<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8533" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8533?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T10:21:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18952">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3210d1b49062ffe9d30f0b91fb89786e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>631353e3f2986b99476b0cfe06c7d434</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27554">
                  <text>Wed
July 1, 1998

Weather

1998 Meigs County babies, Insert
Family Medicine column, Page 8
NBA lockout begi~s, Page 4

Today: Clear
High: 80; Low:60
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80; Low:60

Reds
make it
5 in row
Page7

•

a1
Meigs County's
•

FEMA
meets
with Meigs
Trustees
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff

BUILDING DESIGN· Jack Pottmeyer, architect for Marr-KnappCrawfls Associates Inc., New Philadelphia, left, and James
Lawrence, superintendent of Southam Local Schools, display a
proposed building concept for the new Southam Local Elemen·
tary School at a meeting Tuesday In Racine. The option shown
here was unanlmoualy preferred by those attending.

Plans take shape on
Southern Elementary
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff

Preliminary plans for Southern
Local School District's new kindergarten through eighth-grade building
began taking shape Tuesday afternoon.
Approximately 25 teachers and
residents from the district attended a
meeting at Southern High School in
Racine to determine what sort of
structure the district will build following voter approval of a 23-year,
5.W mill bond/levy issue on May 5.
The $4,042.000 the bond issue
will raise locally will be matched
with $3,685,400 donated by the state
under a school building funding plan
began in 1990.
The new building will likely be a
Y-shaped, two-story building with
younger students housed on the first
noor. and upper elementary and
junior.bigh school students housed on
the second noor.
·
The academic wing of the building. comprising the bottom and right
side of the 'Y' will be dominated by

a centrally located library. The other
wing. that nearest the high school.
will contain the gymnasium, cafetorium. kitchen, an and music rooms.
The building will replace Letan
Falls. Portland and Syracuse elementary schools. Southern Junior
High School and Southern Kindergarten and will be adjacent the existing high school in a tree-lined field
currently used for parking and softball.
The trees will be retained for aesthetic reasons.
Those attending the meeting were
shown three optional building plans,
two two-story plans and a one-story
plan.
Earlier this month. Jack Pottmeyer. ard1itect for Marr-Knapp-Crawfis
Associates Inc .. New Philadelphia.
presented the Southern local Board
of Education with two possible building designs. The favored design was
neither of the two. but one first proposed during a previous bond-issue
campaign and displayed on campaign
Continued on page 3

Trustees of flood-stricken townships and county officials, along
with Ohio Army National Guard
officers and representatives of the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency met this morning to consider how to deal with flood damaged
roads and residences.
The meeting. held at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. was called by Meigs County Emergency Services Director
Robert Dyer who gave a preliminary
report on the damage: about 54
homes damaged and 15 or so completely destroyed.
Approximately 40 people, representing numerous agencies, attended.
Many of the township trustees are
familiar with the damage assessment
process; having gone through the
process following earlier floods.
"We've been through it before ...
you should know exactly where you
need help," Byer said.
He said the county can get a burning permit for wood products. In
addition, he is working with the
GJMV Solid Waste District and the
Meigs County Health Depanment to
establish a site for the collection of
otl'(er debris.
National Guard captains Brunot
and Carper brieny outlined their
organization's mission and project
limitations.
They asked township officials to
detcsrmine what their need$ are and
then report them so they can be
assessed for possible action.
They said additional equipment
will be forthcoming including multifunction Small Emplacement Excavator (SEE) trucks which Capt.
Brunot described as a multi"Swiss
Army" truck.
"We are ready to begin," Capt.
·Carper said. adding that the engineering soldiers need material, culvert pipe and aggregate, before they
Continued on page 3

REPAIRS UNDERWAY • Crews from DV
Weber Construction of Reedsville have been
working virtually around the clock assisting Alltell Communications and the Tuppers

Plains/Chester Water District In restoring service. A crew Is pictured here Installing 1r new
telephone line near Forked Run State Park, the
area hardest hit by the weekend flooding.

Infrastructure repairs
underway in Olive Twp.
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff

Communities in Olive Township
are beginning to sweep away the
debris and mud from the weekend
flooding. but most agree that the
recovery will be a slow one.
Robert Byer, Meigs County Emergency Services director, said Monday
that Olive Township was without
doubt the hardest hit by nash nooding and storm damage.
An Athen~ woman d.ie:ll in Olive
Township on Sunday when flash
flooding swept away a mobile home,
and Olive Township Trustee Randy
Boston said Monday that "several"
homes were destroyed by the flooding. To further complicate the situation, officials have found it difficult
to estimate damage to public infrastructure due to difficulties in accessing certain areas in the township.
State Route 124 between Long
Bottom and jJISt beyond Forked Run

State Park remains closed this morning. not due to high water, but due to
three bridges which were destroyed
by the noods.
Telephone service through Alltell
has been restored in most areas
where outages were experienced.
and temporary water line repairs are
underway for customers of the Tup-.
pers Plains-Chester Water District.
2.000 of whom were out of service at
one time on Sunday.
, TP.C bas o.ow restored water to all
of its customers except for those on
Rainbow Ridge, and customers are
under a boil advisory until further
notice.
David Weber of DV Weber Construction Co .. Reedsville, said Tuesday that he ha.~ about 15 men in the
field working to replace water lines
for the water district and replacing
telephone poles and other equipment
necessary to restore service.

As Weber spoke at a worksite near
Forked Run. State Route 124 contin ued to literally crumble beneath him .
"This is frustrating because it's a
temporary fix ." Weber said. "This is
a lot of work, and it will all have to
be redone permanently once everything is cleaned up."
"It's just unbelievable."
The community of Reedsville
itself suffered little damage -- it is one
of the highest points on the Ohio Riv er..illld.L~.Y.l}oods. li.Qws;.l(.c;r. acce,,,
to the community was hindered by
damaged bridges and high water on
State Routes 124. 248 and oX 1
One private dri veway 1n
Reedsville collapsed. leavi ng rc'ldents in three households with no
way of traveling in or out, except on
foot.
"You just can't imagine thi' kind
. of damage here," a Reedsville woman
: said.

Calculations start on local flood toll
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff

Preliminary estimates are starting
to coming in from nood-stricken portions of the county following a Sunday morning storm that dumped up to
II inches of rain in northeastern
Meigs County.
Emergency Services Director
Robert Byer reported seven homes
completely destroyed. 10 with major
damage and 17 with minor damage.
In addition, nine mobile homes were
completely destroyed. three with
major damage and nine with minor
damage.
He stated the housing damage estimate is preliminary because there are
portions of the county that are still
inaccessible to assessment teams.
One local death has been reported. Doris J. Ellis. 55, Athens.
drowned Sunday morning when a
nash nood demolished a mobile
home she was sleeping in near
Reedsville. She leaves behind a husband, Max Ellis. and (wo sons. Ter-

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages
Vol. 49, No. 49
Calendar
Classilieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
·Sports
Weather

.

8
9·10

11
2
3
4-7

3

Lotteries

QHIQ
Pick 3: 243; Pick 4:3398
BuckeyeS: 12-18-19-29-36

lY.YA.
Dally 3: 994; Daily 4: 3183
0 1998 Ohio Volley Publishina Co.

ry Ellis of Athens and Rick Ellis of she said.
Plans are already being developed
Albany.
"Olive Township is a disaster at ODOT District H) in Marietta to
permanently repair the location with
area." he· said.
The Portland area is now accessi- a large concrete box culvert. As soon
ble via Wells Run Road and state as plans are ready. an emergency conRoute 124 north of the Ohio River tract will be sold and repairs will be
community. Byer said. advising that made. This will be done sometime
drivers of small automobiles may this summer. she said.
ODOT reported the following
want to avoid the route .
However, Ohio Army National state route closings thi5 morning:
-- State Route 124 is closed in sevGuard soldiers entered the area late
Tuel;day morning delivering a truck- eral locations between state routes
load of food, cleaning supplies and 338 and 681 for high water, land
bottled water to Portland Elementary slides and washed out bridges and
School. Electric and telephone ser- . culverts.
-- State Route 248 in the Chester
vice has been restored to the area
which was isolated for more than 48 area. just east of state Route 7. is
closed due to bridge damage. The
hours.
Motorists will soon be able to road may be reopened today if repair.;
enter Portland via Bald Knob- are completed.
--State Route 681 west of Tuppers
Stiversville Road after the Meigs
County Highway Department com- Plains is closed due to a wa.~hed out
pletes an expedient fix to a washed culvert and loss of 300 feet of pavement.
out bridge.
-- State Route 338. two miles
County Engineer Robert Eason
said workers began the project Tues- . south of Racine, in the Antiquity
BOTTLED WATER DONATED • Kroger In flooding. Here the water Is loaded onto a 5-ton
day afternoon. using an old contain- community, remains closed due to
Pomeroy
donated 1,000 gallons of bottled military truck by Kroger manager Dick Warner
er tank with both ends cut out as a high water, but should be open later
water to the Malgs County Emergency Medical (white shirt and tie) and members of the Ohio
today.
large. impromptu culvert.
Service Tuesday for distribution to residents In National Guard's 21174 Air Defense Artillery
State and federal elected officials
He said the road should be open to
the county who have been dislocated or are McConnelsville.
'
one-lane traffic pending a more. per- or their representatives are expected
without water service due to the -kend
10 visit Meigs County Thursday
manent fix.
·Meanwhile, the Ohio Department morning.
-~
of Transportation has hired a conCongressman Ted Strickland and
tractor to make emergency repairs to
State
Representative Michael Shoethe washed out culvert on state Route
maker
announced this morning they
124 south of Portland.
will
be
spending the day touring
"The contractor is David Skinner
Meigs
County.
assessing flood damConstruction, Marietta. He will be
age
to
area
homes
as well as agricul·
paid by the hour and we have set
There are still 350 homes in Meigs of water. Efforts are being made, he
Although water service ha.~ been
tural
damage.
aside $25.000 to pay for costs. Howand
Athens Counties without service, said. to fill lines on South Canaan
restored to most of Meigs County
Strickland has asked President
ever, we don't expect the costs to be
Poole
said. Four outside contractors Road. Stringtown, Canaanville,
homes, consumers of water from the
that high." said ODOT District 10 Bill Clinton to declare a federal
are
now
being utilized to repair the Bethany Ridge and various other
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
emergency in Meigs. Washington,
spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
broken
mains,
he reponed. He said roads in those area~. He asked that
are still on a system-wide boil advi·
"They will be removing pavement Athens and Jackson counties due to
that
slips
are
still
occurring and cus- anyone noticing an exposed water
sory.
and dirt down to a concrete slab the severe storms and flooding.
tomers
experiencing
a new condition line, not already flagged. call the disDonald C. Poole, general manag·
"Though the most recent storms
bridge which remains, and is safe.
of
low
pressure
or
an inability to trict office.
er, reported this morning that all
and will be hauling in stone to cover have subsided, extensive damage
"We know that many homes and
draw
water
should
conulct
the water
homes in Meigs County, with the
the slab. There will be a gradual dip from these storms coupled with the
properties
have been damaged with
office
at
I
800-686-3747
or
740-98~exception of those on Rainbow
in the road, starting about 150 feet hardships suffered after the 1997
the
flooding
and the need to clean up
3315
.
.
back on each side ·of the concrete floods have stretched the resources of Ridge. !'OW have water service. He
is
necessary,
but at this time,. we ask
Poole
is
asking
that
all
customers
slab. Work should be finished by Sat- state and local emet'Jlency agencies to . ·said boiling is necessary because of
that
usage
be
limited to only ba.~ic
in
Athens
County
conserve
their
use
the flooding.
urday," she said.
·
the funhest extent possible, making
human needs." said Poole.
"These repairs' · are temporary," federal assistance crucial," he wrote.

Most water service restored; . .
boil advisory remains in effect

�•

commentary

Preliminary crop damage
for Meigs set at $2.6 million

Page2

OHIO Weather

Wedn11day, July 1, 1998

Thursday, July 2
AccuWeather~ forecast for da111in1e

The Daily Sentinel
'E.st@[is/id in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 ·Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

DIANE HILL
Controller

Gene1111 Menager

TIN Sentinel •~cMNe ,.,.,. to tn. «1/fot' from ,....,_ on • brOfld ~ of ropa.
Short ,.,..... (3011-"' - } IWwltlo r:1unco d l»&gt;nff pu/IIIMH. fYI»d lot·
lww INe p r e - 011111111 ""'Y
&amp;ch
1 llgnollite, - · ·
ond fMytl,.. phoM num,.,. Sfl«'/fY • """ 11 _.,., • ,.,,.,...,. 1o • prelllouo . 01 ,_,., Mall to: Utfet8 to 1M EdltfN, Tlw s.ntJn.l, f11 Court St, Pt:ln'Nro,, Ohio

I»-

llltould-

45181: or. FAJtloii4-P!IZ4157.

Current campaign finance
.overhaul elicits public yawn
By DO,.,ALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press WrHer
WASHINGTON - Disclosure of shoddy fund-raising practices by both
parties made campaign finance refonn a hot issue early this year. But it now
Is clear that Congress cannot agree on meaningf~l change and the public
does not much care.
Most members of Congress are in their home districts for the July Fourth
recess and few arc likely to encounter any demands that they do something
about the way political money is raised and spent.
··u comes at the bouom of the list of things that people want," said Cur·
Its Gans , director of the nonpartisan Committee for the Study of the Amen can E_l_ectoratc. "Their eyes glaze over when they look at particular solu·

Rockers confused about Tibet
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
· Perhaps our nation 's greatest
virtue is its guarantee that those who
wish to peacefully assemble to
protest injustice are free to do so
without intervention from government authorities. That's not the case
in much of the w,.~Jd, as President
Clinton surely saw firSt hand during
his visit to China.
Demonstrators can be seen and
heard in the nation's capital nearly
every day, and many of these protest·
ers travel quite a distance to express
their beliefs. But as the recent Tibetan
Freedom Festival rock concert
reminded us, many of those partaking
in these rallies are often just along for
the ride, woefully uninformed about
the cause they're supposedly supporting.
During the Tibetan concert, hem
at Washington's Robert F. Kennedy
Stadium, Eddie Vedder, lead singer
for the band Pearl Jam, shouted from
the stage to a crowd of approximately 130,000 paymg customers, "I
don't give a (expletive), we already
have your money."
Vedder 's comment was m

response to a
spontaneous
"Free Tibet"
chant
thai
broke
out
the
among
. overwhelmingly young audi·
ence.
Don't blame
Vedder for not
quite getting
the point of the
Moller &amp;
Anderson
benefit that hosted the likes of
hot rock commodities R.E.M., the
Red Hot Chili Peppers, Beastie Boys
and the Dave Matthews Band. The
two-day concert was meant to raise
money and awareness for Tibetans,
who have been oppressed under Chinese military occupation for the last
half century.
But jud~ing from numerous conversations with many of the people in
aue~dance at the concert and at a
companion rally on Capitol Hill. Vedder wasn't alone in his indifference.
Our reporter Carrie Brunk spoke with
activists at the rally sporting "Free
Tibet" signs who had trouble defin-

ing the siruation in Tibet "It's about,
like, human rights and freedom and
stuff. People aren't treated right over
there," mumbled one rallier.
Even the remarks of lawmakers
wht• addressed the crowd at the
National Day of Action for Tibet rally
le1·1 a lotto be desired.
Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis ., for
example, delivered a speech that was
long on patriotic sentiment' but short
on realistic action for solving the
problems in Tibet.
What is the situation in Tibet?
Beijing likens the invasion of Tibet to
Abraham Lincoln's emancipation of
slaves. China needed . land and
resources to support the Chinese
masses, and thought unprotected
Tibet was easy pickings.
Tibetan territory is roughly a
fourth of the size of China and fonns
a border with India -- another prize
China had set its sights on. The Chinese occupation of Tibctm the 1950s
touched off several decades of Indian-Chinese skinnishes a.• the Chinese
sought to move their influence farther
west.
Prior to the Chinese invasion.
Tibetan society was peaceful but not

twns

Money proved too powerful for the forces that tried to curb its influence
in politics. So too did a public cynicism fed by the perception that the elect·
cd official&gt; who raise and spend that money won't do anything to change the
lystem.
"There's more cynicism than I've ever seen," said Sen. John McCain, RAriz .. a principal architect of the campaign legislation that died in the Sen·
ate early this year. victim of.a Republican filibuster.
Fonner Vice President Walter F. Mondale , who joined with fanner Sen.
Nancy Kassebaum Baker, R-Kan .. in seeking public support for change in
campaign laws, said they encountered a mood "somewhere between cynicism and lack of optimism about the posSibility of refonn."
President Clinton spoke out strongly on the need for new campaign
finance laws and endorsed the bill pushed by McCain and Sen. Russell Fein·
~old. D· Wis .
"There is no substitute for strong, bipartisan campaign finance reform
legislation oassed by the Congress," the presidem said. But his advocacy of
reform wa&lt; somewhat diminished by awareness that some of the wor5t ahuses took pl ac~ in Clinton's 1996 re-election campaign.
McCatn also was m the forefront of the failed effort to pass broad legislation to toughen regulation of tobacco and discourage smoking by teen- By Joseph Perkins
. BERNE, Switzerland -- It boasts
agers. That. too, was a victim of money, although McCain said it was not
a
smaller land area than West Virnecessarily political money.
ginia.
It has fewer people livmg
The Arizona senator said major credit for the defeat of the tobacco bill
within
its borders than North Carshould go to the $41 million advertising campaign by the industry. Ads porolina.
Yet there are important
trayed the legislation as a huge tax increase rather than an effective means
the United States .. 200
lessons
of curbing smoking.
·
times
larger,
40 times more popuFrank Newport of the Gallup Organization said polling last week found
lous
-can
learn
from this nation of
only 36 percent of people saying the tobacco bill should have passed and 44
bankers, watchmakers and chocopercent saying it should not have. - •
.
In an indication of the effectiveness of the industry advertising campaign, latiers.
The first lesson begins with a
the Gallup survey found 50 percent agreeing that the measure was "mostly
.a bill to provide money for government spending by raising taxes." Forty- visit to the Swiss capital. One learns
that Switzerland is a "federali st"
one percent thought it was intended to reduce teen smoking.
nation. one of 23 in the world and
Newport sa1d campaign finance and tobacco are "recessed issues" mailers that if you remmd people about them "they'll say something ought the second oldest after the United
States. Bui there is a major differ10 be done ."
But ask those same people what issues mauer the most to them, and cam- ence between the Swiss and American political systems, which
paign finance overhaul is rarely mentioned .
explains
why the Swiss people arc
One reason for the failure of both tobacco and campaign finance legislahappier
with
their government on
:tlon was the lack of a clear perception by the public that the proposals were
all
levels
than
the American people.
·the right approach.
In
the
United
States, governmen:. "I don'tthink there's agreement even on the nature of the problem," said
tal
power
devolves
from the top
:Gans, the student of voting trends. "I don 't believe money is as evil as peodown,
with
the
federal
government
·ple claim."
.
dominant
and
the
states
in a suborStrict limits on contributions " advantage milliona_ires and people with
dinate
position.
In
Switzerland,
it is
large Rolodexes" who can raise huge sums of money; he said.
just the opposite. Most of the gov ernmental power resides with the
nation's 23 "cantons," which operate almost like independent nationstates.
Switzerland's parliament, modeled after the U.S. Congress, handles foreign affairs, national security and monetary policy (which arc
obviously best handled by a common central government rather than
23 separate governments). However. on most other government mat-

perfect. The Dalai Lama doubled as
religious and state leader of the Buddhist country. The aristocracy and
top-heavy bureaucracy of unproductive lamas -- or priests -- tied the
peasant class to the land. Roads were
made of dirt, and health care and general conditions were antiquated.
China rolled in uncontested (the
Tibetans had no military) and
imposed drastic change on the country. The Dalai Lama fled to India and
is joined every year by a growing
number of Tibetan refugees -- estimated at about 200,000 now -- who
brave the Himalayas to escape Chinese occupation.
While China did succeed in
wiring Tibet, paving roads, lowering
infant mortality rates and improving
health care, the Tibetans have fought
the Chinese fiercely to maintain their
Buddhtsl beliefs and allegiance to the
Dalai Lama.
To date, 1.2 million Tibetans have
perished as a result of torture. imprisonritent, starvation or military massacres. Columbia University Professor Bob Thurman, a noted Tibetan
expert. told us Chinese officials
would be more than happy ifTibeta~
no longer populated the Chinese
occupied land. Beijing provides economic incentives to bring Chinese to
Tibet to farm, mine and cut timber to
support the immense Chinese population.
While the concert held in Washington earned an estimated S I million
to "free Tibet," the Dalai Lama is not
calling for freedom but an autonomy
that would be similar to the current
situation in the former British colony
of Hong Kpng.
But don't hold your breath waiting
for a dialogue between Chinese leaders and the Dalai Lama. The reality in
Tibet is far harsher. more complicated and much more dreary than most
of the Freedom Festival concengocrs
probably realize.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers ror United Feature Syn·
dicate, Inc.

