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                  <text>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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Friday, July 10, 1998

Commentary

Page2
Friday, July 10, 1998

County court cases settled

OHIO Weather
~turday,

.The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

July 11

AccuWeather" forecast for daytime conditions and

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Trying to land on
'right' side of history
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- I!'s been a ume of h1s1ory lessons for Pres1dem Clmlon and Congress After procla1 mmg last week thai Chmese Pres1dem Jiang
Zcm1n could pul Chma on the "right side of history,"' the GOP Senate 1s trymg to teach Cl1 nton he ·s go1some of his history wrong.
The mam hi story lesson the Senate is trying to give Clinton deals With
Taiwan, but references to hiStory 's "' right"' and "' wrong "' sides have surfaced
frequently m congrcss1onal debate on fore1gn policy and trade .
Republicans, after first offenng grudging respect for Clinton 's performances m Chma, now have seized on his comments last week on Taiwan to
p1le on fresh cnt1C1sm.
In an exchange w1th students in Beijmg, Clinton said that when the United States and China fonnulated the "'one China Policy ... we also reached
agreement that the umficauon would occur by peaceful means ."'
China spec1ahsts - and Ta1wanese offic1als - were quick to note that
"unification"' was never part of that U.S. policy, and that the 1979 Taiwan
Relations Act only asserts that the "'future relat10nsh1p"' between Ta1wan and
the mamland should be "'detennined by peaceful means."'
So. t;; drive home the ]JOint, Senate MaJonty Leader Trent Lon, R-Miss.,
mtroduced a resolution Tuesday to reiterate the major provisions of that
1979 act - and other Republicans stampeded to sign on as co-sponsors.
S1 ncc the 1979 act is still on the books, such a Senate vote would be irrelevant -except as a history lesson
Clinton critics also pointed to remarks he made ill Shanghai laying out
what 1s called the "three nos" pnlicy: no support for an independent Taiwan;
no recognition for a separate T;,iwanese government; and no backing of Taiwan's entry into mtemational organizations.
Clinton en tics suggest that policy is Beijing's policy, not that of Taiwan.
Clinton has defended his statement as a simple articulation of existing
policy, and other U.S. officials have accused Taiwan- and now Congress
-of overreacting.
Clmton, as most presidents, IS keenly interested in his place in historyand that of others. At an economiC summit in May in Binnmgham, England,
Clinton told Gennan Chancellor Helmut Kohl, "You are clearly on the right
s1de of h1 story. America honors your vision."
But Clinton can be a switch-hitter when 11 comes to China's place in hiswry

" I have told Pres1dent l1ang that when 1t·comes to human nghts and rehgoous freedom . Chma remams on the wron g_s1dc of history," Clinton said m
October when l1ang v1s1ted Washmgton .
But at h1 s news conference 10 Hong Kong last week, Clinton told
rcponers. "I believe that leaders of v1sion and 1magmat10n and courage will
li nd a way to pul Chma on the nght s1de of h1story and keep 11 there."
Clin ton\ deCISion to VI Sit Chma put h1m "'on the wrong s1de of history, "
Rep. Chn slophcr Sm ith. R-N .J . suggested last week.
A lillie h!SIOry was m order Tuesday when a Senate Finance subcommitlcc con&gt;~dcred !he adm 1mstrauon's b1d for a modest expansiOn of trade and
1nvcslmcnt with Vietnam
··we rc on the ngh t Side of hiStory." Sen John Kerry, D-Mass., sa1d m

Letters to the editor
Firemen's festiva l
To !he Ed it or
The Sc1p1o Township volunteer F11c Dcpanmcnt held 1ts annual Firemen's Fcst1val on June 6 Th1s year's fcst1val was held at the f11c stat1on 10
Pagc11 Jic and everyone helped make 11 a success Individuals, busmcsses
and groups donated Items and helped and thm help IS appreciated. Thanks
also 1o 1hc community for support 10 makmg th1s !he most successful lestl·
val ever
S1ncercly
Andy White, fire chief
Scipio Township
Volunteer Fire Department

Tree-huggers send Riggs on the stump
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
Some fo lks JUSt don '1 know
when to gove up.
It hasn't been an easy year for
Rep. Frank Roggs, R-Cah f. Once
a ri song star in the Republ1 oan
ranks, the California conservative
IS now finishing up his political
career, which effectively e1&gt;ded
when he withdrew in April from
1he Republtcan primary on Cah ·fomia 's Senate race .
But before leaving the House,
Riggs has one score he wants to
settle. Some call 11 the most
embarrassing episode of R1ggs '
career. But 10 Riggs, JUstifying
ho s actions after the events of la st
Oc10ber 16 ha s become a crusade.
It all began when a few mem t&gt;ers of the radi cal en vironmental
group Earth First 1dropped by the
congressman 's di stnct o tftce to

chat about a proposed fore st protection boll . The activists dodo 't
ihmk the b1ll that R1ggs support ed went far enough.
That 's when two masked men
enlered the office bean ng Iheir
calling card -- a 500-pound tree
stump, whoch they deposited on
R1gg s' offoce flo or along with

some wood
chips
and
sawdust.
Once
the
masked
mvaders lefl,
four of the
women who
had
been
chatting
chained
themselves to
Moller &amp;
the stump. It
Andtlfllon
was the kind of
stupid prank that IS not uncommon on that neck of Northern Cal1forn1a. where e nvironmentalists

and loggong mtercst have been at
each others' throats for decades.
The sotuation got heated when
pohce showed up to arre st the
suspects and ended up pepperspraymg 1hc women who were
chamed pasSively to the stump .
ThiS bemg the htogoous '90s, a
c1vol suit was quickly filed and
the case made national news .
Rigg s h1m sc lf became the target of eroticiSm after he defended
1he pollee off1cers -- and some
commentators began rcfernng to
hom as Dr. Pepper. He later made
news when he alleged that the

WILL YOU

MER6E

WITH ME?

protesters were supporters of remedy this wave of ceo-terrorism sweepong through the majesUnabomber Ted Kaczynski .
Most politicians, facing the tic redwood forests of California?
kind of ridicule that R1ggs · Very si mple: He wants to proseendured, would. 1et the matter cute these scraggly tree-huggers
rest. But not Riggs . Last month using the federal RICO sratute -the lawmaker used hiS private which is the weapon that the feds
plight as tlte basis for a congres- use to go after Mafioso and drug
~ ional heanng on "environmental
kingpins . In Riggs' world, enviterronsm."
ronmentali st pranksters who
There was R1~gs ' assostant spike trees and spread sawdust to
Julie Rodgers, on rhe witness push their point would soon find
stand, testi,fying to the panel themselves alongside John Gotti
about the psycholOgical trauma and Mexico's cocaihe barons on
she endured while the wood chips the government's list of unsawere bemg spread on the floor. vories .
But Earth First! spokesman Alicia
Or as Ron Arnold of the Center
Littletree told our reporter Carrie for the Defense of Free Enterprise
Brunk that the activist s appeared told us . " It's hke calling out the
at the office oflen enough that the nuclear weapons to swat a fly ....
staffers knew them w~ll .
Let 's have justice here. not
Another wotness rQ,Id the panel revenge .
how he was hired as a pnvalc
UNDER THE DOME -- What
invesugator in 1989 by loggi ng a difference three months can
and manmg interesls lo infiltrate make .
Earth First' But according to the
In early April. Republican
Montana Department of Com - pollster Frank Luntz became one
merce, the witness wasn ' t certi- of the f~rst conservatives to speak
fied as a pnvatc investigator unul out agamst the sexual mosconduct
the followmg year -- ~well after allegations Sw~rlmg around the
hi s undercover work got under- preSident. "The season of Silence
way.
must end," Luntz wrote 10 a
So how does R1ggs plan to memo c~rculated among House
Republicans . He urged Republicans to start speaking out about
the Monoca Lcwonsky matter.
Sure enough, House Speaker
Newt Gmgrich, R-Ga ., quickly
took the bait. The speaker, who
~ (/IJI,'AIIlf,ll ffJ1· ~
had been try mg to proJeCt a softer
)Stalller55@ ao1 com
side and boust his ratings, soon
began lashing out at the corruption he saw emanating from the
White House. He promised to
mention it in every speech he
made unti I he left the speakership.
So how does Luntz -- whose
polls often set the tone for the
Republican congressional agenda
--feel now?
" I hate this issue," Luntz confessed earlier th1s week. The
Lewinsky issue is unlikely to
affect the congressional races this
fall, Luntz continued , because
" Americans have reached the
point where they absolutely don 't
care."
Maybe Luntz ought to pass
that along to the Speaker.
Jack Anderson and J•n
Moller are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

CJA~~

President Clinton's slap at Taiwan _
By William A. Rusher
The only time I ever met B1ll
Clinton, oddly enough , was m
Taipei, Taiwan. It was October I 0,
1985, and we were both there to help
celebrate the "'Double Ten " -- the
I Oth day of the I Oth month, wh1ch 10
1985 marked the 74ih anniversary of
the foundmg of the Republic of
China.
There was an Immense crowd m
front of the presidential office buildmg . PreSident Ch~ang Chmg-kuo
gave a speech, wh1ch was foll owed
by a mihtary parade. Everyone was
thnlled to remember how the Republic of Ch10a had ri sen from the ashes
of the Ch '10g Dynasty 10 1911. batlied the Japanese warlords and the
Ch10esc Commun1s1S. found refuge
10 th1s 1sland prov10cc 10 1949, and
made It a prosperous bastion of free
enterpnsc 1n As1a
Mr. Clinton was only governor of
Arkansas at the t1mc, and had no VISIble problem acknowledging the
10dcpendcnce of the state he was visIting and whose b1rthday he was celebrating.
But 10 preparing for his recent
tnp to ma10land Ch10a, he apparently felt the need 10 please h1 s Com-

gesture. And
what could
please them
better than to
deny, publicly. that Taiwan COJOYS
the very IOdcpendcncc he
had helped 11
celebrate
hack on 19K5 ?
So
an
Rusher
elaborate charade
was
arranged First. to establish a precedent for the statement. Secretary of
State Madclc10c Albnght, " " the
course of an advance tnp 10 BCIJIOg.
remarked at a press confcrc.ncc that
"We have a onc-Ch10a policy -- not
a 'one Ch10a and one Ta~wan' policy
And we do not support Ta1wan IOdcpendcncc or their membership on
10ternat1onal organ,.1t1ons that arc
based on statehood." Her comment
attracted little notice at the umc.
th,ough It brought U.S. policy more
clearly into hoc wuh that of the
Communist regime than ever bel ore.
Then, at a round-table chat of
community leaders with Prcs1dcnt
Clinton m Shanghai, one of the par-

ticipants found himself bounced
from the table and replaced by a
young poht1cal scientist who had
been pnmed to ask Mr. Clinton about
Ta1wan. Replied the prcs1dcnt: "'We
don't support 10dcpendcncc for Tm wan or 'two Ch10as ' or 'one 1iuwan,
one Chma.' And we don' t bchevc that Taiwan should be a member 10
any organ1zat1on lor wh1ch statehood
1s a rcqu~rcmcnt "J1ang Zcm10 h•msell couldn't have put 11 bcucr. and
you can be sure he was, greatly
pleased.
Of course. Mr. Chnton can argue
that he wasn't saymg anylhing new
(Aibnght had said It carhcr, hadn't
she"!), and bcs1dcs, 10 .opposing
"mdcpendcncc for Ta1wan. " he was
talkong about any cllort to create a
new Tmwancsc nat1on, rather than
qucst10mng the present independent
status of the state, born m IYII and
never concluSively dcfcatCd, that st1ll
SUrVIVCS there .
Maybe so, but on what ground,
then , dOl'S he deny that state the right
to JOIO IOtCmational OfgamzaliOOS
"for wh1ch statehood 1s a rcqu~rc­
mcnt"''!
It 1s all so typical of Bill Cl10ton .
First, tell the people inJront of you
(whoever they arc) 'what they want to

hear (whatcverthat 1s). What you say
to someone else tomorrow is quite
another matter; tomorrow is another
day.
Besides, Mr. Clinton 1s almost
10capablc of a genumely forthright,
unambiguous statement without a
loophole. On being aske~ •f.hc had ~
ever smoked a marijuana c1garcttc .
he lirst replied boldly that he had
never violated the laws of h1s country. When asked 1f he had ever
smoked a manjuana c•garcuc outSide
hiS country, he admitted he had -- hut
he d•dn't inhale.
Even 10 the murky area of sex.
Mr. Clinton apparently draws some
h1ghly dub1ous distmct1ons . If what
we arc hearing IS true, he thmks thai
only sex 10 the missionary poSition
would qualify as adultery, 1f engaged
10 with someone other than hiS wife.
Other forms of sexual ~ctivity arc
cv1dcntly somcth10g else agam .
Luck1ly Taiwan is strong enough
to survive Bill Clinton's gratuitous
slap. But its many Amcncan friends
will lind 11 hard to forget, or forg1vc.
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of States·
manship and Political Philosophy.

Taday in history . . . ··ilioo~ """""'
Words of hope bring good health
h...

ByTheAsaociatedPress
Today 11 Fnday. July 10, the 191st day of 1998. There are 174 days lefl
in 1he year.
,
Today 's H1ghhght on HIStory:
On Juh \0, 1940, dunng World War Two, the 114-day Battle of Britain
began as Null forces began attacking southern England by air By late Octv·
ber. BntaiO managed 10 repel the Luftwaffe, whoch suffered heavy losses.
On 1h11 dale
In 1850. Voce PreSident Mollard Fillmore assumed the preSidency, following 1he death of Prcs1dcnt Tay lor.
In 1890. Wyom10g became the 44th state
• In 1919. President Wilson personally deli vered the Treaty of Versailles to
the Senate, and urged •ts ratofication .'
In 1925. 1he offi c•al news agency of the Soviet Union, TASS, was established
In 1943. dunng World War II, U.S and Bntlsh forces invaded S1cily.
In 1951. armiStice 1alks a1mcd at cndmg the Korean conflict began at
Kaesong.
In 1962. the Telstar commumcatlons satellite was launched from Cape
Canaveral. Aa.
In 1973, the Bahamas became 1ndependen1 after three centuries of British
colonial rule .
In 1991 , Boris N. Yelts~n look the oalh of office as the first elected prcsidenr of the Russoan republic
In 1992, a federal JUdge on Miamo sentenced former Panamanian lender
Manuel Nonega, convocted of drug and racketeering charges. to 40 yean in
prison.
· · party actiVIsts
· · on Mex1co
· hi oc ked a bn'dge
Ten years ago: 0ppos111on
linking their country to the United States, charging that Mexico 's recent
presidential election was marked by widespread fro~ud .
Five year1 ago: President Clinton ended his visit to Japan, then traveled
to South Ko~. wher~ jn a speech to the National Assembly he denounced
communist North Korea for raising the specter of "nuclear annihilation."

By George R. Plagenz
One of Ann Landers · correspondents complained recently
about newspaper obituaries that
tell readers more about the
deceased 's private life than they
have the right to know, includmg
the symptoms that caused their
demise .
ThiS usually i_s.n.'t the case
when you read a small-town
newspaper.
" Bertha G1bson died Wednesday at her home after a long II 1ness," !he obituary might say, not
mcnuonmg what that illnes~ wa s.
Or "' Fred Buschmeir passed
away suddenly on Tue ~ day . " Is it
any of our business to know what
Fred succumbed to?
Compare that to reading a big ci ty paper, where the obit writers
insist on giving us all the details
of what caused the death of our
dear departed .
Often they don 'r even wait
until we are dead to tell the world
of our ailments .
They begin cataloging our
complaints as soon as we go 10
the hospital.
or cour se we are just as bad ir

our
private
conversations .
We don't let it
go that "Paul
IS sick." We
have to say,
has
" Paul
cancer."'
Th1s may
seem harmless
enough but it
can actually
be very dan gerous, for it
Plagenz
Introduces fear
thoughts into our co nsciousness.
"'Cancer " IS a fear word . We
know this from tbe reactions we
see in people who are told they
have the disease .
Fear word s, even when not
directed at us, can "scare" our
bodies 1010 malfunctioning .
This doesn't happen every
time we hear a fear word , but the
effects of fear, like the effects of
X-rays, are cumulative.
They may not be noticeable at
. first but repeated exposure can
make us vulnerable to all sorts of
serious side effec ts.
"Eve ry time we remark to an
'

acquaintance that he is look1ng
ill ," says C. Harry Brooks in his
book on Em1le Coue 's practrce of
autosuggestiOn. "we actually
damage hiS health .
The effect may be extremely
shght but by repetition 1t grows
powerful.
A person who accepts in the
course of a day 1.5 or 20 suggestions that he 1s 111 has gone a con siderable part of the way toward
actual •II ness."
The mcd1cal professiOn m th1s
country has, JUS! as unw•ttmgly,
become a partner m spreading
fear.
·
Partly out of threat of mal practice su1ts, doctors now withhold no mformat1on, no matter
how distressing .
The Japanese are w1ser.
They view . medicine as "an
expression of lov1ng kindness
and may withhold a patient's true
colftfi"tion so as to give him hope
to fighr his disease."
If a doctor's job is to make a
patient better, and if by telling
him he has a terminal disease it
will make hi.m worse , isn 't this
the relll malpractice ?
•

Are the Japanese doctors glvmg false hope?
Dr. Bernard Siegel, author of
" Love, Medicine and Miracles"
IHarperCollins) daims there is
no such thing as false hope .
There is only "fal se no-hope,"
he says.
The renowned French surgeon,
Alexis Carrel, would have
agreed . Hope, said Carrel , "generates action, eve n within the
cells of the body." Hope words
have JUSt the opposite effect of
fear words
There is nothing that gives
hope to a sufferer like the words
of Ella Wheeler Wilcox , a turnof-the-century American author
who said:
"Talk good health. You cannot
charm nor please by harping on
that dreary, never-ending tale of
mortal ·malad•es.
So, say you arc well and that
all 1s well with you.
God will hear your words and
make them true."
George Plagenz is a syndl·
cated writer for Newspaper
EnterpriSe Association.

Scott A. Howells II

•
IToledo I 82' I

Scott Alan Howells II, 4, of St. Clairsville, died at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Wheeling General Hospital.
He is the son of Scolt Alan Howells, stationed at the U.S. Army Base in
El Paso, Texas, and Lynn Howells of St. Clairsville, and the gtUI·grandson
of Carole McLaughlin of Pomero.x.
Funeral arrangements are pending arrival of his father who is serving overseas.

IMansfield I BO' I•
IND.

Ronard V. Jones II
•

Ronald V. Jones U, 21, Elm Street,
Racme, d1ed Thursday, July 9, 1998, at
Grant Medrcal Center, Columbus.
Born on June 7, 1977, to Ronald V.
and Mary Amne Bradshaw Jones m
Point Pleasant, W.Va., he was associated with his father in the lumber business.
In addiuon to his parents, he ts surVIved by two sisters, Lisa Jacks of Syracuse and Stephanie Jones of Racme;
maternal grandmother, Nola Bradshaw
of Middleport; paternal grandparents,
Ayward and Mae Jones of Racine; a special friend, Michelle Lonas of Racine.
Services will be held Sunday, I p.m. at the Racine United Methodist
Church w1th the Rev. Mike Thompson officiating. Burial will follow in
Shady Dale Cemetery, Hannony, ·.v.Va.
Friends may call Saturday, 2-4 .ond 7-9 p.m. at Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine .

•leolumbus!B2·1

W.VA.

Perfect summer
weekend forecast
By The Associated Preas
A high pressure system building
over the Great Lakes region guarantees near-perfect summer weather for
the weekend.
Skies will be sunny, temperatures
warm and humidities low on both
Saturday and Sunday, the National
Weather Service said.
Highs will be 75-80. Overnight
lows amund 60.
' The record-high temperature for

this date at the Columbus weather
station was I03 degrees in 1881
while the record low was 45 in 1963.
Sunset tonight wiU be at 9:02 p.m.
and sunrise Saturday at 6: 12 a.m.
Across the nation
A wet and messy day dawned over
much of eastern half of the nation
today a\ thunderstorms formed over
the Tennessee Valley, the Southeast
and the mid-Atlantic.

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Med1cal Service recorded nine
calls for assistance Thursday. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:05 a.m.. Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, Lawrence Douglas, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy
squad assisted;
I :07 p.m., Minersville Hill, Doris
Grueser, VMH;
2:06 p.m., Gold Ridge Road,
Pomeory, Ruby Casteel, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital;
4:56 p.m ., state Route 325,
Danville, motor-vehicle accident,
Pamela Cross, Carina Cross and
Julia Cross, VMH pending transfer to

Cabell-Huntington Hospital via helicopter ambulance, Rutland Volunteer
Fire ~partment and squad, Salem
Township VFD assisted;
8:16 p.m .. Vine Street, Racine,
Paula Justis. VMH.
RUTLAND
4:49 p.m., Rutland Department
Store, Marie Birchf~eld, Holzer Medical Center;
7:25p.m., state Route 124, Ronnie Fry, HMC;
9:54 p.m., Main Stree~ Lillian
Robinson, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
· 3: 15 p.m., state Route 681, Boney
Maynard, OBMH.

Clinic planned
The Me1gs County Health Department will offer a free immunization
clinic on Tuesday from 9 to II a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Center. All children participating must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian and the child's
immunization record.

men's Association will hold its annual fish fry on July 25 at II a.m. to 10
p.m.

Meigs Republicans
The Meigs County Republican
Committee will meet Monday, 7:30
p.m. at Carleton School, Syracuse.
All are welcome.

Antique Club to meet
The Big Bend Fann Antiques
Club will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday
at the grange annex on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.

Fish fry set
The Wilkesville Volunteer Fire-

Arthritis Group to meet
The Meigs County Arthritis Support Group will meet July 17 at the
conference room of the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Sarah
· McGrew, R.N. coordinator of the
Arthritis Program of Ohio University, will be discussing back pain. New
participants are always welcome.

(liSPS 11.1-11601
Community New.~p~per Holdlap. lac.

Published every lftcmoon, Moftdly lhrouJh
Frida ~. Ill Court St . Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
OhlO Yalky PubliShing Qxnp~ny. Sa::ond clue
posa.ge pa1d 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Membtr: The As.soc1atcd Press and the Ohio
Newspaper As5ocii1Kif'l.
Poscmaller: Send addrcu c:cmectiOftS to The
~liy Sentmcl, 111 Court St., Pomeroy. OhiO
4576'1.

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Evangelist to speak
John Elswick will be at the Mt.
Olive Church, Long Bottom,
Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites 1he public.

Board to meet
A special meeting of ttte Eastern
Local School Board has been set for
5 p.m. Monday at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School. Purpose of the
. meeting is for a discussion and pos.sible action on personnel.

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The IIIIa a. .bet II 99l-ll55. Doput·
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Clralltitloe....................- ....... ~ UG
Clallllled

Kenneth K. Krider. 84, Columbus, fonnerly of Racine, died Saturday, July
4, 1998. at Kobacker House Hospice.
He was the son of the late William and Alice Krider, Racine. He retired
from the Commercial Motor freight Company, and was a member of the
Rickley Lodge 670, F&amp;AM. Groveport. Chapter 440 Order of the Eastern
Star. and Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus.
He wa.' preceded in death by his wife. Betty Circle Krider, a son, Gary
Krider. and four brothers. He is survived by three nieces. Dorothy Randazzio
of Westerville, Wilma Samuel of Arizona. Mary Cloud of Kentucky; and a
nephew, Charles Townsend of Michigan.
Masonic services will be held Monday and funeral services-at the Myers
, Funeral Home. Groveport, with intennent at Union Grove Cemetery Tues. day.

Katherine A. Rose
Katherine A. Rose. 65. of Gallipolis, died Thursday July 9, 1998 in the
emergency department at the Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 17,1932 in Mason. W.Va.,daughterofthe late Oscar and Edith
Flowers. she was a homemaker and was employed at one time by Holzer
Medical Center.
She attended the First Church of the Nazarene.
She was also preceded in death by her husband. James A. Rose on Dec. 31 ,
1997: four sisters, Jeannie Hysell, Maxine Brumbley, Louise Smith and Janet
Varga: and two brothers. Rich Flowers and Buddy Aowers.
Surviving are three sons. Jim (Carolyn) Rose of Gallipolis, Mike (Doris)
Rose of Vinton and Jeff (Debbie) Rose of Delaware; four granddaughters,
two grandsons and a great-granddaughter.
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel. with
Rev. Cecil Jones and Eugene Harmon officiating. Burial will be in the Pine
Street Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 7-9
p.m.

