<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8523" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8523?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T16:57:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18942">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8d1ce4a73fc424d47947a66e4c84471d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8dd2e82192e5e206e1bde5746f1f8376</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27524">
                  <text>Friday
J~1t,1198

Weather

Sports

. Reds lose to Diamondbacks., Page 4
Elements for a fatal combination, Page 8
Remembering our fatners, Page 1.2

Today: Pertly cloudy
· High: SO.; ~ow: eoa
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy
High: lOa; Low: 80a

Payne Stewart
takes the lead

In U.S. Open ·

Pages

•

at
Meigs County's .

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Commi:ssi·oners inclu.de sewer _link aid in package
Regional Sewer District in order to as.~ist those who qualify in conneeling
to the system and to deslroy lhcir existing septic tanks.
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Woter District will receive $34,000 to provide water service to new customers willlout water service on Gilkey Ridge
Road in Bedford Township.
.
Olher agencies receiving formula funds were: Meigs Counly Council on
Aging, $27,000 for a new "Hot-Shot" meal delivery vehicle: Leading Creek
Conservancy District. $30,000 for a water-line extension in the Dexter area;
Pomeroy Village, $[5,700, for a water valve replacement: and Scipio Township Trustees, $12,300 for various paving projects.
The commissioners reserved $8,500 for fair housing projects and $8,500
for adminis1ra1ion cosas.

By BRIAN J, REED

Sentinel News Staff
Assistance for low and moderaac-income customers of llle Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer Dislrict and funding for a waterline elttension for households
on Gilkey Ridge Road in Bedford Township will be the rwo projec1s receiv·
ing the II1CXt funcUng through the 1998 Community Development Block Gram
fonnula program. ·
.
The approv~l of funding for $186,000 in project proposals was announced
by lhe Meigs County Commissioners when !hey met in recessed session on
Thul'llday afternoon.
Truslees of Olive and Orange townshiP" will receive SSO.OOO in fonnu·
Ia fund~. which was promised to the residents of the ·new Tuppers Plains

.

Each projecl approved will require local malch dollars from .rhe agencies
receiving funding.
In other business. the commissioriers met with Dan Smith, president of
the Meigs Counry Agricultural Society, aboul the fair board's plans to reincote 'the 4-H horse show ring from iiS edSiing location inside lhe race track
to a location nearer to the 4-H stables.
·
The move wjll make the show ring safer for participating youth and will
also allow lhem constant use of the ring, Smith said. In iiS current location,
use of llle ring is limited during harness horse races and _Diller grandsaand
events, due to.safely restrictions.
Moving the ring, however, might require minor modification of lhe coun(Contlnued on PIQII 3)

.

PUCO allows natural gas. -Bartrum tourne
users choice of s.u pplier
By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel ColumbUI EIUI'UAI
COLUMBUS - Savings on gas
bills and annoying dinner-time phone
call~ could be in store for 1.8 million
Ohio residential gll!i user.~ who will
become eligible for customer choice
programs lhis coming winter.
Beginning on Aug. I, nalural gas _
usen~. in Columbia Gas' 64-i:ounty
service area will be able to choose
· another gas supplier.
The customer choice program.
ordered by lhC Public U1ililies Commis.~ion of Ohio Thursday, is an .
expansion of a gas choice pilot program already'onderway in portions of
the stall: includina East Ohio Gas' ter·
riiDry in Washington and -Monroe
counties as well as Columbia Oas'
Toledo1.ea gas users.
Locally, il means that Columbia ·
Gas cu.,tomers in Gallia and Meigs
coull\ies will be eligible for ihe pro-~;whiCh lii!led a~enp ••.inp
of 15 percent in !lie Toledo-area ler·.
ritory. .

•

LINCOLN
MERCURY
•

f998l/NCOLN NAVIGATOR

f998 MERCURY MYSTIQUE

-38
5.41., V-3, AulD., 3rd
Row Seal, CD Changer,
Tra~r Tow Pkg.,
Leather. Pwr. Moon

11118304

1198283
4 Cyl., Auto .. Spoiler,
Leather-W!llpped
Ste.lngWheel,
Sport Pkg .. Fog
L:amPI &amp; Morel
M.S.R.P. $17,995

Roof&amp; more!

M.S.R.P. $45,550

~•700.••

Signature Serjel, V-3,
Pwr. Moo! Hoof, CD
pteyer, AMIFM C.O.
JBL Aildlo Sys18m.

&amp;muchmcnl
M.S.R.P. 42,240

*15.1D•*2&amp;5.

Bush appointment to -equalize
advisory·council. repre,entation

,

71

Sale price a1 $39,960.40 CD 7.99% for 72 months. Finance
charge of $10,741 .28. Total paybaCk of $50,431 .88. Taxes,
license &amp; fees excluded. Wllh
credit. Prices
Include-·

CD 7.99% for 72 months. Finance
charge gf $3,973.48. Total paybaclt of $19,138.88. T.,._,

Sale price of $15,163.40

iWIIh;•;p-;proved
••
•
cred•
~-.Prtces.
.

approved

license &amp; fees excludedJd.
lncl: ret I

f998 MERCURY TRABER

f998liNCOI.It TOWN CAR
..

11198516
4 Cyl., AMIFM Gala.,

1196337

Starao, Front&amp; R.r
Floor.Mala. AJC,

T-Contml.
FloQr Mall, PW,

""-"""" Group,
S!ncJiun Pkg.
M.S.R.P. $13,400

POL, Til,

•

Sale price of $34,834.75 CD 7.99%1or 72 months. F)nance
of $9, 128.45. Tolal payboK:k of $43,963.20. T.,._,
licenM &amp; excluded. Willi approved cred~. Prices
include rebatel .

cn.rue

G. Kenner Bu~h of Athen~ was
one or three men appointed to the
TranApOrtation Review a:id Advisory
Council Thursday by Gov. George V.
Voinovich.
The other lwo were Cl)arles H.
Gerl:ardtlll of Cincinnali, and Donald E. bkeway of Holland.
Responsibility of the council is to
develop and approve a IIIII of high·
way projects that will not cau.o;e
spendinato sianificantly exceed the.·
future funds predicted to be available·
by the fiscal fo:ecllll of the Ohio
·Department of. Transportation,
apccnliiiiiO the releue from the gov·
li office.
11 was aiM~ noted lhat as of July I,
mben will be co:::pcn.'laled $5,000
year plus expenses, not to exceed ·
·
$15,000 a year.
Bush's lenn of off:ce begins Sept.
16 and ends oo June 30. 2001.
Active in hiJhway development

t998 MERCURY GRAND MARQUISE

I

1198M7

Signature Serieo, V-3,

V-8,AuiD ..

~

Entry, PW, POL.
Pwr. Mimlls,

Slyled-

Crulee, Cli.Contml.

eo..ri.

.T/2...

*11.17&amp; ··•t

---·With--..

Sale price of $11,178 CD 7.99% for 72 months. Finanee

cn.rue of $2,928.60. TCIIII paybaclc of $14,104.60. Taxes,
. llcenae &amp;

Include......

. dll. Pricea
.•

LUILOI....ILTIII .
DRAIN OL, INSTALL NEW OIL

T05

FLUSH•

.
.
- .,
'--..,

* Some Models Extra Valid Oft All Makes
,.....,............... Sonri!D...
4
Ca411'1. . .5.1R
t

programs for many yea:s, Bush is
director of 1he Southea.1tern Ohio
RegiiJI!lll Council, lhe Ohio Chamber
of Co:iune:Ce, and is lilc fo:mer pres·
ident ofthe Ohio Newspaper Foun·
dation.
He i~ the publisher emeritus of
,The AJhens Messenger, having
relired •fter 32 years a.• editor and
publisher of lhe newspaper.
He is ;dso a rormer member of the
Ohio Unjvefliity Board of Truslees.
Bush received his MBA degree from
the Harvard Graduate School of
Business A.dministrarion.
Jake..&gt;ay's term r:uns from Sept. 16
10 June 30, 2002. He currently •serves
a.• pi"el;ide,!ll and CEO of Regional
Growth Punnellihip in Toledo.
From 1991to 1997, he served as
direclor of'lhe Ohio Department of
DevelopmenL He is the fo:mer pres·
ident or the National Association of
State Devei9Pment Agencies and is a

Todly Ia a big d8y for young
8thletH from throughout
Soutlltestem Ohio M New
E = Petrlot Mille a.trum,

member or the N11tional Council for
Urban ·Economic Devclojlmerlt and
I
County netlft, holcla
the Ohio Development As!IOciation
hla
ncond
annual footblll
Board of Direc10111. He received an.
camp.
Lilt
night, Bartrum
MBA degree from Sara.'iOta Univerhoatid 1 dinner tor the bitsity in Florida. ·
name 1lhla1HIIId locll volunGerhardt wa.1 reappointed to the
!Mrl
who will hllp with the
council for a tenn beginnina July I
·
camp.
The dinner was held 81
and ending June 30, 2003.
llllp
High
School, 1nd giVI
Gerhardt received his
the •teem• 1 chlrnc:e to - '
degree from Sl. Louis
liCit ollllr llld ......... pllna for
is currenlly the director of N~::~
toclly'l ICtlvltlla. Along with
Accounts wilh the Economic
Jocl1y'1 . camp, lllrtrum will
op:nent Division
Met I golf IOU~ on Sit·
formerly served -a.1 the
~r:r..: blrMftt a apaclll
tor of the Governor's
Ecolp fund for locll athnomic Development
wilh the
lltll. Blf'trum, plctunld In the
.Ohio Department of Development.
beck row, Cllltlr, below, hu
Bush and Jakeway were appointcolllclld
apor11
ed to fill seats created by House Bill
IMI1ICII'Iblllll to be lOki at lllant
693. That bill provided for an · 1uctlon · during tomorrow's
toum11111nt, Including lutoincreased number of scats on the
aruhed
jlnlp from NFL cocouncil to equalize rej,resentalion in
iiVPa
8Ntt
Fore IIICI 8lrry
the state.
Slndlll, lllrtrum, and other
tootblll IIIPiilllra. PlctuNCI

-•citing

Silence dea~enin·g at North American
GM plants as strike nears 3rd week

-

I

"II mcanl savings on the average
However, at lea.~! one commission
of about $150 per home in tl\e Tole- member said she is concerned about
do-area lasl year," said PUCO Chair- the frequent telephone solicitations
man Craig Glazer. "Now personally, that followed phone deregulation.
lcanthin.kofalotofthingsl'dralher
"Alii know is thai people don't
do with S ISO than spend it on gas." lilc.e phone calls ... and it's something
Even if customers don't switch that is becoming negative quite
their ga.~ companies, Glazer predict- frankly," said Commissioner Judy
ed they could see a drop in gas rates. Jones.
"If tile customer does nothing,
The PUCO ~ay issue further reglhen the regular Columbia Gas r~tes ulations on how ga.~ companies can
will still fall because of the competi- market their produciS at a later dale,
tion," ~e said.
said Glazer.
Although the supplier of gas will
Columbia Gas CEO Bob Skaggs,
be open for compelilion under the · who attended the announcement of
program, the distribulion of the gas the choice expansion, said his comand servic:e problems will continue to pany hasn't used telephone solicitabe handled by the company that pre· iions instead relying on direct mail to
viously-held~the monopoly in -the -enroll-customel5·in the-choice -pro-_
area. explai~ Glazer.
gram.
.
Rules on how gas companies will
Meanwhile, consumer advocates
be allowed to market their product rejoiced over the deregulation e~panwere not set Thursday by the PUCO. sion.
·
Q!m:ntly, ~'omporiies are allowed to
· "This .is a major, important step
m~ 'saies pilche~ over-·the pholle, .....rc-ard--forl)hft) eaua.me: ll~"'!lliict· """""'
but are fotced to ger II eontmct RObert '1\:i:lgren. Ohio. Coii~urnm'
signed by a customer to $Witch their Coun!!el. the stale agency 1h11t repre·
)IS ~ice.
'.
senls residential utility customers.

the Slrike• have dried up the produc. Two !ilrikes at Generul Moton tion pipeline.
. powillfl ar'the No:th American pla:it•
The lalest as.o;cmbly plants to shut
of 1he world's No. I auiomaker. And Corp. p;lrl.• phu:ts in Aint have idled
or slowed prt!duction on 21 OM down were OM's only factory that
a.'sembly line~ in Nonh America. By makes minivan!!, in Doraville, Ga.,
today, nearly 90 pen:ent of OM's pro- and iL• Oklahoma Cily plant, which
"duct ion .capac:ily wa.~ down.
.mal!es the .Chevrolet Malibu . and
With the strikeN affeding 88 oth- Old.•mobile Cutlass.
cr parts plants, nearly 89,000 GM
GM had 11 58-day supply of vehi·
Today's
worken have been ·idled. That's in cles on ·June I, fbur day• -before the
2 Sedlollll ·- 12 PIIH
addition to 9,200 llriking workelli.
first strike. according to thC trude
Vol. 49, No. 42 '
· All of which means the supply of weekly Automolive News. But supnew cars and lnlck$ to dealers "is plies of some popular models were
Nepder '
12
being choked off - and it couldn 'I far lower after unusually strong May
cdrne
at a worse time. .
demand spurred by rebates.
Omlfkds
11=10
-WIIIIIIIS!IL--'--.ll:lllf--1
"We' n: into the summer selling
'lbere was only a 39-day supply of
Cwk;J
IJ
seasorr. 1he holiest lime of the year," the Chevrolet Tahoe sport utility, for
2
said Clint Davis, sales manager of example. Davi• suid his Joe had only
3
King-OIIIInbc:1ain Oldsmobile-OMC · a 2o-day supply of the Taboe's twin.
4&amp;5
in Loveland, Colo. His dealenbip is the GMC Yukon. and GMC extend·
Storti
runni111low .on its best-selling mod- ed-cab plcku~.
Wptltcr ·
3
els. hiJhly profitable GMC pickups
"We still have a fair day's supply
lild sport utility vehicles.
· of stoc:k in the fJCid," said Donald
Lotteries
"I don't think there's any WI)' I Hackwonh,aGMvicepresidenlwho
can oversllle the neprive effect of directs the company's North Ame:ilhele llrilra on thiutorc," Davissaid . can Car Group. "Bul the strike il
0100
Plc:ll3: ~3--6; Pldl4: S·S·B·l
'l'hunciay.
. hurtin1 us."
.....,.,: 10-12-14-20-33 .
While :nos1 OM d I n ~ !he ;
The strikes ue la!Jely over fears
W,\'A. ,
.
counuy llill have sewral weeks' sup- ' thal.lhe automaker plans to trim jobll
..., 3: 6-8-3; IWiy 4: 6-1-6-1
ply or new vehicles, :leliverie&amp; of new I or even close the factories. Also 11
cars .nd trucks have neatly ended as issue ue productivity, health and
o,l,. ONo v.a.,: r' ttidlilt eo. . ·
safel'j issues and subc:onu'actiog.

with~ Of the jlnlys above
.,. AJ V1ughln, Blrlrum, Matt
Wllllllma lnd Cynthia CaldMII.
lllrtrum II also plctuNCI In
bottom photo visiting with
Allin DIGatflnr.ld, one of th1

Racine hire~
additional
ponce officer

DETROIT (APl-' Tile silence is' il's ,growing Jlilinful.

.........

a

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

.......

,.,

•
•

-

•

athlllill pllrtiClpltlng In lhl
c-p. Fallow Pltrlots Tom
1\lpl, Ted Joh-. HNth Irwin
ancllllrlo Grllr wlllllao tuch
81 lhl camp, to be held 11
M1lg1 High School.

ICRIII.IG HILD- Min oww 10 . . !It rlak fDr prwlaw cllawdlil, bul aftln
II tllllr hullb.IIIIUII of 1111 rlall,lhl
llllgl Cowllttt.:::r:Dipl biWd Clfflrad 1n 1n11U11 proatlll
Nil IIIIIJ on
,IIIII provldld elllmlillillol• throuah lhl
OhloUni••:JI= ofOII1ap lolc llldlah•to ovwllhn1n.
Hlra, Jolin
.
a lltUdlftC II the ou-coll, COl lUlls will
Z1M llldldft of ~. • a pert·of the ICI'MIIlng proo111

lll'lfl

•

~

•

•

Roacine Villaae Council hired
· pan-time ~lice off:cer in a special
meeting held Monday.
Ronnie Spaun wa.~ employed following an execulive ses.•ion, M&gt;lhal
1111 olftcer will be on duty for both Friday and Saturday nights.
Mayor Scotl Hill, who presided at
the meeting, reponed that Officer
Brent Rose is to see thai standard
opemling proccdlores are written up
to cover the pollee depa:tmeni operations.
·
Auxilill')' Off:cer Dion Jones has
volunteered to help in the task, and.
~that auxil~ ofticers will be.
required to donale 20 hours per
month 11 maintain their commission. ,
Council set a public hearina oo the •
. 1999 villllae hwlpt for Monday, July '
. 6117,p.m.atthe nlunicipll buiklina.:
Hill advised thai the budget will
· be basically the same u ihe 1998
· spendina plan, bul that council will
!likely need to increase the fee ·for
- ~fusecolleccloli. It Wll noeedthlllhe!
cum::ll rate' of $6 per month' Is the .
(CanllnUid on Pill 3)

.

•

�Friday, June 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
.

••

OHIO Weather
Saturday, June 20

Commentary

AccuWcather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

Lighthorse 'Indian' knife inade in China

The Daily Sentinel
'Lstulisliltf m 1948
111 Court SlrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

. .
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G-m Manager

1'1111 SeMilltl wtcoem ,.,.,. to 1M «&lt;lttw hrm ,..,.. on • brtMtl ,.,.,. ol ropiU.
--,__or-~- lite H o i - of Hhltl publl-. 7Wod lol·
H Milled. &amp;t:h lncfu&lt;M • llfMIIIN, ·
- ...,_,.,...,..- ~ ..... , , _••• , . , , _ ... , . . _ . lltflc/o
w 10: t..llatl 1o llif EdltOI; Tho SMIIIMI, til Com St, -roy, 0/i/tJ
U1U; "'· FIIJ( ll&gt;ll ..l#fU-2151.

- - ,..,.,,MI_ .,,...,

Asian crisis could
help C.l inton win
China trade battle

NBy J1ck Anderson
1nd J1n Moller
Candidates who run for highprofile political office usually
devour all the free publictly they
can get their hands on. But all publicity may not be good publ:city,
especially for a Republican U.S.
Senator trying hard to CQnvmce
voters that he's a true conser- .111ve.
Yes. that was Sen. Ben
Naghthorse Campbell, R-Colo .. the
pany-switching, Harley·riding "onservative whose face was peeking
out at subscnhers who rece1vcd th1s
month's Playboy magazme.
lns1de the magazme's plastic
wrapper. before readers can pcru~e
the Pet of the Month p1ctor1UI and
read a profile of baseball's Ken
Gnffey Jr., IS an advertiSing supplement from the Frankhn Mmt, tout·
mg the "Spirit of thr. Thunder collector's knife "
On the lell s1dc of the ad 1s a p1c·
ture of Sen. Campbell, resplendent
m face pa1n1 and a Cheyenne war
bonnet Of course, the ad g1vcs no
hmt that the "famed Na11ve Amen·
can Art1st Ben N1ghthorse" 1s 1n

fact a U.S.
that all ans and crafts items adverSenator locked
tised as being Indian or Native
in a 11ght race
American muit actually be made by
for re-election.
American lnd1ans. Campbell's collector's knife is manufactured m
Campbell's
race thts fall
Chma.
will be closely
Buyers of !he "Spirit of Thunwatched by
der " knife have to read the fine
insiders
1n
print to learn that the knife 1sn't
both part1es.
manufacture" in Amenca -· much
He shocked
less by Amcru;an lnd1ans. "Just
Moiler
&amp;
$55, tmported, complete wuh
supporters in
Anderson
1995, when ,
padded and zippered case," the text
shortly after the Republican reads.
Nor 1s 11 the fnst time the
takeover
of Congress,
he
announced that he was swJtchmg Franklin Mmt has been tarred . by
parties and becoming a Republican . controversy. The !)lint was recently
But after thre~ years in the GOP, he sued 10 a Los Angeles court by the
has not been embraced by party Diana Memonal Fund, which
acuv•sls, part1cularly the religious alleged that the mint was Illegally
nght. Turning up m Playboy m1ght pcddlmg memorab11ia of the late
not help that cause
l'rmccss of Wales.
This isn' t the first time CampD1ana's e~ecu (qrs argued thm
bell has faced embarrassment over the mint -- which sells several
his association With the Frankhn Dmna Jtcms. mcludmg a doll of the
Mmt. As we reported last summer, pnnccss decked out m mmc-dcar·
Campbell's Jewelry venture has mg gear .. had failed to donate pari
bumped up againsl a law that he of the proceeds to Diana's chanucs
h1msclf authored m 1990, wh1lc as pr01mscd The company counters
servmg 10 the House . The law says that II rccenlly gave more than $1 5

Letters to the editor
Opposes permissive tax

~:i~~~:~nselo~articleabouttheMelgsCountyCommassioners

(

fUT'OIAT
~TUFF UP,

history

t 'miNI( li'S ILLE6M.
II" C:ALlfORf\11~

~

.

'

,,

How to tax people till they· squeak·
By William A. Rusher
Governmcnl. wh1ch has no
money of ns own, must tax n out of
the only real source' ol wcahh: the
Amcncan people. BuL taxes arc
resented, and much of the art of
government consists ol JUdgmg
precisely how much rnoncy can be
taxed out of ahe electorate wnbout
converting tts resenlmcnt into
mutmy.
In rcccnl years, and especially
smce the Republicans took control
of Congress, the resistance to new
taxes has grown so fcroc10us that
Washington has had to give up
imposing new ilirect taxes altogether. The farsl alternative the lax-raiSers h1t upon was to pass laws that
would compel pnvate bus messes to
shoulder the burden of paying for
new benefits mandated by the government That was the way Mr.
Clinton wanted to pay for his huge
(and ultimately rejected) national
health plan in 1994. Note that this
technique doesn't really sh1ft the
tax burden .from the people as a
whole: It merely conceals it. Businesses necessarily pass the cost
along to the purchasers of thcu
goods and services -- or, 10 other

words. to the with httlc or no hlamc accrumg tu
Amcncan peo- government: As "'Crossllrc" copic In their host Bill Press (a former Dcmncr.l·
rnle as con- tic chairman of California) put il,·
sumers.
let those who arc "stup1d enough"
The
tn smoke pay through the nose lnr
tobacco hill the priv1lcgc -- even Jhough the
now up for whole noaion of the toli;icco comp.lconsldcrauon
mcs villu1ny 1s hased on the theory
m Congress IS ll) that smokers ·arc "adihctcd" and
yet
another utlcrly powerless tn sli,'JI
.
mgcmous
wuy
The
h1ll
makmg
1ts
'Way
through
Ruaher
In extract addl· the Senate 1h1s week called lor
tional money from the Amcncan Increasing the tax on c1garcttcs hy
people. Schemaucally, 11 amounts $1.10 per pack. The ostensible rcato this· Fmd some w1dcspread ceo- son for thiS was In "cliscouragc
nomic acuviay lhut IS legal hut lccn·agcrs lrom smoking" -- even
soc1ally unpopular mcrease 11s lhnugh tccn-ugcrs reptcscnt only a
unpopulanty hy fan means or Inul, tmy percentage of all ~mnkers The
and then h1kc the tax nn 11 In far lax. though, would fall on everyone
who smokes -- and yjould produce
higher levels.
The beauty or this strategy is more than $500 b111ion dollars in
that it doesn't matter 1f the ccnnom- new revenue for the federal governic activity in question (l_11 the men!.
,
From whom'? According to the
moment, sclhng tobacco) primanly
mvolvcs the m1ddle class, or even U.S Bureau of LabOr Statjst1cs , 47
the poor. In fact, so much the better. percent of all tobacco purchases arc
As long as the public's mmd can be made by household~ w1th less than
kept focused on the evils associated $30,000 m ljnnu~l income, and
w1th the product, huge amounts of another 30 percent" by households
money can be extracted from the earning hctwec $30,000 and
poorer segments of the population $50,000. "The rich" (defined as

everybody else) make only 23 percent ol tobacco purchases. The
Joint Cmnm1ttec on Taxation estim,ncs that 61 percent of the ni:w
uaxes wnuld be paid hy those ma~·
mg less lh.m $40,!KKl a year
And d&lt;m 'I suppuse lnr a mmul~
that, 1f thiS strategy wnrks. it wall ill.'
conhned to tobacco. Alcohol IS the
next ohv1ous targcl. (Do y&lt;&gt;U sup,
pnsc ahe alcohol barons don't kno~
th.ll their pr(lducls dcsaroy tens or
thousands ol tives every year, and
cost h1lhons 10 mcd1cal care , losl
productivity, etc ."!) Then will come
junk """' -- rurvcycd hy the high
priests of ohcstty, who don't mm~
shortcnmg the hves ol millions.
Don't worry, tho~gh By tho
11me Sen McCain and alic Dem(JC.
rats arc through w1th you, you nla~
be iax poor, but you'll be lean;
bone-dry, and off mcot me. Thai
will g1ve you more years m whlcli
to work -- for Washmglon.
:
William A. oR usher is a Distiii'
guished Fellow of lhe Oaremonl
lnslllule for the Study of Slales;
manshlp and Polllical• Phlloso;
phy.

Reflections on Father-'s Day,· 1998.

and Mr. Eason of the highway depart• 1ent.
1don't think the people of Meigs C"rtunty want or need any more taxes or By ~ ~· Plepenz
fees put on them. You people should oe allle to tellthat,by how many bond
A fathers. mn~ence extends furissues were voted down this year.
ther than he 1magme~. When one of
!think, and I know I'm speakmg (or a lot of people of this county want ~r daughters, who lived m another
to see some laxes and fees stan coming down now, not going up.
c•ty, would v•s•t us w•th her small
We're all way over-taxed now. So, who doli't you elected officials Sl8lt son •. she would s~y as we wc_rc about
lowering our taxes instead of trying to rob our pocketbooks and our families. _ to s11 down to dmner, "Chnstopher,
Enough is enough "No more taxes." and stop wasting what you have.
let's sec yo~r hands .' ~
Again, anyone who agrees no more taxes, letthe~e people know now.
And he d hold h1s hands wuh
Tenj Garten palms upward for his mother to
Middleport mspccl.
"Better wash 'em"," she'd say..
Th~ bem~ rc·cnactcd was a lu!le
suppcr-umc rnual, camcd out wuh
exactly the same words and gestures,
that goes back more than 50 years tn
our family. My father subjected my
sister. an~ me to the same nighdy
BY, The ~siOCIItld Press
.
,
Thtlay is Friday. June 19, the I 70th day of 1998: There arc 195 days left cxamanauon
, Only occasionally would he put us
in the year.
Today's HighhJht in Htslory:
,
. on our honor by askmg, .. Are your
On June 19, ·19S3; Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted of conspiring to hands clean?" ~alhers. come to know
pus U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. were executed at Sing Sing the answer they II get tf they ask that.
Our four children were next to
Pri1011 in Ouining, N.Y.
embrace
the .tradition when they
On this date:
In IS86, Enalish colonisu sailed from Roanoke Island, N.C., after failing came along. "Let's see your hands,"
followed by the display of small, out10 establish Enaland's tinl pennanent settlement in Amen ca.
strelched
palms. Then. inevitably:
In 1862. slavery was outlawed in U.S territories.
"'Beller wash 'em."

i~

·

UNDER THE DOME ·- Could
Sonny Bono's w1fc be presidential
timbre! At least one member oT
Cqngrcss seems lo thmk so.
Rep Jenmfer Dunn, R-Wash. , 1s.
one olthe nSJng stars among llousc
Repubhcans.· House Speaker Newt
Gmgnch even put tapped her to
lead a task force in charge of clos-'
ing the w1denmg gender gap to cui-·
ta1l ahc mcrcasmg number ol
women voters who lavor Dcmocra-·
t1c candidates.
Dunn says her goal is for RepUh·.
licans to gain at least half the
women's vote by the 2000 presidential election One way to pro-.
mote thai goal would be to hav~ a.
woman on the t1ckcl
·
Though some analysts belie~c
Dunn would make a gOOd candidate, she d1dn't tout herself at a
recent meeting with reporters.
Instead she brought up Elizabeth
Dole, who has not ruled out seekmg
the prcs1dcncy.
But s~e also mentioned a far less
cxpencnced GOP operative, Rep
Mary Bono, R-Calif., as someone
widow.-of- the
recently deceased crooner, was "a
huge h1t" al a recent gathering of
GOP women -· even though her
congressiOnal tenure is still less
than m months old.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Fealul'e
Syndicate, Inc.

