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Monday
Weather
'

WATCH FOR OUR
MONEY SAVING FLYER
IN MONDAY'S

Convenience
Value &amp; Service

pharmacy

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 60s

July 13, 1998

Meigs Legion splits DH, Page 4
Talks stall in GM negotiations, Page 6
On choosing a nursing home, Page 10

~~-,

~~ ~,

Tomorrow: Partly cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

.

... ..
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. ...-

~ ~-'~'
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France nets
-. ~ ·
" World Cup
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.. &gt;w..-. ·,
;.iti.: • · :M title with win
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' : ·· ,-.:_.~_... '-·:· "'.·. Page 4

•

NEWSPAPER!
•

Sale Starts Sunday, July 12th Thru Saturday, July 18th

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 57

· -''

" 's: gle ~·.~; ~. 35; ~~... . ;;
"-

.

:·

~. .

'-"~·"·

Glenn, Strickland find response
to Piketon privatization lacking

SAVE

200

PIKETON (AP)- The Clinton adminisuation's response to the privatization of a uranium enrichmenl plant here is inadequate, two members of
Ohio's congressional delegation said.
Vice President AI Gore seemed " ill-infonned" about the plan and what
it would mean for workers and national security. said Rep. Ted Strickland.
D-Ohio. who represent• southern Ohio.
"The vice presidenl. whether he realizes it or not. is in the position of
being significamly harmed politically by this," Strickland said. ' 'I'm a little puzzled by (Gore"s) involvement"
Sen. John Glenn, ().()hio, is n01 happy with infonnation from the admin·
istration orlhe amoum of money lhat will be spemto protect !he area ·s econ·
omy and workers, said his spokesman, Jack Sparks.
Lawrence Haas, a spokesman for Gore, said !he vice presidem did not help
create the plan.
Gore began looking at the issue at the request of lhe plant's union. After

JOLGIUCOffU**

ldomalc ctfp- riiMIId
' 13 CUlCe can.

he was told how it was to proceed, he called Strickland and Glenn 10 brief
them before !he announcement was made public, Haas said.
The United States Enrichment Corp. processes uranium, making 40 percent of !he world's supply of nuclear power plant fuel. The corporation
employs more than 4,000 people in this city about60 miles south of Colum·
bus and in Paducah, Ky.
About600 workers are expected to lose !heir jobs over the next two years
because of the privatization, announced June 29. The plant is expected to be
sold for $2. IS billion in a public offering that could come later lhis monlh.
Proponents said a private company would operate more efficiently and
be able to respond better to international market pressures.
To help the towns handle the economic effect, the federal government said
the plants would have to stay open until at least 200S. The government also
promised severance packages and economic development"tnoney.
Glenn and Strickland said they became unhappy after learning details of
the

GM issues
massive
auto recall

.PI BIT" ft P01aTO CfUPS
&amp;-70UIIC8,

RIB 0&gt;1ld.llawlr8.

WASHINGTON (AP)- General Motors Corp. is recalling nearly I
million cars with air bags that can
deploy inadvertently. company officials said today.
About 863.000 GM Chevrolet
Cavaliers and Pontiac Sunfires from
the 1996 and 1997 model years are
being recalled. along wilh I03.000
Cadillac DeVille, Concours, Eldorado and Seville cars from model year
199S, said GM spokesman Kyle
Johnson.
The National Highway Tmffic
Safety Adminisuation was investi-

CHEER

BOUNTY

ULTRA

PAPER

liquid so ounce
or powder
37-39 ounce.

TOWELS
Desigler or wMe

64 two ply sheets.

FLOODED OUT- As a light rain pelted the roof, Bill Nutter of
Tuppers Plains sat next to his daughter, Kelly, 8, as he described
how he struggled to save his wife and four children from rising
floodwaters du~lng flash flooding on June 28. The Nutte~s· home
Is now unlnhabotab1e aft~r the l_o rce of rushing wa1er carried away
·.plin&amp; ~,COIJII!!aiJI!&amp;-illvolvina Cav· , ll~JI~ ,oUM h!!.\Wl,_m.clu&lt;M,gaart gl ~ tounda~IQn. (AP)

branches at Racine and MiddlepOrt 1aat week.
The youngsters and their flmlllel Mtt trealecl to a tree swimming party at the Middleport
facility and were given ufety ln1tructlona
before beginning en evMing of tun.

Execution date hazy for 'Volunteer'
COLUMBUS (AP) - It may be
months before a new execution date
is set for the prisoner known as "The
Volunteer." despite a court decision
clearing the way for him to die by
lethal injection.
The Ohio Supreme Court appears
unlikely to set an execution date for
Wilford Berry while his case remains
on appeal in federal courts.

'~r----w----~
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' '

SeletM

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QUICKINAP

PUFFS
FACIAL TIIIUE
Plus with aloe or

extra strer'qth, 144 count.

BREATH IAVERI
OR LIFEIAVERI
5 pack;
assorted flavors.

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Z7eD~pCSI8

TRIDIINT
VAL-U·PAK GUll
18 sticks per pad(,

.oOerJiltt

aseorted ftavora

5.00
10.00
•APS
13.00
of6sh

The United States Department of
Agriculture has made funds available
to assist in repairing single-family
homes damaged by recent flooding in
Southern Ohio.
Low-interest loans to purchase
homes with no down payment are
also available.
The program operates year-round.
but additional funds have been allocated by the USDA in order to help
recent flood victims. according to
Linda K. Page. slate director of the
USDA Rural Developmenl.
The repayment period for the
loans is 33 years. Funds can be used
to build new homes. purchase exist·
ing houses or repair e~isting homes.
Applicants are required to meet
program requirements, including

Good Afternoon
OIUL-B
GILLETTE FOAMY
SHAVE CREAM
Regular, lemon-lime,

sensitive skin or

cond111onlng 11 ounce.

lrdcab', 011111hl0dolormlllc.llo
NUIIIo • Ito o, RlqiiiB or

Sentinel

I Section • 10 Pages

or nAI111 1111 42 oz.

-Mit t1ce8 55 yards or
25yarda.-

• GOLD IIIILEM
PEANUTI

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(1·800·746·7287)

Dispalch for a storr Sunday. "There's
no rush, legally speaking, for us to do
things right now."
Had the court followed its stan·
dard procedure for death-penalty cas·
es. Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer
would have signed off on the request
for a new execution date for Berry
around July I, about 30 days after ol
was received.'

income limits which vary according
to family size and county of resi·
dence. Homes must be located in eli·
gible rural areas.
Meigs County is served by the
USDA/Rural Development Otlice in
Marietta. Interested applicants are
advised to contact Dave Urwin at
373-7113.
USDA/Rural Development is
working closely with the Federal
Emergency Management Agency in

order to a."ist flood victims, according to Page.
FEMA has received nearly 5,000
applications for fedeml assistance in
Ohio. In order to qualify. applicants
must call FEMA at (800) 462-9029
from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
In Meigs County, I 0 I applications
were received from Meigs flood victims a.• of last week.

Klan rally in Tuppers Plains
'uneventful,' sheriff reports
A Ku Klu~ Klan rally in Tuppers cation Projecl. Virgil Griffin, a leader
Plains on Saturday wa.• ' 'uneventful," in the Christian Knights of the KKK,
according to Meigs County Sheriff based in North Carolina. wa.~ e~pect·
James M. Soulsby.
ed to be a speaker at the mlly.
The White Shield Knights of the
The Education project, fonnerly
Ku Klu~ Klan. ba.~d in Parkersburg. known as Klan Watch. closely moni·
W.Va .. and the International Key- tors KKK activities from its Alaba·
stone Knights of the KKK organized rna-based operation.
and promoted lhe mlly. which inchld·
;\pproximately 35 pellllle were
ed a march .
involved in !he event, held on private
The Confederate flag was promi· property in Tuppers Plains. News
nently displayed and a cross wa.~ media representatives were not wei·
burned. a.-cording to Soulsby.
comed at the event. acconling to a
According to Lori Wood of the telephone hotline recording of the
Suuthem Poverty Law Center's Edu• · White Shield Knights.

over paved roads.

.

ment in a low·speed crash or when an

plaints of 10 cra.•hes and 53 injuries.
It iothe latest problem to cloud the
perfonnance of air bags. which have
been blamed for killing several dozen
children in low-speed crashes. The
government now adviSo"s parents to
put children in the back seat of cars
with pa."engcr-sidc air bags.
The GM recall was first reported
today by USA Today.
The autos are being recalled to
chan~e the software programing for
the air bag computer. Juhnson said.
Notilication leiters are being mailed
to owners in the next four to six

weeks. GM will pay for the repairs
free of 'harge.
About 188,000 of the Cavaliers
and Sunlires are being recalled from
Canada, Johnson said.
The government safety agency
also wa.• investigating 70 complaints
thai the Cadillac air bags deployed
inadvertently causing 39 injuries.
according to agency reports.
If the interior of the Cadillacs get
-soaked from water spills or fmm
leaving a window op.:n when it mins.
the air bags might deploy when the
ignition is turned on, an agency
report said.
GM had notified owners earlier to
be careful about water in the cars.
Now dealers are moving to protect
the air bag sensing and diagnostic
module from water, and many own·
ers have already been notified about
that recall, Johnson said.

By ANN FISHER
The Columbus Dispatch
TUPPERS PLAINS lAP) - lr
was the lowest point in the life of ;o
man who routinely ha s ruhbctl
elbows with tragedy and fear.
In the early morning Jarkne".
while waters from a !lash ll ootl
swirled in and around lhe I.000square-foot house th3t Bill Nutter
shared with hi s pregnant wife and
their four children. he stood with hi s
oldest son. Anihony. ohc ir back s
against the wall of the front stoop.
" I looked at Anthony. I told him .
'I can't get you all out of here. :..on.

We need help. and there is no help ....
he said.
Nutter. 38. has

Lotteries
.., ' ' l•

~uper Lotto: 6-18-25-32-34-44

Kicker: 5-5-6-0.9· 7
Pick 3: 7-5-6; Pick 4: 4-5-6-3
Daily 3: 9-7-6; Daily4: 5-4-S-7

.

0 1998 Otlio Valley hbliahiaa Co.

COOLVILLE (AP) - The police chief has been cited for driving one of
the village's two police cruisers into the back of a hay truck.
Police Chief Raymond Lyons faces an $80 penalty for failing to main·
tain a safe distance, said Jeremy Mendenhall, a trooper with the Swe Highway Patrol post in Athens.
Lyons· cruiser hit the truck as it slowed in the eastbound lane of Ohio 50
near Coolville, about 80 miles southeast of Coltnl!blls. Mendenhall said..He
did not know if Lyons was on duty. ·
The truck driver, Shannon Stuller, S3. Uld Lyons were noc injured.
Mendenhall said.
,
Lyoos did not
a telephone messqe seek1nJ ~

retuf

.

.
'

~urvivt!d ~.: ~uH:er.

He is father to three children by Ius
lirst wife, who in I~IJ2 doetl nf cancer. His belo&gt;ed father Jietl of can cer in early 19'!7.
The Nuue r family tree i" rooted in
the hills in and around thi " M~i f!"

Counoy hamlet. about X5 miles southeast of Columbus. Their crj , j, i..;

shared. however. by some I .IX)()
familie s in 23 Ohio co u nt i e ~ Ueclan:J

eligible for indi vidual federal diSasler aid when llash ll &lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;ds swcpi ohe
stale June 27-2X.
A self-employed logger. Nu tter

worked addioional odd jobs: he
milked cow~ for 12 cents earh. 'omt&gt;-

oimes a 100 a day: and coll ecoeJ dis -

carded pop cans from roadsides to
raise lhc $2.0(X) uuwn payment he
nceucd for a $34.000 land contract on
1he home and 5 acres. He owed four
more years on the contract when !lash
llooc..h was h~d away that dream .

This week. they aw:Jit news from

federal officials on whether they can
. . aw that vision anJ whether they can
begin to hope to rchuiiJ thtJ mooe ~t
exi . ; tence the'y once •.: heri shed.

While the rain. thunder anu light enin g pummeled the air around them
that morning. Nutte r worried . too. for

hi s m01her. Carol McWilliams. 55.
who lived on a mobile home (ourlcnohs of a mile up Barney Fork
Creek.
He "ill didn't k01qw its waters had
swepi h" yard. gulled the base ment
and nppeJ th t: v.ralls - siding , brick
and all - from their moorings .
Wh~ n Nuner -.hi ned a light toward
rhe furiou\ creek :mJ ~ po lled
M.. : Wi ll1am,· refrige rato r bobbing
among the whitecap' . he feared the
wo r' t for hi ' mother and her visiting
fri end . Don' Ell i'. of A th e n ~ .
.. That 'u reJ me when I hatl cance r. but it &lt;.hJn 't 'L'are me one-tenth
nr what l felt \tandmg ou t on that
porch that night... Nuller said .

· Here's all lhem people depending
on me. and I'm

h e lpl e:..~ ...

(Con1inued on Page 3)

,.

Coolville pollee chief ticketed
when cruiser strikes hay truck

Dry 101181ed; regular,
unealted, honeY IOII81ed
04' Nghlly aaltecf, 18 ounce.

ofloll-oo, Uhra Dry 2.7 ounce
or spray 6 ounce. - Sele 2.99

TO LOCAT£ TH£ CVS
N£AR£ST YOU, CAlL •••

Today's

s-ne Slraat~

Clear dry gel1.6 oz., solid 1.7 ounce.
or Old Spice Sticl&lt; or solid 2-2.25 ounce.

Berry gained his nickname
because he has been willing to aban·
don the nonnal appeals process and
speed up the process leading to his
execution.
"So long as that's pending. I
believe the court's going to wait in
orderto respect the jurisdiction of the
federal courts. " court spokesman
Walter Kobalka told The Columbus

USDA releasing funds for single-family
homes in region damaged by flooding

Three 3.5 OUIIC8'peflelllilllia ....
' - I[Jqll!d 80IIp , . 18 Olftl'-

Strugg-11· ng fa·m1·1y
inc~~~·~:~eo?:nn~rr t~~;ed:~~o~~ endures pro bIems
:~~;y ~~~~~~~~:w~O:~o~~ left by flash flood
:;~~~ya:p~~~~~rew~ii~e':~sc~~~:~
beong dnven under nonnal condot1ons

·' j

INSTRUCTION - Lauren Anderson, a !Heguard at the Middleport Pool, provided lnlltrUctlon on waler safety to young people taking
part In the aummer rncllng PRIQI'Im of .the
Meigs County Dlatrlct Public Library and Its

'

Sports

·- . t Ui'

..n., ...o~:"·
- ·

WRECK INVESTIGATED- No lnjuriHttpOftld folia Cling 1111 one-car llCCident on
..... Rouel 331 nur A8clne this morning.
~ J. Elkins, 41, Mldlllepo.-.-., eaatbo,illlld ~ M 1111 8llllp bllllnd U. wheel

�··.

Monday, July 13, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, OtJio

OHIO Weather

Commentarr_
By JACK ANDERSON

'Estahfrsfui£ in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 ·Fax 992-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
DIANE HILL

Controller

trom-

'

Tile ......, - . '"""" 1o,. """'
on • , _ ronoo ol IOj&gt;ia.
Sholl - . {3tiO or /HI) ,..,. lht ~st chii&gt;Cf ol l»&gt;nff pub/lohod. T'fpod lol·
,.,.. . . {NWfwr«l anl1 Ill m.y,. tdlbd. EM:h 8/Jould Jncludtl• ~. Mkke...
'"" doJ'Ilmo ,_. numtw S,.cHy 1 dato,
1tllcl1
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L....:&lt;5::""'::::'~""::,·;,FAX::,.,::ro:.,:•:.:;•:;~WZ:::,.z:.:,:r5::,;7

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

'Veggie libel' suits
form of intimidation,
citizen group claims

and JAN MOLLER
Sometimes government refonn
can be worse than the problem it was
meant to solve. Such might be the
case with Congress' well-meaning
anempts to fix the Supplemental
Secunry Income program.
For more than half a century,
uncovenng government fraud and
waste has been one of our stocks-intrade. For journalists, it's the gift that
keeps on grving; no matter how
many times politicians vow to root
out waste, it always comes back.
But lately, lawmakers and other
officialS have become so vigilant
about cutting waste and fraud in SSI
that they may have lost stght of the
1 needtest among us.
1
The SSI program, which provides
mon thl y we I'rm checks Io the poor,
and disabled, has been riddled
1elderly
with waste and abuse through the
years.
In New Yort City, a con man was
discovered to be receiving SSI payments under 16 different identities.
There have been several documented
cases of fugitives funding their flights
from the law with SSI money.
Despite these embarrassing examples, the SSI program, which is run
by the Social Security Administratron, provides desperately needed
money 10 millions of Americans. Perhaps the most vital SSI assistance is
the money that goes to impoverished
families with mentally or physically
disabled children.
Yet the comprehensive welfare
reform legislation passed tn 1996 by
the Republican Congress and signed
into law by President Clinton made
the qualifications for SSI - including those for dtsabled children much more stringent.
Lawmakers wanted to cut out the
abuse in SSI, no doubt a noble cause.
And they wanted to score points with
a growing number of voters who
thought the federal government wa.~
too fast and loose with welfare
checks. Let's kick these freeloaders
off the dole and force them to get jobs
like the rest of us, the thinking went.
That's easrer said than done, par-

I

By MITCH WEISS
Auoclated Press WrHer
TOLEOO - Amy Stmpson was relieved when Buckeye Egg Farm
dropped a ·· veggie libel" lawsutl agamst her nonprofit consumer advocacy
group for claiming the company sold old eggs a.• fresh.
.
But there also was a feeling of regret - regret that she mtssed a chance
to challenge Ohio's veggte libel law. which, she says, was designed to curb
free speech.
"You never want a lawsml hanging over your head. And that's what we
had for more than a year." satd Ms. Simpson, director of the Ohio Public
Interest Research Group. "The lawsuit didn't stop us from speaking out. But
11 was always in the back of our minds."
She said Buckeye Egg has been using the law to mumidate people and
groups from continumg to speak out agamstthe company's planned eipansion 10 three northwest Ohio counues.
. The !9Q6 state law allows Ohio farmers to sue people who unfairly crittcize their products. Farm groups say the law gives fanners a chance to fight
bad against negative publictty aboutthe1r products.
The Ohto law came in response to false alarms sounded by consumer
groups about Alar, a chemical used by fanners.
. .
Buckeye Egg opened a 2 5 mtllion hen·eggoperatton m 1995 near Mount
Victory. about 95 miles south of Toledo. Restdents have satd the egg farm
has produced swarms of fltes and endangers the envtronment.
Buckeye Egg cited the veggie hbellaw in letters to people who oppose
the company's plans to open three new egg farms. pullet operations and a
feed mtll m Hardm, Marion and Wyandot counties.
There will be more than 18 mtllion hens within a ?·mile radius when the
egg farms are runnmg 10 those counties.
By NAT HENTOFF
" Some people are now afraid to speak out because of the law, they'~
l!nlhUsiils't&amp; for school vouchers,
rhmkmg twiCe because they ' re afratd Buckeye Egg ts gorng to sue them.
including religious schools - paid
Ms. Simpson said.
.
.
by public money - an: celebrating
The case began in March 1997. when Ohio PIRG filed a lawsuit allegrng the June 9 d!'Cision by Wisconsin's
Buckeye Egg, formerly AgnGeneral. was repackaging old eggs and selling Supreme Court. By a 4-2 vote, the
them a.~ new. It said the practice was unsafe and vtolated Ohto consumer laws. court ruled that taxpayers' funds can
The case is pending.
be used for !Uttion by famtlies in MilBuckeye Egg satd those allegattQJlS w,ere unfounded and hurt business so waukee who prefer to have their chilit used the state's veggte hbellaw to sue Ohtu PIRG. The company was seek- dren attend religious institutions.
mg unspecified damages.
.
. .
The celebrants around the country
But Buckeye Egg. tn one·pagc motion filed last week m Frankhn Coun- believe the decision will provide
ty Common Pleas Court 10 Columbus, said 11 wa_s d1smissing the lawsuit. The piOK:es for students in many parochial
company did not say why 11 was takmg the ac!ton ..
schools in the nation during the
A telephone message left for Buckeye Egg Prestdent Andy Hansen was years ahead. And that the inevitable
not returned Thursday.
appeal to the United States Supreme
Civil rights groups, mcludmg the Ohio chapter of the American Civil Lib- Court is largely a formality.
erties Union, had been warchmg the Buckeye Egg case clos~ly. They say the
I have spoken to some of the
law is an unconstitutional mfringement on free expn:sston. Twelve other states voucher lawyers and they said their
also have similar veggie hbel laws.
case is that strong. Moreover, many
"It's a bad law, .. sard Mark Finnegan of the Toledo-based Equal Justice parents, espectally the poor and
Foundation. " It's exactly what everybody predicted was wrong Wt!h these working class, are clamonng rn an
vegetable defamation laws. It's had a ch1lllng effect. "
increasing num)ler of states for a free
way out of failing public schools.
The odds are, however, that James
Madtson
may yet prevail In speakUSA Today
ing
of
the
First Amendment's EstabNEW YORK- Average Joe "geumg above·average exposure in many
lishment
Clause,
the architect of the
ad campatgns thiS summer- unless Joe dnves a Saturn.
Bill
of
Rights
said.
"The Christian
Marketers are finding mcreasingly creallve ways to tum regular folk into
religion
(and
all
religtons)
ought not,
commercial endorsers for everyday products and services - from Coach
so
far
as
pecuniary
means
are
handbags and Jockey thigh-htgh stockmgs to Mad Boxes Etc., which is !OCOUI·
mvolved,
to
be
provtded
by
the
goving for real people to use in a Super Bowl commerc1al.
"Advertising is so shck now and consumers are so jaded about seemg ernment, rather than be left to the volcelebnt1es. ad agencies are saymg 'Let's get real people,' .. said Bill Ober- untary provtsrons of those who prolander of Ktrshenbaum Bond &amp; Partners. agency for Rockport shoes. Its ad fess it.''
There tS a hne of Supreme Court
campatgn has featured up-and·coming real people. such as a professional hikmg gutde
Anne Kletn. meanwhile. IS putung testtmomals to the tesl 10 liS fall rashton campa1gn. wh1ch wtll feature 30 successful women from d1verse cultur·
ol background• Among 1hem: JOurnalist Noncy Collins and perfume consultant Ann Goulleb
By RICHARD BENEDETTO
"When a real person talks about why they drive a Ford or why they fly Gannett News Service
American Airhnes, 11 makes the lay pubhc say. 'That's me up there.' It's subWASHINGTON - Not surprisliminal," sa1d Laura Slutsky of PeopleFinders Producttons.
ingly. a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup
It also saves lime and money
poll find• nearly two of three Amer"Usmg real people cuts the creauve process by 60 percenttu~~wtse and icans say the investigation into
you· d be amazed how happy real people are wuh scale wages. sard Bill whether President Clinton had a sexMcCuddy. a former adman whose spec~alty was man-on-the-stree!IO!erviews ual It arson with former White House
for Jtffy Lube. Klondike and Ford.
intern Monica Lewinsky should end

ticularly in families with severely disabled chtldn:n. The mtenSive ClR
that many of these kids require prohibited their parents - many of
whom lR single mothers - from
holding down full-time jobs.
As a result of welflR reform,
288,000 of the nearly I million disabled children receiving SSI benefits
- which, on average, amounted to
less than SSOO per month - were
kicked out or the progmm.
But now some lawmakers from
both sides of the aisle lR worrying
that we've gone too far in cutting off
people from the rolls, as one congressional staffer working on the
issue told our associate Aaron Karp.
Adding credence to these concerns is the fact that the Social Security Administration has reinstated S4
percent of the 288,000 disabled children who were kicked off the SSI
rolls under the stncter guidelines.
Many of these disabled children and

their families had their monthly payments hastily cut off before case
workerscoulddetermme if they were
truly eligible.
Sens. John Chafee, R·R.I., and
Kent Conrad, 0-N.D., lR leading a
bi-partisan effort to make sure ques·
!tons are asked before the neediest of
children are cut off the SSI rolls.
"We can eliminate the waste and
fraud without jeopardizmg the health
and safety of those legitimately in
need," Chafee said.
But according 10 Chafee staffer
Nicholas Graham, there m many
lawmakers who don't sec things that
way. "For everyone or Sen. Olafee's
mind, there lR two or three others
who think we need to go forward"
with furtherSSI cuts. Graham told us.
With electtons coming in the fall,
many Republicans hope 10 get loyal
partisans 10 the polls by flaming antiwelfare sentiments.
If GOP lawmakers want to really
•

· MICH

save taxpayers some money by cutting welflR, we have a suggestion:
Rather than pick on impoverished
disabled kids and their families, why
not eliminate the upward of$ 100 bil·
lion a year the federal government
dishes out in corporate welfare?
The truth is that American tax·
payers empty their pockets 10 line the
Gucci wallets of a class of welfare
recipients far different than the poor
single mothers and children recetvmg
SSt benefits. Through tax breaks,
direct subsidies and a variety uf federal program'~. we give out billions of
dollars a year in welfare - and we
call it that because that's precisely
what it is -to the wealthy corporate
barons of Wall Street.
It's funny how you never hear the
anti-welfare crusaders in Congress
talk about that.
(.lick Anderlon and Jan Molter
. . column1111 for Unllld felturea •
Syndlc:atl.)

Anna L. Frank

tND

• IColumbusI sa• I

Sadie M. Thuener

IC8

Today in history

In a SOCiety that uses up news
events hke paper cups, stories that
hang around for six months without
By The Associated Preas
_any apparent resolution, a~ this one
Today,, Monday, July 13. the I94th day of 1998. There are 171 days left
has. wear out their weTcorne.
m the year.
Thus, the public is tired of the
Today 's Highlight in History
Lewinsky matter, and wishes it would
On July 13. 1793. French n:volullonary wnter Jean Paul Marui wa.• stabbed
go away.
death
in his bath by Charloue Corday, who wa.• executed four days la~r.
10
Clearly, the clever hand of the
Marat's slaying is deptcted in the famous painting by Jacques Louts Davtd.
White House has not been absent in
On this date:
.
making sure the issue drags on. Not
In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinance governing the Nonhwest Temonly has Clinton refused 10 come forward and offer an explanation of
')~ 1863. rioting against the Civil War military draft erupled in New York what
went on between him and the
City• arproxilllllely 1,000 died people over three days.
young woman, but his leaal advisers
1~ 1878, the Treaty of Bertin amended the terms of the Treaty of San Stealso have worked overtime to delay
fano which had ended the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78. ·
everything from allowing certain
~ 1960 Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts won the Democrali&lt;: prcspresidential aides 10 testify before the
idenlial
his party's conventi?'l iii Los Angeles.
.
grand jury to challenging in court
Ill 1967 rKC-relalcd rioting broke out m Newark, NJ.; by the bme the whether Secret Service agents can be
violaiCe ~ oo July 17, 27 people had been kil~.
.
.
required 10 give information about
In 1977. a 25-hour blackout hit the New Yort Cuy 1m1 after bgl!mnl&amp;
whll they might have seen while prollrUtk up1111e power lines.
.
.
tecting Clinton.
fn 1978. Lee Jacocca wu fued u prcstdent of ford Motor Co. by cblirAt the same rime, the Clinton
forces have conducted an all-ouf
man Henry Ford U.
.
. o-L-- "'·..,In 1979. a4.5-hour siqe beprll die EJYPI,Ian Embassy~~,...,....,
assault on the competence and cnedu (out Palesrini.,...,_nllu killed two secunty men and setzed 20 ho5tqes.