--Court news--

Meigs annouo_cements

The Daily Se~tinel

Kenneth K. Krider-\

plus interest and cost\ in a foreclosure
Suits filed
suit
against David W. and Betty Jo
Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines
Collins,
Pomeroy.
the grievances ot one party against
Jud11111ent
issued
another. It does not establish guilt or
A
default
judgment for $$132.450
innocence.
The following suits were filed wa' awarded to Mid-State Trust VI
recently in the Meigs County Court from Patricia A. and Dennis R. Oxyof Common Pleas of Judge Fred W. er.
Suits dlsn :ssec1
Crow Ill:
The following suits were recently
Francis L. King, The Plains, in a
suit filed against Northern Health dismissed in the Meigs County Court
Facilities Inc .. doing business a' of Common Plea.1:
Farmers Bank&amp;. Savings CompaRocksprings Rehabilitation Center,
seeks in excess of $25,000 for ny vs. Kay and Carl Platters;
Michael D. Salser Jr. vs. Barbara
injuries stemming from an Oct 4,
1997, fall at the facility in which she VanMeter and Village of Rutland;
Home National Bank vs. Ralph
suffered a broken leg.
Janet L. Barney and John R. Rose, et aL
Hamilton. Dexter, seeks damages in
excess of $25,000 from Cynthia R.
Thomas. Vinton, stemming from a Promotion set
The Chester Post Office wi II proJuly 3, 1996, motor-vehicle accident.
John Hensley, Tuppers Plains, . mote a new Art Deco stamp on July
administrator of the estate of Robert 16, as a part of the U.S. Postal Ser.D. Hensley, deceased, seeks damages vice's 'series of stamps honoring
in excess of $25,000 from Larry E. event1 of the 20th century.
The post office is also planning a
Life, Racine, in a wrongful death
lawsuit stemming from a March 13, special stamp cancellation for the
I7Sth anniversary of the Chester
1997, motor-vehicle accident.
Peoples National Bank. doing Courthouse. The cancellation will be
business as City National Bank, Point offered during Chester-Shade Days
Pleasant, W.Va., seeks $25,868.59 on July 17 and 18.
plus interest and costs in a foreclosure
suit against Eric and Joy Day,
Pomeroy.
Associ~tes Financial Services
Corp., Chillicothe, seeks $42.835.88

Juhe A. Thompson, Long Botrom,
The following cases were setlled
seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Ryan W.
recenlly in the Me1gs County Court
Hollon,
Racine, speed , $30 plus ·
of Judge Patnck H. O'Brien.
costs;
Susan
L. Milhoan. Jack- ·
Fined
were:
Nathan E.
sonville,
Ra.,
speed,
$30 plus costs; .
McConnell, Woodsfield, speed. $30 ·
plus costs; Danny J. Kirkbndge, Jeffrey A. Birchfield. Albany, reck- :
Albany. speed, $30 plus costs; le" operation, $100 plus costs, park- ·
William J. Wise, Langsville, seat belt. ing on roadway, $50 plus costs; :
$25 plus costs; Stephen W. McCarty, Sherrie D. Branhaur. Racine. passing :
Oak Hill, speed. $30 plus costs: Jar- bad checks. $25 plus costs, restitu·
rod P. Coffey. Ray. speed. $30 plus lion; Philip M. Ohlinger, Pomeroy . .
~osts ; Matthew D. Childers. Hamp- dnvong under the mtluence, $850
ton, Ga., speed. $30 plus costs; plus costs, 90-day operator's lice nse
Michael J. Blaski, Marie Mont. suspen soon. I 0 days pol suspended to
speed, $30 plus costs; Terry W. three days jaol and $500 suspended :
Diehl, Weirton, W.Va., speed, $30 upon compkl•on of re"dentia\ treat- :
plus costs; William J. Cottrill, Nel- ment prote1.: tion . one year probation: :
sonville, mud flap violation. $30 left of center. costs only: Roxan Cunplus costs; Michael P. Mulcahy, doff, M1ddlepon . dnvmg under sus- :
Worcester, Mass., seat belt, $25 plus penSion, $150 plus costs. three days :
costs; Shirley I. Bockstiegel, Amelia, jail and $75 suspended 1f valid OL
speed. S30 plus costs; Paul L. Schurg- presented wi1h1n 90 days. one year :
er Jr., Cincinnati. speed, $30 plus probation; Craog H. Athey. Bidwell. :
costS; Rodney P. Alderman. Vinton, seat bell. $25 plus costs:
Roben L. Rirchie. Middleport ,
seat belt, $25 plus costs, failure to
display valid cenificate/registration failure to maintmn assured clear dis~ :
plates, $20 plus costs; Ricky J. tance, $20 plus costs; James W.
Rardin, Point Pleasan~ W.Va., failure Picken s. West Columbia, W Va., slop
to display valid registration, $15 sign, $20 plus cost&lt;: Jason E. Slater,
Pomeroy. drovmg under llnancml
plus costs;
Marshall E. Conley, Left Hand. respons1b1lity ac110n suspensiOn,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Max E. $150 plus costs. I 0 days Jail' susLaudennilt. Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 pended to three days. o~e year proplus cost,, failure to control, $20 plus bation, vehocle Immobilization until
costs; David R. Witmer. Bethesda, proof of Insurance and valid OL proMd .. speed. $30 plus costs; Jeffery R. vided; failure to control. $30 plus
Betts, Albany, failure to yield, $20 costs; R1chard L. Grady. Middleport, :
plus costs: Eric J. Adkins, Clarks- assault. $250 plus costs, 30 days Jail
burg, W.Va.. speed. $30 plus costs; suspended to three days, two years
Carl H. Wilson Ill. Middleport. seat probation. restmining order Issued:
belt, $25 plus costs; W. Kenneth DuSiin 0 . Hatfield. Jackson. dnving
Burke, Racine, seat belt. $25 plus under FRA suspensoon. $150 plus
costs; Carrie C. Crock, Cincinnati, costs. 90 days jai I suspended to three
speed. $30 plus costs; Walter E. Mar- days, $75 suspended 1f valid OL pretin Ill, Cincinnati, speed, $30 plus sented within 30 days; one year pro- ·
cost'; Maurice E. Starr Jr., Logan, bation :
Seth R. Cremeans. Middleport ,
pennit violation. $20 plus costs;
drivmg
under FRA suspensi011. $300
Ervm E. Anderson, St. Albans. W.Va.,
plus
costs,
six months Jao\ suspended
failure to maintain assured clear distance ahead, $20 plus costs; David to 10 days if vahd OL presented wuhDunn, New Taze)Vell, Tenn., speed. in 90 days, one year probation, vehi$30 plus costs; Jared A. Sheets, cle forfeiiUre: exp11ed regislration,
costs only: Angela K. Huddleston,
Pomeroy. speed. $30 plus costs;
Timothy C. Gilbridge, Racine. Portland. left of center. $100 plus
fa1lun: to yield, $20 plus costs; Terri cosls; Manhew T. Brown. ModdleL. Norman, Charleston, W.Va., speed. port. resistmg arrest, $100 plus costs.
S30 plus cost" Johannes Vandermare. 10 days Jail suspended 10 one day.
Lancaster. speed." $30 plus costs; one year probation: disorderly while
Jackie G. Parker, Pomeroy. seat belt. intoxicated. $\00 line concurrent,.
S15 plus costs; Robert F. Lawson. costs. one year proba1ion. Gregory A .
Reedsville, failure to y1eld. $20 plus Snyder, Waverl y, W.Va . drmng
costs; Sandra Foster, Long Bottom. under suspenSion. $100 plus costs.
failure to control, $20 plus costs; three days Jail and $50 suspended 1f .
Walter B. Lauderm1lt, Pomeroy. fail- valid OL presented wuhm 30 days. .
ure to yield, $20 plus costs; Julie N. speed, $29 plus cosh . John J
Jones, R1pley. W.Va .. seat belt. $25 Gu1nther, Racint: . domestu..: v1olen,e,
plus costs: Amta D. Parker, Athens. $100 plus costs, :lO days Jail susseat belt. $25 plus costs; William B. pended to three days. one year proMaynard, Racine, speed, $30 plus bation. restraining order tssued. Alt
costs; Shawn M. Seth. Pomeroy. C. Cumuli, 'Lelart. W.Va .. speed , $30
speed. $30 plus costs. seat belt. $25 plus costs. Alvm Tripp. Pomeroy. seat
plus costs: Rodney A. Klein, belt. $15 plus costs.
Pomeroy, seat belt. $25 plus costs;

Divorces and dissolutions
The following actions to end marriage were tiled recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer.
Divorces asked -- Carl L Hubbard, Racine, from Mildred M. Hubbard, Syracuse, July 7; Kenneth H.
Payne. Pomeroy. from Lois J. Payne,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., July 2; Anna
Louise Stultz, Middleport, from Mark
Stultz. Collinsville, Va .. July I: Car-

HOSpital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Thursday, July 9
George Robinette. Mrs. Oney
Nickles and son, Martha Anderson.
Roy Bowsher, Caitlyn Nelson, Ethel
Robinson, Imogene Walton. Richard
Bryan, Geneive Smith, Stella Pettit,
Paul Hollingsworth. Mary Valenrine,
Mary Willis, Craig Elswick and Vernena Marks.
Veterans Memorial
Admissiions
Thursday, July 9
Victoria Tipton, Middlepon.
Discharges
Thursday, July 9
None.

Am Ele Power ....................... 45'4
Akzo ..............................,.......5&amp;\
AmrTtiCh ...............................45'1.
Aehland 011 ........................... 52'1.
ATAT .......................................57
Bank

one ................................59

TUPPERS PLAINS FIRE DEPARTMENT

Bob Ev1n1 ............................ 20'1.
Borg-Wernar .........................48'0
Broughton............................. 14~.
Champlon....,........................ 12~

July 13, 1998 • Skin Testing · 4:30 - 6:30 p.m.
July 15, 1998- Skin Test Reading- 4:30 · 5:30p.m.

Charm Shpe ............................4\
=ldlng ..........................42'1.
I Mogul ....................... 71~
Gannett ................................. 71\
Goocly•r .............................. 65"1.
Kmart.. ..................................18't.
Kroger ..................................43'!.
Landa End...............................31

CHESTER FIRE DEPARTMENT
July 20. 1.998.. Skin Testing - 4:30- 6:30 p.m.
July 22, 1998- Skin Test Reading- 4:30- 5:30p.m.

Ltd .........................................31~
Olk Hill Fln1 .......................... 22'1.
ova .........................................41
Ont Vallly ....
,..36'1.
Pe0plel ••••••••.••••••••••••..•...•.•.•••.30
Pl"'ll'' Flnl..-..........................20~
Rocltweli ............................. AS}.
AD/Shell ...............~.............53 7oo
s.n .....................................58?..
$h0f'lty'l .....................- .........~\
Star S.nk .............~..........- ....11 ·

REEDSVILLE FIRE DEPARTMENT
Juiy 27, 1998. Skin Testing- 4:30 ·6:30p.m.
JUly 29, 1998- Skin Test Reading - 4·30- 5:30p.m.

¥ . . . . . ; ..............

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.•

}

olyn Sue L1ttle. Pomeroy. from Don ald E. Little, Pomeroy, June 26.
Di ssolution granted -- Ji:aren Hale
Ell1ott and Challis Dean Elliott, July
7.
Divorces granted -- Ronald Joseph
Romine and Kathleen Romine, June
20; Don M. Rose and Donna R. Rose,
June 30: David A. Trout and Carma
Jean Trout, June 6: Carol J. Reed
from Odrey Reed, July 8.

�•'

The Daily. Sentinel :~

Sports

.

Friday, July 10, 1998

Page4
Friday, July 10, 1998

Hubbard

Baseball owners
vote 30-0 for Selig
as commissioner

SHE'S FIRST - Duluth-Superior pitcher lla Borden, shown In
action from Thursday night's minor league game against the Sioux
Falls Canaries, became the first female pitcher to start In a minor
league game. However, the Canaries won 8-3. (AP)

Borders stands as
-first woman pitcher
to start in minors

KVD posts
first July
race results

DULUTH , Minn . (AP)- There Borders was logical.
was nothing unusual about the numDukes manager George Millerbers for a Northern League pitcher: wald pronounced her hisloric start a
fi ve innings, fiv e hits. three runs, two success.
Here are !he local results of July
walks. two strikeouts.
·:u all our starters could keep
So why did 2.266 fans hang on teams at lhree runs for five innings, 3 races at Kanawha Valley Dragway
every pitch' Why did CNN and we'd probably be doing alot better," in Southside, W.Va.
Pro: Greg Fowler. Point Pleasant,
ESPN want footage ' Why were he said "She did an outstanding job.
Japanese media hounding the pitch- It 's the opponunity she's waited for W.Va., 1966 Chevelle, % .71 mph;
er \ father '
1wo years. and she made the mosl of Chuck Sanders, Point Pleasanl,
W.Va., 1982 Camaro, 108.73 mph
Bec&lt;.~u se thi s was history, pure and
it. "
Modified: Larry Jividen, Hurrisimple. II a Borders became the. ~rst
Borders, 23. was the mosi valufemale pitcher to start a minor league able player on her high school team cane, W.Va., 1979 Monza, 87.73
baseball game Tiiur;day night, takmg in Whinier. Calif: After gradualing mph; Bob Sheaves, Marietta, 1975
the loss as th e Duluth -Superior from Whitt1er College in 1997, Bar· Nova 89.32 mph
Dukes lost 8-3 to the Sioux Falls ders was signed by the Nonhern
Pure Street: Man: French, MidCanaries at Wade Stadium.
League' s St. Paul Saints and went to dleport, 1971 Caprice 64.29 mph;
'' I wish I could have gotten that the Dukes on a midseason trade last Arthur Crago, Nitro, W.Va., 1979
win." Border. sa id. "But I wanted to summer.
Camaro 67.37 mph
keep my temn in the garTie. and I
Junior Dragster: Jonalhari Clay,
Borders' family in Los Angeles
wanted 10 pitch the best I can. I think was inundaled witl! calls from the West Hamlin, W.Va., 1997 Spitzer,
I did thusc things and I'm proud of Japanese media. which have taken a 66.64 mph; Derek Baum, Pomeroy,
thai. "
special interest in her. She said her 1995 Spitzer, 65.59 mph
Border~. who had pitched I0
Quick 8 Street: Milch Craddock,
father go1 33 phone calls from !he
SoulhCharleston,
W.Va., I%9Chevinnings during ;ix re lief appearances media after it was announced Tueselle, 122.7 mph; Randall Cline, Cabthis season. took a 2-1 lead into the day she would sian .
fifth . but Benn y C:tstillo and Eddie
As lhe post-game imerviews wore in Creek, W.Va., 1986 Mustang,
Gerald hit horne runs off her to put on. Borders began 10 realize ·'lfow 1122.26 mph
Alcohol Funny Car: Bill Naves,
the Canaries ahead 3-2 .
important her start had been. Nearly
" I was a lot more nervous for this an hour after lhe game, she finally Cleveland, N.C., 1993 Cutlass,
game than I was for the first time I ~nished lalk ing 10 reporters and 162.45 mph; Brent Clark, Erie, Pa.,
puched pmfes;ionally,'' S&lt;tid Borders. returned to a nearly empty dugout 1990 Beretta. 151.48 mph
Pure Street: Marc French, Mid•
who threw 71 pitches in the longest where she was handed a slip of paper.
dleport. 1971 Caprice, 63.12 mph;
outing of her 23-appearance profes- ESPN Radio wanted her 10 call.
sional career.
" I just need a minute," Borders Jeff Hobbs, Ona, W.Va., truck, 57.76
Border; said the suppon of her satd.
mph
teammates helped a lot as they joked
and tried to keep her loose .
" My whole life. all I want out of
baseball is the r~spect of my peers,
and that means more to me than wins
and losses or anything," she said.
Said Cast illo: "I think there may
be players who don 't walll to look
dumb hitting against " wom&lt;tn. the
old sexism thing. That st.uff doesn 't
maner to me . I'm a baseh"ll player,
she's a baseball player."
The Dukes (8-2R) are last in the
Easl Division and Canaries ( 14-23)
•20 Year
are last in the West. With both teams
Stain warranty (lnstallectwlth Pad)
eliminated from first-hal f races wi!h
six games li:ft , the decision to stan

19!!.

MOHAWK
KID·PROOF
CARPET

SHS open gym
set for Monday
There will be an open gym for all
boys entering grades 9- 12 this fall
wishing to play baskelball this coming school year -al Southern High
School Monday. July 13 at 7 p.m.
All players wishing 10 play musl
anend as this is one of 10 instruction
days permitted for the summer. New
head coach Jay Rees will be meeting
with lhe team 10 organize the rest-oflhe-summer basketball program and
inform players about remaining
instruction days in preparation for the
upcoming season.

LEVEL LOOP
CARPET

84!v.
(Installed)

LL Tournament
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Middlepon and Point Pleasant
posted big wins Thursday night in the
annual Bill Hubbard Memorial Lillie
League Tournament at Syracuse's
King Field.
Point Pleasant Home Medical
defeated Green I 8-4 in !he opener,
while Middleport defeated Rutland 71 in the nightcap. ·
In the opening game, Point Pleasant Home Medical took an early lead
and held on to post !he win. Hunter
Roush pitched a good game to post
the win for the Point Pleasant team.
Roush fanned 13 batters , walked
four and scattered six hits in picking

change in anitude wa~ gradual.
" I lhink it got the point he was
hearing from so many people and
gelling so much pressure, he became
comfortable with it," she said.
With labor peace ensured through
2()()(h- 2001 if player.~ exercise lheir
option to extend the agreement Selig faces a future that promises to
be less contentious than !he last five
years.
Major issues coming up are the
fate of the Twins. who have talked
about moving to North Carolina:
what to do with Cincinnati Reds
WILD THROW- Cleveland third a.-man Travia Fryman Clln't get
owner Marge Schon. who is eligible
a grip on the off·ta~t throw by pitcher Dave Burba as the Mln11880ta
to resume daily control of her team Twlna' Brent Gates sl. . into third base in the third Inning of Thuranext season: realignment: and Pete day night's American League game In Cleveland, wt.re the lWina won
Rose's petition for reinstalemenl.
3-0. Burba'a throwing error helped Galas ICOI'8 seconds later. (AP)
Rose's case figures to be tbe least
thorny. Selig has always supported A.
Bartlett Giamatti's decision to impose
a lifetime ban on lhe career hits
leader, who was accused of gambling
on baseball.
Selig will take a long time to rule
on !he petition, one official said
Thur;day. and has no inclination to
reinstale Rose. ineligible for the Hall
of Fanie as long a~ he's on the banned
lis!.
4, Toronto 3: Kansas City 6, ChicaElected to a five-year term and
AL roundup
go 4, and Texas 4. Oakland I.
given a salary one official said was
Mariners 8, Angels 6
about $2.25 million, Selig remember By ADAM NAZIMOWITZ
At
Seanle,
Ken Griffey Jr. moved
wanting to be "the next Joe DiMag- A11oclated Pre88 Writer
within
one
of
Mark
McGwire for the
The Minnesota Twins are trying to
gio" when he was growing up.
major
league
home
run lead wilh his
"After I saw my fint curveball, I make a race of the AL Central. In the
36th
of
the
season.
knew I had 10 do somelhing else," he opener of a head-to-head series with
Griffey's Jwo-run homer off Pep
first-place Cleveland, the Indians
said.
Harris,
a 442-foot shol to center field,
·
lnslead, Selig entered baseball cooperated.
gave
the
Mariners an 8-1 lead in the
Bob
Tewksbury
allowed
three
hits
management, at first becoming a
sixth
inning.
in
7
1/3
innings
as
the
Twins
beat
minorily shareholder in the MilwauLast-place Seaule beal AL Westkee Braves, then purchasing the Seat- Cleveland 3-0 Thur;day night. The
leading
Anaheim for the fif'it time in
Indians.
shut
out
for
the
fourth
lime
lie Pilols in bankruptcy court in
six
games
this season. The Angels'
this
season
and
third
at
home,'
saw
April 1970 and moving the team to
sea.&lt;;On-high
sixth straight loss cui
!heir
lead
over
Minnesota
shrink
to
9
Milwaukee.
their
division
lead to a half-game
1/2
games.·
Selig will resign as a trustee of the
over
Texa§.
Tewksbury
(5-9)
retired
18
trust !hal owns the team - triggerJeff Fassero (8-5) won his third
ing !he start of his term, on or before slraighl after Brian Giles' double with
Slraighl start, allowing five runs on
one
out
in
the
second.
Greg
Swindell
Aug. I, according 10 the resolution
approved Thursday. Sal Banda will got out of a jam in the eighth, and seven hits, five walks and two wild
Rick Aguilera pitched the ninth for pitches in 6 213 innings.
remain 'as the general manager.
Mike Timlin pitched the ninth for
"The happiest people, because his 19th save.
his
second save. Omar Olivares (5-5)
Dave Burba ( 10-6) allowe&lt;l. one
they don't have to put up with me,
must be Wendy Selig-Prieb and Sal unearned run aod five hits in 7 21.3 was the loser.
Yankees 2, Devil Rays 0
Rando. Sal must be drunk already," innings, walking four and striking out
Andy
Pellille pitched f~ve-hit ball
six.
Selig said.
over
eight
innings as lhe Yankees
"Don'! get carried away now,"
.
won
at
Tampa
Bay for their seventh
Twins manager Tom Kelly said.
straight
victory
..
"The Indians are a wonderful club.
Joe
Girardi
hit a two-run homer
They htive a lot going for them at
off.Bryan
Rekar
!0-1) in the second
every position on the field. We can
jump up and beat them once. maybe inning asPeuitte ( 11 -5) won hi ~,ftfth
twice, and !hen . get out of town . stniighl decision, striking oul 'eighl
Hopefully. we won't get bruised and walking one.
up."
Mariano Rivera walked two in the
Tewksbury allowed three hils in 7 ninth before recording his 23rd save.
1/3 innings with two strikeouts and ·
The Yankees 'kept pace with the
one walk. He has only 12 walks this 1902 Pinsburgh Pirates for best
season, an average of 1.03 per nine record through 82 games (62-20).
innings, and is 2-0 with a 0.55 ERA Tampa Bay lost for a franchiserecord seventh straight time and has
at Jacobs Field.
"Guys who don't lhrow very hard been shut oul a major league-leading
like Tewks have to change speeds and II times.
Slay out of the middle of the plate,"
Orioles 3, Red Sox 2
At Baltimore. Cal Ripken singled
Indians manager Mike- Hargrove said.
"If he doesn't do that. he's in trou- home the go-ahead run in the eighth
ble. If he does. he's golden."
inning off Jim Corsi (2-1) as the OriIn other AL games. il was Seanle oles won for the second lime in 13
. 8. Anaheim 6: New York 2. Tampa games since June 22 .
BUD SEI.IG
Bay 0: Baltimore 3, Boston 2: Detroit
(See AL on Page S)

HOUSTON (AP) - Afler losing
a pair of close games, !he Detroit
Shock were taughl a lesson by the
WNBA's top team.
Kim Perrot scored a career-high
22 points as the Houston Comels
extended their franchise-record winning streak 10 seven games wilh a%66 viclory over the Shock on Thursday night.
"We dropped three points to New
York and two points to Phoenix, so
we're right at !he door," Detroit's
Lynette Woodward said. " We' ve jus!
got to get over the hump. We jus!
have to keep fighting and hope that
things balance out at the end."
The Camels (12-1) went on a 211 run midway through the first half
and held the Shock without a field
goal for nearly II minUies. Houston
led by a~ many as 34 points in the
second half.
"We s!amtl ou1 on defense like
we always do and this is some of !he

175 N. 2ND AVE .

MIDOLEPORT, OH
992-7028

two runs in the lhird. David Boyd, Jr.
more runners (Joey Graham and Jeff Russell two doubles.
singled, Ryan Frazier si ngled and
Payton) on wilh walks. They were
left stranded as Roush went up 0-2 in
Middleport took a 1-0 le"'!_ in 1he Whan reached on a fielde(s choice.
the count and fanned yet another bat- second inning 10 break a scoreless Chuckle Davis singled home two
ter.
deadlock. Donnie Whan walked to runs to make the score 3-0. ·
Middleport added three runs in the
Point got some breathing room in lead off the frame, then Chuckle
lbe fifth when they got an insurance Davis was hit with a pitch. Whan fourth. Wigal singled, Boyd was hit
run on a Roush home run to make the stole third and home to post the run with a pitch and AJ. Dickens singled.
score 4-2.
and put Middleport in the drive(s Whan delivered a two-run single for
a 6-0 lead. The winners added a sinGreen loaded the bases in the fifth seat
with one out, but Roush punched out
Meanwhile, Middleport pitcher . gle run in !he fiflh for a 7-0 lead.
Wigal continued his dominance on
the last two bailers on strikes. A four Chet Wigal, who stymied a Rutland
the
mound, striking out seven of the
run seventh put the game away for lhreat in lhe first (Eric Bumem
last
II battef'i.
Point Pleasant
reached on an error and Ash O'Brien
Rutland did not give up, howevPoint hitters were Thompson tw(f'"" singled), found his groove and slruck
er, as Bruce Glover singled and
singles, David Bonecutter a single, out !he side in the second inning.
Roush a home run, Adam Marcum
That string extended to Wigal hav- scOred on a passed ball in the la.'t
two singles, Matt Williamson two ing struck out five in a row, fanning inning and Eric Bumem also singled,
singles and Chris Cooper a single.
!he last batter of the first inning, all but was left stranded a.~ the game
Green hitters were Bodimer a three in lbe second and the first bat- ended 7-1.
Middlepon hitters were Wigal a
double. Scott Shrader two singles, ler of the third.
single,
Boyd a single, Frazier two sinMiddleport then came back with
Joey Graham a single and Steven
gles, Brandon Bell Jwo singles,

best basketball we've played all season and one .o f the best games we've
ever played as a learn," the Comets'
Cynthia Cooper &lt;aid.
Perrot, who played jus! 29 minutes, added seven assists, six
rebounds and five steals 10 her career
high scoring ou!pul.
"I just wanted 10 keep on coming
with the threes. I was struggling earlier in the year. but I've been working on them and I just keep practicing," Perrot said. "Tonight, I guess I
jus! came oul (of the slump). I felt
good tonighl and everything jus! fell
into place."
Sheryl Swoopes finished with 19
poinls for the Camels and Cooper
added 14, as Houston remained perfect at home with a 6-0 mark.
Cindy Brown led the Shock (6-7)
with 14 points and 13 rebounds.
Korie Hlede had II points and five
assists.

Houston forward Sheryl Swoopea (22) Is presforward Lynette Woodard while driving toward the
night's WNBA game In Houston, where the

NL roundup
By Tha Associated Preas
Call i1 Wrigley Field North.
With the Chicago Cubs in Mil waukee for the first time since 1%5,

AL gameS...

County S!adium rocked with a
slugfest reminiscent of the Friendly
Confines 90 miles to !he south.
Marquis Grissom drove in five
runs with a homer and a double as the
Brewers heal !he Cubs 12-9 on

streak for visiting Toronto.
- .Rookie Mall Anderson (2-0)
pitched -one scoreless inning and
Todd Jones worked the ninlh for his
15th save.
Royals 6, White Sox 4
Sal Fasano drove in three runs lo
match his career high as Kansas City
won at Chicago, the Royals' seventh
victory in II games .
Tam Belcher (8-7). won for the
sixth time in seven decisions, giving
up four runs on six hils and one walk
for seven innings.
Jeff Montgomery pitched a perfect
ninth for his 19th save.
Mike Sirotka (8-9) gave up six
runs on I I hits and two walks In seven-plus innings as Chicago lost for

I had goose
basefrom
AII·:Ol•ilf..j~Je a1 hitter-friendly
was awesome hearBre:we1~ second
"'~.-:fu" back

the fourth lime in six games .
Rangers 4, Athletics I
Ivan Rodriguez singled in the tiebreaking run in the nimh and John
Burkel! pitched eighl strong innings
for his firsl win since June 6.
Burkel! (5-9), who los! his previous four decisions, allowed one run
on four hits and slruck out five . John
Wetteland finished for his 23rd save.
Texas' Juan Gonzalez, who leads
the majors with 101 RBis, went 0for-4 wilh 1wo strikeouts and two
groundouts.
Bill Taylor (3-6) took the loss in
relief of Kenny Rogers, who allowed
one run on three hits and struck out
five in eighl innings.

Scoreboard
Sunday's games

Baseball
AL standings

Mnnueul (Pavunu 2·2 ) :11 N.Y. Mer,
S :~n Fran c i~u1

(Wfig_hl

~-1&lt;1.

( Hcrsh•,cr 7-h)

CINCINNATI IRe•nlin~cr _'i . '-J) .11 Anzon:1 (lll:ur
.l - 1 2l. IOO.~p. m
San U1~go (A shb y 11 -_"il ill U1.~ Allj:o.:ks (V :IIUC&gt;

•

111• New Ill ~nl
S·Sll'lfJ UEll. Pk

All New MJ l'lllllt
Grll. AISESftll

1n1new IB aevy
Astri CIIW!I'SIIIftl
• Vlat8 Bly Windows
' • 4 Clptlln Cllllrl
• flllr Soli Bid
•AMIFII C1111tle
• Power wr.tidowll Loclal
• Fully l.oldldl

c.• 1'

•Automltlc

• Air Conditioning

• Air Conditioning

• LS Package
• .... AntH.ock Bllbl

• Power Door Loclll

• AMIFIISiino
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1

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• Aluminum Wheelt
• Nlctly Equipped!

• Nlcllr Eq111ppedl

·---.. ---·-··-----"'lo--Oo--.. .-.. . . . . . . _. . . ,.,._
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Carl Everett homered for the
Astros, and Ray Lankford connected
fort he Cardinals.
Todd Stottlemyre (9-7) took the
loss. He hit eighth in the order. the
first pitcher to bal anywhere but ninth
in the staning lineup since Philaddphia's Steve Carlton in 1979. He singled in the third and lined out in the
fourth .
Expos 9, Mets 8
Ronde II White singled home the
go-ahead run in the lllh as Mon!real snapped" seven·g"me road losing
streak.
Oliando Cabrera led off the lith
with a single off John Franco (0-3)
and advanced to third on two groundouts. Cabrera scored when White hit
a hard grounder past Gold Glove
shortstop Rey Ordonez.
Mike Maddux (2-2) pitched 1wo
scoreless innings for the victory.
tJgueth Urbina. the loser in the All Star game, pitched the II th for hi s
21st save.

NBA champion Bulls whittle list
of coaching prospects to five men

Cn li11 :11l u

K:05 ft .nl.

