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Page 08 • J'~ ti'-·J'adbl.l

Sunday, June 13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

Monday

Heed
the message: . milk
is good for you
By JILL SMITH
.

L
..
. ..
, 0 A LIPOLJS ~ Got Mt lk?,
Behond the Power of Cheese .
"MIlk. ,1t does a body good."
You ve no doubt heard or read
tl]ese advertiSing slogans._ Compared
to much of t~ advertJStng we \let
bombarded wnh every day, the drury
~ommerctals are so.m.e of the more
creauve and entertatmng. Hopefully
you. hke them because chances are
you ll sec a, lot more of th~m this
month. That s because June IS betng
celebrated as NatiOnal Datry Month.
Throughout the cou~try, datry
fanners and the profess~onal s who
work on thetr behalf Will be b~sy
spreadtn.g the word abput . mtl k,
cheese, ICC cream and other dmry
products. And the message is a ~ood
one. ?au; foods o ffer .that umque
combtnauon of bemg thmgs that not
only taste good but also are good.for
you. A nd, as recent research potnts
out.JUSt about all of us need more of

AWARD RECIPIENTS · - Recipients and Boggs, Samantha Beaver and Tyler Collins;
hosts at the recent Holzer Clinic Science standing, Dr: J. Craig Strafford, Karl Hofmann,
Awards banquet included, seated, from left, Mandy Shaw, John Samples, Adam Wadf!, Eric
Stephanie Morgan, Triciil Davis, Oani Jenks, Shuler, Jaret Boothe, Jaffrey Harris, John FarJ ulie Cecil, Sean Smith, K ~istlna .Berent, Hollie ley Ill and Or. James ·o rr.
·
.
.

these good thtngs dauy products can
bring to our diets.
Calcium is a great example U S
.
· · ·
Department of Agnculture
research
suggests that on average, Americans
are consumi ng only about6l percent
of the calcium our bodies need .
That's not good. For folks under 30,
calcium is essential for building bone
density and strength. Past that age,
calcium slows the rate of nonnal
bone loss.
Whi le the bad news is that over
one-third of us are·shortchanging ourselves nutritionally, the good news is
we can help fix that problem with a
milkshake or a frozen yogurt! Dairy
. products contai n nearly three-four) hs
of the calcium in our food supply. Of
course. before you make any swee p·
ing dietary changes, you need to seek
advice from your doctor or a regis,tered dietitian. But the point to be
made here is that when your mom
·

a ccniticatc and money award. Eac h

v"''""' '•'' IJ"'"'"'

c li me se~s the S~ lcnce awards as an

efforts in the sc ience programs. The

ments or 0 ~~ studentS and ed ucation- and. encouraged students to draw

clinic 's sctencc awards program now
encompasses high sc hoo ls from Gallia. Jackson, Me igs. Lawrence and
Vinton counties in Ohi0. and Mason
County. W.Va.
lwod uctory remarks were made
by Robert E. Dani el, the clini c
adm in i&gt;trator, who served as the

al systems.
The sctence awards prog ram hon·ors a student selec ted by the h tgh
school, based on outstandmg achtevement in sciences and a desire to pursue a ht gher ed ucat JOil .. S t~a fl ord
noted that whtl c mll auon tsn 1 rampant. the clm tc ph ystcmns recog mzed

lessons from the example set by Dr.
Charles E. Holzer Jr., the clinic's
fo under. Orr also challenged the stu·
dents to maintain a level of curiosity
all their li ves.
The clinic's science awards have
been honoring are.a Students since
1969. Through the program, the clinic has co ntributed several thousands
MillEn's Ohio plant to hike prod~ct.ion
of doll ars to area schools and students
for the beitennent o'r educati on in the
TRENTON (AP)- Beer,producA joint committee of un10n and region.
ti on will increase starting in August management repreSentat ives is workat Miller Brew ing Co.'s Trenton ing on sc hedule changes that will be
plant, a spokeswoman said.
needed for I he increased producti on.
The hrewery is one of Miller's Ms. 'Lewis said.
mos t efficien t and is help in g the par- · Uni ted Auto Workers local 2308
. ent company hand le increasing con- represents the brewery workers, who
tract-brewing production for Pabst, are to vote on th e schedul ed changes.
plant spokeswoman Sandra Lewis
Last year, the plant produced 8.7
said Thursday.
million barre!s of beer. Management
The brewe ry, which has 535 ex pec ts thai will increase thi s year to
employees, may hire as many as 100 9.3 mi llion barrels.. The increased
additional people to hand tc the new productio n planned to start in August
workl oad. The company already has is e xpec ted to boost nex t year's out-'
an adequate number of JOb candi· put to l0.5 million barre ls. A barrel
ho lds 31 gall ons.
dates, plant ma nagers said.
Starting in August, five production
Milwaukee-based Miller built the
lines· 01 the southwest Ohi o brewery Trenton brewery in the earl y 1980s.
wil l begi n operatin g 24 hours a day, It did not begin operating it u~til I 99 1
seve n days a week. The plant 's oth· because market de mand for bee r
Middleport and
er four lines will operate around the ·flatt ened during the 1980s.
Gallipolis Locations
clock for s· I/2 days a wee k.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

.U.S. fears Russian problem could undermine NATO's Kosovo plan

•

the cli nic's pres ident twice .

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, 01110

t,

.
· WASHINGTON (~) - U.S. offidals are concerned that confusion over
Russia'• role in po1twar KDsovo could undermine NATO's effort to lake an

rcp re;entativc high sc hool was also opport untty to gtve hack 10 the comOrr ·reviewed the cli nic's history
presented a check to furt her thei r mumty and recogntze the achteve- and growth over the past 50 years.

en 1ne

Meigs County's

By ROBERT BURNS
'AP l!IIIIWy WrHilr

theneed tu meet ris ing costs of cd ucalion · and matenal s. and have
;~c;eascd the fi nanctal awards for
9 rectptents. ,
. The ceremony s fea tured speak~r
was Dr. James Orr, Holzer Cli nic
pediatrician, who has been wi th the
clinic since 1959. He has se rved as ·

-Page4

'

Holzer Clinic hails area graduates
during science awards ceremony
mas ter .of ceremonies. Dr. J. Craig
Strafford, the cli nic's president, outlined the history of the scienc.e
awards program.
. Strafford said that this year "marks
30 ·years ·of Holzer Clinic honoring
areri high school stude nts for their
achi.eveme nts in .the sciences. The

Cleveland completes
aweep of Reda with
7·3 .wln Sunday

•

'

· GALLIPOLIS - Outsta nding
sciencc gracjuatcs fro m 23 area high
schools were recogmzed by ·Holzer
Clmtc at us recent ht gh school science awards ban4uet.
The. cli nic hosted the scholars.
their parents and school rcprese nta·
rives and presented each student with

Meigs Legion splits double-header, Page 4
Professional fees, Page 7
Preventing dog bites, Page 7

Today: Rain
High: 70s; Low: 50s
.
Tomorrow: Cloudy
Hlgh:70a; Low: 50s

tol\1 you to dri nk your milk because
it was good for you, she was right.
"'·
•
drury
· .armers
'
1uuay,
can •t re IY
enUrely on mom's insistence that we
drink our milk. Getting the message
through to modem consumers takes
all the advertising tricks that Madison
Avenue can come up with. 'J11at:i
why the next time you tum on the TV,
you' ll probably s~e your favonte.
sports or movie personality with that
big white mil k moustache. Remem;.
ber when you see those ads, it's not .
just the marketing hype. The. dai~
farmers who paid for those ads have
a legitimate message to share. Mil~
and other dairy products truly are
nature's most perfect tools.
'
(Jill Smith Ia the organlzatlonaJ
director lor the Gallla County Farm
Bureau.)

Sports

June 14, 1010

WcJther

~enhanded approach to emptying the province of Serb troops and securing the
return of ethnic Albanian refugees to their shattered villages.
· . NATO's plan. bued on Yugoslav President Slobodan Milasevic's agtee·
inent to withdraw his military and allow an international force into Kooovo as
peacekeepers, now must be adjusted to account for Russia's surprise dec:ision
to put troops into KOoovo without coordinating with the Western "liance.
"~ have to make sure that this agreement stands, and it cannot stand if
there is going to be &amp;pollute struck by the Russians that they are there to defend
the Serb population agllinst the Kalovms," Defense Secretary William Cohen
said Sunday.
·
·
Russia has traditional ties to the Serb&amp;, who are a minority in Kosovo. The
ethnic Albanians in the province endured months of violent explusions by·Scrb
army troops and special police, resulting In hundre&lt;h of thousands fleeing into
ileishboring Macedonia and Albania, where they await NATO's signal to
R:turn.
·
·
Cohen and Other Ointon administration officials Said·they welcome Russian participation in the peacekeepina force for Kosovo1 known as KFOR, but
they stressed that the Ruasians must not act unilaterally.
"If they are pert of (KFOR), then we can manage whatever their llffcctions
or affiliatiOM misht be with the Scrbs, ...Cohen said on CNN's "Late Edition."
He said the administration was surpriSed and disappointed the RUBSian troops
enteR:d KDsovo ahead of NATO despite an agreement not to.
· Cohen 111d other administration officials spoke optimistically of n:solving
.lhe Russia issue. They reported progress on an arr111gement that would allow
.the Russian military to play a peacekeeping role without undermining NATO
control', possibly '!Sing the Bosnia peacekeeping operation as a model.

spokesman Mike Hammer said
The lelld Russian troop&gt; anrived Saturday in the. Kooovo capital of I'Jjstina
ahead of alliance forces. On Sunday, th'e Russians blocked NATO from reinforcing British troops at the airport.
In Moscow, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said the United States
was considering giving the Russians "a mne of responsibility" under NATO
command. After a third day of talks Sunday, Talbott left for Washington.
An administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said U.S.
and Russian officials had worked out a "framework" for agreement that would
enahle the Russian troops to participate in Kosovo. Details were still being
negotiated.
Ointon and Yeltsin planned to talk again today.
.The first of about 400 American ~pel$ from the 82nd Airborne Division ci'ossed iniO Kosovo &amp;om Macedonia to join the peacekeeping operation
·Sunday, accompanied by tanks and Bradley armored vehicles, Pentagon officials silid.
·
Marines entered Kosovo this morning, with the U.S. contingent eventually
total ing 7,000 of the 50,000 NATO peacekeepers. .
U.S. fortes will patrol a section of southeastern KDsovo. Other11CC!ions will
;,
be under the control of NATO membel$ Germany, Italy, France and .Britain.
MOVING
fro th
bllrk
· The Russians had not yet accepted NATO's buic requirement for a single
m •
am
on • command, OJhen said. But he was optimistic 111 arrangement would be made,
Chinook Hellcoptor 01.
SquMiron RAF Sund.y In Pri.Un•, perhaps similar to the one used by Russia and NATO in Bosnia. Russian troops
Koaovo. Under the ~rNmant rNChed ~"" YoguelllVI• lllld in Bosnia are integrated with NATO·forces but lake orders from a Russian offiNATO, Yugo-'•v troop• •nd Serbl•n plll'llmlllt.rlea mllllt wlthdriiW cer.
from Koaovo by June 28. ·
Vice President AI GoR: ·told CBS Radio on Sunday "it would be a mistake
President Ointon and Russian President Boris Yeltsin, in an hour-long tele· to overdramatize" the Ruasia ,problem, but he conceded that it was a "step
phone conve!$ation Sunday, agreed their,generals should work out a role for the back" on Russia's palh 10 democrl!C)'.- ··
.
.
.
.
fif$t 200 or so Russian troops that already are in Kosovo while talks continue
" Russia's going throush a periOd of change risht' now 1111!1 as you know
on command arrangements for larger Russian contingen~ White' House there are differing voices inside M06COW," Gore Said

a

Board of Regents chancellor addresses Rio graduates

All Flats

BENTON RIDGE (AP) - A man killed his wife and wounded her
boyfriend before ldllina himself in outside his home, authorities laid. ·
· Hancock County sheriff's deputies said Charles E. Kennedy, 62, and
his SO.year'Old wife, Regina died in Sunday's shooting$•
Oifford Poore, 40, of Toledo, wu found on a nearby porch with a gun·

$5.50

All Hanging
Baskets .

allot wouitd. . .

.

.

.

He was taken to Blanchard Valley HOipitaJ.in FiDdlay, tlien flown to the
~-~~~~~=.;ol911io ~ospital Ia Toledo, W.h_!ftl.ho-w• ~. ~n fair
Poore told The.Bl!ttde ·for a Monday story that he was hel~na Kenaedy

$5.50
MITCD'S··
Fl.o wers a

jAepwe to move.
' -•
,
.. ~ stopped ~y her house; she !lad a personal protection order out on
him," Poore said in a phone interview ftom the hospital. .
The CIUie of the shooting has not .been determined, but the sheriff's
department said the Incident "was a result of a past and present domestic
situation,."
.
Ben10n Ridge i• about SO miles south of 1bledo.

Produce .

Cleveland teen apparently drowns
Mon~ngahalla River near Pittsburgh

The University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College held its 123rd anniversary
conimenceiJICDt Sunday. Four hundred students
received over 30 different degrees during the ceremony, held outside on the campus green.
. Roderick G. W. Chu of .the Ohio Board of
Regents served 8s the commenCement speaker
and was awanled an honorary doctor of public
service.
Otu, wlio is chancellor of the Ohio Board of
Reaenta, ltdvises the governor and the Ohio Genera! Assembly on hisher edu~tion, coordinates
t"!~111~ ~~~! O~io'aJ 79_Jl!l~lic:: and
pnvafc co'llc&amp;ea;- anel fCl!IU!illi and manages sfate
IJlPIOpt iatioila fot the 61 public colleges. He
. ~lftd ·abMealauruw&lt; ~ from the University of Michigan and an M.B.A. from OJmel.l
Univemity. He has served on the State Unive!$ity
of New York Board of Trustees and on several
advisory councils at OJmell University, including
one for its Johnson Graduate School of Manage,
menL
·
The chancellor has received numerous awards,
including one of four "Outstanding O!inese
Entrepreneurs in the World" in 1991. As a leader
in re-engineering government agencies, Chu was
one of 40 guests invited to discuss Vice l'resident

WEST BROWNSVILLE (AP)A teen-aaer &amp;om aeveland appar·
Good Afternoon endy
drowned in the Monongahela
ltiver when he jumped off a boat to
lake a swim with his cousin.
WASHINGTON (AP) _;_ The number of
Oivers searched until dusk Sun- Americans behind bars or on probation for
day for the body. The apparept vic• drunken driving nearly doubled between 1986
l Sectlo• • 1l ~
lim was identified by boat owner and 1997, the government reports.
Fred 'fait Jr. as James Owen Hard·
While the severity of punishment increased,
.arrests for drunken driving dropped during the
en, 19, of Oeveiand.
Tail, 2S, of Uniontown l!aid he same period - &amp;om 1.8 million in 1986 10 1.5
'took his cousins, Harden and Sam million in 1997 - said a Justii:e Department
Farrier, 26, of Latrobe, out op the . study released Sunday. All this occurred 1!5 the
boat earlier Sunday. They decided number of licensed drivers increased nearly- 15
percent, to 183 million.
_JiliSpotll!lru.JL._.....,_ _ _4:1!Aiti.5_ 10 jump iniO the water to cool off
1 under the Lane Bane Bridge QD the
The department's'Bureau of Justice Statistics
... ~- ' -----attributed
the decline in arrests in part to the
border of Fayette and Washington
aging
of
mQtorists,
since younger drivers ,are
counties, about 30 miles south
L.ottl't IPS
more
prone
to
drink
and
drive. In 1997, 54 perPittsburgh.
.
.
Both struggled in the water. Tail cent of licensed drivers were age 40 or older, up
8-S-9; Pick 4: .5·.5·3-4
pulled Farrier aboard, then jumped from 46 percent in 1986.
Of those convic:ted of driving while intoxicatLocto: 18-21-27-36-42-47
in to help Harden, but Tait said he
ed
in 1997, 454,500 were on probation, 41,109
K!iiun 8-S+I-2-8
also had trouble staying afloat and
were
in local jails and 17,600 were in state priswas forced to get back In the boat
,
.
ons
•.
In
1986, 270,000 people were behind bars or
,..., "' 1-.5-.5; Dall7 4: 8-.5-2-2
The search wu expected to
on
probation
for OWl.
.
0 1999 OIJio Wlty
resume today.
One upert ~d the figures reflect both sue-

HAVE IT

COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER Roderick G. W. Chu of the Ohio Bollrd of
Reg&amp;~ a Nrwd •• the
during the
123rd .Anntvw.ry Com~ oarcl... SuOO.y. ·
AI Gore's 1993 "Reinventing Government Summi~' and has been a consultant to many national
governments, inclui:ling the RIISSian · Federation,
Singapore, the IJnited Kingdom and Canada.
·
During his commencement speech, Chu asked

..,..kar

the students 10 challenge the educational ~ystem to
"f&lt;icus more on the quality of student they tum ou~
than on the quantity they take in," to understand that
their achievements have not been solitary efforts, and
to consider the sacrifices that others have made to get
them to this ppin~
"Your achleverilent today, your triumph of learning, is the product of a partnership in ·which your
family, your college. your fellow Ohioans have
joined to enable you to jpuw iitto all ~ yliu eli~) be,"
Said Chu.
"k you buk in the joy of this day, I ask that you
~ r~ palitude to your famil~ ~ fac·
ul!y by COIISidenPI the duty that comes With your
achievemen~" Chu aWed "Reppying oar families
and our society is a duly." •
Chu also asked graduates 10 reach out lo thase students that are not yet here, and to help families understand the imporla!lce ofhishereducation to the future
of not only their families, but also their society.
John. Deaver Drinko, a partner in Baker and
Hosteder of Oeveland, one of the largest law firms
in the nation, was also presented with 111 honorary
doctor of public service. Drinko, a 1943 grad\We of
· Marshall University, is a strong suppor1er·of Rio
•Grande, spcci6cally the Madog Center for ~Ish
Studies.