..,;m,..ion •

·--I•

Pt. Clou&lt;1y

Cloudy

A southerly air flow will bnng in a warmer atr mass and more hum1d1ty
as the motsture levels mcrease tomght, forecasters satd.
Conditions will become more muggy and skies will become panly cloudy
across parts of the south. Mostly clear skies are expected across the central
and northern sections, the National Weather Servtce reported.
Overnight lows will be in the lower and mid 60s in the nonhea.•tto the
upper 60s in the southwest.
A warm front w1ll approach Ohio on Tuesday. As thts front moves 1010
the area it wtll trigger a few afternoon thunderstorms 10 the south. Most other locations will simply experience partly cloudy skies along with hot temperatures. Afternoon highs on Tuesday will be in the upper 80s and lower

NO,

SOMETHI~

MORE EXPENSIVE ...
AmUSEMENT

PARK

90s.

ADmiSSION.

The record high temperature for this date was 105 set 10 1936 and the
record low was 49 set 10 1940.
,
Sunset at the Columbus weather station will be at 9.06 tonight. Sunrise
Tuesday will be at 6.20.
Weather for«ast:
Tonight .. Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s. Ltght and vanable wmd.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy and hazy. Highs around 90
Tuesday night...Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday... Hazy and humtd with a chance of an after·
noon or evening thunderstorm.

Struggling family endures

decrstons that Illuminate the Constitutional errors in the Wisconsin
Supreme Court's decision. In Commtttee for Public Education vs.
Nyquist ( 1973), the Court found
unconstitutional reltgious schools
getting financial aid from the state.
Even though the taxpayers' funds
went directly to the parents, the
Court empha.~ized, the plan's "primary effect" wa.~ to advance religion.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court,
however, believes that using taxpayers' money for religiQus schools does
not advance religion because the
government checks are endorsed by
the parents
Thereby the plan is supposedly
"rei igion-neutrdl."
The Supreme Court, in Sloan vs.
Lemon ( 1973 ), turned down the
"religion-neutral" ploy. It noted that
however the pubhc money for this
nonpublic tuition is manipulaled,
"tt's mtended •onsequence IS to ser·
vtce and support n:ligtous institu·
lions .... The state ha.• singled out a
class of its citizens for a special economic benefit "
And the United States Supreme
Court is likely to get a long list of the
schools participating in the Milwau·
kee Voucher Plan that wtll rndeed use
these taxpayers' funds to advance
n:ligton because that is their essenual
educational misston.

The All Saints Catholic Elementary Schoof: "Students participate, on

a regular basis, in liturgical and
prayer services in church and school.
... All student• parttcipate."
Bethlehem Lutheran: "Each day is
opened with a devotion followed by
mstruction in Christian doctrine ....
Every child enrolled in Bethlehem is
acquainted with ... a loving Savior
who gave his life for our sins."
As an editorial in the Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel empha•izes, ignored
ts "the important principal tllat taxpayers ... of any religious stripe or
none - must not be compelled to
support a religious institution."
While he wa.• on the Supreme
Court. Justice Harry Blackmun noted that "a statutory preference for the
tlissemination of religious ideas
offends our most basic understanding
of what the Establishment Clause ts
all about." That case, Texas Monthly Inc. vs. Bullock ( 1989). had to do
with a stale tax exemption - a preference - benefiting only religious
periodicals. But Blackmun's pom!
could apply as well to a statutory
preference that brings taxpayers'
money into religious schools.
In their unheeded brief to the Wisc'Oosm Supreme Couit. the American
Civtl Liberties Union and Amencans
United for Separation of Church and
State exposed the money launllering

at the core of the government's argu- · ·
mentthatthe plan "provi~ orily an ·
indirect benefit to religiou.• schools as
a result of private decisions of individual parents."
Not true. The payment• are - as
the Supreme Court said in the ·
Nyquist case- "direct contributions
which are merely routed thmugh the
parent• to the schools." Further- •
more, the Court said in a 1988 case, ·
Bowen vs. Kendrick, that this tricky · ·
maneuver is actually a dtrect subsidy. ·
And a.• in the ' Wt!ieonsin case, it
serves to "advance a perva.•ively sec- ·
tarian institution's religious mis- ...
sion.··
James Madison had it right: "Reli- •·'
gion and Government will both exist ;
in greater purity the less they are · ·
mixed together."
The money launderers say that if :
the parent requests it, any voucher
child can be exempt from the reli· · '
gtous requirements of these schools ..
But in these schools, the religtous pnorities are pervasively compelling.
And many of the impressionable
youngsters - their tuition paid by
Citizens of different religions or none
-will come to :li.'Cepl "a lovmg Savior who gave his life for our stns "
(Nat · Hentofl Is a nationally
renowned authority on the Firat
Amendment and the rell of the Bill
of Rlghll.)

ibihty of independent couns.:l Ken·
neth Starr, addmg more turbulenc'e to
the already churning waters that have
made the public seasick.
The president's handlers conttnU·
ously complatn that Starr is mostly
responsible for the seemingly endless
probe. And Starr, indeed, hasn't
moved wrth due dtspatch. If Cltnton
would level with us, the whole thing
could ~uickly go away. But all he
does is deny the charges.
While 61 percent of the public
continues to approve of the overall
job he is doing a.&lt; president, there is
a lot of ambtvalence when it comes
to the Lewinsky matter.
Asked in the USA TODAY poll
who they would tend to beheve if
Lewinsky said she had an extra-mar·
ital aff:ur wtth Chnton and Clinton
denied it, 47 percent or those
responding said Lewinsky and 38
'percent sided with Clinton.
That's a reversal from a poll in
early february, shortly after the allegations surfaced, when S3 percent
rushed to the president's defense,
only 38 percent believed Lewinsky.
Clinton surely knows his credibility is slipping as the issue drags on.
but he's willing to gamble he can
overcome 11.
First, he is encouraged by poll
results that show that even if people
were convinced he lied under Oath

about hts involvement with Lewmsky, 50 percent still would oppose an
effort to impeach htm or remove him
from office.
Even if they wen: convinced Clinton participated m attempts to get
Lewinsky to lie· under oath. the public is still split whether to impeach
h1m.
Rea&lt;;OO&lt; for the ambrvalence have
mon: to du with the booming economy and Clinton's remarkable ability
to show he is hard at wort on the job
of being president, than with a lower standard of behavior Americans
eipecl from their president.
While it'strue most people apparently are willing to cut Clinton more
slack on personal comportment than
they woulrt, say, a George Bush, a
Jimmy Carter or even an AI Gore,
they still appear to be thinking

She was alive, clingmg to the
branches of a sycamore bending over
the receding waters of the creek.
His relief mingled wuh sadness
because Nutter knew Ellis probably
hadn't survived. Her body was found
later. miles downstream.
Sunda). the Nutters and
McWtlltams celebrated Jesse's btrthday. They will closely watch Amey,
who was due to give btrth Sunday.
They will continue to give thank.•
for their lives and prepare to clean up
They will await word from the Federal Emergency Management Agency
on whether they can afford to rebuild.
In the meantime, they' II live Wtlh
famtly and friends. manage on the
S1.000 proceeds from the roadstde
sale of a mtmculously preserved gun
collection. and the largess of others.
"I saved the most important things
1n that house anyway. My wife and
my chtldren were the only things
wonh savmg," Nuuer smd " I stood
:md prayed for an hour God
answered the'l!tayers of a smner that
mght. "

The Daily Sentinel

CLEVELAND (AP)- The owner of an Ohio Lonery game ucket
wtth the correct Super Lolto combination from the Saturday drawmg
may claim a jackpot prize worth $8
million before taxes.
The winning ucket entitles the
owner to a lump-sum. pretax cash
payment of $3,737.522. That's the
amount the lottery would have mvesled expecting to pay the adveqtsed
Jackpot amount of $8 million tn !tnual payments over 26 years.

Coll•ooltJ Ne.....p&lt;r HGidl .... toe.
Published every 1ftcmoon, Monday lhrough
Fndly, Ill Coun Sl , Pomeroy, Oh10, t'ly lhc
Oh10 Valley Publistuna Company Second cl1u
posaa,; p1id 11 Pomeroy, Otdo
Ma.ber: The Auoclatcd Prw and the Oh10
Newspaper AssociiiKMI
Polllla*r: Send addrCIS com:cllons to 1bc
Dltly Sc:atmcl, Ill Cwt1 St , Pomeroy, Oh10
45769

SUBSCRimON RATES

By Carrier or Mteor lloldt
One Week.. ... ..... .. ................. .S2 00
One Month ......... ................... $.810
One Year..
. . .. . ... St!W 00

Lottery·results

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dall):...... .. ......................... JS Cents
Suhscnbc~ not dc5mn&amp; 10 pay 1hc earner may

through thctr wallets.
Fully eight of 10 Americans ruled
the economy good in the USA
TODAY poll. And that same propor·
lion expect~ it will still be humming
along at the same speed a year from
now. Therefore. said independent
pollster John Zugby, It's rea'iODable to
conclude many Americans are willing
to treat Clinton gingerly for fear his '
demtse could take the economy down
with him.
"They ju~t don 't want to upset the •
apple cart," Zugby said.
Clinton knows thiS, 111111 is willingr l
to exploit iiiO the htlt. The name or.: ;
the game is to keep people nervous•: •
about what might happen if he goe~. :
Little wonder then that nearly two of· :
three just wish the investigations · :
would end now. They figure they ·. ·
have an economic stake in Clinton's
survival.

In 198S, Live Aid. an intemarional rock concen in London, Philadelphia, .
Moscow and Sydney, helped money for Africa's starving people.
,
Ten years ago: Final results of Mexico's recent presidential election wen: - ,
released, giving the victory to the candidate of the governing party, Carlos • •
Salinu de Gortari. Opponents called election "stolen."
:
Five years ago: The American League defeated lf\e National League in '
the All-Star Game, 9-3, in Baltimore. Race car driver Davey Allison died in .
Binningham, Ala., of injuries suffered in 1 helicopter crash.
._ :
One .year ago: Secretary of Stile Madeleine Albright returned to her Jew- I
ish roots in the Czech Republic, findifl8 names of family members killed by
the Nazis inscribed on a Prlgue synagogue wall. News reports the pn!vious
February revealed that Albright, who'd been raised a Roman Catholic. had
6
Jewish relatives, 'lllllly of whom died in the Holocaust.

(Continued from Page 1)
He prayed on the stoop with
Anthony for an hour. promised to
give up the occasional beers after
work, vowed to never ask for another thing if only God would spare his
family: wife Amey, 24; sons Anthony, 14, Jesse, 12, and Michael, 3; and
daughter Kelly, 8.
"I said, 'Lord God in heaven and
in Jesus' name don't take my family
for the things I've done in my life,'
" Nuuer said.
About 30 minutes later. the rain
stopped long enough for him to
move his brood from the second
floor, over a rushing stream at the
foot of the stairs, outside to htgher
ground across the dirt road.
While they waited for help, the
dawn broke. They heard a strange
notse.
"I thought it was a cat meowing."
Nuuer said. "And my linle boy.
Jesse. said, 'My God. there's grandma.' I said. 'Where?' and wondered
where in all the rubble and debris wa'
her body.
"He po10ted and said. 'In the tree,
Daddy.'"

(USPS liJ.Me)

·Linking prosperity with Clinton's s.i.lrvival

now.

sunny

Warm front promises
mugginess this week

•

Vouchers support sectarian schools' mission

Regular folk get their day in sun

Anna L. Frank, 91, of Bradbury Road, Pomeroy, dtcd on Saturday, July
II, 1998 at Darst's Care Home 10 Pomeroy.
She was born on July 28, 1907 m Rutland Township, daughter of the late
Filander and Ltly Powell Hysell. She wa• a psychtatric aide for 22 years at
Gallipoh~ State Institute
She attended the Hysell Run Hohness Church. and was a member of the
Public Employees Retirement System and the Meigs County Semor Cittzens.
Surviving are a sister, Gertrude Sttvers of Pomeroy; and several nieces
and nephews.
Bestdes her parent&gt;, she was pn:ced~d in death by her husband, Albert
Frank; two ststers, Garnet Russell and Clara Mabel Hysell; and three brothers, Daniel, Joseph and Wilbur Hysell
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Hysell Run Hohness Church in
Pomeroy, with the Rev. William Justis officiating. Burial will follow m the
Chester Cemetery. Friends may call althe Ewing Funeral Home m Pomeroy
from 7-9 tomght.

By The Associated Preu

SAVING
FOR
COLLEGE?

Salem VFD slates ice cream social

AccuWeather' forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

Monday, July 13, 1998

Losing sight of the neediest among us

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

local News in Brief:

Thesday, July 14

Page2

rcmum advance d1rcct 10 The Oa1ly Senlmcl on
11• or 12 momh bas~o~ Crcd11 ••II be
a•vcn camer e~eh week
1
No subscnp110n tly mall pcnmucd in areu
when: home camcr sci'\IICC as ava1lablc.
Publisher KK1VC5 1hc t1ghll0 adJUSI riiCS dut·
mg 1hc subs..:nplton period Subsct1pi10R ra1c
chanp may be: tmplcmenltd by chang1ng the
dur~lion of lhc •ubscripiiOII
• th~.

MAIL SUIISCRJmON
1 - Mdp CooaiJ
13 Weeks .......................... l27.JO
26 We&lt;ks ........................... .SSJ 82
52 Weeks .......................... .S I05.56
. _ Olllide Mdp Cou1J
13 Weeks ...................... ..S29 2S
26 Woe.U ...........................156 68
s2 v.recu ..................-......SI09.72

Reader Services
Correction Polley
0... .......... Ia 1111 stories Is 10 be
accunk. If roa bow of u e.- Ia a
liar)', ... l!oe ....,._ It (7401 9'-2-

2155. We wlU died&lt; roar lafonutloll
aad aab a COIIedlolllfwarnated.

News Depltibiilii'lla

'l'llo . . . . . . . . . Is 9'-2-2155. Depart-

•.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

. . . . . •kMetarr.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .....................44"!.
Akzo .....................................58"1.
AmrTech ...............................46'1.
Ashland 011 ...........................53 'o
AT&amp;T .....................................SO'I.
Bank One .............................. 59'1.
Bob Evans ............................ 20'l.
Borg-Warner ........................ 48'1•
Broughton ............................ 15'!.
Champion .............................12'1.
Chamn Shpe ........................... 4'1.
City Holding ..........................41 ~
Federal Mogul.. .....................71 ~
Gannett ................................ 71 "1.
Goodyear .............................64'7.
Kman .....................................17\
Kroger ...................................43\
Land• End ......................." ...30'1.
Umlted ................................31'1.
Oak Hill Flnl ........................... 27
OVB ......................................... 41
One Vallay ...................., .......... 36
Peoplea ................................. 30'1.
Prem Flnl .....................,......... 20'.1

Rockwell .........................45"1.
RDIShell ..............................52"1.
Sears .................................... 59'1.

o-at M a 1 _....- ...........ElL Uti

Shoney'l """""'""'"""""":.... 3"1.
Star Bank '"';...................../...118\

Newt.....-......-·------·--...,£11. 1112

WendJ'I """"""""""'"""""'"".21 'I

orllt.Ut6

WCII'Ihlngton .....................-.14'1.

-·-·-

Stock raporta are lht 10:30
a.m. quotH provided by ¥VMt
of Galllpolla.

Sadre M. Thuener, 92. dred Saturday, July II, 1998 in Holzer Medtcal Cen·
ter, followmg a short tllness.
She was born Oct. 2, I90S, daughter of the late Frank and J~ssie Stowe.
She operated Sadie's Market tn Syracuse for many years, worked in the Vogue
Shoe Store in Pomeroy, and had worked at Baldwin Piano Co. and Sh1lhto's
Depanment Store m Cmcinnat&lt;.
She wa.• a member of the Asbury Untied Methodist Church, Syracuse. and
the Syracuse Daughters of America
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Margaret and William Lehew
of Pomeroy; a sister and brother·m-law, Bernice and Kenneth Theiss of
Racme; four grandchildren and mne great-grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be 10 a.m: Tuesday m the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
wtlh Pastor Chad Emrick officratmg. Bunal Will be in the Greenwood Cemetery, Racine. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight

Legislation may determine
testimony limits for agents
WASHINGTON (AP) - Agreeing wt!h the courts that Congress
should dec1de the legal obhgauons of
Secret Servrce employees, the chairman of lhe Senate Judiciary Commruee says he will seek legiSlation
next year to define what those who
guard the president musttesttfy about
what they see.
A federal appeals court last week
unanimously rejected the Justtce
Department's contention that agents
need a so-called protecttve functton
privilege allowing them to remam
Silent about what the prestdent says
and does in their presence. Without
that privilege, trust between a president and his bodyguard would be
lost. the depanment contended.
Justice ts deciding whether to
appeal the ruling !hal would compel
agents to testify before the grand jury
investigating allegations that President Clinton had a sexual relationship
wtth White House intern Monica
Lewmsky and then hed about 11.
The Judiciary Comminee chair·
man, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R·Utah,
urged the depanment not to appeal.
saying it would only delay the conclusion of lndepepdent Counsel Kenneth Starr's investigation.

Instead. he satd, "I would look for
a legrslattve remedy" that would
stnke a balance between requirements thai Americans abide by laws
and the need lo protect the president.
"It may not be everything that the
Secret Servtce would want," Hatch
said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the
Press " "I think they themselves
would admit there is no way that
Secret Service people should not
want to testify when cnmes are being
commtl!ed. They should not be partrctpants m cnmmal activity.''
Rep Barney Frank. D-Ma~s .. a
sentor member of the House Judic-iary Committee. agreed that a hne must
be a hne drawn between agent' testifymg on crimes and keeping silent
on other matters, and that 11 was up
to Congress to decide where lhatline
should be.
"Obviously, if a Secret Servtce
agent !\aw a crime being comm1tted.
he oughtlo be inlerventn+g, not JUst
testifying," Frank said. But without
some son of legal pnvtlege, he satd,
"they would have to testify before
Congress on poh!tcal con versa! tons...

Meigs announcements
Music in the Park
Mustc m the Park will be held Saturday, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park 10
Ractne, featurmg Don Duddtng
Admtsston is free. Refreshments
avarlable.
Corr«tion
"God's M&amp;M K1ds." a youth
group from Celma. performed home
repairs at the home of Doug Ctrcle.
Mr. Circle was mcorrectly tdenulied
m Wednesday's edmon.
Special meeting
The Tuppers Plams Regtonal Sewer Distnct will meet in spectal sesston
Tuesday, 7 p.m at the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dts!nct.
Reedsvtlle, to discuss posstble httgation and personnel problems.

Board of Elections
The Me1gs County Board of Elec·
11ons will meet Tuesday. 9 a.m. at the
board otlice tn Pomeroy.
Genealogical workshop
The Metgs County Genealogical
Soctety will hold a workshop Tuesday. 3·6 p.m. at the Metgs County
Museum for anyone seeking a.•ststance wuh thetr applicauon for First
Famthes of Metg' County. Metgs
County Civtl War Famthes or 4-H
genealogy proJeCt. Socte!y members
w1ll be on hand for asststance The
museum opens at I p m tor tho'e
who would hke to come early to do
research

The annual ice cream social sponsored by the Salem Townshtp Vol·
unteer Fire Department ha~ been set for Saturday. July 18. Serving will
be from II a.m. unttl7 p.m. at the VFO on State Route 124 at Salem Cen·
ter.

The menu will consist of seven flavors of homemade tce cream, roast
beef sandwiches, ptes. potato salad. macarom salad. baked beans, hot dogs
and more.
The Midmght Cloggers w1ll perform at 4 30 p.m., Rachel Pridemore
and David Suffler at 5 p.m. and Dwtght "Eivts" Icenhower at 5 30 p.m.

Driver ticketed following accident
D?vtd M. Putnam. 17, 30907 Suversvtlle Road. Ponland. was Cited for
no operator's hcense and fat lure to control by the Gallta-Me1gs Post of
the State Htghway Patrol followmg a one-car acc1denr Saturday on SR
124 near Portland.
Troopers said Putnam was northbound at 6 55 a.m when he lost control of the car he drove on loose stone, went off the roadway and struck
a ut1IUy pole.
The car was severely damaged. accordmg to the report

Patrol issues citation after crash
The Gallia·Metgs Post of the Slate Htghway Patrol Clled Ntkkt J
Robens, 17. 36540 Bashan Road. Long Bonom. for fat lure to control following a one-car acctdent Sunday on SR 248 near Chester.
Troopers satd Robens was westbound at 2 55 p m . went off the nght
stde of the road and struck a dttch. The car then overturned. accordmg to
the report.
The car was moderately damaged.

Both sides in Sheppard
case await tr.ial decision
By JOHN AFFLECK
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - It was a cold
January day when prosecutors and an
attorney for the son of Dr Sam Shep·
pard argued before Ohto 's Supreme
Court about whether the case that
helped insptre "The Fug1t1ve'' should
go to trial one more lime
. Now, stx months alter lho.;e Jan
13 arguments. both stdes are sttll
holdmg thetr breath for a deetston
that has been unusually long 10 commg.
" I'm anxtously awatlmg the opmton," said Cuyahoga County Prose·
curor Stephanie Tubbs Jones. "Whatever it is - I want 1t. ••
Terry Gtlbert, attorney for Sam
Reese Sheppard - the doctor's son
- 1s in the same pos1t10n
"We're all JUSt completely baffled," he satd. "There have been cases that have come and gone stnce
then."
But thts 1snt any case, even for
Ohto's htghest court
Law professo" and auorneys
fam1liar wtth the workmgs of the
Supreme Court suspect a spit! vote
among the seven-justice panel may
have slowed down the decisiOn·wnt·
mg process.
The wall also may be an tndtcatton
of how !\Criously the justices take this
case. whtch has be tn and oul ol stale
courts lor 44 years
Sam Reese Sheppard has sued the
state clatmtng the doctor was wrongfully tmprisoned for 1he beatmg death
of h1s pregnant wtfe. Manlyn. tn

1954
Sheppard spent a decade tn pnson
before betng acquttted at a second In ·
al. The TV senes and lilm "The Fugt·
uve'' drew some tnsp~ratton from hts
ordeal.
The doctordted of hver fat lure tn
1970 at age 46
To wtn a wrongful tmpnsonment
declarauon now. Sheppard would
have to be declared mnocenl by a
JUdge - a stronger statement than the
"not gutl!y" verd1c1 he won tn 1966
al hts retnal ordered hy the lJ S

Supr&lt;me Courl
Sam Reese Sheppard could collect
an esumated $2 mtllton tf he wtns lhe

't I

H0Sp1

a neWS

court as spht the JUsllces sometames
w1ll go ba•k and fonh readtng each
other's opm10ns and fine-tunmg thear

own arguments.
"That lakes ume.'' he sa1d
Jonathan Enttn, a law professor at
Case Western Reserve Umversity,
satd he would be 'urpmed at thts
pom! tf lhe court handed down a
unammous opm10n

"Let's remember that the Shep·
pard case wa.' a very contenuous one
at almost every stagt:." he smd

Dr Sheppard always saHI a bushy·
tntruder ktlled M". Shepp.trd
at the couple's home outstde Cleve·
land and knocked htm unconsc1ous
In March. Sheppard 's legal leam
revealed the results ol DNA 1e'" per·
formed on the doctor's e&lt;humed
body whtch showed he ts not a match
lor lour bloodstams from the couple's
home.
The younger Sheppard beheves
the ev1dence potnb to handyman
Rtchard Eberling as hts mother's
k11ler. Eberling. convteted ot murder
tn a separate case. has demed slaymg
Mrs. Sheppard
ha~red

cuse

At the January heanng. Tubbs

Scipio Trustees
The Sctpto Townshtp Board of
Trustees wtll hold tls annual budget
meetmg Wednesday. 6 30 p m. at the
Pagevtlle Town Hall.

Squads record 14 calls
Unus of the Metgs County Emergency Medtcal Servtee recorded 14
calls for aS&gt;istance Saturday and
Sunday. Units respondmg mcluded.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3·16 a.m Saturday. Sumner Road.
Tuppers Plains. Leonard Koenig. St.
Joseph's Hospital:
3:31 p.m. Saturday. Overbrook
Nurstng Center, Middleport. Delom
Powell. Veterans Memorial Hosptlal.

Jones argued any nghtto a wrongful •
tmpnsonment award dted wtth the :
doctor The cao;e shouldn't be allowed
to pass on to Sheppard's son and go
10 tn al, she satd.
The prosecutor also satd 11 would
be unfair to retry a case 10 whtch •
many potenual w11nesses are dead .
and ev1dence has been lost
Gtlbert countered that Ohto law .
allows ctvil suus such a.' this one to
pa.~s on to a vtcltm 's descendants
The average ume between oral ,
arguments and a Supreme Court
dectston IS about etgh! weeks, court
spokesman Harry Franken satd. A .
delay this lengthy IS unusual but not .
unheard of, he sa1d
Other maJOr cases have taken
longer to dec1de For tnstance . when
the Supreme Court declared Ohto's
'chool fundtng system uncons!t!U·
ltonaltn 1'197. tl had been stx months .
and two wt:eks smct! oral argum~:nts .
Wh1le not clatmtng any spec1al
knowledge of the Sheppanl ruhng.
Ohto State Untv~rsny law professor
Dav1d Goldberger 'atd tl an appeals

· - ,.,, 14:45, 7:38,4:15,
ARMAGB1110N
11:111
1111, 11111111~&lt;&gt;••1:1111, 3:21, 5:48,11:11
K-flfS ....
1:011, 4:011, 7:111
IIW Willi ,..,1BJ, 3:38, too. 8:21
lflDIAL WEAPIIf 4 ft 1:011, 1:45, 7:81

6.26 p.m. Saturday. Chester Road.
Pomeroy, Blame Qualls, treated at the
s•ene.
H:29 p.m. Saturday, Chtldrens
Home Road, Pomeroy, Ann Frank.
treated at the scene.
4·27 p.m. Sunday. Condor Street.
Pomeroy, Jody Miller, VMH;
6.38 p.m. Sunday. North Second
Aven~e. Mtddleport, Dwain Tuttle,
VMH. Middleport squad asststed;
7:28 p.m. Sunday, West Mam
Street, Pomeroy, Frances Eskew.
Holzer Medical Center,
8:40 p.m Sunday, Dark Hollow
Road, Pomeroy, Robert Rtffie, VMH ;
11 ·12 P m. Sunday. Second Stree~
Pomeroy, Virgil Westfall, VMH
MIDDLEPORT
8:32 p.m. Saturday. Volunteer Fin:
Department to Lincoln Street. gas
odor at Evelyn Blevms residence;
9:37 a.m. Sunday, OBNC. Jack
Adams, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
POMEROY
10:39 p.m. Saturday. VFD and
squad to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
west wing. a1r conditioner fire, no
injuries reported. Middleport VFD
and squad. Cerural Dispatch, Syracuse and Rutland squads as.•isted;
I:29 p.m. Sunday, Bridgeman
StRet. Syracuse, Paul Huston. VMH,
Central Dispatch squad assisted.