'

st2,95o·

~~

ll pumped me up . It felt like the oth- sixth for the victory, and Bob Wicker nigh! at the All-Star game, just the man got !he lost three outs for his
buzz."
12th save.
The crowd of 38,055 saw 12
Bob Patte,.on (1 -1) took the loss.
extra-base hits, including three
In other NL games, it was Hous· homers. Both staning pitcher.; gave ton 5. St. Louis 4; Montreal 9. New
up seven runs and were gone by the YorkS in II innings: Atlan!a6. Florithird inning.
· da4; and Los Angeles 12. San Diego
"They said we brought National 3.
League ball to the American League
Aslros 5, Cardinals 4
back 'in '92," Brewers manager Phil
At St. Louis, Shane Reynolds
Gamer said. "We have now brought won his fourth stmight stan as HousAmerican League ball 10 the Na1ion- ton increased its NLCentrallead over
al League. Hey, we are trend-sellers." Chicago to six games.
Cubs slugger Sammy Sosa. who
Reynolds ( 11 -5) allowed three
missed the Ail-Star game because of runs on seven hits in seven innings,
a sore left shoulder, hit his 34th and Billy Wagner pitched the ninth
homer in !he second inning. The 1wo- . for his 21st save. Houston has won 19
run . 432-foot shot to cen1er field gave of 29 lo improve to 54-34. its best
Chicago a 5-4 lead.
mark ever at this point of the season.
·-rm OK. couple of days off,"
St. Louis slugger Mark McGwire.
Sosa said. "Tiiat was the key 10 com- the major league leuder with 37
ing back on track and feeling much homers, was 1-fur-3 . He lined out in
belter."
the first, drew his major league-leadHenry Rodriguez added his 201h ing 89th walk in the I hi rd. singled in
homer for 1he Cubs.
the sixth. and struck out in the

By NANCY ARMOUR
he'll play next year or not. and who
CHICAGO (AP)- Pick a rumor. the Bulls hire will likely play a role
Ium
»: L f&lt;L !ill
any rumor. There are plenly sur- in his decision . But while Reinsdorf
New Yotk .... ... .. ..... ............ 62 20 . 7~
b-MI . 10:0.. p.m
rounding the Chicago Bulls these said Jordan has been consulled about
8cK1on .............................. 52 .\4 .60\
Jl NL standings
19'·
Toronto
...46 4~ .517
Sunday's g•m•s
days
.
the search. Hts Airness doesn't £el
26'~
Balli~ .......... ................19 !iO .4.\ll
f'hii :M.Iclph•o1at Pi n sbu r~h . l ..l .. 11.m
Eastrm Diwl.ton
Tim
Floyd
is
going
10
be
a
Bulls
veto power.
JO'~
Tampa Bay ..................... J4 B Jill
MontrcolatN.Y Ml·t ~. IAOill\1.
Ium
»: L f&lt;t. !ill
Chi..:a~n Cut'! ~ a! Milwaukl"'l'. 2 · 0~ 11111.
assistanl
for
a
few
years
and
then
gel
" I said I was going to talk to
Allani&lt;L
.. :.1:. ...... 60 29 .674
Central Di~l•kwi
H ou~10n ill S1_Lom ~. 1 10 p m.
NrwYorL
........... ..44 .W . ~24
l.f !
lhe top job. A broadcaster with no Michael. Is thai saying he has veto
CLEVELAND
............ \0 16 . ~K l
Atlanta :11 flontla . 4· _l"i [l .m
9\
Philadelphia ........................ o&amp;.l 42 - ~
1~
MinntSOI ~ ....................... ..41
46 .411
CINCINNATI ill Anzona, 'HI~ p m
head coaching experience is a candi- power? Of cour;e nol," Reinsdorf
Mom~al .......................... :\~ n
..W2 2-1
K:~oni\31 Ci1y
... ........19 4R .....
II '·
San Frand !Kn ill C11lor;nln. K:O:'i p.m
Florid;&gt; ... '' ...................... )2 l6 .)1&gt;1 27' ,
dale. Michael Jordan is going 10 be a said. "Michuel wouldn't want Ihat. "
14':
Derroit .............................. l'li SO .412
San Diego :11 Lt1 ~ An~eb . H:(l:'i run
]'\'·
Chicago ........................... ;\~ S2 .402
player-coach.
J.ordan has made no secrel of hi'
c,nlr;tl DlwlsiOII
While
Hou5ton .
.. ....... ....
54 J4
some
of
Jhe
rumors
have
dislike
for a! least one of the candi Western Dlwition
Basketball
Ch.icago
. . .. ..... ., .... 41' 40
Anaheim ........................... 49 Jlt .:'i6;\
the
ring
of
truth.
many
ure
si
mply
dales
:·
Floyd.
Despile no NBA coach.,
9
Milwnukao
.....1 ...... 44 •'
Texas ...
. ... ..49 J9 - ~-"i7
]J\
S1
louis
..........................
40
47
But
with
the
NBA
lock
ing
experience,
general manager Jeroutlandish.
«hkland ...
.. ........ ..41 -46 .471
00t'~NhA..T· t· .. .. .. .. ... :-; ... .40 411
" WNBA standings
ll
SeanK ... ........................... J!t Sl .427
PC1t1N"C
oul
on
and
Jordan
's
future
possibly
ry
Krause
seemed
10 be couning I he
Nl
.... ........ . ..... :\9 SO
l."i '~
hanging
in
the
balance.
specululing
young
Iowa
State
coach
as a succesThui'sday 's scores
Eastern Conrerenct
Wnlem Diwlsktn
Texas 4, OnklaOO I
G.II
on
the
new
coach
for
lhe
six-time
sor
for
Jacksonwhile
Jackson
was
1l'
L
1'&lt;1.
Iwu
')
.1 7~0
Detroit4, Toronto .1
NBA
champions
is
the
latest
rage.
sti
ll
coach.
That
irked
Jordan.
Jack
~:~
?:~~~~·..
:::::::::~:::::~~
~~
~ ~~~~~,[~~k .
M n ~7 1
Minnesotn J. QEVELAND 0
Los Angeles.... .......... ,.; ...44 44
12\
CLEVELAND
.fl
5 ~ ."i
N.Y. Yankees 2. Tamp.1 Bay 0
"Reading
the
spans
pages
makes
son's
biggesl
supporter.
and
he
look
Colnrndo ...
......... ........ .17 52
.. fl
1 .4h1
Baltimore J. BoSion 2
,: lktmil ..
me not want to read the rest of lhe to calling Floyd "Pink," as in I he
Ariton&amp;~ .......................... ,.. JO ~8
26~· Washinglt•n ___ _
KaM:u City 6. ~i(ago Wh.ile So1. 4
I II
010
Seanae 8. Anaheim 6
paper because at least 50 percent ofi, rock group Pink Floyd.
Los Angc~~~~~~.";"'res
Weslern Confer•,"""
what I read in Ihe spons pages is •. Floyd does have seveml things
Tonight's games
~~m~R
~4
c
..
•
=~i'L
.
.
'
.
~
1
.~Jj
.
1
incorrect." Bulls chairman Jerry workinginhisfavor. He'safriendof
Toronlo {HeniJ.en 9-S) at Detroit (Mochlet 8-6),
0
? :~p.m .
'""
·
'"f
"
Sacramento
..
.
.....
'
R .1.1.1
7'
Reinsdorf said Thursday.
Krause,
l';tclnr afler
Houston :'i, St. Louis
.
Urah
.. . 4 9 ..'\Otl
K
·
G an
• all-imponunt
·
~inne 5 ou1 ( Hawkins :"i·ll) at CLEVELAND
Mont
...
t9.
N.Y.
Mc11
K
(Ill
u..
,\;g•k'.
.m
,
The
Bulls
have
been
mostly
silent
the
M
s
rocky
relalionship
with
1 1
{Colon 9-4). 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (lrobu 6-J) at Tampa Bay (Alvarez
Tonight's ~about their coaching search since Phil i Jackson. He's a defensive speciali;t.
4-5), 1:0~ p.m.
.
.
·
AlloniB (Nca•lc 9-61" Florid• (Sonchca J-61,
Thursd•y's score
Jackson roared off on his motorcycle also a priority for a Chic;t"o
~oach .
Boston (MU1intz I I -2) .ot Balumore {Erickson
•
Hou ~t on %. De!mll M
~
8-7), 7:H p.m.
7:03p.m.
1
almosl three weeks ago. What is
And he's young. The Bulls know
Kauas C.ily (Rosado 3·6) at Oticago White Sox
Philoddphia
ISchlllinsB·BJ...•t· Pilltburah (Conlo·
Tonight's gamts
known is thevJ have a list of five can- the Jordan Em can '!last l'orel'er. and
va 6-7).
7:05p.m.
(ND~ ~10 ), 8:0~ p.m.
9 p.m
CLEVELANUao
Phoenix,
didates
and are almost done with they'd like the neKil'Oltch Jo SCI! I hem
Anoheim (Finley 8-4) of Sellltle (ldoyct 3-7), 7 40Mlllll,.al (Pcm 6-9)" N.Y. Meta (Yoshi• 4-41.
Chadoue n1 Sacr.tmenlo . I0 r .m.
JO!!Sp.m.
'
C/:~.
Cubs
(Wood
8-JJ"
Milwoukec
&lt;Kort6interviews,
according lo a source through the tmnsition.
Texu (Hellina 11 -ot) at Oakland (CDndiortl S41. H:Ol p.m.
'
Saturday's games
close to the selection process who
"He's a very fine &lt;.'tlUl'h: we think
10), IO:J3 p.m.
Houston (HfU1'41'on 8-4) ar
Louis (Morris oDefroillll WashinJion, 2 p.m.
•
he has done
'fi
OI.8:10p.m
.
·
Utah" Houston. s:JOp.m.
spoke
on
condttion
of
anonymity.
·
a tern IC job," Iowa Slate
Saturday'•1•mes
1
San Fnnci~~:o (Es~es 7-7)"' :olorado (Kilc lIn addition to !'loyd, long consid- president Man in Jischke said last
llliot,.... (Radke 9-6)11 CLEVELAND (GoodI 11. 9oll$ p.m.
Sunday'• pmes
red tu.,_.. rep1acement-tn-wrutmg
·
·· t
k.
eo1-3. 1m p.m.
CINCINNATI
(fomkol-6)
•Arizona
1a....
6Otorlott
.
.
New
Yort..
p.m.
e
.or wee
4
Bouon (Wakcfidd JO.J) .. Baltimcrc (Ponaon 29&gt;. !0:05p.m.
ct£VEUNOatLotAIIJClel.4p.m.
Jackson, NBA assistants Paul Silas
"I know there have been discusl:l,p.m.
ISdo 12·5) 11 Oll:laod t,SI&lt;ia 3-5), 4!!S (lftifmf
s .. 01s-n
•1•10:Q5
(B rowa IO-)l it Los A•a•'"
'(Charlotte). Scott Skiles (PhoeniK), sions between the UM•-...
-·"""Cment of the
p.m.
'
p.m.
N.Y. Y..W.. (Ccoe Il-l) II T - Bay (1oM&lt;
Sa nlll , .......
jRick Carlisle (Indiana) and Ron Bulls and coach Floyd.", Jischke
1
fOil·l• 6:3.! ~m.
_
Otlooc•
C.~&gt;~
•
~
lEI,Rothstein
(Cleveland) are 011 the list. ldded. "Tim ha~ kepi us apprised of
7 51 1
Kaow CiJJ (llttpp 8-7) " Chi..,o Wbiie S.a
fhtH.6U15p.m.
¥
--n-lmW
Atlernpls to reach all of the can· tho5e discus.~ions. I don'tthink those
(Baldwial-J). 7!!S p.m.
,._.&lt;c.- 5-3) .. Doaoil (Gftki. . . 1- 1 , 1 ~1Umo 7-51 "St~
. ~~ · ~:=,~""';.... '!lfdates over the pur several days discussions have~ to a fonnal
3), 7:0! p.IIL
A~ IMaddu 12-ll • Plodilt.(DoWolor 1- t t . - ~ 11oe ,,_..,~!Itt. DoJ1aoo1e4 have been unsuccessful.
offer."
Aoohelm (S,.,U 3-0) 11 Startle (JoiiiiJon 7_.),
3
~:e ::;-, .,&lt;Loo-.'-1&gt;•~~ .1\Wllouollctefaroai...,...
Jordan is still un.,ure whether
While their names may not be as
4:05p.m.
........
1

SJ5,950*

!H. ~t:J•'J - ~).

7 :10 p 1\l.

Boston al Baltimure, I :.1~ r.m. '
Kllftsas Ci1y at Chica~o White: Sox. 2:0:"i p m
Tc:x:L~ al Oakland. Hl~~ . m .
Anaheim at Self.lh:. 4:.1. p.m.

Easttm Divlt&amp;on

1211 cars, Trucks, and Vanl Allin one location!

K-:'11) , 7 : 0.~ p.m.

Torunlo &lt;ll 01..-twit. I : 0~ Jl . Ql .
Minnes4.'1Hl at CLEVELAND. 1:0~ p.m.
N.Y. Y:utk~.~ :11 T:~.mr;• Bay. IJ~ p.m

