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                  <text>Ohio Lottery·

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~

-The House of the

.Pomeroy • Mlddlepolt! Gljlllpolle, OH • Point P11111nt, W!i

n ,

Week----------------

Home Has Free-flowing Floor Plan
. •.

1J IIUCI A-IU'n!A.N
APIIew-Piaa 0 -1, IJJ Ho•eSIJI&lt;I
Dulpera Netwon.. feet\lrH
e nuld Roor plan wltlt ope•

.tMoor/o.......,.u.f.t-

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Staple gun offers variet t
of uses in home repai,rs : i
By READER'S DIGEST
For AP Special Fenntl
With a staple ·gun, you can do •
wide variety of home-repoir jobs.
Because it fues staples thai can
cause severe injuries, handle and
store a staple gun with cu-e. Keep the
staple gun's handle locked with the
safety catch when it's not in use·. Never point a staple gun or fife one at
anyone or anything olhcr than' the
work al hand. And - very important
- keep a staple gun out of !he reach
of children,

.'

opena to a ma11t"e ll•lnt
roo• eod dlntac rooM

- I a hiPIIP'•d 1JJ
'111Pf21d:D"I ~ lbe oulodoor-AdocwopeallOI
pll'dali:J DO"t'CI ed deck &amp;DII D

. . . . . .M

, ••lolnlal polio. The U•l•l

bu 1 llramadc comer
- • J''oe wtt1t a ftUih llurth.
o.. fOtal

The dlll1nc ~· opena 10 •
·Ill(
- olfen
.........
of
· pealrJ
cuphoar&lt;l
opace,
end an lftlled eatlnl hal. The

Urinf ueu h..e IS-loot oeU-

Types of staple pill

' Inp.
~

A hand staple gun drives staples
into types of material_, usually wood,
·with a squeeze of the handle. Available in lightweight or h&lt;&gt;avy-duty
models, look for a gun that loads and
operates easily. Some heavy-duly
models have a.variable power button
that adjusts firing strength to require:
ments of the job, to accommodate
staples of different sizes. and to
• reduce recoil and jamming. For
heavy, time-consuming jobs, such as
installing insulation or carpeting.
consider renting an electric staple
gun.

A aann7, lnrormal e,tJna
adfolno lhe lllll:hen, end
on •filled oe1 of doon opena
to 1 co••enlent maln~noor

1•-

loundz7 room near lhe
- ealrlllce. Ill lhe p....,, oulc
II available. II Ia I
, pod-llaed atonp room for
· fawa aad/or aporla equip. .-ent. Tile laraJI! alaD has •
door 10 .... patio.

', ICCtll

"' lhe - eellln1
-erowna
· . 15-loot
••ulted·
-the
aleeplna ehember. DoubJe
. doon leld to a luna wall·ln
closet. The Prh·ate matter
beth includr.:a en O't'AI tub, •
aeparate ahower, a dul-aink
nnlt)' and 1 prtnte lOIIet.
At the oppoelle end or the
home, a aeparate wins has
two bedroom• for kids or
l\leata, plus a second full
hod!.

.

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~&lt;·"'

. -~·
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tllln 0-8 hat an
entl')'. lhtnt; room,
breakraat
nook,
kitchen, dinlne; room, three
' 1 WJDI, trro l'u.U betha. and

I UIUJty room, totalinc 1,101

aq•are feet of U•lnt; apece.
, . ploD Ia ••alloble wllh Jlll8
exterior wall fnmlnl and 1
atandard baaemebt. crawl·
apue or alab foundaUon. A
twa-:-ear sarase proTide• 484
aqure feet of apace, whUe a
atorase room adjolnl•l the
prqe otrera an addlllonal H
equare feet of apace.

Suncll'y, June I, 1WII :

Staple gun use

A staple gun is easy to use. Grasp
the handle and place the gun finnly
against the material to be stapled.

leaving !he staples stickina
~
slightly so that !hey ore easy ~o ~t
out. To remove staples, use e1111'r a ~
pincer-type office staple remove Of~
the lever type that looks like ~ ~ ±
opener, which often comes w1Jii a ~
staple gun kit. You can also use ,lhe ~
rubber band trick to keep staplts !
from cutting through·very !hill -;
materials. Wlrflll, hammer tiM:~
There are two other specialize&amp;t
tools that drive staples.
;

Disena-ae the safety lock and release
your grip so the handle springs up.
Tben squeeze the handle down
sharply to fire the staple . If possible,
to eliminate recoil and increase tiring
strength, press down the head of the
gun with the heel of your free hand.
Use a lightweight staple gun lo
replace or repair screening. To repair
a screen that has pulled out its wood
frame, staple the screen to the frame,
folding a hem as you go. Double over
the screen to make the fastening
stronger and avoid unraveling.
Another tip for stapling a screen
mesh: place the staples at an angle lo
the mesh. The staple then has more
material to grip and is more secure.
Similarly, set staples going through
fabric so that they are al "an angle lo
the weave.
,
A staple gun can also be used w
· install insulation. Hold the insulation
in place with one hand .while firing
the staple gun with the other.
'
Staple removal
Some fastening jobs, such as sta- .
piing plastic sheets over a willdow,
are meant to be temporary. Here's a
way to make staple· removal hasslefree:
Slip a heavy-duly rubber band
around the head of the staple gun.
. The rubber band acts as a spacer,

,

A quick, neat way to run ph~nt:!
and stereo wire is to staple it in pi~
with a wiring tacker. It shOOts StaPleS::
that bridge the wire without dan\llg-'1
ing it. Many staple guns come WI~
an attachment that turns them into a"
wiring tacker.
~

.

.. '

There's also a hammer tac~~••:
which is handy if you are doing rPD:~
struction jobs thai don 'I require great:
accuracy of placement, such . ~
attaching roofing felt. To seta staple',you just swing the .tacker and slriltC:
the surface with the taeker head as ,ifyou were using a hammer. 1be ~k~
er makes it easier to work overh.fai.f:
and is kinder to ann muscles .Met:
.
I
$ ,.
hands than a regular slap cr.
.j : f"

',.

. ,..
&lt;

"J" ....

Experts suggest f~n flora for garden
G-6
DOUBLE DOORS laUoduce lhe b-e ol lhe tn&gt;nt porch. A
eprawlhtJ lh·lnl room lie• dlreciiJ ahead or tbe entr)".
wannecl bf e lbeplace. The U.jnll room Oom IDto lhe "lalq room. Between tbeee two tp.cet.- a door Jeadl lo a per~
II~ eovered decll. ....,rloolllnllhe hocll.yer&lt;l. An edlolnlnl
patle e&amp;tende even farther •nd rune 't he lensih of the
..,.., JUII orr the d..Loln« rOom, the kitchen Ia connected to
an eaUa1 aook. by aa lllfled ealin1 bar. A utUitr roona Ia
opp»itolbe ..u.. o""'- The oeclladed JDMterbedrooal lno
o wolll.-lo otOMll 1111d • pmale bolh. Oo lhe oppoolle llde of
lhe ho- o wtn, boo IWo mDftl bedJvoml wllh • llall bolb
betwH:n tbem.

a""""

(M)r
deU.IIed. 1CGied plan QflhiJ hoUJ&lt;, lndudlnif gvlda
. 10 utimafint! rolls ondjlooncinlf, tend Sf 10 HoUJ&lt; Qf IM Wttk.
P.O. Bo%1162, Ntw York. N.Y. 10t16,1J6Z. Buu,.. IOinclutk the
pi!Jn
numbtr.)
·A ,..., windoWs
lhe book porch, dedi ond polio.
1:nd ~ hlsh ceUin1 ~ta olf die room.

By JAMES E. WALTERS ·
He says the calla lily comes as
For AP Special Features
.close to perfection as one flower can,
Expen Frans Roozen suggests for with a texture so smooth and velvety
fun in the garoen you try Slll1lltlel that one suspects it is unreal.
bulbs like elephanfs-ellf, pineapple
"Officially. known as Zant· ·
plant, lilies-of-the-Nile, caladium, edeschia, the calla has sheathlike
flowers in pink. yellow or white or ·
canna and calla lily.
"They're so easy - and the one of the newer shades of btonze,
results are outrageous," says Roozen, gold or deep rose. Plant callas in full
who represents .the International sun, sheltered from 'the win&lt;)," he
Flower Bulb Center in Hillegom, says.
Holland. , " Just .bury them in soil,
He likes elephant's-ellf (Colocasia
most only l-inch deep, then water esculenta) for its green, gargantuan .
and ... stand back! Some of th~se are leaves and overall height of 5 feel:
small, some are enormous. None are "They do best in partial or full shade
and must be kept moist in hot weal~\- ·
boring in the garden."

't. c
\

er," Roozen says.

'l {,.

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~

.....

.

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•

Kicker:

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Sports on Page.4

8·7-4-0

Pertly cloudy tonight,

chence of etorma. Lows In
the eo.. Tuaadey, re1n nuty. Hlgha neer IIC).

•
Vol. 47, NO. 31
1 Section, 10 P~~ge~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 10, 1996

14 Galnnett Co.

·-

rt•••P It' IF

Ra$h of church fires brings federal response
.By JENNIFER BROWN _Aaaoclated Pres1 Writer
WASHINGTON- A rash of fires at predominantly black churches in the
South has brought their people together, say pastors gathered to meet with
federal officials and comfort each other.
.
·
More lhan 100 people, including a 40-member choir and more than 30
visiting ministers, sang gospel songs, displayed charred remains from their
church buildings and prayed Sunday night at a service in a church near Capi·
tol Hill.
The clergymen were meeting today with Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin
• to discuss efforts by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Fireanns, a Trea.sury agency, to solve suspicious fires thai have struck 30 Southern church.es in the last 18 months.
~.
The church leaders met Sunday with Allorney General Janet Reno on 'the

~: DUI testing

: py officers
.qu~stioned

involvement of the FBI and other Justice Department units in the expanding investigation, which officials said now involves more than 200 federal
agents .
''The entire administrati.on is commilled to putting an end to these fires,
and we will continue to pursue these matters vigorously," Reno said in a statement afterward. "Acts of violence against the spiritual centers of our communities must be slopped. We will devote whatever resources are necessary
10 solve these crimes."
President Clinton made the same vow in a national radio address Saturday.
"Many, if not most of these fires are driven by racial hostility. That's got
io be faced," Deval Patrick, assistant auomey general for .civil rights, said
today on CBS.
. ·
"II comes from the climate that is pan of this nation, a racial polariza-

tion. ·• added the Rev. Mac Charle·s Jones of the National Council of Church·
cs.
•
Jones. speaking at the service Sunday night, said. "We are here 10 11e In
solidarity with (members of burned churches)."
"This is chance for the pastors 10 share with each other and draw strength
from each other before going back." said Rev. Terrance Mackey, whOse North
Carolina church was destroyed last June . "This is to show the unity, that people are pulling together. That we will noltake this lying down ." .
The council of churches, a New York-based interdenominational groqp,
arranged the meetings with the fedeml officials, to lei pastors venl frustrations with the fire investigations, which they ·say have focused more on the
church members and clergy than on outside suspects.
·
"The sense of dissatisfaction (among pastors} is not around the amount
of the investigation, but the sense of intimidation that they feel from inves·
ligators." Jones said Sunday on CNN's "Late Edition With Frank Sesno."

a

Skills fro. m.· .uesteruear
·,
1 ·
1 ,
Forbes promotes
tax cuts as means
of beating Clint_
on

