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                  <text>Page 12 • The DaUy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 8, 1998

PEPSI, DT.

MT.
DR. PEPPER

STOIEHOUIS
._llaythr•

Weather

Beat of the Bend column, Page 12
France gains Cup finals, Page 4
Play to resume in Majors, Page 5

Today: Cloudy
High: 80; Low:60
Tomorrow: Sunny
Hlgh:80; Low:50

Accepts CredH Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 11 I 1998

Meigs County's

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SPECIAL
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PAK CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS OR

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12•··89c
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Hot Dogs.!!:••••••• 69

English Roasts ••••••
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Ribeye Steak•••• ~~.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Candi· all voter apathy and disdain, analysts Dick Armey. R-Texas.
The system was set up after the
dates in the 2000 presidential pri· said.
.. As interest and participation Watergate scandal to provide partial
maries may have to nul their campaigns without some of lhe federal goes down, so does the interest in taxpayer financing to presidential
IIIOI)eY .IIMIY are entided to, because making a contrillution, even if it"s a hopefuls in ·exchange for agreement
Qi.qs~~ c~oo·~ ~; the $3 tax-exempt C!JI\!fibution;" said Cut· by candidates to strict primary spendcampaign~fiilancing box on their tis Gans, director of the -nonpartisan ing limits. The goal was to limit innuCommittee for the Study of the ence of wealthy donors.
income tax returns.
With participation in the checkoff American Electorate.
The main problem is the presi·
Though the election commission dential campaign fund that provides
down - only 13 percent of taxpay·
ers agreed to it in 1996 - some can· has asked Congress to fix the prolr matching funds for candidates is
didates may not get their full shares lem. including writing into law auto- being squeezed by the annual decline
of federal matching funds until after matic inHation triggers to increase the in the number of who check off the
the November 2000 elections, the $3 checkoff. neither House or Senate contribution. The SJ does not
Federal Election Commission warns. leaders have shown eagerness to increase the amount of tax paid .
That would be long after many have take up the issue this year.
Under the law. the government
"If the checkoff isn't working. it's fund matches dollar for dollar the first
been eliminated from the race.
The failure of most Americans to because the American pubIic hates $250 of each individual contribution
agree to eannark for campaigns $3 the notion of publicly funded elec- a qualified presidential primary canout of the money they pay the Inter- tions," said Michele Davis, a spokes- didate receives.
nal Revenue Service is a sign of over- woman for House Majority Leade{

that violates "'the level playing field
principle': allowing them to compete
· WASHINGTON
Private with the government.
. I~ 1111i ~~~~~Jli~all!lql .a~j,,
In ltiier to Ediicaiip.g ~ec.retruy
sion by die ooucat10n Dcpanment to Richard Riley. a coalition of associ·
slice il~ interest rate for direct con- ations representing lenders, guaransolidated student loans. but the tors and secondary markets. chalagency says the move will trim hun- lenged the legality of the interest rJ.te
dreds and even thousands of dollars reduction, saying it would require
off the final tab of some people's col· - ~~nautborized sj!ending of federal
lege loans.
funds. Among the signers is the Stu·
The Education Dcpanment decid- dent Loan Marketing Association.
ed on July I to cut the interest rate known as Sallie Mae. the federally
. .from 8.25 percent to 7.46 percent for chartered. privately financed corpothose who want to consolidate their ration that'ts the nation"s largest buy. direct student loans with federally er of government-guaranteed student
.
: guaranteed student loans before Sept. loans.
.. 30. The interest rate cut means that.
"We believe the proposed plan is
: · on average, people will save about arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of
· $50 for S1.000 borrowed over the life discretion. and in excess of statutory
of their loans. the department said. authority,'"the •groups wrote in a letSomeone who consolidates about ter Tuesday.
·
$19,000 in loans will save nearly
They added that "'the proposed
$1.000over the standard IO.year loan action also would destabilize the
. period.
student loan markets, rupture the
But private lenders, who comprise cooperative public/private panner. the other component of the guaran· ship that has helped to make the
teed student loan program. worry the American educational system availgovernment will lure away students able to millions. and violate the lev·
with lower interest rates. They have el playing field principle that the
protested the move. calling it an Congres.~ and the administration have
unauthorized use of federal money promoted."

a

La.

UMIT 2 PLEASE ADD PURCH 99e

Free Cash!
Stop In The Store .
For Details

Warzecha said that applicants for
flood relief should apply for aid
through all agencies offering it. not
just through the Red Cross. If a family applies for assislance through the
Red Cross. they should lilso apply
through FEMA. and vice versa
More than I,200 families have
received assistance from the Red
Cross statewide during the latest
flood emergency. Red Cross disa.,ter
assistance is free through donations
made by the American people.
Services include replacement of
needed items such as clothing. bedding, hot water heaters and other
necessities.
The Red Cross does not provide
cash assistance 10 flood victims. but
rather. issues vouchers through local.
merchants for items needed.

Government lowers
Federal campaign fund for 2000
consolidation interest short of dollars and participants
rate on student loans
By KALPANA SRINIVASAN
Associated Press Writer

$199
Steak................. .
BUCKET BEEF CUBED

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Red Cross
center will
close Friday
Two weeks after the flooding
which devastated parts of Meigs
County, the American Red Cross Service Center in Meigs County will
close.
After Friday, services through the
American Red Cross will be provided through the Red Cross Disaster
Headquarters in Cambridge.
Flood victims still in need of assistance are advised to contact the Red
Cross' toll-free telephone number in
Cambridge. 877-753-7324.
According to Kristin Wanocha of
the Red Cross, applications processed
through the headquaners will be
processed in the same manner a.~
applications submitted through the
local center. which has.been operating through the Meigs County
Department of Human Services.

LAY'S
POTATO
CHIPS

CAMPBELL'S
CHICKEN
NOODLE OR
TOMATO SOUP

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 Number 55

Baeon •••••••••••••••
USDA ~BOICE BONELESS BEEF llt.$139

Gallipolis,
New Haven
teams win
PageS

•

2/$

SECOND ST.

Sports

July 9, 1998

6 PK 24 OZ NR

S•llllay
IIM·IOPM
,291

Thursday

President pushes for legislation
curbing· child access to firearms
WASHINGTON (AP) - Decrying an outbreak of school violence.
President Clinton today called on
states and Congress to lighten restrictions on children's access to guns.
"II is still too easy for deadly
weapons to wind up in the hands of
children, by intent or by accident,"
Clinton said in a White House
announcement auended by the mo1her of one of the four girls killed in a
March 24 schoolyard shooting in
Jonesboro, Ark.
In remarks introducing the president. Suzann Wilson, mother of II year-old Jonesboro victim Briuhney
V~~mer. said she had come to the
White House not to seek sympathy
but to let her family's tragedy be a
lesson for others around the country.
'"To every gun owner in America

Four-wheeler wreck victim dies
A 21-year-old Racine man
involved in a four-wheeler vehicle
accident near Racine Saturday
evening died early this morning at
Grant Medical Center in Columbus
from injuries sustained in the wreck.
according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
Dead is Ronald V. Jones II who.
according to the State Highway
Patrol, wa.~ driving a 1998 Honda allterrain vehicle ea.~tbound on state

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages
6

Ca!epdar
Qpss!f!eds
Comjq
Editorials
Local

Soorts
Weather

8-9·10

u·

2
3

'

J

Lotteries
OBlQ
Pick 3: 000; Pldt 4: 0832
Saper l.Gao: 15-16-3().37-40-47
Kicker: 769945

ltYA.

0.0, 3: 624; DaiiJ 4: 7044
0 t991 Olio Vllley -

.. Co.

Route 338, reportedly with no headlights on, when he pulled into the
path of a vehicle driven by Roger L.
Durst, 44, Orange, Texas. who was
making a left tum into a private driveway.
The wreck occum:d near the Yel·
lowbusb Creek bridge near Racine.
Jones was transported to Grant
Medical Center following the acci·
dent.
'•

I want to say, please. please, for the
sake of the children, lock up the
guns," Ms. Wilson said in an emotion-&lt;:hoked plea. ""Don'tlel your gun
become an instrument of murder.
Don'tlPt what happened in Jonesboro
happen in your town.··
Clinton expressed his suppon for
a bipartisan Senate bill that would
hold adults criminally responsible if
they allow children easy access 10
loaded firearms .
"We can't shrug our shoulders and
say accidents happen. or some kid&lt;
are beyond hope." Clinton said.
'"That is a cop-out Every one of us
must step up to our responsibility. "
Clinton has spoken out frequentlyon youth gun violence in the weeks
since a spate of shooting incidents at
schools, most recently a May 21

.

attack on students at a high .school in
Springfield. Ore. During a visit to the
school last month, Clinton endon;ed
legislation introduced by Oregon
Sens. Ron Wyden and Gordon Smith
to require that students caught with
guns be held by officials for 72 hou"'
of observation and evaluation.
At today's event. Clinton said he
remained mystified by the school
shootings.
·
"This recent series of killings in
our schools has seared the heart of
America about a.s much as anything
I can remember in a long. long
time." he said in a somber speech.
The White House also announced
today new federal regulations. based
on a directive Clinton issued in June
1997, that require gun shops to post
signs and issue written warnings
regarding youth handgun possession.

Judge seals
records of
fired news
reporter
CINCINNATI (API - A judg~
has sealed records in the ca s~ of a
tired n~wspapc:r reponer accused of
using private voic~ mail information
to write stories critical of th~ Chi&lt;juita banana company.
Michael Gallagh~r is challen ging
a subpoena ordering him to testify
before a grand jury about accusations
he raided Chiquita Brands International Inc.'s voice mail system.
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Norben Nadel on Wednesday
said Gallagher's effon to hav~ the
subpoena thrown out will b&lt;' kept
confidential because the proc~dure is
part of secret grand jury proc~edings .
Gallagher. hklawyer and a special
prosecutor declined comm~ nt.
The judge postponed a hearing on
Gallagher's challenge to the subpoe- :..,.
na until July 22 and also ordered it be
held in private .
Nadel. who took over the case
Wednesday. also refused requests by
reponers for access to a court
reporter's record &lt;lf the judge's 40minute meeting in hi s chambers
Wednesday with lawyers for both
sides.
Gallagher could face some tough
choic~s if h~ must appc:ar b&lt;'for~ t h~
grand jury. said David Marburger. a
Cleveland law yer who has defe nded
news organi zations and handled various cases involvin g First Amendment issues.
Gallagher could dedin~ to answer
questions if he assert s that his
responses might incrimin at~ him . He
also could risk going to jail 1f prosecutol'i tried to have him held in contempt of coun for not cooperating.
Marburger said.
"To force you to r~vea l confi dential sources. they'd have to get a coun
order to do it.' ' Marburger said .
The gmnd jury and a speci al prosecutor are looking inro whether prnpeny. including contents of m nliuen tial voil.'c! mail messages. were !o.lok:n
from Chiquita. the Cin cinnati -ba,ed
wo rld wiue ex porter of hana na' .
Chiquita 's ma nag~me nt all eges Ga llag her used the voice-mai I mformation for the stories that The Cincin nati Enquirer publi shed May 3 in an
18-page section.
On June 2~. the newspaper
renounced the stories.

Congress nearing OK.of IRS overhaul, expanded taxpayers' rights
WASHING1oN (AP) - Just four
months from Election Day. Congres.~
is poised to ship·President Clinton a
widely populur bill revamping the
IRS and expanding the rights of
Americans battling the tax collector.
The Senate was expected to
approve the mea.•ure by an overwhelming bipartisan margin today.
two weeks after the House endorsed
it by 402·8. When Clinton affixes his
promised signature. it will murk the
most profound changes in the agency
since 1952.
'"With this legislation, we bring a .
promise of hope to honest taxpayers
and hardworking -employees who
have waited far too lona. We bring
responsibility IIKI greaJer openness."
one of the aulhori, Senate Finance
Committee Chairman William Rodl.
R-Dcl., said Wednesday.
'"While the IRS will never be
popular;" said Sen..ltidwd Bryan.
D-~.• the bill will.a'Cilc •·a more
eff'tcientlltd UICr•frieodly·scrvic:e."
Praise also flowed from the Clio·

ton administration. which resisted
congressional attempt.~ to overbaui
the agency until after Roth's com·
millee held hearings la.~t September.
lhooc televised ses~lll)&lt; featured
taxpayers and IRS employees who
wove tales of abusive agency conduct, creating unstoppable political
momentum for change.
'"This bill will help give Amcri·
can.~ an IRS that is not only off peopie's backs but is, more importantly,
on their side," said Vice President AI
Gore.
In CliiC measure of the political
boost lawmakers expected from the
bill's passage. Senate leaden delayed
final passase until today after
Wedncsday"s day·lona debate ran
put when it 1:011kt easily be hip·
lighted in evenina television news

government. II also would forbid the
IRS from forcing people to pay interest and some penalties if !he agency
did not notify them of the problem
within 18 months of filing their
return.
A nine-m~mber board - including six private citizens - would
oversee the operations of the
102.000-employee agency. Workeri;
could be fired for hiding mistakes,
and the power and number of the
IRS"s taxpayer advocates would be
~xpanded.

Supponen said the measure
would help mold an agency thai taxpayers would find more accessible
and ·less intimidating.
'"I belie-re voluntary compliance is
JOins to incrase ,because people will
find it easier to pay their taxes ... said
broldrasts.
Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.
11ie bill woukt shift lhe burden of
:Vet expens said the changes in
proof from ihe taxpayer to lhe IRS in taxjllyers' rights woukt affect rela·
many tax coun cases; and make it· liVely few people. Of the 212 million
:easb' for 11omeonc wiMinaa tau• ' penooal and business returns filed
to have !heir CO$IS n:imbuned by lhc annually, only about 4 l'(lillion to ~

l
.)

.

:

·~ ~"

. ..

~·

·-·---

---

million end up in dispute with the
IRS. said Phil Brand. the agency's
former chief compliance officer now
with the accounting li nn KPMG
Peat Marwick.
Criticism came from a few
Democ r~t s, who focu.&lt;ed not on the
bill's primary thrust but on im.lividual provisions.· Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan. D-N.Y.. predicted that
giving the IRS the burden of proof
could produce more inlnlsive audits.
.. Be warned;: he said.
Others said the rich would benelit from a provision shonening the
waiting period from 18 months to 12
months before investors qualify for
the reduced 20 percent capital gains
tax .
For the most part, bipaniWL•hip
pre~£~~iled. fueled by the bill"s targeting of what Sen. Richard Durbin. DIll .• called '"lhe aacncy we love to
hate.'" 'It was a shal1l contr.L~ to the
bitter baules bcina w.,cd over managed health care. public support for
priva~ scllools

IIKI other issues a.•

campaigning heats up for the Novem·
her 's elt!f.:' tions.

Lawmakers' antipathy towaru the
IRS ha.' b&lt;'en building for several
years. A$3.3 bill ion moJemiwtion of
agency computel'i was deemed a
nop. and a bipanisan congre." ional
commis., ion concluded la.'t year that
an outside board of directol'i ' hould
address management woes.
The bill was expected to cost
$1 2.9 billion over the nelCI decade,
mostly as a result of lost collections
of taxes and pc:nalties. To pay for it.
!he measure would mise revenues,
mostly by leuing some wealthy.
elderly investor.; convert ex·isting
individual retirement accounts into a
different kind of IRA.
The legislation also would:
- Make it ea.~ier for people to
avoid responsibility for tax problems
cause by former spouses.
-'-Let taxpayers sue the govern~
ment for up to $100.000 for civil
damages caused by IRS negligence.

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 9, 1998

:Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

,

Friday, July 10
AccuWeather• forecast for

What they are saying
elsewhere around Ohio

jobs do not pay
enough to suppon a family ...
because
of
women's liberation
many
mothers work
and their kids
arc sent to day
care or arc
latch-key kids,
and ... get into
Vio- Wattenberg
trnuhl c.
lencc is widespread in the schools

I wonder whether Mrs. McNeil
believes all this from her observations of life in the small town of
Ponland. Mich. I don' t agree with
her conclusion, but she does present
a fonnidable and eye-opening list of
changes for the worse . She wins the
"More Change Now" category. The
" More Change Then·· award goes to
Roben Hauser of Glen Ridge , N.J.
(one of many entrants reading the
New York Post) who notes that the
first pan of the century produced
cars, radio, electrification and air
and on the streets ... a person has to travel, and writes: "For a person livhe on guard all the time sn a" not to ing in an ·isolated rural pan of Amerget mugged. Sex is everywhere ... ica at the stan of the century. reliant
illegitimate chtldrcn arc cummon, on horse-drawn carriages or horsesexually transmitted diseases arc hack riding for travel, the arrival of
rampant."
automobiles offered a revolutionary
She ~.:nnlinues : " lbc gnvcrnmcnl increase in mobility. The computer
is hug~ and knows all your husincss. on my desk and the VCR on my TV
Chun:ll ullcmlun~.:c is t.Jown . Chil- haven '1 changed my life to a compadren Men ·1 taught patriotism. ... mhlc degree ."
Kudcncss is everywhere . in stores,
The "Most Humorous" award
on the street. and especially on the goes to Lillian Fishel (a r~ader of
roads .... The elderly arc often put Lancaster. Pa.'s New Era) whose
into nursin~ homes to live out their choice of memories of the good old
lives. i\hortion is very common. and days concerns a time when "conassisted sui~.:idc is hccoming more doms came llat, in folders, 3-6-12 to
prevalent. ... Many people arc spiri- a pack Husband had to roll 'em -tually p&lt;Ktr. I feel that the changes in testing them like hospital nurses and
the last 25 years have hecn phenom- doctors, by blowing into them to sec
enal."
if they had any holes in them ....

. CHINA'S

H()Trf~

SPORT...

Tbe Ironton Tribune, July 2

Now, they just grab lhem from a box
on the wall." Mrs. Fishel is 86 years
old.
The entries concerning the next
reappearance of Murphy -- as i~
4
'

IND.

Murphy 's Law:· where "every-

thing that can go wrong, will go
wrong, at the worst possible time " - were disarpointing. No award.
Also no award for " Best Slogan."
The quite serious wjnner of the
"This is a Stupid Contest" category
goes to George Bromley of Falls
Church, Va., (a reader of the Washington Times). He says "the truest
measure of a time is the length of its
shadow. Unfortunately, the 20th
century's opening decades cast one
which was long, wide and dark ."
World War I. he notes. yielded com-

•leoturnbusl84·

President Clinton almost turned
his China trip into a domestic success, but he's back in hot water. ·
Whether he deserves to be depends
on how he handles Taiwan policy.
By raising the human rights issue
in a dignified, if restrained, way in
his Tiananmen Square press conference with China's president, Clinton
: : The Cincinnati Enquirer, July 2 - •
largely quieted U.S. critics who had
urged him not to make a China trip .
The line' item veto is dead. Or maybe not.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Coun appeared to deal a 6-3 death blow to
R-Ga.,
for instance, said last
the 1996 Line Item Veto Act, which authorized the president to delete items
Wednesday,
"I think if you reach out
from certain spending bills.
to
a
billion
people and talk about
Too bad. The act was an effective way of "curbing Congress' appetite for
open
markets
and expand the zone
mindless. unnecessary and wasteful spending.'' Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
of
freedom
on
the planet, that's a
said. noting that 43 of the nation 's 50 governors have such power.
pretty good investment for the
End of story? Not handly.
.
.
Court dissenters pointed out paths fot Congress to fix the act without world ." Even the Clinton-hating
Wall Street Journal editorial page
amending the Constitution.
was praising the trip.
Congress 1s already exploring those paths.
. .
But after Clinton personally reitEven in a brief period, the 1996 act saved taxpayers nextly $800 m1lhon .
erated
the administration's "three
Congress should make its restoration a top priority.
no's" policy toward Taiwan. he was
vilified again, with the Journal
branding it "Bill's Kowtow."
The three no's are that the U.S.
docs .not support independence for
Taiwan; it does not support two Chinas or one China, one Taiwan; and it
does oot support Taiwan's admission
to any international body in which
statehood is a qualification for membership.
Contrary to assenions by Clinton's critics, the policy is not new.
But it was new for the president to
state it himself and on Chinese soil -

Berry's World

- in Shanghai.
And the circumstances -before a panel
whose make. up ensured
that the Tai-

U.S. responded by moving aircraft
carriers into the neighborhood.
The cri.sis is _believed to have triggered a White House reassessment
of China policy and a detennination
to establish friendly relations. Critics fear that the policy has gone
wan
1ssue ovcrboand, with Clinton excessively
would arise -- yielding to China without getting
suggest extra- anythingi n return.
ordinary ClinTaiwan policy. however, can also
ton effons to be seen as part of a sensible longKondracke
please China.
tenn U.S. strategy-- one favored by
What all this means can't be three former U.S. presidents and
known for sure . Taiwanese officials several fonner secretaries of state.
fear-- and Clinton's enemies surely including Henry Kissinger.
will assert-- that U.S. policy is now
That strategy. as Kissinger put it
on a slippery slope toward abandon-- in a Newsweek article, is to help
ment of a democratic Taiwan in China "emerge as a responsible
hopes of appeasing authoritarian member of the international commuChina.
nity with interest in regional and
On the other hand, Clinton's pol- global stability and progress.' '
There 's no question that there's a
icy could just as easily be taken as a
prudent warning to Taiwan not to risk China might just get economideclare independence and provoke cally and militarily stronger without
an international crisis.
hccoming more responsible or
China and the rest of the world democratic-- and then pose a risk to
consider Taiwan legally to be a part its neighbors and U.S. interests in
of China. A declaration of indepen- the Far East. It could become in the
dence would be a challenge to which 21st century what Japan -was in the
China might feel it has to respond 1930s and 1940s.
forcefully, even militarily, and the
But il also could become what
U.S., as Taiwan's protector, might Clinton sometimes prematurely
find itself in a confrontation with indicates he thinks it already is -- a
China.
U.S. strategic partner.
In 1996, the two nations were in
To make sure it heads in that
near-confrontation over Taiwan, direction will require incredibly
when China conducted guided mis- skillful U.S. diplomacy that mixes
sile ·exercises ncar the island . The pressure , incentives and rewards.

The damage done by this most recent

that American
troops used a

wave ofjournalistic wrongdoing will have
a chilling effect on the crnft arYl funher
diminish the public's respoct fer the wuk
news organizations do --'- a n:spect thai
already had declined noliceabl• in recent

WASHINGTON - These 11re tm
times for the craft of journalism.
For three consecutive days last week,
the Cincinnati Enquirer ran a front-page
OjXJiogy for an investigrove st~ \\hose
findings it admits were based in pat on
information stolen by one of its reporters.
Then, one day after the newspaper's
last mea rulp1. the Cable News Netwuk
- ~ a lmldcast
it aired last
month The a;tion came mthe wake of a
finding of "serious faults" in the st~ by
an independent review thai CNN commissioned afitr the repM drew sharp crit-

deadly nerve
gas on U.S.
soldi-·rs who
defe--ted to
. years.
Laos during
lhe Vietnam
The cynicism people once reserved fer
War.
The
politicians now is targeted at journalists, as
report, which
well. This loss of confidence in the media
aired on June
is fueled not only by revelations of wrong7, was panned
doing, but also by the JQ!dering behavier
widely by miliWickham
of news organizations. Fer fll" 100 many,
tary
officials
lhe line bc!wccn hard news and the
and questioned by journalists both inside voyeurism of slt(lCt'lllil"ket tabloids has
and out of CNN.
been trampled.
The netw&lt;rl's over-reliance on lhe
News organizations thai piously refuse
icism.
In the Enquirer's rqxrt, the newspaper story's producers to verify the serious to be the ftrst to print salacious stories
accused Otiquita Brards Intemalional, charges raised in their piece wa.&lt; a mis- about public ligures are quick with
Inc. -the world's largest bmana produc- take. Such allegations shoold be subject to accountS of such "news" once the superer - of a broiKI mngc of unscrupulous gn:atcr scrutiny by others in the news- malc:ct press has rcpCJ1althem. Somebkc CNN - bill" lite line between news
busines! p-actices, including neallesSiy galhering (:ro:CSS.
CNN's error was cornpoondcd when and llOIISell'1e by allowing pOliticians to
exposing lani'eds of people todangerws
Time magazine. under a.n agreement with aoss-&lt;Rss as joomalists between their
pesticides.
,
The company denied the charges and lite network to share some material, pub- forays into the political ~~rena.
Such practices open media organizathe Enquirer quickly becbd away fran lished a printed vemon of the repooshontions up to charges thai they fava- profit
the suxy afitr saying that repooa- Michael ly after the lxoa:lcml aired.
''CNN alone beln rt:SjXXISibility fa- over principle.
Gallagher had stoleit voico-mail =xdBoth CNN, owned by 1lme Wtrner,
ings thll were a C(flll1l( pill of his inves- both the television repliS and fll' the
ligMiw repM. In alditioo Ill lite mnaiat. jXinll:d IK1icle," Tan JOOnm, pcsidertt and the Enquira", owned by Gannett Co.,
lite newspaper apd to pay Cbiquita of the CNN News ~ said in a stale- Inc.. moved qticldy Ill di9;lpllne sane of
l3rtfth men 1111111 SIO tni11im in an . ment aired on the network.
the people involved in IJ1Xb:ing lite
lltpteudtitlld &lt;llf&lt;i&lt;Ollt sealernelc.
Unfatunalely, his conlrition comes offending stories. The neWI'fllpet fired
CNN's f8Ull pas involved an allegalion too late.
~andCNN disdwgedpocb:a-s

reeon

~

•Poor kid! I feel really sorry for him. He's
got a very slow MODEM.·

.~Today in history
:::By The' A1soclated Preas

·: • Today is Thursday, July 9. the 1.90th day of 1998. There are 175
:: 1!ays left in the year.
.
:. : Today's Highlight in HIStory : .
.
~:.:: On July 9, 1896, William Jenntng_
s Bryan caused a se~~auon at
· ': 1 hc Democratic national convention tn Chtcago wtlh hts . cross of
:-:
of the gold standard. He went
. go ld" speech denouncing .supporters
.
: . :On to win the party's nomtna11on . .
On this date :
. ·
h ld
:
: : : In 1S40, England's King Henry VIII had hts SIX-mont -o mar. · 'riage to his fourth wife, Anne of Cleves, annulled.

. --··-·

.

. . - -

. ..

~

.

.

. -

.. .

-·---- --

.

.. .

W. VA.

munism , fascism . Nazism . terror,

war and genocide, and took mankind
to the brink of nuclear annihilation .
Bromley concludes: "The shadow
of our time has yet 10 fall . Only
future gcncralions will be able to
determine its shape and size."
I learned some important things
from the wonderful respondents
reading the wonderful newspapers
that carry this column. Mr. Bromley
is right; you can't take the measure
of an era until its shadow is fully
cast. Although I had not thought so
before, I think that Mr. Hauser is
also probably right. Insofar as we
can now measure it, the first qua.ner
of the century engendered changes
of greater human significance.
But, notwithstanding "some of my
gloomy readers, I will end on an
optimistic note. Suppose the shadow
of the current era yields miracle
medicines extending a healthy lifespan, a great increase in free-market
prosperity and global liberty yielding less war. Then Hauser will be
wrong becaus5&gt; Bromley is right!
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the author of "Values
Matter Most" and is the host of
the weekly public television program "Think Tank."

For instance , the U.S. has to
fonhrightly criticize Chinese human
rights abuses, but not let human
rights be the sole basis of U.S.China relations. On trade, the U.S.
has to insist on more open markets .
The U.S. has to insist that China not
transfer missile and weapons tech·
nology. using China's craving. for
U.S . high technology as a lever.
On Taiwan. the U.S. needs to
make it absolutely clear that it will
tolerate no intimidation ,o(, the
island, will insure that Taiwan can
continue to deter att"ck and will
encourage peaceful rapprochement
hctwccn the lwo cnlities.

China insists thm the U.S. not
deploy ballistic missile defenses in
the Asian region. ~tsscrting this &amp;.:on-

smutcs "'containment ·· of China.
But the U.S. cant he the guarantor
of security i~ the region unless it
maintains its nuclear umbrella-- not
only over Japan and South Korea.
but over Taiwan as well.
President Clinton treated China
with due deference to an emerging
great nation . It's also necessary.
however. that China understand that
the United States is and plans to
remain the wnrld's leading power
and force for peace. That requires
finnne3s as well as politeness, and
Taiwan is a good place to demonstrate what the U.S. is all about.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the news·
paper of Capitol Hill.)

..

'

.. ...

Tod_ay's weather forecast
By The Associated Preas
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Fog until mid-morn ing ...Then partly cloudy and hazy.
Highs in the upper 80s. Northwest
wind 5 to 10 mph .
Tonight... Mostly clear early ...Then
fog developing late this evening.
Lows in the mid '60s. West wind 5 to
10 mph.
Friday ... Fog until mid-morn-

By The Associated Press
It looks like a nice weekend ahead

across Ohio.
The outlook for the weekend
shows warm and pleasant temperatures and dry skies.
Tonight skies will be mostly clear
with cool and dry conditions continuing . Lows will be in the 55 to 65
degree range.
On Friday. a high pressure system
will move across the state and result
in mostly sunny skies. H!ghs will
mnge from the mid- iO to the mid-80s
across the state.
The high pressure center is expected to stay over the state over the
weekend and could keep Ohio dry
through the weekend with highs in
the 80s and lows in the 60s.

Erma S. Johnston

James Ray Parsons

Today's Uves~~ck report
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio-Indiana direct hog prices at selected buying points Wednesday a.&lt; provided by
the U.S. Depanment of Agnculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: weak to 1.001.50 lower; demand light to moderate with movement moderate.
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
·points 36.50-38.00. few j6.00; plants
37.00-39.00. few 3950.

Meigs EMS l~gs 8 calls

Gallipolis livestock auction results
Producers Live~tock Market
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, July 8:
Feeder Cattle.

200-300# St. $67-$74. Hf. $60$70. 300-400# St. $72' $84. Hf. $60$69. 500-650# St. $65-$72Hf. $62$71; 650-800* St. $60-$67; Hf. $58$64.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ll:l-110)
Com••aitr Newap~.per Holdli~J~olx.

