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Nation•

The Daily Sentinel
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cite refinery cutbKk
WASHINGTON (AP) -While "the Bush administration
cileS !he lack of refineries for energy shortages,. internal oil
industry documents show that five years ago companies were
looking for ways to cut refinery output to boost profits.
It takes about four years to build a large refinery so any substantial additional new capacity from new plants would have
had to begin by the mid-1990s, energy expert acknowledge.
But some internal industry documents obtained by Sen.
Ron Wyden, D - Ore., suggest that in the mid-1990s oil companies had no interest in building new refineries because of
low profit margins and, in fact, were discussing the need to
curtail refinery output to boost profits.
"If !he U.S. petroleum industry doesn't redu,::e its refining
capacity, it will never see any substantial increase. in refinery
nurgins (profits)," said an internal Chevron document in
November 1995.

Bush nears decision on V~eques
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration is planning to look for a new Navy training site after two years of
protests at its decades-old bombing range in Puerto Rico,
officials say.
The idea is drawing mixed reaction from lawmakers.
AdmiAistration officials said Wednesday that President Bush
has all but finalized a decision to end Navy bombing exercises on Puerto. Rico's tiny Vieques Island.
The Pentagon was expected to announce Thursday establishment of a panel to. look for an alternative to what !he
Navy has called the "crown jewel" of its Atlantic training sites.

n ...,.,,_
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Friday

GOPs endorse broader rights to.sue health plans
WASHINGTON (AP) Several
House Republicans bucked White
House opposition Wednesday and
endorsed broader rights for Americans to
sue their health plans.
The development came amid planning
by Senate Democrats, who now control
the chamber. for work nexr week on
similar patients' rights legislation. They
quickly welcomed the support.
"We've got to stop these HMOs from
practicing bottom-line medicine:· said
Rep. Marge Roukema, R-NJ. "If we
don't pass this, or the president doesn't
sign it, !heres going to be a voter backlash out there:' She joined Georgia's
Charlie Norwood and several GOP colleagues in supporting the bipartisan proposal.

Bush, tra~llng in Europe. repeated his
threat, saying he "can't li~" with -a
bill that does not meet his principles.
The bill sets new coverage rules for
health maintenance organizations and
allaw5 patients to sue in State or federal
courts if they are denied needed care.
We are now lefi: with a situation in
lo'illlicll the only way to put patients and
doctors back in charge is to pass new
,
·'h91ding HMOs more accountable,"
said.Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga.
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle
of.South Dakota met Wednesday with
House Democratic leader
Dick
Gephardt of Missouri and others to plan
ways to wan! off attempts by conservatives to delay or kill the proposal.
"Only the paran6id survive," Daschle
veto

said. "And I'm certainly paranoid about
!he patients' bill of rights."
Separately, House Republicans discussed the feasibility of a hurry-up effi&gt;rt
tu bring their own bill to !he floor llll
early as nexr week. No decisions have
been made, GOP officials said. but the
defection of Norwood.lbrr and others,
would complicate that effort. Nonwod
becomes a lead sponsor to the bill alsO
supPorted by Democrat John Dingell of
Michigan and Republican Greg Gansh •
oflowa. ·
Norwood, who had deferred his
endorsement as he negotiated wilh th~
White House, said Wednesday that the
plan is "the only bill that guar.mtees a
patient will find justice if they are injured
or killed from improperly denied care."
'

ities said.
None of the injuries appeared life-threatening. However,
some of the passengers suffered serious injuries and were
taken to area hospitals, said Kim Lightfeldt, a ~P&lt;!keswoman for
the California Highway Patrol.
'
The accident took place about 11:53 p.m. Wednesday on
Interstate 10 just west ofYucaipa, about 73 miles east of Los
Angeles.
The bus was carrying about 45 people, including adult
chaperones and children that ranged in age from 7 to midWASHINGTON (AP) -. The government has cleared teens, Lightfeldt said.
biotech corn as the culprit in a rash of allergy attacks that
were reported after discovery of the grain in taco shells
spawned nationwide food recalls.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - Investigators appointed by
Wednesday its investigation of the complaints "did not find
any evidence that hypersensitivity" to a special protein in StarLink corn caused the reactions.
Blood samples were taken from 17 people and tested for
sensitivity to the protein, known as Cry9C.
Critics ofbiotechnology say the CDC investigation was too
limited to conclude that the corn is safe. "This is a small piece .
of·evidence," said Rebecca Goldburg, senior scientist with
Environment Defense, an advocacy group. "It's far from being
definitive."
·

CD.C: biotech com not to blame

Slaying probe may be public·soon

Nepal's new monarch to investigate the royal family massacre·
raced Thursday to complete it on time.
.
The tWo-man probe committee of Supreme Court Chief
Justice Keshav Prasad Upadhaya and House Speaker Taranatli
Ranabhat began the probe June 8. · On Sunday, they ~
granted a four-day extension, to Thursday.
"The committee will finish up the work by iU deadline.
There is no question of another extension," said Tourism Minister Omkar Shrestha.
The committee, appointed by King Gyanendra, is iQvestigating the killings of Nepal's popular King Birendra, Queen
Aiswarya and almost the entire Shah dynastY- during a family
dinner June 1 at the Naravanhiti Palace.

Mdp eo.ty's
Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh1"o

50 cents· June 15, 2001 • Vol. 51, No. 232

ww

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Disabled Americans still lag far
behind o~ers in graduation rates, employment, home ownership and computer use, a federal report concluded Wednesday.
1 The barriers are ~pecially acute for disabled students, the
· National Council on Disability reported. All states are out of
compliance - to some degree - with a federal law guaranteeing public education to the disabled in the least restrictive
setting, the council said.
A year ago, the independent government agency concluded
the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act was not being
enforced aggressively enough by federal agencies. The updated report said disabled Americans "still confront major ~arri­
ers of discrimination and suffer the consequences of weak federaf enforcement."
The report noted that President Bush, during his campaign
speeches, called for greatly expanded resources for the disabled, including technology assistance, high-quality education,
innovative transportation programs and strong enforcement of
the disabilities law.

Plane crash kills one
DANIA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -A small plane carrying three
people crashed onto an interstate ramp, just short of the Fort
Lauderdale-Hollywood · International Airport. One person
died and two were injured.
.
The eight-seat, twin engine jet had reported trouble befoie
it hit the Interstate 95 exit ramp Wednesday night.
"How he did not hit a car and not kill bystanders on the
ground is a miracle:' said Todd LeDuc, a Broward County Fire
Rescue spokesman.
Jose Santiago Nunez Gomez, 52, the pilot, and Briceda
Zapata, 33, were hospitalized in serious condition early Thursday. Celestino A. Martinez, 34, died before he could be freed
from the wreckage, LeDuc said.

Girl's treabnent shocks dad
CANTON, Texas (AP) - The last time Bill and Sabrina
Kavanaugh saw Lauren Ashley Calhoun, she was celebrating
her second birthday, an energetic, healthy child who loved the
outdoors and movies.
That image, the bittersweet memory of a couple who'd
fought to adopt Lauren, was in sharp contrast to the starving
girl law officers found in a trailer in Hutchins, about 20 miles
south of Dallas.
Lauren was rescued Monday from a filthy, lice-infected clos. et where authorities say she'd spent four months locked away
,from her mother, stepfather and five siblings, She weighed
'only 25 pounds, her stomach was bloated due to malnutrition
and her eyes were sunken· in .
The girl's mother, Barbara Catherine Atkinson, 30, and stepfather, Kenneth Ray Atkinson, 33, were charged Tuesday with
injury to a child ·and were being held in the Dallas County
Jail.

. Comtniilionets nfview · available to Charter Communications

which extends ~nd the traditional
realm of television.
:, ~.
A:~
Those DeW services vw:R: discuzed
Basic and extended basic customers
U~Wf~.
·~
Thursday by M~ County commis- should havl! already noticed that the
sioners.
channel lineup fur their Cable service
Charter's Kurt Leachman and M2rk has been changed
Abbott met with commissioners to
Leachman said that lineup change is a
IYBiuNJ.RaD
SEHI1NE1.1£WS STAff
answer questions about the new basic part of an upgrade process which began
POMEROY - There are more and extended basic channel llneup. arid in March, and was completed two
cable channels to surf, and new services to explain the new seivices - one of weeks ago.
CUStomers.

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While Charter provilks cable service work, American Moo:,;e Oassics, and the
to communities in fOur counties (Mei~ Golf Channel.

and Gallia, Ohio, and Mason and Jackson, WVa.), Racine, Syractise and
Pomeroy were the first to have the
improved services in place.
Cable customers will also notice that,
in addition to the new channel alignment, there are also new channels,
including Comedy Central, Food Net-

Fifty-three additional family, movie,
music, and news channels are available
to customers who opt fur Charter's new
digital service. Those channels require
the installation of a digital receiver.
The company will also offer a new
Internet service, .which will allow Inter-

Piuse ... C.ble. A3

put on
-for

'Old Glory'jlies high as Meigs
celebrates Flag Day

BY TONY M. lEActt
' POMEROY - Plans to
eradicate a number of burnt
and
derelict
structures
throughout Pomeroy have
be en put on hold, but village
officials say that could change
oil
Mother
depending
Nature.

"You could say the large
amount of rain we have
recently received has dampened both the ground and
our spirits," Welker said. "We
are currently awaiting a window of sustained good weather so that the equipment can
be brought in to raze the

he flying of
"Old Glory"
was the order
of the day on
Thursday,
as
Americans celebrated Flag
Day. The holiday was established in August 1949 by
President Trumari, encoura(ling · all Americans in the
country to display their flags
outside their homes · and
businesses as a sign of patriotism.
Day is one of
seven
on which

Councilman Jackie Welker
said Thursday the village still
Welker said renting a trackhas plans to eradicate the run- hoe is expensive and the viidown structures, but recent lage can't affonl to pay for
inclement weather h:is post- equipment that is going to be
poned the arrival of a track- "sitting around until the
hoe and dump_truck that will weather is good, enough to
be. used to detrl&lt;ilish tht unin- use it~'.· ,...
4aRi~d buildip~
__:~ . l i.:."'llfeiH'-'~.e PI~.

raises funds for several area
charitable causes; including
eyeglasses for the needy, has
been flying the flags downtown for the past 50 years,
said its president, James
Snodgrass, and Treasurer
William Middleswarth, pictured here. Middleswarth,
who has .been a· member of
the local Lions club for the
past 29 years, and other
Lions dubs before that, is the
longest-serving member of"
the local club. In Middleport, Big ·Bend Community
Band performed a special
Flag Day concert in Dave .
Diles Park as the first in its
2001 summer concert seri~s .
Roger Williams is the diret tor of the band, which is
sponsored by the Riverbend
Afts Council. The band will
perform at the Pomeroy
Riverfront Amphitheater on
June 28. (Brian J. Reed photos)

BURNT STRUCTURE - Several derelict and burned-out
structures, like thl$ one on Mulberry Avenue, are scheduled
to be demolished in the near future as part of a clean-up • .
campaign Implemented by the Village of Pomeroy. Attempts ..
to remove the structures during the spring were postponed
due to inclement weather.,(Tony M. Leach photo)

strUcntres.''

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2 s.ctlllll-12 ..... .

Calendar
Classifieds

. comics

Editorials
Objtyarjes

. Sports ·

Weab;r .

H!p:I01
I.Gw:IOI
Details. A2

Lotteries

A3

OHIO
82-4 Picks: 4-0-3; Pick 4: 8!3-7,3

85 ••• ,. 5:6-1().19-21-36
M
A3 W.VA.
81.3.6 Dlly 3: 4-9-1 Dlly 4: :5 9-H
A2 C 2001,Ohio Volley I'Ublishl"' Co. ·

Gasolines prices rose 31 cents in May
Wf&gt;SMINGTON (AP)
. Gasoline
pri"t!es during a seven-week period en!Jing
in rlpd-May soared by a whopping 31. ceht-a:gallon average nationwide and 43
cents in the Midwest, the Energy Department reported Thursday.
During the past month , prices have
declined by 7 cents on average nationwide, but could rebound there are supdepanment's
ply or refinery

Energy Information Administration said.
"Production has increased significantly
as refineries have ramped up to full capacity. Barring fi1rther major refinery problems, we expected prices to continue to
decli'ne," John Cook, director of ·the
agency's petroleum division, told a hearing
of a House Government Reform subcommittee.
Gasoline prices traditionally mcrease

with the approach and during the heavy
summer driving seas?n. This year's steep
run -up wa.&lt; surprising in its intensity ·and
early timing, coming about a month earlier than normal, the lawmakers were told.
Among the reasons given by Cook
were: Low stocks of crude oil, lower than
normal inventories of gasoline this spring,
lo.w supplies of MTBE, the additive used
in many areas with serious air pollution,

I 7th ·An
I Co1111111unlty
Heallh ancl Wellness Fair ·
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Saturday, June .16, 2001 10 am- 2 pm
Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Corference Center
Free screenings, free health information, door prizes and refreshments.

Bus-semi collision injures 15

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

. For informa~on, conlact HMC Cqmmunity Health and Wellness 1
Diiec:tor Bonnie Mcfarlarld, RN, BSN, at (740) 446·5679

REDLANDS, Calif (AP) - A tractor-trailer rear-ended a
sc~oo) bus filled with Mexican children and chaperones
returning from Disneyland, injuring at least 15 peopl~. author-

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DemoI

Sentinel v

BALTIMORE (AP) - A volunteer participating in a
research project at The Johns Hopkins University has died.
The exact cause of death has not been determined, the university said in a statement Wednesday. The research project,
titled "Lung Inflation and Airways Hyperresponsiveness" was
suspended.
Joann Rodgers, a university spokeswoman, refused to com.· ment further on the death, citing the request of the family.
Study ·participants inhaled hexamethonium to help
researchers examine a lung function that protects airways from
: narrowing. The function plays a critical role in the develop' ment of asthma, the university said.

t'

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."'bcc.,..

Volunteer in study dies

d ·1

w.my aa ysen me .com

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Disabled still find barriers

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SPOilS: Reds, Indians lose, Bl

Page 88

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�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
s.twdlly, June 11

-

LUCASVILLE (AP) - There was no
laJt minute reprieve for a schizophrenic
killer on his third trip to the death
house.
Jay D. Scott on Thursday night
became the lint Ohio inrrute to be
executed against his will since 1963.
The state put Wilford Berry to death in
1999 after Berry waived his appeals and
asked the state to carry out his sentence.
Scott, 48, received the let!Jal injection
without mentioning the Cleveland deli
owner he killed in 1983.
Instead, he directed his last words to
family members who sat in an adjacent
witness room.
"We always ask about victims of these
types of crimes," said Scott's attorney

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.somewhat cooler on Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cooler and less hu'!Pd conditions will settle on the tricounty area on Saturday after a
frontal system chums up thunderstorms during the night.
The National Weather Service said some of the storms
coUld be severe and capable of
producing very heavy tain.
. Sunset tonight will be at
9:02, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 6:02 a.m.
Weather forecut:
Topight. ..Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Rain may be h"eavy
at rimes until midnight. Areas
of fog after midnight. Muggy
with lows 65 to 70. Southwest
wind 5 to 10 mph becoming
northwest. Chance of tain 50
. percent.
Saturday.. .Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the morn-

ing. Highs 80 to 85. North
wind around 10 mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Saturday
night... Mostly
clear. Lows 60 to 65. ·
Extended forecast:
· Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s ~nd highs
in the upper 80s.
Thesday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows around 60 and higlis in
the upper 80s.
Wednesday...A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
during the day... Otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 60s and highs around
90.
Thursday...Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.

~ CLEVELAND (AP) A Oeveland taxi cab mechanic is
aJ11Png the 6rst reCipients of experimental surgery to determine
whether implanted arm mwcle cells can heal a damaged heart.
Surgeons at the Cleveland Clinic last week grafted 10 million
cells grown from a section ofBarry Bucchioni's arm muscle into
his left ventricle, the heart's main pumping chamber, which was
~by a heart attack.
·
·
The procedure was done during triple bypass surgery. Buc•
chioni, 52, was discharged from the hospital Thursday, less than a

week after surgery.

ijeart muscle is quicldy damaged when oxygen is cut off by a
clot during a heart attack. Studies are taking place nationally wing
cells fi:om skeletal muscle, bone marrow and heart muscle, said Dr.
Pat;rick McCarthy, director of heart transplantation at the Clinic.

NORTH OLMSTED (AP) -The sentence was five days in
jail. for 113-year-oldAnn Donovan, whose suburllan yard is a mess.
She was sentenced'Thesday for prop~rty maintenance violations.
But Rocky River Municipal Judge
Cravens suspended
her sentence ~t the request of North .Olmsted Prosecutor Bryan
O'Malley. ·
.
.
"I ~ked the judge to ~consider the commitment to jail,"
O'Malley said Thursday. "Anyone in that age bracket certainly
should not be in a jail. It's too mu~h stress for them:'
·
Donovan spent less ¢an an hour sitting in the North Olmsted
Police Department on Tuesday, said Capt. Wayne Wozniak. She
never saw the inside of a jail cell.

Maureen

Church bullcllna pen to city
CLEVELAND (AP) --, Neighbors who worked to save a former church building fiom demolition now can celebrate an unex-

BiU approved

FtW•r..... 1s. 2001

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to adCiress
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Suite 214
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
- Appointments -

(304} 675-3400'

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1,300

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projects. Special entertainment will be provided by June
and Myron Duffield. Asbury
UMC is acting as host for this
special visit. Pastor Bob
Robinson invites the public.

·. Plan dink

Plan social

HARRISONVILLE- Har·
r180I1Ville Community Church,
vacation Bible IChool, Monday
through Friday, 10 a.m. to noon.
Picnic June 23.

LETART FALLS - Letart Town-

ship Trust.s, Monday, 5 p.m.,

To host dinner

SUNDAY
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. Annual Milhoan reunion, Sun·
day, noon, Milhoan Homestead,
Milhollil Ridge, W.Va. 2,
Ravenswood. Take covered dish
lnd family history.

llaMd ........ 1881 rice to
110n11i uftt llfOUPI wllhlng to
11r1nou.- -~~~• llld II»'
cltll -ta. The callndar Ia
not dellgned to ptiiii!Oie .....
or funckli..,. of lillY type•

MONDAY

lptlell plfllllta and cannot

POMEROY- Meigs County
Right to Ufe meeting, Pomeroy

Community Callnder .. pub-

nem. .,. prln-.1 only es

be

lllllllllnlMd to be prlntM I
apeclflc number

o1u-,..

Schools coalition delivers
evidence to Supreme Court
COLUMBUS (AP) The coalition of schools
suing Ohio over the way it
funds education on Thursday delivered 30 boxes of
evidence . to · the Ohio
Supreme Court.
The Coalition for Equity
&amp; Adequacy of School
Funding delivered the boxes
just before 5 p.m.
The boxes include copies
of information for all seven
court justices. They contain
depositions, affidavits and
other documents produced
by the state at the coalition's
request. The information
will be formally filed with '
the court Friday, the deadline set by the court.
The state expects to deliver its own . evidence about
noon Friday.

William Phillis, coalition
executive director, said he
believes the coalition's case
is a "slam dunk."
"When we look at the
areas the court is concerned
about, the state has failed to
comply in all areas," Phillis
said. "The state has no clue
as to the resources chat are
necessary to fulfill the constitutional standard of thorough and efficient."

Plans

\

'

The Daily Sentinel

News Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

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Gen•ral manqer

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or

Ext 12
Ext. 13
Ext. 14

.Other service•

Advertlalng

Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext 4

Ciaulfled Ada

Ext. S

To ~end e-mail
newsCIImydallyeenllnel.com
www.mydallysenllnel.com

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LOCAL ·BRIEFS

To meet

On the Web

.

Richie, Florida, and Dorothy Van Pelt of Cochecton Center,
New York; and several uncles, aunts and cousins.
He was preceded in death by his grandfathers, Nunzio
DeUavalle and Gordon Van Pelt.
Services will be held on Sunday, June 17, 2001 at 1:30 p.m.
at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rudand, with the Rev.
Marty Hutton officiating. Burial will follow at Standish Cemetery in Dexter.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, June 16,
2001 from 6-9 p.m.

LOCAL STOCKS

Correction Polley

'

Library, Monday. 7:30 p.m.

at office building.
SATURDAY
neers.
POMEROY- CPR and Firsl
SYRACUSE- 5ynlCU88 United
Surviving in addition to his parents are two brothers, Jason Aid classes, Saturday, June 16, Methodist Church charge to host
DeUavalle of Alaska, and Jonathon Dellawlle of Rutland; a sis- 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the F.O.E. cany-in dinner for membenl ol
2171. haU. All Interested in laking work camp. Entertainment by
ter-in-law,Julie King of Rutland; a nephew, Brody Dellavalle of classes, call Gene Lyons, 992·
June and Myron Duffiekf. Pastor
Rutland; two grandmothers, Agnes Dellavalle of Newport 6619.
Bob Robinson imrites public.

EMS n1ns

Our main concern In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

Jeff Thornton, President ·
Meigs County Commissioners

Newport Richey, Florifia. He was a heavy equipment operator
and a member of the International Union of Operating Engi-

........

cable·

LOCAL EVENTS

Michael Dellav•• Jr.

POMEROY Meigs
2,500
Pl:t dlangeflom .......
County Health Department
-3.66
will offer a childhood immu2,0110
2,101.05
2,043.36
nization clinic on June 19
from 1 to 7 p.m. at its office,
IIKonl high: 5,048.62
1,500
112 E. Memorial Drive,
March 10, 2000
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
JUNE
Pomeroy. The child's shot
loP
POMEROY - Units of
records should be provided,
and all children · must be the Meigs Emergency Service
accompanied by a parent or answered seven calls for assistance on Thursday. Units
legal guardian.
responded as follows:
AEP-45\
USB-21~
Rod&lt;wel- 37~
M:h Coal- 27~
Gannell- 81!.
Roclcy Boots- 4~
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Alczo-42\
General Eledric - 48l.
RDShel-61
a.m., Elmwood Ter2:28
AmTechSBC- 41'GKNLY-9l.
Seara-39~
LETART FALLS - Letart race;Vicky Boso, treated;
Aahland Inc. - 39~
Harley Oallidlon - 45~ Shoroey's -!.
AT&amp;T-20~
' Kmart-11~
WaJ.Marl-49~
2:28 p.m., Holzer . Clinic,
Township Trustees will m~et
Bank One- 36~
Kroger- 24!.
Wendy's-24!.
on Monday at 5 p.m. at the Pamela Jenkins, Holzer MedBob Evans -17\
Lands End - 37
Worthington - 12
ical Center;
office building.
BorgWamer- 44~
Ltd. - 15~
Daily rapor1B 818
Champion - 3%
Oak Hil Anancial- 13'1. the 4 p.m. closing
6:37. p.m., Ohio 7, Keshia
Channing Shops - 5\
OVB-25
quotes ol the prellious
Tillis, treated.
·
City Hoking - 10
BST-35~
day's11anSaC1tons,proDuPont~.ce~
vlded by Smith P811nera
. . MIDDLEPORT
PeorJIN - till.
Federal Mogul- 2~
Pn!mler- 7~
at Advael inc.
. 6:27 p.m., Oliver Street,
BASHAN - Bashan VFD
Ladies Auxiliary will have an assisted by Central Dispatch
and Pomeroy, trailer fire, Lynn
ice cream social on June 29.
administer
the
county's
Hc;~ffinail
residence,
no
$100,000 Summer Youth
injuries.
Employment Thining Program,
POMBROY
fnnPIIpAI
and youths interested in particiSYRACUSE - Syracuse
6:37 p.m., Overbrooll
pating, in the program should United Methodist charge will Nuning Center, Vava Beninet connection through the contact the agency at 992-6629. host a special carry-in dinner dict, Pleasant Valley Hotp!tal.
digiral cable system, rather than
PEBDSVILLB
The program provides Wllrk 'on Monday at 6:30 p.m. in
.through. a telephone line. That experien~e and training for honor of members of a work
9:43 p.m., Ohio 12~, Fanservice offers connection speeds income-e~gible youtlu in pub- camp from the Bowling nie Bigley, Camden-Clark
of 256 kbs and 512 kbs, and is, lic agencies and other worksites. Green United Methodist Memorial Ho1pital.
Leadunan said, ''lightning fast:'
lWTLAND
Prior to the implementltion of Church.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
The
group
will
be
in
Meigs
8:20
p.m.,
Titus Road, Dale
WIA, the program was adminissaid a number of tesidents have
County doing community Ellis Jr., HMC.
called the commissioners' office tered by the CM through the
.inquiring ~ut the change in J~b Training' Partnership Act,
channel alignment, because which has been
July when long range forecasts
The commissioners also:
their number is listed on the
call for good weather;• Welker
• Amended three of the coun•
back of the cab)e bill.
said."Most of them are a safety
Leachman distributed chan~ ty's Workforce Investment Act
fnn'-ceAI
hazard and they ·detract from
nel lineup cards for the public, . contracts, with the AthensPomeroy\ better qualities."
which will be available at the Meigs Educational Service
H~r, plans do call for a
One or two of the runcommissioners office, The Daily Center. the University of Rio trackhoe to be brought in to
down structures .will escape
· Sentinels offices, and at Hud- Grande, and Buckeye Hills tear doWn the remnants of the
nall\; in Middleport, the .local Career Center, to adjust the structures. The debris will be demolition so they can be used
as .a training apparatus for
cable payment agent.
con~ct periods for a threetransported via dump truck to
members of the Pomeroy VolIn other business, commis- month extension;
a yet undecided location for
unteer Fire Department, he
sioners opened bids for the
• Approved transfers of funds proper disposal.
replacement of the roof on the in the amounts of $947,
Village officials had intended added.
While the village is waiting
county annex building. Bids $1,99.53,
$5,000,
and to remove at least six to nine
were received fiom Ohio Valley $17,053.47
'
for the engineer's structures that were either for a time fimle that coincides
Spray Foam of Marietta; in the office; $565 for the board ·of destroyed by 6re or dilapidated with favorable -weather condi- ·
amount of $15,300; Home elections, 'pending certification; in March or April, but a con- tions, he said attention is'being
Creek EnterpriseS of Pomeroy
and $8,000 for the MR/DD sbnt barrage of thunderstorms focused on wious other proin the amount of $6,600; and
and accumulating precipitation jects, namely the installation of
J.D.. Construction ofPomeroy in Board;
the new water line and the
• Appi:oved a telephone main- halted the project's progress.
the amount of$19,800.
"Hopefully we can begin refurbishing of Pomeroy
The commissioners . tabled tenance agreement with Jim demolishing these eye sores in Municipal Building's exterior.
action on the bids until they Mobbs for the Department of
reconvene at 11 a.m. Monday, so Job and Family Services, in the
.
hey can review specifications amount of$6,500;
Present, in addition to Sheets
and bid packages.
Commissioner JeffTbomton and Thornton, were Commis- ·
said the Gallia/Meig'l Commu- sioner Mick Davenport and
nity Action Agency would . Clerk Gloria Kloes.

ACTIVITY:
Administration and Fair Housing
CDBG Funding: $22,960.00 (Admin: $12,000- Fair Housing: $10,960)

Mtmbtr. Gmtsis Ho1pital SJtttm

I , I

4,0110

Reader Services

'

JUNE

June 14, 2001

ACTIVITY:
Removal Architeetural Barriers • County Annex Handicapped Ramp • Lower
Floor .
.
CDBG Funding: $8,500
..
Other Funds: $14,600 (Various Agencies) .

'. •

MAY

. 2,044.07

· The Meigs County Commissioners intend to apply to the Ohio Department of
Development, for funding under the FY' 2001 Community Development Blocls
Grant (CDBG) Formula, Allocation Program, a federally funded program
administered by the State. Meigs County is eligible for up to $180,000 of Fiscal
Year 2001 CDBG funding, provided the County meets applicable requirements.
On May 14, 2001, the County conducted its first public hearing to inform citizens
about the CDBG program, how 'it may be used, what activities are eligible, and
other important program requirements.
'

Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on.June 28, 2001 to express
their views and comments on the county's proposed CDBG FY'2001 Formula
Allocation Application. Written comments will be accepted until 10:00 t,.M, June
28, 2001, and may be mailed to the Meigs County CoUrthouse, Pomeroy ·Ohio
45769.
'

APRL .

3,0110

NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING

If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interp'reter, bnull~d or taped material~
assistive listening device, other) due to a disabifity, please contact Gloria Kloes
Clerk, prior to June 5, 2001, at (740) 992-2895 in Order to ensure that your need~ .
will be accommodated.

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital .

MARCH

The o.lly 81 1IIMI•,.. A 3

FAIDAY
POMEROY- Meigl County
Arthritis SUppolt Group, 10 to
11:30 a.m. Friday at Meigs
County Senior Center. Becky
RUTLAND - Michael "Beavis"/"Tbe Kid" Dellavalle Jr., Baer, Exlanslon Agent, present28, of Rutland, died on Thesday.June 12, ~1 at Rutland.
Ing "Have You Got the Baaic
He was bomonJuly 12,1972 at Staten liland,NewYork,son Budget Blues?" Arthritis suflerof Laura Dellavalle of Rutland, and Michael Dellawlle, Sr. of et'll and friends and family wetcome .

•

Possible Klan link douds naming

Street Improvements Sansbury ToWDBhlp • Rose Hill Road
CDBG Funding: $23,300
Other Funds: $ NONE
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: LMI

1,000

March 24, 2000

Judge Thomas Janas of Lorain County Common Pleas Court
decided the case against Asbok !Umadugu was too weak. He said
reasonable doubt exists.
Rarnadugu was charged with two counts of rape and two
counts of gross sexual imposition.
The two women involved "were suffering from severe medical
problems which, together with medications, caused confusion,
affected their ability to see and their ability to accurately recall the
events occurring around them,"Janas wrote in the decision Thursday.
.
~
.

J.

•

,

iiunates on death row.
"It's our view that some good things
came out of this," Sweeney said. "People are m~re aware of schizophrenia
now. They're more into issues of mental
health, competency and executions."
Scott was calm as prison employees
walked him into the death ·chamber at
the Southern Ohio ·correctional Faciiity. He was strapped onto the death bed
and. nodded several times to family
members.
"Tell my family and friends I send my
love. Don't worfy. Tell them I'm all
right," Scott said in his final statement.
Scott took several heavy breaths as ·
the drugs were administered, then his
eyes closed and his head tipped back.
He was pronounced dead at 9:08 p.m.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Medical gas tmks would have to be
color•coded and tank handlets
A secoqd public hearing will be held on 1une 28, 2001 at 11:30 AM at the
wquld1have to .un~ training
under a bjll.~ Senate approved Meigs County Commissioners office,. Meigs .County. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio,
on Thursday.
to give citizens an opportunity to revje~ apd comment on the County's proposed
' Llwmakers ~ pushing the CDBG FY'2001 Formula Allocation project. . ·.
.
.
bill.after four 'nUning home resBased on both citizen input and local .official's assessment of the County's Fair ·
idents died in d!e Dayton area in
Housing needs, the County is proposing to undertake the following Formula
December when nitrogen ~
Allocation CDBG activities for Ftscal Year 2001:
·
takenly was hO!)ked up to. the
home's oxygen system.
ACTIVITY: .
.
.
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Parks'and Reereatlon FaeiDtlee • SoutbemSebool District
Steve Austria. R-Beavercreek,
CDBO Funding: $30,000_
.
would~ the state Boud of
0Jher Funds: $51,900 • (Southern School District and In-Kind}
Pharmacy to create a safety proNATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI
' .
gram for medical pes..
It would also req~the tanks
ACTIVITY:
containing medical gases to be
Fire Protection Facllitl11 and Equipment • Rutland Fire Department
properly labeled and color
CDBGFunding: $27,840
coded. For exaniple, an air tank
Other Funding: $,NONE
1
would be labeled yellow, a carNATIONAL
OBJECTIVE:
AREA
LMI
bon dioxide t3!1k gray and an·
oxygen tank.~.
.
ACTIVITY:
,
The bill would also require
Fac:IHtlll·
Ball Run Road Water Line Extension· Leading
Water
and
Sewer
employees who handle medical
Creek Water District
"
.·
·
.
gases and their tanks to.undergo
CDBG Funding: $27,400
training.
Foll1' residents of Carriage- Other Funds: $27,480 (LCCD)
by-the-Lake 11uning home in . NATIONALOBJECTIVE:AREALMI
Bellbrook died in December
ACT~TY:
.
·
· after nitiogen. was mistakenly
Stree~ lmprovemen~ • Ch11ter ToWDBhlp • Various Streets ·
booked to d!e oxygen system.
CDBG Funding: $40,000
.
.
Authorities said ·the tink had an
.
oxygen label partially cOYeted by Other Fl.lnds: $5,000 (Chester Township Trustees (In Kind))
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI ·
a smaller nitrogen lapel and that
a maintenance worker changed '.
ACTMTY:
the fitting'l to make the tank fit.

Pleasant Valley Hospital

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Ohio Senate on Thursday
passed a bill granting gun makers inununity fiom ~uits. The
vote was 24-9 in the Republican-controlled Senate, with four
Democrats supporting the bill.
The House already had
approved the measure, but its
version would have made the
immunity retroactive. The Senate removed that provision, ~­
ing it was unconstitutional.
Rep. Jamie Callender, a
Republican fiom Willowick and
sponsor of the bill in the House,
said he will ask the House to
reject the Senate version...

Timothy Sweeney alter the execution.
"I think tonight we just created more
victims. The Scott family now are vicrims. .. . They laved their brother, their
father, their uncle."
Scott's attorneys argued it would be
cruel and unusual punishment under
the U.S. and Ohio constitutions to execute a mentally ill prisoner.
The lawyen ended their· legal fight
on Wednesday after the U.S. Supreme
Court refused to hear their appeal.They
had implored Gov. Bob Taft to grant
clemency, but Taft declined to do so on
the recommendation of the Ohio
Parole Board.
Sweeney and attorney John Pyle said
they hope&lt;,l Scott's case would draw
attention to the issue of mentally ill

...•
. • ..
•• •
';~:··. .

XENIA (AP) - Plans to name a highway in honor of a longtime physician are on hold while officials referee a dispute over
whether the former coroner was a member of the Ku Klux Klan .
Greene County commissioners adopted a resolution May 29 to
rename part of Old Route 35 between Xenia and Jamestown for
ELYRIA (AP) -A doctor who was accused of attacking two Dr. Remer Leroy Haines, who practiced medicine in the county
women in the intensive care unit of a hospital three years ago has from 1917 until he died of cancer in 1%2 ac 72.
.
been acquitted, and the trial judge sharply criticized the prosecuHe was county coroner from 1919-27,and in the 1930s foundtion evidence.
ed l:faines Hospital in Jamestown.

Bill annflnVecl
r:r•-•

Obituaries

Markets roundup

pected victory.
The 75-year-old building had been destined to become a grocery store parking lot.
.The Giant Eagle supermarket chain, which holds a demolition
permit on the dome-topped structure in Cleveland's west end, is
donating the building to the city, which has no immediate plans
for its use.
The Pittsburgh-based company, which inherited the building in
1998 when it bought the Riser Foods gJOCery store chain, also
will vacate its Giant Eagle store next to the church. The company
said the store is too small.
·
"We've been fighting uphill all these years;• said Michael Ruffing. one of the neighbothood people who sought to preserve the
building. "We really haven't had the liberty of dreaming. Everything will evolve around money and developers."

Complete WOmens Healthcare

immunity

. Pomeroy, MlddllpDrt, Ohio

Rocord high: 1,527.48

Mark W. Nolan, MD

grant1ng gun
makers legal

J

Frldey, June 15, 2001

State executes Scott after two postponements

Ohio weather

0

,,

CUBPI 21a.ee6j

·OIIio Yllloy Publllhlng Co.
Pubrlshed """IY lltemoon, Monday
through Fnday, 111 eoun St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Slt(lond-clasa
postage pold at Pomeroy.
_ , The Auoclated Pren and

tho Ohio Newapapor AnocilttOn.
Pot1tmut.r: Send address oorrec·
tiDNI to ThO oe11y senttnet, 111 eoun.
St., pomeroy, Olllo 45769.

SUNDAY SPECIAL
'

-~· ~
..,.~:!'.......
~~ ...

Subscription rates
By-or.motor-

OneOne month
One-

'

S2
$8.70

www-

52

$27.30

$53.82

SfOS.I58
!latH Olllllde Melgo County
't3
1211.25
26W$56.68
52W$109.72

J~

.f'

I ·.

.
:

Turkey
Dressing
Choice of Potato
Choice of veget~IDie .
. Dinner Roll

ONLY

$6.95

We are loCated on State Route 7

MaD
subsaiDIIan
lllllclelllalga cotmiY·

'

-.Iii-

•J¥r
. . Vl)/il'"

carrier sorvtca le ovollllble.

13

·_ ·

..

$104
·Dally
50 conto
Subactlberl not dattlnng to poy tho
carrier may remit In advance dlract to
The Deily Sonlinol. Crwdlt will be given
carTitr each · No eubeoriptlon by
mall permitted In areoe where home

26 w.. ~ca

~

~ext

At C"eater, Ohio • (740) ~902

To Our Complete Feed J!Farm Store
You Can Buy At Landmark;'Anyone Can
Monday • Sllturclay 111111 • 8pm
Sunday 11am • 4pm

Bernard D.

Gilkey
Love,
Debbie, Mark, &amp; Richard

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
s.twdlly, June 11

-

LUCASVILLE (AP) - There was no
laJt minute reprieve for a schizophrenic
killer on his third trip to the death
house.
Jay D. Scott on Thursday night
became the lint Ohio inrrute to be
executed against his will since 1963.
The state put Wilford Berry to death in
1999 after Berry waived his appeals and
asked the state to carry out his sentence.
Scott, 48, received the let!Jal injection
without mentioning the Cleveland deli
owner he killed in 1983.
Instead, he directed his last words to
family members who sat in an adjacent
witness room.
"We always ask about victims of these
types of crimes," said Scott's attorney

0
elcoeun•-!F.w l

·o

•• •
•..
·. •~ -~-~-·S·-\

ICY.

Inc.

0 \-

. . .... . . . .

Sumr PLCiou4j Clou4j

T.-

-

PageA2

"'"'

fUriio

.somewhat cooler on Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cooler and less hu'!Pd conditions will settle on the tricounty area on Saturday after a
frontal system chums up thunderstorms during the night.
The National Weather Service said some of the storms
coUld be severe and capable of
producing very heavy tain.
. Sunset tonight will be at
9:02, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 6:02 a.m.
Weather forecut:
Topight. ..Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Rain may be h"eavy
at rimes until midnight. Areas
of fog after midnight. Muggy
with lows 65 to 70. Southwest
wind 5 to 10 mph becoming
northwest. Chance of tain 50
. percent.
Saturday.. .Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the morn-

ing. Highs 80 to 85. North
wind around 10 mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Saturday
night... Mostly
clear. Lows 60 to 65. ·
Extended forecast:
· Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s ~nd highs
in the upper 80s.
Thesday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows around 60 and higlis in
the upper 80s.
Wednesday...A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
during the day... Otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 60s and highs around
90.
Thursday...Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.

~ CLEVELAND (AP) A Oeveland taxi cab mechanic is
aJ11Png the 6rst reCipients of experimental surgery to determine
whether implanted arm mwcle cells can heal a damaged heart.
Surgeons at the Cleveland Clinic last week grafted 10 million
cells grown from a section ofBarry Bucchioni's arm muscle into
his left ventricle, the heart's main pumping chamber, which was
~by a heart attack.
·
·
The procedure was done during triple bypass surgery. Buc•
chioni, 52, was discharged from the hospital Thursday, less than a

week after surgery.

ijeart muscle is quicldy damaged when oxygen is cut off by a
clot during a heart attack. Studies are taking place nationally wing
cells fi:om skeletal muscle, bone marrow and heart muscle, said Dr.
Pat;rick McCarthy, director of heart transplantation at the Clinic.

NORTH OLMSTED (AP) -The sentence was five days in
jail. for 113-year-oldAnn Donovan, whose suburllan yard is a mess.
She was sentenced'Thesday for prop~rty maintenance violations.
But Rocky River Municipal Judge
Cravens suspended
her sentence ~t the request of North .Olmsted Prosecutor Bryan
O'Malley. ·
.
.
"I ~ked the judge to ~consider the commitment to jail,"
O'Malley said Thursday. "Anyone in that age bracket certainly
should not be in a jail. It's too mu~h stress for them:'
·
Donovan spent less ¢an an hour sitting in the North Olmsted
Police Department on Tuesday, said Capt. Wayne Wozniak. She
never saw the inside of a jail cell.

Maureen

Church bullcllna pen to city
CLEVELAND (AP) --, Neighbors who worked to save a former church building fiom demolition now can celebrate an unex-

BiU approved

FtW•r..... 1s. 2001

'

to adCiress
.185 fank
; -'-tu
.._.,...,

.,

Medical Office Building
Suite 214
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
- Appointments -

(304} 675-3400'

4

,;.'

;;;

'

.

10,690.13

...

Pa.cho!gemn.....,..

·1 .67

10,868.48
~high:

.....
10,659.47
11.722.98

'

'

-

.~

,·-.: ..

. ·'

Jan. 14. 2000

.

11,0110
10,0110
1.000

¥00

··~.

:l'
'•· . •

MARCH

...

'

.

'

12.000

·~·

APRIL

.

MAY

7,0110

JUNE

June 14, 2001

1,500

•*r'sda

1,4110

Poor'aiiQO

1,300

1.219.87

...

1,200

Pl:t cho!ge fnlm ........

-1.75

1.241 .60

.....

1,100

1.218.90

Nnd~q

3,500

I

'

).,

I .
.I

•

projects. Special entertainment will be provided by June
and Myron Duffield. Asbury
UMC is acting as host for this
special visit. Pastor Bob
Robinson invites the public.

·. Plan dink

Plan social

HARRISONVILLE- Har·
r180I1Ville Community Church,
vacation Bible IChool, Monday
through Friday, 10 a.m. to noon.
Picnic June 23.

LETART FALLS - Letart Town-

ship Trust.s, Monday, 5 p.m.,

To host dinner

SUNDAY
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. Annual Milhoan reunion, Sun·
day, noon, Milhoan Homestead,
Milhollil Ridge, W.Va. 2,
Ravenswood. Take covered dish
lnd family history.

llaMd ........ 1881 rice to
110n11i uftt llfOUPI wllhlng to
11r1nou.- -~~~• llld II»'
cltll -ta. The callndar Ia
not dellgned to ptiiii!Oie .....
or funckli..,. of lillY type•

MONDAY

lptlell plfllllta and cannot

POMEROY- Meigs County
Right to Ufe meeting, Pomeroy

Community Callnder .. pub-

nem. .,. prln-.1 only es

be

lllllllllnlMd to be prlntM I
apeclflc number

o1u-,..

Schools coalition delivers
evidence to Supreme Court
COLUMBUS (AP) The coalition of schools
suing Ohio over the way it
funds education on Thursday delivered 30 boxes of
evidence . to · the Ohio
Supreme Court.
The Coalition for Equity
&amp; Adequacy of School
Funding delivered the boxes
just before 5 p.m.
The boxes include copies
of information for all seven
court justices. They contain
depositions, affidavits and
other documents produced
by the state at the coalition's
request. The information
will be formally filed with '
the court Friday, the deadline set by the court.
The state expects to deliver its own . evidence about
noon Friday.

William Phillis, coalition
executive director, said he
believes the coalition's case
is a "slam dunk."
"When we look at the
areas the court is concerned
about, the state has failed to
comply in all areas," Phillis
said. "The state has no clue
as to the resources chat are
necessary to fulfill the constitutional standard of thorough and efficient."

Plans

\

'

The Daily Sentinel

News Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

'

Gen•ral manqer

-· '

or

Ext 12
Ext. 13
Ext. 14

.Other service•

Advertlalng

Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext 4

Ciaulfled Ada

Ext. S

To ~end e-mail
newsCIImydallyeenllnel.com
www.mydallysenllnel.com

. r

LOCAL ·BRIEFS

To meet

On the Web

.

Richie, Florida, and Dorothy Van Pelt of Cochecton Center,
New York; and several uncles, aunts and cousins.
He was preceded in death by his grandfathers, Nunzio
DeUavalle and Gordon Van Pelt.
Services will be held on Sunday, June 17, 2001 at 1:30 p.m.
at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rudand, with the Rev.
Marty Hutton officiating. Burial will follow at Standish Cemetery in Dexter.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, June 16,
2001 from 6-9 p.m.