. · ·COLUMBUS (AP)- A retired
· chemistry professor said police officers don't have a sufficient under. standing of chemistry to accurately
: conduct alcohol testing on suspected
· . drunken drivers.
By KEVIN KELLY
. Bul a retired State Highway Patrol
OVP Newa Editor
. RIO GRANDE -A pro-growth,
: · trooper said breath sampling "is
. probably the most accurate test we
pro-opportunity plalfonn will he the .
. . have available."
key to Bob Dole's aucmptlo capture
: : Fonner Trooper Blaine Keckley,
the White House this fall, his former
: · pow a director of a company that
rival in the Republican primaries
believes.
._,
,
· . makes breath testers, thinks I he accu: . racy of such tests has improved since
Millionaire publisher Malcolm
they were introduced in Ohio.
"Steve" forhcs centered on tax relief
as a winning strategy for the preWalter Frajola helped teach offi. sumptivc GOP candidate during a
cers how 10 use the state's alcohol
news conference Sunday before
testing system when it was firsl used
delivering · the commencement
in 1969.
address at the University of Rio
"Even back then, I didn't think
Grande .
whatlh.ey were doing was rig()t," said
Forbes, who won two primaries
Frajola, a retired professor of physi• ological chemistry at Ohio State
__befJKC bowinll...i.&gt;U.l jn Marcb~ and
throwing his sup(iort to Dole, said he
Un\Xrtsity:·-.:.:. ~ --·.~ - ·"'-''· ·
. Blood tests and urine tests can be
proposed either a 15 percent across. The P,telgs County Historical Soclety'll 25th annual Heritage Day observence Sunday altar·
tl)e-board lax cut for all Americans or .
more accurate, but they aren't pracSteve Forbes
noon featured pioneer homemaking akllls. Melry Kay Y01t, above, makes butter In an. old-fashtical for traffic stops, Frajola said.
abolishment of the 1993 tax increase
Ioned churn, while Patty Parker mixes up a batch of bread. Radios and recording equipment
·as prime ingredients in the campaign. his candidacy.
Breath testing is used more than 90
from yesteryear and an early gun collection were among the other Items dl1played for Heritage
percent of the time.
"It would give the economy far
"The messenger got mussed up,
Day. (Sentinel photo by Charlen.e Hoeflich)
In Ohio, a driver is considered to
greater push and ta&lt; simplification," hut the message survived," Forbes
.be intoxicated if a breath lest finds
he said. "Either one would be a win- said.
alcohol concentrations equivalent 10
Asked if he is possible vice pres0.10 grams of alcohol or more per
idential material for Dole, Forbes said
210 liters of air.
Presenting a substantive agenda "anyone in :this room ranks higher
Frajola contends that the standard
than me right now.. I'm not waiting
involvingtaxrcduclionlothcvolers wilh hail.cd breath."
was set too low: The equivalent of a
will be c.:rucialto unseating President
0.10 percent alcohol reading in blood
Clinton, Forbes added.
He downplaycd plans hi seek the
is more like 0.10 grams of alcohol in
"That's something Bill Clinton presidency in 2000, noting that for
Those problems have been
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gaso- berg said.
230 liters of air.
Lundberg · attributed the drop to . resolved, Lundberg said. On the . can'l match. anq it's the only way to the moment he would remain
line pump price's took their first
Breath tests have been challenged nationwide prunge of the year, drop- lower crude oil prices arid the end of international front , OPEC has decid· dcfcarCiinton," he said. "You can't involved with rolitics to sec his
beliefs prommcJ.
in several Ohio courts after a memo .. ping by more than a penny a gallon . a supply shortage. More price reduc· cd to raise crude oil production after beat him on superficialiucs."
wriuen by Leonard Porter, the stale 's an oil industry analyst said Sunday.
But he joked thai a future caman agreement that lets Iraq sell oil for
·Forbes said thai if Dole's camtions are possible, she said.
former chief of biochemistry and toxpaign
"depends on what h~ppens in
the
first
lime
since
the
Gulf
War.
paign
focuses
on
voter
dissatisfaction
·
Prices
had
been
on
lhe
rise
since
The average price for. all grades,
icology, led' the patrol end other law
2000
if
President Dole decides to run
Nat·ionwidc
a1
self-serve
pumps,
with
ta&lt;cs
and
big
government.
the
including taxes, was $1.37 per gallon Nov. 17, when the average price was
again."
enforcement agencies 10 suspend use
Friday. according lo the Lundberg $1.15. They began falling in some where more than 95 percent of all 1105 rising Reform Party formed by exof the tests.
Forbes' Rio Grande stop was pan
·
.
is sold. the average per-gallon price independent presidential hopeful
· Survey of 10,000 gasoline stations cities last month.
of
a·two
.. day swing through Ohio to
Porter's memo. issued Jan. 29,
The
steep
price
hikes
of
lhe
prewas
$1.31
for
re~ular
unleaded,
$1.40
Ross
Perot
should
not
have
an
impact
nationwide. That's down 1.21 cents
tried to explain how the Ohio Departsuppon
the re-election of Sixth Disvious months were attributed lo a for mid-grade and $1.48 for prcmi- on the election.
from the last survey on May 24.
Forbes, who entered the presiden- trict U.S. Rep. Frank A. Cremeans,
ment of Health tests the alcohol-and"Prices are falling in virtually all variety of factors. including a short· um.
water solutions used to calibrate the
tial
race by promoting the flat tax R-Gallipolis. Before coming 10 Rio
cities nationwide," analyst Trilby age caused by higher production of
At full-service pumps, the average
heating oil during winter months.
breath testers. The memo seemed tq Lundberg said.
concept
as a means of simplifying the Grande, Forbes appeared on two
per-gallon price was $1.61 for reguindicate that 19 batches of solutions,
California was especially hard hit lar unleaded, $1.70 for mid-grade and tax code, said he was grat1 ficd by the Sunday morning network news disThe exceptions were some Midused throughout Ohio during the
western .cities, where prices rose because of a state-mandated switch 10 $1.77 for premium, nearly 23 cents response his campaign rcccivcd. He cussion programs via remote broadpast three years. might actually have
slightly after bottoming out, Lund- cleaner-burning gasoline that caused lower than Lundberg's most recent noted that being a candidate exposed cast !rom Cincinnati.
short supplies.
The universit y awarded Forbes an
been al a slightly different strength.
him to a wide variety of viewpoints.
survey.
"It was an extraordinarily good honomry doctoral degree .in public
experience most Of·the time," Forbes service, and he told the 407 graduates
reOcctcd. "The voters were keenly attending ceremonies in Lync Center
interested in substantive discussion of thai "the real wealth of society is not
resulting in scanered electricity out- shear hit Pomeroy, downing or split- · ing in damage to several tombstones, the issues. and I also discovered how lhc material things. it is the human
Sentinel News Staff
Thunderstonns pounded Meigs .ages and Oooding, b~t litlle damage. ting about 40 trees in Beech Grove
Village workers were busy after- diverse the country is.
mind.
County
Saturday
and
again
Sunday,
Saturday,
a
tornado-like
wind
and
resultwards
cutting trees off of access
Cemetery,
blocking
roads
"There are certain common
.
.
.
"What mak:es our so-called naturroads.
threads. but what keeps us together is al resources valuable'! The human
Emergency, Services Director a sci of shared principles," he added. imagination and ils 'ingenuity.":
Robert Byer said gusts were recordHe said the flat tax concept Forbes said. "Thai's what you have
ed between 40 and 45 mph at the remains a viable concept in spite of goucn from Rio Grande - the tools
EMS office in Pomeroy.
being "ferociously attacked" during lo usc lhose resources ...
The wind shear struck along
Hiland Road. Mulberry Road and
Beech Grove Cemetery, barely missing Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the EMS office, Byer said. ·
The EMS office was withoUI pow- .
er for about six hours after the stonn,
WASHINGTON (APf~ A top grounds of people to· ~ given per-' ·
with workers relying on a generator
White House aide says an apology is manent access to the White House, a
for electricity; he said.
owed for whal President Clinton c.ivilian Anny investigator on tern"We coped with it," he said.
. According to area American Elec- calls "a completely honest bureau- porary assignment had obtained FBI
tric Power Manager Ron McDade, cratic snafu" involving the handling .files of 341 individuals.
They included such prominent
approximately 250 Pomeroy-area · of confidential FBI background files
AEP.customers were without service on prominent Republicans and olh- RepubliCans as fonner Secretary of
ers.
State James A. Baker Ill and Kenneth
when the storm hit Saturday night.
But Republicans - including · Doberstein, White U:ouse chief of
"Our concern was with the hospital," McDade explained, adding thai some whose pasts were investigated staff under Prcsidcnt ·Reagan.
Panetta said on NBC's "Meet the
the hospital .has a generator for its - promise nollo let the maller rest.
"I
don'lthink
thai
ends
it,"
House
Press"
that through a "bureaucratic
m&amp;in circuits.
·
Majority
Leader
Dick
Armcy,
Rmistake"
Anthony Marceca of the
Most service was restored by.12:37 a.m. Sunday, with the exccp· Texas, said Sunday after While Army's Criminal investigation .Divilion of a few residences which had House chief of staff Leon Panella s1on was g1ven access to an old list
power restored by Sunday aftemaon. acknowledged thai an "inexcusable from the Bush administration.
landed acr011 tombltoriee. Damage to monuTREES UPROOTED- Mora than 40 trees in
While Panetta said no political use
"(The slonn) broke poles and mistake" had been made. '"I think we
menta Ia yet to ba determined. Pomeroy viHega
: Beech Grove C.metery .In Pomeroy -re
· downed lines," McDade said. "We ought to have hearings," Armey said. was made of the documents and they
employesl worbdover the wetkand to get the
· downed In a tOI'Jitdo.llke wind ah. . and hHvy
It was disclosed last week that in have .been returned to the FBI "I
had lines wrapped up in tree branchcemetary rGIICis oplfl. (Sentinel photo by Chlr·
rains which hit the araa Saturday nlghi. 1'rH1
late
1993, while checking the back- think an apology is owed to those ·
.
(Contln.uad on Page 3)
1ene H~llch)
were twilled, spilt and uprooted and - . 1
who were involved.'' ·

~~~~e~:~~a?.danyta•reliefwillbc

FBI file 'snafu' prompts
def!Jand for investigation

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•

~

~14-17·21~9-45

Storms cut power, but leave minor damage

Maintenance key aspect
to met~l roof's survi.val
By POPULAR MECHANICS
· For AP Special Features
Metal roofing, while adding· a
unique or period touch to your home,
often brings up questions regarding
maintenance and installation. As far
as painting gpes, Teme (copper and
tin plate), should be painted as soon
after application as conditions will
permit with a red iron-oxide, Iinseedoil vehicle primer lo prevent corrosion. This paint, . which is brushl\(lplied, is very slow drying with a
72-hour drying time. This is followed
with a compatible linseed-oil finish
coat.
In the old days, folks just used two
toats of the red iron-oxide primer,
which is the reason many of us pic,
ture old metal roofs as red. Today, the
compatible finis~ is available in a
variety of colors. Dependi~~g on envirc;mmental conditions, expect 10
repaint about every eight. years.
Some of the metal shingles manufactured tnday are made from gal·

~

Super Lotto:

·Gas prices record penny. a gallon
I · d u stry
. . analyst
.
. dl·scov·er
.
. ·s
d ro P.' ·n

.

• Heating and Water Heating
• Lift Truck Gas Delivery
• Grain Drying ~nd Cooking
• Construction Hea~ing

...

(':

•

.

GA
Over 40 Years Of Dependable

;""

"For a foliage'favorite .with a can;~
do altitude, plant ca,nna in full. sun,":
says Roozen. "Hot weather-lovin£.
canna has distinctive foliage of largebrown, bronzed, green or variegateiC
leaves and red, orange, pink or yel-:
low flowers that look like '}'ildly~
piumed tropical birds clinging IO airperches. II grows to an impressive 3:
to 5 feet, staunch .and uprigbt,:
requires no staking."

Homes _Q &amp; A: fixing
sloping concrete wal!c
By POPULAR MECHANICS
panty used cans of pl\inl without hav- .
lotr AP'
F...u.... · •
ing Ulem develop a skin on the sur- ·
Q: The concrete walk in the cor- face?
ner of our L-shaped house has senled
A: Here are several solutions thai
loa slope of 3 or 4'inches. The slope have worked for us:
causc;s rainwater to seep into the
I. Store the can upside down.
crawl space. Can we top this walk
2. Cut a piece of wax paper the .
with a thin layer of concrete, or will same diameter as the inside of the can
.it crumble?
.
and drop it down on top of the paint.
. A: You have three choices: replace When you are ready lo paint again,
_the slab, lop it with a layer .o f con- simply remove the paper and the
.crete, or lift it up and fill in under it. paint under it will be ready to stir up
There are two ways a homeowner ;;an and use without lumps or pieces of
lift a slab. If the edge of. the slab is dried paint skin to strain out.
accessible, you can·use a pry bar. If
3. Blow into the can before you
the edge is not accessible, or it's loo put the lid on it. The carbon dioxide
big to pry up, you can jack it up.
in your breath prevents the paint from
Span across tbe slab with two 2- oxidizing. Printers use this system to
by-4s placed on edge. Bore holes prevent a skin from fonning on
.lbrough the 2-byAs and through the unused inks.
concrete slab (rent a hammer drill if
4. The best answer we've found is
.need be). Take some threaded rod to pour a thin layer of the proper sol.(known as all thread) and pul a vent for the type of paint ont.o the sur·
spring-loaded wing on the end of face of lhe paint left in the can. Use
each. Push the rod through each hole just enough thinner lo cover the surin the 2-by-4s and inlo lhe hole s in face of the paint. Then,the next time
you use the point, simply stir the thinthe slab.
Put a washer and nut on top of ner into the paint. This way, you have
each rod and thread the nut down. no skin fonned at all and there is
Drive the rod down, with a hammer nothing in the can to fish out and disif necessary, until the wings open pose of without making a mess.
under the slab. Be sure to put the nuts Besides, most paints will spread
on the threaded rod before driving the much more easily when they are
'tod down. Driving the rod will mush- slightly thinned, especially those thai
room the threads and make il difficult have thickened a linle as their sol~o thread lhe nuts on the rod.
vents evapo~ated during a prev1ous
: Tighten the nuts against the 2-by- . use and storage period.
;~Is lo jack the slab up. Then pour a
~lurry of cement, sand and water
.To submit a question. write to
'through lhe open holes in the slab to Popular Mechanics; Reader Service
fill the void underneath. Tum the rod Bureau, 224 W. S7th St., New York,
out of lhe nuts when the filler under N.Y. 10019. The most interesting
the slab has set up a linle. Patch the questions will be answered in a
holes, and the job is done.
future column•.
Q: What's the best way to store

·!' ; ;:

Marauders'
campaign
concluded

\1

It ·

1

�Commentary

,.....~

White
The Daily Sentinel
'£stdti.s6etl in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614 112-21156 • Fu: 192·2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publllher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller .

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"'

~Guest editorial:

:Buffington Island site
:w orthy of preservation

House~ aides

WASHINGTON - It looked like
another plrlisan llugfest: Republican
Nlllionll Committee Ollirman Haley
Barbour and Democra!ic National
Committee Co-Chairm1111 Christopher Dodd shouting on national tele. vision over whether President Clinton was hiding behind a law to protect servicemen.
But that encounter may have been
a lovefest compared to the bitter
behind-the-scenes battle that ignited
after the legal brief mentioning the
act was submitted to the Supreme
Coun at the end of May. The brief is
aimed at delaying a sexual harassment lawsuit against Clinton, and the
debate over whether or not to employ
the act erupted into a shoot-out
between the presi.dent's political and
legal advisers. In the pending lawsuit,
Paula Jones, a former Arkansas state
employee, alleges that then-Gov.
Clinton propositioned her in a hotel
room.
Deputy Chief of Staff Harold lck·
es and several members·ofthe White
House Counsel's Office separately
tried to arm-twist Clinton attorney
Roben Benneu into retracting what

By LESTER HORWITZ
· 1be American Bald Eagle, symbol of our nation, was an endangered
;species. The American government took action and made it a crime to kill
1111 eagle. The bald eagle is no longer endangered.
Pennsylvania is reaping millions of tourist dollars 1111nually because of the
·farsightedness of their citizens wh!) preserved 1he Gettysburg battlefield.
: A developer wanted to erect a shOpping center on the Civil War battle·
.field of Manassas. The Virginia community rose up to defend the land where
.the Battles of Bull Run were fought. 'Their indignation saved the hallowed
site for future generations.
The beautiful colonnade facade of the old Albee Theatre was spared the .
wrecker ball. It now lends grace to the stunning entrance of the Alben Sabin
Convention Center in downtown Cincinnati.
· The original baseball scoreboard from old Crosley Field in Cincinnati was
kept intact and mov.ed to suburban Blue As!J, where it keeps the score each
year for the nosralgu: Annual Old Timers Baseball Game.
·
The irreplaceable, massive an deco murals that predominated the once
.busy railroad hub of Cincinnati's Union Terminal in the 1930s and 40s, were
moved at great expense to the new transponalion hub of the Queen City's
·
·
international ailpon in Nonhem Kentucky.
The Federal government, Cincinnati, Blue Ash. Kentucky, Pennsylvania
ll!d Vi'lJinia all realize the imponance of preservation. he it an animal, a structwe or a piece of land. Had any of them delayed, procraStinated, or looked
the Olber way, these wonderful symbols would have been lost to future generations.
·
What is the stat.e of Ohio doing? An unduplicated 1'iece of history, the
sllle's ONLY Civil War battlefield, is being destroyed. Ravaged beyond recognition. Do the people in 'power, here in the state of Ohio, know thai 10,000
Union and Confederate soldiers fought a bloody battle on the.Buckeye shore
of the Ohio River? Do Ohio lawmakers know that over 4,300 homes in Ohio
were raided by Confederate troops from the Army of Tennessee? This was
1101 an isolated skirmish by a few hundred state militia. This battle involved
several Union divisions of cavalry, anillery and infantry. Even U.S. Navy
gunboats played .a crucial role in this epic battle on Ohio shores.
Where did this major military battle happen? In fortland, Ohio. Never
heard of it? It's in Meigs County. The remoteness of this quiet comer of Ohio
is one of the reasons why the Confederates chose to cross the river at this
point. Fo'lJet bustling towns like Cincinnati a~d Portsmouth. Too .many people, too many Union soldiers. Nobody knows where Ponland is.
There's a small Ohio River isle of 150 acres called Buffington Islalld which
lies next to Portland, and for which the battleground site is name~ . This is
where thousands of Confederate soldiers, led by General John Hunt Morgan
on his most daring raid, planned to recross the Ohio and escape into West
Vi'lJinia. But 8,000 Union troops, which had been relentlessly pursuing them
for weeks, finally caught up and surrounded them. Navy gunboats lay off·
shore and fired their deadly Dahlgrens into the trapped Confederate masses. Naval firepower made it hopeless for anyone trying to ford the river. For
m1111y hours the battle raged.
Hundreds were killed and wounded.
Union Major Daniel McCook of the "Fighting McCooks" was monally .
wounded and died on the ship taking·him to a Cincinnati hospital. He is buried
. • in Cincinnati's Spring Grove Cemetery.
·
Four future U.S. presidents Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley (all hom in Ohio) were pcrso·nally
~nvolved in events that led to this battle and its outcome.
· So what's happening to this hallowed piece of land where the blue and
pay fought valiantly on Sunday, July 19, 1863? It is being turned into Bl!favel pit! Richards &amp; Sons of Racine, Ohio, is prc:paring to apply for a permit
(rom the Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources to mine gravel on 400 acres
ef the Buffinston Island Battlefield (Ponland area).
.
.
: Where American blood anointed the rocks and stones, a shovel·wtll scrape
tway the grassy fields and hallowed hills. The battle.field will he erased for
~temity and Ohio's only Civil War battleground will be scarred beyond recogllition.
.
: There's plenty of gravel in Ohio without having to destroy this sacred
pound. Ohio's leaders must realize that no~ is the time to act. to stop this
senseless destruction. Use the state's laws, 11 s funds and prcscrval!on tools
. io protect these few acres for those who care and those to come. Don't allow
Ohio history to be forever destroyed. Future generations cry out for your
i:Jnmediate attention and resolve .10 .protect and maintain what can'l be
replaced. Save the Buffing1on Island Battlefield. It's the least you can do for
Ohio. History will record your response.
: If you want to help by expressing your opinion, contact or write to:
· :111e Honorable George V. Voinovich, State House. Columbus, Ohio
.3266-0601;
.
: • The Honorable John H. Glenn, 503 Han Sel)ate Office Building, Wash"gton, D.C. 205 I0;
: • The Honorable Mike DeWine, 140 Russell Senate Office Building, WashNlJI,I6n, D.C. 205 I0;
: •• The Honorable Stanley J. Aronoff. State House, Columbus, Ohio 43266-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnsteln
· cJose to him says, "He was bouncing
9ff the walls" when Bennett refused
to make the changes.
lckes and other members of the
vaunted White House rapid response
team were looking for a rapid retreat
in the face of Republican attack ads
that mocked Clinton's use of the Soldiers' and Sailors'·Civil Relief Act given Clinton's avoidance of military
service - in the week leading up to
Memorial Dav.
'
"It was too good a point not to
have in the brief, but {Bennell) did·
n'l want to rub in the commander-in·
chief issues," says one source
involved in the discussions. " If Bob
Bennett were represe.tting Bob Dole,
he would have pushed the point

·

BlLLCLI~

.

'

'

·

CAMml6N ~AL,..,

No, I'M NoT

A~PUBLICAN..,
BUTt PLAY
ONb~t'l

President Clinton has an amazing
knack for surviving crises. This
knack may be more curse than bless,ing, however, since the crises are usually those he made himself.
Pundits applaud his marvelous
ability to bandage 1he foot he shot
and remove it from his mouth simultaneously, all the while talking from
both sides of it and melting honey
with his tongue. It's a good act, but
isn't this a needlessly complicated
way ·to 80 !hrough life'
Then
again,
his
selfdestructive/self-inventing personality
may make him the em.blem of the
'90s. For example, we spent a couple
centuries developing a tobacco habit,
and now we're angry at smokers for
not quitting overnight. We've fc:&gt;stcred a giddy cultural euphoria about
the Internet, to the extent that the
majority of Americans who aren't
"on-line" feel as·guilty as smokersbut those who are on-line have to
worry about whal expens call "Internet addiction."
Yes, we are now a skiilish people
with the attention span of a channelsurfing hungry infant. Perhaps we
deserve Bill Clinton.
. Lately he's ~!olen sawing away his
branch even more aggressively than

usual . First he and/or his lawyers
lried to use the so-called "Soldiers
and Sailors Acl'' 10 get oul of having
to deal with Paula Jones. How did

/an Shoales
that bit play with the American pub. .,
1!C
,
. So the draft-dodger wants to get
out of adultery charges by wrapping
himself in a military uniform. does
he? It was so quiet around the country you could hear a poll drop.
Perhaps in reaction, his wife
Hillary, author of the best-selling
book "It Takes a Village (To Raise a
Child)," and aiready hated beyond
reason in cenain quaners. told Time
magazine that she and Bill may be
planni.ng to adopt a second child sometime after the November election, of course.
I suppose her stalcment was meant
io cr~a1e a warm, fuzzy feeling
among the populace; instead pockels
of derisive laughter exploded
throughout the land. (But · il does
show how far Bill Clinton will take
a political gesture: Most ~lectioneer­
ing politicians would'have just kissed
a baby and moved on; Clinton is willing to take the baby 'Yith him .)

:o•vid Buskirk
David Buskirk. 43, Syracuse, died Sunday, June 9, 1996 at his residence,
Born Sept, 25, 1952 in Partersbu'lJ. W.Va., the son of Sherman Jr. and
Artie Mae "Sis" Buskirk, both of Middlepon, he was a yard supervisor-for
the Kyger Creek Power Plant.
' Surviving in addition to his parents are two sons, Jeremy David Buskirk
and James Donald Buskirk, both ofl-eon, W,Va.; a sister and brother-in-law,
Nancy and Martin Broderick of Pomeroy; a brother and sister-in·law, Mike
and I1111ice Buskirk of Coshocton; and several nieces, nephews, aunts and

hanJing in the balance. Clinton could
find himself trapped in a media cir·
cus trial this fall, compelled to ansWO'
'!juestions from Jones' attorneys about
' every scurrilous rumor that has ever
surfaced.
But White House offiCials w1111ted
a quick fix.
"What happened here was thai
people panicked." says· a source.
.. And this was so typical. The idea is.
'Lets put out the ftre today without
regard to the facts or the long term.'
We took a one-day story lll!d turned
it into a week."
Some White· ~ouse sources say
Bennett was asked to accept a wristslap letter for raising the act in couft
papers. Ickes wanted Bennett to tak~
the extraordinary step of wriung a letter to the Supreme Coun withdrawing the point. Several lawyers in the
White House Counsel's Office were
. advocating a letter that would alsO
ment.ion to the high coun the muunt,
• ing media controversy.
