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By The Bend

Tu

The D.aily Sentinel
10
Monday, July 20, 1998

tional children . Thc1r visits disrupt

Ann
Landers
IWi L, ,

\ nf•'~'

~ ~ nJ .. ~• ..

.. nJ

J,m,··

r ..........,.

S~ nJ'~ "''

Dear Ann Landers: Can you
'land one more letter ahoul the inlaws ·from hell '' I hope so because
mine arc planning to \"isit soon .

My mother-in -iaw is judgmental.
criltcal. negative and eonlrolling .
My fathcr-tn -law watches TV at ' •p
volume I0 hours a dav. talks cunslantly ahoul his mcdi~al prol· : ms
and cars only l"Cnain focx.Js prCJ 1r~d
under his supervision .
They vi:&lt;~it us for li \c or 'ix. days
every few months anJ often hrin~
my ~iste r-in - law and her dysfunc-

li\'..,:~

totally . I realize this is my
hushand ' ~ fault for not s~tting
boundancs early. hut it hurns me up

the way they run all over him . He
says he can., help i1.
Ann. these arc ntH people I would
chU&lt;"c for friends . I l&lt;l'C my hushand . and he ·, a wonderful father 10
our (wo child""· I would never
leave him . hut whenever my tn-laws

come to visit? Arc then: an)' acti,·i·

tics you can become invoh cd in that
would take you out of the house for
~YCrJI

hours ;1 day'! I would also
suggest another l:nunsdor. sint..:c the

one you and your husband saw didn't help.
When you tell me the visits from
the in -laws cause fights with your
hushand and make you physically
ill. I get a pretty gwd idea of" t,at
goin~

visit. my hushand and I get .into a

you arc

huge fight and I am sick tllm)' siOmach for days.
My husband and I sought counseling. but it didn 't hdp. l'\e even
lrtcd prayer. Can you illfcr some
advtcc! - Plano. Texas
Dear Plano: Arc there any fami-

column to your hushand. Perhaps 11
will help him unJcrstand how much
his support wouLJ mean to you .
Dear Ann I anders: Please prtnt
this teller as .t ~urprise gift w my
hushand for al he has done fo; me

ly mcmhcrs or goo&lt;.J friend~ you
might go to sec when the in·la\'''

l

•

'

•

through. Show this

these past 1ou1 year~ .
I was struck hy a car 4tnd ,ufkrcd
a sever~ head injury that kh me on

hram-seizurc medication. Since thiu
time. I have hcen unable to drive .
My husband has been in char~e of
transportin~ the children to sch&lt;Mll

your hushand is and how wonderful
that you appreciate him . Here's your
letter. and give him an c~tra hug

appreciate it if you would !-!CI

from me.

sec:&lt;~

al..'tivitie~

Dear Ann Landers: This '' for
"New Yurk Wedtling Bclk. .. who

karn . - Lal"ycth: Hill . P• .
Dear Lafa~·ette : I was anwcJ "'
the hlitlard nf lrners that hlcw in.
hashin~ "New York Belle .. for her

and social C\'Cnls.

He dues all the marketing
hccausc I cannot gel 10 the grocery
store. He is a fantastic cook and prepares all the meals. He also helps me
clean up afterward.
This man has never once complamed in spite of the fact that he
has his own phystcal pruhkms.
I could go on forever. hut nothing
I say could possibly descrihe the
generosity and kindness of this man.
If you put my letter in your wlumn.
he will surely recogni1.c himsciL ;md
it would make my day. Thank you.
Ann. -- Luisa in N.J .
Dear Luisa: What a great guy

~as

Tomorrow: Sunny
tflgh: 90s; Low: 70s

~

you imaginc what

she mighl ha\'C said if she had clw'iCO our lord to pcrfntm the scrvicl··.'
I can hear her Ol)\\ : ··Jt.:su., Chri:-.t .
rc~llill' it . :&lt;~

a hia.:k-tic alTair. so don ., sho" up
in thai dreary old rnhc .
And one more thing . l.11rt1 . I t1

''

Graduation and award ceremonies
were recently held for students at
Carleton School.
In addition to speech iherapy.
physical therapy and occupational
therapy awards. studenls also
received recognition for the followtng:
Early intervention: "I Can" awards
went to Michael Ball, Emily Emrick.
Dakota MarshalL Jonathan McVey.
Andrew Nash. Justin Reitmire. Justin
~oseberry. D.J. Sellers. Ryan Sellers.
Jacob Smith. Jeremy Stump and
James Withrow.
Thumbs Up awards went 10
Patrick Stump. Michael Slump,
Steven Stump and Tiffany Withmw.
Diplomas went to Michael Bail,
Jonathan McVey. Andrew Nash,

EARLY INVENTION - left to right; front row: Jonathan McVey,
Jeremy Stump, Michael Ball, Brenda Ball, Dakota Marshall, D.J.
. Sellers, Tlffany Withrow, Justin Roseberry. Back row: Danny
McVey, Mary McVey, Tammy Sayre, Lorna Marshall, Annette
Emrick, Emily Emrick Sandy Cobb - Early Intervention SpecialIst, James Withrow, Sabrina St. Clair, Kim Sellers, Ryan Sellers.
. Not pictured: Andrew Nash, Justin Reitmire, Jacob Smith.

Justin Roseberry, D.l. Sellers, Jeremy
Stump and James Withrow.
Preschool Room I : Valerie Hanstine instructor: Bonnie Shea, assistant: Bryan Burt, hard worker: Bobby Goode, most improved: Garrett
Haptonstall. most aihletic: Cameron
Robinson, best storyteller: Kirslin
Zornes, best actress: Melinda Miller,
sunshine award: D.J. Sellers, having
fun: Savannah Graham. most cheerful: Zachary Fink, best friend: Clifford Boswell, most helpfuL
Preschool Room 2: Keely Shuler,
wonderl'ul worker: Hunter Cox. great
manner" Kyle Anderson, best lalker:
Teela Lemley. creative artist: Nick
Hubbard. sensalional singer: Casi
Arnold. fantastic friend: Augusla

Wright. most improved: Eddie Kille.
good sport: Kayla Salser. awesome
helper.
Preschool Room 6: Jack Goode.
best friend: Timmy Willis. good
helper: Andy Roush. hard worker:
Joyce Romines, good manners: Kim ·
Deaver, best actress; Casey Sargent.
most cheerFul: Dale Ellis. most
improved: Sean Coppick, most creative: Meri VanMeter, good sport:
James Strom, best storyteller: Meisha
Deiwert, team player.
Primary: Chris Edwards. !lest
smile: Chris Tackett. most energetic:
Bradley Donald«m, most lovable:
Shelby Powell. ll&lt;:sl friend: Tracy
Smith, hardest worker: Derrick Trimmer. class leader: Luke Lowery. mosl

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy's landlords may soon have to pay a S15 inspection and registration Fee, Following discussion at Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy Village CounciL
Councilman George Wright suggested instituting a $15 rental registration
fee, beginning Aug. I, allowing rental property owners 90 days in which to
register their properties.
His motion, seconded by Councilman Larry Wehrung, was withdrawn due
to lack of documentation supporting the proposed fee.
Wright said $12.50, or about 83 percent of the $15. would go to rental
inspectors, with the remaining $2.50 going into a fund that will be established

helpful: Senti RanlSey, hesl pl~dge
leader.
Intermediate: Nidi Wilsnn. computer/r&lt;ading achievement; Ashley
Rhoades. writing personal inforrnalton: Jennifer Gray, reading achievement: Mitchel Powell. communica·
lion skills: Jesska Simpkins. class
assistant: Matthew Bcha, independence skills: Justin Boyd. cnmmunication skills: Mark Bogard. commu nication skills.
Transition: Mike Bi-sell. achieve men! in reading·: Amy Jo Davis,
achievement in typing ; Adam Caruso. achievement in independence
skills; Deidra Carleton. auendance
and achievement in working indc·
pendently.

l•t;;.,,,_. ,,
PRESCHOOL ROOM ·6 - From left, front row: Kim Deaver, ·
Casey Sargent, Andy Roush, Tlmothy Willis Center row- Joyce
Romines, James Strom, Meri VanMeter, Jack Goode, Back row:
Beth Weaver- Volunteer, Sally Holman • Instructional Assistant,
Kristin Acree ·Instructor, Maria Hampton· Reader-Guide Not pic·
lured: Sean Coppick, Meisha Deiwert

TRANSITION CLASS - From left, Pat Carson, Instructional
assistant, Adam Caruso, graduate, Mike Bissell, Amy Davis, Dei·
dra Carleton, Trlcia Baer, reader/guide, June Radcliff, instructor,
Not pictured: Andy Lamben, Billy Reese.

f, ~; i i

COLUMBUS (AP)- An upensive political campaign over -whether to
ban mourning dove hunting in Ohio may do more than just spice up the Fall
election sea.&lt;On.
II may tilt the balance in some other races, says a Univer.~ity oF Akron
political scientist.
·
"Indirectly, it could have a big impact because of who shows up," said
John Green, director of the nonpartisan Roy C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics.
The i'ssue came up Monday after the secretary of slate's office announced
that the anti-hunting Save the Doves group tumed in more than enough signatures to place a hunting ban on the Nov. 3 ballot.
The group needed I00.393 valid signatures, or 3 percent oF those who voted in the last election for govemor, and tumed in rilore than I05,000, said
Jon Allison. agency spokesman. Some county boards oF election were still
veriFying signatures.
But collecting signatures and getting people to. the polls are two entirely
different matters, Green said,
Hunters and gun owners are a given, he said.
"The $64,000 question is whether the animal rights people can bring out
the voters."
If not, the electorate could take a conservative lilt. Green said. That's more
true in an off-year, when turnout typically is lower than in a presidential election year.
A pro-hunting group, meanwhile, has vowed to raise $2 million to defeat
the issue. That's enough money for a respectable statewide television campaign, Green said.
•
Richie Laymon. Save the Doves spokeswoman. said she has no doubtl)er
side will be outspent, but was hopeful that donors will come forward once
the ballot issue is certified.
"I think we need to raise a certain amount oF money 10 get our message
out," she said.
National animal rights groups. such aa; The Humane Society of the United States, have offered some financial help already, she said. But the group
also is backing ballot initiatives in several other stales.
_
Meanwhile, a group called Ohioans for Wildlife Conservation ha.' c'Omplained that the dove petitions were invalid

,..,',;

PRESCHOOL ROOM 3 - From left, front row: Teela Lemley,
Edward Kille, Kyle Derenberger, Augusta Wright, Hunter Cox.
Center row: Nick ubbard, Kayla Salser, Keely Shuler Back row:
Sue Pullins, Instructional Assistant; Alicia Bauer Instructor Not
pictured: Casl Arnold, Tracy Boswell.

SUNDAY
RACINE-- Snyd~r r&lt;union Sunday. Star Mill Park . Racine. Bring a
covered dish .
DARWIN-- Modem Wmdmen of
America Camp 479K picnic and com-

INTERMEDIATE CLASS - From left, front row: Nicki Wilson,
Jennifer Gray, Matthew Beha, Mitchel Powell, Mark Bogard. Back
row Sherry McCleary - Instructor, Jessica Simpkins, Ashley
Rhoades. Not pictured: Justin Boyd.

munity service rct.:og.nition Sunday.

12:30 p.m. al the northbound roadside park on U.S. JJ. Paul and Bonnie Smith will b&lt; recugni1.ed.

Missionary Society holds meeting
The Berthot M. Sayre Mis,ionary
Sociely mel at the horne of Barhara
Gheen for ils regular monthly meeting.
Attendin~ and answerin~ roll call
with a Bihie verse were -Flort:nce
Atlarns. Martha Lou Beegle. Geraldine Cleland. Barhara Gheen . Ltntla
•nd Marjorie Grimm. Lillian Hay(llan. Mildred Hart. Naomi Stobart
3nd two ~uests . Becky Bradford and
ilaughter" Stephanie.
Lillian Haynwn had the program
with 4ues1ions p&lt;rtaining lo daily liv-

ing anJ answt:rs from the hook of

Proverbs.
. A cornetly skit was presented by
Barbara Gheen and Martha Lou Bee~ie on the art of giving and receiving

~~gift

of pic .
During the

hu:&lt;~int!ss

mt!eting.

thank you notes were read especially one from Cartlova Chnstian Cen·
ler for Carnphcll Soup lallels lhe society sent that enabled the center to
purchase a van .
A collection was taken and given
to the Meigs County Cooperalive
Parish's Flo&lt;ld Vielims' Fund, Meigs
Youth Center. an accident vtctim's
hurial fund. Murrow Indian Chil·
dren 's Home in Muskog&lt;:&lt;!. Okla .. and
Carrie Bell Brown. Get well cards
were sent to shul ins in the communily.
Barbara served refreshments
b.: fore the social hour.

MONDAY
RACINE-- OAPSE 453 Southern
Loc;d meeting Monday. Kp.m. at the
bus garage.

MIDDLEPORT .. Open gym
Monday. 9-11 a.m. at Meigs Middle
School for girls entering thc school

into the S&lt;!Venlh or eighth grJde
interested in playing basketball.
ALFRED -· Or~llJ!e Township
Board of Trustees will meet in sp&lt;cial session Montlay, 7:30p.m althe
home of Clerk Osie Follrcld.
POMEROY -- Vacation Rihle
School at First Southern Baptist
Church bog inning Monday anti con-

1995 Olds Aurora

tinuing through Friday. fd0-9 p.m.
RUTLAND -- Vacation Bible
School at the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church beginning Monday
through Friday. 6-K:JO p.m. nightly.
All children and teens welcome.
MINERSVILLE -- Minersville
Unitetl Methodist Church will hold
Vacattnn Rihle Schnnl Monday
through Fritlay. o-K p.m.
CHESTER -- Vacation Bihle
Sch&lt;M1I at the MI . Hermon United
Brethren in Christ Church Monday
through Friday. o:JO-K:30 p.m. with
classes for chiltlren J-1J years old.

POMEROY ·- ODOT puhlic

heotlth tlcparlment atlJlJ2-fl626.

Bridge projects Tuesday. li-K p.m. at

CHI.STER -- Meigs Cnunty IKE&lt;;
1
work "'"inn Tue'd"Y· 5::10 p.n1. ,\II

conl:t:rning th~ Ravt.!nswotw..!
Connc:ctor and Pomeroy-Mason
Royal Oak Resort nc~1r Pomeroy. Prcsc:ntations will h~gin al h:JO p.m.

memht.::-:&lt;~

POMEROY

Public welcome.
POMEROY ·· Meigs Cnut!ly
Ht!allh Department free immunil~l ­
linn clinic nn Tue"lay. 5-7 p.m. at the
Meigs Multipurpose! Ccntor. Chiltlr&lt;n

RUTLI\ND -- St01tc Representative John Carey IR-Wclhton) open
door

ll,ll,J

dchris .

\l:'iSH:n

Monday. -~ -4 run. at

Rutland Village Hotll

COLUMBUS (AP) - Congress

waler.' nf the dittn . They Inured Ihe

tra':, sent President Clinton a bill pro-

Mo'c ' Lakc ~1rca when: Ncllic\

viding nearly $400 million to build
uranium-recycling plants in southern
Ohio and Kentucky.
The plants are designed to offset
hundreds of job losses from the privatization of the United States
Enrichmenl Corp., a company that
enriches uranium. A $1.5 billion

father. Gurney Mich~tcl. hnn"'tead ctl land in lhc early llJIKh.
She then llew In Oaklotnd, Calif..
where she visiled her son ;md wife.
Eric and lotn Parker at Livermore.
Other guesls were Suzy and Tom
Hy,ell. Joan and Rrllce Moty. Rutland. Wiih Eric otnd Jan she loured
Muir Bl!ach whcr guns wt!rc placcU

Good Afternoon

durin~ Worltl W&lt;~r II to guard the

Golden Gate otrcot otnd Stin"tn Reach
where they allended Shotkespcare\
"Much Ado 1\hout Nothing" in an

Today's Sentine

t•pcn-air thcatt:r.

I Soction - 10 Pages

Nellie v"iled Cleo Bonita fnr
lunch . Nellie. Eric and Jan. anti Linda Ou had tlinner wilh Otis and Belly Clamp. Livermort:. The meal fealurctl harhecucd salmon which the
Clamps caught on a recent trip to
Ala,ka .

1997 Pontia' Grand Am

I

-- . ,~

Lotteries

, '

QIWl

Pick 3: 9-0-9: Pick 4: 8-~-8-2
Buckeye 5:8-12-16-18-29

Loaded!,

'22,950

Hurry!

'17,950

Ch~v.Oids.Cad.-Pontlac-Buick-GMC

992·6614 800·837·1094

10,000 miles.

•21,990

lY.YA.
Fun!

Savel

$10,900

Plan will
continue
Insurance program
for county workers
to last another year
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners will continue their self-funded
employee insurance program for at
least another year. following action
taken on Monday.
Modifications to the self-funded
program, administered through Medical Claims Service of Ravenswood.
W.Va., were made in order to lighten
the burden on the county's insurance
fund, while maintaining county and
employee premiums at current levels.
The county currently pays $227
per month For single policies and
$575 for family policies, with the
employee shares being $30 and $200,
respectively.
In the past seveml years. the
county commissioners have been
forced to supplement their insurance
Fund, which receives premiums and
pays claims, because oF deficit balances.
Commissioner Janet Howard said
that changes in the plan from the curjust In time for the 1998 Melga County Fair. The
SHOw'RRING TOUCHUP - Members of the
rent plan to a 90 percent silenl PPO
paint was donated by Valley Lumber, Mlddl•
Country Clovers and Pioneers 4-H clubs -re
pian will help reduce risks lo the
port. The clubs-... doing lhe work as a com·
buay Saturday repainting the bleachers at the
Fund.
munlty project.
show ring at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds,
The new PPO plan ratses
deductibles and adds co-payments to
certain elements of ihe plan. and even
increases coverage under certain other
elements, such as dental and
"I am very happy with Mr.
panel hereby refers the maller to the
his background and experience,
vision
.
The board's probable cause panel Office of Disciplinary Counsel For Bloomfield's entry and his assessHoward
said that the changes
ment of the situation, and I think he
initially found ba&gt;is to look into the investigation," the entry reads.
come
a.'
the
result of meetings with
The action means Doutheu and has correctly identified the issues
complaint. but the entry tiled last
a
commiuee
up of c-ounty
week indicated that the complainants' Nuzum must now resubmit the com- involved as they relate to my former employees andmade
department
heads.
motions were "not within the spirit of plaint _to the disciplinary counsel. opponents," Evans said today.
who
agreed
that
a
modified
self-fundEvans had previously served 4-1/2
the rules set forth ... and quite inap- which will decide if there is probable
years on the Board of Grievances and ed plan w;c, prefemble to a plan under
cause to proceed with the maller.
propriate.'" Bloomfield said.
a private insurance carrier.
Evans is seeking the appellate Discipline and 1-112 years as its stale
"The complainants picked the
The com~issioners will meet with
forum and procedure. and now show court seal to be vacated by Judge Earl vice chairman.
representatives
of the labor union rep"I don't think it would be approa lack of familiarization with the rules E. Stephenson of Portsmouth. He is
resenting
employees
at the Meigs
that they invoked," according to the opposed by Democrat L. Alan Golds- priate for me to expand on the com- County Sheriffs Department. whose
berry, an Athens County Common ments in the entry, as Mr. Bloomtield contract with the county outline speentry.
"Because of the failure to follow Ple-•s judge. The court of appeals is operating under the auspices of the cific terms for insurance.
the rules and because of the serious reviews decisions issued by lower Ohio Supreme Court," a~ded Evans,
The commissioners discussed a
nature of the allegations a.' found by courts in a 14-counly area of south- who was campaigning in the district list of outstanding accounts payable
today.
Jhe board probable cause panel, this ern Ohio.
by 1he Meigs County Sheriffs
which
includes
Department,
$45.336 .75 for housing prisoners
outside of the county jail and
$8,706.78 for medical bills for pris·
"This certainly is not going 10 hundred construction jobs also will oners. (The county is required to pay
· told The Columbus Dispatch in
replace all the jobs that will be be gained when the recycling plants all medical expenses, including medtoday 's editions.
"This is actually pretty excit- downsized. but the jobs that will be are buill. beginning in the next year ication, for prisoners when in cusing," said Richard Miller, an analyst created will be long-term jobs," said or two, omcials said.
tody.)
The plants will help get rid of
For the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Rep. Ted Strickland. D-Ohio, who
According to a leuer from SheriFf
some of the 40,000 leftover uranium James Soulsby, his department is
, Workers union which represents the represents Piketon workers.
The Facilities will be located at cylinders that are .stacked around the unable to bear !he costs, and Comuranium enrichment employees. "To
umnium
enrichment planL&lt; in Piketon Piketon and Paducah sites. The cylin- missioner Jeffrey Thornton noted
find $400 million and get it moved
through as swiftly as they've accom- and Paducah, Ky .• and each will ders represent a liability of more than that, with the exception of the
plished here is really prelly unusual." employ up to 120 people. SeverJI $4 billion.
department's payroll line item. the
sheriffs budget is "depleted."
Howard said that county departments are expected to work within
the budget appropriations made by
the commissioners each January, or
must find other funding 10 cover
expenses.
I. 7 · percent to 1.52 miiil'On units.
Howard said that the county does
reflecting an anticipated shortage of
COLUMBUS
(AP)State
regulators
say
they
don't
expect
a
repeat
not
have the funds to pay the bills,
skilled construction workers.
of
last
month's
power'Crunch
if
temperJtures
soar
into
the
90s
this
week,
noting
that $45,000 in additional
Construction oF new homes is
as predicted.
.
.
. .
continuing strong into July, with
funding has been spent on operating
"We're not calling for any spectal conservauon mea.,ures atlhts It me
the county home beyond the March
interest rates on 30-year fixed mortpoint,"
said Lee Veroski oF the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
closing deadline.
gages averaging 6.94 percent this
The difference this time is the number of power planLs m the stale and
The commissioners passed a resmonth, compared with 7.0 percent ih
Midwest
that are available to produce electricity, said American Electric
June,
olution which authorizes the Meigs
Power spokesman Pat Hemlepp.
.
.
The · National Association oF
County Department of Human SerAt least five power plants in the region were closed for roultne mamvices to provide funding and oversee
Home Builders said Monday its surtenance or repairs during a heat wave in late June, resulting in a power
vey of builders' plans this month
a contmcl with the Meigs County
shortage that forced electric companies to restrict service.
Chamber of Commerce For economshowed them to be the niost optiThose plants now are up and running .
ic development services.
mistic in the 13 years the survey has
And in a conservation move, AEP on Monday cut or reduced power
been taken.
It was recently announced that the
to 27 large commercial .customers between noon and 4 p.m. ,Those cu_s"The same factors that have been
Ohio DHS would provide S125,000
tomers have intenuptible power contriCts, agreements allowmg the utrldriving the housing mmet through
to the county for these services,
ity to shut off power in exchange for charging lower rates.
the last several months- high conwhich will include funding of lhe curThe move will save AEP 1,000 megawlltS of electnclty a day, enough lrent economic dcvelopmeni director's
sumer confidence. low interest rates
tO power SOO,OOO homes.
Ipo.,ition as well as Funding for a secand a 11r011g overall economy Akron-based FlrstEnei'J!y, Dayton Power &amp;: Light and Cinergy in 1ond economic development prol'esrellllined in place in July," said Ken
C~nnati did not limit flow to customerS, the corr.,.nies saicL
Kolton.
(Contlnuecl on Pllge 3)

'

pline has referred the · maner to its
Office oF Disciplinary Counsel for
investigation.
The board's decision against proceeding with the complaint wa.&lt; outlined in an entry signed by iLs chairman. David 'S. Bloomfield, aFter
Douthell and Nuzum submiued a pair
of motions. one to withdraw the complaint and another to refer the maHer
to the disciplinary counsel.
Douthett, a municipal judge in
Jackson, and Nuzum. a municipal
judge in Marieua, submiued a complaint to the board alleging that during the primary, Evans circulated
campaign literature misrepresenting

Uranium recycling center bill wins House approval

Alfred news notes

1998 Buick Regal LS

.

in..;trul'lct..l to attend to help

clc01n

CHESTER -- Fr&lt;e tub&lt;rculosis
Nellie PaO.er returned recently
skin testing clime Montlay. 4:30-6:30 from a trip In !he west coast, June 25p.m. at the Chesler Fire Station.
. 29. She visitetl her e&lt;&gt;u,in. Eleannr
Avery. in Wesl Seattle. Wash. Dinner
LETART FALLS -· Letart Town- guests nn June 2K wer&lt; Jim. Bnnnie
ship Trustees will meet Monday, 7 and Briuany Hess. lsso•4uah otntl Jeap.m. al rhe oUice huilding.
nine. Rex and Erin Smith. Wnndinvillc. Dtnner guests July I were
Tl}ESDAY
Edward and Tammi Parker. Dehhie
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport and Mike Carcfmt, Arlinglnn .
Church of the Nazarene Women's
Nellie then visited her 'on Edward
Ministry will meet at the home of and family ill Arlington. Wash. She
Renee Barlon Tuesday, 7 p.m. for ld- auendcd the Fourth nf July parade at
lowshtp and refreshments. Visilors Arlingll&gt;n which featurctl patriotic
welcome.
groups, nld cars and lrotctms, and a
bagpipe hand. She visited a friend ,
EAST MEIGS ·· Mandalory Ellie Adkins. She accompanied her
meeting in front of the Eastern High son and family In GrJnd Cnulcc Dam
lobby Tuesday, 7 p.m. for girls gr..des and Moses Lake in central Washin~ ­
7-12 who are interested in playing ton. They loured the dam where it'
volleyball this year at Eastern High history and electric power were
School and Jr. High. For more infor- explained and saw the laser light
mation call coach Don Jackson at show displayed against ihe rushing

DON TATE
MOTORS

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP N-1 Editor
. A pair of unsuccessful candidates
in the Republican primary For a seal
'on the Fourth District Court of
Appeals chose the wrong forum to air
grievances about the campaign of the
primary's winner, Gallipolis auorney
David T. Evans, a slate Supreme
Court board has found.
Noting that the complaint filed by
Marshall B. Douthell and Milt
.Nuzum was "initiated without great
thought as to the rules or processes
set forth by the Supreme Court of
Ohio," the court's Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Disci-

lcgai gu&lt;~rdian with th( (hild\ shot
rc·.:nn! Ft•r lllt,rc inf(Jfl\lalitm. call the

m~c:ting

adding that his properties have not been inspected except upon the re~uest
of renters who were being evicted. Then the inspectors cited him For problems caused by the renters, siKh as broken doors or tom screens.
Earlier, council mel with about 14 residents oF the Union and Buuemul
avenue neighborhoods concerning problems there.
James Soulsby, repre,.,nting the Union Avenue contingent, said his main
concern is the open storm sewer coming From the Pomeroy Cliff Apanrnenls.
Debris flowing into the sewer during heavy rains causes the "'wer to back
up.
He suggested placing seclions oF farm Fencing at regular intervals upstream
of the sewer openings in an effort to catch the largest items of debris. His
(Continued on Page 3)

Ex-candidates' complaint referred to disciplinary counsel

musl he accnmpanied hy " parent nr

740-li67-65JO.

for demolishing condemned buildings.
Wright acknowledged that landowners will likely be opposed to the inspection and registration process, but said something needs to be done to address
the problem of substandard rentals in the village.
"If it rubs people the wrong way, the buck stops here." he said, adding
that landlords would likely pa..s the SIS expense along to their renters.
Wright said the discussion should serve as a warning to landlords.
"It's in the wind," he said.
David Bumgardner, who was meeting with council on another matter,
voiced concerns over the proposed fee. Bumgardner owns rental properties
in Middleport which enacted a similar fee about two years ago.
It corrected none of the problems it wa.~ supposed to address, he explained,

Ban on dove hunting
move· gathers steam

Community calendar----The Community Calendar is
published as a free senic• to roonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting 3nd speci~l events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sal.- or fund ruise" of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be gu3r~nt""d to run ~
specific number of d3ys.

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Pomeroy landlords may soon face village fee

Carleton School awards ceremony held recently

•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 63

Send questions In Ann Lande",
C~ators Smdiratc. 5777 \\', (cntur~· Jlh·d.:Suitc 71111, Los An~rlcs,
Calif. ~IHI-45

'hoc'' And

another thing. I hope you

S'-' 'l'ral fl'adl'h po1ntcJ t1UI th.ll

the pnl':&lt;~l \\ ho \~ ml.' ~.IIH..Ial' '~a:-.
undouhtl.'dl\ a Fran~.: i:&lt;~l":tll ;md th~11
sanU;lb arl: a pan nl" the traduion;ll
garl1. Thank' lor IH..•Iping tu ~du~· ;nlo'
" Bdk .. anU no Uouht many ntha:&lt;~ .

afraid that all the guests would " 'c

W&lt;';tr

Meigs County's

i~n{1rann: .

marri•t~e l..'crcmony without
pro~r fnnlwear tl.:causc ~hc was

her

will you please

:1

I hop;: th;at New Yor~ i~noranlU:-.
thi' kHcr. She\ got a l1\l to

upset thai her dcrgym;m won:

c~m

wins in KC
tournament
Page4

shave. I hate hcard s...

sao.dals.
She didn't want him to perform

his harc feel.

