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.'

. Th&amp;nd8y,July.1,1't ll

Pomeroy • Mlddlafl011, Ohio
•

•• •

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 70s

James and Mary Belh Home o(
Obeu announce lhe binh of a boy.
James Matlhew, onJune II ,81 Grant
. ...
Hospital in Columbus.
He weighed I 0 pounds and ~
ounce. and has a brother· at honle.
John Christopher. Grandparents are
Alice Home of Obeu and John and
Barbara Weeks of Pomeroy.

URG Meip Ce•ter to bold strond
Kids Collep
The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community
College Meias Center ;n Middlepon
is flolding its second KidS College
· with college courses nonn.ally
taught only on the main campus.
Courses "111..designed to be both
educational and fun. and all youths
between the ages of 8 and 13 are
welcome to enroll. Enrollmtnt is

...
'

a:

Curtis named to DAV post
·Denver 0 . Gurtis of Bidwell was
elected !IS an executive comnlitteeman at.the Disabled American Veterans State !¥&gt;nvention held June 11ll
Curtis has been Ninth .District
Commander ' ~Qr nine · counties i.n
solithem Ohio. The· Ninth District
took first place in the state for mal&lt;-

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 70s

Other surgeries, and lransfusions to
newborns continue tlwouJh the summer, and must be supported by blood
donations. ·
Blood donations typically fall
__ when people are busy witlt summer
activities. Other contributing factors
Blood doaon autled
for lower blood donations are vacaHiJh temperatures and lo.wered . lion schedules at businesses and
blood donations are realities the schools being closed. "It may take a
American Red Cross faees during little e&gt;&lt;tra eff,nto make lhe time IQ.
the summer. The combination can dor~ate, but the time spent will save
muh in an i~uate blood supply lives."
for hospil81 ~ents.
A blood drive has been scheduled
Acconling't o Cheryl Gergely, at Middleport Oum:ll of:Christ on
supervisor of communications at Monday, 12-6 p.m. The church is ~
'In-State Regilift Blood Services, it '· . located al 437 Main ·Street. Red
is imponant for people tb donate .Cross hopes to collect 55 productive
units of blood at the bloodcdrive. All
during the summer. . ·
"More peop,le are engaged in out- blood types are needed, with· a spedoor actitivies- and travel. Thi, can cial request for people with 0 nega·
~ . more accidents, and tra"umas • live and 0 positive blood types.
have lhe po~ential , to usc high quan,
. To be a blood donor. individuals
tit!"~ of blood !Jefore ~ patient ·is must be at le"'t 17 years old, weigh
sW,Jiltzed.:' &lt;Jeiiiely .wd. In addt· • at least 110 pounds, be tn good gentian, on-going 'jJi-oced...,s such as eral heallh, and oot .have donated
cancer treatments, open liean and blood within the past 56 days.

Meigs
Cwtlty Chapter .53 took
place
in Division mfor membenhip.

.

·-e
.

~

~.

~

Swedish study suggests genetic
contribution to cervical cancer

.

DeDcioUI

Home

to perform at Gallipolis River
Recreation festival Saturday on main stage

CORN

'"" ...._Ripened

"Red Haven"

PEACHES ·TOMATOES

IJfaskets

~

.....

•

At the Charl eston Stcrnwhe e l Reg ana . the gro up has ope ned for the
Ternpl alt o ~ s ( 1984), the Comm odore s ( 1986), · Lo uie Louie ( 1990),
Jefl erso n Stars hop (1994) and Blessed Uni on of So ul s ( 199.5). Addi tional openin g ac t ned its in clude Regin·a Bell, Martha Ree ves and the
,Yande llas. and Chubby Checke r. In con cert, its mu sic offers a variety
·o r so ul , pop. funk , and rh ythm and blues.
·

3

RACINE - Big Bend Farm
An tique Club. will hold an antique
tractor pull Sunday, 2 p.m. at Star
Mill Park in Rac ine.
MONDAY
RACINE

.,r

Rac ine Villa ge,

-~

.
•• '

r9£etions: ·.
114 Mile Off
2400 Eastern Avenue

~omeroJ'/M11son

Bridge.
Phone: 304-773·5721
Open 7 days a week

Gallipolis
Phone: 740-446·1711

•

.

Meigs County's

Offic~aJs

..

Hometown Newspape~

r,, ,CJdr:c ;:JO rt. Pomero, OhiO

Volume :&gt;0 ~&lt;c, n'tl 0 ' JC

Sing le Copy. 35 Cents

see evidence of potential Serb ·moves against Montenegro

" To the extent that he is conranplaling otlter mijitary action, I would
WASHJNGTON (AP) - Yitgc51av ~dent Slobodan hope and trust \hat the Sail people
Milolevic is taking stqlS to bolster his authority over Moo- would express their oppositicn to
. lategiO; the smaller, V\tst-leaning partner in ~ Yugoslav anylhing that he might have in mind
fedmlion, and he may be .contemplaling "making moves" in the way Qj any further agwaagainst the Montenegrin government, U.S. officials said
sian," Cohc:n said
,
I U.S. Atmy Gen. Wesley Oark. the top NATO &lt;l011\111a11·
The State Dcptnment rccendy
der in Europe, said Thursday he has dctec:t«&lt; "a paltetit over l&gt;ftttioned Belgrade agaimt making
sevenlweelts" by Milosevic to move mili~ reinfon:e- anymovesagaimtMontenegJO.bulil
ments into M'J'IIategr!l and to Install mon: etlinic Selbs alsomadedearthattheUnitedStales
~to oppose Montenegrin ~idenl Milo Ojukanovic.
does not support Monlellegrin indc· "Alllhese are _preparaloly stages." Oark told a Pmtagon pendcna:. President Ointoo met with
IIC\liSOOitfaau. Hedidnotpn:dictanyowcomebutindi· OjukanovicinSiovenialastmonthto
caled that NATO and lhe United States are.d&lt;JIICIY rnonilllr- discuss the futune of the Ballcans.
ing developments.
...
• · ··
a In 1991, when all olher former
"I tltln1t: ~idcnt Milosevic is calculating what iS to his . YllgOlllav tepubli&lt;:S sec;cded from
best advantage in terms of. inaking moves in thai. ;uea," · Yugoslav federation, Monlellegro,
Oarksaid "And I wouiOO't want -todiSC\SS any (lroSIJtXtive wilh a . lArge. .Serb JIOpulatiQn,
,
, Of hypothetical military poosibilities in. that wnnection."
mnained, along Wilh the' republic ·of Serbia. Kosovo is a
Defense Secmary WiUiam Cohen, speaking at the same province of Serbia. ·
news conference, did not give a clirecl answer wben asked "
Oark also said Milosevic retains firm control of his
wbelher the United States or NATO had decided how it army and is trying to' rebuild a political base. .
would respoild if Mil&lt;isevic tried to ~ the Moo- ·
· "~losevic retains formidable power in Yugoslavia ilnd
. tenegrin govanment, which openly blamed Milosevic for he's an expert at dividing the opposition," the four-star
the oonOict in KosoVo.
general ·told the Senate Armed Services Committee 01J
•

By ROBERT BURNS

'·

AP Military Wtl..t

.

assassin John Wilkes Booth's bulBy EVELYNE GIRARDET
'l tts at the Ford Theater had not.
TO RECEIVE EAGLE RANK· Shawn White of Pom«oy Boy Scout Assoo:iated Press Writer
Troop 249will receiV• his e.gle Scout rank during a ceremony to be
Testing on the cloak anct abm!l
CHICAGO (APl - For •years.
held Saturda1, 6 p.m. at., the Middleport First Baptiet Church. Hla 11\e hlood-spallered velvet cloak a dozen other items, including the
Eagle Sc~ project w.. donafructlon of an Osprey nest as an envi- that Mary Todd Lincoln ' is; sheet thought ,to have come from
ronmental project at the G•vtil Power 'plant in Cheshire. He Is " - believed to have worn on the .Lincoln ' s death bed •. &lt;;ould evenson of Danny and Adell White. His scoutmaSter 11 Don Frymyer. The night .President Lincoln was shot tually help to authenltcate much
ceremony Is open to all.
·
has mostly hung untouched.
of the society's collection. ·
·But with recent developments
While existing documentation
in. DNA testing, researchers say supports the specimens' origins,
. the garment could reveal SQme of it is not always reliable, Buenger
tile mysteries surrounding the said. She noted that the society
health of the nation's 16th presi - had to put away a suit- purportdent .
ed to be the one Lincoln wore at
. History buffs at the Chicago the time of his assassination Historical ,Society acknowledge, after evidence sur(aced that
however. . that testing could another museum may have the
· destroy a valuable relic of history real ganncnt. • .
1nd prove false some of the stoBuenger added that many of
ries and myths about Lincoln.
the objects came from the collec"The ·question at hand is what tion of Charles Gunther, a tumvalue would DNA testing have of-the-century Chicago candy
and would it be worth the risk,o; of maker .whO donated "a mixed
losing a historical specimeg," . bag" of artifacts, including obvisaid . Nancy Buenger, textile con- . ous hoaxes such as.the skin of the
. . servat\f at the society. "We ~lso snake from the .Garden of Eden.1
· · have lQ uk: 'Do' we want to
Even with DNA testing, she
, kno,,.-~ . Do we really want all
.said, ptoving the blood was LinNANCY BUENGER, TElmLE ccinaervator · .t tile Chicago Hll:these ' wonderful
'PHteries coln's would be difficult since no
tarlcal Soclaty hoki• • sample of tha blouaa worn bY Klran Launt
solved?"'
· .
samples have been taken from his
Kline, who held tha hMd of Lincoln •fter he - . .tlol it Ford's
A group of ·scientists, conser- remains and there are no living
-rt.b•. Plcturwcl l*llncl Mi. Buengw Ia tha ...- ukl· to h•ve.
vators and historians met at the descendants of Lincoln.
bMn worn ~=::TIXI._d UI!Coln on IMt aama nlgllt. ~~
society Monday to debate those
Dr. Rohert ·Gaensslen, director of tM ~
. W Olhlr IIMnll ...!IC..lld wilt! tilt
.
,.
issues, and recommended that the of Forensic Science at tlie 'Unindcln of Uncoln mljjht prove . n s - . to many itorlit and
··
surrounding tile 11th pteakllnt.
.
·
·
1
,
·.
versity
of
Illinois'
ai
Chicago;
BAND TO
"'"'• Every , Thursday, 8 band from institution h&lt;ild off DNA testing.
"
Ravenswood, W.Va., will pertonn Sunday, 2 p.m. at Star Mill Park In ... The society said it would proba- who participared · in the confer' tremendous," . said Dr. Darwin
ence, said the cons of testing still before we cut," he silid.
Raclne as part of the village's July 4 celebration. The band Is com- bly j!',i,?e by the panel's recornoutweigh the pros.
Notve_veryoMne kagr.eeks .
d
Prockop,
a
gene . therapy '·
prlled of John Coanhour, Don McClure, Bud Dorsey, Mel Connors, men atwn .
1 0 r. tctor c ustc , a me ical researcher at Philadelphia's MCP
Gaensslen
said
current
rneth·
John Tabor and Willard Coqper.
Testing could sellle a long running debate on whether Lincoln ods to extract DNA include cut- geneticist at John Hbpkins ·Uni- Hanhernann University. "People
whl) .has pushed
suffered from Marfan Syndrnme, ting specimens or removing blood versity
.
. for PN'.A are fa•ct'
'. nated by ht'm"
·
a genetic disease thitl makes peo - •from them, while in ten years te~ttn~ ?~ Ltncoln arufa~ts, satd . · Tesung the cloak, Prockop.
· time scientific.:' development.; sctenttftc developments have said, "could answer an important
ple susceptible . to blood clots.
"The syndrqme could account mighr mean a:.- harmless scan:·· co~e so far _that tesung ! ould historical question that could gQ
onlr, cause mtntmal damage . .
fai in helping those struggling
for Lincoln ',s gangly appearafice . could provide the same results.
"We : have to be cautious
'llle tnterest tn ftndtng OUI IS with the disease today."
h ·'could also have proved fatal if
,.
By WILLIAM McCALLSwedish cancer registry. which oon Associated Press Writer
tains records of all cancer diagnosed
A study of Swedish women offers · ' in Sweden between l95S and 1993,
:4; "II- ; ..
some of the b~sl evidence yet that against the Swedl'sh naiional registry
'.
·.:·
heredity plays a role in c crvio~l can· of parent.s of people born after 1940.
,,,
' cer, a disease· blamed , rn~tly on
The study looked at nearly
The Community Calendar .. is
p.m. , fir~ house .
infection. by a sexuall y transmitted · 127 ,000 relatives of 71.53':1 women published as a free service · to
..
virus.
with cervical Cancer. It tracked non -profit groups wishing to
ALFRED~ Orange Township" .
Scientists know that the human mothers and daughters in the same · announce meetings and , special
Trustees regular meeting followpapilloma virus can lead to cancer of families, and distinguished between events. Th.e calendar is not
ing budget he'a ring Tuesday,1 7 :30
fraction of biological a'nd adoptive relatives.
the cervix in a smallr~designed to promote sales or fund
p.m. at i~e home of Clerk Osie
cases._But they· have long suspected
The reSl!ltS showed a strong link raisers or' ahy type : Items are
Foil rod .
... •.
that genetics plays a rol.~ in at least in the risk of .cervical cancer printed only as space .permits and
some ca~s .'
between' women related biologically. ·cannot be gliarant~ed to be print·
The research'ers looked at public '~ "This study doesn 't tell us what eo "a specific number of days ."
health records on mothers and gene it's on, or whether it:s multiple
·.
daughter~_ to reach their conclusion.· genes, but it's very' exciiing," BrewFRIDAY •
Th&lt;fY did not estimate what p¢rcent-, srer said.
POMEROY '-. Meigs County
age of Cervical cancer cases might
The study also indicated that Pomona Grange, regular session
be attributable tq heredity,
. women aie at risk for cervical cancer at Star Grange Hall, 7:30 p.m.
. The ·study published . in today 's at a younger age if they had a moth- .. Inspection will be ·held, and the
issue of lhe journal Nature was led er or, sister wilh the disease. 'I'hat degree of Pomona will be exemby Ulf Gyllensteri, a geneticist' at the (ypically is true of most types of plified. Star Grange ._.ill be the
. University of Uppsala in Sweden.
canc~r. .·'
. ··
.
hosts :
'
.r
The study, based solely on sl'itisThe human papilloma·yirus is the ·
tics, is considered exceptional · nati&lt;;m 's most comfilon sexually
· POMEROY - Peoples Bank
'•
because of the detail provided by ·transmi.tted disease , infecting up to in Pome{oy will hold a bake· sale
.
_
c
cct
1c
(" S 1 t ast 111g,
•
re
s
te
s
t
ror
uct·
n
uv.~u
Swedish records, and the highly sta- half th~ women in the United States in the bank lobby on Friday,
At H.c a ~ ouahl• · P r i c- t ·s .. Sa t i s l ac t 1on &lt; i- u ara ntc. ~c.· cl.
ble and hemog_eneous population in . with between 100 and 200 different beginning at 8:30 a.m. Proceeds
the Scandinavian country.
strains, said Denise Galloway of the · will benefit the American Cancer
" This certainly gives· us more of • Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Soc'l ety.
·-.
a reason to believe· it's related : to ·Center in Seattle.
..
genetics," said Dr. Wenc;!y Brewster,
But only a tiny percentage of SATURDAY
an epidemiology exp~n at the Uni - women get one of the few dangerous
REEDSVILLE
Eastern
versity of'Califomia at Irvine. '' For strains that cause cervical cancer. High · Scbool Class of 1984 15
so long with cerviciil can~er · it's The disease affects about ·16,000 year reunion picnic Saturday, 2
been argued that it's environmental , American women a year, and about p.m. at Forked Run Staie Park .
or a sexually ttansmitted cancer." .
5.000 die.
Bring covered dish and beverage .
Gyllensten
f:Ompared
lh'('- 1
. TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup,pers Plains Veterans of the ForWi~djammer
eign Wm Post 9053 will hold a
South Canlala
.
round a..nd square dance Saturday,
8- 11 p.m. with True Country .
. The dan ce band Windj ammer, based in Ch arleston. W.Va .. will perCaller will be Ronn ie Wood .
form during th e.Gallipolis River Recreation Festival on Saturday, July
3 al 9:30 p.m. on the main stage .
.
SUNDAY .
Th e g r o~p . formed in 1983 , c urrently consists of LeaAnn Jones and
MliJDLEPORT - Boelk Fam Ty ro ne Street on voc al s; Jay Edward s o n drum s; . Mi chael "Nemo" . il y Singers from Hill sville , Va ..
Pleasa nt , bass; Jac k Griffith , guitar: and Mark Sc arpelli and Elli oll
. wi)l s ing at the. First Bapti st
Namay, kcy hoard s.
Churc h of Middleport on Sunday
Th e b~n d a nd it s va ried repert oire has played dance . or co ncert at 10 : 15 a.m. and 7 p.m . All welengagments and convc:: nti o ns .fo r Union C arbide , Nautilus , Charles lon
come.
1
Area Medical Center. HBO. Bank One , E. F. Hullo n and o ther org ani -

-Page 4

•

Testing • on blood spattered cape could uncover Lincoln clues

' '.

The Cincinnati Reds
extend their winning
sbeak to 10 games

Ann Landers: Tax advice, Page 6
Gay rights·flag controversy, Page 3

-

$25 per cowse.
Courses include : Computer
Capers I, July ' 12-16. 12-2 . p.m.;
Medie•al Days
Knights. July 1216, l~noon ; Computer •Capers D,
July 19-23. 12-2 p. m,~ Civil War
Battles &amp; Generals, July 19-23, 2-4
p.m.: Drawing. July 19-23, ((}-noon;
Paper Art, July 26-30, l~noon; Creativ~ Wriling, July 26-30, 12-2 p.m.
To register, &lt;;all the Meigs.Center
at 992-3lB3 or 99~- 6450, Monday
lhrough Thursday. 12-6 p.m.

Sports

. . , 2,

·'

•

•

zau o.ns.

1lndians humble Twins 7-5, _Page 4
Friday

·

ThurSdAy.
Helsinki agreement " by Moscow, (]ark said. adding that
In his first appearance on discussions with the Russians would resume next ,week
Capitol Hill since the NATO air and he eJtpected a final agreement 10 be re~ then.
campaign against Yugoslavia, Oark , The argument is mainly over ·a Russian demand to stasaid he sees link evidence thai tion troops in the Italian -patrolled sector of Kosovo as weiJ.
Milo!;ev'ic's authority ;;. ebbing or · as in the thTee other areas spelled out in the Helsinki agree·
thai he might be ovenhrown or men~ plus a Russian demand for closer military and polit- ·
forced to Step aside.
.
ical control over their troops than NATO says was a~
1
"He still has his tiands on lhe in Helsinki.
·
sinews of power in Serbia," Oark
NATO officials in Belgiuro, speaking'on condiliQ11 of
testified. His political Clp!ICJ$Itioo is .anonymity, said the Russians are sc:eking to expand thc_ir
"fragmented ·atod weak. "
. opeiations inio the British area around the airport in Pristi·
In his remarb 3t the Penta- na as well as the Iialian-patrolled sector.
goo; Oark said the NATO-led
Moscow ·atso ' is arguing with NATO over whether .
peacekeeping eff&lt;irt · i\' Kosoyo . is .Russian soldiers must take orders from NATO cornrnanJIIOCI"'iding well eve!) though he ders - a contentious issue that the Helsinkl agreement
encountered obstacles this w~k was supposed to have senled. ·
.
from Russian offia:rs who visited
. Clark said the Russians wanted 10 make changes· in the
his headquarters in Belgium to work Hd sinki agreement aftl:r analyzing the situ~lion in Kosoout ·details for deploying 3,600 Russian peacekeeping vo and seeing 'potential problems,ISuch as dealing with the
troops in Kosovo.
·
rebel Kosovo Liberation Atmy.
·The Russian role in Kosovo peacekeeping was mapped
" For example, some con;:em was t-xpressed by some of
out in a detailed agJCemCnt readted after lengthy negotia- · the Russians on the ground,,h~ving seen the KLA up a lit·
lions in Helsinki, Finland, on June 18. II is now clear, how- Ue close and personal, ,.that rnaytle the seaors they picked
ever, that disagreements remain.
weren't the most convenient sectors fo r the Russian forces
"There has been some mative reinterpretatiim of the to be in," Oark said.
.'
·•

Area July 4th
MIDDLEPOJn'
Parade line up on

woman
accused of star1ting her-child

"

COLUMBUS (AP) - A grand jury has indicted a mother accused of
starving her 4-year-old disabled daughter so severely lhat the
weighed just lS..pounds when her mother took the_girlto the hospital two
,, . .
.
weeks ago.
· Renee Bunthoff, 26,· of Lancaster, was charg~d T)lursday with .child
endangering and failing to care for a functionally impaired person, acc1ord··l
ing to the Fairfield County prosecutor's office.
· · ,.
Police say Buntht&gt;ff either didn 'I feed her daughter Btitney for sc:veral
weelcs or fed her just enough to allow her to survi'\:e· Bunthoff said shefollowed her doctor's orders in feeding lhe , !=-~ild.
.
Britney requires lOla! em beca11se she has a:rebral palsy and cannot
alk. ._, ,... . -· .~~
lliPeaJ;OI' ·~
-·_ -;..-·
..•..
·" .
had lost a tl1ird of her llojfy weight between the t!mc of her last
checkup
8 and June 20 when 'i'e was taken io Fairfield Medical Center ·in Lancaster, about 30 miles southwest of Columbus.
Her doctor said the girl had a "complete breakdown of the body, ~ue to
malnutrition." She also had sores on her, back, a sign that she hadn't been
moved in months.
Britncy was releO,.ed from .the hospitall!fSI weekend into the care df Fair·
tiel~ County Children SerVices.
.
',
·
·
Bunthoff faces qp to si&gt;&lt;' and-a-half years in prisotl ' if convicted of 9oth·
charges and fines tOtaling $15,000.

Patrol fires froofHJr accusfld of falsifying records I

'

L\MA (AP)- A State Highway Patroltrooper'accused of lying about
writing several traffic ticketS has been fired.
·
· .
Toney Wall; 37, a trooper since 1985, was.notified this week that he had
been fired, said U. John Born, a patrol spokesman'.
Wall was charged with falsification last month, a rni..Umeano&lt; oarrying . a maximum six monl~s in jail
and a $1,000 fine. ·He has pleaded
innocent.
Born said Wall, a trooper at the
Lihla post, can appeal his dismissal.
He 'has been disciplined before for
..being late to work and abusing sick
2 Sectlorut - 12 Pages
time.

U:IS Lm.
Parade line up at
Southern High School
12:45 Lm.
Flag raising . cereParade begins
mony by Racine American Lc;gion
7 P·ID·
Ceremonies
on Post602
Dave Diles Park
.. 1 p.m.
Parade
Flag Raising (American Legion)
2 p.m.
Every Thursday
,;Star Spangled Banner'' (Otad Dod- Band
son)
2:30p.m.
Antique tractor
Invocation (Rev. Vcmagayi: Sullivan) pull
Comments from Mayor Sandy'
S p.m.
RACO
Frog
Iannarelli
,
Jumping Contest
Comments from Commissioner Mick
6 p.m.
Kiddie
Tra~tor
Davenport
"'
Pull
'o·
Parade and Flower Contest Awards
6 p.m.
Harvest
Time
8 p.m.
MusiCal Program Band
.... ,.. ..
(rom Dooley and Paulette Harrison)
7 p.m.
.Country Remedies
. 9-.30 .,..__ ' . Fireworlcs ·
. 8 p.m.
~est Tune · ··
Events are ·s(ionsored by lhe Mid- ·
9 p.m.
Country R!"JJ~ies
dleport Community Ass!JCiation, .
All events with the exception of
with fiteworks .sponsored by the Vii- lh'e pMade and chicken barl!ecue will
!ag~"of Middleport and sul!"rvised by
be held at Star Mill -Park with enterthe Middleport Volunteef Fire tainment ott the Star Mill Park stage.
Department Concessions and other ·'
·
·
·
·
RU11AND
· :
vendors will be set up in Dave Diles
Park throughout the evening.
. ~tland's Fourth or July cdebralitformation is available from lion wUI be held on Saturday, J.uly
Myron Duffield at992-4197.
3.)
·
.
· RACINE
9 LtD. .
P~e line up on
11 a.m.
Oticken barbecue ' Depotlllld Brick Streets
at the fire department
· 9:30 Lm.
Par&amp;!le
5 p.m..
Ash Street ·
6 p.m: ·,

Eve~ts
11 Lm;
Parade awards and
announcements .
11:30 a.m.
Vocalists Tammy
Taylor and Bev Adkins
12:15 p.m.
Big Bend C log-·
gers
I p.m. ·
Entertainment
2 p.m. .
Karaoke
. 5:15p.m.
Dwight Icenhower
- Elvis impersonator
• 7 p.m.
Blind Side
11 p.m.
Fireworb
All events are sponsored by the
Rutland \blunteer Fire Department
and Ladies'Auiiliary.
The de)iarlni€l\t 's annual ox roas
,will be tield throughout the day in the
• 'park.
, . _ · ..
_ .· .. .
· Questions . ibmit. parade entries
·arid other events should contad 742;
.8311.
MASON; W.VA.
Mason, W.Va. w'ill sponsor.
parade on Saturday. The parade line·
up will be at 9 :30 a.m. -at the Faith
Baptist Oturch.
Those wishing to put fire department, EMS, floats. bands o·r other
entries should contact the Mason City
Building at (304) 773-5574. ·

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6
9&amp;10

11

will bl}

3

Sports
Wytber

4&amp;5

3

Lotter ies
OHIO
~
Pick 3: 5·3·1; Pick 4: 3-7-6-9 •
BuckeyeS: 3·7-14-18:21. · •W.VA. .

.

Dllily 3: 5-2-8i DaUy 4: 8-4-3-3
C 1999 Ohio Valle:t hblishing Co.

RECEIVE DONATION · - M•mbers of the
Cheater VoluntMr Rr• Department are ptetured rscelvlng 1!1· chac::k from th• Burlingham
.. Modern Woodm.n Camp 7230. The contrlbu·
lion totaling $3,520, rapraaent8 funds raised
through • M•morlal Day dlnn•r organized by
the Woodmen camp, and through the compa·
ny'a matching fund program. Pictured making

the presentation are Modern Woodmen mem·
bera Carrie Lambert, Kay Wllllama, Rosalie
Johnson, Alfiha Randolph, 0111 St. Clair, Chuck
Williams and Mlldrsd Zlagler, along with fireflghtera Larry Cleland, Charles Radford and
Elmer N-ell. The contribution will be used to
rapl•ce a ·tank on the department's tanker
truck.

Clinton boosts Palestinian aspirations
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clin·
ton is giving a boost to Palestinian aspirations as he prepares for a n.ew round of U.S.
peacemaking efforts in the Middle East.
With Israeli Prime Minister-elect Ehud
Barak due here in a few weeks, Ointon is
beginning to lay out his views· on some of
the thorniest issues, even while saying it
was up to lsr~el and the Arabs to make the
tough decisions.
His statement Thursday that Palestinian
refugees should feel free to live wherever
they liked was followed only a few hours
later by U.S. assurances to the Israeli
Embassy here that U.S. policy had not
changed.
Meanwhile, Clinton, at a joint news con ference with vi siting Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak, reiterated the support he
offered lut year in Gaza to Palestinians'
having their own .land - without directly
calling for a Palestinian stale.
•.

Continued In "Eastern L:ol!ai "
•·
on page 3

In J~rusalem, Barak said in a statement
that Clinton's remark about the Palestinian
.refugees was " not acceptable."
"This is apparently a misunderstanding,
and the (Clinton) administration should clar·
ify its position and correct it," Barak's state ..
rnent said.
If Israel and the Palestinian Authority
manage to reopen nego~iations, the refugee
issue could be one of the toughest, possibly
rivaling Palestinian demands for a state with
its capital in Jerusalem.
The Arabs contend Israel forced local
Palestinians to flee when the Jewish state
was established more than a half-century
ago .
Thousands living in refugee camps lin
Arab lands are demanding a right to return.
If they did, it could have a major impajl on
the character of ihe Jewish slate.
After Ointon's remarks. the U.S. admin istration went into explanation mode.
"The American side has made very clear
to Israel that the posi tio n of the United

States has not changed alld that the question
should be decided by the parties themselves,
in the framework of final :status negotia,
tibns," said Israeli embassy spokesman
Mark Regev.
In addition, he ·s aid, the embassy was
assured "that America will support an
agreement reached between the parties on

the issue."
"We now have a real chance to move the
peace process forward in the Middle East,"
Clinton told reporters after he and Mubarak
met for more than two hours in the Oval
Office and over lu"ch in the While House
residence.
.
Mubarak, for his part, offered to hold
separate talks with Barak, Syrian President
Hafez Assad and Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat.
" We remain most willing and determined
to do all.we can," he said in asserting the
role of moderating force thal 'Egypt assumed
20 years ago 'when it became the first Arab
·
state to make peace wi th IsraeL

the same ones that prQiluce jet skis.
Dealer!i have been sell ing personal
watercraft since the early J980s.
" It is only natural that motorcycle
dealers offer lxlih pieces of equipment
fur sale," Carey said. '_'C urrc~\ law
mahdates th at al l dealers have separate ·
buildings/facilities in orde r to sell dif·
ferent products. If taken literally. most
motorcycle and boat dealers would be
. v1o
. Iatton,
. "
m
L
.
..
The Senate made several changes
to the ,bill, incl uding:
.
• O ari fyi ng the use of placards or
ta'gs, sim ilar to a ,dealer tag for car5
when they ·are al an auto body shop,
when deal ing with the amount and
type of business perfom1ed in an auto
body shop.
• Requiring clerks of courts to
relaJl. waten....,af1 or outboard motor
title
t seven years.
•
fining ·a '"'atercraft d(laler ~t.;;

At the same time, Mubarak called fo r a
suspension of Israeli selllements o n the
West Bank and in Gaza; where the Palestinians envision having a state, and he sharpl y
critici zed Israel for retaliating to a Hezbo lan y rson who ts regular!) e~gaged
l&lt;~h rocket allack by bombing south ern
in the busi nes.• of manufacturing, sellLebanon.
"Such actions only polson the atm os- ing. displaying, offering for sale· or
phere in the region, " ~e said at a joint ne ws dealing in vessels al an est&amp;blishcd
pl ace of busi ness. .
conference with Clinton .
• Excluding franchises or dealers of
- "They create an erosion of the peo pl e's
new
farm equipment or lawn and garconfidence in the process at a time when we
den
equipment.
such as an all -purpose
are working hard to encourage the parties to
vehicle, from the provisions of this
take confidence-building measures ."
legis
Iat ion.
Clinton said he would prefer waiting to
The bi ll now goes to the governor
talk •to Barak before making hi s own views
public. But responding to questions, the .for his approval.
Additionall y. Carey's House Conpresident provided some insight into thi s
curre'nl Resolution 21 was recently
thin ing.
passed by the Se nate and it became
F r the first time , Clinto n spoke in s uplaw immediately. HCR 21 urges the
pur of Palestinian re fugees,
. federal government to reject th e use of
' I wo uld lik e il if the Palestinian peopl e
t free and were free to 1!'\Je wherever they Tem porary Assistance for Needy
Families (fANF) block grants to offli ke, wherever they 1wan t to live," he said .
set new spending.
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The Eas te rn Loca l -S&lt;;haol ·
Bo ard . appr oved se ve (al' per,
sonnel ma tte rs w he n they me t
in s pe ci al se ssio n on· Wednesda y. •·
.,
· The boa rd a pproved ·Joyce
H i II as E lement ary S tu qe nt
C o uncil Adv isor and Fres hman
Class Advi so r atid Te resa
Lemons . a s S pecifi c Lea rn ing
Disabilities T ea c her o n. a oneyear contract. Katr ina Spurlock
was approved ·as a s ub stitu .t e
c o ok and c us tod ian. '
'
T he bo ard 'accepted the resignatio ns of Da rl ene · Reed, bus
driver, G lend a Be11e du m, cook,
and Margie Bene du rn, Custodi an , a ll. due to le tire ment. The .
resignallon ·o f Kin,. H!lwe ll as
instrumental mu sic instructor
w as also aq:e pted .
Professional g ro.w th s ti pend s

ufacturers who make motorcycles are

~

E!!llm•lm
Local

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Ohio Sj; nate changes tQ legisfatio n
codifying a common practice conduct·.
ed at motor dealerships around the
state have been approved by the
House ofRepresentat ives.
'HouSe BiU 3Q6. sponsored by State
Rep. John A. Carey, would ,benefit
motorcyde"dealcrs by clartfying that
they may continue to sell personal
watercraft at their dealerships.
Carey, R-Wellston, said most man-

Today's Sentinel
.