MillAN ~
1:15, 1:28, ~ 7:11
MAIIlH "' 1BI,I:II, 5:111,7:21
IlL OOUTli.E ..~ 1:111,1:15, 5:48, 7:45

OOTIIai'A

1:45,4#1:15

ALL AGia, AU n • a 14.00

***************
BIG ,,., ,,... . , . . ...,

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admtssions- none.
~aturday dtscharges ~ llone.
Sunday admissions - none .
Sunday discharges - Woodrow
Zwilling. Dayton McElroy.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 10 _ Melody
Arthur. Carolyn Taylor, Ruth Fooce.
Roger Leiflteit, Mrs. William Speakman and son. Harry Downard: Jane
Morrison. Norma Fowler. Blanche
Canaday.
Discharges July 11 - Colleen
Davis, Dawn Waugh, Allen Romaine,
Eva Gahm, Ernestine Brotford, Roy
Bickle, Donna McGhee, Hazel
Carnpbell, Beatrice Stocker.
Dlseharps July 12 - Johnnie
Nash, Lloyd Carico. Tma Williams,
Olive Steele, Allen Romaine.
B1rt1i - Mr. and Mrs. Fonest .
RACINE
Teaford, daughter, Portland.
9:31 p.m. Sunday, Cannel ROid.
(Pilllll • I~ witll 'penlllaloa)
MIIIY.Roush, VMH.

[ ] Mo\'ies

.
....

•

1·740·753·3400
!'.'1'., .. ,

r ~ [Ri fl ~•

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'

.
Monday, July 13, 1998

Sports

~

soccer after a '-.tunn1ng

thL'Ir

Meigs splits DH
with Lancaster's
junior Legionnaires

Jl'f'l') L~rn und

ln c okur

the

'"'"

-\s the rarnlh pi.l)ef\ \\e re hand

t•d thc1r ~,;h:-tm p1o n,h 1p med.ll' e.Kh
rneJ\t'd .1 he.l rt \ hug lwm M1chel
l 1 l&lt;~tllll the n.I!IOil' grc.11e . . t playe r
,1n d the: m~JnJ/ e r ul l r;Jncl" l)~ Then
L.tpt Jm D1ci1 Lr Dc . . Lh.tmp\ \\,1\ pre-

() rnut ol

m1 ghty Bralll Ju b R&gt;mct "h"
came up \\-llh the tdt'd !1)1 .1 \~tJJld "L'Illl d tht: Juk . . Rlll1 Ct rroph). \C t
l!ll!! 11 11 rnore tl'\l" ll )
champ10n~h1p 111 thh JlH''-1 popul.tr 11 !
l h ~.: I renLil "C'Lllrl'd the1r pl.lle 1n
spom. ~&gt; ou l d hall' lmcJ 11
He would h,J\t' lo\t.:J ZttiLdtnt· til~.: p.mthnmof ~ l l'.ltte.rm . ., h) throt
Zadane the m.t ... ln pl .t\ rn tkct lfom tim~ thL· dcfl·nd m~ c h.1mp 1 on~o, AnLl
Marl\ellle "ho turned 101 (\ .tn un~.,!Pp­ t I ,Jil ..._e d1d I( Ill lh fil,l !Ournarnent
pable 'corer Sundo1) n1 ~h1 H,· 11 &lt;&gt;ulu .!flfll',lr.tnll' ' tllCC i9X6 - when II
have loved F.1b1en Hart~&lt;'! the d lnlln.ll c U Br.t/11 m .1 quarte rfrn.tl
,h,Jotnut
laerce ·lookmg b.dJ hco~ clcJ goal
I r .lllll' , ..., the fir..,! ho\l 10 wtn I he
keeper who allov. I!J Jll'- l l" l1 ~~~.t h m
the tournament -

dl,llll)111Hl..,h 1p

.mJ rw nt· tn lour

the Fren' h beat Brazil at ats own
F·•mc .and dad so down .1 man for the
1.1'1 cc n11nute' after defender M.lr·
eel De,a ally w.!' eJeCted for rough
play
II Wol\ France th.ll h.ad the n.ur and
Br.IZII ih.at w,l\ ove r!) caullous and
, Jopp) It w,,, France that threatened
I1om the npe nrng lKkotf .tnd tl was
Br.anlthal w"s reelmg all na ght
And 11 was h.mce that he ld the
tmphy ht gh "' the Stade de France
rm ~ed wt lh cheers ..,mgmg and the
lren/) th.H co me" w11 h wmn1ng the
\\url d\ b 1 ggc~;~ ' Portrng event
Ba.tnl won liS lilies an 1958.
I&lt;162 1970 .tnd lour years ago It'
on I) pre\ I OU\ lo"" 111 the fln.ll c.tme
.11 home an t 950 to Uruguay
Fr.Hllt' h.t.., ne' e1 been .t power m
Europe .dong thl' lme'i of Germany
and lt .tly. both tha ee-tame Cup will·
ner, AnJ the spo rt has never before
he&lt;: 11 "ud1 .t rag.mg p,,,.., ,un for the
f rulL h
But .all d.ay S und~y. Ill ant acap.ttaon
ol ex .llll) whal h.appened ,11 mght .
they were an a lesta ve mood People
hung out of cnr&gt; the horn' honk an g
·" thn wowd nags ,md shouted
Alb La rr.mc e .. French young·

n,,,,

fr ont ol h1' nt:t !L' .Ir'
h1 ' c h ec~' ZltLlllL' ~~''L'd
CH'r) t e ~unm.II L' he uHJIJ ~L I llL'.II
v.hrlcot he r" l:t) nn thLIIcld ~~ L ~IIl~
the1r leg' 111 the .til 111 Lklutllll' Jtl\
Then all ol th e \\ 1nncr' ~.r th ctt'J
arm 111 .mn .md JUillf1L'J u11 111d
down hand " Ill the .111 Ill\ II Ill:! the11
1n o
c d o "n

coun trymen tn JOIIl don!! -\ &lt;., the\ .ill
drd - I0\1de thL -.t&lt;~d111111 .md IHHn
the Mt:dllcrr.ln L'.tn to thL he IL hL'" (l l
Norm.mdy

~o,tl'r"

.1 hu~c ll .t~

f.tccs

Jloillll eJ an the blue red and whal e
~o, houtm g dov.. n any
Brazthans who m1ght samba by
One French TV \t.llton even cov·
eteJ - "athou t mtcrruptton - the
aeam ' hus rade to the stadtum an thiS

s,lt -;tunned tryw ~ to fi gure out how
they L.lnH: up \llll,\1111 the h1g~..._. , , ol
game.., f hc) '.l..tlLhcd . . 1k nth ,1, tht:
pla \(."1\ L.l rn ed

\\.-a lkcd the streets 1he1r

n.111ond l color"

rhu- t hor o u ~ hl ) he.IIL'Il Ht.l/rll.lll \

French

Ill

of .11 1"L''L"n nl th g;J nH~\

Wmnt:l

k''"

pra ye r I ll

Ar~en llllJ.

'I JlCe

1~7X

tame ch.ampaon Br.alll
Mo" ot all he """ld h.l'c l111eLI
JOlmng the \\Jid ~..ckbt.tlwn' m
space ·age Stade de I ro~nce .1nd
throughout .1 n.tt 1on th.n ro~reh h.1"
been a spon ' po~&gt;er
Never ha\ t the Farnell h.td a te.ml
lake th" And not ' IlK&lt; \\mid 1\o~r II
ended ha\ C they ho1J ol re N •Il to r·•'
ty lake thl\
Z1d.me wa' the rn.un IL'.J\011 ' Lo r
mg twace on he,l(le" tn the lir'l h.dt
hl"i fip.. t ~o.JI .., nl .t tournJnh:nt he
began by geltln~ , u,pc:ntk·d lnr I\\ o
g"me' B) the lime I mm 11\uc·l Pet II
made 11 1-0 Ill thL l 1n.d 'LLOnd' the
st.md' v.erc rod.. 1ng '.1. 1th 'ong ,1mJ
che~r'" And the qrt.:ct' '~ere 111ohheJ
111 a Frem h
.a! th.ll mt~hl IN
~&gt;ell until the nn l 1\otld Cup
Wh e n the rdt.:'ICL' hie~\ the f 111.tl
v.hr-.tle the Frcnd1 pl.r)t:l" '''lrniL'J
the field and B.utho 'ncelcd tn

ol

Bond claims win in Late Models at K-C Raceway

Page4
Monday, July 13, 1998

'Le Bleus' capture
first World Cup
championship

THERE IT GOES! -France's Emmanuel Petit (right) watches has
ktck go past Brazil goalie Talfarel (kneeling) as Brazil's Cafu (2)
also watches the play during the World Cup championship game
Sunday m the Stade de France tn Saint Denis, France, where the
home team won 3-0 to claim its first World Cup title. (AP)
P"'" suburb
Then Zad" ne. the son of Algenan
ammagrants. turned the nata on\ hopes
anto magn altcent reality wnh one of
the best perfo rmance s 111 World Cup
tan.tl s hl\tory
The French got lot\ of help from
the Brall laans fo r the vactory
Br.tzal dadn' t come out for
warmups before the game. and 11
b.are ly made an appe.arance mthe first
half Except for,, 'hort ll urry nudw"y
through the half. at was ~II France
In the second h.alf. Brazal c.1 me the
closest to be.tlang B.trth ez "hen
Ron,ddo had a pomt ·hl.tnk ' hot from
8 yards But Barthez made the '"ve
The 1·0 sco re w.ts andacatave of
ho" dommantthc Fre nch were They
controlled the ball. they mode world
two tune player of the year Ron.tldo
dl'appem - a sore .mkle foa ~&gt;hach
he was ex,unaned at .1 hospat.ll tn the

mornang certaanly helped - and
!hear star. Zadane, was unstoppable
The first score came off a mast"ke
by Roberto Carlos. who conceded a
comer kack when he couldn 't clear
the ball along the nght \ldehne
Peut's kack found the he"d ofZadane,
who climbed over defender Leon.ardo to send at home
Zadane abo set up .1 hneakaway for
Stephane Guav.arc'h on wha~h goa lkeeper Claudao TaiTarel barely got hi'
hand on the shot Moments later,
Youn DJork.aeff\ comer kack was
headed by Zadane between the legs of
Roberto Callos and 11110 the net to
make 11 ~ · 0
It was the wor&gt;t World Cup half
tor Bratal sance 1990. and probably
the best France has ever played And
thangs never changed

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Adam Cuman gs sangled to score
Jeremaah Bent ley an the bonom of the
etghth mnang to gave Meags an exc at ·
ang JJ. JO wm ove r Lancas ter
(Jumor). 111 Amencan Legaon b.JSe
ball actaon Saturd"y attemoon at
Meags Hagh School
The wm enabled Meags to gam a
splat 111 the afternoon doubleheader
Lancaster broke open,, close game an
the saxth annmg of the farst game wath
five runs to pull a"ay for a I 0-4 wm
Meags rail ted 111 the last mnang of
the second game to tae the contest.
and force the extra mmngs Meags
went mto the finalmnan g facang a 10·
6 deficn and score four runs to set the
scene for the eaghth
In the first game Mea gs took an
early 1-0 lead m the bonom of the
first mnmg Pat Martm w,1lked wath
one out and scored on a Bentley Sill·
gle to gave the loc"ls a J.O .tdv.mt.age
Lancaster came b.tck 111 the thard
annmgs and scored wathoul the ben·
efit of a base hat to take ,, ). J lead
Post II took ad\.ml"ge of four walk '.
two errors and two wa ld patchC\ to
take the lead
Lancaster we nt on top 4-1 an the
fourth mnmg . Josh Sol lee smg led. he
later came nllo score on a fielders
chotec
Meags ued the game an the fift h
mnang Danae! Whutekmd w"lked.
and Kyle Smaddae lollowed wath ,,
sangle Rusty Ste~&gt;art then hat,, tow·
enng home run over the left fi eld
fence to tae the g.tme .11 4·.tll
Butt he root c.aved 111 on Meag' In
the saxth annmg Lanc.t,ter took
advantage of a hat bauer. MMk
Carlisle smgled Sollee In pled Brett
Baucher doubled .• and Kyle Alexan·
der "nd Make H.tgley both smgled to
gave Post II " 9· 1 lead
Lancaster rounded out the scm mg
111 the seventh anmng on .t smgles by
CarliSle and Soll ee, and a Meags error
to score thear tenth and fin.tl run
D.m Carson packed up the wm. he
scattered sax hat\, struck out five and
walked four Sollee h.ad ,, smgle. dou·
ble and a tnple to lead Po't II .
Baucher added a double and a \Ingle
and Carlisle "dded a paar of \I ngles
For Meags. BenJI M.muel packed
up the loss wath help I rom Brad D.av·

JEFF BURTON

enport The two 'cauered I0 hll'
they walked four and struck out tour
Stewan led Meags wnh hiS home
run, Davenport. Bentley. Dall . What ·
tekmd. and Sm addae all had sangles
Meags took the early lead 111 the
second game Cumangs led off the
second mnmg wath a double down
the left field !me He moved up on a
Collm Rou'h sangle and then scored
on a wild patch
Post II took a ~· I lead an the thard
annang on a walk to Sollee a \I ngle
by Baucher and a double by Lyle
Campbe ll Lancaster added .mother
run mthe fo urth mnmg Po't II took
a 1· 1 lead on ,, walk to Kern . a \Ill·
gle to Sollee ,and a fielders choace
Meags howe. er bounced back an
the bouom of the fourth to take ,, 63 lead Once ag.un Cummps ~ot the
annang started wath has second double
an as many at bats Whallekand san·
gled ""d Clayton Ohlinger walked to
lo"d the bases Kyle Norm smgled,
Davenpon walked and P"t M"rtan
and Bentley followed wath back·IO·
back sangles A error on the Lancast·
er left fi elder closed out the scormg,
But Lancaster came back 111 the
\IXI h annang and scored m unearned
run' to take a 9·6 lead Post II took
advantage of two Meags errors. a hat
baner, a walk and sangles by Carlisle
and Rusty Hm.- to go along wath a
Josh Mulroy tnple to '"~e a 9·6 lead
Lancaster scored another run Ill
the seventh to take a I0·6 advantage
Sollee and Baucher both sangled, and
Sollee scored on a llelder's choace
Meag.s fought back an the bottom
of the seventh to force the extra
frame Bentley \lngled and Stew"rt
walked before and Cummgs lined a
smgle up the maddle Two fielders
choaces resulted 111 two outs, but
Collin Roush sangled. Norn s followed wuh a double and Metgs had
battled back to tae the score at 10-all
Meags won the game an the eaghth
when the L"ncaster raght llelder
dropped Bentley's ny ball Stewart
walked to put runners on first and
second to sell he scene for Cummgs'
herOICS
Cumangs a JUmor-elect at South·
ern Hagh School , hat a smash past the
shortstop as Bent;;:y Jogged home
(See MEIGS on Page 5)

Scoreboard
Baseball

\\'r\l t'rn

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ol'ul ,.. ~~

1 u t&gt;~KJa) ·, ~.mu ~
~I

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I II ll( I' rn

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-·-

Here are the result s from the Jtlf)
Lube 300 Wmston Cup race at Ne~&gt;
Hampshare lnternataon.al Speed"ay,
wath st"rtang poSitiOn 111 p.u enthese,,
dnver. hometown . type ot c.ar, l.aps
completed, rea\On out af any..md
money won
I 1'\IJc ft Burton South B1)&lt;,hm \' 1 f &lt;1ul 11M I
l l 'ilM.trlo.M.u1n1 11.11( ~&gt; , 11.: Arlo. h"'1l liMI
l 1::!1 Jdl ~1rtlnn P1thti\Jrt1 hill 01t"l flllt'l
1UJ
•
~ 1''1 Ru11) Watlac t" S1 I nu11 l urJ 10(1
~ ll~lMiltS~IIll\t"r Su .. an1 1llr f' 1hl lht l rt1
~

N,.,.,y,, ~o,

IU ti 7 1Kt&gt;n m 'W11taH' St \ntu' lilfll 1111 1
II 11111 H11N'tl L1hlt1Ht C1 trp1h Chn•l• rl'\ ,,,

2

Pnolt.l• \UU
12 (~!0 leoti C.rtr n Ot•tn•ho•n l K1

\ 1

!)

lh ll H •u•l"n

I U t'~ d.av ' :o.

~)70~p111

7

1 \ )1\lo l lll'~''' l

\or t ltll hl
1

gamt'~

fnn1 ght '"
1\ 111 , ,, l 1h 1p, h ,, I" I

~

"We were awful good on the long
runs," Burton sa ad "But we had to
work all day bec"use the car w"' re.ll·
ly tagh!, and we couldn 't run behmd
people"
Thtrd was Jeff Gordon. the reagn·
mg senes champaon. who \\ as trymg
to become the ti rsl repeat wmner "'
the track where he took the CMT 100
last September

.:' J
1

I\ (!I I Dilrrrll \\ ,iltnp I r 111~1111 rt lm C htl HI
kt 100
I~ t1~1 Trm l .1ill 101~ Ctlrptll C'lm'l' Tt\"
Cht 1 rult&gt;l .21.)1.!
I "i t H l H•lhtt) H.muhou N 1' h' Ill( Tn m
Ch~'wkl ~IN

Ill (.~(}I I ~rTllt' ( llf'l' Sp;ill.l\1 ,II \\ " "
11.11

AL leaders
1'\111 ' (, tl V.dhlrn~ N ~~~. \ •r l HI I Rn
.!tnml l , ,t, IJ• J H M''"' ' Km, 1• f 1tv qt
\•ur• 111llmJ ~10 H•J.!~III '"" IJ..11&lt;•11 l'il 1\1
\ 1111 lm 1\1 ~ ln fl
l l"l "'-):Ill S.: ttll, l ~&lt;;
1&lt;1 ' 1'1\ Gn!k \ Jr Srtl !lt 7'1 [lur h~ m Cltil l
~~ tiJ ! h111 ~-' ( l I VI;. I A.ND fl'J (,,, 1&lt;. 0 1l
luhl 1m \ R •, lnp1~t S.. rill~· flt. J.tm"'"h 1\nt
Ill IIll 11~ John V 1knlln ""' ' "" M
RHI Jn1n (1111\Zdtl f t\1' !Ill (onllt) J1
\t'illlt KZ lhlk (h,, '1= " 7 1 M R11n 1r,•t
( 1 I\ I LAND 7!"1 J\ Rodn)!n • 7 s, 11 11, I 1
ll 1 ~tnk. ( II VI I AND 7 ~ H I' 1ln~t1r II tllttn••r•
HI [ '\ I r't ~d AnJ ht:Hil l ~ ~ A R n,l ri~ Utt
~c 111 1~ 11'1 I t( , .. ln gUI.'~ Tt:l,t• 111 H 1~)!1n•t111
lklrull 112 0 Ne1ll N~:w Y01k I~ Gm~t 0.1~
bnd 107 Ml:Cradrn Tamra 8 :t) 107 (,rdk~ Jr
Sc.111 lc 107 R P:tln-.euo Rnlimll•rr HJI
DOUB LES Erstiold An&lt;1he1 n1 ' I Th omo:
CU:.VRAND 10 I Rodngutz T~1:-. s 21J F. Mar
una s~ .,ule 28 ( fkiJado Tnronro 27 l nhn
Vak:ntm Buswn 27 Juan Gonznkz T~..,,.~ 27
Just1ce CLEVELAND 27
TRIPLES Offt&gt;rman Kanm Cuy 9 Gar~tJ
p.11r 1 tl nsmn 6 Durham C h1 ~ ago 6 D 11\Hln
t... Ill\ 1\ t 11y o; DJrl~r Nt&gt;w York ~ G Alllk"rson
AnJhclm ~ 0 leary Boston ~ 8 W1lham ~ Nt&gt;v.
Yurk ~
HOM I RUNS Gn lfo:y Jr Sr:m l~ 17 A Ru
d11~ut'z Sc;~ nle 27 Juan G~onz..1ln. lt'J..I~ 2fl R

:!U (71 Enut' In Ill s lhn I\ rill! Ponlll~ ~~~x
~I ( 11,11 Jnhnn} Htn'''" ( onuw.l 1-1. lf'ltf, ~ I•, h
FmJ ~~~K
~ ~ t·h Chad Lmlt Sl"fll..mr Vi ,, h I unl ~'JH
::!1 (\4) W.trd IJurh•n Stoulh ll• " '" n V1 j)on
!1.11.. :!•JK
24 1 \KI M1ch.1d \\,tl1n[l Ot•t&gt;n,l\l•ro K}
Ftlrt.l ~·!K
1~ t~\\JmmtJ Sprntt'r Hrnltt~ !11 lttrd ~ 1 11&lt;
:!fl tl\ i iJillllhuu l),lll '&lt;~ •lnil k ( .. , l md :!•17
:!7 i:!.!.l Jt"IT) Natk.w Dmtlun Conn Inn(

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)::! i l it\ R1d; ~bst Uun;1un Va. f un \
11 12~1 Kt&gt;nn~ !rAm lnd1an.1['1'h' l t1nl !Ht-1
~ 141lR!Wn P'rt's~ l~ y A,IJCt lllt NC' fu11..f

::!KI.t
]~ I)') Sttrhnii Mt~rhn Cnhmlht :~ Tt&gt;nn
Cht\ mki 2tl l
ltl i:! I 1 Jtle Nelllt&gt;l htl L1\...o:l:~nd F1 1 Ch.-&gt; rt )let :!4\.1
)7 !42) Gtnff Btw.hM Dlcmung N Y Fwl
I M-1 handling
'\tl tlll Rtch B 1cL I~ Ed1=tnnn " " Fnnl 117

crash

W (27) Ttd Mu,gra1e Fr.ml.lm Y.'J~

I 27

WNBA standin gs
Cnnfercn~e

fum

.\!.

L t.:t.

( h 1ri11Ut
Nl"' ) ••tl
(I I VI I AN D
!&gt;t lrPII

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"'' 0..1111

1 "' AIIJ.:t 1,'
S 11r uno. nh
J

Lll '"

I
\

en em
Walson challenged early before
lapped traffic became a factor. but for
the most pan Kemenah was on a ml\saon "II by hamself. males ahead of the
rest of the field
Rodney Duncan , the 1998 pomts
leader, agaan had a tough road to hoe,
startang mnth. but working has way up
to the runner·up slot at the fimsh Phd
Gressman. lake lim Allison, dad double-duty an the the 360's and 410's,
finiShmg thard 111 a great run, whale
Greg Walson, Jam Naer. Allison, Nack
Nabor. Jammy Stmson, Jonathan
Stevens and John WISbon rounded
out the top 10
Heats were won by Gressman.
Walson and Naer
It was a long ttme 111 commg. but
each wee k Lany Bond has moved up
the tote m pole Bond. who has vartu·
ally won at every track m the Ohao
Valley, has made K·C his Saturday
mght home and won has fillit K.C wm
Saturday mght 111 the Facemeyer
Lumber/Forest Products/Lakevaew
Est,ates Bulhtt Chassas #10
Bond JUmped mto the early lead
ove r pole man Greg Stevens and Carl
Coleman
Stevens challenged
throughout the early! portaons of the

race through lap 13 when he JUmped
the thm cushaon and brought ut a c"ullon. pulling defendmg wmner Make
Walson an tow
Bond pulled Walson on the start as
Scott EdmiSten and Sk ap Watterman
moved anto the frey Wa lson na bbled
"'Bond for a lime. but Bond slowly
pulled ahead as Edmasten dropped off
the pace wath a deflattng tare Wat ·
terman bagged Walson for second
w11 h two laps to go and Jon Osm"n
111 the Sw.trt7 Bulldozer planect\. a
groove 11110 fourth
Back row starters Dave Wallough·
by anJ Scoll Wolfe In the MeDon ·
aid s/C C K Convenaence and Lum·
ber #14 lioashed faith and nanth
respectively after great runs. whale
Shannon Roese had a &gt;trong run mto
sllth followed by Cole man. Audae
Swartz. Wolfe and Steve Coons
Wolfe a&lt; also sponsored locall y by D
&amp; M Pm". Vtrgal Htll "nd Sons
Greenhouses. PreciSIOn Automotave.
Ebers Catgo and Whaskers ruckmg

l 2'l
7~ 11

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tu

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'I

~aturday s scnn:oi
W,e;hlllJ!I"II 7X lA: II Ili! 'i I
1

...''

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDITION
IS COMING AUGUST 14TH, 1998

.''

.. '
. -,
-.,.,

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS AUGUST nH
.&gt;\:•
CALL992·2155 TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION. ....
-.,"
..
..
STEVE KOEBEL, EXT. 1OS • DAVE HARRIS, EXT. 104 !.::

Ut ,h MI.