By DAVE HARRIS
Athens came right back and
Sentinel Correspondent
scored a pair of runs 10 take an 8-6
Athens outscored Meigs 9-0 in the .. lead. But Meigs scored a run in the
final four innings, to defeat Meigs bonom of the inning, Johnson
17-7 in Eighlh District American walked, and came into score on a
Legion baseball action Thursday Martin single.
evening at Meigs High School.
But that was a.&lt; close as the home
Athens took a 2-0 lead after the learn would get. Alhens scored lhree
first inning, Meigs scored a single run in the sixth, two in the seventh. one
in the second inning 10 make a 2-1 in the eighth and three more in the
contest. Kyle Smiddie singled and ninth to close oul !he scoring.
Derrick Johnson reached on an error.
Scholl led Athens at the plate with
Brad Davenport !hen singled lo dri- a single and two doubles. Gibson
ve in the run.
added a two run home run. Dupler
Athens followed wilh four more in was lhe winning pilcher, with help
!he third inning to make it a 6-1 from Champlin.
game. Bul Meigs came back for 1wo
Davenport had a triple and single
in the bouom of the inning 10 pull 10 for Meigs. Martin added two singles.
within 6-3. Adam Cumings walked, Cumings and Dill each had a double .
and Matt Dill reached on an error. Whillekind, Ohlinger and Smiddie
Both runners came into score on a each had a single.
Clayton Ohlinger single.
Benlley wa&lt; the losing pitcher.
Meigs tied the game in the bottom · Davenport pitched the final 1wo
of the fourth inning. Daven.port innings.
tripled to deep right cemer field, he
Meigs will host Lancaster's junior
cameintoscoreonaerrorallowing team in a doubleheader on Saturday.
Pat Martin to reached first. Cumings lnnin&amp; ll!llb
then doubled 10 left, and Mall Dill Athens
204-023-213=17-12-3
Meigs
012-310-000=7-9-1
doubledDaniel
to put Whittekind
runners onsingled
first and
second.
to
WP-Dupler
score Cumings. Dill was thrown out
LP-Bentley
al the plale with the go ahead run.
f

~~~~~~~~~~------~in~g~th.he;f,fu~n;s.~Thn;e;y~w~e~re~go~i~ng~cra~zy~.~~~A~I~R~ey;.e~s~(4;.~~);pi;.lc~h~ed~.~a;sc~o~re;ie~s:s--eciiggh~t~h~.--------------_:~-

&lt;""C""on""ti,;;,;~u"'ed;..;f;;.;ro""m;.;P"'"as..,e-'4._!- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

.Roberto Alomar and Mike Bardick homered for the Orioles, while
John Valentin and Darren Bragg had
solo homers for Boston.
Jesse Orosco (2-1 ), who pitched a
perfect eighlh in relief of Mike
Mussina, gave up a leadoff single in
the ninth to Valentin before Armando Benitez retired !he side for his
lOth save.
Tigers 4, Blue Jays 3
Tony Clark led off the eighlh
against Dan Plesac (3·3) wilh his
18th homer,
Geronimo Berroa hit his IOOth
career homer and Damion Easley had
two RBis for !he Tigers, who won for
the fifth lime in seven games. The
loss snapped a three-game winning

Chuckie Davis two singles and Dickens a single.
Glover, O'Brien and Bumem had
the lone Rutland hits.
Wigal fanned 14 batters. walked
just one and pilched a lhree-hitter.
Davis, Ellis and Collins com bined in
the loss for Rutland.
Middlepon advances to the semi- '
finals on Monday opposite the winner of tonight's Gallipolis- Reedsville
game. Monday's Middleport game
follows the Poinl Pleasant-Harrisonville/New Haven game, which
begins at 7 p.m.
Tonight the Gallipolis Reds face
Reedsville at 7 p.m. while Harrisonville meets New Haven in the
nightcap at 8:30. For a good night of
family fun, fans are invited to come
out 311d suppon the local little league
tournament sponsored ,!ly the Syracuse Volunteer Fire .Department.

Athens beats Meigs
Legionnaires 17-7

Brewers beat CUbs •,
EXPos t 0 P MetS 9• 8"-, ~=;~~:~:~~~~:;

•

DO·IT·YOURSELF
PEEL·N·STICK TILE

up the win, while Graham and Smilh
combined in the loss for Green I.
Point took a 3-0 lead in the secood
inning when Adam Man:um walked,
Matt Williamson singled and Pork
Sayre walked. J.D. Thompson
knocked in another run on a fielder's
choice after Marcum stole home. The
score stood 3-0.
After Roush fanned three of
Green's top hillers in the first inning
3.hd !he fii'St batter of the second.
Mason Smilh reached on an error.
Roush fanned another batter, before
Steven Russell cracked a two-out single for a 3-1 score.
Green cut into !he Point lead by
getting leadoff man Jake Bodimer on
wilh a double. Bodimer advanced on
an error and stole home for the run,
while Green, despite two more strike
outs in !he heart of the order, put two

Comets shell Shock
in 96-66 runaway

Twins blank Tribe
3-0; Yankees, KC,
Rangers also win

SJ9,95o·

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Point Plea$ant HCM, Middleport notch quarterfinal victories

•

By ~ONALD BLUM
CHICAGO '(AP) - Bud Selig'
already · was sounding like a commissioner. Even he geis·exasperaled
wilh owners.
.
- ·
During one of the happiest
moments of his life, he thought back
lo one of !he wo,.t, a 1993 meeling
at the American Club in Kohler, Wis.,
!hal lumed inlo a bailie belween ba.&lt;ehall's rich-and poor teams.
"Mr. Kohler ha.~ these wonderful
bathroom fixlures." Selig o;aid. "and
I would have loved to flush threequarte"' of !he group down !hem."
No doubt, he'll have !hat feeling
again in.fulure yea"'. But on Thu"'day, when the Milwaukee Brewers
owner unanimously was elec!ed
baseball's ninlh commissioner, il was
a time for platitudes and congralulalions.
"I hear people say, 'He's an own&lt;r and he's one of them,"' Selig o;aid.
"Firs! and foremost, for those who
know me. I am a fan. There is no one
who could love !his game more than
I do - ils his101y, ils tradilion, ils
honor and, above all, its decency."
Turning !heir backs on a trodilion
of independent commissioners thai
began in 1920 following a thrown
World Series, owners vo!ed 30-0 for
the man who was baseball's acling
commissioner since Sept. 9, 1992,
two.days after they forced the resig,
nalio,JYof Fay Vincent.
Selig, who !urns 64 laler this
month, repea!edly said he didn't
want the job and wouldn '1 accepl a
draft. Minnesola Twins owner Carl
Pohlad and Houston owner Draylon
McLane headed the group thai pressured Selig and changed his mind.
"Finally." Selig said, "a monlh or
so ago. 1wo months, one day when I
was driving 10 work - I seem to do
my besl lhinking when I was driving
- I said to myself, 'I'm going to do
it.' Even then, I was kind of startled."
His daughter. Wendy Selig-Prieb,
will take over as head of the Brewers from her falher. She said his

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

well-known in Chicago as Floyd's.
the olher candidates are no strangers
to lhe NBA. All are longtime assis tants. and Silas and Rothstein have
head coaching experience . All but
Rothstein had solid NBA careers as
players.
Carlisle, 37, played with Larry
Bird on the Boslon Cel1ics' 1986
championship team and began his
coaching career three years later. He
staned as an assistanl wtth !he New
Jersey Nels. moving to Portland five
years laler. He stayed there until Bird
asked him 10 join his Indiana Pacers
staff lasl year.
Rothstein . a Cleveland assistant
since 1993, was the Miami Heal's
firsl coach and held Ihat job for three
seasons. He also coached !he Detroit
Pistons in 1992 and 1993.
Sila~. also a candidate for lhe
Seattle job after George Karl wa s
fired. just finished his first year as an
assistant for lhe Charlotte Hornets.
Before that, he was an assistant in
Phoenix, New Jersey and New York
Knicks, and he coached the then-San
Diego Clippe"' from 1980-83.
He played 16 seasons in !he NBA,
and was a member of the Seattle
SuperSonics' 1979 championship
learn.
Skiles has been an assistant for
jus! one year, spending las! sea&lt;;On as
Danny Ainge's top a~sistant. Bul pri or to that, he revived a struggling
Greek professional team. He also
spent 10 years in the NBA. setting the
record for most assists in a game

·.

(30).

One assistant not on the list is

•'

Frank Hamblen.

-- -·---- ----- ---- - - --------...,.----------·-··-- -----.....

�Pomeroy • Mld~leport, Ohio

Page &amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, July 10, 1998

urc
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Wodnesday Servic:ea- 7 p.m.

Congreg ational
Triotlty Church

Second ct lynn. Pomeroy
Pulor: Rev. Roland Wildman

Sunday schoolond woBhip 10:25
Dailey Mass • 8:30 a.m.

Apostolic

CI1Ur c t1 of Ctlnst
,_..., Chr&lt;llll Clorlol
212 w. Main St.
Minister: Dann~ Diu

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnesday Services . 7 p.m.

-. . ,. w-

Allsbly of God
. P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane

Clooudl ofCUIIt
33226 Chihben'l Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.

Muon, W.Va.

.Pastor: Neil Tennant
~;r,~:~.;~ 10:00 a.m.ond

7 p.m.

Wonhip · !Oo.m., 6 p.m.

WeJnesdly Servic:cs • 7 p.m.

Worship - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Fne Will Baptist Chardl
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: l..es Hayman

Sunday Service - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday

School ~

9:1S a.m.

Worship· 10:IS a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

llndbory C1otordl or Cllrilt
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 o.m.

JUcl.. Flrllllaptlst

Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WoBhip. 10:4h.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
Silver Ran Baptist
Pastor: Bill little
Sunday School· lOa.m.

R•tlud Cloarcto or Cltrtot

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Comer of St. Rt. 124 ct Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
You1h Minister: Bill Amberger

ML Union Baptist

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:00 p.m.

Pas1or : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 6:30p.m.

Hidror)' lilllo Clooudllll Orilt

llethlehtiW Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worshir · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday 81ble Study . 7:00p.m.

Evanaelist Mike Moore ·
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wc:dnesday ServiCOI - 1 p.m.
Uberty Cluiotlu Cloarch
Oexler

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening -6:30 p.m.
Thursday Service- 6:3()p.m.

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7

LlnpYille Chrilllaa Chuodl
Sunday S&lt;hoot -9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 o.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Old Bethel F,.. Will Baptist Cba...
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30
Pastor: Rev. lames R. Acree, Sr.

H-lock G""e Chard!
PISior: Gene Zap.,
Sunday school · JO:JO a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Worship - 11a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Victory Baptlstlndepo'ldant
S25 N. 2nd St. Middleport

Reednitle Clotuds or Cbrilt

Pastor: Philio Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service' 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Pastor: James E. Keesee

Worship · lOa.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Faitll Baptist Church

Ctlrt stt &lt;J n Union

Railroad St., Mason

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Hartrord c..,.. or Chrtotia
CluiJIIu Uoloa

Worsh1p • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Hartford, W.Va.

Putor:Jim Hughes

Fomt Run Baptist

Sunday School· II a.m.
Worllsip -9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Ctlurch of God

ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.

ML Moriah Cllarch or God
Racine
PUI:or: Rev. James Sauerfield
SUnday School · 9:45 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.

Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.

.Utlqalty Bapdll
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Wednesdly Services . 7 p.m.

Rullaad Chardl or God
Pastor: Ron Heath
SUnday Wonhip- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sunday Evenin&amp; · 6:00p.m.

Rutland Fm WID Baptist
Salem St.
Pa:!ilor: Rev. Paul Taylor

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Syraasoe flnt Cbun:b or God
Apple and Seoond Sts.
Pulor: Rev. Da•id Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.

Evening- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Catholic

Evenin&amp; Services· 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Services -6:30p.m.

Sacred Heart Cothollc Cltoodl

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz

·

Sat. Con. 4:45·5:ISp.m.; Mw. S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45·9.15 o.m.,
Sun. Mw - 9:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Hol1ness

Eakrprt.

llu•Uie Hoi.N Cb•odl
3l0S7 State Route 325,Langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday acltool -9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rider

~ ofShlrooo

"•e G,.,.e llible Hollnal Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pulor: Rev. O'Dell Mantey
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7,30 p.m.
Wesleyan Bll&gt;le HoiiHII Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville

Children's service - 10 a.m.

Worship. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Hyoell Run Hollaeu Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.
Llaftl Clllr Fm MetliOOist Charch
Pastor: David DeWin

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.
Rullaad Community Church
Pulor· Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sundty Evenina • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

11nc1ron1 Churcll of Chrlat

,Worship· lla.m., 7:30p.m.
\\ll:dnesday Services- 7:3() p.m.

Pastor: awl Emrick
Sunday S&lt;hool -9:45 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship· 9o.m.

Cloordo of God or Pt ophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Putor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorpnlud Church of Jeouo Christ
or LIUer Droy S.lnts
Portland·Racine Rd.
Paslor: Je~ Si.nger

Sunday School·· 9.30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10,30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
The Cburch or Jeous
Chriat or Llttei"Day Salat1
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Soc;iety/Pric&gt;thood 11 :05-12:00 noon
Sacnment Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs.. 7 p.m.

Luttlernn
SL Job latloeraa Cbuodl

Pine Orove

Rev. Donald C. Fritz

Pastor: awl Emrick
Sunday School - lO o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Thursday Services· 6:30p.m.
Ruth (Middtepon)

Gnham Yalted Methodist
Worship-9:30a.m. (hr &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
ML Olive Unked Mtthodlat
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Mdp Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
AUrecl
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- It a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chfster
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School· lO a.m.

Thursday Services -7 p.m.
Joppa
Pasror: Bob Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

~~30o.m

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m., 'f·m·

Wednesday Service - p.m.
lntenlenomlnational Church
King&gt;bury'Road
Pastoc Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Corktoa

Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.

-....,.

Ftdlb CbQII a- Billie Cbarch

Wednesday 7 pm

923 s. third St., Middleport

Sunday Schooi-9:1Sa.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 o.m.

Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday service, tO o.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Rock Sfr!oop

Chrktlu Fellcnnlolp Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday Scl)ool · lO a.m.
Worship- ll:Ua.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Keath Rader

Sunday School . 9:15 o.m.
WoBhi~ - 10 a.m.
Yooth Fellowshtp, Sunday. 6 p.m.
Rutlud

Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m.

H - Clor1otlu Fellowllslp Cbuodl

Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Youtb Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

SaltmC...ter
Pastor: Ron Fierce

Sunday School . 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:15 a.m.
Snow•Die
Sunday School · lO a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 9 a.m.

Ftdlb Full Goopcl Cbu ...

LongBottom
Pastor. Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Womhip · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowshtp service 7 p.m.

llethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Tile Belie¥en' Fellowllslp Mloillry
New Lime Rd., Rutland

Worship· 9'a.m.

Pastor. Rev. Marpret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Wednesday Services - 10 o.m.
Cannd-sCannel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Oewayne Stutler

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m ..
MornlqStar

JUciae

Pastor: John Hart

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Calvary Bll&gt;le Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m.

Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
Sy....,.seMisslnn
1411 Bridgeman St., Syrucuse
Re\'. Mike Thompson,Pastor

Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.

Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.
Hazel ComatunHy Church
Off Rt. 124

ure Church
SilO N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
R~oidna

Worship- 10:30 am

Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Church or Jesus Chris~
Apostolk Faith
l/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wedncsday-7:00 p.m.
Friday. 7:00p.m.

Clifton Tobemade Church
Oifton, W.Va.

Sunday S&lt;hool - lO a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Presbytenan
Syrocuse Flnt United Presbyterian
Pallor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Worship- II a.m.
Harrisonville Preobyterian Church
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School . 9:45 a.m.

Mont Chaptl Church
Sundt&gt;y sohool · 10 o.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Pa.,tor. Roy l..awinsky

Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship -3 p.m.

Nazarene

Faith Gooptl Churtb

United Brethren

Middleport C-uodl ortlse Nua,...
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WoBhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
WoBhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

ML Htr111011 United Brethren
In Christ Church
Texas Community ofr CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Busb

ReediYIBe Fellowablp
Churcb oflht Nazaroae

Evenfna- 7 p".m.

Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

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

United Faith Chun:h ·
.

Rt. 7 on PomeroY By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.

Sunday Set)~! ·9:30a.m.

· !0:30a.m.

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)- Bob
Davie might not be the only Notre
Dame head football coach involved
in a lawsuit by a fonner assistant.
E~-assistanl Earle W. Mosley testified Thursday in an age discriminillion suit filed by another fonner
assistant for Lou Holtz that the former Irish head coach assaulted him at
halftime of the 1996 Notre DameBoston Coll~ge game.
Mosley, ·who testified by videotape in Joe Moore's suit against the
university, said he had to be
restrained by other assistant coaches
after Holtz attacked him.
On the videotape, Mosley initially resisted answering a lawyer's
questions about the incident, saying

Third Ave.
Pastor: Re'&lt;'. Clark Baker

ToodiCbuodl
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WoBhip - 10:30 un.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

ByJ_R_ ROSS

Middleport Pentecostol

Seventh-Day Adventisl

ML 011.. Com•uolty Churc:b

NASCAR notes
By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motorsports Writer
Steve Park, whose rookie of the
year hopes were cut short by a crash.
is ready to retum to action.
The former northeastern modified
star recently drove a race car for the
first time in more than I00 days when
lie tested one of Dale and Teresa
Earnhardt's Chevro.lels at Gre~nviUe­
Pickens Speedway tn South Cl!foltna.
: The 30-year-old Park is/coming
back from fractures to his right lhigh,
l~fl collarbone and right shoulder. He
also chipped two teeth in the hard hit
during on March 6 during practice at
Atlanta Motor Speedway.
: Park is able to walk unaided and
is undergoing daily rehabilitation in
Charlotte.
: The young racer drove 200 laps on
the flat half-mile track in 95-degree
heat. The test was successful enough
that Park and crew chief Phillipe
Lopez agreed he will be ready to

Wednesday Services ~ 7:30p.m.

Idea United Bnthrea In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124

Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School . II a.m.
Sunday WoBh1p- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant ~i•IJrr ~uneral ~ ~m.

-·ow ·-..
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432
~r

INSutwiCE

---·

Ful-ol

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Searching for a ·
local church? ·
Check the &amp;n~l.
every Friday/

was a big thrill," Gordon said on the
eve of qualifying for what the 26year-old driver hopes will be his fifth
victory this year and 34th of his mercurial career.
Last year, the Jiffy Lube 300- a
race he won in 1995 en route to the
first of his two series titles - didn't
go well from the start.
"We qualified 29th in the first
race, then we had a nat tire and wen:
just never able to make up for any of
it," he said of.his 23rd-place finish.
"The whole team was disappointed,
and I think when we came back we
had something to prove to our-

his lawyers advised him against talking about it because of potential litigation.
Then Mosley proceeded lo testify
that a Boston College fan spit on him
as he went back to the locker room
at halftime. He said something to !he
fan, and Holtz then assaulted him.
Mosley said.
Mosley could not be reached for
comment Thursday. Someone
answering the phone at Holtz's residence in Orlando, Fla., said he was on
the road, and Holtz did not return
messages left for him by The Associated Press.
Initially, Notre Dame attomeys
objected to Mosley's videotaped
deposition. But they played the segment with Mosley claiming Holtz

return full time in August. staning
with the Aug. 2 Brickyard 400.
"This is the best therapy any doctor could order for me," Park said.
"Ever since I hit the wall at Atlanta,
my goal has been to get back in the
Pennzoil Monte Carlo.
"All we tried to do was knock the
rust off, and I'm pretty happy to find
I really didn't have that much rust. It
took about two or three laps before I
felt like I had never been out of the
car. It was a hot day on a short track,
just the way I like it."
If all goes as planned, Park will
drive in the last 15 of the 33 races this
season. Since only their top 20 finishes count toward·roolde of the year,
Park~ who finished 41st and 31st in
his only two stans this season, would
like to think he still' has a shot at the
rookie title.
"I know we're kind of behind the
eight ball, having missed so many
races, but that makes it all the more
fun to try to get in there' and win,"
.'
Page said.

199&amp; Cachlla£ Sedan DeY11e.

..... _ ,,_,.

L:....--+~IM~V:;•-=~~~~-~n~:-~~*~·~~~~!::.J :~

Tlmt to clean houae? FIRE &amp;
Clean out.your basement SA•ES
or~ wilh the help of the
112-7075
Ave.
CLASSIFIED SECTION! .112 Nor1JI Second
Oh

of his business that he once signed a
check worth a nickel.
King has had repeated run-ins
with the law.

Eighty players were at par or bener.
The 64s by Odegard and Donnann
matched the low score on a par-71
course this year. set by Karrie Webb
at the ShopRite. Neither of the coleaders had a bogey to go with seven birdies - and said they didn't
even come that close to one.
The average first-round score was
even-par. Eight holes played under
par, including the 132-yard, par-3
eighth hole that yielded 39 birdies
against only six bogeys.
"It's not that it's easy. but last
week you got used to grinding it out
every single shot," Donnann said.
"It's nice to have birdie opportunities
from time to time."
A week ago, Odegard went into

the U.S. Open brimming with confidence and left after rounds of 75 and
77.
"It was a huge disappointment for
me, probably my biggest in golf," she
said. "I ne\·er hit the ball so poorly.
I had only three jirdies all week which for me was just two days. I
thought I'd been playing well and
could make a great showing. When I
didn't, it was a big letdown."
So the 33-year-old got serious.
"I had a little talk with myself,"
she said. "I rededicated myself to
what I need to do to improve."
Odegard, who had her lowest
career finish with a fourth in the Farr
as a rookie last year. made the turn in
5-under. After two more birdies, she

hit her approach to the par-4 ninth
hole- her closing hole-,. within six
feet. But she missed the putt that
would have bettered the courserecord 63 posted by five others,
including eventual champion Kelly
Robbins in the second round last
year.
Dormann. winless since her second tour victory in 1993, was 1-under
through five holes before stringing
together four straight birdies. Included in the streak was a 40-foot birdie
putt on No. 16.
"I could hear somebody in the
crowd, when the ball got about 5 feet
from the hole, saying, 'It 's going
in!""

Dormann lost in a playoff to

Wendy Ward at the Hawaiian Open
in February. then bogeyed the last
hole two weeks later at Tucson,
missing a playoff with Helen Alfredsson by a shot.
"There were a lot of low scores
out there today," she said. "I'm glad
I had one of them."
None of the previous 13 Farr winners has gone lower than 67 in the
opening round.
The 1993 Farr winner, Brandie
Burton, was two shots back after a
66, along with fonner Ohio State
player Meg Mallon.
Nine players were at 4-under 67,
including Webb, Hall of Farner Betsy King, Leta Lindley, Laura Baugh,
Kris Tschetter, Charlotta Sorenstam,
Smriti Mehra and Maria Hjorth.

selves."
The DuPont team, led by crew
chief Ray Evernham, did just that,
and Gordon hopes a si milar effort
will help him widen his 40-pointlead
in the Winston Cup standings.
"Ray Evemham made a great call
in the pits when he decided not to
lake on tires on the last pit stop,
which put us back out on the track in
the lead," Gordon said in recalling
the CMT 300. "That's what won the
race for us."
Gordon. who hasn't had a hot
strea~ this season, wants to win consecutively for the first time in 1998.

He is well equipped for the task, driving a Chevrolet that was one of the
dominant cars last month at Rich mond, Va., when a late-race tangle
with Rusty Wallace took him from
the race.
The principal competition figures
to be defending race champion Jeff
Burton, nat-track ace Bobby Hamilton, and- as usual - Jeremy May field, Mark Martin, Dale Jarrett and
Wallace.
Manin is winless despite two
poles and four top-fi\'e finishes in six
NHIS stans. The track is one of only
four current venues on which he has

ify up front and run there all day
come Sunday," he said.
Like Wallace, Bunon has an affec tion for the track.
"It's the environment. the facili ty, the people, the way they treat
you," he said. "I ran here before we
came with the Winston Cup cars, and
I just took a liking to the place.
"If I had to lis I my favorite tracks.
it would be right there."
Not so for Hamilton, despite an
impressive record on low-banked
tracks. where he has two of his three
career victories.
"I don't like flat tracks, but I seem
to do real well on them," he said.

nol won.

"I really like the track, and we've
had some good runs here," he said,
noting that victories in Las Vegas.
Texas and California also came on
tracks where he was winless. "So
maybe New Hampshire owes me one
now.''

Like Gordon, Wallace will be in
one of his favorite cars, a Ford that
has carried him to three victories,
nine top-five finishes and 12 top- I Os
in just 16 outings. He likes nat track s
and thinks has also has a great
chance at NHIS.
"I'm confident that we can qual-

assaulted him without explanation or
comment.
A Notre Dame spokesman said the
attomeys wouldn't comment on the
case.
Of the nine assistants on Holtz's
staff. only Mosley and Moore, 66.
were not retained when Davie was
hired as coach after the 1996 season.
Moore, an offensive line coach
under Holtz, is suing the university
for $1 million. He wa.~ the only witness to take the stand Thursday after
Mosley's videotaped testimony.
Notre Dame lawyers claim Moore
was fired because he abused players
and did not live up to the standard
that Davie wanted to establish on his
coaching staff.
While on the stand, Moore admit-

ted to striking Notre Dame players on
several occasions, though he claims
he slapped them with an open hand
and didn't intend any harm. Irish
lawyers countered several times by
a.•king Moore if he ever punched
players, including an incident in
which he is sai&lt;l to have left at least
one of them bloodied after the annual Blue and Gold scrimmage game in
1995.
Moore testified that he made a
mistake during the scrimmage game
when he struck five lineman aloQgside the head for lax elTon. But he
denied ever punching players.
"I never remember punching one
of those kids with my fist. Never. No
... no." Moore said, holding up a
closed hand.

Moore's lawyer, Richard Lieberman, questioned him extensively
about his background and reputation
for developing linemen of such quality that almost all went on to the NFL.
During opening stateme nts.
Lieberman told the jury of five
women and three men that · Notre
Dame's claims that Moore was fired
because he abused players and was a
poor representative of the program
surfaced only after proceedings started for an age discrimination suit.
Notre Dame lawyer Gerald Lutkus
said Moore was fired because he was
an abusive coach with a hoi temper
and a foul mouth that didn't fit
Davie's image of Notre Dame foot ball.
"We're not here because of age