Switzerland: arm·ed and safe

Berry's
World

ters, the central "government defers
,-----.,==---, to the cantons. It is precisely ,... the
kind of federalist system
that Ameri ca's Founding
Fathers envisioned .
And it is
because governmental
power nows
from the bollom up in Switzerland,
Perkins
that it is a far
more

direct

participatory democracy than the
United Stales. Indeed, while the
Swiss federal parliament passes
laws . the people -- not the politi·
cians -- have the ultimate say.
To wit, Switzerland has an initiative process that enables citizens to
get a law on the books when parliament fail s to act. But the Swiss
democracy goes even further. It also
gives its citizens the right to veto
each and every law passed by their
parliament if 50,000 &lt;:itizcns
request a referendum within 100
days of a law's passage.
Just imagine if federal law in the
United States could either be enacted or vetoed by the American voting
public. Congress would be far more
responsive to the sentiments of the
people. As it is now, the people can
only express their approval or disapproval of overall (rather than spe-

But in -Switzerland, every male between 18
and 42 years of age is legally required -- I
repeat required·· to have a firearm at home.
And not just a handgun, but an automatic
rifle, which, in the United States, would be
considered a dangerous "assault weapon. "
cific) congressional action or inaction when an election comes
around.
Another lesson is learned on a
visit to a Swiss military installation.
One is informed that every Swiss
male is required to serve in the
nation 's armed forces . But the intcrestm·g thing is not that Switzerland

legally rc'quired -· repeat required -to have a tirearm at home . And not
just a handgun. hut an automatic
rille. whic-h. in the United States.
would he considered a dangerous
"assault weapon."
If we accept ~he premise .,r
America's gun-controllohhy -- that

continues to practice conscription,

violen&lt;:c -- then Switzerland should
he one of the most violent nations in
the world. But. in fact, it is one the
world's safest, lcast-violcni nations.
Which leads one to conclude that
gun violence in the United States
has far less to do with guns than
with sick behavior hy a certain aberrant segment of American society.
It is a good thing for Americans
to leave home from timc 'to time to
sec how other peoples Ii'Vc. We
often gain insights abOut our own
country.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
ror The San Diego Union-Tribune.

which the United States ended more
than two decades ago. but that
Switzerland is a safe, virtually
crime-free nation armed to the teeth.
Indeed, it has been accepted
almost as gospel truth in the United
States that the reason there is so
much unrelated violence in Amencan society ts because of easy
access to firearms. And it also has
been accepted as indisputable that
the reason gun violence is so rare in
such nations as Great Britain,
France, Japan. etc .. is because they
have string~nl gun-control laws.
But in Switzerland, every male
between 18 and 42 years of age is

gun ownership leads to wanton gun ,.

By Joseph Spear
· The ongoing debate about press
coverage of the Monica Lewinsky
scandal raises an interesting ancillary
que.~tion .

. ''

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday. July I, the IK2nd day of 1998. There arc 183 days
left m the year. This is Canada Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on July I, I898, during the Spanish-American
War, Theodore Roosevelt and his "Rough Riders" waged a victorious
assault on San Juan Hill -in Cuba.
On this date:
. In 1863, the Civil War Battle of Geuysburg began.
In 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion of Great Britain as
the British North America Act took effect.
,'
:· In 1943, "pay·as·you·go" income tax withholding began.

Who is t~tchier •- the infamously
thin-skinned independent counsel
Kenneth Starr or the media who C31l)'
his water?
The press-Starr volcano has been
- rumbling for years now; but the latest
and moSI powerful eruption came on
June 13, when media entrepreneur
Steven Brill released a 28-page opus
called "Pressgate" that is featured in
the inaugural edition of his new magazine, Brill's Content. The article lambasted both press and prosecutor for
playing footsie at Clinton's expense.
· Brill charged major media playet&gt;
with acting as a "cheering section" for
Starr. The Washington Post's Clinton
scandal specialist, Susan Schmidt,
".docs stenography for the prosecutors, " Brill wrote. NBC's David
Bloom (who docs seem incapable of
hiding his joy when reporting the latest
White House episode) does "lap dog·
like work" and is a ."virtual stenogni.
phcr for Starr." On and on Brill continued, slamming reporter5 who have
ignored Starr's excesses while faithful.

-------- - ----,------ - - - - - - - - -

I

ly recording, if
not trumpeting,
his
alleged
acwmplishments.
The article
also carried an
interview with
Starr in which
the prosecutor
· admitted he had
"talked
with ..____.
rcportet&gt; on backSpear
ground on some occasions." Hi~
deputy, Jackie Bennell Jr., Starr sa1d,
"has spent much of his time talking to
individual reporters." Indeed, on the
January day that the Lewinsky story
broke, Bennett spent "much of the day
briefing the press."
Whereupon the top blew off the
mountain.
lheir words were taken out of context, wailed reporters fingered by Brill.
lhey were misquoted and misrepresented. Brill's piece was "fundamen·
tally dishonest," "utterly garbage" and
"slimy," said one Newsweek COITC·
spondent Susan Schmidt emphatically
denied a quote thai Brill had attributed
to her. David Bloom whined thai Brill
had "forgotten that part of being a

good reporter is being a stcnocraphcr.
Accurately reporting what people say
does not make one a 'lap day.· just as a
willingness to hurl insults shouldn't be ·
mistaken for ~nd journalism."
Kenneth Starr is.•ued not one, but
THREE responses to Briii..On the first
day, he fumed that "Steven Brill has
recklessly and i'rrcsponsibly charged
the Office of Independent Counsel
with improper contacts with the media.
lllese charges arc false.' '
On the second day, he said that Brill
''has created a serious misimprcssion''
by taking his remarks out of context.
On the third day, he accused Brill of
a "reckless and irresponsible attack"
that "borders on the libelous."
On the fourth day, finally, Kenneth
rested.
All of which prompts a few observations:
.. It has been clear for years that
many members of the media arc covert
Clinion hatet&gt;. As long as such feel·
ings are kept under control, there is no
problem. But the press has routinely
reported gossip, babble and even fanta·
sy as if il were legitimate news. Most
Americans seem to be aware of the
media malfeasance, but the press
seems blissfully. ignorant of its trans--

•

gressions.
-- 1he press really should make a

stab, at least, at containing its glee
when the president is wounded and
reeling. When the Lewinsky scandal
broke, White House spokesman Mike
McCurry told the Chicago Tribune he
was shoc~ed to witness " the palpable
excitement in the repnner.; the minute
they thought (Clinton) was going
down. Tiley thought they were gomg
to run this guy out of office and they
got excited, thrilled by it." Sam Donaldson rashly predicted that Clinton's
"presidency is numbered in days ...
Mr. Clinton, if he's not telling the truth
and the evidence shows that, will
resign, perhaps this week ."
.. Special Inquisitor Starr would be
much easier to digest if, ltkc most of
the independent counsels who preceded him, he would just shut his yap,
invcstigalc and repilrl on his findings
when - and if- the probe is ever com·
pletcd. His prolonged and expensive
effort, to put it in words similar to his
own, amounts to a reckless and irresponsible attack that borders on the
demented.
J01eph Speer Is a ~ted
writer for Newspaper ·Enterjirllt
4•o(.ilnn.

Dennis Ray Cannan, 47, Langsville, died Thursday, June 25, 1998 in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
'
Born July 10, 1950 in Athens County, son of the late Kenneth and Dora
Stanley Carman, he was the owner and operator of Carman's Refuse Hauling in Langsville.
Surviving are his wife. Diana Carman; three daughters. Megan Carman
of Langsville, and Dianna and Jennifer Carman, both of Middleport; a son,
Ja.&lt;;On Carman of Middleport; three stepchildren. Franklin Jarvis, Tisha Jarvis,
and Peggy Russell . all of Vinton; seven stepgrandchildren; and four sisters,
Carolyn Doherty, Debbie Doherty and Lois Hartley, all of Zaleski, and Nancy Butcher of Nelsonville.
He was also preceded in death by 1 daughter, Wendy Renee Carman.
Priv ate memorial services were conducted at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with the Rev. Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial was in the
Salem Cemetery.

INO.
0

•lcolumbusl81 '

•

I

.

.

Gladys V. Dillon

..
Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries

Vis Assoaatsd Press Graph/CsNet

-

Today's weather report
By The Associated Press
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Panly cloudy. Highs in the
lower 80s. Northwest wind 5 to 15
mph.
Tonight...Ciear... Then areas of
dens~ fog developing. Lows near 60.
Light wind.
Thursday ... Mostly .&lt;unny. Highs in
the lower and mid 80s.
Extended forecast

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Total agriculture losses due 10 the
torrential rains whicb occurred over
the weekend have been estimated to
exceed $2.5 million .
That figure wa.• arrived at by Hal
Kneen. Meigs County Extension
agent, and Dave Fox. director of the
Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture. after reviewing
damage reports.
"The preliminary report is based
on the best infonnation available to
us," said Kneen. who noted it was
mostly secured through telephone
contacts with farmet&gt; in the affected
area.~ who could not be reached due
to washed-out bridges and roads and
high water.
Crop damage was se t at
$2,680,000, while the loss for traclorn, irrigation pumps and equipment
was set at $145,000, and the death of
seven cows at $7,000.
Kneen said that most of the damage occurred in the eastern part of the
county - Orange, Olive, Lebanon
and Letart .
Tentative figures set for crop dam-

age included soybeans, $100.000;
com, $300.000; wheat, $30.000; hay.
$400,000. for a total of $830,000 on
5.700 acres.
With the vegetable crops. the esti·
mate of damage to the tomato crop
was $840.000; sweet com. $540,000:
cabbage. $114.000: peppers. $36,000:
and pumpkins. $320.000. for a total
of $1.850.000.
The problems facing farmm . said
Kneen, besides the crop damage is
water standing in the fie lds. and the
wet soil where the water has drained
off. making it impossible to get
equipment into the fields.
As for recovering loss. Fox said
the national insurance progmm "does
not kick in until there is a 35 percent
loss of crops in the county."
· He said it is too early to make the
determination . He noted that in most

Gladys V. Dillon. 80, State Route 681, Reedsville, died Monday, June 29.
1998 in Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkmburg, W.Va.
cases, the losses are no t covered
She was born March 30, 1918 in Coolville, daugl!ter of the late Emory
under regul~r insurance.
Clinton and Sylvia Ethel Ward Dillon. She was a homemaker, a member of
Kneen said that the tomato crops
the Reedsville Church of Christ, and a member of the Pomeroy Senior Citof
Larry
Turley and Bob Morris were
izens.
almost
completely
wiped out by the
She is survived by three sons, Ray Dillon of Reedsville, Earl .Dillon of
hail.
and
there
was
ex
tensive damage
•Reynoldsburg and Roy Dillon of Florida; .three daughters, Ella Jones of
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Ice
to
the
crops
on
several
other fanns
Reedsville, Virginia "Gmnie" Hines of Reedsville, and Dale Sleight of Bel•
pre; three sisters. Flora Dixon, Ella Yeager and Roxie Anderson, all of
Thornville; 13 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Pearl Edgar Dillon; and
Thursday night...Clear. Lows near by ~daughter. Mary Swain.
O_bltu.,t.. are p1td an~ouncem~ntl arranged by 10011 runeret hom1,1.
60.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in l.he White Funeral Home, Coolville,
Obltuert.a are pubtlohed u requ11ted to IICcommodote tho• deolrtng more
Friday... Partly cloudy. A chance of with the Rev. Phillip Stunn officiating. Burial will be in the Sand Hill CemeInformation 111M It provided In the eoccmpanylng Duth Nollc.8.
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs tery. Long Bottom. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8
in the upper 80s.
p.m. Wednesday.
Fourth of july... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderMargaret Rose Nessel road, 83. Long Bonom. died Monday. June 29. 1998,
storms. Lows in the upper 60s and
at her daught~r· s residence in Reedsville.
.
highs in the upper 80s.
.
Margaret Rose Nessel road, 83, Long Bottom, died Monday, June 29, 1998,
She was born O&lt;;t. 4, 1914. in Oklahoma City, daughter of the late William
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows m at her daughter's residence in Reedsville.
·
Floyd and Anna Lou Born Foster. She was a rettred postmaster for the
the upper 60s and highs in the mid
She was born Oct. 4, 1914. in Oklahoma City, daughter of the late William
Reedsville Post Otfice.
80s.
.
Floyd and Anna Lou Born Foster. She was a retired postmaster for the
She is survived by a daughter. Margaret Groce Cauthorn of Reedsville ;
Reedsville Post Office
two granddaughters and a grandson-in-law. Alison and Dirk Kreiss of
She is survived by a daughter Margaret Groce Cauthorn of Reedsville ;
Reed&gt;v ille and Abigail Clluthom of Columbus; one sister. Joanna Dodson
homes listed as real estate, home- two granddaughters: one sister. Joanna Dodson of Oklahoma City; four brothof Oklahoma City : four brothers. Richard Foster. John Foster and Wtlltam
owners may also file for a reduction ers, Richard Foster. John Fo&lt;ter. William Foster, all of Oklahoma City, and
Foster. all of Oklahoma City. and Daniel Fostet of Garland. Texas; several
in value. The percentage of reduction Daniel Foster of Garland, Texas; several nieces and nephews.
nieces and nephews .
She was preceded in death by her first husband, John Groce; her second
may vary depending on the date of
She wa.• preceded in death by her first husband. John Groce: her second
the damage. If damage or destruction husband. Martin Nesselroad; one son. John Groce; one brother, Leo Fo&gt;ter.
husband, Martin Nesselroad; one son. John Groce; one brother. Leo Foster.
occurs January thru September, the
Services will be held Saturday. II a.m. at the Our Lady of Loretto Catholic
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at the Our Lady of Lorello Catholic
filing deadline is Dec. 31. 1998. Church, Success Road. Reedsville. with the Rev. Father Walter Heinz offiChurch , Success Road. Reedsv ille. with the Rev. Father Walter Heinz offiShould damage occur in the final ciating. Burial will be in the Our Lady of Loretto Cemetery.
ciating. Burial will be in the Our Lady of Lorello Cemetery. .
.·
qu')rter of the year, the filing deadline
Friends may call Friday. 6-9 p.m. althe White Funeral Home in Coolville
Friends may call Friday. 6-9 p.m. at the White Funeral Home m Coolvtlle
where a vigil service will be held at8:45 p.m. Memorial contributions may
is Jan. 31, 1999.
where a vigil service will be held at 8:45 p.m. Memorial contributions may
Homeowners needing more infor- be made to the Washington County Home Nursing &amp; Hospice at900 Third
be made to the Washington County Home Nursing &amp; Hospice at900 Third
mation or an application should con- St., Marietta, or to the Reedsville Emergency Squad.
St .. Mariena, or to the Reedsville Emergency Squad.
tact the Auditor's Office at 9922698. The office hours are Monday
Continued rrom page 1
thru Friday, 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
l.:em that kindergartners have a sepliterature .
James R. Greene Sr., 60, Hartford, W.Va .. died Monday. June 29. 1998
Op11on
A.
the
one-story
plan.
was
ar..Ate entrance into the building was
in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
balanced by 'the distance fro~1 the
quickly
eliminated
as
an
option.
Born Nov. 30, 1937 in Quincy, W.Va., son of the late George L. Sr. and
Pottmeyer
acknowledged
that
the
kindergarten area to the highway.
ington hospital. Calls to find out the Sybil E. Herdman Greene, he owned and operated Greene's Hardware for
one-story
plan
"meanders
a
lillie
Pollmeyerexplained
the kindergarten
condi.!i.ons of Hess a~d Payne were 30 years in New Haven. W.Va.
classes
would
have
a separate.
bit."
In
addition,
the
one-story
plan
· He attended the Father's House Church and the Hartford Church of Christ
not returned at pressttme. . .
did
not
lend
itself
to
easy
expansion
fe
nced-in
playground
area
with door.;
Hess and Payn~ were ndmg on a in Christian Union. wa.~ a U.S. Air Force veteran. and a member of Amer~hould
the
district
grow
in
the
future.
leading
from
the
classrooms
directly
1995 Harley-Davtdson. The other ican Legion Smith-Capehan Post 140 in New Haven.
As
far
as
cost
is
concerned,
the
into
the
playground.
He was also preceded in death by his brother. Donald E. Greene Sr.
vehicle involved was a 1998 Mack
Now that a building concept has
difference between one- and two-stoSurviving
are two sons, James R. (Kathryn J.) Greene Jr. of Pomeroy.
lral:tor-lrailer operated by Cl:uence E.
been
tentatively approved. archit~ct.&lt;
ry
desig
ns
is
a
toss-up,
Ponme
yer
Taylor, 39, of Bellatre. Oh10. Com· and Ralph t.. Greene of Florence, Ky.; a daughter, Penni M. Greene of Hanwill
produce
more detailed buildmg
said.
The
lower
price
due
to
the
plete detmls of the acctdent were not ford; a grandson and two stepgranddaughters; live brothers. Ralph B. (Donplans
and
schedule
another meettn g
smaller
roof
space
and
ground
area
of
na) Greene of Letart, W.Va., Ernest L. (Colleen) Greene of Pomeroy. Roy
available.
at
that
time
to
reline
1he plans be for~
two-Ooor
building
i&gt;
offset
by
the
a
E. (Ruth) Greene and Kenneth T. (Norma) Greene, both of Hanford. and ·
fioal
approval
and
subm
iss ion to the
price of stairWells and the installation
George L. (Cheryl) Greene Jr. of Mason, W.Va.; a sister. Deloris Ellen
Ohio
School
Facilities
Commission.
of an elevator, which is required due
Rife of Middleport; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to the new elementary
~C=on:::.::tin::.ued::..::..fro:..;..;m.:..pa.::.ge_l----:_ (Charles)
to the Americans with Disabilities
Services wtll be I p.m. Thursday in the Foglesong Funeral Home. Mason.
school.
new rooms will be added to
Act.
the county cun purchase material for with the Rev. Huling L. Greene and the Rev. Mike Finnicum ofticiating. Burthe
high
school. Di&gt;&lt;u"ion on that
All of the plans feature separation
the township with 75 percent reim- ial will be in the Zerkle Cemetery. Military services will be conducted at
:
project
has
yet to begin.
of ·activity areas from classroom
bursement from the state.
the cemetery. Friends may call at the__funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
areas.
The problem is the remaining 25
Other discussion focust'll on the
percent for which the townships must
number and location of restrooms and
be accountable, he said.
the location of kindergarten classHe told trustees to find out where Library Friends to meet
The Meigs County Health Departrooms
within the new building in
they have problems so their material
Friends of the Meigs County ment will have a free evening immu- relation to state Route 124. The conneeds can be calculated and orders libraries will meet Monday. 7 p.m. at nization clinic on Tuesday, 5to 7 p.m.
sent in.
the Middleport branch.
at the Meigs Multipurpose Center,
"Our material is limited." he said.
East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
"We need to know you'll commit 25 Auxiliary sets meeting
Every child must be accompanied by
percent of your matching obligation."
The Fmemal Order of the Eagles a parent/legal guardian and have
County Commissioner Jeff Thorn- 2161 Auxiliary will meet Tuesday, with them the child's immunization
ton said federal and state elected offi· 7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be record. For more information call the
.cials would be touring the damaged served.
Health Department. 992-6626.
a~a.' Thursday morning and added
that federal funding may be available
to further assist the townships.
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D- tified (reported) their 1998 crop
Lucasville, and Steve Mauer, Fann acreage are required to contact the ·
Service Agency State Director will local Farm Service Agency at 992hold an informational 111eeting con- 6646 before July 15 in order to set up
cerni ng the latest nood agricuhuml an appointment.
Move headquarters
disa.~ter at the Racine Annex (old fireThe Eastern Local School Dis- house) at 10:30 a.m. on Thursday.
trict's administrative offices have
Veterans Memorial
· Invitations have also been extend·
been temporarjly relocated to the ed to the Meigs County Commis·
Monday admissions - Frances
Tuppers Plains Elementary School. sioner.;, U.S. S~nator Mike De Wine. Adkins. Pomeroy.
The district will use the same State Sen~tor Michael Shoemaker, D·
Monday discharges - Albert
BIG C;aiiFor M O\(' l !me~
addres.~. but can be reached by tele: Bourneville. and State Representative Roush.
•
1-740-753-3400
phone at667-3310.
Holzer Medical Center
Mo\'JeS Mat nfo;&gt;~ HfRYDAI''
John Carey. R-Wellston.
Discharges June 30 - John
· Local farmers who have incurred
Fourth closings announced
Houck,
Harold Levoff, Merrell
flood damage are invited to attend the
U.S. Post Offices in the Columbus meeting, and are asked to bring pho- Smith. James Rose, Flossie Bush,
District. including post offi,es in tographs and potential loss estimates. Mrs. · Russell Wyatt and daughter,
Meigs County. will Pe closed on Sat· A tour of damaged area.&lt; will be con· Hannah Johnson. Katelynn Henry,
urday in observance of Indepen- dueled after the meeting.
Brianna Lawrence. Richard Eggleton.
dence Day.
(Published with permisSion)
Those fannern who haVI! not cer·
There wi II be no collection or
delivery of mail. and retail facilities
will not be open for business. Deliv·
ery and window service will resume.
on Monday.
.
The Meigs County Courthouse
and courity offices will .be closed on
Friday to observe the holiday, _ac~ord­
ing to Meigs County Comm•s."oner
Janel Howard.
W.VA .