More than 500,000 drunken drivers on probation, in jail

Sentinel

-·Co.

cess in getting "social drinkers" to become more

said they drank every day and two-thirds of them
Said
they had used drug$ in the put.
responsible and failure in dealing with the hard-One-third of offenders on probation and ·
est-core group of drunken drivers: those who
two-thirds of those incarcerated reported previhave a serious problem with alcohol.
Without alcohol treatment programs, "these ous DWI sentences. Eight percent of those on
are just drunk drivel$,waiting to get back on the probation reported three or more earlier DWI
road," said 'ICrry Schiavone, president of the offenses.
.
For every 1,000 DWI arrests in 1997, 347
National Commission Against Drunk Driving, a
private group. "Jail and probation have never offenders were .jailed or placed on probation up from 151 in 1986, according to the study. The
cured the drunken driving problem."
.
Forty-six percent of DWI offendel$ on proba- punishment rate· continues a trend that began in
,
·
tion were in alcohol treatment programs in 1997, the late 1980s.
In its survey based on interviews with the
according to the government study.
Support for Schiavone's view that the half- offenders and record-gathering, the Justice
·
million drivers under correctional supervision are Department concluded:
People
convicted
of
DWI
are
about
five
"hanl-core" includes:
,
- About half of DWI offenders in l~al jails years older, better educated and m.ore often white
reported consuming the equivalent of about 12 than those convicted of other crimes. Men
beers or six glasses of wine in the hours leading account for over 90 percent of DWl offenders in
up to their arrest. About half of those on proba- jail.
- DWI Offendel$ in local jails w~re serving
tion said they had been drinking for at least three
sentences
of II months on average, while state
hours befoR: their arrest.
prisoners
had
sentences averaging 49 months .
.~e-third of DWI offendel$ on probation

Computer experts brace for new work week after virus mutations

After Hours
Pediatric Care

To apply, stop by

·

By BRUCE MEYERSON
bug, which uses guile like Melissa to spread and then inflicts a
AP Bu•In.a. Writer
Chernobyl-like attack on individual machines.
NEW YORK (AP) ·~ Computer systems managers were
Worm.Explore.Zip targets computers using Microsoft Winbracing for new digital infections today. w])en workers log on dows o~rating systems.
and download the latest e-mail virus to bombard the Internet.
The virus arrives in a person's e-mail box as a timely reply . ·
The Worm.Explore.Zip virus, whi~h is transmitted via e- fro!ll an acquaintance, inviting the recipient to open an
mail and ruins files on infected computers, has struck tens of attached file that will unleash a two-pronged attack: It spreads
thousands of machines, but so far hasn 't spread as widely as by sending a copy of itself to the address of any arriving e-mail
the Melissa virus that hit in late March.
and destroys files stored on a person 's machine, including
IM fears remained Sunday that the outbreak may have fall - · ·those created by the popular programs Microsoft Word and
en dormant over the weekend with most people not working, Excel.
·
and could start spreading again when employees return tOday
and switch on their computers.
avqldlna
Another concern, anti-virus experts said, has been scattered
reports of new symptoms bein&amp; detected among infected
machines, a sign the bug may be more complex than first By The Allaoclatecl Preu
How to avoid the Wona.Explore.Zip virus:
thousht. said Mark Zajicek, a.member of the Computer Einer- .
• The virus Is transiDitled via e-mail and ruins niCti on
gency Response Team at Cunegie Mellon University in Pi.ttsInfected computen; II appHn to rome from • friend or
burgh.
. The Federal Bureau of lnvestiaation wu trying to .track acquaintance and readl: "HI ()'our naiDe)! I received your
down the aut~or of the virus, but the agency declined to pro- e-mail and I shall send you a reply ASAP. Till then, take a
look at the attacbed zipped doa."
vide any updatea on the probe over the weekend.
• The meuqe Is hana1•• unlea you open the nle
It took only days earlier thi• •prlna for authorities to trace
attached tci the e-mail. Use caution Ia openlna any
t~e diaital footprinta of Melissa and the Chernobyl virus that
attaehed nle, and report una11111I or au1plcloua meuqa to
struck in late April.
·
The virus, first detected June 6 in Israel, did most of its your e·nlall provider or ayllt~ ldmlnllltntor.
• If your co•puter Ia Infected, repaln are avlll1able ·
damage on Thursday and Friday, infecting computer systems at
several bill corporations includina AT&amp;:T, Boeing, General from several online alta. For nample, the Sy•antec
AntiVIrus Resureh Center hu 1 PI'OII'IIJa to reNove the
Electric and even Microsoft.
virus.
More Infonnatloa II avlilll* at:
Nervous calls to computer support linet dropped off sharply
this weekend after two frenzied days of combat against the http://WWW.Hrc.COm/IVCMtw/lfllt---.z.html

nearest Firstar branch

· or calll-800-274-4111.

Tips tor
the
Woan,Emlqm ZIP viM

··Hours:
.

Monday'- Friday
5:.30 p.m. to 10 p.m.

.,

Bank Without

Saturday

9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

The Children's Clinic
2801 Jackson Avenue
Point
.. Pleasant, WV 25550

Sunday
1 p.m, to 7 p;m.

.

I

'
•

•

'

'•'

'

'

·~

�,
Monday, June14, 1999

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Estli!Jfi.sfiu( In 1948

..... 2

Coerced dive-rsity in colleges boomer~ngs

The United States ~partment
of Education has
111 Court Sl, Pom•roy, Ohio
a way to sidestep the
designed
740 882-21110 • Fax: 11112·21 !17
growing number of federal
court decisions that affirmative
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
action -- as intensively pursued
by this department ·- is unconROBEFIT L WINGETT
stitutional.
Publ..h•r
News.of this strataaem was
firs( reported in the authoritaDIANE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
live weekly, the. Olronicle of Higher Education:
Controller
Otnlrll Manager
"Colleges would be in legal jeopardy if they use
SAT (SchOlastic Assessment Test) or ACT (American COllege Testing) scores as the primary basis
1'Jirt Sendtwl iaat.-rrtH ,.,.. to ctt. «&lt;lifwtnam ,...,_ CJn • , _ . , , . , .
for admissions and financial . aid decisions,
~- Ot.- ) per-F' %ool. ·
· according to draft guidelines that the U,S. Educal)pool _ _ ,.,,.,.,..., . . llioy ... - - -, _ • ....,....,
....,.,., Mfi4A)'flml phontJ ,.....,.,, . , . . , • dlll8 lltiMN'•. IIIIIIM•JN
lion Department's Office for Civil ·Rights is circu. - « ,_.,, - lo: ...,_,. llw o4lfof; lbe Senllnel, 111 Coult Bt,
lating among college officials." ·
·
. ·
I"G II OJ, Olrla 467WI; CHi FAX to ,..,_.1167.
The coercive bureaucratic device to keep in
mind is "disparate impact." The department's
" Resource Guide: Non-Discrimination in High
Stakes Testing" \Yams:
'
"The use of any·edu!!8tionaltest which has a
significant disparate impact on members of .any
particular race, national origin or
sex is discriminatory, and a vi(llation of Title VI and/or Title IX ...
' · .lf·lhe very ·rich are similar to you and me, as some woull! claim, the skies unless it is educationally necessary
over American will be rather qui~t next New Year's Eve and New Year's and there is no practicable alternaDay.
.
·
. tive form of assessment .which
That assumption might he made based on a survey of the very rich, more. meets the edlicatiomal institution's
. than half of whom indicated the.risk of computer failures make air travel an needs and would have less of a dis- . ·
parate impact."
unpleasant prospect on those days.
·
A college will have to meet the
The survey respondents are talking about Y2K, for Year 2000; computer
bugs that are expected to cause at least some ~mputer systems to crash or nigh burden of proof that it is not
malfunction becauae of an inability to recognize the new millcmiium 's num- discriminating when members of
any of . !hese particular groups
bers.
While airlines and regulators are, of course, hoping to hav~ the risk great- score poorly on the SAT or ACf
ly reduced or eliminated by that hOliday weekend, you might say the very tests.
The federal Department of Edurich didn't get to be where they are by taking needless chances.
For definition purposes, "very rich" or "affluent" refers to those indi- cation -- an ardent advocate of
viduals with annual incomes of at least $225,000 or ~ts of $3 million, "diversity"-- will be the arbiter of
such ·gossanier· terms as "edut:awhich places them among thewealt)iiest 1 percent of the U.S. population.
· Thll population 5egment includes I:J.S. Trust customers, which sun:eys tionally necessary" and a permissi-.
the very rich annually, adhering to that principle of modern marketing that ble "alternative."
A c,o!lege failing the departsays y(Ju cannot know enough ·about your customers. Y2K questions were
ment's diversity' test will lose fedamong those asked in 20-miriute interviews.
In all, ihe survey showed the very rich are ovel"oo(helmingly optimistic (94 eral funds and will also be subject
. percent) about the future and, with the possible exception of. the New Year's to accusaiions ·at large of racism,
sexism and other biases. , . .
.
. weekend, confident' about U.S. prospects.
Yet, as the Chronicle of Higher ·
Nearly 60 pe.rccnt agreed with the sllilement that "the United States has
been, and
continue to be, the world leader," and one-third expressed Education notes: "Many college
officials say standardized tests are
· confidence that the best is yet to come.
Oh, they do have cona:rns, just like the rest of us. They fear the next gen- an essential part of the admissions
eration ·will have a more difficult time financially than their g~neration, and process because the wide variation in. the rigor of
high schools makes.ii difficult if not impossible to
most fea.r that stocks. will be less gene~ous.
·
They fear also that global economic troubles could cause a U.S. reees-

11o.--

Death NOtices

llondey, Junl14, 1 •

lilly Ntrt H.motr

11w-- ot,..,. to.,.Dl,..

A message from the
very rich: Be optimistic

g·. r e a t . d e b a t e :..

sandstone vsa

lim.

estone

They have great hopes too. No less than 89 percent indicated that tech.
woman ·for House 'Speaker Jo ·Ann
. noiCJtiy is the industry offering the greatest potential for financial ·success. a, JOHN SEEWER
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg. "Do
And they believe strongly thattlie best way to assure·this success is by start- AIIOdlded Prell Writer
·you really need a. state fruit? Do you
ing your own business.
·
.
LIME CITY, Ohio (AP) - Rick
·really need a state dirt?"
·
•
.Rdlecting an attitude that bears further analysis, !hey ranked ·"well-to-do Tallini knows enough about rocks to
Still;
the
politicians
haven't
family" at the bottom of a long list of factors for achieving success. "Ambi- say with certainty what the state's
Oberlin, where sandstone . 1997, .
to
tion" and "willingness to work hard" were at the top of the list.
most valuable rock is.
stopPed trying. Pending are pro~
In other ways as well, responses to questions constituted an endorsement .
"Everything around here .is lime- is prevalent, asked Rep. Bill Taylor, lion. Sandstone sales equaled 2.5 . als for a state fruit - apple, stale
soil- Miamian soil, md state crop
of what mlny consider to .be all-American attitudes of optimism and faith stone" said Tallini, who ea.rns a liv- R·Norwalk, to help make it the state million tons and $39 million.
.·
. "We're the limesione capital of -com.
that in the long run obstacles will be overcome.
ing blasting limestone from quarries. rock.
'The students went to the State- the world," said Dick Wasserman, a
The Ohio Farm Bureau, fearing a
Such as Y2K. While most feel it will cause only minor problems, some ''We're lucky to be sitting on this ·
house in April to' make their pitch state highway womr who makes backl.~ .from (armets, isn't choosare lakingjust-in-i:ase precautions. Not just avoiding New Year's travel, but· rock."
·
sure that the limestone Ing sides in the state crop debate. .
planning to stock up onf?od a~d water..
.
.
, That'~ why a lawmaker'Hropos- before the House'
State
·
Government
(J
hio
legislators
is up to standards. .
"We have. corn growers as· well
And nea.rly half those mterv1ewed said they were takmg extra.cash out of at to make sanqstone . the official
Committee.
are introducing ·"Umtst()ne·· is the aa soybean growers and apple grow- ·
the bank, which. suggests a possible answer to that eternal question of . · state rock has him laughing.
"They had a
foundation of Ameri- crs," said Farm Bureau lobbyist
·
"That's absurd," Tallini said with
whether they .are different from yo.u and me. ·
chance to see how
more and more ca." .
. Kcitl) Stimpert.
The U.S. savings rate is below zero. While ordinary Americans do have a chuckle.
He points out that
While these bills are generally
· assets, such as cars and houses, on average they do not have .extra cash. They
Ohio's legislators are introducing · government works," bills attempting to
·
Taylor
said
.
.
''They
tJ,
•
t
.m
most
sandstone
does·
met
with humor, some legislators
have debts instead.
more and more bills attempting to
did
a
nice
job."
estgna
e
an
l!JJ··
n'l
meet
the
state's
think there are more important
·designate an official state something
There is no argu· cial s(Qte something standards. . .
things 10 do. Rep. Darrell Opfer, Dor other.
. or other.
"It just .crumbles Oak Harbor, said he won 'I support
. Sometimes .they do it to promote ing, though, that . in
away," he SBid.
the frivolous ideas.
their home districts. A few years the state's western
half
limestone
is
the
dominant
rock.
Taylor
said
he's
got
nothing
Sometimes, though, the frivolous
11y The Auocllded Preea • ·
· back the Lake Erie perch failed to
From
Columbus
to
Lake
Erie
there
.
again~!
limestone
or
its
supporters.
comes firsL
Today is Monday, June 14,the 165th day of 1999. There are 200 days left become the state fish because south"If they would have asked me
While lawmakers in the Senate
in the year. This is Flag Day.
em ·Ohio lawmakers wanted the are rich lime deposits, while the
aevcland area and Ohio's eastern first, I probably would have done it waited to debate the $17.1 billion
.'
·
bass.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
·
education · budget on Wednesday,
On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress in Philadelphi~ adopted the '
The polka meta similar fate' in an half are composed of sandstone and for them," he said.
shale.
The
sandstone
bill
and
others
like
they first approved a proposal bon- •
Stars and Stripes as the national.flag.
' ·
attempt. to make it the state dance.
The
milewide
quarry
that
gave.
it
are
getiing
a
rocky
response
from
oring
Hom Appreciation Week.
On this date:
Rural lawmakers partial .to square
this
northwest
Ohio
village
its
name
legislative
leaders
who
want
to
put
a
They voted in horse speak, of
In 1775, the U.S. Army was founded.
,
dancing stomped out the Polish
sells up to 10,000 tons of limestone moratorium on handing out the course, with i "n-y" or yeauh"
In 1841, the first canadian parliament opened in Kingston.
dance.
- tealirtg 'the patience of Senate
In 1846; a group of U.S. settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the Republic of
. Other times the.ideas are suggest- that is hauled away each day to . state's official aeal ·of .approval.
"If you do one, what's to stop President Richard Finan.
Califomi..
·
ed by a school group. That's how the male~ concrete for roads and bridges.
State statistics show that 77.5 you from doing a state everything," . "If someone brings' up a jackass
In 1940, German troops sandstone bill came about.
.
million
tons of limestone was sold in said Cheryl Burchard, spokes- appreciation bill," Finan .said, •• it's
Students aJ Firelands High
entered Paris during World War
II.
In 1940; hi German-occupied
Poland, the Nazis opened their
at
concentration
.camp
Auschwitz.
in Hawaii and conducting "These ate lucrative projects for the home state. I
lillr J~~ek And,r80n
In 1943, the U.S. Supreme and Jan Moller
high-altitude atmospheric think some folks feel that this is also productive
Court· ruled schoolchildren·
It is the U.S. Senate's answer tO the· movie
reaean:h.in Alaska. (Aiaa- research."
"
could not be compelled to salute "Groundhog Day," iri which Bill Murray wakes
ka and Hawaii are the
What else could expllin why the defense budthe flag of the United States if .up each morning to a repeal of the day before.
home states of the top ·get is being used to fund $175 nlillion worth of
doing so would conflict with
Republiciut 81\d Dcmoc- breast cancer rcself!:h? Or $75 million worth of
Every year around this time, senators begin
their religiou~ beliefs;
rat, respectively, ofl the research into Pr:ostate cancer? Nobody doubts that
debating 'the 13 annual appropriations bills that
In 1954, President Eisenhower fund the government.
Semite · Appropriations thefre both worthy projects •• but vilal to the·
signed an order · adding the
Committee.)
national defense?
, .
Every year, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., brings
words "under God". to the up a series amendment to cut out the pork-barrel ·
In all, McCain count·
Memwhile, serious readiness problema remain
Pledge of Allegiance.
spending inserted by his fellow senators. And ed nearly $S billion worth of po~k; not a lot in a throughout the military. Although service momIn
1982,
Argentine
forces
sur,
every year, the amendments are voted down with budget of nearly $300 billion, but still signi6cant ben get ,a 4.11 percent pay hike In the new budget,
• Thomu Ctntndler Haliburton,
given the shortfalls of manpower and equipment the nucleu carrier USS Enterprise was recently ·
. Culldlan Jurlllt and rendered to British troops on the a big, bipartisan thud.
Only· 16 of tOO aenators could muster enough in several key areaa. All ·the jtemB on McCain's deployed to the Persim Gulf with 800 ftwer lbl. humorl8t (1108-1 8811) disputed Falkland Islands.
In 1993, President Clinton courage to take on the big ,barons of the Appro- list were things that were not requested by my . dlen thm it needs; the Army complai111 thu five
chose J~ Ruth Bader Ginsburg, an advocate of·women's rights, to serve priations Committee by voting to cut the pork. branch of the service, nor included in the p!Ui•. ofllllO,divilionadon't have enough majora, c:1p- ·
on the Supreme Court.
.
.
·Even liberal Democrats --who love to rail against .dent's budgeL McCain also left off my· Items lalns, ll!tkcra or JIUIInen, and bnly 26 percent 6f
Ten years aao: House Dcmociats chose Richard Gephardt 10 be majority expensive projects like the B-2 "stealih" bomber inclu~ on thl: Pentagon's "unfunded priorities" Air~ piloll have re-enlisted beyond their.~~
Iader and William H. Gray to be majority whip. Former President Reagan •• couldn 'I be bothered to v* down a list of pro. list, .a wi•h-Iist sent to Congrea each year of renuemce aareement.
. .
. ,
Je&lt;:Cived an honilrary knighthood from Britain's Queen Elizabeth II. Actress jec.., that contains a litde something for everyone. items they'd like to have i~. the~:• money left ,
Perhlpl the most egregloua eXImplc of waste~
Z1a Z1a Gabor was.arrested for slapping a Beverly Hills motorcycle patrol·
Last week the target ·was the bill to fund the over. '
·
.
. ' .
·.
. ful speitdina waao 't even included in McCai~s ·
mm.
·
·
.
Department of Defense, which just last month
tdc:Cain'~ list is limited to ltem1 inserted into ~mendnlent, because. it found Ill way onto thc
five yem aao: Prcsidellt Clinton unveiled a $9.3 billion welfare reform was ·fortified with ~13 billion in "emergency" the defCIIIC bill by IICIIaton themselves. without Pentaaon '1 unfunded prioriliea lilt.. In a deal
plm. Al:ademy Award-winning, composer Henry Mancini died in Beverly spendinli to fund the war in Kosovo. Flush with the benefit of congrealon.. hearlnp. To pay for worked out bclw- the AJIP!opiatiolll Commft·
Hlll1, calif., at aae 70. The New York Rangers won hockey's Slalilcy Cup Victory in the Balkans -- and with the Pentagon these projects, the speading bill cull $3. I billion tee arid the Air For&lt;:e, pnefalt will aooi1 have
, for the .first lime in 54 years, defeating the Vancouver canuclcs.
doc for a funding boost in 2000 after a decade of that waa suPPQied·to be spent on rcadineu and authority to J,ue 1ix brand-new Gulfltrearn II.
One ·ycu qo: The Chic:aao Bulla clinched their sixth NBA champi- stagnant or declining budgets -- many senators m. .mization -- unalamoro~ stuff like fuel and execulive jell! to ferry top Ina around the globe:
··
The deal could COli S~OO inllllon.ovcr the next HI
just couldn 'I restrain themselves from using this spare parta. ,
OIIIhlp, dete.lina the Utlh Jazz.
.
, .
Tbday'a Blrthdaya: Actrcsa Dorotl)y McG~ire is 83. Actor Gene Barry is as 1ft opportunity to fund pet projects.
llll~ there is a -mlngly cndlelll array of years •• and yet the Air Foree woil!dn't ev'cn owri
There's the $3 million being spent on "phyto- research projects, obscure weapons ll)'s~&amp;ma and !he pllftca. BUt an amendment by Sen. Thlll
16. Fonner White House news secnetary Pierre Salinger is 74. Actress Marla
Gibblll Ci8. AciO( Jack Bannon is 59. Roclc sing~r Rod Argent (The Zom- remediation. in arid lands," and the $1 million items completely unrelate~ .to the national Hltlcin, D-low1, to cancel !he leue authority was
bie~; AlaiDIIt) ia 54. Real estate develope.r Donald:Trump'is 53. Rock musi- going to the Texas Regionallnslitute (or Environ- defense. Many of these pi:ojeciS may .have merit also voted down ~undingly.
:
clm Alan White (Yea) is SO. Actor Eddie Mekkais 47. Actor Will Patton is mental Studies. Don't forget the $3.S million on ·their flee ·• but the senaiors who put them
It's been said 111any times thu ihc fi.rst cuual~
. 45~ Olympic gold-medal speed skater Eric Heiden is 41. Singer Boy George going to the "Smart Truck" initiative (maybe the there never bothered to find out by exposina them ty of war Is truth, If thu'atl)c case, then the se&lt;:•
.·
ond casualty surely mU.t be
rcstrlirit: · •
· 1.1138. Rock m..iclm Olria DcOarmo (Queensryche) is 36..Actress Yasmine folks in Detroit need a little competition) or the to normal budgetary scrutiny. ·
an
election
issue,"
says
a
McCain
staffer.
Coprrlfiht
t•,
Uri"*'
llrndleet..tnc.
"It's
·Biecth 1131. 'Jennls player Stcffi Graf is 30.
·
millions being speni on eradicatingthe tree snake

