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                  <text>Weather

Sports

July 2,1998

Meigs Legion VJins pair, Page 5
Ann Landers column, Page 12
Wimbledon results, Page 5

Today: Cloudy
High: 85; Low:55
Tomorrow: ~unny
High: 80; Low:60

Twins
end Reds
streak 2-1
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Weakened dam cause for
alarm near Tuppers Plains
By JIM FREEMAN
Santlnel News Staff
A weakened dam along the

Page Eight- The Dally Sentlnel1998 Baby Edition

••

Ea.~t

Shade River ncar Tuppers Plains
created a brief scare Wednesday
aftel'!loon with officials calling for a
temporary evacuation of residents
and workers downstream.
The Meigs County Emergency
Operations Center ncccived word
around I: 13 p.m. that the Hickory
Lake Dam was washing away where
workers were digging, seeking to
relieve water pressure behind the
dam.
Worters remedied lhc situalion by
replacing some of the canh and
parking a large excavator on top of
the din.
Sunday morning, flood water
!lowing over lhc earthen dam washed
away pan of the front of the structure
which contains a lake of about 14
acres.
Meigs County Emergency Service
Director Robert Bycr and Sheriff
James M. Soulsby were tom between
concern forth~ living and working
along the Ea.u Shade River below the
dam and fear of causing an unne~es­
sary panic.
In the end. it was "better safe than
sorry" and officials notified people
via radio, television and police scanncr to prepare to move if neces'IW)'.
A blowout may have threatened
residents and workers along state
Route 681 between Tuppers Plains
and Alfred. Owl Hollow llQIII, ~~
Shade River Road and stare Route 7
near Ea5t.em High Scbool. ·•

lng to relief the water pressure behlndJhe Hickory Lake Dam near Tuppers Plains became
concerned that the dam could wash away,

al Guard soldiers were able to enter
the stranded community of Portland
and utility service was reinstated.
Wednesday. county workers reopened
Balcj Knob-Stiversville Road leading
into the community.
Red Cross workers are now in 1he
county to a~~sist fiood victims and
individual assistance teams from the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency are arriving today. according
The two traveled to the site, exam- to Byer.
NEW CULVERT INSTALLED •
HenderiOII, Portllnd,
ined the dam and decided that lhc sitApplications for Red Cross assiswatcllea a Meiga County road crew clear dabrla on County Rd.
uation was safely contained. The tance arc now being Iuken at the
31 near Portland ·~ay. The road 11 getting a new culvert eo
Ohio Depanment of Natural Meigs County Department of Human
It can handle at 1ea1t one lana oflrlfflc while repair work Is betnt
Resources is to examine the dam pos- Services. 175 Race Street. Middlecompleted • (AP)
sibly today and make a recommen- port. Hours will be from 9 a.m. to 4
dation.
p.m. today, Friday and Saturday.
Afterwards. Soulsby and Byer Sunday hours will be I p.m. to6 p.m.
talked with concerned residents,
FEMA has eslablished a toll-free
telling them the situation was con- number. 1-800-462-9029. for people
tained and that the dam is in no in need of individual a."istance.
The Meigs Soil and Water Con- · The Landowner/requester is respon- apparent danger of collapsing.
Bottled water. cleaning kits and
servation District is making available. sible 'for the work to.be done and for
bleach arc available at str.ltegic points
·. cost-share func\s, to landowners for obtaining the proper pennits for work Relief worken arrivlna
throughout the county. for more
Ninety-seven campers trapped at infonnation call EMS at 992-6017.
removal of log jams from streams in in the stream. and for providing a
copy of the penn it to the SWCD.
Forked Run State Park were able to
Meigs County.
Byer said the county ha.s sustained
The
Landowner/requester
will
be
get
out Tuesday. Ironically. some of at least $1.8 mi II ion in road and
According to a spokesman at the
agency. the jams show up on USGS responsible for all bills until turned those campers had lost their homes in bridge damage alone. State. county
Topo Maps as a solid blue line. She into the SWCD Office for reim- tlood-strK:kcn areas of West Vir- and township workers arc conducling
said that to be eligible landowners bursement of cost-share amount and ginia, Soulsby said.
road repairs while Ohio Army
Also Tuesday, Ohio Anny Nation- National Guard engineers are a.-sistmust obtain a cost-estimate and give final approval for payment is issued
a description of how they plan to by the Board of Supervisors.
The District reserves the right to
remove the debris and what they plan
accept
or reject any or all applicato do with it.
tions.
A district representative will look
For more infonnation on the proat the sites before and after removal.
Damage to a new $115,000 sew- replacement, and the system's motors
gram
landowners may contact the
All work must be completed within
er p;K:kage plant at the Eastern Local will require either extensive repair or
six months of being approved by the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation School District's new building project replacement, due to water and sediMeigs Soil and Water Conservation District Office. 33101 Hiland. was discu.&lt;Scd at a special meeting of ment which settled in the motors.
District board of supervisors. Work Pomeroy or.phone 992-6647 or 992- lhc district school board on Wednes- according to Well .
may
be
completed
by 4282 MondfY thru Friday 7:1S a.m.
The damage is not covered by the
day evening.
landowner/operator or contra10tor. to 4:30p.m.
district's
insurance. nor is it covered
According to Superintendent
under
the
builder's risk insumnce carDeryl Well. the flood waters which
Authorities begin damage assessment
ried
by
the
contmctor, DV Weber
ravaged the area virtually destroyed
Construction
Co .. Reedsville. Wind
Damage to roads and bridges. the new sewer system, located on the
By The Associated Preu.
and
other
weather
damage are covOhioans have begun tallymg up sewer and water plants, and other edge of the high school parking lot.
ered
by
insurance,
but
Oood damage
Well estimates the damages to the
the damage from flooding . that publicly owned property has been
is
not.
destroyed homes, and washed out estimated at $3.73 million and grow- plant at between $60.000 and
Well said that the district wi II
roads and bridges in eastern and ing. said OEMA spokesman Neal $70,000. Fencing and sand and gravapply
for funds through FEMA to
O'Brien.
el around the plant will require
southeas1em counties.

.JJolzer medical Center~

Funds are available
for removal of log jams

allnew
/uluri3lic
maternit'J and :lami4 Center

endangering those working or residing downstream. Workers replaced some of the earth
· and parked a piece of equipment on the soli,
stopping the breach. Here, local officials examIne the expedient fix.

ing townships in repairing damaged
culverts and roads. National Guard
military police are also assisting in
relief efforts:'
The Tuppers Plains-Chesler Water
Dislrict remains under a systemwide boil advisory. according to general manager Donald C. Poole.
Poole said the district would know
this afternoon the results of samples
taken earlier.
"If the &lt;amples arc considered
safe. thon the boil advisory will be
lifted for all of Meigs Counly and
Hockingport area. Samples for
Athens County have been taken
today and we are hoping to hear good
results on Friday around 3 p.m .. "
Poole said.

All areas who were out of water
should al this time have waler. he
said. addinr: that if anyone notices a
water line that is exposed that has not
heen marked or tlagged. experience-;
a new condition of low pressure or is
out of wal&lt;r should call the district at
i-l«Xl-686-3747 or 740-985-'' 15:
Meanwhile. the Alhens County
Sheriffs Department .has received
reports ot looting in Oooded areas of
that county. No looting has been
reported in Meigs County. according
to a Meigs County Sheriffs D&lt;!partmenl dispatcher.
Many people's valuables have
noated lo different areas and are nol
co~sidered "community property'. the
.\thens County Sheritfs Department
slated.

Teens reported missing
The Mason County Sheriffs
Gandee was lasl seen on June 2Y.
Department is looking for two Leon She is live feet. live inches lall and
teens who have not been seen since weighs II 0 pounds with brown ha ir
last week.
and brown eyes. Smith was last seen
Missing P&lt;"On.s reports have been June 26. She stands ti ve feet. four
tiled for Amy Lynn~ Gandee. 17. and inches tall and weighs 100 pounds
Cassandm Mae Smith. 15. according with blonde hair and green eyes.
to Lt. Danny Pearson. He said it is
Anyone with infonnation on 1he
believed the girls ran away and are teens should cunlact lhe sheriffs
department at 615-3838.
together.

Eastern board surveys flood damages

•

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections - 1Z Pages
Vol. 49, No. 50

..

Family-Centered Care
Pediatrics • Homelike Furnishings • Pediatric Playroom • Sick Day Care
Labor, Delivery and Recovery Rooms • Postpartum Room (with queen size beds)
Family Lounge • and More!

Calendar
Qassifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Sports

lZ
11-9-10
11

Weather

3

3

Lotteries

oum
Pk1!'3: 716; Pick 4: 8020
Super Lotto: ~13-20-21-46-47

Kli:lrer: 793463

For more information·about the malernil'l anJ :J.am14 ~nler call446-5311

WEAKENED DAM • A potential emergency

wa• averted Wednesday when workers seek·

~
Dally 3: 778; Dally 4: 6988
.'

0 19911 Ollie&gt; Valley l'llblilllill Co.

help a"ist wilh lhe tl ood damage
repairs.
Waler damage to the district's
adminislrative office trailer. also
located at the edge of the parking lot.
has required the district staff to move
into temporary oftices at Tuppers
Plams Elementary School.
W~ll also reponed damage lo the
two high school locker rooms and
equipment which was stored lhere.
Well said lhat live fe~l of water tilled
1he g~rls' locker room althe height of
1he llood. which also covered the
foo1ball field and reached the con-

cession stand and pre&gt;&lt;box.
The fidJ will require extensive
cleanup. and two breaker hoxes at me
field must be reinstalled aher being
loosed by fall ing trees.
In other action. the board also
hired Scon Christman as Ihe new V"&lt;ll'sity football coach, and Pam Doulhill
as athletic direc10r. Radley Fau lk w•s
hired to in.slall a portion of the cornpuler soflwan: required for Schoolnel
installation.
·
The board accepted the resigilations of teachers Nancy Morris'l!y.
Ron Hill and Tony Deem.

Meigs residents set to celebrate the Fourth of July
Community Fourth of July celebrat ions in Meigs County will offer
"something for everyone" with
par.Wes. plenty of food. a variety of
entertainment. and fireworks displays.

MIDDLEPORT
Festivities in Middleport, with
the theme, "Fourth on the River" arc
being coordinated by rhe Middleport
Community Association with most
activities taking place in downtown
Dave Diles Park.
Activities will begin at noon with
the sale of cnafts and
market and
gt1111ge sale IIIC!dlandi5C in the park.
Spaces to local residents will be
available on a first-come, fll'SI-scrved
basis. Serup time is tl a.m.. and all
marketers arc required to remove
their sale items and dcplft by 5 p.m.,
prior to the parade and ~ina pio-

nca

gram.

.

·1.

place from 2to4 p.m.; and lhc parade
will begin at 6 p.m. from the comer
of Ash and Sycamore Streets. The
route from !here will be to Beech
Street. General Haniager Parkway,
and Second Street. around the downtown "T.". and disband ncar Walnut
StrccL
Bob Gilmore is parade chairman
and entmnL~ should contact him at
99l-6128 prior to the parade. Six troph~ will be awllrdcd: best floot. best
decorated bicycle. best walking URiL
best marching unit. bcsl pulriotic unit
and best horse unit. Trophies will be
award&amp;~ bcf01t die ~ get.~
underway at 7 p.m. in Diles Park.
Jack Horton will sing the Star
Spanaled Banner. !he invocation will
be aiven by AI Hanson and a weic«ne by Mayor ~y Horton.
Enlel1lllvnint will lllclude the
Dmlina boiisundefdledirectionof
N1111:r.._.Swartz. • cello number by
·' Aiilaridalblon,lllld adanct loudne ·.

Myron Duffteld will _pnl cal·
llopc conccns from 2 q;;~ jl.m.; a
w!Clllina exhibition by ihe .Blood by Kaile Chi.._ foliowtld b) a RiverWar Wresllina Alliance. will lib 'bend Community Olorils COftecrl.
.. ....

~'

~

l"

'·-.v.•-.,..- ;.:

.

• ~..

4

At 8:15 p.m. Roger and Mary
Gilmore will present u progmm titled.
"How Can I Keep from Singing."
Tom Payne will be a~ masler of ceremonies. Food and drink will be
available throughout the day.
Fireworks arc scheduled for 9:30
p.m.

RACINE
The theme of Racine's July 4 celebration will be "Freedom: Yesterday.
Today and Tomorrow" with the day
starting off with a parade at I0 a.m.
Line-up will be at 9: 15 a.m. at
Soulhcm High Scbool and awards
will be given in the following cateaofies: religious, non-religious. walking, horses. bicycles. and antique
tractors. For inquiries. contact Marilyn Powell at 949-2676.
Parade winnm will be announced
on die staac II Star Mill Park at noon.
A chicken barbecue and honncllllde ice cream will be available at
the
department annex beginning
at II a.m. ·
Tile antique UICIOl' pull will start

.

fire

.•

at 2 p.m. on the pulling track. For
more information. call 929-2 1MI or
742-2750.
The Racine Area Community
Organization will hnld its lifth annual frog jumping cont~st ut 5 p.m. with
winners in two di\li~ions . Rent-afrogs will be available for $3 or contestanls may supply 1heir own frog .
For more information call 949·2485.
The kiddie troclor pull will be held
immediately after the frog jump or at
6p.m.
Stage entertainment will be
Racine Baptist Children's Choir at I
p:m. followed by the Swingiri'
Seniors at 2 p.m. The Last Chance
Band will perfonn .ut 6 and 9 p.m.
The Family Tradition Band will perform from 7 to 9 p.m. Foocl booths
will be available during the day. CI'Dfi
and game booths will also be set up
during the day. To reserve a space,
coritaet Dale Han at 949-2656.
FireWIKits by the fire department
will conclude the day al I0 p.m.

• .

RUTLAND
"Celebrating 45 yea" wllh Fami ly. Fri~nds. and Fireworks" will be
the theme of Rutland's. Fourth of July
observance. sponsored by lhe Rutland Fire Department and its Auxiliary.
The parade at YJO a.m. will kick
off the day's activilies. Participants
arc to line up al Brick and D&lt;!pol
Streets. Registration will be taken al
that time and entries will be given a
number for judging purposes.
Judging will lake place in I Ddifferent categories. They arc religious.
non-religious. bicycles. horses.
motorcycles, go cans, 4-wheclers.
decorated pickups, semis cla.o;.•ic Ctlrs.
one over-all walking unit. and antiqUe

cars.
Grand marshal of the parade will
be Eul!Cnc Fink, a lifelong resident of
Rutland. with Cindy Pw.ons aild
Kimberly Willford. chainnen. A
patriotic opening with a nag raising
cen:mony and the national anthem by
Continued oa pap 3

�•

..

Thursday, July 2, 1998

••

Commentary·

Page2
Thursday, July 2, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls ·

Friday, July 3AccuWeathcre forecast for daytime condthons and htgh temperatures

Rev. Pearl

Dying is easy, comedy is ~ard

By TONY SNOW
Creators Syndicate
WASHINGTON - You have
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
never
known terror unttl you've
614-992·2156 • Fax 992-2157
walked onto a bnghtly ht stage,
squmted mto a celebnty-filled throng
that rncluded a former prestdent of
the Umted States and tned to do
stand-up
cofl,!dy.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
I was keelhauled mto such duty
recently at a roast hononng former
ROBERT L WINGETT
White
House press secretary Mltl"hn
Publlfher
Fitzwater. Franklm Pierce College m
New Hampshtre recently established
a
school of communtcattons and
OIANEHIU.
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
named
11 after Marhn. He dectded to
Controller
General Manager
repay the ktndness by askmg a few
old friends to roast htm - and mvun.. S.ntincl ,..,._ lfltoro to lllo editor ln&gt;m ,_,on a broad,_ olloplca.
mg a mach great number of fnends to
Shott,..,.,. (300 _,,"',...!,...1M l&gt;olt . - o f l&gt;ol"ff ,..oil-. ryp.d I«·
dnnk good wme and sit tn JUdgment.
,.,.. .,. ,.'-"H and all mey t. edit.d. &amp;ch thould lncludt • ~n•tww. Mldreu,
In general, speeches hold hnle teranddayllmo phoM""""'"' Spoclfyadalo ,,.,...,a ,.,.,.,.,.to apmrlouo • ror for me I love gtvmg them, and I
.,. loflor. lllallto: l.allltl to lllo Editor, nt. s.ntlnol, 111 c-1 St, """"""'' Ohio
45711; or, FAX tol1&lt;f.HZ.Z151
have dehvered hundreds over the
nearly stx years smcc George Bush
left office. But never once m that
ttme has somebody asked me to play
the role of a Semfeld wannabe.
There ts a good reason for thts. I
come from baste Mtdwestern stock.
By WALTER R. MEARS
My people couldn't tell a JOke 1f
AP Special Correspondent
Western ctvthzattOn hung tn the balSHANGHAI, Chma - Half a world from home, Prestdent Clmton ts ance. We're great at wtse cracks .. I
campa1gnmg ag:un - for change m Chma, wtth themes and words echmng spent maJor porttons of my pnmaryt~ose he used tn seekmg to persuade American voters to choose hts path mto
the 21st century
Thts campaign ts for tdeas; and for an enhanced relattOnshtp wtth BetJmg,
because "the way the world ts changmg .. our two nattons will be far better
off workmg together than apart."
So he talks of economtc secunty, of the JObs that can flow from efforts to
· act agamst envtronmental pollutton, of the vital role of educatiOn m the new
mtllenntum and of freedom as a linchpm for progress.
Amencan ltberty and freedom are a gtven in any U.S pohttctan's
rhetonc. But thts ts Chma, where Clinton's calls for human nghts have
gamed somethmg - controversy - m the translation
Chnton tmported the tested techniques of American pohtics for hts mneday JOUrney through Chma, the round-table talks with ctttzens, a stmt on a
Shanghat radto call-m show, speeches that stayed on message, usually
human nghts, even a Betjmg version of a nationally televtsed debate wl!h
Chtnese President J tang Zemm
Chnton vs. Jtang was not an argument to match th~ Kttche~ Debate of
1959, when Vice President Rtchard M. Nixon'and Sovtet Premter Ntkl!a S.
Khrushchev dtsputed thetr nval systems - and thetr weapons - usmg a
model Ameucan kttchen on dtsplay tn Moscow as a backdrop. That JNas a
Cold War argument, a dtfferentttme.
Far from brandtshing weaponry, Chnton and Jtang dtd thetr debating after
announcin2 an a~reement to tum the t~etm~ svstems of thetr nuclear
·weapons away from one another, a largely symbohc gesture, but a step closer tn a relatlonshtp they had said m 1997, prematun&gt;ly, would become a constructive strategic partnershtp.
For Chnton, the pressure on human rights is hvth a phtlosoph1cal commttment and a political necesstty, g1ven the complamts he got from ConBy Morton Kondracke
gone wrong mAmenca, we have done
gress about commg here and, especially, about appeanng at 1iananmen
While the Dow Jones lndustnal
- and are still
Square, for the symbolism of it.
Average has climbed thousands of
domg, to ourTo counter those cnllcs, from congresstonal Republicans to hberals and
pomts over the past 40 years, the
selves"
by
: · human rights groups, Clinton pressed the issue with oftictals and raised it in
Index of Nauonal Ctvtc Health has
being "passtve
· hts public pronouncements.
.
.
plunged prectpttously
and
disen·
: · . Chma gave htm a TV audtence, on Saturday and agam w1th a hve broadThe INCH 1s a mettculously
gaged .... In a
: . :Cast of hts speech on Monday. Whtte House press secretary Michael McCurassembled new amalgam of stausucs
ttme that cnes
. • l"Y satd it demonstrated the greater wtllingness of the Chmese government to
on pohucal and community parttctpaout for ctvic
· . open the soc1ety to pohttcal debate...DJ'sp1te techmcal glitches and apparent
uon, pubhc attitudes on trust, cnme
actton, we are
httches m the U.S. translation tnto Chmese; 11 was seen by the Whtte House
rates and frumly hfe that womes Its
m danger of
as an openmg to get Chnton's message to hundreds of mtllions .of ordinary
creators and should trouble everyone
becommg
a
Chmese Clltzens. unprecedented because 11 was hve, wtthout ed1t1ng
else, too
natton
of
specAnd whtle the focus was. as mtended, on human nghts, Clinton spoke
It was unvetlcd yesterday by the
tators."
· also of an array ol tssues !hat had been aspects of hiS own campatgns. for
Kondracki
btparttsan Nauonal Commtsston on
In com·efcctlon and for hts programs tn Congress
Ct&gt;)C Renewal .. chatred by Reagan pthng the INCH. a commtsston stafl
He smd a changtng Chma wtll need new systems to tram workers. to proadl'ntntslrauon Educauon · Secretary headed by Umvcrstty of Maryland
'vu.lc soc tal sc{unty. to deal With health care costs and wtth the cnvmmmcnt
Btl! Bennett and former Sen Sam prolessor and lonncr Chnton Whttc
. . A generally stohd audtencc at hts umverstty speech c~cered cntlcal stuNunn. D-Ga .. and ts mtended to be a House atdc Btll Gulston found that the
.. dent questions - seven were asked- more ulten than they applauded Clmregularly tssued lever chart ol the country's ctvtc health ha.' taken two
: · ·ton dunng hiS set speech Chnton ~a1d that was OK. he learned more by hsnattons moral and ctvtc condition.
huge dtves over the past 40 yeJrs
: · Jcnmg to cnttcs than when he was talktng htmsell
The commtsston was espectally
The ctvtc mdc~ took a long shde
·.
But the mood changed and they cheered htm when he called
tough
on
the
medta.
espectally
the
!rom
1960 to 1975 dunng the baby
: · youth-dnvcn efforts to tmprove the envtronment, a grave problem 1 Chtna
conccntratton by local TV news on hoom"s "cultural revolution," "Then
: · -as evtdcnt as the gray smog that clouds Bctjtng
vtolcnt cnme that causes clltzens to there was a levehng off for 10 years,
: . He satd the young must take the lead, m Chma and other lands. " ause
tgnorc one area of ctvtc tmprovement followed by another prectpttous !all
· · :pohtlcalleaders wtll never be wtlhng to do anythmg abouttt tf they bCheve
.. falhng cnmc rates
from the mtd-1980s to the early
: ·,, wtlllead to large-scale unemployment or more poverty "
Overall, the commt&lt;ston declared . 1990s, largely attnbutable to surgmg
"'Much of our popular culture ts vul- cnme rates, dtstrust m government
gar, vtolent and mmdlcss Much of our and farmly breakdown Another levclpubhc square ts coarse and unctvtl mg off has occurred smcc 1992. but
Pohttcal parttctpauon ts at depressed the future ts clouded
levels la.st seen m the 1920s Pubhc
Spectfically, the commtsston meatrust m our leaders and msllluttons has sured these components of ctvtc It lc
plunged."
Voter turnout m prcStdenual clecttons
Rather than blammg ltberals for fell from 63 percent of ehgtblc voters
promotmg pemusstvcness m the m 1960 to 55 percent m 1972 to 49
1960s or conservattves for pushmg percent tn 1996, the lowest level smcc
sellishness tn the 1980s, the commts- 1924 In mtd-term clecuons, II reached
ston declared, "much of what has a htgh of 48 percent m 1%8. fell to 37
and secondaryschool
years
standmg 10 the
hall .. but not at
storytelling
The M1.dwest
produces people
hke Bob Dole
and
Charhe
Manson. (The
latter halls from
my hometown of
Cinctnnau. Make
Snow
of that what you
wtll.)
No doubt he tned to tell a long.
funny tale He started fine, but had to
stop to retneve a sahent detatl ,
resumed the narrattve, paused to
retneve another mot, then eJected the
ponchhne prematurely .. Jeavmg hts
listeners deflated and bemused.
It 1s a proven fact that God handed
the JOke-telhng talent to Southerners.
some of whom can spm yams for
weeks without even approachmg a
punchhne, and New Yorkers. who
otherwtse would have only the bOttle
and the Brooklyn Bndge for dehver-

called "blocking." Il's the mmd's
way of delaymg unpleasantness unul
the last posstble moment .. as we do
whew, say, we try to avotd conJunng
mental 1mages of the prestdent and
Momca.
Yet ume overtakes us all, and the
chosen day finally amYed., I paced I
muttered I fell vtcum to \proJectile
sweaung.
I typed out Jokes and tned them on
mnocent bystanders. My asSistant,
Irene, listened patiently and then,
bless her heart, cut loose wtth a wan
smirk.
I read them over the phone to
fnends. They all laughed .. after a
seven-second delay. Ftnally, tn desperat10n, I recited the address to my
5-year-old daughter Here arc her
exact words. "That was very lo~~ ·
Daddy. You'll never fimsh all that
Mtsery loves company, of course,
and I had plenty Helen Thomas
opened the fesuvtttes, followed by
Chnton Whtte House press secretary
Mtke McCurry. Then came Bernard
Shaw. Other suckers mcluded Andrea
Mttohcll, Maureen Dowd, Barbara
Bush .. a dtstant rclattve of Frankhn
anc~~~ I dtgress. In the days leadmg Pierce .. along w1th Bush and Marhn
up to the affatr, I thought a ltttle about htmsclf.
the speech, but not much Thts ts
Some were hllartous. Others were

'f.sta!Jlisfwf in 1948

Sounding American
campaign themes in China

WE'RE

GoiNG TO
NEEDA

WAlK· IN
MEDICINE

CABINET

brave.
Maureen stole the show by playmg the role of the naughty Cathohc
schoolgtrl Dressed 111 a backless
lavender stlk frock wtth spagheiJ!.
straps · she lowered her head, causmg
her red hatrto cascade over her eyes.
She spoke ·~.flat hypnotic ~.ade~ces .
"Marhn, she rurred, ts catmp
. to women ···
"He once confided 10 me over
lunch that he had a mad crush on ..
Manlyn Quayle.
'"I don't know why he told me
thts," she conunued, enunctating
each syllable wnh a slow preciston
redolent of suletto heels stnkmg pol·
tshed ulc, "Perhaps he needed some
diSctpline.

··t could JUSt tmagmc htm ponng
over a dog-eared copy of the novel
she co-wrote
'Tammg the Ser·
pent. ..
She peformed at thts level for 10
mmutes
McCurry was stupendous, too He
dcltvcred a funny, warm talk ahout
the camaradene that bmds the Whnc
House grunts who keep the press
.Jackals at bay. Hts speech provtded a
much-needed respite from the Carvtl·
!ism that has gnppcd the capnal.
McCurry, a veteran qf Wa.shtngton,
sttll belongs to the old school ..
whtch believes that people may dts·
agree vehemently on policy and
remam fnends.
PreSident and Mrs Bush also performed hke pros Thts made hfe easy
for me. By the ume the final punchhnc amvcd, everybody tn the crowd
fell good .. and I came to apprcctate
the wtsdom m an old tale
As Davtd Garnck, the great
Brntsh actor, lay on hts deathbed, a
woman called upon htm. "You poor
man," she satd, trymg to console,
"thts must be hard. "
"Madam," he rephcd, "dying ts
easy Comed1· IS hard."
Write Tony Snow, Creaton Syn·
dicate, 5777 West Century Bhd.,
Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

90045.