'

.Watercraft ·dealership
bill goes to governor

Good Afternoo n

ealendn
!;;lasslneds
Comics

Eastern Local
School Board
makes' P.ersonnel
.
.
moves

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Friday, July 2, 1999

Commentary

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

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The Daily Sentinel The· battle for· medical privacy

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
AeRCIIted Pr- Writer

At this point,. it's
. . ·
.(
.
unlikely
there'll even be a
'In response. McDermott mtroduoed a bil that
Rep. Jtm McDermoll, D- Wash ., was trained as
vote.
Congress
fac:es an
for ,Glngress. But ' would give patients the ?ght to have their medical
a physician long before 'he
111 Court St., Po!Mroy, Ohio
to pass a
August
deadline
his 111edical training barely prepared him for the. rp:ords kept confidential. That was four. years
740 9112-2115«1 • Fu: 9S12-21ll7
story that launched htm on a four-year crusa4e f~ • ago, and he's still waitin!l for the firs! h~ng on privacy bill or else Health
medtcal po;ivacy.
the i~e .. ~e~ have Introduced ~urul~ mea- and Human Services SccCommunity NewspaP!tr
Inc.
It was a New York Times anicle about a boy sures- wtth stmtlar results. 1'he leading'btll n~l relary Donna Shalala will
who had been dtagnosed with a mild form of mus- now is a Senate measure sponsored by Sen. Jtm be allowed to write her
.
cular dystrophy A battery of tests had I'&lt;Jnfirmed Jeffords, R-Vl ' On four occasions ~ince May, a own • privacy-protection
ROBERT L WINGETT
rules.
GJngress
could
always
extend
the
deadline,
that he had the disease -- and his family was IJiso committee meeting has been scheduled to clcbale
Publisher
tested as a ~utionary measure.
the bill, but eliCit time the meetin&amp; has been can- but that means bridging deep divisions be!W~n
those who have a vested interest in the current
1
Not long afterwards, the father received a can- celled
,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
and those who want to protect patient prisystem
Controller
G1-a1 llan-sl"f'
cellallon noiice in the mail from his car Insurance.
So far, nobody in Congress is paying much
vacy.
He had no moving violations or other infractions, attention. "The reality is, there is no big public
yet nevertheless he was judged·unfit
car insur- outcry on this 1ssue," says a Jeffords aide. "No . 1ben there are those who argue Jefford's bill
'
n.Sentirwlw I
ance. It turns out the insurance company had deluge. If there is no public impetus, it will get would do litde to protect patients even if it does
..._ ,._,....,. ptJtJ....., or'--] Ja.w 1M bNl ,_,.. ol
'Nd
pass, because il forces patients to waive confidenfound out about the genetic muscular dystrophy typecast as a partisan measure."
,..twr.~ . . . . ,.., .. .,... EM:h llhould,.,.. • .,. .....
affecting h1s 'i""· Even' though t~,e
~....... .w~ .,,.,.. ,_,.,..,.,... s,.dtr • --.w """-•
tv •,....
.,... .,.,_ arr ,.,__'*IIID: ....,_. fo , . editor, n. Sentinel, If I Coutf st.
father showe&lt;j no symptoms, that
e~o.st--~
P
0)'. OIUaM57U; or, FAX fa T•~1S1.
was enough for the nervous compaHU~
,
ny to drop htm as a client
.
This case, while unusual, is not
unique Most Americans may
assume that theu medtcal histories
are kept pn~ate, yet such info,rmaHei'C are excerpts from editorials m-,newspapers from around the United lion is readily available to a whole
States:
host of ootsiders -- from police
detectives
to pharmacists '"d insur1
. President Ointon proposes thai Americans avert a looming crisis in their ance companies. For example,
)lbility to fund Medicare by expanding the coverage the program pwvtdes.
many drug store chains sell their
: H~ wanll' to offer prescription drug benefits to 39 milhon people.
customer lists to drug comp'lflies,
This is the kind of cynical, non-senous' Jll:oposal the Amencan (!&amp;&gt;pie who use that information to market
have Ibm;ted to expect from'one of the most fecl&lt;less members of the Baby new drugs Insurance companies
Boom generation.
·
use such information to screen out
Qearly,' it will be Ilp to the responsible members of the generatiOn to patients'who f1!3Y have comphcated
medical htstories. .or to deny coverarrarige a health' care system their children can,afford to finance.
The presideni is to outli~e his proposal to save Medicare from bankrupt· age for certltin illnessc;s. Many of
cy, and realleadershtp on- the i.Sue would ·be most welcome. '·
theSI' groups are now lobliying Con·
At the current rate ·of spending, the program ;owill go banliiupl. '!'ithin ,the gress to make sure their acceS!; to
decade.
.
such sensitive information is . preThe baby boom generation r::an have the same Medicare coverage their served.
parents now enjoy only by imposing staggenng taxes on thetr own children. •
The case of the cancelled car

you don 'I have."

ran

Holdings,

"'*'...... .,.

ditorial views

1• - ler.- 1.

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· l eo~-JW-1

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June 30 • Los Angeles Times, on Medicare:

s....,

June 23 • The Couner, Findlay, OhiO, on Insurance:

Right now, two panisan issues are hqlding
things up. Democrats want a bill that ~els a federal 5landard fo1 the privacy of juvenile medical
records.
Republicans want to leave that up to inllividual .
states, so as not to interfere with laws in some
states thatJequire parents to be told if their child
has an' abortion. Democrats also want the righl to
sue for punitive damages, ;which Republicans

(APJ -

Jl

.-T-h-"--D--.-1--'-- - --,
e ai y 5entine1'.

·ette r to the £ d ••to·, r

(USPS 213-960)
•
•
Common!., Nnnpop" Holdlop.In&lt;.

I

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ance.

Daily Sentmel, 111 teoun St , Pomeroy, Oh10
'

-4~769

I

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Reader Services

ova .........................................3~

Correction Polley

One Valley ....... :.....................38 1.
Peoples .................................. 28
Prem Flnl.. ....: .............., .........13'/,
Rockwell ................................ .62
AD/Shell ........ .......... ............. 60 ~.

Our main concern In all storks Is to be
accunk. If you know or a-. riTUr In a
stol')', all tbe newsroom at (740) 99l·
21!5. We will check. your lnfonnatlon
nd ntake a C:OIT'Ktlon Uwarranttd.

Sears .....................................47 ~.

News Departments

Shoney's ............................... 2'1•
FirstStar ......... :...................... 29~
Worthlngton .......................... 14'io
• r
•-T
Stock reports are today's
10:30 a.m .. quotes provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Tbe main n•mbCr Is 992·2155. Dcpan·
ment ntendons are:
Gnenl Manap:,: ......... ............ .Ext. 1101
Newt:.. ............ . .. .................. ,Exl. 1102
or ExL 1106

Other Services
Adnrtlslng. ....... ,

......... . . Ext. 1104

Circulatioa ........................... ......Ext., 1103
Classlfted Ads...........
.. ... .Ext. 1100

'

- Announcements: __...!

Entertainment planned
An eventng mustcal show under the direchon of Tom Dooley and
Paulette Hamson wtll be presenled .as a pan of Middleport 's July 4 celebrahon. The program will begm at 8 p.m. on the stage at J?ave Dtles Park

·ACS board, captains ·
The Board of Directors of the Meigs County U ntl of the Amencan
CanOl!• Society will meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs County
Library Conference Room. The Relay for .Life _will be discussed, and a
team captains' meeting will be held prior to the meeting at 6 p.m.

·sutton Trustees

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The regular monthly meeting of the Sutton Township Trustees will be
held on Monday at 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Yillage Hall. Tile townsh ip bud..
get for 2000 will be available for inspection.

Sacred HearUce cream social
The Sacrep Hean Catholic Church will hold an ice cream SOCial Sunday, 2 p.m . on the Pomeroy parkmg lot. Ice cream, ptes, cakes aud soft
drinks will be available. The event is being held as part or the church 's
150th anniversary jubilee celebration.

Producers urged to report crops
Producers were remmded today thai m order to be eligible for loan
.. dl;.ficiency payments and any type of disaster program they will need to
repbrt their crops to the farm service offic&lt;; by July 15. Accordmg 10
Davt~' W. Fox, Farni .se'rvice Agency, those ,that are enrolled tn the CRP
program also must report. As with most programs husbands and wtves
may sign the report for each o,ther.
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ABLE closed Monday

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Meigs County Adult Baste &amp; Ltleracy Educatwn (AJlLE) learni'ng
centers will be closed Monday in observance of Independepce Day. All
centers will reopen for normal houis Tuesday. For mme information about
ABLE and GED programs, call 992-5808. •

Artisan meeting planned
A meeting Will be held Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. in the Metgs County
Counhouse for local artisans interested in being a part of the Meigs Co un- ·
ty Appalachian Artisan Grant Project. Foil those needmg more Information, or unable to attend, call Justin Diddle at 949-2749 or 992-2895 . ..

'Friend' admits he blew
whist/~. on escaped prisoner
KEI"IEUNG (AP) -A friend of Brown.'
Kenneth Ginter's alerted the FBI that ·
"And be says, 'You know, Greg,
'Ginter might actually be Michael they say everybody's got a twm out
Wayne Brown, a convicted killer who there' ... and at that ume I blew it off. ·•
~ped from JU1 OklaJ:oina prison 15
When Gmter began actmg suspt·
years ago.
,
ciously, Gray sail! he called the FBI.
Gregory Gray of'Xettenng said be
The FBI confirmed that Gray's call
saw a photo of Brown on the tnggered Its pursuit •of .\]inter, who
"Unsolved Mysteries" Web site while admined to authorities that ~e was
cruiSing the Internet a few weeks ago Brown when he surrendeered ln the
and told Ginter about the photo.
Oklahoma State Penitent1ary in
Gray, 37, said that he had known McAlester, Okla, on Tuesday.
.
Ginter, who later ., was identified as
Brown, 41, escape.J from a pnson m
Brown, for several years and that his Taft, Okla., on Dec. 4, 1984 He had
wife, Delores, wori&lt;CX,I at Brown's ~L been sentenced to death in 1975 for
Yideo store.
·
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shootmg an msuran&amp; agent dunng a
"I'd been looking at the page and he burglary, but the sentence was oommutcified to talk Ill my wife to see if she ed to"life in prison.
ceuld work that nigh~" Gray satd In an
Gray said he hesuated bnefly before"•
interview publisheq~oday in the Dayton cilling the FBI.
"l\ctually, you know,! really had to
Daily News. "And when I had him on
.the phone I said, 'Kenny, buddy, there's think about this for a while because he's
a guy that looks Jus! like you on the a nice guy," Gray said. "And then I had
Internet. But this guy's Michael Wayne to put my~lf m the VIctim's shoes."

Eastern Local ..·~
Gibbs were approved, as were
were approved , for Bryan · several transfe'rs and advanced
Durst, Daitiel Thomas and appropriations 'f or 1999, temporary appropri.ations for. the •
Scoti Wolfe.,
lq o_ther action; the bo~rd year 2000 and final approp riaapproved Tadd Kiille and lions for ~he year I999.
The ,board voted to forgive
Christopher Garlow as open
enrollment students.
. " three financial advances: high,
The final payments fo~ Gen- school p'rincipal fund, athletic'
era·! Temperature Control ana fund and school store fund, and
V.argo, Cassady, Ingham and approved th.e purchase of'a new
hoi water holding tank for th~
high school.

·

Am Ele Power ....................... 37'.1.
Akzo ...........: ....................... :.. 42~
AmrTech ............................... 71 '!-.
Ash 011. ................................. 41~.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 56'/o
Bank One ...........................~.61 '!.
Bob Evans ............................ 19"i.
Borg-Warner ......................... 55,.
Champion ...............................7~
Chjlrm Shps ........ :........ :..........6~
Clly Holding .......................... 28),
Federal Mogul. .............. , ..... 51"1.
Gannett ................................. 74'/o
Kmart.;..................................... 17
Kroger ................................. tl28'~"'
Lands End .......................... .46"1.
Ltd ........................................ 45'~.
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 18

A Pomeroy baseball player was transpOrted to Cat&gt;eli-HunllngtOI,l Hos-,
pita! in Huntington, W.Va. after be wu _slruct m the head by a ball during a practice session on Thursday eVC!Img.
·
Nick Detweiller, son of AI and Kim Detweiller of Pomeroy, was participating in practice for tbe ,'\merican Legion baseball prognm at Meigs
High School when the accident took place.
.
.
A spokeswoman for the hospital reported Fnday that Detwetller was
treated and released from the hospital yesterday evening.
He is a JUnior at Metgs Htgh School.
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· "The only reason for this surplus is
because taxpayeiS are paying too
much, which is why they deserve a
refund," said Rep. Bill Archer, R·
Texas, chairman of the Ways and '
Means Committee. "If we don't cut
taxes now and Jhe money st~ys in
Washington, the politicians surely will
spend it."

Nc:~per A.saoCiataon.
'.
~ttr: Send add~U~ 'contdlbm 1o The

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Continued from p•ge 1

investments, as well as breaks to
encourage personal savings for retiremen! and education and to enable
more po:ople to affor&lt;! health insur-

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ship in Ohio. .
They want them to require
trenching - digging a hole and
burying the mortar or firing apparatus - to prevent the devtces from
changing duection or hppmg over.
Independence and several other
cities, including Twinsburg and
Lakewood, have changed their
local laws to make fireworks shows
safer.
A reporNrom the state fire mar-,
shal said that 'Wqoden racks holdmg
the launcfiulg tubes at the lndepen- .
dence fireworks s~ow last year
were staked to the ground and fastened together with plasti.c ties.
PlastiC ties are now banned In
Ohio.

'" taxes on income, inheritances ' and

Published every afternoon, Motidly ~through
Friday, 111 Coort St , Pomeroy, Oh1o, by the
Obao V.lley PUbhshmJ COmpany. SeCond clw
postage ptid at Pomeroy, Ohao. · .
Member: The Associated Prus and the Oh1o

Remembering his friend

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a

---Today In History---

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a

· Jun·e30 •The Dal'ly Oklahoman, Oklahoma CHu,·on taxes·.

..

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By ..uRT ANDERSON
House Budget Committee. "But we're Instead of :having a firew 0 ~ks disAP 10-WIIIII ···•• 4
'•
-not going to"'~e all of these extiB play today, the city is dedicating a
When resources if we think we have a legit~; new bridge in memory of a 12-yearWASHINGTON
Congress returns from r_ts Founh of mate w~y to
reform M~tcare.
old gul killed by an errant mortar
July n:cess, the compehhon will be
Democrats, meanwhtle, contend
fie"': on how to divide nearly SI tril- thiu huge tax cuts would ,do nothing to
u;ce Sem iosk was killed a
lion m ~dget surpluses among tax erase lhe pubhc debt and coul~ severeear ~ toda wh{n a S-inch marcuts, Mplicare and more government ly hamper key programs rangmg from .Y
g
Y
spending.
education 10 natimw parks, which are tar shell, launched ~rom a to~pled
The Congressional Budget Office's subject to budget spending caps fireworks rack flew Into the mtddle
latest furecast is for a total surplus over imposed during times of federal of the crowd '" Independence, a
10 years of $2.9 trillion, including deficits.
·
Cl~~ela~d suburb.
$996 billion that is not earmarked for
"We· think 'this tax cut proposal is
I c~mge_ when I hear ~r see fireSocial Security.
totally irresponsible and misplaced in wor~s, satd !.0~1 Semtnsky, the
'' Some Republicans want all that terrnsofitsgoals,"said House Minor- gul s mother... us· the only thmg
non-Social Security money used to,cut ity Leader Dick Gepbardt, D-Mo.
!h'at ,.,;ares me.
.
•
taxes- far abov~ their irutial plan for
But GOP House leadeiS vowe'd
Smc~ Lacey dte~, her parents
$778 billion tax cut- but otheiS say Thursday to p~ ahead the week of h~ve lned to get stncter fireworks
Medicare changes should ccim rst, July ,12 with a massive tax cut even laws enact~d.
•
including new assistance for
'p- though many GOP moderates, paiticEarher thts year, they wrote let. bon drugs as sought by President in- ularly in the Senate, believe it is too
ton.
large and Democrats say its sheer size
"VI'e may put a little bit more practically begs a presidential veto.
The J(}:.year package outlined in
money in tJtx cuts," said ReJl&lt;dohn
Kasich, R-Ohio, chairman of the , general terms would include cuts m

health care foregone, small warning signs are ignored and minor illnesses
allowed to become costly cnses. It's a problem for families because unpaid
me&lt;lical bills are a leading cause of personal bankruptcy. And it's a problem
·ror the nation because uncompensated care is an unfair burden on doclors,
hospitals and taxpayers.
·
These problems cry out for remedy. And happily, a tfipartisan remedy is
, available.
.,
,
We think CQngress should create a new refundable tax credit to enable all
• Americans 10 buy decent heath coverage.

Superll)odels tin you·r street!·

T.....,..

COLtJMBUS (AP)- No sooner was a gay rights flag pulled
down at the Statehouse and burned
than lawmakers ran their own
ideas up the flagpole to prevent a
simtlar event from happening
agam.
The disturbance Sund,ay, at ,
which two protesters were arrest' ed, was a reminder that the Capuol
Square Rev1ew and Advtsory
Board, whic~ oversees events
around the Statehouse, doesn't
have a policy for who can or cannot fly a flag. That may change
soon. ,.
"This event has really f'?rced
the issu~" board spokeswoman
Gina 'Langen sald.Thutsday,
·Sen . Gene Watt~, R-Dublin,
wants to limit flags flown at the
Statehouse to those of the United
States, Ohio, other city an'd municipal flags,• flags of other· nations
and the POW/Ml~ (lag.
.
Rep. Rex Damschroder, R-Fremont,
introduced • legislatiOn
Wednesday prohibiting any' flags
other than those of Ohio and the
United l'tates to be flown without
the approval of the governor.
Rep. Jack Ford of Maumee. the
Oemocratic leader . in the House'
and a member of the advisory
board, believes the board should
keep the authorit'y to decide whtch
flags , are appropriate · and which
. aren ' I.
• Watts said the issue can be handled wtthout legishihon. He's pro·
posed allowing the committee that
oversees flags for Veterans Plaza
on the east side of the Statehouse
to oversee all Statehouse flags.
Wans believes the advisory
board would react favorably to a
proposal from that comminee to
limit the types of flags flown.
"I don't want the Statehou"se
grounds to become a battleground
between opposing ideolgical
forces, " Watts said. '
The ,office of former Gov.
George Voinovich periodica,lly
requested that flags of various

groups, including sport$ teams and
nauons. be flown. spokesman
Mike Dawson satd.
"It wasn't a big issue. Mosllfil
was self-iniliated." he said..
Ltmitmg flag flymg to governmental groups is legal, said Raymond Vasvari, legal director for
the American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio. But he said it
would mt.,. an important phtlosophical point.
,
Hfree spe_cch is contrOv~rsial.
It's supposed to be," :Vasvari said
"If we all !WI along and tbed the
official line, we should just pack
' our bags and move to Iraq. The
f9unding fathers wanted us to lolerate dissent, to tolerate unpopular
ideas."
l;wo of the flag protesters
attend High Street Baptist Church.
Its leaders are trying to decide
wh~ther to submit an application
to fly a church ' flag at the Statehouse .
The Rev, Charles Mainous satd
the church wants to see if the state
will treat Christians the same way
• II treated Stonewall Columbus,
which obtained the permit for
Sunday's parade.
Mainous said his church resents
the ability of Stonewall, a ~ay­
righ!S group, to fly a flag oil pub-.
he property.
"God destroyed Sodom and
Gommorah because of that," . he
said. "I sure don't want to see .
God destroy Columbus, Ohio."
Jeff Redfield, executtve director of Columbus Stonewall, satd
he could respect a decision that
barred all but governmental flags
at the Slatehouse.
But he said he wouldn't necessanly agree with it betause it
would lump his organization in
with groups such as Nazis or the
Ku Klux Klan.
·
"We keep getting compared to
groups who are aboul hate and
violence," he said. "Our sroup is
about equality. It's not about tryiog
to take any rights away. It's about
claiming o'ur just ~ights in the Constitution.

Tax cuts, Medicare and program Parents·want striCter fireworks
laws ·after _daughter killed year ago
spending
competing
for
surpiU$.
' village and townlers lo each ctty,
,..
INDEPENDENCE (AP)

gressional attempts to expand coverage. Imagine what will happen come the

l

...._..

Expect a hot and humid holiday weekend in Ohio.
Forecasters say high temperatures will be in the low lo mtd 90s from
Saturday lhrough the wc;ekend.
,
.,
There is a chance of showeiS or thunderstorms in the northern part of
the state Saturday. Otherwise, it will be fair until early next week.
Low temperatures tonight will be ~5 to 70 and in the low 70s for t~e
rest of the weekend.
·
The record high temperature at the Columbus wealher station for this
date was 98 set in 1898. The I'ecord low was 48 set in 1988.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:04. Sunrise Saturday will be at 6:07. •
,
Wealber forecast: •
· Tonight ... Moslly clear and muggy.' Lows in the lower 70s. Light and
•
variable wind.
Saturday... Hazy suns~ine, hot and humid. Highs in the mid 90s
Saturday night...Mostly clear and m·uggy. Lows. in the lower 70s.
Extended forecast:
Fourth of July... Hazy, hot and humid. Highs in the mid 90s.
Mqnday... Haty, hot and humid. Lows in the lower 7~ and highs in the
mid 90s.
Tuesday ... Hazy, hot and humid. Lows in the lower·70s and highs in the
mid 90s.

ttality when signing up for health insurance ..
For McDermott, however, it's a simple choice:
protect the patients, or protect the insurers. "The
problem with some people is they think they can, •
like Solomon, cut the baby in half," says McDermott.
• "In this case, you can't •cut this baby i!' half,
You ultimately are gomg to make one group
(patients or insurer'S) unhappy and unprotected."
Copyright I tile, Unlt8d future Syndl~e, Inc.

'
S
'II
By Dl•n Vujovlch
and student loans."
•
sity in eight years, the best estimates 1 _ -- Yes, I 00
, a month wt get ~ou
Just because school is o~l for the
Because the cost of higher educa- show his or her education will cost "'ll{lewhere. If you started savmg
summer doesn't mean you can for- - 11o'h can easily equal -·if not exceed around $55,000.
,
$100 a month -when your child was
~·
get about funding John-John's future ·· the cost of buying. a home or
·- You can finance up to tJte total born, and that mon~y earns 10 per·
college educahon.
condo, planning on where those dol-· cost of your chi!d's college ~duca- cent a year, the. account would be
Facing the costs of a college edu- Iars are going to come from is mor~ tion· via your own IRA -- penalty- wo~h app~~ximately $50,000 when
cation can be daunting. With four- ' importanl today than ever before.' free -- provided that it's more than the child reaches age. 18.
year college expenses running into B.. t if you're new at the parent game six years away and that you will be
To learn more about the- VariQus
the tens of thousands of dollars or at long-term financial planning, it under age 59 when taking the distri· ways of funding your child's college
"I~
today, just imagining what they'll makes ..goo(l sense to find out now ' bution. Using a Roth IRA, you're education, including programs like
(\lew f~dcral budget surplus projeo;tions support conservatives' contenhon jump to in 10 or 15 years is enough about the various ways to invest for able to use only ,tlte 'money that's custbdi~l accounts, the Education
•' ,
that the ttme has never been better for a !;&gt;road tax cut.
to make many parents shudde•. Or future educatiodal purposes. That's invested -- not !he earnings --tax- IRA and the HOPE Tax Credit, ·
To no one's surprise, Bill Clinton doesn ' t agree. To him the•e are 'always worse, not even think straight -- where Mosaic Funds can help.
and penalty-free to fund your child's Mosaic Funds has created a 36-page
many reasons not to cut taxes. (We don't count his small, "tar_geted"tax cuts which, according to a recent survey,
Aci;ording to their research:
college education -- with the same booklet tilled "MosaK:'~~o .Guide -to "
is what many parents are doing.
. ·- ·Most states sponsor a tax- time frame and age provisions as College Financing.11' It's I free . Jusl
rewardmg behavior pre-approved by btg government as general lax rehef.)
A survey conducted by Mosatc advantage collej!e savings plan. To above.
call (888) 670-3600 to request it.
Clinton's problem IS a gfdwmg number of folks on Capitol Hill are having trouble defending the anti-tax cut position in the shadow of growing fed· Funds in Madison, Wis., shows that find put rrore about those programs,
eral revenues.
·
parents have a tendency to be overly the quickest silurce is online at
The CongressiOnal Budg~t Office was expect~d to raise its surplus pro- optimistic · and ·not very realistic www.collegesavings.org. From that
jections for the current fiscal year (from $111 billion to $120)&gt;illion) and the about where they . will fmd the home page you'll be able to click on By The Auocllttd Pr..l
.
next (from $133 billion to $150 billion). On Monday the White House pro- money for college'el&lt;penses
your home state and Jearn more /
Today is Friday, July 2,the 183rd day of 1999. There are 182 days left in
~ jected a $5 btllion surplus for fiscal year 2000 over and above Social Secu.Larry Tabak, vice president at about the available programs and ' the year.
·•
rity revenues
Mosaic Funds, says that of the 60ll ~ppropriate contact sources.
On·July 2, 1776,the Continental Congress passed a resolution saying that
-- Education IRAs are worth "these United' Colonies are, and of right, ought to be, ~ree and lndejlendent
Clinton said he will study proposals from conservative Republicans and parents~urveyed, all with children.
Democrats to cut taxes, but we suspect he'll find ways to spend the money under the age of 12 and all planning investigating. ;I'hese are custodial States."
·
long before he stgns on to broad-based lax rehef. ...
•:.
to send them to college, most fig- accounts created specifically forthe
,_On this'date:
.
ure\1 that the No I source Of income purpose of paying for qualifter;l
In 1566, French astrologer, physician and prophet Nostradamus dted in
~r future college ed~cation would higher educatio_n expenses Jo! .the Salon.
·
/ be from "free money," such as account beneficiary. The maximum
In 1881, President Garfield was shot by. Charles J. Guiteall at the Washgran~ and scholarships. "Way dOwn contribution one cl"' make into an ington railroad station; Garfield died the following September.
of the list of possible (money) Education IRA IS $500 per year. , , - In 1890, Congress p3ssed the Sherman Antitrust Act.
-- Need an idea of what tomorIn 1926, the United Stales Army Air Corps was created.
,
' ·
sources were savings and loans,"
I recently learned of the death o f Carroll Teaford.
In 1937, avia~melia Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan disappeared
We go back to the early 30's, when we lived within a block of e~ch other says Tabak. "In reality, it's just the row's college plStS will be? If .you
near Pine Hilt·We spent a lot of time together dunng our growin~-up years. opposite, wilh most college educa· have a 10-year-old child who over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make the first round-the-world
.
·•·
·
Carrolllikcd'to be around machmery There was an old fellow nanied Shorty ' lion ' fundmg commg from savings expects to go to a home-state univer- flight lit the equator. '
Smtih, who hved on Vine Street m Racme.
Shorty and his wife, Dolly, would push their Model ,T out of the garage
and ask Carroll to s t~rt it and drive around town to mak~sure It was running
right. Of course, thts IS JUSt what Carroll wanted.
.
When assured that it was okay, Shorty would head f r Pomeroy.
By tan Shoales .
•
·
in Shady Dell, why are they so authentic Givenchy, cost three thousand dollars,
He felt that if humans needed rest, so did ·cars. Any old-timers will
Tlie June 27 issue of the ' New York Times
gussied up?
and their hair will be small, not big). Supermod·
. remember seeing Sorty at the Park m Syracuse, giving old Lizzie a rest. · Magazine featured, in its "Style" section, a gagStill,
this
may
indicate
a
els will become Keno girls, waitresses in coffee
.,
A couple of belhngs I attended wllh Carroll - when Pizzle Wolfe and gle of models sporting till! latest in fashion" while
trend. The sort of people who shopfti, motel maids, baggers in grocery stores,
Maurice Lott got marned --,. nqt to ea~h other of course
follow .these sorts of fashmn and security guards in art museums.
lolling about sullenly in a trailer parJ&lt;: The prose
" Carroll was no shrinking . violet. He was always m the middle of the that accompanies the pictures, by Bob Morris,
spreads slavishly may have
The high cost of outfitting these women, how~~ ·
'
'
gave us a brief cullural overview of the trailer,
had enough of mod~ls loung- ever, will wreak havoc on the Amencan infra• ,We were in Boy Scouts together. Usually in August, we would go camp- mentioning the Lucy/Desi movie, "The Long,
ing in Belize, or sipping structure. Even though they themselves wtll be
ing. In 1938, we rode bicycles to Old Man's Cave near Logan. The next year, Long Trailer"; James Carville's remark re Paula
espresso in Paris while pre- underpaid, it will still cost thousands of dollars to
we went to Lake Alma, ne~r Wellston.
,
Jones, "Drag a hun~d dollar.; through a trailer
tending to read a book. They provide these models with silk voile fitted uniCarroll's dad, Delbert, had a dump truck a~d would come and ~au I all of park and there's no telling what you'll find";
may be demanding supe(-thin forms and customized hammered-gold ·badges.
our equipment home
•
"Pi nk Flamingos";.. owgirls"; "Lost mAmer- women in hyper-real Situations.
And lhe dry-cleaning costs will bankrupt mosl
When we were abtlut· 18, Carroll drove the truck to a gravel pit at Letart, ica"; the Airstream, Demi Moore; Roger Miller;
We may be seeing, In the near future: Super- mstitutions inside of a year, assuming these
where he and I shoveled a load of gravel.
and Jeff Foxworthy.
models on public transportation! We'll see them women' will even consent to wearing their outfits
In the late 1930's, he operated the proJector at the Racme movie house.
What was that all about? Beats me .
hanging on straps, gazing sensuously at mysteri- more than once.
.
, In 1942, we were putting up gravel at Racine. The company moved to
Maybe New York. m sptte of Its btlterness over ous puddles on the floor.
Sooner or later, there will be a. rebellion .
South Point. We stayed wtth them and got room and board in South Point. losing the NBA lttle, is finally trymg to cozy up to
Supermodels In laundromats! Smce none of Women named Madge and Latanya will demand
We would dnve home on Friday evening, and return on Sunday ntghl. One middle America. Maybe we'll soon see&gt;RVs parked their clothing is washable, h9wever, their behav- their old jobs. Lee's Press-On Nails will make a
Friday evening in October, we stopped at the Log Cabin Tavern near Mid- in Times Square. Whole blocks of Manhattan .wtll ior will be restricted to writhing on the folding comeback. Beehives and too much mascara \viii
ill~~ .
.
be razed to make room for double-wtdes. Tratlers tables, weanng dehcate evening wear and sporty become the rage.
The JUke box was playmg a song that I liked, called "When My Blue will become 'l.'l colorful and trendy as iMacs.
sunglasses. Supermodels at the mulliplex! Again,
Supermodels will go back to their discos, their
Moon Turns to Gold Again ." I still"play it.
But the models in the feature, sporting their since they have. to watch their figures, the gals prWine sandy beaches, their film festivals, their
I had a 1936 Ford and Carrollltked to dnve it.
thousand dollar skirts, dtdn 't seem to be enjoying will stand to one. side of the concession stand line, ~eroin .... And 1 say, "That's great!" There is no
Things came together well In the Summer of '42.
.
thetr newfound inobil1ty.' Of cou~, models never pouting.
o•
foom for supermodels at a barbecue. When I'm
1 met a gtrl and I believe Carroll met Eva at the square dance at the Ltght- seem to be having a good time. It's an unw,ritten
Supermodels at work! We'll see them digging sitting poolside at a motel in Chtco, nurstng a cold
house Tavern at old Lock 24 He would later marry her.
·
rule that models must look pou~y and tousled. In a ditches, driving c~bs, holding up "Slow!" signs at one, I don't want to see some; French babe with
My girl and I would stt m the back whtle Carroll would drive and Eva glamorous kind of way. But even . In the half- scenes of heavy highway construction, wincing sucked-In cheeks prancing&lt;about in her Enrico
would chaperone. It was the best of all worlds.
baked premise of this photo-spread, the models with jackhammers and sorting mail. They will Caveri. We weaf Capris around here chum. Here
We came home in early December, as I was due 19 go into the Army in were way on.the other stde of convmcmg. If they look fabulous.
in Leisureville, it's Old Navy all the way. We're
January. We went our separate ways but I would try to see him when I vis- were supposed to represent worktng class
The next phase of superrnodel-normalization WaiMart .people, you get the picture? Grab your
ited in later years I cannot remember ever having a cross word with Carroll. divorcees brooding In Bisbee, Ariz, on their way will be more subtle. Supermodels will slowly fill Gucei~ and scoot. Take your Johnny Vursahchays
He·was a comfor(Bble fnend .
,
_
back to the Big Apple from Reno, they were a lit- the fantasy roles previously take,n by the likes of and make ljke a tree · Ciao'
Floyd Clark tie too overdressed. If they're all alone out there Pamela Lee (except that their hot pants will be Copyrtgh11tlle NEWSP-'PEfl ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Portland, Or'!.