~e~

WASHINGTON- The Asian financial cnSis"might have one unexpected
consequence. It could help propel to passage Pres1dent Clinton's request for
extending trade relations with Bc•J'".I! over nsmg GOP denunciations of technology expons to Chma.
Given the econom1c upheaval m the rcg1on, denymg·so-called most favored
na110n trade status to Chma would be akin to "pourmg gasoline on a four-alann
fin:," suggests Rep. B1ll Archer, R- Te~as. chainnan of the House Ways and
Means Committee.
In spite of the recent Chma bashmg in the GOP-led Congress, there seems
to be liule enthusiasm on the pan of leaders to further upset the fragile As1an
economic stntcture -or undenmne Chma's role of prov1ding economic stability there.
.
China 1s the fastest-growmg economy in the region. And it has been the least
affected- so far- by the financ1al meltdown being suffered by its neighbors
Archer's PQ!~CIIodav was holdinjl the.first legislative hearing on the extensaon. which Chnton announced earlier thcs month. Congress has three months
to accept or reject his decis10n, but ts not expected to complete work on the
measure before the prestdent's June 25-July 5 lnp to China.
The annual China-MFN bailie is always fierce. But thi,s-year 11 was shaping
up as even more contentious, in light of investigations into Clinton administration waivers allowing Chinese launches of U S. made communic!ttions satellites.
Panels in both House and Senate are investigatmg whether the wwvers
resulted in a breach of U S. nabonal secunty ol' were mnuenced by campwgn
contnbutions.
Republicans have been getting as much election·year mileage as possible
from the controversy. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lou, R-M1ss., contends it
has sparked far more public Interest than inqu1ries into Clinton's alleged sexual misconduct,
But those on both sides of the 1ssue now say it IS likely that Congress will
again renew the trade relationship with China, If by a narrower margin than in
the pasl.
1
• '
"China has played a very important and constructive role in the Asian financial crisis," said Nicholas R. Lardy, an econom1st who speccalizes tn Chma at
the Brookings ,Institution, a nonpartisan rei!CarCh organization. "It has con·
trihutcd substantial amounts of money. .. And, more Importantly. u has contributed by suggesting thai it will ma.ntain the stability of us exchange rate "
Any move hy China to devalue us currency "would have the potcnual for
Sl.'lting off another downward leg of currency cnscs."' Lardy sa~d.
Whil~ Japan rcmams the world's second largest economy alter the Umted
States, 11 ha.• slipped tnto recesSion after gmwmg at less than I percent over the
pa.•tlew years. By contrast, China's economy ha.• been grnwmg at about Hper·
cent.a year.
Even many who arc cTitlcs of the admm1strauon "s teclinolngy deals w11h
China have not advocated curtailmg trade wuh Chma. "'There's no reason why we can'! have a normal rclatumsh1p With Chma. so
lcmg as we don't dc•'Civc ourselves," Richard Allen, who was national security
adviser to President Reagan, told a House hearing Tuesday
"No serious pcrsod believes it 1s possible or necessary to 1sol;uc a country
of such contemporary Importance." sa1d Allen, even as he suggested that Real!lll"s decision In allow the export or satellites turned out to he, ih retrospect,
"an unwise and dangerous dcc•s•on ..
It takes both chambers of Congress to block the trade extenSion. Last year.
the effort failed m the House: by a 259-173 vote.
Democratic pollster Mark Mellman sug~sts th:n, dcsp1lc the conclusion by
some GOP strategists that the China-missile deal 1s one on which they can
make poliucal pomts in this congressional clect1on ycnr. "there is much less
there than meets the eye."
"At the end of the day, Republicans are gomg to have a hard ume pushmg
this too hard and too far," sa1d Mellman. who also 1s an adv1scr to House
Minority Leader Dack Gephardt, 0-Mo.
As to MFN for China, Mellman noted there arc supporters and opponents in
both panics. "If Republicans arc as upset about Chma a.• they profess to be.
they'd cut out MFN status for China," he said.

•

lnbuuon

''E ~UR\BUS UNUM"

Alsocllled Pres• Writer

•

million to a London children's hospital favored by the princess,
although it has also put aside $2 S
m1lilon with a Los Angeles court.
As for the kn1fe, Campbell's
office d1d not return our calls. But
they prev10usly told us that lbe
knife does comply with the law
since 11 was designed by the sena·
tor, who is a member of the Northern Cheyenne mbe
Long before he entered politi~s.
Camphell owned his own_1ndian
1ewelry busmess. Nighthorse Inc:,
wh1ch is now controlled by his wife
and son . Yet even though he gave
up the busmess when he became a
: poliUc1an, Campbell still designs
Jewelry for tl•c firm, for which he
recc1ves a salary
According to Campbell 's son,
Colin, who runs N1ghthorsc Inc.,
neuher he nor hiS father received
any royallics from sales of the
kmlc. Rather, ahey sold the dcsi~~
to the l"irm, wh1ch then handtCM
manufaclunng. markctmg and diS:

v

ly TOM"FIAUM

Today

•
IToledo I 88" I

If I was
'
delighted to spc
that my daughter was carrymg on the custom With yet
another generauon,l -:vas even
more ucklcd to
hear her say, a.•
we sat at the
table . and an
. occas1onal '
morsel of food
Plagenz
would fall from
Chnstophcr's fotk onto his lop,
"Chin over the d1sh. Christopher."
. I'm sure my father in~cntcd that
picturesque phrase. My chtldrcn must
have tired"of heanng it from me over
the years. But they never missed an
opportu01ty 10 chortle gleefully,
when they saw food drop onto my
lap, "Chin over the d1sh, Daddy."
We were a relig1ous fam1ly but, in
the restrained Lutheran fa.'lhion, we
never talked about 11 in the personal,
intimate way of the born-agaan Christians. But my father always·remtnded

us that "every good and perfect gift"
camu f~m God.
.
To h1m, every day was a mcc day
bcca~sc God had made 11. On ramy
days he would s~y. "Look at the mce
rain God ha.~ given us."
Our older sun must have inherited
his grandfather's oullook One day
when he wa.~ four and we were driving along in a pouring rain that
would have sent ducks In cover, Joel
lookc~ nul the car window and
observe~, "Nice day, "" 't it
Daddy"1
More rcnections on Father's Day

makes us pay the price for '1Ur sms 1
"No real lather w111 refuse to help
his child. He will not coddle i't, bui
neither will he let 1t carry a burden
beyond ns strcngah Neither will God •
"In each family all over(he \'lorld;
the father bears a sacral responsib•hi
ty. He is, for the child, the first con~
tact wilh the 1dca of God, for hi~
name and &lt;Jc&gt;&lt;i's arc the same. Bc&gt;lll ,
arc Father."
••
A father's role lflicaving a su~mi
and civilir.ing legacy that will c~tend
even heyond the lives ol hiS ch•ldrc
and grandchildren is echoed in th~
old hymn:
'
"G1vc car ye children to my law/
Devout au~nlion lcndi Let the
mstructmns ol my mouth/ Deep in
your hcan descend.
Your lips shall teach them to your
sons, and they again to their!il
That generations yet unborn! May
teach them to their heirs "
Georp PlalfnZ 1s ~ l)'lldiclted
wriltr for Newspaper Enterprile
A-lation.
·

Apnl Oursler once wrote a story
about her famous father, Fulton
Ourslor. author of the longt•me bestseller. "The Greatest Story Ever
Told " :
"From babyhood," she wrote,
"my father taught me to appreciate
the secrets of God. All good fathers,
whatever thCir fa1lings, do the same.
"Fathers forgive their children a
thousand times,. and yet they chastise
them lllltbey learn to do better In the
same way Ood forgives us, and yet he
•

•

IND.

• IColumbusIoo•l

~attern

repeats itself:
heat, humidity, showers
Ely The Associated Pres~
Temperatures around "Ohio should n:mam warm through the weekend.
Skies will be clearing and temperatures will slowly cool down tonight.
Lows will range from the low to mid-60s to the mid to upper 60s across the
southern part of I he state.
On Saturday, skies will be panly cloudy and conditions will remain warm.
H1ghs Will range from the mid-80s to the lower 90s and lows will drop into
the m1d-60s.
Finally for Sunday, a warm front will bring showers and thunderstonns.
especially during the afternoon hours. Highs will be in the 80s.
The record high for this date at the Columbus weather station was 98 in
1994. The record low was47 in 19S9. Sunset today will be at9:03 p.m. Sunrise Saturday w1ll be at 9:03p.m.
Wealher forecast:
Tomght..Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms early. then clearing. Lows in the mid 60s. West wmd 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Saturday...Sunny early, then panly cloudy with a chance ~f afternoon
showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s. Chance of rain 30 perceq!.
Saturday mght. .. A chance of showers and thunderstorms until midmght,
otherw1se partly cloudy. Lows 60 to 65 .
·
'
Eldended forecast:
Sunday... Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs
in the upper 80s.
Monday...Panly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the upper 80s.
Tuesday...Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s and highs in the upper 80s.

-River SWeep postponed for threeW. Va. counties due to high water
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (API~
The ~nual cleanup of the Ohio Raver shoreline ha.~ been postponed in
three of 12 West Virginia counties
due to the high, swift cummt produced from steady mms .
The cleanup m Pleasants. Mason
and Jackson counties has been
re~cheduled for July II. The event
w~ltake place as scheduled Saturday
1n Brooke. Cabell, Hancock, Ohio.
~arshall, Tyler, Wayne, Wetzel and
Wood counties, said Jeanne lson. programs manager for the Oh1o River
'Iaiiey Water Sanitation Commis·
sion in Cmcinnati.
· The river sweep also has been

postponed along much of the Indiana,
Illinois and Kentucky shores.
In earlier river sweep&amp;, volunteers
hive found old tires, refrigerators, a
stolen spons car, furniture, pares of
houses and even wedding dresses.
- The .Ohio River, one of the
nation's major barge waterways, runs
981 miles from Pittsburgh to Cairo,
Ill. About 3 million people oblain
theu drinking water from the river.
More than 22,000 volunteers
picked up II ,000 tons of litter along
the banks of the Ohio, Kentucky,
Allegheny, Monongahela and Beaver
nvers last year.
I

..,.

Gallipolis livestock auction results
"Producers Livestock Market
repon from Gallipolis for sales condllcted on Wednesday, June 17:
' Feeder Cattle.
' 200-30011 Sl. $80-$9.5. Hf. $72-

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPS lU.NI)

ACI-Co.Nowc 1
I'Lbhshcol OYfiY oftcmooo. Mowdoy """""'
Fndoy, Ill C.Uo St., ~. Olllo. br lho
Olllo Valley Publilllllll """'-/()...... Co
Second d .......... poid II l'awloniy, OhiO.
11oo Allo&lt;ioled ,... .... 11lc Ohio

·-bor:

~w"-1"""'

....... .,., Send lddrca concdKVII to The
Dally Seftlloel, Ill Court St., l'omcllfY, Ohio

4S769

SVBSCRJmON ltATIS
B7Clrrlora•-Ooc Week ......._...................... .$2.00
One Mon~.h ................................$8.70
" One Year......... .......................$100 00
SINGU COPY PRJC&amp;
0.11~ ...... ....... ...................... Jl Cull
Subscriben 1101 delirinc 10 P'Y ltw curler 1111)'

•·

rcm11 in advana: diiCd. to Ttle Dilly Sellinel on
1 thRe, li11 or ll month bltit. ~n will be
pen c1mcr each week.
No 1ublalption b) mail permitted In atcU
when: t.ome e~mer aervic:c II 1vallablc.
Publisher ,...rva the riJ)\10&gt; adJ• doithe IUiiocriplion poriod Silbo&lt;riplloo rile
dlllogu moy he lm.,.._..d by ......... !he
duntion of dN:: lllbtcripbOIL

1.,

Mtlp C.Owly

-0.-

ll - ..............................127.30

Ch•mplon ...............................12

Cltv Holding .............................45
FedeniMog&amp;,II ••• _, ..............H'O.niWU..................................,_

Qooclyear ..............................14'4

.

Comctlon Polley
OarlUio....,.. .. lll ........ lolobe
a-nte. Jr , .. ol U omtr I• I
otory, coli the ..... , _ .. (741) '"2155. We ril dlock JOUr toiDnlodoa

a..t IDike a CUI II~-~~ W8ftll6ld.

Newa Dwwibnenta
T1lo ............... llt2-2155. Depul-

sue:

n:

Gtoenl MllllfiOC....................._.EIL lltl

Newt ........................................;;·: :

AmrTech ..............................M,'ha
Alh'-'d .()11 .........................48''ht
ATIT.....................................U''I.
Blnk One ..............................51\

Ch1rm a..,. ............................ I\

Reader Set vices

·

Am Ele Power ........................47~..
Alczo ......................................10fl

8rOlfghiM.oooooouoooooooooooooooooooou15

26 -~~~ .................. ........$53.82
l2 -~~~ ....................... ..JIOl""
Mttpc.M7
ll-111 . ........................
J211.25
26 - b..................... ..... ~1111
' l2 - ............................ $1011.72

-h 1

Stocks·

Bob E't(lna............................21'·
Borg-Warner lo••••••••••••••••••••••44'-

MAILSlJ~PriON

-

$78, 300-40011 St. $77-$84. Hf. $70$78. 500-6SOII St. $75-S78HI. $68$75; 650-80011 St. $66-$15; Hf. $58$74.
(Feeder Cattle sale is the second
Wednesday of each month J
Cull Cows •
Well Muscled/Fleshed $36-$46
Medium/Ave rase $34-$37.
Thin/Light $30-$33, Bulls $42$46.
Back To The Farms:
Cow/Calf Pairs $40()-675; Breeding Bulls, S40-740 Bred Cows $285$.585; Baby Calves $\-ISS; Goats
$1.5-$67.
Brood cow and feeder sale
Wednesday, June 24, 12 noon.
. For free on-farm visits, please
call 614-&lt;446-• •

Kmerf.................................. ,,..,_
Kroger .........- ......................43'1.
Llrti:lt Enci ••• - ••••••;•••••••••••••••32'-

Lirralted .................- .............. , .
O.k Hill Flnt ..........................21\
ova ...............poooooou•••·······..···a~

OM V1llly.~ ...........................ll\
Peoplel oooooj oooooooooooooooooooouooooo31\

Prem Flnl..1..............~.............20\
Rockwell •••••••••••••••••••••••••••41\

....

RDIII'tiii ..................................M

......................................\
·8~'1 .................................3\

..... Bank .............................. , .

Wetldv''a ............................... .24'Worth1ngto11_._;;.,,._
........................11'Block rtports 1re the 10:30
l.m. QUOfM provldact by Ad¥HI
ol Galipolll.

,Analysts fear ·Pakistan
may peddle its nuclear
know-how to outsiders
By JOHN DIAMOND .
rules barring the spread of weapons
AMOCiatld Pres~ Writer
of mass destrucllon.
WASHINGTON - U.S. intelliMideast analyst Anthony Cordesgence analysts, stung by their failure man of the Center for Strategic and
to anticipate nuclear tests m South International Studies says the United
Asia, are reassessing their conclus1on States is "grossly overdramatizing
that Pakistan is,unlikely to share its the whole thing, acting like we' ve
capability with other Muslim coun- suddenly discovered India and Paktries - raising the specter of an istan are nuclear powers." Calling
"Islamic bomb."
Pakistan's weapon the Islamic bomb.
Although they do not yet vtew Cordesman said, "IS a little hke callthese scenarios as likely, U.S. ana· ing the weapon the United States
lysts are watching for signs that eco- dropped on Hiroshima a Christ1an
nomic sanctions imposed on Pnkistan bomb."
may boomerang, compelling the
Moreover, Pakistan has llule to
Islamabad government to gain scarce spare from its own bare bones nuclear
cash by trading on its nuclear tech- program.
nology, according to U.S. intelligence
David Albright of the Institute for
officials.
Science and International Security
A congressional aide familiar with estimated in The Bulletin of the
mtelligence issues said the CIA's Atomic Scientists that Pakistan ha.~
counterproliferallon center also was enough enriched uranium for 16to 20
concerned that individual Pnkistanis nuclear weapons. Having depleted
might sell their knowledge abroad.
that stockpile with its recent under"While it might not be Pakistani ground tests, regional expens say,
policy to prolifera!e, there might b1! Pakistan would be in no posihon to
an individual willing to do so," the sell its precious fissile material.
a.de said m explainmg the CIA anaThe concept of an Islamic bomb
lysis' thmking.
dates back to the late 1970s when
These developments come a ousted Pakistani Prime Mmister Zulmonlh atler India and Pakistan sur- tikarAii Bhuno mused on the idea
prised U.S. analysts with an exchange from his jail cell.
of underground nuclear blasts. Once
"We know that Israel and South
burned. the intelligence community is Afnca have full nuclear capabilityanxious not to be caught off guard a Chnstian, Jewish and Hindu civiagam. A critique of the ep1sode lization have this capability ... the
ordered by CIA Director George Islamic civilization is without 11, but
Tenet found that the agency failed to the situation (is) about to change," he
give
sufficient weight to ·contrarY
wrote in 1978.
• •
I
optmons.
Far from hailing Pakistan's
That finding by a panel headed by achievement, the Muslim world's
retired Adm. David Jeremmh is now mam internatiOnal group. the Orgadnving a close examination of mzation of the Islamic Conference.
whether Pakistan might sell bomb- issued a statement last month
making material to fellow Muslim expressing "deep concern over thiS
nations such as Iran, according to serious development."
administration officials and congresBut Sheik Ahmed Yassin.the spirsional aides.
- itual leader of the militant PalestinHowever. the prevailing view. 1an movement. Hamas, said. "Pakbolh among mtelligence analysts and astan 's possession of nuclear power IS
·out•ide expen.~. n:mams that Pakistan to be considered an asset to the Arab
developed 11s nuclear capability at and Muslim nations."
Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal
great e~pense after decades of toil
and is unlikely to give it away light- Kharrazi cau.~ed a stir when he said
ly.
Muslims in the Midea.~t had long
They say that the sole purpose of worried about Israel's nuclear capaits program wa.~ to counter archrival bility and could now feel confident
India's nuclear capability, not to that a fell()w Islamic nat1on pos&lt;essed
challenge- lsrael:l'he Islamic- faith similar abilities. Kharr.tzi later said
shared by Pakistan and Midea~t states Iran had no intention of acquiring
does not automatically lead to friend- nuclear weapons and urged India and
ly relations.
Pakistan to work out their differ" Pakistan's relations with Iran, for ences.
mstance, are very testy at lhas time," · · In Jerusalem, Davad Bar-lllan, an
said Geoffrey Kemp, a national secu- aide to Israeli Prime Minister BenritY. aide during th~ Reagan. admlnis~ ' jamln Neuiilylili\1, !liiid -nrael wa.~
trauon and now wuh the N1xon Cen- concerned not about an Islamic bomb
ter for Pe~cc and Freedom.
but about weapons 11roliferation in
U.S. mtelligence closely has general.
wa~hed tensions bet~n Iran ~~d
"The point is not whether or not
Pakas_tan over ~e mmon~y Sh~~te nuclear power is in Islamic hands,"
Mushm po~u~atton, se_en ·~ Shme Bar-Ilion said. "The point is that we
I~ as the VIctim of ~astan1 oppres- are worried about the possibility that
s1_on. A_numbe~ of l~n1ans have been Iran and Iraq. two very antagonistic
k1lled m PakiStan m recent years, regimes which are sworn to Israel's
adding .to the tension..
~structon, we are worried that they
6
Prohferat1on :womes c~.
t a mi
put theu hands on nuclear
lime w~en the Cl.mton admm1~1ra11 .
capons. that proliferation of nuclear
IS olfenng to began a new n:lauonsh1p power makes that possibi lily more
with Iran if it abides by intemation- likely."
al standard~ of conduct- including

Meigs announcements
Dance lo be held
A round and square dance Will be
held at the Tuppers Plains VFW. Saturday. 8to II p.m True Country will
provide the music and Junior Brown
will be the caller for the public dan~-e.
Special services
Special services hononng vcternns
will be held at the Eden United
Brethren m Christ Church located
two miles north of Reedsville on
Stale Route 124 on Sunday, JulyS, at
2 p.m. The VFW will be participating in the service.

County IKES will be held Monday,
at the club house, 7 p.m. There will
be a trap shoot at 6 p.m. and .members and guests are welco~.
Baskel giveaway
The Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative Parish will be having a
summer food ba.'ket g1ve-away for
families with school-aged children.
Applications will he taken at the Coop office at 311 Condor St .. Tuesday
and Wednesday from 9 to II a.m.
only. Distribution w11i be June 30 and
July I.

RACO lo meet .
Bridge lo close
RACO will meet Tuesday at Star
The bridge on Scout Camp Road
Mill Park. There will be a cookout (T-112) 10 Chesler Township Will
and potluck dinner at6:30 p.m. New close, effect1ve Monday. so that the
members are welcome.
Meigs County Highway Department
can replace the bridge tloor. The
IKES set meeting
wori&lt; will take approximately two
Regular meeting of the Meigs weeks.

Meigs EMS runs
Meigs Emergency Services units
answered five calls for assistance on
Wednesday. ·
- CENTRAL DISPA'l'CH
II :52 a.m.; Adams Road, Susan
Reeves. Velerans Memonul Hospital;
12:33 p.m.. assisted by Middleport
unit, Village Manor Apartments,
Eddie Gordon, treated not transponed.
7:30 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Goldie Bryant, Veterans
Memorial;
8:23 p.m .. Minersville Hill, Eli
White, Holzer Medical Cenlcr.
COLUMBIA 'lWP.
I :41 a.m., County ROild tO, auto
fue, David Smart, owner.

COLONY THEATRE
I'RIDAY THRU THURSDAY

GODZILLA

.....,

1'0-13

ONE EVENING IHOW 1:30

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admis•ions - Raymond Lamben. Rutland.
Thursday discharges - Mary
Hawkins.
Rober Medical Center
DisCharpsJune 18- Mrs. Seth
Priest and daughter, Loye Scarborough, Marguerite ShifflJ!Ue, John
Morrison, George Carson, Tonya Ireland, Mary Braley, James Echelbarger, Evelyn Woomer, Un Justice,
Emily Reeves.
,
(Publilhed with permlssloa)
I'RI., SAT., IUN .
ROHRT DUVALL.
MORGAN FROMAN IN

DEEP IMPACT PG-11
AND

ROBERT REDFORD IN
THE HORSE WHISPERER
PG-13

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Commissiond,s include
(Continued from Pllge 11
ty road that runs beside the Sahsbury Township garage and the demolition • .
of an old bam now used by the township for storage.
Smith discussed the project with County Engineer Roben Ea.wn and David •
Spencer of the highway depanment, which owns and maintains all roadways •
on the fairground•.
Ea.wn said that he would con§lder the possible closing of a pon1on of the
road, excepllng at fair time, not only to foci litate movmg the show ring but
also to alleviate vandalism which remains a problem at the grandstand area.
The commissioners also approved making the entrance at the Holzer Meigs •
Clinic on Mulberry Heights a one-way street The roadway, which goes
through the clinic parking lot, pa•tthe Cooperollive Extension lot, around the •
back of Veterans Memorial Hospital to the Emergency Serv•ces facility, '" ;
county-owned.
Since the chnic was opened last fall, safety problems have arisen for cars
auempting to tum left onto Hiland Road from the property. Now, cars leaving the clinic lot will be required to drive around the hospital and exit from •
the hospital's main entrance, which will still be open to both entering and
edtmg traffic.
_
Vickr Morrow, the county's )!lorkers compensation coordinator. discussed :
with the commissioners the details of an agreement between the county and •
CompManagement Inc., a finn approved Thursday to serve as the county's
third-pany adm1mstrator for workers compensation.
The county. wh1ch is m a h1gh-nsk group for workers compensation.
recently adopted a I0-step plan for risk reduction in order to reduce prem•um costs. The contract with CompManagement Inc. will also reduce costs
to the county, Morrow explained.
In related action, the commissioners agreed to set aside $20,000 from a
$133,000 refund in Bureau of Workers Compensation premiums to establish the risk-reduction measures outlined in the 10-step plan.
That premium represents the county's share of a state-wide one-time refund • ·
of premiums granted by the state. The commissioners voted to div1de the
remaining rebate among county depanments, to be used as deemed appropriate by department heads, based on the number of employees in each depan- ·
ment.
The commissioners also:
• Rev1ewed a liquor penn1t transfer from Jacqueline K. Vanover and Reva '
Musser, who operated The Watering Hole, to Wayne Dent: domg busines.~
as Good Times. The conditions of the license will remain the same: beer and •
wine for on-premises consumption and carryout and liquor for on-premises'
consumption until 2:30a.m
• Approved mterdepanmentaltmnsfers of fund~ for the Meigs County Pros- '
ecuting Attorney's Office, the Meigs County Highway Depanmenl and the·
Meigs County Aud11or.
Present were Commissioners Janet Howard, Fred Hoffman and Jeffrey ·
Thornton, and Clerk GIoria Kloes.
0

GOP hopes for passage
of softened tobacco bill
WASHINGTON (APJ - After
derailing the Senate's tobacco bill,
Republican leaders predict they will
pass a smaller mea.~ure to curb teen
smoking and drug usc this election
year and that President Clinton will
sign it.
"What I Want is a result thai is fair
that will deal with the problem. that
wtll restrict, limit and fight teen-age
smoking and, in fact. discourage
smoking as a whole." Senate-MajorIty Leader Trent Lou told n:poners.
"That's all."
Democrats responded With a prediction of their own. They said the
GOP's tobacco policy would be a
token, "a fig-leaf bill" targeted at
protectmg the interests of tobacco
industry campa1gn contributors, not
kids.
"There is no such thing as a
slimmed-down bill that protects kids
from tobacco smoking," White
House spokesman Mike McCurry
said.
"This Will be revisited," said the
b1ll's Democratic noor manager. Sen.
John Kerry of Ma.-.achusetts.
To that end, Senate Democratic
leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota twice on Thursday tried to revive
Sen. John McCain's tobacco bill by
otlimng it a.~ amendments to unrelated measures bemg debated on the
Senate tloor. The first failed. 54-44.
while the second is likely to be voted on next week.
Republicans have their own plans
for tobacco policy. already set in
motion by Lon and House Speaker
Newt Gingrich.
"Nothing like the McCain bill is
going to pa.-s." Lott said.
Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okla., said
he believes that Congn:s,..will pass a
tobacco bill before the session ends,
but that the legislation will work
w1thin the budget. The Republican
whip said there is suppon among his
party members for a measure that
would curb both tobaa:o and drug
use among teenagers.
"I think a lot of us on the Republican side want to pas' legiSlation that .

Racine hires

(Continued from P~g~~1)
least expensive in the area.
Present, in addition to Hill and
Ro&lt;e, were Council members Robert
Beegle. Henry Bentz, Jobn Dudding, Joe Evans. Henry Lyons and
Bob Roy, Street CommissiOner Glen
Rizer, and Clerk Karen Lyons.

w1ll reduce teenage consumption and'
add1ction to tobacco and to drugs." •
Nickles said on CNN's "Larry King :
Live" Thursday. "We don't have to
have a bill that costs h~ndreds of bil- ·
lions of dollars to do that."
As for Clinton, Gingnch said, "I
don't think he's going to veto an anti-'
smoking bill. I think he's going to•
sign it. Particularly if it"s pan o~ an
anti-drug bill."
_Hou...e_OO~Ieaders on Thursday•
pnvately discu.~sed a plan to 1mpose•
limits on the placement of vending
machines to make it harder for teenagers to buy cigarettes. Also under·
review was a plan to offer tinaneial
incentives to states that·take step5 on.
their own to crack down on youth'
smoking- and additional incentives·
to states that impose limits on allorney fees in industry lawsuit~ . '
In the House, officjals said R.epub-·
licans were discussiqg an al'proach
that would fund I"' ad ca"lpai&amp;n dis ..
couraging teen smoking aJid give tht
FDA ailthority over the manufacture·
of. cigarettes, but not necessanly
over nicotine. They also were seek·
ing to impose constitutionally per·
missible restrictions on industry
adveniSmg clearly directed at minors.
These officials sa1d Republican~
were discussing imposing hmits on
the placement of vending machmes to
make it harder for teen-agers to buy
cigarettes.
Republicans said they had come to
'no decision on how to finance the ad
campa1gn enviSioned.