'&gt;•

InC.

Cooler weather coming to Ohio

nna

Thought for Today:

I.

"When a man
is wrong and
won't admit it,
he always get~
angry."

Roll out the (pork) barrel ... again

nscal

'

A 22-year-old Bidwell man was cited on charges of joy riding, reckless operation and expired· tags after a Salem Center man reported his car
missing early Saturday morning.
·
Richard Fuller, 1241 Morgan Lane, allegedly took a 1996 Pontiac
belonging to Jack Ervin, according to a Meigs County Sheriff's Office
report.
.

Middleport man}"ail

A 28-year-old Middleport man was jailed early Sunday rnoming on
charges of driving under·the influence, driving under suspension, driving
an all-terrain vehicle on a public highway and no eye protection after
deputies of the M~igs County Sheriff's Office observed him driving al)
. ATV on .state Route 7.
· · Vaughn Mitchell, Vine.Street, was placed in the MiddlePort Ja,il pending an appearance in Meigs County COurt:.
,
A.

...,..
,
'

nn oun cements • . :_
•

Log Jam advance sales stop Thursday
Thursday will be the final day to purchase advance tickets at the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce for the Log Jam Festiyal to be held at
Po~land Friday evening. Advance tickets are $20, while tickets will be
available at the gate for $25. Performing at the festival will be David Lee
Murphy, Kenny Che~ney and Toby Keith. The chamber office will be
open until 7 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday.

·

Immunization .clinic .set
' .The Meigs County Health Department will offer·an immunization clin-'
ic on Thesday, from 1 to 7 p.m. Every child must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian and the child 's immunization reoord must be presented. Those planning to attend the clinic are asked to.call before com-'
ing since it could be canceled because ofan air conditioning problem in'
the building. . .
·
'
·
·