Cloudy

By The A11oclated Presa

s
t d f t
' d
t
•
nex;:~n~~~~cu~~~:~~·uninsuredisaproblembecausetoooftenitmeans
a;ve 0 ay or omor,r ow s e u.ca, ton
oppose.

Pl Cloudy

Hazy, hot, humid: typical
er for Fourth of July

~~u;~~~: h~~a~~;::'o':~'~r~~~~~~~

When the leg1sla1ion that created Medicare was enacted in 1965, doctors ambitious public-private effort to
depended more on surgery than drugs to treat serious ail'!lents like heart dis- map the human genetic makeup. In
ease and cancer.
time, the genome project wtll help
As Pr~stdent Clinton haS repeatedly pointed out, ~edtcal care has ·doctors test human DNA for genes
advanced m ways that Medtcare ,has nol. Today, 'prescnption drugs extend that predict various diseases. It's a
&gt; life S~S by decades.
. I
.
.
.
• po~~rful tool , still in its early'stages
That s why Clinton_ was nghl :uesday to o.utiine, a plan for .addmg a mod- ... but which could one-day revolutionize the way
e~l drug coverage,ophon to M~tc~r;- The bt~gesl benefit mtght be not the diseases are diagnosed, prevented and cured. But
duect payments bul Medtcare s pnce-bargatntng power wuh drug. makers, in the wrong hands. II could also spell trouble. \
who shudder at the prospect of volume dtscounls that ~?uld cut mto thetr
"Wat~hing the ljuman genome project devel,
•
.
•
,, ,
'
op, 1 realized that ultimately it could be the end or
record profits
the. insura~~e indus!ry as we knolil it," Meper. Congress should act now tli&gt; help the 43 million Americ.ans who have no molt says. Because tf the Insurance mdustry can
'
•
get a drop of your blood and do you• genetics they
health insurance.
The ranks of the uninsured are growmg by 100,000 a month. And this is can ... use that to ~reen out the things yo~'re likehappemng durulg a time of strong economic growth, despite continuing con- ly to have and msure you agamst the thmgs !hal

....

0 *··~~
""*'

June 28 • Charleston IJI. Va.) Daily Mail on Medicare:

•

0 -

\-

for

;w,.,.,..tD,.wlltor!Jom,.._CII'I•.._.,,.....,...
....,_.,.:to
•••===

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Controversy over gay - Local briefs:
rights flag may force Youth athlete Injured
Statehouse change

I

By~ Ancloinon Mid JM Moller

•

Th~ next re gu lar m ~eting
will be· held on Juiv 21 at 6:30
p.m : at the · Eastern Elementary
School cafetonum

7

SPR ING VAllEY ONEMA
('!l!')RQU IEJ5Wl51
446•4524 1ll'.oiJACKSONPIK[
(WED 6130-THURS 7/8/99
lOX OFFICI Will OPIN At 6:30 PM
•
FOW !VINING SHOWS, "'
11:30 PM FDA SAT &amp; SUN MATINEII

'

·Meigs EMS logs 10 calls
' Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded 10
calls for assistance Thursday Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:42 p._m., Salem Street, Rutland,
Joy Anderson, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
5:56 p m., Pomeroy Ptke, Nick
Deuwiller, Cabeii-Huntington Hospital vta helicop\l'r ambulance,
Pomeroy Volunteer F~re Department
assisted;
8:18 pm., Horner Hill Road,
molar-vehicle accident, Joey and
Billy Atwood, VMH, Rutland squad
• aS!;isted, Datsy Taylor and Shern
Gaston, Hol zer Medical Center, Rutland and ScipiO Township VFDs

,
SYRACUSE .
12·21 p.m., state Route 124,
Racine, motor-vehicle accident, Jtll
Burner, refused treatment, Racine
VFD assisted ..
JU;EDSVILLE
6:20 a.m., Swan Road, Ruth
Stetham. Camden-Clark Memorial
Hosp1tal.
RUTLAND
4:53 p.m ., leading Creek Road,
Belly Lemley, treated at the .scene,
Central Dispatch squad assisted;
6:44 p.m ., Salem . Street, Joy
Anderson, HMC;
.
7:51 p.m .. Village Man or Apartments, Middleport, Nina Dixson,
VMH, Central Dispatch squad
assisted.

WILD, WILD WEST (PG13)
7 15 &amp; 9'40 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1'15 &amp; 3'40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NI HT

STAR WARS EPISODE IPHANTOM MENACE (PG)
7'1)0 &amp; 9:40 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1.00 &amp; 3.40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

AUSTIN POWERS (PG13)
7'20 &amp; 9·20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1.20 &amp; 3.20

BIG DADDY (PG13)
7.00 &amp;9 10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 00 &amp; 3:10
THE GENERAl'S DAUGHTER (R)
7:00 &amp; 9:3C DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN I 00 &amp; 3.30 •
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

assi~tcd;

TARZAN (G)

11:18 p m. , Barefoot Hollow,
Middleport, Hugh Thompson.
VMH,
POMEROY
J I :35 p m., Pomeroy Police
Department, William Pacer, VMH.

WID WID WElT "''~ t16, 4:46, 7:16, 1:45
tcomo!Yi WI Smll,Kelt\ ijro ~
.

AND

NOlTING HILL

ME~ Walsh 1!0
~"

MONDAY NIGHT IS CAR LOAD

Nl!;HT· A"" VEHIC,ES $5 00

•

1·10 &amp; 9:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1.10 &amp; 3.00

SOUTHPARK (R)

ller Wi

MlllbtBes SbOWilll!....,.....y
ALL AOES, ALL TIMES $4.00

.
•(

7.10&amp; 9.100AILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1'10 &amp; 3' 10
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

'

�, I

Sports ·

The Daily Sentin~!

'
'

F-:lday, July 2, 1999

Fnc.y, July 2. 1•

Graf, Davenport, Tauziat advance to Winlbledon semifinals
JJ¥

•

5

STEPHEN WilSON
: WIMBLEDON, England (AP) S~ven-time champion Stcffi Grar
ncutralized the power hilling of
Venus Williams to win in three sets
Thursday and reach the semifinals on
another rainy day at Wimbledon.

HRs help .B rewers
roll past Cubs ·19-12
Scou Sanders.

Cincinnati wins 1Oth straight game

July 16. 1996. The Brewers lied a
·season high with 21 hits and had
their 'biggest' inning since scorin~
eighl times against the Cubs last

•

•

·

•

.

Scoreboard

I

:~uan1a (M&amp;ddu~ 7.S) at New York (Yoshii 6-6), ·

Baseball

7:i!ll p.m.

r.J.

!!: . I.

....47 29
......45 JJ

.618
.577

)

J),

..1151 . 26 .662
..... J8

Minnesota ......

soo

38

..33 46

.418

....32 45
.... 29 -~

.416
.377

Seatt 1t- .. .
Oaklaml . ......... .
· Anl!.Mtm _, __

12\
19
19

...

·---~--

22

45l

(U""fid&lt;dl. J ,Ol pO&gt;·
S~n- D•e1o (M~may 0. 11 at Colorado~(B . M. Jones

Thursday's scores

J.J).

Toronto 8. Baltimore 6
Oakland 5, Stoank 4
CLEVELAND 7. Minnesma 5
Tampa Bay 12:-DO!lldn ~ .,
New York 6. Denoi1 0

,.

._.

Tonighfs

8 o5ton {Maninez 1-f-21 :11 Chicago IPnrque
8:6.'i p.m

8-~ L

,

Detroit 1Wenver 6-41 ot Minne'sota (Hnwkin s
tl;. lt :O~ p m .
Seottk (Moyer K-41 a1

Tcxa~

~­

!Helling 6-7 l. IU .'i

.

r~

Anohe:im ISpnrk s -'· -' 1 a1 Onkland (Rogen 4· .' ).

tilJl ~·"'

K;msas C11y (Witasick J-M :u CLEVE~AND
((..nnJ-Ston Qc(J), I :05 p.m.
Knnsas City (Mathe w$ ! - I &gt; a1 CLEVELAND
( Nag)' 10-4; . 7:05.b.m
.
Doston (Rose .1:0) a1 ChiCago {Sirotka 6-8). 1:05
p.m.
.
.
•
Tampa Bay' (Witt -1-4 ) at Torom'8 (Carpenter 5-.SJ,
4 :0~ p.m
.
•
Bultimore (Ponson 7-5) al New York 10.
Hern~ndez

9-6). 4J5 p.m.

Detroit (Cruz 2- 1) at Minnesota' (Lincoln 2-8};
7.0S p.m.
Seaule (Garcia 9-4) a1 Texas (Sele 7-6), 8 35 p m
Anahe1m (fmley 4-8) ~~ Oak;land (Heredia ~-~).

9 :1Sp.m

•

. Mont~al at florida. 4:05p.m

Atlanta m New York. 8:05p.m.

San Francisco at 'Los Angdes . 9:.~5 JJ.m.

Basketball
WNBA standings
Eastern Conference
Nc-w Yorio:
Orlnndo
.. ~­
'CLEVELAND .. :

2

750

.625
_,,
~
- 4 .556
. .~
5 .)75
2 7 • .222
.. ..2 B .200
. -"

Houslon ..

::·~:

Socmn•enlo ...
Los Angele, ...

:

...........6

...... .4
...... .J

Minnesota ...
-Phoenix ...
U~ah ,

.. .1

900'
.667
.600

4

.500

4

' .J33
6_.. _. 250

5',

". '

..................... n

'

SatTamemo, at Detroit 7:30p.m.

GJl

~ :570

3
7

.608
.5 19
.400

16

.342

21

Cenlral Division

CINCINNATI. .. ........... .......44

31

.587

Houston .... ........ ..... .. ... ....... .. 44
Pins burgh .. ......................... :40
Chicago ............... ,................ 37
St. Loui~ ...... .. ....... ...... 38

JJ
37
38
40

: Milwaukee ........ .'......... .. ........36

41

HI
.519
493
.487
.467

I

5
1

71:

•

Western Diorision

• San Frnncisco .

. ......44

Arizona ........

.. .. , ....43

San Diego .........................38
Colorado ..
Los Angeles ..

..'...... 34
.. .... .14

3:5
36
38
41

.557
.544
.SOil
.453

42

.'i fH

I

4':
8

s',

II" . .
~·

~

i

~

s

Thursday's ·s cores
Atlanta 4. Monlrtal L.
St . Louis !0, Houston 4

"Milwaukee \9 , Chicago 12
San Fraocm:o 7, Co lonu.lo I
San Diego 6. l os Angeles )
New York 12 . Florida 8
PJttsbur~h

~
~

12. Phii!Wt:lpiua 7

CINCINNATI 2. Arizo n:. I (\0)

1

Tonight's games
Oli cago (Mu lholl and -k~ } at Ph1ladl':lphm (Wolr
.l -0). 7:05pm.
,
Monl~ ill (Thurman J.j ) ~ ~ f-lor1da !Sprin!l!l" '·

9 ). 7:05pm

·

M11waulccr I Karl fl-7) or Piusburt-h ICordo\·o ~ ­
-~~ - 7 : 0~ p rn
H uu~1on rl.1m_, t 1--11 111 CINCINNATI !Parri s~ ­

"1 ) . 70~prn

'

Tonight's games"

· Satu~day 's gam£s

1.- r.J.

)

Houston 76, CLEVELAND 64

Sl!nday's game
Jr"
.14
37
45
52

,,
2

New York 83. Phoeni• 67
• · Los Angeles 81, Minnesota 77-20T

Euttm Division

»:

j

4 '·
l

I
!r
4

New York It Hous1en. 2 p.m.
Charlotte at Orlando, 730 p.m.
Ph~nix at Minnesota, 8 p.m.

............... ...... 48
New York ...... .... . ............. 45
.. Philadelphia ... .. ...... , ...... .. ,.... 40,
Montreal ... .......
. .. ..... ..... 30
Florida

,I
1

Thursday's·scores ·

_,

.-

!ill

Western Cbnference

A.nnheim at Oakland. 4:35p.m .
Seanle at Tcu~. 8:05 p.m.

n....
Afl~n,a ....

t

l'&lt;t.

Los An~les at Detroit. 7:30 p.m
Sacramento at Wahinaton, 8 p.m.
CLEVELAND at Utah, 9 p.m

.

••

L

Tampa Bay at Toronto. I :05 p.m.
Kanu.s City at'CLEVELAND. 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore at New York, I : ~ p.m.
Boston at Chkago, 2:05 p.m. ·
Detroit a.t Minnesota, 2:05p.m.

.

1

6

.5

W~uh1pgton

• .

NL standings ·

• .•.,

ll:

fum

Sunday's'games

I

.. ,

Houston at CINCINNATI. 1:15 p.m
Cbicogo ar Philadr:!phia. 1' 35 p.m.
Milwaukee at Piti.Sburgh. l ::l5 p.m:'
An zona at' St.L.ou1s, ;Ho p.m.

Detro11 .
Ch::.ilone

Saturda"y•s games
••

'

San Oic-go ':.t Colorado. ~ :05 p.m

gam~s
Tampa Bar (Rupe -'·-'1 ill Toromo 1EsroOOr 7-~ ).
.~ 7-05 pm .
,
1
•
:
K:~ns:u . Ci1y (Rosado .'i-61 :u CLEVELAND
~ ((ioodc-n 2·.\)'. 7 - 0~ p m
Baltimo re(} Johnsun l-2) a1 New York (Cone 8_, 1. 7Yi p.m .

.·

~·05 p.m

Sunday'• games

Chicago 6. Kansas C•t_y 2 •

(See NL on Page S)

lrabu helps Yankees

.shut out Tigers ·s-o

Mike Timlin (3-7) for a 7-6 !~ad in
t~e , eighth. · Greene went ·4-for-5,
matching his career high for hits.
Tony FerMndez went 0-for-4,
.lowering his average to .387.
By The 'A ••oclated Press
John Frnsca~ore (3-0) go! two outs
When Hideki Irabu pitches for the win as Toronto completed a
against Detroit, the toad jokes stop:
three-game sweep, and Billy Koch
· Two years ago this month, he
'
made his successful major league
(See AL on Page S)
debut against the Tigers. On
Thursday night. he pitched a threehitter for hiSo second shutout in 48
major league starts, l~ading the New

American League
roundup

~

,.

Yankees owner ·George Steinbrenner
when the pitcher failed to cover first
base in a spring training game, has
turned around his season. Irabu (5-3)
hasn 't lost in six starts .siilce May 25,
and he .improved to ~-0 against the
Tigers with a 1.35 ERA. ·
.....
.. Yes, I think that w~as my best,"
... he said through an interpreter.
''There are going to be · good days
and bad days. The lhing 1 wanllo do '
is when things go bad , 1 wanl to get
them back to when they were good."
At Yankl'e Stadium, Paul O'Neill
hit a solo home run in the second
inning off Da v~ Mlicki (3-8) and had
an RBI si ngle in a five-run fifth as
the Yankees won for the e ighth time
jn ni11e games.
•
'Ti~ers manager Larry Parri s h,.
who ~onight stans a two-game sus-.
, pension stemming from an argument ·
with .umpires in May, said lrabu .
l ook~d like a different pitcher when
compared with earlier this year.
"The ·scouting report we had on .
. him .fro"' the last game on his curve"ball, he couldn't tlu;ow it for stri~es, •:
Parrish said. "Then he slarled off il
.bunch of our hillers with it tonigh\,
·and threw them all for strikes."
Elsewhere in the AL, it was
Toronto 8, Baltimore 6; Oakland 5,
. .llle :4; Tai!Jpa Bay 127 Boston 3;
·and Chicago 6, Kansas C1ty 2.
Blue Jays 8, Orioles 6
Toronto made.oit a happy Canada
·· Day ·at Sky Dome, overcoming a 6-0,
sixlh-inning deficit, w(th Willie
Greene hilling . a two-run_single ot;f

ALOMAR SCORES - The C~veland Indians' Roberto AIQmar
slides Into Minnesota catcher Jav1er Vale~tln to s_core the go-ahead
run In the sixth inning of Thursday night 8 Amerrcan Leagua game
in Clev~land, wher~ the Indians won 7-5. Alomar scored on D,avld
Justice 8 ht!o-run smgle. (AP)
·

Sixth-inning rally
helps Tribe .down
Minnesota 7-5
By TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) Talk
about legging out a triple. . .
Richie Sexson, Cl~veland's 6foot-8 firsf baseman, hit a two-run
triple - . his ihird in si• days Thursday night in Cleveland's si&lt;'
·run sixth inning as the -Indians rallied
for a 7-5 win ove.r the Minnesota
Twins.
''··
Banolo Cqlon gulled it out for si•
innings and finally got hi's seventh ,
win as the Indians rallied to win for
the 3&lt;lst time !his season.
With the Indians leading 5-4 in
tl)e sixth, Se.son snapped an 0-for-.:

1

'.

13 slump with a drive off the centerfield wall for his founh triple.
"When I got to third base, NewNew (Indians third, base :coach Jeff '
Newman) said that's your third triple
this week,'' said Se.son, who nevec
had more lhan three triples in a season . "It's definitely Odd."
So was die Indians' win .
.
One night after·' Eric Milton limi~'ed Cleveland to five hits in 8 ~.
innings, the ·Indian.s didn_'t fru:e much
b~uer for the flfSI f1ve 1nnmgs
,against rookie Joe Mays.
_ ,·
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

·.,'

NL action.:..
.I

·....-

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• Air Conditioning
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• AMIFM Casselte

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5-Series LS Extended Cab
Aluminum Wheels
1 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakes
1 Nicely Equipped!
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On all items including
Beaqmont Pottery
Pilgrim Glass
· Dreamsicles ·
Porcelain D()lls
Love lite Candles h
All SwaJS &amp; Wreat s .
Floral Arrangements

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fi1#..

~

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(Continued from Page 4)

Rookie Mall Clement (5-7) gave
G.i ants 7, Rodties 1
up three runs in 5 2/3 innings, and
At San Francisco, rookie center
Trevor Hoffman .got three" outs. for fielder Jeff . Barry IUrned B~rry
his 20th s4ve. Darren .Dreifon (6-7) ~onds' high Oy into a two-run triple
allowed four runs in six innings.
and Jeff Kent followed with a twoBraves 4, Expos 1
run home ~ to help the Giants comAt Montreal , .Tol)1 Glavine (7- 7) . plete a !ljree-game sweep.
Shawn Estes (5-5) allowed the
pilched a seven-hiuer lo win his 13th
co nsec utive decision against the one run and six hits in eight innings.
' Expos.
Darryl Kile (4'6) iook the loss forlhe
. Ryan Kles'ko hit a two-run double Rockies, who have dropped eighl
' in the first inn!ng for Atlanta off Dan straight.
Smith (1-3), and Randall Simon had
Mets 12, Marlins 8
a career-high four hits.
.
Octavio bote! (1-1) got his fTrst
'
'' ·tardinals 10, Astros 4
. major leagu~ win as New York took
Kent Bottenfield became the NL's advantage of 11, walks, including
first 12,game winner as St. Louis five by Ryan Dempster (4-4) in a sixovercame a three-run deficit at . run third in11ing at Flbrida.
Houston to hand the Astios their sev; · • The Mets have won eight of II
• and are 19-6· following an eighlenth loss in 10 games.. .
. Jo.D. Drew hi~ a two-run, inside- game losing streak.
Plra~es 12, Phillie~ 7
!he-park · homer for !he Cardinals,
who avoided a lhree-game sweep,
At Pittsbu!'gh. AI Marlin hil two
and Bonenfield (12-3) helped him- homers off Robert Person ( 1-2) for
self with a two-run double off Chris hi s firsl multihomer game in more
Hoh ( 1-8).
ihan three years.
.
·
, . Joe MCEwing exte nded hi s hining
Todd Ritchie (7-6) gave up two
·· slreak 10 22 games , which tied the St. runs in seven innings afler losing
LQuis rookie record set by Johnny three of hi s l ~sl four decisions .
Mize tn 1936

AL games-.•.

·'

\

.

(Cpnl inued from Page 4) ·

earned His IO!h 'sav&lt;:,
s_ave, picked up the win by gelling
Athletics 5, Mariners 4
sh: outs.
Tony Phillips' RBI sing le in the
Devil Rays 12, Red Sox 3
ninth inning off Jose Paniagua (5-7)
Mike DiFelice had a career-high
gave Oakland the win after visiting five RBis, and he and Paul Sorren1o.
Scallle ralli ed for three runs .in ~he who broke out of a 1-for- ·18 s lump .
eighth to·tie.
each wenl 3-for-4 in (h!' 16-hil anack
·Bill Taylor (1-4), who blew the as Tampa Bay won its fifth straighl'
road game and improved to 6-3 lhi s
year against Boston .
Wilson .. Alvarez (4-5) allowed
three runs and six hits in sev.en
innings. Rookie' Jin Ho Cho (2- 1) ·
allowed four runs and eight ·hils in 3
· Andy Botid of ·coolville took a 2/3 innings as Boston lost for the
liking to the new, smooth s urface~~ third time fn four games following a
Skyline Speedway near Stewart, four-game wi~ning streak.
•
Ohio and went on lo claim the excitWhite Sox 6, Roy11ls 2
ing 25 lap feature.
Bond also
Craig Wilson si ngled off Bill
claimed the exciling dash win.
Piscioua (0-1) to break a, 2-all tie in
Bond JUmped i.nto lhe lead and the seventh, and Chris Singleton
led every lap as he held off the c hal - greeted Jeff Monlgom ery with a
lenge s of Jeff Burdeue, Ryan Cline, lhree -run double .
and .hi s brother Larry Bond to post
In losing two ofthree to Chicago,
his third fealure win in a row.
Kansas City relievers all owed 10
· Pomeroy driver Todd Smith had a runs, 14 hits and four walks in nine
good top five run going, but had to innings, and the White Sox have won
drop from the race wilh mechanical 24 of 31 games at Kansas City. The '
problems as Bond. ro ll~d on for the Ropls have losl four of five qverall . .

'

~3,850*

~

('

was

Bond, Stotts
win ·~t Skyline

4 Wheel Disk Brakes W/ABS

:\'\'\WNWI'I'I'I'At'R~~'\.\.~

Florals &amp; Gifts ·

/ndt"anS

He scored easily' when Mark Lewi s
. followed wilh a single 10 right .
• ·• • (Conli~ped from Page 4 1 .
· The winnmg rally was hard to
But o nce "Mays wa~ ·gu nc. the: whid1 leads th~ major..; ln runs. has
fn~ian s rhanagcr. Mike Hargrove against Colon. ".
describe :
'
'
Indi;:ins wok advanHH!C o f a wild · s&lt;:ored fin~ run ~ ur more man inmng
sa1d . ··so that was good 1o ~e~ . "
Mays wa s pulled--. after five..,. "It was ·~acky,"· McKeon sug- Minnc sdtabullpcn . ·
171imcs lll1Sseason.
The Twins scorc.d four run ~ nf'f innmgs and · 116 pitc hc :-.. .md
gelited.
,
; ' May~ W:J.S pit ~.: h i ng us ha1..:k "'The thing ahDut our ulfc11 sc.'"
n. but they had Ill \\or!.. lnr rcpl aiJc d'" hy CarraS(\). who gJ\l''· ur
~ That it . was. ' A.!t~r Scott ward." Clcvcl ancl m:m tH!cr MikL: Scx ..,on said " Is that It see m-; like we Colo
every one o f them .
~.: o n sct·.ut_i \'e: single~ to Ji m-) Th(llll O
Wilhamson· (7-2) piteh~d · a pcrf£Ct Harorove said. " He
thrnwino ca n do !hat in a hcanhcal. "
" I d,p~ ·t 'kn ow if Cnl11n \\' i.h !_!U I· and Tra\: i~ Fryman 10 •;tart the ~i~th~
lOth , CamerQn led off with a single changeups anp breaking pilchc' i~
Coloh had eu nc 0-2 in his last
ling it · Out. " Minn~snta ·'.... Tod d Onc ,Qut_lata. Ken ny L.nflPn '~alkcd
off Dan Plesac (0-1) and was sacri- fas1ball couniS. and he wus 1hrowing 'even slarls. h~t " "' lhe ·victim of Walker said. "' He '~a~ hlmq ng: ll up and ,Omar Vitq u er~ · . . ar.:nfiL'l' tl;
fice to second.
fas1balls ifl, hreaking-ball co unls .... 1 some had lu ck 111 al lcast!wo of 1hbse lhcre at 99 mph . We were ahlc w ge t m a d~ it 4-2 .
.
•
Byung-I:Jyun Kim ~lieved and was .glad rei &lt;e'c 11im lakcn out ' of. !ruling s. In hi s 'laS! star!. he look' a 7a couple o f hit~ . hut ticl!c~·c; me l._cAft~r £nin l' t·n a 3-0 l:O unt ( m
got Lewis 10 hi_t a high Oy to shall ow there ."
1 load in1n 1he cigh1h before Kan sas
was as tol!.g~ a ~ he usually IS. H~ :i~t Robat o Alo~;r. C;Jrrasl.:o \\a~ ilftL.:"d
righ1. Lewis' big swing initially fro7,e
: Co lon (7-3) g'a ve up.a seaso n-high·. Cily rallied for 10 runs. six against tougher \\-ilh men in scnrin~ poSi- fo r Boh \VcJ] ..,_ v. ho 1 1l ~ n wJlk ed
right · fielder Tony Wom,ack, who I 0 hilS - . many of tqem sofl singles !he Indians hu)lpc n.
·
lion...
: '
~l omar and t\·1ann y Rarnirc; 111 fnrcc
recovered and tried to make l!. div(11g -bill. hung around long 'cnough to · Cleveland 's relievers didn'r lei
Rookie Corey ~ Os kic went .1 ~ feir· ft1 a run.. .
., . · 6',
,catc h bul mi~sed.
··
. get his firs.t viclory . sinc'i May 17 as Ihal happen again as 1hrec pitchers 4 with a homer and Sco.rcd thre e r.uns .\
·.. That ~ixt h . 1nmng wa .. rough. ··
The ball . took a high bounce off the lndi·ahs rallied . in lhc sixlh nff dosed out 1hc win . Mike Jack son for the Twins. ,J a-l:iel Valentin had Jwins manag~r Tom Kell ) ~a iU " \Ve
the wet turf, and cen ter fielder Steve relie\Cr Heel&lt;ir Ciurasco (0- 1r·
pitched l1 sfrong ninth for hi s 16th three hit s and also homered, The' pair ju~t dtdn "t lhnH\· .s1r1kc ~. h was '
Finley retrieved and slarted to throw .. _ ·-rrn oul of my sl ump no\V." sa,c.
.
entered the game 2-l'or-24 again~! the ugly. '"
""~
•=
home, but lost ··his · grip. Cameron · Colon said. "!think 1 can stan pitchJackson, who has snuggled at
Indians.·
Ju..,t~e e follo\~C'd with hi·~ two~run
scored easily.
ing a lol better. "
'
limes this year, looked much ·more
Three straight singl!.!s. two (Om - .s tnglc to put th ~ Indiam ur 5--L and
" [ dl'dn'l thin~ it was going IO
David JuSiice had a lwo-run sin- like lhe pitcher WQO savea 40 games
i~g on balls !hal c ould havc- .,heen: Sex son_·~ mple gave Cleveland a
drop, but it did, " Lewis said. ·"We gle in the sixlh 10 help the Indian s in 45 1ries in 1998.
turned into outs, and two saL:rtficcs three, run ~.: u s h1 o n .
got some"luck ."
overcome a 4-1 dcfieil. Cleveland. ,
"'His veloci1y was up 10 94 mph," gave th e Twins a 4 ~ 1 lead in the sixth "
Again . •
"
'
•

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL.E

.

,

•JERRY . IBBEE

•

It's the Dealer BehJnd The Dea) · ..
That Makes The BEAL ·DiCie:rence! '