Sunday's SCDI't!!li
Charl1lfto: 7~ N~w Vorl ~ 7
Lo~ An~ek~ M7 ('I F.V II AND M

Tonight'• gHmes
W:t&gt;hm!!lnn II H nu~rt&gt; n H 10 r m
lklrmt 11 Ulah IJ p m
l m An~ck s n1 Phormk 1'1 111 p 111

'

~------------------------------------------~ =~
•

Heots went to Roese. Walson and
Coy an
Racmg contmues Wednesday
when Dale Earnhardt Jr comes to
town to sago autographs and serve as
officaal starter for the race G"tes
open at 4 p m and racmg " at 7 30
for thas specaal Coc"·Cola sponsored
mad· week show fe atunng 410 Super
Spn nts ""d Late Models Modalieds
were oraganally on the agenda. but
anstead have been replaced by the
Late Models

Summary
Super Sprints
F1f\1 heat Phal Gressman . John
W11bon. Rod ney Duncan, J 1m my
Stmson
Second heat Greg Wtlson , Chad
Kcmcnah, Ed NeumeiSter. Mark
Gooufl esch
Third he"t J1m Naer, Tam Allison.
N1ck Nabor. Donme Jeschke
Kemenah, Duncan

Gre"man .Greg Wa lson. Jam Naer.
Allason . Nack Nabor.Jammy Stmson.
Jonathan Stevens and John Wasbon
Challenger 360 sprints
Fmt heat Jam Dayton , Doug
Stanley. Jetf Wallaams. Jason Coun.
ney
Sc'Cond he"t Phd Gre&gt;Sman, Mark
Long Kyle Sauder. DenniS Yoakam
Th&gt;rd heal Jammy Johnston. Tam
Allison. Man Alloway, J R Stewart
Feature
Gressman. Long,
Walla ams, Johnston, Allison. Sauder,
Ca . . trnc= Dayton. Brewer. Stewart
Late Models
F&gt;rst heat Shannon Roese. Skap
Wanerman Larry Bond, C"rt Co le·
man
Second heat M1ke Watson . Greg
Stevens. Jon Osman. Mo Beeler
Third heat Paul Coyan Audae
Swanz. Scott Edm"ten, Bob Katchen
Fe"ture Larry Bond. Skap WatMake Wilson, Jon Osman.
Wi.llouglabv. Roese Coleman.
Steve Coons

•

By BOB BAUM
PHOENIX (AP) - The Cmcm
nail Reds know P.tul Konerko c"n
pi"Y The only questaon "where
Konerko proved hiS worth 111
spectacular fa,h aon Sunday ntght an
JUSt h1 s th1rd game smce com rng to
the Red' tram the Lo' Angeles
Dodgers. h1t1rng a two- run home run
1n the nrnth 1nnrng to gl\ e C rnunn.HJ
a 5-1 v1ctory (n er the An zon.1 DJ.lmondb"cks
The towenng blast mer the left ·
field wall came 10 front of dozen' of
l.amaly and fnend s m .1 caty wheae
Konerko was ,, ht gh school star JUSt
four yea rs ago
The v 1L1ory wa' the Red"· seventh
w ij row and I ~t h an t 1 g.amc&lt;
"I've not1u! 111 the nunor lc,tgues
and mJ.Jor leag ues th11t fir,! --tmpresslnm are mlport~nt Ill ba,eh.lll. " he
saH.l ·1 got off to 11 r~.tl b.1U stMl 1n
Los Angele\ "nd they werrn't wallang
to gtve me ,, \ewnd ch.mce Hopelull )'. I can JUS! stall rr ght from the
begrnnrng ht::re "
Kont=rko. \\ llo cdme 1o C rn c mn .111

an the de"! th"t se nt relae,er Jell
Sh"" to the Dodge" . aJ,o homered
an the Reds' 8·0 ' actory mer the D~ol­
mondbac's on S.lluad.a) naght
"He's playmg like he w.mh to
keep a JOb \\ hH.:h ts 111L'e "CnK IIlll.tll
man.agtr JaLk Ml Keon "a'd
Kuner'o played ti N h,l\e Sund.ay
a!Jer st.lrtrng 111 th e &lt;lui lieILl S.ltuJLI.ty
" He' ll prob,ably pl.a y thud lomor·
row," McKeon s.ud "We ' ll gave ham
an "udlllon at .all ot them·
Barry Larkrn tlrove rn 1wn runs
wllh three hal\ mcludang h11 thud
home run 111 1wo games as th~: Reds
won lor the I ~th umc 111 13 g.tnte\
H11 'olo home run aoto the Reds
bullpen an nght ued 11 .11 1 111 the
crghth
The short\ top .thn m.tde ,, d1' mg
stop .at \hort ol Da vad Dclluc~a\
ground b.tll tn the mnth then threw
out the runnel at first He rem.11n'
emballered by the trade of hi\ be't
f11end Shaw .md say' the team\
recenr run 1s ,, testtmony to concentrataon and 'P'"'
I really thank thl\ '' .alc\1 ol the
pl~yeas ch.ar.tcter.' Lu • m '" 'd
'They're t.lkmg gu)" .H\ ·'YI10m us
and were contmumg to do the thmgs
'Ae need tn do 111 order to "111 ..
Anzona st.trler Bn.m Andef\!llt
(6·8) rem.11ned wanle\S 111 ha s home

park desp1te gomg e1ght -p lus mnmgs

mg up a leadoff sangle to pmch ·hat
ter Make Fronk 111 the mnth Ander.
son as 0-5 111 mne starts at Bank One
Ballpark So what. Andef\on saad
"That home· no wm thmg " a
bunch of g.arb.age." Anderson s"ad " I
don't know why that 's \UCh a bag
deal There "re a lot of ga mes 111 the
year There " nothang to at There "
no J•n x on patcher' If there "· they
bener trade me fast "
Andef\on blamed ham,cJf for the
loss, porntmg to the home run to
Larkm and smgle to Frank
"In all of 'pons, the thang th.ll
makes me s1ck the m0~11' r1 guy '" ho
choke' "Andef\on ,,ud. ".md I cer·
tau1ly led '" down th.11 choke path
tonaght ..
Anzon.1 man.1ger Rttt.: k Show.tller
sa ad he we nt to the le lt · handcd
Embree, rather than make the tr.,dataonal move to ,, nght · h,tnder.
becmase he figured McKeon would
h"ve gone to,, pmch·hatter af he had
used a nght · handed relaever McKeon
ms1 sted he h~td no such mtellt1on
John Hudek (~·4) got the wan an
relief ol ' t.lrter Pete Harm,ch
Tony BatiSta broke out of a 2-for·
16 , Jump wath three hal \, mcludang ,,
two-run double ,md a solo home run
but at wasn't enough for the D1"·
mondbacb. who Jo,tthcu founh an
a row and seventh of the1r last e 1g. ht
Bat1s1,1 slartmg

, 11

short -.;top

111

pl.tce ol Jay Bell: hat ,, two out dou·
ble off Reggae Sanders glove deep 111
nght -centt'r fi eld to dnve rn Tr.tv l ~
Lee and Dellucca and tae at .11 ~ mthe
fourth
B.atast.t led off the \Cventh wllh a
home run on,, 1 -~ patch oiT H.arnl\ch
to gtve Allll&gt;n.a '" liN le,ad o l the
three-g.1me senes. 3-2
Notes: Devon Whale JUIIled Bell
on the bench to st.lrt the g.ame
While IS O·for·l7 litellme &lt;ag"ao't
H.arn11eh. Bell IS 6-for·11 wath 12
\tnkeouts
O ncmn.111 thud b,l\c·
m"n Pokey Reese h,ad a 'mgle and
scoreU a run 1n the seco nd mnmg,
then lelt the g.ame wath llghtne" 111
h11 nght hammmg
Through the
thard annmg . AnLona h.ld gone scorele" m ~0 of 1 1 mnmg' 111 the three·
game senes ag,unst the Reds
The
Red' h.tve won seven str.ught ro.td
g.unes for the first lime \I nee 1985
Harnl\ch maght h.tv e pnched has
la't gume for Cmcmn,tla He IS con·
sadered a likely candad.tle to be tr.aded before the Jul y 31 dead! me

He w"s replaced by Embree .after gavLap kadt'f\ Cra\t'll I K Gnnlnn \1 ('r.llt'n Ill
14 Gonion I ~ N J ~un11n RO Q\ Gonion 1M~
S~mntr Q7 8 Lahonlt IlK W Spt"nctr lOll- 1 0~
Elhnn Jill II! S~nct'r Ill !Junnn 114 l :ltl ~~r
dun 1'7 14(1 Skmnt'r 141 Bunnn 1e :! II L1ttlr
112 2 1~ 8 BnJute :!I" Rur1 tm :!17 JOO
~rile' fltlutl ot kad"' Gnrdnn 1 '\~1 Manm
2 ~ 1~ .larrt&gt;!l 2 4~'1 Ma) field 'J. WU R Wallace
2 :\fll B 1ahofllt" :! \U~ T Lahnnlr 2 ! fb Dunnn
~ I ]"' :-;pe~c-r I 9MI Earnhardt I %1

In 1945 , Pete Gray, a one-armed
outfielder fo1 the St Louas Browns,
batted 2 18 m 61 games
Kentucky Se nator " Happy ..
Chandler took over as baseball commtsstoner an 1945.

ACS TOURNAMENT WINNERS - The follow·
lng team won Thursday's American Cancer
Society Golf Scramble held at the Meigs County Golf Course. Members of the team, which fin·
lshed with a score of 11 under
are (L-R) Josh

Price, Bruce Teaford, Ron Jackson, Sue Burnett
and Pete Rademacher. Rademacher, a 1956
Olympic gold medal heavyweight boxer, Is the
Ohio director of the American Cancer Society
golf tournaments.

lshed In sec- three hole playoff to wm the runner-up honors.
ond place w1th a score of 10 under par In Thurs- From left to right are Chris Stout, Todd Powell,
day's Cancer Golf Scramble. The team won a Joe Liberatore and Bob Miller.
--(C_o_nl.,-lllU-ed-;-f;:-ro-m""'P.-,g-e4"")_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Meigs splits DH...
wat h the wmnmg run
Marlin packed up the wm an re li ef
ol Cummg' and Bentley The three
combaned to stnke out lour. w,il k
three and hlltwo b.ttters. whale 'cattcnng I0 hal\
Cumm gs who hat the b"ll h,u J
e.ach tame ~ap. went four lor live wath
.t patrol doubles and a paar of smgles
Bentley .added th ree sangles Rou sh
""d Nom' e"ch had a do uble .md "
,mgle M.trtlll had a pa&gt;r of sangles.
and Whattekmd added a ' an gle
Make Carlasle packed up the lo\S,
an relief of Make Hagley and Rusty
Hane' The three gave up 14 hat s.
w"lked five and st ruck out 'even
Baucher had three \Ingles lor L.an·
cas ter C"rhsle and Soll ee .tdded a

Mtkc H.1g ley Ru, ty Hme' !4).
paar of \Ingles e.tc h
M
1ke
C.ul 1\le (L 7) .md Jo,h Mulroy
Meag' wall ho't Galla polls today"'
Ad.un
Cu1m ng.., J~:rem1.th Rt:ntley
6 p m .. md Ihen wall pl.ay Glouster ,\1
lhl.
P.11
Mallin (W-7) .md D.m1cl
home on Tlll•,doy Ag.unst Glou ,ter
Wlullckllld
Mea g' will lt nllh .t \ Uspended game
th,IIIS taed 5·.dl head ang IIll Othe 10th
ttllll ng w11h the rcgul .11 g.tme to fo l
low
You Don't Need To
l..!!.ni.nJ: totals-first ~ame
Lanc,\,ter
001 · 105 1=10· 10· 1
Be Rich To Start
Mcags
I()() . (11() 0=4· '&gt; · 1
Dun Carson Make C.~r l "te !W· '&gt;)
Investing, But You
and Kern
Need To Start
BcnJI Manuel (L) Ba.au D.l\cn
port (fi) and D.anael Whallcl.and
Investing For A
Ad.un Cumangs ('i)
l..!!.ni.nJ: tol als-second eame
Chance To Be Rich.
L an caster
002 Ior,-1 0= I 0 I 0 1
Mc ags
0 I0·500·41 = 11· 14-6

Call Me For Details!
If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Free!
DIAL

992-7834

~Holzer Clinic ... Kee i

1q

Weslt'rn Cunrt·rcnlt'
Ht'lt•h•n

cr.a...._h.

Time Ill race 1 hoo N ~ nunu tt"''o ~~ '&lt;('tntllh
Marp'tn o( \K"'ory 7 4W -r-con1h
Wtnner s "vcr.t~t ~1)ttd Ill~ 9% n1ph
Caulton nag~ 6 for .W laps
Uad c h;~ngc:oo 17 ;unont: 'tl t.ln" ef\

W!

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ford

40 1Ill Gal) Rr:ul~ rry Chtl«a Al3 l\llllut\
IlK en~ult' fatlurt
4\ t:lbllol\...cSp«d J:~~:l~tln Mt" Ford 14
Cr.i\h
42 t241 Hut Strnllm C'.dt"ru A I ~ Chcvmlet
34 crosh
4 1 t.WI Stt'\(' Gn,sunt GaJ-...kn Ala Chr•no
[t"l :\4 Cl"ol\h

Basketball

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ll~
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believed to have et a new trnck record
for a 25·1ap spnnt mam at K-C Race·
way, claaming an awesome green· tO·
checkered run that garnered ham yet
another K-C wan
Kemenah wasted no tame m
upstagmg pole-salter Gressman 111 hiS
first K·C 410 run, Greg Wal son.the
outSide pole man and Jammy Simson.
has second row starttng mate Keme·
nah then put the
Jammy
Harble!U nderground Uta hiles# 15 on
the hagh Side and never lifted 111 a run
that s.aw ham lap all. but the first sev·

RedS tally 53 Wl•n
~;~nsecondsover teammate M.trk over Diamondbacks

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~1 111110. "'' I II (

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~h7

1.7
~K

BY SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
It was a Coors Ltght Open Wheel
mght at K·C Raceway where the 360
spnnlers JOined the full ·blown 410
Super Spn nts and outlaw Late Mod·
els Saturday nt ght
The Challenger 360's spnnt car
mam was won by Phal Gressman.
wha le Chad Kemenah packed up h1&gt;
thard feature wm of the year 111 the
super spnnts and Larry Bond of
Coolvalle packed up hiS first-ever K·
C wm an the Late Models
The Vl&gt;atmg Challenger 360 sene&gt;
put on a great show m thetr firstap·
pearance of the year at the K·C hagh·
banks Mark Long Jumped mto the
mallal lead over pole-satter Jammy
Johnston . Long was quackly chal·
lenged by Phal Gressman 111 the Hoi·
brook 8· H settmg up a race-long attic
that kept the fans mtensely m tune for
the durma11on
Gressman. who has won features
m Oklahoma and Tennessee already
thiS season. challenged for the top
spot throughout the first 20 laps, but
long drove a quack. steady lane to
repel Gressman's efforts Fmally.
Gressman made a bonzat move m the
thard tum to take the lead on the 21 &gt;1
lap Long challenged to regam the top
spot but could not get past the h1gh
nyang Gressman
Jeff Wtlhams fimshed a strong
thard. ahead of Johnston. tenth place
starter Tam Allison. Kyle Sauder and
15th place Bryan Castme. who made
the tnp from Colorado Sprmgs. Colorado Jam Dayton wa.&lt; eaghth. Kurt
Brewer nmth and J R Stewart tenth
Heats were won by Gressman.
Dayton and John ston
Fremont's Chad Kemenah IS

racethewayhehadayearearher
when he won by 5.372 seconds Thas
tame. hts margm of 'actory was

~J
~I

NL leaders

I umJ.!ht ' ~ ).!ames

(\ 1 VI I AND ! 2 ~ \ 11111'" ' 1' 1
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lt. ' ' '

By DICK BRINSTER
LOUDON , N H (AP) - Jeff
Burton, who had expressed a defanate
hkmg for New Hampshire lnterna·
taonal Speedway, proved 11 was more
than tdle talk wnh an easy vactory
Sunday 111 defense of has JaOy Lube
300 tatle
Bunon led 191 of 300 laps 111 a
Ford to wm for the llrstllme thiS sea·
son and fourth m has Wmston Cup
career. After startmg fifth, he took the
lead on lap 80 and dommated the race
from that pomt
" If I had to pack " favonte. tl
would be nght up there: Burton had
saad before the race when asked
about the I 058·male oval. where he
got the second of has three vactoraes
111 h1&gt; breakthrough 1997 season
" We had awesome race car, .. he
saad " But we had to work on at ..
By the halfway mark. the 31·year·
old Vargmaan w"s dommatmg the

h II h i Juho Andrt"lll l n~lt.III IJ"' 'h ' f'l.mu a~.: 1111
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Hosts shut out Brazil 3-0

By BARRY WILNER
SA INT DI:-'IS h lllce 1 \P &gt; Nearl y 70 yeo" Jtter ,, I rcllchm.ln
created th~ World Cur tw. 1 nunlr\
men finally m~o n n
V1 ve IJ Fr,tnLe dl.ttnptnn" ol

-·

DON TATE
MOTORS

Karl Kehler III, CPA
Investment and Tax Consultant
740·992· 7270
offered through H D Vesl
Investment Securt iiCS Inc Advtsory
Scrv 1ccs offertd !h roug h H 0 Vest
Secunlies

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the Promise!

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75038 (972) 870 6000

�..

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..

•

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. ...

•

•
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 13, 1998 . . :

Looming veto fight sets stage for fall election

Monday, July 13, 1998

...
...

..

GaiUpolls
&amp; VIcinity
AU, YIIIISIIIIIIUII

Residential &amp; ·Mobile Home ·
Air C01~ditioners &amp; Heal Pumps

'!'4!!:/!!!

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)
-Chrysler Corp.'s earnings more
than doubled in the second quarter
from a year ago. when the nation's
third biggesi domestic carmaker
wa.'i hurt by a strike al an engine
plant.
The results announced today
beat Wall Street expectations.
Chrysler continues to benefit
from money-making truck and
minivan sales even a.~ it offers big
incentives.
The automaker earned $1.003
billion, or $1.51 a share, in the
three months ended June 30 compared with $483 million, or 70
cents a share, a year earlier.
The avemge estimate of 16 analysts surveyed last week by First
CalrCorp. was $1.41 a share.
Sales rose to $17 billion in the
latest.juarter from $14.4 billion a
year earlier.
The company's combined U.S.
and Canadian car and truck sales
were 723,318 for the quarter. compared with 702.210 a year earlier.
Chrysler spent an avemge of
$1,485 on incentives for each vehicle sold in the quaner, compared
with $980 in the same period last
year.
The resu Its a year ago were
affected by a month-long strike at
an engine plant that cost the company $438 million.
So far this year, Chrysler earned
$2.055 billion, or $3.12 per .share,
compared with $1.5 billion. or
$2.17 a share, in 1997.
Sales for the fiN half totaled
$33.8 billion. up II percent from$30.5 billion in 1997.
For the first half of 1998.
Chrysler sold 1.30 1,618 cars and
trucks. an 8 percent increase over
last year.Truck sales. incl~ding
spon utility vehicles and mtmvans,
were up 16.4 percent for the first
half of the year. and accounted for
70 percent of the vehicles Chrysler
sold .
In a statement. Chrysler Chairman Roben Eaton expressed satisfaction with the earnings. "The
competitive environment got
tougher in the quarter. hetghtened
bv an aggressive coupon 1ncent1ve
b~ttle.

but breakthrough products
helped us considerably.'' he said.

ments GM ha.' declined to make at
lion to $80 million a day will begin beginning immediately."
the Flint Metal Center stamping
piling up again today.
He did not elaborate.
At a news conference Sunday.
Shoemaker declined to criticize plant.
The UAW has alleged that GM
Knechtel said the company would Knechtel's decision. But both men
"intensify our scrutiny" of ways to said they were disappointed that reneged on a promise to invest millions of dollars into the plant's engine
conserve money, including taking a talks had not gone bener.
"There's enough disappointment cradle operations. GM Sl!YS the union
closer look at planned capital investments. GM has hinted before that the around here for everybody to have a needs to change work rules that
strikes may force it to move up plans piece of it - it comes in buckets allow workers in those operations to
quit work early once they reach a cer,
to eliminate slow-selling vehicle lines full." Shoemaker said.
Knechtel said GM management tain daily production quota.
and close some plants.
In Indianapolis. where GM and
He also said the company would was "very disappointed given the
continue to pursue its grievance deva.~tating impact that this work the UAW have. been trying to senle
alleging that the strikes are illegal stoppage has on our people and on local contmct disputes at a stamping
under the UAW contract. The union the company - and it's for bad rea- plant. workers Sunday voted tcr •
has rejected the grievance, but it can sons. It's for reasons involving authorize union leaders to call a
"'"
be appealed.
demands to put investment into a strike, if necessary.
The UAW has said it may call
"We're going to pursue these and noncompetitive· business. And the
strikes at Indianapolis and at two
many other avenues to bring a con- company is not going to do that. ..
clusion to these work stoppages, ..
Knechtel blamed the UAW for brake plants in Dayton. Ohio, once
Knechtel said. ''And we're going to what he described as its unwilling- the Flint strikes are senled.
tum our attention to those avenues ness to compromise over invest-

lawyer who represented the wife of
the first killer, told the Contra Costa
Times. "July II. Antioch. I looked at
that today and I said, 'Deja vu all
over again."'
The latest tragedy unfolded late
Saturday night. 42 hours after
Ramirez. 22, forced his way into the
home of ex-girlfriend Cami Viramontes and took his two daughters
hostage.
Viramontes, the mother of the two
girls. and her parents were forced out
of the home. Ramirez shot and
wounded herfather.
During the nearly two-day ordeal.
police constantly talked with Ramirez
by telephone. Friends outside held a
banner that read: "Carlos. we love
you."
Then suddenly. negotiations went
sour.
Police said Ramirez cried out:

"What is wrong with me'?" Then,
"Oh, my God. I love you," followed
by the countdown. "5. 4, 3. 2 ... "
Shonly thereafter negotiators
heard what they 11elieved wa.• a gunshot. pol.ice Lt. Rich Marchoke said
early Sunday. Police were unable to
reestablish contact with Ramirez.
In a bedroom of the house in a
pleasant. older neighborhood of wellkept single family homes shaded by
trees. they found Ramirez and his
younger daughter already dead. His
older daughter, still showing some
signsoflife,diedenroutetothehospi tal.
Almost 100 officers, many in
black SWAT gear with sniper ·rines.
sutroundcd the home. prepared to
wail Ramirez out.
"It's a very tragic event. a type of
situation I don't think anybody ever
2ets used to." said Antioch Police

Famed JFK assassination film now a.vailable to public
DALLAS (AP) - Thirty-five
years ago. a dressmaker with venigo
climbed a wall so he could get a clear
vantage point to film President
Kennedy's motorcade through downtown Dallas.
When Abmham Zapruder aimed
the telephoto lens of his Bell &amp; Howell home movie camera. he hoped to
capture something to show his grandchildren. Instead. he gave the nation
a visceral close-up of one of its most
horrific moments.
For years. conspiracy theorists
have played and replayed bootleg
copies of Zapruder's 26-second tllm

of Kennedy's assassination. Starting
today. anyone can buy a digitally
enhanced videotape for $19.98 at a
local video store and watch the murder at home.
So(Jle suggest Zapruder's family
and the video producer are trying to
protit from the crime. But the family wants the film to be available to
historians and others who frequently
request access. and they also hope to
recoup the estimated $350.000 cost of
enhancing and preserving the film,
said James Silverberg. the family
attorney.
The 45-minute video, called

He!P You

"Image of an As.~assination: A New
Look at the Zapruder Film, .. con~ists

~ In Just 10 Minutes

Public Notice

PUBUCNOTICE
Rural Community
Aaalatenco Program
PROBLEM STATEMENTSCOPE OF SERVICES
Program Year 1997-1998
Community: VIllage of
Pomeroy, Melgo County, OH
Problem Statement:
Ellenolon ol water tinea,
Ptaa11nt Ridge, and Improvement ol water service
lor Sallabury.
Scope ol Servlcaa: (Work
Plan Objecllvea, by Quaner)
Quener One: USDA/RD
preepptlcatlon.
(7) 13, 20, 2tc

ol Services over an
eotebtlahad time lrame. The
oblectlvos beyond the first
quaner may change with
community naodo and
project progreaa.
t am aware that RCAP
service Is provided from
ltderel Iunde through the
regional Great Leku Rural

members thereto concurr·

lng:
THAT the Clerk/Treasurer
of the Vlllage ol Pomeroy,

There's Three Ways We Can Help
We provick non..,nvulvc , completely painless Krttnlnl• for vucular di~aae u.. n11hr
moll advanced Ultruound and Doppler technokley The acrccnlnga will quickly dctccr
artcrial abnormalltitl which can cause lrrcaular blood fbw We offtr th~c Kpinlc ICIII

: Carotid Vascular Test

'JJ
This test scans the Carotid aiU:I'
1cs In lite neek for plaque buildup 75% of all .bOI(~ irr llnkm

Carolld artery bloc~

·~· Abdo..Unal Aortic

·'

Aneurysm Test '.JJ

•

::1

Ankle Brachial
Index Test

'JJ

This testa for the existence of

ThiS test screens for Periplienl
an aneurysm In the abdominal Artertal Disease (ploque build-up)
aorta.The vast majority of pro- In the lower ClC!ttmlllcs which
pie who ha.., Ill aneurysm ha.., can be linkm to coronary artery
diseue.
nosym~.

.. Ulc ~ _ . ,
'
dtt nadon'•lcadlna provider of nonli19•..,.. health Krtmlna. Our miNkHIIJ ro
you wiCb cfftdJvc 111d dfotdt.blc
"'"'~ d!t moor """"'«d •q•lpWe.._ want to rtplact
I""" l&gt;oaol•lll Ot' phyllclln In any way. It Ia
wtatam dodort by pi'OI'tdint

locr-lnp

1•• •-•'*'·

can hdp avoid a ..-e •
d _ ...,.... .,._.._,

Life Line Screening
Scanning For Life

1um

MGO lweetValley Drlw
Clewlaall, Ohio "12'
(l14t) , . •••" .