New index shows U.S. ailing

ft:,

. Berry's World

percent m 1974 and hasn't been more
than 40·percent smce.
In 1964, 77 percent of adults told
pollsters that they trusted the federal
government. That number plunged to
25 percent tn 1980, rose to 38 percent
m 1984 dunng Ronald Reagan's first
tegh and fell back to 28 percent tn
1~. It's recovered to 38 percent
amtd Chnton-era prospenty.
Meanumc, the extent to whtch
Amencans told pollsters they could
trust other people has ztgzagged I rom
58 percent m 1964to as low a.' 34 per·
cent m 1994 In one ol the marked
Improvements of late. 11 ts hack mto
the htgh 40s
Reported memhcrshtp m at least
one CIVIC or rchgu.1us group w.ts dose
to I)() percent tn the mtd-1970s, now.
it's at 84 percent The percentage of
people takmg an acuvc part m ctvtc
hfe by scrvmg on wmmtttees or betng
an officer m a group ha.s Iallen from
14 percent m 1974 to R percent m
1995. Charttable gtvmg as a percentage of nattonal dtsposahle tncome ha.'
rcmatncd at about 2 percent throughnut the pcnod
Ne~t to plungmg voter parttctpalton and trust m government, the
tndex 's most dtsturhmg components
concerned secunty and fanuly breakdown
Youth murders per 100,000 persons ha.s nearly tnpled smce 1972, and
the numbers arc down only slightly
amtd the gcncml rcductton m vtnlcnt
cnmc oceumng recently FBI-reported cnmcs per I,000 pen;nns rose !rom

48 m 1973 to 52 m 1981 and now arc
down to 41.5
The number of dtvorces per I,000
mamed women wa.s 17 tn 1972, rose
to 23m 1979 and fell \1&gt; 19.8 in 1996.
But the percentage Of children born
out of wedlock was 12 in 1972 and has
nsen steadily to 32 percent in 1996.
Givmg equal wctght to polittcal
factors, trust, membcn;htp, sccunty
and famtly stati!tiCs, the cnmmtsstnn
put Its Index of Ctvic Health at IJO m
1960 It dropped to 100 in 1972. held
at that level unttl 19R6, then fell tn XO
m 1992 and rose sh)!htly to X4 m
1996
There was dtsagrecmcnt m the
commtsston ahout what the future
holds Democrat Nunn satd he was
encouraged that the condttmn of U S
CIVIC hfe wa.s bccomtng a wtdcly dts·
cussed tssue and that vanous grnufl'
arc workmg to tmprove II through voluntary acttnn
But Bennett ts convmced that the
Chnton scandals .. and espcctally the
pubhc 's hla.sc attitude about them ..
arc hkcly to cause lur1her "ctvtc mrophy" m the country
He's wnung a book ahnutll. "The
Death ol Outrage Btll Clmtnn and the
Assault on American Ideals."
although he satd tt's sttlltn he dcctded
whether there wtll he a questmn mark
tn the title markmg the posstbtllty that
outrage tsn 't dead
(Morton Kondracke is executive
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

Ranking of film said insulting, disgraceful

When tt comes to sronewallmg, WE wrote the

"""" .

Today in history
: By The Aseoclated Prell
.
: • Today is Thursday, July 2, the 183rd day of 1998. There are 182 days left
: ;n the year.
· : Today's Highhght m Htstory:
: : On July 2. 1776, the Contrnental Congress passed a resolutton sayrng that
: "these United Colomes are, and of nght, ought to be, Free and Independent
: States."
· : On this date:
: : In 1566, Nostradamus, French astrologer, physician and prophet, dted rn
· Salon.
.
In 1881 President Garfield was shot by Charles J. Guneau at the Washington rail~ station: Garfield dted the following Septemper.

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
PETERSBURG. Va -The more
Susan Fales-Htllthought about it, the
angner she got.
"The Birth of a Natton," the 1915
movte that celebrates the Ku Klux
Klan and deptcts blacks as baboons
and buffoons has been ranked by the
Amencan Ftlm Institute as one of the
- I00 best films ever made.
In the AA's myoptc vtew, the
movie - whtch revolu110mzcd filmmaking wtth tts use of creative vtsual
effects- fimshed ahead of a long hst
of classtcs, mcludmg "From Here to
Etemtty" and "The SoundofMustc."
Unbelievable.
"There are pictures in which the
content ts so heinous that it must be
taken into account when assessing
thetr merits, and this is one of them,"
said Fales-Hill, a televtsion producer
whose credits mcludc "The Cosby
Show" and "A Different World."
"People should see 11 and maybe
even study 11," she said of D.W. Grif·
filii's racist film, "butt! shouldn't be
exalted. It's an evil piece."
.
Why? Because Fales-Hill, who is
in Virginia working on "Line's," a
series about a black-owned bar and its

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

eclectic group of patrons that pre-

of a Natton" AFI, no doubt, wtll he
Movtcs stop bemg ar1 when they
miere 's
on
JUst as deterrmned m defense of tts become Instruments of npprcssion. It
Showttme
m
dects1on to rank the film as one of the wa.' that way from the start with GnfAugust,
said
best of all Urnes.
fith 's film. To now mnk n along side
"The ll•rth of a
Better than "Snow Whne &amp; The "The Wt7.ard of Oz" ~nd "Smgin' in
Nat10n" IS rac1st
Seven Dwarfs "
the Ram" ts to tnvtuit7.c tt's hurtful
propaganda.
Better than "A Streetcar Named mtcnt and the very real damage 11 dtd
And
she's
Dcstre."
hy JUsttfymg the bru!;tlity blacks have
nght.
Better than "Forrest Gump ..
suffered at the hands of Klansmen.
Just hke the
Better than "Rocky. "
Gnffith's ncgauve portrayals of
films produced
There have been several efforts to blacks had a lastmg efl"cct on Hollytn Nazt Germany
rcvtvc "The Btnh of a Nauon " It was wood filmmaken; welltntothc 1970s.
to butld hatred
rc-rclca.scd tn 1921 and agatn tn 1947 Donald Bogle says in hts hook.
for Jews, it was a
Wickham
In 1950, Hollywood toyed wtth the "Toms, Coons, Mulauocs, Mammtcs,
tool of those who
tdca of addtng a vmce track to the and Bucks An lnterprettvc Htstory of
wanted to demomzc blacks and JUsti· stlcnt film. That tdea wa.' abandoned Blacks tn Amencan Ftlms."
fy the black codes and Jim Crow poll· when the NAACP threatened a ma.•The people at AFI who came up
cies that emerged followmg Recon- stvc campatgn to protest such a wtth Its list of 100 best films coukl
struction To tgnore thts rcahty, is to remake. AFI's tribute to Griffith's have henclited from a readtng of
embrace its hurtful tmpact
film hrcathcs new life tnto a film that Bogle's hook and hts instghlful c~ain­
In 1915, antt·black violence often long ago should have hecn dtspatched tnatmn of Griflith's treatment of
followed showmgs of "The Birth of a to the celluloid cemetery.
blacks in hts movie. Their dccisionNation." That year, as Griffith's film
No movie tn the htstory ol Amen- makmg might have bccndiffcrcnl had
was adverttscd as one that "w ill make can filmmaking has done more harm they done so.
'
you hate," lynchmgs of blacks rose to hlacks than ""The Btrth of a
As it is, AFI's inclusion of "The
dramatically. It's against thts back- Nation." Gnflith's venomous movte Btrth of a Nation" among il' ranking
drop that Falcs-Hill said, "I just don't dtd more to dash the hopes and of the top 100 films add.' great insult
see how we can scpWllte content from dreams of hlacks than Ros.' Barnett; to the decades of injurj D.W. Grifartist merit. "
the former segregationist governor of fith's hateful movie has visited upon
But GFifflth tried to do just that. He Mississippi who once sa1d " the hlcrally millions of black people.
went to his grave denying that he had Negro is different because God made
,,
any evil intent in creating "The Birth him different to pumsh htm."

--·. ......

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weather

MICH

The Daily Sentinel

.....

•

PA

IND

• IColumbus I88' I

W.VA

Q,~ ,~qc;:Q~(f~u
Showers T·storms Ra1n

Flur;tes

S~o·~

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

V1a ASSOCIRted Press Grap/JICSNet

Today's weather forecast
By The Associated Prell
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Partly cloudy. Highs 80 to
85. Light and variable wind.
Tonight...Ciear..Then areas of
dense fog developing. Lows in the
upper 50s. Light wmd.
Friday . Mqstly sunny. Highs in
the mtd 80s.
Extended fo~ast.
Fnday night ..Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers after midnight.

Lows 60 to 65.
Fourth of July .. Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s
Sunday... A chance of showers in
the morning ... Otherwise partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s and
highs in the mid and upper 80s
Monday.. Partly cloudy. Lows m
the mid 60s and highs tn the mid 80s

Obituary ·. .

d

Obltu•rl•• •r• p8ld •nnouncemente •rr•nged by locel fun·erel home.• ,
Obltuarl•• .,. publlehed u requMted to eccommodata lb-. dtilrlna more
Information than I• provided In the -JIIinylng Death Notlcu. .

Margaret R.Nesselroad
Margaret Rose Nessel road. 8,3. Long Bottom. died Monday. June 29. 1998.
at her daughter's residence tn Reedsvtlle.
She was born Oct. 4, 1914, in Oklahoma City. daughter of the late Wilham
Aoyd and Anna Lou Born Foster. She was a rettred postmaster for the
Reedsvtlle Post Otlice.
She " survtved by a daughter, Margaret Groce Cauthorn of Reedwtlle;
two granddaughters and a grandson-in-law. Ahson and Dtrk Kretss of
Reedsville and Abtgail Cauthorn of Columbus; one stster, Joanna Dodson
of Oklahoma City; four brothers, Richard Foster, John Foster and Wtlham
Foster. all of Oklahoma City, and Daniel Foster of Garland, Te~as, several
nieces and nephews.
She was preceded 10 death by her first husband. John Groce; her second
husband, Martin Nesselroad; one son, John Groce; one brother. Leo Foster.
Servtces will be held Saturday. II a.m. at the Our Lady of Loretto Catholic
Church, Success Road, Reedsville. with the Rev. Father Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will be in the Our Lady of Loretto Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday, 6-9 p.m. at tbe. White Funeral Home in Coolville
where a vtgil service wtll be held at 8:45 p.m. Memorial contributions may
be made to the Washington County Home Nursing &amp; Hospice at 900 Thtrd
St., Manetta, or to the Reedsville Emergency Squad

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS - Ohio-lndtnna
dtrect hog prices at selected buying
pomts Thun;day as provided by the
U S. Department Of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts· mostly 1.00
1
lower; demand light to moderate on
a moderate movement
U S 1-2. 230-260 lbs . country
pomts 37 50-39.00. few 37.00 and
39 50; plants 38.50-40 50
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs 35 50-

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oncl ....... &lt;OI'I'OCilolllf .......ted.

Am Ele Power ....................... 45'o
Akzo ...................................... 65~.
AmrTech ...............................44%
Ashland 011 ........................... 51'·
AT&amp;T ..................................... 55'1.
Bank One .............................. 58'•
Bob Evana ...........................20~.
Borg-Wamer ......................... 48,.
Broughton ...............................15
Champion ............................. 11 '·
Charm Shps ......................... 4"1.
Cltv Holdlng ..........................44'1o
Federal Mogul ....................... 68\
Gannett ................................. 73'1.
Goodyttar .............................. 64,,
Landa End ............................ 30't.
Limited ..................................33'1.
Oak Hill Flnl ......................... .20\
OVB .......................................40'1.
One Valley ............................. 35~
Peoplaa ................................. 30~
Prem Flnl .................................21

Rockwell ..........................48l.

News Departments

Tlte ll8ia •••ber II 992-115.5. Depol1·

cu..- a..·

Stocks

Kmart ....................................19'Kroger .................................. 44'1.

Reader Services

lllor)', Clll tilt

37.00; 210-230 lbs. 30.50-34.50.
Sows: mostly I 00 lower
U.S. 1-3, 300-400 lbs 22.0024.00; 400-500 lbs. 24 ()()..25.00;
500-600 lbs. 25.()()..27.00, few over
600 lbs 2800
Boars· over 300 lbs . 15.()()..16 00;
under 300 lbs 21.00-25 00
Estimated receipts· 30,000.
Prices from Producers ,Livestock
Association
Thursday's trends·
Hogs 1.00 lower; sows 1.00 lower; cattle steady.
Summary of Wednesday's auctions at Gallipohs and Mt. Vernon·
Hogs:
Market hogs; 39.50-40 85; hght
sows 23.25-26.75: heavy sows 27 75
and down.
Feeder pigs; 41 .00 head and
down.
All boars 25.25 and down.
Cattle:
Slaughter steers; choice 57.5063.50; select 52.50-57.50.

AD/Shell ................................ss~

s..ra .....................................&amp;1~

3'-

::.,.., ~ ...:...................bt. JJG1
N................................ Cl.......... ~

n:

Shoney'a ......................
Star Blnk............................. IS2''t.
Wenclv'a ..................................23
Worthlngton ............................ 15

Other SenicM

Adomlllttl. .....- .......................bt. UM

Stock reporta are the 10:30
a.m. QUOIN provided by Advelt
ol Gallipolis.

Clte...,. ................................ bt. II«J

au llltd Ad&amp; .................._........En u•

M

The Rev. Pearl Casto, 94, Gallipolis, dted Tuc~sda1y, June 30, 1998 in the
Holzer Semor Care Center.
Born June 6, 1904 in Anthony. W.Va .. son of the late Ira Preston and
Mamte Louamy Remley Ca~to, he was a mintster, wnh over 50 years of service.
An assoctate member of the West Ohio Conference. he pastored the Patriot Untied Methodtst Church m 1954. the Letart Falls Church in 1959. the
Chester Charge m 1964.the Stockdale Church m 1%9 and reured from the
Kingston Charge m 1977.
He later served seven ye31"s at the Centenary Umted Method1st Church,
and went back to the Patnot Church for a short time.
Survtvmg are ht~ wtfe. Gladys Mercer Pollock Casto; two stepsons. Ronnie (Anna) Pollock ot Bucyrus. and Mike (Kris) Pollock of Rio Grande; a
stepdaughter, Glona (Oscar) Davtes ofGallipohs; 15 grandchildren and 24
great-grandchtldren; two brothers, Earl (Roxte) Casto of Whtte Sulphur
Spnngs, W.Va .. and Russell (Marie) Casto of Belle. W.Va.; and a sister,
Loramna (Luther) Clements of White Sulphur Springs.
He was preceded in death by a daughter. Edith Casto Andrews; two brothers, Wyau Ca•to and Noel ca.,to; and a stster, Nada ,Weston.
Servtces wtll be 2 p.m. Fnday in the Wtlhs Funeral Home. with the Rev.
Jtm Waugh, Athens District superintendent, the Rev Bob Steele, the Rev.
Jane Ann Mtller and the Rev. Alfred Holley offictatmg. Entombment wtll be
m the Ohto Valley Memory Gardens Chapel of Hope Mausoleum. Fnends
may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.

Personnel actions.net
Eastern Board approval
The Eastern Local Board of Education approved personnel matters
and actton on the district's building
program when it met in regular ses·
sion on June 25.
Angie Rigsby was approved ns
varsuy cheerleader advtsor, Kim
Prospen as marchtng band instructor,
Susan Pan;ons as Flag Corps instructor anlt 1ayne Ann Colhns as ARSI
Teacher/Partner.
Professtonal growth stipends were
approved for Lolita Morrow, Joyce
Htll and Ron Hill.
An mservice day was approved
for secreta'l'ies for word processmg.
data base and spread sheet, to be
instructed by the district's technology coordmator.
The board authorized the posting
of a high school math and sctence
teacher.
The board also approved the pur·

cha.sr of gym floor covering for the
elementary gym floor, authorized the
purchase of appliances from Anderson's furniture, and a digital piano for
use in both the-high school and elementary buildings Change orders for
the winng of the new building and for
drywall partitions in the high school
The trea.•urer wa.s authorized to
advertise for bids for lunchroom
supphes and to obtam quotes for the
purchase of transportation supphes
and fuel 011.
A contract wtth Snouffer's Ftre
and Safety m Middleport for fire
equipment servtce was approved
The board also approved a spectal
meeting forWednesday. July 8 at
6·30 p.m. at Tuppers Plams Elementary, and the regular meetmg on
Thursday, July 23 at 6 p.m. at Chester
Elementary.

Meigs announcements
Forest Run Bible school
Forest Run Untted Methodist
Church wtll presenttts yacauon Btble
school. Ftshers of Men. Monday
through July 10, 6-8 p.m. All children
welcome.
Special service
A spectal servtce to include the
Veterans of Foreign War will be held
at the Eden United Brethren Church
on Sunday at 2 p.m. The church is
located 2 miles north of Reedsville on
State Route 124 The public is invited.
Reunion set
The 20th annual Charles W. and
Fanme Lee Wolfe Beaver famtly
reunion wtll be held July II at Star
Mtll Park, Racine Dmner will be
served at noon. Those anendmg are
to take a covered dtsh.
Grange to meet
Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet Friday at 7 30 p.m. at the

Star Grange hall. Annual tnspecuon
Will be held and the ntual w1ll be presented m full form. Star Grange wtll
be host.
Gathering to be held
Emmaus Gathenng wtll be held
Monday, 7·30 p.m. at the Cheshtre
Umted Methodtst Church.
Distribution planned
The Portland Racme Reorgamzed
Church of Latter Day Samts wtll have
a food, clothtng and mtscellaneous
uems gtve-away lor blood vtcttms at
BtU's lire Servtce m Ravenswood, on
Saturday. from 10 am. to 3 p m.

Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Servtcc recorded sev·
en calls tor asSistance Wednesday.
Units responding included.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I 53 am., State Street, Pomeroy.
Bruce Conde, Veter•ns Memonal
Hosp1tal.
9 16 am .. Park Road, Pomeroy,
Chester Sexton, VMH ,
11 ·28 a.m , Mommg Star Road.
Racme. Mary Porter. VMH .
2 36 p m . Ftsher Street, Pomeroy,
Enc D1ddlc. VMH.
8:19pm., state Route 681, motor·
vehicle acctdent, Kat1e Grueser.
O'Bieness Memonal Hospnal; Beth
Reynolds and Jenmfer Heck, Pleas·
ant Valley Hospital; Davtd Grueser
ancl Chad Grueser, refused treat·
ment; Scipto and Rutland volunteer
ftrc departments, Rutland squad
asststed.
RUTLAND
I0 a m., VFD and squad to Depot
Street. structure lire at Dewayne
McDamels restdence, no inJunes
reported;
9·24 p.m.. Rtverstde Apartments,
Mtddleport, Charles Eakms, VMH
Untts of the Metgs County Emergency Medtcal Servtce recorded 20
calls for assiStance Monday and
Tuesday. Units respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3.30 am Monday. Kmgsbury
Road, Pomeroy. Nev S. Whue, Vet·
erans Memonal Hospttal.
8.36 a.m. Monday. Maples Apart·
ments, Pomeroy. Gladys Blessmg.
VMH:
9 10 a.m Monday, Naylor's Run ,
Pomeroy, Ilene Landaker, VMH.
10·02 am Monday. Overbrook
Nursmg Center Middleport, Ruth
Moms, VMH .
.
3:19am. Tuesday. Naylor's Run
Road. Etleen Landaker, Holzer Med·

teal Center,
8 33 a.m Tuesday, Holly Lane.
Re~ O'Bnen, HMC.
2 02 p.m. Tuesday, Rockspnngs
Rehabthtattpn Center. Frances
Adkms, v~lH
MIDDLEPORT
5.16 a.rn . Monday, volunteer lire
department to Storys Run Rl)ad.
water rescue, Gary Smtth, no mJures
reported,
2.28 p m. Monday. R1ved1de
Apartments. Mtddleport. Bob CQm·
mms. Holzer Medtcal Center.
POMEROY
3 47 p.m. Tuesday, Juke Bo~ P•z·
za. controlled wall lire.
7 18 p m. Tuesday, West Main
Street. Carol Jett. HMC.
:
REEDSVILLE
6 15 a.m. Tuesday. Rtce ~un
Ro•d. assiSted by Central Dtsp~tch.
Jam&lt;&gt; Duvall. VMH .
'
•
RACINE
2 09 am. Monday. Eaton R'?ad.
Greg Sellers, treated at the scene&gt;.
II 40 a.m Monday. VFD ~nd
squad to State Route 124. motor VJ:ht·
cle acc1dent . Shawna Bobo. VMH .
SYRACUSE
'
4·29 p m. Monday. VFD and
squad to SR 124. motor vehtcle acct·
dent. Peggy Ttppy and Ktmberly
Freeman. VMH.
10·20 p.m. Tuesday. Water's Edge
Apartments. asststed by Central Qts·
patch. Gemldine Spo:nL-er. treated. not
transported.
10 34 p m Tuesday. Court Str;eet
Road. as,tsted by Racme first responden;. Tony Shambhn. VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
2 26 p m Monday. SR 7. Ve"f"(lon
Milhoan , Camden-Clark Memonal
Hospual :
7 18 p m. Tuesday, New Hope
Road. Carla Ktmes. O " Bie~ess
Memonal Hospital

' Galha-Metgs Community ActiOn
Agency ts takmg apphcaltons lor
sen10r ctttzens to help other sentor
~111zens m Galha and Me1gs countu:s
Tho)e mterested m parttctpatmg
wtll recetve an hourly sltpo:nd and
mtleage lor 20 hours per week to
serve as companiOns to elderly or
fr,ul county restdents
Compamons can asstst wnh light
chores. provtde soctahzatton. share a
meal or asstsl Wtlh errands and medtcal appomtments Each companton
ts asstgned to three persons dunng a
one-week penod.
Studtes have found that most old·
er people want to stay tn thetr home.
CAA oltictals satd, and compantons
prov1de a regular vtsltor. a canng
fnend and most of all. relteve the tso·
!alton that many older people e~pe-

•

nence. whtle allowmg them to stay tn
thetr homes.
CompaniOns must be 60 years or
older. able to serve 20 hours po:r --:eek
and meet mcome gutdehnes A sentor
leader. 55 yean; or older. tn good
health and able to serve 20 hours per
week. wnh no mcome restncttons.
wtll asstst wnh the program coordt·
nation and development. as well as
wnh volunteer servtce.
II mterested. call Letha Proffitt at
367-7341 tn Galha County and 9926629 tn Metgs County for mtorma·
t10n.

l:tl, 1:311, 4:11,
4:45, 7:311, 11:11

July 4 cancellation
The Swingtng Senter wtll not
perform Saturday at Rae me's July 4
celebratton. The group, whtch was
scheduled to perform at 2 p.m. , wtll
be replaced by gospel singing. The
Home Remedtes Band wtll perform
3-5 p.m

Bruct Wilks Billie Bob Thomkln lN T&amp;

But na."y weather coulll return for the
Fourth of July. forecasters satd.
An u~per level dtsturbance wtll
swtng across the state Fnday ntght

Kospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admtsstons - Kenneth Newland.
Wednesday discharges - none
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 1 - Barbara
Allen. Mrs. Duane Shank and daugh·
ter. Terry Nance, Ricky Weaver.
Annabel Houdashelt, Sam ,Cleveland.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. David
Hoover. son. Middleport.
(Published ft'ith permission)

Cow/CalfPatrs $320-700, Breed·
mg Bulls, 500-675 Bred Cows $325$535; Baby Calves $1 0-55; Goats
$25-$90
. For free on-tarm vtstts. please
call 614-446-9696

Meigs ...
Continued from page I
Tummy Black w1ll ~ tart acliVJlle s an
the Ftremen's Park
Entertatnment wtll tnclude
karaoke by Jeff North from 2 30 to
5:30p.m . and Flat Stanley. a b.md
from Manetta. wh1ch wtll perform
from 6 30 to 10:30. RadiO statton
99 5 WBYG Btg Country wtll broadcast ltve from the park.
The Ftremen's Auxthary wtll
sponsor a cow drop and ltckets are
now on sale for $5 The drop wtll be
held from 6 to 8 p.m.
Throughout the day there wtll
games for adults and chtldren, and
food booths will be in opemtton. An
auction of items donated by area
businesses ·and items from Mtchael
Burtrum of the New England Patnots
will be held at the park at 5:30p.m
Fireworks to conclude the celebrJtion have been scheduled for
10:30 p.m.

ALL AGES, ALL TillES $4.00

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(Limit 2 chains per coupon)
* Does not apply to current
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* No dealers
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TWO LOCATI ON S:

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1•, 1 ;.&gt;nd Avr- .
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Jewelry
Repllr

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___- ---..-·-·· ··----·-------- ____ ._ -----·- ...

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O!ll

111111, Rlllllt&lt;,l1:110, 3:211, 5:40, ll:lli
X.ftfJ ,. ,~
1:110, 4:110, 7:110
(:OOll u "'l
1:110, 7:110
Til TIIIIIAN SIIJW ""' 1:110, 4:110, 7:110
1:15, 13, 525, 7:311
- R.Ol11 ,.,, 1:311,4:311,7:311
JilL DllJTTlf M 1:80, 3:35, 5:40, 7:45
lilT If liGHT " 1:45,4:80,7:15
I PBiftt II'IUIB A
4:110

Gallipolis livestock auction· results
Producers Ltvestock Market
report from Galltpohs for sales C''~·
ducted on Wednesday. July I
Feeder Cattle.
2&lt;KI-300# St. $65-$74. Ht $60$70. 300-400# St. $72-$71 Hl.$1\().
$69. 500-650# St. $n5-$72Hf $62$71: 650-800# St. $60-$67: Hf $58$64.
(Feeder Callie sale ts the second
Wednesday of each month)
Cull Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed $37-$44
Medium/Average $32-$36.
Thin/Light $28-$32. Bulls $42$47.
Back To The Farms·

....-

.....

·- - ~ · ·-

....

-

I'

I

CAA seeks senior citizens
for home assistance effort

Nasty weather could
return to Ohio on July 4th
By The Associated Press
A slow-movmg htgh pressure sys·
tern will provtde sunny sktes and
temperatures m the HOs on Fnday.

I

_____________
...,....;•

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- ·-· - -

1

�Sports

The ·naily Sentinel

f

·

·
Page4
Thursday, July 2, 1998

~uy

in this game and Omar Vizquel
is one oF the bener base stealers in
this game." Juden said. "They've
done that to more guys than just
myself."
Juden (7-7). who pitched For
Cleveland the last two months oF
1997 after arriving from the Expos in
a trade. allowed five runs and six hits
in six mnings.
Milwaukee manager Phil Gamer
said there is only so much the 6-Foot8 Juden can do to hold runners on.
" He is getting beller. You can see
he 's a big guy, but he is getting better. " Garner said.
Dave Burba ( 10-5) allowed two
runs and four hits in 6 213 innings,
and Mike Jackson pitched the ninth
him."
Lofton had three hits. reached on for hi s 18th save.
"Dave threw the ball well." Hara.walk and stole a season-high three
grove
said. "He threw strikes. he was
bases to set up two runs. Vizquel.
staying
around the plate, staying
named Wednesday to the All-Star
ahead
oF
hillers. He got a couple oF
team for the first time. twice drove in
ground
balls
for double plays. ''
Lofton with base hits. drew two
Cleveland,
which had four Allwalks. scored twice and also "ole
Star
reserves
named
Wednesday by
two bases.
Hargrove.
took
a
1-0
lead
in the first
I• " I attribute that to the fact that
Kenny Lofton is probably the fastest innmg without gelling a hit.

Vizquel and David Justice drew tonight."
Milwaukee got a run closer in the
walks. Jim Thome hit a grounder to
second. and Vizquel was able to score bonom half on Marquis Grissom's
when first baseman Mark Lorella RBI groundout.
failed to step on the bag after taking
the throw.
The Indians made it 2-0 in the
third when Lofton singled. stole second and scored pn Vizquel's double.
"I don't go out there and say I'm
just going to steal off Juden," Lofton
said. "I go out there and expect to try ·
to steal ofF oF every pitcher that goes
on the mound."
.
Jose Valentin's 13th homer in the
third brought the Brewers within 21.
David Bell's fifth homer. a solo
shot ·in the sixth, put the Indians up

scored on Vizquel's single. Mike
Myers relieved and Vizquel moved
up on a wild pitch, stole third and
scored on Thome's single.