Sports
New Haven

Cable News Network's decline, Page 2
Indians defeat White Sox,'~Page 4 ·
Ex-husband gets the shaft, Page 10

Today: Sunny
High: 90s; Low: 70s

· Page

In - laws are causing major problems for couple - hubby needs to stand up to them
our

July 21 , 1998

Weather

Daily 3: 9-6-2; Daily 4: 0-1-9-3
o 1998 0100 Valley Pubtilhina eo.

·'

stock offering is expected to start later this week .
The House passed the already
Senate-approved bill Monday night
by voice vote, sending it to President
Clinton days before the money to
build the plants could have been lost
under federal accounting rules.
Clinton is expected to sign the bill,
though it is not clear when, sponsors

Economic strength boosts
level of new hoUsing starts
WASHINGTON (AP)- Spurred
by lower interest rates and a strong
economy, housing start.~ rose sharply
lasl month, reversing three straight
months of decline.
Builders in June started construction at a seasonally adjusted rate of
1,615,000 new housing uniL,, up 5,6
percent ff'Qm May and aboul 8 percent above the level of new starts in
June 1997. the Commerce Department reponed today,
Consii'imltl'il' had slowed in
March. April and Mv after reachjng
a nine-year high of 1.62 million units
in February.
For I0 straight months now,I¥Jme
building has been above a seuonal·
ly adjusted annual 111e of I.S million
units, the longest buildina boom
since the mid-1980s.
New buildina pennits in June fell
\b

Regulators expect
no power shortages

...

�Tuesday, July 21, 1998

Comtnentary

TUesday, July 21 , 1998

•

The Daily Sentinel

The decline of Cable News Network

By Joseph Spear
For the eccentnc few who chart
the
perfonnance and behavtor olthe
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
news
mcdoa the prospect of an
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157
explosoon at the Cable News Network was never a quesu on of of but
always one of when
The ongredocnts "ere there A
never-endong
news hole to fill per
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
sostently low raungs (except on tom~s
of cnsos) a dangerous onchnatoon to
ROBERT L WINGETT
au anythong Without adeq•oatc
Publisher
checkong for accuracy and wuh mon·
omal regard for faorness
Many of the hundreds of respon
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
soble
JOUrnalosts who work at CN N
General Manager
Controller
knew thos They lamented manage
menl s propensity lh oroadcast sen
'llle s-o..~ .,,._,_ 10,. odltodrom-., • bi'Oad ,.,.,_ oi!Oplco
satoonalost ruhb1Sh
Jove W\eragc
Shott-(3011-•or-)h..ot/N,.If.,_ol,.lngpubl/lh«&lt; Typodlof· of the Wolham Kennedy Smith rape
,.,. . . , . _ llld .,, ..., ,. · - &amp;til ohouldl- • , . . _ , lddrwn,
-deytlmophononum,..
$pKH)'odo,_,,.,..,.,,,.,.,,..,.,,,.,....,..,llfkl• troa I Iove coverage of 1hc L orcna
" ' - _ , l.lltlrl 10 1t1o Edlto&lt; Tho s.tttiMI 111 eo..r st -~ Ohio I Bobbon peniS noutolatoon atTaor ll\e
.__.u.;.;.m-.;.,.;.or..;.,.;FAX.;.;..;.;'"..;'.;.'"".;.ft:l;..;;;..;-2.;,;tS1;,;,;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , coverage ol the Gcnno fer Flo\\ ers
press conlcrcncc on whoch she
alleged a 12 year afraor with Boll
ClmlOn mtcnsl\ c ~.;ovl:ragl: ol Ihe
shadv Arkansas state troopers "ho
claomcd they had ahcllcd Clonton In
hos pursuit of women

T.stailfufrLii 111 1948

Sanctions often a
two-edged sword

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - To be an cffcctovc doplomauc tool sanctoons must
hurt But the paon "often felt hy both sodcs a rcahty Amcncan Ianners and
hu,ncssmcn know only too well
When Pakostan conducted nuclear tests last May It knew the cunsc
qucnccs harsh economoc sanctions by the Unoted States II tested anyway
Two months later the South Asoan country announced ot wa.' ahout to buy
molhons of dollars on wheat Pakostan os the thord largest customer for U S
gram farmers The result was as predoctable as the response to the nuclear
tests Wothout a diSscntong vote Congress exempted U S agncuhural credIts from the sanctions
No other country on the world uses cconomoc sanctoons as a foreogn pol
ocy tool as mud as the Unoted States Nearly 70 tomes on the past five years
u has used trade as a weapon lncreasongly, the question os raoscd whether
that tactoc hurts U S onterests more than the targeted country
Dwoghl D Eosenhower was presodent on Oct 20, 1960. when the Unoted
States omposed a trade embargo on Cuba Eoght US presodents and nearly
38 years later the embargo rcmaons on place
The Cuban economy os a mess but Fodel Castro has survoved the test of
tome and sanctions So have Lobya's Moammar Gadhafi and Iraq's Saddam
Husscon
An annual debate over a form of sanctoons os expected thos week when the
House plans to consoder a resolutoon that would block contonuatoon of
Chona s most favored nauon trade status or MFN
Most favored really means normal - tanffs no hogher than those
omposcd on most other U S tradong partners
Backong the anto-MFN resolution are advocates of usong trade to pressure
Chona to omprove ots human roghts record and demonstrate us commotment
to halting the spread of weapons of mass destrucloon But they know they
By lan Shoales
woll not succeed
I've been m a blue funk ever
The best they can hope for os a beuer showong than last year when the
stnce
Gmgcr left the Spocc Gorb
resolution lao led on the House on a vote of 173 on favor and 259 agaonst
(I'm
sure
you sympathoze especml
Chona IS a huge potentoal market for US companocs whoch arc lobbyong
ly
of
you
have
any pre-teen gorls on
hard m favor of MFN
Sen D"k Lugar R-Ind and Rep Lee Hamtlton D lnd hmc proposed the house ) I vc taken some con,olarcqu1nng an economic analysts of lhe Impact ot umlateral sam::llons and hav- toon on the fact that I snapped up the
ong them ex pore automatocally alter two years unle" rcauthomed hy Con- Gmger Spoce doll (wmplcte woth
panther tattoo on lower h,oc k 1)
gress or the prcsulcnl
before
other collector' gnt lo her
We hchc\ C that unilateral c~.:onamtc sancuons when used as a tool of
Stoll
ot
s heen ,, very dollocult toone
lorcogn polocv r.orcly achoevcd the or goal and frequent I} harmed the Unotcd
lor
me
States more than the tar~ctcd country Lu~ar told the Senate
With a lottie help I mo;ht ha\ e
A respelled vou.:c on lorctgn polu.:y as well .lS agru.: uhurc Lugar sau.J
g'JHcn
o\1.:1 11 I"·'' I)IIH! Um.\n Ire
sun~.: lions ... twuld adhere to the prm&lt;.:tplc th~tl we pl.tn to harm our .athcr....lry
quently
w~ epm ; dnnkmg ~t lot ol
mor~.: than w~.: hann ourselves
hcrhal
te.o
.md workon~ throu~h Ill)
But &gt;upporters of sanctoons mclude Sen Jc"c Helm' R-N C ch,urm.tn
grocl
of the Scn.llc Forc1gn Rda11ons Commlltcc "ho a... krd An.;. \\C unrc.Hmn
But then Ton,t Blll\\n quot the
a hie 10 dotng th1s ( unposmg ... ant:tmns), Should we he .l•dum~.:d • I do not
New
Yorhr
thmk so
M.m'
S.t . . s) Bnt J~tJ.... ~ue dwp
Helms contended there arc only thrcl.! h.a .. u.: tnol ... tn lorc1gn pol~~.;y
1
pong
toke
Jloes
I h.l\en l kit tlus h,oJ
There 1s d1ploma&lt;:y sane.: lions and war
soncc
Emm,t
Peel lclt
Th,
Helms vocw prcvaolcd The Senate TCJected Lugar s propos,tl hy 1'ole nl
1
Avenger'
Sl-46
Sure Ton,t ,ond Gongcr lw c the
The most , tA:ccssful sancllnns arc those with Wldcsprc~KI mtcmaunn~tl
rest
ol th"r ll\es ahe,td ol them
,uppon
Tona
Jell I \'C he.11d to do some
In hos rccont hook ahout the ellort to end the loghtong 111 Bosno.t dopln
kmd
ol \,tguc .tnd OHf~lllhltlnus
mal It: trouhl~.:shO&lt;ltcr R1chard Holhrookc dcst:nhcc.J sanc:t1ons ~tg~11nst Scrh1a
multomedoa
m.t~anne /devclopmenl
as • a mlun hargammg ch1p m d1scuss10ns w1th Serh1~m leader Slohodan
thmg
.tl
M1rlunax
thlil s nght
MIIOsC V I~o:
Mor,mo,ox
DISney
s
suhsct
lor th&lt;
John Steonhruner dorcctor ol forcogn poh&lt;y studoc' at the Brookongs
lnslllutwn c1tcd the mtcrnauonal sancuons agamst South Alnc ~t s .tparthcad presentation nl adult 'ntert,un
mcnt
government as ,muthcr success story
WIMI docs thts melln'
But he s,11d unalatcral s~ml'llons oltcn 11Tlposcd by Congress more ollcn
luc l.":mollonal exprcss1ons ol unhappmcss anncd at satasl}t•ng domestic

Readers of
small
but
onsoghtful
news
magaz1nes
knew
tho s
They moght
have seen a
New Repubhc
artoclc
on
August 1994
called
The
Myth
of
Spear
CNN
on
whoch mcdoa crotoc Tom Roscnstlcl
enumerated the nct\\ork s raolongs
among them a mcntahty of aonng
cvcr}thong oe&lt;as1onally wothout
adequate reporting
The astute regular rca~ers ol the
Joe Spear m lumn knew thos In Scp
temher 1994 they read these sadl}
prophetiC words
Tcb osoon ha'
lo\l.crcd JOUrnalost oc standards so
Jramatocally that you wonder wh"h
os news and "hoch os hokum .tnd
CNN IS the worst perpctr.uor
No
new~ orgamzauon h.ts hccn 111orc
adept at chcapcnong prolessl!m,tl

standards than CNN '
And sure enough CNN se lf
destructed
On June 1 on the premoer broadcast of a show called NewsStand
produced 10 cooperatoon with Tome
ma~azonc the net\\ ,,rk reported that
dunng a 1970 exer-ose 10 Laos US
c~mmandos had twoce dropped
sann a deadly nerve gas on a vol
lage and kollcd IUO people ondud
ong two Amencan defectors
CNN s management had occn
scarchong for a story that would sur
up some bun and breathe hie
onto thcor sagg10g ratongs ,md they
h,td found 11 Problem was It was
\Cry lokely not true
The Pentagon protested Vcter
.tns groups howled Other nc ws
org m1za11nn s hcgan turnmg up g.tp
ong holes on CNN s reportong Tioe
hlun&lt;krs were many hut two tell all
you really need to know
One ol the produ&lt;tonn tc,oon s pro
rn.uy sourns w.ts lormcr -.:h.urm,m
ol the Jnont Choels ol St.oll Adnoor ol
Thnm ts Moorer who h no~ X6
)C.Ifs old .ond lnes on .on ,ossostcd

care retorement home Accord10g to;
CNN's broadcast
Moorer con •
lormed that nerve gas was used ,,.:
Taolwond But he never confirmed:
It on camera and he natfy dcnoed tO'
other reporters that he had ever donc
so
Another maJor source was fonne(
Lt Robert Van Buskork now a~
e\ angdocal pro son monoslcr who
saod that nerve gas was used and thaL
he had k1lled two Caucastans h~
thought to he Amencan delectors·
CNN never mcntooned the fact that
Van Buskork had puhloshed a honk on
19K1 ahout Operation Taolwond an4
made no rctcrcncc to nerve l!as and
the kolhng ol suspected dcfccum;
He now s,oys he had repressed;
memory syndrome whoch h' over•
canoe \\hole heong quc,tooned hy
CNN s producers
'
Bowmi! to the ncsc.:cndn ol lntl-;
usm CNN Ch.oorm.on Tom Johnson
.o,k&lt;d proononent Forst Anocndnoeni
,ottnrncy Floyd Ahr.uns to he.od uri
~Ill

10\C"illg' 111011 ol th~ f.u(\\11\lJ

stnr) Repnrtcd Ahr.uns
The CNN hro.odc osl \\ os noi
lur lnlormat1on thai w~ts tn~.:omas!
tent woth the underl}ong wnclusum•
re,odted hy CNN w,os ognored oi
noonnmzed The voew' ol some of
the ondl\ oduals hesl pl.oced to know
wh.ll h.oppened
were unduly dos;
counted St.otcments ol sources thai
were- vague .unh•guuu!ti (lr tJU.tllllc~
were rdoed upon .ts of they wcr~
dc.1r In~.: used and un.unhtguous •
Jofon,on retr,octed the story .on4
pmlusdy ,opoln~llcd a' dod CNN
Jnund&lt;r led 1 u~ner 1wn pmduce..S
were hred a thord rcso~ncd and th~
reporter whn n,orr.ucd the stort,
well known w.11 correspondent
Peter Arnett was repromandcd
:
I d hke In s,oy I Jccl vondoc.ucd;
hut .til I rc.olly !eel os dosgust 1114
sorrow lor .1 once honor.thlc lr.tde
that h,IS agaon hecn haltered hy tho
demons ol ,unhollon greed and prot;
II

Joseph Spear is a syndocated
writer for Newspaper EnterpriSe
Assocoatoon.
'

Sassy Brit gals dropping like flies! .

audacm:~.:s

EDITOR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rothberg has covered national and
mtcmahonal afTaors for The Associated Press in Washington sonce I %6.

advtce to offer
Ttna' I know that Uma Thurman
has replaced Emma Peel m the
movoc versoon ol The Avengers
But I happen to thonk that you d he
perfect for the p,ort You re Englosh
for one thong whoch puts you one up
on Uma alrc,tdy Usong snme of your
onllucncc I m sure you cnuld stop
productoon and demand th.u ynu
replace that young upst.orl A"um
ong that you lnok g1X&gt;d on fc,uher I d
recommend th,ot )OU do thos nnme
den
on
th~.:
ra~c
Shoales
or
even
,, do,nely
II th.u J.uls I suggest th.tt you d
scrcenpl,ty .ohnut her d.o) s .11 the
N,w York eo ( ts 1 vehoc k Joo Emon.o make .1 much hotter Ch.11loe s Angel
Thomp,on J 11 "doomed It wollf,tll th.tn Gongcr Alter .oil she would
h.ovc to he the F.too .oh F.owcclllor tit&lt;
under .1 u ud storm ol nH:J11 dn1
soon .ond onJolkrcncc lrono ,, puhloc mollennoum Those ,tre pretty t.oll
'' ho doon l l ~ll l: ~1hout V.mlt) Eur shoes to loll E\cn ol sh, opted ltll
or the New Yorker ,tnd docsn 1 the Ltclyn Smoth slot I douht that
her l,tshJOn scnsl.": \\IIUid ever c~trn
know T10,1 Brown from Ad,tm
And Gongcr' Sh&lt; II put out 1solo her ,, Km.trt ct~nlr.ocl (F,oce ot p.on
CD yocldong one hottl!,ll woll st.oy on th~.:r t lltnos JUst .1n.: n t KmMl 1! you
the ltlp I0 ol some lo st or other lor know wh.ol I m&lt;.tn ) Could she he
three \\Ccks .10d then 'onk lokc ,, Ki.!IC J~ILkson 1 Fur~~.: I .thout II Tma
rtx:k There s some t.olk th.ll she m.oy Brown however would he &lt;Xcelknt
h&lt; a new Charhe s Angd hut wh.u as the sm.trt Ch.lfloc' Angel I
thonk the puhloc would re,tlly t,oke
kond ol c.11eer mm e os that'
I on no Jcm101Sl hut I ,om .10 her to Its hosmn
And Gonger I heheve os ,, natur
anglophole who still yearns lor Juh&lt;
Chrostoe (,tnd Do.on 1 Rogg ,\s J.u .ts .11 to cnh.: r the m.tg.111nc husmcss
th.ll goes) .md h.ovc some unsoloutcd She s got the l.tshoon sense the
It means
that Ttna's new
project
wtll
faol Whether
ot's the Los
Angclan
an
mtcracuvc
CKpcru.:nt:c or
the Now Los
Angchm maga
line that JUSt
slls smog nc.J

perkoncss, the amllotoon, the sm.orls
and the chansma to make the New
Los Angeles the Vamty F,oor ol tl¥::
21st century (I have a lew caveats ll&gt;
thts daom, though, Gonger shoultl
delegate ,til responsohollly .ond huv.:
no ,octual edotoroal authonty except
I&gt;V&lt;r puhhuly photogr.tphs ol her
sell )
And of Charloc s Angd' shoukl
l.otl 1t1 g&lt;t on th&lt; .ur I h.:lo"c th41
ron,ocould he •• d.lfk hom c.ondod.uc
lor the new lolth Spocc Gnl You
ohtL:l:l C.Ul she sml!' you ·•'k As
'
of tiM! matters She s lng losh She
knows how lt1 p.orty She h.os show
husmcss s,IY\ y Wh.H nwn: do ) ou

-

w.mt •

W&lt; could coil her Content
Prm odcr Spoc&lt;
On the other h,ond they hoth lll.lY
JUst h.tvc to content thcomd\&lt;s wuh
11.1\ ang hccn l.unous wom~.:n onl.:c
fh&lt;y c.tn ret or&lt; to overdcwratcd vol
l.h 11 Brentwood 1.1kc mcclln£'
c,orcss theor chppongs ,10d JOIO the
crowJ Doana Ross Steph,IOoe Pow
ers ~· ory Tyler Moore Jono
Motchcli .md yes F.trr,th F,owcell
M.oJors Gorl power ondeed
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
wr1ter for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Life in Thailand without an ID

hold down a JOb
agree that lhe hest way to obtatn process, they also argue that some of
By Sara Eckel
CHIANG RAI THAILAND
Or
fC&lt;.:CIVC
honh rcgostratoon " to pay oil the the Jault hcs woth the holltrohe people
•
The gorls at the New Lofe Center do health scrvoces
oflocoals
themselves that they often lao. to
not want lOg''"' us thc1r names lor They can eve n
And even th.ot doesn 't always produce cvtden~:c that they were
fear of retaloatlon We cxplaon that he prohohotcd
work One I K year-old !rom a ncar
born 10 Thaoland and sometimes
we only want lor't names and that !rom travclong
hy Akha trohe says that her famoly even seck regostratwn lor those who
they woll only appear on Iaraway from coty to
put up ols most valued possessoon ·
arc not entotlcd to ot such as lrocnds
places Joke London Cho&lt;ago Brus uty
a gongcr stalk so that they could who were horn on nearhy Myanmar
.cis .tnd Oslo But the resodents and
Its
an
horrow the ~00 haht I$1J) Icc that
But Professor Muntrahhorn says
staff stoll thonk that s too nsky so enormous prob
local authorotocs saod she needed to ot's unlaor to onlloct uur Jegalosllc
none ol the gorls names wolf he tern says Pro ·
get an ID card They paod the money wa) of sccong the wnrld onto cnmEckel
pnntcd here
Votll
lessor
"'months ago hut 'he hasn 't hc,ord munotlcs that h,ove exosted fnr ccn
Actually I slltluld &lt;all them Muntraohorn a B,ongkok h.tsed !rom the authontlcs "nee In the turocs solely on or,oltr,odltoon He os
women so nee the mcdoan age here IS scnoor advosor to AS JANET one that meantime she was stopped on the however qUick In poanl oul pos111vc
ahout IK But that s hard to rcmcm
os prev.tlcnt Jar hcyond Thailand s 'trcct and lined :\()() h,oht The rca
steps that many governments on thiS
her they l&lt;x&gt;k so much younger as borders Many cnuntnes demand son failure to produce an 10 card
rcg10n have taken e1t1ng effort.' to
they"' wuh thw hands 10 thcor laps that on order lor your roghts to he
Another Akha 17 w,1s .trrested t.tke moh1k rcgtslr.llwn lu.:tllttCii to
.o~nd theor ankles cros~d theor hare
rccogns zcd or gu.~r tnh.:t:ll you must when poloce dodn l helocve that the the holl areas Some sotu,lllt&gt;O' .oro
feet reflected on the shmy tole floor
he rcgo stercd .11 horth So ol you rc student ID she presented w.ts re.ol
gettong hetter even though we still
These young women don t want not rogostered hasoc,tlly what h.op TI1c gorl was dctaoned lor Jove hours have a very nl.lrgon,ololed group
to rovc.tl theor odentltoes hec,tUs&lt; pens 1s you arc .1 nonentity You ,ond toned ~m h,oht When she .tsk,d
Frnm the ccntr.al g,nvcrnmcnl
they arc wnsodcred outlaws No don l rc tlly e•ISI and so ,til kond' ol lor her ID h.ock the polocc s.ud they nlloces on B ongkok Scna~tr
~
~.1
they haven 1 umumtted any cnmc' cxplt11tatoon u.tn t,oke pl.occ hy the h.od lost II Wothout .o c.11J I c.on l Saosuree Chutokul ch,oorpcrson j;t
They arc c,ollcd
ollegals h) people who have power
go .mywhcre ' ht: s 'Y' I II ~ct the Sen,lle Comonottee on Wom~oi
authontoes hec,ousc they ha~c no
It os the mossoon olthc New Lole .trrcstcd I m .t nnnpl'rson
Youth ,ond the Elderlv IS m,okon~
oftocoal odentotlcs When they were Center to help these young women
And sn It gtx:s Woth th, young cflorts holh to lnt:rcasc regtslr.Htu~
horn nearly two decades ago on thcor ,IVIlld such explmt,lloon to edu~:ate women 12 on ,oil tclhng stones ol ol holhrohe hahoes and to onvestogittc
small holhrohe communuoes no one them lor example so that they wolf thcor run-ons woth Jox:al authorotocs .. corruptoon ch,orges But she admol:. '
rccurdcd the event nr saw that they he less lokdy to tall prc)hto the sex stones that range lrnon the truly that ot os very doll oculi to help .tdults
By The Associated Press
I
Today IS Tuesday July 21 the 202nd day of 19\!1! There a" 16:\ days left rcccove~ p !iinh ccrtoficate To the ondustry or chold labor te &lt;enter appallong tales ol gratuitous hody and teen agcrs who h,ovc thus' t.or
Ak~a LISU Rno.l t.uhu tnhcs that pop
whoch was founded by Amerocan searches to merely frustrating anec· loved thcor loves wuhoul ollocoal
on the year
I
ulatc this nrQp, hlnh was part ol the mossoonancs on 1987 also tncs to dotes about gettong to the regostra· odcnttttes ' Because how can w~
Today s Htghhght tn HIStOry
On July 21. 1925. the so-called Mo~key Troal cqded tn l)aylOf· Ten~
cycle ol nat~ro . nol A legal event
help the young women get tdentoty tlon office at exactly the wrong ttme know 1" she asks Anyone cnuld
woth John T Scopes convtcted of vjolllf'ng 5fUte law for te~h1ng Charl~s
jlut qow lh•f these young cards, though thos has proven chal· "They say you're too late or too come here and learn to speak Thao
D:trwon •5 throry of evoluuon. The CC!'IVlfliOn was later ovenurned 1
tnbcswomcn hA~O ventured tnto the lengtng Although the That govern- early Come 10 next month " says and say 'I was born here ' If you '
WOfld ltcYOftd J~OJr/ vtilage, thiS lack ment has an offic tal polocy that the New Ltfc Center's Marcoa Dtck- start do1ng that , of all)'onc can cnmc '
0. tins date
•
In 18~ 1 Belg1um became tndependen' as ~ld l w~ proclauned ktnj1 of doc~ monlllfi.~" os causmg thc;m states a deme to rcgoster all those erson
10, then there's no end toot "
In 1861, the first Battle of Bull Rjln 'as fpughl at Manas.~as. Va , resull· ~rent lr)lujllq, ,Iince wtthout an offi- born tn that country the process os
Wh1le government offictals admot
Sara Eckel Is a syndleattd '
Cial I&lt;~Wjl~'or nauonahty thev do rofe woth corruptoon And most of the that mom needs to he done to keep writer for Newspaper En(erprise:
1ng tn a Confederate voctory
In 1899. author Ernest Jlemmgway was born m Oak ~k. Ill
Association.
~
~·u hi!V~ )he nght to auend school, holltnbe people we spoke to here eorruptoon out of the rcg~&lt;tratoon

Berry's World

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To~ay

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

in histpry

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Announcements

Local News in Brief:
Picnic slated to honor candidate
A p1cnoc 10 honor of Btll Ooler, Democrat1e candidate for 94th Dostnct
state represenratove for Galha, Meogs and Jackson counties, and eastern
Lawrence County, wolf be held Wednesday from 6-8 p m at the Bob Evans
Farm Shelterhouse at Roo Grande
Donatoons for Otler's carnpaogn wtll be accepted and appreeoated. a
campa1gn spokesperson saod If unable to attend the pocnoc but onterested
on contnbutong, donations may be made to Karen S Wolhams, treasurer,
PO Box 321, Rutland, Ohoo 45775 Make all checks payable to the Ooler for State RepresentatiVe Carnpaogn
For more onformatoon, contact Sharon Tackett at 740-446-2737

Advisory issued on land purchases
The Metgs County Health Department has ossued an advosory to persons who may be planmng to purchase real estate on Meogs County on
wh1ch to buold a home or onstall a mobole horne
Before any purchasong of such property the prospectove buyers should
check With the County Health Department to ascenaon of the propeny os
servtng a samtary sewerage system and of not whether the property can
be approved for the onstallatoon of a provate home sewage dosposal system

Hydrant flushing planned in Racine

Reunion planned
The Hudson reumon woll be held
Saturday at Star Moll Park, Ractne, 5
p m Table servtee woll be provuled
Take covered dosh
DAY cancels meeting
The Disabled Amencan Veterans
Chapter 53, Meogs County has canceled lis Monday meeung
Center registration
Open enrollment and regtStrauon
for the summer sesston at the Umversuy of Roo Grande s Metgs Ceo
ter on Mtddleport Will be held Mon·
day, 3 6 p m at the Meogs Center
Reunion set
The Songer reumon woll ~ held
July 26 at noon at the SemorCotozens
Center Fnends and famoly are mvot
ed to auend
Spec:ial servtce
A specoal servtce woll be held at
the Mount Ohve Commumty Church,
Long Bottom, Saturday, 7 p m Evangehst Carsey wtll be the speaker

ON PARADE - Jamie Drake, who will preside as queen over this October's Big Bend
Stemwlleel Festival, and her court, were a pop-

The Racone Water Department Will be nushtng hydrants Wednesday
Thursday and Fnday Water may be d1scolored at tomes ot was reported
The UniverSity of Roo Grande and Roo Grande Commumty College,
Meogs County Center, has scheduled open regostratoon for Monday lor res
odents onterested on takong classes at the center
Regostraroon woll be held from 2 p m unul 7 p m at the centers 150
Mtll St locatoon on Moddleport
Regtstrat1on for summer classes and Kods College wolf be held on July
27 The second sess1on of summer classes runs from July 27 unto I Aug
29 For more onformatton resodents may contact Gona Pellegnno-Pones
dorector of the Metgs Center at 740-992·3383

Deputies report car-deer crashes
No IIIJUnes were reported on three deer/vehtcle colhStons reported Monday, accordong to the Meogs County Shenff's Department
Jean A Lambert, Albany, was southbound on State Route 143 near
Homer Holl Road around 6 15 am when a deer ran onto the left sode of
her 1997 Dodge, causong heavy damage
Ashh L Davos, Racone, was eastbound on SR 124 near Hoback Road
around 4 30 p m when she struck and killed a deer that ran tnto the path
of her 1992 Plymouth. causmg moderate damage
D1ana S Brewer. Pomeroy eastbound on Lake Wood Road on Chester
Township around 9 10 p m when she struck a deer thai ran onto the path
of her 1995 Chevrolet ptckup truck, causong hght damage

Accident investigated by sheriff
No InJunes or cuauons were reported followong a one vehocle wreck
at the JUnction of Canter Road and SR 124 between Syracuse and Rae one
Monday around 8 21 p m
Rodney D Hones Moddleport was southbound on Canter Road when
the brakes faoled on hos 1991 Chevrolet S-10 pockup truck, accordong to
a Meogs County Shenfl's Department report He dro-e the lru'k onto a
dllch to avotd traffic on the state route, woth the truck comong to re•t on
the dnvers sode, the report stated

Box sours momentary bomb scare
A box fuund along the Ohto Rover near the Ponderoso Campground on
Letan Townshtp Saturday caused a momentary bomb scare accordong to
Metgs County Shenff James M Soulsby
An Army bomb dosposal umt wa.~ summoned to the scene It wa.' deter
moned that the box contaomng black powder an explosove commonly used
m muzzleloadong niles and cannons had washed downstream dunng
recent noodmg. comong to rest along ihe rover. Soulsby saod
The Racme Volunteer Fore Department was also on the scene

Recorder posts land transfers

The Daily Sentinel
CUSPSZIJ 910)
Communlly Newspipe:r Holdln~ttt Inc
Published tYcry afternoon Monday through
Ill Court St Pomeroy Ohto by Ihe

~ Jlfnday,

J&gt;h•o Valley Pubhshtng Company Second class
,postage: p11d at Pomoroy OhtO
Member: The Associated Pn:ss and the Ohto
Newspaper ~tal ton
POSII'IISier Send address eorrccuons to The
Dally Scntmd Ill Court St Pomeroy Oh10

45769

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changes may he tmpkmcnlc:d by changmg lhc
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.SI0972

Reader Services
Correction Polley

.()ur llllln coaetra In ollt10ri01 Is to be
•ccunte. Jr you laoow of on error In 1
call doe oewsroom •I (740) 99l·
%155. We will check your lnronnollon
ond make 1 COCTO&lt;IioD II womooled
IIAH'y,

News Departments

ne Ollila auoaber 1s m.zus. Deport·
"""' nteulou ...,

G\!nent M•""'"' .................... Ell. 1101
New~

Ext. IIOl
or Ext.lll6

Gerald R and Sheola M Hollon,
Chester lots
- Deed. Karen L and Lester R
Hudson to Shawn A and Leanne S
Cunnongham, Chester lot,
Deed, Doanna L and Robert L
Imboden to Doanna L and Robert L
Imboden Rutland. 3 077 acres
Deed, Wayne E and Hester Peck
to Robert D and Sue A Peck
Columbo a,
Deed Wayne E and Hester Peck
to Robert D Peck and Ahce M Leov
ong Columboa ~,
Deed Steve and {lei onda Lane to
Thomas and Manlyn ~ nderson Mod
dleport lot
Sheroffs deed Pearl Proflill to
Roscoe and Sandra J Molls Lebanon
parcel'
Deed, Dwt ght and Elva Corbon to
Zelma M and Shorley L Meadows
Letart
Deed. Donald and Patncoa W Elh
son to Bruner Land Company In&lt;
Salem parcels
Deed, Katherone Lemaster to
Chen L Campbell Columboa tracts
Deed Gannett Satellote Inform to
Newspaper Holdongs lncor Pomeroy
parcels
Deed, Eber I Pockens to Mochael
J Holl Mochael J Holt II Sutton
33/100 acre
Deed. Eber I Pockens 10 Mochael
J Holl Mochael J Hollll Sutton 292
acre

Stocks
Am Ele Power
44't.
Akzo .................... .......... 61'!,
AmrTech .... ........ .. ..... . SO~.
Ashland on .....................
AT&amp;T................... ... .. 59),
Bank One .. .....
.. .60'1.
Bob Evans........ ... . ..... 201.
Borg-Warner
51 '7.
Broughton ...... .. .. ..
. 16
Champion . ........ ........ . .. 11 \
Charm Shps .... . ...
. . 4'1.
City Holdong.. .... ....... . ... 43
Federal Mogul..... ..... .. . . 68),
Gannett . . .
... 66'1.
Goodyear
. .
61'1.
Kmart ..................... ......... 18'·
Kroger................................ 48'\
Lands End .................... .... 30'4
Limited ..............................30\
Oak Hill Flnl ........ ................ 20'1.