Aaaiatance

Program and that there will
be no charge to the
community lor RCAP
aervlces. I understand that

all RCAP activities wilt be
conducted under the
auspices olthe Ohio RCAP,
on behatl of the Great Lakes

of

ance Program.
Enrollment requested by:
John Anderson

Community Contact Person

Ralph Menlinsek
RCAP Field Agent
(7) 13, 20, 2tc
Public Notice

Parcel ldontlllcatlon
Public Notice
. number: 17-CJ0660.001. and
C81t Number 98-CV-G61, thet the re•pectlva claim or
and 11 pending In tho Court the Delendanta to 1atd real
of Common Plaae, Melg• eatate bo quieted against..
County, Ohto.
aald Dalendanta, and ln.
The object of the favor ol the Plalntllla,~
Complaint Ia to Quiet Tme Blaine E. C~rpenter anct ..
to and agatnat real eatata Dixie L Carpenter, and that
described aa lottowa: the Defendant• be enjolnad·
Situated In Section 18, T. 7, from aeaartlng any claim fp
A. 14, Scipio Township, oeld real eatato, and tor
Metga County, Ohto, and ouch. other retial oa the
baing more particularly Court deama luet and .
deocrtbed 11lollowa:
equitable.
Beginning at a point In
You are raqulrad to
County Road 48, aatd point anawer the Complaint.
being North, 1650 leal and within twanly·elght (28)
(;eat, 1200 leal, more or daya altar the lalt
leaa, !rom the South·wesf publication or thta notlct
corner or the North·weat which notice witt be ·
Quortor ol Section 18, published once aach weak:
thence, leaving aald road, lor elx consecutive weak•
South 77 dagraee 20 The laat publication will be
Mlnutoa 50 Seconds Weal, mode on Auguot 17, 1998,
173.56 lett to on Iron ptn and tho twenty-eight (26)
aet, paoatng an Iron pin aet dayo lor en ower win
at 19.64 leal; thonce, South commence on that date.
89 Degrees 17 mlnutea 56 The anowor muet be Iliad
Seconds Wast, 216.34 leet with the Clark ol Court,
to a point tn the canter ol a Coun ol Common Ptaaa,
creek, palling an Iron pin Melga County, Ohio.
at 207.62 I eat; thence, with
In caeo of your failure to
aald crnk North 14 Dagreea anawer or otherwllt
30 Minutes 13 Seconda reapond •• required by law,
Weal, 314.891eet to a point; the Ohio Rulli ol Civil
thence, Nonh 10 Degreeo 55 Procedure, judgment by
Mlnutea 53 Secondo Weal, 1 . default wilt be rendered
219.82 laet to a point; agalnat you lor tho roller
thence, Nonh 12 Dagreea 41 demanded In the Complaint
Mtnutee 10 Seconds Weal,
Witness my hand end Mol
118.81 root to 8 point; oloaldCoun,thte10dayol
thence, leaving the creek,
July, 1998,
South 89 Degroae 58
Larry E. Spencor, Clerk
Mtnutaa 28 Seconds Eaat,
Court ol Common Plass
291.03 leal to e point In
Melga County, Ohto
County Road 48, paaalng an
By: Marle,.. Harrtaon
Iron pin aat at 261.03 feet;
Deputy Clerll· ;: ~
thence, with aald road, (7) 13, 20, 27, (8) 3, 10, 17 6
South 44 Dagre.. 45 tc
:~
lllnutu 47 Saconda Eaat, -~-,----- · .
17.371ut to 1 point; lhtnce,
Public Notice
South 23 Degroat 311
lltnutoa 38 Secondo Eaat;
RESOLUTION 7.98
&amp;9.081Htto a point; lhtnce,
WHEREAS, the VIllage. ol
South 18 Dlgrtta 55 Pomeroy doclareo a ponton'
Mlnutll oe Seconds Eall, of Spring
en
180.22 feet to 1 point; emergency due to
thenca, South 14 DegrHI or • hill onto tho
25 Mlnutea 03 Second• making It
Eaat. 114.82 IHt to 1 point;
1 haurd to
thence, South 27 Degrees creating
II thlt lrtl
.
22 Mlnutaa 34 Secondo
THEREFORE,
tho
Eaat. 1111.08 r..t to 1 point; · ol· Pomeroy wlohaa
thence; South 22 oaoreea Administrator
, t!'
00 lllnutea Eatt,
feet
-'i
grtnt
monlu
to
.,.
''..;
to the point ol fliOinnlng lhlllrtl.
and oonlllnlng·s .oo.
REFERENCE: DeiCI VOlume PASSED JULYS. 1tlle
Fr.nlcA.
;~
320, Page 715, and Official
Johnlluapr,
Recorda Volume 2, liege
Kllhy
. I•
46:1, Meta• County Clel'k·,Hv"''•
._._
Recordera OHica, llelga.

$40,000.00 (Forth ThouIN THE COURT OF
Sind) dollars !rom the
COMMON PLEAS
General Fund to tho Stroot
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Fund for the operation ol
Blaine E. Carpenter, et at
cumntaxpenaea.
Thle reooluUon le deemed Plalntllfa
an emergency duo to tack ol \18.
funda
for
current Chlrtotto Ruvea, II tlvlng,
realdanco unknown
operation a.
end
PASSED JULY 6, 1998
Unknown
Heirs,
Frank A. Veughen, Mayor Tho
l.agatua,
Deviates,
John Muaaer, Preaident
Succeaoort,
Aaalgna,
Kathy Hyllll,
Extcutore,
Admlntllrato"
Clerk-Troeeuror
and t.agat Repreoentotlveo
(7) 13, 20, 2tC
ol Chertott, RHYH
Delandanta
Public Notice
Caoe No. 98-CV-otl1
. Judge Crow
RESOLUTION 9.98
Notice by Publication
Rural
Community TO: Chtrlolll R"v11, II
Aoelatonco Program
living, reoldence unknown
COMMUNITY ENROLLMENT The
Unknown
Hetre,
REQUEST
lagiiHI,
Devi-l,
Program Year 1997-1998
Succeaaora,
Alllgne,
On behalf ol tho Extcutore, Admtnlatralore
community ol Village of end t.agal Rept~~tnlltlvoa
Pomeroy, Molge County, of Charlotte R Ohio, I, John Andar1on, the
You are hertby notlfled
community contoct peraon that you have been n1111td
liking reaponolbitlty lor tho 11 Delendanta tn 1 lagat
project, request enrot11111nt action entitled Blaine E.
In the Ohio Rural Com· Carpenter and Dixie L.
munlty Aaallllnce Program Cerpentar v. Chorlotta
(OH RCAP).
If living, ,..ldence
OH RCAP Flald Agent, unknown, •nd The
Rllpllllentlllllll and I have Unknown Halra, Lagiten,
. reviewed tho community Devl111t, Succeaaora,
problem to be addreHtd. Alllgno, Executora,
We dltcuaaed potantlel Admlnlallltort and Lagal
of
RCAP llelatanee and Rtpr.lltntltiYII
agreed to I COUIV oiiCiton Charlotte RltVII. Thll
IIW ldentlflel RCAP Scope aotlon .... been llllgntd County, Ohio.

R-•·

'=:::;which

I.

the

Community

Rural Community Assist-

RESOLUTION 8.98
BE IT RESOLVED by the
VIllage of Pomeroy, All

transfer

SII'Okr ., ,\n:.,.;ca 's dlird leodlng kllkr. Ills abo die t1 cause for nursing
home admissions. Unforamaldy, two ouc of direr pco~ who suffn a
sli'Ok&lt; show no prior symp.,ms before die a~.

of a 40-minute preamble and six sep- Kennedy 's head exploding when hit
arate showings of President . by a bullet

Public Notice

Public Notice

YOtd a Stroke

tD

Chief Dave Lewis.
in the negotiations just prior to the ·
• It was a different approach than incident," Lewis said. "Suddenly, he
that taken when Joel Souza. 35, changed his demeanor, and we have ..
upset at the breakup of his marriage. no idea why."
The deaths shook the residents of
barricaded himself and his two children inside their house just a half- Antioch. a fast-growing community_
of some 75.01Xl about 50 miles east :
mile from the Viramontes home.
Authorities cut off Souza\ elec- of San Francisco. home to armies of ·
tricity and water. After a nine-hour workers who head daily for the San :
standoff on a scorching summer day, Francisco Bay area or Silicon Valley · ·
they gave Souza to minutes to give to the south.
up. Nine minutes later, he killed his
children and then com mined suicide.
"Why the babies'? It just breaks
The aggressive approach cost the my he an." said Meg Gibson. who · •
city $175.0&lt;Xl in a senlement with just moved into the neighborhood ·~
Souza's widow. Officers don't know over the Founh of July weekend. a.' · .
why the waiting game failed with she attached a wooden yellow ribbon . ~
Ramirez. who had been wanted on to her garage door.
·
. ·· ,
three separate warrants. including a
"This could happen anywhere."
1995 gang-related killing.
said Mary Bennett. wiping tears from.
"To my knowledge. there were no her eyes with a tissue. "You just don~ t .
specific problems that were occurring know what makes people snap."

1,...

.

(7) 13, 20, 2tc

•

Air Conditioners lis Low As
Heat Pumps As Low As

Futuro Olteount)
The Applicmce Man
"Need repair on any
make?"

(Cut Out for

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

128 a month

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

'38 a month

*Free 5 Parts Warranty

Call740·843·5426

*Free Digital Thermostat

• Rangaa
• Relrlgerator1
·Dryer
• Hot Water Heater
• Fretzera
• Dlahweahera
Call Ken Young
(740) 985-3551

1141111 mo.

First Three days
FREE POPCORN AND BALLOONS
Opening July 1st.
THEALMbST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and used
We Buy-Sell and nrade

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;COOLING
"WI1ere Qunlity Doesu't Cost More"
.740-446·9416. 1-800-872-5967

I SAYRE
,TRUCKING

.,

••

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
UmeS!one &amp; Gravel
· Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
· Joe N. Sayre
614-742·2138

NOTICE OF BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Colum~us, Ohio
Olftce of Contracts
Legal Copy Number: 980527
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Date: 0610211998
Sealed proposals will be
from

all

pre·

qualified bidders at the
Olflca of Contracts ol the
Ohio Department of Trensponallon, Columbus, Ohio,
unlll10:00 a.m.
Wednoeday, July 22, 1998
for Improving aectlone
ATH-50-2.816 and Various,
U.S. Route 50, State Routes
32, 550 and 7 In the Village
ol Albany, Athens and Meigs
Counties, Ohio, In accordance

I

with

plana

end

specifications by resurfacIng with micro surfacing.
"'The date set lor
completion of this work
shall be as set forth In tho
bid.ding proposal." Plans
and Specifications are on
file ' In the Depanmont of
Transportation.

JERRYW!IAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION

(7) 6,

992-7943 ·
7131981 mo.
J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
~
• Vinyl Sieling • Soffit
• Fascio • Seamless
Gutter • Roofing
• Replacemenl Windows
• Sto~onary Docks
• Blown lllsulatian
• Garages • Dec:ks
24 • 24 Pole Building
slar~ng at $5995
140-992-2n2
Public Notice
once with tho Surface
Tranaportatlon Uniform
Relocation Aaaletance Act
ot 1987, end 49 CFR, Pen 23
and qualified to bid wllh
ODOT under Chapter 5525
or the O.R.C.
"The date set lor
completion ol thlo work
shall be as oat ronh In the
bidding proposal." Plans
and Specifications ar.e on
file In tho Department ol
Transportation.
.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(7) 13, 20, 2tc

13, 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

::-:--:-:--:-=-Help Wanted

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
l0/2!!186/1111

ROBERT. BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repairs
e Coatings
e Siding

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
Alter 6 p.m.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; ComparB
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

Free Estimates

(740) 985-4180

Free Estimates
8(191'98 1 pd.

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

"Huge lnwentery"
*Roof Coatings
*Vinyl Skirting
*Water Heaters
*Doors/Windows
*Eiectrlc/Piumbln!i
Supplies ·
*Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps

12/18/lln

Discount Prices

Bennetf Supply

7 40-698·9114

Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy. OH 45769

·Heat pump
·lnstalla1ion &amp; serv 1ce

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP

$25 service cal l

740-698·7231

Candle Making
Supplies
•Wax •Scent •Etc.
Refills
Variety of Gifts.
Open Tuto.·Frl. 10 em-6 pm

992-2735

Sat. 10 am.41 pm

P/8 Conlradors, Inc.

CRAFTY LADIES
SHOP
Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items

Cloeed Sun. &amp; Mon.

SR 124, Mlneravute, OH

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
·Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential

740-992-4559

"A..