discrimination. We're here because

this man. Joe Moore. wants to get
even with Bob Davie," Lutkus said.
In a blow lo the plaintiffs, U.S.
Judge Allen Sharp declared allega. tions of misconduct by Davie at past
coaching positions off limits unless
defense attorneys introduced them.
Sharp also harshly admonished
Lieberman for introducing allegations that offensive coordinator Jim

Colletto abused players while he
was the head coach at Purdue.
Both were key to Moore's claims
thai he was wrongly fired. Lieberman
said before the trial he hoped 10 show
other coaches at Notre Dame were
allowed to abuse playe" without
being reprimanded. undennining the
university's claim that Moore was
fired for his conduct.

Park makes post-crash comeback; Martin to delay back surgery

S..I!IJih-Day Ad•entlst
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy

Wednesday Youth Service -7:30p.m.

7iNI••...., .,......,....., Fried Chicken"

DON KING

Mos·ley, Moore file lawsuits against Notre Dame's Davie, Holtz

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
·
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

DyenUie Commuolt)' Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p'ni.

Wednesday Servica • 7 p.m.

LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - Jeff
Gordon, who has had his share of
highs and lows in the brief history of
New Hampshire International Speedway. hopes to become the first repeat
winner since Winston Cup racing
came to New England five years ago.
He already is the only two-time
winner on the 1.058-mile oval. a driver who enjoys trnnsfonning failure
into success. He admits that prospect
excited him last year, when he won
the CMT 300.
"After the way we ran in the first
race here last year. winning in the fall

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

~...c?ns Bottom

By DICK BRINSTER

Pastor: Lawrence Foreman

Middleport Preobyterilla
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worshi~ ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

t:'U'!

Gordon seeks back-to-back wins at NHIS in Jiffy Lube 300

Evening- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Edsel Hart

Worship. 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.
Hoc:ldnaport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School . 10 o.m.

"Frankly, this week you can score
some birdies," Odegard said. "This
is a lot more fun."
It wasn't fun for everyone.
Se Ri Pak shot an even-par 71 just
three days after winning lhe U.S.
Open in a sudden-death playoff. The
South Korean was returning to !he
site of her first tournament on American soil .
"My body felt heavy," said Pak,
20, who also won the LPGA Championship in May.
Only 10 of ISO players broke par
in the first round of the Open at
treacherous Blackwolf Run in
Kohler, Wis. But 62 were under par
at Highland Meadows, including the
lone amateur in the field. Grace Park.

Pastor: David Dailey

Sunday School 9:30a.m.

· Penle&lt;oJIII Asseml&gt;ly
St. Rt. 124, Racine

Coolville United Metbodlsl Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cooi•Uie Cbrch
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunda~ School . 10 a.m.
WoBhip · 9 o.m.
Tuesday Services. 7 p.m.
Bethel Churcb
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 o.m.

SYLVANIA, Ohio (AP)- After
staring down humiliation on almosl
every hole at the U.S. Women's
Open, the LPGA's touring pros
behaved as if !hey had just been
released from prison.
Shooting at pins and boldly aiming putts at the hole, they released a
week of tension Thursday in the first
round of the Jamie Farr Kroger Classic.
Vickie Odegard lipped out a sixfoot birdie putt on the last hole that
would have given her a courserecord 63, settling for a 7-under-par
64 and a shan: of the lead with Dana
Dormann at defenseless Highland
Meadows Golf Club.

Stiven•llle Wonl or Faltll

Pucor: Robert Vance

Bailey Run R01d
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson

&lt;

Faith Fellowship Crusade ror Christ

Pentecostal

Faith VIDey Tobenade Church

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . lla.m.

Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Eadtlase "-or Pnyer

Middleport Commuelty Church
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School tO a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Seivice . 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.nl.

Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

New Ure Victory Cenkr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services - lO a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Sunday worship- lO a.m.
Wednesday service -6:30 p.m.

losing libenies and said that "power
corrupts."
He said prosecutors wen: "tenacious, steadfa.~t and com mined." He
added, "I have been just a.' tenacious,
steadfa.~t and committed."
King took out an insurance policy with Lloyd's in case a 1991 fight
between Cesar Chavez and Harold
Brazier wa.s canceled. The fight was
ultimately called off when Chavez
was injured during training .
According to prosecutors, King
then altered his contract with Chavez
in a way that would force Lloyd's to
reimburse King for all training
expenses. Then, King submitted a
claim to Lloyd'&lt; and fraudulently col lected $350.000. prosecutors said.
Prosecutor Baruch Weiss argued
that King either altered the contract
himself or ordered someone to do it.
Prosecutors noted that King kept such
close tabs on every financial a.~pect

By RUSTY MILLER

Harri!on•llle CommMalty Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday -9:30a.m. ond 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
(at Burlingham churc:h off Route 33)

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.
Eut Letotrt

tory, signing autographs, posing for of them outside the counroom.
Juror Steve Fiscus said he became
pictures and vowing to use his succonvinced
by the evidence that
cess to catapult him to even greater
Lloyd's
provided
coverage for the
achievements.
money
that
became
the ba'is of the
"This is so great. I'm so thrilled,"
charges.
The
most
serious,
charge Ci!"said King, who read a biography of
ried
a
potential
prison
tenn
of up to
Manin Luther King Jr. and the bible
five
years.
throughout the three-month trial.
The verdict cappCd a trial in
"The most imponant thing to me
which prosecutors tried to convince
now is freedom."
A jury note on Tuesday gave the jurors that the defendant who cheerimpression that jurors were on the ily nodded and smiled at them during
verge of convicting either King or his the trial was a wily crook.
Defense lawyers accused prosecompany. When it was learned Thurscutors
of trying to tear down a selfday that the jury reached a verdict
made
man,
a major figure in boxing
against one defendant, a subdued
for
three
decades
who has promoted
defense team waited anxiously.
fights
for
everyone
from Muhammad
At the jury's announcement, King
Ali
to
Mike
Tyson.
smiled. Fleming clapped his hands as
After tloe verdict. King sounded
his eyes filled with tears.
King greeted the jurors individu- like one of his boxers, hesitant to
degrade his defeated opponent
ally with a handshake.
"Thank you all very much," he although he made vague comments
said, later hugging and kissing some waming Americans to beware of

Wbltc'o Chaptl Weoleyan

AppeUl'eC..ter

Sunday School -9 o.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

third time," White said.
King's lawyer. Peter Fleming Jr.,
repeatedly implied to the jury that his
client was unfairly prosecuted, pursued by relentless government investigators who singled him out.
William H. Murphy Jr., who represented Don King Productions Inc ..
said the e~oneration of King and an
Il-l vote for an acquittal of King's
company, proved the case never
should have been brought.
"This was a blowout, a resounding defeat for the government," he
said.
He also accused prosecutors of
unfairly pursuing King with tlimsy
evidence.
"I hope they understand the lesson: When you come at somebody
hard. you got to come at them fair,"
he said.
King lingered at the courthouse
for more than an hour after his vic-

r~'l

Odegard, Dormann share lead in Jamie Farr Kroger Classic

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Smdy -7:00p.m.

m-son

;~t~

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
Coolville Road

·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford

Falnlew Bll&gt;le Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. l

"Fuii-OospelChurc:h"
Pulors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Se&lt;iond Ave. Mason

Pastor: Connie Piuel

Freedolll Gospel Mlaloa
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Putor: Rev. Mary McDaniel

Sunday Services: lO a.m. ct 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

ParlCloopd

Pastor: Brian Harkness

United Methodist

47439 Reibel Rd., Otesttr

MIHnYUie
Pastor: awl Emrick
Sunday School · 9 o.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Our S.•lour Lullseru Cllurch .
Walnut and Henry Sll., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Rusaell
Sunday School - 10:00 o.m.
WoBhip - II a.m.
SL Paul Lutllcne ChurdJ
Corner Syaunor. ct Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School -9:45 a.m.
WoBhlp- lla.m.

lllneot OalftKIJ Mitolatriet

WoBhip- 10:30 a.m.

Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday . 7 p.m.

Sooth lkthel N.,. Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber

Cloto ... IIIIM NIDrnt

Ottler Cllll rctles

Pastor: Vemapye Sullivan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

WoBhlp · 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School . 10:00 a.m.

Pastor: Roy Hunter

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thur!day - 7:30p.m.·

Pastor: Rev. Chute. W. Basye
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
. Wednelday Servicu -7 p.m.
l'or1lud Firat Cblll'dl of!M Nazaret~e
Pastor: Muk Matson
WoBhip - 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serviaa -7 p.m.

ForeoiRaa

NEW YORK (AP) - Federal
prosecutors promised not to seek a
n:mat~h against Don King after failing to ~onvict the spike-haired bo~­
iog promoter or his company in a second insurance fraud trial. ·
A Manhattan jury acquitted King,
66, of all nine wire fraud charges
accusing him of stealing $350,000
from Lloyd's of London after a 1991
&lt;t&gt;out was canceled.
The federal jury was unable to
reach a ,verdict on charges against
Do" King Productions Inc. A jury in
1995 failed to reach a verdict on the
same nine win: fraud charges against
King, who beat a federal tax evasion
charge in 1995 as well.
U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White said
prosecutors were throwing in the
towel.
"We do not believe it to be in the
public interest to try to the case for a

Full Gooptl Uptbouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- llo.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

-

Flalwoodl

Roll..,. Chun:h
leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Communloa - 10 Lm.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youtll- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study w-...y 7pm

Pastor. Mark Morrow

Worship · lla.m.

Cheller Cluudt or tile Noa....,.
Pastor: Rev. Herben Grale

Centnl Chuter

Keeo Chodl of Cllrlol
Worship . 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m,
PISior.Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3nl Sunday

Tilppm Plolll Cloto... ofClutot
IIII!Jumenlal
Putor: Terry Stewlll
Worslllp Service -9 a.m.

6th and Palmer St., Middleport

-"'"'"' (S,,.......)

,_,.,, Cllaodl ofiM Nllllftllt
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Orimm,Jr.
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Worship · 11 a.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pas!or: Roger Watson
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
WoBhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WoBhip . !0:30a.m.
Flnt S...thtn ~
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. umar O'Bryant
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
WoBhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
First Baptist Church

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Col\'lry Pll¢• Chlptl
llarriJonville Road
Putor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servrce . 7.30 p.m.

Zioe Cloto... of Clu1ot

East Main Sl.

Coffee hour folluwina

Pastpr: Sharon Hausman

5th and Main
PIIIOr: Alllartaon
Yootll Mlnioter: Bill Frazier
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 8:1S,I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

PISioderry Stewart
SUnday School ·9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30 p.m.

Rutland Flnt BapciiC Cbardo
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist

Holy Eucharist and
SUnday School10:30 a.m.

Radio Minillly· Ravenswod Station
4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m ..
Wc:dnesday Kida for Ouist· 7 p.m.

Tuppon Plalu SL l'lut

Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

Banrallow RJd&amp;e Cloom:ls ofClutot

Wednesday ServK:e·7:00 p.m.

G.-~ Cllurch
326 E. ain St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier

Worship-9:30a.m.
~·
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month ·7:30p.m. service

By LARRY NEUMEISTER

Worship - IU:JU a.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sr-CIIIordo of ... N...,....
Pastor, Robert J. Coen

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Manhattan jury acquits King of wire fraud charges

irecto

Pastor: K&lt;itll Rader
Sunday School- tO o.m.

Mlddloport C1otordl of Cblol

·Jim DiUy
510 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday acltool · 9:30 a.m.

Eptscopal

Friday, July 10, 1998

.

Said Lopez: "We know his leg is
OK and the rest of .his body is OK.
but you never really know if a driver
is back until he gets in the car and
hauls it down in the first comer at
speed. I think it's safe to say Steve is
back."
Darrell Waltrip, who has been filling in for Park, will return to the No.
11 Chevy he used to own in time for
the Brickyard race.
That hurts: Mark Manin, who
has four wins this season and is a
close third in the points - just 52
behind leader Jeff Gordon - is having more than a lillie discomfort these
days.
Manin has a herniated disc that
makes it painful IC\ climb in and out
of his race cars. But Manin says he
will put off surgery until the end of
the season.
'Tm fine once I'm siuing in the
car," Manin said ..

---

Road rage: Then: has been some

. ..
1995 Gevy Camciro.Coiv. ·

controversy in the Winston Cup
series this year, with .some drivers
bumping aside or sending them into
a wall. NASCAR does not take such
antics lightly, quickly handing out
quiet warnings and, in some cases,
fines.
Darrell Waltrip, once called Jaws
by competitors because of his
propensity to speak his mind, says a
little controversy is good for the
sport.
"I love controversy," said the
three-time series champion . "It's
pan of the spon. It's the heat of the
moment.
"It's not politically correct
because you don't have someone
telling you what to say and what not
to say."
Waltrip said getting your frustrations out like that can be a positive
thing.
"It's venting," he said. "Whenever I got into a fight or a hassle with
somebody. sooner of later it would go
away because we knew we would get

DON ,.AtE
MO'rORS

it all vented out. I think it's good for
the sport because it 's colorful and
exciting."
That hurts: Richard Chi ldress
made headlines recently when he had
his drivers. Dale Earnhardt and Mike
Skinner, swap crew chiefs.
The idea. Childress said, was to
se~~J.lle personalities would mesh
bette! and the chemistry work better
between Kevin Hamlin and Earnhardt and Larry McReynolds and
Skinner.
But Childress was not blaming the
crew chiefs for his team's struggling
first half of the season.
"The biggest problem we· ve
faced this year is two injured drivers." he said. '"Mike Skinner took
two of the most .violent blows I've
ever seen a driver take and still be
walking. He's got to have operations
this winter to get back in shape.
"Dale Earnhardt told me after the
Richmond race (in June) how bad his
chest hurt him in the race. and it was

1996·Buidc Riviera

still bothering him then . We' re dealing with two drivers who have been
beat up tremendously . .
" I don't accept excuses and I
don't make them. but this is one of
the reasons we've been having a little difficult time, " Childress added.
Despite all the problems, Earn hardt is I Oth in the season points and
has finished 15th, eighth and lith in
his la.•t three races. Skinner is 35th in
the points and finished 17th two
weeks ago at Sears Poinf That"s his
best finish since an eighth-place in
the season-opening Daytona 500 a race Earnhardt won.
Stat of the week: Jeremy Mayfield (second) and Jimmy Spencer
(ninth) are the only drivers among the
current Winston Cup top 10 who
were not among the top 10 in the final
1997 standings. Missing are Bill
Elliott (lith) and Ken Schrader
(12th)

1998 Chevy S·l 0 Pickup

- '
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lit. Clb.'

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4,11110 . . LAIIdect

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7,100
~

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.

Friday, July 10, 1998.

Friday, July 10, 1998

Business Services

To place an ad (all992·2156

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Giveaway

To

90

Roofing

M8 J

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Remodeling
Plumbing

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

. ----·r..t.

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

"Buflll Tour DNam"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

TRPPRn

~

"Easy Over lite Plwne Bank

Firw11cirag"

!Ill

*Free

Sunday Calls)

5 Parts Warranty

*Free Digital Thermostat

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7

ROBOT ENTERTAINS - A robot named "Gaweezer 9" was the
star at "Space Mission Camp" daily vacation Bible school at the
Middleport First Baptist Church last week. Here Wanda shank,
director, kisses the robot, portrayed by her son, Adam Shank. The
Shank Family created the robot for the event. The Bible school's
project this year was "Kid to Kid." Approximately SO bags containing tables, crayons, pens, pencils, rulers, erasers and pancll sharpeners were sent to children of other nations who had never had new
supplies. They were purchased with money given by children and
church members during tha week.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED • Kandl
and
Josh
Potts
Bachtel
announce the birth of a son, K.
J. Lee Potts, born at Holzer Medical Center, May 14.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds, 12 ounces. Grandparents are Ronnie and Diane
Bachtel of Pomeroy and Margret
Rimes of Georgia.

Gingerbread Hoase
I!RESCHOOVCHILDCARE
Middleport, OH 45760

740-992-7328

NOW ENROLLING
Children 2 months to 11 years of age.
We offer:
•Infant/Toddler Care and Learning
(2 mo. to 3 years)
•Part/Full Time Preschool and Child Care

(3 years to 5 years)

Kristin Sigman

•Before/After School Services (6 to

11

years)

,,

Hours of Operation: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

GRADUATED • Kristin Sig;
man of Coolville graduated cum
laude from the University of Rio
Grande on June 14 with a bach·
elor of science degree in biology
and a minor in chemistry. She is
the daughter of Jack and Linda
Sigman.

Summer Fyn Actlyltjes for all ages.
pai!y Bates
County assistance available for eligible parents.
Call/Come Visit • 992-7328

1¢.(Woth """'""

llOO 01 without)

Handheld cellular phone
• 40 name·and·number memory
• Up to I 00 minutes talk time,
up 10 21 hours standby.
t11·1101

Sign Up Now for United States
Cellular Service and Receive
Triple Package Minutes on
Rate Plans $19.95 and Highert

Jf j999~tho&lt;t'"'"'"
Lfl

IJWI'l wthoo41

Mini cellular with
extended battery
• 125 name-and-numbfr memory
• Up to 165 minutes talk time,
up to 40 hours standby.

1/MTED 6TATl6

July 10 thru 12,

S25 RadloShack
Gilt Certificate
with any cellular
phone activation.
f~ c rudes

CELLUlAR.
0

'

M

0

I

I

~

0

I

'

I

I

I 11-1119 CWoodq&lt;a~ll11 · 1llO ll'rwl"l

0

@ RadioShack.

Pra ·(lald.

You'wo pt queotiono. We've 101 anoworo.0

tA ntw one·ytar Unn!d States Cellular service contra&lt;! requ&lt;ed. Activation fee of I 10 requirld. Offer valrd only on C!lta~ calling plans. Roamllg charges,
taxes. tolls and nttwort sach.lrges may app~. Oihet' resrrict1011S and charges may applf. Subject to credit awoval. Not valid w11h ant oihet' oiler. S!f
store lor dtraib. Offer er&gt;ds Ju~ lt, 1998.
•
•Mmti51d pic• rtqUires..,. acti&gt;Otiort. minimum stM:t_commitmtnt with a local auihor•ztd ca&lt;rier and aedil approval. Ac1ivotion let may bt required.A
month~ seM&lt;• let, klrtg dislan&lt;e foe. and charges lor aort_
m Wll bt mlldt. fHs Vlty dlpordftg on thr! plan !00 Stltct. Carner may tn1fJ0St a flat or pro-ratld
penally let b eaftllerlllination. n100 """""' _ . withi1120 days of ~!On. to Mid a 1300 charge bom Radiolhad&lt;, you must rellrn thr! phont.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

OOCUMENTS end SPECI· Stnat on July 13, 1998 at
FICATONS may be oblllnsd 7:00 p.m. All lntorolltd
at the Office of TRIPLETT roeldontt ore lnvltod to
COftetrVancy Dtatrtct
·
Ownor
ENGINEERING SERVICES aHtnd. The Budget lo
34481 Com Hollow Rood
CO. located at 112'/, COURT currently avalleblo lor
Rutland, Olllo 48775
STREET, POMEROY, OHIO lnapactlon at the municipal
lsparata -tad liDS for upon piYIIIInt of $SO.OO tor building.
the construction of •ell let, WhiCh wlft not be
lllryanSwann
wtLKESVILLI WATIR UNE rolundad.
Clorlr/1'1'oHuNr
EXTINSION PROJECT will
The EnglnHr'a oetlmtlo (7) 10 1tc
be racelvad by tha Leading for tho project Ia
Cr11k Conaarvancy Dlttrlct $101 ,IIS.oo.
l-....;.Pu.:::::bl::.:lc:..:N::.:otl;.:-:::ce;...._
at the Dlatrtct Office 34481
/SIJ. ChlriH D. llllrrstt, Jr.
Com Hollow Rood, Rutland,
P1M. L8ldlng CrM1c
PUIUC NOTICE
Ohio until 5:00 P.M. Local
Cet-w~
D1e1rto1,
NOnCE It herHv glwn
IINrt on latunlay, July 11,
nma July 21. tSSI and then
11 aald O,ICE publicly (7) 10,1 7, M..
.1... II 10:00 Lm., I pullllo
........ hald 11111 w..c
opened and rwd lloud.
Public Noace
hcond llfeel, P-rey,
Till COtmiAC'I' OOCU·
Ottlo, Tho Faniltra lank
MENTa may be ...,ned et
PUIUC NOTICI
and livings Co111pany
tht Conservancy Olatrlct
The VIIIIOe of lllddloport Plfldrto lot, to Hit for Cleh
whoea 1111ln · office Ia
loclttad on lllle Routl1 12.4, will hold Ita ennual luclgat tha lollowlng colllltenrl:
Hnrlng In council
111115 OODGE CARAVAN
1.11 mllaa MBt of Rutflnd.
2114FK51GIFR254M4
COpiH of tile COHTIIACT cllombort at 237 Race
PUBUCNOTICE
IMdtngCrMk

1------------

._...,Dit....,.

I

·~lver Run Dog

Food ........ $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ........ $9.75100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed ..... $10.25 100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Ufe Data
... Hours: M-F 8-5:30; SalB-12:00 Noon

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

In Memory of our
Mother
AUDREY JEFFERS
3-18-23
7-11-93
We miss her kind and
willing hand,
Her fond and earnest
care.
Our home is saddened
without her
We miss her ·everywhere.
Hills that she.loved, now
enfold her,
Hid in their bosoms she
lies.
,
Safe from pain and
suffering,
There she never crys.
We love and mlaa you
Mom I

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
"H•1• llrtattry"
*Roof Coatings
*VInyl Skirting
*Water Heaters
*Doors/Windows
*Eiectrlc/Piu'!'bln~;

Supplies
*Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps

Discount Prices

Bennett Supply
740 448 9418
1391 Safford
School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Public Notice

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
COMMON PLEAS
Call NO. 98CV021
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
.
(Judge Crow)
CIH No. 98CV033 BANC ONE MORTGAGE
BANK ONE, N.A.
CORPORATION
Succoooor by merger to
Plaintiff,
Bank One, Athena, N.A.
•VI•
C/o Bane One Mortgage
LEROY SIMPKINS, S., at al
Corp.
Osfondanto.
Plaintiff,
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
(Judge Crow)
FORECLOSURE OF
•VIMORTGAGE
LEE ROY SIMPKINS, SR.,
Leo Roy Slmpklna, Sr.,
etel
Kimberly D. Slmpklna end
OSfendonta.
Joaeph P. Gilbert, .whou
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
laot known addreea ta 2244
FORECLOSURE OF
Wllllomo Hptlow Rood,
MORTGAGE
Golllpollo, Ohio 45631, end
Leo Roy Slmpklno, Sr., tho unknown htlro,
whoto loot known addrttl dovloeoo, logalttt, exocuIt 2244 Wlllltmo Hollow toro, admlnlatretora, apouoRoad, Galllpotlo, Ohio •• end 111lgno and tho
45831, and tho unknown unknown guardian• of
holro, dtvl11o1, legateaa, minor end/or lncompetont
oxecutoro, admlnletrolort, halra of Lit Roy Slmpklna,
apou111 and 11algn1 and Sr., Kimberly D. Slmpklna
tho unknown guardlana of and Joatph P. Gilbert, all of
minor and/or lncompetonC who•• realdencea ere
holra of Leo Roy Slmpklno, unknown and cannot by
Sr.. all of whou realdencoa reaaonablo diligence bo
ore unknown end cannot be aacertalnad. will take notice
reaoonablo diligence be that on tho I 9th day of
ncortalnod, wllltako notice Morch, 1sse, Bane One
that on the 23rd day of Mortgage Corporation flied
April, 1998, Bank Ono, N.A., Itt Complaint In tho
Succo11or by merger to Common Plea• Court of
Bonk One, Athent, N.A., c/o Melgo County, Ohio In Cue
Bone One Mortgoge Corp. No. 98CV021 on the docktt
fllod 111 Comploln1 In the of the Court, and tho object
Common Pleoo Court of and domtnd for rotlof of
Melgt County, Ohio In Cue which pleading Ia to loraNo. 98CV033 on the docket close the lion of plalntiH't
of the Court, and the object mortgage recorded upon
and demand for relief of the following deacrtbod roal
which pleading Is to ootatetowh:
Property Addro11 lo:
foroclooo tho lion of
plalntiH't mortgage record· 35134 Ltodlng Craak Rood,
ed upon the following Middleport, Ohio 45780 and
deacrlbed real ootato to wit: being more particularly
Property Addreu lo: New deocrlbod In plalntlfl'a mort·
Lima Rotd, Rutlond, Ohio gage recorded In Mortgage
45775 and being more Volume i, page 7$3, of tho
partlculerly doocrlbed In Melgo County Rocordor't
plalntllf't mortgoge record· Office.
All of tho above nomtd
od In Mortgegt Volumo 10,
poge 303 of the Molge dtfondanto art required to
anowtr within twonty-olght
County Rocorder'o Office.
All of tho obove nomtd (28) dayo ofter lot publico·
dtftndente ore roqulred to lion, which oholl tit pubanawor within twenty-eight llthed once a weok for elx
(28) daya after laat con1ecutlve wnka, or they
publlcotlon, which thall be might bo denied a hearing
publlahod once a week for In II Clll.
LERNER, SAMPSON &amp;
alx conaecutive weeka, or
ROTHFUSS
lhoy might be denied a
Anomoya for PlolntiH
hearing In thlt ca11.
120 E. Fourth StrHI,
LERNER, SAMPSON &amp;
8th Floor
'
ROTHFUSS
Clnclnnoti,Ohlo 45202
Attorney• for Plaintiff
120 E. Fourth Street, (513) 241·3100
8th Floor (7) 3, 10, 1.7. 24, 31; (8) 7 Sic
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241·3100
Public Notice
(6) 12, 19, 25; (7) 3, 10, 17,
6tc
Public Notice
Public Notice

985-33831
35537 St. At. 7 North

Cheater

c•~f:t~~~~~~~ft
et II COISftiUCtiOI ~
4n. ,
New l:tomes &amp; Remodeling
IIA
· ~ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~
4n. . . Commertlal &amp; Residential
~
~ 'i7 yrs. exp.
·Ucensed &amp; Insured M

ft -

A
:~

Free Elf/mates

'·'

Owner: John Dean

-~ .

c·.

Phone 740-992-3987

\

A
~~

~~c~~e;~tr.!~t,~~
... .
. . . . .... '.. . . .. .
'

110

HelpWsnted

DENTAL HYGIENISTS
Full .time (4 Day Week) and
·part time position
·available. Excellent salary,
benefit and bonus
package. Up to date office.
Fqr more information
call
(740) 592-1483 or
(800) 923-7329.
WANTED: RESPITE WORKERS
needed to work with Individuals with
developmental disabilities In your
own home In the Gallla and Meigs
Counties areas. Hours are scheduled
as needed; overnight hours may be
required. If interested, contact
Christy at 1-BOD-531-2302. Starting
salary: $5.25/hour.
Equal opportunity employer.

In Loving Memory
of
MONICA'HOLMAN
WOLFE .
and
KENNETH TYLER
WOLFE
who passed away
1 year ago today,
July 10, 1997.

our fuzppy ~ ana circk
fjDi ful.s taf&amp;n ones we foveti.
'11ity are 6orne from sin ana sorrow
'1i1 a nook rest a.6ove.
'J{p one (!lows fww mucfi we miss tliem
?{_one 6ut acfiing liearts can te{[;
Lost on eartfi 6ut founi in lieaven
\Jesus ioetfi a[{ tfiings we{{.
·
~adly missed by all your loved ones.

Public Notice

"Noad rspolr on any

"Where Quality Doem 't Cost More"
7 40-446-9416 • 1-800-872-5967 .

SUISftROME
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction &amp; Remodeling
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
· Free

. Public Notlca

Estimates

740•742•3411

8/WIImo.

COMPUYER
PERnRMANCE
UPGRADES
"Your One Stop
Computer Shop"
Give us a call for system repslrs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.
INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
IPOIIIERC&gt;Y. OH

JIM'S
BACKHOE uu
DOZER SERVICE
•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

Mrt 304-773-!1878.

• Wa·•-,.make?®"
• Ro;;:a
Since
• Refrlgeretort 1853
•Dryer
• Hot Weier Hoaltr

wks. old,

rom~.

houaehold, Oaby MartiA, 740·

992-MI&amp;. .

ranlblacl&lt;, 74D-

742· t018 .
Frea To Good Hnme: 10 Week

Call740·843·5426

Friendly male cat, liter ualned,
good homo. 30U75-1237.·

First Three days

J &amp; D Auto Parts . Buy ing
wrecked or salvaged veh ic les .

304-773-5033.

wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any

C&lt;rnclition, 7oiD-&lt;146-9853.

FRII POPCORN AND-~AllOOHI
Opening July 1st,
