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Mo~,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel
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June 22, 1998

Weather
Today: Pertly cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 801
Tomorrow: Sunny.
High: 901;, Low: 601

JuneD, 1998

Sports

Royals hand Reds another ross, Page 4
So well .represented, Page 6
Blending st~pfamilies into one, Page 6

Ripley nets
victory over
Meigs Legion
Page.4

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Full season assured
for Midd~eport's· pool.

IMTRODUCINC
CUSTOMER CHOICE 8 ,
A REVOLUTIONARY MEW
WAY FOR YOU TO
CONTROL
YOUR
CAS BILL.
"'
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Why would Columbia want you to
purchase naturjl· gas from someone
else? Because it could save you money;
Mthout·affecting ·the quality service we
pro\iicie you.
·
·
· ·· . You ~ee, dere~.ulation has come to
the gas industry i!hd Customer CHOICE
from.. Columbia allows our customers to
''
take fu.ll·advantag~ ~of it. This voluntary
program makes it simple for you to buy
your gas from othefl quaUfied suppliers
who'!ate not subject to the same regu~a­
tions we_are, an~ are1free to sell you ~as
at a ·lower ..rate.
Jn
We'll stm be ~our gas company, ·
deUvering .the ga.s .t~\ your home (it wm
s~ll come through o~r gaslines), providing safe, . reliable s~rvke, and making
sure that service is jjnever .interrupted,
regardless of who supplies your gas. In
fact, the only.differ~nce
is, you may be
. .
able td save on yout bill.
You can sign up tor Cus~omer CHPICE
beginning August . 1~~· And ·if you decide
·you'd. r~ther keep buying ·your· gas from
us, that's fine, too.Jt's ·your CHOICE.
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'By BRIAN J. REED
'Sentinel
Staff
• Tile Middleport Pool will likely ·
'remain open for the remainder of the
'season. due to strong gate·receipts.
The financial condition of the pool
:was diseilssed at length by Middleport Village Council and tile village
recreation committee during council's

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regular meeting on Monday evening. $7 ,SOO transfer of funds allocated 10
At the last council meeting, mem- the pool's operation left only $2,000
bers expresse\1 'doubt that the pool in the pool's operating budget for the .
would be abl¢ to operate self-suffi- remainder of the season.
cienlly throllgh the end of the season, ~ The discussion, however. was
and discussed the possibility of held without the benefit of informa.
refunding a portion of the price of lion about gate receipts. The sale of
season' pa.~ses sold'to date.
passes, regular admission receipts,
That discussion arose because a
(Continued on Page 3)

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Pomeroy ·
targeting·
sidewalk
parking .

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of
River Volunteer Fire DlpMttnent
' " - Smith tile
R.J. Cormln Derlllment Dlvl.tcm
during till ciNnlip
ol Salurdly'a chlmlcaltrlln
11M' Huntington, W.VIi.
.lllriy of till""""-..,.. hoHd ~ due to till liNt. (AP)

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QUESTIONS?

For answers, call f-er this
fact~fiUed brochure..~ i
Golumbla. Gas of Ohio .
In·.Columbus: 460-2222
Elsewhere: ·1-S00-:344-4077
TDD/TTY: ~.:877-469:-2443
-· · '
Ohio COII$almers'
..
Counstl
.
t £800-'282'- 9448 .(VoicejTTY)
.,.
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C
Public Utilities ·
.Commfufon of Ohio
1:-800;~gg.;.7271 ::·'.
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Local GED graduates told
to faim high' at ceremony
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
sentlnel Newa Staff · ·
"Suc:ces.~ comes with overcoming the hurdles of life." said Jeil·
nifer Sheets, speaker at the Adult
.Basic and Literacy Ed~calion
(ABLE) annual recognition dinner
held at .Meigs High School Monday night.
.The presiilent:of !be Ohin Board
of Education cili:ouraged~the. 16
students · receivinl! their GEDs
(general equivlllence diplomas),
and others working toward that
goal. to "aim high and to be prepared to tackle any.obstacles which
get in the way."
·
"You ·are to be congratulated
because you
aze the_;importance of educati ." said Sheets.
who went on to d ribe each person enrolled in the BLE program
as already a "succe s story."
Awarded their OED cenificates
along with plaques from the Mid·
dleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club were
Joseph . Billingsley. Jennifer. K.
Carman. Angela R. Cundiff, Freda
L. Eakins, Marvin .R. Edwards,
Michelle L. Hoffman. Melissa A.
Holley, James D. Hudson. Stacy J.
Lambert, Sonja K. Lee. Kathy L.
Lemley. Carlos M. McKnighl.
Janis L. Neece, MaeDella Reuter,
Tangie L. Scholderer, and Ari E.
Willis.
Recognized with anendance'
certificates were Sandra Darst,
over 500 hours: Vickie Lambert.
over 400 hours; Penny Dunkle.
over 300 hours;
·

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP).. ~~inspect a railroa'd inspector's ed to see the str«t depanment sl)op
The stretch of railroad tracks where work. '{P'Sullivan said. "We give it around a liule more. perhaps check·
a train de111ilment spilled 30.000 gal- a preU~ goOd look. Our inspector ing with the state purchasing agency
Ions of fonnaldehyde had been visu- wants 'rp, make sure that he finds the to Nee if a similar machine can be
ally inspected the day before the same tJ;Ijjlg the &amp;rack inspec1or found. found at a lower price.
crush, CSX Tran~portation Inc. ofti·
"W,1might go over the track and
Councilmen Larry. Wehrung and
cialssay.
.
takenotesandthen.determineiftheir George Wrighl, who v01ed for the
The track was inspec;led. friday in~pectoo saw the same things."
purchase, noted they would like lhe
and had undergone ,;everafte!lls since .
Details or the agency's inspection.' street department 1o check other
April. saidCSX spokeswoman Kathy were 1101 immediately available Mon- . places beiore purchasing the
Bums.
day.
machine.
No defects were · fo'!nd, said
The tr.lln cars were la.~t inspected
Council approved -the installation"
Randy Cheetluun. a CSX vice presi- . when tbey !\lopped in Ruil...ell. Ky.. on of II concrete plld.• along the park·
dent.
the way to Hqntington, Bums said.
ing 101 at a cost of $4411. The cost
Bums also 1old The Henald·DisCleanup crews g01 the last of 30 includes materials; concrete and rein·
patch ~wspaper Monday the track · . derailed train cars back on the track forcing wire.
wa.• ins1117~ ~ the Federal Rail· Monday. ~ledring the way for crews · Councilwoman Geri Walton dis,tolld-AdmlRI5tnltlon on May 2.
t 10 remove soil contaminated by the cussed W!ller problems on Spring·
· Saturday's accillent f~ about spjll.
.
· · Avenue. Vaughan said a temporary
SOO people to leave t.hear homes
Bums llllld she hoped the track water line ha.•· been installed. The
allho\lgh most were allowed 10 return would be open aaain for rail traffic . road, is also wa.•hed DIH and needs
that evening. A few families whOHe tooay.
· ·
repaired. he said.
homt. driveways were blocked by
(COntln~ on , ....3)
c.leanup equipment were expected .10
lie allowed·IO ret11m sometime today
a.~ cleanup efforts are finished.
ByBRIAfiJ.REED
Williaril O'Sullivan, chief of the
S.nUnel News Staff
FRA's Rail Division, ~jd the
The Meigs County .Commission·
a8ency's. inspection was more of a
.
..
er.;awardeda.contracton Monday td
cross i:beck IIi determine if the comATHENS (AP)- An·Ohio Uni· .. surehowmuchNobledrankbeca&amp;i.~ the Shelly Co.. Thornville.forpaving
. puny's inspections.are correct.
of several 1:ounty roads.
versiay student who5e lxldy wa.~ toleranc:e to alcohol vines.
'
The coroner listed drowning as the · The projects, totaling $271,506,
found in tile Hocking River last
cause
of .death, but said alcohol will be fundl!d through Round 12 of
month had been 1~toxicated. Athens
int~ication
wau secondary cause.. thil'State Capital Improvement Pro"
County's coroner·!aid. .
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"If lhis guy· WI!Sri't drinking the jtl.'l. formerly called Issue II. Roads
Final autopsy a:esults showed Keith Noble. 19. of Worthington.lu,ld a W!lyhewas.hewouldhavebeenable i~luded in this year's projecL~ are
blood-alcohol level of 0.24 pe~nt. to swim. and he wouldn't have Success Road from Slate Route 7 to
·ocuav·s
SR 248, County Road 1'0 from
Dr. Eric Ha.'lemeier A!,lid Monday. The droWned," Hasemeier said:-"
No
lllhct
druas
were
found
in
·
Lanasville to Dexter, and Royal Oak
S(cltion • 10 Pages
Klute's lepllimii fpr drivin&amp; is O.llt
Vol. 49, No. 44
percent.
,
· Noble 'slxldy. and there were no signs Road from Five Points to Pine Grove
''AtO. IS is .when you stanpttina of jnjlll)'. violence orfon:ed drinkins. Road. .
·
. . The bad from Shelly was the only
nausea and vof!litins. By 0.17S the COIIIIICt said.
1
Nol!le disappeared April 2S after &gt;,il bne received by the commissione111
you 'rB mggerina preuy &amp;ood. By
0.30 you stan 10 see Jllli!Pie soina into attending a party. Two illllknts walk· for the work, 1100 was approved. by
, coma. So, 0.24 is., way .beyond ina alona the river found his bally the board upon the recommendataon
May6.
·· · ·
ofRobettEUon.MeigsCountyEnsi·
dru11k," Hasemeier saj4.
·
·neer.
,
'· The coroner said he could not bC
The commisiione... met with
SlleOff J11111e1 Souliby 10 discuss the
fiscal stepS neceu1ry to take delivery
on the county's new sheriff's cruiser
fleet.
CHARLESTON.
(AP)-. A Muon County R1111 wu ki'led when
Soulsby said that the six can are
lirB 1Je was wortina on exploded in hi• fact. .
·
e~tpecred 10 be available for delivery
Earl Wayne Smilh, 43, of Point PIUMIIII, died Sunday at St. Mary's Hos- Iller lhis week. The commissionen
. 3: 84· 7; Pick 4: l-2-2-4
pi... iii Huntlnlfon,
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purchased part of ,the vehicles
.I *U,. 5: 7-18·22-31·3S &lt;
,
. Smith was workina on a buck lirB when the (irB exploded llld llnK:k him through a loan from People&amp; Banking
in tbe'face, $lid a spokesman at Crow·Huasell Funeralt-lome in Point Pleas- ; &amp; Trust Co., and Soulsby purclwed
an,t.
one from his Funherance of Justice
. Smith owned Smith Pavlaa in Point Pleasant.
Fund. a discretionlll}: fund he ·con.

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Mason County _pavlng firm owner
dies when :tire bursts In his face

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DIRECTOR HONoRED- For the pelt 10 years, John D. "'Iebei
Sr. haa HrVICI aa director of the AduH Baalc and Literacy Education program In Meigs County. He will retire on July 1. On behaH
of the atllff, Pit Neace, an instructor, preaMtad him with IIi plaque.
and Ronald .Grimm. over 200 ·
h,ours: and Charles Smilh. Kathy
Lemley. Debra Faulk. Melissa Hoi·
ley. Tina Chevalier. Sheryl Little.
Meles.ha l'auley. Shannon Roush
and Davi!l McDonald. uver 100
hours.
Making the presentations were
instructors Lois lhle. Pat Neece.
Meryl Houdashelt. Susan King.
. Shirley ·Mitchell and Avonelle
Evans, assisted by John Anderson.
pres idem of the Rotary Club.
Special recognition wa.s given
to Shirley Mitchell. who is leaving

the program after II years. She
.was presented a plaque. Also given special recognition was John ·o.
Riebel Sr.. Meigs County superintendent of sehools and director of
the ABLE program For the past 10
yean;. He is retiring eFfective July
I.

Numerous door prizes con·
lributed by local banks and merchants were awarded following ·
the presentation ceremony. The
dinner wa.' prepared by Vaughan's ·
IGA and provided by the MiddleiJOI'!·Pomeroy Rotary Club.

Commissioners award .paving .worJ&lt; .
on Meigs County roads to Shelly Co~

Good Afternoon

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OU student 'way -beyond
. k'..·when h.e .d rowned
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1-~~E:~.IJ.6-1570 ~TDP/TTY)
h

By JIM FREEMAN .
Sentinel N-• Staff .
· A cnlckdown on people parting
· their ~ars on village sidewalks is in
the works. according 10 Pomeroy
Mayor Frank Vaughan.
·. .
Vaughan announced.the action at
.Monday niaht's regular meeting of ·
Pomeroy Village Council. He said
Police Chief Jeff Miller will be talking with residents who park their cars
.on sidewalks. Parking on sidewalks
· is prohibited in the vilfage. he noted.
The Conc:em is that pedestrians.
particularly childR:n and seniors, are
e~gered when IIIey have 10 walk
.into the streets 10 set around parked
cars.
.
~ ~~re is iiO·necd I!J' pGrk· where
·JleOple can't ge• by," said Mayor
Frank Vauahan.
"It is hard enouah for able-bodied
people. but when we send kids out in
ll)e road we a.e asking for trouble."
he said.
In more rouiine matters, council
authorized the purclia.o;e of a striping
machinefor $~49 for painting stripes
on parking lOis and streets.

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CSX in specte.,d tracks ·
d b f ·d , •1
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ay e ore r ~rat men . aaa7.:::1 :::h~esa~~~~':n~

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trois.
verting the county's. self-funded ·
Commissioner Jeff Thornton dis- health insumnce plan to covera~e
cussed with Soulsby a recent invoice through a private insurance company.
received by the coun1y for S23.001l.
David Jenkins. an employee of tlie ·
1he monthly cost of housing o1nd Department or fiuman Services. ·
lmnsporting county prisoners at the attended the meeting. to invite ahe
. new regional jail in Nelsonville. ·
commissioners to meet with employ- .
The commissioneo; estimate that ees of thai agency to·discuss possibli: ·
the coumy's cost of hou.~ing and · changes to the county's health insut·
·transporting its prisoners outside of ance plan.
the county will eKceed $i00,000
In Olher business, the board e.aa6.
before the endof the year.
· fished several budgetary line ite!lls fb
Thornton also said that he was facilitale the purchase of the ne~
arranging 10 have a contraclor look at computer system for the county audj..
the cost or installi'ng the firewall and lor's otTice. approved transfers
other structural modifications funds for the Community Correctioft';
required by the state fire marshal in Program and County Highway
order to keep the jail open.
Depwtment. and approved lhe pa)'-·
Thornton announced that the lnsti· menl of county bills in the amount
tule for Local Government Adminis· · $352,439.26. with 316 entries.
uation · and Rural Development
The commissioners also:
.(ILGARO), 11n orgnnizalion which
• Authorized a contmct between
provides technology services IO local the Meigs County Department of
fovemments through its oft;ices in . Human Services · and Veterans
Athens, will provide the commis· Memorial Hospitallo perform blood .
siol)erS with a new computer. The tests necessary in paternity determi·
computer will allow the conunis· nation cases and a·contract between
sioners internet ·access and will be the DHS.and Meigs Educationul Ser•
used 10 launch a new commissioners' vice Center for Adult Basic Literacy
internet web page. ·
EducatiOA services;
Commis.•ioner Janet Howard said
• ~e~iewed a letter from 1the
the comrniuioners met with several Chester Townllhip Trustees announc·pri'vate ii)SIIrance cllrien last Fridty ing ~r inlllnt to close a ponion of
to gather information about tile cost Township Road oll3, put Kennedv
and benefits associated with coo- Cemetery;
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Tuesday, June 23, 1998

·c ommentar
The Daily Sentinel
-

Xst®fiskrl in 1948
111 Court Strnt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett
Co.
.
. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publl1her
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Generel M-ger

DIANE HIL-L
Controller

Farmland .preservation
gets attention in June
By PAUL SOUHRADA
;Aaloclated F'!reaa Writer
: COLUMBUS (AP) - What could the Ohio Department or Insurance
-possibly do to innuence the amount of the state's farmland being gobbled up
by development?
Probably nothing.
Nonetheless, the insurance department and more than two dozen other
state agencies and commissions have until the end of the month to identify
policies that might affect farmland use and to come up with a plan to minimize their impact.
Gov. George Voinov1ch ordered the review m January in the 'wake of last
-ycai's report from the Ohio Farmland Preservation Task Force. It's another
.indication of how the future of agriculture and land use has entered the public debate over everything from highway projects to political campaigns.
"I think We've already made a difference because we've heightened
awareness," said Karl Gebhardt, executtve director of the Ohio Office of
Farmland Preservation.
Gebhardt, whose office was created in November - also after the task
force meetings, is in charge of collecting the reports from the state agencies
11nd compiling them into recommendations that will be forwarded to Lt.
Gov. Nancy Hollister.
.
1
The goal is to develop a statewide policy that can be dovetailed with
efforts at the county level, he explained. So far, about two dozen counties
have their own farmland preservation task forces. Hollister announced last
'week that the Department of Development will give up to $10,000 to help
loclil communities develop a farmland strategy.
~spite the ra:&gt;id disappearance of farmland in certain areas of the state
-Medina Coumy, for example- Gebhardt figures Ohio has time to design
'a statewide lanol-use plan.
.
"We are. no( in a farmland crisis in Ohio," be emphasized. ''We can take
our time and work at solutions."
That theme goes over better at some of the dozens of public meetings
Gebhardt holds on the topic than at others, however.
" I sense that in some areas, development has been going so fast ... people feel things are a little out of control."
Contributing some beat to the debate: the growing number of l'!l'ge-scale
'livestock a~ egg operations around Ohio, Gebhardt said.
Around those facilities, the worry isn't about a new housing development
or Wal-Mart moving in across the_ road. It's the constant complaints by
neighbors and government regulators of nics, beetles, water and air pollutio!l and industrial-strength animal odQrs.
"In those areas where you have the CrOtons, the Buckeye Eggs ... yes,
they'll: getting very emotional about it," Gebhardt said, referring to one of
the major targets of complaints by neighbors and environmentalj!roups.
Kit Fogle, legislative director for the Ohio Fanners Union, also noticed
the increased spotlight on food safety and other fanning ISSues.
"People arc starting to wonder where tbelf rood comes from," said Fogle.
whose group represents 'mostly smaller. family-run farms.
And that, Foj!le said, has attracted the attention of policy makers and candidates.
·
Mary Boyle. the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate seat heing
·vacated by John dlcnn, has latched onto the issue. So has Richard Cordray,
a Democrat challenging Attorney General Betty Montgomery.
Both candidates say the state should stop issuing permits for new "megafarms." a move opposed by ·Voinovich- who also happens to be B.oylc's
opponent.
"It seems like everybody is interested in this issue, .. Fogle said. "And it
cnuld get b1gger. '

Berry's
World
W66b"f0

CASUAL

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~Today

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Tuelday, June 23, 1111

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By JICk Ander1on

and Jan Moller
HONG KONG -~ From a plush
high-rise apartment overlookmg the
South China Sea, the Chinese
takeover of Hong Kong last year no
longer seems so significant.
A 26-year-old woman recently
held a· party in the condo with IS
childhood friends to celebrate her
return from a car in Pahs. where
she was learning how to make pastries.
Lounsing on leather so(as, drinking wine and popping cream puffs
into their mouths, the 20-somethings, who had grown up in Hong
Kong, mocked the Chinese takeover.
A year after last summer's celebration died ~own, almost everything
seems the same.
"That was such a big story all
over the world, but here all it meant
was a chance to party all night," said
one young woman.
Just a year ago, fears were npe
that July 20, 1.997 would mark the
last day of such freedom. Some worried that Chinese soldi~rs would roll
into the city in tanks with rines
drawn.
Instead, Hong Kong has become
a place of duality and illusion. On

the surface a
VISitOr
stiJI
sees the bright
lights and consumer culture
, . L······
that character.........
ize this bastion
of unbridled
capitalism.
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Beneath the
surface are the
Chinese Communist leaders
Moller"&amp;
who rule the
Anderaon
political power structure.
So far-- as President Clinton will
see when he visits the island this
week -· the Chmese officials have
done a pretty good~ob staying out of
the way. Clinton will find a city
where residents are far mote focused
on stock prices than the political
happenings in Be1jing.
Some signs of change are cvi·
dent: Police officers now wear military green uniforms mstead of the
old navy blue. The legislature is
controlled by Communists, despite
electiOns last month that favored
democratic candidates.
But wealthy island residents still
meet in trendy coffee shops along
Hong Kong's steep streets to sip

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mochaS and discuss the news of the '
world. Nearby, the neon logos of
companies like Citicorp still dot lhe
skyline. Noboc!y tries to silence the
anti-Beijing protestors who gather
each day to liurl epithets at their
overseers,
Rather than pulling Hong Kong
down, the Chinese seem to be holding it up as an .example for the mainland. Already much of the foreign
investment and trade going mto
China goes through Hong Kong, and
the Chinese government has actually
mndFied much of its future growth
on the island success.
Even befOtiC the handover, the
Chinese saw a growth explosion in
the Shenzben Special Economic
Zone it created near Hong Kong in
1980 to encourage development.
For every job created in th~
British colony over the past 18
years, the mainland gained ~t least
two jobs, according to Chinese estimates. Shen7.hen has grown from a
fishing. village of- 10,000 people on
one ~quare mile to a thriving city of
more than 3 million on 21 square
miles.
After the Chinese opened Shenzhcn to investment. Hong Kong's
economy turned from one based on

trade with the rest of the world into
one whose growth depends more.on
'the success or the mainland. While
retaining most of its financial and
services industries, Hong Kong lost
its light industrial firms to the Chinese mainland.
"Most of the fears were political
and ideological," said Sue Headlee,
a China npcrt at American University in W.JShington, D.C. "Not : to
belittle the differences in human
rights, but Hong Kong is not going
to have any economic instability
because the ISland is linked into
Southern China. ''
If life seems free for Hong Kong
residents on the surface, however,
Beijing keeps its finger on the
province. Communist Party leaders
have to be careful abl&gt;ut wruu tlicy
say publicly, ~ut they control the
island government with a handpicked guvcrn&lt;lf and legislature.
Solnc observers here think the
new government actually rcpreserits
Hong Kung's residents better than
the old nne d1d because the govcrnllf
and legislature arc ethnic &lt;!:hine..C,
not British. Some British governors
knew very little ahnut.the colooy '
until they arrived.
But · Hcemin Kim .. professor ·ur
Chinese roliucs at Florida State
University. believes that mainline
Chinese arc more out of touch w.ith
Hong Kong than even the British.
"Ethnically, the new government
mlly be more representative, but tbe
people nl' Ho1111 Kong have been
exposed to Western ideas, Western
living and mo.,t·itllflOrtaiiGy cat'italist ways of doing business," he said.
"Old, mainline Chinese have been
practicing a socialist form of economy· for 50 years."
Yet little of this matters to· the
young revelers celebrating the return
of a friend iri a luxury high-rise. Few
of the partygocn spoke any Mandarin or Cantonese .. ·yet these arc
folks who will help sh_ape ihe
island's economy in coming years.
It seems even the Qld Communists in China have figured out tlie
best way for governments to deal
with~ free market: Leave it alone.'
Jack Anderson and Jtlll Moll~r
are writen for tlnited Featun
S)'lklleate, Inc.
·

The TV woman looked eager
enough to try the new amusement·
park rtde. Donned in a rain poncho
and plastic goggles, she bravely
stepped up to the machine that
simulates the experience of being
in a ~6rnado, allow&lt;ng fierce
winds to nap that poncho and
eventually send her cMcening
back onto the guard rail. As she
yelled at the operators to turn the
machme off, 1t appeared that the
ersatz-tornado experience had left
·
something 10 he desired.
"It was scary," was the commentators only comment.
And ·this traveling tornado is
JUst a pale comparison to the
"Twister" ride that recently
opened at the Univehial Studios
theme park last month.
In a press release for "Twister
... Ride It Out," Universal Studios
Escape president and chief exec'u·
tive officer Tom Williams boasted
about the ride's realism.
"Our guests will feel like
they've stared into the face of a

'

real twister. luck, we'll soon be experie11cing
They will thrills and chills on:
'
feel
like
-- The "Titanic" ride. Experiwe've har- ence the thrill or pushing old
nessed the ladies and .:hildren aside as you
of race for the lifeboats. Then plunge
force
nature and into ice-cold water and hans on to
put
them driftwood until you turn blue.
right in the
•• "The English Patient" ride.
middle ."
Find out what. it really feel~ like to
Those
have your entire body covered
wishintt to with third-dettrec burns,
be right in Experience: excruciating sexual
Eckel
tlie center of frustration as nuhilc actors. spoont.his harnessed nature w1ll find feed you and then go off and sleep
themselves whipred by 35-mile- with each other.
'
an-hour winds and showered with
-- The ':Pulp Fiction" ride.
pelting ram. They will hear the Experience heart-pounding action
roar or a fre1ght train and feel the as you get droned up and are then
room shake.
revived after a junkie lobs a fourAs they watch the landscape rtp inch ne.edle ioto your sternum.
apart, gas pumps will e•plode and
•· The "Boogie Nights" Tide.
sparks· will ny as downed power Feel yourself robbed of all dignity
lines fall.
and self-worth as you gratify
Sound like a good time? Then I yourself in the J'ront scat of a pickhave. excellent news.
up and then get your teeth kicked
I ·reccinly obtained a secret in.
. ·
memo detailing other proposed
-· The "RcservQir Dogs" ride.
movic-thcmcd rides. With any Ever wonder how it would feel to

be tied up, covered with gasoli.nc
and have your car cut off'/ Well,
yo~'re just ahout to find nut.
,,
· •• The "Scream" ride. Feel tl'f.:
intense irony of having Y&lt;!Ur
friends hacked tn ricccs while you '
make smarmy wisecracks at old
'
"Halloween" movies.
-·The "Icc Sturm" ride. ExP,.irience the terror of living in a dys(unctional family in the 1970s.
Exchange keys with unattracti\(e
neighbors and f10d out what ii.:s
like to have truly empty and unfulfilling SCl.
. '
-· The "As Good As It GeL•~'
ride. Find out how it feels to be'\n
lonely and disenfranchised tl)at
you at:tually go for a racist, scxisi,
homophobic ohscssi vc-cnmpulsivc . .
Arc we having fun yet'!
.
Sara Eckel Is a syndicate(!
writer for Newspaper Entef;·
prise Assocliltion.
Send comments to lhc author
In care or this newspaper or senil
her c·mall at saraeumaol.com. ;

.