299 Third Street
Racine, Ohio

m

Brian Morrison
(7 40) 985-3948
&amp;112/1 mo. pd

Owner: John Dean

~~~~~~~fl;!~~~fp
*IULY SPE(:IALS *
•River Run Dog Food ........ $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ........ $9.75100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed ..... $10.25100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Life Data
Hours: M·F 8-5:30; Sat. B-12:00 Noon

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at
6:00.
Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
5 pm-11:30 pm
Weekdays
Sundays 3 pm-10 pm
.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FR.EE .ESTIMATES

Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Top Soil,

740•742•3411

''Your One Stop
.
(;omputer Shop''
Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.
INTERNET SIGN·UP POINT
POMEROY, OH
74()..gg2·1135
8/111,911 1 mo.

9" Rib Pattern
$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per sq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths

Roofing

Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
.
Southern Yel!ow Pine Construction
Custom Engineering

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wllaon
(614) 992-42n

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
74():.985-3813
4" tbru 48" plastic culvert In stock ·
PUll line of wlter storage.tanks·
Septic a Cistern 'rnnks
Wnter line- 100' thru.1000' Rolla
Sawer Pipe- 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulltors
Open:
t :Q0-4;30 WHkday•
t:CJ0.12:DO Saturday

A

• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second

Avenue. GaU!IO!is. 740-446-21142

Antiques, top prices pa•d . Ri...erine Antiques, Pomeroy, OhiO ,

Russ Moore owner. 740-992·

2526.

Antiques &amp; clean used furnllure.
witt buy one piece or complete
household , Osby Martm . 740-

992-6576.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastem Averue, Gall~is.

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas ! Sh trley
SpelliS, 30H7S. 1429.
APPALACHIAN COMMUNITY
VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION, HOSPICE AND HEALTH
SERVICES, INC. now turing
Home Care Aides for fu ll-time and
part-tune posittons. Qualifications
included rugh scnoot graduate or
equivalent, reliable transportation.
upertence in home care preferred. Benefits available with opportunity for advancement Applications avatlable at 280 E. State

ADOPTION:
Fresh baked foods. religion,
quality lime and a solid life await
healthy newborn . We are devol·
ed. honest. couple looking lor 10
parenting . legal/confidential.
Call Gina and Anthony toll-free 1·

888-891·1022.

30 Announcements

40

Giveaway

3yr old H1ma tayan cat. not good
with kids. neutered . 304-675·

4585.

All Black Puppy very Cute . Small.
cnesttire 740..367·7661
Black and Whtle Calico litter
Trained. Phone 740-256·6780
Fireplace coaltwood burner 1n·
sert. 304· 773-5878 .

Free To Good Home · 10 Week

Old Beag~ Puppies . 1sl
Wormed. 740·367.0429.

Avon Representatives Needed .
GallipOliS Area Benefits:
•Earn Up To 50% On Sales
•Work From Home
•Special Dtscooots
•Hands On Training
Call Toll -Free 24 Hours. 1·888·

2BH875.

Personals

ShoiS &amp;

Friendly Kinens. Liller Trained . To
Good Home Only! 740-446-9552.
740-446-3B9J
Gas lurnace tree tor haultng . 304·

675·2117.
Old Washer and Dryer Sltlt

Works .740.256.&amp;119

Part
Chow : pari
German
Shephard tan dog, male . t 2wks .
" Old. 304·67:;.5903.

60 Lost and Found
4 Mo. Old Tan labrador Retriever
Lost near Pleasany Valley Ad. Rio
Grande Call After 5.00P.M.740 ·

245-9595

Found Ferret!
Leave Message.

:::::::::::::::=::::~·
~

CELLULAR PHONES l

614-992-5419

Remodeling
Plumbing

"Bullll rour Dream"

985-3301

POMEROY, OH.

005

740-(46· 7154

FOUND : 2 Weimaraner. female &amp;
male .w/purple collars on Rose·
berry Lane in Pt . Pleasant. 304 -

BlUM LUMBER ·

113 W. 2ND ST.

Ma I

Custom Homes

' For uses on Pole Barns, Garage&amp;,

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Free female kitten. to good home.

COMPUTER
PERFORMANCE
~ UPGRADES

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. S1l·
ver And Gold Cams, Proolsets.
Diamonds. Anlique Jewelry, Gold
Rmgs. Pre-t930 U.S. Currency.

Street Alllens, OH. EOE .

740·992·7505.

WBrrE PAII,.ED S,.EEL
ROOftiG AID SIDING

360° Communications

6/5/98lmo.

Wanted to Buy

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1·740·949·2015

Gravel, Sand,

90

Wanted To Buy . Junk Auto's Any

CALL

Limestone,

Wedemeyer's Auct1on Serv1ce.
GaU!iO!iS, 01&gt;0 740·379·2720

Conditioo. 740-44&amp;.9853

·•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

WICKS
HAULING

773-5785 Of :104-77J.5447 .

wrecked or salvaged vehtcles .

BACKHOE AND
DOZER SERVICE

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

Rick Pearson Auction Company.
lull lime auctioneer. complete
auct ion
service . licensed
166.0hlo &amp; West 'IJirgima. 304-

304-773-5033.

JIM'S

Free Estimates

Insured

·Room Additions
•New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•lnl!lrlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(F.REE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohto

=:=:=::::======:::=:·

Auction
and Flea Market

80

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts . Buymg

614-992-7643

Roofs • Decks • Garages

CARPENTER SEVICE

Cb.ester

Chester

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

YOUNG'S

St. Rt. 248

day before the 1d Is to run,
Sundey I Monday tdlllonHlOpm Friday.

Sterling, Etc AcquiSitions Jewelry

985-33831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Saltl llult 8t Peld In
Advance. O.dllne: 1:OOpm the

Free Estimates

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

Call for Quote Today

lYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS
PRODUCE
Tomato Pickers &amp; Experienced
Packers needed.
· Minimum Wage
740·843-5280 • 843-1238

••••t ,., 11dle ptrlitt."
et2ti'M 1 mo. pd.

Free Eslfmalos
No Job Too Small

Open 11 am • 6 pm

Phone 740-992-3987

·,

1391 Safford
School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

conditioning
·Auto air conditioning

~

.r,.

740-448-9416

·Resident1 nl air

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

od~ • 2:00 p.m.
Frlday.lllondty- 10:00 a.m. Stturdly.

/fA
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
· ~~no.
· 111'1; Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~
Commercial &amp; Residential
;...
.
&amp;
ed ii.·~l
27 yrs. exp.
Ucensed lnsur

PARTS

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

CARPET
PLUS

INcltybeloraiNICI

. 1110 "'"· 5unclly

t,

C; JD CONSfRUCftON

MOBILE HOME

Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
(614) 992·3838

" ". . Hn

ftf;t~~~f.t~~f;tft~~

Sunday Calls)

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

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

012311 mo.

WANTED: RESPITE WORKERS
-needed to work with individuals with
." :developmental disabilities In your
• own home in the Gallia and Meigs
Counties areas. Hours are scheduled
)s needed; overnight hours may be
,. required. If interested, contact
' ;christy at 1·800·531·2302. Starting
salary: $5.25/hour.
•'
Equal opportunity employer.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt' Sand

6'111118 rtn

PUBLIC NOTICE
Separate; sealed pro·
Columbua, Ohio
poaale wilt be received at
Olflca ol Contracts
the olflce of the Tre0aurer
Legal Copy Number: 980547· ol the Board ol Education ol
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Southern Local School
" · Matting Date:
Dtatrlct, Racine, Ohio,
'· ' ' ER-OOOON(165)
Melgo County, unlit 12:00
1Sealed proposals will be
o'clock no11n, August 10,
a~eptod !rom all pre1998. For Bue Chaaals and
quilllted bidders at the Bodlea. Copies ol the
~\ce ol Contracts of the
Instruco Department ol Trano- SPECIFICATIONS,
tion to bidders, and
atlon, Columbus, Ohio, proposals lorms may be
t 10:00 a.m.
proposed at the oHica olthe
edneodey,
Treasurer, DeMie E. Hilt.
'1loiguat 05, 1998
·
Said Boord of Education
FbR IMPFIOVING SECTION reserves the right to reject
M'EG-124·73.6~0, STATE
any and all, or pano ol any
RbiJTE 124 IN LEBANON and an btdo.
TOWNSHIP, MEIGS COUN·
.By order of Board of
TY, OHIO, IN ACCORDANCE Education ol Southern
WO:H PLANS AND . SPECI- Local School District,
FICATIONS BY REPAIRING Dennie E. Hill, Treaeurer.
A.. SLIDE AREA BY
Dennie E. Hill
D~AIINING AND PAVING
S.L.S.D.
WJTH ASPHALT CONDennie E. Hill
CR~E.
Treasurer
:fllddlng on this project Ia
P.O. Box 176
res\flcted _to Disadvantaged
Racine, Ohio 4Sn1
Bllolneos Enterpnseo cert- (7) 13, 20, 27, 3tc
llted as DBE's In accord- ·

11 0

DUMP TRUCK

or
Public· Notice

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

·. TRUCKING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

I

Public Notice

accepted

STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
Backhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,
New Construction,.
Remodeling

llePoldlnMvlncl.
Df!N IHf· 2:00p.m.

Howard L. Wrltesel

Re L. HOLLON

Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last.
Come in and see us at
202 East Main St.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
992·1074

JO···~'-

• W11hera

*Free Estimates

Murder-suicide was 'deju vu all over again'
By WILUAM SCHIFFMANN
Associated Press Writer
ANTIOCH. Calif. - Five years
ago. after a distraught father held his
two kids at gunpoint for nine hours,
police gave him 10 minutes to surrender. With one minute to go. he
killed himself. his 8-year-old son and
his 5-year-old daughter.
So late last week. when another
distmught man took his two young
daughters hostage less than a mile
away from the 1993 slayings, police
sought to avoid a second tragedy,
choosing to wait in hopes that the
father would eventually surrender.
But the end wa.• the same.
Carlos Joseph Ramirez shot his 1year..old and 3-year-old girls to death
before turning the gun on himselfon the fifth anniversary of the other
murder-suicide.
:·11 is too eerie ... Joe Appel, a

Lorta·s
.COrtSTROOIOrt

"Ensy Ot,er tlu! Pl.o11e Bn11k Fi11n11ci11g"

Chrysler Talks stall as GM prepares to reopen plants
doubles
earnings
"It\ clear it's going to go on for
By BRIAN S. AKRE
a while longer." said Shoemaker,
AP Auto Writer
FLINT. Mich.- High-level talks who planned to remain in Flint.
to end two strikes that have crippled
GM had been pushing for a setGeneral Motor.;' Nonh American tlement to coincide with today's end
production have stalled. while the of the company's .two-week summer
world's largest automaker prepared to vacation shutdown. The automaker
reopen three assembly plants today. plans to reopen its Saturn car plant in
GM's chief negotiator. Vice Pres- Tennessee. its truck plant in Oshawa.
ident Gerald Knechtel. returned to Ontario, and a small-car plant in
Detroit late Sunday. .&lt;aying he was Mexico- the only ones unaffected
disappointed that weekend talks had so far by the strike.
.
not resulted in a settlement as he had
GM ·s 26 other major a.~sembly
hoped.
plants in North America will remain
Plant-level talks were to continue closed, along with more than I00
today. Knechtel said he would remain pans plants. In addition to 9.200
available to talk to United Auto .&lt;triking workers, about 162,000 othWorker leaders. but his departure er workers have been idled.
after nearly two weeks of face-toLosses totaled nearly $1.2 billion
face, high-level talks with UAW before the company began ill previVice President Richard Shoemaker ously scheduled vacation shutdown
was a setback.
June 29. Losses of between $75 mil-

Yard Sale

70

: ::.;:
to override Clinton's June 23 veto of legislation imposing mandatory sanc- apponionmcnl in 1792. Congress has overridden I06 times. .
Some Republicans say Clinton might accept some bills he ~ould oth~r-- ;:.
tions on countries or companies ~lling missile technology to Iran. The pres- ·
ident said the measure would hinder his effons to improve relations with Iran. wise veto if weakened enough by allegations that he had an alfa1r wtth Whtte
With few lawmakers eager to be seen as supporting the longtime U.S. ene- House intern Monica Lewinsky and tried to cover it up. And on many issues,
.
my, the House and Senate seem certain to get easily the necessary two-third~ they contend they can lose the vote but win political victories.
Such votes can show most members of Congress "are in tune wtth the
majorities to overturn the veto. The override -which would be the third of
22 bills Clinton has vetoed - could embarrass Clinton, but foreign affairs voters and want to do the right thing," s;.:~ Michele Davis. spokeswoman
rarely inflicts major political damage.
for House Majority Leader Dick Anney, R-Texas. "The only thing stopping.
The following week, the House probably will reverse Clinton's October us is a liberal president. And the follow-on is. elect more Republicans (to
veto of legislation banning a rarely used late-term abortion procedure lhat Congress). and we can get this done next time."
its opponents call "partial-binh abonion." A September vote by the more
Other possible veto fights include bills:
.
moderate Senate is likely to fall short.
• providing fees due the United Nations. money Clinton wants but wnhA fight looms over another Clinton veto, a bill providing 2.000 District out restrictions the bill includes overseas family planning aid:
of Columbia children with vouchers wonh up to $3.200 so they could attend
• trimming taxes on savings used for private school costs;
private schools. The measure pro!&gt;ably will be insened into the 1999 spend• limiting the Pentagon's nexibility for closing military ba.ses; and
ing bill for the capital district's local government this year and probably will
• banning future expon to China of U.S. satellite technology.
provoke another veto.
Veto showdowns also could occur on bills forcing sanctions on countries
Lawmakers would fail on that override attempt. but that's not new. A com- that tolerate religious persecution, requiring parental consent for minors cros.•pilation by Senate librarian Gregory Harness showed presidents have ca.•t ing state lines for abonions and blocking Clinton's plan for national testing
2.536 vetoes since George Washington killed a House of Representatives of studenll.

By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - President Clinton and Republicans are hurtling toward
a flurry of veto fights over abonion, schools and other issues that both hope
will help them win November's battle for congressional control.
The House returns this week from its July 4 reces.~ to join the Senate. which
came back a week ago. With perhaps 40 voting days left this year. Clinton
administration veto threats have been made or are expected against about 40
bills.
Many are aimed at minor legislation. and few vetoes will actually occur.
Most of the bills will be modified or won't be sent to the president But with
each party looking to rouse its ba.se voters. neither will ninch from a few
high-profile veto battles.
"He plays to his constituencies. and we play to ours," said Rep. Bob Livingston. R-La., chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S. D.. called veto fights "a win
for Democrats" and said: "By and large. the president is in a much stronger
position to frame the issues than Republicans are. He has the bigger soapboX. ..
The dueling begins Wednesday. when the House plans a vote on whether

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Caregiver For Elderly Women
~oom. Board . Salary. Reply To :
413 Gravel Hrl l, Cheshire, Ohio

45620.

Centurion Management Group. A
Progressive Long Term Care
Company Is Currently Tak1ng Ap·
phcallons For A Nursing Home
Administrator In The Dayton.
Ohio Area . We Otter Opportunity
For Career D1versiflcat10n And
The Ability To Grow Wtlh One Of
The Mosl Respected Health Care
Provides In The Country We Are
Seeking Challenge -Driven Adminislralors Wtth The Abttlly To
lead By. Example And Ensure
The Highest Standards Of Resident And Patient Care . The Ap·
plicant Must Have An Ohio li cense , Have 3 ·4 Years Experi·
ence . And Have Exce llent People. Financial And Marketmg
Skills. Cent uri on Offers An Exceptional Compensatton Padl:age
II Interested In A Challeng1ng PoSition Se nd Yo ur Resume And
Sa lary ReqUirements To Teresa
Davis . V1ce President 01 Operations At Centurion Management
Group, 3490 Far HillS Ave , Kel ·
taring. OhiQ 45429 .
Cdsmetolog•st Needed Guar·
anteed Salary, Versus Comm1s·
sio n. Pa10 Vacation. Benef1t s.

740.44&amp;.72l;7.

Do what no one elae will do
Cemetery Sales · Take a sa les
posttion no one else wt ll Oller
serv1ce and product no one else
writ . Earn $500-$1000 pe r week
Cemetery sales oflers Job secunty
and IS recess1on proo!. Natronal
corporation w1th average com·
mtsston of $500 PBf sate. set appointments . no credrt turndowns.
pa1d trainmg. majOI" med1cal. and
retirement plan II you are serious
about wanttng a golden opportun·
ity. call Steve Smith, 740·992 ·
7440
ELEMENTARY CURRICULUM
SUPERVISOR beginn1ng the
1998·99 school year lor the
Alhtns -Melgs Educat ronal Service Center. Submit letter ol inter·
est. resume. 3 letters at recommendatio,. copy ol transcript and
current certificate to John Costanzo. Superintendent. 507 Richland Avenue. Suite 108, Athens,

OH

45701

Dy

July 17. 740·593·

675-7121

8001 or 740·992 ·3 883 for more
rntormaton .

FOUND: German Shephard PlJPAI
near Apple Grove, WV. 304·576·

EJpenenced Wartresses &amp; bar·
tenders . Apply in person at
Twisters Sports Grill and Restaurant 107 Academy Drive . Ripley,

2751.
Found: Slate R1 . 218 Male Gold-

en Lab . Very Very Friendly,
Shakes Hands. obedient! 740·

....S-6594
Lost : 2 Male German Shepherds.
Black W1th Tan Trim . Vic inity :
Kygo&lt;, Rewardl7o4Q.388-9436.
tost female Aonweuer, one year
old. just hod ~. Owl Hollow Rd.

vicinity, cal 1o40-6ll7-6729

Yard Sale

70

Galllpolll
VIcinity

a

Glganllc Yard Salt July 13 and
14. Antiques. and Toys, lawn
Moworo, Tools, Etc ... Something
lor Eve&lt;y Body. 1400 Adamtvlllt
Ad.

..

.

Wo/.
Gatlia -Mergs CAA is accep!lng
Preapplications lor temporary laborers to be asstgned primari~ to
Raccoon Creek County Park. Thts
will be primarily outdoor works
such as cutting grass. brush. and
prefor ming other maintenance

worll. 40 hrs. per Week. $5.15 1'9r
HOII.
Applicants must be ag8 18·21,

Gallla County resldtniS. and meet
JTPA Tille liB eligibility roquiremonll.

Preapplicatlons

available

at

GMCAA. 859 Third Ave. Gallipolis, GMACC, 8010 North Slott

Route 7, Cheshire or by c•lllng

(7.0)-446-10181Xll11
Gsillo-llotgs Community Action
Agency Equal Opportunity Em-

pqer

�.

.

••

•

•

•

'

•

' •

-

• f

•

•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, JuJy 131 1998
MOnday, July 13, 1998
•
AtLEYOOP
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALOER
110

Business
Opportunity

Help Wanted

Attention C.rtlllocl Nuralng Aa·
111t1n11 Ravenswood V111age ts
now accepting applicatiOn.S for full

VENDING: Suy Otrect No Ha ssles
You II love Ill Free

time and part tme posttlons Paid

Brochure 80().820-4353

vacallon and holidays II Interest·
ed , please apply m person Mon·
day through Fnday, Qam-4pm or

230

wrne Ann Georg ie Boso, R N

0 0 N , 200 Soulh RIIChle Ave
Ravenswood , WV 26 164, 304
273-9385 EOE . GAnasts/Eider·

care lacilily

310 Homea for Sale

Professional
Service&amp;

liVIngston ' s basement water proofing . au basement repa1rs
dona. free estimates lifetime
guarantee t 2yrs on job expen "'~ 1114-#i7!\-?145

Avoo
$8-$2()/h(,

No Door·lo-Ooor,

Easy Cash , Fun 1·800· 361 ·0466

Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge , 2

ADf&gt;llcallona Now Being Accapl·

bedroom, !amity room. liYilg ream.

ed For liouse 816 Main Streat,
Pt Pteasant, WV 3 Bedrooms, 2
Full Balhs LA. DR. Family Room,
La1ve Kllcllen , laundry Room , No

1 bath , full basement, new gas
furnace, central &amp;If uM, new roof
&amp; easy cleanmg windows ,
screened 1n porch , car port &amp;
storage bUIIdlnQ , very unle mow·
lng , walktn\1 d•stance !rom Foo·
dland &amp; Middlepon Corporalton ,

$27.000, 740-949-2864

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
"Sum- Spoc1al"

lndltJslrep

3br S199/mo

MAKE MAILBOX MILLIONS

onlyii~Homea

Quickly. Eaatly Btg Kit Shows You
How -Start Now! MallboxA 1 3825
Niagara Drive , Lextngton , KY
40517

Manager and mamtenance for
Pomeroy Chlf Apartments Now
accepting resumes , must have
sheriff an d police report. drug

screening required Send resume
to 245 Union Avenue , Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769 04' can 740-992 n 12

NOTICE OF VACANCY
The mason County Board Of Ed·

ucatiOn has a vacancy lor an A.c·
countant Ill/Auditor, CPA l1cense
preferred with buslness/accountmg bad:ground AS400 computer
knowledge IS reqwred TO apply
send resume to George Miller,
Mason County BOE , 307 E1ghth
St Pomt Pleasant , WV 25550

by July 21. 1998
Now hiring safe dmers, good
pay. llextble hours Apply m per500 at Domino's 1n Pt Pleasant
Part Or Full Time Word Processor (WP) Some Recept1on Ma
ture . Respons1ble Self-Directed
Individual Sought Flex•ble Hours
Send Resume To CLA 440 , c/o
Gall1pohs Dally Tnbune , 825 Thud
AY8f"'U9 Gall!poiS, OH 45631
Sales Person Needed Home
Furnishmg Full-T1me lmmed1ate
Open1ng , Apply Lifestyle Furni·
ture. 856 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
1D-2. No Phone Calls Please
State Certified H1g11 Pressure
P1pe Welder 5 Years Expenence
Ttg And St1ck Send Resume To
BrenMar : onstrucl!on Inc , 900
Morton Slleet. Jackson Ohto
45640

STNA'I
Veterans Memonal Hosp•tal SNF
un1t IS lookmg lor canng , dedicated md•v•dual s Apply 1n person at Veterans Memonal Hosp1
tal Human Resources OffiCe
Truck On&gt;o~ers Needed W1th COL

&amp; HazMat For Straight Truck De
livery, Liflmg Requ~red Good
wages . &amp; Benefits Hospttattza I!On. Paid Vacat1on, 40tK , lmmedl8te Start. Send Replies To CLA
441, clo Gall1polls, Oa11y Tnbune,
825 Th1rd Avenue, Galhpohs, OH
45631
Wanted lady Companion To
Lrve-l n Frefl Board No Smoking
No Ormker, C harles Richa rds

740·446·3419
WANTED; RESPITE WORKERS
Needed To WOI'k W1tl'l lndiVIOU·
als W1th Developmental D•sab1ht1es In You r Own Home In The
Gallla And Me1gs County Areas
Hours Are Scheduled As Need·
ed . Overntght Hours May Be Requ!fed II Inte re sted . Contac1

ChnSiy AI 1·800·531·2302 Slarl·
tng Salary $5 25 /Hour Equal Op-

portuftlly EIT'(II&lt;Joier

140

150

Business
Training

Schools
Instruction

LOOKING FOR A JOB . Bul
Shorl On SkillS ? Gam SkillS In
One Year 01 Tram1ng In The
Evenmgs Buckeye H1tls Career
Center Cont inues In 1ts 22nd
Year 01 Operat1on Tra1n In Adult
BaSI C EducatiOn GEO Testmg
S1te . Oll1ce Technology, Weldmg
lndustnal Mamtenance. Peace
Office r 1Correct1ons SUCCESS
Auto Te chnology Alf Condlt1on
1ng &amp; He aling Farm 8US1f't8S S
P lanmn g An aly sis Compute r
Spec1al•st Customer Centered
Heallhcare Techn lc•an (Formerly
Nurse A1de ) MR! DG Pre -Em
ploymenl Tram 1ng And More
C all 740 ·2 • 5- 53 34 For Catalog
And lnlormaHon

180 Wanted To Do
ANYOOOJOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds tr1mmed, mulch
rng flower bed s, landscaping
Sidewal k
edg1ng
mow1ng
etc Free Estimat es Ca ll 8111

304·675-7112
Oressmakmg &amp; Alterations, Shp
cover s &amp; Dr apefles 740 -245 ·

5556 740-245-9561
FurMiture repa11, refinish and res·
1ora00n. a!S() custom orders OhiO
Valley Reflnl sh1ng Sh op, Larry

Phillip$. 740-992-6576
Georgea Portable Sawm tll, don't
haul your logs 10 tl'le mtll Just call

304-675- 1957
Profess.onal Tree Ser\ilce Stump
Removal Fre8 Estl mat est In surance. Bidwell. Ohto 6 14-388-

9848 61 4-367-7010
Will

do night work lor the elderly

E~tper l ence

&amp; references 304 ·

Nltro, WV
304-75H815
12x60 J Bfidroom MObile Home,
Immediate Possesst on, Owne r

All real estate advert•s'ng m
th•s newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fa1r HOUSing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes •t 111egat
to advertise ·any preference
hm•latiOn Of diSCnm•natton
based on race cok&gt;r, rehgiOfl
sex lam•hat status or national
or•g•n or any 1ntent1on to
make any such preference
hml!ahon or d•scnmmal!on •

Translerred. Asking $2.200 740
379-2566
12x60 trader. can be used for offiCe trailer, $3.000 without a1r conditioner, $4,000 With, 7·0·949·

2217
IIIQ 1·888·9211-3426
14x70 3br $999 down , $t98 per
mo lree atr &amp; skirting 1-80()..691 ·

Thts newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
advert•sements tor real estate
whiCh IS 10 V!Oiatton Of fhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised 1n th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportumty bas1s

67n
14x70 Three Bedroom Mobile
Home On 1/2 Acre lot MIL, On
J•m Hill Road, Hedneraon W Va ,

$15.000 Or SeSI Offer. No Land
Contract, 740446-2139 .
16x80 3br. 2 balh S1.325 down

STAT

310 Homes for Sale
1 Bedroom house on North Mam
St Potnt Pleasant , WV S10 000

304-675-5371
Morgan Cnl A111a. 740388·8352
3 Bedroom. C lean, Large Yard,
Double Garage, Near Dam, AI 7,
No Flooding , $45 ,000 , 740-256-

6056
3-4 bedrooms. 1 1/2 bath s, OR ,
new gas furnace central a1r. lull
basement, two-car garage w/posslble apartment, chain link !ence.
good ne1ghborhood , close to
schools and shoppmg, $78 ,900 ,
485 Lmcoln Street , Middleport .
call for appo1ntment . 740·992 ·

9991
3Bedroom 2/bath, full basement ,
1/ 2 acre plus 2 car garage
fenced yard , Camp Conley 304 -

675·2421
3br, 2 lull balhs. UR , LA OR
targe kitchen , fully equipped,
large Ioyer. 2 car atta ched ga
rage GallipoliS Ferry 304-675 ·

1226
50 Acres 2 Year Old' 3 bedroom
House 2 112 Car Garage , Small
Ba r n. Greenhouse &amp; Planl!ng
Supplies 2 M1les From Gallipolis
Locks 011 01 Rt 7, lmmed•ate
Possess1on, S89 .ooo , 740-256-

9350
A Little County ln Town Large
Restored V1c1onan Home Pnvate
Sel ling But W1th1n Walkmg DIS o
tance Of Schools , Churches And
Middleport Busmess Olstru: t
Bnck C1rcutar Dnve W1th 12 Acres Of Land Askmg $149,000 , But
Wtll Consider Any Offer AppOintment Only, 740..992·5696
Attractive one-floor home In Pomeroy Beaut•ful mtenor w1th 2
bedrooms l1vmg room dtnmg
room , bu11t -m kitchen , like new
stove and relngerator, breakfast
nook leatunng corner what -not
shelves . bath . and a ntce sun porch w•th wmdows and screens
provtdnlQ a great view ol the 01'110
Rn1er Carpeted full basement
plastered walls with crown mold·
mg roomy closets w1th full length
mHrored doo rs, sto rm wtndows
and doors fully Insulated 108 le·
g1on Terrace $39 000 Call 740992_5292 after 5 p m
Close To Galhpohs, 3 Bedrooms.
1 Bath , 2 Car Detached Garage

And Ded&lt; 740.446-9664,

~:..:.:=~~.:...:..:...:..:...:.

1·8()().691 ·67n

210

Opportunl1y
INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

1992 Clayton 16'X60', 2 SA, 2
Baths , Garden Tub, New Cprpet ,

&amp; VInyl, Very Good Cone! 740·
3811-8424
1993 14x70 3bf. 2 balh, CIA 304·
4511-2586or 304-4511-1916
1995 Clayton, au electnc. excellent condition, call Tom Anderson ,
740-992·3348 Aher 5pm

3 BR, 2bolha, Home For Aenl 1·
304-736-7295
For sale or rent, 14x60 house
trailer, atr cond1t1on, wBsher and

Qryo&lt;.no-740-ea&amp;-1075.
Help save my credtl, make 2
payments &amp; assume tow monthly
payments Will pay to re locate

Call304·755-7191
Huge 28x80 3BR 1 112 balh
Starling al ONLY $39,999 Many
options avatlable

1· 888· 928·

3426
Large selection ol used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starttng at $2995
Ou1 ck delivery Call 740 -385 -

9621
3BR12BA
Sat Up On Lot Take Over Pymt's,

304·736-7295
New 1Q98 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes sk1rtmg deluu steps
and setup Only $187 08 per
month w1th $1075 down Call 1-

800837·3238
New Bank Repo On~ 3Left , I

304·736-0735

New Doublewtde 3BR , 2 bath
S1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo 1-

888·928·3426
O•kwood Homes Oh1o Valleys
oldest Oakwood means he Lowest Pnces Free Selup &amp; Delrvery
1·304 ·736·3409
$1 ,325 Down . $205 Mo Free air

&amp; lree sk1rllrlQ

1 -~69 1 -6n7

740742·2803

Hou se. 2 Story Duple11. ,
roo m Cottage 13 P1ne
Gallipolis l arge l ot
Appomtment Pnce $96 000

340 Business and
Buildings

446~999

In Mtddlepo rt- new k1 tchen.
cabmets dishwashe r dispo sal ,
Mat pump, three bedrooms bath
and 1/2, call 740-992 3465
Loaded 28x80 3br , 2 112 bath
with all option s o nly $2, 499
down S362 per month Free atr &amp;

st&lt;irl 1·888-691 ·67n
LocatiOn! Crew Ad, close to MHS
contemporary style house I acre
101, 1 112 baths family room Buck
stove , all Jenn -Aue appliances .
2-3 bedroom . garage decks
Trane H P , 740-992-7292 or 304895-3490 before 2 30pm
Lovely Country Ho me On SA 7
South W11h A Breatl'ltak1ng R1ver
VtfM Very PriVate Setttng On 2 11
2 Acres But Only 10 Mi nutes
From Gallipa(•s 3 ·4 Bedrooms, 2
112 Bath s, Hardwoo d Floors 2
Ftreptaces . New Hear Pump , New
K•tchen. Many Extra!i Won't Last

Commercrai -Ofhce or Ratatl 87
M1ll St Mtddleport 1 450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Cor ner BUIIdmg 74099 2- 625() ACQUIS111 0nS (next
door)

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
t 00x1So lot m Galhpol•s Ferry

304-675·1225
Lot lor sale wesl ol Rutland . SR
124 road frontage, restnctiOns
74().742·2148

Po""'""· lour bedroom, SIR, new·

1y docoraled, HUD, no poll, small
yard . patio. deposit. 740 -992-

pori, $100 per monlh, 740·992· bol OEK sysi8mS
3194 or 740-992·3894, 9am~pm
MINT PWS (304)17~.

per monlh, $300 deposh, pay own
UlllllieS, no pelS, 740-992·2381

MERCHANDISE

for Rent
510

Household

2 bedroom mobile home lor rent 1n
Racine, 740-992·5039.

Racine, no poll, 740-992·~
2 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Rent, 8 Miles Out State Route
218, Gallipolis, $175/Mo, Plus

Oeposll , 740·446-8172. 740·
2511-6251
2 Bedroom trailer for rent 304·

675-3834
In Mason 3br trailer, HUO ap-

pr&lt;Mid 304-675-n83
Three beGroom mobile home In
Pomeroy, no pelS, 740-992·~

Trailer For Ren~ 740-4411-1279

lipolis , NO PETS, Waler Paid,
740-388·1100
1 and 2 bedroom aperlmeniS, lu'·
n1shed and unfutntshell, security
deposit required, no pets , 740

992·2216
1 Bedroom. AIC, W/0, Hook-Up,
Near Holzer. S279/Mo . + Utilities
Re~ulred ,

740·

2 Room Furnished EH1c1ency All
Utilities Paid, Share Bath, $1851
Mo, 919 Second Avenue, Gampol~.

740-446-3945

2bdrm apts , total electflc. appliances furnished, laundry room
lld\tttn, c\oM to achocM In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 7.0.992-

3711 EOH

740-992-6542
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 westwood Dnve
!rom $279 to $358 Walk to shop

&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
E~ual Housing ()pporiunlty
Brand New Apt In Rio Grande
Available Aug 1st, All Unltlltles -

Paid Call 740·24!1-5100
Chnsly's Family LMng accepiS
HUD
SPECIAL $100 OFF DEPOSIT
WITH THREE REFERENCES
Chlldre• Welcome
For rent
Middleport- available now, 2 bed·
room apartment with new carpet.
front room 12x15, trash &amp; water
paid, $355 a month plus depoSit
1 year lease
Middleport- ava1lable now, 1 bedroom tra1ler. ntce qu1et lot, South
Second Avenue , $275 a month
plus depos!t, 1 year lease
Pomeroy- lor rent Juty 15th, large
3 bedroom apartment . cable &amp; all
utilities paid, has private back

yard &amp; big porch wllh deck, $650
a month plus deposit, 1 year
lease
Pomeroy - lor rent August first, 2
bedroom apartment, new catpet.
utlll1ie5 4 cable pa1d , French
doors, $499 plus deposit 1 year

leal&amp;
Accept~ng AppbcatiOns Now

Caii74099H514
9-9 Monday thru Sunday &amp; ask
tor Chflsline Martin
GraciOus hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
A•verslde Apartments 1n Middleport From S249-S3 73 Call 740992-5064 Equal Hous•ng Opportunities

l ots on Midway 0m'8 In New Ha·
ven 304-a82 2904

94!1-2499

2566
1 Bedroom . -fufmshed /Unlurntshed, Oownata!fs. Ulii1118S Paid,
No Pets, Parkmg , 6 Month Lease

$I 00 OepoSII . S3001Mo .

Real Estate
Wanted

Ca sh Patd For Land In Geilla
County, Blackburn Realty 740 -

44&amp;-0008

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres.
We Pay Caoh 1-800·213·8385,
Arllhony land Co

RENTAL S

446-3661
Now Taking Appli cations- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo , 740 446-

0006
One bedroom apartmer'll In Mid·

d1aport oil u1HIIIas paid. $100 de·
posll, $270 monlh, call 740·992·
78058arn-5pm
RIYir Bend Place now accept1ng

appllclllona lor HUD subSidized
epts for elderly/hlndiCapped or

2940

•

I

1996 Chevy 112 ion. 4wd, 350 ·•

• s2

675-5332

1987 XLCH 1200 CC's, Sporislet
CusiOm Buill. Looks Sharp, Very·
Fasl, $8.000 080. 740·388- ·
8461 , 740-992-6976

BARNEY

1988 Oids Cutlass C1era $2,800

95 Honda 300 2x4 ATV. Excel- •

By Phillip Alder

Aher 5pm 304-675·1236 To See
Only Serious Buyers PLEASE!

lenl Cond1110n $2,900 740·441 · :
1716

A Groom Shop -Pet Groom1ng
Featurmg Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

Paint. Runs &amp; Looks Greatr H1gh

1-1100•499-3499

Open 9 30 · 5 00 Mon·5al
304-675-SOFA (7'632)
Used Fumltwe Store Below Holiday Inn. Kanauga Beds, Couches , Oreuers. Tablea , Desks,
Lamps . Mattresses . And Morel
Summer Hrs Monday Thru Fri day, HI$ 10-6 7~782
Used Wmdow Atr Condition ing
Units, Oitferent Sizes, Guaranteed,

740-1186-0047

1989 Olds Cutlass Supreme New
M1loage $3.000 740441Hl120
1991 Buick Century Custom 4
V-6 En!J , Aula , AIC, No
Hal Damage 740-256 1924

AKC Reg Golden Retnevers
6wks old shots wormed . vet

CFA Reg Himalayan klllens. IWO

1991 Buick Century Custom 4
Door V-6 Eng . ~utom . AIC, No

Hall Damage $3,550 00 740256·

blue creme females, one !tame
point female, vet checked, S150

1-----------

Chocolate Lab Pupptes. AKC, 3

wlnoows. lOaded, air, 77,000 actu·
m1les. In excellent condition,

Males, 5 Females. $225.
Wormed. ShoiS, Oeposll To Hold,

1.:::=:.:..._;,:=.:.:.::...:..__,__

0BO, 740742·1D19

Ready 7/ 19J98 740-245--9253

1924

1991 Ford Taurus. V-6. power
740-992-6824

1901 Mercury Topaz, power
Window&amp;, loaded, air, In excellent

Full Blooded Aal Terrier Puppies, condlllon, $2150,740992-6824
Had Shots &amp; Wormed, 740·245·
5597

NOTICE
French Cliy I'm Grooming

1991 Pontiac Grand Am, u , tilt,
cnli&amp;e amllm stereo. four new
t1res, excellent cond1tlon , $2195,

740-992-6824

Pwr

Healed mirrors. 11 1, 350, Au-

tom O&gt;o~erdr , Climate Control ,
Ant1·Sk1d Control. New Plrell1

Tires, 81.000 M1. $15,000 00 740682·7512

Buy or sell Rlverrne Antiques,

Reg1stered Border Collie Pups,
Working Parents, Imported
Bloodlines . Good Marktngs, 1st

1124 E Main Slreel, on AI 124,

ShoiS, 740-379-9110

Antiques

Pomeroy. Hours M T W 10100
a m. ID 8 00 p.m • Sunday I 00 10
6 00 p m. 740·992·2S28, Russ

1992 Goo Storm. While w1111 Blue

I

256-9227

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1992 Bass Tracker Pro 17 40hp ·
Evmrude, 2 hsh llnders , 2 new
bauenes. exc cond low hours

$4,500

304·882·3780 aile!

1993 21ft Mtrada Cabin Cruiser,
mfoutboard motor. 41 3 engine.
plus all accessooes 304·1575·
6359 alter 5pm
)

bOn, ask"!! $2500, 740-992-6955
1995 12ft alum mum Jonn boat~ ...
seats . aluminum oars, anchor

$350 1995 12· 1411 boallrailer ·
$250 304-675-3581
.

Interior, New ·TrriS New Exhaust,
Looks Good, runs good 1998
Cavalier, White/Black lnteuor,
good tires, runs good, Sharp!

Runners wldoubtl tra1ler. gre.a(
shape, garage kept , low hours,

$8,000 OBO 304-675-1216
15Ft" 1974 Ebbl lde o'utboa~d. I
50HP Mercury Motor, Trailer and .
Spare Tire, Bumpers. water ·
Sk1es, life Jacket $1,500 740- 1

379-9371

:

Kawasaki STS Jet sk1, still under :
warranty, three seater, 83 horsepower. bought new July of '97. '
three matching Kawasaki ski ',
vttsts and trailer an go wUh It,

740-667·3404

.:.S2.:.500:...:.._oo_ _ _ _ _ __

Sugar Glider and Cage Plus
Toys, Call 740-441-1419

1993 Fotd T-B1rd . V-6, auto. atr,
all power. $4 ,200 740· 742-2357

2045, w111 cons1der trade for a

Two AKC RegiStered lemale Bea gle plfps, SIX weeks old, all shots.
!rom excellent hunung dogs. S100

1994 Ford Taurus GL , 4 door. V6 automatic , low mtles, all power
optmns excellent cdndllton

SACRIFICE

each, 740667·3090

$6500, 740-985·3595

570

1995 Chrysler C1rr us LX 64 000
m1 s Auto . A1r. Keyless Entry
Electn c
Wmdows ,
Locks
$7,000 00 740..245 5130

113 carat round d1amond solltatre,
SIZe 6, pa!d $800, Will take $550,
Marquis wadd~ng set 1/2 carat :
s1ze 7. pa1d $1400, w111 take
$1250 , wedding gown with ve11
s1ze 7, pa1d $700 will lake, $300,

Musical
Instruments

Enroll Now' Summer Lessons
Guttar, Band Instruments. P1ano,
&amp; Organ Brun•cardt Mus1c 740 ·

740367-0286 or 740·949-2481

446-0587

3 1/2 ton Bryant Heal Pump with
10KW20 electnc furnace , good

Enroll Now Summer lessons
Guitar, 'band mstruments, p1ano &amp;
organ Brumcardi Mus1c 740·446 ·

COndiiK&gt;n, $850, 740-992-3102
Assorted vanety of longerberger

0687

baskeiS 304·675-4426

P1ano Tunmg $ Repair, Elmer
Ge1ser

Bedroom Su•te Complete W•th
Ra11s &amp; Full Size Manress Student Oesk With Chalr ,·740 ·2 56-

580

6647
Brg Screen T v 45" Needs Minor
Repalf Zenith $75 00 740 -882·

7512

ATTENTION: We'll PAY VOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds, 47
People Needed lmme&lt;hale~ Offer
Exp~res 7/31198, CALL 740-441 -

1982
Brand New! Great Gtftt CO/video
storage umt Black and cherry
Never out of bo• $125 Holds up
to 940 d1scs . also holds tapes
Call 740 992 -6636 after 6 pm
COs &amp; !apes no! included

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Now Ptekmg Tame Blackbemes

piano Or

740446~525

after :Jpm
lnttntendo 64
2 Controllers ,
Rumble Pack. Memory Pack, All

Hook·ups 1 Game $200 00 740·
245-9357
JET
AEAAT10N MOTORS
Repa1red, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1·800·537·9528
Medtum size chest-type free zer.
hke new excellent COtJd!llon .

1200. 740-992·S108
Rn:tmg •Anens· lawn mower 28'
blade, 110 '110ft ele c tr~ c starter