:r-----_:__ _.....,.__ _ _ _..,.----'-, Fugitive rapist nabbed after
Bloodmobile slated ·
:
~e ~erican Red Sros8 Bloodmobile will visii the Meigs County
exchange of gunfire with police Sc~1or
·'
~~~~~ns Center m Pomeroy Wednesday, 1-6 p.m. To be a blood'
...

..
; Ro:!fE!"E~NIAL BARN - Thtlll · ba m..._~ocaltlh~thon Fhl atwood
, '
'
n r
m.roy, wa• ~ Y pa n .... W
I
0
ctn' tannlal logo by the atatt'l on• and only Blc.ntennlal bam
·\:lnt•r, Scott Hagan, Hagan, of J•ru..l•m, Ohio, bagan work on
• • bam over tht Mtmorl•l Day WMk•nd. Tht bam II own.cl by
-HOI'IICI Karr of P~troy.

0

1

: The .Daily Sentinel ·
(USPS 213-'161)

. Comm..ll)' N.......per.HQkllop,lne.
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Fridty, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
·~
Ohio Valley Publishine Compuy. Second cl111
.. • poolap pild at Pomeroy, Ohio.
. ill•ber: The Aloociated Pnu IIIII rbe Ollip
1

'

,

t

'

New.,. Aacicillioa.
· ·. .uwlii I Send addre11 COI'I'ICiitw' to The
, Dilly Strlinel, 111 Coun St, Pomeroy, Obio
.,769.

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. &lt;huJIIU ...y be implememed by clllr!ainadto
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aublcriptlon.
'

Meigs

0 1 81

OIUAND, Maine (AP) - ,A fligitive who .was convicted in absentia of
child rape was caplllred after a chaotic
shootout 'with sheriff's depoi\ies whO
learned of his whereabouts from view·
ersof''America's.MostWanted."
Though seriously wounded,
Richard Burdick, of Hinsdale, Mass.,
refused to surrender after the shootout
.eariy Sunday mOrning. He was finally
captured after tear gas was fired into
the hOmeless shelter apartment he was
·staying in, and was taken ict a hospital.
A Hancock County sheriff's
deputy, Jeffrey McFarland, was shot
tw.ice in the chest during the struggle,.
whichtook·placeintotaldarkness.He
was wearing a bulletproof vest md
· was not seriously hurt.
"It all look·place in a matter of 30
seconds," · said Brian ~acMaster, .
director of investigations for the attorney general's office "It was total
· chaos." ·
'
·
Burdick, 49, faces possible life
· imprisonment in Massachuaell5 for

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded
eight calls for assistance: Saturday
and · Sunday. Units resporiding
included:
•CENTRAL DISPATCH'
9!54 a.m. Sa'urday, Gaston Road;
. Albany, Arthur Koenig, O'BIJness
Memorial Hospital, Rutland squad
assisted;
10:30 p.m. Saturday, Nbrth
Fourth Avenue, Middleport, Kim

multiple counts of child rape and indecent assaillt. He was CQnvicted two
days after failing to show up for his
trial in Northampton, MIISs., in February 1998. He was accused of assaulting a girt, oow 17, from the time she
was 10 until she was 13.
.
When they disappeared, he md his
wife,. Gail, Burdick, left behind a suicide note that immediately made
police suspicious. It claimed they had
ljl]ccn their own Hves in anguisl\ over
falae accusations.
MacMasler said the shootings happened after the sheriff's department
received several calls froni 1V view·
ers whO saw Fox's "America's Most
· Wanted" Saturday night. ·
Burdick and his wife had been liv·
ing for nearly a year with his wife at
' H.O.M.E. Inc., a ·hOmeless shelter,
MacMaster said.
·
They were staying in a room above
a. renovated bam · and tending the
grounds of the shelter in exchange for
the use of the "??m.

donor, m~Ivtduals must be at leastl7 years old, weigh 110 po,unds 01;
more, be m good general health and not have donated 'blood within the
past 56 days.
·

Advisory canceled
LeadingCreelt q&gt;nservancy Di5!rict has canceled the boil advisory for
customers on State Route 143 from Bailey Run Road to and including.
Wolfe Pen Road.
·

Grange to meet
Star Grange 778 will hold its fun night and first degree practice Satur· ·
day. A potluck supper will begin at 5:30 p.m. Members are reminded to'
take items for the food bank.

.

Gunf"Ire at ' rap·
· concert
prompts pani.cked stampe·de·

LEN,'\. Miss. (AP) - . Gunshots rang out near the end of an all -day rap
concert, provoking a stampede as audience members scrambled for cover. .
One man suffered a dislocated shoulder when he was trampled in the panicked exodus Sunday night, said Te.resa Malone, who owns the ambulana:
.service that provided paramedics for the event.
.
About40 people were arrested for alcohol possession and driving under
the influence, said Linda Smith, a Leake County sheriff's ·deputy.
The concert, headlined by the New Orleans'rapper Juvenile, was attended by lO,QOO people at a drag racing track called Lake Slipaway, northeast
ofJackson.
·
The weekend stampede marked the second time in recent weeks ihat
logs
weekend calls
!njuries have occurred at the track. On Memorial Day, seven people wer~ .
Armstrong, Veterans Memorial HO&lt;S- Hill Road, William Snyder, VMJ{, IRJured when a stage collapsed under the weight of the crowd during a'biki'pital;
Central Dispatch squad assisted.
ni contest.
RACINE
11:50 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
7 p.m. Saturday, vplunteer fire
Police Department, Harley McDondepartment
and squad to Smith
ald, treated at the scene;
7:54 a:m. ~unday, South Third Ridge Road, motor-vehicle accident,
Avenue, Vemagaye Sullivan, Holzer Estherla Powell, St. Mary's Hospital
. via helicopter ambulance, Central
Medical Cenler;
1:52 p.m. !;unday, Rocksprings Dispatch squad assisted.
Rehabilitation Center, Allen Ball,
VMH· .
Holzer Medical Center
'
9:50 p.m. Sunday, Palmer Street,
Dlodlarxet Friday, June U:
Dan Follrod, Deanna Cook, Linda
Middlejlort, F,aye Wallace, HMC,
Bennett, Doris Grueser, Florence
Middleport squad assi~ted.
Stephens, Rosie Wood and Angela Stew. . . POMEROY .
12:3:3 a.rri. Sunday, Wel.chtown an.BllD11S: Mr. and Mn. Jamie Baker,
a son, Jlcl&lt;sol\.

EMS

7

.

TPeat Oad like royaity

·with a

OQ"

FI'OZen Cake.

llilduu'&amp;el s.turilay,JDDt U:

Kayla Libenuorc, Charles Watson,
Pearl Epor, Mrs. Roben McNeil and ·

. ·
...

daughter, Loree· Heath ,and Mrs. Jamie
Baker and son.
l&gt;llciiiJ1Iel Swlday, June 13:
Patricia Hughes, Randy Camink and
~n. David Ratfeny and daughter.

IIIAILSUJSCRIPI'ION

c-.,.

lnddelltelp
13 \\1Deb. ......... ;.................S27.30
26 YJeeb ••• ~...................,... .$5].82

52 Wecb ........................... .SI05.56
O.llldo MrlpCouol)'
13 Weeb ........................... .$29.25
26 \Yaeb ......................... ,•.$S6.68

52 w.eta ...................... ,..~IO!I.n

Reader Servtces
Correcllon Polley ·

·

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Today In History

Miranda J. 'Moon, 16, of HenderSon, 'W.Va., died last Thursday, June to;
in an automobile accident in South Side, W.Va. She was a sophomore at' Pt.
Pleasant High School and member of the Country Oassics. 4-H Oub of Pt.
Pleasant, She wati born June 22, 1982, in Hillsboro, Ohio.
Moon is survived by tier mother, Connie Moon of Greenfield, Ohio; an
aunt and uncle, Joe and Joyce Carlisle of Henderson, W.Va.; grandmother,
Norma Moon of Hillsboro. Ohio; three sisters, Eran Johnson of Greenfield,
Ohio, Courtney Johnson of Greenfield, Ohio, and Kaidynne Carlisle of Henderson, W.Va.; one brother, Ro.nnie ~nzer of Hillsboro, Ohio; and three
uncles, Buster, Rocky and Dakota Moon of Greenfield, Ohio.
Moon was preceded in .death · by her grandfather, Norman Moon, and
.great grandparents, Harry and Gertrude Hopkins.
·
·
·
Calling hours are scheduled for this evening trom 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the
Deal Funeral Home in Pt. Pleasant. Services are planned for Tuesday at 11
a.m .. at the Deal Funerai·Home. Burial will be Tuesdsy in the New Market
Cemetery in New Market, Ohio, at2:30 p.m. with Rev. John McCaskey officiating. ·
,

By Th• AaHCial.cl p...,. .
.
The cold froni will bring much needed rainfall across Ohio along With
cooler more seasonable temperatures Monday, forecasters said.
ijighs will be ·75 to 80 with the showers and thunderstorms. Lows
Melvin Leroy Moore, 62, of Leon, W.Va., died Saturday, June 12, at
tonight will range from 45 degrees in the north to 55 degrees in the south..
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Pt. Pleasant. He was a·retired stcehvorker from
By Thesdsy highs will only range from 65 degrees in the northeaSt to
Ravenswood Aluminum in Ravenswood, W.Va. and was a former member
75 degrees in the southwest.
'
of the Steelw\).rkers Union Local 5668 in Ravenswood. He was .bum Match
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta11, 1937 in Charleston, W.Va.
·
tion was 94 in 1994, while the record low was 44 in 19~9. Sunset tonight
.Moore
is
survived
by
his
wife,
Donna
Wood
Moore
of
Leon,
W.Va.;
one
. be at 9.:01 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday 'Yill be at 6:08.a.m.
son and daughter-in-law, Ted and Stephanie Moore of Leon, W.Va., one
·
·
Extended forecast
daughter and son-in-law, Cindy and Shawn Darst ofHendersQn, W.Va., four
1bn~t: Mostly cloudy. A chance of shOwers and thunderstorms until
.grandons, Nathan, Brandon and Dillon Moore of Leon, W.Va., and Christian
midnight. LOws around 60. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
Darst of Henderson, .W.Va.; and one granddaughter, Mackenzie Darst· of
40 percent.
· ·
·
·
· Henderson, W.Va.
• . Tuesday: Partly cloudy and significantly cooler than recent days.
· Moore is also survived by three brothers and sisters-in-law, Jack and
· .
· · ·
• ·
Highs .in the mid 70s.
Carol Mooie of Pliny, W.Va., Arley and Nelle Moore of Alum Creek, W.Va.,
. Wednesday: Becoming cloudy with a chance of .shOwers during the
Robert and Hope Moore of St. Albans, W.Va., and Marvin and Jean Moore
afternoon and night. Highs in the lower 70s.
.
.
.
.
of North Ridgeville, Ohio.
Thursday: Mostly Cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in the mid
Moore·was preceded in death by his parents, Edward and Orpha Moore;
50s and highs from the upper 60s to the lower 70s.
a ~ister, Anna Hartwell; three brothers, Thomas, Owal and Oley Moore; and
Friday: Becoming partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s and highs from
four grandchildren..
,
the upper 60s to the lower 70s.
.
·
.
Calling hours will be held Thesday from 7 p.m, to 9 p.m. at the Deal
~uneral Home in 1'1. Pleasant. Services will be held Wednesday at the Deal
FLeuneraWlHV:omRe.at Mlpk.mLam.
Bunbe·al wi!J beffiin. the Moore Family Cemetery in
on, • a. ev. r e.
rt.w•11o Cial,e. · ·

will

:::p.~~O:r:fl~Jo~~i~re:t-:~;~=~~~~~~, Theyfearthattaxeswillrise · T h e

\..~=~
·· ~~W.VA.

KY.

,.

· N~ Hentotr I• a natlonallr renowned
authOrity on the Flm Amendmant • the ,....
of the Bill of Rlgldl. ·

Miranda J. Moon ·

~

· Ffll MiNTIN..

Troopers from the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported two accidents in Meigs County, Sunday. No injuries were report•
ed in either wreck, both of which involved Athens residents.
·
Betty J. Green, 10745 State Route 691 in Athens, was tra¥eling northbound on Twp. Road 20 in Salisbury Twp. when the 1993 Nissan Altima.
she was driving slid off the right side of the road into a ditch while trying
to round a comer. The vehicle sustained moderate damage to the front and
passenger side, but was driven al"•Y from the scene. Troopers cited Greer(
for traveling too fast for the road conditions.
•
Wendy C. Coen and her passenger, John D. Coen, of 7480 Williams
Road in Athens, avoided injury yesterday when their 1994 Ford· Explore(
was struck by a falling limb on State Route 689 in Columbia Twp. Coen
was headed south of SR-689 when the limb fell off the tree and hit the
.front of her vehicle. Coen thtn ran over the limb, which did moderat&lt;
dam;~ge to the front and underside of the vehicle.
·
•

Darlene Louise McKinney, 85, Cheshire, died on Sunday, June 13, 1999,
at HolZer Medical Cenier.
,
.
Arrangements are being completed by Fisher Funeral Home.

•

'mUR PAREHTS ARE
. WQ!tklt6 UPTO TIIEJR ·

No one Injured In two Sunday accidentS.

Darlene McKinney ··

I ...,.,.,..;.. llw,...· I •

•I Colurilbuo ls2'172" I

WE DON'T FEEL

Estberla Powell, age and address unreported, was transported to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va. via helicopler ambulance after a
motor-vehicle accident on Smith Ridge Road near Portland SaturdaY.
evening. She was listed in good condition at the hospital this morning. :
The Racine Volunteer Fire Department and squad responded to tho
scene along with the Meigs COunty Sheriffs Department and the Gallia~
Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol. An jiCCident report was not avail~
able as of press.time this morning.
•

Word has been received of the death of Velma B. Long, 8S, of Columbus,
formerly of Meigs County. She died on Friday, June 11, 1999 in Columbus.
She was the daughter of the late Elmer and Mae Nicholson Harmon.
Surviving arc a daughter and son-in-law, Ada and Ed Bumgardner,
Columbus, and several·· grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held on Thesdsy at10 a.m. at Jerry Spears Funeral
Home in Columbus, with byrial to follow at White Oak Cemetery in Scipio
Township, with viewing preceding internment.

''J'ueaday, June 15

Mi.

Woman Injured In wreck

Velma Long

Ohio weather

compare applican.., on grades alone." An A aver- pared students will be admitted and will eventual' ·
age in one high school can be equivalent to a C in ly flunk out The unjust and inaccurate lesson for
these twice-abandoned students will be that they
a leS. ·competitive school.
· It is true that overly rigid reliance on standard- do not have the inherent capacity to make the big
,
ized tests is unfair to individual applicants of 11 leaaues.
Arthur
Coleman,
an
official
at
the
Department
race or gender who have shown the ability . to
J&gt;Yercome poverty or other ·obstacles -- even if of Education, ISSUrcs m~ that theae purportedly
their scores are not of the. highest rank. BUt this beneficent "guidelines" are only intended to clu~
individualized approach -- while used in some ify "aettled legal and anti-discrimination princi•
.
.
college admission procedures ·to balance SAT or pies."
However, over the years, Norma cantu, who
ACT scores -- is very fa.r from qniversaJ:
And deploying the blunderbuss of "disparate . helds the department's Office of avii Righls, hu
·impact" to judge whether a college violates anti· made it clear that.she intends to expand "diversidiscrimination laws can result in the discrediting ty" by just about any means necessary.
And, in a recent speech, Secretary of Educaof any usc of standardiz¢ admission exams.
tion
Richard Riley heartily endorsed these puni. Of course, these tests ckr have a disparate
. impact on youngsters who have bCen abandoned tive guidelines for "Non-Discrimination in High
in dead-end elementary and secondary si:hools. I Stakes Testing."
Colleges, he .urged, should go beyond suC:h
· have been in rnany such schools in low-income
white, black and Hispanic neighborhoods where measures. of merit as test scores and grades:: I
many students have been so badly prepared for aaree J!tey should do more -- on an individu81
higher education that their college l!dmission basis -- than just look at scores. But Riley:'s
departn'tent would essentially so degrade scores
scores will indeed show 'a disparate impacL
· But if these new Department of Education. as to ultimately exclude from higher education
·
guideline$ grow teeth and prevail, admission stan- the very students it so wants to advance.

dards will become largely open-ended. The unintended consequences will be that markedly unpre-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

...

�-

The D.aily

Sports

SenJin~!

Monday, June 14, 1999

Indians' sweep...

Monday, June14, 1999

stands Sunday. He lasted six innings
on a steamy afternoon that quickly
drained him , giving up three runs on
seven hits . Greg Vaughn hit a solo
homer, his fourth in eight games, and
Brian Johnson had a two-run single.
" I' ve always loved playing here,"
said Burba, who attended Reds
games as a boy. "It's still a thrill to
come back and play here."
Burba singled in three at-bats and

Meigs, Somerset notch victories in Am.erican Legion twin bill..
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correapondent
Meigs and Somerset sp lit a doubleheader in American Legion baseball action Sunday afternoon at
Somerset.
Meigs won the first game Il - l
behind a 13-strikeout performance
from Jeremiah Bentley.in the second
contest the hosts scored four runs in
the sillth inning to erase a 4-3 deficit
and post a 7-4 win.
·

First game

Adam Cumings got the second
inning of the first game started for
Meigs with a double to left-center
field . He came into score when Jesse
Lillie singled.
Meigs increased the lead to 2-0 in
the third inning, Adam Williams led
off the inning with a single, he came