Holzer Clinic will be closed on
Friday, July 3 in observance of
Independence Day.

3-1.
" He's a first-ball Fastball hiller, "
Juden said. "I tried to challenge him.
I started him off with breaking balls
earlier, the first couple oF at-bats and
we felt he might havt heen looking
for that. I decided to go with the fastball and lo and behold. he was still
waiting For that first-pitch Fastball.
That was one oF the mistakes I made

Urgent Care will remain open from
. 1:00 PM to 9:00 PM in the
Gallipolis and Jackson facilities.

Hav~ a~af~ and·

Twins top Reds 2-1 to halt
Cincinnati's winning streak
Radke had to resort to something
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (APl- Reds man- he could control.
"Most of their hits were on off.
ager Jack McKeon didn't know how
badly Minnesota Twins stuner Brad speed pitches," he said. "At least I
was throwing them for strikes. IF I
Radke was struggling.
" He changes speeds real effec- , hadn't been. I probably wouldn't
lively. He kept our guys off-balance have made it through the first
all night," McKeon said by way of inning."
Radke is Minnesota's lone All•
compliment after the Twins beat
Star
represemative.
Cincinnati 2-1 Wednesday night.
-"He's not overpowering, but he 's
"The first thing you dream about
smart. He pitches smart." Me Keon is gelling to the big leagues." he said.
said. "He kept pulling the string on " Being chosen to the All-Star team
guys all night and gelling weak fly is the icing on the cake. I was really
excited when they told me."
b~lls."
Radke "kept pulling the string"
Radke (9-6) allowed nine -hits and
because his fastball had gone hay· struck out four in six innings. Rick
wire, hours after being chosen for the Aguilera pitched a perfect ninth for
A.LAII-Star team for the first time.
his 17th save.
Pokey Reese went 3-for-3 For the
." 1 really wanted to win bad
tonight - at least pitch a good Reds, who had their five-game wingame," Radke said. "I had no idea ning streak stopped. Cincinnati haswhere my fastball was going . I don' t n't won six straight since June 1996.
know why. I guess pitchers kind of go
The Twins took advantage of a
bad throw to score their first run, then
!J!to a slump like hillers do."

The Indians:- used aggressive
baserunning to jli!Sh across two runs
in the seventh. Lofton hit a leadoff
single, stole second and lhird, and

used an outfielder's lapse in judgmemto take a 2-1 lead in the seventh.
Terry Steinbach singled off
Cincinnati reliever Scoll Sullivan
(l-4) and scored from . first on Denny Hocking's looper to center. Rookie Mike Frank tried to make a play on
the ball and managed to knock it
down, but then had lo chase it into
left field as Steinb~ch - no speedster- chugged toward home.
McKeon refused to fault Frank for
trying to make the diving play.
"It's his decision. his call. All I
can say is make the right decision
most of the lime," McKeon said.
"The way things were, he kicks it far
enough away so that he can't catch up
toil in time."

Frank, who began the season with ·
Double-A Chattanooga, was playing
in his 12th major league game.
"I thought I could get it," Frank
said. "When I got to the point of no
(See REDS on Page S)

Holzer Clinic
Urgent Care Center
90 1ackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
{740) 446-5287

Friday's AL games

AL standings

1\altimoo: (Mussinu
tiuc 9- ~ ). 7:J~ p.m.

Eastern Division

:w 2Qr..

:i:um

· .........n

New York ... .
Boston ...
TOfontu ...

..49 )2
4.1 41
..... J7 47
.... J" 4K

Baltimore . .

Tampn Bay .....

£&lt;1.

!.ill

.'i 12

10
17 \
21' .

4-tJ).

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r.m.

.7-10
.61ll
.440
.415

.. .47

J9

Minncsotn .....
Kansas Cit y ....

Detrmt

)4

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4.1

476

.

... ..... .......
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..... .l2

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. . .... 49
... -16 17
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.16
41 42
.. J7 4M
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Wednesday's scores
(AL vs. NL)
Ttw-nntt' l:'i . N.Y. Met.' 10
Chica,.o Cuh5 6. Ariznna 4
S:1n Diq!tl M. OaklanJ -1
Dctrntt &lt;J. PtUsbur~h I

.,.
!.\'

so

.
·
·
·

TtiHU

(8urkett4-H).

(CaOOioni 4- 10) nl Anaheim

R : J~

(Qii"arc~

Friday's NL games
Piu s bur~h

(CordoYa ti-6) at C lu ca~n Cub ~

ITaram K-Ill. .1:20 p.m.
Hnnda ISandltz .1-~ ) at Momreal (Vazquez 2-6).
7 : 0~p . m

Mdwaukt.'t! (Karl 6-J) at Phil;ldelphia (Schilling
7-H). 7.05 Jl.lll .
S1. lnu1 ~ (Stollh~ myrl! 9 -.~l at CINCINNATI
IRl!lllhn ~er 4-9), 7 :0~ p.m.
NY Mets (Ynshii 4-.1) at Atloma (GI:avinc II ·
.1). 7:40p .m.
·
Artwna (Benes 6-M) ill 1-hlltston (Rcyno!Js 9- ~).
~ - M)

nt San Die~;o (~am i hon

Western Conrerenc~
...
. .... M I MKIJ
Ptmcnic. .
. . .... .... ..... fi
2 1."1
l.m Angtlt&gt;L.
............. 2 6 1.~0
Sacramento ...
............. ..2
6 .2."i()
Utah ..
. .. 2 7 . 2~~

HolZer Clinic of Jackson
Urgent Care Center
25 South Street
Jackson, Ohio
(740) 286-6417

Huu ~l on

1'

~·
~'

Wednesday's scores

Tonidlt's games.
Phoenix ill CLE\'Eli\N O, 7 p.m
Utah at L.m An!!-tl!!"s. IO:JO p.m

Friday's games
Wnshin~tnn

111 New Ynrk, 7:.\0 p.m.
Si!crotnltnto at Huuston. 9 p.m

Transactions
Baseball
_
ANA HEIM ANGELS : Agreed tn term~ wilh
Amrrlc:~U~ Uat~:wt

;t~~ •p.tlCll

him h t Midlaml tll"

tl~o: Tc•:t~ Lc:tl!UC

BOSTON REO SOX : Pl a~cJ RHP Rtdl { iar ~l·~
(Valdes 6-7) at San Frant.·iscu {Hcr- on lht I :'i -day di .~ottllctlli ~l Rc~.illcll RHP Darin Vcr:ts frnm P:twluckct nl the lnll'l" n:uiunall ..c:t ~th.'
~ hi s~·r 6-h), ULH p.m.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Stp.netl LHI' C C
Sahathia and SS Zach Stucm;cn
KANSAS CITY ROYALS ' Signet! \I\ li yrnn
Geni.1. SS Cinflin Munrc anJ RHP Jt&gt;sh Snplin :nltl
a~sl}!lll.'tilhl'lllltllhCtr Gulf CIIIISI team
01\KL/\NU ATHtETICS : At~-reetltn t&lt;"rtns
with OF M;lll Stt~iu nn " tw()· ycar ~n ntmt.: t l'liCII·
~ itlO lhnlUJ!h the 211()() Sc!IIStlO
Eastern Cnnferenc~
SEAn·I.E MARINERS : l:ksil'nat!!d IF Jd"f
£&lt;1. !.ill
Hu~nn fnr as.1tgnn.cn1 . Called up OF Rid.t&gt;y Craillc
l'harlntte
... 7 2 77H
hum Tucnm~tuf 1hc l'ltt.:ilk COa\1 l...ca~ uc
l" IJ ·: VU .AND
... ."i
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TORONTO BL UE JAY S: Si~ n eJ OF Tnny
l k tn •tl
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t'
Phillips hl a mtntW"~c :tp.ue ~·untntct ami as.~ ignctl1um
N.·\\ York
..... ~
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2'
t ~l Syrat.: u ~ nr the 1ntcrn:mnna1 Lcat:ue .
IJ I.~ A n~dcs

Basketball

WNBA standings

7
7
II '

I! '
17

6

CLEVELANlJ 1J2. Washml!ton MU
O..:tr~&gt;it H2. N~:w Y11rk ll.'i

RHP Seth Etbenun atkJ

:w.m

:w r..

NEED TO REPtACE YOUR
OtD SIJNGLASSES?

· Onsltlll 6. Muntrt:itl I

: Mtnnt.·snt;t 2. CINC INNATI I
. Atl:tnt:l 6. T:1111po1 ll;~y .'i
• NY. Y:mkee~ ~ . Ph•latklplua 2
• Horitla ~ - Baltirnurc .1
· CLEVELAND ."i . Milwotu~w 2
• H!lustlln 10. Ouca!!n Whit~· Snl -1
: K;msas City 6. St Louts 4
. l.ns Ange1t's 7. T t l ;t&lt; :'i
. ~aule tJ. CnloradLl ~

• San Fr.ml-.st:o 6. Aoahetnt J (-!OJ

Our
Complete
Stock of
Sunglas_$eS

1ft PRICE

DUE TO·RECENT STORM DAMAGE
IN THE
TRI-COUNTY COMMUNITIES
FARMERS 'BANK .
IS MAKING AVAILABLE
TO ALL RESIDENTS
'.

LOANS
8.53% APR

FOR LOAN
AMOUNTS UP TO $5 ' 000
.
RATE IS AVAILABLE FOR A LIMITED TIME
RATE AVAILABLE lf'O ALL CUSTOMERS
OFFER SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL

·farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
'

211Weii~P.O. Iar~

....... ~.a769

M1mblr F.O.I.C.

