<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8911" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8911?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T21:21:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19337">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/fa3f65d626a429c72f3e1019b95dfc34.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a5eed6ef1905e5e3590c74fddfb2540f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28695">
                  <text>Ohio LQttery

Lasorda,
Nlekro join
Hall of Fame

Super Lotto:
14-22-31-33-35-38
Kicker:
8·3-Hi..()-2
Pick 3:

Sports on Page 4

4-7-5
Pick 4:
5-8-8-2

Mostly cloudy tonight
with a chance of showers,
lows In the 60s. Tuesday,
partly cloudy and breezy.
Highs In the 70s.

en tine
llol. 48, NO. n

,

•

Union
strike·s
'pa'rcel
•
_carrier
stand now or we won 't have a

The union. which represents about

a third of the Atlanta-based UPS '
302.000 U.S. employees. wants lim ils on subcontrac..:ting and more full-

lime jobs. Nearly two-thirds of the
Teamsters

ai UPS :ire part-timers.

UPS says it has three- to four-hour
busy periods. in the morning and
afternoon and that it wouldn't make
sense to guarantee employees a full lime job. h needs the flexibility for
cumpclilivc reasons. company offi-

REGISTERIN~GiiifTiiiES=i;&amp;Vidi(iiiig;;niOniiiro,;waiOri'eO;s;v::l iiiiiiiikeii

tians who will be exhibiting In the senior division the Meigs County Fair next
Calaway, left, gave him a hand In getting his entries registered.

Board registers nearly
2,300 entries .for fair
A total of 2,297 entries were

Mis1er competition.

While the entry deadline has
registered for exhibit in .the senior
now
passed, membership and sea.division of the I 34th Meigs Counson
tickets
can still be purchased.
ty Fair Friday and Saturday.
and
parking
and camp sites can still
That was 263 more than last
he
rcsenred.
year.
Membership tickets which
By division, the numbers are
gives
voting privilege on members
draft horses, 19; dairy cattle, 44;
of
the
Meigs County Fair Board arc
beef cattle, 24; sheep, 6; poultry,
$15,
while
season tickets which
2~; farm crops 404; ·flowers, two ·
provide
gate
admission and free
shows; 999; domestic arts, 210;
parking during lhc entire fair arc
amateur painting, 42; photography,
$12.
195: baking and cannirig, 274;
Membership tickct.s arc on sale al
grange, 4; hay show. 15; and
the ·Sugar Run Flour Mill.
antique farm equipment display.
Pomeroy, and may be purchased
33.
.
from any. Fair Board member.
In addition, 56 children were
Season tickets may be pur-.
registered for the prelly bahy contest and 19 for the Linle.Miss and • chased at Joe's Country Markel.

.

Rutland; Waid Cross Sons, Racine;
Baum Lumber Co., Chester, Sugar Run Flour Mill. Pomeroy;
Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy,
P,QIIleroy; Lillie John's Food Marl,
Tuppers Plains and Middleport;
Gloeckner's Restaurant; Pomeroy;
Whaley 's Grocery, Darwin; Helen
Baer, Syracuse; Qorscl Larkins,
Long Bouom ; Dan's, Middleport;
Five Points Express, Pomeroy;
Reed's Country Store, Reedsville;
and McDonald's of Pomeroy.
The secretary's office on the
fairgrounds will be open l~is Saturday for those wantfng reserved

parking or camping sites for the
fair.

,.

Eastern Local Board to propose
combination levy for fall ballot
The levy is being proposed
By BRIAN J. REED '
hccausc u 4.7-mill levy previously
Sentinel News Staff
The Eastern Local Board of Edu- approved runs out with 1hc current
cation will propose a 4.7-mill com- col\cctilm period. If approved. the
bined operating and permanent new levy would generate $148.686
improvement levy in November. The per year. based on 95 percent collcc-.
two-year levy would be used for gen- tion, ac\:ording tu County Audilur
eral operating cxpense,s and perma- Nancy Parker Camphcll.
Specifying the proposed usc of
nent improvements.
The concept of combining a levy funds holds the district accounlahlc
· for both operating expenses and per- fur expenditures. according to Lisa
manent improvements is a new one. Ritchie. Eastern's dcrkltreasurer. The
only recently approved by the state board also specifics building
improvements and equipment as part
Legislature.
If this levy is passed, half of the of the permanent improvements.
Pcnnancnt improvement funds nrc
funds would be used for general operating expenses aljd half for perma- required to he placed in a separate
nent improvements; sp!.!cifit.:ally. • fund and can only he used for the
te xtbooks. s.c hool buses, technology speciticd purpose. Ritchie said.
and computer hardware and software.
The hoard's most recent nucmpllo

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer ·
. COLUMBUS - The countdown
to an Ohio Supreme Court dcadlmc
continu~s to tick fo~ lawmakers trying to retool the &gt;tate's school funding system .
The Senate voted unanimously
ncar midni ght Sunday to rejcct a
scaled-down funding plan that only
minutes hcforc ha'd pao,;scllthc Houo,;c.
As a result. state lcgi~kuors will go
back to the drawing board in an effort
to (.;orne up with a method of funding
the state's puhlic schools that is
acccplahlc to the high court. The
coun gave the LcgislaiUrc one year to
come up with a plan when it ruled in
March that the current syslcm was
unconstitutional. ·
·
Senators voted without debate in
a special, live-minute session held
after the House approved the plan hy
a 60-36 party -li ne vote in which three
Democrats did not participate.
· "It docs not seem to me to he
worthwhile to have an ~.":x.crdsc in
futility, .. Senate President Richard
Ftnan said after senators voted lo
reject lhc House plan .
Finan . R-Cincinnali, said the
House vcrl'ton was too dille rent from
the funding plan ~ buill on a penny
increase in the state sales ·tax approved by the Senate last week.
He said lawmakers would not he
ahlc to develop and approve a new
plan by Wednesday. the deadline for
placing issues on the Nov. 4 ballot:
The sales tax proposal and the alternative plan, which cuOtaincd a constitutional amcndmcnl , both would
have required voter approval.
Finan declined to speculate on
where lhc funding discussions would
head next olhcr than lo rcilcrutc n
vow that the Senate would not propose any inctcasc in tuxes.
House Speaker JoAnn Davidstm.
R-Rcynoldshurg . said she was disapp(,intcd the S~.:nutc dmsc not to try tn

READY TO VOTE - Ohi.o
House Minority Leader Ross
Boggs, ·D-North Andover, gestured as he met with Speaker Jo .
Ann Davidson, A-Reynoldsburg,
in the House chamber at the
Statehouse ,Sunday, prior to a
vote on the school funding package. (AP)
work out a L:omp.rnmi ~c .
"I think we were moving in the
right direction."
"lltc Hnusc plan would have ~re­
nted u ~.:o n s tilutinnal guamnlcc' thai
cducaLion fundin g would inl·rcasc
ca~:h year hy 1111 least the ~allll: percentage as the l!cncral fund hullgct.
It also woJtd h.wc set as1dc an

udditiunul $300 million per year to
fund hon'ds over the f1Cxl 10 year.. for
repairs lo Ohio·s sc hools. hrtnging
the total &lt;.:ommiilcd to schoo l build-

ings to about $650 million annually.
The plan dcarcd a House cnm·mincc Smurday after the committee
killed a $1.1 billion sa les-ta• increase
for school fundin g that Gov. George
Voinovich had proposed.
Ruling on a lawsuit fil ed by a
coalition of s~.:houl di stricts, the
Supreme Court UirCcled state officials
· (Continued on Page 3)

'

pass a similar levy failed in November, according to the Meigs County
Board of Elccli.ons.
At its meeting last week, the
hoard also acted on maucrs relating .
to personneL
,
The following staff members were
hired for the 199.7-98 school year:
Dan Thomas, head baseball coach
and junior high fool hall coach; Susan
Parsons, flag corps and elementary
choir advisor; Linda Faulk, DPIA
tutor; Joe Bailey. boys' junior varsity basketball coach; Paul Brannon,
junior varsity volleyball and girls'
varsity haskciball coach; Charles
Knopp, junior foothall assistant
coach; and Roy Johnson, boys' eighth
grade basketball ~oach.
(Continued on Page 3)

-Questions surround impact of tobacco tax
hike's ability to curb smoking by teenagers

cials said:
The Ailanta-baj;cd company will
make medical and pharmacc~)ical
supplies and other emergency deliveries its first priority. and also expects
WASHINGTON (AP) - Conto keep up its international service. gress is raising the tobacco tax this
Sternad said.
year. in part to keep teens from lightThe Iridcpendenl Pilots Associa- ing up . But 15-year-old Suzanne
tion, which represents UPS' 2,000 Kane, hanging oul with friends on a
pilots. said it would honor the Team- summer evening, laughs it off.
sters picket lines.
"Whether you're smoking to be
_ Analysts had said UPS' competi- cool or you're chain smoking. 15
tors won't be able to handle the cents is not going to make a differinduS!.). giant's entire load, an esti- ence," says the Washington teenagmated 80 percent of the nation's total er, reflecting skepticism not only
parcel market
among her peers but among lawThe rival Federal Express Corp. . makers who wanted a higher tax but
reponed a sharp increase in business were forced Ia compromise.
in recent days, and imposed limits
The balanced budget plan Presiincluding culling drop-off times by dent Clinton will sign Tuesday
two hours, suspending money-back incr~ases cigareue taxes by 10 cents
guarantees and declining new regular in the year 2000 and another nickel.
accounts.
in '2002 - much less than the 43
The U.S. Postal Service cents backers originally sought ,
announced temporary measures
The money will help pay for a
today, including limiting customers to new children's health program. But
.foor parcels a visit Posttnaster Gen- the effort's twin goal - to reduce
eral Marvin Runyon said "an extra- teen-age ~making by raising pricesordinary increase in volume" was may nol fare as welL
"Part of the goal was to increase
ex peeled.

•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

School funding
plan fails to fly
by Legislature

ATLANTA(AP)- Union mem, bers, some brandishing· picket signs
promising "We'll fight," walked off
the job today at United Parcel Service, disrupting deliveries of millions
of packages across the nation.
"It's imperative lhal we lake a
future," said Connie McArthur, a 19year employee picketing a UPS distribution· center in Seaule. "We've
got the part-timers working double
and triple shifts. and they're still
called part-timers."
The midnight walkout by the
more than 185,000 Teamsters was the
first nationwide strilq:jn the 90-year
history of UPS, which' delivers 12
million parcels and documents'aday.
.UPS estimated that a scauered, oneday walkout in 1994 cost it $50 million.
" We will do whatever we can
using our management and other
nonunion ·people to operate to the
.extent thai we can," said UPS
spokesman Ken Sternad.
Operations slow on 'weekends,
and many-customers wno heard about
the impending strike shifted their
parcels to other shipping services, so
il was hard lo ·gauge the strike's
immediate effects. National . figures
were not immediately available, but
UPS said it was operating at a40 oercenl level out of its Louisville, Ky.,
air hub al 8 a.m. EDT.
Union members in their cars and
on foot streamed out of UPS distribution centers across the country this
morning, joining their colleagues on
picket· lines.
Picket signs in Minneapolis said
" United We Stand, Divided We
Beg," "Full-Time Jobs Not Full-Page
Lies," "Unfair Labor Practices,'' in
Hartford, Conn., " Blow the Whistle
on UPS," and in Atlanta: "We' II tight
for full-lime jobs."
UPS workers were ready to strike
Thursday night at midnight when
their four-year contract expired, but
union leaders in Washington kept
them on the job .while talks continued. Negotiators made a last-ditch
effort Sunday night, but Teamsters
president Ron Carey said there was
no progress and the talks were "a
waste of time."

2 Sections, ~ 2 Pages, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 4, 1997

C1tlt7, Ohio Volloy Publlahlng Company

the tobacco tax so significantly thai

kids would stop buying cigarcues.
and_we didn't gellhatthis year." said
Rep. Nancy Johnson, R-G:onn., who
sponsored the tax in the House.
• that geuing
But Johnson argues
any cigarette tax increase through
Congress was an important f~rsl step
nevertheless.
" We've broken through a barrier
mi this issue," she said. "When we
need more money,lhal's where we're
•

going."

teen smoking has edged up in
recent years after fallinjl during the
1980s. Now, one in five leeq-agers
smokes and 3,000 teens pick up the
habit each day. About nine in 10 adult
smokers began smoking as teenagers.
Health economists estimate that
for every I 0 percent increase in
price, the number of teen smokers
will drop by about 7 percen~ and
teens who keep smoking will smoke
6 percent Jess.

That means a 15-ccnl iax translates to a barely perceptible 5 percent
fewer teen smokers.
"You would need a very scnsiti vc

seismograph to pick up any ripples
from this," said Richard Daynard, a
Northeastern University School of
Law professor who studies tobacco.
. Teen smoking will not drop significantly unless price increases are.
paired with tougher rules and other
changes, says Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala .
Looking for models, many point
to California and Massaschusetts,
where smoking rates dropped after
tax hikes combined· with big antismoking efforts. Both stales saw
overall smoking rates drop, and teen
rates stayed even as they climbed
nationally.
In California, a 35-cent-a-pack tax
increase was combined with a media
campaign, restrictions on vending
machihes and laws prohibiting smoking in public places.

FREE SERVICE- Sixty-two children were fingerprinted on Friday, as a free service provided by the Meigs County RSVP, Kroger
and the Meigs County SheriH'• Department Fingerprinting Is an
aid In finding abducted and missing children. DARE officer Mony
Wood of the sheriff's office, seated at right, fingerprinted Bran·
don Marcinko, 3, with some assistance from RSVP volunteers
Charlene Thomas, standing, and Evelyn Clark, seated at right.

_,

•

�f:ptnme~tary

OHIO Weuthcr

Monday, Augult 4, 1997

Mason County Fair
schedule

1\iesdly,Aua. s
AccuWeatlle... forecast for

T.stuGsMt 111 1948

By Jack Anderson

111 Court Stnel, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-892-2156 • Fax 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

.

Publlllller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

G-.111-ger

Letters to the editor
Defends Ronald McDonald House
Dear Edttor:
After rcad10g Ms Salyers letter to the cdttor m l~c July 25th edllton
rcganhng her expenence wnh the Ronald McDonald House I feel compelled
also to wntc of our cxpcncncc there
I am truly sony that her daughter was 111 and needed to be m Chddrcn s
Hospllal Hav10g a chdd 10 hospllal and so far away from home Js a traumauc
expenence for the parents as well as the chtld ~
When our granddaughter was transferred to
tldren s Hospttal on the
day of her btnh and rcqutrcd open heart surgery m days not only dtd we
feel blessed to lind such a canng stall at the h')'p1tal but were doubly
blessed that our daughter and her husband w~ referred to the Ronald
McDonald House
They stayed there for mnc days SJX years ago and agam for five days two
years ago when our granddaughter needed addtllonal surgery They have
nothmg but pratse for the facthty II IS a house that IS a home away from
home Yes, they do lllik that you pay I0 dollars a mghl tf you can Yes there
" a one-tunc fcc rcqmrcd to enter the parkmg lot, however, a pass " tssued
tf you must use your car and reentry IS free as often as needed And yes, a
refundable key deposll ts also requtrcd The House also allows you 15 m10
utes of free long dtstanee calls a day 10 addition to mak10g a rccetvmg calls
to the hospttalllli often a' needed If you want to cat your meals there you
can take m food and usc the kttchen however there IS a pantry stocked wtth
free food for anyone to usc All they ask ts that you trcal n as you would your
own home by deanmg up aft,cr yourselves and when vacating to dean your
room and bath wash the hnens usmg free machmcs and detergents thereby
makmg the room ready lor another occupant
My husband and I stayed 1n one of the nearby motels whtch offer reduced
rates to famtltes wnh relauves tn hospnal however the $90 our daughter and
son-tn-law patd at Ronald McDonald House for nme days would not have
covered two days at our motel Most of these motels also charge five dollars
a day for parktng and have a refundable key charge None of these motels arc
wnhtn walkmg dtstancc of the hospllal whtch ts another advantage for the
parents Ronald McDonald House IS wnhm walktng d1stancc and they pro
vtdc sccunty cscorls after dark to and Irom the hosptlal
Please understand that I am not cnhclllng Ms Salyer.; as I understand
thts was a \Cry stressful lime lor her I JUS! need to pmnt out what IS a\ ad
able and to relate our cxpcncm:cs there We were so thanktul sax years ago
lor thts 1acthly that my husband and I made a donal ton lo them lu show our
apprcCJ,IlJnn lor the wonderlul work they do
I abo do not hehcvc that .myone-Jcavmg and unable to pay for theu stay
would cvc1 he tullcd

Ph.:~ls('

lnok

at

the hcndllo,; the House ()Hers 11 you C\t.:f

have a chtld at Chtldrcn s Hosptt.ll ll11ghly recommend 11
C.tml)n McDamel
Purncmy

In

lht.: Idler to the t.:dllor wh1L h w 1s

puhhshcd m ynur July 2~ ~.:thllon rc g.m.h ng The Ron lid M~..:Don 1ld House
Two yean; ago my son was scm to Chtldrcn s H 1spnal tn Columbus due
to sc1zurcs that resulted frnm traum.1 .u tnrth My s&lt;Jn w.t ... two d.1ys old wht.:n

he lcll Hobct hosptl.ll and I was released the same day allcr ha' mg a Cac
sarcan scctmn Th1s resulted 10 .1 lol nl addltmnal stress lor

my cn11rc lam1

ly and myself
I personally found that the Ron,Jid McDon.Jid House was a hlcssmg
Upun arnvmg m Cnlumhu~ then.: were no rooms a\alluhk .lt the houM.: .md
my mother and I wen:: sent to .t hotel

10

downtown Columhus (al a

rl.:dU.,;:~.:d

rate ol $K9 a mghl) StKm aflcr the Ronald McDonald House called hack
wnh a room tor the nomm.1llcc of only $10.1 mght donation
Whtlc we were there they dtd ask that we clean up alter ourselves wh~eh
1n my optmon 1s only common courtesy lltc reasonmg hchmd thts IS that
the house docs not have a lull lime stafl only volunteers
As for the other charges the $l cost for a key IS returned at the end of
your stay tf the key ts returned and the $2 parkmg fcc IS npltonal (you do not
have to park tn the lot prov1dcd although 11 ts much &gt;afcr than parkmg your
car on LIVIngston Avenue)
In addtlton my mother and I were treated lo dmncrs at no costs provtdcd
by volunteer groups and there Is fond that the house pro\ tdes for you 10 cook
yourself 1f you wtsh Also soap shampoo and laundry detergent were avatlablc at no charge
The boxes hangmg outstde the McDonalds restaurants arc for the Ronald
McDonald ChantJCs The Ronald McDonald House " not the only chanty
thatlhts supports In order 10 support the Ronald McDonald House you must
send the money to the house llscll
In closmg my family and I arc very grateful to thts wonderful house as
arc many other famthcs who have utll11cd tls scrvtces Perhaps some people
shou ld not look a gtft house 1n the mouth
Mary E. Stem
Middleport

Drive-in holds no fond memories
Dear Ed1tor
I read hoth the arttclcs about dnvc ms
The last tnnc I went to a dnve·tn was m 1'174 I was workmg out ol
Washmgton DC I rom 1970 to 1974 I moved hack mlo my house m
Mason W Va and one ntghtl dcctdcd I would go tu the dnve m m Mason
In aho ut two mmutcs alter show !'ilart~.:d someone u~d spmc

4-:US!'i

words

1dcc 1dcd one more ttmc and I am gmng to lca'c In a \cry short tunc another haractcr slartcd cussmg so I rolled my glass down and hung up the
speaker on the hook and left
1 haven t been m a dnvc tn smcc
Op1e Cobb
Middleport

'

Today in history
By The Associated Press

and Jan Moiler
We could probably make a hvmg
stmply wntmg columns about
wasteful Department of Defense
programs Around nearly every cor
ncr al the Pentagon arc examples of
m1sused taxpayer money
Unfortunately whenever some
one calls on the Pentagon to ughtcn
JlS bell, DOD offictals arc qutck to
rug al our patnouc hcan strmgs
Defense btgwtgs and a lcg10n of
lawmakers wtlhng to defend them al
every tum -- shamelessly cry that
God and country are 1n danger of
exuncuon, and accuse the crntcs ol
trymg to weaken our national
defense But a more cffictenl mth·
tary would actually strengthen
natwnal sec unty and m1ght even
save taxpayers a few bucks. m the
process
Auditors from the General
Accountmg Office arc among the
Pentagon s btggcst antagoniSts
These calculator wteldmg accoun
tants have done to the Umtcd States
mthlary what Saddam Hu&lt;scm
couldn 1 shom 11 full of holes As
we vc reported numerous Urnes the
DOD s finances arc such a mess that

Today 1s Monday Aug 4 the 216th day of 1997 There arc r49 days left
m the year
Today s Htghhghl tn HIStory
On Aug 4 1944 Naz1 pohce ratded the secret annex ol a butldtng m
Amsterdam and arrested etght people mcludmg 15-year-old Anne Frank,

And so the Pentagon contmues
on liS meny way, shruggmg off billtorl$ of wasted dollars as a small
pnce to pay for havmg the world's
best m1htary
Mere recommendations aren t

g01ng to lead to reforms at the
Defense Depanment The Penta
gon s culture of waste hllli deep
roots
In re&lt;ent tesllmony before Congress a frustrated GAO oflictal
cxplamed that the key to reform at
the DOD ts auackmg the under
lymg causes ' of the Pentagon s
wastclul ways

Henry L Hmton Jr the GAO's
Asmtant Comptroller General for
Nahonal Sccunty and lnternallonal
Affatrs pomlcd to five areas where
fundamcntal c hangc needs to lake
place
Cultural hamcrs Hmton
hehcvcs that the Pentagon 1s
plagued hy a cultural rcststantc to
change Thts may cxplam why our
generals arc sttll lightmg the last
war

·sumc weaJXm ~ystcms arc

(sltll) bcmg developed and pro
duccd even though the Sovtctthrcat
upon whtch they arc JUstttied has
d1tn1mshcd," Hmton noted Some

they can t stand the scrulm¥ or an
mdcpendcnt audn
Because 11 doesn 't keep rehablc
records the Pcnlagon has hlllc 1dca
ol what s m tis Inventory As a
result the armed forces waste btl
hons of dollars on supphes that they
don t need In fact the GAO cslJ·
matcs that more than one half of the
DOD s $69 6 btlhon mvcntory ts
unnecessary Yet DOD olfic1als con
ltnuc lo buy unneeded Jlcms every
day
Ttmc a9d agam the GAO has
recommended that changes be made
to the Defense Department s bustness struclure But for the most pan
thts advtce ts tgnored DOD oflictals 'who don t hkc to be told what
to do by outstders dtsmtss GAO
aud1tors as nitpickers who can t sec
the htg ptcturc

one should tell the mthtary that the
Cold War ts over
•· No mcenttve to change "In the
DOD s culture " Htnton explatncd
"the suc~css of a l!lllnagcr"s career
depends more often on movmg pro.
grams and operattons through the
DOD process rather than on tmpro•·
mg the process The fact that a gtven
program costs more than estimated
takes longer to complete and does
not generate results or perform as
promtsed Js secondary to tmplc
mcntmg' a new program
Dclictcnt dala Agam DOD
records are m shambles Pentagon
offictals don l have rehahlc mforma
!JOn to help them make dcctstons on
whtch programs they should keep
and whtch they should scrap In
addiiJOn Hmton told lawmakers
rehahlc mfonnaltnn would greatly
a1d DOD olhotals tn rcsnlvmg proh
lcms WJlh erroneous ~nntrad pay
menls weapon system cost over
runs and cx~css1vc mfrustructurc
-· The Pentagon s goals and
ObJeCtives olten don t mah.:h tho"'c
of the m1lnary serv1ccs 11 nvc-rsccs

The Pentagon s overall goals arc
too hroad and unspecdJCd for the
services to lolluw H11ton warned

By Nat Hentoff
We had been talkmg about the
m~rcasmg numhcr of d1sscnts he
was wntmg on the Rehnqmst Coun
and I asked Jusltcc Brennan 11 he
was gelling dtscouragcd I should
ha.c known beucr He smtlcd and
satd the Court had these cycles hut
11 would come around agam He
paused and added
Look pal
we vc alway, known the framers
knew that llhcrl) 1s a lrLtg: tl~.: lhtng
:You ~.:an 1 g'l\c up
Th~n
~•

W1lham Brenn.m quoted

"'ccnc

tn

Yeats play

Cath

lcen Nt Hoohh m
Dtd you sec an old woman
~Oint! down the path' .tsh Bndgct
I du.l not rcphcs Patnl: k who

c;,Jmc.: mlO the house JUSt .alter the: old
woman had lc It II But I saw a

)Oung gn I .md she h.1d the walk of,,
queen

Jusucc Brennan looked londly
mltl th~ d1stam:c That passage ha.~
always meant J gn.:at dc.1l to me
H1;,; convu.: llon remamed that the
11\&amp;ng e\ol\lng Ctms11tutum
nill
frozen m lime more th::m 200 years
.1gu • w1ll surely reJUVenate llhcrty

tn the decades ahead Aller all
dcsp11c the hest ye,us or the Warren
Court

when Brennan was Hs

dcfinmg force so much had heen
left undone ~v~n then Let alone
Slnt:C

hegmntng than the end nl the strugglc
For .all h1s passmnate t:oncern
ahnut lnJUstlte ano . . s the ho.trd Ju . .tu.:c Brennan was not a llahty moral·
1st m person Talkmg to h1m as lire
qucnlly dad dunng hllti last years on

the Court I fell cnttrcly at e.tse m
the prcscm:e ol nne or the tnOltil pow
erlullrgurcs m the n.uwn He h.td nn
s1de as the Bnt1sh s&lt;:~y Gcnumdy
cunnus ahcml the mtcrest"' nl people
he talked to he was the mo~l m.1tu
r.dly lncndly person I h.t\c e\cr
know n
Brennan was also mtcr~..:stcd m
what hnppcnctl to some ol the hll

g.1nts m cases he had judged hlf
'"'lance Harry Kcytshtan .m
1ns1ructor who had hcen lm:d
hct:.\use he would not Slt!n .1 New

York state loyalty uath
Brennan m that IY67 ca"" Key
l!&lt;ihaan v Bnard ol Rq!t.:nls ol New

Ymk had ruled th,Jtthc loyalty oath
.md other anti suhvcrstve New York
sl,llc statutes \Julated F~rst Amend
m~.:nt

El~ven

speech

the urhan masses
Ugly mequ1t1cs
~.:untmue to mar the face nf our
nat1on We arc surely nc.1rcr the

years ago he si.ud

10 1

prolcclHm' tll

Tw~nly y~.ars

We do not yet ha\C JUstJCe

a~.:ad~tlll!.: lr~.:c

dum
I.Hcr Kcy1shmn

dl:t::ls~tm

dent ol either party couhJ get Scnatl.!
.trprm.ll 11 he or she were ·•r~unst

It wus ta.. .c.:matmg Brcnn.m
tofu me It was lhc hrstlnnc I h.1d
seen hnn OJ course 11 s r.m.:: th.kt I
ever sec the people m the t.:.ascs. we
dcal wuh Hcanng hun on the tclcv1
sum program I had nn 1dca that he
and nthcr lcachcrs would h.I\C lost
c\~rythmg 1l the case had gone 1hc
&lt;~her wuy
To Brcnnnn th~.: law was more
th~m hncls and nr.d argumenh He
may not ha'c lticcn m.my uf the hu
ganb; hcfore ham hut he scart.:h~..:d
tor a s..::nsc olth~m m th~..: ca.'\C . . that
rc ..lt.:hed h1m Whenever he w,as
ask~d lor hts dcllnttmn ol the Con
st1tutmn Ius ~answer w.1s The pro
tc~,;uon ol the t.hgnuy ol the hum.ln
hemg .md the rccognuum that every
IIIUJ\ tdual h.1s lundamental nghts
wh1d1 govt.:rnmcnt ~.:~tnnot deny
hun
I hat s why Brennan had su ueep
and .1h1dmg .1 rcvulston agamst &lt;ap
at~al pun1shm~.:n1 Exc~.:utmn hy th\:
,l,llc he s,ud treats mcmhers ol
the hum,m race as non humans
E\Cn the vtlc\t mnunal n:mams a
human J'KIS!'iC ... lt;:Cd nlt.:(lnllmtn hum.IO
dtgmly
By t.:ontr.lst no nne nn the pn;

•

the death pen.11ty
When Ju"'t11.:~ B~nno.~n rctan.:d
scYcn yc~us .tgn he smd 11 w.1s lh~,;
saddest d.1y ol my hie II w.ls s,u.J
lor the n~ttlon i.llti well even thnu!!h
rcl.lll\dy lew Ament:.tns knew any
thmg mmc .thout hun than Ius n.unc

11 lh II

'""!!

