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                  <text>By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Ann
Landers
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Ot•ar .-\nn l.andcrs: Long before
Yllll :-.t :lrh.·~l pnntin!! all those letters
at'ti'U t tlh.' pf,.· ~· uh :u lk\."isions handed
~..1\'\\ n 1,~ tlh: .ludi.:iul system, I
l·lipJ"'·d tlu:-. 11~.· m fr1Hn the Dallas
~h,rutn~ N. .·,,~ . It is. in my opinion,
~''"·' 1\f th . .· 1H1lSI outrageous legal

a\\arcls ,,t .111 tunc . You might want
h' ;1dd it h' yl\Ur ~.:u llcction . --Charh...·

111 l'l'\J~

met on the Internet. The 30-year-old
man pleaded guilty to two counts of
child molestation.
The man. who has a wife and a 2year-old son, was arrested after he
visited the home of the teen and
kissed, fondled and had sex with her
against her will. The girl's mother
told police she interrupted the
assault when she arrived home from
work.
The girl told police she met the
man via on-line chat rooms on
which she spent much of her time
socializing after her mother bought
her a computer in an cffon to combat the daughter's shyness.
The man was ordered to undergo

wife.

If I had not seen the clipping with
my own eyes, I would not have
believed it. It' appears that California
also has a few unusual counroom
decisions. Keep reading for another
judtcial ding-bat story. This one
came from a reader in El Cerrito,
Calif.:
A c;alifomia insurance agent was
sentenced to five years' probation
for molesting a 13-year-old girl he

counseling, to panicipate in a sex
offenders' treattnent program and
not to use the Internet except for
legitimate business. He will not have
to serve jail time because he was
given credit for the brief time he
spent in custody after his arrest.
This is Ann talldng. When a man
had sex with .a 13-year-old girl
"against her will," they used to call
it rape. I wonder when the rules
were changed -- and by whom. It is
obvious that the Internet is hatching
a whole new set of problems.
Dear Ann: After reading your
column on the subject of leaving the
toilet seat up or down , I thought I' d
send this lillie poem I created just

for you. I hope you like it. -- Mon
Walker, creator of the Beetle Bailey
comic strip
Dear Mon Walker: I loved it.
Thanks for sending it on.
Is the seat up or down.
She cannot tell.
She'll sit down and try it,
And if it's up, she will yell ,
Ann Landers' Ann Landers'
I'm not feeling well .
Please send all the men
On this Earth straight to hell 1
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

OVAL announced online summer reading program

_;fi;mtlp

~dicine .

John C. Wolf, D.O.

IIIIo

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

....:...

BY JOHN C. WOLF, D.O.
Associate Professor of Family
Medicine
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine
Question: I used Sensodyne
toothpaste for about one and one
half year.; for my sensitive teeth and
gums. I read on the box of a new
tube the other day that the manufacturer suggests this product should
not be used for more than four
weeks, so I stopped using it. I had
been having vague calf pains for
several months. and now a few days
after switching to a "regular" toothpaste , the pain seems to have gone
away. Could my leg pain be due to
the toothpaste' The major ingredients are potassium nitrate and sodiurn mononuorophosphate. Perhaps
the nitral•' works like nitroglycerin.
Answer: Sensodyne contains 5
percent potassium nitrate. This
chemical is responsible for the relief
of tooth and gum pain. It is. not clear
exactly how potassium nitrate provides relief, but it probably works by
interfering with the activity of pain
nerves in the gums and teeth. The
sodium mononuorophosphate is
present to reduce the risk of cavities.
1 don'tthink that your toothpast&amp;.
has been responsible for your leg
pain. and this is why.
First. while the drug reduces
tooth pain by being absorbed
through the gums. the relative concentration within the blood in that
area is substantially less than in the
tissue in that area. This blood is then
mixed with blood from the rest of
the body before it is pumped by the
hcanto the legs. Thts dilution makes
it unlikely that the potassium nitrate
would be of sufficient strength to

&amp;!1..*J1'
0

have any impact on the nerves or
muscles of the legs. In addition, if it
relieves pain in the teeth, why would
it cause discomfon in the legs?
The nitroglycerin you mentioned
is used to cause dilation of aneries,
panicularly the coronary aneries.
(These are the aneries that supply
the hean muscle.) The drug is used
to treat those with angina pectoris
and other hean conditions. Nitroglycerin is different in chemtcal
structure from potassium nitrate and
also in the way the body uses it. Further, I would not.expect that dilation
of the leg aneries would cause discomfon.
Assuming that there is always a
cause-and-effect link between two
events that occur in proximity to one
another is.a very common error. This
type of assumption leads to many
incorrect beliefs and even to superstitions. As an example, do you
know someone with a :'lucky hat" or
similar object? Usually the person
hit a home run, had a great golf
game or some similar positive experience that they link to the wearing
the "lucky hat." The hat did not
cause the "great game," but the person now feels wearing it is neces_sary to have another "great game."
Your leg discomfon disappeared
because of something· other than
changing toothpaste or wearing your
"lucky hat ."

POMEROY - This summer,
kids can dive in to any of the nauti cal links and pons on the Ohio ValIcy Area Libraries "Drop Anchor In
A Good Book" online adventure
cruise.
Kids, families and care providers
wi II find the "Drop Anchor In A
Good Book" website on the Internet
at http: www.oval.lib.oh.us/srp.
On the cruise, kids will find lots
of fun things to read and do. At the
website, kids can play a word game,
print out a coloring page or bookmark , and find directions to fun and
easy crafts. The website includes a
"Piratical Internet Scavenger Hunt"
that invites kids to find the answers

to pirate questions by searching
through recommended websites.
Kids can suggest a good book or
someone else to read or lind a good
book to read themselves bv searching through recommend~d lists.
Kids can also write and publish their
own piraic story on the Internet.
The goal of the OVAL "Drop
Anchor In A Good Book" Online
Reading Program is the same as traditional library reading programs:
lead kids to books and reading. But
the program hopes to reach more
families than traditional programs.
The program is based on current
research findings in reading: I)
Children who read, and read widely.

tificate can be printed out so that you
can reward reading achievements.
Families arc encouraged to use
the OVAL Reading Program website
in addition to participatmg in a tradi tional library-based reading program
at their public library or through the
OVAL Books By Mail Program .
Founded in 197 3. OVAL is
Ohio's oldest chartered regional
library system. In cooperation with
member public libraries, OVAL provides resources sharing, library
development and Books By Mail
services to more than 260,000 residents in Athens, Jackson, Lawrence.
Meigs. Pike , Ross. Scioto and Vinton counties.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing ·to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type . Items are printed as space
permits· and cannot be guaranteed
to run specific number of days.

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees, special meeting,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the town hall.
FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education, special session, 10 a.m. to discuss personnel
and other required action .

a

THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA and Alanon
meetings, Sacred Hean Catholic
Church, 7 p.m. Thursday.

SATURDAY
REEDSVILLE - Friends and
relatives of John and Laura Wells,
annual picnic, Forked Run State
Park, noon Saturday.

POMEROY- Town and Coun try Expo 1998 committee meeting
July 30, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the
secretary's office on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds. All committee members and other interested
in the EXPO are asked to attend.

Star
SALEM CENTER Grange 778, and Star Junior
Grange 878, regular session, Saturday, potluck supper, 6:30 p.m.
followed by regular meeting and
election of officers, 8 p.m.

SUNDAY
Eichinger
SYRACUSE
reunion, Sunday, 12:45 p.m. lunch
at Carleton School, Syracuse.
RACINE - Annual Thomas
reunion, Sunday, Star Mill Park,
Racine.
REEDSVILLE Imboden
family reunion, Sunday, Forked
Run State Park.
80th annual
RUTLAND Davis reunion, descendants of
Orlando and Katherine Sheline
Davis, Rutland Firemen's Park,
Rutland, Sunday. Basket dinner at
noon.

ATHENS - Brickles family
reunion, Sunday, home of Jesse

MONDAY
RACINE - Friends of the
Meigs County Library will meet
:vfonday at 7 p.m. at the Racine
Branch.
CARPENTER Board of
Trustees , Columbia Township .
Monday. 7:30p.m. at the fire station .
TUESDAY
RACINE
JEWEL . home
school support group, 7 p.m. Tuesday, home of Brian and Kim Hupp.

Syracuse Nazarene Church hosts t-shirt swim party at London Pool

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Woman left awake during surgery wins $150,000 in malpractice suit

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NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP) ·A woman who woke up during
surgery but was unable to complain
about her horrible pain won
$150,000 in a malpractice lawsuit
against her anesthesiologist.
Jeannie Smith, 48, said she woke
up in the operating room on Dec. 18,
!995. and could make out a bright
light shining in her face .
With a breathing tube down her

~

•

throat and under the influence of a malpractice case in Newpon News
drug to immobilize her, Ms. Smith Circuit Coun against anesthesiolocouldn't speak or move to let the gist David Carney. The judgment
doctors know she was awake on the however, was less than the SI mil other side ~ f the surgical sheet lion she sought.
draped around her.
Carney's lawyer, Gerald Walsh,
What she could do. she said, was said the doctor acknowledged that
feel - every cut, every stitch of a lsoforane, an anesthetic commnnly
45-minute operation to remove her used to keep patients asleep, apparovaries·.
ently ran out without his knowledge
On July 17, Ms . Smith won a -during Ms. Smith's operation.

DRIVE THRU HOURS: .

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Thppers Plains

~

~ Pomeroy

• Gallipolis

~

"Hey Kids"

Friday

8:00 to 4:00 p.m.
8:00 to 6:00 p.m.
8:00 to 6:00 p.m.

8:00 to 6:00 p.m. 8:00 to 12:00 p.m.
8:00 to 6:00 p.m 8:00 to 12:00 p.m.
8:00 to 6:00 p.m. 8:00 to 12:00 p.m.

Meigs County's

•

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Middleport

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Aug 3rd- 7th

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Member F.D.I.C.

•

By MINDY KEARNS

OVP News Staff
MASON, W.Va. - After si•
months or so of "soul searching," Dr.
Danny Westmoreland of the Westmoreland family Care Center in
Mason said he will file a lawsuit
against the govemmenl agencies that
conducted a raid on his home in June
1995.
Westmoreland's office was raided
by federal agents where patients in
the office that adjoins his house
were held at gunpoint, and guns were
pointed at the doctor's housekeeper
and 9-year-old, pajuna-dad son

Patrick.
No charges were filed against
Westmoreland that day, but a federal
grand jury later indicted the doctor on
37 charges, including defrauding the
Medicaid pro)!r&amp;m and distributing
drugs withtn 1,000 feet of a school.
His office, the same housing a former doctor for many years, is located next door to Wahama High
School. Federal prosecutors dropped
the Medicaid fraud charges, with only
10 charges remaining, alleging the
doctor prescribed drugs to patients
who didn't need them.
The doctor's struggle ended over

211 Wist s-d Strttl
P.O.Iox 626
'-vy, OH 45769
74().992-2136

ll. 7
P.O.Iox 339
T..,.s ltaiJs, OH 45783
74().667-3161

COURT APPEARANCE -Johil E. JohniOn, 81, Crown City, lillt,

spoke with hla 1ttomey, William Dean Conlly, during JohniOfl'l
IITIIIgnmtlnt In a.tllpolll Munlclpel Court Tl'IUI'ICIIy on chargM
of felonloul1111u1L Johnson wu charged in thlllleged lhOOtlnp of three Crown City IWIIdenta Wedntldly night.

Crown City man arraigned
for allegedly wounding 3
John E. Johnson was charged with two ~ounts of felonious assault during his arraignment on Thursday ii?connection with the alleged shooting of
three Crown City residents Wednesday nighL
The incident was the result of an alleged neighborhood dispute that led
to the shooting of Deloris Saxton, 33, Randy Saxton, 14, and Lee Saxton,
II, according to the Gallia Ctitlnty Sheilff's Depanment.
The two charges were a result of the injuries sustained by Deloris and Lee
Saxton. Further charges are expected to be filed based on the condition or
Randy Saxton, who remains at Cabell-Huntington H9Spilal. All thnee of lhe
victims were transponed to the Huntington, W.Va., hospital after the Gallia
County EMS and deputies responded to the scene.
Johnson, 61, 31 Hanover St., Crown City, wu aJTCsted at the scene of the
alleged shooting.
Municipal Judge William S. Medley set a pretrial date for Friday, Aug.
7, and it was ordered that Johnson be evaluated by Woodland Centers prior
to his release.

Closing arguments are
·reported in Ingels trial
Closing arguments in the trial of
Earl Ingels, a former Mason and
Meigs County resident, accused of
drugging and sexually molesting
women, got underway Thursday in
the Hamilton County Common Pleas
Coun.
According 10 The Cincinnati
Inquirer, nine women alleged in two
indictments that Ingels, 52, offered
them something to drink that made
them disoriented, then, they say, he
sexually molested them.
The final witness testified in the
trial Wednesday as it entered its second week.
Another 14 women who say they
also were drugged and molested
were not made a part of the trail by
ruling of presiding Judge Thomas
Crush and an additional 3D with sim'
.
'
ilar all~gations have been found but·

Today's

Sentinel

Calegc!ar
Opylftecls
Comig

7

£d!torials

2
3
4:5
3

8:9-10
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l.oca!

Lotteries
164 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis. OH 4S631
740/4-46-2665
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two years later when U.S. District
Judge Joseph R. Goodwin granted a
motion for acquiual on the remaining
charges on Oct 20, 1997. The case
never went before the jury following
closing arguments in the four-day trial .
Westmoreland said more recently,
the government sent a group of
investigators to his offtee from the
Drug Enforcement Agency internal
affairs to investigate the officers
involved in the raid. But the physician said he is tired of waiting for
results.

"'The U.S. Attorney's Office is act- ed to dispel rumors of his leaving the
ing like they had nothing to do with area. Many have questioned the famit (the raid)," Westmoreland said. ily after seeing a real estate ad fea"They say they were lied to by : turing the Westmoreland home in a
agents, but I do hold them responsi- Jackson County (W.Va.) newspaper.
Westmoreland explained that
ble."
The doctor said in all probability, drillings had been done on his propthe American Association of Physi- eny as a possible site for the new
cians and Surgeons will be handling Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. He said be
the lawsuit. Westmoreland said a rep- listed the house with a realtor to
resentative of that association said he obtain a true market value in case the
had never seen such a case of doctor bridge did claim his home.
Since it was announced last week
abuse, where the doctor was totally
that the bridge would be direct! y next
innocent of wrongdoing.
Westmoreland said he also want- to the p~esent one, Westmoreland said
he has taken the house out ofthe real-

to(s hands, and will not only stay in
Mason, but will expand his business.
The physician said he wi II soon
convert the former dentistry and
pharmacy on his properry to a Quick
Care-type facility, aimed at accepting
patients after regular business hours.
Westmoreland. who admitted to
being discouraged during his tribulations, seems to have recaptured his
jolly bedside manner. Apparently
being teased about the pinkish tint of
his freshly -painted house, the doctor
emphasized. "Tell the people the
color chan said ian Wisp."'

Meigs County 4-H judging completed

Sport!
Wgther

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Mason physician plans to sue federal agencies

2 Sections - 12 Pa1es

we'te

Theme is "]esus is Life"

•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume No. 49, No. 71

Good Afternoon

'

.s

Welcome to Vacation Bible School
at Victory Baptist Church

Time 6:00p.m. - 8:00pm

Saturday

Monday thru Thursday

~
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525 N 2nd

•

Indians
outlast
Mariners
Page4

•

Bricklcs on Pleasant Hill Road,
Athens. Potluck dinner at noon,
with games, fishing and special
music in the afternoon. Picnic dinner at noon .For directions call
740-592-6134.

Over 90 people attended the July beth Wolfe, Scot, Kathy, Justin and
Mallory Roach, Kathy and Bolin. Jodi Chaffee, Jan Nitz .
24 t-shin swim at the London Pool Jonctta Grueser, Mark and Devan Missy Lehew, Katie Matson, Vicki Amber Mills, Cody Davis. Bill
in Syracuse.
Brown, Kathy McDaniel. Sara and Brad. Danny and Misty Morrison. Winebrenner. Miranda Davis. Kim
Hosted by the Syracuse Nazarene Stephanie and Mallory Clark . Amber Bing, Wendy, Ash lee. Amber C . Courtney and Jacob. and Ora
Church Sunday School, the t-shirt Megan W11liams, Matt and Nick and Austin Hill, Brittney Morarity, · Bass.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly swim is one of two scheduled swims Triplett, Dereck Michaels, Mallory Buddy and Brittney Young, Jenny
Persons, P. J. Lewis.
Lou Cleek. Lena Yoachman, Erin
column. To submit questions, to link the church and community.
A summer "Fun Fest" will be at
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic the church on Aug. I from noon to 4
Your Bank for Life • Your Bank fgr life • Your Bank For life • Your Bank for life • Your Bonk For Life
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall, p.m. followed by an another t-shirt
swim on Aug. 7. The pastor is the
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Rev. Bob Cocn and the Sunday
~
school superintendent is Kathy
McDaniel and children's director is ~
~
Kim Wolfe.
~
1;:
Auending the t-shin swim were
ii'
ty Senior Center, Susan Oliver.
Thelma,
Debbie,
Heather,
Eric
and
,
~
director.
~
The emphasis will be on dispens- Jeremy Cundiff, Cheryl and Amy ::1
c
...
Lehew,
Bob
Coen,
Connie,
Lindsey
15
ing information as it relates to
menopause in the 90s. A free gift and Katie Coen, Stanley, Tanya, "will be given to each panicipant. Christopher , Chelsea and Caitlyn ~
Holter, Jenny Larson, Nicole, Tina, .S
Refreshments will be served.
Kenter and Kerry Prunty, Samantha !5
Paucrson, Justin Wongly, Jim ~
UMW holds picnic
The spacious lawn at the home of Caner, Joyce Sayeua. Debbie Staats, • LOBBY HOURS
•
Frances Goeglein was the setting for Diane Young.
Monday thru Thrusday Friday
Saturday
Bob, Sharon, Robbie, Pam , Kyle ~
the recent annual picnic of the Rock
and Brooke Cunningham., Glenda . of Thppers Plains
8:30 to 4:00 p.m.
8:30 to 4:00 p.m. · 8:30 to 12:00 p.m.
Spring~ United Methodist Women.
and Kay Hunt, Larry Willis, Chuck, _..
Ten members auended the event
Pomeroy
8:30 to 4:00 p.m.
8:30 to 5:00p.m. 8:30 to 12:00 p.m.
which was followed by a social Vanessa, Odessa and C. J. Jacks,
Jamie , Kim, Thad, Tyler and Eliza- .
hour.
8:30 to 4:00 p.m.
Gallipolis
8:30 to 6:00 p.m. 8:30 to 12:00 p.m.

Bus Service Call 992-6772 or 742-2332

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

Community Calendar·-----

Society Scrapbook
Women's Health Month to be
observed
In celebration of Women's Health
Month. a special program titled
"Menopause Moments" will be presented on Sept. 10,. at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Scn1or Center, 112
Memorial Drive. Pomeroy.
The event is being sponsored by
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio, the Ohio Department of
Health, Bureau of Health Promotion
and Risk Reduction. the Ohio Universi ty College of Osteopathic Medicine , Area Health Education Center.
in cooperation with the Meigs Coun-

become bener readers. 2) Reading
and writing arc complementary
skills. 3) Children who read, and
read widely, become better readers.
The website provides information for parents and care providers
about the importance of sharing
reading and writing activities with
chi ldren. Several ideas and activities
are suggested so that you can develop your own local Reading Club in
your home, ncigh~orhood or childcare center.
The website includes a Drop
Anchor In A Good Book Reading
Log so that you can keep track of the
books kids read this summer. The
Drop Anchor In A Good Book Cer-

Sports

Today's Sermonette, Page 7
Ann Lander's column, Page 7
Braves thump Reds again, Page 4

Today: Cloudy
High: 80; Low:SO

Reader provides e~en more outrageous legal awards
ed hanging around gay bars and
reading homosexual literature. The
man filed the suit against the owners
of the. truck that collided with his
car. TI1c jury awarded him $200.000
and an additional $25,000 to his

July 31,

Weather

Page 12

Thursday, July 30, 1998

Dear Texas: Thanks for sending
it on -- a real collector's item, to be
sure. Here it is:
A 27-year-old Michigan man.
who complained that a rear-end auto
collision had turned him into a
homosexual. has been awarded
$200.000 by a jury. The man
claimed the accident four year.; ago
left him unable to carry on a normal
sexual relationship with his wife.
Although his on ly physical injury
was to his back, he said the acctdenl
had a jarring effect on his personality and altered his sexuality.
The litigant's attorney told the
jury that his client left his wife.
moved in with his parents and stan-

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Pick 3: 899; Pick 4: MOO
Butkeye 5: 7-21-27-30.32

lY.YA.

IMIIy 3: 628; Dally 4: 7855
0 t998 Olllo Vllley -

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not named, it was reported by The
Cincinnati Inquirer.
After the trial is over, Ingels still
faces a probation violation stemming
from a 1995 guilty plea to sexual battery. Judge Crush sentenced Ingels to
five years' probation in April 1996, it
was reponed by the newspaper.

Meigs County 4-H food judging
was completed Wednesday at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Named grand and reserve champions and receiving honorable mentions in their respective classes were
the following 4-H members.
Adventures With Food: Erin
Weber, grand champion ; Laura Bailey,
If
reserve champion ; Kayla Gibbs,
honorable mention.
Extraordinary Eggs: Billee Pooler, grand champion .
Food &amp; Fitness Choices For You:
Radtael Morris, honorable
mention.
Fun With Foods: Alyssa Holter,
grand champion ; Trieia Congo, Tara
Rose, reserve champion ; Summer
Johnson, Mendy Guess, Sarah
Houser, Andml Tedford, honorable
mention.
Mealsllfllt' Easy Living: Stacia
Sims, honorable mention.
Meals ln Minutes: Morgan Weber,
grand champion .
·
Mini Meal Magic: Morgan Weber.
grand champion : Courtney Kemedy,
Krista White, reserve champion ;
Amanda Windon, Sarah Jenkins,
honorable mention.
Quick Breads: Kelly Johnston,
grand champion ; Jennifer Chadwell,
reserve champion; John Cooke, Jessica Dillon, Emily Ashley, honorable
mention.
Science Fun With Dairy Foods:
Tara Rose, grand champion .
Star Spangled Foods: Tabitha
Jones, grand champion ; Jessica Justice, reserve champion .
The Global Gourmet: Kristina
Kennedy, grand champion ; Erin
Bush, reserve champion ; Ashley
Boyles, Sarah Houser, Nancy Pickens, Bethany Cooke, Jessica Amott.
honorable mention.
The Outdoor Chef: Tricia Davis,
grand champion ; Roger Chadwell,
reserve champion ; Mathew O'Brien,
Sara Cammarata, honorable mention.
Yeast Breads: Whitney Ashley,
grand champion.

Gas ·choice shopping
will start on Saturday
COLUMBUS (AP) - Starting
Saturday, a!Jout 1.8 minion Ohioans
can start shopping for a new natural
gas supplier, as deregulation begins .
As many a5 25 gas suppliers will
vie for residential and business cus·tomers throughout the state by offering savings of up to 15 percent on
their monthly gas bills, officials predict
That amounied to $7.20 in monthly savings for 60,000 Columbia Gas
customen who participaled in a pilot
choice prognun in the Toledo area
that began last year. The Public Util. ities Commission of Obio is expected Aug. 10 to release a comparison of
. prices and deals.
In June, the PUCO approved a
Columbia Gas program and similar,
smaller prognms for customers
served by CifKlinnati Gu &amp; Electric
and East Ohio Gas in northem Ohio.
Salurday is die first day the com- .
mission pennilled nwtetm to solicit and sign up custcmen. But officials
caution that there's no rush.
''This is not like gettins season
football tickets for Ohio State," said

ers.
"I would be very watchful," he
said. "I would want to make sure that
I really have a good, thorough understanding of all the kinds of the offers
out there ... We've got to wait and see
what these offers are all about."
PUCO Chairman Craig Glazer
said customers should read natural
gas offers carefully.
. "Don't necessarily lllke the first
offer you get," Glazer said. "There
may be some enticing offers now, bul
people. _should remember they're
signing a legal contract ... You don't
need a lawyer. But people should
read it."
Suppliers will buy natural gas at
competitive prices and then send the
gas to Columbia, which will continue to pipe it into homes and businesses. Customers do not need to
change supplien; those who do not
pick a new natural gas supplier will
continue receiving service from
Coltttnbia Gas at prevailing rates.
Consumers won't notice a change .
on die~ monthly bills until September, when compeiiton' gas competi-

. Robert'lbapo.Cbe ObioCOIISUIIWR' . lion llll'tl flowina. Supplien' names
will show up on cust.ornen' monthly ·

· COUDSCI. "It's not fint-come, fust-

,acrvc."

\

Columbia biiJJ, aldlough some sup-

~n.

who rcpreaedl rqiden· !'pliers will bill customers separately. ·
..,....,_ · ·,.,
,..,;,.n " •• u
;lial utility eoosumen, lqed cus- 1
IIUa IS J- IR ......~ ........ .
·tomen to be careful and to take tbeir . Coltttnbia Gu spokesman Steve.·
'time when pickjngdleir &amp;is suppli- : Jablonski of the choice prosnm.

....

OUTDOOR CHEF- Roger Chadwell set up 1
tripod to hold a cooking pot over an open fire
for hi1 demonstration on outdoor cooking

before Jeanette Ray, extension service, Vinton
1nd Athens Counties_ He was reserve champ!·
on Iii the class.

It's Easy Street for Powerball winners
WESTERVILLE (AP) - What
Sandy Jarrell wants most is a Harley,
just like her husband's. And now
what Sandy wants, Sandy can have.
With the money her husband has
won in the Powerballlottery, the Jarrells can buy a matched set. If one's
not enough, they can get another ...
and another ... and another .. . and
another.
Sandy's husband, John, is one of
13 co-workers who won the record

S295.7 million jackpot Wednesday actually hit it," Jam: II said Thur.;day.
" You go from totally excited to
night.
scared
to death."
The winners, who nicknamed
The
jackpot was worth $295.7
themselves "the Lucky 13," work at
in payments over 25 years.
million
Automation Tooling Systems .in this
But
the
winners, all men, took the
Columbus suburb. They bought 130
cash
optionone payment of about
tickets - spending $10 apiece - at
S
161.5
million
.
a gasoline station in Richmond, Ind.,
The Lucky 13 won't officially be
about I 00 miles away.
the
winners until the Indiana lottery
Each will get $12.42 million
office
validates the ticket. That's
before taxes, their lawyer said.
within the next week.
expected
"It took a long time to believe we

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'E.stiiDUsfrd in 1948

Page2

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publiltler

DIANE HILL
Controller

•w-.tollo---.o-·•--otlop/co
......