�...

Sports

The Daily Sentin~~ ·

u.s. Open continues

Frlday,_June19, 1~ •

CLEVELAND (AP)- New York
Yankees pi!C!IerOrlando ''EI Duque"
· Hernande~ took a live-hit shutout
into the seventh inning before the
Cleveland Indians got to him for two
runs on Kenny Lofton's two-out,
two-run single. •
Even though El Duque failed to
post a win. his solid performance wa.~
the key in New York's 5-2 victory
. Thursday night over Cleveland.
Hemande~. who signed .to a $6
million contrJCt afier defecting from
Cuba last winiCr, allowed two runs
and seven hits in 7 213 innings. He
walked three and struck out seven.
" I respect the Cleveland lineup
but I was prepared to pitch my
game," Hernandez toid re~rters

through interpreter Jose Cardenal, the
Yankees first-base coach.
It was the Yankees' first appearance at Jacobs Field since losing
Game 5 oftheAL division series last
October, and the second meeting
between the division leaders this
season.
Although a rookie, EJ Duque kept
his composure before ·another full
house Ill Jacobs Fiel~. as Cleveland
manager Mike Hargrove questioned'
whether his move with runners on
base was a balk, and when Yankees
manager Joe Torre decided to remove
him from the game.
"If my concentmtion was ~ot'
broken when I ~umped into a little
boat and went out in the ocean to

•

leave Cuba, nothing in the game of
ba.~ball is going 10 bother me," he
said. "Maybe I ""¥ a little ~urpris¢
to leave the game, then agam maybe
not because we have a great
bullpen."
•
.
Torre is finding out the El Duque
is not a pitcher who can leave satis- .
fied just because a manager is compelled to make a stmtegic pitching
change.
,,
"When I took him from the game
he looked shocked,'' Torre said. "He
said. 'Out?' Then .. had to. take the
ball from him and it wasn't easy. He's

a warrior:·
Indians starter Charie Nagy retired
the first II batterS before Paul
O' Neill doubled in the fourth. The

'

.··

'
ANDERSON SCORES- The Arizona Diamondbacks' Brien Ander·

son alldla IntO Cincinnati catcher Eddla Taubln- to ICOI'I on Devon

Whlll'a atngllln the third Inning or Thursdily's National Laague game
tn Cincinnati, where the Diamondback• won 4-2. (AP)
.

Diamondbacks
beat Reds 4-2, get
$weep
of
series
.
.
.

ay jOE KAY

·
• CINCINNATI (AP) -In a lot of
~ys. the Arizona Diamondbacks are
just getting s(arted.
.
: When they opened their inaugura[ season with an 8-31 mark. they
[¢ked and played like a new team.
Ail that's starting to change.
: Arizona got its first three-game
s~eep- at the expense of baseball's
fifst professional team - with a 4-2·
v(ttory Thursday over the.Cincinnnti
Reds. It's anot~r indi.cation that the
Diamondbacks are ready to become
jlt,t another team instead of an ex pan:sion team.
: 1lle Diamondbacks arc in a 17-16
s~tch that has improved their record
II! ·25-47. After the initial free fall.
they're holding their own.
: " We're not at all happy with the
record we have. but it's a team that's
still full of garners who never say die
al)d play the game .the . ri~ht way,"
said Brian Andet'!lon (5-6). who fin·
ished off the first-ever sweep with
impressive pitching and baserunning.
·
: By contrast. the rebuilding Reds
aie headed down. They've lost five in
a tow. all at home, and 13 of their last
I~ ,;ames. Worse, they've look~d
horrible in the process.
:·Cincinnati has nearly as many
e(rOI'S (8) as runs (9) during the five· game skid, and leads the major
kiagues with 71· errors overall. The
la~t-pl~ce Reds have fallen a seasonlf!w 13 games under .S~ at30-43oot much better than Anzona - and
aie farther out of first place lhan
tliey've been in five yea(s.
·
-: " It's not just the young guys
(~.ho are failing). We've got ..orne
gi.ys who oren ' I young playery."
nianager Jack McKeon saidc-"Some
oC:the guys we were counting on to
pitk up the slack haven't been pick. ins il up. that's for sure. I don't know
why. I wish I did."
.
:On Thursday. Aoderson scored ns
· nt4ny nlns as the Reds with impressive ba.~ running in the draining heat
and humidity. He scored from second
baile on Devon White's two-run sing!~ in• the third inning. sliding
between catcher Eddie T:aubensee 's
lei..; to make il 2·0.
'He also beat out an infield single
injhe fifth off Scott Klingenheck .( 12l1Uid hustled to third oo White's soli
siligle to lefi. D!Wtri Young picked up
th6 ball and threw into the phot08ra·
p~Fs: booth. 411owing Anderson to
conlinue home for a 3-0 lead that was
sulricient.
left-bander allowed only two
hilll over .even shutout innings. and
~gg 01!100 got lhe la5t four outs for
hii Hlth \iave in 13 chances.

:n.e
•

. Vladimir Guerrero can climb or
crash into an outfield wall to make a
catch. He 111ns the ba.~s with reckless
abandon. and hits the ball with power anywhere in the ballpark.
If the C;u-dinals think Mark MeGwire is baseball's Superman, the
Expos are convinced Guerrero gives
them their own real life superhero.
"He's Spiderman." Montreal
teammate Rondell White says of
Guerrero.
Guerrero showed the Metq some
more of his otherworldly skills Thurs.
day night in Montreal's 7-6 win over
New York at Olympic Stadium.
Guerrero homered, doubled,
scored twice and snuffed out a Mets
mlly in the seventh with an outstanding running catch.
"He can dominate the game,"
Montreal manager Felipe Alou said
of the 22-year-old outfielder. "He's
got everything. Speed, reach, good
hand.'l. power. He could steal 30 to 40
ba.~es, but we're not asking him to
steal because we're piotecting him
this year."
Guerrero, who played in just 90
games last year after making three
stops on the disabled list, homered off
Masato Yoshii (4-3) in the fir~t, doubled to begin a five-run mlly in the
sixth, and ran down Edgardo Atfonzo's she;. in the gap to cut off a Mets
comeback bid in the seventh.
"I kind of knew he would catch

ttie ball because of the way he's been ·
running and playing;" said White.
"He can only get better and better.
He's still young."
·
In Montreal, Alfonzo went 3-for4 and Carlos Baerga drove in two
runs for the Mets.
Shayne Bennett (2-3) relieved
starter Javier Vazquez in the siltlh and
got the win. Ugueth Urbina pitched
the ninth for his 17th save.
Down 3-2, Montreal got five runs
in the sixth. scoring three runs on
Mark Grudzielanek's ba.o;es-loaded
RBI single that rolled under right
fielder Luis Lopez's glove for a twobase error.
Elsewhere in the NL. it was: St.
Louis 7, Hou•1on 6: San Diego 7, San
Francisco 6; PitL~burgh I, Milwaukee
0; Los Angeles 5, Colorado 0: Chicago 12, Philadelphia S; Florida 3,
Atlanta 2.
CIIJ'dlnals 7, Asti'O!I 6
At Houston, McGwire hit a 449·
foot home run ·into the A.~trodome 's
upper deck for his 33rd this season,
setting lhe major league record for .
most homers hit through June.
McGwire still ha.~ II games this
month to add to the record, previ. ously held by Ken Griffey Jr.. who hit
32 through June 1994.
Ray .Lankford and McGwin: ·hit
back-to-back homers in the fifth
inning otT Shane Reynolds (7-S).
Padres 7, Giaats 6
At San Francisco. San Diego won

"He was outstanding. lmpressive.'' manager Buck Showalter said
of Anderson. "I felt going into the
game like we might have a little
advantage. Brian is one of the better
conditioned playet'!l on our team.
That came to the forefront today." ·
Anderson was determined to do it .
all in his return to Ohio. He grew up
in the Cleveland suhurb of North
Olmstead. attended Wright State University in Dayton and pitched for the
Indians last year. beating Cincinnati
Sunday's pAles
Baseball
at Jacobs Field on June 17.
Kl.101a1 City uau.:troil. I ~OS p.m.
Bmlon a1 Tamp!l Ruy. 1::\S p.m.
• ''The fit'!lt time I threw in Cleve- AL standings
Torunto ld Balainw.M"c. D:'i p.m.
land was big," Anderso11. said. "This
Minucsotaut Chic::.gn White Sc111., 2:0!1 p.m.
Oakland • Stanlt. 4:~ $ p.m.
was even bigger. It was a different
Eultra Db•W..
.Y. Yunea; nt CLEVELAND. K:M p.m.
.~ I. td. lill. NTCAIU
crowd. Everybody from Wright State ra.
AI Annhcim. K:O."i p.m.
Nc:w Ynrk.. ... ................... ..441 16 .7~
came to the game. I wanted to do Boslnn .................................. 42 21 .li09
~
Tororuo ..................................1:'i J7 ..wc6
17 ·!
NL standings
well."
Ballimort ...............................1-4 JK .472
IH'·1
The whole team did well, going Tampa Day ........................... )() 40 .429 21 \ .
Eucwn 01.-Wen
I1a
~ L fa.
Gil
errorless for a franchise-record sev- .
Ctnlnll DhoWDn
Atlllnla ................... .............. .49 2.~ .6KO
K'l,
enth straight game while the pitchers CLEVIUNIL.................W :to . ~~
New Yllfk ............................. 3K 29 .:'i67
Millfll..-.otiL
............
"''"
........
J.l
.l7
.471
~·'!
f&gt;'·,
Philod:lphia
..........................
34
:\!'i
.493
1
held the opposition without a homer Oail"nttn ................................ :Zil 42 .400 II ':
20
Mt1Nrcai ... ............................2M 42 .400
for a fourth straight game, another KUA11011 City .......................... 21&lt; ·12 .400 II '·1 Aorid:l ....... - ................... ......22 49 .JIO 26~
Oelroil ............. ..................... 26 42 ..\X2
12',
club record.
c~ntniiMYWon
The sweep was the sweetest part.
Wntrm 01.-Wun
Hnu5htn ................................o43 2M .606
Ana~int .... ..............................:z 2K .600
2
"We wanted to do that: come into TeJm!1 ...,.......................:........ 41 )() . ~17 I' : Chknsn ................................41 JO .!'in
1
Milwauk4.-c
.............
...............
3~
:W
. ~i'
somebody else's place and show we O:ttlllfkl ...:..,.............. :.......... 32 .~K .4~7 10 PinstNr,h ........_. ........
K'l:
3~ .l7 .4116
14
K'f,
can do that," Andet'!lon said. ·~That's · ~all~ .,,...... .......................... 29 .IJ .403
St. Lnub .............................:.34 36 .486
14
CINCINNATI ...................... JO 43 .411
big."
Thundoy's scora
Tc-•a.' .l. O..kiMd l
Notes: In the Ja.,t four games, DiuWnt~m DlwW..
_
k:m.,:t~ City ~- ~'tn•it 3
Soo Dh:~u ................... ..........o47 2.~ .6$3
· mondbacks starters have a 1.24
N.Y. Yank«s~.ClEVf.LANI&gt;2
...,
Sun Fmnd~~.en .......................4J 30 .5KV
fL~Ion 7. Tampa Bay~ ( to•
)1 \;
earned run average, allowing silt
L,.o,. ""~'=h.-. ..........................3!'i ;\6 .493
T•Jfllflln 1\ Ballimnn: h
Col~ ............ ............... .'...:\0 4.:\ .411
17'iJ
runs and 32 hits in 38 innings wilh·
Minfll:511li14. Chi.:up• White Sna I (!i inn. -rain~
J\'l;lik'int II , ~allk! 5
oul allowing a homer.... Anderson,
who leads the NL wilh 19 homers
TonlJht'spmes
allowed. has gone two. starts without
k:.n~ Cily CR~~Kh 4--X) atiA'frnit CGreil'in"-" 0.
7;{):\ p.m.
allowing one. his best stretch of the 2). N.Y.
Yn•hc1 (Cone 9-1) ut CLI~ VELA.NO
season . ... Arizona has had an elttra- (Writhl !\-4). 1 :~ p.m.
3-1) at T1~1 llay (Sauntk*n I·
base hit in its last 59 games.... Reds 6J. O,'IIMI'fAvcry
7 :0~ r.m.
owner Marge Schott. recovering from
Tnrnfttn CCicmcn~ 7-6) 1t1 Raltimnn: (Smilb ().I).
.m .
a broken hip suffered on opening day, 7: ~$p
Mlnni.'ICMa tHawkiM -1-6) at (.'bi("J" ~i1c S11:11.
made a rare appearance at the stadi- fN11v1vTu S-It). K : ~ p.m.
· ,
Oakhmd (Siein J.J) ut Scallle (lohn5on .S·M,
urn. walking onto the field with a 10:0'
p.m.
cane before the game .... McKeon
Tt:IIIU fHcllin,: Y..J) Ul Anaheim tfinky7.:H,
·
rTiade two changes in his starting line- tomp.m.
up, resting Barry Larkin (in a 2-forS.luray•s....,..
N.Y. Y...... aoCLEVELAND.I : I~p . m .
14 slump) and Willie Greene, who
T"• M AIIIIMin. 4:~ p.nt
has not homered in 23 games or driBoston • Tampa Bay. 6:Jj p.m.
MiMeiOia at o.i(qu While So-. ~:OS fl.m.·
ven in a 111n in 17. He said after lhe
K~,.,.... City a1 DctnJit. 7 :~ p.m.
game that more change• could be iii
TtlfOtlhl • Baltimntr, 7:05 p.n1.
Ouklnld 111 Scallk, .~ :m p.m.
store.

right-hander allowed two runs and
.
five hils in 7 213 innings.
The Yankees took a 2-0 lead in the
fifih on RBI singles by Scott Brosius
and Chuck Knoblauch.
Lofton went 3-for-4 and drove in
both Cleveland runs' with his single
in the seventh.
·
In the ninlh, Brosius would not be
denied, not by home plate umpire
Tim Tsc:hida and not by hard-throwing reliever Mike Jackson.
Brosius, deprived or an apparent
RBI single on a call by T.~hida, bat- · '
tied Jackson for II dmmatic pitches
and drew a bases-loaded walk that
starled New York's three-run outburst.
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

.

hole . .Not realizing what had happeped, Simson considered it lost and
SAN FRANCISCO (APl
Payne Stewart was the only one ~ho played a second tee shot. He took
really felt like dancing at the U.S. triple bogey on his way to a 43 on the
back.
Open.
Jesper Parnevik. who wa5 Ill 69
The other eight playen who ma!l"
with
John. Daly and Jeff Maggert,
qged to break par in the first round
sensed
thai the pin placement on No.
Thursday were either too surprised to
see their names on the Jeaderboard or 18 wa5 different than what his
simply relieved to get off the course yardage book sbowed, and he wa.~
. right. The USGA realized the pin was
before it caught up with them.
"Always be 5atisfied with making unfair and changed it two hours into
par," said Stewart, who speaks from the round. although everyone played
experience of having won this cham· it the same.
And Ca.~y Martin made history
pionship seven years ago at Hazelby becoming the first player to ride
tine.
On a day when The Olympic Club a can in the U.S.rOpen. lt could have
beat up so many othen, Stewart was used a pair of headlights. since Mardoing a shimmy on the 17th green tin'~ bogey-bogey finish for a 74
when a 45-foot putt fell, the center- came in near darkne5s.
''It was overwhelming, the suppiece of a masterful birdie-birdie·
port I got from ihe crowd out there,"
birdie finish.
.
That gave him a 4-under-par 66 he said. "I have to admit, I was
and a one-stroke lead over Mark aii'IIOlll crying on the first tee. I just
Carnevale. Aoother stroke back were · had to get up there aod hit it quick
Tom Lehman, Jose Maria Olazabal before I thought about what was
arid Bob Tway - all past major going on." .
Lehman was one of many who
championship winners - along with
Joe DuranL the only player to reach repeated a popular' phrase in ,majors
-they cannot be won on Thur.lday.
S-under during tbe day. .
Lehman, who has had the lead only lost.
. .
And
seveml
playet'!l
who
didn't
going into the final round of the last
three U.S. {)pel\•· birdied three of the beat Olympic didn't beatthemseh•es • .
· ,
last four holes. and Olazabal holed a either.
Colin Montgomerie never went
6-foot birdie putt on the 18th.
"I took advantage of some breaks over par in his round of70. where;~
out there," Stewart §lid. "When we was joined by Ma~tet'!l champto
get them. you have to take advantage Mark O'Meara, Thm Kite and happ •
of them. especially in a U.S. Open. go-lucky ima1eur Matt Kuchar. .
Those at 71 included Jusltn
because you don't get thai many."
and Pliil Mickei!IOn. Fred
Leonard
Stewart called his 4-3-3 finish
" unheard of" ori the closing holes of Couples was ai 72, and the group at
Olympic. but ·that wasn't the only 73 featured 10m Watson and 58-yearold Jack Nicklaus.
unusual twist.
'
For others, Olympic: hit them
Amateur Paul Simson was 2under at the turn until a spectator ran before tliey knew what was happen·
'off with his ermnttee shot on the lOth ing.

By DOUG FERGUSON

1

1

t .... ......

its IOth straight game, when Chris sea.wn.
Rockies starter Jamey Wright (5- ,.
Gomez tripled leading ,Off the ninth
and scored on Ruben Rivem's sacri- 7) gave up three runs .m seven ..' '
fice fly:
·,
innings:
The Padres elttended their longest
,,
Cubs tz, Phlllles 5
winning streak in 211 years and
At Chicago, Bmnt Brown hit three
opened a 4 Ifl-game lead over San
home 111ns and diove in five 111ns, and
Francisco in the NL West.
Greg Vaughn hit two homers. Henry Rodriguez 'finally broke out of
including a'game-tying,two-run shot his hitting slump with a two-run
homer.
·
in the eighth for San Oiego.
Fans saluted B'rown's "hat trick"
Roberto Ramirez ( 1-0) pitched an
inning of relief for the wip, and Dan by throwing hats onto the field after
Miceli got two outs for his second his third homer, a two-run shot in the .
eighth. His second career multi ~ ·
save.
homer game came eKacrly two years ·
Pirates I, Brewers 0
. At Milwaukee, Tony Womack's after his first.
Jeremi Gon~alez (6·5) pitched six
bloop RBI single off Doug ~ones (3innings
and went 3-for-3 with an '
4) in the seventh gave Pitt~burgh the
victory in a game delayed nearly RBI.
Mark Portugal (2-2) took the loss.
three hours by rain.
•
Elmer Dessens (2-1) entered the
game in lhe fifth after the downpour
Marlins J, Bravn 2
caused a 2-hour, 40-minute stoppage
At Atlanta, Cr-~ig Coun·scll and
and pitclie4 three innings of- one-hit Todd Zeile had run-scoring singles in
ball. Ricanlo · Rincon finished the the eighth inning as Florida broke an
combined four-hitter by pitching two 11-game road losing streak.
innings for his seventh save.
Tom Glavine ('1·3) failed' to join
Dodgers S, Rockies p
teammate Greg Maddux as the NL's
At Denver. Eric Karros hOmered second I 0-game winner. He wa.~ :
and drove in all five runs and Dave knocked out with orte out in the ;
Mlicki (3-4) pitched his second eighth when the Marlins . strung
career shutqut as lAs Angel ·ended together three singles to ovel'l:ome a
a four-game! losing streak. - "
2- 1 deficit.
.
Mlicki gave up seven hits, walked
Kirt Ojala ( 1-0) pitched the sev- '
two and struck out three en route to enth and Antonio Alfonseca got three
his first road win in seven starts this .outs for his second save.
·

. '
Arizona .................................2$

47

.347,

Thursday's 1&lt;0res

22

1 ·

Arizona 4, CINCINNATI 2
FloriLia 3. Atlanti 2
O!ic"lln Cuh11 12. Phihldclflhia ~
Mllflln:t~l7. N.Y. Mcts6
Pilt s hurp.I , Milwnult~O

.I

Tonight's games
Phii!Mtel~~ia (lttewer 1·01 at Chl,caJn Cttb!
(Cl;uk 4·7). .. 20 r.m
.
Afi11Dia (Millwood 9-2) a1 MnntR.".1I (Omkic 8-0).
7:0!'i p.m.
.
l-1oritla(Mcudllwi 4·6);11 N.Y. Met5 (RtXdM-~ I.

7:40p.m.

c&amp;'fJnlan ~- ~). tc:0.1 r.m.

matchup against Tom ·candioui.
Sele issued a career-high seven
wafb,and hit·a batter, but still 1111111aged to become the AL's first tOgame winner Thursday because Can. diotti was even wilder in Texas' 3-2
victory over Oakland.
Candiotti walked silt, threw two
wild pitches and made an error as the
A's hud their four-game winning
streak snapped on a swelterihg after·
.noon in Teltas.
"It wa.' a little toasty out there,"
Sele 5aid of the heat, which peaked
at99 degrees. "lt·was hard on every-

Ada•tA at Muntn..'U I, I :3:'i p.m
F'k1'filb at N.Y. Met'. 1:40 p.m.

PiLnhurJ,h ~ Milw~ulL'l', l :O!'i p.m.
Anzun.1 a1 Sl. l.aliUI~. 2:10p.m.

,.

1

ili.rizofta (8luir 2-'1) ut St LKJis (~kuvr.clt 4-J).

S.larday'l IIIDM!I
CINCINI'I~TI II lfooulnn, 1 ' 1~ n"'·

body."

WNBA standings
ra.

F..1111torn Conlonmo:c
~

Owk11tc ................................ ;\
CUiVm.IINII ....................... .. l
Nl:w Ynrl ............................. .. l

Dounit ........................ ,...........il
W!WtinJ.Iufl .............. ..............o

L .CJJ.
I
I
J

.7,0
.MJ

!ill

) .lUI

'•· '
2,,
J ).

3 .lXXI

1' ·

. 2~1

14111:8rs, ' " - • IIIII vans In

1,.

Beet ·ihe summer beat
AC check out $29.95
AC Retro Fit for most cars

and trucks $80.95
includes kit and fn•on
For ~ppoinhnent
Phone
.
(740) 667-3350
Service Mon·fri 8-6
Hours Sat 8·12
•

&lt;

·

s19 fiso· ·
1n101 I!IICIIfYJ F11 b

Ex-.catx4Mif

• VIlli .., .......
• 4 Clp llllw Cllllla
•Calor TV
• VIdeo C1 r I ... ....,...
....... lid
•Loldldl

• Air Colldlla111111
• Alln'M -C IIIIIII
• 4 WIIIIIAnll Lock Brlltll
• Dull Alrlllp
'
• Crulll Cltllllol
• Wtl Eqillppldl

·--Eih

Get the latest in sports news from the ·

Daily Sentinel

SJS,850.
Alllfti!J!II ..IIIC
~AISEoAUiatlllc
• , . cendllolllllg

I

•l'uwa Door 1.ac1ta
•Ail'Fitl-eo

ell in A:naheim's rotation. cave up
· At BaltimOie, Alelt Gonzalez had
five l;lll!f and seven hits in 7 113 three hits and a homerto lead an I8inninas.
· hit anack. and Dave Stieb made his
Royals 5, TJ&amp;trs 3
fit'!lt major league appeamnce in five
At Detroit, Jeff King hit a two-run years as Toronto routed the Orioles.
Shannon Stewart and Shawn
double and Dean Palmer homered as
Kansas City gOt its fourth win ill five . G~n l\)so had three hits for the Blue
atii!ICS.
•
Jays, who got hornet'!l from Gonzalez
King"doubled in a three-run fifth and Mike Stanley in snapping a
inning that gave the Royals tiA-1 leud three-game losing streak.
and ended Justin Thompson's sec- • Stieb, 40. pitched the ninth inning
ond-shortest stan of the season. for the Blue Jays, his first outing in
11tomp5on (5-7) ra..ed only 4
the majors since May 22, 1993, with
inning!!. allowing four Nns and nane the White Sox. Stieb. the winningest
hits.
pitcher in Toronto history. allowed
Pat Rapp (6-6) gave up two runs three hits but no Nns.
·
and eight hits in silt·plqs inning~. and
1Wins4, White Sox 1
Jeff Montgomery got three outs for
(S lnn.-raln)
. At Chicago, Marty Conlova drove
his 13th save.
Red Sox 7, Devil Rays 5 (10)
in three runs to help Bob Tewksbury
At St. Petersburg. Fla.. Troy snap a five-game losing streak as
O'Leary'~ two-run triple off Jim MinneSClla won a rain-shortened
Mecir in the lOth inning 1!:tve Boston game.
a victory over 'fainpG B~y.
·
The game wa.'\' stopped after nve
John Walldin (4-3), the fourth of innings and called aftera 1-hour, 56live Red ·So~. pitchers, worked one minute rain delay.
perfect innin&amp; to gel the victory. Tom
Cordova hit a leltdoffhomer in the
OortJon pitched the. lOth to earn his second and a two-run single_ in the
21st 5ave in 1!2 opportunities.
third to 'match his season ha~h for
O'Leary tripled into the gap in RBis. 'Jewksbury (4!8),w_on has firsl
left-center to. drive in pinch-runner game since April 29. gtvmg up five
Steve Averyl and Jim Leyritz after ,_hits over five innings. ·

.

·'

. ~:·Deals For The first
Weellend of Summer

:

1991 CHEVY CIYILIEI
2 Dr, Ssp, air, cass, MSIP $14,260,
Special Disrouril SlOBS,

~r.w$13,175

GfTfWIWT\'
GfTA CASfl

u low u 1.9% YOUI' C~ll

u low u 1.1% Your

Plus $15CJO...,... or fttlllnclng

uloW u U% Your Cholcell ·

1996 lUlCK

1995 OLDS ·

RIYIEU

GUIDIII

4 Door, autO, llr. c:aaa. ..W1111 to
cmo- from

2 DR, ¥$, lliltlllr, CO, like , _
SAVE

AUROU

VI. ltather, loaded, 25,000 mlln:l~ •

'10 178 818 '1 21

171

IM7 CHM MONTI CARLO 2 Dr, V6, u,ooo lilies, tit,
IM5CHMCAPRICEVI.•*'
JM5 CHRYSLER CONCORD V6,...., *'
lM~CHM$-10 PICIUPhtC4~~~a,*,st..
1M5-FORD F150 Plcbp S1tap, VI,.,., .. dlnl, stnwl1..,•11•
1996 JEEP GRAND OIROlEE IWITED Yl, I•• uattf,
1994CADIUACCONCOIItSO.Ialltwt , .......,.......... ,xlrld••
1994 01.15 CUTLASS SII'REIE 1 ow•• 4 Dr, Sl..
IM7CADWCSEDAIIDIYIWlellller,li

5

Clllsa'----- 13,480

ZO% off .

II••••

list prlcell .

May styles of knives in stock,.2 blade poc:ket,.3. blade

· pocket, lockback, XXChansen.•...

PICK YOUR FAVORITE/

indians lose.•.

Plus$1000 rebata or

1997 POIITIAC

An&amp;ds 11, Mlrintn 5

: At Anaheim. rookie Jarrnd Wash6um remained unheaten a~ the surg. !Jag Angels rallied to beat the ~tump­
l!tg Mariners despite Ken Griffey Jr:'s .
AL·Ieadinll27th hotlter.
: The Angels, who trlliled !1-2 head·
Qlg into the $Civenth inni~g. won their
fuurth str~ighl and 16th tn 18 games,
keeping them 1 112 pmes uhead or
texas in the AL West.
: Griffey hit a solo !!hot and had an .
~BI sinale for the M!Jrino:rs. who 10111
tbeir fifth stmight and lOth in 12

Plus 11000 rtbllte or fln8nclng

r•

You can't so-wron1 with a Case Knife. Quality craftsIINinship, Ions term parantee. The knife known the

5

12,750
5
10,500
510,925
512,975
5
23,950
516,950
58980
525,975

':\ wOHd over, made in the USA.
• ~es the perfect iift.

pes"
J.:Ck~t~~~ catered the ~ after
New York Joadcd the bMa wtdl one

:f

•

No S.fl U....... .lut P•nMitfe ~-~~ 0.. P•ntutfe WJaall

THIS 'FATHER'S DAY,
STNfr A.FAHILY
TRNJI'ROI'I.

;
(Continued from Paae 4)
~ "Brosius bottled me tUl .lllulh,"
Jtcklon sajd. "He walked on 1 f!MI·
ball. 11 was close. In thll situadcin I
j.-t tried to saay rocused anchnake
another J00C1 pitdl. llhouJht the IMI
011e WD good. 1'1111'1 how the pane .