-

.n

1'1

in ·history

;By TheAieocllad P....
~ Today is Tuesday, lune 23. the 174th day of 1998. There are 191 days left
• in the year.
; Today 's Highlilht in History;
' On June 23, 1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority wu established.
On this date:
, In 1836, Congress approved the Deposit Act. which contained a pro~ision
; for turnins over surplus federal revenue to the states.
, In 1868, Olristopher Lalham Shol~s rueived a parent for an invention he
·called a "'JYpe-Writer."
.
: In 1931, aviators Wiley Post and Harold Oatty tOOk off from New York
.on lhe first round-the-world Oicht in asinsle-easine pl-.
. In 1947. 1he Sellllle joined the House in overridina President Tl'liiiiM's
veto of 1be Taft-Hanley Ac:r. ·
'
In 1956, GltlllaJ Abele! Nasser was elected president of l!gyp,
(
I

I

Th!s Memonal Day set a record
for a1r travel: Apparently, thousands of Amerrcans chose to _honor
our f~~len war dea~ by .llysng to·
Hawau and snorkehn&amp;. y.'hy? .
Well, the ~eather s gettrng
~ack to ~orrnal, ~nd the economy
IS boonuag, We re takt~g deep
breaths,. and t~ sud~n snnux of
oxygen •s f~!akln~ u~ hghtheaded.
El !'l•no 1s sh~1nlung faster than
t~e fe~era! defrc1t. AI_ the sa~c
ume, lfontc:ally,. !une 1s bpst•~g
out all over, u ts us wont. June rs .
as b1g as. a bank merger, happy _as
a. retiree wnh a V•asra prescnJI"
_ u~n..
.
.
l1kc t.be swallow!N:om•ng-b~ck
to Caputrano, . the p~aycr-anschool amendment made 1ts annu• · the Housc o r
al appearanc
. ~ .tn
Representatives, then new away
.
· d
·
asar~. D1sappomte conscrv_at•ves
~Cc1ved another blow to their ~elreate ~sycbes when Operauon
Rescue s protest of Gay Day at
. ney "'
D1s.
!"Orld dn;w, on 1Y seven
pr~lesters. Maybe were becomms
II bttle more tolerant. Maybe the
'de f I b'
S
M
• . a o es 1ans on pace ountam no longer makes us shudder.
Maybe.
.But are . the ~ccular forces of
~vii ~a!benng? 1 d say so.. A man
•n Mr~nesota JUSt .01 marrted at a
shop~m1 mall.to a woman ch~sen
for h1m by fnends and relatrves. ·
Worse, w~~en actually c~mpete.d
fo~ tf!e pnvtlege of weddmg thts

jerk! . They
submttted
resumes!
Dinky;
the
chihuahua in
the Taco Bell
ads,
has
inspired
a
w.ave of chihuahua-buying in pet-!ovin~· America.
W~ · re goi ns
to be inundated
Shotllea .
with' twitchy
little yapping dogs. Not tn mention Beanie Babies. If they're not
evidence lhat these aro the Latter
Days, well, I'm no secular humanisl witl! situational cihies.
But lhe tireless defenders of
•oam1·1 Y va 1ucs aren 't JliVJng
· · up JUst
.
Pat Robenson, responding to
oyer.
1 d A • d · ·
. r an o, a. s ecJSron 10 put up
rainbo~ nags in support of sexual
diversity. proclaimed that homosexuality "will bring about terror· bom bs, 11
· 'II bnng
· earthquakes,
1st
tornadoes and possibly a meteor."
What lends his proclamation
credibility, in niy opinion, is that
" possibly." He hedscs his prophe~Y just enough to make it convincmg. The boinbs, the quakes and
twisters are a done ~l •• lha~ks to
gay people, but the JUry s st1ll out
~n t~ meteor. Maybe if you're
JUSt btsexual you can step out of
the way.
.
And lhe Southern Baptists are

coming out of the chute, guns
blazing.
They chose Salt Lake City, of
all places, ror their recent convention. This is rather like carryins
coals to Newcastle, tryins to sell
!&gt;atsuns at a GM plant, or anempt·
tng to convert the pope.
So far though, Mormons bave
remained more bemused than
..nnoyed by the presenc~ of Bap),ists in their midst. No fistfights
have erupted between Mormon
and Baptist missionaries, at least
not on my doorstep.
With amazin1 truculence, the
conventioneers declared that
w\vcs were "created to be
helpers" to their husbands. A wife
should and must "submit" to her
lifemate's leadership
· about reli. I don:t· .know much
J!mn but I vc been around enough
'
women to know that this policy
. will never Oy. If husbands submitted to wives, now, we might get
somewhere
· way it's going to
That's the
work out anyway. Practice these
two words Southern Baptist men·
•
.., .
"Yes, dear." Trust me on this.
·. Tht! conventioneers also .decid·
ed that · "homosexuality defies
even childbinh, since it negates
· nat~ral conception." Of homosexuahty's cause-and-effect relationship with bombs,lornldoes, earthquakes and (possibly) mete.ors,lhe
Southern Baptists remain stnn1e- ·
ly silent.
•
j

•

But in·other Baptist news, J~li~
Pennington-Russel, a Southern
Baptist pastor right here in San
Francisco (aka Babylon, . akp
Sndom del Mar) has been named
pastor or the 300-mcmber Calvary
Southern Baptist Church. in
Texas.
:
The church wu promptly pi~k~
eted by God Said Ministries,. al.
ultra-fundamentalist sect.
'
W.N. Otwell, its paSIO(.
claimed that hiring a remale pastor
was "a crime against God, the
home, the husband, tbe childre6
and society as a whole."
Further, Calvary Baptist is
"responsible, along with the fcmi:
nists, as thci main cause of chil.l
abuse, abortion, domestic vio'!
lcncc divorce te
· '
•
•
en
prcgnancr&amp;s,
drug and alcohol abuse, pornoJi!ij
phy teen err·me
· 1 ••
•
• gang vro cnc.. j
racial tensions and the ever.
· increasing coming out of the clos;
et of the sodomites and lesbians·.•,
Pastor
p
·
R r.j
cnnrngtonresponded, "I was
surpriseduss,.
lte
left out global warming." And o(
Poursc poss'thl
t
h'
.. .. •
y, me con, c '"
huahuas and Beanie Babies. " · :
(Jan Shoales' new book, "Nol
Wet Yet," is available from:
2.1),61 Publication 1s, PO Box·
1910, Los Anceles, CA 90078.:
The toll-free number is 1-800-'
992-1361.)
•• :
Iu Shoela 11 a syatllca~:
writer for New1 paper •Eatfr~;
P.rile AIIIC!Ciiltltm.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Recorder posts land transfers-·

Wedoi!Sday, June 24
AecuWeathe~ forecut for

conditions and hJih temjleratures

· The following land transfers were
reoorded recent! y in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton :
Deed, · Don M. and Cathy G.
Monna June Andreoni, 61, Middleport, died on Saturday, June 20, 1998 Erwin to Robert H. and Janice L.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Bratton, MidJileport lots:
Born March 22, 1937 in Langsville, daughter of the late Samuel J. and
Deed, T.H. Associates to Donald
Lilly Marie Nelson Smith, she wa~ a member of the Women's Amdliary of Shaffer, Lebanon, 50 acres;
the Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion, and attended the RutDeed, Robert S. and Aretta M.
land Church of the Nazarene.
Montgomery to Anthony and Gerri
Surviving are her husband, Orlando Joseph Andreoni; five sons. Rod M. Riffle, Letart lots;
(Diane) Walker and Danny (Kay) Walker, both of Rutland. Paul (Rita) Walk·
Sheriffs Deed, Harold W. Fetty,
' erof Dexter, Terry (Tammy) Walker of Columbus, and Greg (Debbie) Walk- deceased. to Farmer's Bank and Saver of Point Pleasant; a daughter, Rhonda (Charhe) Tabor of Gallipolis; II
ings Company, Pomeroy parcels;
grandchildren and a great-grandchild; two sisters. Yvonne (Leslie) WhitDeed, Southern Ohio Coal Co. to
tington and Betty Schnee mann, both of Middleport; two brothers. Raymond Billy R. and Ruby S. Hall, Salem,
(Lydia) Smith of Pomeroy, and Charles Smith of Rutland; and several nieces 66.512 acres;
and nephews..
Deed, Charles T. and Donna R.
She was also preceded in death by two brothers, Ronald Smith and Bill Pullins to Donald P. and Edn~ Ruth
Smith. and two sisters, Marjorie Joann Bank.~ and Wanda Louise SR)ith.
Wilson. Chester, .343 acre;
Services were held at II a.m. today, Tuesday, June 23. 1998 at the RutDeed, William K. Jr. and Trudy J.
land Church of the Nazarene, with the Rev. Lloyd Grimm officiating, with Marshall to William K. Marshall Jr.,
burial following at the Miles Cemetery in Rutland. Visitation wa• held at the Chester parcels;
Middleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home on Monday.
Deed, William K. Marshall to
Trudy J. Marshall, Middleport;
Deed, George and Margaret Buck·
ley to Bas1l.J. and Charlotte L. Dye,
J1mmy Ray Smith, 60, Hamilton, died Tuesday, June 16, 1998 at his home, . Olive, .387 acre;
Deed, Patrick D, and Audrey E.
following an extended illness.
He was born Nov. 15, 1937 at Graham Station, W.Va., the son of Harri- Wood to Richard W and Ruby A.
Vaughan, Pomeroy p8rcels;
son and Ruth Grady Smilh of Racine.
Deed, Nellie E. and Wayne
He was a graduate of Ravenswood (W.Va.) High School, a U.S. Marine
Samuel
Michael to Wayne Samuel
Corps veteran, a carpenter for Russ lbomas Construction of Hamilton, and
and Nellie E. Michael. Salem p-oli'Cels;
attended the First Baptist Church of Hamilton.
Right of .way, Pamela S. and
· In addition to his parents, he is survived by his wife, Eldeana Williams
Frank
M. Colwell to Tuppers PlainsSmith; two daughters and sons-in-law, Lisa and Ralph Loveless of HamilChester
Water DIStrict, Chester, I.969
ton, and Pamela and Mark Jacobs of Palm Coa.~t. Fla.; two sons and a dough·
ter·in-law, Terry Wayne Smith of Goshen, and Nathan IUld Lisa Smith of acres;
Right of way, Fred and Dorothy
Loveland; four grandchildren: five brothers and sisters-in-law. Eugene and
Comin~ky
to TPCWD, Orange,•.904
Pamela Smith of Lexington, S.C., Carroll and Irene Smith of RavenswOod,
acre;
Kenny and Maxine Smith of Mount Alto, W.Va., Curtis B. and Sandra Smith
Right of way, Retha M. Day to
of Jane Lew, W.Va., and Scottie and Esther Smith of Chester; 'lllld three sisTPCWD.
Bedford/Orange. 60 acres:
ters and brothers-in-law, Mary and Tony Weedo of Ormond Beach. Aa.. ConRight
of
way, Randall M. and
nie and William Ralston of Chillicothe, and Penny and William Elam of
Kristina
S.
Boston
to TPCWD, Olive,
Racine.
Services were held Saturday, June 20, 1998 at the Casto Funeral Home 53 acres;
Right of way. Henry C. and Rae
in Evans, W.Va. wilh the Rev. Gerald B. Sayre officiating. Burial wa.~ in the
Ann
Levine to TPCWD, Scipio;
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Right of way, Roland E. and Sherry Goodwin to TPCWD, Chester;
Right of way, Harold and Eloise
Boston to TPCWD, Olive;
(Continued from Page 1)
Councilman George Wright disRight of way, Louise and Keith
"No Parking" signs are needed cussed a drain that is collapsing Chaffee to TPCWD, Orange;
along Butternut Avenue, Walton said. along Ea.•t Main Street.
Right of way. Thomas A. and TerBallard said he examined basketIn other business, council ri L. Hawley to TPCWD. Chester;
ball rims for the Main Street court, approved the sole fuel bid for village
Right of way, Jeffrey R. and Maradding that there is little difference vehicles from G &amp; M Ashland Fuel ilyn E Peal to TPCWD. Orange;
between $190 hoops and $20 hoops. Co.. Minersville, and approved the
Right of way, D. Thomas and BilHe was instructed to it)vestigate minutes from June 'I and June 6 meet- lie Pi Iotti to TPCWD, Orange:
the subject further, to determine a fea- ings.
Deed, Dottie S. Turner, Charmele
sible. vandalism-resistant method of
L. Spradling, Jerry A. Spradling.
Clerk/Trea~urer Kathy Hysell premounting the hoops, and to return sented the following financial report Brenda K. Jeffers, Betty Jo Collins
with an estimate of cost.
for May: general fund, $69,195.98; and David W. Collins to Jack J.
He also reiterated his opposition to
safety, $4.1~5; street, (-$10,166.40); Spradling and Tina M. Kelley, Scipio,
village employees being allowed to state highway, $4,085.1 5; fire, 5.8138 acres;'
use village vehicles for private use.
Deed, Judith A. and John T.
$18,232.52; cemetery, $8,785; water,
Councilman Larry Wehrung tar- $20,436.77; sewer, 55,673.83; guar- Williams, Anne M. and Paul L.
geted plugged up drains on Lincoln anty meter. $20,028.37; utility, Chapman to Judith A. and John T.
Heights and said something must be $9.734.62; overtime grant. $3,418; Williams, Syracuse parcels;
dOne to the Century Bar, a long- perpetual care, $7,32 1.24; ~-emetery
Deed, Carl Richard Hysell to Carl
standing eyesore on West Main endowment, $38,446.59; police pen- Richard and Donald L. Hysell, Rut·
Street.
sion, $6.530.77; building fundi, land Village parcels;
He suggested that at the minimum $2,891.72; FEMA Ill, $4.027.09;
Deed, Linda L. Holter to James W.
a false front could be installed on the recreation, $2,124.35: permissive tax, Cunningham, Sutton, 1.008 acres;
building to address concerns over ' $4,111.19;
Deed. Edna M. Nance to Alicia C.
law' enforcement.
common walls shared with neigh· $4,707 .70; Cops Fa~t Grant, Council, Sutton tracts;
boring structures,
Deed, Audrey June Ashley to
$11,783.75; ODNR Grant, (He also noticed that the rivelbank $9, 137 .SO); downtown revitalization, John E. and Luda I. Anderson, Letart;
is becoming overgrown again .
Deed, Heidi J. and Lawrence R.
$115.65: total. $226,481.63.
Smith Jr., Keith D.. Emma and Clif·
·ford Ashley to Audrey June Ashley,
Letart;
Easement, Alice Fleming and
Robert
Vorpe to Colutnbus Southern
Annual meeting set
Planning session
Power,
Lebanon:
The annual meeting of the CarThe Chester-Shade Days planEasemem, Michael Robert Vorpe
leton College Board of Trustees will
ning meeting will be held this to CSP, Lebanon;
be held at 7 p.m. Thursday at the ' evening (Tuesday), 7:30p.m. at the
Easement, Thomas Edward Vorpe
Syracuse home of Robert Wingett, Chestllr ·firehouse. A report of comto
CSP,
Lebanon;
president. All members are urged to mittees is needed.
Easement. Ann Vorpe Keller to
attend.
CSP.
Lebanon;
EXPO meeting
Reunion lo. be held
The Town and Country EXPO
The Whaley reunion wi II be held meeting will be held Thursday, 7:30
Sunday at noon at the Forked Run p.m. at the Meigs County Fair- .
WASHINGTON (API-lntcrest
State Park. Those attending are to groum!.• grange building. All com- rates on short-term Trea•ury securitake lawn chain and two covered mittee members and other interested ties were mi•ed in Monday's auction.
dishe.~.
persons are a•ked to attend. For
The Treasury Department sold
more information resident5 may call $5 .78 billion. in three-month bills at
Support JI'OIIP
949-2746 evenings.
an average discount rJte of 4.990 perThe Caring· and Sharing Support
cent. down from 5.010 percent la•t
Group will meet at the Senior Citiweek. An additional $7.26 billion wa.•
zens Center Thursday from I to 2:30
Units of the Meigs County Emer- sold in six-month b1lls at an average
p.m. Bon"ie Mcfarland will speak on
gency Medical Service recorded six r.lle of 5.120 percent, up from 5.065
the Holzer Wellness Progrnm. The calls for a.~sislance Monday. Unit~ percent.
public is invited to attend.
responding included:
The three-month rate was the
CENTRAL DISPATCH
lowest since June I, when the bills
Open gym slaled
4:18 p.m.. Spring Avenue. sold for 4.945 percent. The sixOpen gym at Meigs Middle
Pomeroy. Martha Graham, Plea.~ant
School, Middleport, will be held
Valley Hospital;
Monday, 9·11 a.m. for girls entering
5:33 p.m.• Holly Lane, Pomeroy,
seventh or eighth grade.~ in the Meigs
An action for divorce ha.• been
Rex O'Brien, Holzer Medical Center,
Local Scbool District Information on Pomeroy squall a'l.•isted;
filed in' Meigs County Common
an upcoming shoot-a-thon will be
6:.56 p.m.. Bowles Road, Dexter, Plea• Court by Melissa Kay
given at this time. All girls playing Samuel Williams. PVH, Rutland Maxwell, also known a, Melissa Kay
ba.•ketball are urged to attend. For squad a~sisted;
King, Pomeroy, against Rodney
more information call992-6728.
Kevin
Maxwell. Salt Lake City, Utah.
RACINE
)
9:20 p.m.. Elmwood Terrace,
ikpkhstset
Lucille Diehl, Veteran.• Memorial
A pancake and sausage-breakfast · Hospital.
will be held July 4 with serving from
REEDSVILLE
8 to II a.m. at the Hockingport Fel3:08 a.m., Coolville Road, Doris
lowship Hall. Cost is $3. The event Tuttle, St. Josepli's Hospital.
is sponsored by the Hockingport
1 RUTLAND
United Methodist Wonlen.
7:58 p.m., Salem Street, Doris
Thomas, Holzer Medical Center.

Monna June Andreoni

MICH.

Here's more ideas for theme~park. rides
By Sara Eckel ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Hong Kong: Old-communists,
new
capitalists
'
'

By l~n Shoalea

fltii&gt;AVS~

.

•-·

The weather's getting back to normaf \

111ll£M 010

•
•
••
•
•
•
•
••

Pege2

--

•

M.

IMansfield I 8e• I•
'' '

• ICcllumbus I 90' I

c'

W.VA.

Jimm}: Ray Smith

un_
ny s . , soa ng
;.~emps set Wednesday
'BY The Associated Prell
An approUI.'hing high pressure system will clear out the storm clouds over
10hio tonight and Wednesday.
'·''• ' Lows tonight will be 65-70.
.
o·· · With the clouds dissipating. skies will be mostly sunny on WedneSday.
.!the National Weather Service said. Temperatures will soar into the 90s,
A'n isolated shower or thunderstorm is possible in the extreme northwest.
" · The record-higl) temper~ture for this date at the Columbus weather staJtlon was 96 degrees in 1948 while the record low was 44 in 1918. Sunset
tonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:04 a.m.
.,,,.
Weather roncast:
.. Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s. West wind .5 to 10 mph,
:tlecoming light.
' • Wednesday...Mostly sunny. Jiighs near 90.
'.. Wednesday night ... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s.
Extended rorecut!
Thursday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 90s.
· · Friday...Partly cloudy. Lows near 70 and hi~hs in the lower 90s.
,. • Saturday... Partly cloudy with a chance of Showers lind thunderstorms.
t.ows near 70 and highs in the upper 80s,
..

·Full season assured
*

pursueigrant fund~ through the Ohio
De)!M!inent of Natural Resources
f~r fu~s to repair paik facilities: picme tllliles and shelters. playgrou11d
equi~ent and park lighting.,
Tli,e grant will be pursued through
NatlieWorks, the same program
which provided grant a~sistance for
repairs to the swimming pool two
years ago.
The grant would require a small
local match, which could come from
:tOR·
.
the parks and recreation budget.
·'' ' Even if the pool is not self-supRecreation committee memben
P,Orting financiqlly, however, Council Sam'Eblin and Arnold Johnson were
'f'resident beth Stivers said that lhe also present.
··pbol would not close.
Stivers announced plans for a
1 McClure said that pa~s sales have fireworks display during the village
1suffered because of newspaper Fourth of July celebration. The fv-ereports about the possible closing of works ~ill begin at approximately I0
·me pool.
p.m., and the Volunteer Fire Depart·
.: Pool Manager Shari Johnson was ment will a'l.•ist in the display.
,~mmcnded for "tightening up" the
The' rain date for the fireworks is
'oJ?Cration of the pool conces.•ion July 5.
•
·~a. which ha~ resulted in stronger
S~i~ers said that she ~as still
C()ncessions receipts. It ha~ also been rece1vmg oompl:unt• about b1gh grass
.a'ltlounced that pool parties. open to on Rutland Street and other ~rea~.
the public. with live music. have been
Counplman Steve Houchms. m a
' planited for the remainder of the sum- . review of the village budget. noted
1~r. in' hopes of incneasing attent"ld the17 had been no pun:ha..e of
·\h!Jlce.
blacktop \o date, but said that there
· · ' McClure also announced that the were sev~ral area.• in the village that
committee will work with County needed ~~.t repairs.
~,~ornmis~ioner Jejfrey Thornton to
Horton said tha! the weather had
·
not been cooperauve for blacktopping.
Houchins also reporte&lt;j that a
.,
storm !!ewer on Park Street was in
! ' ..
need of repair.
Clerk Bryan Swann announced
that the village budget will be available for public review beginning on
July 3. through July 13, during regular business·hours at the village hall.
Present were council memen
Stivers and Hollchins, Roger Manley
and Rae Gwiazdowski, Mayor Hor·
ton. Clerk Swann and Village Administrator Bill Browning.

• (Cof!tlnued from P1lgt 1)
concession sales and party rentals ·
;~h~ve netted .almost $8.~ for the
pool so far thiS year, accordmg 10 Bob
}:fcCltire of the recreation committee,
· ., ~~ich oversees paries and pool operat1ons.
..
Tho!le ·funds. in addition to a
transfer made at the last council meetiGg in .the amount of $7,.500, will
make the pool virtually self-supporting. according to Mayor Dewey Hor'

&gt;

· the Daily Sentinel

I

wa'C:o.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .....................!.46\
Akzo .................- ...................1Q4.
Aml1'ech......................." .......45}.

.......,... 011 •••.•.•••••••.•.••.••••••••50~

AT&amp;T .....................................~•
Bank One ··-················.........
Bob ev...........- ...................21'-

.55'-

~w..,.,

,..,............ ................
,,.
=-' . . . . . . . . . . .····--···68\
. . . 18~

' .,

CltJ' ...,.~··········J·······-·······45
..:

.

'

FIC'.lC!cr Sc1 ·, tccs

Colnctlon Polley

••

..0..I

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

. . . ,..

..... ., . . . . . . .

..,.,., 1'11111 1M

www ••

2155. We . .

doodt -

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

-

It (7411 9fl..
.....
...

deJIW&amp;i

, a

; • , . . . .,....biNilla
11oe . .
II m.%155. Dopowt·
Cio Ill'

....

..•...BII.lltl

1r _

"
" ' -.. -~-·-··
.. erld.lll6
' " UIZ
~· ·
·

••

•&lt;

Ollwlsn'.css

4Woif15'
···-·······.~&amp;
UM
.g:
.• •.•.__-. . .-..
. . ____
,..BoLli.,

.

n·•··-··. . ·····--·····43~

Brqhton...........,.................15'k
Ch8rli~ ...............................12
Charm Stipe ...........................5'1.

%dAto ,

.•.

'

ID

11•

GMMit ···········--···-···..
~63': ................................
Kroalr ..................- ..................44
&amp;..Iii Enct............................;••32\
Lld.............:................,.........32'-

Pomeroy targeting sidewalk

Meigs a~nouncements

Meigs EMS runs

Files for divorce

Hospital news

Orw Vllllly...................................3S!4

VeterusM-rlal
Monday admissions - Martha
Graham, Pomeroy.
Monday discharxes- none.
Huber Medial Center
. Dilc:harps J - 2l - Bonnie
Wlilker. ~athl)'n Hubbaid, Rhonda
Neece, Mrs. haac ROSB and. son,
Ronald Clark, Harry Staten. Charles
Swigger, Macie Priddy. Jessie
Adkins, Mrs. Woodrow Burnett lind
son.
(PIIIalislald wltll penallllon)

......, Flql ...............................20~

RocJc tl ...._. ..,.uu••••-r••!•noooo48\
Rlllltleii ••.•• - ..........................M\

............. ~............................81 "1.
~"'S oooou••••"•""l'""""'•o•ouoooo3"!.

._. S.nk........................- •••61%
Wertdy'l .......;..............._ .••••••.24\
Woarthlngton.........:...- ........15\

-·-·-

Block report• are lhe 10:30
a.m. quoe.. provkiMI by Advwat
of o.tllpolla.
.

.

Deed, Alan Gilio tq Henry E.
Huggins, Rutland, 2 acre parcel:
Deed, Alan Gilio to James H. and
Bonnie B. Neidhart, Rutland;
Easement, Ahce K. and Gerald
Robert Thompson to CSP. Chester;
Deed, Freedom Road Foundation
to Bank One Athens NA, Pomeroy
parcels:
Deed, Henry L. Rose to William
K. Marshall, Sutton parcels;
Deed, Elizabeth Arnold Cutler.
Mary Elizabeth Cutler, deceased, to
Raymond Andrews, PomeiJ)y tracts;
Deed. Charles Withee to Cha&lt;les
Eugene Withee, Kenneth James
Withee and Maxine Elaine Stafford.
Salisbury;
Deed, James M. and Gloria
Arnold to James M. Arnold Trust,
Salisbury parcels;
Deed, Larry R. and Edith A. Hubbard to Larry R. and Edith A. Hubb:ird, Sulton;
Deed, Wilha E. and Bernita M
Ellis to Dorothy J. Elhs and Nancy
Lee El)is Woodford. Orange;
Judgment entry, Ohio Valley Bank
Company to Richard L. Haggerty;
Sheriffs Deed, Richard L. and
Judy Haggerty to John M. Haggerty,
Middleport;
Deed. Kenneth G. Hartley to Brian E. Johnson, Salisbury;
Sheriffs Deed. Emory L O'Bryant
to Family Homes Inc.. Salisbury.

Treasury bill auction results mixed

a.: .. Flnl ...........- ............20\
ova ........................................42'

Deed, Donna Bums, Donna Rife,
Russell Burns, Kenneth Rife an&lt;i
Sandra Rife to Gary L. and Janie M:
S!anley. Rutland parcels;
l
Right of way, Ja,•on and Roger
Pullins to Buckeye' Rural Electri~
Cooperative, Orange;
•
Right of way, Gary and Luz I!
White to BREC. Rutland;
:
Deed, Margaret Small to Ava I{
Rathburn Ratliff, Rutland, 2•aru1
9911 00 acres;
l
Deed, Lori Ann Rathburn to Av~
D. Rathburn Ratliff, Rutland, 2 anf
991100 acres;
,
Deed, Allen R. and Henriett.
Jacks to Bruner Land Company Inc~
Rutland parcels;
•
Deed, May L. M. Bonnaud to Eri£
Y. Bonnaud, Scip1o:
:
Deed, Ronald D. and .Judy fl(.
Hagerty to Terry J. and Pamela S.
Parsons, Columbia tracts;
:
Deed, Richard Curtis to Mitziann~
Klaiber, Racme parcel;
l
Right of way, Chery~ Ann Laudermilt. Roy T. Brunty, Linda Brundy
to Clarence D. Mcintyre, Cbestet
·parcels; .
.
Peed, Lisa A. Keyser to Tony A.
Keyser, Salem parcels;
"
Deed, Charles E. and Martha K.
Wheeler to Alan and Shirley Riffle,
Middleport;
·
Deed, Ferra Lou and Ernest b.
Barringer, Martha Lane and Howaro
Nelson, Florence Goff, and Franci.•
and Gertrude Chevalier to Ronald E.
and Beryle E. Barber, Olive, 1.2~
acres;
'
Deed, Lora J. Mcl&gt;.miel to Denver
L Warner, Eugene and Karen
Tnplett, Columbia, 5.442 acres;
Deed, Bernard and Patricm E.
Shrivers, Amy Smith to Jason Smith,
Salisbury;
Deed, Virginia Klimk1ewicz tp
Robert Arthur Khmk&lt;ewicz, Rutl&amp;nd. 14 112 acres:
·
Deed, James and Connie C. Smith
to Jeffery L and Beverly S. Vickers,
Bedford parcels;
Deed, Fmnkhn E. and Janet E.
Doherty to State of Ohio and Depart. ment of Natural Resources, Olive
tracts:

~E.""*'&amp;aN '"''

St. -P
.,. 0
,.._..._

Lottery results
CLEVELAND CAP) - There
wa.• one ticket sold naming all live
numbers drawn in Monday mght's
Buckeye 5 drJwing and it's worth
$100.000, the Ohio Lottery said.
The winning ticket wa• purchased
at Piper's Ultm ServiL-e in Lanca.•ter.

• •*• • •• •* • • • • • •

. .