,

i::;;ii!
•

1998 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

1997 LINCOLN MARK VIII

V8; Auto, Climate Control, AM/FM Cass., All
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~forehand wi~- ·

~~~m~rs . ~~oo~~=kad . ~~~~~~~be~m*~-~~==~~=~=~~~~~~~~~=~=~~~=~~==~~~=~-------~~---.•,-------

over Houslon m lhe N!J Ce'\tral. The
Astros visit for f?ur gam~s over the
we-ekend" when lhe Reds ca11 · take
aim at. lhe .team record of 12 straight
wins .in 1957and 1939.
·'
Showalter wouldn.''l be surprised
if they make it.
'
·
." That's a team 1ha1 has lhing s
gmng 1heir way:· he said.
"'Everylhing they do is right." '
Th~ Diamondbacks fell to · 1-8
agains! lhc ReM this season and fell
out of first P.lace in the NL Wes1 for.
lhe firs1 time since May 26 because
!heir once-forinidab le offense~ ,has
been reduced lo scoring on errors .
and a passed ball.
· •'
Thai's how Tony Womack came
around ' in the firs! inning for
Arizona's only run Thursday, eontinuing a week-long slump. Arizona has
scored o11ly ni11~ runs .in the last six
. games. baned .150 and been no-hil
and one-hit along the way.
"The last couple of games. we
haven '1 been ·hilling very good .

York Yankees to a 5-0 victory.
Th
.
. .
Monm-al (Poweu 0-0) a~ AOrida {Meadows 5-9).
" at was not JUSt wmmng a
7:05p.m. . .
·
.
game; that was total dominance,"
Milwauk~ (Pulsipher 1-1) a1 Pittsburgh (8e05on Y
k
J ..,.
'd
6-5). 7 :0~ p.m.
,,
.
an e~s manager - oe -,orre 58;1 •
IHou$100 (Eianon 5-l) 91CrNCINNAll (HaraiSCh ' ''He was great,,
7 6
. ka~:O!i&amp;i·~o (Wi lliam$ 4_'5) a1 Colorado
Jrabu, called a "fat · ... toad" by

.487

35 42

Sept. 12- also at Wrigley.
Marquis Grissom hit a three-run
homer in an eight-run founh inning
as the Brewers won for the eighth
time in i 1 games. Ron Belliard went
4-for-5 with a pair of two-run doublesand a career-high .five RBis. an4
Dave Nilsson also went4-for-5..
Valentin homered in the fourth
inning batting right-handed against
Dan Serafini, then homered in the

co.n.v~rt~d

10-4)1 7:05p.m.

Division
.. "' . ..45 33 .577
.J9 w 500

.. .. F ..• ...JB 40

~! .?~sco (Gardnrer 2-6) 81 los Ang~k:s (Park

4-6). 4:05p.m.
Chicago (Farm:worth 2-1) at Philadelphia (Byrd

We~tern

Te Xas,....'........ .

.

Atlanta (Millwood-9-4) at New York (Leila" 7;- 5).
1:15 p.m .
.
..
Arizona ( ReyooJO 5·1) at St. l.nuit (M~Ur 20

14
IS ',

Central Di~ision
Olicago ..,...
- Oe1roi1 ...........
.,. ·~ Kansu City ....

.

Saturday'• games

9\

• Toronlo . _.
....40 41 .494
.... J4 44 · , 436
Tampa Bay
B.altirnorc .................... .32 45 415

CLEVELAND............

·

7-6). 9 :03p.m.
San Francisco (Jlrock 5-6) at Los Angeles ( ~;r:
2·8). 10:10 p .m.

Eastern DivisiOn

"Tam
"'New York ..
BOIIOB ......

·

Arizona {Anderson 1-1)81 51. L~us (Oh~cr4-3),
~ : IO~m.
·
•
.
S:m Diego (Hitchcock 6-6) 11 Colorado 'Astacto

;AL
,
. ~tanding~
..

•

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'

~be believed.
By JOE' KAY
"There j a great aura surround in~
CINCINNATI (AP) ~ Wh.a t
them now. like it was with us and
next?
. '
be
agam .' '
fusl when lhe Cincinnali Reds hopefully • wiil
manager
Buck
seem to have exhauSted all the ways Diamondbacks
Showaher said.
16 win a game, they invent another.
The Reds readily admit that their
Their wi~ning sl\"ak reached 10
games Thursday nigh! wilh a gUisy 10 straighl wins _six of them over
gamble , a linle luck and a wacky the Diamondbacks - have been
game-winning double in 1he 1Oth built upon i!"probable comebacks
inning. A 2-1 victory over the and fonunate bounces.
Arizona Diamondbacks completed a
_three-game sweep that had to be seen
(See REDS on Page S)

•

•"

·

R
- e,ds. •.·

waS

By JOSH DUBOW
AP Sports Writer
The Milwaukee Brewers ha,ve
taken a liking to Wrigley Field_ no
mauer which way the wind is blow'
ing .. When the wind blow~ out, it's
that much bc:Uer.
Jose Valentin hit two-run homers
· from· each side of the plate as the
Milwaukee Brewers powered past
the Cubs 19-li Thu~ay.
.
" Not too many people have done
that," Valentin said. " I didn't think it
would happen to .me . .I'm lucky to
have played-in Wrigley Field."
The Brewers musr wish they
ARRIVES AT THIRD - The Clnclnna.tl Reds' Mike Cameron could play all tlleir games there. In
arrives at third base with a triple ahead of the throw to Arizona third Milwaukee's i;lst six games at
btisen\an Andy Fox in tJ:1e eighth inning of Thursday ni!Jbt's. National Wrigley Field, the Brewers have
League game il\ Cincinnati, where the Reds won 2·1 tn 10 Innings. · scored 75 runs, -an average of 12.5 . .
C"meron later scored on Mark Lewis' single. (AP)
With the wind blowing to right at
1
·
16 mph, Milwaukee scored its m6st
· runs since a 20-1 win over Detroit on

·
d
b
D
b
k
ac S
Re S eat
2 1 ··• n ·10 •. nn •. ngs

''I' 11 tell you what. I was happy
when I hit the second one, but 1 didn't realize lbal it
the first lime l
did it from both sides," said Valentin,
who. h.S five homers this year.
Mickey Morandini homered twice"
fpr Chicago, and Mark Grace and
Jose Hernandez also homered.
Chicago pitchers have allowed 10
or more runs in seven of their last 14
games. Steve Trachsel (2-11) has
been the staner in three of them.
It got so bad that Cubs third baseman G111)1 Gaeui was wanning· up in
the bullpen in the ninth inning.
~i. who has pitched twice
before, including two scoreless
innings of two-hit ball against
Colorado last July 24, would have
been a last reson. Fans staned chanling · his name when they 'saw him
~anning up.
.
" It's always a bad situation,"
GileUi said: "I felt kind of awkward
when they staned chaining my name
for something foolish .··
In other NL games. it w,as San
Diego 6, Los Angeles 3; Atlanta 4,
Montre~l 1; St. Louis 10, Houston 4;
San Francisco 7. Colorado 1; the
Mets 12. Aorida 8; and ·Pinsburgh ·
12. Philadelphia 17.
. ,
Padres 6, Dodgers 3
At San Diego, the Padres
stretched their winning streak to 13.
1he . longest in the majors .since
,K,ansas City won 14 in 1994, getting
consec ulive homers from Ruben
Rivera and Wally Joyner in the
eighth inning.

Graf, who is two short of Martina
Navratilova:s record of nine singles
titles, overcame Williams 6-2 , 3-6. 64 in a compelling Centre Court duel
that included fOUT rain delays .
"Considering the number of (rain)
breaks we had, it was unbelievable

tennis toda) ... Graf &gt;atd.
p.m .. lasled 1 hour. 52 mmutes of live."
A light, n""Y dn11le rep&lt;;aledly
Also ad\Jhc mg "a' lind~a)- actual playmg ume . But. because of
The 1Wo other women's quarterfi~ forced pia) to he l.iuspcnded
Davenport. "ho uuslcd defendtng th e ram delays. there were 7 hburs nals were suspended and were sc hed- Ti]ursday. ratSmg lhe prO&gt;pcl'l of the
champion Jana Nov01na 6-3. 6-4 to and 7 n;unulcs between the first and uled 10 resume loday.
tournamcnl betng ex1ended tnto a
qualify for the "'mifinals for 1he first last pomls of I he match .
•
In a baule of 1wo qualifiers, 18- lh1rd week .
time in her career.
.;;
The match
fc:uured soq1e year-old Alexandra Stevenson won ·
The forecas t called for dear !!.kiC!l&gt;
The
Graf- Wtlliam'
malch &gt;park ling ralli es and spectacular lhe firs! set 6-3 against 16-year-old today bu1 a re1urn of wet wca1her
resumed in fading hght a1 7:40 p.m. shols by b&lt;ilh players. While Australian Jelena Dokic but trailed 5- over the weekend.
with lhe. 19-ycar-o i&lt;!~I)IW'k:an ahead Williams 1ried to dictate the match 1 in the second .
Organizers sc heduled lhc remain(Continued from Page 4)
2-1 on serve in lh e,ifiii11·S&lt;t
wilh her hig ground}&gt;lrokes. Graf ran
No woman qualifier ha s ever der of !he quarterfinal; for 1oday . .
The turnin g point ca me in the .tiflh down mosl of the shols and hiLJ.ltem , made· it to the semifinals, bul either Thai· mean
men 'sd and "omen's
: There's more to it, thounh. That· 's how ,·t ,· ~." .1d Omar Daal.
·11s the
•- s
d b h
"'
•
game when Graf, applying pressure backju ~ t as hard .
· Stevenson or Dokic will this year.
semJS wt "" aiUr a.)..._an
ol
llley've goncn to the point that who made the one run stand up uritil on cvery .shol, broke for a 3-2 lead.
Showing her grealer exp&lt;;rience ,
In the· other women's quarterfinal , finals Sunday - wcalhe"t permining.
they' re convinced the breaks will go the eighth.
Afler a furious corner-In-comer rallv. especiall y on grass. Graf mixed ,up Nathalie Tau'!iat led Mirja na Lucie 6The last time bolh finab were
their way,
Mike Cameron led off the eighlh ' Graf
:"'ith
her game and threw in some drop '1, 3-3.
played on Sunday ""'. in 1989 w.hen ·
· "The WaY. we're playing, the gfiys by hilling a ball into lhe righ1 -fidd ncr.
shoiS to keep Willjamsguessing. She
In men·~ play. Patrick ~afler and Bo ri s Becker and Graf were lh e
believe in themselve~ an\1 they 're comer and then unnciessarily gan1·
Graf sa,:ed 1hrce break P\l iniS in also slaved off a. number of key break Todd Manjn were tied 3-3 in the first champions. The las1 1i'mc lhe lourna!Oiigh," manager Jack McKeon said. bling that he could Slretch it into a the ·ne&lt;t games as Will tams &amp;lew a pOiniS wilh auac king play.
. se l, and Tim Henman was uif' 1-0 menl dragged inlo a lhird wee k wa&gt;
The Reds also had a 10-game triple. Second basema'n Jay Bell simple forehand .volley 1ha1 would
Graf said it was lhe hes&lt; she ever against Cedric Pi oline.
in '1996 whe the " omen's double s
winning streak last season, but mornentarily'bobbled th_e relay, gi •·- have evened the ,;,·alch. .
.
had to pla y IO geiiO the Wunbledon
Two other men's matches had yet final'was .pfa ·don Monda}. .
th¢re 's no comparison. That one hap- ing Cameron t.hc! fraction ·of a second
ThC players remained on serve rhc ·se mifinals. Which she has now ro begin: five-lime 1 c~ampion Pete
Graf was 1rmly in (Ontrpl bf the
pened ":hen the Reds had alre~dy be needed to make il wilh a headfirst resl of lhe way. with .Graf;wnverting reached 10 times in her career.
Sampras vs. Matk Philippoussis. and fir&gt;1 sel , b aking William s t~·ice lo
dropped out of contention at .mid&gt;ea- ·slide on a close play.
on her firs I match pomt. When
.. \1 rarely happen s in lhe quarterfi- Andre Agassi vs. Gustavo Kuenen.
\\lift . in •
minute s. Bul Williams
son. '
" Once 1 saw ·lhe ball go off the William s hit a forehand wide. Graf nal 10 play that kind of !ennis." she--' Afler a first week of ideal weal her, sto
back in the &gt;econd. breaking
This . one has lefl small-mArket wall, 1 l~ouglit, ' \Vhy n01 '1 ... hopped up and do wn. punched lhc air said. " [played very aggressive on lhe moSI of Monday's sc hedul e was for 3-2 and ";inning five oul of six •
Cincinnati ($33 milhon payroll) WI!~ Cameron said.
and let ou1 a scream of dclighl.
break poims. 1 1old myself 1 wanled rained ou1 and all of Tuesday' s .. ga es ,to fori'!' !he decisive lhird . , :
1
Tl]e way ·the' Reds' luck has been
The match , which ended al 8: I 0 In gn ror my sh01s and nol be ·tenia- matche s were loS! .
' 'the fourth-best wmmng percentage

ninth batting · le(l-handed against

National League
round up

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy ~ Middleport, Ohio

win.

• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakes ·
• Aluminum Wheels
• Loaded!

' Tues. Tags, Tille Fes axtlll. Rebalolncludod In sale price d. new vehidelisled -.applicable. "On appJOVed creclit: On seloaed modois. ·
Pricfi Good Jtiy 2nd UlN July SUl. Not ""'JIfOSilie for lypogr~ OITtlfS.
·

..

'

West VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

Friday - Saturday 9 am - 1o pm
CLOSED SUNDAY JULY aTH

Jn the AMRA modified division .
Darwin's Chris Stalls again sel fasl
lime of 15: 19 seconds, claimed the
dash and made a clean sweep by
winning the feature. Stous had to
overcome early ·race leader Jason
Brookover, then once in the lead had
10 hold off the advances of second
place Bruce Dennis. Wh en 1h~
checkered fell. Slolls came home 1he
winner over Dennts. Brookover, Tim
Walters and Tom Powell.
In 1he strecl slacks, Pat Gil lian
overcame Ted Dille and Tony Roush
to c laim the Will over Mike
McPherson, Frank Roush. Bill
Sluv'er, and Jason Graham . Pnuo
McDan1el. · Grumpy Adkins . who
won the consolation C\'t.!nt; John
Powell
Joe Memc l and Barry
.
. '
Fairbanks cumplc1cd the top ten .
Adkins or Portland came from 17th
to finish seventh.

,.

1998 BUICK LESABRE ,

c

V6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM cass., Tilt, Cruise:
All Power Equip., Low Miles

J997 FORD E150 CONVERSION VAN

Auto, Front &amp; Rear Air, Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM Cass., ·
All Power Equip., TV, VCR. Much More

--:---,

1999 FORD EXPEDITION

.

XLT, 5.4L, Auto, Air, AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise,
·
All Power, 3rd Row Seating

1997 FORD. EXPEDITION
XLt 5.4L, V8, Auto, Air C.ond., AM/FM Cass., All Power
·Equip., 3rd Seat, Low Miles.

NOTICE:

Effective July 26, 1999, pending
Public Utili~ies Commission of
Ohio approval, Telecom• USA
will change its 10-10-321
in~rastate per minute ra~es for
interl.ATA and intral.ATA calls
from a mileage sensitive, dayevening;night/weekend based
rate structure to 8 na~ rale
structure.
The new proposed .
interl.ATA and intral.ATA rate Is
$.16 per minute. The current
rates range as follows: · Day
$.1200·$.2500; Evening $.850$.1650; and Night /Weekend
$.0640,$.1400 per mlnu~e. These
ra~e changes may result in an
increase ~o . your monthly phone
bill. In addition ; 10-10-321 calls
tha~ are 10 minutes or longer will
receive a SO% discount off the
new rates.

Ph01w
740-992-2196

461 S. Third
Ave.
Mid~leport

'

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�•

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.•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, July 2, 1999

Page&amp;
Friday, July 2, _1991

Internal Revenue S1:rvice and per- doesn 't acknowledge a gift with a
haps learn a lesson.-- A.T. IN D.C.
phone ca n or a written note. you
DEAR A.T.: Of course, you arc shouldn 't send that person any more
'right However, I am concerned that gifts."
the mmher may take the ,·hi ld ba&lt;k .. " I was ~hocked by your lack of
if she thinks she will lo~e her hcnc- ..compassinn', A nn, and amazed th'at
an d
fits .
Aunt Louise could be so harsh with
'
he
r own nie.ce · and that you encourtion pro~ i ng the boy lives with her .
The aunt needs Ill sec a lawyer
(sclloo l records, an affidavit from a imn~\'diatc l y · to ensure this boy ·~ aged it. I' II bet tills is one letter you
religious aut hori ty if they attend w,eltare . On ly after the paper\.·ork is . won't pri nt -- A MOM IN NO&amp;TH
.
ch urch or synagogue. or doctors complcled should she risk daiming: CA ROLINA
bills).
the child on her tax return. '
DEAR N.C. MOM: I hope you
Also. she should be able 10 p;o.
Dear Alin Landers: I am angry didn't be t more t~an you, can afford
..
\luce records of household e., penscs at you for tell ing readers not to ,send , to lose .
In
rn
y
opinioh
,
fail
ure
to
express
such as fG nt. mortgage payments ~md gifls lo children· '"''ho don 't wri le
property taxes, and the bov 's c~pc ns- th a~k-you notes.· .
,
' apprec,iation for a gift by note or a
phone call is not acceptabl e behaves [,,r clmhing .,nd "'OPrta.'nm
·
I
a~t
year,
when
my
d:lUg:hta
~A
as.
1
'
'''
en .he r'~ Hes
· .. wrote
•
ior. In fact. it is inexc usable ft~de­
Wi th docum~tat
ion to bad~
y ar. o ldh
' .cr "A um' L ?Uisc::
up. sile could claim her nephew as :o Ill say she dod not rc.;eorc a thank- ness. To cont inue to se nd gi fl s when
dependent and
tlcductoon ,you note tor the last bort hday go." . so there is no lhank -you is to e ncourage
•
for him
~~
she wou l ~ not bt: _sendmg a g1ft tim; su(h boorish ness.
y~a r LoUise add 1:= d. "Ann Landers
Yes,
l
did
say,
"StQp
sc,n~:i n g gifts
Thc". dcad beat s.is1cr wduld ]t1St'
\\rotc
in
~er column th:·lt if J ptrson w p&lt;'&lt;&gt;plc who don' t say th ank you,"
the dcdu~,.· tio n . havl! h ) s~tt iC with the
'
.
.

Ar:l[l lander-s , :

Ohio Hogh School Equovalence Currence, Tiffany Garrison. Crystal MJnkon , l c&gt;n)a Powell , Cannela
Diplomas were presented recently to Gheen, Juloc Hunnel , Charlotte E. Sh.onc . Fel) Shceh . and Diana L
23 graduates of the Adult Basic Lit- Jacks. Sh.eola Westfall , JuAnn L. Sogko
ML'I1~:-,a Br&lt;.lil'Y. Jenmfer La udereracy Ed ucation GED program. at Jacks. Jesse Johnson. Mary Nash.
,
molt
and Fred Roder were presented
ceremonies sponsored by the Mid- Teresa M. Ooler, Melesha Paule) .
dleport!Pomeroy Rotary Club.
Amber I. Robinson, Billie Sayre. certlfil.He ... for over 200 hours. JenDavid McDonald. a graduate of Diana L. Sigler, James Spangler. nofer \k'shorc and Teresa M Oiler
the program, was the speaker at the Anthony J. 'f\lomas. and Stanlc} N. for "' cr .1 (X) hours and Mary Bunch
cere monies, held at Meigs Hogh Watson .
for "'"' ~00 hours of ancndam:e.
Appret:wtmn cerl ifil:at c~ were
School. Snyder shared hi s cxperiAttendance cenificatcs for. over
ences in college after his graduati on. I()() hours of attendance were pre- pn.:~cnied to Mcli ~sa Cr'emcan~.
and commended the graduates for sented to : Sheila Bryan . Debra K. Jo,eph Grucscr, Joy Hy;ell and
' B~rke, Sandra Darst, Bohho Ju Doll. Tra..:v Oilc:r
the ir efforts . ·, ·
Plaques were presented to the. Rooald Crimm, Dale Lil ly Jennifer
graduates attending
the recognition din·
ner by David Snyder.
pres ident of the Midd leport/Pomeroy
Rotary Club.
·Graduates for the
1998- 1999.
year
CML- OffiCI II HJ-2155
: Terri Bowling.
Melissa
Braley:
Debra K. Burke .
:....: These GEP students were recognized at ABLE's aimual recogni.tion dinner,
Y. Burson.
spons d by the Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary Club lrecently. Front, 'l ~ r, Kenneth Currence, Sheila West· Jeanie
be
rl
y
.
Kim
fall, ~ arlotte; Jacks, Melissa ·Braley; baek, .l·r, Teresa. Oller, Jeanie Burson, Debra Burke and Amber Me li ssa M. Bu&gt;h
.
Crc·
Robtnson.
.
,
· .
,
.
.
·
.

'"'"a "'-'

.

.

··!J*· ·

RACO honors ·. gradu~tes, .·
plans for July 4 celebration

Tea party -.h osted

and I meant it. However, since your share of the house, but he refuses to
daughter is only 8 years old and sti ll sell . He doesn't -have the ·money to
in the process of learning proper eti· buy me out. I am at my rope's end.
queu e, I hope her Aunt Louise will .. Do you have any suggestions (or
give her one more chance.
me?
·- · FRUSTRATED
IN
Dear Ann Landen: My brothe[ LAWRENCEVI LLE, GA.
and 1 grew up with our mothe r; a
UE AR GA.: Yo~ need to see a
si n.g le parent , and it was always ber · .lawyer abo ut havi ng the house parti·
dream to have her own home. When ti oned . so you can sell your half of
my·brothcr and lf could afford it;, we the propenL Ge1 whatever amou ~t
bo ught ~ home together so our you can, and be done with it.
mo ther could oove her dream. '
.Is alcohol ruining your life ort he
'rtu-ee weeks after we all moved life of a ioved one'' ''A lcoholism:
i'n', Moin suddenly passed away. She ··How to Rccognizc ' lt, How to Deal
was only 47. and we were de•astat-, Wit h It. How to C&lt;;&gt;nq uer It" can turn
ed. "
thi ngs around.
'
,
Si nce then. the . relationship
Send a self addressed , long, busibetwee n my brother and me has

ness size enve lope and a t:heck o r

deteriorated . He refuses ' lO help
around the house. He won't buy
anything, includin g groceries. clea n- ·
ing supplie s or pai nt.
.
l have ·o ffered t o ' pur~_h as~ hi s

money order fo r $3 .75 (th is incl udes ·
postage and hand ling) to: Alcohol
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 562.
Chicago, Ill. 606 11-b562. (I n Canada, se nd $4.55 .)

IOAID

.... cat••hMII•.....,•

........... llldl ••••.,

GE~RADUATES

Karlie A nne Hall. 3 ~ye a r-old
prizes " 'ill he $ 100. $75 and $50 ·
daughter of An gie' and~ Charl es
while j umor di~vis10n pn ~:Cs wllt h~
High S1·hool graduaies during its $40, $25 and $ 10, RcQI-a-frogs will
Hall, Pomeroy, hosted a tea
regu lar month ly meetin g May 25 at be avail ahle ror the 5 p.m. event.
party at her home oi1 June 19
the American Legion Hall in Rac;i ne. • The gro"p W)ll al so operate a food
for some. of her fri ends, includ-.
President Kath ryn Hart presented booth at the celebration fcaturim.!
ing se veral - oiher girls who
$500 sc holarships to .Joshua Ervin, tacos-i n - a : {ia~
and l emonade~ .
Kara King. Jesse Little and.Kimber- RACO members Bob and Libby
were adopted from' China and
ly Sayre. Eac h gave .a profile on Fisher will sponspr the kiddie tractor
one' little gi.rl adopted from
their school years. Erv in and Little pull ..
·
Korea.
~
·· ·
;
wi ll attend Oh io· State Uni versity
In other busi ness. the gro~p :
·~
The girl s started out by se rvwhile· Kong ~n d Sayre will attend
- Disc ussed mann ing the Me igs ·
ing each other tea w ith the i r lit·
Shawnee State and Marietta Co l- County Fair ticket booths fo r t~o
lege; respect ive ly.
tie tea pots and tea cups.
.
days.
RACO co mmended the SHS
-Noted the co llection of can ned
The girl s each qrought their
class of 1999 fo r its achievements' food and non-perishab le item&gt;l, for
favorite babydoll to pl ay with .
and awards of ove r $n,ooo in the Me igs Coope rative Parosh Food
Hats were made for each girl
sc holarships. '
Pantry was suc&lt;essful . Over 300
and hq doll. The girl s ma'de a
Special guests at t~e dinner and cans of food and $300 in moH~tary
presentation incl uded T.C. and Her- gi fl s were given. ' .
bracelet with their names on it,
bert Ervin, Diane and Sam Carpen" each got a tu rn at hitting a ·
.- Commended the community
then
ter, Cort,nie Little and· Roma Sayre, for supporting the food drive.
: tea pot pinata: ·
' , .&gt;
'' the recipients' parents.
Thank yo u notes were rece iVeQ
Each girl also received a
Guesl Crys tal Coleman, 1998 from the scholarsh ip rec i ~ i e nt s at
,
gift pack with bubblt;~. sticke'rs,
scholarship rec ipient, gave a brief the June,22 meeti ng held at Star Mill
summary of her forst year at Berea Park with 17 members and fo ur
EVERY LIITLE GIRL LOVES A TEA PARTY- Attending a tu party hosted June 19 by Karlle ,·and sunglasses.· ~'' '
Coll ege in Kentucky where she was guests in attendance ..
Anne Hall, 3, were, from left: Makayla Dex:ter, Pomeroy; Olivia Warehime, Massillon; Tori Young, , Tl\e girl s were "served grilled ·
named "fres hman of the year...
· '
A brief busmess meeting was
Jenna Hysell, both _of Pomerov.; Carly Matheny, Little.Hocking; Zoe Thompson, Parkersburg, W.Va.; cheese sandwiches·shaped like
· Sputhetn Jr. and Sr. High· School held. Reports from the secretary,
Angela Keesee, Mtddleport; Hall; Kara Jeffrey, Barbouravllte, W.Va.; front row Holly. Johneon t
h'
d
·
Pomeroy; Tai Li Matheny, Littl" Hocking.
· ·
'
' ea pots, c 1ps, tea an tea pot
· band direc tor Greg Vance met with l.- illian Weese, and ueasurer. Ann
cake.
RACO mem be rs and . told · of the Zirkle. were read and approved.
band~s. acti~ities dUring the school
Libby Fisher gave the blessing
year. It is hoped a sc ~oo l marchin g . before the 6:30 p.m. meal. Davi d
band will be formed nt!.&lt; t year.
~i rk le lead the Pledge of Allegiance,&lt;
RACO wi ll spqnsor . the sixth llte nex t meeting will'be he ld Jul y
In an
i our rca&lt;l erannual ,Frog J umpong Contest at th e 27 at the Star Mill Park and will ship with current news, ihc !)unday
July 4 ce lebrati on. Senior di visioo involve a potluck di nner. ··" "
Tomes-Se nti nel. will not accept wed.dings a(ter 60 days from the dat ~ of
thc.Cve nt.
Weddings submottcd after the 60day deadline will appear during the
SATURDAY
MIDDI&gt;EPORT - ' Middleport wee k in The Daily Sentinel and the
REEDSVILLE ---. East~m High Masonic Lodge 363 F&amp;AM regul ar Ga lli polis Dail y Tribune.
School Cl'l" of 1984 I 5- year reun ion meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. RelrcshAll dub meet ings and other news
picnic Saturday, 2 p.m. at Forked Run menls will be served.
arti~les in the soc iety sect ion must
State Park.: ' Bring covered dish and
he su bm itted within· 60 days of
beve rage.
WEDNESDAY
. occ uorc ncc . All birthdays must l;&gt;e .
•
ALFRED - Oli.-;e Township submitted within ,60 days of. the
•
TU PPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Board of T rusrees regular meeting jil ()cc urrence. · · ~ ~ : ·
Plains Veterans of the Foreign Wai-s the township garage following the
New
Chevy Full
Onl y black and 'white or color
Post 9053 will hold a round and squ are budget heal'ing.
glossy pr ints will be. accepted.
Size Rai~ Roof Conv: Van
. · dance Saturday, 8-11 p. m. wuh True
Country. Caller will be Ronnie Wood.-

KENT, Conn. (AP) - It 's been eight years si nce he graduated from_prep school and Seth MacFarlane is sti ll being
scolded by the headmaster.
MacFarlane, a 1991 Kent School alumnus, is the creator
of ''The Family Guy," an animated,.satire on Fox television
that infuriates the Rev. Richardson Schell .
•
The head of the Kent School is leadin g a one-man ca m'
.
paign to get advertisers to drop their sponsors hip of the show,
.,
wliich chronie.les the travails of .a doofus husband .. hi s wife,
their slacker ieen-agers, homic idal toddler .and trilin gual
pooch.
,
Schell. who was in London on Thursday and could not.be
reached by telephone. told The New York iimes that he finds
the show "obnoxious." He al so objects to the fact that the
name of the cartoon family, Griffin, is the same as that of his
assistant at the Kent School.
"I have no problem with Seth, 'an'd it is not a personal
vendetta," Schell said .
Schell , headmaster at the Kent School for 1,8 years. has
asked such major companies as ·f epsiCo .. Philip Morris,
DaimlerChrysler and Sprin t to drop "The Famil y Guy."
Philip Morris and Sprint ha~e withdrawn their ads.
Jokes Gn the show have touched on rac ism, politics and
PRIESI~NT'S PLAQUES - David Snyder, prealdent of the Middle- cult suicide. One gag involved a toy called " G.I. Jew." In
port/Pomeroy Rotary ' Club, Is pictured with GED graduate Amber another, a.boy shoots the head off a John F. Kennedy Pe z di sRobinson. The Rotary Club sponsored . the annual dinner and ,
penser, then says: " At least I have my Bobby Kennedy Pcz
awards .for the GED graduates.
di spenser to back him up ."
Schell wrote the adverti se rs on behalf of " Proud Sponsors
·. USA ," a group he ac know ledges has a membership of one.
.. " Proud Sponsors, th at's my name, that's me," he said.
The enli stment also gives the new ."The re ason I did it is I'nl head of
soldier the option to Jearn . a new . school and I didn 't want.i n any way to
skill, travel: and become eligible to •. impli.cate t!,le school in this."
~~ ,rec-eive-runrthl!h as $ 50 , 000 ~-:r- c-·~ Jeff Shafer, a spokesman for Ove_r' college education. After completion land Par~ . Kan.-based Sprint, said !ct.of basic military trainin g, so.ldiers ters from Schell and othe rs prompted
' receive advan ced indi vidual trainin g the. company to undeo:take ots own

• :iso v..a Power
• Color TV And VCP

SUNDAY
. . MIDDLEPORT '---- Boclk Family
...,:iingers from Hillsville, Va .. will sing
·~ t the .First Bapti~t Churc.h of Middleport on Sunday at 10:15 a.m. and 7
p.m. All welcome.

• Rear AlriHaat ·

823 850

RACINE - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club wi ll hold an antique tractor pull Sunday, 2 p.m. at Star Mill
Park in Racine.

•

MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Village Council meeting Monday, 7 p.rn . at the
•
. municipal building.
CHESTER Vacation ·Bible
school will be held Monday \)lrough
Friday, 6-9 p:m. "! the Harvest Outreach Church in C~este r.
MIDDLEPORT- BlOOd drive at
Middleport Church of Christ Monday,
12-~ p.m. The church is located-at 431
Main Street.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
.Trustees, monthly meeting, 7:30p.m.,
Syracuse 'Village Hal l. Budget available.·
·
•
TUESDAY
CARPENTER - Columbia To\t&gt;nship Trustees meeting, 7:30 p.m.. fire
house.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees regular 'ITICCting following
budget hearing Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at
the home _of Clerk Osie Foil rod .
POMEROY - Board of Directors
of the Meigs County Unit of the Ameri'~.:an Canl:cr Society will mccl on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Mei£s County
library Conference Ruom . The ·Relay
for Life will be discussed, and a team
. captaons' meetong will be held prior, to
the meeting at 6 p.m.

'

.James H•.Thiel,' MD

Win
be
•

"in the ir Career specialty."
Fox,

• Rear Sola Bed
• Fiberglass Running Bda•
• .Totillly Loaded!
'

.'

.

.GomceHo•n
I.

'

Monday - Friday
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

50*

.

Michael·Brickles
. Pvt. Michael Bric kles recently
completed -Basic Training and Military Poli~e Advanced Individual Tri:"
aning iri' the United States Anny, at
F 1 McClellan· in' Alabama. He is
of Steve_and Sue Brickles of
antown, Md., and the grandsein
of Norman am:Uean Wood and Iona
Brickles of Pomeroy, and .the late
Donald Brickles.
'
He will be stationed at Fort Leavenwoi-th. Ks. as . a Military , Pollee
Corrections Specialist.
Mr. and Mrs, Wood attended his·
'
.
graduation-. al ong with .lona Brick_les, hi s pare nts, &lt;1nd friends Heather
Klitsch and Aaron Wiggins of Ger~
mantown , Md.

Brand New 1999 ·chevy Astra
Raised Roof Conversion Van

year,.

•

• Power Windows lc Locks
• Ground Effects
• Fully Loaded!

John

Mellencamp

helps save the music ·
CLARKSTON, Mich. (AP) Veteran musician John Mellencamp
was on hand for a ceremony designed
·to help.rooki es start play in g.

A meeting will be held
for local artisians who
are interested in being
a part of the Meigs
County Application
Artisian Grant Project.
The me'efing is set for
Wednesday evening,
July 7, at 6:30 p,m. ill
the Court House. For
·'
those who need more
information,· or il you
cannot attend, please
contact Justin Diddle at.·

·'