LOCAL STOCKS

Correction Polley

'

Library, Monday. 7:30 p.m.

at office building.
SATURDAY
neers.
POMEROY- CPR and Firsl
SYRACUSE- 5ynlCU88 United
Surviving in addition to his parents are two brothers, Jason Aid classes, Saturday, June 16, Methodist Church charge to host
DeUavalle of Alaska, and Jonathon Dellawlle of Rutland; a sis- 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the F.O.E. cany-in dinner for membenl ol
2171. haU. All Interested in laking work camp. Entertainment by
ter-in-law,Julie King of Rutland; a nephew, Brody Dellavalle of classes, call Gene Lyons, 992·
June and Myron Duffiekf. Pastor
Rutland; two grandmothers, Agnes Dellavalle of Newport 6619.
Bob Robinson imrites public.

EMS n1ns

Our main concern In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

Jeff Thornton, President ·
Meigs County Commissioners

Newport Richey, Florifia. He was a heavy equipment operator
and a member of the International Union of Operating Engi-

........

cable·

LOCAL EVENTS

Michael Dellav•• Jr.

POMEROY Meigs
2,500
Pl:t dlangeflom .......
County Health Department
-3.66
will offer a childhood immu2,0110
2,101.05
2,043.36
nization clinic on June 19
from 1 to 7 p.m. at its office,
IIKonl high: 5,048.62
1,500
112 E. Memorial Drive,
March 10, 2000
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
JUNE
Pomeroy. The child's shot
loP
POMEROY - Units of
records should be provided,
and all children · must be the Meigs Emergency Service
accompanied by a parent or answered seven calls for assistance on Thursday. Units
legal guardian.
responded as follows:
AEP-45\
USB-21~
Rod&lt;wel- 37~
M:h Coal- 27~
Gannell- 81!.
Roclcy Boots- 4~
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Alczo-42\
General Eledric - 48l.
RDShel-61
a.m., Elmwood Ter2:28
AmTechSBC- 41'GKNLY-9l.
Seara-39~
LETART FALLS - Letart race;Vicky Boso, treated;
Aahland Inc. - 39~
Harley Oallidlon - 45~ Shoroey's -!.
AT&amp;T-20~
' Kmart-11~
WaJ.Marl-49~
2:28 p.m., Holzer . Clinic,
Township Trustees will m~et
Bank One- 36~
Kroger- 24!.
Wendy's-24!.
on Monday at 5 p.m. at the Pamela Jenkins, Holzer MedBob Evans -17\
Lands End - 37
Worthington - 12
ical Center;
office building.
BorgWamer- 44~
Ltd. - 15~
Daily rapor1B 818
Champion - 3%
Oak Hil Anancial- 13'1. the 4 p.m. closing
6:37. p.m., Ohio 7, Keshia
Channing Shops - 5\
OVB-25
quotes ol the prellious
Tillis, treated.
·
City Hoking - 10
BST-35~
day's11anSaC1tons,proDuPont~.ce~
vlded by Smith P811nera
. . MIDDLEPORT
PeorJIN - till.
Federal Mogul- 2~
Pn!mler- 7~
at Advael inc.
. 6:27 p.m., Oliver Street,
BASHAN - Bashan VFD
Ladies Auxiliary will have an assisted by Central Dispatch
and Pomeroy, trailer fire, Lynn
ice cream social on June 29.
administer
the
county's
Hc;~ffinail
residence,
no
$100,000 Summer Youth
injuries.
Employment Thining Program,
POMBROY
fnnPIIpAI
and youths interested in particiSYRACUSE - Syracuse
6:37 p.m., Overbrooll
pating, in the program should United Methodist charge will Nuning Center, Vava Beninet connection through the contact the agency at 992-6629. host a special carry-in dinner dict, Pleasant Valley Hotp!tal.
digiral cable system, rather than
PEBDSVILLB
The program provides Wllrk 'on Monday at 6:30 p.m. in
.through. a telephone line. That experien~e and training for honor of members of a work
9:43 p.m., Ohio 12~, Fanservice offers connection speeds income-e~gible youtlu in pub- camp from the Bowling nie Bigley, Camden-Clark
of 256 kbs and 512 kbs, and is, lic agencies and other worksites. Green United Methodist Memorial Ho1pital.
Leadunan said, ''lightning fast:'
lWTLAND
Prior to the implementltion of Church.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
The
group
will
be
in
Meigs
8:20
p.m.,
Titus Road, Dale
WIA, the program was adminissaid a number of tesidents have
County doing community Ellis Jr., HMC.
called the commissioners' office tered by the CM through the
.inquiring ~ut the change in J~b Training' Partnership Act,
channel alignment, because which has been
July when long range forecasts
The commissioners also:
their number is listed on the
call for good weather;• Welker
• Amended three of the coun•
back of the cab)e bill.
said."Most of them are a safety
Leachman distributed chan~ ty's Workforce Investment Act
fnn'-ceAI
hazard and they ·detract from
nel lineup cards for the public, . contracts, with the AthensPomeroy\ better qualities."
which will be available at the Meigs Educational Service
H~r, plans do call for a
One or two of the runcommissioners office, The Daily Center. the University of Rio trackhoe to be brought in to
down structures .will escape
· Sentinels offices, and at Hud- Grande, and Buckeye Hills tear doWn the remnants of the
nall\; in Middleport, the .local Career Center, to adjust the structures. The debris will be demolition so they can be used
as .a training apparatus for
cable payment agent.
con~ct periods for a threetransported via dump truck to
members of the Pomeroy VolIn other business, commis- month extension;
a yet undecided location for
unteer Fire Department, he
sioners opened bids for the
• Approved transfers of funds proper disposal.
replacement of the roof on the in the amounts of $947,
Village officials had intended added.
While the village is waiting
county annex building. Bids $1,99.53,
$5,000,
and to remove at least six to nine
were received fiom Ohio Valley $17,053.47
'
for the engineer's structures that were either for a time fimle that coincides
Spray Foam of Marietta; in the office; $565 for the board ·of destroyed by 6re or dilapidated with favorable -weather condi- ·
amount of $15,300; Home elections, 'pending certification; in March or April, but a con- tions, he said attention is'being
Creek EnterpriseS of Pomeroy
and $8,000 for the MR/DD sbnt barrage of thunderstorms focused on wious other proin the amount of $6,600; and
and accumulating precipitation jects, namely the installation of
J.D.. Construction ofPomeroy in Board;
the new water line and the
• Appi:oved a telephone main- halted the project's progress.
the amount of$19,800.
"Hopefully we can begin refurbishing of Pomeroy
The commissioners . tabled tenance agreement with Jim demolishing these eye sores in Municipal Building's exterior.
action on the bids until they Mobbs for the Department of
reconvene at 11 a.m. Monday, so Job and Family Services, in the
.
hey can review specifications amount of$6,500;
Present, in addition to Sheets
and bid packages.
Commissioner JeffTbomton and Thornton, were Commis- ·
said the Gallia/Meig'l Commu- sioner Mick Davenport and
nity Action Agency would . Clerk Gloria Kloes.

ACTIVITY:
Administration and Fair Housing
CDBG Funding: $22,960.00 (Admin: $12,000- Fair Housing: $10,960)

Mtmbtr. Gmtsis Ho1pital SJtttm

I , I

4,0110

Reader Services

'

JUNE

June 14, 2001

ACTIVITY:
Removal Architeetural Barriers • County Annex Handicapped Ramp • Lower
Floor .
.
CDBG Funding: $8,500
..
Other Funds: $14,600 (Various Agencies) .

'. •

MAY

. 2,044.07

· The Meigs County Commissioners intend to apply to the Ohio Department of
Development, for funding under the FY' 2001 Community Development Blocls
Grant (CDBG) Formula, Allocation Program, a federally funded program
administered by the State. Meigs County is eligible for up to $180,000 of Fiscal
Year 2001 CDBG funding, provided the County meets applicable requirements.
On May 14, 2001, the County conducted its first public hearing to inform citizens
about the CDBG program, how 'it may be used, what activities are eligible, and
other important program requirements.
'

Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on.June 28, 2001 to express
their views and comments on the county's proposed CDBG FY'2001 Formula
Allocation Application. Written comments will be accepted until 10:00 t,.M, June
28, 2001, and may be mailed to the Meigs County CoUrthouse, Pomeroy ·Ohio
45769.
'

APRL .

3,0110

NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING

If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interp'reter, bnull~d or taped material~
assistive listening device, other) due to a disabifity, please contact Gloria Kloes
Clerk, prior to June 5, 2001, at (740) 992-2895 in Order to ensure that your need~ .
will be accommodated.

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital .

MARCH

The o.lly 81 1IIMI•,.. A 3

FAIDAY
POMEROY- Meigl County
Arthritis SUppolt Group, 10 to
11:30 a.m. Friday at Meigs
County Senior Center. Becky
RUTLAND - Michael "Beavis"/"Tbe Kid" Dellavalle Jr., Baer, Exlanslon Agent, present28, of Rutland, died on Thesday.June 12, ~1 at Rutland.
Ing "Have You Got the Baaic
He was bomonJuly 12,1972 at Staten liland,NewYork,son Budget Blues?" Arthritis suflerof Laura Dellavalle of Rutland, and Michael Dellawlle, Sr. of et'll and friends and family wetcome .

•

Possible Klan link douds naming

Street Improvements Sansbury ToWDBhlp • Rose Hill Road
CDBG Funding: $23,300
Other Funds: $ NONE
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: LMI

1,000

March 24, 2000

Judge Thomas Janas of Lorain County Common Pleas Court
decided the case against Asbok !Umadugu was too weak. He said
reasonable doubt exists.
Rarnadugu was charged with two counts of rape and two
counts of gross sexual imposition.
The two women involved "were suffering from severe medical
problems which, together with medications, caused confusion,
affected their ability to see and their ability to accurately recall the
events occurring around them,"Janas wrote in the decision Thursday.
.
~
.

J.

•

,

iiunates on death row.
"It's our view that some good things
came out of this," Sweeney said. "People are m~re aware of schizophrenia
now. They're more into issues of mental
health, competency and executions."
Scott was calm as prison employees
walked him into the death ·chamber at
the Southern Ohio ·correctional Faciiity. He was strapped onto the death bed
and. nodded several times to family
members.
"Tell my family and friends I send my
love. Don't worfy. Tell them I'm all
right," Scott said in his final statement.
Scott took several heavy breaths as ·
the drugs were administered, then his
eyes closed and his head tipped back.
He was pronounced dead at 9:08 p.m.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Medical gas tmks would have to be
color•coded and tank handlets
A secoqd public hearing will be held on 1une 28, 2001 at 11:30 AM at the
wquld1have to .un~ training
under a bjll.~ Senate approved Meigs County Commissioners office,. Meigs .County. Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio,
on Thursday.
to give citizens an opportunity to revje~ apd comment on the County's proposed
' Llwmakers ~ pushing the CDBG FY'2001 Formula Allocation project. . ·.
.
.
bill.after four 'nUning home resBased on both citizen input and local .official's assessment of the County's Fair ·
idents died in d!e Dayton area in
Housing needs, the County is proposing to undertake the following Formula
December when nitrogen ~
Allocation CDBG activities for Ftscal Year 2001:
·
takenly was hO!)ked up to. the
home's oxygen system.
ACTIVITY: .
.
.
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Parks'and Reereatlon FaeiDtlee • SoutbemSebool District
Steve Austria. R-Beavercreek,
CDBO Funding: $30,000_
.
would~ the state Boud of
0Jher Funds: $51,900 • (Southern School District and In-Kind}
Pharmacy to create a safety proNATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI
' .
gram for medical pes..
It would also req~the tanks
ACTIVITY:
containing medical gases to be
Fire Protection Facllitl11 and Equipment • Rutland Fire Department
properly labeled and color
CDBGFunding: $27,840
coded. For exaniple, an air tank
Other Funding: $,NONE
1
would be labeled yellow, a carNATIONAL
OBJECTIVE:
AREA
LMI
bon dioxide t3!1k gray and an·
oxygen tank.~.
.
ACTIVITY:
,
The bill would also require
Fac:IHtlll·
Ball Run Road Water Line Extension· Leading
Water
and
Sewer
employees who handle medical
Creek Water District
"
.·
·
.
gases and their tanks to.undergo
CDBG Funding: $27,400
training.
Foll1' residents of Carriage- Other Funds: $27,480 (LCCD)
by-the-Lake 11uning home in . NATIONALOBJECTIVE:AREALMI
Bellbrook died in December
ACT~TY:
.
·
· after nitiogen. was mistakenly
Stree~ lmprovemen~ • Ch11ter ToWDBhlp • Various Streets ·
booked to d!e oxygen system.
CDBG Funding: $40,000
.
.
Authorities said ·the tink had an
.
oxygen label partially cOYeted by Other Fl.lnds: $5,000 (Chester Township Trustees (In Kind))
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI ·
a smaller nitrogen lapel and that
a maintenance worker changed '.
ACTMTY:
the fitting'l to make the tank fit.

Pleasant Valley Hospital

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Ohio Senate on Thursday
passed a bill granting gun makers inununity fiom ~uits. The
vote was 24-9 in the Republican-controlled Senate, with four
Democrats supporting the bill.
The House already had
approved the measure, but its
version would have made the
immunity retroactive. The Senate removed that provision, ~­
ing it was unconstitutional.
Rep. Jamie Callender, a
Republican fiom Willowick and
sponsor of the bill in the House,
said he will ask the House to
reject the Senate version...

Timothy Sweeney alter the execution.
"I think tonight we just created more
victims. The Scott family now are vicrims. .. . They laved their brother, their
father, their uncle."
Scott's attorneys argued it would be
cruel and unusual punishment under
the U.S. and Ohio constitutions to execute a mentally ill prisoner.
The lawyen ended their· legal fight
on Wednesday after the U.S. Supreme
Court refused to hear their appeal.They
had implored Gov. Bob Taft to grant
clemency, but Taft declined to do so on
the recommendation of the Ohio
Parole Board.
Sweeney and attorney John Pyle said
they hope&lt;,l Scott's case would draw
attention to the issue of mentally ill

...•
. • ..
•• •
';~:··. .

XENIA (AP) - Plans to name a highway in honor of a longtime physician are on hold while officials referee a dispute over
whether the former coroner was a member of the Ku Klux Klan .
Greene County commissioners adopted a resolution May 29 to
rename part of Old Route 35 between Xenia and Jamestown for
ELYRIA (AP) -A doctor who was accused of attacking two Dr. Remer Leroy Haines, who practiced medicine in the county
women in the intensive care unit of a hospital three years ago has from 1917 until he died of cancer in 1%2 ac 72.
.
been acquitted, and the trial judge sharply criticized the prosecuHe was county coroner from 1919-27,and in the 1930s foundtion evidence.
ed l:faines Hospital in Jamestown.

Bill annflnVecl
r:r•-•

Obituaries

Markets roundup

pected victory.
The 75-year-old building had been destined to become a grocery store parking lot.
.The Giant Eagle supermarket chain, which holds a demolition
permit on the dome-topped structure in Cleveland's west end, is
donating the building to the city, which has no immediate plans
for its use.
The Pittsburgh-based company, which inherited the building in
1998 when it bought the Riser Foods gJOCery store chain, also
will vacate its Giant Eagle store next to the church. The company
said the store is too small.
·
"We've been fighting uphill all these years;• said Michael Ruffing. one of the neighbothood people who sought to preserve the
building. "We really haven't had the liberty of dreaming. Everything will evolve around money and developers."

Complete WOmens Healthcare

immunity

. Pomeroy, MlddllpDrt, Ohio

Rocord high: 1,527.48

Mark W. Nolan, MD

grant1ng gun
makers legal

J

Frldey, June 15, 2001

State executes Scott after two postponements

Ohio weather

0

,,

CUBPI 21a.ee6j

·OIIio Yllloy Publllhlng Co.
Pubrlshed """IY lltemoon, Monday
through Fnday, 111 eoun St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Slt(lond-clasa
postage pold at Pomeroy.
_ , The Auoclated Pren and

tho Ohio Newapapor AnocilttOn.
Pot1tmut.r: Send address oorrec·
tiDNI to ThO oe11y senttnet, 111 eoun.
St., pomeroy, Olllo 45769.

SUNDAY SPECIAL
'

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..,.~:!'.......
~~ ...

Subscription rates
By-or.motor-

OneOne month
One-

'

S2
$8.70

www-

52

$27.30

$53.82

SfOS.I58
!latH Olllllde Melgo County
't3
1211.25
26W$56.68
52W$109.72

J~

.f'

I ·.

.
:

Turkey
Dressing
Choice of Potato
Choice of veget~IDie .
. Dinner Roll

ONLY

$6.95

We are loCated on State Route 7

MaD
subsaiDIIan
lllllclelllalga cotmiY·

'

-.Iii-

•J¥r
. . Vl)/il'"

carrier sorvtca le ovollllble.

13

·_ ·

..

$104
·Dally
50 conto
Subactlberl not dattlnng to poy tho
carrier may remit In advance dlract to
The Deily Sonlinol. Crwdlt will be given
carTitr each · No eubeoriptlon by
mall permitted In areoe where home

26 w.. ~ca

~

~ext

At C"eater, Ohio • (740) ~902

To Our Complete Feed J!Farm Store
You Can Buy At Landmark;'Anyone Can
Monday • Sllturclay 111111 • 8pm
Sunday 11am • 4pm

Bernard D.

Gilkey
Love,
Debbie, Mark, &amp; Richard

�Opinion

'The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

_The_D_aiiy_Se_ntin_·e_I_ _

Ftld l• JYne IS. ~-1

DEAR ABBY: In 1941, whet~ the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, I Was
a 17-year-old seaman on. a~
in the North Atlantic. There were several other teen-agers on boanl. We all
smoked, as did the rest of the crew.
C igarettes were 6 cents a pack. At that
price, the saying was, we couldn't
afford NOT to smoke.
We happily discussed the merits of
Lucky Strikes, Camels and Chesterfields. Old Golds and Pall Malls were
not as popular; Kools were for sissies.
None of us realized that all the brands
we smoked contained the same poisonous, addictive substances. People
who didn't smoke were considered
odd. If they didn't like to be around
smokers, THEY were the ones with.
the problem.
It wasn't until years later that I realized .the purpose of selling ogarettes
so cheaply to servicemen was to get

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74CH82-2158 • Fax: 982·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflleh .
General Manager

DI8M Kay Hill
Controller

"""" ..... - - - .,., · -.,,.,, ,,.,-......JtiJ,.,.,.

orosdj«tro - . . , . - _,,. ri.,W • ..t ht&lt;l•ulu Jdnu &lt;UNI ~........,...
No ..., _ , , _ , rrlll H ,allbW Llrun t wW t&lt; U. 1tH4 - · _ , . ,

w.n. •

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l'lu . , . _ . _ , . U. ... """- t&lt;lo• .,. r1N ....,...,..,
l"ddbAJ.r c..., ~ IHwtl. I!Uiln:r oOiwwis• lfDIM.

•f* OiUD llou.,

OUR VIEW

come
Roll out the red carpet for
our GOBA visitors
·Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure's trek through southern Ohio
begins Saturday in Gallipolis. We welcorne the thousands of par.ricipants in the weekclong trip to the area, and th~nk GOBA for
again placing Gallia and Meigs counties along its itinerary.
The benefits for bicyclists P.edaling through our hills are there
if they're looking at it from a health or touriSm standpoinl. The
: benefits for cot11munities along the route, which wraps back to
Gallipolis on June 23 after stops in such towns as Wellston, Nelsonville and Marietta, are equally apparent.
· We look for GOBA participants to stop and visit during their
stopovers, avail themselves of our local businesses and get a dose
of the hospitality that makes this region unique. There's even a
dash' of publicity in it since Gov. Bob Taft and wife Hope plan to
· lead the parade around Gallipolis' Ciry Park Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
Individuals and businesses . have been encouraged by GOBA
organizers to roll ·o ut the welcome mat and they have responded.
Towns along the way staild co share in the spotlight.
· During 1997's GOBA tour through Gallia and Meigs counties,
Rutland and Vinton were among the communities ready to provide bicyclists with refreshments. GOBA sponsor Bob Evans
. Farms made the Rio Grande farm, its corporate showpiece, available for travelers to spend the night. Other communities also
.made the l)icyclists welcome.
·
A good precedent was set with that visit and let's build on that
impression. Economic development experts have told us tourism
is one means for southern Ohio co shine, given its history and
scenic features. Those following GOBA's path in the coining
week can take home with them the fact this area is an attractive
stop for vacationers and d!y-trippers.
.
The event is more than just a bicycle tour for participants and
hoses. It's an opportunity. for both to learn about each other and
come away enriched by the experience.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCiATED PRESS

Tod!y is Frid!y,June 15, the 166th day of200t.There are 199
days left in the year.
Tod!y's Highlight in History:
·On June 15, 12~5, King John put his seal to Magna Carta
("the Great Charter") at Runnymede, England, granting his
barons. more liberty.
6ri ·this date: ·
In 1520, Pope Leo X threatened to excommunicate Martin
Luther if he did not recant his religious beliefS.
·
In 1775, the Second C ontinental Congress voted unanimously to appoint George Washington head of the C ontinental Army. ·
In 1836, Arkansas became the 25th state.
In 1844, Charles Goodyear received a patent for his process
to strengthen rubber.
In 1849,James Polk, the 11th president of the United States,
died in Nashville, Tenn.
In 1864, Secretary ofWar Edwin M . Stanton signed an order'
establishing a military burial ground, which became Arlington
National Cemetery.
In 1904, more than I ,000 people died when fire erupted
aboard the steamboat General Slocum in New York's East
River.
In. 1944, American forces began their successful invasion of
Saipan during World War II. Meanwhile, B- 29 Superfortresses
made their first raids on Japan.
In 1978, King Hussein of Jordan married 26-year-oldAmerican Lisa Halaby, who became Queen Noor.
In 1994, Israel and the Vatican established full diplomatic relations.
Ten years ago: India concluded its violence-racked elections, ·
with the Congress Party of recently assassinated former Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi gaining a plurality of votes.
Five years ago: A truck bomb blew up in a retail district of
Manchester, England, injuring more than 200 people in an
attack claimed by t.he Irish Republican Army. Ella Fitzgerald,
the "first lady of song," died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 78.
One year ago: Al Gore named C ommerce Secretary William
Daley to take over his presidential campaign, replacing Tony
Coelho, who had abruptly resigned, citing health problems.
Denis Savard, Joe Mullen and Walter L. Bush Jr. were selected
to the Hockey Hall of Fame. ·
Today's Birthdays: Former New York Governor Mario
Cuomo is 69. Singer Waylon Jennings is 64. Actor Aron Kincaid is 58. Actor-director Simon Callow is 52. Singer Russell
Hitchcock (Air Supply) is 52. Rock singer Steve Walsh (Kansas)
is 50. Comedian- actor Jim Belushi is 47. Country singer Terri
Gibbs is 47. Actress Julie Hagerty is 46. Actress Eileen Davidson (" The Young and th e R estless") is 42 . Actress Helen Hunt
is 38. Rock musician Scott R oc kenfield (Queensryche) is 38.
. Actress C ourreney Cox Arquette is 37. C ountry musician Tony
Ardoin is 37. C ountry musician Michael Britt (Lonestar) is ~5.
Ro ck musician Jimmy McD (formerly ·of Jimmie's Chicken
. Shack) is 33.Actor- rapper lee Cube is 32 . . ·
I

the Bend

Page AS
Frldlly. June 15, 2001

Young servicemen paid a price for cheap dgarettes during war

The Daily Sentinel

Clu!rlH W. Govey

__;a~
· y_

J

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
our generation hooked for the profit
of tobacco companies. My addiction
lasted until after I was married and
small children. Fortunately. I realized in time that if I was going to live
to see them grow up, I was going to
have to kick the habit - and by the
grace of God I was able to.
Why am I writing this? Because
two of my grandsons have succumbed
to the slick advertising and lies of the
tobacco companies in spite of warn-

!wf

.

.

ings from those who love them most.
I pray they'll realize the self-destructiveness of the habit before they're as
old as I was when I knew I had to qnit
in order to live.
Keep up the good work, Abby. and
God bless. LEON J. SIMS,
DORAVII IE GA.
DEAR LEON: If your grandson~
refuse to listen to you, perhaps they
can learn from the letter that follows.
Read om
?EAR ABBY: I have asked my
Wife, Martha, to send this to you
immediately upon my death. I want
teen-agers to know I died from a selfinflicted disease - smoking.
Back in the 1940s, a majority of
Americans smoked. lr was the
ADULT thing to do. I "knew" I
wouldn't get hooked. We knew smoking wasn't good for us, but we were
willing to take our chances. We called

ciguettes "coffin nails" and laughed as
we lit up.
·
Years later, I was diagnosed with
emphysema. My heart was weakened
because it had enlarged. trying to
pump blood into lungs that could no
longer expand. I had to stop smoking
or die an early death from a heart
attack, stroke, cancer or slow sutfocation. "No sweat," I thought. "I can quit
anytime:' How wrong I was.
I spenr more than $1,000 on smoking-cessation progr.un.S. I tried
acupuncture, hypnosis, gum, patches,
pills and cold turkey. Nothing
worked. I was addicted, dying and
couldn't quit.
You say you want "fi:eedom"? How
free are you when you want to go
dancing or hiking but can't because
your nose is hooked to plastic tubing
attached to an oxygen tank 24 hours
a day, just so you can breathe?

I could have had 20 more years of
active, healthy. productive life. I could
have bought a new car with the lhousands I spent on cigarettes, doctors
and oxygen equipment. I could have ·
had more happy years with my loving
wife. I chose to smoke instead.
Abby, I wish I had listened to my
dad. He once told me, "Graveyards are
filled with people who said, 'It won't
happen to me.'" - BERT HUDSON, SAND COULEE, MONT.
DEAR READERS: Bert Hudson
died on March 11 . My deepest sympathy goes out to his widow, Martha,
as well as my thanks for forwarding
her husband's letter. I'm honored to
print it. I pray it has an impact. The
American Cancer Society estimates
that in 2001 , 172,000 cancer deaths
will be attributable to tobacco use.

Dear Abby is written by Pauli11e
P!Jillips and daughterJeanne Phillips.

Southern Local releases honor roll Sons of Union Veterans discuss
WATTENBERG'S VIEW
.

Here we go again: Auntie Sam comes to the·rescue
I am an avid pro-natalist. That is, I am
interested in a society that makes it·easier
for adults who 'want to have children, to
have children.
So, too, is Ann Crittenden, author of the
angry and interesting new book "The
·Price of Motherhood: Why che Most
Important Job in the World Is Still the
Least Valued:' Alas, after agreement on the
central pro-natalist precept, our views
diverge in many ways.
COLUMNIST
Ms. Crittenden, a liberal neo-feminist,
sees that the recent wave of feminism did~
n't work out as expected.lt·is very hanl fur wives, mothers and unmarried· mothers.
a woman "to have it all"- great kids, great She says they feel under-appreciated and
job, great family. Instead, they are victims. wOrk too hard. ·
Who's at fault? Crittenden frequently
But she is almost silent about the probblames conservatives, men, America and !ems of men , married men, fathers, bushistory. She says it's a view that's spreading. bands and unmarried fathers.Yet, consider:
Her central question is: Should mothers When educated moms decide to stay at
be paid for being mothers? Her answer is home, where does the minivan, the house,
yes. Who will pay? Guess. The government the orthodontist and summer camp come
will pay. (Who pays the government? That from 1 Who works overtime to provide it?
question is not asked, but I know the Crittenden says many women feel underanswer.)
appreciated. Aash! So do many men.
Crittenden is no mindless old-school
She is mostly silent, too, on " couples;' as
feminist. She says raising a child is the most in marri ed cm!ples.They typi cally reach an
exciting, interesting and important job in agreement as to who does what, regaiding
the world. She understands that, come child-rearing and money-earning. That
:-vhat m~y. _with all the rhetoric about shar- arrangement may well engender a discusmg and JOint parenting, child-~armg usu- . sion or an argument for the rest of their
ally ends up as mostly women s work. She natural lives. Bur they typically live togethknows . that women, no matter how eras a family.When they are old they retire
~ophisncated and fe~-tramed, fall deeply together. Typically, the man dies first and
m love wtth thetr babtes.
the woman inherits the estate which will
Her big problem with child-rearing is then be passed along to the j~int heirs of
that it is not honored, and she says that's the husb~d and wife.
one n;ason that fertility rates are so low in
Now; it doesn't always work out this
Amenca, ':"here 19 percent of potential · way.There is divorce and separation, which
mothers will remam childless, compared to C .
ah
d
·
nost always escnbes as set
10 percent a fcew· decades ago. The way to . nttenden
.
by ·
. ki
·
1
men see ng action .e sehonor such labor is to pay for it. Female m motion
caregivers, she says, have been the \vorld's where, which, p1ty, 1s probably genetically
cheap labor for too long. Money would programmed. They als.o drink too much,
change that, redressing the male-female the slobs. But such splits are rarely a cavapower balance in the process.
lier ~ct, certainly not_when young children
In the course of dissecting child-rearing are mvolved. Most divorces are uutJated by
in America, Crittenden talks at great women. But Crittenden suggests that it is
length about women, married women, women who are left high and dry, tossed

on the mercy of a heartless court.
Many men see it di1ferendy. There is a
vast constellation of marital law to protect
women, including " marital property,"
''conununity property,'' "alimony," "custody" and "child support; ' about which
there are arguments, and courts to resolve
the arguments. In addition, there are
"paternity" actions available to unmarried
women.
.
Crittenden asks: What should we do
about women's low status? Mostly, look
across the ocean to Europe, she says. That's
where you'll find a "family wage," fully
shared pension plans, lots of flex-rime, paid ··
parental leaves, a follr-d!y work week, a
six-hour work day option, a 35-hour work -:
week, lo-o-ong vacations, pro-rated bene- ·
fits for part-time work, equal pay rates for :
part- time workers, universal pre-school for
3- to 5-year olds and, most importaitt, a ·
salary for every mother - paid for by the ;
government. Unmentioned is the fact that : ·
such a· panoply of services raises taxes - · ·
on women! -whom she feels are already • .
· ·.
overtaxed.
There are some ideas over there that we ·
pro-natalists find worth exploring. But ..
European fertility rates are far lower than
American rates, often catastrophically so.
One thing these programs haven't done is
encourage birth.
While the individual ideas deserve con- ·
sideration by pro-natalists, the totality of ·
Crittenden's proposals are stark. Give the - ;
dough to Uncle Sam. He'll turn it over to :
his sister, Aunt Samantha. Auntie Sam will
provide the cash for women to raise children. It takes a village to raise a child, and
the whole fedetal governntent.
1 .

Be11 ~ttenberg, a setJior fellow at the A mer- icatl Enterprise Institute, is tl1e host-essayist '!f
the PBS spedal "Tire First Measured Century" and to-author ofa new book of the same title
(AEI Press, 2000). He is the host of the weekly public televisioti program "Think Tank."You
may send romments to him via e-mail: ~t­
mailaol:com.

RAC INE - The Southern (McGuire): Eric Buzzard,
HIGH SCHOOL
Local School District recent- Brian Durham, all As;
Grade 9: Bethany Ambergly announced the fourth Stephanie Berryman, Wil er, Cadi Davis, Sarah Hawley. ·
_rine-weeks honor roll for the Crow, Tiffany Cuncliff, Scott Tabatha Jones, Henry Rider, ·
I
2000-2001 school year.
. Gilbride, Kevin Jamison, Katie Sayre, Andrew Smith,
MIDDLEPORT - Several a life membership in the Sons ceremony at the annual reenLETART FAILS
Christopher Mamati, Antho- Jeremy Yeauger, ¥I As; Jord!n
legislative issues were discussed of Union Veterans of the Civil actment of the Battle of BuffinGrade 1 (Norris): Bradley ny · Sturgeon, Tyler Wolfe: Bass, Stephanie Bradford,
during a recent meeting of War based on his Ohio ancestor gton Island at Portland on July
George, Kelsey . Holsinger, Grade .3 (Struble): Victoria Sasha Collins, Dustin Ervin,
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7, who fought for the Union. It 21 were discussed. The camp
Olivia Murphy, Troy Pickens, Freeman, Breanna Taylor, Emily Hili,Adam Lee, Amber
Sons of Union Veterans of the further asked that the Presi- voted to again sponsor the cerEmma Powell, Elizabeth Karie Woods, all As; Ellie Mills, Amy Norman, Deana
Civil War held at Hope Baptist dent's membership be assigned emony and provide refreshSprouse; Grade 1 (Guinther): Dudding, James Evans, Clay- Pullins, Christina Rose,
to Brooks-Grant Camp.
Church in Middlepon.
ments with the Maj. Daniel
Brady
Delong,
Bobby ton Findley, Daniel Imboden, Maria Schaefer, Matthew
The members looked at sevA report on the upcoming McCook Circle Ladies of the
Goode, Chelsea Holter, Sam Cody Lee, Taylor Lemely, Smith; Grade I 0: Crystal .
era! resolutions in preparation dedication .of a Congressional Grand Army of the Republic
Levacy, aU As; Amber Hay- Kenneth Marnati, Cody Cotterill, Curt Crouch
for the upcoming meeting of Medal of Honor veteran's assisting.
.
'
man,. Katelynn Hill, Kelly Richards, Jordan Taylor, Kelly Mariam
the
Ohio Department encamp:. marker to Pvt. William BarEl-Dabaja, Tara
The camp voted to give a
4 Pickens, Brandon Smith,
Humphrey, Emily Manuel, Winebrenner; · Grade
ment in June at Alliance.
ringer in Mt. Olive Cemetery donation to the senior vice
Clayton Moore: Grade .2 (Chaney) : Merri Collins, Tommy Theiss, all As; Rachel
Congress failed last year to at Long Bottom was discussed. commander's fund that covers
(Sayre) : Katey Patterson, Emma Hunter, Samantha Chapman, Brittany Fortune,
pass legislation to handle the This ceremony is being con- the costs of the annual Ohio
Paige Schuler, all As; Katie Patterson, Weston Roberts, Jeri Hill, Jordan Hill, Tabatha
needed repairs for Grant's Tomb ducted for its Memorial Day Department
enc~mpment.
Barr, Bobbi Harris, Zachary Chelsea Pape, Jaime Warner, Lawson, . Amy Lee, Zach
in New York, N.Y. and to stop emphasis. Keith Ashley gave a Gerald Crawford of Letart Falls
Manuel, Chanley Pyles; all · As; Zachary Ash, Alex Pickett; Grade 11: Henrike
the vandalism there. The camp repo~ on his work on the was ·named as delegate to the
Grade 2 . (Gow): Dalton Hawley; Grade 5 (Barr) : Armbrust, Matt Ash, Joe Corpassed a resolution asking Con- event. The camp voted to issue convention.
Imboden, Dakota Imboden, Lindsey Buzzard, Sarah El- nell, Ashley Hamilton, Tyler
gress to pass legislation asking a cornmend!tion to him for his
A request for Civil War reenKatelynn Smith, all As; Grade Dabaja, all As; Bonnie Allen, Little, Joey Manuel, Rachel
the repairs be made, a visitor's work. A crowd of nearly 200 is actors from the camp was read
interpretative center be con- expected.
Brown,
Teddy Marshall, T. J.. Moore, Amy
3 (McNickle): Lynzee Tucker, . Morgan
from the town of Spencer,
structed, and a 24-hour military
Michael Trowbridge, camp W.Va., for its first Heritage Days
all As ; Savannah Hunt, Brown,
Christopher Wilson, all As; Chreissa
guard be established to stop commander, and James Oiler, on August 17 to 19. Several
Michael Manuel, John Pow- Burkhamer, Ryan Chapman, Barnes, Carolyn Bentz, Sherell, Cyle Rees, Dustin Salser; Heather Cundiff, Stephanie ri Cummins, Amber Duffy,
drug trafficking and vandalism. senior vice commander, report- members offered to set up a livAlso, information was pre- ed attended a recent event in ing history for the event. The
Grade 4 (Roush): Hannah Cundiff', Jessica Durham, Tyler Johnson, Nate Martin,
senred to the camp showing Beckley, W.Va., honoring a announcement of the first Civil
Hawley, Chns Holter,Antho- Chels.e a Freeman, .Krystle Kim
McDaniel, ' Aaron .
that
the U.S. Park Service wish- black Civil War veteran.
ny . Shamblin; Grade 4 Marter, Trenton Roseberry; Ohlinger, Joy Rose, Lori
War reenactment at Pt. Pleases to change the entire empha- . Oiler also reported on his ant, W.Va. and the annual Civil
(Wh1te): Bryan Harris, all As; Grade 6 (Richards): Chance Sayre, Mandy Schaefer, Lindsis of the Civil War battle parks attendance at a living history at War bean dinner at Rio Grande
Tosha Jones, Rachel Pickens, Collins, 'JYier Harkness, Mal- sey Smith.
it has from interpreting the the Gen. Albert Jenkins' Civil were announced.
Bnttany Meloou, Caleb Utt, lory Hill, Jacob Hunter, Allie
Grade 12: Jeff Circle, Bran,
causes and strategies of the War home in Cabell County.
PORTLAND
Rees, all As: Nick Buck di Codner, . Clay Enslen,
The speaker for the meeting
Ron Eastinan, patriotic was Don Grant of Lancaster, a
Civil
War battles they preserve
Grade 5 (Fisher): Kasey Olivia Dudding, Natha~ Macyn
Ervin, Jonathan
to the interpretation of the instructor, conducted a· discus- cousin of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant,
Poucett, Cody Patterson, McClure, Jesse McKnight, Evans, Chad Hubbard, Jessica
of the Civil War. A past sion on the legal status of our He discussed the life of Gen.
causes
Wesley Riffle, Whitney Rif- Ad!m Phillips, Adelle Rice, Janey, Jessica Nance, Matt
camp commander pointed out country as a republic rather Grant prior to the Civil War
fie: G\olde 5 (f:!ull): Michael Ashlee Teaford.
Neigler, Kayla Pullins, Heidi
that
even distinguished histori- than a true democracy. He and after the Civil War. He
JUNIOR HIGH
Shouldis; Grade 6 (Manuel) :
Reitrnire, Brenna SiSson,
ans disagree on the causes of quoted founding fathers on this noted the strong family life of
Mirand! McKelvey, Bethany
Grade 7: John Bentz, Maggie Smith, Emily Stivers,
the Civil War and that changing issue. He followed with a dis- the general as well as the misNicole James, all As; Ryan all As; Sarah Ball, Kati CumVance.
the interpretation would make · cussion on the correctness in tress that Grant had sneaked
SYRACUSE
Amberger, Dustin Brinager, mins, Jeremy Fisher, Brandon
every
Civil War battle park give_ the display of the flag.
.
Grade 1 · (Harris): Emily Brad Crouch, Bobby Eblin, Hill, Courtney Hill, Jaime
into the White House rolled up
the same information. The
Plans for the wreath-laying in a carpet.
Ash, · Alison Brown, Faith Zach Imboden, Chelsea Beth Hill, Ryan Hill, Saman-·
·
camp voted to ask the U.S.I'ark
Harkness, Morgan McMillan, Smith, Selena Spencer; Grade tha Lambert, Garret Kiser,
Service continue only to interAbbie Williams, all As; Marti- 8: Jordan Neigler, all As: Ash- Shauna Manuel, Tara Rizer,
pret the battles for their parks.
na Arms, Dylan Bass, Christi-, ton Brown, Wes Burrows, Joey Sands, Kendi Smith,
The camp passed a resolution
na Berryman, Blake Crow, Heather Duffy, Holly Duffy, Erin Struble, Lee Williams.
asking that its national body
pustin Hill, Natalie Marler, Jonas Hart, Wallace Hill,
issue
President George W. Bush
McDaniel,
Jon
Ethan Marrin, Andrew Rose- Adam
berry, Elizabeth Shuler, McDariiel, Craig Randolph,
Timmy Warner; Grade 2 B. J. Rizer, Bryan Smith.

resolution in advance.of meeting

$1 0,000 Reword offered for the
arrest and conviction of the
person or persons responsible for
the death of Michael "Sig" Sigler
Contact the Sigler Family
ot742-2279

E·MAIL YOUR NEWS TO US:

SAINTS AND SINNERS

news@mydailysentinel.com

There is a.way to make Sunday School fun for alt

The Daily Sentinel

It was like a TV game' show; except that
·prayer is found in Matthew 6:'
it was about the Bible. The moderator
Others· put the blame on Sun&amp;y school .
asked one of the panelists what his wife was
teachers. "We have to beg people to ·teach
Sunday school;' says one minister. As a
doing when he first met her. "She was takresult, we accept anybody without regard
ing a bath," the husband replied. It brought
a big laugh from the pupils in the 'classto their upderstanding of the Bible or their
room, who ,were supposed to identity the
ability to relate to children."
Bible characters being referred co.
What's the answer? The late Dean
Those who knew the Bible had no trouWillard Sperry of Harvard Divinity School
ble with the answer. The "wife" Was
had a revolutionary suggestion:
COLUMNIST . "I have found myself asking;' said SpecBathsheba. The "husband" was David. The
Bible story is found in Samuel2:11, which
ry,"wby we should not solve the otherwise ·
reports that "one evening David got up
insoluble problem of the Sund!y school by
The answer is Delilah. It is based on a taking our children to church instead?"
from his couch and, as he walked about the
roof of his palace, he saw there a women passage in Judges 14, which. reports that r By no~. said ~perry, _the ped!gogues will
bathing, and she was very beautiful. He Samson's parents were upset when he told be S3Yll?'g, Thats all very well, but the averwent to inquite who she was. ... She them he planned to marry Delilah. She age child s1mply ';"not understand what
became his wife."
came from a Philistine &amp;mily, and the goes on m chun:h.
Sperry's response was, "Because most
This game wasn't being played in a Sun- Philistines were enemies of Israei.
day school class, but many pupils_ wish SunOne high-school girl, who was telling children are in ·Sunday school while the
d!y school was as much fun. The Bible )ler father. about the class, said, "Why can't mam ~t of the_ch~h servtce 1s going on,
game show was a project in a Bible litera- Sunday school be this interesting?"
they nuss the digrury and color and symture class in an Ohio public school.
It is a common complaint among chi!- holism and ceremony o~ the adult worship .
Although prayer and the teaching of reli- dren that Sunday school is dull. Life maga- servtce -.and rrnpress10ns m th~ area of .
qwt_e ~ Important as mforma- ~
gion are forbidden in public schools, the zine once referred to Sun&amp;y school a5 the· ~ligton
teaching of the Bibje as literature is not. , "wasted hour:'
·
tion. It IS m thetr 1mpresstonable years that .
Some of the quiz questions in the .Bible
In the o pinion o( one church's l'!lligious children can be_persuaded rh~t ';'~gion is ·
literature class were harder than the David education director, "Sund!y schools too maJes~c, mystertous and beautiful.
and Bathsheba puz~ler. For instance: often cram the minds of our children with
Let s be sure, S.'Ud Sperry. that we do not
"When asked how the mother of her irrelevant data. When a crisis arises in their kill that for them in ·a Sunday ' school
intended reacted to the news· of their lives, which religion is &lt;opposed to prepare atmosphere that is drab and uninspiring.
(Geotge R. Plagenz is a columnist few Newsimpending marriage, she replied, 'She had , them to meet, it is no help to know there
a fit." '
are 66 books in the Bible or that the Lord's paper Bmerprist Association.)

G
eorge
Plagenz

:u;e

: B+B+: ~+~;+: ~h1h1B+~·~+: ~: **h1:, ,

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Dr.

Internationally Known Evangelist

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LOWELL C.

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j

�Opinion

'The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

_The_D_aiiy_Se_ntin_·e_I_ _

Ftld l• JYne IS. ~-1

DEAR ABBY: In 1941, whet~ the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, I Was
a 17-year-old seaman on. a~
in the North Atlantic. There were several other teen-agers on boanl. We all
smoked, as did the rest of the crew.
C igarettes were 6 cents a pack. At that
price, the saying was, we couldn't
afford NOT to smoke.
We happily discussed the merits of
Lucky Strikes, Camels and Chesterfields. Old Golds and Pall Malls were
not as popular; Kools were for sissies.
None of us realized that all the brands
we smoked contained the same poisonous, addictive substances. People
who didn't smoke were considered
odd. If they didn't like to be around
smokers, THEY were the ones with.
the problem.
It wasn't until years later that I realized .the purpose of selling ogarettes
so cheaply to servicemen was to get

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74CH82-2158 • Fax: 982·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflleh .
General Manager

DI8M Kay Hill
Controller

"""" ..... - - - .,., · -.,,.,, ,,.,-......JtiJ,.,.,.