$375 304-675-4671
Scooters Elactnc Wheelcha irs ,
Sales ~ental , Trade New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 7•0·

446-7283

The Pomeroy Thr1ft Sh op has
moved to 145 North Second Avenue , Middleport (Cash Bahr s old
bwldlng) buy ing - baby 1tems.
breakfast sets &amp; good clean used
furn!lure on consignment , Open
Tuesday -Friday, 11 · 4, 740 · 992 ·

1996 Olds Ache~va 54 000 Miles.
AM/FM C.assette , AIC. CrUise,
Power Locks , $10,500 , 304 -675·

6674
1997 Camara J 8 V·6 , auto.
white/black , T-tops, loaded , CO,
garage kept , 1,600 mtles Askmg

P1ck Your Own Peaches. Yellow

86 Ponllac Grand AM Real good

lamer, Open 6 Days Week ,
Raynor Peach Orchard 5 Miles
South Route 7, GallipoliS , Ohto

74()-446-4807

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'

Cond1110n

Interior hke new•

Credtt Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank Flnancmg For Used
Veh1cles. No Turn Downs. Call

Vidue, 740-446-2897
Upton Used Cars At 62-:l M1les
South of Leon, WV F~nancmg

Sldera Equipment Company

304-675-7421
Yow Area Bush Hog Dealer For
Parts . Rotary Cutters. Loaders.
Tillers, Fmtsh Mowers, Etc Carmichae l' s Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
~etween Gallipolis &amp; R1o Grande
Ohio On Jackson P1ke 740·446241 2 Or 1·800-594- t 11 I
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Res•denlial And Commerc1al
Lawn Equ1pment Compact Ulthty
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors , Hay Equtpment, John

Deere Sk1d Sleer Loaders Check
W1lh Us Aboul F~nanc-.g As Low
As 2 9% On La"n Tractors And
Low Rate Financing On New And
Used Equipment Carmi chael 's

FarJ11 &amp; Lawn Galllpojls, OH 740·

~-2412 1 800-594 11 11

630

Livestock

3 lolonlh Old Coil, Sorral Color
Wllh While Mane &amp; Tall $300:

Used 2 horae trailer , Real good
condition Oak Floor S1 ,500 oo
Elect Brakes. Illes Tack com·

Li ve Traps &amp; Steel low Traps ,

740-2!6-1233

Fem ale Neugeben goat $100

Mala Pygmy goat $75. Laying
liens 13 Oil 31J4.e75.4192

HELLO,. 14EU.O'...
H1'111M wE GOT
CUT OfF;..
· _ _,

offer

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

- - 7_;-

4393
Budget Pnced Transmissions ~
Types Acces s To Over 10,000'--.
TransmiSSIOns. 740.245-5677

I

I

New gas tanks &amp; body, parts ()"I R Auto Ripley. WV 304 · 372·

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

•

SEEN READIN6 T~OMA5
WOLFE'S "'t'OU CAN'T 60
I-lOME AGAIN''

$7.000 lirm 304·895·:JO:t3
1980 Chevy C· IO , 4x4 , rebulll
350 , Elderbrock carb &amp; Intake,

:
·
·
:

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

----=BA~SEII=E::-NT=----. :
WATERPROOFING

hft $3,700 OBO 304-675·1031
1984 F250 .. WD 018&amp;el Topper,
Runnmg Boards. 33.210 Actual

Miles. Very GoO&lt;I Condlllon 740·
256·1134
19i1 Chevy Conversion van ,
Mark Ill, V-8, 4 Captain chairs &amp;
rear couch Looks &amp; runs great

$8.500 304-075-2949
1991 Geo T•scker Black , Stan·

dard, Ai r, AMIFM Cassone.
13.850, 1~521

1992 Goo Tracker LSI , 4WO,
cOnvertible, automatic , air, alum.

w....,., ller.o, billet&lt;/ gray lnllri·
or. clean. nlcal $5350, 740949·
2311 days, 740·949·2644 avan·

labllshed 1975 Call 24 Hra (74DJ 446·~870 ; 1·800·287-0S18 Ao9,
•. :

•

Appliance Parts And Se~lce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
parlence All Work Guaranteed ,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

French Clly Maylag , 740·446·

ngs

C&amp;C Gensral

Home Mafil-

tenence- Painting , vinyl sldin?
carpentry, doors. Windows, balhl,

mobile home repair and mora. For
trte estimate call Chat, 74().912.
6323

.

'

MULLIN'$ HOME Ill PROVE: .•
IIENT Vinyl Siding, VInyl Ro, ,
ptacemen1. WI..,...., Repalrworlr,
Also. l!apalrs On Vinyl Siding,
7-7-1211
· '·

lngl.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

1993 Dodge Caravan Loaded ltJ
C , Powar LOcki,FICIOry lnatalltd
5 Polnl Child Selely S)'S11rn Black
Charry Grey lnl. 16.500 00 740.

na• SIMCO or rapafra -

441 - 1528

ASTRO·ORAPH

Uncondll!onal lifetime guaranln
Local references furnished Es-

ers Waterproofing

'I , '

Residential or commercial wtrtng; "'
censed electrician

I)!

Rrdenoof •

Eleclrlcal, WV011030e, 304·&amp;75·
1786

30 Reduces m
worth or
value

34 Illinois crty
35 Hentage
36 Slippery fi sh
38 Front of a

building
39 Twlsled

I

~,'
I 1• I I ~~".'_

~7-r',o_,..R,B_u,..lR--rEI_o....,~, :~~mplete

1

•

,

.

.

.

•

.

'--L-.L....J~-L-.l......J

IMONDAY

740446-9569

new 2 l/2' exhaust. 35' tires, 3"

Oklahoma
28 - ·do-well

When one writes against a tight
togethe r, hke
deadline, it is ea~y lo make a misrake
threads
Still. have newspapers sacked all
40 Mournful
sound
copy edttors? If not. how did this
42 Human smppel get past lhe blue penctl'' In
(person)
discussing 11 show about reenage
44 Simpleton
49 The girl
smoking. lhe reviewer gave some sta50 Endmg for
tisltcs: " Smokmg kills more Amenballad
cans every year than AIDS. drug
52 Sun. speech
53 Actor Mafors
abuse, murder and car acctdents
combmed. About 4.5 million reens
use tobacco, and ove1 a million of
CELEBRITY CIPHER
those will die."
No wonder smoking is so popular:
by Luis Campos
Ceiebrily Ci!Jhef cryptograms are created !rom quota/Ions by tamous people paS1 and p1asen1
For some 70 percent, 11 confers
Each Miner"' the coptoer s/ands lor a nolher TodRy s clue S squals M
immortality!
Back in lhe seventies. mosl top
Z' D D
K A
bridge players smoked. but notloday.
BAA R N
'OTV
X 8 T
Yet this deal was played some 30
MVTBPAE
PABDC
R Z P W.
·years ago in Anahetm, Calif. How
should South declare lhree no-trump
NHJZP ' N
T H A P MIJSHZTP,
OVAPMI
afler West has led lhe spade mne m
answer to his partner's overcall?
MJVDTN
S T C J
If an opponenl overcalls your
partner's opening btd, don't chicken
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ' I always had one ear oH slage, lislemng lor lhe call
out -· act with poims.
from the bookie·- Walter Matthau , on theate r acltng
Declarer played low from rhe
dummy, taking trick one Wtlh h1s
spade king when Ea.~t played the
WORO
eight South continued w11h a low
GAM I
club, but Wesl shol tn wirh the ace
and returned h1s second spade. Easl
Q Reorronge letters of tlle
took four tricks in the suit IO defeal
four scramb led word s be
low Ia form four s1mple words
the conrracl.
"If I knew West had lhe club ace.
1 would have ducked rhe tirst lnck."
NELCCH
said Sourh.
"II wasn't relevanl. .. replied
North. "Just pul up dummy's spade
queen a1 trick one. If Easl ducks, your
SCUYA
king is a second slop. And 1f Easl
wins w11h the ace. he cannol conlmue spades wilhoul gtvmg you rwo
tncks in t11e sutt Youl:lkP. "'"~ fnrh
KH T NA
Q uote from famo us autho r
easily."
1
5
"Th
e man wh o does no t re ad
I "Oh. you have rhe spade I 0 I
•
.
.
.
.
good
books has no a dv a nta ge
couldn'l see the dummy dearly for
...-----'0"'-::----,
over
th
e ma n wh o ....
your ctgarelte smoke ... explamed
South. R1~ht!

rhe Clossi(Jeds.

730 Vans &amp; 4-WOa

1978 Jeep CJ·S , ltberglass body,
V-8 . 56 000 ongl nal m11es. new
t~res .
w/ blk l nt/ top &amp; cover

6 Ape
9 Kind
10 Fabled Plaza
Ho1el resident
11 Lrs1

the ch uckle QUOied

by ldl on t; on ! he mrHmg w or d~
you d evel op !rom step No 3 bel ow

Again If You Want To

WRITE

304-67~5569

88 , 18Ft Corsan Camper Self ..
Q&gt;ntamed . Sleeps 8 . Very Nice ...

$12.500 OBO. 740-992-4163

1

person
Ancient

strtnged
anstrument

You Can Go Home

MA'(Be

'(OU SHOULD

1984 Palamlnq Pop-Up Campet •
Sleeps 6, $350 , 740 -446- 8172, •

810

ahrew

5 Psychic Geller
6 Nearsighted

24 Belabor
26 C1ty m

To Spy the Besl Buys In

1997 Dodge Oakola 4 Cylmder

'91 Chevrolet Z71 Oflroad 4x4,
excellent condition , 84 ,000 miles,

54 Chinese lrull
18 Compenlon
55 Required
20 Ghre - - whirl 58 Coat• of paint
21 Repair
57 Very
23 Noun eulllx
acqulaltlve
24 .facob'a aon
25 Dried up
DOWN
27 More uptight
Religious
29-Dem.
nor Rep.
2 r.:,~,..
31 Tiling In lew
3 Friend of Jerry
32 Struaale
and George
33 Cry Of
4 Act like a
affirmation

1
~ PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTERS IN SQUARE \

1984 Jamboree Motor Hon\e,
2blt on a Chevy chassis 350 en-..- ·
gme, 20,000 actual miles, neW."'
tlfes. e" cond fully sell· con -

$7,500, OBO, 740256-1233

lor one

Roman dock?

Allpasa

You Don't Hove To look For

740-992·3102

Magnum, 5 Speed , 14,000 M1les,
Need s Mtnor Work On Bed,

carda In a

22 S11iy lalk

·L-~==~--------

1978 Wilderness Camper 30ft. wf
a1r t988 GMC 7000 Y' 5spd/
2spd, 1iUt cattle bed Edison

•

part

I I

LIKE THAT..

1997 Chevy Z -71 ext cab . 3fd
door. 359 Vortex auto loaded

Call a118r 4pm 304·882·3487

51 Nantucket,

Eul

SOMETHING

1992 29' Terry Deluxe travel ~rail
er. 22 ' Carefree awnmg , mi.crowave. queen bed , central atr
steeps 6, new cond1tlon. SI 1,500

rock
17 Numbef of

12 Make a ~ ow
19 Insect at a
ptcn lc

I

New Auto Body p._rts &amp; Ace~&amp;· .,:•
sor~es For All Types Vehicles . '
TransFormers Auto-Sandhill Aq
P1 Pleasant, WV 304-675·3324
'

7402511-6251

m•les

16 Sedimentary

I

1990 Chevy Til Bed Long Wheol

790

pride

45 l:gg drink
46 Pub brew
47 Pert- of AFL
48 Uoed a pencil

I

THERE 11UST BE
50t1ETHIN&amp; wRON&amp;
WITH lo!ER PHONE

Base EJcel Cond No Rust St.,
Bumper, Liller I Ta•lgate 74()-.448·

lalned s 15 500

lis Or Call 740·446· 1080
Late Model 2030 JD $6 950. so
HP JO $6,650, 5000 Ford $7,850, 1992 Ford Expl01er 68 000
4100 Ford D1ese1 $6 450 740 $8 000 OBO 304-675-6439
286-6522

BIG NATE

Mayes 304-675-1856

1989 Chevy Blazer. Can Be Seen
AI 1914 State Route 14 1. GallipO-

ptlr:o.

1967 Qceantc Sea Imp 160hp...
Mercrutser •nlboard engme 19f( '
deep-V w/tratler, life jackets &amp;
bumpers 740 · 446·3814 Make

760

41 Yank'aloe
43 Homeowner'•

I

good pontoon boal

$1 ,500 00 740446-4228

610 Farm Equipment

Summer Cle.ert~nce on •II Hueqvarna lawn mowen 1 string
trimmers. Gue~nteed lowe11

$5000. 740·949-2203 or 740-949-

3933 or 1·800273-9329'

Available 304·4511-1069

3725

parimonl 74044e-4228

1996 Honda CIVIC 0)( Wllh A/C ,

CD player. 5 spead 740·992·
2560

$17.000 304-675-3613

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repAirs
Problems? Need Tuned ? Call the
Homehte Xl - 12 16·cut $150
080 Floor model humld•her $20
Sleeper sofa S100 304-675·2117

1995 Chrysler Sebnng. excellent
conditiOn. call Tom Anderson,
740·992·3348 after 5pm

$10gal 304·882·2744
Or Wh11e, $10 Bushel , Bnng Con-

OU/l

one year old tra1ler, great concll- :

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Bolh Losel 740·446·6306, 1·800·
29Hl098

A,E

1993 T'lf&amp;l' Shar&gt; 650 Jel Ski Wllh •

Moore owner · • -

Central Air CondiUontng Free Estimates• If You Don't Call Us, We

PtopLE

4 30pm

Schnauzers- mlntature "'::~~:~~
AKC , also adults, two -~~
and one champion sired stud,

•cooL QQWNI"

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'2·1995 Kawasaki 750SS Wa~a: •

1992 Corvene Coupe Black Rose,
81 leather, CO &amp; Cass , Tw10 Pwr
Seats, Pwr w1ndows ,Prw locks.

PfOieSSIOnal Grooming by Ap pointments Over 15 yrs expen ence, New bathing system, "Ultra
Wash" , 650 Second Ave Galli·

polis, OH 740-4411-1526

530

PAW'S IN WILLER
SPRINGS, WALDO!!

or 304·882·2570

Davidson 1990 Ultra Classic Wf •
Matchmg Pull Behind Trailer 740- . :

40 Shlp'a bottom

Opening lead: • 9

675·3324

Gall &amp; Wheel &amp; Deal On A Harley ,

89S.3386

3NT

What was
that .again?

1989 Cors•ca, h1gh m11es, auto,

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street , Call 740-44&amp;-.7398,

t•

1995 Harley Oav1dson 1200 :
Sportster $9 000 304·882-2987 ,

wllle $1.000 304-675-5253

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Nonh

1987 Subaru Wagon 4cyl, auto.
air (4114) nice car $1,895 304-

2 female. 1 male, Boston Terriers .

checked M·$175 FM·$200 304 ·

Weal

INT

• •

740-992-2329

llque Glass McCoy 740·388·
8323

Soulll

1994 Harley Oav•dson Sotttell :
Sprmger Cuslom, low m1leage. •

lire new 304·523-8425

1 FuiiMU
7 Toolbox

Answer to Prevlout Puute

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Year Warranty On Motor. Custom •
Bum, Shaw wmner $17,000 080, :

Burkllne Blue Sofa W/Recllners
on Each End , Fold Down Snack
Table &amp; Drawer under Sofa

140-4411-0231

• Q92
• 10 3

• J 83
• J 75 4
1 K 42

882·3436

Old Chtna Cabinet $100 00 An-

• Q9 8
Soulll
1 K65

Moton:yclea

French Clly Maylag, 740·446·
7795

$350 00 0 B 0 7 Pc L.R. Su11
Black &amp; Brass $200 00 0 8 0

Nonh
07 13-11
• Q 10 4
• AK2
OAK
' •QJS85
Eul
aAJ873

• " 7 8

wor&gt; $4.800 740-441-9494

560

2 Breeder pair of Cockatiels 304·

• 10 7 5 4
• 10 8 8 3

87 Chevy 5· 10 4 \Vheel Or Red ,
&amp;Biactc. Ruoomg Broads PO. PW,
Cune, AC, 2 new tires Interior
Excel Runs Good, but need&amp;

Appliances
Recondllloned
Washers. Dryers, Ranges. Refrigrators, 90 Day Guarantee!

Pets for Sale

Wnt

engme . air. cruise , ltlt, am-fm
tape Asking $15 .000 080 304·

5121

oralor Included Wll bo 1\'allablf
July 13 Call after 7pm 304-812·
2099

2480

1987 Ford Escort good cond

$800 OBO 304-675-2714 or 304675·1577

Block, brick., sewer pipes, wmd·
ows lintels, etc Claude Wtnters.
Aio Grande, OH Call 740·245·

Pnme Location 4 u Th ird Ave
Gallipoli s Btaulitur newly con51~ lwO Slory Co1on1al hal 3

Abalement 1189 900 1·304·273-

2580

1992 Harley DaviSon FLHTC 1

740~411-&lt;)206

SmaN 11&gt;&lt; upsialn apl IIIlO mo Waterline Spacial 3/4 200 PSI
plus ullllllu &amp; aacurlly depos ll $21 .95 Per 100, 1" 200 PSI Four horsts· one ~eglstered
In Pl. Plfuanl Evanlnga 304· 137.00 l'lr 100; All Braaa Com- Tannouoe Walker gelding; two
fliiSIIon Fllllnga 1n s875-4875.
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES Aroblln goldlnga; one Reglalered
quarterhorse mart, 740· 742·
Jackaon. Olio, 1-800-537-t528
APT AVAILAILE NOW
Twin Rivera T"""' now ICCif&gt;llng Willamson Goa Furnace 8 YMra 2050.
appllcallons lor 1br HUD aubsldRegistered Angus Bulla ,
old 1200 740·446·3859 Aher
lzed ap1 lor aldarly and handl· 3pm
months old . Cummi ngs
Clflllld EOH ~75-6879
Farm. ~7W248

1600 ram. 1600 deposh 304-824·

1995 Toyot(Tacoma. 4x4, w11h a/
c. CD player, 5 speed . 740·992· '

1986 Ford Escort w/1991 Motor

34 I - allegiance
lo the flag
37 Dlvtalon

movement

&lt;Mitpaymenl. 740-992~133

BaSI Oiler, 740-992·4568

550

2211Hinco1n Ave 1350.rilo plua

2 car ga raqe, Eligible lor tu

1993 Ford hplorer, excelleN :z
condition . asking pa~off or take ,

1983 Honda 200 3·Wheeler
$850 304-675-2949

1988 Pontiac 8ooo STE Needs a
Head Gaskl!l 1400 oo or OBO

""""! lQS

mall until you have inv11Ugated
lhe oftlrlng.

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0, 260
VB Good Cond111on, $1 ,800 Or

Building
Supplies

----------------·~

740

SIOYO $50, 740-448-9202

dtaobled peopla EOH 304-882·
312t or 304-882·3274 .

3 Bedroo m Ranch w/garage,
huge leval lot, meadow land

TrUCkS, 4x4's Etc

1 600-522·2730, X3901

S- 1o $20 Each, Kenmore Ga s

410 Hou- for Rent

recommends thet you do buslnoll with people yoo know. and

1980 ·1990 Trucks For $1001'1
Seized And Sold
Locally This Monlh

May need Clulch . $450 00 You
$75. 2 Bugshl81ds For A FIX $650 00 I Fix. 740-446-6747

rage &amp; 4 6 acres call 304·875·
3030 days or 304·675·3431

deposit, no pets , stove &amp; refrlg·

4420

ACROSS
Item
13 Income
14 01 • ak:kly
yellowish huo
15 Slow mualcal

----------~ \~

1000PM 740-441-9593

2101 Jetterson Ave

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments, Up-stairs. Downstairs 91 Cedar Gal-

Oeposll &amp;Lease
446·2957

A Large Complete K•tchen cab•·
nets, Countertops, Stainless Steel
slnk,Faucet &amp; D1sposal Before

Polly'a - &amp; UIOII Fumlturo
Flags &amp; Army Surptus111

Apartments
for Rent

440

She~es

Goods

water and trash Included, 740·

992·2167

Month Call 1·800·522·2730 Ext

Wooden Bunk Beds W1th Book

420 Mobile Homes
condllloned. $260·$300, sewer,

1910 ·1190 HONDA CARS FOR
1100 Seized &amp; Sold Locally This

Your de((.k Is the center of your
entertaining and recreatiOn acttvltles So don't just give It a "1mIsh" Give It a qualny S1kkens
finish With the Cetol DEK or Rub-

Two bedroom In Pomeroy, $300

882·2566

21o1S

740-385-4361

purellaoe Uuclr, $4325 OBO, 740992·5035 leave message

Washer &amp; Dryer New $.450 F1rml
California Bra New Condition tor

Trailer space for rent in Middle-

New Ha ven . 1br furmshed apt
Depos1t &amp; reterences 304 882-

Jim Hilt Road· at l bricK. 3·4 bed·
rooms, 2 baths , basement , ga·

Mobile homJ!~ site available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

kept, no problems, must sell to

448-9787

8886

44&amp;-4722

Longl1 $110.000
Ca ll Vtrg ln1a L Sm1th Really AI
740 -44 6-68(1 6 Or C all Ca ra At
740-245-9430 For More lnforma-

740-992·3457

I L, 1061&lt; hlghway miles, well

6. 3

Used Furniture For Sale 4 Piece
WOod Oresse• Set, Desk. Chair
With WMets, Storage Rack , And
Student Desk, Call For IntO 7 40-

WITH SIKKENS THE BEAUTY IS
MORE THAN SKIN DEEP.

~uired.

Lot for sale Gallipolis 90x172 ,
nice ne1ghborhood , qu1e1 . 740·

360

304-n:l-5651 . Mason wv

'92 Ct)evy lumina, • door family
sedan , very sporty with luggage
radt, automatiC, AC. ti~ . crurse. V-

675-2811

deposit, no pets. references re·

Mlddlepon . North Fourth Ave 2ro om eff•clenq apt Utilities
paid Oepos11 &amp; references 304

Rac1ne- Dorcas/ Greenwood Ce·
metary Rd I Oak Grove Rd . 1 5 11 acres . 740-992 ·6542 or 740-

740-441-5167

Sleep1no rooms with cooklrlg
Also trailer space on rl~er All
hook -ups Call after 2 00 p m.,

3 bedroom apartment In Racme.

ley area $79.000 304-675-6258

SR. 2·1f2Balhs, Ll!. I FA Formal
Oinllg Room with hardwood lloors,
Olk Doors &amp; Trim Areptace 1·11

NOT 10 10nd money lhrough lhe

lral a11, 8x8 oulside bUilding, 740
992·6582

For Sale By Owner 3br 2 bath ,
vmyl s1ded house 1n Camp Con-

Mossman C11 cle price reduced ,
3 bedrooms . basement. garage &amp;

Buelneu

1990 Spruce Ridge 14x70 mob1le
home, very good cdndllion, 2
bedrooms, 1 &amp; 112 baths, washer
&amp; dryer. stove , refr•gerator, cen-

2 bedroom trailers. 10x50 &amp;
12x65 stove and refngerator,
gas. New Lima Ad , must move,

Will Mul junk or trash away $351

FINANCIAL

Rental Lol, Or Moved $7,950.
740«8-0175, Or 304-675·5965

.:...:.::.:...:.:._..:________1 Two

1101\

lOad 304-675-5035

1988 1-4x55 Excellent Condttlon,
Centra Air. Gas Heat. Lefl On

7~1-5698.

710 Aut01 for Sale

Used bath tub, good condrt1orf,
will accept reasonable offer 304 -

dleport, 1350 monlh plus 1200

2br, remodeled, no pets, references, on Sand Hill Road 304 ·

1977 8lC30 tra•ler $1200 , 740

Motel Lowest Rates In
Town . Newly Remodeled , HBO,
CmemaJ, Showtlme &amp; Disney
Wukty Rates. Or Monthly Rates,
Construction Workers Welcome

F150, Black 740-446-3545

1971 •Bonanza two bedroom ,
good condition new 8xl6' build·
1ng, $4200 . 740 992-0100 afler

5pm

C~rcle

Four bedroom brick home m Mid-

773-5678

___1 SpeCial 16x80 38A 2 balh

Doubl e w1de 3br, 2 ba.th . only
$1 325 down , $205 per month

&amp; Bank

Rapo's Call 1·800·522·2730. X
1709

8811-691-em

742·1303

3 Bedroom Brick Home Full Bau.
ment. 2 Car Garage. 4 9 Acres ,

14,000 Local Gov' t

2 bedroom mobile home m

$205 per mo Free atr &amp; sklft 1·

L

1 ·5 BEDROOM HOliES FROM

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobUa homes, air

14 x70 38A, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 permo Free air &amp; free sklrt-

675-7961 at9am or9pm
~

free air &amp; delivery

Pels, $400 Oepoall, I4501Mo .
740-446-95350r740-446-2205

TRAN SPORTATION

540 Mlscellaneoul
Merchandise

The Daily·sentinel • Page 9

Tuesday - July 14, 1998
:In lhe year ahead, you may reap
returns From good deeds you've do~e
m die pasl. People you' ve helped w1ll
nO'N be able to rectprocate.
i;ANCER (June 21 -July 22) Bad
luck is negligible roday. K~ep pursuing your hopes and expeclllltons. Trying 10 parch up a broken romance?
'The. Astro-Graph Matchmaker can
hellf! you understand whal 10 do ~
mlli'e the relationship work. Maol
$2:75 to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper , P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Sllltion, New York. NY 10156.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) An enler·
prismg associate you ' re closely
aligned wilh may be able 10 give you
a break loday.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepr. 22) Ler
your partner play rhe assenive role
loday. You' ll be more effecrive back·
mg up his/her moves than dirccling
lhe action.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Your
s.:lf-wolth will be enhanced today if
you pul your lime and talenl to produclive uses. Idleness will have a
delerenous effect.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
So~ne you know socially could be
helpful to your business today. Give
lhis perwn a call - it never huns to
ask.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) You' ll be better off in the long run
loday if you let events run their natural course. Lady Luck docM! ' I wanr
you redesigning her intentions.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
It's time to set aside W&lt;Jrldly COIII:anS
I

today. Relax and enjoy yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Condilions wilh a direcl effecl on
your r.oancial well-bemg may brighlen up a billoday. lnslead ofcoasllng,
you should push even harder.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Subslantial objeclives are achievable
today, provided you are properly
motivated and able to clarify your
goals. ~n·r be afraid lo shool For
bigger targets.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) ll's
generally unwise to lei your heart rule
your head in crilical developmenls,
but today could be 'a n exceprion. Be
compassionare.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
When interacting with friends today,
be sure to treal everyone equally.
Being on your good side is more
important to friends than you realize.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Con·
ditions IU'C~orablc for furthering
long· tenn Objectives. Make them
)'(1111' focal points on IOday'Sioodo list

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Sucker - Block· Nobly · Ftllet - LOOKS LIKE
You won't get anywhere tellrng yo ur kr d th a t the ir harr
looks lrke a mop Odds are the y won 't know what a mop
LOOKS LIKE

JULY 131

'

�~

"·

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

~. _

...

,, ..... .. .

By The Bend

.

~

.

·~

... .,

The Daily Sentinel
·

Page 10

Ann
Landers

1997. !..of Mt*s T1Me1

Sy.dicale rond Crcawn
S,nd~eMt .

Dear Ann Landers: I nm 64
years old, have buried two husbands
and have had a full life, complete
with children. grandchildren and
two dear great-grands. When my
husband's sex drive began to diminish about two years ago (he is now
67), it didn 't bother me a bit. In fact,
I was relieved . I was never crazy
about sex, even in my younger days,
and as I grew older, I cared for il
even less.

like a miracle. My husband has been
rejuvenated. I feel like a bride
again ." A 60-year-old man from
Ohio wrote to say he had been "sexually dead for nearly five years" and
he had asked his druggisl if Viagra
might help. The druggist said , " No
harin m trying." so the man did. and
it worked like a charm. Hi s wife was
so thrilled. she went out and bought
three new nightgowns.
It all boils down 10 how a woman
feels about her man . If she loves him
and wants him to enjoy the ultimate
in marital bliss. she will be happy
there is now a drug that can help him
recapture the sexual energy of hi s
younger years. But beware . there IS
a downside . My medical consultants
say Viagra could be nsky for men

who are taking medication for high
blood pressure or heart problems. It
may possibly be linked to the recent
deaths of several men who took Viagra along with their nitroglycerin .
My advice is to consult your doctor.
Dear Readers: Who said nothing
ever happens in a small town? A
reader in South Dakota sent me a
clipping of an interesting Associated
Press story. Here's the scoop:
The family of a Sioux Falls
woman who died in 1995 aftor she
fell from a bar stool is suing the
establishment where she was drinking. Employees of the saloon continued to serve the woman drinks even
though they knew she was intoxicated, the lawsuit said. The woman fell
off the bar stool and was fatally

injured. Her blood-alcohol level was
four times the legal limit, according
to the complaint. The family is asking for $190,000 in damages.
I hope my readers in Sioux Falls
will let me know how this turns out.
Dear ADD LaDders: Among my
many wonderful grandchildren is a
lovely young woman, "Sharon."
She is 19 years old. makes friends
easily and has a very good job. but
she has a·problem about which she
can do nothing. This beautiful, smart
young woman is 6 feet 5 inches tall.
She is not large, just tall.
I am writing in the hope that you
can help us find an organization for
tall people. I've seen a group out
together locally. so there must be a
chapter nearby, but I haven't been

able to locale it. Any help you or
your readers can give will be appreciated. -- F.N. in Hemet, Calif.
Dear Hemet: Yes, there are such
clubs. Your beautiful, tall granddaughter should write to: Tall Clubs
International, P.O. Box 1964,
Bloomfield.
N.r
07003-1964
(www.tall.org) or call 1-888IMTALL2 (1 -888-468-2552). Tall
Clubs sponsors Skywriters. a penpal program for young people under
21, and Tallrific Teens, a program
specifically for tall teenage girls.
Send questions to Ann Landers. Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd.. Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif.
90045

By Ed Peterson
District Manager
Social Security Administration

"';' . r-1 F'
I 'lrtly C::·JJ·,-

Struggling for_an apology, Page 2
Middleport wins in semifinals, Page 4
What makes a marriage work?, Page 10

Meigs County's

Damage in region may exceed
level from March 1997 flooding

Repairs
to roofs
underway

Large print books available at Middleport Library

Contractor works
on Meigs Local
Schools buildings

ESSAY WINNER-Billie Jo Welsh, an eighth grade student at Eastern High School won the "What America Means to Me" Essay contest sponsored by the Gallipolis Elks Lodge 107 .
Miss Welsh won the local contest and received a savings bond
for $150 from the lodge. Another local Amber Snowden placed sec:·
end in the contest. Welsh entered the contest as a part of Scott
Wolfe's English classes at Eastern Jr. High School.

Seventeen new large print books With Dad; At the Hotel Larry; Juliet; Trapped' Cages of Mind and Body;
are among the 118 new volumes Shannon. the Schoolmarm; James Private Jessica; The Big Night;
added 10 the shelves of the Middle - o· Rourke and the Big Potato; The Down with Queen Janel; English
port Library during the month of Agony of Alice: Zip: Wooosic: Mr. Rider, Mayday, and English Horse.
Puller and Tahhy Bake the Cake:
June.
New juvenile non-liction books
The hig print volumes include Lillie Criller's the Picnic; Young arc Draw, Internet for Beginners;
Twanged. T.hc Horse Whi spercr; N Larry : Mick Harte was Here; Kai. Tiger W&lt;K&gt;ds. I Wish I Were a Priis for Noose: You Belong to Me ; the Lost Statue: Marie, Sumlncr in vate: I Wish I Were a Princess;
Sun~ct Pass: West of the P..: . .:os:
the Country: A-B-Sca:. Sonny's Male-up: Our Backyard; Visual
Code of the West. Rohbers' R&lt;oml. BclovcU Boot': The Bo.w.:cs; Some- Dictionary: Jingle Jokes. and Super
Fugitives' Fire : Agony Ridge: The where in the Darkness. Cody: Come Slumber Parties.
Broken Gun: The Man Called In the Fair: lllcre's a Ntghlmarc in
New adult liction volumes added
Moon: Law olthc Desert Bmn: The My Closet: Mandtc and Mollie and in June me Storm Tide; AI All Costs; ·
Stron~ Shall Ltve: Brinnne: Down
the Angel's Vtsit: Molly Meets The Chimney Sweeper's Boy; Acorthe L&lt;~ ng Hill s. and Cnmslt&gt;ek Lode . Mona and Friends: Alice in Lace : na's Quest: Ltfe Before Man;
Forty -six of the new h&lt;x&gt;ks were Lillie Criller's the Trip: The Fire Eleventh Commandment. Unspeakadded to the lihrary \ juvenile lie- Pony: l11c Sea Man: Guess How able : Cities of the Plain: Last Full
lion section o.md indudc There Wa s Much I Love You : At lhr Post Measure: The Joh: A Widow for One
an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly: Olficc : At the Space Center: Year: Summer Sisters: Out of
Sor1 of Forever: Danny's Desert ·-Dinosaur Rnad!: Noah's Ark: Nowhere: ll1e Kinne und 1: Day of
Rats : Achmgly Alice; Mr. Puller and Buster's Dino Dilemma: I Want to Wrath; On the Occasion of My Last
Tahhy Walk the Dug : At the Ilc.och h~ a M~1 ~! 1~-:ian : Sword Quest; Afternoon ; Crystal: Low Country;

Rames II, the Baulc of Kadcsh;
Damascus Gate; McKendec. and
Murder in a Hot Flash.
Aduh non-fiction hooks included
in the new arrivals arc Pregnancy to'
Parenthm&gt;d; Titanic: We Arc Our
Mothers' Daughters: Me and My
Shadows: Wi.1rman's Antiques ami
Cnllcctihlcs Price Guide: Egypt:
Vanessa-1\nn's Iill Christmas Ornaments : Creating Wreaths ; i\ Walk in
the Woods ; Dream Interpretations;
Volunteering: lcehreakcr; ll1e Diana
I Knew: The Brmn Wellness Plan:
Glory and the Games: Photo-craft:
Old-time Brand Name Cookhook:
Creative Crochet : Why Flying
Endangers Your Health : Brand
Name Diahct ic.: Meals in Minute;
New Age Bahy Name Book: Outside Passage. and A Monk Swimmmg.

-----Community CalendaF------.MONDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Anttqucs Cluh. 7·30 p m Monday
at the grange annex. Ro...:k Spnng~
Fairground s.

nied by a parent or legal guardian
and must provtde an immunizala&gt;n record .

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
County Repuhlican Commillec,
Monday. 7:30 p.m. Carleton
Sch&lt;wl. Syracuse.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Free immuniza tion clinic. Mctgs County Health
Department, 9 10 II a.m., I to 3
p.m. Children must be accompa-

special meeting Tuesday. 7 p.m at
the Tuppers Plains -Chester Water
Oistrict offit.:c to disl:uss possihlc
litigati&lt;:&gt;n and personnel maHcrs.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections meeting Tues day. 9 a.m . at the board office in
Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY
John
LONG BOTTOM Elswtck, MI. Olive Chu"h· Long
Bonum , Wednesday, 7::10 p.m ..
special scrvit:c .

REEDSVILLE Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District

Social Security wants to remind the public that some of the junk
mail we all receive from lime to time may include information that
may look like it comes from Social Security. There are mailings that
say they'll check your Social Security records for you lor a fee. and
mailings that say they ' ll get a Social Security number for your newborn infant for a fee . If you'...: a new bride, you might have rccetved
one saying they'll change t:te name on your Social Sec~rity records
for a lee. You should kn.. w that services from Social Secunty arc
FREE. There's no charge to check your records, gel a Social Security number for your new~rn or change the name on your Soctal
Security records if you're a new bride. Just call I 800-772-1213 to
take care of just about any business with Social Security.

The Sentinel News Hotllne 992·2156

Holzer Meigs Clinic
EARNS DEGREES - Deborah

Hillary Rodham Clinton unveils logo- ::r:~~::a~e~oy~:dheof~~~~~~
. m proj"ect June
University of Rio Grande on
14, was recognized as the
for Wh I'te HOUSe m1'II enntU

outstanding graduate in the field
of psychology. She earned a
bachelor of science degree in
psychology with a minor in
anthropology. She also received
an associate of arts degree in
sociology. During her entire col·
lege career, she maintained a 4.0
grade point average. ,
The daughter of Roger and
Charldine King Alkire of
Pomeroy, Is 1 member of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ and
the Meigs County Women's Fel·
lowshlp. She is the granddaugh·
ter of Charles C. King and the
late Rosalie Carr King, and of
Mildred Phillips and the late
Felix R. Alkire.

Certified Mammography

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Work is underway on a $500.000
roof replacement project in the Meigs
Local School District with workers
replacing all or pans of four roofs.
Buildings targetea in the project
are Middleport and Salisbury elementary schools. Meigs Middle
School in Middleport and the Meigs
High School gymnasium.
One building receiving special
allention is Middleport Elementary
School. the subject of a Legionnaire's
Disease scare earlier this year resuhing tn the school being closed prior
to cessation of classes for the summer.
Barbara Logan. a second grade
teacher at the school. died Feb. 25
from complications of Legionnaire's
Disease. Later. a student being treated for a respiratory problem was
found to have Legionnaire's Disease
antibodies.
The concern was that water from
the school's leaking roof contained
the bacteria thai causes Legionnaire's
Disease. although none of the bacteria was detected after water samples
were sent off for testing.
Workers with Tri-State Rooling
are currently removing the old roof,
replacing it with new material . The
new roof \..ill have a hard surface and
some slope to encourage water to run

Sentinel

I Section • I0 Pages
Calendar
CIJ15Sifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Sports
Weather

Ill

7-8
9

2
3
4&amp;5
3

Lotteries

Pomeroy. Ohio

•

~ , He"' Fo• You• Healrh, Hi"' Fo• Your Lifelime!

off rather than pooling.
As workers replace the roof. they
will also replace drop ceilings in the
hallway. paint and clean. The oddtlional work will be funded by the district's permanent improvement levy.
Ex is tin g skylights are being
removed and a new dropped ceiling
and artifi cial lighting will be
installed. according to Superintendent
Bill Buckley.

School. The building and three others in the
Meigs Local School District are the subject of
a half·mllllon dollar roof repair project.

To accomplish the task. the district
last fall received a $500.000 emergency repair program grant through
the Stale of Ohio School Faciltties
Commis.( ion.
"No local money is involved."
Buckley .said .
In addition, Meigs High School
and Middle School will undergo a
$452.464 energy conservation project. Earlier this year. the Meigs Local

Board of Education accepted a House
Bill 264 proposal from the Trane Co.
of Columbus.
House Bill264 is a stale program
in which energy conservation projects are paid for through energy·savings.
The company proposed replacing
boiler&lt; at the two schools and making lighting upgrades with a total cost
of $452.464.

lowmg a vole taken by Middleport
Village Council on Monday evening.
The agency is now located at Big
Bend Foodland. which will relinquish
the agency to make room for a

88 East Memorial Drive

(740) 992-0060

ROOF REPAIRS - Workers with Tri-State
Roofing, Parkersburg, W.Va., are shown work·
ing on the roof at Middleport Elementary

By BRIAN J_ REED
Sentinel News Staff
A public hearing will be held to
determine if the county's slate liquor
agency will move to Middleport. fol -

Today's

QU.IQ
Pick 3: 8-7-8; Pick 4: 3-2-4-4
Buckeye 5: 9-13-19-20-29

. WJ'A.

baiiy J: 8- 1-4; Daily 4: 1-2-0-9
0 1998 Otlio V.:.llcy Publlsh•nt: Co

Single Copy • 35 Cents

Disaster relief applications top
5,000 in Ohio counties: FEMA
More lhari 5,000 applications for asststance have been completed by
victims of Ooods that struck southeastern and eastern Ohio on June 2M.
according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
The number of applications made for disaster asSIStance through
FEMA's toll-free registration line totaled 5.3H8 as of Friday afternoon .
Of those. 120 were from Meigs County. The highest number of appli cations came from Guernsey County ( 1.477). with Jackson . Athens and
Wa.shington County residents submiuing 81,369 and 612 appl tcation s.
respectively.
Twenty-one counties have been included in the presidential declaration.
To be eligible for federal and state a.'5istance. disaster victims must register by calling 1-800-462-9029 (lTY 1-800-462-7585) from8 a.m. to fi
p.m. seven days a week.
Registering with voluntary agencies or with local emergency managers
will not make you eligible for federal disaster relief. according lo FEMA.
After registering, applicants with questions or seeking to check on the status of their application can call the FEMA help line at 1-800-525-032 1
from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Disaster Recovery Centers report more than 570 disaster victims have
visited the centers seeking information on federal and state programs. Any
resident or business owner from any of the 21 counties included in the
presidential declaration may seek information at the centers which are open
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily until further notice. The nearesl center is in the cafe·
teria of the Washington County Career Center. State Route 676. Marietta.
Meanwhile, more than $2 million in disaster a.«istance grants have been
iswed since the. presidential disaster declaration of June 30. Over
$2,362,600 in grants have been sent to 1.089 Ohio llood victims. Since
housing is a primary concern. the housing assistance checks are the lirsl
checks thai people may receive . Victims of the storm may be eligible for
other progmms.
Flood victims' immediate needs for food . clothing and shelier can be
met by visiting voluntary agencies such as the American Red Cr"'s. which
has closed its t~mporary Meigs County relief center, the Salvation Army
or faith-based organizations.
The Salvation Army has established a help line at I-740-439-063H.
Monday through Friday. 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.

Program to help local
flood cleanup outlined

votes for hearing on agency move

~r.ctea .i.h Holzer Meig&amp; Clinic.
''
J,l*e;r&lt;Clin.ic, Board
R.adiOlo~ts.
~~~~~~~·~~:~~~.. Me~aid welcome. · ·
The Best Care is Preventionl Call today for on a !)pointment.
Holzer Meigs Clinic