FPI: Inferior quality, higher prices
We may have emd m our recent
coluRU\ about Fedenl Pnson ~
mes. the government-owned axporauon that earned nearly S500 orulhon
I2SI year from the labor of conviCted
felom
Things are worse than we thought
In the tntetest of ke:cplng federal
mnwes occup!ed. agenoes throughout the fc:dcr.d government are brmg
forced to buy mfenor products at
pnces that are oflen well above the
market rate And those who try to
change the system orught find themsel ve• on the receovong end of a Ja,.suJt

'"Y'

Federal law
that agencoes
must buy certam product5 from FPL
_..,.,..,_,._. l/tJ«&lt;I''•-If-'o•-•·--~
But the law has hnle to .ay about
,. - :=:: ~ ID flo , _ , Tllo , _ , 111 Coon &amp;. , _ . ,, Ohio
whaJ kind of pnces and servoce those
L~41=~~=·~~~~~:~~~·~~~.n~V~-----------------------~~----~
_. agencoes can expect on return As long
FPI's pnce " "reasonably" close to
the market rate -· as determoned by
FPI -- agencoes have to buy pnson
goods Ithough wa~vers are granted on
,._
I
--Pt/0-«~-llo--oi
JI''' ._ TrtJMI..,_
.. , . _ , . . , _ _ _ , • - - - - 1 ........_ ·

Exhibit shows resistance
to Freud is still strong

some mstanees)

But what' s good for the convocl5
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
A. .oclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Toward the end of hos lofe sox decades ago. Sogmund
Freud "'"d the rem unce to hos pwneenng research on1o the mys1enes of 1he
mmd remamed 'strong and unrelentmg "
A Lobrary uf Congre"' exhobll openmg thos fall after years of delay and
controversy ,. provmg that resostance os stoll vogorous
The very odea of the show - first proposed more than three years ago was assaoled by a small army of Freud cnucs who womed that the exhobll
would glonfy Freud\ reputauon and rev1ve the pracuce of psychoanalySIS
Even Freud 's granddaughter, psychologist Soplue Freud, contends the
valodoty of some of her ~randfather's theones has changed on the flow of scoenofic research smce hos death
"They should never be cast m cement, only rehgwns say that," smd
Soph1e Freud. now 73 and reured as a psychology profes~or from Simmons
College of Soc1al Work on Boston "H1s work os a miXture of arnazmg leaps
onto the future with other pans embedded on h1s own time."
Lobrary of Congress officoals .ay the exh1b1t, openmg Oct 15, was never
meant to prop up Freud's scoenufic reputatoon or to pump new hfe onto psychoanalysos.
Instead, 1u a~m was to tap the lobrary's Freud arch1ve -the largest holdong of artifacts and documents on the world - to show the ompact of his
thought on 20th century culture, .aod Mochael S Roth, assoctate director of
the Getty Research lnslltute and curator of the exhibit.
"Our goal was to show how Freud was taken up by the cnttcs. by fans,
by wnters, artiSts, filmmakers. scJentosts .,"Roth SaJd. "He's a figure on our
century we should thmk about "
Freud treaung troubled patoenu on Vienna beginmng at the tum of the
century ~reated the modern field of psychoanalysis. comong up with the theones ~ the unconsctous and traumauc events on early childhood affect a
person's emotoons and acuons as an adult
The show woll feature 150 books, manuscnpts, photos, film clips and
other objects from the lobrary's collectoon, tncludong a reproductiOn of
Freud's famous couch .
Some scctoons are loghthearted a clop from TV's anomated show "The
Sompsons" ollustrates the ompact of Freud's theory of represston on popular
culture In the clop, Homer Sompson tells hos daughter. Ltsa. "The tmponant By William A. Rusher
thing is for your mother to repress what happened. push II deep down msodc
TAIPEI, Taowan-- I have vosoted
her, so she 'II never annoy us agaon "
thos beauuful osland , off and on, for
But dunng the extra ume afforded by the postponement - whtch the more than a thord of a century,
Jobrary attnbules sole ly to financoal re_asons, not the controver~y -c urator watchong It grow from the desperate
Roth commissooned two essays by 'freud cntocs for the cxhobll s catalogue
last foothold of a defeated Chonese
Cntics' had complaoned so nee the summer of 1995 that the [tbrary need- army onto a world-class example of
ed to ensure that the exhibll reflected research over the last 25 years chal- economoc and polotocal success. So
Jengtng many of Freud's condusoons Ftfty scho_l,ars of Freud's work tnsost- when I rece tvcd an tnvllat1 on
ed on a peution that the exhtbll be wtdened to adequately reflect the full rece ntly to travel here agaon as the
' spectrum of mformed opomon about the status of Freud's contnbutoon to guest of ots government, woth assurontellcctual hostory "
ances thai I would be able to onterMany sogners &lt;ay they never sought to cancel the ex hobll But the pell- voew some of ots top ofricoals and
uon 's organozer. Peter Swale, os more outs~oken . callon g the •.~tore hostory of represcntallves of all liS maJor polotpsychoanalySIS from 1900 to about 1975 a htsiOry of hype
ocal partoe., I leaped al the chance
"There os no &lt;e tentofoc baSIS for Freud's htstory of mond, " Swale saod on
The tnp would follow closely on
a recent ontervoew " It ts a fact that Freud fabncatcd at least a couple of hiS Presodent Chnton's vosot to the
case studies "
Comm um st rcg1mc on the mam
Adds Adolf Grunbaum. a Unoversoty of Pmsburgh professor of the phi - land, and gove me a valuable opporlosophy of sc oencc who wrote one of the catalogue's cntocal essays "There tumty to assess Ta1wancsc rcactwns
15 very Joule evodencc that l'reud was nght about the causes of ncurosts,
10 11. In pari ocu lar. I wanted to know
aboul how dreams arc made and about how we develop from childhood what people here thought of Mr
onward."
Clonto n's pubhc endorsement ol
Yet despolc such " profoundly flawed " theoncs, Grunbauon satd there's no BeiJing's " three no's' ' polocy no
question that "Freud 's wnungs have been ommensely onflucntoal on the cui- Taowancse declaratiOn or Indepen lure "
dence from Chona , no " two Cho nas" or "one Taawan, one Chtna"
rormula; and no membershop by
Ta1wan m mtcrnat1onal organtzaloons that requore statehood . The
Chnton admonoslratoon onsosts that
these pohcocs represent nothong new
on Its pan, but BeoJong has been
Dear Edotor
The shoot-a-lhon for the Meigs Moddle School gorls' basketball program prcsson g Washongton to assen them
was a success We apprccoatc everyone who helped , those who pledged on wnlln g, and Mr Chnton 's oral
money and the local bustnesscs who donated prozes
'
John Sharp and Jimmer Soulsby.
Meigs Middle School girls basketball coaches
Middleport

tSn "t
always
anoda, FPI goc the Com:aionaJ Ven- Slalmlellt to say that FPI encouraged
dor's Associalion to file a lawsuit the bringmg of this case," Ra1swn
good f&lt;r the cusagamst GSA challenpng the decision. IOid our reporter Ashley Baker. The
tomer - Q" the
The CVA IS a business coalition !hal GSA, FP1 and the Jusbce Department
taxpayer. Consupplies pr15011 indusuics with raw all dechned to commc:nt on the lawSider whal hapmaterials. And they didn't bke lostng SUI~ which os sull pendmg.
pened to the
Agencoes that try to bypass the FPI
the business thai~ wtth a big furDepartment of
are
hkely to find roadblocks. In !ale
and
ruture order.
Health
Hwnan SeryiCCS
Rep. Peter Hoekstra. R-M1ch., 1996, for example:, the lkpartment of
earl1er this year,
who ts sporuorin~ legJSiabon that Defense needed 3,0Xl worbtatioros
when it decided
would ehmmate FPI' s mandatory for a new personnel support office in
to move some of
source requtremen~ said lhaln's clear Pluladelphta. Two pnvate-sc:ctor
lloller.
tts employees onto
to him that federal prison industries ftnnS subtruued b1ds at JUSt over S4
Andlrsoo
ro:w dtgs.
encouraged the vendors 10 file: their million . FPI's bod was more than
twtce as expensove, at $8.4 mollion
Tile HHS wanled to make sure thai laWSUit
The folks wl)o brought you those
the furruture they needed gOt there on
"I ftnnly bebevc that the CVA
ume OtherwiSe. they'd be stuck With filed the lawsuit agamst the GSA as $500 totlet seats dodn't want to pay
the unpleasant prospect of paymg rem the 'enforcer' of FPI's mandatory twice the goong rate for governmenton an empty &lt;Uite of offices. So the source." Hoekstra !Old us. "Tile sun issue computer stands. So the Pentaagency mformed all potenual suppli- was nOt only filed agamst the Admin- gon asked for a waovcr, whoch was
ers that they'd be hablc: for the mntf osl111lor of GSA, but also agamst quockly turned down (FPI eventually
the shipment was delayed
can:er co vii servants at GSA. This suot granted the waovcr, bul only after
But the FPI sull wouldn't guaran· . clearty conveys the message that 11 IS some hogh-Jevel polotockmg by the
tee a delovery ume . So the General il!!lllnst an ii!!er&gt;:y employee's person- GSA)
And as some a~encocs have
Serv1ces Admm1strauon. whtch was al onterest to protett theor agency from
learned
the hard way. convocted
buyong the furniture for HHS. gave FPI' s predatory acttv~tocs. "
the contract to someone else.
felons
aren't
always meuculous on
But Davod Ralston Jr., who repreThat dodn'1 su too well w1th FPI sents the CVA, denoes any onfluence theor craftsmanshop. Between 1988
Smce federal agencoes can't sue one by FPI "I thonk it would be a mos- and 1990, the Pentagon filed 106 formal " product qualoty defieoency"
complaonu asaonst FPI -- by far the
most complaints filed agaonst any
DOD contractor. Hughes Aorcraft
placed second with a mere 12 Thos os
even
more remarkable sonce Hughes '
CAVIN 1m 1971"""' sales to the DOD were five times
greater than FPI's
Federal pnson officials claim
they're doirig the pubhc a favor by
teaching valuable job skills to inmates
who otherwise might have too much
idle time. Besodes, it would cost too
much to dismantle the company.
Says Todd Craig, chief spokesman
for the Federal Bureau of Prisons:
"We have made great strides to
improve delivery time, product quality and overall customer satisfaction.
We are now meeting the majonty of
our customers needs, and in cases
where there is a problem, we're taking action to rechfy the situation."
We' ll know in September tf Craig
is right. That's when the General
Accounting Office and the JUSiicc
Department's Inspector General are
set to pass judgment on FPI' s customer-service habits.
Jack Anderson and Jau MoDer
are wrilen for Unikd Feature Syu·
dkale, Inc.

q~~~
WI

_,.......

SAYAUUH

Writer;s most recent report from Taipei

Letters to the editor

Shoot-a-than a success

restatement of them in Shanghai
was the first such
by an Amencan
president.
As for
Mr.
whether
Clinton's statement was nothmg

Dear Edttor
The Salem Townshtp Volunteer Fore Department and Ftrebclles had a
great success w1th theor an nual oce cream soctal and apprectate everyone
who helped 10 anyway The Mtdnoght Cloggers, Dwoght Icenhower, and
David Stiffler performed, and the Modern Woodmen of Amenca, Camp
633~ of Galhpohs sponsored a matchong fund for the department
It 15 really great to see a communtty work together to benefit theor local
fire depanment.
Linda Montgomery, president
Salem Township Flrebelles
Langsville

Today in history
By The Aaaocletecl Prell

Today is Friday. July 31, the 212th day of 1998. There are 1~3 days left
in the year.
lbday's Highhght on Htstory
Five hundred years ago, on July 31, 1498, dunng_ his third voyage to the
Western Hemosphere, Chnstopher Columbus amved at the tsland of
Trinidad.
On this date:
·
fJ
th J ·
In 1556. St. Jgnallus of Loyola. foulldor !lf the Soctety o esus, e esun
order of Catholic priests and brot~ , died tn Rome
In 1777. the Marquis de LJfayQ~to. a 19-~ear-old French nobleman, was
made a major-general in lhe A,mtdcan Contmental Anny.

By George R. Plegenz
If she wasn't one of the most
talked-about women on history, she
was cenaonly the most talked-about
(and wrnten-about) woman preacher
on hiSiory
Rcponers delighted on wnung
about the evangelist "with the namong red hair and figure of a schoolgorl "
Aomee Semple McPherson had a
flaor for the dramallc that made her
"tllustrated sermon s" theatrocal
spectacles. Her extracumcular lofe
added to the intngue.
A New York Times revocw of her
latest biography, "Soster Aomee," by
Daniel Mark Epstein (Harcourt
Brace, 1993 ), satd her services at
Angelus Temple on Los Angeles
" had less in common wnh the tent
and tabernacle preaching of classtc
revivals than woth the musical comedieo of Broadway and the movies."
When she appeared al Cleveland
Public Hall in 1933, she came
onstage posins as a traffic cop -- to
"pull sinners over to the curb and
put them back on the right road."
She wore a Los Angeles police ·
badge on her cape.
·

new,

one

hogh offic~al here
dosposed of that
theory
rather
neatly : "If ot was
Rusher
nolhong new," he
asked, "why did Beojong want II so
much 1 "
On the other hand, I have found
little mchnatJOn tn government carclcs here to overstress the impar-

lance ol the Clmton gesture For one
thong. they haven 't forgonen that
when BcoJong lobbed mossole s onto
the sea near Tao wan's pons JUSt
belore lis presodenual electoon on
March 1996, Mr Clonton ordered
two aircraft-earner task force s to
lake up posotoons on the South Chona
Sea -- an act that moght be called a
"two no's" pohcy all by otself.
In the second place, President
Lee Teng-hut was bnefed in Taopeo,
JUSt arter Mr. Clinton's Shanghai
remarks, by Rochard Bush, chaorman of the Amencan Institute m
Tao wan (Washington's unoffocial

A woman

Great success

embassy here). Bush was mstructed
to assure Mr. Lee that Washington
stoll stands by the six promiSes 11
made to Taopeo on 1982 that it w1ll
not set a deadlone for ending arms
sales to Taiwan, that 11 will not consult with Betjing on those sales; that
11 woll not revise the Taiwan Relatoons Act; that 1t woll not seek to
medo~te cross-strait disputes; that 11
w1ll not change ots stance on Taiwan ·
sovereignty; and that 11 woll not
pressure Taopeo to negotoate w11h
Bcojong.
If Prestdent Clonton really means

however, there can be no doubt that
any serious hope of reunoficauon of
Taiwan woth the maonland depends
upon the democratizauon of the
mainland regome .
The people of Taowan are
mtensely proud of the democratic
reforms that have taken root here m
the past I0 years, and ~ould never
consent to rcumficat10n on any lesser terms . Presodenl Lee tmplicd as
much on July 24 on an address to the
Natoonal Unificatoon Councol, ofrcrong Taowan Itself as a model on
whoch Bei)tng could build .
these assurances, his remarks m
Ccnainly the Amencan people
Shanghai may have been only an woll sympathoze woth that determiaucmpl 10 please hts hosts with a nallon . We share the same values:
few relatovcly harmless comments. not only economoc freedom (whoch
But no one on Taopei IS taking thi s BeoJmg increasingly allows), but
for granted .
pohtocal freedom as well MeanBeyond thai, I have been sur- while. let those who prefer to stress
prosed to fond several Taiwanese more pragmatoc consoderatoons,
observers, mcluding government such as the benefits of trade, ponder
offtctals, spec ulatong that Prestdent thos staltstoc : In each of the past five
Jiang Zcmon, head of the Commu- years, Taowan has bought more
nost regomc, may actually be edgong, goods rrom the Umted States than
ever so cauuously, toward a bot all or maonland Chona put togethermore political democracy. That - $75 m1lhon worth a day.
would explain hos willmgness to
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
televise Mr. Chnton's pro-democra· guished Fellow of the Claremont
cy comments on two separate occa· Institute for lhe Study of Stales·
sions.
manship and Political Philoso·
Whether Mr. Joang os really phy.
embarktng on that course or not,

pre~cher

As she pushed
the bunon on the
men oi the motorcycle ,,.rked on
stage, she ripped
mto "the speedsters in Cleveland
who are hurtling
to destruction over

the htghways of
s1n."
had
A1mee
wanted

to

Plagenz

come

careening down the atsle of the auditonum on the sodecar or a motorcycle
dnven by a Cleveland policeman but
the choef of pohcc put hts foot down.
Another of her ollustrated sermons used a boxmg nng as a prop.
"We've got to kayo the devtl, " she
told her congregatton .
Lately Thomas, in an earlier
boography of Aimee titled "Stormtng Heaven" (Wtlliam Morrow &amp;.
Co., 1970), said her ministry was "a
nonstop outbunt of joy, joy, joy. She
scattered tickets to those who yearn
to ride the Happy Road to Heaven. "
But Aill)ee's life was not all joy,
joy, joy. Family dis~nsion, church
uproars, breakdowns and court bat-

fit for the stage

ties were constantly swirling around had drowned.
her.
Then five weeks later she showed
Her mother, Minnte, one of toe up in · Douglas, Anz. She told an
officers of the temple, suspected that excnmg tale of havmg been ktd"parasnes" on the board were napped and transponed blindfolded
"bleedtng the temple to death ." to a shack m the desen.
She escaped from her abductors,
Atmee and Ma often quarreled
themselves over finances. Lawsuits she said, by USing the ragged edge of
ramed on Aimee -- mostly for a tin can to cut the ropes bmdmg her
unpaid bills. Mother and daughter · hands and feet.
were always having a falling out and
But scorfers saod tt was all a hoax
then making up.
and a pubhcny stunt. It was whtsln her woll Aimee left Ma $10 pered that Aimee was off on a renwoth the proviso that of Ma contested dezvous wnh Ken Ormiston, an
the will, the legacy would be cut to engineer on her radto program.
$5. Ma was scarcely more generous.
Witnesses reported seeing the
Out of an estate of $200,000, Ma left two at a cottage at the seaside resort
Aimee $200.
of Carmel, Calif.
The size of Ma's estate (she had
The case went to the grand jury
been an officer in ·the Salvation but was later dropped.
Army) led one btographer to write
When Aimee died m 1944 at age
that "a tambourine in the right hands 54 (the coroner said her death from
can be a remunerative instrument"
an overdose of sle~ping pills WliS
Aimee played every scene in life accidental), the curtain fell on what
with all the stops pulled out.
one historian has called "the last
But the scene she played best of giddy spasm" of revivalism in
all was her vanishing act of 1926.
America.
She was wading in the sea off
Georwe Plagenz Is a syndicated
Ocean Parle, Calif., one May after- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
noon when she disappeared from Association.
sight. It was generally assumed she

By The Auoclated Press
Ohioans are luckmg out on the
weekends.
Another weekend of near-perfect
Wellther was promised by forecasters.
The reason is a high pressure system moving out of Canada. The
National Weather Service said it will
produce sunny skies and temperatures in the upper 70s and low 80s.
The relative humidity also will be
lower, improving the comfort factor.
Lows tonight and Saturday night
will be in the 50s.
The record-high temperature for
Ibis date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 degrees in 1954 while
the record low was 47 m 1967. Sunset tomght will be at 8:47 p.m. and
sunrise Saturday at 6:30 a.m.
Across the nation
Patchy rain · hngered over the
Northeast early today as thunderstorms rumbled toward the Rockies
and showers dotted the West. Another day o(Jriple-digit heat was m store
for parts of Texas and Oklahoma.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms rolled ()Ver southern New
England and New York state, where
a dry air mass should make for an
unseasonably cool evening. The rain
was expected to pu.~h toward the midAtlantic coast by afternoon.
Behind the front, mostly fair and
dry condttions should prevail across
the Great Lakes and the warmer
upper Mississippi Valley.
Heavy rain was possible over
Kentucky, Tennessee and the Carolinas, as well as northern regions of
Alabama and Georgia and along the

Gulf Coast
Showers and isolated heavy thunderstorms also were possible m
Kansas, northern Oklahoma. Mtssouri and northweStern Texas. Mostly fair skies should prevatl across the
southern and northern Plains, except
for a chance of hght rain in the westem Dakotas.
Another day of I 00-degree heatmg was building from southeastern
Oklahoma to central and eastern
Texa~. where weeks of unrelenting
heat have been blamed for 99 deaths
statewide.
Scauered heavy thunderstorms
were forecast across the Rockies and
much of New Mexico, while cooler
air was ushering thunderstonns mto
the interior Pacific Nonhwest. Fog
lingered along coastal areas.
Mostly sunny skies should prevail
elsewhere across the West.
Before daybreak, Tropical Storm
Alex was churning westward of the
Lesser Antilles, the chain of
Caribbean islands extending south of
Puerto Rico. Alex was expected to
strengthen slowly through the weekend without threatening any land
areas.
The nation's hot spots Thursday
was Blythe, Calif., with a high reading of 112 degrees. The coldest place
was Truckee, Calif., with a low of 36.
High temperatures today . should
range from the 70s in New England
to over 100 in Texas and Southern
Cahfomia. with 80s readings stretching from the Nonhwest to much of
the East and highs in the 90s across
the South and High Pla~ns.

Today's weather forecast
the lower and mid 80s.
Extended forecast.
Saturday night...Mostly clear.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Sunday... Mostly sunny. Highs tn
the mid 80s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the lower 60s and highs in the upper
80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows m
the upper 60s and highs in the upper
80s.

By The Associated Preas
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers until mid-morning .. Then becoming mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s .. Nonh wind
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tonight... Mostly clear and cooler.
Patchy fog late. Lows in the upper
50s. Light and variable wind.
Saturday... Mostly sunny. Highs tn

I

Freda Hood
Freda Ross Hood. 87. of Middltpon. dted on Thursday, July 30, 1998
at Veterans Memorial ~ospital in Pomeroy.

She was born on March 20. 1911 in Red House, W.Va., daughter of the
late James and Joanna (Granny) Keeney Turner. She was employed as a clerk
at the former Mtddleport Book Store, wa.~ a member of Order or Eastern
Star. Mtddlepon Chapter 172, and was a member of the Middleport Ftrsl
BaptiSt Church.
Surviving are a soB and daughter-m-law, John and Crystal Hood or
Pomeroy, a daughter-in-law. Lori Hood of Wayland. Tenn., five grandchtldren and two great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Mtlton
Hood tn June. 1996, two sons. Larry and James Hood. and several broth·
ers and st sters.
Services wtll be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, August I, 1998 at the Middlepon Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Mark Morrow orfoetating. Bunal will follow in BeecH Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Fnday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Dorothy Shields
Dorothy Eleanor Shields. 87, of Wadsworth, formerly of Hockmgpon.
died Friday, July 31. 1998 at the Magnoha Care Center in Wadswonh.
Born July 22. 1911 in Coolville, she was the daughter of the late Henry
and Emma Reed Deeter.
She is survived by a d;lughter and son-in-Jaw, Catherine and Donald Selz
er of Strongsvtlle: two sons and daughters-in-law. Raymond and Donna
Shields of Doylestown, and James Robert and Pauletta Shtelds of Medma,
nine grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and one great-great grandson.
Two brothers, Clarence Deeter of Philo and Murray Deeter of Lemon Grove,
Calif.; and a stster, Sylvia Mae Knisley of Coolville.
Beside her parents she wa.~ preceded by her husband, Willie Shoelds, a
daughter. Mary Louise Shields: a son. Charles Wilham Shields. two grandchildren. and two great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p m. at the White Funeral Home.
The Rev. Helen Klone will officiate and burial will be on the Stewart Cemetery at Hockingport. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from I
p.m. until the time of service.

Jerry

HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. (AP)
- "Buffalo Bob" Smith, the cowboy-suited host of "The Howdy
Doody Show" who delighted the
baby boom generation in the early
years of television, died Thursday of
cancer. He was 80.
Smith, who lived in the western
Nonh Carolina town of Flat Rock,
died at a hospital in nearby Hendersonville, said family publicost Kelly
Stitch from New York. She said the
family would not release funher
details.
Fans knew the opening rout me of
. the show by heart. Smith would sh\)llt
out, "What time is it?" and the
Peanut Gallery - the kiddie studio
audience - would respond with
. glee. " It's Howdy Doody time!"
Even though the TV show went
olf the air in 1960 after 13 seasons
. and more than 2.500 shows, Buffalo
Bob and the freckle -faced marionette
Howdy Doody were more than
celebntoes to millions of baby
boomers across the country."
.----.:..,__ __;__ _;---::- ·

S~igger

Word has been received of the death of Jerry Allen Swtgger, 38, of Salem,
Oregon. who died on Thursday, July 16, 1998, following an extended illness.
He was born in South Charleston, W.Va. en August 26 ,1959, son of
Charles Swigger of Pomeroy and the late Helen Fisher Swigger.
After extenstve travel through the Untted States, he settled m Salem m
1988. He worked for various companies as a salesman and an attendant. He
was a member of the Salem Mission.
Besides his father, he is survived by three brothers: Tell)' Swogger of
Kansas City, Ks., Rickey Swigger of Leavenworth, Ks , and Charles R. Swigger Ill of St. Albans, W Va.
Memonal servtces will be held on Sunday. Augu&gt;t 2. 1?98 at 3 p.m. at
the Gospel Lighthouse in Point Pleasant, W. Ya., woth Pastor Boll Banks officiating.
The family requests that no flowers be sent.

'Buffalo Bob' Smith, 80, of
Howdy Doody Fame, dies
They became hke a member of the
family to their young fans- and the
young at hean Columnist Bob
Greene wrote in 1987 that the show
"may have been the most imponant
cultural landmark for my generation."
" I always Joked kids," Smith, the
father of three sons, satd in an interview in i994. "'You can"t kid a kid.
They know right away if you like
them or not."
Among the show's other muchloved characters in the town Doodyville, U.S.A: Clarabell the Clown.
Princess Summerfall Winterspnng .
Phineas T. Bluster, Dilly Dally, Chief
Thundenhud, Trapper- John and
Aubadub. One of the performers who
played Clarabell was Bob Keeshan,
later to become TV's Captain Kan-

Harry Lee Trout
Harry Lee Trout, 61, Raven•wood. W.Va .. d1ed on Wednesday, July 29.
1998 at his resodence.
He was born on April 29, 1937 in Clearco, W Va., son of Samuel E. and
Clovie Ansel O'Dell Trout.
He was a maintenance mechanic for Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation. Ravenswood Aluminum and Century Aluminum for 32 years. He_
was a former coal miner in Nocholas County, W Ya.. and wa.s a member ol
the Independent Umted Brethren Church in Ravenswood, W.Va.
In addition his parents. he is survoved by his wife. Emma Lea O'Dell
Trout of Ravenswood : three daughters and sons-in-law· Pamela and Ron
Crawford and Vicki and Rick Adams. all of Ravenswood and Reneta and
Dennis Funk of Beallsville. Mel : a 'on and daughter-in-law. Scott and Sharon
Trout. Ravenswood: a brother, Harold Trout, Ravenswood: seven grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wll~ be held on Saturday. Aug. I. 1998 at the Independent United Brethren Church on Ravenswood with Rev. Bill Maties and Rev.
Garland Groves officiating Burial will tollow m Ravenswood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Roush Funetal Home on Ravenswood on Friday
from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Immunization program underway

An immumzation educatiOn program,
"lmmunoze for Healthy Lives,"
garoo.
has
been
started by the Meigs Coun"No one knows how hard we
ty
Health
Depanment and McDonworked all those years." Smith told
ald's
of
Pomeroy,
on an attempt to
People magazme in 1987. " Live TV
educate
the
publ
o
c
about
the imports the most dtfficult thing to do in the
tance
of
chold
ommunozatoon
world. You're on the spot all the
Nearly one molloon American cholume."
dren
under the age ot two go unproRecovenng from a 1954 hean
tected
agaonst hfe-thrcatenong bul
attack that sodehned him for months ,
preventable
childhood doseases
he actually dtd some appearances
because they are not fully Immu, from a spectally built studio in the
nized. accordong to the health dcpan, basement or hiS home.
ment.
. During the first week of August,
After his return to the NBC studto
McDonald's
will distnbulc ommuin 1955, he told The Associated
nization
educatoon
Jcaflels, whoch
Press he drove htmself out of "a feel feature
the
department's
tmmunozaing of pride. You're happy that peotion
clime
schedule
and
the
vacconaple want you to entenam them." He
tion
schedule
recommended
by the
said the heart attack taught hom to
" remeiT!ber your hmtls."

The 'D al"ly Sentinel
.
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(USPS ltJ-MO!

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Pubhshed every lftemoon, Monday lllrough
fnday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
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Postallltr. Send address cortCCti0!'5 10 The
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Correction Polley
Our mala .-em ta 1111 aklri• Ia to be

......,.,., If you lmow of on

tmll' Ia 1
story, t:1U the aewsroom al (7&lt;10) 99:1215!. We trill cbed&lt; your lalormodoa

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Departmente

Tbe Jllllo otullber Ia 992-215!. llepotrt·
exteasioa 1ft'
1\t.........:........_..........Ert. 1101
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Other SlrviCH

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G:!.w

M uw It I I_ ....-..- ........_ .._....bL UN
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1113
a I' t AIIL----~ ..----·_,Ert. 11..

---·--------- - -·- -- -'

oo OOO-UOOOOOO HO. . E I L

Bible school ·scheduled
Vacatoon Btble school wtll be
held Aug. 9-13 6 to 8 p.m . at the
Racine Ftrst Bapttst Church. "Ptlgrlm's Progress" wtll be the theme.
There will classes for children three
through adult. Bible lessons wtll be
presented wuh puppets. There wtll
games wtth pnzes.

Am Ele Power .....................43"1.
Akzo .....................................,.. 51
AmrTech ..............................49 "1.
Ashland 011 .........................53'1.
ATI.T ..................................... 60'1.
Bank One .............................51"1.
Bob Evans ....,....................... 19~.
Borg-Wamar ......................... 47'1.
Broughto{l ............................... 15
Champion ............................. 11 '1. M~n!c Lodge to met
Charm Shpa .......................... 4"1.
Middlepon Masomc lOOge 363,
City Holdlng ........ :................. 42'1•
Federal Mogu1 ....................... &amp;1 '!.
Gannett ................ ,................ 64~
Goodyear .............................. 61 ~
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - none .
Kmart ...................................16"!.
Thursday discharges - Edith
Kroger ..................................."8'/.
LJtndl End .......:..•.•..~ ............. 27'&gt;
Ltd .........................................27'4 O'Dell, Ida Cowdecy.
Oak Hill Flnl ......................... 20'1.
Holzer Medical Center
OVB .........................................40
Discharges July 30- Tracy Fe lOne Valley ...............................~ Jure, Ruth Parkins, Gloria Westfall,
Peoples ................................ 291. I · Tammi Adamson, Alma Johnson,
Prem Flni .............................Z1 \• Sharon Smith, Mrs. Anthony
RockWell ..............................41 :0 Arro ood d
M J ' S
RD/Shell ................................ 51,'1.
w
an son, rs.- . am~e tewSeara .................. :................. 521. art and daughter, ~1lta onhup,
Shoney'• ................................... 3
Marian DeWitte, Howard Aubrey,
Star Blink ........................ ft •••• 71 '1.
Judy Dancy, CI'Otia Plants, Margaret
WendY' I ................................2~
Martin, Ruth Nichols, Elias Hat,
Wotrthlngton ....................... 1 41.
fi ld

Hospital news

Reader Services

Ne~

Amencan Academy of Pediatrics.
August is a popular time for parents to ommunize theor choldren
before they return to school, but vaccinations should beg on at on fancy, and
health professoonals rec.ommend a
vaccone for chocken pox.
The health department will dostribute coupons for free French froe s
from McDonald's to those children
rece1v1ng immun1zations during
August Last year, more than 6.500
McDonald's restaurants natoonwide
partocipated in "lmmunoze for
Healthy Loves," reaching over 65 molloon people with omponanl ommunt zatJOn messages . The~e efforts
helped mcrease Immunization rates 1n
many communittes, anywhere from
two to 21 percent.