Margaret R. Nesselroad

Obitua·r y-

Margaret R.Nesselroad

Tax value reduction possible
Homeowners and manufactured
homeowners are being advised by
Nancy Parker Campbell . . Meigs
County auditor, that there are possible reductions in tax value of such
property as a result of the recent
flooding.
Manufactured homes that have
been damaged or completely
destroyed could qualify for a refund
of 1998 taxes assuming they have
already been paid. Manufactured
homeowners must file the appropriate application no later than Jan. 31,
1999.
If flood damage has occurred to

James R. Greene Sr.

Plans take...

Pomeroy woman hurt in wreck
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. .
Two people were lfa!ISpPrted to S.t.
Mary's Hospital following an accident Tuesday night on l:J .S. 33, near
New Haven, W. Va., according to a
Ma.~on County Sheriffs Department
spokesman.
Larry Hess. 43, of New Haven and
his passenger, Bonnie G. Payne , 47,
of Pomeroy, were \•ken by ambulance and Health-Net to the Hunt·

FEMA meets..
can start repair work.
Carper. who was in Meigs Coun·
ty in March. 1997. following flooding in the western part of the county.
· said the soldiern will hold off clear. ing debris for a few days. giving people a chance to sort through their
belongings and organize the debris
for easier removal.
David Spencer of the Meigs
County Highway Department said

The Daily Sentinel

r.pn-

(IJSPS Zll·MO)
A GaiiM:It Co.

Publishcd every afternoon, Mondty through
Friday. \II Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Compuy/Oanttel~ Co.
Scoon4 class postage paid at Pomeroy, OhKI.
Meebtr: The Associated ~ and the Ohio
Ncwsp~pcr Association.

.

Polhulltr. Send address roncct10ns to 'The
Daily Sentinel, t II Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

SUBSCRJmON RATES
IJ Canter or Motor ltouk

Media entrepreneur Brill hits a nerve

Dennis Ray Carman

MICH.

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 1, 1998

Onc-L ........................... .... .SlOO
One Monlh ................................$8.70
()ne Year................................... SI04.00

SINGLE COPY 'PRICE

Dtii~ ........... :........................... Jl Calls
Subscribel'l noc desiring 10 pey the earner may

remit in advanc:e direct W The Daily Sentinel on
,will be
etven carrier each week.
No slblaiption by ltllil permitted ia areas
where home carrier scrvtce is available.
Publisher ractvcs lhc ript 10 .dj~ rates cfut.
ina the sub&amp;cripdon period. Sw.aipt~ r~te
chi""' may be implemented by cha•l'"'lbe
duraUon of the subSCription.

1 three, aix or 12 month basis. Credit

MAIL SIJIISCRIPfiON
IMideMelpC..IIl .
13Weeb........................... .S27.30
26 - b ........................... .s'll.Bl

S2 W..U ...........................SIIlS.56
Ootllde Melp Coelly
13 W6cb ........................... .S29.2S
26 - ............................ .$56.68

S2 - b ..........................SI09.72

Reader Services
Correetlon Polley

Our m~lo ,....,. I• 1111 otorioo II to bt
~~m~nle. " ,... bow or 10 enw Ill 'I
llary, coil lbe ............... 11 (741) 99l·
lU5. We wUI check yiMII' llltbnullloll
Md ..... I COIIOCiiolllf Wllrl'llllod.

Newa Departments .
11so -1• 1u•ber lo 992-l.ISS. DeportBMBtnte..SOU•re:
GtMro1 M - t.......................EIL llOt

N.-. .............................................EIL 1102
or &amp;11.1106

Other Servlc:el

Aa!Yertlli.................................EIL 11M
Omllalioii ................................EIL llo.l
a..•l!od Ad&amp; .............................EIL !} ..

Meigs annoul~m~~t~l~c~tts

Farmers invited to meeting

Local briefs

Hospital news

***************

[J

ASH STREET
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
398 Ash Street, Middleport

F1ood reller fund started
· The Meigs County Co-Operative
Parish has started a relief fund for
Meills County flood victims.
DonatiQns may be sent to the
Farmers Bank or the Racine Home
National Bank. Applications for
assistance are now being accepted at
the Parish headquarterS, 311 Condor
St., Pomeroy (Phone 992-7400), 9
a.m. to I p.m.

Things are hoppin ' at

Vocation Bible School

tfie Ofiio !J&lt;jver '13ear Company

July 6·10
6:30 pm • 8:45 pm

ALL BUNNIES (EVERYBUNNY!) 50% OFF!!
We have new Boyd's plush!
lots of Beanies!
Gund, Russ, Ganz, Mary Meyer &amp; more!
WE WILL BE CLQSEQ JULY 4TH
Middleport
. 992-4055. ·
10.S Mon..sat.
Vlu, MC&lt; Dlacover, AM. Exprul, LlyiWIY

Ages: Nursery thru 6th Grade
"Come See A Miracle"