into score on a two out single off the
·
bat of Cumings.
'

Meigs blew the game wide open
in the founh inning with six big runs.
Meigs took advantage of two walks,
a hit bauer, two errors and singles off
the bats of Heath Rothgeb, Cumings
and Linle.
Somerset came back in the bouom
of the founh to score an unearned run
to 111ake it 8-1. Sole and Wiseman .
had back-tq-back singles and Sole
scored on a two out Meigs error.
But Meigs added two more in the
.top of the sixth. Bentley and
Cumings both singled, and Mollohan
grounded into a force out for" the
innings first' out. .Little hit a sacrifice
fly to left to score Bentley. Mollohan
then scored on a Jamie Baker single.
Meigs scored the games final run
in the top of the seve nth . Nick
Dettwiller walked and later scored
on a Rothgeb double.

.

Bentley picked up the win in an
excellent pitching performance. He
scattered four hits, struck out 13 and
walked one. Cumings was perfect at
the plate with three singles and a
double. Rothgeb added a single and a
double. Little and Williams added
two singles each. Bentley and Baker
each added singles.
· Fields the first of two Somerset
pitchers was the loser, giving up 12
hits, striking out seven . and walking
three. Fields, Cains, Sole and Foster
had the Somerset hits all singles.
Second game
.
Meigs jumped out on top early in
the second game to a 2-0 lead.
Rothgeb singled and Bentley followed with a double. One out later,
Mike Mollohan singled to give
Meigs the 2-0 lead.
Somerset tied it in the bottom of

the inning on a single by Sole, a walk
and a Meigs error that allowed both
runners to score.
Meigs took a 3-2 lead in the third
on a triple by Bentley and a Cumings
single, but Somerset lied it in the bottom of the inning on a · double · by
Bika, a Meigs error and a passed ball.
Meigs added another run for a 4-3
Lead in the fourth inning. Derek
Johnson reached on an error, and he
later scored on a Rothgeb single.
But Somerset pulled the game out
with their big four run sixth inning.

Cains, Isham and Wiseman all had
singles in the inning and Shaefer a
double.
Caines the winning pitcher, gave
up six hits, struck out eight and
walked four. Shaefer had a doubfe to
lead Somerset, Sole. Bika, Caines,
Isham and Wiseman had singles.
Rothg~b. the· losing pitcher "for
Meigs, scallered six hits, struck out
I 0 and walked one. Bentley had a
double and a triple to lead Meigs.
· Rothgeb added two Singles, while
Cumings and Mollohan each singled.

Meigs (2-2) will host Belpre ··
Saturday at Meigs High School
.
lnni11 tpfei::;·Orst 111Df
Meigs ................ 011 -602, 1~ 1·1- 12-2 .
Somerset ............... 000- 100-x= 1-4-2
Bentley (WP) and Cumings
Fields (LP) , Sole and Isham ,
Richley (5)

Cincinnati was never more apparent.
One has a lot of money. stars and
wins .•The other has a lot of envy.
Manny Ramirez .hit his second
homer of the series and Dave Burba .
" beat his former ' team once again
Sunday, leading the Indians to a 7-3
victory and three-game sweep of the
Reds.
It was the first sweep in three
series between the intrastate rivals.
The Indians have won the last five
games- all at Cinergy Field - for
a 6-3 overall advantage.
Cleveland has a payroU that 's
more than twice as large ($69 million
to. $33 million) and has been to the
playoffs in each of the last four
years. Cincinnati hasn 't had a win.

Eastern Dl¥illon

IDa

l!' L 1:&lt;1.
New Yo&lt;l&lt; .......................... Jl 25 .58.1
· Boston .................................. 34 11 .m
Toronto ................................. 28
Baltimore ..............................25
TI!Jllpa Bay ........................... 2~

J6
36
37

,
Cf'ntral Dl"lslon
CLEVELAN0 ... 1................ ~ 40 20
Chk~o ....... .-....,......
. .... 30 29
Detrott ............... ............... 27 J5
Klnsa~ City ....
. ........ 26 _34
Mjnnt:sora ..................
..23 , ]7

,438
.410
.403

.061
.508
.435
,4H
.383

,
Wtstun Oivlsl·on
Texas ................................. Jb 25 590
Oakland ............ ............... J.\ 29 .5.12
Statile ........................... _..... J I 30 .508
AiJaheim ........ :...................... 29 3J .468

Saturday's scores
,

down the final backstretch, then .remaining.
.
·
eased off the throllle of his Ford and
"Sitting as a fan, I'd hate to see a
crossed the finish line .505 seconds · race like that," Jarrett said after his
second victory of the season. " But
ahead of the NASCAR poster boy.
Jarrell took the lead from Gordon where I was sitting, there couldn't be
on the 53rd lap and was never seri- · anything better than having an
ously challenged the rest of the way: almost perfect race car and no cauFans began leaving with 25 laps lions to interrupt that. " ·

With the win; Jarrett stretched his
Winston Cup lead over Jeff Burton
- who finished t)lird - .to 66
points. He is 349 points ahead of
Gordon, who remaine4 sixth in the
standings.
"The car that deserved to win
won the race today," Burton said.
The only real racing came early,
resulting in 12 lead changes involving seven drivers.
Gordon was running in front · of
Ernie lrvan and Jarrett after 50 laps.
Following pit stops by all the leaders, Jarr.ett roared into the lead oit the
53rd lap and was never seriously
challenged.
"For 90 percent of the race, I
couldr\'t have asked it to do any
more," Jarrett said. "I could run

(AL ••· NL)

• N.Y. Mets 4. Boston 2
··Baltimore 5, Atlanta 0
• Chicago Whitt" Sox 8. Chicago Cuh., l
· Oak land 4, Los AngelesJ
• Philadelphia 7. Toronto 2
: Tampa Ba)' 5. Mon11-nl 3
. CLEVELAND 4, CINCINNATI .l
, N.Y. Yankees .~. Aorida 4
, HouSton ~ . San 01~10 2
• Pinsburgh 9, Kllf1SM City 8
' Minnesota 8, MliWnukee 6
·Colorado 8, Texas 7
' Anaheim 4, Ariz.ona J
: st. Louis 8. Derroit 7 (14)
. San Francisco 15, Seatde II

Sunday's scores
(AL &gt;s. NL)
CLEVELAND 7, CINCINNATI 3
Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 0
TOJonto 7. Philadelphia 2
Pittsburgh 8, Kansa5 City 4
N.Y. Mt:ts 5, Boston 4
Minnesolil at Milwaukee, ppd .• rain
Detroit 3, St. Louis I (10)
Houston 4, San Di~go I (susp., 7',, inn.,
emergeney)
Co\ortldo 4, TexaS 2
Florida 8, N.Y. Yankees 2 ,
Oakland 9, Los Angeles 3
San Francisco 8, Seattle 4
Chicago White SOx 6, Chicago Cubs 4
Baltimor~ 22, Atlanlo I
Arizooa J. Anaheim I. 1.\)

high, low, I could pass people wher- ·
ever I caught 'em."
There were two more pit stops
along the way, but Jarrett and
Gordon were so far ahead that their
positions never changed. They ran 12 the rest of the afternoon to the cha..
grin of approximately 160,000 fans
who watched under d.ull gray skies. · ::=
· "The car · was just incredible," ,.
Jarrett said. " That's the only word I
know how to describe it. "
&lt;::
Wi_th no caution flags, all the cars :;
were able to run wilje open the entire ~
race. There was little reason to fear ~
bumping or causing a wreck. The !
field soon was stretched out, single ;.
file, with eacti car basically just .; :
.d oing laps around the track.
;:
'"

Pittsburgh (Rilcllie 5-4) :IT LoJ Angeles (K .
Brown 1-)), 10:10 p.m.

AL leaders

Minnesota (Milton 2·5) ac BoJ~on ( P. Mttrtir.ez
11 -2). 7:05p.m.
BA1TfNQ: T. Fernandez, Toron! o, .401 : Jeter.
Anaheim (Belcher "-~) a! Toronto (Wells 6·51, New York, .380: R. Pitlmeiro, Teu11 .. J62; Thomas.
lill
7:05p.m.
.
Chicago, .349; Surhoff, Baltimore.. 349; Lorton,
Oakland (Haynes 4·5) at CLEVELAND (WriBht . CLEVELAND, .341 : M. Ramirez. O..EVELAND.
I '·~
4-.\) , 7:05p.m.
..H 9.
9
SeaU\e (F. Rodriauez. 1-0) at Detroil (Moettler 5·
RUNS : Lofton, CLEVELAND. 60; R. Alqmar,
IO''l
6}, 7:05p.m.
CLEVELAND, 58: C. Delgado. Toronto, 5.5: Jetrr,
1t
Tu n (G lynll 0-0) :u New York (Cone 6· 2), 7:35 New Yorlt, 54; Griffey Jr., Semttle. 54: M. Ramirn ..
p.m.
CLEVELAND, 49: Dumam, Chicago, 48.
Kansas Chy (Fuuell 0-3) at Bnllimore (J .
RBI: M. Ramirez, CLEVELAND, 72; Griffey Jr .
John1on 0-1) , 7;35 p.m.
Selllt\e, 64; c. Dell;ado. Toronto, 57; ' R. Pnhneiro,
9' ,
Tampa Buy (RUJic 1·3) 11.1 Chicago (Bald~ln 3-5), Te~eas, 57; Jull.ft Gonzalez. TeJ.III, 53: Cil nseco.
t4
,
· Tampa Bny, 52: M. Orslonez. Chicogo, 50.
·8:05p.m.
!4
·
HITS: Jeter, New. York. 89: Su~hoff. llalti_more .
17
89; T. Fernandez. Toron1o. 87; M Ordonez. Ch1Cil~O.
79: U.fton, CLEVELAND. 79: Beltran. Kansas Ctty.
78': M. Ramiru, Cl£VELAND. 78.
E•stem Division
DOUBLES: Greu, Tuns. 22: Offerman. lloston.
Ium
.
L Ed. !il
21 : T_Fernandez. Toronto. 21 : C. Delgado. Toromo.
Ad11n1a ................................. J7 25 ,597
19: Jerer. New York, IS: SGreen, Toronto. 18;
New York ..........'.................. JJ 29 .5]2
4
Thonw , Chicogo. 18.
4':
Philncklphia .......................... J2 29 .m
TRIPLES: Jeter. New Yl)('k. 7: Olferman, Bosron.
10' ~
Montreol ............................... 2.5 ~4 .424
6; Febles. Kan sas Ci!y. 5: Dnt\lon, Kansas: City. .S:
IJ ':
Fl orid&lt;~ ................................. .24 :19 .J81
0\Jrhom. C hi ca~o. .S: Encarnadon. Ottroit, 4: Randa.
Konsos Ci1y, 4; Lofton. CLEVELAND. 4: D.
Cf'lttral Division
Martinez, Thmpo~ 8uy, 4.
'
·
Houslon .................................\7 23 .617
HOME RUNS : G!iffey Jr.: St:nttle. lJ: Qm§eco.
4':
Chic:ugo ......... ,.......................\2 27 .l42
Tampm Bny, 2J: R. Pnlmwo. Texo s. 19: Juan
CJNCINNATI....................... JJ 21 5)4
5
Oonzalt&lt;z. Texas. t7: C lkl!"do. lOronto, 16: M. ·
PimburJh ...... ....................l. J2 29 .52l
s ·~
Rumircz. C L EVELA~D . l6i Pnlmer. Detroit. 16:
1'·
StLouis .............................. JO .ll .492
McGriff, "I:ampa Bay, 16.
.·
II ' .
426
Milwo~t' ......... ·I· .......... 26 JS
STOLEN BASES; T. G6odwha , l Cxns. 27:
Stewnrt, Toronto. 20: R. Alomar. CLEVELI\ND. '19;
Wuftrrn Dl\'kion
, Lnflon, CLEVELAND. 18:'Encnmacion, Detroit. 17;
Arizonn ................. :..... .. .J7 26 .587
I. Rodriguez. TuiiS. 1~: Vizquel , CLEVI:iLAND. 14.
Son Fra.nci3co .... ,..................\5 28 .l56
2
PITCHING (8 decisions): P. Martilh!z. 8Qslon.
1
Los A.n&amp;eles .......................... 29 ~i .47l
11 -2 .. 846. 2.16; Burba, CLEVELAND, 6-2 .. 750.
Colorado ...................... ,........ ~8 31 .415
7
4.48:. Collt!, New York , 6·2, .150. 2.79: Mussi n:. .
II '·
San Diego ............................ 24 36 400
Baltimore. 8-.1, .727, .3.80; Nagy, CLEVELAND. 83, .727, 4.08; Fre-d Garcia. Seattle, 7-J, .700, 4.73: J.
Tonight's games
Weaver, Oerroi1, 6-3, .667, .1.17: Colon, CLEVENew York (lsrinshausen 1-1) M CINCINNATI LAND, 6·3, .667, 5.61.
.
(Villone 1-1), 7:05p.m.
•
STRIKEOUTS: P. Martinez, Bo~ton, 14.\: C.
Chic:aao (F~rnswor1h 2-0) it Milwauk« Anley, Anaheim, 77 ; Burba, CLEVELAND, 67:
(Woodard l-5), 8.0l p.m.
DWells, Toromo, 67; Colon. CLEVELAND. 6J: 0
Atlanta (Perez 4-2} at Hou11on (Hampton 7-2). Hernandez, New York; 61 ; Sele, Texas , 61.
8:0l p.m.
SAVES: Weucland, Texas, 21 ; Percival, Anaheim,
Mon1re:al (Smith 1-0) at St. louis (Oliver 4-4). 18; M. Rivera, New York. 17; R. Hernandez. Tan~tt
8:10p.m.
Bay, 17: Taylor. Oakland; 16; M. Jackson. CLEY~·
San Fmncisco (Estes J-4) at Colorado (Brownsoo LAND. 13: Mna , Seaule,.l 2
0.1),
9:05p.m.
medico!
Rorida (De.mps1er 3- 1) at Arizona (Johnson 8·2),
NL leaders
10:05 p.m.

NL standings

»:

.Tuesday 1ames

, New York (R:ttd 3-J~at CINCINNATI~Tomko 23). 1:0l p.m. .
,
j
Cbicqo (Lieber 5· 2) at Milw.aukee (ADboU 1-$),
8:05p.m. .
Atlanta (Giavine J-7) at Houston {Holt ()..6), 8:05
p.m.
Tonight's games
Montreal (fhurman 2-3) St St. Louis (Bottenfield
Minnesota (Radke 5-:'i) at BostoR (Cho 0·0), 7·05
9-3), 8: tO p.m.
.
p.m.
San Francisco !Brock 5-5) at Colorado (Bohanon
~ante (Fassero 3·7) at Detroi! (Cruz l.O), 7:05
7-ll. 9'0l p,m.
porn.
Aorida (0. Springer 2· 7) til Ariwna (Anderson 0Texas (0!\d: J-5) a1 New YOrk (lrnbu 1-3), 7:]5
1), 10:~ p.m.
p.m.
.
Philadelphia (Ogea 3-4) at San Dif'go (Clement I·
Kansu City (Appier 6·4) 111 Dallimore (Erickson'
7), 10:05.p.m.
2-8), 7 : 1~ p.m.

Jarrett jets away from ·rest of field to claim victory in Kmart 400
been in," Jarrett said Sunday after
winning the Kmart 400 in 2 hours,
17 minutes, 56 seconds -the fastest
NASCAR Winston Cup race this
season.
Jarrett was so fast that the race
soon turned into. a rout. He led Jeff
Gordon by almost 15 car lengths

Tuesday's games

AL standings

.

By HARRY ATKINS
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) None of the _drivers wanted the race
to be decided by fuel efficiency.
Dale Jarre.u took care of that.
He ran wide open all day and won
on sheer horsepower.
"I believe that's the best car I've

Tampa Ba~ (A ivaret 2-4) at Olicago (Snyder 6l), 8:0l p.m.

Baseba ll

That made the sweep a linle more
meaningful for a team that has the
major leagues' best road record at
22-7 .
"It's special because it 's in-state
and it .is a rivalry that! think is goi ng
to get more intense ove:r time," man ~
ager Mike Hargrove said. '"We wanted to ·come in here and do the best
that we can because we're in a·(pennant) race, too . That was the thing we
couldn't afford to take our eyes off
of.''
Burba (6-2) provided the signa. ture moment to last year's series, hit- .
ting a homer against the team that .
traded him for Sean Casey on the eve
of the .season opener.
Burba, who grew up. in .nearby
· BAREHANDED CATCH
Cincinnati S!ICond Cleveland Indians' Omar Vlzquel in Sunday's all·
Springfield rooting for the Reds; had baseman Pokey Reese (3) makes ·a barehanded Ohio series closer at Clnergy Field In Cincinnati,
about 15 relatives and friends in the catch of the toss from first baseman Sean Casey where the Indians' 7·3 victory gave the North
(left) to make the second·lnnlng out on the Coast nine a sarles sweep. (AP)
(See SWEEP on Page S)

'

keep going oultherr and giving them
just two innings."
The left-hander threw 30 pitches
in the first inning alone, when the
Indians sent eight batters to the plate
but only scored twice and left 1he
bases loaded.
Ramirez. who completed a threegame suspension for charging the
mound last week , hit a two-run
homer in the third, a 423-foot shot
that put the Indians ahead tp stay. He
leads lhe majors with 72 RBis.
Avery·· gave up four hits, five

walks and four runs m only 2 2/3
innings .
Robeno Alomar had a sac rifice
fly and an RBI double as the Indians
pulled away. He and shonstop Omar
Vizquel turned a double play on
Barry Larlc.in's grounder to end a
bases-loaded threat in the fifth .
The Vizquel -to-Aiomar combination produced three double plays in
the last five innings .
·
Notes: Steve Karsay pitched the
final three innings for his first save in
pro ball. ... Cincinnati 's Eddie

Taubensee extended his hitting
streak to 16 games with a ninthinning single .... Indians third base.man Travis Fryman was back in
Cleveland on Sunday gelling his
lower back examined. Spasms and
stiffness have caused him to miss the
last seven games .... In his ·Iast two
starts, Avery has given up I 0 hits,
eight walks and II runs in only 3 2/3
innings .... Relieve r Mark Wohlers .
wi ll begin a rehabilitation assign-· :
ment Tuesday with the Reds' Class A
farm team in Rockford .

Scoreboard

Indians down Reds 7-3, earn
sweep of weekend series
ning record since 1995.
"They 've got All-Stars at every
position . You look at the scoreboard ,
and their statistics look like zip
codes." manager Jack McKeon said.
" They" ve got a guy coming off the
bench (Ric~ie Sexson) who wouJd .be
second on our team in RBis.' '
The Indian s have the maJor
leagues' most dangerous lineup, 'hitting a combined .298 while averaging 6.65 runs per game. The sweep
moved them to 40-20, the first time
they've been 20 games over .500 this
season.
The Reds lobbied for a six-game
series with Cleveland after their
three games at Cinergy Fjeld last
year drew 144,917 fans, their best
gate in 24 years: This weekend's
series auracted 141 ,325, roughly half
of them Indians fans.

(Continued from Page4)
upbraided fans who booed him for
failing to run out a grounder in the
sixth. when he was tired anlf nearly
fell coming out of the bauer's box.
Burba patted his butt as the boos
gre w louder and raised his fist to
acknowledge a group of fans cheering him sarcastically behind the
Indians' dugout
"I just wanted to let them know
you can yell at me, ~ -· • I'm not going

to sit there and let you make fun of
me . I have feelings, too," Burba said.
"When the fans get on me, I always
retaliate . But it's always in fun."
Burba, a . 145 career hitter, made
contact all three times up and slid
hard" into second after his single 10
break up a double play.
By contrast, Steve Avery ~-6)
suffered another quick meltdown ,
failing to r.e ach the founh inning for
the third time in h1s last four stans.
" Thi s is something I've got to
work out quick, " Aveiy said. " I can' t

.'.

lpninc totals-second &amp;llllt .
: ::
Meigs .................... 201-1 00-0=4-6-3: •
.Somerset .......... ,.... 201-004- x~7-6-1 • ·
Rothgeb (LP) and Cumings
, •:
Caines (WP) and Bika

'

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- The difference between Cleveland . and

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BATFtNO: Casey. CINCINNATI . .376: L.
. Oonzale~. Arjzona, .363; LWalb:r, Colomdo, JS4;
'Abreu, Phillldclplliil, .)49: KeniliJU, Ph,sburJ,I't, .347;
H. ltodriaue:r., Chicago, _)44; Bagwell, Houston,
.338: Matt Williams. Arizona, .338.
RUNS: J. Bell, Arizo'na. 59; Ba,wdl. Houston,
52; Kendall, Pittsburgh. 51; Mnll Wi Ii ams , A'rizona,
50: Sosa, Chic-so. 49: Touis , S1. Loui~ . 46: Sheffield,
Los Anselt's, 46_
·
·
RBI : Mau Williams, Arizonra , 61 ; DaJ,wt:ll,
Houston, 58: 8Jordijn, Allanta, :'iJ: S. l ~nll=y,
Arizona, 52; Sosa, Chicago. 51: J. 0!'!11. Arizon:~ . 49:
Tatis , S1.. Loui~. 48: Liebenhal. Philadelphia. 4&amp;
MondeJi. Leu Angele~ . 48.
HITS! ~1111 Willianu. Arizona. BS: L. Gonzokz.

ArizQna, 8.5; Casey, CINC INNATI. 83; i&lt; YounJ,
Pittsburgh, 77; Glanville, Philadelphia. 76; Kendall ,
Pittsburr,h, 7S; J Bell, Arimna. 74.
DOUBLES : B1ggio, H1Jus1on. 26; Casty.
CINCINNATI. 21: K Young. Pitcsburgh. 20, Krill .
San Frnoc1sco. 20; Mau Williams. Arizona. 20~
Olerud, New York . 19: Vidro.. MoMren l. 18, Karros,
Los Angeles, liS
TRIPLES: N. Peru. Colorado. 5: Wom~tek ,
Arizona , ~ : Marlin , Piti!burgh. 5: Lloh n1on.
Chicago, S: Kotsay, florida .. 4: A. Jones. Atlanta. • :
M. Maninet. Montreal. 4.
HOME RUNS : Sou.. C~ icngo, 21: Ba,wcll .
Kouston , 20; J. Bell, Arizona. 10; Mondes1 , Los
A.naeles. 19: Mc:Gwire, St loui 5. 19: Man Wllliama,
Arizona, 18; Tatis, St Loui5 , IS: GVaughn. CINCINNATI . 15: ~ . finley, Arb.on[l, '15.
STOLEN BASES : Cede no, New York, 33: ·
Wom~k. Arizona , 28: E'. Young . Lu! Angtlts, 23:
Cameron. CINCINNATI, 20: Kendall , Pimburgh,
18: Glanville. Philade lphia, 16: iliggio. Houuon. 16.
PITCHING t8 decisions): Luna. Uouston. 11 -2.
.846. 2.68: R:mdy Johnson. Ari zona. IS-2. !roO. liS:
HamjltOCI, Uous1op. 7-2 . .TIS, J.ll : Smohz.. Atlanta,
7-2, .778 , J .47 . Ryrd. Philntlelphi o. 9-.~ .. 750, J 14:
Rueu:r. San Francisco. ~2 . .150, HS: Bouenfield.
St. Loui s. 9-.1, .750. J 96: M. Bat ism. Montrenl. 6-l.
.750. J.S6.
STRIKEOUTS: Randy Jolm1on. Anz.u na. 14.' :
Schilling. Philndelphia. 94~ K. Brown. Los ,\ngc: ks.
86: R~ynolds , H6inlou, 84: Hitchc uclt. S:"tn Diego .
Kl : Aslacio, Gllob1do. 79 . Lima. H ou~IOf\ . 69
S,\Vf.S : Nen . S cm fran cisco, 17: W;11tncr.
Houston 16: J. Franco. New York. J.'i : Shnw. Los
Angeles, 14: Rocker. Atlanta. n: Urb ina. Montr(nl.
IJ: Hoffman. San Diego. 12 . Mt ke WIIIHJms .
Pinsburah. 12.

Oecroit ...................................0 1
CLEVELAND .......................0 2
Orlando .....
.......... ·......0 2
Wash ington .
.. ... __ ........0 , 2

.000
.000
.OCKI

t .,

.000

2

2
2

Western Cun(erence
Houston·....
...
..2
Loa Anaek:s ......... ,........... 2
Minnesa~a ..
1
Utah .~..........
.. ....... 1
Sacramento ... -............... ,. I
Phoenix .........
..............0

0 1.000
U l.UOO

0 1.000
0 1.000
I .500
I 000

1

1',

Wednesday's"game
New YO£\

a1

San Anruuio. 9 I' Ill

Wtdnc:sday
New England at COLUMBUS. 7 JO p,m.
DC Unued at Dallas, 8::10 p.m
Saturday
New England a1 Tampa Bay.
Los Angeles a1IX: United , 7:J p 111.
Son Jose m Chfcago. 8 p.m
Dallas :u Co loraJo. 9 p.m.
Sunday. JuM 20
New YOfk-New Jersey a! KaflSIU City, I p.m

Hou5COfl 88. Washingtofl 63
Los AflJ,t:les 75. CLE VELAI'ID ~9
New Yorlt 6R. Charlolle ~7
Minnesota 68. l'klroil5 1
Utah 71, Orlando 65
Sacramento 96. l'hocm ll tsS

18m

Tonight 's games
Denotl til CLEVELAND . 7 p.m.
Los Angeles at Orlando. 7 JO p m
.Washing1on at ~w Yor-k . 7 JO p m
Ulah ill Minnesota. 8 p.m
Socnunento a1 Phoenix. 10 p m.

Baseball

Stanley Cup finals
Saturday's srore
Drtllas 2. Buf'fnlo I: Dallas ll";tds se rie! ]. 1

The future
Tuesda)'
111 Buffalo. 8 p.m.
Thurlday
Buft'n]() at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Slturday
Dallas ::11 Buffnlo, 8 p.m., if necesnry
Tuesday, Junt 21
Buffalo at Dallas . 8 p.m., if net'CSSar)'

Friday's game

Socce r

. Monday, June 21
San Antonio at New York. 9 p.m.

Wednesday, June 23
~an

Friday, June 25 '
Sun•Antor1iu nt New Yurk, 9 p.m., if neCe!isary

Sunday, June 17
New York at San An1onio, 7:]0 p.m.. if neceuary

Tuesday, June 19 ·
New York at Snn Antonio. 9 p.m.. if oerc;ssary

WNBA standings
Ium

MLS standings

Amonio ill New York. 9 p.m

Eastern Conference
l!' L 1:&lt;1.

New .York .... . . .. .. ......
...2
Charlotte .......... ,. .....
......... \

0 1.000
1 .500

Jum

Eastern Conference

l!' !.SOWPts
D.C... ......
. ... 10 3 2 26
COLUMBUS
... 7 5 3 15
New England ...
.. ........ 6 . 6 J 12
l'ampaD~)' ........ ,.....
.6 6 J 12
NY-NJ .............. :.. .... 4 8 2 8
Miami. .• .'..
411 2 R

..

Transactions

Hockey

New Ymk nt San Antonio, 9 p.m.

New England 4, Mtami J-SO
DC United 2, CO.LUMBUS I

The future

Dull11~

NBA Finals

Saturday'!i scores
Colorado I. New York-New Jersey 0
KansiU Cny I, Dallas 0
Los Anzeles 2. Chicago 1
San Jose 2. Tampa Bay. I-SO

Sunday's scores

Saturday ~s ~ores

Basketba ll

(SOW) is a 1ubset of win_, ·

lLE l:iA
30 t•
tt
16
13
.' 13
Ul

II
16
16
10
30

western Conren:nce
Colorado ..... ,....................... 8 3 2 20 22 iJ
Dallas ................................. 7 6 l 19 21 10
Chicago ........................... 6 ~ . 0 . 18 20 14
Los Anaeles .......................1 6 J 15 10
8
San Jose ............................ 8 5 7 10 17 23
Kansas Ci t)' ........................ 2 10 0 6 ~ 20
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for
. shootout win Md zero poi nts for lou. Shoorout

Amtrriun Ltr.,.IU'
ANA HEIM ANGF. I -~ Reco11kd OF MiJ. ~·
(\Jinngdo and OF M:ut Luke from Edmonton of the
PCL. Up1tnned 1B Chri5 l'ruchc:tt to Edmonton and
dcilgnatcd INF Tim Unroc lor ass1gnn1Cnt. Asstgned
Ul· kit Gut e! to &amp;1e of the E.a§rem LcaJue from
L..1ke Eli-inure of the Cahforma Let~.!uc: .
BOSTON REU SOX: Placed RHP Dr~·t
Snbc:rhn gcn on the 15·day dt5ab led l1 st. Recnlkd,
RHP K1 rk, Bullmgrr fro m Pawtu cket of th ~t'
lruernotional Lengue
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: S1gned LHP Ban ~
Zito, I BJorge SolO, RHP Keith Surl:.ont . RHP Dann
Moore, OF Ktrk Asche. RHP Justin Sobchuk, RH I'
Juan Pomar. 1B Ah•}n 'Ellis. LHP ' Chm Ma1.ur
RHP Manhew Gage. RHP Cade Sarn:hez. 111
Bradle)' Henderson. RHP Jacob Ba:~man . RH P
Nathan Hilton and LHP Mi cah Dunphy
SE.ATI'LE MAR INERS . Placed RHP Rafa.·l
Carmona on the 1.5·da)' disabled list Reulled Rt-IP
ACiran Scheffer from Tacoma of lhe PCL
TEXAS RANGERS Pla.:;ed OF Thm Good¥~' III
on tilt" l:'i·day di1abled li st Recalled OF Ru b!:u
Malt:o from Oklahoma of 1M PCL.
TORONTO BLUE JAY.S: Tli!lded LHP L&gt;ttn
P~ ac 10 Arizona for SS Tony Bati sta and RHfl John
Frase afore
Natio.n..i Lt.a811t
AR IZONA DIAMQNOBACKS· Recalled INI
E.iwtn Dtill from Tucson of rhc PCL.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Placed RHP Andy
A .~hhy on the I5-day disabled list' retroactive to Jun t'
7. Recalled RUP Carlos Alnianz.ar from l..a$ VeJO$ of ·
the PGL. Ac:livated OF Tony Gwynn from the 15 - d n~
d1sabled lm. Opt1oned OF Mike Darr 10 Las Veias
.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Sicned I B Se:.rr
McGowan. RHP Jeremy Cunningham. LHP Brian
Meagher. RHP Ryan Cox., RHP Vance Coticer, RHP •
Harold Featherstone. RHP Aetcher l....te, RHP Ke\'111
Vent. RHP Anthony Yacco, RHP Michael Zirelli, C
Lars Hansen. lNF Josh Cook. lNF Joe Jesttr, tNF
Pau·l Turco. OF Scott Oat~)'. OF Micah Holst, OF
Ryan Pent. OF Troy Ran50m and lNF-OF Ryan
Ruther.

i!

Eastern cage camp draws 36

't:.
·~

,.""
~

Eastern E ementary Schoo s basketball camp brought otit 36 athletes
from grades 3'-8, for a week-long trai11ing program which ended last Friday.
Attending the camp were Brandon Walker, Robbie Caldwell, Justin "'• •
Browning, Adam Wolfe, Mark Boyd, Matthew Morris, .Derek Baum, Josh
Hayman, Chris Davis, Darren Scarbrough, Steven Shepard, Bryce Honaker, ~
· Robert Cross. Austin Cross, Nick Weeks, Adam Dillard, Derek Weber,
Action Facemyer, J.T. Evans, Kyle Edwards, Daniel Bookman, Daniel !1:
Bailey, Andy Garnes, John Owen, Michael Owen, Dustin Johnson, Action
Facemyer. Matthew Morris, Brandon Werry, Joshua Marcinko, Ryan
Wachter, Brian Castor, Micah Barber, Jason Kimes and Brent Buckley.
,
Coaches and staff for the camp, held at the school, were Howie Caldwell,
·Rick Edwards, Steve Weeks, Roy Johnson, Billy Sheppard and Eric Smith. •

...

-·.

.

....
,..

CAMP PARTICIPANTS -

These boys participated lr:~ Eastern

•'

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Elementary's basketball camp, held last week at the school.

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EIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HU N SERVICES

~l

~I

:r...
•

�•

".
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Mondayt June 14,1991

__- ,; By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page7

.:;-· ·:. ~.:

Monday, June 14, 1999

D.o service and professional fees depend on the size of an object?

Dear Ann Landers: May I have
the last.word on the retiree wllo felt'
overcharged for a dental cleaning
beca11se he had only six teeth? Does
a brain surgeon charge less for a
smaller brain? Does a department
-store charge less for a suit in a smaller size? Does an automobile
mechanic charge less for a two-door
vehicle? This issue is aliout value, .
not cost.
I have a homeless patient who
collects aluminum cans so she can
afford to haye ·her teeth cleaned. She
lines up the $.1 'bills on the counter
and fights when we try to give the

money back to her..
The moral of the story is this: The
more a person values something, the
more eager he or she is to invest ill
the care of it. If lhat retiree really
valued hi s Ieeth, he'd have .more of
them ... ADENTIST IN SOLANA
BEACH, CALIF.
DEAR SOLANA BEACH
DENTIST: Your .last sentence ·says
it aiL It would make a perfect sound
. bite for a toothpaste commercial.
Keep reading for more:
.,t,'
Dear Ann Landers: I p{l!(l ~icj:d
dentistry in Glasgow, Mont., for 50
years, and oh, the stories I could tell .

about 'the way some people paid
I turned my back to prepare a
their dental bills: During theDepres- Novocain injectio~. and within secSionin the '30s, many patients' came onds, she had wiggled them out herin with vegetables, chickens and self: I gazed with astonishment at
sides of beef. One patient laundered the three teeth she placed on the tray.
my dental gowns as payment for S.rMiss Tillie 'then asked, "Are you
vices.
gonna charge.me (or pulling my own
I remember ."Miss Tillie," who teeth, Doc?" To be perfectly honest,
came in for a teeth cleaning every Ann, I can't remember whether we
six 1r1onths. She had three teeth . The charged her or not .. DR . S.,
price for' a total prophylaxis was $3 . BILLINGS, MONT.
On her last visit, I suggested that she
DEAR DR. S.: If you did charge
have those last three teeth extracted · Miss Tillie, it was a legitimate
so I could make a lower denture to billing. After all, she took your time,
match her uppers, . which she had and that was worth something.
worn with satisfactio n . for many f Here's more on the subject:
From Rlchn:-ond, Va.: This is
years.
. Since those three 1eeth were regarding the man who resented·
quite loose, I informed Miss Tillie paying full price to have his ,teeth
that she could save some money if · cleaned because he had only six
she had them ·extracted without an teeth .
I lost an eye in a hunting acc ident
anesthetic. "No,'' she said , "I want .
some of that medicine."
when I was a child . Several y~ars

later, when I was being fitted for one God gave me. I have a m~icure
new glasses, I asked the ophlhal- every two weeks, and IllY mamcunst
mologist for a reduced rate since I charges me full price. Is this fair?-had only one eye.
NO CITY PLEASE
. . .
He said, "It takes me longer to
DEAR NO CITY: Yes, It IS fa1r ·
get•th~ lens in p~rfect focus because · · unless the manicurist is willing to
you have only one eye. I should book you for a polish change, which
charge you more." I never raised the takes half the time of a manicure.
question after that.·
.
Do you ·have questions about sex:
1\'Iinn.eapolis: Last April, I went but no one to talk to? Ann Landers
in to have a mammogram. I had had booklet, "Sex and the Teenager." is
a mastectomy several yeats before frank and to the pomt end a self·
· and asked the doc tor if. I could have . addressed, long, oosiness-size envea discount because I had only one lope and a check or money order for
breast. He said, "I'm aware of y·our $5 .. 75 (this includes postage and
medical hi story and allotted more handling) to: Teens. c/oAnnLanders,
time 'for you." I felt like tw o ce nts P.O. Box I 1562, Chicago, . Ill.
waiting for change .
·
6061 I - 0562 . (In Canada. send
.Dear Ann: I .lost my hand (from $4.55.)
.
th.e wrist down) in an industrial acciTo fi nd out more abput Ann Laode·nt. A wonderful artificia l lim b ders and read her past columns . visit
expert made a hand for me that is the Creators Syndicate web page ar
almost indistinguishable from the www. cre~tors. co~t.

\.Preventing Dog ~ite·i ·\ · Rutland Garden Club hears .growing tips
By Alden Waitt, Preside,nl
Meigs County Humane Society ·

. ·rr,

~e

unR~: '

thi~gs

It's one of
wo:st
that can happen . Your dog,
..
voked, takes a bll out of a ne1gbbor, a stranger, or famrly membel"'or another animal. It can b~ a wee nip or an all-out bite, sometimes
with devastating consequences . Regardless. we never want lh \~lo
happen . Kansas State University veterinarian Kathy Gaughan
there aie number of things.dog owners can do to keep .their dog tRim
biting someone.
· If you have \he dog as a pup, then prevention begins right there.
Treat the anilll\ll kindly, provide consistent obedience training, ..liOd
plenty of exercise, and you have gone a long way to prevent·. b~~g,.
for then yo~'II have a well-adjusteil pet.
,~f
Dr. Gaughan urges owners ro spend plenty of time with theiijlets.
Dogs who are !efl alone in the backyard or.chained to a post are more
likely to beco111e problems for their owners and others~ Other tips?
• DO get obedience training for your dog. Your dog should, be
willing to please you and consistently respond correctly to s8mmands.
·
·
·.:,. •. · ·
•DO learn how to bring out tlie best in your dog using positive
reinforcement training methods.
·
· ~:
• DON'T use physical .punishment for inappropriate beh~~ ·
• DON'T allow your puppy to "chew." on your hands or~'
• DON:T rough-house or play tug-of-war games, for that just
leads to aggressive behavior.
.
· • DO learn to read your dog's body language.
• DON'T allow yqur dog to run off leash without supervision.
• DO seek professional advice from your veterinarian if you have ·
·
,
conc.errui about your dog's behavior.
• DO get a rabies vaccination for your dog as recommended by

ws

I

yOur .veterinarian. .. · ,
. • DO .be aware that your dog's demeanor may ~hange with illness
or pain and exercise caution when approaching.
.
*DON'T attempt to pel a dog that is behind a fence , tied with a
rope or chain, 'or in a parked car. And discourage people from petting.
your dog in these situations even if your dog knows ihe person{
• DO determine laws regarding dangerous dogs in your city or
the label of'dangerous"
may.
county. Specific behaviors that warrant
.
.
vary.
• DON'T try , to intervene when two dogs are fighting. DO try to
distract them with a noisemaker, water, and so forth .
• DO prevent dog -to-dog aggression by watching for behavior that
· ·
precedes aggression such as staring at eac.h other.
. • DO, if a dog approaches you, stand still with hands at side•lind
feel together, or 'lie on the ground with knees tucked to chest with a
fist over each ear. Remain very still and quiet.
·
• . DON'T stare at a dog (avoid eye contact).
• DO construct outdoor kennels sturdy enough to keep your dog
in and other dogs/animals out. If you have an aggressive dog, one that
has already bitten someone, it is your responsibility to protect others
from that dog. ·
·

The ' Rutland Garden Club met of Edna Hou seholder and Duane
May 3 1 at the Harri sonville Presc Weber.
'
byterian Church with ·Mrs. Clo.tine ·
Mrs. Atkins reported GardenBl ack~ood as hostess and fresicr's Day Out at· Dresden. All those
derit .Pauline Atkins . welcoming wishing to attend need to send in
all.
·
their regi stration. also the annual
Mrs . Blackwood gave the dev&lt;i- OAGC Conv e ntion reg istration
tion, a tribute to Memorial Day, · should also be se nt in .
"To live in hearts, we leave .behind ·
Mrs. Atkins represented the
is not to die." There was a poem, Rutland Garden ·Club at the
Blow ·Gentle Winds of May, and Exhibitors and Jud ges School o n
scripture reading from Matthew May 25 in Columbus.