Meigs announcements

SINGLE COPY PRICE
• Oa1ly.... ....•.•..•...... .. . • . ... • 35 Cents
Subscribers not dc$mng 10 pay the e~mer may
rem 1tm advance d1r«l to The D11ly Sentmel on
a three, "1x or 12 month basis. Cted1t w1ll be:
g1ven camer each week.
No subsc:ripeion by ma1l pemuntd an arcu

I

- . ---·--

T~~!i~ ~~~~s ~~~~}~~e~ng~~~~~~v9. 0a&lt; ~ell

Beautiful weekend
predicted for Ohioans

By C1rritr or Motor Route

I

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Frldlly, July 31' 1918

By Jaell Andenon
iniJIInlloler

111 Court Street, Pomet ~. Ohio
614-4MI2·2156 • Fax 992-2157

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

friday, July 31, 1998

I

-·-·-

Stock report• era the 10:30
a.m. quotH provldad by Adveat
of GelllpOIII.

j u.-.~~===-=!1 ·

ae .

F&amp;AM. woll meet Tuesday. 7:30
p.m. Refreshments will be served.

Orientation slated
The Meigs Middle School annual
onentation for all oncoming stxth
grade students and any new students
enrolling for the school year wtll be
held Aug. II from 6:30 to 7:30p.m.
m the auditonum. Parents, guardtans,
famtly members are encouraged to
attend onentation.

•

Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Pope, daughter, Gallipolis.

(Pilbllsbed with permildoa) .

••

the 18th Pubhc Works Dostrict's State
Capotal Jmprovemem Program wtll
be held Thursday. Aug. 6, at the Hoioday Inn. Manetta
The 18th DIStrict includes Athens,
Belmont. Hocking, Meogs, Monroe,
Morgan. Muskongum, Noble, Pell)'
and Washongton Countoes.
There woll be two sessoons which
representauves may choose from. 10
a.m 1o noon. an d 6 :30 p.m. Io 8.30
p.m.
Topocs woll include. preparation of
apphcato ons for Route 13, onformatlon on loans and loan asststance, and
minonty busoness enterpnsc participatiOn reqUirements.
The State Capital Improvement
Program and the Local Transportation Improvement Program were ereated to provide financoal assistance to
Ohio's local subdivosoons ror capotal
improvement infrastructure programs
These programs were designed to
estabhsh a pracuce or long-term capnal1mprovement planmng and bud-

as
putung on place a system of decentralozed decosoon-makong relatove to
selecting the specofic projects to be
funded .
Local government entoues (county, townshop, cuy. vollage) and water
and sewer dostncls are elogible to parUcopate on thos program Local subdoviSoons that requore financoal assoslance on movmg planned onfrastructure proJects can pursue thas fundmg
through the 18th Pubhc Works DosIncl.
Consoderation ts nOI made on a per
capita basts No parttcular commum ty has an entotlementlo these funds
All Interested parties are encouraged to attend one of the trdonong sessions Applocauons wtll be dostnbuted
at the traonmg sessoons For those
who cannot attend the lraonong, apphcatoons can be obtaoned rrom Aug 6
to Oct. I by calling Mo&gt;ty Casto at
740-374-9436 The deadline for submissoon ol apphcaloons os 5 p m on
Oct. 6

Starr sends Lewinsky's
dress to FBI lab for test
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prosecutors are havong the FBI test one of
Monica Lcwonsky's dresses. a key
piece of evidence m the last weeks of
an mvesugation into alleged presidential sex and cover-up thai soon
may go to Congress.
The dress will be tested to see
whether it contains evidence that
would corroborate Ms Lewinsky's
account of a sexual relatoonship with
President Clinton - one that he
denies.
The dress. along with the pendm'g
testimony of Ms. Lewinsky, the president and a few others. are likely the
last matters in the evidence phase of
the Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr's Lewinsky investigation. Then.
Starr must decide what he should
report to the House about potenttally impeachable offenses.
"'I can enviSion nothing, I can
envision anything" from Starr, said
House Judiciary Committee Chatrman Henry Hyde, R-Ill. He declared
committee members "as prepared as
we ever wtll be" to handle any
tmpeachment referral from Starr.
While Republicans have bolstered
their maJOnty ~tafr, Democrats are
not sottmg on their hands. A group of
sentor committee Democrats has
been mtervtewing candidates for an

impeachment counsel ror their SJde.
Despote the preparatoons, Hyde
saod, " I don't want to hurry or press
or push the ondependent counsel I
don't want it to appear that we're drivmg hos onquory "
Ms. Lewinsky and her lawyers
spent additoonal time Thursday with
members of Starr's starr prepanng for
her upcomtng grand JUry testtmony
Starr ts mvestigatmg whether Ms
Lcwmsky. 25. and Cion ton lied in the
Paula Jones sexual harassment suot
against lhe prestde nt when they
denied an affair, and whether Clinton
asked her to he about it Also under
onvestogatoon is whether the prestdent
and others tned to obstruct I he probe.
One of Ms Lcwonsky's lawyers ,
Jacob Stem. and Starr ossued a JOint
statement denymg they were the
sources of the repon Wednesday that
Ms. Lewmsky had provoded prosecutors a dress she says contaons a
stain that m1ght contam evoden~e of
a sexual encounter woth Clonton.
The statement satd the two sides
met "for the' spec ofic and mutually
shared purpose or preventong the dossemonation of speculative mformatoon ... Suggestions in the medtathat
Ms. Lewonsky's lawyers or the OIC
(Starr's office) are the sources or such
informatiOn are untrue ."

Meigs squads answer eight calls
Un11s of Meogs Emergency Servoces answered etght calls for asststance on Thursday
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:22 am, Success Rd . Clyde
Young. St Joseph Hospotal:
8·48 p m.. assosted by Rutland
unot. Locust St , Joann Hayes. Holzer Medocal Center:
II 46 p m , Story's Run Rd ,
asmted by Middleport unit , Joe
Qt lkey. dead on arrival
MIDDLEPORT
7 18 p m . assosted by Central
Dispatch . Peach Corcle. Thelma
Collons Holzer

Attends institute
CHESHIRE - Patncoa McCollough . executove dorector or the Gallia/Meogs Communtly Actoon
Agency. recently auended a management development onslllute on San
Doego. Calof.
The onstotute. hosted by the Unoversoty of Cahfomoa. San Doego.
involved ror days of inte9se instnictton , interactive exerc1ses, ca:-;es and
group dtscussoon . Soxty panocopants
from across the country attended the
tratmng des1gned to sharpen man ·
agenal ski ll s and promote personal
and · profess oonal development. The
progmm was conducted by faculty
from the Executive Development
lnst&amp;tute, an associatiOn of university professors and communoly acuon
professoonals bosed on Pennsylvania.
The four-day event concentrated
on applyong analytoc and human
resource tools and developong vosion
and values on the communoty actoon
movement. II ts one of several held
annually by EDI to promote the
effec)ove management of nonprofit
organizations.

RUTLAND
9:21 a.m .. Water's Edge Apartmenls, Mary Hams, Veterans Memorial Hospital :
11 ·03 a m . State Route 124.
Roland Searls, Veterans Memonal:
6 02 p m . assosled by Moddlepon
unot. Sycamore St . Norbert Neutzling. Veterans Memonal
SYRACUSE
8·26 am. State Route 338. Ernoe
Moller, Veterans Memonal Hospital.

�I

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Page 4· .

31, 1998.

Indians get past Marin-ers
9-8 in 17-inning marathon
By JIM COUR
SEATILE (AP)- Even Randy !
Johnson's teammates are sick and
tired of hearing about his impending
dtvorce from the Seattle Mariners.
''This has been pounding over us
for four or five mQnths now," said
Alex Rodriguez . after after the
Mariners lost a 9-8 marathon to
Cleveland in 17 innings Thursday
night.
··we have something to prove to
ourselves the last two months of the

season.··

1be best power pitcher in baseball
will be leaving the Mariners for good
-by tonight"s trade deadline to perhaps the New York Yankees or the
Indians, or as a free agent after the
Mariners complete their season.
"'It has been distracting," said
Rodriguez. when asked about the
Johnson trade watch - which has
been in effect sioce November when
·the Mariners said they didn't intend
to extend Johnson's contract. ''I'd be
lying to you if I said it wasn't.""
After what the Mariners have
been going through emotionally with
Johnson. Thursday night 's game that

took five hours and 23 minutes to
play brought a smile to Lou Piniella.
Anything to make him forget
about Johnson .
"That's the damnest game I've
ever seen," the Mariners manager
said.
It was the longest game, by
innings, in Mariners history and tied
the longest in the majors this season.
In the top of the 17th inning,
Ramirez hit his 24th homer over the
center field fence off Bob Wells (02), the sixth Seattle pitcher, after
Omar Vizquel singled and moved to
second on a groundout and Jim
Thome was walked intentionally.
Paul Shuey (3-1 ), Cleveland's
seventh pitcher, got the victory by
pitching the final 2 1/3 innings. He
allowed two runs in the bottom of the
17th and faced a one -out, bases -·
loaded situation, but ended the game
by gettif&gt;£ a gmundout and a strike out
The Indians were out of pitchers.
Manager Mike Hargrove said he was
going to be forced to use rookie first
baseman Richie Sexson if he needed
to replace Shuey, who threw 41

pitches in the 17th inning.
"It needed to be over with," Hargrove said. "We had nobody left.
Richie said he pitched in high
school."
Said David Justice of the Indians:
"If they had tied it up, both teams
would have raised a white flag and
called it a tie ."
Ken Griffey hit his AL-Ieading
41st homer in the fifth and Rodriguez
became the first player in Mariners
history with 30 home runs and 30
stolen bases in a season when he stole
third base in the 14th inning.
Rodriguez became the sixth player in
AL history to go 30-30.
He has a chance to join Barry
Bonds ( 1996, San Francisco Giants)
and Jose Can,eco ( 1988, Oak land
Athletics) as the third player in major
league history to get 40 homers and
40 stolen bases in a single season.
''I had such a hard lime !!ellin!!
30-30 that I might not even get 3232," he said.
Paul Assenmacher then walked
Edgar Martinez and David Segui
intentionally to load the bases before
getting Charles Gipson to pop up to

comea In during the flret Inning of Thursday
night's National League game In Cincinnati,
where the Braves won 13-3. (AP)

.,._ .... ; r

'·

A ......

GOTCHAl -

....

. . "'

·'~
0

o

;~

Sea'iUePitche~ Will

Swift (left)

puta the tag on the Cleveland Indians' Kenny

Lofton to end a flret-lnnlng rundown durlnp
the catcher and Rico Rossy to bounce
to third.
The Mariners had a chance to win
it in the 16th, but Segui's double
bounced over the fence, making Ken
Griffey Jr. stop at third.
Justice. who homered in the sixth

night's American League game under
the Klngdome, where the Indians won 9·8 In 17
Innings. (AP)

inning, hit another one in the 12th to
give Cleveland a 6-5 lead. Edgar
Martmez htt a solo homer in lhe bottom of the inning to tie the score.
The Indians tied the score at 5-all
in the ninth off Mike Timlin. Jeff

Branson opened the inning with a
single and moved to second on Kenny Lofton's gmund out. Vizquel followed with a single to shallow center field that brought in Branson as
Griffey's throw to the plale was offline.

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- The starting rotation is ~plendid, as usual. The
offense is coming around. The record
is the best in the National League and
the best ever in franchise history.
Could things be any better for the
Atlanta Braves?
Well, yes. They could use some
h~p for that bullpen, the one that
can't rely on Mark Wohlers 10 throw
a strike anymore, let alone save a
game. Other than that, they had few
worries after they finished a solid
road trip Thursday with a 13-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Denny Neagle ( 11-9) allowed five
hits over eight innings to rest an overworked bullpen and help the Braves
improve to a season-best 35 games
over .500 at 72-37. The NL East leaders took three of four in Cincinnati to
conclude a 7-2 road trip.
"Neagle was good. Some of our
hillers are starting to look really good
right now, too," manager Bobby

Cox said. "We had a great road trip. " They gave up 24 riuis on 29 hils over
··we keep our focus aod keep lhe last 14 innings of the series and .
everybody healthy the rest of the way lost a pair of infielders to injury on .
and take our chances," said Chipper Thursday.
Jones, who reached base five times.
Third baseman Pokey Reese tore
The only major concern is the a ligament in his right thumh as he .
bullpen. Wohlers had two more out- . dove for a gro~nder in the fifth
of-control relief appearances during inning. He is probably out for the seathe series in Cincinnati, throwing son after surgery Thursday night to
only 12 strikes in 45 pitches.
sew the ligament back together and
The former closer has heen to the insert a screw.
minors twice 1rying to find his form
'"If it ain't one thing, it's another,"
since he suffered a tom muscle in his said Reese, whose season hegan with
side last May. All he's found is that four errors on opening day. "''m
he can"t throw a strike. jeopardizing doing well and then !his happens."'
his spot on the postseason rnster.
Two innings later. second baseHe wants to try to work out his man Jlret Boone sprained his left
problems with the Braves ratherthan ankle while fielding a ball up the .
in the minors.
middle. He"ll be sidelined for a cou' 'I'm staying here," Wohlers said ple of days.
Thursday .. '"This is where I need to
"There's really nothing good to :
pitch. If I go down there and strike say;• Boone said of the Reds' 12th ·
out every guy I face. it's still not at loss in 14 games. "We've got to kick
the big league level."
it in gear. It's emharmssing . I'm ·
1be Reds dido 't play much like a embarrassed by it. There's no excuse ,
big league team the last two days.
(See REDS on Page 5)

Scoreboard
Wtstrm Dlvlsktn
Snn Diego .. .. ...... .... ....... 70 J8
S:rn Frnncisco ......... ....... ~7 ~I
Los Angeles
...... .......... ~ ~2
Colorado .... . .. .. .. ........ 4&amp; 60
Arizona ......................... ~9 69

AL standings
Ea.Rem Diviston

Iram

ea.
71~

l!: I.

~w

li.ll

VorL .
... 7~ 27
Boston ............................ 62 44
BDitimore .... ............. .......... Yi 5.1
TQfonto ... .. ............ ... ... .: ... 54 55

585
509

2)

.495

Tampn Bay .. : ........ ........ .42 6:\

.400

24~~

tl

J4h

Central Division

ClEVELAND ..
.. .....62
Minnesota .......... ................. 50
Kansus City ...................... 47
Qicago ... ............... ......... 46
Delrolt ..............................44

45
56

,j79
.4"72

60

.419

60 .4:W
62 .415

Wtstem Division
Anahttm .... . ................ 58 49
Texas ..
. ..... ....... .... 51 SO
Stank .... ....................48 59
Oakland
..................47 60

tl
1

1:1

.519

14

.444
."\61

22
~1

Thursday's scores

Tonight's games
Colorado (Wright .S-9) al Chicago Cubs (Wood
10-'iJ, J ·20 pm.
San Diego (Brown 12-J) at Montreal (Pavano ~-

10). 7:0l p.m.
San Francisco (HershiH!r 8-8) at Phi lotdc lphin
(Ponuga l 6-2), ? :0~ p.m.
·
CINCINNATI (Remlinger 6-11 l at Florida
(Dempster 1-5), 7:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Judd 0·0) at N.Y. Mets (Reed 117), 7:10p.m.
Arizona (81oir 4- 15) nt Mi lwaukee (Roqlte 0-0l.
R:05 fi.m.

I

tO

tl

Thursday's scom
Baltimore 6, Detroit 4
Kansas City 7, Minne~ota J
OuklantJ 6. 8o5ton 5
Toromo I. Tens 0
· N.Y. Yanktts J, Anaheim 0 (10)
CLEVELAND9. Semlle R (17)

4·6). 7:05p.m.
Houston (Hampton 8-5) at Pi11sburgh (Cordova
9-8). 7:05p.m.
San Francis'o (O rtiz 0 · 1) at Phllodelphia
(Schrlling 10-10), ? : ~5 p.m
Los Angeles (Drciforf 6-9) u1 N.Y. Mc1s (Yoshi1
4-6). 740 p.m.

Sunday's games

Tonight's games
Detroit (Griesinger 1·5) at TQ.Jl1p01 Bay (S.mtana

2-2!. TOl p.m.
Baltimore (Erickson 11 -8) at Kansu City (RoSOl·
do 5·8). 8:05 p.m.
Toromo (Wrlliams 9-5) &lt;1f MinnesOla (Rodriguez
0-0). ROl p.m.
Chicago While So.1. (Snyder 2·0) at Texas (Bur·
kc11 6-10), H·;\5 f1 m.
NY Yankees (lrabu 9-4) ur Seaule (fwcro I~
6), 10:05 p.m.
Bmron (Saberh&lt;~gen 1~5) &lt;lt Anaheim (Oiiverus
~ - 7). I 0:05 p m.
CLEVE LAND (C(l lon 11 -5) 111 Oakhmd (C.o.ndiOftl ~ - 1 1). 10·15 r m

St . Louis (Mercker 6-8) at Atlanta (GI:mne 14·

88, Utah 65

Tonight's gaiD&lt;ll
Socramenrc;r 31 Derroit. 1·)0 p.m.
Phoenh. .o.t Los Angeles, 9 p.m.

Saturday's games

Sunday's games

Transactions
Baseball
Amerkan ·Lt•aue
ANAHEIM ANGELS : PurchllJtd the ' ontn~~.:l
of INF Troy Gloos from Vancouver or the PCL. Or-

WNBA standings

fioned LHP Jarrod Washburn to Vnncouwer. TnmsCINCINNATI REDS : Pl:1.:ed OF Mi~c Frank
ferred RHP Mike Jnmes and I B Todd Greene to 60- on tht 15-day di s;~b~d lisl. r~troC~~.:tivc to July 27
day disabled lis1.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX :"Tradc:d C Churlie
Football
0' Brien to the Anaheim Angels for LHP Jason Nalional Foolhall Ltagur
StockSiillllnd RHP Brion Tokarse. Purchased the
BALTIMORE RAVENS : Sisoed D8· KR Ty.
controcl or RHP Chad Brodford from Calgnl)' of the
rone Hughes .
PCL.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Waived WR Terry Gu~ ss
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Activated 28 Scott
Spiclio frop) .lhe 15·d.o.y disabled list Sent OF Ja.:k
Voigt to Edmonton of 1he PCL.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Traded l B· DH Miko
Hockey
Scllllley to !he Bmron Red Sol for RHP Peter Munro
NaUonal Hockty Lt:~Jtue
and RHP Jay Yennaco.
BUFFAlO SABRES: Signed C L&gt;omcnk Pitiis
andCCf"llig Fisher.
·
N1Uonaii.A:a•ve
DALLAS STARS: Signed LW DaviJ Roberts
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: A'1 iv:1ted
RHP Feli-. Rodriauez from 15-day disnbkd list . Op- to 11 one-year con1rnct
EDMONTON OILERS: Announ~ed rhe rctm:tioned RHP Bob WoiCOft to Tunon of the PCL.
ATLANTA BRAVES : Traded RHP David mtnl of 0 Kevin Lowe :md named him a s .~ i s t ;mt
Cortes and LHP Mike Porzio to lht Colorodo Rock- cooch.
SAN JOSE SHARkS : Annoulk:cd rhc r~tir.:- ·
iu for I B Greg Colbfunn
CHICAGO CUBS: Oplione&lt;J RHP Rodney My- mem of G Kelly Hrudey.
TAMPA ~AY LIGHTNING : Stgnet.l C Jc~sr:
ers 10 lowo or the PCL. Transferred RHP Jt:remi
Belnngrr. Re-srgned RW Corey Spring.
Gonmlez to the 604:1av diJabled li51 .

Eastern Conrerence
fum

W L fa.

li.ll

... 12 9 ..~?1
.. ..... 12 9 jJ J
.... 1 1 10 ..SH

2',,

.... l.'i

.2

7

IM

.6M2

100

2 '· ~

Y•:
12

Western Conrerence

Hous1on .....'...... .. . .......... 20
l .9n
at Pitt1burgh (Schmidt 8.8), Phoeni:..... ..................... .... 12 !I 600
Los Angeles ........................ ? 1.1 . l~O
1 : 1 ~ p.m.
. 7 14
."\.1."\
Colorado (Thom so n 5-7 1 a1 Chr cago Cubs Utah ....
Sacramento.
.
.... .6 l'i .2K6
(fr a.\Chell~'i) . I : I.Spm

4), 1 : 1~ p.m
Houston (Lim.::r. 9-6)

San Diego (l...anpron 4-."\) ar Montreal (Perez 1-

Hous~on

Charlofle at New York, 4 p.m
S,ocmmenlo ac Houston. 4 p.m.

Basketball

St. Lotlis (Stonlemyre 9-9) at Atlanta (Moddux Ch;Lrlo11~
CLEVELAND
14-4). 7:40p.m.
Arizona (Bene~ 7- 11) ar MLiwotJket (Juden 7-9), New York.. .
Detroir
K:O.'i p.m
Washington

Saturday's games

Ch01lone 79, CLEVELAN064

CLEVELAND 01 Hous10n. 4 p.m
New York ar Wnshington, BO p.m.
Los Angeles nr Ut.o.h, 9 p.m.

St . Louis 111 At lanta. I 10 p.m.
San Diego nl Montreal , 1:15 p.m.
HouSion :u Pinsburgh . I J~ p.m
Soan Francisco ar Phi ladelphio, 1:.\~p. m.
Los AngeleJ at N.Y. Mers. 1:40 p.m.
Ariz.ona at Milwaukee , 2.05 p.m.
Colurudo ar Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
CINCINNATI at AoriJa. 4:15p.m.

4). 7:0l p.m.
CINCINNATI (Tomko 9-71 ar AoriJa (SandM:z

542
511
.449
.419

. ~28

At lanta I\ CINCINNATI J
Florida4. Houston 1
Montreal 12. S:m Francisco 6
Arizona 4, Chicago Cubs 0
Los Angeles J. Philadelphi3 1.
San Diego .1. N.Y. Mets 1 (10)
S1. Loui s J. Milwnukec: 2

t )~

15 /J
11'h

.648

Thursday's Kores

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Sting beat Rockers
79-64; Comets roll
WNBA roundup

end road trip with 7-2 mark

Baseball

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

lrvan captures pole
for Brickyard 400

over Starzz 88-65

Braves roll over Reds 13-3,

STEALS SECOND- The Atlanta Braves' Gerald Williams (right) steels second base as the late
throw to Cincinnati second baseman Brat Boone

Friday, July 31, 1998

1'•·

12'•,

1.1

14

BID Cars, Trucks!l and Vans All In one Location!

Saturday's games
NY Yankre ~ (Wt' ll.~ 12-21 al Searrle (Moyer 84·05 p 01
CLEVELAND (Gooden ."\-6J m Oakland (Stein
4--61 . 4 O'i r m
i)(1HUI IM~hle r 11 -7) ar Tampa Bay (Alvarez

CHARLOTIE (AP) -Charlotte
Sting coach Marynell Meadors said
her team had not played well - especially on the defensive end- in two
weeks.
The Sting came up with an impressive performance just in time.
The WNBA's Eastern Conference
leaders forced 19 turnovers and held
the Rockers. tied with New York for
second place, to 44 percmt shooting
in a 79-64 win Thursday night.
Charlotte ( 15-7) snapped a threegame losing streak that included an
85-69 loss to Cleveland on July 19.
"'The players look at the paper and
the standings just like everyone
else," Meadors said. "This win really secured our position."'
Rhonda Mapp scored 20 points to
lead Charlone. Vicky Bullen and former Nonh Carolina star Tracy Reid
added 18. Bullen also had 12
rebounds.
"Considering we.' ve played bad
the last three games, this was good;·
Bullett said. "We sometimes get in a
slump where we don't play offense or
defense. When we play good offense,
our defense picks up."
The Sting shot 53 percent, despite
shooting just 1-for-9 from threepoint range. Charlotte outscored
Cleveland 50-28 in the paint and
scored 14 points on fast breaks.
"This was the first time we"ve
played well in two weeks," Meadors
said. ··we were really swarming

defensively, getting in the passing
lanes and gening transition baskets.··
Michelle Edwards led Cleveland
(12-9) with 24 points. 1be Rockers
beat Sacramento 75-67 at home on
Wednesday night and Edwards said
fatigue was a factor against the Sting.
"Playing back-to-back had an
effect on us late in the game,··
Edwards said. "It was not until the
end when they really took it to us . I
think our legs just gave in."
The Sting led 54-51 with 9:53
remaining and put the game away
with a 16-5 run. Tia Paschal's layup
capped the run that gave Charloue a
7().,561ead with 4:141efi.
In the other WNBA game. Houston defeated Utah 88-65.
Comets 88, Starzz 65
Cynthia Cooper had 22 points and
a career-high 10 assists and Sheryl
Swoopes added 20 points Thursday
night. leading the Houston Comets in
an 88-65 victory over the Utah
Starzz.
The Comets, whose only loss this
season was at Phoenix on June 24,
won their 15th consecutive game and
became the first team to clinch a
playoff berth.
Cooper scored the first point of
the game on a free throw, and the
Comets (20-1 ) led thereafter.
Swoopes had eight points in a 140 run three minutes later as Houston
raced off to a 51-25 halftime lead.
Margo Dydek scored 17 points for
Utah, which is 1-1 under new coach
Frank Layden.

By HANK LOWENKRON
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- A new
car but the same result for Ernie
lrvan. who will stan the Brickyard
400 from the pole for the second consecutive year.
lrvan. who has been close to vic tory twice at the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway, would like to change
those results in Saturday"s race.
·-r ve had a chaoce to win two of
them," l"•an said. "'The first one, me
and JolT (Gordon) had a heck of a battle towards the end of the race and I
got a Oat tire wilh five (laps) to go.
Not much you can do about that.
"Two years ago, me and D.J .
(then-teammate Dale Jarrett) had a
heck of a battle and I ended up running second. lt"s been a really great
track for Ernie lrvan."
The 2 112-mile oval was exactly
that for lrvan on Thursday as he won
the 20th Winston Cup pole of his

wait. I think God purposely made me
wait to get in because he knew it
would be so much more enjoyable,
that I wouldn't take it for granted
now."

McDonald will be inducted into
the Hall of Fame on Saturday at Can-

ton. Ohio, along with Paul Krause,
Anthony Munoz, Mike Singletary
and Dwight Stephenson.
A mighty-mite wide receiver who
always seemed to come up with the
ball, McDonald labored a dozen
years in the NFL with Philadelphia

around untilne&lt;ul y 7 p.m. locrlllme
was whether Gordon . who wa.., 1he
46th driver to tak e to Jh c tr~K k . would
con tinue hi ' recenl -;tring of qualify-

mg 'iU ~CC 'i'\ .
After sitting out a rain delay of
Gordon came into Thursday \
nearly four hours, lrvan won the first time trials having taken a fro nt -row
pole of lhe year for his new Ponliac staning spo1 - including five poles
team with a record speed of 179.394 - in eighl of the last nine races. Durmph . That was faster thon the mark mg that period. hi s worst stan has
of 177.736 he set in a Ford to win the been founh.
pole last year.
lrvan, who watched most of qual' "It goes to show that I get around ifying from his motor home with his
the Indianapolis Molor Speedway wife and daughter. said, ··we sal
pretty good. You can 't do it without there and bit our fingernail s and tried
an awesome car and you can't do it to figure out who was going to beal
without an awesome lap," said lrvan, us . Obviously, there were some prelwho as the first of 50 qualifiers had ty heavy hitters lhere that hall a pretto sit for nearly two hours afler hi s ty good shot ."
"1 thought we had a shot at lhe
GOING UP for the basket Is the Charlotte Sting's Tla Paschal (22), run to know he would be on the pole.
"You
hove
to
put
100
percent
dedpole."
Gordon said. "I guess maybe
who encounters resistance from the Cleveland Rockers' Eva Nem·
cova In the first half of Thursday night's WNBA game In Charlotte, ication to being able to get your line I just needed to get a little bit more
perfect," he said. "We made a cou- aggressive wilh the car because Ernie
N.C., where the Sting won 79-64. (AP)
ple of changes right before qualify - had such a greallap. Bul I wanted to
career.

(

•,

McDonald heading to Pro Football HOF
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
He wa.• too small, came from a
"ghost town" and only a couple colleges would throw a scholarship his
direction.
Tommy McDonald also had to
wait 24 years after his last game to
make it to the Pro Football Hall of
Fame.
'"I used to think, "Hey, I've got the
numbers!"' said McDonald, who
turned 64 on Sunday. "But I realize
now that it's better this way, after the

has been struggling with his new
team and is 16th m 1he point "andmgs.
"I really like thi s track:· he sai d.
··11 ·s just a matter of when you come
here to te&gt;t. you·ve go11o he focused .
... The car hand led excellent . There's
so much going on now with our
shocks and springs. It \ unbelievable
what kind of a 'etup we have to try
and run this fa sl. ··
Jarrell. the 1996 Brickyard win ner, took 1he ouiSide posiuon on the
front row with a lap of 178.596. followed by Gordon'" 178 . ~~4 . rookie
Kenny Irwin at 17 8 . ~60 and Jeff
Green at 178.324.
Jarrett was the IOlh ur11·cr 10 qual ify and lhe only real ' "'P'""e for the
crowd of perhaps 15.000 IIJ;\1 stuck

( 1957-63), Dalla.q 1964), Los Angeles (1965-66), Atlanta (1967) and
Cleveland (1968). He was nominated for induction by an old-timers
commillee.
By the time he retired, he ranked
sixth in career receptions (495),
fourth in yards receiving (8.410) and
second in touchdown catches (84).
He averaged a touchdown every six
times he caught a pass.
McDonald wa.• an unlikely choice
to ever make it big. He was 5-foot-9
and 175 pounds. He grew up in Roy,

N.M., a town with a population of
1,300 and 150 students in its high
school.
'"This is a long way from Roy,"
McDonald said. "'It's like a ghost
town now. They used to have a blinking light, but then they pulled the
plug on it. They used to show the
same movie for two weeks in a row."
But that upbringing might have
been one of a series of good breaks.
'"I have always felt that the big
guy upstairs wa.• looking over me.'"

ing. They were

chnnge~

we though!

would free it up a little bit.
Four drivers managed to go faster
than lrvan's old record: including Jarrett and defending Winston Cup
champion and current points leader
Gordon.
'"I don't knOw how I could have
gotten a better lap.'' lrvan said. "We
did everything we could do. It handled as good as it has since we 've
been here."
lrvan, who missed the 1995 race
at Indy while recuperating from life-

JCl a smooth consistent run and get
a good staning position, and I cer-

tainly did."
Jarrett said, "That was an incred.ible lap Ernie put up there . especially being the first car oul. I mi"ed my
mark just a lillie bit in turn one gel ling to the center of the ramer, and
that hurt me on the e•il and therefore
hurt the speed lhere a little bit."
Among the drivers fai ling 10 lock
in a starting spot for Saturday by
qualifying among lhe top 25 were
defending Brickyard champion Ricky
threatening injuries in an August Rudd and former race winner Dale
1994 crash at Michigan Speedway. Earnhardt. who were 27th and 28th .