r--------------------------,
~~~

I
I ADDRESS
I
.
I PHONE NUM8ER
I ALL£IIQIES

.

I
I·
I·
I
I.
I

RETURN FORM TO CHURCH
~--------------------------~

�."

: :-

· . Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel
'.,

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Wednesday, July 1, 1998

Wednesday, July 1, 1998

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

financial concerns puSh NBA to lock. out players
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
: NEW YORK (AP)- The NBA is
.:losed today. Doors won't be reopen•ng anytime soon.
: For the third time in four years. a
'ockout is in effect. This latest one
-began at 12:01 a.m.. looking like it
:will last throughout the summer.
: "The I&lt; ague is locking us out. We
want to play." players union preSident
·Patrick Ewing said. "There's still a
~ot of time before the season stans. so
:we' ll see what happens ."
: Without any lith-hour negotia-tions taking place. the lockout com:menced without any discernible fan Jare. A work stoppage was so much
:of a cenainty that the league office
·announced it almost 36 hours in
:Odvance.
: Team personnel are now barred
:from speaking to their own players or
·any of the 1.48 free agents. including
:Michael Jordan. Scotti&lt; Pippen and
:Dennis Rodman of the Chicago
·Bulls, who will now have to wait
:indetinitely to see where - and
:whether - they'll be playing next
:year.
· "We're more unified this time."
:said Ewing, part of a massive ovef:haul of union leaders since the last
:time the league imposed a brid lock·out in 1996. "We're strong. We
:believe in what we 're doing. We're
· Jtghling for our rights."
: Such strong words of unity could

be put to the test if the lockout
extends into the beginning of next
season. Most players aren't due to
rece ive their tirst paychecks until
Nov. 15, and the league may want to
see how players with $2 million contracts and $2 million lifestyles react
to a significant lo." of cash tlow.
Many around the league predict
the lockout will last at least into midDecember. basing their feelings on
factors like the owners negotiating a
new $2.6 billion television contract
that obliges NBC and Turner Spons
to make their tirst-year payment
even if a lockout remains in force .
That money would later be
" returned" in the form of reduced
. payments·over the tina) three years of
the deal or. in TNT's ca,., the right
to broadcast additional games.
The NBA said it had no cho1ce but
to stop operating until it could lind a
way to bring the salary growth in line
with revenue g.rowlh.
The collective bargaining agreemenl that expired at midnight Was
supposed to run for six years. But
owners had the right to reopen it if the
amount of money being paid toward
player salaries exceeded 51.8 percent
of basketball-related income. That
number has grown to 57 percent.
" David (Stern) said he wants that
number to be between 48 and 50 percent. He asked me for a number and
I turned around and a~ked him for

one," said union director Billy
Hunter, who has been present for all
nine negotiating sessions since early
April. •·J won't give him a number.
because that's a hard (salary) cap."
. The la't bargaining session a week
and a half ago lasted only 30 minutes.
''They say they want cost-certainty. They have cos t cenainty. They
are the ones with the checkbooks."
Ewing said. ''If they feel Patrick
Ewing or Michael Jordan or whoever is not wonh what they're paying.
then they have the right to say ·No.
this is all we can pay.· Then it's up to
us to move on or go to another team
and get what we ti!el i.s right.
··Jn what other work do the workers put a limit on what they can be
compensated·&gt;" Ewing said.
Around the NBA on Tuesday.
players and team ofticials took care
of lasl-minute business.
At \earn oftices. staffs were
briefed on the rules of the lockout.
Tminers and medical personnel conferred with players on moving treatment sessions away from team facilities.
In Orlando. the Magic decided to
waive Mark Price. while the Boston
Celtics picked up the option on
Bruce Bowen's contract and declined
to do the same with Tyus Edney.
The Houston Rockets brought in
two of their rookies. Michael Dick,
erson and ~uttino Mobley. for a final

Sampras makes quarterfinals,
say$ men's tennis needs boost
Wimbledon
By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON. England (AP). Imagine the scene: a tattooed, trashtalking, body-pierced. rainbow haired dude accepting the Wimbledon championship trophy on Centre
Coun.
. · . All England Club members would
. :pnibabl¥ choke on their Pimm's. but
·· :~te ~mpras says that\ what men's
\·. · teani\'cneeds to boost its sagging pop·'·· : ,p.Jnrity:'a Dennis Rodman .
:·. \"Sampras, on course for his llfth
~:_ Wimbledon title in six years. said the
t&gt; ~~~~e lacks rivalries, person:ilities
~· alld NBA-type marketing.
~. , 1' Referring to his shon-lived rivalry with Andre Agassi a few years ago,

he said. ··You dellnitely need A mer·
icans playing well to have this game
be successful in the States."
Sampras also reflected on the
success of the 1970s and early '80s,
when Bjorn Borg. John McEnroe and
Jimmy Connors played each other in
numerous Grand Slam semifinals
and finals .
"They were 'all diiTerent pe"onalities and they all hated each other."
he said. "It's great theater. Anti now.
it 's sad·buflrue . That's what the game
needs . It needs a little controversy. It
need a Dennis Rodman typo of guy . .
.. You need a hatred. or

wh~11ever

you want to call it. You need a rivalry. You need something so that people not following the g&lt;~me miglu fol·
tow the game."

Sampras. criticized for heing
"boring·· and not doing enough to
generate interest in the game. said it's
not his job to make waves.
"I'm obviously worrying about
my tennis." he said. "There's only so
much I can do. •·
So don't expect Sampras to stan
imitating Rodman .
"I'm pretty normal." he said ..
"Because you play good tennis.
everyone think&gt; there's got to be
something a little bit quirky aoout
you. and there really isn't about me.
I'm kind of your normal guy that
happens to play good tennis, ami
that \ really it. There's not a lot to
analyze with me ."
As Sampras likes to say. his rad (See WIMBLEDON on Page 7) ·

workout. The coach and general
manager of rhe Toronto Raptors new
to Atlanta to meet with Charles Oakley and finalize la~t week's trade with
the New York Knicks.
The Philadelphia 76ers bought out
the final year of Derrick Coleman 's
contrJct. and the Seattle SuperSonics

relea~ed Dale Ellis. the league's
career leader in three-pointers.
Michael Olowokandi. drafted by
the Clippers as the overall No. \pick
last week. watched the ArgentinaEngland soccer game while preparing
to fly home to England. He had been
working out at the Clippers' practice

The Daily Sentinel• Page·$:

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

'

site since the day after the draft.
''I' ll keep doing the things I need
to do, working on my game and my
condilioning." Olowokandi said. "As
much as I need offseason work. this
will only motivate me because il
stacks . the odds against me eveo
more."

RORE HOURS
Mo•day thru

Sunday
8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

•

Accepts Credit Cards

Holzer Clinic will·be closed on
Friday, July 3 in observance of
Independence Day.

THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD TUU JULY 4, 1998

UMIT 2 PLEASE ADD_
PURCH. $2.39

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

COCA COLA.
PRODUCTS .
24 PK 12 OZ

Urgent Care will remain open from
1:00 ~M to 9:00 PM in the ·
Gallipolis and Jackson facilities.

,9
Chops •••••••••• ~~•••• 2
Quarters ••••••~•••• 3 7

Hana~~ean~

FRESH CH,ICKEN LEG

HappJ HoiiJ Weekend!!
Holzer Clinic of Jackson
Urgent Care Center
25 South Street
Jackson, Ohio

(740) 446-5287

(740) 286-6417

3

$ 99
NY Strip Steak •••••!...
·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$259

_FARMLAND SMOKED PORK LOIN

Chops ••••••••••••• !~.

$

· .C

·-

SUPERIOR'S WHOLE BONELESS T~!~RN

Holzer Clinic
Urgent Care Center
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

99 ~

$
BONELESS BUnERFLY PORI LOIN

$

Hams ••••••••••••••••

149

CHUCK WAGON BREAKFAST

Bacon •••••••~•••••••• 99

C

.

Same Faces. Same Places. New Name.

2 LITERS - 79¢

LAY'S
POTATO
CHIPS
6 OZ ASST VAR.

STORCK HOT
DOG OR
HAMBURGER
BUNS

CARNATIONEVAPORATED :
MILK

lb•

c

. "

•

FIJESH99
C
Cantaloupes.;a••••
UNITED

Ice Cream •••••~~~.
MISS SMITH'S ALL VARIETIES
P•les ••••••••••••••••
. '·
~&gt;

Doritos
VLASIC

UNITED lALLEY BELL
9oz

·

Ha~nburger Chips

It's really that simple. On June I 5th, Peoples National Bank took on the name of City National Bank.
Other than a new name, you can still expect that good old fashioned service and your favorite bank products.

www.cltynatlonal-hRk.com

DEL MONTE
KETCHUP

I

NATiONAL
.
All the bank you need

28

oz

c

$ --- 9

1.~

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

c

.

Point Pleasant, (304) 674-1000 • Mason, (304) n3-5514 • New Haven, (304) 882-2135

•

.

'

', -

Umlt 12 pl.- 8dd. pUrdl- -

Member FI)IC

-

"'T~-

. _ . . __ _ .

. Jr~....
2,. M1.lk •••••••

$189

14.2515.250Z.

IUFT AMERICAN

2/$

Sin les ••••••• ::~... .

:SWIIOZ-

.A880RrED VMttTEs

' -(ASST. VlllmES)
18-18.5 oz.

460Z

59

4

CHEF
BOY·AR·DEE ·
2 CHEESE
32.5 oz.

3 $1''·

LL
DUNCAN HINES
HOUSE COFFEE CAKE MIXES

'$ 49

SNOW FLOSS
TOMATO
JUICE

.

O/

•••••••••••••
..

$299

2I $5

16oz

.

·'

2/$1

lB.

OSCAR MAYER

•

,, ;.a

.

. •,

Same Faces. Same Places. New Name.
Peoples National is now City National Bank.

,,

SPK

89C
Hams •••••••••••••••••
· -99c
w·eners ••• ••••••••
FISCHER'S SMOKED _,ICNIC

CANS ~

c

Win A
BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

$2
Free Cash!
St.op In The
For Details

.·'

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 1, 1998

Wednesday, July 1, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • P•ge 7

Reds ·defeat Twins 6-3, extend win streak to five games
By TERRY KINNEY

al League opponents, Cincinnati has
put together its longest winning
streak in nearly a year - five games,
all againSI the AL Central.

CINCINNATI (AP)- The Red~
are getting well on interleague play.
After losing II straight to Nation-

Re-roofing?

Store Building Kits

.........
·--. . . -=

1hl dlnglr 11an1 of alllllhlr wom roof!
.~.~~~~~

Scoreboard

.......

ARIZONA

Features stainable TeX1Ure 1·11 siding.
Includes window.

•C 1 , ... . _...

8Gslon ................................48
T(.)fonto ............. ........ ...... 42
Bilhimorc ......................... J 7
Tampa Bay .
.. ............ .. J 4

r....,.

""''

8'1J
10'1!

.407
.J92

IJ'h

. 60~
~6 1

.4H

J',.
12

........ J 4 49

.410

16

Iwn
"' .MI
f&lt;L
Ar lama ...................... .. ... Jw
4 -29

"""

- ~~I

8 ~:

.500

12'1--

.4{17
.J~4

24~

Milwnukte ........... .............. 4J
Olicago . .... .... . ............... 43

342.00 DK1212
432.00 DK1216

St.

G-F Bruce Bowen lrJfth~ I ~8-IJY sc,IJOn lkt.:h
10 eurcae their optton on G Tyu~ &amp;.l~y
!( . .

2-II&gt;&lt;T -

2889°

- 249900

Colore Slightly Higher

32'x48' Pole Barn Kit

4999°0

•1)7 PEARL ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

Senul~

Colorado 6.

"Vaughan's Signaturen (3·Lbs.or More)
Fresh Beef

Ground Chuck

4

Anaheim 4. San Fmncisco 3

Today 's games
(AL vs. NL)

Brass

N.Y. Mets (Nomo 2-Rl

at Toromo (Williams 83), I :0~ p.m.
ArizoM (Tekm:h:o 2-2 ) ol Ch1cago Cub$ (WOCKJ

$500 Minimum Purchase
Credit
With

1·11. 2:20p.m.
San Diego (Brown 9- J) at O:.kland (Sic:in J-4).
3:15p.m.
Detroil (Greisinger 0-3) at Pinsburah (Perers J ~), 7:0S p.m.
Minneao la (Radke 8-6) at CINCINNATI
(WincDesrc:r 3 - ~). 7 : 0~ p.m.
·
Montreal (Hermanson 6-6) at Boston (Saberha gen 9·5), 7 : 0~ p.m.
Allantn (Smolu: ~-2) Dl Tampa Bny (Santana 2·

85

18.

. 11. 1,Qj p.m.

Florit!u (Hemundtt. 6-4) nl Boltimore (Smith 0-

2), 7 : ~~ p.m.
Philadelphia (Beech

'DC..tS

DC-II
71011

Metal Clad Unll

71070

......

• Easy 101p lo water clean up

Alkyd• or Latex Emrlor

Primer
• FOr new or bate wood

Deep emboiHII
penell loolc IIIII

poly COli,

San Francisco (D;uwin
J -Ol.

threshold, rela11orced

I

more.

9 Lite

$139

Hous10n

:,':'.:.':'~":.'·the

=glen

(S park ~

(AL vs. NL)

(Half Gallon) Selected Varieties

p.m.
Colorado (Kill: :'i-10) al Scitlllc (Swifl7 -4). JJ:'i

p .m.

Delroit (Powell 0-0) at Pinsburgh ( L~1aiz.1 ~ - 4) .
7 : 0~ p.m.
Minne~ota (Millon 4-7) al CINCINNATI &lt;Harnisch 7-3). 7 :0.~
N.Y. Met~ (Jones 6-:'i) at Tllronto (Hemgen 9-41 .

orllrencl-lf
llllllgeloworry

r.m.

lbout

_..

7:05p.m.
Mon1real &lt;Pav;,no 2- 11 at Boston !Maninn 1021. 7:0:'i p.m.
CLEVELAND !Colon K-4 ) nt Mi lw uukcc

-a.....netgy

·~·'"'

s 61

(Woodall4-2 ). 7:15p.m
· · PhiliKklphia IGn."C"n 6-4) ;u NY Ynnkco

MCurlly

( lr&gt;~bu

6--.ll . 7J :'ip.m.
Chi .: :~gn White So" CB11hlwin 2-J ) ;II Hc1us1on

•"-

(Lin~:~7 - 4J .

lllllnllnance

K.O.'i p.m.
Kansas City (Pkhardn 4-fll at S1. L.nuis (Acevedo 2-2l. H: 10 p.m

Lns

PATIO BLOCKS

.. · ..
. .. ,

M :.l~

.

1\nfcl.:~ (P;~rk 6-.~) 111 Tc11.u .~

(Oliver

(Plus Tax)
All V•rieties 12·01. Cans

Tropicana
Pure Premium
Juice

JO~

.

•No ti'OII build up

.

at Anaheim

A1lanta (Maddux 11 -21 ul Tampa D&lt;~y (Johnson
2-:'). 12:.l:' p.m.
Arizona (Surran 1-6) nl Chicogo Cubs (Tr;JChsc l
6-~). 2:20p.m.
' Florida (Fontenol ().~) :1.1 D:1himure (P1msnn 1-6),

$37 9

8Ft

tl -~ )

p.m.

Thursday's games

addition with beautiful patio
doon.

DO

2/8 or 3/0

10: ."\~

Finish on your next room

we•therllrlpping,
wood lrome,
·

loclc-d..-1

;,t

JO:Hp.m.

on

wood, bulhevtlhe '
atrength ol 11111. 1l'o'

7-6) , 8:0~ p.m
Chi~;ago White Sox (Pnrque 2 - 1)

(Sclmurek 4- ~ ). 8 : 0~ run
Kansa.~ Cil y (Belcher 6-7) al S1. Loun (Mercker
~ - 4 ) . Jol: 10 p.m.
.
lo~ Angelts (Reyu 0.4) 111 Tea as 1Von Poppel
1- 1). S·.H p.m
Colorndo I S,_j~ 0-0l at Seaul e (Cioude ."\-"1 ).

ti~

thlclc with lneulallnO

.,

at N.Y. Yankees (Wells

CLEVELAND (Burba 9 - ~ ) 01 Milwaukee (Juden

71QI.t
11GM

700U

sgg
!.alex H- Plinl
• WOOd. metal rx masavy

3 -.~)

10-21. 7 : J~ p.m.

INSULATED STEEL
PREHUNG &amp;-PANEL
EN1JtY DOORS

Ho- lo Trim Paint
· Latex Filii Howt Palnl
• Satin gkHs finisll
• Apply wilh brush, roller or
• Resisu rutin¥ &amp; peeling
sprly
• Durat'litit )' &amp; w(!athcr rcsif.lance • Dries 10 ""'ch in 2 bows

HOMETOWN ·PROUD

16h
24

Bo11on 7, Monrreal 4
Detroit 3, Piltlburgh 0
CINCINNATI6, Minnesol.a J
Toronto 6, N.Y. Meta~
Allantn 7, Tampa Bay 2
flonda 7, llallimOte !\
NY . Yunkeel9, Phil:&amp;delphia 2
Arizona~ . Chicago Cubs 4
M1lwnukee !'\,CLEVELAND -4
Houston 17. Chicago Whit!! Sox 2
Kansas Cily 6, S1. Louis I
Los Angeles 4, Teuu I

Model BEC240

00

~·~
12'!r

(ALvs. NL)

Model BC32&lt;411

.

Solid Vinyl Sotfltt 1CI23101ADSUS a21100(1.e) ............................. 5.99
Perforated VInyl Sotfltt 102311/SFUD 121100(1.e) ................................ 5.99

'edon

season, Bret Boone followed with a
double and scored on Sean"Casey's
single to make it 4-0.
"ll's tough for us to catch up whtn
you don't hit the ball overthe fence."
Krlly said. "We don't really have the
ballclub for that. "
Cincinnati got a run in the third on
an RBI single by Eddie Taubensee.
and another in the founh on consecutive singles by Tomko. Reggie
Sander.; and Mike Frank .
Tomko gave up just one hit
through four innings. but then
allowed a leadoff homer to Orlando
Merced in the fiflh and 1wo more runs
in lhe sixth on Mauhew Lawton's
RBI single and Marty Cordova's
fielder's choice grounder.

NEW
JERSEY adm•mmauon
NETS Named Bobhy
M.•ks
di·~rl
fi
• • • (l~C~o~n~ti!!nu~ed~f!:ro::!m::..:.P,:a&amp;~~:e:..4::.)~-------------------------------rector
of baske1ball
ant.! !nell&amp;
Rub1
no baskerDall operarions mnn a~er
et
has
done
most
of
his
talking.
biggest serves in the game. He said Hingis was ma1ched against Aramxa jicek aggravaled an injury to his right
ORLANDO MAGIC: W;n ved G Mark Price:.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS: Bought out the: fin:ll
He won his fi"l four matches in he doesn't fear Sampras.
Sanchez . Vicario, the French Open knee in his fourth -round win over
yea r ofF Derrick Colt'man ·s conlracl. making him n
straight
sets,
the
latest
a
6-3.
6-4,
6sure
he
doesn't
want
(lo
"I'm
champion
and No. 5 seed; No. 2 Wayne Ferreira and said he wasn' t
free agent
SEAITLE SUPERSONICS: Rc:lea•cd G D;,lc: 4 cakewalk over French qualifier
play) me also," Philippoussis said. "I Lindsay Davenpon met Nathalie sure whelher he would be fully Iii.
Elli s
Sebastian Grosjean. and looks more think I could win."
Tauziat, and No. 6 Monica Seles
In the other men 's quarterfinal.
and more like the overwhelming
Sampras vs. Philippoussis shaped faced Nalasha Zvereva.
Football
fonner lwo-time finalist Gornn lvani N•tm.l Foethalll.A•J~:ate
favorite.
up as the main slugfest on n day reaIn men's matches, No. 3 seed Petr sev ic was up against Jan Siemerin~ .
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Waive d P Bill
"I
feel
like
I'm
playing
prelty
well
luring
all men's and women's quar- Korda was pined against Tim HenKushner
"I'm playing maybe the !test !enJACK SONVILLE JAGUARS: Sig~d OT Ed
at this point," he said.
lerlinnl
matches.
man,
bidding
to
become
the
first
nis
I've ever played here." said the
Philion.
Today 's quanerfinal match was
In women's play. Vena" Williams Brilish man lo reach the semifinals 14th-seeded Croat. who won just one
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS : S1g ned DT
l.eontn Rheams. ·
against Australia's Mark Philippous- was resuming her hid for her first since 1973 and the first homegrown ma1ch in his five previous Grand
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Sign•d TE Ch,,d
Grand Slam tille when she faced Jana men's champion since 1936.
sis.
l...cwi s to a one-year contr~~~.:t
Slam events. "Maybe lhis is the
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Signed DE Kerry
Philippoussis, in such a slump Novolna. lhe No. 3 seed and twoThe
1996
champ,
Richard
Krabreakthrough. Maybe lhis is 1he
Hic ks to a one-ye;n contracl
lhree weeks ago that he considered time runnerup.
jicek, faced lillle·known Davide San- Grand Slam. After five poor ones.
skipping Wimbledon. has one of lhe
Defending champion Martina guineui, a 65th-ranked Italian. Kra- there ha.~ to come one good one."

();)klnnd 12, Snn Diego 10

FREE eaty·to•tolfow pla'ls with material pu-chase

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
ON ANY KIT PACKAGE

12'6" wood grain panels. Easy care. Available 1n white only.
Thickness is .038.2 panels or 2 squares per carton. 10145
042" Thick 1011114...................................................................................... 46. 68

IAII"mb

rough slart with LaTroy." said Kel ly. "There were those two singles.
then the guy who wasn 'I going to be
playing hit one over the fence."
Breit Tomko (7-6) got his second
conseculive win in interleague play
afler losing five straight to NL opponents. He gave up three runs and six
' hils in 6 213 innings to improve to 60 against the AL over the pa.'t two
years.
Jeff Shaw pitched the ninth for his
22ml save.
Hawkins allowed II hits and six
runs in 3 213 innings.
" He looked like he was throwing
the ball tine."' Kelly said. "He just
couldn 'I make a pitch all night to help
himself oul of trouble."
After Greene's lOth homer of the

Tuesday's scores

24'x32'
· Pole Barn Kit

GN roar shingles. Art:hllet1ural plans to&lt; easy assembly.
Cement &amp; foundation extra. in dudes guner. GK268 ................ .
Ar1 fo&lt; illuSira!ve purposes only. NOI 8JC8Ciiy as shown.

389

... - ~3 :\0 .6)9
San Frnnci~t.-o
.....48 J6 - ~7 1
Los Angele&amp; .........................40 42 .488
Colorodo ........................... J 7 47 .440
AriZOIUl ........................... :29 S4 .:149

0

35a7

t6' O.C. wall Sluds 24" 0 .0. engineered root tluaaes.

.41H

San Diego .............

doors/2·3'0" windows. While vinyl siding &amp; soffit

3.0 " - doc&lt;. 7/t6"•4 '•6' ose root sheathing.

.m

39

J9 42

louiS ................... . ......

·

keep running back, so I knew I hit it
well."
Greene slatted in lefl field for the
first time this sea.o;on because Dmitri
Young pulled himself out of the lineup with a strained rib cage. Greene
made an immediate contribution with
his first-inning shill off LaTroy
.. We have kind of a knack of
Hawkins (4-8) following singles by
walking in on people When they gel Mike Frank and Barry Larkin.
hot, .. Kelly said. "We played each
"The big thing is, you gel a 2-0
Other often in spring training. We had pitch and jump on it, " said Red~
pretty good notes 00 them. and ( SUS· manager Jack McKeon . "When we
pect they did on US."
were going lousy, that pitch would
lasl-mt'nu••
""~er Willt'e G-nc
uo •uu•
•have been fouled back - by every·
provided the punch for Cincinna1i body." .
ff th
with a three· run homer 0
e sec·
The last time Cincinnati won five
in a row was June 30-July 4 of la.~t
ond-deck facade.
"It fell real good when I hit it."' year.
·
..
· (N'"
)
Greene saad.
I saw 0 tiS
IXOO
"We got off to a Iiule bit of a

Westem Di¥1don

Garage
Packages

26'x28' Premium 2 Car Garage Package

.610

.m

J7

Pinsburgh ....................... J 9 44 .410
CINCINNATI ...... .......... )~ 49 .417

n- prices""' lor deck only &amp; do no1 illcludo otepo or handroH

••

A

20

~

NahmwltllskiPtball Auodal ~
BOSTON CELTICS Elercued thttr or
on

14 '~

Ctnlral Dh·llion

~:&amp;s~:e:r;;:~~:~~~~-f~--~-~~- ~-~: . .-

• Aayhc latex resins
. c- rasa pcafonnant&lt;
• Rc~ists fadlnJ. peelin!-

.469
.444

J6

Housron ......................... JO J2

3'0" aervk:e dOOr. 7116Mx4')&lt;8' osa root shemhing.

Lain H.... Palnl

,
P.sla.elball

Oakland ........ ............. 37 44

New Yort ............................4-' J~
Philadt-lphia ..................... 40 40
Montreal ......................... J J 48
Florida ............................ 29 H

t6' O.C. wall studs. 24" O.C. engineered root lrusses. WMe ~ny1
siding. t6'•7' Ciopay garage door. prelinished WMe.

.

ST lOUIS C~i)JNALS S•gned RHP Ch~J
Hutchmwn 10 a foui;ftnr l:O ntrac t

Eastern ot¥ilion

24'x24' Standard 2 Car Garage Package

White VInyl Siding

oys of the Japanese t!'it'""onatLcog"'

22 ~
24 '~

.m

Wtsltm Division
. ... 49 J2
. ...... 46

N~W YUR._ MCTS: Sent INF-C Jtm Tmum
ootnghtto Norfolk of the lnternnt•orn~l Lea~ue Sold
the contriiCtof LHP t-fark Mtmbsto the Onx Bluer-

NL standings

000000000
• .._.

10
17'h

.. J I 48

Anaheim ...
Texas ..

We deliver with a fleet of 10 boom trucks for
delivery when you want and where you want
your building materials.

c.-.,

32
41 ' - ~
46 .446
47 .420

......... 46

Dc1roi1 ...

We have 28 styles and colors In stock to
choose from.

r.

li.ll

Ctntral Dl¥1sion

Seattk ....

P..-1

f&lt;L

.7J7
.600

)4
Minnesota ....................... ~ 8 4J
Kon'ns City .
.. ...... J 6 4.5
Chicago .
.1 ~ 48

BUY YOUR ROOFING FROM THE
LARGEST SUPPLIER IN THE AREA.

a..

MILWA UKEE BREWERS: Agreed to te rms

:r....
w ."'
New YorL .................. ... :'6 20

CLEVELAND ...

Activ111ed C

with Rttr Bob Wid:man on a three-year contract

Easttrn Dhlsion

FISERQI A&amp;Q
ROOFING
SHINGLES

DIA~ONDBACKS :

Jorge Fobrcgas from the 61).doy disabled I;or. 0,.
!toned tNF Mtke KobensonooT•cson of the PCL.

AL standings

RHoofwlth

"lli•~

fined them undi1clo5ed amau nu for fiBhting and
provokin&amp; a bench..:karina •nculeno on Jane 2M.

Baseball

Premium Kits -

That includes a 6-3 victory over
the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday
night.
But Twins manager Tom Kelly
doesn't th;nk the Reds' streak necessarily shows.anything about the rellllive strengths of the Cenlrnl Division
of the two leagues.

4 - ~L

Limit 1 With Coupon
(8·01.) Selected Varieties

R.C. Cola
24·Pack

s

Cool Wh~p
Topping

61

p rn .

San Uic~n !Hitchwcl.; 4-11 ;\1 Oakland &lt;Rn~cr.\
7-.1). 9 . 1~ Jl m
San Fr;w-iliCo (RuL1cr 9- ~l 111 Anaheim lDicksun

'

Jol - ~) . 10 : 0~

p.m

40 Lb.

.·

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

. ...

·.

SpiH Rill Fonct
11' ....... ,.,.....

. . 4.
.._..,.."""''"
,..,...,..

~~

5.89
::.........""':.......... ......6.49
~= 70194 .•.., ......-6.49
Uno .... "''" ·"''''"'"" .....