54,.

ova .....................................40\

.. 36~
Peoples ............................... 28'1.
Prem Flnl ...............................21 'It

One Valley . .. . . .

Rockwell ..........................46).

RDIShell .......................,. ....

,.53,_

sura..................................57''1.

Slioney'l ................... _ ........3''1.
Star Bank ..... ~ ..~ ....~ ......73\
Wendy'• .....,_..:....................23\

-·-·-

WorltllngtOn ..........................15\

Stock reporta are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by AdVtst
of Gelllpolta.

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ular erttry In the Chester-Shade Days Celebra·
tlon parade on Saturday. Period costumes were
worn by many of those attending the event.

Pomeroy landlords may

RG's Meigs Center registration set

The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently on the office of
Meogs County Recorder Emmogene
Ham olton
Deed, Roger and Susy Doxon to
Susan and Charles Mash, Sahsbury
parcels,
Deed, Gary and Juanota Groffith to
Davod and Juamta Grate Chester,
355 acre,
Deed. Margaret Bealmear, Marg~ret Maxone Bealmear Peggy
Lucolle Freeman. Peggy Lucolle Tip
poe to Patty Moller. Syracuse parcels
Deed. Wallace G and Waumta G
Haynes to Waumta G Haynes, Syr.o
cuse parcels
Deed, Eldred K and M Kathaleen
to Russell and Brenda S Day
Orange
Deed, Roy R Christy, decea.o;ed, to

The Daily Sentint!l • Page 3

Elizabeth Finnicum
Ehzabeth Fonmcum, 93 of Galhpolos, d1ed on Monday July 20 1998 on
Holzer Semor Care Center
She wa.~ born on Oct 1 1904'" Letart, W Va, daughter of the late Malo
and Emmahne Gobbs Gnmm
She was a homemaker and a member of the Letart Unued Methodost
Church
Survtvtng are two sons and a daughter-m-Jaw, Frank Fmmcum of Pomt
Plea.~ant , W Va , and Jack and Margaret Fmmcum of Galhpohs. four daugh
ters and two sons-m-law, Mary Aycock of Sheffield Lake Nelhe Denny of
Statesvolle, N C and Allee and Larry Eads, Betty and Jtm Dovenbarger and
Martha Moms all of Galltpohs and 21 grandchildren, 24 great-grandchtl
dren and two great-great grandchildren
She wa.~ also preceded tn death by her husband, Wade Fmmcum. a son
John Fmmcum a daughter. Natahe Anzto, and five brothers four sosters a
grandson and four great-grandchtldren
Serv1ces w1ll be held 1 30 p m Fnday on the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home,
Pomt Pleasant, wtth the Rev Danus Underwood, and the Rev Jack Ftnmcum
and Mtke Fmmcum Bunal woll follow tn the Letart Evergreen Cemetery
Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p m Thursday

Loren 'Abe' Lee
Loren' Abe Lee 79, State Route 692, Pagevtlle dted Tuesday July 21,
1998 at hts resodence
Arrangements Will be announced by the Bogony-Jordan Funeral Home
Albany

Mildred Irene Phillips
Mildred Irene Pholhps 78, Corclevolle doed Monday, July 20 1998 at her
restdence
She was born Nov 5 1919 on Wellston, the daughter of the late Fr.onk
and Grace Spores Utsonger
She os survoved by a son Thomas Phollops of Lnhopohs a daughter and
son on Jaw Martha and Stanl1y Markons ofCorclevolle.three grandcholdren
and a soster Joan Stewart ol Rutland
She was preceded tn death by her husband Kelson S Phollops, and by a
brother, Wendel Doehl
Gravesode servoces wolf be I p m Wednesday on the Forest Cemetery No
calhng hours woll be observed and arrangements are by the Wellman Funer
al Home, Corclevolle

Units log 17 runs in 3 days
Unots of the Meogs County Emer
gency Medocal Servoce recorded 17
calls for assostance Saturday through
Monday Unots re,pondmg oncluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7 19 p m Saturday Dusky Street
Woodrow Zwoflong. Veterans Memo
nul Hospotal Syracuse squad assost
ed,
3 p m Sunday, State Route 124
Racone, James Boas, VMH Robert
Rathburn treated at the scene
5 29 p m Sunday East Muon
Street Pomeroy Raymond Granat,
Holzer Medoval Center, Pomeroy
squad assosted,
8 09 p m Sunday, Syracuse Pool,
Amber Ward, VMH
12 03 a m Monday, Nocholson
Hoi!
Road,
Dexter, Harold
McDanoels, VMH Rutland squad
assosted.
9 20 a m Monday South Fofth
Avenue Moddleport. Dale Duuon,
YMH Moddleport squad assosted
II 02 am Monday Elm Street
Racone. Chnstona Lannong HMC
4 04 p m Monday Dusky Street
Syracuse James Hensley VMH
Syracuse squad assosted
I0 II p m Monday Shade Road

Chester, Bertha Smoth. VMH Tup
pers Plaons squad assosted.
II 49 p m Monday, Meogs Mone
2, Terrance Conlon, Ohoo Stale Uno
versoty Hospotal voa hehcopter ambulance, Rutland squad assosted
MIDDLEPORT
6 25 p m Saturday Ca.,sey Wondsor, Choldren s Hospnal voa helo
copter ambulance Central Dospatch
squad assosted
7 39 p m Saturday Moddleport
Pool , Terry Loght YMH
POMEROY
6 25 p m Sunday US 33 motor
vehtcle accodenl Domonoc Caprella
VMH, Jerry Bogard YMH, Syracuse
squad assosted,
10 33 am Monday East Muon
Street, Pomeroy motor vehocle acco
dent Bob Paller, Crystal Day Carl
Knapp Kathleen Knapp and Wolloam
Dye refused treatment
10 15 p m Monday Col ions Road
Howard Searles Pleasant Valley Hos
potu!
RUTLAND
8 15 am Saturday Com Hollow
Road Tammy Watkons, YMH
12 08 p m Monday SR 124 Eve
lyn Jarrell HMC

--Hospital news-Veterans Memortal
Saturday admossoons- Woodrow
Zwolhng Syracuse
Saturday dtscharges- none
Sunday adm1ss10ns -none
Sunday doscharges - none
Monday admos,ons - Kathy
Roush Pomeroy
Monday doscharges - none
- Holzer Medical Cenler
Discharges July 17 - Robert
Rotne Mrs Todd Hood and daugh
ter Irene Osborne, Heather Jones
Jourdan Matheny. Maude Loueral.
Angel Counctl, Sonya Medley, Fern
Belena, Mrs Brandon Pratt and son,
James Walker, Londa Gnmm. Mary
Mayes, Carl Gardener, Evelyn Dun·
can June Johnson, Evelyn Proffitt.
Loren Moore
Birth - Mr and Mrs Davtd
Meadows, son, Wellston
Dischlll"((eS July 18 - Mtchael
Ltnton, Wilham Spauldtng, Johnny
Sparks, Anna M1ller, Hamell Evans,
Mrs. David Meadows and son, Karen
Bowhng, FJ1111Ces Bonecutter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Donald

Folmer, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr and
Mrs. Robert CouncU. son. Langsville.
Disehlrles July It - Michael
Morgan, L1sa Houck. Cole Spurlin,

Otho Motchell, Dawnone Yeauger
Births - Mr and Mrs Voctor
Coates, son, Long Bottom, Mr and
Mrs Jerry Ma.-ters, daughter Gal·
lopolos Mr and Mrs Larry Mayse
daughter, Galhpohs
Discharges July 20 - Mrs Jer
ry Masters and daughter Shelloe
Hannah Lahonna Go! more, Ehzabeth
Young Bertha Payne Mrs Voctor
Coates and son Emoly Kemp. Manha
Sufller, Elozabeth Fonoocum, Mary
Lakon, Kelh Schultz, Angel Councol
Birth - Mr and Mrs Douglas
Golbert. son. Patnot
(Published with permission)

(Continued from Page 1)
neoghhors expressed concerns over rat s raw sewage odors the health and
safety of choldren playong on the neoghhorhood and vehocles and bog trucks
speedong over Uooon Avenue to and from State Route 7
Mayor Frank Vaughan saod people wolf look at the problem on the hopes
of findmg a solutoon
Kay Wheeler Bunernut Avenue addressed councol about no parkong
sogns along the walled sode of the street Many ol the houses have no oil
street parkong
A compromose was met alluwong parkong along the wall but re,troctong
parkmg on the sodewalk purtoon olthe street to maontaon an ope n tralloc Jane
Councol woll also consoder lowerong the speed Joonol or onstallong a speed bump
on the street to address concerns over speedong mutonsts
In other busoness councol approved a new health onsurance pohcy lor' ol
!age employees admonostered by The Woseman Agen'y Galhpolos and
approved vacatong Wollow street located near the Moddleport Pomeroy cor
poratoon lone
The road had been abandoned several years ago and w,os lormally vacat
ed to allow development of the property owned hy Davod Bumgardner who
met with councol on thiS matter The agreement al so oncluded an easeme nt
to allow vollage workers access to sewer Iones on the property
Councol also met wnh Gary Louie representong the CorporJtoon for Ohoo
Appalachoan Development about ProJect Good Start
ProjeCt Good Start IS cumpnsed ot a 'urvey admon"tered to re,odents huso
nesses and community leaders The survey oncludes questoons pertaonong to
retaol busoness actovoty marketong and other concern' added to the ques
uonnaore Lottie explaoned
The survey results contaon other onformatoon such as cen,us data that can
be used for marketong economoc development and grant apphcatoons he
added
Dunng open doscussoon Councol Presodent John Musser menuoned weed'
that need cut across from the Sugar Run Moll on Mulberry Avenue and also
a plugged draon on the upper parkong lot near the gazebo
Councolman Davod Ballard receoved a complaontlrom a Wollos Holt re"
dent concemong sewer dram odors
Councolman Larry Wehrung wanted to know the status of plans to onstall
a water lone on the Naylor s Run Road area Musser told hom the $410 000
project os on the tal kong stage woth no lorm plans
Wehrung also a,,ked when pavong \\Ould be dune Musser saod 11 wollloke
ly be done next year and that the vollage os combonong ots pavong funds !rom
the two years to leverage addotoonal grant fundong lor a vollage wode pavong
proJeCt
Wnght complaoned about bocychsts speedong along the sodewalk' down
town and suggested sogns be on•talled near Court and Muon streets warnong
bocychsts to slow down He also suggested trash conlooners downtown he
paonted blue and gr,ty
Al Wnght s suggest1on c..:ounul iigreed to wnte a letter to the Mc1g' Coun
ty Department ol Human Sewoces complamong about workers assogned !rom
the department that routonel y lao! to show up
Vaughan remonded cuuncol members of an Ohou Department ol Trans
portatoon meeting to be held tonoght o Kat Roya l Oak Resort ne.or Pomeroy
on the Pomeroy -Mason Brodge Replacement and the US 1111 77 Con nee
tor prOJects
Also present were Councilwoman Gcro W.oltnn .1nd Poloce Chod Jell
Moller Absent were Councolman Scoll Dolton and Clerk!freasurer K,oth)
Hysell

Insurance program will
(Continued from Page 1)
soonal
fhe county s pledge ul $50 000
woll be reduc ed to the $25 000
already paod out lor the remaonderof
the year a' a result of the contract
County Engoneer Robert Eason
told the commossooners th.ot through
a.'"stance !rom U S Rep Ted Strock
land D-Lucasvolle and Prosecutong
Allorney John LentO\ the county has
obtaoned surpJu, equopment nece'
s.try to complete diSaster repaor work
The equopment wolf be purchased on
part wtth county funds at a reduced
cost
The commossooners amended the
Department of Human Servoces Pre
ventoon Retentoon and Contongency
program to allow for a maxo mum of
$1,500 on asststance to famoloes woth
choldren atfected by the recently
declared flood dosaster The amount
ongonally set was $500 who&lt;h stoll
apploes to those wothout dependent
choldren
The commossooner' also
• Renewed contracts woth day care
provoders and oncreased rates for

both day care centers and ondovodual
provoders
• AppTl ved a second h,olf appro
pnatoon to •he County Mu-eum on the
amount ol ~4 000
• Approve J tr,on,fers ol funds and
approproatoon adjustment' lor the
county ho hhway department Board
ol MRIDD and the prose,ullng auor
ney s olloce
• Approved payment ol bolls on the
amount ol $149 lll 1X wuh 159
entncs
Also prese nt 111 auu11oon to
Howard and Thomton wa' Clerk
Glona Kloes

Lottery results
CLEVELAND CAP ) - There
were no lOckets sold namong al l fove
numbers selected on Monday noght s
Buckeye 5 drawong the Ohoo Lottery
saod
There were 165 Buckeye 5 locket s
v.llh lour ol the numbers and each os
worth $250 The 4 600 lockets show
ong three ot the numbers .11e each
wonh $10 and the 42 062 lockets
showong two of the numbers are each
worth $1

POMEROY
Nesr Pomeroy·IIIISon Bridge

912-2588
VINTON

Galli• County Dleplay x.n1
155 lleln St.

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�Sports

The Daily Sentin,.!}
Tuesday, July 21, 1998

L.L. Tournament
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
In Monday '&lt; second-round actmn
m the Kyger Creek Louie League
Tournament. the New Haven Reds.
the Racme Marlins and Poml Pleasant Mead'&lt; Body Shop claomed voctones over B1d11ell I. the Galhpohs
Yankees and Pmm Pleasanl Hardware respecllvely
Nrw Haven R•ds 9
Bidwelll-6
The Reds needed ali\ e-run rool m
the liflh mmng to m·erc(lme a Bodwell squad that lied the cnntesltwoce
m the early frames
In the first. New Ha,en \liN run
came when Ton} Tulloh scored on a
wold pitch doorng Calch Lllchlield\
at-bat Bodwell ued the game when
Donnoe Johnson who was h11 hy a
pllch scored on Danoel Berry 's "ngle to left field
ln the th~rd. Aaron Faulk\ three run h(lme to center oiT Johnson put
the Reds ahead 4-1 Bu110 the founh.
Johnson's sacnfice ny scored Chros
l:lro11n before Tommy Bose\ tnple
to nght sent Pete Saundel\ and Bmndon Coe home w11h the nece"ary
runs 10 ue the game at 4-4
In the fifth. the Reds went ahe,od
to stay when Litchfield\ through-thefe nce ground-rule double o;enl Eroc
We a' er and Tulloh home An error
and two w1ld polches helped New
Haven score three more runs
Ni!w Haven 's p•tch•ng rela} te~•m
1slaner Anthony

Motchell F.1ulk .10d
closer Cod) Kn.oppl wmh10ed 10
stroke out four and wal~ three John wn fanned I~ walked two .md
allo11ed lhree h1h 111 a completeg.ome effort
Faulk. L•tchticld (hoih 1-1) .md
Muchell ( 1-4) had the Reds' h11s
B1d\loell\ hillel"'"" Chnslopher
Bro11n. Coe. R,md.oll Sh.~rrell(,ill 111. Boo;e .md Ad.om Schuht (hoth 141

l!ulini lll.lllb

runs thai ga\e them a 6-0 lead
In the rest of the game the M..rhns allowed G.ollopol" to get onto
sconng pma110n 1w1ce Th~ fir~l was
on the thord, when the Yan~ees got
three runs out of two R.oCine errors
and Casey T.oylor's lielder\ -chcnce
grounder
For Racme. Moke Rou'h .mJ Cole
Bro11 n comhmcd to ''"k" out nme.
walk "x and 'urren&lt;kr two hots.
wh1ch went to Kyle Burnell (2-4)
Burnell and N1d Crafl combmed
to stroke out five aod walk two
The Marlms' holler\ were Bass (22, mcludmg a two-run homer m the
second), Phollips. Craog Randolph
(both 2-31. Duslln Bronegar. Brown
and Derek Teaford (all 1-3)

.-·
TULLOH SCORES- The New Haven Reds' Tony Tulloh scores In
front of Bidwell pitcher Donnie Johnson, who walls for the throw from
catcher Brandon Coe In the first Inning of Monday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament second-round game, which the Reds won 96 to head Into the quarterfinals opposhe the Gallipolis Reds. (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

TAKES SWING- Meigs' Adam Cumings takes a swing during Monday's Eighth District American Legion game at Pickerington, where
the hosts survived his eighth-Inning grand slam to win 10-5. (OVP
photo by Dave Harris)

Pickerington rolls
over Meigs 10-5
in tournament play
baseball

Mead\ gol three more runs oul of

New Haven
I01 050=Y-1-S
B1d11ell I
J()()-32Q--6-5-3
WP- Knapp 1m relief ol Faulk)
LP- Johnson
CONGRATULATED by home plate umpire Rick Smith for his secMarlins 9, Yunkl-es 3
ond-Inning two-run homer In Monday night's Kyger Creek Little
Afler lorcmg lhe G.ill•pol" Y.onLeague Tournament second-round game was the Racine Marlins' Jor·
kees 10 strand two runnel\ 111 sconn~:._ lnni.o&amp; lll.lllb
dan Bass. Bass· shot helped the Marlins beat tht G;~lllpolls Yankees
po&lt;~llon 10 the top of the first . the - P P -Hardware
100-00= 1-2-1 9·3 and move into the quarterfinal round. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Rac10e Marl1ns used three Juts (lor- Mead\ Body Shop 51~-13=12-6-2 Osborne)
dan Ba"' smgle Joey l'hillips' douWP- B Boneculler
Home at 6 p m . Poont Pleasant land vs Oak H1ll Bob's Sub Shop al
ble .md Derek Teaford\ two-mn
LP- Reynolds
Home Care Medoc.ol vs Green II at 7 30 p m
double! helped them 'e&lt;ne four run'
-•Thursday: G,liilpol" Reds vs
In thw hall ol the liN
Here "the schedule nf' upcomong 7 30 p m
Wednesday: M.oson VFW vs
New Haven Reds at 6 p m . Racone
Two Y.mkel! errors. one hcforc the
contests
aforemenunncd h1h .md one ,oiler.
Today: Pomeroy ln&lt;h,ons vs Pnonl N.IIIOil\\ 1de Insurance at 6 p m , Rut- vs Mead's Body Shop at 7 30 p m
helped the M.orhn' "ore the other Pleasant Deal &amp; Brown Funeral

Thome, Colon help Tribe top Sox 5-4
"It's hard to say

II h)'

we''e st:-ugsaod "W~ \ e JUs I got
thongs out We've go1
v. hat 'v\ e' \ e gol ht:re
b.1111e .ond helie,·e m

pens hehmd me." N,l\',orro s:ud "I ve
gled " Thome
got to go out and tho ow stuke s .md do
to lr) :ond nde
my JOb"
Wuh one nul 1n the Clcl el,md
to get hack to
We''e got to
third Belle drnpped Kenny Lollnn's
ourselves "
fly b.oll for .olhoee-base error Lofton
scored on Omar Y1zqt1el\; ....1cnlice
Bell~ w·" 1111en1 um.li I) 11 . ol~cd 111
the e1ghth 11 11h ,, runnel ,,, second
Jl y IO make II 1-0
"It's not \ery oflen 1\C w,1lk the
Rohen M.och.1do douhled "nh
go-ahe,od run on base." Clevel,md one out m the Clucago thml .md
manager Mok~ H.~rgro\C s.nd
adv,mced to third on R.l) Dlllh.1m's
B.onolo Colon II O-S) unp1m ed to smgle Moke Can~SO smgled lo lcll .
7-2 O\er hos l,osl 10 starts . .ollowmg sconng Mach.odo Durh.un scored on
four runs and seven hns m 7 1/3 a throwong error hy lei I lieldcr R1 "'"
mmngs Moke Jac~son p11ched the Giles In go .ohead "- 1 rr.lllk ll1001.1S
mnth lor h1" ~:!nd .... tve
then hn hiS 17th home rnn to m:oke 11
J.ume N.ov.orrn tH-11 1 10nk lhe 3-1
loss gl\ mg up live runs - three
The lndoans took a 4-3 lead m the
el1 rned - and s1x 1111\ 111 o,;cven lourth on Thome's homer, Maok
onnmgs The Wh11e Sox m.ule two Wh1ten's RBI double .md Dav1d
error... 1ncludm~ one by N.t\ arm Hl Bell's run-scorong groumloul
the lnunh
Trav" Fryman hll an RBl double
·I don't worry ,ohnut "h.11 h.1p- m the liflh

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Pockenngton took 01J1 .mt.oge of
two bag mmngs. and dd('alcd M~1~s
10-5 1n the f1rs1 rnund of the Amencan Legoon Eoghth DIStnct tournumenl Mond.oy e\'CuiOg .11 PockcomgIOn
It was a scoreless g.une hcmhng.
mto the founh mmng, "hen the hosl
team scored lour n1ns to go on top 40 Post 281 tonk adv,ontage of a
Myel\ ''"gle. a \\',Ilk to Wetm01e, .1
fielders cho1ce ,, Single hy Murr a
walk. and,, Sch1IIC1 Single to 1.oke the
lead
P1ckenngton .added .1nother run 1n
the s1x1h mnmg on,, w.1lk and huck
to-hack &lt;~ogles h} Sch1ller .md !'olea to oncrease the lead In ~-0
Meogs scored " ''"gle 11111 10 the
SC\'enth mnml:! to pull to Wlthm 5-1
Corey Wolhams "o~lked ,md c,ome
omo score on,, RenJI M,mucl douhle
But P1ckenngtnn took .1dv.m1.1ge
of another hag annmg to pull away 1n
the sevenlh Post 281 scored live nms
off a smgle by V.m Schepen Four
walks and a p.ur ol Me1gs errors to
go on lop 10-1
But Me1~s came h:ock m the top ol
the e1ghth to have,, h1g onmng ot ols
own Brad Davenpm1 . P,11 M.onm and
Jerem1ah Bentley .111 Singled to st,lll

Sports workshop
scheduled Aug. 3
A slate cenohed tour hour coaches workshop 1n sports med1C10e will
be hdd at Waterford H1gh School on
Monday, August 3
The workshop w1ll be lrom6to 10
p m The workshop woll be conducted by speakers from Spon Talks,
Ohm's largest spons methcme workshop prov1der They will be bnngong
some ol the latest trammg lechni&lt;JUes used by Olympic, pmlesSional, and colleg1a1e athletes and 'hare
some ol the hogh-tech lraonong procedures that helped many compelotors
wm the gold
For funher mformaloon and preregostrauon. those mterested may the
athletoc department at 984-4892.

the mnmg ;md ln.od the h,"e' One
out Iiiier, Ad.om Cumong' lmed ,, shm
th.ll hooked 01round the foul pole
do11n the left licld hne lor a gr.md
slilm home run Th.ol &lt;'Ill the P•dermgton le.1d 10 HI- ~
Me1gs was un.ohlc lo get any clo'er and P1denngtnn h.lll ,,d, .meed
lolhe 1\'lnller, hr.K:kel nn Wednesd,oy
Smurr was Ihe v. 11111111g pilL her lor
wuh help from Mctne lor Pll·kermgton The two comhmcd to gov~ up
eoght h11s stnke out 'even .md w.olk
two Scholler h.ulthrce Single' to le.od
the w1nn~rs Wet more ,mtl Smurr
adJed two Singles each
Jerem101h Bemley w." the l"'mg
pllcher for Me1gs BenJ• M.muel
pilched the fin.1l mmng The lwo
gal'e up 10 hus. smock nut three o~nd
w.,lked seven Davenpon h01d two
smgle" In lead Me1g" Cumm~s
,oddcd h" home run, Man1n. Ad.om
w,u,,oms. Bentley. Socw.m. M.onuel
and Kyle Norns ad&lt;kd Singles
Meogs will pl.ty G,,llopohs 111 the
loser's br.ockel at Athen'' D.ollon
Focld at 5 30 p m tod,oy G.olhpol"
lost a 10-mnong ~ - 1 he.ut-hre.1kcr to
Wellston 10 fi"t -rnund plo~y Monday
n1ght
P1ckenngton \1 1ll pl.oy At hen,,,, 4) wmner over Glous1e1 on 'Wednesday .11 5 30 ill Athen' Hogh School's
R.mnow FoeiJ O.ok Hill edged L og.m
6-S m .tnnther r1rst round g.1me
lnniJu: MHb
Me1gs
000-000-140=5-H-4
Pockerongton OIXJ-~01 - SOx= 10- 10-1
Batteries
Mcogs Jcrenu.oh B&lt;nlll'). Benp
M.muel (L-9) and Ad,un Cunungs.
Bust&lt;'l Pen ox tY 1
Poc~enngton Smurr ( W1. Metne
(.~I and Myers

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our stai1SI1cs show that mature
dnvers and home owners have
fewer and less costly tosses
than other age groups So 1t's
only fall to charge you less for
your msurance Insure your
home and car w•lh us and save
even more w1th our spec1al
mulli-,&gt;oli•cy discounts

.