Hol~er

Clinic to aid area high
schools with athletic trainers
Holzer Clinic is beginning its
sixth year of coordinating with area
high schools and the Ohio Universi ty Athletic Training Program to provide master's level certified athletic
trainers to regional sports programs.
Since 1992, the clinic's Sports
Medicine program has worked with
OU to provide practical experience
for athletic training students. Since
that time. approximately 16 graduate
athletic trainers and hundreds of area
athletes have benefited.
With many school budgets being
cut. some southern Ohio schools
have been fonunate to have Holzer
Clinic offset pan of the cost of providing trained and qualified spons
medicine professionals. The master's
level cenified athletic trainers from
OU work with both male and female
students on a daily basis from August
through May.
In the 1998-99 school year, Gallin Academy, Jackson, Meigs and
River Valley High Schools will benefit from the program. To ensure that
the same quality of sports medicine
care is provided to athletes at South
Gallia High School. the clinic has
committed its own cenified athletic
trainers and physicians to Ihat school.
John Cunningham, administrator
of Holzer Clinic's Rehabi lit at ion and
Sports Medicine services. said t~e
clinic "is pleased to ass1st w1th thts
much-needed service to our area
schools.
''The presence of certified athletic trainers increases the safety of the
athletes because of injury prevention

and treatment availability on the
field of play," Cunningham added.
'The clinic is also fortunate to have
Lori Ward, a certified athletic trainer, working for us. Lori has coordinated this effon for several years and
has made this possible 'for the clinic,
the student athletes, parents and the
schools' athletic programs."
In addition to having her master's
degree in athletic traiuing and fulfilling her role as head trainer at
Holzer Clinic, Ward has been the
southeastern Ohio district representative to the Ohio Athletic Trainers
Association for the past six years.
When asked about the athletic
trainer program in the area schools.
Ward said that "we see this as a winwin situation for both the athletes and
graduate athletic trainers.
'The athletes are provided early
access to quality health care by an
individual specifically educated to
take care of the student athlete,"
Ward added. "This allows the coaching staff to be able to do their job and
know the athlete's safety and wellbeing are being taken care of.
"The graduate athletic trainers
gain in the ability to organize and
supervise the medical care for the
high school athletes," she continued.
"Most of the students we have
worked with over the years have
gone on to sports medicine clinics
throughout the country. or are now
working in university settings."
For decades, Holzer Clinic physicians have provided team physician
support to the schools in the region

as well.
The clinic's sports medicine program received a big boost in 1997
with the addition of Dr. Kelly Roush,
chiropraclic physician and spons
medicine specialist. as well as several certified athletic trainers to the
staff.
These certified athletic trainers are
available at the Jackson rehab center.
the Meigs rehab center and the University of Rio Grande. This year
appears to be no different. More
physicians have agreed to assist with
the effort and the clinic anticipates
continued physician coverage at most
of the schools' home games.
'The athletic training program
provides a system that allows the
trainer to coordinate with the athlete,
the parents, the physician and the
coaches. which is the best approach
when providing high quality care,"
Cunningham said.
To ensure this continuily of care.
the clinic's Sports ·Medicine and
Rehabilitation Center is providing
sports clinics on Saturday mornings
beginning at 9 a.m . from Sept. 12
through Nov. 7.
The medical services will be
available at lhe Sycamore Clinic jn
Gallipolis and are provided on a first come, first-se"•ed basis. Athletes are
required to have a parent present to
receive treatment.
Anyone with questions about
sports medicine or athletic training
services can conlact Ward at 4465769.

7),

5·K).fl~5pm

B;~ll lmnrl' I K ;lffiii'RII'Ck l

(Rapp Y· IO l. M0~ p m
Tommn 1Hen1gen 11-Kl :11
1Jl. R·O'i

rm

2- .l ) at K an5.::r.S Ci1 y

Mrn~~esol ~

(Hawkins 7·

Chi.:ago Wh11e S11x (SHo1ka 1n 9 ) ru Tuu
{~ llin g

6).

l.l-6), fl-."\5

r nl

Bn'ilon (t..-hnmez
10: 0~ p m.

t4. ') :11

An:lheim (Warson -i -

Sunday's games

$4

NL standings
Easlrm Division
A1lanra ..
New York ...
Ptlitodelpl&gt;io.. .
Monrreal ... .
F1ari&lt;b ..

w ~ .661
ea.

.... 72 J7

l6 49 .m
... 5l It .lt9

........ 42 66
)9 70

Ce.UniDhWon
Hou.slon ..............................64 44
Cllicaco
........6! 48
MilwauW .
........Sj SJ
St. l...ooi• ............................. SO ~7
Pi ~t~~&gt;orlhN~ ·n
........ .. ..........50 l8

C1 NCJNNn

.................. 47

62

Vinyl
Flooring
StarfiJ18At

De1nlrt at Tamp:~ Bay. l .:l5 r .m
Bahrmore m Kansas C t~y . 2:0~ p.m
Toronh~ a1 Mmi'IC3ota. 2 : 0~ p.m
CLEVELAND at Ol'lkland, 4 : 0~ p.m.
Boston at Anaheim, 8 : ~ p.m.
NY. Yllnktts ut Scanlc: , 8:05p.m.
Chr,ago White So:.. at Te:...o.s. 8 :0~ p.m.

Iram

Reds lose...

.)89

.m

.593

.560
.509

.467
.463
.431

li.ll
)4
IS ~

29'!

31

99

Sq. Yd.

Peel and
Stick Tile

79C

Sq.Ft.

Commercial
(In Stock)
Carpet
Outdoor Turf

$5

99

St~.14.

$4

99

Sq. Yd.

Bl'ln~ Nrw 111

cany

sn,950*
Brllf Nrw 1!1

Asln RIISS ..I CoY. VII

nrvy s-serles Plc~ap

• VIsta Bay Windows
• 4 Caplllns Chllra
•Color TV
•Vldto Cauetla Pllytr
• R•r Sola Bed
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• Air Conditioning

• AM/FM Stereo
• Rear Anti-Lock Brakes
• 16" Aluminum Wheels
• Nicely Equipped!

•

(Continued ff()m Page 4)
to get beat like that."
Right fielder Reggie Sanders
dropped a fly ball to let in a run in the
first inning, setting the tone. The
Braves then rocked Rick Krivda (0- ·
2), who was making his first start
since coming from Cleveland in a
June 16 trade. The left-hamler gave
up seven runs and six walks in fourplus innings.
·we're giving guys opportunities
so they can' t come back and complain about it," manager Jack ~cK­
eon said. "We've got to get our pitchers back to throwing strikes again .
We're not giving ourselves a chaoce
to succeed."
Gerald Williams and Andruw
Jones each homered and drove in
three runs to lead a 16-hit attack.
Atlanta scored in six innings as it
improved to 5-1 against Cincinnati
lhis season.
"At this point, we' re prelly con·
Iiden!," said Andruw Jones.

W-tnt Rel.iaoiliiyandService!
THE LARGEST

IN

- - - - -- - - - - -- ------·--

--·-----

- ------

--

- --- --

•

�Friday, July 31, 1998

Pomeroy • Mlcklleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel:
Page7

'

Apostolic

Church of Christ

Episcopal

Pomcrvy Cburdl or Christ

c....., Epilcopal Cltarch

212 W. Main St.
Minister: Dann~ Bits

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 11 a.m.

Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

.....:._....

Wonhip -!Oa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
Middleport Cbun:b or Cbrisl
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth MiniSier: Bill Frazier

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wo!!hip- 8:15, 10c30 a.m., 7 p.m.

570 Oront St.,

i.fj,l&lt;!(eport
Sunday school -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Se111ice • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Keao Church or Christ
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace

Ash Street, Middleport

1st and 3rd Sunday

Pastor: L.ts Hayman
Sunday Se rvice - 7:00p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Barwollow Ridge Church or Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewan

Wednesday Se111ice-7:00p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Rullaod Flnt Bapllat Church

Wednesday Services - 6:30 P - ~ -

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Zion Chun:b or Christ

Worship - 10:45 a.m
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Watson

East Main St.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Flnt Soutbrm Bapllat

Tuppen Plola Church of Christ
lnstrumenlll
Pastor: Tenr Stewart

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor; E. Lamar O'Bryant

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Worship ScrvlCC - 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 10:15a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Flnt Baptist Cburclt
Pastor: Mark Morrow

6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School -9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Tuesday Services -7:30p.m.
CntniO- '
Asbury (SJrocuse)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 : 4~ a.m.

Coffee hour following

Holtness

Worship. lla.m.

Brodbury Church ofChrisl
Pastor: Tom Runyon

Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young

Eattrprile
Pastor: K&lt;ilh Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Wednesday prayer service · 7 p.m.

Worship . 9a.m.

Sunday school -9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Flatwoadl

Colvory Pllpim Chapel

PiiStor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Harrisonville' Road
Paslor: Rev. Via or Roush

Sunday Sctloo19:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 7:30p.m.

forost Ru
Pastor: Otad Emrick

Appe'ur. Ctlll..-

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Hollow Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Children's service · 10 a.m.

PwtCitopel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worshlp - 10 un.

m-~17

Sunday School· 9:15 Lm.
Worship - 10:30 Lm.
Bible Sludy Tuesday- 10 un.

Hysell Rua Holiness Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:.30 p.m.

RodtSpriap

Laurtl CIUrFroe Mttbodlst Chun:h

Pastor: Keith Rader

Pastor: David DeWin
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School -9:15a.m.
WoiShip - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday -6 p.m.
Rallaod
Sunday Scbool -9:30 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany

Worship- 10:30 a.m. ·
Thursday Service!- 7 p.m.

Brodronl Church or Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Sunday Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce

Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger

Latter-Day Saints

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m

Rrorpnlud Church or Jeau1 Christ
or Latter Doy Saint&amp;

lllckorr Hllk Cboordl or Christ

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer

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

Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Sunday Wo rshi~ - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Wednesday B1ble Study -7:00p.m.

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30

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

EYIDI!"Iisl Mike Mcxm
Sunday School -9 a.m.
Wonltip- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesdly Services -1 p.m.
Uber1J Cbrisllan Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening -6:30p.m.

Thursday Service-6:30p.m.
Laapvllle Christl1n Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m. ·
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
HemiOtk Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp

Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Wo~ hip -

wo,hip . lla.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

..Rmlsvllle Church or Christ
PIIStor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wo,.hip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

VIctory Baptist lndependoat
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee

Wo!!hip - IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Faith Baptist Chon:h

Hartford Church or Christ In
Christloa Unloo
Hartford, W.Va.

Railroad St., Mason

Sundar School - 10 a,m.
Wor!i.hlp - 11 a.m.• 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

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

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Salem Ceattr

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

The Churdl or Jesw

Christ or Latlfr·DIJ Solnll
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20-11 a.m.

Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon

Lutheran

MomlnaStor
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

SL Joba Lutbtnn Church

Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
East Letori

Pine Grove
Rev . Donald C. Fritz

Worship-9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield

Sunda y School · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School -9:45 a.m.

Wo!!hip- 10:45 a.m.

Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Antlqullr Baptist

Rullaad Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Wor&gt;hip - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.

Wo&lt;Ship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.
Rutl1nd Free Will Baptist
Salem St.

Walnut and Henry SIS., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

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

Catholic
Sacred Heort C1tbollc Church
161Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rt"- Walter E. Heinz
Sal. Con. 4:45-5: 15p.m.; Mass· 5:30p.m.
Sun . Con. -8: 45 -9:15 a.m.,

Sun. Mass- 9:30a.m.

Mt. Olive

Trlnltl Chun:h

Second &amp;. ynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman

Sunday school and wo,.hip 10:25

RACINE PLANING MIU
Mill Work

Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
WedneS&lt;Iay Services· 10 a.m.

Unlttd Mflhodlsl

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Hoc:kln1port Chun:h

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

Grand Street

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Worship . 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Mtlgs Coopentl•e Parish
Northeast Clusttr
Alrr..l

Nazarene

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Sc:rviccs · 7 p.m.

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

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

~ieqer ~utural ~ ;Int.

212 E. Main Street

264 SCUll Second /We.oMitJiJeporl, OH 45760

7ol0-992-6141
Bruce R. Fltlher • Dinldor'

Pomeroy

.

580 E11t M1in Sbeat •l'omeloy, OH 457E8

740-al2-5444
.... R.
Dinldor'

Inc.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
~

Won;hip - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

C1lv1ry Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo!!hip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicr . 7:30p.m.

Stlvrnvllle Word or F1ilh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening . 7 p.m.

Pastor: lawrence Foreman

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.

Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7c00 p.m.

Wednesday -7 p.m.

Friday · fellowship service 7 p.m.

The Belleven' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson

Se111ices: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m. ..

Horriooavlllt Community Cb•rch
Pas1or: Theron Durham

Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Eadtlme House of Pnyer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Paslor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday service · 6:30p.m.
Mlddleport Community Cbarch

Pearl St., Middleport

Pastor: William Van Meter
Friday·7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Bill Slaten

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Evening - 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Sen-ice - 7:30p.m.

Pentecost ;ll
Peate&lt;oslal Asaembly

St. Rt 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback

Mlddlepor1 Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker

Sunday Schqol - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.

Srnt:~~~el\llsalon

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m.

Syrocuse Flnt Unlttd Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

ASHLEY BROOKE McKINNEY

DANIELLE PECKHAM

Evening . (I p.m.

Worship - II a.m.

AWARDED SCHOLARSHIP •
The University of Rio Grande
has presented Portland real·
dent Aahley Brooke McKin·
nay the People'e Bank Schol·
arshlp and the Truetee Schol·
arehlp. She Ia a graduate of
Southern High School.
McKinney, deughter of Gre·
gory and Deborah McKinney,
plana to major In elementary
education at Rio Grande.
"The unlverelty le very
pleaaed to otter this epaclal
award to Ashley,"' eald Mark
Abell, executive director of
admlsalona at Rio Grande.
"She display• many qualities
we want to see In a Truatee
Scholarship recipient and we
are happy that Aahley hae
elected to study at the Unlveralty of Rio Grande."
Student• who would like
more Information about the
Trustee Scholarship, or any
other scholarahlp programs
offered by the unlveralty, may
call 740·245·7208. Raaldenta
of Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsyl·
venia and West VIrginia may
call toll free, 1·800·288·2746.

SCHOLARSHIP GIVEN
Danlelle Peckham, Pomeroy,
haa been awarded a $1,000
scholarship from the Gallipolis
Elks Lodge 107. In addition, ahe
received the Parker Long Schol·
arahlp from Meigs High School.
. A 1998 graduate of Meigs
High School, she will attend
Shawnee State University In
September and will major In
dentistry.
She Ia a member of the
Sacred Heart Church of
Pomeroy, and Is presently
employed at the Melga County
Commissioners Office end
Crow"&amp; Family Restaurant. While
a student at Meigs, she served
as 1997·1998 Aag Corps Captain, senior clasa treasurer,
Senior Spirit and a member of
the student council.
She Ia the 'daughter of Deborah K. Woodyard, Pomeroy, and
Steven R. Peckham of MlddJe.
Her maternal grandparents
are Doria Mertz of Pomeroy end
James Woodyard, Racine. Paternal grandparent. are Gary and
Charlotte Harper, Middleport

Wednesday Se111ice -7 p.m.
Hozel Communltr Chu"'h
Off Rt . 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9c30 a.m.
Wonhip- IO cJO a.m., 7:30p.m.
Jlyesvlllt Community Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Harrisonville Prabyterion Chun:h
Worship · 9 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Mlddlepor1 Prabyterioa
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

wa,hip - 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventb·Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy

Mone Chapel Church.
Sunday school - 10 u.m.

Pastor: Roy l.awinsky
Saturday Services:

Worship · 11 a.m. ·
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Sabbath School -2 p.m.
Wor.;hip -3 p.m.

Folth Gospel Church
L.ona 8ouom

United Brethren

Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

_St. Rt. 2:-=ter, Oh.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Evening· 7 p.m. ·

Ualted F11lb Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Se111ice -7 p.m.

In Christ Charch

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.
Edea United Breth"n In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - II a. m.
Sunday Worship -10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.m. ·

· FuU Gospel Ughtbouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

Crow's Family Restaurant

nme to clean house?

Clean out your basement :
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy or attic with the help of th~

"Featuring Kentucky FriBd Chicken"

992•5432

Buy, Sell or Trade

MOWER CUNIC

~

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Master Service Technician

in the

1

Bill Qulcktl 9112-as77 •

Support your
local
churches

Place an ad in this

:a

SAVE TIME
e:!~"!:!L:!!E Searching for 8
WITH A
Estatilished 1913
local church?
CLASSIFIED AD!
992·2121
Check the Sentinel.
too Mulbeny Ave.

Pomeroy

every Friday/

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

SALES &amp; SERVICE
172

~-=Ave.

i

•
""'" 2 2644

992

business eac~~~k
In this space
and support 1~

RUTI..AND - 80th annual Davis
reunion, descendants of Orlando and
Katherine Sheline Davis, Rutland
Firemen's Park, Rutland, Sunday.
Basket dinner at noon.
ATHENS Brickles family
reunion, Sunday, home of Jesse
Brickles on Pleasanl Hill Road,
Athens. Potluck dinner at noon, wilh
games, fishing and special music in
the afternoon . Picnic dinner at noon.
For directions call 740-592-6134.
MONDAY
RACINE - Friends of the Meigs
County library will meel Monday al
7 p.m. at lhe Racine Branch.
CARPENTER Board of
Trustees, Columbia Township, Monday, 7:30p.m. at the fire station.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees, 7:30 Monday, at Syracuse
Municipal Building.
RACINE- Racine Village Council, Monday, 7 p.m. municipal build-

News Hotline 992-2156
I

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chesler Garden
Club, open meting, Wednesday, 7 :30
p.m. Chesler United Methodist
Church. County meeting also
Emphasis on fair flower show. All
clubs tnvited. Judges to tdemonstrate
judges. Chesler members 10 lake door
prizes and linger foods .
~ Your Bank For Life

~c

Call Now for Free Class Placement
Evaluation Held August IOth·14th

WPT GYMNASTICS
5 Commerce Dr.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 441·1570

• Your Bank For Life • Your Bank For Life • Your Bank For Life 1 Your Bank For Life ~

Here's One More Reason

WJa~···

w

i
f

•

..

~
• LOBBY HOURS
~

l

Saturday

Monday lhru Thrusday

Friday

1\Jppers Plains

8:30 to 4:00 p.m.

8:30 lo 4:00 p.m. 8:30 to 12:00 p.m.

Pomeroy
Gallipolis

8:30 lo 4.:00 p.m.

8:30 lo 5:00p.m. 8:30 lo 12:00 p.m.

8:30 lo 4:00 p.m.

8:30 to 6:00 p.m. 8:30 lo 12:00 p.m.

J
g

&gt;"

•

~
~

.S

DRIVE THRU HOURS:
.
Thppers Plams

&amp; Pomeroy

8:00 lo 6:00 p.m.
8:00 to 6:00 p.m.

• Gallipolis

~

~

l

, '

8:00 lo 6:00p.m. 8:00 to 12:00 p.m.

•

~
c

.

we',,

i

i
f

Your BankfnJi. .
Fs

~

Salurday
Friday .
8:00 lo 6:00 p.m. 8:00 to 12:00 p.m.
8:00 to 6:00 p.m 8:00 lo 12:00 p.m.

Monday lhru Thursday
8:00 lo 4:00p.m.

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

~.h ~~~::.~hi
.

Member F.O.I.C.

I

,_,.,, 01145769

740-tn-211

..
r.,..rs "~~

7.W-3161

ir

:::;~

339

111145713

7401446-~

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jl.

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.

.J., ~,.. JnOA.. 810 ..... .IIIOl•.., .....

MIG}. • .., . . . . . .IIOA • .., . . . . . .IIOA

•
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AQH 4 &amp;

Session 1 Starts August 31st

11&lt;

Middleport

Aug 3ril.- 7th
Tune .6:00p.m. - 8:00pm

n

•Pre School (3 and up)
•Recreational
•Birthday Parties
•Private Lessons
•Cheerleading Clinics
•Power Tumbling Team
•Boys &amp; Girls Gymnastics Teams

.r
i!

~
•

Theme is ''Jesus is Life"

GYMNAS,.IC 8
,.UMBLJ.N G
SIGN-UPS

•

at

525 N 2nd

The traveling prize furnished by
Belly lowery was won by Eva Rot&gt;son.
The gardening hint was on dividing bulbs, and it was noted lhat
regardless of how careful the bulbs
are ltfted from the ground, lhey
many times fall apan . Each division
should be polled separately 10 get
more plants, il was noted.

~

Welcome to Vacation Bible School
Vretory Baptist Church

Bua Service Call 182.f772 or 7q-~

Send questinM to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndkate, 5777 W. Cen·
tory Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

~

l..

"Hey Kids"

_

find douns of honorable lawyen to
offset the jokes, the negative reporiS
and the dishonorable few. --Proud to
Be a lawyer in Houston
Dear Housloll: 111anks for an
eloquent defense of your profession.
If I ever get into trouble in Houston,
I will call on you.
Dear Readers: Ann landers has
a problem. I am running out of
Gems of the Day. Can you help?
Please send to Ann landers, in care
of lhe newspaper in which you read
the column.

~

.lit

M•iBo c......,.~ oldu, "'"'"''

1111

we Fill Doctors'

I

Port·

RACINE - Annual Thomas
reunion, Sunday, Star Mill Park,
Racine.

TUESDAY
RACINE JEWEL, home
school suppon group, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
home of Brian and Kim Hupp.
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, 6 p.m. Tuesday at the
Township hall, Rocksprings Road.
POMEROY - Auxiliary, Fraternal Order of Eagles, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at hall. Potluck, 6 p.m . Take covered dish. Meat provided.

&gt;"

CL4SSLRED SECTION/
7tancis FLORIST

=·
Sent·t"nel
• 7~99' "'!8·
..
92 5;~;~~-Pomeroy~Mal~n~~--:·:=:-:=-t~
992~.2~~~re-::-scrl-:-pt-io_nP~so~m~!OY~_:C~lASSI_F:-IE_D..,..S_.....,...1t,.,_u.lis-~~:.!?";no.p..~
9
-_!!!~~~~!!:!~~!_-_
._4_KE_R_o_s_EJN~E!:H~EA:re~~AA-EP.-'A-IR-f.:9;;~
~-6298~r""~s,.=n.~~c.=,.=-t·
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FtA1 ~n~ot

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE
Eichin ger
reunion, Sunday, 12:45 p.m. lunch at
Carleton School, Syracuse.

Presbyterian

Reedsville Ftllowshlp
Church or the Nozorene

RIDENOUR
SUPPIL.V1

SALEM CENTER- Star Grange
778, and Star Junior Grange 878, regular session; Saturday, potluck supper,
6:30 p.m. followed by regular meeting and election of officers, 8 p.m.

Sunday Schoot-·IO•.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

tng.

SATURDAY
REEDSVll.LE - Friends and relatives of John and Laun Wells, annual picnic, Forked Run State Park,
noon Saturday.

Sunday Services - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

gave grace. Aikins reported on the
40th anniversary tea of the Cheshire
Garden Club which she altended .
The state convention was announced
wilh Aikins 10 represent the Rulland
Club.
The Athens Garden Club extend ed an invitation to the Aug . 26 open
house where the program wi II be on
"Garden Jewels.

Eastem local

required action.

New Ule Vlnory Centtr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH

classes of the show. She used an
amber vase with yellow glads and
pruit hedge to show a line mass
arrangemenls and mullicolored zinnias, golden rod , yellow dmies.
Queen Ann lace, and greencf) for a
basket arrangement.
Announced al the meeting was
the "Come Home 10 Rutland" program to be held Sept. 6. An invitation has been eKiended to lhe Rutland Club to participate in a flower
show al the Rutland Civic Center.
--· " Plans were announced for the
annual open house to be held at the
Rutland Methodisl Church, 7:30p.m
on Aug. 31. The program will be
presented by Hal Kneen on the
lopic, "Preparing Our Gardens for
Winter. He will also discuss the care
and storage of bulbs.
Atkins presided at lhe meeting
with Sarah Dawn Jenkins arranging
assoned flowers for the table and
giving devotions. Gabriel Jenkins

-Community Calendar~=--Board of Education, special session,
10 a.m. to discuss personnel and other

Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School 10 a.m.

Plans for the Meigs County fair
nower show were discussed when
lhe Rutland Garden Club held its
annual picpic and meeting at the
home of Donna and Sarah Dawn
Jenkins.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
and the Rutland Garden Club will
co-host 1he annual fair nower show
as well as the Christmas nower
show. Members were reminded thai
all entries in the two flower shows
must be made at the Secretary's
office on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds either Aug. 1 or 8 before 4
p.m.
AI the Wednesday open meeling
of the Chester Garden Club at the
Chesler United Methodist Church,
county judges will demonstrate the
making of arrangements to fil into
the fair schedule.
For the program Pauline Atkins
gave a demonstration of arranging
flowers for enlry into lhe various

· EAST MEIGS -

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

hislory is filled with generations of
lawyers who have slood up against
tyranny to build a free society. Of
lhe 56 men who signed the Declaration of Independence, 25 were
lawyers . The author, Thomas Jefferson, was himself a lawyer. Of the 55
delegates to !he Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia who hammered out our Constitution, 31 were
lawyers . Twenty-five of the nation's
42 presidents have been lawyers.
Disreputable lawyers deserve to
be criticized. They are a disgrace,
and the public. as well as the legal
profession , is well served by their
exposure. Bu1 they are only a foot note in the story of 1he legal tradi tion. For every charlatan. we can

Plans underway for Meigs County Fair Flower Show

FRIDAY

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.

4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Are you a daughter of despondency
or a son of sorrow? Have you questioned
God, searched for Him but couldn't find
Him? Have you known such deep despair
that nothing comforts you? Does your life
seem an intolerable burden and death a
relief? Then you can identify with Asaph, the writer of Psalm 77.
In dislress, Asaph cried out to God. His eyes could not close in sleep
and his soul refused to be comfoned until an answer came. Fervently, he
continued in prayer until he realized he had not trusted God. His answer
came and lhe healing process began. He accepted sorrow withoul complaint, and was satisfied with the Lord's will.
.
Asaph reflected on the wonders of God. Verses 11-12 hold the key to
his victory, "I will remember the deeds of the LORD; yes, I will remember your miracles of long ago. I will meditate on all your works and consider all your mighty deeds. (NIV)' Asaph, a son of sorrow, needed to
remember he was a son of God.
Falher, help us know You are the same greal and powerful God Asaph
knew. We trust You for victory. Take the agony of our heans , tum our
despair into peace and restore us to a joyful vibrant life. Amen.
Write Bonnie, P.O. Box 951, Xenia, Ohio 45385.

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Radio Ministry- Ravenswod Station

In distress, call for God
By Bonnie Shiveley
Devotional Writer

Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

-·Jr..

992-3987

Pastor: John Hart
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.

Mt. Olive Community Church

Syrocuse Church ollhe Nlllmte

Sermonette

F1irvlew Blblt Chun:h
lttart, W.Va. Rt. I

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · IO:JUa.m., 630 p.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

obviously had very lillie self-esteem
to begin with. No doubt. she boasted
more than a little and took greal
pleasure in besting him at every
tum. I could tell by her letter that
even after many years, she still conDear Ann Lauden: 1be woman sidered herself to be superior.
in Houston wbo tried to reconcile
My brother started picking on me
with her older brother, with whom the ftrst time I got straight A's in eleshe had not spoken for several years, mentary school and his grades wen:
reminded me of the situation with so poor he was held back a year.
my own brother, "Arthur."
What '"Houston's" brother failed to
'"Houslon" said her brother never see was how much his little sister
liked her because she beat him at needed his approvaL I. too, wanted
!ennis, made better grades in school my big brother to be proud of me,
and had a happy marriage . When she but each of my victories was a nail
tried to reconcile with him, he told in his coffin of self-esteem.
her to go to hell.

Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Se rvice · 7 p.m.