WNBA standings
FArslern Cnnrerenre
Charlortc ..

CLEVELAND ...

Solid color

Dttrnil ..

Gl'lly
Brown
Red
Gray
Red

Exterior Stain

70093
70825

3.49

=

S;w.:mn-.cnlo ...

FENCE

-- · ~...

rreatld

~

-

Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Co.
~t. Rt.

'
CCA PRESSURE TREATED

LANDSCAPE TIMBERS
3"XS"XXI'

99

35 &amp; 160 GalliP9ij&amp;. Ohio Phone: 740-446-2002
Store Hours: Mon.-Sat 8:00a.m. to 8:00p.m.
'
Sunday 11:00 a.m. to 5:00p.m.

555 Park St.
Middlepon, Ohio
Phone: 740-992-6611
Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sat. 7:00a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
··

.

1 2~

,.2

9.99

.M I .KKIJ

........ ,

2

.. 2

r.

........ 2

(l

. 7~1

. 2:~n

. 2~1

1 .111

I'

~·

:" ·

.(Half Gallon) All Flavors

Tonight's gamos

(Each) Red Ripe

Heinz

Whole

Ketchup

Watermelon

S

II

Thunday's g11111es

.

(28·01.) ffluHie Bottle

-Breyers
Ice Crea111

n

New Yort a1 Detroit. J :JO p.m.

::.··

Pfaoenix ot CI.F.VELANO, 7 p.m.
U1ah al Los Anselcs. IO:JO p.m.

Transactions

I

B.sebd

WOOD

AmetinnLtaa"'
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: A •1iv~cd RHP Nerio Rodri(l:uel from the l j -duy di ~abled list. Designu~N RHP Terry ~bthew s for llllllnmenl
BOSTON RED SOX P1o....t INF Lou Mmoni
on the 1$-dAy diltlblcd l isl. Reco.lltd INF Donnie
s.t~er· from Pawtucket of the lntemalional U ugue.
SEATfLE MARINERS: Ac1iva1ed OF Raul
Ibanez from fiO.dly dlsable!J list Md optiOned him
to Tacoma of the PCL. Dhianolftl OF [);avid Me·
Cany for usiJftmtft l. Siancd LHP Andrew Van
Httten. C Cnia Kuzmh.: and RHP JtUtin Dunnina.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Actlvoted C Kevin
Brow• from the U..tay d;oatoled li•. Dctianated
RHP Lois A_..jlr for lllipmcnl.

SCREt'

DOO S

32"&amp;3 ."

WIDTH

_...._

NL. : S•speaded Pitt1burah Plra.tel C Jason
Kcadall 1Dd Los A•Jtle• Oodfefl OF O•ry
Sheffield live&amp; I""" Ol&lt;h, effe&lt;uve July I, ud

-.
'

'i:'ifl

CLEVELAND at Washington. 7 p.m.

4th 8 AM to 3 PM
•

4

7

Utah 7.11 1 on
Sacrnnlm!o ~K . L.lr.\ A n~clcN 5fl

30"
.CONCRETE SPLASH BLOCK

Prices Effeetlve Thru July 12, 1118

tF'lxllll

..~ 5h

H ou~ lnn 7~.

•

"'.;.~~--

PrtiiUrt

4

~

.77K

Tuesday's scores

6.99

...·_,-,...-

STOCKADE

~71

.... --~

... 2

Utah .. .

~'~~··
- ..,}1; 10111
t.... ...
""'C .1"-").'i:::&gt;,;:.h . .!• ;:,&lt;
~~.,..

_l

Western Conference
Houslon
Phoenill. ..
Los Angt:IC L , .

24"x24"

Quality

2

. .. 4

.... 1

Washing10n

18"X18"

... 7

........

New York ....

SemiTransparent
Or
Dl'k Stain

The Premium

W L 1:&lt;1.

Iwo

YourChoie•

Y•m
w1111
~Rain SIMI~

99

Basketball

•UPS

•WESTERN UNION
•PIJBUXFAX

OPEN 8 A.M. TO·MIDNIGHT
7 DAYS A WI&lt;I!K]

•I'EDEltU.. EXPRESS
•VIDEO IUNf.\L.

UNLIMITED
DOIJBLE COUPONS!
'

EVERY DAY lJP TO, 50~
.

...•

�Wednesday, July

By The Bend
1991,

u..

Allfda Timet

Syfldtcat: ud Crcaton
S)'lldtcMt.

Dear Ann Landers: Animal
lovers gave you quite a roasting for
the stand you took against keeping
pels in the house when a spouse suffers from allergies.
I'm on your side. One of your
readers suggested allergy shots,
which is not a bad idea -- if they
· work. Mine didn't.
My wife had two dogs when I
married her. In an attempt to control
my allergies, I took all kinds ,of

The Dally Sentinel • Page

The Daily Sentinell
.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Wednesday, July 1,199$ ~

drugs, including steroids. That hesitate for one single minute if they
chemical brew caused me to slide had to make a choice between keepinto a deep depression.
ing their children and keeping their
My wife and her brother then pets. Why in the world is it such a
pressured me to take anti-depres- big de~! when it comes to spouses?
sants, hinting that if I refused, it
The fact that there is any debate
would be another symptom of men- at all trivializes the spouse's health
tal illness. I refused anyway.
problems, which, in tum , poisons
Finally, I became disgusted, the marriage. I speak from experiflushed all the drugs down the toilet, ence.
hired someone to clean the house
Tell your readers that if they are
and tried to keep the dogs outside.
planning to get a divorce anyway, to
I s n fou
ut _that my wife just do it. Otherwise, get rid of the
was brin g t e an l_s back into animals pronto. If you get any hate
the house w
I wasn't home. This mail, Ann, you are welcome to send
infuriated me.
it to me. -- No Sneezing or WheezI gradually recovered, but our ing in Calif.
marriage did not. She took the dogs
Dear Calif.: Thanks for the offer,
and left.
but I think I can handle it. The truth
Believe me, _parents ' would not is, a woman who really loves her

husband is not going to put her dog
ahead of her husband 's health. This
goes.for cats as well. Keep reading
for more on this subject:
Dear Ann Landers: You ••cent·
ly printed a letter from a reader
whose new husband was allergic to
her pets.
You told her that people are inore
important than pets and if her mate
could not overcome his allergies,
she should ship the pets off to a new
home. Here is why you are wrong:
I have two cats. I've had them for
nine years. They both give me
unconditional love and affection,
which is more than I ever got from
any woman .
They greet my guests, mind their
own business and don't damage

other people's property. They also
mak'e me feel loved and keep my
biood pressure down. What do they
ask in return? Two meals a day and ·
to be let in and out of the house .
Now, you come along and tell me
that if I marry a woman who wants
me to get rid of my two longtime,
faithful friends, I should just ilo it.
Why, if I love animals so much,
would I be so foolish as to marry
someone whq doesn't care for pets?
How your future spouse feels about
animals should be a premarital test
of compatibility.
Chances are that the wife who
would insist I get rid of the animals
would leave me sooner or later anyway. My pets love me and will never
ask for a divorce.

r!!!!:.'!!!

"Easy Over lite Pirone Bank Financing"
Air Conditioners As Low As 128 a month

BENNETI'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

90045

BY JOHN C. WOLf, D. 0 .
Associate Professor of Family Medicine
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine

CELLULAR PHONES

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

"
...
JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE

Family Medicine" is a weekly column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteo·
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

Color your garden with tall annuals

LP TANKS!

113 W. 2ND ST.
1

By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
Associated Press Writer
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - The
ink on the signatures on 1he Dec laration of Independence was scarcely
dry when an unhappy Thomas Jefferson wrote oul five full ~onies of
his original draft to show the world
what he had intended to say.
Today, one of the three known
surviving copies -a treasure of the
New York Public Library and a document of America's biggest news
story of 1776 - goes on display at
the Newscum here. It is the first time
the library has ever ~greed to lend it
to another instilution. It will be on
view until Sept. 30.
Jefferson. the declaration's
author, writhed as the Continental
Congress cut his work by about a
third, changing or discarding some
of his language and eliminating the
entire section condemning Britain's
King George III for the introduction
of slavery into the colonies.

At a preview Tuesday, Donald
Ritchie, an official historian for the
Senate, said thai even though history
has given the edited document
immortality, Jefferso n thought his
declaration had been mutilated.
"No one likes to be edited and
Thomas Jefferson was no different,"
said Newseum executive director
Joe Urschel. The Newseum , a museum devoted 10 the history and practice of journalism. is fin anced by
The Freedom Forum, a nonprofit
organization that studies the news
media.
Jefferson wanted his original text
to survive . So between July 4 and
July 10, 1776, he wrote out the five
copies for friends and associates,
carefully underlining the sections
that had been deleted or changed .
After passing th ough a long
series of hands, the copy on display
ended up as a centerpiece of the c?l·
lcction of Thomas Addis Emmet of
New York. In 1896, he donated it to

plumes with brighl red, orange, and
By TIM MOREHOUSE
yellow blooms). '
.
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Many readers have asked about
- Rudbekia "Indian Summer"
easy -to-grow tall annuals. They (2 feet high with golden yellow
want fresh, colorful flowers for blooms 8 inches across on sturdy
small cutting gardens to brighten the stems).
-Cosmos "Sonata" mixture (3
landscape when the iris, peonies and
sprin g bulbs have taken their to 4 feet tall on airy stems with
white, pink, and red daisylikc
·t!ncores.
: : Don't worry about the quality of blooms).
- Zinnia "Oklahoma" mixture
:your soil when selecting annuals. A
few weeks a~o I turned over a strip (2 to 3 feet tall with masses of medi·of lawn - in full sun- for the pur- um-s ize !lowers in vibrant red, pink,
pose of planting tall annuals for yellow and orange on strong stems).
- Snapdragon "Rocket" and
summer cutting. The soil was primarily heavy clay on the sweet side "Liberty" mixtures (2 to 3 feet tall
(alkaline), so while spading the new with masses of pink, yellow, red,
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
bed I incorporated into the top 6 and white blooms on stems perfect groups wishing to announce meeting and special events. The calendar is not
inches of soil copious amounts of for cutting).
designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any type . Items are printed as
compost. If you lack compost, work
If you're searching for perennial - space permits and ~.annnt be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
'\
in some pre-moistened Canadian plants that are useful for cutting and
sphagnum peat moss.
attract butterflies and hummingbirds
THURSDAY
Now. go plant shopping.
as well, Harnist suggests Buddleia
POMEROY - AA meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday. Sacred Heart Catholic
Beth Hamist, owner of Adopt-A- davidii " Black Knight," " Nanho Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Plant Greenhouses in Harrison, Blue," "Pink Delight," "Empire
Ohio, has been in the nursery-green- Blue" and "Wbite Profusion." She
MIDDLEPOIO' - Middleport Village Council emergency meeting
house business most of her life: "As sells them for $6.25 per container.
Thursday at 6 p.m. at village hall .
a child, my parents grew vegetables
For later in tbe season, try Asters,
)
for market, and for the last 20 years such as Aster dumosus "Alert"
TUPPERS PLAINS -Auxiliary, VFW Post, Tuppers Plains, 7:30 p.m
r have raised flowering plants for (deep crimson), "Professor Kippen- Thursday.
burg" (lavender) and "Hella Lacy"
retail and wholesale," she says.
She grows tall varieties of annu- (royal purple). She sells them for FRIDAY
als and offers mixed containers for 5~1.75 to $7.50 per container.
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustees, re,gular meeting, 7:30p.m.,
Plant some tall annuals for fresh township building.
people who desire blooms for cut- .
bouquets throughout the summer. If
ting during the summer.
Some favorite tall annuals, avail- your soil grows good perennials and
SUNDAY - 62nd annual Charles 'wesley Buckley reunion Sunday,
able in 3- io 4-inch pots ($1.50 each your flower beds are in full sun, you Forked Run State Park, south of Reedsville. Covered dish dinner, I p.m.
can enjoy continuous bloot!'s until Take family memorabilia to share. Door prizes, games.
or 3 for $3.99) include:
. -Ageratum "Blue Horizon" (2 frost by simply walering during
droughts and picking off the spent
RUTLAND- Rutland Oturch of God, gospel sing, Friday 7 p.m. with
'feet high with blue flowers).
flowers
.
The
Spirits of Harmony.
· - Celosia Sputler mixture (4
--feet high, strong stems and fat

the New York Public Library.
Mimi·Bowling, the library's curator of manuscripts, said it had
changed its policy'on not lending the
Jefferson draft in pan because the
Newseum was able to guarantee
optimal display conditions, including low and limited light, and proper temperature and humidity.
As it passed though various
hands, she said, the Jefferson copy
was "loved and 'admired nearly to
death .... It was glued and bound. It
was folded and unfolded thousands
of times .~~
Now, she. saip, the document has
been stabilized and should last at
least another two centuries. And it
will continue to be exhibited occasionally, to the extent that public
display can be done safely.
"If we don't let people sec it
from time to time, there's no point in
having it," Ms. Bowling said.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

740-698-9114

FREE ESTIMATES

(No Sunday Calls)

6/11198 tfn

Discount Prices

ito•.
~
~ft

ill'!'

~

•

SMAll

20" Fans

WANT ADS

12"

PACK

ABIG PUNCHI

Oscillating
Fans
16" Pedestal
Fans

Installers
Needed

Owner: John 0 ean

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

St. Rt. 7

740-985-3813

6112/1 mo. pd

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

(614) 992-3838

12118/tfn'

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

cutting edge•••

Read the
Classified

MASON,
W.VA.
773·5583

S

ADVANCID tlftAINAGIIVITUIS, 11111

Custom Homes
Roofing

M&amp; J

• •

Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Joe Wllaon
(614) 992-42n

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

&amp; Nike

. ...

.
~1
..
'

~e
I. SICOID AVE.

SHOE PLACE

992·5627

MINLIPOIT
•

•
-i
j

l

•River Run Dog Food ....... ;$2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ........ $9.75100 lb.
•Shade River· Creep Feed ..... $10.25 100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Life Data
Hours: M·F 8·5:30; Sat. 8-12:00 Noon
985-33831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Chester

Insured

740•742•3411

2 Calico killen&amp; to good ' home .

740-446-1271 , Aho1 4 P.M.

Adorable Killens To Giveaway. 7

In All. 740-446-7730.

Free kiltens , 8wks old . 304-675-

7323.

60

Fot1nd· P o meranian i Pe~tng ese
mi xed dog In Ba&amp;han area . call

740·949-2210, 740-949·2153
740-992·2133.

• R1lrlgel'llorl

Found : Small Black Puppy With
Short Ea rs &amp; Long Tail: Looks
Like Part Lab. Found : 6129 On
Neighborhood Road Near En ·
trance To Mound Hill Ce metary.
To Claim Call 740..446-6960

ft53

•HotWIIerlltller

,

German

Lost· during ltood . pregn ant red
Belgium mare. Horse Cave Ad. v1·
cinity. very worried. 740 -94 9·

3168.

Lost : 200 lb . mate Maslill, tan wl
black mask , Owl Hollow/ Tuppers
Plains area . reward. 740 ·667 ·
_0109.
LOST : ·Male Cockatiel. 3 112yrs·
4yrs old, Reward . 304 -675-7423
ask lor Lori.
LO ST : Norwegian -Elk Hound ,
black/silver, white-spot on che st.
neutered. meditJm -brown eyes .
shy. Missing s1n ce June '5 .
Black/brown/while beagle. 1 Bar.
neutered. Missing since Jane 15.

304·937-2954 .

Lost: red medium size Suzuki 125
4·wheeler, Owl Hollow/ Tuppers
Plains area. 7410·667·0109 .

Yard Sale

70

No w Haven, rainJshine , Home
leror. toys and mldl mofe.

In·

Moving and multi family· July 1·3,
Moore' s on SA 7 across !rom
Ian dshde. JUSI above Meigs/ Gat ·
tia Co. line . Furniture. clothing ol
all sizes. toys &amp; much more
Mu lll· family. July 1·2. rain or

So llthern

HS on SA 124, maternity
&amp; baby ctotne slite ms , men 's ,
women's, &amp; children clothes. tabkt
&amp; chairs. igloo dog house, odds &amp;

ends.
Th ursda-y. Ju ly 2. Broadway
Si reet . Middleport. above park ,
ma ny items . good values.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
2-1am1ly, 105 Highland Ave _July
2 &amp; 3. 8:30-4 OOpm
Garage Sale-Antiques. Ty Beante

bab1es . misc.

138 Howard St. ha ·

n He1 ghls New Haven . WV
••Thurs
&amp; Fn . July 2 &amp; 3rd

July 2 &amp;3. 9am-5pm, 2616 1/ 2
Madison Ave adull/ k1ds cloth ·
10g. baby items. mise

July :2,3 ,4. 1407 Cedar Street . M
&amp;Stires on Ford wheels (4 each) .
Jr uck Mx lull· sfze (In bed) , golf
Cl ubs , fu ll set . w/ can. b1 cycle s .
hi s k hers . 27 " 12-speed , other
ijems. 304·675- 1731

vard Sale -2023 Maxwell Ave
July 1. 2 &amp; 3. Table , cha 1rs .
ctothmg &amp; misc.
80
Auction
and Flea Market
A1ck Pea1son Au clron Company.
ull time auc t1 oneer . complete
auc. tio.n serv1 ce L1 censed
66 .0hiO &amp; We st V1rgm1a, 304 7 73-5785 Or 304-773-544 7

'

•

Wedemeyer' s AuctiOn Serv1 ce .
Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720.

Wanted to Buy

90

1 1/4 Miles Out Georges Creek ,
From AI . 7, 712nd . J rd . 8 AM
washer IOryer

3 Families: Wed , Thurs . Young ·
Teens 9-? Corner St . At . 850. And
Kerr Rd .

Anhque s. top pt~ ces pa 1d . A1ver ne Ant iQue s . Pome roy. O nro .
Russ Moo re owner . 740· 992 ·

Free Estimates
6/19/98 I pd .

Th' ee lam1ty yard &amp; garage sate.
Jul 'I 6· 7. 9am·? . one mile east of

Absolute Top Dollar All u S S1l ·
ver And Gol d Co1 ns. Pr oo l se ts.
01amonds. Anllque Jewelry. Gold
Rmg s. Pre -19 30 U S Curr en cy,
Slerltng . Etc Acqu1S1IIOns Jewelry
M T S C01n Shop. 151 Second
Avenue , Galhpohs. 740·446·:2&amp;42

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

5 Family : 55 Gar1ield Avenue . AI.
7 South, July 1st -3rd, 9 A.M.·? II
Rain Cancelled For Day.

6 Fa;nily Yard Sa te: 713. 7/4 9
A .M. AI. 141 , 4 . 112 M1les From
Gallipolis, Wood Burner. Furn .,
Baby Items &amp; Mise
Att llem s 16 Mos . Old Mayt ag
Washer &amp; Dryer, Vacuum Clean-

er. 32' Sony T.V.: 27"

'

2526

Antiques &amp; clean used furnit ure
w1ll buy o ne p1ece o r comp le t e
hOu seh old . Os by Mart1n 740
992 -6576 .
Clean L at e Model Ca rs Or
T1ucli s. 1990 Models Or Newer.
Sm11h Bu 1ck Pcn t1 ac. 1900 EiJSI·
ern Avenue, Galhpol1S

RCA TV :

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts

Satellite Dish Network . Sola Bed .
Microwave. 24 Drawer Dressers,
Metal Shelves . B·Ball Hop. K1ds
Books &amp; Toys . Gas Gn ll , Msg .
Humtdit i er . 1636 Cherry A1dge
Road . CaM 740·2415· 5938.

wre cke d or salvag ed
304·773-)1)33

A1J, Yard Sllel Must
Be Paid In Advance.

Buym g
veh iC le~

Wanted To Buy Junk Auto's Any
ConditiOn. 740·446·9853
Wanted Auto' s In Any Cond 1tton .
Call 740·388 · 9062. Or 740· 44 6 ·
7278

DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

lltONn . Su~

Monday O&lt;llllon
-10:00 o.m. Saturday.

F~dty.

Annual Yard Sales In Eureka July
2nd . 3rd . Somethmg For E11ery one!
DB Garage Sale : R1 0 Grande .
North 325. Tycoon lake . Srgns .
733 Eagle Road . July 2nd , 3rd .
4th , 9 ·5, Wicker Baskets . Floral
Vases. Whatnots. More!

GARAGE SALE:
508 watson Roaa. 740· 446·3365 .
July 3m &amp; "" Sale Open .
Garage Sale July 1st . 2M . 4
~i~s From HospHal On Lett. Neal
Res1dence. Name Brand Toddler
Clothes . Armoire Jewelry Chest .
Ladies Clothes , Home Interior,
Lot's Of New &amp; Good ll~tms . Be
There I Sign Up
Huge First Tim&amp;: C11mping , Ex&amp;r·
cise. Sports EQuipment ; Motorcy·
cle; RaM Buggy, Antiques, House·
hold Items. July 1sl. 2nd . 8:00·

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP
Candle Making
Supplies
•Wax •Scent •Etc.
Refills
Variety of Gifts.

6:00, 147 Klichor. Gallipolis, 1.5
Miles Neigl'bor!&gt;ood Road.
713rd. 4th. 8 A.M. -? Boih Days.
85 Cora Mill Road, Evory1hlng
From Clo&lt;hes ~-

July 3rd, Jockaon Pika, Behind
Stir Bini&lt;, WalCh Fo&lt; S9&gt;1, Rain

Open 'nln..frl ,. -

pm
lol.tD-pm
Ctooicl&amp;un. I lion.
1R 124, . .,....... OH

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

~-

•

f1 0

Help Wanted
"POSTAL JOBS"
S!lrt S14.08111r. plus benefits .

For exam and appUcatlon Info.
cell 800-280-9769.

Ert. WV11• . 9ern.11 pm.
AVON

! All

Ar eas

I

5pea«. ll4-675-1 429

ShH Je y

App licat ions are bemg accepteo
lor In -Home C areg 1vers . App lic ants should have a h1gh sc ho ol
d1p1oma or G E 0 . rehable tra nsponallo n. telephone 1n the home
and wilting lo wor k wee kends &amp;
holidays. Must be motivated cina
fiUJble . Expe rr ence m p rov1d ing
d~recr care or working w1lh older
adults a plus . Wt ll tram . StAl e
tested nursing assistants en couraged to apply. Appltcalion s
are availabl4!! at the Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center, Mulberry Heights . Pomeroy, OH . An
EOEE~.

AfTENTION

Corllllod

Nuro1n1

Aaaletenta. Ravenswood Vill,ge
Is now accepting applications tor
lull anG,.part time positions. Paid

vacatioi&gt; and holidlys. H Interestad , please apply in Pftr&amp;on Monday through Friday. Dam-.fpm .

MoYII1g Solo: Comtr

Write atln: Georgie Boso, R.N..
D.O.N. 200 5oulh RIICI1to Avenue,

lind. 9:00 A.M. -8:00 P.M.

273-9:185. EOE Glenmark/ Gon&gt;
slsf Eldalcare Ftcillly.

Sllll Roull
7Solltl1&amp;211. - l - •.
Clo!hlng, Lown Ttactor July 111,

....

'

While

FOUND:

Shephard . 304·675-2715

985·3301

• Dryer

01

Found : Set Of Car Keys At Ria
Grande Memorial Park On Sun ·
day Call 74o-245-54 11 To Claim.

BAUM LUMBER

INTERNET $ION-UP POINT
IPO••ERC)Y, OH

Lost and Found

Found- ," Page 's Oh iO Revised
Code Annotated" law book. conta ct Steve 107 Pleasant Ridge,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Call for Quote Today

€&gt;

bU ry Graoe SChOOl. Pomeroy Pike.
Raln cancels
·
Jul v 2n&lt;:l·3 rd . 102 Mary Street .

Kittens : 8 Weeks Old. Black
Mate. Yellow Male. Grey Female .
Multicolred Female. Utter Tra1ned.
· shi ne . SR 124 beside Hysell ' s
740·446·3769 .
Garage.

For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF_TRUSSES
Southern.Yellow Pine Construction
Custom Engineering

~.

July 2·3. lirsl house beSide Salis·

longer Hair, We. Have Allergies!

SJWO&gt;mo

- · ·.
Compn&amp;er Shop"
··Give us11 cilll for system repairs,
· ..~., upgrsdes or consulting.

8029

edition • 2:00p.m.,.

"NHCI repelr on eny
meko?"
•Weahers
• Rangel
Since

July 1·3. Vellowbush Rd .. Racme .
lor everyone! TV.
CIOI hes, wneel &amp; tires.
July 2·3, Carroll Smith residence.
Hap py HollOW AO, RUII8nd. 9 UH 5.

'9" Rib Pattern

The Applance Man

July 1-3 . Th ird &amp; Main. acros s
hom Wolfe's garage, Racioe.

304-773-5810.
4 Free Ouclls &amp; Babies. 740·388·

9 Month Old Mate Cat. Neutered,
All ShOts Given, Good House Pet,

Chester

COMPHER
PERFORMANCE
~:g UPGRADES
\.-...--'=.=
"Your One Stop

July 2·3, R-3&amp;5
S1xth Avenue , Mrddleporl. Too l$,
mo wers. sewing mach1ne . ext 130·

Oh. Something

lhe day bolor11 1ho ed

Dlacount)

Big mov1ng sale·

Giveaway

WBift PAIN,.ED STEEL
ROOnNG AND SIDING

(Cui Out lOr FutUre

little bit ol everything .

40

(740) 985-4180

St. ~t. 248

41a m•!y. July 2}. 8.30-6 00. Nonh
Broadway. Rac•ne
All Vard Salel Muat Be Paid 'tn
Advance .' Deadllne: 1:00pm the
dey before the ad Is to ru-n,
Sun dey &amp; Monday edition·
1:Otlpm F~day.
·
Bac k yard sale . 715 Sycamo re
St. Middleport. Ohio, July 1·4 , a

der

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

Free Estimates

4 lamrly. July 1·3, eurclse equl)&gt;·
ment , drapes. wallpaper. hous,·
hOld, baby. ladl8s . men 's &amp; boy's
$UI IS, 1oo111 . no rea5onabte otter
1elused. 37255 SA 124 . Middle·
port , 1 mile east ol Rutland on
124, 740-992·3543

740-592· 1842
Qual ity clothing and ho usehold
items. S1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:()()-5:30.

10/2-

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

Announcements
New To You Thrih-Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

I mD. DG.

. ,.

Includes
Eastland, Dexter

30

TRUCKING

Roofs • Decks • Garages

USA

Ab4e To Drive. No Smoking, I Am
A Disabled Veteran , 740 · 446 ·
3419 .

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

Top

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

.

Wanted : Lady Co mpanion To
Live In , Free Board, Mu st Be

PAINTING

Gravel, Sand,

New Construdion &amp; Remo4eling

20% OFFI

$2 .99 Per Min . Must Be 18 Yrs
Serv-U 619-645-4434

R. L. HOLLON

"Build Your Dream"

Beat
the Heat...

NOW

puler! 1·900·329·1293 Ext. 9980

•Room Additions .
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp;,Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Limestone,
Remodeling
Plumbing

Personal•

In ternet TV Set -Up, Learn How

