquet will be held at
Tony Salser and Mark Salser. all of Racine; sisters, Sally Holman of Rut· 4. Speakers during the week will
received.
.
·land,l'l!nny Brinker of Pomeroy. Millie Cotton of .Coolv~lle. and Betty McK· include John Elswick. Shade; Ernest Chester Elementary School due to
That
excess
represents
the
difference
in ·funds received and operati~g!
construction at the high school. A
·inney of Lanca.~ter; seven grandchildren; and several nocces and nephews. Ashby, Williamstown, W.Va.;
. ;I
Se..Vices will be II a.m. Friday in the Pomeroy Chapel of the Ptsher Funer· James Stewart, Hebbardsville; social hour will begin at 6 p.m., and expenses of the libmry. and is required by law to be refunded.
The
finding
is-payable
to
the
Meigs
County
auditor.
,., 1
al Home, with the Pastor Charles Birchfield officiating. Burial will follow · George Young and Noretta Adkins, dinner will be served at 6:30 ·p.m.
A:
in the Bradford Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6·9 Huntington, W.Va.; and Lawrence Tickets may be reserved by caJiing
Bush, Racine. There will be a variety Niese! Duvall Gemrd a1 985--4362.
to~ight.
Honored classes will be the cla.~s­
o~ mus_
ic, including Betty Messenger
~
'
· ·· ~
and the New Life Soul Seekers of es of 1958. 1963, 1968. 1973, 1978.
Butler.
Holzer Medical Center
Nashville: Ray Cook and the Heart· 1983, 1988. 1993, and 1998.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Discharges June 10 - Patty
Helen Kibble. 91, of Reedsville, died Tuesday evening. Jun~ 9, 1998 at
Anz.
son. Jackson: Mr. and Mrs. J~
Laudermilt , Fmnces Curfo:nan, Norlhe Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pom~roy.
.
Harrison.
daughter. Rutland.
ma Fowler. Mrs. Bradley DeCamp
1;. ,
Arrangements will be announced by the Whote Funeral Home, Coolvolle.
(Published with permission)
and son, Harold Baisden. Deborah
. Reynold,, Margaret Bonham. Flo- ·
1
renee
Willis,
Jack
Curry.
John
Obltuartee are .paid announcements artarigad· by .Jo~t· runaral 1101n...
Obltitsrll•,•rellubllfhld• requaattd 10 aceomlilodata llloee Clelklng.!llor- Pa.'ljuale, Wanda Poling, Breanna
MiDDLEPOQ.T
Units of the Meigs County EmerRussia'• J'r "dynasty beaan iq .,
···"
9:0S -~.m volunteer· fire depart· lnf~ thiJI Ia provlcltd In tile -mpanyJ DHt!l No11ota. ·
. gency Medical Service recorded ei~ht
161~ with ~ CJ!'Wning of Mikhail ,)
RMIIIno~ a. ....- and l!lldt.d in 1917
'calls for assistance Wednesday. Umts · ment alll! squad to Riverside Apart·
wi1h Nicholas It
."
ments, ·heater fire, Jack Tanner
responding included: ·
·- refused
'treatment.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Eva Dessauer. 96, of Pomeroy, died on Tuesday, June 9,-1998. .
POMEROY
5: 12 a.m., Grant Street. Middle·
She wa.~ born on January 6. 1902 in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Philip
8:05 p.m.. Butternut Avenue, Patport. Carol Manley. Holzer ~edical
Rusche!
and Daisy Smith Rusche!.
.
ty Laudennilt. HMC. Central Dis'Center. Middleport squad a.~ststed ;
She
was
a
retired
employee
of
the
Robinson
Laundry,
and wa• a volun8:37 a.m .. West Main Street. patch squad assisted.
teer
with
the
Meigs
County
Senior
Citizens.
·
RACINE
Pomeroy. Janet Wanl. treated at the
Surviving are a son and daughter-in~law, Harley. and Irene Hendrick of
4: IS p.m., State Route 338, Jeff
.scene. Middleport squad a.•sisted:
Pomeroy;
a daug~ter-in·law. Dorthea Hendrick of Newark. Delaware; a sis·
3:05 p.m.. Spring Avenue. Pelfrey, VMH.
ter
•.
Genrude
Bass of Pomeroy; and six grandchildren, 15 great grandchil' TUPPERS PLAINS
Pomeroy, Martug Graham. Veterans
dren
and
two
great-great gr~ndchildren.
8:J3,p.m., S-R 7, Elizljbeth Lyons,
1 Memorial Hospital;
Besides her parents, she was pteceded in death by her two husbands.
8:28 p.m., Main Street, Amy Barr, St. Joseph's Hospital.
Harley
F. Hent;lrick and Fredrick Dessauer; two sons, Carl and Albert HenVMH.
.
.
drick; and four sisters, three brothers and a graQdson.
Funeral services will be. held at I p.m. Friday, June 12. 1998 in the Ewing .
Furieral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating.' Bur·
ial will follow in the Beech Grove Cemetery.
(Continued from Plge 1)
posed 10 take into consideration rur·
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, June II. 1998 from 7attempts to rank highway; projects al and urhan dillerences. Our part of 9 p.m.
with a point system," Crawford said. the state needs to monitor the'process
"The priorities for funding are and help the st.ate adjust the selection
·based on a formula which scores process if·it develops an 'urban bias',"
transportation data such as traffic he said.
·OOOT had to develop a proce.&lt;s
accident rates. volume to capacity
In 1953, sona·and·danoe m1n Ray
ratio and avemge daily li'I!Ck traffic. that would allow theou to plan and
llolaer (TM Wizard of Ot) slaned in
The process also mea.,ures econom- build highways with the money that
ABC' 1 Wh#rt 's Raymond? as a musi·
cal comedy star who was alwayi late.
ic development criteria such as the was available; he explained.
number of jObs created and the level
MONUMENT·
of investment anracted by a project.
. ., . , t'OMI'ANY
.'
Projects can score bonus points for
.,
E.&lt;llllii:lhnt 111!11
J.
private or local government contri.520 W. Mala Sl - Pom.aroy, 0 ,
bulions." he added.
ON!! EVENIIG SHOW 7:30
·
Phoae 8111-2&amp;88
•
· "We are concerned · about how
4414123
vm=--8~3
,o;outhern Ohio·. over time. will fare
G.Wpolil.., 448-08111
·
with this process. The formula is sup-

. Ernest W. Bowles

.M eigs announcements

Linda Ann Jenkins

j

Audit results In finding for recovery.
ha.~
4~

--Hospital news---.

Helen Kibble

.

~.

·EMS units log eigttt calls

. ·.· ,· .Obitu~ll':. · :.

TRIVIA

..

Eva Dessauer .

-

SEORC highway.agenda

TRIVIA

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The -Daily Sentinel '
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~ul'lday, Ju.ne 1tr 1998

The ·J):aily (S entinel

;r

.

1

..

Bulls one step closer tb. an.o ther titlef:
.

ByRICKGAHO
AP Sports Writer

RODMAN REBOUNDS· Chicago's Dennis Rodman pulls In a
rebound In front. of Utah Jazz guard John Stockton during the
third quarter of Game 4 of the NBA finale In Chlcilgo on Wednes·
. day. The Bulls won 86-82 to move within one game of winning
their sixth NBA championship. (AP)

CHICAGO - One ·win from
another NBA championship. One
. victory, perhaps, from the end of a
dynasty.
The cigars and chilled champagne
are ready; the downtown rally hns
been planned; the city that embraces
them i's ready to party.
The Chicago Bulli know how to
celebrate. They've had plenty of
experience this decade. The sixth
title, though, could be!: the most memorable of aU because it might be the
last.
"I don't want to think about it
right now. I'll th.ink about it Friday
night when it's over," Bulls coach
Phil Jackson said. "But right now
we're hoping this is our final game in
the season.''
.
The Bulls are ready to send the
Utah Jazz home without the championship they have been seeking for so
many years.
Chicago, behind the scoring of
Michael Jordan, the bri IIi ant allaround play of Scottie Pippen and the
defense, rebounding and dutch freethrow shooting - yes, free-throw
shooting - of wrestler wannabe
Dennis Rodman hns a 3-1 lead in the
NB·A Finals.
The Bulls beat the Jazz M6-82
Wednesday night in Game 4 a.~ the
Jazz again failed in the closing minutes. Gume S is Friday at the United
Center.

"They have.to beat us three iri a
row to win this series, and we know
that's a pretty diflicul( task for any
team," Jacbon said.
"The other thing is that we want
to win it on Friday as they want to
win desperately on Friday."
Utah needs a victory to take the
series back to Salt Lake. But the Jazz
faltered in the closing minutes of
Game 4 just as they did in Gl!me 2
when they lost home-court advantage. In between, they were blown
out by .,.2 points..
:·vou come 0111. you work hard
your whole career to be in this position · to be in the final§," said Karl
Malone, who managed just two
point• in the fourth quarter Wednesday night as he battled Rodman.
"Maybe, I need to try a little harder, maybe I need to do different
things, but you can't start secondguessing youlliCif right now. The only
thing I can do now and what we can
do as a team is just get ready to play
on Friday."
With less than a minute to play,
Rodman - who skipped a practice
and headed to a wrestling sh9w
Monday - wrestled Malone for a
rebound.
It was the game's defining play.
The two locked aims going for the
ball that Rodman lipped with his
loose hand.
Malone got the fout Rodman got
two free throws and made them both

to put Chicago up by four. Just better than a 50 pen:eqt shooter this season from the line. the Worm was Sof-6 in the final qu:u1er. He also had
14 rebound~.
'
·
·
And Pippen. who might unseat
teammate Jordan us &lt;;:hlcago' s MVP
in the final series, continued to disrupt the Jazz with llis defense, doubling and foiling the screen-and roU.
John StQCkton, , ~ho scored 24
points in Utah's Game I victory, has
managed just 18 ill the last three
games, including seven - with 13
assists -Wednesday night.
"I'm catching Stockton where
he's DOl able to see the whole court,"
Pippen said of his Olympic Dream
•Team .teammate.
•
" I huve good siie, good wing '
span. So he ha.' to respect my quickness of being able to altack him. It's
about finding the right person OUI
there that can make me pay for coming and having the double teams."
So far, the Jazz have not been able
to do that. And there are other factors
making their nssignment even more
difficult.
No team ha.~ ever rallied from a 3I deficit to win a title. And the Bulls
haven't lost at home in the finals
since 1993.
"It's not a good situation to be
in," Stockton sai.d. "W~ h.a~e o~e
game to play, and tf we wtn, n sa dtfferentsituation: We go home for two •
games and anythong can happen.

One win ·ean ch'ange the whole con(~
plexion of things."
•
Pippen, unhappy with teamagement all season. was asked.if hill
performance had made the Bulls' uniform more comfortable for him. 1.
. ''I'm just trying to get through one;
more game. And that's it. And !hen t
can stick it (the unifonn) in mr
tnink," he said.
. ·
;
Jordan. who had 34 points to 28i
for Pippen. said the world won't
know for a while if this is the lina~
running of the Bulls, even if they,
clinch Friday night.
•
'·I understand Scottie want.~ tD
take his unifonn and put it . in the!
trunk," Jorda~ said.
·olio
;
" I want to lUke my uniform and'
put it in the trunk, too - they give!
out new ones next year- whenever:
or whatever.
.
") just want to end this seuson.;
And believe me. when it's finished· .
we're due a celebnuion. The job isn't:
done yet."
•
NOTES: The Jazz reached 54 point(
-their infamous total from Sunday;
night's record-setting loss - when
Howard Eisley made a free throv.i
• · he th'rd.
)VI'th 38 .4 secon ds 1·
C1ttnt
1 .. ,·
Pippen made his first four 3-pointer.r
and finished 5-for-10.... Adam Keefo
started at center for Utah a.• coacl\
Jerry Sloan tried another sh:llce~;;
Greg Ostertag started Game 3 af'W :
Greg Fosterstaned Games 1 and · ~;
Keefe had six points und seveq
rebound' in 20 minutes.

SOCCER
PARIS (API- The World Cup
began with defending champion.
Brazil edging Scotland 2-1, a.• lhe·
(lecisive goal was put iniQ his own net
by Scottish defender Tommy Boyd. ·
, The 10-day 'Air France pilots'
strike, which se_verely underinined
preparations for the W9rld Cup and
embarrassed. the airline, the World
Cup's official ca:rrier, was settled.

In the other game, Norway and
Morocco tied 2-2.
BrJ.Zil scored in the founh mirute
on Cesar Sampaio's header off a corner kick. but he gave it back by fouling Kevin Gallacher. Jolm Collins
converted the penalty kick.
Morocco's Tahar set up two goals
with long precision · passes, while
NorWay scored twice on clumsy
plays off free kicks.

I

'
Hubbard
tourney to be held in July
· The Bill Hubbanl Memorial Linle
League Tournament will be held in
)uly in Syracuse.
.
1 There will be a 20 team limit with
.the drawing to be held on. Weidnesday,

July 1st.
For more information you can call
Eber Pickens Jr, at 992-SS64 or 9927181.

chise, was at Wednesday's meeting.
where the owners approved Hicks'
pun:hase of the Rllnsers.
Smiley met with reponers, but
refused to say anything on the record
when quizzed about his so-called
financial problems.
·
Amid reports that Smiley's bid is
in jeopardy because he might not be
able to come up with enough money
to buy the francllise, the owners
pulled the Marlins' proposed sale off
their agenda Monday - without an
explanation. Then they shortened
what was supposed to be a three-day
meeting to one.
"I'm hopeful and I'm optimi~tic,"
Selig said of the Marlins' sale to Smiley. "It's terribly imponant for us to
put a group together down there. I

.

.

--...........

t . .~a..-.uao

1.
1,1111
2. """ 'MIIIIol. 1,143
$. Jell Gerdon, 1.122

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l'.llobbor' l.lltlat*. 1,141

II

----

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.'

artan hlld off adetetu•lld
Dolo Elmhaodt Jr. In 1ht

WINStON CUP~
Teory ~hod\&lt;! bo Ita!,

-'o2l!OatRiciVnOIId.
EermMit 10 llaYO 1ht
aupootor
lithe topo .-.. but llurton ._redly
-1nllllc: 10 hillld·
vontago. With five lllpiiO go,

.... Ito """ to bo luckY·
a late NC!-ftoiJ period

-him
-.Dolo-.

'*

a c:hlnoolor one 1111
Rlctmolld

·-~LIIlonte
W8l
up to the d1 • + ·

_,_,

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go.---boon ..
--f&lt;lnl...........

--t.llr•the

Lobonto took 1ht toed In tum
""" olliP 319.
for 1ht ..., ftoiJ, - lit topo to

two I*IICI1ht lappod . . &lt;II '

Mike Cq», end Burton~
out to. five ....... IQih - ·
... , _ ol which he main1ht llnlah.

- - Llllonllllook
the IM!I.No~..........,

_to

- 1 h t - during 1ht

'

-'IRUCIC IERIES

~'ollfltol1ht-

end

cool-top. Tho~­

,'

hlloooond

end Joo """""' II
- - Speodwioy. Both ol

TOP1111

'·

-.,,....by NASCNI-- Wlllw MoniO Cunon. last
Wlilk'l~illniO*W ..

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7.11o111Jr1' hJ ... Ill

a. Merii-'Cie
Ia !hit hit Y'!l"!..
a. ........ M8ii'ilicl141

Getting...,.,1'11
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A niltler of time

Who'd haw boliowd n1
4.0. ....... 131
Hogolthe.

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Sllrtlld 37th, llnlohlld 14th

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'

.... 400.IIr00fltln, Mich.
ftoclono; 500. Lone Pond, Pa
...... , . , • • Soncrnl. Clllf.

'·"""""'

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~-:IOO,~N.H.

......

"J."""~ ,_,

Paw )I • • t.D0.Lq Pwd, Pa.
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lud .... &lt;11ft. YMdnt O&amp;.t, N.Y.
~ 400, 8loolllyrl. Midi.

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NliliiiliiiiC:hlk

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Gaody'oiOO,-CMT 300, Loudon, N.H. .
....._ ..., - . S . C..

.

Since Joining Robart

4)0

Tlllt ~ r

Jarrett hea won 14 but still SMks hta first
Winston Cup title.
AGE: 41
SPOUSE: Kallay
.
CHILDREN: Juon (22),
Natalie (1 0), Kar8yn (8),
Zac:hary (3).
CAR; No. 88 Quality
Care/Ford CrtdH Taurua,
owned by Robart Y-.
CAREER RECORD: 335

our National Anthem, ·should

·sing it permanently.
Dave Cam ·~ -:11
Sin Mateo, :·Ia.
Dear NASCAR This Wock~
I've been o fan of NASCAR
rac:ina for' years.
It\ I Slid day when ......,.
with a lot of money can run a
live-car urn and pna up on singiKII' 1&lt;11111 and buy lhc OUI·

e polos, 17 wino. 78
top-five finlllhn, 124 top
lOs, more than $12 million

'·"""""' t":..
'·"""""'

in earnings.
FIRITI (WINSTON
CUPI: Star1 (April 2$, 1984,
at Martinsville), pole (Feb.
,.1, 1995, at Daytooa), win
(Aug. 18, 1991, a! Mlc,hlgan).
WHY WABIT 80 TOUGH
FOR YOU TO WIN ON
IHORT TRACKIIEFORE
LAST YEAR? 'H takn IUCh
a combination, figuring all
that' out lnd than havi!lll
IXIclly what I noodod at the
right time In the ..-. I
could gellhe car rutty
good at certain polntt ollhe

Paul L. Ho~licb Jr.
Mymtown, Pa.

81 th61end?' That we
worked reaNy hard oo. •
MOlT EVERYBODY

you do a lot ol ~. Htakas 8

totally diftoront mind-set than
M111 you grew up doing. •
· YOU WERE THE FIRST
ITARTI OUT ON IHORT
DRIVER
TO WIN THE DAY·
TRAC"-, 80 WHY ARE
THEY 80.HARD TO GET A TONA 1100 AND-BRICK· •
YARD 4GO IN THE SAME
HANDLE ON? 'Even
YEAR. WHICH WAS THE
though you've cut your
MOST SPECIAL? 'Winning
Ieath oo them, you heven't
the Daytona 500 is the uHIdono ~ w~h 700 horaemate in this business, but
power most of the time ..
'winning at Indy is prstty
And that rutty makes
dam spacial. There's not a
dllfocuH and, w~h the short
race, but 111111 and, I
whole lot of people who can
tracks now and the radial
n~ maki!lll the right adjustsay they've won at Indy,
ments. I think a big part of K tires, Ws sbmethi!llllhal
was just saying, 'We've got guys just don't grow up rac- whether ~·s 8 stock car or
Ing on. Ws a totally different not. I'm one of the fOrtunate
to make some changes.
low who can.'
·
WhY aren't the cara as good animal, rutty. Evon though

mondtntltnltionaiRace-

~-·-that
w•
.-ty
the

50 percont
""'"' thin
lolel paid lor
1,028 riiCII .IIIIICIIonlld bV
NASCAR In 1953. - -

54 111 hont Bl ;td •·
·(

goverr&gt;l!lll bOdy had paid

out "thh _,........,total
of $1,208,1!011.20"1ho
pr-.o,... Thal-

outto .. -.geof

See us tor Your Stihi-

$1,174.55 por,raco.

•

Power Tools &amp;
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992-6611

N.C.-

• No, ho otillhaln~

won a ,..,., but after
13 -..29-yeor-(lld

JoNmy MaytiOid otiU

.

1Nda1ht Winoton CUp
point lllandlngs,
lhanka In pan to 1ht
-WO&lt;koiCNW

--c:hlol PauiAndrewt
ondahlgh-quality

toom. Andrewt

nolontleosly-

- I n 11182•• guy

bll 1110 nama o/AIIn

KUiwlcltl.

ESPNHome-lt

.....Utnaft• NASCAA

~rnontary
"Tho Fifty, • on- homo·

·
-· complote
with
bonUI
fOOtage nat

Included on lito TV p8-

l

-lalloo~

Win'

"Inherit 1ht

Ia lllloulnoclng'l

flmous lamilloll: lhe
Pottyt, JIIIIWitl, Fkicka,
AJiiiOnl Md, of CourH,
lhlfrMCn.

I

1y ...... DuftOn

Mmethina we·now expect.
wbodtor it\ .. . 11 Ridvnood or
tO ,.ks from now. We know it
is cominJ, and we are ready for
ic. Quite simply, we want several
wins. To~
·
ICCOnd and
..ird rK
c to win the
fint one.
f
DADJrt: DIDN'TTIACH
HIM nfATI FoiJowin&amp; Fridly
nisht.. Grand Naliorial nee, Jeff.

aiOl of clwand fou&amp;b&amp;·• a
aood fight. lt\llribute tolhe
RICHMOND, va. - The
youn1man
spew well for
Jmmy Mayrteld walth
whit h;s fat~~~ him." 1
continPJCa.
Burton coul
i11sayrn..
The 29-ycar-old 011&lt;nsboro,
"That's nut wllil.._ iocld me
Kv., driver is the scuon .. sencleu. He f¥eil mt elean
silion, but thOuah bci is the
bcciUie •il did didD't tclch him
WiMton Cup point leader, MayuydJiaa."' • •
r.ekl ha111ill aot won his fim
Wild lluahter. Sponswri1ers
acnuhw Winaton Cup rKe.
1 on dnk lops. Nervous
No bipic, uy thole around
Burton ,epealedly ulute4 Dale, -t;
from Pinon and Burhim. •
Eamhard1 Jr. for fir.tnilla a
.~ lDn wife Kim.
"'Your way oflhinkina chanscs cou~aeoua. but dan beltle with
"'I'm kiddiJI&amp;,.. aid Burton.
the hlaher )'OU min the point
Burton over the final~ llpt.
..It~ ajoke ... •joke."
. atandhtp." laid Mlchlft Krane·
Onc:i., &amp;.ram\ 111m man·
LATEST SliSPECT: Jef'f' •
ruu. co-oner or Mayf"ackt'l No. qer; ~ Panotl. chin\od in. Green took the Yt'heei'Of .f9lix
12 FoniTouru~ 'tr will be nice \ . 'Mylllt\olrto llllelr. He
S.bates' embaltlod No. ~ J
·
to wiil the rint race, bu1 il'l
\(I{OYC lib 1 gentlem~n, showed
Chevrolet at Richmond. Wally

· NASCAA 'IIlio WMk

..a

e:·

.