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•f* OiUD llou.,

OUR VIEW

come
Roll out the red carpet for
our GOBA visitors
·Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure's trek through southern Ohio
begins Saturday in Gallipolis. We welcorne the thousands of par.ricipants in the weekclong trip to the area, and th~nk GOBA for
again placing Gallia and Meigs counties along its itinerary.
The benefits for bicyclists P.edaling through our hills are there
if they're looking at it from a health or touriSm standpoinl. The
: benefits for cot11munities along the route, which wraps back to
Gallipolis on June 23 after stops in such towns as Wellston, Nelsonville and Marietta, are equally apparent.
· We look for GOBA participants to stop and visit during their
stopovers, avail themselves of our local businesses and get a dose
of the hospitality that makes this region unique. There's even a
dash' of publicity in it since Gov. Bob Taft and wife Hope plan to
· lead the parade around Gallipolis' Ciry Park Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
Individuals and businesses . have been encouraged by GOBA
organizers to roll ·o ut the welcome mat and they have responded.
Towns along the way staild co share in the spotlight.
· During 1997's GOBA tour through Gallia and Meigs counties,
Rutland and Vinton were among the communities ready to provide bicyclists with refreshments. GOBA sponsor Bob Evans
. Farms made the Rio Grande farm, its corporate showpiece, available for travelers to spend the night. Other communities also
.made the l)icyclists welcome.
·
A good precedent was set with that visit and let's build on that
impression. Economic development experts have told us tourism
is one means for southern Ohio co shine, given its history and
scenic features. Those following GOBA's path in the coining
week can take home with them the fact this area is an attractive
stop for vacationers and d!y-trippers.
.
The event is more than just a bicycle tour for participants and
hoses. It's an opportunity. for both to learn about each other and
come away enriched by the experience.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCiATED PRESS

Tod!y is Frid!y,June 15, the 166th day of200t.There are 199
days left in the year.
Tod!y's Highlight in History:
·On June 15, 12~5, King John put his seal to Magna Carta
("the Great Charter") at Runnymede, England, granting his
barons. more liberty.
6ri ·this date: ·
In 1520, Pope Leo X threatened to excommunicate Martin
Luther if he did not recant his religious beliefS.
·
In 1775, the Second C ontinental Congress voted unanimously to appoint George Washington head of the C ontinental Army. ·
In 1836, Arkansas became the 25th state.
In 1844, Charles Goodyear received a patent for his process
to strengthen rubber.
In 1849,James Polk, the 11th president of the United States,
died in Nashville, Tenn.
In 1864, Secretary ofWar Edwin M . Stanton signed an order'
establishing a military burial ground, which became Arlington
National Cemetery.
In 1904, more than I ,000 people died when fire erupted
aboard the steamboat General Slocum in New York's East
River.
In. 1944, American forces began their successful invasion of
Saipan during World War II. Meanwhile, B- 29 Superfortresses
made their first raids on Japan.
In 1978, King Hussein of Jordan married 26-year-oldAmerican Lisa Halaby, who became Queen Noor.
In 1994, Israel and the Vatican established full diplomatic relations.
Ten years ago: India concluded its violence-racked elections, ·
with the Congress Party of recently assassinated former Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi gaining a plurality of votes.
Five years ago: A truck bomb blew up in a retail district of
Manchester, England, injuring more than 200 people in an
attack claimed by t.he Irish Republican Army. Ella Fitzgerald,
the "first lady of song," died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 78.
One year ago: Al Gore named C ommerce Secretary William
Daley to take over his presidential campaign, replacing Tony
Coelho, who had abruptly resigned, citing health problems.
Denis Savard, Joe Mullen and Walter L. Bush Jr. were selected
to the Hockey Hall of Fame. ·
Today's Birthdays: Former New York Governor Mario
Cuomo is 69. Singer Waylon Jennings is 64. Actor Aron Kincaid is 58. Actor-director Simon Callow is 52. Singer Russell
Hitchcock (Air Supply) is 52. Rock singer Steve Walsh (Kansas)
is 50. Comedian- actor Jim Belushi is 47. Country singer Terri
Gibbs is 47. Actress Julie Hagerty is 46. Actress Eileen Davidson (" The Young and th e R estless") is 42 . Actress Helen Hunt
is 38. Rock musician Scott R oc kenfield (Queensryche) is 38.
. Actress C ourreney Cox Arquette is 37. C ountry musician Tony
Ardoin is 37. C ountry musician Michael Britt (Lonestar) is ~5.
Ro ck musician Jimmy McD (formerly ·of Jimmie's Chicken
. Shack) is 33.Actor- rapper lee Cube is 32 . . ·
I

the Bend

Page AS
Frldlly. June 15, 2001

Young servicemen paid a price for cheap dgarettes during war

The Daily Sentinel

Clu!rlH W. Govey

__;a~
· y_

J

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
our generation hooked for the profit
of tobacco companies. My addiction
lasted until after I was married and
small children. Fortunately. I realized in time that if I was going to live
to see them grow up, I was going to
have to kick the habit - and by the
grace of God I was able to.
Why am I writing this? Because
two of my grandsons have succumbed
to the slick advertising and lies of the
tobacco companies in spite of warn-

!wf

.

.

ings from those who love them most.
I pray they'll realize the self-destructiveness of the habit before they're as
old as I was when I knew I had to qnit
in order to live.
Keep up the good work, Abby. and
God bless. LEON J. SIMS,
DORAVII IE GA.
DEAR LEON: If your grandson~
refuse to listen to you, perhaps they
can learn from the letter that follows.
Read om
?EAR ABBY: I have asked my
Wife, Martha, to send this to you
immediately upon my death. I want
teen-agers to know I died from a selfinflicted disease - smoking.
Back in the 1940s, a majority of
Americans smoked. lr was the
ADULT thing to do. I "knew" I
wouldn't get hooked. We knew smoking wasn't good for us, but we were
willing to take our chances. We called

ciguettes "coffin nails" and laughed as
we lit up.
·
Years later, I was diagnosed with
emphysema. My heart was weakened
because it had enlarged. trying to
pump blood into lungs that could no
longer expand. I had to stop smoking
or die an early death from a heart
attack, stroke, cancer or slow sutfocation. "No sweat," I thought. "I can quit
anytime:' How wrong I was.
I spenr more than $1,000 on smoking-cessation progr.un.S. I tried
acupuncture, hypnosis, gum, patches,
pills and cold turkey. Nothing
worked. I was addicted, dying and
couldn't quit.
You say you want "fi:eedom"? How
free are you when you want to go
dancing or hiking but can't because
your nose is hooked to plastic tubing
attached to an oxygen tank 24 hours
a day, just so you can breathe?

I could have had 20 more years of
active, healthy. productive life. I could
have bought a new car with the lhousands I spent on cigarettes, doctors
and oxygen equipment. I could have ·
had more happy years with my loving
wife. I chose to smoke instead.
Abby, I wish I had listened to my
dad. He once told me, "Graveyards are
filled with people who said, 'It won't
happen to me.'" - BERT HUDSON, SAND COULEE, MONT.
DEAR READERS: Bert Hudson
died on March 11 . My deepest sympathy goes out to his widow, Martha,
as well as my thanks for forwarding
her husband's letter. I'm honored to
print it. I pray it has an impact. The
American Cancer Society estimates
that in 2001 , 172,000 cancer deaths
will be attributable to tobacco use.

Dear Abby is written by Pauli11e
P!Jillips and daughterJeanne Phillips.

Southern Local releases honor roll Sons of Union Veterans discuss
WATTENBERG'S VIEW
.

Here we go again: Auntie Sam comes to the·rescue
I am an avid pro-natalist. That is, I am
interested in a society that makes it·easier
for adults who 'want to have children, to
have children.
So, too, is Ann Crittenden, author of the
angry and interesting new book "The
·Price of Motherhood: Why che Most
Important Job in the World Is Still the
Least Valued:' Alas, after agreement on the
central pro-natalist precept, our views
diverge in many ways.
COLUMNIST
Ms. Crittenden, a liberal neo-feminist,
sees that the recent wave of feminism did~
n't work out as expected.lt·is very hanl fur wives, mothers and unmarried· mothers.
a woman "to have it all"- great kids, great She says they feel under-appreciated and
job, great family. Instead, they are victims. wOrk too hard. ·
Who's at fault? Crittenden frequently
But she is almost silent about the probblames conservatives, men, America and !ems of men , married men, fathers, bushistory. She says it's a view that's spreading. bands and unmarried fathers.Yet, consider:
Her central question is: Should mothers When educated moms decide to stay at
be paid for being mothers? Her answer is home, where does the minivan, the house,
yes. Who will pay? Guess. The government the orthodontist and summer camp come
will pay. (Who pays the government? That from 1 Who works overtime to provide it?
question is not asked, but I know the Crittenden says many women feel underanswer.)
appreciated. Aash! So do many men.
Crittenden is no mindless old-school
She is mostly silent, too, on " couples;' as
feminist. She says raising a child is the most in marri ed cm!ples.They typi cally reach an
exciting, interesting and important job in agreement as to who does what, regaiding
the world. She understands that, come child-rearing and money-earning. That
:-vhat m~y. _with all the rhetoric about shar- arrangement may well engender a discusmg and JOint parenting, child-~armg usu- . sion or an argument for the rest of their
ally ends up as mostly women s work. She natural lives. Bur they typically live togethknows . that women, no matter how eras a family.When they are old they retire
~ophisncated and fe~-tramed, fall deeply together. Typically, the man dies first and
m love wtth thetr babtes.
the woman inherits the estate which will
Her big problem with child-rearing is then be passed along to the j~int heirs of
that it is not honored, and she says that's the husb~d and wife.
one n;ason that fertility rates are so low in
Now; it doesn't always work out this
Amenca, ':"here 19 percent of potential · way.There is divorce and separation, which
mothers will remam childless, compared to C .
ah
d
·
nost always escnbes as set
10 percent a fcew· decades ago. The way to . nttenden
.
by ·
. ki
·
1
men see ng action .e sehonor such labor is to pay for it. Female m motion
caregivers, she says, have been the \vorld's where, which, p1ty, 1s probably genetically
cheap labor for too long. Money would programmed. They als.o drink too much,
change that, redressing the male-female the slobs. But such splits are rarely a cavapower balance in the process.
lier ~ct, certainly not_when young children
In the course of dissecting child-rearing are mvolved. Most divorces are uutJated by
in America, Crittenden talks at great women. But Crittenden suggests that it is
length about women, married women, women who are left high and dry, tossed

on the mercy of a heartless court.
Many men see it di1ferendy. There is a
vast constellation of marital law to protect
women, including " marital property,"
''conununity property,'' "alimony," "custody" and "child support; ' about which
there are arguments, and courts to resolve
the arguments. In addition, there are
"paternity" actions available to unmarried
women.
.
Crittenden asks: What should we do
about women's low status? Mostly, look
across the ocean to Europe, she says. That's
where you'll find a "family wage," fully
shared pension plans, lots of flex-rime, paid ··
parental leaves, a follr-d!y work week, a
six-hour work day option, a 35-hour work -:
week, lo-o-ong vacations, pro-rated bene- ·
fits for part-time work, equal pay rates for :
part- time workers, universal pre-school for
3- to 5-year olds and, most importaitt, a ·
salary for every mother - paid for by the ;
government. Unmentioned is the fact that : ·
such a· panoply of services raises taxes - · ·
on women! -whom she feels are already • .
· ·.
overtaxed.
There are some ideas over there that we ·
pro-natalists find worth exploring. But ..
European fertility rates are far lower than
American rates, often catastrophically so.
One thing these programs haven't done is
encourage birth.
While the individual ideas deserve con- ·
sideration by pro-natalists, the totality of ·
Crittenden's proposals are stark. Give the - ;
dough to Uncle Sam. He'll turn it over to :
his sister, Aunt Samantha. Auntie Sam will
provide the cash for women to raise children. It takes a village to raise a child, and
the whole fedetal governntent.
1 .

Be11 ~ttenberg, a setJior fellow at the A mer- icatl Enterprise Institute, is tl1e host-essayist '!f
the PBS spedal "Tire First Measured Century" and to-author ofa new book of the same title
(AEI Press, 2000). He is the host of the weekly public televisioti program "Think Tank."You
may send romments to him via e-mail: ~t­
mailaol:com.

RAC INE - The Southern (McGuire): Eric Buzzard,
HIGH SCHOOL
Local School District recent- Brian Durham, all As;
Grade 9: Bethany Ambergly announced the fourth Stephanie Berryman, Wil er, Cadi Davis, Sarah Hawley. ·
_rine-weeks honor roll for the Crow, Tiffany Cuncliff, Scott Tabatha Jones, Henry Rider, ·
I
2000-2001 school year.
. Gilbride, Kevin Jamison, Katie Sayre, Andrew Smith,
MIDDLEPORT - Several a life membership in the Sons ceremony at the annual reenLETART FAILS
Christopher Mamati, Antho- Jeremy Yeauger, ¥I As; Jord!n
legislative issues were discussed of Union Veterans of the Civil actment of the Battle of BuffinGrade 1 (Norris): Bradley ny · Sturgeon, Tyler Wolfe: Bass, Stephanie Bradford,
during a recent meeting of War based on his Ohio ancestor gton Island at Portland on July
George, Kelsey . Holsinger, Grade .3 (Struble): Victoria Sasha Collins, Dustin Ervin,
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7, who fought for the Union. It 21 were discussed. The camp
Olivia Murphy, Troy Pickens, Freeman, Breanna Taylor, Emily Hili,Adam Lee, Amber
Sons of Union Veterans of the further asked that the Presi- voted to again sponsor the cerEmma Powell, Elizabeth Karie Woods, all As; Ellie Mills, Amy Norman, Deana
Civil War held at Hope Baptist dent's membership be assigned emony and provide refreshSprouse; Grade 1 (Guinther): Dudding, James Evans, Clay- Pullins, Christina Rose,
to Brooks-Grant Camp.
Church in Middlepon.
ments with the Maj. Daniel
Brady
Delong,
Bobby ton Findley, Daniel Imboden, Maria Schaefer, Matthew
The members looked at sevA report on the upcoming McCook Circle Ladies of the
Goode, Chelsea Holter, Sam Cody Lee, Taylor Lemely, Smith; Grade I 0: Crystal .
era! resolutions in preparation dedication .of a Congressional Grand Army of the Republic
Levacy, aU As; Amber Hay- Kenneth Marnati, Cody Cotterill, Curt Crouch
for the upcoming meeting of Medal of Honor veteran's assisting.
.
'
man,. Katelynn Hill, Kelly Richards, Jordan Taylor, Kelly Mariam
the
Ohio Department encamp:. marker to Pvt. William BarEl-Dabaja, Tara
The camp voted to give a
4 Pickens, Brandon Smith,
Humphrey, Emily Manuel, Winebrenner; · Grade
ment in June at Alliance.
ringer in Mt. Olive Cemetery donation to the senior vice
Clayton Moore: Grade .2 (Chaney) : Merri Collins, Tommy Theiss, all As; Rachel
Congress failed last year to at Long Bottom was discussed. commander's fund that covers
(Sayre) : Katey Patterson, Emma Hunter, Samantha Chapman, Brittany Fortune,
pass legislation to handle the This ceremony is being con- the costs of the annual Ohio
Paige Schuler, all As; Katie Patterson, Weston Roberts, Jeri Hill, Jordan Hill, Tabatha
needed repairs for Grant's Tomb ducted for its Memorial Day Department
enc~mpment.
Barr, Bobbi Harris, Zachary Chelsea Pape, Jaime Warner, Lawson, . Amy Lee, Zach
in New York, N.Y. and to stop emphasis. Keith Ashley gave a Gerald Crawford of Letart Falls
Manuel, Chanley Pyles; all · As; Zachary Ash, Alex Pickett; Grade 11: Henrike
the vandalism there. The camp repo~ on his work on the was ·named as delegate to the
Grade 2 . (Gow): Dalton Hawley; Grade 5 (Barr) : Armbrust, Matt Ash, Joe Corpassed a resolution asking Con- event. The camp voted to issue convention.
Imboden, Dakota Imboden, Lindsey Buzzard, Sarah El- nell, Ashley Hamilton, Tyler
gress to pass legislation asking a cornmend!tion to him for his
A request for Civil War reenKatelynn Smith, all As; Grade Dabaja, all As; Bonnie Allen, Little, Joey Manuel, Rachel
the repairs be made, a visitor's work. A crowd of nearly 200 is actors from the camp was read
interpretative center be con- expected.
Brown,
Teddy Marshall, T. J.. Moore, Amy
3 (McNickle): Lynzee Tucker, . Morgan
from the town of Spencer,
structed, and a 24-hour military
Michael Trowbridge, camp W.Va., for its first Heritage Days
all As ; Savannah Hunt, Brown,
Christopher Wilson, all As; Chreissa
guard be established to stop commander, and James Oiler, on August 17 to 19. Several
Michael Manuel, John Pow- Burkhamer, Ryan Chapman, Barnes, Carolyn Bentz, Sherell, Cyle Rees, Dustin Salser; Heather Cundiff, Stephanie ri Cummins, Amber Duffy,
drug trafficking and vandalism. senior vice commander, report- members offered to set up a livAlso, information was pre- ed attended a recent event in ing history for the event. The
Grade 4 (Roush): Hannah Cundiff', Jessica Durham, Tyler Johnson, Nate Martin,
senred to the camp showing Beckley, W.Va., honoring a announcement of the first Civil
Hawley, Chns Holter,Antho- Chels.e a Freeman, .Krystle Kim
McDaniel, ' Aaron .
that
the U.S. Park Service wish- black Civil War veteran.
ny . Shamblin; Grade 4 Marter, Trenton Roseberry; Ohlinger, Joy Rose, Lori
War reenactment at Pt. Pleases to change the entire empha- . Oiler also reported on his ant, W.Va. and the annual Civil
(Wh1te): Bryan Harris, all As; Grade 6 (Richards): Chance Sayre, Mandy Schaefer, Lindsis of the Civil War battle parks attendance at a living history at War bean dinner at Rio Grande
Tosha Jones, Rachel Pickens, Collins, 'JYier Harkness, Mal- sey Smith.
it has from interpreting the the Gen. Albert Jenkins' Civil were announced.
Bnttany Meloou, Caleb Utt, lory Hill, Jacob Hunter, Allie
Grade 12: Jeff Circle, Bran,
causes and strategies of the War home in Cabell County.
PORTLAND
Rees, all As: Nick Buck di Codner, . Clay Enslen,
The speaker for the meeting
Ron Eastinan, patriotic was Don Grant of Lancaster, a
Civil
War battles they preserve
Grade 5 (Fisher): Kasey Olivia Dudding, Natha~ Macyn
Ervin, Jonathan
to the interpretation of the instructor, conducted a· discus- cousin of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant,
Poucett, Cody Patterson, McClure, Jesse McKnight, Evans, Chad Hubbard, Jessica
of the Civil War. A past sion on the legal status of our He discussed the life of Gen.
causes
Wesley Riffle, Whitney Rif- Ad!m Phillips, Adelle Rice, Janey, Jessica Nance, Matt
camp commander pointed out country as a republic rather Grant prior to the Civil War
fie: G\olde 5 (f:!ull): Michael Ashlee Teaford.
Neigler, Kayla Pullins, Heidi
that
even distinguished histori- than a true democracy. He and after the Civil War. He
JUNIOR HIGH
Shouldis; Grade 6 (Manuel) :
Reitrnire, Brenna SiSson,
ans disagree on the causes of quoted founding fathers on this noted the strong family life of
Mirand! McKelvey, Bethany
Grade 7: John Bentz, Maggie Smith, Emily Stivers,
the Civil War and that changing issue. He followed with a dis- the general as well as the misNicole James, all As; Ryan all As; Sarah Ball, Kati CumVance.
the interpretation would make · cussion on the correctness in tress that Grant had sneaked
SYRACUSE
Amberger, Dustin Brinager, mins, Jeremy Fisher, Brandon
every
Civil War battle park give_ the display of the flag.
.
Grade 1 · (Harris): Emily Brad Crouch, Bobby Eblin, Hill, Courtney Hill, Jaime
into the White House rolled up
the same information. The
Plans for the wreath-laying in a carpet.
Ash, · Alison Brown, Faith Zach Imboden, Chelsea Beth Hill, Ryan Hill, Saman-·
·
camp voted to ask the U.S.I'ark
Harkness, Morgan McMillan, Smith, Selena Spencer; Grade tha Lambert, Garret Kiser,
Service continue only to interAbbie Williams, all As; Marti- 8: Jordan Neigler, all As: Ash- Shauna Manuel, Tara Rizer,
pret the battles for their parks.
na Arms, Dylan Bass, Christi-, ton Brown, Wes Burrows, Joey Sands, Kendi Smith,
The camp passed a resolution
na Berryman, Blake Crow, Heather Duffy, Holly Duffy, Erin Struble, Lee Williams.
asking that its national body
pustin Hill, Natalie Marler, Jonas Hart, Wallace Hill,
issue
President George W. Bush
McDaniel,
Jon
Ethan Marrin, Andrew Rose- Adam
berry, Elizabeth Shuler, McDariiel, Craig Randolph,
Timmy Warner; Grade 2 B. J. Rizer, Bryan Smith.

resolution in advance.of meeting

$1 0,000 Reword offered for the
arrest and conviction of the
person or persons responsible for
the death of Michael "Sig" Sigler
Contact the Sigler Family
ot742-2279

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There is a.way to make Sunday School fun for alt

The Daily Sentinel

It was like a TV game' show; except that
·prayer is found in Matthew 6:'
it was about the Bible. The moderator
Others· put the blame on Sun&amp;y school .
asked one of the panelists what his wife was
teachers. "We have to beg people to ·teach
Sunday school;' says one minister. As a
doing when he first met her. "She was takresult, we accept anybody without regard
ing a bath," the husband replied. It brought
a big laugh from the pupils in the 'classto their upderstanding of the Bible or their
room, who ,were supposed to identity the
ability to relate to children."
Bible characters being referred co.
What's the answer? The late Dean
Those who knew the Bible had no trouWillard Sperry of Harvard Divinity School
ble with the answer. The "wife" Was
had a revolutionary suggestion:
COLUMNIST . "I have found myself asking;' said SpecBathsheba. The "husband" was David. The
Bible story is found in Samuel2:11, which
ry,"wby we should not solve the otherwise ·
reports that "one evening David got up
insoluble problem of the Sund!y school by
The answer is Delilah. It is based on a taking our children to church instead?"
from his couch and, as he walked about the
roof of his palace, he saw there a women passage in Judges 14, which. reports that r By no~. said ~perry, _the ped!gogues will
bathing, and she was very beautiful. He Samson's parents were upset when he told be S3Yll?'g, Thats all very well, but the averwent to inquite who she was. ... She them he planned to marry Delilah. She age child s1mply ';"not understand what
became his wife."
came from a Philistine &amp;mily, and the goes on m chun:h.
Sperry's response was, "Because most
This game wasn't being played in a Sun- Philistines were enemies of Israei.
day school class, but many pupils_ wish SunOne high-school girl, who was telling children are in ·Sunday school while the
d!y school was as much fun. The Bible )ler father. about the class, said, "Why can't mam ~t of the_ch~h servtce 1s going on,
game show was a project in a Bible litera- Sunday school be this interesting?"
they nuss the digrury and color and symture class in an Ohio public school.
It is a common complaint among chi!- holism and ceremony o~ the adult worship .
Although prayer and the teaching of reli- dren that Sunday school is dull. Life maga- servtce -.and rrnpress10ns m th~ area of .
qwt_e ~ Important as mforma- ~
gion are forbidden in public schools, the zine once referred to Sun&amp;y school a5 the· ~ligton
teaching of the Bibje as literature is not. , "wasted hour:'
·
tion. It IS m thetr 1mpresstonable years that .
Some of the quiz questions in the .Bible
In the o pinion o( one church's l'!lligious children can be_persuaded rh~t ';'~gion is ·
literature class were harder than the David education director, "Sund!y schools too maJes~c, mystertous and beautiful.
and Bathsheba puz~ler. For instance: often cram the minds of our children with
Let s be sure, S.'Ud Sperry. that we do not
"When asked how the mother of her irrelevant data. When a crisis arises in their kill that for them in ·a Sunday ' school
intended reacted to the news· of their lives, which religion is &lt;opposed to prepare atmosphere that is drab and uninspiring.
(Geotge R. Plagenz is a columnist few Newsimpending marriage, she replied, 'She had , them to meet, it is no help to know there
a fit." '
are 66 books in the Bible or that the Lord's paper Bmerprist Association.)

G
eorge
Plagenz

:u;e

: B+B+: ~+~;+: ~h1h1B+~·~+: ~: **h1:, ,

;tfREE
·
.,
~~SPLASH ,

~

-

BUCK!

Dr.

Internationally Known Evangelist

nti ui

I "

5:00-7:00 p.m.

Games and food! Sponsored by
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~ ; Abstinence Education Program
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June 19

LOWELL C.

I,

j

�Sentinel

---

O...tl.'-a.t.t••

_ , ..._WalfaE.Heial
SoL 0.. 4,45-,, I'P= MHI- "10p.aL
1

~--ltd.

Sunday. 10 LQL .... 7:30p.m.
~..,.7:30p.m.

w~ 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.

~U...Rood

Wcdnpdoy s.mc..- 7 p.m.
.

IJkny A-,.tiGool
P.O. Box 467, lludcliaa Lone

, _ w- Clooftll tiQrlol
33226 Children's llomc Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
- . , - IOo.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedaoday ServKn - 7 p.m.

~w. v..

Pulor.NriiT.....,.
Sunday Services-- 10:00 a.m.IRI7 p.m.

MWdlopwt Cluordltl c.riol
~and

1\.lpli,l
'~I

,.,.- ...

~~ ~

BurlinJbam - 742-7606
Puler. Jabn Swanson ,

Sllllday S&lt;bool · 10,00 a.m.
MominJ Service 11 :00 LDL

Wedftesday Servi&lt;es - 7p.11L

Evcninc Service -6:00 p.m.

K..o CIM&lt;b oi-Ciortno

-..toy Service - 7,30 p.m.
Hope ....... CloOida ~S,.CL j • )
'70 Giani Sl., MKidleporl
Sundoy tdoool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 6 p.m.
, Wednesday Ser.(iu: - 1 p.m.

........ Flnt ...... Clloordo

.

.

Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehoul - 10,30 a. m.
Ptitor-JdfR:y Wallace
Iat and 3rd SundaY.

ll&lt;orwoollaw Jlldtt Clolil'do otCiorisa
Pastor:Tmy Slewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wonhip - 10,30 a.m .. 6'30 p.111.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Sunday Sebool - 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4.5 a.m.

......., Flnt Bnpliol
Eut Main St. ,·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
. Flnl ~... 8nptlst
41812 l'&lt;&gt;mcroy p;~ce
PooMJr: E. Laiow O'Boyanl

Zion Chuodo ol Christ
Pomeroy, Hanisonville Rd. (Rt. l43)
Pastor: Roaer Watson
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plnln Choordo ol Cllriot
lnstrumenlal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
SundaySchool - 10:15a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Dible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday S&lt;hool - 9,30 a.m.
Wriip - 10:4.5 a.m .• 7:00p.m.

•

Wednesday Servicet - 7'00 p.m.
Flnt llnpliol Churdo

Paslor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. Middleport

Broolbury Chuorlo ol Cbrlst
Pastor: Joshua Lynch
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 9: 15 a.m.
Worship - 10: l.h.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rndne Flnl Bapliol
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.·
. Wonhip- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servic~ -7:00p.m.

Sliver Ran Baptist
Pastor: Sleven K. UUie
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Wonhip - I lam .. 7:00p.m.

Rutland Chur&lt;b ol Christ
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worship · l0:30a.m., 7p.m.
Bradford Church ol Clnilt
Comer of SL Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd.
Minister. Doug Shamblin

Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Youlh Minister: BiU AmbeiJer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m .. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

ML Uoolooo Baptlot
Pastor : Joe N. SJiyrt
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
W~y Services- 6:30p.m.

Hkkory Hllb Chun:h ol Christ
Evangcliit Mike Moon:
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Won~hip - 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Betb)&lt;hom Bnpdst Cbur&lt;b
Great Bend, Route 124. Racine, OH
Pas10r : Daniel Mecea
SunrJay School- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.
· Wednesday Bible Study-6:00p.m.

•
'

Old Bethel Fo-.. Will Bapliol Cbooi'&lt;h
28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday Scpool- ~0 a.m.
Evening - 7:00 p.m.
Thursday SetVices- 7:00

Hlllkle BaplJsl Ch•n:h
. , SI.,Jl!. 14~J~stoffRt.7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship. I 0:30a.m.., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Vletary Bopdsll...pendtnt
mN. 2nd S1. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip - 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fallh Bnptbt Churdo
Railroad St. Mason ·
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senticcs - 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- ll a.m.
ML Morlalo BnpUII
Poortb &amp; Main St., MickDeport
Putor: Rev. Gilbert Cralj, Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Andqull)' Bnpdst
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&amp;hip- 10;4.5 a.m.
Sunday Evenina - 6:00p.m.
Putor: Mark McComas
Radnoool Free Will Boptbt
Salem St.
Putor. Rev. Paul Taylar
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Bvenina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Seoooool Bnpdst Chur&lt;h
Ravenswood, WV
Pulor. David W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMomina worship II am Evening ~ 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

( ·alholir
Sncrod Htnrl Cnthollo: Churdo

s-yS&lt;IIooi - 9-JOUL
Wonloip • i0:30 ILJL

La••Uie Cluisdon Churdo
Piastor: Roben Musser
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednellday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Gro'Vc (."hrfltiau Oiurth
Pastor: Richard Nease

Sunday school • I0:30a.m.
Worsllip ·9:30a.m.,
Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Rmi.,IU. Chul'&lt;b ol Cllrisl
Pastor: Philip Sturm
School: 9:30a.m.
Worship ServiCe: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedne!iday,·6:30 p.m.
S~ndly

DtJ:ter Churth

a-.

,._,
-·
R&lt;-1.4"nD.
Cnoia"-or

,._.._so. ....

Wonhip 10:2j UD.
Sundly School Q: 15 a.m.

Chui'&lt;b ol Christ
Intersection 1 and 124 W
Evangelist: DeMis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study . 1 p.m.

' hri~lian

I uiun

U.rtreool Chord! ol Clorlot Ill
Cbrisdnoo Uoolon
Hartlord, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim HuJhcs
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Wot1hip- 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
WedneMay Services • 7:30 p.m.

( 'hut l'11 ul ( ood
ML Morini! Churdo of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utr
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
WedneSday Services - 7 p.m.
RuUaDd Chur,;::h of God ·
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Syrn&lt;- Flnl Chun:b of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor. Rev. David Ru!I!ICII
Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evenlng Service.- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service§- 6:30p.m.
Chur&lt;h or God or Proplo&lt;ey
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rl. 160

Pastor: P.J . Chapmln

'

~c..dlti . .

A-,(Syrxusc)
I'Mior.BmROOiNoa
Slandly School - ~4S a.•.

-

c_.ao~~yCiuudo

Pastor. RC\'. Amos TUiis
Main Strtet., Rudand
Sunday WOI'ihip-IO:OOa.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

-

Bob JloJbiooJon

Pastor: Charles McKenzie

Alii-

-

Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday-Service - 7:00p.m.

Worship - ll:OOa.m.

Sundlly School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

R-alSioaronU.U..Cburdo
Lading Cr=t Rd., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Dewey King
Sunday &amp;ehool- 9:30a.m.
Stmday worship -7 p.m.
Wedne:Miay prayer meetinJ- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wtwship- IOa.m.

..._..,

PlDe Grove Blbk H~ Chardl
112 mile RL 325
Paslor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOBbip -10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

o«

Pas10r: Rod Brower

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool- 10'3' a.m.
lto&lt;kSprbop
Pwor: Keith bder
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip-IOa.m.
Yooth Pellowahip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

w-,.nn Bible H - Churdo
75 Pearl St.. Middleport.
Pastor. Re V. Doug Cm; .
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sehool - 9,30 a.m.
Wontup - 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Servk:es- 7 p.ni.

C.rmei.Sutto11
Cannel &amp; ·Ba..han Rdl.
Racine, Ohio
· Pastor: Dewayne Studer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - IN' a.m.
~ Bible SIUdy Weilc1:00 p.m.

....

~

l .ulhn;ltl

Worship - 9:00a.m.

Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wednc.Jday Sef\'ice - 7 p.m.

New Life VIctor)' Cmler
•.
3773 Go&lt;qes C...k Rood. Gallipoli&amp;, OH ~
Poooor. Bill s.....
·..
Sunday Services - 10 Lm. &amp;: 7 p.m. - •
Wedooeoday - 1 p.m. &amp;. Youd! 7 p.m. ;

i

F\oU G.pel Chuodo otllle U.U. Sn""" •.
Ro.338, Anliqooily
Pastor: Jesse ~orris
Asst. Puton: Jim Morris

Services: Saturd;ay 7:30p.m.

.....,,

.

St. ftul Lutlttru c•un:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; S«:o~ St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
\
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Grnlwa Ullllod Metloodlot
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7,30 p.m. (ln! &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Air...a

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Ch-r
Pastor. Jane Beahie

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday Sthool- 10 a.m.
Thunday Services- 7 p.m.

'

\,lf&lt;ll'l'll('
MWtlleport Qo- ol tbe N,...ne
Pulor: Allen Midoap
Suooday Sehool- 9:30 Lm.
Vionhip • IOoJO a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesdly Servi('Ct- 7 p.m.
Putor. Allen Midoap

Joppn
Pasoor. Bob Randolph
Woohlp- 9:30a.m.

,

I

r

'

:

Mulbeny Hto. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawinlky
Saturday Servioet:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Wonhlp - 3 p.m.

Mt. Olive Coauaualty Cbun:•
Pastor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wcdnoday Service - 7 p.m.

•

•

\&lt;I \IIII i '!

" ' \llilh- l l .ll

LonaBouom
Sunday Sehool - 9,30 a.m.
Wonfoip- 10,45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7,30 p.m.

Toro:h Cboordo
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Sehool - 9i30 o.m.
Wonhlp. 10,30 a.m.

j

Middleport l'ronbytorlu
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worflhip - 10 a.m.

Fnldl Glllpel Churdo

Wednesday services - 8 p.m.

.

HarriJonviUe Presb)1eri.. Church ..
Worship - 9 a.m.
"'
Sunday School - 9:43 a.m.

Mol'll Clonpel Churo:h
Sunday school ~ 10 a.m.
Wor&amp;hlp - II a.m.
Wednelda.y Service- 7 p.m.

Orand Street
Sunday School -· I 0 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Melp Coopm~dve Plorilll
Non~ast Cluster
'

•

'

I Jlikd l:n·lhn·n
~·

. Mt. Hennen Ualted lrethl'lll
In Cbrisl Cbool&lt;h
TeJW Commuriity oft CR 82
Putor: Robert Sllllders ,
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp;. 7:30p.m.

Ullltod Fallh Churo:lo
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pua ·
Pastor. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Surlday School-9:30a.m.
Wooihip • 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
WedneSday Service - 7 p.m.

•
-,

,,

J'ull Goopel LltlhtloouM
3304' Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening7:30 p.m.
Thcsday • Tlounday- 7,30 p.m.

Edon Ullllod • ...,.... too Chris!
2 112 miles north of RccdaviUe
00 Stale Route 124

P111oc Rev. Robm Muldey
Sunday Sehool- II n.m.
SundayWonlilp·IOoOOa.m: A 7:00p.m.
Wedooeoday Servkoa • 7,30 p.m. '
Wedooeoday Youlh Service • HO p.m.

Soutb lletljel Now 'IOstomeolt
Silver RidJe
POSIOr: Robon Borber

ICniW's Family Restaurant

Real qestate

. UFMturtng KMtuclly Frif1d

Chicken"

216 E. Second Pomeroy

W. Main St., Pomeroy

Marlultlng ,__,..,

214 E. Main

992·5130

NEW HAVEN
unto the Lord. and thY
FUNERAL HOME
Dignity and Service Always

Eetabllehed 1913

992·2121

7411-992·2644 740-892-e298

!Always &amp; t'forever ~

FLOwal

. Sift Sfiop

106,Bvm:RNUT AVE.

. Wt Fill Doctors'

PmMmiOY,OR 992-6454

Prescriptions

'Flowers for all occasions"

Pomeroy

lngel's Carpet

SNOUFFf:R FIRE &amp;

169 N 2nd Ave.

SERVICE

SAFETY SALES &amp;

Middleport, OH

992·7028

•t..t "' 11ttd !flll.lt ~&amp;M• with lfl«l•l•re·

992..5432 .

PHAAMACY
992·2955

Bill

camp slatecl
RACINE - The annual
Hustling Tornado ~tball
camp will take place June 2529 for players entering grades
3 through 6 from 9 a.m. to 12
noon.
The camp is open for both
boys and girls and will be
conducted by head varsity
Coach Jay !tees and his staff.
Players should pre-register if
possible or come before 8:30
to register at the door.
The camp will feature fundamentals essential to produce
·winning basketball, those
same fundamentals insrilled in
the Southern varsity squad.
The camp is open to all area
players. The cost of the camp
is $30 with families having
more than one child paying
no more than $60 per family.
Camp
pre-registrations
should be sent payable to
Coach Rees at Southern
High School, Box 98, Racine,
Ohio 45771. Included in the
cost of the camp ts a camp
Tee-Shirt and Individual
awards.
For further information
contact Coach Rees at 2477301.

992-7075
17,2 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

~:

.

·

518 E. Mliln St. POmeroy, .OH';,,

992·1161

.

~

Office Service &amp; Supply
~-J
137-c N. 2nd Ave.
.,,
I
Middleport,
OH
I__J
992-6376
•
•

/

~-

•

Miami advances
to CWSflnal
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Kevin Howard and Danny
Matienzo hit back-to-hack
home runs to spark a sevenrun fourth inning, leading
Miami to th~ College World
Series chantpionship game,
12-6 over Tennessee.
Miami will play Stanford in
Saturday's tide game.

Irwin leads at
US Open

ia11

Pastor: Rev. Krlsana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Dy..vUie C0010001uoofty Churdo
Sunday School - 9:30 11.m,
Woobip - 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.

H&lt;~efd-rl Clourch

ML OUve liolted Metbodllt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:jo a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.: 7 p.m.
~unday Services - 7 p.m.

l'rv~ll\ ll't
.
~

PtiJOr: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonlolp - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

-.!Cbur&lt;b
Townohip Rd., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip- ·to a.m.
Wednesday Service• - 10 a.m.

J.-:

..•

•

OlfRt 124

Coolrillt Uoolltd Metllodilt Parisll
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesduy Services - 7 p.nt

St. Rl. 124. Racine
PallOr: WlUlllri Hatiact I

Third Aye.
•
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sllflday School- IOa'.m.
EveninJ- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicei -7:00p.m~ -

!lnJel c...mooootl)' Chardo

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wedneiday 1 p.m.

Pn-~lol)'

Mlldleporl Pen._tnl

SynctlHMIMien
141 I Bridgeman Sl, Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor •
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenins - 6 p.m.·
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Putor. Brian Harkness

Our Saviour Ludlenn Ckun:b
· Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Vo.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
W001bip.- II a.m.

Snloon C..mually Cb!Mdo
Lievin&amp; Road, West Columbia, W.Va. ·.. : ·
Pa11tor: Clyde Fenell
·
Sunday Sehool 9,30 . .
Sunday evenina Rrvice 6 pm
"
Wednesday service 7 pm

Sunday School - IOLm.
Bvenina - 7 p.m.
Wedocsday Scrv-icea - 7 p.m.

Bailey Run Road ·
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson·
Sunday Evening 1 p.m.
Thursdly SeN!ce - ~ p.m.

Rao:t..

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

992·3785

174

Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.

r- Vnlloy 'lllbmondt Clourcb

1

740-992-3325

Director

Clifton, W.Va.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30 p.m.
Wedne1day Scl'\lice- 7il0 p1m. • ·

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedne!day - 1 p.m.

St. John Lutberu Cb1rcb
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz

INSURANCE
SERVICES

•

m -~17

Service time:' Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedooesday7pm

F.ut Letnrt

Pomeroy

"We accept Prenead Transfers" .
882·8200
Lundy Brown
Regan Brr.1wn

Clift0111 Tabernilck Cbun:lt

Middleport c...mualty Cburdo
~7.5 Peatl St., Middleport

Pwor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m. ,

Homemaking.meeting, Isr 'Il!ura. • 7 p.m.

603 Second Ave. Muon

· HarrtlonwiUe Community Cburdl
Pas1or: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m; and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - tO a.RL

M~mlna Star

Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m•

Tomado hoops

.Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Betllnny
Putor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday &amp;:!tool- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 11.m.

Tbe Chuorli o1 Jaus
Christ ol Lnttor-Day Snlnll
St Rl. 160, 446-6~47 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20..11 a.m.
RcliefSociclyiPricslbood -ll:OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Sen ice 9·10: l!'i a.m.

AppeLifeC.ooltr
"FuU-Goopel Chun:h"
PaRton John 4 PaUy Wade

God'• Teoooplo "'Prnloo

Worship - 9 a.m.

Community ol Cbrilt
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Ouhl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Pulor: Mike Fomnan
Pasror: Emeritus Lawrence Fomnan

1'be Bdlewen' Fellowsldp Mfailtry
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
New lime Rd.~ Rutlllftd
Pastor. Wayne Baloolm
Putor: Rev. Margattl ) . Robinson
Services: ThUll. Nitcs 7:00pm
Services: Wednesday, 7:.30 p.m.
New church No Surxlay aervice eatabUabcd. :

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Sainh

IIIJofdnl ur. Cloud
SOil N. 2nd A,.., Mi~

Ulng Bottom
Pallor: Steve Reed
Sunday s.lool · 9,30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedooeoday - 1 p.m.
Friday - fellowllhip service 7 p.m.

s...mne

Wednesday Striicc - 7:00p.m.

....

Fnllh Fooll Goopel Cllardo

SnleaoC..tor
PasiOr: Roo F1erce·
Sunday School- 9: t.S a.m.
Wor&amp;hip- IO:IS a.m.

Llurd Cliff Free Metbodilt CbUfCb
Putor: Donald Bali~
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m:
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

-...

Sth-en.WC Com•••HJ Cllurda
Paator. Wayne R. Jewell.
•
Sunday Services~ 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:00p.m. •.
Thursday - 7:00 p.m.

Abuooolnool Groi&lt;o R.F.I.
923 S. Thin! So., Middlepon
Pastor Tmsa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednclday service, 1 p.m.

Roolllinol

Hy..U RUb Holt- Church
Rev. Mllfk. Michael
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youlh - 1 p.m.

Clooordo

Harval OUbadl
47439 Reibel Rd., CheSler
Puwn: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Stmday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi«S • 1 p.m.

Part Clonpol

Falllt r..., •.,, c-r..- Cllrlol
Pallor: Rev. flrlnklin Dickens
~ ..
Semcc' friday, 1 p.DL
l'llnocroy Plb. Co. Rd.
Pulor: Ro•. Blnckwood
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9,30 Lm.
Worship IOolO a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wedooeoday Servi&lt;e • 7,30 p.m.

M-

Pulor. Bob RObinsoo

·-

Cnl..., IIMtCioudl

Ash St. Mlddleporl
Sunday School ~ IO:(X) a.m.
Sunday Service ·6:00p.m.
W~y Service ~ 7:00p.m . ,

&amp;

thouihts shall be
'
, established.
~roverbs J,6:3

e•

()till r ( llll nIH·'

lldtla (MiddhpNt)
Pulor: Rob Bmwq
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

•••

Wonhip . 7'00 p.m.
Wcdnellday Bible ~Y - 7:00p.m.

MominJW&lt;XIhip - 10:4,Lm.
Swlday S...ice . 6:30p.m.

Wotsbip - 9 Lin.

Harrisonville Road

212 E. Main Street

IJI\~PII

Fnlrriow .... Cloud!
LeW1. W.Va. RL I
Pu10r. Brian May
Sunday Sdoool · 9;30 a.tn-

Sundly School - 10 a.m.

Sunday wcn:hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp;.7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer service- 7 p.m.

l..illn - D;I\

Worship · 10:30 LDL

Portlud 111'111 Qua .ru.e N
Pastor: W"tlliam. Justis
Sunday Sthool -10:00 a.m.

,.......

Puwr: Gary Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Suoday School - 9:30 a.DL
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WcdnetdiiS...i..-.. · 7p.m.

Paslor. Kcido Stmday School- 10 a.m.
Wonh.ip - I J a.m.

Dn..w.H-CIIoodo
31M7 Stare Route 32S.L.anpvlk

HIGHLIGHTS

Pu1or. ~- PhiUip Rldmour

...._.CIIormti. . Nn I'IIIAx: Rev. Snmuel W. Buyc

rl

llaiw

FRIDW's

Wlolto'l Clooopol Woolo711
Coolville ROid

.... HedlertGnlo

ftU1J,IU1115;DD1

WedoudnySoMce - 7p.m.

~
Paslor. Kcilh Roder
Sunday ScOOol- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

llolillt' "

N--

Sunday Scbool· 9:10 •.m.
Wonhip - J I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnaday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship - 11 a.m.
Wedlleldays.r.ias - 7,30p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Wonbijl · 10:30 La oad 6 p.m.
WeM ertlly SetW:a - 7 p.m.