Publi~hed every afternoon, Monday lhrough
Friday, Ill Court St, Pom~roy, ·Ohio, by the
Ohto Valley P\tllishing Compiny. Second clas.s
posltJC peid at Pomeroy, OhiG.
Metaber:: The Associated Press 1nd tbe Ohio
Newspaper Association.
POitalller: Send address corrections to The
Daily Sentinel, II t Coun S1., Pomeroy, Ohto
45769.

SUBSCRJmON RATES

·

By Carrier or Motor RMte

SINGLE COPY PRICE

ticcs.
A cour.;c in jownalism ethics ought. to
a requirement for media employmcnl
Thooc who did not take such a class in college ought. to be male to sit through an irthous: ethics scssioo - like the one the
Poynter Institute fer Media Studies conducts in ncw!roOII'IS around the nation.
The B&lt;son GIOO. and New Republic
could have benefited from Sid1 a requirement. IB month, the Globe firod Patricia
Smith alia" she milled manufacturing
quotes and people in her column. Back in
May,lhe New Rqlublic disctdgul writer
Stephen Gtm;s fer much the same reasons.
News apnizalions have to move
quickly to JI'CVCIII a replay of the misdeeds of the past tine II10IIh, (I" lnce
for a futtl"e as llOOblcd as the recent past.
~

. ·'

Minnie D. Clem. 87, Coolville. died Wednesday. July 8. 1998. at her home.
She was born Jan . 9. 191 i. in Mill Creek. W.Va., daughter of the l:ite
William and Mallie Herron Bennett. She was a homemaker.
She is ~uryived by a daughter and son-in-law ... Hel~.n and pi mer Kaylor
of Reed.wtlle; a son and daughter-m-law, Dorsey Bud and J&amp;n Burkhammer of Coolville; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren and two
great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Ray Burkhammer; a second husband, Kenneth Clem; one son, Rtchard Burkhammer; a granddaughter. Judy Deweese; a sister, "Grace Rasmussen. .
.
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at the Whtte Funeral Home 1n
Coolville wilh the Rev. Helen Cline officiating. Burial will follow in Coolville
Cemetery.
.
·
Friends may call Friday, 7-9 p.m. at lhe funeral home.

ing ... The.n mostly sunny.·Highs in the
lower 80s. .
Extended forecast
Friday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows
in the upper 50s.
Saturday...Mostly clear. Highs in
the mid 80s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in the
Enna S. Johnston. 87. Columbus. formerly of U:mg Bottom. died Wedneslower 60s and highs in the upper 80s.
Monday ... Panly cloudy. Lows in day. July 8. 1998, in the Fmnklin Woods Ca.re C~nter, Columbus.
Born Feb. 10. 1911. in Archer. Idaho-, daughter of the late Bert and Rhoana
the mid 60s and highs in the lower
Hatch
Atkinson . she was a homemaker and a 'n1ember of the Relief Society
90s.
and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
.
She is survived by two daughters and a son-in-law. Florence and Clifford Jernigan and Alta Li_ndber~ . both Qf Columbus; .three sons and daughters-in-law. Robert and Faye Scnmsher. Tracy and Cheryl Scnmsher and Ben
and Pam Scrimsher. all of Columbus: 10 grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren;
one brother, Theron Atkinson, Utah .
Sunset today will be at 9:02 p.m.
.
She
was
preceded in death by her husband. Lewis Johnston in 1978.
Sunrise Friday will be at 6:12 a.m.
Services
will be held Saturday. I0 a.m. atlhe Schoedmger Htlltop FunerThe recond high for this date in
al
Home,
3030
W. Broad St.. Columbus, where friend&lt; may call Thursday
Columbus was 105 set in 1936. The
and
Friday,
6-8
p.m.
record low was 49 set in 1963.
Graveside
services
will be held Saturday, 2 p.m. at Bald Knob Cemetery,
Across the nation
Two fronts hanging across the Portland. under direction of the Cremeens Funeral Home. Racine.
nation's eastern third were bringing
na.~ty weather today to the alreadysoaked Nonheast and, by afternoon.
James Ray PliJ"SOnS. 69, Racine, died Thursday, July 9. 1998, at his home.
the Southeast and Gulf Coa.&lt;t.
Born Oct. "18, 1928. in East I..ynn, W.Va., son of the late Edward and
A cold front pushing south across
Maude Clay Parsons, he was a Baptist. cenified pipe welder on area powthe Northeast was expected to bring
er plants construction, a construction worker and fanner. He was an Army
showers and storms along the nonhern Great Lakes and parts of the veteran.
He is survived by his wife~ Ma.nha Virginia Bateman Parsons. to whom
Northeast.
he was married Sept. 19. 1964. in Oakland. Md.; two sons and daughtersIn New York. Vennont and New in-law, Ray and Susan Parsons of Racine and Dave and Debbie Parsons of
Hampshire. the weather could be Pont and; four daughters and sons-in-law, Alice and Bryan Sweannger of Lansevere. featuring hat I. heavy ram and caster. Nola Young of Athens, Sue and Vernon Miller of West Jefferson, N.C ..
damaging winds.
and Pa.rn and Keith Carter of Patriot; ten grandchildren; two stepgrandchtldren and five great-grandchildren.
Also surviving are four si~ters, Mabel Merrill of Huntington, W.Va., Esta
Imes of Huntington. Ruby Mills of East Lynne, and Violetta Amott of CanU.S. '2-3, 230-260 lbs. 33.50- dler. N.C.; several nieces and nephews.
36.50; 210-230 lbs. 29.50-33-.50. ·
He is preceded in death by his first wife. Rolla Mne McComas; two brolhSows: most Iy steady.
ers. Herman and Roy Parsons; a sister, Pearl Clay.
U.S. 1-3, 300-400 lbs. 22.50Services will be held Friday. I p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral Home,
. 24.00; 400-500 lbs. 24.00-26.00; Racine, with the Rev. Vernon Perry officiating. Burial will be in the Carmel
500-600 lbs. 26.00-28.00. few over Cemetery.
600 lbs 29.00-30.50.
Fliends may call tonight, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Boars; over 300 lbs. 15.00-17.00;
under 300 lbs. 21.00-23.00.
E;stimated receipts: 33,500.

(Feeder Cattle sale is the second
Wednesday of each month)
Cull Cows
·
Well Muscte&lt;I/Fieshed $37-$41
Medium/ Average $32-$36.
Thin/Light $28-$32. Bulls $41$49.
Back To The Fanns:
Cow/Calf Pairs $350-615; Bred
Cows $250-$550; Baby Calves $4160; Goats $5-$48.
. For free on-farm visits, please
call 614-446-9696.

One: Montb ................................ $8. 70
One Yar.... ............................... SIOC.OO

April Oliver and Jack Smith. Pam Hill, the
report's senior cxccuti ve producer
resigned.
But a lot more needs to be done 10
revetll: jotmalism 's skid in the coon of
public opinion.
Journalism once again must bocorne a
place for professional practitioneos, not a
staging area where idle politicians go to
write a column er impcrsonatc a TV
newscaster. Media organizalions should
develop a code of conduct thai governs
their news-gathering and reponing pra::-

Minnie D. Clem

Nice weather forecast
for weekend across Ohio

One Week ......•..•...••....•..•.•..•.... .$2.00

- -- --· ·· ----- --- ---·· --~---------1
~

I

Alvin Chutes, 63, Coolville, died Thursday. July 9, 1998, at St. Joseph's
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. Arrangements will be announced later by the
White Funeral Home in Coolville.

l
'

Goldie Bryant

Alvin Chutes

Black clouds darken ·j ournalistic skies
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service

FEMA establishes recovery centers
. Goldie Elizabelh Bryant. 82. Middlepon, died on Wednesday, July 8, 1998
at Overbrook Center in Middlepon following a brief illness.
She was born on November 26. 1915 in Desheler, daughter of the late
Alben a.nd Oral Reed Ackennan. She was a homemaker, and a home missionary affiliated with the Assemblies of God.
Surviving are three daughters: Marianna Schmul, Homewonh. Rebecca
Delong, Pomeroy, a.nd Marilla Maynard, Salem. and nine grandchildren.
Graveside services will be held on Friday. July 10, 1998 at 10:30 a.m. at
Rocksprings Cemetery in Pomeroy.
There will be no calling hours.
Arrangements are under lhe direction of Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland.

·1Mansfield I 82" I•

Taiwan tests Clinton's Asia strategy
By Morton Kondracke

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

Surprise! My readers are gloomy!

Has mere been more change in
America at the beginning of the cen111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
tury (from 1900 to 1925) or at the
614-992-2158 • Fax 992-2157
end of the century (from 1975 to
2000)? 1 hat was the general topic of
a contest, with six sub-contests, that
appeared in this space in late April.
The ~ ntries surprised me. Despite
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
a monumental glitch in the e-mail
ROBERT L WINGETT
address originally presented. I
Publisher
received almost a hundred responses, almost all via snail mail, many
more than I expected of a contest
where respondents actually had to
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
write an essay. I salute them all .
Genert1l Managar
Controller
More surprising. to an optimist
like me, was a tone of pessimism.
fatalism and resignation in so many
of the best letters. I expected respondents to talk about recent change -for the better: laptops. Vlagra.
Olestra, big bookstores, cable TV,
increased longevity, female athletes.
the TV zapper, cell phones, the end
of the Cold War, foreign travel, the
omnipresence of bagels. But most of
the comment was about change lior
the worse .
By The Associated Press
·
Thus. contestant Jani s Fleglcr
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio McNeil (a reader of The Sentinel
newspapers:
Standard in Portland, Mich .)
Akron Beacon Joomal, July 6
reminds us that morality trumps
The U.S. Supreme Coun ruled 12 years ago that sexual harassment was technology. She writes: " ... many
a fonn of discrimination in the workplace. A deluge of lawsuits followed.
Paula Jones hasn't been alone. In this rapidly expanding area of the law, the
nation's lower couns ha.ve struggled to keep pace, issuing a hodge-podge of
opinions that have created confusion and contradictions, more than anything
else.
Into this thicket, stepped the Supreme Coun last week. and thankfully, it
didn't make mailers worse. In two separate cases, the same 7-2 majority
brought needed clarity and coherence to the law on sexual harassment in the
workplace. Both employers and employees should be pleased with the
coun's work.
Where lhe couns have struggled is in trying to define precisely the liability of employers. In this area. the high coun made much progress.
The result might be fewer lawsuits, although the goal of the coun wasn 't
to invite or discourage legal action. It properly sought to draw bright lines.
defining rights and responsibilities that promise greater order in a nearly
· chaotic lead of lhe law.

Massachusetts is reeling this week after the results of a test of prospective teachers reached the!apers. It seems nearly a third of those taking the
· test could barely re~d an write.
One finds it pretty hard to believe that Massachusetts is the only place
·where a statistic like lhis could hit the news. If Ohio tested some of its
. .prospective teachers, it is likely that it, too, would have its share of students
who were just nut qualified to be in the classroom.
So, what does this mean? Simple. Pa.n of the problem in our education
-: :System here and across the country is that some of the people who are stand:· :ing in front of a chalkboard shouldn't be.
: : · Perhaps we need to weed out some of lhe incompetent veterans and
·: screen the incoming teachers more effectively. After that, m1x new graduates
: • with experienced professionals. The mix of experience and enthusiasm just
:: might help us achieve what we really want - a better education for our chit:: dren .

...---Local briefs--

OHIO Weather

Thurlday, July 9, 1998

By Ben Wattenberg

'Lstah{isfrd in 1948

Page2

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Daily. ....................................... 35 Cents
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Reader Services
Correction Polley

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Wednesday, July 8
Lisa Mullins. Rolland Searles.
Mary Dowell, Ma.ry Elliott, Gladys
Blankenship. Lillian Bun, Donald
Jones. Nicolas Wooldridge and
Rebecca Thompson.
Birth
Wednesday, July 8
Mr. and Mrs. William Speakman.
Wellson, son.
Veterans Memorial
July 8 admissions -- Pamela
Ingles, Middtepon.
July 8 discharges-- Ashley
Roach.

O.r ...U -.en .. oil llorieo lo to be
IIC&lt;Unle- . , ,... "' .......... I• I
.....,, ... die ...,.._ .. 1741)
ll55. We w8l dMck JGar ..loralllloa

Unil' of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded eight
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included: ·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:39 a.m .. General Ha.ninger
Parkway, Middlepon. Willie Cook.
Holzer Medical Center:
II :43 a.m., East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Gladys Walker, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy squad
assisted;
6:59 p.m.. Waters Edge Apan-

Stocks
Am Ele Power ............... ..45 7116
Akzo .............................. 56 15/16
Amrlech .........................45 7/16
Ashland 011 .......................52 1/8
AT&amp;T ...............................571/16
Bank One .......................... 59 1/4
Bob Evans ........................ 20 318
Borg-Warner .....................48 1/8
Broughton ...................., .... 14 314
Champion ......................... 12 1/4
Charm Shpa ........................ 4 518
City Holding ...... :............... 42 518
Federtll Mogut ................. 70 311,6
Gannett ......................... 7111/16
Goodyear ..........................65 314
Kmart ............................. 1815/16
Kroger ............................. 44 3/16
Lands End ............................... 31
Ltd ........................................... 32
Oak HJII Flnl ...............,., .. 23 1/4
OVB ......................................... 41
One Valley ......................... 36 1/8
Peoplea ................................... 30
Pram Flnl.. ......................... 20 112
Rockwell .......................46 11/16
RD/Shell ............................53 t/2
Sears ............................. 60 11116
Shoney'a ......................... 3 t3/16
Star Bank .......................... 66 1/4
wendy'a ............................22 1/8
woarthlngton ....................
14 718
.

_,_._

m-

ments. Syracuse. Lola Kovalchik.
Pleasaot Valley Hospital, Syracuse
squad assisted;
10:55 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middlepon, Jack Stivers.
VMH.
POMEROY
8:30 p.m.. volunteer fire depa.nment and squad to Country Mobile
Home Park, Darwin. gas odor :it
Annie Griffith "residence.
RACINE
7:53 p.m., Sharon Hollow Road,
Ponland, Stephanie Robens. VMH.
RUTLAND
· 8:55 a.m .. Meigs Mine 31. Oscar
Davis. HMC. Central Dispatch squad
assisted.
SYRACUSE
8 p.m... Third Street, Sadie Thuener. VMH. Central Dispatch squad
assisted.

Carey open door session
State Representative John Carey
(R-Wellston) will hold an open door
ses.,ion July 21. 3-4 p.m. at Rutland
Village Hall.

Three Federal Emergency Management Agency recovery centers
have been established to assist Ohioans affected in June 28 flooding.
The nearest center is at the Wa.&lt;hington County Career Genter cafeteria, Route 676, Ma.rieua. People who have received flood damage
must first call FEMA toll-fr:ee at 1-800-462-9029 to apply for assistance before visiting the recovery center.

Public assistance briefing slated
A briefing for all township. county and other agencies involved in
the June 28 flood disaster will be held Friday. 2 p.m. at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
·

Gallipolis man charged
A Gallipolis man was tentatively charged Wednesday morning on
counts of felony vandalism, resisting :vrest. driving under the influence and driving under financial responsibility action (no insurance)
suspension. a.nd driving the wrong way on a one-way street following an early morning incident in Middlepon.
Arrested was Narvel H. Foster, 20. 7790 state Route 588.
Acconding to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department repon. Deputy
Donald Mohler was driving through Middleport when he observed a
white pickup truck, allegedly driven by Foster, driving the wrong way
on a one-way section of Mill Street. He stopped the truck in the parking lot ofthe Middlepon Police Depa.nment and. with assistance from
Middlepon Patrolman Adam Smith, subdued Foster and placed him
in the bllck of the sheriffs cruiser.
Foster then allegedly beat his head on the window of the cruiser
and kicked out a back window. He was tra.nsponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he received several stitches on his forehead, the
repon stated.

Accidents investigated
No injuries were reported following two deer-re lated accidents ·
investigated this morning by the Meigs County Sheriffs Depan~nt.
Naomi E. Wilson, Portland, was southbound on Bashan Road near
Racine when she swerved to avoid a deer in the road. Her 1986 Chevrolet van went off the right side of the road and flipped over onto its
side, sustaining moderate damage.
Sarah K. Waugh, Pomeroy. wa.&lt; westbound on state Route 124 near
Pomeroy when she struck a deer that mn into the path of her 1994 Ford
Ranger pickup truck, causing heavy damage to the front-of the truck.

Criminal damaging reported
Charles Wolfe, Letan Township Trustee, reported Wednesdav morning that a ca.r ran though a 12-foot section of metal fencing surrounding
Leta.n Falls Cemetery, tearing down the fence .

Meigs announcements·
Boil Advisory lifted
·Southern basketball meeting
The l.eading Creek Conservancy
There will be an organizational
District ha.&lt; lifted the boil advi ~ory meeting for all boys grades 9-12_
for customers from lhe intersection of
SR 143 and SR 684 to Vance Road. wishing to play basketball this coming school year at Southern High
School at 7 p.m. New head Coach
Club to meet
Jay Rees will be meeting with til&lt;!
The Meigs County Fish and Game
team to organize the rest-of-the-sumClub will meet Saturday night. ·
mer basketball progmm and infonn
players about remaining instruction
Hymn sing set
days
in preparation for the upcoming
A hymn sing will be held at the
season.
Faith Full Gospel Church Friday at7
p.m. Singers will be "Higher Calling." A fellowship hour will follow.
Bicentennial meeting set
A Bicent~nnial committee meeting has been set for Monday. 4:45
p.m. at the Meigs County Museum.
Benefit shoot planned
A benefit gun shoot will be held at
the Forked Run Sportsman Club, Friday, 7 p.m. with all proceeds to go to
Herk Mayes.
Bible school to begin
Vacation Bible School will be held
July 19-23 from 6:30 to 8:30pm. at
the South Bethel New Testament
Church. There will be classes for all
ages including adults. The closing
progrilm will be on July 26 at 6:30
p.m. South Bethel Church is located
two miles from Route 7 on S1lver
Ridge Road across from Eastern
High School.

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Stock raporta ere the 10:30
a.m. quotn provided by Aclveat
of Gallipolis.

ud JUireallOIIecdool lfwarnated.

News Deolrtmenta

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Sports

The Daily' Sentinel

Thursday, July 9, 1998

By,NESHA STARCEVIC
SAINT-DENIS France (AP) - A
banner hangmg from the hleachers of
the St.tde de Ftanc e begged Les
Bleus" to let the n.ttton dream on
The French team was ever so obe
dtent
France beat Cro.ltta 2 I on
Wednesday mght to reach the World
Cup final lor the fitst tune settmg off
wtld celebrnt10n s throughout the
nat JOn, tncludmg thous.mds marchutg
tnumphantly toward naturall y. the
Arc de Tnomphe
When the game ended JU st he fore
II p m Pans time. an estunated 21
m1lhon French men \\Omen and
chtldren were tuned 111
' We played our heart s out .md
that made the dtfference F1e nch
coach Atme Jacquet s,ud
·It" truly the mo'i bc.tuttful "·')
10 the htstory of Ft cnch sport ·
French Presnlent Jacq ue s Chtr.tc
added
Perhaps on I) unttl Sund.t) 11 hen
France wtll try to hft the trophy 10 the
competmon tn1 ented b) Ft enchman
Jules Rtmet when 11 m&lt;el\ four-It me
champton Braztl
Croatt.l wtll pi.l) the Netherl.mds
for thtrd place Saturd.ty

France h.td to come back agamst
the cl~1er Croatian team .md played
the last :!0 mmutes 11 tth I 0 men after
the eject ton of defender Laurent
Bl,mc
That c.tmes an automattc m101
mum one g.tme suspenston but the
French team wday appealed the eJeC
!ton 10 hopes of ha1mg the BJ.m,
a1 at Iable tor the rule game
Wuh French forwards st11l strug ghng to find the target 11 \\·"defender Ltlt.tn Thuram who fired Fr,mce
tnto the final h) scormg hoth goals.
hiS first lor the nat tonal team
ThiS "labulous.' Thuram satd
To th1nk I don 't e1en score tn tram
mg It s 200 percent luck It s not th.u
I am a hew bec.IUse I scored to he ,,
hero th.tt s for the fm.tl
HIS goals ended Franc~ \ semtfi
nal JlllX on '" fourth .tttempt ,10d
a ll o ~o~ed hts team to become the ftr,l
host nat ton Ill 20 )e.trs to teach the
final No host h.ts met the dcfend10g
champton for the It tie
Chtrac cheered 11 tth h.mds .11oft
llhtleCroat counterpart Ft.10JOTudJ
man applauded h" n,llton's stunnmg
march Croalla almost scored the
b1 ggest upset of the tourn.tment
e1 en tak10g the lead he fore ltnally

falling to French flmr
" If we had held the lead for fi1e
mmutes. they were gomg down."
Slaven Btllc satd ·The players. the
fans The) had pl.tyed l\1o m.ttchesof
120 mmute&lt; each They looked
ttred ·
Ftrst Croatt.t stunned the crowd 26
seconds mto the second h.tlf when
AIJOSa Asano1 tc spin the French
defense and Da1or Suker scored hts
fifth World Cup goal shppmg the
ball under goalkeeper Fabten
Barthez
One mmute later. Thumm stole the
ball from captam Zvonumr Bohan
ncar the Croat penalt) area pl.t)ed a
I 2 "''h Youn DJorkaeff .md sent the
ball past goalkeeper Drazen L1d1c
In the 70th mmute, Thuram 11as
e1 en bolder surg10g up the left .md
seu10g up a I 2 wtth Thterry Henry
The ball seemed to go stratght to
Robert Jamt. butThuram won 11 back
and then unleashed a curhng 20-yard
shot that went wtde ofLadtc and 10to
the comer of the net
As tempers Oared after France's
second goal. Blanc tugged at Slaven
Bthc's shtrt and slammed the palm of
hts hand m hts face Referee Jose
Manuel Garcta sent the standout

Hubbard
LL Tournament
By SCOTT WOLFE
SentineiConvspondent

Two htgh sconng games hlghhghted Wednesday mght's actton tn
the annual Btll Hubbard Memonal
Ltttle League Tournament sponsored
by the Syracuse Volunteer Ftre
Department
Wmners for the evenmg were the
Galhpohs Reds who whtpped the
Pomeroy lndtans 11 -1 and the New
Haven Reds who defeated the Btdwell II team 13-2
Galltpolts scored early by takmg
a 2-0 lead m the top of the first mmng

By MEL ANTONEN
USA Today

Anahetm Angels
What went nght The Angels took
control of the West wtth a 22 6 June
as thetr pttchers posted a 1 81 ERA
and thetr otfense htt 291 RHP Jason
Dtckson and LHP Chuck Ftnley rescued a rotatton htt wnh tnJunes They
got help from RHP Omar Ohvares.
LHP Jarrod Washburn and RHP
Steve Sparks. who was w10less 10 I 1
mtnor-league starts yet ts 3-0 wnh the
Angels OF Dann Erstad put together an tmpresstve blend of speed and
power whtle adJusung to the leadoff
spot RHPTroy Perctval (2 97 ERA .
42 stnkeouts 10 36 1/3 10nmgs) has
been hts usual dommatmg self 10 the
bullpen SS Gary DtSarcma. a career253 httter. supphed a 313 average at
the No 9 spot and" the most underrated defenstve shortstop tn the
league The catch10g platoon of Matt
Walbeck and Phtl Ne11n ftll ed m
mcely for the IllJured Todd Greene
What went wrong lnJunes cosrthe Angels three-fifths of thetr startmg rotatiOn by mtd-May Ttm
Salmon's move to full-lime DH
w~akens the outfield defense InJury
ended 2B Randy Velarde 's season
LHP Mtke Holtz ts havmg trouble
wiih hts curveball The team 's bats
w~re strong 10 June. but fi zzled
toward the end as the Angels ended
wllh a live-game los10g streak
. InJury update No tunetable set on
R~P Jack McDowell !elbow) or
RHP Ken Hill (elbow) but LHP
Ailen Watson (elbow) could be back
wiih10 a week RHP Mtke James
(fQrearm) " tintshed for ttfe se,tson
Greene (shoulder) doesn I need a sec
ond surgery. and doctors say he can
play tfhe doesn I catch He son hold
1n case Salmon goes dow n
Outlook How dtd the Ange ls do
11? They lead the West desplle a long
hst of problems and 10Junes For the
A~gels to mamtatn the lead they
have to get pttchtng uepth
Balttmore Orioles
What went nght Not much In a
season when skv h1gh ex. peli~HJ on s

vantshed qUJckl y. OFs B J Surhott
and Enc DaviS DH Harold Batnes
and I B Ralael Pal metro are the most
conststent players Th~ home-run
numbers were among the AL leaders.
and they played thetr usual league
Jead10g defense RHP Mtke Muss ma
pnched well after gettmg smashed 10
the face wtth a ltne dn ve The
prospect who got the most expenence
was RHP Sydney Ponson who shoY. s
promtse even though he got htt hard
.,.
most of the lime
What went wrong After losmg 10
the AL Champtonshtp Senes the last
two seasons. they were hurt by a
weak bullpen. lllJUnes tn the rotatton
and. at umes. grumbhng aUttudes

RHP Armando Bemtez was supposed to step mto the closer s ro le.
but he couldn 't handle the JOb He
showed tmmatunty when he threw at
Yankees 1B Tino Mart10ez and challenged the team to a light The whole

bullpen lell apart after the dub and
LHP Randy Myerscouldn 't agree on
a contmct last offseason 3B Cal Rtpken and OF Brady Anderson, who
struggled to hn 200. created clubnoose tenston when they played
every day. despite slumps 2B Roberto Alomar wasn' t happy. and hts lack
ol hustle on the fteld showed he was
gomg through the mo11ons

Injury update RHP Scott Kamteme6t (neck suttness) wtll start a
rehabilitatiOn assagnment Within the
nex t two week&gt; It s uncertam when
LHP Jtmmy Key (shoulder) wtll
return OF Jeffrey Hammonds (back
spasms) wtll start rehabtlttatton m a
week
Outlook The Onoles prove that
money tsn 1 everythtng. and owner
Pet~r Angelos has gtven the team two
weeks to shape up or he wtll start
sh1pp10g out players Looks as 1! btgttme trades and a maJor rebutld10g
process are commg

Boston Red Sox
What went nght The Red Sox are
havtng a great season. but nobody
-nouces because they are m the East
behtnd the Yankees Btggest
tmprovements Puchtng and delense
CF Darren Lewts ts the defenSive staple whtle gomg trom the bunt-smgle
type to a guy who htts conststently
Wtth 9nly two months expenence.
RHPTom Gordon" one of the AL's
best closers. wtth good help from
RHPs Jtrn CorSI and Rtch Garces SS
Nomar Garctaparra's 24-game htttmg
streak whtch ended last Saturday.
was the maJors longest thts season
Except for a mmt-slump when he
ru shed mechantc• RHP Pedro Martmez has dommated RHP Bret
Saberhagen's return from shoulder
surgery provtdes msptratton RHP
Ttm Wakefield IS conststent and LHP
Steve Avery seems to have lound
htmse lf Prospect Lou Merlom solved
th~ second base problem All Star I B
Mo Vaughn. Garctuparra and DH
Regg te Jeffe rson were the usual tornd batters on otfense
What wem wrong Streaky·futung

1B John V.tlentJn couldn t lind a hot
hllttn g streak Dtd RHP Dennts Eckers le y (mtlamed rotator cult) try to
extend hts career one too m.tny
years 1 28 Jell Frye tnJured a knee m
~pnn ~ tram1n g and 28 Mark Lemke

ctsco last July. and 2B Ray Durham
have been a soltd double-play combo even though both make rout10e
errors LF Albert Belle tsn 't among
the AL s home-run leaders. but hts
HRs and RBI totals aren't bad Chad
Kreuter and Charhe O'Bnen have
been a sohd catch10g platoon. but
prospect Robert Machado. 25. who
plays above-average defense 10 all
aspects, wtll be gettmg some playmg
ttme 111 September Kreuter ts putt10g
together hts first 300 season at the
plate He's a career 236 httter
What went wrong Pttchmg and
defense have been problems for new
manager Jerry Manuel DH Frank
Thomas. a career- 312 httter and
defend10g AL battmg champton at
347. IS 111 the worst slump of hts
career. Thomas never has htt below
300 The Whtte Sox expected a soltd season from Of Mtke Cameron
but dtdn 't get u RHP James Baldwm,
who was supposed to be a staple 10
the rotallon. pttched so poorly he
wound up tn the bullpen RHP Jason
Bere needs a year to recover from
elbow surgery RHP latme Navarro ts
becommg a two-year bust although
they hope more bend m hts elbow
wtll make h" forkball cons,stent
agam DH Ruben Sterra tits well mto
the bust category I B Wtl Cordero
hasn't been a factor
Injury update RHP Matt Karchner (stramed lett muscle) " expected
to be ready Thursday mght
Outlook Are a long way from
contendmg because thetr champtonshtp-cahber players- Ro~m Yentum. Thomas and Belle - get ltttle
support They need a better rotatton.
bett~r bullpen. a stronger defense and
a few young players to develop
That's askmg a lot
Cleveland Indians
What went nght The lndtans
t ontrol the Central bt!cause they
have the AL's second-best pttchmg
0 Rli ERA) and fourth -best htttmg
kam ( 2R0) I B Jtm Thome who lintshed second mthe All-Star home-run

NL forecast
By CHUCK JOHNSON
USA Today

WE LOVE YOU, MAN! - France,'s
ram (center) Is congratulated by teammates Laurent Blank (left) and Yourl Djorkaeff after scoring
his second goal during Wednesday night's

defender off
"The expulston of Blanc wasternble." Jacquet satd
"We knew that we would have
dtfliculues, because Croatta IS dtfft-