C~~~·~

Vlalioll- 1111101

-"'.oeu

•
•

month rate was the highest since June
8, when the average wa• 5.155.
The new discount rates understate
the actual return to investors 5. 122 percent for three-month bills
with a $10,000 bill selling for
$9,873.90 and 5.328 percent for a SIX·
month bill selling for $9, 741.20.

I

••

••

r

�.-

Sports

•
•
•

The Daily Sentinel

Page4
Tuesday, June 23, 1Q98 ·

:--------------------------------------------~------~--------~~~~--~

•
•
•
•
•

·Royals hand Reds 9th loss in row

Scoreboard

•

•

w

N~w York

L

Bmllimort

Toromo
Tampa Bay

Jl

H
' ' Jh

Kansas Cit)
ChiCQiO
Detroit

J7~

w
42

L

P('t.

29
]J

W8

J.\

41

)I

45

4l

Munday'!l Gamn
Torunto l·t Momrcal

Flonda J . Tampn

6 !f2
IU /1

40l

27

r~·,,.~

•

"'
12 1/l
4l
"" West Division

JO

Oakl:md
Senule

GB

l7l
4R6
m

IJ

)I

Anlileim

Pet

L
.\J

IY
C~vel:md

7.'9

.!OJ
9
17 Ill
w
m
.487
.\9
17 1/l
4)
419
J2 In
Central Division

17
J7

MinneJotil

GH

Ptl.

18
29

Sl

••

Bouon

CINCINNATI (AP)- Jeff King
returned to third ba'le in style.
King volunteered to play third
ba~e on Monday night because the
Kansa~ City Royals had no one to put
there. He hit a two-run homer in his
first at-bat and made two crucial
defensive plays, setting up a 3-0 vic·
tory that left the Cincinnati Reds with
a nine·game losing streak.
" I thank him and the club thanks
him," manager Tony Muser said.
No thanks were necessary. King
figured it was only right that he return
to his old position for one night
Muser found himself without a
third baseman as the Royals wind up
a successful road trip. Terry Pendleton went on the disabled list June 14
with a strained rib cage and Dean
Palmer strained his thigh on Sunday.
'leaving Muser to ponder his few
options fonhird.
"I had Jeff Conine penciled in
originally," Muser said..

American League
East Division

•
•

14 J/1

GH

.l!O..

.1

If~

12
ll

401!

~

Ba~

2 I2 1nn1ngs
flhdacklph1a 9. Bost(ln Jt. 10 1nnings
C h11:t~go Whitl.' So~ S. Pin s bur~h 4
K.1nslu Cuy .l . Ci nctnn:ut 0
H;•llunmi!7. N.Y M..:ts:!
N Y Yankees 6. At lmtta 4
Cil"~dand J. Ch1 ctl,!:n Cuhs I

.•

1\.lmr~smn 5. Huuswn ~
St I.Oltis ... lktruit I
Artwm• 6. Tc11.&gt;1$ 0
SHn lJICI:t'l 5. ~aulc J

,1\nahcl!n 6. los An~clcs S
Tut'~\ '.s Came~

..
•
•
•

•

•
•

·K,.;•~a~ 0~ O&lt;&lt;•pp fl..hl al

CmmuMHIKhngcnht:d.

1 -~ 1. I ~ l~

By SCOTT WOLFE, .
Sentinel Correspondent
Frankie Kerr passed Joey Saldana
with three laps to go in the All Star
sprint 40-lap feature Saturday night at
K-C Raceway. Kerrs third win of the
season. on K-Cs 14th anniversary,
wa.~ worth $7,000.
"I hurt myself in South Dakota. and
now Im just starting to feel better,"
Kerr related. "This certainly makes it
feel a lot better. The racetrack was
great. Right now. this is the premier
race track in Ohio. This is a bran.d
new car we brought out for tonight
and Speed week." Kens Eagle chassis is owned by Stan Shoff, rode
Goodyear tires and utilized BrownChevrolet power.
Saldana rode home second. eight
car lengths back. in the Steve Mox
Stealth. "The lapped cars were using
my line," Saldana said. "When I had
to get off my groove I wasnt good."
Kelly Kinser started 14th and rode
home a steady third in his patented
inside groove, ahead of Randy
Kinser, Kenny Jacobs, Mark Keegan,
Dean Jacobs, Jim Nier. Kevin Huntley and Jonathan Stevens. Stevens,
the 15-year old whiz kid from Chill·
icothe, Ohio scored his second con·
secutive top ten finish with the AllStars.
Kerr started on the BtitlerBuilt Hot
Seat pole position with Keegan
alongside. Saldana and K. Jacobs
made up row two: Rodney Duncan
and Keith Kaufl-man collided on the
inioial green. moving them to the rear
for the next stan. Keegan led the lirst
circuit_ but Jacobs went low through
tums three and four to lead lap two.
Following a lap four caution for a
Todd Kane spin, Jacobs took off on
the drop of the green. while Saldana
picked off Keegan and Kerr for second. Jacobs entered lapped traffic on
lap 1.0. with Saldana right on his tai I.
Free of oraffic, Saldana was able to
move right onto Jacobs bumper at lap
15. while Kerr and Keegan battl~d
side-by-side for third. On lap 16. Saldana dove low going down the front
stretch, and remained low through
turns one and two, drifting up ahead
of Jacobs ~xiting tum two to lead.
· Kerr also moved around Jacobs to
take over second. with Jacobs keeping third and Keegan fourth. · On lap

National League
East Division

w

Pel.
.MR

L.

GB

so

New Yurk.

)9

Jl

.l49

Philadclphiu
Mon1n::1l

.17

J6

.10

44

.507
AOl

Aorid11

15

:'\0

. J .~ J

~6

8 Ill
11 117

19

24 112

" Central Division
IV
46

Houston
Olu.'af:O
S1. Loui§
MIIW3Ukte
l'rnsburg.h
CiO\'"tnR:II i

0

29

I.

Ptl.

-11

.'.1

61J
.l60

4

.\H

.\6
.\6

.514

7 112

.SOl

~

'9
•7

'"'

9 1/2

J7
."\7
JO

.~2

. ~K..).

.l6

.W

J~

~5

..1!10
.-116

1\riJOIUI
16
l\londav''l Gamu
Tur;mlll 1-1. Montr-::•12
Florida J. ·1:1mpa llay ~ -

~0

.~-12

Lns An!!dl'~
Cnlor.1do

Phil;tddphi~

lJ

lln ~ tnn

17

West Division

\\"
SO
J~

San D•e~tl
San FraJICI!I.'II

GH

.J90

I.
2ft

Pet.
l'lSII

.'i Ill
I.\ 1/:!
I K 1/1

1.

I ~ 1nn i n~~

H. lllmu1np

Chll":lt:n White Su., 5. Pm ~htt ry lt--!
K :ms: 1 ~ Crlv l. Clnl"lnn:llt 0
Rahnn"rc 7. N.Y. Mt:h ~
· N Y. Yankl·c~ fl. 1\lli•nta J
Ckl dnnd J Chr ~·al!n ( u l"l~ I
Milw : ml..~'\'

1. Ctl lolf:ttln

~

f,hnlll..'\tll:t .~ . H11ll'l"n ·'
S1 l.o.•ui • J . llo:lru•t I
1\rll.tlna fl. T~·;o~as 0
San lli~·~·' ~ - s~:1111t .1
S;m Fr:ml·i''" I~ - fbllaml I"
1\nolh.'lm fl. l..t&gt;\ 1' n}!L'k'' 'i
T u•· ~u \· ·~ (;am•·~

K:ui$a~ Cit\"1H:arr fl. (,) :11 ('utl';nn:nt 1Khng\•nhl.'ck 1·21. 11:.l.'i J•.m
Minnc\tlf il lll'Wi..~flur~ -1 -KI ill H••u,h•n tNi iL II IV ~ k• .~ · 11. 1..1~ p.m.
Cnh"t•du 1W11}!hl '\.7) :.1 h.lil \1 :•uh·c tl'alrid, ~-Ill. ! ·II;\ p.m.
Ckl.!!laltt iiN a~y 7·.11 ,,tl'lul" i l ~" Cut!~ !( innt.nk7 fl - ~1 . .! : ~0 p m.
San Dlq!tl I Harm linn. '\ . 71 :11 s~·:11 1k tf,ln~l· r 4·fl). t. .\~ p 111.
Mumrc:•lt Vat.4Ul't. ·1·61 :ll TtlWilLt&gt; tC : •rp~omll'f .1·21 7:05 p.m.
Fll•rtil.:.i! IA:mrster 0-~1 at "litmp:r lla) tSj,r m ~o:r 2-!01. 7.05 p 111
Phi l.ldo:lpln:l ll'urtu!!:ll ~ -~\ .I I n.... ., .. . ).ll\\~ (l. :'\). 7.05 p m
Chk:~~~~ Whn..: Sn:&lt; (S•r•Mk:t 7- 71,1( l'111 .c hur~h tSd11111d1 !1 -Jt. 7:05jull.
NY. Ml1 ~ !Y11sht t J .J) :11 lt.llllll l~&gt;rL·I Juhn~ ~ - ~1 . 7. l.'i p m.
Atbm:a ~Gb\' 1111.' '/.l) :1t NY "'':ml..:~o:) tHL· rn .n uJ~·/.2 · 01 . 7 . .1~ f•lll .
[)..·lwtt 1Thomp.~1•n ."i-7) al S1 l .•, u• ~ t llnth." tlll!!l.l 2-.11. 1'1 : t 0 p.m.
1\ril.&lt;ln:! (1\fll.kr~on 'i-h) alT... , .,~ tSd,· 10- -11. H:.l'i p.m
San Fr:ut~.• i .~n t G: t~Jn~o.'r ~-l\ :11 (J,,I..1:rnd l(":••tJt•ltU 4-IJI. 10 0~ r .m.
~ ~~~ Anj!d!!~ t~llid..t .l-~1 :ti ,\n :.lh.' ltlltW: ~hhurn l-OL IIJ-11~ p m
\\'rftrwsd:n '5 G;~ntf!l
Oakl;uiJ tSt.:m ~-..).) :II San r r:III... N "II ( \),lr\\ In 1• -5 I. J :05 p.lll
C'tm·:'!'n Cu h~ tl' l.lr" .. . ,, :1! llr.·i l lllll&lt;.ir~.:l~in~o.."TCI · ll. 7.0"'i r m.
St. l..nui~ U'o.."tkun&lt;.'l.. ~ -.\1 .n CkH"1:1ml [\\'n)!l\16·41, 7:tl~ I'm
rnmmniCI,.'nk'n.~ 7-(JI at ~ h •mrc :• IIB•'s L.I~o: 1-01. 1·11' Jl m
T:tllll'·' lby (S;nmtl•r- ). 71 al rJ, ,,,t)., l~k:11IP"~ ·' ·(1). 7·05 p.m.
n a•~tun lAwry 4- 11 at
ll ;~ llitno\l"l'

!Snmh U· l) ill N.Y

NY. Y:tnh·..'S (Ct•tk'

1

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p.m.

ll)l'ICU ~ - -~ ) Ill K:ltl ~ il~ C u ~· ! Ru ~d• ~ - 111. It~~~ p m 1
Mth,·;mll-c tW,,o...!:.rJ J ..'i I :11 r..lnllk' ~Pia t H : 1wkln~ ~- 61. !1:05 p.m.
Ctni"IOtlotll tWi nd11.'Ml'r ·' · 4) ill C hl l":tj!tl Wlu tl.' Su, .fN:.votrm VJI. 1'1 ·0~
• H 11u~1un ( lkr¥11J..1D 6 -.11:11 (.\,J.Ir,,t) .., d1 •urn ,.un 5·6). 9 ·05 J' .m.
rm ~ b u rr.h

1~:-t:tS

tHI.'IIitl}! 10·.') m r\rit11fl&lt;1 tn.l:nr 2- Uh .

10 :0~

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p m.

,\nal11.'111l (Finky 1·.&amp;) ~• l . tli 1\ llfl.''b I Drct ll1fl -1-b). I0 ..1~ p.111.
St.•auk i1Phnw n h-6) a1 San i)IC}!ll IA ~ hby 10--1-). IO:J' p.m.

....
•
•

•

i

•
•

IEHTUY HOMERS • Mefta' .lenlnleh Bentley CI'C'IIII llollle
,..._following a two-nm homer aplnatRipley Monday evening.
waat VIrginians won, •2. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

n..
.

I

.

t(~ ·.. ~
....

r at •

19, Ed Neumeister !lipped off tum
now led over Kerr. Jacobs, Keegan.
K. Kinser and Jim Nier for the
restart.
Saldana pull~ away in the high
groove on a clear track, but hit
lapped traffic.
With six laps to go, Saldanas top
groove began·getting slower, and ohe
inside rubber covered line of Kerr
wa• faster. Saldana had to contend
with dense lapped traffic, and Kerr
was right on his back bumper. Lap 36
saw Saldana still high, and Kerr low.
Saldana tried the low groove on lap
37 to block Kerr. On lap 38; he rode
the high groove again, and hesitated
behind the lapped machine of Tim
Allison, allowing Kerr to shoot by in
the inside groove for the win.
Kinser rode third. Randy Kinser
got pa.'l K. Jacobs during the la't few
circuits to snare fourth at the end.
Sarah Fisher won the United
Expressline B Main. Fast time for
· Ken.ny Jacobs was worth $500 from
Chillicothe Fireworks and he won the
Commercial Truck &amp; Trailer Dash
plus the United Expresstine heat
whic~ saw Chad Kemenah get upside
down and end his eveniQg.
Ban Hartman of Zanesville,OH
captured his fourth STARS Racing ·
Series sanctioned event of 1998 Sat·
urday pocketing the $7,000 to win
"K·C Raceway 14th Anniversary 40"
at
K-C
Raceway
near
Chillicothe,OH. Piloting the Hanman's
Truck
Center/MasterSbih/BAH No. 75
Grand · Prix, Hartman grabbed the
lead from Rick Aukland on lap 23
racing away to a four car length win.
Aukland held on for second with
Steve Shaver third. Mike Balzano
fourth and Darrell Lanigan fifth.
Rounding out the top I0 tinishers
were Rick Eckert; R). Conley, Gary
Stuhler. Steve Lucas and Jack Boggs ..
At the drop of the green flag Aukland jumped into the lead from his
outside front row berth followed by
Shaver. Hartman, Balzano and Con·
ley. H~man, who had started fourth,
grabbed second from Shaver on lap
2 and started to chase down Aukland.
By lap 10 Aukland and Hartman had
· pulled away from the field and caught
the back markers on lap 12. The two

front runners sliced their way through
ohe backmarkers a' Shaver, Balzano
and Conley waged their own battle
for position. Hartman closed to within a car length of Aukland by lap 20
and made his move as the field
worked lap 22. Hartman went to the
low groove ·in tum t~ree but before
the field completed the lap the races
only caution flew when Steve Fran.cis spun in tum two.
Hartman powered off of tum
fourh with the lead on lap 23.
Hartman began to pull away from the
field but the battle for fifth on back
was fierce with Conley. Eckert and
Lanigan battling three wide with

...
• -·

EASTERN TRACK HONOREES • Entem
High School track athletaa- rKently honored with a banquet at Forked Run Slllta Park.
-';•. ·· Special recognition went to the following ath·
t .... . letaa: Matt King, Molt Points Scored In Field
~.. .

The annual Eastern High School
,trai:k awafds banquet was held at
1
· 1• forked Run State Park on May 27.
Swimming imd a cook out high~ '.".'lighted the awards event. All track
,:,~.. athletes were presented awards.
. ,•:.. Special recognition went to the
· i •following athletes: Amber Baker,
;" ·Most Points Scored in. runni~g
v , , , events; Jessica Brannon, AII-Distnct
·9.· ·. Honors and Most Points Scored in
, ,;,,, Field Events; Matt Boyles, Most

Lanigan finally taking fillh on iap 38.
Forty-nine drivers signed in for the
$28,000 event with Hartman setting
quick time
around the highbanked 3/Sths mile at 14.114 seconds
earning a $500 bonus from Chilli·
cothe
Fireworks.
BORLA
EXHAUST heat race wins .fell to
Lucas, Francis, Eckert and Davey
Johnson. The SCOTT PERFORMANCE WIRE heat race bonus
went unclaimed while Shaver topped
the ISKY RACING CAMS da.~h and
Larry Bond and Todd Andrews
claimed the PRO SHOCKS "B"
Mains ..

~ ·~ ,

'....
I .

Two local
golfers score
aces over
weekend

..

By SCOTT WOLFE,
.
$entlnel Correapondent
• Player and Coach, Brady Trace and Phil Faires of Trimble headed the list
~f Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division baseball honorees, whole
Alexander shortstop Lance Rolston and coach Dave McLaughlin posted
;·' · 'similar honors in the Ohio Division as announced by tbe confemce recent~· ·· I~

.

.

.

.

' " ' · Two players each from Meigs and Eastern, aQd three from Southern also
,•; 'earned firsl team honors in the league voting.
' Brady Trace. the hard hitting junior pitcher/shortstop for th~ Tomcats
headed the voting in the league's Hocking Division , where he dommated and
··' · -ted his team to a regional baseball berth. Teammate Mike Drake joined Trace
on the fir~t team.
· '· · So'uth, rn's Michael Ash, a senior outfielder/shortstop. joined senior team' ,mates c.,rey Williams (Pitcher/second baseman) and Matt Dill (Pitcher/sec.. " pod ba,eman) on the first team. These scmors led Southern to the &lt;hstnct
'' • iournala"nt, after defeating Miller in the Sectional.
-.'
Eastern 'placed twq players on the first team, pi ocher/shortstop Steve
1' ' ''Durst and pitcher/shortstop Josh Will.
.
_.
'" ' · Other first team members included Tommy Curt1s, Federal Huckmg:
· ' •;'Adam Keller, Miller; Thad Skinner. Waterford: Ben Heiner. Waterford; and
.r: 'Randy Nelson, Miller.
- _
.
..
'·'
Southern placed senior Pete Sisson and junior cntchcr Adam Cummgs on
1 .,. second team.
·
.
1
·' '
Veteran Coach Phil Faires earned "Coach of the Year'' honors in the
;,"Hocking Division.
·
_
O • · 1' In the ·ohio Divisinn, Lance Rolston of Alexander headed the llrst team
, )ist and Most Vuluahle Placr voting af'tcr leading Alcxanller to ils mnsl sue- .
':1"ccssl'ul hasctmll campaign in many years. Coach Dave McLaughlin cap1tal:
•' '- l,.ed on the Spartans reccnl success hy gaining "Coach of the Year" honors
,,. \ in the divisinn.
.
.'• " Mei1r~ pbccu senior nullic.ldcr/catchcr Tony Dugan on the llrstlcnm to he
: I 'joined wllhJumnr pnchcr/rnhctder Jeremiah Bentley.
..
Other llrso team memhcrs mcluded Chad Kuhn, Brcnl Ewmg. and Mor: 1 'gun Stevens of Wellstlln: Bmu Est. Belpre. Ben Rohcy . Nelsonville-York:
..... P.O. Stewart. Ale~;Jndcr: :mol Aaron Ward oJ' Vinllln Cnunoy.
Following is a list of thnse hemmed in cad1 division :
.,_' '
. '. •
All T.V.C. Baseba·ll 111'111
11· - .
Finl Team-Hocking Division
II ''

.

Player
Brady Trac.e
Michael Ash
Tommy Curtis
-·
Mike Drake
Adam Kelle
Mall Dill '
Thad Skinner
Steve Durst
Williams
Nelson

Team
Trimhk
Southern
Federal Hocking
Trimble
Miller
Southern
Waterford
Eastern
Southern
Waterford
Eastern
Miller

Pos.
p·SS
ss.
p-ss
lb
lb
p-ss
p-ss
p•ss
p·SS·2b
ss-p
ss-p
p-ss

Yr.
3
4
4

4
4
4

4
4
4
4

2
I

Second Team
.. Jeremy Scaggs Trimble
Jones
Miller
McCJcllanTrimhlc
Pete Sisson
Southern
Robbie Cooper Trimble
Adam Cumin~s Southern

lb Daniel
~ · ;·Qustin

.

I

~·

c-p'"

3

cl'
cl'

4

lh
of

4

c

Second Team
Wellston
3h-ss
, Mall Hallen
Alexander
cf
Dan Met.ts
Belpre
ss
, .... lack Ke11h
: '_, Dan Jewell
Alexander
c
: Shane McFernn Vinton County p-3b
Nelsonville· York Ib
: Clay Watkins

:f

..

!I

'.
:

3
3
2

MVP-Brady Trace, Trimbk
Coach of the Ye11r-Phil Faires, Trimble

,
Flntteam·Ohlo Divisi011
: Lance Rolston Alexander
ss
: · Chad Kuhn
Wellston
p-lb
Brad West
Belpre
cf
Ben Robey
Nelsonville-York 2b
P.O. Stewart
Alexander 1
p- lh
Aaron Ward
Vinton County p-ss
Brent Ewing
Wellston
p-ss
Tony Dugan
Meigs
of-c
Kyle Bradford Belpre ·
,p-ot'
Jen:mialo Bentley Meigs
p-inf
~ Morgan Stevens Wellston
p-c

~

,~;:: .

~
·.~,:1/"";p. ''

•

:·,... _1998 TVC All League
. baseball team announced

..

U!!t!Y..~~~C,!

Points Scored in running events; and of improvements in the track facili·
Matt King, Most Points Scored in ties at Eastern are looking good and
Field Events.
the expansoon of the track program
Coach Arch Rose said, "This looks like it will happen. Thanks to
year's track team has been more sue- tbe boaid and the administration."
cessful and competitive than many
teams in the past. We h.a~e always
had a few very good mdovodual athletes but this year's team.was m?re
balanced. Eastern True~ •.s growm.g
and the athletes that partocopated th1s
year are very excited. The prospects

:r: .

Scott Mill« .of Clyde, Ohio best- copter making an appearJnce at the
ed a tield ofl wenty-four sprint cars track. . Racing coninues each. ,and
Saturday night at Skyline Speedway. every Saturday night at S~yline
Miller shot from his fourth row stan 'Speedway on County Road 53 o~T SR
and took the lead from Cincinnati's 50 between Athens and Coolville.
Mike Bowling after a lap six caution The Summary: Super Sprints;
for a spinning Rick Holley.
Heat: Mike Bowling, Many l,.ing.
The race went caution free the rest of Craig McGuire. Ron Myers .
the way. Miller said in victory lane . Heat: Scott Miller. Steve Bixler,
"I have heard about what a great sur- Dough Heritage. Brian Benson
face it is here at Skyline and now I .Heat: Paul Weaver. Wayne McP.eek.
know what all the talk is about. It is Mark Imler, Ron Marks B·Main:
an excellent rJcing surface and I del~ Chris Fraley, Mike Imler, Billy Jarinitely be back." P~ul Weaver of rell. Dave Dickson. Chuck ·Waddell.
Fremont, Ohio started in the ninth Shannon Jodrey. Lonnie'Darst.'Truvi"
position and quickly moved to the Honnert, Norton Southard. Feature:
front to post his challenge for the lead Miller, Weaver, ·Bowling. Fraley.
·a., Chris Fraley, who started sixteenth, Waddell. KEith Crabtree. Craig
moved up to break into the top three McGuire. Benson, Ling. S t r e e 1
by lap 19.
Bowling eventual- Stocks Heat: Ralph Withem, Rick
ly pa.&lt;;.•ed Fraley to hold onto the third Hudnell. Jim Ashcraft. Larry Clark
position, but Fraley held otf the Heat: Tony Roush, Jeremy Blake.
charges of Chuck Wadell and they . Ja.~on Graham. Paul McDaniels
finished fourth and filih res(iectively. Heat: Donnie Kinnison. Ted Dille.
Fifteen·year old Boston Reid Jay Rutter, Sam Lovejoy B·Main:
made the long haul from Kokomo. Moore. FrJitk Roush. TrJcy Ross.
lnidana. and finished fifth in his heat, , Marcus Powell. Feature : Withem.
but succumbed to mechanical failure Dille. Rutter. AshcrJft. Lovejoy, F.
in the feature.
Ralph
Withem Roush, Rick Hudnell. McDaniel
claimed an exciting win in the Street Four Cylinders
H ci a 1 :
Stock feature, defeating Donnie Kin- John Brooks. Mike Baker. Roy Dodnison and Ted Dille. after an exciting son, Keioh Zimmerman
. battle. Kinnison bowed out with
Heat: Lyle Swain, Delbert Roush,
engine problems allowing Dil)e the Be.n Murphy. Earl Reeves. Feature :
task of catchign Witheop. Wilhem, Brooks. Baker. Murphy, Delbert
Dille. Jay Rutter, Jim Ashcraft. and · Roush. Reeves. Zimmerman. Swain.
Sam Lovejoy roumled out the top Jeremy Roush.
five.
The four-9linder class feature event wa.' won by John Bmoks
of Nelsonville as he clamed his heat
race and sat on 'l~e pole beside
Reedsville's Lyle Swain. Swain and
Brooks exchanged the lead several
times maknig for an exciting show,
however, Swain faded and Mike
Brooks. a paso winner: claimed sec·
nnd. Baker, Ben Murphy, Delbert
Corey Williams wa.' the starter · Roush and Earl Reeves rounded nut
and loser for Meigs. with help fmm the lop tlve.
Cheryl Reeves,
Clayton Ohlinger. The two com· wife of Earl Reeves. drove her husbined to scatter eight hits. walk three. band's Nissan to the four eylinder
hit two and strike out five. Bentley powerder puff win.
T h i s
led Meigs with his home r:un. Pal week is WOWK-TV 13 Night at the
Before you just sit back and let
Martin and Williams added singled. Speedway with the Channel 13 HeliOn Saturday Meigs swept a dou·
your CD (~ificate of depo:.it)
ble header from Gallipolis. Meigs
roll~ again, call ·,
won the first game 12-4 and defeatus to lind out about
ed Gallipolis 7-4 in the nightcap. In
No~onwide's ltfe insu~
·the first game Bentley led Meigs with
lhree singles. Adam Cumings added
produ~ and linonciol services.
a double. and Martin, Ohlinger. Pete
Sisson and Kyle Norris each added
single. Bentley picked up the win.
In the second gwne Meigs jumped
out to a S-0 lead in the second inning
and went on to post lhe win. Matt Dill
picked up the win with Brad Davenport picking up the save. The two
combined to strike out 10; walk seven and scatter four hits.
Williams led Meigs with a pair of
Paula K. Dillon
·
doubles, Bentley and Sisson each
Associate Agent
..
added two singles, Davenport.
Ohlinger and Johnson each added
Jim Rogers &amp; Assoclatea .
singles.
.
33105 lMn IW, S.ll, ''"""'· OH 451"
Meigs is now 2-3 On the year, they
Ollkt: 74,0.992-2311 . 111-445-9426
will host Glouster on Tuesday. and
Wellston on Wednesday.
Score by lanlap:
.NATIONWIDE
Ripley 010 210 400-8 8 0
Meiss 000 002 000-2 3 3

a

•

honors was the t•m of Jay Harris, Mike Ralaton, La,Y Whobrey and top Ohio amateur
Rutty Sauridera. From 111ft to right are: Harril,
Bartrum, Ralston, Sllundera and Whob111y.

BARTRUM RUNNERS UP· Three t•ms tied
for third place In the Bartrum Celebrity Golf
Tournemant, and a tie b1111ker system was
ul8d to b111ak the tie. Winning aeconcl placa

E,.nta; Amber Bakar, Moat Polnta Scored In
running events; Jenlca B111nnon, Alt-Diatrlct
Honore and Moat Polnta Scored In Field
Eventa; and Matt Boyles, Moat Points Scored
In running events.