Page B1

•

F-Geo,oiBald Knob. 00 Co. It4 31
1'111«: ~. R.... WoUfoool
Sundny Sdoool · 9:30 LtiJ.
-.,.7p.DL

Me

S...y Scbool - 9:JO LDL

~Ciooter

Sunday: ~~~ Fdtntioa •
Sundly School 10:1.5 l.d'l.
Holy E.acharUII I :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharill S:OO p.m.

~- ·l p.JII.

•JO.rdill6eP'

Daimond Roundup, Pagt B6

...

~

Kiolpbuoy Rood
""""" RCJI&gt;eot Ynaoe.
Sunday Scbool · 9:30 LID.
Wonbip- 10:30 ILJL
~
.NaSuooday&lt;WW..-,. N;pts.m..r
, .

r-MibA!Idns
S....., School · &lt;j,JO LBL
Wanhip - IOolO a.m.. 6 p.m.

Pukw::J&amp;l...a~

SoadayScbooi - 9LDL
Wanbip - IOLIIL
Tueodoy s.r.ias . 1,30 p.m.

Cract!i' ,.,~
326 E. Main So.,l'o!Defvy
R... l , _ Bmodi, Reo. Kodooriafoolcr
RoY. !ldJoqb Rlnkin, Clav

~

s,_C~~orm.,•'*'=-

P

""""" l i D &lt; -

or Cluisl

Pastor: Nathan Robinsoo
Sunday sctlo019:30 a.m.
Norman Will, supcrinlendcnt
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

(

1\WIJ a....

• •

The Daily Sentinel

5 . - , . - · 9La
Wodllip • !0: 10 LOO.. 6 p.iL
w , 11} Sen-ioe ~ 7 ....

w-,ScMceo - 7pA

I
Wonloip • 9,30 LDL
5.-,. Sdlool · 1()-JO ....
F...,S...yoiMoolb • 7,00p.at.tetVIce

Main

Poslor:AIIbruoo
Youth Miniila': DiU Fraricr
Sunday School - 9:10a.m.
Worship- 8: 1~ . 10:30 a m.. 7 p.m.

~ Tnaa Wtkkd:
_ , Scbool · &lt;j,)O .....
Wonlaip . 10:45 ......... 1 p.m.

Ltoe-

~ayScnioa ~ 7p.a

I

( l1111 ( h .. 1 • 1!1 i't
, _ QorclotiOriol
212 W. Moia St.
Minister: Neil ProudfOOI
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

•_.ai&lt;Foilb

'''r~l

Swa. MMI - 9:30a.m.
Dlile)' ~ • I ;JO Lilt.

S.....,Scllooi - ID-JOU..

~ ..-Ciodo&amp;

Wonloip - 11 .....

Sun. ea.. ~=·s-.9: 15 Ul.,

7

E..-. - 7:.1op.a

Suadly Sc:Mol · 10 .....

.
I '

TULSA, Okla. (AP) Tiger Woods cqrsed, tossed
his clubs and stammered
around the course like a 56~
year-old golfer.
'
If only he could have played
like one.
Woods' expected march to
a fifth straight m&lt;Uor triumph
got off to a stormy start
Thursday at the U.S. Open.
Stealing the thunder was
Hale Irwin, the oldest man on
the course, striking the shots
usually found in Woods' arsenal.
Southern Hills Country
Club was in a frenzy as Irwin
Walked up the 18th fairway,
whipping his cap like a lasso
after a laser 2-iron from 198
'yards rolled to a stop less than
2 feet from the flag.
The gimme birdie left
lrwiri with a 3-under-par 67,
the leader among 66 players
who completed play before
thunderstorms forced a sus. pension late Thursday afternoon.
Woods hit his first ~hot in
the rough, an omen of the
troubles-to come. He bogeyed ·
the third hole, doublebogeyed the ninth and left the
course at 3-over par when
play was halted.
Retief Go.osen of South
Africa birdied the seventh
hole just before the sirens
sounded and was tied with
Irwin at 3 under. Toshi Izawa
of Japan was at 2 under after
four holes.
Lo.r en Roberts and Stewart
Cink were the only other
players who finished their ·
rounds under par, both at 69.
Phil Mickelson· made backto-hack bogeys on the back
nine to finish at 70, along with
Sergio Garcia, Angel Cabrera
and Matt Gogel. Davis Love
Ill, playing for the first time in
two months because of neck
and back injuries, bogeyed the
last two holes for a 72.

ChiSox rally beats Reds
CHICAGO (AP)- Paul Konerko wasn't
worried at all when he went back to the
dugout in the seventh inning.
Sure, the Chicago White Sox had blown a
5-1 lead and the game was. now tied. But the
way the White Sox are playiil.g these days, he
knew that somehow, rome way, they'd find a
way to wm. .
Konerko did more than just put out good .
vibes to his teammates. After CarlO! Lee doubled to drive in the go-ahead run in the bottom of the seventh, he added an insurance
run With a sacrifice fly as the While Sox beat
the Cincinnati Reds 7-5 Thursday night.
Despite nine players on the disabled list, the
White Sox have won 16 of 19 games. They're

two games under .500 forth~ first time since
April 19.
· "We're just kind of rolling," said Konerko,
who also hit a grand slam in the first inning
and matched his career high with five RBis.
"No one talks about (the injuries) as much
as you do (the media). We just come in and
try to figure out ways to win."
.
Magglio Ordonez added a solo homer for
Chicago, which swept Cincinnati for the second year in a row. Kelly Wunsch (2-1) got
two outi for the win, and Keith Foulke
pitched the ninth for his 13th save in 14
chances.
Jim Brower (3-4) gave up one unearned
KUDOS - Chicago's Paul Konerko (right) is greeted at home
by teammates after hitting a grand slam Thursday. (AP)

PhaHMPRecii.IJ

Brewers nail Tribe, 9-4
'

Indians blow
four-rnn
lead
CLEVELAND (AP)
Ben Sheets was impressed
with his team, not his
pitching.
· Geoff Jenkins hit two
home runs Thursday to
support a shaky start by
Sheets as the Milwaukee
Brewers overcame a fourrun deficit tp defeat the
· Cleveland Indians 9-4.
"They had me on the
ropes, but my· team picked
me up;' Sheets (7-4) said.
"The way I threw the ball
was terrible."
Despite taking two of
thtee from the Indians,
Milwaukee manager Davey
Lopes did not particularly
enjoy the interleague
series.
"I have a tough time
staying awake, to be honest
with you;• Lopes said. "Not
bad for a mediocre Central
Division ballclub, as some
announcers say. I hate to
see what we'd have done if
.we were a good ballclub."
Jenkins gave his inanager
a very loud wakeup call
not once, but rwice. He
sparked the Brewers' 17-hit
outburst with a solo homer
in .the foutth inning and a
three-run shot, his 13th,
during a five-run fifth.
"I hit a split and a
changeup," Jenkins said.
"We were looking for

PIIPHMP'IIIba,IJ

'DEJECTED -Indians pitcher Charles Nagy reacts after giving up a home run to Milwaukee's
Riehle Sexson In the fifth Inning Thursday In Cleveland. (AP)

Rec: OHSAA to monitor finances
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
hand- picked committee recommended
tighter fiscal monitoring Thursday for
the Ohio High School Athletic Association, including establishing an independent annual audit and empowering
the commissioner to mo~itor expenses.
The committee was appointed by the
commissioner to review the financial
records of the association~ which oversees the,state's high -school sports, after a
newspaper [!:port detailed questionable
financial practices by some district
board members.
· The 12-person committee met three

times before presenting its recommendations to the board.
"I commend the committee for the
in-depth report that. they have compiled," OHSAA Commissioner Clair
Muscaro said Thursday. "On the 9Urface,
it looks to me that they addressed all
the issues."
Traditionally. the state's six district
boards have been autonomous and not
accountable to Muscaro's office.
The committee recommended giving
Muscaro coutrol over daily operations;
authority to approve or reject any
OHSAA trips and to consolidate

money management. It also recommended recovering any inappropriate
reimbursements to district board members.
Muscaro said the committee's recommendations will be on the agenda in
the board's control meeting in July.
"I would welcome any challenges
assigned to me," he said. " I want to do
everything possible to let everyone
know what the OHSAA is really all
about.
"I am excre·mely disappointed with
the perception that some people may

PINH -

OHSAA, 13

~riffey,

.Larkin to
return
soon
CHICAGO .(AP) - Ken
Griffey Jr. and Barry Larkin
could be back in the Cincinnati
Reds' lineup Friday.
The two will work out in
front of Reds manager Bob
Boone and Ken Griffey Sr., the
team's hitting coach, before Fridays game against Colorado.
Griffey and
Larkin will
then have to
tell Boone if
they're ready
to return to
the lineup.
Ditto for
Aaron Boone,
who was to
Griffey
play in a ~e
with Triple-A
· Loui~ville on Thursday night.
"He'U know whether he can
compete," Bob Boone said
Thursday before the Reds
played the Chicago White Sox. ·
"If he can compete, he'll compete right here."
Griffey has been on the dis-. abled list since April 29 after
tearing a hamstring during
spring training. He hasn't started a game yet this season.
. Larkin's been out since May
18 with a strained right groin,
while Boone ha• been on the
DL since May 15 with a broken
bone in his rig\tt hand.
"Ali anxious a."i we've been to
get them back, the scary thing is
we're going to have to live
through a little spring trainil)g;'
Bob Boone said. "The patience
continues.''
And he's willing to live with a
little rust to get his best players
back. Injuries have hit the Reds ·
particularly hard this year, with
Cincirumi (25-38) yet to start
it&gt; projected openiJ1g-day lineup.
Griffey, a three-time MVP in
the AL, hit 40 home runs and
drove in 118 runs la•t year for
the Reds. Larkin hit .3 13, and
Doone hit .285 with 12 homers
and 43 RBis deSpite not playing •
after July 9.
.
"We need them here;• Bob
Doone said. "The questiOf!
becomes, are you a better team
With · them at 85 percent or
what we've had at 100 percent?"

'

Errors doom Mason County Legion squad
8Y DAN

POLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAFF

ALBANY, Ohio. - Errors
caught up to Mason County
in a big way Thursday night.
The Mason County sqiJild
committed six errors en route
to falling to the Athens No.- 2
squad, 13-6 in American
Legion baseball play.
The win gives the Athens
team its first win of the season
after its first two games were

suspended.
The· game
was called in
the · eighth
inning due to
darkness.
Mason was
3-0 coming
into the conbut
test,
Hoelle
. Athens was
able to score multiple runs in
'
each of the four innings

whereMason County booted
or misplayed balls.
Bradford Clark started for
Mason County, working five
innings and giving up eight
unearned runs. Three errors
in the fifth gave Athens' Justin
Guinthier the chance to hit
his two-out, two-run homer
to center field as part of a
·four-run frame which gave
the Ohio squad an 8-5 lead
which it did not relinquish .

Clark cook the loss, striking
out seven and walking four.
He gave up five hit&gt;.
Athens also tallied five runs
in the sixth inning off reliever
Matt Webb. That frame saw
Mason commit an error and
Acl{ens get a pair of hits into
no-man's land past third base.
. No Athens pitcher worked
more than two innings. Mike
Lucik started, getting a no
de cision and giving up four

runs. Tyler Mclead worked
the third and fourth, while
Jake Hale worked the ' fifth
and sixth to pick up the win.
Ryan Lawson finished the
game, ' working the seventh
and eighth frames.
Mason County started the
game with hot bats, plating
thre e runs in the opening set.
· West Virginia
all-stater
,
Please see Llpon, IJ
•

�Sentinel

---

O...tl.'-a.t.t••

_ , ..._WalfaE.Heial
SoL 0.. 4,45-,, I'P= MHI- "10p.aL
1

~--ltd.

Sunday. 10 LQL .... 7:30p.m.
~..,.7:30p.m.

w~ 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.

~U...Rood

Wcdnpdoy s.mc..- 7 p.m.
.

IJkny A-,.tiGool
P.O. Box 467, lludcliaa Lone

, _ w- Clooftll tiQrlol
33226 Children's llomc Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
- . , - IOo.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedaoday ServKn - 7 p.m.

~w. v..

Pulor.NriiT.....,.
Sunday Services-- 10:00 a.m.IRI7 p.m.

MWdlopwt Cluordltl c.riol
~and

1\.lpli,l
'~I

,.,.- ...

~~ ~

BurlinJbam - 742-7606
Puler. Jabn Swanson ,

Sllllday S&lt;bool · 10,00 a.m.
MominJ Service 11 :00 LDL

Wedftesday Servi&lt;es - 7p.11L

Evcninc Service -6:00 p.m.

K..o CIM&lt;b oi-Ciortno

-..toy Service - 7,30 p.m.
Hope ....... CloOida ~S,.CL j • )
'70 Giani Sl., MKidleporl
Sundoy tdoool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 6 p.m.
, Wednesday Ser.(iu: - 1 p.m.

........ Flnt ...... Clloordo

.

.

Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehoul - 10,30 a. m.
Ptitor-JdfR:y Wallace
Iat and 3rd SundaY.

ll&lt;orwoollaw Jlldtt Clolil'do otCiorisa
Pastor:Tmy Slewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wonhip - 10,30 a.m .. 6'30 p.111.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Sunday Sebool - 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4.5 a.m.

......., Flnt Bnpliol
Eut Main St. ,·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
. Flnl ~... 8nptlst
41812 l'&lt;&gt;mcroy p;~ce
PooMJr: E. Laiow O'Boyanl

Zion Chuodo ol Christ
Pomeroy, Hanisonville Rd. (Rt. l43)
Pastor: Roaer Watson
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plnln Choordo ol Cllriot
lnstrumenlal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
SundaySchool - 10:15a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Dible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday S&lt;hool - 9,30 a.m.
Wriip - 10:4.5 a.m .• 7:00p.m.

•

Wednesday Servicet - 7'00 p.m.
Flnt llnpliol Churdo

Paslor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. Middleport

Broolbury Chuorlo ol Cbrlst
Pastor: Joshua Lynch
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 9: 15 a.m.
Worship - 10: l.h.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rndne Flnl Bapliol
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.·
. Wonhip- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servic~ -7:00p.m.

Sliver Ran Baptist
Pastor: Sleven K. UUie
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Wonhip - I lam .. 7:00p.m.

Rutland Chur&lt;b ol Christ
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worship · l0:30a.m., 7p.m.
Bradford Church ol Clnilt
Comer of SL Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd.
Minister. Doug Shamblin

Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Youlh Minister: BiU AmbeiJer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m .. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

ML Uoolooo Baptlot
Pastor : Joe N. SJiyrt
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
W~y Services- 6:30p.m.

Hkkory Hllb Chun:h ol Christ
Evangcliit Mike Moon:
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Won~hip - 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Betb)&lt;hom Bnpdst Cbur&lt;b
Great Bend, Route 124. Racine, OH
Pas10r : Daniel Mecea
SunrJay School- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.
· Wednesday Bible Study-6:00p.m.

•
'

Old Bethel Fo-.. Will Bapliol Cbooi'&lt;h
28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday Scpool- ~0 a.m.
Evening - 7:00 p.m.
Thursday SetVices- 7:00

Hlllkle BaplJsl Ch•n:h
. , SI.,Jl!. 14~J~stoffRt.7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship. I 0:30a.m.., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Vletary Bopdsll...pendtnt
mN. 2nd S1. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip - 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fallh Bnptbt Churdo
Railroad St. Mason ·
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senticcs - 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- ll a.m.
ML Morlalo BnpUII
Poortb &amp; Main St., MickDeport
Putor: Rev. Gilbert Cralj, Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Andqull)' Bnpdst
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&amp;hip- 10;4.5 a.m.
Sunday Evenina - 6:00p.m.
Putor: Mark McComas
Radnoool Free Will Boptbt
Salem St.
Putor. Rev. Paul Taylar
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Bvenina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Seoooool Bnpdst Chur&lt;h
Ravenswood, WV
Pulor. David W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMomina worship II am Evening ~ 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

( ·alholir
Sncrod Htnrl Cnthollo: Churdo

s-yS&lt;IIooi - 9-JOUL
Wonloip • i0:30 ILJL

La••Uie Cluisdon Churdo
Piastor: Roben Musser
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednellday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Gro'Vc (."hrfltiau Oiurth
Pastor: Richard Nease

Sunday school • I0:30a.m.
Worsllip ·9:30a.m.,
Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Rmi.,IU. Chul'&lt;b ol Cllrisl
Pastor: Philip Sturm
School: 9:30a.m.
Worship ServiCe: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedne!iday,·6:30 p.m.
S~ndly

DtJ:ter Churth

a-.

,._,
-·
R&lt;-1.4"nD.
Cnoia"-or

,._.._so. ....

Wonhip 10:2j UD.
Sundly School Q: 15 a.m.

Chui'&lt;b ol Christ
Intersection 1 and 124 W
Evangelist: DeMis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study . 1 p.m.

' hri~lian

I uiun

U.rtreool Chord! ol Clorlot Ill
Cbrisdnoo Uoolon
Hartlord, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim HuJhcs
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Wot1hip- 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
WedneMay Services • 7:30 p.m.

( 'hut l'11 ul ( ood
ML Morini! Churdo of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utr
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
WedneSday Services - 7 p.m.
RuUaDd Chur,;::h of God ·
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Syrn&lt;- Flnl Chun:b of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor. Rev. David Ru!I!ICII
Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evenlng Service.- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service§- 6:30p.m.
Chur&lt;h or God or Proplo&lt;ey
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rl. 160

Pastor: P.J . Chapmln

'

~c..dlti . .

A-,(Syrxusc)
I'Mior.BmROOiNoa
Slandly School - ~4S a.•.

-

c_.ao~~yCiuudo

Pastor. RC\'. Amos TUiis
Main Strtet., Rudand
Sunday WOI'ihip-IO:OOa.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

-

Bob JloJbiooJon

Pastor: Charles McKenzie

Alii-

-

Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday-Service - 7:00p.m.

Worship - ll:OOa.m.

Sundlly School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

R-alSioaronU.U..Cburdo
Lading Cr=t Rd., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Dewey King
Sunday &amp;ehool- 9:30a.m.
Stmday worship -7 p.m.
Wedne:Miay prayer meetinJ- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wtwship- IOa.m.

..._..,

PlDe Grove Blbk H~ Chardl
112 mile RL 325
Paslor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOBbip -10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

o«

Pas10r: Rod Brower

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool- 10'3' a.m.
lto&lt;kSprbop
Pwor: Keith bder
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip-IOa.m.
Yooth Pellowahip, Sunday - 6 p.m.

w-,.nn Bible H - Churdo
75 Pearl St.. Middleport.
Pastor. Re V. Doug Cm; .
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sehool - 9,30 a.m.
Wontup - 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Servk:es- 7 p.ni.

C.rmei.Sutto11
Cannel &amp; ·Ba..han Rdl.
Racine, Ohio
· Pastor: Dewayne Studer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - IN' a.m.
~ Bible SIUdy Weilc1:00 p.m.

....

~

l .ulhn;ltl

Worship - 9:00a.m.

Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wednc.Jday Sef\'ice - 7 p.m.

New Life VIctor)' Cmler
•.
3773 Go&lt;qes C...k Rood. Gallipoli&amp;, OH ~
Poooor. Bill s.....
·..
Sunday Services - 10 Lm. &amp;: 7 p.m. - •
Wedooeoday - 1 p.m. &amp;. Youd! 7 p.m. ;

i

F\oU G.pel Chuodo otllle U.U. Sn""" •.
Ro.338, Anliqooily
Pastor: Jesse ~orris
Asst. Puton: Jim Morris

Services: Saturd;ay 7:30p.m.

.....,,

.

St. ftul Lutlttru c•un:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; S«:o~ St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
\
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Grnlwa Ullllod Metloodlot
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7,30 p.m. (ln! &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Air...a

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Ch-r
Pastor. Jane Beahie

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday Sthool- 10 a.m.
Thunday Services- 7 p.m.

'

\,lf&lt;ll'l'll('
MWtlleport Qo- ol tbe N,...ne
Pulor: Allen Midoap
Suooday Sehool- 9:30 Lm.
Vionhip • IOoJO a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesdly Servi('Ct- 7 p.m.
Putor. Allen Midoap

Joppn
Pasoor. Bob Randolph
Woohlp- 9:30a.m.

,

I

r

'

:

Mulbeny Hto. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawinlky
Saturday Servioet:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Wonhlp - 3 p.m.

Mt. Olive Coauaualty Cbun:•
Pastor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wcdnoday Service - 7 p.m.

•

•

\&lt;I \IIII i '!

" ' \llilh- l l .ll

LonaBouom
Sunday Sehool - 9,30 a.m.
Wonfoip- 10,45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7,30 p.m.

Toro:h Cboordo
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Sehool - 9i30 o.m.
Wonhlp. 10,30 a.m.

j

Middleport l'ronbytorlu
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worflhip - 10 a.m.

Fnldl Glllpel Churdo

Wednesday services - 8 p.m.

.

HarriJonviUe Presb)1eri.. Church ..
Worship - 9 a.m.
"'
Sunday School - 9:43 a.m.

Mol'll Clonpel Churo:h
Sunday school ~ 10 a.m.
Wor&amp;hlp - II a.m.
Wednelda.y Service- 7 p.m.

Orand Street
Sunday School -· I 0 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Melp Coopm~dve Plorilll
Non~ast Cluster
'

•

'

I Jlikd l:n·lhn·n
~·

. Mt. Hennen Ualted lrethl'lll
In Cbrisl Cbool&lt;h
TeJW Commuriity oft CR 82
Putor: Robert Sllllders ,
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp;. 7:30p.m.

Ullltod Fallh Churo:lo
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pua ·
Pastor. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Surlday School-9:30a.m.
Wooihip • 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
WedneSday Service - 7 p.m.

•
-,

,,

J'ull Goopel LltlhtloouM
3304' Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening7:30 p.m.
Thcsday • Tlounday- 7,30 p.m.

Edon Ullllod • ...,.... too Chris!
2 112 miles north of RccdaviUe
00 Stale Route 124

P111oc Rev. Robm Muldey
Sunday Sehool- II n.m.
SundayWonlilp·IOoOOa.m: A 7:00p.m.
Wedooeoday Servkoa • 7,30 p.m. '
Wedooeoday Youlh Service • HO p.m.

Soutb lletljel Now 'IOstomeolt
Silver RidJe
POSIOr: Robon Borber

ICniW's Family Restaurant

Real qestate

. UFMturtng KMtuclly Frif1d

Chicken"

216 E. Second Pomeroy

W. Main St., Pomeroy

Marlultlng ,__,..,

214 E. Main

992·5130

NEW HAVEN
unto the Lord. and thY
FUNERAL HOME
Dignity and Service Always

Eetabllehed 1913

992·2121

7411-992·2644 740-892-e298

!Always &amp; t'forever ~

FLOwal

. Sift Sfiop

106,Bvm:RNUT AVE.

. Wt Fill Doctors'

PmMmiOY,OR 992-6454

Prescriptions

'Flowers for all occasions"

Pomeroy

lngel's Carpet

SNOUFFf:R FIRE &amp;

169 N 2nd Ave.

SERVICE

SAFETY SALES &amp;

Middleport, OH

992·7028

•t..t "' 11ttd !flll.lt ~&amp;M• with lfl«l•l•re·

992..5432 .

PHAAMACY
992·2955

Bill

camp slatecl
RACINE - The annual
Hustling Tornado ~tball
camp will take place June 2529 for players entering grades
3 through 6 from 9 a.m. to 12
noon.
The camp is open for both
boys and girls and will be
conducted by head varsity
Coach Jay !tees and his staff.
Players should pre-register if
possible or come before 8:30
to register at the door.
The camp will feature fundamentals essential to produce
·winning basketball, those
same fundamentals insrilled in
the Southern varsity squad.
The camp is open to all area
players. The cost of the camp
is $30 with families having
more than one child paying
no more than $60 per family.
Camp
pre-registrations
should be sent payable to
Coach Rees at Southern
High School, Box 98, Racine,
Ohio 45771. Included in the
cost of the camp ts a camp
Tee-Shirt and Individual
awards.
For further information
contact Coach Rees at 2477301.

992-7075
17,2 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

~:

.

·

518 E. Mliln St. POmeroy, .OH';,,

992·1161

.

~

Office Service &amp; Supply
~-J
137-c N. 2nd Ave.
.,,
I
Middleport,
OH
I__J
992-6376
•
•

/

~-

•

Miami advances
to CWSflnal
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Kevin Howard and Danny
Matienzo hit back-to-hack
home runs to spark a sevenrun fourth inning, leading
Miami to th~ College World
Series chantpionship game,
12-6 over Tennessee.
Miami will play Stanford in
Saturday's tide game.

Irwin leads at
US Open

ia11

Pastor: Rev. Krlsana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Dy..vUie C0010001uoofty Churdo
Sunday School - 9:30 11.m,
Woobip - 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.

H&lt;~efd-rl Clourch

ML OUve liolted Metbodllt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:jo a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.: 7 p.m.
~unday Services - 7 p.m.

l'rv~ll\ ll't
.
~

PtiJOr: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonlolp - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

-.!Cbur&lt;b
Townohip Rd., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip- ·to a.m.
Wednesday Service• - 10 a.m.

J.-:

..•

•

OlfRt 124

Coolrillt Uoolltd Metllodilt Parisll
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesduy Services - 7 p.nt

St. Rl. 124. Racine
PallOr: WlUlllri Hatiact I

Third Aye.
•
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sllflday School- IOa'.m.
EveninJ- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicei -7:00p.m~ -

!lnJel c...mooootl)' Chardo

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wedneiday 1 p.m.

Pn-~lol)'

Mlldleporl Pen._tnl

SynctlHMIMien
141 I Bridgeman Sl, Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor •
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenins - 6 p.m.·
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Putor. Brian Harkness

Our Saviour Ludlenn Ckun:b
· Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Vo.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
W001bip.- II a.m.

Snloon C..mually Cb!Mdo
Lievin&amp; Road, West Columbia, W.Va. ·.. : ·
Pa11tor: Clyde Fenell
·
Sunday Sehool 9,30 . .
Sunday evenina Rrvice 6 pm
"
Wednesday service 7 pm

Sunday School - IOLm.
Bvenina - 7 p.m.
Wedocsday Scrv-icea - 7 p.m.

Bailey Run Road ·
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson·
Sunday Evening 1 p.m.
Thursdly SeN!ce - ~ p.m.

Rao:t..

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

992·3785

174

Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.

r- Vnlloy 'lllbmondt Clourcb

1

740-992-3325

Director

Clifton, W.Va.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30 p.m.
Wedne1day Scl'\lice- 7il0 p1m. • ·

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wedne!day - 1 p.m.

St. John Lutberu Cb1rcb
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz

INSURANCE
SERVICES

•

m -~17

Service time:' Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedooesday7pm

F.ut Letnrt

Pomeroy

"We accept Prenead Transfers" .
882·8200
Lundy Brown
Regan Brr.1wn

Clift0111 Tabernilck Cbun:lt

Middleport c...mualty Cburdo
~7.5 Peatl St., Middleport

Pwor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m. ,

Homemaking.meeting, Isr 'Il!ura. • 7 p.m.

603 Second Ave. Muon

· HarrtlonwiUe Community Cburdl
Pas1or: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m; and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - tO a.RL

M~mlna Star

Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m•

Tomado hoops

.Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Betllnny
Putor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday &amp;:!tool- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 11.m.

Tbe Chuorli o1 Jaus
Christ ol Lnttor-Day Snlnll
St Rl. 160, 446-6~47 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20..11 a.m.
RcliefSociclyiPricslbood -ll:OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Sen ice 9·10: l!'i a.m.

AppeLifeC.ooltr
"FuU-Goopel Chun:h"
PaRton John 4 PaUy Wade

God'• Teoooplo "'Prnloo

Worship - 9 a.m.

Community ol Cbrilt
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Ouhl
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Pulor: Mike Fomnan
Pasror: Emeritus Lawrence Fomnan

1'be Bdlewen' Fellowsldp Mfailtry
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
New lime Rd.~ Rutlllftd
Pastor. Wayne Baloolm
Putor: Rev. Margattl ) . Robinson
Services: ThUll. Nitcs 7:00pm
Services: Wednesday, 7:.30 p.m.
New church No Surxlay aervice eatabUabcd. :

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Sainh

IIIJofdnl ur. Cloud
SOil N. 2nd A,.., Mi~

Ulng Bottom
Pallor: Steve Reed
Sunday s.lool · 9,30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedooeoday - 1 p.m.
Friday - fellowllhip service 7 p.m.

s...mne

Wednesday Striicc - 7:00p.m.

....

Fnllh Fooll Goopel Cllardo

SnleaoC..tor
PasiOr: Roo F1erce·
Sunday School- 9: t.S a.m.
Wor&amp;hip- IO:IS a.m.

Llurd Cliff Free Metbodilt CbUfCb
Putor: Donald Bali~
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m:
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

-...

Sth-en.WC Com•••HJ Cllurda
Paator. Wayne R. Jewell.
•
Sunday Services~ 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:00p.m. •.
Thursday - 7:00 p.m.

Abuooolnool Groi&lt;o R.F.I.
923 S. Thin! So., Middlepon
Pastor Tmsa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednclday service, 1 p.m.

Roolllinol

Hy..U RUb Holt- Church
Rev. Mllfk. Michael
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youlh - 1 p.m.

Clooordo

Harval OUbadl
47439 Reibel Rd., CheSler
Puwn: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Stmday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi«S • 1 p.m.

Part Clonpol

Falllt r..., •.,, c-r..- Cllrlol
Pallor: Rev. flrlnklin Dickens
~ ..
Semcc' friday, 1 p.DL
l'llnocroy Plb. Co. Rd.
Pulor: Ro•. Blnckwood
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9,30 Lm.
Worship IOolO a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wedooeoday Servi&lt;e • 7,30 p.m.

M-

Pulor. Bob RObinsoo

·-

Cnl..., IIMtCioudl

Ash St. Mlddleporl
Sunday School ~ IO:(X) a.m.
Sunday Service ·6:00p.m.
W~y Service ~ 7:00p.m . ,

&amp;

thouihts shall be
'
, established.
~roverbs J,6:3

e•

()till r ( llll nIH·'

lldtla (MiddhpNt)
Pulor: Rob Bmwq
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

•••

Wonhip . 7'00 p.m.
Wcdnellday Bible ~Y - 7:00p.m.

MominJW&lt;XIhip - 10:4,Lm.
Swlday S...ice . 6:30p.m.

Wotsbip - 9 Lin.

Harrisonville Road

212 E. Main Street

IJI\~PII

Fnlrriow .... Cloud!
LeW1. W.Va. RL I
Pu10r. Brian May
Sunday Sdoool · 9;30 a.tn-

Sundly School - 10 a.m.

Sunday wcn:hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp;.7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer service- 7 p.m.

l..illn - D;I\

Worship · 10:30 LDL

Portlud 111'111 Qua .ru.e N
Pastor: W"tlliam. Justis
Sunday Sthool -10:00 a.m.

,.......

Puwr: Gary Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Suoday School - 9:30 a.DL
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WcdnetdiiS...i..-.. · 7p.m.

Paslor. Kcido Stmday School- 10 a.m.
Wonh.ip - I J a.m.

Dn..w.H-CIIoodo
31M7 Stare Route 32S.L.anpvlk

HIGHLIGHTS

Pu1or. ~- PhiUip Rldmour

...._.CIIormti. . Nn I'IIIAx: Rev. Snmuel W. Buyc

rl

llaiw

FRIDW's

Wlolto'l Clooopol Woolo711
Coolville ROid

.... HedlertGnlo

ftU1J,IU1115;DD1

WedoudnySoMce - 7p.m.

~
Paslor. Kcilh Roder
Sunday ScOOol- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

llolillt' "

N--

Sunday Scbool· 9:10 •.m.
Wonhip - J I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnaday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship - 11 a.m.
Wedlleldays.r.ias - 7,30p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Wonbijl · 10:30 La oad 6 p.m.
WeM ertlly SetW:a - 7 p.m.

Page B1

•

F-Geo,oiBald Knob. 00 Co. It4 31
1'111«: ~. R.... WoUfoool
Sundny Sdoool · 9:30 LtiJ.
-.,.7p.DL

Me

S...y Scbool - 9:JO LDL

~Ciooter

Sunday: ~~~ Fdtntioa •
Sundly School 10:1.5 l.d'l.
Holy E.acharUII I :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharill S:OO p.m.

~- ·l p.JII.

•JO.rdill6eP'

Daimond Roundup, Pagt B6

...

~

Kiolpbuoy Rood
""""" RCJI&gt;eot Ynaoe.
Sunday Scbool · 9:30 LID.
Wonbip- 10:30 ILJL
~
.NaSuooday&lt;WW..-,. N;pts.m..r
, .

r-MibA!Idns
S....., School · &lt;j,JO LBL
Wanhip - IOolO a.m.. 6 p.m.

Pukw::J&amp;l...a~

SoadayScbooi - 9LDL
Wanbip - IOLIIL
Tueodoy s.r.ias . 1,30 p.m.

Cract!i' ,.,~
326 E. Main So.,l'o!Defvy
R... l , _ Bmodi, Reo. Kodooriafoolcr
RoY. !ldJoqb Rlnkin, Clav

~

s,_C~~orm.,•'*'=-

P

""""" l i D &lt; -

or Cluisl

Pastor: Nathan Robinsoo
Sunday sctlo019:30 a.m.
Norman Will, supcrinlendcnt
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

(

1\WIJ a....

• •

The Daily Sentinel

5 . - , . - · 9La
Wodllip • !0: 10 LOO.. 6 p.iL
w , 11} Sen-ioe ~ 7 ....

w-,ScMceo - 7pA

I
Wonloip • 9,30 LDL
5.-,. Sdlool · 1()-JO ....
F...,S...yoiMoolb • 7,00p.at.tetVIce

Main

Poslor:AIIbruoo
Youth Miniila': DiU Fraricr
Sunday School - 9:10a.m.
Worship- 8: 1~ . 10:30 a m.. 7 p.m.

~ Tnaa Wtkkd:
_ , Scbool · &lt;j,)O .....
Wonlaip . 10:45 ......... 1 p.m.

Ltoe-

~ayScnioa ~ 7p.a

I

( l1111 ( h .. 1 • 1!1 i't
, _ QorclotiOriol
212 W. Moia St.
Minister: Neil ProudfOOI
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

•_.ai&lt;Foilb

'''r~l

Swa. MMI - 9:30a.m.
Dlile)' ~ • I ;JO Lilt.

S.....,Scllooi - ID-JOU..

~ ..-Ciodo&amp;

Wonloip - 11 .....

Sun. ea.. ~=·s-.9: 15 Ul.,

7

E..-. - 7:.1op.a

Suadly Sc:Mol · 10 .....

.
I '

TULSA, Okla. (AP) Tiger Woods cqrsed, tossed
his clubs and stammered
around the course like a 56~
year-old golfer.
'
If only he could have played
like one.
Woods' expected march to
a fifth straight m&lt;Uor triumph
got off to a stormy start
Thursday at the U.S. Open.
Stealing the thunder was
Hale Irwin, the oldest man on
the course, striking the shots
usually found in Woods' arsenal.
Southern Hills Country
Club was in a frenzy as Irwin
Walked up the 18th fairway,
whipping his cap like a lasso
after a laser 2-iron from 198
'yards rolled to a stop less than
2 feet from the flag.
The gimme birdie left
lrwiri with a 3-under-par 67,
the leader among 66 players
who completed play before
thunderstorms forced a sus. pension late Thursday afternoon.
Woods hit his first ~hot in
the rough, an omen of the
troubles-to come. He bogeyed ·
the third hole, doublebogeyed the ninth and left the
course at 3-over par when
play was halted.
Retief Go.osen of South
Africa birdied the seventh
hole just before the sirens
sounded and was tied with
Irwin at 3 under. Toshi Izawa
of Japan was at 2 under after
four holes.
Lo.r en Roberts and Stewart
Cink were the only other
players who finished their ·
rounds under par, both at 69.
Phil Mickelson· made backto-hack bogeys on the back
nine to finish at 70, along with
Sergio Garcia, Angel Cabrera
and Matt Gogel. Davis Love
Ill, playing for the first time in
two months because of neck
and back injuries, bogeyed the
last two holes for a 72.

ChiSox rally beats Reds
CHICAGO (AP)- Paul Konerko wasn't
worried at all when he went back to the
dugout in the seventh inning.
Sure, the Chicago White Sox had blown a
5-1 lead and the game was. now tied. But the
way the White Sox are playiil.g these days, he
knew that somehow, rome way, they'd find a
way to wm. .
Konerko did more than just put out good .
vibes to his teammates. After CarlO! Lee doubled to drive in the go-ahead run in the bottom of the seventh, he added an insurance
run With a sacrifice fly as the While Sox beat
the Cincinnati Reds 7-5 Thursday night.
Despite nine players on the disabled list, the
White Sox have won 16 of 19 games. They're

two games under .500 forth~ first time since
April 19.
· "We're just kind of rolling," said Konerko,
who also hit a grand slam in the first inning
and matched his career high with five RBis.
"No one talks about (the injuries) as much
as you do (the media). We just come in and
try to figure out ways to win."
.
Magglio Ordonez added a solo homer for
Chicago, which swept Cincinnati for the second year in a row. Kelly Wunsch (2-1) got
two outi for the win, and Keith Foulke
pitched the ninth for his 13th save in 14
chances.
Jim Brower (3-4) gave up one unearned
KUDOS - Chicago's Paul Konerko (right) is greeted at home
by teammates after hitting a grand slam Thursday. (AP)

PhaHMPRecii.IJ

Brewers nail Tribe, 9-4
'

Indians blow
four-rnn
lead
CLEVELAND (AP)
Ben Sheets was impressed
with his team, not his
pitching.
· Geoff Jenkins hit two
home runs Thursday to
support a shaky start by
Sheets as the Milwaukee
Brewers overcame a fourrun deficit tp defeat the
· Cleveland Indians 9-4.
"They had me on the
ropes, but my· team picked
me up;' Sheets (7-4) said.
"The way I threw the ball
was terrible."
Despite taking two of
thtee from the Indians,
Milwaukee manager Davey
Lopes did not particularly
enjoy the interleague
series.
"I have a tough time
staying awake, to be honest
with you;• Lopes said. "Not
bad for a mediocre Central
Division ballclub, as some
announcers say. I hate to
see what we'd have done if
.we were a good ballclub."
Jenkins gave his inanager
a very loud wakeup call
not once, but rwice. He
sparked the Brewers' 17-hit
outburst with a solo homer
in .the foutth inning and a
three-run shot, his 13th,
during a five-run fifth.
"I hit a split and a
changeup," Jenkins said.
"We were looking for

PIIPHMP'IIIba,IJ

'DEJECTED -Indians pitcher Charles Nagy reacts after giving up a home run to Milwaukee's
Riehle Sexson In the fifth Inning Thursday In Cleveland. (AP)

Rec: OHSAA to monitor finances
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
hand- picked committee recommended
tighter fiscal monitoring Thursday for
the Ohio High School Athletic Association, including establishing an independent annual audit and empowering
the commissioner to mo~itor expenses.
The committee was appointed by the
commissioner to review the financial
records of the association~ which oversees the,state's high -school sports, after a
newspaper [!:port detailed questionable
financial practices by some district
board members.
· The 12-person committee met three

times before presenting its recommendations to the board.
"I commend the committee for the
in-depth report that. they have compiled," OHSAA Commissioner Clair
Muscaro said Thursday. "On the 9Urface,
it looks to me that they addressed all
the issues."
Traditionally. the state's six district
boards have been autonomous and not
accountable to Muscaro's office.
The committee recommended giving
Muscaro coutrol over daily operations;
authority to approve or reject any
OHSAA trips and to consolidate

money management. It also recommended recovering any inappropriate
reimbursements to district board members.
Muscaro said the committee's recommendations will be on the agenda in
the board's control meeting in July.
"I would welcome any challenges
assigned to me," he said. " I want to do
everything possible to let everyone
know what the OHSAA is really all
about.
"I am excre·mely disappointed with
the perception that some people may

PINH -

OHSAA, 13

~riffey,

.Larkin to
return
soon
CHICAGO .(AP) - Ken
Griffey Jr. and Barry Larkin
could be back in the Cincinnati
Reds' lineup Friday.
The two will work out in
front of Reds manager Bob
Boone and Ken Griffey Sr., the
team's hitting coach, before Fridays game against Colorado.
Griffey and
Larkin will
then have to
tell Boone if
they're ready
to return to
the lineup.
Ditto for
Aaron Boone,
who was to
Griffey
play in a ~e
with Triple-A
· Loui~ville on Thursday night.
"He'U know whether he can
compete," Bob Boone said
Thursday before the Reds
played the Chicago White Sox. ·
"If he can compete, he'll compete right here."
Griffey has been on the dis-. abled list since April 29 after
tearing a hamstring during
spring training. He hasn't started a game yet this season.
. Larkin's been out since May
18 with a strained right groin,
while Boone ha• been on the
DL since May 15 with a broken
bone in his rig\tt hand.
"Ali anxious a."i we've been to
get them back, the scary thing is
we're going to have to live
through a little spring trainil)g;'
Bob Boone said. "The patience
continues.''
And he's willing to live with a
little rust to get his best players
back. Injuries have hit the Reds ·
particularly hard this year, with
Cincirumi (25-38) yet to start
it&gt; projected openiJ1g-day lineup.
Griffey, a three-time MVP in
the AL, hit 40 home runs and
drove in 118 runs la•t year for
the Reds. Larkin hit .3 13, and
Doone hit .285 with 12 homers
and 43 RBis deSpite not playing •
after July 9.
.
"We need them here;• Bob
Doone said. "The questiOf!
becomes, are you a better team
With · them at 85 percent or
what we've had at 100 percent?"

'

Errors doom Mason County Legion squad
8Y DAN

POLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAFF

ALBANY, Ohio. - Errors
caught up to Mason County
in a big way Thursday night.
The Mason County sqiJild
committed six errors en route
to falling to the Athens No.- 2
squad, 13-6 in American
Legion baseball play.
The win gives the Athens
team its first win of the season
after its first two games were

suspended.
The· game
was called in
the · eighth
inning due to
darkness.
Mason was
3-0 coming
into the conbut
test,
Hoelle
. Athens was
able to score multiple runs in
'
each of the four innings

whereMason County booted
or misplayed balls.
Bradford Clark started for
Mason County, working five
innings and giving up eight
unearned runs. Three errors
in the fifth gave Athens' Justin
Guinthier the chance to hit
his two-out, two-run homer
to center field as part of a
·four-run frame which gave
the Ohio squad an 8-5 lead
which it did not relinquish .

Clark cook the loss, striking
out seven and walking four.
He gave up five hit&gt;.
Athens also tallied five runs
in the sixth inning off reliever
Matt Webb. That frame saw
Mason commit an error and
Acl{ens get a pair of hits into
no-man's land past third base.
. No Athens pitcher worked
more than two innings. Mike
Lucik started, getting a no
de cision and giving up four

runs. Tyler Mclead worked
the third and fourth, while
Jake Hale worked the ' fifth
and sixth to pick up the win.
Ryan Lawson finished the
game, ' working the seventh
and eighth frames.
Mason County started the
game with hot bats, plating
thre e runs in the opening set.
· West Virginia
all-stater
,
Please see Llpon, IJ
•

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Gonllomon Sooklng Whllo Female OYer 50 Yeara For Walkl

And Frlondohlp. Roplw To: 553
2nd Avonuo, Golllpollo, Ohio
48131' Aporlrnonl-403
Why wolt? Sllrt mooting Ohio
olnglu tonight 1-I00-7U-2823
11111121.

30 AnnouiiCIIMIIII
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roopanolbll lor onw dobto other

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I

45789, Alilon

8arMIL MPT. Re-

hob Samcea Diroctor. e.,..l ()p-

panunity Employer Encouraging
~Divlrlily.
Planned Parenthood Of SauttoNil Ohio Hu An Opening For A
Full-limo Nuroe Proctitiono&lt;. Tlill

c..-llialar)'-

lf', ll IMklng an ambltloua aaln
proleaslonal to develop Internet

Ideal candidates will have 2+

facllll)', to provide aaslatance to

rehab 11rw1cea director, evalua-

ly.

Full-limO I'DII1ion, Fumlluro 0111¥•ry and Warehouaa. Apply 0

Llfoatylo Furniture, 856 Third
Avenue, Gallipolle. No Phone

Cab.

Saturday, Juno tis, 8--4pm, 4 mlleo
-o1Aoufl7an141.

Friday &amp; Saturday 15th

a 18th,

8am·4pm, furniture, gla11ware,
bidding, Cloihll, ping pone Wilt,
1

mlecallaneoue, dinette, living

room aultt, dre~~u11n bed,

43012 SR 124, M

le.