Bret Boone's ny ball to end the seventh
"He had oulslandmg slull. " Red'
manager Jack McKeon ,,ud "He
made our hillel' look Sick II was all
Dreofon tomght He had our hollers
ued m knots."
Onconna11 stancr SIC\ e Pams (I I) allowed two runs and five hns on
6 2/3 mnongs and got some defenSive
help from Boone to keep the game
scoreless m the thord The All-Star
second baseman robbed W1llon Guerrero of a bloop smgle and an RBI
woth a c~rcus catch on shon roght

But 10 the seventh. roo~1e Adnan
Behre and Charles Johnson followed
an lnlenllon,ol walk to Mall Luke 11 1lh
RBI songles to help end the Reds' 10game road wonmng strca~ - !hell
longeSI smce a I ~-g.ome &lt;!retch m
1957
Mondes1 led off the 11 mnmg rally wtth .1 'itngle ~md .utvanced to second nn a one-out r,eJ,Ids chooce
McKeon ordered an mtentoonal walk
to Luke. who hot three home runs durmg the Dodge"' weekend senes at
St Loms. but the plan backfired
when Beltre and Johnson follow•d
wnh smgles to chase Pams

By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK (API- The sc hedule called for a doubleheader Still.
the Detrml Togers and New Yor~ Y.mkees fell like they'd pl01yed ,, mple1
he.oder
It took 26 mnmgs. 770 p11ches .md
more than 01ne hours from start to
linosh Monday 111gh1 And when 11
was aH done, the T1gers .ond Y.on~ees
were all even
They sphl, wolh De1r011 wmnmg
the opener 4-3 m 17 mmngs and New
York commg back for a 4-3 VIctory
m a second game that truly was a
mghtcap
"We should get a good mght\
sleep after IhiS one ... saod Y.on~ees
outfielder P.1111 O'Neoll who played

Pirates 3, Mets I
At New York. Francisco Cordova
(8-8) and Ricardo Rincon combmed
on a live-hiller aod Aramos Ram1rez
hoi a two-run h(lmer as Poi!Sburgh
won 11s fourth straoghl
The Pirates won for JUsllhe th1rd
lome 1n the11 last 15 games
Cordova allowed five hils m 6 2/3
onmngs. aod Rmcon. who combmed
wllh Cordova 10 no-hoi Houston last
July, pitched 2 1/3 perfect mnmgs for
hi&lt; lith save
Masato Yosh11 (4-6) os wmless
smce May 27 and 0-5'" hos last 10
s1arts

Astros 10, Roc:kles 9
At Houston. Tim Bogar's RBI smgle m the mnth mmng off Dave Veres
10- 1) helped Houston hold on for ols
fourth strmghl wm after blowmg a
seven-run lead
Carl Everell went 4-lor-5 w11h
three RBis and four nms scored for

the A,stros. who toed a season-hogh
wllh IR hots
The Rockoes tra1led 8- 1 111 the fifth
mmng before rally10g to ue 11 9-9 on
the mnlhon Dante Bochelle'stwo-run
homer Colorado has lost sox'" a row
and nme str01ght on 1he road
Doug Henry (6-2) won des pole
allowmg B1cheue\ 14th homer
Giants 5, Diamondbacks 3
AI San Francosco J T Snow hll a
two-run homer 10 the e1ghth mmng a'
the G1ants ended a four-g.ome losmg
stre.ok
Ramon Manmez. a late-mnmg
replacement for second haseman lefT
Kent, led off the e1ghth wolh a "ngle
ofT Bobby ChoUinard (0-1) Roch
Aunha sacn fice&lt;l hefore Snow hoi hos
lith homer
Roch Rodnguez (2 -0) potched a
h11less mnmg and Rohb Nen got three
outs for hiS 27th save

nunute th.m Toronto ami B.illlmore
took on June 19
The sewnd g.ome w," played 10 a
relat1 vely bnsk 2 45 Then ag,un.the
whole e\enmg l,osled too Inn~ for
Togers leadoll man Bn.m Humer
Hunter went 0-for- 11 111 the two
games. m.okmg lhe first and last outs
ol1he marathon 'essoon He bonko the
mdJOf lea~ue m.uk lor most .1t·tMts
ll'lthout a h11 10 a doubkhe,odcr Washmgton's Bnb Saverone was the
last to go 12 h.1ck 10 1961\
In the only other AL game. Cb eland heal Chocago S-4
Only a lew thousand fans were 10
lhe stands when the douhlche,1der
began at 4 06 p.m. M.my fans from
the announced crowd of 16.285 were

every mnmg
The final out came .11 I 17 a m
EDT. long afler games ,11 Los Angeles and San FranCISCO had ended
Because the Tigers were mnkmg
theor limollnp to Yan~ee Stad1um.the
AL curfew of I a m was wa~ved
"It would''e been mce to h.ove
dealt wuh th.ll first game ,, hule
longer... Togers manager Buddy Bell
sa1d "But you move on It 's" long
season
Play10g on a muggy mghl w1th a
1emperature 10 the 80s. Joe Rand,o's
RBI smgle woth two outs m the 17th
ended the longest game tor both
teams s10ce 1988. It took 5 hours. 50
mmutes and was the lengthiest g,tme
10 the mators thiS season. one more

already gone by the lime the second
g.ome st.orted at Ill 3~ p m
Not smce Sept II . 19HH "hen the
Y.onkees beat DetrOit 5-4 m 18
mmngs. h.od eolher cluh pl.l) ed so
long Thos g.ome m.otchcd the longest
m mnmgs thiS year 10 the maJOrsToronto and Flonda needed 17
mmngs on June R.md S,m Fr.1nct~co
and St Loons tonk 17 on M.oy 24
The Y.onkees had pl ent) of
ch.mce.., le.tv Jng. ~~runner' on h.1se
They Jell the ha,es lo:llled 111 the
eoghth, IOih, l"th ,mJ 15th ,ulll \\ere
hllless 10 lheor last 16 ,ot-h.l" "llh

Both learns ran through the11
entue hullpen' Detrnol employed ~0
players 0\ or.oll.omllhe Y.mkees used
18
"I told the guy' tl1.11 tf the g.unc
I.ISted unlll n11d1ught. the) were all
elig1hle agam." Torre s.11d · A cou ple of Ihem hll on 11 "
Ttw••uiJ the end olth.tlm.u.llhon
even the stadoum staff seemed
fa11gued When A I Sager reheved
for Detrootmthe 16th . the scorebo.11d
nashed "Now Potchmg - Armando
Ben11ez" - a miStaken reference to
the Baltimore potcher
runners m sconng pos111on
Yankees reliever&lt; had rellred 15
" How many gu}s d1d we lt:.l\ c on
slra1gh1 bailers before LuiS Gonzalez
base. 326"" Y.onkees m.m.1ge• Joe Singled w1th one outuolhe 17th Paul
Torre sa11l
Bako smgled wolh two out&lt; and

Randa smgled 10 cemer
Sager (3-1 ). the e1ghth Togers
p11cher. w." the wmner a day after
bemg called back up from the nunors
"Sag was JUS! gomg 10 go forever. no maller how long 11 I.!Sled... Bell
S.11d
Bako. a rook1e took over ,u catcher 1n the fifth mnmg when Raul
Casanova lllJUred hiS h.omstrmg
Bako wound up catchmg 21 mnmgs
"M,oybe he w,os JUst gomg on
fume s," Bell ,,ud "The k1d showed
everybody somethong tomght "
Darren Holmes (0-3).1he sevemh
Yankees p11cher. took the loss
In the second g.ome, Hodeko lr.1bu
(9-3) beat the T1gers for the third lime
thiS season

Oakland Raiders, Woodson approve six-year, $14.5M contract
By ANNE M. PETERSON
ALAMEDA. Calif. (APJ - The
Oakland Raoders sogned HeiSman
Trophy wmner Charles Woodson.
the or top p1ck m thiS year's draft,Just
a day before openong tra1n1ng camp

Woodson w1ll report on lime
tonoghtlo camp m Napa. Cal1f HIS
forst pracllce will be Wednesday
Nellher the Raoders nor Woodson's agent, Carl Poston, would diScuss tenns of the contract on Monday,

tomghl
- "I told my agent when we first
talked !hall dodn 't wantlo be a holdout," smd Woodson. a cornerback out
of Mochogan and the lourth overall
pock 10 the draft

although both sodes confirmed 11
mcluded a Slgnmg bonus. ESPN
reported the sox-year deal was worth
$14.5 mdhon. wllh an $8 molhon
sognmg bonus
Woodson, an Ohoo hogh sc hool

Mercury cruise to 88-67 win over Monarchs
By BOB BAUM
PHOENIX (AP) -After a sputtenng start.the PhoeniX Mercury d1d
what was expected to the Sacmmen10 Monarchs. Now bnog on Houston
The Mercury scored 57 secondhalf po1nt' Monday mghtto beat lowly Sacramento 88-67 in a tuneup for
tomght's game against the Houston
Comets. Phoemx ( 12-4) "the only
team to beat Houston all season

The Comets (16-1) brong an 11game wmmng strea~ mto Amenca
West Arena. where the ever-enthusoasuc crowd should be louder than

But, T1mms added quockly, if the
Mercury plays the way 11 dod most of
the first half agamst Sacramento,
"we'll be down by 30 ~~ halftome"
After Sacramento bmll an eoghtpoml lead and sllll was up 33-31 at
the break. Phoemx coach Cheryl
M11ler saod she dodn 't need to go on
a tirade on the locker room. Normally stOIC assostanl coach Kathy Anderson dod 11 for her

ever

''I'm not scared of Houston ar
all," Mercury poml guard Mochele
Tomms saod "I thmk we'ne the one
team that can match up woth Houston,
and our last w10 agamstthem wasn't
a nuke "

"She went crazy m the locker
room." M1ller saod · I wa~ the good
cop for a change "
The second half was a blowout
Jcnmler Gollom snapped out of an
early-game shootong slump to score
16 pomts and Tomms toed her career
hogh wolh nme
tor PhoeniX
Brodgel Pellls scored I 8 and
Mochelle Gnfliths 14 for PhoenoK

a""''

standout who starred as a runmng
back. detensove back and k1ck returner at Fremont Ross. was the h1ghest
selectoon so far thos year to come to
terms woth hi&lt; team Woodwn was
chosen as the 1994 Mr Football m
Ohoo by The Assocoated Press.
"There was a commument from
the very begmnong." Poston saod
'Charles made 11 clear and I made 11
clear that we wanted to gelthos deal
done before camp "
After marathon negotoallons over
the past several days. the two Sides
saod they preuy much came together
at a barbecue held by Rmdel\ head
coach Jon Gruden on Sunday noght
Woodson, who was woth hos famoly 10
Orlando, Fla . got 1he call to be on a
plane Monday mornmg

Wood son, 21 will be competmg
for the left cornerback JOb

Insure boih your home
and cur wilh Nai1onwtde~
•and get a special moneysaving di~counl ori your

Scoreboard

homeowners insurance AND
onolher money-saving

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ASSOCiate Agent
J•m Rogers &amp; Assoc•ales
3310l Hiland R~ S~ltll , PDIIIero~ OH 45769

Offic.-740-992-2318

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IUr&amp;nce

0 aga~nst Flonda thos season
Molwau~ee scored four runs m the
first mnmg agamst Lovan Hernandez
(7 -7 ). who took the mound hours
after auendmg a coun heanng on
allegatoons Ihal he phySically abused
hiS ex-g11lfnend She" seek10g a permanent restraming order agamsl hrm
Bumotz who was m a 3-for-16
slump before he homered Sunday. hoi
h1s 22nd home run wllh two outs m
the forst
Phillics 3, Exp&lt;IS I
At Montreal. Curt Sch1lhng
p1tched a live-h111er and struck out
mne to take over the maJor league
lead woth 198.
Scholhng (10-9), who also smgled
home Pholadelphta's lil\1 run off
Carlos Perez (7-10) on the lif1h.
walked one mhos maJor league-leadmg IOth complete game
The surgmg Pholhes have won 10
of 14

Yankees, Tigers capture wins in nine-hour doubleheader

Clm. t~n

Woman charges Belle with domestic battery

'

twoce agamsl Sean Casey before gellmg the call from ump11e H.11ry
Wendelstedl on a potch JUS! off the
plate
" I have nothmg agamsr anybody
10 that clubhouse," Shaw sa1d followmg hos 26th save and 1h11d smce
leavmg the Reds "They're my
froeods off the field. bu1 once 11 comes
down to compe1111on. ot 's me agamst
them. That's the way ot's got to be"
Dreofon (6-8) slmck out seven .md
was \O dommant that none of Los
Angel.-' outfielders recnnled a
putout until R.1ul MondeSI caught

hiS souvemr ,ow.oy from two greedy
Atlanta fans
"No. they saod they wouldn't
gove 11 up." Tapano saod "They
wanted a nogho to Chocago and free
11ckets to a Cubs game. or somethmg
hke that ..
It was the first grand slam by a
Cubs pllcher smce 1972. when Bun
Hooton hll one agamstthe New York
Mets and the first by a maJor league
polcher smce 1996. when St Loous'
Donm'an Oshorne h1t one ag.unst San
Doe go
Elsewhere mthe 'NL, II was · Mol waukee 5. Flor1da 3. Pholadelphoa 3,
Montreal I, Ponshurgh J. New York
I. Houston 10, Colorado 9. and San
Francosco 5. Anzona 3
Bnwers S, Marlim 3
AI M1am1. Jernmy BurnotL hit a
three-run hnmer ,md Scnu K.11l (R-4 1
allo" ed no earned runs m se\ en
mmngs '" M•lw,oukee •mnrmed to K-

wuhm 18 homers of
matchmg Mans' record of 61 home!\
By TOM WITHERS
10 a season. wenl4-for-4 and extendAP Sports Writer
ed hiS record for homers hy the end
Mark McGw11e got a hllle closer of July w11h a two-run shot 10 the
to Roger Man&lt; So dod Kevm T.opan1
liflh
McGw~re hoi hiS maJor leagueThe 458-foot shot landed 1n the
leadmg 43rd homer Monday noght. second deck ,md ga'e McG111re a
tymg the C.ordonals' record for share of the cluh record set hy Johnhomers 10 a season as St LouiS rout- ny MIZC Ill 1940
ed the Padre&lt; 11- I at S.on D1ego
After Mark Langston {3-3)
And whole homers are nearly an allowed Ray Lankford's smgle le.odeveryday occurrence for McGw11e. mg off the filth. Bro.m Boehnnger
Tapam gollo experoence seemg a b.oll came on to face McGw11e. He threw
he hot sao I over the \\all for the first a 2-1 pitch ro~hl down the nuddle and
lime 10 his hfe
McGw1re muscled 11 out
And the Ch1c.ogn Cuh' p11cher d1d
" II was a pretty cool thong,"
11 m style wolh ,, grand sl.om. leadong McGw11e saod "I was sollmg on the
the Cubs to an 11-4 voctol} .11 Atlanl,l
p11ch and got .ohold of 11 When you
"Th:ll s the fir&lt;t one over the an1u:1pnte and g.el a good swlllf! on 11.
fence." sa1d Tapam. who grew up m you can dn\e 11 a long \\,1)'"
Escanaba. Moch ·we h.1d a lot of
Follow10g hos molesU&gt;ne 1n homer
snow. so there weren't ,, lot of m Atlanta. T.op.ml was unable to gel

~lrl\11

and released late Sund.1y alter posl mg $100 h.ul
"Alben ,,nJ there" no \al111i1y to
the charge, 'Ron Schue leo. the Wh11e
Sox genernl man,tg.er. o,;,ud m ,, st.ttemenl "Based on that •nlorm.otonn.
the org:m17.1110n woll not 1.1~ e .my
act10n .11 th1s lime "
The 11mmg of Belle's arre~l couldn't be worse for both hom and the
White Sox He's been on a hot streak
and was selected the AL's Player of
the Week on Monday for the second
stra~ghl week
The White Sox. who have struggled all season despole havmg Belle,
Frank Thomas aod Robm Ventura,
were finally winning some games.
too.
"Life's nor perfect, bur you stoll
have 10 come in and do your job,"
satd Ventura, one of the few Sox
players willing to talk about Belle's
am:st.
"There's nothing we can do," he
said.

works out for both teams"
Shaw has re11red 18 of the first 20
bailers he ha&lt; faced since JOinmg Los
Angeles- not mcludmg the All-Star
game. whe~&gt;he ma&lt;fe hiS first appearance 10 a Dodgers uno form
The nght-hander kept the hall
away from pmch luuer Melvm
Noeves and threw hom a spin-finger
thai he swung nver for the first out
Reggoe Sandel\ wa' loolmg for a
shder late 10 the count and Sh01w surpnsed h1m 11 llh ,, fasth,oll nghl down
the m1ddle th,ll he took for .1 th1rd
stnke Then Sh;~w pmnted the corner

McGw~re

\\'tl&gt;1tm Omsmn

on the Slluatoon at hand ..
dod not reSist when police .omwd .ond
By NANCY ARMOUR
Bur he seemed a little distracted arrested hom. Snon~s s.11d
CHICAGO (AP)- Alhen Belle.
He w.IS ch.orgecl Wllh domestiC
the bad boy of baseball . IS 1n trouble when he took the field ag.11n't the
_
b.111ery.
cnmm,ol d.om,oge 1o propeny
Cleveland
lnd'''"'·
hiS
old
team
HIS
agaon
Belle wa.&lt; charged wolh domestiC fieldmg error m the thord mnmg led and onterterong wlllr a repon of
ballery Monday and ordered to stay to Cleveland's first run. and he domestoc ballery. saod Bob Benaway from a woman who cla1ms the grounded out on hos first two al-b.lls pmm. a spokesman for the Cook
W11h Chocago fans cheenng h1m County slate's allorney The charges
Choc.1go Whole Sox outfielder hoi her
aod then npped her phone out of the - sogns hangmg over the left-lield are Class A mosdeme;mors wuh
wall read. "Sox Snved by the Belle" penaltoes of up to a year m Jill I and a
wall when she tned to call for help
$2.500 line for each count He" due
He was rele~ on a S3 000 so goa- and "Numher 8 Alben Belle "
Great" - Belle hit a solo homer '" back on coun Aug 10.
rune bond.
"Alben's assured me th.otlhere's
Though he amved at Comoskey the sixth mnmg. It was h" 29th home
Park late and mt~sed the team poctune run of 1~ season, and lith m 13 no men! to the charges brought
agamst hom here today He has full
because of the coun hearong. Belle games.
Cleveland won 5-4
confidence on the legal system and
didn't -m upset. Hi~ surline« "
"'I apprecoale the support of the
we're confident that he ·s going to he
legendary. but he sal and played cards
vmdicated m this maller, .. Nock
with Jeff Abbott and Ray Durham Chocago fans They were great to me
tonight
...
Belle
saod
m
a
statement
Zagotta, Belle'~ allorney. told
while ~ milled about hom m
released by the Wh1te Sox He
repone~'&lt;. dechn10g to answer que&lt;!.he clubhouse
tiOm
"'Albert's a guy IO'ho's had a lot of dec:hned to speak with reponers
Belle allegedly struck Srephanoe
Belle and Bugusky had a "dttllng
different controven1es in his career.
Bugusky.
25.
and
damnged
a
door.
a
relallonshop."
Snooks said. but he
He knows what's ahead." White Sox
window
and
telephones
on
her
apanrefused 10 elaborate BuJlusky did not
IIWIIgft' Jerry Manuel said. "He
need medocal allention Belle mitoalseems to deal with these things well. menl in Alsip. a southwest suburb,
U.
David
Snooks
sa1d.
Belle
police
ly was charged woth simple banery
He seems to block !lull out and focus

Konerko swung allhe lil\1 porch and
grounded out to th11d after Wolhe
Greene doubled wllh two out 10 the
second for C10cmnato's only hoi
"They became a beller ream with
what they got. there's no questoon
about that," smd Konerko. h11110g
207 woth SIX homers and 20 RB!s 10
179 at-bats "They're delimtely a
beller team wolh Jeff Shaw than they
are 11 11h me "llmg on the bench ;md
geltmg spot playong lome
"But my commg over here helps
the Red' because of what the} 'retrymg to do lor the future So 11 really

chances·

NL roundup

American Legion

a throwmg error and a faoled p1doff
allempt at 1h1rd base dunng Nogel
Thompson\ at-bat
Brandon Boneculler whoffcd II.
walked two and polched a two-hiller
(H1ggmhotham and Malcolm Saunders 111med m 1-for-3 at-the-plate
effons) '" a complete-game effon
PPH staner Lee Reynolds combo ned
wolh Robboe Greenlee to stroke out
mne and walk II
Ken Durst's 3-for-4 hollmg mcluded three runs balled on. mcludong the
1wo-run douhle to leflthal h.olled the
game m the fiflh and gave Mead's the
11 -run mercy-rule wm Also gcllmg
hots for MBS were Motchell McChntock ( 1-2 ) and the Bonecullers (both
1-3)

CHICAGO tAP I - Alhen Belle He knows \\h;ot 's .ohead He seems to
deal wolh these thongs well He seems
was the focal poonl
On the ,,,me da) he 11 "' selected to block that out and locns on the SltAL player of 1he week for the second uatoon at hand "
Belle. who m.11le ,, coun .oppe.~r ­
&gt;traoght week. the ChK.o~n Wh11e Sox
outfie lder was charged "llh domes- ance hours bclore the game. w.1s
gre~ted by the s.1me miXed chorus ol
lie ballery He .ollegedly hoi a woman
and npped her phone from the wall boo-. :md cheer.., he h.\s 1eC~ I\ ed
"' she tned 10 c,oll for hdp Sunday throughout I he scn~s He &lt;IL-clincd In
t.olk with reporters
noghl
However he m.odc th• f'nllll\\ ong
Aller arriVIng late and m"""g the
te.om p1c1ure. Bell homerad f'or the st:otemenl thmu~h Wh11e Sox dneclith lime '" 11 games 111 the Wh11e tor of pubhc rel.lloons S~o11 Reo len
Sox , 5-4 '"" to the Cle' eland Indi - "I apprec~ook the suppoll o( the
ans on Mond.oy mght He also Choc.ogo fans They were gre.lllo me
dropred ·' n) h.oll for ·' lhree -hase tomghl "
Belle hll h" 291h homer of the
e-rror
season
10 the s1xth 1nmng.
He w.l... the 'a me gu) \\ ho come"
Jnn
Thome's
26oh homer. ,, le,ld1010 the ofloce every d.o) ... Choc,ogo
manoger Jerry M.onucl ,,nd "I don't off sholnllhe lmu1h . helpe&lt;llhe Indifeel he' ll ha'e a prohlcm dc.ohng wolh ans spht the lour-game -.en~\\ and wm
for JUSI the second t1me m "even
11 hal h,,, haprened
"A Ihen sa guy who·, had,, lol of games
d1fferen1 contro,·er,,e, 1n "''career

Shaw's relief pitching helps Dodgers shut out -Reds 2-0

McGwire's 43rd homer helps Cardinals whip Padres 13-1

-- .,

lnni.o&amp; lli1Jih

(M)J.O(}Cf:3-2-5
Galhpohs
620-10x=9-9-5
Racme
WP - Roush
LP- Burnell
Mead's 12
Point Pleasant Hard.,·are I
In thos all-Mason County noghtcap. Mead's Body Shop ehmmated
Pomt Pleasant Hardware's 1-0 lead
with ,, fove-run outbul\1 m the first
and kept sconng runs from then on
PPH scored the lil\1 run 10 the lil\1
when Brandon Hodge who walked.
scored r en Adam Hoggonhotham's
s10~le to nghl cemer
MBS erased the de fico! when
Trav1s Ephng scored on Brandon
Boneculler's infield songle Mead's
went ahead when Frank Boneculler
scored on a wold puch dunng Lee
Plants' at-bat

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

LOS ANGELES I API - Round
one Ill the Jeff Shaw -for-Paul Konerko trade went to the Los Angeles
Dodgers - by a w1de margm
Shaw potched the tina! mmng of a
comb10ed shutout wllh Darren
Dreofon on Monday mght aga10stthe
Cmcmnat1 Reds. stnkmg ou1 the
sode to secure a 2-0 voctory that
extended the Reds' los10g streak to
four games
Konerko, dealt to Cmcmna11 woth
left-hander Denms Reyes on July 4.
was 0-for 2 Wllh a walk In hiS first
at-bat agamst ""former teammates.

New Haven Reds,
Racine, Mead's
Body Shop win
Kyger Creek

Tuesday, July 21 , 1998

LMlthalll.ra~~ur

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Tuesday, July 21, 1998

.

By The Bend

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

110

Help Wanted
Attantlon c.rtllled Nunlng »

slsblnts: Ravenswood VIllage Is
now accepting appltcdtioos for full
time and part time positions . Paid

Page&amp;
Tuesday, July

21, 1998

Tim Russert:

Matt Drudge was appropriate
guest on 'Meet the Press'

PRESCHOOL ROOM 1 - From left, front row: Bobby Goode,
Cameron Robinson, Garrett Haptonstall. Back row: Valerie Hanstine -Instructor, Savannah Graham, Zachary Fink, Melinda Miller,
Bryan Burt, Bonnie Shea - Instructional Assistant. Not Pictured:
Clifford Boswell, D.J. Sellers, Kirsten Zornes.

~Damon

· PRIMARY CLASS - From left, front row: Scott Ram141Y, Chris
Edwards, Shelby Powell, Tracy Smith. Back row: Brad Donaldson, Chris Tackett, Diana Ash ·Instructional Alalatant, Luke Low·
ery, Derrick Trimmer, Jared Spencer - lnllruetor.

calls young actors 'morons'

NEW YORK (AP) - Before
·· "Good Will.·· there was ill will.
Man Damon. the Hollywood star
of "Good Will Hunting" and
···school Ties." blasted young actors
· a~ "morons" in a newly uneanhed 4year-old interview that was never

published.
"For the most part. young actors
in Hollywood are actors by defaull."
said the aclOr and Oscar-winning
writer. who wa~ then 23. "They were
a model la~t week. and they're an
actor this week .... They' re morons."
The interview is to be published in
the Aug. 4 first issue of Gear magazine. h took place when Damon was
·a movie wannabe searching for work.
"Those guys were out gelling
bombed every night," he said of the
stars of "The Three Musketeers."
· including Chris O'Donnell. "That's
not gonna help me as an actor. seeing how drunk I can get with (expletive) Charlie Sheen."
lmerviewer Jeff Gremillion. also
then 23. was a Columbia University
Graduate School of Journalism stu·

dent working on a class assignment.

Seeking a follow-up interview recently, Gremillion's letler and several

phone calls went unanswered.
Agenls for Damon, O'Donnell
and Sheen did not retum phone calls
seeking comment made by The Associated Press on Monday.
The magazine hits newsstands
Friday.
NEW YORK (AP)- Less than a
half-hour before the fatal car crash
that killed Princess Diana and Dodi
Fayed. Dodi's father urged his son to
spend the night at Jhe Ritz Hotel
rather than face the papar.lZli waiting
outside, Mohamed AI Fayed said.
"Twemy minutes later, I ~ot a call
from one of my security guys at the
hotel," AI Fayed told NBC's Katie
Kouric in an interview. "Shocking
night."
The interview is scheduled to air
tonight on "Dateline NBC." NBC
released a partial transcript Monday.
Diana. her boyfriend Dodi, and
driver Henri Paul, a Ritz employee.
were killed in the Aug. 31 crJSh in a
Paris traffic tunnel, shortly after leaving the hotel. Paul was drunk at the
time, and believed to have been driving very fast.
AI Faved said he believes there

was a conspiracy to kill Dodi and
Diana because people didn't want to
see an Egyptian stepfather for the
future king.
He said he ha~n 't been trying to
exaggerate the intensity of their rela-

privacy lawsuit. Baldwin was "ecstatic" over the outcome. said his auorney. Philip Weiss.
The tight broke out on Oct. 26.
1995. a~ Baldwin and his Oscar-winning wife. Kim Basinger, returned
tionship to increase his own stature. home from the hospital with their
"I don't need any more stature." said first child. daughter Ireland. Baldwin
the owner of the Ritz Hotel in Paris was acquiued of misdemeanor batand the British department store Har- t.ery in a 1996 trial.
rod~. "I don 'tlook for stature because
Zanger said he was "sorry it hapI told you I'm just an ordinary human pened on a day (that the actor) was
being. working cla~s."
bringing his baby home." He said he
has no plans to change his methods.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Alec
Baldwin mouthed "thank you" to
NEW YORK (AP)- Struggling
jurors who found that he shared the with the ratings and harsh critics.
blame with a celebrity photographer Magic Johnson brought in a new
for a 1995 scuffle outside the movie sidekick.
star's home.
Comedian Tommy Davidson. an
The panel on Monday ordered original cast member for "In Living
Baldwin to pay $6,000 in damages to Color." has been added to "The Magphotographer Alan Zanger. However. ic Hour."
since Zanger wa~ found 25 percent
Johnson's original sidekick. comeresponsible. his award will be dian Craig Shoemaker. wa~ tired after
reduced to $4.500. The photograph- publicly complaining that the show
er had sought $200.000 in lost was an embarrassment and "an
income.
absolute nightmare ...
Baldwin. the 40-year-old star of
Davidson also had roles in "Booty
"The Hunt for Red October." was Call" and "Ace Ventura II: When
awarded nothing in his invasion-of- Nature Calls."