Arizona Diamondbacks
What went nght The Dtamondbacks opened thetr first season to
great fanfare m a spectacular new
ballpark It's been a blast Amana's
I)() HRs mnk fourth m the NL I B
Travts Lee ( 284. 17 HRs, 47 RBI) ts
a leadmg NL rookte-of-the-yearcandtdate. and CF Devon Whue ( 292.
13 HRs. 49 RBI) was selected as the
team's first All-Star
What went wrong Reahty set m
qutckly Although the Dtamondbacks
spent a lot of money to get such players as 3B Matt Wtlhams, SS Jay Bell
and RHPs Andy Benes and Wtlhe
Blatr. the lack of depth and quahty
pttchmg has remmded everyone thts
ts a first-year expanston club The
veteran acqutsttlons haven't been
able to htde that Benes ts 6-9 wuh a
4 73 ERA Blatr 0-12 wtth a 5 00
ERA) leads the NL m losses
InJury update Wtlhams (brutsed
left foot) sat out the la.st game before
the break bu1 should he ready for the
second-half opener Fnday vs Cmcm-

senllffn,algameagll~l~~~;~~~

Denis, France. France's 2-1 vi
put
host
team In the championship game on Sunday, July
12 against Brazil (AP)

cult to parry The goal we conceded
11 as shock mg. but 11 produced ,, great
response "

Croatta. whtch had several opportumttes to tte 11 late m the m.ttch -

B.u1hez mdde a lungmg save at the

crossbar m the dymg seconds
"We were not careful enough."
Croattan coach Mtrosl.tv Blazevtc
satd

hlltmg contest. IS among the leaders
m the Tnple Crown c:llegnnes and ts
a candtdate tor AL MVP RF Manny
Ramtrez Js havmg hts typtcal 30-plus
home-run season All -Star SS Omar
Vtzquel IS htttmg 302 and workmg
on hts SIXth conseeullve Gold Glove
Hts 70-game errorless streak fifth
longest by a shortstop. ended May 12
As usual. the bullpen IS deep. but the
closer IS dtllerent RHP Mtke Jackson a set-up man last season. has
been deadly (29 stnkeouts and four
walks) RHPs Bartolo Colon and
Jaret Wnght have developed conststent approaches and ll.HP Dave Burba. acqutred m a trade. has made one
bad start RHP Owtght Gooden IS
do10g fine wtth a 3 60 ERA
What went wrong OF Kenny
Lofton has 28 steals. but hts first-half
performance suffered because he was
trymg to be too tmpresstve 111 hiS
return to Cleveland. 3B Travts Fryman had a mtserable start tor the
same reason but htt better as the lirst
halt concluded DH Gerommo Berroa
was a clubhouse pam and wound up
gettmg tmded OF Davtd Justtce battled tnjunes. RHP Charles Nagy ts
the stall ace, but hts ERA " 5 57
RHP Jose Mesa. once a can't-mtss
closer. ts getung booed at . Jacobs
Fteld
Injury update RHP Chad Ogea
(stramed stde muscle) ts ready to
return OF Bnan Gtles (spramed lett
ankle) wtll be acllvated for Thursday
mght s game
Outlook The lndtans hvve 50
wms but the best could he yet to
come Of all teams. the lndtans have
the best chance to knock off the Yankees come the postseason Nothmg
less than a World Sen~s champt onshtp wtll be constdereu a success
New York Yankees
What went nght Name 11 anu 11
worked New York ts getllng a new
detinatton of Yanke!!! greatness, thetr

61-20 record matchmg the best 81 game start 111 htstory (Wtth 1902 Putsburgh) They are on pace to wtn 122

games. whtch would surpass the
record of 116 by the 1906 Chtcago
Cubs The Yankees have everythmg
Sohd bullpen, deep rotatton. unselfish
chem1S!ry. bench depth. veterans at
thetr peak. prospects developmg
strong outtield and catchmg pl.ttoons They are among the AL lead·
ers tn pttchmg. htttmg and delense
Team speed ts much tmproved. and
there are many team MVP candt
dates RHP Davtd Cone. LHP Davtd
Wells. RF Paul 0 Netll. 38 Scott
Brostus RH closer Manana Rtvera
SS Derek Jeter The Yankees mnk
. tirst tn the AL m walks (359) and onbase percentage ( 370) and second m
steals (98). runs (484) and thtrd tn
RBI (451) Thetr ERA (3 81) ts the
league's best as well as thetr IOcomplete games
What went wrong The Yankees
started 1-4 Anyone remember DH
Chth Davts, SJdehned for the season
wtth a torn tendon tn hts ankle' The
Yankees s!tll haven't put 11 all together 28 Chuck Knoblauch was subpar
lor two months I B Ttno Manmez'
power was short-ctrcutted by a
spramed shoulder after getllng
beaned Swttch-htttmg CF Bernte
Wtlltams was fmdmg hts power
stroke when he spramed hiS nght
knee Jeter spent ttme on the DL So
dtd Rtvera
lnJUr) update Wtlhams reaggravated hts nght knee 10jury and wtll be
out at least another 1-2 weeks They
aren't sure when RHP letT Nelson
(lower back mtlammutJOn and trac
tureu toe) wtll ret~rn Davts (tendon
tear tn nght ankle) returns m August
Outlook What do you call a d.ty
when the Yankees lo•e &gt; Unusunl
They plowed through the best m both
leagues dunng the hrst halt , anu
there s no reason to be h~ve the sec ond hall wtll be much dtfferent The
Yankees are baseball's best team
Wtll they lose thetr dnve &gt; Thmk
.tgam We JUSt want to wm .tll the
ttme. Martmez satd When we get
10 games ahead. we s hoot lor 15 •·

Texas Rangers
What went nght The Rangers
have one of the AL\ most potent
ollenses when OF Tom Goodwm and
2B Mark McLemore are gemng on
b.tse ahead ot OF Juan Gonzalez. I B
Wtll Clark. OF Rusty Greer and C
Ivan Rodnguez Gonzalez is healthy
for the lirst ttme tn four years, thanks
to a wetght program that focuses on
flextbthty Clark shows what he can
do when healthy Greer ha.s a chance
to score I 00 runs wtth 100 RBI
Could Rodnguez ( 350) one of tour
catchers to start SIX consecuttve AllStar Games. be the lirst catcher to
wm ,, battmg tllle 1 The Rangers are
pleased wuh 38 ~ernando Taus.
espectally hts udense RHP John
Wettel.md ts havmg one ot hiS best
seasons. and he's gettmg sterhng setup help from RHPs Xavter Hernandez and Ttm CrJbtree The acquiStJOn
ol a healthy RHP Aaron Sele looks
goou as does the return ul RHP Rtck
Helhng (Improved changeup) SS
Kevm Elster IS hlltmg well and play- •
mg hts usual steady defense
What went wrong At the All-Star
break. the defense. pllchmg and hll-.
!tng were hurtmg as well as the fundamentals How desperate were they
for pttchmg 1 Pttchmg breakdowns
dropped them out ot first place m the
West RHP Bobby Wttt was so bad.
they gave up on htm RHP John Burkett" a dtsappomtment because he's
leavmg too many pttches m the mtd
die of the plate LHP Darren Oltver
has control problems RHPTodd Van
Poppel IS untested In the bullpen.
LHP Enc Gunderson has a good ERA
(2 02). but opponents are htttmg htm
at a 100 cltp Goodwm\ pertormance at the top ol the order started
to shde toward the end of the first
hall
Outlook Manager Johnny Oates
could see 11 commg m Apnl when he
satd the Rangers could not hold thetr
West lead unless the startmg pllchmg
gets bt!ner

nall.

Woods dominates Riverside seniors

Ketth Woods Of Br.tdbury JS
puttmg on a one man show as he conttnues to domm.ue the 1998 R11 erstde Sen tor League golfing race tak(r.:om:u"' 'on ) J1dn t \\.ork
InJury upd.ue Eckersle) ''throw- mg a 17 5 pomt le.td 01er hts nearest
mg on the stdelme RHP Bnan Rose competitor Btll Hannum
Twelve pla)ers are w11hm 10
(li ghtness ) 1s on a mmor league rehapomts
of each other as the compellbtltt.lll on Merlont (lett knee tendmt twn
JS
thtck between second .md
tl:-.) 1' wo rkmg out and should be
lith
while
Woods coasts out front all
really nex t week RHP Rtch Garces
alone
The
top
20 ts only separated hy
(stra10ed elbow) could be back 10
15
pomt&lt;
mt d July The Red Sox are uncerta10
Woods IS a1eragmg .tlma&lt;t mne
when Lemke (post-concusston synpomts per week whtch means th.ll tf
drome) will return
Outlook Wtll the Red Sox do thetr he plays every 11 eck for the rem,un tradtll onal second hall fade' Th ts mg 12 11eeks he wtll set a new
team tsn t as likely to Past teams record of over 200 pomts The old
have been bUilt on offense Thts team - mark IS 192 5
Woods' team of Jtmmy Proffitt of
has pttchmg and delense to go wtth
Mason
and Btll Hannum of Chester
the offen se
scored
three
Eagles to lie the league
C hlcago White Sox
record
of
13
under pat to wm the
What went nght SS Mtke CaruTuesday
sconng
honors Second
so. one of the prospects who came m
place
was
tted
at
ten under par
the controverstal trad~ wtth San Franmvolvmg Kay Wtlson of Chester,

on Singles to Andre Getger and Casey
Taylor and fielder's chotces to Cody
Caldwell and Bnan Caldwell Shawn
Klem then reached on an error as
Galhpohs took the lead
Klem. the Galltpohs pttchmg ace
fanned the stde m the first mmng.
then proceeded to stnke out twelve of
the first fourteen batters he faced
Galhpohs went up 4-0 tn the thtrd
when Bnan Caldwell doubled and
scored on a Klem smgle. Klem
scored later on a wtld pttch
The Red.'i, scored three runs m the
fourth on a Joey Banks smgle, a Gary
Logan smgle, and Andre Ge1ger
tnple Getger scored on a Caldwell
tly out for a 7-0 lead. Galhpohs
added two runs m each of the last two

tnntngs for the Il - l score
Pomoroy's lone score ume when
Jeremy Blackston walked. Daylon
Jenkms walked and Blackston scored
on a passed ball
Kletn ptcked up the wm m four
and tw~thtr&lt;ls mnmgs of work. whtle
Getger came m to mop up m an
mmng and a thtrd Klem tanned
twelve and walked one whtle giVIng
up one hu Getger fanned four and
walked two whtle gtvmg up no htts
as the duo pttched a one-htt game
The lone Pomeroy hn was a double by Shawn Day
Galhpohs h1tters were Getger wtth
two smgles. Taylor wtth a smgle. Bnan Caldwell a double. Klem two smgles and a double. Kyle Hudo;on a sm-

gle. Joey Banks a smgle. and Gary
Logan a smgle
Ftfe and Blackston suffered the
loss tn gtvmg up ten htts, fanmng SIX,
and walkmg stx
In the mghtcap. the New Haven
Reds proved to be one of the more
dommant teams by plowtng by Btdwell II by a 13-2 score After Cody
Knapp got out of posstble Jam tn the
first by stnkmg out the Ia" two batters. hts New Haven Reds tooll: a 10 lead on an error. stolen base by
Anthony Mitchell and an RBI smgle
by Caleb Lttchfield Jared Swam.
who also got off to a good start struck
out two m the first tnmng for Btdwell
Swam rettred the stde m order m

the second mnmg. after Knapp struck
out three Btdwell liatters sandwtched
around a Enc Dmge ss smgle and a '
Kyle Tipton walk Btdwell threatened
but dtd not score
New Haven got a btg mnmg m the
fourth when Lnchfield and Aaron
Faulk each walked an Tyler Gnnstead
reached on an error Ian Smuh
walked. Enc Weaver walked. and
Cody Knapp smgled
Three more walk, and smgles by
Faulk and Mttchell combmed wllh a
two-run double trom Colbe Ingels to
push ntne runs across the plate lor a
10-0 lead
New Haven htuers were Ingels a
double. Muchell a smgle. Lttchlield

a double. two smgles. and a walk.
Faulk a smgle. and a Cody Knapp
smgle
Dmges.&lt; and Josh Eddy smgled for
Btdwell whtle Jared Swam doubled .
Swam suffered the loss wtth reid · ~
from Eddy Knapp ptcked up the wm •
wuh II stnke outs. one walk. anu
four htts , whtle Zerkle fanned two
and walked none. whtle gtvmg up no
htts
New Haven advances to play Harnsonvtlle at 8 30 Fnday. wh1le Galltpolt s laces Reedsvtlle m the 7 p m
Fnday game
Tomght Green I faces Pmnt Pleasant at 7 p m Rutland laces Mtddleportat 8 30pm

Braves, Astros, Padres, Giants expect to stay on playoff pace

lndians, Yankees, Rangers get riods to keep leading divisions
AL forecast

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 · ·

Gallipolis, New Haven Reds top Pomeroy Indians, Bidwell II

Page4
1998

France defeats Croatia 2-1,
earns World Cup final berth
~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Harley Rtce of Long Bottom Jtm
Wtkoff of Sh.1de and Rusty Wood of
New Ha1en The other team constst ed of Don Wtlson of Chester. D.10.1
Wmebrenner of Syracuse .md Glen
Roush and Joe Bradley ol New
Haven
A total of 47 plnyers were on hand
Tuesday .tfter beung flooded out of
last week s round The pl.tyers 11 ere
d11tded uno II loursomes and one
tnreesome for the d.t) The closest to
the pm honors were t.tken hy Don
Wtlson on the 14th hole Tom Stem
pie of Ravenswood 11011 the se1 enth
hole
A total ol 72 dtiTerent pl.tyers have
1.1ken part m the first h.tlf of the
le.tgue w11h the weekly average now
above 44 players There are sttll 12
weeks rem.umng and ,, lot of bones
to crack before the ptcmc on the last
Tuesday of September to comemorate the league wtnners
All semors are mvued out to JOin

the le.tgue
Followmg " ,, ltst ol the top 20
players

flmr

Ketth Woods
Btll H.mnum
Johnny Bobh
J.tck Fox
Btll How.trd
Ch.trley Georgt
Luther Smith
E.trl John son
Dale Hamson
lHJI Wtkolf
Claude Prolfill
Don Ftelds
Joe Bradley
J.tck M.tlone)
Btll Yoho
Peat Carnah.m
Ralph Sayre
Ed Wtlson
Harold Lohse
Elmer Cltck
Bob Mcintosh

~

107
89 5
86
85
84 s
H1 5

82
81 5
80
80
79 5
. 79 5
79 5
79
78 s
78
77
76
75
74
73

Mtlt Maxwell
Harold St.mley
Don Kay
Dana Wmehrennet

72
68
67 5
67 5

~ sHS

to hold
basketball
meeting tonight

There wtll be an org.101lattonal
meetmg for an boys grades 9- 12
wtshmg to piny basketball thts commg school year at Southern Htgh
School at 7 p m
New head coach J.1y Rees wtll he
meetmg with the team to orgamze the
rest-ol-the-summer basketball program ~nd mform pl ayers about
rematnmg mstructiOn days m preparatiOn for the upcommg season

DOI,ATE
MO,ORS
..
Chev-olds.Cad..POntlac·Bulck-G'-'C.

..

992·6614 800·837·1094

--

Outlook The Dtamondbacks have
bao;eball's losmgest record at the
break But they have a good nucleus.
a strong fan base and a revenue-produc10g ballpark
Atlanta Braves
What went nght The trademark of
qualtty startmg pttchmg kept the
Braves on top of the East All-Stars
RHP Greg Maddux and LHP Tom
Glavme are on pace for dual 20-wm
seasons tor the thml It me thts decade
LHP Denny Neagle and RHP Kevm
Mtllwood had sohdlirst halves. RHP
John Smoltz ts workmg-tm."\\&lt;~ack
mto the rotatton after otlsea.'on
sur~ery and venerable RHP De
Ma'runez showed he sllll has a I eft
as a rehever and substitute starter
All-Stars I B Andres "Btg Cat·
Galnrraga. as a nght-handed power
httter. and SS Walt WeiSs. tn the leadoft spot. have been 10valuable acqUJstttons All-Stars 3B Chtpper Jones
and C Javy Lopez are havmg perhaps
thetr tines! sea.,ons
What went wrong RH closer
Mark Wohlers suddenly lost hiS
etfecttveness after a sllnt on the DL.
leavmg the bullpen us the lone vulnerabthty
InJury update LF Ryan Klesko ts
not expected back tor another week
after havmg hiS appendtx removed
June 29 OF Curtts Pride (lacerated
nght mdex finger) could be acllvated next week
Outlook Wtth the maJors best
startmg pttchmg. the Braves are
agam the NL's ehte team and shouldn t have any problem get!tng back to
the postseason Anythmg short ol a
World Senes champ1onsh1p wtll be a
dtsappomtment
Chicago Clubs
What went nght OF Sammy Sosa
had a btg first half wtth 33 HRs, 81
RBI and a 324 average The htghhght a maJor-league hes! 20 HRs for
one month m June. when Sosa also
had 40 RBI RHP Kerry Wood led
NL rookte pUc hers wtth a 3 38 ERA.
a 727 wmmng percentage (8-3).
139 stnkeouts and a 190 opponents
average LF Henry Rodnguez ( 19
HRs. 54 RBI). 2B Mtckey Mor.mdtm ( 327) and RH closer Rod Beck (13
saves) hved up to expec!llttons after
bemg acqutred m the offseason I B
Mark Gmce htt .332. 22 potnts htgher than hts career averuge
What went wrong SS Jdf
Blauser. stgned a' a free agent flit
JUst .237 and led the team wtth ntne
errors. The lower half of the batllng
order ha.s been espectally utconststent
tn a tirst half of peaks and valleys C
S.:ott Servats ( 194) ha.' not played
well. and the rehef pttchmg ha' been
spotty
Injury update· It's sttll not known
when CF Lance Johnson (tnflnmmal!on of nght hand) wtll be ready to
play. His replacement, CF Brant
Brpwn (spratned left shoulder), will
be out 10 days to two weeks.
Outlook: After wmnmg 10 m a
the Cubs lost IS of 20 dunng
one stretch, but are still btloyed after
enterin&amp; the break nine games above
~. Sosa feels confident he can
duplicate hia lil'!ll.:flalf numbers in the
sewnd half, which would make him
a serious challenger to Roger Maris·
smgle.season homer mark of 61 . If

..

the Cubs can get out of the gate fast.
thetr chances of wmntng the Centml
are a~ good a.~ any
Cincinnati Reds
What went nght I B/OF Dmttn
Young IS havmg a breakthrough year
( 317) RHPDanny Graves emerged
as a dependable set-up guy and 2B
Bret Boone excelled defenSively and
otTenSively to earn hts first All-Star
berth
What went wrong The Reds tmded thetr top pttcher. RH Dave Burba
JUSt before opentng day and have
conttnued a season-long purge of veterJns 1R an effort to rebutld Wtth
youth They traded RH Jeff Shaw.
one of the game's top closers. and
Lenny Hams, the NL's top ptnch httter JUSt before the break
Injury update RHP Stan Behnda
(spmal cord tntlammatton) ts sttll
expenencmg tmghng m hiS lower
extreme11es RHP Ketth Glauber (tendmllls 111 nght shoulder) IS expected
back tn the second halt
Outlook Trudes. trades and more
trades SS Barry Larktn. a Reds' mstttuuon. wtll hkely be gone by the
stretch dnve Sllll. the Reds fimshed
the lirs! halt wtnntng nme of 10
Colorado Rockies
What went nght All-Star 3B VmR) Casttlla has been a.' good a.' ever
httttng 307 wtth 25 HRs and 75 RBI
at the break The youngsters. SS Netfi
Perez and rookte I B Todd Helton.
have estabhshed themselves a' sohd
maJor leaguers All-Star LF Dante
Btchette IS battmg 337 wtth II HRs
and 68 RBI
What went wrong When the team
has pttched well. n ha'n t htt . •md
vtce versa There ha.~ been no consiStency. wuh the longest wmmng
streak betng three games vs expanston An zona to start the season RHP
Darryl K1le. a 19-game wmner tor
Houston last year. IS JUst 5-11 and 2B
Mtke L!nsmg. acqutred from Montrealm the offseason. ha.' also strug
gled The Rocktes appear lb really
mtss I B Andres Galarraga and SS
Walt Wetss. who they dtdn 't re-stgn
All -Star RF Larry Walker ts battmg
.331 . but hts power numbers ( mne
HRs. 33 RBI) are sharply down
from hts MVP season tn 1997 RHP
Pedro Astacto has gtven up 21 HRs.
tted for most tn the league
Injury update RHP John Thomson (bhster on rtght finger) wtll start
the Rocktes • exhtbttton vs Class
AAA Colorado Sprtngs Thursday
and IS expected to return to the rotatton after that
Outlook The Rocktes had expected to challenge for the West thts season. but are out of the mce and
searchmg for answers Thetr 20 Ingame delictt out ol lirst 1s thetr
htggest smce thetr maugurJI 1993
season
Florida Marlins
What went nght The Marhns
have won 15 ol thetr last 26 games.
gtvmg them sumethmg to feel good
about for the first ume thts sea.-;on LF
Chtf Floyd htt 17R wtth 14 HRs and
57 RBI All-Star SS Edgar Rentena
hu 302 and wa.' among the NL leaders with 2R stolen ba.,es
What went wrong The depleted
Marhns got off to a 17-44 start Only
two starters from Game 7 of the
World Senes. Rentena and 2B Cmtg
Counsell. remam from the defendmg
champtons The fire sale reached a
peak wtth the May 15 blockbuster
tmde ofC Charles Johnson. 3B Bobby Bontlla and OFs Gary Shellield
and Jtm Etsenreteh to the Dodeers for
C Mtke Ptazza and 3B Todd Zetle
Ptazza wa.' tr~di:d a week later to the
Mets
Injury update RHP Aiel Fernandez ts sllll hopmg tor a second-half
return alter rotator cuff surgery put
htm out of last years playoffs
Outlook The trJnst!ton from a
star-studded team to a squad of
young prospects has been taxmg on
manager Jtm Leyland. but he ltkes
how thmgs are commg together.
Whtle Wayne Huizenga's sale of the
club is pending. the Marltns have
mwntained thetr fan base. That's
cribcal for helpmg to land a revenuegenerating n ew ballpark.

and a 590 sluggmg percentage. Btg·
g10 and OF Derek Bell both have 26
doubles and 110 and 114 h1ts. respecttvely. and 3B Jeff Bagwell. even
though he mtssed 15 games and got
off to a slow start. had 19 HRs and
56 walks LH Mtke Hampton wa' m
the top I0 m ERA before gomg on the
DL. LH closer Billy Wagner saved 18
games and RH Shane Reynolds (95) went mto the break 7-2 m hts last
10 stans
What w~nt wron£ Astde from
Reynolds· early struggles and a slug
gtsh start by Bagwell. who hll only
234 tn May. httle has slowed the
Astros
Injury update RHPChns Holt has
been on the DL smce the begmnmg
of the year after offseason rotator cu If
surgery on hts nght shoulder He
threw before the break and had
exploratory surgery that ytelded no
fmdtngs Hampton (stramed left
grom) came off the DLjust before the
break and OF R1chard Htdalgo (separated nght shoulder) ts expect.:d
back soon
Outlook. As long as the bats keep
connectmg. the Astros look to fimsh
what they ve started by re)leattng as
Centml champtons Despne lnJUnes
to expected staners Holt and RH
Ramon Garcta. the Astros haven 't
mtssed a be:;t Hampton and
Reynold' lead a rotatton rounded out
by RHPs Jose Ltma and Sean
Bergman (6-4) and revttaltzed LHP
Pete Schourek (5-5)
Los Angeles Dodgers
What went nght RF Raul Mondest htt 289 wtth 19 HRs and 52 RBI
and 2B Enc Young had a league-leadmg 32 stolen bases
What went wrong The Dodgers
cleaned house m June when they
fired GM Fred Clatre and manager
Btll Russell They took the fall tor a
team that ha,n 't hved up to expectauons lnJunes to key players have
hurt and the blockbuster seven-player trade May 15 that sent All-Star C
Ptazza and 3B Zetle to Flonda has
fat led to turn thtngs around
InJury update RHP Ramon Marunez IS out for the year alter June 10
rotator cull surgery 3B Robby Boml·
Ia (mtestmal vtrus) returned to the
hneup Saturday and Young (pulled
nght thtgh) and SS Jose Vtzcamo
fspramed ankle) are due hark
Outlook The JUry '' still out on

bona fide olfenstve Ioree capable ol has been the ottenst ve catalyst Wtth
httmg the rest ot the hneup I B John a 296 ba1110 ~ avera~e 10 HRs and
Olerud hu 326 wtth a -138 on-base 7-1 RBI All -Star RF Tony Gwynn
percentage The pttchmg stat! s 3 34 ( 329) ts tn hne lor ye t another bat
ERA was second only to Atlanta s tmg crown
J 32 LHP AI Letter t'l-4) h.td a I 86
What went wrong Not much JB
ERA. second to the Brav~s Gre~ Ken Cammttt mts s~d 21 games wtth
Maddux I 54 All Star RHP Rtck a stramed n,;ht quadnceps and got off
Reed (9-5 2 7:! ERA) LH closer to a slow stan CF St&lt;ve Fmley ( 236
John Fmnco ( 18 saves) and 2B Car- wuh st x HRs and 17 RBI) IS makmg
los Baerga ( 285) were sohd
progre" but has been stop and go
What went wrong RHP Mel
Injury update Leadoll httter and
RoJa.' faltered m the setup role. ace 2B Qut1v10 Veras took a sore Jell
centmg the bullpc!n':-o lnl:OnsiStenl:y wnst 11110 the break and wtll he
Letter parttally tore the patella tendon watched closely
m hts left knee RHP Htdeo Nomo (2Outlook The Padres are drawmg
8) ha~ only one wm smce hts trade
at th~ gate and "mnmg hke never
from the Dodgers OFs Bnan McRae he fore Brown. I B Wally Joyner. Fm- .
( 234) and Bernard Gtlkey ( 229) ley and CamtntU are all elt2tble tor
have struggled
free agl!ncy at ter th1 s seaso~ so 11 s
Injury update Letter IS expected tmperatJve the Padres wm now B ~ . :
to he out 4-6 weeks IF/OF Matt ruling the West so lar the team ,,; · ·
Fmnco (broken toe) IS slated to hegm domg m part to gam favorable supa rehabthtallon program Thursday at port lor constructton ol a new ballClass AAA Norfolk (Va)
park
Outlook The Mets don't have
San Franctsco Giants
much hope ot catchmg Atlanta but
What went nght The Gtants 52
are the favontes to get the wtld card
17 record" close to the 51-36 mark
They need help Slugger Todd Hund- .11 the break last year on the way tll
ley. who lost hts starttng catcher's JOb wtnnmg the West RH closer Rohb
when Ptazza wa.' acqutred. can help Nen s 25 saves are tted tor the NL
1f he: returns to torm a tier re'ovenng lead Nen al ,o boasts a 0 98 ERA
LHP Ktrk Rueter ( 10-1) lied tor thtrd
from September elbow surgery
m
the NL wtth a 769 wmnmg perSan Diego Padres
centage
RHP Orel Hershter held
What went nght The 57-31 record
opponenls
10 a 219 battmg average.
IS the wmnmgest first hall m the
ftlth
best
tn
the league LHP Shawn
team's 30-year htstory The prevtous
Este,
19-5
last se;son. rebounded .
best start was 49-34 111 1984 when
from
an
0-4
start
to go 7-3 wtth a 1 27
the Padres won the pennant Pttch1ng
ERA
LF
Barry
Bonds
( 283 I KHRs
and defense are markedly tmproved
59
RBI)
had
77
walks
15 mtentton.
The 1-2 punch of RHs Andy Ashby
al
( 11-5. 2 54 ERA) and Kevtn Brown
What went wrong Cleanup httter
( 10-3. 2 67 ERA) le-Jds the rotatiOn
RH closer Trevor Hollman has and 2B Jeff Kent mtssed the l.tst three
anchored the bullpen wuh 25 saves 10 w~eks wtth a spramed nght knee. not
as many chances All Star LF Greg helptul to Bonds tn the No 3 hole
The team went 11 · 13 10 Kent s
Vaughn reverstng last year's slump
absence

Hail Damaged Dent Sale
11 1CI(:t:S SL\SIIt:lt- S.\\!t: 'fiiOllS : \~ItS
0:\ 'I,III~SI~ SI,IGII'I,I,\' 1),\ !U :\(;t:lt C.\llS!