The board made another $15 million in federal money and $2.5 million
in state money available to counties. cities and towns to fix bridges, roads
and other infrastructure. The state eventually will match 25 percent of the
federal money.
Among those getting the help is Carolyn Knellinger. who lost nearly everything she owns in the Oood. The house she re~1s in Cambridge needs a total
overhaul.
"They tore everything out of the house," she said. "II was soaked through
the walls."
Ms. Knellinger. 58. has received $646 from FEMA to cover rent at another home and has a new $10,000 loan.
"That\ what you need. is the money to get you back on your feel again."
Ms. Knellinger said.
Caldwell Mayor Robert Ralston said he is frustrated that FEMA has not
helped local officials in the Noble County town. although he gave the agency
credit for helping people gel back into their homes.
"We lost city hall. We have nothing," he said. "We're having an awful
time getting help."
About lwo dozen FEMA officials continue visiting isolated rural homes
in the hardest-hit areas because some people don't know about the help thai
is available.
"When you're up to your waist in water. you don't think about anything
else," said FEMA field officer Don Johnson. "Now everybody has a lot of
questions."
FEMA's next priority is 10 help locill officials determine road and bridge
damage.
To register for federal and state disaster assistance call (800) 462-9029
between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Middlep~rt

Good Afternoon

Meigs Legion
te.am defeats
Gallipolis
Page 5

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number SB

POETRY. CONTEST WINNER·Sarah Hill, a sophomore at
Eastern High School, presents school librarian Jim Huff with a copy
of the American High School Poetry Anthology, a collec:tlon of
poems written a published by high school students across the
nation. Mlsa Hill's work slang with another Eastern student, Renee
Barringer, were chosen as contest winners. These two students
entered a contest through their teacher Scott Wolfe, who also
expressad his praise upon their fine works.

MISLEADING MAILINGS

WASHINGTON (AP) - With the While House south portico as her
background. first lady Hillary Roclham Clinton unveiled a red-white-andblue logo for hcl'millennium pr&lt;'j&lt;cl celebrating the United States' past and
future with the approach of 2000.
·
" It is deSigned 10 use our national symhols to force us to look toward the
horizon. a horizon of promtsc and opponunny thai we lhmk really d~s represent what is the American spirit: always looking toward the future . · Mrs .
Clinton told a small group of reporters.
The logo depicts a twisting. red-and-while &gt;triped path leading to a blue
horizon . In the background ar.c_ three white stars. two smaller ones representing the past two millennia and a larger one representing the next one. AI
the top, in white numerals. is 2000.
It was designed by the firm Carbone-Smolan of New York.
.
The logo is 10 be used for events and proJects by the Whttc House Millennium Council, in association wtth vanous nattonal nonprofit groups and
federal agencies. To mark one such project, called "Save Amen ca's Treasures," Mrs. Clinton was traveling today 10 Orange, Va .. 10 vtsn Montpeher.
home of one of America's founding fathers, James Madison.

~~

Tomorrow: Hazy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

Sports

July 14, 1998

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - As flood victims in southeastern Ohio contmue to file
applications for federal help. damage estimates are approaching the totals
from last year's flooding along the Ohio River.
Damage has reached $130 million from the storms in 24 counties in late
June and early July. said Eric Bode. fiscal officer for the Ohio Emergency
Management Agency. Last year's flooding caused about $180 million in damage.
· "This Oood looks at least 50 percent as big. maybe 100 percent as big
and maybe even bigger," Bode said Monday.
The Oooding affected nearly all of southeastern Ohio, much of il dolled
by small towns nestled into rolling hills.
About 50 new applications for federal aid arrive every day. said the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which has paid more than $2.3 mtl ·
lion to nearly 1.100 flood victims forced from their homes.
The average payment has been about $2.600. used for essential repairs 10
make homes and apartments safe and sanitary.
About 5,600 people have appl;ed for federal help. including low-interest
. loans for items such as clothing and furniture .
"Our biggest concern is housing," said FEMA spokeswoman Linda Sacia.
"We don't replace someonc's house. we give them a place to stay while
they're looking for a place to live.
"We aren't going to replace everything. That's what Oood insurance and
low-interest loans are for." Ms. Sacia said.
The slate Controlling Board on Monday approved spending $3.75 million in federal money, plus $1.25 mtllion in state money, to help families that
lost property or oossessions.

Choosing a nursing home

NURSING HOMES
One of the questions I often get from people who serve as representative payees for beneficiaries unable 10 take care of their affairs
ts whether I can recommend a good nursing home. Generally, I send
them a copy of a publication by the Health Care Financing Admmistration called "A Guide 10 Choosing a Nursing Home." h provides
a wealth of information you can use to make such a decision .
The booklet suggests that when shopping for a nursing home
remembe to carry a nursing home checklist and observe: the daily
lifestyle of the residents; the care residents receive from the staff;
how the nursing home handles payment; and the environment.
You should also know that your state hcahh department produces
a yearly report, which you should review, on the performance of
each nursing home that is certified for Medicare or Medicaid. The
report should be posted at the nursing home and is also available
through your state health department or from the local ombudsman
program.
It's important 10 remember that choosing a nursing home will
require you to use cntical judgmental a variety of levels. Your final
judgment should also include your intuitive "gul feeling ." In addition, you should seek information from a broad base of sources and
not rely on any one source in making your decision.
For more information on how to shop for the best nursing home
and what questions to ask, call the Health Care Financing Administrotion's Medicare Hotline at 1-800-638-6833, and ask for the hooklet, Guide To Choosing A Nursing Home . Also. you may call the
Social Security Administration at 1-800-772-1213 for general
Medicare mformation.
KEEPING THE PROMISE
Social Security has been called a promise, a promise between
generattons ... a promise to those who have spent their lives working
10 l&gt;uild the nation we all live in ... a promise that they will not have
to spend their last days without an income.
It is important to remember this promise on the occasion of the
63rd anniversary of the signing of the Social Security Act by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, on August 14, 1935. This is the strength
of the program. the glue that hotels it tog,ether and has made it one of
the most popular domestic government programs in history. many
observers believe. Everybody has a stake in it and the stake transcends generations. Today 's workers expect that if they mntinue to
support the program.lhcy will receive hcnctits. They know that their
parents arc bencr off because of the Social Security taxes they pay.
Social Security was established to. as Prcstdent Roosevelt put it.
" ... give some measure of protection lo the average cititcn and to his
family against the loss of a jot&gt; and against poverty -ridden old age ."
The early 30's were a time when the problems of the poor and aged
became increasingly visible. Since then. Social Security has become
one of the most su~.:ccssful government programs ever. Wilhnul
Social Security. nearly 50 percent of the people who receive benefits
would fall below the poverty line .
And what abouttoday's workers - the hahy hoomcrs who have
done so much to change the face of tuday·s society and the younger
workers who will he drawing Social Security hcnclits in 2030 and
beyond '' Today. the population of the elderly is about 35 millton
people. By 2030. it will douhlc 10 ahout 70 million. By 2032. the
trust funds that now have a surplus of more than $656 htllion wtll be
depleted. We will be able In pay only aboullhrce-fourths of benefits
due .
That's why it's important 10 have n national dialogue on the
future of Social Security. We need tn work together to lind the hcst
solutions to ensure the future solvency of Social Sccunty and keep
the promise to future generations.
.
.
For more informatton about how Soctal Secunty works today so
that you can be beUer prepared to participate in the national dialogue. call 1-8()(}-772-1213 and ask for the booklet, Soctal Secur~ty :
Basic Facts. If you have access to the Internet, v1stt
httP://www.ssa.qov, our website.

Today: Hazy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Monday, July 13, 1998

Viagra is either an answered prayer - or a nightmare come true
Now comes this "wonder drug"
called Viagra, and my husband has
informed me that he has talked it
over with his doctor, who knows of
no reason why my husband shouldn't take it. Well, I know of a reason.
I've made il clear that the nuuute he
walks into this house with those
pills, I am walking out
I'll bel you have received a lot of
leuers from women who feel the
same way I do. How about sharing
some of their comments with your
readers?-- Nameless in Philadelphia
Dear Philadelphia: Yes , I have
heard from a great many women
about Viagra, and ahhough some
feel as you do, most say it is wonderful . A 64-year-old reader in Oklahoma City wrote, "Viagra has been

Weather

branch of the Ohio Valley Bank.
Tony's Carryoul. owned by Beth
Stivers. council president. has applied
for the agency permit. Council called
an emergency meeting two weeks

A program designed lo employ
displaced workers and help with
Oood abatement and disaster-related
repairs was outlined when the Meigs
County Commissioners met in regular session on Monday.
Vice President Fred Hoffman
presided at 1he meetmg in the absenct!
of President Janet Howard .
Tom Reed of Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agenc) discussed the
Disaster Relief Employment Program. which will employ 30 displaced workers al a cost of $250.000.
The employees will be used to clean
creek beds and perform other llood
abatement work .
The program will last for approximately six months. according to
Reed, and applications are available,
at the Community Action Agency
offices in Cheshire and Pomeroy.
A similar program was instituted
by the CAA after the March 1997
tlooding.
Prosecutmg Attorney John Lentes
requested approval of cerli licalion
requests for a Substance Abuse Prevention ~rani program in the amount

ol' $16.631.47. The appropriatton s.
which were approved by the board .
represent funds reimbursed by the
slate to the county for expt"nd1tures
already made .
The comm1,sioners al su upproved
transfl!rs of funJ, anJ appropri&lt;~tion
reque sts forth!! Me1 g' County Hi g h ~

way Depanment. The tran.,fef\ and
appropri~uions

were made into the

department's Round I c pavmg grant
project, State Capital Improvement
Program budget, and into the budget
for FEMA projects.
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton
noted that the board was prepanng to
review its t.:ontract with the Me1gs
County Chamber of Commerce I&lt;Jr
economic developm!!nl scrv1t.:es.
The commissioners appointeJ

tl\ree members

the Community
lmpru ve ment
Program/HUD Review committee :
Andy Baer representing cnntr;.u.:tors.
Henry Bent z representing home own ef\, and Thornton . representing the ·
10

Hous1ng

comrni'\Sinners .

Aho present was Clerk Gloria
Kloes .

ago to discuss the application. with
no action taken.
Last night, council voted to
request a hearing of the Ohio Depan(Contlnued on Page 3)

Consumer spending slowed in June
WASHINGTON lAP) - Con sumer spending. which had been
powering the economy in the early
part uf the year. showed signs of
slowing in June with retail sales edging up just 0. 1 percent.
The Commerce Department
reported today that last month 's
increase, the smalle st since a similar
0.1 percent advance in March. left
retail sales at $225.7 billion last
month.
. The June advance followed a
much more robust 1.2 percent surge
in sales in May, the biggest increase
in I0 months.
The slowdown. which was in line
with expectations, renected outright
declines in sales at department stores,
hardware stores and service stations
and only a small 0.1 percent increase
in sales by auto dealers.
Consumer spending is closely
monitored by economists since it
accounts for two-thirds of total eco-

nomic activity. The overall economy.
as measured by the gross domestic
producJ. soared ahead ~!-.lin annual
rate of 5.4 percent in the lirst three
months of the year, but most analysts
believe growth is now in the process
of slowing dramatically. to perhaps
an annual rate of just 2 percent.
The slower growth is expected to
occur in part because of the impact of
the Asian financial crisis. which is
cutting sharply into the ability of
American manufacturers and farmers
to se ll to Asian countries. who buy
one-third ·of all American ex pons.
While the weaker growth will
mean a rise in the unemployment
rate. it had fallen to a 28-year low of
4.3 percent in April and May. raising
concerns that unless growth slowed
lo a more sustainable level on its
own. the Federal Reserve would be
forced to step in and begin raisin~
interest mtes to cool dernand.
For June. unemployment rose

slightly to 4.5 percent Many economists are predicting that the slowing
economy will nudge the jobless rate
up to clo&gt;e to 5 percent by year's end.
Tuday ' s report un retail sales
showed that demand at auto showrooms inched up 0.1 percent la.st
month. far below the 2.4 percent
jump. in .sales recorded in May.
Sales al department stores fell by
0.3 percent in June following a 0.6
percent increase in May. Sale.s were
al~o down at hardware and building
supply centers, dipping 0.2 percent
while sales at furniture stores dropped
by 0.3 percent.
Grocery stores recorded a small
0. I percent rise in June sales and
demand at restaurants was up an even
stronger 0.6 percent.
Sales at gasoline stations were
down 0.1 percent and specialty clothing stores saw a 0.4 percent dip in
demand.

v

l
i

FUN IN THE

his eyes 11

he dafended himself with 1 Qlrden hosa while hiVIng a water fight
with his brother Georvt, 6, on Monday In front of their home In
Pueblo, Colo. The two made uH of the water to cool off 11 temperaturea topped out 11102 degrees. (AP)

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