worth of mu Sical instrume nts to three
Detroi t schoo_ls.

Of

'

Yard S.al.e
Mt. Hermon U .S. Church
Saturday, July 3 rd - 9 :00AM
Located tn Texas Community
North of Five Points
Watch for Signs

'1" ·
'

Garage Sale

't

. July 2-3 (9-3)
Rustic Hills Syracuse
Collectibles • Clothes
MISC . :·:.

,~·~·~
- ~--~~·-·· ------~
..
"

.

..

·

",t he·_sl!ow is out there on the
edge. in terms of subjec t matter and
the way th at it deal s with ~oo\lro ve rsial subjects," Shafersa:d.
••

..

· • Ram Air V-6 Power
• . Traction Control , ·
• Power Windows &amp; Locks :. Aluminum Wheels
• Till/Cruise ·
• Loaded! ·

• ''li

·.

. .·~·

take It to
the limit

q&amp;,B50*

Brand New 1999
Buick Century Custoni

• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows
• Power Locks &amp; Mirrors

. • Tii( Steering
• Remote Keyless Entry
,• Nic~ly Equipped! ·

.,

• Instructor: Bryan Hoffman, BA.
1/{ltemationa/ Fitness Trainers of America,Certified/

• Mondays &amp; Wednesdays /Noon &amp; 5 p.m.!
• Wellness Center Activfties Room
., l

• $4/class f0r non-members
$3/class for members
• Early Bird Sign-up /Receive t-shirt with payment/
- $30/non-members 18 sessions/
- $22/members {8 sessions/

.

'

.•

&lt;'

Before a Wednesday night con -

cert, Mellcncamp and officials with
the .Save the Music Foun dation
ann ounced the donation of $75.000

tl3
8
5o·
*
•1
.

'

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM CD System

qo,B5D*

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Firebird

• 3800 V-6 Power
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM CD System
,,

• Cruisemlt
• Aluminum Wheels
• Nicely Equipped!

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunfire Sun &amp; So~nd
.

• Power Sunroof
• Chrome Wheel Covers
• Nicely Equipped!

• Taxes. Tags, Trtle Fees extra . Rebate ind~ . in sale.price of new vehicle listed where applicable. ··on approve&lt;~ creat. on selected f'r'OdelS
Pnces Good July 2nd lhru July 5th. Not •espon~ble for typogl!lphical enois. .
_...- - - - - -·_
. - - -- - - - - ,

The nonprofit fou ndation os dedicated·to restoring music programs in
schools nationwide and raising public

Gallipolis Ferry
West VIrginia 's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

Friday • Saturday 9 am - 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAY JULY 4TH
Monoday 9 am • 9

awareness ahout the importance nf

music education.
''I'm very excited about it," sriid
Charles Moody . . the principal of
Bethune Elementary School in Pontiac . one o f the three schoo ls.

•
,

re·vJe w of th ~ show.··

entering . active Jiuty fo r up to o ne

'

Rt 2. BoxBJ - Ohio River Road
Gallipolis Ftny. WV 25515

Jessica Fox
Jessica A. Fox has jo~d me
United Statts Army under the
Delayed Entrr Program at the U.S.
·Army Recruiting Stati o~,i n Athens.
, The program gives young men
aiH:I women the opportunity to delay

• AMIFM Cassette
• Rear Sola Bed
• Loaded!

'
• Taxes. Tags, Tille Fees extro. Retoote ~ ~ 1101 price li I14W vehicle !~ted - · awllcable. "On app10ved
Cf9dit. On mOdel
Pnces Good .!lAy 2nd lhru JoAy 5th. N!i reaponsl)le for typographical em&gt;IS. 'Vehicle shown with equlpment lrom an Independent su'""lef s.
Se&lt;o tile owner's manual tor 11formalion on alleralionSIIIId wamonlies.'
""' ·

(304) 675;.3062

Serving at 11 :00 am ,
Homemade ice cream and
. dess erts will be ava il able.

Michael Brlckles

,

Brand New19~Chevy
Astro Converston Van

• Air Conditioning
• High GlOss Walnut Wood
• Rear Sofa Bed

G-11•••~··
Heal~hCare

1

Chicken BBQ
Sunday July 4th

.

serving as the interim physician at

• Color TV 6 VCP
• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks

Mason Co.
Fairgrounds
Space Available ',
·304-675-5463
304· 773-5696

Racine Fire Dept. a re having a

Brand New 1999 Pontiac·
Grand.Am GT Coupe; ' .

n

121,850*

July4

1999

• Fiberglass Running Bds.
• Custom Alum. Wheals · • Loaded!

beginning Tuesday, Ji.dy 6, ·.l999. .

a 199&amp; graduate of Federal

Hocking Hi gh School. will report to
Fort Leo nard Wood, Way ne&gt;v ill e.
Mo., f~r basic trainin g on August u ·.
She is ',the daughter of Shelb y
Biggin_s. Coolvill~ .

. Full Size Conversion Van

HealthOara ot GalliPolis Ferrv,

4 pm

a

* Brand New1999Chevy

• VortkV-8 Power
• 4 Ca;u.l.iis Chairs
• Rear Sofa Bed

10am

'Open

· , , · Military:NeWs Notes

Corrrmunity G:&gt;atendar---

I

Mason County
Flea Market
July 2 -3 - 4
8 am - 5 pm

· 634 East Main Street
Pomeroy - 740-992-5500
· Open Sund ay ~ uly 4

Headmaster not amused by
grad's animated Fox sitcom

The.! Ral7ine A rea Com muni ty
O rgan ilal icn honored four So u1hern

825950

O'Dell Tru.e lumber

means, Ke nneth · M.

Karlie .Ann.e Hall

* 'Brand

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy_• Middleport, Ohio

GE£? graduates recognized at _annual dinner sponsored by Rotary Club

Aunt raising her nephew needs legal help with tax deduction problems

Dear Ann Landers: I'm writing
al)out "Ticked Off in Texas ," who is
raising her nephew because her sister's new husband does npt want the
·boy. The sister is still collecting welfare checks for the child.
· While I agree with your advice to
"forget about his mother's chiseling
and consider the boy a blessing in
your life," I don't think you should
support illegality.
Even though the Jllother provides
no support for the child, she claims
him as a dependent on her tax return .
'(Th i.s Is ill egal. If ·Ticked Off' wants
justice ~·sh,e should
., keep doc ume nta-

I

•

•

675;_7222

West Virginia 's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds .•
And Custom Van Dealer. .

Friday · Saturday 9 am • 10 pm
CLOS ED SUNDAY JULY 4TH
Monday 9 am • 9'

·,

�•

•

•
Page

8 • The Daily Sentin.e l
Public Notice

THE V1~1.AGE OF

Ordinance 07-99 An
ordinance
lncceaalng
compensation of all hQurly
employee• forty-five cents
per hour.
Salaried
employees' compenaatlon
was Increased by thr•e

3%15.._ Vanilla leo Cream
Mix·l /2 Gallon
Water (plaatlc)-112 Pint
Cottage Cheese-S lbo.
Oro ngo FruIt Drlnk· l /2

percent.
·
Resolution number A04·
99 a resolution authorizing
that
$27 , 825 . 72
be
transferred
from
the
Economic Development
fund to the General Fund.
Resolution nUinber RDS·
99 A resolUtion ,uthorlzing
that
$27,825 .72
bo
transferred
from
the
General \fund to various
other lunas.
.
Resolution number A06·
99 A resolution appointing
Robert Robinson to fill lhe
council-seat of Sandy
lannarelll until January 1,
2000.
Ordinance 08 · 99 An
ordinance authorizing the
MayOr to . enter Into a
Community Development
Block Grant agreement on
behalf of lhe VIllage of
Middleporl.
lor
Im provements . to
the
wastewater system.
Ordinance 09·99 An
ordinance authorizing the
mayor to apply for, accept. G
John A.
and ent$r into a Water
Pollution Control Loan Fund
agreement on behalf of the
Village of Middleport.
A copy
of
these
legislative documents are
on file at the Village of
Middleport
Clerk/Treasurer's office and
available
for
public '
lnspecllon.
•
Bryan -Svyann
Clerk/lreasurer
(7) 2,9 2TC

Pint
Fruit Punch Fruit Drlnk·l /2
Pint
·
Orange Julce-4 ...

All

quotes

must

submitted by July

i6,

be
1999

to thq following ·address:
Eastern Loc-al School
District
Treasurer 's Otflce , 5Q008

State Route 681 , Reedsville,
Ohio 45772

"

Lunchroom
Quote

Supplies

(7) 21TC

www.c:omlu .com
Public Notice

Public Notice

~EGA~ NOTICE

Racine Vlll~ge Clerk Karen
PUBLIC NOTIFICATION OF
~yona will received sealed
INTENT TO FI~E AN
.
bids until 7 pm Monday,
APPLICATION
. July 5, 1999, lor the aaie of
The Village of Pom,e roy
a 1991 F.O rd CroWn VICtoria
hereby gives notice of lis
(Old ' Pollee
Cruiser)
intent to tile an application
Minimum Bid $1000.
for financial assistance with
Also tho Clerk will receive
Quotes for Supplle's
the U.S. Oepartmant of
sealed bids for the sale of a
Eastern Local Schqol Agriculture,
Rural
7 l oot finish mower with District, 50008 State Route Development
for water
new bearing and belts. ·681 , Reedsville, Ohio 45772 extensions and ImproveMinimum bid $500.
Is accepting quotes for ments. This notice Is pub·
ttem1 may be seen by con- I u c h r o o m
an d
lished In accordance with
tacting the Clerk al lhe transportation supplies for Rural Development regula·
Municipal Building .
fiscal
year
2000. tiona contained In RUS
Envelopes- to be marked, Specifications for supplies Instruction 1780.19 (a). The
Bids for Cruiser
Bids for can be obtained by calling proposed pro)eet Involves
Mower.
the treasurer ' s office ·BI 740- tho extension of water aer·
Karen Lyons, Clerk
667-3319. Ouoles will be vlcelo 25 (31 potential) res·
Racine VIllage ·
open8d .in thi treasurer 's !dents located .In Pleasant
(6)' 25 (7) 2 2TC ·
ortlce at noon ~m Monday, Rldg'I R:oad In Pom•roy and ·
. '
July 26, 1999. The boa•d N 1 • R
nd st h
ay or s un 8
arc er
rese rves the rigtit to rei'ect
Public Notice
In
Salisbury
anY' or any part of the 'f,&gt;.;ll,,h,lp, Meigs County,
PUBLIC NOTICE ·'
quotes. Ouotea should be Ohio. The proposed project
1
NOTICE Ia hereby g1ven labeled
' 0Ljotes
for also Involves the Improve·
0
0 1 ment , of water service
that on Saturday, July 3,
L u nc h r 0 m
1999, at 10:00 a.m., a public· Transportation Supplies " (Increased pressure)· for 40
sale will be held at 211 West and mailed to :
·
existing customers located
Second Street, Pomeroy,
Eastern local School
In the Route 33 and Rose
Ohio, The Farmer's Bank District
Hill areas of Salisbury
and
Savings .Company Treasurer's Office, 50008
T-ownship ,_ Meigs ,County, .
parking lot, to sell for cash State Route 681 , ReedsVIlle,
Ohio.
tho lollowlng•coilaterai:
Ohio 45772
A copy of lho application
199.1
Kawasaki
Ninja
EA\ITERN LOCA~ SCHOO~
Is available lor review altho
. 1G1JC14G9M7113346.
DISTRICT
following
iocalion
by
. The Farmer's Bank and
SPECIFICATION FOR
appointment. .
Savings
Company,
~UNCHROOM SUPPUES
' Village of Pomeroy
Pomeroy, Ohio, res,rves
1999~2000
320 Main Street
,
the right to. bid at this sale,
BA~ED GOODS:
Pomeroy, OH 45769
1
and to withdraw tt'le above
Hamburger Buns-Package
Questions regarding this ,
collateral prior to sale. or 12.
'
application, or appoint·
.. tfurther, The Farmer~ ~ank
Hot Dog Buns~ Package of
ments to review said appli· :
and
Savings
Company 12.
.
cation should be dlrec1ed to
reserves the right to reject
!;ipiit Top Hoagie Buns·
John Anderson, Village
any or ail bids submitted.
Package of 6
Administrator at 740·992·
Further, the above collat·
Scotty Buns (le party size
2166.
"era! will ba soldIn the con- hamburger buns)
(6) 25 (7) 2 2TC
dillon II Is In, with no
Bulk Hamburger Buns
exp.ress or Implied war·
Bulk Hot Dog Buns
Public Notice
rantles 91v~n ... .
White· Regular Bread-loaf
For furth·er lnfo.rmatiori,
While Sandwich Bread19 .
· THE FO~LOWING
c.ontact Shannon at 742· . loaf
ORDINANCES AND
270§.
· '.,
I Whea1 Broad-loaf
,.
RESOLUTIONS WERE
(6) 3D .(7) 1, 2 3Tc '·
MILK PRODUCTS:
REC~NTLY ENACTED BY
2% White Mllk·l/2 Pinl

or

.

I

...

Tr8noportalion
opecllicoliono . Prtvoill~g
wogn will •pply to. lhlo
projact • . Spacllicatlons ond
bid docum•nta may bt
obtolnod by contocling
John Anderson , VIllage
Admlnl1trator,
Pomeroy
Municipal Building 320 E .
Moin Slreot, P.O . Box 666,
Pomeroy, OH 45769. (740)
992·2166.
Each bid must contain the
full name ot every person or
company , interested In 1ht
bid
and
must
be
accompanied by . a bond or
certified chock In the
amount or 5 percent of their
bid, to the a8tisfactlon of
Village
Council, 11 a
guaranly lhat II tho bid lo
accepted, a contract will bo
entered Into and Ita
performance properly
secured. These chocks or
bonda will be returned at
once to. all _except the
aucceaolul bidder.
His
check or bond will be held
un111 tho contract is
properly executed by him.
The outside oltho sealed
bid musl be m.arked
" Aaphail Paving Bid ".
, The VIllage Council or
Pomeroy, resarvea the right
to reject any or all bids, and
to waive lrregular~tlea,

MIOD~EPORT:

Cream Mhc·V2 Gallon

Publlc'Notlce

Public Notice

Public Notice

1% Chocolatolow Fat
Mllk·112 Pint
1% Whlto Low Fat Mllk·l/2
Pint
3% ; 5% Chocoiato leo

....

F~iday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

PUBUCNOTICE
Tho
Village
of
Mh:UIIoport will hold 1
Budgot Hoorlng lor the yoor
2000 on July 12, 111H 11
7:30 P. M. in council
chambers. Ragulor ...-ng
will follow. Tho public lo
invllod to o11ond. Coploo of
111o propolld budgot will bo
ovallable lor lnopoctlon
!tom July 2, 1999 through
July 12, 1999 in council
chambori.
Bryan Swann
Cierk/Trooourer
(7] 2, 9 2TC

Happy Blrthda,to

Faye
Watson!
..

We all appreciate
the many. kl•d
·
·
things that she
does..

Love from

f'aruib· &amp; Friends

Ande.~rs=o=n~·-V~I~IIa~g=ej~~~~~'iiii

-

annual budgot mHtlng on July 14,
1999 .t ~ Pogeorille Town
H.,l ., 11:311 pm. The public
Ia lrMIONI.
(7] 2 lTC

Card

wnb,

pnl}'t'fj , .ffoJI'aS,

(740) 843·1252

-. o{/so .9;arefid jar rfi,.
t•xprr1Br L;.: kmdm•ss of
tfit ambuiaucr prtslfrtnlf.
pliySicians, nurstS, (.;:.
fiosprtal stc~tf {" ·;.,lf'ryont
wlfo

l1SSL,Itd

HOWARD'
EXCAVATING CO.
I ill

m {l/1~' war

740·742·2138

(7401992·3831

,.

'

•New Homes

29670

•Garages

.985-4422

flaclne, Ohio

Sims

·concrete
Connection
25 yrs exper.

740·742·8015
877·353·7022"
fr~e)

Free Estinwtes

ESTIMATEES

7:00AM.- 8 PM .

985-447~

· E"O

~ew H'o mes

-

..

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
Siding &amp; St~llil

Cull todt.y ·nboul •peci,/
prict&gt;• tllru July ou
Quality Built llou1e•

Remember
Oacllltr Is )olt One
~Z7S5 ~1101

•

.

BJSSELL BUIL!)ERS,
INC.
'

Siding •Nev; Garages
• Replacement Windows

· 15-hp · 44-inch mower deck
· Automaiic transmission

·: Room Additions

..

and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

•
,.

"

614·992·7643

· 22-hp • 48-inch mower.deck
·
·
· Hydrqstatic drive

AG sEJMCEV

'

New

..
•

.

.

445 Lawn and Garden Tractor

335 Lciwn and Garden Tractor

~.!'ors

lamiliJ 1#11me
Alm111phm

T

0

H

I

N

u

G

N

s

74D-99Z.33fJO

New Construction &amp;

L I

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc.

K

A

E

005

~ERVICE
·, "\'tll'll

"

• S\Urllll

'

740-- 742-3411

Gtll\611\9

Brya11 .{leeVIf-.'1
Susa11 Reeve•

20 Yrs.

Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Free

We

delive~ ALMOS_
Tanyt~lrig

Call 98S·383I

7 40-992-0038

_Jo_seph Jacks
. 740·992·2068

Linda's Pain,tlng

message . After

6

pm

740~985~4180

Free Estimates

'

DEPOYSAG
,..
, PARTS

WICKS
ttAULirtG: lrtC.

All Makes Tractor &amp;

We Deliver

EiJuipmenl Parts

Limestone, Gra,vel,,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
,4griculiural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil

Factory AuthorJ. zed
Case-IH Parts .
Oe~lerSI
I 000 ~I. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

74MII7-o383 .

(Low Rales).

740~992-3470

D E E. R

Repo • Dlvotced

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
304-529-3309

~pprcived. cred1t an John Deere C.1edit Rawlv111g Plan . for oon-&lt;:ommercial u:e 10lliu down payment requrred ra~es. frerght. Setup and del:~~ery charges could merease monthly payment Other special rates and terms may be avar lsble mcfudmg rr-.staUment flnanctng .and
·

' ' ..

·

WORRYING!!!
QUALIIT WINDOW SYSTEMS ·
FORMERLY OF II 0 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMER.OY AT CO~NTY ROAD 18
VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119
' OR 800-291-5600
.
VINYL REPLACEM ENT WINDOWS AT
. FACTORY DIRECT PRI CES

Personals

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Ha'w'e Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gles. In Your Area . Call For More
Information . l·tiOO·AOMANCE.
Ext. 9735 .
Start Dat ing To 'nightl Have fun
playing the Ohto O_
ating Game. 1·
SOO·AOMANCE . extensi9n 9681

30

Call
for details
,·
.

pm leave

'

&lt;ar
· • •Deep · · s safely
•OED ORIZES leaving carpel
melling fresh
•Lifts matted carpel pile
•'Dry" cleans so you can u'se
carpel righl away ·
,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

PROBLEMS

East ,End Cycle Sales, inc.

Jackson Pike - 2 Miles West Of Holzer Hospital
GaUipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412
•

TREE

Free EtJlit~nites

• Before

(

-Host- }
tl1e leflllir ' !to:

JONES'

Remodtling·Kilchtn Coblnota
·vinyl Sldlng,-Rooi..Peckl· · ·

.!l

Now Stockir

992-7021

Supplies'

Sldlpg • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates ·

INGELS CARPET

1i5 N. 2nd,.Miqdleport,
.
...OH.;.-

Sunset Rome
·Construction

www.~eere.com

linqncrog for comrilercisl use. Available at particrpatmg dealt11.

parts -• Wlll deUver
·..
51645 Billlev RidRe Rd., LODR Bottom, Ohio

WIC'Itl. Sun$e tH o"le, c 0"1

. - Take th.e pain out
of painting, and let
. me do it f?r yo~:~.
, INTERIOR
-.

6122199 1 mo. pd

'

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

P98MOD7 - H/8 '1

; Offers end July 5. 19J Subj&amp;t:t!D

~

a~cl OeltP.~! cfu~l1'te.~

Coating • b utters •

740·992-5232

THE APPLIANCE MAN .
985·3561
'
• We service .all makes • Used AppUances • We sell

Under New Mgmt.

Complete Line Of 4-H
"
Feed &amp; Show Supplies

·.Repairs •

" 33795 Hilnrrd Rd.
'
'Pohreroy,
Ohio ·

Ken Youn~ Former Owner of
KEN'S
. A PLIANCE SERVICE
Now
•

Cnre for Elderly

&amp;·Dry

$elf-Storage

"I'M .B ACK"

It's easy to find great John Deere lawn equipment- just stop. by your nearest dealer. And it's easy to find a price
that's easy on your wallet. But with so much to choose from, the hard part's deciding what to take home.

N

(740) 742-8888 .

tre""f-~ 21, II": Taxi

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
•

Hig~

experience .

.i6 21 1 mo.

..

40 yrs

740·698·3290

Now Renting

8:30 • 5:00 i

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

SHADE RIVER

.,

Over

.
And Sullivan Show

-.

'

vinyl tops,

"

. GT225.Lawn and Garden Tractor
·. 20-hp · 48,inch mower deck
· ·Automatic transmission

"ssoo.oo

(No Sunday Calls)

..

Also riding le~sons

~·

Mon • Frl

•Jfandicapped

'

992·2772

Horses &amp; Track
New &amp; Used Saddles

.boat covers. carpets. etc.

$300.00 Coverall

.. Garageo

• Roofing

COMMERCIAL

17-hp · 48-inch mower deck ·
· ·All-wheel steering

.

HOME
'

II

Hoof Hollow Farm

Four wheeler seats. motorcycle .seats,

$80.00

.

1·100·311•3391
Free ·E stimates
5/25199 2 mo. pd.

"

'

ELIM
'

'

PH: (740)

Ohio

.

Albnny, Ohio '

·Automatic iransmisslon

St.,

James Keesee

•

Lie. II Q0-50 nn.,.

Contractors Welcome

~ : 15-hp · 42-inch mower deck

OH

Truck .. seats, car seats. headliners,

sterburst
Progressive top line.

•

. New Homes • Vinyl

.,

' Rut!and,

petgame ·

·'

•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing &amp;Seamless GuHer
•Replacement Windows
• •Concrete
•Room Additions •Go1'oges
•Decks 8. Boot Docks

E SYSTEMS INC

'truck tarps. convertible ' &amp;

Pomeroy,OH

6'18199 1 mo. pd

*Additions
• Rcmo&lt;leiH1g

Tuppers Plains,

Announcel')'lents

Going ·Out 01 Business Sale: 45%
Off Store Wide , y.'lllon Cake
Pans , D.J 's Craft Shop. 2390
Jackson Pike, 740·446·2134
,New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 west Stimson, Athens
740.592·1 642
Quality clothing and hOusehtiLd
items . $1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
i- "
9:()0..5:30. .
STOP YOUR HAI,A LOSS . .Buy
PROPECIA Over The Phone . I ·
· A07 ·859·405t
Doctors
Are
Standing By. For Men Only I '
WEIGHT• LOSS . I Lo St 90+
Pound&amp; In 6 Monthsl I'll Help You
Reach Your We.igl\1 Loss Goa lsl
Toll Free B88·781·9624.
40

Giveaway

2 Free Kittens : \Male, 1 Female,
740·388·0173 , Alter 4, 740·367·
7187.
•
6 Week Old Puppy Female , \lery
Friendly, Long_'":lair I 740·446 -"

6700.

.~ts~~ 1k~~t.ens~ to

giveaway. 740·

°Free Kittens. to gocid home.
Male/Female . Can be seen any·
lime. 302 3rd St. Mason. WV.
Free Outside Kitte ns. Mixed Col·
or. 1 Calico. 1 TatXly, 1 Orange, 1
Pregnant Mom Cat. 740·388·
9161.
Ki"ens. 740-446-7730.
Puppies. 10 weeks old, part Sea·
gle. 740·985·3662 or 740 :985 ·
3884.
.Registered Australian Sheppard,
~Jpproximate l y 3 yrs old , Red
Merle . (30.4)675-7911 .
S1x WeeM Old Kittens. Li tte r
Tra1ned. To good home. (304)675·
4579.

60

804 Porter Road , July 2M . 3rc:l ,
41h

Be hid In Advance.
DfAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
lhedoybelon!tiiiH

Ia to run. Sundly
edition • 2:00 P·"'·
Frldoy. llondoy edition
·10:00 a.m. Sltunt.y.
Ammana 20.000 BTU Air Condi-

tioner, Oueen Size W:uerbed Etc..
()10 S&amp;lr Aoacl. Vinton , 74-0-245- •
9306 , '1/tst . 2nd , 3rd~- 8 A.M. -5
PM.-

J &amp; LInsulation
&amp; Siding

A &amp; DAuto Upholst,ry • Plus,., Inc

Th~rsdays ·

Paying

38782 Sumner Road ,
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45"769

22 yr•. i.ocal

AT6 :30 P.M.

· Sat~faclion Guaranlee~
2 room minimum ·
378·6438 992·0077
1·877·626·3693

SMITH'S,,.
CONSTRUCTION

ADVANCED OfW

Club Bingo On

Main

FREE ESTIJ,fAT£5 ..

Ill

740·992-6215

pd

.

STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

9:00 to 4:30
Sat: 9:00 to ·12:00

P.omeroy Eagles

Spring Gean Sp«ial
2areas 545.00
3orllCis 554.95
4oreas .S69.95 ·
511ieos 584.95

V.C. YOUNG

(740) 985-4218
EMAIL:

Mon.· Fri.

7/22/tln

CHEVALiER'S
CARPET CLEANING

PHONE :

8" Grovelless Leoch100' · 100D'Rolli 1" &amp; 3/4" 700#Wottit Line
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;.RegulatoB Wotet Storage Tonks -

Stop &amp; Compare
.
FREE
.

·· 3JSIII/1 mo. Dd.

Trucl&lt;s - lractor
Trailers -decks -driveways
Eqwpmem Cleaned &amp; Degreased
. JEFF STETHEM

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

Remodeling

'

CARPENTER SERVICE

Lost and Found

Found Beagle Male Oag , Very.
Very Friendly! lara Apartmen t
Complex, 740·367-~2 .
'
Found · Clarion remote , Pome ro~
"Post Office vicmity, cal l 7110-992 ·
5333.

Lost Or Staten · Toy Pooal e
• Needs Medlcrne·. If Fourra Return
To 1601 Clav Chap el Road ,
Crown Crty, 740..256-6579

Complete Auctionee ong Servlc·
es Con11gnment auc tiOn· M1ll '
Strtel , Middleport. Thursdays
O~'uo License 1 7693 740·989·
2623

4 Fam•ly: 7,/ tst . 2nd. 3rd . 9•4 1st
Door On RigN Off Route 7. Bladen

AU. Yard s.• Mutt

Apom Addtttont. &amp; R.fnocs.llng
New G•ragee
Electrlc~l &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guttera •
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pitio &amp; Porch Decko

Allctlon
Md FIN Market

·1S:-::7:--:":::'::=::::-~====­
tU MoOdispaugh Aucttoneenng .

5 112 Miles Out Butavllle P1ke ,
Something For Everyone!_ Wa tc h

POWER WASH

FrH Elllmst••

St. At. 7

•Complete

10'

949-2168

740-985-3813 '

Hours
~

.

Your

5' x

to10'x30'

TOM STOBART
todav at .
740 ~ 992- 7022 far
fUtlhet infttmalion·.

n

45n1 ,.

740-949·2217

Must be 50 -years
of age &amp; meet ,
HUD income
guidelirres.

Chester, Ohio

Bashan Road

Fl't~E ESTIMATES

'G~W Plastics and Supply

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

SELF STORACE

•
•
•
•
•
•

1-740·985·3949
mo

80

Road, Plus Size Womans Cloth·
mg . Men' s, Ch itdrans Clothmg.
HousehOld Items, Misc. hems

TRI·STATE MOBilE

Qwrier/ Operalor

1

»

For StgnS. 9:00Am- 5:00Pm

. RODNEY KELLER

3/11/99 TFN

.HILL'S

' Call

Dirt • Send

(toll

Utilitie•

Charh•s rBIJ.~Ii .'"farm/)'

Limestone • Gravel

1012

&amp; Gravel

SeJJtic Systenu ·&amp;

&amp;

Gradit;'Q .

9od rBft&gt;ss 1Vu .

~
Need To Slay

11

Limestone

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

• Land Clearing

.:._~

s1~ns,
l3-hp · 38-inch mower decf
·
5 -speed shift-on-the-go
".' .
transm1ss1on

Downspouts

YOUNG'S

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site Prepa·ration
Septic Systems

Hauling

House &amp; Trail~r Sitf"s

wllo Cd n· . .,

·11imrk yOu

1111111111
Service•

' J.:

'

3 Famlliu! July 1st, 2nd. &amp; 3rd
Wagoner Road , Oft 233 . Toys ,
ClOtheS, 1987 Dodge Aries. 1993
Ranger. Schennu Trac1or,, K1ng
Cutter Oren Mowar. And Much
Mora! 740-379-2851 .

Gutters

Phone (740) 593-6671

KCB
EXCAVATING

TRUCKING

ta:waiTtnWIJI

BuUdo:er &amp; Backhoe

rfir Lord )or pt•aph·

raise

Agricultural Lime,

•

ROOF II&amp;
IEW·UPtiR

:'A Belter Wa

SAYRE.

Y•nt ,Sale: Fair Ground Roa.d,
. . . . . Trl-County Sports . Ja~ly

2 Fomily l'lnl Solo. S.lllllllv. JulY
3 Only. Clothe•. Toys ,'"Misce lla~
- . 1 2 7 - D r 9:00...

Painting

750 East Stille Slr~et
Athens, Ohio 45701

Portland, Ohio

pfionr calls (;;. PISlfors .

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE '

Ev. &amp; Fnmily

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

r

. '5 3560 S. A 338

110 .

9

Help W111nted

&amp; VIcinity

ad Call992·2156

In And See
Steve Riffle
•
Sa.les Representaiive
Larry Schey

ll'r arc"' rliaukfu/ Jor rli.·

5th
American Legion
Post 467
in Rutland, Ohi.o
will be paying
$80.00 a game
since our new
construction is
finished on our
· Legion Hall. The
coverhall game
amount of $200.00
will be more
depending on the
,size of the crowd.
Starburst at
$1,500.00
July

Re L. -HOLLON
TRUCKING

Qappys.o th

an

Stop

THE MAPLES

'. You .leclure.l to or1e and all that I was
· " Over T/w Hill",
No.rc 1 ask ymt How Doei II Feel?
·,,;e Fourti, of July, Fireworks will abortnd.
Fumily &amp; Friends ·will all gather round.
To ce/i!bmle tl.e pa.sirrg Qt tlris eveiltful day
. ou July 6,' 1'99 9 "'slte 8 ear "
~ .~ill you s'C nd them &lt;Ufay?

To place

Pt. Pleasant

YardSale

70

Howard L Writesel

Apply now for

' Wlr~tr I lumed Fifly,
. " 1'o D o " ,
yot• m.a de _a B rg
So rrow my &lt;/enr,
,, it~ /wpptmit/1! to 'yort,

,_,-------

Gutter Cleaning '
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page

PomerQY • Middleport , Ohio

of

Summar?

IS/1rer·M· De(lr,

2, 1999

Business Services

A public hoaring on lhe
Sutton Townahlp budg.t lor ,
y,.r 2000 .will be hold on
July 1~h at 7 :30 PM at
SyracuH Vlllago Hall .
Kenneth Wigging•
Sutton lWp. Cle&lt;lt
43410 Dutchtown Rood
Racine, Ohio 45171
21TC

Cool ftls

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealfd bids will be
received In the office of the
VIllage Clerk, Pomeroy
Municipal Building , 320 E.
Main Street, P.O . Box 666,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, unlll
11 ;OD AM. Monday, ,Auguat
02, 1999 lor I he follow! ng
propoSal . concerning the
paving of various atr~ets In
the VIllage of Pomeroy.
·•
2173 Cubic yards, mor(J!
or less of specification 404
asphalt paving Installed,
2900 gallons~ more or less
of specificatiOn 407 tack
coating installedt 8nd 29263
square yards more or leas·
of • specilic~tlon
254
pa~p monl planin,g.
The
Villige of Pomeroy' will
provide a site within lhe
village lor lhe stockpiling of
the planings material.
All
materials ~
and
equipment are 10 meet Ohio
Departma ·nt
of

-r

TM Scipio lWp. TruaiHO

wiU hold

-

Friday, July

LEGA~ NOTICE

PUBliC NOTICE •

Public Notice

2, 1999

Public Notice

Public Notice

Adminlatrator
(7] 2.9. 1 II 3TC

July

Fqday. Saturaay, 9 · 5. Frank li n
F urnac e . Furniture . Wood &amp;
WindOWS, From Old House. MLSC
Items, Route 160 Ewnington

Ht}ge Yard Sale: ·July lSI, Till 10tn
9 A.M. To Dark. 3 Mrtes South Of
Rio Grande. To Centerpoir\1 Road.
2nd House Follow Signs
Jewelry, Hand )oots, Lawn Mow·
er. \ICR. ~weeper . Odds / Ends.
Much More! Friday. Saturday.
July• 2nd, 3rd. 9 A..M. -5 PM. Pant
Lane Tr~iter Park , 57 Jay Drive,
Lot i28
·

FLEA MARKET
7fl 10 A. .M -6 PM .
71310 A..M ..4 P:M , .
7!4 1 PM ·5 PM
'
AuctJon 714 · 7 P.M
. Anol
.426 ~Avenue . GaWtpolls.
1\riel Fund-RaJSef "No Dealers
Wide Varl8ty Of Used Treasures
And A FeW ,l.ht1Qu&amp;S
DotlatOns WelCome
Cai740-44&amp;ARTS
For P"""" Po:i&lt;·Up

,.,..g.

Rtck Pearson AVciiOn Comparly.
full 11me .auct1oneer. comp lete
auct ion
service.
Lrc ensed 1
t66 .0hlo &amp; Wes t \l~rg tnt a . 304·
nJ-5785 Or 304·nJ-5447
Wedemeye r' s Au ct,on Service,
Gallipo~s. Ohto 7.(().379-2720.

90

Absolute Top Oolla~ · All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coin's, Proofsels .
Diamonds. Atltique Jewelry, Gold
Rings . Pre- t930 U.S. Curr~ncy,
Sterling . Etc. AcquiSlltens Jewelry
· M.T.S Coin Shop, I 51 Second
Avenue. Gall~is. 740-446-2842.
Ant•ques . top prices paid. River·
rne Ant iques . Pomeroy, OhiO,
Russ Moqro ownef. _7 40· 992·
2526
Clean Late Mode l Cars Or
Trucks . t990 Models Or Newer .
· Sm1th Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
, ern Avenue, GallipOlis . .., ·

l,.arge TwQ FamilY: Clothes . Baby
Items. Al')d Lois More r 7/2r\d . 71
3rd. 338 Third Avenue . .
Monday June 28th, Tnru Friday
July 2nd. Clothes. Toots. Crafts ,

Shutters, Toddle; Bed Otshes .
Curlain.s, Shoes . Boat Seats ,
Name Brarrd Je.ans , Bathroom
Sink And Cabil}et Lounger, 1914
State ~oute 141, Gallipolis .
Pomeroy,
Middleport

Wanted to Buy •

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

HelpWanted

$2 ,000 WEEKLY! Malling 400
Brochures ! SatiSfaction Guar·
anteed ! Pos taQe &amp; Supplies Pfb·
v1ded! Rush Sell-Addressed
Stamped Env&amp;lope t GICO, DEPT
5, Box 1438 , ANTIOCH. TN .
370'11 ·1438
.

&amp; VIcinity
All students, lull and p.art timB
3 family yard sale- Friday &amp; Sat· • openmgs ·1n custo me r's arv fc'a/
urday. Julv 2·3. 9·5. S:,2nd Ave . • sa les dep ..$10.35'"per hr appt. No
Middleport . large women :S c;:loth·
ell:oerience· will train. Conditions
ing, tots of women's jeans al l siZ·
apply. Must be 18. Call 304·485·
es. other mise :
'4300. www .workforsll,ldents.eom/
.oh
4 fam ily yard sale; July 1·0, Bam
till evening . Dishes. clothing ,
A\IONI All Areas l To· BUy or 'selL
tools. lo ts rl')Qre..Pierce residence ~
ShiriB'f Spears,' 304-675-1429.
1!2 mile north WPortl~nd Park on
SA 124.
.
I)
AVON has' a place for yo1.1 ! Jo1n
the,., beauty company ! Enjoy
8 Family yard sale·July 5. 6. 9·5.
your own buSiness. Buy vour own
Skate·A·Way 740·985·9996. mi·
pr oducts at cost. Call 1·800·4·
cro ~ave . range hood. water heat·
AVON or 740·594·4354.
••er. lamps , stereo. ~TV's, furniture,
toq ls14.trUck tool box , Rawleigh
' Avon Products: Start yaur own In·
Produtfs. Avon , clOthes, m1sc.