Brenn.m h
a qu1d scns~ ol
humor .1pprnl.lt~d 1rony He nught
IMvc savo1cd 1he pn.::sadcnt s tnhutc
to 1'\lm when hi.' d1~..:d JustH;C Bn.:n
nan"' (k\otmn to 1h..:: Ball ol Rtghts
mspm.:d t::ountkss young l1w stu
dents mdudmg 111yscll
L11ix D•ll Clmtun s c~ls~.:cr.uwn
ul l1.1hca"' corpu ... 1 H1!'i pcrsastcnt

devntwn l&lt;l the death pen.1hy' HIS
,Jrdenl "dvnc"cy nl greatly expanded
FBI w1rct.ap powers' Justice Brcn
nan s lq!ilcy mdudcc..l none ol th~o:st.:

hut the prestdcnt dues wnhrm Brcn
n,m s cunv~euun I hat hhcrty ts
mde~.:d

.1 lragale thmg

Nat Hentoff i• a nationally
renowned authonty on the Ftrst
Amendtmnt and the ""'' of th&lt;
Bill or R•~hts.

Americans have a healthy cynicism
By Joseph Spear

ales or cngagmg

Colummsts commc n1.llnr"' and

pollsters never seem to life nl tclhng
us we arc too t:ymcal lor our own

good
I lear I have lmlcd tn thJS duty as
I deeply beheve the puhhc has ahun
dam reason to be cyntcal Hell
1lu:re s 535 reasons to he

~.:ymca!

on

Cap1tol Htll nlonc
Oh thai s JUst too cy n~eal How
about 5l3 &gt;
Item TORRICELLI DEMON
STRATES
RI:MARKABLE
RECALL
Durmg the Se nate campa1gn
finance heanngs Sen Robert Tomcclh D N J hemoaned the Republican locus on Astan Amcntan con-

lnhutors As an ltnhan Amcncan he
smd he had been scnslllzcd to ethniC
Slcrcotypmg when Sen Estes Kelau
vcr turned the spot hght on the Malta
m I~51 It ts among the first mcm
ones I have of government Tom
cclh sa1d
He Wllli three days old when the
Kefauver hcann gs began
Well he satd when someone
pomted out thJS mcongrully I must
have been watchmg the vtdeotapes
when I wllli five
But vtdeotapes were not wtdely
avatlable unttlthe 1970s
OK maybe he recalled 11 from
scemg the film " He added "I thmk

D"Amato began mtroducmg himself as "the new and stnsl·
tiVt AI D'Amato" a11d told reporters that hiS change of altilude
"has nothrng to do w1th the fact that I m•ght be languiShmg 111
the polls and am lookmg to a11 election year."

In

lies

dlslor-

unns and ohluscauon The New
York Rcpuhltcan's constituents
app.trcntly d1d nnt agree wllh hts
harsh represent,nmns and hJS pnlls
plummeted Th~ AI DAmato
cxpcncnccd an a rupt «.:hangc nl

there m•gh! have hecn a larger pmnt
that was mtsscd
• Au contraarc Senator We get the

J101nl
Item HELMS HOLDS UP
WELD NOMINATION
Any tan mmdcd Rcpuhhcan
should be pleased that lormer Massachuseus govcm&lt;lf Wdham Weld
one ol the party s more hnlhant and
youthlul stars has hcen nommatcd
hy Prcstdcnt Cl mton to he ambassador 10 MeXJco Then agam Sen
Jesse Helms ts anythmg hut a latr
mmded Republican He ts an unpenous stubborn ossaltcd yahoo who
by dmt of scmorJty has nscn ln
become chatrman nl the Forctgn
Relauons Commtllce
As such Helms has veto power
over many thmgs, mcludmg amhassadonal appomtmcnts Btll Weld
may be a fiscal conscrvattve, but he
JS pro-chmcc and supports the medtcal usc of manJuana and that makes
htm a dndgum hbcral Helms
decreed that Weld wouldn't even get
a hcanng much less a vote
Let s see tf we can sum up lhts

umqucly Amcr1c.m t.1lc
A small tuwn hoy hccomcs a
radto and televtSinn cdnonahst who
ralls agam"'t Negro ·1!-tll~ttors ' He
takes hJS mouthlul-ol -marhles drawl
to Capnnl Htll where he makes a
«.:arccr nut nt stam.Jmg tall agamst
husmg, ~.:1v11 n~hts and the Marun
Luther K1ng Jr natwnal hohday He
warns us that Caspar Wemhergcr ts
tou dovtsh to be a gonJ sc«.:rctury ol
ddcnse He alerts us that Henry
K1ssmgcr 1s loo hhcral 10 he set.:rc
tary nl state He c.tuuons us th.ll
George Bush JS lno hheral 10 he
dtrc•l&lt;or ol the CIA
We dtdn l hsten then hut th1ngs
arc dllferent nnw Jesse has power
now No tdeologtcally •mpurc
amba.,.sadonal nommccs arc gomg
to silp hy Old Jess And the cnttrc
Unncd States Senate has 111 go along
hecausc, well those arc the rules
Item. 1 D AMATO PURSUES
NEW IMAGE
A year ago tbc man who chat red
the scemmgly mtermmablc Senate
Whllewater heanngs regularly and
loudly accused Chnlon and assoct-

'

he.Jrl 1 wo months agn he dec lured
that mdcpendcnl counsel Kenneth
St,Jrr h.1d d.una~ed hts crcdth1hty
and 111.11 the Antcnc,m puhilc had
grown s1ck

llhd

tucd ol Whatcwa

Rainy system will usher
in cooler Canadian air
By The Associated Press
Another Canadtan htgh agaJn wtll bnng cooler and drier atr to Oh10 tomght
, and Tuesday, forecasters satd
Temperatures tomght wtll dtp 1010 the 50s across much of the stale
Ohtoans wtll see a lot of sunshme on Tuesday when htghs wtll be m the
70s
The'fatr and unseasonably cool weather ts expected to conunue at least
through Thursday, the Nauonal Weather Serv1ee satd
Thunderstorms wllh strong wmds, hghlnmg and heavy raJn rumbled across
northern Ohto early today Wtlhams County tn northwest OhiO was pelted
wtth one-tnch haJJ
Ramfall was mostly under one mch but parts of Allen County measured
up to two mehes
The record-h1gh temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather sta
tJOn was 99 degrees tn 1955 whtle the record low was 49 tn 1950 Sunset
tontght wtll be at 8 43 p m and sunnse Tuesday at6 34 am
Weather forteliSt'
Tomght Mostly cloudy wnh a chance of showers Lows 60 to 65 North
west wmds 5 to 10 mph Chance of ram 30 percent
Tuesday Partly cloudy, breezy and less hum1d Htghs m the m•d 70s
Tuesday mght Mostly clear and cooler Lows 10 the lower 50s
Extended forecast:
Wednesday Mostly clear Htghs 10 the upper 70s
Thursday Mostly clear Mornmg lows 50 to 55 Htghs 1n the upper 70s
Fnday Partly cloudy Mommg lows 1n the upper 50s Htghs m the low
er 80s

Weekend accident sends 3
to area hospital with injuries
The three occupants of a ptckup
truck that crashed Saturday on Ohve
Townshtp Road 273 (Hudson) near
Reedsvtlle were taken to a Parkers
burg W Va , hospttal for treatment of
mmor vtstble Jn)Urtes the GalhaMetgs Post of the State Htghway
Patrol reponed
Transported to Camden Clark
Memonal Hospttal by the Metgs
EMS were dnvcr Bryan R Dalley
28 and passengers Mchssa D Dat
ley, 29, and Ben R Oatley, 25, all of
53140 Carpenter Road Portland
troopers satd
The patrol reported that Bryan
Oatley was northbound, five-tenths of
a mile south of State Route 681 at
12 30 p m when the ptckup went off
the rtght stde of the road struck a culvert and overturned once

Damage to the ptckup was severe
accordtng to the report
The patrol cued a Wtlmmgton
Del man for speed for condtttons

and vlluhty nl the arts t::ommumty

must he nurtured must he strength
cncd
D Anhlto hcgan mtrodu~,;mg h1m
sell ns the n~w and sens1t1vc AI

D 1\mato and told reporters that hts
change ol altitude has nothmg to
do wnh the lactthut I mtghl be fan
gutshmg m the polls and am lnokmg
to an elecuon year '
We rc a cyntcal people you say I
Indeed we arc We doubtlessly
owe our sanlly tn 11

Joseph Spear is a syndkated
writer for Newspaper Entei'Jirlse
Association

•

followmg a two vehtcle acctdenl Saturday on SR 681 tn Sctpto Townsh1p
Troopers satd Rohcn Wnght Ill
42 wa&lt; eastbound at2 30 p m when
!.!!• ptckup truck shd left on a nghthand curve and a struck a wcslbound
car dnven by Shelhe R Maurer: 17
570 S Second Ave Mtddleporl
Damage was shght to Wnght's
ptckup and moderate to the Maurer
velucle the report satd
Troopers also ctted a Mtddleport
man for speed for condtttons m a one
vehtcle acctdent Saturday on Rutland
Township Road 170 (Smllh Run)
Carl W McDade 18, 938 S Thtrd
Ave , was eastbound I 7 mtles west
of SR 143 at 8 p m when he lost
control of the ptckup he drove went
off the nght stde of the road and mto
a creek
The ptckup then overturned and
came to rest on tts wheels, accordmg
to the report Damage was severe,
troopers smd

Jackpot increasing to $24 million
CLEVELAND (AP)- No ltckets
pad all sJX numbers selected 1n Sat~rday s Super Lotto drawmg worth
520 mtlhon so the Jackpot for
Wednesday s drawmg wtll mcreli5C to
~24 mtlhon the Oh10 Lottery smd
Sales for the Super Louo game
1otaled $5,448 740 Sales for the
j(tcker game totaled $794,390

The Daily Sentinel

There were 124 Super Lotio lickcis WJlh live of the numbers and each
ts wonh $1 208 The 5,973 uckets
showmg four of the numbers arc each
worth $78
In the Ktckcr game one player
had the exact stx-dtgll number 10
claun $100 000
The ctght K1cker ttckels showmg
the ftrst hvc dtgus are each worth
$5 000 lltc 67 wuh the llrst four
numhers arc each worth $1 000

.
•~

•

TUFSDAY, AUG. S
9 am - Fa~r opens, Oag-raJsmg ceremony, Judgmg
II am - Jumor DaJry Goat Show, egg toss
Noon - Flower Show opens
I p m - Pedal Tractor Pull, Jumor Hoflie Show Tnal Class, Carmval opens
2 p m - Juntor DtvJSJon Rabbtl Judgtng
3 p m - Mark Wilhs, Mam Stage
5 p m - Market Hog Showmanship, Wahama H1gh School Band Concert

6 p m - Jun1or Market and Open Swme Show, Pomt Plell5ant Mtd
die School Band Concert, Greasy Ptg Catch
6 30 p m - Falf Queen Contest, Ma•n Stage An neue Hanes Award,
Amy Boggs Award
7 p m - Open Farm Tractor Pull
9 p m - Mark Wtlhs Ma10 Stage
II p m - Gates close

The Rev John H Icenhower 75, Letan WVa, dted Saturday, Aug 2,
1997 10 the Mount Carmel Medtcal Center, Columbus
Born March 8, 1922 m Mason WVa, son of the late GeorgoiFrednck
and Edna Ameha Thetss Icenhower, he was a member of the West Vug101a
Annual Conference of the Unned Methodtst Church
by Bob Hoeflich
Dunng hts m101Slry, he pastored the Faifplam Charge 10 Jackson Coun
ty W Va the Umon Charge m Mason County, Deep Creek Lake Charge 1n
Garret County, Md the Red Htll Murphytown Charges m Wood Coljllty
WVa the Good Shepherd Unned Methodtst Church and the Creston UmtIt has been reported that the U m- Chckers flom Athens County So 11
ed Methodtsl Church
versuy
of Rto Grande ts toymg wuh seems there wtll be a lot of dancmg
He auended Wahama Htgh School and was aU S Army veteran of World
the tdea of opemng a branch m Metgs gom on dunng thQ productton whtch
War II
has the theme Made m Amenca
He was also preceded m death by two ststers, Blanch Ehzaheth Bland and County
And, by the way, 86 year-old
The Metgs County Chamber of
Freda Icenhower, and a granddaughter Theresa Lynn Icenhower
McDowell, who ts a standup
Clara
Survtvmg are hts wtfe Wyoma A Hughes Icenhower three daughtefli and Commerce has announced that a
comtc
wtll be dehvenng a routme to
sons m law, Carolyn Loutse and Russ Brunton of Columbus Sharon Ann commumty meetmg has been set for
open
the
talenl show I hear shes fun
and Bob Murray of Mmeral Wells W Va and TAmmy Lea and Dave Wayne Sept 9 to alf 1deas for the destgn of
ny
ofWtlhamstown WVa, two sons and daughters m law Glenn A and Sue a program to lit the county s needs
AsSJStmg Paulette Hamson who
Among
the
Items
to
anse,
of
Icenhower of Letart and John W and Barbara J Icenhower of Santee, Cahf •
IS
m
charge of the show IS M1ddlc
IS
the
Interest
mvolved
10
a
course,
10 grandchtldren and five great grandchtldren, live SISters and brothers-mports
talented Sharon Hawley, who
branch
campus
m
Mctgs
County
as
law Lenore and John Dillard of Mount Vernon Luc1 lie and Wliham DavJs
teaches
vocal and ptano at her home
well
as
the
subjects
to
be
o(fered
the
of Mtddleport, Eleanor Knapp of West Columbta W Va Jane and James
Undoubtedly,
you II be seemg and
ume
of
classes
that
IS
evenmgs
or
Chapm of Danvtlle and Delores and Donald Gourley of WesterVIlle two
heanng
some
of
Sharon s vocal stu
weekendsand
preferences
for
the
brothers, Freddte Icenhower and Charles Icenhower both of Columbus, and
dents
dunng
the
show and Sharon
loca!Jon
of
the
branch
A
survey
form
several nteces and nephews
wtll
also
be
taktog
pan as a part of a
ts
also
be10g
prepared
to
help
wuh
the
Servtees wtll be at2 p m Wednesday 10 the Crow Hussell Funeral Home
vocal
tno
survey
on
the
needed
mrormatlon
Po101 Pleasant, W Va , wuh the Rev Ben Stevens offic1a!Jng Bunal wtll be
m the Kirkland Mcmonal Gardens Fnends may call at the funeral home from
Havmg fooled around wuh mustc
If you d hkc a souventr from the
2 4 and 6 9 p m Tuesday
1997 fa~r, you mtghl be mtcrcstcd m for the past x·number of years does
one of the coffee cups betng olfcrcd have 11 fnnge benefits
People know I hkc 11, and when
The cups feature a harness horse
racer on the stde and the cups sell for ever they dectdc lo dear out thctr
copy of theu child s b1rth certtficatc
Volleyball meeting
$5 each Cups arc also dated The sheet muSJc or hear a rccordtng, they
An orgamzattonal meellng for Soctal Secunty number and shot quanltly wtll be hmlled and you can thtnk I would hke they send these
Southern Jumor Htgh School seventh record For more mformauon contact sec ure your cup at the fan board thmgs along to me
and etghth grade g~rls mterestcd m the supenntendenl s office at 985 office on the Rock Spnngs FmrHarold Kaull of Mtddlcport Js the
playmg volleyball will he held Thurs- 4292
grounds I understand thJS IS the sec latest 10 provtdc me wnh a new stack
day 6 p m at Southern Htgh School Eastern Board
ond such offcrmg last years havmg of sheet muSic- a number of wh1ch
The Eastern Local Board of Edu
featured on the stde the ptcturcsquc I hadn l ~ccn before The Kauffs arc
cauon wtll meet Wednesday 7 p m and aged grandstand on the fatr gcumg ready to move from Mtddlc
Cheerleading clinic
A mandatory Eastern varstly at the Tuppers Plams school for the grounds Accordmg to present plans, port to be ncar a son at Westcm lie,
cheerleadmg chntc w1ll hcgm Tues purpose of constdcrabOn of person
the cups wtll become a so;rtes wtth a so I benefited from the move And
day 6 8 p m at Tuppers Plams Ele- nel, renovauon, and other busmess
Harold Wtll confined to a wheel
dtffcrenl vers10n olfcrcd each year
mentary School for anyone mterest
chatr bemg quuc til consistently
ed m trytng out for varsity cheer- Sets social
Four cloggmg groups w1ll be par makes tapes ol my kmd ol musJc and
leadmg For more mformauon call
Burhngham Modern Woodmen uctpaung m the local talent show to sees that I have them I thank both ol
Angte Rtgsby at 667-6742
wtll have a meeung and socml Sat
•
be the grandstand auracuon at th1s them
urday 6 30 p m at the Modem Wood
It seems that I shall have mus1c
years faJr at 8 30 p m on Tuesday,
1
SJHS football
men hall Saturday Camp wtll fur
wherever I go and thai s not a bad
Aug 12
All boys mterested m playmg ntsh sandwiches, salad melon and
The four groups 1ncl ude the M•d- thmg to have on hand Just plays hav
football for Southern Jumor Htgh dnnk Guests are welcome
mght Cloggers the Btg Bend Clog oc wuh my dc11rcsston
School are to report to the football
Do keep smthng
gers and the Shady Rtvcr Shufners.
butldmg Wednesday, 6 30 p m For Comedtan coming
all of Metgs County plus the Ctty
more mformatton, call Tom Smllh at
Mtkc Warnke Ltve wtll he at the
949-2955
Ash Street Freewtll Bapllsl Church
399 Ash St M1ddleport, Perfor
mances by the Chnsuan comedtan
Southern golf
Southern Htgh School students wtll be on Fnday, Saturday and S4n
provtder, Southeastern Ohto Spec tal
(Continued from Page 1)
plamng to play on the golf team arc day at 7 p m A love offenng wtll he
The board approved prufesstonal Educalton Regtonal Resource Center
to meet at the Metgs Golf Club on rece1vcd
growth expenses for Dccdrah Stm for spec tal education servtces BP for
Wednesday 5 p m Questtons should
mons, Stephen Weber Jantcc Weber gasohnc. dtescl and heatmg ml, G &amp;
be dtrccted to Jtm Anderson 949Sandy Needs Sheryl Roush M for lubncallng grease, transmts
2534 or 992 3671
Katheleen Peyton and Cmdy Lmton SJOn 011 and 15W40 od Malone Tuc
\
m
ac&lt;.:ordam.:c With the ma..,tcr con Servtcc for ures and tubes,
No mJuncs or Cllat•ons were
Kindergarten onentalloft
Broughton Datry for datry products
reponed followmg a one-car acctdent tract
Elllilern kmdergarten oncntauon
and
Hcmcr s Bakery for baked goods,
Russell
Swart
and
Brantly
Bentz
on State Route 124 near Salem Cen
mecungs wtll be held Aug I 8 at
•
Authonzcd change orders for the
were
approved
a"'
students
part1c1
ter Saturday around 2 p m
Chester Elementary School at 9 a m ,
dtstncl
s butldmg plan,
Karen E Saltsman 21 Ractne, patulg m open enrollment
and at Tuppers Plams Elementary
•
Set
the boards next mcctmg for
The board also
was eastbound on SR 124 when she
School at II a m If you have not pre
Monday,
Aug 25 at 6 10 p m at the
•
Approved
~ontracts
wtlh
MGM
lost control of her Dodge Anes on the
regiStered your chtld for kindergarten
Dnve
R1ght
us
dnv~rs
cducauon
htgh
school
hbrary
wet pavement, accordmg to a Metgs
please plan to attend Parents who dtd
County Shenlfs Depanment report
'
nol attend spnng regtslratJOn or who
The car then shd mto a dttch sus
arc new to the d1slncl w11l need a
tammg mndcrate damage
Envtronmental orgamzauons from
CHARLESTON W Va - Hear
West
Vtrgmw and Ohlo and one IOdtmgs he fore the Au Qualny Board of
vtdual
hied appeals on the permn
West V~rgmta on a perm•t ISsued to
wnh
the
atr quahty board m July
the Apple Grove P.ulp and Paper Co
RACINE
Unns of the Metgs County Emer
1996
Hearmgs
have hcen held wtlh
arc e&lt;pectcd lA • resume Tuesday
6 22 p m Saturday VFD and
gency Mcdtcal Servtcc logge 16 calls
stnce
July 1996 wtlh
mtcrmtllcnlly
mormng
for asSistance Saturday and Sunday squad to Elm and Thud streets
appellants
and
state
otfictals pre
The West Vugtma Office of Atr
motor vchtcle acctdent Preston Har Qualny ISSUed an au perm1l to Par- senung wnnesses
Un1ts respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
mon refused treatment
The slate JS expected to present
sons &amp; Wh11tcmorc a pnvately
3 57 am Saturday Buuernut
REEDSVILLE
closmg
arguments m the hcartng
owned mulunauonal company based
12 55 p m Saturday VFD and
Avenue Pomeroy Shawn Pnce Vet
Wednesday
hut n could he months
m New York m June 1996
squad to Hudson Road motor vch1
crans Memonal Hospnal,
before a final dectsJOn IS made on the
II 10 am Saturday, Rock.spnngs elc acctdent, Mtssy Oatley and Ben
appeals Stale olhCJals and appellants
RehabthtatJOn Center Pomeroy, Opal Jamm Dadey Camden Clark Memo
must rcv1ew transctlpls of tcs11mony
(Continued from Page 1)
nal Hospttal Tuppers Plams sq&lt;tiid
Carey VMH
and make wnucn statements mtcr
to shtft from reliance on property tax
1 52 p m Saturday New Hope asmted
prelmg the cv1dcncc
cs to a system that wtll ehmmate per
Road, Chester Telltha Casto Holzer
RUTLAND
3 38 am Sunday Mount Unton puptl spendmg gaps between poor
Medtcal Center,
and wealthy dtstncts
3 55 p m Saturday Gold Rtdge Road, Wanda Sweanngen HMC
The leader ol the coahuon wei
Road Pomeroy Mtssy Russell treatSYRACUSE
121 p m Sunday, SR 124 James corned the Legtslature's mact10n
ed at the scene ,
The bestthmg that could happen
9.;50 p m Saturday SDu!h Second Russell treated at the scene, Central
here tomght JS nothmg Wtlham
Avenue, M1ddlcpon Barbara Mullen DISpatch squad asSISted
Phtlhs cxccuuve dtrcctor of the Ohto
HMC,
CoaiJUon for Equny &amp; Adequacy,
II 23 a m Sunday State Route
satd before the House vote
681 Darwm motorcycle acctdent
Holzer Medtc~ Center
'That would force lcgtslalors to
Ronald Herdman VMH Pomeroy
Dtscharges
Aug
I
Harry
Bar
go
back
to the drawmg board
VFD asststed
ton
Mtldred
Randolph
Regtna
Democrats
hope that mcludes
12 34pm Sunday SR 124 Syra
Edwards,
Frances
them
Mulhns
Norma
euse, James Eakms VMH Syracuse
Grady, John Adkins Clarence Free
1 thmk they learned thetr lessquad asSJsted,
man
son,
· satd Senate Mmonty Leader
1 40 p m Sunday, SR 1 Marvm
Bu1h
Mr
and
Mrs
John
Sayre.
Ben
Espy
of Col~mbus
Yeauger HMC ,
daughter
Pomt
Pleasant
W
Va
Senate
Democrats
who had com4 04 p m Sunday Rockspnngs
Dtscharges
Aug.
2
John
plamed
that
they
were
not consulted
Rehabthtauon Center Loutse Bartels,
Adkms,
Gerald
me
Roberts
Mrs
dunng
the
des1gn
of
the
fundmg plan,
VMH
Bradley
Dmguss
and
daughter
hope
to
gel
another
look
for thetr own
8 42 p m Sunday, Mount Umon
Mtranda
Johnson
Mtsty
Morga~posal
Road, Wanda Sweanngen HMC
Mrs John Sayre and daughter
_ J oubbed Plan B ' the proposal
Rutl~nd squad asststed
Btrth - Mr and Mrs James would mclude expandmg the sales
MIDDLEPORT
taK to servtces - such as autlrney
1 26 p m Saturday, Mulberry Darst son, Galhpohs Feny, W Va
DISCharges Aug 3 - George fees and hatrcuts - and reducmg resStreet, Joey Blake VMH,
2 31 p m Saturday, Hamsonvtlle Harper June Argabnght, Lon Wat- 1denual property taxes more than recson
ommended by ellher the Senate or
Bnan Haggy HMC
(Published with permiSSion)
Vomovtch proposals

Published every afternoon Monday lhrouKh
fdllay Ill Coun St Pom~roy Oh1o by th~

Ohkt Valley Publtshtng Compiny/Cianncll Co
Ponwroy Ollto 4S71i9 Ph 992 21Sft Second
'IIIH postaac pllld 11 Pomeroy Ohto

Mtllbtrr ne Alloct•ted Pre"

1nd tM

Ohio

New.,aper A•IC)!:Iattort.

fOSTMASTERt Send flddrru COirectlons to
Th~

D•llr Scntt~l 111 Court St Pomcrety
Ohto457M

Meigs announcements

Eastern Local Board

Accident reported

Pulp mill hearings resume Tuesday

Squads answer 16 calls

School funding

IUSPS liJ 960)

ter
In hiS prcvwus hie D Amal(o
hashed the Nattonal Endowment lor
the 1\rts lor tis supppn ol "abhorrent art Recently he stood on the
steps ol the Mctropolnan Museum
ol 1\rt and declared thai the health

Rev. John H. Icenhower

.