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

HAULING

4121196 I mo

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

ALL SANDALS _ @ filiJ1rnj

005

Come in and see us at
202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992 -1074

.

' '.

4-FAMILYYARD SALE
406 2nd St., Mason, wy
JULY 2 &amp; 3, 9 AM til?
Clothing, Beanie Babies,
&amp; more.

ANNOUNCEMEIJTS

LINDA'S

WICKS

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Don't get stoog by high prim '
Shop ~ clossi(itd section.

Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last.

Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

* JUU" SPECIALS *
. , . , 1111

Homewood Drive. Bidwell

'7 /22/tln

Frss Est/males
No Job Too Snisll

:s

45720

PICKENS
HARDWARE

614-742·2138

Firs! Three days
FREE POPCORN AND BAllOON\
Openmg July 1st.
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and used
We Buy-Sell and Tirade

4" thru 48" plastic culvert in stock
Full line ol water storage tanksSeptic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Water line- 100' thru 1000' Rolls
Sewer Pipe· 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
'
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00·12:00 Saturday

Warner Heating
&amp;Cooling
Chester, OH

~!

'

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Send resumt:!
or
apply In person:

'
P.Q~Box8

~Jr...

~it~~f.t~~~~.~ -~tt.t

Help Wanted

HVAC

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

P/B Contractors, Inc.

2112112/lfn

Free Estimates

-li\!1,

1391 Safford
School Rd .
Gallipolis, OH

••I'll meet •you
at tile river."

SAYRE
:TRUCKING

•

New Homes &amp; Remode_ling S"
~
Garages . Pole Buildings, Roof1ng, 1d1ng
. Commercial &amp; Residential
~Jr...
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured ~ ·
Phone 740-992·3987
~-

;...

7411-448-9416

110

•

To Watch TV Station&amp; Worldwide
Over The Internet On Your Com·

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
~top &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

t:~f;t~~fJt~~~ft~~
~ JD CONSTRUCTION ~

Bennett Supply
In loving memory
of

949·2168

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
7 40-985-4422

614-992-7643

740-698-7231

ln~ent.ery"

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•Bbbcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential

Mulli·Famlly Va•d Sale: July 1&amp;1 .• ·
.
Thursday, July 2nd. 9:00 A,M Ut·
C:.3C&gt;Iue likes Toys. Girls Clothes.
3rd. 9-&lt;1, 908 Por!er, BidwelL

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Room Additions • Roofing

or

*Root Coatings
*VInyl Skirting
•water Heaters
*Doors/Windows
*Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
.*Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps

Community Calendar

•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

"Huge

Get Cool
with

l/271TFN

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

PARTS

Sadly missed by
·wife, Donna

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479 .

mo. pd.

MOBILE HOME

John Wilson, Jr.
who passed away
July 1, 1997.

Communications

Howard L Wrltesel

.

PLUS

WE FILL -

Racine.
In addition to providing required
immunizations, the Childhood Big tree contest underway
Immunization Program along with
The Meigs Soil and Water Con:
the Ohio Department of Health is servation District is announcing the
now offering the Hepatitis B va,cine annual Big Tree Contest which will
free of charge to all children thr·.'ugh run from now until Sept. 4.
.·
age 18. The Hepatitis B. vaccine is a
This year the tree to be nominal;
three shot series over a minimum of ed is the white oak. Anyone can
six inonths. Children's shot records enter the contest and residents 48
are to be brought to the clinic.
not have to own land to nominate il
The clinic is provided by the tree, just have the owners pcrmls;
Ohio University College of Osteo- sion.
pathic Medicine Childhood ImmuOfficial entrY forms maY h~ s~ ni
nization Program's community to you b.y calli~g th~ S\\'CD offi.:~
mobile health unit and the O~io or by stopping by and picking ''"~
Department of Health in cooperation up. The award for ha• ing th.: bi~ ~~"
with the Meigs County Health white oak tree in ~ki\!~ (f'Unl\ i~ J
Department. For more information S50 saYing!' hl1nJ . ·
about the program, residents may
call 1-800-844-2654 or contacl the
local health department.

360°

Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
5.pm·11:30 pm
Weekdays
Sundays 3 pm-1 0 pm

•

~ARPET

634 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY
740-992-5500

RECOGNIZED - RecOgnized lor 45 yeara of members In Racine
Poat 602, American Legion, by Firat VIce Commander Gene Milia
and Commander Bill Flnklnblnder were Earneat Bush, David Yost,
and Bill Fox, pictured left to right.

Writing for history: Thomas Jefferson's
original Declaration of Independence

Gun Shoot every
Saturday ll,llght at

LOI'iG'S
COI'iSTROCTIOtt

O'DELL
LUMBER
COMPANY

Elllltem Athletic boosters
runs to 8 p.m. with ball games
The Eastern High School Athlet- beginning at 10 a.m. on the fields
ic Boosters will hold their annual behind the school. A fire department
Fourth of July celebration activities, water battle will be held at I0 a.m.
dubbed "S uper Saturday" this SaturFor further information please
day, July 4th at Tuppers Plains Ele- call Roger Willf~rd at 740-667-3653
mentary School.
or any other athletic booster memA parade kicks off the day at 9:30 ber.
with live music beginning at 10:30
and a chicken barbecue at II :00 a.m.
Live entertainment will be by High
Country, the Happy Hollow_ Boys, Mobile immunization clinic comTimber Line, Russ and the Gospel ing to Meigs County
Tones, After Midnight, and square
dancing with callers J.B. Wilson
The Ohio University college of
from Parkersburg and Mary Holter Osteopathic Medicine Childhood
of Long Bottom .
Immunization Program (CHIP), a
The chicken barbecue will also mobile health program, will provide
feature a wide variety of other foods . free immunizations for all area chil Ice cream and desserts will also be dren from birth through middle
on the menu.
school on Tuesday, from 3 to 5 p.m.
.A yard sale begins at 9 a.m. and at the Volunteer Fire Department in

1·740·949·2015

6:00.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

PINS PRESENTED - Longtime membership In the
Racine Po1t 602, American Legion, was acknowledged recently with
the pre1entatlon of 50 year pins. Pictured with First Vlca .Comman·
der Gene Mills and Commander Bill Flnklnblnder are Don Hupp who
accepted the award for the lata Otis Knopp, and Larry Circle,
accepting for Dale Hill, left to right.

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB

CALL

"Wit ere Qunlity Does11 't Cost More"

Call 740-·843·54~!e

~YEAR

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

Heat Pumps As Low As '38 a month
*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates (

740-446-9416. 1·800-872·5967

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

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;.
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding • Solfit
• Fascia • Seamleos
Gutter • Roofing
• Replacement Windows
' • Stotionary·Oocks
• Blown Insulation
• Garages • Decks
24 x 24 Pole Building
starting at $S99S
740-992·2n2

BACKHOE AND
DOZER SERVICE

•

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Be careful in thunderstorms: Lightning can kill
Question: My uncle, who lives in Teus, was struck by lightning
last summer. Fortunately, he survived the experience with only
minor bums. The injury made all of us in the family aware that the
dangers of lightning are real, rather than a remote problem that
always happens to someone else. But how common is being struck
by lightning ?
Answer: Lightning is a direct result of a large difference in electrical charge between the clouds a,nd the ground. This difference in
voltage ultimately becomes so 89.1'at that it overcomes the_insulating
property of the au. Then, a ci)&gt;OO-to-ground hghtnmg stnke occurs.
The National Weather Service estimates that there are 100,000 thunderstorms each year causing approximately 30 million lightning
strikes. That makes.quite a few opportunities for injury! All areas
th~ country experience thunderstorms. but they are most common in
Florida and along the Gulf coast.
Considering the large number of lightning strikes, it is surprising
that there are only about 50 to I00 deaths each year caused by it.
(The numbers vary depending on the specific year and also on the
way in which the statistics are collected.) There are also about 260
lightning injuries, like your uncle suffered, each year. Ninety-two
percent of lightning injuries and fatalities are recorded between May
and September - the months most of us play outdoors - and 73 percent are in the afternoon or early evening.
Of those persons struck by lightning, about 30 percent die, most
within one hour of the injury. Of those who survive, about .73 perce nt have some form of permanent disability. Your uncle is among
the most fortunate of survivors.- _ ·
Your uncle 's experience with lightning reminds me that there is a
need for all of us to be more knowledgeable about the "possible
health consequences of this natural phenomenon. These injuries are
a consequence of outdoor activities, so pay attention to the weather
forecast when going outdoors. Be particularly vigilant when thunderstorms are forecast. Remember also that lightning often precedes
rain and that it can strike as far as 10 miles from the storm front.
When the storm front moves in or you hear thunder, move indoors.
People who stay out on the beach or golf course when a storm
approaches arc the most likely to be struck by lightning. If an
unavoidable circumstance requires that you stay outside in a storm,
follow one or more of these suggestions to reduce your risk of
injury: Avoid standing ncar tall objects such as trees because the
lightning may strike them and also pass through you. Lightning will
also strike metal object su~h as an umbrella or golf clubs. Get under
a permanent shelter or building in a storm, or get into your vehicle;
don't stand under your umbrella.

JIM'S

Residential &amp; Mobile Houle
Air Conditioners &amp; Heal Pmnps

The only unhappiness I ever suf-·
fered from a pet was when one was ·
killed by a car. Please don't ask how
much grief I have gotten from some
of the women in my life. -- Dan in
Branford, Conn.
Dear Dan: Methinks you are
much bett~r at picking winners in
the feline category than you are at
picking women.
If you ever consider marrying, I
suggest that you look for a woman
who is a veterinarian or works in
that field. and I am not kidding.

9

Yard Sale

70

Page•: :

How much do you love your pet? Should marriage or animals come first?
Ann
Landers

1, 1998

Ravenswood , WV 26164, 30-'·

�I

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 1, 1'998

Wednesday, July 1, 1998

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOm

Brown's Hardware Small Engine
'Mechanic STIHL, MTD Murray,

Homelite A.vg

•o Hrs

Week Call

ForlnteNiew, 740-446-3826
carteton SchootiMelgs Industries
....111 1 IUbstltute Heallh Services Coordinator (AN or lPN) to
WOI1I wlll1 sludenls and adulll deveiOJ!mentat disabilities Must
be a registered nurse or liCensed
practical nurse currently llcenled
lfl tht State of ONo Send resume

..

Needed

est ed In Caring For People In

Our Progre.ss1ve long ·Term
Care Facility Must Be Senslt1ve
To The Needs 01 The Elderly
Ptean
Apply IN Person At
Scenlt H1IIS Nurs1ng Center 311

131 ocaneton St

~

Ohio45779

~Anllylt

Jackeon O.ntret Hoepltlll h81
an ltnmedllllt ft~U·tlrM op4entng
far a ~Analyotln tho -~

... - . Dapllnpotlont, Ou~

pelltnl, end Emergency vltlt

coding ART, Cortlflod Coding
Spec:lallot or oqulvolent oxperl..,.. '*!UI...S. Reply 1o· HR 01rtelot, PO Box 720, Ripley, WV
21271. EOE
Companion to live w1th elderly
woman tor room &amp; board Non -

drinkers 304-675-1704

Buckrldge Ad Bidwell, OH 45614

Scemc H1tls Nurs~ng Center 311
Buclmdge Ad Bidwell OH 45614
Is Now Acoepllng Applications
For Fnendly Outgoing And De·

pendable STNA s Please Apply
tn Person At The Front Desk Bet
ween830AM 430PM
Scen ic Huts Nursmg Center 31 1
Buckndge Road Bidwell OH
45614 Is Now Acceptmg Applies·
11ons For Part T1me Laundry And
Housekeep1ng A•de' Please Apply In Person AI The Front Des ~

Berween 6 30 AM 4 30 PM No
Pnooe cans Ptease

Drtver Needed For Local Compa-

ny Class B COL Tanker License
Required, If Interested Please

WANTED - EQUIPMENT
MECHANIC
Expeueneed In He a.. y Truck s
Equipment And Hydraulics Sa l
ary Commensurate Wrth Experl
ence Call Monday - Fnda~ From
8 00 5 00 At 1·800·339 ·651 8 For
Art Appointment

Call AI 740-245·5!14 ASk For
John Or Kalhy

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

E•P DependatMe D1asel Mechan-

WANTED
CRANE OPERATOR

rc With Own Tools, Benefits Provided Send Resume To MECHANIC. PO Box 109 Jackson

OH45640
Experienced Auto Body man
Sen&lt;J Applications to CLA437 c/o
Gallipolis Dalty Tnbune 825 Third
Ave Galipolll, Oh10 45631

F~ral

140

Business
Training

CONDt3111NIUII
LaPlace , 215 Second Avenue 2
Bedrooms 2 Baths Located

ENROLLING NOW
SUMMER QUARTER
STARTSJULY6
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

Oownlown $79 000. 740·446 4299
Double w1de 3br 2 bath only
$1 325 down 1205 per month

740.446-4367
t.aoo-214-0452
ACICS Accredited

1-800-69Hi777

Reg 190-05-1274B

Direct The Activities Of Tne Slta
Health Services Cen ter Which
Orters 'reventlve Medicine Programs And Med•cal Oiagnoals
And Treatment In This Capacity,
You Will Supervise A Medical
Staff, laboratory Technicians
And Administrative Stalf, Perform
Some Clinical Functions Control

SCHOOlHOUSE ROCK GOT

Security Clearance Or The Ablllly
1jl &lt;lb181n Sucn Clearance Ullllly
Services Offers A Compet1t1ve
CompensatiOn And Benefits
Package Send Your Resume To
Lockheed Marlin U!ihty ServiCes
lt\C Attn A Oil a Dever MS·1 t 31
p 0 Box 628 Pike ton , Oh1o
45661 Lockheed Ma rlin Ut1l1ty
Services, Inc Is An Equal Op portunity Employer Commlned To
Building And Malnlalnmg A DI verse WOrk Force

MENTAL HEALTH
PROFESSIONAL
CASE MANAGER The Mason
County Branch Ofllce Of Prestera
Center For Mental Health ServiCes Inc located PI Pleasan t
WV, Is Seekmg An Individu al
W1th A B A In Psyc nology
Counseling Or Soc 1al Work To
Prov1Cie Assessment Planning
Linking Monllonng Advocacy
And Cr~s1s Ass1stance Servrces
To Mentally 111 Population E~tperl ·
ence Providing Case Management Preferred Must Possess A
Valid Driver's License And Reli able TransportaUM We Offer

And Excellenl Bene1H Package A
Compe1111ve Salary ~n d A
Smoke Free Work Enviro nmen t
Mtnor lty Applicants Are Encour
aged To Apply Send Resume Tp
~RESTERA CENTER

Sherry Snes
E~nl

SpeciaiiSI

PO Box 8069
HunHngton

wv 25705

EOE/AA
Modell wanted natiOnal award·
1ng w1nn1ng area portra1t studiO
needs photographic mode ls lor
publiC diSJIIays adverusmg , portrait competitions and assign ·
ments 11 you are a young lady 18
a up a have always wanted 1o 1rY

YOU STARTED But Your Em
ployer May Demand A Utile
More Let Us Keep You Learnrng
Tram At Night Take Adult Tratn·
lng At Budleye Hills Career Can
ter Let Us Know Your Interested
Fall Registration Is Open In July
Stop In Or Call For A Brochure

740·245·5334 Financial A1d
Avallabl&amp; To Those Who Ouallly

150

Call 740-245 5334 For Calalog
And InformatiOn

180

ANY OODJOBS

304-6757112
C1rcte ·N· Convalescent Home
Has 2 Open•ngs Elderly Or Hand
1capped Person In My Home

74()-4411536
E ~tpe nen ced carpenter will do re
modaltng decks v1 nyl s1d1ng
plumbmg Free est1ma tes Call
J1m Shull 304·675 t 272 Refer
ences upon reQuest

Furn1tura rapa1r rehn1sh and res
torat10n also custom orders Oh1o
Valley Rehn1 shmg Shop Larry

PhillipS 740-992-6576
George s Portable Sawm111 don t
haul .,.our togs to the fl"'lll JuSt cah

304-675 1957
Pamtmg Plumbing Remodeling
Any And All O~d Jobsl Free E'
t1matas, 74Q-24~515t
Proless•onal Tree ServiCe Stump
RAmoval Free Est1ma1es l In
surance Bidwell Oh10 814 388

GOV' T FORECLOSED Homes
From Penn1es On It Delinquent
Tax Aepo s, REO s Your Area

Toll Free (1) 800 -2 18 9000 Ex1
H 2814 For Current LISimgs
In Middleport· new kitchen oak
cabmets, diShwasher, d1 sposa1
heat pump three bedrooms bath
and 112 call740 992·3465
July 1st Large Yard, 3 Bedrooms
2 Baths 5 M1nutes From Rio

Grande, 706·864·3493
Load ed 28x80 3br 2 112 bath
with ·au optrons. only $2"499
down, $362 per month Free air &amp;
skrrt 1 888-691-6777
lovely Cou ntry Home On SA 7
Soutn With A Breathta king Awer
V1ew Very Pnvate Sanmg On 2 1/
2 Acres But Only 10 Minutes
From Gallipolis 3 4 Bedrooms, 2
1/2 Baths Hardwood Floors , 2
Fireplaces New Heal Pump Naw
K1tchan Many Extras Won't Last

Long'! $110,000

Save SS mtenor exterior pamt
1ng roo f painting, pressure &amp;
hand wash house
mob1le
homes Neal work 15 years ex
penence References, Free est•
ma\es 3()4-675-1327
Will lake care of the elderl'r' 1n
their home E11perlenced Refer
ences 740-446-9632

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

IMI-

304-755-7191

avallal&gt;e

304- 755-~

Call Vtrg 1n1a L Smith Rea lty AI
740 -446 -6806 Or Call Cara At
740-245 -9430 For More Information
Maso n modular home 2Bx70 on
t OOx 100 lot three bedrooms two
tutl baths. liVIng room/ dinmg room
combo ram11y room/ k1tchen combO , ut1Uty room, working flfeplace,
central air privacy fence, lwo car
garage appliances Included 7 40

949-9004
MOdern Home In VInton Wrtn V1
nyl S1dlng AC HP N1ce Carpet•
Fln1shed Basement On 2. Lots All

al Olllwood Homn of Nllro, WV.
304-756-HM.
Huge 26x80 3BA 1 112 balh
Slarllng al ONLY $39,999 Many
1· 888 · 928 ·

34211

Quick delivery Call 740-385·

9621

UMITED OFFER
1998 Ooublewlde 0 Down $295
month Free delivery &amp; set-up,
no land needed Only at Oak·

wood Homn Nitro, WV 304-755-

5&amp;85.

NEW BANK REPO'S O~ly 3 lah1
Still under warranty, owner financing available
304-755·

7191
New Ooublew1de 3BR , 2 bath
St 325 Down &amp; $205 per mo I ·

868·928-3426
Single P8renl Progr1m. Special
financing on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
Payment• 11 tow ••

homes

$160 Call now 304-755-5815
Special t61t80 3BR , 2 bath
$1 ,325 Down $205 Mo Free Sir

&amp; lree sklrllng 1·800-691 ·6777

Three bedroom mobile home m

Pomeroy, no peta, 740-992 5858

1 and 2 bedrOOm apartments, fur·
nlshtd and unfumlehed, security
deposit required, no -peta 740-

992·2218

hlul Two Stor'r' Coton1al 414 Third
Avenue Ga lhpohs Close To
Sc hools 3- Bedroo ms 2 112
Baths LA &amp; FA Formal Omlng
Room Oak Tr1m, F~replace. Much
More Home Et1g1ble For Tu
Abatement $1'75 ,900 Call 30.t

273-2940
Pomeroy SA 124· beauUiul river
v1ew ho me w1th wrap aro und
porch p1cturesque setting de ·
scribes this three bedroom one
and 112 bath with basement and

garage 740-247 3644

Three bedroom spht lel/91 new 3
car gara ge Wnh a one car garage
m basement lam1ty room laundry
pantry 1n oasement many new ex·
tras Very mea home mov.ng be ·
cause of waric 741).742-4000

320

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

71 Budefy tra1fer, 121t65 w/ 12X26
add -o n $5000 OBO call 740·
667-6251 or 740-667 '388.t after
5prn

OAKWOOD HOliES
Aa cm Sellabrallon, 0 Dow n 6 99

Beanie Babies , all beers- Prln·
ceu, Valentino, Curly, &amp; Peace

304-ll75-7495
ATTENTION; We'll PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds, 47
People Needed Immediately Offer

Brand New! Great Glttl CO/video
storage unit Blaek and cherry

Nover oul of box S125 HoiOs up
1o 940 discs. also holds lapeo
Call 740-992·6636 afler 6 pm
COs &amp; lapel nollncluded

Apartment For Rent 78 VIne

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
EST~TES , 52 Wellwood Drive
lrom $279 10 $3!8 Walk 10 snop
&amp; movie s Call 740·44B · 2568
Equal Houong Opportun~
Country S•da AJIBrtmants State
Route 588, 2 Bedroom s, WID
Hpok Up, CA. Central Heat $3651
Mo Deposit Required . 1· 888·

840-0521
Gracious living t and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·

pori From $249-$373 Call 740992·5064 Equal Housing Opportunities

$100 To $125 00 A St1! Used
Yale Uf1 Trud! 3!00 Pd Cornpaslly Nleda Clu1Cn &amp; Olher Repairs
$400 080 740·379-2655
Grubb's Plano· tu.ning &amp; repairs

Problems? Need Tuned? Calllhe
plano Dr 74(H148-452.5
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebulll In SIOck
Call Aon Evans, 1·800-537 ·9528
JVC Compact Camcorder Cost

$1,000, Sell $375, 740-446-2529
lodwlg Drum Set With Cases Call
740-446-7496
Pomeroy Thrift Shop now buying
Jarge outside toys and baby
•tems walkers toddler car seats
etc Tuesday through Friday One
free TV (small) Beame Baby w1th
every $25 or more purchase

740 992 3725

0006
River Bend Place now accepting
applications for HUD subsidized
apts tor elderly/handicapped or
d•sabled people EOH 304·882·
3121 or 304-882 3274
Three bedroom apartment, Spring
Avenue. batn and 112. $3001
month plus $100 deposit, 740·

6&lt;;7-3083

Scooters, Electric Wheelchairs
Sales Rental, Trade New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 740·

446-7283
Beanies Beanies Beanies . For

Sale Some $6 00 &amp; Up IO $8! 00
New and Relired · back to Oct

1997 740-446 1523
Three Wheel Lillie Rascal Etectnc Scooter Like New $650 Firm,

740-245·5811
Used Furniture For Sale Coflea

APT AVAILABLE NOW

Table Wllh Malch1ng End Tables

Twin Rivers Tower now acceJ)tlng
applications lor 1br HUD subaid·
lzed apt lor elderly and hanctt-

4 Place Dresser Se l, School
Desk, Single Futon , D1nelle Set
With 4 Chairs, Tv Stand 4
Wheels Make Offers 740-446·

340

cawad EOH 304-67!-6679
Two bedroom trailer $2501 month

plus $100 deposl1, 740-817 3083,

450

Buslneaa and
Buildings

Building For Sale In New Haven

WVA On S1 AI 33 4,000 Sq Fl .
Full Basement, 2 Baths Oll1ce,
Storage Equipment Included All
Excellent Cond rl1on , Also One
Bedroom Apartment Phone 740·

9787 For lnlo
Waterline Special

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO
Ci nemax , Showllme &amp; Disney
Weekly Rates Or Monthly Rates
Construction Workers Welcome

74()-4.41-5698, 74()-4.41-!167

$21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100, All Brass Compression Flnlngs In SIOck
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son Oh~. 1·800-!37 ·9528
WITH SIKKENS THE BEAUTY IS
MORE THAN SKIN DEEP.
Your deck Is the center of your
entertaining and recreation actlv·
1t1es So don't just give 11 a ' tin
ish " Give II a quality Sikke ns

Commflrclai-Oiflce or Retail 87

Mill Sl Mlddlepor1 1,450 Sq Fl
$400 mo Corner Building 740-

hook-ups Call siler 2 00 p m
304·773 5651, Mason WV

llnlsh wllh 1he Celol OEK or Rubbo! DEK sySiems
PAINT PLUS (304)675-4084.

992 ·6250
door)

460

550

350

Lots

(next

&amp; Acreage

(ATTENnON DEVELOPERS,
C~MPGROUND

COUNTRV ESTATES)
38 26 Acres Approx B Acre
Lake Mobile Home Wllh Large
Add On Gall ra C 1t~ Water And
Elect nc $125 000 More Acreage
Available 740 388-8678

Space lor Rent

For Rani Exoelen1 Olflc9 Or Relall
Sp~ce Approx 716 sl Wllh PIOnly
01 Parking Locate'd 26 Ceda r,

Gallipolis 740-256-6&amp;&lt;;1
Mob1ie hom, site available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

74()-365-4387

470

Wanted to Rent

100~150

tot In GatHpohs Ferry
304 675 1226

4 1/2 acres water, electric and
sewer chace spot Ready ICJr single wide , double wide or build
home One mile from Ohio Rrver
Boat Ramp on 124 next to Forked
Run Start Park price reduce d

510

Public Waler $22,500 304-67!·
5911
8 acres or 2 acre tots on Bethel
Ad , WV No s1nglew1des 304 -

675-7946
Lot for sate - Gallipolis 90x172
nice neighborhood quiet 740-

446-4722

Block brrck , sewer p1pes wmdows lintels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande OH Call 740·245·
5121
Pole Building Specials 24 'x42 x9'
w1lh two 1O'x8' overhead doo rs,
one 3 entry, Insulated roof &amp;
seamle ss gutter erecte d pnce
16946 30'x48'x9' with one 14 x9
sliding door, one 3' entry, seam-

560

Houaehold

Pets lor Sale

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming
Featuring Hycfro Bath Don

Goods
-

ShoalS 373 Georges Creek Ad

Appliances
Recondilloned
Washers. Dryers Aangesr Rein·
gratora 90 Day Guarantee!