PASADENA. Calif. (AP)- Tim
Russert said he ha' no regrets about
pulling Internet gossip columnist ·
Man Drudge on NBC's "Meet the
Press" after Drudge broke the Monica Lewinsky story.
Russert. speaking Monday to the
Television Critics Association, said
he would invite Drudge back if he
again became part of a story.
He was asked whether it was
sound journalism to give air time to
Drudge. whose online reports have
included stories that have proved
false.
"I make no apologies for pulling
Mall Drudge on a roundtable for people to see who he is. how he articulates things and what his tactics and
techniques are ... Russert said.
To act as if Drudge doesn't exist
is to "put yourself above the news."

plane. check into a hotel. go to
school or enter or leave the United
States without showing that card. You
may not be able to use Viagra or even
buy an aspirin without the federal
government being notified." Gellman
said.
Gellman wa.s reminded by fellow
panelist Dr. John R. Lumpkin. Illinois' public health director. that Congress•has mandated the assignmem of
identitiers.
Several witneS&gt;es testified that not
enough legal safeguards ex is! against
misuse of the identilier. Curren! privacy standards provide for up to
$250.0&lt;X&gt; in lines and I0 years in
prison for wrongful disclosure of
medical information.
But one witness. Dr. Christopher
G. Chute of the Mayo Foundation in
Rochester. Minn., said a unique
patient identitier - if properly set up
- might reduce the dangers of ·

LANSING. Mich. (AP)- Beanie
B1bies are no longer illegal immigrants.
The maker of the much sought. after toys. T}' Inc .• agreed Friday to
allow international travelers to bring
up to 30 of the stuffed animals into
the country. The previou~ limit was

..

one.

.. r m

glad they IOOSI'!ned their
grip 011 them." said U.S. Customs
Sppervisor Bill T1mothy 1n Port
Huron. where the Blue Water Bridge
links Michigan 10 Canadll. "II makes
ot¥ job ell!iier."
.
Unli(lhi~ woek. border mspectors
hlld 1o ~e:ll people ~IIIT)'Instoo many
Pfani" From Canadlllo ,lther rerum
11¥111 o• tum rhem over.

'

Customs has already seized thou&gt;ands of undeclared Beanie Babies.
They will probably be burned. said
Pat Jones. a Customs Service
spokesman in Washington.
"We don't want to throw them
away because people would be going
through our garbage ... .,he ~ aid .
But Chaise Miles. spokeswoman
for the Customs Service in Chicago.
said the a~ency is holding onto
seiteJ Beanies in hopes they can be
donated 10 charity.

September faces four·term Democratic incumbent Sen. Patrick Leahy.
who promotet.lthe movie when it wa.s
screened on Capitol Hill two years
ago.

regulations to protect it.

SACRAMENTO. Ca lif I APIGov. Pete Wilson ha.s come to lhe res·
cue of Caesar sa lad lovers.
Wilson signed legislation Monday
allowing restaurants to serve the sal·
ads with r:.~w eggs in the cJressiOg. it"
diners don' t object.
The bi II amends a statute that took
MONTPELIER . VL I API - He 's effect this year and set minimum
not the first movie star to get into cooking stant.lards for restaurant food.
Republican politics. but Fred Tullle
Raw eggs are a traditional part of
may have had beller preparation than Caesar salads. a mixtur~ of greens.
others.
grated cheese. anchovies. croutons
Tullle. a 79-year-old retired dairy and other ingredients.
farmer. played himself running for
""This half-baked law is now final·
Congress in the 1996 movie "Man ly cooked." said the bi.ll's sponsor.
With A Plan." a low-budget film with Assemblywoman Carole Migden . "I
plenty of Vermont humor. It became - am pleased that ahi'' bill whips up a
a local hit and is due to be broadcast recipe combining good policy and
nationally on PBS this fall .
good food as ingredients... •
On Monday. the movae" s producer and director. John O'Brien. tiled
official nominating papers pulling
Tuule in the race for the Republican
U.S. Senate nominatioQ.
O'Brien, Tunle's neighbor and
now campaign manager. said the
campaign would spend no more than
$16 in the GOP primary campaign
against Jack McMullen. a Ma&lt;sachusells millionaire who became a
Vermont resident lasl year.
"We thought (McMullen) was
tremendously unqualified ... Brien
said. "But Fred's tremendou·sly
unqualified. too. So we won'l ·hold
that against Mr. McMullen ...
McMullen was not available for
comment.
The winner of the GOP primary in

o·

ing doctor noticli!s he has large scars

but ha.s no idea where they came from
or if they are relevant.
The Health Insurance Portabi Iity
and Accountability Act says if Congress does not enact new legislation
for health-record privacy by Aug. 21.
1999. Health and Human Services
Secretary Donna Sbalala must issue

Winter resort finally has a funeral home
PINEHURST. N.C. !API- People who die in this winter resort vii ·
Iage tinally have a place lo conl1he.r
heels before being shipped to their
linal resting place.
For the lirst time si nce it was
founded in 1895. Pinehurst linally
• has a funeral home .
Jamie Boles. owner of Boles
Funeral Home. had triet.l since 19HY
to get pc:rmission from the villagl! to
open hi s business. But he had to bat·
tie a zoning ordinance. a Jisda1n lor
•,. death amonoe some residents and
lonQ· Ia&gt;ting legends.
~ There are no undertakers and no
cemeteries within the bounds of
Pinehurst. II seems that it"s against
the law to die around here ... wrote
L.A. Koch in his column in the Pine·
hurst Outlook newspaper on Feb. 29.
1936.
Allhough Boles Funeral Home is
enjoying a brisk business. the cemetery trade is dead. Pinehurst still does
not permit cemeteries.

breach of confidence in the present
system.
"If fairly and intelligently implemented. electronic patient records
using common identifiers might actually reduce risks to patient conlidentiality relative to what exists today in
our paper environmenl. which has no
ability for audit or usage trail. as it's
currently managed ... he said.
Several standard-selling groups
have endorsed the idea of identifiers.
including the American Nurses Association and the National A.sociation
for Prescription Drug Progmms.
ldentitiers could eliminate many
medical mix-ups between p:atients
with similar sounding names. for
example. proponents say.
Lumpkin said he could see their
potential value. when. for example. a
patient ends up in a hospital emergency room at 2 a.m . and the allend-

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hofl.lne
News HotUne

992-2156

c
I

a

s
s

..I

I

e

d
s

CRAFTY lADIES
SHOP

Goose clothing,
slates; saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items
Open II am - 6 pm

WICKS
HAULING

"WIIere Qrmlity Doe111 't Co1t More"

FREE ESTIMATES

005

Personals

Avon $8- $20 / nr . No Door · lo-Ooor. Easy Cash. Fun 1·800-361·
0466 tnG'SISirep

AnENTION LOVERS! II

1-90Q.M0.1120 •1255
S2.M

~min

/Must be 18yn +

SerY.U (619) Ms-M34

George Chapman of Gallipolis or
Columbus Of' anyone knowrng him.
have him contact Fred Beaver m
person in Pomeroy, Ohio. very 1m·

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Chester

''
'
''
'

who's
been intimately acquainled
with an optimist.

I

***
a poor man's credil

'

.'

***
Our friend the fisherman said

'
'

.
..

the one he caughl was too
small to bother wilh, so he
got a couple of guys to help
him throw it back in lhe lake.

2J1219241n

ponanl.

BACKHOE AND
DOZER SERVICE

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating
1·740·949·2015

20981mo.

DON'T FORGET:
Gallia County Fair
August 3·8
Mason County Fair
August 11·15
Meigs County Fair
Au ust 17·22

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

(614) 992-3838

•'

'

.
'.
.
'
'

On site custom sawing
with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill
WVCall

(304) 273·5860
Ohio Call

(740) 985·4287
•

.

Custom Homes

742-2211

Card of Thanks

•

'

REFRIGERATOR

POMEROY, OH.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•Auto air condition ing
·Heat pump
•Installation &amp; Service
S25 service call.
Don Smlh
37814 Peach fork Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
992-2735
529982 mos pd

LOtt&lt;i'S
COHSTRUaiOH
• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
.Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Call 614·843·5426

7l21

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding ·So"lt
·Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
·Stationary Docks
·Blown Insulation
·Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

'IHJ

COMPUTER
PERFORMANCE

!!~.~!~~~p

Contfllllt'r Shop"
Give us a call tor system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
POMEROY, OH
740-992·1135
4/13/98t mo. d.

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

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

7 40-985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8" , Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday

Howard L. Writesel

12/18/Hn _.L-----------------------~~7~1~~
110 Help Wanted

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB
Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at

6:00.
Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
5 pm-11 :30 pm
Weekdays
Sundays 3 pm-1 0 pm
6/23/ 1 mo. pd.

P/B Conlractors, Inc.

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or

740-698-7231
8/11/98 Un

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•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

• Bobcat Service
• Concrete
• Masonry
• General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates
No Job Too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

"NC'ed rt&gt;pair on any makt•?"
Washers
• Hot Water Heater
Ranges
• Freezers
Refrigerators
• Dishwashers
Dryer
Call Ken Young
(740) 985-3551
9$3 ' LPm, mo

Dl•count Prfc••

Bennett Supply
740 44111411
1311Sifford

SChool Ret.
Galllpolll, OH
'

.

good home only. 304-675-t 193.

home. 740·992·5755
Friendly Kittens . Litter Trained. To

Good Home Only' 740·446-9552.
740... 6·3897 .
Kittens to good home only, IIIIer

!rained. 740-1143-5268.
Adult polly cha1r. e• . cond . 304-

882·2436.
Three kittens to good home. one
black . two gray, 8 weeks old. 740985·3810.
.

5/26/ttn

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP
Candle Making
Supplies
•Wax •Scent ·Etc.
Refills
Variety of Gifts.
Open Tues.- Fri. 10 am -6 pm
Sat. 10 am-4 pm
Closed Sun. &amp; Mon.
SA 124. Minersville. OH

740·992·4559
"lis• 1beu1 eur Ul'ldlt putlu. "
15.'2,/H 1 mo pd .

pd.

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings
Free Estimates

Found On Graham School Road :
Husky Like Female PuW'f. Needs
Goocj Home. E•tremety Fnendly.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
lli Yard SeiH Mull
Be Paid In Actvence.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
lhe dey bolo,. the ld
11 to run. Sunday
edition · 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edlllon
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

Garage Sate Cenlenary At . 14t &amp;
L1ncoln Pike . Tu es .-Wed .. July

21·22. 9:am·Jpm

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Peld In
Advance . Deadline ; 1:OOpm the
day before the ed Is to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1:OOpm FrLday.
Garage sate· ra1n or Shine . Wed ·
nesda~ . Thursday. Friday. large
vanety of clothes and whatnots. &amp;
much more . t t /2 mile on Hysell

Run. 740·992·5275.
80
Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson AucHon Company.
lull l ime auctionAer . co mpiBte
auction
service .
L1 ce nsed
1166,0hio &amp; West Virginia . 304·

773·5785 Of 304·773-5447.
Wedemeyer's Au clion Servi~e .
Gallipolis. Ohio 740-379·2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

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

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS
Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
·Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickie Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
Backhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,
New Construction ,
Remodeling

992-7943
713198 1 mo.

9"

Rib Pattern
$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per sq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pint Construction
Custom Engineering

·

Call for Quote Today

•

BIDMLDMBBR

St. Rt.W

985-3301
Cheater

F1rst Three Days

FREE POPCORN AND
BALLOONS

Openong July 1st.
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and Used
We Buy· Sell and Trade
Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last
Come in and see us at

202 Eat M1ln St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·1074

••

BETSIMBREAD

WIJHA-AD

286·6875
B C.S W1!h Over 50 Locat1ons In
Sou!heastern Ohio. Currenuy Has
Openings In Ga111a And Me1gs
Couni18S
I) 27 .5 Hrs fWk 8 45 A.M ·7 15
PM . Sat. 10 A.M. ·1 P.M . Sun: 4

2) 34 Hrs Nlk 3:30 ·9 :30 PM . Tu

fW iTh: 5 ·11 P.M., Fn . 2 · 10 P.M
Sat (Galli&amp;) ·
3) 40 Hrs IWk 3:30 PM ~on ·
8·30 AM Sa t : Sleep·Over Re quired /OaytlfT\8 Hours Oft (Meigs)
4) 28 Hrs IWk 11 P.M . · 8 A.t-.4 .,

Mon ITu Nie&lt;J (Meigs)
We Are Searching For Compas ·
sionate Proless1onats With A
Team V1sion And A Desire To
Teach Personal And Community
Skills To Individuals W1th Mental
Relardalion . The Work Environ ment Is Informal And Rewardmg .
The Requ1remen1s Are : High
School D1ploma IG ED. Valid Driv.
er' s License . Three Years Good
Drlv1ng Experience And Ade quate Aut omobile ln suranc&amp;
Covers. 8 C.S. Oilers Comprehen·
51ve Trainmg In The Field 01 MAl
DD Inte rested Applicants Need
To Spec1ly Pos1li0n Of Int erest
And Seod Resume To·

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
SERVICES

2526
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture .
wil l buy one piece or co mplete
household. Osby Marlin , 740 ·

992·6576
Clean Lale M o de~ Cars Or
Trucks . 1990 Mode ls Or Newer.
Smith 8u1ck Pont1ac . 1900 Ea sl ·
ern Avenue. Galhpohs

J &amp; 0 Auto Part s 8uy 1ng
'1"/recked o r salvaged veh1cl es
304·773·5033
Standmg limber . top pnce s pa1d .
w1ll cut small or large tracks . call
after 8pm , 740-992-5050
Wanted To Buy Junk Auto's Any
COndition . 740-446-9853

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

$$$DANCERS WANTED$$$
Excelle nt opportunity lor the r1ghl
g1rl $500( • )per week earn1ng potential . No exp necessary. mu st
be at least 18 Catt 6t4·992·6387
(anytime ) or 304 -675 ·5955 aller
Bpm. Weclthru Sal
AVON I Al l Area s I Shuley

Spears, 304·675·1429
Arbors AI Galt ipotrs Is Currently
Accepting Applications For Stale
Tested Nursing Assistants . We
Are looking For Dependable Applicants . Benefits Are Ava•labte It
You Have Any Questions . Please
Contact Lisa Short At 740·446·
7112 . Applications Will Ba A.c·

Ct!&gt;ltd From 8 A.M To • :30 P.M.
Monday • Friday.

Arbors AI Gallipolis Is Currenlly
Accepting App11Ca11ons For AN's
We

AI• Looking

~5641).{)6()4

All Appl1ca110ns Must Be Posl ·
Marked By 7123198 Equal Oppor·
!unity Employer .
Babys111er 10 our ~ac1ne home lor
8 &amp; t 0 year old . vaned hour s.
l1ght housekeeping. musl have
dependable 1ranspor1a110n . ChriS·
11an pre/erred. call 740-949-2940
Career OpportuniUes
Knowledgeable And Expenenced
Individuals May Have An
Opponumty For The Fot1ow1ng
Pos1hons·
• Ultra SOund Tech (Gallipolis)
• Key Punch Operator (GaU1p0lls)
• MediCal Secretary (GaU1pohs)
• Medical lab Tech(Galhpohs)
• X·Ray Tech

Garage Sale : Tue s. Wed . Ram Or
Shine. 2 Miles East Of Porter On
554. Everything Must Gol

DUMP TRUCK

WBI'rE PAINTED STEEL
RODnNG AND SIDING

..

70

Antiques . top pnces pa1d . R1ver ·
me Anliques, Pomeroy, Oh1 0.
Rus s Moore owner . 740·992-

614-742-2138

•Spec1a1 D1scounts
•Hands On Tra1ntng
Call Toli ·Free 24 Hours . 1·888 -

P.O. eOX604

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Joseph Jacks

Avon Aepresentat l '#eS Needed·
GalliPOliS Area. BenefitS ·
•Earn Up To SOO!o On Sales
•Won.: From Home

JACKSON. OH

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

THE APPLIANCE MAN

*Roof Coatings
*VInyl Skirting
•water Heaters
*Door/Windows
*Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
*Fiberglaaa &amp; Wood
Sttpa

now serves
Friday, Saturday &amp; Sundayl
Mon. lhru Thurs. 11 am-11 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat. 7 am·1 am,
Sun. 9 am-8 pm
~:1 Dally J](8alkfast, lunch &amp; dinnet'

Brown puppy. 8wks . old . Catha
mixed , mate . friendly. Must go to

740-992-2068

7/16/1 mo

(Cut Out for Future Discount)

"Huge lnuntorf"

CALL OUR OFFIICI &amp;lr.'9t~t·U!i5

9 Adprabte Pupp ies Part Cothe .
To Good Home. 74Q-446-9762

Absolute Top Doll ar · All U.S. &amp;•I·
ver And Gold Com s. Prootset s.
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings. Pre - t930 U.S . Currency.
Sterling. Etc. AcqurSIIIOns Jewelry
· M.T.S. Com Shop , 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740-446·2842

10/25/96Jt1n

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

. BULLETIN BOARD
'700 colum~ Inch ,weekdays
1900
· ·inch Sundav

Adorable Klnens To G1veaway. 4

to good home. 740·446-7730

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

;:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::w:•:··~'

•••••I•

Giveaway

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

949-2168

Avon .- 58 ·$20 /Hr No Door To
Door. 'Bonuses' t ·800·296-0 t 39
ll"ldlslslrep.

·9 PM . Fn (Gall~ I

40

740·446·1366 .

CARPET
PLUS
Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

•
•
•
•

9 West SMlSOn. Athens
740-592·1842
Quality clothing and household
items . $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday lhru Saturday

9:lJ0.5:30

air conditioning

Remodeling

"Build
Tour
\
. Dream"

Get Your
Across
With ADally S.ntlael

•.

7120!98 I mo pel

M&amp;J

B.C.$., with over 50 locations in Southeastern
i ; Ohio, currently has openings in Gallia and Meigs
!: Counties:
1) 27.5 hrs/wk: 8:45am-7:15 pm, Sat.; 10 am-7 pm,
Sun.; 4-9 pm, Fri. {Gallla)
2) 34 hrs/wk: 3:30·9:30 pm, Tu/W.'Th; 5-11 pm, Frl;
2·1 0 pm, Sat. (Gallia)
3) 40 hrs/wk: 3:30pm Mon.; 8:30am Sat.; sleepover required/daytime hours o" (Meigs)
4) 28 hrs/wk : 11 pm-8 am , Mon/Tu/Wed (Meigs)
We
are
searching
lor
compassionate
professionals with a team vision and a desire to
teach personal and community skills to
Individuals with mental retardation. The work
environment is informal and rewarding. The
requirements are: high school diploma/GED, vaNd
driver's license, three years good driving
experience and adequate automobile Insurance
coverage. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training in
the field of MRIDD. Interested applicants need to
specify posilion of Interest and send resume to:
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
P.O. BOX604
Jackson, OH 4564()..06()4
All applications must be post-marked by 7/23/98.
Equal Opportunity Employer

Rutland Bottle Gas

MEIGS

4!24!98 !In

'

''

113 W. 2ND ST.

J;l

ONE MAN BAND

'

i

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

U

CALl

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 985·41 !10·
Free Estimates
6/19/981 mo. pd.

New To Vou Thrih Shoppe

·Residential

JIM'S

Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

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

'

CELLULAR PHONES

740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

LINDA'S
PAINTING

***
Pessimist: someone

.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Eighl week old kitten to good

BENNETI'S HEATING &amp;COOLING

7/22/tln

•

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

614·992·5479

(Ume Stone·
Low Rates)

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

to
keep your shirl on when
you're hot under the collar.

EOE

*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

Top Soil,

***
Tolerance is the ability

Overbrook Center,
333 Page Street, Middleport,
has full time and part time
LPN positions available for
all shifts. $500 sign-on
bonus for eligible
candidates. Please stop by
and fill out application if
Interested.
70.992-6472

•28 a mgpth
Heat Pumps Aa Low A• 138 a mgpth

Gravel, Sand,

.

Iii

Air Conditioners Aa Low As

985-4473

I want to thank
everyone that
helped with the
cleaning of my
home of 68 years,
and our farm
buildings, alter the
flood.
Thanks to Rev.
Bob Sanders for his
uplifting prayer and
Pastor Sharon
Hausman for her
prayer of concern.
I want to give
credH to my dog for
waking me and my
slater. We would
have drowned. Also
for the Chester Fire
Department for
. .
getting my
grandson off the
roof of my home.
God Bless all of
you;
LeotaMa11ar
Starling and Sandra
--.saer and family.

Garages • Replacement Windows

360° Communications

"Ea,y Oa•er rile Phone Bank Fina11cing"

Limestone,

One nice thing about inflation
- the money you haven't got
isn't worth as much as it used
to be.

MEIGS COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
The Meigs County Heallh Department is seeking
applicants for a permanent, full lime public health
Sanitarian. Applicants must be a registered Sanrtarian,
a Sanitarian-in-training, or eligible for Ohio
Registration as a Sanitarian, a Sanitarian in training.
Applicant must have a valid Ohio drivers license and
be a resident of the State of Ohio.
Applicants must have compuler skills and
experience. A Bachelor's degree with at least 45
quarter units or 30 semester unils in the general areas
of Biology, Physics, Geology, or mathematics al an
accredited college or university is necessary.
Applications may be obtained at lhe Meigs County
Health Department from 8:00 am to 4:00pm, Monday
through Friday.
The Meigs County Heallh Department is an equal
opportunity employer.
Only qualified applicants will be considered.

'!"~!!:.~

Racine, Ohio

Dave
Grate
of
Bottle
Gas

Rt. 124, Rulland, Oh.

985-3831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

• Til£ CUSSIFIOS
Alii TIIAT"I 10 ltlll

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

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

299 Third Street

By

On Sunday, July 5, Gabriel Perry Starcher celebrated his fifth binhday with a party at his home where
he and his friends soaked each other with water balloons and squirt
guns.
Attending the party were his parents, Eddie and Michele Slareher;
brother, Jacob; grandparents, George
and Judith Slareher and Mike and Joy
Zirkle; Jim, Lisa and Robert Moody;
Jim and Pam Durst; Lennie Haptonstall; Gaynell McAbee; Mary
Starcher; Susan, Kaleb and Jacob
Petry; Juanita Grueser; Carla, Cody
and Gavin Russell; Chris and Cole
Johnson; LaDomla and Chelsea
Stewart; Tracy and Jeremy Sayre;
Amy and Emma Perrin; and Ashle)
Ohlinger.

....

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•RI.ver Run Dog Food ...... $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed .........$9.75 100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed ....... $10.25100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Ufe Data
Hours: M-F 8-5:30; Sat. 8-12:00 Noon

vacation and holidays . II interest·
ed . pleaM apply in person Monday through Friday, 9am-.Cpm or
write Attn : Georgie Boso . R.N .,
0.0 N., 200 South Ritch1e A.ve ..
Ravenswood. WV 26164 . 304·
273-9385 . EOE . Genesis/Eldercare laCilily.

30 Announcements

The Light
Toach

Turns 5

--IJI

To

PASADENA. Calif. (AP)- Vet·Emmy presemers won't be chosen
emn actors and fresh faces - not just until after lhe nominations are
one person- will take turns playing announced Thursday morning.
host during the 50th anniversary
The four-hour Emmy ceremony
Emmy Awards .
will air Sept. 13 on NBC.
"We. want it to feel like the entire
television industry ha.s come together for this night." producer Don Mischer told the Television Critics Association on Monday.
Mischer noted an awards show
truism: When a ceremony goes
wrong, it's almost always because of
the host.
"There are very few people that
generally do that well." he said. citing Oscar host Billy Crystal a.s one of
the standouts.

GABRIEL STARCHER

,lip.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
,.._!_1
Garages , Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
1/o.
Commercial &amp; Residential
.[u
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
1/o.
Phone 740-992-3987
-.:•!
Free Estimates
4r,o.
_
lt11•
Owner: John Dean

50th Emmy ceremony will
be no-host, four-hour affair

Money:
card.

* JULY SPECIALS *

JD CONSTRUCTION

Russert said. noting that Drudge"s
Lewinsky SIOf)' drew 6 million "hits..
on the Web. ·
Allegations of a sex scandal
involving President Clinton and Ms.
Lewinsky first surfaced after Drudge
posted information that Newsweek
magazine had declined to report.
Brian Williams. anchorman for
NBC and cable's MSNBC. appeared
wilh Russert and was asked whether
"Dateline NBC" was stretching its
resources thin by going to five weekly hours
"How many of you are with a seven-day-a-week paper"'" he replied.
"Do you worry about your journalistic imegrity"'"
"Dateline" has an editorial staff of
211 and 16 on-air correspondents to
handle the load. Williams said.

Plan for health 10 numbers spur worries about loss of privacy
CHICAGO &lt;AP) - Patients. Ironic transfer of medical data.
A 17-member advisory panel is
please take a number - whether you
still considering what kind of identiwant one or not.
The government on Monday fier to recommend to the Department
began hearings on how to ""gn of Health and Human Services. It
· . every American a lifetime health-care. _ could be a fingerprint or DNA pauem
ID number - much like a Social - out testimony suggested a number
· Security number - that critics say on an ID card would be-most practiwill demolish privacy by opening cal.
But before testimony even began.
medical histories to insurers. employone commiuee member made clear
ers and othe..S.
When President Clinton signed his dislike for the idea.
"Once everyone "s required to use
the 1496 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act into law. a government-issued health identifisupporters celebrated its guarantee cation card. it may become impossithat anyone changing or losing a job ble for any American citizen to walk
would be able to get health insurance. down the street without being forced
even with a pre-existing medical to produce that card on demand by a
policeman." said Robert M. Gellman,
condition.
an
information policy consultant in
'·
Bu1 a lesser-known proVision of
Washington
.
· the lnw contains a requirement for an
"You
won
"t be able to use a cred''idc!nlilia " such as a number for
it
card
.
cash
a
check. tly on an aireach person to streamline the elec-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

For Hard Work·

lng Depondablt AppllconiS. Ex·
ptrlence In Long Term Care Is
Prtf8rrtd , But Not NICIIIITy.
Bentllls Art Avallablr. II You
Have Any Qu11t1ona, Plea11
Conlact Llu Short AI 7•0·4467112. Appllclllona Will Bt Ac·
ceplt&lt;l From 8 A.M. To 4:30 P.M.
l.londoy · ~'rid~¥

Employer Offers Ex.cettent
Benefits And Work
Emironment. Only Qualified
App~canls Need Apply
An Equal Opoortunily Employer
Send Resumes To
HumJn Relat1ons Oeparlment
90 Jackson P1ke ,
GallipoliS, OH 456 3t·t562
Careg1ver For Elde rly Women
Room . Board. Sa la ry. 740·367·

7463
Cosmetolog1st Needed Guar anteed Sa lary, Versus Comm1 S·
s10n . Pa 1d Vacal•on. Bene1 1ts
740-446·7267
DeteCtive - Pnvate Inve stigator
Trainees. Good Wages . 614 -523·

6458
OAIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:
CLASS A OTA:
Single Dnver, Late Model Ken ·
worlhs Wilh Reelers West Coas1
Carner

CLASS B OTA:
Team Stra•ght Truck. Late Model
Freig htllners Wtth Sleepers Must
Have A.r Bra ke End orseme nts
1300 Mrle RadiUS Home De liver ·

·r,s.

BOTH POS1T10NS _.
AI Least 25 Years Old
A! Least 2 Years Expenence
Good MVR
WeAkly Pay
H@flllh Insurance Ava1labte
W-;y k Welt With The PubliC

For More lnlormat10n Call 800·
437-t'764. Hrs 8.30 A.M . ·5 P.M
Easy Wurll.l Excellent Payl As·
semble Proauc ts At Home Call
To ll Free t·800·4'37·5566 bl
t 2170
Expenenced Auto Body Ma n Ex ·
celle nl Hours &amp; Pay. Apply At
larry·s Body Shop. 2046 A•Jd1son
P•ke. Galhpohs
Home Health Age ncy Otfenng lm·
meo1ate Part ·T1me Pos1t1ons . Full·
T1me PoSSi ble. To C NA " ~ &amp;
HHA "s. Many Extra s. W1lh Fu ll·
T1me Employment ONLY EX -

PEAIENCEO PERSONS NEED
APPLY . Must Be Available For
Weekend &amp; Holiday Hours Re ll ·
abte Tran sportatiOn A Mu s! May
P1ck·Up ApphcahOI'Is At 762 Sec·
ond Avenue , GallipOliS. Monday
Thru Fnday From 8 ·5 P.M Me1gs
County Ma~ Call 740 ·992 · 7900 .
Health Managemenl Nurs1ng
Serv1ces. Inc. Eq ua l OpportuMy
EmplO'jer
Jam Fu ller Brus h Co th1s sum ·
mer Get no· nsk 30 day free l r~al
otler. 304·675·1090 Date Wood
(Independent DIStributor)
Manager and maintenan ce lor
Pomer oy Ctifl Apartment s Now
accepting res umes , must have
sheriff and police rep ort . dru g
screen1ng requ1red . Send resume
to 245 Un1on Avenue . Pomeroy.
Oh~

45769 or call 740-992· 7772.