'IEHS track banquet held recent[Y

Skyline race results

By DAVE HARRIS,
Sentinel Correspondent
Ripley pitcher Thompson fired a
three hiller. struck outlive and helped
him.,elf with a solo home run as Ripley defeated Meigs 8-2 in American
Legion ba.~eball action Monday
evening at Meigs High School.
Ripley scored an earned run in the
second inning. Meigs had back·toback errors and a sacrifice fly ·made
it a. 1-0 contest.
Ripley made it a 3-0 game in the
fourth inning. Thompson led off the
inning wit~ with a IPng home run.
Two pitches later Vannest made it
- back -to-back with a .Jeng home run
over left-center field fe~ce.
Thompson meanwhile wa.\ mow·
ing down .Meigs hillers striking out
10 of the firsl 13 hitters he faced. He
had faced only one bauer over the
minimum. He .walked Benji Manuel
with one out in the sixth, one out lat. er Jeremilh Bentley launched a home
run over the the left field fence to
make it a 3-2 game.
.
Ripley increased lhe lead in the
fifth inning on a walk to Green and
back-to-back singles off the bats of
Williams and Hudson. Ripley closed
out ~ scoring in the seventh inning
on an error, a walk, a double by
Vannest and singles by Moore, Wilson and Sovic.
•u.rtea:
Williams save up the thra: hits; .
Thompson and Williams
and walked two to go along with his
Corey Williams, Clayton Ohlinger
15 K's. Vannest had a home run, dou(7) and Adam Cumings, Whittekind ' 1--~=.:::::~A~v.:·~
ble and sinsle to lead the winners. (8)
· I

,...',.-

..

'·

Ripley nine tops
Meigs Legion 8-2

lt!ttl:!lk.'lj'lna t l.uc"'~·r 1-0 l. 7 : .\~ I' m
Mc1 C ! H:o'l'ol l'l ·-1). 7-10 p 111
t\11 :un :t t ~lilh~ '" "' 1}-,1 1. 7•..).0

An inning later. lhe Reds IQaded
the bases with one out and Reinljnger
hit a soft grounder to King, •who
threw to second to stan anoiher:double play. With those two plays, Pillsley was able to last five innings for
his first victory since la.~l Sept. 23.
"(Muser) told me to act .like I wa•
relieving. to throw strikes and go
after hillers," Pittsley said. "That's
been my problem all year- gelling
behind."
This time, his defense bailed him
out.
"When you're going like we are.
nothing falls in," McKeon said. "We
need three or four days of getting a
break or two."
Notes: The Royals also played ·a ·
three-game series at Clnergy Field
!last season, losing two of three ....
The Royals reinstated outfielder Roderick Myers from the disabled list and
optioned him to Double-A Wichita.

p 111

Minncsma ITcwk~t&gt;ury -'· ~1 :11 Hotl ~ mn 1Ni1l:nwsla \ .]I. L.l5 p 111.
Ck\·elnnd !Nagy L~l al Chka~n Cuhs 1Gm11.akz ti-51. 2 : ~0 p m
S01n D1cgo IH:1111111nn 5· 71 :u .Sc:fltk (f\ luyc= • J -61. 6J$ p m
Momr..::il {Valqucz 1-6) ;u Tl'roll lotCarrcnh.'t J -11. J ·O~ p.m
Ronda IDcmps1cr 0·1 1 ttl Tnmp:l B:1y f.Sprin gl'f 2-101. 7 05 p m
Phi lade lphia /Ponuj!ai1 -1J nl Un•tnn 1Lnwe 0-~). 7 05 p.rn
Chica~o White Sok ISirot ka 7-71 n1. l,itt sbur~h ISdunuU H- .l 1. 1·05 fl .nl
N Y Met~ fYnslm -'·Hal n ~ lttnlurl' !John~ ~-21 7· \~ fl m
Atlant:t (QI;~vmc 9-.l) &gt;II N.Y. Yanl: ~· c5 IHrrn :mdcz· 2-0l. 7:;4S fl.nl .
lktrOII (Thompson .1-71 :u St. L11U1s 1Bollcnfu:hl2 -.11. !1: 10 r.m.
Ariwna IAnJerson :'\ - ~)ill Tl.·-xas {Sdc IO.·h K·.\5 p.m.
San Franci sco /Gardner 5-.1) :u O:~kland (C:lndiom J-9). 10:05 p.m.
..
l.os Angeles (Mlkki .\ ...).)at Anaheim I Wnshhurn ~ -01. 10 OS p 111.
WrdnrMiuv'!i Gamt's
Oak1arid tS tcm .\ ...).) a1 S:m Prnncisn, !Durwin fl ..'iJ. 4:0.'i p m
Ch1cago Cub' ~Clark -'·1) al lklron (Gn. ·t~ mgc=r 0-.l). 7:05p.m.
S1. Looi5 (Pcd:un;ck ~-~) a1 Cleveland (Wright 6-4) 7:0:1 p.m.
Toronto (Clemens 7-61 at Montreal! Busl:1e 1·0). 7:05 p m
T;unpa Bay (.S;IUn dc r ~ I· 7) ill FJond.1 IM~:adnw~ .'i-6). 7:05 p.m.
Bo~ 1on !Aii!!ry ~- I J m l'hiladciJllllniL&lt;H.'WI.'f 1-01. 7 .~.'i p.m.
l)ulttmnre !Sm11h 0-1) ill N.Y. Met\ !H: co:d K- ~ ). 7·-MJ p.m
NY. Y:ml:l'!!S tCone 9-l) :11 Atlama (M illwood 9-.ll. 7 .W p.m.
Pittsburgh 1Peters 2·51 r~t Kon~as Cuy IRusch -~-li) . 8 :0~ p m.
Milw:IUk.t.'t' (Woodanll.l-5);,1 Mmncsuta (Huwlc.ins 4-6). M·OS p.m.
Ci ndnmui {Wm chL"Stcr ~ :-'1m Chic:tj!O While So-. tN:warro S-9). 8:05p.m
Tc:t&lt;~S ( H elhn~ 10-J) ar Anzonn (IUmr 2-10). IOO.'i p m.
Anaheim CFinlcy 7·4) allm Anselcs (0reifo n 4·6), 10 : ~5 p.m.
Sc:tll lc U~n~on 6·61 :tl Snn Dier.o IA ~hb y 10--'1. IO:.l'i p.m

·Allama

Shane Mack added his fifth homer
in the fourth inning, and the Red~
were in trouble. They've lost 17 of20
in June primarily because of poor
clutch hitting.
The Reds are hitting .163 with
runners in scoring position during ohe
nine-game lo.•ing streak, their longest
in more than two years . .They have
scored two or fewer runs 13 times
this month;
" I wanted to give our hitters
some breathing room," said Remlinger, who-ha.• lost six of"his 'last seven decisions. "I didn 't want them to
feellilce they were losing."
They had two chimces against Jim
Pittsley (I-I), who was making his
second start of the season, but King .
snuffed out both of them.
With Reggie Sanders taking off
from first base on a hit-and&lt;run in the
third inning, King snared Mike
Frank's liner and threw to first for the
double play.

Kerrs' third win worth $7,000 at K-C Raceway

S;m fm~cl~l'O 12. Oal.:l:1nJ ~

•

King, who played third for Pittsburgh before moving to fil'lit base
with Kansas City the la~t two years,
gave his manager another option. He
volunteered.
"I didn't feel it was right to throw
Conine at tbird," King said. "I told
him I'd play."
He put the Royals a~ead 'with a
two-run homer in the fil'lit, his 15th,
off Mike Remlinger (4-9). King ha.•
been the Royals' offensive catalyst
during their road trip, hitting four
homers and,driving in I I runs as the
Royals won six·of eight.
Remlinger struck out the first two
batters, walked Jose Offerman after
starting him out 0·2. then gave up a
first-pitch homer to King.
"He had good stuff," manager
Jack McKeon said. "After he struck
out those first two guys, I was thinking. 'This is what we' re looking for.'
Then he. walks a guy and one pitch
later we're down 2-0."

.MVP-Lance Rolston, Aleltander
.
Coach of the Year· Dave McLaughlin, Alexander
•

4
4
3
3
4

3
2
•4
4
3

..3
4

3
4

2
2
3

Two local golfers had bore-in-ones
this weekend. Bobbie Karr of
Pomeroy recorded ~er thirct.ace of her
career on the par three,l)l'l l3 yard
eighth hole at the Parkersburg Coun·
try Club. Bobbie used a wedge to
record. the ace. playing with Bobbie
was her husband Ray and Bill and
Donna Nease.
Kay Wilson of Reedsville recorded the eighth nee of the season at
Riverside Golf Course this season on
Monday when he aced number 14 at
the Mason Course.
Kay used a wedge forthe I05 yard
par three. Playing with Kay where
Don Wilson of Reedsvi lie and Earl
Johnson of Mason.

Roush the Pro at ·Riverside Golf Course,
Bartrum, Todcl Powell, Scott Wickline and

THIRD PLACE • Thla team flnlahed In third
In the aacond amual Mike Bartrum
Golf tournament. From left Ia right
Roush repre•ntlng hla brother Ty

Todd Lisle.

Rees honored
Alexander Coach Jay Rees
achieved t;.vo great honors the pa.~t
month as he was selected to the
coaching staff of Ohio-West Virginia
All-Star game wilh Chcsepeake's
Norm Pierson. Games were held in
the Charleston Civic Center and at
Chesepeake. ·Earlier, Rees had
coached in the Ohio-Kenlucky AllStar game. Rees, a Southern High
· graduate, has coached at Alexander
High School the past nine sea.wns,
.twice e;oming Coach of the Year honors there. He is the son of Jim and
Virginia Rees of Racine.

Cage camp
set July 12-15
The University of Rio Grande will
host a basketball camp for boys in
fifth through ninth grades July 12-15.
The camp will focus on individual
fundamentals for young players. .
Cost per camper is $230. Group
rates of $225 per camper is available
if seven or more players from the
same school district allend the camp.
For more information, contact
Earl Thoma' at740-24S-7489 or Jeff
Lanham at 740·245-7485.

SOUTHERN GIRLS CAMP • The Southern High School
Lady Tornado basketball camp was again vary succeuful In
1998. In front era (L·R) Angsla Hayman, Bonnie Allen, Mallory
·Hill, Whltnay Riffle, Erin Chapman, Joanne Plcksns. In the
aacond row are Jordan Nelgler, Deana Pullins, Jerri Hill,
Brooke KIHr and Nicki Tucker. In the third row are Ketl Sayre,
Rachel Chapman, Tara Plckena, Brandl Lane, Sarah Hawley
and Susan Brauer. Behind them are Kim Sayre,- Heather
Dalley, Kim thla, Sarah Brauer, Individual counselors.

-

Southern girls complete camp
.

.

The Southern High School Lady
Tornado ba.•kelball camp was agairi
very successful in 1998 with 17 girls
panicipati ng.
·
Serving as counselors for the
event were Southern players Kim
Sayre, Heather Dailey, Kim lhle, Stacy Lyons. and Sarah Brauer along
with coaches Alan Crisp, Scott Wolfe,
and Tammy Chapman .
Crisp. the camp director said,
"The camp went very well this year.
The girls really improved throughout
"the week and were very. competitive.
This was a very quality group and a
fun, productive week." •
.9uest speakers for the week were
Soulhem boys varsi1y coach Howie .

Caldwell and former Eas1em varsity
coach Scott Wolfe.
·
Campers were taught ,the fundan;JCnlals of shooting, rebounding, ball
handling. defense. and other individ·
ual skills before being grouped into
teams for team instruciion.
Also, games and competitions
were held throughout the week. O-UT competition, Knock Out, and Free
Throw shooting was a daily acitivity
with overall and dailey \'iinners being
honored. Daily winners advnn.ced to
Friday's championship ro~nd.
· In the third and fourth .gmde competition winners were Mallory Hill,
0-U-T; BonnieAIIen. Knock Out and
Free Throw Shooting. In the 6th

grade, Brook Kiser won both 0-U-T
and Knock Out. while Susan Brauer
hit 70 percent to win the Free Throw
Shooting.
In the seventh grade, winners
were Deana Pullins, 0-U-T; Kati
Sayre, Knock Out; and Deana
Pullins, Free Throw Shooting; Eighth
grade winners were Brandi Lane, 0U-T; Rachel Chapman, !&lt;nock Out;
and Tara Pickens. Free Throw shoot·
ing.
Three·on·three team competition
was one by Kati Sayre, Nicki Tuck·
er, BrJndi Lane, and Joanne Pickens
in the older age group, while Bonnie
Allen and Mallory Hill claimed the
younger gf'Qup's two-on·two competition.

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Hom~
Owners Special
Savings.
Our .statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and tess costly losses
than other age groups. So it's
only fair to charge you less for ·
your insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save
'even more with our special
mullti·polic:y discounts.

Woods increases lead in seniors golf play
Aided by his team. senior golfer downpour, but none of the brave old Jack Maloney 63: Luther ~mllh lltJ.);
Keith Woods buill an eight and one lads came-off the course.This shows Ralph Sayre 60: Bill Howard 60; Bill
half poinllead over h!s nearest com- the dedication of the senior league Winebrenner .59; Don Field~ 57 .5;
petitors Peal Carnahan and Charlie - players. The closest lo the pin hon- Jack F~x 57; Elmer Click 56.5; and
Georgi i~ the Riverside Golf Club : ors went to Johnny Bobb on both the Bill Yoho 56.
in regular golfing action. the
Seqior men's league. The players that . seventh~ founcenth holes.Bobb is
pulled Woods through were Gene the owner of Bobb Lumber in West course had its eighth hole in one for
· of Pl.
Gray and Bill Howard of New · Columbia. but takes time out week- the year as Harvey Bla~
Haven. W. Va, and Harold L.oltse of ly to ' panicipale in the senior Plea.'illnt accqmplished the · t on
Pomeroy.
The wiqning total league:F&lt;:&gt;Ilowing or the lop twenty hole number 12. using a seven iro'l
for the 155 yard shot. It was his firs(for the day was nine under par at · point scorers for the league:
61.The win boosts Woods 40 a 80- · Keith Woods 80; Charlie Georgi ever hole in one, and was witnessed
71 .5 lead over Carnahan and Georgi. 71.5; Peat Carnahan 71.5; John Bobb by Jay Bostick, Racine; Craig HarriThe ~ay weather held the 67.5; Harold Stanley 66.5; Earl John- . son, Racine; and Dave Bodkin, Pl.
altendance down lo thirty-six play- son 6.5..5; Dale H~son 65 ..5; Claud Pleasant.
cts or just nien four man teams.The Profill 64.5; Joe Bradley 64; B1ll
players pl1yed lhroullh a conslant Hannum 615; Bob M~Intosh 63.5;

')
\

•

\

VRNER~

AN~

surance Services

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-8687
Auto..O...nen l111uronce

Life Home Car Business
n. ;r, f1WI,.

�Page 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh

J

Tuesday, June 23,

\

1998

.
•:tuesday, June

-~~----~--~------------------~~~~~~--~--------~~~~~~
·:

23, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Glvenay
110 Help W1nted
2mo. old Bugto &lt;lOg, brown/
14 UIMII!I CO-Y
whlto moto, to good homo only.
304-875-1193.
-HiringMI-~
3 k!Hons. I blect&lt;lmoto, 1 crMml
123 ·$21K.Cett 1-1110-Nt-1931.
malo, I black/Whtto llmolo, litter
ltllnod , 8-lwks old. 304·875·

••

Understanding PMS can help ease problems and cause~•

By DR. JANICE MARKS

BY BECKY BAIR
Melp County l!xWnalon Agent
F1mlly 1ncl Consumer Sclencesl Community Development

.,, .

All families have their problems, but when
there
is a blended family where stepparents and
•
stepchildren are involved, the difficulties may
""'"4.......:..=~ seem insunnountable. The changes within step
family can be verr dramatic to everyone involved, but especially to a
:' : child. Even so, adjustments can be made that will result in a strong, secure,
• loving family relationship.
What can be done to help the child make the transition from their old
family situation to the new blended one? Parents and stepparents can help
by maintaining the _same routine. in daily activities. If a chilo;! has been
active is Scouts and sports, these activities should be continued. Changes
should be made only when absolutely necessary.
.Parents should be cautioned about how they share their time, money
,,, and affection among family members. Resentment, jealousy and hun feel., ings may result because a child perceives favoritism is being shown to step
~ . ' siblings.
.
'
Another thing that stepparents should consider ts that a child may feel
dtsloyal to the biological parent if affection is shown to the stepparent.
," These loyalty connicts may also affect adults. Parents may become distressed that they nrc not living with their biological children or they may
• have trouble accepting live-in stepchildren . These anxieties can greatly
affect the stepparent-stepchild relationship. Children from single-parent
homes who have had the parent all to themselves may have difficulties in
0
sharing thetr parent with the new spouse.
Another possible source of friction in blended families may be that fam·
ily members may not know what is expected of them in their new family
.• structure. They may not know what their new roles. nrc, or they may not
understand that the new parent can enforce discipline.
It is true that it may take some ltme for the blended family to feel like
a famtly. but adjustments can be made. Here arc ten imponant steps to
observe in order to become a successful stepparent:
1. Try to provide neutral ground. If you can afford it, think about mov·; ing into a different house. This will help prevent constant reminders of the
old way of life.
2. Be yourself. Don'ttry to live up to preconceived notions of what the
·• perfect stepparent should be like. Chi ldrcn can see through phonies.
3. Have a united front when dealing with discipline by setting limits and
enforcin2 them. The parent and stepparent should have rules and discipli·
nary actions agreed upon in advance·, then suppon each other when en fore·
ing the rules.
·
4. Realize that the child will have affection for the natural parent Do
not get upset by taking this personally.
5. Expect connicting emotions from the child. The child's feelings
towards the stepparent may change freq4ently and dramatically.
6. Make mealtime a pleasant time. The child may become emotionally
. • distraught with how things used to be during this time, so try to keep the
- -"--atmosphere-calm and-peaceful.
7. Don't expect the child to love you immediately. It takes time to form
a new relationship. There wi II be a period of adjustment for the child to
recognize the loss of the previous family.struciure and to be able to accept
the n•.w one.
R. Don't fee.l guilty if it takes a while for the relationship to develop.
Tloiu people are involved · the child should also take some of the responsibi:ity in making the relationship work.
,
9. Be patient. There may be difficult times for several months maybe
even several years.! 0. Keep your marriage strong. Spend private time with your ~pouse . A
·. • healthy and strong family is built on the strength of the marriage relation·
ship. This is not only true for a first marriage, but is also essential for a
blended family.
With time, love, patience and undcrstam!ing the blended family can
' become a stable and secure environment for the entill' family.

,.

,,

Eleat·of the Bend ...

..

By Bob Hoeflich
I just happened to he in Athens
"· S,aturday morning and I was sur. · priscd to sec Meigs County so well
.::. represented at the Farmers Market.
The Farmers Market is a regular
Saturday event in Athens and these
" day~ is being held in the parking
· · area of the University Mall and is
: . expected to he in that location for
· the next year.
,·
Among the ·Meigs Countians
·. taking part thai I noted on a quick
" walk-through wcr~ Mitch Mead·
• , : ·ows, Denise Arnold, Tim Glaze and '
· : Sue Rice.
, There might be more but those
· nrc the exhibitors I saw. There's an
· amazing amount of participation
: and the market does offer a variety
· of products:·small wonder that it is
. , so successful.
'
If you're~ craft person or some.. one who would like to spend your
Fourth of July doing a nea market
: or· a yard sale type thing then you
have a great opponimity this year in
. Middlcpon.
" There wiII be no charge in vol vcd
' for yuu to set up in the Diles Park
where the tqwn's annual JulY. 4th
~ cclcbr&amp;tion i~ being held. You can
sell from 12 noon to 5 p.rrr.• but
then ynu h:ivf to move out to make
. room fur the ~vcning activitiCis. .
Of course, space will he ljmitcd
und is bein~ provided on 11 fir¥1
come. first ~crwd basis. If you
: want to reserve your space and par: licipa!e just .i:tll 992-4 I97.
By 1~e ray. talented f!t1yron
:, pufficld wil enhance. this year's
' t'•clebration i Middlcnort by haul: ng out his d circus wagon and
1
• ·alliope.
·
'
Myron will he pre!l\.'rlling music
pn the nostnl~'• instrument from 2
· ~' .5 p.m.
t. ulonc sh01fld be
' oiiOiigh to a tract a 191 of (lcople
across Jthc ctlllrlty. Myron
y• all of lhc golden oldies and

· frlin
,":r·)!ell SOiiiC.
..

There were a number of auraelions on hand to enhance the walk
and despite .the heat. parttcipants
appeared to be enjoying the event,
There arc no records, of course,
available on cancer survivors and
getting them located and pnnicipating was the task of Maxi'ne Griffith
who was on hand Saturday to
record names, etc., on all those· she
had been able to locate. Well-at
least it was an excellent stan for
next year.
If you've ever doubted the economic effect that the Hobson Yards
had on Meigs County, then you
should view a couple of photographs of railroad employees
owned by David Robinette.
Identification is almost complete
on one of the photos; a second
photo which must show about 200 ·
employees is a toughie. No one has
been abJc to come up with identifications of the workers in the picture.
The pay• 1111 at the yards cenainly
had to h;·ve a tremendous impact on
the economy of Meigs County.
David is one of the local toy
tram collectors who will be taking
part in the seventh annual train '
show which has been set for July 27
through Aug. 2 at the Mcig~ Coun·
IY Distritt Public Library in
Pomeroy.
Railroad memorabilia will be
diJplaycd nlons with maps, Rflotos ·
and other exhibits includin1, of
cqul'llll, Q number of the trains In
action.
Un.doUhtcdly, Dp•id will' be displpyins his tw(l a11ed pl,lotos of. the
H!lbson Y11fdS during the s~ow so
yqu will bare t~e ppportunit)' to sec:
th~m at thai time. 'Ad11J!issi0f1 is ffe;
and I' ll I!i"' .you file ljme lf;hedul,¢
·as the show dates get 4!Joser,
·

tion begins. If they c!on 't - if irri- both the woman and her physician
New York Univenlty School of lability lasts all month- PMS is not con finn that PMS is actually the
Medldae
the cause. Although many women source of her problems.
For AP Spoecllll Featura
experience bloating with PMS, the
Once PMS has been diagnosed,
You're screaming at yoor kids, symptoms that concern people most several treatmeni options are availscowling at your husband and writ- arc usually the emotional ones.
able. It is important to keep in mind,
iog hostile memos to your boss. It
Nobody knows for sure what however, that the syndrome is high·
just .seems that the world is against causes PMS, although most doctors ly individual and what works for one
you. Ev~ry traffic light turns red believe that it is related to the hor- person will not work for another. For
right when you pull up. The check- monc progesterone. That's hccausc some women, taking the binh con·
out line in the grocery store seems PMS occurs just after nvulation, trot pill can help, Even though binh
10 mil~s long.
when the ovaries produce prnges· control pills do contain small
Then you look at your calendar tcrone to help prepare the uterus for amounts of progesterone (as well as
and suddenly realize that your peri- implantation of an egg. Progesterone estrogen I. they also stop ovulation,
od is due tomorrow. The next day, is produced every month and ovula- which, lor some women does elimi·
when it finally arrives, your anger tion occurs (an egg is released). But · nate PMS symptoms.
begins to dissipate. Your children, (.lespite the suspicion that prugcs- . Another thing that helps some
husband and boss seem reasonable terone is involved, there is no blood wumcn is to begin an exercise pro·
again and even the traffic lights arc . test to actually confirm a diagnosis gram. Vigorous exercise can release
of PMS. Diagnosis must be made endorphins, chemicals that create a
going in your favor.
If thi~ sounds familiar. you prob- clinically, by paying careful nttcn- sense of euphoria or well-being, also
ably have PMS, or premenstrual lion to when symptoms worsen and known as "runner's high." To get
syndrome, a constellation of symp- improve .
this effect,' the exercise has lP be ncr·
toms that plagues at least one in four
The first step in treating PMS is ohic . raising the heart rate. Those
women.
to make sure that it is, in fact. the with PMS should exercise strcnuSymptoms of'PMS include mood reason for mood swings. Women ously for 30 minutes to 40 minutes.
swings, irritability, bloating and who think they may be experiencing four times a week.
headaches, all of which increase in PMS should keep a careful diary !'or
Sometimes PMS is managed hy
intensity the week before a woman several months, recording their prescribing an antidepressant such
begins her menstrual period. The symptoms and also the dates when as tluoxctinc. better known as
symptoms go away once mcnsrrua- menstruation begins. This will help Prozac. When antidepressants arc

Residential
&amp; Mobile Home
.
.
~ Air C~mditioners &amp; Heat Pwnps
''.I'APPRn
-..
~ .-

t.

Dr. Janice Marks is a clinl~al
instructor of obstetrics and !IYOeeology at NYU School of M~i·

A demonstration on bread baking
was given by Becky Baer, Meigs
County extension agent, at a recent
meting of the Meigs County
Women's Fellowship held at the
. Bradford Church of Christ.
Baer told how the Bible refers to
'bread in so many passages o( scripture and she quoted several for the
group. She explained how the different types of flour can be used and
Ohio
Intertribal
planned
for July Powwow
3 _5

On July 3, 4 · and 5, the Ohio
River will once again echo the
sounds of Native American drums.
The Ohio Center for Native Ameri·
can Affairs will host the Third Annu·
al Founh of July lntenribal Powwow at Spartan Stadium Complex in
Ponsmouth.
This annual Indian celebration
will feature authentic Native Ameri·
can dancers, singers, artists, music
and food representing a myriad of
Nalive Nations throughout North
and South America.
The public is invited to share in
America's oldest cultures, rich in
diversity, integrity and tradition. The
gates open at 10 a.m. with the Grand
Entry of Dancers at noon. A second
Orand Entry takes place each
evening with dancers from through· out North and South America
dreucd in traditional Native dance
regalia.
Admission is $5.00 for adults and
$3.00 tor seniors and children ages 6
_ 12 . Children under 6 arc free.
Bring a lawn chair or blanket, as
seating is limited.
This event is sponsored in part by
The Ohio Arts Council, The City nl'
Ponsmouth and Coca _ Cola Bottling.
For more information phone 355

• 2025.

By
Dave

Grate
of
Bottle
Gas
Son to dad: "If I didn't knotW ·I
the value of a dollar,
wouldn't be asking for two."

***
way to keep· your

The only
health is to eat what you don 'I
want, drink What you don't
like, and do what you'd rather
not.

***
Our friend has reached

the
age where it's not as hard to
avoid temptation as It Is to
fin~ II.
·

***

A -hospital, should also have a
recovery room adjoining the
cashier's ofllce.