,
In a series of discussions, Bennett
warned White House officials thai
there would be dire consequences fot
the case if the Supreme Coun got
even a sniff of politics. Moreover.
such letters arc usually reserved for
coJTccting grievous e!Tors.
.
"Cenain political' people ... panicked and wanted Bennell to take
actions which Bennett fell were inap:.
propriatc to take both from a !ega! .
and political perspective ..Aiso Bennett said that he was an officer of the
Sup!'"'me Coun bar and has been·for
25 years and would not ·let a com·
munications person write his brief."
Bennett never relented on his
main point. but he did budge by clar'·
ifying thai the president "does not
rely on. or claim any relief" under the
act.
Whi.tc House press secrelary Mike
McCurry told us that White House
officials have "an obvious political
need to protect the ·president in the
coun of public opinion." He said
Bennett was only asked to make the
language more "explicit." McCurry
added that Clinton had only "glanci ·
in8" ~ut not "studying" knowledge
of the briefs.
(Jack Anderson and Michael
'Binstein are columnists for United
Feature Syndialte.)

Pay -attention to little Johnny after dark

UII(Jes.

' Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·

pon, with the Rev. Paul Stinson officiating. Burial will follow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9
p.m. tonight.

Cecil Mary Duckworth

.• Cecil Mary Duckwonh, 82, 509 Doylestown Road, Creston, died

~rnest

NatHentoff
organizers is Woody Osburn, a fulllime civil rights specialist with the
Pennsylvania Coalition of Citizens
With Disabilities. He is a quadri·
plegic.
.. Americans with disabilities " he
and the others say, "don't want your
pity or your lethal mercy. We want
freedom. We want LIFE. We, the
. m
· g WI'th severe disabilities
peopIe Itv.
and chronic illnesses, are the most
affected by assisted 'suicide.'
"Our deaths are being viewed as
more desirable than providing services · such as in· home care, that
would allow us to live as free and
independent citizens. Instead, many
of us are caged in nursing homes and
other institutions or dependent on a
family member- the two main circumstances that lead to assisted 'suicide.'"
Not Dead Yet is circulating a prescient, ominous statement on the
social value of assisted suicide by Dr.
Kevorkian. He presented · it to a
Michigan Circuit Coun in 1990.
Said the good doctor:

Sun~

L. Handley

Ernest Lee Handley, 65, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday. June 9, 1996
at his residence.
'.
· Born Oct. 4, 1930 in Culloden, W.Va., son of Raymond L. Handley of
Millwood, W.Va., and the late Grace R. Meddings Handley Chirgwin, he
· '!"as a retired pipefiller at Ravenswood Aluminum, a member of the Main
Street Baptist Church, where he served as a deacon, a member of Minturn
Lodge 19 AF &amp; AM. vice president of the 0 -Kan Wanderers Campers and
Hikers Association, a former Point Pleasant city councilman, and a member
Qf the Point Pleasant High School Band Boosters.
' He was also preceded in death by a son, Todd Handley; a brother. Paul
Handley; a brother-in-law, Oshel Wolfe; and a sister-in-law. Era Mae Rollins.
Surviving in addition to his father arc.his wife.Anna Francis "Sappy" Hanqley; a son, Rick (Sue) Handley of Point Pleasant; six grandchildren; a sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Josephine "Tommy" and Gene Hanes; two
brothers-in-law and a sister-in-law, Bob Rollins, and Dick and Patty Thomas ;
a. sister, Ruth Wolfe of Millwood; a brother and sister-in-law, Roger and Bonna Handley of Point Pleasant; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Main Street Baptist Church, with
Dr. Donald W. Johnson Jr. officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call atlhe Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point Pleasa,nt, from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.
· . The body will lie in state at the church one hour prior to Wednesday's serVIce.

~ames

W. Layne

)ames William Layne. 65. Gallipolis. died Saturday June 8, 1996 at his
residence.
·
; Born July 20, 1930 in Omar, W.Va., son of the late F:P. Layne and Ethel
Layne Gilfilen, he was a welder and coal miner employed by Southern Ohio
Coal Co., and he retired in 1994. He was a U.S. Navy veteran of the Korean War.
··
·
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy Mason Layne, whom he married Aug.
17. 1953 in Gallipolis; a son, James (Tammi) Layne of Mariena; a daughter. Judith Layne Calhoun of.Gallipolis; his stepfather, Charles Gilfilen of
'Jallipolis; three grandchildren; a brother, Rlll:ie\;1 E. (Judi) Layne of
. r~oxville:• Tenn.; and·tht;ee !isters, Donna (Lindllu rgh) Arnold of Mason,
\of Va., Lms (Sonny) Robtnelle of DeLand, Fla.,.and Shirley (Roger) Boster
&gt;f Gallipolis.
. Services are II am. 1\Jesday in the McCoy-Moore Fonef'ai'Home Wether. ,tplt Chapel, Gallipolis, with Chuck Stawsberry officiating. Buriaf will be in
the Ohto Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at .the funeral home from
6· 8 tonight.
·
,

How far will he take the children ' hates his job.
of America? He wants to do someAs far as this V-Chip goes, may I
thing about their ·smoking, about call parents' attention to the on/off
what they watch on television ... In switches on their televisions and
New Orleans he voiced his concerns. computers? May I suggcsl that you,
about "children having children. rather than the proper authorities,
children killing chil(\ren, children give your children attention, strength '
being raised by other children .... " · and love? May lsugg'estthat the ban• •,
and funher, his ·woJTies that this is ning of loaded weapons on school
"not the America ... we can pass on propeny be given a higher prioritj ·
to our children and their children."
than sex education or the scouring ot:
This s.peechifying made medi.zzy. . Joe Camel from pubescents'T-shirts?
We mustn 't P,ass the children of chilI remain unconvinced that our
dren on to our children's children ... ? youth (or illegal immigrants as far as
·What')
..
that goes) are as thuggish as we're ,
Then he sawed his branch clean being led to believe. I ha•e spoken to '
through, as far as J' m concerned. many young people. They seem to
What wa~ he thinking when he cnthu-· this middle-aged man to be soflspo- '
siastically endorsed New Orleans' ken and polite (if highly tattooed) ,
curfew for kids?
~
individuals.
It's one thing if Mayor Barney of
Cenainly, many of them are prone
Hoolervillc instilutcs a curfew. to sudden rage,&lt;. But these are easily' \
fhere 's only four cops.in Hootcrvillc explained : America hates them and t
anyway, and only 96 kids. In other they know it. America considers' 1
words, sure, a village .can raise kids. them underachieving, drug-addled,"t
But if we're now going to call out the tobacco-smoking. Internet-addicted; ' .
Marines every time Lillie Johnny is easily swayed, iJTCsponsible, sex· '
caught smoking a doob at the mfill cra1.ed insomniacs whom it must love ;.
afler 8 o'clock, well count me out, ag:iinst its will:
·~
folks. I think I'd prefer to have my
• Atlca~t until the election's over. .
delinquent children roustcd by a cop
(Jan Shoales is a columnist fot ~
they knew than a mange fed who Newspaper Enterprise Associa· .,
lion.)
•:

Frank Murphy "Buddy" Reynolds, 77, Parkersburg, W.Va., died Sunday,
June 9, 1996 in St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg.
, Born Aug. 30, 1918. in Pennsylvania. son of the late William Henry and
fannie McGlone Reynolds, he was the former dwner of the Mason (W.Va.)
Auto Man, and a member of the Mason t!nited Methodist Church and the
· L'oyal Order of the Moose, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
, He ·was also preceded in death by ··a sister. Ida Mae Hemingway; and a
brother, Raymond Reynolds.
Surviving are his wife. Gladys L. Thacker Reynolds; three sons. Norman
R,i:ynolds of New Ellenton, S.C.. and Nelson Reynolds and Kenneth
RFynolds, both of Nel" Haven, W.Va.; a daughler, Lisa Ann Ohlinger of New
Haven; a stepson, Larry D. Snyder of Racine; nine grandchildren and fi~e
great-grandchildren; a brother, William Reynolds of Kanauga; and a sister.
Pauline Griffin of Chesapeak'e.
.. Graveside serviCes will be I0 a.m. Wednesday in 1he Lone Oak Cemetery, wi1h 1he Rev. Ben Stevens officiating. Arrangements arc by tlie Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point Pleasant.
In lieu of nowers, donations may be made to 1hc St. Joseph's Dialysis
Departll)cn'., in care of Dr. Godlewski, Parkersburg, W.Va.

1

The Sentinel News Hotline

'

'

,. r
"The volunlary self-&lt;&gt;limination of last decade have allowed life-sus-: :
individual and monally diseased or taiqing treatment to be withdrawn . ~ ,
crippled lives. taken collectively, can from persons :·with substantial,: ~
only enhance the preservation of though notterminal, disabilities. This ~
public health and welfare."
trend is rooted in pervasive and ;
· Those who are not dead yet are largely unconscious societal preju- _ :
afraid that much of the general pub- , dices against people with disabili- j
lie uncritically assume that the "vol- tics."
'l
untary" pan of Kevorkian's prophe·
"~
cy will be exactly that. Aft~r all, not
1
a few of us do not like to look at _
In Mouth: The Voice of Disabili·. ,
or think about- "defective" people ty Rights. a lively and continually- 1
and hehevc thafthc severely disabled challengi~gJII!l!lication (61 Brisllton .
probably do wish. in the.ir hcan of St., Rochester, N.Y. 14607-2656)-'- ,
· hean.~. to 'bc "liberated" by suicide. Joe Ehman, a reponer with disabili-&lt; •
Through the years, in hospitals, tic~, ~ells ~f his e~ounter ~ith ~ prejsome of the disabled .ha•e been told, 1u.d'c.,'.al
vtew of hJS .own qualny of,. 1
~
1
one way or another, that their "quale.. ·
'
. ,·,
ity of life" is hardly wonh their effort :
. A few hour.~ after surgery. still · ·I
.to preserve it, .let alone the e"'ons of . dchnous from
. .the ancsthe.sta and
'"
f
1
1
h
d
their dQCto~ or the cost to socie~¥.
rom pos ·Su(gtca morp me .a~ 1
And with some or the disabled, that. Demerol, 1 had to ,hear from • SOCial ,
J!Ssessment of their lives can become worker who wante;d 10 f~-fe,ed me .;
persuasive.
'
~
Not Resuscitate order to the ' , I
One of the witnesses during a
oc ors.
·'
recent hearing on assisted suicide by
"I mustered iny strength and
the H.ouse Subc~mmtttec on the Con- screamed, 'I'm 30 years old. I dorr't ..
Slttutton was· Dtane Coleman, exec- want to die.'
.
.
utive director, Progress Center for . "Anothe'r nurse came into the :
Independent Living. Dlle to spinal rbom. She asked why I was verbally ·: l
muscular atrophy, she ·has been a abusing a sraff .mcmber. ·
':
wheelchair user since the age of II .
"I responded that there w" ~oth- ,, ;
She told the subcommittee ing in arms' reach to throw It the "' •
headedbyCharlesCanady,R.-Aa. - hitch."
about coun decisions that over the
Not dead yet. .

992-2156
... - ---- -. .,

't'

'J

wilh menu of baked chicken , mashed
Farmen' feed slated
The Southern Local Building potatoes and gravy, noodles, cole
Committee will host a farmers' feed slaw, roll, strawberry shoncake and
Thursday, 7 p.m. at Karen 's Market beverage for $4 per person. Enter(formerly Harris Farms), Ponland. taining at 6:30p.m. will be the GenAll district farmers and resid~nts are tlemen Four Barbershop Quancl of
invited to .attend the free event, Hugh Graham, Gerald Powell . Den·
which includes hamburgers, hot dogs, ver Rice and Mike Wilfong.
snacks and drink.
Community Band
The Meigs Counly Community
Senior Citizens dinner
Band
will meet tonight at 7 at Meigs
A dinner will be held at the Meigs
High School. All members arc urged
Count~_eni~r Citizens . Ce~ter.
to attend .
Pomcroy~sday from 5-6.15 p.m.,

'

...

To offer story suggestions,
repon late-breaking news and
offer news tips

.. -·

87 C.rritr or Motor Routt "
One ~..~ ................................... $1.00
One Montb ................................................$8.70
One Ycar ....................... .~. ..........
$104.00

s.blcriben not delirint to pay the catdet may
rtmil in Jdvanoe dln:ct 10 The DAily Sen1inel
on a 11uDC, sbo or 12 monlb basiL Credit will be
pven cll'rier eacll week.

No lubaeripdon by man permitted In II'!BI

where ~ Cllricr service it ~aillble.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded '12
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday, including one transfer call.
Units responding included :
MIDDLEPORT
II: 17 p.m. Sunday, Cole S1ree1,
Mike Youkers, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
{6
POMJ):ROY
9:2 1 a.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Mabel Niemy,
er, VMH;
5:40p.m. Saturday. motor vehicle
accident on Main Street, Walter
Leifheit, Mildred Roush, William
Young ahd Mary Roush, refused·
treatment;
3:28 a.m. Sunday, RRC. Arvil
Wcblin, Holzer Medical Center. ·
REEDSVILLE

A Middlepon man was arrested on charges of criminal trespassing
and DUI after he was found sleeping in a Cotterill Road residence.following an autQ accident Saturday night. according to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
I
Dorsey Ohlinger, Middlepon, wa.• found sleeping in lheliving room
of the nome of James Couerill, Pomeroy, when he returned home
around 9:30p.m. Saturday. C~uerill contacled the sheriffs depanment,
who arrived atlhe scene and arrested Ohlinger on trespassing charges,
Soulshy staled.
According to repons. Ohlinger wrecked his car in a field near lhe ··
Coucrill home and apparently cam"' to the residence for help. After find·
ing no one home at the time. Cotlcrill enlered lhe residence.and apparently passed oul.
··
The State Highway Patrol investigated the auto accidenl, charging
Ohlinger with driving under 1he innucncc.
Ohlinger was scheduled to appear in Meigs County Coun. on the
charges this morning, according to Soulsby.
· '

----Hospital news---,......_
Discharges June 9 - Monta
Metzger.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Fife. son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. ·
Sleven Peters, daughter, Clifton,
W.Va.
(Published with pennission)
Plastics have become so versatile'
thai the same substance lhat makes
garbage bags also makes armor for
U.S. Army tanks.

By The Asaoclated Press .
' It's going to be a wet week for
Ohio. The National Weather Service
says afternoon and early evening
showers and thunderstonns arc like-

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... ..411\
Akzo .............................:........ 59'4
Ashland 011 .... :...................;.. 40'4
AT•T ......................c..............61'!.
Bank One .............................. 36'1.
Bob Evans ............. :.............. 14~
Borg-Warner ........... :.............40'4
Champion Ind .............., ........ 18'!.
Charming Shop ................;:....TJ.&lt;
City Holding ............................23
Federal Mogul., .................. :,.~&amp;~
Gannett ........................ :...,, ...7QA
Goodyear T&amp;R ,,......................511
K·man ................................... 12~
Landa End ..........................'~.~~~
Limited Inc............................ 21 '!.
.Peoples Bancorp................... 23
Ohio Valley Bank .................. 32'1.
.One Val!ey ............................. 33t
Prem Fln1 ............................... 13~
Rockwell ...:............................ 59
Royal Dutch1Shell ..............152'4
Shoney'a lnc ............ ;............ 12'!.
Star Bank .............................. 69Y•
Wendy lnt'l .............................. 18
Worthlngton Ind................... 19'1,

lydaily through 1hc week.
Rain on Sunday nighl and early
today caused some 111inor flooding in
southeast Ohio but no evacuations
were necessary. Most of the flood waters had receded by daybreak.
· Skies generally will he panly to
mostly cloudy lhrough Friday.
Overnighl .lows will be 60-65 and
d~ytime highs 75-80.

'

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High Interest Yields
Available -............
• No Loads or Fct;s
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
• High Safely!
• Wide Choice of Annuilics of
All Kinds

NWS ·forecasts rain through·week

Call for lnfonnation:

SCOTT INSURANCE
614-698-4011 (collect)
3~22 Swart Rd.'
Albany, Ohio 45710
• Annuilics are issued by lnsurancC

"
'•

Companies and have substantial
penalties for early withdrawals.

..
·r

________, ..

.__

F

'
•
40 Gal. Propane
Water Heater

•

• The only charge is $5.00 per month lease
for 5 years.
• Rutland Bottle Gas will install gas line at
no charge.
• Water Heaters are propane only.
• Propane must be purchased from Rutland
Bottle Gas to qualify for this offer.
• Must be property owner to qualify for this
offer.
• Plumbing and venting of water heater is
the obligation of the property owner.

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quo1es provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Where the Patient Comes First

Dedicated to providing you with .
the highest quality care in the
safety and comfort of your home for
more than 25 years.

MAIL IIVB8CRIPTIONS .

BUCKEYE HOME HEALTH

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I•.

'

'

Sheriff cites area man on two counts

The Choice Is Buckeye

••••••••• •

SINGLE COPY PRICII
Doily .................... ...... .......... :.......... ..:. 3l'Cenll

An Albany man was arrested Salurday morning after threatening to
shoo1 a man in a domestic dispute, according to t.-!eigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Donnie J. Kasler, 42, was arrested nfter he allegedly twice threat·
ened to shoot Brian Wooten in front of his residence. Deputies were
called to the home twice, only to find Ka.sler had Oed after authorities .
were contacted.
Charges of menacing threaiS were filed against Kasler after his arrest.
He is scheduled to appear in Meigs County Coun on the charges. Soulsby said .

Quautg !Jlome Care,

SUISCRIPTION RATIS

•.

Deputies file charges on Albany man

When It Comes To

POS'I'MASTERl Send address COI'JUlions lo
The Daily SenlirM:1. Ill Cour'l: Sl., Pomeroy,
Ollio 45769.

H

A Racine man was arrested Saturday evening on drug chlrJCI for
alleJedely 1t1ernptin1 to obtain prescription drucs illcaally, accordina
to MeiJS County Sheriff Jatnel M. Soulsby.
According to Soulsby, the Meiss County Sherill's Depatlment
received a repon from a local pharmlllly stating that Woodrow' Hall,
Racine. contacted the pharmacy 'under the premise thll he was calling
in a prescription for a local doctor.
After funher investigation, Hall was arrested by deputies and
charged with one count of deception 10 oblain a dangerous drug, a
felony of the founh degree .
'Hall is scheduled to appear in Meigs County Coun on the charge,
Soulsby said.

EMS units answer 12 calls

Published every afternoon, Monday lhrou.&amp;h
Friday, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, 01\io, by the
Oftio Volley Pu61ishi na. Company/Gillntlt Co.•
1
fiomeroy, Obto 4S169. ftl: W.Z-2156. Stcond
dtJSI postqt pMd Dt Pomeroy, Ofrio.
M•btr: The AtAnciated Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper A.noeiation.

Racine mon an-ested on drug charge

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Rcva
Smith. Middlepon.
Saturday discharges -none ..
II :08 a.m. Salurday, Eden Ridge, ·
Sunday admissions - Mable .
Kevin Cowdery, Camden-Clark Niemeyer. Pomeroy.
Memorial Hospilal;
Sunday discharges- none .
2:53 p.m. Salurday. State Route
Holzer Medical Center
681, Ellen Sams. CCMH .
Dis&lt;harges
.June 7 - Mary
SYRACUSE
Sheets, Kalhy Webb, Mrs. Daniel
R:02 p.m. Saturday, RRC, Leo
Woodyard, O'Bieness Memorial. Hos- Foglesong and daughter, Mrs. Gary
Stauch and daughler, Lemona Casey,
pital;
7:47p.m. Sunday, RRC, William Sheila Doss.
Discharges June 8 - James
Cusler, VMH.
McDonald,
Janet Harrison. Maggie
TUPPERS PLAINS
Sheppard,
Rebecca
Reitmire .
9:46 a.m. Salurday, Kcebaugh
Birth
Mr.
and
Mrs. David
Road. Roben Dorst, HMC;
Mon1gomcry, son, Gallipolis.
3:24p.m. Saturday, Sumner Road,
Leonard Koenig. St. Joseph's Hospital ;
3: II p.m. Sunday. Forked Run
Stale Park, lim Dawson, lrcated allhc
scene.

, (USPS Zll-960)

'!

0:

Meigs announcements

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

Homer Edward "Jade" McQuaid, 61. 1117 Teodora Ave., Gallipolis. died
Sunday, June 9, 1996Jn Hob:er Medical Center.
Born Sept. 18, .1934 in Oallia County, son of the lale Lawrence W. and
Rose M. Sheline McQuaid, he was retired from the U.S. Air Force.
He served during the Korean War and was a memberof the Strategic Air
Command 99th .Bomb Wing. He was an engine mechanic on B-36 bombers.
He served in Newfoundland 1111d Guam, and was awarded the American
Defense Medal, the Good Conduct Medal and the Air Force Longevity Ser·
vice Award Ribbon.
He was a life member of 'the Disabled American Veterans and the Veterans of ~or~ign Wars: He was a m~mber of Morning Dawn Masonic Lodge
7, Galhpohs, helongtng to all bodtes, mcludnig the 32nd Degree Mason. He
was a "!e~ber of the Aladdin Temple Shrine and the Knights Thmplar.
. Survtvt~g are hJS wtfe. Olona Poling McQuaid, whom he married in 1971
m Galhpohs; three sons. Mtchael S. (Elizabeth) McQuaid of Gallipolis and
Keith McQuaid and DeWayne A. McQuaid, both of Moore Haven Fla: two
daughters, Jamie (lame~) Denney of Bidwell, and Teresa Summerall of Moore
Haven; four grandchildren; five brothers, Lawrence W. McQuaid Jr. and Harry D. McQuaid, both of Rutland , James J: McQuaid of Gallipolis, Gene A.
McQuatd of Lomm, and Luzon L. McQuaid of Addison; and two sisters Vir·
ginia Mae (Donald) Dennison of Columbus. and Mary E. (Rohen) Str~it of
Li1hopolis.
·
'
He was also preceded·in death by a son, Craig McQuaid.
. Se!"ices will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Willis Funeral Home, Gall(po- ,
hs, With the Rev. Charles Stansberry officiating. Burial will be in the Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday.
A Masonic service will be cond ucted iQ lhe funeral home by Morning
Dawn Lodge 7 at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Full military graveside rites will be conducted by 1he Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base Honor Guard.

Frank 'Buddy' Reynolds

Death-on-demand irks disability rights groups:!
sive and enraged are various disabil·
ity rights groups. An alliance of the
dissenters has created a new force.
It's .called Not Dead Yet One of the

·

day, June 9, 1996 in the Meadowview Care Center, Seville.
. Born Aug. 30, 1913 in Boomer, W.Va., daughter of Alben and Hattie
(Diehl) Linkenhoker, she lived in Rittman before moving io Creston in 1975 .
She was a homemaker.
: She w.S also preceded in death by her husband, Charles, in 1993.
~ Surviving are a daughter, LaDonna Lewis of Creston; a granddaughter,
and three grandchildren; and a sister, Mamie Swauger of Middlepon.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Leran Falls Cemetery, with the Rev. Dr. Krisana Robinson officiating. Friends may call at the
!)illm~ Funeral Home, Rittman. from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
·

• I

'

Ten years ago, before Dr. Jack
Kevorkian became a Halloween
mask, I went to a conference in Minnesota of disability rights activists ..
Much of their anger was directed at
the American Civil Libenies Union,
which some of them had previously
regarded as an ally.
The Southern California ·affiliate
of
~-ioo Honorable Alben Gore. The Vice President, The White House, 1600 the ACLU had gone to coun to
establish the right of a woman with
Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20500;
.
: • Gary C. Ness. Director, Ohio Historical Society, 1982 Velma Avenue, cerebral palsy and other disabilities to
get help in committing suicide. The
(:olumbus, Ohio 43211-2497.
·
ACLU did not succeed, and its olient,
having recovered from . clinical
depression, decided she did not want .
to die after all.
Since then, the Michigan and
Aorida
affiliates of the ACLU have
ly The Auocllded Prn1.
Today is Monday, June 10, the 162nd day of 1996. There are 204 days vigorously supponed assisted suicide,
and the national office, being politileft in the year.
.
·
.
. · cally correct in these matters, goes
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 10. 1935, Alcoholics Anonymous was founded m Akron, Ohto, along. Now, at last, the ACLU does ·
· seem to have won this battle for
by William 0. ~lson and Dr. Rohen Smith.
·
death-on-demand. Both the 9th and
On this date:
In 1801, the North African state of Trijloli declared war on the Un.ited 2nd Circuit C~un of Appeals have
SillieS in a dispute over safe passage of merchant vessels through the Medtter· ruled not only that assisted suicide is
legal but that a doctof'may both pre·
ran::·865, the cipera "Triswi und Isolde" by Richard Wagner premjered in scribe pills for the despairing patient
Munich, Germany.
.
. · ,
.
.
. . · and, under some circumstances, may
In 1892, the Republican nallonal con~nuon m Mmneapohs. nommated direc;tly administer a lethal injection.
J'ruident turrison for re-election and Whitelaw Retd for vtce prcstdent. (Har· That is, the doctor can commit an act
of. euthanasia.
rison, however, lost the election to former President Cleveland.) .
. Of all those apposing these lethal
In 1922, singer-actress Judy Garland was born FranCes Oumm m Grand
coun decisions. the most apprehenlbtpidl, Minn.
•

Today in .history

very

becausc&gt;'it was a
aood point."
Although Bennett has focused
most of his firepower on constitu·
tional ariuments, the act has been a
pan of rvery brief since August
1994, when a delay was first sought
in ·u.s. District Coun. One official
says every " word and comma" was
cleared by 1he White House Counsel's Office.
In coun papers. Bennett described
the act as permiuing civil suits
against service members to be ·
delayed because they were subordinate "to more immediate and significant national interests. Yet no one
suggests thai scrvic• personnel
improperly are accorded elevated
legal status because of this relief. The
. nation's interesr fn the •undivided
attention of the President to official
duties is even more compelling ,., and
acknowledgement of this fact similarly does AOI pla&lt;:c the President
•above the law:'"
The Supreme Coun may soon rule
· ·on BenneU's motion that 1he civil
lawsuit should he delayed until Clin·