1995 NISSAN
240 51

1994 LESABRE
LIMITED 4 DR.

One local owner, auto , A/C , CD player
Only 26,000 mtles

Local one owner, ruby red wtlh leather
tntenor Loaded wtth opttons

former long-ume manager Tommy

Lasorda a, mtenm GM Hts ti"t
tr.tde Saturday brought one of th e
game's top closers m RH Shaw who
led the maJOrs wllh 42 suves Ja.,t year
fur Cmcmnatt But they had to gtve
up LHP Denms Reyes and I B Paul
Konerko. both young. htgh-upstde
players Lasorda satd a quahty closer was necessary to get ba&lt; k m the
West mce But It mtght be too httle.
too late, conStdermg the hole the
Dodgers have dug lor themselves
Only 14 players from the openmgday roster remam on the t~am New
manager Glenn Hoffman must get hiS
team to show some SJgns of ltfe to
retam hts JOb
Milwaukee Brewers
What went nght The tirst team
thts century to change leagues made
a seamless transtuon !rom the AL
Centml to the NL CentrJI The Brewers held tirst place for awhtle and
thetr unhemlded pttchmg stalf ha'
managed a decent 4 03 ERA 2B Fernando Vma hu 305 to ~arn hts first.
and the team's only. All-Star berth
RF Jeromy Burnttz led wtth 19 HRs
and 59 RBI RHP Bob Wtckman had
II saves a' the new closer after RHP
Doug Jones faltered
Jlhat went wrong LF Davtd Ntisson opened the season on tlle DL and
IB John Jaha was stdeltned m May
The tnjunes to thetr former DH-combmauon kept the Brewers· best
offense off the field Bumuz had a
maJor-league htgh 93 stnkeouts The
Brewers had 81 grounded-mto double plays. tymg Colorudo for the NL
lead
IOJury update. C Mtke Matheny.
out stnce June IS (str.uned left stde
muscle), IS set to come off the DL as
early as next week C Jesse Lev1s has
been on the DL since May 8 wtth a
80115ton Astros
partrally-tom rotator cuff. RHP Puul
What went right. Led by AII·Star Wagner (StQmach virus) went on the
2B Cnug B1ggio's 75 lUllS scored, the DL on June;! 27 to make room for
Astros' offcn.o;c hit on all c:ylinden to newly-acquired RHP David Weathlead the NL in most cate&amp;Ories in tht ers. Wasner is cxpec:tcd back after he
first half. Rankin&amp; •1110111 the l1lllkes four minor-leugue starts. RH
leque's top 10 were AIJ:Star LF reliever Chad FoJt rejoined the club
Moi!a Aloia with 20 HRs. 73 R&amp;( July I after missing altllO!It two

•

months wuh shoulder mflammatton
Outlook The Brewers who
entered the break wuh a wmnmg
record for the first ttm~ smce 1992.
are playmg lor keeps nght now wtth
an eye on the tuture They re sull
wtthm 'tnkmg dtstance of tirst-place
Houston and are runnmg neck andneck wtth thetr nearby new nvals, the
Cubs The Brewers have mne players
stgned through 2&lt;Xl0, the year they
wtll move mto Mtller Park
MontRal Expos
What went nght All Star RH
closer Ugueth Urbma was among the
NL leaders Wtth 20 saves CF Rondell Whtte htt 293 wtth 16 HRs and
51 RBI I B Brad Fullmer htt 287 and
topped the NL wtth 34 doubles to
emerge as a rookte-of-the-year candtdate RF Vladmlf Guerrero hit 308
wtth 14 HRs and 45 RBI C Chns
Wtdger tmproved defenstvely
What went wrong SS Mark
Grudztelanek complamed he wants
out and played hke 11. htUtng JUst 2-15
and commttttng 18 errors m the first
half
Injury update RHP Marc Valdes
ts out for the season after "Tommy
John" tendon tmnsfer surgery 3B
Mtke Mordecat ts on the DL wtth a
&lt;prnmed left thumb
Outlook The Expos are gmng
through the growmg pams of tummg
a collectton of talented youngsters
mto a untt Nbthmg new for manager Fehpe Alou. who ha' developed
sohd teams before. only to lose the
top talent when they become ehgtble
tor free agency The future of baseball m Montreal hmges on getttng a
new ballpark
New York Mets
What went nght The May 22
trade wnh Flonda for C Ptazza ( 308
14 HRs 48 RBI) gave the Mets a

WAS

$12.900

Now58,500

1997 BUICK
SKYLARK 4 DOOR
Power wtndows, cassette, ltlt, cruise
Balance of new car warranty
WAS

$11 .900

Now$9,900

WAS
$12.900

1998 FORD
CONTOUR 4 DOOR
Only 2800 low, low mtles, auto . AJC.
cass , power wtndows Small dtngs on
roof and deck ltd

~:s~S:sRP Now 512,888

1993 MITSUBISHI.
ECLIPSE COUPE

1993 DODGE
DYNASTY 4 DOOR

Locally owned, auto .• A/C. only 65,000 Clean tnlenor Runs good.
miles.
WAS

$7,995

Now$5,880
1997 GRAND AM
4DOOR

Now 5.3,990

WAS

$5,995

1996 BONNEVIlLE
4 DOOR

Power wtndows, cassette, tilt, crutse. Power windows, ttl!, crUise, cassette.
Balance of new car warranty.
Balance of new car warranty.

$9,900

WAS
$14,900

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel·

: Thul'lday, July 9, 1998

.,-

Pagel

Woman thankful long term affair ended - and husband took her back
Ann
Landers

199'7, u. AAreb n.e.
Sylldicaae Md C11a10n
SYf'dicMC.

Dear Ann Landen: I am writing
to reply to lhe woman who was
looking for tbe impossible dream in
her marriage .
I agree that the sparks and
excitement of an illicit love affair
can be thrilling, but the results are
often devastating . I learned that lesson firsthand.
I met a man at work who took my
breath away. We were both married
to other people, so it was just an
innocent flirtation at first. We used
to stare at each other from across the
room . After a few months. he got up
th~- nerve to ask me to lunch.
I was flattered and excited. One
thing led to another. and you can
guess the rest.

We bolh knew it was wrong, bu.t
somehow, it felt so right. The innocent flining turned into a full-blown
love affair that lasted seven years.
I now thank my lucky stars that
he decided not to leave his wife and
I decided to stay with my husba11 :.
Plea&lt;e continue to tell your reade &lt;
!hat !he temporary excitement of
exttacurricular romance with candlelight and wine are not worth the
pain.
I stayed married to a man I can
!rUst and depend on. I count my
blessings every day that he was able
to forgive me. -- Forever Grateful
Dear Grateful: Your letter is
much more powerful than anything I
can say. Thank you for writing.
Dear Ann Landers: In the early
1980s, you printed a letter that
changed my life.
A mother wrote for help with her
daughter who cilmpulsively pulled
out her eyelashes and eyebrows.
I was 12 years old when I began
pulling out my eyelashes and eye-

brows. I felt alone and crazy until I
read that letter in your column.
You responded with kindness and
told her that millions of people do
this and it has a name •• bichotillomanJa.
Today. because of your letter, I
am whole emotionally. I am still
addressing thi&gt; condition. but I have
no shame and no longer suffer in
isolation. I know one day I'll be able
to stop.
Years later, you printed letters by
two other sufferers. You referred
them to !he Trichotillomania Learn·
ing Center.
Please print the address again,
Ann, so others can be helped as I
was . -- C.S. in Sacramento, Calif.
Dear C.S.: With pleasure. An
estimated 8 million to 10 million
people in the United States have trichotillomania. and most of them still
feel they are "the only ones."
The Trichotillomania Learning
Center is the nation 's only resource
center devoted to helping people

with this disorder. It provides infor·
mation on treatment referrals, current medical knowledge and networking, and assists in setting up
suppon groups.
When I mentioned !he organization last time, o,.,: 16,000 wrote to
ll.C to ask for he I 'and information.
For inforrnatio~. send $3 to: Trichotillomania Learning Center Inc.,
1215 Mission St., Santa Cruz, Calif.
95060 (www.trich.org). Because
you wrote, many others will be
helped as you were.
Dear Ann Landen: Please say a
word about people who drive around
with their kids unbuckled.
r v~ seen kids standing, jumping,
switching seats and climbing
through the rear window of a pick-.
up.
I recently heard about an accident
where a driver was transponing
more than 20 kids in a van.
To those who think it's a nuisance
to buckle up a kid when you get into
a car, think for a minute about how

hlrd it would be to pick out a~
and headstone for your preci0111
child. - Been There in Pevely, Mo.
Deir Peftlys You've wrillell a
letter thai wiD save many YOUDI
lives. Blesa you on behalf of all the
it.

'
Send questiOIIS to Ann Landen, Cleaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles, Calif.

9004S

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

•uountTlfiRD

PltONE"N'"

41 0
' DLEPOR1' • 0"

108 North S1*'11 Ave. • Mlddlepoi"'., OH

liiJ • aiC .:J

Guaranteed Service

•

EXCESS ·

........ Lcutan
-Sonloy,
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INVENTORY
ELI/V\1 NATION

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bt lllo ftnot onotoo iiPCil1l toOevlood I n - po1mo tine,
until Satunlly ~Oct. 17.

IUICH CIIIAHD NAllONAL
Dolt Jr. """""'*~

Doodgo, 1211.(127,., ...... 211, 11188 .

O...'NASCAR 11oio Wodc

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Preparations will be made for the
upcominq !35th anniversary of the
Battle of Buffington Island to be
held on July 18 at Ponland. A discussion on a change of meeting will
occur. Also a discussion of aid
to Orange Church Cemetery veterans' stones will be discussed.
The Public is invited to attend the
meeting.. Anyone with questions
may contact Keith Ashley Commander, at 992-7874.

plantings, containers. even window
boxes that receive full sun, hanging
baskets and rock gardens.
Clotine Blackwood talked about
•'le ruby-lhroated hummingbird, !he
."'ying JewelL She said they are
named for the male's bright lhroat,
and are the only hummingbirds east
of the Mississippi
She said that hummingbirds have
the ability to fly in all directions can
hover in one place, have a heany
appetite for flower nectar, small
insects and sugar water, have a distinctive metallic green coat, and can
move their wings up to 200 times a
second. Blackwood described the
male ruby throats as fearless protectors of !heir home territory which
averages V4 acre in size. Females.
she said. are !he next builders which
are cup-shaped abodes I0 to 20 feet
from the ground.
In autumn many hummers
misrate more than 2,000 miles to !he
warmth of Mexicc and Central
.America, Blackwood noted. She displayed a tiny nest of a hummingbird.
Atkins and Sharon Jewell presented devotions, and for roll call
membetl answered by naminJ a
new rote they had recently purchued. A letter was read from !he
1t11e publicity chairman noting 'that
the · Rudand club had received an
excelleat ralinJ an tile publicity

book.
Atkins attended the Gardeners
Day Out held in Hocking Hills in
June.
It was noted that Donna and
Sarah Jenkins had planted and
weeded at !he club'• plant sites in
Rutland, while Mar;orie Rice and
Atkins had done so at the Masonic
Hall in Harrisonville. Lowery, Eva
Robson and Atkins took flower

~community
THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday. Sacred Heart
Church. Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053, Thursday, Refreshments 6:30
p.m meeting,7:30 p.m.
CHESHIRE- Disabled American Veterans, State Route 7,
Cheshire, Monday, 6:30 p.m.;
meeting 7 p.m.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Friday's fun,
food and fellowship at Ood's
Neighborhood Escape for Teens,
Front Stteet, Pomeroy. Nubitional
foods free of charge, non-violent

arrangements to their churches.
Jenkins furnished the !raveling prize
which Lowery won and Marcia
Denison drew !he door prize.
Stella Atkins attended with her
daughter-in-law of Seattle, Wash .
and her 89th birlhday was observed.
Another guest was Robson's
nephew, Bob Brewer. A picnic will
be held at the Jenkins home in July.

CalendaF-rvideo games, computer programs,
pool tables available for use at minimal fee . Center opens 6 p.m. and
closed at 10:30 p.m. Youth may utilize game room on Saturday.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville Ulllge 411, FotAM, Sat·
urday at hall, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments. Meeting change due to holi·
day.
SALEM CENTER Slar
Granae 778 and Slar Junior GraniC
878, Saturday, potluck SUJIIIU, 6:30 .
p.m.; meeting, 8 p.m. Contesi judi•
in'; Harrisonville visitina .

""~~· '

Bucl• hi CJIItn, \1\'lllcLw Olin, N.Y.

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Cloodr'500. -

Stpo. 12
Stpo. 20
Stpl:. 27

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4 wo, e cyl, NC. auto,

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Jt1toi Uile 300, Uulan. N.H .
.,. . . . . . . 500, Lone Pond. Pa.
DeYaM .400.~. Mich.

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t-..r, nwoyii()N oqu~on_,.
10 bdicoc dotl .... of die

0 . , - - oMn ....... tnd
_ . . , iMn for drivina in 0.,
doaoiiOl- Aloo, lotvioW 0., dri·
&gt;at in aoc foetd . - y helpo
......"in lbc lower divisioo.

llelr NASCAR 11oio Week.
I htw bol '""lloinf 10 II)' tbo&lt;il
doe leftGonlon/Roooly Wtlltce inridono. ltidmcno11r)IIU
Jeff
hit boty • llriMol .... )'Off told
ROlli)' die ....,., bol Oonloon
poulotloly
_ , renoenober dotl: I
aid, "Thaa\ ...,.._. Wei~
I lliii* I Rlilly II)' doe MillO
otmoa. Hey, Jeff . . . ptybtcb ...

....u.

UAW-GM 500. eao-.o. N.C.
Wlneton 500, ~- •
Dutt-Ubo 5 0 0 . - Ariz.
AC-Oeloo ~::::•uhwn. N.C.

NAPA500.

, N.C.

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SCtndlr

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B. l...lbante

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8POUIE: Pill
80NII Coy, Jaon Dean
(J.D.)

11NWi In my tile, and I IIIII like
WINSTON CUP CAR:
tllat was Whn I ooght to
No. 181..-ate Batteries
go. But my dnlem was alSo
Pontiac GrWld Prix dltven
to drive a race car, II'1CI had
by Bobby l.lbonle.
nw00&lt;et1 out. tllat's probaCARIER AICOAD: 199
bly whit I would have tried
sla'll, 11 polea, 0 wins, 46
to do."
top flvee, 90 top Ills, tM1t
YOU ONCE WANTED
$9 m1t11cn In wlmlngs.
. TO DANE RACE CARS.
HOW DID YOU OIT
HAVI! YOU FOUND IT M
INVOUIED, FII8T IN
SATIIFVIHG TO OWN
COACtiNG AHD THEN II !lACE TEAMS? "Vthen I
AUTO RACINQ? "Coaching coached, 1 . - under·
provided 1\'11 the ftrll oppor- stood why owners got such
tunity to make money o1ghl
a kick out or ~. Now t under·

S1and.- you put som&amp;tnlrog together, and then
you're fortunate enough to
have IIUCC8IS with n. n-.
exciting."

WHAT 18 THE KEY TO

8UCCE88? "Keeping the
olglot prio&lt;itles. Racing

ilhoutd not be first in my !We.
God shoUd be first Keep
God first. Second should be
lan11y end kMtd onee. That
leaves my occoopation. raelng, third, althoYgh n's a very
important pa1 cl my l~e..

TRIVIA

.The Daily
Sentinel

1. --tllt--dE-Owono?
2. Who -tilt 11r1t dwnplon d tilt er.rtwn.1 Trud&lt;

3. Who wmtllt 111113 SCiutlltmiiOO?

-?

I!I!
liO
llo

0

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Iii

Valley
Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St.
Middleport

next.,...

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J. Ekl1on

ina&gt;llep.

lolichtd 1 Gtmea

l...llbonte In Wlnllon Cup

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

J. Ocwdcln

....

; ieaoced upper echdon of

men

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ar.lually getting -

011 1'111 SOIIIlUU

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pnoo:lically iiOOCliill&lt;nll. [lloeyJ

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w....,....,,_..,....

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played In flu Sup.- Bowie
1n1 won thnle d 11wn.
fllnl1ltlrh, he won with

CoiCio Gibbs' blggoll )'081'

WASI3,411

Davis is a member of the Gov.
William Dennison Camp No. I Sons
of Union Veterans of the Civil War
of Columbus-Ohio's oldest veterans' chapter of any kind.
He served as the Chief of Staff of
the Ohio Department Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War for the
past foui years.
He is also the current national
S.U.V. chairman of Grand Army of
lhe Republic Highway (U.S. Rt. 30)
Committee.

Mllct-

Foodhold oil
lllo Dodge of Jionmy Hlnlloy to
win lilt Sen DIIHMI200 II

oin, lhcllunooo,- told -

~.,.

In.... ' 1Nt---

4 Dr, eldon WIIJOil, lion! wheel drive, 4 cyl, AIC. auto, PS, PB, NNFM

politician of the 1860s. Hi&gt; wife,
Anita Davis, ponrays Anna (Neil)
Dennison, wife of the governor.
Anna Neil was the daughter of the
weallhy Neil family of Columbus
and owner of the main hotel in
downtown Columbus for decadeslite Neil House.
Davis has obtained his rcsearcb
through a doctoral dissertation from
Ohio State University as well as
having talked with the living granddaughter of Gov. Dennison.

--who-

why nwoy

w- a., otoMn ..,. in [boclo

rnotoiiPIJjla.

WAI~Ja

WAS

:Ia Miller, Beatrice Morgan, Ryan
Pratt, Atny Smith, Becky Smith,
Josh Sorden, Wes Thoene; Shawn
Tibbetts, Bridgett Vaughan, Ryan
Well, Melissa Werry, and Marissa
Whaley.
Adults which included Meigs
faculty members, some parents and
other chaperones were Jennie and
Steven Dorsey, Mike and Bob Ger·
lach, Mary Bays, Elliott Dorsey,
Celia McCoy, Carol Crow, Eleanor
and Marvin McKelvey, Melissa
Bays, Lynn Brown. Mabel Coston,
Barbara Matthews-Crow, Daniellc
Crow-Kincaid, Tom and Mary
Dorsey, Briannc Hartley, Linda
Hayes, Shirley Miller, Edna Orr, Jim
Reed, Jenn Tas~a. and Keri Wilson.

-tile Jl(lliot lllldoOUI by 20
..., Mllct t.lcl.aqllln IIIII 22
.... EJmiWIII.

4 Dr, 4 cyl, NC,IUIO, PS,

1997 FORD PROBE
front wlllel drhle, 4 cyl, IIIIo, PS, l&gt;B. atereo, bucket

and ancient Green ruins were also
included on !he visit which concluded wilh an evening on !he town at a
disco on~ lbc. M~iterranean waterfront
From there tbe group headed for
Switterlan'd -~ where they rode
through the Province . area made
famous in the landscapes of
Cezanne and into the Alps to Geneva. They !eft from there for the
return trip home.
Students making the trip were
Dave Anderson, Michelle Bissell.
Stacey Brewer. Jeff Brown. Jackie
Buck. Beverly Burdette, Ashley
Bunon. Tricia Davis. Beth Farley,
Marjorie Halar. T. J. King, Jennifer
Lambert. Tangy Lauderrnih. Carrie
Lightfoot, Morgan Matthew, Aman -

-now

noltd ~- .. ~~~go~
IUol-. Mitt

Dave Harris
Ext.104
For More
Information

IW:IIIIC(No Joel&lt; Spoguo. ~
·~ .......... 30, 111111.

Hill d Feme, Jot Glbbl
1111 followed hie COIChlng
-wlth.-ln
tnlhr rJI hie lllllong ltMI,

thnle cllflwlwtt ~:
Joe Tl1eiiiM on, Doug
Wlillnllnl Mlrtt Ryplen.
lolltw-loltlo In Alllo,
lilt loltlwoukao - -......
Wlo., ln. a-ololown.l by
Sprlgut,
11*11111.
Wille . . coCii tglhe
hit-. 5oca1cl ,_ Eltoo Chevy, .... ponollmd lllp by Redlklns, Glbblllllllld
NASCAR-.
up hie own I'ICI twns. In
~- who"*'*''""'
cdy hiS MCOnel-ln
NA5CAR WiniiDn Cup, Dale
.-r.n
gave Gllbl his ftrll
TOP'IBI
victory • the Day!onl500.
Bobl7f l.lbonle ltel .....,.,
~-.go by NASCAR
OUI!Aiol 1.....-k'l rtrti'lg II
won two
In Glllbl' IP8I" lnl biD
..~-~~~
Pltllno:e -'"II tloln
Pontile Grnl Pl1x.
2.--121
Glbbe allo ftllkil NHRA
Not OXIC1Iy ok.mpiltg
Top Full lnl fLmy Car
a.
(4)
.. .1111 llurtaol[lll
teerna.. well • • au.:h
OYordue lor • w
AlmoetllyoungllGoodon
Orlnd
Nl!lonlll Pontile for
J. llobtlr 11111111rDn Ill
4.DIIe.llrNII[31
l'ollnji!U Tony a.-t,
GettJog Mtoglll)er
- f o r 1M
who wtll probably join
10. iJIIe IIIII•'* III {101
S.llobtlr ~ [81

hll---wtnnlng hll hlnl ..O.ot tile

de Milo among many other treasures
of art. An illumination cruise down
!he Seine River was also taken by
!he touring group.
An overnight couehette train took
the students to !he south of France
and Nice, who later went on to
Monaco and a tour of Monte Carlo.
Students saw the changing of the
guard at the Royal Palace, toured the
f p·
R ·
d h'
pa1ace o nnce amer an
IS
Amencan pnncess, the late Grace
K 11 e Y· ·
. .
.
Other h1ghhghts of- Monaco
· lud d · C h d 1 B
· 1
me e tts at e rae, otamca
Gardens, and the yacht harbor. They
saw the grand casmo and the streets
upon which the Grand Prix race is
held. A talking tour of Old Nice and
.
.
a ehmb to the summit to the chateau

dllpllo • pote-wtnnlng qulllylng ""'· NASCAR ~

Call 992-2156

---JmnyHonoloy.

Ntttllti • member d the
Nl!lonlll FoolbllllAIQue'l

IIOIIWTW&amp;I

ADVERTISE
ON THIS
.PAGE

Sundly, Jdt 12
w a IlliG
CM•' triON: Joel&lt; 8!nQul

NASCAR 11111 Will&lt;

Fo r H omf·r:'

Elloa Sdlr.

a-.111.1118,., Jdt 12, 11117.

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Ave. In LIMpor1, II.,~ ... -

--lftl-., __ Joe Gibbs

-- -

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IDIIGCM'IIIION: Elloa-

~MCOID

IIOJMU:Or'IV - - ,.._, .... IUICII-NAT101W.
CDM11G II': Mjo1lo- 2150
WIBI: Mjo11o-(S.C18o~-­
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Blllldoy, Jolt 11

.., onoo 11 t..ouc1on.

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COMIIO II': Jilt I.ID 3!10

I.JMwrtlpuua·, 1.171
10. Dllt ~ 1.1U

TOURING El:ROPE - Twenty-teven Melg1 High SchooJ Frenc:h iltu1enta, .c:c:ompanled by teec:hera
1nd pamrtl lwve returned from an lldumlonll tour ol Europe.

992·2825

THE WIISTOI CUP CIRCUIT

URN
PIKE
Quality Senice Swts Right Here

7. .....,. ........ 2,045
I. JIIIIIUU'l, 1...

·Rutland Garden Club members learn all about roses
A program titled 'The Rose is
Queen" was presented at a recent
meeting of !he Rutland Garden Club
held at the home of Pauline Atkins.
Betty Lowery reponed on how
perennials love roses noting that
new or antique shrub roses fit perfectly into a mixed borer. Purple
foliage and flowers form a rich
background for roses, she said, and .
vining perennials intermingle artfully with roses, also spiky flowers
such as the red hot poker are a pleasing contrast for reses.
Lowery noted that roses with
perennial companions in mixed borders offer their blooms freely and
ask little from the gardener in return.
Dorolhy Woodard suggested that
when looking for a lovely and stunly
rose, mink small. She said !hat if !he
flower bed is not large enough for a
· six foot shrub rose, try minis. They
w: roses !hat produce small, perfect' IY. shaped blooms resembling their
· laiger counterpartS of hybrid, flori. bunda or polyantha.
. Miniature roses can range 18
inches to 30 inches tall with some
producing flowers twD i~ across
· while others are IS lllri'OW IS one
inch across, she explailled. Because
ininiature roses are compiCI pow. ers, they Clll be used in IMIY w~ys
iii a home genion - alo_nl wrth
perennials, bonlcJs and 11, IIWI

• \ - ., .

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Gallipolis
Aaolle fran Gallla Auto Sales on old Rle. 36 WfJat
New Summer Hours Mon.-fri. &amp;-5; Sal &amp;3

Portrayal of Ohio Civil War governor at SUV meeting
Robert Davis of Canal Winchester, ponraying Ohio Civil War governor. William Dennison. will be the
speaker at the next meeting of
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7, Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil War of
Middleport.
The meeting will be held on
MOnday at the annex of Hope Baptist Church on 570 Grant Stteet,
· Middlepon. The meeting begins at
7:15p.m.
Davis will be attired as a typical

•.r\..

t12.Z1te

a. ... Bing

'S.St8ftMnda ..

Meigs students return from educational tour of, Europe
Twenty-seven Meigs High
School French students have
returned from a tour of Europe
under the leadership of Jennie
Dorsey, teacher.
The students were accompanied
by 24 parents and chaperones on lhe
trip which marked the fifth year for
!he educational European tour which
took them lhrough five countries
and four European capi.tals.
The group flew from Pittsburgh
International Airpon into London
where !hey visited the Tower of
London, the British Museum, Kensington Palace, and gardens, as well
as Harrod's Department Store.
Several of the students also visited St. Paul's Cathedral and Charles
Dicken's home. Scenic bus tours of
London with stops at Westtninster
Abbey, the Houses of Parliament,
and the changing of !he guard at
Buckingham Palace were highlights.
The students also ioumeved
south of the Thames for viewing of
Shakespeare's "As You Like It" at
the Globe Theatre and then later
a)tended "Les Miserables" at !he
Palace theatte.
The group then boarded a ship for
France where they viewed The Eiffel Tower, watched on a huge screen
set up in Trocadero Square, as the
French played its first World Cup
Soccer match. and took a bus tour of
Paris. visiting the Left Bank which
· 1 d d Th p th
L So
one u e
e an con, a
rbonne and the Luxembourg Palace
' d
and Gar ens.
They stopped at the Notre Dame
Cat hedra Ie, Iook ·m th e Ho1e1 des
/l~nvalides and the L'Ecole Militaire
~well at The Place de Ia Concorde
d th
H
'
an e 0 pera ou~ed
he L
The bus tour en c at t
ouvre
where the group saw The Mona
Lisa, Winged Victory, and the Venus

MUFFLER SHOP

112-21ee

Thul'ldly, July 9, 1111

The Dally sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

992-6611

.

No. they dldn1 ....,.
"'"
to lllo Pepol
400fnlm~.
but YOiuf'lte. flrefighten

fnlm 45 did man1111 lo IIVI Daytona
-

'"'"' ..... clettf\JC·

Ikon wMn wlldliroo
cloled In '"' lilt 1'11011
ctty'"'"' lilt nottll, ""'
end oouth. Finis got
dangorOully close to
tho IJ)OOC!Way; -

IlK NASCAR hOailqultl""
u

t\acl to be evacauted.

Fan Tips

111 Court St.

Pomeroy
992-2155

-

--=-=:..:III:::.::IAI:MI=._

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

_,of

1lle tloh
NA8CAR
Bob Blhr8 knowl ell about

WAS$7,1811

pattenee. New Hampslljre

lntomllltonal Speedway u .
opened In 11100 without

4 W D, e cyl, NC. auto, PS, PB, PW, PS, POL

..y _,,.,.,. of •

111 -.nilod owner, hill
wnn Bulch GtlnO
Naltonat, Bulch Nolllo iOild
Modlfiod untli ht

to -

4 WD, 4.0 8 cyl, AIC, -*!,

WAS.1t,441

8 cyl, NC, auto, PS,

WAII13,411

Win-

liOn Cull dill, tond BIIW,

""""'*' •

Cup oace.
In 1993. K tool&lt;l mojor ·-

!NIIy

SIIHJ:.
-.ldhlutt.-

--Bihre

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

t101q11 IIIII In
North Wifklltl CMO - but &gt;
btglnnlng iUt NHIS c

receMid I

_.,., dalt

«&lt;lht-le.

·:: ·

Ridenour
Supply
St. At. 248

4 cyl, A/C, PS, P8, AM/f~

Chester

teotal cry $ampler

985-3308

WAI .....
8 cyl, A/C, uo, PS,
WAI . .

Denblgh· Garrett Ford
Rlpi.V. WV 1-800-964-3873

....~c...

.....

SUMMER SAVINGS DAYS
Gnat prk1s • Wtt, S~ach, Slrltl

.

cMMiD.
..,.,,.......

-~

on Channel 9

Featured Next Week:

Call 992·2155

Cal Now r.ar $9.951lW w....._ •
CO""UNICATION.I

).766-0553

ON ADVERTISERS!!
Advertise dn this page

67$4398

Dave·Harris Ext. 104
For More Information

�Thursday, July 9,1998

P-age •• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 9, 1998

Business Services

Members solicite for service oriented library program
- A membership drive has
opened for Library Kids Youth, a
community service oriented
young peoples organization, at
the Meigs County District Public
Library in Pomeroy.
The organization plans community activities throughout the
year.
Such activities of the group
have included a haunted , spooky
'ialloween party, a noat in the

&gt;

I

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 11 hereby given
lhllt on Soturdey, July 11,
18M, Ill 8:00 e.m., 1 public
1111 will be held 11 40411
Laurtl Cllll Rold, Pomeroy,
Ohio 457H, to Hll lor ceeh
the lollowlnt cot~:
1873 CHEVROLET
DUMP TRUCK

Rockwood
Avenue,
Ch111p11ke, OhiO 411111
end 238 Eaet ll1ln Street,
P~, Ohio 457H.
Any p1reon wlehlng to
comment on thle eppllci·U!In lilly file comment. In
writing with the Deputy
Comptroller, Southe..tern
Dlllrlct, llarqull One 1 - .
Suite 800, 245 Peeehtree
Center Avenue, AUIIIII,
Georgia 30303 within 30
deya of the d1ta of thla
eppllclllon, the public 1111 le
evellable lor lnepectlon In
the · dletrlct office during
Ngullr bUIIRell hours.

DEFENDANTS HEREIN
ABOVE NAilED, whOH 1111
known. 1ddrea1.. ere ••
lleted ebove, 1nd who11

Horton line to the north line
of eeld lot; thence w..t
olong uld north line to the

'·

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pmnps

IGCBSI4E1JI10M41

·---·-

128 a month
Heat Pumps Aa Low As 139 a month

Air Conditioners As Low As

'

Garden Oub enjoys picnic
· The annual family picnic of the
Chester Garden Club was held
recently at the Karr Cottage.
· · Edna Woods had devotions and
for roll call members named a gard~n pest and gave their solution. The
.hint of the month was on cabbage. If
it is maturing faster than it can be
used, just cut pan way through the
root with a knife to slow the
piogress. It was reported that
Dorothy Karr and Edna Woods dec=ofated the stage and tables for the
·chester High School Alumni banquet and dance.
Eleanor Knight planted the urns
on Chester Cemetery before Memorial Day and Karr provided flowers
for the Chester Untied Methodist
·thurch in June. A thank you from
Opal Eichinger for sunshine in May
was read. It was reported that Helen
Nelson broke her hip, and Paul Karr
· had open heart surgery, with both to
·remembered by as June sunshine
projects by Edna Wood and Maurita
Miller. Hal Kneen, Meigs . Count)
· E~tension agent, was a guest at the
picnic.
An auction of garden related
. obje((s was held as a money-making
project. Bob Woods was the auctionee r and $95 was raised.
A letter was read from Maye
Mora who remains a member and
. sent a donation for the auction. She
is one of club; 's charter members.