-----·-- ..,----·-- --·-· --

~~~··

Wimbledon
By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)Pete Sampras usually feels at home
playing on Centl'l: Court at Wimbledon. It won't be that way in Friday's
semifinals.
Cenllt Coun will reverberate with
"Henmania" as Britain. still mourning over England's loss to Argentina
in the World Cup. pulls For Tim Henman to go where no homegrown
male player has ventul'l:d in 60 years.
"It's safe to say it's my favorite
court," Henman said. "When you've
got 15.000 people cheering you on
and willing you on. it gives you a
buzz.,.
Sampras knows he won 'l have
many supporters.
"Playing Tim here in England, il
wiII be tough," he said.
· But Sampras said he has Faced
similar situations, namely playing
Boris Becker in Germany, and knows
how to cope.
"Hopefully. you can put the
.crowd out of the match," he said.
"You've still got to piny. It's still one
on one. Tim is going to have some

semis now."
The other men's semifinal will
feature tivo of the game's biggest
servers - Richard Krajicek and
Goran lvanisevic.
Despite a swollen knee. Krajicek
is playing as well as when he won lhe
Wimbledon title in 1996. A bigger
surprise is Ivanisevic, a former twotime finalisl who won only one

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Washington Mystics have the WNBA
expansion blues.
The Cleveland Rockers are just
glad they didn 't catch it from Washington Wednesday night.
After blowing a 15-point halftime
lead last Saturday to the league's other expansion team. Detroit, the Rockers were a bit anxious Wednesday
when the struggling Mystics began
chipping into their 19-poinl secondhalf advantage.
"Anytime you have a lead in the
second halF, it is never s:1fe," Rockers guard Suzie McConnell Serio
said. "We need to put teams away
instead of letting them come back on
us."
Washington got to within live
points but Cleveland. hehind Isabelle
Fijalkowski 19 points and eight
rebounds. escaped with a 92-80 victory.
The Rockers (5-3). who shot a
season-best 58.9 percent, got 15
points each from Eva Nemcova and

Merlakia Jones and 13 points each
from Janice Braxton and Serio.
Washington (1-8) got the MCI
Center crowd of 10,364 involved
with a late rally sparked by KeriChacona~· live 3-pointers. Nikki McCray
had 19 points and Chaconas 17 for
the Mystics.
''The crowd was great. They are
ready to Jove us," Washington coach
Jim Lewis said. "Some of our players need to show a lillie moll: of their
love oF the game perhaps. They love
it, but they need to show it."
The boltom line Wednesday is that
the Rockers were a more cohesive
unit than the Mystics.
Cleveland had 23 assists to 16
turnover.; in the game. while Washington turned the ball over 21 times
with 15 a~sists.
Cleveland coach Linda HillMcDonald pointed out lhal 10 oF the
Rockers' assists came from the front
court players.
"We have an equal opportunity
offense." Hill-McDonald said.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 :

Meigs _Legionnaires ·
beat Westland twice ~

emotional support behind him, but
you have to play, and I feel like I'm
playing well."
Henman is playing more than just
the No. I player in the world, the man
who has won Wimbledon four of the
last five years and who hasn't
dropped a set so Far this tournament.
Henman is also playing the btuden
of history. By beating Pelr Korda in
Wednesday's quanerfinals, he
became the first British man to make
the semifinals since Roger Taylor in
1973.
Now he's aiming to become the
first Brit to reach the final since Henry Austin in 1938 and the first to win
the title since Fred Peny in 1936.
"I wa~n't'bom when Taylor got to
the semis," the 23-year-old Henman
said. "I don' t want to stop at the

Rockers beat Mystics 92-80

HOME IMPROVEMENT
AT 8.00%

".~ i.;.

in semifinal round

:Sy FRANK CAPEHART
with 10 points.
:OVP Correspondent
Nathan Hollingshead is on top the
Moisture from Mother Nature did 13-14 division with 15 points. Bryan
~n the third round oF the annual Tri- Cromley is second with 12 and
:County Junior GolF Tour this week. Casey Villars holds third at I0 points.
The first o&lt;&gt;und at Hidden Valley lanSmithheadsthe 11-12groupwilh
:Country Club was played on wet turf, 20 points. Ryan Slinde is second al 16
-end just finished prior to that first big and Bren Doeffinger is third with 14
:deluge a little over two weeks ago.
points.
: Then, the second round at CliffJill Sallaz (20) and Brooke Crom-side Golf Club also Found the junior.; ley (16) are one-tivo for lhe ladies.
i&gt;laying on a damp turf with cloudy while Eric Milhoan (16), Greg Ruslhreatening skies, but each of the two sell ( 10) and Bryan Harris (8) are
rounds were completed before the leader.; in the 10-and-younger secmoisture fell.
lion.
This week. the skies opened up
All the local courses were open
with abandon and local courses were 1. again Tuesday afternoon, despite
unplayable and closed. The third some lingering wet spots. and everyrpund, slated for Riverside, was lhins.should. be prelly much back to
washed out and will he played later. normal Wednesday. The weatherIt was only the third time in tour his- man calls for additional showers a
tory that this occurred.
few days hence. but golfers oF all
So, the Tri-County tour will ages should be out there swinging
resume on Monday, July 6, when lhe every day from now on. The rnin
young linksters a•semble at Meigs caused great problems all around, but
County GolF Course in Pomeroy. -local cour.;es recover quickly, so
Then. the makeup round at Riverside keep the clubs ready to go.
will be played on the Mason. W.Va.
Fonunately, lhe storms spared the
course Wednesday, July 15. to con- regatta, mostly last weekend at Point
elude regular point play. After that , Plea~ant. so we hope the arts and
the final roundup day of play al crafts festil'al in Ripley will get
HVCC. comes on Monday, July 22. good days this weekend. What with
All the rounds will tee-ofF at 8:30 lhe big event up there. local July
a.m. Registration each day begins at Fourth events and family outings on
8 a.m., so all interested local young lap, dry· weather would be nice.
golfers are urged to join in.
Officials at Ril'erside note there
Currently, leaders in each age will be open golfing through the
division are snuggly grouped. with weekend. HVCC has a scramble set
everything still wide open. On the 15- for Saturday at 4 p.m., but plenty oF
17 age group. Matt Tarbell heads the times For· all folks to play over the
list with 13. John Smith is right weekend. and other courses offer
behind at 12, and David Reed is third plenty links opponunities.

•

M Ill

~ - 9) . 1):(1~ jl.m .

£&lt;1.

Cenlrlll Dh'islnn
... ll .12 .614
.1K .."i"\ I
... 44 JtJ :'i .lO
.w 4.1 .476
Sl . Louis
...... .. J9 4~ .-164
Piu ~bur~h
.412
..... ..1~
CINCINNATI ..

N"iltiRa ...

at Minnesota !Tewksbury

H :{]~ p.m.
Si!illlle (Fasscro 6- ~lnt

Cvlnwdu (Wright

Houston

Snn Dicr:n
S:m J =raoct ~l·n
u~ Angdl'S
C:nltlf:.tdn .

2-~l

IHI."i pnt

Ea!lttr"n Oiwbion
Atlanta ...
New Ynrk
Philaddphia
Mnntrcal
Aprida ... ...

l&gt;etruit (CaSiilln

&lt;'

,Ill'....

. ~?H

NL standings
Iwlt

('J..:vclan.J lGoodcn 2-J) ar KansDs City (Ros.'kkl
H:05 p.m.

.l-~1-

Oakl&lt;~nJ

.17 4.1 .451
.... .11 49 .402

Chil:n~o

Yankees (Pct-

~ - -1 1 . IO:U:'it•.tn

Central Division
CLEVELAND ...

fl.~) Ill ~ . Y .

............... 1

Washington

Tampa Buy (Johnson 2 - .~) al Toronto (Gu~: man
4- 111). 7:0~ p.m.
(1tkago While Sox (SirOika ll-7 ) ot Boston
(Wakefield 9-J), 7 :0~ p.m.

Sampras earns

Tarbett, Milhoan,
Sallaz, Hollingshead
~ead junior golf series

Scoreboard
Baseball

,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

date with Henman

Indians defeat Brewers 5-2 ·to kill three-game losing skid
MILWAUKEE (APJ - The
Cleveland Indians knew exactly what
to expect from former teammate Jeff
Juden.·
· All-Stars Kenny Lofton and Omar ·
Viiquel each reached ba.o;e four times
and combined for five stolen bases to
help lead Cleveland to a 5-2 victory
Wednesday night over the Milwaukee Brewers, snapping·a three-game
losing streak .
"Jeff. when he was with us. was
very slow in his delivery to the
plate," Cleveland manager Mike
Hargrove said. "His release time was
very slow and we didn't see him do
anything to quicken that up here. so
we came into this looking to run on

Thursday, Juiy 2, 1998

RETURNS VOLLEY- America's Pete Samprae retums a backhand
volley to Auatrslla'a mark Phllllppouasla during their quarterfinal
match on Wimbledon'• Number One Court Wednesday. Samprae' 78 (7·5), 6-4, 6-4 win put him In the semifinals against Britain's nm
Henman. (AP)
match in his pll:vious five Grand
Slam tournaments and was written
off by many people.
"It's my lith Wimbledon," he
said. "I'm having fun . I don't know
how it's going to finish . but maybe
this year is the year for me."
lvanisevic will be Favored Friday
because he has beaten Krajicek eight
consecutive times dating back to
1992.
The men have a day off today,
which was set aside For the women's
semifinals.
Scheduled lim was Nuthulie
Tauzi·al, the .lowest seed at No. 16,
against unseeded Nntasha Zvereva.
Next up was what many considered
the l'l:al final- defending champion
Martina Hingis vs. her doubles partner, Jana Novotna, in a replay of last
year's championship match.
Henman has enjoyed relatively
restrained media coverage this tournament because of the Focus on the
World Cup. But with England out oF
lhe Cup following Tuesday's penalty shootout defeat to Argenlina, the

hopes of a nation are now turned on
l;lenman.
"What I'm doing is far more
important to me than the World
Cup," he said. "They (England soccer players) are out there representing their country, but when I'm on the
court, I'm playing solely For myself."
Henman said he never played
better than in his win over Korda and
has no reason to believe he can't be4l
Sampras.
"The way I'm playing, I definitely feel I've got a good chance," he
said.
Don 'I count on it. says Mark
Philippoussis, who was swept away
by Sampras in straight sets in the
quanerfinals and ha~n 't seen anybody
who can slop the defending champion.
"I think he's too solid," Philippoussis said. "He's dedicated out
there and he wants to prove a point.
When somebody serves like that,
they want to say something. So I
think he's ready. I don'l think any·
body will beat him."

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs American Legion
·baseball team swept a doubleheader
from Columbus Westland Sunday at
Meigs High School.
Meigs (4-6) won the first game
12-11 on a two run double by Jeremiah Bentley with nobody out in the
seventh inning to post the come from
behind win.
Columbus Westland ( 15-3) Jed the
game Il-l 0 heading into the bottom
of the seventh inning. Pat Martin
reached on a Westland error, Matt
Dill followed with a single. Bentley
then doubled in the game tying and
winning runs.
The game featured big innings by
both teams. Meigs took ad,yanlage of
a pair of four run innings and a pair
of two run innings. Westl and had a
pair of three run innings and a four
run inning in building up a 11 -8 lead
heading into the bottom of the sixth,
but Meigs scored two in the bottom
of the sixth and seventb innings to
pick up the win.
Martin pitched the final three
innings to pick up the win. Collin
Roush started and pitched the first
two innings and Brad Davenport
pitched the third.
Rusty Stewart led Meigs with a
pair of singles and a big three run
home run in Meigs' big . four run
fourth. Matt Dill and Daniel Whittekind each added a pair of singles.
-Bentley, Adam Cumings and Pete
Sisson each chipped in with a double.
Goud~he losing pitcher for
Westland. Hendry added a pair of singles and a double to lead Westland,
Detello had a pair of doubles.
In the nightcap. Bentley slammed
a two run home run in the bottom of
the eighth inning to lead Meigs to a
4-2 win. Sisson reach.ed on a Westland error to lead off the eighth and
Bentley followed with his game winning shot.
Benji Manuel went the distance to
pick up the win. Manuel struck out II
and walked seven in an outstanding
performance while seattering four
singles.
Bentley had his home run and a
triple to lead Meigs. Stewart had the

only other Meigs hit a single.
Meigs was supposed to have
played this coming weekend in the.
Glouster Fourth of July Toumamerit, :
but flooding from this past weekend.'s
storms have caused the tournament to
be canceled.
Meigs will take advantage of tlie :
canc.ellation to play two make-~p.
games. Meigs will travel to Logan oo
Friday to play Glouster at I p.m., and :
then will take on Logan at4:30 p.in·. ·
Both games will be conference
games.
lnnin&amp; to)als-first l:lll!lt
· ·
Westland
30-l-30 1-0~ 11 -8):
Meigs
040-402 - 2~ 12-13-i
Goudy (L) and Detello
'
Roush. Davenport 13). Martin IW-·.
4) and Whittekind
·
lnnin&amp; to)als-second l:lll!lt
Westland
OOI-OOI-()(},o2-4:J .
Meigs
000-020-02o:4-J:Ii ·
Lewis IL) and Detello
Manuel (W) and Cumings

Sloan signs
three-year pact
to coach Jazz :
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Uhlb
Jazz.coach Jerry Sloan has signed p
three-year contract.
•
The agl'l:ement, which runs
through the 2000-200 I season, was:
finalized while Sloan was in Utah for
last week's NBA draft.
"It's done," Jazz generar manag- ·
er Tim Howells told The Salt Like:
Tribune, which quoted him in a
, copyright story.
Sloan, 56, Utah's head coach
since Dec. 9, 1988, had one yearremaining on his contract. Howells'
said Sloan signed a "completely
new" deal with the Jazz, not simply
a two-year exlension.
'"~ Terms Were not relensed.
Last season. Sloan guided the Jazz:
to a 62-20 record and a second
straight trip to the NBA Finals. where ·
the team lost to the Chicago Bulls:
. .. Jerry is a great coach who·
· embodies the ethics and values of this
organization," Howells sa1d.

•

or

Mtl1 these two

great summer
specials!

Utes

free USe

Both plans come with
of a NEC 820 phone. With more minutes and
phones for everyone, you can't pass up this hot
summer deal.

"Sure, let me check
"Coming home now.
How about a cookout?''

with the kids ."

"I'll be at the mall

tonight ~

''l'n• ,.:ut ho.tll prat"tit-t· ."
" I havt•

~ l t•t· puvL·r .

il

Call you

011

1-x·dtmw ."

"'

Reds lose ..• (Continued from Page 4)

•

return and realized I couldn't, I just a tie with Hugh Duffy for 20th on the
wanted to make sure it dido 'l go career Iist.
through. It went into my glove, then
The Reds tied it at I in the sixth
popped out and shot across the field. on Reggie Sanders' RBI single.
"Looking back. I realize I probaNotes: The Reds signed a "memo
bly should have played it in front and of understanding" wilh Hamilton
keep them at first and second and . County, promising to contribute $30
make them get a hit with two outs." million toward construction of a
Reds stoner Scott Winchester $235 million, 45,000-seat baseballallowed just two hits in siK innings', only stadium. The agreement
but gave up an unearned run in the approves a site, but there is no
sixth. Otis Nixon walked, stole sec- design or binding lease or timetable
ond and went 10 third on citcher for either. The most optimistic taraet
Eddie Taubensee's throwing error date for completion is 2003.... Winbefore Marty Cordova hit an RBI chester, making his 13th career stan,
got his first major leque hit, a singroundout.
ale,
in the founh.
The steal thai set up the run was
the 574th for Nixon. moving him into

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a...t..o...ToonC..
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II. 33 Wool 300/372-2926
JCM/372·71ll

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�Thul"'day, July 2, 1998
Pllge I e The O.lly S1nt1nel

Pomeft)y e Mlddleport, Ohio

MUFFLER SHOP

•-2111

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Gal'~•

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~from

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2. M. McUuf*l. 2.171
a.D.......... Jr.• 2.147

..

""'&gt;' 5

DIFIJIDINO C~"ON : Rondy

aptly named

July4
LaJoie
par, just ecroos lhe llreet front the
OIFENDINO CIIAIITIIACit QUAUmNO IIECOIID: Her..,_,
to
the IIOU1h ol lhe Civic
1'1011: Jolin Andrettl
mie Sedler, Chevrolet, I 18.320 mph,
Center end lhe central bNchfront
1Y1lff QUALIFY·
July 6, 11198.
dillrict.
INO AICOIID: Ste&lt;IIACI RICOIID: Mike Wotao.,
Ung Mo~in. CheYm·
CheYmtet, 100.9atl onph, July 2. 11194.
.... 203.8641 mph,
. OTHIR FOIIIIEII WINNefiS: No one
July 3, 1906.
hal ever won thil race mont th8n once.
·Dale Earnhardt, hoWM~et, .,.. tM active Buckshot Jon. Ia the onty active wJn·
IIACI AICOIID:
lolderJ In victortn, tlilylng two oplece. nor llcbby Allison. Me&lt;·
LaJoie who Is likely to be
cury, 173.473 rf1lh,
NOTAIILE: The Pops! 400 will boome
In lhe field. Dolo J - t won in 1995,
July •• 1980.
the first nighttime race in the history of Steve Grtsaom in 1993.
OTHIII FOIIIIIII WINNERS: Oovid
NOTA8t.l: Jones' ~lctory w11 the first
Daytona and the first live netwOfk ••·
cast of 1 Winston Cup race on prime
Pearson is the all-time winner with five
of hi a career.... nm Fedewa won the
time.
summer vk:tories, including three in a
polo tut yeor.... T1MI first Mitwoukee
ro., 1T01n 1972 to 1974. Bill Elliott and
winner was S1m An:l, in 198•.

,_c.I
•

Altia, Wia.
WMIN: Sundoy..

-reel..._
01 the
At11111tic Red Snip-

- N: Slturdly,

-"'

WMRI: The Mttwlukee Mile, West

We highly recommond ....

Flo.

,2..~·

AlMOST liME COtlllll(j

way, Daytona S.ach,

--

Call 992·2158

wti!OM.VY
CAMOT8

Dave Harris
Ext.104

BREAD

CHICICEH CACCIATORE
IMSHED POTATOES
CARROTS
BREAD
PINEN'Pl£ ..
ORANGE GElATW

IIAICED PORK STEAK
MASHED POTATOES
wilhGRAVY
GREEN BEANS
BREAD
S'TRAWBERRIES an

SAUSAGE OM.VY
OllER BISCUIT
HASH IIROMI POTATOES
HOT N'PLESAUCE
ORANGE JUICE

SCAU.OPED POTATOES
AND HAM CASSEROLE
BREAD
· MX£0 VEGETABLES
HOT CINNAMON PEACHES

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE
COLESLAW
GREEN BEANS
BREAD
APPLE CHERRY CRISP

01/EN IWCED CHICI&lt;EN

CHICKEN PATTY
AUGRATW POTATOES
BRUSSEL SPROUTS
BREAD
CANTALOUPE

SPAGHETTI WITH

11lJNGARIAN STYlE
PORK CHOP
PARSLEY POTATOES

BEEF TIPS IN GRAVY
OVER NOODLES
MASHED POTATOES

IWCEDFISH
l!ICIN ON POTATOES
CAMOT8
BREAD

PEACH SLICES

,
Dear NASCAR This Week,
I enjoy your pa&amp;e in the

.,_Dulllln

the pedal to the melal!
New, here.. 1 question :
What was lhe nature or the

O~~rett

Waftnp has won
more racea than any active
Winston C&lt;Jp driver, but
none Iince 1992, when he
ICOI*I ttuwe victories.
Racently, while aubolnut·
lng for the injured Stove
Part&lt; In 1 Chevrolet owned
by Dolo Eomhardt Inc.,
Wonrip hoa shown that he
Ia still capable of getting
the job done. The threelime champion hiS turned
In flnlohH of fifth ond sixth
Jn recent races.
AGE: 51

IIIOIIIASIWRI

G
..........,__._
--= , 'l• '

-eel . .

ln~,,!Jflfl

· ondheel
-~John
Andrii1J
hll belt flnloll of

-CUP-U
J.rr Clofllon
flrlt of two IOIICkKinO .weok-

Cll:JEFF
.

.... ~ ~hlglllot-ftnlolling
Ford ftfth-ptece Ruoty
WOitlce.

pole end

ondl, oweoplng -

roce ot Seo11 Point - o y

.!A~.=-

1naor-,CaNI.
Tllelrlck'IIWCOIIflgurlliol&gt;- IUICH . . _ NATIOIW.
'IIIII lllo "M lhe
1 couple of - - eliminated, cutting -h top from
IOIId," witll Ron Fettowa
putting off .............t he
2.52 to 1.116 - • not

1_,_

~~-=··-11"

.... ...-t!/'1 ..,.,... with

occomplilhed

-.moll of whom

Watlclnl Olen in Cr11ftsmln
'lhlck s.rta cornpetRion.
F-1. '" occompllslled
IOIId ...,.,, ell- mto Joe
- ' 1 Chriy ond won
.... lysol 200 ot .... Gtwl.

thought R , _ the jlullng
"""" dlfllcult.
Ruf1IW.up -Bobby
tt.rnld In h l l roed-courH portormonce

I~ lgCIII

conuoversy that arose

~-1¥NA!ICM----~

. . . . llf'llllng II In . . . .

LlltlllrWIIIIce!71

1' ""' Ganlan Ill

MEAT SAUCE
TOSSED SAI.AD
GMl.lC BREAD
FRUIT COCKTAIL IN
RED GElATIN

SWEET POTATOES
PEAS

BREAD
WATERMELON

BUTTERED BROCCOLI

CORN

BREAD
PEARS

BREAD
PINEAPPLE

7.1My ...... llll

3........,...,..,.. C3l
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LJell-111
...... ablrlt«

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4. . , . Jln'llt 141

l.lollllr lloloillao INRI

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lllpl.11 EMit 400,1111ctwnond. VI.

s.. 27 "--1100.
.........
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Now. 1
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---- -·- ! ! ! ! - .....

••

._,
A14 .
._
qJO

may have had my driving
car- dead lnd burled, but
!hey dldn'l put Qu~e
enough dirt on me. I kicked
" off and, In this Pennzoil
cor, I crowled bock out. It
bring• tears to my oyea to
got beck out !here 1111d
compele like this. I never
lhoughll would see~ . I
thou~ I wao done. But I'm
crawling back out 1111d,
,
, gosh dlrn "· we are going
to win 1 race.•

o.zHng i*b•••a

lllr\lggle

s..prtoo 4th II Paint

.., •

HOW DOll IT FEEL TO
HAVE REVITALIZlD YOUR
CARE!R IN RECI!NT
WUKI? ·some people

gol untriCkld

-

J. Oordon

.......

.....

J. lufW:In

w. lufkin

""""

(l_ ......

........

T. l..abontl

tWn11on
.......

~IOO. ......... Mz.

AC-011oo 400, "'*4'1!"· N.C.

·~

NWA IIQO, Conoofd. N.C..

ll\'lft

exc~ing."

"I love controversy. It's part
of lhs aport. It's the heat of
lho moment. It's not polili-

RECENT CONTAOVER·
liES AMONG DRIVERS?

WHAT IS CAUSING THE
"I think, in some cases, tho
frustration levels are going
up because guys aren't
winning. particularly when
we go to places where they

don't have someone telling
you what to say and whal
not to say. You olloot from

- ........-only--

W11cf111C1l

In..,_,
oftfll 1111
-~
.. nile

think thay should win or
have won before. I remember when we got the Monte
Ca~o in 1995, ond I knew I
had an advantage because
of that car. I think if I were
driving a Taurus right now, I
would think that I had a
better start toklng odvan·
tage of the advontage I
have. When you are getting
beal by someone in a
Monte Carlo, lei's say, and
you know that you should
be belling him because
you are in a Taurus, then
you get fruatroled. You
start doing things you normally wouldn't do."

1. wtJo won the last Wlnstoo Cup r~eell the NatMII F~?
2. Who was the first stock cat &lt;ttverto offldl~ surpus 200 inph7
3. Wilal ~Fl ~co-owns I Wlnstoo Cup t-1

WljO'IIIOn
Todd has quollleci lor

111 Court St.

,., one
Zlrd.

Pomeroy

The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing. cards, games, and
pool. Weekly activities are Une
Dance Team practice, with Paulette
Harrison, instructor, on Mondays
from 1:00 to 2:00 and Knining
Circle on Wednesdays from 10 to
12. . The Exercise Room is available daily from 8:00 to 4:00 for
people to usc the exerciJc equipment. Exercise classes will resume
in the fall.

Valley
Lumber.A
Supply Co.

-CioniNOSCMI " " -

T R I'V I A

WIIO'SIIOTT
Jell Gordon hal lin-

The Daily
Sentinel

-•--r

tho hip and when you let
the bullets fly, sparks fly
and tempers fly. n·s a vent.
Whenever I got into a fight
or a hassle w~h somebody,
sooner or toter" would go
away because we would
got It all vented out. t think
"'s good for the sport
because it's colorful and

II O.:ONTROVEJIIY
GOOD FOR TH! IPOIIT1

cally correct becauae you

I . U1:1oNt
a.lola'l

o.n.11 w . 1 p - he-

Iiiii MIIIon,

tlnilh- t111n

555 Park St.
Middleport

---2100E.
--..-Kwou-..goto ......... oro

_,.,,.~~,

wotte:IIAICAA

This- y,.. 1Iom, c/o
N.C.II060

992-6611

.
I

Questl~ns

.,_..._.

FIOM THE AICHIVESl

'llllrloh_,.,_

Tlle . . , _ _
won llrM of lho 11r11 11w
1.......... """' .. Dllytrlna.
in 1959 end 11182 In I Pcntlac llllln 18e3 In 1 Fonl.

"""*''*

.u. Foyllhen CIIIIUI'Id ....

_,twO-·

In 1884
end tH5, aleoln Forda.

1 l n o - "' .... ,..,.

Iince I ftrll·lime hla eccnd In .... o.ytona
- ; SomMcOI-In
18M, Grev Slciuo In , H5
1111 Jolwl Ancnnllall yw,

BIIHt;
-.ldhiUI&amp;.COIII

See us for Your Stih~
Power Tools &amp;

NASCAR
1'llia Cllif.
SONOMA,
-lsck

........,.l ,_ wrinkle
mokA.,....
Satur·
doy, and lht'"""' modelllcllr I
Rout~~

~iR

in his

·
s.
w11~..uppon.

couple of drMn o bio uneuy.
Roush, ..... shady ..... r...
- . ptd te..in ~under
-.luoowllcnohtwill
-.oodrive,andaowllll
poinl. Routll opicd noi· IO be

. :'aia;lll •-· .,..,. secun:d ohc
OpdiiHo lip Kevin to 1 mvhi·
)CII' c:oMr1tt

W. hope \o IOrma\ty
on ewer the ncJCt

forward wilh

,Plan!

111'1 beyond...

SIIICO
hU iCtb'ict)o stated
he wi!IM""no'"""' thsii

tclml, the q~ation

r,..

becomes:

.

Who 'I our?

could be slotlcd /OJ aleiCO&amp;a leam
ohc Woods sn: IUrnon:d 10 be
.:~din"'
"·
· ·
Ok, FINE:~
'rnnll:df.
ately. I..A:paJIC's
(ll1)klyer,
lee Fttk, boo
our of his
ride.
-"
"We're liooo.," laid FaRe ofhi1

reillionsbip wioh lepa~c .
Falk did not hide his bitterness
I&amp;Jblina ltpllge 111he worst of

The ..,..likely .,.. is fo&lt; Ted -: iiRios:

Musamoe to be releuod. 1hbo~ .. \Ye,QD't afford to have a bad
RDuoh hit ooil · iD..M...,...
finish hore. We need '" "'" up

rorohtomiiiJ.

"te..in hit pnMd himself 10

be one of the bat new laJentJ on

the WinHon CIIJ) IWiRuit," 11id
R&amp;Malh ...We felt the lime wu
ript 10 Jive te..in and his f1111

11u · "
' ·

~ ~:) 6 fonl
v.on .

,~

· ·

'J/iier

front Thll\ llt 't'm oryina 1o &lt;iu.
I'm tryin' to do whld)~inlc I hid

1 coopwilh the
'~ 10 Msro K&lt;nJcih

1YC

the chance to sec what he can do

,

ftlk ain't the richest py in lhe

.:o....,. tu1M l'wtl!i1autcarenou.:h
for the mt
mtMM.'Y

rut1

nf 1t-: year. We 'tlll'l:ll: clolc to sipin~ a SJ'KWO'. That spoMOt'
_. ... Kevin,"' l"""ldn' doubl
ifyoo a a Roatu:ar with lhat
spmsor.''

The Scni01 Nutrition Program
evening meal wiU be served on
Tuesday and Thunday with serving
from 4:45 IO 5:30. This evening
meal is intended to provide a nutri·
tional meal at a rcasonablee cost; a
suggeslcd donation for the evening

SOUP BEANS AND HAM
COLESLAW

MUSHROOM STEAK
MASHED POTATOES

CORtiBREAO
PINEAPPLE AND
COTTAGE CHEESE

WITHGN.VY
GREEN BEANS

•I

EARntQUAKECAKE ·

..... lid by CI1W
c:Nof I.Mt&lt;lns,
obYioualy-..s

recoguliou.

HAM .t. SCALLOPf!D POTATOES ·
MIXEDVEGETABLES .
TOMATOES

Tho NFL Pllyerl
Assocllllon Is c:i1ociHul
d roclng ,.,., "'f))ICiily
tho !lotjlhils' T..c.
·
Armttrcng. union p!l$1dont. Tho NflPIO. II wakIng with • coupio d
Potty, in I toinlmori&lt;ot»g
etiOJI. Footbll ptoyors n

23

.....

Gnlt ,._ • • 1..,

s•• n Slrlb

....................-..
..,11110¥11 CllliiiLe

oodo to run up l'ron~jull)il&lt;O
'. Ky. "hi been a fun-*· 1M we
Kevin thinks he hid to pfft,
J I know we've t:OUO get beck to
R.....,) 10 nm up frono ... :,Jos:_ ./ work." .

--..r_,,.,~~m

--,.- · -- -----~------

-~--~- -- - - -... ,. . - ~ .Qj:..

CUCUMBERS .t TOMATOES
ROLL

.

l8
MEAlWAF

•

MASHED POTATOI!S wilh GRAVY
PEAS .t CARROTS

ROLL

'.

PEACH PIE

ByTIMFRI~D

David &amp;.yre and Ellis McMillan are shown using the
bjcyclnlrt the Exercise Room. The exercise equipment Is
available for use dally from 8:00 to 4:00 In an al.r condl·
tloned room.
-...,_

OHIO ENERGY CREDIT PROGRAM
FOR SENIOR CITIZENS OR DISABLED OHIOANS
The Enctgy Credit Program provides relief from the costs of healing
to elderly and (jisabled low-income households.
You may qualify for heating assislance if you meet all of the following requirements:
1) Are you 65 years of age or older OR permanently and lotally disabled?
•
2) Arc you or your spouse head of your household?
3) Is your lolal annual income $9,000 or less?
If you would like an application, or for rriore information contacl
Darla Hawley at the Meigs Multipurpose Ccnler at 992~2161 ~

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY

.

Every Wednesday Storewide Savings

30
BAJCED STEAK wi1b MUSHROOM

15o/o off

ORA.VY
MASHED POTATOES
OREI!N BEANS
ROLL
CREAMY FRUIT SALAD

· USA TODAY
Scienlisls said they now know the
cause of Alzheimer's disease. and
lhey appear to have found one way to
prevenl it.
The culpril is a prolein lhat form•
plaque on brain cells and has lon~
been a prime suspect in lhe developmen! of Alzheimer's, which affects 4
million people in lhe U.S.
Called amyloid bela. lhe prolein is
found lhroughoullhe body in a hamless form. But for unknown reamns,
it can change and-form loxic strand's
that build up on brain cells. The key
question has been whether it causes
brain cell dealh direc1ly or builds up
after sort1fihg else has killed lhe
cell.
Two sludies in lhe July Nature
Medicine, out today, strip away much
of lhe myslery lhat has cloaked the
amyloid prolein. In essence, scicntisls
have caught the changing prole in redhanded, and lhey' ve shown how 10
rehabililale. it. .
·In one sludy, led by Bruce Yankner of Children's Hospital in Boston,
researchers injecled a small amount
of the toxic amyloid inlo the brain of
.an aging rhesus monkey. It attack&lt;u
brain cells and killed them. The rhosus brain provides the closest mo&lt;lel
yet for how cells behj\ve in human
Alzheimer's.
~
In the second study, Claudio Soto
and &lt;B&gt;colleagues &lt;P&gt;at New York
University M~ical Center discov , ered a way to prevent the amyloid
I prolein from changing into a killer.
·They developed an agent thai mimics a ponion of the amyloid protein.
II prevented amyloid from turning
mlo a koller m the brains of rats, and
il also can dissolve the toxic slrands
after
have

· ~&amp;(li&amp;P

WE HONOR

[~)

'C'J!:"elers
~212

EAST MAIN ST.

Senior
Sense

lC ..

..·-

Advertise on this page
CABLEVISION

·Call992·2155

COMMUNICATIONI

175-3398 or 1.,...788-0553
Clll or vlalt our offici It
1410 JefferHn llvd.

-a..---

In Point PIIUint

,_... _ ...'*'.......- .............. ~- ...- -..
........

OVER NOODLES
GREEN BEANS .t CORN

ICE CREAM

.----------__,,AITENTIONADVERTISERS!!

SUIIII!II SAVINGS DAYI

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RACIN6011

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Q 'MJC:..

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SPAGHETn with MEAT SAUCE
TOSSED SALAD
GARLIC BREAD
LEMON LUSH

-""-mornings.

Supply

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Prefet red Pack
plus SHOWTIME, SHOWTIME2,
and THE MOVIE CHANNEL
for only $9.95 ,.... month•

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ll

booOmi1g .. """""'"'

•rnc~~~ngortlnlhl

"'
...... ~

Scientists
untangle
·Alzheimer's
secrets

loukcd fnnmd 10 ott my life,''
satd Mayfield, from Owensboro,

'

. . ..,... Garrett Ford..

CREAMED PEAS

NASCARtuns.lhooool

BOWLED OVER: The IC&lt;Ioim
ac:cornpuryina Jeremy Mayfteldi
first Wiru.1on Cup victl'll')' lase
""'" OYCrwhcimed ohc 29-yearnld driver.
'The paso ...k wu onr: I hove

Ridenour

~·
the 7 channel

ov\!N FRiED CHICKEN
MASHED POTATOES .t ORAVY

Jonn_ ... Kyil

AccessorieS

'

BAICED STEAK
MASHED POTAOTES 4 ORAVY
GREEN BEANS
VANliLA PUDDING wi1b
BANANAs owr GRAHAM

ROlL

BREAD
CAEAMV FRUIT SAI.AD

. ... '

Friday, 1uly 17 - the Arthritis
Support Group will meet from
10:00 to 11;30. Sarah McGICW
will provide inf01mation from the
anhritis library.
Thwsday, July 23 - lbe month·
ly birthday pany will be held with
seniors having birthdays in the
month honored. The· Big Bend
CI088crs will entenain at 11:00.
Thwsday, July 23 • the Caring
&amp; Sharing Support Group will meet
at 1:00. The topic of discussion
will be diabetes with a question and
answer session.
Thursday, July 30 • Vision
smeningfrom tOto 11. Dr. Henry
Croci will speak at 11 :00 on
"Diseases of the Aging Eye".
There are two moto'rcoach
trips scheduled at this time. A trip
to tbe Ohio State Fair will be
Saturday, August 15, al a cost of
$2S .00 for transportation and
admission. There are a limited
number of scats available for this
trip. The trip to the Ohio Amish
Country in Oclober is on slandby
slatus at this time. Conlact Alice
Wamsley, 992-2161 for further
infonnation or to make a reservation.

16

14

-~Fift

PEACH SLICES WITH

narntor.

meal iS,$4.00. The publii: ll-lnvlt·
ed to anend.
Junior and Rila White will be
playing old lime favorite music on
Thursday, July 9 at 5:30.
A Blood Pressure Clinic will
be held on Thursday, July 23, from
4:15 to 5:00.

CRACKER CRUST

•o ,r

Rt. 248
CheSler 1185-3308

J

mURSDAY

ROlL

iw1ll on. I.Miy -~

www.llnlllRaLN•

WALDORF 8AI.AD

BREAD

coordinator, will meet from 1 to
2:30.
Wednesday, July 15 - the
monthly Blood Pressure Oinic will
be held from 9:30 to 11:00. Blood
sugar ~ning will be available at
a cost of $1.00 dwills the clinic.
Thunday, July 16 - John
Lentcs, Prosecuting Attorney, wiU
be available to assist senior citizens
with legal concerns. Call Darla
Hawley, 992-2161, to make an
appointment.
Thunday, July 16 - the 4-H
Fashion Board and other 4-H memben with clotlliJJ8 projcels will pre·
sent a style show of their 4-H projects at 11:00 with Becky Baer,
Meigs County Extension Familr
and Consumer ~ Aj!cnt, u

9

ton, II be h8d to do Wit

I

arise after Jack Roush signs Kevin tepage

Evening Meals ...

CREAMED.BAKED CHICKEN
BROCCOLI
COLESLAW

AIOUIID Till &amp;AIAGI

992-2155

I
7

14th11S...Pmt-

Wirf 111111 Sonlly. Hlmllton "*'""iod I soc:ondIJil&lt;» finish In I ChrnoiDt
thllhlrldildiO porloctlythll, IClOIJRIIng to Hanil-

II

MEATLOAF

MASHED POTATOES
PEAS &amp; CARROTS
ORANGE SAUCE

A representative from the
Athens Social Security Otlia: will
be at the Center on Wednesday,
July 8 and 22 from 10.to 11 a.m.
Thursday, July 2 - Dr. William
Smilh, Ortllopedic Surgeon, Holzer
Medical Center, will spelk at 11:00
about.hip and knee replacement.
Tuesday, July 7 - Karr
Audiology will do bearing tests,
call Diana Coates, 992-2161, to
make an appointment.
Wednesday, July 8 • the Stroke
Survivors Support Group, with Ua
Tiptoo, OT, Holzer Rehabililation,

TUESDAY

l l o l l l l y - had
,......,flnllhld tMhr ttwl

!

88Q CHICI&lt;EN FUEl.

SCALLOPED POTATOES
MIXED VEGETABLES
BREAD

Meigs Senior Genter July Activities

Ourina practice sesSions,
enouah tire problems arose
that members of the Profcs·
siontl Drivers Association
decided that the track was
unufe.
When Bill Fronce of
NASCAR demanded they run
anyway, the sport's rirst and
only boycoll occurred. The
race WIS held. allhough most
vf the lead ina drivers did not
compete.
Richard Drickhouu won the
race in a Dodac Daytona
owned by Ray Nichcls.

CAR: No. 1 Pennzoil
Chevrolet Monle Corio,
owned by Teresa Earnhan!t.
CAREeR RECORD: 835
atom, 58 poleo, 84 wins,
276 top flvH, 367 top 10.,
almoot $17 mYIIon In winnings.

HMaJRGER ON SUN

OIIEN ROAST POTATOES
LIMA BEANS
ORANGES AND IIAMHAS

blrtlldav party,

IriCk .

leigh (10), Sarlh KIRtyn

The~'IIMI

on top
a.a.cll
_
_ .,,

1he

Dear Johnny,
In 1969, when Talladega
opened, Goodyear had been
unable to detian a tire com·
pound that could withst1nd
the hiah tpcedt of the new

SPOUSE: Slovle
CHILDAEN: J ...lcl

..

11

fir•t race 11 Talladeg1 in 1969
which caused Richard Peuy
· and several other drivers to
withdraw'!
Johnny McCf'lcken
McCormick, S .C.

(5) .

1'0P 111

Joan Wildman, MCCoA Board of TNitns President,
•nd G•y Perrin, who are both membere of Trinity
Congregational church, apok• about thtllr trip to work at
Mission Muuhua, Mexico, •nd dlaplayed plctuiW •nd
81alned gilA objlc:ts made at the ml~ for the May

lndcJI-Journal. Greenwood,
S.C ., every Thursday . K.cep

NASCAR--

,

I

Information

.......,......,~,~,,

11m,.....,

1

I

4. ..... LM*,1-

L ,.._Pwlafll. 1.112

,, Hnnlr

'

FRUIT COCKTAIL

For More

PIOfiU

7. llal'l ..,., 1.115

-------

'

IWCED STEAK

MASHED POTATOES

Il .... .c.llr.1.M

I.
1.111
10. ............. 1.711

~

PORK 88Q on BUN
LVOIIWSE POTATOES

ADVERTISE
ON THIS
PAGE

IUICH IIIWIQ IIAnDNAL
. ' COlliNG U': DIIHord 250

I

JULY MENUS

LAIA lEANS IIIII CORN
IIIII' liNG PEARS

THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT
COMIIIQ U': Plpsl 400
- I l l : Dlytono tntomotlonli Speed-

I

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

992-2825 . J~-

•

------

1 -...
I

I

PH0NEH2-21H

[ill • • ~

Guaranteed Service

c

Sa .. WIWQII .... I L

.

4 15
0UTK""'Ro
'

The Dally Sentinel e Page 7

Thursday, July 2, 1998

..::::::-... 'td- ~llt.J,

.. -""':......
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

c

112-21ee

~ e M~leport, Ohio

b'•

...

IIOII'ITIL . . . .

Dave Harris Ext. 104
For More Information

MTIIIIT Llnl

~

WIIIIL Oll&amp;•a

Oll'f'OIII

COMPLETE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS

u•

THE ME.DtaOICAL
SHOI!PE·
.
.

··

l

:

Ptb
ok

mEE DELIVERY &amp; SET~UP
e HOSPITAL BEDS MEDICARE
HOME
• WHEEL CHAIRS MEDICAID
OXYGEN
PRIVATE INSURANCE
e UITCHAIRS
U.OOUR
DIIRGII'ICY
• BATHROOM AIDS
SDVICE
"We 7reoe You
• NEBULIZERS
IISI'IIATOIY
Like FCIIIIily"
• STAIR GUDES
~

.

I

\I

h

'I I\

-

by Aupiift:-·

,,
1'1~ '

The Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine and the
Meigs Senior Cente!,.Wi~J sponsor a
Medication Misuse Prevention
Program on Tuesday, August 2S &amp;
Wednesday, August 26 from 9:00
a.m. - 2:00 p.m. at the Center.
This is an interactive program,
so you won't be listening to speaken all day, you will be "doing
things." ll's fun, interesting and
you will learn about safe medica·
lion practices.
All of
know at least one
older adult who shares medicines,
tatcs liiOR thaD is prescribed, or
JOCI to liiOR than one doctor. The
pi of this propm is to reduce
die risk of injury resultin&amp; from
meclbtklll misuse.
Collllet Diana Coates at 992'2161 10 ;:;.;J.t.;r for the worksbop

'· , I

Ltutcb wW be provided.
1

.....

'

' '
'I \I\

�Thursday, Juiy 2, 1998

Page' 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Public Notice
of tht purchtlt
111811 be ptld within 30
ener lilt ddt ol tete.
Jo""'t M. Soultby
Shorlff ol Molgt County,
Ohio.
Larry R. Rothenberg, 323
W. Laknkle Avt., SuHt 200,
Cleveltncl, OH 44113-10911
Attorney for Plelntllf
Sherlff'tOIIIce,
Pomtroy, OH
(6) 11, 25; (7) 2, 3tc

By MIKE KILEN
(
.
· The Nashville Tennessean
As a child , she remembers the yellow box her daddy held out 10
: : s'prinkle the white powder on the carpeL
He would vacuum it up later, taking nasty pet odors with iL Now
-Glenda Burch, 37. of Old Hickory, Tenn .. uses it all over.
"From the body to the car," she says, "10 the kitchen 10 the car. peL" The substance : Sodium bicarbonate, the wonder powder for
-gener.ations, a.k.a. baking soda.
Called the "oat bran of the '90s," baking soda has outlived many
other products ' touts as a super substance. Arm and Hammer has
made its baking soda since 1846.
But only during the last 30 years has clever marketing and even
more clever consumers expanded the alkaline-heavy food product
•
into miracle dust.
Ask Burch : She, of course, deodorizes her carpets with it. (Sodium
.bicar.bonate kills odors by chemically neutralizing odor molecules).
She put s it down the disposal and in the refrigerator. Her latest?
Putting in a scoop in the car's ashtray - in secreL "M,y boyfriend
smokes, l _don 'L It alleviates the smell ."
· : -: · With its versatility, baking soda needs ' no public relations,
~ : :: although Arm and Hammer sends the media a thick package to tell
::: jou its many uses .
• · · Among them :
- - In the k1tchen . Deodorizes cutting boards; cleans and deodorizes garbage cans and recycle bins; keeps the dishwasher smelling
, ·fresh; elimin,tes refrigerator odors; cleans counter tops, range hoods
~nd microwave ovens; removes burned-on foods from pots and pans;
shines tile noors; keeps . silverware shining and deodorizes plastic
.containers.
-In the bathroom. Neutralizes odors in drains , bathtubs and sinks
and toilets ; cleans tubs and tiles; cleans brushes and combs; deodor.izes musty towels and cleans and-deodorizes shower curtains.
- In the nurse ry. Cleans baby bottles and brushes ; deodorizes
spills on carpets; deodorizes disposable diaper pails; cleans bassinets,
high chairs and strollers.
- In bedroom s and family rooms . Deodorizes closets, sneakers
and pet accidents; cleans scuf(_11_1arks off walls and crayon marks
•-from furniture .
- In the garage. Cleans chrome bumpers , car lights and hub caps;
removes tar from around wheel areas ; neutralize s battery acid corrosion on cars; refreshes noor mats and neutnilizes odors in the trunk .
- In -on the boily. Cleans hands: soothes skin in the bath; polish,
es teeth; relieves acid indigestion: soothes aching feet: eliminate s
co nditi oner or styling product' build-ups in hair; soothes inset! bites .
And yes . usc it in the laundry, in your pet litter boxes and on the
Statue of Liberty's coal tar ouild -up , like cleaners did in 1986. Oh.
and you ca n actually bake with _baking soda, too. rt makes cookies

VI.

Carol Lynn Thelet, et el.
By vlrtuo ol en Order of
Sale No. 07CV-138 to me
directed lrom the Court ol
Common Pleet ol Melge
County, Ohio, I Jemat
Soultby, Shorlll ol oeld
County will offer lor oale tl
Publle Sale, at the front
tlept ol the Court HOUH, In
Pomeroy, Ohio, on the 24th
day of July, A.D., 1998 11 10
o'clock A.M. or etld day, the
following deocrlbed Lendt
and Tanementt, to wit:
Sltueted In the. Village ol
Syracute, County ol Melgo
end State of Ohio: Being
the North hall of Lot No. 53
and the North hall ol Lot No.
54, ea merked end ehown
on Quartuo Brldgman't Plet
or tht aald Town ol
Syrecuoe, which parcel ol
land herein conveyed lronlt
100 laet on Second st.... to
the Town ol Syrecuto and
59 leet bn Cherry Street.
,Property locettd II: 2421
2nd Street, Syracuae, OH.
Property appraised at
Thirty-Two
Thouaand
Dollert ($32,000.00). Property cennot be told lor
leu then 2/3 ol the
appralaod value.
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
dtpoelt In ceah certified
check or btnk check
payable to the Sheriff or
Melge County, Ohio, to be
tondered ot talo ot tho time
ol oceopttnca ol the bid.
The purche.. r thell be
required to pay lnteraet al
the rete olten percent (10%)
on the unpaid balance ol
tho bid omount, unleoo peld
within (8) dayt alter the
date ol oalo. The entire

George W. Long
18875 Cedlz Rood
Lore City, Ohio 43755

Help Wanted

•NEW
CAR SALES
,__._, •NEW TRUCK SALU
•USED CAR SAI.ES

:.In honor society
Brian A. Anderson, 31991 Pine
• Grove Road. Racine, and a junior at
Ohio University's Russ College of
- Engineering and Technology. was
· recently inducted into Tau Beta Pi.
national engineering honor society.
Besides distinguished scholarship,
members must also have exemplary
character, "integrity. breadth of interest both inside and outside engineering, adaptability, and unselfish activity."
..
Brian is the son of Jim and Becky
Anderson, Racine.

News policy

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Discount Prices

Bennett"upply
74().446-9418
1391 Safford
School Rd.
Galli lla, OH

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP
Candle Making
Supplln
•Wax •Scent •Etc.
Refill a
Variety of Gifts.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

CloHCI Sun. • Mon.
SR 124, Minersville, OH
740-9112-4558

The Melgt Soli and Wtter
__,.._
r. ''"'"·"
coneervetlon Dletrlct le .... •"•• "' .....,......
accepting bide lor purehiM
of a 1998 7-peatenger mini·
van. It •• to heve • e 30 Announcements
cylinder, 3.0 liter engine,
leetory lnetalled elr
conditioning, ,.., window
dtlroetar and wiper, with tn
extended werranty end 30
day llcena• lllgt,
The Dlatrlct reearvet the
right to rejecl tny or ell
bide.·
634 EAST MAIN ST.
Blda muel be Into Melgl
POMEROY
SWCD, 33101 Hllend Roed,
Pomeroy, QH 4578D by 4 ·
740-992·5500
p.m. July 17 and will be
opened tt 8:15 p.m. ·
(7) 2, 18 2tc

O'DELL
LUMBER
'COMPANY

WE FILL
LP TANKS!

FREE ESTIMATES

(No Sunday Calls)

211VI2Jtfn