chapters 5 and 7 followed by The
Donna Jenkins and Sarah Dawn
.Lord's Prayer recited in unison.
Jenkins, and the fifth grade at Rut·
Roll call was answered by "I land Elementar.y School. planted a
planted something .new." A get dogwoqd tree for Arbor D~y . Mrs.
well cardwas .signed by all for Joy Jenkins · and Sarah also · planted
Combs who ·is currently in Holzer flower s in the Ruiland Park.
Hospital.
Mrs . Pauline Atkin s planted
An invitation was , received by Geraniums at the Masonic Temple
the club for the June 13 ·wedding in Harrisonville.
·

·
The uaveling prize furnished
· by Joy Combs was won by Donna
Jenkin s. Marcia Dennison 'is. 'to .
..furni sh the June traveling prize. ·
· Taking flowers to church .were
Paulin e · Atkins , Ann Webster,
Marj orie Ri ce and Betty Lowery.
Pauline Atkins gave a program
on Lantana, an anhual growing 36 feet high and 3-6 fee t wide containin g clusters of small fl owers.
They . come in a ·variety of colors
and are attractive to butterflies.
Dorothy Woodard gave a program on planting a haven for ~ut· terflies including the life stages of .
the butterfly. · Butte rfli es are
attracted to bright-colored flow ers.
Donna Jenkin s reported on Iris·es. named afterthe Gre~k goddess

of rainbows . A nower native to
Portugal , they come in '300 differ ·
ent co lors and can·oe solid or mul :
ticolored . There arc 200 kno"Cn
spec ies of Irises. ·
Betty ·Lowery gave a report on
Tanagers , colorful birds which
migrate from Central American
and South America in the &gt;pri ng.
Although ' there are about 200
spec ie s of Tanagers, o nl y four of
them migrat e. to the United States:
the Scarlet Tanager, the Summer
Tanager, Wes tern and Hepatic tanagers.
A hint was passed abo ut to use
a 50/SO so.luti on of 1'-:ater and .
vinegar in a spray boule.for slugs.
The solutio!! dqes not harm plants.
The June meeting· will be held
·•• the home of Ann Webster.
·

RLDS Church holds mother-daughter banquet
The RLDS Church has held sev- crafted gifts were presented to the Fran Sayre. · ·
and youth. In recent months. there
era) recent activities.
· winners.
.
Family night was held at the have · been 42 baptisms, and their
The annual RLDS MotherAttending were . llah Roush, church on May 28, and included services are expanding . He is the son
·oaughter B.anquet was held recently Diana Duhl, Sarah Duhl and daugh- · groups from several community of Golo;la Radcliffe, Syracuse.
at the Kountry Kitchen restaurant in ter, Kieran, Denise .Alkire and· churches, with songs of praise ~nd
· The Sunday School picnic will be
· daughter Samantha, Lucy Taylor, fellowship and refreshments.
Racine.
· held at the Syracuse Park on June
.Joann Proffitt, women 's depart- Jocelyn Bailey and daughter Juli,
On May 22, Evangelist Ronald )3 , Children's Day, with s.pecial ser·
ment leader, welcomed 23 members Betty Proffitt, Ma•ine Sellers, Gillilan and his . family visited the vices for children.
and their. guests. Juanita Wells led Wanda Seelhoff, Joann Proffitt, Portland/Racine congregation and
Evangelist AI Stretch, from the
the group in the opening prayer and Karen Adams and daughter Kri sta, prese nted the mor.ning message. Logan congregation. will bring the
Proffitt read "Honoring Mother," Golda Radcliffe, Janice Danner, · They gave an update on the Power- morning message on June 20. A
while Lucy Taylor read "A Visit of Brian Brown, Sharon Russell ~nd house storefront inner-city plant in potluck dinner will foll ow. He will
an Angel to Mother." Several guess- daughter, Lisa, Juanita Wells and Baltimore, where their family has also conduct an afternoo n meeting
ing games were played, and hand- daughter Tammi. Causey, and guest been brin gin g a ministry to children with co ngregational leadership. ·

.Chester·Daughters of America ·meet's recently at hall
Chester Council 32-3 , Daughters' of America, met recently at
the hall . · ·
·
Laura Mae Nice presided at the
meeting. The pledge to the Christian ·Flag was given , and Psalm
27:1 -2 was read. T~e Lord 's
Prayer was recited in unison and
the Pledge to the American Flag ·
was given. The first stanza of

"The Star-Spangled Banner" was
sung.
Roll call was given. and the
minu\cs were read and approved.
Reports were given about Mary
Joe Barring.er, Mary Rose, Ellen
Clark. Betty Young· and Opal
Eichinger; who have. expe rienced
health problems.
Erma Cleland thanked those

who parti c&gt;pated in the .. Chester · lunch and visitin g .
parade and · the ceremony at the
Pre se nt were Opal Ho l.lon.
cemetery.
Thelma White. Delori s Grucser.
Quarterly · birthdays arc to be Charlotte Grant. Bc.rty Young .
celebrated at the nel(L meeting, Erma (:teland, Laura Nice. Mary
and it was re ported that Past Barrin ger. Mary Holt er. Gary
Councilors Club will mee t at the · Holte r, Everen Grant, Helen Wolf.
Esther Sm ith , Goldie Frederick ,
hall.
The meet ing was closed in reg- Elizabeth Hayes. and Julie Cu rti s ..
ul ar form , follow ed hy a sack

Community Calendar-

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply
992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

The Shoe Place And Locker 219
992·5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

K&amp;C Jewelers
. 992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

Qual.ity Print Shop
992·3345

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

Fisher .Funeral Home
MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

Home National Bank
UCINE .

SYUCUSE

949·2~10

. The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to a~nounce meetings and special.events. The calendar is not
.designed to promote·sales or fund raisers of any. type. Items are printed only
as space perinits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number
of days .

This Paee Sponsored
B~ TheSe·Fine Businesses

Warner Insurance
992·5479

nour Sup
STATE ROUTE 248 ,
CHESTER, OHIO
985·3308

Ewing Funeral Home
POMEROY, OHIO

992·2121

Baum Lumber

992·2342

POME

CHESTER, OHIO

985·3301
.
.

day~

TUPPERS PLAINS
Technology committee, Eastern Elementary
. School, 7 p.m. Monday. to discuss technology and reorganize the committee. Anyone interested, welcome to attend.
-

Brogan Warner Insurance :

POMEROY ....,. En(erqrise United Methodist Church, vacation Bible
school, Monday through Friday, 9to I !:30 a.m.

POMEROY,.OH

. 992·6687

DAKOTA LEE CONNOUY
SON BORN • Lee and Kelly
'
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Chapter 53, DAV, Monday, dinner at 6:30 Connolly of Mason, W. Va.
.announce the blnh.of their son,
· nieeting at 7 p.m.
·
Dakota Lee Connolly on Aprll28.
RACINE - Racine Board of Public Affairs, Monday, I 0:30 a.m. munic- He weighed ilx pounds, 12
ounces and 2 Inches long.
:ipal building.
·
Maternal grandparents are
Roy and Debra Gilkey of
MIDDLEPORT - OhKan Coin Club, Monday, 7:40 p.m. at the River- Pomeroy. Lydia Gilkey. · of
bend Arts Council building in Middleport. Public welcome, meeting free , Cheahlre Ia a maternal great·auction to be held. Refreshments.
·
grandmother.
Paternal grandparents are
ROCK SPRINGS ~ Big Bend Farm Antiques Club meeting Monday, Rick Connolly of Mason and
.
·
'7:30p.m. at the Rock Sprin~s Fairgrounds.
Steve end Belinda Lane of Mid·
dleport. Paternal', great-grend•TUESDAY
parenta are Bernard and Lynn
RUTLAND ·~ Rutland Village Council, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
. · Connolly of Leon, W. Va. and the
paternal great-great grendmolh·
ar Ia Kathryn Gill of Flatrock, W.
·POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Elections, Tuesday, 9 a·.m .
Va.
·

Crow's Family Restaurant
POMEROY,·OHIO

992·2432

Fruth PharMacy
MIDDLEPORT,

992·6491

Farmers·Ban

Downing·Childs~Mullen•Musser

Insurance

MONDAY
· POMEROY- Right to Life meeting, Pomeroy Library, 7:30p.m. Mon-

. :::.~~OY

"YOUR BAIIC fOR llff"
· GAWPOLIS·

TUPPERS PU1Nii1

992·2955

992·6533

·\

POMEROY, OHIO .·

985·3307

·

.CHESTER, OHIO ~·
'"

v,

.,

·'

••

' ! '

·"

,,

•

•

A Special Souve.nir Edition W'rll Be Included In The
.
Sentinel In Mid-July.
:Many stories and pfiotograpfis of significant events relating to tfie
fiistory and development of'Rutland will be featured i!l tfie publication.
. Ifyou prefer an alternative to regular advertising copy, perhaps yvu
mig/it consider an liistoric account and pliotograpfis of your business.
We will be fiappy to assist you in designing an ad .

'

The first '4-H dub especially for horseless mem·
bers recently was· formed by advisor, Pam Milhoan .
, The group is a branc~ of the Meigs 4-H Pleasure
Riders Club and will be called the Horseless Plea· .
:sure Riders. The goal of the club is to teach and .
;encourage members how to safely work with and
·around hors.es . ·
When they are
ready to get a horse of their own, they will be pre·
.pared with the knowledge that will hel)l them to
'become a kind. responsible ·horse owner, said the
·advisor. ·
· '
·

.

.

Th e grdup recently held their third meeting at the
Milhoan stable. Members conducted business of ·
paying dues, eleqing offi cers and workin g o n project books.
·
Barn activities . included
mucking out stalls, grooming horses and learning the
prope r way to halter and lead a horse. Afterward s
members ertjoyed cook out.
.
.
In July members will "'•et at a co unty meeting for
a lesson usi ng the new horse sk illathon kit. rytembers
atten.ding . w ~ re Josh Noitingham, Joey Nottingham
and Rachael Buckley.

a

. ,I
I

1.

Call
992·2155 and Speak With
Dave Harris-Ext. 104.
or Kathy Wllllamson..:Ext. I OS
June 18.
.

A-H Pleasure Riders Club organizes Jor horseless members
.
.

Swishe-r '~Lohse Pharmacy Ridenour TY .&amp;Appliance

Help Us Celebrate The zooi:b
Ann1venary 01 Rutland.

'

�Monday, June 14, 1999

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Meigs Center students honored at
awards ceremony held recently
Students oflhe University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community
College Meigs Center were honored
during a student recognition and
awards ceremony held May 5 at the
Family Life Center in Middlepon.
The ceremony was held also to
marl&lt; the first anniversary of the center, which was established on March
ts, 1998, in order to provide new
. educational opponunities to tl)e people of Meigs County and the surrounding area.
'This has truly become a center
of the community," said Rio Grande
President Dr. Barry Dorsey. "This is
a red letter day in the history of Ri o
Grande and I believe a red letter day
in the history of Meigs County."
Susan C. Oli ver,"executive director of the Meigs County Council on
Aging tn Pomeroy, served as the
keynote speaker for the ceremonies
and told the students that they need
to put · together the things they
learned at the Meigs Center with the
"ABC's of employees" in order to
be successful.
· Attitude, Bravery and Credibility
make up the ABC's of employees,
Oliver told those at the ceremony. A
positive attitude towards work, she
said, will kad to better interacti ons
wnh c:ustomers and co-workers, as

June 14, 1999"

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio
N~

Public Notice
·llcenM, order, etc. Inter·
COUNTY: IIIEIOI
111111 paraona may oullmll
PUIUCNOncl
written oommente or
The following oppllcatlono
requ11t 1 pulllo mHtlng
and/or verified eomplolnto
regarding draft actlono.
wore received and the
Commanta or public
following droll, propooed,
11111tlng requeata muat bl
or tlnol aetlone we,. IIIUICI
aullmlttad within 30 claya ol
by lhl Ohio EnVIronmental
riollea or lhl draft action.
Protection Agency (OEPA)
"Propo11d Actlona• era
loot Willi. "Actlona: Include
wrtrten alltemente of the
the adoption, modlllcotlon,
or ·repael of ordero (other .
Intent with
napact to the 111uanea,
thin ~mergency ordera);
clenlol, modification, revocotlon, or renewal of a
permit, llolnu, or vortonc-.
Written comment• and
requ11ta lor 1 public
meeting regordlng 1
propo11d ectlon may be
aubmltled Within 30 claya of
notice of the propoaed
1ct1on. An adludtcatlon
heorlng may bl held on a
prop ad actton It a hallrtng
requ11t or objection 11
reeaiVed by lhl O!'PA within
30 d1y1 of II lUI nee .of the
propoaed action. Wrltlln
commanll, raqueata for
public meellnga, and
adludlcltton hearing ra·
queoll muat be 11n1 to:
Hl"lrlng Clerk, Dhlo lnvl·
ronmentol Protection
, . _ , P.O. Box 1041,
"My slater Just gave me ~ dolll1'8
COiumbua, Ohio 43211-104t
not to tell you 11011181hlng."
(Telephone: 614-1144-2t2t).
-- .
"Finol Actlona" .,. actlonti
of thl Dtractor which ,,.
11 0 He Ip Wanted
lfllctiVI upon leaua.- or 1
atated eltecttve data.
Purauant to Ohio R.VIHd
WANTED: LPN (full-time) at two community group
Codo
Saotlon 3745.04, 1
homes for people with MR/DD in Gallia County.
final octlon moy be IP·
Hours: M-F, daytime hours or as scheduled for
pealed to lhl Environmental
Review
Appeole Commie·
medical appointments or iss ues. Requirements:
elon (ERAC) formerly
current Ohio LPN License, NAPNES/OOPNES,
known 11 the Environ·
menlll Board of ReVIew) by
valid driver's license, three years . good driving
who hal • party to
experience and adequate automobile insurance. 1• pa..on
proceeding botora the
Salary: $8.50/hour.'Excellen\ benefit package. Send
dl,.ctor by filing an app•l
resume to: Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box within 30 doyl of notice ot
ttnol ttctlon. Purauant to
604, Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for applicants: lhl
Ohio RIVIHd Code Sactlon
6/18/99. Equal Opportunity Employer.
3745.07, 1 fino I octlon
teaulng, denying, modify• ~ r;...-...,;..;.,;;;;;;;;.,_ _ _..;.._.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.llng, ..VOklng, or .. nawtng 1
I
permit, Uean11, or VllrfeiiCI
which
Ia net precadld by
Community . Services propolld
octlon, mey be
has a '""t·.tlrr•a opening in Meigs oppaoled to the ERAC by
ICo•untv:' 28 hrs/Wk: 8 am-11 pm, SaVSun. We flUng on appeal wllhln 30
doya DIIIIUI.- ollhl nnal
searching for compassionate professionals action.
ERAC appaala mull
a team vision anct a desire to teach be flied with: Environ'""'""'""' and community skills to individuais mental IIIVIIW Appaall
mental retardation. The work environment Commllllon, 238 &amp;II Town
Room 300,
informal and rewarding. The requirements St
Ohio 432tll. A
sctJool diploma/GED, vall" driver~s
oppaet mull bl
on the director
three years good driving experience
Within
3
deya
nllng lhe
automobile insurance coverage. appaal with ...olhlr
ERAC.
comprehensive training in the
Flnol Approval ot Plana
of MR/DD. . Starting salary: $5.50/hour. 1nd Spaclflcattona
llnlterEISIEtd applicants need to specify position 'lllppera Plolno·Chaotar
' Dlatrlct, Tuppara
interest and send resume to: P.O. Box 604, Water
Plllna,OH
.
IJa•ckstl_n OH 45640-0604. All applications luue Date 08101/1tlllt
• Thla tlnol action not
•m"'"r be post-marked by 6/16/99.
preceded by Propoeed
Equal Opport!lnlty Employer.
Actton ond Ia lppaoloble to
ERAC. New Well H.
(8) 14 tTC
Public Notice .
the
IIIUanca, daniel,
IIICidlfiCIIIIon or -.lion
o
l - - · or
pennlhl,
- -·
v1r1encee,
certlftcatu;
and the approval or
dlaopproval of plene and
apecltlcatlona. "Draft
Actlona": a,. written ~~ate­
menta of lhl Director of
Environmental Protec·tlon'a
(01-'•) Intent with
re•pect to the leau1nce.
denial, ate. ot .. permit,

ot-··
a,

,r.

OUTSTANDING MAB STUDENT - University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College Meigs Center student Jeanie Howell
received the Outstanding Microcomputer Applications In Business
Student Award at the center's recent student recognition event.

well as providing extra moti vation
to do a good job.
Bravery is needed, she said, tn
order to stand up to bosses and other
employees when you believe they
/
are doing something wrong, or to
/
make suggestions on how to make
-.
your workplace operate better.
. Employees who are credible,
Oliver said, are trustworthy, faithful,
honorable and proud.
"They are committed to excellence," she said. ·
Oliver, who serves as a local,
regional, state and national advocate
for elder issues, commended the students for their decisions io funher
their education, .and congratulated
them for all they have achieved .so
far.
·
. Jeanie Howell was one of 21. students who received a Microcomputer Applications in Business (MAD)
cenificate at the ceremony, and she
was selected the Outstanding MAB
Student. She said all of the students
OUTsTANDING Cf!OSSROADS STUDENT- Jerry Uribe received
in the ·program are outstanding stu- an award as the Outstanding Cronroads Student and now has
dents ao\d she was honored to be able employment as a truck driver as a result of his training at the Unito speak for the class.
versity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College Meigs Center.
Howell said going back to school
Student Kathleen White agreed go smoothly for the students.