Chun:b or Jesus Christ,
AposiGIIc Faith

Long Botlom
Pastor: Steve Reed

57~

Ann
Landers

I hope "'Houston" will keep try·
Dar Maryland: Thank you for
ing to reconcile with her brother. an insightful and generous letter.
She should write a letter listing all Sibling rivalry can be ememely
the things that she admin:s about painful and inlense. Remember Cain
him . Maybe il will help her see the and Abel and Jacob and Esau' Your
good things her brother has done letter is sun: 10 help many readers
with his life, and he will feel thai his judge themselves less harshly when
sister appreciates him.
it comes to rocky family relalion1 was lucky because Arthur and I ships.
were able to understand each other a
Dear Ana Landers: I am not
lot better as we grew older. He was offended by the lawyer jokes that are
killed in a motorcycle accident constantly noating around. although
recently, and I miss him terribly. My they do become a bit tedious. I do
dear brother was hard-working, gen- wonder, however. how many of your
erous and loyal, made friends easily readers are aware of the distin and never had an unkind word to say guished history of the legal profesabout anyone. He was a far greater sion.
success in life than he realized. -·
I know what mos1 members of
C.C. in Maryland
the public apparently do not -- that

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.

Texas Community off CR 82
Pa!;tor: Roben Sanders

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunduy School · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wors~ip - 10:30 a.m.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev . Phillip Ridenour

1\JL Hrrmoa United Brethren

Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph

Whitt's Cbapel Wflleyln

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

Middleport Ch•n:h or the N1zorene

K&amp;C JEWELERS
992-3785

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Pas1or: Sharon Hausman

Worship_- 11 a.m.

Tuesday Services -7 p.m.
Bethtl Church
Township Rd., 468C

Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9c30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am

Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday se111ice, 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Helen Kline
Main &amp; fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Frttdom Gospel 1\llsalon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

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

Coolvlllt Unlttd Mtthodlst Porish
Coolville Chun:h

No Sunday or Wedne!iday Nigtlt Sc:rvk:es

H-. Cbrilllon Ftllowoblp Cbun:h

Pastor: Rev . Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:45a.m.
WoBhip - II a.m.

Pastor: Jeff Smith

Sunday School -9:30 o.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.

Rejoldng Ure Church

Worship- 11 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

C hest~r

Congregational

Rodoe

w~hip . 10 ··~ ·· 7 p.m.

500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz

Wednesday SCI"\' ices · 7 p.m.

Dai le y Mass · 8: 30a.m.

Wednesday Se111ice - 7 p.m.

St. P1ul Luthena Church

Flnt Church or Gnd
Apple and Second SIS.

Chun:h or God or Prophecy
O.J . White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Worship · IJ :IS a.m., 7 p.m.

Fallb Volley Tabera1cle Church
Bailey Run Road

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - II a m, 6:30p.m

Wednesday Services -6:30p.m.

Wcdaaday ..,.ice, 7 p.m.
Christiu Ftllowohlp Ceater
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Worship- 11 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· tO a.m.
Evening Services- 6:30p.m.

Faltll CUDo1 ape. Bible Clturdl
923 S.'lbinl St., Middleport
Pastor Emic Wenaerd
Sunday ..,.ia:, 10 a.m.

Worship · 9 a.m.

Wednesday -7 p.m.

Pastor: Robert Barber
SundaySchool · 9 a.m.

her successes did to her brother, who

Faith Ftllowshlp Cn111dt for Christ

Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wtdnesdly?pm

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Our s.~iour Lutber-.1 Church

Syracuse

Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor

603 SeaJnd A... Mlson

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Racine

Pastor: Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.

"Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4l a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Graham Unlttd Methodist
Worship -9:30 a.m. (lSI &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)

Church of God

Wednesday Se111ices- 10 a.m.
C1rmei-SulloD
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio

Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, Jst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

United Methodist

ML Moriah Cbun:h or God

Worship - 9 a.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wednesday Service-7 :30p.m.

Mt. Moriah B1ptlst
Fourlh &amp; Main St., Middleport

Sunday School -9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.
Snowville
Sunday Sdlool - 10 a.m.
lletbaay

Pastor:Jim Hughes

Sunday School - II a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 9,30 a.m., DO p.m.

Forest Run 81plist
Pastor : Arius Hur1

Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

l'lllor: Rev. Miry Mclllalel

•fuJI-Coopel Cbwd!"
Pasion John .t l'lllr Wade

r-or
l'lllor: CGaaic ......

Worship -7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia -7:30p.m.

Other Churches

Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

RutJ•ad Community Church

Sunday School-9:45 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wtdnesdly Se111icea - 7 p.m.
Por1Jud Flnt Cburdl ottbe Nuarat
Pasto&lt;: Mark Matson
Worship - 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Se111ia:s - 7 p.m.

1\llaernllle
Pastor: Chad Emrici&lt;

Rullaad Church or Christ
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

. _ Cltotrdl of tile N111rue
PISior: Rtv. Samuel W. Buye

Sundar Setviceo: !Oa.m. .l 6p.m.
Wedaretlay Servicea -7 p.n

1/2 milt off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

Sout1o Bethel Ntw T - t
Silver Ridge

C1rieloe Jntmleaomlllltloul Church
Kingsbury Road

Wedbesday Services - 7 p.m.

She probably could not see what

Evening 7:30p.m.

Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Pastor: Rtv. Hert&gt;ert G&lt;tte

Sibling rivalry has deep rooted causes going back to childhood

Tuesday &amp; Thursday -7,30 p.m.

Wednesdly Se1111ce -7 p.m.

Worship - I 0:30a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

' Pastor: Ror Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

~Citarcholtllt N~DNM

Plat Gron Bible HollafJI Church

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdly Se111ices- 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Bapllst

ML Unloa Baptist

Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wtdnesdly Se111icea -7 p.m.

a.-a o.cn.Jt Mltolotries
47439 Rcibelld., a..-

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo,hip -8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

or

Heotb (Middlepor1)
Pas1or: Vemagaye Sullivan

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Pastor: Bill Linle

"'

Citoorci. tilt N...,_
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Orimm)r.
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -9 a.m.
Thursday Se111ices -6:30p.m.

lbd• Flnl Baplbt

Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servie&lt;s-7:30p.m.

r

Rose or Sbaro1 Holloess Church
l..eading Creek Rd .. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey K..ing
Sunday school· 9:30a.m
Sunday worship · 7 p.m.
Wt;dne!oday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Rick Rule

Worship - 10:30 a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Se111icea • 7 p.m.
Wtdnesdly Kid! lor Christ-7 p.m.

Wednesday Sen-ices · 7:30p.m.

DoavUk HoliDeu Cbun:h
31057 Slate Route 325, U.gsvlle

Wednesday ServiCe · 7.30 p.m.

Worship · 9:30a.m.

r ... Will Baptist Church

Worship - 10 a.m.

Sunday SchooiiO:JO a.m.

Pomervy Westside Church or Cbrisl

Uberty Auembly or God
P.O. Bo. 467, Dudding Lane

Pastor: Sbuon HaiiSRian
Sunday Sdlool - 9 a.m.

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev . D. A. duPiantler
Hoi)' Eucharist and

Wednesday Sco ices- 7 p.m.

33226 Children's Home Rd.

Ttappen Plolu St. ·PIIII

Friday, July 31, 1998 ·

f

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Program features family theme
"Children and Family" was the
theme of" the program presented
under the leadership of Osie Mae
Follrod at a recent meeting of the
AI!Rd United Methodist Women
held at the church.
The group sang "God Leads Us
Along", which was followed by
selections from Mark and Matthew
about Jesus and children.
Follrod had prayer, and all memben took part in reading selections
about children and family including
"A Touching Story and a Truth",

"Jenny's Necklace". and "Mama's
Cllristmas Thoms."
The program closed with unison
reading of "Prayer in Appreciation
of the Family."
During the business meeting officer's reports were given. Friendship
calls totaled 26. Follrod made the
treasurer's repon. President Nellie
Parker read greetings from Sarah
ScheuOer, West Ohio UMW president and conducted the repon on
membership.
Parker had the prayer calendar

and chose Deborah Dennick-Ream
in laity service at Mt. Lebanon
Extended Day Program at Bethel
Park, Pa. The society signed a birthday catd for her.
•
Thelma Henderson served sandwiches, fruit salad and cake to those
named and Nine Robinson, Martha
Elliott, Charlotte Van Meter, Martha
Poole, Aorence Ann Spencer. Elliott
gave the table grace. :-!ext meeting
will be Marjorie Guthrie with Foilrod as hostess.

Local quilter exhibits craft at Bob Evans Farm
Bunny Kuhl of Pomeroy is one desire and helped with the
of the 14 quilters displaying work unknown ." Bunny has been quilting
at the Fifth Annual Bob Evans seriously for more than 20 years.
Farm Homestead Invitational Quilt
Kuhl said that she prefers tradiExhibit in Rio Grande, which began tional patterns and in making a quilt
on June 27 and continues through thinks of what someone would like
Sunday.
as a keepsake.
Kuhl has on exhibit five of the
"''m a fabncaholic- so as I'm
nearly 100 on exhibit at the show.
getting older- I try to fit fabric on
"Quilting and quilt making have hand to the next preny pattern I
always been done by someone in .see," she said.
my family . My learning comes
Over the years Kuhl has exhibitmostly by 'domg tt' but a class at ed at numerous local shows. includOhio University really stirred ing the ones at the Meigs County

Fair, in Grange contests, and at fa,bric shops. She also participated in a ·
Mountain Mist contest displayed in
Hairston, Texas.
"I really like to garden," com-_
mented Kuhl, "but if I had only one
choice to make, I'd rather be quilting. Thank God for the joy of both."
The show will continue from I 0
a.m. to 5 p.m. through Aug. 2, with
the July 24 and 31 show times
being extended to 8 p.m. Admission
is $1 per person.

Osbornes host gathering to celebrate birthday
Family and friends gathered
recently at the home of Bill and Jean
Osborne, Reedsville, for a dinner
party, honoring Theodore Pullins of
Long Bottom on his birthday
anniversary.
Assisting with the dinner were
Beckie Pullins, Donna Pullins,
Denise Laughery, Terri Browning,
Stacie Pullins and Angie Taylor.
· Others attending were Chuck

Pullins, Tom, Audrionna and Kirk
Pullins, Clint and Louise Pitzer, Sue
Kibble, Paul and Pauline Rtley, Don
and Edna Wilson, and Brian and
Mischelle Beeler, all of Long Bottom; Doug and Justin Browning and
Ray and Manha Parsons of Racine;
Mattie Pullins of Coolville; Freda
Carsey of The Plains; Judy Leach
and granddaughter or Mineral Wells,
W. Va.; Gary, Vicki Joshua and

Beckie Cline of Canton; Kiara Taylor of Columbus, and Michelle
Laughery of Cincinnati.
Sending birthday wishes were
Christopher Spencer, Columbus;
Gary and Charlene Truex of Canton;
Don and Rod Pullins of Coolville;
Bob and Nancy Cronin of
Youngstown; Tom Kibble, Long
Bottom, and Mike Taylor, Columbus.
- ~ ec-ce

GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIR

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

SOUTHERN MEIGS
STATEMENT
Conlblnld Flnenctet Repoit
of 1111 Board or Educlllon
For tht FIICit Ynr Endtd
Junt30,10118
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
REVENUE RECEIPTS
RECEIPTS:
Texae .......-......... 1,469,1132..14
Elmtnge or
lnvmmenta ......... 17,324.87
Extracurrlculll'
ActtvHiea............. 111,491,56
lilac. Recelpta ....... 30,739.73
Grenllln Aid
Still Sourceo ... 2,389,849.81
Federal
Sourceo .............. 305,245.110
Total RICIIpta (0peratlng) ..... 4,323,584.51
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS
DISBURSEMENTS:
lnotructlon ........ 2,403,334.15
Supporting
S.rvlco ............ 1,549,637.47
Exlrecurrlcular
AcUvltlea .............. 113,201.50
fiCIIIIIoo
AcquloHion.............$,740.110
Debt S.rvlce ........ 167,292.39
Totlt Dlabur11menla
(Oper.) ............. 4,219,213.40
Exc. Repte. Over/
(Undtr) Dleb....... 104,371.11
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Contribution• lr,
Donation a ................. 548.00
Operltlng Trenelersln ............................. 5,281.68
Refund or Prior
Yearo Expend ............ 155.00
Operltlng Traneltre Out ....................... (8,2111.88)
Totel Othlr Fin.
Sources (Utn) ... (1,300.00)
Exee11 Reeelpii/Sourcn
Ovtr/(Unde., Dlab~n. lr
Othtr UHI/Nit .. 103,071.11
Beginning Fund Ceah
Balance .............. 208,1137.73
Ending Fund Caah
Batance .............. 311,-.84
Reaervod for
Encumbftncea .... 40,1143.80
Unreaerved Fund
Balance .............. 270,1168.07
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
OPERATING RECEIPTS
RECEIPTS:

Scratch &amp;Dent Clearance!
JUST AFEW NEW BUICKS AND PONTIAC$ REMAIN
FROM THE HAIL STORM.

Prices Slashed-Save ABundlel

Food Servlct
Salaa..................... 31,174.13
Cleu Mattrlale lr
Faee ...................... 14,137.52
Mlec. Recalpta ..... 335,100.77
Grante In Aid
Total Rocetpta (0ptratlng) ........ 430,561.47
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS
DISBURSEMENTS:
EmployNa Salarlee
lr Wagtl ............... 95,302.77
Employeea Retirement
Berie!Ra ................ 46,013.118
Purchaaed
Servlctl ............. 333,967.84
Suppllellr
Metorlala ............ 124,405.54
Capital Outley .......... 1.-.oo
Othir Oblecta ............. 665.00
Totet Dlabur11monta
(Oper.)................ 502,254.21
Exc. Reptt. Over/
(Under) Dleb .... (171,692.79)
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)
State Sourcea........ 13,5t1.97
Federal Sourcea .. 186,056.37
Operating Tranefersln ............................. 2,ooo.oo

Rebates and low financing Still Apply if Applicable!
Low Mileage Factory Programs Cars,
Returns, and Local Trades
To Choose From!
SEE BOB COOK, JIM COCHRAN, BRETT EPLING, ·
DON CARTER OR GREG SMITH

Public Notice
COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tile following eppllcetlona
end/or verified complelnta
wert received and the
following drelt, propoaed,
oi ftMI ICIIone wtre luUid
by the Ohio Envlronmentel
Protection Agency (OEPA)
1111 -lc. "Actlona: lncludt
tile edoptlon, modlflcltlon,
or rtpMI of ordere (other
then emergency ordere);
the

le•uance, denial,

modlflcetlon or rtvocetlon
ollleen-. permlta, leiHI,
verlencee, or certlllcetee;
and the epprovel or
diHpprovel of plene end
epeclllcetlone. "Drelt

Actlonl": en written ltlte- ·
lllffdl of the Director ol 1

llwlronrnentll P•otec&gt;llon'e

..

(li~ecmr'a) Intent with
rt.,.ct to the IIIUinCI,
denlel, etc. of • permit,
tlcenee, ordtr, ltc. lnttrteted penon• mey eubmH
written comment• or

Public Notice
requeet

Friday, July 31, 1998

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

1

pubic meeting

Public Notice
adjudlcltlon he1rlng re-

Total Other Fin.
Sourcea (U111) .. 201,735.04
Exceaa Recelpte/Sourcea
Ovor/(Under) Dlobure. lr
Other U111/Net .... 30,042.26
Beginning Fund Ceeh
Balance ................ 37,049.17
Ending Fund Caah
Balan co ................ 67,091.42
Unreaerved Fund
Balance ................ 67,091.42
AGENCY FUND
OPERATING RECEIPTS
Extracurricular
Aetlvltlee .............. 31,4118.118
Total Rocoipts (Operating ............ 31,496.118
OPER. DISBURSE.
Purchaaed Sorv.......... 154.79
Suppllnlr
Materials .............. 27,374.14
Other Objacta ............. 841.00
Total Dlaburaemtnla(Oper.) .................. 28,869.93
Exc. Rcpta. Over/(Under)
Dlsb ........................ 2,626.13
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)
Contr. &amp; Donations .... 132.61
Total Other Fin.
Sources (Uaea) ......... 132.61
Dlab. lr Other
Uaoa/Not ................. 3,758.14
Beginning Fund Caah

....

Public Nollce

Bela"Ct ......- ....... 13,177.ta· Wlllleme Hollow Roed,
LERNER, SAIIPSQN lr
Ending Fund Cull
O.llpolle, Ohio 45131, lind
ROTHFUSS
a.tenct ................ 15,1315.10 tht unknown h•lre,
Attorneyl lor Plelnllfl
u.....nwc~
dlvl-, legttaee, eocu120 E. Fourth StrMt.
Fund 8lllnce ...... tl,t:IUO ton, tdmtnlab-.......
lthi"••
end
eealgna
end
tht
TOTALS
Cinclnnati,Ohlo
45202
unknown
guerdlena
ol
RECEIPTS:
T -...,............. 1,411,1132-14 minor end/or lncompltlflt 513) 241-3100
.hei!J or IAe Roy lllf!ljlklne, 7) 3,10, 17, 24, 31; (8) 71te
Elmlnga or
l n -......... 17,324.87 ·sr., Klmblrty D. Stmpklna l---=--:-::~':'"'::--Food Strvlcta
lnd JoHph P. Gilbert. ell or
PubUc Notice
S.lea..................... 31,174.13 wholl r11ldtnc11 are
unknown end C.nnot by
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Extrlcun1cullr
Tht lltlge County
Actlvltlta ............ 142,957.S2 r11eoneble dlllgenco bt
uctrlllnld, will take.notice Counell on Aging, Inc., P.O.
Cleu llttarlela
l F-.................. 14,137.52 thet on lht ttth day ol Box 722·112 Eelt Memorial
lllec. RICIIpta ..... 369,t:IUO llerch, 1118, Bene On• Drtvt, Pomeroy, OH 4571t,
Gronllln Aid
Mortgage Corporation flied wiH eccept Htlld bldt lor e
State Sourcea ... 2,389,14t.81 lie Complelnt In the 1001 Dodgt elevtn (11)
Federal
Common Pl111 Court of p1111nger llexlven with
Sourcea .............. 305,245.110 llelge County, Ohio In CIN wheelchelr lilt, until
Total Rectlpta No. IICV021 on the doclllt llondly, Augult 10, 111118.
(Oper.tlng) ..... 4,785,841.00 of the Court, end 1111 object The lltlge County Council
EXPENDITURE
end demand for rtllel or on Aging, Inc. the
DISBURSEMENTS
which pleedlng 11 to lore- right to IICCipl or reJICIIIIIY
DISBURSEMENTS:
clo11 thl lltn of plelntlll't end all bide. For more
lnotructlon ........ 2,403,334.15 mortgag• recordiHI upon lnformltton, conllct ROIIIId
Supporting
tile following d-rlbld rill Herrle It (740) 812-21111.
S.rvlci ............ 1,54U37.47 ntata to wit:
(7) 211,30 2tc
Exlrllcurrlcular
Property Addrlll le:
Acttvltloo .............. 13,201.50 35134 LAIIIIng c-k Rood,
FeciiiU11
.lllddltporl, Ohio 45710 end
Acqulaltlon ............. 5,740.110 being mort pertlculerly
Debt Service ........ 187,212.39 tletcrlbld In plllntlll'a mort·
Employ- S.larlta
gege t'ICOI'ded In llortgegt
l Weg01 ............... 05.302-77 Volume 0, page 783, or tht
EmployHI Retirement
llelge County Rtcorder'e
Belllltti ................ 46,013.118 Olllce.
Purchelld
All of the ebOvt nemed
Servlc01 ............. 334,122.53 dtfendentt art required to
Supplllllr
ena-r wHhln lwtnty..lthl
lllttrllll ............ 152,279.88 (28) daye eltar let publlceCapital OuUoy .......... 1.-.oo tlon, which ehell "' pub. Other Objecll .......... 1,!1011.00 llthed
one• e week for alx
Total DlaburHmento
conaecutlvt
-"'· or they
(Oper.) ............. 4,350,337.14 might be dented 1 llurlng
Exc. Rtpll. Over/
(Undt., Dlob...... (14,505.55)
30 Announc:ementa
OTHER FINANCING
Happy 16th
SOURCES (USES)
Contrtbutlono lr
Birthday
Donatlona ............... 677.881
State Sourcee ........ t3,881.57
Brandy Tobin
Fed. Soul'CII ....... 186,053.57
Operating TrenaloraLove,
ln ............................. 9,281.88
Refund or Prior
Dad&amp;
Yeere Exptnd............ tss.oo
Operating Trenalera 110 Help Wanted
Out ....................... (9,282.58)
Total Othtr Fin.
Sourcaa (UH1) .. 200,587.65
Exce11 Reeelpte/Sourcea
Full or Part
Over/(Undo., Dlabun. lr
Barber for
Other u..o/Nat .. t35,872.10
Beginning Fund C11h
Mick's Barber &amp;
Balance .............. 259,014.118
Ending Fund Cooh
Style Center,
Balance .............. 384,936.18
OR
MORE
R11ervedfor
120 East Main,
Encumbranc11 .... 40,1143.80
PER GAME
Pomeroy.
Unreaerved Fund
Balanco .............. 353,003.36
Call Mick
C11h In Banke
(Nit) ...................... 384,836.16
Williams
Total Fund Bal..... 384,936.11
MEMORANDA DATA
740·992·2367
110 Help Wanted

BINGO

MON.&amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

Business Services

AaNIIId

Valuatlon ............ 61,012,1110
lnalde 10 Mlll ............... 3.5000
ADM .............. Jl.............OS0.50
Numblr ol Non-CII'l
Employaea ................. 35.00
Numblr ol Ctrt.
Employeea .................. 57.00
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS
BONDS
Bal. Beginning
or Porlod .............. 20,000.00
Rodtomod-Durlng
Flecol Perlod ..........20,00.00
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS
NOTES
LONG lr SHORT TERM
Bal. Btglnnlng
ol Ptrlod ......... t,123,315.24
Radoomed-Durtng
Fltcal Porlod ...... 5110,227.54
Balance 6-30-118 ... 543,087.70
I ctrtlly the following
report to be corrtct end
true, to the boot of my
knowledge:
Dtnnlt E. Hill
Treaeurer or the
Board of Education
740-149-2213
(7) 311tc
Public Notice
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Cue NO. 118CV021
(Judge Crow)
BANC ONE MORTGAGE
CORPORATION
Plaintiff,
-VI-

LEROY SIIIPKIN.S, S., It al
Delendente.
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Lee Roy Slmpklne, Sr.,
Kimberly D. Slmpklna ond
Jo11ph P. Gilbert, wholl
laat known eddr111 le 2244

HEAD NURSE
Responsible for 24-hour administration of
nursing services on Skilled Nursing Facility. Must
be an .Ohio Licensed RN. Administrative and
Clinical experience in geriatrics preferred but not
required.
Contact: Human Resources,
115 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
740-992-2104.

IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A
QUAUFIED BODYMAN
Call for an Interview:
740-992-6614 or

1-BOG-837·1094

DON TATE MOTORS

permit, Ucenee, or verlance

Fri., 31st, Karaoke
Sat., Aug. 1, live band,

Southern Breeze
$2.00 cover

OPENING
AUGUST3
THE LUNCH LINE
105 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy

Ho~rs: Mon.-Fri.

10-3
Carryout or Dine In

992-6670

(Cit Out for Futun DIKount)

LOnG·s
COnSTROOIOn
Over 20 years experienceFree Estimates

Call 614·843·542!,.. 1....

orl

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

·---·-

. ~

TJIPP/Ul

~~

"Easy Over 1l1e Pl1one Ba11k Fimulcing"
Air Conditioners ~s Low AI '28 • monlb
Heat Pumps Aa Low AI

'38 a month

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

Business
Services

• Hot Water Heater
•Washers
·Freezers
• Ranges
• Dishwashers
• Refrigerators
• Dryer
Call Ken Young
{740) 985-3551
7117111 t ntO. pel

-

-w.r

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

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

740-985-3813

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
4121/11 tfn

BENNm's HEATING &amp; COOLING
"Wf1ere Q11alily Doetn '1 Cotr More"

740-446-9416 •1-800-872-5967

.Custom Homes

985-4473
7/22itln

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor o1
financial obllgatlonlancl arrange a fair dlltrlbutton
ol a111t1. Dtbtore In bankruptcy may keep
"txampt• ~ tor hll or her personal uu.
T111t may Include 1 car, a houu, clothes, and
houllhold goocll.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William s-.franek, Attorney At ~w
(740) 592·5025 Athens, Ohio

AnENllON LOYERSIII

1--1120111255

$2.91 p/lnln , _ bo 111yn •
Sotv-U tflt) MU434

On site custom sawing
with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill

CELLULAR PHONES

WVCell
(304} 173-5860
ObioCitU

(740) 9854197
712(W81mopd

P/B Contractors, Inc.
• Bobcat Service
• Concrete
• Masonry
• General
Commercial and
Resldentlel
Free Esttmslet ·
No Job Too Small
Brian Mor~lson
(740) 9~?:48 ..

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Umeatone Hauling
Houu &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Uti IItie$
Estimates

(614) 992·3838

12/18/lln

7•trv1 mo oo

.:::.,.

~,_t..,:.~l

fit The Bend Area 8 Largest EXPO
JJ.:D.
Located at
Meigs Cpunty Fairgrounds

J\
~

--

360° Communications

" WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY,

OH.

0155.

John's Rd. Radno. 9-5.

Female Ronweiler. 4yrs old.
spayed , very g8ntle &amp; loves

Carport sale . 536 High Street.
Middleport, Saturday 811, ~ : 00-

kids. 304-576·3124.

2:00, msc. items.

Free puppies part Dalmatian.
304--E75-1725.

Church yard sale· Syracuse Park.

Pet Bunnies! Lop Eared · For

Friday &amp; Saturday. 300 Broadway

lnlenection US .33 &amp; SR 7 (northwest corner)

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

September 19th &amp; 20th

. Garages • Replacement Windows

Saturday 10-6 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10-5

p.m.

For more information call992-6676
.
7/:JCWn

ter 7pm. 304·773-5348

Pure-bred
male
German
Shepharct no papers. has shots.
2yrs old, good watch dog . to

good home. 304-675-3216.

r

LOST: Small brown w/white
paws. Weiner dog . Answers to
'Midget" in viCinity or Btl1 St. in
Point Pleasant. 304-675--7398 .

11 10 Second Ave . 7/31 &amp; 8/1
9 :00-5 :00 No Early Sales,
Beanies, Electric Cooking Stove ,

Clolhes, Household

161 Green Terrace Up The Hill 8/
1/98 9:00AM -5 :00PM . Boys
Clothes. Girls 18 Mo.

Grav1!1, Sand,

614-992·3470

CRAFTY LADIES
SHOP

Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items
Open 11 am • 6 pm

299 Third Street
Racine, Ohio

Howard L Wrlteael

· ROOFING
HEW·REPIIR

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
"Hu91 lnftnttry"
*Root Coatings
*Vinyl Skirting
*Water Heaters
Supplies
&amp;Wood

Stepe
Discount Priess

Bennett Supply
7~11416

13g1 Safford
School Rd.
Galllpolla, OH

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
5/2fllln

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding •Sotllt
•Faecla
•Siamlell Gutter
, •Roofing
~Replacement

Window•
•St1tl1111ary Dock•
+Blown lnaulallon
•Garegea •Decka
24x24 Pole Building
aterHnn at $5885

AI:\
[iu_·

Owner: John Dean

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

CARPET
PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114

3 Family Lots of kids clothes.

Toys, Womens Clothes , Various
Sizes. Brand Names. Sun Valley
Drive just past dnema in Spring

Valley, Friday, Saturday 9:00·?

5 Family : Saturday, 9· 3 . First
Brick House After Underpass.
BulavHie. Furniture, Appliances.

TBE .M APLES
100 Memorial Drive East
Pomeroy, Ohlo
Renta are computed according to your Income.
Lovely apartmenta falturlng wtll·to-walt
carpeting, with all appllaneea.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
MUST BE 50 'iEARS OF AGE OR
HANDICAPPED.
.
MUST MEET HUD EUGIBIUTY REQUIREMENTs
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
CALL (740) 992-7022
· Equal Housing OpportunitY.

Sat. Au.g . 1. 100 lastey St. be·
side Jeff's Carryout. 9am·?. baby/

kids/adult clo~. lots ol misc.

Saturday, dinette set, lamps,
sweeper, sheets. pressure cooker. portable stereo with speakers.
curtains. clothes. ice cream
freezer. Frances Alkire. Harrison·
ville

the clay belore the ad
Is to n.m. Sunday

.

ociHiori. 2:00 p.m.
F~day. Monday edition
- 10:00 a.m. Saturday.
August 1st. 9 A.M . To 5 P.M. Bid·
well Porter Elementary School

Gym.
Estate Garage Sale: July 31st. &amp;
August 1st. 2427 Slate Route
218 . Dishes. Pans. wrmger
Washer, Wash Tubs, ~ntique's,
2 Bedroom Suites, Utility Trailer. 3
Point Hitch Field Plow, Tools. 2
Hand Lawnmowers , Misc. Items.

!
·

Furniture, Pictures Clothes, Ectl
282 State Route 554 Cheshire.