0 ;;elul• ttM n. a.non (N.C.)Gutlll• Dl ta 11M br UnlwerulfiNie .,,

Chesler

985-3308

in e

O.llcnbKh Jr. and tdorpn
Shephenl poucdcd Green in
lhe car.
A solid si~tth·piKc: qualifying
performance pvc lite team a lin,
as did the hirina of Waddell
Wilson to run the operation.
Sabala is, by his own
admission, It wil's end over the
performance oflhe ICim. His
business rtlationship with the
spontor, Firit Union, niakrs the
tum\ repelled failures some·
whit of an embarrassment IO
bolh parties. SabJtcs may fold
the team, rcducina his opcraiion
to two Clfl, if tht operation does
no! continue to show any
Improvement

(IDDf -.en. • FOr fiiNII _...

RACING ON nf Will
::.::::.AMI~ flj
ww ppfr,com

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pllologl..,. """' ~

and lrllormatlon
loholp--...tora,...~and

lOdging.

"'Ju1lt I

~

~------------------------------~------··
-

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SubK.ribe to the 7

. . . . . . . G.. aeUiae.
Ripley, WI/ 26271

Bus. Phone (304) 372·3673

1.'
•'

1-800-964-FORD
Rt. 21 .... f~~HY-.•IIIrplaln Exit 1132

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. .

wrfte: NA8CAR
-'111m, olo '

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COMING UP: Pikes Peak 250
WHERE: Pikas Peak International
Raceway, Fountain, .Colo.

NOTABLI!: Dale Earnhardt Jr. haa
finished flral and aocond In hla laat
two starta .... Thla milo track hat
10-degree banking In lilt corners
and Is 0 -ohsped.

-CifiiiWBI

Tratlo~. GT. 300, &amp; 400 Series

I

at this track.

Dave Harris
Ext.104
For More
Information

WHEN; Sunday, Juno 14
DEFENDING CHAMPION: Firat race

Yat01 Racing In 1985; Olle

The Daily
Sentinel

•

Elliott flnlohed second to lrvan In lhlt
race last year.... Jell Gordon haa
never wcin at Michigan.

Is tate bloomer. This second-genarl)lon ntMir
won a Winaton Cup race
until he was 35 years Qld,
but has become one of the
sport's handful of dominant
drlvera.
Jarrett Ia wall liked by
fans because he Is almost
always polite, lriondly. and
cooporative, rnoch like hla
father, the ex-NASCAR .
champion and oeeptctecl
lelevleiolt COOtmentiiiOr Ned.

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THE . WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT .

RACI RECORD:
Ruaty Wallace,
Ford, 186.033 mph, Juno 23, 1998.
NOTABLE: Bill Elliott haa won seven .
tlmn at Michigan, the mol1 of eny
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David Pearson'• ell~tlme record . ...

II. Terry Lelz ........

be hooked on the 400 Series!

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18, 1995.

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

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4110

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THE WINSTON CUP IERIEI
COMING UP; MIUer Ute 40C
WHERE: Mlchlgen S.,...Sway,
Brooklyn, Midi.
WHEN; Sunday,
Juno 14
Dt!FENDING
CHAMPION: Emit
lrvan
QUALIFYING
RECORD: Jell
Gordon, Chevrolet,
185.611 mph, Juno

t . . . . . . . . .. _ . .. . .

Pictures arrive

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think that wi II serve as a way we their directions directly into getting ti
solve the stadium problem and all the new ballpark."
. :
other problems in South Florida.
Huizenga is trying to· dist~
· "Hopefully, we will · ha~e some- hi'mself from the Marlin.• to improve
thing 'in the .very ·near future."
·
the chances for a taxp;iyer-financecl
The owners' next meeting will be stadium.
·
·
in Milwaukee on Sqit. I S-17.
In Hicks, S2, the Rangers got their
After the ~arlins won the World fifth owner since the franchise moved
Series with a $53 millio~ payroll in to Arlington froiD Wa.,hington, where
October, Huizenga tore upart his .they were the Senators, for the 1972
franchise. His payroll is down to $16
Continued on pap 6
million, and his team, at 19-45, ha.'
the worst record in the major.;.
· " What happened in Sou tit Florida
Sports picture.' of athletes that
is a microcosm of bn.~ll's eco- · ·
played
in spring sport.. at Meigs Higtl •
nomic problems," Selig said. "I
think Pon Smiley underlltands it School are now in. The pictures cal)
well, a,, does Wayne. What we need be picked u'p in the office at tJte His~)
to do is gtt astable owneri;hip group Sehoul between 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
ill plac~ and then they need to tum Monday-Friday.
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-Sports briefs-'--- Tom tlicks new owner of Texas Rangers.
SEATILE (AP) - Baseball's
owners made Tom Hicks \)ne of their
own by a 30-0 vote.
Will Fl~da Marlins team president Don Smiley follow Hicks, new
owner of the Texas Rangers, into the
fold? •
. "Don Smiley and I have been
talking on a daily ba.~is," interim
commissioner Bud Selig sai&lt;\ after ·
the owners' quanerly meeting ended
Wednesday night
"They were not ready to bring
anything to this group. But I would
not read anything into that. Don hns
been out working putting his smup
together and putting. deals together."
· Smiley, seeking to come up wid!
Wayne Huizenga's $169 million a.,k·
ing price to buy the Marlins' fran·

See

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... _ _ _ _ Olio _ _ _ _

Dave Harris Ext. 104
For More Information

•
..

I

...

- · - --· -

-

-----

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Scoreboard
w

L
21
2l
33

·~
Jl

New York

29

Pbil*lphil
M....al

24

19
w

·~

Hou11on
Chi&lt;~ go
Pittsburgh

40

24
26

38

)2

31
. ·"

28

:\8

w

San Diego
San Francisco
Los Angeles

7
14

10

GB

.424
Wut Ol~;iston

L

Pet.

2l
2l

.621

J)

.'2
.19
44

.508

21

19 112

.469

41
. 41

n

Colorado
Arizoma
T\ltsday's GIAIH

GB

.612
.183
.468

Toronto topped l'lorida 4-3 in 10
By BEN WALKER
innings.
AP Blttblll Writer
Also, Seattle stopped San Fran:
A home run derby between Mark
McGwire. Albert Belle and Robin ci~o 4-1, Arizona downed Anaheim
Ventura at Comiskey Park. Acycle by 10-2, Los Angeles beat Oakland 1-0,
Dante Bichette at Coors Field. A near the New York Yankees defeated
no-hitter by lsmael Valdes at Dodger Montreal6-2, Boston topped Atlanta
Stadium.
.
10-6, Minnesota de'rented the ChicaThere · was extra e~citement in go Cubs S-1, Houston defeated
interleague play Wednesday night. Detroit 10-3 and the New York Mcts
topped Tampa Bay 3-2.
and for good reason.
Six games went into extra innings . In !he only National League game,
- tying the major league record for San Diego edged Cincinnati 2-1.
the most in one day. It also happened Padres l, Reds I
on dates in 1951, 1963 and 1988.
Ken Caminiti hit his fir.ll homer
. "We didn't have any more pitch· since April23 and Kevin Brown tied
ing," Milwaukee manager Phil Gar· a career high with 10 strikeouts as
ner said after the Brewers beat San Padres completed a three-game
Kansas City 9-6 in a rain-delayed, IS- sweep of visiting Cincinnati.
inning game.
Caminiti hit his IOOth honie run in
Rookie Bronswcll Patrick, who four seasons with the Padres. Wally
began his minor league career in Joyner hit a go-ahead single in lhe
1988 and finally made it to the eighth.
majors this year with Milwaukee, Pirates 4; Indians 3
pitched !he last ~nnings to win his
Jermaine Allensworth doubled
· first big league decision.
home the go-ahead run in !he lith
"To come up here and get my first inning off.Jose Mesa as Pillsburgh
victory, it's something I will always ·won at Cleveland.
cherish for the rest of my life," he
Tony Womack had two hits and
said.
drove in two runs for the Pirates. His
In other games, the Chicago White single set up Allensworth's double.
Sox beat Si. Louis I().8 in II inning~. White Sox 10, Canli11111s 8
Colorado defeated Texas 9-8 in 10
Venl\lra hit a tying homer with two
innings, Pitt~burgh downed Cleve- outs in the bonom of the ninth
land 4-3 in II innings, Baltimore beat inning, then connected for a two-run
Philadelphia S-2 in 10 innings and drive in !he lith to lift Chicago o.ver

.297
2l
Central O.vlsion
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2
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7 112
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39

Flonda

Milwaukee
51. Louis
Cmcinnati

-

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621
7 Ill
14

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19 112

N.Y. Yan~ II . Momteall
Florida 5, Toronto 4
Houston. 5. Detroit J
Piusbt.lrgh 7,.Cleveland 4
Bosron 9. Atlnnt:. 3
Philadrlphia 2. Billtill"IOI""e 0
MinnesOta 8, Chicogo Cubs 0
St. Louis 5, Chicag., Whit~ Sox 4
Milwaukee 6, Kansas City) . 10 inninps

Tampa BaY S. N.Y. Mt.'f s -l. II innin~

Teu.s .5. Colorado 2
Los Angeles 5. O..khmd 1
San Diego .5. Cinci nnati I
Anaheim 10, Arizona H
San Francisco 7, Sconk 6
Wednesday's Games '
N.Y. Mets .l, Tanlflll Bay~

Seattle 4. San Frand s~·o I
N..Y Y_an.lu.'\!5 6. Montn·al 2
Toro nto J . 1-lorid::. .l . 10 inninp
Huus10n 10. Dt-troi t .l
l,illshurgh 4 . CkvdanJ ;\. II Jnt!J DFS
Rahimnn: 5, Phi laddphi;J!. 10 inn m t:~
OoMon I0. Atlanta 6
Milwn u h~ 9. K::.nsa~ Ci1y 6. 15 lnl)in ~s
Minne sota~ - Chicago Cuhs I
Chu:ag:o Whit!! Sa1 10. St. Loub K. II um in~~
Color:lllo 9. Ti.!JW\ !1. JO 11111int!~
Arizona 10. Anal"ll!'im 1
l..os i\n!dl!\ I. Oakland 0
San Di~o:i!o 2. Cirtdnnau I
Thursday."s Gamt~
N.Y. Yankees Wcuittl!

al Mnturc:•I IMom.: 1- ~J. 7 :0~ p.m
N.Y. Mc1s (Jone s ~-;\ ) 111 Ftornla (SnndM:l. .1·:!1. 7 : 0~ p.m
Anaheim !llickwn ~--U 1111\riluna (Wnkou 0-0J. JII · O~ p.m.

Onl)' J!'O!Fl-.:~ s~·htdulc d
i=ru:hty"s Games
N.Y. Ml'ts {Yosh i -'·l) :11 1-llltlda llkmp5lcr0 -1J. 7:05p.m.
Mil waukC~.: !Karl ~ -J J at Piu s bur~h 1Curdnv11 6-Jl. 7 : 0~ p.m
Houston 1LiiTIII7-2J ru Ci ndnn:lli !Remlinger J-7 1. 7:05 Jl m
C hi~·ago Cubs (Tapani ll-.l ) m Phil:ldelf•hin ISchillin!! 5-7). ·us p.m.
MonlrtaJ (Vazquez 1-6J ot Allttnm (Maddull. 9-2). 7:40 p.m.
St. Louis (Stottlemyrt 6-J) 11 AntoNI (lknei 4-6). 10:05 p.m. ·
Colorado ~Kite S-8) a1 Lot Angeles CMiicki 1-4). JO:OS p.m.
Silll Francisco (Rueter 7-3) at San Oicao (Hitchcock 3- 1l. 10:05 p.m.
American LuJut • ·

aut Dlwlsion
L

Boston
Toronto
Baltimorr
Tampa Bay

.17

26

Cleveland

.ao

w

L

New York

Minne soc::~

Chicngo

lktroit
Kansas City

.\ ~

.14

27

.17

W .

L

)8
29
26
23
23

26

. ~9-1

.14

.460

8 112

37
JR

. ~13

I I 112
)) 1/2
14 IJ1

~9

2~

.\ 5
28

27
J7
J6

21

.477
18
.422
2 1 112
Central Division
PeL
GH

.J77
JM
Wnt Di'·ision
Pd.
.601

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The
University of Louisville acknowledges it violated nine NCAA regulations in its women's volleyball and
men's ba.~ketball programs, while
dispulinll some of the NCAA's lind'
mgs.
The ·university's response comes
· almost two months after an official
NCAA inquiry. and is the .latest step
in a prqc,ess leading to an August
hearing be}orc !he NCAA's Division
I Committee 'on Infractions. The
deadline for the !CS(X!nse was )une 8.
Neither ihe university nor t.ICAA
officials would comment on !he likelihood of future penalties. beyond
those the university already has
imposed on itself.
In a written response released
Tuesday, the school agreed !hat assis·
tant basketball coach Carlton '"Scoot·
er" McCray violated rules by giving
a player's father his credit card to
avoid eviction from a Louisville
h!&gt;lel.
The university .also admitted !hat
the volleyball prpgram violated eight
rules, including Coach Leonid Yelin's
failure to adequately monitor !he program.
However, the university disputed
NCAA contentions that McCray
arranged for a discounted room for
Frederick Johnson, father of player
Nate Johnson. Citing its internal
in-:cstig~tion. the school said former

GB

.l6l

)

.-'J I
.429

II 112
II 112

.

N.Y. Ytank~s II . Mon1n:al I
Fluric.la 5. Toronto 4
Houston 5. 9etroit 3
Pit1 5bufFh 7. Cle,·eltantl 4
Boston 9. Atlama ;\
Phi lndclphia 2. 8:\ltlmo~ 0
Minnl!sotn II.. Ch kngn Cttbs 0
Sl Louis 5. ChkaRo White So1 4
· Milv.·nul:cc 6. Kan'Sa~ City~- 10 iunin,I!S
T:mtpa llay ~- N . Y. Mets -'· II innings
T.:xns S. Colorado 2
Lor. Angeles 5. (k!Umd 1
Annhcim 10. Arizon:~"
S:m francisco 7. Seattll! 6
Wtdncsdaw 's Galhts
N.Y. Ml!ts ~- T.1mpn Ray 1
Scanlc -l. S:m Frnnd~·o l
N.Y. Y:mh·c~ fl. Mont r.::1l l
TtlnJRIII -'· Flnrida ~. 10 innings
HuuSlt' n 10. IA:t rnil .l
Pinsburgh ·'- Clcvd:md .\. II innin~~
Baltimorl! ~- rtul ;kldphia ~ - 10 tnn in~~
Bn!illln 10. tulanln 6
.
i'ohlwaukcl! 11. K:msas City 6. l;'i i nnm)!~
Minnc ....•t:• ~ - 0\i.:a~o Cu b~ I
Ch u:a1!•' While Su.r; 10. St . luUI S K. II mmng.~
l""ulnmJ n 'J. T.:xas Pl. Hl innin~ s
, \niHil;! 10. Anaiii!Hil ..!
I .••~ /l.n}!cl.· ~ I. IM.: I:mi.l 0
, Tiluuda~· ·s (;llml'li

N.Y. Yanh'l;~ n \: uit li! 7-.ci l :11 1\tnmr.:al !P.Inur.: ~- -~ 1 . 7 :0~ p.m.
,\!lahcim tUidi$110 5 -4 1m Ari1t•n:1 t" h•k••tt 0-01 . 10:0) l\lll
s~· :llt k t l · as~·m .ci -~) :11 O:tkiMJ ({~lli SI ~ - ;\). 10 : 0~ Jl m.
On I ~· ~ ;unc.• •rhcUuktl
t " rithn '" G~mn
ll ;thm"Mlf&gt;,' ( r.IU-'Sll~l -'·J f al Tolrntlltl IGU1.11\0UI .~ - 71. 7 :0.~ t•.m
Ta mp:• na~ f,\m•jtl!'-.l) :II nu~tUII (W:ikcfidd li- .\1. 7 : 0.~ Jllll
n .·wlanJ tWrt)!hl ~-JI itl· NY Yank~."'\."liiMctkkll::l .J-1). 1:.'~ p m.
l klr&lt;~ liiHHnc

two-base error with one out.
Marinen 4, Giants I
San Francisco's 11-garne winning
streakcamc toanendasDavidSegui
drove in th'" runs for visiting Scat·
tie. The Mariners had lost fouc in a
row.
Giants starter Orel Hershiser left
. the game in the firth inning after
being hit on the right wrist by Alex
Rodriguez's line drive. Left fielder
Barry Bonds also left early because
of tightness in his left calf.
· Before the game, the Giants put
second ba.'leman ieff Kent on the ISday disabled list with a sprained right
knee. He wa.~ injured the previous
day when Rodriguez slid into him.
Rodriguez was hit in the shoulder
by the lirsl pitch he saw from Hershiser. hi the bollom of the first. Swill
hit Bonds in the calf.
The next inning, Hershiser
brushed back Mariners starter Bill
Swift. Umpire Harry Wendlestedt
issued a warning and as he talked to
Seaule manager Lou Piniella.· Hershiser and Swift met in front of home
plate. and there were no more incidents .
Diamondbacks 10, Angels 2
Jay Bell homered, tripled and
drove in three runs and Arizona
stopped Anaheim's nine-game winning streak.
·

offers.
Reds general manager Jim Bowden said in a statement released
Wednesday night that Lurkin's agent
told him about I0 days ago that

Larkin would like to be traded ·for comment Wednesday night. There
because of the club's rebuilding pro· · was no answer to calls to his,home.
gram and uncertainty about the new
But Larkin said Wednesdliy that
stadium.
he had not requested a tmde.
Bowden said he told agent Eric
"I prefer to stay in.Cincinnati. but
Gold~hmidt that the Reds did not
I also prefer to win." said Lurk in.
want to trade Larkin but would inves- "It's no fun losing day in and day out.
tigate trade possibilitieS. Bowden and that's what has been happening
also said he told Gold~hmidtlhat the here ...·
team woula not consider a trade
The Daylon Daily News repooted
unle~s it .would significantly improve . Wednesday that the Reds have conWilson Inn assistant manager Daph- the club by adding young players .tacted the San Diego Padres. Los
ney King gave Johnson the discount who eventually would contribute to Angeles Dodgers. San Francisco
on her own.
a championship-caliber team.
Giants and St. Louis Cardinals. BowThe university said McCray's tele"For the pa~t 10 days, we have den did not identify the teams con·
phone records show he didn't call the explored sevel"~l trade possibilities !acted, but he said Goldschmidt had
Wilson Inn until after Johnson had involving Barry Larkin," ~d Bow· given him a lisl of four teams to
been checked in for nearly two den. "At this time, there has not been which Larkin would like to be tradweeks.
an acceplable trade proposal for us to ed.
'
Louisville also argued that it is not even consider moving him."
The Reds' payroll is at S22 mil·
responsible for two a~pects of the of
Goldschmidt could not be.reached lion.
t~e volleybajl PfOIInllll's, tran.~gres- ,.. ~
·· •-·· ,
•'
- - •-·
.
. stons.
.
.
ContlnuetUrom page 4
According to !he NCAA inquiry,
ft, . • • •
ao;sistant volleyball coach Pany Den· . se11,o;on.
..,..
"I don 'tthink there will be a dranison improperly assisted two'"" Bob Short Bract c-;irl,eit and matic incie'a.~"in ou'i'player payroll,"
~cruits with thei~ college applica- Eddie Chiles 'owned the Rangers said Tom Schieffer, who will remain
lions. The umvers1ty conten~. how- before Gov. George W. Bush and · a.' ·the Rangel'!l' president. "We'~
ever. that the NCAA docsn .• h~ld Rusay · RO!IC pun:ha'led controlling already among the highest payroll
schools ~sr,x&gt;n.slble for momtonng interest in the Rangers from Chiles in teams.
the adm1ssJons process of every 1989.
"So I don't think you'll see a
prospective student·a!hl.ete:
.
The Bush·R~ group paid $89 marked difference in that in !he
The school also sa1d 11 d1d not frul million for the Te~as team. Hicks is future. But I would expect for us to
to educate Yelin .on Division I rules. paying $250 million - !he second- remain in that area at the top of the
Yelin failed to pass the NCAA coach- highest price for a.baseball franchise payroll." ·
es certification exam on his first in history -to add !he Rangers to his
Hicks wa• unable to be at the Seata~mpt, but passed it two days later. sports· portfolio that includes the tle meeting because he wa.• in New
After !he violations came to light, Dallas Stars of the NHL.
York on business. He was scheduled
the school reprimanded basketball
Hicks, 11 1968 gruduate of Uni- . to appear at a news conference in
coaeh Denny Crum and put McCray versity of Texas, owns ll!OfC !han 400 Arlington today.
on a year's probation with his salary •utiio statioos in 100 markets in the
Baseball's effort to shorten its
frozen.
United States.
games this seao;on app.arently Is workYelin was suspended for a 1110nth
In the Rangers, he takes over a ing; AL games are down an average
without. pay, Dennison wa' repri· team with the fifth-higltelit payroll in of seven minutes to 2:53, while NL
manded and the volleyball team's ba.~ballat $5S million. Not surpris- games are down five minutes to 2:41,
preseason trip to Japan last year was ingly, Te~a.~ ha.s a three·game lead Selig said,
canceled,
over Anaheim in the AL We!U, ·

Louisville formally agrees
wit/1 most NCAA charges

g

)2

1\nHim
Se:mle
Oakland

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds have looked into the·
possibility of trading All-Star Reds
shortstop Barry Larkin, but they
have not receiv~d any ncceplnble

GB

Jl

Te.1.as

Tuesday's G11mn

Pel.

.780
--~~2

13

St. Louis.
McGwire's major league-leading
30th homer helped the Cardinals
take a 7-0 lead into the si~th. ~lie
had a pair oflhree-run homers for the
White Sox, matching his career high
with six RBis.
Chicago trailed 8-4 in the ninth·
with two out.~ and the bases empty.
But Belle and Ventura connected for
consecutive homers to tie it.
· RockieS 9, R.llngen 8
· · ·Bichellc bei:amc the first player in
Colorado history to hit for the cycle.
winning the game at Coor5 Field with
a long single With IWO OUtS in the
lOth inning.
·
Bichelle doubled in the f11urth.
homered in the sixth and tripled in the
ninth. He finished with five RBis and
scored twice.
'Dodgers I, Athletic!l 0
Valdes, supposedly close to heing
sent to Scallle last week in a trade for
Randy Johnson, pitched a two-hiller
for his first complete game since
199S.
Valdes (S-7) did not give up a hit
·until Man Stairs singled with two
outs in the .seventh inning. He struck
out nine a.' Los Angeles won at Oakland.
'
The Dodgers held on in the ninth
inning after left fielder Roger Cede·
no - a defensive replacement - ·
dropped Scon Spiezio's ny ball for a

Reds general manager says·he has
investigated trade possibilities for .Larkin

7·~1

w
46

-'· II at K:m~ ;1s Ci ty tRn~aJu 1-_c;l. ~ : IJ.ci p.m

om HIC ';s

Public Nodee! PohUe Nodee! PohUe Nodee! PohUe Nodee!