Beat of the 'Bend ...

\

sent court has rcfu.,ed as Brennan
dtd In he an accomphcc m what
Harry Blackman called
the
machmery ul death And II JS ddh
~.:ult ln unagmc that anyone nnw
nnmanalcd lo lhc Court hy a prcs1

I•

WVA

(

"as on a telcvtscd Btll Moyers
sencs 'In Search of the Consltlu
!ton I saw Brennan at the Court
"1on aher the program atrcd and he
was cx~.:Jtcd at havm~ seen lhc a~.:IU·
al pcrsnn hch1nd the name on h1s

Ada Dtlcher, 72, Albany, dted Sunday, Aug 3, 1997 m 0 Bleness Memonal Hospnal Athens
Born May I. 1919 m Rtpley, WVa, daughter of the late Thornton and
Virgmta Eamestme Skeen Counts she was a member of the Metgs County
Semor CtUzens and the Black Oak Bap11s1 Church
Survtvmg are her husband, W Eugene Dtlcher, a daughter V Yvonne
Anderson of Albany, two grandchtldren and four great-grandehtldren, a SISter Dolly Ktsor of Kentuck, W Va , and several nteces and nephews
In addtlton to her parents, sbe was preceded mdeath by a daughter, Annette
Dtlcher, a son m law, Jerry Anderson a granddaughter, Kelly Rtley and four
brothers
Servtces wtll be I p m Wednesday m the Btgony Jordan Funeral Home
Albany, wnh the Rev Marvm Markms oflictatmg Bunal will be m the Wells
Cemetery, Pagevtlle Fnends may call at the funeral home from 5-9 p m Tuesday

•leolumbusl7s•l

Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Svndtcate, Inc

ON

equal and practtcal for the poor for
the members of mmonty groups for
the cnmtnally accused for the dts
placed persons of the technologtcal
revolutiOn for ahenatcd youth for

!Mansfield !11•

well he lnl!'slun nnpnssthlc

All
FOR(

I

•

that managers (from the dtffcrent
servtces) lack straightforward road
nsk operaung
maps ' and
autonomously rather than collectiVe
ly
Lack ol ""'ountahthly
Dclcnse olhe~als arc seldom held
accountable for waste When a Pen
tagon program JS runnmg poorly. 11 s
rare that anyone gets SJngled out for
blame or repnsal Instead the people rcspon .. hlc may stmply be trans
fcrrcd 10 another post, where they
can wreak more havoc Satd Htlton
Accountah1h1y helps to guarantee
that datly acnv111cs rcmam focused
on at.:htevmg the outcomes that
DOD ts Jrymg to aumn
New Dclcnsc Secretary Wtlham
S Cohen JSn l a product of the mth·
tarv culture A lormcr Rcpubhcan
senator known lor hiS Independence
Cohen has \owed to root out the
wa•le that hampers DOD operations
We wt'h hun luck The mlillary and
waste have gone hand and hand for
decades Changmg thai mtght very

A protector of the living Constitution

!rom

Don't look gift horse in the mouth
Dear Ed nor
I am wntmg thi!'O. lclh.:r m rcsponsl:

Ada Dilcher

DOD waste is a military tradition

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 4, 1997

Stocks

Hospital news

SINGlE COPY PRIU

~ Pa•ly

)j

Cents

I~ubscrlbln ftOI dt •lrln• let pay Ihe can~er may
r#mlt

In lldY•ttet dl111.1 to Tile UariJ St-nt1ncl

p ..-a,ah ball• Cre4it Will be

q11 1 rhrce •I• or
~·.,en c•rrkr tKh

wnk

rfo •ubac:rlpUon p)' m•al

~rm1ttcd rn

"'!Kre home ~"'1' Mr\'klt l••'~•llablt

areas

Pubtl•lwr h!IIJYII lltf rll"' let ~!ill nics dur
Ina ae ••b~erlpl~i"' ,_na $11bKnpuon rstc
cll11nat• rnay 1:11 llflPIDntctl!lll~ br daanJ•nJ t~
dur~~tlan

of the 'u~SQflpjlon

MAIL!Ut... ~JI"rlONS

•••ldtt"~"" c,...,
r

ll Wcoko

Sl7l0

21'i Weeki

SSl K2

ll Wcoko

S1Ul..!6

lbtfl

ISW..U
26 W,.U

llll'coko
,I

Doll* .... c....,

,,1,.1

h

I

,

~

..

$292.5
S56 6H

$10912

••'

l

�-

SpOrts

The

Daily Sentin~}

,•

Niekro and Lasorda._ head
Cooperstown's C_
lass of '97

NEW INDUCTEES • Phil Nlelcro, left, and

tommy l..a8orda paee with their Hall of Fame

plaques after

ceiemonles SUnday In Coopar-

lltown, N. Y. (AP)

232. The returning Hall of Famers
'included Stan Musial, who played
' "TakeMeOutToTheBallgame,"on
:his harmonica, and ailing Ted
·Williams, who received a standins
·ovation.
.
Joanne Fox accepted for her late
husband, a 12-time All-Star, and
Stella Wells accepted for her father.
the 14th Negro League pla~er inducted. Longtime baseball writer Charley
;Feeney and broadcaster Jimmy Dudley were honored with media awards.
Lasorda, whose teams won I ,599
games in 20 seasons, including world
championships in 1981 and 1988,
was the 14th manager honored.
He said unless managers win,
they become ex-managers in a hurry.
With that in mind, be recalled going
to church one Sunday morning in
Cincinnati. Across the cathedral was
Johnny McNamara then manager of
the Reds.
'
"I knew why he was there and be
knew why I was there," Lasorda said.
"After Mass, he said, 'Wait for me
outside, I'll be risht out"'
Lasorda peeked into the sanctuary
and saw his rival light a candle. Wben
McNamara left, the Dodgers manager said he went in and blew out the

I

By CAllfERINE BRALEY

candle. "I knew he wasn 'tlighting it
for a dead relative," Lasorda said.
· That day the Dodgers routed the
Reds 13-2 with Lasorda teasing
McNamara about the extinguished
candle. That winter he heard from
McNamara, who was on a trip to
Rome.
"He told me, 'Try blowing this
:One out! '" Lasorda said.
Niekro, who grew up in coal nliner region of eastern Ohio, cited an old
country proverb. "If you see a turtle
sitting on a fence pos~" he said, "you · ·
lrnow it didn't get there by itself.
·
· "I didn't get bere by myself."
·
' The pitcher they called Knucksie · :
won 318 sames in 24 seasons usins : :
a gimmick pitch he learned from his :
father. He talked about his brother.
Joe, who also made it to majors as a ;,:
knuckleball specialist.
·~
"We faced each other nine •
times," Niekro said. "He won five
and I. won four. That's the way it
should be. He's the baby. He got one
;hit off me. He hit one home run in the
~ig leagues and it was off me. Won a
. !game, too."
After leaving the majors, Niekro
became ftrst the manager and ·now
general manager of the Colorado Sil,ver Bullets.

l

Vizcaino's.homer may
be Giants' biggest hi.t
By JOE KAY
"I guessed right," Vizcaino said. will draw second-guessing. He chose
AP Sporte Writer
guessed he would throw me a first- to bri~g on closer Jeff Shaw (3-1),
CINCINNATI --'- The puniest pitch fastball. I never do that. I guess who had pitched two innings the preslugger in the San Francisco Gian!S' I'm going to have to stan guessing viousday. Shaw looked tired. retiring
lineup delivered their. biggest hit of more often."
only one of the eight batters he faced
the season.
The shortstop not only guessed as the Giants rallied for five runs.
Jose Vizcaino's two-run homer right, he hit it right - over the rightThe inning featured Hamilton's
only the I5th of his career - set up . field wall for his first homer since tie-breaking single, a bad-hop RBI
an 8-3 victory in 10 innings Sunday Jime 27, a span of 128 at-bats, In the double · by Barry Bonds, Greene's
over the Cincinnati Reds that was sig- Giants' dugou~ there was.a sense,that error at third base and a soft double
nificant as well as stirring.
the game- and maybe even the sea- by Snow that landed just inside tbe
The Giants' 3 ht come-from- son - had turned.
third-base foul line.
behind win ended up bre&amp;king the tie
"That was probably the biggest hit
"I was all right," said Shaw, who
for first place in the NL West, where for him ~d for us at the same time had retired the last II bancrs be faced
Los Angeles fell a game back. San this year," Baker said.
beading into Sunday's appearance. "I
Francisco bas been in first since.May ' Vizcaino has only one other won't say I was totally fresh. but !felt
11. a span of 85 days that seemed m important homer in the major all right."
o
jeopardy until Vizcaino came leagues, a · game-winner in extra
Asked if be thought the inning
through.
·
innings four years ago. He deemed! l a sa case of bad luck, Shaw said
"That was huge. That was big," this one more important.
·
" at sums it up."
·
'
manager Dusty Baker said. : ·~e did"With the pennant race, for me
'Jeff said be could have gone two
n't play too well at the begmnmg of. - this js the bigger one," Vizc!'ino said.
three innings," McKeon said. "He
PICKED OFF ·San Frencleco's Bill Mueller,
In Cincinnati. The Olllnts rallied frOm 1 3-0
the same."
·
,
The Reds never recovered from it, only threw 18 pitcheS(Saturday) in
left, plcka off Cincinnati's Barry Larlcln who
dllflclt to thump the Reds 8-3 In 10 Innings.
The Reds went up 3-0 as Reggie falling for the lith time In ISsames. two innings."
tried to lltlllll third In the sixth Inning Sunday
Baker knew better. When VizSanders hom.ered for the third con- Their I..St.re.al hope died when censecutive game off Shawn Estes and ter fielder Darryl Hamilton ran down caino's homer iied it, he figured the
the Giants did nothing against Mike Willie Greene's fly ball to the W3!11· · Giants were in control because they
Notes: Estes gave up five hits and two wins in three games. Wilson · Schourek·, who had a cortisone shot
Morgan. The right-hander shut ·San ing track to end the eighth. ·
were into tbe Reds' tired bullpen.
Francisco out until J.T. Snow doubled
Robeno Hernandez (1-0), one of
''I'm sure they didn't want to use .three runs overS 1-3 innings, con- Alvarez got the victory on Friday Sunday in his sore left elbow......
home a run in the seventh.
the three pitchers obtained in a trade Shaw because hC had thrown two tinuing his post-All Star game strug· night.. Danny Darwin, the other pitch- Reliever Mike Remlinger will stan Reliever Stan Belinda gave up an with the Ghicago White Sox last innings yesterday,'' Baker said. gles. He is 2·2 with a 5.40 ERA in ·er acquired, is scheduled to stan against San Diego on Tuesday in ·
eighth-inning single and Vizcaino Thursday, pitched two-hit ball over "Someiimes you do what you've got five starts since the All-Star game, in Tuesday.... The Reds called up Gio- place of Dave Burba, who is still
came up one out later, playing a two innings to keep it deadlocked to do. I felt good about the game which he gave up the game-winning vanni Carrara from Triple-A lndi· bothered by a stiff back. Remlinger
hunch. The Reds had been staning through nine.
when we got into the bullpens homer to Cleveland's Sandy Alomar. anapolis. Carrara will start against the , retired two batters in relief Sunday.
him off
fastballs, so be looked
In the I Oth, int~rim Reds manag· because our bullpen was fresherthan ... The Giants' trade has paid off with Giants today in place of Pete
er Jack McKeon made a decision that theirs."

·:I

Goodwin paces Rangers' B-:7 victory
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) _:_ tency."
load the bases. ·
The Texas Rangers acquired Tom
Goodwin started the night in a 2Mark Mclemore hit a two-run
Goodwin from the Kansas City Roy- for-22 slump, but he had tbJ:ee singles double down the left field line to tie
als on July 25 to add a dimension and a double to pace the Rangers the game at 7.
they badly lacked: speed. Goodwin's offense. The l&lt;ey play, however, was
Jackson intentionally walked
flying feet paid their first dividend for taking a chance on Will Clark's fly Rusty Greer to reload the bases. Juan
ball with one out in the ninth.
the Ransers on Sunday night.
Gonzalez popped to short, but Clark
Goodwin matched a career-high
· "There's not too many guys who lifted a fly ball to shallow center field
with four hits and raced home from would have scored on that sacrifice and Goodwin beat Marquis Gris- .
third with the winning run on a shal- . fly ,I' Rangers manager Johnny Oates ·som's throw home.
low fly ball to cap a three-run ninth said. "It was nice to have him on
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
inning rally as the Rangers snapped third base in that situation."
said the Rangers were definitely
Mike Jackson (2-3) hit pinch-hit- samblins on the play.
a five-game losing streak with an 87 victory over the Cleveland Indians. ter Domingo Cedeno with an 0-2
"If the throw's on line, he's out," ·
"Being able to run puts pressure pitch to open the ninth and Cedeno Hargrove said. "They rolled tbe dice
on the defense," Goodwin said. went to second on Jim Leyritz' pinch and it came up good. Given that sit"That's pan of the game I can be suc- single. Goodwin, .attempting to sac- uation, I would have tried it too."
cessful at. Hopefully this is a stepping rifice the runners to second and
Jackson blew his second save in
stone for me to have some consis- third, ended up with a bunt single to 16 opportunities. Hargrove said one

of the keys to the inning was Jackson
hitting Cedeno.
•·
"The big thing was that he hit ·
Cedeno on an 0-2 pitch," Hargrove
said. "You really have to get that first .
guy out."
·
John Wetteland (6·2) gave up a
homer to Sandy Alomar in the ninth,
but picked up the victory.
Brian ·Giles homered twice and
drove in three runs for the Indians.
Cleveland took a 1-0 lead in .the
first off Tanyon Sturtze when Marquis Grissom led off with a triple and
scored on Giles' sacrifice fly. Texas
tied it in the first on Gonzalez's RBI
triple.
.
The Indians went it front 2-1 with
a run in the ·second ·

Scoreboard
· Baltimore
New York
Detroit

,

Ton&gt;mo
Boslon

w

69
63

't

"
'2

w

Cleveland
Milwlllkee
Chicq:o

,..

~

MillnCIO&amp;I,

'3
49

KusuOty

6

Aaaheim
s..n~

r....

w

L'
39

4'

'7
'7
l9

Bait IM•ilion

Pet.

Ga

.639
.583

6

.472
.472
.468

Ctntr•l
L
48

Dlv~

Pel.

,..

.500-

. ll

.491

60

4~

61 .

18
18
18 1/2

GB

.!IJS

.434

4
l

9 1/2
tlt/2

M""'-f'• G••a

Cleveland (Nagy 10.7) m Detroit (Silndtrs .\-8), 7:05p.m.
Toronro (Carpenter 0-2) 111 MinMsOia (Rad~ 1$-!1), S:ds p.m.
N.Y. Yankee$ (Wells 11 ·5) 11 Kansms City (Ru.ch 3·71. 8:05p.m.
Bos1on (Suppan 5-1,)) at Texu (Burkett 7-10), 8:JS p.m.

L

Pct.

6l
62

48
48

-~

~

58
70

.4113
.381

.~

GB

Cleveland II Detroit. I :05 p.m.
Toronto II MiDfte501&amp;. I :I$ p.m.
Chicago While S91 8l Oakland. 3:15 p.m.
N.Y. Yankca II Kusas City, 8:0S p.m.

Milwaukt:ie M Aflaheim, 10:05 p.m.
Ballimcwe 11 Seatdc, 10:05 p.m.

w
1\llllltl
Aoridl
New York
M .......

L

70

42

63
61

46

Ptlillddphia

3l

w

L

HOilltOa

,.

lO

Pit....h
Sl. LoWs

61
ll

Bllti.,...7, Ooldao4l

CinciDDIIi

411

Clo&gt;etond • ,..., (o)

OW:qo

44

o.tdond

43

s..n.IQ'•G._

19 1/2

Late Oamu Not: lacluded
Dccroit ~ . TororMo 2

Kwu City l, Botton l
N.Y. Y...... 6,Mi...,...l
s..n~ 6. Mitw..bc l
Chicqo Wbitc So1. • Aalhdm (n)

l7

~

,
I

San Diego
Colorado

60
l3
l2

. Suncl.y's Games
Late Game Nollncludcd

L

so
so

l8
60

Pet.
. l~

.l4l
.417
.464

Ga
lfl

8
' ·9 t/2

Pinsbu.gh 8, Cot...OO 4

Bostoo at Tel!u, 8 : 3~ p.m.

48
l2
73

It

~

w

. 61

Los Anp:lu

Milwaukee (Karl6-10) ill Anftim (Hill 6-8), 10.05 p.m. ·
Only gamestcbcdulcd
'l'landi!J'• Games

Will Dirillon

WtSI Dl\'isictn

San Francisco

National Ln1~~e
EN&amp; Dh·ision
Pet.
GB
.62l
.578
s 112
.l60
7 t/2
.523
tl t/2
.)24
33
Ctntrlil Dlwbk»n
Pct.
GB
. l~

.495
.473

6

l8
62

.426

81/2
tlt/2

67

Jl6

17

Montreal 6. San Dieao 3
Pbilldelphi• I0, St. Louit I
San Francisco 8, Cincinllllli 1 10 irminp
Houscon 3, N.Y. Mtb 2
Aoridl 8, Atlanta 4
Los Anltlel at Chita&amp;o Cubs (o)

Monrt.y'sCtu~~es

Houstoo {Hok 7·7) • Florida (Hemlndciz 5-0), 7:0!1 p.m.
· Colorado (Cutillo 8-9) II.Philadelphia (Green 1-1 ), 7:35p.m.

Atlanta (S_mohz 9-9) a1 PitUburJh (Cooke 8-10), 7:3!1 p.m.
Su ~·sc:o (Ruecc:r 7-S) at Onclanati (Carnra 0.0), 7: 3~ p.m.
SL Lou11 (AybarO.O) ll N.Y. Mcts (Reed 'J..t). 7:40p.m.
Only aarnca scheduled ·
1\ttldly'J G1mts
HollSlon ll florida, 1:M p.m.

Atlantl at Pinsburp, 7:3!1 p.'m.
San Dieso 111. Cincinnati, 7:3!1 p.m.
Los AnaeleJ a1 Montre~l , 1:35 p.m.
Colorado 11 Phillldelphi•, 7:35 p.m.
St Lwi• B1 N.Y. Mas, NO p.m.
San Francisco at Oicaao Cub•. 8:0.5 p.m.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

.

.OVP NEWS STAFF
·There were crafts and games and silly songs, but the Tri-State Area Council's M-G-M District' s Cub Day Camp had a different twist this year. Nearly 60 boys, ranging in age from six to II, took the rypical Cub Scout camp
experience out of this world with a space theme,
This week cubs from Gallia, Meigs, and Mason counties descended upon
the Moo!" Lodge in Point.Pleasant to advance in scouting while learning
important lesson. Many of those lessons were not always so evident to the
youngsters.
·
"What are you learning?" quizzed M-G-M's Scout Executive Barry
Hamm to·a group of Tiger Cubs as they worked their way out of a giant tangle knot - amass of hands and elbows
.
entwined.
"We're learning we' re stuck! We can 't
get loose." shouted one of the boys. ·
Hamm• chuckled, and then offered
some suggestions. "If you move this
way, and he comes up under your arm,
you'll see something different."
With a few moves the boys quickly
freed themselves. and to their surprise,
made two separate circles.
"See, we learned that we can work it
out. We can work as a team and sol~e
our problems." Hamm remarked.
The giant tangle knot is an exerCise
Hamm uses in advanced COPE (Chal lenging Outdoor Personal Experience)
training with adults and Boy ·scouts. It
is used to build communicationsskills
Andrew Garnes of ~roy, an~ group c.ooperation.
Everythmg we do here has a purpaints his wOoden tool box at
cub camp.
pose. The boys might think they are
just having fun, but we're teaching
lessons that they can use in so many different areas of life."
Camp Director Connie McCormick at!fees. The boys are exploring the
wonders of space while doing crafts and playing games. "We' re going to
1lave an official astronauts suit, complete with helmet and visor for the boys
to see. Our nature study of the constellations ties in with our tin-punch craft
design of stars on a tin can. At our camp fire on Friday night, we' ll shine
them on a backboard. and in tum work on showmanship."
The scouts are divided into t!fOUps with names like space cadets, comets,
and pathfinders. By the end of the week. they will know about astronauts of
the past, life in space, and the current .drama of tbe Mars and Mir ventures.
McCormick
credits her staff of. parent volunteers with making camp so
.
exciting.
. "We have 24 adult leaders here. They did a lot of research work and spent
a lot of time at the library. Plus, we went over each advancement and rank
requirement and planned activities to help the boys with their progression of
SCO)Iting.''
The ·cubs still work on the skills that have become the cornerstone of
scouting. The boys learn about citizenship and flag respect and doing good
turns.
.
And what would camp be with handcrafts? Not fun according to Donna

\.

\

Cubs from Gallla, Meigs, end Mason counties do bike rllplllra lor activity pins In the handymanraqulrements

scouting.

Henson as she readied a table of plain wooden tool boxes waiting for the
artistic touches of a paintbrush. Henson's Pack 262 from Point. Pleasant will
enter their handiwork in the Cub Scout exhibit at the Mason County Fair.
She admits turning her living room over to cub scout craft projects, but
wouldn' t have it any other way.
"They are realiy turning out great. and tlje boys are doins such a good job
painting tbem . It is fun to see them having a good time and learning at the
same time."
.
Parents were invited to the Friday night camp fire and hot dog roast. The
parents played the games and did some of the activities the cubs, have
enjoyed all week. There was a family camp out at the Moose Lodge on Friday night.
As McCormick noted, "The whole camp is an attribute to the great dedication of the parents and adult leaders. We couldn't do it without them . We
have a good program with good people."
•
Langesville resident Joanne Council heartily agrees. As the mother of
three adult sons, who all obtained the rank of Eagle Scout, she is back working with cubs. "I'm doing it all again. It is a·wonderful program that really
makes a differenc'e with boys."
For more information on joining tbe adventure of scouting, call M-G-M
Scout Executive Barry Hamm at (614) 446-4430.
··

Memberll of Pack 249, Pomaroy, ara hllrd at work' on tool boxe~. The boys build tha boxes,while learning how to use tools.

·,

AmerbnLupe
ByTht,._edl'ml

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

M-G-M Cub Camp proves to be out of this world

Monday, August 4, 1997

By HAL BOCK
AP 8porta Wrtt.r
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y- On
the day be was inducted into the Hall
of Fatn~, longtime Los Angeles
Dodsers manaser Tonuny Lasorda
. remembered how, as a kid, he had
dreamed of pitching for the New.
York Yankees.
"I dreamed of playins with Dick. ey, DiMasgio. Gehrig,'' he said.
"And then my mother would wake
me up and say, 'It's time to go to
school.'
·
"That dream was so real, and after
what's happened to me now, this is
unbelievable. the t!fCBtesl thing in my
lifetime. ~e Hall of Fame is eternity. I am hvmg a dream. I only hope
~omehody ~~s~ 't shake me and say:
Wake up. tt s ume to go to school.
"Fifty-t.wo years aso. I left Norristown, Pa., as an aspiring left·
htlllded pitcher, scared to death. Now
I come into Cooperstown and I'm
still ~ared to death."
W1th 35 Hall of Famers returning
for the c~monies , Las~ knucklebaII p1tcher Phtl N1ekro, and
mfielders Nelhe Fox and WJ!tie Wells
!Were added t~ the basehall s~ne
~unday, swelling 1ts membership to

Monday, Auguat 4, 1997

The glaflt tangle knot teaches communication skills and team
effort to 11 grciup of Tlgar Cubs from Southwestern Pack 205.