Garogo oal• Friday l Soturdoy,
SlaM Route 143, Pomomy, 1 milo

lionllAvonuo.
Ctmlr,
507
1100
Suilo
11oe.
Allttnl.
Ohio 45701 . ' ' ' " ''ta-....
11, 2101. Tha MIESC
II on E"quol 0pportuot11y Eni!JIDIOd

--

l'Nene 12111• . . nat

llliOillliiQiiiCOIIll .
-·for--

The Athono-Molgo EducatiOnal
Service Center hal a poeltlon

30·30 Martin r1111 a11ng.
1275, now plywood ologha&lt;lae,

Tu'a Marathon calhlor n - .
drop off roaumo oriytlma, 740:.11112::..:-7;:.3311::..:. - - - - - Tho Alhono-Mtlga Educotlonal

to&lt; a

Sorvlco Ctrotar Is tNrd*og

quallllad . Co111pu1or lorvloo
Tochnlolln to ..........
,.,.... ' tho ra""'
,_
deployment ot technology far
-~'":.':."' and
tlon In

iido•••a-

and filii J

.....

York SchOOl Dlltrlc1a. Thlo - -

nlalan need1 lo have the akllla
nece11ary 10 troublethoot and

notworto ~1. Applicont IIIUII
be aelf·molhtated and willing ta

11 a definite plua. Muet have
working luoowlodgo a1 DOS, Wind-

OWl

zo, Superintendent,

Athens·

1108. -

Tha

Courtly 'HIIp Mo-- ...........

Tho AMESC II an Equal Oppor-

working parl·llmo omployoo lor tunity Employar/PIOYidof.
oatlng, 740-742-2803 ltlvo URGENTLY NEEDED· plaoma
m 1 ·ge.
donora, s.s 10 eeo for 2 or 3
Llconood AuctlonHr no,.Sid- for houiB weekly. Call Sera-Toe, 7-40·
Into. call 740-992-9734 daytime ll- 592-8651 . .
5pm, 740-742·1406 anytlms after

310 Homes for Sale

&amp;pm.

1-IOG-214-0482.
Roglto-oS-12748.

180

Wanted To

Do

All Malie Mawo11, Lown T-oro.
Tilloro Rapolrod. Frao pick-up,

Delivery Available. 21 Years Ex-

porlonco. Coli Mlko. (7 40)44871104
Davld'a General Contractors,

Plumbing, Electric, Pointing
Dockl, Misc. Work, Call
(7-40)258--9373 Or Coli Phone 1·
304~33~285

Georgea Portable Sawmill, don't
haul Y&lt;our logo to Ilia mill juol call
304-ll75-1 1157.

porvltlon. Knowlldgo In c:ompret·

olon, ganoratons u wlilu variouollliOhanlcal, oloctrlclland

plumbln(lljlllme. Knowledge In
~ oodlo and oafoly r~a­
llano 1 plua. oand

~0

Ftl a

••ot. (7&lt;10)44&amp; 0538

patio. Immediate poeHIIionl

Letart Falla acrosi from the

oohool; Iorge 2 family hauoo, approxlmaloly 3750 oquaro fool, 112
C001Ipjeloly bull in
&amp; IOIDCidllooring. now tic &amp;
furl*t. l a r g o - - ........

Don't

Purchau

A

Working at the
speed ot lite.

Very large yard ai'ld t1tate tale.

Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
behind Maoonlc Lodge In Reclno.
Many alzll of olothlng, carpets,

14x70 Southem Dream, tru De·

livery froo Setup only $9995 1888-1128-3428

prlvite renred lot In Centenary.

U88 Shoultz 12x55, $1500
(740)3417--oe32

recommend• that you do burl·
n111 with people you know, and

ptlance• {Stove, R.!~;;;;;~
Fronl &amp; Back Deok~~
1

NOT to und manoy through tho

Priced. (304)674-'670 (304)875-

mail until you have Investigated
lht ol!orlng.

5030

310 Hom• tor S.ij
3 Badroom House With Full
Buement &amp; Garago On I Aort
Of · Land Qn Rodmond Aldgo
(304)87&amp;-7114
3 lldroom on Jllouto a, (304)17&amp;NU
,

&amp; VIcinity
I~

I'll

Llmllad Or No Cradll7 Govarn·
mont Bank Flnanoo Only AI Oak·
wood In Barbour~vllla, WV 304·
738-3408.

?11111111 17 I

111-11111 . .
IMifllllllllll

Jlllok Paareon -uouon company,
run trma auotronatr, oomploll
auction ltrvloo. Lloenttd
tU,Ohio &amp; Wilt :£1nla, 304·
773-1711
7.

uti-

lumialiod apartmont,
paid,
deposit &amp; referencea, no pets ,

7-.0185.
Chrlot_y'o Family Living, 33140
Uma Rd., Rullsnd, Ohio, 740742-7403. Apanmont, homo onil

We Tille Trade lnll
Slnglewidll, Doublewides, Any

Yoar, Any Moko. Top Dollar Paid

Fumllhod 2 Bodroario Apanmont,
Acrooo From Park, A/C, No Poll.
Relerencao, Depalit. 1325 ·Moiono
(7-40)448 8235 (7-40)44H577

4230

340

BUIIIIHS and
Buildings

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bldroom
apanmantt 11 Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle~

Bulin"' with upstairs apartment
tor ule, 2.t1 Satem Street, Au·

pan. From $278-$348. Call 740892-506-4. Equal Hauling Oppor-

lilnd, Ohio, sas.ooo. cal 740-742·
2572. Good lncOmo.
.

lo.l1ilios.

North 4th Ave., Mlddlepon, 2

Oillo:e building In Mlnemillt, 800
oq. ft., ale, covered porklng, coil-

room effiency, utilitiea paid. de·
posit &amp; references, no pets, 740:-

Ing fan, $3000110., 81 U78-1681.

992.0165.

Welt 2 Bedroom Townhouae

Rentalt, Also Lots Of Floor
Space, 'Good Income . Call

Sewage, Trash, $350/Mo., 740-

Now Taking Appllcaliano- 35
Apartmanls,

448-0008.

Includes

Water

.

Square Foot,

Acreage

.a

2,000

Bedroom· Plus

Storage, $11501 Manlli, Downtown
Galllpollo,
Contact
Kolly
(Z40)4-e 9961

2 Loll, Zoned Commooclal, Williln
Tho VIllage 01 Rio Grande .
(740)2«&gt;-51158

Tara Townhouse Apartmente,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floono, CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Car-

8RUNEII LAND

polo&lt;!. Aduli Pool l Baby Pool,
Pallo , Stan $385/Mo. No Poll,
lease Plus Security Deposit Ae-

qulrod. Daye: 740·446·3481 ;
Evenings: 740-387-0502 , 7.40448-0101.
Twin RlvorTowo11 now accopilftg
applicaliono for 1 BR.
HUD lllllil!dlzld apt. for -rly
a n d -- EOH.(304)8756879.

Two 2 bedroom apartments tar
rent In Syracun, $325 per month

pluo $200 dopoa~, 740-378-8111.

480

Space for Rent

One dock site tor renl, one full
hookup for a small camping trailor, family type, 740-882·5858. ·

oandy blach, beautiful view, give
usa coll740-992-57112.

470 Wanted to Rent

410 HOUIII for Rent
~

·3

Bedrooms

MERCHANDISE

Foreclosed

Homol From $1911/Mo., 4% Down,

Couch, 2 Cholra, End Tablti,
Coffee Tobia, All For $250.
Lov.lr Cf)'l&amp;al Chelidelisr, 1175.
FIDI,- $150. (740)441-82111
Craftsman Rldine .._... Price
"50, (740)258-1102 Aok For

510

Houuhold

. Good I

1 bedroom hauoe, $275/mo, $200

AERATION MOlORs
In 5110*.
e-.&amp;t-eoo-537-1528.

Ropaiold, Coli
Ran

Lorge compaotor at VifGjl'a Bony
Patch on Rt. 124 Eaal Qf

Syra~

....... 740-11112-7449.

barhood, References and Deposit

Thompaono Appliance. 3407
Jaoklan A11011uo, (304)675-7388.

3 bedroom home Minersville
area, river view, references re·
qulred, deposit required, no pets ,
740·11112-8m Iller Spm.

OOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers , relrlgerators,
ranaes. Skaggs Appliances, 76

VIne Stroet.-Call 740-448-7398,
1.atiB-81 B-01 28 .

3 Bedroom House In Syracuse ,

Ohio, $4601 Month HUD Ap·
proved
(304)875-5332
or
(740)11112-ll119 -.nda only

(304)675-1422

In Racine, nice neighborhood,
across lrom Star Mill Park, • bod·

515 Main StnMil, Polnl Pfoaoant

room, S450 dei&gt;oon. S450 per mo.

Now &amp; Ulld.Fumlluro
Now 2 Ploco Llvlngroom Sullo&amp;,
$38i. Buy, Soli, Trade.

lncluder water, garbage &amp; sew·

age, available 7-0t-01, 740-949·
2217.
II Your RMt $4007 New 3
Bedroom , 2 Bath Ranoh Style
Home

From Rent

To

New And Uaad Furniture
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
StU Grave Monuments And
Vttlll. (740)446--4782

Own .

(740)446--3583

Ueod Whirlpool Rol,rlgaralar,
Runo Good; 5,000/10.000 BTU
A/C ; Eloctrlo Dryer, Eloctnc Oven

Pilot Program , Ronloro Needed,
;!04-736-7295.
Three bedroom houae for rent In

w/Bullt On Microwave; Stars, GO

Pomeroy; no poll, 740-992·5858.

Gallon HIW Hoaltr, Elootrlc Eloc·
trlc. (304)875-7042

Moblie Homea
for Rent

530

Buy or 1111. Rlvorlna Anllqu_oa,
1124 Elll Main an SA 124 E. Po'
moroy, 740·992·2528 or 7-40·8921539. Run Mooro, OMlor.

12lt80, 2 bedroom, lacaiod In Addavlllo achool Dlalrict. Lacatod on
privlttlol. (740~7--0832

Mob Ill homa In Aaolna aru , no
poll, 740-li2·!111118.

Antique•

540 Ml1cellanoou1
Marchandlu

.'

I

•

lngt &amp; _ , -

1888 Grand Pr!X GT, Whllo, 4
door, 24.500 ...... co.... Clirld

One Seuon Excal&amp;ent COndiUon,

$500, (740)379-211 1 Call Allor
8:oopm
NEW AND UIED ITEEL Steel
11oama. Pipo Rebar For Cono:rolo,
Angle, Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Grating For Dralna, Driveway• &amp;
Walkways. Now 55 Golion Drumo
Willi Ud a Ring, 17.00 Eac:li. L&amp;L
Oak a Popular Lumber. Call For
Mora Information. (304--·3258
-llpm

$100 Each. AJC; 5,000 To 23.000
BTU For Salt, Stoning AI $75.00.
Thompaon Appliance Repair,

3407 Jackaon Avonuo. (304)8757388
RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNEIIS
Tappan HI Efllcloncy 90% Gao
Furnaces, Oil Fumaces. 12 SHr
Hoat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Syeteme Free 8 Year Warranty
Bemietls Heating I Cooling, 1·

800-872-5887 www.Ofllb.com/bon-

nlil

Soiling Out All Typaa Of Trallar
Parts, Llghlo, 93 Chevrolet Pick·
up, Wrecked, Farm Tractors, And
Oihor llemo. Lola Of ftemo For
Flea Market Dealers. 729 Gaga

Rd. (740)3711--2243

Two gl11s showcuee, one 5',
... 8', $75 """"· 740-11112-2478. .

(7-40)258 1100

14000 Inn.

lor, (740)U1--G211, (740)581 7110
89 Cougar, Excellent CORdltion,

S2300 OBO, (304)773-5108

91 NIIIIR Maxime, IOfl condition,
toadad, $3500; " Nlooan Molmot. lop condition. loaded, $8200
(304)875-11132
94 Dodge Sftatlaw, 2 Do«, Hatch
Block, $2800. (304)8112-27!111

OHSAA

94 Tempo GL, All POWII', 75,000
Miln. $2550 (304)875-4014

fnwn,.B1

97 Chrysler Sebring JXI, V-8,
Auto, Asking $8200, (740)2581252 Or (7-40)256,-1616

have that we are a bunch of
thieves ... that is directly
opposite of what we stand
for," Muscaro said. "There
might have been some
instance~ that were not proper, but I feel that those were
limited."
In March, The -Columbus
Dispatch reported that it had
obtained a 15-page ~epo~
fiom the association's auditOrs
that said some members of
the OHSAA's six district
boards:

97 Uercury Mourualnur, All

Whtol Drlvo, 5 Liter, 58,000
Mlltl, T9tolly LOidld , (304)7735182 Or (304)874-1523

720 Trucks for Sale
1876 Ford F-1 50, $1700 Or
Trade.

Average

condlllon.

(7-40)448 4053
1988 Chevy SIIYoroda, 4x4, Excetllnt Condlilan, Lola Of Exkaa,
(740)37H820
,, •'
1881 S-10, E•tondod Cob, Automatic, v-e, A/C, $2,885; teU
Sllvorodo, 411A, $3,885;
8-10. S4.385; 1187
II, $1,895; 1991 T•o,;-oo;

Front Photography. (304)578·

550

fromPIIp81
run and two hits in 3 1-3 innings. He struck
out four and walked one.' ·
·
The White Sox also picked up some ground
in the AL Central with the victory._Minnesota
and Cleveland both lost, so Chicago is now 10
game~ back. ,
That's a pretty deep hole, but the White Sox
have 27 games left against the '!Wins and Indi-

3020.
• · •·• N"'

Dodga Ram SLT, 2WD,
mlltl, (7-40)441-1651

Building
Suppll..

63 Dodge Ram, 6 Cyllndor, 2.25
Auto, $1200 OBO (304)875-8832
Block, brick, sower pipes, wind- 88 F-150 Fltlbld, Truck, 4 WIIOii
owe, llntols, etc. Claude WlntoOB, Drive, Good Condition, (304)675·
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245- 1458
-

580

Plltl tor Sale

98 Dodao Ram

ans.
"It's too early to .be scoreboard watching,"
Ray Durham said. "As long as we take care of
our business, things will work out."
Down 5-1, the Reds raUied in the sixth
inning, tagging Chicago starter James Baldwin
for three runs. Pinch-hitter Brady Clark tied
the game with a sac fly in the seventh.
But the White Sox put a quick end to any
thoughts the Reds had of a victory. With one
out in the bottom of the seventh, Brower
wallte!l Durham. Brower was then relieved by
Hector Mercado.
On Mercado's fifth pitch tO Chris Singleton,
Reds ; catcher Jason LaRue was called for
interf~rence. Replays showed LaRue's glove

1500, 4WD. 318

V-t, SLf, PW; PL, Cruloo, 72,000

Mlill (304)878-8040

730

Vena &amp; 4-WDs

1980 Ec.onallno, 1 Ton EKitndld
Length Cargo Van, Y-8, Auto, 4
sable/while, vet checked, cham~ Now Whoola And Tlroa. 84,000
pion ..... 1350, 740-81111-1085.
mille, On Boar&lt;l Pawor convertor,
Small Rolrigoralor, .Asking $2000.
French City Ptl Grooming Has (304)875-1802
Moved To Point Pleasant , Now
Calltd Rooo'o Pot Grooming. Call 1984 Dodge Ram 250 von, 318
For Appointment (304)875-5010
.auto, make 1 good work van,
$800, 740-992-38841.
Registered Lab
Pupploo,
Chocola te &amp; Bla ck, Excellent 1997 F-150, 4x4, EKtondod Cob,
Hunting Pro!ip ec1s. (740)448- 60,000 mllol, Loaded, (304)875·
0080

3052

Rotwalller Pupt, $125, 6 weeks,
hi ohola &amp; wormed. (740)388-

1999 ZR2 S-10, red, air condition,
cruloo, CD, auto, lint, 49,000
mll11, aoklng 114,900. (740)3792'198

l
Vogltlbles
Frult1

.

second.

Fryman !eli: in the fourth
with a strained left groin. The
Gold Glove third baseman
returned June 2 after being
sidelined more than two
months with a strained right
elbow.
.
"Travis could be back
tomorrow, if not, then maybe
two dayJ," Mmuel said.
Nagy had his poorest outing in three starts since
reruming from elbow surgrry.

when Chris Barbe doubled and sco-t on an
Athens error. The final Mason County run
came in the sixth when Kruk reached on a
fielder's choice and sco-t on a Dennis double.
Three Mason County players, the Barbe
brothers and Dennis, finished the game with
a double and a single apiece. Dennis had two

RBI.

.
.
Hodge had three singles and an RBI. Daniel
Tench had two single~, while Matt Warner,
Kruk, and Clark each had a single.

Athens had eight hits, including two singles
by Stickel. Dan Stier had a double while Jason
MCCumber, W21!fJ1e Dicken, Jake Hale and
Zach Wooten each had singles.
Mason County travels to Beckley on Satur-

day.

touched Singleton's bat while he was swinging.
Scott Sullivan relieved, and Lee doubled to
score the go-ahead run. SuUivan intentionaUy
walked Ordonez to load the bases, and Konerko lofted a sacrifice fly.
After hitting .152 in May, Konerko is averaging .350 this month.
"You reach a point where you feel like, now
.I'm due to start doing weD. It can't get airy.
worse," Konerko said. "You just keep swinging
and they're going to start faDing."
Reds starter Osvaldo Fernandez left after
giving up five runs in three innings, including
the grand slam to Konerko, his fourth batter.
Fernandez has gone five inninll' or Jess in four
of his last five starts.
''I'm pretty concerned. I don 't think he had
very good stuff," Reds manager Bob Boone
said. '~You don't need a gun, you can see it. It's
lazy, it kind offades. But we're not seeing any
mechanical problems."
Notes: Konerko also had five RBis on Sept.
20 at Detroit. ... The Reds were 5-7 on their
longest road trip of the year... White Sox DH
Harold Baines, playing for the first time since
June 2, puUed a hip flexor and was put on the
15-day disabled list. .. . Chris Singleton extended his career- high hitting streak to 13 games.

•

.