,NotJ.ee! PohUe Notice!

1616
•

•

' '

Glllllpolla' Hometown Deller

•

·PuiiUe Nodee! PuhUe Notice! PubUe Nedeef·
.•• •

'

(

l9'17, ,.. ,..,.,..

n""

Sytldiea~e IIIII CrciiNI

'"""''"·

Dear Ann Landen: Approxi·
mately one year ago; my son-in-law
deposited my 28-year-old daughter
and their two children in our living
room and walked out. Our house is
small, but I figured we could manage if everyone cooperated.
· ~·Josie" and I agreed on certain
rules, such as her helping around .the
house and not expecting us to be
baby sitters, but she did not keep her
side of the bargain. After a couple of
weeks, my, mother-in-law most generously gave Josie .a place to•live,
· with paid utilities. She lhought lhis

Josie took in her 17-year-old
half-sister, and that's when the tr~uble really started. G~ys w1th pohce
records st.arted hangmg around, and
there was plenty of drinking and allni ght panying. When Grandma
objected, Josi~ ltold her lo mind her
own business :1Needless to S!IY· Josie
was asked to leave.
.
My daughter 1hen moved in with
a girlfriend for about four monlhs.
My husband and I took care of her
older daughtel, but th~ baby boy was
too much for us. I offered to keep
him overnight one~ a week, bul
Josie wanted more.: Ann. the baby
still doesn't sleep through the night,
and Josie sometimes slays out pany·
ing until noon the ,ne&lt;l day. Then,
she wants t&lt;l sleep d,ll afternoon.
The nex\ thing l knew, Josie had

A vanely of selections 1n aud1o
b?&lt;&gt;ks are available at the Racine
L~brary of ~he Meigs County t'ublic
L1brary · DIStrict for patrons who
!Day be sight impai~ed .or are lind it
mconve~1ent m then hves to settle
for readmg the conventional book. .
Audio books may be
checkked?udt ofdthe lib rbary fo r a ,'WO
~ee pe~1o an ava1 1a 1e se 1ecuons
mclude: . · .
.
A N1ght to Remember; ·
Babushka's Doll; Pandora: Joumey
mto Darkness; Black and Blue: The
Streepl Ladwiyer; AUbsdolutely, Pdos1Ct1ved1y; ar~ se; n erscore ; o1
~ountam, Over the To~, Anqther
Cny ; The Ranch; Sno~ m August;
Avalance; The Mavenck Queen;
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer:
The Genesis Code; Charlolle's Web;
Power Words; Skeleton Canyon;
White Crosses; Big Trouble; Before
I Wake; I I(oow Why !he Caged Bird
Sings; Should You Leave?; Illusions ; 3001, the Final Odyssey;
· Dead in the- Water; Stone from the
River; Contact; Fatal Terrain; Wonderful Ways to Love a Child; London; Giavanni's Gift; Chicken Soup
for thC' Soul, Hear the Fear: Murder
in the House; Cloudy in the West;
She's Come Undone; Out or Sight,
The Matarese Countdown; Memoirs
of a Geisha; SOO Nations; Sanctuary;
Red· Storm, Rise and Fall of Jesse
James; Songs in Ordinary Time; The
Runaway; Ambush; Midnight in the
Garden of Good and Evil; The View
from Saturdays; Rounders Three;
Maniac Magee; Morning, Noon and ·
Night; Sacrament and Angela's

Ashes. .
Meantime, a number of
conventional new readi ng books
have been 'received at the Racine
Lib~ary in~luding fictio~ and non·
licuon volumes for bo1h adults and
juvenile readers.
New fictiop edi4ion~ for
adu 11ds ~ l'availabThle · Lat RaRci nde
me1u e: • ·i arget, . e. ong oa
Home; Hannful Intent; Fatal Cure,
Free&lt;Jom'sJ. Challenge; A Maggot;
Hold \he Dream: The Predator, Forlu~s on War; There's a 'Hair in My
DDift;bThl. e Pact;·SA PatcphworkF Piahnetf;
ou ~ 1mage ; ecret rey, 11g to
Eagles; The Transall Saga; Ghost
Country; Azlec Autumn; Brothers,
Eyes, Memory; Monument Rock;
Belladonna; Tin Man: Masque; Con·
tract will\ an Angel, and Bullerlly.

Nedee!

,,

URNPIK
EXCESS

.INVENT&lt; &gt;RY
LIIV\1 NATIC &gt;N

t

White, 4 br, front ·wheel drive, 4 cyl, A/C. Auto
WAS
1'997 FORD
V6, foJC, auto, PS, PB, f"+', P. Seat, POL, tift, cruise, AM!FM .,.,...,,
WAS$21,495
I 1997 FORD MUSTANG
6 cyl, A/C, auto, PS, PI;!, PW, P seat, POL, tilt, cruise, AM,IFM stentO
WAS $17,495.

.'J:he new ad ult non-fiction Tunnel Pain: Playful Origami; Me
books a·re: · Ancient Civilizations: and My Shadows: The Rights of
Careers for Fashion Plates; Opponu- Dying; Talking 10 Heaven: Wills and
nities in Welding Careers; The Gin- Trusls; Dicli onary of the Bible;
seng; · 1998 North American Coins Divorce and Child Custody; The Pill
and Prices, Beavers, Foxes; Grizzly; Book; Yogi Book; The Lives of
Hawaii ; Family Adventure Guide: Danielle Steel. and Beautiful Cats.
The· American Dream, the 50's; .
New juvenile fiction books
Sport s; Emergenci es; Venison Cook- added to 1he shelves are Katy No- ' 6 cyt, foJC. auto. PS, PS, PW,
, AM/FM stereo, radial Urea
' ery; 5 Ill 1 Me; Serge It man Hour or Pocket; Hooray for Differdoofer.. WAS s1e,495
Less; On This Day; The Complete Day; Maura's Angel ; Strays Like Us;. · 1----------:===========-'""'-&amp;..=.~"'-1
·Scholarship Book; Plumbing; It's Alice Rose and Sam; Arthur
1997
Easy to Play Disney; Great Taste-" Accused; Disney's Mulan; If You
6 cyl, loJC, auto, PS, PB, PW, P aaat,
Low Fat Grilling; Cabinetmaking ; Give a Pig a Pancake, and Locked in
WAS $17,495
HL~nhdhTools; Eastern Great Lakes the Library;
"
1
1g t ouses: It's Easy to Play
Two new large print vol4 cyl, A/C, auto, AM/FM stereo
Beethoven; Snakes: ,the Art of umes have also been added to the
Angels and Cherubs; Chinese Can- Racine shelves. They are Murder at
1997 MERCURY TRACER
tonese. &lt;;;ooking; Collectible Quilts; the National Galley and The Sena4 cyl, auto, PS, PB, AM/FM stereo
.
. Natural Medicine for Colds and l'lu ; tor's Wife.
Freedom's Child; End Your Carpal
WAS$13,495

61ZZLIN' 6&lt;JMM~~
HOT SALE AT EMPIRE FU
FRIDAY 10 AM TIL 8 PM
SATURDAY 8 AM DL SPM
SUNDAY 1 PM TIL 4 PM
8 AM TIL 8PM

·1 0 /a
·· OFF ILL
SPRING AIR
BEDDING

Community
Calendar
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local School Board, special meeting; 7 p.m., Tuppers Plains school,
to discuss all-day everyday kindergarten, personnel, building project
payroll, change orders.

Front WD, 4 cyl, "JC, auto,
tires, bucket seata, rear W. Defog WAS $13,4115
VB, auto, A/C, PS, PB,
tires, white walls WAS $28,448
4 cyl, auto, PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt, f11Uia41, AM!FM 11111110
WAS$11;495

1

II SftCK
RECLINER SOFA

Front WD, 6 cyl, auto, PS, r-D.r-vv.
tlrea, bucMt seats, re~r w. Defog WAS $13,4115

VB, A/C, auto, PS, PB,
seats, ·rear W. defog WAS $8,4115

Earth tones
Front WD, 4 cyl, A/C. auto,
WAS$5,495

TUPPER,S PLAINS - VFW
Post 90S3, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.;
· refreshments, 6:30p.m.

4

POMEROY -/1.A
AI-Anon,
Thursday, 7 p.m ..at lills:cred Heart
Church, Pomeroy. .

Matchlna OttoMan
ONLY

Not

$49995

4 cyl, auto, PS, PB, tilt, cruise, AM!FM stereo,
WAS$3,495
4 wo, 6 cyl, A/C, auto,
lights WAS $18,485

ACTION LANE
QUEEN SLEEPER

radial tires, short wheel base, fog

GREEN, iEIGE &amp; PUID
Nol

·.

ONLY

$998.95

$

95

SMITH BROTHERS

SOFAS

$99
DAIKMAUVE
95

$99

DARK PINE FINISH

$

ers

·15 cu. n. REFRIGERATOR
WHnE

.j

4 WO, 4 cyl,

sta~

trans,

WAS 113.4811

99

POMEROY - Mt. Union Baptist Church, revival through Sunday,
6:30 p.m. each . evening . Rev.
·Charles Swiger, evangelist.

POMEROY - Child Conserva·
tion League, family picnic, Sunday,
I p,m. home of Helen and Harold
Bla&lt;!kston. Take covered dish, drinks
am) table service.

Front WO, 6 cyl, A/C, auto,
WAS

95
$
. SELECTION liD • COFFEE
fAIL.S ••• UP 10 75" OFF
SELECTION OF GOOD USED
FURNITURE:
)

ectlonals • Recliners • D)nettes
Sofas • Loveseats
All Items $ubject to Prior Sale

. FREE DELt/ERV • FREE SET-UP
•

~·

'

"' .

~~

6 cyl, A/C, auto stereo
WAS$4,495

FLOUL PRINT .
TWIN SLEEPPER

SUNDAY
RACINE -John and Clara Sell·
reunion, I :30 p.m. Sunday, Star
Mill Park, Racine. Take coyered
dish and own table service. Family
and friends welcome. '

.. .

Nedeel

guidance. The toll·free number is 1You're so sexy!
-- Cnstn.m lda~o Falls, Idaho
800-221-2681 (www.fsanet.org).
Dinner is ready.
. Dear Cnsta: I II bet~~ least four •
Have you considered getting
1 hate shopping.
p1eces of your adv1ce Will work for
tough with lhe father of those kids
and demanding child support? You
need help, and he should be willing
.to give it. Meanwhile, bless you,
dear woman. Just know thl\t you are
the solid anchor for that family, and
QuaJi.ty Service Starts Right Here
one day, the children will" realize it
and thank you.
Dear Ann Landers: I enjoyed
the advice 10 young husbands on
how to keep Jheir wives happy with
only " 15 lillie words" such as "I
love you" or "Lei's em out. "
· I, too, have been married for .
quite a few years (nearly 30) and ~~~~~~~~~~~~;.~;~;;~~~~~~~~~
wou ld like 10 offer the following 15 ,,·
words to young wives who want to
6 Cyt,
make their husbands happy. (II has 1 ::.!W~'A~!~~~~--~

Racine Library announces audio books available for patrons

CHESTER
Evangelist
Michael Vance, Columbus, to speak
at Harvest Outreach Ministries on
Riebel Road, Chester, Saturday, 7
p.m., and Sunday 6 p.m.

.Nodeel

moved back in with us. We had a
long talk, and she agreed to behave
he_rself and h~lp out. I really thought
thmgs would be different, but they
are worse than· ever. She does very
little around the house, never offers
to fix a meal or clean up after one,
and spends most of her time running
up our telephone bill.
Josie ha~ a part-time job and gets
no child su ppon from her e~-hus-.
band. If it wercn 't for my grandchildren, she· wouldn 't be in.this house
for another five minutes.. I am about
lo lose my mind. What can I do? •.
Kentucky Mom
Dear Kentucky Mom: This is a
Iough call, but I feel that for the sake
of your grandchildren, you cannot
throw their mother out. She needs
counseling, and you should insist on
: .

ancD.f&gt;!..

Dresser/Hutch/Mirror

(614) 446-3672
.

'

Ann
· landers

CHESTER - Meigs County
Fish and Game Association, annual
fishing derby for children, Saturday,
8 a.m . at the club house in Chester.
Mee1ing for members in evening .
Take covered dish.

GallipoU.

CaR ToU Free 1-800-521-0084

Page7

'

GrandmC?..t'l~rmt~ s~r.~.f;t~,!,!D.9 . !£,,~.~Am!~~~.~~:s

·sATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Camp, Modern Woodmen, cookout'
~atunlay, 7 p.m. at the hall. Fathers
to be recognized. Hamburgers, hot
. d,ogs, buns, condiments and dessert
furnished. Friends of members welcome.

• OLDSMOBILE
c
Ea11~m A..,e.-

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday,June11,1998

FRIDAY
LONG BOITOM - Faith Full
Gospel Chun:h,. hymn sing, 7 p.m.
David and Debbie .Dailey. Fellowship hour to follow.

On.Tuesday, June 2, ·1998, a Severe Hail Storm hit Gallipolis;
Ohio- Over 100 New &amp; Used Cars &amp; Trucks were afQted!
These vehicles will be sold Without repairs- ~e will pass the
cost of damage plus any Factory Incentives to you!
New·&amp; Used Vehicle Damage Liqui_dation Sale Now At.• ~
. Ge'\.e Johnson Chevrolet-Oids
"Your Hometown Dealer"
•

By The Bend

Reds, ·Indians l·ose; McGwire belts 30th

-Lu&amp;..
Atl~nta

Thursday, June 11, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio '

~

.......••
.•

�..
P.-oe 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

....

..
Thursct.y, June 11, 1998

Don Tate Motors Eseaped the
recent stormsSo we experienced no
Ball or Storm DBDIBJ.Cel

y Bob Hoeflich

'

:ReaiiOfl~

..
l think there arc some words in our vocabulary which seem

or lwo also.

Song sheets will he available in case you've forgoucn a
few of lhe words I:Com the golden oldies lo he sung. April
Showers. Carulina in the Morning, I'm Looking,O••cr a Four
Leaf Clover, Bye. Bye Blackbird, Till We Meet Again and
Hello, My Bat&gt;y nrc jusl ·some of lhc numbers mcluded.
Hope 10 sec you there. Dress· is casual and lhe singing is
loud.

"
'

Meigs Memories is the !heme for this Sunday 's observance
of Heritage Sunday which s1ar1s at 12:30 p.m., and runs lo S
p.m.
· Older resideniS from across the county have been invited 10
the museum Sunday and will be interviewed and video taped
as they recall experiences from lheir early days in Meigs
County and there will be a display of memorabilia from Meigs
Counlians. The idea of lhe interviews is again lo preserve the
counl(s hisldry lhroul!h the recollections of residents from all
of the townships in Ihe county.
The inlerviews will be done in a seclion of lhe museum
away from lhe sing along so lhal one won'l interfere with lhe
other. Those being interviewed will rel~le family traditions.
education details and the schools attended, historical events,
information on churches, businesses and their neighbors over
the years as well as their own personal experiences while living in the county.
· .
Heritage Sunday is singed by the .Meigs Coun•y Historical
Society and refreshments will be served.

1998 CHEV CAVALIER

TRECIA KIMES·BROWN
EARNS LAW DEGREE • Trecla Klmes-Brown of Cuyahoga
Fills, daughter of Mr• .and Mra.
Dennie Klmea of Hartford, W. Va.
graduated froin The University
of Akron, School of Law, on May
.17. She will a it for tha Oh lo Bar
Examination at the and qf July.
While In law school, Tracla
·aerved as a law clerk for the
Department of Ju1tlce, United
States Attorney's Office, Wheel·
lng, W. Va.; and In the law
offices of J. Randall Nye, L.P.A.,
In Hudson, and Little, Sheets,
and Warner of Pomeroy.
Trecia · received the Wh~'s
Who A,mong American Law Stu·
dents Award In both 1997 . and
1998. She also received the
GALl Excellence for the Future
Award for excellence In the
study of Probate ·Practice and
the Anderson Publishing Com·
pany Scholesllc Achievement
Book award •for excelling In the
study of probate practice.
Before attending law school,
Trecla graduated magna cum
laude from Wheeling Jesuit Unl·
varsity in 1995.
An open houaa reception to
celebrate her accomplishments
will be held on August 29 ·in
Hartford.

•Qnharn.

Top. stlllknts in language arts
wen: Caleb Davis,Scoll Kennedy,

'

a

Raila

·,

li!!J

: Joe N. Sayre .

Ram Air-Black In Stock and
R~ for H/lwry

• Vinyl Siding •.Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

. Commercial a Rnldentlill

~~no.

Free E.tlmates

· ll.'!l

Owner: John Dean

1997 PONTIAC·
GUNDAMCOUPE

•

Call 740·843

Ma J

Custom Homes
Roofing

$

"
...
. ..
JEff,·WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

1998 Martin Street

(No Sunday Calls)

Joe Wilson

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction &amp; Remodeling

Bel'llldln-nce.

~

.....;;;;_

1995 CHEVY TAHOE 1- , 4 Dr,4x4,11der, va,JO,ooo • - - - - - - · .&amp;ool''"
5
1994 BUICK CENTURY 4 Dr, ~~to, air, PW, Pl.
$990
512,400
1994 BUICK LESABRE LIMITED Y6,11der,
510,500
1995 CHRYSLER CONCORD Y6, 1110, a1r, PW, PI,.IIIIW
1995 CHEVY C1500 PICKUP 1WI·2WD; 111o, a1r, va. 37,000 • · · · - - " - · 514,600

cnlte--------

·. · ·

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
5121111n

Custom Engineering

;st.~. 248
.'

..

~OBERJ..IJl.LJ.
. ONRRUCJION
:.New Ho'mes
•.G arages
~.Complete

BRmNEY NOELLE LEACH

BIRTH ANNOUNCED • Rogar r-=::;:~:::;::;==:r=:::;::=::==:r---------------- ~
and Mary Leach of Cheahlre
Public Notice
Public Notice
··
announce the birth of a daugh·
·tar, Brittney Noelle, April 17, at Bherlfi'•S.IeoiR•IEat.le July 11,1• 81 10:00 a.m.
the Holzer Medical Canter, Gal·
1'118 Staa ot Ohio, lhlga
Df Hid .dliy, 11M following
Darby Gilmore. Caitlin· Swanz.
County
AMIIEatatt, to-Wit
Thal.eo1Mr llor1pge
Sltu8ltclln 11M liftltOW""IMI.t"llllllp
Amy Barr. Jenni!Cr Smith. BIO(&gt;k~ llpolls.
Brittney . w11 21 inches long
Campeny
otllclplo, Coua1y o1 lllelga
O'Biyun1, Christopher VanRcelh.
weighed.11ven pounda, five
va.
and 11t111 o1 Olllo:
J
and Granl Armold: in malh. Cassie and
ounce.s . Maternal grandparents
David B. S.um et al.
Being In thl VIII... ot
Smith, Scotl Kcnne~y. Morgan
In .,.!:;:!"C:.~ Ordar ~'::~..:'L.!:'C.~
Kennedy. Kirk Lcgar. Brandon Pear- ara Pearl end Linda Edwarda,
Long
Bottom,
and
paternal
ofS.Je
1M ·~ ••Hihlcl No. 11 • .,_an IMIINI
son, Derek Brickles. Travis Butcher. grandparent• ere Donald and octlon,tInWIU
ollar lor Ale 81 plat of .. ld v ......
Christopher VanReclh. an~ Granl Dorothy Le1ch of Cheahira.
at the front Excaptlng from LDt No. 11
Arnold: in science an~ heallh. Andy Maternal graat""randparenta are
of 11M courthou• In thot = ron
t conv.r;..:
Garnes, Christopher VanReclh , Blanche and "t ha late p aer1 :::::l~~Oh~l~o' ln.11M •bove C·C·
_ ..
of "-•
. · · ·· htYe,r .....e ..rtsl
Grant Arnold. and April Coppkk: in "Penny" Edwarda, Middleport, namad
on :•1 ~:: by ciMcl r~cordad In Vol..... ; • • ~ hllr Se•tl•el ·
social studies. Shauna Clark. and Cora Folmer and the .late :~l.C: a.m., the
';;".~: R::!;.N~alga
Christopher VanReelh. and Grant George Folmer. Plternal gl'llat· daacrlbad real
Thl gran1or hlreln lurthor
Arnold .
grandparents are the late oltuote In the County
'grants unto the Gr•nt••
Cili7.cnship awards were present· Joaep· h and Margaret Leach, llelgo and 11111 of Ohio, and thllr ...._11M right
In' tho VIllage of to UN ....., from a wlllr
ed lo Brctl Curtis, Krislcn Eblin, and John Valth, 1nd the late and
lllddlop,..tq.wlt:
,...lanalolaciJocontlaLol
Jeremy Ash, Gabriel Williams, Ash· Dorothy Veith of Cheshire.
lltuolld In tho Vllloge of No. 15, naw or tormarty
CALL OUI OffiCI AT
Icy Mayes, J.T. Evans. Renee Col·
lllddloport, County of OWMd by IWold D. Q,.hMn
llelga, IIIII of Ohio, and .and J1111t K. Q,.hllm, and
burn, Frank Slewart, Amanda Smith,
bounded and de-Ibid' •• the aald Grant- ahall
Nathan McClure, Travis Butcher.
loll-, to *It:
hno lhl o•olullvl right to
Briuani. Dailey. Sheena Ash, and
Being
lilly
(501.
,
...
ott
of
un the well until 1 publla
I Cable's "first channel for kids."
Megan Garnes.
the
louthaoot
port
of
Lot
....,
supply lo provided, In
I N....,.__ouneclilo 1977 uNicl
Number Two (21 adJoining occordanco with the
F/icb. a local children"• show in
tiNt property olllllr. llrownell provlalone of the deed
. SNOWVILLE
Columbus, Ohio.
and running !lack to the reoordod In Volume 247,
RECREATION &amp; GUN
lance lwo hunclrod al•ty Poge 443, of tha llelga
(210) !HI.
·
County DHd R-.:onla. 1'118
CU:JB IS HOLDING IT'S
AddroiS oflhl Property: GraptHa aliall 1110 hawe
711 B.-11 AWIIUI
the right of lngreae and
1ST SHOOTING
AVAI~BLE
lllddlopart, Ohio 41710
' .. r..a to enter upon thl
MATCH ON SATURDAY,
• S.ld Prem... Locllted wall aHe preml~a lor 11M
Gallia-Maigs Communily Aclion is curranlly accepting· applicalions for
at 7Q Brownell A - , purpoM of laying, ....,.,.
JUNE 13 AT 6:00P.M.
llldclloport, Ohio 411710.
and IHinllllnl• Mid Wlllr
FREE Aviallon Training Program for youth. Parlicipants in the program
S.ld Proml- Appralaod Uno to the praml101'
AT SNOWVILLE, OH.
will receive !raining in a variely of aviation skills Including naVigation,
81 11,000.00 and cannot be dacrlbld hiN!n.
.- .
Take St. At. 681
aold tor leN IIHin two-lhlrda
LHoted 81 31400 11. RL
flight planning, aircraft lnspacllon, mainlenanca, and wea'lher
ollhll
-nt.
·
.
114,
l'omll
oy,
OH
41711.
loracasling. Partlclpanls who successfully complete the !raining will
&amp; follow signs.
Terme ol S.le: cannot be
laid property hila bHn
have lhe opportunily to fty in aircraft from a local airport.
Welcome.
101c1 tor .... thin lwO-Ihlrda appralaod 11 •:II,AIOO.OO IIIII
91 tiNt eppralaod value. T111 cannot aall lor. • - thin
The aviation training will be conducled al a lacilily near Alhans with
pa~ (10'!to) deposit day lwO-thlrdli ol appraiH"*IL
WAYNE'S PLACE
lransportation provided from Gallipc~lis -and Pomeroy The.Jraining will
of ule, beltnoe due In 311 Thla apf.ralaal Ia baaed
Presents
dayl.
.
.
'
upon
I
V
·
lnlpiDUOII
ol
begin June 22 and end July 31 wHh class held each altarnoon Monday
KriN
D.
l'etly 11111 111r1 ol tiNt pmnlaaa lo
"LIVE
BAND" .
lhrough Friday.
. ,
100 WMtlt. Clair ·Whtoh - - Wla retcllty
SOUTHERN ACCENT
a-111 l'loor IVIIIIble. Thl appi'IIIHra
Youth ega 14·21 lntere.stad In participating can obtain addllional
CII..IM!d, 011 44113 aoaume no raoponalbllll)'
Sal. Nigh! Only
JalnH II. 5oulab!r lor, and give no Wl,ght to,
Information and an application by ceiling 740·448-1018 exl. 98. A 30
Drive Safe!
lhlrtfl unknown legal · mattara,
minule meeting lor interested youth and their parents, which will Include
(I) 11' 11, 213 to
lncludtng, but nat lllillllcl to,
a brief video presen~tion, will be held allhe following locations;
- l t d or latent ciiiUIJ,
3LOTS FOR SALE
'
Public Notice
111nd/or the praunoa of
.GMCAAoflice 859ThirdAvenue. Gallipolis 9AM Thurs., June 11
hllrmlul or lolllo ohiiiiiDIII, .
OR TRADE FOR
IHI!III,.I IALI
poltidante, ........
GMCMollice 33101 Hiland Rd. Pomeroy 1 PM Thurs., June 11
SOMETHING LIVABLE.
USDA Rural DIIVIIoprnent
Term1 of Salt: TM
. '' '
va. The 11t11a ol Kllhlrtne Pe..- (10'!to) day ol IIIII,
'
. 4 COLE STREET
w. .......
Applicanll mull be age 14-21, residents of Gallia or Meigs Counlles,
belanoe upon dlllvarJ of
992·5192
11•1118 County Common
and meet JTPA guldel~. Youlh who complete lha aviallon training wiN
.
" ' - CaH No.17.CV·121.
; r
be given prlorlly consideration tor available temporary employmem In
In pu,.,.nDI of ., order
'lhlrllf ol ...... County,
'
iaMIMI flam CooMMI " ' Augull.
OhiO
CoUJf, within •ncl lor the
FRI. &amp; SAT., JUNE 12, 13
II ptJanD.IIItae,
County of llhlp, 1tata of
•na ..,
Glllll MIIJII Community Action Aglncy
Anlique lurn~ure, atone jars, lqoll,
Ohio, on thlllh day olllay. 1ew..t .................
•
clolhing, girls 6-12, man's,
8010 North ltallltota 7
t•, IIIKI to me dlrnlld, I .
Ohto414G1
women's, all
Chnhlie, Ohio 45820-0272
will ollw lor . . . . I'Wito
22
Point
Lane, Uncoln HIH,
•ullllanlntlle ...... c-tty
Courlhoulle, tuancl .....,
iEqull Opportunity Employw
Pon!lnly, Ohio an l'rldly,