Wife worries about daughter seeing hubby and mistress together
Ann
Landers
1'1':17. L•~&gt; Atl!!•'b Tim ~~
S)· ntlir~ll' ~.w (' r~u h • r •
S) llllK~1 .:

.
Ann Landers: For ihc past
lYfO years, my husband and I have
~en having serious problems. We
w~rc separated for a year but agreed
to try one more time. Last month. we
went to a weekend retreat sponsored
. by our church. All the t:ouplcs
renewed their wcddmg vows. except
"~tan" and me. He said it was stupid and refused to partiCipate. When
· we returned home, Stan told me he.
was moving out.
The following weekend. my

father saw Stan parked near our
home, necking in the car wit,h a
young woman. Our 3-ycar-old
·daughter was in the back scat. Since
then. several friends have told me
they have seen him around town
with this woman.
. Here's the problem. When I work
the graveyard shift. our 3-ycar-old
stays with Stan. He lets his girlfriend
sleep over while my daughter is
there. He says a 3-year-old is too
young to understand anything. I'm
not sure I agree with him. At any
rate. I don't want our daughter subjected to this sort of thing. We live in
a small town. and now, I see Stan
and his girlfriend all the time, which
is very hard on me. How can I deal
with all this stress'! •• Upset in Idaho
Dear Idaho: Ask Stan to go with

you for joint counseling as a last·
I eat normal portions of burgers.
ditch effort to save your marriage. If · pasta dishes and dcssc(ts until Man·
he refuses, let him know you arc fil. day morning, when I start that lowing for a legal separation, and do it. fat diet again. I thought this was catThe court will then set visitation ing " in moderation," but many pcorulcs. In the meantime, try to find pic tell me it's not..l don't think I'm
someo~e else to take care of your
obsessed, but I admit that by
daughter while you arc working.
Wednesday, I'm reading a cookboo!&lt;, dreaming of Saturday when
Dear Ann Landers: I wonder if I the pancakes will ooze butter and
have fallen victim to an eating disor- syrup.
der. I' m an average guy in my 30s,
I am in great shape and feel I am
and I cat a low-fat diet all week and
not
harming myself. What do you
work out every day. I consider
think,
Ann!-- Normal in New York
myself a fitness buff. But once Saturday comes, I cat every fattening
thing the planet has to offer. I spend
most Saturdays preparing· gourmet
meals with tons of butter. crcain and
other delectable flavors that I don't
get all week. I iove to create desserts
that !l'ost j)nstry chefs would envy.

· Dear N.Y.: You say you arc a
physical fitness buff and in great
shape. but you pig out on wcc~cnds .
The real key to whether or not you
arc harming yourself can be determined by checking your blood pressure and cholesterol levels and get-

ting on your bathroom scrtlc. If all
arc within normal limits, I'd say you
arc OK. but you do tend to he a hit
compulsive, so Watch it.
Dear Ann Landers: Our 38ycar-old son is living with a 32-ycarold woman, who has still not been
legally divorced from her husband.
She has four children· and is expecting a baby soon. Our son says it is
his.
We arc making the best of all this
and hold no ill will, but I'm having
trouble feeling like a grandmother.
We arc not rich people, Ann. What is
expected of us on holidays regarding
gift&gt;'' We have four legitimate
grandchildren . and this new relation-

Dear Gary: It would be most
generous if you co~ ld treat them all
the same. Easy to do'? Of course not,
hut it always pays to take the high
road. You'l l bc glad you did.
What can you give the person who
has everything'! Aim Landers' hcK&gt;k·
let, "Gems," is ideal for a nightstand or coffee table. "Gems" is a
collection i&gt;f Ann Landers' most
requested poems and essays. Send a
· self-addressed. long, busincss-si1.c
envelope and a check or money
order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handling ) to: Gems, c/o
Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562,
Chicagc•, 1111. 606tl-0562.

ship means live more.• so I need your

help. ·· Gary. Ind.

. ...:.....--.'Air ForGe One' stiil ·number one -at box office
LOS ANGELES-(AP) - A bat·
tie between two cteatures sent
from Hell to rule Earth was no
match at the box office for Harrison Ford's macho presidential
beroics.
"Air Force One" raked in $26.2
tnillion in holding off a challenge
from "Spawn" to retain its No.. I
spot. "Spawn " grossed $21 .5 '!Ill·
lion in its opening weekend,
according to estimates from ·
l!xhibitor Relations Co. Inc.
, "Air Force One" stars Harrison
Ford as a brave chief executive
who outwits a plape full of Russian·terrorists. It remains to be seen
whether the film will break the
summer cycle in which one special
effects-filled blockbuster has
eclipsed another.

The film has grossed $81.2
million . according to Exhibitor
Relations. Its weekend take was the
biggest ever for an August weekend, topping the $23.7 million that
another Ford thriller, "The Fugitive." earned in 1993.
"It shows that Harrison Ford is
really one of the toP:shelf people
in opening films. " said Dave
Davis, an entertainment analyst
with the investment bani&lt; Houlihan, Lokey, Howard and Zukin.
Davis predicted that the. film
eventually will gross between $175
million and $200 million, which
would put it close to "The Lost
World: Jurassic Park." The
dinosaur sequel has made more
than $220 million in·less than three
months.

1 Me'!llJ!I.bilc, New Line Cinema
tt9olv:l chance on "Spawn" by
opening it in 2,536 theaters, the
studio's third-largest debut ever.
"We are. elated it screened so
well and people, loved it so much,"
said Mitchell Goldman, president

of marketing and distribution at · ·
New Line. "It is a pretty amazing
performance considering the other
summer movies and their opening
weekends." ·
"Gearge of the Jungle" dropped
to third with $8.4 million and

"Men in Black" earned $8 million
over the weekend for No.4, giving
it a total gross of $208.1 million.
"Picture

Pcrfc'ct~ "

a romantic

comedy starring Jennifer Ani ston .
debuted at No. S and earned $7.5
million in 1,705 theaters.

Julia wants more smooching with Mel
NEW YORK (AP) - Julia
Roberts tweaked the script of ber
new movie "Conspiracy Theory"
with co-star Mel Gibson to add
more kissing.
"I always want more," Roberts
said in the Aug. II issue of
Newsweek. "Put me and Mel in a
movie, and people are going to be
I

waiting for a little smoochic."
. "I hope people realize the value of the reality we give them
rather than waiting to see us
smooch," the actress mused about
her new film, which opens this
week.
· "Conspiracy Theory"ifeatures
Gibson as~ maniacal cab driver. It

wasn't that hard to get inside the
character's mind. he told
Newsweek.
"I know what it's like to feel
paranoid," he said. "I've had my
phone bugged. I have people who
want star gossip. They follow you
around, stake you out. They cavesdrop on your life. It's not always so
nice."

Your partner In protection

Downing, Childs,
Mullen, Musser
lll E. Second St., Pomeroy

992-3381

�The Daily ·Sentinel
....

By The Bend

~day, August4,1997

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pbmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

----~-----·-----~_.------~~~------------------~--~--~~------------~~=a~~=d~~·~·=~~Ud~~~1~~~

An ,importanttip about tips

BY ED PETERSON
Social Security

u-g.r In Athens

Many summer jobs involve tips as
a pari of the earnings. While some
workers think of lips as "something
extra," tips may be covered by Social
Security and can count for imponant
credits toward rclircment, disability
and survivors benefits, and Medicare
hospital insurance.
If you work at a job where you
make $20 or more per month in cash
lips, that income is covered by Social
Security. That means you and your
employer are required to pay Social
Security and Medicare taxes on this
income. And reporting lips and other income now will mean more
Social Security benefits for you and

CLASS OF 1831 • Attending a - u reunion of the Chestw
High School clan of 1831 were nlt8d, left 1o right, Nellie hrk· ·
Ill', lrane Partwr, Betty DaviiiOii, Mlldncl Colllna, and ttllndlng,
Opttl Wickham, Pauline Rlclenour, and John Belley.

,

your family later when you retire, or
if you become disabled or die.
When you earn lips, you must
keep a daily record of the tips you
receive. ThisJncludes tips received in
cash directly from customers or from
other employees and lips added to a
credit. card charge_ When your lip
mcome totals $20 or more in a
month, you are required to repon the
amount to your emplpyer. Your
employer is responsible for reponing
the correct tip and wage information
to the Social Security Administration
and the Internal Revenue Service.
You should check your Social
Security earnings record at least
every three years to make sure all
your earnings are reponed. You can
do this by cl!!ling Social Se&lt;,uritv'•

Michael Engle
obsei'Ves sixth
birthday

Michael Allen Engle celebrated
his sixth binhday July 24 at the home
of his parents, Ann and F!e&lt;i Engle.
Othcn Bltending were his brother
Jus~n. and Agnes and Larry Sellers:
.
Canna, Jacob and Mackenzie Sellers
Shawn Engle, Toni .Combs, Cheryi
Sellers, Stacy and Brittany Black,
Marilyn, Christie and Oary Lee "Joe
Bob" Cooper, Jessica Smith, Michael
Bailey, Nancy Campbell, Mae Vine- and Chris Conley.
yard, Dennis and Howard Parker,
Julia Engle telephoned birtbday
Opal Hollon, Mary Lee Maxcy and wishes to the honoree. Oames were
Joe Poole, all of Meigs County; played and the winner was Stacy
Kenneth Davisson, Mechanicsburg; Black. Cheryl Sellers won the door
Katherine Collins Lee, Chagrin Falls,' prize.
and Phyllis and Harold Fell,
Spencersvillc. ·
.
John Bailey had the blessing and
Joe Poole took pictures in the after.noon. The class made a donation to
the CheSler firemen and th
Opal Wiclcham for making
ments for the meal
· cream.

·chester
Class of '31
,.
holds annual reunion
.

The Chester High School class oi
1931 held its annual reunion July 27
at the Chester firehouse.
Seven members of the class wero
present -- Opal Wiclcham, John Bai~
ley, Pauline Ridenour, Irene Parker,
Nellie Parker, all of Meigs County;
Betty Davisson, Mechanicsburg ,
and Mildred Collins, Canton.
The class had 25 members and 10
llfC now living.
Noted were the deaths of Virgil
McElroy and Fred B. Smith who died
this year.
Guests attending were Henrietta

MONDAY

Senior Center
August Activities

POMEROY-- Meigs Band Boosters, 6 p.m Monday at the food booth,
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. After the
meeting, the booth will be prepared
for the fair. Parents asked to aucnd.

RACINE'-- Racine Village Council regular meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at
thc•IJ!unicipal building.

l
1

I

REEDSVILLE --Free Skin testing
clinic, Reedsville Fire Depanmcnt,
·Monday 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. All individuals in food service required to
have skin tests.

Evening dinners ·

Adam Pape observes third birthday
The third birthday of Adam Pspe,
son of Allen and Carol Pape, Syracuse, was observed recently with a:
party at his home.
· ' '
A 101 Dalmatian theme was carried out with cakes made by Adam's
aunt, Linda Teaford, and other
refreshments being served.,
Ailending were Adam's grandparents, Larry and Phyllis O'Brien andJohn and Patty Pape; great-grandparents, Bob and Florence Adams,
Nial and Virginia Salser, and Eileen
Roush.
Others there were Adam's brother,
Joshua, and his sister, Chelsea; Raymond Adams, Dale, Linda, Derek •.
Dale, Darin, and Lindsay Teaford;
Jim, Sherry and Jamie O'Brien: Erin
)
Chapman, Jim and Judy Pape, Kris................ ~
ten and Seth Bond, John~y ·and
. ADAMPAPE
Andrea Pape, Sheryl Derek, and
Amaitda Roush, Diane, Kyle and OilOthers sending gifts and cards
Jon Hill, Trish, Stacy and Stephanie , were Rex O'Brien, Lisa Pape, Pastor
Snyder, Amy and Wesley Patterson, Larry Haley, and Rita, Aaron and Jay
and Erin Struble.
Young.
·

The Senior Center is sponsoring evening meals ·each Thesday and
Thursday with serving from 5:00 : 5:45 .. A suggested donati~~ for .
the evening meal is $4.00. The mtent ts to provtde a nutrtt!onal
evening meal foi a very reasonable cost. Dollars generated wtll be
used to support the existing lunch and home delivered meal
programs. The public is invited to attend.
•
. ·
There will be music by The Classics at 6:00, Thursday, August
7. A Blood Pressure Clinic will be held from 4:45 to. 5:45,
Thursday, A~gust 21.
·

TUESDAY

In the Name of Love?

CASH BACK

OR

August 19
Baked Ham Slice
Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed Vegetable
· Roll - Beverage
Hot Cinnamon ·
Peaches

By Alden Waitt, President

1.997 TAURUS
OR SABLE

August 7
Oven Fried Chicken
Potato Salad
. Green Beans
Roll - Beverage
Honey Bee Ambrosia

August 12
Lasagna
Three Bean ·Salad
Garlic Bread
Tropical Fruit Cup
Beverage - Cake ·

l997RANGER

won't let me bring home. " So much
for affection -- much less love. And
MelpCounty
I'm not blaming the parents.
Huma"' Society
Year&amp; ago I saw a British movie, These days, when TV stations warble
"We Think the World of You," I think that they "believe in us," when peoil was called. I know Alan Bates was ple testify publicly to private foibles
in it, so it was wonderful, of course. all in the hope of being heard and
The premise Wl'S that Bates ended up understood by someone when banks
living with and taking care of (for offer us a "personal financier, " it is
keeps, it was implied) a neglected, clear that people are not, in the media
unruly dog, despite the fact that the therapiSl's words, "getting their peeds
dog's family "loved" it and "thought · met. • Although I have great empathe world" of her (she was a she, I thy for this, I cannot forgive people
reeall).
· · who decide to "try a pet" to see what
Well, people will offer neglect and it can do for them.
even Qbuse in the name of lov.. with
It is not up to animals, anymore
'
people, often children and animals; than people, to solve your emotional
bearing the worst of it We "love" our problems. You wouldn't (I hope)
animals so much we are killing them "try" having a child to see how you
by the thousands. Just take a look at like it. You make a lifelong commilthe ads in the local media. "Free to · mcltl to another living creature. If you
good home." Right~ They just want to thinl&lt; you can't, then don't. Maybe
gel rid of him/her/them. Think they you have a good reason for being
care if the new owners plan to chain · afraid you'll botch it. Take a friend's
the dog for life or let the kittens run puppy for a day and a night (not a bad
wild, never seeing the inside of a vet's idea if you are thinking of having a
child, either). This can be enlightenoffice?
The most conservative figure for ing.
That staggering dog I found on the
the number of dogs and cats
destroyed annually is ten million. road (and thank you again to thelcind
According to Roben Armstrong, a man who helped me get her in the
retired Houston veterinarian, and truck. His parting words to me: "I
author of 'The World Is Going to the can't bear to see a creature dumped
Dogs" (Newsweek. 28 March 1994), like that!) may have been a child's
the health depanment in one Texas responsibility lesson or an unwanted
town destroys seven 10 ten tons of gift. Worst of all, that ~aciatcd creal 1,.1111!'11~~-!ii~
ture may have 'been dumped by
animals weekly!
In the past year, I have picked up someone who 'just loves dogs" but
five dogs and one liner of six aban- couldn't endure .the guilt occasioned
doned pups--all starVing, one dying by a trip to the pound. Well, someone
of heanwonns -- on Route 681. I else cleaned up the mess -- again. To
have seen, usually on Monday mOrn- those of you, working quietly 1Q clean
ings, dead cats and dogs (once, even up ·SO!ftC(,ne else's mess - by adopta cow hit by a car), all reflecling how ing cus, taking stray dogs 10 the vet
much people care about animals. At to be put down. or encouraginll peOnearby Ohio University, students ple to adopt from the Meigs County
appear at the shelter 81 the end of each Dog Pound -- a million thanks!
quaner with .animals "my parents

THURSDAY

August 5
Salisbury Steak
Mashed Potatoes
Spinach
Roll - Beverage
Bananas with
Vanilla Pudding

97/98 ESCORT

....

..

l997ASPIRE

August 26 .
Beef Tips · in Gravy
on Rice
Tossed Salad
Biscuit - Beverage
Pineapple Upside
Down Cake

1997 EXPLORER
OR

September 2
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Peas &amp; Carrots
Roll - Beveage
Angel Food/

MOVNTAJNE.ER
.

7

Haml oaf ·
Sweet Potatoes

11

12

Sloppy ·Joe on Bun

Ham Salad
Macaroni Salad
'
Baked Beans
Bread
Mixed Fresh Melon

13
Johnn y Marze tti
Three Bean Sal ad
Bread
Tropical ·Mi xed Fru i
Cookie

Angelfood Cake
18

19

Saus age Gravy
on Biscuit ·
Hash Brown Potatoee
Orange Juice
Biscuit
Hot Applesauce

Beef BBQ

August 21
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Glazed Ca-r,rots
Roll - Beverage
Cherry Cheesecake
August 28
Hungarian Style
Pork Chop
Baked Potato
Broccoli '
Roll - Beverage
Rocky Road Pudding
· September 4
Beef Stew
Cole Slaw
Bis c uit - :.Beverage
Apple Cheiry Crisp

20

Ham and Sca llo pe d
Potatoes
Mixed Vege t ab les
Bread
•Hot Cinnamon Peac he

Green Beans

Cole Slaw
Bun
Apple Cherry Crisp
.

25

26

Chicken Patty
Augratin Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Applesauce

Oven Baked Fish
Skin ' On Potato
Wedges
Carrots
Bread
Cantalope/Watermelo

27

Beef Tips in Gravy
Mashed Potat oe s
Buttered Corn
Bread
Pineapple Chunks

Cauli flo wer

Br ead
Appl esa uce

FRID AY
8

Ba ked Chicken
Mas hed Potatoes
with Gravy
Broccoli
Brea d
Water melon

14

15

Chi cke n Cacciator e

Ba ked Po rk Steak
Mas he d Potatoes
wit h Gr avy
Brea d
Blus hi ng Pears

Mashed Pota t oes

Carrot s
Bre ad
Pi nea pple i n
Ora nge Ge latin
21

22

Oven Fri e d Ch i c ken
Swe!' t Po t a t oes
Pe a s
Bread

Baked Steak
Mashe d Potatoes
wi th Gravy

Wat e rme l on

Ca rrots
Bread
Fru it Coc ktai l

28

29

Spaghe tt i wlt h
Mea t Suace

Toss ed Salad
Gar li c Br ea d
Fruit Co c ktail in
Red Gelatin

.

Hun gar i an Style
Pork Chop
Parsley Po t atoes
Bu ttered .Br occoli
Bre ad
Pe a r Ha lves

r----RSVP to visit extended care-----.

Celebrate health

The Retired and Senior Volunteer
Program in conjunction with the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
Inc., will sponsor the Third Annual
Health Information Fair, "Celebrate
Health'!, Thursday, September 4
from noon to 4 p.m. FREE health
screenings along with 25 displays
by physicians and health
professionals will be available
during the health fair. Another
reason to allend will be the Grand
Opening of the exercise room at the
Senior Center. Try,out the exercise
equipment' and sign up for door
prizes. WMPO will broadcast live
from the center and refreshments
will be served.

August 14
Baked Pork Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Creamed ''Peas
Roll ..: Beverage
Carrot Cake

A visitation program began in June to the E•tended Care Unit of Veterans Memorial Hospital • .
Several volunteers visited residents and presented Fourth of July lapel pins lo them. Come join us
on our visit August 26th from 12:45 to 1:45. We'll walk over to the hospital after lunch and spend
lime visiting, reading, and writing !etten lor the residents. Other activities planned will include
bingo and singing. Volunteers and resldenlfjllctured are: Left - Ted Hatfteld, RSVP volunteer;
Martha Chamben, resident; Melvin Tracy, RSVP volunteer; Gertrude Robinson, RSVP
volunteer; and Pete.Shields, resident.

STAFF PARTICIPATES IN PARADES • Pictured are Jeri Faulkner
Aides at the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc., who participated In the Fourth of July parade
in Racine. Other staff attended the Middleport and Rutland parades.
TRAINING FOR . GIRL
SCOUNT CAMP· Pictured Is
Evelyn Clark an RSVP volunteer,
and Andreu Neutzllng, a Girl
Scout who came to the Meigs
Multipurpose Center for training
on skills that she will teach at
Girl Seoul Camp. Andrea
reveived training on lin punch,
leather craft and making
liomemade noodles. Other
volunteers who assisted with this
project were: Jean Nease and
William Mlddleswarth.

Looking for something to do?
A new volunteer project called
W.O.L.F. is underway for RSVP. II
stands for Warm Our Little Fingers.
We need volunteers who can knit or
crochet mittens for Head Start
children for Christmas. There are
190 children! That sounds like a
lot of mittens, but if everyone
works together, it can be done. So

far, severalladies ·have made 101 . Come 10 the center on Wednesdays
pair of mittens. If you would like and help the ladies at the knitting
to help make the mittens or would circle with this assignment or you
like to DONATE any color of 4- may do it al home. These mittens
ply yam for this project, please call · will be on display at The People's
Diana Coate.s at 992-2161. Bank in Pome ro y " during
Instructions will be provided to you Thanksgiving and the first part of
or you may use your own pattern. December.'

Wednesdays
. Senior Citizens Day ·
Storewide
.Save 15%
everything in our store.

off

Sale

•.

WE HONOR

&amp;~

Merchandise
Not Included

MOII'ITAL IIDI

I'ATIIIIT Ll"t

WMIIL OHAIIII

OXYGIM

212 EAST MAIN ST.

.·fffil

COMPLETE HOME ~EDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

·992·3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE

FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET-UP
HOSPITAL BEDS MEDICARE
HOME
WHEEL CHAIRS MEDICAID
OXYGEN
PRIVATE INSURANCE
LIFf CHAIRS
24-IIOUR
EMERGENCY
BATHROOM AIDS
;,We Treat You
SERVICE
NEBULIZERS
RESPIRATORY
Like Family"
ffiERAPIST
STAIR GLipES

et~elers

API

6

Salisbury St e ak
Mashed Potat't&gt;es
Spinach
Bread
Carr if ru'i t Sa l ad

The Meigs County Council on with the program beginning al1 :00.
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
Wednesday, August l3 - The
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30. Stroke Survivors Support Group
Regularly scheduled activities are meets from 1 to 2:30, 'with Lia
COTA ,
Hol~er
quilting, sewing, cards, games, Tipton ,
can help . to relieve stress in
pool. Weekly activities are Line Rehabilitation, Coordinator.
Dancing on Monday at 1:00,
Thursday, Au~ust 14 - Senior careg·iving.. ·
There will not be an Arthritis
Chorus Practice on Thesday at Citizens Day at the Meigs Couiny
Support
Group meeting in August .
ll :00, Knitting Circle on Fair, free admission for persons
due
to
the
Meigs County Fair.
·Wednesday from 10 to 12.
over age 60.
The
Area
Agency on Aging, PSA
A representative from the Athens
Thursday, August 21 - the
8,
day
at
the
Ohio State Fair is
Social SeCUrity Office will be at the monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
Friday,
August
8.
The Center vans
Center on Wednesdays, August 13 be held from 9:30 to 11 :00.
will
be
going
to
the
fair, with a cost
and 27, from 1010 11 a.m.
Thursday, August 28 - the
of
$20.00
which
includes
Thursday, Augusi 7 - Jim Lower, monthly birthday party will be
·
admission.
Ohio University College of h~ld . Seniors with binhdays in the
A trip to Jackson, with a stop at
. Osteopathic medical student, will month will be honored.·
the
.Arts &amp; Crafts Mall, dinner at
speak at 11:00 about good nutrition
Thursday, · August 28 - the
4wis
Restaurant, and shopping at
·and medication interaction with monthly AD/RD Support Group
Wal
Marl
is scheduled for
will meet from 1:00 to 2:30. Janice
foods.
Wednesday,
August
13~ Cost is
· Thursday, August 7 - the Meigs Haynes, massage therapist, will be
$5.00
for
van
transponation.
Call
.County PERI .will meet at noon the guest speaker; massage therapy
992-2161 for further information
about the trips.

---community calendarSYRACUSE -- Sutton Township
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
· Syracuse Municipal Building.

5

THURSDAY

Weiner with
Chi cken Salad
Mea t Sauce on Bun Potato Sabd
Tatar Tots
Bread
Bake d Be&amp;ns
Honey Bee Ambros ia
Apricots
Brownie

Lyonnaise Potatoes
Lima Beans &amp; Corn
Strawberries on

Plctund working on the W.O.L.F. projed are: 4ft to right Leona Cleland, Dorothy Downie· and Ardis Waggoner. Other
RSVP volunteers who are helping are Ruth Moore, Jane Walton,
Delori~ Will, Femdora Story and Wilma Sargeant.

WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY .

4

!

MONDAY .

AUGUST MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

toll-tree number 800.772-1213--and 1rity card matches your permanent
asking for a "Personal Earnings and ·Social Security earnings record.
Your employer should record your
Benc6t EslimBie Statement. • The
name
using the fust name, middle inistatement will tell you what earnings
tial
and
last name. Don 'I use titles or
have been reported to your recoid, as
suffixes.
such u Mr. or Mrs.. Dr.,
well as how much you could get in
MD,
or
PhD.
benc6ts if you retire or become dis. abled or fOI' your family when you 1 If you have a compound name,
·die. If you see a mistake, you should connect it with a hyphen. Don't separate your name with a blank space
!contact \IS and report it.
· Whe'! you rcpon your lips, you or join into a single word. To record
should remember that the additional Pamela Ann Peabody Jones, it should
benefits generated will be there when appear as Pamela A Peabody-JODCii.
If you change your name, continthey are most needed-when your
earnings are reduced by retirement, ue using your old name until you get
death or disability. That's when you'll a new Social Security card showing
be glad you thought about your your new name. Using your new
name without updating Social Secufuture today.
rity's records may prevent posting of
Getting Yoor Narn~ Right in Your earnings to your rccO(II.
Notifying the company you work
Social Security Records
How your name is recorded on for will not update Social Security
your employer's records Clll\ affect records. You should report name
how your earnings 1ft reported to the !changes direcdy 10 Social Security by
Social Security Administration. The :calling toll tree I-8QO. 772-1213. You
information on your W-2 should can change your name and g'CI a new
·match your name and Social Sec uri- Social Security card free. There is no
'ty number on your Social Security charge for this service.
icard. The name on your Social Secu-

DAY
Every ,Wednesday Storewide Savings

15o/o oft

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS
HAVING TROUBLE FINDING SHOES
THAT FIT CORRECTLY?
CALL

•
•
•
•
•
•

I, \1.1.11'01 . 1~

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

llh-7:!n:t
70 1'1:\E ~ r.