Home Busmess. Work Flex ible
Hours . Enroy Unlim1ted Earn1ngs.
All Yard Sates Must Be Paid In
1·888·56 t ·2866
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the .
day before the ad Ia 10 run,
Be your own bos!i. Work at 'hOme.
SundaY. &amp; Mon~ay . edltlon24 rour message. 877·267·"-"03.
1:OOpm Friday,
Com·p uter Use rs Neeq,&amp;d. Work
Carporl sale· rain ·or shine. Lead·
Own Hrs ~:$251&lt; ·SSOK/ Yr_ 1·800·
lng Creek Rd. at Clonch VCR Re·
476-86"53 X 1777, WW'I!.1cwp.com
pair. 1st, 2nd.· &amp; 3rd. 8:30· 4:00.
Driver
Lots ol good things.
·.

'•

Firat time lhl1 yearl La rge 'in·
door/o utdoor yard sale . July 1· 3.
· 9am·5pm . Out At. 33 on CR 19,
Peach Fork Ad . Watch fof signs.
Rain or shine. Women 's and kid's
cloth ing, _lots ol, new arid 'used
~ merchand ise.
Refreshment s
ser'w'ed. Don't miss this one!
Something far ewryone .

CONTINENTAL EXPRESS
·COL Class A With 6 Monlhs
Exper. Driving SchOOl Grads
Consiclered. No NYC · Home
Most Weekends
Aeg~nal &amp; Long Haul
EOE
8()0.293-{)700 Or 800-695·4473

First time vard sale- SA 2.48 . 2.6
miles from SA 7. Follow signs .,
Ttwrsday, Fnday. SaiUrday. July
1·3, 9am·4pm.
' ·

AVAILABLE'

GARAGE·A·PALOOZA II· Sat·
urday, July 3, 9:'00i 3:00 , .One Day
onlyi·Three families ., .totS ol stuff!
169f Lint:oln Heights, Sm1th rest·
dence. Don't, miss. this· one· we've
got s.tu.Ji!
Huge li!ie family yard sale· Flat·
woods Af:I .,:.Pomeroy. OhiQ. Satur·
day. Ju ly 2. 9·00·4 :00 . Clothes .
furniture, misc. Rain or shine.
Julv 2·3: 9am·,4pm. 37070
Bashan Ad . 740·985·3376.
. 'L

DRIVING POSITIONS
Class A OTR:
.
S1ngte · Del ver, "Late Model -l&lt;en·
worths With Reelers. Wesl Coast
Carner.
CI,Js B OTR:
.
T~~m Straight TruCk, Late Model
Freightllners With Sleepers: Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements.
· BOO Mile Rad ius.
., Home De liverles.
Both Positions:
Atle as t 25 Years Old
Alleasl2 Years E•periBI'ICB
Good M\IR
Weekly Pay
Health Insurance Ava ilable
Work Weii.Wlth ~ Public

Need 7 . . _ To Sol """"· 740-

..a-3351.

Nead an ttonest . depenaa'ble.
per50n to M in With ~ pntleman. Some personal care
needed . Room , ~oarct . Salary
.,..-. {304)895-3902

OUTDOOR CAREERS
Coii4JMY
-c'cwu;cllu .. Pey &amp; Be; allll

•EI•~ Owned
~WOiklln

•t States
Must E'*'l' Physteal O&lt;ildoor

wont Possess Strong

L.saderSNP SkiUs, Haw
A Good ()rrvfng Record. And
Be Flexible t o Trawl To
vanoos WOrk Locations
OSMOSE, INC.
Call F.« lnfOf'l'nltlon
ToU-Free 2.t Hra n Dey1
1.an-61Wh1

EOEM/FION
Vlllt Our w.blltt AI

. www.oamose .com

OWN A COIIPUTER?
PUT IT TO WORK!
$25 ·175 /Hi . FTIFT

1 11a n41401
www.wtn·lr'om-nomt.netltlJnt'l
Plumb8rs And Pipefitlers L.U
t577 Will Be D•stribUiing Appren · ,)
tlce Applications Beginmng June
28th Through July 9th . App Hca·
!lens Can Be Picked Up At 1236
Ga llr a SHee t. PortsmoUth , OhiO
From 7 :30 A.M Unt1l 4:'oo P.M..
135 OO,AppiK:alioo Fee EOE
Pasnton Ava ilable ~ House Manager For Homeless Sheller. 30 .
Hours A Week Cand1date M!JSI
Possess Good Organiza tional /
Clerical Skills. Be Able To Work
With Mm 1mal Supervr sto h. Work
We ll With Otner Ser vrce Agen ·
ci as , And Have An Interest In
Helpin g Other s Rate Ot Pa y $6.00 !Hr .. 12 Noon To 6.00 PM.
Monday Through Fr tday. Inter·
ested Person s Shou \d. Send
Resurries To Personnel. 'p.Q. Box
454, GalliPQits, OH 45631 .
Postal J.otts to $18 35 /Hr., InC ..
Benefits , Nr:f Experience . For
App and Exam Info. Ca ll · 1·SOO·
813·3585. E1Ct .8826. SAM ·9PM . 7
Days tds .inc.
POSTAL JOBS To St8 35 /HR .
INC . BENEFITS , NO EXPERI·
ENCE . FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO . CALL 1·800 · 813·3585,
EXT 14210 . 8 AM . ·9 P.M., 7
DAYS rds. \nc.
Rax Restuar~nt Now Hu ing ,All
Shifts . Experience Preferred, Apo
ply Within.
Sce nic Hills Nurs ing Center. Is
Currently Seeking .Peop le Who
Wdu ld Like To Att end, cN·A
Classes For Em.ployment AI
· Scen1c Hills . In All Our Depart~
ments . If Interested Comft In Per·.
son To Obtain An Application, At
311 BL!c~r i dge Road. Bidwell. No
Phone Calls Please !
Securi!y GuarOs· must be able to · .
work anv snrtt lndLtOing most weekeht;ls Must have ctean. polrce ·
record . good work hi.story, rEiliao~
transportalton , va ltd' Or~ver's li·
cense , home phOne af1CI friust '
have btack stee l toe S'S.Iety
shoes. Pay starts at $6 .00 per
hour, 32·40 nours per week, Call
740·669·2874 MOnday · Frrday.
8am-4pm lor apporntment
SIGN-ON BONUS a·F $500 .
FOR RN POSITION ON t'1·7
SHIFT Rocksprings .Re hablllla·.
t1on Center, a sktlled and mterme·
,dlatEi facility 'of .100 beds . l'las an
1mrl1edi'ate open ing tor lh.i rrght
candiOate . We have an e·"Cellent :~':
bene'f1t package. 40t K and com ·
pet ltrve salary. This rs an ex cel·
lent opporHJnity to become pan of
a stable nursing team that has a
comp liance history of ex.ce ii EHJt
surveys and care Issues . Submit
you'r application to 367~9 Rock·
springs F!d .. Pome roy. OhLO
45769. Or 'caU Caro l Gree nrng ,
DON at 740..992·6606 . .
SINGERS!' GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY, 'Call Now Toll F~ee I·
800·339·4204 Or 1·615-367·6153 •.
For Appoint ment To Come To
N.;tS hVIIIe, TN And Aud ition For
Mator ReCord ProdUcers
Someone to mow ya.rd ilt 1.107 ·
Hogg Street, Pt. Pleasanl , for 18·
mainder of Summer (3.04 )342 ·
6421, After 5PM.
Someone to paint taU barn. Must
have adequate equ 1pment. rn ·
cludmg spray equ1pment Not m·
tereste d rn par~t tme pa1nter s for •
this rob. Cal l (304 )675·2658. bet
ween 9AM· t PM only

The Southe rn Local SChool D1s·
tnct has lhe tea chrng po'si tlon p ~
H1gh School Ma th/Engl1sh avail·
For More Information Call 800· able for the. 1999 =2000 school
Neighbofhood.oyard sale· 3 fT\tles
437·8764. Hrs . 8'30 A.M. ·5 PM
yeal Also. the supplementa l po·
,
.,.
s1t ions of athletic director. ¥ars1tv
out SA 143 ·on Wolle Pen Ad July
Drv Cleaner Neede.d AI Cardii'IBI volleyball coach. and varsity ·soft.
'J
1. 2 &amp; '31 1999. Clothing . lots of
ory Cleaner 19 Ohio R1ver flaza h,all coa~.;h are ava1labJe ~ ~~ sup •
used fur nlture· {waterbeds . cnest
$8 ClO Hour. Apply Tuesday 12 oo pleme ntal appllca!lts must pos
of drawers, entertamment ce·n·
Noon
sess or acquire a' sport s medr·
ters). many other llems.
.
'.cine certlfl cal e and' a CPR. card .
Pomeroy Clifl Apa.c_tme(its . Friday
Early InterventiOn Parent Coordi· Ph on e 740·949 -266'9 tor tunner
&amp; Saturday. 9am·?
nator, Part-Time To PrOvtd e Sup· mlormation Please seM 1nqu1nes
port Services To Pa re.t'ltS Of tn t- to Mr James Law rence. Superm·
Thre femlly· July 1·4. 9 OOam·
ants !Toda lers Wrth Orsab11H1es. tendent . Sd'uther n Locat SchOols
•S:OOp
1/4 mile wes t of ForkeQ. Th tS W!ll Include Parent Educa · S o ~ 176,",Rac ,ne . Onoo 4 5771
Run State Park an SA 124. 63092
11on. Personal Contacls And Link·. SLSD ,is a'Tl Equa t Op portunity .
SA t24, Long Bonom. Lois ci t mce age Wrth Other Res o,urces, Ou::.l· Emplover
tiiCatJons : To Be W11itl'lg To Obtain. __::..;_:.:.__ _ _ __ __
clothes and other items.
~ll o wledge ADoul Laws,· Parents Three e~p e rrenced t1mber cutters
Pt. Pleasant
A1ghts And Procedur-al ·Safe· tw o e11perren ced skrdder. opera .. ··
guards Related Ta Ea11y Inter · tors , must have e:o:per1ence 740·
&amp; VIcinity
ventlon. Parent 0! A Chrld With fJi 985·4465.
·
•·
3 Family Yard/MOving Salt). Sal· D1 sab4Uty In qama Coun~. Ability
urday, Roush St reet In Mason . To EfleCtllfely Communicate Wi th True~ Dme t Fot Local Are a .• . ·
Clolhlng . .Household ~tern s. ~~· F8m ilres And Are ProfessionalS . MuSt Have Ct ass 8 W1th Hazmat
c.rowave. A . vanety ol misc. Please· Send Resu me By July 9 &amp; Ta nk Endors!'lments. Good Pa·t· .
Items.
· To ~ Gallla County Ear~y lnterven· Benefits. Weekends &amp; Maror Holilion P.O. Box 943, Gallipolis . OH days Off. Send Replies T.o CL 4
5 Famil y Yard Sale 2728 L1ncoln 45631 .
477 ·cto Gallrpolr s Oatly Tnbune .
Avenue. 'pt ~ .Pl .. SaturdiyiJUiy
825 Third, Avenue : Gall1pohs. OH
3rd . Books. Bean ies . Baby FILM' !TV INDUS, AY, LOCALLY 45631
Items , Furniture ,. Clothing, Misc.· HIR ING . No Ex ~rlence Neces 8AM·2PM.
sary. Work BehinO Scene.. Pro· W1ldl lle Jobs· to S21 60 Hr Inc.
ductron Assistant. Set Constru e· Benefits Game Wardens. Secur·
Block Yard Sale 2600 JeHerson t1on . 323-857·0954.
rty Ma rntenance_ Park Rangers.
Ave. July 2 .I 3 8:00-? Ret 1red
No e11p. neede d For App and
beanies.bean ie pole s. lurn
House keeper For Disabled Prac - Exa m rnfo r. Call 1·800· 8 13·
bikes. books , household 1tems. ticing Co lu mbus Att orney {Plus 2 3585 .E• t. 8827 . 8AM ·9PM. 70ay~
hot dogs beginning at10:30.
!t
Teenagers ). Ll'w'e - tn. Cook1 ng Ids me.
CJeanrng. Laundry, Turn ing At
Garage Sale: Saturday, 9:00AM _. Night Salary, Room . Boarl'i , 61:4· WI LDLIFE JOBS To ,$2 1 60 /HR
? 2905 Anniston Olive. Pl. Pl.
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR ·
267 - 5354 .
OENS .
SECURITY.
MA IN·
Garage Sale : Thurs /Fr i/Sat. JOB LIST ING ASSEMBLY' ,AT "TENAN CE. PARK RANGERS. NO
9.00AM·? Lyons Addrtion . Ma · HOMEI I Cra fts , Toys , Jewelr y. EXP NEEOEO FOR APP AND
son . BaMe· Sal e. Crafts/ Lamp. Wood, Sewing . Typing . Greal .EXAM INF O. CALL 1·800- 813·
Womens Clothes ._ Cameras. Rain Peyl CALL 1·800·795·0380 Ext. 3585. EXT. •4 21 1. 8 A.M ·9 PM
or Shin&amp;. ·
•201 (24 Hrs)
.
7 DA'r'S Ids. inc.
Ju ly 2·5, Matri S.lreet, Racine,
Lare(1 Wqlfe .residence _ Child ·
ren 's clothmg. 0·14 : m1sc. i1emS

.•

Jerrys Ru n, Rd . 3 1/ 2Milas out.
J..uly 1. 'Clo thin g/all sizes . Old
D i~h es /Crock . Rug s, Hu 'distal
&amp;More.
July 1.2.3. Thurs/Fnl 1. MM-7 1
Burdette Add n.. P . Pleasant.
WV. PICtures and M1sc Items.
Vard Sale : Lots ol baby Hems.
men. wome n. and baby clo thes .
.Exerc1se bi'ke . lo ts m1sc 1 mtle
from Vocationa l School on Rt 62
N Fri. and Sat. 9·12 00
Sat 9·? 2325 Lmcoln Ave Some
Infant Chlldrens . M1sses. WOrn ·
ens. Clothtng Glassware . Tread·
m111, Windows. BookS,MISC

local Trucking Company Seeking · 150
Schools
Qualified Truck Or ll(ers . Good
Instruction
Pay And Benefits. SeM Resume
To : Onver, P.O. Box 109 Jack · EARN A LEGAL COLLiEG E OE ·
son . Oh io 45640 . Or Ca ll 1·740 - GAEE QUICKLY, Bacnelors ,
286·1483 To Schedule An lnter- Ma st ers , Doctorate, By Corre ·
v;ew.
spondence Based Upon Puor Ed·
uca110n
A.r'Ki Short Stuay Course.
Medicel Ass istant or LPN . need·
ed lor Ooclor' s Olfice for tempo· For FREE lnlormallon Book let
PhOne CAMBRID GE STATE
rary emp loyment. Send resume
UNIVERSITY
1·800·964·8316
c/o EB22 , Pt Pleasant Register,
200 Ma tn Street , Poin t Pleasant.
180 Wanted To Do
wv 25550
Mus1ctans· loo king for Qu 11a nst.
'iocalist to do lead and harn1omes
tor oldies. rock and country, John .
740·698·8212
,.
.

Appr ove&lt;l Master Licensed Electrician, WV02595Ei . Free Estimates lor Res idential Services

{304)675·7927 .

. .....

�Friday, July 2, 1999
hge 10. The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

\

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I

T-£1-·- CS-

ALDER

IF-

14
13 "

0

u-

Norlll

320 Mobile HOIMI
for Sale
• t; &amp; S Lawn Sai'VICI Design, lm-

pltmentatton.

and

Servict

Available lor Sprmg Clean up
fertilizing and ptanti~~Q Free asti·

mat ... Satistactton guaranteed
Gteg- 30'-'675-4628
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
• haul )'OUf IOgJ. to the miH JUSI cal
~75-11157.

Interior &amp; Exterior Pamtlng Expe~6enced. Reltrencaa Reason·
able Rate~ For Free Estimate.

CONSOLIDATE DEBT RO&lt;Iucoo

Monmly Pay.,.... 20 ·50%. s....
Thousands Of DoRous In Interest

Non-ProliL TCC801)-758-311oW
CREDiT

PROBLEMS?

VISA

CARD • Guaranteed ApprO'tlal •
No Cred•t Check • 0%APR. Re·
qunments 18+ US CitiZen, Have
CheCking Account Phone Approviii 1·100-737-0073 Issued By
Menlcll Bani&lt;, SI.C,l)J

Jims Drywall I Construction
New Construction &amp; AemOOe iJ
Crywall, Siding Ao!}fs Addl·
tlons, Painting etc (30.4}674·

DON' T BORROW MONEY ! The
Debl Managem6nl Club (Not For
·Profit) CAn Pay Your Debts And
You Don't Hav1 To Pay Us Back·
• EVER! Sond SASE To DMC •
Depl &lt;320 P 0 Ba• 4332 Val loy
Vltlagt, CA 81617 818 763·1000

4823 01 (304)674.()155

Ell 4320

740-3118-8041.

Milly's Cleaning Servtcf Home
Or OffiCe Years E11oenence For
I\IOOe lnla ca!l 7 40-245-5052
Neld A Home For Your Loved
Onlln Quiet Home With 24 Hour
Care?7~t-1238

Shrubs Trimmed, Mulching,
P1lnllng, etc. C1ll Bill. Len•
Mats age (304)67~7112.
Will DabySII lor any aoe .av.inl·
1ble anytime , halle gclod refer·
ences cal304-773-5435
Will Ito au typeS of pa~nting , 1ntert:
or and extetk. t Can do new adl:ions and remodeling Also will do
yard woril 740-992·7950

FINANCIAL SERV SFREE CASH
NOW$ From WaallhV Families
Unloading Mllhons Or Dollars To
HatiJ Minimize Their Taxts Write
lmmed•ately WINCFAllS, 847-A
SECOND AVE , SUITE 0350 .
NEW 'o'ORK. NEW YORK 10017
FINANCi AL
SEAV
CASH
LOANS Auto Loans &amp; Mort·
gages BaCI Credit 0 K 1-800·
"71 5119 Ext .45

MONEY PROBLEMS? We Can
Halpl Up to tOOK No Fees! Low
Rates OuiCk Resu lts Call 1·877·

746-9009,

'
ProfessiOflal

230

Sarvlcet
Will do House Cleaning Have
References and Experience!
(740) 388-8421 or {740)·446·
2646, L88Ya Message Will Repair Lawn Mowers Farm
Tractort And Machmery Also
light Weldmg , Call Evemngs.
740-441-0199

533-:M53.

Opportunity
IN!)TICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus•
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough the
mall until you have mvest1gated
illeolle~ng

ADULT INTERNET
Prepa1d Access Cards Hot lteml
"No CornpeliHon "Real $$$ Maker
"DISrribtJtorlhip Star·UIJ ~99 1
,IIJ0-829..2371 Dept 97
BAKE CUSTOMIZED COOKIE
GIFT BOIES Senously Wantmg
'A Business? Our ldeas1 ExperJ·
ence, M81enals But Completely
Your Own Bustness Not A Franchise ~o Royalties Details 1-877
,. 764-5464 (TOLL FR~E)
'

Banks And Financial 1nstlt4J1ons
Eam 60% Of Their Profits Trading
Foreign Currency For Your Free
Report Call 1·800 392 0843,
$5 000 Minimum Required
'
BUS OPPT $1 ,000-t WEEKLY
WORKING FROM HOME111 Re·
Clive $4 00 Per Envelope Pro·
cessed, Supphes Provided!
Guaranteed Program! CALL
NOW! 24 HoUrs FREE INFOA
MATIONI 310·514·4892 Ext LG·
2
CURAENCV DAV TIIADINO
Earn Si~SS
Trad1ng On YoUr
PC Far
Than Slocks /S&amp;P
Make US II Ma el Goes Up Or
Oownf Immediate Income! 1·800·
~ 1090 wWw computracles.OOm
DISCOU~T

TOBACCO PRO·
DUCTS Volume /Group Rates
Manufacturer Coupons ~cc:ept·
ed, FREE SIH In Con11nental US
W 13+ Carton Orders Toll F ~ee
1-877·945..0862
E~SN 590,000 YEARLY

ing, NOT Replacing long
In Windshields Free V1deo 1
800-826·8523 US /C anada
'IIWW glassmechan1x com

.'

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR'
Send Us A Ono Page Form We
Oo Tht Rest No Direct Selling
Free Information Package 1·800·
, 31'0-8745 Ext 27, 24 Hrs

Established lawn mower "shop,
., complete mventory neaut1lul
horne and rental all on one prop
arty, or will sell everything except

'"'""'or)' 740-949·2606

•

For sale· thriving young florist
and glfl shop. centrally located
Parking excellent Many l1ne g•fts
Localed In newty reslored Alston·
cal building Priced to sell 740
843-5281
FRITO LAV /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE
St 000-t
WEEKLY
POTENTIAL
All
CASH BUSINE~S PRIME LO·
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP·
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1·600·

731-7233 EXT 2603
IT'S
HOT"IT'S
GROUND
FLOOR'IT WORKS! Become A
METABOLIFE 356 tm Distributor
"J:.odayl Fastesl Growing Dietary
Supplement Allailable Free lnfor·
mat!Ofl, Free Call 688·863·8859
METABOUFE om INDEPENDENT
DISTRIBUTOR
ApproMII
IN345508!599
N~ed A Loanllry Debt Consoli·
dation $5.000 • $200 000 Bad
Cfedll OK Fee 1· 800·770 0092,
ExL 215

For sale· newly restored , two
atory, historical bilck building Lo~
caled two blocks from the Ohio
River Perfect lo start your own
business wllh b&amp;autlful living
quarters upstairs · Priced at
$1 1.4,000 7.40.&amp;43-5281

220 Money to Loan
SS$ OVEROU

BILLS!!! Consoli·
date Debts! S me Day APJJrova/
NO APPLIC~ ION"fEESV 1-800·
883·900&amp;~ 93e "Member Bet·
ter Busln ss Bureau· www help·

1-888-582·3345

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
1988 GMC Pldt Uo Uing 8110 305
Engine .4 Wh Drive $2.5"00 00
060740-388-8183.
1995 4br 3bath. w fireplace
16x20 ~ . 9120 lront porch &amp;&amp;eluded on 7 72 acr mus1 tell
$65 ~ 00 740-379-2643
3 Bedroom Ranch Home, 1850
Sq Ft 24x"8 Garage Shop, Ul
Acres, County Water, 11 Miles

From

Gallipall&gt; CA. Bulk 1n 1991 ,

$95 000 Neg 7-10-379-2835

3 Bpdrooms, Basemenl, 2700 Sq
Ft Fireplaces, In-Ground PQOI,
Large Lotk, S R 588. Gallipolis
C•ty Schools, Reduced! 740·«6·
7438
TARA ESTATES .4 Bedrooms. 3

1/2 Bams. b'mol tMlR, Finished
Basement Custom Kitchen/
Cherry Cabinets! Sunroom over·
looking small Pond! $189,900,
(740) 441·5118 or more lmfo.
Leave Message Appt only!
1 Year Old 3 BedroOm Ranch
Home 2 Baths, 28x30 AHachad
Garage, 89 112 Acr11. Wifl Sell
All Or House And Lot Meigs
County $150 000 For lnklrmatlon
Call 740-992·3537

BeaullfuH,rlck 3 br home, on
lovaJy acreage must see to ap·
preoate 304-273-IM85
Beaut1ru1 older home, lanced yard,
building 10 run yo~ur own
uslnos.s or take over •&amp;Stab·
11shed lawn mower business and
r,omplete lnqntory Rental home
on the property, room klr expan·
s1on Good area. Racine, Ohio
st ~ . ooo. ~7.te-94S-2606
Brick Home, Ntce Family Neigh
borMod, 2 Miles f~m Hosptlal.
Off Of Jackson Pike. Appt To
See 74o-Mi 0641 . '
By owner mea country home lull
basement palio room, city anel
well water approx 2 acres, loeat·
ed on Texas, Rd . 740-98,5-3565
Ct;tURCH STREET, BldweU Invest
J.n this furn ished hOme with new
roor and siding wllh THREE lots
$35 000 00 Compare to manuractured housing wi1tl No real urate!
FIRST AVENUE, THREE bedrooms. full basement, attatchtd
1,000 SF SHOWROOM two
garage w1th two bedroon aparl·
ment abO¥e Also lnctvdes valu·
~ble rlvertront lot Buslnep,
nome. recreation and Income
property all for one mvestrnen1
$145 ooo oo

9 5 ACRES
$1500000

Eblin

Hollow
'I

5 4 ACRES Blazer Rd ,
septic $20,000.00

cistern ~

\

FOR RENT Two bedroom apart·
ment m GallipOliS Private
$375 00
RANCHO OI'IE
Realtyl AuctiOns

One bedroom furmahed

aide pels ~0 montl'l plut dt-

ment In MiddlepOrt.
9191

o; n1ct big .,.,a and tr..s, no •
wW

mnsat MllnU on con-

.

Used Dell Computer For Sale,
Windows 3 1, 5 Vear1 Old, In·
eludes· Harddrtve. Keyboard &amp;
Monitor, $200 For More tnlorrna·

(3041882·245• .. (304)e7!H269

lion. Cll304-n3-5841

1985 2 Bdrins CJA.- CaiJ&gt;ol,
Furnace. Underpmmng 2 Decks.
lmm.arate Posuslonl 7•o-«&amp;4793
1985 Nausna. 1•Ftx70Ft with
8x20 Expando 2 BedloootiS. 2 ful
Daths , F1ri1Jl&amp;ce , New Carpet
(7~)446-3493

1988 R•dmond Danville 14x70
Also, Hu Expando, Vary Nice
Must Salll Ask/MQ. St" 000, 740·
388 8335

1991 1411lo72to SNnglo Aaol

Vlnyt

Mob11a home kit In Mlddtaport,

7701 Slate Routt 588 1 Mile
West 01 Rodney, Ale• Acor~ .
740-245-901S

$100 poi' ......... 7-10-992-3194
Mobile home sill available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

Cl•an nice 2 br basetl'lentlga·
rage r1f leltp no pets ao.--675·

740-311S-4361'

5162

r.1ERCHANDISE

House tor rent 1 Bedroom,
S30Q Month $250 Oeposll 2·
Aeterances No Pets! (740) .U6·
9342

Siding, Excellenl Condition
$16,500 00 (740~ 44&amp;-8113

House In City, Gallipolis, 3 Bed·
rooms. Extra C5aan. OU11t Neigh-

t995 t"Jc76 Onty, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Bat"s. Food C1sposa1 Dishwasher Vaulted Ceiling Uvlngroom,
Window Covermgs "'' Electric
CA.
New Floor Co"!idngs.
$19,000, 7l&amp;0-44&amp;-7860

-

510

1292 (304)675-8165
48A. 2BA, $.499 Oown Assume
Payments ol $239 mo (3Cl")755-

wv.

Clearance Sale All Displays
Must Go OownPayments as low
as $491. Interest as tow as e.H
Umlted time only at 01kwood
Homes, Nitro, WY. (304)755·

5885

Trna bedroom homlln,Chlater.
updates new lurnace, references
and deposit 61•·501•8339 after
600
'

385-9621
New Bank Repo's Onty 3 Lett 1·
900-383-6862 •
•

s.-et

down, $119
New 3BR
Month Only ilakwood Home•,
Nlli'O, WV,I304)755-5815.
New Bal'lk repos only 2 left
f1nance can 304-722-7148
Single Parenrs Program $499
Down, Llm•led Offer Call tor de·
tails. (:KK)755-7191
To Everyone Gallla Maaon
Me1gs Area, Stop By. Sea Pe1e
Pack -VIew Our Beautiful Homes
Beside Auto Zone Gallipolis, 7o40-

1)0.17

-3093
Rapo Doublewlde Save Thouaandsl 1 80(),.385-6862

330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL. 6 Stall Horse Bam,
3. Bedroom House, Fence 740388 850&lt;

Lots &amp; Acreage

12•65 2 Bedrooms, Expando,
5350/Mo. Plus Deposit, 101116
Worl&lt; Shop, CoUntry Sottlng, 74044&amp;1692.

5 5 Acres Fronlage, Garfield
Av'inue . City Utilities, $49,000
Send Response CLA825. cl
oGalllpolls Cally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue Gai111J01Is, OH

45831
1SACRES
HDf'SESAREWELCOME
Ofl SA 141 West Galha County
lots Of Meadow, With New Sheds
/Barns Ani:! Fencing, Ready For
Atumals Lots of Road Frontage
20ACAES
Great For Recreation /HUnllng ,
Wooded, With Road To Wayne
NaiiOnal Fore!!,! Make Me A
Deal! 5"1. Down Land Contract
With Ap1Jroved Credit Free
Maps._ 1-80Q-213-8365
II.
• •
5 ACRES
Near Vlnlon SR 325. 7 M1tes
Past Oanvtlle 15 Miles From Rio
Grande Perfect Home Site County Water. On Pa'ied Road Nice
Neighborhood Only $10 500
$1.000 Down. Land Contract No
Sin'glewi'des AnthOny Land Co,
LTD 1·800-213-8365

I· :::.~.::;~~~~TS-----

Wltar 1nd Etactrtc Fleady For
Hoak·Up. Nice LOll. 10,000.00
EKh Ceii304-77W111.
Suitdmg &amp;lte Just off AT 33 14_.
ft x 302 H 1 acre S15 000 304·

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres,
wa Pay Cash 1·800·213·8385,
An,hony Land Co

1304)675-4808 or 675-3991
Restored VIctorian home sltua1ed
on 12 acres. VU!age Middleport,
secluded and private, appointment, call740-992·5696
Thfee bedrl)om house m Pomer·

·•Credit Card DEBT"" Cebt Con·
IOIIdallon Stop Collection Calls
Reduce Payments &amp; Finance
Charges Avoid Bankruptcy 1·
800-27D-9894

Three bedroom house 1or sale,
ooe and 112 baths, fully uml&amp;hld,
nice yard, close to park, 477 Sy·
camore Street Middleport call

oy, newly remodeled, country sel·

1

740-367·7000

TWo bedroom brlcll home with fu"
basement, two story two cer g•
rage , corner lot In t-11ddieporl,

(7~)-388-0173,

992·2167
(304)e75-n83

4313
2 Bedrooms, Scenic Drive, VInton All Electric GfA. $300/Mo.
$300 Deposit 74D-388·8801 Arter

11000 1304167...6n
Tired 01 Going To The Laundry
Mal? can Me For A FrH washer
&amp;~ 1·800-383-e862

3~M

For Rent 2 pelrm MOO!Ie Home
$275 00 mo plus utilities.
$27!5 00 security deJ) ··relerences
req ··located in Muon Call··

Used Furniture IA.piJIIances Olf
Bulavllle Pike On Keeter Road,
7"1t.t4.46·4039, 740·.446·100.4
Call Any Tim~. Johnson's Ustd

(304)675-1911 ,
Two bedroom mob lte home In
Mldd,eport , $275 plus dapqslt,
740-992-3191

Apartments
for Aent

Items, 7-10-245-5009
A(fordlbla Otr,lal Plan With Ac·
cess to America s Largest Oen.-tal Netwdrks About $3 ~r Week
No Deductible, No Waiting Period,
And Pre·Ex1sllng CondltiQn&amp; Cov·
ered Cho1ce Of Dentist 1·888·

1 BR A/C, Near Holzer, 1st
Month Free Wllh 1 Yr Lease.
Outet Location, No Pets, $2791
Mo., Plul Uti11161S. 740-446-2957
1 Room &amp; Bath Across From Col·
lege $200/Mo All Utilities Paid.

227·3752

888-840-052t '

992·2800

S500 &amp; up, 74fJ-

$50 Needs room to run Good

TRANSPORTATION

1.-o.

BARNEY
TAKE IT AWAY,

NOW-·TH' LATEST

Collie

Pups,

No

'

,'

Cobia 17 1/'Z Runabout Uke
W1ll Trade For A Pontoon "
Of Equal Value 7"0·4"6·

THE

Pa·

pe.. $75 00 740-&lt;41-1083

,.OJ~ ~N..E::l tlW~ FQI:. ~

AKC Lab Puppies, Very Lovea~e
&amp; Folencly l-10-367-0659

L

AKC male Co111e. sable &amp; white
normal eyes, young adult $200,
740-696-1065

~·~ (..~\ MOI'-I\1\ Jj~\
C.NA.E. 11'-1

AKC Male Yorkle Pupp1es $300
aach Had 1st shots &amp; w&lt;~rmed
AKC Registered Shetland Sheep
Puppy, Known As Shellle 740·

379-2836

'·
AKC Reglslered YellOW Lib Pups,
Shots &amp; Wormed, Ready 4th Of

740-256-U!6

AKC -Reglstered Black Lab Pup·
plea 7 Wk Olds Have been
wormed, has had 1st shots
$200 oacll (304)875-8046
Australian shepherl;t puppies, 8
weekS ok1 Ready to 90 July 15th
Come reserve your puppyl 740·
742·3304
CFA Registered Himalayan K1t·
tens, 1st Shots. Wormed. Litter
Trained, 70-387·7705
CFA Registered Himalayan Kll·
tens 7 Weeks Old, 740·4.463188

1970 Pontrat Lemans W1th 350
Rockel Motor, $600. Call After 5,
304-675-5612

ssoo

1980 ·1HD CARS FROM
Pollee lm'pounds. o\nd Tax
Repa s For Listings Call 1·800·
319·3323 Ell 4420 lf

z

1980 Camara 28 Race fStreet
Car 45., Engine 4 88 Gears
Many Extras $7.000 00 OBO
740.256-1182 Or 740·258. 1275
Ask For Heath Setlous Inquiries
Only
1
•
terlor,
1986 Subaru
Needs Good
Er\gineBOdy
WorkAnd
$250,
In·

740-446-4310.740-446-9322
1988 Ford Tempo, " cyl auto,
body good cond runs tii'.C 30.4·
875·3365
1990 Cougar, high miles, runs
great, looks good, V-8, $2100,
7.40-949-2836.or 740-949·2().45

Auto Parts &amp;

,

Budget Priced Transmission•
and Engines. All ~pes, Acc111
To Over 10,000 Transm1sston1,
eve Joinl&amp;, 7.40-245--56n

,.

C
&amp;
ampera
Motor Homes .

j:~~~~=~S~1:5:D:O~L:ac:•:•Oil~

Fairgrounds.

1973 Cobra 5th Wheel
New Awning. NIW Palr')t, Roof AW,
Upholstery, Everything

I'~~~E~•I~ra~G~o:o~d~C~o:n~d:il~lo:nl

\IP AGP:&lt;N

816 SRO'l)lER 7

NEXT 'f'EAR

Pass
Pass

3•
Pass

~nnlng Jars For Sale
~(1-4406

Can 740·

After 7 00 pm

COOL DOWN
Central Air Condllioning Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces Heal
Pumps Certified Installer II You
0on1 Can ua We Bolt! Losel 7o40-

Apartment tor rent In Mkjdleport,
no pets, 740-992·5858

-6308, 1·80Cl-29Hl098

D!scounl Mabile Home

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 7•0·4"'6·,2568
Equal Housing OpportUnity 1,.

Parts &amp; Suppty

HugoiOMnlo)oy

1

t

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos'

,

Cei.My Clptlef crypt~ .,.. Cf8Uid from qualatJOnS by w-.IJIIOPI- PUt ana present
Each lettef 111 tt.e ClPIWr atand8 lor llnOiher TocMy'l- cW E ~ P
l

HV'R

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION 1 "Somewhere Robert Stack d;scoverod the founta1ri of
youth tt's an unsolved mystery · - (TV critiC) R1ctc Ou Brqw ..
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four scrambled words below to form four llmple words

U Q0 U R M

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~elp

VE HA Y

Granny always tned to
usbulldagoodselfemage She .
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Complete the chu"le quoted
.by ,fllt.ng •n the m•ss•ng words
you develop from step No 3 below

I'LL WAKE 'l'Oll

. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I:::::.::=:::..::::.:.:.::::.___

7 ... 1 ... 9 9

Domam ·Water- Vault· Nutmeg , ATTiTUDE

Sandpiper 30' camper, star·
m1crowave. root air,
.one with bunkbedl.:
with shower and tub, 1
people. asking $7000
excellenl condition, 7&lt;l0-91&amp;-

roy'll bUild 0 brg nest egg when
you wvt WYUl th~ dou1(itd5

'Remember students ," the teacher told lhe class
"You can often change lh1ngs If yo~ change,)l,our ATil-

TUDE'
,(

BIG SCREEN TV. Take On Small
Monthty Payments Good Credit
Required 1·800-7111-1651

2bdrm alltl total electric ap·
pUancea furnished, laundry room
facUlties, close to scl'tool in town
Applications ava1iable at Village
Grun Apts U9 or call 7.40.9$2·
3711 EOH

Pass
Pass

Shadow 5 Sp..O, V-

$5,300 (304)675-3954

•

STA'o' TI1HE

601N6 TO CAMP,

1993 Oldsmcbll• Cutlass Su·
preme SL 3 1 V-6, 124000 miles

tCricllet
poeitiono
10 Actress

East
Pass

.

Male Rat· Terrier 6 wks old
(304)67S.7946 before 9 pm $75
Do~go

&lt;IOWI~

I I I I I

DO VOU T~INK I
D&lt;D RIG~T 9'1' NOT
1993

2•

North

I.

PEANUTS

1990 lincoln Cl1nllnenlal, Black
With Black Interior, Moon Root.
$3,000, 7ol0-245-5659

6, Leaded Nice Stereo $2,600,
OBO 740-256-6034

7 [ploemerol

37FlretO&lt;- 1 Compellina

0 WL A WL

Mal• Copper NoH Beagle 1 112

'

We&amp;t

·w

'o'ears Old $30 00 ?40-446-0885

each

.

b

New gas ~nkl &amp; body pariS D &amp;
A Auto Ripley WV 130")372··
3933 or 1·800-273-9329

790

-

• Volvo

3C Celllomll clly

Setting up a long suit

Searay 220 M1n1 Condibt&gt;n,
Cabin &amp; Many Extrut Low
740·388-9991. 7•0·388-

(3041895-3926

3~­

• -.-go ..
5 ,_
6 Tllfl ..._;ne

33 F..,laro

By Phillip Alder
.
For the last three days, we h~ve
been lookmg at ruffing losers m lhe
dummy. As thos play usually generates an extra tnck,, 1t 1~ almost
always lbe nght line. However, I here
ts one notable hme when 1t is proba·
bly wrong: when you are trymg lo
establosh dummy's long side suit.
Then you often need dummy's
ttumps as entnes
This deal ollustrates the basec
idea. How would you try to make
four hearts? West leads lhe club
k10g
You have nme top tncks. two
spades, sox' hearts and one club.
Equally, there are four losers (two
d~amonds and two clubs) stanng you
m lhe f~e. you cannot ruff any of
thl:m m '!he duinmy, so you must
establish a.long spade in I he duminy
• There are s1x spades m1ssmg.
•
They woll probably divide 4-2,
whech means that you must ruff two
spades 10 you r hand before a long
spade es established. Therefore, you
need three entnes m the dummy:
two for the ruffs and one to get back
to the dummy 10 cash I he eslabhshed
wonnor Whal are those three
entn cs? You have a top spade, so the
other two must be in lrumps. the ace
and nene. Thes means that you cannot afford to draw more than one
round of trun\ps.
,
Here es lhe safest line Wm the
first (or second) tnck welh lhe club
ace, cash the heart kong, play off
dummy's ace·k!ng of spades, and ·
ruff a spade hegh 10 hand tO aVOid
the nsk of an ovcrruff. Play a heart
lo dummy's nine, ruff another spade
high , lead a trump to dumll]y's ace,
and cash .the oestabloshed spade
sev&lt;l1:" Your
lncks are lhree
spades, SIX hearts and one'club.

AC E

Seats 6.
$2,000

710 Autos for Sale

2S.-

&lt;Jperung lead: • K

Ciiil,.., E1ot1 Canol , Uios 01 Ex·
~~~~H~~~oo~7~~~·~·e~·~1~75~-.I