***

one Who

how the yeast acts to cause the bread
to rise and be light'and tasty.
Salt ts also a necessity in breadmaking to cause the yeast to act on
the gluten m the flour, she said. She &gt;
made .bread· sticks, crescent rolls,
Porterhouse rolls, cloverleaf. and
other shapes of rolls. She gave out
recipes on handouts and had rolls (or
those there to taste.
Linda Bates, president, conduct-

ed the meeting with officers ' reports
being given by Ann Lambcn, secretary, and Marie ·snyder, treasurer.
It was reported that Eileen Bowers ts scheduled for surgery. A card
will be sent to Gerry and Everett
Lightfoot.
Naomi King had devotions,
"Lord Teach Us to Pray" and gave
scripture from , Luke.
Next meeting will be June 25, at

'

the Dexter Church of Christ fd
Bradford will. have dcvmions. Gene
Lyons from the Meigs EMS "'(ill
demonstrate CPR.
4
The quilt hlocks from the varil)us
churches arc to he turned in !to
Kathryn Johnson at this mcctiag.
Refreshments were served by· the
host church .and friendship .b4gs
were presented to each guest.
:

r=~~~~:J=~~~~=r=~~~;:::r:J~~~~=
Public Notlca
Public Notice
Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
· S1lo teeuod out of the
Common Plea• Court of
MIIIJI County, Ohio, In tho
Clio of Homo Nlllanel
Blnk, Plaintiff, va.-Jimmy
Hon1loy, 11 el, Ooftndlnlo,
upon 1 Judgment therein
rendered, being C••• N~.
ti7.CV·128 In Nld Court, 1
will offer lor Nlolttho front
door of th• c ou rthouoo 1n
Pomeroy, Motg1 County,
Ohio, on the 17th day of
July, 18118, 1110:30 a.m., the
loll owing tend• •nd
tonemenll, loclted 11 34250
Sug•r Run Ro1d, Long
Bottom, OH 45743. A
complete 1111111 deecrlptlon
of the rill ..tate II I I
followl:
.
Tho fallowing doecrlbtd
pr.-mllol, altulled In the
townlhlp of Chtlltr,
County Of Meta• and Steto
,of Ollto:
Being In Section No. 4,
T-n 3 end Ronge 12 of the
Ohio Company'• Purch•••·
Beginning et lhe corner of
lind owned by Arthur Orr
•net LM MundiiV on Secllon
lin•; thence 1outh along
1oetlon lint to tha North
corner of land owned by
Paul Orr; thence In I
aouthe ..terly dlracllon
•long P•ut Orr'• Nonh line
118 rod• from pl•ca of
beginning; th•nca In an
1111torly dlr1cllon 10 rode;
thence In • northerly
direction ee rodo to tho
Section .Uno; th1nce "'ell
11ong S~etlon Uno 30 rodl
to place of beginning,
conlllnlng 27 acr.., more
or ION.
Excepting •ll mlner•l•
underlying ebova doecrlbtcl
pramleoe with right to
opar•t• lor limo. AIIO
agrHIIIIInl oiiiCUied by F.F.
Miller lo thl OhiO Full G11
Co., dilled Jenu•ry 6, 11122,
•nd recorded In Vol. 18,
P1gt 420 of tho County
Lolli Recorde, to which
ro'-!Ce It htrtby medo.
'R tllrtnet Oeod: Volume
117, Pilgo 571, Mllge County
Official R•cordo •nil
Volume 281, P•g• 8811,
Malgl County Dud
RaconiL
~ecol no.: 03·
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
342110 sugar Run Roed,
L.Gnglottom,OH46743
Rii!AL
E S TATE
APPRAISED AT $20,000.00.
The real alltto 011nno1 be
10111 tor 1- than -thlnht
lhoapprellldv•tue.
TERMS OF SALE: Celh
on Delivery 01 DMCI. Sold
IUbjoct to 1ccrued reel

county . Community lm·
NOTICE 01' SI!CONO
Umtted Cltentole (Very LOw
provomonf Corporation at
PUBUC HEARING
1 - Low IIICOIIIII)
tho office ol tho Owner on
The Motg 1 county ACTIVITY: Public 8ervleo:
July I 5, 1988 •t 2:00 p.m. CommlNlonere Intend to Hot Shot V1hlole I!UrohMIlocal tlmo. The Owner'• epply to the Ohio Molgl Council on AQI)lg
1ddre11 II 238 Well Main De p 1 r t m 1 n 1
0 1 CDBG Funding: $211000 ,
Street, - Pomeroy, Ohio Development, fCir funding Other-Funda: $8,1125 (1.11!=•1
45769.
.
under the f'Y'
98 L.evy.COUnc:H onAtllng) ,
Bide received after the Community Development NATIONAL OIJICTIVE:
echeduted clollng lim.. for Black Grant• (COIG) Snutll Umlted Cllont•l•
'
the reception of bide will be CHiet Progrem, 1 feder•lll' ACTIVITY: Wlltr •net S~r
returned unopened lo the fu ndod
p rog rem F• 0 lilt II •y 1
Bidder. Bldo wttl b• opone d ...
-~ m1n1lllred by tho Sllto. Ro~mont!Ta p
1n e.
at the cfflco oltho Owner'' Mllfl• County 11 ollglble lor Pomeroy Vlllege . coto
lhe ochoduled limo and $1116,000 of l'liCil Veer '18 Funding. S15,700 Other
then reed •llowed.
CDBQ lunctlng, provkled the Fundi: ,, 4,100
,
The Bidding Oocumento, County mtotl lppllctblt NATIONAL OBJECTtii.E:
conalollng ot Plana, Specl· requlremonto. On May 11, ArM LMl
flcottana ud Conlrlcl 11118, the County conducted ACTIVITY: Adrnlnlotroti&gt;n .
Documonto, may be Ill flrot public hterlng to lndFelrltoullng
,
••amlnod ot tho lollowlnil Inform clt11on1 about the coeo Fulidlng, , 17,000 :
locatlono: Woofport LLP CDIQ program, hOw It IIMIY
Clllz•n• •re oncourlpd
1200 Corpor1to Court, 111 uNCI, witetllCIIviiiM ere to •ttend thll m..tlng~Dn
Aahl1nd, Kentucky 41102 lllglble,andollllrlmporllnt June 1zt, 1 • to expr4e1
and other location• llated at PI'OIIIrMI Ntihmlntt. . ·
their YltiWII end commollll
lhe and 01 lhlo advorA IHConcl public hoerlng on the county'• propool.ct
llaemenl
will be hold on June 211, CDBG FY 'M FormYl•
Bidding Oocumanlo may 1998 •I 1:00 P.M. 11 th• ~~~:~:!'!: n Appllcall6n.
be
obtained
from M•I g 1
County I'
comment• wilt be
WOOL PERT LLP, 1200 Comml11lonert ofltc•, accepted until 1:00 '·~'··
Corporate Court, Aehland, Mllgl County CourthOI,IN, June 21, , . ., end "'IIY-,.
Kentucky 41102. (106) 329- Pomeroy, Ohto to glva llllllled to 1M Molal Cou(!IV
11148, upon non-refundable cHI11n1 en opportunity to CourthouM, Pomeroy, ol:
poy.menl Of 545.00 por MI.
review lnd comment on the 45711.
•
No Blddor may wllhdr•w county'l propollll COBG
H 1 p~~rtlclpant "'Ill 11
hll bid for a period of eo FY '18 Formula Allocltlon 1uxlllery elll• (lnterp._lilr,
doye alter 'the dolt 111 for pi'OJict8.
br1lled or llped melor.. l,
opening of bldo.
B..od on both citizen llllllllvt llllonlng deVIl••
Bldl oholl be accom· Input and loc1l offlcl•le' other) duo to a dleebll(ly,
panted by Certified Chock •••n•IMRI ol the CouniJ'I p t - cont1ct Gloria Klote,
or Bid Bond paylbloto the neolle, tho County le Clark, prior to Juno ~··
Owner, Melgo County' propelling to .........,.the , . ., 11 {740) 992•2815.1n
Community Improvement following CDIQ 1otlvltla1 order to en1uro lhlt your
Corporation In tho amount farFiaciiiV.r'•:
noadl
will
~e
not 1111 than 5 percent of
ACTIVITY: Wiler a s - r occommoclllttcl.
:•
the Ball•Bid, 11 guor1n1y FICliHin: Otxttr Wllw Uria
J1not ltowllrd, p,.~
thlllf tho bid 11 accepted, a Extanllon·Ltadlng Creek
Mllge Coatlty
Contract will ~· entered Into Conaerv•ncy Dlllrlct.
CornmiNfonora
and 111 porlormanco COBG Funding, S30,000
(81 11, 23,28 3 to
11cured wllhln tan daya Oth•r Funda: 11171,401)·
after written notlflclltlon of (COBG· ARC· OWOA/
Public Notice
accepllnct 11 oent.
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
A Performonce and NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
PUBUC HEARING · ·
Peyment Bond each In the AR&amp;A LMI
Tho budget for Lotirt
amount of tOO percent of ACTIVITY: Wllltr lnd Sower
the Ccnlrect Prlca taeued F1cllllle1; W1ter Line Townohlp for ye1r 1~;11
by 1 rooponalble auroly will Exten1ton Gilkey Rldgo· open for lnapoctlon lit Ofll';o
~. required 01 lhe auc- 'lllppert Plain• Chiller of clork ot 23238 Hill R9.,
ceaaful Bidder.
Wiler Dlllrlct
Recine, OH 45711 fr4m
June 23to July 6, 19911, 5&gt;00
All bidder• mual comply COBG Funding, 134.000
~
wllh: The Prnldent'a Other Funda: 12,800 p.m.
Executive Order Nco. 11.~46 (T.P.C.W.O)
Tho he•rlng for tfie
and 11.375 which prohibit NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: .budget will 1M held July Is,
dlacrlmlnallon In employ· AREA LMI
7:00 p.m. Regut•r mootlh
ment regordlng race, creed, Activity: Slrtot Improve· to follow et office bulldi'!J.
color, aex, or notional monte: Scipio Townehlp
Every- welcome.
1
origin: Title VI ol lho Civil CDBG Funcflng, 112,300
llollrd of Trull-:
Chrii\VQto
Alghta Act of IH4; l"h·o'tiiAnltriCI·IIil =~•: ~ijECTIVE:
DovoQ~
KlckbiCk Acl; tho v,
Atu LMI
Robert Mcllija
Work Houro Slondordl Act: ACTMTY: Wllw and Sower
Joyce
White, C1i'rtt
40 CFR 33.240; 1nd olhor Feclllllu:
Tap-Ina
(740)
247·3f25
•pproprlote Slate 1nd lnlllllled/TIIIk
(6) 23, ltc
Federal Rqulotlono.
Ablndonmente- Port'- of
Bidder• are notified lh•t Or•nt•
and
Olive
t h•
Con t r • c I or
or Townlhlpe (Sower Olllrlot
Subcontractor will bo ~ArM) .
rtqulrod to PlY to ..ch COBG Funding; MO,OOO
laborer, workm•n or Other Funda: I30,CJI»CD8G
mechanic engaged In wqrk CHIP .
nt~tttaxn.
on the Project unjltr tho NAnONAL OBJECTIVE:
Jamn M. Soutllb!l I Contract at lho alto of tho
(8) e, 11, 23, 3 tc
Project In tho 1r1do or
occupation required, not
Public Notice
••• than the minimum baoe
hourly wage role pluo
Get
Acrou
PUBLIC•NOTICE
certeln fringe beneflll, 11
.Wit. A Dcllly h•tl•ol . '·
Racine VIllage Council predetermined by tho Stolt
will hOld the public hoorlng prev•IU.n t wage roteo.
on tho t - Budget July e,
Tho Owner reMrvoa .lhl
18111, 7:00 r..m. 1 t the rlghlla accept or reject 1ny
Recine Mui)IC pol lulldlrlg. 1nd all bldo and to wogo
The budget will be on view lnformlllllu, ·ohould II
'
'. .
11 lho Munlclpel Building dHm It lo be In lhe beat
from 1:00 1.m. - 4:00 p.m. lntarool of tho o-r.
'
••"~···
Juno It, 11118 through July
Tho contract documents
I, 1991. S•nlor cKilieno 1ro may be oxlmlnod •I the
lnvllod to oltond tho loll-lngloclll-:
heerlng.
F. W. DODGE CORPOR·
(ll2311c
ATION PLAN ROOM
2525 Horrodoburg R01d, 1
Publlc·NOIIce
Ptr•aon Cantor, Sullo 230,
Lexington, KY 401104
YOUR MESSAGE
OHIO CONTRACTORS
ADVERTISEMENT
ASSOCIATION
CAN BE SEEN HERE
f'OR BIOI
1321 Dublin Rud,
Sellod bldo for tho Coturnbua, Ohio 43211
FOR A TOTAL:.OF
conotruC!Ion of The TUppora It) 18, 23, 21c
·
$7.00 PER DAY.
Plllnl lndullrill Site,
utllltleo, lilt gredlng •

:"'.0::,

-

Yo•r •••••

·' · IULLETIII IOIRD ;
. '7"'
l11ch WHkday•

col•••
.,..

.....
' AI

·=·

· JIL SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

....

*Free Estimate'

··BENNEn's HEATING &amp; COOLING
-••where 'Qruility Doesrtt -cost More"
740-446-9416 •1

-·:-r -----~~ARPET

PLIJS
,., ,. Professional
•• ·floor Installation
i' · FREE ESTiMATES

740-698·9114

•

or

740-698·7231

.'""'. '------~=:.:::~
!, 1

1/11111

.. ROBERT BISSELL .
, CONSTRUCTION

'"~

.•New Homes
.•II •Garages•· '•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
. ESTIMATEES
'
985-4473

.

=·

,
'·

7/22Jtfn

.
•

1•740·949•2015

Heating &amp; Cooling

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEYICE

RADIA,.OR REPAIR

•Room Addlllons
•New Garagee
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Conc:rtte Work
(FREE ESTIMATESI
V.C:YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Agrlculturai • Industrial • Au\omotlve
··Re·cores • New Radiators

"Done righllhe fir st time.'

LINDA'S'
PAINTING

.. Welding Supplies ~ Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

TONY'S PORTABlE WELDI.NG

'

•Take the pain out of
painting, and lei me
· do rt tor you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After6 p.m .
(740) 985-4180 .
Free Estlmates
' 1111111111 pd.

4 Coli 2 Blld&lt;, 2 816ctc 6 WlllloShort Hllr, 'lory Cute 441-02el
4 Ml&gt;od BrHCI Pupplto 10 good

hamel (740):J8S 0415

GuHara
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
• FREE ESTIMATES

4·8wtc. old Angora klttena , 2-

block/whllo, 2-ora"fi/Whlto, ll!ler

tra ined. 9 Flrtt Slfttl , Muon .
304-173-5259.
amo.Okf Plrt beag'-Jpart ipllnitl ,
hal lhOia, fixed , d~g houu. to
goodhomo. 3CM-457~7528.

949-2168

5121/11n

:,TRUCKING

Arboro

117~7112

-:-A--------. rbors It Galllpoll t Ia currtntly
pllcanta. Baneflts art available.
If you have anv questions,

Long hair fluffy aiiOilod cOlor kittena, mala and female, 740·992·

~~ 1':,ntact Lisa Short at 7&lt;10-

are looking for dependable ap-

AREA SUPERVISOR
POSITION OPEN

Ferry. 3Q.4.87~2644 .

Supervt1or Poalton Open. Solid
Supervi&amp;ory Elpet.,nce A Must

Lost: malo long haired Shaphanl,
7&gt;40-MS-3325.

cation, Organizational, Anc:l Lead·

30&lt;1-937'2950.
Lost: Sprtng valley Aroa, Female

BoiCir, Ears Not Crop~d . VIPif
Frlendlv. Purple Collar, ?.C0-445·

2751.

Y1rd Slle.

70

Galllpolli

&amp; VIcinity
2 Family: Frtdoy Only, ROdney II
8·4, Chlldrena, Womeni, Clothtl
&amp; llemo. llr)'or, Lighll, Morel

FrH Ettlmltll

,.

(740) 985·3948

Mulli·Unll Pizza Dollvory Fran·
chloe With LocatiOn• In 50 Mlleo
surrounding cntlllcOihe Hos Area

Baale-Meadowa area Gallipolis,

black/sliver, whfte-apot on cheal,
neullred, medJum-brown eyes,
!ShY. Milling alnce June 15.
Bla9klbrown/whlla beagle, 1 ear,
neutered. Mining alnce June t5.

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

Golllpotls 11 currenUy

Biack 1: Whl1t Shaltle, Frltndl~.
CaU 7AO UEII982. '

LOST: Nortoioglon·Eik Hound.

P/B.Contradors, Inc.

11

accepting applleettona for RN' I
and LPN'a. We .,. looking for
eependable appllctnts . Mu1t
novo 1 valid Ohio AN or LPN II·
eanu. Experience In Long Term
Care 11 preferred . Benttlta art
available If you hav. any qutl·
tiona. please contact Uu Short

accepting applications lor 11111
teated nuralng aaalstanta. Wt

anawtra to •sampson•, reward,

LAIDSCIJII
DDIGII

740..985·4422

Eil\Jll ~ ~·

~PI Drug- EnlokooWJ••

Ronwelltr Mixed Pupplaa, 1•0·
375·2741.

60 Loat and Found
FOUND: Whltehon male Beagle.

614-742·2138

No Job Too .SIMI
Brian Morrison

M

5597.

Hauling, Excavating
a. Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gr1vel
Syatem• ·
Trailer &amp; HouH Sltea
ffeaonableffatee
Joe N. Sayre

1-740-742-2842

Computer Grapblc8
Designs
All Lar:utacaplng &amp;
Lawn Servlcas
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

992·5583

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Septtc

· SALES
·SERVICES
·I N S TAL L ATIO N
DON NITZ

. Oxy· Accet Regulator Repair

AU. Ylrd ..... M•t

1/1!11 mo. pd

1e Plltlln Adnnce.

• MAQUNE: 2:00p.m.

As Woll As E&gt;collont Communi·
orshtp Skills. Roiult ·Oriented
Paroon, SAl! SIOrtor, And Poolllvo
Loader~ Nttd Only Apply. Pool·
tlon Currently Repons Direct To
CFO Owner. Salary l30k Range,
Plus Bonus. Camp. Car, Medical
And Other Beneflte . Qualified?
Send One Page Resume To POB

211 , ChUiicotho, Oli-15601 .
Bltrlng Clerk For Family Practice

Office Needed Immediately. Experlence Required And Knowl-

odgo 01 Medico! Manago• Soli·

ware. Send Resume To: 318 Mc-

Cully Road, Gallipolis, OH 45630,
Or Ca!1oi0-44Hl757 .
Cartoton School/Meigs tndullrtoo
101ka a subslltuta Health Servlc·
11 Coordinator (AN or LPN) to
work with sludanll and with
developmantal dlsabllltlea. Must

bo a roglotored nurse or ticonud

practical nurse currenrlv licensed
~: tht State of Ohio. Send t8Sumo

Frldey.llondoy·I O:OOa.m, leb dllt.

s- Beha, EJ&lt;OCUilYo Director
c1r1o!on -~.....,..t..................
P.O Booc 307
t310CartotonSI.
Syracose, Olllo ol5779

Eatett Sale; 73 Cedar Street,
8 :30·4:00 Wed., 11124tl'l, 25th,

Companion to Uve with elderly
woman for room &amp; board. Non-

tht dly _ . . tht ad

lo ... ""'· 8undly
edlllon-2:00•m.
~

27111, Anl/q..s IGIIIIWirt I
Booko. !Furnlluro, IAppllancts, 1
Avon Bottfea, I Crattmatlc Bed I

.2etll,

Tools

""""""'· ~ 7 5-!'104.
Coupone for caah. Earn up to
S200 per week clipping .coupons
at home. Fr" Information 1·800-

Wed, June 2•th Thru Frl June
26th, 8 112 Mlleo North On 180, &gt;168-!lfiZ!...,B865.
SOmotning For EYoryonei ·
Driver nooded lor local haul, 27%

ol grose, atart Immediately, must

•Trim
·StUmP
Grinding

.

.

(7401 367·0266
1·800·950· 3359
20 Yni. Exp. • lns.-Owner: Ro'Vlle Jones

,o

Cheater

t1

St. RL 7

_ Tuppel'l Pltilna, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813 .
4" thru 48" ~;~taatlc culvert In stock
Full line of water atorage tankl·
Septic &amp; Clatern Tank•
Water llne-100' thru 1000' Rolla
Sewer Pip•· 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulatora .
Open:
.
. .~,
9:CI0-4:30 w..kdaya
9:00.12:00 Saturday

.

'

n

'0 '1 .'

SNOWVILLE
IECREATON CLUB

'i

. ',G un Shoot every
,· Saturday Night at
r •'

6:00.
..·Everyone
.
welcome.

••

Room open·
,~, _ G1me
5 pm-11:30 pm
Weekday•
•· ·
Sundays 3 pm-10 pm

..

tl ' -

.

112311

mo. ad,

.
First Three days

FHE POI'CORN AIID BAUOOHS
Opening J~ly ,I st.
THEALMOST .
EVERYTHING' STQRE
New and used
We Buy-Soli and Tirade
Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last.
Come In and set! us al
202 Elt1t Mllli SJ,
Pomeroy,Ohlo
192·1074

.

.

...

Custom Homaa
Roofing

.. •

Remodeling
Plumbing

8 .J

1:00pm Frldly.

80

(Lima StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAUliNG .
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Fill Dirt

. 614·992·3470

"Build rour .Dreana"

for Rent

Cross Pointe
Apartments

11198 Mlrtln,Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Re L. HOLLON
'TRUCKING .

Now Accepting Applications
· For·The Scleify &amp;Disabled

CO,.STROCTIO"
. • Vinyl Siding·· Garages
· • New

Equal Housing Opportunity
Public Notice

Homes • Pole Buildings

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE .
Agricultural Uma,,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Public Notice

·call 740·843·5426 ·

.,.,.., mo.

COMPUIBR
~PIRFO,RIUUICI

UPIIBADBI

=
c.==::=:=_:;,

1 6Your One Smp
~ ....ter

Shop'"

GIV. us • cat/ for syttem repslrs,
Nles, upgrades of consulting. ·

ver And Gold Colnl, Proof11t1,

Dlamondo, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Ringo, Pro-1930 U.S CurtOncy,
SIOrllng, Etc. AcquloHiono Jewolry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

COIStiUC,.IOI

"H•s• lateattrr"

Anttquu, top prtcoa paid, Rlvlr·
lnt Anttqutl, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ .Moore owntJ, 740· 992·
2526. .
•
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture.
will buy one place or complete

household .. Oaby Martin. 140·

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding .
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
Free Estimates

~5~.

Clean Late Model CafS Or
Trucka, 1990 Model&amp; Or Newer,

Discount Prices

Bennett Supply
740-448 04111
.13111 Sifford .
School Rd.
Galli Ia, OH

Musl Be 18Yfl.

s..v.u (81&amp;)64S 8430 • .
Wortd Wldo Wob Hotpl Amazing
World Wide Wob Navlgollonot

lheApplialceM•

®

"Noacl repair Oil lll)y
Slrrc:e
11153

•Dryer

• Hot Willer Hellltr

005
~00111
SOAP OPERA UI'OoiiTES NOWIII
t-900-n:l-llss

•

Secreta Revuledl You. Never
Would HM Thougftt., ..

H00·329-1293, &amp;ld. 9796, 12.111
Par Min. Must Bo II Yro. Sorv·U
819-845-8430.
30 Announcements
DIABETIC PATIENTI: You Mly
Be EnUtlld To Roctlvl Your Oil·
bollc flupplloa At No Cool To
You. For More lnformaiiOr! 1·888·
en-658t.

9--·-

- l b 'lbuTlwffl ~

Fa1t paced salon, hiring In all to·
cations, Athena atore hiring now.
coametologlat &amp; raeeptlanlst. call
1&lt;10-592·9101.

Full Thne L.P.N. SITE SUPER-

VISOR For Privalt Non·P,rolil

Family Planning Services Based
In Gallipolis. Ohio. This Position
Alao Manages A Mobile Slla In
Meigs County. Medical and Edu·
catlonal Slfvlces For Potan1ial
Case Loacl 01 I,500 Clients. Provide Outreach. Intake, Laboratory
And FoUow -Up Services To Females And Males, Schedule And
Statl Ph)'elclan Clinics; Must Be
Excellent Communicator. DeYalop
Knowledge 01 And Be Sensitive

To Birth Control And Reproduc·
Healtn laauea, Detail Oriented. Evonlng And Sllurday Hours
live

To Be E•pecttd. Travel To Other

kend1 Or Morning•. 740-446tiiM.

Wook W~h Benefit PaCkage, EOE

Wonted To Buy: Junk Aulo'a Any

/ESP.

-=

Ohio 45701. 37 5 Hours Per

Grill cook wanted. apply In ptr·
son. Crow'&amp; Steak Housa In Po·
moray
Halrdresur I Na1t Ttchlilcan
Needed For Busy Salon , 740-

441-1880
House

clianlng,

t '.11'1 !lVI.H· NT
o.Ui\ I( f ·,

·r

.,

I

•

,,

•

call

erea for STNA'a. For e~~:cellent
PlY. and details call now! 6142211-9642.

Llcenlld Physico!