TOI.I . l'lliT
1-::0U- l.lH-h:t 1 I

.I \1

l\~0\

:.:! Bh- 7 I a I
7&lt;•.&gt; E. 'I \1\

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, August 4, 1997

70

up

~~v.be."'

a

In
separate interview, Chris
NEW YORK - A new banlcfronl Spencer attem(lled 10 keep up the
for the late-nighl wars? Or just more appearance that he's just tending bis
talk?
own garden, with no thought of the
It's hard 10 say right now, bu11his . one about to bloom across tbe way.
much is sure: "The Keenen Ivory
"Keenen Williams?" Playfully
Wayans Show" premieres tonight. garbling Wayans' name, Spencer
"Vibe," wilh host Chris Spencer, feigned surprise over his fellow newpremieres tonight.
comer. "I hadn't heard!"
Talk about talk-show synchroThere are a few differences
nism~
between "Keenen" and " Vibe."
Each syndicated hour (check loi:al
Initially "Vibe" will be available
listings for times and stalions) will to 97 percent of the U.S. audience,
feature a young black host who pre- while "Keenen" will be seen in !10
sides over cclebrily inlerviews, com- perccnl of the nation.
edy and live music from the hottest
At 1he outset. Wayans, 39, is.bet·
bands.
ter-known than his "Vibe" counterEach prdg!§Jil.Will tape just hours part. The driving force behind the'
before airtime, at Hollywood studios Fox ske1ch-eomedy series "In Living
virtually within shouting distance of Color," he also wrote, directed and
·each other.
starred in the film "I'm Gonna Git
Each pledges to be different from You Sucka." He is executive proLena's and Leucrman's late-night ducer as well as host of the sbow that
institutions.
bears his name.
Each wanls lo land the audience
A decade younger than Wayans,
thai's been adrift these past three Spencer was a rising comic who had
years, ever since "The Arsenio Hall . been a guesl on both "Arsenio" and
Show" barked its last For il was the " In Living Color," a.&lt; well as a Slar
pioneering Arsenio who identified the of a shortlivcd Fox silcom, when
niche of the urban young adult in late "Villi: 's" producers chose him for the
night, seized it, and then, when he show that bears not his name but
quit, left behind a tanlalizing vacuum. · instead that of tbe popular youngSo say hello;o "Vibe" and '.'Kee- adult magazine. Think of the TV vennen." Each dearly hopeno follow in ture as a sort of brand extension.
Arsenio's woof-steps.
. An even bigger brand name
" If you look at the landscape of belongs to · "Vibe" executive protelevision, there's a void," Wayans ducer Quincy Jones, ,a godfather in
noted in a phone interview Wednes- the entertainment world. His star valday, "so we couldn't help saying, ue is such that he poses beside
'Hmmm, lei's take a shot.' That's Spencer in some of "Vibe's" publicwhy other people had the same idea ity shms.
.
" Vibc" talks big, promising
at the same time."
It's the only lime Wayans brought splashy production values, inventive

naca em sottWDI

.03 SECOND AVE.

staging, even salellite remotes from
glamorous events like premieres and
..mega-parties. n
"I wish them luck," Wayans said.
"We all have to work wilhin the
confines of the talk-show genre," he
argued, with the deciding factor. in
each sho.w's success . not technical
pizzazz, but "lhe host and that host's
sensibility. Dave has a different sensibilily from Jay. And I'll have a different sensibilily from them.''
..
As well as !hat ne'll( guy? "And :
from Chris," Wayans said.
Only time will tell if, even in markets where the two new shows don't
compele head-to-head, lhey will be
fon:ed to divvy tip a finite group of
viewers Arsenio once had all to himself.
Or if, instead, " Vibe" and "Keenen " can start with lhat audience,
then b~ild on il by attracting the
broader demographics both hosts say
they welcome.
A• Spencer cracked, "I want those
OTHER people, the people who now · •
watch cable at nighl or renl movies
or commit crimes. I'm gonna bring
the crime rale down with my show!"
Each host makes nice with lhe oth,
er, preaching peaceful coexistence as
they set oul on palhs thai , a11he start,
a~ least, arc parallel.
Wayans: "I think there's enough
viewers for everyone.,.
Spencer: "I think we can bolh
work out."
Which of them wilfArsenio- the
host who broke the color barrier in
late-night TV, lhe man whose manlle
each wants' to recover - bless first
in guest form?
Or, come to think of il, is he over
the hill?

a· giant, nawly-unvalled U.S. Po1tat Senr~.
atamp featuring legendary Hollywood . etar
Humphrey Bogart last-kat Mllnn'e Chi-

1'114.tar In the Hollywood area of Los Angeles.

Both Bllcell, Bogart'e wife, and Huston apoke
at the caremony commemorating the firat day
of Issue and Bogart'• Impact on the u.s. film
Industry. (AP)

.

Solid whodunit makes telling points
about world ·at contemporary Army
By J. FORD HUFFMAN

Is it a 'military guy' thing? (No. ·something to hide and is hiding it.
Gannett Newl Service
Name an institution without guilt Then another woman . is murdered.
You're in the army now. Lucian when it comes to discrimination.) More secrets are uncovered, and
Truscott's army.
Whatever. Fate is unable to move this some are volunteered.
Truscott's first novel, "Dress · army. However, this book will move
Guidry 's legal defense is up
Gray" (1986). insightfully told the you.
against the entire Old Straight White
story of a cadet's investigation of
Truscott tells a solid who-dun-it. Soldiers Network, and she is fon:ed
. murder at West Point in 1968, the and at the same time he teaches ales- to rind out if the guys who would not
year folks in the Summer of Love son without·a lecture to the troops. let her fly a helicopter will let her
were trying to be all things to all pea- "Hean of War " is an easy, engross- steer a counroom to justice.
pie, and the year the Army was try- ing read. (I read the last five chapters
Even readers who want to push
ing to be all it used to be.
.
non-stop and not fast enough.) This relevance and meaning aside will lind,
The academy then "was groomed novel, his fourth. is topical. timely 'that Truscott can enlist attention in a
as impeccably as its cadets. It became · and terrific, a book to take with you highly readable, dramatic way.
military Disneyland, a lush green to when you hit the beach or the " Dress Gray" was a made-for-TV
summeidream, a memory of the way mountains in August.
NBC movie in 1986. We can hardly
things were ... a place Tom Sawyer
Truscott's Army qpbringing. edu- wait for the movie of ."Heart• of
mighl have aspired to, even in lhe hot cation (West Poinl) and experience War."
mistofthathecticsummerof 1967." give his story credence and detail.
An excerpt from "Heart of War":
("Dress Gray," SigQet paperback. There is knowledge of protocol, pro"(Kara) had been born into a dif$5.99).
· cedures, regulations- and emotions. ferent Army, and yet it was still the
In " Hearts of War, " it's 1996, I H
~ajar Kara Guidry is an officer, same. The men who ran lhe Army did
years after Tom was told to make a lawyer, and a former helicopter whatever the hell they wanted;·and
room in formation for Becky.
pilot · who was rejected from flying were answerable only to each other.
The long gray line i~ nm just gray ·any higher due to a clear case of dis- Men around the office still talked
anymore. The' cadets in "Dress crimination. But no mauer, she about 'the lillie woman' back home.
Gray" now run the Army, which ofti- believes in defending her country and There was at Fort Benning, and on
cially has welcomed female soldiers her clients and her pri'nciples.
other posts where she had served, the
· and not welcomed gay soldiers.
When she returns froin a weekend old military ethic that women were
Truscott has something to say about with a secret lover (officers aren't supposed to keep their mouths shut
both.
allowed to date enlisted soldiers), she and their blouses buttoned and !heir
This suspenseful, fast-paced nov- and her friend try to Sllve an enlisted children at heel ...
el's action reads like today 's head- woman from drowning in a flood .
"II was all about power, but it was
lines about an evolving military. Later, investigators find that the more than that. II was about fear. The
Who has time for soldiering- with woman was murdered long before the · men in lhe Army had turned on ,the
all that ~xism, racism, discrimina- waler hit her. Kara the lawyer is television at night and · watched the
tion, harassment, tension. hypocrisy, assigned to the case.
world changing, outside of their con-.
politics and immoralily Trus~oll
To be fair we cannot tell much uol. Women began to act differently.
poiniS to'?
more about the plot However, one of They were on their way in a differThe author's army loleratcs the suspecls, an officer, works with . ent world, and soon they would be
unspoken discrimination against Gen. William Beckwilh, who hap- admiucd to West Point and be on
women soldiers....:. and IS md1fferent pens 10 be runnmg a nallonal pol II•· their way up the ladder in the Army.
to Ihe hypocritical laws against its cal campaign for the office of Chief l&lt;ara reme.mbered how11~.father had
gay soldiers. His army reluctantly . of Staff.
.
reacted when she laid li1m she was
allows women to serve, so long as 1he
Before you know u, everybody going 10 apply to West Point. II was
emphasis is on "serve." Bul his army and his lover at Fort Benning has like he had j'ust taken a hammer blow
won'l acknowledge the existence of
to the solar plexis ... "
gay soldiers; apparently there's som~­
thing disgusting about a gay man m
uniform.
The derby.has losl one-third of its
In the ·context of news repons
AKRON (AP)- Participation in
. about Tailhook, Aberdeen and Kelly the aimual All-American Soap Box budget in the last two years, and parFlinn - what some would describe ~rby is enjoying a mild resu'l!ence ticipation is not expected to grow fast
enough · to generate the money il
as rampant heterosexuality - . these days.
"Hearts of War" makes you wonder
A record 280 racers are expected needs. There are also other problems,
if Congress ou,thl to outlaw hetero- to compete in Saturday's 60th including an aging Derby Downs,
sexual soldiers iilstead of sanct1ontn$ anniversary f8CC at Derby Downs and community apathy and the changing
discrimination against ho~osexual the S,OOO or so.competing nationwide tastes of youth.
"I think that is the big problem now is double what it was I 0 .years
ones.
everything
is changing and the derTruscou's army brass has learned ago.
by
hasn't."
said
John Piscitelli, chairall about politics, but the leaders
But looking past the shiny cars
man
of
the
derby's
board of trustees.
h•ven't ftgtued oul how to look at job and the faces of hundreds of excited
The
grandslands
in place when
performance rather gender or orien- children, there are still problems, the
Piscitelli
coasted
down
the hill as a
talion. Why not? Why such resistance Akron Beacon Jownal reported Suncompetitor
57
years
ago
are basicalto accept &amp;mnebody who is different? day.
.ly the same ones stan&lt;l.i!l.l t2!!a.J'.

Financial constraints plague derby

Well, don 't expect outright
Yes, CBS is what il is. And whal,
Gannett Newa Service
exactly, is that? Most of all, it's the 1iffanydom. Don'llook for the days
One recent morning, two opposite Heartland network. I! has 1he when CBS was . the home ·for
forces nearly collided at the Ritz- strongest stations in 1he South, the Newhart, Mary Tyler Moore, Archie
Bunker and "MASH."
' ·
Carlton Hotel in Pasadena, Calif.
Midwest and the mid~sized cities.
lnslead, look for a network 1hat
One .had retirees, on a tour. The
As an example, look al Michigan:
o1her had CBS executives, talking In Detroil. CBS has been stomped for tries to juggle two images. It wants to
about their fall lineup.
·
· decades by ABC and others; in Lans- keep its homespun wns. while
What would have happened if ing, 90 mi!es away, il sometimes dou- Slrctching into younger' and hipper
turf. .
they ' d met? The retirees might have: bles the ratings of any competitor.
That's Moonvcs' style. A former
Applauded CBS, as the home of
So CBS has played to that
" Dr. Quinn," "Touched By an strength. ll bills iL&lt; Saturday lineup of actor (method-trained, no less), he's
Angel," "PJ:omised Land" and feel- "Dr. Quinn," "Early Edilion," a handsome man. He ha.&lt; a deep lan,
good television.
"Walker, Texas Ranger" as " Amer- great hair (or hairpiece) and charmStampeded it as .the nelwork that · ica's night"; it has also given other ing manner.
As head of the Warner Brothers
cancelled "Murder, She Wr01e."
nights such feel-good shows as
CBS is like thai, as it keeps "Promised Land," ''Cosby" and TV division, he once had a record 22
shows on the nelworks. That's p&lt;lssiadjusting and re-adjusting.
"Touched By an Angel.''
This was the last network to resist
Thatlasl one has made il possible hle only by embracing all styles.
His Warner Brothers shows were
the emphasis on demographics and 10 draw an audience for Heartland
as
lofty as "ER," "Friends" and
youth. It stayed warm, s1ayed Hean- movies on Sundays. Just ask John
.
"Murphy
Brown" ... and as lowly a.&lt;
land, tried to convince advertisers Kent Harrison, who had a surprise hit
most
of
til!!
shows ABC ran in ils
that old viewers are important, too. wilhWilliam Faulkner's "Old Man,"
"TGIF" block of Friday comedies.
Then it swooped in Ihe other this season.
Now Moonvcs wa.&lt; ready to lake
direction. In 1995, CBS killed most
"There's an opportunity.to make
of its older shows and tried to tum movies that are chara.;ter-ba.'icd,'' CBS both ways. It would be old and
inSiantly hip.
·
. Harrison said. "Thai involve actual comfortable one· momenl, young or
That's when Leslie Moonves took performance and actual thoJighlful- hip lhe next
over as programming chief, in·July of ness."
The previous administration had
1995. He had to defend a scheduJe.he
That's because CBS puis its qui- done one thing right: It signed lhe
didn'l create and didn'llike.
e1er films on Sundays, when il draws eternally hip David Letterman.
"(() didn't know what I was a Mid-American crowd.
"I remember the first time I saw
doing," Moonvcs recalls. ~'(I) had to
"We had nine of the top 10 films Dave," said Rupert Jee, a deli-own1ry to sell you on the fact' thai I (inratings)'lastyear,"Moonvessaid. er who's often on Leiterman's show. ,
thought 'Central Park Wesl' was a "I know, I'd much rather stan a "He was wearing jeans and aT-shirt
good show.''
movie after 'Touehed By an Angel' and a baseball cap. Thai's him, very
He didn't really think so, of than after (NBC's) 'Men Behaving laidback."
For a while, however, Letterman
course. Nor did most functioning Badly."'
members of society; "Cenlral Park
Viewed 1his way. CBS seems to be seemed like the only CBS person
West" was an irredeemable mess.
back to its comfortable old way1. You with youth appeal. That changed
So was the CBS auempt to change can toss in a few other shows, includ- when the network:
ovemight. It retreated quickly.
ing "Cosby" and Bob Newhart's new
• Signed producer Steven Bocheo,
who was ending his stretch at ABC.
Then Moonves staned the facclift "George and Leo." ,
again, this time more gradually.
Newhart has done three previous Bochco's first show ("Brooklyn
"We are trying to get younger," he series at CBS, but hated lhc third one, South") will have a young casl, a
plush Monday timeslol and fierce
says. "(Bul) we ai'e what we are ...
done under previous management
" We're nol going to try to do the
"II will be wondcrfulto be part of emotions. "A Bochco show is an
'Central Park West' strategy, and the process," he said, '.'to help make extraordinary experience," said
James Sikking, who worked for him
crash and bum."
· ·
CBS the Tiffany Network llj!ain."
in "Hill Street Blues" and this show.
Public Notlc:e
Pllblic Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
centft. 'Tiie lunda ere 11om ePPtlcllnt IIIHIII be requlrecll
Notice te hereby given the Senior Flclllllll line to Pl81 1 phyalcal
thetthe ao.n1 of Educltlon Item ol the Ohio Stele exemlnlllon, glvan by a
ollhl e.-.. Locll School Budget. Appllclllone·..,.... llcen81d
phyalclln,
Dletrlct, 31100 SA 7, be recelnd 11 tha Arw ahowlng that he or 1h1
Rendavllle, Ohio 45772, Agency on Aging no IIIW m1111 lhl phyllcal
will oller for Nil by Mlled then September 20, 11t7. raqul-nta _ _ , to
bid 1t 12:00 noon on Mextmum 11111 lunda perform thl dutlla of Chief
Monday, S.ptamber 1, 1H7, raqueet per . pro( eel II of Pollcll. Appl~ IIIHIII
l111831nternatlonll bul.
$50,000. Appllcltlona end be accepted lor 1n
All ..lied anvelopll apeclftc lnformlllon llbou1 lndellnlla ,.-or dme.
containing 1 bid are to be lhl procna II 8YIIIIbla by ffi 21, 21, (8) 4, .11 41C
merkad clllrly on the contectlng: Cynthia
oullldl end 11nt to the llcllemla, Are1 Agancy on _--.;P:...;U::,:b::;II::C:~N::ot::I:::C.:.._--:
Trtuurer'l orne.. Ttrml of Aging, (814l 374-1143&amp;. · 1 IN THE COMMON PLEAS
1811 will be Cllh or money Arel Agency on Aging COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
ordlr. Said lloerd rHINel Route 1, lox 2ti·D OHIO
lhl right to WIIVI Mart-. Ohio 45750 (114) BANK ONE, ATHENS, N.A.
lnforflllllllll, to IOOipl or 3(78)4-m
Plllntlll
reject eny end 111, or P11rtll-'~;....------ va
.
of 1ny end Ill bld1.
Public: Notice
BILL BUCHANNAN, Ilea
Quntlonl Cln be ln-1--..:...:====:......- BILLE BIJCU&amp;U&amp;U ET AL.
by Mro. Llll Rltchll,
·
~.
Trtuurerllll5 t331.
Till Vlll8gl ol P-roy II
118oCV.Q24
(1);.:..4..:.,_11..:.'-1...:1'..:.as'--4-tc____ =-=~~=P~~c'::, ' : . . . 1
Public Notice
Pollee. All tnter1111d lherlll'e 8811 ol RMI E _.....;=====--IIPPllclnll lhOUid IUbmlt
AI Sherlll Of M::P;
LEGAL NOTICE
- r ,_.... llld - - County, Olllo, I hereby
Tha Ohio Dep1rtment of or qulllllceuone to 1111 lor Nle 11 10:00 1.m., on
Aglng,thraugh thlllucklye VII .... OIIICII In Potnlroy. friday, September 5, 11t7,
Hllle·Hocklng
Vllley S1l1ry lhlll be UO,OOO A.D., on U.. front llePII of
Regional Qevelopmant minimum. AppiiCintll llhall the Melge County
Dlllrlct Ar11 Al:xncy on be 1 rMident of the Vllllge Coullhcule, ~. Ohio,
Aging, Roull1,
:ztt.D, or Po,..roy or 1h1ll be thel'ollowlng dlacrlbld l'lll
Mlrlltll, Ohio, Ia milking willing to rlluclll within lhl ......,
Till lldclrell ol Mid 1'111
IVIIIIbll Iunde lor tha oonlln11 of the Vlll8gl
1111r1110n, renovation 1nd Coi'poi Ilion llnllla within 11x ...... 1111150 Joppl ROIIII,
n1w · conetructlon of month• of hla or har RIICIIVIIII, Ohio 45772.
mulllpurpoll 11n1or 111110lnlmlnt 11 Chill. Thl SIICI reel lll8tl II more

=::*

Public Notice
fully dncrlbld lllllollftl:
Sltullld In the County of
lllllge, In the • - or Ohio,
1nd In the Town1hlp · of
Olive 1nd bounded 1nd
dncrlbld .. fallowa:
ltlng In lllctloil 27 lnd
21, Lot 212; being 1.so
- ormlililll
line·
nortll
roed on north
1"*'ra on thlllicl '1 tu
dupltC.te tor they r 1147
ln the,n1mo of the 1111 of

iTFj

Ohio.

.

REFERENCE DEED:
volu1111 271, P1g1 23, 1nd
Volume 312, Plge 28, Mllg1
County OMd Aeconll.
Auditor'• P1rcat No. oe00213.000.
. Slid rill 111111 Wll
IPPrlllld 11 Three
ThouNnd Seven Hundrecll
1nd 00/100 DOIIIrl
($3,700.0G).
S.llofNidl'lll-to
be lor not 1111 than twothird• (213) lhl IIOriNld

lpprlllliil VIIUI. CHh In
hind on dill of Nil.
Slid 1111 II IUbJICI 1o
IPP.rOYII by th1 common
Pille Court, llllgl c-ty,
Ohio.

.11.-M. Soulebr, 8herllf
Mliglc-ty,Ohlo

(7) 21, (I) 4, 113tc

Ak Condilioners lnstaled 128" amonth
Heat PUmps lnstaled 138" aJIIOidl!
iPa~-011~&lt;&gt;«11)

•Free 5 Year Parts warranty •
•Free Digital Thermostat

Roofing, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,
Concrete, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
. ' Oh 45614

(614) 388-9865

.

Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

AIJ.. 'Yard SIIH Must
B• P.klln Advance.
DEAQl!NE: :Z:OO p.m.
the day bltore the .t

Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanks Installed
New Aerlator Timers &amp; Motors

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

Is to rvn . Sunday

edilktn . 2:00p.m.
Frtd.-,. MondfY edition

·10:00 • .m. s.tunl.y.
August 4th, 5th, 9-1 87 Shoa~

614·742·2566

3117.94/TFN

. Cr4Kik Road, Crown City.

Echo- Ryobl- Roper • Rally· Hydro Gear

''.

·AND OTHERSil
....., r. s-..: Mist•

Slnke.,..........

OI!Mor Power £qulp11t111 Assodllllotl: ClltlfW 2 Cycle
. • State Route 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio
. 614) 949-2804

R. L. HOLlO
TRUCKING

Po1nt Pleo so nt

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone
. .• Gravel
Dirt • Sand ·

ELIM
HOME CARE
For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dal)y • Weekly Contract
Femlly Atmoephere
209 S. 4th Strt11t
Middleport

acrta,

• · With l DaiiJ Sentinel

• BULLETIN ,BOARD
17" coluilln Inch weekdays
,,.. :coluaan Inch -·~day
:0Uil OFFICE AT 992·2155

DOMINO'S PIZZA
Location

TYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS
Reedsville
Tomato Pickers &amp; Packers
$4.25, 20 and under
$4.75, over 20
Payi11g daily during fair
week. Work until
mid-October.
(614) 378-6194
378-6373

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday-8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday -'8:00a.m.- 12 noon

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

·••FACTORY
DIRECT
PRI(;ES"
Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.
992-4119

wv 11023477
.'

1

WILLUUL·

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine.&amp; Wel4ing Shop

JUS,. CALL.
992·7074

Gravel, Umestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-2111·5500

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614:
Fax: 304-773-5861

(Llme StoneLow Rates)

CELLULAR PHONES

UULIIII
DCIVI,.IM

WICKS

360° Communications

Ll~ne &amp; Gravel

.HAULING .
'I

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 w. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH. . I

614·992·5479
h

.

3m/TFN

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, FUI Dirt

~ 614·992·3470

J(
i

CONSTRUOION
Uc. WV 011030

Systems
· Trailer &amp; I
House Sites .
ReNonab/e Rat/18
Joe N. Sayre

Roofing, Painting
Gutter•
Guaranteed

· Sayre Tnicklng Co.

Fr81 Eatlmatea

Qtulllt)l
W.rlnna~~thfp

614-742·2138

992·9057711111 mo

wm11n

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lui( lime auctioneer, complete
auclion
service.
licensed
166,0hio I Wes1 V~rgm1a, 304773-5785 Or 304· i73-~·H.

·go

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Della~ : All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins . Proo l sels ,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, P re- 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Awnue, Gallipolis, 614·446-2842.
Antiques, furniture. glass. china,
coins, to~s. lamps, guns. loots.
estates : also appraisals, Osb~
Martin, 614-992-7441 ,

Antiques, top prices patd". River·
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohto,
Russ Moore owner, 61• ·992 ·

2526.
Ctecin late Model Ca rs .or
Trucks , 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smtih Bu ic;k Ponttac. 1900 East·
em Avenue , Gathpotts.

J &amp; D's. Auto Parts. Buymg sal vage 11ehtcles. Selhng parts. 304 ·
773·5033.
Shephard logg.ng Buyer Of Stan -

ing Timber And land, Ptne, Pulpwood, And Saw Timber, 614·682-

8402.

Wanted Tp Buy Usad Mobile

Home. ·ca.ll" 614 ·•46-0175 or 304·

-·.

675-5965

DIEBELI

• Top • Trim • Removal

• Stump Grinding
20 VI'!. Exp. · ·Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

Free E•tima1e1

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Call 614·843·5426

BISSELL BUILDERS,

:,.
INC~

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions ·E~~tng
COMMERCIAL and R
ENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES.
(No Sunday Calls)

CORPORAL ELEORIC
Dally Rd., Racine
614·949·3060
John Williams, Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
Providing Quality
Residential Service.

•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. ·7
Leading Cr81k Rd.

142·2925 .
"W•I•11• Yo•
Jlfon.,"
......,,_

HOT PRESSURE ClEANING

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

537 BRYAN PLACE
!IlDDLE PORT
992·2772
8:00 l.m.-3:30 p.m.

•Replacment Windows
•But1d Garages
•Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
•Room Additiens

1

10 in .......... $10.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

\

unwanted din, mold and
mildew • Restore the clean
natural look

We can WIISh anything
Free Estimate
Rtsidtntial &amp;Commerdal

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

985-4473
7/22/lln
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Local Area.Pick Up
Discarded Appliances
&amp; Many Metals.