oH''""·

South
-4 •

PINEY Rt06E

&amp;OSSIP IN PINEY
RIDGE--

t996 Harfey Dav.son 1200 Sport·
star Lots 01 Exlfasl •.000 Mtles,
7o!G-446-3773
1996 Honda Shadow

-

'? 1~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer North

8162
AKC

oAK 9 6
... 10 8 2

DOWN

"'A 7 4

Polaris Scrambler, good
less than 20 gal gu ran
through it $3 800 080 304-67$5980
':\,

Home {304)675-8178
AKC Boxer Female, 3 Years Old,
Brindle /White, Housetralned,
Proven Breeder, $150 , 740 258·

0 108?32

1304)8?5-4548

2 Rooms &amp; Bath, $225/Mo , Includes Utllllles, No Kllchen, 1
Bedroom &amp; Bath Includes Utilities,_
No Kll!?', 740-446-2477

!

Bulls 14 Months Old.
For Serv1ce. $500,
" \

32 Ncwan.an

31-'oorg.

e · KQJI063
• Q4

1990 VamaM 89 Sear 4x.-. good
condition. $1100 OBO, call 74Q.

Baby bed , Playpen Swing, Car
Seat, Stroller Dressing Table

2 BR, WIQ Hook·up References~
Dopa~~ No poiS.I304)675-5162

740-992·2333

740 44fl 4110

Tobacco Plants For Sale
(304)895--3740 Danrtf Oewt\0011

Pets for Sale

560

oo,.

7806

are evallab'e on an equal
opportunl!y basil

9 Horses 5 Paints, 2 Sorrells, 2
Studs, Pr1ces Start At 5250 00,

• J 9 8 3

1985 Yamaha Y Max For Sale,
Must See Asking $3.700.

446-9355. Allor 5 ~M

5
C57 6
Hillis

• Q 10
• 8 7

Motorcyclee

740

ca Hamper

51 Viouolo
SCActreu
--

2l.lk::AS1illl
2CIIo!al

29,_.-

• K Q J 9

c:ty

!i5 Moat mcu11m

Easl
.. 5 2

•

n u - ~Po«-I

21 Hew hn

Weol

Soalb
• 52

742..ao&amp;.... b'Mb

Llveatoc:k

For sale- hOrs8l.

2· 84 Dodge Caravans • lol parts
1300 01 304~75-3383
after 5 pm.

650 Seed &amp;·Fertilizer

Lose 0·200
Pounds
Quick, Fasl
Dramatic
1
Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam
J*l&amp; Call740o441-19B2

2 bedroom apartment 1n Middleport we pay wate{, sewer &amp; trash.
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per
month, $100 depos1t, 740·992·

Takj,rtf""Appllcatlona- 35
Bedroom Townhouse
lncludll Water
Trash, 1315/Mo 7"'0·

al"""

2 OJflce O~sks. $150 Each, 1
Computer ue&amp;k, $99, &amp; Other

'

Norlh Th1rd Avenue, Middleport·
two badroom rurntshed apartment,
deposit and reterenct~ reQuired.
740·992·0185
I

FL 33781, 727-464·7408

1304)675-790&amp;-

,.

AKC Shell /• pupp1as, sable &amp;
while trr sable merlea, vet
checked. exce-llent pedigrees.
$350, 740-696 1085

....

1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment,
Downstairs 1 112 Baths, Air Con·
dltionlng, AU Utlllies Included Except Electric, Privata Parking, No

Nlci 1 br apt kit turn WID
hookup, $300 + damage dep
301-675--3100 or 304-675-5509

-7398,

Antiques

1&amp;• Olre=TV &amp;!tillite Sy1t1m1·
$6900, SIOO
prognomonlng
Utnlted time offer call 1·800-ng.

1 Bedro'om Apt $275 month,
utllltlea paid 706 Vlanct Sueet.
Pi Ploasanl, wv 1304)736-5554

~

Old Molorcyclea Motoracootart.
Motorseooter Partl (Cushman
preferred) Contact D Mllchell,
5568 80th PI No P1nenas Park.

Angus. six cow &amp; catt
pa1rs, seven 1 &amp; 2 year old t'lelf·
ers txcellen~ bloodlines, 740·
742·3033

530

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

tunltles

620 Wanted to Buy

630

40A , EJL:cellent Condlllon. High

Ctow~a
Kill Mii ·
-

tr

2SWWievent
'0 ClllnHe fnli1

... 6 5 3

Miles $9.400. CAll before 9PM .

Rtgtstere&lt;~

Ju~.

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Regrlgerator Included, 740·«62583

nlshed and unfurnished, security
d1pos1t required. no pet~. 740·

GraciOus living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249-$373 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor

Washer. $95 00 Dryer. $9S 00,
Electnc Range $95 DO, Hoi Polnl
RiililQII3101' $95 oo. Raper wasner And Dryer Set SSOO DO 90
Day Warranty Ktnmofe WfD Set
S•oo 00 Upright Freezer
$30000 New ~qor. 1 'mar
warranty. Whirlpool AJC 14 000
BTU, $250 00 Skaggs App"'"c·
IS 76 Vine St, Galhi)OIII. 7~·

~

992·2218

1 and 2 '*!room apartments, lur·

Furnished upstairs two bedroom
apartment, large ll'ilng room &amp;
kitchen nice and clean 7«&gt; 992·
3418

Please

FurrW~Ure

Buy or tell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, on AI 12"
Pomeroy Hours M TW 10 00
am to 600 pm, Sunday 100 to
6 00 p m 740-~92·:2,528, Russ
Moor1o awnor

ph 1304)675-1911

This newspaper will not
knowingly accep!
advertisements for real esta!e
which Is 1n violation of ll'l8
taw Our readers are hereby
lnfomled that all dwellings
advertised Jn tt'lls newspaper

Sealy·Posturapldlc Crown.Jewtl
King Mattre11-Set Top·ol·theLine P1llowTop Paid $1656 len
than year ago • Sell lor

No Pets, Central Air, 7"0·"48-

For Rent·· Ma~-2 bdrm garage
apt Nice $350 00 plus utllitl81
$350 00 deposil references req •

All reel estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Feoeral Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 wn1ch makes t1 meaat
to adVenlse ·any preference,
11mhat10n or discrimination
based on race. cotor, rettgion,
sex tam/1181 &amp;latus or nat10n8/
ong•n, or any 1111entl0n to
make any such preference,
llmltaUon or dlscnmh"'atlon ~

1740,_-7...

New And Us•d Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kan1uga.
Be(ts Cheats. Couches, Table8,
Much Morel Stop And Sea Us
no 446 4782

2 Bedroom MoblleHome m Mason. $295 month + Deposit

All Electrk:,
Per·
aons, No Grass To Mow No
Lawn, First Floor, For An Ap·
polntmenl To VIew, Phone 7•o-

Usld Frigidaire Air Conditioner.
8200 BTU's, E•ceUenl ConditiOn,
740-379·91 1o No Sunda~ Calls

31,. Wolf &amp; 1/4 Huskey 1 yr old

Molbhan Carpet; Room Sill Cllf·
!Jets Drive·a·Litlla Save 1 Loti
202 Clark Chapel Road. Ponar.

mob"'

-9539

HOMES FROM $5,000 Foreclosed And Repossessed No Or
Low Cown Payment Credit Trou
ble O.K For Current Listing Call
1·800-311 ·5048. Ell 3865
By Owner Exe111ent Location,
Very Attractive Price $80 s
Please Call From 8 to t 1 PM

1-88H18-0128

2 &amp; 3 bedroom
hOmes, 111
condll1onett. S2fiO·S300 sewer,
•water and' trash inclllded, 7.-o-

Christy's Family Llvlng,
ments, nome &amp; traller rorllaiiS ,
7.-0-992-45t•. apartmenll avail·
able, tumished &amp; unfurnished

«

•

ODOD USED APPLIANCES
washers. dryers. refrigerators ,
rang81 Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street Call 7"0·4.46·7398

•

7~2602 .

500

1!1010 $2.00 ooch 30H82·

191M GMC Jimmy SLS. Loaded ,

ALLEY OOP ® by Dave Graue and Jack Bender

9239

7795.

141170 two bedroom, total electric,
12lc60 two bedroom, tOUl! eleCtriC,
$250 month plus $150 deposll, no
pets 740-74.2·2714

Pets.

base po5t S2 25 each or

AppUancll:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryetl, Ranges, Refrl·
grators , 10 Dly Gu1r1nteel
French Clly Maytag, 740·4•&amp;·

for Rent

440

Locus~

oo

~•P•uu ' a•...,...

~-)ClOt

11 r n •
17 TrPe ol ny
llct
..
20Aod d

•AK764
• A 9 r&amp;
• J 3

Air Condlttaners, Used Different
Sizes Gu'irlnte,dl 740·886·

2 Bedrooms $325/Mo , + UIDitles,

Good .selection 91 usad homes
w1lh 2 or 3 bedrooms Start1ng at
$3995 Ou1ck delivery. Cal~ 740·

HouMhold
Goods

30' 'Eiocioic Rongo, 4 Old,
2.4 • Electuc Range Good Condi·
uon. 7"'0·388·0113, 740~••&amp;7...

I Slo)oy, 740-446--11523

CNM Toll PW. 55.200. 7..0.24&amp;-

SH Tl'le New John Deere 200
Senes Skid StHr Loaders, 7 5%
JDC Financing. Qarmiehael's
Far.m &amp; La•n. lnc.' f• 800·59•·
1111 Gpl"'*· OH We DtM1

with refereneel, 740"..891·

1989 Ford Bronco Eddie sower.
302.. Standard, 69 000 Milll Aii.

Deere Diesel S5.995 tOtO John
Deere $3.295. 7-t0-286 5 522

~--2077

740-192·

1982 Oakwood Tra1lar, 1"'a80,
2BR GardenTub S9.SOO. Call

360

Comple te ly remodeled house, "
bedroom, family room. living room,
k1tchen, utility room &amp; bath, basement wllh batn, new carpet
throughout, central air. beautiful
view ot river call 7 .40· 992·9012
appointment only

can

a~rt·

bedroom stove rafrtgaratOf, un·
cM1rp1nnlng, ntw a ir condiiiOner,
19.500, 74b-949-NS2

882·3772

7~-446·000' . Colli Jay.

•

8082.

2 o.- 3 bedfoom house .n Pomtr-

· 7o!G-446-9300
t980, t•k65 Buddy by Skytlne, 2

736-3&lt;409

tlng. air and heat !JUmp outbulld
lng 740-992 7745

800-54H566

7068 Or Call Barry French City

•
11-L.O.W 0-tJ.T
$.499 Down ~~~ Stngles. $999
Down Doubles Super Low Payments , Um1led Time, Oakwood
Homes. BarbourtWille
30&lt;4·

pay-

Bad Credll7 Start Getting Ap·
IJroved For Crtdlt And loans To·
morrow! MC Nl&amp;a In 7 Oays. 1-

fl x60 Ft
p.ooo. 7-10-367·

-1.

OneBodroom-b'Ron&lt;
''" Rto Grande. Call 740-245

posit, Relslw--. 740-441·9501

5S60

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W~nt

_;~-2-10----B-u-s-lna
__s_s____

t2

1996 Clayton tflx80 A C 3BR
N1ce Take Over Payments

SIGNS. Portlbfe Slgn1 wllllter1
$275·369 Free Delivery: 1.aoo-

~

1977 Govenor
Good Conofition

--·-·Dot-

2 Bedloom Houll. 3 Miles Down

420 Mobile Homes

OHice Cleantng.

FINANC!Al

1873 Ramada 12a65 MObtll
2 Bedrooms, Central AIC,
Must Be Mo&gt;Jedt $5,000, Even·
logs, 7-10-2-45-93912

Home,

2.000 Ford Diesel Tractor,
$4 ,195. t60 ~ord $2... 85. T035
Ferguson $3,695 , 1020 JoM

OT-&lt;&gt;2

., Lamon'lca Portolo.-

ACROSS

PHILLIP

..

Vinyl S~!rting 1&lt;111 $299 25, 5 Gal
ton Aluminum Flbtred Roof Paint
$2~ 21. 5 Gal White Roof Paint
$57 fl9 , Anchors $5, Coors &amp;
Windows, Gas I Electric Wa.ter
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Paris, intertherm Mrller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home
Supply, 740·4•&amp;·9418 Gallipolis,
Ohio .

Etectrk: Range, Brand New, Ask·
tng SlOO 740-:J88..8029

P.A Equipment For Sale like
New Peavey XR 1200 0 Powered
Stereo Mixer Wlth 128 Digital Ef·
feet&amp; On Board!! 4 Band f:q And
.4 Auk Sends Per Ch 30.0 Watts
Per Channel 0 4 OHMS $750,
Peavey MO • 8 Stereo 8 Chanmtl
Mlur With Reverb Stereo A,·B
And Sum Monl1or Outs, $200,
QSC-MX 700A Pwer Amp, 350
Wails Per Ch 0 .J. OHMS S275,
(1) Peavey t.S-10-H 3 Way
Speaker $150, (2) Fender 2·15-H
Dual 15.' With Horn Main Speak·
era $800 Pr, (2) Peavey FH 1
Folded Horn Low End Cabinets
No Slleakers, $200 Pr Contact

Miek Al7.,...._18

580
Green

(304)675- 1090
FULLY LOADED
PENTIUM
COMPUTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl
1·800-520-636-4

Good used downtlow 11o,ooo
BTU natural g11. forced air furnace, caN 7.40-992-297,.
GOT A dAMPGAOUNO MEM·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? We'll
Take ttl Americas Moat Successful Campground And Time·
share Resale Cltannghouse Call
Resort Selea International 1·800423-5987 2• Holn

Grubb'a Pleno- luning &amp; repairs
Problema? Naed Tuned? Call ltla
piano Or 740-4&lt;l&amp;-t525

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; llebulk In Slocio
Cal Roo EYOns, 1·800-537-11528

Beans

$20

Bushel

(3041882·3826
Home Grown Sweet Corn And
Tomatoes For Sale 10 Miles
From Gallipolis OH
State Ro·
ut•141, 740.379-2501

on

Formal bridal gown, tong train
beautllul, size 18, matchmg veil
bOth tor $300, 740·898·2915

Fular Brush Products Order from
your local Independent Ols!rlbu·
tor and aavt postage Cali

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

(304)675-3276
1998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced to
$22 500 00 Oreal Graduation

Gitoll (74GI-44H548
AUTOMOTIVE Japanese En·
gmes And
Tranmiss10ns
Rebuilt,
Super
Low PricesUsed
, AndI
Imported Direct!~ From JaiJan
Cleaned Tested, And Year War·
ranty Fore1gn Englnts. '"c. 1·

6()0.535-9889
FACTORY WHEELS, Alloy, Rally,
Steel Buy, Sell Acker Wheel 1·
800 -994-3357 Worlds Most
Complete lnvenlory www acker·
wheel com

S11zed Cars From $500 Sport
Lu•ury, &amp; Economy Cars Trucks
411.4S Utility &amp; More For Currant
Listings Call1·800·311·50..8 Ext
1183

o Farm Equipment

1=-------======
Home

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFtNO
Uncondlllonal lifetime guarantu.
loca~r. fertnces fu rnished Esilblis
1975 Ca~ 24 Hrs (740)
446·08 0, 1·800-287·0578 Rogers WatefJ)rooflng.

n95

1990 Oodgl D·150, Plck·Up 318
Automatic, LWB, Cual Exhaust
Air Good Shape! $3 900 UO

C&amp;C General HQme M.aintenen ce· Painting , 'ilnyl siding.
carpentry, doors, windows. baths,
mobile home repair and more For
~estimate call Chet, 740 992-

1995 S 10 LS. Extended Cab 4
Cylinder 5 Spefl'd )'tr $8 800
740·446·1968 7.40-388-8637

June U&amp;ed Hay Equipment Sale
4 9% Financing With John Deere
Credit ~pproval , J01219, JD720, 1985 Ford Plck·Up F·150 Short
NH47", NH469, NH488 HayiJine, , Ab0\/&amp;300 6 tyl 4sp 96 000 miles
JD335, NH630, NH650 MF1560, • ·
Average ConditiOn! 740·
NH85t, Round Balers, New John :388::..:.():;,148=-----------.....!.'!_
Deere Round Balers, Mower Con
dltloner&amp; O% 12 Months, 2,75 % 0 ne 1986 KW One 1988 Western Star Dump Trucks Good
2• Months 3 75% 36 Months. Asphalt Trucks. Call Afllr 6 P:M
4 75% 48 Months 5 5% 80 740-448-4 257
Months. Carmichael'&amp; Farm &amp;
Lawn, Inc 1-800-59.4· t 111 , GaiU- 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
palio, OH Wo DIIMI~
1977 Chevy 4 WD, For Sale Or
Cat-553 Sheep Fool Rol!llr· Trade, For S·10 .4 WD Of Equal
$31 000 Cat · 215 Track Hoe Value 740-361'-7117
$31,000 45ft Parts tra1ler $1 ,800,
16ft Trent Box $3,000 2.000 Gal· 1982 Ford F-2 50 4X4. $2 r300
lon Water Tank $800 00, 421 080, Has New Reese Hitch Very
Chevy Truck Motor $750 00 Tough ! 740·245·5949, 74b 703·
Mise S!eel Beams, P1pe Vlbral· ms
ing Tamp fits 416 Cat Hoe 16ft
Trent Box $3,000 00 J740J 843· 1989 4 WO Dually With Ul1hty
2844 Aller fl PM , alter 5,00 Bed, 6 2 D1esef, Good Mechantcs
17~)-643-291a
Trude, 740-446-4257 After 6 P:M

. ASTRO·GRAPH

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands 011er 25 Years Ek·
parlance All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag, 740·446:

720 Trucks for Sale

~see

61

I FRIDAY

1995 Chevy Blazer LT Leather
Inter ior. Loaded. AC/PWIPDL,
COPiayer, Towing Package, AI·
loy Wheels, Power Seats

Livlngston's Basemftnt Waler
Proofing , all basement repairs
done, free est imates , 1tfetim1
guarantee 12yrs on job experl·

once (304)895-3887
M&amp;R General Contracting &amp;
Electric Cafpentry, Porches,
Tra!ler ,Set-Ups, And Air Condl·
IIOning, Also, Maintenance 74044Hl193

RolnbOw Bulklono
Bu1ld new or repair old no job
loo small or large Major credit
cards
tWV029$82
C(llll
1304)458· Hl49 BP 1528-8092 ,

840

Electrical and
R,efrlgeratlon

Resldentlal or commercial wir ing,
new service or repa1rs Master LIcensed electnc1an Ridenour
Electrical WV000308, 30.4· 6751786

•

Work related conditions look
extremely enleresting for you m lhe
year ahead. 11 looks Iike success
could come from lwo destinct areas.
One affects your eareer, lhe other
your pnvate hfe.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
sp11e of the fact !hat you might get
off 10 a bad start loday by doing a
number of thmgs wrong, your possibelflies ror acheevmg your aems look'
very good. Trying 10 pa1ch up a broken romance? The Astra-Graph
Matchmaker can help you undersland whal to do to make. lhe relalionship work. Mail $2.751o Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P 0 Box
1758, Murray Hell Station, New
York, NY 10156.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you
Reep lookeng over the shoulders of
those who are helpmg you today,
they won't be able to be as effective
for you as they could be when left to
the11 own devices Show faoth en
them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Desappoinlment could stan 1he day off

by depending on someone to come
through for you ,who has proven
unrehable in lhe pasl. Be discetrung
m whom you pul stock.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Crih·
cism, inslead of compliments os a
sure fire way to Jeopardize a good
relalionship you have going. If thes
person is trying hard lo please you,
apprectate "tns or her effort.
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22) By
consi&amp;Q_ng lhe mlerests of others
over your own, you well make t~
day a happy one for yourself On lhe
oth~r hand, selfish mohves won't
yield happiness
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Avoed jumping to conclusoon~
lhat someone in aulhority is going to
be agamst you before you've even
tested the waters. A good altolude on
your part ytelds cooperation by olhers.

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
Even if your response is JUSt, avoid
be10g vmd1ct1ve at this time. Follow
your humane msuncts mstead and
the day will Iurn oul 10 your favor
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Lei your wallet be the deqd10g factor should you find yourself in an

awkward PQStllon where a stranger
can geve you a bet1cr deal cconomecally than a fncnd . Your pal w\11
understand
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)'
Allhough you meght thmk aboul
reneging on an agreement today,
you'll stay lhe course. The chooce
w1ll prove to be a good one, when
you find out there IS a bonus in 1f for
you.
ARIES (March. 21-Aprol 19)
Although your motives m1ght be
onnncenl to you, this es not a good
daJ lo try to slip somethong over on .
an mtemale paf !&lt;cep cverythong
above board
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)
When ncgotoatong for anylhong
Important 1oday, do more hstcnmg
than talkong. Chances are the person
wt1h whom you're bargaoning woll
gtve you better terms than you have
10 mend.
'
GEMINI (May 21-Jtlnc 20) Part·
nershop arrangemenls can J;le very
succe'!"fulloday of each party shares
equal au!onomy. Conversely, the
team won'l funcloon as cffcclovely 1f
one person has more power

.

JULY 2.1

�Pege 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2, 1999

cathoik'church

a..rc.

UJ Wetltille
rJ1 Clrill
33226 Clbl&lt;lrco\ Rd.
Swtday School- 11 .....
Worship • lOa.m., 6 P-•Wcdftesda)' Sen:~
p.m,

P

.".posto ltc

o....-• 1'

._'

am.

M ' t C pee 1 C'1tardi a1
5th and Main
..._, At lhrtson

A sse mbly of God
'•

M.ISOfl. W.V&amp;.

Ba pt1 s t
Mamuea Baplisl CIHardl
Burtinpam . 7-42-7606

Pas&amp;or. John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 un.
- MorninaSc-rvn 11 :00 a. m.
Evening Ser.-kt. 6:00 p.m.

-

-~

Sunda1 school • Sl:30 a.m.

.

'

'

.

Fret Wili Baptist O.utdl

Ash Str~et, Middlepon
Past or; lu HayJTJan
Sunda)' Service- 7:00p.m.
Sunda~· School • 10 a.m,
Wcdne~ay Service .7:00 p.m:

·.j

•··

'

Wont. ip ~ 10:45 a_m.

'.

Hie~ Hills S:burcb or Christ
Evan~dist Mike Moore
Sunda) School . 9 a_m_
Wo rship· 10 a.m .. 6.30 p.m.
Wednc:sday Services- 7 p.m.

Racine Fint lb.pllsl
PasiOJ: Rick Rule:
Sunda~ School ·9:30a.m. ·
Worship - 10:40. a.m_, 7:(10 p.m .
Wednesday Services . 7:00p.m.
Sih· ~.-

Run Baptisl
Pastor: Bill Lillie
Sundav So.;hool - !Oa.rn.
Worsh1p. · 11~ m , 6·30 p m·
W ed ne sda ~ Scrvices.-6.30 p q.t.

..

Ml. Uni011 Bapd$1

Bethlehem Bap~t Church
li-4, Racme . OH
Pastor : G~ne Morris
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday \YOr$hiP.- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedne.!iday B•ble S1udy • 6:00 p.m:

a.m..

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rl. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor; Rev'. James R. Ar.:ree , Sr.
Sunday School"- 10 a.m.
Worship· lla.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

I,

Vktory Baplbt Indcpendant
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
. Pastor: James E. Keesee
. ..
·Worship· lOa.m"! , 1 p.m.
Wedn~sday Services - 7 p.m.

··.

PhsltH: Jwain Ca mpbell

Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, sUpe-rintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

1

t'lf

Hartford Church or Chnst in
Hanford,.W.Va
Pasror:Jirri'Hughes '
Sunday School - I I a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. , 7:30'P.m.
Wednesday Servia;s - ?:30 p.m.

"'

Paslm: Rev . Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

ML Moriah Cburch Or God

.Mrigs Cooperalin Parish

Mile Hill Rd ., Racine
.
Pastor: Brice Uu
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday S~~iccs. 7 p.m.
')I

Nonhtast Clustrr

...

..

Rutlaad (;hun:h' of God

Railroad St. , Mason ·
Sunday School . jQ' a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 11 p.m.
WedncsdatServiccs · 7 p.m.

ML Moriah li.pti.!lt
Fourth &amp; Mai_n St., Middle pori
Pastor; Rev. Gilbert Craig Jr ~
Su nday School- 9:]!) ~-~ .. • Worship - 10:45 a. m.
Antiquity Baplist
· Su?'lday School· 9:30a.m.
. Worship - 10:45 a.m
' Sunday Evening· 6:00p. m. •.•

..

Paslor:·P.J _ C hapnlan
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
• • Worship - ·11 a.m.
Wednesday Ser.:ices · 7 p.m.

Monc O..ptl Chard
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worship· lla.m.
. Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Wednesdav 'Sel"'iCes. 7 p.m.

Holy Eucharist and .
. Sunday School 11 :00 a . m .~
www.frognet.nel/...(:leanery

..

~abbath School · 2 p.m:
&gt; Worship • ~ p.m.·

ML Henn011 United Brethren
· In Christ Cburth
·
Te:.as Community off CR 82
Pas1or: R~n Sanders
Sunday School· 9;.30 a:m.
Wollhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

' Eden Uaittd' Brdhrt~ In Christ

Uallnl Fakh Cburch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass ,
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

2

Full Gospel Ugiuho,...
33045 Hiland ttoad, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a.m. '··
Ev.ening 7:30p.m.
·
Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30p.m.

South Bethel New Testament
Silva Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barbei · --;-&gt;.:
Sunday School -9 a.m.
Sun. Worship · 10:10 a.m ., 6 p.m.
W~dncsday Service. 7 p.m.

' Long BoUom
Sunday Schoo l -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.tn .

"' clrletOn lnlrrdenoatlaatiOnal Churt'b
Kingsbury Roa.d
.•

.·

Pastor; Clyde Henderson

tn miles north orReedsville
on State Route 1f4

. Pas10r: Rev. Roberi Markley
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
.Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesqly Services. 7:30p.m.
Wednesd a}1 You,th Service · 7:30p.m.

, Woiship- 10:.30 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

. ,.

.

Untted Brethre n

•

Evening - 7 P-P'I-

. ·'!

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.'