•lliCIIon c.ai
• Will E' lppedl

••

!13

Sele (I(N,I) struggled· through 6
l/3 innings. but managed to hold
etakfand to two runs on RBI singles
by Kevin Mitchell and Miguel Tejada.
"Aaron made a lot of quality
pi1Che5 when he had to." said
Ranger.~ manager Johnny Oates, who
was ejected·in the second inning by
home plate umpire Ted Barrett for
uguing balls and strikes. "You f!CC&lt;1
to win one of these every .once m a
...hile to relax a little bit."
! Candiotti (4-9) 10111 his fifth c:on!fecutive Mart. allowing three t'U1I5 ~
four hits in live innings. 1lle knuckleballer didn't @et much help from
Oakland's offense, which stranded IS
titnner5, two short of the club record '
~tin 1982.
.
.
• Elsewhere in the AL. II was
kansa.' City S. Detroit 3: New York
3. Cleveland 2; Bo!lton 7, Thmpa Buy
5 in 10 innings; Toronto 13, Baltiinore 6: Minnesota 4, Chicago I in
five innings; and Anaheim It, Seattle S.

Ba$ketball

8: Ill p.tn. .

Lus AnJeb l~ifclf1 4-6) til Cnlnr.ldo (t\llfacin
4--M), 9:0, p.m.
• San Diean (t\shby ~,at San Fra.t:ikn (Darwin
· 6-4). 10:35 p,m.
;/

Jl. lll.

Huu~~m.l: 3~ tt.m.
lA~ 1\n,.:k:~ :11 Culnr.vJn, 3 :0~ p.m.
San Oic~n ill Sun 1-"rmtci!ll:tl. 4: 0.~ JUn.

CIN&lt;.'IN"NA'Fiut

Pillshurp (1\!b.-n 2.-4) at Milw~ (Wnodnnl
3·5). K:O!'i p.m.
•
(' INCINNATI (Wim:hc11.tcr 3-3)~•t Hou110n

got to S-under with a wedge into I
foot on the 12th hole.
"1lle crowd started getting a lit- .
tle bigger and a Jot more cameras
were out there following us," Dumnt
said. "I started getting a little nervous." He made two bogeys and a
double bogey over the la.~tlive holes.
Carnevale also feltlhe nerves. but
he managed to light through him. He
was the only player to avoid a bogey
in the lint round and wa.~ one of only
five playe111 to make birdie on No. 17
- a 468-yard, par 4that is the tough~st at Olympic. He hit a 2-iron into 6
inches.
"Granted, this is onfy Thur.lday,
but this is where all the attention of
the golf world - is this week;''
Carnevale said.

Washburn (3-0). recalled Esteban Ya~ ·(4-1) walked Mo
· games.
Aaron Sele won a wild pitching from Triple-A Vancouver on June 2 Vaughn and Leyritz with one out.
to replace the injured Jack McDowBlue Jays 13, Orioles 6

Atlllfltalll Mnntreill, 7:0' p.m.
.
Philllddphill:al Chi'-'IIJII Cuh!l. M:O!'i tt.m,
Arizona Ill St. I.&amp;'MIIil. K:OS JUn .
PiiiRburp a1 Milwnukr..oc, M:f~:'i p.m.
U11 A~~J~:Icl al t'nlun1du, K:OS tUn.

1

Tiger Woods wa.~ cruising along at
2-under, tied for the letid in the early going, when he four-putted No. 9
for a dobble bogey. Four more
bogeys follnwed on the back and
Woods wound up at 74.
Steve Pille was also at 2-under
with only three holes left when he
missed the next three fairways and
finished Ill 72.
"That's the beauty of the U.S.
Open," David Duval ssid after four
bogeys in the final eight holes Jed to
a 75. "You're never so happy as
when you're done. 1llere's no letup."
Durant also took ·a beating, even
if he felt like a winner. .
Durant, who has made only silt of
I 2 cuts on the POATour this year,
birdied four of the first five holes and

By The Aaeoclated p,...

San Oicgo Ill San fmncii'ICo, 4:lv.i p.m.
FhM"idoaal N.Y. Mets, • : IU p.m.

f'hiliMiclphia at l'1lkaj!t• Cuh,, 2:20

WANTS A REPEAT - Defending U.S. Open champion Emil Ela
watches hta tM shot on the third hole during Thunday'a lim-round
U.S. Open action at the Olympic Club In San Frencleco. (AP)

Satlaz of HVCC wa~· fit'!ltand Brooki : •
By FRANK CAPEHART
Cromley of HVCG won second~ -:
OVP Correepondent
Just like top notch pros. the Tri- Then, Eric Milhoan was the only HJ:::
County Junior golfers challenged the and under so he won his night wilh- :•
·
: -:
weather. ~vercaq~e soggy playing a67.
conditions and turned it all into a .
Forthe 11 ·12 age group had a reat ; :
dandy, competitive fit'!ll mund of four contest for the top two spots. lan- ·Smith finished well to pull out the
play Monday at Hidden Valley.
The incessant min hnd soaked the first place award with a good 47,jusl · .
ground. left casual water all over, but ahead of Ryan Slinde at 49. Severa~:~
failed to dampen the young swingers strokes back of them came Bret~ ~~
enthusiasm. With splashing steps. Doeffinger. Heath Stanley and Shawn: • j
·
-: i
ground-splattering shots and dogged · Fowler.
In the Tri-County point system,: ;' ·
determination, the juniors finished
before the big storms. and did it in fit'!lt place is good for 10 points, sec~ ::
fine style with very respected scores. ond place each week gets eight. !hil'l! • :
In the ·premier I S-17 age group. place brings six points. fourth gamer.t :;
John Smith of Riverside put togeth· four. and each other competitor · ·
er an excellent one-over par 38 to win receives two for the week.
top honors this first outing. Matt TarAt the end of the 'four scheduled
ben had two tough holes early. but tour events. the player with the highbattled well after that In win second est cumulative total in each division
at 47. ahead of Nick Dettiniller and ' is the 1998 champ for his age g'roup.
Andy Davis of Meigs and fif\h place so it behooves young golfers to play
Donnie Scaggs.
as many as possible. These hardy
A d&lt;;~zrn 13-14 age linksters real- young linksten got a good stan on
ly fired up a strong competitive divi- Monday and deserve special come
sion. Leading the tightly bunched mendation for.njol! well tlo11e.
group was Bryan Cromley ofHVCC
The next Tri-County outing comes
with a solid 43. Close behind was Tuesday. June ·23 when the junior
Nathun Hollingsworth of HVCC with golfers convene at Cliffside in Gal45, Nathan Fowler of Riverside at 46 lipolis. All interested youths are
and the pair of 47 scores from Cmig asked to join in.
· Roush and Brody Roush. A stroke
Registmtion heg.ins at 8 a.m. The
back at 48 wa.' Drew Bush of Gal- $8 fee includes green fees und lunch.
lipolis. while Michuel Moore of Groups will tee of ,;11, 8:30 a.m. in .
Point Pleasant was one more back at another exciting coifapetition.
: ::
49.
• Meantime. enjoy all we ure priv- '
In close order behind the leackrs ilegcd to share. ignore the negatives: · .,
came Jtish Osborne, Matt Roush, ·eive th:mks for it :ill. smile a hamcll,
Seth Gaskins. Justin Scuggs and hug the kids each day and have a:
Chad Sayre. For the ~als on hand. Jill great day every .day.
:

Rangers beat Athletics 3-~~·
Red-Sox, Blue_Jays also ·w1n .

Sunday's R»"""'

St. l..oui10 7, Houston 6
l.ns Angek:s !'i, Culomk&gt; 0
San Diean 7, San l1'11ndM:o fl

Cromley
stand as latest
junior golf victors

'

Expos outlast Mets 7-6; Pirates also win
By The Aaeoclated Prua

Smith~,

. .

Stewart leads cast
of nine to break par
in first-round play

~-

Yankees notch 5-2 victorY over Indians

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5:: ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frkiay, JuM18, 1898

.,. qainst Paul Aslentnal:her (2-4~.
Jtcbon sauc:k out ~ Cl!""
ai.d ar1 one strike on Brostus. Who
:1 llien tapped a slow roller IOWIId thild
~
dial app~tertdy scored the paheati
••
,I
Tschida didn 'I hesitarc in Nlin&amp;
I
·' the ball foul. ·

run.

.

~

.

...~-

.._

... .

·.

-

Oo- O
M
__ ,...

p

,.. _ _ _ _ _ _ ,._ _ .· P ·--·

~··

-~---

--

- ------·-- __

____....

�..
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

'

(

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, June 19, 1998

Friday,June19,1998

....

.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

·Pomeroy • Mldd!eport, Ohio

T~bacco industry faces ·class action suit from custom~r~
.
.
By KAREN TESTA
Associated Preu Writer
WEST PALM BEACH. Fla. With a tobacco deal up in smoke on
Capitol Hill, attention has turned to
the industry's next legal battle.
This time it's not against night
attendants or grieving relatives of
cancer patien1s. It's the nation's first
cla.~s-action lawsuit to be brought by
smokers, people who blame the
industry fonheir illnesses.
And it comes in Florida, unfriendly territory to tobacco companies,
The multibillion-dollar ca.~. set to
open in state court in Miami on July
6, could involve as many as SOO.OOO
Aorlda smokers, led by Dr. Howard
Engle, a 78-year-old Miami Beach
pediatrician with emphysema.
They will have the benefit of some
of the strongest medical evidence so
far li11king smokers and disea.~. And
attorneys will be armed with the

~

industry's own documents, forced
into the public in earlier cases, some
of which seem to indicate • conspiracy to conceal the deiri mental effects
of cigarettes.
Already tobacco has suffered
some blows in the Sunshine State.
La~t summer. the state a won an
$11 billion settlement over the costs
of treating smoking-related illnesses.
Then, cigarette makers agreed to pay
$349 million to settle a secondhandsmoke lawsuit filed in Florida by
!light attendants. And just last week,
a Florida jury ordered a tobacco company to pay punitive da~ges in a
smoking lia~ility case for the first
time ever.
ln fact. only three times· in 40
years of tobacco litigation have juries
ordered the industry to pay damages
in smoking liability cases. Two of
those cases were in Florida.
"It can 'I be a place where the

tobacco companies want to fight,"
said Richard Da~nard. chainnan of
Northeastern University's Tobacco
Products Liability Projec1. a health
advocacy group. "Florida has not
been goOd to them."
The sick smokers are represented
by the husband-and-wife team of
Stanley and Su.~an Rosenblatt. who in
October won · the flight attendants'
ca.se. The lawsuit seeb compensation
plus punitive damages from cigarette
makers for a host of smoking-related
disea.~s.

Rosenblatt said he learned in his
first trial to take nothing for granted
when dealing with the tobacco industry.
"The fundamental lesson is
you' ve got to watch those guys every
minute. Don 'I take your eyes off of
them." he said. "They have a bottomless pit of resources. Our pit is not
limitless."

ruling by a federal judge in West a jury awarded punitive damages in
Palm Beach that threw out a law!illit such a case.
In the B&amp;W case, Wilner argued
by unions accusfna the industry of
the company was nesligent, made a
targetina blue~olla!'workers .
In his decision, U.S. District Judge defective product and conspired with
Kenneth Ryskarnp said the industry other companies to hide the risks of
had ba.'Ome "the whipping-boy of smokins. Those same arguments will
American p&lt;ilitical discourse."
arise in Miami next month.
Certain to be key are the industry
While the legislation that failed in
Washington would have settled' the documents. some of which include
state lawsuits, it would not have pro- in-house research dating back to the
tected the industry from individual 1950s revealing a relationshil!
claims, such as the smokers' class- between smoking and cancer.
action or the more than 200 lawsuits
Ris~man. however. dismissed the
brought in rlorida by Jacksonville signi ficunce of the documents and
attorney Norwood "Woody" Wilner. reitemted a central defense of tbe
Last week, Wilner won nearly $1 industry: personal choice.
million from Brown &amp; Williamson
"I don' t think frankly the docu;
-the nation's third-largest tobacco ments · change anything in tha(
company - for the family of a man respect." he said. "The fact that
who died of lung cancer at 67 after whatever you want to call it - addicsmoking Lucky Strikes for more tion, dependence, habituation -docthan 40 years. It was the biggest lia- . umenl&lt; don't change the fact that
bility verdict ·ever against a tobacco people do quit, the vast, vast majorcompany, and marked the first time ity without any outside assistance ... :-

Nationwide anti-tobacco leJiislation perished on Capitol Hill on
Wednesday on procedural votes. The
biD would have settled duec dozen
state lawsuits agaii\Sl the industry
seeking to recoup the cost of treating
sick smokers. It also would have
allowed federal regulation of nicotine.
The next state lawsuit to come up
for trial is Washington's, in September.
Steve Rissman, senior counsel for
Philip Morris. said ma.ny of the
claims originally brougfit against the
industry in. Washington state have
been dismissed, making it a different
case from those in Florida, Minnesota, Mississippi and Texas, where the
industry ha.~ settled for a total of
$36.S billion in damages.
Rissman also played down any
unfriendliness in Florida toward the
tobacco industry. He cited an April

Apostolic

co1 J.... Clorlol it ••
Von:Z.ndl and Ward d. '
l'ulor. James Miller
School - 10:30 a.m.
- 7:30p.m.
7:30
Uberty Allembly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Neil Tennanl
~1:~~1~·~ 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

570 Oranl s~.·:,·,iii.i;ilepc&gt;rt
Sunday school - Y:.&gt;o a.im.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Wednesday S.rvice •
Free WID Beptlot C......,h
Ash SIRel, Middleport
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service - 7:00p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Tests yield warning Muted welcome greets c·onvicted·nanny
on medicine switch By !:tOBIN ESTRIN
PORTLAND. Ore. (AP)- Four patients who switched from the blood
pressure medication Posicor to similar drugs became seriously ill and one
died, said researchers who warned doctor's to closely watch their prescriptions.
A team from the poison-control center at the Oregon Health Sciences
·university said the patients went into shock within 12 hours after their
doctors switched them from Posicor to a similar cla.&lt;s of medicines.
They were rushed to hospital emergency department• suffering dangerously low blood pressure and heart rates. All were saved but a 79-yearold Vancouver. Wash .. woman.
The problem, the researcbers ~id in a study to be published July 8 in
the Journal of the American Medical Association. is that traces of Posicor combined with the new drugs to overdo the treatmeni.
The cases occurred before Posicor, known generically as mibefradil,
. was taken off the market June 8 because it interacted dangerously with
other medicines, including certain antihistamines, antibiotics, cancer medicines and cholesterol-lowering drugs.
The Food and Drug Administration received 400 reports of health problems in Posicor patients and 24'deaths.
.
Posicor. made by Hoffmann-La Roche, is a common blood pressure
and chest pain medicine taken by nearly 200,000 Americans and
people worldwide.
·
Dr. Michael E. Mullins, a toxicologist who led the research team, sa d

400,oor'

Woodward insisted that she did not
kill Matthew Eappen and attacked
Anocleted Pren Writer
what
she called a "purely political"
ELTON. England -It was a draAmerican
justice system. She also
rna that riveted mitlions: A 11aby's
death. a murder conviction and an pledged to clear her name in the
agonizing wait for an appeal verdict. baby's Feb. 9, 1997, death.
Her return to Britain followed
But the final act unfolded quietly
Tuesday's
decision by Massachuas famous ·au pair Louise Woodward
setts'
highest·coun
that a lower court
returned Thursday to her home and a
judge acted within his power when he
life that ha.&lt; been forever changed.
Ms ..Woodward's many supporters . reduced her second-degree murder ·
here wished her and their village a conviction to manslaughter and senreturn 1{1, normalcy after her tenced her to the 279 days she had
'manslaughter conviction for killing served since her arrest.
Ms. Woodward still faces a civil
an 8-month-old Massachusetts boy in
lawsuit
filed by Matthew's parents.
her care. It I!(Ouldn't be ea.~y.
U.S.
District
Judge William Young
Even Ms. Woodward, 20, has said
barred
her
tempomrily
from spending
her life could never be the same.
~ course, not. How I=OUid .it a.ny money she may earn from sell~~ s~ told hundreds of re~rs an ing her story and set a trial date of
~! 11rst pubhc comments sance the Oct. S. Ms. Woodward vehemently
has denied having any plans to sell
saga began 16 month.s ago.
At. Manchester Airport after her her story.
Ms. Woodward was visibly
ovemrghl JOUrney fi'o.!ll Boston, Ms.

relieved when she. noted Thursday
that, at long last, she was back on
British soil. But in Elton, there.we~
no blaring car horns, no fireworks
and no parades to welcome her home.
A police escort accompanied Ms ..
Woodward and her parents .into the
northern England village of Elton,
where the most visible signs of support were the dozens of yellow ribbons tied to trees and fences in the
village green.
Locals-remembered all too well
the bdrrage of world criticism aller
their mucous champagne celebr~tion
when a Massachusetts judge freed
Ms. Woodward in November.
The quiet reaction to her homecoming, many insisted, had nothing
to do with dwindling suppon, despite
Ireports of rifts among her key advocates.
During the trial and after her
October murd«._ c~nviction, t.he

!

Rlllland Flnl Beptlll Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
. Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flrll Bepllst
Ea!l Main SL
.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
First Soutbom Ba~IIOI
41872 Pomeroy Ptke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant 1
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
First Baptllt c .....,
· Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer Sl., "'iddleport
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10:15 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

British offered overwhelming!)
enthusiastic - some say nation~lis­
tic - support.
Most national newspapers waged
campaigns to win her freedom, but'on
Thursday, Ms. Woodward arrived
home to this front-page headline in
the tabloid Mirror: "First Cla.~s Child
Killer," referring to her pricey lirstclass airline flight from the United
States.
A headline in The Guardian said
"Two cheers for Woodward," while
the tabloid Sun, which campaigned
heavily for her during the trial. asketl
"Is Louise innocent or just an Oscar
winning actress?"
·
The limes argued that her trial
was fair: "There will be those who
believe, especially after the 0. J.
Simpson charade; that American justice is not what it should be. Ms.
Woodward seems to be exploiting
that sentiment for all it is worth .~:

Rad11t PJrst Beplltl
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

.
-

Tra •. n/tra.cto r-tra ··ler co Ill. s •. 0 n Ieaves .3 dead

he
is concerned
that some
patients
continueprescribe
to use theimedicine
un ilit runs
out, and some
doctori
mightmight
unknowingly
a different me
I
icine that could cause a serious interaction.
\
~~
The problem, Mullins said, is that it takes many days (or the last traces\ By REX
· UPPKE
·
of Posicor to leave the patient's system.
.
1\::IIOCI
ren Writer
In response to the findings by Mullins' team, Roche Laboratories issued
PORTA . Ind. - The tractor-a letter on Jwie 12 advising-doctors to wait-seven-days-after-4iscontinu· -1 ilei-cti t blocked- the -path of a
ing· Posicor before beginning therapy with most other calcium channel
Chicago-bound commuter train was
blockers.
.
·
overweight and it&lt; cargo wa.&lt; impropThe patients in Mullins' report all hll!l, after quitting Posicor,'begun
erly secured, state police said.
taking another iype of blood pressure drug, dihydropyridine calcium chanThree people died and six others
nel blockers. They also were taking another medicine, beta blocker.
were injured Thursday when the '
A calcium channel is a site on the cell membrane that allows calcium
train rammed the trailer,, sending a
to flow into the celt It helps to regulate the tension In blood vessels and
20·ton steel coil from the truck
heart muscles, so drugs arc designed to reduce the 8111&lt;!Unt of work the
hurtling throu11h'the train's passenger
heart does and reduce blood pressure by relaxing the blood vessels, Mullins
comportment. It flattened the seats
said. ·
like dominoes, but left the hat mck

ML Union Beptlst
Putor : Joe N. Sayre ·
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening " 6:30p.m.
·
Wednesday SO(v.ic:es ·6:30p.m.

i

--

.
.
crossing gates between two sets of
railroad tracks in an industrial area.
South Shore Tmin No. 102 wa.&lt;
traveling about 45-mph- --15 mph
slower than required - when it ·
struck one of the ris's two trailers,
severing it from the rill and pushing
it the length .of a city block.
Lintz wa.&lt; ci!ed Thursdlly for four
violations, including trans~rting an
improperly secured load. The coil
wa.&lt; attached to the trailer with a single chain. not the required three
chains, said Trooper David Eggers.

above them untouched.
Prosecutor today were deciding
whether to press criminal charges
against the truck's driver, Kci!h -J.
Lintz. 38.
Michael Martino, the head investigator for a 14-man National Transportation Sllfety Board team probing
the ,llfllh,..said•tthe•·ageDC:Y . would
examine the milroad equipment this
morning and recreate the accident
early Saturdl\y. , ,, ,
The cmsh occurred after the 6S.fool tractor-trailer gottmppe4 by the

Lintz faces up to $2,000 in 11ncK
in addition to any criminal charges ..
The rig was also 70,000. pounds
overweight and- had inadequate
brakes, and Lintz had not properly
filled.out his log book.
"If he'd been within the law he
would have had only one lro1iler. He
should' not have' hild both trailers,''
Eggers said.
Passenger John Madden; who suffered a br:uiseli necl&lt; a,nd shoulder in
the collision, said there was it came
without warn~ng.

oay

Old llelbol Free Will Baptltt Clno...
28601 Sl. Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; ·7:30p.m.
Thursday Scrvlce.s- 7:30
tllhide Bepllal Church
St Rt. 143 just off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Sj:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship- It a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

~ppy

father's

oav

Victory Beptltt lndeptadonl
525 N. 2nd St Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip. IOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wedne!Kiny Service• .- 7 p.m.

.·•

er s
· ~ppy
father's

lledllobom Bapdll Church
0Rut Bend, Route 124, Racin~. OH
Pastor-: Daniel Berdine
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday WorshiP. - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedncsdoy Btble Sludy • 7:00 p.m.

•

J

Faltb Baptill Church
Railroad St., Mason
Sanda~ School · 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ··7 p.m.

.' •
• •'
•,

~ppy

'

Sliver Run Bepllll
Pastor: Bitllinle
'su0day School- 10a.m.
wo .. hip' lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday S.rvices· 7:30p.m.

Fomt Run Beptlst
Pustor': Arius Hurt
Sunday Schooi-1U~.m
.
Worship- II a.m.

.,

ather's

Foav·

A8tlqully llalllist
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evenina ·6:00p.m.
d

.

Rutlallll Flft WIU Boptt,.l
Salem Sl.
.
r-r: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvicea • 7 p.m.

C;JihOIIC

TreH end.,.Jemie

Socnd H•rt Cldlolle Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeooy, 992-58911
l'ulor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.;
5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mus· 8:30a.m.

' ..ll:
Douglas
Circle
Lovt, Undt, SUt a L,trry

!'f"•

Bob Manley
Did,
Wreatllng .....Jy It faktl

Low, Ctjtt81 Dtxtw,

Tr8oylAWMn

a ..... Ephcopol Church

.'

Delmar G.
Davis
Sr.
loft, Kltte, Duckle,

i'

•

326 E. Main Sl ., Pomeooy
Rec1or: Rev. D. A. duPianlier
Holy Eucharisc and
Sunday Sehooll0:30 a.m.
Coffee t)ou r,followina

PODI&lt;roy w_.... ~hurdt orChrlll
33226 ChildRn's Home Rd.
Sunday !!dlool • 11 i .m.
Worship - Jlll.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport c ... n:~ or Christ
· Sih and Main
Pastor: Ai Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Suooay School - 9:30a.m. ·
WoBhip- 8: IS~ 10:30 o.m., 7 p.in.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Zloo Church ol Cbrlat
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt143)
Paslor: Roser Wa1son
Sunday School -9:30a.m. ·
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday S.rvices • 7 p.m.
Tuppen Pilla Qurdl ofQriot

Instrumental
Pa!iiOr. Terry Stewart
Worship S.rvice - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday Sehool -10:15 a.m.
Youlh· S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm .

Rulland Churdl ol.Chrlll
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bndrord Church or Chl1tl
Corner of St Rl. 124 &amp;,Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Stiamblin
Youlh Mini!uer: Bill Ambera:er
Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
Worship . H:OO a.m., IO:i!Qa.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedn~ay ServicR -: ~p.m . .
Hl&lt;k'!l1 Hllil ciu~Citrll&amp;
. Evangelill Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip ; 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday S.rvlceo- 7 p.m.
DbortyChrlatilnChuRh
Dexter
Paslor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thursday S.rvice - 6:30 p.m.
Laopvllle Chrlsclan Churdl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
W.on;hip- 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

aWocl~t''\

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Leading CRek Rd., Rulland
l'ulor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30a.m. .
Sunday won;hlp -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting~ 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbool • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Polllti'Ol'
Paslor: RobeR E. Robin!IOII
Suntl!y School-9:15a.m.
Wo11hip- 10:30 a.m.
Dible Study Tuesday • 10 a.m.

Rutland
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Rlldaud Co••unlty Chur&lt;h
PaSior: R~v. Roy McCany
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

SalemC.....r
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship· 10: 15 a.m.

Latler-Day Saints

Betllaay
l'aslor: Dewayne Studer .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

The Chur&lt;h or Jaus
-cbrlat or Lalter-Dtoy Sotnu
St Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-lla.m.
Relief Soc~ty/Priesihoocl II :OS-12:00 noon
Socrament S.rvlco 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakina m"tin., lsi Thur~. • 7 p.m.

Cannti-SUUon ·
Carmel &amp; Dashan Rds.
pasiOr: Dewaytl&lt; Sluiter
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Dible Study Wed. '7:00p.m.

Christi&lt;Hl Union
Hartrord Chuo:ch or Qrlst In
Chrlsclon Ualoo
Hortford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hushes
Sunday School • II a.m .
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m,
Wcdnesduy Services· 7:30p.m.

Church of God
MI. Moriah Cburcli or God
Racine
Po,stof: Rev. James Sunerficld
Suntluy School · 9:45 .,.m.
Ev~ning · 1 p.m.
Wctlncsdn~ Services- 7 p.m. .
Rutlallll Cborth of God
Pas10r: Ron HAth
Sundl~ Wonhip- l&amp;o.m., 6 p.m.
we-..sday S.rvla:• - 7 p.m.

.

SyraciiiC Flnl Chur&lt;h Of God ·
Apple und Second Sa..
Pa!!tor: Rev. D111Jid RuK8CII
Sunduy S..ilooland Worship- 10 u.m.
Evening Service•· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

...

Chu......,fGod or PropiMcy
O.J. While Rd. off Sl. Rl. 160
Puslor: P.J. Chapmun
Sunday School • IO·a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wednesday Servic"- 7 p.m.

· Pastor: Brian Harkneaa
Sunday School • tO a.m.
.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Rldne
·Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School-lO u.m.
Worship - ll a.m,.

lledlel Chu,..
Township Rd., 46SC
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday.~rvit:cs- 10 a.m.

MI. Olive United MOihodill
·off l24bc~ind Wilkesville
Pu&gt;lor: Rev. Ralph Spi,..
Sunday Scllool • 9:30 a;m.
Wor.&lt;hip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursduy Services- 7 p.m.

Tbe Bellevon' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pustor: Rev. Murgaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Clifton Tobemaclo Chur&lt;~
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday Sehool · 10 u.m.
Worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m .

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Services · 1 p.m.

lbursd&lt;~)'

'

Reedsville Fellowthlp
Church olthe Naurene
Pulor: T.:rCsa Wukleck
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
W&lt;dncsday Service• • 7 p.m.

Sunday School - ~:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 u.m.

Syncotie Chu... of tile NazartM
P1010r, Raben J. Coen
Radio .Minlslry• Raven~wod Station
4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Roedl vine
Worship - 9:30 a.qt. ·
Sunday School- lO:JO a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of' Monlh- 7:30p.m. !ICrvice

'

New ure Vk:lory Cen'"r
,
3773 Georges Creek Road, Oallipolis, OH .
Pastor: Bill Sraten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m. .

Pentecostal
.-- .....-.IAsocmbiJ
Sl. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sund1y School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday_Services · ?'p.m .
Middleport Ptnlecostol
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Onrk Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Eveniri&amp;: · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Presbyt erian
Syra&lt;utf Flnt Uollod Prab)'lerlon
Pastor: Rev. Krisan~ Robinson
Sunday School , 10 u.m.
Worship · 11 &lt;~ . m .