.

985-4473
7/221lfn
Public Notice

Out lor ,_l*iounl)

·

"Need repolr

on ony

,._

•W.IIhera
~
• Rlngea
S/""
• Rtfrlglriloll 1 ~
• Dryer
• Hot Wiler Heeter •
·F-a
• DllhMahara
C.ll Ken Young

~~.!.. ~ •

I.IIIDCIPI
DDIIII

.

992·5583

Pi'ofesslonai
Floor lnstallatton
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or
740-698-7231

I. L•.HOLLON
·.TRUCKING

·Rcsrdenttal ,lrr
r.onrllttonnnJ
•Auto atr CfHH11 I HHllnQ

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

·Hea t pump
· l nstalla t ton &amp; scrvrcc
SF) sr'r,·•rr :;1li

Agricultural Ume,
· Umeatone · ·Gravel
Dirt • Sand .

.'

Don SrlllOl

Peach Fork Rd
Pomeroy. OH ~5769

3781~

98~~

992-2735

·-

Chester, Ohio

1111/Wttn

A'JN OU tKEf11E tHS

lflnel 1·900·285·thef Ext.5183,
hlqWtwww........._o.oom/d&amp;'
1248884da.htm. SU9/Iolln. 18 •
Sorv·U819-845-IM3ol . .
30 An!IOUncetnen!l
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Be Enlllltd To Receive Your Dla·
betic Supplltl At l'lo Colt To

. . · .' IUUOIN IOIRD

,, ·*7" c..••• lach wHJctl•r•
., •t:t·cfl••• .lnch Sutlq
JJ

You. For More l!"tormalion 1 -~-

871-6581 .

TRIVIA

•o

•Come try one o1 aur
many IIIW acenta

..

....... ...._ ...........

~

•

'

·.

.. .

.

'

sizes.

•

Plaint
Fire Department
1at Annual Fair
TU61day, Jul'!• 9Sunday, June 14,

•Bring In ro11r odde A
andli 1111c1 we'll refill

ttilm
•NIW spring pottery

()peri TuH.·Frl. 1o-e

CIOHCI $un. a Mon.
· . SII.1CH
St. At. 124,
lllnarsvllle, OH

1998
Tupper• Plains Fire
Dapartment Grounda
C1m1val. Rldea
· (a..t 0 ride I), gamn,
conCIIIIOnl.
(Dilly: From 12 Noon
tot PM

110

Giveaway

oVerbrook Center Js ·currently
accepting.appllc;atlons for Director of
Social Servlces;r The Ideal can(lldate
will have a BSW. and be licensed. We
offer a competitive salary and .bfneflt
package. .Send your resume to
Administrator, Overbroqk Center, 333
Page Strtet, Middleport, Ohio 45769•
No hone calla lease. EOE
·

Homoi740-31!7-G187.

fl.

LIIDI•s

Mil

e Pupplts, 6 Weeks Old, Part
Australian ·Shepherd. To Good

Homo, 740-+11•0382:

arno. old· malo Gorman ShaP.flar&lt;l,

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave massage.
· · Altar 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180
Free Eslirnates

mlxtd, to good home. round at

Raclna Lodls. 304-773-5872.

Abendoned .&amp;-8wk okf male kit·
ten, using liter pan. 304·675·

3332.
Airedale &amp; Jack Russell Te~rler

mixed """""'· 740-992·711811.

W•ks Old.

Haired,
Vtty ...,..._, 740-258-Si79.
Fr.. To Good Homo: I WMk Old
Puppfoo, eoaglt /Bordto Colllt
MI-.!, 1o1Siroll &amp; Wormed, 7(0.

II 'S ·
I

BICKBDEan
DDIII .I IRIICI
.•Septic $ysJems
·•Basements
•Excavating
CALL

1·740·949·2015

Movtng: Frt, Sat, i-5, Rain /Shine,
Nit* Clothing, Household lte~s.
Furnnure. Misc. 1 Mile From Rio

Granda, St. Rt. 554. •

TueSday June 9th Thru S,at. June

13th, 8 112 Milas North On 180,

Furniture, Carpel Squares,
Clothes, Longberger Baskets,

· -And Mile. Hems.

Pomeroy,
· Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Bacheloro 'Dogrea prolerred. Tl)o

successful candidate will need
strong administrative, manage·
ment, &amp; clinical skills. Please
submit a. resume or appliCation to
Holzer Senior Care Cerit~r. 380
Colonial Or. Bidwell, OH ol5614
"nn: Andrea Ctina WMiiams.

Cline Williams . .

DRIVERS
IIOAE WORK THAN WE CAN
HANDLE I
Wall Established Transportation
Co. Seeks Experienced Tractor
Trailer. Drivers To Make Deliver·
tea In Tha ColumbUs, Clnclnnall,

And Dayton Area. RELOCATION
PAIDI Make
$32.000.00 A~nually With No
OTR Expanses. Bonuna Can
Add An Addillonal $2,000.000 To
EXPENSES

• Exc::eHent Heahh Insurance

Doodllnt: 1:OOpm lilt
day berore the ad 11 to run,
Sunday l Monday oalllon·
Advl-.

1:OOprn Frtdty.

• Co. Paid ·ute And Oi&amp;abltltv In·
surance
..

• Paid Holidays And Vacations

• 401{k) Ralirement With Co.

Matcll

.

• Co. Paid Unil&gt;rms

Big family yard sale, across from
EbofS Cllgo on 51811 Rou1e '24,
Racine. man's. jeans. women 's &amp;
children's clothing, household
_Items, toys. collectible dolls, much
misc., new Items on Saturday &amp;

Monday, (Lmlo Ty~as slide. kitchen, waaher, dryer), June 12th,
131!1, &amp; 15111, 9-5, 700.9(9-2509.

Garsgei sale, 1 mila on Rl . 143,
Lee Aoad, Friday &amp; Saturdav.
June 12- 13, first house Past

cllurch In Chtatar, Rt. 248, 1ots o1

June 12th, 8·4. 49884 Portland
Rd., "*l!tiooaa on loft.
Throo larnlly, Friday &amp; Sa!urday,
an sizes good clothing , .hand
made quilt lops and lots. o misc.
Batty sayre residence a'eross
trom Radne Bap11sl Church. Rain

canr:ols.

Long &amp; Shofl

3117-oQ!I.

.Hay· lor the mowing. 740·H2·
11!110.
8 Wttkl Old, Bftck
.Kltltno:
Ma~. Yellow Malo, Gray flmalo,
IMuMk:olrod falllllt. Liller ltllntd,
;:.7.0=~·=·8:.:3~78=7.:...---------1Mother Cat &amp; a Kftttnt, Whitt
' Wl1h Bluo Eyat. l'lo Tall, 1-..
3732.
'·

For More lnlo Call M·F, 9·5, 1·

Easy Worlcl Excellefll Pay! AI·
semble Products At Home. Call
Toll Free 1a800·467·5566 Ext.

12170.

.

Excellent opportunity ro join the
long term health care Held. Seek·
lng LPN'&amp; .tor rotating shifts. lnler~
mediate care !acUity. West Vlrgl·
nla license required. Point
Pleasant Nursing &amp; Renablllla·
tiOn Center, Slate Route 82, Route ·, ,. Box 326 , Point Pleasant,
WV 25550 (a Genesis Eldorcart
~!lily). EOE.
Experienced Dental Aaslslant

loch

dental Of·

Ilea In Pt. Pltiasant. We arB look· .
lng lor a team player that is ener·
getic aM people oriented .
Please sand resume 10 P.O. Box

29. Pt. Pteasanr, WV 2555(!.

Pt. Plealant •
&amp; Vicinity
Inside &amp; out moving sale , rain/
Shk'le, 2205 N.. Main St Frl &amp; Sat

I1malo, 7(0.388-9147.

,
1
1

;
,
1

'
'
:
,
1

Nursing, And Should Hava One :
Yu.r Of Prlctlcal Experlence. Ex· ·'
perlence In Home Haallh 11 Prea •

1o"ed. Please Apply In Pllrscn Or •
Send Resume To: Oak Hill Com· ,
munlty Medical Center, Anenrlon: ,
Brenda McKenzie , 3SO Charlonl ,
A~nue. 08111 Hill, Oh~ 4,58,

;
1

•
:
,
•

'

ParHime position ror Patl•nt
Services Ass istant tor family
planning Sfrvicaa based in Galli·
polis . OhiO\· Medical office experience required . Flaa; ible schedule
to include ewtning hours and 5at·
urday mornings as needed . Ra·
sponsible pMson who Is sensitive
to birth control and reproduc1111a
health needs ol. clients. Must be
organized , accurate with t(gurea
and documentation. Tra'llel to
Meigs county weetcly : ot~r lites
as needed . Must be Willing to
work as parf of a team . Send resume and three employment ratarences to Planned Pare11thood
of Southeast Ohio, 396 Richland
~~$p Athens , Phi0 45701 .

:
.
•

·

•
·
~

•
:
:
1

.
·
;
·
:

1

Part· Time· Position For Patient ·
Services Assistant For Family
Planning ServiCe&amp; Baseclln Galli· 1

I

polls, Ohio. Medical Office Experionce Required. Fltxlll~ Schtdule

·

I

To Include Evening Hourf And
Saturday Mornings As Needed.
Raspansible Person Who Is Sensltlve To Blrlh Control And Re·
produC:Uve Health Needs Of Cli·
ent&amp;. Must Be Organized. Accurata With Figures And Oocumtn·
tatlon. Travel To Meigs County
Weeklv; Other Sites As Needed.
Must Be Willing To Work As Part
Of A Team. Sand Reaume AnQ
Three Emptovment References To
Plannitd Parenthood Of South·
east Ohio, 396 Richland Avenue,
~llrens. Ohio45701 . EOE /ESP. .

1
!

~

I
1

!
j

t

;

;
1
1

'

:

POSTAL J08S JO $tL31 MR.
:
Inc. Benefit1. No Experience. For t
App . And Exam Info.• Call ·1·800· !

813·3585. Ext 6474, 8 A.M. ·9 :

j

P.M., 7 Days lt1s.lnc.

i·

ProgreSsive Long aTerm Care
Facilily Specializing In Skilled •
And Aehab Services Has Re warding Positions Open For ,

l

Friendly, Outgoing And Dedicata&lt;l . ! .
RN's (PI~·Time). Pfoaao Apply In

Cantar, 311 Buck ridge Road.. !lido~

• .. ~

wetl! OH 4561•.
RN't, LPN't, CNA'a

PRN work, lop pay,

ChOOse whop

&amp; where you work. Capital Nurl( ::

tng Agency. 1-800-5~.
Siding applicaton &amp; carpenter
helpers. Must have transport•; ..:

liOn. 740-992·8815 bo-n 10om I

&amp; Spm.

I

Someone To Cut Hay And Brush •

HogPasluntCall740~24.

1

1

'~

The Southern Local School Dis·

trtct has lhl lo1lowlng certilied po- ·' :
slllona l"llllble tor the 1998a99 ,.
school year to all applicants wllh
the appropriate tertlfk:atlon and' ' '

background chock: 9·12 Compre-. .,

henalv• Social studies· teacher ; .
and AdmlnlstraUve Assistant to •
hand.. Special Education and fi.•·"·'·

'"' Programa.
.

I

.

•!

Please send Inquires to James· t.
Lawrence. S.rtntandant, South-: 1 ~·
orn Local SchoolS, P. 0 . a... 176,1 ~
Racine, Ohio 45771 or call (740) •
949·2669 Sl50 II an Equal ap., "~ 1.

ponunlty Elrjlloyar.

_

80

Transporiat1o11 aoeclallst needed· / J
.Jor 1oo bod sktlttd nurstng taCilioy. 1,
Hours vary lrom week to week.

Riclc Peerson Auc:tlon Companv.
full time auctioneer, corttplete
auction
service . Lic.nsad

dependent on appolnlmants- : 1,
made for realdentt . Must have
good driving record, txcellent ret·_ ,
arences, prolanlonal and enJov ' ·
wortdng with 11'18 ni!hab candidate.
For mOre inlormatlon contact , ,.
Rocksprings Rehabllltaiion Ctn·: '
ter, 36759 Rocksprings Ad ., Po.. 1 ' ~

Auction
and Fl._ Market
Mowing and other pdd )ol&gt;s, 740·
992·2807.

t66.01ilo &amp; Woat Virginia, 304·
n:t-5785 Or 3[)(-773-5447.

meroy, . Ohio 45768 . 740·992• ; .
~==~.E~OE~------------'' .,

Wademever's Auction Seryice ,

Waitress wanted, LaCantina.. ..;
Mexican Restaurant, Gallipolis ·•

Cll!llpolls. Ohio 7ol0-379·2720. .
90 Wanted to Buy

Forry, WV. 304·675·7115 ask lor ·•

Jeanne or Tammy.

.:·

, /'

WILDLIFE JOIS TO 121.80 lilA. '

Aboolute TOll DoMar: All U.S. Si1·

'

Inc. Benefltl . Game Ward•ns ,
security, Malntaoact, Park Rang- . I
ers. No Exp. Needed. For App . ..

"lr And Gold Coins, Proofaets.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelrv. Gotd
Rings, Pre·1930 U.S. Currencv.

And ham lnlo Call 1·800·8 P'

·~

3585, Ext. 6475. 8 A.M. .. 9 P.M., 7, ~ ,
Days fds. inc
. ~~~

Ant iques, top prlctl paid, Rtvarlne Antique&amp;, Pomerov. Ohio,
Ruas Moore owner, 740· 992·

120

2526.

HaVe opening for 2 'dulls in
group home, Oarat Pri'f,te Ctre · I
Home, Syracuse, 740·992·3324 ~ ;4

Antlquta &amp; c~an Ulld turnuurt,
·wm buy one piece or complete
household, Osby Marlin, · 7.t0·

912478. ,

.

Cltln Llll Model Cars

Or

• .29c FWM!Io

Ct\lne.. Ktnpo l&lt;erste, private
•
11110ns &amp; tplrrlng ciiiStl, Jay :)

em·- .GatllpOIII.

o $12.!50 FW Hour
• un-.g &amp; llrop Pty

·-Ditpolch

J

&amp; D Auto Paris. Buying
wrecked Or •ltveg•d vehicles.

wanted to Buy

Auto'o any

Jun~
~ . 7-..11883

·:•
,, ~ ··

..-rT..-oRTATION

Optilll1gs For OTR Drlvtrl,

Trucks. 1990 Mod.ota Dr Ntwtr,
Sml1h Buldl Pontiac. 1900 Eaot·

30t-n3-S033.

Shuatlons ·
Wanted

7,00.::::;:992:::;·502::::;3:;..----..,-- ·'
•
.170
Mlacelhtnaous
•l

·-• Homo IVooldy

~

.01K ·VIallon, ~ Pty

C.H 600·871·0880 Mon ·Frl 8:00
Pupplta: 3 Month Part laagtt Wanttd 10 buy- 200·250 gallon A.M. To 500 P.M.
,740-3117-70117 A11tr8:00. ·
-haiA!ng tank, 700.742-28S2. ·
•
'Seven coonhound ml• puppltl,
:740-7oll!·M.
4 Puppltt, mixed 1 malt, 3 It·
1

'

'
:

Person AI Scenic Hills NurslnO\

aoo-837·3637 Ext. a.

needed lor a high

'

1192·8472.EOE.

That Income . COL Class A At·
quired. We Offer:

All Yard Salea Mual Be Paid In

•
'
:
•

Overbrook Cente r. 333 PiQe
Street, Middleport , Ohio has full
time and part lime STNA .POII·
tlons avallabtl lo r all shifts, an ~
yona interested plene atop by
and fill out an application. 7o40·

rector of Nursing. E•cellent work·
lng envlronmenc . Qualifications
Include an Ohio RN license,

c ...rc~~. Rt.141 .

1

EOE

has an opening lOr Dl·

Floor Model RCA T.V. Noedt Lit·
700.379-2-162.
Sltrtlng, Etc. AcquisitiOns Jewelry
Frtt klltano to 1 good homo 7.0· . M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
448·3312.
· Gatllpolil, 7olil-448-2842.
Ill Work,

Free Kittens. L11ter Trained, 7

'I

EOEEmpt-.
Avon . $8 ·$20 /Hr. No Door To
Door. "Bonuaas• 1·800·298.0139

9am·?

3 Year Old Ratt Terrier Spade,
Female, VerY Loving, To Good

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP AND MORE

~:".:. 1898, Saturday. 9 4M

things.

cial S'omaone Nowll 24 Hr. Hoa

Tuppe~•

ftexlblt . Experlanc.e in providing
direct care or worldng with oldtf
adults a plus. Will train . State
tested · nursing asslatanfl en·
couraged to a·pply. Appllcadona
aro avallabla at the Meigs County
Multipurpose .Senior Center, Mul· ·
barry Heights, Pomeroy, Ott An

To 5 P.M. Cen1enarv Methodist

Llctnll. :

With Tho Ohio State Board 01 '

AM
I
Has An
Opening For Director
Nursing.
Excellent Working Envlronmen,.
Qualifications Include An Ohio
Friday June 12th, &amp; Saturday RN license, Bachelors Dtgrea
June · Uth , State Route 7
Prelarred. The Successful Can Cheshire, At The l'raH~ Light.
didate Will Need Strong Admlnls·
uallve , Management &amp; Clinical
Skills. Please Submit A Resume
Or Application To Holzer Santor
Old School Oeaka, Toys, Bicy·
cles , Womens And Chlldrens , Care Center, 380 Colonial Drive.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614 AHn: Andrea

June 12·13.

005
Perlonlll
A"anllon Singles! Find Your Spe-

YOUTH AVIATION CLASS

Applications iri being accepted
· for ln~Home Caregivers. Appllc~
anta ahould have a high schOol
diploma or GED, rellabte transpor·

Gigantic Yard Sale: Baby llem&amp;,
Babv· Clothes, And Birth To 1
Years 01 Age, .:roys, Glassware,
And Tupperware, It Rain Cancels,

814/TFN

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

1-7 40-7 42-2842

'

• Trim
·StumP
ortndlng .