Monopoly fans roll
.dice for new token
. Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) The
nationwide campaign to elect an addition to the 60-year-old Monopoly
board game's stable of game pieces
kicked off Wednesda• at Manhattan's
FAO Schwan toy sto~e.
· The tokens being considered: a
money bag (the sigr•nture of greed and
temptation), a piggy bank (the icon of
the thrifty) or a 1930s biplane (the sign
of an adventurer).
"As you look at Monopoly ... you
see that it's about real estate, trading
and making money" and those three
tokens tie back to that, said Glenn Kilbride, a vice president at Hasbro, the
parent company of game creator Parker Bros.
It's the first time since 1942 that
Monopoly has added a token to the
classic edition of the game. The win-· } ning token will be announced in Febi
ruary. then added to the game.
•
. As pan of the campaign, voters will
also get to choose their favorite original
token. There are I0: the top hat, car.
shoe, iron. battleship. thimble, cannon,
dog, wheelbarrow. and horse with rider.
Parker Bros. retired three other

1

IOkerts -

JUSC. lantern and rocking

hme- in 1942.
. Ballots will be accepted al FAO
S&amp;warz stor'CS across the COUIIII'Y until
~ 30. votCs can also be cast on the
bitemet at www.monopoly.com or by
calling toll-free 1-888-81-TOKEN.

•

...

addreaa

orl..a.

74().446-9416 • 1·8oo-872·5967

SUNSET HOME
CONS.,RUCTION

AUDITO A'S
PARCEL
NUMBER 07-G0317.000.
Court Coete 1nd euch
other lurther relief 11 the
court mey dHm Juot In In¥~~
end equity.

740•742•341J8/s.91

UPGRADES

INTERNET SIGN-UP PQINT
POMEROY, OH
740--992·1135
111111111mo.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Roam Additions • Roofing

614-992-7643

r---------------,

1

·

tOUPON

1

I Up to $5.00 Off tny prescription. I
: Limit 1per Customer per prescription. :
1 Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy 1
I
Expires 7·25-98
I

L------~--------~
SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kenneth llcCullouglt, R. Ph. ClwtH Alflll, A. Ph.
AOftlld I!Mnlnt. ll Ph.

Mon. lllru Fri. 1 e.m. to I p.111. IlL a 1.111.-1 p.m.
luncley 10:00 1.111. to 4:00 p.m.
PRUCfiii'TlON
Pit. 112·2115
I. ll.m ,rleMiy ..,._ PoaiWOJ, Oh.
Wtell N hta 'Ill t
t

110

Benefit Gun Shoot
Forked R1n
Sportsman Club
Friday,
July 10, 1998
7 P.M.

St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" thru 48" plaatlc culvert lrrstock .
Full line of water storage tanks· ·
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Water line- 100' thru 1000' Rolls
Sewer Pipe- 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays

HelpWineld

DENTAL HYGIENISTS
'

Full time (4 Day Week) and
part time position
available. Excellent salary,
benefit and bonus
package. Up to date office.
For more Information
call
(740) 592·1483 or
(800) 923·7329.

8111198 tfn

Custom Homes

M &amp;J

Roofing

CRAFTY LADIES
SHOP

Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items

Remodeling
Plumbing

• Fascia • Seamless
Guitar • Roofing
• Raplacament Windows
• Stati-ry Dacks

• 8lawn IMulotion
•Garages•Decb
24 X 24 f'ole Building
alarting ot $5995
740-992·2n2

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985--4473
7/22/lfn

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Gun Shoot every
Saturctay Night at

t~ur Mtllagelcross

s:oo.

With I DaUy S.atlael

Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
5 pm-11 :30 pm
Weekdays
Sundays 3 pm-10 pm

BULLETIN BOARD

,...

· *700, ~olumn Inch w11k~ays .

;,
.

·~

•·,• ,

.

.

.

112311 mo .

SAYRE

EXCAVATING CO.

:, TRUCKING

Umestone Hauling
· House &amp; Trailer SHea
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
(614) 992·3838

HauUng,Excavatlng
&amp;Trenching
Umaito.n e &amp;Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; HOUII Sltea
Ru1onable Rate•
Joe N. Sayre

ll/18/tfn

TAl-CLUB BENEFIT
SATURDAY, JULY 11
$.5.00 entry
Starts at good nmes, t st bike out
at noon . Proceeds to benefit 5 yr.
old in need of transplant.

·Residential air
conditioning
·Auto air condltion1119
·Hea t pump
·Installation &amp; scrv1ce

STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
Backhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,
New Construction, ·
Remodeling
·

r"

~.:

7/3/te 1 mer.

Don Smith
37614 Peach Fork Rd .
Pomeroy. OH 45769
992-2735

JIM'S

P/B Contractors, Inc.

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

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

"Huge

lnnntery"
*Roof Coalinga
*Vinyl Skirting
*Water Heaters
*Doors/Windows
*Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
*Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps

Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
•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

I

;

SR

650.

Name

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
575 Front Streel, Friday, Satur·
day, 9· 5 , brand name clothes
(levis . CK , Guess), good condi·

lion , cheal)l
All V1rd S.l11 Muet Be Peld In
Advance. Dlldllnt : 1:OOpm tht
d1y before the td 11 to run ,
Sunday • Mond•y •dillon·

1:OI!pm Frldoy.

Friday &amp; Saturday.

Four family yard sale· Saturday.
July 11, 9am-4pm. David Spenc·
er's. Main Street, Racine . Men's,
women's and girl's clothes, toys.
Mousehold Items and misc. Rain
cancels.
Friday &amp; Salurday. four family ga·

rage sale.

Hoi~ Lanen.1u~r·

101

ry Hgts, Home lnlerior, antique,
desk &amp; chair. children's clothing

&amp; toys. 9am-3pm.

Garage sale . Fry residence ne•t
to Salisbury Elementary School.
Friday July 10tn 1·7pm , Saturday
July 111h 9am-4pm, miscellane·

10·11.

follow signs

l'&lt;luso

end of Crew Ad

(be-

hind fairgrounds ). 3 family, kids
clothing, bikes, toys , baby items.
car phone . answering machine .

Fri. &amp; Sat .. 9:00

Pt. Pleasant
4 Fam il y· Yard Sale aam .·4 pm
Saturday, July 11th . 3 1/2 miles
out Sandhill Rd . off Belle Ad
Cancel Hrain!
Yard Sale 1306 Meadowbrook Or
Fri. &amp; Sal. 8·3 Clolhes, rad1o 's.

mosc.

Interested In AChallenging Po·

sition Send Your Resume And
Salary Requ irement&amp; To Tereia
Oa\11&amp; , Viet .President 01 Opera ·
l ions At Cenlurton Management
Group, 3490 Far H1Us Ave ., Kat ·

lOring, ()n;o 41-429.

albllltlea ; Implement A Broad
Basad County Economic .4nd
Communiry Oevek&gt;pment Program
Including Issues Such As lead·
ership, Land Use Planning . ln lrasHucture Oeveklpmenl, Slrate·
gic Planning And Other Key Concerns : Develop And Mainta in
Appropria te Grantmanstllp Skills:
Be An Effective Team Member :
Develop And lmplemenl Com ·
munlty Marketing Strategies; Ual·
son W~h Regional. State And Na·
tional Organizations : And. Estab·
fish Membership AM ParUclpate
In Proteuional Econorrric Davel·
opmenl Oroanizations.
Ouallllcallona : O~ gree In Fteld&amp;
01 Publ ic Adm1n 1stra11on . Busi ·
ness Adminislration . .Commun ily
Planning. Community Develop·
men! , Applied Economics Or
Closely Related Fields Preferred .
OemonsHated Ability In Applying
CommlJnity Economic Develop ·
men! Process To The Solution Of
CommuMy PfOblems. Especially
In Aurat Area 'Success In Work·
ing W1th A Wide Rage 01. Ciien·
tele And Organizations . Prefer·
ably Through Demonstrated
Management. Networkmg And
Collaborative Skills . Ability To
Communicate Ellectively, Orally
And In Writing . Candidates Mus!
Be Willing To Work Flexible
Hours Under M1nimal Supervision
And As An Effective Team Mem·
ber. Preference Will Be Given To
Candidates Willing To Res1de In
Meigs County. Salary Range Is
$30,000 • $40 ,000.
Interested Persons Should Am:&gt;ly
To Meigs County Chamber Of
Commerce, 238 West Main
Street. Pomeroy, OH 45769 . Or
Meigs County Commissioners Of·
flee. Counhouse. Pomeroy . OH
:,.5769. MeigS County Is An EOE .
Cosmetologist Needed Guar·
anteed Salary, Versu s Co mm is sion , Paid Vacation. Benefils .

740-446-7267.

Do Whit no one etle will do
Cemetery Sales · Take a sales
posillon no one else will. Oller
service and product no one etse
will . Earn S500·S1000 per week .
Cemetery sales oilers 10b security
and is recession prool . Nallonal
corpora t io n w11t1 average com·
mission ol $500 per sale. set ap ·
pointments, no credit turndowns .
paid tra ining, ma1or med•c ~l. arid
retirement plan . II you are serious
about wanting a golden opporlun·
Hy. call Steve Smith. 740·992·
7440.
Easy Work! E•cellenl Pay! As ·
semble Product s AI Home. Ca tl

Toll Free

90· Wanted to Buy
Absolute Top Dollar : AU U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins. Proolsets .
. Dlamonc:ls. Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings , Pre· 1930 US. Currency,
Sterling. Elc . Acqu151t1ons Jewelry
· M.T.S Coin Shop. ,151 Second
Awnue. GaliPOiis. 740-446·2842.

New To You Thrift Shoppo
9 West Stimson, Atlens
Quality clothing and hOusehold
Items. S1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9:011-5:30

4()

Antiques . top pnces paid, . R•ve r·
ine AntiQues . Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owner . 740·992·
252e
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture.
will buy one piece or complete
household . Osby Martin . 740·

992·6576.

740-592·1842

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Ponliac. 1900 East ·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis .

2 Full Blooded German Shepherd
Pups Both Must Go together 10

country homo 740·256-9123

OH

4!701

Female Golden Retriever. Approx.

E•perienced Wa•tresses &amp; bar ·
tendfrs . Apply in person at
Twisters Sports Grin and Restau ·
rant 107 Academy Drive . Rlple'y,

wv

MAKE MAILBOX MILLIONS
Ou•ckly, Easily. Big K1t Snows You
How ·Start Now! Mailbo•A t . 3825
Niagara Drive . Lex inglon . KY

1 112

·2 Yaars Old. Frltnd~. Well

Behaved. Needs Room To Bun ,

7.0 446 6688 .
Free to good country home, lull
blooded German Shepherd, 11

wks. old, lemalo. tan/black.

742·1016.

740·

.

110 Help Wanted
AVON I All Areas I Shl•iey
Spears, 304-675-1429.

740-446-9552.

AppHcatlons are being accepted
tor the posRlon of Long Term
Care A&amp;slslant. Ouallftcatlons In·
elude an Associate Degree in a

Friendly milt cat, liter tralnad,

experience In a health care set-

Friendly Kittens. L11ter 'Ttalhld, To

Good Home Only! 740&gt;4411-3897.

good homo. 304-67$-1237.

.

Manager and mainlenance lor
Pomeroy Cllll Apa rtments . Now
accepting resumes . mu st have
sheriff and police report , drug
screening required . Send resume
to 2-45 Union Avenue , PomeroY.
Ohio 45769 or call740-992·7772.
Now hiring sa le drivers . good
pay, flexible hOurs. Apply in per ·
son at Domino's in Pt. Pleasant.

25/98

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

hoallh-rolatod llald with 2 yaars

ting. Compuior

and blllng, modlcal

recorda skills a must. ~e1umas

AI I0:00 A.M. Tho Above

Will Be Sold To Highe st Bidder
•A5 Is- Where Is" Without E• ·
pressed Or Implied Warran ty

And May Be Seen By Calling

Keith Johnson AI 740·441 -t 038 .
OVB Reserves The R lg~t To Ac·
capt Or Aejact Any And All Bids.
And Withdraw Property From
Sail Prior To Sate. Terms Of Sale:

CASH

OR CERTIFIED CHECK.

Ont FuH· Time Licensed Practical
Nurse (LPN) Position I&amp; Available
In The Long Term Care Depart -

mont At Ook Hill Community

Mod-

k:'l Center. Cualllicatlons Include
licensure From An Accredited
School. long Term Care Experi·
ence Is Preferred . 11 lnlerested,

Please 5ond Resume To: Dak Hill
Community Mldlcel Center. At·

Full blooded molt Garman mull bo rocalvad by Monday. ttntlon : Brenda McKenzie. 350
July 20 It the IOIIOwlng: P.O. !lOx Charlene Avenue , Oak Hill, OH
old. to good home In the country 722, 112 E111 Memorial Drive, 4!6!56.

Shephard, solid white, 14mot.

orlyl 304-67$-552-4.

.

POMEROY, OH.

.

'

l'oiNroy. Ott. An EOE ~.

Kilton. gray ai1d whlta lomolo. Clreglver For Elderly Womtri
pllylulllnd llltcllorllfl, 7ol0-992· Room, Board, Selary, Rap~ To:
311112.
•13 Grevei.HIII, Cheohlre, Ohio
Long hllrld ktnlnt, lwkt old. ~304-87H418.
Avon • Sl ·UO /Hr. No Door To

.

ut~ . · ·To A Good Home: Hw Old fa.
.~.to--------~--""'!'---=~) nWIIItldl Lab, 7«1-448-7123.

Door. ·eon....• 1-eoo-2M-o13e
~

Nu,.ong. (304)675-5Zl6. MIEOE.;
Badjp!ACN Tedylican
Myerti&amp;OD!Hl1
Wanted : Ohio Licensed Badie!O ·
Part~Timt Position
With Screening Company W~tk ·
100 Athens And Surrounding A't·
eas . Excellent Pay Opportunlhes
Fle•itlle Hours And No Call.
Please Send Resume And Letter
Ollntenl To Radlology . Tec~ nl·
c•an . P.O Box 752. Athens. OMo

gy TechniCtan.

45701. OrC.Il-800·322·2182. '
Sales Person Needed · Home
Furmshing · Ful~ Time. Immediate
Opemng . Apply . Ulestyle Furnl·
lure, 856 Thtrd Avenue. Gallipelis .
10.2. No Phone Galls Please

The Jackson County Department
Of Human Services Is Accepting
ApplicaliOns For Two Social
Service Worker 11 Positions . Min·
•mum Ouahficalion$ : Completion
01 Coursework For UndergradlJ·
ale Major Field 01 Study (ie. Sp·
ciat Work, Sociology, PsychOlogy,
Home Tra1ning) As Required By
College Or University (Or 6
Monlhs E•perience A.s Social
Worker I In Counly Welfare Or

M.H. And MR. Or 16 Monlhs .Ex·

·perience As Social Worker For
County Children Service . 169 Or
6-48 Boards Or Community Social
Service Agency) . Associate Pe·
gree In Social Work May Be Ac·
cepted If Appl icant Complet8d
Comprehensive Program W1th
V1rtua1ty All Courses Taken Be•ng
In Social Work . Will Be SUbleCI
To Civil SeMce Testir.g.
Beginning Salary Of S9 .11 Per
Hour Plus Benerits . An Equal O)t·
portuMy Employer . Applications
Can Be Picked Up At Jackson
County Oepanment Of Human
Services, t 35 Huron Street.
Jackson, Ohio Or By Contacling
Belly McManaway. Director AI
(740·266·418 t) Between 8:00
AM And 4:30 P.M. Filing Dead·
line Is July 14 . t998AI4:30P.M.
State Certified High Pressure
P1pe Welder 5 Years E•perience
Tig And Slick Send Resume To :
BrenMar Construction, Inc .. 900
Morton Street . Jackson. Ohio

45640.
The GaiUa County 911 Communi·
cations Center Is Now Accept•ng
Applications For The Positions Of
91 t Operator Applications May
Be Obtained At The 91 1 Center
Located AI 1191 State Route 160.
Gall1pohs, Ohio Or AI The Information Desk In The Gallia CoUnty
Courthouse On Locusl S1ree1 In
Gallipolis . Gallia County, Ohio Is
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Thornton Greenhouse5. 740·247·
4334. needs labor workers to Pidc
tomatoes . ages 16 &amp; up, S5, 151

nour.

Truck Orlll'ers Needed With COl

&amp; HazMat For Stra1ght Truck De·
l1very. lifting Required. Good
Wages . &amp; Benefits . Hospitaliza ·
liOn, Pa1d Vacation; 401 K. lmme·
diate Start . Send Replies To: CLA
441 , c/o Gall ipolis . Daily Tribune .
825 Third Avenue , Gallipolis. -dH

45631

WANTED:
CRANE OPERATOR .
With Mecha n1 ca 1 Background .
Salary Commensurate With E• ·
perience . Call 1··800 · 339·6518
Man -Fn. 8·00 A.M . · 5:00 P.M .
For An Appo1ntmen1

OPPORTUNITY .
EMPLOYER

EOIJAL

Wanted Lady Companion To
live- ln. Free Board. No Smoking.
No Ormker, Charles Ric hards
740-446·3419 .

WORK FROM HOME
Prr $1182 Frr $5,!147
Free Book ...
1-800-465-1528

17 . 740· 593·

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any

Bunch Of Yard Sa le Stuff·Musl

Take A! . 304-773-5878.

b~ Jul~

304·773·5033.

Condition. 740-446-9853.

OirectoJ.

Pleaunl Valley Nursing ano Rt·
l'labilitation Center Is look1ng ~r
a two luU·time LPN·Ph's. Mu&amp;l ·be
llcen&amp;eCI. Must be able to w6t*
all shifls. holidays and wet ·
kends . Long term ca re tnpe rience pre lerred . Contact Ano..e
Cleland . Assistant Direclor et

ELEMENTARY CURRICULUM

Ohio Valley Bank Will Ollar For
Sale A 1996 Honda 300 41 ·WD
ATV. 107205. Public Auction Will
Be Held At The OVB Annex , 143
Third Ave ., Gallloplls, OH On 71

J &amp; 0 Aulo Parts . Buying
wrer:ked or salvaged vehicles.

Giveaway

Exl.

Wedemeyer's Auction Se rvice.

Bennett Supply

30 Announce'!lenta .

1·800 ·467 ·5566

8001 or 740 ·992 · 3883 l or mor e
infOrmation

773-!76! Or 304·713·5447.

Reaourcet

SEOEMS District, P.O. Box 5rf.

12170.

Rick Pearson Auction Company.
full lime auclioneer, comple te
auction
serv ice .
licensed
166.0hio &amp; West Virginia , 304·

Auction
and Flea Markel

Human

Social WOri&lt;or 2
Job Dllcrlptlon And Aeapon·

SUPERV ISOR beg inn ing lhe
t9 98· 99 school year for the
Atnens·Meigs Educational Serv·
ice Center. Subm1t letter of interest. res ume. 3 letters ol recom ·
mendaliOn, copy ol transcript and
CUfrent ce rlilica te to John Cos ·
Ianzo. Super intendent. 507 Rich·
land Avenue. Suite 108. Athens .

80

Gall.,.,lis. Ohio 740·379·2720

ANNOUNCEMENT S

"
JEFF.·WARNER INSURANCE
"

Centurion Management Group, A
Prog ressive long Term Care
Company Is Currently Taking Applications For A Nursing Home
Admm istrator In The Dayton .
Oh•o Area . We Otler Opportunity
For Career Oivers1fica1ion And
The Ab~ity To Grow With One Of
The Most Respected Health Care
Provides In" The Country. We Are
Seeking Challenge -Driven Ad ·
ministrators With Ttle Ability To
Lead By Example And Ensure
The Highes t Standards Of Aes i·
dent And Patient Care . The Ap·
plicant Mt.Jst Have An Oh10 ll·
cenee. Have 3 ·4 Years E•per i·
ence. And Have E•cellflnt People. Financial And Markellng
SkillS . Cen turion Otters An fl .
ceptional Compensation Package .

40517

..

614-992~5479

1501

Discount Prices
74()-446-9416
1391 Safford
School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

CELLULAR PHONES
113 W. 2ND ST.

Dirt

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

. 360° Communications

CAU

11th.

&amp; Vicinity

Free Esllmatss
No Job Too Small

Chester

YARD SALE
SATURDAY, 8 AM-5 PM
STH STREET, RACINE
Beanie Babies, crafts, chairs,
top desk, boll c:ardl, dllhes,
misc.
sleeper

Soil, Fill

614-992-3470

St. Rt. 248

BICDOIIID
DOZER SIRVICI

10.

Brand Clothes, Weight Bench.
Miscellaneous , 740·245·5595,
WatCh For" Slgns!l

Yellow

Gravel, Sand,

BlUM LUMBER

MilWAY TAVERN
GRAND OPENING
Sat, July 11 w/DJ Lee O~hnrn•• UL
Karaoke'&amp;very Fri. in
Ju!Y with Jeff North

'

Three family. clothes, baby
clotM es, some lurnlture. playpen ,
walker, stroller, etc, Friday &amp; Saturday, 2421 Lee ClrcHt , Syracuse,
Oh, rain cancels.

Limestone,

Cs/1 for Quote Today

740-843-5280. 843· 1238

ens Sizes 3-18 Lots 01 Miscl

Dlstrlbutl~

Ken'. OH 45643. By 7115198.

P.M. 1110 01 A

9·6

July 10 &amp; 11. lurn first road lelt
past WMPO Iron) Middleport Hill.
~tn hOuae, lOts of Items.

WICKS
HAULING

For uses on Pole Barn~, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pine Conatructlon
'Custom Engineering

TYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS
PRODUCE
.
Tomato Pickers &amp; Experienced
Packers needed.
Minimum Wage

992·7943

1·740·949·2015

.

Thurs ·Sat.

Mila From The Korner Store To·
ward VInton. Baby Clothes. Wom·

from Memorial Garden&amp;, antiQues,
dishes. toys, clothing. misc . !rum
college apanment, rain cancels.

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

S25 sc rv1c e cu ll

·
- From
Home
~
011C011111

II

And

DopooiU. Filing. Part·
Time BenefiU Include Slclc Lep
And Ohio Pen. Send Resume. "'Po

rnsc.

Bashan. July

9" Rib Pattern
$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per aq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths

,_..' .,.,
· ·,'""· .'~
.. ,·•

July 10 and 11 . 10:00-4 :00 . 91
Garfield . Toys . TV. Curtains ,
Bowling Ball s. household. Much

Huge yard sale at Gordon Hol1·
ers. on Holter road just out ol

WBift PlllftD SR:IL
RDDnNG AND SIDING
,.

Pnc.t.

ous ~ems .

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

Chester

ENTERPRISES

o

Household Items. Galore! 11
First Avenue, Friday. July 10th,
Saturday. July 11th . 9 A.M. ·3
P.M . Also Have Aelired longa·
berger Baskets, Asking Bentley

cuse.

8/t211 rno. pd

"Build rour Dream"

Big Garage Sale : Kids Toys . Kids

Clothtl, Big Wheels . Bikes.

First time ever. Sixth Street. Syra·

HOWARD

299 Third Street
Racine, Ohio

I HOME CREEK

• Vinyl Siding • Soffit

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

• Siding

. Open11am·6pm

~-

*

INSULAnON

· Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repairs
• Coatings

Top

rnu:

\

JlL SIDING l

-

740~698·7231

1

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

All proceeds go
to Herk Mayes.

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES
740-698·9114
or

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

JD COISfiiUnJOI ·

985-33831
35537 St Rt. 7 North

PLUS

(No

ft~~~~~ft~~~ ~···, ~

30 Announcement•

CARPET

-

Two Family Garage Sale : July 9,

614-742·2138

FREE ESTIMATES

---------...j

NOTICE OF FlUNG AN
APPUCATION TO
ESTABUSH ABRANCH
Notice 11 hereby given
thll City N1ttonel Benk of
w.. t Vlrglnle, 3101
l11cCorkl1 Avenue, SE,
Cherl11ton, w..t VIrginia
25304 hal flied 1n eppllcl·
tlon with tho Comptroller of
the Cumncy, Southlltlern
Dletrlct, ll1qulo Ono tower,
Suitt 800, 245 Peachtree
Center Avenue, Atlenll,
Georgll, 30303 on Mey 13,
11198, 11 apecllled In 12
C.F.R. 5 In the Comptrotllr'a
m1nu11 for Netlon1l B1nka,
lor perml11lon to ·••t•bllth
1 domeellc brench 1012

1--

5/26/lln

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

a.

We honor most third party
prescription plans. Your Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck,
Ken &amp; Ron, are here to fill your
prescription needs.

a.

Gutters ,
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

Chester, Ohio

740-992-2068

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping
Lawn Services
•Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR

985-4422

Free Estimates ·

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Howard L. WrlteMI

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

(740) 985-4180
611MB I pd .

One Stop
Computer Shop"
Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks

~Your

I

*

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

1 mo.

i:OMPUYIR
PDFORMANCI

Business
Services

Quality Prescription Service
at Competitive Prices.

PAINTING

Free Estimates

Insured

PRESCHOOVCHILDCARE

a

LINDA'S

Roofs • Decks • Garages

Gingerbread House

C'

Come in and see us at
202 East Main St.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
992·1074

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

1----------

Wllll~r;:

while they last.

New Constnction &amp; Remodeling

,..

NOW ENROLLING
Children 2 months to II years of age.

First Three days
FREE POPCORN AND BAUOONI
Opening July 1st.
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and used
We Buy.-Sell and Ttrade
Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons

Mail. Dol~

28U87S.

Beanie ~t Baskell, And More! Fri·
day, Rain Or Shine . 9 -4, Mitcl\811

Part·Ttlnt (36 Holn Ewry Otllir
WHkl Reeepllonltl Noede&lt;l. 0.·
phone. Opening

Call Ton-Free 24 Hours, 1· 888·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted

ties Include Answering Tele-

-OnTralftlng

Yard Sale

®

1141111 mo.