HarrloonYIIe ........,... rlon Cinlrc:h
Worship - 9 a.m.
S1111tl!y School • 9:4S a.m.
Mlddlepolt Preabyterlon
Sunday School- 9 a.m.

Dyo..llle Commuolty Chur&lt;h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adven 11st

M- Chllpel Churdi
Sunday !!Chool- lU a.m.
. Worship- II a.m.
Wodnesduy S.rvia:- 7 p.m.

Stve•th-D•y Adventist
·Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeooy
Putor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbaih 'School · 2 p.m.
w..,.hip. 3 p.m.

Filth Gosptl Church
· Long llottom
·
Sunduy School-9:30a.m.
wo.. hip. 10:45 u.m., .7:30 p.m.
Wednc'Sduy 7:30p.m.
.

.

i'

;

Worship - 10 a.m.

Middleport Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
·
· ' Sunday School ·9:30a.m. · ·
wo,.hip . !0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedncsclay Services· 7 p.m.

l...olll..._

Congregational

Church or Jesus Cbrltt,
ApooiOII&lt; Faith
1/4 mile pa&gt;l Fort Meip on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William V.an Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday· 7:00 p.m.
Friday· 7:00p.m. .

TorthChurdl
Co. Rd. 63
School - 9:30 a.m.
W&lt;orshoip • 10:30 u.m.

'Worship· 9 u.m.

P••IO&lt;: =antlolph
Wo,.,ip- 9:30 u.m,
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wooship ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Friday ·fellowship seriice 7 p.m.

Orand Sueet .
Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Cheoter
1 Pusror: Sharon HuuKman

-;

Rejoicing Urr Chur&lt;h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

llo&lt;llllfiP"I't Chu,..

·Molp Cooperative Parlsll
Nortltellst Clllllor
Alt'rod
Pastor: Sharon Housman
Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Won;hip- II 8.1!'., 6:30p.m.

Faith Fellowship CniSade for Cbrill
Paslor: Rev. Franklin Oicken!i
Service: Friday. 1 p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowship Chorth
Sunday service, 10:00 a.nt., 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wedne!Kiny service, 7:00p.m.

Flltb Valley Tabenocle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pustor.: Rev_Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
Syt'IICWOMiaaloe
1.411 Brid&amp;emln Sl., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompoon,Paslor
Sanday School -10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m .
Wednesday S.rvle&lt;: • 7 p.m.
Hozel c-...,olly CJ!urch
Off•Rt . 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
wo..hip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

CooiYIIIe.Ualled Mothociiot Partsll
Pa.~or: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main a: Fiflh Sl.
Sunda~ School- 10 a.m.
1
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Grahom United Metllocllat
Worship. 9:3U a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wcdnc!Kiny Service-7:30p.m.

Falniew'Diblo Church .
Lelan, W.Va. R1. I
Pa111or: John Har1
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m. ·

Middleport Community Cbu,..
57S Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: sam Anderson·
Sunday School 10 a.in.
· Ewcning ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

1!1111 Letart

United Methodist

While's Chapel Wosloyon
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday S.rvice - 7 p.m.

Slinnvllle Word of Failh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7. p.m.

EIIIIUmt H..,.. of Pnyor
(ut Burlingham church off Roule 33)
PUSior: Robert Vance
Sunday worship· 10 11.m.
Wedncsduy service-6:30p.m.

. , Mql'!lna Star
• Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
. Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship -·10 a.m.

·SL Pool LuthOno Cbu,.. .
Comer Sycamore a: Second ·st. Pomeooy
Rev. Oeorge Weirick
Sunday
Scliooi - 9:45 a.m.
•
Worship- II a.m.

Fmdom Gotptl Million
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev.'Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wors hip· 7 p.m.

Christian Fellowohlp dnter
Salem S1. , Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School • JO ,a.m .
Worship . 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

tlorrl-•llle Community Church
Pustor: Theron Durham
Su!"'ay · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedne!Kiny - 7 p.m.

RKinc,Ohio

Our Sovlour IAIIberaa Church
Wialnut und Henr)r Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pwnor: David Ruwll
• Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship- ll a.m.

Carloton lntenl..omlnotiellll Chuf'l'h
Kingsbury Road
Pas1or: Jeff Smith
Sunda' School · 9: 30a.m.
(
Worshtp Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Servi._-es

Calvary Bible Chur&lt;h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday S.rvice -7:30p.m.

Snowvlllt
Suntl!y School • 10 o.m.
wo..hip - 9 a.m.

Reorpnlzod Chun:b or JOIU! Cllrl!l
or Latter Day Satnu
Ponilnd-Ra&lt;ine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Sinpr
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wedf~Fsday Setvlces - 7:30p.m.

Silver Rid&amp;e
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Folth Chopel ()pen 8IIJie Chur&lt;~
923 s. Third St, Middlepore
Paslor Michael Pangia
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thur~ay service, 7 p.m.

RockSprlnp
Pastot: Kelch Rader
Sunday School- 9:-IS a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship,. Sunday - 6 p.m.

Pine Orove •
Rev, George Weirick
Worship· 9:00a.m.
· Sunday School - 10:00 n.m . .

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship S.rvlce: 10:30 a.m.
.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m .

Appe Ufo Center
'Full -Gospel Church'
Pastors John &amp; Pally Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
S.rvice lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 1 pm

Purl Chopel

Sl. John Lulllenin Chorth

- - Rot4svllle c ..rch or Christ
Pnstor: Philip Srurm

Hanni Outl't!a&lt;h Mlnlttrtos
47439 Reibel Rd., CheSler
Pastor: Rev . Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Minersville
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
wo .. hip- 10 a.m,

Wesleyan Bible Hollo.., Churdl
75 Peart St, Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Chil'dren's _service • 10 a.m.
Worship· 7:30p.m.
Wedne!Kiny S.rvie&lt;: - 7:30p.m.

Sotothll&lt;tbel New Tata.,..t

Other Churches

Huth (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sulliv,an
Sanday School · 9:30 o.m. .
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pine Gron Bible Holln011 Church
1/2 mile off Rt 32S
Paslor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wor.:hip ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thuosday • 7:30 p.m.

Purtl.and Flnt Church or I he Nan reno
· Pastor: Mark Matson
Worship· 10:30 p.m.
Suntl!y Sehool · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

FomtRun
Pastor. Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
wo..hlp- .9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30p.m.

L.uther zm

Hemlock. Gro•• Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.
Worship- 9:30 u.m., 7.p.m.

Chattr Churdl or tbo Nau,...
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won;hip - ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.
Rutlallll Chur&lt;b oltho Nozorene
Pastor: CharJes Swigger •
· Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wo15hlp - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

. Eloterprl..
Pastor: Kehh Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Laoret Clltr Free Mnhodist Church
Pastor. David DeWit!
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvice • 1:00 p.m.

Bradbury Church or Christ
Pasror: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
•Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Scc..-ond &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: R~v. Rolund Wildman
Sunday s&lt;:hooland worship 10:25

•,

DaaYillt Hoi•• Church
31057 S~te Route 325, Lanpvtlo
Pa!IOr ~ Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday scllool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday woithip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

Hysell Run llollness Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuosday S.rvice- 7:30p.m.

Trinity Chu"'h

Termite, lubby, POoh'

Holrne ss

Role of Shllron llolln011 Church

'· Chur&lt;h or Chrllt
Beorwollow Rldao
Pastor:Terry Srewan
Sunday School ·9:30 .a.m.
Worship. IG:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

P-roy Cliurdl oltbe Naumoe
Puler: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm)r.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
. Wednesday Service• • ·7 p.m.

Concrol Oullor
Asbury (Sy,.....R)
Pastor: Clad Emrick
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
wo,.hip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Colvory Pllplat Chllpel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday Sehool9:30 a.m.
wu..hip ' lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m.

Keao Cbur&lt;h of Chrlll
Won;hip . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
PaSior-Jeffrey Wallace
lSI and 3rd Sunday

Worship- 10:45 a.m.

Swatzel
YourGirlt,

EptSCOfJill

ro.eroy CH... ofCIIrllt
212 W. Main Sc.
Minisaer. Danny Biu
Sunday Sehool · 9:Jj) a.m.
Worllhip· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

ML Morloh Bept I
Fourth &amp; Main Sl., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilben Craig. Jr.
Sunduy S.hool · 9:30 a.m.

Jim

Wltll Love From

Church of Chnst

Worship - 10:30 a.m., b p.m.
Wcdnuday Services· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ· 7 p.m.

'flippers Plains SL l'aal
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
SUnday School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Servicu - 7:30p.m.

•

MI. ~lin Comno..hy Chu,h
Pusror: Lawrentc Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
· Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedncday S.rvice.- 7 p.m.

Unit.. F.... c•ur&lt;h
Rt. 7 on PIMIIeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· tO:JO a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

United Brethren
ML Hermon Unilrd Brethren
In Chrlll Churth
Tc,.;as Communily off CR H2
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:31lu.m.
Worship. 10;30 u.m., 7:311 p.m.
W~dncsduy S&lt;:rvia:s · 7:30p.m.
Eden Utalled B,.th,.n in Christ
2 1/2 milc.o; nonh of Reedsville
on Slate Roulc 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
,
.. • Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:110 p.m.
Wcdnc."KKuy S&lt;lrviccs • 7:3(1 p.m.

-

Wednesday Youth Service • 7:30p.m. .

Full GoopeiiJ&amp;h-te
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy

'
.•,

•

.

••

~ppy

ather's

F~

In Loving Memory
'.
of .

•

Charles G.
Dill
Low, Slllron, Linda,
Cltlly • Rlchn

· ~PPY

father's

E)OY

Tom
Schoonover

~ppy ·
father's

oav

Dallas Hm ·
'

~ppy

ather's

FI)GY

•

,

'•
'

·

David E.
Gloeckner

•

•
'
••
•

..

•
Wt Low You ,

Misty, Jakt a z.c11

Loft, ~. Jan, Art, .
&amp;DIM

I

•

••
' . --·-·...

Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

•

•

•I'

212 E. Main

Pomeroy

992-3785

992-3987

....' '
'·

Bruce A. Flalw • Dlc.a
510 Ellt _,a-t • POUMO,, 0H 4&amp;718

992·5432

74HII-5444

.,._ A. Alno, Jr. - Dlc.a

• MOWER.CUNIC

'

Crow's Family Restaurant Time to clean house?
"FNiuting ICenfuc*y Fritld Chlclctn" Clean out your basement
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy or attic ~ the help of the

~i•~rr ~utural ~ ~tu.
SeeonciM.oMidilojiCII', OH 467WO
Street 214SocMi
,
74HII-11141

Brtggs &amp; Stratton
M&amp;ster Service Technician

SWISHER
/ PHARMACY
. We Fill Doctors'

INSURANCE
. . SERVICES ~
~

p escri 1

Buy, Sell or Trade
in the

se·ntl·nel

-·

M• c......,,., ow..,,.....,,

---·
w.
740-992-21144

2
30
2
2
955
99
I..-~~~~~~~~KE~A:Q~S~EN~E¥H~EA~rE~R;RE~P.:~:R~9,92~~~~:
~E~.~~ain~~:W.iiiiJ~~.~r~~Pl~. ;on~;:om:eroy:?4-~C~LA~SSIFii·_JE_D~S=-fl_,.._u.s-~~~;e.:i~ji;t-8298~1 '1M;c'Mi.ir.,_,c. . . ~
1111

Support your
local
churches
Place an·ad In this

·SAVE TIME
~~==E
WITH A
Established 1913
CLASSIFIED AD/
992·2121
1oe Mulbeny Ave.

Searching for a
local church?
·Check the sentinel

Pomeroy

every Friday/ ·

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SAl ES &amp; SERVICE
982·7075
172 North Second Ave.
Oh

•A

-·-·-

CLASSIFIED SECinG

'·

~

"

.

1

.bualness each week
In thla apace .
and support local
•

�"

BrTheBend

Business Services
..
'S

The Daily Sentinel,

'

19, 1998

,_...

Ann
landers
IWl. Lor Aftttlcl limd

SyaditalC ltld Crc111~
S)'*lica~e ,
.

Dur An• Landers: This is in
response to ihe letter signed by
."Married to an Oddball in Ohio,"
:Whose husband deliberately gave
,booze to their terrier.
· · Several years ago, my husband
i!KII entertained friends for cock.lllils before going out to dinner and
. the theater. Our son,, "Dennis," had
ii frie nd staying o~night. They
were in the next room with our bea.j!le, Useless, an~ our old Persian cat,
Dusty. Suddenly, I realized we
\fOuld have to rush or we'd be late,
so we dashed off, leaving. our cocktails and hors d'ocuvres on the cof·fcc table.
: The next morning, I called Dusty
'and Useless to breakfast. Dusty
-bounded into the kitchen, as usual,
'hut Useless dragged himself in, gave
.me a gl~nce through bloodshot eyes
:and would not eat. He went to the
farthest corner of the house, where
·he collapsed behind a chair and slept
:~ntil 6 p.m·. that evening.
· My son and his friend later told
rile they had been watching TV the
night before when they heard
·strange noises in the living room.
they found one very drunk beagle
staggering around and bumping into

Recupenilinl at home
. Ann Davis of I00 I South Second
Ave .. Middleport, is recuperating at
home following recent hospitalizalion. She ,remains homebound and
says she would enjoy cards and vis..ils fr9m her friends.

'ReedsYUie UMW meet1n1 held
· · The Reedsville United Methodist
:women met recently at the church
basement. Mrs. Emma Durst served
.as hostess .. Gladys Thomas opened
1he meeting reading the "Purpose"
•nd read a letter from the president
of the Athens District.
; · Regina Reed had the opening
1!l'llYCr, "Each Qay You Live" and
"Keeping Springtime in _ Your

animal 's anti cs

du~ing.thc

cruise, on

board ship and when they took him
ashore on a leash.
I asked Dad what had happened
to the cub after the cruise. He hesitated and then said, "That was the
maddest I ever saw the-captain." It
seems some of the sailors took the
bear to a ball game and got him
drunk, and he died as a result .
So, Ann, I agrc!' with you that

Installation held at Council ses-

sion
Louise Staats was installecl as
outside sentinel at a recent meeting
of Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, hell! recently with Ella
Osborne, councilor, presiding.
Opening in ritualistic fonn,
Esther-Smith, junior past councilor,
read scripture from John, after
which the pledges to the American
· and Christian-nags were given and
the national anthem was sung.
Erma Cleland thanked · all those
who marched in the Memorial ,Day
parade at Chester. It was .announced
that the Deputies and Past Councilors Club of District 13 will have

Ohio's husband has either a screw
loose or a serious mean streak. -A.P. in Dallas
Dear Dallas: Th3,ks for the
sa~a . I'd say he had bo&lt;h. And now,
one last animal _story and then, I' ll
get bac k to writinjl about people.
Dear Ann: I may have a solution
to what to do about the "cat from
he ll " whose-owner just had a new
baby.
We had that same predicam.ent
with our spoiled-rotten cat when our
daughter was boro . My husband
came up with the idea of putting a
screen door on the nursery. That
way, we could peck in on the baby at
any time and hear her day or ni ght. It
still allowed th~ cat free reign of the
house except for that room and permilled both of our "babies" to be
slowly introduced to each other. I'm
sure the cat felt less threatened by
the tiny newcomer. 'Please pass our
idea along to your readers. --Cat
Lovers Who Read You in Sta1s and
Stripes
Dear S&amp;S Cat Lovers: Thanks
for a creative solution that make s
everybody happy -- parents, baby
and cat. Arid now, I'll say it one
more time: Cats (and dogs) should
never be allowed to roam around
when there 's a baby in the crib. The
results· could be CATastroph,ic. ·

The group reported 55 shutin
calls and · sent cards to several
.lhends.
The group voted to order a ncVL _
-hot water heater for the church.
The meeting was concluded with
a ~ircle of prayer, led hy Mrs. Grace
·Weber. A game was played with
·J)rizcs given.
.
· : · Refreshments were served to
those named and to Mrs. Nina
:Boston. Mrs. Pearl Oshome, Mrs.
frances Reed. Mrs. Dchhic Weber.
Miss Erin Weher. Mrs. Rosemary
·Vance and Mrs. Lillian Pickens.
·. . The 'next _mceting will he held in
Septemher with Mrs. Diane Jones as
liostess. Mrs, Frances Reed received
:the door pri1.c.

.

Le~~on AuxUiary retains officers
. . Lewis-Manley Unit 263, American Legion Auxiliary, voted to retain
it present officers for another year
when ·they met recently at Dale's
:Restaurant in . Gallipolis with
ltnnette Johnson as hostess.
They are Lorene Goggins, presi_ilent; Helen Culmer, first vice presi·dcnt; Louella Patterson, second vice ·president; Margaret Bowles,_acting
secretary ; Edith. Ross, treasurer;
·. lielcn Culmer. chaplain. and Margaret Bowles. historian.
Committee chairmen arc Mar. iaret ·Bowles, Americanism and
·music; Helen Culmer, Auxiliary
· emergency fund and community service; Florence Richards, children
- and vouth; Lula Hampton. national
: 5cc:.rity, legislative, poppy and publi.: ity: L~?UCII~ Patterson, education.
The meeting was .opened in ritu. ol;.toc: form with Mrs. Goggins prc»iiling.
' · A news bulletin from 8th District
President Betty Harris was read. She
. •hanked the unit for the contribution
for veterans at the Athens Mental
•J-lcalth Center and announced that
:1he district is in sixth place in the
itcpbrtment for membership dues

paid. .

.

The July binhday party for veter. onK ot the VA hospital in Chillicothe
,.-ill hc held on July 3.
· The subscription for "firin~
J.inc." the oraanization's publica'tlon. was. renciwcd.
A JOI .wcll card· was sent to Marvin Craig.
·
Mrs. Hampton stated that action
jo relocq~e 'a memorial for World
Wat II veterans will have to he
'approved -in mid-June. · She
:cxplai~ tltc proper ceremony for
-dillfXII!Ini of lhe·flag.
· Cldslng Qeremonics were con'ductcd by Mrs. OogJfns.

:Air Conditioners At Low Aa 128 a mgnth

.

Heat Pumps AI Low AI 138

:

..

UR~·,

!

_s8,850

740-446-9416 •1 -80()..872·5967

-24,950
..

90045

•

..f

~
' St. Rt. 248

SJJ,950
$9,950

·

•

Sully 1p.a ·8,..

•

Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

•'

740·698·9114'

Wayne's Place
Middleport, OH presents
·uve Band" Sat. Night Only
. swimp Jewce
Drive SafEtly

1913CIMIL
CAMillO CONQUEST&amp;
305 VB, auto, Blue w/Biue cloth
Interior, AC,_ilereo, PVV, PL, tin, ·
cruise, alloy wheel&amp;, very nlt:e

1994 HONDA
ACCORD H -ACCORD

V-tech, auto, Cashmler SHver, Alr Conditioning, stereo, CD
player, power windows, power locks, power mlrrort, till, cruise,
rear apoller, aharpl

8tld 10 withdraw lha allow

collateral prior to Nla.
Furlhar, 1'111 Far-. Bank
and S.vlnga Company
NIII'Vtl the rltht Ia raject
any or all blda aullmlltad.
Futthar, lha allow aollat·
.... wll ba aolclln lha oon-

dltlon II Ia In, with no
axpraaa or lmpllld Wlr•
rantltl gJwn,
'
For lurthlr lnlormallon,
oontact nm a111111 ••·
(I) 17, 11, 11 3TC

·PUblic NOll~
,COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, 6•"V033
OHIO
C... No · _..
'
BANK ONE, N.A.
luccaaaor by mervor to
IM!k One, Athena, N.A.
c/o a- One Mortgage
Corp.

Plelntlll,

1914 MERCURY
GUll MARQUIS
VB, auto, White w/Rad cloth Interior, AJr conditioning, stereo
cuaelte, power aaats, power windows, powet: locks, lilt, cruise,
· 70 K mila&amp;.

State Route 7
Tuppera Plaine, Ohio

740-687-3350

fil··~

c•••·

(Judge Crow)

--

LU ROY SIMPKINS, SR.,
at a1
•·

ilafandanta. ,
NOncE IN surr IIOR
I'OAECLOSUIII 01'
MORTGAGII
Lea Roy Slmpklno, Sr.,
wholl leal known adclra11
Ia 2244 Wllllama Hollow
lload, Qalllpolte, Ohio
41831, and the unknown
helra, dtvle-. lagatoll,
txeoutore, admlnletratora,
apouHa lind ualgn~
lha uni!Mwn gunl-· Of
· minor and/or lncompattnt
halra of Lao Roy llmpldna
lr., aU Of whO,aa ratld._.;
ara uM,nown and cannot H

Public Notl~
NOTICE OF SICDHD

. · PUBUC HEARING
Tlta Melge County
Commlaalonera Intend Ill
apply to tha ohto
D I P 'U t mIn I
oI
Dov'alopmant, , for fundl"fl
under tha I'Y' Ill
Community Devalopmant
· lllooll llranta (CDIMI) 11111111
C"'" Proeram. • r.clet ai!J
funded
prog!lm
llllmlnlltaracl IIY lha ltate.
11111111 e-lY Ia allalllia lor
1111,000 Of P:IICII 'i'11r 'II
CDIICI fundlnt, provl~ld~
County !Mitl eppllolula
requl..-.nta. On MI!Y 1t,
1111, the County ooncluotad
Ita llrat pullllo hllrlng to
Inform oltlaena IIIOUI tha
CDIICI JII'Oiratll, how _It tilly

'P ublic Notice
1111 ulld, what ecuvltlea ara
atlglllle, 11111 Olhar lmporlltnt
program NqUI-'8.
A iecond public heirlng
wrlll ba held on June 211,
11118 at 1:00 P.M. at the
Mal 11 a .
_C o u n t y
Commlaalonara olllca,
M.... County CourthouH,
Po-oy,, Ohio to glva
cltlzena an opportunity to
review 8tld comment on lha
county'a propoaed CDBG
FY '98 Formula Allocation
projiCII.

Baaed on both citizen
Input and lonl olllolala'
•-ment ol the County'a
n..da, the County Ia
propoalng Ia undortaka the
following CDBG eothlltlaa
tor FIICII Year 'II:
·
,ACT1VITY: Willi' I a FIOI!ltlaa: oax. Walar Une
Extanalon-Laedlng cr..k
Conaervii!QY Dlatrlct.

CDBG Fundll!ll, $30,000
1Dthar Funda: •5711,400·
ARC- OWDAI
1CCDBGAURAL DEVELOPMENT
_ANIIA:nDI!ANALMLI_ · OBJEcTIVE:
.
lt.CTMT:V: W- and ' ,facllltlao; Wetar Llna
Extanolon GllkU , Aida•
lllppera Plelnl Chllllr
Willer Dlatrlct

CDBG Funding, Pt.OOO
Other Fund a: $2,800
..-.P.C.W.D)
'"
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
AREA LMI
.
Activity: Str..t lmprov•
- : Scipio Tawnlhlp
CDBG Funcll~2,300

=:~a: OliJECTIVE:
Arll LMI
ACTIVITY: w-and

l'lclllllu:

s-

TIIIHM

lnatallad(l'anlt

Allllnclor.manta- Ponlonl Of

·Oranaa and Ollvt
Townahlpa (8-r Dlalrlot
......... Aria)

CDBG Funding; MQ,OOO

Olhar P,unda: IPO,ooo-cDIIO
CHIP
.

NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
Umllad l;llentale (Vary lAw
lnoa.- Low lnOOIM)
ACT1VITY: Publlo 8arvlca:
Hot lhOf v.hlole Pure"Counoll on Aging
l'tllldlng: . ,.000

=

Othtr fundi: ..... ~~

~~:.~IVE:

Lltltlllil Cllanllll

or

. Public Notice
ACTIVITY: Woter ond s Facllltln·
Vllva
Rapl-.nontfl'a p
In 1 •
Pomeroy Vlllega CD8G
Funding. $15,700 Other
Fundo: $14,100
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
Ar.ILMI
ACTIVITY: Aclmlnlatratlon
and Fair Houtllng
coao Funding, S17,ooo
Cltlzana ara ll!oouragad
to attend lhla maatl"fl on
· Juna 211, 11118 to axpre11
thllr vtew1 and commanta
on tha oounty'a propotld·
CDBG FV 'II Formul.
Allocation Applloatlon.
Written commanta will 1111
acceptld until 1:00 P.M~

740-698·7231

-

1

1/11/N tfn

'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
··Garages
•Complete
· Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7122/t1n

J - '211, 1911, end tilly Ill
mallad Ia the Melgl c-ty
CourthouN, Pomeroy, Ohio
45719.
If a pllrtloiJMIIIt

will net41
auxllla'Y aida (lntorpratar,
brallld or .llpacl _.erla!,
1111111va lltlanlng davlaa,
othtr) dua Ia a dlaablllty,
plaaae contact Gloria Kloati,
Clark, prior to Juna, 21,
18111, at {740) 112·211111 ·~
order to anauro thai your
neada
wilt
bo
~
Janet

•

I

'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

_.County
CommiiiiOitlt'l

Tupper• Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" thru 48" plaatlc culvert In stock
Full line of weter stor•ge tanka- .
Septic 6 Cillttrn Tanka
Water line- 100' thru 1000' Rolla
Sew1r Pipe- 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe a Ragulatora

In Loving Memory of
My Husband
Larry D. Carpenter,
passed away Jan. 23, 1998
Henry Carpentcr-

Father-tnrlaw Mardt I, 1
Happy Fadler's Day to you
both. \bu both arc missed
alot. This day Will never be
£orgouen bribe OIIC$1bat
1om you both my much.
Dad your son Is In
~n with you.
Sadly mbaed by:
'Wik; Rulli Carpen
'
l.cM llwayttl

Custom Homes
Roofing

BINGO

®

m•k•?'"

aJ

Remodeling
Plumbing

1998 M1rtln Street
Pom•roy, Ohio 45769

Silica

Joe Wlleon

!0•

LO"G•s

• Fraazara
·Diah-hlra
Call Ken Young ·
(740)el5·3551

12/ll/lln·

(Lime-StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Fill

Dirt

ROOFING
IEW·IEPAII

.,~,

·

.._

·~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

'

Ft'ft E.tlm.te-., ·
.

- . t.:";' ...._._____..::::51Z111fn=:.:..

-.
•'!!

Owner: John Dean

~ftft~ftft~Cr~ftft~
· ·

·'

·" ·

·cELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF.·
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY,
OH.
,
'

614-992-5479

•

•

•
-~

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
P•lntlng
FRE~ EsnMATES

949-2168

Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding. ill!!:
Commercial-&amp; Ratldantlal __
lfJrJ,.
%7 ~. txp.
Ucensad &amp;Insured i&amp;.'!J
Phone 740-992-3987
-~-

C.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Howard L. Wrlte. .l

Call740·843·5426 .....

.,

•

(614) 992·3838

t!W-

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

r-::::-:~-:-=~~~&lt;MOBILE

B11111tt SUpply

Umestone Heul_lng
House 6 Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy~tam 6
Utllltlea
Eatlmetae

Chester, Ohio

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

1/IJ/1010, pel

Dl•count Prlc.l

3' Month old male tabby &amp; while
killen , frea ro gooct home . ~458·2218.
Calico, shor t ha ir. female cat: 1
Sllmosa, flmole kitten, 1 yellow/
-mole kltton. 740-8112-9107.

FfM triO kif firewood, you CUI up
and rei"'"'CWC. 740-892·7949.

King SIZe. Waterbed; Glau top
Table Wllh Chairs: Rowing Mechino Wllh Pross; 55 Gallon

Drum Empty, 740-4-46-2105.

long Haired Klttons 6 Weaks Old
Real Culltl740-446-4929.
Three nine wHk old klhens, one
male, two tamales, to good noma,
740-949-2529.
Tiger cat long hatred, tyr old ,
good hout e pet, to goo'd home
only, 304-67ilo 1193.
.

SJVRE
1
.

1

:,TRUCKING
H1ullng, Eiu:avlltlng
-a T11nchlng
Umaito_ne a Gravel

Sepllcs,atam• ·

Tralllr a Houle Sitae

, _ _ , . RIIH

Joe N. S.yre
814-742-2138

HelpW8Aid

AVON I AU Aru a I Shl~oy
Sj&gt;Nio, ~il-1 4211.