Thora~lst

needed to dlagnoM and provide

u-•
direct ltrvlcea tor children and
110 ....
pWanted
· - a t tho Metgo County 9oan1
AVON I All Arooa I Shirley of Menlll Rotonlltton lnd lleYt~
opmonllll DIA-. Sclllduto to
Spem, 304-67~ 1429.
rottow tnt Certoton School eaton·
Ail kll n ~~.
dor. Comprehensive benefit ll'ldlc on ·~·• needed. (tnchJd· ago. Submit by Juno 30, 1988.
~~~ooC:O~~IIcation Contact: Carleton School, P.O.
Box 307, .1310 Carleton Street,
AIIPIIIChlan Community VIsiting SyrlCUH, onto 45779, 740·992·
Nur11 Atooclatlon, HOIP/iU!nd 8881 . EOE
Health Sorvlcto, Inc. It , .. ldng Now Taking AIIPIIcotlona AI Dorn·
oxporl Registered Nu'"s 10 PR&gt;· lno's Ptua, Gellipolto, l ....._
Yldl ..,. to In liomes
•-·--.
altor nours (tvonlng1 and .... Locolionl.
kondl). Qualified RN'J Olk HIN, Onto Trucking Compel minimum ol 0111 _ L kl F E
..,
clinical
..-rtonee In ola· ,•omo
oo ng •or xpartoncod Somt
•"
lloctor Trolllr Drlvoro, E•collont
cart "' acute caro Mtttng, - . Poy &amp; lnour•- PaCII~ga, 740·
.lontvtnt
and probtent
so ~~lcllllon
g -ms 1nd IIRibtltly.
eo... . ·-t~N2!!:!_.~13!:;,a~1~t~''!*"~'·~5!:_.-=:,~~
lllctlorboro Allin, Human Ae·
I'OITAI.J01110S1UIIHII.
IOUrCtl Director II 740·5t4· lno. lonollll. No Elltlllllnce. for

eo• t«&lt;D-

App. And Eurn IIIIo.,
813-3515, E&gt;l 1474, 1

P.M., 7 llo!lllll,tnc.

•

•

full time,

Would. Llkt To Buy
Working Whitt Glove Cloantng Services.
Wllhlrl, Dryero, SIDVII &amp; AI· ;_1&gt;40-::..:,742::.,:·26:::19~
. ----ft'IOitalotl. 7...._1088. ·
IMmediate opportunities In your

7&gt;40-!182·1142 .
Ouollty clOthing and hOUIIhotd
ttema. S1 .0g bog oalo ...ry l22e - .tnq- or ltnd YIIUI
Tllurldly. MondOV tnru Saturdly reaumo 1o P.O. Ilea 781, Alllonl,
Ohio 4510t,EOE
1:110-5:30.

740•742·3411 .

oriented.

aetwaged
Jwrecked
&amp; 0 or
Auto
Ports.vehicles
Buylng. ·Lauer at Interest And ThrH Em304-773-5033.
ployment RtrQ(oncos To Planned
Parenthood Of Souut~aat Ohio,
Used Mantia Tiner Call wee· 396 Richland Avenue, Athens,

·72~.

ANN OU NCEMEN TS

and people

Still As NHdtlf. Sond Resume.

WOnted: Auto'S In Any Condition,
CoN 740·388·90f2. Or 740·446·

Ext. l293
S2.99 per mi,.,.

tar Futuro Dllcount)

nutko?''
•W..here

Smltn Buick Pontiac, ISOO Elll·
ern Avenuo, Galtpotls.

~.7-IIISS.

*Root CoaUng1
*VIn,l Skirting
*W1ter Hellte1'8·
-poorsiwlndowa
*Electric/Plumbing
. supplies
.
*flbergl111 &amp; Wood
Stepa

•R••
New Construction
......__
. &amp; Rem•••ling
• Rtfrlgerelora

:

AYOnue, Gillllpolla, !40-446·2842.

POMEROY.I OH•

PARTS

(Con

PleiH 11nd restime to P.O. Box
29, Pt. l'ltUinl, WY 25550.

Absolulo Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit·

Chester, Ohio

MOBILE HOME

iNTERNET SIGN·UP POINT
POMEROY, OH·
740-8112·1135
1 mo.

gauc

Wedemo)er's Auction Service,
.
'E•pertenctd H.v A.C. Instiller,
90 . W111tec1 to Buy
Colt Y1t01 Hoetlng 6 Cooling,
7&lt;10-245-!1858.

1-----~::.!::!:~=====~==~~

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates
.

t88,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia. 304-

773-578fi Or 304•713-5447·

' 985-+122

614•992•5479

Experienced Auto Body man.

GolllpOlio, Ohio 7&lt;10-37tH1720.

'
JEFF.·WARNER INSURANCE

• Room Additions

OH 4511&lt;40.
---'------'-

u~ .

360° Communications

'.

wotcomo.

Rick Pearson Auction Compa"". Experienced Dental Anlstant
.., lor a high teen dllntal of·
Iu/1 lime auctioneer, completa
flee In Pt. P..aaant. We 1 ,. lookauction sorvtce. Llcenoed 1ng lut a tllm player,.. 11 .,.,.

·cELLULAR PHONES
113 .W' 2ND ST.•

vldad. Stnd Reauma To: ME·

Anti~UI bottle show and aale·

.

Lo,.a·s

Local stuff, bOttles, 'anct advents·

Sacond and Mlln St., Pt. Ploal· Sond AppltcatiOnl to CLM37 c/o
ant, Juno 26, 6·9pm. Juno 27, g. Galli N D 11 ~
'3pm.
740.992·5088. Free appral· llNe. Golllpotio,
po • a Yorlbune 825 Thlnl
~
Ohio 45631

JoeWIIaon

(614) 992477

atmbto Products At Home. Call
·~~:'.J."' 1·800·467-5566 Ext

lng. 7&lt;10-992·!5088. C.nstgn._to CHANIC, P.O. Booc 109, JaCkson,

d'•

440 . Aplrtmentil

Auction
and Flell Mlrk!ll

Ace. Dept: 1351 , P.O. Box 5769.
Dlomond Bar. CA 91185.
.
Eaay Work! Excellent Pay! Aa-

Antiquo auction· June 26, noon, E&gt;p. Depend- Diose! MecnanSecond end Main, Pt. Pleai'ant lc With own Toals: Baneflta Pro-

(614) 992-:3838

.

.......

der llefare lhl 1d 11 to runt

Sundat I llondoy adlllo,.

Ulllfttonl Hlullng
HouH &amp; Trailer Situ
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Siptlc Syatem &amp;
Utllhlea
Eatlmatea

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
985-3301

Pomeroy,
nova cu,ont COL, medical card:
Middleport
drug ac:roon. call740-742·3410 '
&amp; V.lclnlty
s1.ooo Wtaklf
Stuffing Envolopos At Horne. For
All Yon! leloo llual Be Patel In Detolls. Ausn (Long Saii·Ad·
AIIYinco. Doadll,.: 1:00pm the drosaod Stamped Envelope) To:

HOWARD
EXCAVATING "v·•

,..

be roc1lved by tho Molge

. .

DON'S

J086:::COM

3332.

SAYRE

CALL

"Pticed rtgnl Jiilhe time. ·

~allweycon•bucflon,wH

: IPrinJ• Fairp'ounds.

•leplocement Windows
• Slofiouory Docks
• Blown lnsulotion
•Garoges•Dtcb
24 x 24 Pole Builcling
starling of $5995
740-992-2n2

•S•ptic Systems
•Bas•ments
•Excavating

*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat

Howard L WrlteH

• V'myl Siding • Soffit
• fascia • Stam&amp;.u
GuiMr • Roofing

BACKBOEua
DOZER SERVICE

, , EnltiJver tlae Pltolle Bank Fit•tmici11g"
,·Air Conditioners Aa Low A• 128 a month
' Heat Pumps AI Low A• 138 a month

Bread b_
aking demonstration given to women's fellowshipl

Arid sutfcnly it's · sum~er. I
think it's s!lfc to say Y!IU ca~ forgQt
.
.
about the furnac~ '"'!!" o, for ~
,. The cancer gniup really drew a 1ile ~nd fl for ~ ~ir cotiditiorl&gt;
.. ~"" day Saturday for its annual in,:. ICFep ~Of liool, and do kL.,
· ,
· lay for lire walk. held at the Rock SIJtthn,, . ,

-I

used to treat PMS, they are usually
administered in a low dose and t~y
are taken all month, not just during
the week when symptoms occw.
Although a gynecologist can p~­
scribe antidepressants, many · w¥1
refer their patients to a psychiatri!l!.
Some doctors may also prescrilie
anti-anxiety medications for worn:.
with PMS to take, as needed, durit
the week their symptof!IS are m l
intense.
. ! ..,
P.opular literature is filled wi
many other supposed remediFs ~ r
PMS. These include high~carboh •
dratc diets, vitamins arid health sto
preparations. Some of these rem dies seem to work for some peopl ,
but the scientific proof on most f
these treatments is scant.
Although PMS is the freque t
target of jokes, it is a real condit'
and it can wreak real havoc on a fll!'"
son's life. If you suspect that it• is
happening to you, keep careful tnic~
of your symptoms and report thCm
to your physician.

...

A.M. ·8

�•

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 o The Dally Sentinel

Tueed•y, June 23, 1998
ALLEYOOJf .

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

ACROSS

PHJIJ,rp

ALDER
FINANCIAL

Now Accepting Applications For
A Part·Time RtotorlltiVO Therapy
Alototont 10:00 A.M. -8:00 P.M.
Mult 81 STNA· Reatorlitlwe -EJt·
por(onco Holplul But Not Ra ·
qulrtd . Oopondablllty A Muatl
Ptea11 Apply In Person Al
Scernc Hills Nurslng 'Center, Bet...
- n 8:30A.M. _.:30 P.M.

OpportunHy

VENDING: Lazy Parsons Dream
• Big $. Prli»d To Sol
Free Brochure, ~.

Few ~ra

• .~Per Mile
• $12.50 Per Hour
• Untoadlng a Drop Poy
• Porsonollzed Dispatch
• Home Wooldy
• 4CtK - Vacation, Holiday Pay
• Medical Insurance

B a w Garage, St Rl 338. Lalar1,
Ohio. 740·247·3522, propono
'-"kl lillld for grillS &amp; flV'S.

ol Education Ttocltlng COrtiliCalO.
To be considered lor lull time employment , applicants must also
have or bo eligible lo ob!Oin Ohio
Department of Education multi·
~ cor11flcallon.
Sond resume by June 30 to:
Meigs counly ao.t1 or Msnllll
Rotordalloo and Oowloprnantal
Oll&amp;bill..
P.O. Box 307
SyrocuiS, Ohio •5779.
Trace Ventures EMplorations, Inc.
Will Begin Taking Applications
For Seismic workers On Mon·
day. June 22. This I&amp; Ali 'Out 01
Ooora Work, Very Physical And
long HoUrs. We Work 7 Days A
Week And You Must Be Y(llling
To Travel, Have A Valid Drivers
License . And Be Able To Pass
Drug seraanlf\g. Apply In Par&amp;On,
tO A.M. To 3 P.M. Mon, Through
Fri. At The Knights Inn Rm. 15,
41M Chillicothe Street, Jackson.
OhiO 7.00.288-3129.

180 -wintedTo Do
ANYOOOJOBS
Shruba &amp; weedl trimmed, mulch·
lng, llower beds, landscaping,
aidewalk
edging, mowing,
· etc ... Free Eallmarea. Calf Sill
304-875-71t2.

CA. cathoclral coUings, otl drywall,
real rock underpinning, garden
tub, etc. Excellent conditiOn. Must
bo moverf A mull 100. priced to
1011 at $1&amp;.•oo, coli 7•0·992·
7690.

-·...,CUllOm-·

Goorve• POrtalllt - n . don't

'::J:t,#. to ... rnll Me ...
()14 WIH labytll In My
In GlllftiOIII, R t - -.
. . . - lltqurlto Only 740·441-

01114. :'
......... l'lllmblnll, Rtn)Odollftlj,

Mt

And ,U Odd J!II&gt;OI -

Eo·

SeMel. ~

,,JPII
Ttwl
II•-•'·
Froo Eo!lmltlll In·
I

•

- · - · Olilo. 114·3111141.t1441N010.
W11 Do Cuw•: ..:dll I R IWIIII
Cloenlng NO JOII II Too Sotlll,
Clll ..... 74().317•7111.

(RIPOl
'
Sot Uf! on 101. Bolt Ollor. 1100-3438182.
Monarch 12111:80 remod.eled
throughout, sitting on 11nled lot.
Can atay or be moved. Lot rent
S40.mo. Asking $4,900. OBO

304-882·34311. LMw ·
MUll ottl· 11198 Rtdntln. 14l70,
two bedrooms. two balhl, tJtCOI·
lent condlt\on, Hrtoua lnqulrl'.•
only, 74f&gt;i49-1327.
Now u or 1eaiO. Only make 2
paymen11 to movt In, no pay-'
..... lftor: 4yll. 304-786-7181.

1111ltl 14a70 throo btdrpom,
lr\cluojet 5 monlhl FREE lOt rtnt.
Includes &amp;kirllng, dalu•e ataps
and oolup. Only $187 .08 por
month wltlt St075 down. Call t·
1100-831-3238.
NEW IWIK IIIPO'I Only 3 IOhl
S1111 under warranty, owner fl.
nonclng avlillablo. 304·755·
7181 .
New Ooubltwldo 3BR, 2 balh.
$1,325 Down ·a $205 por mo. 1·
-~3428.

,,2
with otl options, only $2,499 .

loaded

28»~80,

3tH. 2

Slngto Porwnt Progmn. Sptc;ltl
l)nanclng on 2. 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes. PQ•enla •• low ••
tiiO. COinrM 304-786-51185.

bath

-n. $362. per monlh. Froo olr a
lklrl1·88H9H7n.
Lovely Country Home On SR 7
South With A Breathtaking River
VIew. very Prlvall Sonlng On 2 11
2 Acres But Only 10 Minutes
FrOtn Galllpolla. 3 ·4 Bodrooma. 2
112 Baths, Hardwood Floors. 2
Flroplacos, Now Heat P....,, New .
Kitchen, Many Elltrla. WOn't Last
l.Mgll$110,000.

Call Virginia L. Smith Aaally At
740·448·6806 Or Call Cara At
740· 245-9430 For More. lnforma·
lion.
Middleport. beautiful lwo atory, 3
br, 2 bath, Iaroe l.r. &amp; tr., oak
doors &amp; tnm, Smlth'l cuiiOtn oak
cablneta, Jenn·alr range. dish·
washer, detached gaJage, by apj)Ointmont, 7.00.992-52ol3.

320 Mobile Homes .

Futnllrft - " · rotlnilh and .....
Ohio
Valloy Aotln[Jhlng Shop, Larry
PhlfiiPII74CJ.9112.e&amp;18.

Paymenta After 4 Years, 1·800·
383-6862.

Houae t'or sale at 379 Salem
Stroot 1n Rutland. 5 rooms &amp; bllh
with garage and hall basement.
Out ol tho flood aroa, call at 7.00.
742-2065.

auolnttl Canto $17 .95 Per
t ,000 Ralstd Print /High Ouatlly
Stock Call K&amp;B Advortillng 7.00.
..-&amp;-11173.

EKPetilneld e~~rpenllr wiU do ,..
modollng. acko . vinyl lldlng,
plumbing . Free estlma1ea. Call
Jim Shull. 304·875-1272. Attar·
..... 1410"~·

Wo Buy Land : 30 ·500 Acres,
we Pay Ceth . 1-SOP-213·8385,
Anttony Und Co.

MlddltpOrt.

Special 15xl0 • 3BI!. .2 balh.
St ,325 Down, 1205 Mo. Fro• air
&amp; lreelklrtlng. 1-1-em.

...__
-

...

BPRiilo IPICIALI

Cia--

111111o.
'-WIMUia
't7,_ _
__

Frat DtNIIy • .-....
Onl'j AI

Nllro,WV.-~

TAXIPICIAL

New 3br $999/down '189/mo.
Free Sll·up &amp; Dolivory. Only 3
Leltl Only at Olk- N~
11owv. 304-755-5ees.
TWo 2 bedroom trauera, 10.50 &amp;

t 2•8!), otovo and rolrlgtralor,
gas: f.lew Lima Rd., muat mave,
740-742·2803.

112 Acroo. House. Workohop,
Outbulldinga, Westetn Gallla
County, 115,000; Equlpmtnl
Avellobto ·Soparattly, 814·239·

for Sale
12111:80 1ralfer or cin be usl&lt;l lor
oHict trailer. $3000 with out air
condllloner, $4000 wllh , 7.00.IM92217, 7:00trn-tO:Oilpm.

14 x70 3BR. $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 ~ mo Frat air &amp; koo oklrllng. t -888·928-3426. .

8858.
Molgl County· 100 ICIOI wllh
por\11.
- - bldiOOin
-·
4 -hunung
,,.. gu.
!IIIII
Ior.
end·fishing,
1175,000,
~-t29e.

340 Bullnne8nd
lulldlnP

t4a70 3br $999 d,own. $198 per
kao air &amp; ·~rtlng . 1·100-ett•

mo.
mr.

Commorcla~OIIIct

Of Rttall; 87
Mill St. MlddltpOft. t,450 8q Ft.
8400 mo.(or outldiYidt- to -1,000
oq,ft. lor $300 ~CGmtr lng . (740)412
~

·

poe. per mo. Froo air l llllrt. 1·
SIHIHIT77.

.

330 Farm. tor Sele

1'\uge very nlca corner lol. 740·
(192·7493 onytiml.

t8al0 3br. 21!ifh, $t,325. -

RENTALS

Uaod Window Air Conditioning
Unlll, Dllllrtnt Sizes, Guaranteod,
7.00.1l16.0Q47.

410 Houlft tor Rent

520

2 Bodroom Conage Qn BultYIIIO, .
1/2 Milt From Porter, NO PETS,
Water, Trash Paid. 740·318·
ttoo:

530

'

~-~·

1983 Cttamplon. !101112. two l&gt;ttlroomo; 1M4 Spruco Rkfto. Sky·
line, 72&amp;14. rwo bedroom•. two

350 Lol8 • AcriiiJI

c__,
COUimiY 18TATII)

-7-11327.

I I I I I - DIVILOHIII,

Jl74 HltiCrtlt, 12•111.· tlHIIenl
condition, twO bedroom, oentrll

31.21 Aerts, Approa. I Acre
n ,_,.. . Lalla, Mollilt Ham• Wllh Lorgo
hatne, mut4 be movecl. fult tur· Add On Gallll CIIY Wlttr And
- ·papa, 7-3843.
Eltetrlc 1t28,0ilo Moll Ac~
1- 7 'rle, , . . . . 1171.
I
1"111:10 2 Bldtooma, Good
Aol1lng Prlct ...1100; 74CJ.
2 Ctmtllry toto at Klrkllnd
1112 Commodore, 14xl0, on Mtmorltl, olde·by·lldt w/lronl
ronttd lot In M"""-1, . - 10 - .1800. 3fl4.t7&amp;.3211.
o11Gppin9. ochOOII, pool &amp; "'"'· 4 112 10111, wtltr, iltclrlc ond
Throo bodtOOmo. two lvH llttlti.
- dOuDII
opal. wldt
fla.lyorlorbUild
lintolltl Mclrlc. 2all - . oro ·
wldt,
ctltlngo, 3 1on Hntrol •" 11onar, two okyligllll, front porctt homo. Ono -from Ohio -

aw, aM tiOCiric, -

-~on1M_io_

llun Strrl Parte, prlco rtducod,
tnd - · Cllpor1, 4' ground pool """ - ~..... 7~HII22.
tnd """r cowr. privity laftCo In
back lor pool, .... outbul:r· I ..,.. ol 2 ocro loll on lleHtll
120.000 """· Clll 740-H2• Rd. WY. No olngltwldtl. 304·
175-71118.
.,_" rrgeltna ......

540 Miscellaneous
MerchendiM
•CQOL OQWHt•
Contra! Air Cond11ontng. Free Eo·
timlllal II You Oon'l Call Us, We
Both LOlli 7ol0·448-8306, 1'900·
29HXJII8.

113 carat, ·Olund ·diamond llllltalre.
slzt 6, paid $400, will lake 1550:
Mar,quta wadding aat 112 carat •
olze 7, paid $1400, will tiki
$1250: wedding gown wllh vall
llzo 7, peld $700 wllltako. 1300:

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hOmes
$280·$300, sewer, water and
- - · 74Q-9112·2t87.
bedroom mobile home, in
Racine. no flOII, 74CJ.992·~.

7.00.367~861J17.00.i49-2461.

a

TraHers tor rent 2br &amp; 3br, quau. ·
fiol for HUO. 304-n:H&amp;C+.

1Wo btdtOOnt In Mlrlrlleport.
S300 month plus dtposll. 740·
91lli-311M.
.

125·CFM g11 compre11or, call
7.00.9112·7548 .... 15pn].
18,000 BTU Air Condltiontr, 740oi46-7t23.
. 1930'1 Old .Singor Ptddto &amp; EloCtrlC Sowing Mtcltlno. $1 so, 080.
7.00.2~5.

AJM~rtmenla

1.993 Cub Codel Rl~lng Lawn
Mower Modot t 841 •a• Dock, 18
HP. Wllh Cu. Fl. Troller, Excollanl
Condltloo, $3,200. 74().041 .Q043.

for Rent
1 end 2 bldtoom ap.~nmenta, fur·

nlshed and unlurrMihld, Mcurtty
deposit required. nq pets, 740·
9112·2218.

Pete for Sale

1yr old Saint Bernard, great w/
kida, beaumur, to good home.
$200. 304.fi75-1519.

--·

.420 Mobile Homae
.for Rent

A Groom ShOp -Ptt Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
ShtetA. 373 Gaofllo&amp; Crook Rd.
740-448-0231 .
AKC English Springer Spaniol
Pupa, 6 Weeks Old, tat Sholl,
Wormod, S 1~0 . 740·256- 6935,
Allar·5.
AKC Reg Goldtn RolririYor Pupa,
roody on 7·8·98 . M·$175 FM·
$200. Can NCWI304-995-3388.
AKC Roglaterad Rott Wallora.
Roady To Go 8126198 . 2 Malea, 3
- · 7.00.388-9788. .
Australian ·shepherd Puppies, t
Moto Blue Morto, 1 Mole Trlco~
orad, 7-1032.
Australian Shephard Puppies.
Male Merle, 1 Mate Tricolored,
7-1032.
Bird. ·Jenday conure. Hand
ralaod . Tame . $350 . Groy and
while Cockatiel' $50. 740·992·
69t41111r 5pm.

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Man-Sat
11·8. Fish Tank &amp; Pol Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave. Polni Plaaa·
Int. 3CH-e75-:zo83. .
Eight month old Cocker spaniel,
Atglatared, male, all ahots,

- · 741&gt;992-ltl48.
Golden Rotrlovor Pupplos. AKC
$200, ShOll IWOtmed, 740.3711-

29e1.

.

;

Lorge golcllloh lor outdoor panda.
$15. otch. 304·675-1845.

1 Bedroom· Untur.nlshed. tat
Floor, All U11titl16 Furnlohtd Ex·
cept Eleclrlc, Central location. 741J.448-2602.

i

Btdroomt, 142!5/Mo.. $100 o ..
poolt, Ufll- PoJd. No Poll. 7.00.
448-f937, 740-446-3437.

2bdrm. opts .. toltl tloclrlc, IP•
pMtncto lvrnlllltd, ltunrlry room
laciiiiiOa• . - .. ocltoolln town .
Appllcatlono avollalllt ot: Vllloge
!irMn Apta. t4t or cal 7.00.112·
3711 .EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARtMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Orlvo
from S21t 1o ,318. \VIIk to shop
. &amp; mov111. Coil 740·4411·2511 .
Equal~ Opporlunlly.

-•tor - :

Fully lurnlohtd tlflcloncy at&gt;irt·
COUtl1ry lOtting, con
1.00.tt2·2292 5pm or loovo
lnl .. ..

Gracloulllvlrlg. 1 and 2 bedroom
opartmtnts ot Vllltge MinOt ond
Rivlllldo Apartmonll In Middle·
pOll. from $249-1373. Colt 740·
tt2·50M. Equll Hauling Oppor·

.

Nlce 1 Bedroom Apartment.
Country Sldt Apallmonto, Routo
581, $285/MO., Wlttr, Stwtr.,
G&amp;fblgo lncludtd, Oepoolt • ·
qulrad, 1 IllS 84Q.Ol!21.

Now Taklhg Appllconono- 35
Weat 2 Ballroom Townhoull
A,.rtmento $285/Mo., 7•0·448·
0008..
.
1bllpl· 1 01 2 pooplo. $100
dtpOIII, Ill utltllltl ,.ld, $150
,., month. 304·175·18 12 alter

eprn,

----·=
'::.:r·
Al'f AVM.AII.a -

IIIPflcltlor)llor 1bl. HUD
1or3CH-e'IH87t.
eklorty """ hondl·
.
• EOH

Upllolrt ""'rtrntnt lor rent,
downtown GolllpoHI, ont Dod·
room . .,. ......... 1231 month,

Draaslng table, olrollor. awing.
. ~;~~Y bod, • cor &amp;oat.

4000 Ford Tractor Leit Model
SUSO: 5000 Ford Late Model
Dryers, small apartment weal'ler, 17 ,,50; John Deere 50 HP
rolrlgorator. computor &amp; discs. SU50: John DMre 2030 $7,950,
304·875·85t2 or 2304 Madllon 17~.00.~286~8~5~22:_._ _ _ _ __
/we, Pt - · WV. Apt M.
8N Ford 1roc1or wllh 4' bruoh hog:
EBTATE BALE: Numoroua J-. •oo Farman, both In ••cenent
ry : 111ngo, Eerrlngo, Nteklacea, lhapt, 741&gt;985-3ttl2.
Bracel,ata I Pendant1, Precloua
Stones 1 Dlamondo, 740·381· John Ooor1 212 With 47 Inch
Mower, 383 Cub Cadef Hydro
1481.
ilotll Nlool7of0.44H227.
Festival and Fair Food Booth lor
Sale. Will Consider Trodo. 740· John Dttre STX-38 Riding Lawn
Mower, aame is new. $1.60Q.
2•5-0803
304-675-3124.
G.E. Wnhor $125: Mtylag Oryor
190: Whirlpool Oryor S85; All Mauoy Farguoon Modal 1010
Whlto Gold G.E. Stovo $90, War- 4K4 Oleael Tractor, E)lcellent
COndHlOn, 7of0.&lt;146.1943.
ranty 4S 0.1 7ot0-448-90lll.
Tractor &amp; Equlpmont. 7•0·256·

Grubb'l Plono- tuning &amp; roj&gt;alro.
Proi&gt;IOmo? Nttd Tuned? cau Itt
plano Dr. 740 448 4525

Your Area 'Bush Hog Deater Far
Parta. Rotary Cutters, Loadets,
Tlllera, Ftnlah Mowers. Etc. Car·
michael's Farm &amp; lawn Midway
Bttwotn Gollpolll a RIO Grondo,
Ohio On Jackson Plkt 740·448·
2412 Of 1-1100-5114-1111.

· IBM 3811 oomputor, monitor. key·
botrd ond mo~••· '1 50 080,
moy con•- gun on lradt. 740. tll2-lt54.

.

UpotaiN Aponmtnt, Ctooo To
Grocorr l Dowotown GllllpoHI,
Aeltronct l Otpooll 740-448·

Your Arta John Pe.tre Dealer
For Rtsldtnttar And Commercial
Lawn Equlpmont. Compoct UURty
Troclofl From 20 To 3t HP. All
SIZtl 01 • WO And 2 WO Form
·JET
Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
. · AERATION MOlOAS
·oo- Sltkl Slltr Lotdttra. Chaclt
Ropllrld, 1!1!' &amp; Rtbulll In Stock, Wllh Ua Aboul Flnlncin9 AI Low
COil Ron Evono. 1-II00-537-I5all.
AI 2.9% On Lawn Tractors And
Low RtiO Flnlncir)g On New And
Uatd Equipment. Carmichael's
F.rm &amp; Ltwn ClaR'I&gt;OII, OH 740.
- 1 2 1-1100-594-1111.
Mlnolta 35 mm Camort, Extra
630
Livestock
(tna, Aaah, New lea
7
71128
HuldiOI, ·
2 Small POnlto Child Solo $500
ftomoroy Tltflfl 8ltoP .,., buying Eech. Bolh For SIOO. 740·441·
largt outoldt toy a ond baby · ;:,11111:. ;. . 1· - - - - - - - .1ton1o. wallrlrl. ,_cor - · e Yltr Old Gonllt Outrtor Mor·
~~'r'.:'nttFr= ~ gon Riding Mort, Good Troll
Hartt; 8 - Old Guroltt¥Ory • 2 01 mort purchlll, Stud Colt, 740· 387·7875, 740·
7 - : m s.
387-()183, 7-t-Q425.
.

:rea-·

Soil--

=e~

lid:

Bcoottro, Elactrlc Wlttetchalra,
Stloo: Aenlai, Trtdt, Ntw &amp;
Ultd, llowmln'l - · 740448-1213.
Treadmill, txtrcloo bike, will
Ckclt Molal. LOftll R1t01 In
mirror 3114h .. · 311f0Ct Will
Town, Nowty Rornod-. HBO,
unfl, TV·tllnd, 2/ohelvto. 304Clntm... tlhowHmo l Dlanay. I7USI:I
·
Wtoldl' ...... Or Mon1lllr flllll. '
Conllructton Wortcoro Welcontl' Wattrllno Spoclll: 314 200 " '
7-1-5117.
121.15 Per tOO; 1' 200 PSI
137.90
Par I 00: All Braaa CoinSlttplng tooma wllh coo•lng.
8iocll
Alao trtllor 1pace on rlvtt. All pllltiOit
liON
IVAIIIl
lllltiiiPIIIIII
hOOk·upo. Call anor 2:00 p.m.,
- · ONo, 1-800-113'1....
3o4-773-115t. l4oaon wv.

1111.

7_,.....

1528.

Janitorial oqulpmont. 20' Eloctrlc
auto acrubHr. t~secs vary 11111e.
$2,000. 7~-8914 . .

no pall,--.....-.- :.
oiOCtrlc.

Ill and IriSh peld, total
7...742-21117.

610 Farm Equipment

Giovtty riding rnowor, 12 hp.. 38'
........ - . 7~1813.

,.,.In

Four hoflol· ont Atgllllrod
Tonnaastt Walker gelding; two
Arabian llfldlngo: one Rogllltrtd
quarltrhoflt mora; 740·742·
2050.
French Alplnt Ooat, Buck, 8
::::,~ld, W11ntd, S59. 740•

,

Bautll

Motorcyclee

IA ,QJ983
•• 5 2
•

• K

1183 Mustang 4 Cylinder, Au·
10rnallc, $895. 7.00.44&amp;«1110.

6 A J 2

South

•
1984 Honda 250 4 Wheeler •

Noods Some Work , $800, 1•0·.' · '
245-5235.
.

3909.

1Q84 Honda 'v65 Sabre: nooc:e,.
14,500 Miles. Wiler Cooled, Shin
DriYe, Like New. 74(1.041.()443.

9112-8914 aft« 5prrt. .
1987 Sulek Riviera. make excellent work cor. Alkln9 $700. 080.
304-e75-1t37,

1987 Chtvy Cavalier, 4dr, with
AC. Fair cond . $500 . 740 ·992·
8914 alief 5pm.
t 987 Toyota Calloa. 5op. air,

1891 Honda 250• 4 Whotlor
01 New Stull! 74().041-1419.

SEAT BELT

.TY PI GAL.! ylt4fNtVEit
Ttttn'S L-AYOFF$,
Tt4fY AL.¥1 AYS
/
$0lJtfZE
FitO~ Ttlf

:

Under 1/0, with accesaorlea, •
$7500, 74().742·7101 .
:
12 Ft. Coleman Fiberglass Cal . :
noa, Paddle, a Life Voat, llk•· ,
Now, $125, 7.00.245-9322.
•

1992 Chevy Corvottt Coupo,
Loadod, 80,000 'Miles . St5,500
740-e42·75t2 Evanlngl.

1811. NorrlsCrait btU bOlt, 200tlp
Mercury motor, trailer, tackle/ ;

Upton Ultd Cais Rt. 82·3 MMtl
South ol Leon, wv. Financing
.....::He. 30W58-1019.

720 Trucks·tor Sale · ·

!039.

Power St1arlng, Pow1r B,rakei.
$10,700, 740-245-0337.

730 V.Qsi4-WDe
1t74 Ford F·t50 4a4 4 Spatd,
Runo Good Pltro :jilt For
II, $2,000, 740-258-1311.
t911 Chtvy Yon 112 ton Looko
GOod, Runa Good. All1lng 1.bOO.·
740 441 • ••

s

t990 Toyota 4a4 Plck·Up, 5
Spud, 110,000 Mllll, 740·448.

4219.

Ftrflol- .ltrloy COw Duo To 19t1 Goo Trockor Black, St••·
Frllhon With 2nd Cot! 7112, dard, Air, AMIFM Clllollt,
IMO. 740 251 11230.
U,850, t - - ..
Neloon'o Cullom Proc11slng
1915 Ford Alrolllr. XLT; - r
now open. For molly Joneo cuo· •locka,
crulae, air. I ,...e. .r,
tom, 2573 iltltt erou1ng Road, 8211,
19.450
,_..,.., 740-142·
Milton, WY. We do vocuum
72o13, 741&gt;742-2333.
packing. 304-743-11400.

Norlll · E11t

I'Jas

Pass
Pus

C.-...

2Z Schldullll
23 Yilt Jlll'lacl
Olllma
24 FIMhriNII

tr-i--11-t-+-+-.... · 25 Eyapert

128~n'

1.

...-+-+--+--i

1:
3B=r.:r-.
=pin?

' 30 Chltlllnlle

Kawaaakl STS Jet ski, still u,.r'..:
warranty. thrH uater, 83 hor ...
power, bought new July or •87. :.
three matching Kawesakl akl 1
veata and trailer au go with It , 1
S5000. 7it0-IM9-2203 or 740-...,_,
2o•s. will consider trade tor&gt;:
good pontoon boot
• •••

--+--+---+-+--1
....-t--+--t--t--1 .... -

.

.

~

I

..

·0

.

.

I I I' .

..

I1

1 1

It.., .

l

II I I I I
S

. '·

8

0 5
t

~~~~!andyouhopeit'snol-·-.