Part Or Full· Time Denial Hygienist Needed To Jom Our Dental
Teem . Please Submit Resumes
To Drs Smith &amp; Jorgenst~n 995
Jackson Pike, Suite 101 . Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .
ROCksprings AehabiUtation Center
is seeking a part .time 1111-l n
cook,dlshwasher. etc. Please apply In person: Aoct&lt;springs Rtha·
bilitatl on Center, 36759 Rock springs Road , Pomeroy, Ohio

•5769 . NO PHONE
PLEASE.

CALLS

Stft ei'Ki friendly place to work,
cashier and clerks lor all shifts.
Serd muma cJo The Deily Senti·
nel, P.O. Box 729·65, Pomeroy,
Ohio o151811.

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 21, 1998

Tuesday, July 21, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

1 Topeol7 Bourllllte1Z l:nd produCt
13 Ac:1or Lome 14At15 Sounclld lllte
Ilion
lls-poWo

Security Guards- must be able to

wort any shin rooomg most weekends Must have clean pollee
record. good work htstory, reliable
transportatton. valid duver's li-

ce nse . nome pnone and must
have black steel toe salety

3br house. ro l)OII. possible land
Llvtngston 's basement waterprooltng , all basement repatrs
done . free estimates . lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job elpert -

ence 304-ti/5·2145.

shoes Pay starts at $5 50 per

Rl J Helling I Cooling

hour 32·40 hours per week, Call

Free Estmates

740-669-2874 MoMay - FruJay ,
~ to&lt; appo•nn•&gt;&lt;ll

2-thr Emergency Service
17yrs Expenence
LOW9SI Rates In Town

Wanted Lady Compamon To
740·4-46·3' 19

Business
Training

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK UOT

3 bedroom. 1 bath , very clean ,
make a good starter nome. corner
of 6th &amp; Hooker Ill Middleport, lor
more tnlo call 740 -992 -2790,

YOU STARTED... But Your Em

$55.000

player May Demand A LitHe
More Let Us Keep You Learn•ng
Train At Night Take Adult Tramtng At Buckeye Httls Career Cen
ter l:.et Us Know Your Interested
Fall Regtstra!IOn !s Open In July
Stop In Or Call For A Brochure
740 -245 ·5 334 Ftnanctal Atd
Available To Those WM Qualify
Soulheastern Busmess College
Spnng Valley Plaza. 740 -446&lt;4367 . 1-800-21 4-0452. Accredited Member ACICS Reg 190-0512748

150

Schools
Instruction

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... But
Shorl On Sktlls? Ga1.n Skills In
One Year Of Tram1hg In The
Evemngs Buckeye Hills Career
Center Contmues In !Is 22nd
Year 01 Operat1on. Tra1n In Adult
Baste Educalton. GEO Testmg
Stte. Otflce Technology, Weldmg ,
lnduslflal Maintenance. Peace
Ofltce r /CorrectiOns. SUCCESS.
Auto Technology, Atr CondltiOnmg &amp; Heatmg , Farm Bustness
Planntng , Analysts. Computer
Specialist . Customer Centered .
Healthcare Techmctan {Formerly
Nurse A1de) . MAIDD, Pre - Employment Tratntng, And More
Call 740-245-5334 For Catalog
And InformatiOn

180 Wanted To Do
ANY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds tnmmed. mulchmg . flower beds . landscapmg ,
edgtng
mowtng .
stdewalk
etc . Free Est1mates Call 8111

304·675·71t2
Furmture repair, rehntsh and restorauon. also custom orders Ohto
Valley Reltnlshtng Shop. Larry
Phtlltps, 740-992-6576
Georges Por!able Sawmttl . don't
naul your rogs to the mill JUSt call
304-675-1957
Prolesstonal Tree Serv1ce, SlUmp
Removal . Free Esttmates' In
surance Btdwell Ohto 614 -388-

9648. 6t4·367-7010

3 Bedrooms. t - 112 Baths . Double
Garage . Famtly Room. Qak Doofs
&amp; Tum . 3 0 ,t.cres Rtver Front

Propeny 740·256·1667

Wan..ttng to Clean Houses Avatl ·
Flextble
able
lmmed•ately
Rates'Hourly. Weekly , Monthly
Call Ourmg Morntngs 740-446·

6961
Wt11 Do Any Yard Work Haulmg
Available For Brush Removal,
Tnmmmgs Unwanted Structures .

740-441 ·0682
W1t1 haul Junk or trash away $35/

piCkup load 304·615·5035
WUI haul junk or trash away $35/

pockup load 304·675-5035
W•ll stay mghts wtth elderly E• ·
penance &amp; references 304-675·

7961

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

"CIGAR DISTRIBUTORSHIP""
Earn Up To $150K + Pot Invest
From $4 500 NO Setttng 1 1-888 -

383·2442
!NOTICE'
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bustness with people you know . and
NOT to send money through the
matt until you have tnvest tgated
the offertng

HERSHEY VENDING
Earn $42K • /Yr 4 -6 Hrs /Wk
Aeq $6.995 tnv 1·800-467-0227
2-4 Hrs
Money Maker. Fully EQutpped .
Seii · Conta intd . Food Booth ,

$3.500 080 74'·245-0603
ltO!e 5ele-0Utl
Everything ntteded to open a
small grocery ,rare. If Interested.

call304·458·1¥7

3br, 2 lull baths , UA . LA ,
large krtchen, tully eqUipped.
large Ioyer . 2-car attached ga·
rage Galltpotrs Ferry 304-675·
1226

5 Bedrooms . 2 Full Baths New
Kttchen , Break last Nook . L R
Wtth Gas FP. 0 A . Oflrce. En
clo sed Back Porch . Ftnrshed
Basement With Laundry Room &amp;
112 Bath, Large Yard Wl\h Beautiful Landscaprng . Nrce Netghbor-

hood. Ctosa To Shopp"!J

$160000
NEEOTOSELl
Gall Fo1 Appomlmefll
740-446-9360 Days Of
74()-446-8427 Eventngs

MAKE OFFER
Attractr-.~e

one-floor nome tn Pomeroy Beautiful 1nteoor wtth 2
bedrooms. hvtng room. dtmng
room. built-tn kitChen, like oew
stove and refngerator, breakfast
nook leatunng corner what-not
shelves . bath and a ntce sun·
porch wllh w1ndows and screens
providtng a great vi8W ol the OhiO
River Carpeted. full basement,
plastered walls w1th crown moldrng , roomy closets wtlh full length
m1rrored doors , storm wtndows
and doors. fully Insulated 1OS Leg ron Terrace $39,000 Call 740-

992·5292 otter 5 p m.
Bnck house m Meadowbrook ,
Jbr. 2 bath. large eat-in k1tchen.
d1n1ng room . hardwood floors .
screened· tn porcn . lam11y room.
partral base ment, large storage
butlding. CIA natural gas fur-

nace. $65.000 304·675-1798
By Owner 3 B&amp;drooms. 2 Baths, 2
Ca r Garage Basement Wtth 2
Mobtle Homes. 740-446 -2851.
740-446-9862
Close To Galltpohs. J Bedrooms.
1 Bam . 2 Ca r Detacned Garage
And Dedi, 740-446-9664

CONDOMINIUM
LePiace . 215 Second Avenue. 2
Bedrooms. 2 Baths , Located
Downtown $79,000, 740 -4464299·
Double wtde 3br . 2 bath . only
$1 .325~o~n . $205 pe1 mont h

1·800-69t ·6777 .

For Sale By Owner 3br 2 bath.
vtnyl stded house tn Camp Con·
ley area $79.000 304-675-6258.
Four bedroom house . 6 112 acres. large garage wnh 1 beam. trolley and charn hors t. outbUIIdmg ,
.24K 24 cabm under rool on n 111.
cas h sale $12,500 or may take
older motor hOme on par11a1 trade .

740-992·2594
House . 2 Story Ouple~e . 1 Bed room Co llag e, 13 Ptne Street,
Galllpolrs Large lot ShOwn By
Appomtment . Pnce $96.000 740·

446-4999

In Middleport- new kitchen . oak
cabrnets . dtstlwasher. dtsposal,
heat pump, three bedrooms. bath
and 112. calt 74Q-992-3465
Loaded 28K80. Jbr. 2 112 bath
'Ntlh all Opl lOnS On ly $2,499
down, $362 per month Free arr &amp;
Sktrl 1·888·691 -67n
LocatiOn' Crew Ad , close to MHS.
contemporary style nouse. ltke
new. must sell. 1 acre lot. 1 112
baths. lam11y room. BuCk stove. all
Jenn-Atre appttances . 2-3 bed Joom garage decks. Trane H P .

$80.000 , 740 992·7292 or 304·
895·3490 belore 2 30pm
New 3 bedroom . two bath home.
78 acre . Hamsonvtlle area .
$54 .900 74()-742-3033
Prtme L oca tiOn 414 Third Ave
Gatt1pott&amp; Beaulllut newly constructed two story Colonral has 3
BR 2· 1128aths. LA. I FA Formal
Otn1ng Room w1th hardwood lloors.
Oak Doors &amp; Tnm Fireplace 1· 1/
2 car garage , Ehglbte lor talC
Abatement S169 900 1·304-273-

Free Brochure. ~820--678C

320 Mobile Homas
for Sale
MSummer SpectaiM
3br S199/mo free arr &amp; deltvery

Nhro, WV
lOC-755-5885

12.&amp;0 tra11tr. can be used lor offiCe trailer, $3,000 without atr condtttoner. S-4.000 With , 7-40-949·

2217

the Federal Fa1r HoustngAct
of 1968 whiCh makes 11 rllegal
to advert•se ~any preference.
limrtehon or drscnmtnatlon
based oo raee coJor reltgiOn.
sex tamthal Jtatus or natlQnal
Ol"tgin or ,ny mtentlon to
make any tucn preference ,
ltmllahon ~ dtscnmtnatlon •

121:60 With 1~x32 atklttion. 1 acre.
2 car gar&amp;Q~. newty remodeled rnstde &amp; o~lsjde Chester aru .
must see. J4p,OOO. call alter 5pm

14x70 3br $199 dow". f188 per
mo lree a11 ~ sl&lt;lrtlng HIOil-ti91 ·
6777.
14x70 MQb1t homt·15 muu
!rom PI PleaJant, 1 1 mltea from

F&lt;azlf" BonT.m· """'' nnancing
wllh $2.000 ~o"'" · II you have

bid Cfldh. o&lt; ro credit. """" will
fl"anoe monthly payment $3~0 .

304-!82·tl78.

18x80 31&gt;&lt;, 2 balh. $1 .325 clown.

szos. ptr mo. Fr" air &amp; skirt. 1·
888-691-8777

6 Room House In Oownt()Oin Gal·
ltpohs. No Pets, Reterences . Call
Between 8 :00 A .M -Noon . 740ApplicatiOns Now Stung ,t.ccept·
ed For House 816 Ma1n Street ,

746-888-0047

520

Sporting

Fo1tftre Cross Bow Oulvera Ar-

446-9818

or sell . R ivenne Antiques.
t ·5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM Buy
1124 E Main Stroel. on Rt. 124.
14,000 Local Gov"l &amp; pank Pome
Hours M T.W. 10:00
Repo·s Call 1·800·522·2730. X am toroy
s·oo pm _ Sunday t 00 to
1709.
6.00 p m 740·992·2526. Russ

1984. 2 bedroom , 1 batt'! , large
kitchen &amp; ltvmg room area .

16 .500. 740-949-7007
1990 Spruce Ridge t-4x70 moblle
home . very good conditiOn. 2
bedrooms. 1 &amp; 112 baths. washer
&amp; dryer. stove . refrtgerator, central a1r, 8x8 outside buHd1ng , 740-

Large three bedroom farm house,
carpeted. garage. $400 plus secunty depostt , also apartment ,

992-6582.

Mate Wants Female To Share 3
Bedroom Home, E~epenses Only
In Country. No inside Pets, Alco·
hoi. Drugs Or Games II Interest·
eel. 740-3118-8423 AltO! 6 PM

&amp; V1nyt , very Good Cond
388-842-4

740·

$275. 330-945-&lt;1505

Pomeroy- lou" bedroom. SIR. new·

ros. $125.740-446-2316

530

Antiques

Moor'e owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

·cooL DQWNt·
Central Alr ConditiOning. Free EstJmatest II You Don't Call Us, We
Both Lo&amp;et 740·446-6306. 1·800-

29t-0098

1995 Clayloo Larue Mobile Home.

ly di!C()(aled. HUD. no pets. small

1/3 carat. l1lUnd diamond SOiilllfe.

1&lt;4x70 3 Bedrooms. For-More tnlormatl()(l, 7-40-446-2921

yard , patto, depOSit , 7-40-992·

6886

1995 Clayton, 'an electnc, elceltent conditiOn . call Tom Anderson,

420 Mobil&amp; Homes

Stze 6, paid $800, wiU take $550,
Marquts weddtng sat 1/2 carat ,
sue 7, paid $1400. will take
$1250 ; wed.d1ng gown wtth w-all
size 7, paid $700 w111 take, $300.

740-992·3348 Aile&lt; Som.
1998 Close out sale . Save btg
$$$ 2 .3.4 .8edroom homes Tn State Homes. St Albans. WV

Caii1·80Q-948-5678

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. a1r
conditioned, $260·$300 , sewer,
water and trash mcluded. 740-

992·2167.

tst t1me buyers E ·Z hnancing, 2
or 3 bedrooms, around $200 per
month Call Credit Line 1-800·

948-5678
3 BR, 2bllthl, Home For Rent 1·

304-736-7295

70x14 Vlndale w1th 8x14 elten sron, two bed1oom, $4000, lor
more inlormatton call 740-992 ·

6589
Help save my cred rt, make 2
payments &amp; assume low monthly
payments W1JI pay to relocate .

CaiiJ04.755-7191 .
Huge 28x80 3BR. 1 112 bath
Sla&lt;llng al ONLY $39.999 Many
options avatlable

1·888 ·9 28 -

3426
Large selection of used homes 2
Of 3 bedrooms Starttng at $2995

Ou1ck delivery Call 740-385-

9621
3BA/2BA
Sel Up On Lot. Take Over Pymfs.
304· 736·7295
New 1998 141170 three bedroom
mcludes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes sktrttng, delule steps
and setup Only $187 .08 per
month wtth $1075 down Call 1·

800-837·3238
Bank Repo Only 3 Lett . 1·
304· 736-0735
New bank repos Only two !ell,
neve r lived tn Call 1·800-948-

5678.
New Doublewtde JBR , 2 batn
$1,325 Down A $205 per mo. 1-

2 bedroom

Tratler For Sate• 3 Bedrooms 1' 1/
2Baths Call740·268·0007
bedroom tratlers, $2500

I~~~~~~4~G-~99~2~-5~94~9~-­

home

m

Glenwood Ad 2&amp;3br mobile
home for rent $350 tn) JCW-562-

5840
Three bedroom mob1le home in
Pomeroy, no pets, 740-9S2·5858

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. lur·
ntshed and unfurnished. seetmly
depostl requtred. no pets . 740·

992·2218
2583

446·2957
2bdrm apt&amp;, total electflc, appliances lurn•shed. laundry roorn
lac1httes . close to school rn town
Applications avatlable at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740-992-

3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drtve
!rom $279 so $358 WaN( to shop
&amp; mov1es . Call 740·446·2568
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Brand New Apt Rto Grande
Avatlable Aug I st. All Unlttlltes·
Paid Walking Otstance To Cam-

pus. 74()-245-5100
Chrioty'o Faml~ Living
Apartmenll
Pomeroy/MtddlePOfl
Caii74Q-992·4~14

Monday through Saturday

9 OOam-9 OOpm
1·2·3 bedrooms . Stove / relng
a\latlable. uttltt1es and cable pa•d ,
HUO accepted Ch•ldren Welcome Ask lor Chnsty

Two 2 bedroom !ratters. 10~e 50 &amp;
12x65 , stove and relngerator,
gas. New ltma Ad . must move.
740-742·2800
Unbelie vable. new 14x80. no
payments alter lour years Call 1-

New Haven , 1br lurnrsheo apt
Deposit &amp; references 304-882·

800-948·5678

2566

Used smgte w1de. around $100
per month . Call 1-800-946-5676

Now Taking Apphcattons - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo. 740-446 ·

340 Business and

0006

Commerc•ai-OIIice or Reta tl, 87
M1ll St Middleport 1.450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Butlding 740·
992-6250 Acqutslllons (nell
door)

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Road . WV 304·675-7946
Butldrng tots , 2 (two ) 5 acres ,
Bashan "d at Mornmg Star owner llf'lanong 8% 74Q-992·5072

Lot lor sale- Gallipolis . 90K172
ntce netghborhood . qu1et . 740 446--4722
Racme- Dorcas/ Greenwood Ce·
metary Ad I Oak GrO\Ie Ad - 1 5 ·
11 acres. 740 ·992 -6542 01 740-

949·2499

360

One bedroom apartment tn Mtd·
dleport . all utlltttes paid , $100 de pos•t . $270 month , call 740-99.2 ·

7806 8am-5pm
River Bend Place now acceptmg
apphcaliOns lor HUO substdrzed
apts lor elderlylhandtcapped or
d1sabled people EOH 304-882 ·
312t or 304-882·3274
Twtn Rtvers Tower now accepllng
applrcattons lor 1br HUD subs•dtzed apt lor elderly and handi -

capped EOH 304·675·6679
Upsta irs Apartment . Close To
Grocery &amp; Downtown Galhpohs,
Reference &amp; Deposit 7 40 -446-

1158

450

Furnished
Rooms

Ctrc le Motel lowest Rates In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO,
Cmemax . Showflme &amp; D•sney
Weekly Rates. Or Monthly Rates .
Construct ion Workers Welcome
740·441 -5698 . 740-441-5167
Sleepmg rooms wtlh cook1ng
Also trarler space on rtver All
hook -up s Call alter 2 00 p m .

304· 773·5651 . Mason wv

Raal Estate
Wanted

Cash Pa1d For Land In Galha
County. Blackburn Realty, 740-

446-00011

460 Spaee- for Rant
Mobile home stte available between Athens and Pomeroy, call

740·385·4367

MERCHANDISE

We Buy Land 30 -500 Acres .

We Pay Cash 1·800·2t3·8365.
Anll\ony Land Co.

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

304-675-2329

12 Horse Power John Deere Rklmg Mower, Eleclnc Start, Electnc
Ldt , Excellent Condition, $1.000,

740-379-2788
1995 Terra mite Low Hrs Hunting-

ton . WVa 304·736-4800. 0! AI·
l8f 6 PM 304-525-5359
25 ln . RCA Color T.V. Console .

Walnul. Remole $125. Cash Ex·
ceUOnl ConditiOn! 740-446-4722
7 Piece Black laminate D1nlng
Set With Matchtng Hutch beef tent Condition Paid 52,200 .00
Asktng SBOO.OO Full Size Head-

boa&lt;d No Rails $30 .00 740·446·
7310 Anylme
Assorted varte~ of longerberger
Baby bed, dressrng table, htgh
chatr, swing, car seat, stroller

510

Household

Goode
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washer~ . Dryetf, Rangel. Relrlgrators . 90 Day Gua rantee!

2 -3 Bedroom House, 818 Third
Avenue , Gallipolis , $375/Mo,
Plus Deposit. Phone · 740·4•1 ·

French City Maytag . 740-446·
7795.

1519.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahert, dryers, refrigerators ,

Repalf Zentlh $75.00 740·682·
7512
ATTENTION: We'll PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds. 47
People Needed lmmedtatety Offe1
Explfes, 7/31198, CALL 7-40---441-

1982.
BO)Is 2 Comforters Twtn 2 Seta ol
Sheets &amp; Drapes Brand New

$60 oo $280.00 Value. Comma&lt;·
c1a1 Magic chel Gnlt $250 00
Valued S1 ,500 DO, D•neue Set.
Glass Top with wood S50 00 7oi0-

:J6Hl433
Brand Newt Great Glftl CO/video
storage umt Black. and cherry
Never out of bOl $125 Holds up
to 940 dtscs, also holds tapes
Call 740-992-6636 alter 6 pm

cos &amp; lapes not rouded
Complete kltchen-si0\18, refrig erator . smk counter-top. cab·lnets 9000 BTU atr conditiOner
mtcrowave sold separately 304-

WITH SIKKENS THE BEAUTY IS
MOM THAN SKIN DEEP.
Your t:leck Is the center of your
entertaining and recreation actl't'tlles So don't JUSt gtve tt a "hn rsh" . Give it a qualtty Stkken5
fintsh with the C.tol OEK or Rub-

bot DEK systems
PAINT PWS (3041675-40114.

550

Building
Supplies

Block , bnck. sewer p1pes wtnd ·
ows, ltnte!s, etc . Claude Wmters,
A10 Grande. OH Call 740 -2 45-

5121 .

Pets for Sale

560

A Groom Shop - Pet Groomtng

Of wtl trade

640

304·582·1876

Hay &amp; Grain

900 lbs Round Bales. S 15 Each
WHI Load. 740-379-2768

650 Seed &amp; Fartlllzer
Ear corn. $2 50 per bushel , 740·

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
1975 Oldsmobtle Cutlass S CoiOnade , two door hardtop, 350 au·
tomatic, 4 new !Ires. new brake
lines . needs brakes . body latr,
$350 080. 74().992-ti988

1977 Chevy Corvette 350 Au tomatiC, T-Top, Whtte, Tan lntenor. 50.000 Mtles . $9.000 080.

740-446·1 021

1810 ·101)0 HONDA CARS FOR
$100 SeiZed &amp; Sold Locally ThiS
Month Call 1·800·522·2730 Ext
4420
1980 ·1990 Trucks for $100111
SeiZed And Sold
LocaNy This _.,_

A.K C White German Shepherd
Puppies. Senous lnqUines Only

Trucks. 4x4's. Etc

74()-245-9213

Female Chihuahua

1 Months

HIOil-522·2730. X3901

cenl Ca&lt; $500. OBO 740 ·441 ·

9788.
Now Open Sundays 1·4 Man-Sal

11·8

Fish Tank &amp; Pel Shop.

0584.
1gft6 Ponttac Ftreblrd T-Top. 4
Wheel D1sk Brakes, 5 Speed.
Runs Good , Looks Good , New
Mo!Of. $1 .800. 740-446·9552.

1987 Dodge Anes lE Runs
Gqod , Good Ttres , New Water
Pump, New Headliner. $900, 7•0-

2413 Jackson Ave Po•nt Pleasant, 30-t-675-2063.

1988 8onl'l8Vtlle LE, maroon. 4dr,
new tires &amp; bra~es. good cond

Oalmatlon Pupp1es, $50 Each, 7

1989 Dodge Shadow New Brake&amp;,
Rotors. Struts. New Front Tues.

WeekS. 740-388-8922
Need a flea/tick miSt kills adults
on dgga and cats? Ask R&amp;G

feed &amp; Supply (740-992·2184)
aboul Hippy Jock DD-33 Flee/
Tick Mitt. C1trus scented Trigger
spray Btodegradable . (www hap-

PYiaCktnc com)
NOTICE
frwnclt Clly Pet-Grooming
Prolesstonat Grooming by Appomtments . Over 15 yrs expen ence, New bathtng system "Ultra
Wash", 650 Second Ave Gallt-

polo. OH 740-446·1528
San Juan rabbits. great lor tratn mg Beagles and or eattng. $5
each, 740·742·2411
Schnauzers- mmtature pupptes.
AKC, also adults, two females
and one champron srred stud .

$3.200 304-675-5792 aller 5pm.

$2 ,300 Aller 6 PM 740·245·
0333.

1984 Honda Magna V45 . $1900 .
also 1998 Honda 300 ATV,

740-992-8824
1991 Thunderbud, body · mlnl
condition. fully loaded. sunroof.
needs engtne work . $1,700 . 304·

740·256-1270
1987 Harley Davidson Sportster,·
1100 kil, b1g ga&amp; tank, lots oj
chrome. good condttlon. 17200
080. 740-992-6119

For Sate Reasonably . Two Grave
Spaces with vaults, Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens Gafllpolts,OhiO

Call Collect: 74(}888-8506

Framing lumber. all sizes . 18,000
BTU arr cond11/oner $200 dehumtdllter $75 gas range $35. 1021
3 clay Std1ng new $25 . sq. 380
BF walnut lumber, 200 BF Fred

Musical
Instruments

Show Bud Steel Guitar In Good

Condtllon. $400. 74G-367.0279
Silver trombone $150 Trumpet
S50 Snare drum $75 304·675-

7302
Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

Pearson 304-ti75-4004
$100 00. Cooke&lt; Canne&lt; 21ql .
hke new $&lt;40 00, Canner Jars:
$1 25 Dozen 74o-44&amp;-3824
Gtbson atr condttloner 17,500
BTU . 220 hook-up, ex cond.

$200 304·882·2682
Gold Relngerator, Electnc Range,
Both Good Condltton, Set 01
K•tchen Cabinets Wtth Counter-

lop And Stnk. All Fo&lt; $300. 740·
446 -7616 . 740·379·2852. 740·

Peaches! Fre sh, Homegrown
Now! Richard Bros Frutt Farm.
1922 Orpheus Road , Thurman .
OH 740-286·4584 . ~on . Sat

8.0Q-5.00

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

675·1843.

1991 Toy51a Co!OIIa ox 83.000
Mtles. 5 Speed. 31 M1 /Gal. N:.. I

Good Used Commercial Carpet.
S1 00 Per Yard Or Take II All At
SOc Per Yard Can Be Seen At
1743 Centenary Road . Gallipolis,

74G-446·9585. Of 740-446-2883

$23.000. 1 Drop Hammers Wllh

245-9087

G•ubb 's Piano- luntng &amp; repa1r1
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

plano D&lt; 741l-446-4525
JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repatr8&lt;1, New &amp; Aebu~t In StOCk
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537·9528.
Klndlewood wood burn ing stove'
msert 36" wide , ask1ng $200

740·992·3'93
New western saddle, brownlsHver
tnm 5375 . Brown English saddle , used a few ltmes $95 304 ·

562·1876

One engagement and two wed·

ding bands lor sale. asking $200.
740-892·8988.
Pool For 5.1118. 27x4. Almost Newl
Aski"V $700, Evenings, I&lt;G-446·
4175
Pnmeatar- low Installation with
rebate, fll'lt monlh free, free HBO,

SlarOno lpeclll 1'0 lnotallltlon.
800-263-2640.
Scoottr&amp;, Electnc Wheelchairs ,

Seleo Rental . Trade, New &amp;
Used. Bowman's Hornecaft, 74G446-7283.
Spinel Plano $225 ll&lt;m . 304·

1.8()().409-3'99.

The Pomeroy Thrift Shop t'la&amp;

Used FurnHuro 510ft Belew Holl·

nut. Mlddflport (C.. h Bohra old
building), buying- baby lltma,

875-3734

moved 10 145 Nor111 Second Avebntakfatl seta &amp; good elton furniture on consignment, Open

Tussday-Frlday. 11-4, 740·992·

3725.

65 Ft Leads $7.500 , 1 Aenco
Straw Blowers $5,200 , One 3 loch
Gorman Flupp Pump $900. M•sc
Steel Beams From 20 Ft -57 Ft.
One 10 By 50 Office Trailer
13,600. 1 Trench Box, 1 Ptpe
lazar : 1 Top Con Transmtt ,

$4.600 . 740·643·2916 Aller 4.

740-643·2644 Ahe&lt; 6

ne~ tires. e~e
cond $5 .800 . 304 ·615 ·3824

for Sale

SN:.RIFICE

bumpers 740·446·3814 Malle
YOIJR JUNIOR

tom Overe!r. Cltmate Control,
An!1 -Sktd Control, New Prrell1
Ttras. 61 .000 Mr . S15 000 00 740-

Mercrwse1 tnboard, w1tra11er. llle
Jackets &amp; bumpers $2,050 740·

HAT MAKES

446·3814

over payments 304·615·7302
1994 Pontiac Ftreblfd, V-6 au·
toma!lc, all power, low mtles.