614-992-4025
Call 8 am·B pm

YOUNG'S
·WPEHTER SERVIa

'.6om Addltlortl

· ofiiW Gar111111
•EIIcll'lcal &amp; Plumbing ·

·•Rooting

otnvrtor &amp; Etterlor
. .
.Painting
. Alao Conc,.lt Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG 111.
992-6215

·-

PomefOy,Ohlo

$2,000 REWARD!!
For Information
leading to the
arrest and
con.v iction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron L. .Miller

992-40.25

1

· Shirley

ACTION YOUTH CAR E. INC. 11
saekinQ a Child and Family Trterapist for our Pt. Pleasant ·offtce.
Individuals must be a Master
level Soc1al Worker. Counselor.
Psychologist or R.N. and be l1 ·
.ce nsa bte. At lefls! one year ell per~ence m l(ldnm:luat and fam1ty
therapy. Plea se ruspond by
send1ng resunu,;os to 1\cuon Yount
Car~ . PQ Ro• StO. n1piey WV
l5271 Or Cf\1! 1· 800 835 5277

AVON • $8 ·S18 IHr No Door To
Door . Outck Cash• · nonu ses•

Fun! 1·600-827·11640 •M•slstrep.
Cemetery saln? Its the best
kept secret 11"1 Amenca 1-ligh
commtsstons, Donuses, bcnchts,
leads, heatlt] plus 40 1K $600 tast
start training bonus. call 614 -992·
74-40

. 30 Announcements
McCoy's Curiosity Shop.
221 Main St., P1 Pleasant.
Open 10·5

Compu ter Users Needed , Work
own hours . S20k to SSOICJyr 1.
ooo-348-7186 x1~a

.

Tuesday tl'lrv Saturda~.

--=====--1
40
Glveaway
me,o,,
Crahs and

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304·773-5822

Rt. 1, Box 44-C
Mason, WV
25260

·

~j

6 Monlh Old Lasha Apso With

Papers, 614-288.0007 .

Doe r,abbttto give away, call 61•·
992·6369.
Kino size Serta pedect sleeper
w!lrame, good condlclean .· 30• ·
882·2719.

THE MAPLES
in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring wallto-wall car13eting, with all appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID

Must be 62 years of age or handicapped .
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements.
For further details call today

&lt;=)
E

-

Oomtno·s Ptzza Now Acccptmg
Appl icat!ons Ar Calhpohs &amp; Po ·
Appl, '" Pe"on

~~fuib;bo;bb-:i.la;;jilhoT.iin;~n;;s::.33ii0~4-I Earn e)(lra money wrthoul lctwmg

hOme. 304-882-201 1.

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?
Consider:

1•614•992~7022

AVON 1 All Areas
Spearfi, 304·675· 1429.

CNA postttons clvatlaOIC, part 11mo
and lull ttmc, salary $6.09 po1
hour. 61•·992 ·7900

8 Month old Ak ila -Ge rman
Shephard mind pup. to good

· nEE

Help Wanted

EOE.

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Harry H. Houston, D.D.S.

Financing through NorwHt Financial

110

Avon S8 · S18 tHr, No Door -To .
Door, Quick Cash. Fun &amp; Relall ing, 1·800· 736·0168tndiSISirep.

~ Remodeling

1-614-742·2925

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Heavy Equipment·• Remove

...•:::..

~ MASON DENTAL CARE

Wanted- 1940 AiU;me ~earbook .
call614-474-a885.

House • Mobile Homes •
Privacy Fences • Patio
Decks, Driveways • Farm &amp;

Serv/r:e

Utula L. JfoiiJton; CDPMA
ZI12JI:2/tfn

OHIOVAWY

24 Hr. Em11rgem;y

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

LOHG'S
COHSTRUCTIQH

614·992-7643
FAMILY NIGHT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
B~y 1, Get 1 FREE After 4 P.M.
R..·~h''" l 2 Large Pizzas w/1 item $12.99

Craw ford's Flea Markel, Henderson, WV. Everyday 9· 6. Craf!s,
antiques, trading cards, furnilufe,

1012519611tn

SOLID VINYL \
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

m.o re or 1111_,

~~ Your Mes!41geAcr•••

20 Yrs. Exp. •. Ins. Owner: Ronnie ~ones

Auction
and Flea Market

,_,;,;.._ _ _ _ _..,;,;,;,;.....;,,;,;......;...,;;.,;,;....,;,;,;.._-i.IIOys, variery. 304-675-5404.

992-5042

No: lllo(:V·1111
excepting all legal
In puriluance of 1n ilrder eattmenll end rlghll ol
oiNII In tho above ant1111Hf way, p111lng an Iron· ptn at
llctlon, I will after lor 1111 11 273.921111 lor ••"'"'nco.
public 1uctton on the front · . Tho 1bove description
...Pl. of the courthou11 In w11 prep1rod tram 1n
.ll1lg1 County, Ohio, on the 1etuel aurvey by Robert R.
2nd illy or Slpllmbtr, 111117 Eaeon, Ohlo P.S. No. 7033.
II 10:00 1.m., the following Mey, 1992.
dllcrlbed reel 81talt .
Reference DHd: Volumt1
tiiUitt In thl County of 332, P'l• ~ Volume 330RIClillto wtt:
P1ge 221 and Volume 275.
SIIUIIId In Sutton Page 235.Parctl 2. Tract I.
.Townehlp, M1lg1 County, Melge County Dead
stot1. of Ohio and being AICOfdl. _
s.cuon 31. Town 3 North.
The 1bov1 deecrlbed r111 ·
118nge 12 Will or.the Ohio "'... 11
of the r111
Comp~ny•e Purchllt and eellll
be,n
bltng ducrlbld aelottawe: l~·;~.::·~~~~r~r·~ Parcel
Baglnntng at a point In I
1~1 centerline of Counly
Torma of 11te: Ten
Floacl 30 (Forell Run Road). p11rcent (10%) down et the
11ld point being at the time the bid 11 1cceplld.
~ulhlaot comer of Smllh'l
to bt peld within
Rerctlll 11 deiCrlbild In the
Any .IUm ·
. il(11lg1 County Dlld
llld Thirty
tlecordo: Volume 323. Pllll (30)
111111 beer tntereot
:rn:
11 the rote of 10.00% per
Thenct1 Nortll ae• 31' 49" annum form the date ol
••t 384.72 1111 elong the 1111.
Qtnlerllne ol eald County
Depoelt to be w11vad Ia
Rold 30 to a point 11 the told to the pllntlll, first
~authwlll comer or Blng'l mortg111 holder.
1.34acra pan:tl;
ptrmllll com manly
Thence North o• •7' 22" known II: 44770 For11tllun
w..t 1168.39 f..l elong the Ad. Perm1n1nt p1rcol No:'
Will nne of tha. 11td Bing 18-110031.005
parcel end along the w..t
Jlmtl M. Souleby
nne of Amberger'• 2.795
Shorlll of Melge County
acre p~rcelto ari Iron pin at (7) 28, (8) 4, 11 3 I
1111 Norlhw..t corner of the
~lid Amberger 2. 7115 acre
percal, p11alng Iron plnl 11
~.41111 and 3113.78 IHt far
.,f.,..nce:
·
• Thence South 82" 17' 40"
W..t 314.50 fill to en Iron
fin: Thence South 1" 16' 50"
Ellt 400.113 fMt to an Iron
pln lound 11'the Northtlll
earner or Smith'• Parcell
and described In the Melge
County D..d Aecarde:

80

Chester, Ohio
'

Yard Sale-Aug 1·2·•·5·6 from 9·?
Bro•d Run Road . 1S1 house on
ri Qht from Sporn. Coleman 2250
generator, gold-elacuic double
oven-built in, boolils, movies,
size 24 112 womens clothes , lo ts
of misc.

·"to9

985·4422

.

I

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck

Dialer for:

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL Volume 323, 'Pegl 377:
ESTATE
Thence SoU1h 1' 16' 50"
The Sllte of OhiQ, Melga
E111 418.12 fill 1long the
County, AmlriCIIIMorl!lllt Eall IIIII of the llld Smith
1nd lnvellntent COIIIPI
. ny percole to the point of
~
beginning, containing 7.52
Dlnlel A. NuH, ET AL.

Gutters

5.

-Brtgga &amp; Stratton • MTD· Murrey- McCollough -

Remodeling

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

HOME IMPROVEMENT

TRI-COUNTY SANITATION

4 Famil~ Sa ..: 154 S.cond Att'41·
nut , 4th , 5th, fUh , New IUsed
lr.larchandiae, Tools, AntJqu es. 9·

Parra and Se"'icel l ,
; Mowera • Chain SIIWI • Weedestera • AuthoriZild

"Build Your Dre•m"

MANLEY'S

HOWARD'S

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

1-100-872-591171391 Safford SchOOl Ad., Gallipolis, OH

M&amp;

2 Wt1ttlhorlt tldtnt mowers.
Children's: Unit grill clothing;
gun cabeineL 2 1121 mi out ShoelltinG Ridge R4

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

1-614-441-1050-1-888-441-1050

BENNE'IT'S MOBILE
HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; wv
eu ua 1418

Custom Homes

•Computer Systems
•Repairs
•Accessortes
•90 Day Same As Cash

•We Recharge Laser Cartridge•
•We Refill Ink Jet Cartridge•
•We Re-lnk Dot Matrix

Public: Notte:•

By MIKE HUGHES

REMEMBERING BOGIE- ActresHs Lauren
Bacall,left, end Anjellcl Huston stood benellh

Easy Bank Financing

Howard. L WrlleMI

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•Software
•Parts
•Printers
•Custom Orders
•Financing

11211Wl2 rntJI,

CBS retreats to past s~ccess
as a network of the heartland
.

Yard Salt
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

New talk shows hope to fill
vacuum left by Arsenio Hall
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Televlalon Writer

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 4, 1997

Mounlain Cur. dog. male. 1yr old.
304·895·3640.
.
Shepherd type dog, li~es kid&amp;,
spayed, call614·992-6619. ·
Table &amp; 4 chairs. 304 · 67~7755.

60 . Lost and Found
Found : Black Female Part
Dachshund In Patriot, Cadmus
Area, II Not Claimed Will Givaawa~.

614· 448-3229.

· Found· Darwrn vrciniry,

3·4 month

old, fema le, German Shepherd,

81&lt;-1192-2075.

Found: Small Solid Grey Cal In

Centenary Area. 614-446-&lt;4753.

home . lnv •tl' '(ou r frren ds lor a
proles sronat Gl::tmo4r Portrart .
party. Satrslnc trorr guurarlloc a
For •n lormal ron ca l l 1·800 487
5787or 1·800·.112'&amp; -6:llJ3

Full T•me Ollrce PC!rsonr-~ot Na&lt;:.d
ed Wilh Emphasrs on 'Co lll'Chons
Ollrco Dutres In Hcattn Care Envr:
ronmenr . Smrtrng Drue Augus t I·
25 , 1997 Please Send Rosulrre
and Prevrous Sa larr Hislroy to
CLA PO Bo• 418, CtO Gallrpolrs
Dai l y Tribu ne, 825 Thr rd Ave .,
Gallipolis. Ohro 45631 . Submrt Re·
StJme By Augus1 1S. 19~7.
Home Busrnoss S A.S E $1 00
M.O. Onlr. S.PF lnf. P.O. Box
347358 , San Francrsco , CA

94134 .
Local Bus•ness Seek•ng Worker
For C;a rpet Cleantng fl. no O!her
Related Servrces . Uusl Have
Good Or1v1ng Record. Serid AG·
sume To : ETC P.O. Box 541, Kerr.

Ohio •5643.
Mature dependable baby sitter
neaded to provide care, In our
home, for 7 &amp; 3 year11 ofd no
evemngs or weekends .. reterenc·
es,equired call 814·992·7562 al-

ler 4:30.

�P~~ge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 4, 1917,

Monay, August 4, 1997

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
BRIDOJ:

NEA Croasword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

,._..God
Pullod
7

210

OPPOATUNrf

-Mwt

ano

YICTORV EXPRESS INC.
NomiHI Among TOP PAY PACK·
AGES Natl Truc~oad Carriers In
A Surver, Of Driver Wagas By
Sigrl'oat rw:.
UMITEO TIME OfFER
lnnperlenced Onvers Earn Up
To 161 SO Per Day Wh 1le Tratn·
Stlrt Cllalls Betore &amp;'25197
And Earn Top Wages Class Stz
es Are Ltmtted SO DON'T DE·

•no

LAY I
For Mora lntormauon And An
Appltcat1on Call Your Future Em·
~ov«TOdavll

VICTORY EXPRESS INC
1·SOO.M3o5003

Opportunity
INOTtC£1
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you da bull·
ness with people you know, and
HOT to send money through the
mall until you have invHtrgated
11'18 otfenng

230

Professional
Services

HARTS MASONARY • Block,
brick &amp; srone work, 30 yeats expeflencw, reasonable raru. 30489S-3S91 sher e:OOpm, no JOb lo
small or 10 BIG WY-021208
Lt vtngston s basement waterproofing all basement repa~rs
done free estimates, lllellme
guarantee 10yrs on job experience 304 675-2145
t
Ttm 1 Cuatom Carpentry, no JOb
to small, wtll do It all,'"'' htm a
call 301·882-3i21
rae lltimates. great references, Interior
&amp; ewtertOr

BAM · 6PM ESTMF
EOE
Mlf
'SignPost Inc:
Fall. 199G Issue
PART· TIME
Need Employee W1th Sw11chboard
Expenence In Gall1pOI1s Area.
Uust Be Flexible &amp; Avatlable For
All Shifls Musl Be W1llmg To
Dr1ve To Huntmg10n For Appomt
ment Call Today 614 446 4511,
Kelly Temporary S&amp;tvtees
i)erson to stay wlelderly man,
must be hones t &amp; dependable
Send resume to Box CW29 cJo
Po1nt Pleaaant Register 200
Uatn St Pt Pleasant WV 25550
SeriOus lnqutr" Onlyl
Postal Jobs 3 Pos1ttons Avatl·
able, No Ellpartence Necessary,
For lnforma110n Call 800 5090998 EKI 6016
RNI\.SW

,,_

Slit

1TIME ONLV!

IJ.l.Q-W.Q.U Tl

$499 Oaim on

.,.ect

lingle Me+

liOn $899Downon.aectrR.IIti·

IBCtbnL 2-3 or • Bedroom modell Mllalle.Ooi&lt;Woocl Homes
N1trt1, WV S&gt;4·755-5885.
---'-------1&amp;72 12xe5 Llbeflv. 21&gt;&lt;, 1ba. 1.w
cond , mu~t be moved 13 500
Will mo¥e lOcally 304-8 75-3000
!rom &amp;.5

1988 Oakwood 14K60 2 bedtoom
2 bath, central a~r. 18,500 304·
576-&lt;00S
'
1987 14x70 Presu~. 3 bedroom,
2 balh, good condttiOn. 110,000,
614-985-3807 or leave message

1988 Clayton 14x70 3br, 1ba,

the Federal Fa1r Hws.ng Act

of 1968 which makes h llegal
to adYarttsa "any prefafvnc8,
limitation or dlscrirNnatlon
based on race, colo&lt;, rvtlglon,
sex 1amlial status or natiOnal
ortgtn, or any lmemlon to
make any such preference,
limi18Uon or dtserlminallon •

ThiS newspaper Will not
Pa n lime Long Term Care Omk..,.,.,ngty accept
budsman Volunteer Coordtnator
acNertlsements lot' real estate
pos1tton avatlable Ttle coordtna
tor would develop and manage a
whiCh IS In viOlatiOn of tne
voii.Jnteer program 1n an e1ght
law Our readerS are hefeby
county reg ton of sou lheastern
_,.., lllol •• dwellings
Ohto atmed at provldtng general
advertised tn this newspaper
mlormaucn to consumers about
are avatlable on an equal
nursmg homes and rtghts of the
opport..,lty basis
elderly, and help!(lg to er~sure that
the elderly are no1 abused, ne
glected or explotted The appltc·
ant mull have expertence tn the
REAL ESTATE
fields ot agtng and be a Reg ts
tered Nurse, Ltcensed Scctal
Worker or hold a Bachelor's De- 31 0 Homes for Sale
gree tn a related held After em
plo~ment, ttte successful appltc
2bedroom house end 2 lots
ani Will be requtred to complele Greer Rd Shown by appomtment
tra101ng and pass the l TC Om· only 304-675-3696
budsman Program certlftcauon 1.:._:_:.:.._ _:...______
e~tam Salary Range $9 50 • 3bedroom brick house on ucre
$12 50 per hour Please subm1t lot In Gallipolis Ferry. Ntce1304resume and cover len~ ourhrnng 87&amp;-SO.tD Dr 30-WSJS.411
quallhcauons by August 22 1997
Btdroom 5phl level Wilh 5400
to The Da•IY Semtnel P:O Bow 4
Sq Ft lncl udtng Full Baaament
729.50, Pomeroy Ohio 45769
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM·
Wilh 2 Car Garage, Gas Heat, 2
PLOVER
llllea From Golipolls On Bula.,lle
Pika, On 1 112 Acre flat Lo\ Coty
Seektng Registered lqng term S&lt;:ltoola, $129,000 0t Best Oiler,
care Nurstng ASSistants for Inter· 814·HI 0380
medta1e Cllre Factltty Rota,ttng
shifts. part time West Vlrgln1a • Bedroom, 3 bath, tivmg room,
family room, dlntng room, 2 gacer11f1catton required J1ll Bum
gardner, AN DON, Po1nt Pleas- rages, 3 112 m11es out Sandhill
ant Nursmg and Rehab1lltat10n Rd. 1140,000 30+675-5403.
Center. Slale Route 62 Route t,
8 8 Acres,- 2 year old
I
I
Bo• 326 Po1nt Pleasam WV
3br, 2 baths, central air, NICE
25550 (A Gleomark Mulll care
SOmtrvUio Rtolty 304-875 3030
faclhty) (Q(
or 31)4..875-3&lt;431 Jean Cato
Shephard loggmg Anyone E 1t
AntENS MORTGAGE
perlence 'Wtth Ct'latn Saw Also
COMPANY
SkidderOperarqr. 614 682-6402
When the bari&lt;Saya no lot
Athens Mortga~ say yeslllet
WANTED RN s k:u 136 bed 1ntsr·
oor
sta.H help ~ get the loan you
med tale care fac1h ty Extens1ve
need
benefit package Salary comWt epecllllzt In :
mensurate with eJtpenence ConFlnandng tor hou-. and ~
lact Sandra Renmtre RN, DON,
bllohornH
Laktn Hospital. Lakm, WV 304Self.emptoyed·
rennancln;675-0880 Ellt 124 Men Fu
Hame Improvement•· Bill Con·
a ooam o1 oopm Deadttne loJ ap.
aolw.tiQn. Investment Proper·
plrtng •s August a, t997 laktn
ty. Cooh out lor ony need
tS an EEO Employ8f
No Ojlf)licaaon fee. AN krlelo ol

ArwS2!ilJMo., 614·388-~162

Air Conditioner~, Wln&lt;low Type

2 Btdroom Tratler For Rent In
Chshlrt 614•367_7560

8 •000 And ,O,OOO BTU $t50
Each, Furn~ce, Pmpine, 75,000
BTU. 112!5, 114-441-oo43

2 Beclroom Trallet, 1260/Mo . Retl•10•ncol! &amp; Oeposn, Route 7,
. Gall• potts. e 14·256·1568.
2 Bedroom Tratlets tn Small Tra•l
11 Park, Oepos 1t &amp; Reltrences
ReqUired. 814-446-1104

1997 t4x70 2 or 3 Bedroom
$995 down S1951mo Only at
Oakwood Homes N11ro WV :304
755-5885
1997 t4xBO 3 or "' Bedroom.
$1,359 down $229/mo Free a1r,
Sklrltng &amp; deltvery Only at Oak
wood Hom&amp;s Nttro WV 30o4-755
5885

3 Bedroom Mobile Home In C•n
Utnarv $275/Mo, $200 Depoal~
614 446-9522

3238
Limned 011erl 1997 doublew1de,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, S2791
manlh Free deltvery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes Nllro

wv 304 1ss seas

New 1997 U•70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 momhs FREE lot ren\
Only $181 66 per month wtth
$1050'- down Call 1 800 837

3238
New Bank Repo'sl Only 3 left,
owner l1nanc tng avatlable 304·
755 7191

330

Farms for Sale

275 Acre Farm Par11ally
No Pest fHerotcal Used
On A Sueam 3 Bedrooms, 1 83th
House, Free Gas 814-367-0638

340

Business and
Buildings

Call today bra free anety81sl

8QO.II2fl..1- 814·512..006

7706.

F...,..· ' Bt~ Pwera, et.,....
--...

GOOD

1 1 01

1!:===..=:=;.:::.:,:::..:.:;,~.,..-Paltf• Nlw • UMd Fumlture
2101Jolltnon AIIO
Open 9:30.5:00 l.ioi&gt;Sal
304-675-SOFA (7632)

440

Apartments
for Rent

Used Furniture S(ora, 130 Buta
villa Ptke, Gas /Eiecrnc Cook
Stoves, Automatic Washer, Mat
tresses. Beds, Dinettes, Htde A
Bed Couches
Tetevt11ons,
Desks, Typewnttn. Baby Bed
G1ft Shop, 614-448 4782 Hr&amp;. 10

1 and 2 .bedrOOm apartments, fur
111shed and unfurniShed, securtty
depos tt requ1red no pets 614·
992 2218
I
1 Bedroom Apartment In R1o
Granda, S3301Mc , WhiCh In
eludes U1tltt1es, Deposit Requtred,
614 245-9082

2bdrm apls. tota l etectnc. ap
pltances furmshed taunary room
fac1l1hes close to school m town
Apphcattons available at Vtllage
Green Apts 11'49 or call 614 992
11
37
EOH
2bedroom , lurmshed, garage apr
m Clifton mce &amp; c:lean $275/mo

4

530

Moore owner

540

1

2 Bedrooms $.(00/Mo, Route 7,
GaiiJpois 614 245-5024
House For Sale 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, 2 Car Garage Graham
Sd1001Aoad.614-441 1198
Newt~

remodeled lhree bedroom
one and 112 bath home in Middleport 614·992·3465 alter 5pm

Ewpertenc:ed carpentry and remodeling Inside and outside,
decks, vmyl Sldtng, add-on addl·
lions, cab1net refactng or newly
rebutll References-Free Eall~
mates Jtm Shva 304-675-1272.

Three bedroom brtck ranch style
home. L:R OR ltreplace tWo
baths, garage, on one acre on
Frank Rd , c:all614·992 718o4

S&amp;M Water Haulmg Servtcea,
"Where Purity 11 Our Panton•
G1ve Us A Call Today 304 675
3716
Saamatren 25yrs eJpeuence
All alterat•ons welcome Senior
Citizens d1acoun1 Call Tareaa

304-875-8728
Weekly Hcuseclaanlng, Reier
encnlf Needed. 614-446-1137
Will Do Battyslltlng In M~ Home,
814 4o46-8522
W1ll haul 1unk or trash

away $351

Un That Mortgage Paymem tor
So melting Better Than Interest!
-"Pay your mongage oft 5 15
years soonerl
·"Sav&amp; $25,000 $75,000 or more1
.•uake sure your Lender tsn' t
mJacalculatmg your mortgage
and casung you tt'lousandsl
-·Program works on mobile home

loans 1001
HOW?
The Mortgage saving•
Program!
Call tor FrM lnfonn~tion

Tot1F-

1.aaa.343-473&amp; EXT.19
Victorian house large rooms 4
bedrooma, 1 112 balh, for sale or
rent, Corntng, Oh, 81"'·948·2168,
8 11-949·2608 ore 14·347-47.&amp;3.

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12xeo Wtlh Pull Out, Pull Out Is
11 x9, EJcellant Cord•tlon Uust
See To Appreclale ! 8 14"446-

&lt;4094

1g11 two bedroom 12JI60 tn
eludes concrere sttpa, underpin·
stove, ~fngeraiOf, new carWtll Haul Pick·Up loada, Tr"
hallway and masler bedTrlmmtng, Wttenor IExtenor, Paint·
12900, call 614·698·6031
mg, Lawncare And Varloua Othef·
and IHve message
Jo~ 61 ....&amp;-MO~

pickup load 304&lt;175-5035

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'-,s~F-oo-,~~~o~,~~-~~H~P~sa-n-d~F~,~,,.-r
Ladder And Other Equrpment,
814 245-5483
1i85 ChENy pick up, ~ufl John
boat, outSide coal/Wood furnace,
40ft extenston ladder, 24• wtndow fan, 15· Dlack/Whlte TV, gtrls

3:14~773-5040

3 Bedroom House. 2 Baths, 1st
Avenue References &amp; Oepoa1t
ReqU JUtd $3851MO, 614-446
4993
4 Or 5 Bedroom House DepoSit &amp;
References ReQutred Phone 614
4JI6 1104
A Good 2 Bedroom House In Po
meroy New V1ny1 Wmdows To Be
Installed By August 1St For Rent
Wllh Opt1on To Buy Wllh Good
References, No lrtstde Pets De
pcstt Reqwed, $350/Mo, 614·
698-7244
Beauulul large 2 story l'ornltr lot
816 Matn St Pt Pleasant, Wv 3
Bedrooms, L1v1ng, Dtntng Room 2
Full Baths $450 Month 1100
Oepos tt No Pets tns1de (814)·
446 9585 or (61 o4}-o446 2205

,,,,,,.