110

Gailpob Area. :
•ENn Up To 50'4 On Sales

~rman Shepherds,

"N- repllr on any
mokl?"
·
•Weahere
te7 Woodland Ortve . Thurs . Fri .
• Rangel
Sine•
. Cralls. Clothol. Lots 01 Goodiosl
• Relrigeratore IW
ALL Yonl Soill Must
• Dryer
BePoldln-.
PEAPUNE: 2:00 p.m.
• Hot Water Heater
lllodly-lllood
• Freezers
II 1&lt;1 run. Sundoy
• Dlthwllhtrl
edition • 2:00 p.m.
Frlclly. Monday ocll1lon
Call Ken Young
• 10:01! o.m. Soturdoy.
(740) 985-3551

Call 740·843·5426

"Where Quality Doem 't Cost More"

·

I

Warranty

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

Shlln'a eleven acre lot;
thence eouth to the pleea of
beginning; the .. me to
conlaln eleven acrea more

are

5 Parts

10

The AppliiiKe Man

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Help Wanted

Avon Reprtlentatlvel Needed:

(Cut Out lor Fulllfl Dlocounl)

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

~'
"Easy Over tlae Plaotte Bauk Fi11ancing"

The Fermer• Benk end
Sevlnge Compeny, Pomeroy, Ohio, ,.....," the right
to bid 11 thle eole, ond to
Newberry, Leurence B.
withdrew lhe ebove
Newberry end George
You are required to
coll1terel prior to 1111.
Newberry, It 11, D1fendant1. enewer thle. Complllot
Thle ectlon hu b.. n within twenty-eight (28)
Gardeners Day Out at Old Man 's demonstrated by participation tn Further, The F1rm111 Benk
(7J llltc
end
S1vlnge
Compeny
aaalgned Caee No. 88-CV· d1y1 Iller the 11•1
Cave was announced and plans were high school activities, community ruervee the right to reJect
0411,
and 11 pending In the publication of thle Notice,
completed for the annual garden service and part-time employment.
Public Notice
1ny or Ill bide oubmlttlcl.
Court of Common Ple11 of will be publlehed once each
tour. Club members visited Denise
Most successful candidates rank
Furthtr, tho ebov1
llalg' County, Ohio. The week for elx (6) eucceulve
IN TilE MEIGS COUNTY
Arnold 's gardens "Fragrant Fields" in the top quarter of their high collllterel will 1old In the
obJect of thle Complelnt weeki. The 1111 publication
COURT OF
dem1nd1 Judgement, by will be m1dt on the 30th
and a program was given by Arnold school class and have demonstrated condition It 11 In, with no
COIIIION PLEAS
expreoa
or
Implied
wer·
adverse poaaeaalon, for day of July, 19118, and the
on her herb gardens.
proficiency in both mathematical rentlae glvan.
C... No. 98-CV-0411
real property commonly twenty-eight (28) doyo lor
and applied science.
For further lnformetlon, ·NOTICE OF PUBUCATION found 11 the North Side of answer will commence on
Accepts appllattions
Candidates must be unmarried at cont1ct Tim 1111185-4218.
Beld·Knobb Stlverevllle thet dele. In the cue of
George w. Long
Road, Lebenon Townehlp, your f1llure to 1nawer or
The ·United States Coast Guard the time of the appointment, have no (7J •• II, 10 3tc
111875 Cldlz Road
llelge County, Ohio, and otherwlee , .. pond 11
Academy is now accepting and pro- legal obligations, and must have
Lore City, Ohio U755
Public Notice
more pertlculerly deacrlbed requeeted by the Ohio
cessing applications to the Class of reached the age of 17 but not 23 by
Plllntlll,
11 lotlowa, to wit:
Rulli of Civil Procedure,
2003.
July I, 1999. Candidates must be
PUBUCNOTICE
Judgement by default witt ba
Sltueta
In
the
Townehlp
of
Levi Newberry, hIt Llb1non, County ol Melga, rendered egalnet you 1nd
NOTICE II hereby given
Appointments are tendered solely assured of high school graduation by
1hll on Slturdey, July 11, unknown helra, aaalgna, end Stele of Dhlo 1 and lor the relief dtllllndtd In
.on the basis of an annual nationwide June 30, 1999.
18M, 11111 :00 1.m., 1 public ~.and devl...e, 1111 bounded 1nd deecrlbed 11 the Complaint.
competition with no congressional
Coast Guard cadets obtain an 1111
will be held et 211 Weal known eddre11 Uhrlehe- lollowe, namely, baing In
Dotee lhla 23rd day of
nominations or geographical quotas. excellent undergraduate education at · Second Street, Pomeroy, vllll, Ohio
Juno, 19118.
the
aouth
hill
ol
tho
weal
Applications must be submitted to no personal expense. In addition, Ohio, The F1rrl11r1 B1nk Cunwnt Addrtu Unknown
Llrry E. Spencer,
hell of the north-east
IIIII
the Director of Admissions prior to they receive pay and allowances for and Savlnge Comp1ny
Clark of Court•
quarter
of
Section
No.
32,
Gertrude Long, her
By: Dlene Lynch
Dec. 15. Candidates must arrange to living expenses. The Academy cur- perking to~ to Hll for caeh unknown heirs, 111lgn1, Townehlp No. 3, Range No.
collllltrel:
Deputy
11 of the Ohio Comp•ny·a
participate in either the SAT I or riculum emphasizes engineering and the following
legltHI, end devl'"'· leal Purchaee: commencing at Submitted by:
19117 GIIC SIERRA
known addflll Uhrlchs· the aouth-eaat. corner of an · Christopher E. Tenoglla
ACT prior to or including the science. leads to a Bachelor of SciEXTENDED CAB PICKUP
villi, Ohio
December 1998 administration.
2GTEC19AXV158016
ence degree, and establishes a solid
eleven ecre lot deeded lo (0055290)
The Fermere Benk 1nd .CurT.nt Addrne Unknown
Jo1nn1 Sh1ln by Rachel Attorney lor the Plelnllff,
Appointments are based on the foundation for a challenging career.
oncl
Company, PomeTorrence Decker by dtlcl of George W. Long
candidate's high school record, per- Graduates of the Academy are com- Saving•
Delli A. Steen, her
roy, Ohio, re11rv11 the right
(&amp;) 25; (7J 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 etc
formance on either the SAT I or missioned as Ensigns in the United to bid at thle ttle, ond to · unknown helre, 111lgns, February 10,1914i thence
..at to corner ol Frank
ACT, and leadership potential as States Coast Guard.
wlthdflw the 1b0¥1 leglllell, lnd devllell, lilt Horton'• eleven ecrotreet of
CLEAN HOUS
E
collateral prior to .. le. known addrou Uhrlchl· lend which w•• deeded 10
Furlhlr, The Fermere Benk ~~~~~.... Unknown him on February 10, 1814 by
WITH THE
lnd
Riche I Torrence Decker;
,., .., ~~~~llr!ft~l
reaorvee
the rightCompeny
to reJect
1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..J•nd
thence north on eald Frank
Vlol'l~fr"fiiO:Sovlngt
1ny or ell bide eubmlttlcl.
Irma Hlllegu, her 1---------~~------...;,...::.
Furthtr, the above unknown helre, a11lgn1,
logeteee,
1nd devl ...a, laet
collateral will eold In the
THE COUNTRY
condition It 11 In, with no known 1ddreee Uhrich•· I.---------~
ville,
Ohio
••pro•• or Implied werCANDLE SHOP
Currtnt Adclfftl Unknown
rentlee given.
Candle Making
and
584 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
For further lnlorm1tlon,
Suppllea
Arthur
A.
Hln
..
,
her
contaet Shell• at 985-42H.
740-992-7328
unknown helre, aaalgna,
•Wex •Scent •Etc.
(7J 8, 9, 10 3tc
legiiHI, lnd dtVIIHI, 1..1
Refills
known eddrttl Uhrich•·
Public Notice
Variety
of Glfta.
ville,' Ohio
Open Tueo..frl. 10- prn
Cu"ent Addreet Unknown
PUBUC NOTICE
Sat. t0111fto4prn
and
NOTICE II hereby glvan
CIOIId
Slln. ' Mon.
We offer:
Hermon J. Hlnot, hie
thot on Saturday, July 11,
·
SR 124, Ml..,lvllll, OH
18M, 11 10:00 a.m., a public unknown helre, ..algne,
•Infant/Toddler_Care and Learning
7--45611
11le will Ill held ot 211 Weat legiiiHI, end dtvlteee, IIIII
............., tu41t ,.,. ......
known
addr•••
Uhrich•·
Second Street, Pomeroy,
(2 mo. to 3 years)
..._,_.,..
Ohio, The Fermere B1nk villi, Ohio
CurrentAddreee
Unknown
·
_
..
·
·..
· -~
·
•Part/Full Time Preschool and Child Care
end Sevlnge Compeny
parking
lot,
to
••II
lor
coeh
(3 years to 5 years)
E. Newberry, hlal
tho following collotoral:
1885 DODGE CARAVAN
unknown helre, a11lgn1, lin.
I!A
•Before/After School Services (6 to 11 years)
ltglllll, and diVIIHI, laal ~ IJ!!I
.,
·
~·.
284FK5tG8FA254884
Hours of Operation: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
AND
known 1ddreu Uhrich•· .-.
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
lin.
11188 CHEVROLET S·IO
viii•, Ohio
.fill!!!"Or G
1 BUl'ld'1ngs, R001·mg,
' s·Idi ng ~:·
Summer Fun Actlyltles for all ages.
CurnintAddre••
Unknown ·.'Ill!
, arages, poe
PICKUP
end
IIi:..
Commercial Reeldentlal
N:o.
1GCBS14E1JI109441
Dally Rates
CI•rence E. Newberry, hla ·. ill'!! 27 yrS exp
Ucensed &amp; Insured 11.~1
The Fermere B1nk and
County assistance available for eligible parents.
·
·
~:\!!..
Savlnge Comp1ny, Pomo· unknown htlra, aaa&amp;gna, ·
leget•••·
and
ov111ee,
loat
Phone
7
40-992·3987
Ill!!!
roy,
Ohio,
reaerv11
the
right
Call/Come VIsit • 992·7328
to bid et thla eale, end to known lddreu Adtnl, Ohio
Free Estlmstes
.._
withdrew tho ebove Current Addrtll Unknown
Llurence B. Newberry, hit ~~~~·;
Owner; John Dean
lll'!l
COIIIItrll prior to .. 11.
IIR. It:\ An. An. .111:-. M..lflr.o.lflr.o. M..lflr.o.lli:..
Further, Tho Fermere B1nk unknown heirs, 1111gne,
1nd Sevlnge Comp1ny legltlll, and devlaeea, ,... ~ m.~~ ~·! ~ ~l~ ~~; Ill·~ ~·! fll•!! \it!~ m~ ll!IJ
. · · · · " _,.. ·
· " · ·
reoorvee the right to reject known 1ddre11 Uhrich•· ...
ville, Ohio
any or all blda aubmltted .
IULY SPECIALS
Further, tho obove Current Addreee Unknown
and
COIIIItrel Will IOid In the
George Newberry, hla
•River Run Dog Food ........ $2.00 lb. per bag
condition It 11 In, with no
(While coupon• laat)
expro11 or Implied wer- unknown heirs, eealgne,
legeteu, 1nd dtvlseea, 1..1
ranlltl glvan.
For further lnlormetlon, known 1ddr111 Uhrich•· - •Shade River Cattla .Fead ........ $g.75100 lb.
contact nm at 985-4289.
ville, Ohio
•Shade River Creep Feed ..... $10.25100 lb.
Current Addreae Unknown,
(7J 8, 9, 10 3tc
Dltend•nte.
We carry Ferriera Formula from Ute Data
To: ALL OF THE
Hours: M-F 11-5:30; Satll-12:00 Noon
Public Notice

Society Scrapbook-Easter benefit underway at
Krogen
· The Easter Seal Society of the
· River Cities will benefit from an
A&amp; W root beer float promotion
being held this week at Krogers in
·P0 meroy.
The promotion will be held
Thursday, Friday and _.Salllrday from
II a.m. to 3 p.m. The annual event
raises more than $4,000 to help children and adults with disabilities.
Kroger emJtiOY,ees will be selling
root beer float.i for a SI donation.
The. ice cream is donated by Kroger
and the sodas and supplies are
donated by A&amp;W Root Beer.
. All proceeds from the event will
help Easter Seals continue to provide programs and services such as
equipment loans, pediatric therapies
such as speech and physical therapy,
SAFE Kids, a car seat program, oneon-one home care, community education and more . For more informati6n about programs and services or
volunteering, residents may call I·
800-93-EASTER.

preaent

ad Call992·2156

LO"G·s
CO"STROCTIO"

fo~

TRPPRn

north-e:aat corner of Joanna

unk-.
You 111 hereby notified
lhllt you have been nemod
Delendente In the ectlon
entitled George Long,
Plllntllle, ve. Levi Newerry,
Gertrude Long, Dell• A.
StHn, Agnee Hlnel, William
E. Newberry, Clorence E.

an

Kyger, Rewarcll740-388-9436 .

*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

Public Notice

To place

110

Black With Tan Trim. Vicinity&lt;

Christmas parade, an Easter egg Amy L. Miller, head of the ·
hunt at the Racine Library, a kids library children's services. at
fun day at the Racine Library; 992-5813 .
panicipation in a July 4th parade,
Meetings during the school
and visiting with residents of .year are held from 5 to 6 p.m.,
local nursing homes including every Thursday while in summer
caroling during the Christmas the meetings are held from 5 to 6
season.
p.m., every other Thursday.
Boys and girls from across
All business meelings of the
Meigs County wishing to join the organization are held at the
group should be from age I 0 Pomeroy Library.
through 14 and shnuld contact

Public Notice

60 Loat and Found

Lost 2 Male

*Free

MEMBERSHIP DRIVE- These members of the Ubrary Klda Youth are ready to welcome new membera Into the community aervice organization aa a part of a rnemberahlp drive which Ia now underway.
In the photo -.front, I to r, Bethany Amberger, Jenny Bowlea, Chriateena Young, Jeaaica Wolfe, back,
I to r, Miranda Young, Jilli Young, Jennl Young and Amy L Miller, head of the Meige County Public
Library Dlatrlct'l children'• aervicea.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

www.bonbusters.com

14()

Business
Training

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK qor
YOU STARTED ... But Your Em
ployer May Demand A little
More . Let us Keep You learnmg
Train A) Night. Ta~e Adult Tra ming At Buckeye Hills Career Can·
ler. let Us Know Your lnte res.ed
Fall Registration 15 Open In July
Slop In Or Call For A Brochure
740·245·5334 . F1nan c•a l Ai d
AVBIIa~ To Those Who Quality

150

Schools
Instruction

LOOKING FOR

A

JOB ... Bul

Short On Skills? Gam Sk1fl5 In
One Year Of Train1ng In T.I'IA
Evenings . Buckeye H1lls Career
Center Continues In Its 22-nl::l
Year 01 Operat1on . Tra1n in: Adull
Basic Education . GED Test1ng
Site. Otf1ce Tecnnology. Weld1ng .
Industrial Maintenan ce , Peacft
Olficer /Corrections. SUCC ESS .
Auto TecMnoiogy, A1r Cond1!1Qn ·
mg &amp; Healing . Fa rm Bu sme.ss
Plann•ng , Analys•s . Co mputer
Special1st . Customer Cen tered .
Healthcare Tecnmc•an {Formerly
Nurse A1de ) . MA /00 . Pre -Em ·
ployment Train ing . And Mort .. ,
Call 740- 245 ·5334 For Catalog
Ancl lnlormati:ln.
·

180 Wanted To Do
ANYOOOJOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulching , flo wer beds , landscaping·.
edg ing ,
mowing ,
sidewalk
etc ... Free Estimates . Call Bill

304-675·7 112.

'

Dressmak ing I Alterations. SUpcovers . &amp; Draperies . 7-40·2~5·

5556. 740-245-9561
Furniture repair, refinish and res·
tOfBtkm, also custom Of'tteft;. Ohio
Valley Aelinish lng Shop , Larry

Philip&amp;, 740-992-65-n.

EOE

Georges Portable sawmill, don't

Pert 0( Full Time Word Procos· haul ''"" log&amp; tc 1111 mill lust ....
'
.,. .
eor (WP). Sotnt Racepllon. Ml· 304-67$-1!157.
turo, Responolblo, Soii·Oiroctld
~I

Send

Sought. Flulbll Hotn.

ProttulonllllM Service,

~
~~­

R11um1 To: ~lA 440. Cio Removal, Fr11 Ellil!lltltt

Ollllpolil Dilly - · 125 Ttinl

Awnuo, Olllpollo, OH 4Se31 .

....,... Blclwell, Ohio. 814-388-'
- · 81~-7010.
::

'

�•
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 9, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 9, 1998

, .../

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

~::~==~~~~-=:.~==~----~----~~----------------------------------------~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::·
=·~-·· ·
'EY OOP
ALL
NEA Crossword Puzzle
. :.:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - .·-·
ACROSS
PHILLIP
..'

...
.'

ALDER

340
RLdlng mowers . push mowers.
farm 8Qu1pment and scrap metal.
wiN haul :wr.ry free. 7.a- 7 42-2502
Will do ntghl work lor the elderty.
Eioerien ce &amp; references 30487~ 7961 at 9am. 01 9pm.

WiU haul Junk or trash away $35/
~ toad 30H75·503!i.

Loaded 28x80 . 3br, 2 112 bath
with all options , on ly $2 ,499.
down. $362. per month. Free air &amp;
skin. 1-888-69Hm7.

Location! Crew Ad. close to MHS,
contemporary &amp;tyle house. 1 acre
lot, 1 1!2 baths. family room. Buck
stove . all Jenn -Aire appliances.
2·3 bedroom . garage, decks.
Trane H.P., 740-992-7292 or 30489f&gt;-3490 belore 2:l1pm.

FINANCIAL
320
210

Business

for Sale

Opportunity

OAKWOOD HOMES

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLE Y PUBLISHING CO.
re co mmend s that you do busi ness with people you know. and
NOT to send money through tile
mall until you ha ve mvestrgated
the olfering
230

Racin Sellabrauon, 0 Down 6.99
APR. 304-736·3409 .

t2x60 3 Bedroo m Mobile Home.
Immed iate Posse&amp;&amp;ion. Owner
Tran sferred. Askmg: S2 .200. 740379-2566
14 1170 3BR. $999 Down &amp; ONLV
S179 per l1'l) Free air &amp; free skirtIng 1-888-928-3426.

Professional
Services

Ll\l lngston 's basement wate rPfOOiing , all basement repa.rs
done. !fee est i mates . l1le t1me
guaran tee . t2yrs on fOb e11pen ence. 304-675-2145

All real estate advert1s1ng 1n
this newspaper •s subteC1 to
the Federal Few Hous1ng Act
of 1968 wh1ch maKes 11illegal
to advert1se "any preference.
limitation or d1scnmnlatton
based on race . color. rehg1on.
sex tam111a1 status or nat1ona1
ongin , or any 1ntenton to
make any such preference ,
limitahon or d•scrim1na11on •
Th•S newspaper will not
knowmgly accept
adven1sements for real estate
WhiCh IS 1n VIOlatiOn Of the
taw {'h •r readers are hereby
1nformed that all dwellings
actvertlsed 1n thiS newspaper
are ava1lable on an equ~l
opportunlly bas1s

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale

t•h70 3br $999 down . $198 per
mo. tree air &amp; sk1rting. 1-800-691·
6777

50 Acres 2 Year Old 3 Bedroom
House, 2 1/2 Car Garage. Sma ll
Barn, Green house &amp; Plant1ng
Supplies. 2 Mites From Gallipolis
Loc ks 011 0 1 At. 7 Immediat e
Possession. $89 .000 , 740 -2569350.
A Little Co unty In 'Town : Large
Restored VIctorian Home. Pr ivate
Sett ing But Within Watk1ng Di stance Of Schools. Churches And
Middlepo r t Bus1ne ss D•st rict
Brtck Circular Onve With 12 Acres 01 Land. Asktng $149.000 . But
Witt Cons1der Any Otter. Appoint·
mentOn~. 740-992·5696
Attracttve one -fl oo r home 1n Pomeroy. Beautifu l 1nte rior w1th 2
bedr ooms . hving ro om. dm1ng
room . bu ill -m kitchen . l1ke new
stove and refngerator . breaK fast
nook teaturmg corner whar-not
shelves . bath, ana a n1 ce sun porch with w1ndows and sc reens
prov1d1ng a great v•ew ot the Oh10
A1ver. Carpeted, lull basemen1.
plastered walls with .crown mold·
ing. roomy closets .w1th lull length
mirrored doors ; st orm w1ndows
and ooors. tully msutated. I 08 Le·
gion Terrace $39 .000 Call 740 992·5292 after 5 p m.
Close To Galllpot•s. 3 Bedr ooms.
1 Bath. 2 Car Detache d Garage
And Deck. 740-446·9664
CONOOMtNtUM
LaPlace. 215 Second Avenue . 2
Bedrooms . 2 BathS . located
Downt own $79 .000 . 740·446·

Acreage

(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
CAMPGROUND
COUNTRY ESTATES)
38 .25 Acres . Approx . 8 Acre
Lake . Mobile Home With Large
Add On Gallia City Water .And
Electric S125.000 More Acreage
Aval~ble . 740-388-8878.
10011150 lot In Gallipolis Ferry.
304 -675-1226.
4 98 acres . 7 minutes from Point
Pleasant. Good building sites .
PuotiC Water. $22.500 . 304·675·
591 I

Racine- Dorcas/ Greenwood Cemetary Rd./ Oak Grove Rd.· 1.5 •
11 ac res. 740-992-6542 or 740·
!149-2499.

1972 Homene 12x65 3 Bedrooms.
Need Some Remodetmg $1,000.
740-256-9109.
1977 8x30 trailer, $1200. 740 ·
742·1303.

360

$7 ,500, 740-446-3409

1968 141155 Ex ce llent Condition .
Cen tr a Ai r. Gas Hea t. lett On
Rental Lot . Or Moved $7.950.
740·446-0175, Or 304-675·5965 .
1990 Spruce A1dge 14x70 mobile
home , very good conditio n . 2
bedrooms , 1 &amp; 1/2 baths . washer
&amp; dryer. stove. refrigerator. central a1r. 8118 outs•de buik1i ng. 740992·6582 .

Divorce For ces Sales -Take ove r
payments . 2br. 2 bath . financ ing
avatlable. 304-755·5566.
For sale or rent . 14x60 ho use
tra iler. air condition , washer and
dryer. no__pets. ?40-696-1075.
FREE DOUBLE-WtDE
Stop by Oakwood Homes ol Nl·
tr o. WV. &amp; re gister to win free
doublewide , no gimmicks Only
at Oakwood Homes of Nitro, WV.
304-755-5885.
Hug e 28x80 3B R. t t/2 bath .
Starting at ONLY $39 ,999 . Many
optiO ns available . t -888 ·928·
3426 .
Large se lectfon ol used homes. ·2
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $2995 .
Ou1 ck delivery. Call 740 -3 85 9621
LIMITED OFFER
1998 Ooublewitle 0 Down $295
mon th. Free delive r y &amp; se t-up.
no land needed . Only 11 Otk·
wood Home• Nl1ro, WV 304·756-

5885.
3BR/2BA Set Up On Lot, Take Over Pymt's.
30036-7295 .
New 14 or t6JI80 . Only make 2
payments 10 move in, no pay ments after 4yrs. 304·755-7191 .
New 1998 141170 three bedroom .
includes 6 months FREE lot ren t
Includes skirting, de luxe steps
and setup . Only $187 .08 per
month w1th $1075 down . Calli ·
800-837 -3238
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 left!
Still under warranJy. ow ner finan cing available
304 -755 7191.
New Doublew1de 3BR . 2 bath .
S1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1888·928-342ti.

Real Estate
Wanted

Cash Pa id For Land In Gallia
Cou nty, Blackburn Reatty. 740·
~.

We Buy Land : 30 -500 Acres .
We Pay Cash . 1-800-213-8365 ,
Anlhony Land Co.

1981 Governor II. 3br. CIA.. new
carpet. 304-675-3840 or 304-675·
1952
1987 141160 2 Bed rooms. Good
Shape, 8x10 Deck Vinyl SkirtinQ,
8x 10 Outl:luilllng, Asking Pnce

Apartments

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent
2·3 bedroom house In Pomeroy,
HUO approved, $375 month, 740742-2367
22 19 Lincoln Ave. $350 mo. plus
deposit. no pets . stove &amp; refrlg·
erator Included. Will be avaitabte
July 13. CaU after 7pm . 304·882·

2099 ..
3 Bedr oo m Aanch ''w/garage,
hug e leve l lo t , meadow land.
S600 rent, $600 deposit. 304·8242480 .
Applications Now Being Accept·
ed For ·House 816 Main Street ,
Pt. Pleasant. WV. 3 Bedroom&amp;, 2
Full Baths. LR , DR, Faml~ Room,
Large Kitchen , Laundry Aoom, No
Pets , $400 Depo.slt . $450/Mo .,
740-446-9585 Or 740-448-2205.
I -5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4,000 Local Gov 't. &amp; Bank
Repo's Catl 1-800· 522-2730 . X
1709.

Pomeroy- bur bedroom , SIR, newly decorated. tiUD. no pets, smatt
yard, patio , depoSit , 740·992·
6886 '
Two bedroom house. $300 month,
S150 deposit. water and trash in·
eluded, 740-992-2524 .
Two bedroom in Pomeroy, $300
per month. $300 deposit. pay own
utilities. no pets, 740-992·2381
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Mobile Home.
Close To Gallipolis. 740-2566574
2 &amp; 3 b~room mobtle homes, air
co ndi tioned . $260-$300. sewer.
water and trash included. 740·
992·2167.
2 bedroom mobile home lor rent in
Racine. 740-992-5039
2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine. no pets. 740-992·5858
2 Bedroom Mobile Home Fo r
Rent . 8 Miles Ou t State Route
218, Ga llipolis. $175/Mo ., Plus
Deposit'. 740 -446- 817 2, 740 256-6251 .
2 Tra ilers For Ren t. 740 · 4464110 .
2br. remode led, no pets . refer·
ences . on Sand Hill Road . 304 ·
675-3834
3br on Pleasant Ridge Rd . Gallipolis Ferry, WV. $250/mo. + $250
oeposit. 304·57&amp;2241 .
3br , deposit &amp; references re quired. $375/mo. 304~75-3424 .

for Rent

CMI1v'• Fanily LlYi1g aa:epts

Pool table . 8ft. regulation , new
green felt , slatron top, many ac·
cessories. $200 fi rm . 304·458·
1554.

. HUll
SPECIAL$100 OFF DEPOSIT
WIT!i THREE REFERENCES
Children WtiiCOmo

For rent:
MkkUeport· i1V8ilab'e now, 2 bedroom apartment with new carpet.
front room 12xl5, trash &amp; water
pakl, $355 a month plus deposit,

1

vearto...,.

MkkUep'ort· available: now, 1 bedroom trailer, nice quiet lot, South
Second Avenue, $275 a month
plus depos~. 1 voar lease.
Pomerov- lor rent July 15th. Iaroe
3 bedroom apartment, cable: &amp; all
ulllllies paid , has private back·
yard &amp; big porch wHh dad&lt;, $650
a month plus deposit , 1 year

lease.
Pomeroy. lor rent August first . 2
bedroom apartment. new carpet,
utilities &amp; cable pa lO, French
doors. "99 plus deposit. 1 year

lease.
Aa:epti~

Appilcatlone Now
Can 740-99H514
9-9 Monda)' thru Sunday &amp; as&lt;
for Christine Martin

2 Room Furnished Efficiency All
Utllllles Paid. Share Bath, $1851
Mo .. 919 Sacond Avanue , Gallipolis, 740-&gt;146-3945.
CIYI&amp;tYs

Famltf Living accepts
HUD.

Middleport· available July 7th, n.o
bedroom apartment, new carpet ,
front r.oom 18x15, upstairs unit,
trash and water pakl, $355 month
plus deposit and one year lease.
Middleport· available August 1&amp;t,
two bedroom apartment. $355
month plus deposit and one year
lease. water and \rash paid.
Middleport· Immediate occupan-

cy, one bedfoom traNer, nice quiet
lot on South Second Avenue ,
$275 monlh plus deposll and one
year lease.
Call 740-992-4514, ask lor Chris·
tine Martin.
Cournry Side Apartments : State
Route 588. 2 Bedrooms. WID
Hook-Up, CA, Central Heat, $3851
Mo. , Depoalt Piequired, 1· 888·
840-0521.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedi-oo.m
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port . From $249-$373 . Call 740·
992· 5064 . Equal Housing Opportunities.
1 Bedroom, Furnished /Unfut·
nlshed, Downstairs. Utilities Paid,
No Pets, Parktng, 6 Month Lease
$100 . Deposit , $300/Mo .. 7404&gt;&lt;6-3667.
Now Taking Appl ications- 35
West 2 Bedroom TownhouSe
Apartments $295/Mo .. 740-446·
One ballroom apartment In Mid·
dleport, all utilities ,.paid, $100 de·
posit , $270 monlh: call 740-~92·
7806 aam-5pm.
One bedroom furnished apart ment for rent In Mlddlaport, 7~0 ·
992-2178.
River Bend Place now accepting
app lications lor HUD subsidized
apts . for elderly/handicapped or
disabled peopls . EOH . 304 -8823121 or304-682·3274.
.APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications lor 1br. HUO subsld·
ized apt . lor elderly and t1andl ·
capped. EOH 304-675-6679 .
450

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel l owest Rates In
Town , Newly Remodeled . HBO,
Clnemax, Showtlme &amp; Disney.
Weekly Rates. Or Monthly Rates.
Constructi on Worka rs Welcome
74()..441 · 5698, 740-441-5167 .
Steeping roo ms with cooki ng .
Als o trailer space on river. All
hook -ups. Call altar 2:00 p.m.,
304-n3-5651, Mason WI/.
460

Space for Rent

Specia l 16~t80 3BR, 2 ba th .
$1.325 Down, $205 Mo. Free a~r
&amp; tree skirting. 1-8()0.691 :6777 .

2 Bedrooms Trailer For Rent Or
For Sa le On Land Contract, For
More InformatiOn. 740-446-1610.

Trailer space for rent In Middle·
port , StOO per month , 7•0·9923194 or 740-992·3894, 9am-4pm.

For Sale By Owner 3br. 2 bath .
vinyl Sided house m CamD Con ·
ey area . $79.000 . 304-675-62 58

SPRING SPECIALS
$499 Down
u Fixed Rotet
$198/Mo. Plymenlo
$11,995 onJBR.
FI"M Dellvlf'Y I Set-up
Only AI Oolqoood Homoo
NHro, WV. !Oo-755-5885

Three bedroom mobile home in
Pom8roy, no peli, 740-992·5858 .

(n Midd!eport · new ktt chen. oak
cabinets . diShwasher. disposal .
heat pump, three bedrooms . bath
and 11:2. call740-992-3465
Lo\lely Country Home On SA 7
South With A Breathtaking River
View. Very PrtvaJe 5entng On 2 1/
2 .Acral But Only 10 Minutes
From Ganlpolls. 3 ~ Bedrooms. 2
112 Baths. Hardwood Floors. 2
Fireplaces. New Heat Pump. New
Kitchen , Many Extras. Won't Last
LOngll $110,000.
Call VIrginia L Smllh Realty At
740··446·6808' Or Call Cara At
741)..245·9430 For Mora Informs -

lion.
Near Pomeroy -Mason Bridge, 2
1orn1y room, living room,
1 beth, lull basement , new gas

~

cenlrtll al&lt; unit, -

root

1 HIY Claanlng • windOWS,
KtMned In porch , car port &amp;
..,... llulldlng, very un1e mow·
1ng, walking dll!lnca trom Foodlond &amp; Middleport Corporotoon.
t27,000, 740-9411-28&amp;1.

•

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br S99!il /down S189/mo.
Free Set-up &amp; De livery. Only 3
Len! Onty at Oakwood ·Homes Nl·
tro WV 304·755-5885 .
Tw o oedroom trailer set uP on
rented lot . Middleport, river v~w .
completely remodeled throughout,
new carpet, new bathroom, large
front porch, $9500,740-992-6619.
Dbt IWO I Bough! Won 't Fit' My
Lot. Must Sell, Will Deliver &amp; Set
Up, 1.aoo-~62 .
330

Farms for Sale

100 Acres With 3 Bedrooms.~ ·
Leve l House With 41S'x388' Barn
&amp; Pond &amp; 30'x60' Barn Near Vinton. $145,000. 740-388-11352.

34D

Buslnen

and

Bul~
(3) two story houaoa • 12x80
lrfllar &amp; lot, en located In Pomeroy, will not separated, must sa._,
$2 1.000,740-843-5218.

MERCHANDISE
510

Household

Apartments

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartm-ent&amp;, ·upstairs. Downstairs. 91 Cedar, Gal·
ll~olls , NO PETS , Water Paid ,
740-388-1100.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur.
nlshed and unlumished •. sacurity
deposit requi red, no pets , 740·
992·2218.

Goods
A Large Complete Kitchen : cabi·
nets. Counttrk)pl, Stainless Steel
stna ,Faucet &amp; Disposal. Befor'e
10:00 f&gt;~ . 7~1-9593.
Appliances :
Recond itio ned
Wesht!lr1, Orytm . Ranges. Aelri·
graters, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740-446-

7795.

1 Bedroom. AJC, W/0, Hook-Up,
Nea r Holzer. $279/Mo.. + UtHHies,
Deposit &amp; Lease Required , 740·
&gt;146-2957.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. ~kaggs Appitancea, 78
Vlno Slleot, Call 740·••6-7398

20Cirm. apts .•. total electric, ap·
pliences furnished. laundry room
ilcilitles, cloSI to school In town.
Applications ovaHablt at VIllage
ar- Apll. 149 or call 7•0-11112·
3711 . EOH.