·'

· Sunday School -9:30a.m. ,
·
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
;
· No Sunday or Wednesday Night ServiCes
.
.

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'

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31 Pastor: Rev. Roeer Willford'
Sund~ Sch~J- 9:30a.m. ".
o_f$bip· 7 p.m.
.

~

Church of Christ

RAVENSW~D. W.Va. -Unit- employee at the ·plant's mai.n gate,
ed Steelworkers of America Local 1,068 workers voted for !he contract,
5668 members have voted to accept a . , with 352 voting agaiast. ··1
wntract with Century Aluminum Cor·,'-.:· Since May 31, the·· steelworkers
poration in RavensWopd. _.
have been working under an.exten5ion
-..,ting at the· plant gates by more of their fonner conliict. Qn June 11
than 1,600 unionized workers began workersvdteddownonecontractoffer
Friday, at 6 a.m., and continued all day I,:QB-286, but work has wntirtued at
through t;llidnight. According to unof- _ !he facility.
•
.
licial totals given Saturday by an · ' The rejected contract offer tenns

.,

, F•llh Fellowship Cruudr ror Christ
Pastor: Rev . Frarlklin Dickens
·
Service; Friday, 7 p.m.

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy Cfirist]esus col!ce .

· ·

.

I

INSVIWICE

Full line of

MOWER CLINIC

. .L .. ~~ Mast:~i~~~fc;~=~~~ician ~~~~~~~~E. /.X)

r

-.:.I£N(''"""T~•-

~

SWISHER ~ LOHSE

~~~~::::.

Buy, .Sell or Trade

S

in .the

mmg you.
'Tfies. 5:1

:Jrancis FLORIST

-~·~~·;;.~~;:•n,;;.,

entinel
740·992-2644
~SB~m~a~u~lc~ke~l~~2~~n~~--JVEl94~9~,2~a~~t7uv~~9~~~
-5~13~0~P~o~me~m~y~1K~~~99~2~
-2~9~5~5~::~P~o=m~er~oy~~C~LA~~S~SI_F~IE__D_S~!-+~~~~~~~~J
Support your
HAVEN ·EWING
FUNERAL
.

lOCal · t
churches

KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

214 E. Main

5 earching for 8
lOCal ChUrCh?

ttuM

FUNERAL HOME

1

an ad in this space

"Weacce~.'1:;e;~;ra,i&gt;.ftrs "
Lundy Brown
Director

Regan Brown
174

DignityandServiceAiways
Established

1913

992-21'21 .

Street 106 Mulberry Ave.

Prescriptions

Pomeroy

Check the Sentinel
every

,

:a

FIRE &amp; SAFETY .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992·7075
172 North Second Ave.

PARADE HIGHUGHTS- A large crowd of
GaHII Cou~ana Jllthlred lor tht 1m Fourth
of July·Parlclt ln.downtown Gatllpolla, Sllllrday mornlll!l· Holztr Clinic (abovt photo) won
tilt Bttt Themt Float
In thll yur's
pantdl. Ltlt to right, Holztr Clinic
ptdlltrlclsn Dr. G. Wlla'ltn BOwent, Dr.
Jam~_ Orr a_
ild
Bobbl Holzer,
widow of the late
Dr. Charita Holz·
er, wara the , ...
turf~~ rldera on tht
winning entry. River
Recreation Fetttval
,
quHnMeu...
..
Workman (right
pholo) aleo participated In the parade. Work·
l'l\ln wu crowned during Frtday't opening
. nlghtctremOnlu at tht laatlval. Tht River
' ., 'Rtcrttllon Fatllval contlnuu tpday wtth 1
worahlp ttrVICt, go.pal mualc, U.S. Tllla
StrJta powtr bot! ntclng at noon, various
muatcalant-lnment throughout th• day,- and .
culminating In tilt annual ftrtworks display at
· 10:30 p.m., apon110rtd by Holier Clinic.

-•rei

.

'

'

IJICilt, communitY · hivolvement, self confidence,
personal appearance and self expression, and each
were.introduced and interviewed during the ceremony by 101.5
The Ri~r's John Pelletier. The event was sponsored by the
\)JIIipolis Junior Women's Club and Floral Fashions.
· The contest got off to a different s'-" this year with the

introduction of a queen '~ parade that not only featured the con·
testants, but past River Recreation and Gallia County Junio,r
Fair queens, as well as past winners of the Little Miss and Mr.
Colltlnuotd on pege A2
· . •.

Advertise your

bus:~~~~se:;:c:eek
and SUpport local

would have tequired the workers -to
pay deductibles and co-payments
under the medical plans.
Negotiating teams from the com- .
pany'illld~nimet last w_eek in Piusburgh, but' . d not rell!'h an agree'
menton
tenns.
.
The -Charleston Gauttt obtained a·
le.tter td the unionmembers on June 26
which stated the leaders objected to

some other provisions of the offer.
Company management had been
Both-sides seem anxious to avoid
They _were un~app~ with pro~ ·_ preparing ~sible strjke, ln,a let· the turmoil that began in November .
pay raoses, penston, S1ckness and acct· ter sent Mon
.to salaned employ- 1990 when prevoous owners erected .
ctent wverage. ·
·
ees, Century Pre ident Geny ,Meyers-,. fences, and steel shields arou~d the .
A tentative agreement was reached ,.said managers' needed to be ready for plant, locked out union workers when
. :ruesday at the Charleston House Hoi· . astrike on. 48-hour n&lt;!tice. Managers the_contract expired; and hired non-iday Inn 'l'.ith assistance from media! .- were told to prepare'' to spend up to union _replacement workers to run the
tor Gifford Oum. Neither side dis- seven' days in the plarit "in order to plant. Scars from the l8-'m9nth disclosed deiails of the tentative ·co~ tract, min critical operational posts, plus pule that followed remain in Jackson
under a mutual agreement
essential administration functions."
County: ,
.
.

Main Street organization updated on historic design_procedures

Crow's Family Restaurant In everytfiing give
for
"Featuring Ken_tucky Fried Chicken"
tfiis is tfie will of 9od in

$92·5432

·

·Steelworkers vOte to apPrOve contract With Century Aluminum

Felnlew-1811* Churdl
Letan, W.Va. Rt. J
Paslor: Brian May
Sundiy School-9:30a.m.
·
Worship·· "7:00p. m.
Wednesday Bible Sludy . 7:00p.m.

Holiness

-.
GALLIPOLIS- Sele&lt;;tion of•aqueen· and junior royQity, a
patriotic m.SSage and entertainment were the high Iights of the
opening night of the 34th Gallipolis River Recreation Festival
·
on Friday, kicking off a three-day
observation ofthe Fourth of July
holiday that ends Sunday night
with a fireworks display over the
Ohio River.
The festival's planning com·
mittee'had realigned events to help
keep people coming back to the
festival this weekend, and the
crowd that remained. at the City
Park for the festival queen contest,
:lito'· selection of Little Miilll , and
town.
,,
Firecracker and a perfonnall!!c
Although Wai-Mart corporate
The Rarely Herd testified .to the
officials have refused to comment
behind the committee's
on the store, the first concrete eviplanning.
'
dence that Wai-Mirt wtu;, ind.eed,
"We're four hours into it and
we have a great crowd," said Ray
going to open a supercenter in the
Mason area was found in the May 17
McKinniss, who coochaired the
edition of F.W. Dodgt Consmu;(ion
festival committee with Carol
Ntws Weelcly.
_,;,
Blaine: ''That's what it's all about
' Prior to the ·magazine article, sur- an event for the public. The
vey crews were regularly seen at the
co6peration betw$en the chamber
of ci&gt;lnmeree and the volunteers
site, which is owned by ,MIOOO: Stm Mllttll-1
LTD, an qhio Limited tiabiliiy.
worJ(ing here has been nothing
bee
at:"
'
Company.
In the June 1 edition·of ihe conThe festival cOntinued Saturday --;ith a .. Fourth of July
structjon magazine, store officials
e through downtown Gallipolis, 'iJ:tc Baby!fot 'Sparkler
test, a youth talent show and other events. Sunday's high·
-. ,_ had 'changed its listing from a pre-,
bid _status; to a bidding status.
' Jig include' a worship s'rvice in the park at 10 a.m., a show
by country perfonner Jeff Carson at 9 p.m., 'and the fireworks
display synchronized to music a.t 10:30 p.m. '
Good Morning
. A major draw for the ftstival has been the U.S. Jitle Series
hydtoplane boat racing, held on Saturday and agili n on Sunday.
Today'• tlt--"aatbwl
from noon until 4 p.m. under the sponsorship of the Ohio-Val14 Sections - ~34 hiles
ley Visitots O:nter. .
.
·
'
In
activities
Friday
night,
Melissa
Workman,
a
graduate
of
C2&amp;6
Calendan
River Valley High School; was select~ the 1999 River Recr\:'!· .
03-7 '",
Classlfteds
- at ion Festival queen, with Angel Beck chosen first·,runnerup. '
I!HUI
~2mi£1
' Ashley Fraley, also an RVHS graduate, was named the sec·
Ell
ll!!dl!l~
M
·,
ond runne'lup and ~i:k, who graduated from Galli a Academy
Alona tl!~ Rl•u . !;1.
High School, was also cl!osen Miss Congeniality. Fraley and
W!ll!!llrl~l
A.l!
GAHS graduate Christin~ Caldwell were each named princess·
' !!Hi ~ .
Si!!!m I
es in-judging at the event.
·
.
C 1999 Obk&gt; Valley Publilbing Co.
The contestanllj were ju.dgCd for their academic achieve-

•.

.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. ~
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

·,

By KEVIN KELLY
TlmM-Stntlntl St.rr

'

Whlle't•Chapel Waleyan

•

'Great crowd' greets opening
of River Recreation Festival

(l

Freedom Gotpet Mluton '

ge

Sal. Con. 4 t45-5:15 p.m.; Mass-5 :30p.m.
Suit. Con. -8:45-9: 15 a.m .,
·
Sun . Mass. 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30a.m.
-e.

Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:

ML olin «om .. unity Ch~rch •·
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
'"
Sunday School ~· 1': 30 a.m.

G .. E sco,-1 Church
.,!_
. 326 E. · ain St, PomeiO)'
·
161 Mulbe rry Ave ., Pomeroy, 992-589 8 ~/c~_- James
ki, Rev._ Ka1harin Foster... · ..
· Pasto r: Rev. Wahtr E. Hei nz
.
.., • . Rev. ~bo h Ranktn, Clergy
:- ~

SaCftd Heart CathOlic Church

Seweoth·O.y Adnndst
Mulberry Hts . Rd., Pomeroy

'

Eptscopal

Catholic

Seventh-Day Adventist

LongBottom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:;45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednes.tlay 7:30 p:rn.

Trinlly Cburth
Second &amp; Lynn , Pqmcroy
Pa stor : Rev. Roland Wildffian
Sun!Jay school and worship f0:2.5

Salem St.
.
~astor: ReV, Paul TayfOr •
Sunday School · 10 a.m . •
·
~ve ning . 7.p.ni".

Middleport Pmeyleriu
Sunday Sci:K&gt;ol- 9a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.

Faidl Gospel Cb"rth

•

Reechvllle
Worship . 9:3u a.m. "'"'
"
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m. .
.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m. , :..
f ns_t Sunday of Month • 1:30 p. m. serv ice ·

Congregational

.Rutland ~·m Will Baplllt

. Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.in., 1 p.m.

, Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.'.' 1 •
WeUnesday Services . 7 p.m.

JOppa

Church or God oi Prophecy
O.J. White: Rd . off S!'. RL 160

HarrUo'nvUie Prnb)1trian Church

;.'1,:'

Pastor: Bob Rando lph
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Su nday School - 10·30 a m.

'.

Worship -- II a.m.

Dymille Commuaily,Cbun:b

Mlddltport Chun:b of the Nuarmt ..
' ·Pastor: GregoryI\. Cundiff
S!Jnday School • 9 :30a.m.

Sunday School • lO a.m . .

Sunday School and Worship · 10 11.m . ·
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scmces ; 6:30 !J.m.

Sun!Jay Schqol- 10 a.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Thursda~ Services·- 7 p.m, .

Pastor: Rev. David Russell

Sy.-.cue Finl Uailtd Pnsbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

Wedneday Service· 7 p.m.

Pastor; Sharon Hausma n
Worship - 9 a. m.

Syracuse Finl Cbun:h or God ·
Appl~ and SeCond Sts.

Kline
Coolville Cburrll
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday ~hool- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tut:Wy Strvices. 7 p.m. ·

·Sun day School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10;30 a.m.

..

Pre sbyterian

lbul Coa~mamily Chtarth
~ ~
" Off Rt. 124·
Pastor: Edsel Hart
~ Sunday School • 9:30 a.in.

Pasror ~·l-{elen

MASON, W.VA.- A building
pennit has been issued for the construction of the new Wal-Mar1 in
M~ according 'to Mason Mayor
George Nichols.
Nichols said the building penni!
was iss""d in the name of Shannon
Strobel &amp; Weaver Constructors and
Engineers of Auburn, Alabama, general contractors for Wai·Mar1 Supercenter Store No. 2849. The store will·
be located near the foot of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. ·
.. ,••_
The mayor also said a site superintendent will begin working at the
~ slofe loeation beginning July 12.
According to Nichols, be, along
with the council members, will be·
meeting with the contractor !iometime during that week to discuss
traffic; managemOI)I and other details
are
.to oc:cUr. when a

. ~.

SYracuse Miuioa ·

Co. Rd. 63

Chesler

Pastor: Ron Heath
· Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services' i p.m.

Fol-est Rim H.aplist
Paslor : Ari us Hurt
'\ S.u nday School · 10 a.m.
WOEship . 11 a.m.

Alrred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
•· Sunday School.• 9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.'!l ·· 6:30p.m .

•'

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse. ·
. Rev. Mike Thom~n.Pastor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.·
.
Evening· 6 p.m. ,
vlronesday Servi,ce- 7 p.m.

Torch Church 1

Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
'Thursday Sc'rvi~s- 7 p.m.

.

.

Cooi,Uic UaJtnl MdllodiJII'arish

Mt: Olive Unhed M;tlhodist

·:· ,.

Fallh Valley T....,._ Clnud
Bail~y Run Road
Pas10r: Rev. Emmeu Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday ~rvice - 7 p.m.

Vol. 34, No. 20

Kickoff for·
the Fourlh:

Mason mayor: building
, pe&amp; mit for Wai·Mart
· construction Issued

' Mlddl&lt;po" PHt....bl
Third A'-e .
•
Pastor: Rev, Clark Baker •
Sunday ,School- 10 a.m.
E\'C'ning - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv~- 7:00p.m.

Sunday School 10 a,m.
E\'C'ning • 7:30 p.m,
Wedna:day Service -~ 7:30P . m.

P~tor: Brian Har.kness
Sunday School • JO a.m .
"' Wo;rship • 11 a.m.

· Hockingport Churth
Grand Street
~unday School • IQ a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednc:sday Services . 8 p.m.

Off~ 4 behind Wilkesville

Church of God

Mw'PJI "11 Coaamulty Cl!urtb
.S1.S Ptarl St., Middk:po;rt
Pastor. Sam Andenoo "

.

Graham United Melhodlsl

Worship· 9:.30 a. m .J l ~l &amp;-2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd·&amp;: 4th Sun} .
WednfSday Serv~e~ ~ 7:30p.m.

Christian Union

Wcd~y • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

. BetbeiChurdo
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a .m.
.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Ch ris tian Un1on

;

F•ilb Baptist Chun:h

C~r Sycamore &amp; Second S1., Pomeroy
"
Re v. Donald C. Fritz •
Sunday School • 9:4_.S a . m ~
WOtsb ip · II a.m .

lnxltr c•urch of Cbrisl

• Great Oe nd,-Rou1e

Old Btthel Flft Will Baptist C horch
2~qJ St. Rc 7, Midd iCppn .
Su~day. Sch ool - _19
venmg , 7:30p.m.
::rhursday Services. '7:30

Sl. Paul Luthenn Chun:h

St. Rl. 124, Racinr
. Pastor: William Hoback
Sun!Jay School· lU a.m.
· Ev~ning • 7 p.m.
Wednnd.~y Scrvicc:s. 7 p.m.

Sunday - 9 :30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler .

·

Pentecostal
......................
,

Hanisoa..-UM CO..alliiJ Cllurch
·•
' Pastor: Theron Durham

~Dt

Sunday School. 10:00 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m·..

Pastor: Phi li p Sturm
~Sunda) School: 9:30 a.tn.
Worship Service: 10;3() ~.m
jlible Study, Wednesd a)·. 6.)0 p.m.

Sunday, Z:JO p.m..•

SUnday School ~ 10 a.m.
1 WOrship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

9Di- S.vio•r Lulhnan ·c•urch
Walnut and Henry Sts.. Ravenswood, W.Va.
Past_or: David Russell •

Rffilsw-ille Cburd. of Christ

Servic:n: Wednc:Jday, 7:30p.m.

Eut Ltwt
Pastor: Brian J;iarkness&gt;

Pine Grove:
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00a. m. ·
Sunda)· School - 10:00 a.m·.

Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sundar sc!lool. 10:30 a. m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rulland

Gall ipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • July 4, 1999

By J .. FREEMAN
_
the Coali!i_onAgainst Superfluous Highways, ariAthens- must sell their properly due to financial h~dship, but are " ' Although the construction funding was not approved, ,.
Tlmtt Stiltliltl st.rl
area group 'opposed to the planned highway between unable to find buyers due to upeomilig co~struction.
m9ney for it was not redistributed elsewhere, he
. DELAWARE- Both the opponents and supporters Athens and-Darwin.
Highway advocate Steve_Story, an attorney from explained.
· ·
•
_,
of a new highway between Athens and Darwin claimed
~ri_day afte'!'oon CASH~~~ a preliminary victo- . Pomeroy, said he ..was disappointed tl)at funding for the · "It's still on track and headed in the right direction,"
victory · following 1. Friday morning meeting of the ry m 1ts opposthon to the proJect· after TitAC approved project was not approved, but was encouraged that the Story added. - ·
·
SUi b~lliOII in state _hi~way spendinJ!o but left out ·state is willing to fund continued desitn and engineering
At the meeting 'fRAC received comments from '
state's Transportatioo Review Advisory Council.
In addition, the TRAC reaffirmed its commitment to approximately $74 mtlhon m _wostruction funds ear· wo!k..
. ,
· ,
·
' • Norm Marshall, senior project m!"'ager from RSG Asso·
funding other Route 33 projects in Meigs and Fairfield marked for the Athens-to-Darwtn U._s•• 33 neallgDJl!eDL : .H1story has_shown_that_ those projects that have c~ates, an mdependent engmeenng and hoghway plan·
counties.
~owever! T~C appr~ $6 m1llt"!' for continued des1gn and engo.neenng ~?mpleted have a good chance ning firm from Vermont. hired b)C CASH to stuay the
. TRAC met Friday to reconsider funding numerous _des1gn, engmeenng and hrruted hardship nght-of-way of constructoon, Story sa1d. ·
_
highway project.
highway projects across the ·state after it changed its acquisition ~lo~g the proposed ':'~.ens:to-_Darwin corri. "111 take the six ~illion; two_. years ago we didn't have
Marshall outlined what he felt were numerous planpolicies to address COiieerns addressed in a lawsuit by dor. .Hardshtp nght-of-way acquiSition IS for people whQ SIX cents for the proJ~CI," he swd. · .
. .
Continued on peg• A2.
·

Putor: Rev . Maipm J. Robinson

Sun!Ja)' School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
,._Bibl~ Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

'

.

RL338, Anriquil}'
Paslor. Jesse Morris
..,,~
Assl. P~ors : Jim Morris
~rvices: Sa1urday 7:30 p.m .

'l1lle 3 " rtn' Fellowlltip Mlailery

•""'
Canilel-sUuoa
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rcls
· Racine, Ohio
··

'

'

FuU Gospel Cllonto fll 11M U.·iioc S.•io&lt;

Won.bip • 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowsllip service 1 p .m.

.• Wonhip . 9 a.m.
· Wednesday Servitts, 10 a.m.

St. JOhn l.utMnn Church

Hellllock Gron Church ·

.., .

Pastor.: Joe N. Sa'yre Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel"'liccs • 6:30p.m.

'.

ll&lt;lhooy
P~ror. Qc:wayne $1utler
Sunday School · lJh.m

Luthera n

Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7,:30 p.m.

hslor;;: Sfevt: Reed e
SuDday Sc:bool • 9:30 a.m.

me

"TRAC OKs continuing.design funds for R~venswood Connector

..

New Urt VktOI) Cnt'tr
JnJ Gcotges Creek Road, Gallipol~ OH
P~stor; Bill S1a1en
'Sunday Services· .JO a.m'. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m. .t: YOulh 7 p.m.

.Looa Bot....

Latter-Da y Saints

LupvHic Chrislilla Cbiu'do
Sunday School- ~:30 a.m.

Wednesday servicz:, 7:00p.m .

Soow.lllo
Sui;Kiay Scllool • 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m. ·

MGnlilll SCar

,Oifron, W.Va .
"'
Sund•y Sct-wl - 10 w.m.
,
•'
-~ WorShip - 1 p.m.
·
""
Wednesday ~rvicr . 7 p .m. ; .

'·

Sunda)· Sc.hodl -9:15a.m·.
Worship· 10:15 a.m.

.

,,' ·~

Foldo r.tt Goopd Ciolordo

L.aum OilY Free Methodist-Churcb
Pastor: Cbarles Swiger
Sunday School-9:30a.m
Worship· 10:30 a.m. aod 6 p.m.
Wedncsd_ay Servia:~ 7:00p.m.

Tht C hun:h ol Jesus
Christ of UUl'r·D•)' Saints
St R1. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
'
Sunday School10: 20~11 a.m .
Rdief Society/Pries! hood 11 •05-12:00 noon
.
Sacrament Strvicc: 9·10:15 a.m.
___, Ho m~making meeting, 1st Thurs . . 1 p.m.

.

Cliftoo T......_.. (Jlurdo

Sundly arvia!, 10:00 a.m:.. 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7;00 p.m.

s.ltlb Cnttr
. Pastor: K®"Ficru

or

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p. m.
Frid:ay-1:00 p.m.
.

H - Cllritliu Ftllonnlolp Clourdo

Thursday Services.· 7 p.m.

Ohio Va ll ey Publishing Co.

Paslor: William Van Meter

Su~y Sd:lool • 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 : 1~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wed~)' ~TYke · 1 p.m.

· Worship . 1o-.JO a.m.

Schopl_- 9:3Q a.m.

ll-' mik: paR Fon Meip on Ntw Li101 kd-

Pasl:or: Robert E. 'Musser

·.

,, '

•$undaY School · 9:30a.m.

R-Un! Churdo J..,.. Clnisl
'·or Lauer Day sam~s
· Portland-Racine Rd.
PaStor: Jerry Singe'r
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worsh1p- 10:30 a.m.
.
Wednesday Servicc:s- 7:.30 p.m.

Bndrord' Ch~~;n.:h or Chrisl

~

'

RatlaH

c.om..,
J... Ckilt,
..,........fWdo
.

~r-.c­
Sakm St., Rutland

•

tmts

WorWp- IO·.JO am •
Wedne.Wy SHvicCI • 1 p.m.

Wednesday seTYitt. 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:J5 a.ni.
· Worship- 10 a.m.
~ . Youlh Frllovtsbip,·Suoday . 6 p.m.

· 10:45 a.m., 7 p m
Thursday Service: · 7:30 p.m.

Cof'!'c:r ~f ~1. R1. 124 &amp; Bradbup- Rd·.
Mtmsler: Doug Shamblin
Youth :\1in~tc:r : Bill Amberger
. Sunday School - 9~ 30 a.(n.
,Wo rsh ip· 8:00a.m., 10:.30 a.m.• 7:00p. m.
Wednesday Ser' lt%s - 7:00p .m

Pastor· Mark- Morrow
6th. and Palmer St.. Middlepor1
Sunda' School-9:15a.m. ·
Worship~ 10: 15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serv1cc:- 7:00p.m.

·'

~Unda)

~ orsh• p

Cit~ or Cluist
Sunda} School- 9:.J(J'a.m.
Worsh1p · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

first B~ptiil Cbun:h'

Sunday School - 9:I.S a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
B1blt Study Tucsdl}'. tO a.m.

-Spriocs

u,-sru Ru• Holiness Cburcb

Rudaad

Finr Soutbcrtl U.ptist
41N72 Po'riieruy Pike
Pasroe: E. Lamad)'Bryant

Poaa., .

ScrvU - 7:30 p.m.

Pastor: R(!\'. Doug Co '(
~. Sunday Wor:?hip- 9:30p. m.• 7:30p. m.
. -Wednesday ~n ''-"= "! t:Jo p.m.

Sunda:r School-9:30a.m.
Worsbip · 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School-·9:30 a.m .
-Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.

,.

...

.

Bndbuf1 thwd: or Christ
Pas1or: Tom Rua,·on

Sunday School - 9:.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Putoc Coaait rtarcs

Walr~·u Bible Hoti.a.t Churdt
75 Pc:-ar! St., Mi~lc:port.

,_

Pomeroy Fini U.ptist
Eas1 M ~:~,i n St

Plat Gnrn .BiWt llelilless Chllf't'll

F-Cloopol ·
92J'S. 1'bUd SL. MNidlq&gt;on
Pulor Eniie Weqcnl
Su.odly SCI'\'ia:, 10 a.m.

R&lt;joldna ur. 0unto
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middtepon
P2swr: Lawrericc ForeiiW!
Suoday School - 9:30a.m.

W~y 7pm

Pui:Of: Ke1tb Radt-r

Sunda) School· iO;l5 a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm srundn .
Bible Study_wronesda} i pm

.Z

R•t..ad First Baptisa Ch~
Sundn School -9:30a.m.

•

...

...... John • Patty Wad&lt;
6QJ SeCOftd AVe. M.B011
-173-5017

Worsllip- 10 un.

Wed~y

t.pPen PlaiD Church of Cbrisl
Instrumental
·
~ Pastor: Ten\· St~~:.m
Worsh ip S&lt;n·iC(' -·9 a.m
Communion- 10 a.m .

.t'l

"F~ ICiu•do"

•

•

Sunday Scltool9:30 a .m .
E\'tning • 1 P- ~-

Ac:afr lJfe Ceater

Servia: time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.

/

· Sdt·t'I'S\·illr WonlflfF_.. .
, P&amp;SIOr. David O.ailey

"

Details on
page A&amp;

Suaday Sc:booil - 9-.JO .a.m.
Worship 10-.JO Llll .• 7:JO p.m.
Wednesday Servia-. 7:30p.m.

Wtdnesday Scrvioes - 1 p.m.

Pn.t'a..iot
SurwUy Scbool • 9 un.

1.!2 mile- otf Rt. 3~

Pastor: Rogc:r W1tson
,,
Sundav School 9 30 a m
Won.hip ·_10:30 a rri,. 7c00 p.m.
Wedntscb y ~n ..:is · 7 p.m.

Worship - II a.m . and 6 p.m.
W,cdllCsday St:rvicc; - 1 p.m.

Sunday Scftool . 9 LDI.
' Worship- IO_un.

'M....,_

Kmg
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday wc:nhip •7 p.m_
Wednesday prayer mec:tinJ· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. o·Deu Manic:)'
Sund.ly School . 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:3Q a .m.• 7:30p.m.

•Zioa O.urdl ol Cllrisl

.570 Gran1 Sr., Middiepon ]

M~ilr
~or; Chad 'Emric.t

"

ad-

......., Rev. - - -

474]9' Ieibei Rd., Chesler
""-':Rev. Mil)'
Cool;
Sunidly Scrvias: 10 LIIL .. ~p.m .

ReG (M ' c· pw1)
Pastor: Vnnap)·e Sullinn
Sunday School - 9;30 Lm.
Won.hip - lO:lOL.m. '

Pas~oc ~ - ~-c:~

Pomtro~· - Ha'frisonvtlk Rd. (RI.l43)

,

.....,.._OwL

Thuf'S(by Scrvica - 6:30 p m.

· Leading Cied: Rd , Rutland

Sunday School -9:.30 a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Walncsday Seri. ices-6:30p.m.

Hopo llopoitl Cburdo (Soollllmo) ,.

..

1\ao Cllurdo ol Cllria

.'
Row ol saw-.. Ho5Hu Cluud

· Putor.Teny
- RldpCII"""'oiCIIritl
·
Ste-wart

Wednesc:l.a)' Sc:rv!~X- 7:30p.m.

PolSIOr: J•m Diuv

Wontup- 8: Is·. 10:3() a.m., 71Jl.m.
Wedi'W:$day Services - 7 P-~Worship - 9:3(1 a.m .
Sunday School- 10:30 L111.
Putor-Jeffre} Wall~
lst and 3rd Sundly

W«dlip - 9 Lfll.

the Jubilee Year
,

€aloory - Q o r d o
........ uyl'iU,Co. lld.

Other Ch ,_,rches

HI: 908
Low: 70s

experiments
with new

prepares for

--

f-ltoo
"-r.a...JEmrid&lt;
Sw.iay Sdloof • 10 ....

PVcrilo O.pot.

Hamsonvillr Road
PJlSl(lf: Rev. \' letOf Roush
Sunday School9:30 am .
Wor'itup - 11 a.m.. 7:30 p m.
We-dnrsday ScJ-,.·itt - 7:.30 p m

Su~y Sdlaol - 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Neil Tennam
Su_ndly Scrvias- 10:00 a.m. at)d 7 p.m.

•

Coi!"'J

Youth Mihfsler. Bill Fruitr ·

. P.O.
Uberty
"""-' oiGad
B&lt;u 467, Duddi"&amp; unc

,_ ur C-"Mrdd

JI 057 Statt Rouk 325, u..p, 1k
PDklr. Dr. lD. Y.oun&amp;
Sunday school • 9:)() Llll.
SuDday "'''OBhip • lO:JO a.m. 1: 7 p.m.
Wtdnt':Sda} pr.~~yrr 21'\ lCt . 1 p,m
,
.

,.

Pioneer racer

STUDYING DESIGN - Judith Kitchen,
In archlf "'111ral hltlorlan trom tht Ohio
Hlatorlc .-reatrvatlo'n Olllet, oulllnotd
deslgn ritvl- and how to "rtad" s historic commercial l,lructurt during the
recant· daatgn r'vlew workshop apons&lt;trotd by Main Street Gilllpolla Inc.

GALLIPOLIS - Looking to produce explained Marjean Buteher,
Powers. discussed the criteria for placeMemberS of Main ·Street, along
"fundamental changes" in downtown Gal- assistant difector of the
ment on the National Register, and Harper with various p_roperty pwners and
lipOiis' economic base, the Main Street Gal- Gallia County Chamber of
outlined the Federal Certified Local Governlipolis Inc. organization hosted a recent Commerce, which worked
ment Program and the National Historic . the Gallipolis Historic Preservation
design worJ&lt;shop to investigate the benefits on getting Gallipolis into
Preservation Act. The Historic Preservation Review Board, were briefed on
of a community's historic preservation.
the Main Street program.
Tax Credit, article 34 of the state's basic numerous preservation programs
Gallipolis won· the Main Street designa"The key to the success
building code, was Raymond's topic, while
available through sto.te am/ federal
lion last December in an effort to make its of the Main Street OIJlaniza·
Klichen ·examined design review with the
sources, including criteria for
historic central business district mor~ tion . is its comprehensive,
organi~ation.
attractive to businesses, customers and the incremental and implemenIn addition to the prestige a building . placement of structnres on the
public.
:
llition oriented nature," she
attains when included on the register, the National Register of Historic
Members of Main Street, atong with var- expl3lned. "As a result of proper planning OHPO representatives ;aid the properties
ious property owners and the Gallipolis_His- and dedicated members, Main Street Gal· may be assisted by federal tax incontives Places.
toric Preservation Review Board, were lipolis Inc, will produce f4ndamental that allow for a 20 percent investment tax
Becky Thatcher Showboat.
briefed on numerous preservation .programs changes in the downtown's economic base." credit for cer1ified rehabilitation .
Kitchen, whose presentation was entitled
·The group heard from Barb Powers,
Register listing is often a-prCJequisite for
available through state 'and federal sources,
including criteri,a for placement of struc- . Glenn' Harper and Mar1ha Raymond, all of funding applications for restoration work "Shopping forth~ Best Approach : Designing
tures on the National Register of Historic the Ohio Historic Preservation Office, and through various private, non-profit organll.a- for Main Streel," discussed how to ~ ·read" a
Judith' Kitchen, an architectural historian lions, such as the National Trust for Historic historic commercial building, outlined mmPiaces.
·
,
mon ~torefront design and preservation
With this knowledge in hand, Main Stteet who is also ail OHPO staffer. Kevin Kuch "o· Preservation.
Gallipolis will begin incorporating infonna· becker of Downtown Ohio Inc. was also ••n
The listing has even extended to the Mis- problems, and provided specific information
tion about design into its overall strategy, hand for the workshop.
sissippi Ill. better known as Marietta's heeded for Main Street projects. . ·

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