A Groom Shop -Pet Groommg
Featurm; Hyaro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges .Creek Rd
614 446 0231
AKC Baaseu Hound pupptes
$150ea Tncolor reaay 7128197
304·576·2216 or 304 576 2126
AKC Bo~er pupptes 3 males 2
lemales, wormed dew claws re moved, ta(ls docke(J 304 895
3t17
AKC Reg Blood Hound Pupptes,
8wk I old 304 882 3613
AKC Regtstered Basse! Pup&amp;, 7
WE9.s Old $100, 614 446.()974
AKC Regtstwed Oalma110n Pup ptes. 8 Fem111es 4 ._hies Vo1
Checked. Wormed &amp; 1st Sho1s
Stud Serv1ce Fo1 An AKC Male
Oalmat1on We ll Bu11!, Good Na
tured, Stres large llll~rs 14
256 1961

e

AKC Regtste red Pcd1gree Ger
man Rollwtuter Stud Sefv1ce
304-8823556

t~~te c - ss 381. !Hove ss
Hood) 011 Frame Restoration
Sta1ted Noeda Complolo, Loll Of
New Parll $2.000. 1W7t Chl¥rolel Molobu, Gray 2 Or Coupe, M
zona Car 305,
Auto, Air No
Rust Ver ~ Sohd Car, Daly DriYef
$3,000, 1994 Pontiac Sunblrd,
Red, Girl Dflven, {College Car)
47 900 Miles 4 Cylinder, Air,
Auto Well Maintained, Has New
Ttres And Stru1s, $8,000; 1t97
Ertended Cab. While, Chewolet
4•4 350 Vorl.. Engine Fully ap.
lloned, 11 ,000 Milts, $26,500
614-388·8803 Alrer 5 00 Or
Lea¥&amp; Meuaga Anydnw

I:A.:r:.:e:.:v:.:o..:u:.:b:.:u:.:v:..on:.:g-ne_w:,_lu-,..:n.:u_r_e"'&gt;
11

Av&amp;riJe, 614-44UI221
Sell your used l(lrmture to tt'le PoBesch St., Middleport. 2badroom meroy Thnh Shop There Is a real
lurmsh~, utlhtles paid Oepoalt need for couches breakfast and
a referencea 30&lt;1·8112·25e8. , dtnmg room aets We also bu.,
baby beds, &amp;~rollers playpens.
BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT toddler car seats and walkers
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Call 114·992·3725 Tuesday lhru
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive Saturday, 10am 4pm at 220 East
lrom l260 10 $334 Walk to shop Main Stree~ ~&amp; movlaa Call 614-448-2588 1..;.:::.:..:.:..::..::..:..:....:..:~--­
Equal Housing Oppor"niiY
Bools By Redwmg, Ctttppewa,
Rocky Tony Lama Guaranteed
Convement to PVH, 2bedroom, Lowest Pr~ees At Shoe Cafe Galkitchen battr, LR No peta. $3001 ltpoliL
mo. $300 d~llt 304-675-5788
Bran Bed Wtth Mattress, &amp; Box
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, No Springs. 1125, 614·4146-3040
Pets Relerenc:e And Oepooit Ro- 1.:::.....;::.:..:...::.:...._....:.__,_ _
qutred 811-448·1510
Buying spor11 e~rd1!
I Wtll buy any Elites or new Ola F urn11hed Apartment, One Bed· mond l&lt;tngs If you have cards to
room, Upstatra, All UlihriH Paid, sell, let me know Call 6H 949
No Pels, 854 Secorid Ave., Galli· 3098
POll• 614 ..48·9523
Canning Tomatoes $4 Per Bushel
Furntshed EUtc1enc~ $1115/Mo. u PICk. Bnng Own Contatner, 614·
Uulwes Patd, Share Bath, B07l2::4::7.:2::t:42::_-.,.~,----­
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 614
446-3844 Alter 1 PM
Complete King S1ze WaterDed,
614·379·2720 AFTER 6 PM.
GraCJous liVIng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llagf Manor and Concrete &amp; Plastic Sepltc Tanks,
R1vers1de Apartments 1n Mtddle~ 300 TI'Hu 2,000 Gallons Ron
'port From $236 $30o4 Call 614· Evans Enrerprlses Jackson, OH
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor- .:.1·.:800-:::.53:::.7..:.Q::S.:2B:.:.__ _ _ __

1==--------

1

CENTRAL SUPPLY
VALLEY SUPPlY
BROWNS TRUSTWORTHY
Grubbs P1ano tun1ng S repatrs
Pro~ems? Need Tuned? Call the
piano Dr 6141 414ti-4525

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red, New &amp; Robu1lt In Stocll
Call Ron Evans 1 600 537 9528

Ta ra Townhouse Apanments,
Very Spactous 21Jedrocms, 2
FlOors, CA 1 112 Bath Fully Cir·
peted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pauo, Start $350/Mo No Pets,
lease Plu.a Secunty Deposu Re·
qwed, 614·446 348t, 614·446:01:_::0:,:';....;_ _ _ _ _ _

Ltl tle Ttkes Race' Car Bed (Twm)
Excellent Condition 614 4466051,

-::c-:-:l

Three bedroom apartment, Third
Street Racme $300 month plus
depostt and u11lllles 614·247·
..;429=2--------.,.Three bedroom mobile 1'1ome for
rent no pets 6 t 4 992 5858
Tw1n R1vers Tower now ac:cepting
appl1cat10ns lor 1br HUO subsilf·
tzed apt for elderly and handt
cappod EOH :100'67!Hl679
Two bedroom apartment In Middleport, no pets, 814-902·5858.

Queen s1ze waterbed frame, wnh
m1rrored headboard rails &amp; heat
er. $75,614 992 7836
Full stze true~ topper $45 new
portable phone, wtll seu at 112

.I pnce, $25 614 949 2045
Sears Au Con01!1oner tS 000
BTU's 220 Volts $150 Easy l1lt
Trailer Httcn For Full Stze P1ck Up
Sway Control $100 614 441
1061
Sears Kenmore Washer, Twm
Waterbed Frame &amp; Maureu &amp;
Boll Spnngs, 6141 446 2855

Reg11tered Small Ratt Tem er
Pupptts, ti14 256- 1951

1986 Plymouth Colt. auto. 4 new
ttres 32 mtlea pet eallon, body
e•cellent runs good $595, 8U.742 2370

Wetmaraner male 7 months
AKC champton bloodl1ne excel
lent dtspostt1on S1h1er gray 1250
614 992 7201
Wolf Hybrids Male Poodle, HuskIeS Samoyeds, Chows Alaskan
Malamutes, All Ages, Puppy Pal
ace Kennels 614 388-&lt;l4~

570

Musical

1989 Ford Festtva S350, 614256 1130

1990 Chevy Cavalier, excellent
condition 1ns1de and out, co~ air,
PS, PB, $2795 negotiable Wilt
cons•der par11al trade &amp;1•·982-

6824

Instruments

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
Baughman Farm Cann1ng To
matoes For Sale $8 00 Bushet
Al ready P1cked Brmg YQur Own
Conta•ntr. 614 256-8535
CANNING TOMATOES
$3 Pe1 Bushel Ptck Your Own
Bnng Conta1ners. 614 247-2532
Cann1ng tomatoes $4 par bushel
u p.ck bring your own containers
614 247· 2142
Sweet corn and peppsrs 10am?
W1ll1ams Farm, Syracuse Oh10,
614 992 3985 days or 614 992·

1991' /fl)nliac Sunbird LE, S2.700,

614·~37.

1993 Ford Thunderbird $3,200,
1V9• Dodge lntrapld $4,DOO,
1992 Dodge Colt, t990 ford F...
l tYa AUto $1.500. 1990 Pontiac
Sunbird $2,400, tSOO ChEWy Cor
dova $2 000 1998 Ntssan Cen
tury $1 200 1988 Chevy Corstca
St 000 1993 GMC Sonma Ptck
Up $3
1985 Chevv 5·10
P1ck Up Auto $1,600, 1991 Che·
YY
10 Blazer 4 Doon,
1986 Chev~ S 10 ••~. Ptck Up
St 400, B&amp;O Auto Sales, Hwy
160 N 614-446-6865

aoo.

s

se.soo

5866 everungs

1995 Chrysler Curus. loaded,
Sweet corn, $2 dozen for 10 do· 126.000 maes. $12000 or trade for
truck of equal value 614·9•9
ZBfl or more 614-742 2086
2452

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

1984 Mass1e Ferguson 01e sel
460 Hours Always Storea lnBtde
Very Good Condl1ton, Trac1or 85 Olds stat1onwagon, one OW{'&amp;f,
W1th 5 Foot Brush Hog, $7 800 75,000 m11es, clean, new t.res &amp;
614 388 8803 Alter S·OO Or baltery $1200 614 992·7011
Leave Message Anyt1me
[ ::::::::..::;.::::.:::.:.:..:..::~::--:96 Plymouth Neon, 14,000 m1!es.
3 Po1nt hitch ccne seeoerrlerttl
36.000 mile warranty, 2 door, ate.
11er spreadtH useo very little
$l0,000 6f4 742 1800
$200 304 675 6406
467 N H hoy"ne $2800 two ISO
gallon Rubt&gt;crma10 water troughs
StOOeach 61~ 2&lt;17 1100.
Husqvarna &amp; Green Machtne
tr1mme rs &amp; brush cullers on sale
now S1der s EquJpment 304 675
7412t
JD 17X7 Double 01sk Gra1n Dnll
1H 620 Gran Dull NH 256 Rake
JD 12' Dtsk Taylorway 18 Fold
Up 0 1Sk JO 1210 400 Bu Gra1n
riuggy (614)669-5101
John Deere 212 lawn tractor
Hyde statiC 48" CUI e•c COnd
$1 700 304 675 3824

630

A Need A Car? No Credit Bad
Crecht Bankruptcy? We Can Help
Ae-Estabhsh Cred1tl Uust Make
S 1SO Week Take Home 1 5%
Down On Cash Or Trade To
Oualtfy For nus Bank Flnanctng
No Cred1t Turn Downs• 6t.tl 441
0607
CARS FOR StOOl Truc:ks boats
4 wheelers, motor homas, turn1
ture eleerrontes computers etc
by FBI, IRS. DEA Avatlable your
area now Call 1· 800 513 _.343
Ext S 9368
1980 1990 Cars For $100111
S..zed And Sold
Locally This Month.
Trucks. 4xo4 s, EIC
t·800·S22-27Xl, )( 390 t

livestock

17 Head Bred Cows &amp; Heifers
$!150 Each 614 256 6230
t995 AOHA lncenuve Ful'ld Bay
F11!y Peppy San, Doc Ba' Boston
Mac Bloodlmes Starred Under
Sndd le Very 01J1et Wtll Be Tan
42000 61'1245 1401 Eventngs
6 Month All Ttme Billy Goat Wtth
Horn!&gt; $50 Each Brown Egg Lay
mg H~ns $2 50 Each 614 256
626SEven1ngS8.Weckends
Hay Mare 15 Hands 614 256 6801
Game Hens &amp; Coon Hound For
Sale, 614 256 1233

1;r;;~;.;~;;r;;;-2w.;k,~
Helfer 2 Weeks 2

Upton Used Cars Rt 62·3 Mtles
South ol Leon, WV Fmancmg
Avatlable 304 458 1069

720

1978 Ch&amp;Yrolet 112 Ton, 350 En·
Qtni, Automattc, Steel Flatbed,
1800, 614-388-8879
1983 Ford Ranger Topper Bed
Liner, New Ttres Engtne Rebt.ull
7197, Runs Greal 11 700
(614)256-1443
1985 Ford F- 150 300 6 Cylrncer,
4 Spead ShQrt Step Bed Very
Gaod Condtllon $2 850 614
379-1!247

450

3347

New!~ remodeled 3br' all electnc,
Glenwood S350imo + deposit.
304-576-2929 8Y9f'llngs

Sle&amp;pm~ rooms wi th cooking.
Also tra1ler space on nver All
hook ups Call after 2 00 p m ,
304 n:l-5851, Mason WIJ

STORAGE TAN~S 3 000 Gallon
Upnght, Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jadl.son 01-io, 1 800-5379528

Ear Corn Easy loadrng located
In Cenlenary OH Call 614 4-iS
1010

550

Tobacco wator bed plants 304·
895 395&lt;

1989 Ford E350 7 3 0 1esal, AC,
Auto 12' Van Body $5,000 090 ,
1991 Ford E350 58 Gas AC,
Au10 12' Van BodV SS.SOO 080,
1993 Dodge 0350 Cumms, le
Package Club Cab, Auto , Atr,
Aeeae Httch, Goo!leneck H1tch,
Immaculate Conct1tton 1990 Ford
F250 7 3 01eael, Auto 51,000
Milts, Work truck, No Atr or Ra
d10,
E .:cellent .. ConditiOn

Mobile Homes
for Rent

14170 Su1lable lor 1 Chtld, no tn
stde pets, Applegrove, WV 301
576·2890
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home, All
ElectriC, S2501Mo • 1250 Otpostl,
61~ 387-7802

460

Space

for Rent

2 Tfaller lota, Teens Run Road,
Counly Water, 10 Miles From
Gallipolis, 1150/Mo , 614·245·

Building

rool.ng or lldtng, 42"xt20•, $450,
814992 2560
•

SD36
Mobtle hOme sue avatlable Det ~
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
614 385 4367

$75 Uo lo 1215 6U
245-S..64
Whole or 112 Sides t&gt;eellor sale
c:ontact K1m, 304 773 9S85.

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

Supplies

3e Sheets of box nb atummvm tor

Block, bnck , sewer p1pa!1, w1nd
owa, lintels. etc Claude Wtnrers
R1o Grande, OH Call 614 215
5121

Tl6f,S 0
JrfPS 0
¥111.\lCATS 0

VIPe,s

0

StA~S
61~1'1TS
S~II'ITS

0
0
0

t4Awi:S o

,..
WE 00 t-IOT
,- ~t:&gt;TOOOY

,.., ~w c.Nt,

ou~~~~~~
i'!&gt; (pX) ~ Tl\f.

\&lt;£.
001 II 1
~y

UUW'{5!

OOL.y OCCJ.J.1.£ II MD

...

10(),000 t&lt;'\11.£~
01'1 IT W!\€.N
W£~i1Tf

TRANSPORTATION

710

19M Chevy 5-10, real good con
dltton. runs great $1700 080,
614 992-6897
1988 Custom 30 wlu!lllty bed,
2wd, 454 wtcompleta extra 427
Also complete rear end auto ps,
pb, $5 000 304-675 3000 !rom b·

(81418811-5101
Aulos for Sale

198i T,aurus GL runs &amp; looks
good 304·1!95·3964

Honda 70 4 Wheetc1 614 2566629
'

&amp;

1ggo Ford F 150 Ptck Up Truck,
Loaded, Excellent Condition,
28,750 Actual Miles, Flberglau
T-$9,800, 61 .. 386-9049

Pass
Pass

Motors

for Sale

East

1988 Ranger 373V 18 12 24V
Troll tog Motor 1SO XP Evmrude
Outboard $9 800 614 992 2770
1995 Wave Runner 750 SL.
S5,000 or take cvor payments
304-675 4894 ask lor David

37 una

dynemlte

.,..+--+-+-+-i

doamonds and one dub
As expected South grumbled
abou1 hts b:id luck m ltnd10g a 3-0
trump break. hut Nonh was unsym ·
pathe!tc
"Suppose that when Easl follows
to the ftrsl trump you lincsse the
Jack suggested North
"I would look really s1upod ol West
smglcton

queen.''

I FILED IT WITH
'(OUR CATOIER ..

WE DON'T

J.IA\fE A

Terl48-lixe
(obsession)

49lochmonster

50 - and crafta
52 And nol
540ogdoc

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ ~r crypiOIJm"l are created I~ qootat011. by tllll'IOU!I people past and PfMMI
Each lanet ll'llhe ciptle1 lt.lndl for a~ TocM)/s due N equ,~ts B

UZFBAA .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Tbohe
wtll never see them How a

XL H Z GT
EVPUKBA
GBFXJKW'X

FKAABL.'

RZHJKG'X
XUKOG

XZ

NBGPU·MHBXX

PKG

U B

vx

EKAZGB

•0 K HA

9

goveidernm1e ~;:.·~~t;:k;?~meiJ:~t:n~ere

ut InS

a

kids

r::!:~~'

S©\\onlA-l££tfs·

- - - - - - 141tod ~y CLAY
Rearrange
0 four
scrambled

~ers

low

to

I

WOlD

IAMI

I'OUAN

of

words
form four Slmf)le words

NI DNA I

"""T'::A_Mr-Y1

E_Trll.,!,

I• 1 1 1 .

1-1

Most people can tell nght
from wrong , but tellmg oppor-

R A WE E R
~u_n~~ -~om temptation IS much
l-.....,.:..:...;,~:..,ro5ri-,-TI&lt;s-; A Complete lhe chuckle quoted

1 1 1

1

1V

1........1-...L-.L.-''--L-...

6

bv fllljng 1n the m1nrng words
you develop from step No 3 below

ntNT NUMeeREO \ETTERS IN
1HESE SQUARES

I' I" I" ·r I'

UNSCIAMilE .AIOVE \E!TERS
10 GEl ANSWER

1111111

tI

Robot .

Usurp. Wiggle- GUIDE POST

Yatitt,; floating on a cloud with
1M buys you'll find in 1M
classlfreds

IMONDAY

SERVIC~S

"ASTRO-GRAPH

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1t1onat l t 1~tlmC guarantee ,
local references lurmsneo Es
tablrshed t975 Call (614) 446
0870 Or 1 800 287 0576 Rogers
Walerproortng

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Appliance Parts And S8fvtce All .-.•V...
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
pertenc e All Work Guarameed
French Ctly Maytag 614 446
7795

1786

Born beck

post but as a GUIDEPOST

1980 Flee1W1ng 17 Awrung Excel
lent Condttton 19B2 Coachman
15 Pop Up, 1975 Mallard 27'
Awn1ng Pontoon Boa1 24 35 HP
Johnson ! Trader 1699 McCormtckAoad 611 446t51\

Re!ltdentlel o' com,merctal W1nng,
new serv1ce or repatrs Masttr lt· '
censed electnc tan R1denour
Electrical W\1000306 304 675

air

47 Actress

I.

&amp;

Refrigeration

Thin1 ••

45 Columnlol

P~~f:xpenences should not be used as a hltchmg

Motor Homes

l;lectrlcal and

alflrmallve

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Full I me cf au ro body panels, p...,
paints and suppl1es also glass
ltght assembly Otygen and ace •
ty!ene tanks lilled and (!•changed, · '
6147422792
I
I~---=..:..:.:..______ '
New gas tanks 1 IOfJ truck ~
wheels &amp; radu;uors 0 8. A Auto · 1
Rtpley WV 304 372 3933 or 1
'~
800 273 9329

840

bulldingo

43 Slangy
44

'1:11'

LEA6UE

Budge t Prtce l r 1r1sm ssrons
Start1ng at $99 00 and Up, Used 1
Rebulll, All Types Over 10 000
TransmiSSIOns Access Transfer
Cases &amp; Rear Ends. 614 2.,5 ...
5677

Save Hundreds On Res1den11a 1
Roof1ng, JB Rooltng Decktng 1S1a
1ng , Free Est mates Work Guar
anteed 614 3fl8 8879

41 Voraeo
42 Athletics

LO lose lour Lru.;ks one spade. two

1966 CheveU Super Sport HoO(l
Excellen t Condnjon 614 ?56
1071

C&amp;C General Home Ma tn
tenenca Pemttng vrnyl tnd1ng
c;arpemry doors wmelows baths
mobile home repo11r ana more For
tree Ut1mate call ~rtlft 614 992
632'J

Author

Gordner

A

Accessories

810

31

Pass

rcphcd South
" Would you' II seems to me rhm
you would be 10 clover You ruff
West 's heart conunua11on -- mHhmg
else os bcller -- wnh a htgh spade
draw East's final trump. and lead
your second dtamond toward dummy
When West w1ns wnh hiS kmg. the
dtamond queen ts eslabhshed as a
parkmg place for your club loser And
1he •pade stx ts 1hc dummy cnlrv You
lose only one spade and two don·
monds "
'"It was cruelly kmd of you to
potnl 11 out." concluded South

1983 Galaxy E•ecuttve 181!
t65hp MercrUtser wtsk1s &amp; ac
cesi0fles.S3000 6141-4116 4401

Campers

30 Pekoe, etc

Pass

Alder
For thmgs that don't seem rtghl
we have several words. paradox.
emgma. oxymoron The other day. I
saw somethmg paradoXIcal a Volvo
wolh a rear spooler
Thts dealts somclhtng of an entg·
rna No peekmg now ·· how would
, you play m four spades 1 West cashes the dtamond ace (playmg ace from
ace-kmg) before swilchmg 10 the
heart kmg
Some Wests would double four
spades; some Easts would even
respond one heart However. ell her of
these acuons mtghl have resulted on
thCif losmg 200 or SOO m five hearts
doubled whereas here Easi-West
ended plus agamst lour spades
Foreseetng no dtfliculty. declarer
played a !rump to h" ace al lrtck
lhrcc Wesl 's club discard was a body
blow Struggle as he tlllght. wilh no
dummy cnlry remammg South had

won w1th the

1967 tB!r Sea Imp t60hp Mer
cnuser wltra1ler 2 l1le JSckers, 4
bumpers. $3 000 614 4146·3614

790

a hero
28 Paraollel
29 Poker lfake

'

SOGGf!r ~tAGU~ S'OrES

1985 Yahama V~rago 700 shaft ' ,
dtlve. 8 000 m1les IWo helmets
$1,100 304-675-6282 .

ltucks for Sale

House In Waterloo, $300/Uo,
Oeposll &amp; References 814-8o43·
ZlOO 614643 2916

420

.,

1g74 Xl 100 Honda 1 000 ong1- •
nal m11es. exc cond $500 304 •
675 3824

Bass Hunter bass t&gt;o&lt;tt rwo pad
ded swtvel seals Mtnnkota troll
mg motof, Manne battery $350,
1995 Pont1ac f1rebird lully load· .. 6H·992 7230
ed, t-tops $14 500 oego 30•.e7S.
Ftberglass Bass Boa t Astro
6723lesve message
Glass Tra•ler Ftshhnder, Acces
1995 Satu/0 SC2 AuiOmaltc:, Atr
sones, Need Selt lmmed alely An
Cru1se AMIFM Cassene, Trunk
yume. $1 soo 0 B D 614 441 ·
Release $12 ooo call Att"' 5 PM
1415
~~=,~~~ lnqutrtas Onlyl) 6!4760 Auto Parts &amp;

s

Rooms

5UPP0fl.T
GflO\JP

Motorcycles

Boats

ridges

26 Whero lo gel

An unusual move

I BU~~fTIN IOA((I&gt; I

F~A~ OF
SUGG~55

992-2580

750

24 " charnn
25 Grave

By Phillip

j

Toyota Tacoma, 4WO p1ck up,
PS PB, Blf, bedhner D•amond
Plate IOolbc))( ssp. $12.500 614-

North

ltiCkl

23tmpuloe

laland

All

1gQfi Yamaha Wamor E•cellent
ConditiOn $3 200 614 367-0608

Ear corn tor sale, Sltghtly dam
aged, pnca negottable 614 945·

Furnished

II

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1992 Yamaha Banshee 350 Twm
Cylr1der Good Cond1!10n $2 800,
614 379 2933

580

nme

11 Architect

21 Socrld ICing&amp;
22 Measuring

38 River

,.

89 Ford Converston Van E 1so;

740

Saarinen

Gardner

12 Skalched
I Flahlng aids
10 Make a sweater 19 One Day--

Opening lead • A

??

19e6 Goldwtng Aspe.ncade Low
M1leage, loaded W1th Ex tras, Ex
celentCondtt•on 614 4&lt;16 8660

Steam Jeannte, mo1o' pu l ler
t1rea &amp; t~ms lor Camero 304 6751137

House 1n Pomeroy lor sale or
rent, 614 992 3090

A uau
YESTIDDY

1997 Chevy LT Blazer, or1gtna1 ..
warranty, CO pla~er, tilt, cruise
304-875-3335 days, 304·6 750845after6pm.

o

TODAY HE'S
GITTIN' A
BIG FAT

MISS BESSIE II HOW
COME YOU GAVE MY
YOUNG-UN

t986 Cutlass Supreme $1,000
080 B14·446-07g2

Upstatrs Apartment For Rent •
1300 00 Month . Must Pa~ For
Phone · New Kttchen One
Bedroom ltvlng Room
• E•cellent Cond1t1on
No Pets Deposil Requ1red Can
Be Seen Ar 1403 Eaarer" Ave
nu9 Galltpoha, Call 614 418-45U
For Appcuntment

Heat Pumps Only Sltghty Higher
CaU Us Today 1997 l!i The
Twe.nly Seventh Vear In The
Heating &amp; Coo~ng Busmessl 614
446-6306, 1 «:&gt;0 291 0098

.

Bo&amp;lon lemer puppies pureotood,
no1 Reg1srered two lemales left,
Will sell only to good hOme $150,
61~ 992·5872

1988 Chrysler New Yorker. loaded 3 litre V6, lOis ol new partS,
hrgh m1leage, no rust $1 ,eso
61-4 446 3814

BARNEY

1994 Jeep Cherokee. o16.000
m1les. 70,000 mile warranty", new ~ •
bres, loaded, St6,SOO, 814-712- 1

.:.::.=::.:-::--:-:"-::::--::::I

,.
Pass

West

__,_

ra1sed root 350 eng1ne It cheSC·
nut color, extras 41,000 mtlei,
very n1ce, $7900 ph 614 742
2887

Affirmed

East-West
Dealer: West

19U Dodge Grand Ca1avan
leather lotenor, Fully Loaded,
Captatn Chairs 66 oao Miles,
61 ..446-«12!1.

Runs

7

8 ACIMI

Vulnerable:

~8~7,\~~e~g~ ~~~n :~z4e ;:~r ·.~

1985 Uustang, good condition
$900 (6,4)-388-886ot

SUMMER SAt;E. Central AH
Condittoners Full 5 Year Warran
tv •If You Oon'r Call Us We Both
losel· Free Est•matesl Add-On

Elle(UII\Ie Home For Lease 2,000
Sq Ft Near Golf Course $650/
Mo , Avf11able lmmedtately 614·
.... 295?