~~~~~~~~~~~c
~ JD CONSIRUCfiON C
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
11r...
Garages. Poie Buildings, Roofing, $iding ~
~
, Commett:lal &amp; Residential
~
ed
27 yra. exp_Ucensed &amp; lnsur

·~

~
;...

Phone 740·992·3987

ft

Free Estimates

·~ -

'•

iJI!!;
.

. ·'

.

.

n

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 457e3
740-985-3813
4" thru 41" plastic culvert In s_tock
Full line of water storage tanks·
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Water line· 100' thru 1000' Rolls
Sewer Pipe· 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
·
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Salurday

.

SHOP

Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items

wiiu

Custom Homes

M&amp;J

Roofing

Remodeling

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Open 11

1111 • 6 pm
299 Third Street
Racine, Ohio

Plumbing

"Build Your Dream"

POPCORN AND BALLOONS

• Easy care Olerme/Nylon
• Great for kitchens!

II
Sq. Yd.

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
July 3·4·5
8am -5 pm
Antiques, Beanies,
A little bit of everything.
Inside &amp; outside space
available
773-5696

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repairs
• Coatings
• Sldilg
Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks
740-992·2068

LINDA'S
PAINTING
Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4 180

Free Estimales
1/19/98 1 pel

$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per sq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
Southam Yellow Pine Construction
Custom Engln!tering

•River Run Dog Food ........ $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River CaHie Feed ........ $9.75100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed. ____ $10.25100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Life Data
Hours: M·F 6-5:30; Sat. 8·12:00 Noon

Quality Carpets at
Affordable Prices·
• Free No Obligation Quotes
• Satisfaction Guaranteed
• Furniture &amp; Appliances Moved Free
• Free removal of old carpet

Meigs Co. Bikers
Independence Poker Run
July 4th
~ . 00 enlry
Starts Lakeview TavBrn.
1st bike out 12:00

Anderson's

Roofs • Decks • Garages

Free Estimates

Insured

740•742•3411

Call for Quote Today

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 248
985-3301
-------~~~~--..;_
J~

____

L

COMPUTER
PIRPORMUCI
BPIBADII

"Your Oa~ Stop
C.,-..pater Slaep"
Give us a caiffor aystem repal,.,
uies, upgrades or consultln11.
INTIANET~N-UP POINT

J

I

60

Lost and Found

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
·Residential air
conditioning
•Auto air conditiomng
•Heat pump
·In sta llatiOn &amp; scrv1ce

005

. Personals

Internet TV Set-Up, Learn How
To Watch TV Stations Worldwide
Over The Internet On Your Com·

Don Smitll
Peacl1 Fork Rd .
Pom eroy. OH 45769
992 -2735

Found- Pomeran•an/Pekingeae
mixed dog In Basl'lan area. call
740·9.,.9-2210 , 740 · 949 - 2t~3 or

740-992-2133.

R.L. HOLLON
'- TRUCKING .

Friday, June 3. 9am-? 261p .Jel·
lereon Ave.

••

at:

Four•d : Sat Of Car Keys At Rio
Grande Memoria l Park On Sun ·
day Cal 740-245-5&gt;1 11 To Ctaim.

babies, misc . 138 Howard
ha·
ven Helg_h ts New Havani .wv.

Found : Small Black Puppy With
Short Ears &amp; Long Tail ; looks
like Pan Lab, Founel : 6f2fl On
Neigl"lbo.rhood Road Near Entrance To Mound Hill Cemetary.

July 2 &amp;3. 9am-5pm, 26UJ 112

Thin &amp; Fri July 2 &amp; 3rd.

•.

Madison Ave . aduiVkids doth·
lng. baby items, misc.

July 2.3.4 . 1407 Cedar Slr4et. M

German

&amp;S tires on For~ wheels (4 each).
truck box lull size (in bed ). golf
c lubs , lull set. w/cart. bicycles .
his &amp; hers. 27" 12-speed . other
items. :J0.4.67S- 1731 .

lost: 200 lb. maW! Mastitl. tan w/
black mask. Owl Hollow/ Tuppers
Plains area, reward, 740·667 ·

July 3. 9am-4pm, across from Pt.
Pleasant High School . large size

To CO!im Call 740-446-6960.
FOUND :

White

Shepharo. 304-675-2715.

0109.
lost: red medium size Suzuki 125
4-wheeler. Owl Hollow/ Tupper&amp;

Plains area.

7~7-()109 :

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Rt. Off SA 35, Pas• C.ni8Mne. 8 .

4 , Clotl'llng, Home Furnishings.
Tools, Guns , Cardiogllde. Basket

liners.

s Family; 55 Garlleld Avenue , At.
7 Soulh, July lsi -3rd, 9 A.M·? If
•

6 Family Ya rd Sale : 7/3. 7/4 9
A.M. At. 141 ,4 1/2 Milas From
Gallipolis , Wood Burner, Furn . .
Bab'f Items &amp; Misc.
All ttems 18 Mos . Old Maytag
Washer &amp; Dryer, Vacuum Clean-

er, 32' Sony

r_ V.; 27' RCA T.V.;

Satellite Oisl"l Network. Sola Bed.
Microwave, 24 Drawer Dressers,
Metal Shelves. B· Ball Hop, Kids
Books &amp; Toys, Gas Grill , Msg .
Humid ifier, 1636 Cherry Ridge
Road, Call 740-245-593fl.

AU Yald Sites Mulf
Bo Paid In AciYoneo.
DEAPLINE: 2:110 p.m.
lho dly botorwlho od
Ia to

sp

-

Auction · .
and Flea Market

773-5785 Of :Jl4-773-5447.

3 Family, One Day Only: Frt 716/
98. County Road 77. 1st Road To.,

Rain Cancelled Fo&lt; Day.

dothes. mtsc. items.

Rick Pearson Auction Company.
lul l time au ctioneer, complete
auction
service .
licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia: 304·

run. Sund8y

edition - 2:110 p.m.

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
Gallipolis. Ohio 7~379-2720 .

90

Wanted to BuV

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

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sitver And Gold Coins , Proofsets ,
Diamonds. Antique Jew~lry, Gold
Rings . Pre-1930 u ~ s . Currency,
Sterling , Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Sl"lop, 151 Second
Av9nue, GallipOliS, 740-&lt;U6-2842.
Antiques, top prices paid , RiverIne Antiques. Pomeroy. Ohio .
Ru ss Mooi-e ow ner. 740-992 ·

2526
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture .
will buy one piece or complete
household. Osby Marlin ; 740 ·

992·6576.
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer.
Srrtit11 Buick Pontiac . 1900 . East·
ern Avenue. Gallipolis.
J &amp; D Auto Parts . Quying
wrecked or sa lvaged vehicle s .

:Jl4-773-5033.
Wanted To Buy : Junk Auto 's Any

COndlion, 740-446-9853.

F~dly.

Mondly odlllon
-1 0:110o.m. Sotunloy.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Annual Yard Sales In Eureka JUly
2nd. 3rd . Something For Every-

one!
DB Garage Sale : Rio Grande.
North 325. Tycoon Lake , Signs .
733 Eagle Aoad , July 2nel, Jrd,
4th, 9-5, Wicker Baskets . Floral
Vases, Whatnots. Morel
Estate Garage Sale 01 Aay Weih·
er: Aio Grande, 504 Ridge Ave-

nue. Ju~ Jrd, 4th, 51h. Etc. AI 8:00
A.M. Tilt ?

Friday July 3rd . 9:5, 3 Miles Out
218 On lei! , Nursing Scrubs.

Baby llems. Cralls. Houseoold.
Garage Sale: 41 Chillicothe Road.

GARAGE SALE:

508 Walson Road, 740-446-';.!85,
July Jro &amp; 41!1 sate Open.
Huge 5 Family : 2 1/4 Miles Out
2212 Cherry Aielga From AI. 325
South, Rio Grande, Friday 713rd, 8

A.M.
7/3rd, 4th, 8 A.M. -? Both Days,

85 Co ra Mill Road , Everything
From Clothes .COmputer.
July 3rd . Jackson Pike , Behind
Star Bank. Watcl"l For Signs. Rain
Cancels.
Multi-Family Yard Sale : July 1st..
3rd, 9-4, 908 Porter. Bidwell.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
· &amp; Vicinity
4 family, July 1·3. exercise equip.
ment. drapes. wallpaper, house-·
hold. baby, ladles , men's &amp; boy's
suits, tools , no reasonable offer
r~lused.

37255 SA 124, Middle·

port . 1 mile east of Rutland on

124, 74()-992·3~3
4 !ami~. July 2·3, 8:30-6:00, North
Broadway, Aacine .

All Yard Sale1 Mull Be Peld In
Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the 1d It to run,
Sunday I Mondey edition·

I :Otlpm

F~dly.

Back yard sale . 7 15 Sycamore
St., Midelteport. Ohio. July 1·4, a
little bit of everything.
Big moving sale· July 2·3. A-365
Sixttl Avenue , Middleport. Tools ,
mowers. sewing madline. ext. lad·

"'"

~

'!fos. lots of blue jeans &amp; misc .,
day &amp; Saturday, July 3ra -4th, at
38 Hudson St., Mlddlepof"t.

Family garage sale, rain or srline.
July 3-4, Hiland Ad , 7-10 -922 ·

5232 9am-4pm.
Friday &amp; Saturday- 770 Sycamore

A Disabled Veleran , 740 -446·
3419.
July 1·3, Yellowbush Ad., Aacine.

Quality clothing and household

Pt. Pleasant- · :
&amp; VIcinity : :

Ga1age Sale·Antiques , Ty llr.tnio

$2 .99 Per Min. Must Be 18 Yrs . pliances. trutt; topper, set ol truck
tires, dog cage. kid's games. roll&amp;f
blad8s. boy's &amp; Qirrs clolhing.
Wanted : Lady Co mpan ion To
Live In, Free Board . Must Be July 1-3, Third &amp; Main, across
AtMe To Drive, No Smoking , I Am from Wolfe's garage: Racine.

30 Announcements
NewTo'll&gt;uThrlft ~
9 West Stimson, Athens

&amp; baby clothes/ilems. m~n · s .
women's. &amp; children doltps. table
&amp; chairt. ~loo dog hou&amp;&lt;!, odds &amp;

Pomeroy, Oho.

Sorv·U 619-645-8434.

37814

Soulhern HS on SA 124, matemlly

Found- "Page's Ohio Revised
Code Annotatad" law bOOk, "contact Steve 107 Pleasant Ridge .

puler! 1·900·329·1293 Ext 9980 Street. Middleport, 9am -? Ap -

S:'S sc rvtcr c all

Three family yard &amp; garage iale,
Juty 6· 7, 9am·?, one mUe east of

ooos

.G q~et. dishes. antique door.

740-592· 1842

POMEROY, OH

992-3871

11..,. 1 mo.

7323.

7/3 To 716, 9·? Lots 01 Nice
Clothing, Children, Aduns. Elc.

9" Rib Pattern

* JULY SPEUAI..S *

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

Free ktnans, 8wks old . 304~875-

Come in and see us at
202 East Main St.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
992-1074

BOOnNG AID SIDING

Joe Wilson
(614) 992·42n

New Conttruet-itn &amp; Remodeling

In All, 740-446-n30.

WBift PAINTED STEEL

"

Chester

!2/18/tln

CRAFTY LADIES

1"1"

~REI

AMrable Kinens To Giveaway, 7

Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last.

Limestone Hauling ·
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Systeln &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
(614) 992·3838 '

St. Rt. 7

First Three days
Opening July 1st,
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and used
We Buy-Sell and Tirade

EXCAVATING CO.

'

SUNSft HOME
CONSTRUCTION

18 Colors

Pomeroy

7/22/tln

ANNOUNCEMENTS

BERBER CARPET

S
Sale

985-4473

HOWARD

~tc~~~~~~~~~
. .
...

985-33831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

with

e

614-742·2138

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

811211 mo. pd

Owner: John Dean

'

LEVEULOOP C?ARPET

Joe N. Sayre

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
· •Comml)rclal
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
7 40.985-4422

·Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential
FrH fslimates
No Job Too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

614-992-7643 .

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

s

Installed with pad

RfiiiOn&amp;biiiJRBIIII

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTIOJ4

P/B Contractors, Inc.

Open TUet.-Frl. 10 am-e pm
S.t 10 tm-4 pm

Public Notice

Haullng,ExcavaUng
&amp; Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gravel
Septic System•
Trailer &amp; House $1tes

LUDSCAPE
DESIGNS

~

1/11/lllfn

"H•e• lnvtntery"

SAYRE
;TRUCKING

Room Additions • Roofing

7 40-698·7231

PARTS

POMEROY, OH.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

£ARPET

MOBILE HOME

Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
5 pm·11 :30 pm
Weilkdays
Sundays 3 pm-10 pro

614-992·5479

11.,.1 mo.

.YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

949-2168

.

Call740·843·5426

• 100% Nylon
• 12ft wide
• 9 colors

s
.....

•

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
512B/tfn

Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at

CELLULAR PHONES

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

.

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB

LOttG'S
COttSTROCTIOn

SCULPTURED CARPET

• 12 or 15 ft width
• Scotchguard
• Olermlnylon Blend

• GOroge5 • Decla
2A X 2A Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992·2m

6:00.

Help Wanted

s

• Blown lnwlotion

1·740·949·2015

74().446.9416 •1-8()().872·5967

(0055290)

• Thick, heavy pile
• 100% nylon
• Scotchguard
e 32 colors

·~ryDocks

CALL

"Wit ere Q11ality Doesn't Cost More"

Howard L Wrltesel

• Yrnyl Siding • Soffit
• Foscia • Seamleu
Gutter • Roofing
0 Replacement Windows

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

BENNEn'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

Attorney lor the Plaintiff,
George W. Long
16) 25; (7) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 &amp;tc

TRACKLESS CARPET

J&amp;L SIDit'S &amp;
INSULATION

BICKIOEua
DOZER.~SERVICE

*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

otherwloe r~tpond ti
requeetod by the Ohio
Rulet ol Civil Procedure,
judgement by deleult will be
rendered egalnot you and
lor tho rollol demonded In
the Complelnt.
Daleo thlt 23rd day ol
June, t998.
Lorry E. Spencer,
Clerk ol Courto
By: Dltne Lynch
Deputy
Submitted by:
Chrtatopher E. Tenoglla

!!fie!!!!
expand our sales staff. Realistic first
year income of $25,000 • $45,000 or
mor,. Industry leading benefits
lncludin!J group health and 401 K
retirement plans. We provide
training, great products,and a great
work environment. You provide your
desire and commitment
Contact Brad Sang, Mike Sergent or
Brian Ross In person
---.petwe~m 10 a_m_ and 5 p.m. Monday
mr,~u~1n Friday at Turnpike Ford.
TUrnpike Ford Is an equal·
opportunity employer.

~

Air Conditioners ~sLow As 128 a month
Heat Pumps As Low As 138 o month

your failure to anawer or

110

JIM'S

Over lite Pltolle Bank ~
Fi11ancing"

~:-

NO ·WAI
ROLL VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING

. In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
'limes-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of the
"See Store for detalls
event.
Weddings submttted after the 60-day deadlme wil_l appear during the •
'reek in The Datly Sen1mel and the Galhpohs Dilly Tnbune.
Store Hours
· All club meetings and other news anicles in the society section must be
Monday thru Saturday
·submitted within 60 days of occurrence. All binhdays must be submitted
9:30-S:OO
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

"Ea~y

or !ole.
AUDITO R' S
PARCEL
NUMBER 07~7.000.
Court Cotto and ouch
other further relltf oe the
court ""'Y dHm jut! In lewn
tnd equity.
You ere required to
enower thle Complolnl
within twenty-eight 128)
deyo alter the loot
publication of thle Notice,
will be publlthtd onee etch
w..k lor alx (&amp;) tuccettlve
weekt. Tho laot publlcellon
will bo mede on lho 30th
dey ol July, 19118, end tho
twenty-eight (28) deyt lor
tntwer will eommeneo on
thll dote. In the cote ol

'Floor Covering Sale

s

·-..-·-

TRPPRn

contain. eleven acrea more

Anderson's

• 100% Olerm Pile
• 18 Colors
• Soil Resistant

Longer Hair, We Have AUergiesl

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps

9

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

7-1271 , Aftsr4 P.M.

lend which weo deeded to
of
him on Februery 10, 11114 by
Rechel Torrence Decker;
thence north on teld Frank
Horton line to the 'IIOflh line
of oeld lot; thence weet
olong uld north lint to the
11011h-tett comer ot Joennt
Shein'• tltven ecrt lot;
thence aouth to the piiCtl ol
beginning; tho oeme to

Page

Pomeroy,

9 Month Old Male Cal, Neutered.
All Shols GM!n, Good Houle Pill,

...
..

BERBER CARPET

BRIAN A. ANDERSON

Help Wanted

Public Notice

o

Yard Sale

70

Giveaway

40

2, 1998

········-···············-····

Sale

Jacob Edward Starcher celebrated his first birthday with a Rugrats
pany at his home in West Columbia
Sunday, May 17.
Present were his parents, Eddie '
and Michele Starcher; brother,
Gabriel; grandparents, George and
Judith Starcher and Mike and Joy
Zirkle; Jim, Lisa and Robert Moody;
Jim and Pam Durst; Lennie, Bill,
Debbie, Garrett and Brenna Haptonstall ; Gay nell McAbee; Mary
Starcher; Susan, Kaleb and Jacob
Petry; George and M&amp;ljorie Moody;
Greg and Darlene Bonecutter; and
John and Juanita Grueser.
Unable Ill attend. but sending gifls
were Ruthann Plants and Gail
McAbee.

110

Help Wanted

Mid Ohio Valley's
Leading
Automotive
Retailer,
has Immediate
openings In the
following area:

17 Patterns I n Stock, 12 Ft. Wide

Starcher turns one

hlo

clevl-.

FORD,

You know !lest where else . So tell Arm and Hammer. The compa ny wants 10 hear even more ideas at I (800) 225-3763 (BAKESODA).

JACOB STARCHER

Cunent Add,... Unknown,

110

IN THE MEIGS COUNTY
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
c... No. 9&amp;-CV.o411
NOTICE OF PUBUCATION

ri se .

•

ville, Olllo

end

110

Public Notice

unknown helre, aaalgne,

SHERIFF SALE
Commorclel Federtl
Mortgege Corporation .

CunentAdd,... Unru-

legeiHa, end devlteoo, leot
known tddretl Uhrlehtville, Ohio
Current Addreet Unknown
end
Gertrude Long, her
unknown helra, ettlgna.
legetHa, end devlteea, lift
known eddrett Uhrlchavillo, Ohio

The reguler monthly
meeting of the !IUnON
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES It
on Monclly, July 6th d 7:30
PM II Syi'ICUM MuniCiptll
Building.
The 1111111 Buclgd will be
evllllbla II mHtlng tnd
eleo 11 • public heertng on
llondey, July 13111 tt 5 p.m.
ttSVf11CUM.
(7)21tc

ve.Plaintiff,
Baking soda continues to sprinkle 1-=========---1
Public Notice
Levi Newberry,

small miracles into our daily lives

Public NoiiCe
Dellt R. Stten, her
DIW!denll.
unknown helrt, ltllgnt,
To: AU. OF THE
lepten, end dt¥1-, lid DEFENDANTS HEREIN
known tddr..e Uhrlcht- ABOVE NAMED, whoM lui
vllt,Ohlo
known addre•••• are 11
Cu...m Add,... Unknown
noted obove, end who~•
end
prettnt eddreu ere
lrme Hlllegu, her
"""'-'·
un'known heir•, •••lgne,
You ere hereby notllltd
legtt-. end
lett thet you heve been nemed
known tddt..t Uhrlcht- Delendonto In tho action
vllle, Ohio
entitled George Long,
Cumnt Add...U Unknown
Pltlntlffe, vo. U¥1 Newerry,
ond
Gertrude Long, Delle R.
Arthur R. Hlnee, hor Stun, Agneo Hlneo, William
unknown helra, aaelgne, E. Newberry, Clerence E.
ltgtlHI, tnd devi-l, 1111 Newberry, Lourence B.
known oddrtea Uhrlcht· Newberry ond George
ville, Ohio
NIWbtrry, tt tl, Dolendento.
cu,.nt Addreoe Unknown
Thlt action hit been
ond
otelgned Cote No. 91-CVHerman J. Hlnlt, hit
end It pending In the
unknown htlrt, ltllgnt, Court of Common Plett ol
legete.., and d"'''"'• teat Melge County, Ohio. The
known oddreao Uhrlche- object ol thlt Complelnt
vllle, Ohio
demendo judgement, by
Current Addreat Unknown
adverae poeaeaalon, for
and
root property commonly
Wllllem E. Newberry, hit found d the North Side of
unknown helrt, eealgnt, Beld-Knobb Stlverevllle
legetua, ond dtvl'"'· loti Rotd, Ltbenon Townthlp,
known oddr..o Uhrlcho- Melgo County, Ohio, and
vllle, Ohio more pertlculorty deocrtbed
Current Addr... Unknown
11 followa, to wH:
end
SHUIIt In the Townthlp of
Clorence E. N-rry. hit L.abenon, County ol Melgt,
unknown helre, aealgna,
Steto or Ohio, end
ltgllotl, end eviHII, 1111 end
boundod
tnd doecrlbtd 11
known eddreaa Ader11, Ohio
r11mely, baing In
Current Addreoa Unknown followo,
touth hall ol the wttl
Laurence B. N-rry. hie tho
north-eeat
hell
unknown helra, a8algne, querterolol the
Section
No. 32,
legatoeo, end devloHo, lett Townthlp No. 3, Ronge
No.
known eddretl Uhrleha- 11 ol the Ohio Compeny'e
vllle, Ohio
Purcheoe; GOmmenclng at
Cu,.nt Addreaa Unknown the
aouth-eed comer of an
lnd
eleven
lot deeded to
George Newberry, hit Joenna ecrt
Shein
Rachel
unknown htlra, ...lgna, Tornnce Decker by
by
deed
ol
tegetHe, end devlt..o, loot Ftbruery 10,11114; thence
known eddreoa Uhrich•- 111t to corner of Fr1nk

Public Notice

. As a part of the Gallipolis Elks Lodge 107'e Community Service program, $500 wae donated towards
the restoration of the Chester Courthouse. The Chester Courthouse Is the oldest standing Courthouse
in Ohio, end through local community efforllla in the proceae of being completely renovated. Pictured Is Gallipolis Elks, Exalted Ruler, Dave Scott presenting the check to Pat Holter, project
chairman of the Chester Historical Committee. Alao pictured are Meigs County members of Gallipolis
Elks Lodge: Ken Harris, John Blaettnar, Fritz Goebel, Roy Grueser, Bill Pooler, Bob Hysell, Bruce May,
John Ridenour and Robert P. Wood.
. The Gallipolis Elks Lodge Plans to apply for additional funds that may be available through the Ohio
Elks Aasociation Community Service Grants. Tha Community Service Grant Program Ia 1 new program
initiated by the Ohio Elks Association Prealdent, Don Procnow and Is administrated by hie State Com• ·- munity Service Chairman, Clyde V. Sickle. The intent of the grant program ls to make fun de available
. for projects similar in scope to the Cheater Courthouse project.

Thursday, July

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

on . Something lor everyone! TV,

ckllhes. wheel &amp; tires.
July 2-3, CarroM Smitl"l residence,

HaPP\1 Hollow Ad, Rutland, 9 liU 5.
July 2-3, lirsl house beside Soils·

Items. $1.00 bag sate evary bury Grade School, POmeroy Pika
Thursday. Monday lhru Saturday Rain cancels.
8:01).5:30.