$7900. 740·992·7614 or 740·992·
1995 Chrysler Sebnng, excelier.l
condttton call Tom Andersor,

74()-992·3348 afte&lt; 5pm.
1995 Ponttac Flrebnd . fully loaded, !-tops, new fires, 55,000 m~es ,
asktng 19,900, 741)--675-6723
1997 Chevy Blazer Phone after

5pm 304·675·7453
1997 Sunltre Pon!tac 4 Cylinder. 5
Speed . AIC , Excellent Condtton,

74()-379·2'126

97 T-Btrd. V-8, sunroof, sport

packaga. $16.900. 740·992·4256
Credtt Problems? W~ Can Help
Easy Bank Ftnanctng For Used
ventcles , No Turn Downs . Call
Vrckte, 74()-446---2897

GREAT FOR DERBY
Cars
1977 Ford LTD Station Wagon

t667635. A 1992 Ford f · t50
tA07620 Public Auction Wtll Be·

Bolween Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grarm.
Ohio On Jackson Plko 740·446·
2412 Of HIOQ-594-1111 .
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial
lawn Equipment. Compact Utility
Tractors From 20 To 3D HP. All

Sizes Of 4 WD And 2 WO Flfm
Tracloro, Hay Equipment, John
Dotro Skid Sl~ Loaclttra. Choclt
Wllh Uo About Flnorw:lng Aa Low
As 2.9'11. On Lawn TlaciOft And
Low Rl.. Financing On And
Uoed Equlpmanl. Carmlchatl"s
Fann &amp; Ulwn Galllpollt, 01! 740-

448-2412t~!594·1111.

P&lt;operly From Sale P&lt;lor To Sale.
Terms 01 Sale · CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK.
Transportation Problems? Let Us

Helpl can 740-448-7278 BetwHn
11 .00 ·6 00 Of 740·388·9062 An·
111....
Upton Used Cars At 82 -3 Miles
South of Laon, WV Fi nancing

Avalable. 304-458-t 069.

720 Trucks for Sale
t965 Chevy Panel T&lt;uck $750,
080 740-379-~706.

Nortb

1•

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pasa

.

3•
SNT

Transmtss~ans ,

eurciM

56 HttrvOUI -

Z3lVne!Wot1&lt;

57 Unemotional
sa tron grating

26 Weecls

Z8 FICillty
ze~··

DOWN

~

30o..k31 Clllngt tile

1
2
3
•

drMng plan
33 Houllng

Jalt occu.J:::
Wiatt u
Alrtlne Info
Aglte

6 Hlmler
7 State(member of the

sa....

lnttlrumenll

8 Slangy
aftirmatlve
9 Sun. tpeech
10 Firotnumblr
11 Comedion
Sparlla
13 Complain
t8 Cheal
19 Hey!
20 Abhor
22 Coated with

pollee Ioree)

Eaat

pHch

23 Actor Tom24 Michael
Keaton role
Z5 Luatera
27 Actor Mineo
32 Medical oulllx

Pass

FRISBEE 1

Chev ro~t trucks,

By Phillip Alder
When did the U.S. Census Bureau
first use a computer?
Computers were slower to catch
on in the bridge world. but now they
are an integral pan of !he game. You
can even use one to play online 24
hours a day. perhaps with OKbndge.
It i&gt; also possible to watch e&lt;htbilion
matches. The rec~nl ones have [~a­
lured Paul Soloway (who ltves near
Seanle) and Bobby Goldman (from
Highlands Vill~ge. Texas). Thts deal
occurred during thetr m~tch against
Peter Nagy (a former Canadian international now residing in Las Vegas)
and Bruce Ferguson (from Boise. Idaho).
How would you declare si~ nolrump? West leads !he dtamond sev·
en, second h1ghest from a weak suit.
Five no-trump asked South to
select a siam.
Given lhe diamond lead, you have
nine top tricks: two spades, two
hearts, two diamonds and three clubs.
If clubs are worth four tricks. four
spades will be sufficient. But if clubs
are splining badly, you will need five
spade tricks. So. Goldman (South)
staned by playing ~club to dummy's
ace and a club to his king. When
everyone followed, he took the s~fe­
ly·play in spades; He led a spade to
dummy"s ace. then played a spade to
his nine. This guaranteed four spade
tricks (e.cepl agatnsl an unlikely 50 break). Here. starting with lhe spade
king and linessing dummy\ jack
would have raked in an ovennck. but
would have failed 1fEllst held queen·
10-fourth. Don"l risk a slam (or
game) bonus for Ihe sijkc of an over·
trick .
The Census Bureau lirst used a
computer in I HR9 Holes were
punched inlo special cards.

Budget Pnced Transmtssions All

10.0~0

34UI1erly

35 Avoided
edroltly
39 Tea type
43 Khchen

45r."$..
47 Sandwich
ahop

48 Flrot degren
(abbr.)

49 Toward the
Item

so
u::;J.Sp.J
52 E
lng
53 ZAiro
54 Regard

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
ca.twiry ClpNt cor:;r••• .,. Cf.-d fnlm quotatioN ~ l•moua peopte p.st and present
£a
~ ,_ dphef Nndllot ~ Tt:Wy's CU H
L
fqUa11

'IPJTSCG
DZT

OVHLPCJ

XSSY

FTZPCU

OPDZ

R I

DZTPX
FVELG.'

DZTPX

vcu

usoc

ZVCUG
AT V C

ESEDTVR
PREVIOUS sOLUTION : 'He always amazes me; you expect the tncred•ble.
and he keepo doing II .' - Cardtnal Manage&lt; Tony La Russa . on 1.4ark
McGwi1e.

'::~:~;~'

S© ~Q{l N\ -l£ t. trss
l~ltod ~J

CIA Y I . ,OLUN

WOlD
GAM I

0

Rearrange letters of the
four IC'rombled words below to form four stmple words

I

CERTWH

' 1 1 1 1

I

VABER

r
I

I1: -,- ,.-IT~I~_F. .,I~,. . . ,Dir- 1 ~
I
I

My Mtghborwtll not hes1tate
L.--..J.L.......I.-.J..-.1..-·,... lo try and outrun a 1ra1n but he s
. - - - - - - - - - , s c a r e d to death of - · - . - - .

SLOFS!

740·245-5677

f--,l.:...;.l..:::....r,l6--;..,7.:....,...1--l G)

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

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

R Aulo. Rtpley. WV 304 ·372·

Complete lhe chuckle quoted

by hllrng •n !he mtssmg words
yotJ develop from step No 3 below

3933 or 1-800·273-9329
Parung out, black 1984 Chevy S1o elt cab Che\lette 1ransmis~
StOn $75 Must sell 304 · 773-

A

WE'LL TURN fT

OV'ER A~DWATCI-i

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

SCRAM.LETS ANSWilRS

IT A6AIN ..

Caucus - Rajah - Niece - Plac1d · HEADS

1980 Ffea twtng wtth awning 17H
1972 Anstocrat 18ft . A/C. 1973
Smoky 15ft 12' Boat, Tra1ter And
6 HP Mot04', SBOO, 1699 Bob McCormiCk Ad 740-446-15 11

If you feel uncertain about wh1ch way to go . JUSt flip a
com You Will then f1nd yourself w1sh1ng for HEADS

t995 Nomad Delu~ee . 30 Ft F1fth
Wh eel . Wrth Shde -Oul Central
Heat &amp; A ir, Microwave , Stert.o.
Seii-Contaliled, 1 Owner, Used
Very Ltltle, 74()-245-9376.

lTUESDAY

1997 lnnsbruck travel trailer, 26h
vtnyi·Sider. $12,000 OBO 304 ·

675 2793
9 112 Truck Camper, AC , t-IIW,
Showers . Furnace, 3W Frldg ,
TV , Ant, 3 Burn Stove, Oven , 20
Gat Water Plus Hot. Hail Dam -

age. Sa~ $3.500. 74G-446·1111.1

SERVICES

810

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I

~ IN THESE SQUARES

WOW! LOOK AT
T~AT! O)(A~ NOW

5452

Held At The OVB Anne~e, 143
Thttd Ave Galhpohs. OH On 7!2.51

The Rtght To Accept Or Reject
.l.ny And All Bids , And Withdraw

A GOOD

125. 740·446-2316

1978 C.dlllac. 74()-245-5037
Oh1o Valley Bank W1ll Offer For
Sate A 1989 Mercury Cougar

WOOOCH~K

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

John Oeere 40200 NF , JO 450
dozer. winch , manual blade, New
Idea 484 round baler , New t1ol-

Your Area Bush Hog Dealer For
Parts, Rotary Cutters, Loaders,
Tillers, Finish Mowers, Etc . Car·
michael's Farm &amp; lawn Midway

a

Sl:l this aummert

Seen By Calling Ketlh Johnson AI
740·441·1 038 OVB Rese&lt;ves

~7$-7421

7

1811 D&amp;ep V. closed bow. 160HP

Seats . Pwr w1ndows .Prw locks.

304·675·3824

Sicloto Equ'-1 Comi&gt;lny

i:EW'( K£1-11'\f.

Pwr Heated m1rrors. It 1. 350, A~

Massey Ferguson 65, Gasol tne ·
w/PS. &amp; front end loader 15.300.

prlco.

THE BORN LOSER

$5000. 740·949·2203 or 740·949·

oller

-Where Is" Wttnout Expressed
Or lmplted Warranty And May Be

Summer C•ntncl on 111 Huaq.
v1rn1 lawn mowera a string
trimmer~ . Ouerenteed low .. t

7-2 I

Kawasakt STS Jet ski, still under
warranty, three seater, 83 horsepower. bought new July of '9l.
three match tng Kawasakt ski
vests and trailer all go wtth 11,

1992 Con'8ne Coupe BlaCk Rose ,

98 AI tO 00 AM The Above Will
Be Sold To Highest Bidde&lt; -As Is

baiOf; 740-949-2630.

...

vx~

1995 12fl atumtnum Jonn bOal,
seats. atum1num oars. ancho(
$350 1995 12-14ft. boat trailer

81. Leather, CO &amp; Cass , Twin Pwr

Ford 3000 Diesel .

~nd85t

~000.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

Excellent CoodtiiOn, S4,500, 740446-3677

93 Honda Accord . 2 door coupe.

1991 553 Sheeps Foot Roller,
$42,000, 48 Inch Double Drum
Sheeps Foot Roller S3 .200 .
MNPA Vtbraung Tamper For A
416 Cat S4 ,600 , Tool Trailers 45
Ft -30 Ft. Hara 1500 P1le Hammer

JANVA,Y J,

1967 Oceamc Sea Imp 160hQ
Mercrwser tn/board eng me 1011
deep -V w/tra11er. hie Jackets-&amp;

aulo.loaded. 740-742·8903

610 Farm Equipment

ON

wheeler :JlC-675-3308

Types. Access To Over

570

tMYwl,t

For sale Real mce Honda (

1994 Ford Asptre auto, 61 .000
miles, ale , 4cyl $5,500 or take

Ranger 1300 304-675-6348

UNTIL. l&gt;tAT~ l&gt;O You
.-:;.....~. on.... PA,T, Oil UNTIL.
vi~ ALL. 60

•

Bed ra11 caps. hi

Ftbergla ss topper. bed l.ner, tailgate hner &amp; protector lor Ford

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

t995 Harley Sportster 8.70Q
m1tes Ex cond, many e•tras.
ready to go S8.750 304-675•

2045, wtll cons1der trade for
good pontoon boal

51 Atlantic and
Pacific
55 Aatrly

The computers
are coming

$250 304-ti75-3581

t991 Ponttac Grand Am . au, !Itt,
crutse. amllm 5tereo, lour new
hres, e~ectllent cond•IIOn, $2195 ,

48 Box top
48 Armed
fighting

17~.:·1on
18 ACbMI
Chlrille
Zl Abclomlllll

Opening lead: • 7

v-.

1993 Thunderblfd , V-6 automaltc,
au. loaded. 97k m1te s. $3995.
1988 Tempo. 4 cylinder automattc, excellent condtt i OO, S 1450,
740-742-2357

Two Ferrets lor Sate 740·441·
1419

IF IT WASN'T FER MY LITTLE ANGELS,
SHE WOULDN'T HAVE A .JOB ! !

1984 Honda, Water Cooled.,
11.000 Miles , St,ooo , 12Ft
' Bottom Boat. W1ttl Tra1ler. &amp; 3 HP·
Sears Motor, $700 Or Trade :

1989 Harley DaviSOn Ultra Clat·
stc., 38,000 Mtles. Black &amp; Sttver,

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

6 NT

218t

650 Yamaha. Double Tratlef,
Flush K1t, 17,000 080, 740·2·
1279

45Mellncholy

pertonner

••

3.

$3800. bolh excellent 740·949·

t993 LX650 Yamaha. 1995

elyle
U Nttvot olf.

36W-

South
2NT

TH' TEACHER SAYS YOU
GOT TH' MEANEST KIDS
IN SCHOOL!!

Motorcycles

Sugar Ghder , and Cage P!us
Toys , Call 740-441-1419

$26.900. 74()-992·5072.

BARNEY

6623

379·9278

41 Bulkllr'a unit
42 Arclll1.c1tn

Dealer: South

glass Cap. 113.900. 740·256-

1310

K 9 6
A K 8 3
A J

--

arrow

Vulnerable: Neither

1996 Dodge Ram 1500 Laramee
SLT 4x4 318, Auto. While. Ftber·

1994 Honda Magna V·4 750 cc
5,600 M1les, 7.u).446-3909

•Q10976
a K 10 5
• J 52

40

• K 9 84

1995 Ford Explorer XLT, 4 Doofs.
All Power, 62,000 M1les. $15,800

1984 Chrysler 5th Avenue . De·

AKC Reg istered Boston terrier
pups, &lt;4 males, 1 female, ready to
go, mother and father en premises, $200 each, to good homes,
AKC Registered Ron Wetlers. 2
Females. 9 weeks old. shots &amp;
wormed $150 00 each 740 ·388-

a

.

140

• 53

•
•

1994 Jeep Grand cnerokee Lar ..
edo, leather, kJaded 57 .000 mites,·
exc:eltent condtl10n. 740 ·985 -

$11000. 740-446-4616

Best Offef. 74()-992-4588

740·992·3'18

1993 Ford Aerostar Van . Auto :
AIC. Cru1se. AMIFM Canelte ~
740-256-9364

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0 , 260
V8 Good Cond1t1on. S1.800 Or

$100.00. House B&lt;Okan! 740·256·
8162.

Q 10 4
52

.976432
• 10 6
South

080. 740-44H)467.

Featurmg Hydro Batn Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

740-446-0231

•
•

$4995. 740·949·23t1 days. 74lh
949-2644 ...,;n;ngs

3949

9!12·2623

West

1992 Geo Tracker LSI. 4WO .:
converttble. automatic. atr, alum ·
wheels. stereo. blackJ gray 1n1ert- ·
or. clean. n1cel 60 .000 m1les . .'

D-6·C dozer. turbo , Ult . 4 post
ROPS, sweeps. cargo 60 wmch .

VIne Street, Call 740·448· 7398,

Fr'day. Hfs. 10-6. 740-446-4762

3/4 200 PSI

Morgan &amp; Saddlebred 4yr old
geldtng , ¢od tratl horse . $1 ,500

EEK&amp;MEEK

1987 Ford Ranger, -4K-4 , catt 7.0..

1!92·3465

675-1805

Gallipolis. $375/Mo.. Doposlt Rt·
Qulfld. Call ToH&lt;ee 1·888·&amp;41l0521.

Dtaks . Lamps. Mall&lt;tsats, And
MO!ol Sumn-e&lt; H&lt;s. Monday Tlvu

Waterline Spectal

$21 95 Pef 100. 1' 200 PSI
$37, 00 Per 100; All B&lt;ass Compr8SSIM Fk1itgs In Slodi
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Otuo. 1.000·531·9528

740-388·8358. 740&lt;141 ·7:130

16.800 080 :J)C-895-3023

682·7512

rangu. Skaggs Appliances, 78

day Inn, In Kanauga . Bada,
Couches . Dresser&amp;, Tablll,

Vacation rental· Southern Ohio.
Metgs County cabtn , all conven·
ttnces, hot tub. hshmg . paddle
boats. hlktng, daity, weekly rates.
&amp;losps e9tt. 740-9!12-5072

Horses For Sale Liquidation'
Trail Horses. 112 Quarter Horse ,
112 Morgan, 3 Arabians. 1 Walktng , Horse, Call ,t.tter 5·00 PM .

740-667·3404

3 Bedroom House. t Bath , WID
Hook· Up , 172 Fourth Avenue ,

3 Bedrooms. 1 Bath. Wllh Bu•
mtnl. Counlfy Sllllng. Clly
Scnools. No Poll, $450/Mo., PIUS
Dopoail. 740-44&amp;-1062

· Phone. 3 ·6 PM 0!1~. 74G-

Btg Screen T V 45• Needs Minor

GE 24 11 cu' Cnest type Freezer

APT AVAILABLE NOW
2 acre lots or 8 acres. Be thel

$350

mower

304·675~548

1 Bedroom . AJC. WID, Hook- Up,
Near Holzer, $279/Mo , • Uhlllles,
Depostt &amp; Lease Required . 740-

G•actous hvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments tn Middleport From $249-$373 Call 740992-5064 Equal Houstng Opportuntltes

Buildings

12 t 12hp Craftsman riding

bask•IS. 304-675-4426.

1 Bedroom Apartment . Stove &amp;
Refngerator Included. 740-446-

$1.32§ Down. $205 Mo Free arr
&amp; lree sktrtmg 1·800·69 1-6777
Spruce Rtdge Skyline 72~e14 two
bedroom. two bath $17 .500. 740843-5327

mobtle

Raane. ro pets. 740-992·5858

888·928·3426
Spectal 16x80 3BR. 2 balh

Two

740-367.()286"' 740-949-2481 .

for Rent

New, Deluxe Electric
Ltke New, Maple Wood
Table, &amp; 4 Chaus l tke

Notdt
01-21 91
•AJ872
• J 4
• Q 8
• A Q73
Eaat

miles, V-8, fiberglass bGdy, new
ttres, softlblkin1 top, wlfull cover..

Side Re1nperator. 22 Cu.

446-1~

Goods

Large Kftchen, LauOOry Room, No
Pets . S-'00 Oepos11 . S4SO:Mo .

740-446-9585 Of 740-446-2205.

Skis By
Ft Like
Range,
D1nette

-

1984 Shultz Mobtkl Home. 1.-x75.
114 Hubbard Avenue . State Route 7 North. Kanauga Oh10 740·

74()-~3917 .

t4 x70 38~ . $999 Down &amp; ONLY
1179 pt&lt; mo Free air A Iff&amp; slurt·
lng. 1·888-928·3'2e.

UIIIIS. Otlfe&lt;ent Siz8s. Guafanteed.

P1 Pleasant. wv 3 Bed&lt;oo"':. 2
Full Ball\s. LR. OR. Fan11~ Room.

School. Call 740·256·6228 . Or
740·256·1417

Of ~4-882·3772

UucJ W1ndow Air Conditioning

""""'· $1200. 740-742·1303

Three bedroom 211 Seventh
Street . New Haven , WV, $35 000.

74()-992·5641

contract . Phone after 5pm 304-

675-2759

446-1734

2940

only If 01kwood Home&amp;

AI real estate adventsiF'lQ 10
thts newspeper 1s sub}eC1to

1975 Homen 14x70, new electriC
furnace &amp; bath Priced upon 1n·

Land For Sa le 10 Mrles Out 01
Galltpohs On State Route 218 ,
Good Home Stte With Some
Woods In Hannan Trace School
OtSiflct Elementary &amp; Hrgh

VENOING: La/y Persons Orearn

Few Hours • I\IQ S Priced To Sell

$1.800 080. 304-67!Hi864

trlome.

1992 Clayton 16"X60". 2 BR . 2
DR . Baths . Garden Tub . New Carpet.

SEEKING EMPLOYMENT

Self· Mottvated. Dependable . Respectable Ha rd Workmg Chrtsttan Woman. 32, Looktng For PIT
OpportuRIIy To Work Jn Con1unc·
tton Wtttl Pre se nt Job Man -Frt,
Starttng At 4 AM 0t 5 A M Until
1 1 A M Or Noon Previous Man agement Exp. Also Works Well
W•th Pubttc, Call Rtta , 740 ·9654487

mobile

8K30. one bedroom, one battl ,
kiiCt'lltn , stove aM refrigerator,
furna ce new blower . ready to

No Dnnker. Charles Rtchards

140

t2x60

spoctiOn. 304-675-3444

304-675-20151

Ll'/8-ln , Free Board , No Smoking,

1971

1978 Jeep CJ·5. 56.000 ongtnal •

:e..:Pn·

Home
lmprovaments
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional ltfetime guarantee.
locel references furnished &amp;·

lablished 1975. Call 24 H!S (740)
446·0870. 1·800·287-0576. Rog·
ers Waterproofing.
Appliance Parts And Serv1ce · All

Name Brands Over .25 Years EJ perlence All Work Guaranteed .
French Ctty Maytag , 7•0 · 446 ~

7795

1

C&amp;C General Home Mai n tenence - Painting , vinyl siding ,
carpentry, dOors, wtndows, bartts,
mobikl home repar and more f.or
lree esdmate call CMt. 7•o-992.

6323.

'

Proless1onal 20yrs experience

wilh all masonory, bridt, bloclt 1
s1ono. Also &lt;oom addltlono. go·
~ages, etc. Free t1tlmat11. 304-'

713--iS5Q

'I

t988 Chovy Pick-Up V·8, 4
Speed, 60,000 O!ig. Miles $I ,995; 640 Electrical 1nd
1989 Comonclte Pick·Up. $2, 195;
Refrigeration
1989 &amp; 1991 S·10 Plck·Ups.
Cook Moton, 74()-4.48.()103.
Onrs Electrical Servlc&lt;t, , . _
llal and comme&lt;elal, 740·t4t·
1986 8·10 Chevy P/U Exttndtd 4020.
.
Cob, Rt.&lt;tS Excollenl, $1.050, 740448-WB.
Raaldtnllal "' commorctltl wiring,
1990TOI'QII4x4. 740&lt;141-1318.
Of ..,. ... Mullr U:'
cen11d electrician . "(denoUr;
Eloctrlcll.
WV000306.
304-t711995 Chevy $·10, IX. cond. :104·
178e.
875-54711.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
you emp1y and unfulfilled a.' the day
There's a gOOd chance you"ll receive
wears on. It\ imponant to find a profavors fmm friends today. Be sure to
ductive project in which to immerse
Wednesday, July 22, 1998
yourself.
. : Thi s i, no11he year to be a Oower reciprocate at a later date.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
PISCES (Feb. 20-Ma;:;,h 20) if
wilting on the vint. Strike out on an
No job will be too difficult for you
there is someone s pecial whose
apvcnturous path by initiating ~ new
enterprise or pursuing an anistic 1\)day. and the way you handle your friendship you'd like to cultivate. 1his
tasks will enhance your standing in
is a good day to give them a call and
endeavor.
suggest a get-together.
:: CANCER !June 21-July 22) If the eyes of your peers.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) The
. ARIES «March 21-April19) Your
you·re the guy/gal who calls the shots 1
last
thing you want today is to find
mstmcts for gauging the need' and
tOday," things should go smoothly.
tl'owever. if you palm your work off your.;elf stuck in a rut of mundane wants of others is adroit today.
01110 others. results "could be stymied. activities. Pian something adventur- Ackno':"iedge your intuition 1f you're
markenng something with a broad
C:anccr. treat yourself to a birthday ous or e~citing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. appeal.
gift. Send for your Astro-Graph preTAURUS (April 20-May 20)
dlctions for the year ahead by mail - 2 II People you"ve been involved
ing S2 and SASE to Astro-Gmph. cl,o with in the pa.~t lew days appear to be You're bener equipped for mental
overlooking something that's obvious pursuits than physical ones today.
thi~ newspaper. P.O. Bo~ 1758. Murray Hill Station, New York, NY to yi&gt;u. Bring it to their anenlion,or Spend your time balancing accounts
or answering your mail instead of
18156. Be sure to state your zodiac act on it younel[ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·lan. 19) cleaning the house.
$1&amp;0.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Let those The only types of crowds you'll find
enjoyable today we the .family clan
If yPU 're -.intemted In buying or
~·re involved with savor the spot.
sellina merthucii.e today, don'tlet
liaht today. You'll -be much more and/or old friends.
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
2~Feb.
19)
a SW)'Opte•make the deal for you.
elfcaive as the stage rnaruager wllo
Frittering your time away will
Your fteJ01iationa will ~ bear:r.
directs the operation from the wings.

ASTRO·GRAPH

~

,, .

._ve

JULY 21

I

�-- - ·.--~~~

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

will get one-half of my pension and of lhe last 365. I kepi track. That
Dear Swealill&amp;: If you have statindividual retirement accounl, along doesn't seem to matter to lhe court, ed the facts accuntely, I would say
Ann
wilh our home and everylhing in il. however, because she is just starting you had lhe sttonger case but your
For lhe record, when we married, on her "new life" outside of lhe wife had a sharper lawyer.
Landers
I already owned a very nice lhree- marriage and needs to socialize.
My advice is to stay as close to
bedroom house. I sold it and buill a
I live alone. I work, clean, shop your children as possible, and evenbeautiful place lhat will be hers and and cook like every olher bachelor tually, they will want to spend more
hers alone.
in town. If I want to continue to see time wilh you. When lhat happens,
Dear Ann Landers: I'm writing
I also will be paying private my children, I will have to drive to neilher lhe judge's ruling nor yQ!Ir
in response to "First Wife in Wis- school tuition for our lhree children. lhe beautiful home I paid for and wife's wishes will make much difconsin," who bemoaned lhe fact that She will not be conuibuting a dime hope my ex-wife and her current ference .
her ex-husband's new wife would to !heir education . Meanwhile, I boyfriend will allow me to spend
Dear Ann Landen: I've been
reap the benefits of lheir marriage have spent approximately SI0,000 some time with them. It's !heir deci· reading your column ever since I
,11811 she would be left with nolhing. in legal fees this year uying to retain SJOn.
was in junior high school. I am now
You said, "Assuming your husband custody. Allhough I am an exemIn the future, Ann, please be more a grandmother. Let's consider this
didn't catch you in bed with some· plary fathPr, my chances of succeed- careful with your answers and d~n't item a bit of payback for all lhe
one, you got a very raw deal."
assume that every divorced woman enjoyment you've given me.
ing an: almost nil.
Well, I did catch my wife in bed
At this writing, my ex is with her got a raw deal. Sometimes, the shoe
You've twitted the Internal Revwith someone. but it didn't make a fourth lover (since January) and has is on the other foot. - Sweating It enue Service on occasion, so here's
bit of difference to the judge. She been out of the house 300 nights out Out in Chicago
another item for you. It appeared in

writing. Another example of how I
learn from my readers. I wonder
how many of you out there knew
this? It was news to me.
Dear Aim Lucien: A poem you
recently printed, "Good Enough
Isn't Good Enough," was written by
my grandfalher, Edgar A. Gue~t. We
are pleased to know people are sti II
interested in lhe values that were
common 50 years ago. - Ellen
Guest Brookbank

Smcl questions to Ann Landers,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceatury Blvd., Suite 700, Los AngeleS,

(CGMA) held recently in Lamar,
Mo.• and was nominated for two other awards.
"Eternity" has been singing since
1992 and have two recordings, "Living ProoF done in 1993, and "I Will
Praise the Lord" in 1995. From key
boards to drums. this group is said to
"bless the heart."
Acconding to Bill Quickel who
serves on the amphitheater committee another gospel group may be participating in the sing.
Those attending are encouraged to
take a cushion or a lawn chair.
Refreshments will be provided by the
Meigs High School Band Boosters.
Restrooms will be available.

Pet ownership:

It's good for you!
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society
Well. now it's official. Snuggling
with Lady, or playing with Tiger is
good for you!
John Freeman. president of the
American Veterinary Medical Association, has gone on record as saying
that there are "epidemiological studies that document the positive effects
animals have on the wellness and
overall health of people ... we also
need economic analysis of the benefits of using animals in health care.
not just from the standpoint of prevention, but in therapy."
Physicians, he iells us, have suggested therapy involving pets for peopie in extended-care facilities, chitdren undergoing psychiatric treak
rnent, and to increase the survival rate
of p:~tients following discharge from
coronary-care units. Some doctors are
actually prescribing getting an aquarium or walking the dog every day.
So. the medical world is coming

Meigs County Fair bo&lt;?th
discussed by Fellowship
Plans for the Meigs County Fair
Booth were discussed when the
Women's Fellowship of the Church of
Christ met recently at the De~ter
Church.
The Men's Fellowship will be in
charge with the women contributing
ideas and support th.! program. President Linda Bates noted that a meeting had been held with the fair display committee and several idea' presented.
Cards for encouragement were
sent to Jane Wise and Eleanor
Hoover. Ann Lambert gave the secretory's report and Marie Snider the
treasurer's report. It wa~ announced
that Kentucky Christian College
would be starting in mid-August and
reminded everyone that we support

some of the girls who are attending
college from the various churches.
The Women's Retreat was announced
and a trip to the Wooster Children's
home in October to split wood for the
winter. Anyone is welcome to go to
help.
The opening song led by Paula
Pickens wa• "Oh, How I Love Jesus."
She also had devotions from the
Bradford church on the topic, "Be A
Friend" and her scripture was from
Luke Chapter 20 and John 15: 13.
The next meeting will be held at
Middleport with Mike Gerlach and
Mike Wilfong to have the program.
Dexter Church will have ihe devotions . Closing prayer was by Paula
Pickens and refreshments were
served by the Dexter church women.