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and used
We Buy-Sell and Tirade
Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last.
Come in and see us at
202 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-1074

LINDA'S
PA.INTING
Take the pain out o.f
painting, and let me
do~ for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
· After 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180
Free Estimates
0/101081 pel.

SERVICE.
Agricultural Ums,
Umestone • Grevsl
'
Dirt • Sand

. ' 985-4422
.

.

Chester, Ohio

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repairs
• Coatlnts
• Sieling
Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks
74o-992-2068

DESIGNS

Computer Graphics
· Designs
All Landacaplng &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon . ,
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422
r

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
Umestone Hauling
Houae &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syatem &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
(614) 992·3838

Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES
740-698-9114
or
140-:698-7231
0{11118 trn

SHOP

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

Open 11 1!11 • 6 pm

TYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS
PRODUCE
Tomato Pickers &amp; Experienced
Packers needed.
Minimur:n Wage

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB
Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at

6:00.

i

.

~

'•'

Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
Spm-11:30pm
Weekdays
Sundays 3 pm-1 0 pm
tnlJ1

740-843-5280 - 843-1238

No Job Too Sm111

Brian Morrison
(740) 985·3948

BEANIE BABIES

FOUND:Comp Conley area.
brown dog wftranaialor collar .

30U75-220t .

Kyger. Aawlrdl7of0.388·11436.

70

mo. .

•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

\ · 9" Rib Pattern
$1.2!i pef {unnlng foot ($39~40 per eq.)
~·Wide~ ~o·, 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildings

&amp; Porches

ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow. Pine Conetructlo.n
Custom Engineering

Curly - Early - Singer
Ants - Fortune - Jake
Sat., 7-11-98, 9:00A.M.

BlUM LUMBER

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AU, Yon16oloo Muot
S.PaldlnAdvance.

Pomeroy, OH. An EOE

omplr&gt;fer.
Attonllon Cortlllod Nurtlng Ao·

111tanta: Ravenswood Village Is
now accepUng applicallons for lull
time and par1 lime posWons. Paki
vacation and holiday&amp;. If Interested, please apply In person Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm or
wrlle Attn: Georgie Boso. R .N.,

Ratliff Pool

Center

·
360° Communications
'

·

-

JEFF.· WARNER INSU.UNCE
113W.2.NDST: ·

··

Part Or Full Ttme Wotd Proces-:
&amp;or (WPI . Some Reception. Ma· .
lure. Responsible . Self-Directed ·
Individual Sought . Flexible Hours. ·
Send Resume To : CLA 440, cto •
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis. OH 45631
Pari -Time (36 Hours Every Olher ·
Week) Receptionist Needed . Ou- ·
lies Include Answenng Tela-.
phone , Opening And Oislributing ·
Mail. Daily Depos its . Filing Part· ·
Time Benefits Include Sick Leave •
And Otuo Pars. Send Resume To .
Human Resources Director.

SEOEMS Dislricl. P.O. Bo• 527.
Kerr. OH 45643. By 711 5198.
.

Pleasant Valley Nurs ing Cjnd Re- ·
habilitalion C~nter IS looking lor ·
a two full· time LPN- Ph's. Mus! be ·
licensed . Mus! be able lo work :
all shifts, holidays and wee- .
kends . long term care experl- •
ence preferred. Conlacl Angle ·
Cleland. Assistant Director ol

Nursing.(304)675·5236.AAIEOE.
Aadiolomi Teehnjc;an
AmnjsemeoJ

Wanted : Ohio licensed Radiolo·
gy Technician . Part-Time Position ·
With Screening Company Work· :
ing Athens And Surrounding Ar- .
eas. Excellent Pay Opportunilies .
Flex ible Hours And No Call.
Please Send Resume And Lener
01 Intent To : Radiology Techni cian , P.O. Bo~~: 752. Athens. Ohio
45701 , Or Gall 1·800..32:2-2182.
y

Avon - $8 -$20 /Hr. No Door To
Door. "Bonuses· 1-800-296-0139

Avon Representatives Needed :
Gallipotis Area. Benelils:
•Earn Up To 50% On 5ales
•WOO: From Home
•Special Discounts

•Hands On Training
Call Toll-Free 24 Hours. 1-889-

286-&amp;75.
Caregiver For Elderly Women

DEAQUNE: 2:00p.m.

Room, Board, Salary, Reply To:

tbl dly blfDre the ld
lo to run. 8undoy

45620.

Sales Person Needed - Home
Furnishing - Full-Time. lmmed1ate
Opening, Apply : Lifestyle Furni·
lure. 856 Third Avenue . Gallipolis.
10·2. No Phone Calls Please .

:
•
•
•
·

413 Gravel Hill, Cheshire . Ohio

e

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

Soil, Fill Dirt

Mlacollanoous, 740·245·5595.

WalCh

614-992-3470

3 lamlly, s.at., July 111h, 9·3, at

575 Front Street, Friday, Saturday, 9·5, brand name clothes
(Levis, CK, Guess), good condi·
lion chaapl
All Yanl Slle1 Mutt Be P1ld In

Advlnce. De1dlln1: 1:OOpm the
dey bttore the 1d 11 to run.
Sundoy 6 Monday odltlonUOpm Fr1doy.

Flrsl time 1110r, Sinh Srroar, Syra·

992-7$43
7/3/981 mo.
J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding o 5affit ·

Do what no one else will do

463 S. Fourlh Sl., Mlddleporl, loiS
of misc.

STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
.B ackhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,
New Construction,
Remodeling

cuso. Frldoy &amp; Sarurday.

I

Four family yard sale· Saturday.
July 11, 9am·4pm ..Davld Spencer's. Main Street. Racine. Men's.
women's and girl's clothes: toya,
household items and misc. Rain

cancer..
Friday-Sunday, 9·?, mise . nice
stuff, corner ol Bashan Ad . &amp; Ea-

• FaKia • Saomless
· Gut1er • Roofing

gle AldQe Rd .

• Replacement Windows
• Sla~iy Docks

Garage sale, Fry residence ne111
to Sall&amp;bury Elemenlary School.

Friday July tOrh 1·7pm, Sarurday

• Blown lnsulotion
• Garages • Dsclu

July 11th 9am-4pm , miscellane-

ous Items.

2.4 X 24 Pols Building
storting at $5995

Beanie Babies. crafts, chairs. roll
top desk, ball cards , dishes.

''-r couch 800 misc.

Thrao family, clorhas, baby
clothes, some turnllure, playpen,
walker. stroller, etc, Friday &amp; Sat·
urday, 2-421 Lee Circle, Syracuse,

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP

on. ran cancals.

Cendle Making
Suppllea
•Wu •Scent •Etc.
· Refllli
Varlllty of Glfta.
~ Tueo..f'rt. 10 pm
Sot.10o.,...pm

Pt. Pleaunt
&amp; VIcinity
13 Wakollold Rd. Sal. 8·? Teen
;irt clothing, torm.als, other clothIng. bicycles . van ladders . toys,

misc.

1---·-

4 Fomlly·Yard Sale 8am .·4pm.
Sarurday, July t llh. 3 112 miles

~Sun.611on.

811124, llfnnvtHo, OH

our Sandhill Rd . off Belle Rd .

c..ncot " ,.,,

"M ..... "' tto4lt flrlltt.'

~nl

Camarory Sales· Taka a.sales
poslllon no one else will . Olle'
service and product no ana else

will. Earn $500·1 I ooo per weak.

Cemetery sales olfers job secunty
and is recession proof . National
corporation with average com ·
mission ot $500 per sale . set appointments. no credit turndowns .
paid training , ma1or medical , and
retirement plan. If you are serious
about wanting a golden opportunity, call Steve Sm11h . 740 - 992 ·

7440
Easy Work I Excellent Pay! As semble Products AI Home . Call

Toll Free 1·800·467·5566 E•r.
12170.

ELEMENTARY CURRICULUM
SUPERVISOR beginning the
1998-99 sc~ool year lor the
Alhens-Meigs Educational Service Center. Submit letter ol interest. rtsume, 3 letlers of recom·
mendatlon. copy ol transcript and
current cartiUcate to John Cos tanzo. Superintendent . S07 Rich ·
land Avenue , Suite 108, Athens .

OH 45701 by July 17. 740·593·
8001 or 740 ·992 -3883 lor more
information.
Experienced Waitresses &amp; bar·
tenders . Apply in person at
TwisteiS Sports Grill and Restaurant 107 Academy Drive . Ripley.

wv.

Slllll Sireel Racine, Salurday. 6-5,

740-992-2n2

740-446-7267.

For Slgnsll

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

H ME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Sill t 308 Maadowl&gt;rOOk Or.
S.t. 8·3 Clothes , rad io' s,

Fri. &amp;

Gallia -Meigs CAA Is accepting
Preappllcattons for temporary Ia·
borers to be assigned primarily to
Raccoon Creek County Park_This
will bt primarily outdoor works
sucn as cunlng grass. brush . and
preforming other maintenance
work. 40 IVS. per Week, $5.t5 Per
Hour.
App!icants muit be age 18·21 ,
Galtla CDLWlty residents . and meet
JTPA Title liB eligibility require·
men1s.
Preapplications available at
GMCAA. 859 Third Ave . Gallipo-

lis, GMACC. 8010 Norrh Srare

Route 7, Cheshire or by calling
(740)-446-1018ell1. 111
Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency Equal Opportunity Em-

ployer.
MAKE MAILBOX MILLIONS
Oulddy, Easily. Big Kit Shows You
How ·Start Now! MailboxA 1, 3825
Niagara Drive, leKington. I&lt;Y
40517.

mile.

ADOI'TIOII:

Frllh baked loodo, religion,
quality ttmo lnclt aoJid .l l f t llttltlly IIIWborn. Wa are devQt·
od, hOnaot couple toottlna 1o1 to
~ertntlng. Logellconflcfontlal.
Cal Glna.lncl """"'¥- 1•
.....1·1-.
~

10

Nllilb'!IUTIIII._
t:-~"'-

~.

MoMey t1rrU _ . ,

t:CJO.I.'Sq; •

i
•

·leal Center. Qualifications Include . ·
licensure From An AcCredited
School. Long "Term Care Experl· · ·
ence Is Preferred II Int erested ,·
Please Send Resume To: Oak Hill .
Communi ty Med1ca1 Center. At tentiOn : Brenda McKenzie , 350
Charlotte Avenue , Oak t:tlll , OH

273·9385. EOE, Genesis/Elder-

care facili1y.

Auc:tlon
and Flea Market
Rick P11roon Auction Company,
. lull lime o~ctlonotr, cdmploll
·auction ttrvlct. Llconood
Ht,OhiO 6 Wilt VIrginia, 304·
m-amOr304-773-5ol47.
Wedt111tyer'o Auction Sorvlce,
Clalipoii,OIIIo740-IM120
.
.

'10 . ~to Buy

Now hiring

ufe

~~r:ay o~.·=~d~~~~~~n~

Itt

STNA'I
Vete1ans Memorial Hospital SNF
unit 1s looking lor caring . dedi cated Individuals. Apply in person at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Human Resources Office.
The Gallia Counry 911 Commumcattons Center Is Now Accepting
Appl1calions For The Posilions 01
911 Operalor. Applications May
Be Obtained AI The 911 Center
localed At 1191 State Roule 160,
Gallipoli S, Oh1o Or At The lnlor·
mahan Desk In The Gallia County
Courthouse On locust Street tn
Gallipolis. Gallla County, Ohio Is
An Equal Oppor!unily Employer
Thornton Greenhouses. 740-2474334 . needs labor workers to pick
tomal oes, ages 16 &amp; up , $5 .15/
hour
Truck Dnve1s Needed With CDL
&amp; HazMat For Stra1g'ht Truck Del iv ery , llftm g Requ ired , Good
Wage s. &amp; Benef its , Hospital iza tion, Pa1d Vacatio n, 401 K, Imme diate Start. Send Replias To: CLA
441 , clo Galhpohs . Daily Tribune .
825 ThtrO Avenue , Gallipolis, OH
45631

WANTED:
CRANE OPERATOR
W1th Me c han1c al Background .
Salary Commensurate WHh Ex perien ce. Ca ll 1-800 -339-6518
Mo n - Fn, 8:00A .M. ·5 :00P.M .
For An Appointment

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Wanted : lady Compan ion To
live-ln . Free Board. No Smok1ng ,
No Drinker. Charles Richards .
7&lt;10-446-34 19.

WANTED: RESPITE WORKERS
Needed To Wo rk With tnd ividu ·
als With Developmental Oisabili·
ties In Your Own Home In The
Gall ia And Meigs County Areas .
Hours Ar&amp; Sch&amp;duted As Need ed ; Overnight Hours May Be Re ·
qulred . II Interested. Conta ct
Christy At 1·800· 531 ·2302 StartIng Salary: $5.25 Aiour Equal ~

ponunlry Employer.

·

WORK FAOII HOME
Plf $982 Flf $6,M7
Fret-Ill
1-100-4&amp;5-1521

www.boolbuor.ro.com

140

Business
Training

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK GOT
YOU STARTED... Bur Your Em·
player Mar Demand A little

More. Lor Ua Koap You Ltamlng.
T!aln At Night. Taka Adult Train·
1ng AI llud&lt;eys HIMa ca- Ctn·
tor. Lot Uo Know - lnltftllod.
Fell Aogillrltlon II Open In July.
And Withdrew P~porty From Slop In Or Cell For ABrochure.
=..Pitor1b8111. ,_,.Of Sail: 740·245·5334. Flnancltl Aid
_
011 CiihND CHICK.
.-1() '"-Who Qualify.

· Alrtcltoltt 1bp Doltor: All u.s. 811- •
wr And Gold Colftl, Proo!Mta, ICittll Jo11nton ~~t-1031 .

..... ::...~Ill a-.1
•.
40 •• . . . ·

Slate Certified High Pressure .. ·
P1pe Welder 5 Years E11perience •
Tig And Stick Send Resume To ·
BrenMar Construction. Inc .. 900
Morton Street. Jackson. Ohio
45640.

drivers. good

pay, fllllblo hourt. Apply In per·
son 11 DomlnO'IIn Pl. Pllasanl.
Ohio Valley Bank Will Onar For
,,
Salt A t 888 nondt 300 4 ·WO
~!V~~7~~~ublovalc Auction Will
"" ~ ~• "'"
Annex, 143
Thlnl Avo., oamopu., OH on 11
25191 AllO:OC) _A.M. Trtt Above
Will a. Sold To Hlgholl Blddtr
'A1ol1 • Wlltrt 11.' Without E1·

··· pof.ti:ROV.OH. 1 ouilttJo~::.:a~
~=~r.= ==·Any~~~:,
1\llllt: ~1 .00 1118 ut~ eyery
lie..... , '
~

6"l"t"
" .992-i::"
.
~
...,..79
• ...,,~
..____...,_,_,_..;.._'!"-_;.;.,..;.;,'!'""__;:l::::l;.

In The long Term Care Oepart· · .
ment AI Oak HIU COrnrrunlr( Mea- : ·

e

005

.,ssgss

Nurse (LPN) Position Is Available · ·

Social Worker 2
The Jackson County Department
Of Human Serv1ces Is Accepting
odltlon • 2:00p.m.
Applications For Two Social
Frtdlr. Mondly ICIUon
Centurion Management Group, A Service Worker II Pos1!ions. Min·10:00 Lm. Seturdly.
Progressive long Term Care
imum Oualiflcalions : Complelion
Company Is Currenlty Taking Ap01 Coursework For Undergradu- ·
Big Garage Sale: Kids Toys . Kids plicalions For A Nursing Home
ate Major Field 01 Study (ie . So·
Ctothee, Btg Wheels, Bikes, Admtntstralor In The Dayton ,
cial Work , Sociology, Psychology,
Household IIams, Galorel 110 Ohio Area . we Ollar Opportunily
Home Trainmg) As ReqUired By
First Avenue, Friday, July 1Oth, For Career Diversification And
Or Un iversity (Or
Salurday, July t tlh, 9 A.M. ·3 Tho Abillly To Grow Wllh One 01 College
Months Exper i ence As Social
P.M. Also Have Retired longa - The Most Respected Health Care
WorKer I In County Welfare Or .
berger Baaket&amp;. Asking Bentley Provides tn The Country. We Are
M.H. Ana M. A. Or (6 Months ExPncos.
Seeking Challenge ·Driven Ad· perience As Soc1al Worker For ·
ministrators With The Abilily To'
Gigantic Yard Sale 1925 Chest· Lead By 11 ample And Ensure County Children Service . 169 Or
nul Sl., Sarurday ONLY 7111/98 Tho Highosr Srandards 01 Aesi· 648 Boards Or Community Social
Service Agency) . Associate De· • ·
~B:..:.OO:..A..:..M..:.·_·? - - - - - - I doni And Pallen I Care. Tho Ap· gree In Social Work May Be A.c · • :
Huge Sale Rain/Shine. 105 Ann pt1can1 Must Have An Ohio
cepted II Applicant Completed • .
Dr. Corner ol 7 &amp; Raccoon Sub. cense, Have 3 -4 Years Experl·
Comprehens1ve Program Wllh : ·
$nee. And Have EKcellent Peo·
Division. Sat OAiy 9·?
Virt~Jally All Courses Taken Being • :
.:..__ _ _.:..,-_ _ _ _ 1 pie, Financial And Marketmg
·In Social Work . Will Be Subject ...
July 10 and 11 .' 10:00--4:00 . 9l
Skills. Centurion Offers An fK· To Civil Service Testing
•
Garfield. Toys. TV, Cunains, Cflptional Compensation Package
Bowling Balls. household, Much If Interested fn A Challenging Po- Beginnmg Salary 01 $9 .11 Per • ·
~IC.
&amp;Ilion Send Your Resume And
Hour Plus Benefits. An Equal Op· • :
Salary Requirements To Teresa
portunity Employer . Applications • • _
Thura · Sst. 9-6 P.M. 1110 Of A Davis, VIce President Of Opera- Can Be Picked Up At Jackson : ·
Mile From The Korner Store To- lions At Centurion Management
County Department 01 Human • ·
ward Vinton, Baby ClOthes, Wom·
Group, 3490 Far Hills Ave., Kel ·
Services . t35 Huron Street , • :
one Slzoa 3-tB LOIS Of Miser
renng. OtliD 45429.
Jackson. Ohio Or By Contacltng • .
Belly McManaway, Director At : ·
Two Family Garage Sale: July 9, Cosmetologist Needed Guar·
10, 11th, 1501 SR 850, Name anteed Salary, Versus Comm is- (740-286·41811 Berween 8:oo ·. ·
sion. Paid VacaHon. Benefits . A.M. And 4:30 P.M. F1ling Dead· • :
Brand Clothes. Weight Bench.
line Is July 14 : 1998 At4 :30 P.M.

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

St. Rl248

CELLUtAR PHONES

.

have ~

sheriff and pollc;e report, drug . ·
screening required . Send resume . :
to 2.tS Union Avenue. Pomeroy,
Otllo 45769 or call 740·992· m2.

O.O.N., 200 Soulh Rllchlo Avo.,
Ravenswood, wv 26164. 304·

80

251b.
Tablets or Sticks

accepllng resumes, must

u-

Calffor Quote Today

The Specialty ShoP.

must be received by Monday.
July 20 at the following : P.O. Box
722, t 12 East Memorial Drive.

lndlsi&amp;'ll!!l.

lost: 2 Male German Shephiords,
Black With Tan Trim, VIcinity:

Joe N. Sayre

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

Wllft PlllftD STilL
iiOOFIIG AID SIDIII

MIZWAYTAVERN
GRAND OPENING ·
Sat, July 11 w/DJ Lee Osborne 1:,, ',;i~J:i §
Karaoke every Fri. in
July wilh Jeff North

Found: Sraro AI . 2t8 Mole Gold·
on Lab. Vory ·vary Friendly,
=Hands, obedlonrl 740·

RN«MI,. R_,H

Sl'fVICC' LJI I

011211 mo. pd

$5.00 entry
.
Starts at good Times, 1st bike out
al noon. Proceeds lo benefit 5 yr.
old in need of
I

Grinde Call Alter 5:00P.M.7402~

Hauling, Excavating
· &amp; Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syatems
Treller &amp; Housa Sites

P/B Contractors, Inc.

Racine, Ohio

TAl-CLUB BENEFIT
SATURDAY, JULY 11

4 Mo. Old Tan Labrador Retrlevor
loll noar Pllaalny Valley Rd. Ri&gt;

SAYRE
;TRUCKING ·

Don Smrth
37814 Peach Fork Rd .
Pomeroy OH 45769
992·2735

299 Third Street

ling. Computor 800 blllng. rN!d;cal
records skills a must . Resumes

Chow,

80 Lost and Found

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

REFRIGERATION
·Resrdenttal atr
condrtionrng
·Auto air condrtronrng
·Heat pump
·Installation &amp; se rvr ce

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

Part

To A Good Homo: 4 Yoar Old FomaiiSiac:to Lib. 74().448.7123.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Top
CRAFTY LADIES

30U75-54t9.

Applications are being accepted
tor tne posnlon of Long Term
Care .a.saistanl. Qualifications include an Associate Degree in a
health-related field with 2 years
experience in a heallh care set ·

old. 30U7!S-5903.

MEIGS

$25

Kitten, gray and while female,
playlul and aHacrlonare. 740·992·

part
German
Shephard tan dog, male, 12~ks .

5I2Wn

110 HelpWanted
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-ti75-t429.

Long haired klttona, 8wki old .

Pomeroy Cliff Apartroents . Now · ,

EOE

Ef,1PLOYMENT
SERVIC ES

87~2117 .

3992.

614-742-2138

CARPET

In rho country

Oaa furnace tree for hauling. 304·

Guttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

12/11/lfn·

f.

home

Onlyi30U75-5524.

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

1~

LAIDSCAPI

Professional

1•740·949·2015-

DUMP TRUCK

old, ro gOOd

Howard L Wrltenl

Manager and maintenance for . :

45656.

Wonnod, 7&lt;40-387.().129.

R. L. HOLLON·
.·,TRUCKING .

Help Wanted

One Fuii·Time Licensed Practical · ·

Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks. 1990 Modele Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East -

ern ,.......,, Gallpolls.

Free to good country home, full
blooded German Shepherd , 11

Old Boagio Pupploa . 111 Shors &amp;

PLUS

CALL

152 3rdAve.

·

will buy one piece or complete

Full blooded male German
Shephard, solid while, Umos.

BENNETI' S HEATING &amp; COOLING

Insured

ue eeee.

Fireplace coal/wood burner. ln-

0/-1 mo.

In

•

740

*Free Estimates

• IUU' SPEt:IALS •

!:::::

In Memory

"

584 North Second Ave.

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" thru 48" plastic culvert In stock
Fulllfne 'of water storage tanksSeptic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Water line- 100' thru 1000' Rolls
Sewer Pipe- 3" thru 8", Gas Plpa &amp; Regullltora
Open:
•
9:00-4:30 Weekdays,
9:00-12:00 Saturday

11M ApplmKi MDII

Behaved, Needa Room To Run,

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Heat Pumps As Low Asl38 a month

614-992-7643

Antique&amp; &amp; clean ustd furniture.

Ftm11o Golden Rtlr-. Approx.
t 112 ·2 Yoort Old, Frlondly, Wei

(CUI Out tor Futtn Dttoolont)

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

Air Conditioners As Low As 128 a month

FREE ESTIMATES

Joe Wilton

LOnG'S
conSTRoalon

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

110

Full B1oodod a.rmon Shoj&gt;hord
. top ·prtces paid, RiverPupa Bctrh Mull Go toglthor ro Antiques
Ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
DDUrttrY I'Omo7&lt;40-256-llt23
Ruu.. Moore owner, 740-992·
AH 8lac:to P14JPY very Cuta. Small, 2526.

Cheolh. 7&lt;40-387-71181

Custom l;lomes

.Wanted to Buy

2

an ad Call992-2156

place

9

The Dally Sentinel• Page

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 10, 1998

ALLEYOOP

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOJ:
PHILLIP
ALDER

.730 Vana &amp; 4-WDa
Short On Skills? Gain Skills In
One Year Ot Tra 1n1ng In The

Evenings. Bu ckeye Hills Career
Center Conu nues In lis 22nd
Year 01 Operation. Train In: Adult
Ba s•c Education , GEO Testing

Site . Othce Technology. Welding ,
lndustnal Maintenance. Peace

Qllicer /Corrections . SUCCESS,
Auto Technology, Air Conditioning &amp; Healing, Farm Bu si ness
Plann •ng. Analysis, Computer

Spec•aHst. Customer Centered,
Heallhcare Technician (Formerly
Nur se Aide ), MR/00 , Pre-Em ptoymanl Training , And More ..
Call 740-245-S:lJ-4 For Catalog

And lnlonnalloo.

1 Bath, 2 Car Detached Garage

And Dock. 74(}.«6-9664
CONOOIIINIUII
lePiace, 215 Second Avenue , 2
Bedrooms. 2 Baths . Located
Dow ntown $79 ,000, 740·4-i6·

4299
Double wide 3br, 2 bath . only

$1.325. down, $205. per month .
1·IIOQ.69Hin7.
For Sale By Owner: 3br. 2 bath,
vinyl sided house In Camp Con·

ley area. $79,000. 304-675-6258.
House. 2 Story Duplex. 1 Bed·
room Cottage, 13 Pine Street,
Gallipolis. Large Lot Shown By
Appointment, Price: $96,000 74Q-

180 Wanted To Do

446-4999 .

ANY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds tnmmed. mulch·
ing , flower beds . landscaping ,
sidewalk
edging . mowing,
etc .. Fr ee Estimates . Ca ll Bill
~-675· 71 12.

In Middleporl· new kitchen, oak
cabinets , dishwasher, dlsposat ,·
heal pump, three bedrooms, bath
and 112. call 740-992-3465.

Dressmaking &amp; Alterations. Slip·
cove rs. &amp; Drap er1es . 740-245·

5556. 740·245·9561
Furniture repair. refinish and restoration. also custom orders. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry

Phiii!&gt;S. 74().992-6576.
Georges Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your logs to the mill just can

304·675·1957.
Professional Tree Service. Slump
Removal. Free Est imates! In ·
surance. Bidwell . Ohio. 614·388·
9648, 614·367·7010.
Wil l do night work lor the elderly.
Experience &amp; references . 304·
61~ 7961 at 9am Of 9pm.
Will haul Junk or trash away. $351
plcf&lt;up klad. 304·675-5035.

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SHING CO .
recom mend s I hal you do busi ness will, people you know. and
NOT to se nd money through the
mail until yolJ have mvesttgated
the offering.

230

Professional
Services

living ston 's basement water·
proollng . a ll basement repa1rs
done. tre e estimates. lifetime
guara ntee . t 2yrs on job e•pe rience. 304·675-2145.

Loaded 28x8o. Jbr, 2 112 bath
with all options , only $2 ,499 .
down. $362 . per month. Free air &amp;

skirt. 1-888-jj91-6177.

lot, I 112 llalhs. family room, Bl.d&lt;
stove. aii .Jenn -Aire appliances,
2·3 bedroom, garage. daclts,
Trane H.P., 740· 992·7292 or 304·
895-3490 before 2:30pm.
lovely Country Home On SA 7
South With A Breathtaking River
View. Very Private Sening On 2 1/
2 Acres But Only 10 Minutes
From Ganipous. 3 _. Bedrooms, 2
112 Baths. Hardwood Floors, 2
Fireplaces. New Heel Pump, New
Kitchen, Many Extras. Won't Last

Long!' $1 10.000.
Call Virginia l. Smith Realty At
740-446·6806 Or Ca ll Cara At
740·245·9430 For More lnforma·
lion.
Mossman Circle, price reduced,
3 bedrooms. basemen!. garage &amp;

2klls.
Jim Hill Road-a ll brick : 3·4 bedrooms, 2 baths. basement, ga·
rage &amp; 4.6 acres . call 304-6753030 days or 304·675·3431
evenings.
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, 2
bedroom. lamHy room, living room,
1 bath. full basement . new gas
furnace. central air unit, new roof
&amp; easy cl,ea ning windows ,
screened in porch . ca r port &amp;
storage building, very llnle mowing , wa lking distance from Foo·
dland &amp; Middleport Corporation,

$.27.000, 740·949·2864.

Th ts newspaper w1ll not
knowmgly accept

ar1ver11sernent s lor real estate
WhiCh IS 1n VIOiatton Of the
law Our readers are hereby
mtormed thai all dwellings
adven tsed m thts newspaper

nre avatlable on an equal
opportun tty basts

REAL ESTATE

.

12x60 trailer. can be used tor ol·
!ice trailer..$3.000 without air conditioner. 54 ,000 with , 740-9 49 -

2217.
14 •70 :!BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 per mo. Free-air &amp; free skol·
ing. 1·888·928·3A26.
14x70 3br U99 down . $198 per
mo. free air &amp; skirting. 1·800-691 ·

6777
14x70 Three Bedroom Mobile
Home On 112 Acre Lot M/l, On
Jim Hili Road . Hednerson, W.Va ..
$15.000 Or Best Offer, No Land
Contract, 740.446-2139.

1 Bedroom house on North Main

St Point Pleasant. WV. $10,000.
304·675·5371
3 Bedroo m Br~ ck Home Full Basement. 2 Car Garage .· 4.9 Acres.
Morgan Cnt Area. 740·388·B352
3 Bed 1oo m. Clean . Large Yard.
Double Garage. Near Dam. At 7.
No FleMing . $45 ,000. 740·256·
6056

3-4 bedrooms , 1 112 baths. DR.
new gas IUfnace. central air. lull
basement, lwo-car garage wlpos·
sib/a apartment. cham link lance.
good ne1gh1&gt;orhood . close to
schOo ls and shopping, $78 ,900.
485 Ltnc oln Street , M1ddte'por1.
call for appotntment , 740-9 92-

3br. 2 lull baths. UR, LR , DR .
large kllctlen. full y e(luipped.
large foyer. 2-c ar ·aJtac hed ga ·
rage . Gallipolis Ferry. 304-675·

1228

SO Acres 2 Year Old 3 Bedroot'l1
Houae. 2 1/2 Car Garage. Small
Barn, Greent'jouse &amp; P lan lln~
Supplies. 2 Miles From Gallipolll
Locks Off 01 R1 7. Immediate

Possll oion . 189.000, 740•2 56·

9350.
A U ltte Coun1y In Town : La rge
Re&amp;rored Victorian Home. PrivatJ
Soiling Bul Within Walking DIS·
ta~tee Or Sch~ls, Churche• And
M~dleport Bu slneu Oletrlct.
Brick Circular prive With 11 Acres Of Land. A'f!lng $149,000. But
Wll Consider* Offer. Aj&gt;pO!nt·
~nl Only, 7
5698.
Anracttve on~loor home In Pomvoy. Beaut! Ullntertor Wilh 2
bfprooms . II ng roorR, dining
roltlfl . tlulll ·ln kitchen , llkt new
st~ve and refrigerator. breakfaet
nohk featurin~ co rner what-not
shttlves. bath 1 and a nice sun ·
pOit:h with wln~ws and l(lreen~

pro~ a ~vieW of tno ~ .

Rl.,er. Carpet4d, lull ballmlnf,
pl~otored wolfe will! crown li'lolcl-

lng,' roomy _

.. wtlll lull tengt!l

mlirof-d dooro; otorm wlndowJ

1 ~ 1 dOOr&gt;.

n:tnouleled·
..._
.ooo. can101740-

glofr Torr•••·
99~-5292 antr p.m.

$1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1·
888·928·3426.
Single Parent Progrem. Special
llnanclng on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
names . P1ymenta es low 11
1180. CaN now 304-755-5885.
Special 16•80 3BR, 2 bath.
I 1,325 Dow~. $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; free sf&lt;irtJng. 1-80&lt;HI91-&amp;m.
SPRING SPEC1ALS

54111Down
Uflud$17,196 on 38R.
Free Olllve&lt;y a SaMip
Only AI OIIO!OOCI Nitro, WV. 304·o75W88S
TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999Jdown $189/mo.
Free Set·up &amp; Delivery. Only 3
lefll Only at Oak\W()d Homes N~
tro wv.304· 755-5885.
Two 2 bedroom trailers, 111x~. 6
12•65, stove and refrigerator,
gas, New lima Rd ., must move,

740-742-2803.
Two ~edroom trailer set up on
rented lot, Middleport, river vktw,

completely remodeled thfoughout,
new carpet, new bathroom, large
Iron! porch, $9500, 740-992-G619.
Dbi/WO I Bought Won't Fit My
lot, Must sen, Will Deliver &amp; set
Up, 1·900·383-6882.

340 Business and
Buildings
Building For Sate to New Haven.
W.VA. On 51. AI. 33. 4,000 Sq. A .,
Full Basement. 2 Baths. Ofllce.

Storage. Equipment lnclucled. AH
Exce llent Condition, Also. One
Bedroom Apartment, Phone: 740698-2613.
Commercia i·Oifice or Relail , 87
Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Ft:
$400 mo. Corner Building. 740·

992· 6250
door).

Acquisitions (nul

4.98 acres. 7 minutes lrom Point

Pleasant. Good building sitos.
Public Water. $22,500. 304·675·
5911 .

Wanted
Cash Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackburn Rea ltr. 740·

$1 ,500, 74()-389·6970.
1971 Bonanza . two bedroom .
good condition . new 8x 16' build·
ing , $4200. 740 -992 -0100 alter
1972 Homette 12x65 3 Bedrooms.
Need Some Remodeling S1,000,

740·256·9109 .
t9 77 6x30 trailer. $1200. 740·

742 1303.
1987 14x60 2 Bedrooms, Good
Shape, Bx 10 Deck Vinyl Skirting,
8Kt0 Ou1builtlng, Asking Price

$7.500. 74().446-3409.
1988 141155 E11cetlent Condition,
Centra Air. Gas Heal , Lell On

Rental Lot. Or Moved $7.950.
740·446·0175, Or 304·675-5985.
1990 Spruce Ridge Ux70 mobile
home. ve ry good conditio n. 2
bedrooms, 1 &amp; 1/2 baths, washer
&amp; dryer. stove. refrigerator. Cen·
lral air, 81t8 outside building , 740·

992·6582.
1995 Clayton. all electric. excel·
lent condition, call Tom Anderson ,
740-992-3348 After Spm.
ment s. assume loan. owner 11 ·
nancing available. 304-755'-7191 .

2bdrm. opll., Ioiii oloetrlc, ap·
plllnces turnllhld, laundry room
lecUitlea, close to Khool In town .
Applications avallabl• at: Village
Green Apia. t49 or cell 740.992·

3711 .EOH.
3 bedroom apartment In Racine,
740-992-'542.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 740·448-2568.
Equal Housing (lpportunfty.
Chrlsly'a Family Living acoopfa
HUD
SPECIAL $100 OFF DEPOSIT
WITH THREE REFERENCES

Children W""'!'M

For rant
Middleport· avotlable now, 2 bedroom aparllf\llnt wtth new ·carpet,
Irani room 12x15 .. trash &amp; water
paid, $355 a month plus cleposlt,

1---

Middleport- available now, 1 bedroom trailer, nft QUiet tot. South
Second Avenue, $275 a month
phil dlpoolt, 1 year toasa.

Pomeroy- for ntnt July 15th. largo
3 bedroom opartmont, cable &amp; au
utilities paid, hat private bock·
yard &amp; bfg pon:h wltn dod&lt;, $650
a month plus deposit, 1 rear

lease.

Pomeroy· for rut August first, 2
bedroom •Pirtment, new c•rpet,