110

Help Wanted

AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
Spears. 304·675-1429
Applications are being accepted
lor In -Home Caregivers . Applic·
ants should haw-e a high school
diploma or G.E .D.. reliable transportation. telephone in U'l&amp; nome
and wiUing to work weekends &amp;
holidays. Must be motivated anel
flexible . Experienca in prov iding
direct care or working wilh older
adults a plu s. Will train . State
tested nursing assistants en ·
co uraged to apply. Applications
are available at the Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Cente·r . Mul·
barry He ights, Pomeroy, OH . An

EOE Employe1.

ATTENTION Certified Nurtlng
A11l1tanta : Ravenswood Village
is now accepting applications for
lull and part time positions . Paid
vacation and holidays. It interest·
ed, please apply in person Mon·
day through Friday, 9am'-4pm
Write attn : Georgie Boso. R.N .
O.O.N. 200 South Ritchie Avenue .
Ra venswood , WV 26164, 304 ·

273·9385. EOE Gtenmarkl Gen1·
sis/ Eldercare Facility.
Brown 's Hardware Small Eng•ne
Mechanic STIHL , MTO, Murray.
Homelite, Avg . 40 Hrs. Week Call
For Interview. 740-446-8828
Carleton SchooVMeigs Industries
seeks a substitu te Health Services Coordinator ( AN o r LPN ) to
work wllh students and adults with
developmental disabilities . Must
be a registered nurse or licensed
practical nurse currently licensed ·
in the State ol Ohio. Send resume
to:
Steve a&amp;ha, Executive Director
Carleton School/Meigs Industries

P.O. Box 307
1310 Car1eton St.
Syracuse. Ohio 45779
Coder/Anatyal
Jackton Genenl HO:aplt1l t't11
an Immediate tull-tlme opening
tor a COder/Anaty1t tn the ~
eat Rteordl Dept. Inpatient, Ou
patient, and Emergene~ visit

coding. ART, Cerlllled Coding
Specl1llat or equivalent experience required. Reply to : HR 01·

rector, PO Box 720,
25271. EOE.

Ripley, WV

Cosmetolog ist Needed Guar anteed Sala ry, Versus CommiS sion. Paid Vacation, Benefits ,

740·446·7267
Full Time L.P.N. SITE SUPER VISOR For Priw-ata Non -Profit
Family Planning Services Based
In Gallipolis. Ohio . This Position
Also Manages A Mobile Site In
Meigs County. Medic;at anel EClu ·
cational Services For Potential
C_ase l oad Of 1,500 Clients: ProVIde Outreach . Intake, Laboratory
And Follow ·Up Services To Fe males And Males. Scheduls And
Staff Physician Clinics : Must Be
Excellent Communicator, Develop
Knowledge 01 And ' Be Sensitive
~o Birth Control And Reproduc tive Health Issues, Detail Oriented. E'o'ening And Saturctay Hours
To Be Expected . Travel To Ottler
Silas As Needed . Send Resume.
Latter of Interest And Three Employment References To Planned
Parenthood Ot Southeast Ghio,
395 Richland Avenue, Athens ,
Onio 4!H01 . 37 .5 Hours Per

Week Wllh Bonelli PaCkage, EOE
/ESP.

DUMP TRUCK

SERVICI;
. / 185 4422 .

Holzer Sonio&lt; Care C.ntor Is Now
Accepting Applications For PanTime STNA'o , H \bu Ate ln18rtSI·
In Applying Ptono Stop By
Colon!ot Drlw, Bidwell, 01\io
740-448-5001. Holzer
Caro Ctnlet II An Excei-

Chetttr, Ohio

Our N~nlng 0e-

Agrlculturll Ume,
Umeatone • Gravel

Dirt • Sand

-~

Cirt Provider With

�r

Thursday, July 2,1998

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

&lt;,

Thursday, July 2, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 1~: :

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

1 PNoccupy
7 ~ted II
.,. .......

=. loc-..•.. -

40 Air !loiN

42 Ulnlne Qlllllll
4e Crow'l C8ll
47 Sldrt ienglll
51 .......

lnl8nlll

13 Por11Md'l

ExPtrtenced clerk for conven·
1one1 sue. ~3603.

State Certified High Pressure
Pipe Wetder 5 Years E~perlence

F1o1aJ Oollllnor Full Or Part-Tlmo

Tig And Sllcli Stnd Resume To:
BrenMar Conatruclion , Inc., 900

Must Have Prevk»us Experience,
Stnd Roaumt To: CLA 439, c/o
Glllipolll Dally Tribuno, 825 Third
A-.e. Galpois, OH 45631 .

Loctmeed Martin Utllhy Services.

Inc _, The Operating Contractor
For The United Stale&amp; Enr1chmtnl
Corporation At The Gaseous Oil·
fusion Plant. Piketon. Ohio. Haa
An Opening In The FOllowing
Area:

45640.

Alt real estate advertising in
this l'l8WSpap8f is sub;ecl to
lhe Federal Fair Housing Act

CIWIE OPERATDII
With Mechanical Background.
Salary Commensurate With Ex·

perlence, Call 1-800-339-8518
Mon -Frl, 8:00 A.M. -5:00 P.M.
F&lt;1r An Ajlpoinlmonl

EOuAL OPPOIITUNIT'f
EIIPLOYEA

IIEIIICAL DIRECTOR

WORK FROII HOllE
MSt82FfTIUC7

Direct The Actlvitlea Of The Site
Heallh Services Center Which

1-8110-416-11521

Offers Prevenlive Medicine Pro·
grams And Medical Diagnosis
And Treatment In This Capacity,
You Will Supervise A Medical

WWW bO'Ibe I I

This PosiUon Requires A DOE

Stcurlly Clearance Or The Abillly
To Obtain Suctt Oearance. Utility

com

Oedlcaled AN's And LPN'S Inter·

Buci&lt;rldOO Rd .. Bidwell, OH 45614.
Needed : Reliable c8ra giver to
stay with elderly woman, Saturday's &amp; Sunday's . Call 304·675-

6894.
Now hiring sa te drivers . good
pay. flexible hours. Apply in person at Domino's In Pt. Pseasant.
Now Taklno Applications At Oom·
\no's Pizza. Gallipolis. ·&amp; Pomeroy
Locations.
Oak Hill. Ohio Trucking Company
Looking For Experienced Semi
Tractor Trailer Drivers, Excellent
Pay &amp; Insurance Package. 740·

682-6613. Between 8-5.
Scenic Hilts Nursing Center. 311

Buckrldge Rd . Bidwell, OH 45614
Is Now Accepting Applications
For A Futt-Time LPN (Shifts :;:oo

P.M. -11 :30 P.M. &amp; 11 :00 P.M. ·
7:30 A.M.) Must Be Sensitive To
Tha Needs OF The Elderly
Please Apply tn Person At The
Front Desk Between 8:30 A.M. -

4:30P.M.
Scenic Hills Nursing Center, 311
Bu'cknctoe Ad ., Bidwell, OH 45614
Is Now Accepting Applications
For Friendly Outgo ing And De·

pendable STNA 's Please Apply
In Person At The Front Desk Bet-

Between 6:30 A.M. -4:30 P.M. NO
Phone Galls Pleaae.
Tha University Of Rio Grande An·
nouncu Two Openings For A

Pan-Tlmo

Emc&gt;~DVmtnl .

Secretary In Tht Welsh Studies
Center . Pofltlon Available Alter
July 1 Job Dulles lr'lclude Pro·
vidlng Secretarial Support For
The Director Of The Welsh Stud·
111 Center Including Cltrlcal ,
computer Work And Receptionist
Dulles. High Sct1ool Diploma Or
Equivalent And One To Two
Years Previous Office Experience
Required . Good Interpersonal

28x80. 3br, 2 112 balh
with all optiona, only $2,499.

dton. 20 Hours Par Wlll!k. No BenefliS.
Part· Time Medical Lab Technology Faculty Member. Bachelor's
DegrH In Olsciptine; ASCP Ctr·

Fret air &amp;

ployer May Demand A Little

Lovely Country Home On SA 7

Train AI Night. Take Adult Training AI Buckeye Hills Career Center_ let Us Know Your lntaresl8d.
Fall Registration Is Open In July.
Stop In Or Call For A BroChlKe.
7-40 -245· 5334 . Financial Aid

Soulh WHh A Brtalhtaklno River
View. VfK'( Prtwle 5tltJng On 2 1/
2 Acres But Only 10 Minutes
From GIMipolla. 3 -4 Btcfrooma. 2
112 Baths, Hardwood Ftoors. 2
Areplacea. Now Heal Pump, KHchen, Many Ex1ras. Won'l Lasl
Longll $110,000.

Awilable To Those Who Quaily.

Schools
Instruction

Call Virginia L. Smith Realty At

740-446-6806 Or Call Cara AI

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... Bul
Sho~l On Skills? Gain Skill&amp;

hi

Silo, Office Technology. Walding.
Industrial Maintenance, Peace
Officer /Corrections, SUCCESS.
Auto Technology, Air Conditioning &amp; Heating, Farm Businell
Planning , Analysis, Computer
Specialist. Customer Centered ,
Healthcare Technician (Formerly
!'lurse Aide) , MA/OD, Pre-Employment Tra ining , And Mort ..

740.245·9430 For More lnlorma-

llon.

100x1 00 lol, three btllrooms. lwO
full balhs. living roornt illnlng room
combo, lamlty room/ kitchen combo. ullllly room. working fireplace,
central air, privacy fence,

two car

oaraoe. applla""'' lnciOOed, 740949-9004.
Modern Home In Vinton, With VInyl Siding AC .. HP Nice Carpett

Finished Beaemtn\ On 2 LoiS All
$55,000. 740-59&amp;-1829.

180 Wanted To Do

Avenue, Gallipolis. Close To
Schools. 3 Bedrooms. 2 1/2

ANVOOOJOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed. mulch·
ing, flower beds. landscaping,
mowing,
sidewalk
edging,
etc ... Free Estimates. Call Bitt

304-675-7112.
Home.

Has 2 Openings Elderly Or HandIcapped Pe rson In My Home,
740-441-1536 .

Baths. LR &amp; FR Formal Dining
Room. Oak Trim, Fireplace, Much
More. Home Eligible For Tax

Abatement $175,900, Call 304·
273-2940.
Pomeroy, SR 124· beautiful river
view home with wrap around
porch, picturesque setting describes this three bedroom. one
and 1/2 bath with basement and

oaraoo. 740-247-3644

ltvel.~ 3

Experienced carpenter will do re·
modeling, deck" , vlnvt siding.
ptumbi,ng . Free estimates. Call

Throe b¥room spill

Jim Shull."304-6l'5·1272. Rtler-

pantry In baatmtnl many ,_ exlrae. Very nice home, m&lt;J'IIng bl·
cause ol work, 740-742-4000.

ances upon request.
Furnilure repair, refiniSh and restoration , also custom ortlari. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, larry

Phillips. 740.992-6576.
George&amp; Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

304-675-1 957.
Prolessional Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In surance . Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388·

9648.614 -367-7010.

mates. 304-675-1327.
Wilt Do Commercial &amp; Residential
Cleaning No Job Is Too SmaiL

Call Belh. 740.367-7966.
Wilt take ca re of the elderly In
their home. Experienced . References , 7~~9832

FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi ·
ness with people you know. and
NOT to send money through the
mail until you have investigated

lh8 ollenng. .

230

320 Mobile Homn
for Sale

livingst~n · s basement water ·
prooting . all basement repairs
done. tree estimates. tlletlme
guarantee. 12yrs on job experience. 304-675--2145 .

REAL ESTATE

992-9113.
14 x70 3BR. $999 Down &amp; ONLY

1963 Champion. 50x12, two bedrooms ; 1994 Spruce Ridge Skyline. 72x14, two bedrooms , two

baths; 740-843-5327.
1971 Bonanza , two bedroom ,
good condition , new 8x18' build·

lno . $4200 , 740-992-0100 allor
5pm.
1987 14x80 2 Bedrooms. Good
8X10 DeCii VInyl Sklrtlno.

Sha~ .

$7,500. 740--446-3409.
.t989 Clayton Mobile Home, 2

l!tdrooma. $6.000. 740-388-9875.
1993 1•x10 mobile home, 3br, C/
A, alove &amp; relrigerator included.

304-675-5881.
per&amp; Plains, two lull baths, three

bedrooms, laundry room, WID, LR,

3br. 2 lull balhs , UR . LR . DR ,

ABANDON HOME Make 2 payments, assume loan , owner ·f l·

nandng ava-. 304-755-7191 .

Charming two story home, two
bedrooms , corner tot fenced all
around, two car garage, bcated In

aval•

Slop by Oakwood Homea of NI-

llon Or Fal Quarter.

very gcod condHion ,

immediate occupancy, 740-742·
8200·or 74().992·3041 .

tro, WV. &amp; register to win free
doubtewlde, no gimmicks. Only
~~---o1-.wv.

lnttreslld Applicant• Should

Rio Grande. Campul Poll Office
Box F27. Rio Grandt; OH 45874
EED /M fn1li0Ye'.

WAHTED- EOUfPIIEHT

IIECIWIIC:

Experienced In Heavy Trucks,

Equlprnen1, And Hydraullco. StillY Comrntnauralt WHh Expo~, once. Call IIOIIdaY · Friday From
I :G0-5:00 AI 1·100-33.ee11 For

An

Appolo•••ll

CONOOIIINIUII
LePtace, 215 Second Avenue. 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths. located

. 304-755-5588.
FREE DOUBlE-WIDE

-~-

Downtown $79,000, 740-448-

Huot 28x80 3BR. 1 1/2 both.
Starllno II ONLY $39,999. Many

4299.

optlont available . 1·888·828·

Double wido 3br. ~ balh, only
$1.325. down, $20!. ~r month.
HIG0-691-Bm.
House. IWO loiS,

Tup~rs ~lalna,

30'x80', 4 bedrooms, 2 tun baths,
LR. eal In khchen. laundry room,
one stall garage. AC/ heel pump,
12'a:16' storage building, 18'K38'

pool--

lngrOUnd pool, 12&gt;124
$17.000. 740-66H)108 -epm.

In Mktdleport- new kitchen, oak

coblntll. dlahwllhor, dlapoael,
heel
pump.
""" - · bllh
end 112.
col740-992-3465.

3428.
Large atltctlon of uatd homeS. 2
or
Starling II $m5.
Quick delivery. Call 740·3B5·

-001111.

8821.

UllfT£D DFI'ER
I e98 Doubltwldt Q Down $2e5

a

month. Free delivery
set-up,
no land naeded. Only •t Oell:·

--

MIOd -

Nitro, WY 304-716-

URnBA
Stl Up On Lol, Tllkl Over Pyrnl'l,
304-7311-72115.

Hook-l!p, CA. Cenlral Heal. $3851
Mo .. Dopo&amp;ll Required , 1·888·
840-0521 .