Mat--

M ~ .. COMFitoHY

123How--ftr1ng-caa ,. -..,8311.
EMili -

:

An Equal~~
MIF rN Drug- ErMIDI .......
All kitchen help - · llnCIIJd·
lng cooking). Plcil up appllcollon
~,..Cool Spot. CcoMtto.·
AREASUPER¥11011

POSmONOPEN
Otll vtry Franchile Wtth Locadona In 50 Mnea
SUrTO&lt;Jndlng Chillicothe Hu Artl
Suporvl aor Poallon Open. Solid
Supervlaory Experience A Must
Aa Well As Excellam Communi·
cation, Organizational, And Llllld• rahlp Skllll . Raault -O rltnlt d
Person, Sill Stlrlor, And Posltlvo
l oadors Nood Only Aflllly. Position Currently Report s Direct To
CFO Owner. Slllry S301c Rango,
Plus Bonus, COmp. Car, Mldlcal
And Olhor Benoflll. Quollflod ?
Send One Pogo Reaume To POB
21 t , Chllllcotho, OH4M01.
MuiU· Unlt Pizza

Baby·sluer needt d for a aet ~ '
twin boyo (tyr old) In their home.
Evening shift. Sarloua calli only
call: 304-675-1417.
Drlvor - d for local ~!Jul. 27%
ol ·grou. atart lmmldlately, must
have current COL. medical card,
drug ICIMn. call 740-7C!-3410
$1 ,000 WMidy
Stuffing Envelopes At Home. For
Details . Ru sh {Long Solf·Ad·
dresaed Stamped En\lalope) To:
Acs, Dept: 13~1 . P.O. Box 5789,
Diamond Bar, CA 91715 .

Experi enced Denial A81 1atant
n - tor a high tech denial offico In Pl . Pleasant. We are lOOk·
lng kif a leam " ' - thal ia onergatle and people oriented.
60 Lost and Found
Please aend resume to P.O. Sox
Found: baslball ·c.'lltoft In Meigs . 119, Pt. l'llallnl, wv 25550.
Co\Jnty Common Pfaa&amp; Court. call
Experienced H.V.A.C. Installer,
740·992-6439 to claim.
Call YBtaa Heating &amp; Cooling ,
Found: Sickle ear For New Hoi·
740-245-5858,
land Hay . Blne, VIcinity : earn
ExperNtnced In Rllldentlal Con·
Crook Hm, 740-245-5483.
sll'UC11on Siding, Framl"1!, Roolt"1! •
LOST: Cllnlq~a cosmetic bag,
Etc., Own Hand Toola, Phone &amp;
orange &amp; yellow. wlbig cl'leck
Tran sportation . Call 7"0· 388·
gold jewelry. Lost In Pt Pleasant
9385 For Into References Re·
Ire&amp;. 304-675-t696.
qullac!.

Used refrigerator, needS new wirIng Inside , Interior &amp; &amp;llterlor In
exc. oond. 304-675-t528.

ALJ, V.nl Solei Mull

81-tn-....

EXCAVATING CO.

.· ' 985-4422

CO"STROaiO"

(740) 185-3848

~

2 port Boagle/port Lab 3-4yr. old
doga, 1 mllolt fomolo, dog- - 304-182-2260.

HOWARD

., TRUCKING

ll/!3

""••• llftlflry"
•Roo1 co..lngl
I ~lnvl Skirting
"Water Heeter•
"Doori/Windowa
*Electric/Plumbing
Suppllee
"flbergllll &amp; Wood
Stept

lEECH GROVE
ROAD

740-985-4422

Limestone,

"BalM Your DNam"

"Ntld repair on any

740 ·~· 1411
t3t1s.tfortl
School Rd. ·

Computer Graphics
Dealgna
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn ServlceB
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

.R. L. HOLLON

The APPfia11Ce Man

PAm

PIICUI

· LARDSCAPE
DESIGNS

614·992·3470

Brien Morrlaon

MON&amp;WED.
6:30 P..M.··
RUTLAND
POST467
· STAR BURST
- $1150.00
$50.00 lilt 110111

'

II:OG-12:00 Saturday

No Job Too Stn11/

--

-

9 :oo-4:30 Weekday•

•General
Commercial end
.Residential
FfH E•llmll"

· 30 Announcement•

In Memory

. Open:

!Cut Out lor FUbft Dtocount)

(I) 11, 23, 2113 to

2 Hlmaloyon Klltons. 304 -87~83311.

Gallipolis

St. Rt. 7

•Masonry

6/lt/11 1 pel.

Giveaway

6 VIcinity

G&amp;W-PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

•Bobcat Service
.•Concrete

(740) 985-4100
Free Esttmates

ttowaftt, Pnilldant

40

Y1rd Salt

na&amp;BIVICI

P/B Contractors, Inc.

Take the Pain out of
. • painting, and let me
do Hforyou .
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After6 p.m. ·

1-740-74 2- 2842

:O E: i'VII.E: -,

1_10

Df!D'!'f- 2:00p.m.

tho &lt;toy- tho Ill
Ia ta run. SUndly

lllltlon • 2:111J p.m.

Frtdoy. llondoy odltlan
·10:111J .... S.luldoy.
Estate Huge Garage Sale: New
Tupperwara, Khehen llama. Pols 1
Pans , Tools, Lawn Equipment ,
Dishes. Linens, Many Household
nama. Everything ElCcellent Con·
dillon, Satunlay Juno 20, 8-6, 583
LoGranclt,Bivd.
Estaii/Huge Garage Sale, new
TuppoiWaro, dishes, tools, pots/
pans, yard equlpmanl, linens,
kitchen ultnslls, many other
11ems. Everything ex. cJ)nd. Sat·
u•day Juna 20 8:00am-6:00pm
~83 La Granda Blvd. Gallipolis,
Ohio

Pomeroy,
Middleport
6 VIcinity
All Yard S.ln Muat lie Paid In
ACIWlnco. Doodllno: 1:OOp"' tho
day before the ed It to run,
Sundoy I Mondoy adlllon1:OIIptn Frldly.
Giant· first ever· just married·
household merger. June 19·20,
Friday &amp; Saturday, three miles
... st on SR f43, 9am-!5pm. Furnl·
turt, Skll, word processor, tools.
no clothes. A liltlo of Mrythingl

Pt. Plea11nt
&amp; VIcinity
Garage Sale-88 BurdeHe Add. Fri
19th &amp; Sal. 20th . ~-

""""Y· _

eoe

Anl6quea &amp; de'!n used furniture,
wil l buy one piece or complete
hOUithold, Osbj Marlin, 740·
882-6571.
Clean Late Model Carl Or
Truckl, 1910 MOdell Or NIWir,
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1100 Eastam Avenue. Gallpolls.

NURSE POSmONS
Openings For MOS . Nurses In
SoUIIlelllern Ohio NllfSing Factllty. (Medlcore a Madlcold CortiIIJd). Excollent. WorkiOg Environ·
nlonl And Bonetlto. Ouoilflcallon&amp;
·Include Ohio RN License,
lleclleloro Dogroo l'falorred. Tho
Succeuful Candidate Will Need
Strong Clinical SkUll I exporlon&lt;;o In MDS Submtulon. Pilose
Submlt 4 Re1ume To P.O. Box
1884, · Ohio 4~70t .
Now Tll&lt;lng Appllcltlono At Domlno't PIZZI, Gallfpoill, &amp; ""-"!'

locattono.

Oo\KHIU~

IE'*'ALCINTEil
.1011 P08TINtl

Port· Time Phermacy Tochnlclan
Pooltlon At Otk Hill Community
Medical Co-. Hourt Will V.ry.
Qualified Ctndldata Wll Fill Or•
J
D ""to Porto. Buying dOll, Stodl · Etc. And IJIIIIng
wracked or ..lvaged vehicles. For Pharmacy Doparlnllnt. Cln31)4.773-5033.
dldlto MUll HI"" HIOh Schoof
Dlplomt /Equlvatant, Clarlcol
Wlntod To Buy: U11d . Mobile SkNit And Good Plllrmacy Techllomn. 710.44B-Qt75, 30&lt;1-675- . nical a.c-ground. Hoapllll expartonco It P....rred. In-fwd
Pat-aona Sllould Sind Roaumea
Wlnllll: AulD'S In Ar"1 Condlllon, To: Ook HHI Comrnurllly Mllllcal
Call 740-311-eota, Or 740-4441· Canttr, Attenuon: lrenda Me·
7r78.
Konzlo, 350 Charlotto Avnlla,
.
WOuld llllo To Buy No!: Wortclng Ooll HI, Ohio.Waahora, Otyora, Slallu a AoEOE.
lrigafelolt. 7~8011.

a

--

or;

Position Available For An Aaaiitant -Housemaneger To· Wo'rk
Evening&amp; And Weekendl ln..A
Residen tial Salting. Thll 11 ~
Pari-Time Contract Position. Ttle
Ideal Candidate \\' 111 Hl\11 Ex·
parlonco With Women And ChUdren In Crlals, Be Able To Wort
With Minimal Supervlolon, ~
Have A Minimum Of A H ~gh
SchOOl Education Or GED. tntoruted Persona Should Send A
R11ume To : Peraonnel. P.O. Box
454, Gallpolll, OH 0583t .
POSTALJOISTO a1UI/Hit ·

Inc. BonofHa. No Expanonco. For
App. And Exom Into., Coli 1-800813 - 3~8 ~ .

ext 8474, 8 A.M:-9
P.M., 7 Days ldl)nc.

RN'a, LPN'e, CNA'I

•

PAN work. lop pay, ChOOH when
&amp; where you work. Capital Nura·
lng Aqoncy. 1-6110-576-6348.
.
Scenic Hills Nursing Center' la
Now AcceptinG "ppllcatlona FOr
A Part-Time Reatorotl"" Therapy
Asalslant 10:00 A.M. -8:00 P. ~ .
Must Be STNA· Restorative Ex·
ptrle·nce Helpfu l But Not At·
qulred. Oopondablllty A Mul ti _
Please Apply tn Person At
Scenic Hills Nuroing Cenlor. hl- n 8:30 ~-M. -4:30P.M.

Teachin'g positions available ·at
Carleton School. Full time and
substitute opportunities for teachera with current Ohio Dapanment
ot EducatiOn Teaching Ctrtillcole.
To be considered tor full time arnr
ptoyment, applicants must al ~o
llavo or b8 ollglble to obtain Ohio
Department of Educati on mull ~
llandlcappld certlflcallon.

~O. Box

·,

m

Licensed Phytlcal Therapist
needed to diagnoae and provide
dirtct servlcll for children and
Rick Pearson A.uctlon Company, . adulla al the Meigs Counl)' Boon!
of Mental Relal'datiOn and Ot¥el·
full ume auctioneer, complete
ppmontol Dlsablntlos. Scflodull to
auction
service. l lcennd
follow tile Corllton SchOOl calont66 ,0hlo &amp; West Virginia. 304·
dor. Comprehonllft benoHt pocllnH7as Dr 304-773-5447.
aga . Submit b'y Juno 30·, t998 .
Wedemeyer's Aucti on Service,
Contact: Carleton School , P.O.
Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720.
Box 307. 1310 Carleton Street,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779, 740.99290 Wanted to Buy
888t.

.

Part Time Position Avollablo. ;;~
Daya Per Week, For Seeretart
Roceptlonlal Poslllon At Local
flclln Gallpotlo. R oaponslbH~Ie'
Include Scheduling Appointmanta, Some Typing, And In•
ouronce. No Phone Calls Please;
Submll Resume To: Hanger Or,
tttopadlca 1034 Ga~leld Avenu~o
l'lrllorslkog, WV 26t01.

a

Auptl(!n
and Flea Markat

2526.

Overbrook Center, 333 Paie
StrH l, Middleport, Ohio llaa futt
time and part limo STNA pooltton• wallabta for all shifts, eb·
yone lntertsl td pleall stop lir
and fill out an • ppllcatlon. 7• 0·
992-6472. EOE.

. Full lime L.P.N. SITe SUPeR- · Trace Ventures Explorations, Irk .
VISOR for prlvalo non·proflt laml- Will Begin Taking AppllcaliOIIs
ly planning services based In For Seism ic WqrMers On MonQolllpolls, Ohio. Tills poslllon also day, June 22. This Is All Oul 'Of
manage&amp; a mobile site In Meigs Doors Work , Very Physic11 And
County. Medical and educational
Long Hours. We Work 7 Day• A
services for pollntlal case load ol Waak Anq You MusI Bo Willing
1500 cUentl. Provide _OutrtJCh, To Travel , Have A Valid Drl\l,rS
Intake , laboratory and follow-up License And Be Able To Pau
services to females and males; Drug Scroonlng. Apply ln Parson.
schedule and staff physician clin·
10 A.M. To 3 P.M. Mon . Through
ics; must be excellent communi·
Fri. At Tho ll:nlgh11 Inn Rm . -15,
cator, develop knowledge of and 404 Chllllc'llh• Stre,t, Jackson,
.be sensitive to birth control and Ofllo 740-288-31 119.
.
roproduclivll hlalth loaues: dellll
WILDliFE .lOllS TO t21 .10 ill._
oriented . Evening and· Saturday
hours to be ••peeled. Travel to Inc. Beneflla . Game Wardens ,
Securlly, Malntenaca, Port RangDitter I IIII as needed. Send fl·
sume, letter of tntere•t and thllHI on . No· E&gt;p. Noed'lld.·For App .
Exam l~to Call 1-800·8t3·
empJoymenl rererenc11 to And _
Pllniled Parenthood of Soult. .st · 3S85, ext. 647~. 8 A.M. · '~M.,, 7
Days fda, Inc
Ohio, 388 Richland A\lenue,
Alheno, Ohio 45701. 37.5 houta
per week with benetlt package. 170 Mlec.llaneoua
EOE/ESP
_
Chinese Kenpo Karate, prit ate
_Full Time l .P.N. SITE. SUPER· lessons sparring classes. Jay
VISOR For Private Non-Profit Clartc, 740-7C!·2548.
Family Planning Services Based
In Gallipolis, Ohio. This Position 180 Wanted To Do
Also Manages A Mobile ~lUI In ;
ANYODOJOIS
Meigs County. Modlcol and Educational Servlees For Potenlial Shrubs &amp; welds trimmld, mutt;hCase Lolli at 1.500 ~llent&amp; Pio- lng , flower beds, landscaping.
sidewalk edging, mowing ,
vld8 OU1roach, lntakl. LabOratory
And Follow ·Up Ser~lcea To F8· etc ... Frae Estimates. Call Bill
malea And Mateo, Schidule And 304-675-7112 .
Staff Physician Clinics; Must Be Bast Frianda Babyslnlng $1 :So
ExceNont Communicator, Devotop Per Hour, Call J'nna Or L11a ,
Knowledge Of And Ba Sonalllvo 740-441-0797,740-441-1127.
To Blnh Control And Rtproeluc·
llvo HoaMh tssuos. Detail O•lent- luelneee Carda $17.95 Per
arl. Evening And Saturday Hours 1,000 Raised Print /High Quality
To lle-Expoctld, Trove! To Othor SIOCk Coli K&amp;B Ad,.rtlslng 740Silas At Needed. Send Reaume,
446·t973.
loHtr of. lnlerool And Tllroa Employment References To Planned Circle ·N· Convalescent Home.
Pa1anthood Of Southeast Ohio, Has 2 Openings Ektlrty Or Ha!lcllcapped Person In My Home,
398 Richland Avenue, Athens,
Ohio 4~701 . 37.5 Hours .Por 740-441-1536.
Wook Wllh llenoHt Package, eoe
CUSTOM
IUilDER5
/eS~
Mark Cronk, Owner 1-740·671 ·
t 376 Windows -Siding -Doora Grill cook wanted. apply In per·
flooltng.llconsed and I,....... .
son. Crow·s Steak House in Po-

740-742-2679.

Anllquoo, top prices pold, ,Rivsr·
ine Anllque s, Pomeroy, Ol'lllo,
Ru11 Moore oorror, 740·992·

1-5.

Dllabllltes
307
Syracuse, Ohio 4~779.

House eteanlng. lull time, call
While Glo"" Cleaning Sarvlce&amp;,

Abaolutt Top Dollor: All U.S. Slf.
ver And Gold Colna, Proof111s,
Diamonds, Antiquo J-lry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, etc. Acqul11tlons Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second
Avonua, Glilpolll, 740-446·21142.

---1 3, -

Full Time Dtsk Clerk, Apply In
Person, Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.

Yard Sale, Leon, Main Street, 2·
family, Friday &amp; Saturd'ay, Rain

t5 ·20 Acroo Along Stoto!' Route
35 , Wlllt Acces To Highway. 740.
~118-2128 .
.

Ooll . ., Olllo 1'r.-.g ~
looking Fot Exporlan..., i enil
Tractor Trailer Drlvlra, ElCOIIenl '
Poy I lnauriiiCI P1cll191, 740·

Sonci11BU1111 by June 30 to:
Meigs eoun~y Boord ot Men~ar
Retardatlon and Dewlopmantal

Hairdresser &amp; Nail Technican
Needed For Busy Salon, 740·
44t• t860.

80

11_0 · Help W•lltd

Fast paced &amp;aton, hlrtng In au locations. Athens store hiring now,
cosmetologist &amp; recepUonlat, call
740-592-9707.

Yard Sale Saturday·20tn . 1003
Kenny Court. First one this year.
lola Of Stutlf Rain C.ncell.

or Shine.

PIQ8 9

-

.IE:'&lt;l

JOBSIKUMBER.COM

Lost: Spring Valley Area, Female
Boxer. Ears Not Cropped, vary
F~sndly, Purple Collar, 740-448·
2751.

•1rltn
GAWPOUS, OHIO 45831
•StlltnP
(740 ) 367 -0266
QilndlDII
1-800-950-3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • lns.-Owner: RaMie Jones

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
•Room Addition•
•NewG1rage1 ·
•Electrical a Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior a Exterior
Painting
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMAll!SI l
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215' .
Pomeroy, Ohio

• Dryer
• Hoi Watar Halter

9:0().~ : 30 .

. JONES

I/IM 1 mo.

•WIIhtrl .
• Rang••
• Rafrlgaretora

D O N N ITZ

E~.IPl 'J&gt;

Thurldoly. Mondoy thru Slturclly

FULLY INSURED

.

..• CARPET
.•'
.. PLUS
..' Professional

llema, $t .oo bag ule every

SENIOR CITIZEN
, DISCOUNT

Free Estimates

740•742•34l1

· IN STALLATIO N

(No Sunday Calls)

Roofs • Decks • Garages

Insured

740-*·1 &amp;12
Quality clothing ond llouaollold

Free: 2 Trees For Firewood, You
.Cut. 'lbu Haul, 740-2&lt;15-5536.

.614-992·7643

Minor Repairs • Cabln.e ts • Siding
..

•SA L ES
·SERVICES

FREE ESTIMATES

SUNSET HOME
CONS,.RUCTION
I

11(4(TFN

'Done righl ihe firs l time."
"Priced t~ght alllhe lime."

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

Public Notice
raaaonable dlllganca be
a-.talnad, will lake notice
that on the 23rd day ol
Aprtl, 11118, Bank One, N.A.,
SUCCIIIOr by merger IO
Bank·Ona, Athena, N.A., C/o
Bane Dna Mortgage Corp.
Iliad Ita Complaint In the
Common Pt111 Court ol
.Melga County, Ohio In Caae
No. 98CV033 on the docket
of the Court, and the obJect
and demand lor retial of
which pleodtng 11 to
loraolooe . the lion ol
plalntlll'o mortgoga recordad upon the tollowlng
daacrlbad raal aatatato wit:
Property Addraaa Ia: Na.w
Lima Road, Rutland, Ohio
45775 and being more
parlloularly doaorlbad In
plalntlll'a mortgage raoordId In Morlgaga Volumo 10,
pago 30~ of tho Malga
County Reconlar'o Ollloo.
All ol tho above namod
tlefondanta '" raqulraclta
ono- within twanty·alght
(25) daya altar laot
publlcotlon, which aholl be
publlohld once 1 Wllk lor
alx conaecutt¥o waaka: or
they might be denied 1
hoarlng In thla
LERNER, SAMPSON I
ROTHFUSS
Attomoyo tor Plalnilll
120 E Fourth Sl- 1
·
·
·- •
lth Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(5131241·3100
(II 12, 111, 25; (7) 3, 101 17,
Ito

u.•

Garages • Replacement Windows .
· Room Additions • Roofing

111111mo.

'

Never, Never Swim Alone

Heating &amp; Cooling

· New Homes • VInyl Siding New

. INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
POMEROY, OH
740-992·1135

..

475 SouUt Umrch Street· Ripley, wv l-lkl0-IIZ!·04n ·37.!-2844

740-446-6579

1·740·949·2015

Give us a call for system reps#,.,
sales, upgrades or consulting.-

8To
Choo;e •'rom!

ssggs
Ratliff Pool
Center

DOH'S

""our One Stop
f:omputer Sllop"

•-s-..ANnl

To Good Country Home Only,
740-448-7885.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

985-3301

To 'lbu Tlwlft ~

-

_...;,7_4,;,11-_992
__·_2n_2__, 2 Yoar Old Malo Part Chinos•
L
1Pug, llgnt Bilge, Grut Willi Kldol

CALL

PIBNBMANCE
~~ UPIBADBI .-

Choo;e From!

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia her.by glvln
thai on Saturday, June 20,
11118, 1110:00 a.m., a pu1111c
Nla will ba held at 211 w.at
Second Streat, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 1'111 Fanner'a Bank
and Savtnga Company
flllrklng lot, ta Mil lor cuh
lha following collateral:
1111CHEVROLETS-10
EXTENDED CAB 4X4 PICK·
UP TRUCK
10CDT11X91'821'89114
AND 11183 FORD THUN·
DERBIRD
1FAPP8247PH12&lt;1008 ·
The Farmara B'artk and
.Savlnga
. Company,
Pomtroy, Ohio, reHrvaa
lha right Ia bid at thla Hie,

llarling Of $5995

992.•5513

COMPftBB

16'1b

~......., 9 .... 9,...

.. • ..• "-'- eu·U:""'"II

..., X..., ""'

TONY'S PORTABLE WiLDING

:L-------~--~C~h~a~llt~ar~--------~

14To ·
Choose •'rom!

SJJ,950

SIXltftlll3

'-

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New. aJ_dlators
Oxy· Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Sup'plles • Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Call for Quote Today

{

•

SJJ,950

its picnic and meeting ~tthe Kachelmacher Park in Logan June 20.
Quarterly birthdays will .be
observed at the next lodge meeting
on June 16.
·
Kathryn Baum was pianist for the
meeting. Games were conducted by
the miscellaneous committee, which
also served homemade ice cream,
cookies and soft drinks.
Others attending were Gary
Hol:cr, Evcrcll -arant, 'Jo Ann
Ritchie, Julie Curtis, Delores Wolfe.
Theima White, Opal Hollon, Doris
Gruescr, Jean Welsh, Sandra White..
Goldie !'rederick. Opal Eichinger,
Laura Mac Nice, Mary Jo Barringer
and Mary K. Holter.