ton leaves office. There are grave
political and constitutional issues

r-.~--------~
. ---

~~NGOFA

--.--

retreat from GOP attack.

they reg!lrded as politkally damaging
references to the act in the brief,
according to sources.
Ickes was the 1111griest One source

Local News in Brief·-

Homer 'Jack' McQuaid

Mondly, June 10, 11$

The Dtlty S ls\tlnel • Pege 3

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

llondey, June 10,1111

\

•

.\

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•

•

�~y.June10,1998

Sports

The Daily Sentin.!!
.UO, 4. 15 : 8el ~ber . K~1111as City. 6-2 .
.1$0. 4.00; M.waaa. laii1MCW. 8-), 127.

- 04-

1.54: Denni1 Mlni•z. OLVELAND. B) . .727. 4.JO.
STRI KEOUTS : Clcmrn1, Bos1o n,
IM; Appicr. Kansas Ciry, 85, Raley. Cal·
tfOI'ftia. 14: Muulna, B allimo«~ , 82. A.
FtrMI\da, Chicato. 7~ Alllllfel, Chkalfl· 71 : K. Hill, Tc.aas. 71.
SAVES; Meu. CLEVElAND. 21; R.
Htrnandez. Chic•au. 19. Hrnneman .
Te~tu , 18: Montaomery. Kanw Ciry. 16.
Wetleland, Ntw York. 14. Pcrc!wal. Cah·
fornia. 13: RM)Im. Ba.himorr. 12.

:rNt-w Ynril.

ll I. ll:l.

!ill

~

34 14
. .'\2 26

.552

2

TororKo ......... 26 H ..tl6
B~»ton . . .. ,.., .... 24 J6
.-400
Deltoll .....
.... 15 .t7 .2&lt;12

J'h

Bakimott ..

II
21

Cenlnl DlvWM
Chu:a,o .. . ., ..... 39 2 1 .MO

NL leaders

CLEVELAND •.... 39 21 .650
MinneJI.KOJ .... ....,JO 30 - ~
Milwaukee ............ 28 J l
Kansas City .. . . 18 :\4

9

1 0 1~

...7:l
.&lt;1!'12

12

Wtsttm DitoWOft

Ttus ...... ,.......... Jtl 2J
Se;mle .... ....... ....Jl 28
C:.hlorrua ........ 28 .\2

.613
.467

5\
9'1

U;~ kland .

.4!59

10

-·

.. 28

sn

3.1

Saturday's sCores

De!fOII ~- N~w York 7
CLEVELAND S. C1il liforn101 0
au~ago 2. Bahimon: I
UH MlniJoe!&gt;Oia 4, Oakland 2; Oakbn.J

IJ. Mlnr.t-:501111

M1lwuukt.oe .l, Bosmn 2 I 10)
Kan sa~ Ci ty 12. Se0111~ 8
Tc-.a~

2. Toronto 0

Sunday's scores
New York J. Detroit 2
Milwl!ukec II . 8 0S!On tl ( 10)

Seaule J, Kan 5as Cu)' 2
Chicag.o 12. B;~ llimon: 9
C;•hlurnia II , CU:VELANU 6 t l ]J
Tc11.as K, Tonmlo6
Minfk'SOia .~.Oak laRd J

Tonight' s games
Bnl timore (WeiiJ

:\ · ~ 1

at l:k:lmi1 ~ 01• ·

llai'CS 1·2). 7:0!\ p m_

Onldtmd (J ohns 4-7lm ClEVELAND
(Nagy 9- IJ, 7 : 0~ p.m.
N&amp;:w York ( Kc~ 2-61 at Toromo (Hc:mgcn 6-4), 7.] .'1 p.m. ,

Boston (Sd e 2-4 ) ill
6-]J. 8:05 p.m.

Ol ic:.~ro

(Taparu

Seaule lWngner 0-0) at Min~SOi n {Aldred I -41. 8 : 0~ p.m.
Cn lirornia tLang.s iDn 3-ll at Kanus
Cit y £Haney 4-51.8:05 p.m.
I
Mil wauk« (Gi ve ns 0- 0 ) at l'eus
(Grou 5-4J, 1U5 p.m.

Tuesday's games
Bahimnre (Coppinger 0- 0)

:11

Detroit

IU ra ]-.'1 ). 7 . 0~ 1• -m.

Oa11and (Ad ami 0 ·0 ) at CLEVELAND (Maninez 8-J). 7: 05 p.m.
New York (Pettitte 9 -~ J ill Toronto
{Qu:llltril 2·6 ). 7:.'~ p.m.
8 Mion (Eshe lmnn 1-2 ) 111 Chi cngn
(Mugrane 1-2), 8 : 0~p. m .
·Sea Uit! {Wcll5 5- 1) at Minn u ora
IAt; uil er~ 0-0). H:OS p.m.
.
CalifOfnia (Abbolt 1·9) at Ko!Jsas City
(Limon 1-2). 8:0.'1 p.m
Milwauket! (Mc Donald .'i-.l ) at Tl' US
(Hill i-41, K:J 5 p.m

NL standings
Euttm Division

Ium

.1!: I. &amp;1.

Atlanta ... ......... 39
Mnntreal
....... .34
Florida .................. 30
Phihulelphia .........28
New York ............ 26

21
27

JJ
32
34

.650
.557
.49:Z
.467
.433

Centni,Divbion
Houstan ................ 32 J I .508
Sr. Looi s ........ .......29 32 . 47~
Piusburgh ............... 28 J4 .452
Chi..:ago.................. 27 34 .443
CINCINNATI... ..... 22 3J .400

Gil
S~

BA TT ING: Pinttu. L o~ Anr,c le s.
358, McGriff. AllarUD, J47 ; Bur\s, Colorado . .~ : Mllbr)'. St. Lou is. J 42; Viz- .
caioo. New York, .341 . Ci r~c. Chicaao.
..\41 ; Grud zit lanek, Monue-al , .340: f. .
Yo una. Colofado. J40: T. Gwy nn. San
Diel!ll. J4Q
RU NS: Burks. Colorodo. ' ); Bonds.
San Francisco. 51 : Cirudziclandi., Momreal. ~0 . Bagwe ll_. Huuslo n. ;'iO; Biuiu.
Hov§lon , ~. C'h1 ppcr June-s , Atllll\la, 48;
Shd faeld, Florida, 48
RBI : 1'4oagwcll. Houston. 6.' : H. Ro·
dngutz, Mo nt~al. 511: Mall Wi llinms, San
Frandsen. :'ill: R iche u ~ . (fllnndo, :'i4;
Bnnds. San Frnnct~CO . ~-1 : Galam1 ~a. Coloradll. ~-1 ; M ~&lt;iri ff. Allama. ~-t
HITS: Gr ud zi d ;~ m• l , M n n1r e ;~l . Kif;
M ~-G n ff. 1\tl anr~ . K:!: Gr.ll.'o:, Chkatco. 1'1;
L. Johnsu n: Nl''A' Yorr. 7'-1: U•.:hcnc. Cui ·
nrado. 7K: Lm ~ in~: . Mmnrc:•l. 77 : Burlu.
Colllf:tdtJ. 77
DOUBI.t:::S: Lm .~inJ!. Mmur,•aL 21:
B :t~w cll . Huu ~lu n . J'J . Gran :. ('hicilJII.
Jt,l; C'am.'\l tl. S;m t-=r;mds..'ll, 19; \a,tilla.
l\•lorado. I It: H R 1•J ri~ U\' l , Mu11t ro:al.
17: Be rr y. Htllls h•n. 17; l'inlo: y. San
llk-)!n. 17 .
TRIPLE.~ I. J11hnsnn. Nl·w Ytw-k. •J:
Mor;mdin i. Phil:\lld11hia. :'i: Gri1mun. Al lomt a. ~ : l)cShk- IJs, Lus A ll~t."ll.'s, -1: VizCiuno. No:w Yttr L. -I ; Fiplo:y. S:m l&gt;il'):U . .J:
LWalker . C\1lor:1 J n. -1 : Ucn1 n Wh11o:.
nl1nda. -1
HOM E RUN S: H. Rtldri}!IIO: l. Mllll ·
trl'u l. 2 1: Klt."s ko, Al la nt a. 20: S •1~ a .
Chic:IJ!-11. 20 : H:i}! Wl'll . 1-!uu slun . 19:
Shel'lidtl. Florida. HI: RnnJs. S:m Fmn~ is~ ll - 17: G:tlamt~OI . C1'lurndo. 1.~ : McGnff. Adanl;a, 1 ~ .
STOLF. N BASE.''i : M~;R..c:. C hi~;ago.
21; Mou ndini , Ph iladelphi u, 19 : E.
Young. Co lorado. 18: Dt!-Shields, Los An·
gele,, 18: R.l. Hunter. Houston, l-1: Clay.
1on. St. Louis: 14; L Johnson. NL-w York,
14: Bonds, San Francisco. 14: It 1-!endtrson, San DieJo. 14.
PITCHING f8 &amp;c i1ions): Sn10ltz, Atlanla, 11·1• .923, 2.54; Gardnt:r, San Fra.nci5l'O. 7-1. 87.~ . J.IO : Grace, Philadrl·
phia, 7-2, .77R . .\.49; Neagle , Pinsborgh,
7-2, .778, :; .w : Ashby, San Diego. 7-2.
.778, 2.98; Hamillon, San Diego, ll-J .
.121, 4.]11; Reynolds.- l-louSI0n, IJ.J, .727,
J.6t,l.
STRIKEOUTS: Sma ltz, All nnla, 11 7:
Nomo. Los Angeles. 92: P.J . Maninez.
Monlre- .nl. 90 : Kil e, Hou ~ ton . 89 :
Reynolds. Hou ston. K6: Swulemyre. S1
Loui~.ln: A. U;iter , Florida, "9.
SAVES; Todd Worrell. Los Angele~ .
17: lk.: k. San Frund s~o. I ~: Butlnl11:1l.
l)hil:~delphm . 1-1: l Brantley. CI~CIN ­
NATI , 14: Todd Jones. HouSion. 12; Ncn,
'r:toritla. 12: Fmnco, New York. 12.

2

Y~
4

Saturday's scures

Tonight's ganaes
Chic;•go (Navarro .l-6) til Philuddphia
(Mulhvll and 5-4), 7:J5 p.m.
fl n rid :1 {Rapp 3· 7) 31 Montreal
(Cormier J-3). 7:JS fl .m
Alloml(l (Avery 6-4) ut N ~.w York
( 1, ~ s 5-2), 7:40p.m.
.
Huu s10n I Wall 2-0) al Colorado
( R~y n o~ J- ~). 9:05p.m.
St. Louis (M~rft~.n 1-0)

ul Lo~ Anb&gt;c·
IL-s (Park 3·2). 10.0. p.m.
CINCINNATI tSulkeld 2· 1) at San
Diei(U {Worrc114-I J. Hl:05 p.m
·
l'•usburgh (l.oui:w 0-0) 111 San 1-1-andsco (Gantner 7- 1), 10: 0~ p.m.

AL leaders
81\TI'ING : R. Almmn. Baltimore.
40J ; Knobbu ch, MmneS\Ita, .J69 ; Mo
Vaughn . Dnu on, .]67; A. R o dri~uez.
S.:allk , ..l~6 ; Se1 tur, Milwau k~\ J _2: F.
Th o rn ;• ~ : Ctii c:1g o . . HK : Bog.Jl!s. New
York . J4l
'
RUNS : Bel le . CLEVELAND. 54:
G rift~)'. Sc.·anlc. :"4: Phillts. Chi.:ugo..'4:
R. Alunl;u. BahmJOn: , . 3; F. Thomas.
Clu c ;~ gll . 51, E. M ;~ rtii1e z. Sca.lllc. 51 ;
llllllt~ . ClEVELA ND. 47: Mo Vaughn.

-1 7
RRJ : F Thomas . Chic ago, bll: Ml'l
V a.u ~hn . Boshl tL 0 .\ : Be: lie , CLEVE LAN D. 61 ; Bu h~r . Se:ulk:, 60: Gri(fey.
Scol nk. 51 . R. l'&lt;~hndw, B:tltnnon:. 52; f..
Mar11 nc1.. Sc;~ttl c. ~ I.
HITS: R ,\lomar. Ballimorc, 9); Ml'l .
Va uFJm . B u~on . R7: Molilnr, Minntsor r~ .
H~ : F Thomas. Chic ap. o. 79: Hamihon.
Texas. 79: Knoblauch. MinneJola. 76; E.
Marti nez. Seattlr. 7 ~ . Scitu r. MilwaukL."t'.
15.
OOUOLES : E. Mru-1 inez.. Se:~ "lc . .12:
A. ROOri gu~z . StatUe. 19; John V&lt;~ltnlin ,
Bostoo, 19: I. Rodrigue1, Tr.us, 18; Banga, CLEVElAND, 18;-GMyt:rs, Minnt KJil. 18: Caner. Toromo. I K.
TRIPlES: Knobl:l.uch, Minnerota, 5:
Carter. Toconm. 5; Vina. Milwauk«. 4;
Jo ~e Valenlin , Milwnukee , 4: Guillen.
Chicago. 4. 8 are tied with ] .
HOME RUNS' lklle, CLEVELAND.
24; Mo Vaughn, Boston. 22: Buhner,
Seaule, 21; Crifrry. SenUie. 20; Brady
Anderson, Baltimore, 20: F. Thomas. · ·
L1ucaso. I8: Cnnseco. Bo11oa, l8
STOlEN BASES: Lo(ton. ClEVELAND. 32: T . Goodwin. Kan~U Ci1y. 2~ :
Vitqyel, ClEVELAND. 16; U~ach . Mil·
wa111kee. 15: Ni•on. To ronto, IJ :
Knoblau ch. MinneJota , 12: D. l..cwis.
Chicago. II .
·
PITCHING Of Jtdsions): NaJY.
CLEVELAND. 9- 1, .900. J . 58 : ~Pavlik.
Teus, 8-1, .8H9, 4.90: Bo1kle, Califl)lnin,
7-2.. 77H. ] .87; Pettine. New York. 9-~ .

fence in left field for his foonh home
(See MEIGS on Pace 5)

:an

r

Landowners of property within in .the base flood elevation ( 100 Year Flood)
are ·required to obtain a development permit before any type of work,
construction of a new building, placing a trailer or manufactured home on a
site (residential or non-residential), remodeling an old building to grading
and filling work, is to be performed. Development' is limited in areas below
the base flood elevation. If you own property in an area outside of the
incorporated villages or have any questions and need to apply for a permit,
the applications can be picked up at the Meigs County Tax Map Office
call 614-992-2994, see or ask for Edward Werry, Meigs County Flood Plain
Manager.

Dr. Murrey Has
Inside Information'
. That's Truly
Remarkabl~.

Sunday's score

It's amazing what ~ifference
technology has rna in the way
we are able to care f you and
your family at O'Bieness
Hospital. In the past few years
our radiology department, under
the direction of Dr. John Murrey,
has increased our ability to
provide you with more accurate
dY.Ignosis and treatment than
most people ever dreamed of. ·
Millions of dollars in equipment

.

.

EAST MEIGS - Jessica Karr,
lhe daughter of Roger a)ld Susie Karr
and a 1996 graduate of Eastern
· High School recenlly signed a leuer
of inlent to play baskelball at Wilmington College in Wimington.
In addition to grant-in-aid schol_arships Karr has been awarded a
., $6,000 a year Leader Honor Schol'
· arship based on academic achieve· ment, leadership, accomplishmenls
in school and on-campus testing.
, Wilmington College, a private,
.co-e4ucationalliberahans college, is
•within an hour's drive of Cincinnati,
;Dayton and Columbus. Karr will be
:majoring in social work. Heavily
;recruited by small and larger col· .
: •leges, Karr chose Wilmington for its
··:academic almosphere and reputation
and the facl that she will be able to
~ontribule immediately Ia the Lady
Quaker basketball program. . .
: Karr ended her career with 1,224
, -.points. She ended her senior season
)Yith 334 points for a 15.2 overall
. average. Karr owns a 16.3 average
and a 13.9 mark overall in four years.
~ Karr led the TVC Hocking Division champion Eagles ( 16-6) with 71
assists and also led in free lhrows
with a 74.2% shooting percentage
[101- 136). She owned a 42.9% field
goal percen1age (112-261); led lhe
team in steals with 56 and had. 77
rebounds. Karr was honored for
peing named Associated Press Dis·

including CT scanning, fluoroscopy, nuclear medicine,
ultra sound, l]lagnetic resonance
im'!ging (MRI), accredited
mammography and much, much
more offer you and your doctor
inside information about ·your
health. So you can make better
decisions, more informed decisions. It all adds up Jo help make
O ' Bieness Memorial Hospital a
hospital we can aU be proud of.

Basketball
NBA Firials
Sunda)"s score

Ch k a~O

10M.. Se:llll t" K6 : Chi L':IjW

leollls sertes J-0

..

Wednesday's game
Chii:l go ;11 Seauk. 9 p.m. (NBC)

· Friday's game
Chkugll u1 Scatllc. 9

Bulls . beat Sonlcs

1oa:.as to ·take 3-0
lead in NBA Finals

TO JOIN REDMEN -Eastern greduate Eric Hill (seated betwMn
his lather, Ron Hill, and Ea1tem athletic director Pam Douthitt)
1lgned 1 len. of Intent to play bleketball at the University ol Rio
Grende. Standing are UlfG b..lwtblll coach John Lawhorn (left) and
Eaateril coach Tony Deem.

Eastern's Hil.l to join
URG cage p.r ogram

r.m. (NOCI. if

1\l"L~ S.~'U')'

Hockey
Stanley Cup finals
Saturday's score

of lhe game. I talk trash, too," Jor·
dan said. " But in lhcse cin:11111·
slanc~s . a veteran team know' you
can'l just go out there and do a lot
of lip service. You' ve sot to so out
and play the game, evenlually.
"In someone else's home .. . it's
hard to come in here and talk trash
because they 've got 17·, 18.000
people supporting lhem lll&gt;d we' ve ·
got our wil'es and a couple.of office
people. Thai eliminales a lot of tal~­
ing 1rash. It's up 10 us to let our game
do our lalking."
Once lhe Sonics' lalk was quiel·
cd. all they had lef1 was trash.
.
Scaule missed eight of its first I0
shoL•. It fell behind 34-16 afler one :
time .
quarter, with .seven IUmovers . to ·
The Bulls can finish the sweep -·
Chicago's
none. Shawn Kemp was :
and an unprecedenled 15-1 poslsealost
when
lhe
Bulls double•leamed ·
son run - by winning Wednesday.
him;
he
finished
wilh 14 points, less :
Thai would come on the heels of
their record 72·win regular season. 1han half his average in the first 1wo :
.
Sunday was an affinnation of games. Paylon was confused.
"I
don
't
know
what
team
was
out
·
lheir grealness.
lhere
in
the
first
quarter."
Payton
:
Despite taking the firsl two
games, Chicago hadn't played very said . " We jusl didn' l come lo play." :
The Bulls did, even !hough Ron ·
well. Jordan had averaged 28.5
points, good for mere mortals but not Harper was limiled to one minute by :
for the league's career leader in scor- a sore knee. Toni Kukoc startod in :
his place.
.
.
ing average.
Wilh
Jordan
scoring
12
points,
·
In Game 3, however, lhe Bulls
look a 34· 1i lead and led by.double · Longley eight and Kukoc seven. :
digits 1he rest of 1he way. Jordan was Chicago's first quaner was the best :
::
outslanding, especially when Seaulc offensive period of lhc series,
The
Key
Arena
crowd,
consid·
.
lried 10 rally. He scored 15 straight
crcd
one
of
the
NBA's
loudest,
nev·
:
Chicago poinls during a fabulous
fourcminule slretch at the end of the. er got inlo lhe game as lhe Sonics :
first half and opened the fourth losl al home for just the sixlh lime ·
quaner with live quick points lo lhis season. The Bulls, who set a :
make sure the outcome was never league ·record with 33 road victories, :
arc 5-I on the road in. the playoffs. :
really in doubt
In their four appearances in the ·
"I saw a team that wasn't going
linals
-· including the title-winning :
to lose," Seaulc coach George Karl
years
of · J991 , 1992 and 1993- :
said. "It was lhe lirst time I' vc see.n
.
them wilh killer eyes."
. they arc 9-1 on the road.
"Whal we've done on the road, ·
Said Jordan: "Hopefully, he di&lt;)·
n't think we would come out here · it's aslonishing," Jordan said . "We
and not have killer eyes. We sensed know we're against all odds and we
an opporlunity to grasp this series. focus more. You're bonded together,
But this team has done thai all sea- 14, 16, 18 people strong. We focus
son long. It hasn 'tjust happened here on our responsibililies."
Jordan knows his responsibility.
in the playoffs."
Score. Lots. Quickly.
A founh championship in six
The Sonics· had clawed back into
years now is more than just likely,
contention, trailing only 45-31 with
it's practically a sure lhing.
No learn in history has come back 4 1/2 minutes left in the lirst half.
from a 3-0 delicil in any playoff Over the next four minutes, Jordan
outscored I he entire Scaule team 15round .
"We've got an exceplional group 7.
of leaders.•" said Luc Longley; who
had a playoff career-high 19 points.
"It would stun me if we didn'l come
Save
Everyday
out very, very focused in the nex1
game. That's why we've won all
MIDDLEPORT
year. l don't. think il's going to let us .
down in lhe fourth game of the
DEPARTMENT STORE
finals." 1
Said Dennis Rodman: "Lei's gel
this one and just go home."
Rodman again slood up 10 lhe
rough-house 1ac1ics of Frank Brickowski, ·laking an elbOw to the chops
Save a minimum ol 20%
off manufacrurar'sllsl.
as Brickowski was ejected for 1he
'
plice everyday.
second time this series. Rodman,
meanwhile, had I0 rebounds.
. And 1he Bulls finally silenced the
brash, young SuperSonics.
tl "' ; ', 1 !
"I must admit trash-lalking is part

By MIKE NADEL
SEATTLE (AP) - Let the cor~
nation begin for Michael Jordan and
the Chicago Bulls.
" I slill 1hink we can win some
games." Seaule 's Gary Payton said.
" But they 're a championship learn."
In a few days, the Bulls may be
more 1han mere champions. They
may be known as lhe No. I team of
all time.
·
Chicago pul itself in position 10
complele the best season ever, lak·
ing a 3-0 NBA Finals lead over the
SuperSonics with a 108-86 vi clory
Sunday night. Jordan had 36 poinls,
dominating 1he series for lhe first

RIO GRANDE- When area baskelball fans think of Eastern Local High

~chool's Eric Hill, usually two qualilies come lo mind: hard work and hus-

tle. Throw in outslanding skills and good cilizenship and lhal's whallhe 6foot-3 inch Hill will take with him when he suits up for the Univ ersity of
Rio Grande in November.
Hill recelilly decided to join lhe Redmen when school reopens in lhe fall.
He joins an already highly·touled group of newcomers and a solid core of
reluming players on a squad lhat won 21 games in the 1995-96 season.
Hill played at the small forward slot for coach Tony Deem's Eagles and·
helped lead the club 10 an 11 ·9 record his senior year. Thai was gond for
second place in the TVC's Hocking Division.
Hill averaged 19.2 points and 6.3 rebound per game while shoaling 49%
from lhe field and 71 .4% from the charily stripe. He led the team in poinls,
field goal percentage and free lhrow percemage.
.
For his on-court accomplishments, Hill was voted to lhe TVC's firsltcam
and was tabbed second team aii-Southeasl District by the Associated Press.
Hill was also named to the all-Ohio honorable mention learn.
His senior season awards were capped off being honored as the top senior
athlete at Easlem. Hill was this year's recipienl of the Ivan B. Walker Alhlete of the Year Award.
Deem, who will begin his fourth year al Eastern in the upcoming season,
, said of his top player, "Eric has tremendous work ethic. He's the 1ype of kid
that you have to run out of lhe gym every night after pruclice is over. He's
tricl Player of the Year, coaches Dis-· a good all-around player and is the ideal player thai a coach likes to have.
Eric is also a leader in his community and comes ti·om a good background."
trict 13 Co-Most Valuable Player;
Rio Grande coach John Lawhorn said, "We're glad that Eric has decided
first learn, all-Soulheasl DistrictAP.
lo
come
lo Rio Grande and play ball. We think he'll be a fine addition 10 our
aii-Districl 13 and ·all-TVC. Karr
program and our institution. It's exciting to have another good local athlete
was nomina1ed for the academic alljoin our roster.''
Ohio team, sponsored by the Ohio
Hill is the son of Ron and Joyce Hill, both of whom are teachers at EHS.
High School Basketball Coaches
Association.
To be eligible for lhis. award, a
player must be in good standing on
his/her team, mainlain leadership
and citi7.cnship qualities, must have
received previous academic honors,.
must average double digit scoring
and maintain a 3.5 OPAor higher. An
academic scholarship could also
result from selection.

.[Eastern's Karr sig.n s
·at Wilmington
.~to play
.

Division I nnal: Can1on GknOak 6,
Tirfin Colombian I

l)ft /o

Middleport Dept. Store
( )(I

Toni~hl's game

Thursday's game

. NICOLE NELSON

l .

Baseball

.,

GE,OR&lt;GE SCC)RE!S - The Meigs Mara!Jde~a· Scott George (9)
takes out Tallmadge's catcher to acore on Gary S1llnley's double In
the fifth Inning of Saturday's Division II aemlflnal contest In Canton, where the Blue Devlla came back to win 6-5. (S.ntlnel photl) by
Dave Herrle)

Haigler. RHP R ic hanll.oon&lt;~m . RHP Tom
laRo ~a . RHP Mike Lincoln, LHP Mike
Baud er. RHP John Mundine. C TonRuo:hmnn, C Chad Moeller und 28 Crai~;
Thielke.
TEXAS RANGERS : Signed RHP
Ron Nelson. RHP John K~nis. C John EJ.
li s. OF Adrian Myers und lHP Ryom
Smith .

NuUonal Leuaur
.
CHICAGO CUBS: Optioned OF
Onit." Timn10n ~. C Brian Ounell . and
INF Tockll-laney lo Iowa oft~ An~cah
Association. Recallrd OF Doug Glanvilll!.
JNF Tt!ny Shumperl. und C Mike Hubbtu-d frorill owa.
COLORADO ROCKIES. S1gneJ P
Jake Wes~brook .
LOS ANGELF..S DODGERS: Si~ned
JB Damian Rolls.
NEW YORK METS: Pl ::~ce d RHP
Paul. Wilson on 1he l:'i -d11y disabletlliu
relrOOL"'i vt to June 5. Ac,iYD.Ied RHP P:lul
Byrd from 1he 15-day disabled li51 t~.IKI re~alled him frum NorfQik""oftlhe lm~rna­
rional ~t.llf . Traded RHP Bla5 Minor 10
the Sc:atllt Mariners ror IF Randy V1ck·

....

PHILADEI.PHIA PHILLIES' Traded
OF Lee Tinsley to lhr Boston Red Sox for
RHP Scou Bakkum..
PmSBURGH PI RATES: Oi)lloned
Of Midre Cumming5 lo Calgary of the .
hciftc Canst ll:ague .. Recalled P Ramon
Morel from Carolina of 1he Soulhern

w,uc.

SAN DIEGO PADRES: Pla"d lB
S\:on Livingstone on 1~ IS-day dilllbltd
list retrooctin~ 10 June ;\. Pun:h!UCd the
"-'Ofttract of 18 Jason 1liomp5on from Lu
Veau or the Pncific Coast Leq,ue

TRACY WHITE

Four Eastern softballers
.get all-star team berths

Transactions
Amtrlam lAa~tut
BOSTON RED SOX : Scm IF Jim
Tatum 10 l.as Vegas of 1h( Pil\:ific Ccx1s1
~ague fur ~ash cun~idt:r:~ t io ns .
CLEVELANU INUIANS : Rtc alktl
RHP Chad Ogca front But'hlo of the
Amo:ric an A ~s odntiun _ Opr iuned U-IP
Ah1n Embtt(': 10 Buff':Lin Ac4uirt."U RI-IP
Jar.:d Camp hum MilwaukL"t' Ill c umpl(':t~
an earlier deal thm k!nt C Jesse Levino
Milwaukee for lHP Scou Camp. Sis ned
18-0F Danny Pc:uples.
MilWAUKEE BREWERS : Pl aced
OF D:'lvid ltul k! on tho: IS-day disublo:d '
li ~t Atkkd OF Kevin Koslofski lo Uk: &lt;11.: ·
rive rosier. Transferred OF Chu..:kic Curr
m the 60-tl.ay di~abkd llsr
MINN ESOTA TWINS : Sigm:d SS
Mike Ryan . I 8 Tom P\1erman, RHP Phil

Four members of the 1996 Eastem soflball squad have participated
and will participale in district and
state all:slar games, according 10
Eastern softball conch Pam Douthitt.
Seniors Rebecca Evans and
Nicole Nelson played in lhe Soulheast Dislrict All-Star Game Saturday
.at Portsmoulh. Both players were
first-team all-TVC and first-team aiiSoulheasl Dislrict selections for the
Eagles, who were Division Ill dis·
1rict finalists this season .

Kim Mayle and Tracy White
have been selected to lake part in 1he
all-Ohio Softball Tournament Satur·
day and Sunday. June 16 in Grove ··
Cily.
Mayle, a sophomore, and White,
a junior, were selecled aflcr tryouts
and will play for lhe Southeast District team in the round-robin

tourna~

ment among Ohio 's best prep soflball players.
Doulhill and Wheelersburg's Ron
Bailey will coa.ch 1hc Southeast District stars.

Meigs·ends season... __&lt;_co_nt_in_ued_f_rom_Pa.:..ge_4&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

-~

l
,.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Drive, Atheru;, OH 45701
6t4-593·55SI

A hospital we can all
be p~:oiul of.

run of the year to tie the game at liv~. then hit a high chop that Collin
Hoover then followed with a line Roush was able 10 back hand deep in
single over the second baseman and the hole at short, but Roush was·
Cleland walked putting runners on unable to make a play as Anderson
first and second. Brad Whitlatch then raced home with lhe winning run.
Brumill was the winning pilcher
hit a grounder 10 short, lhat, afler
in
relief
of Dumire. The two combobbling the ball, Galati recovered to
bined
10
g~ve up six hits, strike out
nip Whitlatch at first. Chris Roush
10
and
walk
six. Caipen led lhll Blue
was walked imentionally to load the
bases and bring Brent Hanson to the Devils with a double and a single,
plate. At first it looked the the stral- Dave Sikora, Brownlee an~ Anderegy might backfire on the Blue De,v- son added a pair of siqgles each and
ils, as Hanson worked ~ 3-0 count, Steve Showalter a triple.
Stanley was the losing pitclu:r in
but Brumill came back to strike out
relief
ofGebrge the two combined to
Hanson swinging to end the Meigs
scalier
nine hits with six of those
threat
.
coming
in the last two innings. The
Anderson led off the seventh
inning with a sharp single to right. pair struck oul four and walked five.
Brownlee followed with a bunt that Hoover led Meigs with a double and
Anderson just beat the throw to sec- two singles. Stanley added his home
OIId in the auemptto retire .the lead • run (his founh of lhe year) and a dou·. runner. Dumire was walked inten- ble wilh tluee RBis. Burt011 and Hantionally to load the basts and sive son added a sinsle each.
Tallmadse then dropped a 7-S
Meias a force at any base. Caipen
j

'

'

,

o (

l

'

I

, ..

NO,.IC£

Culur..UO ul Florida, loi p.m. (ESf-'N J
Florida al Colorado. 8 p.m. O;:SPN ), if
neceu ary

20%

0

KIM MAYLE

Colorado J. Florida 2: Colorado kads
.seric: ~ J-0

Tuesday's games
Pin shurgh tNra$1t 7-2) al San Fran cisco rFemandcl. J..~). J : )~ p.m.
. Cbi c:~go (Campbell 0-0. 1) at PhilaOclphm ( Munoz 0-0 ), 7 : 3~ p.m
Fl or ida (Brown 4 ·") at Monlreal
(Urbina 3·0) .• : .l~ fl.na.
Atlanl:l ISchmiJI 2·1 ) Ul New Ynrk
iH;•rnisch 4-41.7:40 r.m.
l-l nus ton (0 m hdi. 2-:'i ) :II Colur~d n
tRilz 7-4).9:05 p.m.
S1. l.nuis (O~ bomc 4-J) ;11 Lt•s Anpc·
lc~ (Man me.~: 4-0 ), 10:05 p.m.
CIN CINNATI !J ~ rvi s Cl-1) at San
Dn~~l\ (V al ~ n z uc l ;• .~.J). 1 0: 0~ r .m.

...

a

bounce ba~: k and strike outlhe nexl
two Marauders to end lhe inning.
Brumitt led off 1he Blue Devil
sixth with a single. One out later,
Caipen doubled in the gap in leftce nter. Steve Showalter then lripled
to score both runners, Showater lhcn
scored on a wild pilch, after a single
by Dave Sikora, Meigs coach Scou
Gheen made a tJitching change
bringing in Stanley. Gary was able to
end the inning, bullhe damage was
done and Tallmadge look a 5-3 lead
inlo lhe sevenlh inning.
Despile lhe end of the season
tllree outs away and lhe Marauders
facing a 1wo run defici t, the Marauders showed that they weren't going
down withoul a fight .
Against relie ver Mall Brumiu.
George walked and one oul later
Stanley brought lhe large crowd of
maroon and gold followers to their
feet. On lhe first pitched delivered to
Stanley. lhc senior lri-captain
launched a towering shol over lhe

ATTENTION!

Saturday's scores

Sunday's scores
New Yor k J, Florida 0
Ch1cago 4, Montn.-nl 2
Hou§lon 2. Philadelphia I .
A1lnn1a 8, Colorado .l
San Frnncisco 9. St . louis 0
l os An&amp;eles l CJNCJNNA"O 2
Piusburgh 6. S.1n Ole-so 0

••
•
•

Sentinel CorTupondent
Aaron Caipen's high hop infield
single seored Mike Anderson from
lhird base to give Tallmadge a 6-5
win over lhe Meigs Marauders and
end lhe Marauders quest for the