For Sate Or Trtde, 1881 Ford

C_lubwagon XLT, Fully Handicap
Slrawberrlea, Pick Your Own. Call Lift, Fully Automatic, Hand Controls, Ralaod Root, Tilt, Cruloo,
Cltude Wlntero. (740)245--5121
Power WlndOWI, Good Condition,
Strawberrlto, You Pick· Wo Pick. (740)24s-9212
Taylor's Berry Patch, 2864 Kerr
Road. Open 8·8 Monday, Wodnosday &amp; Friday, 8-4 Saturday, . 740
Motorcycltl
Cloood Sunday. (740)245--ll047
~~~~~~;.:..:...,.......,
1883 Honda 750 Shadow, Goad
Condition, St,OOO (7-40)387--QIU
FAHM SUPPLIE S
1880 Harloy Sportallr 883, Call
&amp; liVE:STO C K
(304)773-5734
1882 Honda 3.00, Fourlrax,
$2,000; Yamaha 80 4-Whoeltr,
810 Fann Equipment
Excollonl Condition, $1200 High
~ Flnanclne On Now John Country Bow. (304)175·5824
Dssro Mowor Condltlonera And
Baloro With John Dotrl Credit 1898. Honda 300 4 Whoalor, Uka
Approval. Call Or Slop By Nowll Now Oondlllan. (7-40)a4He87
Carmlchatl'l Farm I

tbree--n~n

--Cwmed they drove to
The report did not identify
out-of-state
conferences any OHSAA htembers. The
when they actuaUy flew, district boards are made up of
pocketing the extra travel school administrators .
As a nonprofit organization,
money.
-Received allowances for .the OHSAA which has
attending state tournament 819 member high schoolsevents without submitting pays no feder.al, state or local
expense reports or returning taxes. Its nonprofit starus also
unused funds.
means many of its records an:
--'---Car-pooled to tourna- confidential and are exempt
ments but ·turned in separate from financial review by the
mileage reimbursements as if state auditor.
each had driven.
Though . 85 percent of its .
--collected cash advances member schools are public,
for several nights of lodging the _OHSAA is not accountduring national conventions, able to any governmental
then leli: their hotel early agency or body for its conwithout rerurning money to duct, decisions regarding srudents or handling of millions
the OHSAA.

Reds

19Bt Dodge Dakota LE, 4WD,
Many Exlrso, Elocoillnt Condition,
S4500 Call (740)379-27U Evon-

~3...;18;;.1________
-

during the IndianS'

4114, Autornedo, $2,181, CUI"" 1
IIIOTOIII (7-40)448--0103

Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
121 .95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
137.00 Per tpo; All Brass Com- tnga
prelllion Filling&amp; In Stack
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES 1994 Raneor XLT, 4 cyl., 5 op., a/
C, $3,800; 1987 Dodge DakOII, 4
Jackoon: Ohlo, 1-800-537-9528
cyl .. 5 op., no rust, 11,000, 740Weddings, Reunions &amp; In Home 992·3384 weokdayo , 740•742·
Photography. Bast Prices. River

stuff

two;

Ki-uJt

II -!Ompg.,

good.

his

the past, ~n a scale of one to
10 it was
Lopes said.
"But the bottom line was he
found a way to win. I don't
know how he did it, but he

Andrew
led off the game with ~ towering double into the rightcmter gap, then
came home on Ryan Hodge's single. Hodge
came home on Andrew Dennis' single and
Dennis came home on first baseman Matt
Barbe~ single through the !eli: side.
Mason County added another run in the
second when Chris Barbe singled and scored
on a Krult fielder's choice, but Mason County
committed an error in each of the first two
frames enabling Athens the enter the third
ining tied at 4-4. Kevin Stickel had a two--out,
two-run single in the first fOr Athens .
Mason County took a S--4 lead in the fourth

l.alllod, Wltft AI Opllona, WhJto,
Gray lnttotor, Run1 Good, $3800

8418 WW.ONb.conwblt•i81

Lawn

(740)446--24121-800-594-1111

710

Auto Parta &amp;

Acc•aorl•
16' ootllo traitor In good ohapo.
Hay opoar and ocluor jack. 8' Chevy FlbtrgiUI Truck
(740)448--2514
Tapptr, 1g87 Chovy Caprlca
For Pa~a. (7-40)250 e541
Are You Looking For Engines Or

Allct Chambers B. robulll metor, TranomlooiOno? Glvo Mo A Call

11,000 lACK 2 Tan Air Condi- $1500. Forguaon u• doublo
tioner, 2 Ton Coli , 1 Line Sol, ln'otallod, $2,295, $1 .ooo Back , p-. St75. (7-40)388--1113
$12915 Not Price. Free Eitlmalll. JohR Deere Oomp1c1 Tractors
Call For Quotee On Other Sizes . from 20 to 48 HP, 5.11%, eo me 11If You Don't Call U1, We nanclng avallablt wllh JD crodll
Both Loael Mobile Homo•
approval. Carmichael '• Farm &amp;
Speciality 1-740·448·8308 1-800- Lown, Golllpalla, Ohio (740)448291-DOIB
· 2412
23 cubic fool Frigidaire chest NH 478 Hoyblno, 1111. $3,!500; Cui•
lroozar, $200; 18 BTU Glboon Air 11-Gator Harrow, 12ft, $900; Kao·
Conditioner. $200. Call (740)448- ttn Silage WaQon w/Avco·NI
4484
Gear, $1,200: (;!04)578-80011
I

- . .......... vory ~ - --1304)875-72511
1812 Pontile BoMevlllo SSE,

Runs and -

cultlvatora, excellent condlllon,

\

5143-llpm

owa, Anchors, Water Htatert,
Plumbing &amp; Eloclrlcal Paril, FurnaCea &amp; Heat Pumpe. Benne«•

"If you comp:m:

tonight to what ias been in

.... ,... •.

Condition, VO&lt;y Clqn, 5 Spood,
$1800 Good Buy, Call (304)175-

1815 Hyundta Ellntrl, AIC, PS,
PS, PW, Crutao, Antl-llloh ro&lt;llo,
allron, Now Tlrot. Slrult, Bulh-

Mower- Craltamari, Rear Efttlne,
13.5 HP, 30' Cui, Uaod. Pari Of

saw

~on

Air

IIOII4LE- owNaa
Huga Inventory, Dlicount Pricll,
On. VInyl Skirting, Daoro, Wind·

580
Main Sloool Fumll'"o

Accord,

(304)875-3324

1525

Condo For ~enl , North Myrtle
Beach , Sleeps 6, 2nd Row,
(740)448 8857
.

said. "I left pitches up
the entire inning."
Jim Thome hit his 19th
homer fOr Cleveland, a 414foot shot to center to nWce it
4--0 in the third. It was his
13th homer in t 8 games.

DaytOna, vory
Milot, 11000,

Bunemut , Pou•oy.

Mobile Homo Supply, 7 40-446-

to win the Olympic gold
medal for the United States
bst September, sealed down •
after allowing fow: runs in the '
tint three inningl to win his
third str:aight decision. He
up fow: runs and rune
hilS in six inningl.

Nagy

UIIO Cadillac Sedan Dovilla,

FOr Sale: Reconditioned wash·
ere, dryers and refrlgaratora.

Required, No Psla. (740)4468U39Itlvomolllgo

62 at-bats since May 24.
" I let Richie get his arms
extended, and if you do tb.u,
he is just going to crush it,"

1 pt... j ':, p (j;:::;; TATI c .'

18U Hondo

JET

2 Bedroom 1 Bath, Nice Neigh·

74Q-.4411-n9s.

-

· (7-40)378--"

Tolltcco Flaao -

ct:i

AKC Shelllo pupa, Iris, bl blaoka,

pliances, FfenCh CIIV Maytag,

Jenkins

150816d&amp;Filltlllar

1Ne Olda Culioll Slono. Good
Goubb'a Piano- Turoloog &amp; Ropolrw. · ~. $1400 080 (7-40)24!&gt;Po-ne? Nood Tunocl? Cllllie 5572
· PIInG Dr. 7«» ue «525
111111 Cltryolor LllliiRin. 4
dlt, 2~PO. Auto, PS, PB.
lndor&gt;ooodlt~· Nr. Till. CMIO, AM1F11 ca-.
eon
FO&lt; ProdUC1 Or Opportunlly.
. . . . , _ - . (740)311 111117
(740)441-111112

anleodl Wt Soli New Maylag Ap-

1092 Sunset Drive , Very Good

Sexson followed
with a -465--foot blast
into the Indians' bullpeit for
his 1 tth homer - and first in

calll-llpm

Condition . Deposit &amp; Reloronceo
Roqulrld. No Poll. Call (740)448-4116

Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrl·
gralora, Up To 90 Cays Guar·

. Richie

Folloor'lo o.y Longttborgor 1f!l'ith .,.wtar ch11a Mt" end
cltockor aet. (740)448 111111 No

Rocondllloned

Appliances:

In Hold.

Euy Sol poo115d,- - ·
pump, covar, 10 mlnut• setup,'
$2110 (740)387-G857

AKC Reglolered Shetland Shoopdog Pupploo, $225 Eoch,
(740)3711--2836

deposit, no peta. Call after Spm,
(740)448--9342

&amp;agll

Jonor

---~~--~~---1 ~51~2~'--------------

30 Years at 8.5% APR. For Llstlngo, 60Q..3111-3323 Ext. 1709.

8411-2217.

,,

_ , . ,•1555.
•-·
·· · - $4400,
.......
~

Reconditioned Washer &amp; Dryers,

Recently ·Renovated

350 Lots l

I

a..ry ~ bod, ..... ""' IIIII101. now. 111111 bostd. Can

Scrap- (7-40)446--7300

Ovmor Retiring- BulkllftV For Sate
In Galllpollo, OhiO, On Route 7.
Hat Large Parking Lot. Has 4
(740)387-7888

(740)2 15

:;~::;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:
Bod- a now lui......,.._ mat- Oats Hay lor ·Salt
(74101 2 ' . , . ,
- 101, ... In,._, -

truck, $150, 740-882·2528, 132

(7-40}1411-1519

Bamo, Gorogo, Fnolt Treea, Cloll
To Halur. $215.000. (7-40)446--

Good Ill Cllllng hay. To .....

-liltloF
s-. -"""""· ....
(140)44t-4111
da);ll •

Metal roll·batl for • puck-up

v...,.,:

lng, Reterencea &amp; Deposit Re·
qulred . Utililies Furnished.

Farm HOuse, Beautifully Remodoltd, 2983 Square Faet. •7 h:r11, Pond, fn-gll&gt;llnd Pool. Slvtrll

5118 Ulilily Trollor,
(7411)441-1151

tralfer rentals. Commercial 110re~

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apartments, Oean, No Pets, No Smok·

330 F.-m• for Sale

S88,(304~132

lronta a v - lor ltaoa.
cilanow.

With Purchatt Of A New Palm
HaotKor. Collt eee 881 72!541

In Racine, good candltlon l nlot
neighborhood, a badroom. atr.
carpc~. •~eo dopoalt, t360 por
mo. lnaludll water, garbage &amp;
towage , avallabla 7-1-01 . ?40·

Cloat to grocery &amp; Galllpalla. Mualllil 11U Llbarly 14170, 3
bodMOm/1 bath, good oondlllon;
(7~ttee
Call Hoodd, 740-11847.

·,

Baoocih St.. Mkklllport, 2 bldroom

For Atnt Or Slit On Land Contraot, a ladroom, Air, On Aontod
Lot 1n Galllpoila. (740)448-1 408

e 1'1101 Jlltnlal pro...rty tor lilt,

Or**"

72115

loautlful Rlvar Vlow ldaal For 1
Qr a P101&gt;l1, Aotoronooa, Dopoall,
No Pill, FOIIIr Trailer Park, 74Q441.0111.

3 homaa, barn, lobacoo bile,
atrum runa wough h, 11 +
aOtlt, Jlllo Granda, Qhlo. 0111
(7&lt;10)1Q.IIU

IWUI~:

Utllil._ Pold, Shared Balli, D19

llonllll 3 Bodroom, 2 Balli. Froo
Delivery a Sot-up . 1·888-828-

420

I.

Pt.Pieaunt

1 Room Fumllfood E"idoncy All

House In country, Ohio vicinity,
(740)441-1115 after 6pm

--------I

F/8xlble Scheduling

toolt, htattra, profeulonal Bunn
Coftoomokor, blcyclll, wlndowa,
doora, Naacar ittmt, lavatory,
love teat, camper, Dapraaelon
glut, aot of Crookavllle dlnnor•
wort, qld polloarda, loll of
houNhold and mloc.

·New Double Wide. S195 Per

LocUli.-.....

Dilplay.

· 21•80 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Only
Start Your Buolnoll Today... $345.00 Per Month 8.88% FIKtd
Prime Shopping Center Space lnllmt Rate, 1-8118-828-3425
Available AI Aflordeble Rate.
Spring Vallty Plaza, Call 740-448· Factory Gaol 32K80 110,000 Dlt·
~0_;10;;.1;,.
.
count only $1000.00 Down, Do-=
livery, and •lup paid by Factory
230 Profeulonal
t-8CJ0.89t-em
, Servlcaa
Final O"ayo, Nationwide lnvantaoy
Bankruptcy Attorney Louie Con· Roductlonl (304)7341--34011
name, local appointment for your INTRODUCTORY
canvonl0nco,814·221-0888. .... _
(New) 48'll25', 3 bedroom, 2 both,•
TURNED DOWN ON
8' tKiorior walla, vynol windows, .
80CIIoL
/Ill?
1o1I o1 good loa . (Only) $31.31
No Fll IECUAITY
Unltll wo Wlnl
l-8118-,5&amp;2·:1345
oquaro loot . We're doallng
Cofea'o Mobile Homos. State Route 50 Eut Alhono, Ohio, 740•
HfAI. FS IAfc
592-1872.,

BIIUI
nmeUs&amp;LPis

rain-.

1 .bedroom rumilhed apartment.
paid, 94
pluo clopoait. (740)448--1340

River frontage clmp 8111 for retn,

IIIO"OCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 2 Bath, Co~tral

$1,000

Naw doubll wide 3 br. 2 ba.
$888.00 down only $295. por
man. CII._1-800-89HI777.

To Buy A New Home? .
Manufacturing Homo Without Looking
Dan1 Have Lind? Wo Dolll Hurry
CalllftV 1·888-8414·7258. Wo Can Only
10 l.OIIl.elt, 304-736-7285.
Savo You Thouhndl On A
Haw Palm Houbor Homo. Call
nENTALS
Today! Over 20 Homes On

.
Engine And Tranam1111on Repair. (7-40)441-1304
ASE
Cortlllod Mechanic.
16 Wldo. Only IUS.OO Par
(740)441-0188
Month, 8.88'1(, Filed lntoroot Rate
With Air And Underpinning
FINAN CIAl
1-888-1128-3428

"

7-40-315 t317.

I-~ Rohl!»tator,' Range, AJC InclUded , &amp;288
Plua o.r&gt;alil &amp; Roll&lt;..-. HUD
~(740)441-1518
.

2001 Fleetwood only
St48.48 par month. Call Karena
Naw

New

Will Ropalr AutomobiiOt, Lawn Roady to movo In to, Sol up on

Bualne•
Opportunity

-1-6777.

Ac....

tral Air, Excellent Condition,

210

I - - ApaM&gt;ont, AI . _
Paid, (304)875-2200
.

7-lr1482
Galla Co.- Ria Grandi, PriDead End Road. 1 3 3 bathrooma, baMmtnt, call ror -Acroo,
w.ooo. Kerr Road, a
h:rooo, $21 ,OOOOr 5 A&lt;:oai Wlh
acmplolo - · 440-748-2448.
Pond $25.000. Ci&gt;ollolre. 8 Acoft,
Now Houoo, Crown City, Ohio, 4 $11,5000&lt;24Aorol
Hugo
Bodroant1, 2 Full Ballio, 112 A&lt;:ro Bam. $31,0001 CloyWilli
Township,
lot, (740)258 8818
Bam + Stream On 31 Acres
Prl.. roducad lor quick oalo, 2 $32,000. Tyooon l.aluo Area,
homtl ooHing on one lot in Mld- 14 Acrol. $13,800.
lltlgo Co.- Tuppeno Pillndlaport, $45,000, 740-llll2-ll151.
SR861, 7 Ao:root $16,500 Or 31
320 Mobile Homaa
- · $27,500. can Road, 18
$23,000 Or Exn Lorgo
for Sale
Polo lam On e Acnoa, $30,500.
5
$10,500.
'1' Only· Lot Modal Doublowlde- Dlnvile.
Autllnd,
1
Acree,
$8,500.
4 lladrocom, 2 Bath, Wao $51,11115,
$42,887- Price Good Till
a low ol llio paocelo
8-25-01, Huroy To Oakwood· Jull
IYiilabloo.
Call now lor mapa and
Gallipolia, (7-40)446 3093
~ liltlngol Owner linanclng
wltto lilglot property markup.
•ITOPf•

Mowing

Mowers, and Farm Tractora, AIIO

Haw 111 H. wido S499. per mon.
only $270. por mon. coli now 1·

(740)448-35711

14x70 Trailer with BlC24 Expanda,
111,000 OBO, Conkal Air, Under·
Wood Eating Hillaldeo, Dltchn, pinning, Blocks, Front Porch All
Elc. Mowing, Clean-up, Removal Go., (304)773-51 08
01 Unwanted ltomo. Odd Jabs. 14l70, 3 BR TOIII Eltclrlc, Con•
Call Sliva (740)446--71104

OKPOrionco and plan rolalod eu-

1112-2211.

Houall
ForDawn
Salt. Paymon~
2Balli, 1750
_· ,1 Take Owr Paymonta, 3 Baclroom,
Goillpolia, Ohio. Call Dovid • 1- 2 Balli Olkwood. Cll For lletalll

Service, Fr11
Elllmaltt, Call (740~58 11363

AVAILABLE
Must havo a minimUm of 3 years

1 - 9:21242t

30113

Roducod to $78,800. McGuirt
Company, R~TOR
pall· Raalty
.
tion ~o anewer phone ta~lla, data HIOO-t71-7533
aoMootlan/ lnhlko al all Help Mo Groat Nalglll&gt;arliaod, Good Cano- rolorrolo and malnllln filii. dillon, Nelda Handyman, Houaol
QuaiHICIIionllnciUdo HCrotorill/ Church, $50,000 Make Ollor,
clerical training and/or eaptrl· (304)875-1818

O.UipolleC.. Ccllrgr
(Coraora Clool To Homt)
Cal Todayl7-40 418 4387,

111,1150. Fo•elleli-v a Sat Up.

- Hurty -Endl
Paymonts
From
$199/moJune 25th,
Oakwood- Gallipolis (7•0)448-

ful~tlmo

Training

deposit required, no pels, 740·

Doive Inion $287 to $383. Walk 10
shop &amp; moviea. Call 740~448251111. EqUal Houoing CJo&gt;rxorUoity.

rt~~•
~

. . . 'WonMIQUII

Help Me Grow lrtake/ Referral

linti for appllcailon: Juno 22. 2001.

Now 14 Wido, 3 Bodroom. Only

Singlt Sactian Lot ClearanCe- All

_......, __

a:tuar Urttileau

young-·--

1108, Athans Ohio 45701 . Dtad-

(304)1112-3131

t lind 2 bldlooin ~ fur.
nllhed Mel untumllhtd, security

BEAUnFUL APAIITIIENTI AT
IUDGET PRICES AT JACKIDN EITATES, 52 Woolwood

Ao-late'a Two Yoar dogro In QALLIPOLII· 0"0RTUNITY
nurolng, IOCI&amp;I work, Hrly klII IOIOCICIIIG In i1t11 ~
hood davalopment or a rei
8 noom oonc:lt alyla homo on qulol
dltclplluo. Mutt havo · - - otroot. Dfferlng modom ldtchon
WOIIdrlg ....
Ia oomrnwtiCitt with famllln Md wltli now cablnata and dllhwalh·
on undlrolltrtdlng al lioliltlc, fllnl- •· 3 b&lt;Wrt- airy bodooomo, formal
ly coittorlil and lntardlaclpllnaoy dining a... and largo liYinli noom.
To cor garogo and huga COYOrlil

ants muat have • valid driven lt.. ence, aucce11ful communication
aklllr and comprehenalve com·
po11111 and outgoing peroanall- · cenee, reliable transportation,
and bo willing to tra•ll. A dlgrH puler 'skllll. Pl..., und mum•
ty, WI want to talk to you.
In computer technology 11 de·
by Juno 11, 200110:
Salary and commission structure olrod, but a mlnlmorn ol 2 Y11f1 ol . Gollla County EariW ..._
ba11d on ekperlence. Compre· quality eKperlence aa a service
P.O. Iloi&lt; 813
henalve benefits. Grow with our tachnk:lan may be considered In
Galllpolla, OH 45631
lltu
or
a
dogrot.
Salary
will
bo
company's vision by aan.d lng a
based upon training and expert., Work From Homo, Part·llrMI FullIHURIIIO:
onoo. Submit- al tntoroaL ••j
WIUie 8awyef1i, I
$25- 175/ltr. Plklvacationl.
sume, and recommeniJatlone ~o 1 limo,
P.O. Box830
HIIIB-878-7042
John D. Costanzo. SuperintendLondon, KY 40743
ent, 507 Richland Avenue, Suite 140
Bualneaa
Oromollat-Ocnhl.oom

-

Private Property And Now Dou·
- · Ono Paymont. (304)736-

Ouallflcadone: A minimum o an

t:;lorlcol Spocilllat,

1 Bedroom Apartment tn New

Haw 14 llwlcfo $488. only
S1tl. per mon. call now 1·80()..
1181-6777.

The Indians wmt 2-4 on did it."
Tyler Houston hit a solo
the homestand and dropped
homer in the eigbth and an
to 18-1-4 at ~bs Field.
~~ can't be happy with 2---4,
RBI Ungle in the nindL Mark
md I sure hope the phyen are Loreua and Jeromy Bumitt
not happy, either," Indians l11so bad RBI singles for Milpirches up ita the moe."
.
.The Brewm got plenty of manager Charlie Manuel said. w.tukee. ·
Tlllvis
Fryman
had
an RBI
thole from Cbades Nagy (I- "We wae completely outsingle and later · sco-t on a
t) to take a 6--4 lead in the played."
Sheels, who shut out Cuba two--run single by Einar Diu
fifth.

I

$128, 304-34104P3'

~ob•ood-altl 111111

to -king lndlvlduala to fill tho 5 room l both, 2 porches. A/C,
.. . . -. . . . Ill Grow rofrlgtrotor. · - 110¥1 a gtl
- $27,!500 ol 2424 MonRit
-paoKiono,
~.l\oll-llmo
lo prvvldt oorvlco
co- - · (304)876-1385
ordination to pa ..nll of lnfantll
taddlora birth to ago throo lth BoautHul Rolling F...., Lind With
tiNt w·rr or •at ,.. . Thle
n. 4 Bodroom, 3 8tih Hau11, City
Wltlr On 8 A&lt;:roo Willi eo Maro
c1uc1o homo-· paront ·od
Acrn Avalilbil, On North Routo
tlon, developmentll ecreen
2,
Muon County $155,000
and llnkago Oihar rooou
(304)513 55tt .

--10-doliv.ry.

AJ*biiW1tl
for Ront

3428

on eaperltnte and tre1nlng ac·

"" al i n - 10 JoiWt D. Coalon-

No

-·ln-oaiN

...., ..,_.,...,. .. bocording to ulary ocolt, ond will

MI-.

ctw•

II

Second Avenue, Gallipolle, OH
~~-- (740)448 31M5

.....Cur-.. ltonlby

opening u lr.: a Mia 1 Ctlrtlcvlulll .,,..,._ in Molgl county. AppliCinll mutt havt • MuteR 0ouroa and~ carlilicotian. Tloil II a 12 manit - -

Lawn

Raclno, adull I girl's clolhoo,
boy's blko a household llomo,

'

Oftgin, ,. flff . . . . . tD
....... u:t'l .........
lrl'i'
oorciJO•••alkn•

3 112 Milot Out Sandhill Road,
(304)875-21107

ant. Please Send Reaume To:

Spancer'a, 805 Main Street,

lllta Market

rollgiDn.

Golllo County Local Scloool
Dialrlct, filool agant for ""' Galla

380 Richland Avenue, Athena,
~Ohlo_;._4570
__
, ;:.EOE_;.._ _ _ __

LPN Or CIIA Wanted In Buay
Phyolclan'l OHico In Point Ploao-

Saturday, Juno 18, 9-4pm, Davo

and

londont, Alhon•llolgl Educe·

"'*"·

1 Me FUua••• ldck l Vtnyt.
311ft, 2 Balli, 2 F~. Hlrdwoad Flaono, Appnox. 2,000 oqft,

otallor, CLA 525, o/o Gaillpollo
Tribune, 825 Third Avo., Galllpo·
Ill, Oh 45831 .

bit.

Auotlon

- a n nooo,

, . blr ... SUiimll al - . . t o - D. c-.m, &amp;upom-

Olilo 45701. ,.,._
. .= ...., tl, 2111.
Tha AMESC II an Equol .Oppor·
lunily Eot......./ P i - -

Locol flooring COft'4IIUIY In naod of
additional carpet and vlnyllnatall-

Long'a) clothes, glallwaro, lumlturo, loya, colloctiblo Holiday Bar-

10

aordlo•••--•

Women And Maintain A Pro·

lrom route 7 on the right {De·

lalo lvor, Camp Conlay•
Rlln Or lhlno....S.mall Appjlanoot,
Homo o-r, ""' loaila &amp; MagaZinoa, YHI Mo•lta, Gille. Mlao
lox Lola. 171 Millon, '"day &amp;
laturday, limo -

••• 1

Ctoolco PhiiOOOphy. Stnd Coftr
Lotter And Raoumo: Pt.........

roaumoo to Sconlc Hils Nlftlng
Center, 311 Bookrldgo Road, Bldwoll, OH 45814. Attn: Cindy
Slmpoan. Scenic Hlillls an EEO
Employer

Pom.-oy,
Mlddleporl
&amp; VIcinity

., ...... ..11¥ ..........

Ilion -

ing to ...,. . . .. and . . -

production Health 01 Mon And

IIIAIIITENAIICE POimON

llturdoy Only, 8-2pm, 114 Milo
On Orchard Hill Road, Clolhoo,
Baby llama.

rary Toactolng Cortlflca'- In thai

aroa. satory . . 111 - a n ox-

or tlmilar aalet poaltione and

Larry'a ·Lawn Care naefjs a hard

lhlf; I I ;wllaq.:ttu
. . --Houllngld

... ,

Molgo EduCitional Sarvlcl Contor, eo7 Richland Avonuo, Sullo

IISIINI ME 2000 Cion!. ~.
FlloMoker
and OHICI 2000. Mutt
experience. A general under·
atandlng of the Internet wtn' be havo oblllly to lift ond cony hllvy
helpful, but a comprehensive ob)lcto, and bo willing to work In
training pack•g• 11 Included. II le11 than Ideal environment•
yau'vo ltad ••t&gt;OrionCI In market- such aa overhead and tub tloor
Ing, advertising, public rolallono ar011 lor wiring purpooa. Applloo
)'Mrl of IUCCelaiUI Outside UIU

8uckrldgo
·EEO
OH
45814. - llaad,
...loAn
Errflioylr. .

for

haYO U - . llogloo_oloog . . Ill Auguol '· 2001 . Ill-

emerging technologlea.
ldvortlling bullnOII In 1110 Rich· ltarn
mond, London, Corbin, Marefoaad Knowledge al common ,..rlplooralo ouch 11 prinlort and naolloro
and-,KYmarkell.

10: Cindy~ r:lo . . . Nurllng Ctntlr, 311

llevler Hull'cr•••• T_.,
for 1oo SIH ~ Unit at

Position Will Provide Health
Screenings For PPSEO'a Mile
Md Female Cllenle Throughout
The Service Area. Candldate
Must Bo Commlttod To Tha Ro-

Community Now-r Holdings, ropolr problomo with dolktap
Inc., owner of more new1pepere in
Kontucl&lt;y llian ony allior publilh- computera, 11 well aa aolvlng

-Mdilhtl-.~
In
nurolng
anti In--,.,..,_,...
lnaludlng ~- prt&gt;diDDt,
lnvontoly Md patiOIOIIi-

___..,In
-l.cic;ll-- ,.___
...,..
---·-= . . ,
patw,.. opening u ....._ . .

patience and ...r

P.O. ao. 657, Barbourovllle, WV
One day only: Saturday, 8118101, 25504 or Fu (304)522-31112
8am-2pm., On Duly road, off of ·
Skldmort rood.

2 ta • -·· 14170. 2 - · CIA,
· ooloigli-. In• ' -· No poll, $350 ptuo do)XIIII. (7«1)381' 11371

440

Mobile Homlll

Tho Alliono·llolilt Educltionll

&amp;· poid - · &amp;
retirement plan. reapond by rw·

lor...,...,
,.._,Oil,

111, aent rttume to- FlOOring In·

Huge Yard Sale, 815 LeQrande

140 I, Jl'l IDUI

for Sale

Semoe Cenler .. a I ., ... If ·a

2001-2001 - Ap.
-..- S8H Cortilicotlon or 111 - . ; 10 got o T -

N....,

menaurate with e•parience.

320

Help ........

polilian
wt - CPT &amp;
lCD-I coding required , experi·
once
boMfill lncludl

·
limO paaitoono coma bod

:.!:ilyb_"

c-.

Friday a Saturday, 9-llpm, baby
cloth11, Iota of mloo., off 218 on
StoteAoufl780.

piayers.

Piouo coll740-787-4581 M-F
8A-':30P to IIChodult an proloo................ E.O.E.
•Alo you looloing for ... oppoo1uniIMMEDIATE NEED: Director of
ly lo jOin I wlnriii1g loom and too- .,....._
(RN) for •~ ~~In
como part a1 a ra. gouw1rtg ·--..
·-·~ - · a
Clril lnduotry? Sconlc Hillo Nuro~·.:_:';.;::
lng Ctrolor 11 oHorlng Nurao Aido
TralnlftV CIUIII monthly. It II o Includes State Civil service Re·
tirement, can eam up to 15 days
75 hour cour••· 1a1tlng for 11
11 daya sick taave and
daya, Monday through Friday vacatton.
3
8:30 to 4:30. This Ia o groat op- 1 dlyo paid holiCiayl por yoar for
porlunllyl Thl next cllll win bo· tull~llme employ•••· Salary It
gin In July. Stop by today lor an commensurate with OIIPOrllnco.
appllcollan or contoo:t Stophanio CORtoct Kolth Stoulflr, Admlnll·
Kompor, lnatructor, at (7-IO)U&amp;- trator at Lakin HOspital, lakin ,
wv at (304)875.08eo. E•t. 101.
7150
Mondoy lhru Friday from 8amAHonlion• Wo Hlip, $1800 4pm. Llkln Haaplllf Ia an EEOf
Pen-time, $38011 FuN-dmo, Huga MErrflloylr

Rotwollltr Lob, 1 Yoor to good tlono, trlltmanl and nHdad dayhomo, (7-40)441-QIJII .
to-day aorvlou. Exctllont opporlunlly lo Ill part or • progroOIIvo
70
YardSale
mob dapt., providing batfl inpatient and outpallont aarvlceo.
Facility hU ••&lt;*lent compjlorlco
Galllpolla
hlatory, ucoptlonll manogomont
&amp; VIcinity
toam and paoltl.e ropuhltlon In
5 family yard ult, lo.. at ovory- referral community. lntereetad
thlng, _ , Gorlltfd Rood, Frldly oandldalel Jhould •pply to:
Rackaprlngo Rehabilitation Con1511- SIU*y, IIIII.
tor, 36758 Rocklprlnga Road, PoFrldoy l Saturdaw. 15th l 18th, meroy. Ohio 45719; Alllaon Bam9am- 5pm, 57 Jay Drlvo, Lot 18, on, MPT, Rehab Sorvlcoo Director. Equal Opponunlty Employer
Girlo,
Gomoo, Pumpo
Encouraging Workptaco DIVIfll·

-.

STNAIIOoo--ncoro.
Applicants muat be energetic,
oolkliraclocl, and molivalld _..,

110

Lato.l SNklng Now Artlata. with and o•oollenl blnolit pock- lent _.tunlly far now grill to
1111 .. ,..
ComlniJ To Huntington. WV oge tltat tnc..- a ahilt differon- bocome pan a1 1
till for PM lhahl, l Ill in~~
&lt;•tl427..- .. (80t1427-t5t4
ourlriCI. -401 K. paid ..cotton. 7 hob dopL ond inlogfol part al rehab learn. lnlerMted Cld rtid'IM
A Now Ctraorl 400+ DRIVERS paid dl holidayllyear. .Flexible
IPflly 10: Rocloapologo ....
ng account, crodol union ' -habilitation
Contar, 38758 RackDrlvoro-1-B00-858-2353
Nood
NEEDED IN JUNE. EllpllienCid on,
_
,
and-y
and
more.
Hourly
wage
comoprlngo
f!d.,
Pomeroy, Qtoio
Yow COL? We 011or 14 01y COtJ

Double Ovon Eloctrlc Rongo, Porllolly Wortuo, N - 1 Honctym.n, . Full ~me phyalcol thoraplll nood(7-40)44&amp;-2045
eCI for 100 bed ·akllled nurelng
Klnena and female catt, malt

nursing focilily, it ...

lor-

,-' r'f.'f ' • T

old-- mont----GIYMWIIY

c.- al Alllons, A 158

time, part·time. and contingent
.,._ .. 1 flit RNI
LPN 7P-7A
care, 1 lull
liml fill-in ~ coro 7A-3f'/
3P·11P. 1 part time day lhift AN

r~t~.lr_t::

•

Help Weullld

-'ing applic:atlono lor RNa,
LPN'I and STNA'o. VaryiftV full-

IIMu.,CI

Ma~•~an1~p~a

410 Mrt"lllolnn
far flllll

Tralltt For Rent, In
. PolL (304)77H7111

.,

1be IWy Sentinel•

2001

Al7~1g.

780

Campers &amp;
MotorHoma

1998 Dutchmen Cloaolo, 24 fool
roar bedroom, Laadod. Call
(740)3711--2518

Hippy Ad

IIAIIMINT
WATIRI'IIOOI'ING
Uncandltlonolllfollmo guaraniN.
Local ret•renctt turnrahed. Et·

ll~llhod

1875. Cal 24 Hra. (740)
448-o870, t -eo0-217·0878. Rog·
'" Watorprooflng.

C&amp;C Gonoral Homo Malntonanco- Pointing, vinyl aiding,
carpanloy, dOorl. windOws, bolha, .
mobllt homo rapalr and .,..., For
frot oollmato call Chot, 7-40•882·
5323.
Livlngston'l B111m1nt Water
Proofing, all b111mant rtpllre
done , free eatimate1, llfetlmi

ludtai Prlotd Tranamlaalono
All Typoa, Accell To Ovar guarantee. 14yra on job exporl10,000 .Transml11lon1 .. Transfer onco. (304)895-3887.
Caooo, 740-245·5877, Coli: 339·
3785.
.
840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
790 Campers &amp;
Motor Home•
Raoldonllal or oommarcill wlrine,
or repalra. Maltlr U·
1877 Coachman Cadet, 20·112 new 181VIct
olaotrlclan. -Ridonour
fool, 4 now tiroa, olCCIIIInl condl· conaod
Eloctrlcal, WV000308, 304-875lion, (304)875·4888
1788.

On Salui-day, June

lot lho following
vohlcloa:
1185 Chtvy Plokup
4X4Vln
11
GCEK14H8FF322824
1182 Dodge Pickup
B7FL 1
Vln
11
IG8LSI800850
1882 Chtvy Plokup
Vln
11 GCDC1
424NZ1 eo738
1118 Daylona Jet
Ski
Yin tARJI
1047EIH
11181 OMC 1 Ton
Pickup ·
VIN
II GDHR34KIJJ51223

the Homo National
Bank will offer lor
ealt at public auction
on tht Bonk peoklng

HDma

lmprqvamantl

Public Notice

11, 2001 at 10:00 a.m. ·

S ERVICE· S

810

Public Notlc1

110

Help Wanted

summER
JOBS
S6-S7

Easy Indoor work
ftelllble hours
full/part time hurry!

Posmons fllllng
quickly!!

1·888-974·JOBS

COG management,

uc

a.

.

The toimo of lhe
Hlo ItO caah.
The Homo National
Bank reaorvaa lhe
· right to re(oct any or
Ill bide or to ·remove
any unit from the Hit
at any lima.
Arr•ngamonte may
be mada lo rnopect
any of the abovl
naontd V1ihlcloe prior
to the eale by calling
740-1141--2210.
(6),

4tc

a, 6, 13,15, 2001

�-- --

.-

-- ~

-

--------- ----- -- -- - -

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

·-

•

..........
., ,.._........
AJ

name

110

Rln:t.

HlciiOry

YIN ..........- , ,
1bDIIA*IIull . . fllllcl

bod -

· " f"

110
-l'ltdlly.

" * i p p•g

2 ..__ ...._ . . . . 1e 11
-•·
-IIW 4:30
• llandaJI
1•an
,...,...,_

.!•=D:I;I;·;-~-~~~~Dt;lt::ll
chll ... dullllllalilllp"

I

r, 'l ' , ' , I II , r: f: 1.1 F r I T'-.
Gonllomon Sooklng Whllo Female OYer 50 Yeara For Walkl

And Frlondohlp. Roplw To: 553
2nd Avonuo, Golllpollo, Ohio
48131' Aporlrnonl-403
Why wolt? Sllrt mooting Ohio
olnglu tonight 1-I00-7U-2823
11111121.

30 AnnouiiCIIMIIII
no Ill
roopanolbll lor onw dobto other

I, . -

Tray

IIIII

-mw-uat0&amp;-13-2001.

Thrill._
,_ -.AIIIonl

-lb You

7«H!e2-1~

Quollly clothing ond houoohald
ltomo. $1.00 bag aalo ovory
Thulldly. Monday thru saturdoy
9:QIMI:OO.

Nolle• I will not bo worldftV on

ony .,... ilwn , _ , Ole. H you
hlvl ony 11wn - . otc. 1n mw

lhap, pl.... came a pick lhom
up. (304)87-18 1111--

40
2 ,..,

Rolrilv-

or, -1 yoor old malo, 112 Goldon

Rotrlovor, 1/2 Narwoglon Elk-

hound, 8 year old female. good
-~~Coli

(7-40)418 8eee

:~=
2P- f0P STNA'o okilod
unil. 1 full Hme 1 OP..&amp;A STNA's

Hllp W•diad

akilled unit, 1 full time t0P-8A

"'TA! IEMCH'"

~·
Singon, Bonde &amp; Vocal ~All Stylell Agel. Major Record

Co. Paid Tuillan . Llttlime Job
Placomont. Rogianal &amp; OTR.
CALL TODAY I~ .

Friday &amp; Soturday, 9-3pm, 525
3rdAvonuo
Friday, 15th, Saturday, 18th, &amp;
Sunday, 17th, 8·8pm, 1 Milt Out

-Pika

Ful ·

, _ lllring

lloCiuM'1o -

all

110

Help W.tllll

lacollont, lull 0&lt; part-t-.
plcl&lt; up oppliea- at location &amp;
bring bock bohrHn t :30om ...
3

1o:GOim, Mondlyfvus.udly.

Modical 8a1g

Clod&lt;·,._. -

Blvd.. Juno 14,15,18, 8am-4pm,
Name Brand 1chlldrtnl, womena
and men• clothklg· all slzaa. 2
computer laser prlntere, kitchen
table· 2 chalfli, 2 benchee, Exer-

ciliiEqulpmont,_~or Shine

li'ICIIIIIJII.1..-.e2:....7a4

175 Hour, PT/FT. Moll ardor.
www.tlllii:JOXITIOI..,maw.com

INTERNATIONAL COIJPNIY
EXPNIDING P/T-f'I1'$2Helio'
HR POTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE NECESS•IIV

AVON! AI AtoUI To Buy or Sail.

CALL TOLL FREE
,_!IIIUQBII

Al(ontlon· Work ham homo. $251

,_,_

_...
MAIL ORDER

8hillly 8palrl, 304-e7li-1428.

cumIIANAQI!R
= DIITAIIY

Aap: au 1tltlw

I=II

Choillnglng _ . . . - ovoll-

lblt for

sume to P.O. 270, Athena. Oh
_"5111~1.:_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

Pan-time lo full-limo phylicol
I .._ , _ 100

lor
....wog facilty. e-.

I

45789, Alilon

8arMIL MPT. Re-

hob Samcea Diroctor. e.,..l ()p-

panunity Employer Encouraging
~Divlrlily.
Planned Parenthood Of SauttoNil Ohio Hu An Opening For A
Full-limo Nuroe Proctitiono&lt;. Tlill

c..-llialar)'-

lf', ll IMklng an ambltloua aaln
proleaslonal to develop Internet

Ideal candidates will have 2+

facllll)', to provide aaslatance to

rehab 11rw1cea director, evalua-

ly.

Full-limO I'DII1ion, Fumlluro 0111¥•ry and Warehouaa. Apply 0

Llfoatylo Furniture, 856 Third
Avenue, Gallipolle. No Phone

Cab.

Saturday, Juno tis, 8--4pm, 4 mlleo
-o1Aoufl7an141.

Friday &amp; Saturday 15th

a 18th,

8am·4pm, furniture, gla11ware,
bidding, Cloihll, ping pone Wilt,
1

mlecallaneoue, dinette, living

room aultt, dre~~u11n bed,

43012 SR 124, M

le.

Garogo oal• Friday l Soturdoy,
SlaM Route 143, Pomomy, 1 milo

lionllAvonuo.
Ctmlr,
507
1100
Suilo
11oe.
Allttnl.
Ohio 45701 . ' ' ' " ''ta-....
11, 2101. Tha MIESC
II on E"quol 0pportuot11y Eni!JIDIOd

--

l'Nene 12111• . . nat

llliOillliiQiiiCOIIll .
-·for--

The Athono-Molgo EducatiOnal
Service Center hal a poeltlon

30·30 Martin r1111 a11ng.
1275, now plywood ologha&lt;lae,

Tu'a Marathon calhlor n - .
drop off roaumo oriytlma, 740:.11112::..:-7;:.3311::..:. - - - - - Tho Alhono-Mtlga Educotlonal

to&lt; a

Sorvlco Ctrotar Is tNrd*og

quallllad . Co111pu1or lorvloo
Tochnlolln to ..........
,.,.... ' tho ra""'
,_
deployment ot technology far
-~'":.':."' and
tlon In

iido•••a-

and filii J

.....

York SchOOl Dlltrlc1a. Thlo - -

nlalan need1 lo have the akllla
nece11ary 10 troublethoot and

notworto ~1. Applicont IIIUII
be aelf·molhtated and willing ta

11 a definite plua. Muet have
working luoowlodgo a1 DOS, Wind-

OWl

zo, Superintendent,

Athens·

1108. -

Tha

Courtly 'HIIp Mo-- ...........

Tho AMESC II an Equal Oppor-

working parl·llmo omployoo lor tunity Employar/PIOYidof.
oatlng, 740-742-2803 ltlvo URGENTLY NEEDED· plaoma
m 1 ·ge.
donora, s.s 10 eeo for 2 or 3
Llconood AuctlonHr no,.Sid- for houiB weekly. Call Sera-Toe, 7-40·
Into. call 740-992-9734 daytime ll- 592-8651 . .
5pm, 740-742·1406 anytlms after

310 Homes for Sale

&amp;pm.

1-IOG-214-0482.
Roglto-oS-12748.

180

Wanted To

Do

All Malie Mawo11, Lown T-oro.
Tilloro Rapolrod. Frao pick-up,

Delivery Available. 21 Years Ex-

porlonco. Coli Mlko. (7 40)44871104
Davld'a General Contractors,

Plumbing, Electric, Pointing
Dockl, Misc. Work, Call
(7-40)258--9373 Or Coli Phone 1·
304~33~285

Georgea Portable Sawmill, don't
haul Y&lt;our logo to Ilia mill juol call
304-ll75-1 1157.

porvltlon. Knowlldgo In c:ompret·

olon, ganoratons u wlilu variouollliOhanlcal, oloctrlclland

plumbln(lljlllme. Knowledge In
~ oodlo and oafoly r~a­
llano 1 plua. oand

~0

Ftl a

••ot. (7&lt;10)44&amp; 0538

patio. Immediate poeHIIionl

Letart Falla acrosi from the

oohool; Iorge 2 family hauoo, approxlmaloly 3750 oquaro fool, 112
C001Ipjeloly bull in
&amp; IOIDCidllooring. now tic &amp;
furl*t. l a r g o - - ........

Don't

Purchau

A

Working at the
speed ot lite.

Very large yard ai'ld t1tate tale.

Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
behind Maoonlc Lodge In Reclno.
Many alzll of olothlng, carpets,

14x70 Southem Dream, tru De·

livery froo Setup only $9995 1888-1128-3428

prlvite renred lot In Centenary.

U88 Shoultz 12x55, $1500
(740)3417--oe32

recommend• that you do burl·
n111 with people you know, and

ptlance• {Stove, R.!~;;;;;~
Fronl &amp; Back Deok~~
1

NOT to und manoy through tho

Priced. (304)674-'670 (304)875-

mail until you have Investigated
lht ol!orlng.

5030

310 Hom• tor S.ij
3 Badroom House With Full
Buement &amp; Garago On I Aort
Of · Land Qn Rodmond Aldgo
(304)87&amp;-7114
3 lldroom on Jllouto a, (304)17&amp;NU
,

&amp; VIcinity
I~

I'll

Llmllad Or No Cradll7 Govarn·
mont Bank Flnanoo Only AI Oak·
wood In Barbour~vllla, WV 304·
738-3408.

?11111111 17 I

111-11111 . .
IMifllllllllll

Jlllok Paareon -uouon company,
run trma auotronatr, oomploll
auction ltrvloo. Lloenttd
tU,Ohio &amp; Wilt :£1nla, 304·
773-1711
7.

uti-

lumialiod apartmont,
paid,
deposit &amp; referencea, no pets ,

7-.0185.
Chrlot_y'o Family Living, 33140
Uma Rd., Rullsnd, Ohio, 740742-7403. Apanmont, homo onil

We Tille Trade lnll
Slnglewidll, Doublewides, Any

Yoar, Any Moko. Top Dollar Paid

Fumllhod 2 Bodroario Apanmont,
Acrooo From Park, A/C, No Poll.
Relerencao, Depalit. 1325 ·Moiono
(7-40)448 8235 (7-40)44H577

4230

340

BUIIIIHS and
Buildings

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bldroom
apanmantt 11 Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle~

Bulin"' with upstairs apartment
tor ule, 2.t1 Satem Street, Au·

pan. From $278-$348. Call 740892-506-4. Equal Hauling Oppor-

lilnd, Ohio, sas.ooo. cal 740-742·
2572. Good lncOmo.
.

lo.l1ilios.

North 4th Ave., Mlddlepon, 2

Oillo:e building In Mlnemillt, 800
oq. ft., ale, covered porklng, coil-

room effiency, utilitiea paid. de·
posit &amp; references, no pets, 740:-

Ing fan, $3000110., 81 U78-1681.

992.0165.

Welt 2 Bedroom Townhouae

Rentalt, Also Lots Of Floor
Space, 'Good Income . Call

Sewage, Trash, $350/Mo., 740-

Now Taking Appllcaliano- 35
Apartmanls,

448-0008.

Includes

Water

.

Square Foot,

Acreage

.a

2,000

Bedroom· Plus

Storage, $11501 Manlli, Downtown
Galllpollo,
Contact
Kolly
(Z40)4-e 9961

2 Loll, Zoned Commooclal, Williln
Tho VIllage 01 Rio Grande .
(740)2«&gt;-51158

Tara Townhouse Apartmente,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floono, CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Car-

8RUNEII LAND

polo&lt;!. Aduli Pool l Baby Pool,
Pallo , Stan $385/Mo. No Poll,
lease Plus Security Deposit Ae-

qulrod. Daye: 740·446·3481 ;
Evenings: 740-387-0502 , 7.40448-0101.
Twin RlvorTowo11 now accopilftg
applicaliono for 1 BR.
HUD lllllil!dlzld apt. for -rly
a n d -- EOH.(304)8756879.

Two 2 bedroom apartments tar
rent In Syracun, $325 per month

pluo $200 dopoa~, 740-378-8111.

480

Space for Rent

One dock site tor renl, one full
hookup for a small camping trailor, family type, 740-882·5858. ·

oandy blach, beautiful view, give
usa coll740-992-57112.

470 Wanted to Rent

410 HOUIII for Rent
~

·3

Bedrooms

MERCHANDISE

Foreclosed

Homol From $1911/Mo., 4% Down,

Couch, 2 Cholra, End Tablti,
Coffee Tobia, All For $250.
Lov.lr Cf)'l&amp;al Chelidelisr, 1175.
FIDI,- $150. (740)441-82111
Craftsman Rldine .._... Price
"50, (740)258-1102 Aok For

510

Houuhold

. Good I

1 bedroom hauoe, $275/mo, $200

AERATION MOlORs
In 5110*.
e-.&amp;t-eoo-537-1528.

Ropaiold, Coli
Ran

Lorge compaotor at VifGjl'a Bony
Patch on Rt. 124 Eaal Qf

Syra~

....... 740-11112-7449.

barhood, References and Deposit

Thompaono Appliance. 3407
Jaoklan A11011uo, (304)675-7388.

3 bedroom home Minersville
area, river view, references re·
qulred, deposit required, no pets ,
740·11112-8m Iller Spm.

OOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers , relrlgerators,
ranaes. Skaggs Appliances, 76

VIne Stroet.-Call 740-448-7398,
1.atiB-81 B-01 28 .

3 Bedroom House In Syracuse ,

Ohio, $4601 Month HUD Ap·
proved
(304)875-5332
or
(740)11112-ll119 -.nda only

(304)675-1422

In Racine, nice neighborhood,
across lrom Star Mill Park, • bod·

515 Main StnMil, Polnl Pfoaoant

room, S450 dei&gt;oon. S450 per mo.

Now &amp; Ulld.Fumlluro
Now 2 Ploco Llvlngroom Sullo&amp;,
$38i. Buy, Soli, Trade.

lncluder water, garbage &amp; sew·

age, available 7-0t-01, 740-949·
2217.
II Your RMt $4007 New 3
Bedroom , 2 Bath Ranoh Style
Home

From Rent

To

New And Uaad Furniture
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga.
StU Grave Monuments And
Vttlll. (740)446--4782

Own .

(740)446--3583

Ueod Whirlpool Rol,rlgaralar,
Runo Good; 5,000/10.000 BTU
A/C ; Eloctrlo Dryer, Eloctnc Oven

Pilot Program , Ronloro Needed,
;!04-736-7295.
Three bedroom houae for rent In

w/Bullt On Microwave; Stars, GO

Pomeroy; no poll, 740-992·5858.

Gallon HIW Hoaltr, Elootrlc Eloc·
trlc. (304)875-7042

Moblie Homea
for Rent

530

Buy or 1111. Rlvorlna Anllqu_oa,
1124 Elll Main an SA 124 E. Po'
moroy, 740·992·2528 or 7-40·8921539. Run Mooro, OMlor.

12lt80, 2 bedroom, lacaiod In Addavlllo achool Dlalrict. Lacatod on
privlttlol. (740~7--0832

Mob Ill homa In Aaolna aru , no
poll, 740-li2·!111118.

Antique•

540 Ml1cellanoou1
Marchandlu

.'

I

•

lngt &amp; _ , -

1888 Grand Pr!X GT, Whllo, 4
door, 24.500 ...... co.... Clirld

One Seuon Excal&amp;ent COndiUon,

$500, (740)379-211 1 Call Allor
8:oopm
NEW AND UIED ITEEL Steel
11oama. Pipo Rebar For Cono:rolo,
Angle, Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Grating For Dralna, Driveway• &amp;
Walkways. Now 55 Golion Drumo
Willi Ud a Ring, 17.00 Eac:li. L&amp;L
Oak a Popular Lumber. Call For
Mora Information. (304--·3258
-llpm

$100 Each. AJC; 5,000 To 23.000
BTU For Salt, Stoning AI $75.00.
Thompaon Appliance Repair,

3407 Jackaon Avonuo. (304)8757388
RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNEIIS
Tappan HI Efllcloncy 90% Gao
Furnaces, Oil Fumaces. 12 SHr
Hoat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Syeteme Free 8 Year Warranty
Bemietls Heating I Cooling, 1·

800-872-5887 www.Ofllb.com/bon-

nlil

Soiling Out All Typaa Of Trallar
Parts, Llghlo, 93 Chevrolet Pick·
up, Wrecked, Farm Tractors, And
Oihor llemo. Lola Of ftemo For
Flea Market Dealers. 729 Gaga

Rd. (740)3711--2243

Two gl11s showcuee, one 5',
... 8', $75 """"· 740-11112-2478. .

(7-40)258 1100

14000 Inn.

lor, (740)U1--G211, (740)581 7110
89 Cougar, Excellent CORdltion,

S2300 OBO, (304)773-5108

91 NIIIIR Maxime, IOfl condition,
toadad, $3500; " Nlooan Molmot. lop condition. loaded, $8200
(304)875-11132
94 Dodge Sftatlaw, 2 Do«, Hatch
Block, $2800. (304)8112-27!111

OHSAA

94 Tempo GL, All POWII', 75,000
Miln. $2550 (304)875-4014

fnwn,.B1

97 Chrysler Sebring JXI, V-8,
Auto, Asking $8200, (740)2581252 Or (7-40)256,-1616

have that we are a bunch of
thieves ... that is directly
opposite of what we stand
for," Muscaro said. "There
might have been some
instance~ that were not proper, but I feel that those were
limited."
In March, The -Columbus
Dispatch reported that it had
obtained a 15-page ~epo~
fiom the association's auditOrs
that said some members of
the OHSAA's six district
boards:

97 Uercury Mourualnur, All

Whtol Drlvo, 5 Liter, 58,000
Mlltl, T9tolly LOidld , (304)7735182 Or (304)874-1523

720 Trucks for Sale
1876 Ford F-1 50, $1700 Or
Trade.

Average

condlllon.

(7-40)448 4053
1988 Chevy SIIYoroda, 4x4, Excetllnt Condlilan, Lola Of Exkaa,
(740)37H820
,, •'
1881 S-10, E•tondod Cob, Automatic, v-e, A/C, $2,885; teU
Sllvorodo, 411A, $3,885;
8-10. S4.385; 1187
II, $1,895; 1991 T•o,;-oo;

Front Photography. (304)578·

550

fromPIIp81
run and two hits in 3 1-3 innings. He struck
out four and walked one.' ·
·
The White Sox also picked up some ground
in the AL Central with the victory._Minnesota
and Cleveland both lost, so Chicago is now 10
game~ back. ,
That's a pretty deep hole, but the White Sox
have 27 games left against the '!Wins and Indi-

3020.
• · •·• N"'

Dodga Ram SLT, 2WD,
mlltl, (7-40)441-1651

Building
Suppll..

63 Dodge Ram, 6 Cyllndor, 2.25
Auto, $1200 OBO (304)875-8832
Block, brick, sower pipes, wind- 88 F-150 Fltlbld, Truck, 4 WIIOii
owe, llntols, etc. Claude WlntoOB, Drive, Good Condition, (304)675·
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245- 1458
-

580

Plltl tor Sale

98 Dodao Ram

ans.
"It's too early to .be scoreboard watching,"
Ray Durham said. "As long as we take care of
our business, things will work out."
Down 5-1, the Reds raUied in the sixth
inning, tagging Chicago starter James Baldwin
for three runs. Pinch-hitter Brady Clark tied
the game with a sac fly in the seventh.
But the White Sox put a quick end to any
thoughts the Reds had of a victory. With one
out in the bottom of the seventh, Brower
wallte!l Durham. Brower was then relieved by
Hector Mercado.
On Mercado's fifth pitch tO Chris Singleton,
Reds ; catcher Jason LaRue was called for
interf~rence. Replays showed LaRue's glove

1500, 4WD. 318

V-t, SLf, PW; PL, Cruloo, 72,000

Mlill (304)878-8040

730

Vena &amp; 4-WDs

1980 Ec.onallno, 1 Ton EKitndld
Length Cargo Van, Y-8, Auto, 4
sable/while, vet checked, cham~ Now Whoola And Tlroa. 84,000
pion ..... 1350, 740-81111-1085.
mille, On Boar&lt;l Pawor convertor,
Small Rolrigoralor, .Asking $2000.
French City Ptl Grooming Has (304)875-1802
Moved To Point Pleasant , Now
Calltd Rooo'o Pot Grooming. Call 1984 Dodge Ram 250 von, 318
For Appointment (304)875-5010
.auto, make 1 good work van,
$800, 740-992-38841.
Registered Lab
Pupploo,
Chocola te &amp; Bla ck, Excellent 1997 F-150, 4x4, EKtondod Cob,
Hunting Pro!ip ec1s. (740)448- 60,000 mllol, Loaded, (304)875·
0080

3052

Rotwalller Pupt, $125, 6 weeks,
hi ohola &amp; wormed. (740)388-

1999 ZR2 S-10, red, air condition,
cruloo, CD, auto, lint, 49,000
mll11, aoklng 114,900. (740)3792'198

l
Vogltlbles
Frult1

.

second.

Fryman !eli: in the fourth
with a strained left groin. The
Gold Glove third baseman
returned June 2 after being
sidelined more than two
months with a strained right
elbow.
.
"Travis could be back
tomorrow, if not, then maybe
two dayJ," Mmuel said.
Nagy had his poorest outing in three starts since
reruming from elbow surgrry.

when Chris Barbe doubled and sco-t on an
Athens error. The final Mason County run
came in the sixth when Kruk reached on a
fielder's choice and sco-t on a Dennis double.
Three Mason County players, the Barbe
brothers and Dennis, finished the game with
a double and a single apiece. Dennis had two

RBI.

.
.
Hodge had three singles and an RBI. Daniel
Tench had two single~, while Matt Warner,
Kruk, and Clark each had a single.

Athens had eight hits, including two singles
by Stickel. Dan Stier had a double while Jason
MCCumber, W21!fJ1e Dicken, Jake Hale and
Zach Wooten each had singles.
Mason County travels to Beckley on Satur-

day.

touched Singleton's bat while he was swinging.
Scott Sullivan relieved, and Lee doubled to
score the go-ahead run. SuUivan intentionaUy
walked Ordonez to load the bases, and Konerko lofted a sacrifice fly.
After hitting .152 in May, Konerko is averaging .350 this month.
"You reach a point where you feel like, now
.I'm due to start doing weD. It can't get airy.
worse," Konerko said. "You just keep swinging
and they're going to start faDing."
Reds starter Osvaldo Fernandez left after
giving up five runs in three innings, including
the grand slam to Konerko, his fourth batter.
Fernandez has gone five inninll' or Jess in four
of his last five starts.
''I'm pretty concerned. I don 't think he had
very good stuff," Reds manager Bob Boone
said. '~You don't need a gun, you can see it. It's
lazy, it kind offades. But we're not seeing any
mechanical problems."
Notes: Konerko also had five RBis on Sept.
20 at Detroit. ... The Reds were 5-7 on their
longest road trip of the year... White Sox DH
Harold Baines, playing for the first time since
June 2, puUed a hip flexor and was put on the
15-day disabled list. .. . Chris Singleton extended his career- high hitting streak to 13 games.

•

.

For Sate Or Trtde, 1881 Ford

C_lubwagon XLT, Fully Handicap
Slrawberrlea, Pick Your Own. Call Lift, Fully Automatic, Hand Controls, Ralaod Root, Tilt, Cruloo,
Cltude Wlntero. (740)245--5121
Power WlndOWI, Good Condition,
Strawberrlto, You Pick· Wo Pick. (740)24s-9212
Taylor's Berry Patch, 2864 Kerr
Road. Open 8·8 Monday, Wodnosday &amp; Friday, 8-4 Saturday, . 740
Motorcycltl
Cloood Sunday. (740)245--ll047
~~~~~~;.:..:...,.......,
1883 Honda 750 Shadow, Goad
Condition, St,OOO (7-40)387--QIU
FAHM SUPPLIE S
1880 Harloy Sportallr 883, Call
&amp; liVE:STO C K
(304)773-5734
1882 Honda 3.00, Fourlrax,
$2,000; Yamaha 80 4-Whoeltr,
810 Fann Equipment
Excollonl Condition, $1200 High
~ Flnanclne On Now John Country Bow. (304)175·5824
Dssro Mowor Condltlonera And
Baloro With John Dotrl Credit 1898. Honda 300 4 Whoalor, Uka
Approval. Call Or Slop By Nowll Now Oondlllan. (7-40)a4He87
Carmlchatl'l Farm I

tbree--n~n

--Cwmed they drove to
The report did not identify
out-of-state
conferences any OHSAA htembers. The
when they actuaUy flew, district boards are made up of
pocketing the extra travel school administrators .
As a nonprofit organization,
money.
-Received allowances for .the OHSAA which has
attending state tournament 819 member high schoolsevents without submitting pays no feder.al, state or local
expense reports or returning taxes. Its nonprofit starus also
unused funds.
means many of its records an:
--'---Car-pooled to tourna- confidential and are exempt
ments but ·turned in separate from financial review by the
mileage reimbursements as if state auditor.
each had driven.
Though . 85 percent of its .
--collected cash advances member schools are public,
for several nights of lodging the _OHSAA is not accountduring national conventions, able to any governmental
then leli: their hotel early agency or body for its conwithout rerurning money to duct, decisions regarding srudents or handling of millions
the OHSAA.

Reds

19Bt Dodge Dakota LE, 4WD,
Many Exlrso, Elocoillnt Condition,
S4500 Call (740)379-27U Evon-

~3...;18;;.1________
-

during the IndianS'

4114, Autornedo, $2,181, CUI"" 1
IIIOTOIII (7-40)448--0103

Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
121 .95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
137.00 Per tpo; All Brass Com- tnga
prelllion Filling&amp; In Stack
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES 1994 Raneor XLT, 4 cyl., 5 op., a/
C, $3,800; 1987 Dodge DakOII, 4
Jackoon: Ohlo, 1-800-537-9528
cyl .. 5 op., no rust, 11,000, 740Weddings, Reunions &amp; In Home 992·3384 weokdayo , 740•742·
Photography. Bast Prices. River

stuff

two;

Ki-uJt

II -!Ompg.,

good.

his

the past, ~n a scale of one to
10 it was
Lopes said.
"But the bottom line was he
found a way to win. I don't
know how he did it, but he

Andrew
led off the game with ~ towering double into the rightcmter gap, then
came home on Ryan Hodge's single. Hodge
came home on Andrew Dennis' single and
Dennis came home on first baseman Matt
Barbe~ single through the !eli: side.
Mason County added another run in the
second when Chris Barbe singled and scored
on a Krult fielder's choice, but Mason County
committed an error in each of the first two
frames enabling Athens the enter the third
ining tied at 4-4. Kevin Stickel had a two--out,
two-run single in the first fOr Athens .
Mason County took a S--4 lead in the fourth

l.alllod, Wltft AI Opllona, WhJto,
Gray lnttotor, Run1 Good, $3800

8418 WW.ONb.conwblt•i81

Lawn

(740)446--24121-800-594-1111

710

Auto Parta &amp;

Acc•aorl•
16' ootllo traitor In good ohapo.
Hay opoar and ocluor jack. 8' Chevy FlbtrgiUI Truck
(740)448--2514
Tapptr, 1g87 Chovy Caprlca
For Pa~a. (7-40)250 e541
Are You Looking For Engines Or

Allct Chambers B. robulll metor, TranomlooiOno? Glvo Mo A Call

11,000 lACK 2 Tan Air Condi- $1500. Forguaon u• doublo
tioner, 2 Ton Coli , 1 Line Sol, ln'otallod, $2,295, $1 .ooo Back , p-. St75. (7-40)388--1113
$12915 Not Price. Free Eitlmalll. JohR Deere Oomp1c1 Tractors
Call For Quotee On Other Sizes . from 20 to 48 HP, 5.11%, eo me 11If You Don't Call U1, We nanclng avallablt wllh JD crodll
Both Loael Mobile Homo•
approval. Carmichael '• Farm &amp;
Speciality 1-740·448·8308 1-800- Lown, Golllpalla, Ohio (740)448291-DOIB
· 2412
23 cubic fool Frigidaire chest NH 478 Hoyblno, 1111. $3,!500; Cui•
lroozar, $200; 18 BTU Glboon Air 11-Gator Harrow, 12ft, $900; Kao·
Conditioner. $200. Call (740)448- ttn Silage WaQon w/Avco·NI
4484
Gear, $1,200: (;!04)578-80011
I

- . .......... vory ~ - --1304)875-72511
1812 Pontile BoMevlllo SSE,

Runs and -

cultlvatora, excellent condlllon,

\

5143-llpm

owa, Anchors, Water Htatert,
Plumbing &amp; Eloclrlcal Paril, FurnaCea &amp; Heat Pumpe. Benne«•

"If you comp:m:

tonight to what ias been in

.... ,... •.

Condition, VO&lt;y Clqn, 5 Spood,
$1800 Good Buy, Call (304)175-

1815 Hyundta Ellntrl, AIC, PS,
PS, PW, Crutao, Antl-llloh ro&lt;llo,
allron, Now Tlrot. Slrult, Bulh-

Mower- Craltamari, Rear Efttlne,
13.5 HP, 30' Cui, Uaod. Pari Of

saw

~on

Air

IIOII4LE- owNaa
Huga Inventory, Dlicount Pricll,
On. VInyl Skirting, Daoro, Wind·

580
Main Sloool Fumll'"o

Accord,

(304)875-3324

1525

Condo For ~enl , North Myrtle
Beach , Sleeps 6, 2nd Row,
(740)448 8857
.

said. "I left pitches up
the entire inning."
Jim Thome hit his 19th
homer fOr Cleveland, a 414foot shot to center to nWce it
4--0 in the third. It was his
13th homer in t 8 games.

DaytOna, vory
Milot, 11000,

Bunemut , Pou•oy.

Mobile Homo Supply, 7 40-446-

to win the Olympic gold
medal for the United States
bst September, sealed down •
after allowing fow: runs in the '
tint three inningl to win his
third str:aight decision. He
up fow: runs and rune
hilS in six inningl.

Nagy

UIIO Cadillac Sedan Dovilla,

FOr Sale: Reconditioned wash·
ere, dryers and refrlgaratora.

Required, No Psla. (740)4468U39Itlvomolllgo

62 at-bats since May 24.
" I let Richie get his arms
extended, and if you do tb.u,
he is just going to crush it,"

1 pt... j ':, p (j;:::;; TATI c .'

18U Hondo

JET

2 Bedroom 1 Bath, Nice Neigh·

74Q-.4411-n9s.

-

· (7-40)378--"

Tolltcco Flaao -

ct:i

AKC Shelllo pupa, Iris, bl blaoka,

pliances, FfenCh CIIV Maytag,

Jenkins

150816d&amp;Filltlllar

1Ne Olda Culioll Slono. Good
Goubb'a Piano- Turoloog &amp; Ropolrw. · ~. $1400 080 (7-40)24!&gt;Po-ne? Nood Tunocl? Cllllie 5572
· PIInG Dr. 7«» ue «525
111111 Cltryolor LllliiRin. 4
dlt, 2~PO. Auto, PS, PB.
lndor&gt;ooodlt~· Nr. Till. CMIO, AM1F11 ca-.
eon
FO&lt; ProdUC1 Or Opportunlly.
. . . . , _ - . (740)311 111117
(740)441-111112

anleodl Wt Soli New Maylag Ap-

1092 Sunset Drive , Very Good

Sexson followed
with a -465--foot blast
into the Indians' bullpeit for
his 1 tth homer - and first in

calll-llpm

Condition . Deposit &amp; Reloronceo
Roqulrld. No Poll. Call (740)448-4116

Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrl·
gralora, Up To 90 Cays Guar·

. Richie

Folloor'lo o.y Longttborgor 1f!l'ith .,.wtar ch11a Mt" end
cltockor aet. (740)448 111111 No

Rocondllloned

Appliances:

In Hold.

Euy Sol poo115d,- - ·
pump, covar, 10 mlnut• setup,'
$2110 (740)387-G857

AKC Reglolered Shetland Shoopdog Pupploo, $225 Eoch,
(740)3711--2836

deposit, no peta. Call after Spm,
(740)448--9342

&amp;agll

Jonor

---~~--~~---1 ~51~2~'--------------

30 Years at 8.5% APR. For Llstlngo, 60Q..3111-3323 Ext. 1709.

8411-2217.

,,

_ , . ,•1555.
•-·
·· · - $4400,
.......
~

Reconditioned Washer &amp; Dryers,

Recently ·Renovated

350 Lots l

I

a..ry ~ bod, ..... ""' IIIII101. now. 111111 bostd. Can

Scrap- (7-40)446--7300

Ovmor Retiring- BulkllftV For Sate
In Galllpollo, OhiO, On Route 7.
Hat Large Parking Lot. Has 4
(740)387-7888

(740)2 15

:;~::;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:
Bod- a now lui......,.._ mat- Oats Hay lor ·Salt
(74101 2 ' . , . ,
- 101, ... In,._, -

truck, $150, 740-882·2528, 132

(7-40}1411-1519

Bamo, Gorogo, Fnolt Treea, Cloll
To Halur. $215.000. (7-40)446--

Good Ill Cllllng hay. To .....

-liltloF
s-. -"""""· ....
(140)44t-4111
da);ll •

Metal roll·batl for • puck-up

v...,.,:

lng, Reterencea &amp; Deposit Re·
qulred . Utililies Furnished.

Farm HOuse, Beautifully Remodoltd, 2983 Square Faet. •7 h:r11, Pond, fn-gll&gt;llnd Pool. Slvtrll

5118 Ulilily Trollor,
(7411)441-1151

tralfer rentals. Commercial 110re~

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apartments, Oean, No Pets, No Smok·

330 F.-m• for Sale

S88,(304~132

lronta a v - lor ltaoa.
cilanow.

With Purchatt Of A New Palm
HaotKor. Collt eee 881 72!541

In Racine, good candltlon l nlot
neighborhood, a badroom. atr.
carpc~. •~eo dopoalt, t360 por
mo. lnaludll water, garbage &amp;
towage , avallabla 7-1-01 . ?40·

Cloat to grocery &amp; Galllpalla. Mualllil 11U Llbarly 14170, 3
bodMOm/1 bath, good oondlllon;
(7~ttee
Call Hoodd, 740-11847.

·,

Baoocih St.. Mkklllport, 2 bldroom

For Atnt Or Slit On Land Contraot, a ladroom, Air, On Aontod
Lot 1n Galllpoila. (740)448-1 408

e 1'1101 Jlltnlal pro...rty tor lilt,

Or**"

72115

loautlful Rlvar Vlow ldaal For 1
Qr a P101&gt;l1, Aotoronooa, Dopoall,
No Pill, FOIIIr Trailer Park, 74Q441.0111.

3 homaa, barn, lobacoo bile,
atrum runa wough h, 11 +
aOtlt, Jlllo Granda, Qhlo. 0111
(7&lt;10)1Q.IIU

IWUI~:

Utllil._ Pold, Shared Balli, D19

llonllll 3 Bodroom, 2 Balli. Froo
Delivery a Sot-up . 1·888-828-

420

I.

Pt.Pieaunt

1 Room Fumllfood E"idoncy All

House In country, Ohio vicinity,
(740)441-1115 after 6pm

--------I

F/8xlble Scheduling

toolt, htattra, profeulonal Bunn
Coftoomokor, blcyclll, wlndowa,
doora, Naacar ittmt, lavatory,
love teat, camper, Dapraaelon
glut, aot of Crookavllle dlnnor•
wort, qld polloarda, loll of
houNhold and mloc.