•I

~~~18,950
mu.,UDI

.BlUM LUMBER

'
:
'

...

17To
Olro~e •'rom!

'

._

41'0 .
Choo;e From!

'

'I

Rib Pattern
$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per aq.)
3' Wide x 10',12', 14' Be 16' Lengths
For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage liulldlngs Be ~orches ·
• ROOFTRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pine Conlltructlon
Custom Engineering

~

• Goroges • Decu

'r--wiiiiliiiiiiiiiiMiiLl
I WBrrl Pill I ED IY££1.
RIDII,.OR
REPAIR
·
RDDnll AIIIIDIII
9"

eo

• Replnun•nl Windows
• Slaliouory Docks
• Blown Jnsulolion

•

7To
Choo;e From!

19,950

'

" WI1ere Quality Doesn '1 Cost More"

Bitzer LS 4Dr. 4l4

..

DlAIITIC "'nENTS: You Moy
en~llod To ~ vo... DilboUc SuppliOI At No Coat TO
You. For Mote lnlo&lt;melloo t-aeeen-tatl1.

Guitar • Roofing

•Septic Systems
•lasemen.ts
•Exca,ating

BENNETI'S HEATING &amp;-COOLING

~

21,950

i mgntb

*Fr.e e 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital· Thermostat
*Free Estimates
· .

:
·:

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

251b.
Tablets or Sticks

BICKIOiu•
DOZER SERVICE

:" Emy Over the Plaf!lle Ba11k Fi11a11ci11g" .

'

~ Heart."

_,_

·TJIPP/In

'

furniture. There were several empty
glasses on the coffee table. They
then realized that Useless had fini•~ed off the martinis. plus the gin
a;td tonics, as well as all the leftover
food. Denn is picked him up and put
him outdoors. The poor hound suffered the world's worst hangover.
We were thankful it hadn 't killed
him.
Alcohol and animals don't mix,
and "Oddball in Ohio" needs a lesson in the ethical treatment of animals.-- M.S., Laguna, Cali f.
Dear Laguna: Thanks for the
short course. Keep reading for
another lcucr about animals and
booze:
DeaT Ann Landen:. My letter is
prompted by the one about the hus- .
band who put bourbon in the pet terrier's water dish to sec how it would
affec t him.
My fath er was in the U.S. Navy
when Teddy Roosevelt sent the neet
around the world. When they put
into Seattle. the city gave each of the
battleships a bear cub a.s a mascot .
. Dad told delightful stories about the

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULAOON
· • Vmyl Sieling • 5olfit
• FJJSCia • Seca1. .11

Residential &amp;.Mobile Hoaite
: Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pwnps

Animals and alcohol don't mix - .results -ca.n be fata

The Dally Sentinel •
30 Announcemanll

To place an ad (ull99 2· 21 ,56

•
. Friday, June

oCo

.

Pomeroy
. . • Middleport,

19, 1998

Frlday, _June

Experienced carpenter will do ,..
modeling , decks , \llnyl aidiiW,
plumbing . Free estfmates. c,au .
.jim Shull. 304 - 87~ · 1272 . Rolor-

oncosupon-t
Furniture rtpAir, refinish and re's·
toratton, also cuatom orders. C)t)io
Valle~ Refinishing Shop, Lau y
Phillips. 740-992-6578.
·
Georges Portable Sawmill,. don't
hlut your logs to the mill lust cltll
304-675-1957.

Mother Ot 4 Will Babysit In My
Home In Gallipolis. Referenc:ea .
Sertoua tnqurlea Onty 740·...,.10244.
.
'
Mowing and other odd JOba, 7..0.
-992-2807.
P•oNIAional Troo Slrvlco, Slumtl
Rem.ovat, Free Esnmatlll fn·
auronce, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-38119648. ~14 -367-70t0 .
Will 00 Babysitting In My Home
GrMn e1emen11ry School Dlotrlcl,
Cenrenary Area, Experienced
Doyc110 Provldol With C.P.R.
'ltoillng, Call740-448-3047.

Wll hluljunl&lt; or lrllh awoy. 135/

llictrl4llolll. 304-675-15035.
FI'JANCIIIL

210

Bualneu
Opportunity
lNODCEt

OHIO VAlLeY PUBliSHING CO.
recommends lhat you do but l·
nooa wltll people you know. lllid
NOT to lind money tttrougllltll
mall until you hMio lnvattiglllotd
tho ofllrlng.

Sarvlcea
'"''···~·

230
8 a w Gontto. St. Rt 331, Lltar\

--lor.,..

Ohio, 740-117-3522, propo..
&amp; """
Llvlngaton'a baaem1nt water·
prootlng , all Dlll.,.nt riPilfo
dona, lroa oallmatta, Utetl.,.
guorontoo. t:lyrt on lob IIIPirl·
--~t45.

�..
Ptge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 19, 1998

.-: ...

··..

~~;rid~•~Y·~~~w~~;1~.~~_'=~~~-=..·~~----~----~----~--~·--~~~p~~:m=MW~o:y:•:M:~::·:~:::O:h:~::::~-:. ~-~~~~-~-~::::n.:::O.::I~:Se::n:ti:re:I:•:P~~ge~::11~~.;~.
NEA Cro11word Puzzle
..:·~··~•'
~=-=------::::~:ACROII
• "
PHILLIP
ALDBR

.
' '

.-

•

'I

'$

: l:,~

a

14 x70 38R. 1999 Down OHLV
$1711 I* mo. F&lt;M ai' &amp; lreo lldn·
ng. 1-888-928-3426.
AI- estate edverllslng In
this--~ Is·~ to
thO F~r Housing Act
ot1968 whiCh makes • Illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
llrnHa1ion or dloatmlnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to

make any such preference,
llmttatlon or dlscrlmlr)atlon.'
This ,_.paper will not
knowingly accopt
advertisements tor real es&amp;ata
whiCh is in violatiOn of the
law. Our readers a.re hereby
lrlfonmod t11at all dweUings
advertised in ihis newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

REAL ESTATE

1993 Redman Mirage, 14x70,
3br, CIA. $12,000. 304-675-5881 .
94 Clayton , 3 bedroom. 2 tun
blths, storage building, In ground
pool, 740-949·3306 or 740·594-

1807.
ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay·
ments, assume loan, owner t lnonclng avallabfa.·304-755-7t 91 .

Divorce Forces Sales-Ta'ke over
payments, 2br, 2 bath, financing
avallabto. 304-755-5586.
. FREE DDUBU!·WIDE
Stop by Oakwood Homos of Nl·
tro, .WV. &amp; regl•ter to win free
doublewlda. no gimmicks.
tl1 Homoe ol Nitro,
304-75H815.
Huge 28x60 3BA, t. t/2 a1h.
Starting at ONLV $39,999. any
options available. 1·888·928·
3426.
Large selection ol used homes. 2
or 3 -oorns. Starting at $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 740·385:·

9621 .

310 Homes for Sala
3 Bedroom, 28atl'l, 4 Acres land.
1OM lies S. of Galllpolla. Blacktop
... (740)256-6313

3 Bedrooms, 1·1/2 Baths, Solid
Oak Trim, Doors, 1-t/2 Story, 2
Car Garage, Riverview Lot
$90.000 7-40-258-1867.

no land needed. Only It 0111:·
Homoo ~ltro, WV 304-755-

581115.

NEW 3 BEDROOM
($16,995)
OAKWOOD HOMES Barboursvlle 304-736-3409 ·

3br Srlck Ranch, 2·fuH baths, II•·
lng&amp;famuv room, kltcheri , urmrv
room, above.·ground pool on. 1·
·aero. 304-675-li394.

Make 2 Pa~ments Move In No
Payments· After 4 Years, 1·800·

3br home In New Haven, 1230
aq.ft . E11ce1tent starter home,
ready to move in. AU appliances.
$35,000. 304-862·3197.

(AEPO)
Set up on lot Best Offer. 800-383·
.6S62.

4 Bedroom Brick, VInyl, Fenced
Yard. Wallt-Out Basement , At·
tached Garage, 112 Aero Lot,
7-40-245-11620.

MQnarhch 12
xGO remtodd•:•~
rhroug out, s1Hlng on ren a o .
can S!ay or be moved. Lot rent
4o.mo. Asking 54 ,900 . OBO
304-862·3434. Lo!Ml moooage.

s

Approx. 1/2-acra land with 4br, 2

Moving Forces Sale : Mobile

baths, S25,000 . t/2 milo on
Paved road Pleasant Rldgli Rd.
Gallipolis Ferry, wv. Very nice
location. School bus goes right
llyh0ul0. 304-n3-5040.

Homo t4'x70' 3 Bedrooms. Call
740 245 9842 For More lnt••ma

363-6862.

tion."

·

"' ·

380

·

Real Eltlte

wanted

Colh Paid For Land t~ Geflll
County, Blackburn Realty, 740·
44&amp; oooe.
Small House Or Trailer In City 01
Gallipolis . Clooe To Stor.., For
Reaso- Prtoo, 304-t75-n43.

Circle Mottl Lowest Ratti In
Town, Newly Aomodoltd, HBO.
Cinema•. Showtlmo &amp; Dlonoy.
Weekly Raila, Or Monthly Ra111,
Construction Wortt,rs Welcome
74()-441-. 74()-441-5187.
Sl..plng rooma with cooking.
Alao trailer apaee on river. All
hook·upa. Call after 2:00p.m.,
304-n3·~1, Muon WI.

Wo Buy Land: 30 ' 5Do•• _
,·l 460 Space lor Rant
We Ply Caah. 1·800-2"183415
50xt 23' troller apace In Middle·
Anthony Land Co.
port. 7o40-81H1114.
·
Mobile homo 1111 available boiween Athena and Pometoy, call

RENTALS

740-3915-4387.

410 HouHI for Rent
2 Bedroom Cottage On Bu(avllle,
112 Milt From Porter, NO PETS,
Water, Trash Paid, 740-388·
1100.

2 bedroom house, clean, carpet·
ad, stove, no retrlgara•DI. no In·
side pels, deposit requlrtd, 740·
992·3090.
·

r.IERCHANDISE

510

skirt. 1·686-li9t-llm.
Lovely coUntry Honia on· SA 1
South With A Breathtaking River
View. vary PrlYata Setting On 2 tl
2 Acres But Only 19 Minute&amp;
From Gallpoils. 3--4 lltidrooms, 2

~:.::.::: ~~d~~~~:~P~r~;,!

KHchOn, Many Extras. Won't Last
Longll $tto,ooo.

New Ootiblowtde" 3BR, 2 bath.
$1,325 Down a $205 per mo. t·
881-928-3426.
Single Plront Progrom. Special
llnanclnt on 2, 3 a 4 bedroom
homes. Peymenla 11 tow ••
SilO. C.! now.304-755-5885.
Special 16xao 3BR, 2 bath.
St.325 Down, 5205 Mo. Frea air
a troe skirting. t·tl00-89t-ll7n.

tlon.

$111111o. Plymontl

..·F~·• -

740·245·9430 For More lnforma~

330 Farms for Sale

dkllng area , full oasement, garage. 2 lots. Call Somerville At·
any 304-6.75-3030 or Jean Casto
304-t75·3431.

OutbulldlngJ, Weotern Gallla
County, · $95,000, Equipment
Available Separately, 740·441 -

·Three bedroom houaf in Harrisonville, new root and Siding,
deck In rear, 24' above ground
pooJ. approx. 2/3 acre lot, can
7-40-742·2846 .•

Meigs County- 100 acres with
pond, three bedroom homo, 4 stall
heated gerage, free gas, groat b
hunting and llshlng, $t75,000.

Two badroon'! In Pomeroy, $300
I* month, $300 dlpool~ pey own
ut~ltias, no pots, 7-40-8112·2381 .

·12x80 trailer or can be ultd tor
ofllca trailer, $3000 with out air
conditioner; $4000 with, 740·9492217, 7:00am-tO:OOpm.
14ic70 3br $999 dOWn, 1198 per

mo. 1rae air a skirting. "t-800-691·
·ff777.
.

49112.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$ 260., 300 , sewer, water · and
uaoh 1 - . 7o40-8112·2t67.
2 bedroom mobile homo In
Racine,' no pets, 740-992-5858.
2 Bedroom TrOllers tn Small Tral~

•R'.!u~.- :!'~:". ;:U:.:f~.~it

520

t•

3t .

"

WHeN ARE YOU TWO
601N' TO CSIT BACK
ON SPIAKIN"
TIRMS?

.• '

1978 1811. Tri Haul boot 70hp.
motor &amp; trailer w/some acceaso· '
rles. Boat a motor In real good ·:
shape. Asking $3,300 lorm. 740·

.
'

---------- ·.;

$300 month plus depoolt, 740·

Cobia 4 Cyllnd4r, Mercury • '
~~!!·~'!· ll!ntiOard, Outboard, 125 • :
Bow Wtth Top &amp; ~."' ~
Like New, 740-

t

Now open, live ·ball. Chle1's

:992::;·3~1~94;:;·------440 Apartmenll

R t
- for en

•CQOL QOWNI•
Central Air Conditioning. f1M El·
tlmaleol 11 You Don't Call
we
Both Lo..l 740·448-6306, 1·1100-

us,

~t-ooaa.,

1 end 2 bedroom apartments, tur•
nlshed and unturnl1hed, ucurlty
depoOit required, n~ pets, 740·

:8112
~·22
=..:.18::.·-:---:-:-:--:

1 -Bedroom Apartment Newest
and Cleanest In the· area, near
Holzer $279/Mo .. Plua Utllltloo,
= n d_Ltlso Required 7-40-

Bedroom Un"'rnlahad, 1st
All UtlllfiOI Furnllhed Ex·
c t 1 L tl
, on ra oca on.

113 carat, round diamond solitaire,
slza 6. paid $800, will taka $550; ·

Marquis wedding set 1, 2.carat ,
alze 7, paid $1400, will take
$125Q; wedding gown with voll
liza 7, paid $700 will take, S300;
7o40-367-ll288 or 7-40-949-2461 .
18,000 BTU Air CondKioner, 740·
448-7123.
tB31l's Old Singer- &amp; Electrle Sewing Machi.,., $t50, 080 ,

01\,WL,
~IQoJOW

WMTMY

740-258--6345.
1993 C,ub Cadet . RldJng Lawn
Mower Model11141 48' Deck, 16
HP, With Cu. Ft. Trailer, Excolilnt
Cond
•• 200 7
~·

I:) »&gt;t:&gt;~

Not(~ rot~!

Treadmill, exercise bike, wall .
mirror 3x~ll., ooliell, 3-ploeo wall
unit, TV-stand, ,2/ahOivas. 304.:.67::..5-..:5523=· -....,-....,.--1
Two. lots at "Miigo Mainory Gar·
dono, S300, 740-1192-3875.

/

Building
Suppllel .

Block, brick, otwer plpea, wind·
ows, linlllt, etc. Clauc:te Winters,
Rio Grandt, OH Ciltt 740·245·
5121.
Stool BUildings, New, Mull Soli
30x40•12 Woo $10,200 Soli
$6,990; 40160114 Wao $18,400
Now St,ttO; 501100x18 IIIII
$27,590 $18,890; 801200x18
Wos $58,780 Now $31,190, 1•
1100-406-5126

Pill for S.ie
13 month old Flame Point Peralan, dew claws, neute.red, lncludoo lifter !lOx and toya, $100.
7-40-742-311111.

760

Uvntock

1 Year old bllick Angus bull ap·
prox o7001ba. Aoklng $350. 304·
875-4182.

PUs
Pass

North

z•

3•

2 SmoD Ponloo Child Sale S500
Each, Both For S800, 740-446·

1988 FOrd F·150, 314 Ton Pick·
Up. S2,iJO, 7o40-446-31170,

a

1988 f·250 Ford 314 Ton 300
~llndtlf, Automauc, 2 wnael·
drive, ,Good Condition, Runs
Good~OOO.Ceit7o40-liM-t258.

1989 F-250 314 Ton Tructc Vary
Good Condition! Towing Pockego
&amp; Topper Included, $4,500, 740·
.441-!269.
=-i":-:--~':"'"---1990 Chevy Sllvorado 350 long
bed •.~tomatlc, loaded, poslllvt
traott'bn rear-end·, two lone.
$4000, 304-773-5139, 304-773!5039:

Wootle

11 Hooldlkl potrta

....•.

24Sw.t

East
Pus
Allpua

CO"

....

29 .Arld

• .. -

31Mekesul8

33 Thlcun, a

41 Black
· · "
. 42 Wipe aut (11.) : :
43 Eye tayw
·:
44 Rhythmlell
:~
IWIIn::s,._
. &gt;
48 Slum
•
47 GI'MI revieW " ·~

·

......,um.
-.....

11' campar,. 198t Sha1ta, self . , •'
contained, commode. thower. N ' .. •
C. gao, awnlflll, like now, $3200, ,. )
7o40-1Nt-26n.
• &lt;

IFRIDAY

.,

1970 Tohoo camper, $700. 304· - ,
576-81121.
'

.·•."·'.•...

ani-In

50 - filr tat .
52 Mn..Nixon

53 Airport InfO

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Cempos

Eldo

.....

.

I II 4 br ,.._ peorplt, PMI n ~

WZLOYP

ZDPSRON

'E G

ZYAUWZ

, K..,....P

,. .";

WZAW

'
',

AOG-'WZLOF

LP

'

....'.

..,..,_lor_.r...,........

c:...trirQ:Nr o;=Ci411'1 Cflilied front Ql

-.·

'

...

zv

..' ""

"

.

~

..

• • c.l

YAWP

WZY

8YHIIIY

YAKLXAWLIIO

. ., .

·-

NAWY.'-

XLWA
XDNOYI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There's not enough bad ~stel I LOVE bad 1-1

Hve for 11811 1811811 am 111e apokiiSIIIIIn for bad Iaaie! -

Mel ~

. ..

·• ~ I

..

·~

...

:''

~"

'
..

••rni•

TIIAI NILY t...,;..r nr

· ;;.._
· ~--.:....-

I."Cill

I I 1 1 I' I.

....

Ri.JLABI

,, ' I

..... ·-··.

2

"" .i::

I~ I 1 I I I

.' .
' ~

UHTOV
5

I!
II I I !
I
1--n,
•
..,
.
Tl--rl
8
I

• '

•

_ •

~. .

•

MIPDIL

,r-T,_
T§

-1

PRINT NUMBflfO
lfnfiS

I

I

.'
•

. . .,

..

Complete the chuckle qvolod ·

by filling in the missing words

I'

FOil

"

A

Most adults ale decent. hard
· working, and honest. ThOse
.-....,.~~~~~-, who ar!'!n't gel the·· • - .- • • • • .

.

7

"
..
. ''
..
." ..

'
'

..

r H E s ·c

6

...

. ·'

.. ..
' .,

A Roorranoo leiters · of tile
111 four Krombled words below 10 1- four olonple wordo.

. ,

...'

_...._
'

3 below. .

.

.

•. 0

.

I I I '".

I I I I. I

'

· to
SAVE his FACE."
•

' .

•

38 Neckwur
40 Troplcll fruit

whispered, "Man is the only animal that breaks his back

'90 C-ah, opan bOW, 18', 4 cy. '
IInder 110, with acCessories,
S7500. 7-40-742-7101 . .
:

•, •

blood

Aviaty ·Force· Men:y • Garisl!- SAVE hiS FACE
.After listening to the political tandidate my friend

I •

••
• •

28 Welllclt end , • • .
WhllniV
• ••

· - UNSCRAMBlE
ANSWER

Home•

'

•'•

'

as
27 H.wellan

•

,

~

. ume

SCI•M UTS ANSWIIS

Clmperaa
Motor

• Actor'Nyle

~

13 Glllgl. .'l
•
rod
' ..
•
tiN-20 StOOd up ·
•
21 SIIHhlplcl
•'
22 ......... of

L._...__,_...__.._..._..... you develop from step No.

PEANUTS

.'•

12 ,Tiny ep~~~lng .

• Sondhilltn
· ehow;-1111

I Ellle'leouncl
7 Olen 1m1 bonll

•

New gas tanks a bOdy porta. 0 &amp;
R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-3723833 or t-800-273-9329.

790

5 Qulclo. high
note

23-1111
night .. '

Yesterday, we stmted to look al tri·
al bids (or help-suit game~trics, a.~_
they are also known). The opener
bids one pf a major and the res!)®der gives a single mist;. With a hand
too good to pa.•s but not strong
enough to jump straight to game, the
opener bids a weak suit, asking for
help there.
How does the responder react?
This is the basic plan: With no losers ·
(void, singleton ace, doubleton Iceking, etc.) in the trial sui!: bic! game
. in the agreed major.·With one loser
(low singleton. ace-doubleton, etc.) in
the trial suit: bid game iptlte agreed
major. With two·losers (lo~ doubleton, ace-third, etc.) in the trial suit:ilid game if maximum; but sign off at
the three-level with a . minimum.
With three losers (three low. jackfourth." etc.) in the trial suit: (alltlO!IU ·
always sign off in three of the agreed
·major. (When counting losers, only .
~-'· · the
ti 51 ·~'WOrT)' abllutthe__11'
uu~u._&lt;;, In- ~
suit.)
Here, South makes his try in the
suit •• di•mo·nd., :. where he does not
want partner to have three IO!iel'll.
North signs off despite his near-maximum because of the three diamond
losers. (Give North the heart jack
extra and three heart.• is Slill high
enough, but mO!il expert• wou\d bid
four because the game bonu.• ts too
tempting.)
West leads the diamond · q~n.
and the ~fenders take th~ tricks in
the suit. They switch to.a wmp.
After drawing wmps. you should
· play a spade towanl dummy's king~
QUCCII befOR risking the club finesse.
If eidter the spade ace or club q~n
is well placed, you will win nine

'

&lt;

1/,

4..,.cle~

' "
...

..

........
.

JUNE 191

•

1178 Starcrau Travel 250, 25'
;
long, olr, lull, aalf conto~• .' •\
sleeps 8·8, cell 7•0-992·8991 .. ,

_,:!

,.n.

.

.

.. ...

'

;

.'

.....

'

. ..

'

•
'

•

'

AKC Rtg Gotdtn R..~ Pupo,
roody on 7·1·98. M·$175 FM·
1200. Cal NOWI304-ele-3311.

11.-Co.:

840

Hey &amp; Grain

100) Ory onuleh hay rolls·800 lb.
In bam, StOoe. Mvrgon Farm At
311.tJOI.837·2018.

AKC Malt Boaglt Puppy, Vory
CUll, Top Hunting
$75,
· Round bllll ol hoy 4 mlloo out
7-1·1704.
Ashton/Upland Rood. 304·578·
AKC Rirglottrad Soaton Torrler ·2415.
Pupplll, B&amp;W, 8 wkl pld. Vlt
Cllockld, Firat Shots. ~40-3111-

1112
rented
.lhoiiPing,
Thr'• bedroOms.

AKC Roglator ... Rott Wtllero,
RMdyI TO
Go 1121/11. 2 - · 3
F., 7o40-318--t788.

-no.

eaoe.

Upper ..,rtinlnt, IYIII8bio
II rot ol Jllly, 2Dr, kltehon, op.
pllonceo lurnlohtd. 304-171121 ••
. - ·
Up1111ro aportm•nt lor ront,
downtown GtiNpolla, one bod·

,_.

.. _,

- , S235 ..,....,.,
-... S235 -m,
no peta, r.....,_ required, tor lnd trllh pold, 10111 ltocrtlc,

Up On lht Compttl011 A •-~lot
lion, For ~....00, My...,.
Will Toocll . u 81r11101e1 To
Win Your Fant11y WHk, For
Moro lnlormltlon, Celt Krlln AI

73R esc-saw.

74().742-m7.
Upatalro Aportmont, Cion To
Oroeory I DOwn!- GeltlpOHI,
Roloranco &amp; Oopolllt 740·448·
. 1158.

Grulib'a Ptono- tuning a ropotn.

Pi It 011? -lllflld? c.tl Ill
plano Dr. 740 148 4521

Auotrltlon Shepherd Pupploo, 1
Motto Merlo, 1 lltcoloratl, 740o44ii-IOOII.
Auirtrlllln Shepherd Puppilt, 1
Mole Morrie, I Mole Trlcotored,

7-10011.

'

710 Autol for S.le

ltlllol -

4x4 pick... 300 8 cyt.,
lair,

~ opead, .......- . body

...~~~~~n~tl~
. - ~~-~~~~~mpt~~ruv~
IAIIIIENi .,

WATE:RPAOCN«&lt; "'"
$111115, 74Qot112-371t.
.
UncondHionai lfetlmo guarantoo.
!1185 Ford F·150 Shor!lod 4 WD Local reterencaa furnfahed. Et·
·a . 8 ~. 81Mdlrcl, 11.200, 1875. Cal 24 lb. (740)
4-46-0870, 1-800-287-0578. !log.
304-674-o077,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
•

•"

--------·
·
.
ar-. ov..

ltH Chevy Aotro Vln, New MoTranamlaalon, ·Mony Other
...,., S2.000 010 7o40-441· Apflllanca Plrio And Sorvic»: AH n ,
Nome
25 Yllro Ex· •
perlenc. All Work Guorontoed, · ••
Froncn City Moy11g, 740·448· , • ,
'

'

.'

'

•., FOOi - - - - .
air. new tlrea. good Condlllon
51050. 740 . . 21t1 .

ttH Dot1a1 Oort, 4 Doora, 740~AfTIIIIPJI.
1173 . _ , tow mills,

1!1140.

.Eight month old Coclle&lt; apanlll,
Aogiatortd, lltllle, 111 .ahota,
. . . _ _ , 74MIII! 8118.
Engllob Buclgoo, Blrda. 111Wit. t

'*'·304-182·3436.

.. ,

• •
' •"
. ,

,

-

.

.
'
June 20, 1998
I In the year ahead. you may make f
signif1C81lt chaa&amp;a whm your W01t1
is concemed. You will control developments io create conditions IIIOfti 10
your liking.
·•
•GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Don't
wait for whit you want to COlli': 10
you today. tr thina- aren't movma
fa.q enoUgh, get penonally ln~oiYed
from this point · onward. TrytAI to
ptldt up a broken roma11ee? The
Astro-Graph Mak:hmaker can help
you utlderstind what 10 do to make
. the ~laliOnthip work. Mail $2.7!1 10
' Mardunaker, do this MwiJIIIIel'.

etlvt·pe~~g.

771$.

.

.•-

....

-llod

lAUNER LANO ·
7-1·1ollll

c.........,_,

1814 1 Ton Grumman Step Van

14mo. old Limousine bull. 304·
882·2083.

30 Angus And CIII·Angua Bulls
For Solo, Reasonably Priced, Ex·
cattant Breeding, Slate Run
Farmo. Jed&lt;son7o40-286-5395.

~·,

1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, ., 'I
t89o Chevrolet 4.3 motor-com·
ptoto (noO!Is hoada robuih). 304675-2314.
.
12 Foot Cargo Area, Aluminum
Body, Duol Rear Whtala, Very
Strong Trlick Vary Gooa Condl·
tlon, $4,500, May·Consider Trade
For 1121'on Pick-Up Of Equal
........ 7237H218.

stet.
25 Angus ·and Chi· Angus bulla
lor sell, reasontllly priced, e""""-'
!tnt breeding . Slate Run
Jaclclon, 740-2811-5395.

Auto Parte&amp;
Accenorlea

3 llllllcllldng

z.

I-•••-·

lotal - 3
·ton2ldl
otlllnga,
.tr condl·
tloMr, twO lkytightt, lront porch
end
oorport, 4 ' ground poot wtlh pump, Nnor CoN For Fret Mope + Ow- F~
ind - r .,.,..., prMicy tonc:e In ntlr1Cing lniO. Teiol tOll. 01! Lillld
. bock lor pool, new outiiUIIdtng, . PllcltOn
120,000 filM . ..n 7-40-992·5053,
. tiMmurrplno.,....
J i m - Homo Compfe.
lion With Ft. Melli Olrlgo
111~ Ookwood 14x80 Single Building fnoirlolld, Also Troller
Wldt fly OwMr: 3"11edroomo, 2 Pod Sot·Up, 2 + Acroo, ,Rurol
ld1l. With HtiiP'""P
- · Wlttr, Appro•. 7 111111 From
7-40-317-?:J&amp;f,
740-3117-7414.
01._,..., $32,000, 7-40-~1335.

Weal

lticks.

Four horstta- one Registered
Tennessee ,Walker gtlditlg; lWO
-lnge.
.
Arablen geldings; ono Rogloterod
1yr old Saint Barnard, great wl · quarterhorae mara: 140· 742·
tttltl 22 Ft. Hi Low CaOJPer E1·
.,
kldl, boautilul, to good homo. 2050.
cellent ConCUUon: $5,500 Firm,
•
1200.304-675-1511.
. 740-441-1269.
French Alplnt Goat, Buck, 8
InteriOr,
r bol conotrlctor with torgo cage Wooko Old, Weaned, S50, 740·
Ahor 5, t988·PocoArrow·341t. loaded/ , ,•
I acceooortao, 1100, 740.583· ltl2-7779.
baaemenl, e . ~
2 A/C, full • . ,f
85V.
awn. levelers, queen bed, ex. : •
Good Gentle Pony For Kldo WHh
Price lo cand. 304-875-t131.
•:
A Groom Shop ·Pit Grooming. Soddlo $500, 7o40-448-1692, 740.
.
'I
· Footurlng Hydro . Both. Don. 367-o433.
SlarCrah....,..._lor_, : ·
Shooto. 373 G;orgea Crook Rd.
Ylnt&amp;4-WO.
1 f rnece, gal range and rt· .. •
740-448-0231 •
.
Nelson's Custom Proct~alng
now open. formo~y Jonoo Cus- 1974 Ford F·150 4x4 4 Spoed,
. - ' ·- ·
'$1000,
•••
Alradalaa AKC Reglatered, 8 tom, 2573 Yllti -Cro111ng Rood, Runs Good Pluo 351
For
-Old, $250, 740-258-1783.
Milton, WV. We do vocuum h,-'2,1100, 7-40-~1318.
peeling. 304-743-5400.
AKC· Chlhuohua pupploa, two
11181 Chevy 112 TOn t.oo111 Good,
rnollt. Nldy Juno 26, S250 OOCh,
Runs Good, Aoklng $1,000, 7o40- 810
H~
C81740-687.0117.
44H118t . .

(ATTENTIOII DEVELOPEIII,
CAII'OROUHD
COUNTRY ESTATES)
Acrtl, Approx. 8 Aero
Mobile Homo IIIIth Large
Add On Gallla City Watar,And
Electric $125,000 More Acroego
AY811ebte, 7o40--tltl78,

011111 Co.: GolllpOIII, NilghtiOr·
hood Rd., Nleo 10 Aero Building
Sill $18,000 Or 22 Acr11 With
Pond S21 ,500 Cooh Price.
Frlondly Ridge, Nice 18 Acru
$18,000 • S2.ooo Down·· tl!121
Mo.. OrU-$7,500.

OL' &amp;uDI&gt;Y
. OL' I'N-\

-MER FUN
1867 Oceanic Sea Imp 160hp. , , .
Mererulser ln!Oolrd engine. 1811. •· ..
deep-V rwltraller. !He jacketa a , · ·
bumpera: $2,250 080. 740+446· · i:
3114.
"I
""~ ,

~~laek~I0'1.~~0h~lo~,.!!~~~!._-

550

HIYA, l:lo'N.

UCRtftCE
1967 Oceanic Sea Imp 160hp. " ·
Mercrui11r lnlboard engine. 18ft. .... • • •·
detp-V wllrall.r, ltle jackets a •. , , :
bumpers. 740-448-3814. Make • ,
oflor.
.
.

630

350 Loti &amp; Acreage

&amp;Jr f'Ao.'( f#oOo..I !

MAA'5 ·tAfJif

commode wlplumblng,
3t"xtt• whMa marble lovatory wl
1
ftlon,""'
• 40-44 ~·
cabinet &amp; laucttl, lroo otondlng
2 Ice cream machlnea, double lavatory wlchroml lags. two
head, 3 phase, Taylor &amp; Sanl- lighted medicine cablneta. 304·
s.....· -.- · 2 &amp; 9 1 . 8.7.~5-3.:.;;194:..::..
.· - - - - - - -

Comm!t'rclai-Offlce or Retail. 17
Mill Sl. Middleport t ,450 Sq Ft.
S400 mo.(or subdivide to 1.000
sq ft . for $300 mo.) Cor'nor Sultdlng . (740)·992-6250 Acqulaltloria

,.~[W~T
TO~~I-ID

~'(,~

Ty Beanie Babies, Assoriad At·
tired, $I2And Up. 740-245-9618.
Washer &amp; dryor pair with frao vacuum eleanor. Only StO down
delivers 10 yqur door. Call Home
Products D 1-8811-252-1802.
Wate~lne Special: 314 200 PSI
$21 .95 Per 100; t• 200 PSI
$37.00 Per tOO; tt.ll Brass Compression Fltflngo I n RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

'••

The help-suit
game-try
reprise

.. :
., ~
:: t
· ;

446·34811.

&gt;

1 ClolltM (II.)
2 Ui--pll8

Opening lead: • Q

15' SeaStor 11991 Ylmoho 40 HP •: .;
Outboard Engine. Fully Encioaad, •· .-~
Cuaomtlzed Top Runs Greatl
:
S2.700,080740-446-7t08,
•