___

2 Grid

3 Oomage
4 Of ChabNo, etc
5 Chamicaloulflx
6 Living tence

40 Mlatakea

z

Abominable
Snowman

•AK4

1992 Chwralet, tull SIZe Convet
liOn Van- 8 cyl . 350. 49 800
mtles, loaded , tncludes color TV

1985 Monte Corlq, A•. Now Tifea,
68,000 Ong1nal Miles, E.c:elt.m
Cond 1t1on, t2.000 Ftrm, 114·982·
6485 Before Noon 614·388i42t

t===:=--:=-:-:-=-

F~rst

" 5
• 7

1890 Ford Ranger XLT 4xl, 4"1tlt
tiel. 33X12SO llres $5,500 304·
675-3429

6012
::.::;,

1

23 Got! lfllr,

Tiger27 Overpralae
Easl
~ Blbllcol
• Q 74
prophet
•KQJ9
" I 0 1 6 41-,.+--&lt;t.• Big ohlp
.. I 0 6 3
34 Totolly (2 wd,.)
+A K 9 8
• J 8
35 Outer
• Q 10 9 5 3
31 Latin
Soulb
xylophone
1 A K J 10 9 8 5
39 Singer Della -

1$87 ChtYy S.tO, 4ll4, gray, runs
""''· $2650, 614·992 6737

1984 Chevy Cnalter 2 0 auto.
dnvea good S300 3Q4.675'3824

1987 Bu1ck Skylark, St.300, 1988
Ford Escort, Auromarlc, $1,000,
1969 Mercury • Sable, Load11d,
$1,500 814-379-28•5

• Q J 5'
• 7 6 2

....

DOWN

20Packawoy
21 Actor sellers

West

1988 Ford 4 WD F-150, ExctHient _, •
Cand1Uon, 814· ..,.6-7597 au.
256 8577

1982 Maltbu, 4 door $500, 114992 3357

18 Hl&gt;ltoe ,.,.,

" A 8 3

EEK&amp;MEEK

1g&amp;4 Ford Rongor
fuel InJected V-8 engtne, fender ~
nares sun ¥1101' chrome wheats. bed liner. suspen11on ltlt, excellent condl1+on. 614 949 2142 ,a11er
5:30pm.

Hl81 T Btrd, 8 Cyllner 2 Doors,
Good Body, Good lnlfrlor, 5
T11es. White Top, 1400, 080, &amp;01
Second Avenue Apatlment 4,
GallipoliS

3 Room FurnlshiHI Apartment.
851 Second Avenue, Gallipoll1, Atr conditioner, 1250, 8H 992~
Na11 To Bollard Ubrary, $3SOII""""==.:"':.;6:.1:.:.._:&amp;::•:.9·.:260::.:7;....;_ __
Me· Plus Depoan Required, No Air Condllioners 19g2 Toyota
Pels Allowed, References Re- Corolla, 1991 Toyota Celltca.
quested, Catl Oebbte Or Judy At 1903 Honda Prelude, All EKtel·
611· 448-7323.
tent ConditiOn, 6tl-446-1810
Apartments For Rent On

.1.;
XL. •WD, ''!0

v.a,

1985 Pont1ac Sunb1rd

Nortll
• 6 3 2

HOD

Treetng Walker pul)s UKC &amp;
PKC reg•stered, we t993 UKC
World Champ1on Tn color Tom
Tom. 614 698 2t 13

m-

57 Cllpa (wool)
of ploylng ss Empllaalza

17 Type

1DBO International but 65 Pll·
tenaer, 140,000 m1les $2,895
Call 30o6·$75·1061 or 30•·&amp;7!\8574 or 3114-67~165-

Good, $900 080, 614 ~7.

Schnauzer pupp1es mtn tature
salt &amp; pepper AKC champ1on
l)joodhne au 6e7 3404

r-1

58 La. .t

~laity

Autos for Sale

clolhess.8&gt;.

446 2205

Carpentry And Remodeling Addtttons Decks From Frammg To
RrnhWork 614-441 012•

Prolesstonal Tree Serv1ce, Stump
Removal. free Estimates! In·
aurance, Btctwell, Ohio 814 388
M48 81•·367·7010

Antiques

Buy or 1111 Rlvertne Anliques,
112o4 E Mam Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
Lm ID 8 00 p m., SUnday 1:00 ttt
8 00 p.m 614·DII2 2526, Russ

Small one Bedroom In Outt aetttng Washer/Dryer, Stove, Rflg.
Included $350 00 month $300
Oepostl No Smokers, No Pe11 tn·
s1de (614) 446 9585 or(614) ·

In My

Neecl Some TlC For Your Child?
Call · arammy Care" e 14-2..Se229, 811·9928109

4811

FLEA CIRCUS•
ENFORCERS Flea Products
Protect Your Pet, Home And Yard
From Re lnfestatton While They
Ktll Fleas &amp; Ttcks NOW' Guar
anteed Eflecuve Avatlable At
These ParOctpaDng Slores
Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,
ODELL'S TRUE VALUE
614 446.()390
R&amp;G FEED

21 Hour Care, For Elderly Or

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
Raul your logs to the m1U jUSt call
304·675·1957

APPldANCES

Washera, dryers, refrigerators
ranges. Skaggs App(Jances, 76
V1ne Street, Call &amp;14·of46·7398

One bedroom apartment tn Pt
Pleasant Furmshed Very clean
&amp; noce No pel~ 304 675 1386

ANY ODD JOBS: Extertor paint·
mg. shrubs &amp; weeda trimmed,
landscapmg, stdewalllla ectged,
lawn care, etc Call Bill 304-11757112

USED

seUtng need reJetences call be ~~1-1100'-=::...:411!1~·34=99~~~-:--:--:::
lore 2 30 614 992 2736 or leave
Kit&lt;:Nn Carpe~ 16 50 5alo On All
message
Room Size Carpera , Mollohan
Two bedroo~ .!!~~~.~~ent on Furniture, 81•448·7144.
lead•ng Cre~acres, I ~L-ov-.-,-'e,--:-,--:,-.-r-o-ae_c_o"'to-r,
S2B51mo, 81&lt; 992-6926
IIIIOd cond., 304-87s.

tunwes
Moelern 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apaflments 1n Mlekllepon, a/c &amp;
equipped kttchens, relerencea
and depostts requtrad Call614·
992 7833alter600pm.

::.:::-..:.:..:~

Handicapped Person,
Home 614..,.41~.

~

-

0028.

4br tratler tn Applegrove $3501
mo + deposn 304 576 292g

1 Bedroom Near Holzer EKira
N1ce. Central Au, $269/Mo, +
UtJhttes Oepos1t Req 814·446
2957

Large selection of used home 2
or 3 bedrooms Statlmg at $3495
Outck deltvery Call t·BOD· 8:37·

~ppUancea

French City Maytag, au-ue.

Two bedroom, electric, rwo mtles
on Cremeans Rd oil New L1ma
Ad 614 742-2803 or 614·7&lt;2
2421

Give Your Do~ A Brea~ From
Summer Heat Ask J D NORTH
PRODUCE 614 .us 1933 AbOut
HAPPY
JACK
PARACIOE
SHAMPOO Kttls Fleas &amp; T1cki
On Contact Checks Doggy Odor
Contaff'll NO Permeli'Yiflsl

LoMobrtahla

51 Lonaa (ror)
53 !luSMt dodglr
55 llurnMing

rtlllgUlne'o

710

77V5.

grato11, 90 Day Guarantee!

1997 Fleetwood 14X52 2 BR
like New (614) 992 5426

IT'S BIG 1997 4BR 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE $1 949 DOWN,
$3191110 FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OA~WOOO
HOMES. NITRO WV 304·755·
5885 Limned Offer

1704 Eastetn A11e (&amp;14)-446·

erences. 614 367-os32

1 bedroom furniShed aparlment 1n
M1cldtepor1, 614 992 2178

FACTORY DIRECT
NO MIDDlE MAN
SAVE SSSS
Oakwood Homes 11 lhe only
dealer m the tn-staUJ area rhat
butlds and sells theu own
homes For factory direct pnces
shop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl
TRO, WV 304 75S.588S

Apptlences S.nrat Recondl·
rloned waanera, Dr~ers, DO Dey
GuarantMI french Clly Maytag,

Reconditioned
Walhftf1, Oryet'l, Ranoes. Refn·

1997 do1.Jblew1de $1445 oown
S229fmo Free delivery &amp; serup
I 800 691 6777

3 Bedrooms 14•70 ·schulr Mo·
btle Home Newly Refurbtshed
Clean, 61it 245 9448

Nr:Mlot

2 Bedrooms Green School D•s:
tnct $250/MO , Pfus DepoSit Ret-

Three bedroom trailer country

New-1997 14 W•de 1 bath. $6991
down, $139/mo With approved
ctediL Calli 800 69HH77

Goods

2 Btclroom Mobile Home Vou

ENetllngs.

1989 Pfedge, b6 walls, two bedroom, two balh, laundry room, air
conditioning, St4,000 or best off·
Gf, 814-698-3803

.........

Household

PIV UDIIDOI, &amp; 0.110•1. In l'b&lt;ter [ ~---...:..;;__;_ __

3000 lntm a.~

credlt wotcorre 10 apply

Weal Vlrgtnta. State Farm
seektng application for Main·
tananc:e Employee, five day wort.
week, vac.arion, etc Sorry we
have no medlcal coverage You
apply .Tuesda~ through Satat the Museum Please

510

heat pump, 8xt0 front porch,
good cond., $12,900 304-175·

1996 Clayton legend 14x72l 3br
shtngled roof, ¥tnyl s1d1ng, n+use
Windows &amp; doors S1 000 down
take over payments 304 675
6121

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper ~ sub)eot to

MERCHANDISE

Mobile Homes
for

Business

KNOCKS! I
Now Is the T1me To Exchange
Yo'¥ Hum· Drum Career For The
Elldting
01"" om OriYor

320

47~

(ol )

13 14 15 Twlrlld

FINANCIAL

42 Circular IIIOIIon

.e From--z

I

Tuesday. Aug. 5. 1997
Your lcadcrshop qual111cs wtll
become more pronoun&lt;ed and eftecltve 10 lhc year ahead Your talenls
could projccl you 10 the forefront ol
lwo promlstng cntcrpnses
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Your
words carry constderable wetght
today, espectally among your tnner
ctrcle If you find a reason to com·
plement a fnend who ts fond of you,
go all out. Trying to patch up a broken romance' The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand
what 10 do to make 1he relattonshtp
work. Matl $2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o
thiS newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ray Htll Statton, New York, NY
Ull56

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22)
Hunches or llashcs of mstght you get
today should not be discounted This
"especially true tf they arc of a posHIVC nature

.t

LIBRA (Sept n-Oel 1~) Tills IS
good d'\y 1o Ia) l'oundauons lor,,

s10ns today, as you'll be able to deter·
mme thctr worlh from all angles
Wetgh your altcmauvcs JUdtctously
PISCES (Feb 20- March 20)
Fncnds wtll be wtlhng 10 do thmgs
for ,.YOU today. because ~~~y know
you'd do the same for tliem 11 the

new proJeCt nr cntcrpnsc. Seeds

roles where reversed

planled a11hos tnne could yteld .darger rhun usual han est
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nm 22) Tlte
more compcuuvc the stluaunn ts
today. 1he more ellecuvcly you rc
hkely to funclton Your bcstodeas arc
apt 10 come when you' rc under pressure
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dcc
21) Conmucuvc leammg oxpenenccs w1ll be denved today lrom
dtrccl contact wllh others. Even mundane snualtons wtll earn pages 1n •
your book.
CAPRICORN (Dec: 22-Jan 19)
You are ltkely to be beucr at sonmg
the affatrs/of others today than
0 1
~u wtll be at handhng thmgs for
y
If
yo~QUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
You are not hkely to make poor dect·

ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19)
Because you'll apprectate hfe for
whatol has lo offer loday, tl woll hght·
en your burden, as well as hft the
splflts of compamons.
.
TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May 20) You
have the tenactty to get what you
want today, and you'll dot! m a manncr froends wtll find appeahng. In
fact. they ' ll even be supporttve
GEMINI (May 21-June 2~) Men·
tal tasks are your cup of tea today
You are cspectally adroot at domg
lhmgs thai beg for lrcsh tdeas and a
crca11ve touch
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Put
your tmagmauon to profitable uses
today Try to stZe up sttuauons
presently avatlablc to detenmne
whether lhey can help add lb your
resources.

AUGUST 41

•'

�Ohio Lottery
net
9 victory
n preseason
IS~~rts

Pick 3:
'

2-0-8 "
Pick 4:
4-2-0-5

Mo1t1y clear and cool,
lows between 45 and 50.
Wednesday ,
mostly
aunny. Highs In the mid
70s.

Buckeye 5:
8-10.15-17-30

on Page 5

•

en tine
YDI.e, NO. 78
C1tt7, Ohio V.Hey Publishing ComP*lY

Pomeroy-Middle~rt.

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35. cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Ohio, Tuesday, August 5, 1997

Agreement provides investigative services to DHS
'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff

,

The Meigs County Commissioners approved an agreement between the
Meigs County Department of Human S.ervices and the Prosecuting Auorney's
office at their weekly meeting on Monday to provide investigative services
to the DHS.
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes and DHS Director Michael Swisher presented the agreement to the board, saying that the agreement would provide
$27,000 per year to fund investigative services to the various departments
at the DHS.
"Because of the nature of the work that the DHS performs, many of the
cases end up in my office.'' Lentes told the commissioners. "Most of these
cases are processed through the Juvenile and Probate Court or the Common
Pleas C9urt."
.
.
.
"We are also asked to help in the enforcement of court orders and to provide security when caseworkers do field work," Lentes said.
Under the agreement, two existing investigators in Lentes' office would
be available 24 hours a day to the DHS to assist the administrative case-

Two sets
of building
bids nixed
by Racine
I

I

' Racine Village Council rejected
electrical and concrete bids involved
in the construction of a new fire sta·UOn at Monday night's regular council meeting at the Racine Municipal
Building.
Council received ·two electrical
bids of $8,000 and $16,000, and
wanted to review the bids and spec·
ifications due to the wide diserepancy in the price estimates.
Concreie bids were rejected
~aiisit·rnf.mbe..S~~ the fill: depanme~t are planning on doing the work
in an effort to save money.
Council also authorized Total Tree
Care from Athens to come in ~nd_.
remove several dead trees and cut
limbs throughout the village . .
The smaller pieces of wood will
be ground into mulch while the larger portions, trunks and larger branches, will be made available for village
residents who need wood for heating
during the upcoming winter.
·
The wood be stored near the
water treatment plant near Third and
Vine streets.
· Village Clerk Karen Lyons
announced that the Ohio Department
of Development had done an examination of the work done with the
water meter grant and was satisfied
with the results.
Mayor Scott Hill discussed the
need for a computer system for the
police department. The state request·
ed the village purchase or rent a computer to send in records on traffic violations and mayor's court. he said.
_ Hill is &lt;;hecking on computers and
software that are needed to comply
with the request
. (Continued on Page 3)

workers in respOnding to field calls.
The funds, which are local DHS funds already appropriated, will go into
the prosecutor's office salaries budget. The contract will be retroactive from
April 1997 to March 1998.
The commissioners authorized the advertisement for bids for· new windows at the Chester Courthouse, which is now under renovation . Pat Holter
of the Chester/Shade Historical Association, discussed the ongoing renovation and presented bills to be paid and receipts for expenditures.
The windows must meet specifications set forth by the Ohio Historical
Society. Those specifications also call for Lex an protective coverings to prevent damage to t"e windows once they are installed.
The renovation project is being funded by state grant monies and local
dollars.
·
·'
Lentes announced that his office had received a grant from the Ohio
Depanment of Drug and Alcohol Addiction and Mental Health Services in
the amount of $25,000 to establish an Internet website and to prepare educational materials.
·
The commissioners accepted. with regret, the resignation of Dan C. Arnold

OPEl
MOI..fll.9·9
Slt9-6

COLUMBUS - Political leaders
· past and present came to the Statehouse to mourn and pay tribute to one
of Ohio's most powerful lawmakers
-a testament to Vern Riffe's influence and personality.
Riffe, who served a record 20
years as Ohio House speaker, died
Thursday of cancer at age 72.
Gov. George Voinovich said that
Riffe, who rose from his humble
beginnings as an insurance salesman
in tiny New Boston. was n6t born
into prestige.
"Vern Riffe achieved his greatness
·one day at a time, one decision at a
time/' Voinovich said at a memorial
service Monday.
Mourners filed by Riffe 's nag·
draped casket earlier in the day iQ the ·
Statehouse rotunda, near the House
chamber he ruled from 1975-94.
The memorial service was a who's
who of Ohio politics. Former Republican Gov, James A. Rhodes, the
longest-serving governor in state history, sat noxt to former Democratic
Gov. Richard Celeste, who was
showing off pictures of his new
baby. ..Jt
"In on~ way or another, if you
lived in the state of Ohio in the 1970s
or the '80s or the early '90s.• your life

• Met with LentCs ·and Swisher in

ex:e~,:utivc

session to discuss possible

litigation, but took no action;
• lntreased the appropriation for I he prosecutor's budget in the amoun t of .
S1.200, representing a surplus in the county's well ness block grant;
• Approved a transfer of funds in the amount uf $400 in the budget of the
county auditor;
• Established a budgetary line item for the county's Microcnterprise grant
in the amount of $52,000;
• Adjusted appropr.iations in the ofnces of the Soil and Water Conservation District, the Probate Court and the Juvenile Court Grant; and
• Approved the payment of bills in the amount of $104,934.36, with 176
entries.
•
Present, in addition to Lentes and Swisher. were Commissioners Fred Hoff•.
man, Janet Howard and Jeff Thornton and Clerk Gloria Klocs.

...--Almost done- Pomeroy Council studi~s
sternwheeler visit plans
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Pl~ns for a day-long stop in
Pomeroy by the Delta Queen sternwheeler were discussed by Pomeroy
Village Council when it met in regular session on Monday evening.
A large crowd i~ expected on Sept.
I, according to Council President
John MuSser, when the boat docks at
the levee and its passengers disembark for the day.
Parking will be provided in the
football field area for those who travfl by car ·into Pom~roy to spend the
day, and entertainment is planned.
· The Delta Queen's on-board band
will perfonn at the new amphitheater,

,

and music from the boat's calliope
will also cnter\ain the crowd. A craft
show on the parking lot, guided
walking tours of the husincss district

and a visit to the Ohio River Bcilf Co.
in Middleport may also be a part of
actiVities pl3n0cd for passengers.

Musser said.
It is important that the community put its best face forward. Musser
said, because the IFip could hccome
an' annual event. Merchants will be
encouraged to open their 'i:~torcs for

the day, which is Labor Day.
Council passed an emergency res,
olution authoriling the Ohio Department of Transportation to repair a
slip. caused by river erosion, on East

Main StrCct near KrOger.
The ·construction will performed
from the intersection of State Route
124 to Condor Street, and is e•pected to begin during thC April 1998
construction season.
A new health insurance plan .was
approved by council for village
employees. Clerk Kathy Hysell noted that the plan now in place is no
longer available. The new plan will
provide 80/20 coverage for comprehcns1vc major medical expenses, and
will require a $20 cp-paymenl for :
off1cc visits.
·
Th&lt;; insurance is provided through
The Wiseman Agency of Gallipolis.
(Continued on Page 3)

Voinovich stands by ·belief tax hike ..
necessary to. properly fund schools
COLUMBUS {AP) ·Gov.
George Voinovich says he is sticking
by his belief that a tax increase is neeessary to fully fund the state's
schools.
"Anybody that really looks at this
issue and understands you can't rip
apart the rest of state government
realizes that addition.al revenue is
necessary ' to get .the job done,"
Voinovich said Monday.
.

He said Democrats bowed to pres-'
sure from labor union s and trial
lawyers, who did not want a school
issue on the Nov. 4 b~llollo compete
with their aucmptto repeal the state's
new Wl,lrkers ' comp&lt;nsation law.
Some Republicans, he added. "want
to force their views on the rest of the
state" and·were unwillmg to com let
voters decide whether they wanted to
raise taxes to pay for schools.
Voinovich suggested lawmakers
"I was very dis~pointed in the take some time off from the debate
inability of the General Assembly to ·and come back in a few weeks for

Workers of Banlul Constt'llction Co. are wrappirig up con·
structlon of the Pomeroy Riverfront Amphitheater. To date, workers have installed concrete seating areas and step1, driven pil·
Ing and constl'llcted the amphitheater deck, and are now
Installing reinforcing bar which will strengthen the deck. According to contractor Larry Banks, concreta for the deck may ba
pour'ed Wednesday with final completion alated for Aug. 15, Math·
er permitting. Plans call for the Delta Queen to use the new fscll·
1ty for a several-hour stop on Labor Day.

come to a consensu·s on a reasonable

plan to come up with an adequate
education for Ohio's kids."
Voinovich blamed Democrats and
conservative House Republicans for

the Legislature's failure on Sunday to
piece together a response to the Ohio
Supreme Court's order in March to
rework the state's school funding system..

Vern Riffe's influence
recalled by colleagues
By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Preas Writer

from the Gallia-Meigs Airport Authority Board, and agreed to send a letter
of commendation to Arnold for his years of serv ice.
The board also:

... was touched by the speaker," U.S.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said at a
memorial service.
In 36 years in the House, Rille
created a Democratic dynasty from
which he dispersed favors to members of both parties but expected loyalty in return.
.
During an election year. he would
railiJ! millions of dollars \O help elect
friends and defeat foes. ushering in
the era of big-money politics in
Ohio.
Riffe was fiercely -loyal to the
people of the southern Ohio district
he represented. But his duties to the
people came only second to his family.
"The one thing he wouldn 't compromise was the well-being of his
beloved southern Ohio." Glenn said
His son, Vern Riffe Ill, said sharing his father with the Legislatu(C
was not easy.
"We lost precious time as a fam ily," his son said. "We know that by
sharing him with the people he was
able touch the lives of so many
Ohioans."
Riffe's body was taken to
Portsmouth for a public viewing at
Shawnee State University, the school
he founded in southern Ohio. The
funeral will be Wednesday in
Portsmouth:

another round of negotiations.

The Legislature is to reconvene in
.September bul Senate President
Richard Finan wouldn't promise
school funding would be on the _
agenda.
"Right.now, that's not even tin my .
radar," the Cincinnati Republican
said.
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson,
R-Reynoldsburg. said the task won't
get any easier as March approaches.
The state Supreme Court ·gave the :
Legislature until then to come upwith a plan when it ruled that the currelit system waS unconstituli.onaL
Any new plan thnt inYolvcs taxes

"I think there arc enough people
in the General Assembly - both
Republicans and Democrats - who.
if given the freedom to do so, will
come together and forge a consen sus," he predicted.
.·
Legislative leaders say they plan
to take Voinovich's advice.

will need Democratic support in the
H(,Usc . even if it docsn,.t require the

threc-lifths vote needed for ballot
issues. Davidson said.
"There arc a lot of our members
who won '·L vote a tax inc rease,

whether it goes on the · ballot or if
docsn 't go on the ballot." she said.

Executives man trucks
as ·ups strike 'intensifies
A1LANTA (AP) - United Parcel
Service managers who worked their
way up through company ranks
climbed back onto delivery trucks
and package lorting lines. and customers made do with limited shipping
alternatives .

·

With no talks scheduled ·today
between the Teamsters union and the
nation's largest packa~e delivery service, President Clinton refused to get

involved In cn.d the nationwtdc stri ke.
"I hope they'll go back to the
table, but at this t1me I don't think any
further action by me is appropriate ,"

IN MEMORY - A pair of rose• ut at the loot of Vern Riffe's
casket In the Ohio Statehouse Rotunda Monday. Riffe, who was
House speaker for nearly 20 years, was eulogized In ceremonies
at tha Statehouse and will be burled Wednesday In Wheelersburg.

Earlier Monday, Riffe's colleagues
gathered in the chamber where he
spent his 36-year legislative career. In
a special House session, Riffe's
friends and foes swapped stories.
Barney Quilter of Toledo, who
was Riffe's right-hand man during his
tenure as speaker, said some may

'J.•.
----1

'

have thought Riffe was too dictatorial.
"When you're up there on the rostrum and you look out and see those
different faces and different personalities, you've got to maintain control," Quilter said.
·

Ken Shapero said of the substitute
drivers, "everyone from accountants
to industrial ci-lginccrs. We may eve n

have a public affairs guy in there. "
About I H5,000 uniun workers,
two-thirds of the company's 302,000
employees in t~c United Stales,
walked i1IT the job at midnight Sunday after contract talks between management and the union stalled.
The two sides were unable 1u
reach comprom ises on pay, pensions
and the usc of part-time employees.
Although no negotiations were
scheduled, a UPS representative met
Monday with presidential aides and

Clinton said.
Customers who got UPS packages "made a case for intervention,' ' a
Monday often had to wait for deliv- White House official told The Assoeries the company admi!lcd were ciated Press, speaking on condition of
slower than usual because the drivers anonymity.
·were un fami liar With the routCs.
The 12 million packages delivered
"It's not an easy JOb lor anybody," daily by UPS - 80 percent of
said Dallas Zander. a striking UPS nation's total package deliveries driver in Des Moines, Iowa. "It's- represent 6 percent of the nati on's
hard if you' ve got a regular service · gross domestic product. UPS norto keep up."
mally docs $80 million in business a
The UPS managers. traditionally day b,ut couldn ' t say how much monpromoted fro m within the company, ey it has lost so far.
delivered about 10 percent of the
The Independent Pilots AssOciacompany's
usual
packages, tion . 'which represents UPS' 2,000
spokesman Robert Godlewski said. pilots, ho~orcd the Teamsters' pick· UPS plans to empty the distribution et lines. Some management pilots
centers of packages already there were avatlablc to fly. however, and
before accepting any new shipments. UPS also uses chartered planes for
" You name it," UPS spokesman some deliveries.

.,

•

•

·

.
,
·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="403">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9788">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28697">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28696">
              <text>August 4, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1167">
      <name>counts</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5386">
      <name>dilcher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="233">
      <name>icenhower</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