·New Double Wide. S195 Per

LocUli.-.....

Dilplay.

· 21•80 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Only
Start Your Buolnoll Today... $345.00 Per Month 8.88% FIKtd
Prime Shopping Center Space lnllmt Rate, 1-8118-828-3425
Available AI Aflordeble Rate.
Spring Vallty Plaza, Call 740-448· Factory Gaol 32K80 110,000 Dlt·
~0_;10;;.1;,.
.
count only $1000.00 Down, Do-=
livery, and •lup paid by Factory
230 Profeulonal
t-8CJ0.89t-em
, Servlcaa
Final O"ayo, Nationwide lnvantaoy
Bankruptcy Attorney Louie Con· Roductlonl (304)7341--34011
name, local appointment for your INTRODUCTORY
canvonl0nco,814·221-0888. .... _
(New) 48'll25', 3 bedroom, 2 both,•
TURNED DOWN ON
8' tKiorior walla, vynol windows, .
80CIIoL
/Ill?
1o1I o1 good loa . (Only) $31.31
No Fll IECUAITY
Unltll wo Wlnl
l-8118-,5&amp;2·:1345
oquaro loot . We're doallng
Cofea'o Mobile Homos. State Route 50 Eut Alhono, Ohio, 740•
HfAI. FS IAfc
592-1872.,

BIIUI
nmeUs&amp;LPis

rain-.

1 .bedroom rumilhed apartment.
paid, 94
pluo clopoait. (740)448--1340

River frontage clmp 8111 for retn,

IIIO"OCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 2 Bath, Co~tral

$1,000

Naw doubll wide 3 br. 2 ba.
$888.00 down only $295. por
man. CII._1-800-89HI777.

To Buy A New Home? .
Manufacturing Homo Without Looking
Dan1 Have Lind? Wo Dolll Hurry
CalllftV 1·888-8414·7258. Wo Can Only
10 l.OIIl.elt, 304-736-7285.
Savo You Thouhndl On A
Haw Palm Houbor Homo. Call
nENTALS
Today! Over 20 Homes On

.
Engine And Tranam1111on Repair. (7-40)441-1304
ASE
Cortlllod Mechanic.
16 Wldo. Only IUS.OO Par
(740)441-0188
Month, 8.88'1(, Filed lntoroot Rate
With Air And Underpinning
FINAN CIAl
1-888-1128-3428

"

7-40-315 t317.

I-~ Rohl!»tator,' Range, AJC InclUded , &amp;288
Plua o.r&gt;alil &amp; Roll&lt;..-. HUD
~(740)441-1518
.

2001 Fleetwood only
St48.48 par month. Call Karena
Naw

New

Will Ropalr AutomobiiOt, Lawn Roady to movo In to, Sol up on

Bualne•
Opportunity

-1-6777.

Ac....

tral Air, Excellent Condition,

210

I - - ApaM&gt;ont, AI . _
Paid, (304)875-2200
.

7-lr1482
Galla Co.- Ria Grandi, PriDead End Road. 1 3 3 bathrooma, baMmtnt, call ror -Acroo,
w.ooo. Kerr Road, a
h:rooo, $21 ,OOOOr 5 A&lt;:oai Wlh
acmplolo - · 440-748-2448.
Pond $25.000. Ci&gt;ollolre. 8 Acoft,
Now Houoo, Crown City, Ohio, 4 $11,5000&lt;24Aorol
Hugo
Bodroant1, 2 Full Ballio, 112 A&lt;:ro Bam. $31,0001 CloyWilli
Township,
lot, (740)258 8818
Bam + Stream On 31 Acres
Prl.. roducad lor quick oalo, 2 $32,000. Tyooon l.aluo Area,
homtl ooHing on one lot in Mld- 14 Acrol. $13,800.
lltlgo Co.- Tuppeno Pillndlaport, $45,000, 740-llll2-ll151.
SR861, 7 Ao:root $16,500 Or 31
320 Mobile Homaa
- · $27,500. can Road, 18
$23,000 Or Exn Lorgo
for Sale
Polo lam On e Acnoa, $30,500.
5
$10,500.
'1' Only· Lot Modal Doublowlde- Dlnvile.
Autllnd,
1
Acree,
$8,500.
4 lladrocom, 2 Bath, Wao $51,11115,
$42,887- Price Good Till
a low ol llio paocelo
8-25-01, Huroy To Oakwood· Jull
IYiilabloo.
Call now lor mapa and
Gallipolia, (7-40)446 3093
~ liltlngol Owner linanclng
wltto lilglot property markup.
•ITOPf•

Mowing

Mowers, and Farm Tractora, AIIO

Haw 111 H. wido S499. per mon.
only $270. por mon. coli now 1·

(740)448-35711

14x70 Trailer with BlC24 Expanda,
111,000 OBO, Conkal Air, Under·
Wood Eating Hillaldeo, Dltchn, pinning, Blocks, Front Porch All
Elc. Mowing, Clean-up, Removal Go., (304)773-51 08
01 Unwanted ltomo. Odd Jabs. 14l70, 3 BR TOIII Eltclrlc, Con•
Call Sliva (740)446--71104

OKPOrionco and plan rolalod eu-

1112-2211.

Houall
ForDawn
Salt. Paymon~
2Balli, 1750
_· ,1 Take Owr Paymonta, 3 Baclroom,
Goillpolia, Ohio. Call Dovid • 1- 2 Balli Olkwood. Cll For lletalll

Service, Fr11
Elllmaltt, Call (740~58 11363

AVAILABLE
Must havo a minimUm of 3 years

1 - 9:21242t

30113

Roducod to $78,800. McGuirt
Company, R~TOR
pall· Raalty
.
tion ~o anewer phone ta~lla, data HIOO-t71-7533
aoMootlan/ lnhlko al all Help Mo Groat Nalglll&gt;arliaod, Good Cano- rolorrolo and malnllln filii. dillon, Nelda Handyman, Houaol
QuaiHICIIionllnciUdo HCrotorill/ Church, $50,000 Make Ollor,
clerical training and/or eaptrl· (304)875-1818

O.UipolleC.. Ccllrgr
(Coraora Clool To Homt)
Cal Todayl7-40 418 4387,

111,1150. Fo•elleli-v a Sat Up.

- Hurty -Endl
Paymonts
From
$199/moJune 25th,
Oakwood- Gallipolis (7•0)448-

ful~tlmo

Training

deposit required, no pels, 740·

Doive Inion $287 to $383. Walk 10
shop &amp; moviea. Call 740~448251111. EqUal Houoing CJo&gt;rxorUoity.

rt~~•
~

. . . 'WonMIQUII

Help Me Grow lrtake/ Referral

linti for appllcailon: Juno 22. 2001.

Now 14 Wido, 3 Bodroom. Only

Singlt Sactian Lot ClearanCe- All

_......, __

a:tuar Urttileau

young-·--

1108, Athans Ohio 45701 . Dtad-

(304)1112-3131

t lind 2 bldlooin ~ fur.
nllhed Mel untumllhtd, security

BEAUnFUL APAIITIIENTI AT
IUDGET PRICES AT JACKIDN EITATES, 52 Woolwood

Ao-late'a Two Yoar dogro In QALLIPOLII· 0"0RTUNITY
nurolng, IOCI&amp;I work, Hrly klII IOIOCICIIIG In i1t11 ~
hood davalopment or a rei
8 noom oonc:lt alyla homo on qulol
dltclplluo. Mutt havo · - - otroot. Dfferlng modom ldtchon
WOIIdrlg ....
Ia oomrnwtiCitt with famllln Md wltli now cablnata and dllhwalh·
on undlrolltrtdlng al lioliltlc, fllnl- •· 3 b&lt;Wrt- airy bodooomo, formal
ly coittorlil and lntardlaclpllnaoy dining a... and largo liYinli noom.
To cor garogo and huga COYOrlil

ants muat have • valid driven lt.. ence, aucce11ful communication
aklllr and comprehenalve com·
po11111 and outgoing peroanall- · cenee, reliable transportation,
and bo willing to tra•ll. A dlgrH puler 'skllll. Pl..., und mum•
ty, WI want to talk to you.
In computer technology 11 de·
by Juno 11, 200110:
Salary and commission structure olrod, but a mlnlmorn ol 2 Y11f1 ol . Gollla County EariW ..._
ba11d on ekperlence. Compre· quality eKperlence aa a service
P.O. Iloi&lt; 813
henalve benefits. Grow with our tachnk:lan may be considered In
Galllpolla, OH 45631
lltu
or
a
dogrot.
Salary
will
bo
company's vision by aan.d lng a
based upon training and expert., Work From Homo, Part·llrMI FullIHURIIIO:
onoo. Submit- al tntoroaL ••j
WIUie 8awyef1i, I
$25- 175/ltr. Plklvacationl.
sume, and recommeniJatlone ~o 1 limo,
P.O. Box830
HIIIB-878-7042
John D. Costanzo. SuperintendLondon, KY 40743
ent, 507 Richland Avenue, Suite 140
Bualneaa
Oromollat-Ocnhl.oom

-

Private Property And Now Dou·
- · Ono Paymont. (304)736-

Ouallflcadone: A minimum o an

t:;lorlcol Spocilllat,

1 Bedroom Apartment tn New

Haw 14 llwlcfo $488. only
S1tl. per mon. call now 1·80()..
1181-6777.

The Indians wmt 2-4 on did it."
Tyler Houston hit a solo
the homestand and dropped
homer in the eigbth and an
to 18-1-4 at ~bs Field.
~~ can't be happy with 2---4,
RBI Ungle in the nindL Mark
md I sure hope the phyen are Loreua and Jeromy Bumitt
not happy, either," Indians l11so bad RBI singles for Milpirches up ita the moe."
.
.The Brewm got plenty of manager Charlie Manuel said. w.tukee. ·
Tlllvis
Fryman
had
an RBI
thole from Cbades Nagy (I- "We wae completely outsingle and later · sco-t on a
t) to take a 6--4 lead in the played."
Sheels, who shut out Cuba two--run single by Einar Diu
fifth.

I

$128, 304-34104P3'

~ob•ood-altl 111111

to -king lndlvlduala to fill tho 5 room l both, 2 porches. A/C,
.. . . -. . . . Ill Grow rofrlgtrotor. · - 110¥1 a gtl
- $27,!500 ol 2424 MonRit
-paoKiono,
~.l\oll-llmo
lo prvvldt oorvlco
co- - · (304)876-1385
ordination to pa ..nll of lnfantll
taddlora birth to ago throo lth BoautHul Rolling F...., Lind With
tiNt w·rr or •at ,.. . Thle
n. 4 Bodroom, 3 8tih Hau11, City
Wltlr On 8 A&lt;:roo Willi eo Maro
c1uc1o homo-· paront ·od
Acrn Avalilbil, On North Routo
tlon, developmentll ecreen
2,
Muon County $155,000
and llnkago Oihar rooou
(304)513 55tt .

--10-doliv.ry.

AJ*biiW1tl
for Ront

3428

on eaperltnte and tre1nlng ac·

"" al i n - 10 JoiWt D. Coalon-

No

-·ln-oaiN

...., ..,_.,...,. .. bocording to ulary ocolt, ond will

MI-.

ctw•

II

Second Avenue, Gallipolle, OH
~~-- (740)448 31M5

.....Cur-.. ltonlby

opening u lr.: a Mia 1 Ctlrtlcvlulll .,,..,._ in Molgl county. AppliCinll mutt havt • MuteR 0ouroa and~ carlilicotian. Tloil II a 12 manit - -

Lawn

Raclno, adull I girl's clolhoo,
boy's blko a household llomo,

'

Oftgin, ,. flff . . . . . tD
....... u:t'l .........
lrl'i'
oorciJO•••alkn•

3 112 Milot Out Sandhill Road,
(304)875-21107

ant. Please Send Reaume To:

Spancer'a, 805 Main Street,

lllta Market

rollgiDn.

Golllo County Local Scloool
Dialrlct, filool agant for ""' Galla

380 Richland Avenue, Athena,
~Ohlo_;._4570
__
, ;:.EOE_;.._ _ _ __

LPN Or CIIA Wanted In Buay
Phyolclan'l OHico In Point Ploao-

Saturday, Juno 18, 9-4pm, Davo

and

londont, Alhon•llolgl Educe·

"'*"·

1 Me FUua••• ldck l Vtnyt.
311ft, 2 Balli, 2 F~. Hlrdwoad Flaono, Appnox. 2,000 oqft,

otallor, CLA 525, o/o Gaillpollo
Tribune, 825 Third Avo., Galllpo·
Ill, Oh 45831 .

bit.

Auotlon

- a n nooo,

, . blr ... SUiimll al - . . t o - D. c-.m, &amp;upom-

Olilo 45701. ,.,._
. .= ...., tl, 2111.
Tha AMESC II an Equol .Oppor·
lunily Eot......./ P i - -

Locol flooring COft'4IIUIY In naod of
additional carpet and vlnyllnatall-

Long'a) clothes, glallwaro, lumlturo, loya, colloctiblo Holiday Bar-

10

aordlo•••--•

Women And Maintain A Pro·

lrom route 7 on the right {De·

lalo lvor, Camp Conlay•
Rlln Or lhlno....S.mall Appjlanoot,
Homo o-r, ""' loaila &amp; MagaZinoa, YHI Mo•lta, Gille. Mlao
lox Lola. 171 Millon, '"day &amp;
laturday, limo -

••• 1

Ctoolco PhiiOOOphy. Stnd Coftr
Lotter And Raoumo: Pt.........

roaumoo to Sconlc Hils Nlftlng
Center, 311 Bookrldgo Road, Bldwoll, OH 45814. Attn: Cindy
Slmpoan. Scenic Hlillls an EEO
Employer

Pom.-oy,
Mlddleporl
&amp; VIcinity

., ...... ..11¥ ..........

Ilion -

ing to ...,. . . .. and . . -

production Health 01 Mon And

IIIAIIITENAIICE POimON

llturdoy Only, 8-2pm, 114 Milo
On Orchard Hill Road, Clolhoo,
Baby llama.

rary Toactolng Cortlflca'- In thai

aroa. satory . . 111 - a n ox-

or tlmilar aalet poaltione and

Larry'a ·Lawn Care naefjs a hard

lhlf; I I ;wllaq.:ttu
. . --Houllngld

... ,

Molgo EduCitional Sarvlcl Contor, eo7 Richland Avonuo, Sullo

IISIINI ME 2000 Cion!. ~.
FlloMoker
and OHICI 2000. Mutt
experience. A general under·
atandlng of the Internet wtn' be havo oblllly to lift ond cony hllvy
helpful, but a comprehensive ob)lcto, and bo willing to work In
training pack•g• 11 Included. II le11 than Ideal environment•
yau'vo ltad ••t&gt;OrionCI In market- such aa overhead and tub tloor
Ing, advertising, public rolallono ar011 lor wiring purpooa. Applloo
)'Mrl of IUCCelaiUI Outside UIU

8uckrldgo
·EEO
OH
45814. - llaad,
...loAn
Errflioylr. .

for

haYO U - . llogloo_oloog . . Ill Auguol '· 2001 . Ill-

emerging technologlea.
ldvortlling bullnOII In 1110 Rich· ltarn
mond, London, Corbin, Marefoaad Knowledge al common ,..rlplooralo ouch 11 prinlort and naolloro
and-,KYmarkell.

10: Cindy~ r:lo . . . Nurllng Ctntlr, 311

llevler Hull'cr•••• T_.,
for 1oo SIH ~ Unit at

Position Will Provide Health
Screenings For PPSEO'a Mile
Md Female Cllenle Throughout
The Service Area. Candldate
Must Bo Commlttod To Tha Ro-

Community Now-r Holdings, ropolr problomo with dolktap
Inc., owner of more new1pepere in
Kontucl&lt;y llian ony allior publilh- computera, 11 well aa aolvlng

-Mdilhtl-.~
In
nurolng
anti In--,.,..,_,...
lnaludlng ~- prt&gt;diDDt,
lnvontoly Md patiOIOIIi-

___..,In
-l.cic;ll-- ,.___
...,..
---·-= . . ,
patw,.. opening u ....._ . .

patience and ...r

P.O. ao. 657, Barbourovllle, WV
One day only: Saturday, 8118101, 25504 or Fu (304)522-31112
8am-2pm., On Duly road, off of ·
Skldmort rood.

2 ta • -·· 14170. 2 - · CIA,
· ooloigli-. In• ' -· No poll, $350 ptuo do)XIIII. (7«1)381' 11371

440

Mobile Homlll

Tho Alliono·llolilt Educltionll

&amp;· poid - · &amp;
retirement plan. reapond by rw·

lor...,...,
,.._,Oil,

111, aent rttume to- FlOOring In·

Huge Yard Sale, 815 LeQrande

140 I, Jl'l IDUI

for Sale

Semoe Cenler .. a I ., ... If ·a

2001-2001 - Ap.
-..- S8H Cortilicotlon or 111 - . ; 10 got o T -

N....,

menaurate with e•parience.

320

Help ........

polilian
wt - CPT &amp;
lCD-I coding required , experi·
once
boMfill lncludl

·
limO paaitoono coma bod

:.!:ilyb_"

c-.

Friday a Saturday, 9-llpm, baby
cloth11, Iota of mloo., off 218 on
StoteAoufl780.

piayers.

Piouo coll740-787-4581 M-F
8A-':30P to IIChodult an proloo................ E.O.E.
•Alo you looloing for ... oppoo1uniIMMEDIATE NEED: Director of
ly lo jOin I wlnriii1g loom and too- .,....._
(RN) for •~ ~~In
como part a1 a ra. gouw1rtg ·--..
·-·~ - · a
Clril lnduotry? Sconlc Hillo Nuro~·.:_:';.;::
lng Ctrolor 11 oHorlng Nurao Aido
TralnlftV CIUIII monthly. It II o Includes State Civil service Re·
tirement, can eam up to 15 days
75 hour cour••· 1a1tlng for 11
11 daya sick taave and
daya, Monday through Friday vacatton.
3
8:30 to 4:30. This Ia o groat op- 1 dlyo paid holiCiayl por yoar for
porlunllyl Thl next cllll win bo· tull~llme employ•••· Salary It
gin In July. Stop by today lor an commensurate with OIIPOrllnco.
appllcollan or contoo:t Stophanio CORtoct Kolth Stoulflr, Admlnll·
Kompor, lnatructor, at (7-IO)U&amp;- trator at Lakin HOspital, lakin ,
wv at (304)875.08eo. E•t. 101.
7150
Mondoy lhru Friday from 8amAHonlion• Wo Hlip, $1800 4pm. Llkln Haaplllf Ia an EEOf
Pen-time, $38011 FuN-dmo, Huga MErrflloylr

Rotwollltr Lob, 1 Yoor to good tlono, trlltmanl and nHdad dayhomo, (7-40)441-QIJII .
to-day aorvlou. Exctllont opporlunlly lo Ill part or • progroOIIvo
70
YardSale
mob dapt., providing batfl inpatient and outpallont aarvlceo.
Facility hU ••&lt;*lent compjlorlco
Galllpolla
hlatory, ucoptlonll manogomont
&amp; VIcinity
toam and paoltl.e ropuhltlon In
5 family yard ult, lo.. at ovory- referral community. lntereetad
thlng, _ , Gorlltfd Rood, Frldly oandldalel Jhould •pply to:
Rackaprlngo Rehabilitation Con1511- SIU*y, IIIII.
tor, 36758 Rocklprlnga Road, PoFrldoy l Saturdaw. 15th l 18th, meroy. Ohio 45719; Alllaon Bam9am- 5pm, 57 Jay Drlvo, Lot 18, on, MPT, Rehab Sorvlcoo Director. Equal Opponunlty Employer
Girlo,
Gomoo, Pumpo
Encouraging Workptaco DIVIfll·

-.

STNAIIOoo--ncoro.
Applicants muat be energetic,
oolkliraclocl, and molivalld _..,

110

Lato.l SNklng Now Artlata. with and o•oollenl blnolit pock- lent _.tunlly far now grill to
1111 .. ,..
ComlniJ To Huntington. WV oge tltat tnc..- a ahilt differon- bocome pan a1 1
till for PM lhahl, l Ill in~~
&lt;•tl427..- .. (80t1427-t5t4
ourlriCI. -401 K. paid ..cotton. 7 hob dopL ond inlogfol part al rehab learn. lnlerMted Cld rtid'IM
A Now Ctraorl 400+ DRIVERS paid dl holidayllyear. .Flexible
IPflly 10: Rocloapologo ....
ng account, crodol union ' -habilitation
Contar, 38758 RackDrlvoro-1-B00-858-2353
Nood
NEEDED IN JUNE. EllpllienCid on,
_
,
and-y
and
more.
Hourly
wage
comoprlngo
f!d.,
Pomeroy, Qtoio
Yow COL? We 011or 14 01y COtJ

Double Ovon Eloctrlc Rongo, Porllolly Wortuo, N - 1 Honctym.n, . Full ~me phyalcol thoraplll nood(7-40)44&amp;-2045
eCI for 100 bed ·akllled nurelng
Klnena and female catt, malt

nursing focilily, it ...

lor-

,-' r'f.'f ' • T

old-- mont----GIYMWIIY

c.- al Alllons, A 158

time, part·time. and contingent
.,._ .. 1 flit RNI
LPN 7P-7A
care, 1 lull
liml fill-in ~ coro 7A-3f'/
3P·11P. 1 part time day lhift AN

r~t~.lr_t::

•

Help Weullld

-'ing applic:atlono lor RNa,
LPN'I and STNA'o. VaryiftV full-

IIMu.,CI

Ma~•~an1~p~a

410 Mrt"lllolnn
far flllll

Tralltt For Rent, In
. PolL (304)77H7111

.,

1be IWy Sentinel•

2001

Al7~1g.

780

Campers &amp;
MotorHoma

1998 Dutchmen Cloaolo, 24 fool
roar bedroom, Laadod. Call
(740)3711--2518

Hippy Ad

IIAIIMINT
WATIRI'IIOOI'ING
Uncandltlonolllfollmo guaraniN.
Local ret•renctt turnrahed. Et·

ll~llhod

1875. Cal 24 Hra. (740)
448-o870, t -eo0-217·0878. Rog·
'" Watorprooflng.

C&amp;C Gonoral Homo Malntonanco- Pointing, vinyl aiding,
carpanloy, dOorl. windOws, bolha, .
mobllt homo rapalr and .,..., For
frot oollmato call Chot, 7-40•882·
5323.
Livlngston'l B111m1nt Water
Proofing, all b111mant rtpllre
done , free eatimate1, llfetlmi

ludtai Prlotd Tranamlaalono
All Typoa, Accell To Ovar guarantee. 14yra on job exporl10,000 .Transml11lon1 .. Transfer onco. (304)895-3887.
Caooo, 740-245·5877, Coli: 339·
3785.
.
840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
790 Campers &amp;
Motor Home•
Raoldonllal or oommarcill wlrine,
or repalra. Maltlr U·
1877 Coachman Cadet, 20·112 new 181VIct
olaotrlclan. -Ridonour
fool, 4 now tiroa, olCCIIIInl condl· conaod
Eloctrlcal, WV000308, 304-875lion, (304)875·4888
1788.

On Salui-day, June

lot lho following
vohlcloa:
1185 Chtvy Plokup
4X4Vln
11
GCEK14H8FF322824
1182 Dodge Pickup
B7FL 1
Vln
11
IG8LSI800850
1882 Chtvy Plokup
Vln
11 GCDC1
424NZ1 eo738
1118 Daylona Jet
Ski
Yin tARJI
1047EIH
11181 OMC 1 Ton
Pickup ·
VIN
II GDHR34KIJJ51223

the Homo National
Bank will offer lor
ealt at public auction
on tht Bonk peoklng

HDma

lmprqvamantl

Public Notice

11, 2001 at 10:00 a.m. ·

S ERVICE· S

810

Public Notlc1

110

Help Wanted

summER
JOBS
S6-S7

Easy Indoor work
ftelllble hours
full/part time hurry!

Posmons fllllng
quickly!!

1·888-974·JOBS

COG management,

uc

a.

.

The toimo of lhe
Hlo ItO caah.
The Homo National
Bank reaorvaa lhe
· right to re(oct any or
Ill bide or to ·remove
any unit from the Hit
at any lima.
Arr•ngamonte may
be mada lo rnopect
any of the abovl
naontd V1ihlcloe prior
to the eale by calling
740-1141--2210.
(6),

4tc

a, 6, 13,15, 2001

�- ·-

-- - . ·FIIIIIJ, June 15, 2001

Frlclray, ~ 15, 2001

.....
.-~=
~.4
- ~

SMITH'S
• . ,. . . , --1"',
-

Box '89
r.1 ,c.Jdlepu rt Oho .15750

Wrltesel
RooiLlg· Home

AIMU&amp;'Indwi-a

Loclll843-5264

lllllntlnanet-

Parts
Flldllr)'Aalloowl

R0ck

1

R Hupp

t.gcot

IMiedi•care Supplement; Ufe lnsurance;
• H•m•• and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
I Denllti, Retirement,
I P•msioJn &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
I M•ortgage; MajOr Medical
Nursing Home

DAZE
CCIGIHUCI ION
F-..a........

GAIDEN SEIVICE

Sp , 'he .. ..,

EatlaL TIIUna.
Prunina. Pressure
Wlsblna

........

.......-..

ft. . dd'q.

,.. .tug.

elodrkal.- ...,_
--uclropolr
poo • Adedls.
Owner
Charles R. Dill

.....92-7445

c.l

591-9254

Mowllll. Weed

Sli':~h . .

_lllh. .

Hourly rates
740-949-2610
Buslnea

740-541:41350 Cell

The One Man Corporation
Residential Pressure washing, Single Wodes,
• Double Wide&amp;. Boat's Decka, AVa, and
camper's, swimrring pools and farrn-equipmanll've pressure washed things 11om .filling station
IJ!IIIdng lots, RV's and homes to a corporate
Lear.Jet.
I aJso. Degrease automobile and lruCk motor's
as Willi as diesel and industrial equipment
engines. such as bulldozer's, backhoes; and
endloadenl. If I can help you caU me after 5:00.
·Jiml IIcon 11112 3002

oremaH at:

Giltlei'S- Down
Spout

•GnvdSocJ•
'lllplall • Fill Dirt

types
Roofs,
Specialist

Pomeroy Eagles

CaUBob

hylng$10Jiil

Club Bingo
On Thursdays
At 6:30 P,ll.

740-992·1671

RtVERSIDE
'STORAGE
•

KENSINGTON

llllln . .

:

...._oy,OH

.......

$311111111 eov-11
S5iiiiJIII SWblnt
Plog,ullve kip II
Uc,t00-50

Celli
614-747-1715
TIM DEEI\II
CONTRACTING
·Rooting, Sldlni,

Sterat•

~.Gnges.

Room Add.

a70 Blthln Aolld
Alclnt, Ohio

Free Estimates
Toll Free

45771
7~2217

WlnciDM, Deckl;

1-88&amp;:992.()021
740-992.()021
Locally owned &amp;
operated
WV028120

T111llerl

• Bolts •lllolllle t t - • ~Y•
• EqulpmentcleeneciA cllg1118M11

.Jeff Stethem
Cell7.0•511•2782 7.0•1191•1M77
Home 7..0•185••218
Lowwt prlcel

OF DAIIAGING

FACTORY DIRECT

PRICIIG

OUALITY

in this

U.Chlne Quilting

Hours

EARNHARTI3

7:011 AM - 8:011 PM

pillow penela

Geneni/Sped•llnd Typing
Tempo111ry Ollke Aalstmce
MaiiiDg LabeJr.IEav~
Cassette Trallllerlptlon
Numerous Business Support Services
lS yean! Secretarial Experience

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy;, Ohio

................
....,.._..,....,
lnltmrlllonll'....... --......

&gt;'

PUIIUC NOTICE
Sealed propoaelw
will 1111 ~Kelvlld at the
. olflce of the Mayor,
Municipal Building,
237
Pace
St,
Middleport, Ohla unlll
3 p.m, local lima on
Monday, July 2, 2001
lor fumlahlng ell labor
materlalw
and
equipment necnaary
lo complete the
project known aa
VIllage ol Middleport
Buelnewa
end
Allldenllwl . Street
Improvement•, and at
1ald time end place
publicly opened and
r11d aloud,
Contrea·t
documente, plane end
IIMCiflcltlone csn be
Obtllned at the
Mlyor'a office Monday
through
Friday
betwMn the hourt of
8 1,111, lnd 4 p,m,
E1ch blddsr II
required to lurnleh
with lie propoul • Bid
au.ranty end Contnoct
Bond In accordancw
: wHh llectlon 153.84 of
· the Ohio Ravl .. d
Code. llld ..curlty
furnllhld In Bond
fprm ehall be luued
by • Surety Company
or
Corporation
llcaneed In the ltetw
of Ohio to provide
. aald eu..ty,
Eech Propoul must
cont.ln the full nama
ollha party or pa_rtln
aubmlttlng
the
propoul and all
psrsona lnter..ted
therein. Each bidder
mull eubmlt evidence
: or He experience• on
. project. of elmller elze
· end complexity, The
owner lntende and
requlrtl that thll
proJect be completed
no later than Augu1t
31, 2001,
All contrectora end
eubconlr~etof'll

•?

, Involved with the
· project will, lo the
extent practicable u•e
Ohio
Producte,
mllerllla, ..rvlceo,
and labor In the
Implementation of
their
project,
Addltl-lly,
, contmtor .compliance

with the equal
employment
opportunity
requirement• of Ohio
Admlnlalratlve Code
Chap,ter 123, the
Governor'• Executive
Order of 1972, and
Gov.nor'e Executive
Order 14·9 aha II be
requlrlld.
Bidders
muol
comply with the
prwvelllng wage ratea
· p u b 11 c
0n
Improvements In
Melga County and the
Vllla;e of Middleport,
Ohio as determined by
the Ohio lilure1u of
Employmwnl Servtcea,
W1ge 1nd Hour
Dlvlelon, (814) 8442239.
The project COnlllll
o1
11 y 1n a
o1
approxlmetely 3900
cubic ysrde of 2"
aophell With VlriOUI
milling and caollng
ad)uatmenta
ae
outlined In the plane
and apeclflclllone,
The milled oil old
asphalt will become
the property of the
Vlllege ol Middleport.
Eetlmlted coat of the
project 11 1420,710,
The Mayor and VIllage
council r..erve the
right to w11ve
lrregulerltln and to
......,, any or 111 bide.
Sendy lannarelll
Mlyor
Village or Middleport
(8)15,22,29

.......... for-wone.
Clll your lndlpendli11
JlL~niMjOiw

(7401-1
Wtcan...........,.,
,....mtoryoorl

II al.
Defwndent..

NOTICE IN SUIT
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE

OhiO In Ca.. No, Oi•
CY-038, on the docket
of the Court, and the
oblect and demand
•lor relief ol which
·pleading Ia to
. lorecloiW the lien of
plelntllt:e mortgage
. recorded upon the
following deacrlbed
,... Mille to wit:
· Property Addre~e:
38811 1111 Run Road,
pomeroy, OH 45711
and baing more
pertlculerty cleeorlbllcl
·In plelnUfl'• mortglge
l'ftordlld In MortPu•
BOOIJ 11. page 13, or
I h Ia
Co U n I y

IMPERIALTIRE
Moson,WV

304~ 773-~~~~~~!!:

IA.l~:) ~ WIU. ~'('IOU~
I'W"t: WKIL£. LOOKlNCo ~

&amp;f~ YOU ~OW IT,""~

WlU.Nt.D :'JC.OTI I~ ~:-IC.INC:&gt;
'(~

I

BIRTI\01\'( 00 tf\E.

·T~'(N :)1-\0'rl!

.

i

-

ELmt MECHANICAL
CONTitACTORS
-

.' . -

..

i

•
. ! ~t;;;Q.s;;;LJ::I

,,.,250-,.,

• Mounting, Bal. Extra
Other Specials
Available
Whlla Supp"ea Last

HARTWELL·
STORAGE

155R12
1~R13

1e5:110R13

'

. Come /nAnd See
Connk Or Andrew

17~R13

ol"l{ -l\

1'1111\\lil\

PEANUTS

l'dd

Repair Hydraulic HCIHI • Cylinders
AIIO Sail Different '!YPII 01 Olla
Cheater, Ohlci
(former Warner Heating
&amp; COOling building)

STRANGe 61RL .. COULD YERV

M'f JEALOUS'(
AAS OVERCOME
M'f REASON ..

St. Rt. 7

185:a!R13

lOx 10$40
10x20$60

ICIId

13 Anlel

1 NawiiMI

21 hit
211 Fellow

chore

3 Okla. time

......
.4 L.-lkt
31 Thiel, In the
c-on role
Southweet 5 llotloolleaa

33 lecqlrellne

43,0pe•-·
car
45 ·--the

Ademw' tool 47 llohern" ..
18 Rellll
11Dide
mllden
loundry
prayer

2~

Bo!rthem

11 1110,tung

DOWN

20 Woolly
22 Throllbed
23Aclar

Pet.r-

• GnnoJa,

ac.-dye,g,
38 F 1 Choaelrom
17 DepooH
the38 ._of
I Cooke'
Adam
.......

Ieeder

45 "SUrvlv«"
networ11

4150 - Paulo

24 Deettucllve 52 Oldahoml
po owler
town

Who said this?
25 Ancient
53 Hlah71 ·surel"
schoaler'•
"Acting is the expression of a neurotic
32
leaving
34 ....,
-vy- ·
.,.,.,.
40 .....
9 Collection
impulse. It's a bum's
fishing toot
(ebbl.)
alriiM
oa..,.lnga
35 Folly
54 Language
(2 wdl.)
10 Soak, . .
life. Quitting acting,
31 Unrlo!r
suflf• ~
41 butch city
llex
that's the sign of maturiry."
There are several
signs of maturity in a
bridge player. One is
avoiding the impulse
that befell West in this
deal.
Since North couldn't respond initially,
surely South should
have passed out two
spades,
However,
when he did bid a third
time, North, with three
trumps. a ruffing value
and an ace, was justified in jumping to
game. Also, note
East's one-no-trump
overcall. In the balCELEBRITY CIPHER
ancing -- or pass-out by Luis Campo•
- position, this shows
Cetobrl1y Cljlhtr cr;ptogramo ore c:oeted 110111 qiJotationl by tamouo
only 11-14 high-card
poople, put and ~ Each-lin the Cipher alanda for another.
Today's clue: Y equals D
points.
Declarer won the
ZH · CGRC
BRSCPHK
'E K
first trick with dummy's heart ace, played
Z' E
HUETYRK
a diamond to · his
NTRXCGK
ZSYTJTSYTSCXK
queen, cashed the diamond ace, and led
z DRS PLS
H U
TSULMO .. .
another
diamond.
Greedily, West ruffed
OTS
DUSMPTHH .'
B UP
with the spade jack -and gave away the
RBBXTDA
contract.
Declarer
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The 'lhlngs that the llag stands, lor
were created by the uperlences ol a great people. trumped the next heart,
Woodrow Wilson, Flay Day speech. .
ruffed · a diamond in
the dummy, and ran
WOlD
the spade eight. AnothlAIII
er trump from the
'
dummy restricted East
Rtcrronga letters of lh•
to his spade ace, and
lour tcromblod words b•
Sout~. lost only three lew 10 form four llmplo wordo. ·

O

1·3414-675-7824
llesldend•l Coatiuerdal New C~on
s.Jos s.rnce lnotallallon
SpKiolizina in Sheet Metal Ductwork
"Truue" Solei A Senke For '·
Gdil, Mum, oDcl Meip COIIIIII•
LkenHd and land
. wv 0051"

• No Carry Outs

WELL !'E A SP'f.., PERJ.lAPS
1 S~OULD 6ET WORI' TO ·

GENERAL PERSJ.l1N6 ,.,

992-1717

(740) 985-4194
or (r40) 985 4384
24 Hourl/7 Daye Per WHk

tricks: two spades and
one club.
West must discard
. at trick four. Probably,
ddeclarer will rufftin thhe
ummy, cross o · 1 e
club ace, and lead
another diamond. Yet
· now West goes in with
the spade jack and
continues with either a
heart, or the king and
another club. As'South
cannot get into the
dummy, East must
score two spade tricks
for one down .
The original comment was made by
M arlon Brando, who
obviously
doe sn' t
practice
what he
preaches. Or maybe he
is just immature,
despite turning 77 on
April 3.

1

CREH 1 S
I
.--.;,_..,;;.-r.:-;,..,;;_,....-l,
1

I
I
.
1
I
I
~=:::===~-.J

f:,,

2

,,.,...H__,V.,..,.:,S..,Wr-0....-"-l.,

I I, I, I.

:-3
. .

:::::::::::::::::::::~

AL Q I U

0
\

A man confided to a co-worker,
"My wife and I argued all the time
so we wenl to a marriage coun1-N_U_R_G_E_N....:.--.,~~~~~ -~~ ..sti ll argue bul we call it

..

6
·

I

17 .,

·

-

I I

.-

ft.
V

chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

Comptetb the

you develop from step No. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUARES

!

1

UNSCRAMBlE .LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

,

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Hoofed- Tweak- Yours· Unsold, DOES TOO
Man to trooper: "It's a good th ing I wa sn't driving a
:company car. They frown on speeding ." The trooper
. feplied, "The company I work for DOES TOO !"

r---~--....,

P/8

(Nmi"OOIIS IlK.
""'""
•
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740-985·3948
CONCR""' 'BLOCK/BRIC"

'"'
•
• Footen, Wallt, Steps •
Flot w.,.k,
Replaeementt, • Welu
ond
Steadl
Crete Free llt.._ot,.
Servlna Ohio and w.v,
..__w::,V;.:;:I03::::.:,17:,:1.:,l_.l

Jirt.,. •

.-------.

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECDON
0111llty Driveways,
Patios, Sldewalkl.
25 y•rs uperlence
Free Estimates

7..0:742·8015 or ·
·1-an-353-7022

BYPACU81! SMALL
ENGINE DOCTORS
13841 Colltgt Rd.

,

for
24 per month

,_,.........---....,

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes.• Vla7l
Sldllll' New Ga ......
•Replactmnt
Windows • Room
Addltloas • Rooftn11
COMMER&lt;W. and R~DOOW.

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

(8) 15, 22, 211, 2001
(7) 8, 13, 20, 2001

(NO SUNDAY CA~LS)
\

'lOur
'Birthday·

740-112.0122
Master Ctrllfltcl Ttct.lidans

Saourday, June 16, 200 1
In lhc ycur ahead you could

Over 23 yra exp,
AH work guerwnlftd

Service &amp; parte
·evellable.
Special thanks to 4'le
Ocne Baker, Auto Value,
·&amp;

all our loyal

customers &amp;: friends.
Outdoor Power

URNPIKE

LINCOLN

Mercury

r:-:--:----""'!'--~--'""'ll!"--"1

New equipment arriving dally

more fun . Trying to pntch up n .
broke n romnn.;e? The Astro,
Gmph Muochmuker cun help
yotl understand whul 10 do to
mnke the relat ionship work.
Moil $2.7~ 10 Matchmaker. c/o
thi.&lt;newspaper. P.O. Box 17~8.
Murray Hill Station, New
York. NY 101 ~6.
. CANCER !June 21,July 22)
, l11~1cud of ~t ill ing yon. clutl,
kn~~~ uwukon your inj!cnuity
um1 ct-cntlvc juice~ . The clever
wuys you'll hundlc thlna ~ will
crumble the nppositi un into

l·800-272-Sl'79 or
c

SH Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or wltld trimmer.

GRAVELYTRACTOR
SaiH &amp; Service
204 Condor St,
·: Pomeroy

·992·2$75
,'

. on thing!' (11h ~1· than cumml;'r. c i;ll affu irs. somethi ng oppor-

some unexpected rc\'i$ions in
yOur sO&lt;.: iul iU.:tivitics today. it
won't upset you one bit . Actuul ly, the new plans will be far

Ask For Mike Hindle

Every Sprlf19 Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening,

both new acquaintances and

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
-- Even I houg h there cou ld be

Can Help"l!
Call Us f'inst Or We 8oth LoaeJ

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
. ·9 92-5479
)

~uhm i1'1siun .

LEO (lull' 2J,Aull . 22) ,
Stlt11&lt;1hil1i 11&lt;11' ll'hlch ynu ' vc
hccn hoJ1il1¥· hnt paid onl)· lip
~orvl.:c 111. mi~ht sutldonl)' he
mmlc unoiluhlc In )'&lt;111 . This

.

could he your hu.:k) ' d;,1y.

VIRGO (Aug . 2.1-Sept. 22)
-- Although your 1nind may be

your happ iness .

s:~~~~CED~MnM~
~
credit Problems?

regardi ng the olucmlle of ·

find yourse lf luckier than usual in Utaling~ you have with

friends of long smnding. People will piny an intricate role in

1

R~":t~:!"c.'.;ov• Advertise
In your repair work
n1med defendants In this space Im~'ll get you gelq for
ere , raqulred to

a - within twenty·
eight (28) daye after
le.a t publication,
which ahall be
publlehad once a
week
lor
alx
con11cu,tlve Wilke,
or they might be
.denied a hearing In
lhll c;IM.
LERNER, , SAMPSON
&amp;
ROTHFUSS,
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Clnolnnetl, OH 45201,
5480
(113)241,3100

I"" 1\Kt&gt;

oo'~llm\~. JH~"l

740-992-5232

( flllltl

Gcxxt Tlmes
Come out Dance &amp; Party
to Live music by "Fiinf'
Sat nite 9 pm -1 am
June 16th

~MORNI~G.,'(OIJ~I\OPI~
f\EIZ. ~C. f.\\~

I ,\.I) I h dr;11:lin ,\. Oil

Donnl!l R. Hoflma11
end . Barbara E,
Bowen, wholl 1181
known •ddr111 11
38851 Ball Run Road,
Pomeroy, OH 41711
lor Donnie A,
Hollman
and
unknown for htbere
E, Bowen, end the
unknown helra,
devleeee, legatua,
executors,
admlnlstratora,
apouue and llilgnw ·
1 - - - - - - ' - - 1nd the unknown
guardian• of minor
Public Notice
1'--,;,:,;;,;,;.;.:;.:.:,:.:_ and/or Incompetent
helre of Donnie R.
COURT OF
HoHman end Barbera
COMMON PLEAS
E. Bowen, all of
MEIGS COUNTY,
whoH1re8lden011a are
OHIO
unknown and cennot
reelonable ·
by
CaH No. 01.CV.038
diligence
be
Judge: Fled W. Crow eacartalned, will take
notice th!ll on the
LaSalle National
27th dey of February,
lank, aa TruatM
2001,
La Bille
under the Pooling
National lank, ae
and Ser:vlclng
True!•• und•r the
Agreement dated
Pooling
and
1111189, Serln 199t:2 Servicing Ag...,..nt
c/o Superior Bank,
deled 8/1199, Serle•
FSB
1199·2 c/o Superior
lank, FSB Iliad II•
PlelnUII,
Complaint In· the.
:V..
Common Pilla Court
Donnie R. Hoflmen,
of Melge County,
.,

lflrlllllft

~'(

BIG NATE
Pd 1 mo.

.
Public Jtotlca Ia N.wspapen.
Your RJabt to Know, Delivered RJabt 1o Your Door.

Tiloli. FLIE:) ~
tx:lD li' EVE~ I

TI'Ct'

Self-Storage

Shoun Seth
(7-40) 985-3563
(740) 541-3820

~ wa.•rnwiiQ to
-~··
.. ;1 •••
your dlot for......,.
nu1ritton, or lull look rour

THE BORN LOSER

High&amp; Dry

small

?

, ,. .,

1/«c£ ?&lt;lllftltt

lanclscaplnq

Loae Weight Now
Ask Me How

1~291-5600 • Pomerolc OH
Mil• ..a. ESIIIAT!I•"'IIIIIII • .....,.•MPUTT

month.

or small Jobs;

740-667-3224 or 740-667-()()38

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

$50 per

740-992-3673

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE

wt40 AM ~ TO JUI&gt;Gf
wt40 SOMt OF Oll/l
/ 6/lfATfST PllfSil&gt;fNTS
vlfllf7

space for

. MILLEND
FABRICS

SIDIS'x 10'
to 10'x 30'

l'r'O(esslonal Worlc at
Af(oraable Ratts

HEAT II

ULlPAVIOLET RAYS

MowiiN)&amp;
Trtmmlnq
740-992-5065

,,.,.