Table, &amp; Cha irs , Screen Door.
Building Material, Excercise Ma·
chine, Lawn Mowers, Weedeat·
ers. Metal San Saw, Auto &amp; Truck
Parts. Bumper, Drums, Aotors,

L---------

Etc . Old Hand Tools, Tow ~ar &amp;
~~~~.'7~~.~m City ~ark.
Kelley Drive, Sal. Aug. 1 8am· '

TV, Home Interior, Exercise

;

IINNOUNCE~1ENTS

Pereonala

I
.
'woman SHko Loving Man 45+

. . 1'0( UlolonO Rttotlonllllp. lnctutll

Equipment. Baby Swings. Stroller.
Lamps , Scrubs·. Good Kids
Clothes nsx. Riding toys. and
Muc11 More
:.!4oYI=no..:.;.Sa.:cOI_:_t_52_Fo_urth_A_w_n-ue.
Gallpolls, Ohio, July 3tst, August
~~~2nd. s:OOTII?
Moving Salt: July Silt, Auguat
111, 9-4, CenN~ory, At t4t,
Houaahold ttoma, Anttquu,

Attention Certified ~urslng A..
slstants : Ravenswood Village is ·
now accepting applications tor full
time and part t1me positloos. Paid
vacation and hOlidays. II interest·
ed . please apply in perso n Monda'/ through Fodav. 9am-4pm or
wrile Attn : Georg1e Boso, R.N~..
O.O.N., 200 South Ritchie Ave;. ....
Ravenswood . WV 261U. 304-- ..
273·9385 . EOE, Genesis/Elder..-:
care taality.
•:
Avon Representatives Needed:
Gallipolis Area. Benefits:
•Eam Up To 50"'/. On Sates

•Work From Home
•Special Discounts
•HandS c .. ;.~ining
.. . .
Call Toll-Free 24 Ho:urs, 1·888'- ~ •

:. ~

286-6875.

B.C.S., With Over~ locations In-Southeastern Ohio. Is Opening ~(­
New Program In Meigs County:
For A Teenager With MRIOt)..
And Has The Following Posltlort-.
Available:
• ..
1) 40 Hrs /INk: 3 P.M. Mon Thru ' •

J:

8:30A.M.Sal: Steep.CM!i

Require&lt;J; Daytime Holi"S Off; .. .
Excellent Benefit Paduige;
2) 32 Hrs /INk:B A.M.Sal Thl\0
8 A.M. Man;
•
Sleep-Ooter Requrred;
We Are Sea rching For Compas·:
s1ona1e Prolesstonals Wltn A.
Team Vision And A Desire To ·
TeacH Personal And Community :
Skills To IndiVIduals With Mental •
Reta rdation . The Work Environ- •
ment Is Informal An~ Rewarding .• :
The Requirements Are : High ~
School Diploma /GED, Valid Driv- ~
er's license. Three Years Goad~
Driving E11perience And Ade· •
quate Automobile Insurance :
Coverage . B.C.S Offers Compre- .
hensive Training In The Field Of
Mental Retardation . Interested
Applicants Need To Specify Posi-tion Of Interest And Send Re· ·
sume To:
..

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
SERVICES

•
•

P.O. BOX 604

•

JACKSON, OH 4564~

All Applications Must Be PostMarked By 8/4/98. Equal Opportunity Employ&amp;r.

Yard sale. Friday &amp; Saturday. 913

Babysitter Needed In My Bidwel~
Home Or Yours Start Date 8/31981,
For 2 Boys Ages 3 &amp; 1. Monday.
Thru Fnday. 8-2:30 PM . 74Q..38e,.9206 .
•

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Caregiver For Elderly Women:
Room . Board, Salary, 740·367· ...
7463.
_..:...:._

_____,

3· Family, . Friday 31 &amp; Saturday 1.
beside Henderson Community
Center. baby items. adult&amp;kids
clothing.

Cosmetologist . Needed Guar.r
anleed Salary, Versus Commis.;
sian, Paid Vacation, Benefits .•
740·446·7267
•

112 Walnul Ave . behind Foo ·
dland. Sat. Aug·1 st . Large selection ol baby items &amp; household

Co un ler Person Pan -Time , Cal·•
dmal Orycleaners 1 Gallipolis, Ap ·:

~ems.-

'Auction
80
and Flea Market
Alck Pearson Auc:tion Company,
full lime auctioneer . complete
licen sed
auction
service
t66,0nio &amp; Wast Virginia, 304-

Be Paid In Advartee.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.

675-t324 EOE.

Two family yard sale- New Hope
Rd., Chester, Ohio. July 31 &amp; August1 .

Yard sale, Monday Aug . 3rd,
Broadway St. Middleport. many
new 1tems, 25C table.

ill Yon! Sales Mull

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.l'holo, POB 104, J!.lir.011 45&amp;13.

Oh, 740·949-2038.

50 Kristl Dr. Across From Gallia
Auto Sales Fri. 7/31/98 And Sat.
811198 9:00AM·?

Chester, Ohio
Oh . 713t/98 &amp; 811/98
740-985·4422...__ [ Garage Sale: Fri. Sat, Rei. Patto

~ DOS

July 31st. Aug . lSI &amp; 2nd . 9am till
? , shotgun model 870 Wingmas"ter: pistol 22, AUger. auto with 2
clips; 22 auto rifle; disnes, glass
ware &amp; many other items: silver
coins, prool sets ; rain or shine,
35275 Basnan Rd .. Long Bonom.

Broadway, M&lt;ldleport. 9om·?

8 Family : Golf Clubs, Pressure
Cooker, Dishes. Toys. Manual
Treadmill , Books, Blinds. New
Baby Afghans, Homemade Can·
dies. Baked Goods. Clothes All
Sizes. Nintendo &amp; Sega. Window
Fans. Misc. Kitchen Ware. Some
Tupperware. Rt. 7 Soulh, 3 Miles
Below Bladen landing On Right
Next To Mexican Imports, Friday
Thru Tuesday.

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential

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) 985-4189.
Free Estimates
7•mo.pd.

t!2 miles oH 124 on Noble Summit
Ad . Clothes. tools. dryer. washer.
gas heater. mowers. Something
for ewryone, 740-742-2412.

Toys. Clothes.

Morel

l/1t/ll tin

INCOME LIMITS HAVE CHANGED II
1 PERSON - $14,200
2 PERSONS- $16,200
AND AGE UMITS HAVE CHANGED
IF YOU ARE 50 YEARS OLD OR HANDICAPPED,
YOU MAY QUALIFY FOR

July 30·31. AuguSI I, 9:00·3:00.

325S , Goltclubs. 98 Ford Runnlngboards. Old LP'S. Much

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Owner, Mickle Hollon

items.

7Am-2Pm 7131 &amp; 811 2200 SIAl

t mo.

SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

740·698·7231

Friday, July 31st 1:00.7:00, Satur·

Saturday, August 1- corner of
Flarwoods Rd. and Pomeroy Pike.

Bladen Ofl2t8 Clotheseverylhing!

DUMP TRUCK

or

Garage 5ale· Fry's next to Salis·
bury Elementary. County Rd . 25 .

ing For Everyone!

10125/96ilfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Garage sale. Monday Jrd, Tues·
day 4th. 9·5. Snowden restdence.
College AIIPfiUO, Rullarid. Ohio,

2 Fam ily: 7/31, 811, 9/2nd, 9·?

3 Families\ Friday &amp; Saturday
8:30·6:00. 1st House on left on

TRUCKING

Free Estimates

4:00.

Saturday. August 1 &amp; Monday.
Augu$t 3· levl's. jewelry, bicycles
&amp; lots, lots more. 1 1/4 mile on
New lima.

236t S.R. 588, 2 Milos From
G.A.H.S. T.V.'s, Clothes. Somelh·

R. L. HOLLON
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~
..fir.,
Commercial &amp; Residential
;1Ju.
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
Phone 740-992·3987
~

Yard Sale
Galllpolle
&amp; VIcinity

Limestone,

Sunday Calls)

Frday &amp; ·Saturday, corner of Flat·
woods and Rocksprings Ad .
Something tor everyone! 9 :00-

July 30 to August 1, beside Sum·
merfield's Restaurant in Chester,
9:00am·5:00pm.

74().667-6427 .

HAULING

7/31~

Action Youth Care. Inc . is cur·
renlly seeking tnd1v1duals w1th
Bachelor tevel , Soc1al Work re;
laled degree for the position of·
Family Service Specialist lor the •
Pl. Pleasant area . AYC provides
e•cellenl training . compensation
and support . Salary range is
S10.57 to $12 .01 per hour. Closmg date is Aug . 7. Please re·
spond by sendirlg resume to: Ac·
11on Youtn Care, 217 6tn St. Pt
Pleasant . WV 25550 . Call 304·

Jane Fonda ueadmlll. misc .

lost: male Golden retriever, Tuppera Plains vtcinity. $1b0 reward,

70

992·7943

July 3t, Aug. I&amp; 3.

Confidential Reward, neutered
male Beagle, left ear missing .

Pliny area.304-937-2954.

Joseph Jacks

614·992·7643

August 3-4, Glasgo residence,

Huge garage sale, August 1·2.
9am-? 18 Railroad Street. Middleport. Water softener. 4 wheeler,
Jeep, dump truck, band saw.
clolhts, rrucll more.

LOST OR STOLEN:

Free Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Lost and Found

Found· small tan femakl dog with
red flea collar, Rocksprings Rd
area, 740-992-6531 .

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Room Additions • Roofing

"

day, August 1st 9:00.4 ;00 . Misc.

'Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

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

The deadline to r a accepting ap·
plication •s Fr•day August 7,
1998. 5 00 p m. for Additional Informati on Call . 441·3010 . 8.00·
5.00 p m , Monday thru Friday
Access lo Human Resource Development 15 an AAIEEO Employ·

Street. Middleport. 9:00·? lots of
adult and children 's clothing,

Puppies. 6wks old, halt copper
nose beagle. other hatt 1 Call af-

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Applicants tor this Pos1tion may .
submit a Resume to Jeanme Wll·
hams. Human Resource Mafl399J ...
Access To Human Resource ·
DeVelOpment. PO Box 316. Gallipolis . Oh 45631

· 740-992·3265
Big moving sal6- 2872 Third
Street. SR 12~ . Syracuse. Thur&amp;·
day, Friday, Saturday &amp; Monday.
9am-? Rain Of shine.

Btg yard sa.a, new &amp; used items .

Walker coon hound: also Beagle:
very friendly dogs, to good
homes, 740-388·9357 .

WICKS

ttltute} AppliCants mush have a .
H1g.tl School diploma or equival·
en! , Commercial Driver's Licence
wrth school bus ctassrhcation and
a clean dnvmo record . EJpenence wOfking •n a per-scnoot setting preferred begmning rate of
pay is $6.25111•

Ridge Rd .. ctolhes. Home lnte&lt;ioc'.

Female dog and temale 5 month
old puppy lo larm home. 740-992·

7(27198 1 mo pel

* .JlJLY SPE£1ALS *

Chester

Giveaway

9 Adorable Puppies Part Collie.
To Good Homo. 740-+16-9762.

60

Counties (Full Time 1nd Sub.

Auoust 1St· 9:00am . Rutland
Church of God baSement. rain or
shll\0. Hugo. LOw pOOeS

PolS On~! 7-9762

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction

Posili&lt;&gt;"

dey before the 1d 11 to run,
Sundly &amp; Monday edltlon1:OIIpm Ffldly.

en. truck topper. ne&amp;ds little repair. :J)4.-ti75--468-4.

WV
304-882·3336
Burglar, Fire, Oosed·
Orcuit TV's

•River Run Dog Food ...... $2_00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ......... $9-75 100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed ....... $10.25 100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Life Data
Hours: M·F 11-5:30; Sat. 11-12:00 Noon
985-3831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

------

. All Yard S.let Mull Be Peld In
Am nee. Dudllne: 1:OOpm the

gas neater. otd cabinet, hot water

614-742-2138

(Ume .stoneLow Rates)

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

Springs Rd

While. One Bladl , 11 Weeks Old
740-44t ·1659

740-992·2068

614-992·5479

5 family sale. Saturday. Aug . 1st.
9-3. Radford's approalmately 1
mile nonn Of talrorotJI'ds on ROdt

August 3·4·5. 9-5 . 38545 Gold

ALARM
SERVICE

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

But Drl-..e(t)--GJIIII end llelgl

2 Female K ittens One. Tan &amp;

JAMES

"Build Tour Dream"

4 family· Frday &amp; Saturday, 1 314

Sc&gt;oaB. 3()1.675-t 429 .

mile west of l\41P8f'5 Piains on SA
681 . Fumitunl. dolhes, rrisc.

9:()().5:30

New Haven,

ONE MAN BAND

Access Head Start is Accepting
Appl ications lor The Following ·

Quality clothing and household
items. S 1.00 bag sale every
Thur&amp;aay. Mon&lt;Say M'lru Saturday

40

Bpn. Wedlhru Sat

• family va.rd sale. now through
Monday, Ransom , Tanners Run
Rcl,Radne.

8434

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
· Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Re~sonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

•

Elcellenl opportunHy lor lht right
gill. $500(+)1&gt;er earning potential No exp necessary, must
be at least 18. Call 6t4-992-6387"
(anytime) or 304·675·5955 aile&lt;, .
AVON ! All Areas I Shirley •

Mus! 8a 18 Vrs . Serv·U 619-645·

30 Announcements
-To You Thrift Shoppo
9 West Stinson, Athans
740-592·1842

··:.

nursing home at Abbou resi·
dence, dothes. nerdse machine,
_.,bicyde,oll: .

LONELY! II
Need Someone To Talk To? live
Girls One -On ·One 1·900·438·
6773 Ex1 .8459 . $3 .99 Per Min .

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Remodeling

M&amp;J

(No

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

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

parenting . Legal.'confJdential . · _ _ _ _ _ _.;..._ _
C8H Gtna and Anthony toM·free 14 family yard sale, Sal. August
888-891·t022 .
tat. 9-4. Old Rt. 331ull beyond

740·367·5040

HelpWanted

SIS EWtCERSWANTED SSI

AIIOPTION:

·Rtlldentlal
-commercial
•FREE Eltlmates
•No Job Too Small
•Christian Owned 1r
Operated
•Gill Certlflcates
Available

"Need repair on any maker'

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

110

Yard Sale

70

Fresh baked foods . religion,
quality time and a solid lilt await

ATOUCH OF ClASS
CUANING SERVICE

THE APPLIANCE MAN

Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
EOE

ROBERT. BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

To pla&lt;e an ad Call 992·2156

Personals

heallhy..,.ort&gt;orn. we are de&gt;ot·

31 0 E.

B.C.S., with over 50 locations in Southeastern Ohio,
opening a new program in Meigs County for
teenager with MR/DD and has the following
··
available:
1) 40 hrS/Wk; 3 pm Mon thru 8:30 am Sat;
required; daytime hours off; excellent benefit
2) 32 hrstwk; 8 am Sat lbru 8 am Mon; I
required We are searching for
professionals with a team vision and a
to teach
personal and community skills lo individuals with
mental retardation. The work environment is informal
and rewarding. The requirements are: high school
diploma!GED, valid driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate automobile insurance
coverage. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training in the
field of mental retardation. Interested applicenls need
to specify pos~lon of Interest and send resume to:
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
P.O. Box 6011 .
Jackson, OH 45640-0804
All applications must be 1)051-marked by 8/4/98.

1105

ad. honest. couple lookino tor to

nme

BEKHGROVE

The Dally Sentinel e Page 9 ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

31, 1998

$1200.00
$50.00

Public Notice

regtrdlng drtlt tctlone. QUttll muat bt a•nl to: which It not preceded by 1
Comment• or public H11rlng Clerk, Ohio Envl- propo11d iiCllon, mty be
m11t1ng rtqu1111 muat
ronmtnlll Prottctlon . appealtd to the ERAC by
aubmllttd within 30 day•
Agency, P.O. Box
filing tn epp11l within 30
not let of the drelt action. Columbua, Ohio 43l!1&amp;.·1114JQ· I day• olluuanco of the final
"Propo11d Actlone" ere (Ttltphone: 614-644-2128). ectlon. ERAC appeal• muet
written atattmenta of the "Final Acttone• are aetlona be flied with: EnvironDirector'• lnttnt with of the Director which ero mtnttl Revlow Appeal•
reeptct to the leeuence, tllectlvl upon leauence or 1 Comml11lon, 236 Eoat Town
denlel, modlflclltlon, revo- ellltd elltcllv• date. Strut, Room 300,
cellon, or rentwel or • Pureuent to Ohio Revl11d Columbue, Ohio 43215. A
permit, llclnH, or vertence. LC••d• Section 3745.04, 1 copy of tho opp11t muat be
Wrltttn commute and final ectton may bl op- otrvod on the dlrtctor
rtqulltl lor • public pHied to 1111 Envlronmtntll· within 3 deya eltar tiling the
muting rtgardlng 1 Ravltw App11l1 Commie- eppeel wnh the ERAC.
propo11d action mey be tlon (ERAC) formerly
Final opproval of plone
tubmltted within 30 dl'fl of known eo tho Environ- end tpeelflcotlono.
notice of the propo11d mtntal Board ol RtvltW) by
Leedlng Cr11k Conllracllon. An adjudlcellon a peraon w11o hee 1 perty to vency Dlatrtet
hllrlng mey be lltld on 1 1 procllding btlore tht . Ruttaitd, OH
propolld ectlon If e hurlng director by filing en epp11l
!Hut Dett 07/17/M
roquut or objection 11 within 30 daya ol notlc• of
Thla llnel ectlon not
riCIIvtd by 1111 OEPA within 1111 flnelletlon. Pureuent to prtceded by propoeed
30 deya or 111uenee of the Ohio Reviled Code Section ectlon end 11 eppeeleble to
propo11d ectlon. Wrlttm 1
,
1 tine I ectton ERAC. Dtllll plena ol
comm•nte, r1qu11t1
dtnytng, modify- Wllkoevllla
Waterline
public mutlnge, end
rtvoklng, or renewing 1 Extenalon.
c
(7) 31, ttc

Public Notice

Friday, July

773-5785 Or 304-773·5447.
Wedemeyer 's ~· Auclion

•

p~. Tues9 ·11.

DRIVERS NEEDED Prer ce ton ·
Trucking Co. Immediate Openings
For EKperienced Tra ctor Trailer" ·
Drive r. Needs C1ass A COL Witn: ·
Tank Endorsement. Good Pay,..
Heallh Ins .. Pensi on 740-446-•
0114
:

•

Experienced T1mber Cuner Neeo-.
ed 740-682·7318

Service.

Full or part lime barber for Mick'i"
Barber &amp; Slyle Cen ter. 120 Eall ·
Main, Pomeroy . Call M1ck Wil'- .
•
hams, 740.992-2367

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil·
IJer And Gold Coins, Proofsets .
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings. Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second

Gel Paid at Home lor ProductS.
you assemble . No SellingiFREe-'
DETAILS! Send SASE to Nation-:
al Homemake rs Co. P 0 Box ...
370040 Dep t 10,Maple Height,, ·

Gallipolis. Ohio 740.379·2720
90 Wanted to Buy

Avenue, Gallipolis. 740-446-2842.

Antiques , top prices paid , River·
ine Antiques. Pomeroy. Ohio.
Russ Moore owner. 740·992 ·

2526
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture ,
will buy one p 1ece or complete
household, Osby Martin , 740·

992-6576.
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac , 1900 Eastem Avenue, Gallipolis.

J &amp;

D Auto Parts. Buying

wrecked or selvaged vehicles .

304· 773-5033.
Mobile home or house In Mason
County on land contract . Have

doWn payment. 304-675-797t .

Ohio 4.4137

Looking For Pafl Time Worker&amp;
At A &amp; A Auto Detail , Fourttl
Ave. Gallipolis 740·441 ·0177
·
Motor Route Carner needed for
leon - Evans area 1-800·982·
6397 eKt . 1787.
Need Beautician 's Fu ll Or Part · Time For Busy Shop. 63 Pine
Srreet, Gallipolis, 74D-441·0583.
Party With Christ mas Aroun6
The Wor ldl Earn Commissions &amp;
Free Mercnandise . No lnvest -

roont. 740.446-9219 Kit Supplied. ,

Pe rson For Full /Pa rt Time Pasl···
tion ONCounter Sales And Truck •Dri ver, Electrical E11perience A ...
Plus But Not Necessary. Apply In .
Person At W.Va . Electric Supp ly
Co .. 1885 Eastern lwe., Galllpo\1~

OH EOE WV/F/0.
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile Rewarding And Challenging
Homtl, 740-44S-ot75, 304-675· lions Available For:
5965.
• FULL-TillE LPN
E',11'L 0Yf.1E'JT
',f f;VIClS

lbolo, Ctottq.

.
Posl· •

-

.,·

• 1'1\AT-n11e Rll
.
• 1'1\Rl.TIME STIIA
Mutt Ill Fllendly, Outgoing l 0.: -

pandablt ..Apply In Person AI •

!"!""kfOoHtlloRei,~Clntll,
3.tl·,;:
v
011 411el4. , ••

IIULTI·FAIIILY YARD SALI:

""iii:Hi;i;;";;;;;;;;~-

Furnltora

- - - . . . . : - - - - •'- ·Sella poattlona: ... ·.t Taytor"~
AVON ..-aaoJttr No Door To IIOIOtl In Athena, loOking toi''
- · lllgllty
motlvalld PIOPII. ~-''"·
31D~oor~·~~~u~y~C~u~h!,_,_u~n._,..:·IOO_:_
!f1-o11111..,.,...
'
s.MFVfh, 7~

-tnlant,1-.
l\4IPII•••·.,.,
Chldrtn'l
Adult Clolhll.

&amp; Many Hounllold
._, 5418 Mllpte GoM ·110111, •
Millo Dut 141. Fft1oll Galtlpolll, t

A.ll.lbUM. frt Ult

110 . H11p Wanted

�Friday, July 31, 1998
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

!SonfeYOy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

AUEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

3br house in Hender&amp;on, $300.
mo. Deposit &amp; references re·

The Southern Local District has
lho pooltlon of ro...... boys booiletball coach open lor lho 1998·

All real estate adver1JsinO in

subfecl to
tne FedOial Fair Housing Act
ot1968 wtlich ma1&lt;es n illegol
to •any preforence.
limitation or discrimflation
based on race. color. religion.
this newspaper is

-.:e, &amp;4&gt;ontlondon~ Soulhom
Local Schools, Box 176, Racine,

Ohio 45771 , SLSO is an EQual
O!l!&gt;orUily ~

IIIDof-

Thornton ar-t.ousaa, 740-247·
4334, to pidl
tomatoes, ages 18 &amp; up, $5 .151
IIIU.

Roquirod, Ceii74Q.992·2326.

WORK FROM HOllE My Child·
ran Come To The Olfice Every·
day! Elm An Elr1ra $500 ·$1.500
PI/Mo., Or $2,000 ·$4,000 FI/Mo.,
VIsit Our Website At www.own·
yourllft.com Or C811 Toll Free 1·
80().708-3287.

sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any SUCh pretererlce,
kmitatiOn or discrimination .~

1998 Close out sale. Save big
ISS. 2,3,4,Bedroom homes. Tri •
State Homes , St. Albans, WV.

This newspaper WIN nol
knowingly accepl

advertisements lor real estate
which is 1n ~ion of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that ail dwellings
advertised mthis newspaper
are available on an equal