school's first ever state champi·
onship SaiUrday al Canton's Thurman Munson·Field.
The contesl was originally scheduled to stan at 3 p.m. Friday, but
rains Thursday night and early Friday, plus completion of a suspended
con1es1 pushed the staning time 10 6
p.m. Friday. Then action was stopped
with two out in the botlom of the
founh inning by an01her hard rain.
After a delay of some 45 minutes,
lhe tarp was removed. However as
the umpires were laking the field
another s1onn hit, and afler a delay
of aboul 30 minutes, lhe game was
suspended unlil 10 a.m. Saturday.
Meigs threatened in the top of lhe
first inning when Gary Stanley
reached on an error wilh two outs
and Rick Hoover drilled a double 10
the left-center field gap. But Brian
Dumrie bounced back lo slrike ou1
Cass Cleland swinging to end the
Meigs threat
The Blue Devils took 1-0 lead
in 1he bouom of lhe first inning when
Mike Gala1i walked and advanced to
third on Mike Aqderson's single.
Galati then scored when Mall Brumill hit a sacrifice fly to righl giving
Tallmadge a 1-0 lead.
Meigs took a 2-1 lead in the lhird.
Robert Qualls led off the inning with
a walk. One out later, Chad Burton
lined a double lo right-center field
scoring Qualls with Bunon going 10
third on the lhrow 10 1he plate. Gary

Stanley then grounded oul. but
Hoover laced a single 10 seore Burton wilh.lhe go ahead run.
Bul the Blue Devils bounced
back in lhe bottom of lhe inning to
lie lhe game. Galati walked and later came ill to score on a single by
Scott Brownlee.
One inning later ·the rains came
and the game was suspended with
action resuming on Saturday. Both
!llarting pitchers (Scott George for
Meigs and Dumrie for Tallmadge),
despite pilc.hing four innings on Fri·
day wenl back 10 the mound when
play was resumed.
Meigs quickly took a 3-2 advan,
tage in the top Of the fifth_George led
off lbe inning wilh a walk, one out
later Stanley lined a double 10 leftcenler field. George, running all the
way, jarred the ball loose from Blue
oCvil calcher Brownlee in a bone·
jarring collision a1 the plale wilh
Stanley taking lhird on lhe play. Bul
once again, Dumrie was able to

Dlvi!llon II: Hnmilton Badin 7. Tal,lmadge S
.
Dhislon Ill: WHEELERSBURG 4.
Middlefield Cardinal I
l&gt;iloiston IV: Col. Hanley 4. Owtwa
Hilb I

6

Huu ston 7, Philadelphia J
Culorndo IJ, Allanta 12
Sa:: Fmocii4:0 4. S1. Louis I
New York 7, Florida 6
~i r ug o 6. Momrca14
Los A ngeles ~- CINCINNATI 4 001
Pi n ~burgh 9, Sun Diego H ( 14)

•

By DAVE HARRIS

Ohio H.S. finals

II

Wuttm Division
Sun Diego .. ........... ~6 26 ~ 8 1
Los Angele., .......... 11 30 . ~ 24
San Frnncisco ........ J I 29 . ~t7
Colorado .. .... .......... 29 30 .492

D ll~ t u n.

Talhttadge rallies to slip by Meig$ 6-5

9~

IJ

• LOS ~GFLBS (AP) - Afler ving it to the right-celller alley for his
:wuliag his filii two major leaaue lim extra-base hit - and ninth hit
" do.ltlbles, Hideo Nomo nearly wutcd - in 89 career at·bats. Bin Delino
eight strona innings aaainst the DeShields fouled out, and Hoi·
Cinc:inll&amp;li Red$.
landswonh gioundcd OUI.
. '!'he Los Aageles Dodgers right·
In the sixth, Nomo led off with a
hander fell behind by a run in the ground-rule double into lhe left field
sixth on Willie Greene's two-run corner and advanced to third on
"homer. But his leammlllCs rallied in DeShields' groundout. But Hoi·
the eighth on Todd Hollandsworth's landsworth grounded out and Raul
.RBI single and a run-scoring double Mondesi struck out
"!didn't lhink il would go into the
:by Eric Karros for a 3-2 victory Sun:day.
seats," Nomo said of his second dou: " I was happy we were able to ble. " It was too high and I didn't
;~=orne back." Nomo said through an
swing that hard. 'The outfielders
lintcrpreter. " Hopefully, we can win played in, sol was lucky,"
the games I pitch."
Nomo, who was pinch hit for dur; 'The Dodgers won't, however, if ing the eighth-inning rally, allowed
~hey have to rely on Nomo (7-5) for
two runs and five hits with nine
:the bulk of their offense. Noma had strikeouts and two walks. He has nol
) wo of the three hits . Cincinnati allowed more than four earned runs
)ight-hander Dave BW"ba allowed in any of his 13 starts this year.
jOVCr six innings. The olher was Kar" I knew I had to pitch a good
ros' lith homer in the second inning game b~ause Nomo's going to
~ one of his three hits.
throw a quality game nine out of I0
"Eric kepi us in this game all day times." said Burba, who has lost all
.long," Hollandsworth said. "For as seven of his decisions this season
lmany opportunities as we let slip and is winless since last Aug. 29.
~way, Eric gave us a chance to win "We're not scoring a lot of runs right
the game - and then he won it."
now, especially when I pitch. ll's
· : Nomo's doubles were the firsl hard to swallow."
):xua-base hits by a Dodgers pilcher
Greene gave Burba the lead with
since last Sept. 9 at Pittsburgh, when a two-run homer in lhe sixth - the
Kevin Tapani doubled againsl Paul first allowed by Noma in six slarts.
:Wagner.
·
·
· " With a guy like thai, you just
, "All of those Japanese players have to ~cratch what you can ofl'
11row up ·swinging the bal," Reds him," Cincinnati 's Hall)1orris said.
manager Ray Knight said. "Anylime "He's not one of those guys you're
~ou throw fastballs out over lhe mid·
going to have five· and six-run
~le of the plate, somebody 's going to
innings off. I was just hoping that
hit it hard. We were supposed to lead was going lo hold up. ...
·
lhrow him breaking balls and spot
. Todd Worrell got the final three
· lhe fastball."
: Nomo went the other way with outs for his league-leading 17th
save.
~urba's high fastball in the third, dri.

In the Division II state bssebsll semifinals,

Baseball
AL s tandings

L.A. beats Cincy 3·2

1

Monday, JUM 10, 1 -

Scoreboard

The Deily Santlnel• Pegel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

decision 10 Hamilton Badin in Saturday championship game. The Blue
Devils held a 5-3 lead heading inlo
the botlom of the fifth inning, bUI
Badin scored four runs in its lasl
three at-bats to win lhe title.
Stanley, Burton, Cleland and
Hanson wore the maroon and gold
for !heir final time, but Gheen returns

a talented group next year.
· The Marauders ended their season
with a 17·9 record, the bes1record in
the school's history:
lmlin&amp; t2.IBb
Meigs....................002·0 10-2=5-7-0
Tallmadge ......... ... 101-.003- I =6-9-1
WP-Brumitt
LP - Stanley

J01HANNUAL

BILL HUBBARD MEMORIAL LITTLE
LEAGUE TOURNAMENT
Starts July 8th - 20 Team Limit
Drawing July 1
Sponsored by Syracuse Vol. Fire Dept.
Contact Eber Pickens Jr. 992·5584 or 992·7181

Date: June 8, 1996
On Wednesday, June 12, 1996, tlie Leading Creek
Conservancy District and Southern Ohio Excavating and
Pipeline will be Installing new valves on the existing 16"
water line on Red Hill Rd. (CR 65). The purpose of the valves
are to connect and Isolate the existing transite (type of
cement) line from he naw high density polyethylene pipe
(HDPEP-type of plastic) line across Southern Ohio Coal
Company's nest longwall coal mine panel on Red Hill Road.
In order to make this connection, the main line between the
water traatment plant on SR 124 and Tank 112 on Red Hill Rd.
wlli be isolated and de-preasurized. This work will begin at
approximately 8:00 a.m. on Wednesday, June 12, 1996 and
should be completed by 4:00 p.m. During this time all
cuatomers on tile following roads will experience lltt!e or no
water pressure:
1
Red Hill Rd. (CR 65) between SR 124 and Tank 112.
Painter Ridge, Price-Strongs, Molehan, 6 Fairplay.
SR 124 from the water treatment plant (near Mine t1) to
the Intersection of SR 124 6 Painter Ridge (CR 1) including
all of Hampton Hollow.
All of Salem School Lot Rd. (CR 1),1ncludlng CR 1A, Point
Rock Rd. (CR 27), Laurel Rd., Sisson Rd., North Run, and SR
689 In the Point Rock area.
After the valve Installation is complated, the District wlil
be restoring service and tluahlng air, tio all customers In .t he
effected areas are advised to boll all water used to~ human
consumption until further notice. Also, the District requests
that all customers in the effected areas retrain from using
water from 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. on Wedneaday, June· 12,
1996. Although your own water may still be flowing, the ~nd
reault Is mora air In the lines on the hills and a longer time
period tor flushing this air and reatorlng serilce to all
customers. In addition, all customers east of Tank 12 .a nd
west of Painter Ridge are asked to conllerV!l water during thla
time. These areas will be aupplled from tanks which can not ·
be refilled until the valve InstallatiOn on Red Hill Rd. 11
completed. H these water.ten lea are deplete&lt;!, these areu will
also be without Water service.
The District apologizes for any Inconvenience auoclated
with this outege, however this replac:ament line will Insure
the Integrity of our distribution syatem during the mlnl!lfl
period and beyond.
Any questions, pleaae call the Dlatrlct office (614) 742·
2411, M-F, 8:3o e:m.-4:00 p.m.
Brent A. Bolin, Manager
Leading Creek COIIHIVI
.

.

I

,,

J.

•

�..

ByThe~end
•

Mybrother'skeeper:

; ....... Athens

•

·

•
MostpeoplethinkofSociaiSecu. rity in terms of the benefits they
would receive. But, as a social insurance system that pays benefits to
- everybody who works and pays
Social Security taxes, Social Securily plays a majorrole in helping those
who may otherwise be dependent to
help themselves.
The success lllld popularity of
Social Security is based on tbe fact
that it strikes a balance between the
· complementary goals of individual
equity--providing benefit protection
which is related to an individual's
contributions--and social adequacy-providing advantages to society as a
whole by alleviating poveny and
allowing as many citizens as possible
· to enjoy a reasonable standand ofliving.
·
Certain features of the program
· are geared toward meeting broad. based social needs in addition 10 pro. viding retirees with a specific rate of
. return. In other words, the social ade·quacy aspects of the Social Security
program look beyond the individual
to how Social Security can benefit
· society as a whole. ·
Here are some of the ways Social
Security benefits society .as a whole:
% Social Security allows almost
·. 42 percent of the elderiy-- 10 million
people--to live out of poverty.
% Social Security relie&gt;es
younger generations of the burden of
providing for the financial needs of
older relatives at th., same time tbey
are trying to raise their own families.
'% Last year, Social Security paid
. about $41 billion in benefits to about
six million disabled workers and
. family members. A young worker has
a one in three chance of becoming
·disabled .t&gt;efore age 65.
% Social Security paid about $67
. billion in benefits to more than sev-

·
en million survivors of deceased
workers last year. A young worker
faces roughly a one-in-five chance of
dying beforereachingage65.
Social Security is desi gned to
provide a measure oJ financial independence to all workers and their
families. It offers society a blanket of
protection for now and in the future.
.............
June brides should repot1DIIIIte

chanae

Too many brides forget to change

their names with Social Security
· resulting in confusion when tbeir
earnings are reported for Social Security purposes under their new name.
Social Security authorities note that
· many brides put it off because they
mfstakenly think there's a lot of
paperwork involved . Actually you
can do most of it with a toll -free
phone call. When you receive the
application in the mail , send it back
with proof of your old name and your
new name. Or .you can stop by any
Social Security office. It o nly takes a
few minutes. The toll-free number is
1-800-772-1213. Internet users can
get the application form · at
http://www.ssa.gov
--------------·
Addicts and alcoholics to receive
notice of benefit cutoff
By June 28, 1996 the Social Security Administration (SSA) will se·nd
notices to all individuals who are currently receiving Social Security and
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
disability benefits based on their
addiction to drugs or alcohol. The
notice will inform them of recent Iegislation that prohibits the payment of
disability benefits effective Janu'I'Y I,
1997 to individuals whose disability
is based on drug addiction or alco- ·
holism. Representative payees who
receive benefits on behalf of disabled
workers will also get copies of the
notice.

Holter reunion held recently
The George Holter, Jr.· family a~d Marie Heasley, Linda Holter and
reunion was held recently at,the home . Jim Cunningham, Sarah Ball, Jim
·of Jim and Karen Holter Werry.
and Karen Holter Werry, James A.
Keith Ashley asked the blessing. Werry and.Sarah Triplett, Randy, ViaAttending from Meigs County were · let and Tommy Werry, Danny. Dawn
June Ashley, Mary K. Holter, Gary and Julie Weddle, Paul Moore and
Holter, Brenda Holter Lemley, Judith Bill Harris.
Those atte'nding from out of the
Holter Kern, Tim and Rebecca, Mat·
'tie Holter Lawrence, Roy and Bonnie county were John and Linda Stock·van Meter, Leota Birch, Roy and Pat ton Watson , Canal Winchester; Ryan
Holler, Alan, Kaye, Ben and Ross Holter and Christy Berentz, Athens;
Holter, Ed, Jan; .'\lyssa, Kelsey and Dora Birch Lipps, Little Hocl\ing;
Brenna Holter, Greg, Jan, Tricia and Augusta "Ducky" Birch Powell and
zack Davis,
·
· Oscar Gorrell, Torch; Jean -and DelThomas and Evelyn Holter, Kevin mar Hamm, South Webster; Rich and
·Hoiter, Keith, Emma, Racbel, Whit- Debbie !jolter Rapp, Copper Mounney and Emily Ashley, Edith Sisson tain, Colo.; Pat Rapp, Wonhington ;
and Brenna Sisson, Elma Louks, Tammy Holter and Mike Vinciquerf'rances lhle Roberts, Paul, Sharon, ra, Westerville.
-Aaron, John and Tracy Card, Jessann
The reunion next year will be the
Steinmetz, Samantha Pridelllore, first Sunday in June, at the Werry res:Penny Pridemore and James Werry, idencc.
Jr., Roger and Helen Holter, Delbert

The 1996 Wahama High School
Alumn i Banquet was held May 2S in
tbe high school gym in Mason, W.Va.
The gym was decorated by Carol
Roush Proffitt and the alumni officers
and other alumni . The5().yeargraduates the c lass of 1946 were special
gues~ and their table .;,as decorated
with red and white carnations.
Marjorie Clarl&lt;e Walburn gave
the invocation. The school's flag
corp entertained after dinner.
Jim Stew an, scholarship
man , awarded two $500 scholarsh1ps
to Wesley Lieving and Jason King.
The class of 1955 gave a $200 scholarsbip to Ryan Keller. Marjorie
Clarke Walburn represenled the
Marie Clarke Roush family in presenting the first memorial scholarship
to Wesley Lieving for $500. It was
noted that Bruce Gillman memorials
went into lhe Marie c. Roush Scholarship .
Marjorie Clarke Walburn gave
the secretary's repon and Peggy
Edwards gave the treasurer's report.
The officers elected for 1996 are
Tom Vance and Jim Proffitt, co-presidents; Marjorie Walburn, vice-president; Peggy Edwards, secretarytreasurer.
Jim Pro!Tiu closed the business
meeting with" a · brief history of
Wahama High School.
Peggy Edwards and Carol Proffitt
presented gifts to the following: oldest alumni __ Evelyn Proffi.ut,_Donald

ch~ir-

Jud~

J~an

POMEROY -- Meigs Local Boand
of Education regular meeting Mon·
day, 7 p.m. in the central office.
ROCK · SPRINGS -- Disabled
American Veterans meeting Monday,
7 p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall on the Meigs County Fair-

grounds.
DARWIN -- Bedford ·Township
Trustees meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at
the Bedford Township Hall.

MIDDLEPORT •• Middlepon
Natarene Church vacation Bible
school, Monday through Friday, 9
a.m to noon with a picnic and
olymics on Saturday. Theme is "Run
for the Gold."
TUESDAY

;

PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE .
t
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
1·900-nB-2525 EXT.
5961
, $2.99 per min .
Must be 18yra.
Serv·U (619) 854-8434

"

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to hear from you!!
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· (114)112-11311
114 112·2753

Must be 18 YJ1
.
· Selv-U_i6111l645-8434

FREE ESTIMATES

NIYica to IMI:k It up ·
·
Serving S.E. Oltlo A W-.t VIrginia
Tol F'" 1.aoo.t72-51&amp;7
448 1418

,.,,
...
V11Y IWOIAILE

ONE

.......

FOR YOU
• TO
JUGGLE

•Garages
·Com pl._
Remodeling
Stop Compare
FR.EE ESTir-tATES

•

a.

985-4473 .

,,.......

I.L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dlri•S&amp;nd

'

35 Yurs Experience

304-875-3851 '
4 Mi•ed Llapsa Aaj.sa Puppies ,

Female, e Weeka Old Very Nit:&amp;
Pall,-· 814-3117.0167.

Female Beagle • male mi•ed

&amp; &amp; W IUSTICS 11111 SUPPLY

bloctc la(). 814-992-112Z.

TUppers Plelna, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert - Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D. perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314"·&amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's lhnt 1,000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduil
8" Grave less Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru' 2" ~ Fittinf!s ~ Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex filling• &amp; Water fittings ·
Full line ofCislCm. Septit &amp; Wa1er "oragc tanks.

Free Klnena. All Cotot~, 61&lt;4·-44e-

11442.
Free Wood For Winter Heating!

For Information Cali Sid E-rda,

614-367·'1341 .

.

Mh1td breed puppies , 9 112
- 1 , WOimod, 814·949-2908.

NEEDED: Some one to tear down
old Muse tor lumber and mated-

all. 304-675-1602.
Playful Klnens, litter Tra1nad,
Ready Far New Home! 61·C·367·
7871 .

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experience. community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen . Just do this one thing,
lnd leeve tll• juggling
to us.

RICH WAMSLEY

. HANNAH HAWLEY

··BIIICI

act

Hawley's announce
birth of daughter

DoWIIIIg Childs Mil.- Mmer IIMance

111 Second st.

•::

ta-3381

$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 ynrold
'
Senlice u
16191645-8434

Truck:

11111 mo. pd.

. representing the

' · , Love
Bueiness
F.ilmlly .Matters
· Allow Your
'f'F'enlonal Psychic to
AaaistV'ou

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

Gen11111l

·ext. ·

....,..,. ...

.Summer Images

,GEIIEUL .
CONTUCTORS
'

Celebrates fifth
birthday recently

'Smells like your odor eaters
have gained 10 pounds!"
Public Notice

Jamie Renee Jeffers celebrated , ..;,;,-~====~MIDDLEPORT -- Hobson Chrisher
fifth binhday recently with a
tian Fellowship Church, revival ,
Monday tl)ro.ugh Sunday. John pan ~ at the home of her parents,
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
Elswick, eyangelist. Special singing. · DonJ· and Jennifer King Lauderrnilt
of Harrisonville.
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPOR ~·-oN
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Attending were her sisters. JoAn·
'""
Columbua, Ohio
Masonic Lodge, F&amp;AM , special na and Amber, maternal grandmothOfllce of Conlr8cta
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the er, Joan King . he r paternal gran dpar- Legal Copy Number 1111-510
Temple. Work in the Master Mason . ents, Donnie and Donna Laudermih,
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
degree.
Date 5131/H
Jeff King, Julie King, Shawn Reeves
will be
and
Dave
Reeves.
Cake,
ice
cream
from
ell
pre·
POMEROY -- Meigs County
and chips were served. Jamie is the
blddara at the
Chamber of Commerce luncheon
g randdaughter of the late Jack King.
of Contraeto, Room
Tuesday, noon at Trinity Church.
111 of the Ohio Department
of
T ran-rtatlon,
Tom Weaver, jobs specialist for
-·Columbua,
Ohio,
untii10:00
Southern and Eastern high schools
will be guest speaker.
a.m.
June 21 ,
In:
CHESTER -- Chester Township
· Ohio for
LOS ANGELES (AP) - C.C.
MEG·7·
1Tustees meeting Thesday, 7 p.m. at
Route 7, by
Brown
's ice cream parlor, where
the township hall.
movie stars ranging from Mary Pick- t"dtng and paving with
ford to Marlon Branda savored hot
!Thlh•" Concdatret•._eet lor
WEDNESDAY ·
fudge
sundaes,
is
closing
down
after
completion
ol thta work
CHESTER -- Chester United
Hollywood
landmark.
ehlll
be
••
eat
forth In the
decades
as
a
Methodist Church vacation Bible
bidding
prop(!aal."
Plone
Touted as the . birthplace of hot
school will be held Wednesday
and
Speclllcattona
ora
fudge, the ice cream parlor stands a file In lha Dapanment on
through Friday for children, ages five
ol
few doors down from Mann's:Chi·
through sixth grade, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
nese Theater in the hean of Hollywith lunch provided; and from 9 to
DIRECTOR
OF .
II :45 a.m. for children, ages three wood, where thousands of tourists Tranajlortauon.JiiRRY
WFIAY
TRANSPORTATION
flock every day.
and four, with snacks provided.
10, 17; 2TC

Ice cream parlor
closes down

1

Home willl a very
carpet and nice
Drv•wall Interior, paneled breezeway,

Public Notice

-:'.:.'~h~olnior

lmprovlnl aac 11on · MEG·
124-&amp;.79, -Route 1241n
Salem Townahlp, by
replacing preatr,aaad bex
btama and othar rala1ad
work.T
t f
• he date
11 wlirlt
or
completion
of thla
ahall be ae HI forth tn 11M
bidding propoaal; • Plana
and Spaclftcatlona a~ en
1111 In the Department of

Large level lot filled with ftoweis, fruit trees and
~ x 70' mobile home with room addition, patio,
a 1"
appliances, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathe, elec. heat, CIA, well and.
TPC'avatlable, septic and gorgeous River View.
ASKING $31 500
.
•

TRANSPORTATION

(e) 10. 17; 2TC

992-3607

.

li/211111 I ·mo.

Plck· up dlacarded
btlltertea, appliances a
llllllly metals.

Gutters
l)ownapouts .
Gutter Cleaning
Palntl~tg

949-2168
511&amp;94'TFN

'

Middleport, Ohio.
With 3 Beds to

· Serve You Better.
12-$20.00
16-$25.00

MANLEY'S .

814 '3811-11885!11011

Trucking ·
Limestone
.
'
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sllits and
"
Utilities ,

ollldG•ag1i
·
•Stn Doors &amp;wiildows

,IO.IMPIOV.IT

8am·8pm

INSULATION
&amp;14-1192·2n2
8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.
eaeplqc~~~t~~~tW'ildows

at22n .., peL

614-992-4025

Howard hcavatin

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Phone 992·2489

ROOfing, Room AddiUona
Siding, ~ncrett. ate• .
P.O. Box 220,IIIIIwi!R, 011.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
537 BRYAN PLACE

eR. . AMtiott~ ·

PONDEROSI
PRIMITIVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On St Rt.·338 w. 8 mllea
irom Raven•wood
Bridge, 1 mile from
Apple Grove, Ohio:
Electric hook-up, dump
atatiOna, non-poriabta
water, large Iota,
hiking, fishing.
R.e nt by wHk or month.
304-372·5686 or
614!247·2120"""' ....

..

FlAGRANT
· FIELDS
Herbs

.....

YOUR MB$SAGE "
CAN BE SEEN HERE
. FORA TOTAL OF
.OOPER DAY.

~c

hrend••
EVWI•illlll
Tllur.-8ei.1N
H11111DckGrovl Ad .,
~oy,OIIIa

"

.

300-773-5013 241\rtiOJir.
t200· S~o

wklr in your apar•
rlrn•. No exp ~ - Ca" now,
open 7 dlyo, C407\17S.i02Z En
0528H21
• ATTN : Polnl PleaaafW pct11al
Positions. Permanem lull lime lor
clerklsoftert. FuU Beneflla. For
exam. appticalion and sallrr inlo
call: C7081QOI ·2350Ert.38 70.
lla,.8pm,

A.AA Driver's Education Trainlng
Schaa l lnttrUCIOrt NHded For
The Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy, Ar. ..
Permanent - Pari·Time. Ide. I For
Eatra tncome. Will Train. MUtt Be
Rehablt, Have. Good
Record And Vail ld Drivtf' a· U ·
cense For At Least 5 Veers. Sub-mlt'Rtsume To: CLA 381, clo
GaHipolis Daily Trlbune,.825 Third
Awenue. Gallipolis, OH 45831 .

Or ivlnd

Able Avon Represerttarivet
needed. ·Earn money for Chrltt·
mas biHa a1 homeJat ..wtk: 1-800·
992-6356 ar 30C·882-2845, Ind.
Rep.

8abysiner Needed In M.,. Home,
61···46·8595.
. •
Buaineu Aasislant Needed.
Compu1er Skills Nece•sar). Ac_
··
counting ,Eaperienee Preferred.
Send Resume &amp; References To:
CLA 387. CID Gallipols Daily TribOH4:;,~hird Avenue, Glilli~lis,
Christian bat:t.,Sinar, m aur Aacine
home, call 814 ·949 -2940 ahet

8pm.

Demonsuator&amp;· Christmas ~r- '
ound The World/ Gills 01 tiouae
Of Llovd. Would you like a free
Christmas and earn eltlra cash?
Call Carol, 614-909:3301.
Drivers- 11raigh1 trucka, Class 0

license, over 21 yura, qood driving rec:otd,, have, phyau::al. Call
T.D.I .. 3Q4·422·03Q3 or apply
1010 Broadwav AYGAJt, Parkersburg, WV.
Or l\lers to transport cars to and
from auction. call 61 c-992·2806

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1x8, 2x4, 2x6
8'·10' 3041 a II.
14'·16' 35~ a II.

70

1·800·291·56.R9.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump G,rinding
•
20 Years Experiertce • Insured

·Yard Sale

Hoalth Recowtry Services. ~. A
Uulri-Servlce Mufti ·C_auntv
Agency Has The Fctlfowing Openings:

Gallipolis
All Yard Sales Must Be P~id In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
"!he day before the ad is ro run.
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition - 10:00 a.m. Sarurday.

•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
day belore rhe ad 11 to run, Sunday edhkm· 1:OOpm Friday, Monday edition 10:008.m. Saturday.

Huge garage sale, 11th &amp; 12th,
rain or shine, ColleQe Rd. Syra- · Household Goods Van Operator 1
Ofiver Needed lmmadlarelv COL
1 'use, furniture, Home lnierior, I Household Goods Elc. Re~
bunk beds. gas logs, microwave,
qu~red, Desir&amp; To Provide Ouathy
children's clolhing o-..r, toys.
Service A Must. We Have The
Best Loaders In The Business &amp;
Thursday, June 13th, 9am-3pm,
State Route 124, Minersville, Plenry Of Work. Please Apply At
wasner &amp; dr~er, small appliances, 180 Columbus Roact In Athans
OH Or Call Uan, 1-800-8£6·6891
couch'bed, end table, coffee table.
For MorelniD.

Owner: Ronnie Jones

so

(614) 441-1191
1-800-508-8887

9o

• Top • Trim • Removal
•

• Stump Grindmg
15 Yrs.

. Uc.

CHAT LINE

Owner. Ride Johnsen

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, San~.
Top Sol~ 1 Fill Dirt

,
' $3.99 per min.

1960'o
act. Will pay fair price based on

ll':pm---:---:-"-:-:--"""7::-Books : State And County ' H~storv,
G~ns. HUhting, fishj"', Biographies, Otbalea , War. 814 -41146 7282 Evoningo.

WICKS

Ext 6445

Wanted to Buy
toy·o, G. I. Joo, $tar war'o

condition. 614·446 -6630 altor •

(UmaStoneLowRateal

Live 24 Hrs 8 day
Talk to Beautiful
Girls
1·900~446·1414