·Two Outen Anne cha lra , lloral
print in . mulberry, t~rgreen ,
mauve and light grMn on cream
bactground. $100 liCit, 740-1149-

3 bedroom apartment In Radne,

70982-e542.
BEAUTIFUL APAATMtNTS AT
BUDGET PR ICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WUI•ood Drlvo
lrom $278 to $388. WaMIIO .&amp;hop
&amp; movl11. Catl 7•o-••&amp;·2~88 .
Equal Housing i)ppottullly.

Moore ownef

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

"COOL QOWNI"
Central Air Conditioning. Free Es·
timatesl If You Don't Call Us, We
Bolh Lose! 740-44~·6306 . 1-B0029Hl098.
1 engagement &amp; 2 wedd ing
bands for sate. asking $200. 740·
992·6988.

1/3 carat. round diamond solitaire.
slza e. 'paid $800 , will take $550:
Marquis wedding set 1/2 carat ,
size 7, paid $1400 , will take
S1250: wedding gown with veil
size 7, paid $700 will take, $300 ;
740-387-Q288 or 740-949·2481.
15'x 36" Above Ground Pool
Equipped, Chemicals $75; Large
Size Diamond Cluster Wedding
Rings. 1100, 740-388-8062.

3 t/2 ton Bryant Heal Pump wllh
10KW20 electric furnace , good
condlllon, $850, 740·992-3102.
3 Piece Wtllte Bench Craft Sec·
tiona! sola. can 740-448-3821
7ft. locust posts . $2 .50 ea c h.
304-675-6348.
8 Foot White Flbarglass Topper
For An 1987 Pickup Of Otder.
Excellent
Shape.
Quick
Sate$100.00 740-258-9161
Bedroom Sulle. Complete With
Rails &amp; Full Size Mattress, Stud·
ent Des". With Chair, 740-256-

6647.

I

ATTENTION: We'll PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Poundo, 47
People: Needed lrumttdlatety Offer
Expires, 7/31/98, .CALL 740·4411982.
Brand Newl Great Glhl ·co/video
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out of box. $125 . Holds up
to 940 discs, also holds tapes .
Call 740·992·6636 alter 6 pm .
COs &amp; tapeS not Included.
Fully equlpped Food Booth, 740245-0603.
Gold Side By Slda $200.00, Gold
Etac. Rarlge $75 .00 Wh i rlpool
Washer
&amp;
Dryer
mis match$160 .00 While Relr lg.
$125 .00 Almond gas stove
$100 .00 Reconditioned Guarranteed to Work 740-446·9066

0006.

Double w1de 3or . 2 bath . only
S1.325. down, $205 per mon th
t -800-691-6177

for Rent

Buy or eel! . Riverine Anllques,
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt . 124.
Pomeroy. Hours : M .T.W. 10 :00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
8:00 p.m . 740 · 992 ·2526. Ru ss

25' Zenllh color TV, $100 ; alecIrk: lif1 chair, like new. cost $525,
&amp;ellor $250, 740-992-2805.

4299

4&gt;0&amp;-4999.

Antiques

Pomeroy - available July 15th,
three bedroom apartment, all utilities and cable paid , has private
back yard and porch, $850 month
p(us depo&amp;il and on:e year lease.

Forrwnt

For Sate or Aent -2 Bedroom Mobile Home 304-675-6984 .

440

530

Pomeroy · available August 1&amp;1,
two bedroom apartment. all utilities and cable paid , $499 month
p(us deposit and one year lease.

Mobile home site available bet ·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
740-385-4387 .

Trailer For Rent , 740·446-1279.

Power Mag Bow, Toxonlcs Sight ,
Qu iver . Excellent Condiflo n .
$200. 304-882-Jn5.

18,000 BTU air conditioner $200.
Oehumidllier $75 . 52 Gallon
electric wate r heater $75 . Gas
cook atove $35 . Almond sidingnew S25sq . Microwave oven &amp;
vent combination $80 . Fred Pear·
son 304-675-4004.

Single Parent Program . Special
financing on 2. 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes . Pay,mentt 11 tow 11
$180. Call now 3)4-755-5885

House. 2 Story Duplex . 1 Bed ·
room Collage . 13 Pm e Street .
GaiUpohS. Large Lot Shown By
Appointment . Pr ice: $96.000 740-

-

&amp;

1970 Parkwood Mobile Home,
$3 ,500 ; 1961 Elcona 10 x50
$1,500, 740-388-8970.

ABANDON HOME Ma&lt;e 2 pay ments. assume loa n. ow ner li ·
nanc1ng ava1fable . 304-755-7191.

3br . 2 lull ba th s. UR. LA . DR .
large k1 1chen . fu ll y equ•pped.
large toye r. 2-c ar auached ga·
rage Gallipo liS Ferry. 304-6751226.

350 Lots

Lot lor sa te- Gallipolis, 90~t172,
n1 ce neighborhood.• Quiet , 740 ·
446-4722.

1 Bedroom house on North Mam
St. Point Pleasant . WV. $1 0 000 .
3:)4-675·5371.

6058.

Co mmercial-Office or Aatall , 87
Moll St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Ft.
$400 mo.-Co rner Building . 7~0992-8250 Acqulsllions (next
door).

161180 3b(, 2 bath , $1,325 . down,
$205 . per mo. Free ai r &amp; skirt . 1·
888-69 t -8717.

1993 14x70 Jbr, 2 bath , CIA 304458·2586 or 304-458- 1916.

3 Bed roo m. Clean . Large Yard.
Double Garage. Near Dam . At 7.
No Flooding. $45.000 , 740-256-

Building For Sale In New Haven,
W.VA. On Sl Rl 33. 4,000 Sq. fl ,
Full Basement. 2 Baths. Office.
Storage , Equipment Included. All
Excellent Condition, Also , Ortt
Bedroom Apartment. Phone: 7-'0698·2ti13.

Acreage - approlt . 30 acres , two
side road frontage . electric and
water available, serious calls only,
740-992-5264 .

1971 Bonanza . two bedroom .
good cond ition . new 8x18' bu ild1ng. $4200 . 740-992 ·0100 aller
5pm .

440

Buildings

t4x70 Three Bedroom Mobile
Home On 1/2 Acre Lot MIL. On
Jim Hill Road , Hednerson. W.Va ..
$15,000 Or Best Oller. No Land
Contract, 740-446-2 139.

(3) 2 story hOuses &amp; 121160 trailer
&amp; lot. all loca ted In Pomeroy. wtll
not sepa rate d. mus t sate .
$21 ,000, 74Q-643-521B

3 Bedroom Blick Home Full Basement. 2 Car Garage. 4.9 Acres ,
Morgan Cnt . Area. 740·388-8352 .

•

Mobile Homes

Buslnen and

·.

1-800-$-.

.

.

a.oo.

UMd Furniture SIOrt Btlow Hoi·
d&lt;oy Inn, Konauga. Btda, Couch" · Druaora, Tebitl . Duka,
Lompa , Menrouea, And Morel
Summer Hra. Monday Thru Frl·
dly, .... 1()4, 7~782.
U&amp;od Wlndo• Air Condltlonlrig

Units. Dilllrenl S1a&amp;, Guarenteld,
1~1 .

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs .
Problems? ,Need Tuned? Call the
p~no Or. 740-446-4525

Metal fence &amp; pOst. also misc.
llems. 304-n3-5878 .
550

Building

Block. brick , sewer pipes , wi nd ows, lirUets, etc . Claude Winters .
Rio Grande , OH Call 740 -2 45·
5121 .

560

Pets for Sale

2 Br,eder PJir ol Cockatiels . 304·
882-3438 .
A Groom Shop · Pet Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek: Rd .
740-""l!-Q23t.

AKC Reg Go lden Retr ievers
6wk5 old . shots . wormed . vet
chec&lt;ed M-1175 FM-l200. 304 895·3386.
AKC Rottweller. Fe-male. 1 Yea r.
Good With Children . Due In Season Now$125. 740-25&amp;-6162 .
Now Open Sundays t -4. Man-Sat
11 -e. Fis h Tan k &amp; Pet Shop.
2413 Jackso n Ave . Po1nt Pleas ·
ant, 304-675-2063.

CFA Reg . Himalayan kittens. two
blue creme female&amp; , one flame
point female , vet checked. $150
080, 740-742·1019.
Chocolate Lab Puppies. AKC , 3
Mates , 5 Females , $225 ,
Wormed. Shots. Deposit To Hold.
Aea&lt;ly 1119198. 740-24!&gt;-9253.
Oalmalion Male 1 Year Old, Reg·
istered $100; ·cocker Spaniel Female 2 Years Old. R&amp;gistered $75.
7.40-2~50 .
.
Female Doberman 10 Mo. Old·
Good Country Home 740·446 ·
9290
Full Blooded Rat Terrier Puppies,
Had Shots &amp; Wormed, 740·2455597 .
Gray Quaker Parrol w/Cage $125 .
304-773·5878

The Pomeroy Thrllt Shop has
moved to 145 North Second Avenue. Middleport (Cash Bahr s old
building). buying - babv Items .
breakfast sets &amp; gooq clean used
lurntt ure on consignment . Open
Tuesday-Friday, 11-4, 740-992 3725.

Ty Bean ie Babies. Princess S80:
Er in $tOO; Place $30: 199&amp; Me Donalds Teenie Beanie Set $125 .
740-388-3595.
Used Furniture For Sale: 4 Piece
Wood Dresser Set, Desk, Chair
With Wheels, Storage Rilck, And
Student Desk. Can For lnlo 7•0&gt;146-9787.
Watorllna Special : 31• 200 PSI
$21.95 Par t 00; I' 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 100: All Brass Compression Rt1lnga '" Slock
liON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jadcson, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528
WITH SIKK~NS THE 8EAIJTY IS
IIORETHAN SKIN DEEP.
Your deck Ia the ce nter of your
entertaining and recreation actl'tllloa. So dOn'! jull glvo It a "llntsh" . Olvo It 1 quellty Slkktnt

flnlah - 1111 Cetol
bol OEJ( &amp;ylllml.

-

OEJ( Of -

1'\.US (J04)111-a4.

Wooden Bunk Btdt With Book
Shelves $75; 2 Bugahleldo For A
S-1 0 $20 Each. Konmoro G11
SI&lt;MJ 55g. 740-448-9202.

197.5 Oldsmobile CullaS&amp;-S Calonnde, 2 door hardtop, 350 auto, 4
new !Ires. fl8W brake lines. needs
bra&lt;a, 110&lt;1)' lair. $350 OBO. 740·
992-6988.

2580.

1996 Chevy 112 ton . ~wd . 351)
engme . a ir, cruise , 1111 . am-lnr
tape. Asking $15,000 0 80. 30467f&gt;-5332.

1~10

·1880 HONDA CARS FOR
$100 Seized &amp; Sold Locally Th is
Month. Call 1-800-522 -2730 Ext.
4420.
1980 -1990 Trud\5 For $1001!!
Seized And Sold
Locally This Month.
Trucks, 4x4 's, Etc.
1-800·522·2730. X 3901.

740

1985 Buic&lt; Regal Ltd .. pw, pdl .
amlfm caese ll e, 3.0· eng ine,
$1200, 740·949-2800.

Vegetables
Pic k Your Ow'n Peaches . Yellow
Or White, $10 Bushel, Bring Container , Open 6 Days Wee k:,
Raynor Peac h Orchard . 5 Mites
Sou th Route 7. Gallipolis, Oh io
740-446-4607 .
Sweet Corn $2 .50/0oz . 10 MI.
lrom Gallipolis on Rt . 141
\O:OOAM· 5:00PM

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Late Model 2030 JD $6,950 ; 50
HP JO 56.650: 5000 Ford $7.850:
4100 Ford Diesel 16.450 : 740286·6522.
Summer Clearance on all Hutq·
varna l1wn mowera &amp; string
trimmers . Guer~nteed lowest
price.
Skiers Equipment Company
304-87.5-7421
Your Area Bush Hog Dea te r For
Pan s, Rota ry Cutters . loaders.
Tillers . Finish Mowers, Etc. Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
Between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande.
Ohio On Jackson Pike 740-446·
2412 Or t -600-594-1tt 1.
'Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Res,dentlal And Commercial
Lawn Equipmen1. Compact Utility
Tracto rs From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes Of 4 WO And 2 WO Farm
Tra'ttors, Hay Equipment , John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders . Check
With Us About Financing As Low
As 2.9% On Lawn Tractors And
low Rate Financing On New And
used Equipment . Carmichael 's
Farm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis. OH 7-40446-2412 t -800-594·1111 .
630

Livestock

3 Month Old Coil . Sor rel Co lor
With Wh i!O Mane &amp; Tall $300 :
live Traps &amp; Steal Tow Traps ,
740-256-1233. •
Courbette Marschall Dresaage/
Jumping Seddlo. Excellent Condition740-388-&lt;M06
Four horses· one Registered
Tennessee Walker gelding ; two
Arabian geldings; one Registered
quartertlorse mare; 740·742-

~.

Artgu, "-"'· ~~.

Regltterld Ouorter HotH M4trt,
5 Yuro 0 1a lmpronl.,. N/N
Sitown In 4-H, 7-7H3 AI·
llr 5 P.M.
Aiding HarMS, Geldings &amp; Mares
For Sele 7~110

Paas
, Pau
Pau

24 Noel
.
25 88lly carrllgl

JIIOI_.,

::r:::..

27 ll8gnilucll
28
28 Veelcle In the

Allpau

31~

33 FI'CIIIIIenmM

CtocUit

38Actor~ -

40 F1encl

.1 Impel

G-CCNI
... - ·
.......
pltemelli

would you play in s ix hearts after

&lt;18 OloUy fMII1c .

.7 Pr-rer ending

South opened with a strong, arti·

.. F1oridl

50=

ficiai and forcing two clubs. North

Auto Parts

,.

1998 Honda Civic OX wilh A/C,
c_o pl ayer , 5 spee d, 740-9922580.
1996 Otds Achei\la 54,000 Miles,
AMI FM Cassette. AIC. Crui se.
Power LOCKS, $10,500. 304-6756674 .

'"t '££ YOU'Vf. ~

f\~VE t 601 ~ STOCY F~ YOU I
YOO'll Lfo.J.Xof\ ~
~. '(OO'LL !&gt;\llt((
YOUF:-~1\!

a diamond into your ace-queen . Still

(]

BIG NATE
,,._

IHJ

~~

~to•

. i:

''"

...... .

1ne1

y

to

-~

5 tt!

1 tn:

~ill C ~RI
~ST!"

0/t!r
Ia 'P'i The

r+'

./

·v

•

,..-

m: ,h

-..

.

tod•

ers.

a dia-

ace, play a spade to dummy "s king ,

and

I

o

I

r-M_I......-11•
1--r-E_G,....-A
5

I 1 I I

:~'

I've noticed that a fanati c .

I
I I e

-

usually has a huge chip on the1r

r - - - - - - - - , shoulder

L.J611TS FROM
THE MALL ••

II LOOKS UI&lt;E 6LVE
SKI( TO ME ..I I&lt;NOW

that often causes

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS
IN THESE SQUAR!S

IT'S SLUE: SK'f.. fT'S
CLE:AitiN6 UP.. I CAN
SEE SLUE Sl&lt;'r'..

f)

Damage ·Novel· Awful· Truant· NORMAL
"If you want to be different In these days ," the mom
told her teen, "just try to be NORMAL"

To Spy the Sest Suys /n
'

ITHURSDAY

ASTRO-GRAPil
Friday, July 10, 1998
In the year ahead, keep on the best
of terms with people in your field.

The.'le

individuals will

do

you the

most good with the fewest number of
strings altllchcd.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Ifyou do business today with peo-1
pie you don't know well, proceed
with care and don ' t

be afraid

to a.~k

questiaos. Get a jump on life by
undet'Siallding

the

influences that"ll

by

time in the long run.
VIRGO(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You ' ll

so.

be disappointed today if you expect

You may

others

to

do

things you could easily

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
feel

19)

like the odds are

against you early on today. Howev-

cient!

you think things over again in .
the late aftemoon; benefits will come

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Be· the
one who helps bring hannony to a

to light.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March' 20) A

collective endeavor. Avoid adding
1ension and strife.

poorly- managed project will sllllt to
come under your control today.

take care of yourself. Be self·suffi·

SCORPIO (Oct.

24-Nov.

22)

er,-if

predeccssorsdid:
ARIES (March

chann to make

others cooperate.
Pleasant words and courtesy will gain

Someone

you the support you require.

they

23·Dec.

21) Even though a companion's

than

your

21·April

19)

You'll be able to do better

instead of being assenive and
demanding today, u.~ your wit and

SAGIITARIUS (Nov.

II

UNSCRAMBLE LfllfRS TO
GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

you know is a "Iaker" may

look upon your resources today as if
wen: his/her own. Put limits on

your generosity.
TAURUS

•

(April

20-May

20)

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Consider
CAPRICORN (DeC. 22.Jan. 19)'
GEMINI (~ay 21·JIUie ~0)
of yrMi alternatives before male·
An
acquaintance miJht try to keep SoineoDe IJii&amp;llt offer you advice
ing an impclfllllt deciaioo today.
you riandoiaa eomedliJ!I dill would· ·· today thitt'aa bl• pili to swallow,
What initially appears to be lhe aiveyouMadvullpeDday,be&lt;-'1!' ' ' AA,r-dptib«,you'U_il.afor
quickest route might take too much
it's not in bialherbest iniOrall to do : ,)'OUI'O'MI pod.

U:

I~

last loser, the diamond queen, on the ..,

L A MM E B
them to lose their • • - • - - •
6 17
Complet~e~ the chuckle quoted
•
•
.
_
•
bv hll,ng in the m1ss1ng words
1
L......I-..L.-.L......I-..1..--l you d a\lelop from step No. 3 below .

all

Ao&amp;ldontlll or convnorc111 wiring
MW 11Mco or "P!tlrl. Mllllf
cen&amp;ed electrician. Ridenour
Elec1ricol, wvooosoe, S0.-875·
f786,
...--

I I

a club to the king and jetti son your

""""'.

,.

to Astro-Orapll. c/o this faults will be obvious to you today. Objectives can be accomplished
newspaper. P.O. Box I 7S8, Murray
It's best no1 to criticize him/her _in
today, provided you don't do things
Hill Slllion. New Yort. NY I0I S6. front of others. Think of how you the hard way. In order to aet on a roll,
Be sure to 11a1e your zodiac sign.
would feel if die roles wae revt(led., . ~ out die·best I'OIIIeS beforehand.

Refrigeration

L I HL C

established spade six.

mailing S2

258-1134.

S0 V NUE

ca&lt;h the ace, discarding a club, and

Home

Milts. Vary Good Condition . 7~1).

I

low

letters of the
scrambled wordt beto form four simple word•

mond (his best defense). Win with the

I

I I &lt;'

for your Astro-Oraph predictions

JMi-:.:.;..;:;2800=·- - - - - - -

wise, it is elusive. After drawing

ruff a spade. Return to dummy with

1/

govern you in the year ahead Send

a

Rtorronge
0 four

Suppose Ea~t switches to

1"1 COP\ :s

+ki•

&amp;

more.

18M OMC conversion ven, 305,
lmllm caaSI111, lront reer elr,
pw, pdl, 4 .tlru. $4500, 740-

you 've seen the theme before; other·

round of spades.
~ .-4.111\N

30o4-6J5--4225.

63e3.

Billy Wilder,.

WOlD
GAM I
14ltetl ~y ClAY I . 'OUAN - - - - - -

trumps, you should duck the first

Improvements

1'997 Dodge Dakota -4 Cylinder
Magnum, 5 Speed, t4,000 Miles.
Needs Minor Work On Bad,
$7•1500• 080, 740-256- 1233·

RH

'::~::;~' S@\\at\lA-~~trse

no joy -· West has the 13th club as a
safe exit card .
The winning line is easy to spot if

TIIAT 15H'T SLUE
5K'(..TII05E ARE

C&amp;C General Home Molntenence · PaintlniJ, vinyl siding: ·
carpentry, doors. w l - . both&amp;,
mobile homo repair and
For
free ·esttmate call Chet, 740-992;

UZAEBX,

will have to win the trick and return

&amp;

BASEMENT
1985 Nissen 4wd , new tires .·
WATERPROOFING
$950. 304-682-3775.
Unconditional lifetime guaranttte.
1989 Chevy Blazer. Can· Bt Seen Local references furn ished. Es·
At 1914 State Route 1•1 . Gallipo- tabtlsh&amp;d 1975. C811 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870. 1·800-28J.0576. Roglis Or Call 74()..446.1080.
ers Waterproofing.
.
1992 Ford Expk&gt;rer 68 ,000 ml...s.
Appliance Parts And ServiCe: A~
$8,000. OBO. 304-675-6&lt;39.
Name Brondi Over 25 Years Ex1996 Dodge Ram-1500 Laramie,
peNance All Work Guaranteed ·
SLT Regular Cab, short bod ,
French City Maylag , 740-ue:
n95.
loaded, no ha ll. $13,500. llrm.

FBGJBAA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'You have Van Gogh's ear lor music." after lislening to Cliff Osmond singing tor a part.

three rounds of clubs, hoping West

SERVICES

720 Trucks for Sale

XEZOB.

The third time . you probably play

the Classl(leds.

810

JBKA

THBKL

three rounds of spades followed by

1992 29' Terry Otluxe travel traU·
er, 22' Caretru awning, ml·
crowave, queen bed , central air.
sleeps 6, new condlllon, $11,500,
740-992-3102 .

Up1on Used Cars At . 62·3 Miles
South of leon, WV. Fin"-ncing
Available. JC•·•58· 1069.

K

split, but that doesn't work either.

1-\w:o Ill f\~1'111'\1&gt;1! ,_;..

1984 Palamlno Pop-Up Ca mper,
Sleeps 6. $350 , 740-446-8172,
740-256-&amp;!51.

Credit Problems? .we Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Used
v,hicle~. No Turn Downs. Ca ll
Vidlie, 74D-44~2897 .

XIIBGJ

XUZIBAVGT

LVEB

ZAVIBH

the computer to reset

rounds of spades, hoping for a 3-3

Motor Homes

199 7 chevy Caviller 2 Door ,
Red. AUto, A./C. Tilt, Cruise, Antilock Brake s. Autom . Sunroof.
Elac .Mirrors 9,400 MI. Excel.
Cond $8,250.00 7•0-256-9161

zs

the cards to trick four, you play three

Ne-w Auto Body Part s &amp; Ac ce s·
so rie s For All Types Vehicles.
TransFormers Aut o-Sa ndhiU Rd
Pt. Pleasant, WV. 304-875·3324.

s

" AKFWBHX

It

fails . Next you try the diamond

You Don'! Hove To loolc Far

Campers

Campos

cr..-ct from quotatlonl,., larnf:MA, peop6a, put and PNMf1l
in 1w dphtf ltlndl lot andher. Todly't M : l . . . T

e.ct.

a com·

Budg'et Priced Transmissions All
Types , Access To Over 10 .000
Transmissions , 74()-245·5677.

790

. by Lule

puler setting.

New gas tan~s &amp; body parts . D &amp;
R Auto , Ripley, wv. 304 -372·
3933 or 1-600-273-9329.

1997 Camara 3.8 V-6, auto,
while/black . T-tops . loaded . CD.
garage kept, 1,600 miles. Asking
t 7,000. 304-67f&gt;-3613.

is ideal for

c.llbttty CiptMt

You start by drawing trumps.

.,

1990 Chevy TK Bed Long Wheel
Base Excel. Cond. No Rust Step
Bumper. Liner I Ta ilgate 749-4464393
...

1995 Neon Standard AJC, Asking
$4.500, 740 -256 -1252, 74 0-2561738.

crazy,

After asking

THE BORN LOSER

Accessories
1994 Ford Taurus GL, 4 door, V·
6 automatic . low miles, ail power
op tions , exce llent co ndition,
$6500, 740-985-3595.

· This contract, which could drive
someone

Cl=--.,.
·

Then you take the club finesse.

SACRIFICE
1967 Oceanic Sea Imp IBOhp.
Mercruiser in/boa rd engine. 18ft.
deep- V wltreiler. tile ja cke ts &amp;
bumpers . 740·446·3814 . Make
offer.
760

CELEBRITY CIPHER

suade North to administer two shots
of Blackwood.

••

Kawasak i STS Jet ski. still under
warranty, three seate r. 83 hoi"se·
power, bought new July ol '97 ,
three match ing Kawasaki ski
ves ts and trailer all go with it.
$5000, 740-949-2203 or 740-949·
2045, will co ns1der trade lor a
good pontoon boat.

t 993 Geo Metro 3 Cylinde r, A.ulomatic. 64,500 Miles New Tires.
Clean In si de And Out Asking
$2 .900, 740· 379-260 1, 740-4464679.

a solid suit. That was enough 10 per·

'·

2·1995 Kawasaki 750SS Wa\le · ,
Run ners w/double trailer. oreal
shape , garage k'ept, tow hours,
$8,000. 080. 30o4-67f&gt;-1216.
•

1992 LeB aron Convertabl e. V-6.
Asking $4,500. 740 -256- 1252.
740-256·1738.

suit. Now South's jump

·would have been forcing , guaranteed

&amp; Motors

1993 2111. Mirada Cabin Cruiser,
in /o utboard motor, 4.3 engine,
plus all accessories . 304 ·675 • ...
6359 after Spm.
•

1992 Geo Storm, White with Blue
interior, New: Tires New E~thaust.
Look s Good , run s good . 1998
Cavalier, White/ Bla ck Interior.
goOd tire s. run s·good, Sharp!
$2,500.00

a good

to four hearts, when three hearts

TtMT MfANS
TtftY St4~1Nk,
BUT T~fY
l&gt;Oftl T
WANT tO.

1992 Bass Tracker Pro 17 40hp.
Evinrude. 2 !ish finders. 2 new
batteries , exc . cond . low hours.
$4 ,500 .' 304-882-3780 alter
4:30pm.

t99 1 Mercury Top az . power
windows. loaded. a1r, In ew.cettent
condition, $2150, 7-AQ-992-6824.

52 -Angelee
53 Beti!Mn tic
end 101

spades, promising at lea&lt;t eight points
and

'

.

G Tl'ltde egcy. ·

How

West ha&lt; led a trump?

&amp;EARNEST

unit

finesse. but that loses too: one down.

for Sale

· t991 Fo rd Taur us , V-6, powe r
windows. loaded, air. 77 ,000 actu·
at miles. in eJiceilent condit io n.
$2995, 740·992-8824 .

I Me CltMcllt. 414. 4.3 lllre. 1m!
lm caanno, llanderd, $4000,
?40-1149-2800.

z•
4NT
5 NT
&amp;•

By Phillip Alder
Straight to business today.

'Yamaha Banchee 350 , Excel!
condition. $1 ,800 .00 . Daytime
740-446 -084 2 Ask tor Jim . Aller
6:00pm 1· 740-992·5089.

Nelson's Custom Procosalng
now open. Formerly Jones Cus- 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
tom. 2573'(1tos Crossing Road, ·
Milton, WV. Wt do vacuum 1984 F2SO 4 WD Olestl Topper,
padi;ing. 304-743-S400:
Running Boards , 33 .210 Acruat
Ouall1y Registered Angua Butts,
1•· 17 months old . Cummings

Norlb

Pass
Pass

It could drive
you crazy

Honda 70 Mini trait. $400. call :
740-992-6061 .

1978 16ft . Tri Haul boat 70hp .
motor &amp; trailer w/some acceseo·
ries. Boat &amp; mot or 10 real good
shape. Asking $3,300 lorm. 7~0446-3466

&amp;

West

Opening lead: • 8

t 994 Harley Davidson Sofllall
Springer Custom, low mileage,
li&lt;e new. 304-523-8245.

1990 Chevy Beretta 320 GTE 5
Speed. While With Sunroof, Great
Tires .' Addition al Accessories ,
740-245-9 171 .

Fruits

ELVINEY'S AT
TH' aoSSIP
FENGEU

Motorcycles

1011. John Boat 4hp. Evtnrude
motor. 4spd M!nkota trolling motor, all lor $500. 304-675-5589.

580

Eut

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

gave a positive response of two

1986 Pontiac Sunbird hatchback.
good condition, everything works,
sunroof, run s great , $900, 740·
992-5322.

Registered Border Collie Pup s.
Wor king Parent s. Imported
Bloodlines. Good Markings. 1st
Shots, 740-379-9110.

t-..-

12 Poelthrt tnnd
13 Ending lor
be-.cl
18 ot. .
20 Vul period
ol.
21 lrlfNII&amp;*IIIY22 LuckY cNml
%30ICIC""- .

• AJ 3

Pass

WHAT'S SOME
GOOD NEWS
WORTH?

11 Old muelcltl· : ·

• A K Q J 10 9
tAQ

Pass

1992 Harley Davison. FLHTC 1
Year Warranty On Motor, Custorrf"
Built. Show Winner $17 ,000 OBO;
1987 XLCH 1200 CC's, Sportsler
Custom Built , Looks Sharp. Very
Fa st. $8 .000 OBO . 740·3888461 , 740-992·6976.

1985 Otds Toronad o new tire s.
brakes, trans. starter, radiator &amp;
much more. $3.950.
1985 GMC 5-15 (5-10) runs great,
needs paint . new tires . $1,350.
304-67f&gt;-5244.

1991 Buick Century Custom 4
Door V-6 Eng ., Autom .. AIC, No
Hait Damage $3,550 .00 740·2561924

4 3
• 10 7 6

Soulb
.. 8 2

1991 Kawasa&lt;i 500 EX $1 ,100,
080 740-388-9669.

1985 Mercury Marqui s N~eds
Engine Wor&lt; . $250 . 740-2455393.

1991 Buick Ce ntury Custom 4
Door V·6 Eng ., Auto .. A/C , No
Ha11Damage 740·258· 1924

• 53
• 10 9

KJ 6 5
• Q9 8 5
t

1981 KZ750 Roa d Ready With
Wingammer Far ing $800 ; t 982
KZ750 Has A Starter Problem,
$400; 1982 75 HP Johnson Boat
Motor With Controls &amp; 18 Gat.
Tan&lt;. $1,500,740·388-9932.

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 D, 260
VB . Good Condttlon. S1,BOO Or
Best Otfer, 740·992·4566 .