;

Two Part· Time Reglsterad Nurse
Positions Open (n The Home
Health Department AI Oalc HIH
Community Medical Center.
Hours Will vary, Including On
Call Hours, And Will Asa lst Wn·
kend Coverage . Tht Qualified
Candtdate&amp; Will Provide Nursing
Care Directly To Patients Of All
Age&amp; AI Their Aesidencaa . Each
Candidate Must Be A Gr,aduate
From An Accredited SchOol Of
Nuraln·g, Currently Rtglsttrtd

SNne.

·TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

t:;ARPET
PLUS

"'IIXERII•

1, Friday, Saturdav. 9·5, .Rain Or

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radllltors
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
·welding Supplies • Steel· Sales·
Stick ~ Tlg • Aluminum Welding

·SERV ICES

~

Fn. &amp; Sat. June 12, 13 8:30 ·5:00
7 mites paa&amp; Hollers N on 1-60 at
Porter. lots fishing gear- books,
ladles golf clubs. clothe&amp; leans .&amp;

To? Lots Goodies For E"'ryonel

RADIATOR REPAIR

·INSTA L LAT ION
DO N NITZ

...-.?" '

. (740)

~

•SALF S

-l'lwApplance'Mcm

Computer Graphic•
Designs
All Landscaping I
Lawn Services

-•on

:!n.v

'

.

·Remodeling
:,Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE
ESTIMATEES
.

(Cui

·10:00 o.m. Salunloy.

RN

18M,"""""· Ohio 45701 .
OU HILL COIIIIUNITY
MEDICAL CENTER
JOBPOflnNO

•LADIES&lt;
"DANCERS&lt;

ce~llled)

Ohio

Bachelors Oegrtt Preferred. The
Successful Cani:tldale Will Naed
Strong Clinical Skills &amp; Expert ~
anca in MDS Submlsskln. Plaase
Submit A Resumt To P.O. Box

;::::2~0~Y:rs~.~
Exp~·=·=ln=s=.·=Ow=n=e~r::Ro::n;nl;e;Jon:::;;e~s;:;;:~ t,:~~~~~:~·o~n~~rP~::;

'Done right the fir1t lime·
Priced righl all the time."

"

Include

Georges Creak 112 Mile From.Rt.

JONES
na IIRIICB
OHIO 451131

Heating &amp; Cooling ·

Cheater

'•

FULLY INSURED

DON'S

985 3301

ltlo run. Sunday
Frldty. llondly tdllloo
od111on • 2:00p.m.

Foci~

lly. (!Hdlcart &amp; Medicaid Ctrtl· ,
lied). Excelltnt Working Environ· ,
mont And BtNIIta. OUIIIfleallont •

Director of NUrsing Position,
Holzer Senior ·care Canter, a 70
bed nurtlng facUlty In southeast·
ern Ohio (Uedlc:are and Medicaid

DEMLIIE: 2:00p.m.
tht city ....... tht ad

·Garage Sale: Cremeans. 1129
Sun.sel Drive, June 11th · 13th, 9

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

GAWPOUS,
(740) 367 ·0266
1· 800 ·950·3359

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Soulhtutern Ohio lhnlng

jld/~1/rep.

&amp;OIAI.

Downspouts

BlUM LUMBER

ALLY... Stlot Mull

2J12112/1fA

Gutters

Call for Quote Today

Chldron, Baby Toys, Misc.

740·742·3411

ROOFING
NEW• REPAIR

Southern Yell~ Pine Conatructlon

apreada, Drapes, Exerclzer, Play
Pen Carrier, Clothing, Adults ,

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
t=:ree Estimates

Howard L WrlteHI

· 9" Rib Pattern
."
·~$1.25 per running foot($39.40 per aq.)
::3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
· For u..s on Pole Bams, Garagea,
.Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
.

Pony Sadella , Books, Furniture ,
Misc . From River Valley High
School Turn On Llttla Kyger·

4 Family Carport Sate: Frt, 12th,
Sat 1311t 202 Kinaon Drive, Ber!-

614-992-7643

100n11 ·ua SIDIII

G1lllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

on.-;

s.rv1oo -

-POIITIONI
Optnlnga
For ~DS
l'lurata In •I

appllcanto only. 1·304·576·2966
or t-304-633-7526.
AVQN I All Area~ I . SO ir iOy
Spears, :JO.t-675-1429.
•

Road, Go 8110 01 Mite Rlg"t On
Grover Road, 111 House On Left.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

BISSELL BUILDERS, .INC.

992-6215

Local noah

3 Family Yard Sale: Rain Or tatlon, tatophone In tht homo and
Shin•. Friday &amp; Saturctav. 8· 3.
will ing 10 worlc waelllends &amp; h!lll·
AdUlt. &amp; Children Clothes, Bikes, days. Must be mollvated and

POMEROY, OH.
614~992·5479
' .

New Homes~ Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE,. ESTIMATES

Yard Sale

70

·-

Help W••lllcl

tr /Loader W11h COL Llcanaa, 1
Somo ~ Poaii&lt;Tid. Send 1
- T o: P.O. Boo 117, - · :
OH, 45&amp;14.

Must bt t8 vrs or older, 10 ra ·
qulrtd . New club In area. Serious

On Tl1e Corner.

.

warn PllftD lYEII. ii

.... $7 99

Remodeling
Plumbing

110

girt. S500(+)par week earning po·
tentlal. No axp necassarv. must
be at 1oaat 18. call814·992-6387
{anytime) or 304-675· 5955 attar
l!ptTl. Wed thru Sat.

79n.

3 Family: Friday,. Saturdav. Sun·
dav, 9·5, Kvgar Cematary Road

'•

lt6M1614

Lost· owo Dalmallona. brown malo
and black female , 554 vlcinlly,
kid's polo. Reward, call 740.387·

. 3S0° Communications

·•oom Addition•
•New Garages
·ilectrlcal &amp;.Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior a Exterior
Palnllng
~lao Concrete Work
{FREE ESTIMATES)
; V.C. YOUNG Ill

lt6M1606

992-6344.

, _,

Pomeroy, Ohio

1997 GEO PRIZM

80 Wanted to Buy
ISO Loet and Found
AdUH female Ballfft hOOI\d, Rl.~ Wanted: AuiO'I In A"'i eondiiiOn,
-Hn Pt. PINUm &amp; New Ha· Call740·388·110e2,
Or 7411-&lt;148·
.... irlendly.7-5154.
1218.
Found : On Adamovllla Road.
'mall Gray Famalt Kilton, 740·
Ei.1PL0Yf.1UH
246-5233.
St:RVICES
Found ~ tan cocker spaniel, T.P.
vldnlly. 741H!87-&amp;278 .
Found: young 1amafo bladl Chow 110 Help Wanted
mix, Pra111 Fori&lt; vicinity. call 7.0·
896-1318. •
&amp;&amp;&amp; DAI'ICEAII WAIITED &amp;&amp;&amp;
Excellent oppoflunlty lor lhl right
t,ost or stolen- Miniature Dober·
rNn, BaUey Run area, child's pet,
please have heart &amp; ca ll 740·

. · Over 20 years experience.
FrH Estimates

.

ft~ft.f;Jftft~~~~.
ft~
.

: 614-742~2138

. YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

awards assembly
; An awards assembly was held al
Snlishury Elemcnlary School reeenl·
ly wilh Christopher VanReclh heing
re~ognized as lhc lop fou11h grade
student.
.
Ashton Bush and VanReclh were
presenlc~ trophies in recognition of
beias the spelling been an~ runnerup al the school. Alsn recognizes
were Mary Scarbrough. Dru Reed,
and Sabrina Oldaker for perfect
altendancc during lhe year.
The school participated in the
Hills "Miss School Miss Out Pro·
gram" with gift certificates from
Hills Department Store gains lD
Joey Blackston. Kayla McKnight,
Mcaan Tripp, Jamie Ash. Brook
WaiSOn. Nathan ·Stous. and Granl
Arnold. Joseph Rosier ,won the
gl'liiiCI prize of a casseue player.
Receiving academic awards
wen::
Kindergarten: Coty Will, Cassie ·
Smith, Jacob Rime. Tiffany Rcil·
min:. Adam Lavender, Breana Hemsley. Khrystina Harris, Kristen
Eblin, Caleb Davis, and Breu Curtis,
Kcllllly Burton. · Darby Gilm~re.
Scoll Kennedy. Bobby ~mg.
Samantha King, and Stephanie
Shamblin.
Grade 1: Ruche! Davis; J.T.
Evans, Amanda Gilkey, J. R.
.Greene, ,Brandon Hanning, Shawn
Hawley, Morgan Kennedy, A.•hley
Mayes, Andrew O'Bryanl. Brillany
l'aKlon. Demetria Pearson. Anthony
Shamblin. and Caitlin Swartz.
Gradel: Amy Barr. Kyle Boggs.
Laura Field~. Heather Graham,
Rcbc&lt;;ca Han!lline. Kaylee Kennedy.
Kirk Lcgnr. Trenton McCiinu~ek.
· Eric Wood. and Whitney White.
Grade 3: Shauna Clark, Andy
Games, Brnndon Pearson, Bradley
Ram~burg, Dru Reed, and Jennifer
Smith.
Gnde Foar: Derek Bricklcs.
, Christopher
Fields.
Brooke
O'Bryanl. and Christopher Van·
Rceth:
Grade 5: Grant Arnold, Jerri
Bentley, April Coppick, and Ashley

C
~ 27 yre. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured .
.
~
Phone740-992•3987 ·
C

a

740·992·2772

Whal has happened lo lhe humming birds7
. A.:cording to the reports I'm gelling they '"e scarce this
year.
. .
One resident whose docs lhe humming bird feeders to·
allractthcm reports that in past years she's had 40 or SO. This
year she has had four or five. And !here arc other similar
reports oul there. Is this anolhcr effecl of El Nino·~
And how about this wealher? On these mornings, you
don 'l kno.w whether lo reach for lhe furnace or air condition·
ing buuon. Chances arc .tl!c furnace is win~ing oul butlhis too
shall pass so do keep smiling.

Students recognized at

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
·a
111!!1 Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding II!:

• • Fascia • Seamless
; . Gutter • Roofirig
• Replacement Windows
: • SlaliOnary Dacks
: • Blown lnsulalion
; • Garages. • Decks
;2• X 2.4 Pole Building
slar~ng at $5995