opponunny baSis.

~~~~~~~~~~~
310 Homes for Sale
38edroom, 2/ba1h, lull basement ,
112 acre plus. 2 car garage,

lanced yard. Camp Conley. 304·
675-2421 .
3br, 2 lull baths , UR. LA. DA ,
large kitchen. fully equipped,
large toyer. 2-car attached ga·
rage. Gallipolis Ferry. 30•·675·

1226.
140

Southeastern Business College.
Spring Valley Plaza . 740-446-

4367, 1·800·214·0452. Accredit·
eel Member, ACICS Reo 190·05·
127ol8

180 Wanted To Do
AllY ODD JOSS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed. mulching, flower beds, landscap ing,

edging,

mowing,

elc ... Free Estimates. Call Bill

:1()4.675-7112.
Circle -N- Convalescent Home,

Has t Opening Elderly Or Handi·
capped Pe1110n In My Home, 740441·1536.
Connie's Child Care has OJJen·
ings. S. A. 7. Tuppers Plains.. Car·

tlfled in Meigs and Athens Coun-

ties . Reasonable rates, open 24
hours. S8Y&amp;n days per week, 740-

867-6329.
Fumiture repair. refinish and restoration, also custom orders. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry
~.

Brick house in Meadowbrook,
3br, 2 bath, large eat·in kitchen,
dining room . hardwood floors .
screened-in porch. family room ,
partial basement. large storage
building. CIA . natural gas fur-

nace. $65,000.304-675-1798.
CorRer lot, two year old furnace,
HW heater, roof, carport. small
&amp;lied, aslrlng $55,000, price nego-

tiable, 740-992·2790.

740-669-3765.
House For Sale in Vinton, Out of

High Water! Reduced! 740·596·
1929 Very Nk:e Home.
House For Sale, Mercerville
Area, Electric And Water For A
Trailer Hook-Up, Call 740-446·

2580.740-446-3151 .
House, 2 Story, Duplex, 1 Bed·
room Cottage, 13 Pine Street ,
Gallipolis. Large Lot Shown By
Appointment, Price: $96,000 74()..

:1()4.67!;.1957.

446-4999.

Handyman l.abofer. Painting, yard
work, small carpentry. Reasonable
rates/ prices per job. Phone 740742· 3225 , it no answer, leave

In Middleport· new kitchen, oak
cabinets, disnwasner, disposal,
heat pump·, three bedrooms. bath

end 1f2, caH 740-992·3465.

moosaoo.

like nttw. must sell, $80,000. Location! Crew Ad, close to MHS,
contemporary style house, 1 acre
lot, 1 112 baths, family room.
Buck STove, all . Jenn-Aire appliances, 2·3 bedroom, garage,

Is The Heat Too Much, Or Just
No Time? We Will Do LandscapIng, Mow Yards, Roofing, &amp; Carpenter Work, Call Anytime, Free

Eatimatesl 740.388-8966.

decks, Trane H.P. 740·992·7292
or 304-895-3490 bei&lt;lre 2:30pm.

Will haul junk or trash away. $351
pidlup load. 304-675-5035.

FINANCIAL

Nk:e 3 Bedroom. 1 88th. 1600 SQ.
Ft., Maintenance Free, 2 Car Garage, Great location 740·446·

9664

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

tho offering.

Professional

Services
Llvlngston·s basement water·
proofing. all basement repairs
done, free estimates, llfellme
guararuee. 12yrs on job expert ·

...... 304·675-2145.
R I J -dng I Cooling
Free Estimates

24hr. Emeigency Service
17yrs. Experience

2940
Three bedroom house, central air,
cor ner of Sixth &amp; Palmer. 740·
1

992·7571.

Huge 28x80 3BA, 1 112 bath .
Startmg at ONLY $39.999 . Many
options available . 1-888-928·

"Summer Spor:lai"
air &amp; delivery
only at Oalrwood Homes

3br S199/mo. free

Nitro, W':l
3tJ4.755-5885

30W75-2056

REAL ESTATE

12x60 trailer. can be used lor office trailer, $3,000 wlthoot air con·
ditloner, $4,000 with, 740· 949·

2217.
310 Homes lor Sale

Room. 2 Car G._rage, Fairfield

t2x65 New Moon trailer 10x12
pull-out , 3bedroom. been remodeled. great shape, must be
moved. S•.ooo. Kawasaki molor-

Centenary Rd .. Po~erbrook Sub·
division. Call AHer 3:00P.M.740·

cycle 750 4cyl. SBOO. 304·576·
4146.

2 Story, 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Bath,
Family Room, Living Room, Dining

«e-9391

14 x70 3BR, $998 Down &amp; ONLY

5 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, New
Kitchen, Breakfast Nook, L.R .

With Gas FP. O.A.. Oflice, En·
closed Back Porch, Finished
Basement With Laundry Room &amp;

1f2 88111, Large Yard With Beauti·
lui Landocaping, Nice NeighborI'&lt;&gt;Od. Close To Shopping.
$160,000
NEED TO SELL
CaU For Appointment
7~9360 Days Or
7~27E\IIInlngs

MAKE OFFER
e yoar old. country style. 2-3 bed·
rooms. 1 bath, ron owrtool&lt;lng rrvlng room, tongue &amp; groove kiiCh·
en cabinetry, doors &amp; woodwork

throughout. pellet stove, HP/CA,
appManoes included. 50 year vinyl
atdlng. shutters. deck , 1 car garlQO, spa, storage Dulldlng, nk:ely
tand.scaped , on 1 acre. count~

sci100I&amp;. 8 mlles !rom Holler, 740387.Q286.

Anractlve one-lioor hOme In Po·
meroy. BeiiUtlful interior with 2
bedrooms , living room , dining

room, buill-i n kitchen, like new
stove and refrigerator, break faat
nook featuring corner what-not
shel'f8S, balh, and a nice sun·
porch with windOws and screens

a grut Ylow ot tho Oltlo
lllvlr. Carpeted,. full basement,
piiiiMod wallS wttn crown mold·
1ng, roomy doNII wfltl fuR 1trlglll,
mirrored dciora; atorm windows

large selection of used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $2995 .
Quick delivery. Call 740·38~-

9621.

3 BR 1211A
Set Up On Lot, Take Over Pymrs,
304· 736·7295.
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 montns FREE lOt rent.
Includes skirting. deluxe steps

and setup. Only $187.08 per
montn with $1075 down . Call 1·

$179 per mo. Free air &amp; free sklft·

ing. 1·868-928-3426.
t4 ' X 70' 1983 Clayton-Lincoln
Trailer, 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath . tO' X 22'
Front Porch Wllh.'Aoo l, 6' X 10'
Back Porch . New Underpinnings.

For more into, After 5:00 304-li75·
3339, 304-675-3269
14x70 2br Champion . $4.000 .

304-675-7117.

-----

t6x76 4br, 2 bath $1,195 . down.
$193. per mo. Free air, tree skirt.

1-6Q0.691·67n.

1978 141170 Festival 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, like New Total Electric.

Delivered $11 ,950, 304-675·5965,
74().448.0175.
1978 Liberty 2 Bedrooms. To!al
Electric. 12x55. 220 A1r, Vinyl Underpinning , New Ca rpet . New
Doors, $6,950. 740·446 ·0175,

New 3br $900 . down, $149. per
New bank repos. Only two left,
never lived in . Call 1·800-948·

5678.
New Oou'biewide 3BA, 2 bath .
$1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1·

868·928·3426.
NOTICE
Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
W.Va . Location Has Been Ordered To liquidate All Inventory.
o Down, Lowest APR! 304-73tl·

3409.

Special 16x80 3BA, 2 bath .
$1,325 Down, $205 Mo. Free a1r
&amp; free skirllflg . 1-800-691-6m
Trailer and lot in Gallipolis Ferry.
'Great for rental or starting out.

304·675-4679 or 304-675-1860.
Unbelievable, new ,41180, no
payments aher lour years. Gall 1·

800-948-5678.
Used single wide, around $100.
per monl11. Callt-600-948·5678.

340

Business and
Buildings

Commerciai· Oflice or Retail, 87
Mill St. Middleport. 1 ,450 Sq Ft.
$400 mo. Corner Building . 740·
992·6250 Acqulsillons jne~et
door).

304·675-1226.
2 acre lots or 8 acres. Bethel

Aoed, WV. 304-675-7946.

Meigs Co.: Lots + Lots -All
Newll Rutland. Whiles Hill Rd ..

Just 011 New Lima, 16 Acres
$14,000 Or 9 Acres $12 ,000 .
Danville. Red Hill + Golf Ads . 7
Or 8 Acres $13,000 . Also. Qn SA
325, Nice Wooded ' 17 Acres

$18,000, Cily Water. Soulh 01
Tuppers Plains. KeeDaugh Ad .", 5
Acre Lots $14,000 Ea. Dyesville.
Very Remote 11 + Acres

Gallla Co.: Gallipolis. Ne ighbor·
tiOO&lt;l Rd ., NICS 10 Acre Building
Site $19,000 Or 2~ Acres Wilh

Pond $21.500 Cash

Price .

Fnendty Ridge. 8.5 Acres _$7 ,500.
Back On The Marke,l 10 Acres,

Teens Run Ad.. $12,000.
Call for Free Maps + Owner Financing Info. Take 10% Off listed
PriCes On Cash Purcnasest

Lot for sale· Gallipolis, 90x172.
nice neighborhood, quiet, 740·

446·4722.

Mobile nome site available bat·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, can

740-385-4367.
Mobile Home Site Availaba&amp;, Ro-

ute 7 North, Gallipolis, S150/mo..
References Required, 740· 245740-2-45-5151.

502•.

' 470 Wanted to Rent

74().256-1367, Allor 5 P.M.
2 Bedroom Trailer 8 miles out At
218 $185.00 Monl11 Rent Plus de-

posit 740·446·8172 740·256·
6251
2 bedroom traHer in Middleport,

$275 plus deposit. 740-992·3194.
Mobile Home 2 Bedroom in Galli·
polis. $375.00 Plus Utilities, Pus
Doposn. No Pets! 7~13
Near Rio Grande. In Country. 2
Bedroom Mobile Home, No Pets.
Reference &amp; De-p osit. 740·245·

510

Household
G~s

Partly lurnished, $200. mo. elec·
trlc &amp; gas not covered, REFER·
ENCES &amp; deposit required, in

Apple GrrMt

area. 304·576-2950.

Three bedroom mobile nome in

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlstted and unlumlshed, security
deposit reQuired. no pets. 740·

992·2218.
1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Relrtgerator Included. 740·446·
1 bedroom furrished apartment in
1 Bedroom, AJC, WID, Hook-Up,
Near Holzer, $279/Mo., + Utilities.
Deposit &amp; Lease Required, 740446-2957.
1 Bedroom, Rio Grande, 3 BkJcks
From University, $235/Mo . Plus

Deposit, 740-388-9948.
1 small bedroom apt, upstairs,
$190. mo. plus utilities &amp; security deposit in Pt. Pleasant. 30•·

675-49751eave name &amp; number.
1br &amp; .2br apartments for rent In

Pt. Pleasant. 304·675·2174 or
74().,146·2200 alter 5f&gt;m.
2bdrm. apts., total e1ecmc, ap·
pliances furnished , laundry room
faclliUes. close to school In town.
Applications available ·at: VlllaQe
Green Apts. 149 or call 7 40-992·

3711. EOH.
2br. Wedge apartments. no pets,

deposn reQuired. 304·675-2072.
456 112 Second AW!nue, Gallipo·
lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,
$425/Mo .. $225 Deposit, Utilities
fleij, 740-446·2129.
BE~UTIFUL ~PARTMEN7S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

.Equal Housing oPPortunity.
Beech Street, Middleport, 2br,
furnished, utilities paid. deposit
&amp; references, also 1 room effi·

clancy apartment. 304-882·2566.
Brand New Apt. Rio Grande.
Available Aug . 1st, All Unilll11es·
Paid . Walk1ng Dlslance To Cam-

pus. 740·245·5100
Fomlly Uvlng
Aportmentt

Ch~lly'o

PomerCJ{IMiddleport.

CaU 740-982-4514
Monc!aY through Selurday
9:00am-9:00pm.
1·2·3 bedroome, Stovelrelrig.
available. utilities and cable paid,
HUD accepted. Children Wet -

come. Ask lor Chnsty.

Quarter Horse. 1'0 Year old geld- . '98 GMC Yukon 4WD. SLT pack·
lng, dooa trail &amp; Baneil Asking age, white, CD player, leather

building), buying- baby Items,
breakfast sets &amp; good clean U&amp;Od
furniture on consignment, Open
Tues.day-Friday, 11 ·4, 740-992·

198• AMC Eagle auto, 4wd, 2

1990 Tf¥'10 4x4, PS, PB, 4 Cyt., 5
Speed, AM/FM Plus CO Play·
740·44 1-0950 Days, 740-441· ·
1316 Ewnings

304-882-3194

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Short Bed , very •.
Nice, 740-245-9544.

-:740.,.....,.,..-M_ot.,..,o,rcy,;;,.c.,..les....,..- .
Good Condition, 740-256-6574.

6:00 p.m. 740-992-2528. Russ
·Moore owner.

Central Air Conditioning. Ffoo Eotimatesl If You Don't Call Us, We
Both Los81 740--446·6306. 1·800-

29Hl098.
18,000 BTU Kenmore AIC 220

Volt $200. 304·875-1937.
1998 Teenle Beanie Babies
80.oniols,
740-446-4922.

-

2 Piece Living Room Suit, Light
Blue. Ivory &amp; Mauve. Good Con-

dilion. 740·448·1000 Leave Mes·
26,000 BTU air condllioner $325.

50 gal. electric water heater $60.
Complete set maple cabinets
$1400. new, framing lumber,
11sq . clay siding $25. sq. 200
amp electric box .$100. used

3981.

65.000 BTU Empire Vented LP
Gas, Console Heater With Blower,
Thermostat &amp; Pipe, Used 2
Months $675. Dehumidifier, like

New $150, 18,000 BTU Venl Free,
LP Gas Heater, used 2 Month~

$200, 740-245-5887.

675·3734.

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don

740-446-0231 .

AKC Golden Retriever Stud Serv·
k:e Proven $125, 740-441-0615.
AKC mini Pinschers. 3 red, one
black and rust, 7 old, $250,
AKC Registered Boston terrier

pupa, 4 males, 1 famaill, raady to
go, motner and father on premls·
es. $200 each, to good homts,

_.;;_:=..:.;.;.:;....
740-992·3418. _ _ _ _

AKC . Sheltit pupplu. trl and
.-and wttltt. vet clteckod, tx·
cellent ptdlgrtt, $250· $350
each, 74().896.1085.

ence, New bathing system, ·uttra

Wash', 850 Second Ave. Galli·
polis. OH. 74().448.1528.
Poodle puppies, tiny toys, elso
Schnauzer puppies &amp; adults,
AKC, shots &amp; wormed, 740-667-

3404.

er, dad· boxer, $10 each, 140·
982·1415.

570

ATTENTION: We'll . PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds, 47

Musical
Instruments

Ganlly Used , Vito • Alto Saxa·

1982,

Used Bundy Clarinet. 740·446·

Brand Newl Great Gifll CO/video

4237 Leave Message.

storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out at box. $125. Holds up
to 940 discs, also hplds tapes.

580

Call 740·992·6636 alter 6
COs &amp; tapes not OCiuded.
Biarl&lt; Disks, and Extra Typing rib-

FruHs &amp;
Vegetables

weeds, Berries On Fence. 30•·

458-1667 t.aave Message.
$10.00 geNon. :1()4.675-4514.

Now Tak1ng Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo , 740·446·

Claw tool Bethlub !rom 0.0. Me·
1903. Best Ollar 740·446·1022
or740-446-4217

740-37~9885.

One BedrooFTrApt . A~ 651 Second Ave . Next To Bossard Li·

COUCh And Chair $7~ . 00, 2 S Single Waterbeds $45.00 Each.
Dresser $15.00, 740-386-930!i
Craftsman 12" wood lathe. like

- · caH 740-742-2931 .
Elecirlc Scooters, Whettlchalrs,
New And Used, Stairway Eleva·
tors. Wt\ealchalr And Scooter

LIHs, Bowman's Homecare. 740.
446-7283.
Fiberglass topper, bod liner, tall·
gate liner &amp; protector for Ford

Ranoor: $300. :1()4.675-8348

For Sale Reasonably: Two Grave
apan· .Spaces
with vaults, Ohio Valley
ment. It's $390 a month, utilities
are Included. A $300 deposit Is Memory Gardens Gallipolis,OhiO
required. For more Information, or Cel Collect 740-886-8506
llr~t

.an appointment call 7•0 -Ul·

53-13 8Jid leaYo a message.

Furnished
Rooms

Sluplng r9oma with cooking.
Also tr1ller "space on river. AU

hook-ups. Call aflor 2:00 p.m..
304-n3-5el1 , Mason WV.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

IProblems? Need Tuned?&amp; Call 1111
Grubb's Plano· luning

repalra .

plano Dr.740 446 4525

JET

AEMlON M010RS
Repelred, Now I Rollull1 In - ·
Cel Ron Evans, 1-80().537-11~28.

610 Farm Equipment

1990 Honda Civic 5 Spead. AC.
AMIFM Cu&amp;ette, One Owner,
Vtry Sharp $4,850, 740·446·
9827.

Mower Deck With Hydraulic Lilt,
Bol11 Eldnl Nk:el 740-446-9227. .
Summer Ctooranco on 111

Hu~

v•rna tewn mowere I etrlnt
trimmers. Ouer1nteed loweet

polco.
SldtnEQ~ Compoll)'

:J04.t75-7421
Your Area Bush Hog Dealer For
Parts, Rotary Cutters, Loaders,
Tillers, Finish Mowers, Etc. Car·

michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
Btlwoon GalliJolis &amp; Rio Grande,
Ohio On Jackson Piko 740·4462412 Or HIQ0.594-1111 .
Your Area John ·

Lawn Equipment.

Trtctors F.rom 20 To

HP.

Sizu 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractoro, Hay Equipment, John
Doorl Slcid Slttr ~ . Cllock
With Ul About Flnlnclng AI Low
A&amp; 2.t'!l. On ·Lawn 'll'actoro And
Low .Alto l'1nlnctlg On Now And
Uotd Equipment. Carmlchstl'o
Form &amp; Lawn Gallipolis, OH 74044e-24121-80Q.594·111t .

0

'
~

Ski thlssummert

collectora
34 Severe

exper'ence

35 Unwllole10m8VIpor

38 Poweoful
oxploohre
(abbr.)
38 Klckof1 type

39Ciooer
40 Queena'
matH
42 Chicago
alrpoll
44 Manlcurtlll'a

.'

Tra~smlsslons, 7-40-245-5677.

tomallc, A/C, AM/FM/Casaette,
75,000 ml Good Condllion asking
S4.SOO.OO Days 740·448·3278 or
EW!nlng 740-446-3099

New Auto Body Parts &amp; Acces·
sories for all types of vehicles .

PEANUTS

~-.

..

nus ISM'&lt;

.

LATEST POEM ..
SEE WIIAT

'(()U T~INK ..

..·~·· .
.

~·

IFRIDAY

1979 Carriage 38Ft 5th Wheel
Camper With Hookup, Very Ex·
cellent Condition. Color TV-VCR
COmbo., Microwave and many
other accessories. $6,000.00 Ne·
1990 Wilderness trailer, 32' for
sale. $7,500, excellent condition,

740-742·2070, 740-742-4308.

98 Toyota Camry, 19K, loaded,
S1B,soo oeo. 740-885-3831.

$13,000. OBO. 304-675-2793.

1997 lnnsbruck travel trailer, 26ft.

Pop Up Camper. Sleeps 6
$400.00 740·388·9147

Upton Uoed Cars Rt. 62·3 Miles
South of Leon , WV. Financing

Wanted Slide-In Truck Camper," : • :
9 Or 10 Fl . Self·Contained, Must • · ·

'

Be In Good Condition, 740·256-· · • ·

720 Trucks for Sale

6038.

'

SERVICES

810

1972 Chevy 112 ton 350 , Real
Nice, New Tires.- Battery, Brakes,,

Ball Joints, &amp; Tie Rods $5,500.00
74().446.7139

Home
Improvements

..

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
local referenqes furnished . Es-

1972 Mack truck, 237 Meek mo·
tor, $2500; set of aluminum
wheels for late model 4x4 Chevy

iablisi!Od 1975. Call 24 Hrs. 1740)
446.0870, t·B00-287·0578. Roo·

1ruclr, $350; 740-742·2675.

ers Waterproofing.

1982 Ford F9000 Trinle. 350
Cummlpa, Exctllont Condi·
tlon.7410-379--9238

App11anc- Parts And Service: All
. Name Brands bver 25 Years Ex-

1987 Ford 48' Hlgl&gt; Ranger buck·

perlence All Work Guaranteed

t

French City Maytag, 740·446~ ·

. 7795.
. C&amp;C General Home Maintenance- Painting , vlnyr· siding, ·
· carpentry, doors, ~lndOws. baths,
. rnobie home repair and more. For
' ~ee esflmate call Chet, 740·982·

6323.

., '.

,840
'

1990 Dodge DakDia With Tbppor,
4 WD, AW, 95,000 Mlltl, 1 Owner,

: new MrviCI or 'repair~. Mqlor Ll- · · ·

Electrical and
Refrigeration
wl~ng.

. •

cen1ed electrician : Ridenour

' •'

Eloclrlcsi, WV000308. 30..4·875·
1786.

·nothing to encourage loose tongues to
wag about your acriviries today. Keep
' ' ASTRO·GRAPH
everything out in the open ·· just to
frustrate the gossips.
.ARIES (March 21:J\pril 19)
BERNICE
Friend~ you'll be involved with today
BEDEOSOL
won "t be impressed by airs or affectations. Pretenses will produce rhe
opposite of whatever you hope to
achieve.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
23-Aug. 22) lndecision1
Someone
you perceive as an ally
is your nemesis today. especially in .
might
not
be as supponive as you
matters affecting othm. A wishy·
think
today.
At the present time. this
washy attitude could be contagiou.,. ;
individual)
intentions aren't in har·
Trying to patch up a broken .
mony
with
yours.
romance? The Astro-Graph Match· :
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your
maker can help you understand what / ~s
small:~!·valuable posse~­
thinking
may be imp111Ciical and disto do to make the relationship work. ' stons 1s a ~tbtilty today, so don t :
jointed
today.
Don't wast~ tiine and
Mail $2.7S 10 Matchmaker, c/o this . leave your nngs on ~ wa.,hstand or :
1
effort
designing
a vehicle with square
newspaper P.O. Bo~ 17S8,. Mllll'ly your pune at the tcnn1s couns.
1 wheels.
·
Hill Statio~. New York. NY 101)6. .
• AQUARIUS (Jan. ~().feb. 19) A !
·
CANCER
(June
21-July
22)
You
VJRGO.(Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Don't fri_end of. yours who ts. an ~mtum your back on a friend who needs pilshed lime-waster mtght d1srupt :could make some bad buys when :
your help today. You won't like~ Y?Ur sc~ today. Don' t let • ~hopping today if you're more con. I
younelf later if you pus up the: him/her hnpr too long over the ·cetned about the label than the c:On~
:Ients of the box. Don't be denied by;
opponunity 10 lend a hand.
: momina coffee and donuts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23.oct. 23) A
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mudl 20) Do fancy pii:Uging.
intentioned friend might provide you
with infonnation slhe thinks could
make or save you money today.
Unfonunately, .t his penon could be
way off base.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) In
ordcr ' to gain status with your co- 1
workers today, you may be tempted 1
to promise something you can't
deliver. Don't do it.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You might be 100 gullible for your ·
own good today. If someone tells you
slhe causht the Loch Ness Monster, .
insist on a photograph.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. I 9) '

?f

,1989 S·I O83,000 Miles, Sport
.Striping, $2,491; 1989 Jeep Com. oncht, 12.295; Cook Motoro,
740-446-0103.

Rtsldtnlial or commercial

F R D G

RMFI

GHIVHG

GRFOGE

t E

NR. EGLFIEB

OTLAOTM
UGMG
NEWMAB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I used to live in a village so poor that even !he
rainbows came 1n black and white."- !Singer) Facundo Cabral

r::~:~;~' &lt;0~\t~lA-&lt;Zt.~s·

_ _ _ _...:,_;;;; 141to4

CLAY I. POLLAN.

~y

WOlD
GAMI

0

Reorronoe · '-tters of the
four scmmbled words belOw to form four s1mplo words

I
I

OSIDUD

WONNK

I

.~
.....,...w_v_o5........1L_L...--IIm=:
1

1

I0

•

•

•

.

•

.

Complete the chvdle qvoled
by f1l11ng in the m1,sing word~

you develop from sfep No. 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTER ST
IN THESE SQUARES

11 13 14

1_11

5

[6

I

I

I

I

Jackal. Guilt · Waken · Uphold • WATCH

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Nissan pick up, kino cab; 740·
982-2178.

p

I

VGMUFO

T~Z

PIE

R F

You can lell who is lhe host of a party. It's lhe person
who keeps looking at lheir WATCH .

gotlable 740.388·9638

35,000 miles, new

R M

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1971 Chateau, Sleeps 6, Excel.·
lent Condition. 740·379·9236

1995 Pontiac Flreblrd. fully load·
new lires, 55,000 miles,
asking $9,900, 304-675·6723. ·

TEG

_8. . .:~.: ~:.:.~.:.c: : ~:.:!~w:.:st!:.!lR:_l_ET_r_ER_sJI. --JI~.-....

R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304·372:· · "·
3933 or 1·800.273-9329.
: ·...

eel. Hop&amp;,

S 0 I

'TLFIEB

8

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

1995 cnrysler Sebring, excellent .
condition, call Tom Anderson,

"!'rtf

I

'

3085.

by Luis Campos
c.lebrily Cipher c:ryptogr.m~ are created from ~Ions by lamous peop68. pasl and preseol
Eactl
in tt. Cipher s1an01 tor anolher. rooay·s cfOe · ~t~ equals 0

~I

Transformers Auto. 304-675-3324

$7500, 740-992-7614 or 740.992·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

Types, Access To Over 10,000 .

790

fiber

RECDOG
~......~.,..6....,..,__,,,...7_;,..1_;_,~~

Bed rail caps. fit Chevrolet trucks,.

ts9• Pontiac Flreblrd, V-6 au·
lomatlc, all power, low miles.

general

52 -Aviv
53 Palm

You will find it hard to gel
your child to pay attention if
•
.
.
.
... you're lell11ig them somethmg
. - - - - - - - . . . . , for their • • • . . . .

350 Chevrolet engine, 740·985-

1993 Plymouth Laser, 85,700

50 Conhdera1l

.

760 · Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

miles, 5 speed, erurso, air. amllm

bolnl

4i -lor tat

a guaran·

club ace, cash the spade ace. play a
club to the dummy. and run the spade
jack.
Here, the finesse wins and South
has nine tricks: three spades, one diamond and five clubs. But suppose the
finesse loses. As the defenders cannot
cash four heart tricks. Wesl does best
to switch to a diamond. However.
South rises with dummy's ace, runs
the clubs, discarding his blocking
spade king, and finishes the spades,
· again collecting nine trjcks.

446·381~.

1993 Dodge Shadow E. S. Au·

6587.

produc1
30 Certain data

!

:

Budget Priced Transmissions All

Maintenance Done, •740·440·

22Women
24 Gete up
26 Little brook
28 Fermer's

East
Pass
All pass

South's heart holding is

dition, one owner, call 7•0·949·

Excellant Condition 740-862·7318

North
••
3 NT

Here is another deal from the
European Mixed Championships. This
lis from the team event. and surprisingly the declarer went down in three no·
trump although there was a guaran·
.teed line of play. Can you spot it? West
leads the club seven, playing fourth
highest from good suits and second
highest from bad.
In North America. after South opens
·one diamond instead of one heart, per·
haps the final contract w~uld be in dia ·
monds. As the cards lie, six diamonds
would make. And even if three notrump were reached. West might well
lead a heart. letting the contract gel
home. Here, though, when South rebid
one no-trump to show a minimum bal·
anced hand, North wasn't thinking
about a diamond slam.' He settled for
the unscientific three no-trump.
After winning with her club ace, de·
clarer played out three rounds of
spades. This gave East the opportuni·
ty to switch to the heart three. West
took declarer's 10 with his king, re·
turned the heart five to his partner's
queen, and another heart gave the de·
fenders five tricks: one spade and four

18ft. Deep·V, closed bow. 160HP • ' ,
Mercrulser inboard, wl!railer, life'
·
iacke15 &amp; bumpers. $2.050. 740·
'

$25, 740-448·2316.

1987 Ford F 250 Rod, 4 Wheel
Ortva, 480 Engine $3,700.00 OBO
740-862-nSB or 740-245-0333

West
Pass
Pass

~::'"

W811hor
191ncorrec1

teed stopper only if West attacks the
suit. So, declarer should win with the

44$-6253 aller 6:00PM

1983 Bonneville, black, good con-

at truck, 74Q-378-6279.

11

12 Winter
(pre!.)

hearts.

HP 530 Hrs Red/While, Ski Boom· · :

3408.

less 8400 John Deere Skldder

For Rtokllnllal

'1WCAA

&amp; Cover. Also Boat House w1th • ,
Boat lift. Will Sell Separate. 740· • ~ •

$2,895.00. 1986 Cavalier $275.00
Cook Motors 740-44lHl103.

74().862-7318

M/IN! (I(J,IO~

Ski Nautlque 1989 351 Ford 240

1991 Shadow Convertible, Au ·
toffl . , AIC, New Top, New Tires,

Milsublshl With 48 Inch Belly
Mower; John Deere 318 18 HP
Hydro Power Steering, 48 lncn

1-JITf-\

lttls. $3,500. Cali :1()4.675-3485.

199t Chevrolal Caprice Station

tractor. $2,300. 304-675-38:24.

9N Ford tractor, new tires, nice

11'\t., "!()UN!&gt;

Price Aeducedll 17ft. 'Starcratt,
walk·thru, 140 HP Mercrulser In·
board, tr~.tller. covers. all equipment new, all A-1 condition,
seats 6, family boat. Must see

12895, 740-992-8624.

t 60 A Barko Loader f1ew John
Deere Engine 1,500 Series CTR
Sawbuck, Excellent Condition

PlAY~

NEA Inc.

00011 pontoon boat.

1990 .Grand Prix, four dOor, runs
good, air. 1111. crulte, sharp,

Available. 304-458-1069.

1198 ll\avMIOill.

2045, will consider trade for a

Intyre's house. Dated March

7806 Bam·Spm.

entrance, completely furnished, ·
quiet surroundings, threa miles
from the Ravenswood Ritchie

'

_...;.-:-.
............
v 6 s- 7-3 J
• •
wrww.rranunctt"'"t com

$5000, 740.949·2203 or 740·949-

wllh blue InteriOr, groat condition,
74().992-7627.

tires, asking $3,500: 1986 112

Time Blackberries. S3.00quart.

,cy .fi~ST.

' _-.. •

II'V'\li'T

COFFft

warranty, tf1ree seater, 83 horsepower, bought new July of '97,
three matching Kawasaki ski
vests and trailer all go with It,

1969 Toyoti Cellca ST. air, au·
tomatlc, amlfm .catsette, whits

Esco~.

..

Kawasaki STS Jal ski, still under

Seats, PB, 71,000 Mile&amp;, 51,400,
740-367.7480' 740-446-9552.

94 Fold

~.

5pm

1989 Tempo Auto, Air. Till.
Cruise. Power Steering, Power

740.982·3348 aher 5pm.

BLACKBERRIES
$13-gal. You Pick $10·gal. No

•

' • •.

trailer. $1.000. 304-675·6956 aller

ers. $5000, 740-992·9008.

pl1one $700.00 740-245·0020

"':::-

\oJIUlUF0~ 1 Dl~~&amp;.
Tl f'of. 10 C/)111£ It-1 I

· 1997 Bass Tracker Bantam 3x w/

cassette , spoiler, neadtlght cov-

People Needed Immediately Otter
E~epires. 7/31198. CALL 740-441 -

7:ooam-IO:OOpm.

i1ed apt. lor elderly and hendl·
~. EOH 304-675-8679.

new tires &amp; brakes, good cond.
$3200. :1()4.675-5792 after 5pm.

2900 or 740-949-1004.

7223 after 6pm.

304-675-5162.

Twin Alvert Tower now accepting
applications tor 1br. HUD aubsid-

$5,500.00 Negol"'ble.' Extra Sharp
740-388-9638

1986 Bonneville LE, maroon, 4dr.

Wormed. Asking $150.00 Call
740.379-9110

tO' tong. sl~e 6' long. oak, good
condition. call 740·949-2217.

APT AVAIL.AeLE f!IOW

1989 19FT Bayliner Capri with ·
Trailer. 3.0 Liter Inboard Motor,·
Skis And All Accessories '

bies. 2 months old. 304·882·

Beanie Babies . buy-sale-trade,
available for sale now, Fortune,
Erin . Wise, and others. 304·675·

Ground floor apt 2br, Wid hook-up,
references &amp; deposit. no pats.

Pels. Contact Debbie or Judy AI
740-446-7323

•

4 gray nand·fed Cockatiel ba-

Church pews, I'Mlivl! 12' io(lg, four

$350.00 Deposit Required. No

446-3461;.

1455.

Registered Border Collie Pups,
Only Females left. Vacclntd &amp;

llon 740·446-9182

Bridge In Ohio. Porloct

1 Year Old Full-Blooded 51. Ber·

... ::..

'.\~\--:-- L
~
.:ic:~~:s;;~-:::::-:-7:-

shape. Asking $3,300 lorm. 740·

nard Neuterect, Male, Very Good
With Children, $100, 740 -446·

Puppies- mom- shepherdlretriev·

A round butcher btoyk table &amp; 4
chairs. Juice man Juicer. 304·

.

motor &amp; trailer w/some accessories. Boat &amp; motor in real goo~

Pets for Sale

Wagon, Loaded, 85;385 Miles
c·. F. A. Registered P.,slsn Cat 1 $4,500,740-448-0924.
Shedtd SHvor Malo, I 3.Year Old ,
Torupotnt Female, 1 3 Year Old · 1991 Chevy Corsica, 3.1 Multi·
Shaded Sliver Female, 1 2 Year . port engine, power windows,
doors, 112 HP garbage disposers, Old Red Female. 740-446-1455
cruise, tilt, air, sharp car. only
$80 . new, dehumidifiers $75 .
82,000 actual miles, $;!200 neg.,
NOTICE
Fred Peerson 304-675-4004.
740-982-8624.
, FllnOtl City Pot Grooming .
486-66 DX2 computer, 4MB, 500
1991 Ford Festlva GL, s-sp ex.
MB hard drive, WIN, CO RO'-t, Professional Grooming by Ap· cond.
304·675-7303.
.new color monitor, Epson 24 Pin pointments. Over 15 yrs. experl·
Printer, $900 OBO, call 740-992·

f\1\.'K ./

1978 1611. Trl Haul boat 70hp.

740-948-:m&amp;.

!Set, Plus 1997 Teenle

.l PON'T ICNOW ASOUT YOU,
BUT .l'M (;OING
·· L \
TO
Nftl&gt;
~,. ~~
10M~
,,,,

Finder, 740-448·8926

Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.

·cooc DQWNt•

FR 4NK &amp; EARNEST

15Ft Bomber Scout &amp; 40HP Mercury Motor With 'Trailer &amp; Depth .

3436. '

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

: •

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

Used Window Air Conditioning

port. From $249·$373. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
'

·•.••:.

mets. mus1 sell, $17,750 firm, 740667·3802.

Units, Ditferent Sizes, Guaranteed,

a.m. to 6:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

10 Not

By Phillip Alder

1996 Harley Davidson Heritage
Soft Tail Classic, 600 mile&amp;, mint
condition, over $25,000 invested,
Includes all original parts plus
many. e1tras, also matching hel·