Restraint

BARNEY

5I

:== .
30

BLOCKS OUT IIA

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES
• Trucks • HoiMS

TillE

Wn&amp;

•• •• ••••
••

OUT AHDWINIER

~40) 992-5072

Hill'• Self

.....
••

KEEPS 1IIE
SllF IJ- HEAT

1) X 10 S30 00
10 X 20 550.00

c

21 Cindie

Vulnerable: 8GUI

WNIOWS HEAT

I I :

57 TeiCIM

-...
-- - .._.... .............
--·"
18

A Q J leI

.IROP TECIIIIOlOGY

(under Pomeroy-

~;::~
~ m11t1111

KQtiJ

. BY PHILLIP ALDER

Remodlllng
Stop &amp; ComlllllplrlWWI
FREE~Tti

, . IJ •••

Q II 1

51=
=

lilly ]oinld 55 Lllre . . . .

•••

•GII-.gls
•CcwiQIIII

Cooti&amp;,OHWD

6

money 10)

12;.::-~ -~-

A It I
k 11 1

• i

1J Ulllnll
meclllr• aor~~~e
14 Kftlle...... unl....
15 CcJnaanl: 51 Olnlaa ICI

9 KI J
•

·

44 Old . .
45 .Wortrwoa'

!!"!!

•t ••

..... Hom ••

I

•

·IOIEIT IISSEU.
COIS.IOCIIOII

ftltiO SL RL 7 8oufll

992-3470

6 1:JII

740 -992 -1101
or 992 -2753

1

t AllY ling
7 ........
.

J

•

-

42-~

ACROSS

...
....... ...
9 QJ tH

85

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

9 Atl1

• •• s

p.
•

... .

~74

Fr ee Eot1·nates

.,......

• Mllidl

.

-..'

• .._. ..
n...,,..,,..

c--mPwrD

lluldozn- S.Sa..,irkka
..

-

•Decb

IIIIIDM
~~.

'-

:?!4c'le

Mor.-.crl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 ynJ experlenc:e
(740) 742 8888
1-521-G916

...,.

......

::: :z••

mnvertillc ole vinyllllpl, Four wjloeler seals,
moton:ydc: sealS, boll covers, calpCIS, etc.

Howardl.

.:

·-l'a•r•
•?' • •

Tnd 1Ca1s, c:arlals, bead!incn, bud 1a1ps,

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE

~

The Dally Sentinel•

Pomeroy, lliddl1pcxt, Ohio

AJJ-EYOOP

~-

---

·-·- -·--

llllll! couiJ rtm~c nl101111odny in
an uncxpc,tcd m;mncr. ca'using
• you to respo nd 4uickly.
LIBRA (Sept. 21-0cl. 2.1) -

- You've alway:-: bL•cn u person

who gelS ulong well in one-onone situations, but today there
could be tw o people with
whom you' ll have dealings
who will pro ve lo be very
lucky for you.
·
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) , Even thoug h this mny
nol be n workday for you,
focus your eff011s on developmetHs thai could be mutoriully
rcwurdlng. You're c'pcciully
lucky in thi s rculm loduy.
SAOITTARI US (Nov. 23,
Dec , 21), It won't tukc much
to woe over people who meet
yon for the firKI lime 1odny.
Your chnrismulic churucleristico will be ~renlly uc1ivu1cd.
churmins 1he bird• out of the
treeK.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 21,Jun.
19) , Be oplimi&lt;tic loduy

events that arc important to
you. Time seems to cn h ~t m::e
your lm:k as the day wears on

instead of dimini shing it.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) ~ -There' !" a c h an~e you' ll
find y our~clr i.J bit m o l\! restlt:ss
th an usual t0dav und end up
lookinc. fo r a litilc fun . Fpi1U·
natcly .... pui s shnuld be readi ly
available unJ. wunti ng. to do I he
same.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Mardl :!0)
-- Mat erial gains un: qui t~
probabh: today comin g from
two se parate ~oun.: c s. One
could ha\'c something to do
with your ~.: u rc~r &lt;~l}d the other
mnv come throu~h 11 re luli\'Cor

funlilv member.
AltiES CMu.-h 21·April 19)
, In Ol'd&lt;rlo get mhors w jump
on your bnndwngon 1odny und
support your tUU!e , ull you
have 10 do i; 10 demonMrule tho
proper iniliulive. Loud on un&lt;l
they'll follow,
TAURUS (Apri l 2Q,Muy
20) .. It'; Ull UI\UMIUI kind Of
duy where others mi¥hl end up
doing more for you fi nunclully
1 lhnn you Will dO fOr your!Cif.
Your 111i11erlul prospects look
''ery promi.liill)l..

�- ·-

-- - . ·FIIIIIJ, June 15, 2001

Frlclray, ~ 15, 2001

.....
.-~=
~.4
- ~

SMITH'S
• . ,. . . , --1"',
-

Box '89
r.1 ,c.Jdlepu rt Oho .15750

Wrltesel
RooiLlg· Home

AIMU&amp;'Indwi-a

Loclll843-5264

lllllntlnanet-

Parts
Flldllr)'Aalloowl

R0ck

1

R Hupp

t.gcot

IMiedi•care Supplement; Ufe lnsurance;
• H•m•• and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
I Denllti, Retirement,
I P•msioJn &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
I M•ortgage; MajOr Medical
Nursing Home

DAZE
CCIGIHUCI ION
F-..a........

GAIDEN SEIVICE

Sp , 'he .. ..,

EatlaL TIIUna.
Prunina. Pressure
Wlsblna

........

.......-..

ft. . dd'q.

,.. .tug.

elodrkal.- ...,_
--uclropolr
poo • Adedls.
Owner
Charles R. Dill

.....92-7445

c.l

591-9254

Mowllll. Weed

Sli':~h . .

_lllh. .

Hourly rates
740-949-2610
Buslnea

740-541:41350 Cell

The One Man Corporation
Residential Pressure washing, Single Wodes,
• Double Wide&amp;. Boat's Decka, AVa, and
camper's, swimrring pools and farrn-equipmanll've pressure washed things 11om .filling station
IJ!IIIdng lots, RV's and homes to a corporate
Lear.Jet.
I aJso. Degrease automobile and lruCk motor's
as Willi as diesel and industrial equipment
engines. such as bulldozer's, backhoes; and
endloadenl. If I can help you caU me after 5:00.
·Jiml IIcon 11112 3002

oremaH at:

Giltlei'S- Down
Spout

•GnvdSocJ•
'lllplall • Fill Dirt

types
Roofs,
Specialist

Pomeroy Eagles

CaUBob

hylng$10Jiil

Club Bingo
On Thursdays
At 6:30 P,ll.

740-992·1671

RtVERSIDE
'STORAGE
•

KENSINGTON

llllln . .

:

...._oy,OH

.......

$311111111 eov-11
S5iiiiJIII SWblnt
Plog,ullve kip II
Uc,t00-50

Celli
614-747-1715
TIM DEEI\II
CONTRACTING
·Rooting, Sldlni,

Sterat•

~.Gnges.

Room Add.

a70 Blthln Aolld
Alclnt, Ohio

Free Estimates
Toll Free

45771
7~2217

WlnciDM, Deckl;

1-88&amp;:992.()021
740-992.()021
Locally owned &amp;
operated
WV028120

T111llerl

• Bolts •lllolllle t t - • ~Y•
• EqulpmentcleeneciA cllg1118M11

.Jeff Stethem
Cell7.0•511•2782 7.0•1191•1M77
Home 7..0•185••218
Lowwt prlcel

OF DAIIAGING

FACTORY DIRECT

PRICIIG

OUALITY

in this

U.Chlne Quilting

Hours

EARNHARTI3

7:011 AM - 8:011 PM

pillow penela

Geneni/Sped•llnd Typing
Tempo111ry Ollke Aalstmce
MaiiiDg LabeJr.IEav~
Cassette Trallllerlptlon
Numerous Business Support Services
lS yean! Secretarial Experience

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy;, Ohio

................
....,.._..,....,
lnltmrlllonll'....... --......

&gt;'

PUIIUC NOTICE
Sealed propoaelw
will 1111 ~Kelvlld at the
. olflce of the Mayor,
Municipal Building,
237
Pace
St,
Middleport, Ohla unlll
3 p.m, local lima on
Monday, July 2, 2001
lor fumlahlng ell labor
materlalw
and
equipment necnaary
lo complete the
project known aa
VIllage ol Middleport
Buelnewa
end
Allldenllwl . Street
Improvement•, and at
1ald time end place
publicly opened and
r11d aloud,
Contrea·t
documente, plane end
IIMCiflcltlone csn be
Obtllned at the
Mlyor'a office Monday
through
Friday
betwMn the hourt of
8 1,111, lnd 4 p,m,
E1ch blddsr II
required to lurnleh
with lie propoul • Bid
au.ranty end Contnoct
Bond In accordancw
: wHh llectlon 153.84 of
· the Ohio Ravl .. d
Code. llld ..curlty
furnllhld In Bond
fprm ehall be luued
by • Surety Company
or
Corporation
llcaneed In the ltetw
of Ohio to provide
. aald eu..ty,
Eech Propoul must
cont.ln the full nama
ollha party or pa_rtln
aubmlttlng
the
propoul and all
psrsona lnter..ted
therein. Each bidder
mull eubmlt evidence
: or He experience• on
. project. of elmller elze
· end complexity, The
owner lntende and
requlrtl that thll
proJect be completed
no later than Augu1t
31, 2001,
All contrectora end
eubconlr~etof'll

•?

, Involved with the
· project will, lo the
extent practicable u•e
Ohio
Producte,
mllerllla, ..rvlceo,
and labor In the
Implementation of
their
project,
Addltl-lly,
, contmtor .compliance

with the equal
employment
opportunity
requirement• of Ohio
Admlnlalratlve Code
Chap,ter 123, the
Governor'• Executive
Order of 1972, and
Gov.nor'e Executive
Order 14·9 aha II be
requlrlld.
Bidders
muol
comply with the
prwvelllng wage ratea
· p u b 11 c
0n
Improvements In
Melga County and the
Vllla;e of Middleport,
Ohio as determined by
the Ohio lilure1u of
Employmwnl Servtcea,
W1ge 1nd Hour
Dlvlelon, (814) 8442239.
The project COnlllll
o1
11 y 1n a
o1
approxlmetely 3900
cubic ysrde of 2"
aophell With VlriOUI
milling and caollng
ad)uatmenta
ae
outlined In the plane
and apeclflclllone,
The milled oil old
asphalt will become
the property of the
Vlllege ol Middleport.
Eetlmlted coat of the
project 11 1420,710,
The Mayor and VIllage
council r..erve the
right to w11ve
lrregulerltln and to
......,, any or 111 bide.
Sendy lannarelll
Mlyor
Village or Middleport
(8)15,22,29

.......... for-wone.
Clll your lndlpendli11
JlL~niMjOiw

(7401-1
Wtcan...........,.,
,....mtoryoorl

II al.
Defwndent..

NOTICE IN SUIT
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE

OhiO In Ca.. No, Oi•
CY-038, on the docket
of the Court, and the
oblect and demand
•lor relief ol which
·pleading Ia to
. lorecloiW the lien of
plelntllt:e mortgage
. recorded upon the
following deacrlbed
,... Mille to wit:
· Property Addre~e:
38811 1111 Run Road,
pomeroy, OH 45711
and baing more
pertlculerty cleeorlbllcl
·In plelnUfl'• mortglge
l'ftordlld In MortPu•
BOOIJ 11. page 13, or
I h Ia
Co U n I y

IMPERIALTIRE
Moson,WV

304~ 773-~~~~~~!!:

IA.l~:) ~ WIU. ~'('IOU~
I'W"t: WKIL£. LOOKlNCo ~

&amp;f~ YOU ~OW IT,""~

WlU.Nt.D :'JC.OTI I~ ~:-IC.INC:&gt;
'(~

I

BIRTI\01\'( 00 tf\E.

·T~'(N :)1-\0'rl!

.

i

-

ELmt MECHANICAL
CONTitACTORS
-

.' . -

..

i

•
. ! ~t;;;Q.s;;;LJ::I

,,.,250-,.,

• Mounting, Bal. Extra
Other Specials
Available
Whlla Supp"ea Last

HARTWELL·
STORAGE

155R12
1~R13

1e5:110R13

'

. Come /nAnd See
Connk Or Andrew

17~R13

ol"l{ -l\

1'1111\\lil\

PEANUTS

l'dd

Repair Hydraulic HCIHI • Cylinders
AIIO Sail Different '!YPII 01 Olla
Cheater, Ohlci
(former Warner Heating
&amp; COOling building)

STRANGe 61RL .. COULD YERV

M'f JEALOUS'(
AAS OVERCOME
M'f REASON ..

St. Rt. 7

185:a!R13

lOx 10$40
10x20$60

ICIId

13 Anlel

1 NawiiMI

21 hit
211 Fellow

chore

3 Okla. time

......
.4 L.-lkt
31 Thiel, In the
c-on role
Southweet 5 llotloolleaa

33 lecqlrellne

43,0pe•-·
car
45 ·--the

Ademw' tool 47 llohern" ..
18 Rellll
11Dide
mllden
loundry
prayer

2~

Bo!rthem

11 1110,tung

DOWN

20 Woolly
22 Throllbed
23Aclar

Pet.r-

• GnnoJa,

ac.-dye,g,
38 F 1 Choaelrom
17 DepooH
the38 ._of
I Cooke'
Adam
.......

Ieeder

45 "SUrvlv«"
networ11

4150 - Paulo

24 Deettucllve 52 Oldahoml
po owler
town

Who said this?
25 Ancient
53 Hlah71 ·surel"
schoaler'•
"Acting is the expression of a neurotic
32
leaving
34 ....,
-vy- ·
.,.,.,.
40 .....
9 Collection
impulse. It's a bum's
fishing toot
(ebbl.)
alriiM
oa..,.lnga
35 Folly
54 Language
(2 wdl.)
10 Soak, . .
life. Quitting acting,
31 Unrlo!r
suflf• ~
41 butch city
llex
that's the sign of maturiry."
There are several
signs of maturity in a
bridge player. One is
avoiding the impulse
that befell West in this
deal.
Since North couldn't respond initially,
surely South should
have passed out two
spades,
However,
when he did bid a third
time, North, with three
trumps. a ruffing value
and an ace, was justified in jumping to
game. Also, note
East's one-no-trump
overcall. In the balCELEBRITY CIPHER
ancing -- or pass-out by Luis Campo•
- position, this shows
Cetobrl1y Cljlhtr cr;ptogramo ore c:oeted 110111 qiJotationl by tamouo
only 11-14 high-card
poople, put and ~ Each-lin the Cipher alanda for another.
Today's clue: Y equals D
points.
Declarer won the
ZH · CGRC
BRSCPHK
'E K
first trick with dummy's heart ace, played
Z' E
HUETYRK
a diamond to · his
NTRXCGK
ZSYTJTSYTSCXK
queen, cashed the diamond ace, and led
z DRS PLS
H U
TSULMO .. .
another
diamond.
Greedily, West ruffed
OTS
DUSMPTHH .'
B UP
with the spade jack -and gave away the
RBBXTDA
contract.
Declarer
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The 'lhlngs that the llag stands, lor
were created by the uperlences ol a great people. trumped the next heart,
Woodrow Wilson, Flay Day speech. .
ruffed · a diamond in
the dummy, and ran
WOlD
the spade eight. AnothlAIII
er trump from the
'
dummy restricted East
Rtcrronga letters of lh•
to his spade ace, and
lour tcromblod words b•
Sout~. lost only three lew 10 form four llmplo wordo. ·

O

1·3414-675-7824
llesldend•l Coatiuerdal New C~on
s.Jos s.rnce lnotallallon
SpKiolizina in Sheet Metal Ductwork
"Truue" Solei A Senke For '·
Gdil, Mum, oDcl Meip COIIIIII•
LkenHd and land
. wv 0051"

• No Carry Outs

WELL !'E A SP'f.., PERJ.lAPS
1 S~OULD 6ET WORI' TO ·

GENERAL PERSJ.l1N6 ,.,

992-1717

(740) 985-4194
or (r40) 985 4384
24 Hourl/7 Daye Per WHk

tricks: two spades and
one club.
West must discard
. at trick four. Probably,
ddeclarer will rufftin thhe
ummy, cross o · 1 e
club ace, and lead
another diamond. Yet
· now West goes in with
the spade jack and
continues with either a
heart, or the king and
another club. As'South
cannot get into the
dummy, East must
score two spade tricks
for one down .
The original comment was made by
M arlon Brando, who
obviously
doe sn' t
practice
what he
preaches. Or maybe he
is just immature,
despite turning 77 on
April 3.

1

CREH 1 S
I
.--.;,_..,;;.-r.:-;,..,;;_,....-l,
1

I
I
.
1
I
I
~=:::===~-.J

f:,,

2

,,.,...H__,V.,..,.:,S..,Wr-0....-"-l.,

I I, I, I.

:-3
. .

:::::::::::::::::::::~

AL Q I U

0
\

A man confided to a co-worker,
"My wife and I argued all the time
so we wenl to a marriage coun1-N_U_R_G_E_N....:.--.,~~~~~ -~~ ..sti ll argue bul we call it

..

6
·

I

17 .,

·

-

I I

.-

ft.
V

chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

Comptetb the

you develop from step No. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUARES

!

1

UNSCRAMBlE .LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

,

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Hoofed- Tweak- Yours· Unsold, DOES TOO
Man to trooper: "It's a good th ing I wa sn't driving a
:company car. They frown on speeding ." The trooper
. feplied, "The company I work for DOES TOO !"

r---~--....,

P/8

(Nmi"OOIIS IlK.
""'""
•
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740-985·3948
CONCR""' 'BLOCK/BRIC"

'"'
•
• Footen, Wallt, Steps •
Flot w.,.k,
Replaeementt, • Welu
ond
Steadl
Crete Free llt.._ot,.
Servlna Ohio and w.v,
..__w::,V;.:;:I03::::.:,17:,:1.:,l_.l

Jirt.,. •

.-------.

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECDON
0111llty Driveways,
Patios, Sldewalkl.
25 y•rs uperlence
Free Estimates

7..0:742·8015 or ·
·1-an-353-7022

BYPACU81! SMALL
ENGINE DOCTORS
13841 Colltgt Rd.

,

for
24 per month

,_,.........---....,

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Homes.• Vla7l
Sldllll' New Ga ......
•Replactmnt
Windows • Room
Addltloas • Rooftn11
COMMER&lt;W. and R~DOOW.

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

(8) 15, 22, 211, 2001
(7) 8, 13, 20, 2001

(NO SUNDAY CA~LS)
\

'lOur
'Birthday·

740-112.0122
Master Ctrllfltcl Ttct.lidans

Saourday, June 16, 200 1
In lhc ycur ahead you could

Over 23 yra exp,
AH work guerwnlftd

Service &amp; parte
·evellable.
Special thanks to 4'le
Ocne Baker, Auto Value,
·&amp;

all our loyal

customers &amp;: friends.
Outdoor Power

URNPIKE

LINCOLN

Mercury

r:-:--:----""'!'--~--'""'ll!"--"1

New equipment arriving dally

more fun . Trying to pntch up n .
broke n romnn.;e? The Astro,
Gmph Muochmuker cun help
yotl understand whul 10 do to
mnke the relat ionship work.
Moil $2.7~ 10 Matchmaker. c/o
thi.&lt;newspaper. P.O. Box 17~8.
Murray Hill Station, New
York. NY 101 ~6.
. CANCER !June 21,July 22)
, l11~1cud of ~t ill ing yon. clutl,
kn~~~ uwukon your inj!cnuity
um1 ct-cntlvc juice~ . The clever
wuys you'll hundlc thlna ~ will
crumble the nppositi un into

l·800-272-Sl'79 or
c

SH Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or wltld trimmer.

GRAVELYTRACTOR
SaiH &amp; Service
204 Condor St,
·: Pomeroy

·992·2$75
,'

. on thing!' (11h ~1· than cumml;'r. c i;ll affu irs. somethi ng oppor-

some unexpected rc\'i$ions in
yOur sO&lt;.: iul iU.:tivitics today. it
won't upset you one bit . Actuul ly, the new plans will be far

Ask For Mike Hindle

Every Sprlf19 Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening,

both new acquaintances and

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
-- Even I houg h there cou ld be

Can Help"l!
Call Us f'inst Or We 8oth LoaeJ

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
. ·9 92-5479
)

~uhm i1'1siun .

LEO (lull' 2J,Aull . 22) ,
Stlt11&lt;1hil1i 11&lt;11' ll'hlch ynu ' vc
hccn hoJ1il1¥· hnt paid onl)· lip
~orvl.:c 111. mi~ht sutldonl)' he
mmlc unoiluhlc In )'&lt;111 . This

.

could he your hu.:k) ' d;,1y.

VIRGO (Aug . 2.1-Sept. 22)
-- Although your 1nind may be

your happ iness .

s:~~~~CED~MnM~
~
credit Problems?

regardi ng the olucmlle of ·

find yourse lf luckier than usual in Utaling~ you have with

friends of long smnding. People will piny an intricate role in

1

R~":t~:!"c.'.;ov• Advertise
In your repair work
n1med defendants In this space Im~'ll get you gelq for
ere , raqulred to

a - within twenty·
eight (28) daye after
le.a t publication,
which ahall be
publlehad once a
week
lor
alx
con11cu,tlve Wilke,
or they might be
.denied a hearing In
lhll c;IM.
LERNER, , SAMPSON
&amp;
ROTHFUSS,
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 5480
Clnolnnetl, OH 45201,
5480
(113)241,3100

I"" 1\Kt&gt;

oo'~llm\~. JH~"l

740-992-5232

( flllltl

Gcxxt Tlmes
Come out Dance &amp; Party
to Live music by "Fiinf'
Sat nite 9 pm -1 am
June 16th

~MORNI~G.,'(OIJ~I\OPI~
f\EIZ. ~C. f.\\~

I ,\.I) I h dr;11:lin ,\. Oil

Donnl!l R. Hoflma11
end . Barbara E,
Bowen, wholl 1181
known •ddr111 11
38851 Ball Run Road,
Pomeroy, OH 41711
lor Donnie A,
Hollman
and
unknown for htbere
E, Bowen, end the
unknown helra,
devleeee, legatua,
executors,
admlnlstratora,
apouue and llilgnw ·
1 - - - - - - ' - - 1nd the unknown
guardian• of minor
Public Notice
1'--,;,:,;;,;,;.;.:;.:.:,:.:_ and/or Incompetent
helre of Donnie R.
COURT OF
HoHman end Barbera
COMMON PLEAS
E. Bowen, all of
MEIGS COUNTY,
whoH1re8lden011a are
OHIO
unknown and cennot
reelonable ·
by
CaH No. 01.CV.038
diligence
be
Judge: Fled W. Crow eacartalned, will take
notice th!ll on the
LaSalle National
27th dey of February,
lank, aa TruatM
2001,
La Bille
under the Pooling
National lank, ae
and Ser:vlclng
True!•• und•r the
Agreement dated
Pooling
and
1111189, Serln 199t:2 Servicing Ag...,..nt
c/o Superior Bank,
deled 8/1199, Serle•
FSB
1199·2 c/o Superior
lank, FSB Iliad II•
PlelnUII,
Complaint In· the.
:V..
Common Pilla Court
Donnie R. Hoflmen,
of Melge County,
.,

lflrlllllft

~'(

BIG NATE
Pd 1 mo.

.
Public Jtotlca Ia N.wspapen.
Your RJabt to Know, Delivered RJabt 1o Your Door.

Tiloli. FLIE:) ~
tx:lD li' EVE~ I

TI'Ct'

Self-Storage

Shoun Seth
(7-40) 985-3563
(740) 541-3820

~ wa.•rnwiiQ to
-~··
.. ;1 •••
your dlot for......,.
nu1ritton, or lull look rour

THE BORN LOSER

High&amp; Dry

small

?

, ,. .,

1/«c£ ?&lt;lllftltt

lanclscaplnq

Loae Weight Now
Ask Me How

1~291-5600 • Pomerolc OH
Mil• ..a. ESIIIAT!I•"'IIIIIII • .....,.•MPUTT

month.

or small Jobs;

740-667-3224 or 740-667-()()38

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

$50 per

740-992-3673

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE

wt40 AM ~ TO JUI&gt;Gf
wt40 SOMt OF Oll/l
/ 6/lfATfST PllfSil&gt;fNTS
vlfllf7

space for

. MILLEND
FABRICS

SIDIS'x 10'
to 10'x 30'

l'r'O(esslonal Worlc at
Af(oraable Ratts

HEAT II

ULlPAVIOLET RAYS

MowiiN)&amp;
Trtmmlnq
740-992-5065

,,.,.

Restraint

BARNEY

5I

:== .
30

BLOCKS OUT IIA

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES
• Trucks • HoiMS

TillE

Wn&amp;

•• •• ••••
••

OUT AHDWINIER

~40) 992-5072

Hill'• Self

.....
••

KEEPS 1IIE
SllF IJ- HEAT

1) X 10 S30 00
10 X 20 550.00

c

21 Cindie

Vulnerable: 8GUI

WNIOWS HEAT

I I :

57 TeiCIM

-...
-- - .._.... .............
--·"
18

A Q J leI

.IROP TECIIIIOlOGY

(under Pomeroy-

~;::~
~ m11t1111

KQtiJ

. BY PHILLIP ALDER

Remodlllng
Stop &amp; ComlllllplrlWWI
FREE~Tti

, . IJ •••

Q II 1

51=
=

lilly ]oinld 55 Lllre . . . .

•••

•GII-.gls
•CcwiQIIII

Cooti&amp;,OHWD

6

money 10)

12;.::-~ -~-

A It I
k 11 1

• i

1J Ulllnll
meclllr• aor~~~e
14 Kftlle...... unl....
15 CcJnaanl: 51 Olnlaa ICI

9 KI J
•

·

44 Old . .
45 .Wortrwoa'

!!"!!

•t ••

..... Hom ••

I

•

·IOIEIT IISSEU.
COIS.IOCIIOII

ftltiO SL RL 7 8oufll

992-3470

6 1:JII

740 -992 -1101
or 992 -2753

1

t AllY ling
7 ........
.

J

•

-

42-~

ACROSS

...
....... ...
9 QJ tH

85

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

9 Atl1

• •• s

p.
•

... .

~74

Fr ee Eot1·nates

.,......

• Mllidl

.

-..'

• .._. ..
n...,,..,,..

c--mPwrD

lluldozn- S.Sa..,irkka
..

-

•Decb

IIIIIDM
~~.

'-

:?!4c'le

Mor.-.crl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 ynJ experlenc:e
(740) 742 8888
1-521-G916

...,.

......

::: :z••

mnvertillc ole vinyllllpl, Four wjloeler seals,
moton:ydc: sealS, boll covers, calpCIS, etc.

Howardl.

.:

·-l'a•r•
•?' • •

Tnd 1Ca1s, c:arlals, bead!incn, bud 1a1ps,

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE

~

The Dally Sentinel•

Pomeroy, lliddl1pcxt, Ohio

AJJ-EYOOP

~-

---

·-·- -·--

llllll! couiJ rtm~c nl101111odny in
an uncxpc,tcd m;mncr. ca'using
• you to respo nd 4uickly.
LIBRA (Sept. 21-0cl. 2.1) -

- You've alway:-: bL•cn u person

who gelS ulong well in one-onone situations, but today there
could be tw o people with
whom you' ll have dealings
who will pro ve lo be very
lucky for you.
·
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) , Even thoug h this mny
nol be n workday for you,
focus your eff011s on developmetHs thai could be mutoriully
rcwurdlng. You're c'pcciully
lucky in thi s rculm loduy.
SAOITTARI US (Nov. 23,
Dec , 21), It won't tukc much
to woe over people who meet
yon for the firKI lime 1odny.
Your chnrismulic churucleristico will be ~renlly uc1ivu1cd.
churmins 1he bird• out of the
treeK.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 21,Jun.
19) , Be oplimi&lt;tic loduy

events that arc important to
you. Time seems to cn h ~t m::e
your lm:k as the day wears on

instead of dimini shing it.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) ~ -There' !" a c h an~e you' ll
find y our~clr i.J bit m o l\! restlt:ss
th an usual t0dav und end up
lookinc. fo r a litilc fun . Fpi1U·
natcly .... pui s shnuld be readi ly
available unJ. wunti ng. to do I he
same.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Mardl :!0)
-- Mat erial gains un: qui t~
probabh: today comin g from
two se parate ~oun.: c s. One
could ha\'c something to do
with your ~.: u rc~r &lt;~l}d the other
mnv come throu~h 11 re luli\'Cor

funlilv member.
AltiES CMu.-h 21·April 19)
, In Ol'd&lt;rlo get mhors w jump
on your bnndwngon 1odny und
support your tUU!e , ull you
have 10 do i; 10 demonMrule tho
proper iniliulive. Loud on un&lt;l
they'll follow,
TAURUS (Apri l 2Q,Muy
20) .. It'; Ull UI\UMIUI kind Of
duy where others mi¥hl end up
doing more for you fi nunclully
1 lhnn you Will dO fOr your!Cif.
Your 111i11erlul prospects look
''ery promi.liill)l..

�Pagel&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

a1S.HIL

David Bell homers to
beat dad's team

II

'

PltlodoiiJIN

- YOIIc

.Uollool

L

Pet.

'.fT

27

.571

35
31
29

29
33
37

25

41

.547
-.01
.3711

8
13

L

Pel

25

.803

Gil

IJ
38
33
32
32
25
20

Qic8go

._

Slt.ouil

Uillr:r 'II ·
CIIDw . .

Pillll¥llh

IJ
-411
38
34
33
30

Q8

2
8

32
31
31
•

.3tl IJ 112

43

.317

11

L

Pel

Gil

2111
30
32
32
38

.&amp;Ill

·•
a

.508

8

.508

I

.545
.515
.508
.455

(llal,..,.

8 t/2
10

.. 5-3~ 7:05 p.m.

llftloy'•-

Angels4

-

-

YOOic

2111
28

Pet.
.594

.563

-411
30
ZT
25

34
....

•
·-.323 17112

1112

23
23

32

22

Gil

2

r

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112

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18

t.oui0~5-C),I: 10p.m.

-2nd-

..,.....,..
e.

•

tmes
.

~5-2),

SanFrancioWI0.- - 4

s.n Diogo e. Olldond 4

Oh 1o \Jilt?\ P·u bl 1sh in::; Co .

10;315 ......

N.Y. Vai-~5-7)11N.Y.­
(AAJIIr~. 1:15 p.m.
Q'icogo Sci&lt; (1(.- 3-2) II Sl.
t.ouil~s-5), t:15p.m.

N.Y. 9, Motlliool 6
Oeltnil6, PilllllUllh 4
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Cone (2-1) gave up Mike ihe third as Detroit beat visitLowell's 59lo homer and Der· ing Pimburgh.
Steve Sparks (4-2) gave up
rek Lee's two-run shot in the
four runs in six-plus innings
ihird, but nothing else.
for his third consecutive win.
Phil Nevin hit a grand slam
Matt Anderson pitched the
with one out in the eighth, his
ninth for his fourth save.
second homer of the. game, as
San Diego avoided a threegame sweep.
R~kie _Josh '!owers (4-1)
. Trailing 4-2 in the eighth, won h1sth1rd stra1~t start, and
the Padres loaded the bases off Jerry H~imon singled in the
Jim Mecir (2-6), who inten- tiebteaking run off Steve Tra~­
Randy Keisler (1-1) allowed
tionally walked Ryan Klesko shel (1-8) in the seventh
five hi15 in 6 2-3 innings, and
·before Chad Bradford relieved inning for Baltimore.
Chris Richard hit .his team- Bernie Williams had four
and gave up _Nevin's second
career slam.
high eighth homer for the RBls as New York "eld off
Orioles, who salvaged the visiting Montreal.
finale of the three-game series
Jorge Posada had three RBis
at Camden Yards.
in the first two innings on a
Mike Piazza and Todd Zeile triple and single as the Yankees
homered for the Mets.
led 11-0 heading into the third
Brian Daubach hit the first
gtand slam of his career, and
David Con.e's comeback progressed with seven strong
innings for host Boston.
Lance Berkman hit a grand
Daubach's lith homer of Tony Clal'k hit a go-ahead
three-run
homer
in
the
fifth
slam
and a two-run homer to
the season, off Chuck Smith
inning and an ~I double in · lead Houston.
(3-2), erased a 3-0 deficit.

Orioles 5,
Mets2

Yankees9,
bpos6

Reel Sox 6,
Marlins 4

Astros 8,
'IWins 3

11pl'$ 6,
Pirates 4

U.S. 33

~

5), 7:05p.m.
....,
· Toronto (Loaiza H) ol Motlliool
~5-7),

Berkman went 4-for-5 and:
set a career high with six RBI(
·as Houston's offense brokt:
through after being held t&lt;f
one run in the first rwo gam~
in Mihnesota.
.
Astros rookie Roy Oswalt&gt;
(4-1) gave up three runs in six~
innings.
;:

Royals3,
cardinals 2,

13 inninp
Mike Sweeney hit a solo
homer with one out in the
13th inning off Gene Stechshulte (0-J),lifiing Kansas City :
to the three-game sweep. · '
Doug Henry (2-0) pitched a ,
perfect 13th, striking out two, ·
for the win.
The Cardinals finished 1-8
on their road trip.

Gallia

uit

·greets

·3,oo.o·

ODOT declares
{utuonditional' victory

:cyclists

BY Bllwl

• BY KEviN Klu.Y ·
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

ALLIPOLISGallia County's
population
increased
by
more
than .
~.000 - for one night &lt;;&gt;nly .
-· · as_participants in the Great
Ohio Bicycle Advenrure
~ived Saturday to begin a
~eek-long
trek through
southern Ohio.
: GOBA, which draws bicyclists fiom Ohio and numerous other states, set up shop at
9~ GounfY )uqj?r f~­
- . . . . . 19 "1CJ,'Ilft91 "i ~~...
· pants, JJ~Jriy of them spen&lt;llitg
the night in tents there before
starting their journey Sunday.
Rick Lippincott of Fredericktown is making his second ·
GOBA trip and attributed the
event's attraction to bicyclists'
shared experience.
THii WAY, PI EAII (top) - Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure local volunteer Betty Jo Carter directed a GOBA
: "Yahoo! has a bulletin participant to parking facilities as bicyclists registered Saturday at Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds. The
board for GOBA and they get week-tong event starts today from GaiiiP&lt;&gt;IIs. MAKING SURE (lbove) - Bill Deaton of St. Paris helped wife
all kinds of 'hits," he said. Su.sle with her bicycle after registering Saturday·for entry In the Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure; The week-long
"They talk about it all year · ride through southern Ohio wraps back to Gallipolis on June 23. (Kevin Kelly photos)
.
i
tong and it provides tips for
the
first
GOBA
"just
dazrled me.
newbies. It's amazing, how
"It's more like fun than exermany people are attracted to.
..
cise;• he said. "It builds becimse the
t his event.
more you ride, the more you
• GOBA was expected to
enJoy.
bring in \IP to 3,500 partici· Chuck DeProsse of Lone Tree,
pants this year. The event is
Iowa, entered his second GOBA
organized by Columbus Outand spent the past year getting in
door Pursuits, a volunteershape for, the ride. Preparation, he
based, not-profit organization,
said, comes in riding as much ~
with sponsorship from Bob
possible an.:l by learning to take
Evans Farms Inc.
natural obstacles, like hills, in
For Larry Steele of Akron, stride.
who's ridden in GOBA since
"I tried to work get some work
its start in 1989, "GOBA is in on hiUs;' he said. "It'~ important
more t~an a bike ride or .a to maintaip your physical condicamping trip. You form a lot tion.''
of camaraderie with these
DeProsse reentered GOBA this EQUIPMENT CHECK ...,: Chuck DePrpsse from Lone Tree. Iowa, checked
people."
year because it is "the best orga- his bicycle In preparation for entering the Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure
Saturday at Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds. DeProsse was among
·· Steele said he had been an
many
who camped out at the fairgrounds.
on-again, off-again rider until
PITIH ... GOIIA.M

...

• Automltlc, Air Conditioning
•llelr Spoiler, CD Syllem
• TIH&amp; Crulle

•

• :MOO V-6 Power
• "-Windows, Locka, Uirrortl
AM/FM StaNO With Cal.

•11" Aluminum Wheela

• Air Conditioning
• Sport Sulfllllllon Pac:~caw'~

81111111 New 2001 Pontile
Montl111 Extended 4 Door

'22,950*' 121,9 *
• Automatic,

• 3400 V-6, Onatar Syllllm

• Keylell Entry, CD S)'llem
Tollllly Lolldldl

• Power Windon I Loeb
Klylna Enlry, Tilt I

H!p: ..r

•

Health survey coming to Meigs

. Low:IOI
Details, A3

BY CHARLINE HOEFUCH

•

2000 Chevy
Lumina Sedan
'

.
' '

•
•

..
•

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

COMING

•Automltlc
• Air Conditioning
• Slfto With Ceaaene

Oldsmobile Alero GL
Coupe Or Sedan

2001 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

· 2000 Buick LeSebre
· Custom Sedan

2000 Chevy Venturi
Extended 4 Door Van

~1,950* . ~2,450* ~8,150* ~8,950~ ~1,950*

• V-6 Powwr, Air

• Po- Wlndowa I Locka

• CD Syatem, Tilt I Crulae

• Aulomltic, Air Conditioning
• Power Seal, Wlndowa, Locki
CD Syatem, Tilt &amp; Crulae

• Automltlc,
.
• Power Windows I Locka
• 1111, Crulae ·

• Power Slit, CD System
• Power Wlnclowa I Locka
. THt &amp; Crulle

• Automlllc, Air Condlllanlng
• Pawar Wind., Locka, Mirrors
THt, Crulae, CD Syltlm

Calendars

C4

Classifieds

02-7

Comic$

jnsert
M

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

A6 ·

POMEROY - As a part of the
process to develop a health care plan
for Meigs County, a telephone survey arranged by the Meigs County
Community Health Planning steering committee will be conducted
next week.
The random su~vey, where participants will remain anonymous, will

MONDAY:
Scenes
from
Saturday's
GOBA
excitement

81·8

&gt;IStoci!Odlks;r_~-'---~-"p,_..)

·. 0 lOOI Ohlo.VIIIef Publishlns Co.

...

ls.-'t It tiMt t.r 1 rell ctr1'"

. t;;i;) Olc:ISmOI:ill&amp;.
IIIJMIIGIIIIIICJe"

Wast VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, And Custom Van Dealer.

· Pleau ... survey,Aa

,........ u.s.ss.A2

Mine
losses
have spinoff
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

ATHENS - The employment director of
the Hocking-Athens-Perry Community
Action Agency will use the results of a recent
Penn State University study and a local survey
of employers to determine the effects of the
closing of the Meigs Mines on other area
employers.
Glenn Enslen, director of Employment and
Community Services for the Athens-based
agency, will compile the results of an employment survey, and study those results alongside·
the Penn State study.
"That study," Enslen said, "indicates ihat as
many as three additional jobs are lost along
with every mining job that is lost. It's in the
best interest of the area to· try to determine if
additional jobs are at risk, and what help can
be obtained to assist in this transition."
Enslen said Friday that he has not closely
examined the Penn State study, but has spoken
with the professor who completed it, and
expects to receive the complete study in the
coming week.
In the meantime, Enslen's agency has contacted employers in Athens, Gallia, Meigs and
Jackson counties and Mason County, W.Va., to

Plun ... MIMI.AI

Holzer Medical Center is a proud supporter of this year's American
Cancer Society R~lay for Life, June 22 - 23, at Gallipolis City Park .

CHIVIOLIT

•kl@

involve about 400 residents and will
be conducted June 25-29 with calls
being made between 5 and 9 p.m. by
a research team at Ohio University.
A series of questions asked will
give the participants an opportunity
to express their concerns and opinions about health care in Meigs
County- what is available now and

POMEROY - The Ohio Department of
Transportation is declaring an "unconditional
victory" in a federal lawsuit filed by opponents
of plans for a new section of U.S. 33 from Darwin to Athens.
U.S. District Judge Edmund Sargus issued his
decision on a federal lawsuit brought against
ODOT by the Citizens Against Superfluous
Highways and the Buckeye Forest Council,
which asked for an injunction. preventing the
project fium proceeding as planned.
.
The lawsuit was filed in April 2000, and
alleged that ODOT altered a dr.dt Environmental Impact Statement to minintiu references to
"significant impacts" to the environment, and
faulted ODOT for using an Environmental
Assessment rather than a more detailed Environmental Impact Statement when making its Find•,. - ~No Significant~ • · ·•
"The court concludes that there is no genuine
issue of material fact as to whether (ODOT's)
decision to issue a Finding of No Significant
Impact was arbitrary or capricious," Sargus wrote
in his ruling.
In the decision, Sargus ruled that ODOT took

Message•

• Tlllft, TIQI. Tille Fees extra. Rebate included k1 sale price of new Ylhlcle listed whenl applicable. "On approved ctadt. On seledad models. Not !llpOIIIible for (jpogoiplk:al ""P"·
Prices Good J1111 ISilo ThJOUtt! June 17111.
.

WI'ILII1HIII '

J. REED

TIMES.'SENTINEL STAFF

..

,.

~3,950*

Vol. 36, No. 18

..

Olldond ,.._. B-3) 11 8on Fra 1
(1-ldoz ot-9), 4;05 p.m.
(Nomo 1-3) I I - , _ 11-

Padres 6,:
Athletics 4

Bnlnd New 2001 Chevy
SSerlll ZR2 LS EiL Clb 414

'1.25

,,

Ct.D ~H). 4;05 p.m.

L__..:________________________________________

s.Serlel XTREME Pickup

me

&amp;

~

Ct.D (Ta11018Z 3-4), 3;20 p.m.
Toronto (Carpenlar 5-4J II lotoolliool
(Vazquez 5-7), 7;05 p.m.

Gallipolis • Pomero) • pt, Pleas.ant • June 17,2001

GREAT OHIO BICYCLE ADVENTURE

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IN1EIIUAGUE I'UY .

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Iverson packing

7;10p.lll

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Giants 10,

Devilllays 6,
Phillies 3

"""-

IJ

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. best record after 64 games
Some Father's Day gift.
since 1900. Only the 1912
While many chilcmn were New York Giants (53-II) were
shopping for gifts for dad, better.
David BeD homered to help
"We went from playing one
·beat his father's team.
of our poorest games to one of
"If you don't mind, I'd our better games," Mariners
rather not talk about that right manager Lou Piniella said.
now," Colorado manager "Just a complete turnaround."
Buddy BeD said after his son's
Colorado rookie Shawn
two-run homer lifted Seattle Chacon (4-3) held ~ttle to
to a 5-1 victory over the two hits in seven innings in
Rockies on Thunday night to Game I. Ben Petrick added
gain a split of a day-night dou- two hi15 and two RBis to help
bleheader.
the Rockies end Seattle's sixDavid would have been game road winning streak.
happier if the home run had
come against any other team.
· "I'm trying to do the best I
can and trying to help us win,"
he said, "but I just prefer play. ' ing against someone else. It's
Barry Bonds hit his 34th
kind of weird."
homer, and Jeff Kent had a
Bell's homer and AI Martin's bases-loaded triple as San
three-run double gave sta,rter Francisco swept a three-game
Paul ~bbott (4-3) all the series at Pacific BeD Park.
offense he would need in
Benito Santiago drove in
Seattle's five-run first against three runs, and Rich Aurilia
Pedro Astacio (5-7).
went 3-for-5 with a homer
Abbott limited the Rockies and two RBis 'IS San Francis}O one run in seven innings to co pounded Ismae! Valdes (4win his fourth straight start for 4) to win for the seventh time
the Mariners, who lost the in 10 games.
opener at Coors Field 8-2.
In other interleague games,
it was San Francisco 10, Ana. heim 4;Tampa Bay 6, Philadelphia 3; San Diego 6, Oakland
4; Boston 6, Florida 4; BalliFred McGriff homered and
more 5, the Mets 2; the Van- drove in three runs as host
kees 9, Montreal 6; Detroit 6, Tampa Bay completed a threePittsburgh ~; Milwaukee . 9, game sweep -. its first threeCleveland 4, Houst?n 8, Mm- game winning streak this seanesota 3; the Whtte Sox 7, . son
Cincinnati 5; and Kansas City
The Phillies have lost nine
3, St.. Louis 2.
.
of II games and watched their
Anzona beat the Chicago lead in the NL East shrink to
Cubs 3-2 in the only NL two games over Atlanta..
game.
Ryan Rupe (4-5) limited
Seattle has w?n I~ of 20 and the Phillies to two hits in
\eached 50 VICtones 10 64 seven innings, ~nd Esteban Yan
games, tymg the 1939 New got his eighth .save.
.
York Yankees for ·the second-

n

AROUND. THE DIAMOND

•

1

Walk - Friday 7pm through Noon Saturday
Survivor's Lap - Friday at 6 pm
Lvminary Ceremony- friday at 9 pm
Come walk with us I

Monday- Saturday gam - 9 pm.
1
·Bpm

Discover the Holzer Difference.

For more information, call Bonnie McFa~and at

/
\,

(7401 446·1679
I

'

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