995

ltP302

COnSTROCTIOn ·

a

: • Vinyl Siding .•

ltP314

1998 PONTIAC
TUNS AM

·Lona·s

~~~~~~~:Soffit I ·CELLULAR PHONES

1998 CHEVY MOITE
CARLO

1998 CADILUC
SEDAI DEVILLE

To place an ad Call992· 2156

CCC.ftftftft.f tftftftC
C · Jl COli I 18ftl01 ft

H1uUng, Excavltlng
: · A Trenching
Umiltone • Gl'llvtl
' Septic Syltema
Trailer &amp; HOUH S!tH

'

lo give some o( us an automatic turnoff. Among these is the
word, ..muscum n.
.
Too often probably, for a loi of us the mention of museum
seems lo bring images of boring, quiel and dull.
However, perhaps, !his Sunday's venture al the Meigs
Museum on Bunemul Avenue in Pomeroy will change your
impression if you drop by during lhc observance of Heritage
Sunday.
The ordinarily relative quiel museum will. rock with lhe
sound of music beginning al 2 p.m.. as a sing along is ltlaged
with talented Jennifer SheeiS a11he keyboard.
How long has i1 been since you ' ve gathered around·a piano
lo bell nul some of I hose old songs which have almost a builtin harmony'' ll's heen a while I ~enlure . People jusl don't do
lhal much anymore. ll was. a great pasli'."e and still is ..
· So you're cordially invited 10 gel a dtfferenltmpress10n of
the word "museum" Sunday. A similar sing was curried oul a
year ago and everyone had so much fun lhal it was decided 10
hold another this year. According 10 plans, there may be a solo

.,

Business Services
. . SAYRE
;TRUCKING
'

The Dally Sentinel e Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, June 11, 1998

I

'Ciolk, 7ol0-742·254&amp;.

.

180 Wanlacl To Do

' •-;

1oJrt- .1011

."I

'.

-·-~llnmod. ""*""' · '
lng, flower becfl, landscaping,, 1)
aldewatll

• edgtng;

m~lng,

l

.,

tle ... Fraa Eo11matoo. Call lllr ·•
~:~:.:n.:.:7~··=2.:..·--................
Proloulonalllat 'SIMco: SlUmp I ' ,'I•
Atrncwa), Frtt Eotlmatttt ln...:•I
turtnco, BidWell, Ohio. 8t4·381· IW317·70t0.
::~~~~:_
,, .

__....__

Will houl junk or lrllll away. $31!1
plcltup load. ~n.5031 .

�Page 10 e The Dally Sentinel

-

...

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·-.

June11 1tee

The Dally Sentinel• Page

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

NEA Croaaword
PHILLIP

ALDER
•

t 12 Acres, Worklhop, Siverll
Outbuildings, Greenfield Town·

Reduced, 3 bedroom \ 1 bath, In

Cktle ·N· ConYalescent Home,
Hot 2 0pon;ngt Elder1y Or Hon&lt;flcapped Person In My Home,

Racine, near school, oank, post

_ Shull.
_,roq
_ _ 1272. Reltr·
J\lll
304·675·

Three bedroom house In Harrt- · 340 Bualnasa and
sonvllle, new roof and siding,
Bulldlnga
deck in rear, 2ot ' above ground
pool, approx. 213 acre lot, call . Commercial-Office or Aetail, 87

740-742-28411.

Mill St Middleport 1,450 Sq Fl.

Fumhure repair, refln llft and res-

Three bedroom, bath and halt, in

$400 mo.( or subdivide 10 1.000
oq ft. lor $300 mo.) Corner Build·

~lenced

carpenter wHI do re-

md'deling , decks, vinyl siding,
plumbing . Free eatlmates. Call

Middleport, con 740-m -3465 al·

tofltian, also oustom orders. Ohk&gt;
~!!!.' Rellnlshlno Shop, Larry
......... 740-992-6578.

ler 5:00 or anytime weekend&amp;.

Vinton . Ohio 126 Clay Street, 2
Bedrooms , Very Nlct, Finished
Bl......,t 2 lol!. 740-596-1929.

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

304-e75-1957. .

Men Will Do Maintenance And

Lawn Work, 740-441-1473.

210

Buslneu

recommends that you do-busi·
ness with people you know, and
NOT 1o send money lhrougl'l tl'le
mail until you have investigated
1ha OfferlnQ.
'

1 . 5 acre partially seclu ded lot In
VIllage of Syracuse. located on

Ro1 Jones Rd., $9000, 740·992·
4!161,
4.98 Acris-7 minutes rrom Point
Pleasant, good building sites.

$22,500. 304-875-5911 .
8 acres or 2 acrA lois on Betht!!il
Rd. WIJ. No singlewides. 304-

675-7946 . .

888-691 -s1n.

Cash. Realistic Earning. Potenlal

$1,500 $2,000 /Mo., For A Modast ln\leslmant Of $3,000, 740·
..6-8325.'

llelgt Co.: Ali New!! Rutland ,
Whites Hill Rd. 18 Acres $14,000
Or 9 Acr•a $12,000. Danville, SR
325, Nice Wootted 5 Acres
$16 ,000, City Water. Dyesvllle,
Hunters •. Very Remote 11 + Act as $10,500.

1970 Fleetwood two bedroom mobile horne. $1500. 740·949·2153,
call tale evenings.

Start vOur Own Embroidery /Mon·
Bu!Unass With A Malco EP1 Embroidery Machine; E•·
cellenl Condition Includes Accesorles, Designs, Fonts, Thread,
Supplies And Training Manuals,
o~amml np

1980 14x70 Cla1ton, 3br, 2 full
baths: appliances. C/A, skirting ~

Oallll Co.: Gallipolis,

$12,000 . 304-6 75-7128 afler
6:30pm.

Prolnslonal
Services

Pond $21 ,500 Cash

$18,000- $2,000 Down+ $2121
Mo.. Or 8.5 Acres $7,500.

Atter3.

Call For Free Maps + Owner Fi·

nancing Info. Tal!e 10% 011 Ullld
Pricos On Cash Purchasasl

1993 14:ac70 3br, 2 bath. CIA 304·

458·2588 or 304-4!16-1916.
1993 Oakwood 14x60 Single

For sate· nice let wilh Muse on
Gravel Hill In Middleport, central
air, 1 112 bathS, many possibilities, call 740-992.()062.

Wide By Owner: 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, With Heat Pump Included,

740-367-7354, 740-3e7-7414.

360

1995 14•50 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
All Electric, With S1rwe &amp; Aefrlg·
erator, Underpinning Included,
Must Be Moved , .$11 ,000, 740 ·
2!16-6040, Or 740-256-81~ .

after :;pm.

Farms needed In Mason Cty. •o
Acres or more . Call Homeslead

ABANDON HOME Make 2 pa1-

Bond, Broker. 304·882·2405 or
882·2221 .

ments, assumeToan , owner fl·

nanclng awlallla. 304-755-7191.

WI Pa~ Cash. 1-100·2 13·8365,
Anlho01 Land co
.
R E NTA LS

Thi lowest lnatatlld Pr~e. Easy
Over The PhOne Bank Financing.
Call Bennett's Mobile Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1-&amp;0D-~72-5967.
·

advertisementS for real eslate

lol lo llhe
whk:h is In v at n
law. Our readers are heret&gt;v
lnlonned thai all dwellings

Discount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessorii&amp; Watelr Heaters. VI ·
nyl SkimnD Kits $299 .95, An·

advertised In this newspaper
are avaHable on an equal

Root Coatings, Doors, Windows.
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies.

°

410 Hou- for RanJ

'

RE A L ESTAT E

310 Homnlor Sale

tor, 7&lt;10-446-3617.

Divorce Forces Sales-Take over
plus dopostl. pelS extra, 74(]-698payments. 2bt, 2 bath. llnanclng . 72...

- -· 304-755-5566.

3 Bldroom Hou11 On Route 180,

For sa!• by owner, 2 bedroom
trailer, barn, garage &amp; wor~ shop.
apt. not finished, 2 acres

Near North Gama $400/Mo.• De·
•poall, No Pots,

3 BR 12 Ba $300.00 a roonlh, 304-

tar~ .

736-7295
3br House located In New HllYtn,
WV. $300/mo. + utllltlll + de·

Slop by Oakwood Homes of Nl·
tro, wv. I register Jo win free · polil. 304-n:l-5881 .
doublewlde, no gimmicks . Only

$100.000. State Route 160, 740381-9934. 7&lt;10-387-7917.

47 112 Spruce Slrall, Gallpolla, 3

II Dlk- - o r Nllro, WV.
304-716-MN.

3 or 4br brlc~ ranch. 2250 sq.ll.
full basement. 2-cir garage on
~· 4.8 •eras iand. Call Somerville

•Bedroom House. Carport. One
Yea; llll&amp;ll, $385/Mo., S385 se-

. cur111 Deposit , Key AI Tcipo Furnilure, 740-4411-0332.
1 ·I BEDROOM HOlliES FRDIII
14,000 L,ocal Gov'l. &amp; Bank
Repo's Call 1·80D-522·2730, X
17 09
:::- -· - - - - - - ·
Nice 3 bedroom, references. de·
posll. no poll. 304-675-5162.

Huoa 28x80 3BR. 1 112 bath.
Starling al ONLY 138,999. Many

Roally 304·675-3030 or Joan

options available. 1·898· 928·

Cello 304-e75-3431 .

3426.

3br, 1 bath, OUI baCk of New Ha-

Laroe setectlon or ultd hOmes. 2

on 112 acre. 304-882-3845.

or 3 bedrooms. Slartlng al $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 740-385·
9621.

515 Aobklaon St. 3 BR ranch on
corner tot. Large rooms, remo deled tllltchen . Call Homestead
Bend, Broker, 304·882-2405 or

UIIIITED OFFER

1 room hOuse with basemen1, 2.S
ocroo, op1l1 driveway, need&amp; work,
11 11, 87,500. Texas Road, 740186-!ISit.
.

la'nd, daposu requJred. 3o.t·675·

Homeo Nitro. WV 304-711-

~-

Doublt wide 3br, 2 balh , onl1
11,325. down, $205. per month.

1-1-1777.
..... In llulland. 5 ruorno 6 bolh
witt\ praoe and half banment.
Out of~ lhl flood area. call at 7ot0-

PaYments 4fler ..&amp; Veers, 1· 800·
383-8862.

(REPOI
SOl up on lot, Ball Offlr. IIOCl-383-

742-2GI5.
tmmec;tlate occupancy- cozy 1wo
. tad oom, large fenced corner k&gt;t,
vinyl aiding, new vinyl windows,
two clr garage, low tax11, im·

Vlrl'""

__,111m,-·-....
p rt, bMUIHul

two.,_.
_,_3

11&lt;. 2 bllh, Iaroe l.r. &amp; lr., ook

' Clblnato, Jortn•olr range, dloh..

-· j-:=u· ~~~'•

2 Bedroom Tralllr lOr ROlli 1n Rio
Gritnda. 7&lt;10-2-114 Af11r lpm.

Now Doublowlde 38R. 2 balh.
$1 ,325 Down 6 1205 per mo. 1·
188-9211-3426.

Two 2 Bedroom Troller On Bob
McCormlcl&lt; Road, $275/Mo., Plua
o.poa,jt, 740 4.. 8114.

P""ram. Special

5pm. 740-667-3083.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wollwood Drlvo
from $278 10 $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies . Call 7ot0·..&amp;..&amp;8·2588 .

Equal Houo1ng Opporlunlty. ·
,Efficiency Near Walman, Stove,

Rolrlgoralor, Walllor. Dryer, A/C,
Cable $415/Mo., Utlllllu Paid,
Depoll1, 740,446-2515.
Extra Nice 2 Bedroomo. All Eltc·

trlc, Furnished Kitchen. WID

Hook·Up, CioN To Sj&gt;rlne Valley.
No Poll, $375/Mo.• Plua Reier·
....... Dlpook, 740-44H157.
Gracious ltvlng. 1 ·and 2 bedroom
apartmel\ta at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middlepori~ From $249·1373. Call 740.
992·5oe4. Equal Houslne Oppor-

1Uni111s.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment, In
Gallipolis, References . Oepos.t
lloqulred, 740-448-ll'82.

Country Side Aparlmonll, Roulo
588. S2l51Mo.. Walor, Sowaoo.
·oal'tlege Included, Depoait Re·

qulred, 1-188-840-0521.

PLEASANT VALLEY APARt·
MENTS are taking appllcallono
lor 2br, 3br, I 4br. Appllcallons
are taken Mond•y thru Friday

lrom 9·4. Office Is located a1
1151 EvorgrHn Drive, P1 . Pile•
ant, wv. Phone 304-875-5808.
EHO.
APT AV-LE NOW
Twin R'-1 Tower now acctpllnG
applleallono lor 1br. HUD auboldlzed apt. tor elderly and handl·
capped. EOH 304-875-6879.

450

Fumllhed

Roome
Circle Molal Lowell Rat11 In
Town, Now11 Ramodolod, HBO,
Clnemax. SM.,llmo &amp; Disney.
Weekly Ratts, Or Monthly Ralel,
Construction. Workers Welcome
740-441-~. 740-441.S187.

Sl
I
top ng room• wllh cooking.
Also trailer opato on rl•or. All
hook·up~. Call al)or 2:00 p.m.,
304-nil-5951, Maton-WV.
. 460

Spice lor Rant

For ROlli Excoltnt Oltlco Or Rolal

rAEFlCHANDISE

Houllhold

Good•

150.00; parlor lamp $75 .00
(740)3'19--2923
.

Appllancoa :
Rocondlllonod
Waohoro, Dryera, Reno•. Rolrlgratora, 90 Day Guarantee!

French City Ma11ao . 740-446·
7795.
GOOD UIED APPLIANCES
Washere, drjiri, refrigerltora,

ronou s~aggo Applloncot. 78
Vine Slr..l, Con 740.448·7398,
1·100 . . ,.• .

IJNCI F.,._ Sloro 841ow Hoii!I"Y Inn, Kanauga. - - Couch·
·••· ·Qr11aers, Tablee. Dilks,
Lampe And Morel Summer Hrs.

rtnanclng on 2, 3 I 4 bedroom
homes. Pajmenta •• low ••

2 Bedroom Trelllll In Small)all" Park. Roforoncto &amp; Dopoall
Rtqulrld,NoPoll, 740-44&amp;-1i04.

Mondoy Tltru Frldoy, Hrs. 10-1.
7&lt;10-441-&lt;1712.

Spoclol 18•80 3BR, 2 bath.
11.325 Down, $205 Mo. Fr11 olr
llraelklrllng. 1-100-8111-lm.
PIIIIIG IHCIALI
M•llciMi

2 bodfoom. In country, 1210 pot
monlh. dopooll SI~O . walor &amp;
lflloh peMI, no poll, till 740·992·

Unlll. Dllliron1

......... ,.,..
.,..,_,.,n••

--

117..... - .
_Dttl,.,a
....-

Onlr AI 011

5284.

U11d WindOw Air Condlllonlng
Gullronleld,
7~.
.

520

au..

Sporting
Goode

2 llodroomo, AC. Traah I Water
furnlthld, 1 Milo From GolllpoNI
Wlllhtrl~ 22x25 Gun Wllh
.Dn SR 141, 'No-· AIIIIIO-. · Scope
Ntw $1,400 OBO; 740•
1250/Mo., $100 Dopoall. 740· 387-7401.
- 8 1• .

w-

Brand now hwO - . o m -

-.wv.-71...

- · roltlgetiiDI
lnd
curtaN
Inc., nice:lnd
Alctne
rural

=

Hlllllv. . . -

·-

dlposll,
1r11h, water •n.d lawn care,
no

~-:="~~

,.

&amp; 3 bedraom mobile homes

2 bedroom mobile ilome· In
Racilll, no poll. 7&lt;10-11f12.Sf151.

.... llllt 7
·
:
TAX PICW.
Houu, · 3br, 2 belh,: . Ntw 311r Stllldown tllllmo.
11001q.n.
erN. \104&gt;773-l
1177.
110 wv.304-7511-5115.

Ll~ln

Apanmenl. Spring A\10., $325 per
month, $100 deposit. call afler

420 Mobile HOIIIBI
lor RBIIt

Middleport $300 per month plua

litO. cas- 304-755-5185.

·can
L, smnh R11lty At
740·44 ·1101 Or Call Cora AI
740-245·11430 For More lnfor...

qulred. 304-675-1090.

Anllques, oak oval library table
w/ drawer 1250.0p; oak parlor
table 1100.00; oak courthoun
bench $375.00; Vlc:tortan, heart
ahape parlor chair $200.00: VIc·

7181 .

""'nt

cation, deposit A relerences re·

510

dlpoB11. 7&lt;10-992·31114.

81111 under 'll;tlrranty, owner fl·
nan~:lng avallabla.
304·755·

lingle

3~----~-------~
room unfurnished apt. nice lo-

Two bedroom in'Pomoro,, $300
per month. 1300 doposn. Pl1 ulilillls. no pots, 740-992·2381.

2 bedroom all electric trailer In

NEW BANK REPO'S ONy- 3 10111

Lovtiy Country Homo On SA 7
Soulh Wllh A Brotlhlol&lt;ln&amp; River
VIOW. Very ,.._ -.g On 2 11
2 Acr11 Bul Only 10 Mlnulll
From Glllpollt. 3 .. - · 2
112 lllhl. Hardwood Floora, 2
FlolpiiOII, Now HHI Pump. Now
~. Manv Exlroa. Won1 Lill
Longllt1 10,000.

2588.

.

$280'1300, sower. water and
uash """'-· 740-982-2187.

and setup. On11 1187.08 per
monlh wllh $1075 doon. Calli ·
IIOCl-837-3238.
•

Loodod 2t•80. 3br, 2 112 balh
wltll all Ollllono. only 12.499.
- · $382. per month. Frae air 1
- - 1-UHel-8777..
'

2br furnished on Beach Street lri
Middleport, OH . Utilities paid .
DeposJt &amp; references required . 1
room efficiency apt. 304·882·

Remotleled one or two bedroom

?

New 1998 14:ac70 thrH bedroom,
IM:Iudoo t monlhl FR£E lol rant.
ln:tudet Skirtl.ng, deluxe tti.PI

f301.

2bdrm. apta ., total electric,. IP·
pliances furnished . laundry room
laciNtles, close to achool in town.
Application&amp; available at Village
Grun Apts. ••s or call 7.C0-992·

$150 deposit piUs utllltits, 740· . lorlan horp rnatilo lop porlor wJ ~rawer $100.00; floor lamp
1192,2524.

man11 aiiOr """· 304-7!15-7191 .

hill Rood. 1137,500. 304-875-

2 Bedroom Apt S1ovo end rolrlg
Included. 74 Court St Gallipolis.
740-..1-2583

7&lt;10--7.

south or Middleport, $275 monlh,

New 14 or fftx80 . Only ' make 2
paymenta to move in , no pay·

LIU than 1yr okt, 2-story hame,
4br, 2.6· baths, 2-car garage,
aaiM h8rdwood noora, whlrlpoo~
- · 3.2 ""'" 4 mlleo _out Sind-

.

Mobile home alte available between Athans and Pomeroy, call

12x65 lwo bedroom traUer, Rt. 7

6862.

IIIICUIOII. call 740·742·8200 or
740-1112-3041.

446--2957

Homestead Realty. broker. 304-

ttou., far ule at 379 Salem Mak8 2 Payments Mowe In No

pelt. rtforonc11 required, call
740-8t82•

,.

.

for Slle

1'14&gt;1. 1 Molt &amp; 2 Femoln.

no ue 1309, ~.

$, 250; wedding gown with veil

A Groom Shop ·Pit Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don

Sheela. 373 Cloorgu CrHk Rd.
740-4411-GZII.

window• 3·38x3e 1-4BxBO $30.
drewlng ta ble $otO. Space saver
1r11dmlll $350. Trlm-rldor 135.

AKC Registered Roll Wellets.

Roady.To Go 6128198. 2 Malts. 3
flmlln. 740-388-9788.

IBM monitor 6 keybOard $25.00

1H4 4·whllier Yamaha St.500.

llaiiV _ , For sa~ J5.oo 740-

1995 Suzuki Karana $3,400. 30ot-

3881859.

Now Oilon Sundoyt 1-4. Mon.S.I

1989 UOUIUII $5. silver coin.

11-e. Fioh Tfnk 6 Pol Shop,
2413 Jackaon Avo. Polnl Pleastnt, 304-e75-20e3.

Deposn and. Le11e Required 7&lt;10-

11040.

675-5540.

3 Lab

olzo 7, pold 1700 will lake, S300;
740-:J67-o288 or 740-M9-2481 .

$16.95 R1.1 Bo• 12-A, GllnWOOd,
WV25520.

oowor plpll, wind·

Pe~

580

olzo 7, po,ld $1400, will lsko

1 Bedroom Apartment New11t
and Cleanest In the area, near
Holzer $279/Mo., Plus Utlllllas,

b~.

Rio Grondo, OH Coil 740·245·
5121 .

Marquis wedding 111 112 carat •

.992-2218.

conago. No polS. 1250./$250 . ·

NEW 3 BEDROOIII
($18.995)
OAKWOOD 'HOMES Barboura·
vMie 304· 736-3409

Block,

lluy or 1111. Riverine

Anllquet,
1124 E. Malnlllroat, on Rl. 124.
l'o-or. "oura; M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 1D 1:00 P-~~ 1;00 1D
8:00 p.m. 740'?'2·2528, RUN

--·

810 Farm Equipment

720 1'nlcU for 81"

50 lb. Blby P I~t. Soli For $40,

1H4 Chwy SUbUfben 1500 ..,,
le t, loaded, 41 .000 mllel,
$24.000. 740-742·2!JII6·
.

7&lt;10-387-IXI47.

OWl, Nnlell, 11C. Claude Win11rt.

113 Clrll, round cllom&gt;nd oolllalro,
SIZI 6, pold $500, Will teko $550;

882·2755.

SpBCI Appro•._718 sl Wilh Plonl)'
. Nice 3br rancn l'lotne, auached . 01 Parking ~ocated : 28 Ceder,
Gallipoilt, 740-256-8881 .
garage, huge yard at Maadow·

•

1998 Ooublewide 0 Oown $29~
month. Free dellverw- &amp; set -up,
no land needed. Only at Oall·

182-2221.

....
we

7&lt;10-4'1t8495.

$24.500. Phone 304·57e-2491 alFREE DOUBLE·WIOE

3 Bedrooms, easement. 3 Acres.
2 Car Garage, Natural Gaa.

niahed end unturnlahed, aecuri1y
deposit required, no peta. 740-

0006 . .

2 Bedroom Hou11, No Poll, $2251
Mo:, $100 Doposll, lncludoa Wa·

good relerences, $400 per month

$90,000 740-2!16-1667.

1 tnd 2 bedroom aportmlnll, lur·

Aporlmonla $295/llo,. 740·44e·

Blocking Wood 6 Wedges And . 2 or 3 bedroom house In Pomer·
Morel Cali Bennett's Mobile
ay, niCe yard with trees, will con alder purchase on conuac1 wi!PI
Home Supply AI H40-44e-9416.

3 Bedrooms, 1· 112 Balht, Solid
Oak Trim, Doors. 1· 112 Story, 2
• Car Garage, Riverview Lot

Apartmenll
for Rant

Now Taking AppUcaliona- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

chors, Wood &amp; Fiberglass .Slops,

~j

440

"(;QOL QQWNt•
cantral AJr Conditioning. Frae e..
llmateol II You Don1 Clll Ul, WI·
Bolh Losol 74D-441-t130e. 1-IOD291-oo88.

10ft llttlllte •w-stem $100 . 4

Nice 1 Bedroom Apartment,

Pans, Huge Buylne Power Moans

knowingly-accept

-

We Buy Land : 30 · 500 Acres,

Attention Mobile Home Owr«~ :
Areas Largest Inventory Of lntertherin &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps,
Air Conditioners, Furnaces &amp;

Thi Snewspaper will not

opponunl1y t&gt;asls'.
..,________

Raal Jlatete
Wanted

Cash Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackb~rn Flea,uy, 740·
446-0008.
.
.

1995 Clayton, 14x70. all eiectrlc,
call Tom Anderson 740·992·3348

•All real estate adverUsing in
this newspaper is subjeCt to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 whk:n makes It Illegal
tO actveniSe M
any preference.
limitation or discrimination
baSed on race, color, religion,
sex familial status Of natk)nal
origin, Or any intentior) to
make &amp;,y sucn preference,
limltal:lon Of discrimination:

Price .

Fr iendly Ridge, Nice 19 Acres

lane, $13,500 OBO, 740-446-1063

LMngston·s basement water·
prooling, all basement repairs
done , free esllmates, lilelime
guarantee. 12yrs on job e~~;peri ­
ence. XM-675-2145.

NeighbOr~

hood Rd., Nice 10 Acre Building
Site $19.000 Or 22 Acres Wllh

198 5 Holl~ Park 14JC65 2 Bedrooms , New Carpel, CA, 8~~;10
S1or. Bldg., 14 Ft. Awning. Park-

.$8.500 740-446·6325.

depoatt. no pets, call alter 5pm,

3711. EOH.

BRUNER LAND
740-441·1482

1964 Vindale 1Ox55. Rover truck
campei. well -equipped , good
eond. 304·895-3880.

Etttra Time And A. Need For

230

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

7-7-30113.

t2:ac50 Trailer Been 'Remodeled,

16:ac80 3br, 2 bath, $1 , 32~ . down,
$205 .. per mo. Free air &amp; skirt. 1·

On Con·

dor Sl-. $250 per monlh, $100

Available. 740-388-8678,

en1.

E•tra Money Working Part Time.

TWo 2 bedrGOm trailers

lno . (74(])-992-8250 Acqulsmons
(nextilol&gt;ri.

Bedrooms. 1 112 Baltls, $35,000,
740-441-0487.

l4Jt70 3Dr $999 down , $198oper
mo. free air &amp; skirling. 1·800-691·

Set Own Hours, Great For RerlrMs, SIUdenls Or Anyone With

7408.

Electric $125,000 More ACreage ·

14 x70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 per mo. Free olr &amp; lree &amp;kr~
ir&gt;;l. 1·818·928-3426,

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PIJBLISHING CO.

Smlll 1 Bedroom HOmo In
Klnauga Utllltlta Furnl,hed
1110/Mo.. PI• DlpooH, 740-44&amp;-

Add On Gallla Clly Walor And

$2.000. 74G-388-,9169.

Opportunity

Ill 1100521.

38.26 Acres. Approx . 8 Acre
Lake, Mobile Home With Large

1.2 Acreage, 1987 Clayton Mobile Home. Chalnlink Fence, 3

FINANCI AL

po111 Water Tr..b Included, 1·

(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS.
CAMPGROUND
COUNTRV ESTATES)

320 Mobile Home•
lor Sale

Will Work For S4 A Hour, Handy

Rio Grande Area, 2 Bedrooma.
CioN lb Colllgo, $300/M0., Do·

ship, Gallla Coun11. 740-441·
4962.

ottlco, etc. $3e,500, 740·949·
3228.

7~H53e.

540 Mllclllaneoua
Melchancllll

Uvntock

830

25 Angus ond Chi-Anou• bulla

tor

tole, reuonlbly priCOd, lent breeding. Slate Run Farm.

Breeder PIIJIIr Latino Cockallela 1

cooe. lood, dlohllo. oleo 2 pony
llddlto. 1 brldll. 304-e75-3992.

Or Take Over Peyment1, 740·

446-2451.

CFA

2 Gra110 Loll &amp; Vaul1 Bought For
$2,300 Sllll'or $1,500, 74G-387·

Roglllor~d

Himalayan kll·

lens , shols and wormed, $150

4 Year Old Aneua Bull , Calving
Ease. New Trend , ao2 Sire,
$1,200, 740-441-1883.

''
Nel1an'a
Cuatom Processing