Thru Fflday. 10-4. 740·446·4782,
Slop By.

Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00

&lt;

good condllion, $2.800 or best. • •
- · 740-992·3719.
•

560

29 u... ~pac~e
1 T•type
31 PNIIx lor cycle 2 Neclcplece
3 Coda of paint
or pod
4 Ear
32 Sick
(comb. form)
33 o.wn gockiMa
5 Mil. rank
34Eggdlsh
37 Ulllldlled
&amp;Cattle
enclolu,.
l8boNr

The sure line is best

1995 Yamaha 350 Warrior, veri · :

Used Furniture Store Below Holl·
day Inn. In Kanauga . Monday

Buy or sell . Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street. on Rt . 124,

PA

cytlnder, 800 miles, asking $8000, ,

Polly'l - l Used Fumlturo
Flags &amp; Arrrrl Surpluslll
2101 Jeffon;on Ave.
Open 9:30 · 5:00 Mon-Sal.
304-675-SOFA 17632)

Antiques

27 Holy

Opening lead: • 7

HELP ME THROW
OUT THr TRASH U

1985 Honda Magnum VHF 750, 4- • •·

Sale

VIne Street, Call 740·448·7398,
HI00.499-3498.

530

.'

1986"Honda 4 Wheeler, In Very · .

Washers, dryers. refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 76

740--7.

WILD

1996 F-150 XLT 4x4: V·B, Auto,

Mile North On AU.

710 AUtos for

WHAT A

2•.ooo Miles,

SQuare boles S1.00 &amp; $2.00ea. 1

South
1•
1 NT

BARNEY

· er,SIIdlng Rear Wlndow,Bedliner,
Tool:lo~e, 120,000 Miles,$4.995.00,

Nilw-.wv

•

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

new tires. JCI4.458..1817.

Custom Sto\qlillr &amp; l'rootsslng
Sla1e lr.pected
wv Sauaago COfr'4&gt;any
907 4th Strati

41 y- (Sp.)
43 Large knU.
13~ker
45 Actrell Luplno
14 'IIIIa Is- Tap 46 -clegree
151ktbe~to 47 Newlmln
a disc~
DoMideon
1&amp; Goller t aide
46 Cuddle
17 .S t. c r 51 Dnlu
11- Daryl
54 Smtlller, In I
(Aalan rt-)
way
20 l'lrat number 55 Ubrary patron
21 Actor Malden 511 Bleckbolnla
23 -Watrolo 57 Detactlve
24 0111OUMn
~5 FOI'tMf
RuaallnNief
DOWN

• A 8

$32,500,740 992 6819.

Riding Honea. Galdingl &amp; Marn
For Sale 74o-44&amp;--411 0

Krlltoffwlon

1 Slx-7 Heppena

• Q8 5 2

seats, garage kept, 9000 miles,

5:00pfn

740-992·3886.

Brother word Processor WP·
3550 Comes with Users Guide,

450

month , plu&amp; utilities;

730 Vans &amp; 4-WO.
Laying hens $2.00oa. Pulllll , '87 Fori! Ranger 4x4, rebuih motor :
St.oo... Nougoben goat $75. · and tranamlsskm , runs good, , :
Plgmoy goal $40. :J04.675-4192.
$2800, cal740-992·3465.
·

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·

Upstairs efliclency wll'l private

3 bedroom houss, Middleport,

80().263-2840.

740·446 ·

2445

7795.

Middleport, 740-982·2178.

Counly, Blackburn Realty, 740·

home, very good condition, 2

StarOno special S4t inotllllllon,

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag. 740-448·

brery. $350.00/ Mo Rent Pius

304-675-7174 alter 4pm.

Prlmtetlr· low tnatatlatlon with
rebate, llr&amp;t montll fnlo, fnlo HBO,

•KQJI02
West
East
• 6
•Q8754
• AK95
•Q8732
• J 91
t K 10
•97653
.. 4
South
• A K 3
• J 10 6 4

1994 Ford F150 X L Pickup : ·
Truck 65,000 Miles

TRANSPORTATION

360

&amp; references required. $375. per

Uveetock

3 112 Month Old Colt, Brown.
Black &amp; White; Sltel Toe Trap.
740-256-1233

$1 .200.00740.367·0122. alter

3n5.

Compact Case Lawn &amp; Garden
One bedroom apartment in Mid·
Tractor. With loader, 3 Point
dleport, ali utilities paid, $100 deposit, $270 month, call 740·992· · Hitch, In GOOd Condition. $2,800,

2 story 3 or 4 bedroom. 2 beth, on
Lincoln Ave. large yard. Deposit

740-245-0020

630

nue. Middleport !Cash Behfs old

Scenic Valley at Apple GrOve .
WV. Building lots. single wides
accepted. public wate r. 20
minutes from new Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Ad . Cl~e SQwen
Jr. 30-4·576-2336.

410 Hou~s for Rent

Macintosh Performa 8200 CD
Computer, Monitor, Color Prlnter.wtth loll ot aoflware $1,000.00

t

5637.

moved ro 145 Nonh Second AV&amp;-

MERCHANDISE

lent Condition. $5,500, 740-245-

992·2822.

5622.

0006.

4&gt;4&amp;-0008.

6011 .

The Pomeroy Thrift Snop has

carville Alu, Washer fOryer, A.C,

9436.

Cash Pa id For land In Gallla

lng Board With Base, 740·256-

Salellile dish, $300, Morning Star
. Ad.. 740-94&amp;-3511 .

$300/Mo .. $200 Deposit. Water

Now taking sealed bids on com·
merclal lot on us 35 Henderson.
Mail bids to · Siders 2123 Malvern Rd . .Rock Hill, SC . 29732 .
Opemng date September 1, 1998.
Reserve the right to refuse any
or all bids. For info call . 803-366-

Real Estate
Wanted

-1. 8 Fl. DIY·

•• A 6 4 3

1993 S·IO 4.3 V·6, Tahoe Pack· •
age, Topper 85,000 Milts, Excel·

mower, S700: 25' ltay •

valor, $300; ham111er mill ; 740·

875-2072.

460 Space for Rent

HUDI 30&lt;4-562·5840.

tunltles.

1990 Spruce Ridge 14x70 mobile

bednloms, 1 &amp; tf2 baths. wuillr
IIIII dooll, fully iniUIIIOd. 1011 1.8-'
dryer, llove. refrigerator, cong1on Tttraco. $39,000. Call 740·
••· 8&gt;r8 OU1elde building, 740il82-!1282 afler 5 p.m.
992-6582.

17 Mnes from Milton Exit-8 Miles
from Point Pleasant . 2&amp;3 Bed ·
room mobile home, sits on 1
acre. city water, very nice. $359.

$10,500.

RENTALS

!railer cou~ . 304·875·3735 leave
me._.

420 Mobile HomM

.!rom $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 740·446·2568 .

Expando, 3 Bedrooms, CIA. Call
alter 5:00 740-256-1090

1990 Fleetwood 14x7o, 2br, 1
e~e . cond . Camp Conley

Nice 3br, references &amp; deposit.
No pets. :w-675-5182.

ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive

BRUNER LAND
740-441-1492

'1979 Bayview 14'X 70' Double

1988 Redman 14x55 2 Bedrooms,
Gas Heat, CA. Like New, $7,900,
304-676-6985, 740-448-0175.

740-992· ·

2583.

We Buy Land: 30 ·500 Acres ,
We Pay Cosh . 1·800·213·8361,
Anltrony Land Co.

304-675-5965.

$3001 month:

Pornoror. no pets, 740-992-5858.

Acres With Nice Pond $12,000

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

~stRa~lnTown

~

caH 304-755-7191.

100x150 lot in Gallipolis Ferry.

Oak Doors &amp; Trim Fireplace. 1-1/
2 car garage, E1iglble for tax
Abatement. $169 .900 . 1·304·273·

House in Pomeroy,

also 2 car~ lor sail, call
2979 after 5pm.

Paid, References Requested,
Help save my credit, make 2
payments &amp; assume low monthty
payments . Will pay to relocate .

740-441-5698. 740-441 ·5187.

Repo's Call 1·800·522-2730. x

2 Bedrool)'l Mobile Home. Mer·

675·2924.

BA, 2·112Balhs, LA, I FA. Formal
Dlnlng Room wllh hardv.ood lloors,

$4,000 Local Gov't. &amp; Bank

For sale or rent· 14x60 house
trailer, atf conditioned, washer
and dryer, no pets, 740.6!MH075.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Prime location 414 Third Ave.
Gallipolis. Beauutul newly con·
structed two story Colonial has 3

With Coil; 1987

992·2167.

Price Reduced : 1 1/2 story, 3br,
Garfield Ave . Pt. Pleasant. 304·

recommends that you do busi ness with people you know. and
NOT to send money through the
mail until you have investigated

lennox 3 Ton Heal Pump Unit,

Construction Workers Welcome

ery. 1·8()().691-6777.

mo. Free skirt. HI00-691-6'777.

House and 58 acres. some tim·
ber, all mineral rights, excellent
deer and turkey hunting, $40,000,

Weekly Rates. Or Monl111y Aa1es,

1 ·5 BEDROOM HOliES FROM

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hOmes. air
conditioned. $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash Included . 740-

owning relocating, 740-992·5243.

garaoe.

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town , Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Cinema ... Showtime &amp; Disney.

Doublewide 3br, 2 bath, S 1,345.
down, $217 . per mo. Free deliv-

800-837·3236.

Georges Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

230

3 BR, - · -.e For Ae11l 1304-736·7295

Garage apartment. Middleport.
great condition , new carpet, two
bedroom, bath, kltcnen . large lrv·
ing room. deck . 2 112 car

740-992-6576.

210

948-5678

5" fi1ish
Hen 2 112 ton air condilloner.
good cond . thru the wall . 304·

4 Room House 52 OliW! St. 740·

for Rent

1st time buyers. E -Z financing, 2
or 3 bedrooms. around $200. pet
month . Call Credit Line 1· 800·

3426.

Business
"Training

sidewalk

Browns Court. 74().992-7860.

\995 Clayton, all electrlc, elcellenl condiion. call Tom AndolliOn,
740-992·3348 After 5pm.

eel Diana Coalos. 740-992·2161 .

Garage For Material. Reference

1709.

740-256--6123.

Cai1 ·80Q.948-5878.

Wanted· persons 55 and over to
help teactl reading at Pomeroy
Eiomontary with 111o STARS Pro·
gram. fifteen hours per weak.
Chok::e of $2.50 per hour stipend
or tuition ooita tor your grandchild
or a cnild of your cnoice. Paid
mUeage and tree lunch. For an
application or more Information,

Story Frame House And Small

uic, I 1 5,500 can be seen ar

ver Payments 740 ·258+6040, Or

mult po11ess or 111cquire a
sports medicine certificate and
CPR canl. Pnwious coaclllng IX·
perlence ia preferred. Please
Hnd inquir .. s to Mr. James la-

Wanted : Experienced And Ae ·
aponslble Party To Raze One

1995 14x70 Clayton, 2 bedroom,
2 bal11, per1oct condition, all eloc-

--

1985 14x50, 2 Bedrooms, , Must
Be Moved, $4,000.00 And Take&lt;&gt;

99 ochool year. All applicants

quAil. 304-675-19n after 5pm.

01·31 ·98

-to-Puzzle

40 Actor

ACROSS

wen.:

JULY 31

I

�.... .... .. ... . .

Plae·12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 31, 1998

Gallipolis barber
hangs up shears
By Catherine Hamm
OVP News Staff
PO!Nf PLEASANT - Cub Scouts from the Tri - State Area Council's MOM District stepped back in time to become 'Knights Of Yore'
at the annual Cub day camp. going on this week at the Moose Lodge
in Point Pleasant.
Keith Xirinachs, MGM District Executive, along with Cabby Gill,
camp director, planned a week of activity to keep the youngsters busy,
while promoting basic scout skills.
Using a theme of knights of the middle ages, the Cubs learned
about heraldry while making shields. heard stories about bravery,
worked with a leather punch and learned songs.
Joanne Counci:, both a grandmother and one of the adult leaders
from Meigs County. wouldn't miss camp for anything. "We have 73
boys and 28 adults - it's a lot of work. but so much fun. We have a lot
of exciting things for them to do. and it's great to watch them learn."
According to Mrs. Gill, learning takes place in many different
ways, "We're working on our citizenship requirements while doing
flag raising. They learn about primary colors while painting their
shields. It is a good program for boys - and they love the opportunity
to be at camp."
Xirinachs praised the involvement of the adult leaders and community support. "We couldn't put on a camp of this size without adults
who willingly give their time to make this a success. They are the
backbone of the program."
The camp will end today with a cookout provided by the Moose
Club. Parents and Cubs are invited to a family camp out following the
closing program.
For more information about scouting call Keith Xirinac~ at 740245- 5949.

Boys on the run • during game time that is • mean summer fun at
camp.

Story on D-3

Major League roundup -81
Comedians' showcase - C 7
Shell plant honored - 01

Detalls~n

page A2.

•

tmts
Ohio Valley Publishing co.

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· August 2, 1998

Vol. 33, No. 25

Strickland trumpets lead over Hollister in polls

Jeffery Bryant of Pack 205, Gallipolis, tries his
hand at fiehlng during camp.

By PAMELA BROGAN

Gannett News Service

.

WASHINGTON- Democratic incumbent Rep. Ted.Strickland is leading the money chase in Ohio's 6th Congressional District with a S368,1XXl
treasury heading into the November election.
His Republican opponent. Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, has S 115,1XXl, Federal Election Commission records show.
But Hollister. rebounding from a tough and costly GOP primary. raised
almost three times more than Strickland from April through June, the lalest
campaign-finance report.• show. Hollister raised nearly $236,(XX) compared
te&gt; $1!9.000 for Strickland.
.
During the three-month period, Strickland raised about $15,000 from individuals compared to Hollister, who pulled in nearly $124,000 from voters.
Hollister also raised S102,000 from political action committees, or PACs,

compared to $67.000 for Strickland. Political panies contributed nearly
$7.000 to Strickland's campaign compared to $10.000 for Holhster.
Strickland said be's not surprised that Hollister raised more money during those three months.
"I always expected to be outspent." Strickland said "Our fund-raising
is going extremely well. but r m spending no time doing that much. to the
consternation of my friends."
.
Strickland also said recent polling by his campaign shows that he 1s more
popular with the voters than Hollister by an 18 percent margin.
"I would blow her out of the water if the election were held today." the
congressman said.
. .
.
. ..
Chris Baldwin. Hollister's campaign manager, satd h1scandidate ts coming"I'm
on strong."
. . " Bald . 'd "'" •
.
very pleased with our fund-ramng,
wm sa1 . ..ere commg

off of a primary and we've spent May. June. and July raising money for the
fall."
Baldwin also said he is not fazed by reports from·Strickland's campaign
that show he is leading Hollister in the p&lt;ills.
"We were behind in the primary 100. at certain times. by as much as 15
percent." Baldwin said. "But we won that election. didn't we?"
In Ohio's 18th Congressional District. incumbent Republican Rep. Bob
Ney has more than $324.000 for his re-election campaign compared to the
$175.000 his Democratic challenger. Robert Burch. has.
Ney. seeking his thind term. raised more than $181.ood during the AprilJune period. Burch raised nearly $99.000.
.
In West Virginia's 1st Congressional District. incumbent Democrauc Rep.
Alan Mollohan has nearly $33.000 for his re-election bid. Mollohan ha.s no
GOP challengers.

News
Watch
Summer camp wouldn't be complete without we"r balloon
fights.

Cub Scouts like to sing • and will do 10 for their parents at the cloa·
lng program on Friday night.

.

State recognizes
fair housing unit

('

Seth Johnson of Pack 240, Rutland, works on

an art proJect

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Fair Housing Program has
received the Governor's Award for
OuL•tanding Program Implementation from Gov. George Voinovich
for its efforts in community development.
The award was presented by
Jack Riordan, deputy director of
the Ohio Department of Development's Community Development
Division, during an awards ceremony Thursday at the Ohio Conference of Community Development Inc.'s banquet in Marietta.
The Gallia Fair Housing Program was chosen for continually
aa:omplishina-Jia. goals ancUor,.
notably surpassing the minimum
requirements for fair housing infor. mation distribution.
The program provides residents
with knowledge of laws on fair
housing, landlord-tenant issues and
rental repair. The county was recognized for implementing a fair
bouslng complaint policy and procedure thai allows complaints to be
addressed by a full-time fair housing coordinator.
Additionally. the county developed four fair housing pamphlets
and purcha.o;ed promotional items
to promote fair bousing at fairs,
schools. senior resource centers .
and the local library.

·

Garden club members tour Fragrant Fields
A tour of Denise Arnold's herb
gardens, "Fragrant Fields" was
enjoyed by Chester Garden Club
members recently.
Arnold discussed the many plants
and herbs in her garden, noting that
a rare plant, cardoons, is a highlight
of the garden. She described it as a
mix of oyster plant and anichoke
with an ever-so-slight bitterness of
eggplant.
She said that cardoons have been
eaten since ancient times and noted
that the plant can be stewed, baked
or dressed up in sauces. It grows six
to eight feet tall and has grey-green
serated leaves and deep blue thistle:r.Described them as "invaders", she
suggested picking the flower heads
before they mature and spread.
Besides eating the plant, she said it
goes well in dried arrangements.
As for the use of the Oower
heads, the plants need to be
blanched by wrapping them in
newspapers for about a month, then
cut and destrung, parboiled. then
made into soups. sauces or fried .
Another popular plant discussed
by Arnold was St. John 's Word, used
by the Greeks and Romans to stop
bleeding, for healing wounds and in
ceremonies commemorating the
birthday of John, the Baptist. Today
it is used for boosting the immune
system, jet lag. healing wounds,
varicose veins, and congestion, and
is also said to be effect in the fight
against cancer and AIDS .
Maurita Miller opened the meeting with devotions using scripture
from Matthew on mustard, a native
of the Holy Land and Israel. She
said that birds love it and it is the
world's smallest seed.
For roll call members named
their favorite herb and its use. Sage.

..//''
• f

I

MADELINE .JANE QUILLEN

chives, thyme, poppy sees, mint,
garlic and pineapple sage were
among the herbs named. Arnold
described herbs as anything that
grows has a use, either for flavoring,
cosmetic, medicinal, fragrance,
cooking or decorating.
A thank you was given for a
hanging basket furnished by Maorita Miller for Paul Karr who had open
bean surgery. The July sunshine project honored Clarice Krautter who
has a broken ankle. The remembrance was provided by Kathryn
Mora.
A book was donated to the
. Pomeroy Library on bluebirds by
Pat ·Holter in memory of Debbie
Miller, and a book on ·wildflowers
was donated by Lula Toban in mem ory of Jean Frederick.
To handle a weed problem, the
gardening hint was to cover the
flowers with a bucket then spray the
weeds with a weed killer.
The state convention was
announced for July 29 and 30 and
Aug. I at the Radison in Columbus.
The Aug . 5 meeting will be at
7:30 at the Chester United
Methodist Church. It will be an open
ineeting o the clubs and the public.
The program will feature county
judges demonstrating the Meigs
County fair schedule. Chester club
members are to take finger foods for
refreshments and" a door prize. Pat
Holter will be hostess for the meeting.
It was noted that Dorothy Karr
had furnished Oowers for the church
in June, and that Betty Dean had
judged flowers, plants and lawn projects at the Noble County Fairgrounds. She was accompanied by
Kathryn Mora.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED •
Jeaon and Melanie Quillen of
Racine announce the birth of
their first child, a daughter,
Medelln6 Jane, born on JUne 4.
The Infant weighed seven
pounds, four ounces and waa
20 inchea long.
Maternal grandparents are
Roy end !lonnie VanMeter of
Recine, end Ther..a end
Randy Preaaley of Mclean•·
vllle,N.C.
·
Paternal grandparent• ere Ron
and Joyce Quillen of Recine.
Maternal great-grandparent•
are Richerd and Mary Margaret
Weaver of Racine, end the
paternal great-grandparenta
are Myrtle Quillen of Middleport, and Raymond Proffitt of
Recine.

BOT DAYS~~~£ D
JULY SPECIALS
AT

MD
95 OLDS AURORA

'18,490

94 CHEVY ASTRO
CONVERSION VAN

98 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

'12 410

'13,991

97 BUICK SKYLARK,
OLDS ACHEIVA OR
PONTIAC GUND AM

990
J_:_ '

AsLowAs

• " •

"'-

:q.: .,

POMEROY- Work on repairing a slip on Spring Avenue in
Pomeroy is expected to begin early this week.
·
Village Administrator John
Anderson said Friday that Jeffers
Excavating of Pomeroy is expected to begin work as early as Monday. weather permitting. to repair
a slip and damaged water line
n:suling from heavy rains in June ..
The slip, which was repaired by
village crews and then further
damaged a week later by more
min. cau~o;ed an interruption of
water service to 12 households in
lhe Spring Avenue area. That water
line was temporarily repaired
shortly after it was damaged. but
those households are still being
served by a temporary line.
Funding for the project will
come from a discretionary emergency fund administered by the
director of the Ohio Depanment of
Public Works. Anderwn said that
he filed an appliclllion for the funds
on behalf of the village. and that
lhe application was approved by
Lawrence Bicking. director of the
department.
.
Anderson estimates the cost of
the repairs a1 $35,1XXl, and said that
other utility companies may make
repairs at the same time that the
water line repairs are completed.

f;

96 BUICK RIVIERA

8

7,490or

'17,990

951UICI LESAIRE Custom, V6, auto, air, till, cruise,
96 CHEVY 5·10 ILIZIR 4 Dr, va, auto, air, tilt,
AM/FM cass, beige ...... ....................... , .. ................ 112,700
cruise, red ...... ............................................. ...... .... 118,400
95 CHEVROLEI CIMIRO CONVERTIBLE va, auto,
97 CHEVY I 1500 4 WD Sportslde, VB, 5 spd, air,
air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass, black ................ ........... 112,900
tilt, cruise, white only 3,300 mi . super sharp ........... 121,850
97 CHEVROLET LUMINA vs. air, auto, tilt, cruise, 112,600 95 FORD F150 ILT LWB, VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise,
97 CHm CAVALIER 2 DR, 4 cyl, air, auto, AM/FM
only 5, 700 mi. n Blue/Silver like new .. ............... .. 1 15,400
cass, white ............................................................... 110,400
96 5·10 EXT CAI•V6, 5 spd, air, tilt, cruise,
91 PONTIAC 5UNFIRE 2 Dr, 4 cyl, air, auto, tilt,
red ..... ......................... ............................................. 1 10,800 ·
1
AM/FM cass ................. ............................................ 12,900
96 5·10 EXT Cll4 cyl, auto, air, tilt, cruise,
98 OLDS DELTA 88 Loaded , V6. auto. air. tilt, cruise,
cass ... ................ ... ................ .............................. ...... 1 12,750
1
PS, PW, AM/FM cass, only 6,600 mi. maroon. Like new 18,700
97 DODGE NEON. Tilt. cruise,
97 OLDS CUTWS SUPREME 4 Dr, auto, air, tilt,
air, cassette, sharp!... ......................................... ............. 19,850
1
cruise, cass, white .................................................. 12,750
98 GMC SIERRA SLE LWB, 4x4, V8, auto, air, cass, tilt, 93 OLDS 88 US loaded, leather,
cruise, only 3,500 mi. .............................................. 123,800
one owner ...................... ............................................. 18,950

)

'
News po IICY

Good Morning

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painful, and they must also consider needs of that next generat ion.
what will become of the current
'1'he church was a real link in the
structure. to find a "creative use" for flood relief," Sallee said. ··The comthe building. Sallee said.
munity was good for the church, and
'That's what's bad," he added. "If the church was good for the commuyou have to move. then you don 't nity, so nei ther wants to us to leave,
want the next generation to face the but there aren't any op1ions for us."
same problem. They should have
enough ground to add on to meet the

Slip repair work
slated this week

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REVIEWING THE SITUATION - Tha Rev. Marvin Sallee, pas·
tor of the VInton Baptist Church, examined Information last week
In his offlca at the church. Federal regulations have canceled out
plana for expanding the building, prompting Its membership to
consider building In a new location out of the floodplain.

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Health needs of women, children survey target
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

nmea-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - A broad-based
survey on the health need~ of women
and childnen conducted by the Meigs
County Health Depanment will get
underway Saturday, Aug. 8 with r.utdom telephone calls to collect data.
The goal is lo determine how the
department will structure its programs to provide health care and
what sources of funding need to be
pursued.
.
Part of the total survey, funded
through a $5,000 grant from the Ohio
Department of Health, will be done
by telephone by a panel of registered
nurses. It will be conducted from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. with families to be
selected at random from the phone

survey and then to sign up for a free
gift wh1ch will be given away at the
end of the fair.
The goa.l, acconding to Torres, is
to develop a working health-related
data ba.se about mothers and children
in Meigs County. The data ba.o;e will
be one that can be annually updated
and provide a ba.,is for supporting
need~ and establishing benchmarks a.'
new grants are written, explained
Torres.
She said that the final reP.&lt;&gt;rt is
expected to he completed in early
1999 and will remain with the Meigs
County Health Depanment. It wi II be
available to other agencies in the
county that need information.
Acconding to Torres, the community assessment will include infor-

book.
Norma Torres, director of nursing
at the Meigs County Health Department. is working on the project with
Sharon Denham, an associate professor in the School of Nursing at
Ohio University.
"It is important for people in the
community who get the calls to
answer the questions," said Torres.
"because that is the only way we can
get the importllnt information we
need to plan our local programs.·
She said that it will take about 15
or 20 minutes to answer the health·
·related questions. Nurses will also be
at the Meigs County Fair to continue
the survey with visitors then:.
Torres encouraged fair visitors to
stop by the booth and complete the

mation from u variety of sources.
"We don't want to spin our wheels.
There will be input from health care 10 be working on lhings which aren't
providers. local service agencies and needed or wanted. We need indicators
public institutions. c
to show us what is needed. what is
The focus of the as.&lt;essment will essential. and the assessment should
be on the health of mothers and chil- help us make lhose ueci,ions:· 'aid
dren. and include issues such a.• nutri- Torres.
tion. immunizations. blood lead levAs for now. compiling the inforels. smoking. alcohol and drug use. mal ion is the key to moving toward
availability of health care providers. a more-complele health care pro 0ram
use of medical cards. availability of for M~igs countians. according to the
health insurance. and issues relating director of nursing.
·
to abuse and violence.
"Coopemtion from the communi When all the information is com- ty is vital to ensure the success of
piled. Torres said it will provide the
basis for determining where Health these efforts." she said. in appealing
Department funding is spent and for residents to take the time to
also where the agency needs to answer the nurse's quest1ons if they
develop programming and dedicate
receive a call Satunlay.
personnel to grant writing.

Clinton 'anxious' to answer grand jury's questions
examined at the FBI laboratory has a
the laltstill must test
to determine the compo.~ition of the
stain, and whether il contains DNA
material that could eventually be ·
compared with Clinton's, the sources
said.
As the Lewinsky investigation
moves closer to completion, Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr
placed himself in position to devote
full time to the probe. He took an
unpaid leave from his law firm Friday after juggling his public and private jobs for nearly four years.
"Mr. Starr said he wanted to fulfill his moral commitment to his private clients, which he has done, and
he is taking an unpaid leave of
•absence
from the fmn until he has
such rellllonlhip.
completed
his public duties," said
A law enforcement liOiln:e Cunil·
spokeSman
Charles Bataly.
ier with the evidence, demendina
Clinton,
commenting about his
111011ymity, lllid the dress now beina .
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WASHINGTON (APl - Grund
jurors will watch President Clinton's
testimony live on closed-circuit television Aug. 17, and Clinton promises he will "completely and truthfully" answer prosea~tors' questions
about Monica Lewinsky.
The jurors can submit questions
for proseCutors to pose, alegal source
j amiliar with lhe arrangements said
Friday on condition of anonymity.
Meanwhile, new information
emerpl about the dark blue cocktail
dress thai Ms. Lewinsky, a former
Wbite House intern.~ over earlier this week. tellina prosecutors it
wallained durina aleXIIII encounter
with Clinton. The ptaident hu
denied under oelh thll he hid IDY

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upc;omins testimony in an appearnnce
.in the White House Rose Garden.
said: "No one wants to get this mat·
ter behind us more thiD I do, except

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humanity and respect for the law .. :
In legal papers. Mrs. Jones'
lawyers argued. "Mr. Clinton's
behavior toward Ms. Lewinsky is
evidence of his habit of making
aggressive sexual advances to young.
low-ranking employees."
Lewinsky herself came under fire
again in Oregon. where a Lewis &amp;
Clark College employee said he
believes his experiences with her in
1995 are relevant to her credibility in
testifying before a federal grand jury.
David Bliss. shop foreman for the
school's theater depanrnent.told The
Oregonian newspaper lhat when he
accused Lewinsky of forging his signature on an official document, she
wrote back saying she had not realized what she had done.

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maybe all the rest of the American
people."
When reporters shouted a chorus
of questions. the president held up
both hands and said. "Wait. wait.
wail. wait, wait! Everybody 's got a
question. Let me give you the answer
to all of them ....
" I am looking forward to the
opportunity in the next few days of
testifying. I will do so completely and
truthfully. I am anxious to do it. But
I hope you can understand why. in the
interim. I can and should have no further comment on these matters."
Meanwhile, Paula Jones, the former Arkansas state employee whose
now-dismissed sexual hara.•sment
charges qainst Clinton sparked the
Lewinsky investigation. pleaded with
a federal appeals coon in St. Louis to
reinstste ·her lawsuit and restore
"fundamental principles of decency.

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