Single or Double Bedroom. 233

Building•

~~~~.,.,_,....;;-.,.._·I Avenue, bath and 1/2, $300/

Bulkttng For Sale In New Haven,
W.VA. On SL Rt 33. 4,000 Sq. Fl..

Full Basement. 2 Balha, Office,
Storage. Equipment Included. All
Excellent Condition , Alto, One

month plus $100 depo11t, 740·

66.7·3083.

Commercial-Office or Relall , 87
Mill 51. MldOitporl. 1,450 Sq Fl.
$400 mo. Corner Bulldlno . 740992-6250 ~cqulslllons (next

dOorl.

AYT AVAII.AIILE -

Twin Rivera

Tower now accepting

applications for 1br. HUD subsld·

Two bedroom ..ller, $250/ monlh
plus $100 cllpool1, 740-667·3083.

Fumlehed

450

(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,

CAIIPOAOUNO

COUNTRY ESTATES!

38 .26 Acres, Approx . 8 Acre
Lake, Mobile Home With Large

Add On Gallla Clly Walor And
Electric $125,000 Mora Acreaoe
Awllable, 740-388-61178,
1 OOx 150 lol in Gallipolis Ferry.

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled , HBO,
Cinemax , Showllme &amp; Disney.

Wtekly Ralos, Or Monthly Ralts,
Construction Workers Welcome

740-441·5888. 740--441 -5167.

740-385-4367.

.

470 Waoted-to Rent'
Small wooded tot In Mason
County for C8"1* with Of without

ulllilles. 304-675-1327.

MERCHANDISE

Household
Goode

510

875-7948.

360

Applla'ncet :
Reconditioned
Washers. · Dryers. Rangea: Refrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740·446·

n95.
Fleuteet couch (with pull out
bed) &amp; chair, $200; Admiral con-

sole TV. $75; child's large chest.
$70; call740-992-24n.

Real Eetate
Wanted

GOOD

Cash Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackburn Really, 740·

H8 0008.
We Buy Land : 30 · 500 Acres,

410 Houaes for Rent
2 Bedroom Cotlag8 On Bulavllle,

1/2 Mile From Porter. NO PETS,
Water. Trash Paid. 740 -3881100.
2114 Monroe Ave. 3br, lull basement, CIA . $400 . mo. plus de-

posM. 304-675-3230.
3 Bedrooms, With Basement,
Country Salllno. No PaiS. $475/
Mo., Plus Deposit 741l-4-16-1062.
3-4 bedroom home. central air.

big yard, $300 wllh $150 deposit
&amp; reltn!nces, 740-742·2460.
Appllcallona Now Being Accept:
ed For Haute 816 Ma)n Street,

Pt. Pleasant, WV. 3 ~edrooms, 2
Full Baths, LR. DR, Family Room.
large KIIChan, Laundry Room, No

USED APPLIANCES

Washers . dryers. refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances. 76

Vine Slreel. Call 740-446-7396.
1-800-499-3499.
U&amp;ad Furniture Store

Below Holi·

day Inn. Kanauga . Beds, Couches. Orenera, Tabtea, Deskl,
Lamps, Mattresses, And Morel
Summer Hrs . Monday Thru Fri-

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.

Pr-.ns? Need Tuned? Call lhe
piMo Dr. 740-446-&lt;1525
JET
AEMTION MOTORS
Repaired. N&lt;!w &amp; Rebuill In Skld&lt;
Ctl Ron E..,., 1-800-537-9528.
JVC Compact Camcorder Coat:

11.000, Sell: $375, 740-44&amp;-2529.
Kenmore Gas SIOYe 4 Years Old,
Almqnd, Excellent COnclrtlon; G.E.
Eltctr~ Stow. Gold. Good Condlllon; 4 nras &amp; Wheels, Like New.
740-245-9525.
LudwiO Drum Sel Wl1h Cases COli
740-4-46-7498.
Nordic Trac. ex . cond . 2yrs old .

$225. 304-675-6787 -

Spm.

NordlcTrack Pro $300, DP Alrgomeltr Exerclee Bike $60 ;
Walder 100 ~ower $50; EJlC&amp;Uent
Condition! Prices Firm, 740·4-46-

0122.

'Drum, 48 Inch, S3.200; 553

Sheep Fl. Roller; 30 Fl Vibrallng
Skraed $5,000; Fuel Tanka,
Boards . $3,000 A Piece. R40
Oitchwlteh wttn 600 Hrs .. $7,500;

1992 Plymoulh Grand Voyager,
AJC, P/8, PIW. runs &amp; looks
good, good stereo. $6,000 . 30•·

Ollie': 740-643-2300.
.41HI43--29116 After 4 P.M.; Alltr
. 740·643· 26«; Fax : 740-

-843-1030.

,.,mmer C...renGI on ell ttueq.

a

v1rna lewn mower•
atrlng
trlmmera. Ouarenteed loweet

prlct.
Slcltn Equlpmonl~
,.
304-476-7421

304-675·2177 Day or 304-875Riding mowers, push mowers,
farm ~uipment and scrap metal,

wll haul-lree, 740-742-2502.
Scooters, Electric Wheelchairs,
Sales:· Rental , Trade, New &amp;

Uatd. Bowman's Homecare. 740.
446-7283.

New aod Retired-back to Oct.

1997 740-4-46-1523.
Three Wheel little Rascal Etec-

lric Scooler, Ulie New, $650 Firm.
740-245-5811 .
Used Furniture For Sale: Coffee
4 Place Creaser Set, School
Desk. Single Futon, Dinette Set

550

Building
Supplies

Block. brick. sewer pipes. wind5121 .

560

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Ad .

740-446-023 f.

Tractor &amp; Equipment, 740·256·
Your Area Bush ~og Deater Fo1
Parts, Rotary Cutters . Loader&amp; ,
Tillers , Finish Mowara. Etc. Car·
~9t'a Farm I Lawn Midwav
~

Galll&gt;olls &amp; Rio Grande.
OhiO On Jackson Pika 740-44624120&lt; HIG0-594-1111 .
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For ~;tasldentlal And Commercial

Lawn Equipment Compact Udllly
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Trac.t.ors, Hay Equipment, John
Dttl" Skid Steer Lotdtro. Chad&lt;

WHh Us AboU1 Financing Aa Low
As 2.9% On Lawn Tractore And
Low Rate. Ananclng On New And
~qulpment.

Carmichael's

Sporting
Goode

520

CJossbow Jennings Deveatator

4 BollS &amp; Ow1'8r $150, OBO
740-379-2804.

W~h

Four fiorses· one Registered

TennUaee Walker goldlhg; lwo
Artbli11 Ofldlnos; ohe Roolstered
quarta)horse mare ; 740-742·

2050.
Nelson's CUstom Processing
now open . FormerlY Jones Cus~acuum

~f':7-43-5-IOO
Quality' Aeglater8d Angus Bulla,
14-17 ~ths old . Cummings

Angus

:.;F 304-675-6248.

Reglster4d Half Unger Horse;
Tennesse Walker ·1Lg. Mare
Pony; 1 Three Year Stud Pony,

38" Tall 740-245-5492.

TRANSPORTATION

530

Antiques

Buy or sell . FH~erlne Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday ,1:00 to

6:00 p.m. 740-992 -25267lluss
MooreOWf*.

540 MIIICBIIanaous
Merchandlae
•COQL QQWNt•
Central Air Conditioning. FrH Estimalesl If You Don'l Call Us. We

Both Lose! 740-446-6306, 1-800291-oo98.
113 carat, round diamond oolltalre,
size 6, ~ld $800, will lake $550;

420 Mobile Homes

size 7, paid 1700 will tako, $300;
740-367-0288 or 740-049-2481 .

size 1. paid $1400, will lake
$1250; wedding gown with veil

304-675-~.

1985 Ford Crown VIctoria, 4-dr,

van, fully Equipped, 31 ,400
t.Ailes, 740-24&amp;-5938 After 5:00.

Registered

Cocker

Spaniel,

18wks old, whileollufl. $200. 304675-3995.

1989 White Ford Escort clean,
good: .running car. $2,00() . 304-

198:1. Dodge Daytona Shelby Tur·
bo f,ully Loaded. High Miles, Exceli.lnl Condlllon, ,$4,000, 740·
379-2847, LtiM Mossage.
1991 Dodge Shadow Convert·
abiAI, Aulo, AC; 1989 &amp; 1991 S·
10; 1989 Jeep Comanche, Cook

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobllt homes
$250·$300, atwtr, Wtltr and
740-992-2187.

11'1111--

2 bedroom mobile home In
Raclnt, no pera, 740-1102-seea.

14 Ft. Jt 4 Ft. Preuure Treated
Wood Dock WJth Floatation Bll -

ltiS $500, 740--446-3796.

10' lye grain drill, excellent con-

1998 Cub Cadet riding mower,

dillon, $6500 li'm. 7,40-742-1903.

model 12155, uklng $1,800.
304-895-3013.

800 Gallon Mueller Sulk Tank

325 gel water lank, fill In truck
bad, $100, 740-992-5826.
7fl. lOCUli POll~ . $2.SO tiCh.
304-67!1-6348.

Small 111M btdroom Utlltr, SR 7
IOUih of Middleport, $200 month
plua utlllltta: 12ldl5 two ~­
$225 morlh plua utillltl; coli 740992-2524.

Bunlt Bablu, all btara- Prln-

Thrto btcfroom rnobllt homo In
Pomeroy, no !fl. 740-1192-seea.

ATTENTION: Wt'll PAT TOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounda, 47

ceaa, ValentlflO, Curly,

304-675-74115. . .

a Pllace.

.'

COby, Glhl Grinder &amp; Mixer John
DHre Corn Chopper &amp; Matlure
Spreodtr, 740-2!11-1321 After 1
P.M.

848 Case liwn tractor &amp; 5oader,
mower deck, box blade, plow,

Ntwl GrHI Glftf CDMdto

range , new tires. S2.300.,30ol:

1982.
Brand

Meter, 10 Ton· Grain Silo With
Augera Insley• Waoons lll~l -&amp;

Ontn
engine,
$2300;
· - ridIng
..__
$450:
740-1192-38112-

Explrea. 71'1/8t, CAU 740-441-

2 Btdt'oom Aponmenl Upaltlra,
451 Stoond Awnuo, FurnJohf9,
Wtltr; Troth Rtmovof $250/Mo.,
Plut DtpoaH, No Pall, Rtftrancto,740-448-2581 .

Wllh Aulomallc Washer; 400
Gallon Solar Bulk Tank 4 Deliva!
Plpt Lint Mllkere Wllh W..lgh

l~llly Ofltr

People -

Aj)lrtlllil'lta
for Rent

610 Farm Equipment

9 N Fond lrtclor, hlg~ 8 low

storage unil. Black end cherry.

875-31124.

out ol box. $125. Holda up
IO 1140 diiCI, ,1110 ho.i dl II~ I .
Call 740·992·8838 ollor 8 pm.
COo&amp; lllpeSnolincUied.

,,;

TO THAT II

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
20ft. NorrlsCraft bass boll!, 200IIp
Mercury motor, trailer, tacklel
lures, other extras. $8,500. 304;

875-3580 leel'8 message.
1978 1611. Trl Haul boat 70hp.
motor &amp; trailer wfsoma ac::cea~
ries . Boat &amp; motor In real good
she~ . Asking $3,300 lorm. 740·
446-3486.

THE BORN LOSER

1983 Rinker 18ft Mtrc"rulaer l/0,
coast guard ~quipped, $3.500 .

~ ('lr\ OOIN&amp; '((:'&gt;\(~'(~
CFa&gt;~

1988 Sea Sprite. 19 112h . Cuddy
Cabin, 4.3 V-8 OMC In/Outboard,

PUZZL£ TCU.Y ...

new stereo system. prop, banery,
Includes trait&amp;(, ex . cond. $4,900.

30.4-773-5241. 1996 Old Town
Discovery Canoe, Discovery
't7.5 includes OWL paddles, per-

loCI cond. $500o304-n:J-5241 .
35 Horae Power Johnson&amp; Good
Cond~lon. SSOO. Call Between 1 ·5

PM. 304-675-5131.
Kawasaki STS J~l ski, sitU under' .
wauanry, three seater, 83 horse- ·
power, bought new July Of '97 .
three matching Kewasaki tki
vests and trailer all go with It ; .

$5000. 740-949-2203 or 740.949' ·
2045, wilt consider trade lor

a·

OOOd pon- bollt
SACRIFICE
,1967 Oceanic Sea Imp 160hp....
Mercrulser In/board engine. 1811. •
daep-V wltrailer, l!le jackets &amp; :
bumpers . 740· 446·3814 . Make ,

Credit Problems? We Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles, No Turn Downs . Call

Upton Use.d Cars Rl. 82·3· Miles
South of Leon, WV. Financing
Awilable. 304-456-1069.

720 Trucks for Sale
1986 Ford F-150. 314 Ton PickUp. $2,400, 740-44&amp;--3570.

Well
Pass

Nard!

Eat

I•

Pass
All pus

3NT

With Bump Or Tailgate And Fac· ·

HI, CHUCK .. JUST
THOV6UT I'D
CALL A6AIN ..

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

13' camper. OOOd condition, $500.
740.949-7009.

11

12s..blrd
19 Positive

Anlmelld

21T--toner

220bllaldioM .
23 FlnnTah lirll

NPiY

ruune

24-_,1 '

26 Reedy
28 Soc:ltl misfit

29'JYpeof .... . .
30 Art dac:o
lilustrlltor
31 Oboe, e.g.

CURIOUS AS TO
HOW YOU'VE
SEEN ..

.

37 -Creed
38 Nlhoor

~':.r

41
42 Bille&lt; nut
43 Chllmpagne

bucilel
44 And ..-a
(2 wdl.)

45-mecum

(handbook} .

47

Femaua

:·

Auntie

-

41--IM
groundftoor
4 9 , _·

.

prObilm

50--llitay
52 Coqeu54 Aclor Ar-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
~ ~CI=Wi4 . . ~fn:lm ~by' t.noui J*JP~e, pU and~
e.:h
n tht dP* et.ndl tor anolw. Tod!IJ"a '*-:8 equt1 F

·o

UHZT
BTII

H

PUDCL

H

HVL

UHAAW ,

ATSACT

D

RHLT

KUHK

DE

LDTKFDPU
RHFCTYT
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "II is on!Y !hal which canno1 be expressed olherwise'

H C C.'

that is worth expressing in music. -

Frederick Delius

·

'::~~:~' S©\\&lt;1{1}\-~f.,tfS" lAIII
-,......-_.;_...;; l4llttl ~ CLAT I. fiO&amp;LAN - - - - - WOlD

'-"•rs of

0

Re&lt;monge
the
four Krombled words be·
low ro form four simp le words

I r 1 1 I' 1
CORPTI

I

H U L AG

I

T H A WE lm
I 16 1 I ~

J--,---.-:--..-"-T--1
~
7

A professor once told me
that I should never let any one
.----,,....,,....,....,....,....,.-.., talk me out of pursuing what I
pIE ME D lknowisa- ---- ----.

0

Complele lhe chuckle Quoled
bv f 1ll1ng in the m1ssing words

you develop from step No. J below

1

I(OU RE STARTIN6
TO REPEAT
VOURSELF, CHUCK ..

•

~~AMBLE
TUA5

I I I I I II I 'I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

You Don't Hcwe To loo/c For
To Spy the Best Buys In
the Closslfleds.

New C&amp;rpol, UphOISISry, 740-367 •
7671 .

ITHURSDAY

1995 Jayco Designer Series 34' ,
camper, like new, kitchen/liVIng .
room slide-out, queen bed, center

balh , side·by·sida, priced lo oall,
7 40-007·3222.

1362.

Bemuse - Noisy - Eider - Deaden · REMINDED
'Alii want for my birthday." the Mom told her kids , "1s
not to be REMINDED of ifl '

-·

JULY 21

ROBOTMAN
.

Wilderness camper trailer 32', :
excellent condition, $7500, even- •

lngs anor 5:00pm 740.742-2070, ·
daytime until 1:30pm, 740-742" ~

4308.

•

SERVICES

Home

810

Improvements
WEM£NT

WATERPROOFING

unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnfshed . Es -

tabllahed 1975. cau 24 HB. (740)
«6-0870, 1-800·2&amp;7-0576. Roo·

ors WaiBrproollng.

Appliance Parts And Serva: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience A.li Work Guaranteed ,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

French City Maylag, 740-4467795.
C&amp;c General Home Mtlh·
tenence- Painting , 'vinyl atdln~ .

IIULLIN'8 HOIIi IIIPROVE·
IIENT VInyl Sldlno. VInyl Rt piiCtrlltrll, Wlndowt, Rtplirwork
Alto, Rtptlra On VInyl Sidi ng '

11197 Dodgi DlkOII 4 Crllnder
Mlgrolrn, 5 Speed, 14.000 ·
Nttda Minor Work On Std.
$7,500, 080. 740-258-1233.

WHAT? NO, JUST

Travel Trailer Setf·.Contalned,
Large Bedroom. Queen Size Bed,
Furnace, Microwave, Awning.

8323.

-11.

9 PUII10 ABA member

1981 37 Fl. Yukon Wlldernus,

11191 Ford F1 110. long btcf, Gcyl,

whlltlnovy lnltrlor, ....,..,,
olumlnum whetla, 24,000 rnltta,
romtl~r or ftclory worronly.
$1 0,500. 304-675-7858.

38--.
l.oulaiano

'--'--'--'--'-....&amp;...--'

R Aulo, Ripley, WV. 304·372 3933 or 1-800-273-9329.

5-sp, 1ir, all power, super dean.

cover, 1m-tm caa11ne, 80/40

7 Lots lnd loll
8 Blldnf top

38 lllrvesll
35Angry

l--,,-;,r"T,-"T,--::8:-Ir:9rl
_
_
_
_
_
_

lory Liner, SSOO, 740-4411-4393.

carpentry, &lt;looni, wlndowa . belho
mobile homo reptlr tnd """'· F&lt;K

11197 ChtYy LS, S-10, oleyl, 5-IJI,
•• PS, PB, apo&lt;tl alde, TO!IntaU

-

&amp;Pry

33-lllllle

In twos
and tbrees

·1989 Chevy Truck Bed L.W.B.

1988 C30 H.D. 1 Ton Truck f
Spttd, 454 Engine, 10 Fl. Fill
Wllt1 Rackl, Goostneek &amp; RHH
HIICh 1e.eoo. 740-256-66117.

ss.500. 304-882-3052.

Fum-·acry

2 Scottilh hill
3 Detlomlnetion
4 ,.,_..,
·s lble child

lllountalna
ofRUSIIII

I

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Shape. Asking $2,800. 740-256- ·

1994 Ponllac Sunblrd, V-6, 5
Speed, 21,000 Miles, Red , $5,300
OBO, 740-256-1252, 740-2581618.

1

25 -

I wrote yesterday's column one
morning, That afternoon, I played a
session of bridge. during which this
deal arose. While I'm describing
whal happened, carry out your own
critique.
.
Againsl three no-trump, West led
the heart two; three, IO,jack. Declar·
er played a spade to dummy's queen,
a spade back to her jack, which held,
and a third spade, East discarding the
heart live. In with the ace, West
switched to a club, so declarer
claimed II tricks: four spades, three
hearts and four clubs. Your thoughts?
Yes, North was thin for one spade,
but it pays to open, especially when
one can bid a good spade suit. Also,
strange as it sounds, it is safer to open
than first to pass, lhen to overcall on
the next round.
I prefer a two-club response with
South's hand, but two no-trump did
describe her strength and distribution.
Further, with no diamond stop, probably South should have corrected to
four spades.
South should win the first trick
with the heart king, not lhe jack, in
the hope of encouraging a second
heart play by the defender wilh the
spade ace. Wesl did very well to hold
up her spade ace until the third round.
But Ea~t's heart discard was unhelpful. He should have thrown either the
club live or, even belter, the diamond
eight. Then, maybe West would have
found 1he lethal switch to the ace and'
another diamond.
Finally. let's look at four spades by
North. Presumably East would lead
the diamond king. To defeat the con·
tract, Wesl must overtake with the ace
and return her remaining diamond.
West ruffs the third round of diamonds, and the spade ace will defeat
the contract.

Tt4EY'Vf GOT SOMf .
~IN I&gt; OF !OFT'II ltf:E
PICO,LfN I)Owtl Tltff;E.

1992 Saturn . 4-dr, auto , air.

$2,600. 304-675-16!11 or 304-6756197.

32=

DOWN

By Phillip Alder

YOIJ'L/, ttAVf TO vi/tiT-·

24 Fool Travel Trailer, Sleej')s 6 :
Roof Air Con~ltioner, Very Good ·

Vlcldo, 740-448o-2897.

12d5 Trailer wit acre of lend,
14x70 trailer w/2 acres of land.
WIN Ill or rwnl. 304-578-2190.

UN•• I WAS. JEST 61TTIN'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

"''&gt;lors. 740--446-0103.

Reglalered Shih- Tzu puppies .
· 1997 Chavv C~valier, 4dr, auto,
$300. 304·682·3626.
air, 21.000 mllea, 111ume ·bal·
ance $8,650. 304-675-7642.
Schnauzers· miniature puppies .
AKC, also adulls, two lemai&amp;S
1997 Nlssan Maxima PW. f&gt;S ,
and one champion sired stud ,
Sunroof, Boat Sltrao, Leather In740-667-3404. .
terior, 5 Speed, Standard Trana·
mission, 740-446-532• .

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Motorcycles

Two 1979 Yamat1a Motorcycles!
1 For Parts, 1 Needs Minor Repair, $500, Both, After 5, 740-379-

790

Olive2D Auld Lang -

29 ilordefed

1986 Oldsmobile Culloss Clara,·. New ·gas tanks &amp; Dody parts. D &amp;

1137.

polls, OH. 740-446-1528.

JUGHAIO HAS PICKED UP
SOME MIGHTY BAD
HABITS IN
SCHOOL!!

1998 Harley Davidson 1200 XL

New Muffler. $695. 740-256-6228.

• 10 5

58 !Icon

Opening lead: • 2

Sporlsler, $9000 firm. 740·9926440, 740-992·7158.

1986 Alles K Car Dodge Good

1986 Dodge 600 $250; 740-4463745.

2NT

W/D, good shape . 12,400. 304 675-1976.

Cqndltlon, New Tires. New Brakes.

1991 Camaro for pans . 304·675·

Professional Grooming by Ap ·
pointments . Over t 5 yrs . experience. New bathing system , "Ultra
Wash•. 850 Second Ava . Galli·

BARNEY

1996 vamana 250 Ttmberwoll, 2-

760

n:J.M52.

HOTICE
French Clly Pal Grooming

Soad!

1993 Kawasaki KX125 Olrlblka.
Excellent·Condition! Lots Of Extras! $1,700 080 !Trade . 740446-0211 .

ofler.

, .._

~ B::'::.~~o .

•

ler5pm.

OOOd tires. $1,100. 304-675-1242.

57 ~ O.hl

16 City In Olllo
17 Fliln

Dealer: North

~75-4225.

710 Autos for Sale

15

Vulnerable: Neither

1997 GMC Sonoma Extended
Cab 4x4, 5 speed, air, 8,000
miles. $18,900, 740-992-7014 af-

tom, 2573 Yates Crossing Road.
Milton. WV. We do

53Hewk
511 inlrocluclory

• 10 ' 3
A J 7 4

li

2399.

1988 T~la Camry. Good Condl·
lion. 'fully Equipped . 49,200
Milas; 1996 Dodoa Grand Cara·

0171 .

1996 4x4 Mazda Ext Cab. Rt·
duced. Hall Damage, 5, Speed.
Air, AMIFM Stereo 89,000 Miles,
Excellent Condition. Except Few
Body Damaoo. 18.000. 740-379-

RM 125 motorcycle. $300. 304456-1074.

Livestock

•KQI62

Soatll
• J 85
• AKJ

stalled 5 Polnl Child Solely Sys18m, 740--441-11521.
.

7 40

2

a8 2

t 993 Oodge Caravan Factory In·

630

11 -6. Fish Tank &amp; Pal Shop,

Great Wnite Pyrenees Puppies, 7
Weeks Old, St25 Each. Father &amp;
Mother On Premises, 740-643-

• 9

675-7474.

1998 Yamaha Tlmbar Wol! 250 ·
$2.900.740-245-9851 Aftef7 .

$850, 01!0. 740-441-()958 Aher 5.

available. 304-675-5n1 .

• 10 2
• 10 a 7 5

• A 5

Farm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740.
446-24121-ooc&gt;-594-1111.

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Mon·Sat
24 13 Jackson Ave . Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063.

Eat

• A 9 4

• Q''

14 -Eloqutnl

21 Go 115 mph
23118bi1.....
27 Into MPUIIll

Well

2tie6.

1985 Ca~lllac Seville, ex. cond .
garage kepi. 1975 Oldsmobile.

ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Alo Grande, OH Call 740-245-

• 6 3
• J 9 7
• K Q3

EEK&amp;MEEK

1991 Geo Tfectcer Black. Stan•
dard, Air, AMJFM Cauette.

$3.650. 1-688-840-0521 .

•Hera Powell Driving Hammer

Nortll
07-el-tll
•KQ763

$10,000. 304-576-2147.

Misc. Water Tank&amp; , Mlac. Steel
Beams. Concrete Barrier; Arroa

Used

Remodeling kitchen. old kitchen
for sale . Includes double oven,
cook top, sink, disposal, lots ot
Birch cabinets &amp; countertop. May
be seen at 509 Kathnor Lane .

miles,

1980 Chevrolet , 314 ton, auto,
4ltl, 2ol.OOO actual mites.

1526.

Used Window Ai r Conditioning
UniiS, Different SIZOI, Guaranlttd,
740-881Hl047.

Marquis wedding set 1/2 carat ,

440

ceo.

CFA Himltayan · Persian adult
cats &amp;· kittens. Stud service also

Two bedroom In Pomeroy. $300
per inonlll, S300 c~epoon, pay own
U111111t&amp;, no ptto, 740-1192·2381 .

tOrRent

Three Sell of Truck LUI Forks
1100. To 5125 .00 A Sell Uaod
Yale LHI Truck 3500 Pd. Compully, Neads.Clulch &amp; Olher Repairs
S400
740-3711-2655

day, Hrs. 1o-s. 740-4-46-4762.

Pets, $400 Deposit, $450/Mo.,

1 -5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4,000 Local Gov'l. &amp; Bank
Rtpo'a Call 1-800-522-2730, X
1709.

er, $60; manual treadmill , $75;
740-992-2472.

original

8x30 Tool Trailer. I 1.700; 40 Ton
Uma Truck Crane, 100 Fl. Boom.
$45,000; Sl1ttp FL ROitr, Double

Wllh 4 Chairs, T.V. Slend 4
1880 ·1980 HONDA CARS FOR
Wheels, Make Oilers. 740-446. S1 00 Seized &amp; Sold Locatly'Thls
9787 Fo&lt; Info.
Monlh . Call 1-800-522-2730 Ext
Waterline Spacial: 314 200 PSI
4420.
$21.95 Per 1 00; 1' 200 PSI
1980 ·1980 Truclis Fof $100111
$37 .00 Per 100; All Brass ComSeited And Sold
proaalon Fillings In SIOCk
Locafty This Month.
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Ttucks. 4x4's, Elc.
Jad&lt;son, Ohio. 1-800-537-9528
1-800-~22-2730, X 3901 .
WITH SIKKENS THE BEAUTY IB
1982 Cutlass Supreme. 2 D. 280
IIORE THAN SKIN DEEP.
V8 . Good .•Condlllon, $1 ,800 Or
Your deck is the center ol your
Be&amp;l Oller. 740-992-45811.
enter11ining and rscreatton actiY·
lUes. So don't just give U a •tin1962 Oldsmobile 96 Regency,
Ish' . Glvo II a quality Slkkens
runa ooo&lt;~-41.100 . 304-682-2925.
llnlsh wllh !he CeiOI DEK or Rubbol DEK syolema.
19B3 Mu~lano 4 Cylinder, AuPAINT PLUS (304)&amp;7~ .
lomallc, $695 , 740-446-0390.

Pleasant Good building silos.
Public Water. $22,500. 304 ·675·
5911 .

metary Rd./ Oak Grove Rd.· 1.5 ,

Commodor'e computer with print·

50,000

416 Backup; 427 Chevy Motor;

304-n:J-5851. MaaonWV.

Mobile home stte available bet~ ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

nice nelohborhood. qulel, 740·
446·4722.

Caoilloglidor $50. 304-675-5054.

1978 Jttp CJ5, flbtrglalt body,
V..S,

v.ooo.firm. 304'3!15-3023.

Table Wllh Matching End Tables.

4 1/2 acres, water, electric and
sewer, choice spot. Ready tor single wldt, double wldo or build
home. One mile from Ohio River
Boa! Ra"" on 124 nexllo For1ced
Run Start Park , price reduced,
740-667-3222.

Lot far tale- Gallipolis, 90x172,

Brown plaid couch &amp; chair w/
matching full-size saeeper. $400.

Slrtw Blower, NTK VIbrator. FI1J

Steeping rooms with cooking.
Also trailer apace on river. AU
hook·ups. Ca ll attar 2 :00 p.m.,

,460 Space for Rent

8 acres ar 2 acre lots on Bethel
Rd . WV. No sing lewldas . 304·

~-

576-41112.

Sale: Some $6.00 &amp; Up lo $85.00.

304-675-1:126.

4.98 acres, 7 minutes !rom Point

12" Btll lOW. Arnold Btalie. ~ .

Beanies Beanies Beanies, For

Rooms

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Laturner Grader S7 ,500; Renko

10011~.

lzed apt. tor elderly and handl·
capped. EOH 304-675-61179.

740-4-46-11585 Or 74o-446-2205.

1993 24'x40' doublowlde, Tup -

Country Skfe Apanmenrs: Stale
Route 588 , 2 Bedroomt , WIO

=

340 Buslneas and

6m.

888-691-67n.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Wea1wood Drive
from $279 lo $358. Walk 1o ahop
&amp; movies. Call 740·446 - 2~88 .
Equal Houolng Oppor1unly.

Main Slrtel, Pl. Pleaaanl. 304·
67 21
_s-_-:--n_.- - - - : - - Three bedroom apartmtnl. Spring

RENTALS

310 Homes for Sale

Mld~leporl ,

• HIOQ-383-6662.

14•70 3br $999 down, $198 per
mo. free air &amp; skirting .' 1-800~91 ·

pump, $32,000, call 740-667.0108
anerSpm.

rage. Gallipolis Farry. 304-875-

Lot. Must Sell, Will Deliver &amp; Set

Wt Pay Cash. 1-800-213·8365 ,
Anlllony Land Co

18x80 3br, 2 bath, $1,325. down,
$205. per mo. Free air &amp; skirt. 1·

Slrtt1, Galll&gt;olla, Ohio. 740-3877886.

-

s179 per mo. Ffee air &amp; free skirt·
lng. l-st8-928-3426.

Apartment For Rent: 78 Vine

Now
Applications35
Welt Taking
2 Bedroom
Townhouse
Aparlmtnll S2e51Mo.. 740-4460008·
TAX SPECIAL
::-:---:---=---Now 3br $999/down $169/mo. River Btnd Piece now accepllng
Free Set-up &amp; Delivery. Only 3 applications lor HUO aublldized
Lefll Only at Oskwood Homes N._ apts . for elderly/handicapped or
lrO WV. 304-755-5885.
· disabled people. EOH. 304-182Dbl IWD I Bouohl Won'l Fll My 3121 Of' 304-882·3274.

APR. 304-738-3409.
l OxSO mobile home. needs soma
repair, priced reasonable, 740·

Grttn Apia. 149 or call 74Q-992·
3711 . EOH.

~~~~~~~~~-~

949-2499.

kltche'n. furnished. AC with heat

large kitchen . fully equipped ,
large foyer. 2-c ar attached ~Ja ·

117,1111 on :IIIII.
Frttlltlfv.y I 5tklp

5pm.

h10 Outbullting, Asking Price

Professional
Services

11-Poy-ola

11 acraa, 740-992-6542 or 740-

Years Previous Clinical Experi ence Required . Previous TeachinO ExporloncO Preltrrtd. Poslllon
Available Second· Summer Ses-

Human R11ourc•s Untverllty Of

... ,__

667·6251 or 740· 667-3864 afler

OAKWOOD HOliES

2bdrm. apts .. total electric , ap·
pliances furnished, laundry room
lacil-. CION 10 IChOOI In town.
Appllcallona 0'411able at: Vllleoo

Gracloua IMng. 1 and 2 btllroom
apartments at VHtage Manor and
Rlverelde ApanmeniS In Middleport From 1249-$373. Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Houalng Oppor·
lunilles.

Racine- Dorcas/ GreenwoOd Ce-

Divorce Forces Sates· Take over
payments, 2br, 2 bath, financing

Dtadilnt Of July 10. 1898 To Ms.
Phyllll M11on. PHR, DlrtCior Of

$1 ,325 Down. $205 Mo. Frte air
&amp; 11tt sk011ng. 1-soo-es1-sm.

'71 Buddy ~aller, 12x85 w/12JC26
add-on. $5000 OBO, call 740-

Racin Sellabratlon. 0 Down 6.99

Save $$ interior, exterior painting, root painting . pressure &amp;
hand wash house. mobile
homes. Neat work . 15 years experience. Afferencas, Free esti-

210

car garage with a one car garage
In basement. larnily room, laundry,

1226.

Three References Before The

homes. Peymente ee low e•

69&amp;-2813.

lfflcallon Or Equivalent And Throe

Stnd A Ltlltr Of lnltrtll And
RIIUml With The Names Of

fllogle Parem Prorpm. Sptcial
financing on 2. 3 I 4 bedroom

Ma&amp;on- modular home 28•70 on

NEW CONSTRUCTION ... Beautiful Two Story Colonial 414 Thlrlf

Con~atescent

mo. 1-

Btdrooin Apanmenl, Phono: 740.

Call 740-245-5334 For Catalog
And lntonnallon.

Circle -N-

~r

Special 16x80 · 3BR, 2 bath .

More. Let Us Keep You Learning .

Commun1c111on Skills And Oem·
onstrated Computer Knowledge
Neceuary. Twelve Month Posl·

$1 ,32! Down &amp; $205
888-928-34211.

1180. Ctl- 304-755-58115.

Bedroom•.

ween 8:30A.M. -4 30 PM.
Scenic Hills Nursing Center 3t 1
Buckridge Road. Bidwell. OH
45614 ll Now Accepling Applications For Part· Time Laundry And
HouseKeeping Aides . Please Apply In Peraon At The Front Desk

New Ooubtewlda 3BR, 2 bath .

informed that all dweflings
advertised in this newspaper
are availab6e on an equal

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK OOT down. $362. per rnonlh.
YOU STARTED... Bul Your Em- s111r1. 1-688-691-em.

Needed: Energetic, Kind And
asted In Caring For Peop le In
Our Progressive Long · Term
Care Facility. Must Be Sensitive
· To The Needs Of The Elderly.
Please Apply IN Person At
Scenic Hills Nursi!lg Canter, 311

7191 .

laW. Our readers ""' hereby

July 1sl. Large Yard, 3
2 Batns. 5 Minutes From Rio
Grande. 706-864-3493.

One Year Of Training .In The
Evenings . Buckeye Hills Career
Canter Continues In Its 22nd
Year Of Operation. 1\'aln In: Adult
Basic Education. GEO Testing

74o-«6-7494 or 1-800-272-5327
Tuesday-Saturday.

Still under warranty, owner II·
nanclng available . 30ol· 755-

310 Homes for Sale

P.O. Box 628, Plkolon, Ohio
45661. Lockheed Marlin Ulllily

Models wanted- national awarding winning area portrait sJudio
needs photographic models for
public displays, advertising , portrait corrlbJIIions and assignmenta. If you8re a young lady 18
&amp; up &amp; hiM! always wanled lo lry
modeting· now Is your chance. No
experience necessary, call now
tor details - The Image Gallery

NEW BANK REPO'I Only 3 lehl

S411Dawft

150

Building And Maintaining A Dl1'8rat Wor1c Force.

and atlup. Only $187 .08 per
month wllh $1075 down. Call1·
800-837-32311.

8PIIING SPECIALS

Services Offers A Competltl~e
Compensation And Benefits
Package. Send Your Resume To
Lockheed Marlin Utility Ser~lces.
inc. Attn : Anlla Oever MS·113t
Services, Inc. Is An Equal Opponunlty Employer Commtned To

oriOin. Of' any inlenlion IO
make any sUCh pr-ance.
limi1ation or discrimination.·

lnctudea akirt1n11. deluxe steps

opportunily basis.

SUIIIIER QUARTER
STARTS JULYI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
7__.367
1-800-214-0452
ACICSAccrtdrted
RfO. 190-05-12748

Some Clinical Functions: Control
Bud&lt;jel; And Monitor Quality And
Corrj&gt;liance Wllh Regulations.

ly Practice Medicine Is A Plus.

status or national

N• 1998 14x70 llwH -oom,
lncludtl 8 rnomlll FREE lol rent

ENRDWNGNOW

And Admini&amp;traUve Stall; Pertorm

strafed Ability To Interface ,With
Other Managers And Community
Leaders Are Highly Beneficial.
Certification In Occupational
Medicine Is Preferred. Cerliflca·
tion In Internal Medicine Or Fam·

sex tamliat

knowingly accepl
a&lt;lvertlserneniS 10r r931estate
which is in violation of the

Business
Training

140

• o11968 wllk:l1 - - " illtgaf
IO adYertise ·any f)i818i8tiC8,
~~imitation or chcrirnination
based on race. color. rellgion,

This . _ r will no1

,__

Stall, laboratory Technicians,

A MD Deoret. Ohio Slate Ll·
cenae. And 10 Years Or More Of
Mecucal Practice (Witn At Least
5 Years In Occupational Medicine) Are Required. Proven Man·
agement Skills And A Demon·

payments to move ln. no pay-

..,. -4¥'1-304-7116-7191 .

Marton Street. Jackson, Ohio

WANTED:
LOCKHEED IIARTIN UTILITY
SERVICES, INC.

New 14 or 18x80. Only make 2

-..om--.

1 and 2
111'nlahod and unfumllhod. &amp;tCUrl1y
dapotll required. no pets , 740992-2218.

540 Mlac:ellaneoue
Men:handlte

fret eatlmate call Chat, 7ol0·992·

740-M7-7211 .

.

140 Electrical and
. Refrfgtrltlon
Rtlldtntial 0&lt; oommtf'CIII wlrlno. ' '
- ltrYict or ropoirs. fllllltr
ctn&amp;td oltctrlclon. Rldonour · ,
EltCiriCII, WV00030e, 304·175178&amp;:
'

U: •·

CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
you plan something soci~ ioday.
don't forgelto include a scns111ve old ·
friend. Put this pal at ihe lop of the
· guestlisl, so there's no c~ of an
oversight. Get a JUmp on hfe by
Jndcnlanding ihe innuenccs ihal'll
govern you in the year llhead Send
roc )'011' As~ J!Rdictions ~Y
mailing $2 to Astro-Grapli. c/o th1s
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray
lftll Stllion. New York. NY IOIS6.
Be sure to stale your zodiac siJIL
lB&gt; (July 23-Aus~ 22) Even people who love you may not be com-

1oday you
more:='~~t;;-:;;;;;_....__...,~""
·you should.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22} Avoid Today you must guard against
discussions wilh an a.-.'IOCiale who becoming discouraged if an initial
demeans your bright ideas and pro- allempl-falls shon of ils mark. Make
posals. Save your presenlalion for n second or third effon, if necessary.
people who fully appreciate iheir
PISCES (Febo 20-Mnrch 20) If
something about a friend is dislurbworth.
LIBRA (Sepi. 23-0ct. 23 l Afriend ing you loday, it won't be resolved
who knows how difficuli il is for you withoul a discussion. Don't be afraid
io tum him/her down mighl impose lo bring lhis mailer oul inlo the open.
upon ,toil financially loday. Remem·
ARIES(Mnrch21-Apriii9}Com·
ber, you are notlhis pal's banker.
mercial and/or financial matters musl
SCORPIO (Oci. 24-Nov. 22) If be handled with prudence and skill
you're imbued with self-doubls today. If you make mistakes, they'll
·
today, il will be difficult for you 1o arouse auention.
make speedy decisions.
TAURUS (April 20-Mny 20) li's
SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. imperative in this phase of the cycle
21) Additional complications could to do everythipg you can to generate
ensue if you keep posipOIIins some- positive intei'IIC!ions with your mate.
thina that requires immedille aaen- The time you spend will not be wasttion. Oet with it.
ed
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
GEMINI (May 21-Junc ~) You
An acquaintante who lwllon •· may be tempted to shelve c:erWn
srudae qainst you miJht be 11 an re,sponsibilitia beca!ne they interlbe
event you attend today. Repnlless rl with odler interall today. Tills may
how you're trclled. be tolennt and not be a wise iudlment.
,!