""''. open. Formerly Jonoa Cui·
1om, 2573 Yates Crollln&amp; Road.
Mll~n.

wv. W&amp; do vacuum

'podllng, 304-743-5400.

PoHid Black Llrnousln Bulls 74(]Aogl•terad Ane~s Bull. 2 Veara
Okll,l:ionno. 740-367-7224 . . ·
Ridlog Horaea For .Silo (740)
4&lt;48--4110

Hey I Gralri.

111111. 740-667-3090.

64(

3 Lovi'o, now 30-30 115. oiiCh, 1

CFA. Reglalered Himalayan Kit·
llnl. EO-aN~ 740-446-3188.

Round bales of hay 4 mil11 out
AshtqniUpland Road. 30ot -678·

Almond Color Non-6olf Dlkosllng
Relrlgoralor S125; Almond Gaa
Stove 1125; Good Condition, 45
Day Worran~ 740-448-110116:

HAPPY . JACK 3X FLEA COL·
I.AR: kllll 11111. lick , IIIli mlloo
Jdlbllld 11111mlc poisoning. J D
North Produce, 740·448·1 933.
(www.hlppjjad&lt;lnc.coml

Approx 200 Now l'oldln&amp; Chairs,

NOTICE

0347.

o;ordlooll&lt;lor $40. 304-174-e138.

Also Other Merchaildlll, 740-

256-1270.

aao.

BOTTLED WILL POWEAI LOSE
Up To 30 Poundo. 30 Df..Y MON·
EY BACK GUARANTEE! Naturot,
Doctor Recommended. 74fl...1-

19116 Dodgoi Dart. 4 DOoro. 740379-:1120 AFTER I P.lll.

Proteasional Grooming by Ap·
polntmanta. Over 15 yrs. tlllpotl·
ence, evening appolntmentl
available. 850 Second Ave. Gal·
llj)oiiS, 01-1. 740-44(;.1528.

IHO•IHO HONDA CARS fOR
1100 Sllzod &amp; Sold Loca111 ThiS
MOOih, Coll '1·800·522·2730 En
4420. •

Reglslorod Doberman Puppy. 6 11 '

1980 ·1990 Truc:itl For 1100111

.

Shlh·Ttu puppies, registered,

$300. 304-882-3e2e.

Mo•lng Box11 (11 Wardroboa .
127 Misc . Picture/Mirror Paca ,

Unique bobtail kitten•. bobcall
Siamese 'croll; tabbys, blacks.

DISh Pees. Book Silft), 137 Tolol
For 1125, Caah l'or All, 74G-448-

$50 I .$35; lrae
740-9912-2741 .

2410.

.
Brand Nowl Groat Cliftl CDIVICIOo

580

storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never ou1 of bol. $125. Holda up

~ltteno

with Ulila;

FNHBI

VagetebiBI

10 ~40 dloco. aloo holda lapei.
Call 740-992·8838 Iller 6 pm. · Block ra•pborrlol r~ lor )'Ou 1D
pick, Vlrgll'a Berry PSICII, oast of
GDi &amp; lapeo not incl-.
Syr&amp;CU~~ on 124, 7&lt;10-1192·2378.
For Sale: Cloj&gt;ey 9x7 Metal Ga· Strawberrlea: Taylor's Berry
rage Door. New (Wrong Site)
$'190; I Used Wooden 9xa•e• Patch, 28114 Kerr Road, Bklwoll.
7&lt;10-245-11047.
Garage Door $50. 7&lt;10-245-91154.

once Booka. Novar Ulod. E•CII·

'

FAnU SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11n1 Condition, $400, 7ot0· 446·

7106.
Gal A Huc1 IJp 0n _Tho Compoli- 810 .Finn Equlp!Mnt
lion, For Only $5.00. My Booldol . lliO Farman. 1111 hllch, cultlva·
WIJI Teach You Strategies To
Win Your Fantaay Week . For
More Information. Call Kevin At

lOri, plowa, disc, aide are11er.
markln~UI plow, mowing ma·
chi
p1a~
pia
hi"

no.
• ·~m. ntor. w
.... 7~·7451 .
GOOd uald waohor. $50. 304'875- 1978 IH 715 Dolul Combine
5574 ohor 8:30pm on -'"~By~.
,1755 Houro, 843 Com Hold 810
•
Grain Hood 13'Foo1 Floolar 8500
Grallely rldine mo,..r, ·12 hp """ IH 8 Shonk Dlac Chiul PlOw 57
38' mower dock, 740-992-78113.
Fool 8 Inch Caldiilol Clroln Auger
Grubb's Plano· luning a rajllira. 1991 15 Forrowlno Crolu, 740PrOIJiemt? Nold Tuned? canlhe 3'19-21115.
pla:....no
__
Dt:_._74(]
__4_48_4_525
__·_. ----I 35 MF tractor. gu. $3500. 740lmporlod Hond Modo Cigars, 1185-4195.
Many To ChooM From. 422 Sec- 5.11%Financlng on Ulod naclora.
ond - · 740-448-18!5.
Ford 5030·400 HRS., Ford 7040
JET
4WD W/ Loldlr•1370 HR$ .• Ku·
AERATION MOTORS
bola M5030 50HP·IOO HRS. carRepall'ld, &amp; Robul~ In Slock. ft\IChaol Farm a· Llwn. inc. Ca11
Cal Ron e .... 1-800-537-ll52fl.
740 448 2412 or 1-800-594-111 t
9 N Ford tractor. reai nice .
.Kenmore Uprlghl Freezer. E.C. 4 12,500. Bolona 12hp lawillroctor,
Voaro Old, $200; Zonilh 4 Head run1 &amp; mow1 good. melle otter,
VCR 1 Ye.ar Old E.C. $130; Lazy 304-e75-3824.
Boy Aecllner Sofa Very Good
fonl 8 Ft Ulto Now, $700,
Condnion, $150; 7&lt;10-316-9e45.
Maney ~uoon Dlok $590;
740 t48 42Gfl.
Like NiiW: Mi11ag Wftllar $150;
Mey1ag Dryer Older $100; WP
Wuher S125; K•nmoro Dryer John DHro 7000 4 Row NO TM
fiOO, 45 Day Worronlyl 740-141· Planlor E110c Cond. 2-AC 333 4
RQw Air Planters, Older
110116.
732-941HI008.

e&gt;"•" .

Lorobl Mulchlno10r Roellargelbla
I.8Wn -$150,740 4481325.
Now In 'Stock; Utility Trallora. 5' 1111'
• !li' 1110' • 5'X12', 78.X18" KIJIHII
Traclor 6 Equipment, 740-448·

890e.

Pomofoy Thrift Shop now bu1!ne
large outside tOJI and baby
Items, Wllltert. toddler C8Y IIIII,

Dlora
·2.John
Jolin oo..
2800 48- Plow
12·14 h Dill&lt; . - ~ Squoro
Ba1111, Round Blltra 1.!5% Fl·

Like Now. Tollt Time. Splld &amp;
c a -. 740-4&lt;tll-2ll05.

Soilll&lt;l """ SOld
Locally TNa MOnill.

nenclng on . - Round 8411ra 6

Trucks. 4•4's. EIC.
1-800-522-2730, X3901 .
1982 Cullall Supremo, 2 D. 280
V8 . Good Condition. $1 ,800 Or
Boll Olfir, 740-992..~..
1983 Monte Carll), new paint,
new Interior, &amp;how or race, aiOI of

chromo. runt 880'a In 118ML .
very quid&lt;, vary lllarp, $4,300. or
trade for late model family car.

304-na-5054.

"•

• Q J 9 4
• 7 53 2

.. motor,

seoo.304-773-5054.

UU D~dga Spirit, good llroe.
paint, ~d condition, 11500,
muo1Ml, 7&lt;10-9411-2001.

blne

Ex, cond. Carmlchael'e

1172. 40 Ton Lima Truck Cr1n1,

100 Fl. Boom. $45.000; Sholl Fl.
Roller. Double Drum, otl Inch,

1992 Lumina Z3ot., •• ·· cond.

&amp;e.ocio mllto. 304-875-7058 after

5pm.

.

11192 PlymoUth Acclaim 4 Doors,
Mt6. Air. Crulae. Altti/FM Sler.O,
4 Qyllndor, .34 MPG . Runs · &amp;
Looks GrNd 7&lt;10-251-8114.

veralon 'Exctllent

Condillon :

$9,500 740-441-1013.

•

"'

BARNEY

Ford Bronco 1180 Full · Size:
•82,000 Mlln, 4 WhlelllrMI, 35f
Now Brakoo I Exhiulll Tlroo :
Well Equipped, $7,800, 740-245-o
9012.
.'

740

.

1NT

MAYBE ·YOU OUGHT
TO GIVE OUT
COUPONS It

NtTCHID

IN PINEY

' CREEK

1988 Quad Sporl Suzuki 230
1900, 7&lt;10-258 6806
199i '2501 4 ~ ~
01 Now Slulll'7o4()-441-141t.
.

. ,

1998 Hoi1do CBR 800 Smokln ob
Replica .500 MIIH, 'lllllllmoro E•'
hauat, Many Extras! 740·245{

,

750 Boeta I MoiOI'I
tor Sale
12 Fl. V·Boltom Alumlr-..n lloal,'S
HP Motor. Trolling 110101. Trillo(
2 Bau Sloll, 740-44&amp;-2810. •

{~.~~::~ ~;.~
D~plh

Finder &amp; Ballery. 11.200;

74Q-.M6.~.

.

•

1978 1811. Trl Houl boot 70hp.
motor &amp; trailer wllofnlt acca1.,_

:THE Q,QRN LQSER
. ~M,

.,
.
t'f!\

~---

Do YOU Tl-\11-oll'.. ...,
f.le EJ&lt;..i ENOIJC,jl.
I/E:&lt;£Tr-&amp;£~?

......

~~·.,=~.~~;~~
~

35 Horse Powtr iohnlona
Condlllon, $500, ca~ ~ 1 ;5

P.M. 304-e75-51 31 .

·

Jon Boat 1ot Fl. Trailer 4.5 HIGh'

.....,.r GaoOiine Mariner 15
1&gt;1. noMine Menor AH For $1,200.
7&lt;10-387-7401 .
Kawaukl STS J4t1 okl, IIIII . . -

2045, will consider trade tor,•
good pontoon-·
•

KL PRO 120 Buo Boal lncludll
Mlnn Kola 3.1 tjP Motor, Balllry,

s1.595. 740.441-113:15.

720 Truckl for Slle
11155 'GMC 112 Ton 282 Silt CYI!n·
der, 3 .Speed, All Original, U5,
7&lt;10-387-0433.
'
.

Building

1115 Ford A1nger ·Sound Body
Your 4rea John O.ere Dealer~· Engine; 740·251-G4414, 740.25e·
Suppllel
For Rooldln11al And Commotclii
1185.
1'1111 e-.g lpacllla: 24'1142'd' 1.-. EqUipment. Compooct Utili!;•
Trocloro
From
20
To
31
HP.
All
1118
Chi"!' S'uburban 3/4 ton.
with two 10'11' OYII'hted doors,
one 3' onlt~. lnoulotod roof I Bim 01 4 WD And 2 ·WD Foim u.
1n 1 ou1, no ru11. ,2
uamlan
guuor.
$11141. Troc1ora. Hay' Equl.,_nt, John """' · l'hono 304-875-31113
30'x4e'd' wllh one 14'd' olldlng Dlora Skid ..... · c.... l n o - . - m o IIQI.
door, ... 3' entry, IWhl
gul- -Ut-F-.gAILOW
AI 2.8'Wt- On IJIIIII Tracloro Alid 1991 Ford F· iiO E•llndld Cob
llr,S7315.
Low IIIII F_,. On- And AIC, Till, Cruloo, AM/,111 Cea·
Procllkln ftoal,.,. ......
Ulld Equlpmont. CermlciN!ol'o - · Ellouodld -.nry ExcelInc. Hlllfl.38HOillll, 7404111film &amp; Laflin Golpillll, OH. 740- 1lill ~ 1bppor On h, 74011411.
4411·21124.
448-24121-tOI).lllM-11 11.
•.

"'•P•

West

Norlll

PIIS . 3NT ,

57=1tyte

DOWN
1 ltlevll.lt
Ollk:onMI
2 FuluNIItYI.'

·-

3~Chue

34 k••vene

4WkM.,_ala

(2wda.l

c. pllt
:~~t=!ar

o.nll•
·~
7 ltllmMI-

37 Numero-

1 Wrtw Ftrbtr

31

I CoiiiCIIOn

• "'*'

11 Cry of

11 Cookl' nteds
12 In oppoel1lon
1D
13 Gun IIQI.

•

I WAS

, -~

25 ~ lltlltd
~.~
27 Bind
.~
ln.-t • •
21 Cry of
• .;
blcehanola '
21 Scarlelond
criiMOII
31 Vextcl
•

Elll

Allpaaa

: .,~

33 Ral• .

31~x:b· . ;r

The defenders
enter the fray ·

~·' ·

torm

'• f' •l

40C

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'A work of art has an author and yel, when ll's
petlecl, H haa something whiCh II anonymous_abOut rt.• - Simone Well .
•
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low to larro faur olmple

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A college roommate retumed to the dorm and dream·
.
ily replied, "A kiss is a nice rer--::-:-:-::-:::-::--:":'--, minder that lwo heads are bet· ·
ONEDOW Iter-- ·· -··-!'
5

,'.
"•'•
..
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l---r~--r~'":6:-'11r--~r-""TI'=_7,.-1 G

dllp-v w/lrollor, lifo ltckolt &amp;
bumpero. $2 ,250 OBO. 740......
(1814.
.
.

~
22 lnCIIatnOIII •••
23 SWift . ' •.~
lntll'u-' ..,

I

Mlrcrulnr lnlbo•rd engine. 18ft.

lrlumph
201A1fall
21 tt.rt pllt '
24 MuoiCIII

Opening lead: • Q

PEANUTS

-1887 .Oceanic
SolFUll
Imp 110hp.

-..1--..1.-.J.L--..L.._..,_.....1.

;

'

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Complete lho chuckle quolod
by filling in the missing words

you develop rrom step No. 3 below.

VOU DON'T
611/E TIPS?
•

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,, ,.

Auto Plrtll.
ACCBIIOI'iBB

•.t f

SCUM LETS ANSWDS

Now gu lanlla &amp; llody f*lt. 0 a ·
R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-372•
3833 or 1-800-273-11329.

Deploy- Squaw- Onion - Button • WON'T STOP
·Most annoying car trouble is when the car won't ~tart
and the payments WONT STOP.

790 . .C.mpel'l &amp;
Motor HOITIII

.

1972 Dodge Champion. aloepl'
eight; lnterlor newly

dteor•tlli1'

~Q.I t ~!).

'

SOllllb "11\EV

TV~~s.

now tlrot, olr c - . $40110~

740-992-2741.

.

~,~_~~-~~~--~~--

1978 Camper Pr-r 11 Fl. E•-.
collanl Condition. $2,100, 740·1
441-8'754.

awn. flvelere, ·quun bed, a• . ~

SERVIlE~

81.0

QERNICE
BEDEOSOL

..

Uncondlllonal
1-·-Locol
roloroncet lwnlohod.
E•·
- . . . . 1175. Cfll 24 Hll. (7411(
44-0870, 1·110D-287-o571.......
... Walorpruoftng.

Frid:~v.

Appliance Plrlo And Strvlce; AI .
Nemo Brandl Over 25 ._,. ex:
ptrl•nce AH Work GweraniHd. •

Fronch Clly
77915.
CIC

55TheCUIIIII

H Anlcdllle
coUecllon
27Tt.lalrl
30 ......llghla
32 Tried hlrd

1

780

51 Art
· -·,
connm
14 l'elt
55 o.rdln , . _

Kappel

s

Charger. Tfaher. Acce1aortei.
Never Uaedl Price Reduced To

'

- · 304-451·10118.

Soulll

last lhrc:e days can apply lo lhe ·
defenders, but it is much harder for
them to get '1 hese plays right because
they cannot see their panner's cards .
Today, let's look at one important
defensive coup that is missed by most
players. How should lhe play go in
three no-lrump after West has led the
spade queen?
South has seven top tricks; two
spades, three heans and two clubs.
Needing 1wo more tricks, declarer
musl broach diamonds. !-lis best play
is lo duck lhe fim spade trick, win lhe
second wilh dummy's spade ace, and
·call for a diamond.
Now the spotlight lums to East.
Normally. he would play second
hand low. Here, though. the ()nly way
to defeat t~e contract is for l;ast to
flick the diamond king onto the
table. (He·should also cover the dia. mDnd queen, if South called for lhat
card. although it is normally correct
to cover only lhe last of louching
honors.) How does Ea.~t find this
play? Thi~ is the key poinler: West's
sui I is nearly- but 1101 quile •• estub·
lished. (From Wesl's lead of the
queen; Soulh is known stili to h:ive
the ~ing.l So. Ea,;t should do every··
thing he can to win im early trick .
Then, if successful. he can ·return his
last spade. eslablishing his partner's
sui I while West hopefully still ha.• an
entry 10 gain the lead lo cash those
winners.
·
Easl's only possible entry card is
the diamond king, so he should play
it If South ha.• the diamond ace, 1he
play probably won'tcost a trick. And
if Wesl ha.• a singleton diamond ace. ·
quielly gnash your tcelh •• but don't
write in!

1998 Yamaha Kodiak 4 Wh-f
209 Mllo1, Blo Fool Kit,' Wlncih.
Like New, $4,500, 74G-245-1141io

·•

41111r

II is time lo tum 10 the defenders .
. The aspects pf entries .covered in lhe

1994 ~Win&amp; SE Many EllrU
E-llnt Condition, Low_IIIIIIQj
Allki10 111,500, 7~525.

9480AIIar5P.M.

.. ...,_.tung

41NoCIIII

By Phillip Alder

cond- ~75-1731 .
.
1
1995 Chevy lllonll Corio Z34
Lt_llhlr lnlorlor CD Player, Load- ;Travollfllller, 3511. 5ft·w11HI,1r~ &lt;
ed, 4e,OOO MNII, 740.245·9480, axle, central air, like new . . ,. i
lng, largt sl6dl out, muat Net AI- ~
Allar 5 P.M.
llrlghl Carrwound. Lol I, '107·A. ,
1H5 Chryoior Concord Loaded, Pickering S11e11 , OH 77 i 85 , '
•
' I
LIIIIIOr 1n1eror. $8.600 oao. 7&lt;10- Parbroburg, WV, . '
2151--8189. .

·*

Watarllno Splclal: :J/4 200 PSI Your Aroa Buill Hog Dialer
$21 .95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI Parts, AotlrJ CuUera. Loaders,.
137.00 Par 100; All Braaa Com, Tllltra, Flnloh Mowort, Etc. Car·
-ion Filllnglln Slodt .
' mlcha,l'a Farm 1 L•wn Midway
RON EVANt INTIRPRIIII lllfMtn Galnpolla l RIO Clrlndl, ,
1-801).537. .
Ohio On Jacltoon Pike 740-446·,
~120r 1-800-594-1111.

Soalll

PAR$0Nit KATIE AN' ZEB
RAN OFF AN'

MotOrcyciBI

All« 5P.M.

::Eorv·

·-'

~ISIFII I
40 8uflaw
42 Acting_,.

• A lC 4

111M Cavalier Tlll.- Crulll, Au19,
j
$87.000, Very Ughl Hol1 Dlrnago, 1988·P..:oArfOW·34f1. loadodlt
Asking U.800 OBO. 740-~41- , ,botomonl, 8.5 gen . 2 A/C, lui
0013LAIVIMeuage.

• 10. 6

Dealer. South

S5000. 740-11411-2203 or 740-11411-

1991 Dodge Daylona Sllolby 'IIJr·
bo Fully Loodld, High Mllto. Ex·
celllr!t Condillon, $4,000, 740371-2847, ...........ge.

K62

1992 Chevy C·28 Morll 111 Con-'

1980 Ca•allor 2 Doori. $1, 795;
1991 sliadow COnte- 13.295;
1919 S· IO, 1991 S·IO; COOk Molorl, 74().446-0103. '

1991 Chevy COralca 3.1 117,000
Mllto, TNI, Crulae, AMIFM Radio,
Excollonl Condlllon, $3,000, 74fl. .
.. 1-ll417.

t

Vulnerable: Both

Watranty. lhf" Mater. 83 horse·
pQwer. bought new July ol '17.
1hrle malchlng Ke•a•akl akl
veat1 and trailer Ill go with ·lt.

1990 Oido Cullaos Sltrra ·s· ·3.3
Lllor ·v-e Engine: AIC, cru111
Control, Power Door Loch. AMI
FM ~1oroo Caaune. 75 .000
Mild! Mint Condlllon. 14.800.
740-245-9852.

+A 5

Speed.:

1989 fo fd LTD Crown Vlcl~rlo
Slalioll Wtlgon $3:000, OBO. 740441-19113.

1990 Hyundal E - 4 Cylinder. 5
Spood, • poor., SS Mpg. 83,000
Mlln $1,450, 7&lt;10-256-8114.

•• 4 2
910742

1917 ForO Ranger 4,4, 5
Tlnlld Wlndowa, Sunmor, Spoi~ .
or, Excellonl Condlllon. $3,100,•
7~124.
'

1991 Coble 4 C~llndor, More~
. CruiMr. Inboard. Outboard, I~'
1987 Dodge Arloo LE. • Dooro. HSP 8 Fl. Open Bow Wllh Top,li •
Aulomallc. Dependable $950 , $kl Equlpmonl. Llka New. 7~
..e-2905 '
••
740-37NI78.

1'989 Dodge Dynasty, need•
transmission work, ex. body, ••·

• Q J 10 7 6

-lo-lcalo.304-f75-2114.

7&lt;10-258-9123.

1989 .C~ co•ollor Z-24, bur·
AIC, PW, · PB ,
$3,800. loan value, take $3,500.·
304-675-!10119.

., •• s

• K 8 5
" A Q .J
• 10 8 7

tlloCupy.t
10111 ....... 111
12Ph Ia.,....,
Atclllld
14 Bee -. land
of(2wda.l
11 Fencydlve
1t AJrpM Info
17C"'-

.....

23 CciquM1e

Eut

• Q".

7,000 mllea , on mot01 1 Urea.
treller hllch, running boarda.
IOOkl good inllde I Out. Mutt

Door CoUpe, Priced Reasonable,

13.200; 18t3 Allat Copooo Comproooor 185 330 Hra ., 17,500;
SalOl: Ronltl, Trodo. Ntw 1 1989 F•800 Ford Dlaul Dump
UHd, Bowmon'o Ho-ro. 7411- Truck 52,000 Milot; •s Ft. Tool
....7283.
Troller 12.000; Cot 553 Shelp Fl.
RoHer. 145,000; \10 Fl. Vlbrallng
Selling Collection Of Bunle 84- Skraod $4,000; Mile. Fuel ~nka. · 1995 Noon Very ClOOd Condition,
btea Including Maple, Erin, SM· ~11c. W1t1r Tanllls, Misc .' Steel Duol Air, Baga, Stereo. 14.450,
mora. Firol Prlncolo With P.V.E. Btlma. Concrete Blrrllr; Arroa &lt;740-251-114114, 7&lt;10-2511-1185.
1'111111. DilcorMirud Bongo. Mit- Boardo. U .OOO A Ploca. A40
llggld Bllnill, From' C.· DIIChollct• Wl1lf 500 Hro., S7.500; 1998 Neon Groon 4 Doora. Aulo,
nodi &amp; Many Mony Morel 740- Offlctl: 740·1143·2300. 740-s43- M; , 31,500 Mll11. $1,500 OBO
1'&lt;10-251-8340, 7&lt;10-251-114e7.
....,523.
2811 Allor 4 P.M.; Allor 8 P.M.
::T--:-Iop--=PI:-n&amp;-Pona::--:::-------1 740•U3·2844; Fax : 740·843- Crldll Probllmo? w. can Help.
Eot1 Bonk Flnoncing For IJNd
lonl ·Condlllon, usi~.-74o::t•i- 1030·
Vehicles, NO Turn Downs, Call
8754.
Tobacco BaM For Louo', 2.000 . v-.740-446-2t97..
1Y Bllnlo Bableo. Aooorlod Rl· pdo.,
P11 Pdo. 7&lt;10-387-7414.
Uplo~ Ulod Caro Rt 12-3 Mills
llood. $12 And Up. 7&lt;10-245-tell.
Tobocoo Satlor, 7&lt;10-387- 7800.
South or Llott. WV. Financing

5110

., K.a s

· weat

1986 Chevy Colebrlly Slallon shape. Aaklng $3,300 lorm. 740-:
Wagon . S150. 1990 Clao Storm . 448-3488. .
.
$2.500. 304-675-8430 e11er 5pm.
1989 24' Pontoon Boal, 70 HP.
1986 Dodge Lancer. 4 Dooro. AT. Johnson, Full Enclosure, PortA.o
Runs Good 11100. 40-3'19-tml.
polly, $8.200. 740 l41 0417 Afle(.
-:
1987 Chrysler LeBaron. Rod." 2 5 P.M.

gund~'iif,"

U.ll·M

• A 3

189 VZ·21 Camero $7.995; 1988
' '
Roun~ Baler 1 year old wlltl Nil
·' I
·z·24 Cavalier, S1.500. 740·388Wrap/New Holland 472 Hayblno 910.
.
19119 Covar Wagon, ~·
EX. cond .. now HoHond ~74 Hay·
'_Worll, $500, 080. 7&lt;10-2511 I 3. •

Scooters, Electric WheelChair••

-·Ohio,

EEK.t:MEEK

1810 CJ 5 Joop, runo I loolrt
greet, 1011 of new parll, eaklng
13.500. 31)4.1e2-2970.
.

riea, Boat I mo1or In real good'

Mower -condlllonara. New Idea

.Farm &amp; Lewn. Inc. Call 740.448ale. 'IIJIIdly lhrough Friday, 740- 2412 or 1-800-594-1111
982-372S.
John oeart Slckl Stetr Loadei.
Prlmeatar· low installation with All SIZII and AUochr~~onll In
rotllll, flral month lroo. 1roo HIIO, IIOetc 7.5% Financing AVIillbtl.
SuorOnt special $41 lnlllllaUon, Carmkhaet's Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc.
can: 740-....2412 or 1-8Q0-51M·
IIOCl-2113-2140.
1111
' .
Rornodollng Hit, draporllo. will Lllurnor ~ - $7.500; Cat 41e
dry vac, 2 kllchon olooil. 304·
$25.000; D4H $52.000; Hero Po·
882-20311- 5pm,
well Driving Hommor. $25.000;
Aoadmast•r Ettctrlc Treadmill,

71~ i Alitoa for Sale

BHn Cropped. 1100. 740·4410750, After 3:30 P.M.
·

Boxes, Proleaslonal Cardboard

dla Britannica tncludin{l Reter·

1 nANSPORTATION

2 Months Old , All Shota, Ears

1882, Frae~

Cornpllla ,SII 0111191 Enqclopo-

24e5. •

Fronch~~Polo-lne
Oponl

ASAHI Pen111 K·100p Camera
W111t 50mm Lena, carry
And
Now Vl•llor 2800 Aulo Flesh
$225, 740-..1-1507.

..

- · 7&lt;10-211e-~ . .
. 19111 ChoYJ 4x4, 350. ·Ailnt Good
\10 Angut And Chi·Anguo Bulla 740-&lt;146-2751 .
For s,lo. Reuonlbly Prlood, Ex·
collonl Broodl~ Sllll Ru~ 1982 Chwf Converolon Von 305
engine. rebuilt motor, 1111 th•n
,Fanns. - 7 288-538!5.

387~7600.

1998 Kirby Sw11per 6 Sham•
poorer. Gonontllon 4, Prlllo: $500,

730 Venai4-WDI

N

ACROSS
1o-llfjll

Ma~lag,

General

740-441·

Ho~M

Main• •

llniiiCjl· Palnlln&amp;. •lnyl lklln&amp;.
Cltlllnlry. doora, wh-s. - · •
- - " " " ' lnd ...... rot .
1rH • - call CIIM. 7&lt;10-- ,
1323.

1·~14o)"ij;'=~llriye;£;i~.;-;ldt...l
r11 4 AllriQI......
... , ••

_.,...wiring,
_..,..,...,.._
...,IJI'•

"'Aiikil;;;;~;;;;;;;;;jii';;~;:
-·jlntltl or
con11d •loclrlclan. Ridenour
Eltclrlcol, WVooo3CMI. :104·•78,
17111.
•
.

•

June 12. 1998

More liCiivity than UIIUIII iK indi·
c'llted in lhe year ahead. What you
ll!icomplish now will be gn:a1er 1han .
all you've done previously.
OEMlNI ' (May 21-lune 20) You
11lill11 uncover an 'linpn;~~~ive c:orn-

~ial oppor1liility today. Lady Luck '
wtll•be a prominem fiiCior in this treasun:-hunt. ·Get a jump on life by
Undenlandif1J die influences that'll
4
govern you, in die year .ttead. Send
for your Allro-Grapb j)ftdictions by
nallifiJ $2 to Astro-Gnpll, cJo !his
new~p~per, P.O. Box 17.58, Mumy
Hill SWion,
Yort, NY 101.56.
Be aure to stale your zodioc siJn.
CANCER (June 21•July 22)

New

i

•

!THURSDAY

'J.

'" ~"

JUNE 11

!:;.

�.

.

'

Thursday, June 11, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

, ..ge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Weather

Safety tips for backyard playsets

FIVE GENERATION - With the birth of Audrey Tay·lor.Ma·y·
nard on March 12, the Roberta Swisher family of Naw Haven, W.
now has five living generatlona. Included In the family group here
are Audray taylor being held by her great-great-grandmother, Mre.
Swisher; with back, left to right, Jesse Maynard, the Infant's father;
Debbie Maynard, her grandmother, and Ann Zirkle of Racine, her
. great-grandmother.

TO ATTEND BUCKEYE GIRLS •
Kristina Kennedy has been
selected by the Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American
L;glon, to attend Buckeye Girls State, June 13·19 at Ashland Col·
lege.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kennedy will be a junior at
Mejga High School this fall. Girls State Is a workshop .in democracy.