L--.1........1-.J.--...I.L-...I.L-.J

•

8

Complete tho ~huckle quOitd
by fil~ng in lhe miltling -d•
you d...lop lrom np No. 3 bolow.

...

Auto Perle &amp;
•
Acceaaorl..
'
"'New_ga_•-,.""
....;.•"'&amp;"'body....,."",.,.-. o,..;,.a

i

SCUM Lm ANSWIU

Motor Homes

'

,

ITUESDAY

·- ------.,.•

t

1995 Jayco Otslgnor Serteo 34'
compor, IIIIa new, kltchonlllvlng
room slide-out, ~n bed, «*tW
both, sldo-by·lldt, ptlcad to otll.
140-811·3:222.
';

1
1

J

•
...

1998 30ft. Sprinter travel trat~~

•1

lull owning, CIA &amp; hotil. Ulld '4 . 1
tiii'M. 304-875-3823.
-I r 't

1

.•

Pop-up camper. Sittps 8. GrMt
condition. AC/heat. OYIIn, atOYI, '
and sink. Electric, gaa, or ba1· ~
tory. $3,000. 740·Ii92o&amp;914 ahor .!
5pm.
.
-

SERVICE'";

110
IAIIMENT
WATEIIPIIOOFIIG
UncondHionol llllllmo guarantM. ·
Local ratarences lurnlahtd. Ea·
~ 1975. Col 24 Hra. (74Q(
ue-0670, t·I00·287·057e . Aoa· •
.,.. w.....oor. 10•
Appliance Parli And Strvlco: A" •
Nomo Brtndl Ovor 25 Yllrt Ex,
perlence All Work Guaranteed
Fronc~ City Moytag, 740·44.,: ·

..

Homo Moln: ·
ttntnct· Painting, vinyl aiding, . ·,
CMponlry, doOII, wlndowa, bathl, , ·
hOinl ropolr ond mora. For ·
"" ••-ta call Chot, 740.992- • ·

•

140 Eleeb k:allnd

"'" lgenitlott

.

..

Asthma • Doubl- Bleak- Umpid- OLD HABITS
After every New Year I discover that serious lf'9uble
occurs when my resolutions collide with my OLD HABITS.

R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304o372· I
:

'· .

A•'dwiiNII or commtrclll wtrtng.
Of llpllra.tMaottr LJ. · '
cen1eo lllctrlclah. Aldtnouo ••
Eltclrtcal, WV00030tl, 304-1175.
1711.
• '

r

.,
' /

.' .
..•

780

campeee a

.' .

4

1LL EAT LOUDER ..

I

1323.

.•

-ltboul ,,
By Phillip Alder
450cNn
Brilain's besi player, Tony For·
rester, wriles for The Daily Tele·
47 Wrllllr'•
•
concern
graph. He has put 1o~eiher a col lee-· •
:41 SmiiiMI 01
lion of his columns. "Vintage For- ~
lhllittlr
rcster" (BaL~fonl). There Is advice on
-r+-1--+--t--+--1 ·51Lat.leiW
41111dllwl -r '
..
all aspects of the ga19e, with a wide
53A-ea
variety of subject matter and com·
14 Ending for
plexity level. In particular. Forrester's
IUCIIOn
•
recommendations arc practical. He
·
describes only convenlions that he
feels are useful.
.
... .,.,,
Forrester admiis thai I he articles'
CELEBRITY CIPHER
,
quality has been improved by taking
by Lula Campos . ·
e.llbrtty Cipher Cl p1cr-ms ...,et.-ct lrom' ~ tly tamcM people, pat lfld .,.....,.
advantage of suggestions from readEliCh lin..~nl'll «*'* ltlndltcw anoNr. Todlr'~ clle: w ..,.,. r
ers. Here is one of the easier deals.
featuring a defensive play ··~at has
IZD
DNBZAAZ
UAZBX
been highlighied. many limes in ihe · 'XBLINBE
.· '
•II "'
literaiUrc, but is often missed by playAPH
PH
IZD
TH
A
L
PLBLA
.
ZB
ers below the expert level.
ScJtllh's jump to four spades is an
LU
APH
ZA .ANDA
overbid, but if he made a game-try. · E A H.Z A H D A
North would accept wilh his near·
QHBAFAW.'
KFJNL
NEJHDNZD ·
maximum.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He was lhe boss. He was lhe big bang ol f)ilp. The
•
In answer 10 his partner's opening
·man invenied pop music.•- Bono, ol Francis Albert Sinalra. ·
bid, West leads the heart seven, East
winning and playing two more
rounds of lhe suit. When South ruffs
WDII
fiAT lAilY
IAMI
the lasi of · these with the spade
PIZILII
_ _ _ _;.__ l4llotl lor CtAY I. P«lAN
•
queen, what should Wesl do?
. '
There is a nalural reaction 10
Roornongo ia~Mro of the
four oaambild _ . be. overruff, but i1•s wrong. South will
low ro fOfm lour limplo -ds.
win whatever West returns, draw
..,
frumps and claim. His losers arc one
.• '
spade and two hear!.•.
Noie I he di ffercnce if West discards at trick three. Soulh's remain·
,.
ing trumps .arc heucled by t~ liCe- .
,
jack-nine. Siuing over him, Wesl ha.~ •
.
ihe king· I O.iwo. Wesl musl collect
two frump tricks, 10 go with East's ·
..,
pair of heart winners.
•.
AQ0 UT
'Middle age." a woman said
The book is S22.95 poSipaid from
~o-...--1~~-.-TI--1: to her friend. "is wha n dthe
Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call'
. . . . . .
phone rings on a 5 a1ur ay
(800) 274-2221.toorder.

My

.'

1'115.
cac • Gtntrol

-

Wle.

41 Llyen
42 SWit'MI
•43 Owl'• cry

.

SACRIFICE
• ,·
1987 Oeoonlc Seo tmp 160hp .•• .
Morcruloer lnlboerd ongl111f. 11~ . :
doop-V wltraller. tile 1acktts l I
bumpero. 740·446·3814. Mokt
oftlr.
'
'

7110

•

131 'lypullerrilr • ·

·•. r--r-I_M,_.. .,T,_o_,Frrll

•

1992 Ford .El1P- ·ee.ooo milts.
M.OOO. 080. - H 4 3 t.
t 997 Red FOfd Rongor XLT AU·
lorneuc, AJC, Aluminum Whaela,

.

35 Horae Power Jot'lntonl Good' '
Condlllon. $800, Coli ~ 1 .s, !
P.M. 31M-1175-5131 .

1973 23ft. Dodge Concordo. filii "
oloc~lc htol. microwave. doubli-~'
door rtlrtgerator, 1611. ceretrt~
11wnlng, king liZt bod, novr ttroo: 1
4.0 O~a gonorat01, runa groat 1
$3.400. 304·882·3237 alter 5pm.
~

19110 ChtY)' Sllvorodo 350 long
b8d: automatic, loodtd, .pooltlvt
traction rear·end , two tone,
$4000, 304-7·73-$139, 304· 713·

.

'

1982 F-700 Ford Dump Porll,
Front lAter Houstng1, Tires
900x20 Mounted Tranaml,alon
- · 5 Spood, 7.00.245-9441.
1984 1 Ton Grumman Step Van
12 Foot Cargo Area. Atumll"!um
Body, Dual Rear Wheels, Very
Strong Truck Vory Good Condl·
tlon, $4,500, May Consldtr Trtdo
For 1/2 Ton Pick-Up 01 Equal
Volut. 7.00.379-2211.

1989 Chovrolll Suburban 2500,
314 ton, 2•whool drlvo, ox. cond.
In &amp;out, no ruot. :JO.WI75-3823.

21

'"·

SCC:1l~lA- ~ ~~s·

22 ft . Sto Ray Cuddy Cobin 1
Hardtop lncludol Dining Arot•
Wllh Sink, AlcohOl, St&lt;M, Bulll·ltfl:
leo Chill, Sttroo, POrt ·A ·POtty.
New Lower unu, Gtmbla Rlngl; .. !
Eahauot Mo~llold, Stoorlng C• ..
·bias, Battery: Stalnleas Steet i
Prop. CUI\Omlltd Storage CMJ,,,
,$8.500. 7.00...-&amp;-7106.
l

1
~t9::7::2-:S::'ta:-r:-&lt;;J~Ih::-,:-.c"'it::'ll':'lo-r-a-ppo-:'ln-:-t· 11
..-. 710-843-53117.
-·

1918 Ford F·150, 314 Ton PICk·
Up, $2,500, 7~70.

.

12 A 8Gall

11 Mldlhll

..

~'{,NOW tf.T'~ C.Nf. IT ~ ID!

,,

.1981 International Cargo Star
1100. PS, 31,000 actual mllal,
7.00.742·2455.
.

•

r

~

oJr ~ ~/IOK,ITT...-.. ._.....-,

;;;-~3;;;or...;1~-I00-2~~7~3-~9329~~·;----

245-5235.

·

'ffil~ 1:&gt; ~ ~w. (:J.Ar;;t&lt;~ 1
Wl\'t' t'()l'r we rio¥£~ tmoU. ~

1993 21ft: Mkada Cabin CruiiOi. '
In/outboard moror, ·4.3 engine, ,
plua ell accessories. 304·87!5(
635911ttr!ipm.
• ·;

1978 Ford F-250, V·8. Automallc,
4a4, Hao Ladder Rack TOOl Box·
eo On Eaeh Sldo, $1.200,.740.
446-9718.

t915 Dodgo Heovy t/2 Ton 4a4
WKh Slttl HllttbOro Bed Wllh AI
Trolltr Hook-Ups, $3,500. 740·

r c

stsoo. •

20n. Citation wnrllltr, lnloutbolni '
motor, 170HP. $4,995. 304·875· •
4221 .
.

NO HAll. DAMAGE t 997 Cavoli·
or II.S. 2 Door Cottpo, lilacS, NC,
·5 Spood, AMIFM Ct-t!O. 7,000
Mlltl, $8,250, OBO, 740·251·
1011 ..

111E BORN LOSER

1Mtl. 24' pontoon. bOlt with 35 hp. '
Mercury motor and traitor.
300-882·2588 altor 5pm.
I ;

1995 Qhovy Coprlot • Oooro,
Loaded, 31.000 Mllto. Hall o ..... ·
oge, ... 295, 740-892·7512 Even-

Crtdll Problamo7 Wo Can Holp.
Eaoy Bank Financing For Un&lt;l
Vehicles. No Tui'n Downs, Call
VlckiO, 74tJ.146..2187:

.

5· Pevlng goo
I Blri'IPII

..

t984 Evlnrudt S - 16 Trl hout, &lt;
90 hp. Evlntudo motor, Evlnrud• i
lntlle{, 7.00.742·2580.
- -

Car, 28,000 MilOs, Garaged Ko!JI,
PrlC0$15,500, 740-4411-3570.

1897 Ntssan Maxima lq,w Milt·
age, LOaded, 740 418 8324.

i.......
plllllll
...._

_,.......,.

11"-

....

roTTOMl

2· t995 Kowosikl 750SS Wavt·. ;
Runners w/doublt trailer, greet 1
shape, 8::)0* kepi, low 1\Qurs. I
$8,000.
. 30H75-t218.
;

1997 Chevy Cavofler. 4dr, auto,
air, 21,000 mues. $9,800. 30•·
875-7842.

3118obblng

.

7 Dltrolt
tn1betl team
I ~·,Ia,.
I - In Clncllllllll
lOtti'-

3 Inlet
4Noiupyet

..

luttl. other extraa. $8,500 . 30"· ,
675-3580 toava rnoosage.
•

1995" Buick Park Avenue, Etllilt

.

..

.

Benefiting from
reader 'comment

'

"''90.,-,::C~hto~ta~h.-o-pon~b:-ow"""'.,::,~.•":4-::r:f
::.

1989 Ford Tempo, runa good,
naeds windshield, lots. of new

Ings.

,....

ZGnrwl,._

lo:n-+-t-+-

..,

•

1 lllumlnel!ld

33 v.rtlully
34 ..... _ ••

1110'4.,.,..

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor S81e

1994 Toyota SA5. 4x4 Eatendtd.
Cab, 42 ,000 Miles, 7•0·3792746.

DOWN .

32 Weird

3781.-IIMW

t997 Harley Davidson Soft Pale
Custom, Bleck 800 Miles, No
- · $t7,300, 740-643-0426. '
2 Honda 300 Four Wheeler• ..;'
Four Wheel Drive. Needs Re':i
pairs, $1,650 Each, 740·448,

shape. 304-875-2714 or 304·6f5t577.

·1994 Cavalier RS. 4dr, auto,
4cyt, loaded, good cond. 89,000
milo&amp;. $4,850. 31J4.1176-288B.

.,...
27 S.nlbel lncl
N1n1UCk11

tlloraughtaN

5I Grlndmolltll,
ettlmee
•

Openmg lead: • 1

CAR!!

·~

1993 POntiac Sunblrd LE. 2 .0itr.
5-sp.,opprox. 75,000 mllta. Sell·
lng at huge diloount duo to minOt
holl domago 12,500 . 304 ·875·
5050 anytime : Ltove me11age
ofter t :30pm. · •
.

Wnl
Pass

OL' CALEB TOOK TH'

Lot~c

~11 .

ports. $800,080. 3Q.WI75-73911.

57 City

OUT OF HIS

North Carolina car, no rust, EK.

1999 Corllco V-6. Automallc, ~
c. $2,395: 1989 Joop COmoncht
Plck·Up· Buckel Soato, $2,295,
Cook Molorl, 74Q.ol46.0103.

5I I I , . . .
55 Pltcltlr

.Vulnerable! Neither
DeB.Ier: East

t985 Buick Skylark, goorl co.ndl·
lion, 100,000 lriiOa, alklng $11Jtl!l,
call 7•0·992·5852 or 740·992·
t988 Dodge Coli: Now tirao, bat·
tery, painllnel trom brake&amp;. 740..

e

lllllrtcllly
t:Mrgtd

DwiQitt 55 T-lao ~
GG I liD ""''I

~ ltertalnlng to

• 5
9 A K Q 10 9 I
• Q 10 8
6Q98

107543

HOwe

.-tner

Ell1

1as. Hart.y Oavklaon Sportster
1'000, runs great, lookS great, ·
$4200 080. 7.00.949-2317.

89 Nl111n Pulnr, 5 opood, now
tlrel, voi'y good cond~lon. $2,300,
7.00.9112·2191 .

FARI.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

2 lltdroom Apt. Stovo ond rolrlg
lncludoli/ 74 Court 81. GaiMpollo.
74Q-446.2583

-

1982 Cutlass Sup&lt;tmo, 2 D. 260
V8. Good Condition. $1 ,800 Or
Boll Qllor, 7.00.992-45118.

87 Ftreblrd. 3.1 liter. overhead
cam, 7.00.Mf.3308.

2 Bedroom Apertmtnt For Rent,
Stolt Rouie teo. 0tpo11t &amp; Rtllr·
lnctl, 74(1.041·1519.

tAJ975

• K 8

1981 Hondo 'cxsoo Motorcycto,
Excellent Condition, Like New,'
Water Coaled &amp; Shatt Driven
lt,OOO. 7.00.245-5235.

1999 Ponllac Grand Am·. Hall
Damage, Huge OIICOUnl . 304·
578-224t .

Btanlt'l: Amorloon Trio $ t ,300,
Moplt $300: Rodor $300, 740·
379-2974, Aft« 4 P.M.

1 bedroom· apartment In MldcHe·
port, 740-9112·2178.

1998 Dodge Ram 4x4 1500 SLT
Loodod, 36,000 Miles $15,500 .
~· Black. Short Bod, 7.00.

198 t Bonnavltle Ponlloc UOO:
740-256-.fi345.

&amp;It e.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antlquea,
1t24 E. Main StrMI, on Rl. 12•.
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m.. Sunday 1:00 IX&gt;
8:00 p.m. 740·992·2528, RiJII

• J 4 3

1991 Honda CA·400 lOW mlltl,,
... cond. $1.200. :Jil.H75-1278.

POle Building Speclsll: 24'x•:rxe·
with two 10'11:8' overhead doors ,
one 3' entr~. Insulated roof &amp;
aeamless gutter, erected price
$89411. 30'x48'X9' wllh one 14'119'
sliding door, one 3' entry, seam·
loll gun., prlco $7385.
Pnoc:tlkln Poll Framo Bulldtrl
InC. 1-tiOD-39&amp;-3026. 7.00.992·

Antiques

• 7 6 4

•

Hoc:Uy~

17 LID I IIIII
. 11 -ell , , _
20 Atnlt
.....,..,..
21 llcltlllucll'a

Staridlrd, 1t.200.

,I

740

Block, brick. oowor pipes, wind·
ows, Hntets, etc. Claude Wlnttts,
Rio Grandi, OH Call 740·245·
5121.

Power Mag Bow 6~ · 80 limbs
85% L,l OR TM Hunllr Rill Cobra SIQhll, 5 Arrows And Qulvor,
$1 SO, F~m. 7-3600. '

1182-3090.

440

Sporting
Goods

Now opon, llvt bait, Chief's
Praca, Hunting &amp; FllhltiQ sup·
ptlto. 1110 Viand, Pt. Pltooant.
31M-1174.fi109.

2 bedroom house, dean, carpet·
td, stove, no refrigerator, na inaida pill, dtpolll required, 740·

1110 ·1990' HONDA CARS ,011
1100 Stlztd &amp; Sold ~OCiily Thll
Month. Call 1·800·522·2730
4420.

-Supl)lles

580

Cyllndtf.

'9t Tompo, whlto. 4 door. om/1m 31M-111~n.
~.r
caa11ttt, air, power wlndawa. ==~~~~~~--~~~-·
child safety locko. $3500 OBO, 1981 Nluon Pothllndor. 4WD, ~ ·•
7.00.1M9-2483.
automatic, air, ver'f"QQOd cond!.', '
tlon, runo good. $4900, 740.992·
tt188 Do&lt;lgo oarl, 4 ooora. 7.00. 7301. ,
I
37,9-2720 AFTER I P.M.
:.::,;;,.~-------- ' j

Pulldlng

550

11

Ford F· t50 Short Bod 4 wn.l

300, e

Wolf Sun Ou011 Tonnlng Bod
longenburoer Baaket, Home In·
-.7.00.256-1018.

Ulld Furniture Store BelOw HOlt·
day Inn, Kanauga. Beda. Couches, Oretaera, Tablea, 01111:1,
lamps And Morel Summer Hra.
Monday Thru Friday, Hrs. 10·6,
740-448-4 71a.

--

Make 2 Paymenta Move In No

Household
Goods

Your deck 11 the center of your
entertattllng and rtcrtaUon ac1tv·
Illes. So don'l Juot giYo It t 'lin·
la h' . Glvt It o quality Slkkona
llnllll wM~ lhl Cttol OEK or RubbO! DEK oystemo.
.
PI\INT PW8 (304)115-1084.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryera. refrlgeralora,
rong11. SktiKII Applia~cll, 78
Vine Street. Coli 740··448·7398,
1-800-499-3499.

3 Bedroom, Very Clean. Stovt a .
Rolrlgorator•. Contra! AIC. Large •
Yard, 2 Car Garage, Rt ro 14001
Large ulec1ton ol uood hcMnn. 2 . Mo... Otpoelt, No Poll. 740,258or 3 bedroom&amp;. S!lrtlng II $2995. 110111.
Quick delivery. Coil 740·385·
3-&lt;1, br hoUIO IOclltd In POmeroy.
962t .
Newly remodtled with MW carpet
·and kltchon cablnota. $450. per
UMITED Ol'fER
1998 Ooublewldo 0 Down $295 month and oocurlly dtpoolt. 740.
month. Free delivery &amp; lll·up, 9112-89t4 lftor 5pm.
no land noodod. Only at Oak•
. I ·I SEOROOM HOMES FROM
Nitro, wv 304-781- 14,000 local Gov'l. &amp; Bank
•
Ropo'a Coli 1·800·522·2730, X
NEW3BEDROOM
1709.
($18,995)
Two bedroom ln' Pomeroy, $300
OAKWOOD HOM.ES Borbouro· per monlh, 1300 tlopoolt, pay own
utllllloo, no poll. 7.00.9112·2381 .
' Ylll0·304-736-3409

-enlllorrealestate
which Is In vlolalion or lito
taw. Our reOdlra ore hOr8lly
Informed that all dhtllings
advert~ In tNt ne"•rerw
are available on an equll

1Wo bedroom hOtno In

CUSTOM f11' BUILDERS
Mark Cronk, Owner t~740·871 ·
1376 Wlndowl ·Siding ·Doors ·
Roollng. ~ lnd inllo"td.

Small Houto Or 'l)elltr In Clly 01
Gallipolis, Close To Stores. For
ROOIOIIIblo Prlct, 3Q.WI75-n4;1.

two badrooma, two blthrooma,
nl.IJTierous upgradta Including

1l1ls
-will not
k.-ngly
IICQIPC

Best Friends Babyollting $1.50
Per Hour, Call Jtnna Or Lell,
7ol0o04HJ797, 74().041-1127. ·

Circle ·N· Convaleacenl Homt,
Hot 2 Oponlngl Ekllfly Of Hanc&gt;
icappt:d Perion In My Home.
7.00.44t · 15311.

Divorce Forcoa So let· Toke ovor

Hurty! t 993 18l70· mobllt homO.

All real-. advertlling In
11111 ._apaporls sub(lct to
lito Fodera! Fair ~lng M.
or 1968 which rnakll Klllogll
IO advel11se "aaly ptalarenca,
llmitaUon or dlscrtmtnation
based on race, tOlar, rel'olon,
sex familial status or lllltlof)al
origin, or any lntl(tllon to
make any such pral.......,,
limitation or discrimination:

Experienced In Heavy Trucks, ·
RE A L ESTATE
eQuipment, And Hydraulics. Sal·
ar;y Commensurate With Experl·
ence . Call Monday ·Friday From 310 Homet for Sale
8:00·5:00 At 1·800·339-65-18 For
An Appointmsnt
t2x60 3 Bedroom Hou11 Trailer
$2,800. 7~09.
.
EQUAL OPP&lt;iiiTIIIIITY
3br Brlok Ranch. 2·1vil bllha. llv·
EMPLOYER
lng&amp;tamlly room, kitchen, utility
WILDLIFE JOBS TO $2t .10 IHR• . room. above-ground pool on 1·
·Inc. Benefits. Game wardens. acre. ~7~ .
Security, Malntenace, Park Rang·
ers. No Exp. Needed. For App. 3br home In New Haven, 1230
And E•am Info Call1 ·800·813· sq. ft . Elccerrent slarter. home,
. 3585. Ext 8475. 8 A.M.· 9 P.M .. 1 ready to move in. All appUanclt.
$35,000. 300-882·3197.
.
Days ldl. InC
4 Bedroom Brick, VInyl, Fencacl
140
Business
Yard, walk·Out Basement, At·
·Training
tached Garage, 112 Acre Lol,
SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK GOT 7.00.245-420.
YOU STARTED... But Your Em· Approx . ll2·ac're-land with 4br, 2
ployer May •Demand A Little
baths. S25.000. 112 milo on
Mont. Let Ul Keep You Learning. paved road PJiasant Aidge Rd.
Train At Night Take Adult Train·
Gallipolis Ferry, WV. Very nice
lng At Buckeye Hilla Csroor COn· location. School bus goea right
ter. Let Us KnOw Your Interested. by house. 30'1-n:l-5040.
Fall Roglotration Ia Open tn July.
Stop In Or Cal! For A Brochure. Double wide 3br, 2 bath , only
740·245·5334 . Financial Aid $1,325. down, $205. per month.
Available To Thooo Who Oualif¥
1·800.fi9HI7n.