French Clly Maytag, 7.t0·446-

CFA Hlmllayan Persian adult
cats &amp; kittens Stud service also

779!

aval~ble

Ftaxsteel couch (w 1th pull out
bed) &amp; cha~r, 1200, Admiral console TV $75, child's large chest

Golden Retriever Pupp1e s. ~KC
$200 Shoti !Wormed, 740-379-

S70 call740-992-24n

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

740-446.Q23t

:..;.:~.:...::::.::.__ _ _ __

304-675-5771

2961

NOTICE
Fronc:ll City Pel Grooming

Washers dryers refrigerators.

Aacme· Dorcas/ GreenwoOd CJ.
metary Ad I Oak Grove Rd 1 5 11 acres 740-992-6542 or 740

949-2499

360

Building
Supplies

less gunar, erecled price 17365
PreCISIOn PoSI Frame Builders
Inc 1·800-398-3026 740-9926416

MERCHANDISE

740-667 3222
4 98 acres 7 minutes from Point
Pleasant Good building !Jiles

ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
VIne Slrael Call 740-446 -7398,
1-1100-499-3499
Polly's -

Real Estate
Wanted

Cash Pa1d For l,and In Galha
County Blackburn Rea lty 740-

&amp; Uaod Furnlfllro

We now have Arrrtt Surpluslli
2101 Jefforson Ave
Open 9 30 . 5:00 Mon·5a1
304-675-SOFA (7632)

Protess lonat Groom ing by Appointments Over 15 yrs expenence, New bathing systtm ·uttra
Wash" , 650 Second Ave Galli·
pol~.

740-667 ·3404

RENTALS

410 Houeee for Flent

3·4 bedroom home central air,

big yard $300 wllh S150 doposlt
a refar9ncos, 740-742-2460
I ·5 BEDROOM HOliES FROII
14,000 Local Gov'l. &amp; Bank
Rapo'o Call 1-800-522-2730. X
1709
Two btdroom in Pomeroy, $300
per morl111, $300 deposit, pay own
utH!hes no pets 740-992 2381

OH 740-446 1528

Schnauzers- mtnlature pupp1es.
AKC also adults. two females
and one champ1on sired stud ,

1526
Your Area Bush Hog Deater For
Parta , Rotary Cutters loaders
Tillers, Finish Mowers, Etc Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn Mldwav

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

520

Good a
Crossbow Jennings Devestator

With 4 Bo1ts a OUivtr $150, oeo
740-379-2804

530

Antiques

Buy or 1111 Rlvtrlne Antlqwee,

Four horses- one Reg iste red
Tennessee Walker gelding, two
Arabian geldings, one Registered
qua rterhorse mare , 7.t0 · 742-

2050
Freshen W11h 2nd Call 7112,
$650, 740-258-6230
Nelsons Custo m Processmg
now OJI&amp;n Formerly Jones Custom, 2573 Yates Crossmg Road ,
M11ton, WV We do vacuum

pael&lt;lng 304-743·5400

71 0

Autos lor Sale

1980 ·1890 HONDA CARS FOR
$100 Seized &amp; Sold Loca lly This
Monlh Call 1 800-522·2730 Ex1
4420

BARNEY

1960 ·1990 Trucks For $100111
Seized And Sold
Locally Ttis Monlh
Trucks 41t4 s, Etc
1 BOO 522 2730 X 3901

AN' WHAR DID
YOU HEAR

THAT?

PAW HEARD IT AT
TH' CARD SAME
LAST NIGHT

LUKEY tt YO'RE
PLAYIN" CARDS
TONUIHTII

AM 125 motorcyc le $300 304·
Two 1979 Yamaha Mo torcyclos
1 For Pans, t Needs Minor Re

pair, $!00, Bolh, After 5, 740-3'192399

Boats &amp; -Motors
for Sale

Mercury motor, trailer, tackle/
lures other elltras $6,500 304·

675-3560 leave message
1983 A1nker 18ft Marcru1ser 110,
Coas t guard equipped $3 500

1986 Sea Spnle, 19 11211 Cuddy
Cabin, 4 3 V·6 OMC In/OutbOard,
new stereo system prop, batlery,
Includes tral~r. eK cond $4 ,900
304 -773-52 41 1996 Old Town
Discovery Canoe , Ots c o~ery
17 5 Includes OWL paddles, per-

vs Good Condition $1,800 Or
Best Offer 74Q-992-456EI

1982 Old•moblle 98 Regency,
runs good $1 100 304-982-2925
1omallc $695 740·446-0390
1985 Cadillac Seville , ex co nd
garage kept 1975 Oldsmobile

304-675-2290,
1985 Ford Crown Victoria , 4-Cir,

goodttres $1,100 304·675· 1242

1986 Aries K Car Dodge Good

$6,000 080 304-675-1218

1986 Dodge 600 $250 740-4463745

1967 Oceanic Sea Imp 160hp
Mercrulser lnJboard engine 181t
deep - V wit raile r life jackets ~
bumpers 740·446 3Bt4 Make

o11er

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

790

Camaro lor pariS 304-675

1991 Dodge Daytona Shelby Tur
bo Fully loaded Hrgh Miles Ex

cel)en1 Condlllon . $4,000, 740
379-2647, Laave Message

atr

$2.600 304-675-1651 or 304-675·
6197
1993 Buick LeSabre Limited,
loaded Clean 73,000 M1tes

$9,000, 740-446-279!

V·«&lt;

5

Speed, 21 ,000 Miles Red $5 300

060 740 256 1252 740 -2561618
1997 Nlssan Maxima PW , PS,
Sunroof Bose Stereo , leather Intenor 5 Speed Standard Transmssoo 740-446-6324
Cred1t Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank F1nanclng For Used
Vehicles , No Turn Downs Call

1988 C30 H 0 1 Ton Truck 4
Speed, 4!4 Engine, 10 Fl Flo!

1991 Ford F150 long bod, 6cyl,
5·sp, elr, all power, super clean

$&amp;,!00 304-682·3652

1997 Chevy LS, 5-10, 4cyf, 5·ap,
llr. PS, PB, sports oklo, Tonneau

g N Ford tractor, high &amp; low
range new tiru $2 300 304t ·

cover, am· lm cas~eue . 80140
seata, whitllnavy Interior, carpet,
aluminum wheel&amp;, 24 ,000 miles,
remainder al lactary warranty

675-3824

$10,!00 304-675-7858 .

North

I NT

Pus

3 NT

11 Uncle (Sp.)
21 SkiiHul
22 Like aome
foods
23 Yawn
24 Fibber
25 Center of a
ohleld
26 Lamprey&amp;
2S Cro.. ln a
church

Eul

29 Bauball
evanta
30 Plalntln
31 Trade for

All pus

money
37 Moot
depraved
36 Comedian
Phlllpa
41 Short laclteli
42 Egyptian
·

By Phillip Alder
S1r Arthur Helps. an English
wrner m 1he last cemury, wiSely sug·
gested that "public money IS sca(Ce·
ly ever so well employed as m securmg bus ot waste ground and keepmg
them as open spaces ••
Well, there IS one bndge play that
many have trouble secunng. ThiS
ISn' t because 11 1s so d1fticult. but
because 11 goes agamst the gram to
waste a h1gh card
How should the play go m three
no-trump'' West leads the spade
queen
From East's point of v1ew, the
defense's best chance 1s to establish
and run the spades. However. East's
king 1&lt; a potenttal roadblock. He must
gel 11 out of the way by overtaking
partner's queen at trick one. And Easl
should do 1t quickly, before he has
11me to ch1cken out!
Presumably South will duck thiS
tnck and East's spade return After
wmnmg tnck three w1th the spade
ace, declarer will have no opt1on but
to allack diamonds (He should play
the ace and another, JUSt in case Wesl
began w1th the smgleton kmg.) Here.
though, West gets m and cashes. h1 s
remammg spade wmners. o ne down
Note that 1f East drops the spade
four at tnck one. South has a pa1r ot
wmnm~ plays duck thiS lnck and the
next. or wm thiS tnck. In eother case.
South crosses to the dummy 10 clubs
ami takes the d1amond finesse. crUismg home wuh at least one ovennck
Are you won.Jering if unblock1ng
m1ght cost a tnck m the su1t 'Well, as
11 " no-trump, then in prme~ple. 11
West 's spade suit ISn't strong enough
(say. Q -J-x- x-x) to stand hiS partner's
unblock ot lhe kmg (or ace), he
should lead a low spade attnck one,
not 1he queen

43~~n
'
44 Make cloudy
45 No more than
47 Lei-(Beatlea'

1009)

48Dogaweggel'
49 Elllpllcaf
sa Rocldlah
52 WeddlngPI08Word
54 Dlrector'a cry

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo•
t.llbrlty Cipher cryptOgl'lml .,.. crealtd !tom quotaliOr'll by tamou1 peOJ* pa" and preMI'l
Eac:h~intr..aphefdandllofanoiMt TOIU!y tclue I equa/t8

G8X

8

U 8 R

' K EV D

LDVJORKZBKEOT
BZD

RKYIIJZO

J A
K U D

K U D

VJAK

VJ R K

XDNTDOX

E 0 KDP P E T D0 K
XDNKYRUDOMJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION · sae1cally. 11's show up , keep up and shul up · M1ke Cowan, T1ger Woods' cadd ie, on hiS pnmary dulles on 1he PGA lour

'~~;~:~' S@\tQ{l~-~t.zrss
_ _ _ ___;.__ 141to4
CLAY I ,OlLAN

WOlD
GAM I

~y

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrombl.d words

low

th•

be

to form four s1rnple words

ME E S
INSOY

I I 1· I I
3

0

II

1
R
l s IE El 6
.

_

.

~~

.. .

"All 1 want tor my blnhday
the Mom told her k1ds , "1s not

I

ANDEED

I

Complete rhe chuck le qvo1ed
by ld l1ng •n lhe moumg words
LJ-..L.-L-.;..J.-..0..--' you develop from step No 3 below

PEANUTS
~E'f. OIUCK, flOW

COME VOU NEVER
CALL ME?

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

TMAT~ NOT
11AN6 UP. AND TME SAME'
I'LL CALL '(OU
TM1Nf,
RI6~T BACK ..
CMUCK.1

W~'f DONT VOU

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSW ER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Edtlor- Jwcy- lnsh -Jaunty - AROUND
Have

Far

To Spy rhe 8eJI 8uys In
the Closslfleds.

T h e number of accidents m the home 1s n s1 ng beca use people aren't spendmg enough t1me th ere to know
their way AROUND

IWEDNESDAY

Wilderness ca mper trailer 32',
excellent condltron $7500 even·

lnga aller ! OOpm 740·742-2070,
dayllme unlll 1 30pm 740 -7434306

SERVICES
'

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFI"'l

446·0870, 1·800 287-0576 Rog-

Your Area Toll Free 1·800-2 18·

1986 Ford F-150, 314 Ton PICk·

10 E plurlbuo wureway
6 IRS employM, 11 Peralan fairy
311 Ford flop
12 Rlvar In
40 Hourataae, e.g.
Belgium
42 lltulle abbr.
9
,...'ftl"'""lli-,I'II"""Tn-n.,..,

Shape, Asking $2 ,800, 740·2561362

ers wa1erpmolf1Q

fdr Sale

6 Extend I
aublcrlptlon
7 Donny and
Marie -

holding
36T-Inglo

24 Foot Travel Tra11er , Steeps 6
Roof Air Conditioner Very Goott

es Ca dlllacs Chevys BMW 's
Corvettes Also Jeeps, 4 WD's

Trucks

5 From--Z

35 Mflll'lott

740-6&lt;;7 3222

tablished 1975 Ca" 24 Hrs (740)

:134-458-1069

4 Cefeau-

l---r.l7;-r-l""'"r.la:-r-1....,,. - 0

------

Se•zed Cars From 1115 Porsch

Ava-

3 Do-other•

.------=--=--=--,to be -- -- - -- - of 1tl '

t99 5 Jayco Ces1gner Series 34
camper Ilks new k1tchan/ hvln'
room slide-out, queen bed Cflntel
bath side by-s 1de priced to sen.

VIckie 740-446-2897

Upton .Used Cars AI 62-3 Miles

23Paatecl
27 Fregrant
32 Tergel IMiter
33 Drench
34 Artlat Pleaaao

_

1981 37 Ft Yukon Wilderness ,
Traval Trailer Sell -Co ntained,
Large Bedroom Queen S1ze Bed,
Furna ce, M1crowave Awn1ng
New Carpet Upholstery 740 367
7C7 1

Unconditional lifetime guarantee,
local references furnished Es-

Ustlngs

Weal

13' carnpar, good cond1ll0n $500,
740-949-7009

15ft t699 Bob McCormick Aa
740-446-1511

1137

Soulb

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Miles 1996 Dodge Grano Cara

U3·54!2

DESPERATION

R Aulo Ripley · WV 304 -372 3933 or 1 800-273-9329

1980 Flealwlng wllh awning 1711
1972 AriSiocrsl 1811 1973 Smoky

t989 Wh ite Ford Es co rt clean
good running car $2 000 304 ·

Y.,'( THAT
t105T I'IE N LE;o.D
LIVE5 OF QUIET

New gas tanks &amp; body parts 0 &amp;

1988 Toyo1a Camry Good Condi11on Fully Equlppad 49 ,200
van Fully Equ1pped 31,400
Miles 740-245-5938 Aher 5 00

WELL , THE.¥

1989 Chevy Truck Bed L W B
Wllh Bump Or Ta!lgale And Fac tory Liner, $800 740-446-4393

1987 Buick Cantury Station Wagon 7-40.446-8253

$650 OBO 740-441-0958 Aller 5

1994 Pontiac Sunblrd

2'(~1

a

1973 23ft Dodge Concorde; gas!
electric heat microwave doubledoor refrigerato r 1611 carefree
awnmg, king s1ze bad new lrres
4 0 Ona generator, runs great
$3,400 304-862-3237 aher 5pm

1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass Cla ra

1992 Saturn, 4-dr, auto

t-10, l'VE. AA.D 1 fliT~
Off 1-\11'\ It-\

Kawasaki STS Jet ski shit under
warranty, three seater, 83 horsepower, bought new JulY of '97,
three match1ng Kawasaki skr
vests and trailer all go with 11

Condition New Tres New Brakes

New Mul11er $695 740.256-6228

1&amp;~1

,.

Runners wldouble tra iler, great
shape, garage kept. low hours

SACRIFICE

1982 Cullass Supreme 2 0, 260

DOWN
1 Fumbler'acry
2 Getor'a kin

Uncomfortable
play

458-1074

2045 will cons1der trade fof
good pon1oon boa1

....., __

Opening lead: • Q

$2,900, 740-245-9851 Afl8r 7

750

Steven•

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

$!000 740 949 2203 or 740.949

Deere Corn Chopper &amp; Manure

----

Motorcycle a

35 Horse Power Johnsons Good
Condlllon, $800, Call Berween 1 -!
~M 304-675-5131

Pomeroy Houri NT W 10 00

modal 12155 asking $1 .800
304-895-30 13

740

TRANSPORTATION

wnn Aac«s, GOOS8nect &amp; Reese

1i98 Cub Ctdet riding mower,

1 A 10 53
.. Q 52

1993 Dodge Caravan Fac1ory In·
SIOIIod ! Polnl ChilO Safely System, 740-441-1528

58 Actreea

20 llohllmmecllln
noble
21 Didn't

="

• A K 8

se

miles $16 900 740·99'2-7014 al
ter5pm

6 K 4
.107632
• 7 2
.. J 10 8 4

Soallt
• Aa2

1992 Plyrnoulh Grand Voyager.

1997 GMC Sonoma Exlended
Cab 4x4 . 5 speed, air 8 000

~

• 916

A/C Pf8, P/W, runs &amp; IOOkl
good, good stereo
000 304

675-7474

East

K4

$3,650, 1 888-640-0521

2·1995 Kawasokl 750SS Wave-

Hllth $6,800, 740-256~7

· $450: 740----

t

1991 Gao Trac.ker Black , Stan·
dard, 4ir AM/FM Cauette,

Registered Hall Linger Horse,
Tennesse Walker · 1Lg Mare
Pony, 1 Three Year Stud Pony,
38" Tall740 245 5492

Up, $2400. 740-446-3570

Ing -

$7,000 lltm 304-895-3023

I8C1 OOnd $500 304·773-5241

Augers lnsleya Wagons Gehl &amp;

MerchandiH

Weal
• Q J 10 9
• QJ 9

304-675-4225

800 Gellon Mueller Bulk Tenk
With Automatic Washer , 400

!48 Cue lawn tractor &amp; bader
I mow•tr dacll:, bo• blade , plow
Onln engine, $2300, IMP~* rid-

oQJ986

•AK3

Full-Blooded Jeraey Cow Due To

Coby, Gehl Grinder a Mixer John

-.oownor
540 Mlscellaneoua

&amp; 4-WDa

EEK&amp;MEEK

bass boal, 200hp

Livestock

720

Spreader, 740-256·1321 After 7
PM

Vans

01-ot-te

• 76 3
• ~ 4

1&amp;78 Jeep CJ5, fiberglass body,
v 8, ~e . ooo origina l milea,

446-2412 HI00-594· 1111

1124 E Moln S1ree1, on AI 124,
am 10 600 pm , Sunday 1:0010
6 oo p m 740·192·2528 Ruaa

730

1998 Yamaha timber Woll 250

610 Farm Equipment
Gallon Sollr Built Tank 4 Oelavel
Pipe Llna Mllkero Wllh Weigh
Moler, 10 Ton Grain Silo Wllh

$7 ,!00 080 740-256-123:!

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial

South of Leon, WV Flnancmg

Sporting

Needs Minor work On Bed ,

1996 Yamaha 250 Tlmberwoll, 2·
WID, good shape $2 ,400 304
875-1976

630

Non

1997 Dodge Oakola 4 Cylinder
Magnum, ! Speed. 14,000 Miles

Belween Gallipolis a Rio Grande.
Ohio On Jachon Pike 740·446·
2412 Or 1·600-594-1111

9000 Ext A·2814 For Currant

Units, Dtffentnt Sizes Guaranteed,

Anlhony Land Co

Tractor &amp; Equipment 740·256·

\983 Mustang 4 Cyhnder, Au-

31&lt;4 200 PSI

Sleeping rooms with cook1ng
Also trailer space on river All

Acqutsltr ons

Sldoro Equlpmanl Compony
30W75-7421

Low Rate Financing On New And
Used Equipment Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis OH 740.

12x65, stove and relrtgerator
gas, New Lima Ad , must move

Dbi /WO I Bough! Won '1 Fll My
lot, Must Sell, Will Deliver &amp; Sat
Up 1 800-363 6862

p&lt;lco.

Three Seu of Twck Uft Forks

14 x70 3BA, $999 Oown a ONLY
$179 per rro Frat .. &amp; lree slclr'
lng 1-66&amp;-9211-3426

Shape 8x10 Oecl&lt; VInyl Sklrllng
8x10 Oulbullllng Asking Price
$7 500 740-446-3409

trlmm~ra. O~o~erent. . d lowttl

TWo 2 bedroom trailers. 10x50 &amp;

740-742-2603

Sunvnor Clolrara on all Hu141'
warne lewn mowtra I etrlng

Wllh Us Aboul F1nanclng As Low
As 2 9'1. On Lawn Tractors And

1Ox 50 mobile home needs some
repa1r priced reasonable . 7.t0·
9929113.

1987 14x80 2 Bedro ome, Good

7lt locust posts 12 50 each

er, $80 manuallreadmlll , $75,
740-892·2472 "

740-688-0047

740-~9109

Arnold Blake 304-

$23.000 , Olllce HO-f43·2300,
740-843-2916 Aller 4 P:M, Alter
6 PM 740·643-2644 Fax 740·
643 1030

Commodore computer with print-

We Buy Land 30 · 500 Acres,
We Pay Cash t 800-2 t 3 8365 ,

1972 Homell8 12x65 3 Bedrooms.
Need Soma Remodeling $1 ,000,

uw

12" Bell

578-4162

011Chwitch With- 600 Hf'1 , $7,500,
Hera Powell Orlvmg Hammer

es, 740-446-2581

APR 304 736-3409

baltl$, 740-843-!327

alza 7, paid $700 will lake, $300,
740-367-()286 Of 740-949-2481

Board s $3 1000 A Piece, R40

Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes 01 4 WO And 2 WD Farm
Traclora, Hay Equipment , John
Deere Sk1d Steer Loaders Check

Used Window Air Condl11onlng

mo tree au &amp; skirting 1-800-691-

Marquis wedding sel 1/2 carat
size 7, paid $1400, will lake
S 1250 wedding gown with veil

Skreed $5 ,000, Fuel Tank e,
Mi se Water Tanks, M1sc Steel
Beams, Concrete Barrier Arro11

Lawn Equlpmenl CompaC1 Ullllly

448-«llB

14x70 3br $999 down, $198 per

round dramond solitaire,

malchlng lull-size sleeper $400
Cardloglkler $50 304-87!&gt;5054

$55 000 740- 596-1929
NEW CONSTRUCTION ... Beau-

carat,

Sheep Fl Roller 30 Ft VIbrating

Brown plaid couch &amp; chair wl

Apar1men1S $29!/Mo 740-446·

Free Set- up &amp; Delivery Only 3
Left! Only at OakwOOd Homes Nr·
tro WV 304 765-5885

Drum , 48 Inch. $3,200, 553

2 Bedroom Apartment UJIIIatrs,
458 Second Avent~e, Furnlahed,
Water Trash Removal $2501Mo ,
Plus Depoail. No Pets, Aeferenc·

-Oown

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down $189/mo

291-oo98

1982

Apartments
lor Rent

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

UFiudReleo
$1-o. Paymenu
$17,e96on3BR
Fn11 Oellvory l Sot•UP
Only AlOe- Homao
Nllro, wv. 304-165-6885

$45 000 Sheep Ft RoUer, Double

Explrh 719/98, CALL 740·441-

SPRING SPECIALS

Oall Hill Ohio Trucf&lt;lng Company
Looking For Experienced Semi

GRANTS!

•

SlreOI, Gallipolis Ohio 740·3677666

Mo . P1ua Oeposll. 740-446-10112

Colltgt Sctolnl1lpo '
l!tjllnaas MediCal Bill
Never Repay
CoiToll Frae
1-600-218-9000 Ell! G 2814

sourh of Middleport $200 mrtnth
plua utllitlea, t2x65 two bedroom,
$225 month plus utHitles, call 740-

New t998 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE tot rent
Include s sklrtrng, deluxe steps
and se tup Only $187 08 per
month w1th $t075 down Call1 ·

800-837-3238

Ltma Truett Crane, 100 Ft Boom

,31)4-67~

Small lhret bedroom trallor, SR 7

New 14 or 16x80 Only make 2
·payments to move In, no pav·
mentsafler4yrs 304-755-7191

1963 Champ1on SOx12 two bed·
rooms . 1994 Spruce Rldga Sky·
line. 72x14 two bedrooms !wo

Roolera and Siding lnolallars
For lmrnadlalo Emp~y­
monl, Apply In Poraon AI Chris·
ltln'l ConiiNCIIon. 1403 Eao10m
Avo , Gallipolis, OH 740-446·
4514

740.992·58511

facllllloa, cloll 10 school In !own
Appllcallona available at VIllage
Green Apll 149 or call t40-992·
3711 EOH

3 Bedrooms, With Basement,
Country Setting. No Pets $475/

FREE
CASH

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$280 $300 sewer, water and
ltaSh Included, 740-992-2167

2bdrm apts , total electric, 8JI·
pUancea furnished. laundry room

tim

8-5

Will &amp;ell or renl 304-578-28110

416 Backup 427 Chevy Mo1or
8x30 Tool Trallei, $1 ,700, 40 Ton

Both Lose! 740·«6-6306 1·800·

Size 6, paid $800, Will lake $550,

12xe5 Trailer w/1 acre of land
14x70 trailer wf2 acres of land

992·2524

"COOL DOWNI"
Cenlral Air CondiUonlng Free Es·
Uma18sl II You Oon'1 Call Us. We

113

3BR/2BA
Sel Up On Lei, Jake Over Pymra.
304-736-7295

recommends that you do bus!
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 until you have mvesugated

ea:H813,

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

440

day's &amp; Sunday'J- Call 304·875·

ll1e offe~ng

420

Large selection ol uled homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Slarting a1 $2995

INOTICEf
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Tf'llctor Trltttr Drivers, Excellent
Pey I tn•=:Etackage , 740

1100

Racine, no poll,

Stop by Oakwood Home' of NItro WV &amp; register to wi n free
doublewide, no gtmmlcks Only

opUons availab le

1f2 MUe From Porter, NO PETS,
Water Trash Paid, 7.t0 -386-

2 bedroom mobile home In

FREE OOUBLE-W10E

698·2613

9648 614-367 7610

necessary call now
tor details - The Image Gallery

-

Wanted To Do

Shrubs &amp; weeds tnmmed mulch
mg flowe r beds , tanoscap lng
stdewalk
edg ing
mowmg
e1 :: Free E'flmates Ca ll B1ll

e~:peritnce

Needed Reliable care giver to
st1y with elderly woman Satur-

Bul

Short On Skills? Gain Sk ills In
One Year 01 Tramlng tn Tne
Evenmgs Bu ckeye Hilts Ca 1eer
Center Continues In It s 22nd
Year Of OperatiOn Tra1n In Adult
Basic Educatron GED Te st1ng
Site, Olf1ce Technology Welding
Industrial Maintenan ce Peace
Olf1cer fCorrect1ons, SUCCESS
Auto Technology Air Cond1fl0n
lng &amp; Healing Farm Bus1 ness
Pl ann1ng Analysi s Co mputer
SpecialiSt , Customer Centered
Hea lthca re Techmc1an (Formerly
Nurse Aide) MAI OD Pre Em
ployment Tra101ng And More

II'Ocloting· , _ Is your chance No

740-4-le-7494 or I ·800·272·5327
n-iay-SoiUfday

Schools
Instruction

LOOKING FOR A JOB

3br 2 lull balhs UR LA . DR

8200 or 740·992·3041

MEDICAL DIRECTOR

This PoSitiOn ReQUires A DOE

2Acres W1th :1 Bedroom House.
Separate Garage Secluded, Near

Charmmg two story home, two
bedrooms co rner lot fenced all
around, two car garage located In
M•ddleport very good condition ,
1mmedtate occupancy 740-742·

1-600-4&amp;5-1528

lockheed Marlin Ut1hty Sarv1ces
Inc The Operating Contractor
For The United States Enrichment
Corporation AI The Gaseous Dl1 ·
fusion Plant , Piketon Ohro, Has
An Opening In The Following
Alea

A MD Degree, Ohio State Ll·
cense , And 10 Years Or More Of
Medical PracUce (With At Least
5 Years In Occupational Medl·
cine) Are Required Proven Man
agement Skltts And 'A Demon strated Ability To Interfa ce Wrth
Other Managers And Community
Leaders Are Highly BeneUc1a1
CertUicatlon In Occupational
Mtdlck1e Is Preterrad Cerllllcattol\ tn Internal Medicine Or Fam·
1ly,Practice Medk:ine Is ,., Plus

Tll1s newspaper w111 not
knoWingly accept
advertisements lor real estate
whiCh IS In VIOIBI/On of the
law Our readers are hereby
mformed that all dwellmgs
adverf1sed 1n thiS newspaper
are ava1iable on an equal
opponun1ty bas1s

310- Homes lor Sale

www.bo..buatera com

LOCKHEED MARTIN UTILITY
SERVICES, INC

Budge!, And Monllor Quallly And
Compilanco WHh RegulaiJOns

thrs newspaper ts subjec1 to
the Federal Fa.r Housrng Act
of 1968 wh1ch mak,es 11 Illegal
to advertiSe "any preference
hm1tat10n or cliscrlmmaiiOn
based on race color rehg10n
sex tamlhal status or nauonal
ong1n or any 1ntent10n to
make any such preference
llm•ta!lon or d1scnmmat1on •

EOUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

Galllpoll&amp; Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Averue. Gallipolis OH 4563t

All rear estate actventsing 1n

large k•tchen , !ully equipped,
large foye r, 2-car attached ga·
rage GallipoliS Fe~ry 304·675·
1226

Dsslgner Full Or Pari-Time

1989 Claylon Mobile Home, 2
Bedrooms. $8,000, 740-JBII-9675

naoong

Holzer A'klng $95,000 740-441·
0132

Must Have Previous E.:perlence,
Send Resume To ClA .t39 c/o

811H91-6m

Divorce Forces Sales Take over
payments 2br, 2 bath financing

REAL ESTATE

WORK FROM HOllE
Prr S982 Frr $5,947
Free Bool&lt;lel

Free air &amp; skirt t -

ments assume loan , owner II·

With Mechanical Background
Salary Commensurate W1th Ex
penance Call 1 800 339 6518
Mon -Frt 8 00 A M · 5 00 PM
Fof An Appo1n1ment

Expenenced clark for convenlerta! store 304-895-3603

mo

ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay-

11 30 PM &amp; 1100 PM

430PM

16x60 :Jt&gt;r, 2 balh, $1,325 ClOwn ,
$205 per

Laturner Grader $ 7,500, Renko
Straw Blower. NTK VIbrator Fits

2 Bedroom conage on Bulavlllt,

derson 740-992-3348

Is Now Accepting ..&amp;.pplicattOns
For ~ Full T1me LP.N (Shilts 3 00
7 30 A M ) Must Be SensiUve To
The Needs OF The Elderly
Please Apply In Person At The
Front Desk Between 8 30 A M

,. wwtf .....

1995 Claylon. 14x70. an e1e&lt;:1rlc
excellenl condrtion, call Tom An-

Scenic Hills Nursing Center 311

Cosmetologist Needed Guaranteed Salary, Versus Comm1s
sion Paid Vacation Benefits ,

740-446-7267

once 304-675-2145

Bud!rldge Rd B-1 OH 45614

PM

S..llaha, E - Oirec1or
C811810n ~ lnduiiiit!S
~0 Box307

livmgs1on s basement waterproofing all basement repairs
Clone. free estimates, l1felime
guarantee 12yrs on Job expert·

14 lhcttbonn
15 !Magic (cei1aln drink)
11 like aclulla
17 IJ!MaDW nett ..

Mobile Homn
for Sale

En ergeti C, Kmd And

Dedicated AN s And LPN's Inter

47 Belle.. - not
51 Ocddn ollhe
53 Mu.ielll
lntlnal
55 Hall!~
llti'Jype of goat
57 Public roed

, Ollhe .,..
7 Fill
13 Decor Ill..

ALDER

320

o4e 8ullder'aunlt

ACROSS

PHILLIP

Appliance Pans And Service All

Nama Brands Over 25 Vaars Experience ~II Work Gullranteed,
French City Maytag, 740·44G·

7795.
C&amp;C Gene ra l Home Main·
lenence - Pamtlng , vinyl siding,
carpentry, dOOJs, windows, baths,
mobile home repair and more For

free eSbmsiO call CHe1 740.992,
6323.
MULLIN 'S HOllE IIIPROV£·
IIENT VInyl Srd1ng, VInyl Raplaoement, Windows, Ropalrwotl&lt;,
Also, Repairs Op VInyl Sldln~ .

740o311H281

840

Electrical and
Ralrlgeratlon

Rosldenilll or com...,.,lal wl~ng,

new SI&lt;Ytco 0&lt; repairs. Mosllr l~
ctnSid t ltctrlclan

RldtnoiAr

Elaclncol, WVOOQ306, 304·675'
1786