utilities &amp; c•blt paid, French

doors. $499 plus cleposll. 1 year

lease.
Aocei&gt;Oing Applicollons Col 740-992-4514
9·9 Monday lhru Sunday &amp; ask
for Clvisllno Martin

$600 rent. $600 deposit 304·824·
2480.
Applications Now Being Accept·
ed For House 816 Main Street,
Pt. Pleasant. WV.·3 Bedrooms, 2
Fun Baths. LA . OR, Family Room,
Large Kitchen. l.Bundry Room. No

Large seloctton of used homoo. 2
or 3 bodroom1. Starting at12!185.
Qutck ao ttvery. Call HO·SII9921 .
UMIYED OFFill
1998 DouDIII"Ido 0 Oown ' ' "
month. Free delivery I. "t·up.
no land neeqed . OniJ IJ q_~~"
wood Homll Nitro, WV 3qoi-7Jt

--Up, CA. Central Heal, $3651
Mo .. Deposit Required. 1·888·

840-0521 .
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and

Now biting Applicttlons ... 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

dleport. all

ulllll~s pa~.

$100 do-

7808 8arn-!5pm.
River Bend Place now acoeptlng
applications lor HUO subsidized
apia. lor elderly/handicapped or

dloablod people. EOH . 304·882·
3121 or 304~92· 3274 .

Power Mag Bow, TOllonlct Sight,
Quiver,
$200.

Excellent Condition .

3o4-892-3n5.

530

Antiques

Buy or salt'. Alvertne Anllquta,

Rent, 8 Miles Out State Route
218, Gallipolis, $175/Mo., Plus

Oepoall , 740·448· 8172, 740·

25H251 .

2 BedrOom traile r. for rent . 304n:H87.8.
2 Trailers For Rent, 740·44&amp;4110.
2br, remodeled, no pets, refer·
enc,s, on Send Hill Road . 304· .

87s.3834.
3flr on PIU1a01 RldQI Rd. GIAfpoHI Ferry, WV. $250/rno. + $250
dlpotlt. 304-57&amp;-2241 .

brick, oowar pfpoa, wind·
ows, lintels, et,. Claude Winters,
Rio Gra,do, OH Call 740·245·
5121 .

2 Breeder pair of Cockallals. 1104892-3438.

'92 Chevy lumina, 4 door famitY
sedan, very sporty wilh 'luggage

kept , no problems, muat sell to
purchase trud&lt;. $-4325 o!lo. 740.

992·5035 -

540 Mlacellaneoua
. Merchandise

$8900, 740·992·7614 or 740.9492210. •
1110 -1fltl0 HONDA CARS FOR
1100 Salzed &amp; Sold Locally Thla
Month. Call 1-800.522·2730 EKI.
4420.

A Groom Shop -·Pel Grooming .

'"COQL QQWNI•
Central Air Conditioning. Froo Es·
llmatesl If You Don't Call Uo. We
Botn Lose! 740-448·6308, 1-8oo-

291-oo98.
1f3·carat; round dilmond solitaire,
Size 6, paid $800, wit take 1550;
Marquis wadding set 112 carat ,
size 7, paid $1400, will take
$1250: wedding gown with volt
size 7, po~ $700 will taka, 1300;
740-36Hl2118 or 74().949.2481 .
15'K38' Above Ground Pool
Equipped, Chomlcala $75; large
Stzo Diamond Cluator Wedding
Rngs, $100, 740-388-8082.
3 112 ton Bryant Hoot Pump wltn
1OKW20 electric furnace, good
condillon, $850, 740-992·310&lt;0!.

A.KC Reg Golden Retrievers
6wks old, shots, wormed. vet

checked M·$175 FM-$200. 304·

895-3386.
Blue Heeler Pups , Full Blooded .
~.00 aacll740-379-2836
CFA Reg. Himalayan kittens. two
blue creme fema les, ona flame

point female, vat checked, $1 ~0
080, 740-742' 1019.
Chocolata Lab Puppies. AKC, 3
Males, 5 Females, $225,
Wormed, Shots, OoposH To Hold.
Ready 7/11MI8. 740-245--9253.
Female Doberman 10 Mo. oldGood Country Home 740·446·
9290

Ful Blooded Rat Terrier Puppies.
Had Shots 6 W,ortned, 740·245·

meosago.

'94 Flrebird, V-6 automatic, PW,
PL, air, keyl11a entry, 50,000
miles, excellent condition . asking

Salzed And Sold

3 Piece While Bonch Crafl Soc·
Ilona! sofa. CII7-Jt!21
711. locust posts. S2.50 tach .

M111 &amp; Femaie Bassett Hounds.

304~7!H348 .

Furnished
Rooms

Circ le Motel LQwes t Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Clnemax, Showtlme &amp; Disney.
Weeklr Rates, Or Monthly Rates.
Construction Worke rs Welcome

Traile r apace for rent In Middle·
port , $100 per mont~ . 7-40·992 ·

3194 or 740-992·3894, Ill~ .

MERCHANDISE

510

Houaehold
· Gooda

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges , Refrl·
graters, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 7.40·,.46·

n95.
Burkllne Blue Sofa W/ Recllners
on Each End , Fold Down SnaCk
Table &amp; Drawer under Sofa

$350.00 O.B.{J. 7 Pc. L.R. Suit
Black &amp; Brou $200.00 D.B.D.
Ota China Cabinet 1100.00 An·
llque Gtau McCoy 740·388·
8323
GOOD . USED APPLIANCES
Wllhtrt, dryere, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appllai\CII, 7e
Vlno Stroot, Call 740·446·7398.
HI00-499-341111.

Polly'•-'
~ - ..
Flaga
&amp; Alrrfy SUrf)fuolll
2101Jolfof1onlwe.
Opon t:30 • 5:00 Mon-Sit.
30W7HOFA (7e32)

Two Queen Anne chatrt, floral
print In mulberry, evergreen ,
mawe a[td light gr11n on crMm
becl&lt;groulld, Ctoo •ICII. 1~

1400.

Ulled Furniture Sforl -

Hoff.
dey Inn, KaftiUOI. lltdo, Couch11, Oreuera, TIDIII, Delkl,
Lampo, Mettreuto, ~nd Morel
Summer Hrt. Monday ThrU Friday, Hra. 10-e. 740-448-4782..

304-4511-25811 or 304-4S!I-I9te.

For An 1987f'lclu4&gt; Or Older.
. fAala Pomeranian Rogfllared. NO
Pepora. $150.00 740·245-5889 II
E•cellont
Shape.
Quick
. no!.,_ LIIIVO Mosuga
5ale$100.oo 740-256-9181
Badroom Sullo, Complete With
Ralls &amp; Full Size Manroas, Stud·
ent Desk Wllh Chair, 740·256·
8647.
Big Screen T V 45' NHds Minor
Repstr Zenith 175.00 740· 682·
7512
ATTENTION: Wa'll PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds, 47
People Needed lmmodilllly Of1or
EKpfrts, 7131/98, CALL 740-441 1982.
Brand Nonvl Great Glf11 CDIIrldao
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Navor out of boK. 1125. Holda up
to 940 discs, also holdo tapoo .
Call 740·9g2-8838 allsr 8 pm .
COt &amp; tapoo not lnr:fudod.
Gol&lt;l Stele By Side $200.00. Gold
Eloc. Rsngt $7~ . 00 Whirlpool
Washer
&amp;
Dryer
mlematch$180.00 Whllo Refrlg.
$125.00 Almond gao otova
$100.00 Rocondlllonod Guar·
rantlld 10 Work 7-9000
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs .
Problems? Need limed? Ca ll tho
plano Dr. 740-448·4525
Homallte XL · 12 18'cul $150
OBO. Floor mqclel humldlller $20.
Sleeper sola $100. 304 ·67~·2117
alter 3p t
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In StOCk.
CaH Ron Evans. 1·800-537·9528.

lnets. ceiling Jan w/llght kit, call·
lng lights &amp; vsnt fan . 304·875·
3194.

450

Gray Quaker Parrot w/Cago $125.
304-773-5876.

F-

NOTICE

City Pat C11oom1n9
Profou tonal Grooming by Ap ·
polntmentl. Over 15 yrs. expert·
ence, New batht~ syatam, ·unra
Wash· . 650 Second Ave. Galli·
pols,OH. 74Q..44&amp;.1528.
Reglattred Border Collie Pups,
Working Parents. Imported

Bloodllnoa, Good Marking a, 111
Shols. 740-379--9110.
Sctmauzer&amp;· miniature puppies.
AKC, also. adult s, two femal es
and one champion sired stud,

740-867·3404.
Sugar Glider, and Cage Plus
Toys. can: 740-441·141g

570

Muslcel
lnstTumenta

Enro ll Nowl Summer lessons
Guitar, Bana Instruments, Plano.
&amp; Organ Brunicardl Music 740·
446-(1687

Enroll Now .. Summer Lessona
Guitar, bend Instruments, plano &amp;
organ. Brunlcardi Music 740--4,.6·

0687

580

LOcally 111fl Month.
l'rucQ, 4x4's, Etc.
HI00-522-2730. X 3901.
1982 Cutla!ll Supreme, 2 0, 260

VB . Gopd Condition, $1,800 Dr
Boa! Ofler. 740-992-4588.
1985 Otds Toronado new ures.
br1k11, trana; starter, radiator &amp;

ri\ICh more. $3.950.

19M GMC 5-15 (5·10) runs groat,
noada paint, now tires. 11,3~0 .
304-875-5244.
1987 Ford Escort good cond .
$800 080. 304-675-2714 or 304·

075-t~n .

Now Picking Tame Blecltberries.

SIOgal. 304·892·2744.
Pick Your Own Pe8ches. Yellow
Or While, $10 Bushel. Bring Con·
!diner, Open 8 Days Week ,

1987 Subaru Wagon 4eyl, auto,
(4K4) nice car. $1,895. 304·
075-3324.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610 Farm Equipment

Items. 304·773-5678.
New blue electric lift chair, only
used a lew limes. excellent
cond. ~ . 304-875-1528.

Poned Caclus. several varieties.
$2~ .

304·

Riding •Arlena• lawn mower 28"
blade, 110 volt electric starter'.

1990 Chevy Borella 320 GTE 5
Speed, While Wllh Sunroof, Great
Tlrea, Additional Accesaoriu.

740-245-9171 .
1891 Buick Century Cusfom 4.
Door V-6 Eng., Auto., A/C , No

Holt Damage 740-256-1924
1991 Buick Century Custom 4
Door V-6 Eng., Au1om., AJC, No

Hsll Damage $3.550.00 740·256·
1924
1991 Ford Taurua , V-6, power

wiOOOws. loaded, air. 77,000 aetual miles. in exoellent condition,

12995. 740-992-6824.
1991 Mercury Topaz. power
windows, loaded, air, in excellent

condlllon,.$2150, 740-992-6924.
1992 Corvellll Coopo Blaclt Rose,
Bl. Laatnor, CO &amp; Coos .. !Win Pwr.
Seats, Pwr. wlndows.Prw Locks,
Pwr Healed mirrors, I I 1, :ISO, fw·
tom . Ovardr., Climate Con tro l,
Anti-Skid Control . New Plre lll
Tlrea, 61 ,000 MI., $15,000.00 740682·7~12

1992 Goo Slorm. Whlll wllll Blue
Interior, New: Tires Naw Exhaust,
Looks GoOd, runs good. t 998
Cavalier, White/Black Interior,
gaod tires, runs good, Sharp!
$2,500.00

options,

exce llent ·condition.

KZ750 Has A Starter Problem.
$400; 1982 75 HP Johnson Boat
Molor Wltn Controls &amp; 18 Gal.
rank, $1,500, 740-388-9932.

Red, Auto, AJC, Tit!, Cruise. Anti·
lock Brakes, Autom . Sunroof,
Elec.Mirrors 9.400 MI . E•cel .

Cond. $8,250.00 740-256-9161

new llras. $2,300 . 611. edfustablo
Massey Ferguaon disk $400 .
304-675-3824.

86 ·Pontiac Grand AM. Real good
Cond ition . Interior like new!

846 Case lawn tractor 6 loader,
mower deck, box blade, plow,
Onen englne, $2300; snapper rid·
lng mower, $450; 740-992·3802.

Credit Problems? We Can Help .
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles . No Turn Downs, Call

$1 .500.00 740-446-4228

Vldllo, 740-446-,2697.
Upton Uaed Cars Rt . 62·3 Mil11

1992 Harley Davison, FLHTC I

1978 1,611. Trl Haul boat 70hp.
motor &amp; trailer w/aome accessories . Boa1 &amp; motor In real good

shape. Asking $3,300 form. 740·
448-3466.
1992 Baas Tracker Pro 17 40hp.
Evlnrude, 2 fish finders. 2 new
'batteries. exc. cond . low hours.

TY

Bean-. Babies, Princess $80:
Erin $100; PIICI $30: 1998 Me·
Oona~s THnle Beanie Set •125,
740-388-8S95.
.
Use&lt;l Furniture For Sola: 4 Place
Wood Drtss•r Set, Oeek, Chair
With WhNII, Stortge Rack, And

Student Dtlk, CaN For Info 74o44&amp;-9787.
Wa&amp;hlr a Dryer Now $450. Flrml
Colllornlo Bra New Condition lor
F150, Bflck 740-440-.
Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
121.9~ Per 100; I' 200 I'SI
$37.00 Plr 100; All Breu Com·
praufon Flltlntlo In S1odr •
liON EVANI INTIIIPIIIIII

Jookson, Ol1il. l.aOQ.537-t528

WITH IIKKIHI THE RM/TY 18

UOIIITIWI- Oltp.

Between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande.
OhiQ On Jeckson Pika 740·446·
2412 Or HI00-594· 1111 .

1987 Chavy Z-71 ext. cab, 3rd
door, 350 Vortex auto , loaded.
Cal altar 4pm. 304-892-3487.

Your Area John Deere Dealer

1997 Dodge Dakota 4 Cylinder

for Rllldonllal And Commercial
Lawn Equipment. Compoct Utility
Tractor&amp; From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors. Hay Equipment. John
Daert Skid Stear Loadtra. Chock
Wllh Ul About Financing AI Low
As 2.8'4 On Lawn Tractora And
Low Rete Financing On Now And
Uatd Equipment. Cormtohatl'l
Farm &amp; Lawn Galllpolla, DH 740.
448-24121-aoo-94-11 II.

830

Livestock

·Magnum. ~ Speed, 14.000 Mllaa.
Noodo Minor Work On Bed,
$7,500, OBO, 740-256--1233.

730 Van• &amp; 4-WDs
'91 Chevrolet Z71 Offrood ox4,
oiCColtont condition, e..ooo mtlea,
$12,500 080, 740-992-4183.
f g14 F250 4 WD Dlllll Topper,
Running. Boordo, 33,210 Actual
MillO, V•ry 0oort Condition, 74().
256-1134.
.

3 Month Old Coli, Sorrel Color IHO Ohtm&gt;fot, 4114, 4.3 lllnt, am'
With While Mane &amp; Ttlt UOO: • lm ooouue. otondord , S4000.
Live Tropo I Steel Tow Trapo , 740-94f.2800.
740-25&amp;-1233.
IHO Cloevy Silverado 4K4 Sharp
12ft • eFt 8' Duel .,.,
Courbene Morechlll Dreooagtl
Jumplftg Saddle. Excellenl Con· 1lllilar 1100.00 740-379-2920 .
dlllon740-318-040e •
1881 Geo Trtcker Black, Stan·
1
Four horae&amp;· one f'egl etered dtrd, Air, AM/FM Cuaolle,
Tonneu.. Wilker gelding: two $3,e5Q, t . - - t .

Your deck Ia the center of your·
an*-'nfnl Ifill i1etut1on ICIIv- - n gefdlngl; one Aeaioquerterhorn merr, 74'0·742·
lllel. 5o don1IU11 glvt M1 'lln- 20!0:
.
loh". Gl•• II 1 quall1y Slkken1
flnflh w1111 tno Cl10f oet&lt; or RubQuality Reglltlled Anguo Buill,
bo! DEK ty111m1.
14-17 months old. Cummlngo
MINT PlUS (304~.
Anguo Form. 304-87&amp;-6241.

u.ooo.oo

t992 Geo Traclror LSI, 4WO,
-.tiblt, automatic, elr, olum.
Whtoll, 11-. bllclrl gnoy lnta~­
or, clean, nlcol 15350, 740-94&amp;23t 1 deyo, 740·948-2044 ovenlngl.

Tf-lf. (dXJ&gt; ~I~
~~NOm~ 1

Jactrat l1.500. 740-379-9371
Kawasaki STS Jet &amp;kl, atlll under
warranty, three seater, 83 horse·
power. bought new July of '97,
three matching Kawasaki sk i
vests and trailer ail go with it,

15000, 740·949·2203 or 740·9492045, will consider trade lor a
good pontoon boat.
•,

oJ7e
•Kt0742

IS Wllk ooftly
415
17 &amp;plonlge org. 47 -de F..,.,.
11 ~'*to bud
415 Sell robber

20 c-led

21 - . . -

51

0ew1op Into
54 lrtla

23 Actr.a

" Penc:lll*l

Ruby 56 e.,
24 lira. Trun1811
57 Pranke
25 Hindu peeunt

27 Cumnt unit

DOWN

2l~llgnll

31 Com-plllnt 1*1
32 Singing
lyl....

7 RMJIIICI*I
8 Romandoan
9 Hobgoblin

33 Oantllc
lll8l8rlll (abbr.)

10

&amp;•

2•
Pass
Pass
Pass

t•
2•
t•

s•

Pass

Moreoupple

realdent
12 Futu.. pl.anta·
19 Cry of
.
fllllrmatlon
22 Youtlllodglng
24 Chide
26 Un" of

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

28~0::-

30 Most llka the
ocean
34 Leu
d1111cuh
:IS Swerved
38 Gab

Opening lead: • A

38 lntllectlve
39 Goller
Amold40 Phi Beta-

By Phillip Alder
T.S. Eliot and Boris Pa.,temak saw·
eye to eye on one subject. The Fonner
wrote, " The progress of an artist is a
continual self-sacrifice, a continual
·e~tinction of personality." The latter,
in a speech, said. "Art is unthinkable
without risk and spiritual self-sacrifice." Still, given the amount of mon·
ey some artists make tMse days, their
self-sacrifice doesn't last long.
,,.._, At the bridge table, you some" times do well to sacrifice a trick. If
you get lwo tricks back for the one
given up, that has to be good business. But occasionally the offering is
made with a different purpose. How
would you play in six spades? West
leads the diamond ace.
North-South did well to reach the
slam. North's four-diamond bid
showed a hand very suitable for
spades. South cue-bid his heart ace,
which improved North's hand even
more . So he cue-bid five clubs to
show that ace.
The c~ less declarer would ruff
the opening lead in the dummy and
draw !wo rounds of trumps. Then he
would tum his attention to the hearts.
But East would ruff the third round
and iotum a diamond. resulting in
two down.
With seven side-suit tricks (six
hearts and one club), declarer needs
only five spade winners. not six. And
he requires a trump in the dummy to
keep the diamond suit under control.
So, at trick lwo, declarer should duck
a spade. He can win West's return,
draw East's remaining trumps, and
cash his 12 winners in peace.

42 Salllng thlp .
44 Cull I
aldelong

4,r=-.

50 Decimal unh.
52

lmpartant

time

53 lloltle
top

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

&amp;dt....,

c.twlly~af1*DI•I• n C'NIId from QUOtltionl bV flmOUI ~. put and Pfesenl
r.thl Qphlr standi lor W!Oiw. Todly't 00.: T equals K

'X

I K HILA

PI W

DEEARIYN,

0 t K K

KXARNJXJY

EUDC

HIKRNU

0 J N

RPN

NIU
EDU

R P N

SDDTXN . '

. CIRRPIV ,

DJ

RPNIRNU

tORXJY.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "lawyers spend a great deal of time shoveling .
smoke.'- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

lAIII
'::~:~~, S©RillA-L£t-~s·
1411o4
ClAY I . I'OUAN _,;__ _ __

WOlD

-~--...;,.-

~r

Rearrange le"ers of
0 four
acrambled words

the

be·
low to form four simple words

K RUS E C

r---......L-I:-::F:-::T'""E::-"':"L-..,1

You won·r get anywhere tellmg your ktd that their hatr looks
like a mop. Odds are they won't
know what a mop - • - - -

e

: 18 I I§ I
Comp lete the chuckle quoted
_
.
_
•
•
• by l1lltng in t~e mining words
I
L-...1-..L.-L....J.-•-' you develop from s1ep No. 3 below

1990 Chevy TK BerJ Long Whaol
Base Excel. Cond. No Rust Step
Bumper, liner I Tailgate 740-448-

[ 1-tOPE 1115
TRACTOR
6ET5 WET!

4393
Budget Priced Trensmtsilons All
Types, Access To Over 10,000

Transrnlaslons, 740.245-5677.

8

TraoaFormors Auto -Sandhill Ad
Pl. Pleasant, WV. 304-6?5-3324.

You Don't Hove To Loolc For

To Spy the Best Buys In

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

R Auto, Rip ley, WV. 304· 372.'
3933 or 1·900·273·9329.

the Clossl(leds.

IFRIDAY

Campara &amp;
MotorHomea

1978 Wilderness Camper 30h. w/
air. 1988 GMC 7000
~spdl
2spd, 1811. canle bed . Edison
Mayo&amp;. 304·675· 1858.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS

I' 1~ I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I

II III I II II

New Auto Body Parts &amp; Acces·
sarin For All Types Vthictu .

790

415 ~-·1

11 Storledl&gt;fua

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Venous- Chill-Image - Embalm- BALANCE
I've.noticed that a fanatic usually has a huge chtp on
their shoulder that often causes them to lose thetr BAL ANCE

JULY 10 I

ROBOTMAN

v·

1984 Palamlno Pop-Up Can1per,
Sloops 6, 1350, 740·448·8112
740-256-6251 .
.

Swlngut with allde; 2 storm

1992 Ford EKplorer 68,000 miles.
$8,000: 080. 30H75-6439.

1-,Kt&gt; TI\E BN&gt;t\Dol~ I~
~·~~ (:£XX)~I

1Stn' m4 Ebbtlda Outboard, 501

· Sldtra Equft&gt;n*lt CCmpony
Your Area Bu~h Hog DJalar For

~

mD000D~ ...

,...

Mercury Motor Trailer and Spare
lire, Bumpers, Water Skies, Lite

440-7263.

Pans, Rotary Cutters, loadtra,
Tillers, Finlah .Mowers. Etc. Car·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway

1-lfl"-nt--~e:.w-r

l AAVE eN:&gt; fo.lf.W~

....

' ~.

2· 1995 Kawasaki 7~055 Wove·
Runners w/double trailer, gre1t
shape, garage kepi, low hours.
$8,opo. OBO. 304-675-1216.

1992 29' Torry Oolu•o travol tral~

The Pomeroy Thrift Shop has
moved 10 145 North Second Avenue, Middleport (Cash Bahfs ok1
building) , buying- baby items,
breakfast 181&amp; &amp; good clean used
furniture on conslgnmen_t, Open
Tue&amp;day· Friday, 11·4, T40·992·
3725.

111 , 0\\EF!

1993 Tiger Shark 650 Jet Strl wllf1
one year old trailer, great condl·
lion, asking $2500, 740-992~95~.

er, 22' Carefree awning , mP·
crowava, queen bed. central air

doors; deep freeze; IIVga cat pen;
740-985-3839.

THE BORN LOSER

1993 2111. Mirada Cabin Cruiser,
In/outboard molor, 4 .3 engine,
plus all accessories. 304·675·
63:&gt;9 ahor 5pm.

JL:. ..

-

_o

altar

1985 Nlasan 4wd , new tires .

1989 Chevy Blazor. Can Be Saan
All914 State Roulll41, Gallipolis Or can ~40-448·t060.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

780

=&lt;A

A small
. sacrifice,
a big profit

ELVINEY!!

740·446-0842 Ask lor Jim. After
O:OOpm 1·74()-992·5069.

120 Trucks for Sale

304-671H421

TOO!!

1994 Harley Davidson Sofllott'

v•rne t1wn mowere &amp; string
trlmmert . Ouaranleed tow111

$950. 304~92 ·3n5 .

SHE SEEN IT

Springer ·custom . low m1111ge,
.like new. 304-523-82:45.

llommor Clelnonce on all Huoqprtco.

CHEER UP!! NOW
YOU GOT SOME
GOSSIP FER

1987 XLCH 1200 CC's. Sporlalor
Custom Buill, Looks Sharp, Very
Fast, sa.ooo OBO, 740- 388·
8461, 740·992-8976.

286-8522.

Scooters. Electric Whlllchalra,
Salu: Rental, Trade, Now &amp;
U!ltO, Bowman·a Hornecare. 7-40-

FIRST
SPAT!!

Year warranty On Motor, custom
Buill, Show Winner $17,000 080;

deep·V wltraller. lila lockets &amp;
Dumpers. 740·448·3814 . Make
oflor.

1997 Camara 3.8 V·6, auto.
while/black , T-tops, loaded, CD,
garaga kept, 1-,600 miles. Asking
$11,000. 304~75 · 3813.

••
3•
t•

I JEST SEEN TH'
NEWLYWEDS
HAVIN' THEIR

1gs1 KZ750 Rood Aosdy With

South of Loon, WV. Financing
Available. 304-458·1089.

$375. 304-675-4871 .

BARNEY

Wlngammtr Faring $800; 1982

1995 Chrysler Sebring, excellent
condition, call Tom Anderton .

I 996 Honda Civic OX with AIC,
CD player, 5 speed, 740·992·

=·"

-··country ......,... -

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soutb
West Nortb East

Motorcycles

$6500, 740·985·3595.

740-992·3348 a~ar !5pm.

-~~~--

~-::r.-·1

1 Dlgrw
37
7 a.nllhM from 40 Film crtllc

• 9 8 5 4
• 5

miles. 300 8 ely. engine, 112.000
OBO. 740-867-9818.

SACRIFICE

• Q J 2
• 9 3

10

•AK9763
•A2

Ford F-150, •••. red , 72 ,000

$4,500. 304 -892·3780
4:30pm.

Q6 3
East

Soutb

87 Chevy S· 10 4 WheeiiDr. Rod
&amp;Black. Running Broado. PD. PW.
Curie. AC, 2 new tires . Interior
heal. Runs Good: but needs
worfl. $4,900. 740-441.()494

1967 Oceanic Sea Imp 160hp.
Mercrulser In/board engine. 18ft.

2 N Ford tractor &amp; grader blade,

Lilt MOdll 2030 JD $6,950; ~0
HP JD $8,850: 5000 Ford $7,8~ ;
4100 Ford Dlasol $6,450; 740·

1996 Chevy 112 ton. 4wd, 3~0
engine, air, cruise, lilt, am· tm
tape. Asking $15.000 080. 304·
675-5332.

8 automatic, low miles, aU power

1997 Chevy Cavalier 2 Door,

Medium size ch\I&amp;Hype freezer,
like new, uce tt ent coridlllon,

$200. 710·992·5108.

1990 Buick Skylark Maroon Se·
don, E•cellent Condition, 13,800
Miles, One Ownership, $4,99S,
740-448-2933.

1998 Olds Achltva 54,000 Miles,
AM/FM Cusouo, ~/C, Cruise,
Power locks. $10,500, 304-675·
8874.

House
With All 12 Taenle
Beanlea. Bought at Charity Auc·
lion $1,500.00 74Q..44&amp;.9650

•

Q

• 8 6 5
• A K Q 1032
• J 9 8

2580.

Yamaha. Banchee 3SO . Excel!
condition, S1 ,800.00. Daytime

740-448-4807.

McOonalds Teenle Beanie Club

West

1995 Toyota Tacoma, 4•4. wl1h II
c. CD player, 5 sposd. 740·992·

1988 Olds Cutlass Clara $2,800
AHor 5pm. 304·675- 1236 To Sea.
Only Sartous Buyers PlEASE! .

2580.

Swell Corn $2.50/0oz . 10 MI.
on At. t41
!O:OOAM· 5:00PM

• A

over payment, 7o40-992-4t33.

Hondo 70 Mini trail , $400 , call:
740-992-6061 .

Raynor Peach Orchard. 5 Mile a
South Route 7, Gal lipolis, Ohio

!rom Gallipolis

....

• 8 5 4
• K
J 10 7 4

1993 Ford hplorer, excellent
condition, asking payoff or take

a~

199-4 Ford Taurus Gl, 4 door, V·

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

1993 Dodge Caravan Loaded A1
C , Power locu.Factory Installed
5 Point Child Saloty System Blaclt
Cnerry Grey tnt. $6,500 .00 740·
441-1528.

740

34 -lllullwa

'·15 torUnwtlllng .

1980 .1990 1\'udls For $1 00111

Bath . Don
Shoots. 373 Georges Croak Rd .
7 40-448-ll231.

applications for 1br. HUD subsld·
\zed apt. for elderly and hand!·
capped. EDH 304~75-6679 .

per month. $300 "-l!. poy own
utHIIIes. no pots, 740-992·2381 .

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Fo;

Bloe~.

Featuring Hydro

Marble top vanity, medicine cab·

Two bedroom In Pomeroy, $300

2 bedroom mobile 11ome· rn
Racine, no pots, 740-992-5858.

rock. automatic. foe. IIH. cruise, v.
8, 3.1 L, 108k highway miles, well

Building
Supplies

Moore owner.

APT AVAILAIIU NOW

yard. patio. deposit, 740·992·
6886.
.

992-2167.

550

2 fomale, I mall, Boston Torrlel&gt;,
740-992-2329.

110/ pot ar 3 poll for
675·3892.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

710 Autos for Sale

1124 E. Main Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 6:00 p.m., Sllldly 1:oo to
6:00 p.m. 740·9g2·2528. Ruos

Porrerat· lour lledroom, SIR,' _.
ty decorated, HUO, no pets, small

1Wo bedroom hOuse, $300 month,
SISO deposit, water and trash InCluded, 740-992·252ol.

TRANSPORTATION

Shelves $75; 2 Bugshie~s For A
S· l 0 $20 Each, Kenmore Gas
~. 740-448-9202.

56d Pets for Sale

lWin Rivers Tower now accepting

460 Space for Rent

2 bod"""' mof&gt;lle home for ron! In
Racine, 740-992-5039.

Huge 28•80 3BR. 1 1/2 bath .
Slsrll"g at ()tjLY $39,999. Many
optioos available. t ·888·928·
3428.

Pool table , 811. regu1111on, new
grun felt, slalron top, many. IC·
ceuorlta, $200 firm . 304·458·
1554:

Metal fence &amp; post, also misc.

For sale or rent , 14x60 house
trailer, air condition, washer and
dlyef, no pets, 740-696-1075.

wv.

Sporting
Goocla

Pets . $400 Deposit. $450/Mo., . 740·441-5698, 740-441 ·5187.
740-446·9585 Or 740-448-2205.
Sleeping rooms with cooking
t -5 BEOROOII HOliES. FROII Also trailer space on rlv8f . All
$4,000 Local Gov't . &amp; Bank hook-ups . Ca ll after 2:00 p.m..
Repo 's Call 1·800·522·2730 , x 1104-n:l-56SI, MasonWY.
1709.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom motllla horr&gt;ls. atr
condllioned, $260· $300, aewer.
water and trash Included. uo.

FREE DOUBLE-WIDE
Stop by Oakwood Homes of Nl·
tro, WV. &amp; regis ter to win frea
doublew/de.
glm.mlcks . Only
at 0 - - of Nitro,

Country Side Apartments : State
Route 588, 2 Bedrooms, W/0.

posit, $270 month. can 740·992·

3 Bedroo m Ranch w/garage.
huge level lot , meadow land.

520

F«Salo7~110

porlmont. 7~

8 Foot White Flbergt•aa Topper

We Pay Cash. 1·800·213· 8365.
Anthony Land·Co.

July 13. Call ahar 7pm. 304·882·
2099.

10:00 P.M. 740-44HI593.

Rkllng Horloo, Geldings &amp; Mares
UHd 2 horse trailer; Real good
condition . Oak Floor S1,500.00
Elect . Brakes, lites. Tack com·

56g7,

One bedroom apartment in Mid·

Divorce Forces Sales -Take over
payments. 2br. 2 bath , financing
available. 304-755·5566.

5815.

2 Room Furnlahed Elflcloncy All
Utilities Paid, Share Bllh, $185/
Mo., 919 Second Avenue, Galli·
polit, 7-31145.

446-0008.

2219 Lincoln Ave. $350.mo. plus
deposit. no pets, . stove &amp; refrlg·
trator Included. Will be available

304-715-5816.

Near Holzer, $279/Mo., +.Utllllla.
Dopool1 &amp; Lease Required, 740·
440-M7.

We Buy land : 30 -500 Acres.

1970 Parltwood Mobile Home ,
$3 ,500 ; 1961 Elcona 10x50

"o

1 Bedroom. AJC , W/0, Hoo~-uP.

Apartmon1S $295/Mo., 74Q.446·
0006.

RENTALS

A Large Completa Kitchen : calli·
nets, Counterlopa, Stainless &amp;tee~
sink,Faucet &amp; Disposal. Before

Wooden Bu!'l!t Beds With Boolt

Lot lor sale· Gallipolis: 90K172, ·Rfvorslde Apartments In Ml&lt;kllonice neighborhOod, quiet, 740· port. From $249·$373. Call 740·
446-4722.
992·5004. Equal Housing Opportunllloo.
Racine- Dorcas/ Greenwood Ce·
mefary Rd./ Oak GrOIIO Rd.· 1 . ~ • 1 Bedroom, Furnished /Unlur·
t1 acres, 740-992·85,.2 or 740· nlahed, Downstairs, UtiliUta Paid,
949-2499.
No Peta, Parking, 6 Month' Lease
S100. Oepoall, $3001Mo .. 740·
360 ReaiEstilte
44&amp;-3667.

688·69H7n.

ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay·

675-2421

New Ooublewlde 3BR. 2 bath.

41 0 Houses for Rent

9991 .

JBedroom . 2Jbalh. full basement.
112 acre pl us. 2 car garage.
fenced yard. Ca mp Co nley. 304·

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 left!
Still under warranty. owner fl.
nanclng available. 304·755·
7191 .

16•60 3bl, 2 bath. $1,325. down.
$205. per mo. Free air &amp; 5klrt. I·

Spm.

310 Homes for Sale

incl\)des 6 months F~EE lot rant
Includes skirting, deluxe steps
and setup. Only SUI7.08 per
month with $1075 down. Call 1·
800-837·3238.

1OO• 150 lot In Gall ipolis Forry.
304-675· 1226.

3 Bedroom Mobile Home,
Immediate Possession, Owner
Transferred . Asking: $2.200. 740·

ol 1968 whtch makes it tllegal
to advert1se ·any preference.
ilml/alton or d1scnmtnal10n
based on race. co lor. rehgton .
sex tam111a1 status or nat1ona1
ongm . or any mtenlion to
make any sucn preference.
ltmllal ton or dtscnmtnatton •

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartmonta, Up·
Downatotro, 91 Cedar, Gallipolis, NO PETS, Wa11r Paid ,
7o40-388-1100.
slalta,

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

320 Mobile Homes
I for Sale
OAKWOOD HOMES
Rac!n Sellabralion , 0 Down 6.99
APR, 304·736-3409.

All leal estate aaven1smg 10
!hts newspaper ts sub1ect to
the Federal Fatr Hous1ng Act

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,

$1 MIMo. ,., """"

Locatlon! Crew Ad , close to MHS,
contemporary style house. 1 acre

379-2566.

1993 14K70 :JO&lt;, 2 1&gt;8111, CIA 1104458·2586 or 304-458-1918.

ACROSS

13
tA
41
14 Rid ... bMI, 43 And oiiMn

Close To Gallipolis. 3 Bedrooms,

lOOKING FOR A 'JOB .. . But

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11 · .

...

slaat&gt;s 6. new condllk&gt;n, S11 .5oo:
740-992·3102.

SERVICES

810

Home
lmprovamenta

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unocindlllonat 1/leUme guarantee.
Local references furnished. Ea tablllhad 1975. Call 24 Hra. (740)
446-0870, 1·800·287·0576. Rag·
111 Waterproofing.
Appliance ' Parts And Sarvte.: All
Name Branda Over 25 Years Ex.Perlence All Work Guaranteed, .

French City Maytog. 740·448·

7795.

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tanence· Painting , \1/nyl siding ,

carpentry, doors. wlndowo bathl
moblla hOrr&gt;l ropar and mOra. Fo(
tree estlma.te call Chit, 740·982·
8323.

I

MULLIN'S HOME IMPIIOV!·
MENT VInyl Slalng, VInyl Roplacoment, Wlndowo, R . . _
Alao, Repairs On VInyl Siding'

740o31N21t .

:

840 Electrical and

Rlfrlgeretlon
Relldontlal or tommtrclal wiring,
~ ·Ot repairs, fltllflr ~
cen11d electrician. Ridenour

Eloc(rlcal, W\(000308, 304-17&amp;178li.

ments where you rely on the advice
of
others. the same may not be true.
Saturday, July II, 1998
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be
It looks like the bottom line might
very
careful about whom you take
be tiltcd,..!!LY!!!!r favor in the year
into
your
confidence today. If you fail
ahead.
-- -- . .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Con· to be selective, there's a chance you
dltions look financially promising for may talk to someone who will use
you today. Don't settle for small what you say against you .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
retums if you have a chance for
something larger. Trying to patch up1 may be tempted to flare up at
a broken romance? The Astro-Gruph whomever's closest today, but
Matchmaker can help you understand remember that blameless people
What to do 10 make the relationship don't deserve to feel the brunt of your
work. Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o anger.
SAGI!fARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 21) Decide·to ovedook,.the annoying
little things others do today. This will
10156.
increase the chance that they will do
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
If you have a dispute with your the same for you.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22·Jan. 19)
mate today, it's not imperative that