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearsan A-uction Companv.
lull time auctioneer, complttte
auction
service .
licensed
166,0hio •&amp; West Vir'ginia, 304773·578.5 Or 304-773-5447.

614-992-3470

~

·•

.FIND TOTAL
. $AnSFACTION!
Through a live
Personal P,sychicl

1-900-255.·0500

1-900-988-6988

. Ext. 4009

Ext. 1449 .
$2.99 per min .
~uil be '8 ytl\ •

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Y,nJ.

Sarv·U (810) 645 8434

P.O. BOX724

ATHENS. OHIO 45701

&amp; VIcinity

J &amp; O's Auto Pans. Buy•no sal·
vage vehicles. Setling parts. 3Qc .

773-5033.

..

645·8434

'

.,.)

Competitive Wages. Dillerenlial
With Experience, Equal Oppar~
runitv Employer. Contact The Qi...
rector Of Nursing , Pinecresc Care·
Ceruer, 170 Pinecres1 Drive, Gal·
lipolia, OH 45631 , s~·4 :446·71 12. ..

local ~sitians office is lookinG
tor L.P.N. with
Pediatric u 1 .year ra.-

. Send
cto Po in t

200 Main St pt.

'
Now taking &amp;!Jplicaua'JS,· Harris
Steakhouse 324 Main St. Pt .

Pteasan~

wv.·

~

hr. 814·245-0437

Part-Time Summtr Food Service
Wor-era -N.tded, ·Ar Univei'aily ' J

Of

Rl~

Grandt, A!iply At

T~o l

Food Serv•ce Otfjc:t, In St~o~denl
Cen1er AnneJ, 9 A..M. ·5 P.M. Or
Coli 81'\-245-5660.

Meelthe Man or Woman
of your Dreams·Never
.
1
be"loitely again.

l

Se~·U (819) •

Immediate OP.ntnga For Pan

Time AN's And LPN's, All ShillS.

Non-Workong Washers , Dryers, Now taking applicAtions la'r ex- ·
S\O•eo, Rerr~gorotors, Freezers, perienced ropfera_and carpernl- ·
~lr Conditioners, Calor T. v:o, ers Must ha,e, hand tool~ and.
vcR·s. AlSo Junk' Cars. 614-256· transpbrtalion. StarUr\g pay S7.'2s ~·

glasa, china, cloeka, gold, lllftr,
coina, wal~hes , estat•s. OtbJ
Mar~n. 814-892-7.W.1 .

·New24hr.
Dateline

Immediate openings for pan time
AN'S and LPN'S, all shifta. Competitiw wagea, differential with ex&lt;
perience, equal opportunity emplover. Co01ac1 the Director atNursing, Pin.ecreat Care Center:.
110 Pinecreal Drive, Gallipali •.
ONo, 45631 61.4-448-7112.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
TruckS, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Ponllac, 1900 ·Easl·
ern Avenue, Gallipoh.

Must be 18 yrs old.
Service U
,_..1238_
. ----!112111-- • · ·L-••
(6•1•9•)6•54•
. ':·8_4_34
_ _ , . 11.-----~-"""l .. I Top dollar· antiquea, lurnlluro,

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
your choice.

SERVICES, iNC.

All Yard Sales Mull Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline; 1:OOpm the

I .

AlliO available
4x4'a • 4x6'a
_81 4-985-4 10 7
614·742·3337

Date-line

HEALTH RtiCCNERV

Lost Moth9r Of Pearl Pin, Thurs -.
day Evening Berween Srowaway

JONES' TREE SERVICE··

Kinds

FU...

exp811enee, free suRplies. lnlormalion, no obligalion, send SASE :
Buctc Dllpt 77, 3208-C. E. Colonial
Dr.,ll308, OrlandO, FL 32803.

Severai famlty Yard Sale; Sal · "!
Bulaville Pike, BidNell.

of Earth Work
-All 992·3838

.PODURftll

Last: Beagle piJp, 6· 7 mcinlh\ old,
·male, D. T.C. collar. Cook Rd .,
Cheshire vlcinily, (614• 361 711&amp;1.

wordi614-387-74U7. .

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Pomeroy, Ohio

Be.....,tOA.M . -S~M .

Earn Up to $1000's weekly stuffing
&amp;n11'8f0pes a1 home. Start now, no

Aeslaurant And Jack And Ji11 s,

Call today with your .
window sizes for a 4ree
quote!

FREE ESTIMATES

Faund: Set Of Key a. ~ . Gallipolis
Park, 0~ SidOwaik, 614-«6·4553,

Or Big Lola Store Or Parking. Re-

Limited Time Offer

367-0266 - 1-800.950-3359
Free Estimates

RACINE· Apple Grove Road· Approx. 1.873 Aerts, ground
wl1h a 1891 - 14' x 70' Moblte Homepll . 2 badcrooms, baAIIh, flon)
porch, deck, ce111ng 1ens, ap ances. entra1 r, 8 .G.
Furnace. TI'C water, IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII
.
ASKING S28,fiQ.O
WE NEED USTINGSI Special JWq1181t81or WGOtled
prqpat'ty, 1180 l'lqllletll
.
tor Tuppers Plllns, ·
Chater end For Farm Land All"".,,..,, 8 IIYWIS lnt
coming hera to find that SPECIAL PROPERTVIIF
YOU WANT TO SELL "NOW IS THE TIMEII" GIVE
US A CALLI

•TIIt·in
•Double Hung
•Insulated

New
.
.Location
'.

bu a 24' x 45'
ol Level ground w.llh
fencing, driveway to lldlng. Also a
TPC water tap. Drilled well, septic.
silt aultabla for h"'MifNr:"$30•n,d or
000
1 BIIICI~O'~ ROAD&gt; Very n1ca levelaHe ihat contains three
I'
ed oad T""
• bta Nl b lldl
lots. Pav
r . rv wa18r ava11 a . ce u ng or
mobllel)Ome site wl1h a River View.
ASKINQ 18,500

~ERRYWRAY ~~H~IENRY~~E~.~CL!~LAN~D~~;;~~~~§~~
DIRICTOII OP

Siding • VInyl
Ahl!J!I,-tum • Roofing
·tgw • Repair' '
Gutters &amp;
Downspouts
Free Eatlmlites

FREE

1--~~=~,;;.;..;..._

NOTICE TO BIODERS
STATE OF OHIO
TRANSPORTATION
DEPARTMENT OF
Cotumbua, Ohio
Office of contra-'·
•w
Legal Copy Number 1111-511
NIT PRICE CONTRACT
U Milling o.te 5/31/9e
Sealed propoaale wilt be
accepted from all , prequalified bidder• at the
OHice ot Contract•, Room ·
118 of jhe Ohio Department
o1
T ranoportaUon,
Cotumbuo, Ohio, until 10,00
o.m.
w ....... ~- June 21
--,. ·
'
1 -

'

NEW-REPAIR

Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions of
Jove, success, care, soul
mates, seW-help and
more.
1-900·255-0500
• Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Sew:u (619) 645·8434.

· Must be 18 yrs.

MGM

ROOFING ·

Psychic-Line

Sarv-li(611) 845 8434

$.19500 ln~talled

Howard L. Wrltesel

.

$2.99 per min. • ·

$3,99 Per_~ln1.te
Muetbe
Toueh·Tone
Serv'!! (611)

•

3/a'lmo.ptl

1•90D-990.3737
Ext. 2261

1-!100·9811-8600

JAMIE JEFFERS

1·90fl-446.1414
EXt. 4309
$3.99 per min.
Must 111118 yra.
Sarv·U (619) 645-8434

.lnUCTIVE
&amp; WILLIIG
TO TILKIII

Hied Direction?

.

. OFFICE 992·2259

~

,.I

The Ohio Casualty Group
·

MEN
IIIUTIFUL WOMEN
Ill WAITING TO
HEIR FROM
YOU NOW!!!

Ext. 6733

'
.
614-441-7558 .

Pomeroy

ol.lnoul8nce Compan~

•

Your Sw661#!eart ss

,.,., Rea.:
'·"'
114-992-2524

Se111ing Me;,. Coo111y Silu:e 1868

REPLACEMENT
·WINDOWS ·

Cheeter, Ohio

Quality Work
' close es yOUr p/lofJB
C~petltlve Rates· · r::soo-"9aa:Sglls

Your lndepende111 A6enia

Kim and Randy Hawley of
Pomeroy announce the birth of a .
daughter,
Hannah Alyssa May II .
Palernal grandparcnl• arc Randy
and Darla Hawley, Middleport ;
maternal grandparents arc Ben and
Doris Ewing, Pomeroy; great-grandparents arc Betty Hawley, Middleport and Sarah Caldwell, Pomeroy. .

DATE''
LINE

LDiiUIK
-Dill

10 looe

be-.nHpm. . ·

. 985-4422 -

-7573 - - ptl,

•

Giveaway

2 Boxes of garage sei&amp; items .

(614) 992·2364 - , 1-Soo-&amp;89-3943

fi1Cr'MI1 mo.

Personals

40 .

St. R1: 7

They have helped
millions find fortune,
success and love.
The future starts today!
Call 1-9()0.868.4900
Ext 4193
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Yf$.
Serv-u (619) 645-8434

•New Homes

You've got a lot on your mind . You're building
your world and yout insurance needs are
real. Bu.t you don't need to add this worry
to your list.

742·3212

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

101.11 BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

lFH

SWM Likes Church, Movies,
Ollldoooo, And Quiet Everings At
Home Soe+ung SWF Ago: 25 ·35
Please Write To : P.O. Box 282,
Ganipo~~s, ott&lt;o 451131 .
.,

Stick/MIG All)minum Welding

...

'

THING

.

. TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

ll4/lmo.

~

005

nMG
--~·

poopit who

wof9ht
• - wtit~I
- ·IOII toJ&gt;fOdUC
try . . .
patented
L

814 ..... 123&amp;.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
· Gutt•rs and Downspouls
Complele Remodeling
Decks .: BathroOms - Kilchens ,; Siding

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AJC Condenser*'Hose_Assemblys

992·2768 or
. 992•3274

f14-91~11D

LESS

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Free E•timale•

I4RIIfiiiiCU

BIB BOOniG and
COIS7RUCftON

- ·-,.

Roofing &amp;
Block Work

, ... tile ,........
palatl... Let •• tie It

t1»,.,. a

J

4 Potential Leadef'a s.iiqualy tn.
teresled In lnveating Few Haura
Weekly In Part-Time B\l&amp;lntll,

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp;· Peggy Brickles

614-742·2193
•

: '

AVON I All Areas I Stl!,rtey
Spears, 304-67S-,.2Q.

. Blllllls.w Mil ·

We will work within your budget
.Ph. n3-9173
FAX n:J.58111
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason, WY .

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Ho111e.
•••odellng ·

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portable

Authorized AGA ·Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gasa1! • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• AIIAT!Inum/Stalnless • Tool Dressing • Om$100ntal
Steps ·Stairs, Railings, Patio Fum~ure, Fireplace
Hems, 'Planter hangel'$, Trellises·&amp; lots of other stuff!!

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too S1111JII"

BENNE-TTS

H&amp;"

. 11111101·Enil101

tWV010212

'

111t111

LINDA'S
PiiNTING

(114) M•2011 FAX
814 514-2008 NIGHT

Fu,_s. Allequlpmen•ln atocli

•Remodel!"'

•Siding

Calls)

Air Colldllloners, Heat Pumps,

•Addiii•New Garage•

..--....

Manl.. llowt

j(

Help Wlnted

110
10

ss.oo-,.,...,

(&amp;14) 1141-3013 PhOne '

and Manufactured Housing

_ •NewH0tne1·

Call

~na.Ohlo45n1

......,.,-··

SMITH'S '
COISTIUCfiOI

' ' l : ' ..

TODD IISSELL

614-992·7643
1nm~,..

mOllII

21513 BASHAH RD.

,, Pi' d'f H ','

t

614-949•2096

FREE ESTIMATES

PQm-v,Ohlo

l~•ry

.,.._B1Z

UCIIE IYDUUUC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC •

lfew Homes • Vlny' Siding .Mew
G8regK • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

•lloollng
•ltMrtor Emrior
P1llntlng
.
A110 Coua • WGrll
~EE ESllMATIS)
V.C. YOUNG II
112-t215

1·900-446·1414
Ext. 1477
$3.99 Per Min. ·

Hendnckso~.

·.

,

I

And~r ~~Y~·

~1bby

........
..
,..
.....,.a.,r·

J. It D1"'M E, OWNER .

BISSELL I'UILDERS, INC•

,'

Attending the shower were Tara's
mother, Janet Kitchen , Tammy
Clemente, Megan Tibbetts, Tim's
mother, Patty White . and Patty Johnson. Margaret Henderson, Faith
Hayman, Tamara Hayman. Manic
Short, Carol Hayman , Cheryl
Knight. Sheric Joh11son and Ginny
Leach.

POMEROY-- Home School Suppon Group for parents and children
at the Pomeroy Library meeting
room, Tuesday, 10 a.m. For more
information call Tammy Jones, 9926743.

RESULT~

.

Jam~ ~roH
R~nna
Y~ ~e
/i
D~ve ~~~

An~ebeHIIe

. SPORTS/.
ENT£RTAINMENT
'

:5:1:

ol~st He~r

Cell

••

~~it•.

Wamsley represents
region at VICA session
Rich Wamsley, son of Dick and
Charlotte Wamsley,. Racine, is the
VICA South Central Regional parliamentarian representing 14 vocational school s in the region .
He recently spent a week in Washington D. C. where he represented the
district at the National VICA Convention. He also assisted with regional ski ll competitions held in Cincinnati.
Rich completed a welding program at Meigs High School.

•

~ KarenWerry.~anand¥!u

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to annou11_ce mcetin.g
and special evems. The calendar 1s
not designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
as space permits and ca 0 not be guaranteed to run a speci fic number of
days.
MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
~ight to Life. Monday, 7:30 p.m .,
Monday.

Te ..,. : .a.. II.IN

RoushandSarah:bispan; hlgltschool ' Grinstead.DonnaFowler.ldaD!ehl,
paduate with the most children arad· 1 Helen M.awhinter, Mary Hendriclu, Wmebrenner, Jackie Sasson,_B
uates •• Barbara McDIIlllel . and
McWhorter,
and Williom · Rim_e. David and Or}lha F1elds 1 •
Eugene Weaver; traveling the longest B_lame, Steve and G1nny Cadle, Bon- Wilham Hanpah, Kay Keathley, 1 ' t
distance .. Jo Berry of Colorado and me and Gary Crabtree, Angela and Carl, HIIIT)' R. Layne , Betty
SandraRoushPo.mroyofNewMex- GeorgeCapchan,
'
.
Harvath, Ralph and Flo~ ld e '
ico· same-year graduales married the
Thomas G. Edwards , 'Jlona Har- Pete and Betty Bums,
a alfl
longest •• Pete and Betty Burris; old- bour, Gail McAbee, Nancy Proffitt, Lois Bumgardner, Chari~• and Lavt
est majorettes .. Mary Stew an Rebecca Scarberry, Joy Thabet, J1m ra Yeager, Charles and M1~
Fowler and Betty Jones Rawlin 2 s: Ste wan, Phyllis and Jerry Scott, Mary Ann McCrady, Ben an
t'f
oldest cheerleaders .. Arthur Sayre Mary Fowler, Peggy Edwards, Calvm Sayre,
· .
~
and Betty Rice; oldest football play-_ and Marilyn McDaniel, _Lola and
Sarah G1bbs,
:
er .. William "Peele" Zerlcle;
Miller, Cllljll and J1m Proffitt, Evalee Wolfe,
an
basketball players .. Lawrence L1ev- MaJ]onc.and Dale Walburn, Jack and ry R. Fry, Marilin and
ge.,
ing and William "Peck" Zerkle; old- Mary Ann Wmebrenner, Carolyn Weaver, Cathy an .
est band members .. Raymond Grin- Allenswonh, Braunda Ballou, Pam and Danny E11as, en (J ~·
stead Ida Diehl am{ Lila Zerkle; old- Eleanor Blalock, Larry Gardner, )toush, Helen Bro;:'; ~~[; •O~ Ul•
est FFA .. Thomas Bumgarner; old- Wanda and Larry King, Shirley Prid- Love, Lawrence a
ns 1evm •
est FHA .. Sally Roush Clark: oldest dy, Sandra Roush Pomeroy, James W.
HuRdalnalhl,
H.
school newspaper editors .. Marjorie Roush. Mary and Erme Roush,
. Mai1ha an.
P an race ay,.,
Clarke Walburn and Mary Stewan
Gene and Oma Jane Sexton, Ber- Barry and Loretta . Hdnes,
Fowler; attending most alumni ban- mce S~mth, (,:harles and Norma Sta~- Dyer~ Gary and Penny reen, On_f
quets .. Gary Greene.
ley, J1m Stewan, Tom and Jama Roush, Darrell Hoffman , Duane~
Jim Proffitt entertained with wills Vanu, Thomas and Julia Willoughby. . Sherry Clatwonhy, John and Cozetlf
and prophecies of the reunion years Larry and Earlene Bumgardner, Brad_field,
. .
.
and the group closed the evening with Charles McDaniel, Dick and Audrey
Duddmg, Sallyd
the singing of the alma mater.
Young, Barbara and Stan Saunders, Amanda Clark, Ve_ron an . ay~
Attending were: Evelyn Proffitt, Peggy Bumgardner, Joan · Cornell. . Roush, Bruce and R11a
Sarah ·Foster, Donllld and Leota Barbara Dunn, · Judy and Max D1ana Johnson, George and Cathe,!;Roush, Henry and Leota Krautter, Eichinger, Jam~ a~d Margaret Hill, inc Oldaker, Jeffrey and Janet RusMildred Fry, Paul R. Rood, MaKine Robert and PriScilla Kell: Juha sell,•. Kevm and Debra Scott,
and George Wagner, Sunville Kennedy, Sharon Lloyd, Maxrne and W1lll_amson, Ryan Keller, we.. :sl(!ll
Gilland , Virginia and Raymond LarryMorrison, Raben Tnpp, . .
L1evrng, Andrew Jones, ,!..e1
Greathouse, Margaret Kincaid,
Sheldon and Karen Roush, Phllhp Fowler and Amanda Broadwater.
Robert and Ruth Lisle , Barbara
McDaniel, Clara Capehart, William
Lester and Lilah Zerkle, Raymond

·:J_ayette shower held
for Tara and Tim Michael
Women of the Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church hosted a layette
~hower recently for Tara and Tim
Michael who are expecting their
second child. He is in the Marines
stationed in Okinawa and will be
returning to the states this month.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael have a son,
. Ryland two.

.
..,
.,...,., ..........
--

.

Wahama High Schoool class of 1946 honored ~

~

: Soclel Security

Pege

The Dilly Sanllltll e Pege 7

Pomeroy • Mldcllepor"., Ohio

Monct.y, June 10, 1

.

P~

.

•

.Social Secu_rity one way
• By Ed

The D'aily Sentinel

CALL NOW
1·900 988 8003

Ext. 1021

. $2.99 per min.
Mull be 18 yrs.

-

'

Sl!v·U (814) NS 8434

•

�~~onc~ay,·.~u,.

10, 1986

~ • Middleport, Ohio

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 ......

:=..-

Yarlt MeyOr
I -

47 Ac:tar -

12

710 Alf'StOI'S.Ie

•

$PECIAL: Now ltH 14d0 Norttl .... oa.... - """ S1oriC1
Inc~ C..UOI-Ait, Sklrtiftg. Deli..ry ond S.t·up. MOUNTAIN
STAlE HOMES 304-41711-UOO.

OuaHty Cart Nuflint S.Victl,

Now Hiring CNA'o, PCA'o, -

IIMA'a, saarring Pay 11.50 An
Hour,
Ate l.aollld In Chif.
hcot.M Ohio. For Mcwe lnforma·
lion, , -100- 52e-7 -

c-

Salesman posiuan twaitllbte, full
rime, e1peuence required, state

altry requk'.menl. Send rnume

to Box G-8. ""Pl Pt•asanl Rag·
iuer, 200 Wain St. , PI P11111nt
WY 25!1!0.

SOCIAL WOAKEA : Th• Alhena
AIDS Took For.. lo Seeking A
Lic:enaed Social Worker (LSW)
To Serve AI CaM Mana,_, For
The HIV Rurel Consortium Of
Soul-11om Ol'io. Thlo II A Ful
Time Poaltlon Funded By The

Ohio Deportment 01 Hoaltll. Tlw
Succtntul Candidate Wilt . Ia

LSW Cer!Uiad In Ohio And Will
HiWe ·A Minimum Of Two Veara
Professions! Experienc:e. E~:pari­
enc:e In Worki ng W(th Per~ona
Infected Wilh HIV Ia Highly Desira ble. This Position Involves

All reo! MillO I&lt;Mrlolng In

330 Finns for S.le

polio, 11~11"""' 7 P.ll.

llmllltlon or dllel1/nlnotlon
baled on,_, color, rollglon,
ltX flmlll - o r notiOnll

ortgln, or

40 ICII flltm wntvee hof$8 barns,
WIAOHA cham·
pion tlallion, blood mares, yell·
inos: 8 1 112 acres, fenced, ntw'
indoor riding are&amp;

onr I n - to

bom,814-28H522.

.,.,. '""" prelorenc&lt;t,
lil tila.,_• or dllcrlmlnation.•

340

Thlo-wllnot

"""""'W

advertisement~ lot roolasltala_l
wlllchllln Ylolatlooi ollho

-r

OUr,_,. oro hereby

Employer.
Social Wortter1. Now Hiring $23 I
Hr + Benefits, On Tne Job Train·
ing To Apply In Your Aree, 1·800-

33!1-6150.
VACANCY: BEHAVIOR HANOI·
CAPPED INSTAUCTOR . Volid
Ot1io Certification. Contact Supt.

Oltlc8 By June 24, 199f5. GaitUa •
Jack1on • Vil'ltOn JVSO, P.O. Box
157, Rio Grande, OH 45074. 814·

2•5-5334. EEO.

Want a rewarding_ carHr'? We
are looking for caring Individuals
who want to join the growing
number of Professional cnlld Care ·
Prov1dere. Training and referrals
pt"ovided free. Call Juety at link ar
304-523-9540 or t-800-894·

9540.

170 Miscellaneous
BAHAIIA CRUISE! 5 do~a/4
nlghll, Undlt booked! llull Solll
S299tCoupte. Limited Tidl.ets. 1·

800-935-9999 ext 6589 Man - Sol
- . 10pm.

180

Stare for rent 'Front of Main St
Post Office. Call 304·67S..2t74 or
614-448·2200.

Body work on cars &amp; truckl, rea·

sonable ratea, minor mechanical
repeira, oil changes, caM 614· 742~

··

Dan' s la~n Care. Retldantial,
Churchett &amp; Cemetarlaa, Rea·

- · Ri!18SI614-379·28ol7.
General Maintenance, Painting.
Yard Work Windows Washtd
Guners Cleaned Lighl Hauling,
Commerical, Residential, S~tM :

614-388.0.29.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your l~s 10 the mil just call

304-675-2770.

REAL ESTATE

25 Acres, Hannan Trace School
Dis trict, Small Tobacco Allotment ,

Mmerat Rghll, &amp;14-2511-1611 .

310 Homes for Sale

BRUNER LAND

614-775-9173
t:Je.ooo.
Meigs County: 20 Miriute• SE Of
Athens, Near Albany. True Coun2·3 bedroom house, 50:.:100 tot, try 5 Acre Bu ilding Site $7,500 :
localed in Syracuse. appliance,· Great Camping &amp; Hunting On 11
included, call 614·992· 5767 alter + Acres With Stream 19,000,
Nice For Home &amp; Horse 10 •
I 112 ltory, 4 br.. " ·· dr.. .,., batement &amp; tun por(h.
call
814·992-4480.

-·

Acrea SB.SOO.

2 ·3 bedrooms, brick, DR. new
windows, carpet, complete new
kitchen and b.alh, garage, full

.

3 ·BR .• 2 bath ranch. 2 car garage,
Spring VaHey area. close to Holz.
er Hospital. 814-446-7040.
Beautiful 3 badrqom Rancher on
Jerry's Run Rd. 11yrs old. spill Fall
fence, garage, breezewa)', larQe
porch, concrete drive, large barn,
fenced in harte lot &amp; out build·

lngL 165,000. 304-575-2.94.
Eight room house, Racine, .four
b6drooms, LR. DR. family. tOORJ.
fireplace , latge kitchen, full ani~;,
basement. new central heat and
air, toom for lhrte cats, 4.68 acr·aa. could sell lots. $75,000 nego·
tiabkt, 814·992-2924 or 614·992·

6971 .

$1•.soo. 22 Acr01 $26,poo, Or 10
Acres $17,000. Twenty Minutes
South, 3 Milts Out Teena Run •
Chamb8ra A·oada, Your Horses
Will LoY&amp; 8 Aeres .With Stream
$11,900. Or, 7 Acret With Pond
$12,000. Many 10 Acre Building

441-0568.
Will do lawn maintenance, clean
garages. guUers. plant Howen,
etc. , for more information, call
614-992-2065.

For Mark Palmer.
ln . Point Pleasant, el!c. cond,
good neighborhood . 304·875-

...,.fW114.

c..

FINANCIAL

210

Business

One bedroom home in Pomeroy.
Will sell on land comract, 614·

1192-5858.

Three bedroom home in count~y.
Willes Hill Rd ., Rudand, one bath.
in-ground"'!"'· 614-992-5067.

Orl~. 614-446-ol'l53.

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beauliful 2ac lo ts. pubHc water,

Clydo Bowen Jr., 304-518-~

Near Rio Grande, S2501f.4o., Plus
Oepoait, I References. 814-388·
9081 .

recommends 1nat you do busi ·
nett with people you know. and
NOT to •end money through lhe
mall un1ll ~ou haYe lnveatigaled

.

Middleport City limits, no pars,
references , S27~mo. 304 · 773-

5185;

117g Baron t'4J.70 With 7x14 Expanda 3 Bedrooms. 1 Bath, Total
Eleclric With Backup Gas Heat,
N:, &amp; 2 Rlrche1. 814-448-9543.

lhO ofttring.

goo~ thru June

STATE

15, 1998.

HOliES

304-675--1400.

FREE HEAT PUIIP wilh the pur·
chan ot any multi section home.
Limile&lt;l Time. MOUNTAIN STATE
HOMES 304·675-1400.

u~itin

kitcl18n and LR, S300 plus

downstairs haa 1·2
bedrooms, balh, lR, DR, $350

Valley A.partmenls,

3 ~room apattments. HUO Subsidized. 304·675-5548, ERA Town
&amp;

Country Real Ettate.

450

Furnished
Rooms

Bedroom To Rent In 'Single Home
1 112 Milas To Galllpolla, Usa
Kitchen, Living Roam, Washer &amp;
&amp; Dryar, 61H41·129t .
Circle Motel, GaMipolia, OH 614~
446·2501 or 814·36NJ812. Effe·

ciency ROoms. Cable, Atr, Phone.
Refrigera!Or.

Srartin_g at $120/mo. Gattia Holet.
614·446·SI580.
,

Steeping rooma wilh c:aoking .
Also trailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,

304-!13·(i851. Mason WY.

460 Space for Rent

A\I ail able July 1st ,. nice 2 bedroom , basement, garage, rater·
enc~ts, de-posit &amp; na p,e tl. 30•·

Trailer Spa1
ce For Rent On Ball
Run Road $10D.IMo .. Referencea
Required, a 14·448·4111 Daytime,

67!).5162.'

Or E-ngs, 81 ..446-7157.

.

Available Soon: 2 Bedroom Brick
House In R10 Grande. No Pets .
$275/Mo., Security Oepos11, 614·

2•5:5439.
House 3 Bedrooms, S300 • Ulili·
ttes, 918 Fourth Avenue. Gallipo-

1975 12:.:85, two bedroom,

MOUNTAIN

Twa apartments in Middleport·
uparaira has one bedroom, bath,

Avenue. Point Pleasant, $27Sit.lo,
614-446-9278.

House in Clifton, 4 beaoom, li'ling
room. bath, kitchen, ful basement:,
·big lot &amp; carport. S275mo. plus
utilities. Deposit &amp; references re1972 Homette Mobile Home 2 qurred. 304· 713·5054.
Bedrooms. 12:.:55. Reconditioned
Thru-OU~ Somo fumiiUra, $2,500, Roomate Wanted $2501Mo., Utili·
li~s Paid, 614-446·859S.
Alter 8 P.M. 614·245-1518.

Offer

capped. EOH 304-675-6879.

2 Bedroom House. 2 Bedroom
Trailer AC. In Gallipolis, 614·«8- Rooms lor rent • weak or monlh.

320 Mobile Homes
'
for sale

FREE CENTRAL AIR : 1ftx80
Commodore 3 Bedroom and
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 14117.0 CommodDr.e 3 bedroom.

Twin Rivlp TOW8f', nOw accePiing
applications tor 1br. HUD aubaidized apt. for elderly and hand!·

Micro~ &amp;

fil, 614--446-3844 Aftet' 7 P.M.

!NOTICE I

388-9946.

----.,-.,.---,.,.....,..,=
121165 2
AC,

Bedrooms.
S250f
Mo .. Plus Deposit, No Pets. Reier·
encel. 814.,441·0318.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Unfurnished, No Pets On Kriner Road,

61 .......9569.

2 13 Bedroom Mobile Homai In
Porter Area. You Pay Utilities,
ReferenceS! Depos1t Req.
14•

388-9162.

e

Trailer tor rent 1n GalliPolis area.
814-448--8849.
Two and three bedroom mob•la
homes, starting at 124~ · $300,
sewer, water and trash included,

614-992-2187.

440

ApBrtments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apanments. furnished and unfurnished. security
depolrt required •.no pets, 614·

992-2218.

1 Bedroom, Super Nice, S2881
Mo., Plus Ullhtie s. Usually
SOQ'lelhing Available! Sun Valley
Apartments. 614·1446-2957.

2 bedroom apartment, $350 per
monlh, S200 deposit. utilities paid,
no pers, 61.4·992-5724.

MERCHANDISE

-------"----=·1
510
Household
Goods

:,o·

1236.

VIRA FURNITURE
614-446-3158
Ouaiiy Houaehold Furni1Ure And ·

ApplillrlCel. Groa1 Oools On
Clllh And Corry! RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Al10 Available.
Rea Delivery Within 25 Mia&amp;s.
Vinyl14 Panerns Large selec ·
lions, Khchen Prints in Stock Clr·
pal $8.50 and up. Mollonan Car·
pef1814-446-7444

Whirlpool Walher 195: Small Relrjgtrator $75; 8,000 BTU Air
Conditioner 175: Hotpoint Dryer

facilitiaa, daM 10 school WI 10Wn.
Applications aYailal* 11: VIllage

Green A!&gt;IL ••9 or coli 814·11923711 . EOH.

11, SVS: Gr- Rolrigldalro Rolrig-

eraror. StSC; Holpoint Range Hor~e•t Gold $95; Skfiggt Applianc "· 78 Vine Str11et, Gal~polis. 614·
448· 7398, 1-1100-499-34119.

BEAUTIFUL APA~TIIENTS AT Zenith floor modal, colO! console
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON TV, older modal, 1:\B,ndtoi'ne cab•·
ESTATES, 52 Woatwood Drlvo net, good picture. 175.' 304·875·
from U•• 10 $315. Wolk 1D llhop 7354.
&amp; movloa. Coli ·814·441·2111.
Equal Hauling Oppor1Ur111y.
530
Antiques
Efficiency apar1ment, lCrUll flam
Moln St. Poll Ollie•. 304' 171·
2174 0( 814-4441-22110.

Buy or sell. Rivt,lne AntiQUII,

1124 E. lloln StrHI, on Rt. 124,

Pomeroy. Hour~ : M .T.W. 10:00
o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00 Ill

e:oo p.m. 814-992·2528 ..

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 Cuohlon Couch, Lovoooot , 2
Cualil!ln Brown Couch, 11414412157.

.
~

good, ru ns

tint,

·11 .100. 814-3117-7fl07af·

,1.......__ _

1111 Ford Fe11h•a AC , Runs

Good, 1875,

1189 &amp;Uictl leS.brt, e:.:cettenl
running condition, V-e, PB. PS,

AC, - - . 13600. ,,..
1142045"' 114+0~2302.

:,

11g1 Hond• 2SOX. exc coni .

l

$2,000.304-675-1274. •

From

German

o.rm.n

1110 Ooclt• Omni, 4 Door, 5

I

750 eoais &amp; Motors

for S.le· .
12ft. A;urnr.Jm bOal w1 3.~.

4

.:t

2030.

3157·1912.

HKII1 Oldl Cut1111 Calais. ·sun ·
dolrol~ 4 cyl, Stpd, oc.

1984 M ir,da 1s· Ski Boar.
liter Inboard Chev. Engine Ful ~,

2948c

sene Plater, All Ski Equipment.•'
Litr.e New. $8,500, 614-448-9330. ' :
.
75 norse power JDhnton oul-. 1
board, conlrols. winng, laCk, A"Wt• i
meter. g~:s tank, runs, good,
end JUSt gone lhrough, new bear,::,:
ings &amp; seals, 814 ·992·3Q11 arterl .
101m. 1575 Ot;JO Of 118~ ~
~:!

Full bloOded Sheltia· miniature
Collie pupa, $125 each: AKC
Registered three r,•ar old tem111
Collie, Lassie-co or, $200; 81•·

varsar~. Fully loaded .

All Natural Fat Last Product.
lose We tont , Feel Beller, Increated Energy I 1 A Day 014 ·
Boot1 By Aedw ing, Cnippewa.
Tony Lam•. Guaranteed Lowest
Prices AI 5noe Cate, GIHipolia.

742-2050.
Puppy Palac:e Ken~ts, Boarding,
srud Sar'lice Puppes, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breads.
Paymen:s Welcome . 61.t·388·
0429. ·
S.ames&amp; t&lt; ittens, Blue Point CFA

Camcorder For Sale · Panaaonic