All .Nowll Rutland
Whltoo Hill Rd .. 18 Acroo $14,000
Or a Acral •12,000. Danvllto, SA
1'988 Ookwood 14170 2· Bed- 325, Nlco Woodtd 5 Acroa
. roomo, "2 -·~.Heat $18,000 , Cny Woter. Oyoovlfle,
Pump, U"'*Pinnlng $9,500, 304- Hunters. Very Aomote 1t + Acr·
·01$10,500.
-3742.

bad!-·

Soudl

By Phillip Alder

Goode

340 Butlnen and
Bulldlngt

a acres or 2 acre tots on Bethel
Rd. WV. No alnglewldea. 30.4·
875-7948.

1917 14110 2 Bodroom1, Good
SNipe, A8lr1g Prtce 18.500. 74044&amp;24Y.

•):!

·Honda VS5 Sabre, ttOOCc,
14.500 MileO. Water Cooled, Shift
Drive, Like Now, 740-44Hl443.

.• .
•.

DOWN

• 7 4 2

1884 Honda Goldwlng Aapon·
cadi, 27,000 actual mites. new
back tlre, new wlnd1hield, ••eel·
lant condition, S5500, 740-992- ·

Sporting

7~·1296 :

1874 Hlllcrett, 12x58, exceUent

atr, all electric, used 11 summer
home, mutt be moved, lull furrtlonod, 17000, 7o40-115-34~

$500 or trade. 30f·578-2046.

Used Window Air Conditioning
Units. Dlltoront Sizao, Guara,_,
740--7.

.

2 Cemetery toll at Klrklond
Memorial, slde-by-itde Wlfront
view. S800. 304-675-32tf.

condition, two bedroom, central

t9~9 Dodge Daytona 4cyl, 5tpd.

231141ginnertl
lltAIIey27 a.ndllalttr ·
llrown

e A J 52
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
·

1982 Hondo 850 Runs I Looka ' ,
Good $500, Firm, 7-8-3745.
. :

~-

t 12 Acres, House. Workshop·.

t8x80 3br, 2 bath, St ,325. down,
$205. pel' mo. Frao air Skirt. I•
-1-11m.

a

-·34~. ·

t969 Chevy Cavalier, Call Bit·
- n 7· 10 P.M. 74Q.o146.21t2.

Uotd Furniture Store Below Holl·
day Inn. Kanauga. Beds, Couch· ·
as. Dressers, Tables. Desks.
Lamps And More! Summar Hr~.
Monday Thru Friday, Hra. 10·8,
740-446-4762.

(next doOr).

320 Mobile Horrtel
for Sale

Rabbits tor salt, $5.00 each.

•

1"961 Honda CA·400 low milts. .
• &lt;J

IX. cond. $1 ,200.304-675-1278.

• lnCIIgenoua

118 'Rat· - • r;r Qlmlnleh
gndullly

==:=In
.. Ofllllll
34 Curnnt unll
35 CIIOcDin ~
31 Dr.niiiCY·
. 37 ,.,.,IMIICII

••AKQ18
•

l

4~
''

080, 740-992·750o4.

•• 2
t A K 8
• 9 8 3

If c.rm.n 8lld
Aide

14Hip-

,...,._

South

-a

517,11116 on 3811.
Frw Delivery a Set-up ·

7
2 5243
.
pOintmont, 40-99 ·
MoSiman Circla, price r&amp;ductd,
3br, large living room wlflreplace.

VInton, Ohio 128 Clay Stroot, 2
Bedrooms, very Nice, Finished
- . l n t. 2Lots, 740-596-1929.

Outdoor Chllda PlayhouH With
Hardwood . Floor&amp;, Sunroof, 3
Wlndowl. Ulod Harllwoocl Floors,
7-40-245·5687.

Profenlonal Grooming by Ap·
polntmen1s. Over 15 yrs. experience, evening · a,ppolntments
available, 850 Second Ava. Gal·
1110111, OH. 740-448-1528.

. !'

1877 Honda 750, 16.000 mn...
.
fully dressed, many new parts, · .. ~I
aceeaaorles lnclud'ed, $1,200 ~

gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
3 Bedroom House. Gallipolis,
French City Maytag, 7&lt;10·•48$400/Mo., + Deposit, No Poll, . ~779...;.;.5·__:__;..__ _ _ ____
7
3
40-446:43t .
0000 USED APPLIANCES
3 Bedroom, Very Clean, Stove a
Wasru~ra , drylrs, refrigerators,
Aolrlgorator, Central A/C, Large
rangea. Skaggs Appllancoo. 78
Vard, 2 C11 Garage, Rt 7~ $400/
Vine Stroet,'Caii740-44S-7398,
Mo., +Deposit, No Pots, 740-2561~99-3499.
6058
flollv'•
Ulod FurnHin
·
1 ·I BEDNDOM HOMES FROM
we now have Anny s,.,.,alfl
54,000 Local Gov't. a Bank
2101 ·JefforsonA\!e.
Repo's Call1 ·900·522·2730, X
Open9:30 - 5;00 Mon-Set.
1709.
:!Of-675-SOfA (7632) .

tF A t
2 Bedroom Apar1mon or en ,
·stata Rouil180. Dopolit &amp; Relarstorage and big poSSibilities.
Onty At oakwood HomH
Sao to eppreclate. 304-675-3169. . I. __..;;N;;IIro;.:.:.,w.;;v:.:..::.304-.....:.7.;;55;;5;;tltl.;;5__:__ oneoo, 740-441-1519.
2 a..:troOm .....t. stove and refrig
Middleport. beautiful two story, 3
TAX SPECIAL
....
G
br, 2 bath, large l.r. &amp; lr., oak
3br $999/down $189fmo. Included. 74 Court St. alllpolls.
doors &amp; ~rim, Smith's cuatom oak
Set-up 5 Delivery. Only 3 740-446-2563
cabinets, Jenn-alr range , dish- Left! Only at Oakwood Homes Niwaahtr, detached garage, by ap- tm wv. 304-755-5885.

tor 5:00 or anytirrit,- ·

Only S10 down dellvero • com·
plete living room suite, bedroom
lnd dlnelle lo your door-plua ·a
troe 25-lnch TV. Coli Homo Producto 0 1·888-252·1802.

NOTICE

.FNnch City Pot o.-.tng
-Optnl
.

.. Fly

20 llon&amp;co'a

East
• J 10 8 .6 5

• J 3
• Q J 10 8
• Q 10 7

1Wo bedroom trailer In Mlddlepon,

SPAtiiGSPECIAts
$4ll Down

Throe bedroom. bath and hell, In
Middleport, celt 740-992·3485 al·

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repelrod, NOW l Flallullt In SIOCk.
Coli Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528.

West ,
e A 81 2

s

Call Virginia L. Smith Realty ~~
740-446-6806 Or Call Cera ~t·

Lunon built hous!B, large rooms.

1874 Harioy Sporiltor 1.000 ec
Shovel Head New Disk Brlkea, Electric Stlrt Black Wllh Loti 01 •
Clvomo $4,2!)0, After 4, 740-28114482.

-3, 7-40-~.

Ne
eKQ3
• 10 8 8 5
• ·as 3
... K 8 4

·.

Motorcyclet ·

740

Aaeondllloned

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 31oft!
Still under warranty, owner II·
~~;~~lng available. 304·755·

with all option&amp;, only $2,499..
down, $362. I* month. Ffoo elr &amp;

tll2-6154.

J.C. Penney Camcorder, 12x1.
Zoom Lono, New Battery $350,
Aoritor Septlo Tll.nk Motor $300,

Waahers: Dryers, Rangel, Relrl-

two car garage, low tuea:. lm·
maculate, call 740·742-8200 or
740-8112·3041 .
Loadod 28x80, 3br, 2 f./2 balh

Houoo lor s81a at 379 Salem
Siraot In Rutland, 5 rooms &amp; bath
with garage and half basement.
Out ol the flood area, call at 740·
742·2065.

ltntod to buy· Chovy A,tro or
GMC Safari vena, '69 and newer,,. ;-;
740-742-3802.
.. .. ~ \

:; ~

41~

Hidaf

15 PlanO DIMe
11 Cotpuchln
_.,
17 U.. 1 ecletara
1t Catt on - Tin Roaf

·io

J

198~

Immediate. occupancy· cozy two
bedroom,
large lonead corner lot,
vtnyl siCSing, ne~ vinyl windows,

1-800-6~1-67n.

ISM 38&amp; compuilr. -.nor,• "-Y·
board and mouu, "S150 OBO,
may con11dar gun on trode. 7o40-

Goodl
Appliances :

.. .

.

·~ ·..

a::tltufrloM

lonn

11181 C""'V 4ll4, 350, Runs Good. •,'
7.tQ.441..2751 .
• · ·~ '

Houtehold

., · ·Place, Hunting • Flohlng sup·
Must sell- t996 Redman, t4x70, 2 br troller, 5250 . mo. 150 _do· plltl. 111~ Viand, Pt. Ploaoent.
two bedrooms. two baths, excel·
&lt;Vt, .. _
;::304-6:::;;::;;74:;:-11:;:1,:09~.-.....;_ _ __
882-3BtO
ient condition, serious Inquiries paon.~
·
5""
Antlquet
only, 740-9&lt;49-1327.
In Mason 3br trailer. HUD ap·
""
prov.d, deposit required . 304· Buy or sell. RIVerine Antiques,
14
0 1
2 675-7183.
New
or tot&amp;xao.
" ~ no
make
1124 E. Malft SlrHt, on Rt. 124,
payments
move In,
pay· ::.::..:..:.:::_
_ _ _ _~-:ments ahor4 1rs. 304-75!&gt;7191.
Trailer For Rent, Deposit· Re- Pomeroy. Hours : M.t.w. 10:00
qulred Aeforo•••s Required No a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
Now 1998 t4x70 three bedroom,
'
·~
'
8:00 p.m. 740·992·2528, Rult
7 367 43
Includes 8 months FREE lot rent. - · -40- .n . .
~Moora;::::::.;ow~rw:;:;...~----ln~ludes skirting, .•• ,,•..,,_.,••,._,1\vo bedroom
,~ome,_gas,_l 540 Ml•-llaneout .
and aelup. Only
Salem center
~
month
with
St075
is~3DO~depo~~olt.~~~~~=
Merchandlte
800-837·3238.
:

Double wide 3br, 2 bath , only
St.325. down, $205. per month.

-

LIMITED Dff'ER
1998 Doublowlde 0 Down $295
month . Free deHvery &amp; set-up,

Lo1 tor oelo· Galllpolla, 801172,
nice nlighborhood. quiet, 740..
44&amp;-4722.

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDt,

Fumllhed ·
Roome

":

"-••••tof';uwla•,_.

10 IMIJII~n tlllld
1rt11e
12 'IMIVDII
41 Yri'tloe
1•A1

450

1101

••c'llltt,ln•

P.O. 80Jt 1751, MU1111Y Hill Stldun,
New York. NY 101!16. ·

f

cANCER (June 21-July 22)

•'

You'll do well oommen:ially today j( go at yoiu- own pace. however. •
. you are both finn .and considenlc. · CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Ja~. 19)
These~ will fare better 1~ Therei~no~~foryoutocondOne
being -nive or delnanding.
a neprtve AI~ al wort. Take the
LEO (July 23-Au~. 22) You might nece5.~ ~reps t.~ward~ positive!
get involved in a $1imulaling new ChMJC todlty.
._
endeavor today. Qe pllicnl ... you· · AQUARIUS (JM. 20-Fcb. 19) In
may not 11c able 10 devote lime to it . order to be as productive u you
unlil another day.
·
·~
~ld like~ be ~y. you may"!leed
VIRGO (AuJ. 23-Sept. 22) The to_ ltn~ up WI~ ;;omeone whose enertiming miplbe better, for IOI!ICO'.Ie IY and ambitton are p-ealel' "-n
10 do yciu a favor ~ dwl1t Will yours.
.
.
be 101f1011'01111. If the inPar Is critical,
P,ISCES · (.feb. 2~Man:h ~0)
don't Wille time.
.
You re not . 'apt to .milljl worktng
. UBRA (Sept. 23.ol:t. 23) 5tr!ve extra hint ~nd-the ~ ~y. as
to put new P-ledae into pracuee ~~ as a co-Worker pllches m and
today. If you do. it could help devel- cames some of the load..
op .. iqlorlanlendeavcn~~napidARIES (Mardi 21·April 19) It
1
· .
will put you in the propel fl'lllle of
y. SCORPIO(Ot:t. 24-Nov. 22) That mi~
~ entire ~ if you
old fiahl and drive will be stirring in JIIIIICtjWc tn a compeuaon IOday.
your veins today,~ you lhou~.do . Dan't foc:us on winnina; just enjoy
well in situalions wtth compettuve the pme.
.
· TAURUS (April 20-M.y 20) Be
111 INIIIL Go for the pi! ·
SAOin'ARIUS (Nov. 23·DI!c. dediea_ted IIIII persi~ IOday in
!Z I) Once you aet ~mind 10 IOifie.. fillllltialllllllim nteaniaafuiiO you
thiiiJ todlty, c111nca are e~~letit ~ your f~'r· Make.
the chief
you'llldl~ your JOills. Pe sure to tiiiiC on ~ ltst or pnonucs.

.'

.

&gt;

. ..
'

·' •

4

.
..... 1

...
••
!

'

...''.

...... =
.... .
.... . .•'.
' • n

·~-

. .. ~~
' :

.'

!or

..
' •' I

'· :
'

lh!•.

• ll.
•

'

�•
•'

.:.

~age 12 • The Dally Sentinel
•

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Sermonette

For our fathenl
By Bonnie· Shiveley

HAPPY FATHER'S DAY! I
hope. you have the privilege of
honoring your fathers today. My
step-father, Papa Charles, will be
92 in a few days.
He won my hean early in his
whirlwind with Mother 14 years
ago. When he · was able, we had
lots of fun. Now we have quieter
celebrations at the nursing home.
I also have good memories of
my Daddy who has gone on to
heaven.
Papa and Daddy made fol lowing God's instru·ctions a
delight. "Honor your father ... as
the LORD your God has commanded you, so that you may
live long and that it may go well

with you ... " A long life is
promised to children for obedience, but fathers also have an
obligation: "Fix these words of
mine in your heans and minds ...
Teach them to your children ... "
Jesus said, "If anyone loves
me, he will obey my teaching.
My Father will love him, and we
wi II come to him and make our
home with him."
·
I can't think of anything
more wonderful that having
Jesus and His Father living in
our homes.

A great Christian, Matthew
Henry wrote, "What a sincere
love for Chri~t is in the hean,
there will be obedien.ce ... duty
follows ... is easy· and natural,
. and flows from a principle of
gratitude."
Heavenly Father, thank You
for a Christian father and stepfather. I pray that we will have
joy today in honoring our
fathers, and they will desire to
hear God's word, be obedient
and teach it to their children.
Amen.
(Scriptures: Deut. 5:16,
11 :18-19 and John 14:23, NIVJ .

Frtday,June11,1998

Retiring minister to be honored at Sqnday reception
An open house reception tor Rev.
Bob Robinson and his wife, Joann,
will be held on Sunday from noon
until 3 p.m. at lhe Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Rev. Robinson, who 1w been lhe
pastor at the church for four and a
half years, recently retired from the
pastorate.
~rior to serving at the Pomeroy
church, Rev. Robinson served as
pastor of the Heath United
Methodist Church in Middlepon
from 1979 to 1985, and then served
in the Toledo area.
His special interest has been min·
istry through the Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish,
emphasizing w&lt;irk in feeding the
poor.
The 'Robinsons plan to live in

Middleport, where Mrt. Robinson
will continue her music ministry and
Rev. Robinson will continue ,a ministry through the Cooperative Parish,
..the Meigs Ministerial Associaiion,
the local Emergency Medical Ser·
vices and as chairman of lhe Holzer
Chaplain's Asso.;iation.
.
He will also serve as a special
representative of ·lhe Jackson Area
Ministries and will assist lix:al pastort.
The Robinsons have four children, David, of Phoenix, Ariz.,
Diana Swanz of New York, N.Y.,
Bobby of Tatoma, Wash., and Faith
Ann Robinson of Toledo.
All friends, co-workers and
church members are invited to
attend the reception in the Robinsons' honor.

A Gan nett Co. Newspaper

(Editor's note: A clvllault ouillnH the grllvi!ICII
cir 0111 perty agalnat .another. It dOll not lltablllh
I~ or guilt)
GAUJPOUS -A Gallipolis woman who was the
victim of a 1996 stabbing incident has filed a civil suit
in the U.S. District COurt Southern District of Ohio
seeking a total of $6. million in compensatory and puni·
tive damages against the city of Gallipolis and several
loeallaw enforcement officera as defelldants:
· The suit filed by Lana Toles cites "non-intervention
·and non-arrest in domestic violence cases that resulted
in Toles being assaulted, threatened, forced to move in

FRIDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County Arthritis Suppon Group. Friday, 10 a.m.
to II :30 a.m. in conference room of Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
Dr. Jams Schmoll to discuss eye emergencies.

"COME AND SEE"
JESUS THE LORD
Middleport ·
Church of Christ ·
5th at Main

Income limit for
rural ~Jouslng aid
· GAWPOUS - An inctease
in the income limit for the Guaranteed, Rural Housing program
Iib(IUld bolster the number of fami·
eliJiible for aasiatani:e, U.S.
IDe:partment of Agriculture offi·

-'"ne 22·28
9:00-'12:00

--3-12

MIDDLEPORT - Open gym, Meigs Junior High School, Monday, ICiok-otr Pa~•de•-.lune 20th
8:15 to 10 a.m. for girls of Meigs Local interested in playing basketball. Une up et .,_.,. Dlle•

~~'
'~ r

..

:(~:-

\'r? -.....;,"\(

r:-:'f~ ~

Pw k . t 8130 with -,our bike.. :f~,~
·
t"...fi!L-.Free immunization -clinic, Meigs County Health Pool Pllre. I Oo t 2 et
~~
De!)artme~t.dTbuesday,t/9 tordn ..a.m: hand I 1~ 3 p.m. Every child to be Mlcklleport Pool.
~· /

TUESDAY
POMEROY -

~

y paren gua tan, wtt tmmuntzatton record.

Oltio. "'ur

for
paymeat home

vw-.lblp P.CIIiwn. COtllbiDcld with
today'I low 1n1m=1t nt1e1 and the new
hilbet inoome lilftlll, make a my

IIUICiive c:ombi111tion for the
prllliP:cdve hooie buyer."
Paae said that many · people
who .think ownina .• home is
beyoad their me1111 are not aware
of the USD~ proaram, a situation
the tleJ)artmemloob to revene by
inaasina awareneas in Gallia
. Olunty.
Under the Guaranteed Rural
Houslna proar•m• commercial
lc~~: provide the loan, and
U
Rwal Development guar·
uteel the loan apilllt 111111 10 lhe

HUT,

Jason Campbelf awarded internship ·

fide or game.

said.

Previously, a family of fopr
~ h.nt~ an Income exc:ecding$44,6SO
Galllia County waa not eliJiible.
new limit, announced last
1-'k. 11 ~.oso.

£::1

PRESENTED PLAQUE- Slatar'Fidelll Bell who III'VId at
· the Sacred Heart Church In Pomeroy for uver.. yeare before retlr·
ing to a Columbus home for c.tholic nuns, waa ricently preunted
a plaque by the Meigs County Mlniatet:lal "ssoclatlon. The plaque
was given in recognhicin of her mlnl111rles to the people of Meigs
County during her tenure at the local church. Making the prftlnl8tion was the Rev. Robert Robinson, Aasociation prealclen't
·

B:r MIKE SCHNEIDER ·
LAKE BUENA VISTA. Aa. {APl
-It's a small world promising shorter
lines and 'cheaper tickets at DisneyQuest. the first of Disney's hightech indoOr amusement arcades.
WIJile DisneyQuesl has many of a
theme pad&lt; 's touches - such as a
choreogmphy between music, visuals
and rides and the ubiquitous gift shop
to hawk Disney merchandi5e - it diffm from a Disney theme park in many
ways.
I.-ad of Kiting aside a day, visitors to DisneyQuest are e~pected to
spent a few hours there
.
· . The lines at the I00,000-square·
. foot an:ade are smaller.
~ one-day pass at a Disney theme
p.n costs S44.SO. DisneyQucst visi·
tors can pun:hase $7, SIS and $20
debit cards and deduct the cost of each

Ill

lender.

.Man accuHCI of
:damaging Indian altea

.

Dad: ••1 love it! ..
.

And that's .noc all! Yaur'loc:al Pizza Hut is !dso feauring a
"buy a I81Je. get a medium. free" special right now. Or you
can get a medium, !-topping pizza for only SS.99 (cOOpon
. required; both offef5 are good anytime?. So hurry on down
.

'•

'

~

to Pizza H.. befon: our 1J11111a8m come to their~-- And
brina Dlld, too. He deserva it!

I

$599. I

I ~!~!: i
.:_:_ I
.,. . . ................... ..,.... .....
.......
=::-;o.:.::oz::;..,.,....,.;,...,
. .·
~··· .. ··· 1~~
='t·e'=' :'4!!:-·. ·· 1
;-.::

__
_
--- -, ~ ~-=-::c=~ l

I DIU

180 Mulberry

It's amazing but true. Dads can leave t~ir wallets at home
when t~y come to Pizza Hut on Father's Day for the All
You Can Eat Buffet. 'Thut"s nilht·-dads ear free on their' special day! Have Pizza Hufs managers lost their mind.•? No
•
way! We have dad.•. too. you know! This is our gift to all
dads-on Father's Day.
Here's the deal: Any dad who c~ to a panicipating
Pizza Hut reslaurant on Father's Day. June 21, accompanied by his child(ren). is entitled to a fR:e meal from our All
Y011 Can Eat Buffet.

-----· 2

· Pomeroy

....... &amp;!81/a

_

· ;:ct'
. • :..•::t.;,_,,., . ....;J
./
.,. • ••• ;"'.Ar!'H..t.:....... •.•.•••·

740-992-2115
'

.

'I1tolc Interested in tile JO.year,
fixed rate loans must nieetthe fol·
lowing criteria:
• A satisfactory credit history.
• Sufficient income to repay the
loan.
• Meet the inalme guidelines,
which VII)',by c:owdy and family !lizle.
· In addition, the home must be
Jocated in a "rural area" as defmed
by USDA Rural Development.
those interested can call614-469·
~744 for more information.

ATTENDING CONFERENCE •

. Snail and Sl. . PeUeu .
Bumming bird Feeders A Neetor
Weed and liill Sprays£hle~n w....er
.Water NlppiN
BIO Spot for flea eonu ol on
dol8 now In 3 ~no•y .....

learning

Detall1 on
pageA3

experience
.,.~87•

•P•/H•

•

mt

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • June 21 , 1998

Vol . 33 , No. 19

.,.,.--.,-..,-,-,-'«&lt;-:..,.b-y....u...,..,,-:;:-:1i--~-.....,..cl.-=,-••-., ~~~~~~~~~~~~~!:

. . , , _ ,,.....,_ -

MONDAY
HEMLO€K GROVE- Vacation Bible school, Hemlock Grove Christian c.~urch, Monday through Friday, 6 to 8:30 p.m. Theme, "Hooked on
Jesus. Classes for age 2 through 7th grade. Picnic, June 27; closing program, June 28, 9:30a.m. .

992·2156

on·the-fob

/1f1Tolefl ~ ...,.,, ,,..,.,_,

POMEROY - Mt. Union Baptist Church, Father's Day homecoming
Sunday, 9:45 a.m. Sunday S.chool. Special singers, "Headed Home" and
"Friends of Jesus."
-~

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

HI: 801
Low: 608

t.
k. $6M ..--.. . .
:M SSSU ·~
. ·1.C 1m see S .
d"'!o.!..'!.'!~a:.t#••~.:.~ ~~~~rJ:r~fr~~a~~~
·
· ·
·•
.u•
In sui.t against c1ty, ou1cers .s:£..;.a:-::a-:-, :a::..:r::.~:::
It .

:: Jl .

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting and special events, The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any .type . Items are printed as space permits and cannot be guaranteed .to run a specific number of
days.

Kimberly 1111, ~ of Mike
lhle end Sheron HarVey, Recine,
Ia at Alhllnd College lhle WHic
at lei Hllng Buckeye Glrla Stllta.
She Ia lltlndlng unc11r eponeorshlp of the Auxiliary of D Wiballr Poet ~. POII'III'Oy, end
Horne NatiOnal Benk of Racine.
Kimberly wiU be I Hnlor It
Southern IIIIa fell. Her mother Ia
1 Yoluntaer nuree at Glr11 Stalll.
Also lttlndlng Under epon-.hlp of the P'-.,y AuxilIary end the Falllllfl lank Ia ·
Crllty Gllleeple of Jecklon. She
wee alllcted Q a aulletlltM for
I Southern atudlnt who W81
llliclwd end lhln· decHned to
pertlclpate.

Acting as an

tmes

SUNDAY
. REEDSVILLE - Eden United Brethren Church, Sunday, 2 p.m. spe. eta! pratse servtce to remember veterans. Located two miles nonh of
Reedsville on State Route 124.
.

Disney Lite - smaller·
DisneyQuest offers
rides and games

]tither's Dttg
reflections

•

Community Calendar

accompante

S1 '"'

Stewart retains lead;
U.S. Open play
concludes today

• F~ured on page C1

SATURDAY
POMEROY- DAR family ·picnic, 6 p.m. at the Maria Foster home
Minersville. Hostesses Mary Kay Yost and Lisa Young will furnish meat,
heverage and table service. Members'to take covered dish. Families invited. In the event of rain, it will be held inside the home.

Jason C. Campbell, son of the
late James T. Campbell, and Janet
and Joe Dickens, Gallipolis, and ·
grandson of Eleanor Kloes, Middlcport. will be serving an inter.nship in industrial design in London, England · during the months
of June through September.
Based upon interviews with
Proctor and Gamble , and a review
of his portfolio,
Jason was selected among various universities throughout Ohio
and the surrounding states, to
work as an intern in Cincinnati
for the winter, 1998 quarter.
Due to his performance there.
he was the first undergraduate to
be given the opportunity to complete a'n internship 'in England .
He is a I993 graduate of Galli a
Academy High School and will
graduate from the Ohio State
University in the spring of 1999
with a degree in industrial design.

Inside

Alonq the R1ver

;

. •'

. COLUMBUS (AP) - A _man
:who organized a motorcycle rally
in the Wayne National Foreat is
:accused of damaJiing ancient
American Indian campsitea.
' II marks the tint lime criminal
cha!Jes haVe been filed in the
aoulbern Ohio district under a
1979 law that protects archeologi·
Cal resources.
A federal grand jury indicted
brew Wolfe, 39, of Nelsonville,
on Thursday. A sec.'bnd count
accuses him of damaging the
1011theast Ohio forest. •
·: If COIIYic:ted of both counrs, he
could be sentenced to up to 12
yea111 in prison,
The 1996 rally included more
than 100 moton:ycles. Motorcycliars drove over the Indian sites,
said Fred Alvenon, a spokeaman
at the U.S. attorney's office.

Gno(/ Monur;g

c'

t·n

ca ··x
b

ClA'
03-7
hrn1

Mber!eh
· M
,., ri!ICR!ur ct ·

;;r·

.m

0 1911 Ol&lt;lo Voller Mllollitll Co.

order to be we, c:ut' severely, and 'permanendy scarred
on her neck .and face."
Toles was stabbed repeatedly with a broken beer bot·
de by former boyfriend Ronald Morris In a Gallipolis 1
tavern on July 7, 1996, according to the ault.
Toles alleges In the suit that in September 1995, lhe
Gallipolis Munici~ COurt iasucd. a temporary protection order insl~ing Morris to stay away froiD her resl·
dence and prohibiting him. from baraaslng her.
She claims that will lllle COillinued 10 sull'er physical
abuse, threats and verbal abuse, properly damage and
harassment by Moms because ,the TPO was allegedly never

-

tory post release control
for a muimum of tbreo

,.
H.B. 33S, effective Dec.
enforced by lhe defendants.
t:!;.:._;:L--:-.---.....:::.........;.:.~---'"---___. 9, 1994, providing law
In seven separate documented alleged instances over enforcement officers with guidelines on the enforcement
a period of three months during 1996, Toles had con- ofTPOs, proper documentation and appropriate action.
tac:tcd law enforcement officials to come to her aid,
The suit claims that the alleged illKtion by the defen, .
while no restraint was taken against Morris, according to dants "deprived plaintiff of constitutionally protecte~
tbe suit, filed on Toles' ·behalf by COlumbus attorney interests without due process of law ... deprived plaintiff
James D. McNamara,
of the equal protection of the laws based on ber gender"
Morris was' apprehended in St. Albans, W.Va., the and that the defendants "arbitrarily and capriciously,
'IUesday following· the stabbing incident, after fleeing without justification, deprived plaintiff of protection."
the scene, the suit said.
The suit seeks $2.5 million in compensatory dam·
He was later sentenced to sill years in the Orient COr· ages, $3.5 million in punitive damages, attorneys~ fees
rectional Facility after he pleaded guilty to a charge of and "further relief as justice may require."

New federal highway bill includes
funds for Hobson Bridge replacemen

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="414">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9838">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27526">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27525">
              <text>June 19, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