you have the last word. Silence Promotional money " might be
required today in order to set ·the
restores harmony.
: VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In scene for something laqer.•Don't be
matters where you use your own afraid to drop in a few di~ if you're
judgment, the results should be grut- assured of more in retum.
AQUARIUS (Jill\.,, 20-Feb. 19)
ifyin~ today. However, in develop-

ASTRO·ORAPH

I

Avoid partnership arrangements
today with people who think small.
You need allies who see things on the
same large scale that you do.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
There are indications that you might
enjoy the benefits of something you
didn't work hard to bring about. The
real producer.; aren' tlikely to object,
however.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
.Experience shows us life seldom provides a sure thing. However, today's
expectations will be founded on positive and viable f~tors.
TAURUS .(April 20-May 20)
Today you' ll be beUer at doing than
thinking, and the self-doubts that
plague you will be brushed aside
once you glide into ~lion.
. GEMINI (May 2 I -June 20)
Something you're presendy involved
in h-. greater potential than you real·
i7,c. lt's best at this time to !eave the ·
mechanicS of the deal up to tisoci- ·
ala.
l

�By The Bend

The Daily S·entinel
·

Elderly physician planned his death with dignity and concern for family
Ann
Landers
I'H7, l..IJS AnJCicJ TimcJ
Synd oat~

anU Crcaton

Syr&gt;doc:•r.c

Dear Ann Landers: My fatherIn -law died at the age of 83. He had
been a physician for 40 years, as
well as a dedicated father and loving
husband . Hi s death with dignity was
a truly remarkable experience of
faith and strength.
As a physician , Dad witnessed
the di st urbing trend of changing
death from a family cKperience at
home to a prolonged ordeal of feed Ing tuhc~ . IV antib i oti ~.:s. intensive-

care units and respirators in a futile
attempt to somehow prevent the
inevitable.
He was concerned about the
emotional toll that families suffered
during this hospital ordeal.
He wanted none of this for himoelf. and during the last months of
his life, he let everyone in the family know that he wished to be at
home for his final days.
When my father-in -law stopped
eating and drinking, his wife, all six
of his chi ldren and their spouses
were at his bedside within 24 hours.
We held his hand , held each
other 's hands, laughed, cried and
spent a remarkable two days as a
family sharing stones from our

Nine new audiobooks arc includ·

The blessing of gentle rain
By Bonnie Shiveley
Devotional writer
I look outside the dark house this afternoon. Gentle rain dances across the npples
of the pond. Tree boughs droop by wave in
the southeastern breeze while families of
Canada geese rest at the water's edge. Black
birds set in the top of the almost-dead old
walnut tree. and drops of water bounce off the little gray boat. What
a quiet day 1
As I gaze into the haze, my mind drifts off to Mount Carmel in
northern Israel where Elijah prayed for rain . What a contrast- that
was not a quiet day' But let me back up a liule .
Kmg Ahab tried to force the Israelites to worship Baal, the god
they believed made rain . The Scriptures tell us that Ahab did more to
provoke the .Lord God than any other k.ing before him . To prove that
God. not Baal , was m charge of crop-enriching rains, the Lord dispatched Elijah with a message :
"
There will be neither dew nor rain in the next few years
except at my word." The people could pray to their rain god, but
there would be none until Elijah said so.
After three ycdrs of severe drought, God commanded Elijah to
contact Ahab apain. The king had to understand that God would end
the long dry spdl , not Ahab's idol. He suggested to the ruler that he
bring all of Israel to Mount Carmel. A contest between the Lord God
of Israel and Baal would determine once and for all who should be
Israel's God. The challenge was to detennine which God/god would
send fire to consume a sacrifice. The idol worshipers were confi dent
their god could solve the problem . From morning till evening, they
pleaded to their life less god to consume their offering. They danced
aro und the altar and cut themselves with swonds till their blood
gushed out. but to no avail.
At the time of evening sacrifice, Elijah asked the people to come
near. He built an altar and trench that would hold about a bushel of
seed. cut up an ox and arranged it on the wood. Three times he asked
men fill four big jars with water and pour it on the offering and wood
- until the trench was filled with water. Elijah prayed.
··Then the fire of the Lord fell and burned up .the sacrifice, the
wood, the stones. and the so il , and also licked up the water in the
uench . When all the people saw this, they fell prostrate and cried,
, 'The Lord - He is God 1 Th e Lord- He is God'" What a victory
for the Lord!
After the people turned away from idol worship and back to God,
Eliph told King Ahab to gel ready- it was going to rain' God sent
Elijah to the top of Mount Carmel.
Elijah prayed. "The sky grew black with clouds, the wind rose , a
heavy rain ~.·arne o n ... "
Father. thank You for the gentle rain of today. I pray that our country would be like the Israelites of old and proclaim, "The Lord, He is'
God'" Amen.
Scriptures NIV: I Kings .17: I, 18-38-39,45.

The Comm unity Calendar is published as a free service to nonprofit group s wishing to ann ounce meeting and special events . The
cale ndar " not deSigned to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type . Items arc printed as space permits and can not be guaranteed to
run a spec1fi c number of days .
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Friday's fun, food and fellowship at God's Neighborhood Escape for Teens, Front .Street, Pomeroy. Nutritional foods
lrce of charge, non -violent vid~o games, computer programs, pool
table s available for use at mtntmal fee. Center opens 6 p.m. and
c losed at 10:30 p.m. Youth may utilize game room on Saturday.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411 , F&amp;A~:. Saturdc.y at hall, 7:30p.m. Refre shments . Meeting change due tc holiday.
RACINE -

Charles W. and Fannie Lee Wolfe Beav• r re~ ni on
'

SALEM .CENTER- Star Grange 778 and Star Ju nior Grange

878,Satu r~ ay, potluck suppe r, 6 :30p.m.; meet ing , 8 p.m. Contest

JUdgmg: Harmonv1llc VISitmg .
SUNDAY
RACIN E - Theiss reuni on
Covered diS h dinner, I p.m .

Sunday, Racine Star Mill Park .

REEDSVILLE - Van Meter reunion , Saturday, Forked Run
State Park at noo n. Bring covered di sh and table service .
MONDAY
RA CIN E - Rac ine Board o f Public Affairs , Monday , 10:30 a .m.
at the muni c ipal build1ng

Free tan if you're willing to bare it all
DAWSONVILLE. Ga. (AP) This weekend you can get an all-over
tan for free. ifyou·re willing to bare all.
The owners of the Hidden Valley
Nudist Reson are dropping charges for
everyone who dmps their drawers.
Fees arc normally $32 for couples and
$20 for singles. but the open-door poli-

opt for an exi t si milar to that of your
father-in -law. He was a wise, courageous and thoughtful man . How fortunate for you that you married his
daughter.
Dear Ann Landers: I was
pleased to see your column about
how annoying gum crackers can be
because it encouraged me to write
about my personal gripe -- women
who constantly fling their hair.
These females ning it to the front
and then the back. They fling it to
the right and then to the left . It is
exceptionally annoying to be in an
elevator behind a ninger.
Yesterday. I actually said to a
woman (in my most polite tone of
voice), "Please don't ning your hair

have yet to hear a man say, "I married her because I liked the way she
nung her hair." The ads may sell
shampoo, but they won't put a ring
on your finger.
Dear Readers: Because I care
about yo u, here's a health lip I read
in the Harvard Health Lenc1· Once a
sneeze begins, don 't try t&lt;' stop it.
Suppressing a sneeze forces the air
into the eustachian tubes, which lead
from your mouth to your middle ear,
and it could damage your eardrums .
Pennanently.
Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Sy ndicate, 5777 W Century
Blvd ., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

cy is pan of a celebration of national
Nude Recreation Week.
Resort spokeswoman June Wagner
said Thur&gt;day that a normal weekend
draws 200 to 300 people. but more than
400 are expected this weekend
because of the free admission and the
heat.

ed in the over 100 al.lditions which
were added to the she Ivcs of the
Racine Library during June .
The new audiobooks ava ilahle to
the public include Long Road
Home ; Tender Years; All-true Travels and Adventures of Lidic Newton,
Blood Work; General; Fire Dance at
Spider Rock; Legacy of Silence:
Dust and the Man Who Fell in Love
· with the Moon.
New adult fiction volumes added
are Balance of Power; The Most
Wanted; Storm Tide; The Chimney
Sweeper's Boy; Life Before Man;
The Eleventh. Commandment, Acorna 's Quest; Pay Dirt or Adventures
at Ash. Lawn; Rogue Star; Moon fall ;

The Last Full Measure; Summer
Sisters, A Wi~ow for One Year; Xmen. Bri dget Jones Diary ; Cities of
the Plain : Freedoml~nd; The Klone
and I; Unspeakable; Low Country;
Ballanger, Pony Soldiers; Abilene;
Plumb Drillin'; Troubled Range;
Full Circle; Tornado on Horseback.
The ToughTexan, I Know This
Much is True, Damascus Gate; Riptide. Crystal. and Aftershocks.
New non-ficti on books for adults
are Second-hand Dog ; VanessaAnn 's 101 Christmas Ornaments;
My Name is Caroline, Jet Skiing;
Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue;
Ti tanic, Mustang; Fantastic · Fun .
Face Painting ; Life During the Crusades; Egg Painting and Decorating;

Starting in the Taekwondo; Chicken to School; One on a Web ; Tht
Soup for the Teenage Soul; A Safe Alphabet from A to Z: Lions at
Place; A Walk in the Woods; In Love Lunchtime; Polar Bears Past Bedwith Crochet: Diabetic Meals in 30 time; I' m a Big Sis ter; I'm a Big
Minutes, and All About Bathroom Brother; Sheep in a Jeep, Sheep in a
Remodeling . Two new large print Shop; Summer Horror, Buster's
editions added are Long 'Road Home Dino Dilemma; Trapped', English
and Homeport.
Horse; English Rider, Mayday; Big
Juvenile fiction books added to Night; Private Jessica, and Down
the Racine shelves .are Farmer Boy W1th Queen Janet.
Days; Sea Man; Achingly Alice,
Non -fiction volumes added to the
Boxes; Drag~n Quest; Eerie Trian- juvenile shelves are The Search for
gle; Return to Foreverware, Bureau Lost Cities; Mexico; Before You
of Lost, Later, Gator, Alphabet City Were Born; Coping with Birth ConBallet ; School Mouse; Finders trol ; Forests, The Moon, Amazing
Keepers; Meet Babar and His Fami- Sea Creatures; Hooray for Dairy
ly; Babar Learns to Cook; New at Fanning ; Best School Jokes and Fun
the Zoo; Is the Spaghetti Ready? With Your Microscope.
Trouble with Bubbles: Boomer Goes

------.society Scrapbook-----Free vision screenings offered
Eighty percent of what a child
learns is through their eyesight.
Because one child in 20, between
the ages of three and five, has an eye
problem , it is important for parents
to have their children's vision
ehec"ed before school starts.
Prevent Blindness Ohio is partnc: mg with Sears Optical to offer
free vision screenings during the All
Ar.terican Vision Chec k Day on
Sunday, Aug. 2 from noon to 4 p.m.
at all local Sears Optical locations.
Vision screenings take only five to
seven minutes and are offered to
children and adults ages . No
appointments are necessary.
Prevent Blindness Ohio encourages regular visits to the eye doctor
as an effective way to preserve the
precious gift of sight. Anyone whose
screening indicates a posSi ble vision
problem will be referred to their eye
care professional for further evaluation.
For more informat ion about All
American Vision Check Day or
National Eye Exam Month, consumers can call Prevent Blin dness
Ohio 614-464-2020 or 1-800-30 12020.
Annual ice cream social planned
by fire department
The Salem Township Volunteer
Fire Department will hold its annual
ice cream soc ial on July 18.
Serving will be from II a.m. to 7
p.m. at the fire department which is
located on State Route 124 in Salem
Center.
The menu wi II consist of seve n
navors of homemade ice cream,
roast beef sandwiches, pies, potato
salad. maca[oni salad . baked beans,
hot dogs and much more .
The Midnight cloggers will perform at 4:30 p.m. Rachel Pridemore
and David Stiffler at 5 p.m and
Dwight "Elvis" Icenhower at 5:30
p.m.
Services at Heath Church
announced
The Rev. Vernagay Sullivan, pastor of the Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, is on vacation .
During her absence, a former
pastor, the Rev Bob Robinson will
handle the pastoral concerns of the
church.
Worship service Sunday will be
conducted by the Rev. Mr. Robinson, and a special guest, his brother,
the Rev. Dr. James C. Robinson of
Florida. He will speak at the 10:30
a.m . worship hour using as hi s topic,
"When God Whispers in Your Ear."
Seminar on stress to be offered
Due to the rece nt noods and the
personal problem s relating to that,
Dr. James C. Robinson of Florida.
visiting here with hi s brother, Re v.
Bob Rohinson of Middleport, wi ll
conduct a seminar workshop on
"Critical Incident Stress Dehriclin• ·
a Pastoral Protocol."
'·
The workshop will be especia lly
useful for E.M.S. staff and local pastors who deal with the problems of
fl ood victims. It will be held July 14
from 9to II a.m. at the Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis More
detail s can be secured through the

office of chaplaincy at Holzer, 446-

5055.
Dr. Robinson is a PhD chaplaincrisis counselor adjunct professpr of
religious studies at SouJhem College
in Florida. He is also a volunteer
chaplain at St. Cloud Hospital ,
E.M .S., First Responder, and an
ordained United Methodist elder in
June 1958. He holds degrees from
Ohio Northern Universi:v, a master's degree from Hanford Seminary
rmmd.at,·o&gt;n, and the theology degree

from Iliff School Theology, with a
PhD from the California Institute of
Asian Studies.
Additional infonnation on the
seminar may be obtained from Rev.
Bob Robinson who is chairperson of
the volunteer chaplaincy ministry at
Holzer, 992-3550.

Graduates from college
Richard Edison Friend, son of
Rick and Linda Friend, Syracuse,

$9,950

graduated on June 12 magna cumma
laude from the College of Ans and
Science at Shawnee State University. He received a bachelor's degree
in natural science with a concentration in biology.
He will be working at Shawnee
State during the summer in the orientation and governor's scholars
programs, and in the fall will continue his ed ,•cation to obtain a master 's
degree i" biology before auending
law school.

_s9,950

3To

6To

Choose From!

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$9,950

$10,950

..
4To

12To

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..

QJoose From!

$1),450

$11,950

4To

26To

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$1),950
7To

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....

19,950
t4To

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12,950
-UT1ieAt

....

21,950

1!11 Cewy Kilzer I.S 4Dr. 4x4

·~~~

12 To

&lt;lloose From!

•

unba
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

tmes

Loss set at $450,000
in Point Pleasant fire
: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Losses totaled nearly $450,000 in
a devastating fire that destroyed
Point Pleasant's Dollar General
Store Friday on Jackson Avenue.
Investigation is continuing as to
how the blaze began.
The state fire marshal arrived
on the scene late Friday morning
aitd remained throughout the day.
He is expected to return Monday
to continue the investigation, with
the Point Pleasant Police Department assisting.
.
Nearly $300,000 in merchan~ii!C was lost in t~e fire, as well as
lhe,·bllihliriJ; whieb&lt;was 'VIIIued·
approximately $150,000.
The blaze began around 2:48
a.m., and· the Point Pleasant Fire
Department responded along with
firefighters from Gallipolis and
Mason. One firefighter was overcome by the extreme heat and was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
where he was treated and released.
The heat of the day, as well as
the heat coming from the fire,
hampered firefighters, according
to 911 Assistant Director John
Bryant.
He said many men were needed
because firefighters could only
stay near the fire for minutes at a
time.
The fire was thought to be
under control around 9 a.m., but
rekindled at 9:52 a.m. closing
Jackson Avenue to traffic.
Gallipolis and Mason departments again responded. Valley
.Fire Department was called in io
stand by at the Point Pleasant station, while Flatrock was sent in
with supplies.
By. mid-afternoon a backhoe
was brought in to knock down
building walls.

Good Morning
Today'a ~ina-.-mtbul
12 Sections - 136 Pages
Calendars
Classifiec!s
Comics
Edltodals
Along the River
Obituaries
SPOrtS

CJ&amp;S
DJ-7
Insert

A4

Cl
A6
Bl-8

C 1998 Ohio V.llcy Publishin&amp; Co.

Low: 60s

Details on
pageA3

entinel

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· July 12, 1998

Shadow of controversial
drug task force follows
.overhauled agency·
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlme•S.ntlnel Steff
POMEROY - The Major Crimes Task Force,
administered by the Meigs County Prosecutor's Office,
is finding it hard to escape shadows of the former Southeastern Counties of Ohio Narcotics Task Force and accusations of its alleged civil liberties infringements and
drug-related forfeitures.
A discussion on changes to the renamed crime task
force shared by Athens and Meigs counties dominated a
budget meeting of the groups' controlling board which

HI: 80s

• FNtured on Page A3 •

• Featured on page C1
in my face." I was rewarded with a
diny look.
Tell me, Ann, i~ rhis supposed to
be a sexual come-on or what? Who
staned this anyway?-- Wondering in
Lomita, Calif.
Dear Lomita: ·I am only guessing, t•u• I believe hair flinging staned with a commercial for a sham poo, when women began to wear
their hair longer and loose.
The young female with a gorgeous head of hair in the TV commercial did the flinging number.
which auracted a handsome man.
The assumption was, of course, that
he asked her out and they fell in love
and lived happily eve r after.
And now for a dose of reality. I

Audiobooks added to Racine Library

Sermonette

~a tu rd ay at noon, Star Mill Park . Bring covered dis h.

childhood .
We did not have to 'make any
agonizing decisions about the use of
feeding tubes or respirators.
This far-seeing man :1ad made all
th ose decisions many month s
before. He wanted to oe at home. He
wanted his family around him.
He knew that the end of his life
was approaching, and he died in hi s
own bed, in his own ,home. surrounded by the people who loved
him.
He was a role model for us all .-Hi s Son-in-Law
Dear Son-in-Law: You can be
sure that because you wrote, hundreds. mayhe thou s ~nds. of people
who read this column arc going to

'URG's 'Kid's
College' in
Meigs County

Usuallg a quiet
communitg,
but sometimes, ..

Page 12
Friday, July 10, 1998

met Friday afternoon in the Meigs County Courthouse.
Meeting were Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lentes and Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Athens
County Sheriff David Redecker, Middlepon Police
Chief Bruce Swift and Pomeroy Police Chief Jeff Miller,
and MCfF administrative assistant Michelle Williams.
Lentes, who serves as the task force's project director
and spokesman, fielded questions from Mike Depue,
Lathrop, a member of the Lathrop Militia, and Debbie
Lorz, Athens, representing the Civil Rights Education
and Monitoring Project.

Vol. 33, No. 22

Their
questions
stemmed from thenSECO's involvement
in Athens County
where the group,
under direction of the
Athens County Prosecutor's Office, was
accused by citizens of
civil liberties violalions, infringements
and excessive properIncluding Gallla County ty seizures.
which had earlier
Among the group's
administered the
controversial activigroup.
ties was a drug search
' - - - - - - - - - - - ' at Alexander High
School ih Albany by hooded SECO agents with drug
sniffing dogs. No drugs were found at the schooL
Currently Athens and Meigs counties, Middleport,
Pomeroy and the city of Athens are the only participating members of the task force, which at one time served
several southeast Ohio counties including Gallia County
Currently Athena end
Melga counties, Middleport, Pomeroy and the
city of Athena are the
only participating mem·
bera of the task force,
which at one time
served several aoutl)·
east Ohio countlea

Ohio River 'Sweep' 1998

which had earlier administered the group.
The agency is primarily funded by a grant from Ohio
Criminal Justice Services for $141,635 and a local
match of $47,212- in the form of manpower assistance
- from participating law enforcement agencies. The
largest expense is for personnel which consists of three··, ,
agents and an administrative assistant.
\
The group approved the agency's $188,847 budget
for 1999.
Depue said his major concern was that the agency
would function as an independent police force complete
with arrest powers.
"What will it do to make us any safer out where I
live?' he said. 'I think we're gelling too many branches
of law enforcement; the average person out there doesn't know who can arrest them."
Along with the move to Meigs County came a shift in
authority, Lentes explained. The group is not independent and must work through an existing police or sheriff's department.
"Individual agents do not have independent arrest
authority," Lentes said. "They are not carrying out any
Continued on page A2

Flood-stricken
farmers face
second obstacle

By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme•S.ntlnel Stllfl
POMEROY - In addition to devastation caused by flooding late last
month, Meigs County farmers face a second obstacle, also brought about by
the high water.
Fanners have been unable to
For your information
get into their vegetable fields to
POMEROY- Some fruita and veg.
spray for insects and fungus, a
hurdle that threatens what remains eUibln In garden• hlt by recent floodIng wilt be unufe to aat, but othera
of their crops.
Clln be aalvaged, ec:c:ordlng to the
This spraying is required two Ohio Sute Unlveralty Extenalon serto three times a week in order to vice.
infestation and blight,
Flood wetera often Cllrry alit, raw
ff"'•lollllftlii!J!P'tll•..
- Fox · of rhe eaus g~pa,·.-., end ~~c~' WNtM
of the that can confllinlnlte garden jiroduee
and make the crope un..t. to ..L
Servie~lsAgency.
Tbe dagrM of contllmlnatlon
The inability of farmers to depend• on the kind ol produce, how
access their fields for this spray- metura It wea, the time of yaer the
ing is expected to compound the flooding took place, and aevarlty and
fosses caused by the high water du1'11tlon ol the flooding and the type
itself, although Fox said Friday and level of contamination from
end other bacterial contamlthat most farmers are now able to 11w1ge
nanta, eccordlng to OSU food ulety
get into their fields, and in doing apeclallet Lydia Medalroa.
·
so, are finding that their losses are
Fruita end vageU!bl11 that were
even higher than were first esti- mora then two wuu from maturity at
the lime of flooding ahould be ufe to
mated.
ell
by the time they ara reedy lor herEntire fields were washed
VIII.
away, mud was l~ft behind on
Fruita and vageUiblll that were
corn, and wheat was knocked ready to harvlet when flooding
down, making harvest difficult, occurred, unl11e flooding w11 light,
according to Hal Kneen, OSU there w11 no danger of bacterial cont·
Agricultural Extension Agent for amlnatlon, end tha produce Clln bl
Meigs County. Vegetable crops dlelnlecttd, peeled and thoroughly
cooked.
were also completely wiped out
• S,.elflc. crop
on some farms and hay fields and
con•lder•tlon•
on Pege A2
blgl on Stitt Route 1 aouth. Pictured helping navlfarm equipment were damaged.
lllle tha boat Wll Adame' canine companion, Duke
"A lot of hay noated down the river and mud and debris left behind has
(left). Thle year'• eweep wae organbed locally by the
made the next culling less usable and less storable," Kneen said. "The noodGalllpoll1 City Parke end Recreation DeplrtmenL
Contlnued on page A2

O•re

RIVER SWEEP- Gallipolis ralldent Rita WI•
man banda a bag or traah to boat operator Jack
Adame Saturday morning during the Ohio River
Swnp. Wl~~men and her daughter, Sara, filled their

Rio sets groundbreaking for $4.8 million 'Bob Evans Farms Hall'

.
.
RIO GRANDI';- Construction of a $4.8 million new home
for the Emersor( F;. Evans School of Business Management at
the University d Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College
will begin followi ng a groundbreaking ceremony set for Saturday, July 18 at ~30 a.m.
In response t~~mmunity support, Rio Grande officials said
the new building&lt;, to be called Bob Evans Farms Hall, will
accommodate bu!ii!Jess and industry training facilities, in addition to eight stuCl~nt classrooms, 14 faculty offices and two
administrative offices.
An auditorium seating 175 people will be a centerpiece to
the multi-floor structure, as well as two conference rooms
across the hall from a training facility and a small business
resource room.
'
In total, the building, located east of the main campus and
nonh of the athletic fields, will have 34,800 gross square
footage.

"The Emerson E. Evans School of
Business Management will be housed
prominently in this new, state of the art
business and training center on campus,"
said Barry M. Dorsey, Ed.D., Rio
Grande's president.
"The community has been very
involved in , this exciting venture, with
considerable support coming from local
donors for its development," he added.
Longtime Gallipolis business leader
Morris E. Haskins commented on the
Dr. Koby
announcement of the groundbreaking by
noting that Emerson Evans "was one of the finest men I've
ever known." Haskins and Evans grew up together in Gallia
County, each serving as the chief .executive officer of Ohio Valley Bank.

The new building, according to Haskins, will remind people
of Evans' achievements as a business leader.
"He just did everything well," Haskins added.
Herman L. Koby, Ph.D., Rio Grande's vice president for
facilities, planning and technology, said all rooms in the new
building will be connected to an improved campus technology
network currently under construction, allowing for access to
the Internet and voice mail.
"It truly is a dream come true," Dorsey said. "Bob Evans
Farms Hall will offer extra space to continue the fine tradition
of educating our growing business student population. The
added dimension of providing business and industry training
makes the facility even more valuable to the region we serve."
Completion is estimated for December 1999, Koby said.
The groundbreaking ceremony is open to the public, with
nearby parking available in a lot adjoining McKenzie Hall.

Outreach .program assists veterans with preventative health care services
By JILL WILUAMS
Timet-Sentinel StaH
GALLIPOLIS - Representatives of the Ohio Community Outreach Prognim- a component of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Chillicothe - will be in
Gallia County Monday to assist veterans with health
care enrollment and preventive health care services•
Services, including blood pressure checks, cholesterol screening, glucose screening, tetanus shot updates
and health cand enrollment, will be available at the
American Legion Post 27, McCormick Rd., Gallipolis
beginning at 10 a.m.
Veterans should bring a copy of discharge papers, as
well as information regarding dependents, included
spouse and children's social security numbers and
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birthdates. This basic information allows for faster processing during the eligibility determine process.
"Basically the personnel from Chillicothe are making lhemselves available in order to register more peopie," Gallia County Veterans Service Officer Steve
Swords stated.
"Veterans need to take advantage of the benefits
sign-up not only for their personal needs, but for budget
purposes of the VA's," according to Swords.
"Many VA Hospitals have trouble staying afloat
because veterans haven't always utilized their services."
Sword. said that, while the hospitals haven't always
had the best reputation in the tenns of care, over the
years the services have become much more scrutinized,
and in part more improved.
The health cand now being issued can be used universally at any of the VA's Hospitals. If a veteran would
happen to be out of town at the time of an illness, he or
she could go 10 any hospital and their records would be

accessible.
The Gallia County Veteran's Office provides transports for veterans going to the Chillicothe VA's on
Monday and Wednesday, and the Huntington site on
Tuesday and Thursday. Trips to Cincinnati, Dayton,
Columbus and other surrounding VA's can be arranged
by appointment by calling the Veterans Service Office
at 446-2005.
According to the Veteran 's office Driver/Investigator
Roger Houck transpons in Gallia County to the above
hospitals have rapidly increased from 14 in 1993, to
912 last year.
While Gallia County can legally transpon only its
own veterans, many counties now conduct their own
transponation runs.
Swords stressed the importance of applying for hospital benefits.
"Veterans may not want to use the benefits right
now, but they may later, and the hospital w,an ' t be there
if they don't get signed up soon," he warned.

••
~

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