And lnlonnotiOn.

~~~~:~~::~::_~

710 AutOI for Sale

WITH IIKKINI T:HE BEAUTY 18
MORE THAN 8IIIN DEEP.

Appuane11:
~econdl ti oned
Woohoro, Oryora, Rongos, Rtlrl·
gretora , 90 Day Guarantee!
Fronch City Moytog, 740·448·
77115 .

Real Estate
Wanted

menta,
auume 304-7M-7t91
loan, owner. tlnanclng ova-.

Huge 28l80 3BR, t 112 bath.
St,nlng at ONLY $38,999. Many
optlona available. ·1·888~828·
3426.

WAHTED- EQUIPMENT
MECHANIC: "

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... But
Short On Sklllo? Gain Skills In
One Year. Of Training In The
Evenings. Buckeye Hills Career
Center Continues ' In Ita 22nd
Year Of Operation. Train tn: Adult
Basic Education, GED Testing
Site. Ofllco Technology, Wokllng,
Industrial Maintenance. Peact
0111oor /Corroctlons. success.
Aulo TechnakJgy, Air Condition·
lng &amp; Hfallng, Farm Buslnau
Planning, Anaiyals, Computer
Specialist, Customer Cantered,
Heallhcare Technician (Formerly
Nurse Aida ), MR/00, Pro-Em·
ployment Training. And More ...
Call 740·245-5334 For Catalog

360

_,_,

opponunilybull.

Schools
Instruction

Lo'- lor llit-f)ubllC Willi a MWar, doublt·Widta ONLY! no tin·
g -.304-n3-11844.

Stop by Oskwood Homes ol Nl·
tro. wv. a rogllltr to win lrtt
doublewlde, no glmmlckl ~ Only
at Oek•ood ttomea of ...,.. WV;

Teaching poaltlona available at
·Carleton School. Full lime and
subltttutt opportunities for teac,...
era with current Ohio Department

510

15 . . .

Sot illby Bod. Crorllo. Bed, ·
2 Cor Stoll, Mlle. Baby Items,
7-7928.

MERCHANDISE

1 l'o I
42 UnlfOI'
7 In 1M Cllr ttCIIon
lllullllnMI on

01
41"-110
.13 Unun ..,,... 47 11111.,.,..,.1or
f4 IIIII'Ur, In •
ICMol ot 11x
wey
SOIJICC!LIIe

540 Mltcellantoue
Merd\andiM

Mobile !'lome site available bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call
740-385-4387.

Lot lor lilt· Golllpolll; 110l112,
nice nolghborhood, qultl, 740·
........722.

Livingston's basement water- paymonto, 2br. 2 bath, financing
proofing . all baf ement repelra . . -. 30H55-5e88.
done, free estimates. lifetime ·
FREE DOUBLE·WIDE

guarantee. 12yra on job experl·
onco. 30ol-675-2145.

01 Parking LOCIIOd: 28 Ctdar,
Golllpolil, 7.00.w-eetl1 .

Lot tor aale, 1.5 acrws kJcatad In
Syracu11 Vlllage on Roy Jonet
Rd., $9000,7.00.1192-4541 .

1807.
ABANDON HOME .Mako 2 pay·

For Rtnt ElolliOnt a... Of llatlll
Spoct AppiOl. 718 at With Plenty

Lot for sale, 1.2 acres In S'yra·
..... $12,000, 7.00.9112-4581 .

94 Clayton, 3 bedroom,' 2 full
bllha, storage llullcllng, In ground
pool, 740.1M9·3308 or 7•0·59•·

Professional
Servlcel

230

Coli BOD-876·0680 Mon .- Frl 9:00
A.M. To 5:00P.M.

--.740 ltl 5151.

Build ing lnoulatod, Aloo Trollor
Pad SII·Up, 2 + Ac:r•a. Rur1l
Water, Approx. 7 Mllta From
GoillpOII. $32,000, 7.00.258-1335.

t993 Redmon Mlrago, 14x70,
3l&gt;r, C/~ $12,000. 30ol-675-58111 .

INOTICEI
1995 t4lSO 2 Btdroomo, 1 Both,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. All Eltctric, With Stovo &amp; Rolrlg·
recommends that you do bull· er1tor, Underpinning lncluelld.
ne" wllh p•oplo you know, and Mull eo Movod , $11 ,000 , 740·
NOT to oand money throu~h lht ~~25~6~6~040~
, Or~7~4CJ.~258-e~!1~23=·~-.­
mall unUI you have Investigated
tho olforlng.
lt95 Clayton, t4a70, all oloclrlo,
excellent condition, call Tom An·
ALL MEDICAL VENDING rio. ~ 741J.9112·3346.
Ad¥11, Alka Seltzer, BondAldo,l\1·
renol, Etc. Earn l-'K +IMo.. S4K • 9.5 A.cr11 With 2 Mobile Homes .
$8K Roq. 100% Flnonco, t·BOO· With Additions Frult ·Tl'MI, Out3110-2829 Ext. 4114.
building, Price Rtductd $28.000.
740-388-9838, 740-388o6323.

• IUIIIIIT TRAIISPORTAT1011
Oponlnga For om~.

50x123' trolltr space In Mlddtt·
pc&lt;1, 7-·31114.

t10n With 115&gt;50 Fl Mttal Glngt

B.uelnell

210

Scenic Hllls Nursing Center IS

150

tt;al_ Homo liter Compto- .

Jim

Rooltrt end Siding lnttallors
NMdtd FOI lmmadloll Employ·
menl. Apply In Hraon At Chris·
tton'o Construction , 1403 Eastern
Avo, Galllpollo. OH 740·448·
&gt;0t4.

WOIIIM L8tldlr
40 Glnalr ODD' ...

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JUNE 231 . ·:

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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
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Readers should be ~lerted of old phone scam that is being revivecf
to . hang u~. I became suspicious,
satd I was tn a b1g hurry and hung
Ann
up. .
.
Landers
I
Lmmedtately
~ailed the phone
, 1W7, Ln. AIIJdi:J Twnc1 '
company
and
was
tnfonncd that by
Synd11:a1e and Crt:lll'"'
Syndteall:
pushtng 90 #, 1 would be giving that
·:technicia~" access t~ my pho~e
ltne,
allowtng htm to pla;:e long-dtsDear Ann Landen: I just found
tance
calls while 1he charge
out about a tel~phone scam, and I
hope you will warn your readers ap~eared .on my . bill. Please alert
your readers to thiS scam. --Dayton,
about it.
Ohto
I I received a phone call from
Dea.r Dayton: ·I very much
someone who identified himself as
apprcctatc
your letter. You have
an AT&amp;T service technician.
This so-called technician claimed helped me alert millions of people to
to be running a test on the 11hone a racket lhat could he very coMiy to
.
lines and asked me to help him by unsuspecting vocttms:
We
contacled
Onano
Pagnucct
,
touching the number 9, then 0, then
the pound &gt;ign# I was lhcn supposed lhc dtrec1or ol pubhc re lauons at
AT&amp;T, and he tnlonncd us lhat your

information is accurate.
Pagnucci said this is an old scam
but it was recently revived whi:n ·the
information was posted on the In1ernel. 'The scheme is mostly directed
at businesses and government agencies.
Pagnucci said that real' AT&amp;T
technicians do NOT ca ll and ask
customers to help check the phone
lines or run tests. Nor will they ever
ask to verify your calling card number.
· Managers of office buildings
should notify their staffs no11o com·
ply with such requests.
If anyone should call you and say
he (or she) is an AT&amp;T service per·
son, ask for his or her namo. phone
number and the name of a supcrvi-

sor. Then, hang up. The caller's
iden1ity can then be verified through
AT&amp;T.
These crooks should not be permitted to get away wi'th such
shenanigans. Victims who do nothing are aiding and abetting them in
their dirty work.
Dear Ann Landers: What could
you possibly· have been thinking
when you replied 10 " Midwest
Senior"?
·
He's the reader who -was critical
of the sensitive personal information
contained in newspaper obituories
and asked how you fe ll about il.
You said 1hat you didn't mind
reading about someone 's multiple
marriages because that was "part of
1he person 's personal history " but ·

that y~u would prefer to see an
AIDS-related death referred to as an
"extended illness" to spare the family members any embarrassment
I can't understand how you railed
to sec the hypocrisy in your statemenl. An AIDS-related death is
indeed a profound part of som"one's
personal history.
. To have it whitewashed implies
that AIDS is a source of shame. It
most emphatically is not. That is the
kind of thiqking that prevents so
many people from being tested for
this devastating disease and contributes to its spread.
The public needs to know how
many lives are being lost to this tcrrible illness so thai the ·search for a
cure will not wane

. Publishing such information in~
obituaries confronts us all woth t~
reality of thjs plague. Please, AnliJ.
rethink your response. --West Coafl.
Reader
&lt;C·
Dear West Coast: Several re~
ers complained about my answer bdi
for a different reason. They point.out 1hat a death from AIDS shou~
not be a condemnation of oneit
lifesty le. There are ways other th~
by reckless sexual conduct that :J
person can get AIDS. Contaminate!!
blood and needles are the most com.
mon.
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Send questions to Ann Landers, CrC;
atc&gt;rs Syndicate, 5777 W. CentUI;!'
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calit
90045

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eommunity Calerlda!
New videos
library patrons

available · t~

Over '4o new videos have been
added to the Meigs County Dislrict
Public Lihrary in Pomeroy and its
branches a1 Middlcpon and
Rac,ine:
Library patrons arc permitted to
check out lwo videos for 1wo days
on eac h library
Additions to the Pomeroy facilily include: The Fi fth Element;
Anaconda, Fern Gully II, The
Magical Rescue; That Old Feeling;
Buddy ; As Good as it Gets; Anastasia, The Brave Lillie Toaster
Goes to Mars; Disney's Flubber ;
Elmopalooca!; Mouse Hunt; Conspiracy Theory and Breakdown.
Added to the Middleport facili·
ty are: Hcathers; .Danielle Steel's
Jewels; Malte se Falcon; Gigi ;
Conspiracy Theory; Breakdown ;
Rookie of 1he Year; An American
in Pari s; Toothle ss; Brigadoo n;
Buddy ; As Good as it Gets; Mouse
Hunt; Disnlo.(s Flubber and Anastasia.
At the Racine branch, th e additions are : Toothless; Buddy ;
Mouse Hunt; Conspiracy Theory ;
Blank ; Moby Dick, Anastasia;
Dan ielle Steel's Secrets; Danielle
Steel's Kaleidoscope; The Sandlot;

As Good as it Gets; Breakdown;
High Society; The Apartment and
Disney's Flubber.

Ceremony planned
The national .bell ringing ceremony, "Let Freedom Ring", will
be held on July 4 at 2 p.m. in the
afternoon.
.
Ewings Chapler, Sons of the
American Revolution, is asking for
. volu.ntecrs who can gain access to
bells in churches. co urthouses.
town hills, Universily buildings
and the volunteers would ring each
bell 13 times stating at 2 p.m.
Last year over 20.000 ringers
partici pated in this celebration of
Independence Day in honor of
those patriots of the Second Continental Congress wloo singled the
Dec laration of Indepe ndence in
July of 1776. To volunteer for the
new patriotic ceremony residents
!Day call 1-800-330- 1776.
Attends 1"0rkshQp
Fou.- Meigs County students
part ici pated .i n Buckeye Boys
State . a workshop in government
spon,ored by the American
Legion, at Bowling Green State

University last week.
Taking pan under sponsqrship
of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, were Matthew King , son
of Curtis and Linda Kin g of
Chester, and' a stude nt al Eas1crn
High School; Jason Harris, son of
Tom· and Penny Evans, Middlepon , seni or at Meigs High Sc hool;
Jason Youn¥, son of James and
Barbara Young, Rutland, se nior a1
Me igs High School.
Attending under sponsorship of
Middleport Feeney-Bennett Post
128 was William Aaron Will . son
of Mike an d Marcella Wilt of
Pomeroy,_a senior at Eastern High
School.
About 1400 high school stu dents from across the state panicipated in the program, the larges t: of
50 such· programs in the Uniled
States. It was a week-long activity
where two former boy state rs were
inducted into the Buckeye Boys
State Hall of Frames. They were
Brigadier General Darrel Porr and
Astronaut Michael Gernhardt.
Speakers included Randy Gardner, member of the Ohio Hou se of
Representatives, and Peter Lemon,
medal of honor rec ipi ~ nt and
author of the book, "Bey ond the
Medal."
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TUESDAY
;
POMEROY - Free immuni''
tion clinic. Meigs County Heali~
Depanmcnt. Tuesday. 9 tn II a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. Every child to ~
accompanied by parcnt/guanlia(
·with immuni1.ation record .
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RACINE - RACO mcctin i
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. cookout an'.{!
potluck dinner at Star Mill Park. !"0
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· POMEROY - Meigs Coun ~
Township Association ~cetinJ;:• .
Tuqsday, 7 p.m. at the Sentor C111,
zcns Center, Pomeroy.
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POMEROY - Winding Trails
Garden Club meeting Tuesday, ·&amp;·
p.m. at the home of Debbie Mohlcit: .
Members arc to bring perennials for
exchange.
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THURSDAY
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POMEROY
AAIAI-Ancin
meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacr(d
Heart Ca!holic Church, MulberQI·
...:~

Avenue.
.

GIVEN SCHOLARSHIP- Jam fa Drfke, daughter of Tom and Debbie Drake, was the recipient of the $500 Ken Amsbary Memorial
Scholarship presented by the Melga County I.K.E.S., a loeal conservation club. Making the presentation on behalf of the club was
Henry ·Bahr.

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TUPPERS PLAINS - VF'1/ '
Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, Thin'S;:
day, 7:30 p.m.
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REEDSVILLE
Rivervic~
Garden Club potluck supper Thur -•
day, 6:30 p.m. at the home or Nola~
Young.
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MEQitAL tOVERAGE
FOR YOIJR FAMILY

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MEDICAL
ELIGIB
PROG

YOU MAYBE
IF YOIJR FAMILY
INtOME IS AT OR·
BELOW 185 PERt.ENT
.OF FEDERAL
GUIDEtiNES
Family Size

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CALL TODAY FOR

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Meigs County's

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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

·S•outhern seeks
ir:l put for design
o.1f ·new building
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Single Copy- 35 Cents

Racine
preparing
'booming'
celebration

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By •.

liM FREEMAN
cuse. Letan Falls and Portland, in
Sen Unel News Staff
addition to Southern Junior High
The Southern Local Board of School and Southern Kinderganen in
Education
is seeking community and Racine.
•
staff input on two possible designs for
The building is scheduled to open
the •district's new K-8 elementary by the beginning of the 2000-200 I
scho,ol.
.
. school year.
Jm:k Poumeyer, representing the
Building plans need to be submitarchi·lect firm of Marr-Knapp-Craw- ted in Septetnbe~ to the.state School
tis A:ssociates Inc., New Phillldelpltia, Facilities Commll;iiion so biddhig I f••:·;~hc&gt;ifi
presc ~nted the board ,Monday night paperwork can be completed in
with a couple of possible building · Dcc~mber. said Lawrence.
designs - a one-story design and a
"The decision probably needs to
two-·.story design.
be made within the next few weeks
Po lllmeyer met with the board dur- to determine what kind of building
ing it'.s regular meeting held at South- we want," Lawrence said.
.em High School in Racine.
Lawrence stressed that the avaiiSt.lperintcndent James Lawrence able drawings ate just building drawsaid he wadts to get the qcsigns out ings which do not show how the
to . dlistrict employees and to the building will look on the site. More
SOul bern Local community. Copies detailed drawings will be available
will be sent out this week with pay- following the completion of survey
chec ·ks and the · pl1111s will be dis- work which·haulready started.
BUILDING DESIGNS- The Southern Locel
· play•ed atthe 'high school for public
Each type of design has its advanBollrd of Education- prilnnled two poMI·
• bill building ·deelgns, on.story and two-story,
revio =w.
tages ·and disadvantages, Lawrence ·
during MOnday'a ~ · IIIMtlng. Southern
1•, public meeting will be held explained. For. instance, while the
Superintendent J1mea Lnnnc:e ·examined
Tue:·tday. June 30 at I p.m. at the high one-story design is easier to-construct
'.
school, during which the architect and more accessible to handicapped
will receive comments on the build- people, a two-story design may fit del Group cOmpany. Tokarski was
Lawrence said there was vecy Iii· de ·
beuer ·,n the available space and h:lve assi_._. to the district by the state lie difference in the companies' fees.
mg stgns.
e·~y
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Plans call for the new school less roof area and lower heating costs · School facilities Commission.
but added that it was oelt Key ap•btlil·ding to be constructed next to the - but require a costly elevator to
The board also approved Key · tal Market&lt;; would · give the "best
highschool on land already owned by malce it accessible to hiUidicapped Capital Markel~ o( Columbus to pre- effon at the best price."
the :;chool district. The building will people.
·
pare the bond.' for the building proIn addition, the board approved
hou.Hc: students from kindci'Jianen
In ~elated malle..,. the board met ject. The board also considered fiflh for $10.000 the firm of Peck. Shaft~t:Ugh ~ip.th gnJ4e IUid will. replao:e with_ co~s!(111;tion manager Roland Third Bank and Huntingtoti 'Capital _ f~r &amp; ~illi~s lo serve n.• bond cou~-

prepared .for the buildi~g proj~ct:
. The board scheduled a speci.al
. M -'- J
?9 t 7
meetmg on....y. u·ne - a p.m.
at the high school with Peck, Shalli:r
&amp; Williams reprelienlalive Ed Cavezza and -Key Capital Markets to discuss investment strategies to maxi!flizc the return on, bond•.

investments.
Utilities already recover those
costs, but they are in the rates th;tt are
regulated by the ~tale .
Rep. Ron Amstutz, R-Wooster
and a s.upporter of the bill, said he
understands the coalition's concerns,
but that it'S time to move forward.
"There hn.~ to be a level, evenhanded approach to this," Amstutz
said. "One would qu~stion whether
we can go back and review decisions
that •lreooy.huve been mude."

PAUL SOUHRADA
AtUQCiated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS -'The state's 8-month·old welfare reform law- designed
to push people off public as.•istance and into jobs- is too toug~ on the state's
p(lor, Democrutic lawmakers said Tuesday.
·
··we need to remember that the goal of welfare reform is not simply to
driive down the number of people on the welfare rolls," Rep. C.J . Prentiss
of Cleveland said at a news conference.
·
"The goal of welfare reform is to lifl families out of poverty and into self·
su fticiency."
'The numberofOhiodns reL-eiving welfare benefits hus litllen by more thllll,
5!'•.000 since the new law took eiTect Oct. I. according to the statt: human •
service~ dq)anment. The 353.764 who remain arc the fewe.t since 1971. but
a ,good bit of the decline can be attributed to the strong CL-onomy.
Under the current system. recipient• lose some food stamps. welfare checks
aud other benefits ifthey do not '"eel work or educaliQn requirements. Prentil;s and the other Democrats proposed legislation to make the penalty a llat
S~iO and allow welfare recipients to keep their state-subsidized day care. job
!mining and other benefits.
The legislation also would require the .state do tl beller job of determil)in,g whether welfare recipients are finding jobs, allaw'single adults to get food
stamps in parts of the state with high unemployment, incren.o;e the number
, of state·funded jobs and provide rriore money for training welfare workers
. 'a~od for dnog and alcohol treatment of recipients.
·
,
The bill has virtually no chance of clearing the Legislature, however. One

l Sections - 12 Pages
Vol. 4!1, No. 4S

(800) 992·2600 ~

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Los••

4::6
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Lotteries
.(lt.JIIll
Pick 3: 4-7-7; Pick 4: 0-1-9-0
Buelteye 5: 2-5·12-16-25

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Wgtbcr

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8-10
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Ca!eqdar
C!us!Oeds •
CPmiq
- · Edjtoda!s

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Dilly 3: 1-8-'1; Dilly 4: 3-S..Q..O ·

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The coalition objects to having
consumers pay for the multibilliondollar investments utilities made in
nucle-Jr power plants in the 1960s 1111d
' 70s.
Particularly hard-hit may be the 2
million customers of Akron-bn.o;ed
FirstEnergy Corp.. which operates
the Perry and Davis-Besse plants in
northern Ohio. Those customers
already pay some of the highest utility rutes in Ohio.

A parade. chic ken barbecue.
antique lr.tetor pull. frog jumping
contest ... and, of course. fireworks
will be the highligh-ts of Racine's
annual July 4 celebration.
The parade line up will be at 9: IS
a.m. at Southern High School with a
flag raising at 9:45 a.m. by the
Racine American Legion Post 602.
'The parade will start at 10 a.m., going
down Elm Street!o Third Street. from.
Third to Vine. from Vine to Fifth then
back to Elm Street before returning
to the high school.
In the float awards. there will be
. two categories: religious and nonreligious. In the religious category,
there will be awards of$1 00,$75 and
$50 for the first three places. .
Awards will be $75, $50 and $25
for the first three places in the nonreligious category. In the walking
units, monetary .awards will be $25.
$15 and $10 for the lirst three place
' entries. Trophies will be aw:)l"ded to
the. first place individual rider and
first place unit in horse entries.
Trophies will also ~ awarded to
the first three places in the antique
tmctor division. Monetary award'
will be awarded to the first three
places in the decorated bicycle divi·
sion.
Anyone wanting information on
.the pamde may contact Marilyn Powell at 949-2676.
Abaobecue will be held at the fire
depat'lment anne ~. Homeffillde _ice
cream will alstfbe aliailiibte.- ·
The tractor pu.ll will be at 2 p.m.
on the· pullihg track at the park. Any'one with questions may call ?.422750 or 949-218!. A kiddie tractor
pull will be held at a time to be
announced later.
The Racine Area Community
Organizalion will sponsor the fifth
annual frog jumping L'Ontest at5 p.m.:
Rent-a-frogs will he available for$) ·
. or _contestants may supply their own
frog.
Awards will be presented to the
contestant with the farthest jumping
frog in lwo divisions: senior and
(Continued

[)emocrats want change in welfare· reform law

Today's Sentinel

MORE INFORMATION
(740) 992·2117 or

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
H
SERVICES
I

Reds extend
losing streak
to 10 games
Page4

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Good Afternoon

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Withstanding jeers and threats, Page 2
Meigs Legion ties with Glouster, Page 5
Aspirins: cheaper usually better, Page 8

B·:~

Annual Income

1
$12,948
2·····~!.···~·········~···$17, 796
a... ~~··~ .. . . .·....... ~···· $s21.:,75,6
......... ~ ... ~.-.. ~. 26,856

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

Sports

lcoLUMBUS (AP) - An envi· for $10.5 billion, the amount the ing the Legislature before the next
ron mental coalition warns that eon- .{"!UP says is what utility companies session begins in January because
surtners could wind up bailing out the stalld te lose on bad investments lawmakm are in recess, possibly
until after the Nov. 3 election,
under deregulation. '
,
el~ ~tric utilities if competition is
At is.'ue is a . bill sponsored by although hearings have been held on
inl'roduced to the power industry. But
OO tl of the main proponents of dereg- . Rep. PriseiUa Mead and Sen. Bruce · the Mead-Johnson bill and other proulatli_on suggests it may be a little late Johnson, both Columbus.:arca Repub- posals.
The bill, in its current form, would
licans, that would allow customers to
in the game.
About 20 people auended a rally choose their electric power supplier mani!ate a temporary user IIIX on
Tu csday sponsored by the Ohio Envi- within five years of enactment. electric cuSiomen;n.~ a way to pay for
ronmental Council, Ohio Citizen Transmission and distribution sys- some of the utilitie~· ••stranded
costs." Those are the utilities' cost•
Ac:tion ond the Sierra Club. The par- tems would remain in place.
The bill has little chance of pass- froni construction projects and other
tic ipanl' then shredd~d a mock check

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MAY ASSIST YOU WIT11
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Todaiy: Sunny
Hlgl1u: 80.; Low: 60s

June 24, 1998

ACIW;;t~"hi;hii9hi'";OnS~;;;;;; cosi ;;;d;;d~re;,Jiitio~

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Weather

Page 1Q

Tuelday, June 23, 19911
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· 0 iHtl 01111&gt; Wley Puloliohlna Co.

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reason is that Republicans are apposed to any tinkering. particularly with t,he
welfare-to-work rules. 'The other rea.son is purely logistical: lawmakers do
not plan to return to Columbus until this fall- and then only for a few weeks
to clear up left over legislation before the end!lf their current two-yeartenn.
Still, the proposal wn.~ welcomed by'advocates for the poor, ~ho say the
state sanctions have incren.'led demand at food banks ond soup kotchens.
. "Provisions contained in both the Ohio Works First and federal welfare
reform bills have incren.o;ed the severity of food insecurity and hunger for
thou.,ands of Ohioans," said Lisa Hamler-Pndolski. director of the Ohio Food
Policy &amp; Anti· Poverty Action Center.
.
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But buckers of the current system s~ incentives and penulttes are but II
into the welfare•'plan because recipients arc eligible for welfare payments for
only three years and have to get with the proj!nun right away.
•• tthink they're wrong about their iss.res," said Rep. Jo~n Lawrence. a
Republican from Galena and one of the architects of the welt are reform law.
Lawrence said the changes in the welfare law would be meanmgle:.- wothoutthe penalties.
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·
That said, Lawrence ackoowledged that there may be problems wnh the
way some county welfare departments are interpreting the law.
She said some county offieiuls are looking mainly at the number of~
pie cut from the prosram. and not enough at whether people need more Job
lrllining, education or .other benefits.
.
.
The leJiiislative welfare oversiJIIhl commtttee plans meetmgs around the
stutc later this summer to investigate some of ~hose local problems. Lawrence
added.

Clinton pledges patient protection as
managed care firms enter Medicare
By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton sought to n.'sure the nlllion 's
38 million Medicare recipienm lUesday that when new manaaed-care
providers begin entering the jlroJram
next year. all plans will be required
to offer strong patient protections. ·
Included in those protections:
• Women having direct ac:ceu to
women's health specialists. .
• Quick re•olution of patient
appeals of a decision to deny, reduce
or tenninatc care.
·
• Streamlined bealment ·plans for
penons with complex needs.
.
• Patients ' lliiY not be excluded
from eii!'OIImcnt bued tin their health

status.

receiveJedcral health cart...benefits,"
Clinton said at an unrelated bill signing event. "Beginning this week, we
are putting thole protections into
effect."
The protections Clinton referred to
are part of a thick ricw reaulation to
be publi.shed in the ·fcdcnll register
this week that sets ground rules for
IIUIIIIIed-QR! healtfl pllns to participate in the Medicare program.
S-.nina in January, a broider
amy ol' health plans will be eliaible
to market services to Medicare
enrollees. 1'hciSe pl1111 include traditional hcaltll-maintcllllll:e OIJanizations, pn!femd-provider oipnizations and provider-lpOIIIOI'ed OIJanizatiOns

Al~ah familiar .0 n-y Clln'ent

"I instructed our adminillralion to ·worbn who paniciptlle in em'ployimplement 1 palienll bill of rights for er-aponiiOied health care, loday's
the one-third of Americans who senion are luply uninformed about

how. managed care differs from the
traditional fee-for·service structure
they are IICCUSIOmcd tO.
Nine out of 10 Medicare recipients
do not unden;tand managed ciU'fi,
according to a survey . relea.oied last
week by the American Association of
Retired Persons.
. "If people don't undentand the
system they are signing up for, they
are going to have trouble ... getting
the care they need." said Judith Hibbatd of the Univenity Qf Oregon.
who directed the study.
Medicare advocates welcomed
Ointon's IIIIIOUnccment but withheld
judgment.
·
"The consumer protections th~t
an: enumerated in that neaulation are
aoocl on ptpct but what concerns me
is il!ere is no new mone)'{l)r the gov. eiriment for enforcement," lllid Joe
·Baker, associate director

·'

SEEKING CHANGE - State Rep. C.J. P,rentiM, D-Cieveland, .
leaned back -In hlir chair Tuesday as she l.l stened to ,:omments
during a conference snnounclng propoaed legislation tb!ltt
-l!l,d make changee to Ohio's current walfare laws. The bill
-uld be sponaored by Prentlsa ·a nd Rep. Tom Roberts, D-Dayton, left. (AP)
,,

Plott Hound Days starting
at fairgrounds on .Thursday
The National Plott Hound Association will hold its 45th annual Ploti
Days beginning Thursday at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
·
The event, to continue through Saturday, is hosted for the second consecutive year by the Shade River Coon Hunters Association, Pomeroy. and
includes UKC licensed nite hunts and bench shows for devotees of Plott
hounds, a breect of hound generally used for raccoon. bear and boar hunting.
.
.
:
La.•t year approximately 5,000 to 7;000 people visited the event, accord-: .
ing to organizer Bill Spuun. ·
"We expect more this .year," Spaun Sjjid.
,
AII·Piott f11n events begin Thursday at I p.m. and include a youlh bencli
·show. The evening will conclilde with an All -Pion hunt
·
··
One of the more popular events, the bear treeina col)lest. will be held
Friday, with oontest entries closing ,at8 a.m.
The bet11 is in a caae suspended in the air out of reach of the hounds;
said Spaun. There .is no contact with the bear, he added.
"Anyone expecting a bear fight, they're coming to the wrong place, •.
he said. "They might aet to see dog b¥k tit .him.. .
.
A UKC licensed bench show and licensed nitc hunt will also be held
Friday. .
.
· .
Sltunday will consist of the NPHA annual btl~ineu meettna and awardspresentation at 9 a.m., a UKC licensed llench show 111d 1 licensed nite.
hunt.
A wide veriety of vendon will be available durin&amp; the three-day event
lleHilll doJ-related ite.ms.

a

,,

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