ReQistared. 014·.W1.0797.

••; 614-949-2060.

Scooters
Afld
.Wheelchairs, New lUted , Van 1
Car lih Installed, S!Birglides, lih
Chairs. Cat!" For Brochure. 614446-7283.
Etectnc

Five ton air condition, used one
summer, asking 1600, (614) 742-

1802 en.,.,. Camara. 25th ann•·
Red witn
black stripes. Asking $12,500,

Col 814-2.5-!ifl12.

11193 Plymouth Sundance, Standard, 80,000 + Miles, E:.:cellant
Condition, 814·258 -1244, 814 ·

25e-805t .

1093 POntiac: Sunbird, LE Red. 5
Speed, AC , 2.0 Liter, Appro• .
31 ,000 MWet. Rear Spoiler, E11cel·
lent Conchtion. 18, 100. 614 -388·

8728;

Musical
ments
.

1n11ru

18515 Ford Eac:ort LX, am fm SNtr·
eo, CO player. cruise control ,

rrroon rool, 011 35 ., 36 mpg. can

814-1182·211011.

Fender Tellecaatef Electric Gui·
lar Americ1n Made $tOO , 8U· •te98 Jeep

Grand Chorokoo Lor·
ldo 3 llonlhs Old, 1~.000. lla~
ConlidorTrado, 614---6120.
Rudolph Wurlitzer Pi•no, EJcel311-1135.

lent Shape! $1 ,995, 614 ·2568611.

N.W as· Oldt 442 T-Topa Grey
Silver; One Owner. 2:0,300 MiNts

580

Full Powor,

Fruits &amp; ·
Vegetables

-0109

Cherries, Pick 'WJu Own $1 Ouart

Bnng ConlalfWf'S. 6l4·446· 157t

G•aoe Kept

(6,41-

AulD l•ns. OeakH w~l arrange fl.
nancin; even if you !'lave been
turned down elsewhere: Upton
Equipment Used Cars. 304· 458·

1069.

2187.

Strawbeu ies Tlly lor's Batry
Paten, Open Mon. Wed, Fri, 9-8;

Sol r• Noon. 6t•·2•5-90ol7. ·

720 ll'ucks for Sale

Flex Home Crou Training Syt·
tem AlfT'IDSt New, 614-446-8778.

Strawberries, Pk:k 'four Ownl Cal

·• F-250, auiOmaliC, tlidtng window in t.c:k, 300 8 cyt, excellent

Heal Pump 2 112 Ton Heil Needs
New Revarsin; Valye 8 Yean
Old. $200 OBO 614·441 -0706.

JET
AERATION UGTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Reb.iilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, 1-8()0..537·9528.
Kerosene heiuer Ommy 230,
23 ,000 ·BTU $140. Sears Kenmore small refrigator
camper

$50. 30•-372-11480.

ror

Kirby sweeper w / attachments.
304~75-1126.

lots For Sale Gravel Hill Ce·
metery Cheshire, S200 per grave
including Corner Stones and ·Perpetual Cart. 614·367..()214
New Gas Furnaces. New Galvan•ied Duet Work. New Hood Fans,

814·379-2720 AFTER 6 P.ll

In Plastic Cost SBDO. Sell 1250.
6l4 -77S.2360.

Ciauclo w-.. ~t&lt;-245-St2t .

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Fwm Equipment
1995 2 Horse S!antload Goo...
neck Horse Trailer With Rear
Tack Wilh Dresaing Room, 304-

882-21V5.
Ford

2000 tractor w/loadtr.

a....

4xt Rhino, S8,7i5; 81 ... 211-

11'1 Time To Make Hay I 8 Uaed
Round Baiera From SOO• To
20001; 9 Used Mower Condition.,, From S1 ,250 To $8,500; NH
Rake Tedder ·Like New; Rakes,

Square Baiera. Wllill • -Row No
Till Planter. Diska. Otillt, Plows.
Bobcats: Also Have Bater Twine.
Ha~

so.

Center s 1
Sega Genes 1s With
11 Games $125. 614·446-2221 .· -

R &amp; S. Fum1ture. Mason WV. 304·
173-5341 : New Store Hours.
Mon- Fri
12noon- 7pm.
Sat
12noon-Spm. we Buy . Sell .

Anc Dryers. All ReconOIItOn&amp;d
And Gauran:eed• $100 AM Up,
Will DehVef. 614-669-644t .
Sale 1 Trade Yamaha Racing Go·
Cart; Ready 10 Race, an accesaories.: · wiU trade· lor 4 Wheeler ol

Jackson, Ot;o,

HI00-~7-9521.

es Made To Order: CompaCI
Trac10rs 4.K For 48 Mo.; 40 ~
HP Tractors Artd Ha~ Equipmenl
6.9% For 48 Mo,; Lea• 50 HP

30•-a7s-994o.
W1lk Behind Gravely With Mow·
ar, Su lk~, CultiYaror &amp; Blade,
$250, Needa Work, 614· 448·

9557 After 5:30.
WATER WELLS ORILLED

Fast Reasonable Ser~ l ce 014·

michael's Farm 1 L8wn 114-4.-&amp;~

2•121·100-584·1111 .
Used 2300 Trencher Call&gt; IU·

611&lt;·1842.

About F r - 1,.-4411-11104.

550

Building

Supplies
Block, brick, sewer pjpes, wind·
owt, lintels, ale. 'Claude Winters,

1988 Chev,. 112 Ton V-6 Eng•ne,
PS, PB. Air, Auto Trant. S5,495, .

81 ....48-4225 Col- 4 P.ll.

cu..na. AC, 114-388-0406, AI·

.., 5 P.ll.: Or Day a 8-4: 304-578-

,4583.
Vortec V-e, Auto Trant, AC,
Tradet Welcome! Cook Mo1ora,
114-~101

81"ecfor will pick-up mniB.ct Harry
Go1dsberryJPI.ul Mercer Sllwmill,
Inc. 2e08 US Rt3S South aida

......... 30ol-773-5182.

or 30C-675-7G82.

1115 Ford F·150 .Cx4 Automat..:,

Wv, 2St87. Phone 304-875-7511

1015 Cntvrotet SB. tx4, ac, am.
fm ttereo. 51pd, hilch, bed liner,

.:t_:A_:Ipn;.,..,..·n-•""So:noon:.;.::.;.:bl.;lly,..:.:.goa~~-·"50,.,...

AC. Excll'-11 Condihoo . J15,500,
614·379--21180.
1 80 GIIC 112 ,;n, V-8. lllSI rebuil1

71arge Bantam chic:ken.s. 110.tor
all. 304·518-2102. •

engiile &amp; nnarnisakln. rww 'painl
job, all new brakea, .many new

630

·. Livestock ,

Baby pigl lor

II~.

or81':1Mt-2017.

peril, asking 13995, 814 -992814-V48·21108 5368.

Pair 01 Dookoro. 114·311H784.
Riding I Trail HarHt, Pony, Dif~
lararuPricos, 8,._..11-.. IO.
Two Billy Goatt 3 Months 130
Each. Young GHstl2.50 Each,

614·251-1399.

International Log Truck Single
A.xte, Ltll Than 5,000 Miles On
Engi,.. 814....14l7.

130 Vlns &amp; 4-WDs
1971 Cherokee, tJ~C:etling ruM1ng
.tWO, l'tas etectfle winct'l . lair
body, $650, 814-742-1123.

TRANSPORTATION

1882 Convertton van Y·l , auto,

loaded. very good condition, va-

710 Autos for S.le

1'' ,..,..;:-,-:::.:..:..:~~,;.;.:-97,f100 milel, $100 080, 0"1"4·
9t9-2311 days or 114·g40·2e,.4
~s.

I ~:::.::;:...,....,.---::=--:-·a7 Ford Muttang GT, 5 .0, 5
spe.a, 111, "whi18, llnled Wtndowt.
lOOks good, $3SSIS, G14-742~3802.

'89 Thun- sc. IWO door. 3.8
litre, V·l, tlila model bubo, PS,
PB. AC, 5 speed. pow•r 11111
and loc;kt. ·Great Cai; S5200

1973 Volkswagen .S uper BH'da,
11,800, 11.t-082-7574.
_,. .

1.::=::..:.:::.=..:..:.:...::.._ _:___
1975 llrv:oln 48,000 Acrull llllot
A·t White, lloroon tnt. SH: Tom
Keolol,et~71117.

c..-. -

calion readr, tharp insktt • out.

30ol=t175-11134.

1884 Ford Van, 302. automatic,
new tires, \ tJMra '"''P inside
$3,500 firm . Sunn~ Gibbs 304112·2741 .
198SI Dodge Grand Caravan SE
Ex1ra Nice $8,500, 814·448·3237

'

t t92 Chevrotel Corw«tion Win,

wtite with ,gray ttripe,
automltic:, color TV. YCR, eHrtc
windows. ettclric mirrors, Mt::lfk:
rear INt. makes quMn bltd, like
new, 31,000 milaa , asking

$14,500, calll14-1192-6012 Ohlf

"""'

.

30ol-4175-5332.

Rio Grondt. OH Call 6!4· 2, 5 • 1980 Dodge Dlpllimot, ton, ,_ 740 'Motorcycles
milet, runa,.good, fair condition,
uking seoo, 114-182-5&amp;12 or 1ti.1 Honda Shadow 750, Great
A&gt;lt BkiO Spl: 30'x•s-xr, 1 ·t 5'11''j:e.::t..:.:982:::...,..:::::·.:11k=..:1Dr:.:Do::t1i0.::·
.: _ _ Conctllion, AUung: 11 .800, 014·

Poln1ed SIMI Siding, Gollrllu.,.
Slttl Root : se.•u Ertcted: Iron
Horllllldtl 1-800-352-1045.
AEPOIULD111G8
Foc10rr Hoa 2 All StHI 0Uona01
lllllldln011 for lrMioclioll Soli, (1)
•SdO, NOVtlr Er•Cied. WHI Toke
-o.odCoiBil;
t-80fl.511·25fl0

au

1

Dadga .Aries, lor parts.

1100. 304-1111-2102.

:.:::::.:=:.::.::::::=..,....,--1884 =•fer N. . .,......,, runo
,,lt+eu-1210.
1815 Clllwr tmilell. Good Concli·
:ion.::::;l:,:1.r.;•'.:00::·.:81;;:4';.:311.:~::."=::.;..;__

317-78113.

1995 Ho!)CII 300 4 Trax a WO w1
Winch and Running Baarda, Ex·

c-. Condition. 13700 814-448:11145

1885 Yllla011 Blutor 200- • ·
""Hior. RHI good co~~ltlon,

-·

1811 Clllbrity, ~ OOOd - k l2,40q. COli w .St ,OOO. 30ol- 71'3-~.

.

'
'

'.

.

· PLA1f1N6. ..

A800T SERIOUS ni1N6S ..

Wl-l'f ARE MOST
D06 DISi-165

lollS TIME 1lUNKIN6

ROUND'?

built, All Types. Accenibla Tct
Over 10,000. Transmission, AISOI ,
Ovem.Jat Kits, 614·2~5-5877
' ,
Full Size Fiberg la'ss TrUck Cape.
Good Cond1110n, Wl'lite, 614· 2451.

•r

=::,....------··
New gas tanks, one ton truck
1

:

D &amp; R Au10, Rlpi.y, WV. 304·312- •
::39;;:33;:;.;;o:..r1:..·800=..::2;:.73-:..::113::2»:;., __ _ :

Campers &amp; ·

.:

Motor ltomes

:

190

O'ltn,

bnace, and !!ol Wiler

~rlr;.

,.

=

1

Mus1 see to appr teilte . Only '
$3.000 Call 614· 448 ·31114 •Iter

l

7pm.

•

.

"""

Oei-Re;•llucl ta',jpoif• •
self contamed wffurna.ce, ~goo~·

19r.

a1~

~E

.

.,

BORN LOSER

·J:llt.I·Dit-1, K£WPIE::!

1074 Chateau Traveler Camper-'!
sleeps S-8 , good Cl)ndilion, ask·,

...

·.

'"r ~ " DCh lilA\ W..l:t\E::i lr.l...

NIC£ I.£.FT·

~... tlW"
~:it!eT WITH
Cv.,..Pft,jol ~!

lng S3000. 614-985-4194.

ISI71 Prowler 20 Ft 1973 Fleel· '
wood 17Ft., 1970 Blazon. 24 Ft. ~:
24 Ft . PDntoon, 1899 tkCOrmick· .
..
Roa=d:..:·Gal=~:::
· poli=·•.:8,::14:.:-4.:;4:11-.:1:.51:..:1:..
. --''\•.,

51,.,...........

14 DO a POll·

·53 lour

YtiC8IIIon lll'urealr
11 , _ onlaot
11 ·· noll
22 ~
24,__

57 .
- .,_

5I

w-··

MMk:-·· -t.Ex..........

clolllllla ...

51 -..he

25=

1-

DOWN

27 DevouNcl

21Eume
3t c.pltol - -

35F......al-h 2 ~"r.:..oe,
37Putolthe
. 3 ..... .
4 Buahyhalrdo
31 -~
........
5 a.tw··~ Colo.

...........

-llo.

8Eff

1
I """"
Cabot
111 liMp

Q

F'-TINT~

/IO'IE Cl i'ffL y

1AAN roo!

' of Queensland.
Continuing my tour
on March 5 I wenl to Buderim. north of
Brisbane. There I gave two short cliiSS·
es on defensive signaling and useful
conventions. The IaUer concentrated
on transfer bids. but I also gave advice
on a variety of other bidding topics: primarily in answer to questions.
• Transfer bids confer two major advAntages opposite a strong n•·trump:
The responder can show a game-forcing two-suiter below the level of three
no-trump; and the opener can play the
contract in. responder' s major. with
the opening lead around -to his hand's
tenaces. rather than through them .
This deal caught out one sleepy decla'rer. How should South plan the
play in four spades after West has led
the heart queen?
·
Two hearts showed at least five
spades . Then, when North offered a
choice between three no-trump and
four spades, South had an easy decisioh to make.
M~sing three aces . declarer had to
avoid a third-round heart loser. South
could discard dummy's loser on his
third club, but that had to be organized
immediately. The declarer who won
the first trick in hand went down. West
duclted the club king, won the second
, round of clubs and returned a heart.
stranding declarer in the dummy.
The careful declarers won the first
trick in the dummy before attacking
clubs . Although West ducked the first
club. won the second and relumed the
heart 1o, South could win in hand and
discard dummy's last heart on the
club jack. The spade ace was driven
out and 10 tricks were won.
Walch not only your losers but also

CELEBRITY ·CIPHER
by

Lull Campo•

~ CipMJ Cl=am. fAI a.lld from qt

&amp;ch

.s

p

ERC

N 8 H H,

tior• by IMnow pi1QP61t. PMt Md ,._...
WI h c6pher ltaldllor IIJJil'ltef. Ta.r·• a\11:.V equM P

L R 0' X

UBXUZ

ERC

NBFDNBHH
NKSLADF,
LDPDOFSVD

uaxuz
XZD

WBOBADK
XR

80

xzo
N C F . '

K R U IE

soovx

VHBEDK.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I hava a very low regard lor eynic:a. I think M'l lha ·
beginning of dying."- Robert Redford .

d fl'il
P\!::1
_ _;..:.;.:.;_.....:._;;; ldhlo4
111AT DltLl
PUUUI

~,

O Rearrange
letters of
four scrambled words
low to form fo\Jr words.

I

Ru c T E T

..

your entries. '

Mini motor noma, 1984 Njasan : 4
Mirage, dual rear wheel.a ~· 4eyl, ,:

_____

5opd. 20mpg, sleeps 5. S~.800. 1,

:I,.

SERVICES

810

_...;....;,;t:

e

"

Home

_ _l_m-=p~ro::,v:..,:e:;.,me.;.::..n;.:tll::.__~.;
BASEMENT
1' •
WATEIII'ROOFING

TH!!&gt; 1$ APf'AL.Liff~!
LOOt(

WHERE

HOW lAW ,WE

AN'1WA'(? .

SCORED C01'1PAR.E!&gt;

Unconditional lifetime ..a(lntee;,; 1
Lac-' references furnished. Call'•:

.___l1;..:0:_,:;WEOEN I.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

(114) U8-0870 Dr (1141 237·..:1

.•

--..,...,..,-------•'
c
•'

Sclvtnes You 'll Find In the

Classified Section.

A&amp;J Home Improvements- room 1i
additions. kilchen and balh ramo· t •

My husband relurned late from a town hall meeting .
"The best way to slow progress." he sighed. "is to form a
COMMITTEE'"

dating, instalf and repa., windows, : ~
deck, porches and patios. rooling t•

I MONDAY

and vinyl tiding, •nsllll exterior I!
IIUCCO, llOnt lnd brick, .da~ :.
si~alks , steps and tuC:k-pOml..... •
•ng . Far estimate calll14 ·992')

i

Encore · Empty · Major · Utopia · COMMITTEE

The

0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Et.~o. 1 •
tablilhed 1975.
· ~:

9979.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

0 .ANSWER
UNSCRAMBLE FOR

1•

SWEDEN.

I
I

JUNE10I

i

·~

Applianc:e·Paftl And Service: At• ,:
Name Brands OWtr 25 Years Ex-•t.
pe~ience All Work Guaranteed, •.
French City Maytag , 814- 446 -o: .~·

7795.

•••

-::7::~:---:--:----

,.

C&amp;C Genetal Home · Main -' ! :
tenence· Painring, vi nyl 1iding, ~ • •
carpetltry, doOfS, windows, bams. l'

.·•

~le home repe11 and more. For : :
frH estimate call Chat, 814·992·•· •·
6323.
.
~

_ _ _ _ORY_W_A_l_L--,-- '.,:

•••

Hano, fimsn, repa.r.
'·
Ceilings le.xtufed, plasUN rf:pa.ic. : ·
Can Tqm 304-675-4188.,20 years: .•
expt~ierce.
- .
• ·~
E'rl't Home

Maintenllnc~. Yinyl~

ASTRO·GRAPH

sidii'IQ. rooting. n•rior and imari-or pe!nting, pl;1lret' •lhino..room

·,

additions. Free Esllmetes, 814·

-

·.

Aon'a TV Service, &amp;peclatiljnQ in •

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

0015. wv 304-518-2!!118.'

remodeling deckt &amp; 'sidine. '35 ·

yoors npan.nco. 8 &amp; 8 Aoofing
and ContiNC:tion, 814 -112;2384 -

or 1·800 IIIII :Jt43.

Graph Matchmaker can help you under·
stand whatlo do to make the relationship
work. Mail $2.75 to Matdunaker, C/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY 10t58.
CANCER (June 21-JUiy 22) Hyou make
unexpected changes to your social plans
today. you could arouse const~nnation
among your companions and mess up

everyone's schedule.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today, guard
against the inclination to switch objec·
fives just when a goal is witnin reach.
Indecisiveness wil be countarprodudive.
.' VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 You ,might
• leave some unlinished proje&lt;&gt;ts In your
W.ketoday. Alter you drive In a lew nails,
you might lose lnteresl in the llammar.
Interesting and unusual changes could LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Try not to
be In 111ore lor you In the year ahead. For ga- at aN today, but Wyou can't~~~~
example, you might begin one projact lhe urge, restric:l your wagers lo areas
anc1 then u .. 11 aa a launching pad lor aboulwllfch you are knowledgeable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Uauglly,
somethlug8ntio.ry
G!lllll (Mily 21-June 2 0 ) - may yoo aticl&lt; to your guns once you'Ytl made
take precedence over your logical up yoor mind. However, olhanl mighl 11y
_.,np~iona today . It might be wiM to to tum you on and all ~ke a ligl11 ~witcll
kind 01 8YIIulllion. Trying to toclly.
~ up • .,..,..... ~7 1lMI AaiiO- - ~"- (Nov. 23-Doc. 211 "- you

-•«.

,_.. '*

"

are in a do·it-yourself mood today, don't
experiment with expensive materials . In

the end, your lack ol knowledge could be
costly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22""-n. 19) Strive lo
be generous with the ones you love

today. but don't be loolish . Remember
that it's the thought that counts, not the
cost ollh&lt;i geslure.
AQUAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Do not
break a commijmenl to a family member
or relative at the last minule today il
something more appealing comas along.
PISCES (Fell. 20 . .rch 20) You might
r/ot havolhe ability 10 keep secrets today.
With

a

I

minimum amount of probing , a

skilled inquisnor could find out eve!Yihing
you knOw.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 18) II you go
a hopping loday, strive to ba selective
regarding what you buy . If nol, useless
gadgets might find their way into your
tote bag.

TAURUS (April 20-MIIy 201 Tlwi world
might oo1 ~ ready lor yoor aVIIIII-gllllt
ideaa today. Try. to aava your tar-out
plana until lhe planet c:atcl!eo up wltll

you.

.

lpn. 3114-713-

'·

....

.... ,.,.

Poundalonl
13 ,
_

-

Roofing I UUI'"" c-to llorM

v.ny~que,

J.IE PREFERS TO SPSND

Budgol T..nsm.uion~ Ulld IRe' ·

Zenith atso servicing inost·Cnn.h
brands. Hou• calls, 1 · ISOQ·197~""'"

'

HE'S NOT
INTERESTED IN

tons, Htads, front CoYer. ·tnaakf( :
And Oil Pan, $50, 614 .. 48.(1519. ' .

5523.

&amp;.::il..- ... ~

Two for the price
of one

-~~98~7~2=-.•~E'"nu_o..;ne-=,B..:.oo-.ck-:W~itll~Pi,...;
.s..t ~

J990 Dodge Ram Vlin B· 250.
72,000 Milet, S6,000, Can Be
Seen At: Galhpolit Daily Tribune,
825 Th ird Avenue, Galhpolit

Ohio.

ROOT HAWG !!

:;

992..232.

512 1.

· Sliding Door, 1 ·3' Man Door,

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

Allor 5:00 P.ll .

1977
Enoi111: 1flfl4 C!Wvy, :1/4 lOti, 4-WO, 350.
_Trtnlmllslon, New Exhlloo~ Mel· aulD, ow•dliw, 21,000mi. laldld.
NewTopa, Ot+-441417,

760

3)4.-675-2949.

11193 S·10 To hoe long Bad. • .3

1186-7311
noa .. 814·1192·7478 or 114-0412879
Zop Tht Fallll Loot Up To 301
·
.
lbs., 30 Daw Money Bljck Guaran·
teet 100% Natural , Dr. Recommended. No Starwatianl Ask

Hl.87 Ford F250 314 Ton, 351
Windsor 2 wMet Drive, 8'4·446·

5300 2 WD 1288/llo.. Car- 1993 ford R•nger XLT AMtFM

.84 Ford Tempo, 4 doDr autom.rTandy BOO compu1e f, ICrHn, ic, left rear tall light damage,

~board, printer, MI·Up, for hard
dr ive on floppy disk, a.xc cond.
S&amp;OO 080. loti ol extra ditkl.

Toolbox $4,200, ft1H48·6833.

Conditioning And ·Hydraulic Hoi·

Equal vaula. (114) 367-0594
STORAGE TANJCS 3,000 Gallon
Uprighl, Ron Euans Entorpriaos.

1987 C~rolel S-10, Dark Bluo,
87,000 Milee, 2.5 Four Cylinder,
Fuel Injected, 4 Speed , Power
&amp;aku, AC, Alpine AMfFM CasMill, Topper; Bedltner, Aluminum

ASK '(OUR D06 IF
HE WANTS 10 COME
OUT AND PLA'f..

1•
~:

oond. $800. 304-895-35118.

Wrap, Spra~ar Porta, PTO
Sprockel Assemblies. Air 21145 or 30•-&amp;75-2365

St\lfta,

allor 101m. $250 OllOor'lnrlle.

camper, 1leaps 6 .. 101111y Mff con- i"
ta1ned. Detachable awning, de- i
mand pump. showftr, rang•IOP &amp; :

15186 GM(:: good conditiOn. 304-

. Opening lead: •

)

Older 7 112 horse power Evin .. •
rude outboard, runs. lhiftt ~ ,
pumps water wtll,·6t4·992-3078 ,

1982 Ford 112 ton f-150 4x4Dark Shadow Blue paint, chrome

8711-5182.

YOU'Ll. 8€
MY OFFtciAL

PEANUTS

-:::::::-'::::=--~--::-:--.-,,.-:
•
1972 Scamper 1Bfl. pull~behin«i ; .

$6,850; 35 II.F., SUUS; 25-lln·
ternatlonal dieael, 14,805; 11H aher 7pm.
6522.

ski ta
15' boat, 614-992·3071: ottO!
tllam, $250 080 or-·

t 3 2
3 2
3 2
Q J

. -

By Phillip Alder

Jow8tt'

2311 doyL

wheels, 31110.50 tires, tinted
windows, bed liner, new lual system, new complete tune-up, new
'!rant-end steenng ·and auspen ·
StOn parts, new btakH and bear ·
1ng1, 89,000 ac:1uat rrulos. Sharp
lruck $4,500. Call 614·t46 ·3814 ·

WANT YOU TO
MASCOT FOR tsllt•Ltlr:.
BEANBAGS!!

,.

wheels, radiatOrs. noor meiS, etc.

condition, greal work truck, first
13150 takas it home. 614·949·

BARNEY

3.a:

Boar trailer, adjust from jel

K
A
K
K

... COtNilllnloll

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North £111
I NT
Pass 2 •
Pafl.s
Pass 3NT
Pass
2•
Pass Pass
Pass
4•

Speed,

" "· r-

•A

Soulb

:

94 Wl ncnester 30· 30 · caliber,
made m 1968. Sanborn air com·
pressor wraeveral air tools, used

VHS Vary Good Condition. mo. 570
114·446·9330.
Concrete &amp; Plastie Septic Tanka.

•

/

• 8 7 fi
• 7 6 5 l
• ti5432
•
•
•
•

I!'Pto: 30H75-883t.

446-1238.

•

• K 54
tQJtO
• 10 9
Eut

A 9 8
A 8 7

eu•

lion, $275, 614-37V-2700.

""'Y lirda. 304~75-1584 . .

Border Collie Puppes, blla Nice.

o

U6 Hondo 2 wnool Drivo, •
Year E.xttnded Wat ranty,
379-224SI.

om-lm coo-. $3,300. 304-875· ·tnstrumentation. AM i FM Cui'

::36:..4_4:.:Ah11r:.::..7:..P.:.II:.:
.: ._ · - - - - I r.-. ~Sf&lt; lor Roc;y
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Rainbow sweeper WI anachmanta.
Washen, drwer1. refrigerators.
ranges. Ska;gs Appliances. 76 304-675-1125
Vine Street, Cau 614-446-7398, RCA enteruiintnent center wJra1-800-499-:W99.
dio, CD, catsette player, 21arge
New while gas rango S400. Used speakers, $175. 304-372-8&lt;80
2 months, Will sell S250.' 304-675- Refr igera tor s, S toYes. Washers

$95; Wuhar To llatch $95; G.E.
2bdrm. aptl., roral elec1rlc, ap.. Almond Refrigerator N-r llad-

pUances furnished, laundry room

Shophord P\lppiH,

Tu:.::"':..:Sol=:.:."::,·;:.s.n::.·::.:"..:-s·:..__ _ 1
&amp;20 .wanted to Buy
.::
•
Oueen S•ze Waterbed Wuh 6
Exira large lridoor pel caee, used Drawers , 1225; En1er1aonmen1 GRADE LOG WANTED : Daliv-

Refrigerator, washer, Or~er. 30"
Eleclric Stove,
Gas Stave,
Color T.V. $50 Each, Microwave
S.CO, Air Condirioneu·, 814-25e ·

·

oe. looks

f'UJ£)JAIR£ RIJPtJ::IER
evr 1 RAIJ ".no
nlE ~ UJCI!:".

hghls , r-oo motorcycle I&amp;I·UPI.:

Sl 700: (114) 11&lt;11-2722. -

Wul
• 7 6;
• Q J 10 9

I &lt;!UD fiA..t &amp;£.\J A

Dog I Cat Graom1ng: reaaanable
prices, 15yra 811parience. Call fDr

--------·I Queen
Size Orthopedic Manress
Set And Frame. Never Used Slill

7819.

1. . Chi¥)' Celeb:itp, pt. pb, IC.
:,~:ne int, 4 door. goad gas

EEK&amp;:MEEK

I Inch Joinler Excellent ConO•·

_7:.:79:.:5_
.

Freezer 18 Cu. Ft $100, 614·446·

Or Trade For 4 WhHI.,, 11~·

ss-

1111 Bllc:ll c~~~wr
c.- 379-2154,1M·379-2133.
,
10, 1 Owner, 38,500 IIIIH. Lllw
1SI89 Harley CuslOm 8ofttail
- . &amp;11-251-130ol.
Springer, low ...... $15,000. Sotl·
1818 B•r•tto, Good ConditiOn. ou s mqu1nea only pte..e ; t90'J;
114·441-4551.
PaCII eargo traf..r. cat"pet. •nlid;i

Scottish Blood. S100, One Pol1iar·
art~~n, 814·4-46-9290.

---I

·2mo. 185, double oven , *Drks
great SSO, Hunter green Oueen
Anne IBbles w/gtass ropt $50pair,
daJk walnut roll-top de1k wlchajr
135. 304-675-8053.

N
116-IO·..
• Q J 10 9 8

u.ooo

I 112 HP 60 Calion Magna Force
Air ComPressor, NIYtr Bean Run
Or Hacked Up To PDwers, $380,
1514-446.()519.

New Vivitar Flash tor Canon
24,000 BTU Fridgtdairt window 35mm camera, $50. S8Y8fal teet
. AIC, 220 110111, older model. works · of chain link lenc::ing w ith ,PDSI a"nd
=fii:.:M::':.:*:..:'.:00::.·.:304-e::.:::.1.:5-.:;73.:S.:..::..
.
accessories, $125. Call 304 -6]5..
Reconditioned 3423 evenings..
Appliances:
!Nashars, Dryers. Ranges, Refri· Nordic Track E11erciser, E:.:ceuent
gratort, 90 Day G~arantee! Condition, $400, 614·441-1908.
Frencn ·city Maylag. 614 ·.446·
-:
Country Fumitwe. 304·875·6820,
Rt 2 N, &amp;mltea. PI Pleasant, WV,

.

s;;r

Dinette set witn lour cha irs;. re·
chner: three P.ece liVing room su·

. 2 Bedroom House, Jeffeuon

6,.-1192-7350. No Sundar callS.

Opportunity

Mo.. 2 Bedroom Apar.,.,1 $2951
Uo., Wllh All Utilitlet Paid, Close

(114)~

1817 Yamaho FZ700. """
Brtllea I Tlroa, Looka ll Rune
Good. lnclucln Holmoll,

10r 1n real good snape. Reduct'§t
tor qu iet+. lite, 1350 . 304·77337,000
flliloo,
Tiroa,
1
· . ...
3 Thompson Contender Barratt Imports. Call RiverYiew Ktnnelt. Mini Conclhlon. U .OOO, 114·•41 · 9116.
Ooll4.
Onlwo, 1 Super 14 .357 M111 Wirh 6!4-44&amp;-1142.
tg73 15' Lund boa! wilh · 5I
SiQhtt, 1 Super 14 .44 Mag With AKC Ron Wei'-"· Tails DoCked. 11510 Thunderbird V-6. charcoal horta Cnr.ytler motor, live .~,.
Sight&amp; &amp; 1 CullOm ... Super IIIQ Dow Cl- Ror10&gt;8d, 111 Sholl &amp; gray, auto, Pl. pb, crui se. tilt $1.000. 61.·992-7410.
With Muzzle Tamer 814 · 245· Wormed. Have Parents On Prern· ~. pw, pf, P'D'Mr 1811tl, rear
;
dltrott•r. llc. auto headlights &amp; 1991 BrOn New 850 -aaki
:583=:':..·-~_;-----· I'"'~ $300 Fwm. lt4-388-9ZIO.
ditnmer $5,100 nego. 304· 882· Jet; 1PSIS Ttlilar, t2.800, 61-4-1•

Mason, WV

2 Bedroom house, lurnished, in

Counlry home in town- 1 3.14 acr·
es in Middieporl, Oh io. lovely
1988 Schull's Special Edition mobile home, 1 112 baths, carpet
throughout, plus many e11tras.

One Bedroom Apanment $200/

HCiion 48, caii614·451 ~ U12 If· AKC . Raglatered

:'"'::.8::30pm.::::;:.:__ _ _ _ _ _

noW accepting applications tor 2&amp;

8849 For Information.

.

814-992-7712.

•c:h.

River Frontage, t.3·Ac:re 10 Min
From Gallipolis, Serious Calls

Miller: 9.8 Milas To Proclorvilla
Bridqe, Two Story, Colonial Brick,
3 Bedrooms, Double Auached
Garage; House With 1.28 Acres,
185,500 , Or House With 1 Acre

erences.

Now acceptin~ applicaliona for
one bedroom apartments. ~ppll­
cationa can be picked up at Po·
meroy Cliff Apartmenls Office,

-.. ~~ . .. .., pump, • . . ,~ _
-- bl"·
-. AKC Mate 7 Uanthl Otd Cni·
adult potty chair, paint aprayet. ,..... Sharpai,814·31'i-2187.
30ol' 173-5360.______ 1 AKC miri. Pinocl1ors, two lomolfl.
:::;.;.:.:.:::::;
2-a· Op1imus IPIIkert, 100 wtn S300
one mall, $250, rea~
Ban Cannon, 110 wa tt Opt1mus June 15, accepting deposirs,
Amp, $350 080. Coli 304·812· 8t4-8411-3026.
:2::
57~7..:as::k::.;lor=..;C::111=ri~:;,·_ _ _ __l AKC Rogilltrod Bo,.r PuppiH.
3 comotory 1011 11 Btoch Grove. 304-e75-11085.

queiled; e 14-1192-7136.

7000.

1991 Fairmonl , 14•80, 3 bed·
rooms, 2 bath, all electric, ·6·
Will ProYide Quality. ChHdcare In .haute walla, heat pump, 400 aq.
My Home, Located Near Holzer fL pressure reared deck included.
Hosp.tal, C'all 614·448·8113, For 61 •-11112-SC.. or 61•·982-6134.
More lnlormation.
11Kl5 Clayton 14• 70 2 Bedrooms,
Would like To Bab)'sit infant To 2 Balhrooma, Garden Tub. All
An~ Age, large Pla~ground, Ref- New Appliances , Washer /Dryer,
Built In Hutch All New Furniture!
814-245-5887.
Oak Porch, 8:.:10 Building, 814·
Would like To
an Houae. 6' t - .C.C1..0179Aher4.

no-·

2 WINd &amp;Iter.. ch1in . . .. bolt

300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ron
EYans Ente·rl)fises, Jackson, OH
1-800-537·9528.

good Unturnisned 2 bedroom house.
condition, rurnohecl, $5500, (614) nice &amp; clean, no inside pets, d&amp;pol!t require&lt;!, 61 t-992·3090.
742-31107. .
aSk lor linda.
420 Mobile Homes
1978 Dilde, 2 bedroom, now carWill Do Babysitting In My Honit, pel, good oond. 16,295. 304-675fOr Rent
•
Flellible Houra, Experienced Daw~ 5708.

care. Can GiVe Ref.,-ences, 614·

Nice two bedroom apart,.nt in
Pomoroj.
614-8112-5858.

4 yr. .okf ponr Wfaaddte &amp; bfid...

.:.:~=--------•· -. et&lt;-1192.-e.

plus utilities and deposit Avail·
able imm,diataf~, referance1 re ·

2 Bedroom House In Centerville,

9648. 614-367-7010.

Will care for elderly in your home
ar ho1pilal. Ni ghrs Sun·Thun.
Days Mon-Fri.. Call 304·675-5795

(6 ..,__-&lt;345 aftor 5 Pll.

Window Air Conditioners, 814~
441- ?a7S.

Call For Map• &amp; Owner Finane·
ing tntormarlon. 10"11t OU Cash
Purc/'luesl
·

41 0 Houses for Rent

$82.000. 814·11118-7211.

·-·

PriYite Parking . Water &amp; Gar ·
bage Paid . Oepostt required .

11,000, 1,000 Or 10,500 BTU Coll14-440231.

and deposil;

Air, Carpon Double ~rage W•th
New Apartment AbOve. 614· 446·
1 774 Home: 614 ·44&amp;·0374 Work

dirion, New VJnyl Siding, Central