~~~~~~~~~~=-U~V~I:RG~O~&lt;A:u=g~.

23-Sept.

ASTRO·GRAPH

22) Wa1t

2. 1998____

for a better lime before putting a nsky
move youre .enously contemplating

In the year ahead. you should be
able to estubhsh a comfortable bal ance between your prJctical social
interests. It will enhance both areas to
your satisfaction
CANCER (June 2 I -July 22) Try
to d1stm~u1 sh between genume optt mism u~d WIShful th1~kmg today,
because unrealistic expectations
could take the air out of your balloons. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find 11. The
Astra-Graph Matchmaker mstarttly
reveals which signs are romantically
perfect for you. Mail $2.75 to Match·
maker, clo this newspaper. P.O. Box
1758. Murrt1y Hill Station. New
Yort. NY 10156.
• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It's best
not to try to man~ something you
Were never able to do effectively
today. You could end up with a nther
sticky mess.

on the kitchen table Your mate may
not be ~y mpathetic today.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) U sual·
ly. you're someone who sees thmgs
through to completion. but today you
m•ght abandon a project before the
foundatiOn ha.• been la1d.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
When sl)opping today, avoid stores
with expenstve merchandise. There
are indications you may spend more
than you can afford.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0tc
21) Busy your.;clf with your own
affair.; today. Idleness might incline
you to butt mto another penon's busi·
ness -· with poor results.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If
yourheartondmindaren'tdedicated
to your work today, yoy7miaflt as well
take time off. You're not apt to produce anything you· d be prvud to sian.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

Thu;;:duy. July

•

EnJoyment 1s likely to come from
your domestiC sphere today Outside
act1vil1es aren't apt to measure up,
and be.•ides, they could~ ,!;_xpenstve
PISCES (Feb . 20-Man:h 20)
Don't start coastmg today JUst
because everythmg seems to be run ning smoothly. Unwarranted overconfidence could lead to indift'erence
and dim1msh your efficacy.
ARIES (Marth 21-April 19) In a
situation where you are the managmg
authonty, be careful not to abuse the
privilege Don "t try to look good at
another's expense.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Your
ego may be enlmgcd today, and this
could have disadvantages when
someone attempts to manipulate you
with Hattery.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Thday
you Clll realize an ambitious ~jec·
live, provided you
for it totally
lllllided. At thls time. a p111ne1 could

ao

pro~ to be dead
an asseL

weiJIK lllher than

•

•

�Wedne~day. July

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dlilly Sentinel
.

I.

1,1998

.

Cleaning up after the flood waters should begin Loon as possible
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Nlwa St8ff
If you want to be perfectly safe, it
is best to assume that anything
touched by flood water is contaminated, said Becky Baer, Meigs .
County Extension Agent, who today
gave tips to homeowners on cleaning up after die flood .
Baer said that flood waten that
have passed through homes and
other buildings create health and
safety concerns. Many clothing
items and other household articles
that have been submerged may n01
be safe or worth the time, effort and
money to try to make usable again.
but other items may be salvageable,
she said.
The extension agent stressed the .
imponance of cleaning up arter a ;
flood as soon as possible. "First :
remove noticeal&gt;le din, then tackle :
the bacteria that arc n01 noticeable,"
she sa1d.
M ddew grows on wet surfaces clothes. furniture. and walls, and can
be very hard 10 manage if not taken
care of promptly. according to Baer.
She proposed using a disinfecting
soluuon of 3/4 cup of liquid bleach
and a gallon of water to disinfect
surfaces. The solution. she said,
should be changed as it becomes
cloudy. otherwise. it will not be
effective.
To minimize mold and mildew
growth, Baer suggested trying to
keep surfaces dry, and exposing
items to direct sunlight which can
help sanitize because of the ,ultraviolet rays .
.
When cleaning up debris, !he ·
extension agent said to wear rubber
gloves and boots. as well as additional protective clothing on arms
and legs to prevent the spread ol
microorganisms lhat can cause dis-

mnaininc ~Jhould be bung 011 a
!jne or sprad_',put to dry to help
reduee milde~. she advised.
II is bet! tonnse soiled clotbinj
in rold water to mnove mud and
surface dirt, accordinJ 10 Dr. Joyce
Smith, Clothii~ Specialist with
Ohio State Uljillenity Extension.
After 1 lhoroujla rinsing, clothing
should be waslied in the hottest
water and for the longest agitation
period that the fabric can withstand,
said Smilh, who cautioned against
crowding clothing in die washer,
and suuested usillg plenty of deter-

after itllalldl for 10 minutes.
away. If toys an: wuhablc, clean access to bottled water, thcR an: two ,
For exterior surfacea, like out- with soap and water, rinse, then dis- ways in "ffticb you can purify drillkdoor furnitlll'e, and play equipment, infCCI for two minulel in the disin- ing Wiler • die boiling medJod and
she nid !hey should be cleaned with feeling solution, and rinse again the bleaching method, nid
a forceful wller spray, then sanitized • .before giving to children.
The boiled water is preferable, she
with a disinfecting solution, allowCaution was the word from Baer added.
ing it to remain 1 few minutea before on food items, including canned
About the can: of clothing after it
being rinsed away.
goods, that ftoodwaten may have has been in flood water, she said it is
The disinfecting solution needs conwninated. There is no way of important to remembet that clothing
to also be used on dishes after die knowing if the food is safe, s~c cau- can harbor bacteria and needs spedin h.., heen removed, and all soft tioned, so "throw it out."
cial care in laundering to disinfCCI.
plastic Md permeable items like cutBottled water is being given out
She suggested wearing rubber
tlng boards, baby bottles, and · in many areas around !he county to gloves when han41ing and cleaning
stuffed animals which may have displaced families and those wilhout flood-soaked clothing. While waitbeen infected should be thrown water service. If you do not have ing for wash loads to be completed,

a-.

gent and the higbcll waler level pos-:
sible.
A disinfecwu is iiiJo necessary,:
she laid, noting that people too often·
dO not realize that !hey should use a:.
disinfectant when washins clothing:_
that has been in flood water whil:h:·
commonly carries sewage waste or:
other bacteria that are not killed in hot water and d:etergent
Liquid chlorine bleach is lh&lt;'.
most common and cheapest of disinfectanu and it takes only two tablespoons to disinfect a load of laundry,
she said.

~(Q)~m ~~i'?Jm
Triple ....Fwurs Coupons.
ASST.

ASST. VARIETIES
r-

FOODLAND

PSI COLA PRODUCTS

CE CREAM

ease.

To clean and disinfect surfaces
such as walls. floor, counten, glass.
dishes and plastic, she said that
loose din should be removed ftrst,
then the area washed with the disin- '
feeling solution. That should be left
·there for two minutes before being
rinsed off with purified water.
As for upholstered furniture, carpeting. and mattresses lhey .hould
be cleaned by a profession •I, Baer
advised, because water fror.l floods
can damage and contamiuate the
ins1des of them. She said it might
not-be worth salvaging upholstered
furniture, although solid wood items
probably can be cleaned and
repaired.
Appliances that were submerged
in the flood must be cleaned and
dried before using, she said, also
suggesting that an electrician be
called in to check on the appliance's
safety.
To kill germs from sewage backup. Baer said a cup of liquid bleach
should be poured into the toilet bowl
· which should be brushed thoroughly

~GALlON

Umlt 1 With $10.00

24 PACK CUBE

Additional Purchase

ASST.
FOOD LAND
CEREALS

•KAHil'S MIA1 WIIIIIRS ' Ll.
•1111DIRBIS1 GROUIID Bllf P£1
5 Llts. or Mort

FOODLAND
CORN FLAKES

•JUMBO PA(I Pll Ll. .
nsoi/BOLL1 fARMS
tBlCIIII llllS1S

FOOD LAND
SALTINES

*
*

aNI•s

6·7 oz.

c

II OZ.

9

I LB. 101

C.

'

t;\

FOODLAND
:;
.
PEANUT BUnEir
r·;
t~

II OZ.

••

....~·•

Velvet Sherllet

Qb.

Velvet lee Cream Pk.
Sandwiches 12
VelvetS Qt.
Ice Cream
Herr's 20 oz.
_Potato Chips

64 oz.

ggc

FUVORITE
SHELLS &amp; CHEDDAR
...

saaa

•a•
8
2/ 4
8118

Valley Bell
Buttermilk · 112 &amp;.1.

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

.

~.............

~h~;s,~on's $119 FOODLAND
-Dip

Broughton's

Fruit
Drinks

Gal.

1

C
II RITE
1

99

PAPER TOWElS
FOOD LAND "
MACARONI &amp;
U·200Z.
CHEESE

- Collin• ahOWI hll skill It llllln. talning balance In more then 1
: foot of water.

.o.-·.

2/S

SQUEEZE CATSUP

16oz.

FLOOD WATER FUN : Rutland youngaterl found poola
: of flood water gmt lor Widing
· In end riding their bicycle•
: through. H-11-yNr-old Shine

iudilioD for
c......
could perform Ia llllr 111111 ICIIDol'a
poduction ol ~ Y...U.J.

12 oz.

FOODLAND "'
~..i....-..0~ SQUEEZE MUSTARD 20 oz.

34.5·3, oz.

TRIVIA

-

Daily from 111m ·l pm ud 3poi· 7pm,
if1m bmore tlwiJ CIISfomer siD line 1t 1 register, we will open uother register.
"WE GET You IN, GET Vov Our &amp;GET You HOME To TilE MORE IMP()mNr TmNGS IN

/

ROLL

age

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="415">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9839">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27556">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27555">
              <text>July 1, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1513">
      <name>carman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="77">
      <name>dillon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="936">
      <name>foster</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="865">
      <name>greene</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3716">
      <name>nesselroad</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