..

.. '

�!

.•

I
I
I

Friday

By The Bend

Weather

The ·Daily Sentinel.

;·

'

·

High: 85; Low:60
Tomorrow: Cloudy

Alcoholic son - ~nd excuse making father - should $eek help from AA
arTCSted for driving undu the influence. Arnie bailed him out and ISkcd
if it wu OK with me if Mike stayed
with us until he got t.:k on his feet.
1997. lM Mfdm T What
kind of wife would say no to
s,...-~~e ..a Cruwn
SyMitMt.
.
such a reques .
lllat was a .nonth after our wedding. !'low, Mike, who is 24 years '
J)ear Ana Len den: PleAse help
old, and has no job, n0 car and no
me. I have no one else to tum to. place of his own, seems conlent to
"Arnie," a widower, and I were live here pennanently.
mairied a little over a year ago. We
He stays up all night and sleeps
are . in our early 50s but young at all day. He says he can't find a job,
hean.
but I know he isn't looking. He
We postponed our honeymoon expects three square meals a day and
cruise so we could buy a small cot- tosses his diny laundry in with OU(S
tage. Then, "Mike" came. Mike is so I can do it.
·
•
Arnie's son by his first wife.
Arnie and I have no privacy.
Mike lost his job, and his girl- When we are intimate. we must be
friend kicked him out. Then, he got

An~
Landers

very quiet or Mike will hear us and I suspect he lislens.
I don't know how many thousands of dollus Mike has cost us,
but we had to cancel our honeymoon
cruise because of our financial situation.
I have tried to talk to Arnie about
this, but it seems like naging. I fear
if I demand that Mike leave, Arnie .
will go,.too. I love my husband and
understand his concern fet' his son,
but' this is not tile married life I
expecled. - Still Wearing Aannel in
Ky.
.
Dear Kentucky: If you look like·
a rug and are on the floor. people
will walk all over you. lllat's what
is happening. Get up'

Tell Arnie that he is crippling his
son and if the "boy" stays, you are
leaving.
It sounds as if Mike needs counseling and possibly Alcoholics
Anonymous. You would be doing
both Mike and Arnie a huge favor if
you pushed for all of the above. If
Mike doesn't get help now, he is
down the tubes, and if you don't
assen yourself, so is the marriage.
Dear Ann Landen: Here's a
new one for you. I recently went to a
nationally known chain store and
purchased $167 in merchandise .
Among the ilems I bought were IS
greeting cards.
When I got home, I could not
find the cards in any of the bags. I

phoned the alOft' and as~ if I had
left the cards., • ~!he counter. They
said no but suggeSted that I come in
and ~ a refund, which I did, after
assuring the store that I had searched
through all the bags.
About a month laler, lo and
behold. I found the missing greeting
cards sandwiched between a set of
sheets I had pure,. I copied the
original receipt. i . ized the cards
for which they
, given me a
refund, added tax
sent the store
a feller of apologltlalong with my
cheek for the full "8mount of the
refund.
Two days later, I received a "call
from the store. I naively thought,
"Gee, they're calling to thank me

High: 80; Low:60

Dorsey has been very supportive
of this program and we are very
excited about the opportunity to
provide students in southeastern
Ohio with a leg up on their education."
Throullh · Project CHAMP,
well over 3,000 students from
across southeastern Ohio have
been exposed .to hi11her education.
The program provides tutoring to prepare students for the
state proficiency test and has
giv~n student teachers from Rio
Grande a chal)ce to gain real life
experience in the classroom.
OACHE is comprised of I 0
colleges and universities in
Ohio's 29-county Appalachian
region.
The goal of OACHE, according to its director Wayne F.
White, is to increase the college
going rate of students within its
service area.

Festival queen to be named at Friday judging
The 1998 Sternwheel Festival for the queen. The University of Rio
queen and her atlendants will be Grande has also set up Sl.SOO in
sel~ted in open judging scheduled sch9larship monies, $750 for the
for Friday night at 6 p.m. at the queen, $500 for the first runner-up,
Pomeroy Uniled Methodist Church. and $250 for the second runner-up,
The three contestants, Stefanie the amount to be applied toward first
Bcarfls, Myca Haynes, and Jamie year tuition. Several mercllanll have
Drake, will each present a talent also donated sifts for the queen and
before modeling in Victorian cos- her coun.
turning. The queen will make her ·
Stefani is the daughter of Richard
first appearance on July 4 in Middle- and June Bcarhs, Pomeroy. and
port. Miss Congeniality and the best graduated from Meigs High School
costumed contestant will be named where she was a member of the
during the Stern wheel Festival this _ fl!ational Honor Society and VICA.
fall.
She is 1:mployed at the Rock Springs
Prizes for the queen will include Rehabilitation Center.
a $1,000 scholarship from the four
Myca is the daughter of Paul and
chapters of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Janice Haynes, Coolville, and is also

a graduale of Meigs High School
where she worked on the school
newspaper and year book and
belonged to the Fellowship of Christian Students and the National
Honor Society.
.
Jamie, daUghter of Thomas and
Debra Drake, graduated from Eastem High School and works this
summer at The Fabric Shop. She
was on the varsity cheerleading
team, belonged to the National
Honor Society. played with the concen band, and belonged to the
French Oub.
Linda Bondurant and Debbie
Snyder are co-chairman of the festival queen program.

Meigs County's

including rolling hills, lakes and
wetlands that ore home to more than
two dozen species of wildlife from
around the world. In addition, participants toured a surface coal mine
and coal-fired power plant and
learned about the interrelationship
between energy production and
environmental protection.
Teachers from AEP's service area

and beyond were chosen to panicipatc in the workshop.
. AEP, a global energy company,
is one of the United States' largest
investor-owned utililies, providing
energy to 3 million customers in
Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio,
Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

Llb_rary outlna planned
A special outing has been scheduled for young people of the Meigs
and: Mason Counties areas involved
in the summer reading program of
lhe : Meigs County District Public
Library in Pomeroy and ils branches
at ~iddlepon and Racine.
The outing will .bc a family swim
nigRt at 1he Middlepon Pool next
Thursday. July 9, from 7 to 9 p.m.
Lifeguards at the Middlepon Pool
will be providing a brief program on
water safety at the stan of the
evening and before any of the children are pennitted to enter the pool.
The evening is free for children .
in the summer reading program and
1hcir families and children must be
accompanied by at leas1 one parent/guardian. Those planning to
attend arc to pick up their admission
1ickcts at the library in Pomeroy.
Libraries in Racine and Middlepon
will not have the tickets available.
Localteachtn gain insight into
eallanJered species
Local teachers, Debbie Lowery
and Linda ·')lanley, were among 52
ed~jcators from Ohio, Indiana, and
West Vir,inia who explored issues
of endangered animal conservation
dui.ing "The Wilds - Protecting
Gl~bal Wildlife for Fulurc Generations" workshop sponsored by
American Electric Power and Muskingilm College June 16- 18 at Nonh
America's largest endangered
spceies conservation center located
in eastern Ohio.
t.owery, of Meigs County, and
Stanley. of Gallia County, hoth leach
fifth, 11rade at Pomeroy Elementary
Scli!iol in Pomeroy.
'fhe annual workshop provided
the 1eachers with an in-depth look ~t
ThO Wilds, home to populations of
soulhern white rhino, bactrian
camel, Przewillski wild horse and
scimitar-homed oryx. among other
· spc:Cies. The Wilds is situated southf Zanesville on more than
9
of former surfiiCC mined
u reclaimed and donated
by AEP subsidiaries.
The teachers studied extinction,
conservation, breeding, habitat, biodiversity and research. They toured
1.300 acres of open-nange habitat

MIDDLEPORT - Middlepon
Village Council emergency meeting
Thursday at 6 p.m. at village hall.

SATIJRDAY.

RACINE - Planning committee, Theiss family reunion. Saturday, 8:30 p.m. at Kucsma home.
Reunion July 12 at Star Mill Park.

SUNDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS - AuxilREEDSVILLE - 62rid t nnual
iary, VFW Post, Tuppers Plains, Charles Wesley Buckley ~union
7:30p.m Thursday.
Su y, Forked Run State Park,
of Reedsville. Covered dish
FRIDAY
· din
I p.m. Take family memoraREEDSVILLE - Olive Town- bilia to s . Door prizes, gaines.

By MARK WILUAMS
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- President Clinton has declared seven more Ohio counties disaster areas because of damage caused by la.~t week's stomns. The declaration makes them eligible for state and federal disaster relief.
Clinton's order, which wa.• issued Thur.;day, increases the number of counties declared disa.,ter area.• to II , More could be added as state and federal
workers a•sess the damaged area.~. said Dale Shipley, coordi~ating officer
for the Ohio Emergency Managemenl Agency.
Athens, Belmont, Jackson. Jefferson. Knox. Meigs and Ottawa counties
were added to the list Thursday. Muskingum, Noble, Guernsey and Washington were declared disa.•ter areas Monday.
All but one of the counties are in eastern or soutlleastern Ohio. which
was hit by weekend stomns: Ottawa County is in nonhwest Ohio and hit by
a tornado and stomns June 24.

By The Associated Presa
Facts aboul damage caused by storms that have hit Ohio in the
last week:
-DECLARATIONS: President Clinton has declared 11 counties federal disaster areas and Gov. George Voinovich has placed
25 counties under a stale or emergency.
-DAMAGE: SlO million in public property in nine counties
that have been ~ so far. The Red Cross reports that ISO
dwellings - single-ramify homes, mobile homes and apartments
- have been destroyed, 469 have heavy damage and 850 have
minor damage.
- UTILITIES: About 2,000 customers remain without power, isolated telephone outages remain and -ter systems are hting
restored to power. A boil alert remains ror 1S water systems.
- ROADS: State and U.S. highways remain closed in about
SO spots, including southbound Interstate 77 north or Cambridge.

Census offers

RU1l..AND - Rutland Church
of God, gospel sing, Friday 7 p.m.
with The Spirits of Harmony.

:statistical look at
ln,dependence .Day

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel
sing will be hekl Monday at the
Middlcpon First Baptist Church
featuring the Boclk Family of
Hillsville, Va.

WASHINGTON (AP) - " It's a
grand old flag, " goes the patriotic
song, and indeed. millions of Amer- icans will fly the Stars and Stripes on
the Founh of July.
But at least some of those banners
will not be born in America.
In a statistical look at lndependence Day, the Census Bureau has
found that impons of American flags
totaled $710.200 in 1997. Most,
$566,700 wonh, came from Taiwan.
On the other hand, the bureau's
analysis of foreign trade found
expons of U.S. flags totaled
$473,200. The Dominican Republic
was the biggest customer, spending
$102,400.
On the holiday, there is one other
thing Americans like to see overhead
. - fireworks .
Imports of fireworks totaled $93
million in 1997, nearly all from China. U.S. expons of fireworks totaled
$6.2 million, with Canada the leading country of destination, buying
$2.5 million wonh.
The Revolutionary War to claim
the nation's independence was fought
against England. as every schoolchild
in America learns.
Well, most of them. anyway. judging by a poll of 1.004 adults and 502
chi ldren commissioned by the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
Asked the purpose of the Declaration of Independence. 82 percent of
adults and 59 percent of children
knew it was to state that the colonies
were free of British rule. Some
thought it was to repeal the stomp act

MIDDLEPORT - Friends of
the Meigs Counly lihrarics. Monday, 7 p.ni: at the Middlepnn
Branch.

Things art hoppln ' at ·

tfie Ofiio 9?jver r:Bear Company
A! BUNNIES (EVERYIUNNYl) 50% OFF!!
Wt hnt new loyd's plush!
lots of ltanitSI
Gund, Ru11, Ganz, Mary Merer • mort!

Delicious
Homegrown

Sweet &amp; Juicy
"""'l l\/nt.c:.r melons

Sweet
Corn

WE WILL BE CLOSED JULY 4TH
Middleport
992-4055
1~5 Mon.-Sat.
Vlu, ~C&lt; Dlecovtr, AM. Expreu, L.ayiWIY

"lee cold
watermeloru available"

•
Vine-Ripened

ASH STREET
FREE WILL BAP-TIST CHUJC.H
191 lsll StrMt, Middleport

Vacation Bible School

Good Afternoon

Cantaloupes

Today's

Tre~-Ripened South

"Twte.like homegrown"

''Great For Your Cookouts"

lurMry tllra 6111 Grade

Peaches

• JloWerlllg ,.,.,,., IJUicets

I

I

II'HONI-...

I

INt"KWn

I

~--------------------------~

-~

4-5
3

QIWl
Pick 3: 048; Plek4: 3118
Buckeye 5: S-IS-26-29-37

33 (1/4 lftl north of Pomeroy/Mason Brklael
Maeon, WY
• _.1 •

2400 Eaetem Ave. (AcroA from K·Mart)

Sports
Weather

Lotteries

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

I

Local

7
8·9-10
11
2
3

Calendar
Classifiecls
Comics
Editorials

• Jreslt Pllllltr' • Potted JIOw.rs·

r----~---------------------,
I~
I

Sentinel

1 Sections - 12 Pagt:~
Vol. 49, No. Sl

Carolina "Free&amp;tone"

f100tl MfeCtlon of••.

"Come See A Miracle"
IADDIIIII

"

'jor that flower Nfl f10U never got
tUOUIItl to plutlng.•• IJob'• still htu a

July 6·10
6:30 p• · 8:45 p•
11111

Tomatoes

I

Delicious
South Carolina

Single Copy. 35 Cents

President de-clares 7 more counties .disaster areas

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif.

Calenda~--r- - -

ship liustees, regular meeting, 7:30
p.m., township building.

..'

Hometown Newspaper

Including Meigs ·

AWARDED SCHOLARSIIP • Longbottom reeldtnt Kimberly Caator (front, center), a fourth grader In
the Eastern Local School Dfltrlct, hu bien awarded a $2,500.00 scholarship to attend the University
of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College. Ca1to.r 11 Pictured with, from left to right, Gina
Pinel, director of Rio Grande's Meigs COUnty Canter In Middleport, Barry M. Dorsey, president of Rio
Grande, Lese Sidwell, her mother, Deryl Well, auperlntendent of e.tatern Local Schoola and Jake
.
'
Baplt, director of the Rio Grandt Instructional Media Center and coordinator of Pro~ CHAMP.

THURSDAY
.
POMEROY - AA meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday. Sacred Hean
Catholic Church. Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

'"

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Floods at a glance

---Community

...

Hingis
upset
in tourney
PageS

•

for being honest. " Not true. They
needed identification for my check. - Dumbfounded in Overland Park,
Kan.
Dear Dumbfouaded: Actually,
the store was pretty generous to
have given you ·the refund. Mosl
stores would not have been so
accommodating.
It does sound, however, as if the
person who made the call was a bit
ham-handed. He (or she) could use
some instruction on "customer
councsy."

University Rio Grande awards scholarship
to Eastern Local Elementary School student
BY Andrew Carter· Rio Gr11ilde
The scholarship covers full
Dlrector of Public lnfoi'I'Mtlon
tui'tion for one academic year at
. The University of Rio Grande Rio Grande . The total worth is
and Rio Grande Community Col - nearly $2,500.00, a sum that will
lege has awarded a scholarship grow by the time Castor is ready
to an elementary school student to enter college in the fall of
(r'!m the Eastern Local School 2007. Castor is the daughter of
District.
' Lesa Sidwell.
· Kimberly Castor of LongbotThe idea of awarding scholartom is the recipient of a one_.year ships to students who are still a
tuition scholarship to attend the few years removed from college
122 year-old institution located age was the brainchild of Barry
i~ ·central Gallia County.
M. Dorsey, president of Rio
..Castor, who just completed Grande, and Jake Bapst, director
th~ third grade, was selected at of the Rio Grande Instructional
random from among the list of Media Center and coordinator of
elementary honor students in the Project CHAMP.
El,\tcrn Local district. She is the
Project CHAMP is an cducafourth s1udent in the last two tiona( enhancement program
academic years to be awarded operated by Rio Grande with
ihe scholarship.
assistance from the Ohio
Two other Meigs County ele- Appalachian Center for Higher
nientary students and a middle Educatjon (OACHE).
s~hool student from Lawrence
"We wanted to give something
County have also been awarded tangible back to the communities
sc~olarships in that time .
around us ," said Bapst. "Dr.

Sermonette, Page 7 .
Ann Landers column, Page 7
Reds rally to win 8-7, Page 4

Today: Sunny

Page 12
Thursday, July 2, 1998

Sports

July 3, 1998

lY.YA.

IMlly 3: 783; Dally 4: 6843

.~

0 1998 Ollio Valley Publilbina Co,

O.lllpolla, 01:t

""'- -·- ..

and others suggested it was to free
Virginia from the other colonies.
- The poll found that 81 percent of
adults and 68 percent ~f children
knew the "Redcoals" were the
British regulars in 1he Revolutionary
War. Others suggested hoth. sides in
the Civil War and some chose soldiers in World War I.
Also, 89 percent of adults and 76
percent of children knew there were
13 original states. ·six percent of
adults and 15 percent of youngsters.
thought there were 50.
Despite having fought the Briti~
in two wars- the Revolution and the
War of 1812 - the Census Bureau
repons that today, Britain is our
founh leading trading panner.
During the January-February period this year. there was $11.5 billion
wonh of trade between the United
States and the United Kingdom.
Even the Boston Tea Pany did not
stop the trade in tea. The United
States imponed $5.6 million wonh of
lea from the United Kingdom last
year, making that country the sixth
leading source of tea imponed by the
United States.

One person dead, two
hurt in boat accident

Shipley said Gov. George Voinovich has declared a stale of emergency
for Pickaway County, raising the number of counties under the stale declaration to 25.
Shipley said as~sment ICamS will visit the other counties not already
declared federal disaster areas to detennine whether the state should ask Clinton to add them to the list. Shipley said there are no specific standanls that
must be met by areas requesting a federal disaster declaration.
The stale still is trying to detennine the exlent of the damage, Shipley
said.
·
"It was so widespread and so h~avy that even today, some areas still are
under water, •• he said.
The amount of damage to roads, bridges, sewer and water sys1ems and
other public propeny in 12 counties surveyed by the emergency management agency is estimated at $27 million, the agency said. Damage figures
range from $6.3 million in Washington County to $106,000 in Coshocton

.,

County.
Rood damage caused by the s10nns shouldn 't pose much trouble for travelers driving during the July 4 weekend, he said.
High w~ter or damaged road• have closed state and federal highways in
about 50 spols, said Keith Swearingen, a highway management official for
the Ohio DepaJ!ment ofTransportation. Three stale highways in Noble Counly are~x to remain closed for six days.
The
·t notable closure is that of southbound Interstate 77 nonh of Cambridg
.
S earingen said southbound traffic is being detoured until a new medi an can be installed that will allow southbound tmffic to cross over to nonhbound lanes for about two miles. The new median could be in place by the
end of the weekend.
He said it will take 45 days to ~pair the highway.

State
officials
tour
disaster
sites
By BRIAN J. REED
and JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Legislators and their representatives got their first view of the devastation of last weekend's flooding
during a tour conducted by Meias
County officials on ThuBday.
Emergency Management officials
.__ /.&gt; .,_ ; -_ ,
...... .'llf "
•
and National Guard leaders were also
in Meigs County to survey damages
aiiO to·assess their roles in cleanup.
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D~-- .
Lufi~Sville, Stale Senator Michael
INSPECT DAMAGE· COUnty Cornmluloners Thursday are pictured lnapectlng a damaged
·Shoemaker, D-Boumeville, State
Janet
Howard and Jeffrey Thornton, Lynne culvert and township road In Lebanon TownRepresentative John Carey, R-WellCrow
from
Senator Mike DeWlne'a office and ship.
ston, and Lynne Crow, field repreotherl Included In a tour of flood damage on
sentative for U.S. Senator Mike
De Wine, joined Meigs County Com- Portland due to a damaged culven.
Officials also took an auto tour of such problems in lhe fu ture, said
missioners Janet Howard and Jeffrey
Brinager and other!' distributed ponions of Lebanon. Olive. Omnge Meigs County Emergency Services
Thornton and others on a day-long photos and video tapes to the legis- and Chester Townships to review Director Roben Byer.
tour of sites devastated by weekend lators which showed the damage damage and to talk with propeny . Emergency Services st ill has
flooding.
they sustained.
cleaning supplies, boll led water aml
owners regarding their losses.
Prior to the tour, a meeting was
During the tour which followed
Ohio Army National Guard Gen- bleach available at the Tuppers Plains
conducted by David Fo~ of the the meeting, Strickland. Carey, Shoe- eral James Caldwell and Colonel Bill and Olive Township fire slat ions and
Meigs County Farm Service Agency. maker and Mauer visited farms in Radford, a Meigs County native. al the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
OSU Extension Agent Hal Kneen, Letan and Lebanon Townships to sec came down to examine the relief District. For more information or
and Steve Mauer, Form Service first-hand the damage sustained in the effons and visited the communily of assislance. people can call the EMS
Agency State Director, to infomn area recent rains.
Portland which wa.' isolated earlier office al 992-6617.
v~getable and livestock farmers of
According to Kneen, agricultural lhis week due to flooded or washed
assistance available to them through losses over th~ weekend are expect- out roads, before proceeding tooth"I am really amazed al the coopthe government.
ed to exceed $2.5 million -- $2.68 er counties where Nati.onal Guard eration from local, county and state
Those farmers reviewed the dam- million in crop damage, $7,000 in soldier!' are working.
organizations," Byer said. "The coopages they had sustained and difficul- livestock. losses, and $145,000 for
In addition, Mitchell Brown, eration is tremendous."
·
ties they were still facing because of irrigation equipment and tractors.
director of the Ohio Depanment of
· Latest damage estimates show
the fl~ing.
Both Strickland and Crow. speak- Public Safety, and James Williams. between 60 and 65 houses damaged
Tyrone Brinager, who operates ing for Senator De Wine, said that a chief of staff of the Ohio Emergency or completely destroyed by Sunday's
produce farm.~ in Reedsville, Ponland federal disaster designation would Management Agency. flew in for a slorm, Byer said. That fi gure does no1
and Letan, said he had lost a tractor expedite and largely fund reparations disaster briefing and also visiled the include damaged or destroyed oul·
in the flood, and that his employees for farmers and other residents who Pol)!and area.
buildings. vehicles or other items.
were now traveling a• far as 80 miles suffered loss of property.
Infrastructure damage . damage lo
a day just to get to work. because of
The purpose of the meeting was 10 mads, bridges and culverts. is expectThe designation was made late
the closing of State Route 124 at yesterday.
see what could be done to prevent ed to exceed $3 million. he said.

Middleport Council applies for Nature Works grant
to put new roofs on the two shelter license. it was reported by Beth
houses. replace picnic tnbles, buy Stiver!'. president of Council and
new playground equipment. make owner of Tony's Carry out.
Council must act favorably on the
some lighting corrections, and resurface the ba.~ketball and tennis couns. application if the Middlepon busine&lt;S
Discussed at the meeting was 'the is 10 become the designated state
application of Tony:s Carryout on liquor store without having a public
Mill Street to the Ohio Liquor Con- hearing. A vote on the matter wa.s taktrol Board for a stale liquor store per- en, with Councilmen Roger Manley
mit. It was noted that the carryoul and Bob Pooler voting "no" and
now has a license to sell beer and Stivers abstaining. It was then
wine. License to be a slate liquor rescinded pending publication of the
store would penni! the sale of hard required public notice of a special
meeting in which the matter is listed
liquor.
Foodland, which has been the for consideration.
location of the state liquor store for
SeverJI ' other items of business
the past several years, is giving up the were discussed including water leaks

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
CELINA (AP) - A boat traveling Sentinel News Staff
A $27,000 grant under the Natureat a high rate of speed cra.•hed into a
Works
program of the Ohio Depanrock jetty in Grand Lake St. Marys,
ment
of
Natural Resources for repaiB
killing oa. person and injuring two,
to
structures
and pun:ha~e of new
authorities said.
equipment
for
Hartinger Park is
The 18-foot pleasure hoat crashed
being
sought
by
Middlepon Village
Thursday night in the southwestern
Council.
ponion of the lake near the Indiana
Meeting in special session Thursborder about 60 miles north of Dayday
night, Council voted to file an
ton, said Glen Cobb, park manager
for Grand Lak.e St. Mary State Park. application for the grant which would
Cobb said he did not how fa.~tthe require a $6,000 match from the vi 1boat was going when it crashed, but lage. Mayor Dewey Horton wa.~ desa large pan of it was shattered. The ignated as coordinator for the project
nighttime speed limit for the lake is - Honon said that the combined
grant and village funds would be' used
tO mph.

resulting in driveway ancJ other dan lage on Vine Street. unsi ghtl y accumulations of yard sale and other
items around several homes, and
water tank cleaning.
h was also reponed that the '&gt;Oat
doc~ at ihe levee is now back m place
through the effons of the Middleport
firemen .

After the meeting adjourned
Council went into ex.ecuti ve session
to discuss personnel mailers.
Other!' anending the meeting were
Council members. Sandy lannarelli,
Beth Stivers, Rae Gwiazdowski . and
Steve Houchins.

Governor announces ~ $700 million tax cut
COLUMBUS (AP) - The continued strength of the economy
means Ohio taxpayers will have a little extra money left over when they
file their state income tax returns next
year, Gov. George Voinovich
announced.
Thank.s to higher•than-expected
tax receipts and lower-than-projected
spending on welfare·and other programs. the state ended the budget
year Tuesday with an extta SI billion.
Voinovich said Thursday at a news
conference. About $700 million will
be returned .to taxpayers through a
tax-cutting mechanism the Legisla-·

·-

Voinovich countered that he was
merely trying to come up with a plan
to deal with the Ohio Supreme
Court's order to fix the way the state
pays for public education. It would
have been easier, politically. to do
nothing.
" l.' m not stupid. " he 1old
reponers.
Voinovich said he still would have
liked the Legislature to have set a~ide
more of the surplus for school building aid.
"The word I got is 'We' re going
home,"' he said.

surplus wa• coming.
··1don't believe it was in the best
interests of the people of Ohio to a.sk
for the largest sales tax iru:reasc in the
history of thntate at a time when the
state had a significant surplus." said
Mary Boyle. who ran television ads
earlier this year urging volers to rejeft
a proposed penny increase in the
sales tax.
Voten in May overwhelmingly
defealed the proposal, which would
have raised about $1.1 billion annually for schools and property tax
breaks for homeowners.

fund. which will climb from $862.7
The tax break should knock about million to $90(i 9 million. and to an
$90 off what a family of four with a account used to pay bills still due.
"Today's announcement brings
household income of $40,000 would
the
three-year income tax cut to over
have paid otherwise. For a family
S
1.3
billion, along with an additionmaking $50,000, the savings amount
al
$7
I8 million for our schools,"
to $126, Voinovich said.
The exact amount will be deler- Voinovich added.
But Voinovich's Democmtic rival
mined in the next few weeks. he said.
Of the rest of the money, the Lea- for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by John Glenn said Voinovich
isla~We decided earlier that $200 million should go into stale proarllll5 could have done more to help schools
that help local school districts repair - · and should not have aslr.ed
or replace rundown buildings and. ..Ohioans to raise their state sales tax·
cover financial en~e1pnci0. 111e rest es when bud&amp;d officials knew a hup
will be added to the state's rainy day

tui'e created in 1996.

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