Fourth of July celebrated with family gathering
J.M. and Mildred Gaul of
Pomeroy entertained on the July 4
holiday weekend with a family gathering.
Attending were Vicki and Andrew
Michael Kish Ill and their infant
daughter. Kyleigh Madison Kish.
born on May 5. ol of Centreville. Va:
Victor and Darlene Gaul of Elyria;
Lisa and Duane Sanderson of Washington Court House: and Pat and Larry Clay and son, Patrick, of Alphret-

I.

ta. Ga.
Also attending were Donna and
Jim Crockarell of Alexandria, Va.;
Denise and Jonathan McConkey. Jim
Jr. and Christy Crockarell and children. Alex and Katie. and JetT and
Anna Crockarell. all of Virginia
Beach.
.
Nora and Bob Eason, Linda. Jay,
Dayid and JeiT Warner, Robbie and
Amanda Eason. and Huey and Susan
Eason. all of Pomeroy.

.

II

I

lj

The Community Calendar is
published as a he service to nonprofit JII"'Ups wishing to announce
EAST MEIGS -- Mandatory
meeting and special events. The
meeting
in front of the ·Eastern High
calendar is not deslped to promote
lobby
Tuesday,
7 p.m. for girls grades
sales or fund ralsen of any type.
7-12
who
are
interested
in playing
Items are printed as space pennits
volleyball
this
year
at
Easlem
High
and cannot be guaraateed to run a
School
and
Jr.
High.
For
more
inforspecifiC number of days.
mation call coach Don Jackson at
740-667~S30.

TUESDAY
. POMEROY -- ODOT public
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
meeting
concerning lhe Ravenswood
Church of the Nazarene Women's
Connector
and Pomeroy-Mason
Minisuy will meet at lhe home of
Bridge
projects
Tuesday, 6-8 p.m. at
Renee Barton Tuesday, 7 p.m. for fel-

'.

"·

could ea~ily be made self-sustaining
with only modest levels of payroll
taxation. So these two factors, a kind
of pragmatic judgment about prevailing retirement standards and the
favorable actuarial outcome of using
age 65. combined to be the real ba.•i~
on which age 65 wa~ chosen as the
age for retirement under Social Security.
lncrea.~ing life expectancy (and its
impact on program e~penses) ha•
resulted in additional changes in the
retirement age, and more changes
have been proposed. The age for full
benefits is scheduled to gradually
increase to age 67 starting in the year
2003. affecting people born in 1938
or later. There are a number of proposals afoot which would accelerate
the present schedule, or change the
age for full benefits to age 70. or
would link retirement age increases
actuarily to the program.

For more information on the sut..
ject. you may access Social Security
Online
yourself,
at
http://www.ssa.gov.
,
Other important a~pects of SociJil;,
Security
•
I. The Social Security program is
a social insurance system, which con·
tains features designed to provide
benefits to society as a whole.
2. Under a voluntary system. some
~orkers who chose not to participate
could become disabled. reach old age
or die without adequate funds to sup:.
port th.!msclves and/or their familie~.
When a worker dies. a spouse can gd
100 percent of the worker's Soci:il
Security benefits for life.
3. In a voluntary system. a young
worker would have to be disciplined
enough to invest the same amount of
money from each paycheck that is
withheld for Social Security.

Artist registration
forms are ready
Artist registration forms for the
17th Annual Foothills Art Festival are
ready.
The festival. held at the indoor
Lodge at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp. 5
miles northwest of Jackson. will run
from Friday, Oct. 16 to Sunday, Oct.
18.
Artists are invited to exhibit in the
following categories: oil/acrylic. pa.•tel/drawing. photography. prints.
three dimensional work, and watercolor. Juried booth spaces are available to e~hibiting artists.
The show is professionally judged
but not juried. Artists of all ages and
experience are encouraged to enter.
Entr•nL• are limited to four works per
category. Entry fees are $5 per piece
or $16 for 4 pieces.
S1.210 in ca.~h prizes. sponsored
by OSCO Industries and Sands Hill
Coal Company will be awarded.
Dozens of purchase award patrons
select artwork during a preview
reception on Thul'llday evening, Oct.
15.
Foothills Art Fe~tival is a program
of the Southern Hills Art.~ Council.
Call the Council at 740-286-635S or
write Bo~ 149. Jackson, Ohio 45640
for further information or entry
_forms. Registration deadline is Sept.
II.
.-

As the president said in launching
lhe service scholanhip. "I want every
principal in America to be able to
stand up before a graduating cla•s
and announce the name of a National Service Scholar."
According to Harris Wofford,
Chief Executive Officer of the Cor·
poration for National Service, "With
their idealism, optimism, and energy.
young people are a great resource to
the community, and lhe National Service Schola,.,;hip Progrnm imparts on
young people the importance of ser-

-

vice by giving back to students who
serve their communities."

Shrimplin gr.uluated frnm Meigs
High School and plan., to attend Capital University.
In addition to overseeing the
National Service Sd10larship Program. the Corporation for National
Service administers AmeriCorps,
National Senior Service Corps. and '
U:am and Serve America and thus
creates opportunities for Americans
of all ages to serve their communiti&lt;s.

'

- -·Time out for tips
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County
Extension Agent
An: you thinking about operating
a business from your home? Since the
entire family will be affected, it is a
good idea to thoroughly talk it over
with them. While discussing. consider the numerous advantages and
disadvantages before deciding
whether or not you should invest
time. money and energy in a homebased
One of the most obvious benefits
of operating a business out of your
home is that you will be your own
boss. You determine the hours you
work, what needs to be done and
when it needs to be done. If you are
an "evening person," you can schedule your work time during those
hours to fully capitalize on your productivity. You may choose to schedule work and appointments around
the
In addition, time can be saved
commitments because there would
be no lengthy commute to and from
work.
Families that work together on a
common goal. such as a business,
tend to take pride in their work.
Because of their commitment and
proximity, there is usually greater
understanding and communication
among family members. Children can
acquire skills needed in life by learning tht social graces of waiting on

customers, answering phones, etc.
Besides the personal and family
benefit.• to working at horne, there are
several financial advantages, too.
You don't have to worry about transportation in the form of a reliable car,
gasoline, tires or upkeep. You may
·not need any ~pecial clothing or ·
spend money for lunches eaten out.
If lhe children are home from school,
you don't have the ha•sle or the money involved in finding a babysitter.
Having the business in your home
would be less e~pensive than renting
office space and paying additional
utilities.
There may be' tax benefits a.•
well. The IRS permits deductions for
particular costs in maintaining your
horne, if it is used regularly for business purposes. If you usc 1_5% of
your home for your bu~iness. you
may deduct 15% of your utilities
(olher than phone). Check with a tax
preparer or lhe IRS Publication 587
to be certain.
Of course there are also disadvantages to having a home busines~.
Some parts of lhe house may need to·
be "off limit.," to the family, so that
. work can be conducted. This area will
need to be presentable at all times to
clients.
Discipline will be required to prevent you from becoming ea•ily distracted with what is going on in the
rest of the house. Even though you
determine your work hours, you will

need self motivation to adhere to
them.
It is possible that work may con·
flict with the family in order to meet
lhe needs of the client. Customer calls
and visits may intrude on family time
in the evenings and on weekends.
Personal use of the phone may need
to be limited for family members if
there is only one line for both the
business and the family.
In addition you will have to work
hard at networking with others. Many
times home-ba'ied business owners
feel isolated from their colleagues.
Even with today's computer networki;~g system,, there should be per·
sonal contact. from lime to time to
keep abn:a~t of the fatest developments.
Location is important for the suecess of a business. It may be hard to
get cliems and customers if you Jive
in an out-of-the-way area.
One consideration that shoul&lt;l not
be forgotten is the fact that strangerS
may be coming into your home. You
will need to have ample liability
insurance and valuables removed
from sight. You should also take e~tra
precautions to secure your own safety.
·
Deciding to opernte a home-ba.o;ed
business should include many key
factors. Weigh the advantages and
disadvantages carefully before chaosing lhe best course of action.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Certified Mammography

--Community calendar
lowship and refreshments. Visitors
welcome.

I

WENI)V SHRIMPLIN

Announced by President Clinton
and administered by the Corporation
for National Service, the National
Service Scholarship is awarded to
one junior or senior from each high
school to recognize an exemplary
record of community service. The
Corporation for National Service
funds $500 of the $1.000 scholarship
which is matched with a locally
funded ,;cholar.;hip of at least $500
from the school. a local civic group.
business. or faith-ba.'led organization.

Royal Oak Resort gear Pomeroy. Presentations will begin at 6:30 p.m.
·Public welcome .
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Health Department free immunization clinic on Tuesday, S-7 p.m. at lhe
Meigs Multipurpose Center. Children
must be accompanied by a parent or
legal guardian with lhe child's shot
record. For more information, call !he
health department at 992-6626.
CHESTER -Meigs County IICES
work session Tuesday, .5:30 p.m. All
members instructed to attend to help
clean Hood debris.

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 85; Low:65

Holzer Meigs Clinic

Meigs County's

DeWine snubs SEO
veterans, praises new
project in northeast Ohio

(740) 992-0060
Here For Your Health, Here For Your Lifetime!

By JIM FREEMAN

Sentinel HeM Staff

A politician boasting a $28.3 million veterans' project in northea.~
Ohio is attracting some unfavorable
attention here in southeastern Ohio,
where residents feel neglected by
both state and federal governments.
A press release from U.S. Senator
Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) touting funding for a veterans' project in northeastern Ohio bas drawn complaints
from Meigs County Economic
Development director Ron McDade,
who feels a similar effort should be
made to assist veterans in southeastem Ohio.
McDade said DeWine twice lauded how the new facility will assist
norlheast Ohio veterans, while ignoring veterans in other parts of the state.
On July 17, DeWine announced
Senate approval of $28.3 million in
funding to construct an ambulatory
care unit at the Wade Park Veterans'
Administration Medical Center in
Cleveland.
Full funding for the ambulatory
car~ addition/renovation project is
included in the fiscal year 1999 Veterans Adm.inistration-Housing and
Urban Development Appropriations
bill, he Stated.
DeWine then proceeded to laud
the Wade Pnrk center and how the
proposed project would assist veterans ... specifically those veterans living in northea~t Ohio.
"As your press release ha.~ very
BPPJOPriately stated, The Wade Park
VAMC performs services for the men
and women of northea~t Ohio who
have offered their lives for our country.' The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and Economic DeveloP"
ment offices would en•'OUrage efforts
from your office to provide similar
services to veterans who re~ide in lhe
southeastern part of Ohio," wrote
McDade.
DeWine's press release stared:
"Wade Park is the sixth largest
medical center in the VA system - in
1997, it provided more than 250,000
outpatient visits to veterans in its
ambulatory care area alone. Current
deficiencies in the ambulatory care
area result in a lack of privacy,
insufficient emergency room space,
congested. cold treatment rooms,
and inadequate heating during ihe
winter. The total cost for construction
of an updated, expanded facility is
$28.3 million . In 1997, Senator
DeWine and U.S. Representative
Louis Stokes (D-Ohio) prevailed
upon the Secretary of Veterans
Affairs to make this project a 'top

The new Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
will be built near lhe existing span,
the Ohio Department of Transpona·
tion formally announced Tuesday
evening.
The announcement was made at a
public meeting held at Royal Oak
Resort near Pomeroy. Approximately 60 people attended the meeting
which concerned the PomeroyMason Bridge Replacement and
Ravenswood Connector projects.
For ODOT District 10, ba.o;ed in
Marietta, the meeting wa~ unusual
because it encompassed two unrelated projects, two states - West Vir·
ginia and Ohio - and three counties
- Meigs County in Ohio and Jackson
and Mason counties, W.Va.
Joe ~indecker with Sverdrup
Associates Inc., the consulting finn
working on the bridge project, said
the decision was based on over·
whelming community support for a
new bridge at !he old site. determined
at a public meeting held at Wahama
High School in Mao;on, W.Va. la•t
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge Project, explain
NEW BRIDGE- Joe L.elndeclter,lell, and Teryear.
ry L. Wlnebl'enner, representing Sverdrup
portions of the project to those attended a pub"They were good reasons," he
Alsocllles, Inc. of Columbus, consultant on
lic hearing near Pomeroy Tuesday night
said.
two locations.
The bridge wa~ originally built to the new. heavier and wider span.
Road, Portland Road/stale Route
"It's
just
the
way
we
want
it.''
he
connect the communities of Ma.o;on,
I ~4. Sandy Dcsen Road and state
The two sites are almost identical.
said. "The only thing I want now is Rout&lt; 33K at the appmach to the
W.Va., Pomeroy and Middleport. Leindecker said.
Ritchie Bridge.
Moving the bridge to another location
The e~isting bridge will be open to see it get done."
In addition. OOOT announced a
would detract from its original pur· to traffic during construction and will
Tum Hedrick. ODOT District 10
pose. Leindecker said. In addition. be destroyed after the new bridge is preferred route for the so·called planning and programs director. said
Ravenswood Connector Project the pref&lt;rred route included minnr
the old bridge is located on a short opened around the middle of 2004.
straight litretch in what is otherwise
, Leindecker briefly explained that · which will connect U.S. Route 33 course changes to avoid wetland and
a bend in the river.
the new bridge may be one of four with the William Ritchie Bridge at unnet:es~ary stream cru~\ings.
The ruad will cunsi&lt;t of three sep·
The U.S. Coast Guard had serious different types commonly construct· Ravenswood, W.Va. and Interstate
arare projects. Hedrick said. adding
objections to placing a bridge ed and will have two 12-foot lanes Highway 77.
The long-promised highway will that ODOT is proceeding with
upstream near Nyc Avenue in with 4-ft&gt;Ot shoulders compared to
Pomeroy because it would cross a the existing bridge which has two I 0 begin at Five Points at its nonhwest· JetaikJ de~ign work on the first se~.:­
em tenninus and proceed in a south· tion. that neare't the Ritchie Bridge.
bend in the river. creating a naviga- 1/2-foot lanes with no sholllders.
If the necessary funds are availtional hazard. he c~plained.
Total project cost is estimated at easterly direction roughly following
The bridge also ~rves as a flood $22.6 million for the downsJream site Flatwoods. Pine Grove and Morning able. the lirst section should be sold
route for area residents.
and S23 million forth.! upstream site. Star and Elige Hill roads in Chester to a contractor 10 200 I with sections
The new bridge will be located The project is currently in the pre- and Sutton townships. and state two and three sold in 2002 and 2(~13.
about 130 feet downstream or liminary development phase with Route 124 in Lebanon Township res1J&lt;!ctively. Hedrick said. Construe ·
upstream of the existing bridge. he tinal design slated for 1.999·2000. before connecting with the William tion lime is about two years per sec·
said. If located upstream. two homes right·of-way acquisition in 2(MMJ- Ritchie Bridge crossing the Ohio Riv· lion.
er at Ravenswood.
ODOT did nul display figures
will have to demolished compared 2001 and construction. 2001-2004.
The
road,
a
two-lane
highway
com:ernmg
the co'it of the
with one home if it located down·
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan,
stream. A third option. using the orig· who attended the meeting. strongly based on a four-lane right-of-way will RavenswooJ Conne&lt;.·tor Project. hut
inal bridge site was unfeasible since supported placing the new bridge have exits at Fiw Points. near the in I 9':&gt;6. it was reported th;JI nuking
the stone pie,.,; supporting the old near the existing site and said he junction of Vinegar Street and Pine Jhe cnnnector road into a super II pro·
bridge are not large enough to support
would be plea.o;ed with either of the Grove Road, Morning Star Road at ject would reduce the price from $ 117
!:;&gt;
Court Street, Ba.shan Road. Elige Hill million to $4] million.

RON MCDADE
construction funding priority' for the
department. This year, Senator
DeWine successfully urged the
appropriations subcommittee on VA.
HUD and independent agencies to
fully fund the much-needed consuuction of the project.
"The Wade Park VAMC performs
an unparalleled service for the men
and women in northeast Ohio who
have offered their lives for our counuy," DeWine said. '"lbe docton,
nurses and staff work hard to provide
quality care in a facility that is
unable to meet current. much Jess
future, needs. Thjs facility is one of
a series of'improvements that will
help the facility meet patient
demand."
While northeast Ohio's veterans
cope with congested waiting rooms
an~ a lack of privacy, many veterans
in southea•t Ohio lack any facility for
care and treatment.
"As you are aware, many veterans
in our region must drive many miles
to other comers of the state in order
to receive much-needed and deserved
health care. We would appreciate
attention givef! from your office to
this inadequacy for our,veterans here
in southeastern Ohio," McDade
responded.
"A family here in Meigs County
has offered a site 'free of charge' for
a veterans hospital to be built which
would serve veterans from our comer
of the state. Please give serious consideration toward providing similar
support from your office to this
Meigs County p,l'oposal."
Funding for tile project is also
included in the House version of the
FY99 VA-HUD Appropriations bill
Conllnued. on page 3

Heat wa·ve continues
By BRIAN BERGSTEIN
Anoclatecl Preas Writer
A sign at a Houston car wash
might say it best: "Who put Viagra
in lhe thermometer?"
Summer is dishing out its worst,
clenching the counuy with staggering
heat and humidity that continued
today in much of the country. With at
least 129 heat-related deaths in seven states, people scrambled for protection.

Good Afternoon
Today's Sentinel
l Sections - Jl Paaes
Calendar

7

C!assjfieds

11-2-11!

Comics
Editorials

11
2

Local

3

Sports

+5-6

!

'

I,

Lotteries
01110

Pick 3: 840; Pick 4: 0434
Buckeye 5: 2-6-26-27-37

w.YA.
01

~ -~

New Pomeroy-Mason span
to be built near old bridge

By JIM FREEMAN

Daily 3: 362; Daily 4: 3871

...

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Sentinel HeM Staff

Pomeroy, Ohio

:

LL Indians
advance
PageS

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 64

88 East Memorial Drive

.-

Pomeroy

•

No good deed goes unpunished

Meigs High student awarded National Service Scholarship

Wendy Shrimplin. a student at
to terms with loving pet owners
Meigs
High Sehoul, has been award'!'
have known for years. What's the big
ed
a
National
Service Scholarship by
surprise? Those who us who choose
the
Corporation
for National Service
to live with animals (often over peaand
VFW
Stewart-Johnson
Post 9926
pie) know what having a,pet means.
in
recognition
of
out.,tanding
service
Among other lhings, it's healthy to
Jive with another creature who to the community.
accepts your foibles and strange
habits and does not expect clever
repartee at breakfast ·- or any other
time, for that matter. I have never had
a cat demand to lrnow what I'm thinking!
The relationship with an animal
with whom one shares one's life is
firmly grounded in the physical
world: resting against a tree in the
woods with a cat or dog, sharing
pieces of apple after dinner, sniffing
the air for rain, the e•change ot
_caresses (their version and yours) as
a greeting. What could be better?
Conver.mtion is not nece,.;ary; in fact,
from both points of view. it is a bit of
a distraction. Give me canine collegiality or feline friend.•hip any day.
To your health!

Beat of the Bend column, Page 7
Meigs Legion eliminated, Page 5
Reds lose fifth in row, Page 4

Today: Humid
High: 95; Low:70

Sports

Calif. 90045

Gospel sing to be
Your Social Security: Why age 65 retirement?
held in Amphitheater
sophical principle or European~
dent. It was, in fact, primarily pragmatic, and stemmed from two
sources.
One was a general observation
about prevailing retirement ages in
the few private pension systems in
existence at the time and, more
importantly, !he 30 state old-age pension systems then in operation.
Roughly half of the srate pension systems used age 6S a.~ the retirement
age and half used age 70. The new
federal Railroad Retirement Sy~tem
pa'sed by Congres• earlier in 1934,
also used age 65 as its retirement age.
Taking all this into account. the CES
planners made a rough judgment that
age 65 was probably more rea.~le
than age 70.
This judgment was then confirmed by the actuarial studie.~. The
studiCl&lt; showed that using age 65 produced a manageable system that

July 22, 1998

Weather

Dear Mlnneapo&amp;: Thanks for

my local paper. It seems a woman in
Columbus, Ohio, erroneously
received bills from the IRS saying
she owed $270 biUion in back taxes.
They inf.ormed her that she could
pay in t1Jree easy insl8llments of $90
billion eich. Sweet of lhem, yes? .,Sc'rantoll: Pa.
Dear'~: Yes - just darling.
Thanks for my laugh of lhe day.
Dear 'Ann Landers: A while
back, a reader who had a pet python
wrote to say it was the best companion he ever had and described all the
virtues of keeping a snake as a pel.
You replied, "I'd rather have a
canary. At least they sing."
If you do get a canary, Ann, make
sure it's a male. Female canaries do
not sing. - "'inneapolis Ann Fan
~

"Shall We Gather at the River"
will be the theme of a gospel sing to
be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Pomeroy Amphitheater on the Ohio
River.
Three gospel groups will be featured at the sing -- "The Builder
Quartet" of Ripley. W. Va.. a group
now in their 38th yeat of singing
gospel music: Sheila Arnold, of near
Chester, a singer, song writer, and
recording artist, and "Eternity" from
Point Pleasant.
Arnold, who has been singing solo
since 1995, ha~ shared her music
across the county. She was named
"Female Vocalist of the Year" by the
Country Gospel Music A..sociation

Wednesday

Tuesday, July 21, 1998

Divorce man bemoans fact that he got the 'Shaft in settlement

Ed Peterson
Dllltrk:t Manager
One of the frequent questions I get
is why age 6S was selected as the
retirement age for full benefits. The
question arises as people are discussing options for changing the
program to meet the needs of future
generations.
Germany became lhe first nation
in the world to adopt an old-age
social insurance program in 1889.
designed by Germany's Chancellor,
Otto von Bismarck. By lhe time
America moved to social insurance in
1935, the German system was using
age 65 as its retirement age. But this
was not the major influence on the
Committee on Economic Security
(CES), the body charged wilh developing lhe Social Security system,
when it proposed age 65 as the retirement age under Social Security. This
decision was not ba'ied on any philo-

'·--··~

•

"We've distributed about 80 fans
so far and I've got almost 100 people on the waiting list," said Lillian
Jackson, a coordinator for the Norlh
City Congress senior center in
Philadelphia, where temperatures
could hit 100 today. "The phone has
been ringing all day."
As lhe hot. humid weather arrived
in the Northeasl, Philadelphia officials on Tuesday reported the city's
first heat-related death of lhe summer,
a 61-year-old woman found in her
home. Even Maine was expected to
have highs in the 90s today.
But cooler air was pushing across
the norlhem Plains and Great Lakes,
and the line where that air collided
with lhe hot, humid atmosphere to lhe
south was marktd by strong lhunderstorms today that sllttched from
Nebraska to New England.
Farther south, however, Dallas
was expected to top I00 for the 17th
day in a row. AI least 86 deaths in
Texas, including 23 in .l)allas, have
been blamed on the heal.
In Louisiana, where authorities
allribute at least 26 dellllt,to the heat,
the federal g"avemment ''will likely
declare a drought disaster in every
parish where cash crops arow. state
Agriculture Commissi~r Bob
0t1om said. There are mila of yellowlna. water-llllrVed cciDM•Iks in
northeut Louisiana.
I
There have been 13 heal-related
dealhl in Oklahoma. where several
towns were havlns trouble kecpins
up with the demand for Wiler.

Meigs Local to seek levy renewal
By JIM FRIP!EMAN

Earlier, supporten of the permanent improvemenl~ levy pointed to a
Citizens in the Meigs Local science te~tbook that indicated man
School District will decide a five-year may someday walk on the moon --an
renewal of the district's permanent accomplishment achieved almost 30
improvement levy when lhey report years ago.
to the polls on Nov. 3.
Buses won't be quite as big an
The Meigs Local Board of Edu- issue a.• th~y were in the past, Buckcation voted Tuesday night to place ley said.
·
the renewal before district voters in
This will give us an opportunity to
the November general election. A concentrate on the rest of the buildrenewal in the election will allow the ings. including roofs at the high
permanent improvement program to school and Bradbury Elementary
continue without interruption.
School.
District voters first approved the
"We would also like to replace all
additional 5 mill levy on May 3, the dt&gt;O,.,; in the district." Buckley
1994, for a five year period. The said. Most of the doon are chained
board emphasizes the three B's -- shut at night and are unlocked during
boob. buses and buildings -· as the the day.
reasons behind the permanent
"It's a safety issue. It would be
improvement levy.
nice to have them remain locked dur"Our need is not going to go ing the day, locked without chaining
away." said district Superintendent people in." he said.
In addition to building repai,.,;.
Bill Buckley.
He said the district's textbooks are Buckley would like to replace some
pre!Jy !ll.UCh up date and re.Placed on of the• district's classroom furniture
a regular basis.
-

Sentinel N-• Staff

and conduct electrical upgrades to
allow for changing technology in the
classroom. The funding also gives the
district leverage in apjllying for
grants.
This summer we are buying math
books for grades K-6. Ne~t year will
buy grades 7·12. he said.
Of particular concern is science
books, which should be changed
every five years just to keep up with
new discoveries in science and tech·
nology. Buckley said.
The state gives the district a text·
book subsidy of about $32.000 a year.
he said. The last time we bought Eng·
lish books for grades K-12 it cost
over $100,000, he added.
The levy currently mises about
$500,000 a year. a figure that will not
change. he said.
"We're not asking for any addi·
tiona! money from the taxpaye,.,;," he
said.
In personnel matters, the board
hired the following teachers on one·

year contracts effective the beginning
of the 199H-Y9 school year: Michelle
Anderson. high sehoul science: Lisa
Averion. Salem Center kindergarten :
Lorri Barnes. Rutland Elementary
second grade: Ami Jn Holden. Salem
Center fourth grade: Shannon Kom.
Bradbury Titk 1: Christi Lisle. Brad·
bury fourth and fifth grades; Stacie
Nign. high sc hool science: Kelly Sat·
terlield. elemenlary art: Pamela Vogt.
middle sc hool Titk I math .
In other business.· the board
a-.:arded bakery/bread bids to He in ·
ers and milk/dairy hids to
Broughtons, and approved renewin g
its membership in lhe Coalition ot
Ruml and Appalachian Schools nrga·
nization for the 199R·9Y school year
at a cost of $3!XJ.
The board aho reviewed and
adopted a list of 36 district policies.
"They are basically just minor
technical issues. clarifying existing
policies." Buckley said. The polic1es
are subject to public review.

Meigs County Fair tickets on sale
Tickets for the JJSth Meigs County Fair, Aug. 1-7-22, are now on sale.
Season tickets at S12 each entitle
the holder to gate admis•ion and free
parkinJ during the entire fair.
Membenhip tickets at $15 provide admission all week and parting,
along with giving the right to vote or
file for die Board of Directors of the
Society. They can be purchased only
a1 the the Sugar Run Flour Mill in
Pomeroy. Membership tickets are
sold only to individuals, not 1,0 I IXlll\·
pany or orpnizllion, according to
Debbie WlltSon, fair boarcl secrewy. .
Seasoa liclcets may be pwdlued

at Joe's Counuy Market, Main Sueet.
Rutland: Waid Cross Sons, Racine;
Baum Lumber Co.. Chester; Sugar
Run Flour Mill . Pomeroy; SwisherI..ohse Pharmacy. Pomeroy; Little
John's Food Mart, Tuppers Plains;
Gloeckner's Restaurant, Pomeroy;
Whaley's Grocery, Route 681. Darwin; Helen Baer. Syfacuse; Dorsel
Larkins. Long Bottom; Dan's, 290
North Secoild, Middleport, RAO
Feed, Pomeroy; Five Points Express,
RQUte 7, Pomeroy; Reed's Country
·Store, Reedsville; ~cDonald's
Pomeroy; Little John's Food Mart.
Middleport; Rutland Department

Store. Rutland.
The price of daily admission,
Monday through Saturday, is $6 with
children under two being admitted
free at the gates. The~ is no charge
for parking. Rides are free with payment of the daily admission . Holders
of membership, season or 4-H tickets can ride by paying $4 atlhe ride
office.
Parking will again be under lhe
direction of the Middleport United
~ntecostal Church.
Again Ibis year reserved parking
is being offered in specific areas at
S20 for lhe week. Pay privilege and

picking of the site will take place at
the secretary's office on Saturday.
Aug. 8. The parking cost does not
include entry onto the grounds.
Camping spaces are available at
S60 for traile,.,; and campers. and $25
for tents. Aug. 8 is also the date when
payment is to be made and the location selected.
Exhibitors are encouraged to
make their entrie.\ early. Deadline,
according to board official, is Aug. 8,
at 4 p.m. Watson will be at the secretary's office on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds to accept entries on borh
Aug. 7 and 8, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="27605">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27604">
              <text>July 21, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3184">
      <name>finnicum</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="601">
      <name>grimm</name>
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    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="318">
      <name>phillips</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5904">
      <name>utsinger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