Reg . Mini Pinschers. three weeks
old, two black·, three red. taking
depoeits and payments $250,
740-949·3026.

• Q J 9 7

• a7e

BARNEY

Ford F- 150. 414 , red , 72.000
miles, 300 6 ely. engine. $12.000
OBO. 740-667·9816.

1990 Buick Skylark Maroo n Sedan, Excellent Condition , 13,600
Miles, One Own ersh1p, $4. 995 ,
740-448-2833.

Profess ional Grooming by Ap pointments. Over 15 yrs. expert ·
ence. New bathing system, ' Ultra
Wash ", 650 Second Ave. Galli·
polls, OH . 740-448-1528.

Eat

• 10 4

.

750 . Boats

NOTICE
French City Pet Grooming

• K42
West

1995 Toyota Tacoma , 4x4, wl1h a/
c. CO player. 5 &amp;peed . 740·992-

1988 Old&amp; Cutlass.Ciera $2,800
Alter 5pm. 304 -675-1236 To See.
On~ Serious Buyers PLEASE!

646 Case lawn tractor &amp; loader.
mowe r dec K. box blade . plow .
Onan engine. $2300; snapper rid·
ing mower, $450; 740·992-3802.

Swingset with slide : 2 storm
doors; deep freeze : large cat pen ;
740-985-3839

'94 Flreblrd , V-8 automatic, PW,
PL , air . keyleas entry. 50,000
mil~&amp;. excellent condition . asking
$8900. 740-992-7614 or 740-9492210.

1994 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo. 57.000 miles . leather. full
loaded, excellent condition . 740·
985·3949

Male Pomeranian Registered , NO
Papers. $150 .00 740-245-568911
not answer Leave Message

McDonatds Teen ie Beanie Club
House
With All 12 Tean le
Beanies. Bought at Charity Auction $1.500.00 740-446-9650

Scooters. Electric Wh8e tc hairs,
Sales: Rlt(ltal . Trade , New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare. 740·
446-7283.

t 993 Ford Explorer. excellent
condition. asking paYoff or take
CNer payment. 740--992.,..133.

1987 Subaru Wagon 4cyl . euto.
air (4x4) nic' car . $1,895 . 304 ·
675-3324.

2 N Ford tra ctor &amp; grader blade .
new tires . $2,300 . 611 . adjustable
Massey Ferguso n disk $400 .
304-675-38211:-

Riding "Arlena• lawn mowe r 28"
blade . 110 vo lt elecfric starter .
$375. 304-675-4671.

'92 Chevy Lumina , 4 door !amity
sedan , very sporty with luggage
rack . automatic. M:-. till. cruise. V8, 3. 1 L. 106k highway mile&amp;, well
kept , no problema, mu st sell to
purchase truck. $4325 OBO, 740992-5035 leave message.

• 4 z
• 8 7 2

- -

~p
---- ·

1993 Dodge Caravan Loaded AI
C , Power Locks.Factory Installed
5 Point Child Safety System Bladt
CheNy Grey Int . S6.SOO.OO 740441-1528.

Autos for Sale

Male &amp; Female Bassett Hounds.
304-458-2586"' 304-458·1916.

Marble top vanity, med icine cablnets, ceiling tan w/light kit, ce il·
1ng tigrus &amp; ve nt fan . 304 · 675 ·
3194 .

Potted Cactus , several varieties .
$10/ pot or 3 pots for $25 . 304 ·
675-3992.

710

EEK&amp;MEEK

1991. Geo Toack,r Blac&lt; . Standard . Air. AMfFM Cauette ,
$3,650, 1-688-84Q.j)521

TRANSPORTATION

Blue H.eeler Pups , Full Blooded .
$50 .00 each 740-379-2836

610 Farm Equipment

New blue electric lift chair, on ly
used a few time s. eJ~cellent
cond. $500 . 304-675-1528.

1988 Chevy Sitvarado 4x4 Sharp
$8.000.00 12FI X 6Ft 8" Dual Traileo$800.9() 740-3711-2820

Supplies

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, N.ew &amp; Rebuilt In Stoc&lt;.
Call Ron Ev~ns. 1·800-537·9528 .

New 3 Roadside Warning Trigan·
gles S~D : 1 load Blocke r $20:
ABC Fire Ext. $10 : Size 8 112
Good Year Steel Toe ShOes $25.
740-446.-4534

Tlmottly, Alfalfa. and Clover,
ro,vrm bale or squartt, 740·985·
4249.

I

"

'

'

I

\'

JULY 9l

�Page 12. The o.lly II ....

-

Pomeroy • Mlddlepor"., Otllo

'

Weather

/

Beat of the Bend ....

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

By Bob Hoeflich

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

You are probably aware lbal ·· put 10 good use.
the Orange Christian Church in
An account has been estabthe Alfred area of Meigs County lished 10 rca:ive donations which
was one of the casualties of 1he will hopefully come from across
recent nooding.
Meigs County as well as from
The 160-year-old church other localities.
became debris as it was washed
Those wishing to give should
away by the flood waters and send their contributions to the
scauered about the nearby area. Hocking Valley Bank's Coolville
Only the sandstone foundation branch making checks payable to
and the front steps into the church the Orange Christian Church
remain at the site.
Building Fund. The address is
What is amazing about the 26111 Main St., Coolville, 45723.
flooding is that the large church
Your local contact in case you
Bible which was stored under the have questions is Lloyd Blackpulpit escaped being ripped apart wood. 985-3805. Lloyd attended
and received only some water the church for over 50 years. lncidamagc .
dentally. the church practically
Meeting under a tent last Sun- straddled the Meigs-Athens counday, the small congregation many ty line so perhaps some help will
of whom have attended the small also be provided by Athens Councountry church for years on end, ty residents.
·
oted to rebuild the structure
The nearby Orange Cemetery
which served 20 to 25 families was also extensively damaged by
every Sunday.
the flood waters.
Undoubtedly, members of the
The Communiversity Band,
congregation are hoping that public support will be out there to affiliated with Ohio University,
help with the rebuilding process- will be appearing in concert at
Pomero~xt Thursday evening
es.
I'm sure that every contribu- at 7 p.m: under the sponsorship of
tion given-no matter how Peoples' Bank.
small-will be appreciated and
Art in the park will be featured

as a part of the evening's entertainment and you are invited to
arrive before dte concert time and
view the wort of local artists
which will be in the mini park.
It's always impressive the quality
of work displayed at the art show
by local artists. There is, indeed,
some talent out there. Both the
concert and the art in the park features will be held in the Court St.
area.
Also according to tentative
plans those attending the
evening's program will get a look
at the special costumes which
have been created locally for the
greeters who will be meeting the
Cumberland Princess when it visits Pomeroy. The costumes have
been a lot of work and fortunately, a S6,000 grant came in to help
with the expense involved.
The Communiversity Band
always does a good program so
grab your lawn chair next Thursday and htlf.l for down town.
· What this country needs is a
good holiday between July 4th
and Labor Day and preferably one
without rain. Do keep smiling.

Tlltn• AIHnd ~
BeeaUN of tiN ~ R•D .,.,.,• ..- ean now
purehue a ....., or •r•-o..,... veJale.. at Grut
Savlntsf • Man, of eut..ns In our area uve
a•v•nt•t• of tJN•• one• In a Iff• tfm•
prlea- You an roof
(•

encased letters.
Others are taken by Nancy Reagan's wedding bouquet, Pat Nixon's
baroque wedding and engagement
rings, and an impossibly tiny silk
bodice worn by Rachel Jackson.
Dot Jensen, 59, and Eleanor Parris, 63, visited recently while on
vacation from Chattanooga, Tenn.
History buffs, they pride themselves
on the number of presidential
libraries each has visited - from
Lyndon Johnson's in Austin, Texas,
to Harry Truman's in Independence,
Mo.
This was their first visit to the
Nixon Library. They came because
of this exhibit.
They also came with the knowledge that presidents aren't perfect.
White House affairs are as old as
some of the museum pieces: Warren
G. Harding had a mistress, as did
Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
"It wasn't until long after
Kennedy died that you&lt;hcard about
him and Marilyn Monroe," said Ms.
Jensen.
But she had vague suspicions,
notably when Monroe squeezed her- ,
self into a sequined dress and breath- '
lessly sang "Happy Birthday" to
President John F. Kennedy in public.
"At the time, we were saying,
'Now why is Marilyn Monroe stllnding up there singing to him like
that?'" Ms. Jensen recalled. "You'd
wonder, but you didn't know."
Ms. Parris said the exhibition
made her feel better about the occupants of the Oval Office. "It makes
you think, 'Well, maybe they did
love their wives."'
Ms. Jensen smiled. "You want to
believe that what they say is true, and
that they really are romantic, but you '
never know," she said. "Sometimes
. they do just tell you what you want
to hear."

Strawberries plus chocolate mousse equals great cake
By The Associated Press
syrup; bring to boil and simmer I
It's rich, luscious and really sim- minute. Immediately pour over
chocolate chips and blend until
ple to make.
Fresh strawberries plus chocolate smooth. Cool to •·JOm temperature.
mousse are the basis for a recipe that
While chocolate cools, in luge
is particularly appealing as a sum- mixer bowl, llcat I 1/2 cups of the
mer dessert. It has a buttery cookie cream to form ·tifT peaks. With rubcrust and is served chilled with ber spatula. fold cooled chocolate
whipped cream on top.
into whipped cream to blend thor·Strawberry Chocolate MOUSie oughly. Pour into prepared pan:
level top. (Points of strawberries
Cake
'
I cup (about 5 ounces) chocolate might extend above chocolate mixcookie or chocolate graham cracker ture.)
Cuvcr and refrigerate 4 to 24
crumbs
3 tablespoons melted butter or hours.
Up tu 2 hours before serving, in
marganne
2 pint baskets strawbcnies. medium mixer bowl. heat remaining
stemmed and halved
I cup crcum to form soft peaks. Add
2 cups ( 12 ounces) semisweet sugar; heat to form stilT peaks.
chocolate chips
Remove side of pan; place cake
1/2 cup water
on serving plate. Pipc or dollop
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
whipped cream onto top of cake.
2 1/2 cups whipping cream, Arrange remaining halved strawberries on whipped cream.
divided
I tablespoon sugar
To serve. cut into wedges with
In bowl. mix crumbs and butter thin knife. wiping blade between
to blend thoroughly. Press evenly . cuts.
o'nto bottom of 9-inch springform
Makes 12 servings.
Nutritional an~ysis per serving:
pan. Stand strawberry halves around
pan, touching, side-by-side. pointed 406 cal .. 30 g fat, 76 mg chol., 153
ends up, with cut sides against side mg sodium, 36 g carbo., 3 g fiber, S
gpro.
of pan; set aside.
l'lace chocolate chips in blender
Recipe from California Strawbercontainer. In small saucepan over
medium heat, mix water and corn ry Commission.

Meigs County's

-

4 Dr. • "Dealer Demo"

Store destroyed by blaze

$25,960
~ &amp; 0. Dlscauuls • 5,849
Now lor

The annual reenactment of the
Battle of Buffington l•land will take
place in Portland on July 19. on the
acwal I 35th anniversary of the Civil War battle.
•
The reenactment seeks to portray
events a.~ they happened on July 19.
1863, near the Portland community
when Confederate General John Hunt
Morgan and 2,000 raiders cla..tled
with I1IOR than 8.000 Union troops in
Ohio's only Civil War battle.
The event is sponsored by the
Meigs County Historical Society.
The reenactment and historical portrayals :w·being hosted and planned

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. - The West Vli'Jiala State Fire Mar!Jhal- 10 arrive iD Point Plea.1ut this rnominl to lnvestlpte a blue
tiW destJ oyecllhe Dollar GeoenaJ Store 011 J~ Avenue arty Friday.
.
No dllmage estimates on contents or structure were IIVIlllllble.
The Point Pleawlt Fire Department, with II men tllld four tnKks,
Gllllipolis Fire Department, with 18 men tmd one truck, and Muon
Fire Department, with two trucks and !le\'en men, responded 10 the
1:48 a.m. tall. City llrdlghten remained on the sceae through midmorning. At 9:51 a.m~ the fire rekindled and Jackson Avenue was
closed to tnftk: In front of the store. Firemen from Gllllipolis and
Muon again responded to the scene to assist.
The building, owned by Jim Wilson tmd John Felker, was 4,6004,700 square feet and had been a PoUar Genenl for nine years, Wilson Slid.
Wilson said late Ibis momiiiJ be bad been Ia eoalad wltll Shawn
Dant, a district J11U111tf for lhe store, but diJDqe to lhe couteats
IJld strudure are not known. When the Rqlster attempted to contact Darst Ibis moml111, be wu reportedly at the ftre scene.
Also usisting flreflghten at the sc:ene were the Point Pleasant
Pollee Depanmeut, Point Phznut EMS and tbe Muon County SherIn'5 Depanment.

MSRP

.s2o, 111

1997 CHEVY CAVALIER
$13,987
MSRP
H• &amp; OW Dlsceuuls • 2, 992

$10,995

COLUMBUS (AP) - A group
trying 10 outlaw Ohio's mourning
dove hunting season has turned in
another 38,000 signatures in iL~ last
chance 10 put a ban on the Nov. 3 ballot.
Save the Doves needs another
16,073 valid signatures 10 put the
issue before voters. The group turned
in petitions containing nearly 140,000
signatures in June, but only 84,320
were those of registered voters who
did not sign a similu petition last
yeu.
Dove backers then had another 10
days to collect the remaining signatures it needed and turned those in on
Thursday. Altogether. the group need-

~., .

$20,005
L &amp; 0. Dlscoults • 4,900
$15,105
·'
GMRebatt
·750

$14,355

A family of tltrel: was transported
to a Huntington. W.Va. hospital by
helicopter following a one-vehicle
accident in Salem Township.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, Pamela . E. Cross. 27,
Langsville. was traveling north on
State Route 325 when she lost control of her vehicle when turning into
a left curve. Cross went off the left
side of the road into a garden and
continued into a fence, creek and

Stock #

$18,540
1998 OLD.\r~f ROYALE
.~w .

CHESTER COURTHOUSE DONATION - The Cheatet'-Shade
Hlatorlcal AHOClatlon Thul'lday racelved $2,500 from City
Loan, Pomeroy, through Travelera Foundation, New York, which
Ia the philanthropic arm of City Loan'a corponte parent, Travel·
en Group. The donation will be uead to ftii1her raatoratlon effortl
· -of the Cheater Courthouea. Here, Jamas'llnoclgraaa, right, praMnte the c:Mck to Bruce Myen, repreeantlng the hlltorlcaluaoclatlon.

•

'~

LtssGMRebatt
llyllowfor

$19,500
·1500

$18,000

1998 CHEVY 5·1 0 PICKU

$15,659
Had &amp; Our DIHM~s • 2,505
13,154

MSRP

GMRtktt
Buy Now lor

ISIIvArlllda

·JSOO

$11,654

4x4 3

WASHINGTON (AP) -Inflation
atthe wholesale level dipped 0.1 percent in June as a second big jump in
drug costs wa~ offset by falling energy prices.
The Labor Department reported
today that the June decline in it~ Producer Price Index. which measures
inflation pressures before they reach
the consumer. fell for the fourth time
this year following gains of 0.2 percent in both April and May.
The decline was led by a 1.7 percent drop in energy prices, the eighth
decline in the last nine months. Drug
costs, which had soared a record 10.7
·percent in May, were up again in
June. rising 3.2 percent.
-- Prices of tranquilizers, which had
·caused the May spike. were up again
in June although Labor Department
analysts said the price increases in the

Good Afternoon

Jo!!t!k~W.Y EXT CAB

Today's

MSRP
$28,047
1111 &amp; Our DlscMts • 4,757
llylltwfor

Sentinel

l Sections • 12 Pa1es

Calendar
Clapllicds
Comks

Eclltoria!s

1l

"'

8·9-10
II

IAAAI

2
3

Sporto

+5-7

Weather

3

Lotteries
mDQ

1616 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio

.

I

. Pick 3: S54; Pkk 4: 3S04
Buckeye 5: I J-.17·20-22-34
·}Y.Y&amp;
·DIIIIy 3: 437; Dilly 4: 828S
0 1998 Oblo \\Ill) llobtitti.. c..

embankment.
Cross and her daughters, Corinna
R. Cross, 8, and JuliaN. Cross, II,
both of Langsville, were all transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital and then to Cabeli-Huntington
Hospital by Med Aight helicopter.
A spokewoman at the hospital
reported that all three are in satisfactory condition.
Troopers reported heavy damage
to Cross' 1989 Ford Tempo.

SUMMER STROLL - Year-old Cody Stewart let hll uncle, Kenneth Stewart do the driving on an afternoon walk and wagon ride
through downtown Middleport on Thursday. Yesterday's typical
aummer weather made for a sunny but humid walk for the Stew-

arts.

Home beautification contest underway in Middleport

Village beautification programs
were discussed at Tuesday's meeting
of the Middleport Community Association held at Peoples Bank.
Mary Wise reviewed the planting
of the flowers along Second Street
noting that business and other people
about town are beginning 10 water the
drug category were more widespread flowers lind look after them.
in June.
She also reported that there is a
The overall 0.1 percent price group of interested citizens who m
decline was in line with economists' gathering each Wednesday evening at
expectations. It supported the view 6 p.m. to sweep, clean and groom the
that inflation still poses no threat to flowers along the streets. It was nota U.S. economy buffeted by an Asian ed that anyone willing to assist join
currency crisis that has cut into U.S. the group at the Wednesday evening
exports and subjected American manufacturers to increased competition
from lower-priced Asian goods.
Through the first six months of
this year. wholesale inflation has
The Meigs Local Board of Eduactually been fulling at an annual rate cation settled a handful of personnel
of 1.5 percent.
matters during its rescheduled reguThe news has been almost as good lar meeting Thursday night in
at the consumer level, where through
Pomeroy.
May, retail prices were rising at an
The board hired the following:
annual rate of just 1.5 percent That Ron Hill, assistant varsity football
is even better than the 11 -year-low of coach: Holly Raffle, high school sci1.7 percent turned in during 1997.
ence/health teacher (pending ceniliThe I.7 percent drop in energy cation): Joseph R. Bailey, high school
Food costs edged up a slight 0.1 English teacher: Lester Manuel, high
percent in June following a 0.3 per- school Tille I math teacher: David
cent decline the previous month. Ramey, Pomeroy Elementary special
education teacher: Stacie E. Scarber-

·wholesale inflation
dips 0.1 o/o in June

jSRP
$23,625
Hal &amp; 0. DlsCOIIIs • 4,125

ed 100,393 signatures -representing 3 percent of those who voted in
the last election for governor.
"I think we're OK," said Save the
Doves spokeswoman Ritchie Laymon.
Orest Holubec, spokesman for
Secretary of State Bob Taft, said a
final tally should be back from the
county boards of election within two
we'eks.
Dove defenders say the birds
should be protected because they are
gentle, carry no diseases and don't
damage crops. Hunters say the doves
are plentiful in Ohio and there is no
danger they will be hunted into
extinction. ·

Tt.ree transported to Huntington
hp,~i~l f~l~qwlng aut~ ac,.cldent

1998 OLDS IMIRIGUE
MSRP
$22,045
Hal &amp; 0. Discouats .• 3.505
I'YNowfor

by the 9lst Ohio Valley Infantry, Meigs County history during Mor- will highlight the battle reenactment
gan's Raid. Proceeds from the living which will take place Q11 Sunday. July
Company B.
More than 150 Civil War reenac- history trail will be used to support 19. IJOp.m. .
A period churt:h service will be
tors from Ohio and several nearby efforts to preserve the battlefield
held on the park lawn at II a.m. on
states. who registered for the week- from proposed gravel mining.
Adance for reenactors will be held Sunday and the public is invited to
end event, will begin arriving on Friday. July 17, and set up camp. which in the park at dusk that Saturday attend .
will be open to the public the fol- evening.
All activities. with the exception
lowing morning at 9 a.m. A special
This year's event welcomes the of the battle reenactment. which will
memorial service is planned to begin return of I st Ohio Light Artillery and take place near Karen's Greenhouse
at 12:30 p.m. with other program- the four Civil War cannons from the on state Route 124 about a mile-andOhio Statehouse. The guns. used in a-half south of Ponland. will be held
ming 10 follow.
From 3-5 p.m., the Civil War reen- the I 35th anniversary reenactment of in the park at Portland.
acton will conduct a living history Antiewn in 1997 and the 135th
For more information. call the
trail to highlight events of local anniversary of Gettysburg this year. Meigs County Museum at992-3810.

Dove backers turn
in more signatures

1998 CHEVY LUMINA

lfyNow for

S1nglc Copy- 35 Cents

Buffington Island event set July 17-19

Pt. Pleasant Dollar General

UETTE VAN

....

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volumn 49 Number 56

JoJttiUCim Claalrokt-OIU

1997 OLDS SIL

Indians
drop
3-0 tilt
Page4

•

S..ustoff41'f

Hillary's wedding dress to Nixon's love letters:
presidential marriages documented
your company after six o'clock as he
shall please to demand and charge
them to my account," Adams wrote
his intended.
Theodore Roosevelt called Alice
Roosevelt "my sweetest little wife."
Lonely while campaigning for the
New York State Assembly, Roosevelt wrote in 1881, "I so Ionge~
for you when I received your darling
letter that I could hardly contain my
desire to see you. Oh, my sweet•:st
true-love, pray for nothing but that I
may be worthy of you."
On Valentine's Day in 1884, Alice
Roosevelt died after giving birth.
The same day, in the same house,
Roosevelt's mother died of t~phoid
fever. Shattered, he moved to a
Dakota Territory ranch and never
spoke of his first bride again, not
even to their only child, who was
named after her mother.
Nixon Library curator Olivia
Anastasiadis and first lady biographer Carl Anthony spent two years.
culling artifacts from universities,
the Library of Congress and the private closets of Barbara Bush, Betty
Ford and Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Mrs. Clinton sent her wedding
gown, which floored Ms. Anastasiadis. "I never expected her to
part with it," the curator said. It's
also one of the exhibit's most popular pieces, in no small pan because of
its plainness.
Mrs. Clinton bought the ivory,
floor-length gunnysack dress of[ the
rack of an Arkansas department store
one day before her 1975 vows.
Standing before it, a recent museum
visitor whispered to her husband,
"That was the style then . They were
all hippies."
·
Ms. Anastasiadis smiles at such
comments. "I just think it's really
indicative of who Hillary is. There's
not a lot of poufs and lace and ruffles
about her."
Visitors sometimes spend hours
reading , the exhibition 's glass-

Meigs Legion team loses, Page 5
Sermonette column Page 12 ·
Middleport, Pt. Pleasant win, Page 5

ta•••

llyllowfor

By DEBORAH HASTINGS
Associated Press Writer
YORBA LINDA, Calif. (AP) The year is 1940. Young lawyer
Richard Milhous Nixon, not yet infamous For his foul mouth and dirty
tricks, is writing a love letter.
The recipient is his fiancee, a
schoolteacher named Thelma
Catherine Ryan, known as Pat.
"Do you remember that funny
guy who a; ked you to go to a so-so
ladies' night about two years ago?"
Nixon penned. "Well, you know that
though he still may be funny- he's
changed since then.
'.' And when the winds blow and
the rains fall and the sun shines
through the clouds (as it is now), he
s1ill resolves as he did then, that
nothing so fine ever happened to him
or anyone else as falling in love with
Thee - my dearest heart."
A new museum exhibit features
written proof that behind the facade
of American presidcn!s dwell regular
guys madly in love with their wives
- mistresses notwithstanding and
not mentioned.
"Dearest Partner: Husbands and
Wives in the White House" runs
thrC)ugh November at the Richard
Nixon Library &amp; Birthplace in the
Orange County community of Yorba
Linda. It pecks into the courtships
and marriages of 30 presidents and
fir.il ladies, revealing endearing nicknames. lovestruck prose and heartbreaking loss.
A besotted John Adams called his
wife . Abigail, "Miss Adorable."
Putting quill to parchment and abandoning decorum, he demanded kisses before marriage in a letter dated
October 7, 1762 .
Fourteen years later, in the same
painstaking hand, he signed the Declaration of Independence.
"By the same token that the Bearer hereof sat up with you last night I
hereby order you to give him as
many kisses and as many hours of

July10,11198

sessions. It was also noted that there
are new shrubs. donated and planted
by David Dowler, at the lower end
of town.
The porch and entry way contest
was discussed during the meeting.
The purpose of the contest will be to
choose how flowers have best been
used to beautify or enhance a porch
or entry way.
There will be three prizes awarded first pi!!Ce a $50 dollar gift certificate from Bob's Greenhouse for
next year's flowers, .second place a
$25 gift certificate From Mitch's Market for next year's flowers and, third

place a $25 dollar gift cenificate from
Vaughan's for next year's flowers.
Gift certificates will be purcha&lt;ed and
awarded by the Middlepon Community Association.
The winning entries will be
marked by a sign in the yard. All participants will receive a ceniticate
acknowledging their participation.
Contestants may begin by signing
up to be judged on Monday at the
Middleport Department Store. There
is a $2 registration fee required
which will be used towards the cost
of the gift certitjcates. Registrations

will be accepted until July 27. Judging will be done by members of the
Chester Garden Club on Monday
July 27.
There was a brief street repon
indicating the recent opening of the
Office Service and Supply slore as
well as a new variety store on Second
Street A report was also given on the
July 4 celebrJtion.
The C &amp; 0 depol restoration projecl was discussed and it was noted
that the Community Association has
been given$1.000 towards the project. More funds and volunteer help
are needed.

Meigs Local Board of Education hires personnel
ry, Middleport Elementary special
education teacher.
Also hired were Lonnie Taylor
and Anna Welch. janitors.
In other personnel matters, the
board accepted the resignation of
Debbie Haptonstall as principal at
Pomeroy Elementary School and
accepted the resignation for retirement purposes of Carol M. Riggs a~
secretary at Ha,risonville Elementary
School effective Oct I.
The board also accepted the res-

ignation of Tara Woods as a math to SEOVEC for lnfohio f'ees and the
teacher and M. Christine Wakefield payment of $1 ,592.70 to Warner
as a special education teacher at Heating &amp; Cooling for repairs to the
Meigs High School effective Aug. I. high school air conditioning system.
Present were Superintendent Bill
and granted a one-year leave of
absence to Sue McGuire effective Buckley, Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus, and board memhers Scott Wal Aug. I.
In other business, the board met in ton, Roger Abbott and Wayne Davis.
executive session to discuss personThe next regular meeting is schednel matters, approved the minutes of uled for July 28. 7 p.m. at the disthe June 25 regular meeting. . trict's central office on the second
approved the June financial repon floor of the Pomeroy Municipal
and approved the payment of $2.500 Building.

Newspaper:

Judge oversee-ing case received money from Chiquita CEO
CINCINNATI (AP) - People
Gallagher was fired as a reporter questionin&amp; Chiquita's business prac- voice mail messages and had die the Chiquita case in May because
connected with the investigation of for The Cincinnati Enquirer after the tices. Chiquita denied the stories and, deceived his editors about it. Gal- Deters had received campaign conwhether private vofee mail mes.\lges newspaper renounced a series of sto- said they were based on voice-mail lagher, 40, who had been with the tributions from Lindner and his famwere stolen from the Chiquita banana ries for which he .had been the lead messages stolen from Chiquita's Enquirer since 1995, has repeatedly ily.
'"I didn't want there to be any
company have made campaign con- reporter.
voice-mail system.
declined comment.
appearance
of impropriety," Deters
tributions 10 the Judfoe who assigned
The Post reported Thursday that
Nadel did not return a call to his
said
of
his
personal
decision to stay
himself to the case, The Cineinnali Nadel received $825 in cunpaiJIII
The Enquirer fired Gallagher on office for comment Thursday. His
Post reported.
donations between I990 and 1996 June 26 and agreed to pay Chiquita home phone number is unpublished. out of the Chiquita investigation.
Deters said Thursday he doubts
Hamilton Coun~ Common Pleas fran! Carl H.. Lindner: Ch!quita more·than SIOmillion to settle claims
Gallagher and his lawyer did not
Nadel
would allow his court deciJudge Norbert Nade\ wigned him- B!VIds lntematJonal Inc. 1 chairman against it. although Chiquita had nol return calls. Ancona. reached l)y telesions
10
be affected by campaign conaclf 10 the cue Wednesday and - and chief executive officer, and his sued the newspaper owned by Gan- phone. declined comment
tributions.
'
ic:heduled a heariq July 22 on family. It cited county 8011'11 of nett Co. Inc. Oalla&amp;her was not pll'·
Sandra Heimann. a spokeswoman
Chiquita
spokesman
Joseph
W.
whctber 10 grut newap~per 1eporter l!lectioa records.
ty to the settlemenl and has been sued for Cui Lindner. confumed his conHaain
said
the
company
was
not
Michael OaiJ.taber's ~ 10 throw
Nadel allo received a $125 cam- by Chiquita.
.
tribidions 10 Nl!del. Ms. Heimann
out a subpoena
GaiJ.taber 10. ' jlliaD C:olllribution fl!lrn Perry L ' The Enquirer ilso renounced the lllid Lindner has the same riaht as awm of Nadel handling the case
ratify on the l1lllter ~ a arand . Alirlona, ·lht ~ ~.U: work-: . lllllriel June 28. say ina ii could 110 :: other A-icMUo matuudl 'con- until contacted by the Post
"We're not directly involved in
jury. 'J'he judp 11ic1 rill belrina J•'lrilhdlep.ijllry.diiM.aikL '!lolpt IIIDd behind dlelll beCIIIM
the
criminal investigation. it's in the.
would be ileldpri\'llely f*11111t it II
IIIJrila 1W 1
111-.tPR*'I!eilewd Olllllller 11111 · ,._,..,.. )oeepb Deien Mil I hands
of. law enfon:etnent." he said.
plrlofsecretpwtdJU!ll!fOCCedii!P- CiDciaatld ..... puht&amp;' ~MaY,
ha~ "-:itrlolwd ,In .lhelt.· ~ die iapeeial proeecutor appoiAied to han-

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