heat pump. garage, 1.4 acres(MI
L}, $70,000, 614-949-2495.

1615-C3.

Fourth AYenue. Gallipolis, 114 ·

I'll XL F&lt;o·;·in Lao- Wilh
Power Shit• .:able Winch Husky - · CIMllurilo, IIIII - A I Form Sllpplllo 114-:141Utt:l
Bru10 300 XL Mnuc:ldo Boom Log lo•d•r Mo''"led On Tlf)dem
Trailer W11 CaN Forklift Wilh 560
Pete for Slile
Bucke t And Log Forks; e14-t48·
1417.
Groom $1111j1 -Pol G -. Foo.;..;;.:.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _=·llurtnt Hwodro Bath . Julie Webb.

Sires aeg;n,;r'!l AI $10,000.

3 Bedroom Home, E:.:cellent Con·

Equipment, Reaaonable Rates,
Senior Citizen Diacounl, For An
Estimate, 814-245-5755.

Tree Trimming Service; Free Ettl·matesl 614·256· 1615, 1·800·909·

room, Bath, KIIChen, Apartment.

S25SIMo., UtiiiHoo Pold. 214

To UnN8ftily 01 Rio Grande, Slt-

Gallia Counly: Gallipolis, 2 Milas
Out Neighborhood Rd . 9 Acres

HOUSE FOR SALE

LR, DR, laundry room, two baths,

Childcare M·F &amp;am-5:30pm Aqes
2· K, Yount~ School Age Ourmg
Summer .. 3 Days per Week Mini·
mum 614-446-3857.

LB!OI 1 Bedri)Om, Largo living-

RENTALS

LaWns Uowed &amp; ·Trimmed. Have

S~n Valley Nur.sery School.

turides.

Nice One BR. . Unfurnished
Aparrmen1. Range &amp; Relrig. PfO·

.:.304-·6_7_5-'·,1-95_7_
- . - - - - - - I Racme. four bedrooms, 2.4'x28'

Profe11ional TrM Service, Stump
Removal, Free Eetlmateal In·
surance, Bidwell 1 Ohio. 814-388·

~­

388-1708, FO&lt; Sliowlng.

BY OWNER

Any odd jobs. Painting, carpentry,
repairs, lawn work. etc. 304·675·
7112.

Por1Ung.l14-441-2102.

1192-508&lt;4. Equol Houaing

Union Road (back ol New HaYen),
l O&amp;cre parcel, &amp; 2•acre parcels,.

wanted To Do

2935 ask lor Kip, Rudand.

Business and
Buildings

are evallabll on '" equ~l
Ollpt)r1Ur\lly basiS.

, . . _ 814-982-631111.

FurriiiMd Effiocjlr\Cy Apl(tmonl,
All Ulllitie• FurnlthH, Central
HHI &amp; Air Condiljoning, Prtvale
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
a.-rtmenll at Vlt.ge Manor lnd
. Riverside Apartnwu in Mlddl•
por t Fram $232-$355 . COl et•·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Informed that aft dwell tgS
~-11\ 11111

Modanuo Tr-. SUirting Ooto II
July 1, IQ98. Sotory" 1n Tho Mid

20's With E ~:callent Frtnge ~
aha. A letter Of lrnereat And
Currant Reaume Should 8a 01·
rec:lad To : Caae Managtt
Sa,a rch, ' Athens AIDS ·Talk
Force, 18 North Collett Srr. .l..
Athens OH 45701. AppliCIItlons
Will Be ·Received Until June 14,
199e . The At hans AIDS Taak
Fore: a Ia An Equal Opporlunlr~

Furnished Etnclency 2 Rooma,
Share Bath. ''151Mo. Utililltl
Poid, 807 Socond .......... OliN·

ttooFlldorol
- Fllf
·
oulljodAd
10
tnt
~
ol11188- • illgel
"'r1y ptelei .....

to-..

u.,.. Aoonno a Sicline GoJnn.

1UI OldsmoDile, Sedan. 23Ft
C1r Tr•iler ; wiH Sale or Tralfe.

+t~

• , _ Nell

•

.

.

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{

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Monday,June10,1111

Under-wear considered outer-\Near these days
Dear Ann Landen: I am a I .5-yearold air! who is writins in rcspoue to
"R.M.. in Lone Beach." He complained about how some airls arc
wearins high-rise underwear wilh
low-rise jeans. He said tlw even lhe
crudest dudes he knows don'tlike it . .
R.M. has no riaht to be critical'.
when so many guys arc now shim- jeans?
mying their pants past their boooms
Has he been living in a cave or
and showing the, world their boxer what? Doesn't he know that
shons. Tiley must think it's cool, but UNDER-wear is considered OUTall the girls I know find it crude and ER-wear these days? 1 don 't know
repulsive.
where this fashion trend is going, but
Ann, are these morons trying to I wouldn't be sutprised if girls stan·
make a fashion slatement or what? ed to show up in bras and denim
Please tell them that guys with class shons. And when I say shorts, I mean
keep their underwear out of sight a dime's wonh of fabric . Maybe we
Sign me -- Blake in Arnold, Md.
should call out the Decency Squad.
Dear Blake: I was amazed at the Things arc getting out of hand. ,.
number of teen-age girls who, like Orlando
you, were offended by R.M.'s letter.
Dear Orlando: Fashions come and
Here's one from an older reader in go, and maybe by the time this letter
Orlando, Aa.:
appears in print, low-rise jeans will
Dear Ann Landers: What's with be out and bras will be back where
that dork in Long Beach, knocking they belong. Meanwhile, remember
girls who let their underwear show on that the best-dressed females leave
putpose when they wear low-rise something to the imagination.

Ann
landers

"-AG Plll!lbTATION -Miry FI'Oit, IICOIId from 111ft, 1 "*""
...,., lftaill -"''"*•'aauxllllrlll, Pl"llntld an~
... tD IWM QI I ol the lclplo Townahlp VoluntMr Fire Dlpart...e • the ..cent lblr'd Annual Fhwflvlo..,. Flllivlol hllcllt the
... h a m In tllrrleonvllle. Pictured with FrOat It the pnMnta...... from lha left, Dale Brlcldtt, (Froet). Andy Whlt8, Eugene
'hW~ 1, Dan I.Mce,anct Gary Kerr.

Gibbs family reunion
held at Martin home
1be fourth annual Gibbs family
Nlliii011 was held recently at the
~tome of Rick and Gwen Manin,
aflddhpM. hosled by Wesley Gibbs.
, s.ty morning coffee and donuts
bepn the day, with a carry-in dinner
M I p.m .. Games were enjoyed for
youdo and adults and included sack
O'IICes; balloon losses, egg tosses and
doree legged O'IICes. Adults also played.
horw lhocs and cards. Amber Kent
load ·a solo, and family quilt was
awariled to Tammy and Mark Nutter.
A shelf and sconce set, made by
Doua Gibbs was won by Wesley
0~ who also won a pillow set
Olillde by Owen Manin in memory
lllicl honor of the families of Harold
Helen (Stanle) ) Gibbs.
Prizes were awarded to Greg
McKinney and Shane Gibbs, door
prizes; Helena Gandner, most family members present; Doug and Sara
Gibbs, travelinJ lhe farthest! Jerry
and SIIICey Cleland, most recimtly
MUTied; ' Matthew Clendenin,
younpst boy; Megan Cleland,
ouaacat girl, and Gabrielle Nicole
ynne Rice, newest baby. A family
IRe picture was presented to the host.

*

r

1be 199'7 ~union will be hosted
by Gary Gibbs, Mason W.Va.
Attending from West Virginia
were luanna and Bernard Hussell.
·Sam, Stacey, Joe, Cody, Stefanic and Summer picnic held
Aubrie McKinney, Donna Kay, .
A potluck picnic was held recentAinber and Tiffany Kent, · Gary ly by Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Gibbs, Agatha, Tim and Natosha Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at the home
King, Helena Gardner, Matthew of Joan Corder.
·
Clendinen, Will and Corey Ohlinger,
The last meeting of the year conNancy and Charlie Jr. )"cal, Franky vened at the residence of member
Musser, Carrie Stewan, Robyn~ Bar- Joan Corder. An outdoor potluck
ry, Trista and Mariah VanMatre, picnic supper preceded the informal
Theresa, Autumn and Cole Starcher, meeting at 6:30 p . ~ .
Tammy and Mark Nuller, Roy and
1996-97 President Carolyn
Cheryl Hussell, Wesley, Shane, Grueser handed out an interest surDerek and Shawn Gibbs.
vey and a list of committee appoint.. Attending from Ohio were Eric ments for the new year. The memHayes, Stephanie Houck, Bill, Helen bership then broke up into their
and Nikki Rice, lesley and Sheryl respective comminees to plan the
Gibbs, Regina Rice, Curtis Miller, upcoming year's activities.
Greg McKinney, Jerry, Stacey,
Present in addition . to Grueser
Bethany and·Megan Cleland, Angie and eorder were Ann Rupe, M8rtha
and Paul Janey, Pete, Ann, Pam and McPhail, Dorothy Sayre, Carol
Aimee Gibbs, Keith, Debbie and Adams, Shirley Beegle, Donna
Dustin Vanlnwagen, Rick. Gwen and Dyer, Vera Crow, Norma Custer,
Pat Manin.
Charlotte Elberfeld, Clarice KrautOthers attending were Jack and ter. Carol McCullough, Jean Powell,
Siegi Gibbs of Kentucky, and Doug Velma Rue, Rose Sisson, Reva
and Sara Gibbs from Tennessee.
Vaughn and Margaret Stewan.

----~---Graduation

.....

na Hartson, Jeremy, Carne and Erin,
Bill and Missy Frazer, Ryan and Brittany, Cathy Wilfong, Mike, Missy
and Beth, Cathy Erwin, Amy Perri.n
and Emma, Aaron Hockman, Craig
Hanman, Drema and Stefani Pickens.
The graduate plans to anend
Hocking College to pursue a career
in child care.

Ohio Lottery

letter.
Dear Ann Landen: 1be lener
from lhe woman who was still setting
mail addressed to her IQng-dead inlaws reminded me of a similar experience.
,
My mother died some years liJO.
One magazine continued to arrive '
with increasingly urgent messages:
" Soon you will receive no further
issues. Please let us know wl(y yoU
no longer want to subscribe." I
responded, "Because the subscriber
is dead.''
The next month, I received a
notice saying, " Please send us your
new address." I returned the notice
with my mother's new address:
"Roselawn Cemetery" complete withstreet. town, zip code and grave
location. -- Irvington, N.Y.
.
Dear Irving: I wouldn't be surprised if the mail is being sent to the!
cemetery. Have you checked?
Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angela,
Calif. 90045

·Avalanche
named ·-NHL
champions

Pick 3:
6-7-2
Pick 4:
7-G-9-4
Buckeye 5:
14-21-27-32-37

Sports on Page 4

I

SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED- The Women's
Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital has
awardeclacholarshlps totaling $3,000. Mrs. Fern
Grimm, left, auxiliary traaaursr and a member
of the acholarahlp committee, Ia pictured presenting the awarda, I to r, Amber Bennett, a
spring graduate of Meigs High School and an
employee at VMH who will be entarlng til&amp; nursIng program at Hocking Coll&amp;ge In tha fall,

$1,000; Maurlaa Nelson, a graduata student
who will continue her studies In physical ther·
apy at Ohio University this fall, $1,000; Bea
Lisle, 1 graduate of Southam High School who
will enter the University of Akron .in the fall to
major In sports medicine, $500; and Edna
Davia, an employee at VM.H who Ia studying for
her llcenaed practical nursing degree at Hock·
lng College, $500.
.

our

I

Partly cloudy tonight,
ch8nce ol stonM. Lows In
thw 108. Wed! II' j, 1*1ly cloudy, Hlghe In the

10..

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Vol. 47, NO. 32
1 Seetlon, 10 P8gM

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuelday, June 11, 1996

AGanMitCo.Nota

Commissioners
$ign CHS lease

I

r r•

Insurance·
·plan still
arousing
concerns

Document calls for medical facility

party h e l d - - - - - - - -

A party was given Saturday at the dell and Kathryn McKinney, Dan and
Cheshire Park for Stephanie Wood, Sharon Tucker, lew and ·Rhonda
J111C1u11C of Meigs High School, by McKinney, Amy, Jenny, Mandy,
her pi~Cnts, Brian and Peggy Han- Meagan and Jessica, Tim .and Jo
Dunn. Jennifer and Jacob, all relaAttending the cookout were her tives; and friends, Ron and Cheri
brother, Steven, grandparents, Bur- Werner and McKenna, AI and Don-

Dear Ann Landers: I was interested in the letters tlw appeared in your
column about the proper (and
improper) way 10 dress when eating
in a restaurant.
I am not saying that guys should
wear tuxedos and cuff links when
they go to McDonald's, but, unless
YfU have faced the hairy armpits Qf
a jock when dining out, you have no
idea what real nausea is.
Please tell those slobs to show
some consideration for ochers by carrying a spon shin in the car for such
occasions. Houston is ·a panicularly
offensive city in this regard. I know
because for.18 years I put up with the
slobs. Too bad there's so little class
there. I haven·, seen one hairy armpit
in a restaurant since I moved to Baltimore. -- J.R.
Dear J.R. : Your complaint leaves
me baffled. Have you been eating for
18 years in truck stops? I have been
to Houston many times and have yet
to encounter a single hairy ann pit in
a restaurant. Mayor Bob Lanier is not
going to be happy when he sees your

.

'

llY JIM FREEMAN
Commission President Fred HoffSentinel News Staff
man said work on the proposed
. With little fanfare.. the Meigs building could begin as soon as
County Board of Commissioners August.
~onday afternoon took action to help
The board also agreed to submit
secure the future of the county's only six projects for funher consideration
liospilal.
for Community Development Block
. The board approved a 50-year Grants.
lease with Consolidated Health SysProjects approved included:
tems Inc. on a piece of propeny ncar Chester Township street improveVeterans ~emorial Hospital in ments, $20,692; Syracuse street
Pomeroy.
improvements, $16,122; construcUnder the terms of the lease, CHS tion of a 'new Racine Fire Station,
will pay the county $150,000, or $30,000; a fire truck for the Scipio
$3,000 a year, within 30 days of the Township Volunteer Fire Depanexecution of the lease.
ment, $20,000; a meals-on-wheels
· The document states that CHS truck for the Meigs County Council
inust contract and operate on the on Aging. $23.900; Tllppers Pla_insproperty a medical services facility Chester Water District Bedford
· treating· patients and· maintain the Township water lines, $30,000.
propeny and buildings in "good conOther projects considered but not
4ition and repair."
approved were: Pomeroy/Middleport ·
In addition, CHS will also have planning, $10,000; leading Creek
ihe option to bid on purchase of the Conservancy District Zion Road
property should commissioners water line, $24,400; Pomeroy water. .
decide to sell it with any funds paid telemetry, $33,992~ Rutland Village
toward the lease credited against the street improvement, $15,130; Rutfinal purchase price,
land Township Trustees watershed
. Plans call for CHS, an organiza- planning, $10,000; lebanon Townt.ion consisting of VMH and Holzer ship street improvement. $25,364;
(::linic, to construct on the propeny a Tuppers Plains Fire Depanment fire
$1.5 million medical ans building . ho~se improvements, $18.015; Rutt)lat will house three to seven doctors. land Fire Depanment fire equipThe new facility is expected to ment, $18,614; TPCWD Gilkey
emplo_)' more thap 18 people.
Ridge water line, $29,071 ; TPCWD
COn~lruction of a medical building engineering study. $9,500.
was"proposcd soon after thi merger
, A total of 16 projects were subof VMH and Holzer Medical Center mitted for consideration.
last spring. Commissioners have
, In other business, commi~sioners :
ancmpted to secure a location for the
• Noted that county offices have
propQsed building since_last fall.
received refunds totaling $32.080.45

WASHINGTON (AP) A
Republican proposal to phase ill
medical savings accounts as a way to
· save a health insurance bill is a step
forwand but still contains problems,
a White House official said.
· "Clearly, they have a way to go,''
said Chris Jennings, the White House
spokesman on health issues. Yet, the
plan has some goqd elements and t~e
Clinton administration will study 11,
he said.
The insurance bill's Democratic
sponsor, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D•
Mass., was less open to the .ide31
rejecting it as a "travesty."
Senate Majority leader Bob Dole
announced the Republican compromise plan Monday on his last afternoon on the job. He leaves the Senate today to campaign full time for
the presidency.
·
.:
" Now it's up to the White House,
it's up to the president," Dole said. "I
dated Heelth Systems Inc. on a piece of prop- · would hope the president would say
APPROVE LEASE - Metga County Cornthis is good, this is close enough.' ~
arty naar Veterans Mamorlal Hospital In
missioners, fronl laft, Janet Howard, Robert
Dole called the GOP plan "a
Pomeroy.
Hlirtenbach and Fred Hoffman, Monday after·
good, solid health reform bill" and
noon approved a so-yaar leaae with Consoli·
said his only regret was that the Sen; Met with Clerk of Couns larry ate would not be able to vote on it
due to a change in their workers' mental Protection Agency for pollutcompensation premiums.
ing the cr,ek in 1993, d,le fines could Spencer o~ renovations to the title before his dcpanurc.
• Received a letter from former be utilizeq to develop a flood contro.l office, including a new filing system,
The medical savings account fight
painting and electrical upgrades.
clerk 11f commission Mary Hobstet- project along the creek.
,
has llcld up final action.for wee~s on
• Paid weekly .bills -of the holallh insurance bill, a measure
ter of Rutland asking-~hem to worli..-..-, t lteli!Jwed ~ cont~act with the
with state officials and agencies to Office of.the Q,!lto Pubhc Defender to $147,235 .25, consisting of 132 supponcd by both Democrats and
remedy flooding in the leading represent tndtgent defendants for entries.
Present were Hoffman, Vice Pres- Rcpuhlkans that ensures workers
Creek watershed area. Hobstetter $32,027, $5,013 less than last year.
access to health insurance when they
noted that since the Southern Ohio The one-year contract will take effect ident Janet Howard, Commissioner change or lose jobs.
Roben Hanenbach and Clerk of
Coal Co .. was fined by the Environ- July I.
Republicans themselves had been
Commission Gloria Kloe.s.
divided over the scope of medical
savings accounts.
The GOP plan announced by Dole
would allow companies that employ
50 or fewer people and the selfvery popular fireworks display, one complete the project.
derofthc year, Hockman said. Coun- collected. .
.
By TOM HUNTER
In routine financial review by ctl sa1d tl wtll monttor the depart• heard from counctl . member employed to set up tax"deductible
of the largest in the area, will begin
Sentinel News Staff
council, the following village funds ment's expenses to ensure there is not B~th Sttvers a~out complatnls fro'!' medical savings accounts from next
Plans for the village of Middle- at 9:30p.m.
Warehouse move
balances were reported for the end of a shonfall.
.
F1fth Street rcs1dcnts over the posst- January. Aides to Kennedy estimated
pori's annual Fourth of July celebraDon Vaughan of Vaughan's IGA May by village clerk Dennis HockQuestions of a possible cash flow ble closmg of the street dunng t~e ·that would amount to 25 million peotion were unveiled during the regular meeting of Mi!)dlepon Village Supennarketaddressed council on a man: general, $52,588.75; revolving problem were addressed over the Mtddleport Church of _Chnst Vaca- ple - a much bigger test than thQ
senator could suppon, they said.
Council Monday evening at the vil- planned move of its current ware- , loan, $32,763.29; ODNR Waterways, pool improvements fund. Hockman tmn B1blc School acttvtltes.
After three years, such accounts
lage hall.
. house facility one block west to -$766.33: refuse,' $27,472.26; street said that reimbursements for grants
also
would be available to people
• heard from council member
Council President Bob Gilmore, Beech Street. The Vaughan's have run maintenance, -$1 ,296.35; law on the project .are not guaranteed to
George Hollman concerns over park- working for larger companies, con•
presiding over the meeting for the into right-of-way and -zoning prob- enforcement, $2,425.82; water tank, come to the village very soon.
"We have $9,000 coming to us on ing problems at General Haninger tingcnt on an interim study and the
vacationing Mayor Dew~y Honon, lems with the move of the building, . $359.55; water, $24,646.81 ; sewer.
meter
deposit, a reimbursement from a grant in Jan- Park. Hoffman also addressed con- approval of Congress. ·
formally announced the schedule of the fonher ACE Hardware structure, $13,811 .20;
"From where they were to where
events for the annual summer cele- which is pan of extensive renovations $31,348.65; economic development, uary, and we haven't seen a dime of cerns about the handling of refuse
containers by Rumpkc ·employees they arc now; it could be considered
bration, which will be held at Dave and construction work at the Mid- $4.905.20; pool improvements, that as of yet." said Hockman.
Diles . Park along the Middlcpon · dlcpon supermarket.
$28,812.10;
CHIP
program, · · After a brief discussion, council during the trJsh pickup in the village. a step forward," Jennings said. "But
it's not a step forward far enough."
riverfront.
assured Hockman that the village is
When moved, the front of the $1 ,822.28; fire equipment,
Jennings said the White House
The theme for this year's celebra- building will be seven to eight feet on $1 ,539.14; fire truck, $12,877.85; securing a bank loan to cover the
• heard from council member
was
concerned with the procedure for
tion will be "Fab 50s on the Founh," village right-of-way, covering the mini golf, $1 ,656.79; cemetery, amount of the guaranteed grant John Nev.ille conceming lighting
with a parade, entenainment, and existing sidewalk. Vaughan said ihat $1. 144.94; recreation, $2,334.79; monies if they are notturned over to problems on the village tennis courts expanding medical savings accounts
fireworks planned. The parade will thcfamily is willing to work with the COPS program (cash flow), - the village before the completion of . at General Haningcr Park. Arnold after three years.
Kennedy · had suggested letting
form on Ash Street and begin at 6 village to find a solution to the prob- $4,412.72. .
the project..
.
Johnson of the village recreation just a few states try out the accounts.
p.m .. with an awards ceremony fol- lem, including purchasing the section
Budget concerns
Other action .
commission said that those problems
"Medical savings accounts should
lowing at 7 p.m.
of village propcny on which the· ftont
Hockman addressed council about
. In other matters, counctl: .
arc to be looked at soon.
be tested responsibly first, not reckEntertainment will begin at 7:30 of the building will be.
copccms in the budgeting for street
. • approvc:,d payment of btlls and
Attending were Gilmore, Stivers, lessly imposed on a massive scale,"
p.m., featl!ring the Dazzling Dolls'
Gilmore ssaid that the village is maintenance and pool improvements. mtnutes from May 29 mccttng
Hoffman, Neville, and clcrkltreasur- Kennedy said Monday.
and the Fab Fifties on the Founh considering either shortening the
Because of extra cKpenscs during
• approved the May mayor's repon cr Hockman . .
Show, featuring singing, dancing. width of Beech Street to free up the the winter, the street depanment bud- tn the amount_of $6,676.75, wnh
clogging. and strutting, at 8 p.m. The propeny. or selling enough space to
will remain · for the remainof that total
fines

Middleport Council reviews plans for July 4th

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1-800-516-2932

Cremeans faces citation
for trailer park violation

'

Indian artifact's owner looks
to move stone off plant site
By HEATHER SVOKOS
, for a while, anyway. .
.
Thw Charleaton Gazette
So Casto built a sled and hauled
BUFFALO. W.Va. (AP)- As the the 700-pound rock out with a trachills loomed behind him, Guthrie tor.
Casto crossed the ph,Jwed bottomland
Casto gave it to his dad. After he
of a Buffalo farm, rifle in hand. He died. the nutting stone took up resiwas likely hunting deer, but he end- dence in the yard of Casto's home.
ed up with a much bigger haul that
Last year, Casto was shot and
day in the early 1960s.
stabbed to death while he defended
· Casto stumbled across a large his son Gilbert's home in a burglary.
stone that jutted out of the din.
Gilbert Casto and his mother
To someone unfamiliar with Indi- would constantly have to pass the
an ani(acts, it might have looked like spot where Guthrie Casto lay dying,
a big old slab of dimpled rock. But and after a while, they colildn'ttakc
Casto recognized the sandstone piece it anymore. They moved away from
· as a nulling stone, a relic of an Indi• the propeny that was home to three
an village that once nestled on the generations of Castos.
tarm. Today, the same spot is being
"When we inoved out, I got everyreadied for the arrival of a Toyola . thing moved out but that rock," the
engine plant.
son said, adding that he figured it was
· Although usually much smaller, too big to move to their new digs in
this&amp;~utting stone is about 2 feet wide Poca.
by 3 feet long,.and sits about 14 inch"I tried to donate it in me.mory of
high . .Dimpled like a golf ball, Dad," he said. "The (West Virginia)
lndil,ms would use the piece as a son Cultural Center carne years ago and
of open,air moruir to grind n11ts on. tried to get it from Dad, but he did· Casto told the farm owner of his n't want to.give it up.''
find. The farmer told him to take it.
. (Continued on Page 3)
. He had wanted to get it out of the way

es

,,

sick," said Clark. whose wife and one
By PAMELA BROGAN
son arc disabled.
Gannett News Service
Cremeans blames the situation on
WASHINGTON - Rep. Frank
Cremeans. R-Ohio, was cited by the the Clarks.
"Whatever damage was d.onc,
Gallia County Health D_epartmcnt on
·was
done by them," Cremeans said
May I for violating Ohio's waste disposal laws after two of his tenants Monday. "And whatever damage
complained that raw sewage was they 've done, I'm going to clean up.':
Cremeans .said he was in the
flowing. within 100 feet of their
mobile home on propeny owned by process of evicting the couple
because they hadn't paid their rent in
the congressman.
Gallia County Prosecutor Brent several months.
The lawmaker also said " he
Saunders also is investigating
· whether Cremeans is in violation of couldn't answer" any questions about
Ohio's Mobile Home Park Rules whether he nee&lt;led a licerisc to operbecause he doesn't have a license· to ate a mobile home park.
operate a mobile home park.
.
" I have not been there for two
On May 20, Roben and Denise years, I really couldn't tell you," CreClark and their five children moved means said. "I don 't know the issue."
from Cremeans' property at 277
"My name is on the deed, or iis
Georges Creek Road because of what jointly with my wife, but I don't run ·
they considered unsanital'y condi- the daily operations," Cremeans said.
tions.
Cremeans said he receives rent
" The smell of the raw sewage from mobile homes on hi s propeny.
would take your breath away," said but didn 't know any more abo·ut the
Robert Clark, 34, who was paying matter.
SEEKING A NEW HOME- Gilbert Caato of Buffalo, W.Va., ella-.
Cremeans $135 a month to rent a lot
Clark said he was advised to
playa a . nutting atone ullld by .lndllnl yeer ago. The atone
from the lawmaker for his mobile
belonged to·c ..to's father, Guthrie, who waa murdered IN!yeer.·
(Continued on Page 3)
home.
C11to Is Melting a new h~ for the 7CJO.pound atone. (AP) . .
"This was making _everybody

g

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