Kennedy holds a 3. 7 grade point average at Meigs where she Is. par·
tlcipates in numerous activities. She has been on the newspaper
staff, In the Medical Explorers, the French Club, marching and concilrt band, on student council, and the yearbook staff.
; 'She hae also been active for many years in 4-H, taking several
grand champions locally, and participating in various programs on
tlie state level.
·
Her Interest In others has been shown through her volunteer
activities. She volunteered with the Christmas angel project, coordinated a toys for tots for needy children, collected food for needy
families, coordinated hug a bear for Injured children, and was a volunteer with a girl scout troop.

Rule~ announced

for poetry contest

The U.S. National Library of hardbound anthology.
Poetry has ann ounced that $48,oo0
To enter, send one original poem •.
in prizes wi1l be awarded this year in any subject and any style, to The,
the Nonh American Open Poetry National Library of Poetry, Suite
Contest. Poets from the Pomeroy 19815, I Poetty Plaza, Owings·
Bend area, particularly beginners, Mills, Md. 21117-6282 or go to
.
are welcome to try to win their share www.poetry.com.
The poem sh~uld be no more
of 250 prizes. The deadline for the
contest is July 31. The contest is than 20 lines, and the poet's name
open to everyone and there is no and address should appear (m the top
entry fee.
of the page. Entries must be post·
"Any poet, whether jlreviously marked or sent via the. lntemet by
published or not. can be a winner," July 31. A new contest .Oill?!!S on.
, ·
·
·
:
stated Howard Ely, contest director. . Aug. I. . ·
"Poets from the area have success- . The. Natiomil ·Library of Poetry, '
fully competed in past competi- founded in 1982,.is the largest poettions." ·Every poem entered also has ry organization in the world.
a chance to be published in a deluxe, ·

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
A backyard play set, whether it's
home· built or store-bought, can provide kids with hours·of f~n . But it
can be dangerous, too ..
Here are some safety tips:
- There's no substitute for
supervision. Watch your kids as they
play. Don't let them play with wires
or ropes. Watch out for loose clothing such as hoods or scarves that can
get caught in the equirment.
- Set rules for behavior. Make
sure your children anJ !heir friends
underslllnd playground safety rules:
no jumping from high points, no
wrestling on monkey bars and no
jumping off a moving swing.·
- Injuries commonly .occur
when children play OJY equipment
they lire too yourig to handle. Buy or
build a system that adapts as kids
grow, with swings and play pl at~
forms that can be raised.
- Once .the set is up, inspect it
periodically. Look for loose or broken parts. splinters and any damage
caused by use and weather.
·- Don' t leave lawn underneath.
When the grass wears off, the din
will be as hard as concrete. Instead
place a 10- inch layer of cushioning
material such as mulch, sand, pea
gravel or shredded bark under the
play set. The cushioning material
.should extend 6 feet from the
perim~ter in all direct ions.
The safest play sets will have
these features:
- Federal guidelines ror safety
of 'playground equipment now dictat,e . .that aU accessible o,penings
'.
.

must be less than 3 If2 inches or
greater than 9 inches in order to prevent head entrapment.
- Be sure that corners and edges
are rounde~ . Protruding' bolt ends
are dangerous. Cut off the bolt ends
with a hacksaw (filing down any
rough edges) or cover.them with cap

•

·OtJ/Q ConlinuQJ
lu

J~~:~~~~ FOR SALE • The Gellis County Farm Bureau, In con·

with Bob .Evans Farms, will be taking orders for the first
Evans Farm Festival Commeratlve Basket. The cost Is
~2~&gt;.9:1 plus tax for a total·of $31.75. There will be 200 baskets availthrough Farm Bureau. The Bob Evans Farm Festival Commit·
tee will sail the same basket during the Farm Festival for $34.95 ·
plus tax.
'
·
They will have 200 available for the Festival. The basket is hand·
madeby the Cherry Basket Company In Athens.
,Baskets will be sold on a first come, first served basis. When the
400 are gone, there will not be 1 re-order this year. Each year tge
bureau will offer a different ~asket. All Proceeds go to the Gallla
Cdunty Farm Bureau Scholarship Fund for a Gallla County student.
Orders will be taken by phone at the Farm Bureau office at 1 800 m
·9226, or In Gallia County by calling
Vickie Powell at 245 • 5271.
Plctur11d above isThe Baskat Committee, left to right, VIckie Pow·
all, Farm Bureau; Gall Leslie, Bob Evans Farm Festival Coordinator;
Klrn Harless, Farm Bureau Organizational Director, and John
Lai'lmar, owner of the Cherry Basket Company.

Tomorrow: 'Cloudy
High: 80; Low: &amp;Oe

- Many children fall from
wooden play sets simply because
grab-bars and handles are too large
for them to grasp. Handholds should
be piaced at strategic points and
should be easy for a ~ hild 's small
hands to grip.
- Chai ns on a child 's swing can
cut into small fingers. To make \he
chains softer to hold, cover them
with sli ~ lengths of foam pipe insulation or garden hose ..
- Most falls from .slides occur at
the top where children jostle each
other. 1bere should be side guards
securely installed at the top of the
slides to prevent such accidents.
· - The slope of a slide should be
no more than 30 degrees, with a nat
horizontal secti on at the 'bottom to
slow the child 's e~it speed .
- Swings should be placed 24
inches apan, with tbe seats at least
30 inches from the frame.
- Any platform that is more than .
30 inches in the air should be protected with a solid or tightly slatted
enclosure at least 38 inches hij;h.
· - Avoid molded plastic and alu- ·
minum swings. They wei gh from 30 ·
pounds to 80 pounds and can cause
severe injury !0 a child struck by

Hydro plant c·o nipletion
postponed :until October

one.

Transmission lines in Meigs .
County - from Reedsville to a substation built in Rutland ~ were
completed almost a year ugo. but
conslruction wai halted in September
when the contractor on tbe power·
house portion of the project. Atkinson
Construction Co.• filed for bankrupt·
o;y protection under Chapter II.
AI the time AtkillliOn stopped

'

Expos snap
N.Y.'s str~ak
of victories
Page4

to be completed this spring.'However. Cunis · Todt of 1\MP-Ohio in
Westerville said Thurs&lt;;lay that the
estimated project completion date has
been moved to late September or early October.
'
Work on the project resumed
within a month of Atkinson's bank·
ruplcy colirt filing.
.
The project includes two 21
megawalt hydroelectric units and
will cost AMP-Ohio $73.8 millioo by
the time it is completed.
t·
Todt said that one unit ' will be
compleb!d before the second. and will
begin ge,nerating electric:ity once that
first unit is operational.
At this time, Todt said, crews are
involved in the R:watering proces.•,
which ensures that the water pressiue
inside the cotTer dams con.~ructed a.•

Heritage

Su~da

set

a pan of the project is the same 1)5
ouL•ide of lhe coffer dams.
After that is completed. the coffer
dams.will be removed. In effect, Todt
said, water is being pumped in by the
facility. but not out at this time.
In additioo to the powerhouses
along lhe river, the project includes a
• 26.5-mile transmission line connect·
ing t!Je plani to the system's transmission grid. and back-up generation
·sources for those times when the condilions of the Ohio River preclude
full availability of the Belleville
plant.
The project employs . 190 union
tradesmen - inany of them from
Meigs County,' AMP-Ohio rcpor1ed
late la.•t year.
AMP-Ohio manages the projecl
for OMEGA JVS, a cooperalive of 42
municipal power·systems throughout
· the stale.

R~quest

to·use Racine fire
annex submitted to council
•

At the recent Racine Village paving. He ai!IO reponed tbe p84i vidual was caught by the Racine omCouncil meeting. Oary Basham. would no! interfere with the ballfield. cer.
·
·
owner of Route 7 Pizza Express. met
Council tumed dowD his request
Several blind spots at various
with council seeking to letaSe the Fire to have a village worker take over the , intersections were discussed and
Department Anne~ for a pizza and daily c~aning the restrooms al tbe limbs _and weeds are to be Cik-..
sub pickup service when the fire . piuk- Since village workers are mowClerk Lyons re~ that papers
department moves into its new quar· ong the cemetery this year. there is no for the 1999 budget . haye arrived
ters behind the municipal building.
manpower to spare, it wa.• noted.
from the CCJI!nty auditor's office . .
Basham is to submit a written proLee Layne. a member of the
She also reported . the board of
ANTIQUE, BOOKS ON DISPLAY -A ~ llfll gqcle Nldar
posal.of a iea.o;e for council to review. Bo!.rd of Public Affairs, proposed public affairs wants midents to 'use
the Portllnd School, 1 chlmplon lpalllng booll.uMCIIn the -ty 19CIOI at RndlvHie School,
Roger Hubban1 "met with council ~inJ!a~J:Qif,..,tll,.br:tt~ .. c~ioo ~hen mowint jiii'9UIId, ~ - t',..lnd. l -elitlrylllll -lru' ....,.In II)Ldllplay • ~Meigs Mu••m for· tha ....... SUnday
a!XMif fdoii-~le'lll beiiiJopen!iil in by the water meter readiR. Co.u!ICIL~ 'V*~cov.. Sornfbl'the readObi~ a..wtttt,fll books IIIII!IMUIII volunteer the Rev. Wllllem Mkld..._rth.
the village. He reported one wa.• run• axed the proposal since it is 1llegal to er buttons on 'lhe tops of the meters
ning in his yani.
·
operate a golf can on streets or side- have been damat!ed, il was reported.
Dale Han. representing the Star wallis.
She said the buttons cost $20 eoch
Mill Park Board, requested additionand that resident• will be chlirged for
old photogrJphs and papers, along
"Meig.• Memories" will be the
to. the bu.•ines,;es t~ey operated.
a1 money to finish wiring a new she!· _ • Layne . ai!IO .re~ed that ~ary replacement if they continue to damwith .books from the early 1900s.
theme of Heritage Sunday to be ' and .whatthey did f9r fun . .
ter house in the. park. Council sug· COII5lnlctlon w1ll.pamt the.outs11le of age them .
Patty Parker is chainnan of the proobserved a1 the Meigs County
Memory sharing from Salisbury
gested the park board pay the bill the water .tank th1s fall. .
MayO( Scott Hill callecl for a spegram.
Museum. Butternut Avenue.
Township will begin at 12:30 p.m.
which will be reimbursed 1a1er since
Counc1lman l'l_enry .Lyons wtll· cial meeting for Monday at7 p.m. at
Beginning at 2 p.m., a singAllowing a half-hour time slot. the
Pomeroy, Sunday from 12:30 to 5
if was pun:hasedwithout a pun:ha.'le check the hydrauhc cyhnder on _the the Municipal Building to work on
along
will be held under the direcorder
for
the
rest
of
the
afternoon
p.m.
order from the clerk.
packer truck. It wa.~ reported leak!ng. the 1999 budget and diSCU§S the pastion of Bob Hoenich. with Jennifer
will be Bedford. Columbia and
Featured in tbe programming
Clerk Karen Lyon.~ wa.~ authorized sible hiring of an additional police
Scipio. Chester, Orange and Olive, "Sheel• at the keyboard. Song sheeL'
· will be video ses.'ion.• of older
Han also a.•ked permiMioo to to write a letter to Prosecuting Allor· officer.
have been prepared for use at the
Sulton. Salem and Rutland. and
"Meigs countians sharing their
have a 12-by- 18-foot pad paved for ney John R; Lentes asking why
Alsoalteodingwaecouncilmem"sing." which will include many of
Letart
and
Lebanon.
experiellj:CS from childhood. They
use of the scales during the tractor breaking and enteriqg charges were bers Roberl Beegle, Henry Bentz,
the
golden oldies. •
Also featured will be a display
will be a.~ked to talk about family
pulls a1 the part..
.
dismis.~ against.a.person who had John Dudding. Joe Evans and Bobbie
The annual Heritage Dinner
of memorabilia from Meigs Countraditions, their educalional backHe advised there would be no ~"tlSt entered the annex.building to tum oo Roy. Also attending were Stre~t
will be held at 7 tonight to kick off
grounds and the schools they . ty townshi~. including numerous
.to the village nor would village the electricily·in order to steal ga.'IO- Commis.~ioner Glenn .Rizer. fireman
the event. Cost is $10 a person.
auended. the churches they went
equipment be used to prepare for the. line from the village pump. The ilidi' David Neigler and Dennis Wolfe.

Meigs Memories' theme for event

!'jobs Jeetails are stockect ctaii!:J
· witH-plants fresh from the
greenhouse.No overgrown. straqql11.
or uncierfect plants'

Easing of. h~ome health fr_
aud ·rules gain Senate support

Includes: AU bedding plants &amp;ooi Ageratum to,;~ooias.
And alllO" IJanging ~ stock
..

0

·Quality
Jackson Perkins .

61/2

By LARRY WHEELER
..
Glnnell Newli SIMce
.
.
.
WASHINGTON_ Oozcru&lt;of senators have !ligned on to a bill that repeals
a tough new anti-fraud regulation aimed a1 eliminating "Ry by night" home
health agencies that treai. Medicare patients.
.
. .
Senaton are concerned that touah enforcement Is fon:mg those oper.llors
0111 of busines.•. thu·s endange!'ing the health of elderly patients.
The regulation requires each Medicare-cerlilied horne health agency to
obtain 11 surety bond by July 31 or be expelled from the ptPj;ram. A form of
inslllliiiCC for the government againstlalse claims. each agency's surety bond
must be worth $~.000 or IS percenl of the agency's Medicare billing ainount.
whichever is greater.
·
"TIIese requirement' and costs are unatTordable. especially for the small.er free-standing home health agenci~." said Sen. Christopher Bond. R· Mo..
whose newly-introduced bill c:arried 28 original co!spon~ . "(.The) J~Urety
bond regulalion.~ threaten the existence of many small bulltiiC55 home health

•

11

P~

GERANIUMS or
.NEW GUINEA IMPATIENS

ROSE BUSHES

Now Jut

,;.ork on the project. it was expected ·

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel NIWS Staff
Tile American Municipal Power
Co. ha.' extended the estimate for
completing it~ Belleville Hydroelectric Power Plant project.
Under construction across the
Ohio River from Reedsville a1 the
Belleville Locks and Dam." the project. when completed, will provide
electric power to 42 communities in
Northern Ohio.

';r
,.

R~. $14.98

sr..~

8

providers and the essential services they provide to the most vulnerable and ~than ~SO_ free-sllll!ding home he_alth agencies. ::Many thousand.~ more
most frail of our sociely."
•
will ch1se 1f th1~ (Bond s) resolution 1s not adopced.
.
Bond claimed mon: tl!an 1,000 home health agencJCS have already lcfl
Wh1le there 1s no set pnce for surety bonds. tndustry oflicmls have comthe Medicare market because of li~ial .unceitainty posed by the surety plained that many Operators must pledge collat~l worth twice the face valbond.~ ~ a ne~ ~pa~ment system betnJt!"plemented by the Health Care ue of the_bond to oblam coverage: Some ex.ecullves of smaller agenc1cs)lave .
Financmg l\dmm1strat1oo thai roll• back pnces to 1994 levels.
used thetr homes to S.:!=Ure bond•. larJ,satd.
But in a May i~terview with Gannett News Servi~. HCFA administra. In la.•t y~ar's Balanced Budget ~ct. C::ongress n:quired hollk! llealth agentor Nancy-Ann Mm ~Parle said_her agency has no evidence large numbers c1es !~ obtatn suret~ ~nds. The s11pulut10n ~a.• rno..lel~d after a Flonda law
of home health agenc1e.• are leavmg the program.
requmng new Medtcutd home health agenc1es to obtam $50,000 bonds.
. Agency 5pllkesman Chris Peacock had no comment on Bond's proposal.
The bond• were seen as a useful tool to make it more costly and theresaying he had 1101 seen it.
.
.
fore l~ss likei.Y'that shady operators would try to scam their way into the
About one-third of the nation's. 10,000 Mcdicare-cerlified home health ' Medicare system.
'
agencies have obtained surety bonds._
.
lns~or General and Gene~l Account !lfflce reports hav~ found a high
"Hundred.~ of home health agenc1es have already been fon:ed to close level of 1mproper payments w11h1n the Medic-.m: home health 1ndu.,try. Govbecause oft!Ji~," said~ Lara.di~of government ~!1 for the Home· emment auditors can't say what percent of improper payments are due to
Care As!loclatlon of Amenca. a Aonda·ba.'led trade assDCiaiJOJI
fra.,.tldt~:.,..;:::~~-------------:--:--:;-:-;--:--or.t

Eastern adopts full kindergarten schedule·
5·1nch PoHad

NEW GUINEA IMPATIENS
Reg. $2.49
"

-;·~':""

.,

'

Now

Entire
Selection
'

Flatof
8

em Local SChool Dillrict will attend
chas.oces all day, fiye days a week

· By BRIAN J. R.EED
Sentlnll Nlwl Staff

~indergunen studenrs in the Ea.~t·

TREES and SHRUBBERY

Good Afternoon

48

Today's

OR

.

~-;':'&lt;;"

•

8

Sentinel

2 Section~ • 12 Paps
v... 49, No. 37

Sale Prices In effect·whlle quantHiea laat

•

•

,._ONEY COLLECTED ~A total ol $6,579.04 has been collected In
.Wige County by the Shrine Club for Ita 22 orthopedic and burna
hoapiUis.
.
:Walt R. Manley, en ectiva member of the Athene Shrine Club, ·
reported thet St ,379 waa collacted on F'rlday, llllcl $1,458.04 on Set·
urctay In don1tlons for the tabloid which 11 given free.
· ln addition, 1 total of $1,535 wee meda through recycling cans
•I'IJI other aluminum projac:ta, end $2,0571n prior eollectlons during
the year. Manley thanked rnerchante, civic organizations and others
wf\o contributed to helping Malg1 County'• contribution reach an
•ll·tlma high.

Two Convenient Locations
1/4 Mile North of Pomeroy:Mason Bridge, Masori, WI/
Phone(304)77~5721

•

2400 Eaatem Avenue, Gallipolis,
Phone (740) 448-1711 , ·
Open: M Ulru S 8-8 Sun 10..7

Open: Monday thru Saturday 8-8;
Sunday 10-7

Lottenes

•

....,. 5: 3-9-14-16-33

•

W.\'A,
.,.., l: 7-4-7; .,.., 4: 3·2-4-2

I
(

''
t

beginning in Augu....
t'1'he Ea..tem Local School District.
meeting in special ses.~ion on Thursday nisht, approved the chanse from
a full-day. ahemating day kindergarten program.
The changes in the kindergarten
progr.un come a.~ a mull of a stau:
mandate is!llled through the Disadvantaged Pupil Impact Aid program.
which emphuizes the expansion of
kindelgarlen pt08rDIIIS in low-wealth
districts.
The state, thi'I!Uah the DPIA, will
fund the ellpllllsion. The. mandalc
specifa a teacher·student ratio of I
to IS.
.
Eastern joins the Meigs l..ocal and
Southern locl1 districts in making the
chanJe to • five-day kindttprtal
proJIIIIL

OHIO
PldJ: 3:4-0-9 PldJ: •: I.().S-7

0 .,,. Ollio Valley I

.

.

~ uts .

·'

•

AII-TVC teams selected, Page 4
Paying many dividends, Page 6
Living under God's banner, Page 6

High: 80s; Low: 601

Market·8 Greenhouses, Inc.

8ung Otiolnp

Sports

June 12, 1998

Today: Partly cloudy

, '
Duffields perfonn at Wabama ~lumJii banquet · · ·.
, Myron Duffield as Dr. Myroni, master of music, perf'OJ'n•ed at the
· Wahama High Scho.ol Alumni banquet held in the cafeteria of the school on
M«; 23. He was assisted in the presentation by hi's wife, June, amlthe couple received a standing ovation upon completion of the program.

~Bob's

Friday

.. Co.

roll. In years pa.'ll, two kindetgarten
classes - one at TuppeB PlairL• and
one a1 Chester - h;lve been taught.
The new Eastern Elementary
School building. expecled'to open in
lime for the new 5ehopl year, inclucb
a special wing dedH:ated to pre;!Chool
and kindergarlen programs.
Two kindergarten Classrooms,
~ by a conidor and two
restJooms. are located in the front of
the buildina on the. end oppollite fn)lll
the admin~offJt"a and the new
public library.
ln other action, the board
apprtJYed the pure~ of newlyadopted tcxlboot series for an,
musi!:. family lind consumer ocience
IIIII matllemldics Jllldes K-6..
The bcwd hired Anlie Rissby u
a junior hip IIOCial studies and Ent·
lish Iacher on i one-year contract.
11114 CMherine Lawless IS 1 SLD

The district expects a kinder· ttaeher on a one-year contra~:~.
The board also approved !leVCI'oil
supplemental
conlndS for the 1998RAIIIEOUT-Arllny~dlmt*lld
the new IChool ~. IIIII dlole 1111p11n110
t1n1111 up till new Gllthlt Billing c.n1999
IIChool
year:
Christy
Taylor.
dents will be IIUaJM il the two cJau.
w
In
llhtolap
IMt. 0MW Mlltl Llildna ol Glles· by • total IX four teacherJ. The junior hilh cheerleadinJ! advisor.
llpolls
Wll
hoping
to lnlllll Cll'plllnd pill II
board audlorized the pollina ot two Don Jri:soo. vallity volJeybtlll mach ··
lnaldl till lllltMO
1 which lhoukl open
additional kihdelprlllll teachen 10 (IIIII lllilllnt IOftblll Cl*h; P.aul
IOifoilllme
thll
Rll•nd.
He llid tile Clll" wtll
(COntlnuld on Plge 3) ·
join the twO ttaehera,r on the paybe opetlld dilly wllh hours to bl c1at1t miMCI.

pnm enrollment IX 60 IIUdent5 for

c-.•

t

.J'

1ha r.ciitt ..... 11ft ClgM wllh alow, nlldJ.
um end flit biJJblll pllcNng mechlnas llld
lwo alow pllt:h IIOftllell IIIIChm.e. wtlh 81iCh
otrwrlng 20 belle for $1. Hare, WISley Lwtdna,
1011 oltlll OMIIR, 1tu1pt In till rein M'OUIICI till

.biltlh'lll miChlnas..

•

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