was not easy, but it was something
that
getting her MAD was not easy
"They really worked with us and
she really wanted to do.
as
she
had
to
balance
work,
school
helped
us a lot," Uribe said. "They
"I have realized the first step in
and
takmg
care
of
her
children.
Her
really
taught
us to work as a team."
my goal. the MAB certtficate,"
family
has
been
very
supportive,
The
Meigs
·County Community
Howell said. "At this time next year,
though,
and
having
the
Meigs
CenImprovement
Corporation (CIC)
I will walk across the stage at Rio
ter
in
Middlepon
made
it
possible
was
instrumental
in helping get the
Grande and receive my associates
·
for
her
to
achieve
her
dream
of
Meigs
Center
set
up in Middleport,
degree." She said the assistance of
going
back
to school.
and CIC President Paul Reed said he
the other students and the instructors
Jerry
Uribe
was
namehtlle""
Outwas proud to be at the anniversary
are making it possible to get her edustanding
Crossroads
Student
dunng
and
student recognition celebration.
cation. She said having the center in
the
ceremony
and
satd
he
·
already
"This
is a tremendous day," Reed
Middleport has also made a big difhas
gotten
a
Job
due
to
his
educat1on.
said
.
He
thanked
Ri o Grande for its
ft,rence.
Uribe
was
in
the
truck
driving
procommitment·
to
Meigs
County and
Howell- said she had to learn how
gram
and
said
he
had
wanted
to
said the Meigs Center is helping a
to study again and get m the mode of
drive trucks fur
long time. He lot of people. He said the people that
being a otudent again, after not being
in a classroom for years. "As I pur- never had the opportunity to get the really should be credited for the sucsue my second goal, my associates training before the Meigs Center cess of the center arc the students.
degree, I know it will not come made it possible - He credited They are the ones that went after
easy," Howell said. "But nothing instructors such as Theresa their dreams and made them a reali Wachovec for makjng the program ty, he remarked.
wonhwhile comes easy."

Public Notice

....... The
·
IIOIIWIIIIIe
...projlct
_.........,
of Dexter In 1111111
Townahlp, tllllga County,
Ohio, M .... • CR 14, Tilt

Water Una Exllnalon, Gate
Vatvaa, w.terllna ·~lion

Hrvloe
In Rutllndlllelgo
· and
Balom Townahlpe,
County, Olilo, wiH be
r-lvld by the lllelga
County Commllllo11ara at
thllr offiCI
II "the
Courthouaa,
"-'nny, Ohio

Roada ·In 111Rulllnd T-"lpa·

bkl tcnna may bl 111011m
II thl Office ol Triplett
l!ngl.-1.... 112 1/2 Court

Strllt, Pomeroy, Ohio. A
payment of One Hllt14hd
(S1 00.00) (Non-..tundabla)

clollara will 11e requlm lor
- h ... of pllila lnd apaclftaatlona, cheek made
payable
to
Triplett
!ngl-'"11.
l!aoh bid muat lie Plnlld by llthll I bid bond
In an omount ol1110% of.,.
blcl amount With a turety
lltllfllctory to lhl atonulcl
Melga
County ,
Comml•tonan~ or by c:ertl-

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$8.00 PER DAY.

.

SMITH'S

-,• We service all makes • Used Appliances • We sell

'I +'

BuUdooer &amp; Backhoe
SBnJice•

J louse &amp;! Tr.~iler Site~ ..
1
• l.arid Clearing &amp;
Grading

380 E. lllllllltrML Thla wiU
be an Opportunity for tha
public to d ' - and 1111

Septic SyoleiiU &amp;

t;::;:;==:::::=:::;==::
8••_
•_
•_• •,

Call today abol'l 1pe&lt;ial
price• dtru JuJy an
QruJIIIy Buill Houoe•

a....&amp;J HW

Mwt be 50 yean

of age &amp; meet
.HUD income
guideline•.
Ctll
TOM STOBART
tod•f 11

740-992·3470

99S47D . . .UOI

------.
.
Linda'• Painting
·Take the pain out
of painting, and let

me do It for you.

Qaalltj Is Job One
··· .

- ·- ---.

B~ELL

BUILDERS,
INC.

COMMEROA~:a;IDOOW.

740·915·4180

FREE ESTIMATES

Free Estimates

101111 IISSELL
CONSIRUCIION

i
I
.j :

•New Homes

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

ESTIMATEES

114-1192·7843
L...:~:.:N;;:.o.:;::SU:::;nd::::a;&amp;-::C::;:al::,lsU,. . ~__

985 4473·
...;........,._...:.

C.onstructlon
Ugh! Commercial &amp;
Residential
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling
-FREE ESTIMATES
(740)667·6H2

.

:Q.. Utw Crtf1111eti••lp

N""' Stocllu.,

.
. .. .
•

-Ho•c'"• leruJinw lla
t:arpef

cleaner .

~

.

•
•
•
'

smelling fifth
. •Ufts matted carpet pile
•'Dry' cle111s so you can use
Clllp81 right n&amp;y

:

•

i ..

i.:1 All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parte
Factory Authorized
Caae- IH Parts
11100Dealera.
81. 11ft 7 IJaulh .

MDI......

JACKS ROOf,ING
&amp;CONSTRUOION
New Roots • Repaln •
Coaling • Cullen •
Siding• Drywali •
Palndng • Plumblnli

Fre•E•Um•t••

Joseph Jacka
740.992-2068

CONCRETE
COINECnON
Quality Driveways,

Sidewalks, 1'111101
Parklna Loll
25 yrs experienca

FrMEitlmatea

740-742-8608

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVIa
•...,.. 'll•tt••• ftlft'lad111111

•HewO..gu

• EI-*IA Plumbing
• Roollng A Qutl8,.
• VInyl Sieling A Pointing
• Pallo • Porcli Decka

"'" e.l'lmllla
V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-6215
22yro. LocuJ

.:740-949-2217
SIZII 5' X 10'

'

I

I

i:

1:
:·
[.

I

j:

• •

.I ...
•

'

'.

to 10' x 30'
Houl'8
7:00AM ·BPM

SAYRE
TRUCKING

ovenlnda and - n da, pa~ dmo

poaitlon. Candl(tara must be out·

going, cartng,

Now To """ llwfft SIIOI&gt;I&gt;O
9 W"' Slln)aon. Alhtnl
740-592·1842

Owner: John Dean

Ill&gt;.

11.'!1 ·

ftCft~~~t;:;rftri"ifHfi

profllned ancl'or expofienct work·
lng wtth rlhab!medtcally Complex

Quality clothing and household
Items . $1 .00 bag aelt every
Thursday. Mondey thru Saturdey

care needs. Appli ca ~ta 11nd ra·
aume to: Rocksprings Rthablllta·
tl on Ctnttr, 3&amp;759 Rocksprings

9:00.5:30.

Dana Warren, Activities Olreetor
or apP,Iy In person Monday

WEIGHT LOSS. I Loal 90+
Pound&amp; In 8 Mon1hsl I'll Htlp 'IOU

through Frlclay. EOUAL OPPOR·

Reach Your Weight Loss Goals!

TUNITY EMPLOYER

Free 888-781-9624.

AlllltiiiiTltATIVE CLERK:

2 Beautiful Kittens: 1 Male Stack;

Temporary Position Candidates
Must Be Accurate At Data Entry
And POIIIII Microsoft Skil ls.
Position Requires A Seii.Startar
Wllh Strong Interpersonal AM
Communtcatlon Skills. Purchasing
Background Helpful. To Fltcelw
Confidential Consideration For
.My Poaltlons, Submll Resume
To:

3 khlens , ! wka. old. nHd bottle
fld, 740-949-2709.

Borg-Warnor AIJ-vo
ATTN: HR Dop1.CLERK

-·

4 Kittens, 3 Bobtailed. 1 Whitt. 1

2160 Ealltm Awtnu1
GIJipoio, OH o05631
Fax: 740-441-3249

Grey Tlgor, 1 Cream. 740·446·

aalea ctep. $10.35 per hr appt. No

R. Le HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

apply. Must be 18. Calf 304-485·

Toy1, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing ,

Klttana, Calico, bl. &amp; wh., yel. &amp;

l)'ptng ... Great Payl CALL 1·aOO·
795-0380 Ext. 1201 (24 Hrsj.

wh .. ootid bl .. Tabby, 740·992·
7880.
Full

Blooded

60

Shirley Spoa11, 304-675-1429.
Avon Products: Start your own In·
Home Busineaa. Work Flexible
Hours, Enjoy Unlimited Earnings.

1-888-561-2866.

Loat and Found .

Bartender Wanted : 7•0·441·

Lost 2 Dogs : 1 Brown &amp; Whi1t,
Answers To Tha Name 01 "Bud·

I

Lost: Red Marlboro Bag, Haa

20 Yrs.

Exp. • Ina.

Owner:

Ronnie Jonee

1-800•809·7721

14th And TUIIdly Junt 15th
From 8 A.M. To ol P.M. A Range

EXCA.V~TING

••

•Bulldozer Co
Backhoe Serulces

Caplto1 Nu".~ · 1·800-576-6348

ALL·I'Inl Solellluol

Arbo(s A1 Goltipolta Witt Be Hav·
lng A Ylrd Sale On Monc1a1 Juno

Stop In And See
An Old· Friend
M i ke Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

CNA, LPN, naeded. Good pay,
hourty, bonus for weekend work.
Mutt be lleensed In WV. Cat!

Gllllpolla
&amp; VIcinity
hl'llldln-.
Pf*QUNE: 2:00p.m.
till dly till od

Bo• 720 , Ripley,
EOE.
·

ta to run. Sundly

odhlon- 2:00p.m.
• 10:00 t.m. '"hlnll¥·

or ltema From Clolhta ol All

Slz·

OTR expar. 23

Orl\ltrs : Free 3 ·Week COl

Culverts: 4" - 48" In ·stock

a• Gravellm Laadt

I00' - I000' Rolk )• &amp; 3/4' 200# Water Une
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulaton Wafer Storage Tanks
YST

Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

ClauAOTR:
Single Driver, Late Model Ken·
wortns With Reefers West Coast

Coorlor.
ClauBat:R:

80

Auction
end Flea Market

lol.

Bill Mooctispaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auctronea11ng Servlc·
11. Consignment auctlon· Mill
St'r ett , Middleport, Thursdays .

Bolli Positions:
A-125 'IHrt Old
A-t 2YIIII Exparlenet
llood MVR

Ohio Lloanao 17883: 740·889·
2823.

_,Ply

1naurW1CI Avalllbfo
WOrll W. Will Tilt Putltlc

Rk:k Pearson AucUon Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
suction
llrvlce.
L.letnaed
ISI,Ohlo &amp; Weal Ylrglnie, 304·

Every Slluoday Ntghl 7 P.M..

8~

Employment

740-37t-27:!0

Services , 1800

WEEKLY POTENTIAL Compl'to

Wanted to Buy

Simple Government Forma At
Home. No. Experience Necenary.

CALL TOLL FREE • t ·800·988·
3588 Ext 2801.
Exeellant Opponunlty 10 join trtl
long term haa!th cart field. Li·
cenHd Practical Nura11. Rotat·
lng lhlfts. lntarmecUatt cere cen·
ttr. W111 VIrginia ileenae ,. •
qulred . Apply 11 Point Pleasent
Ctnter/Genetla Eldercera, State

Rlnga. Pre· t83Q U.S. Currency,

AnttqUtl. iop prices paid, Rl\lerlne Anllques , Pomeroy, Oh io,
Ru11 Moore owner, 740·882·

-·

Rout• 82, Aouto 1, So• 326,
Polnl P-~ Wo/ 25580. EOE .

HOUSEKEEPING
IUPEIIYIIOII Duo To Stoff Chong••
HolDr Senior C... ceritor II Now

Clean Late Modal Cara Or

Truoka, lttO Motlola Or Nowor.
Smith BuiCk Pontiac. 1900 Eoat·
1m AYinue, Glllll oil

Able To Accopl Apptlcollona For
Super:vtaor Of HOUHkHplng And

ill"' 1b Sell-liM &amp;tufl'l con Rlv-

laundry Ell:p~rlance Required .
Wt Art L.ooklng For Oadlcatld

oraldl ~tlon And Lal uo Sen It
For'lbu. 740-2-.

Poopta To Join Our Toam. Apply
In Person Or Send Or Fex Your

~onltd To Buy: 1813 Molga

Roaumo To RDtllr Hlltle 380"Co·
lonlel Dl1w, SldMU. OH o05614. 0&lt;
Fo• 740-ol4t·t347 EOE.

....r tlooi&lt;. It Anyone Hal One 0&lt;
Knowa Of An1ona Pleoae Coil
740-742-2512.

.,
•

I

Now Taking Applications For
Orl\lera For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
Only, Domm'a Pizza.

NUAStNO LPN'I And STNA'I
Due To Stalf Cna.ngea Holzer
Senior Cart Center, Is Now Able
To Acctpt Applications From
perlenced Af)d Oadlcated People
To Join Our Team. Ohi o License
Aaquired. We Are Also Proud To
Announce That Applications For
Future CNA Classes Are Now
Bti.!"Q Accepted. Apply In Person
Or -Send Or Fax Resume To

Rhonda Coo, RN C.O.N. 380 Colonial DriVe, Bldwoll, OH 45614, 0&lt;
Fax 740-441-1347 EOE.
Part time maintenance (man who

WU1

oo rnowklg): part lmo manager

K1.40353.

SINGERS I GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY. Coli Now Toll FrN 1•
100·339-4202 Or H15·387-815S
For A.ppo i nlmenl To Come To
Nllh\li lla. TN And Audition For

MajorRecoo!P.-a.
I&gt;Omeono 1o apond tho nlghl '""'
tho oldaoly, midnight-lam, 5 dlyo
per week, SI O per day, 740-992·

soaa or 740-992·.W10.

Wanted· experienced full or part
time batber. at Mid&lt; I Style Cen- ·
ter, Pomeroy, Interested paniaa

-·

c oli 740 ·992· 2361 oo 740-992·
WANTED: Buckeye Community
Services C u r r ent!~ Has A Part.
Time Opening In Mttga County;
28 Hrs /Wk.: 8 ~ .M. · 11 P.M .. S'l
/Sun. We Are Searching For
Compasiionate Professionals
With A Team VIsion And A De·
sire To Teach Per aonal ~nd

Communtoy Skllto To lndlvrdualo
With Mental Retardation . The
Work Enwironment 11 Informal
And Flewarding The Requ ire;

menJs Aro: High School Olploma I
GED. Valid Driver's License,
Three Years Good Driving Ex·:
perlence And Adequate Automo·.
bile Insurance Coverage. B C.S.
Offers Comprehanll'tl'l Tralnlng hr

or MA/00. Starting Sal·

The Flold

ary: 15.50 /tlour, lntereattd Ap·
pllcants Need To Specify Position
Of Interest And Sand Reaume To.
P.O. Box 604 , Jackson , OH
45640·0604 . All Applications
Must Be Post · Ma~ By 6116199.
Equal Opponunlly Employer

W"NtED : LPN (Fu ll-Time) AI
Two Commun ity Group Homes ·
For Peop'- With MRIDD In Gallil
County. Hours M· F. Daytlm•
Hours Or A&amp; Schtdulad For
Medical Appointments Or Issues.
Flequtrements: Current Ohio LPN
Llc'ense, NAPNES IOOPNES,
Valid Dr iver' s license, Three
Years Good Driving E•perience
And Adequate Automobile In·
suranee. Salary: S8.50 /Hour. Ex·
cellenl Benefit Package. Send fl&lt;r
sume To . Buckeye Co mmunity
Service&amp;, PO. Box 604, Jackson,
OH 456~0 . Deadline For Ap pllc·
ants· 6118199. Equal Opportunll~

EIT'!lloyOr.
WE NEEO DRIVERS
New EQuipment
Good Pay

KELUTAUCKINQ, INC .
Can
740-218-0178
7411-21&amp;-0208

140

Buslneas
Training

Gotllpolto C•- Coltogo
(CarMos Cklse To Home I Call
TOda)'l 740-446-4367. 1-600- 214-0452. Aeg 19tHl5-12748.• ,

150

Schools
Instruction

URN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors .'
Masters, Doctorate , By Corre·
spondence Based Upon Prior Ed:
ucatlon And Short Study Course.
For FREE Information Booklll .

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE .
UNIVERSITY 1.80().964-83t6.

1BO Wanted To Do
E &amp; S lawn Slrvlee: Design, lm· ·
plementatl on, and Strvlce . ·
Available fo r Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and planUng. Free estimates. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Greg Milhoan: 3041675--4628
Georges Portable Siwmllt, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call
3G4·675·1957

H.S. CONTRACTING
ProfBssJonal Conrracting &amp;Jtvk»s
Ro..-nng, AU Klndo 0t Roofing, •
Shingles, 3·D lap Meta l, Add On
Additions, Painling , Free Eat!•
mates I Res ide ntial. Call Alter ·
6:00Pm. 741l-441.Q653.
·
Interior &amp; Exterior Pai nUng . Ex~
parlenced. Flele rences. Reas on··
able Ratts Fo r Free Estimate, ·
74~388-8041

Jlms Drywall &amp; Construetlon.
New Construction &amp; RemodeJI
Drywall , Siding . Roots, Addi·
tions, Paint ing, etc . (30 4)674- '

4623 or (304)874.0155.
Wil l Clean Ho uses, Aelerences
Available, 740-446-1834.
W1l.l Mow and Haul and do Clea- '
nup. (304)675-4538.
Will Rep air lawn Mowers, Farm .
Tractor&amp; An d EQuipment In My
Garage, Call Evenings. 740·441-

0199.
1

Will Slay With Elderly Persons ln

ThatrHomo. 740-388·9656.

ShlfiS, (304)882·3922. Leave
Maosago.
.
PINKERTON SECURtTV
Now Accoplklg Appllcallons
For Tnt Gdipola Area.
•AlxMt Average Wages

'Coonpo!ltlvo Houoty Wages
'fl,jl Time Po&amp;Hions
•Paid Vacations

F INAN C IAL

210

recommends that yoo do b usl~ •
ness with people you know, anti
NOT to send money through the "'
mail unti l you have lnvestigaled

'""offering .
ALL CASH BIZttt
Get $20 Bills For $12.5011
S500 ·$1 ,000 /Wk. Easy!
Free $5 5amplal
1·800·997·9888, 24 ttl.

And Dismemberment Insurance
'Opt. DeniOI &lt;\.Ill
/Medical Insurance

To Quotlly Applloonlllluat
-Tho Foltowl"ff:
'8o11Y..,.OfAgoOrO'Ho.,.A
•11uol Be Alllt To l'lloa
AOnlgSclllft

Ctaon--

Buelnees
Opportunity

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

'Lifo. And Ac-.1111Death

Area Pepsi /Coke Route t 5 High Profit Locations, With New Ma~
chines Earn 100K Yearly 1-800·

440.2371 .

.

A\lsl!able Vending Route 10 -20

Locallono. $4K -$10K. $4,000 +1 •
Mo. Income • AL.L. CASH! 100%
Finance Awallable. 1-800·380· •

Earn $104 ·$400 + FrH Portraitl,
lnvlla Your Friends To Your
Home For A Profeulonal Glem·
our Portrait Party, 1·800·426--

liVE- AUCTIIIN BARN

.

,I

Apply In Person At
17 Plr:te Street
GallipoliS, OH
Monday, June 141h
Tuesday, June 1Sill
Wadno&amp;day, Juno 16th
6:00P.M. UU 900 P.M. Only
Ask For: Ms. Hammon

437·8784, Hrs. 8:30 A lot. ·5 P.M.

773-5785 0&lt; 304·773'5447.

Slarltng, Etc." Acqullitiono Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 S•cond
A......... ~.74Q.446.2842 .

VINYL REP!...ACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACI'ORY DIRECf PRICES

WeTrain
StUdents Welcomt

For Mora lntormetion Call 800·

Otomonda, An11quo Jowllry, Gold

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS .

N-

Bonont&gt;lnctuOo:

Team Stiilght Truck, late Modal
Fratghtllnerl With Sleepers. Must
Have Air Brake Endor11ments ,
800 Mile Radius. Home Dtllver-

Abaolutt Top Doilor: Ail u.s . Sit·

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

740·742·2131 ! -

· ' Oay Ar&lt;l Ewnklg
ShiHo Avalle~a
' Fun And Pan Tl"" Opening
• No Expe&lt;loncad

www.parntTanlpOrt.com

ver And Gold Coins, Proof11ts,

VISIT OUR OFFICEISHQWROOM THERE

Joe N. Sayre ,.

Wo"'

8002 Sun ·Fri. 7 A.M. · 7 P.M.

80

IS NOW LOCATED STAR Rotm U
6 MILES NORTH Of POMEROY AT coum ROAD II

Reuonable Ratea ,

NOW HIRING
&amp;170.00 PER WEEKIPT
(GUAAAANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Te~hono Operator
For
LOCAL RACIO
STATION PIIOMOTIONS

$3.00: Belkin Enttrprlata . Box

~ ONo

FOiiMERlY Of 110 COURT .STREO, POMEROY

. . ..

•ao•

903, t.lonchlollr, TN 37349.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

HelpWented

982·8397 . ex I 1787. Leave Moo·

Part·Time Babyail1ar. Variable

Crown City, 740--9

No Embarr1111ment ...

•

Newspaper C4Jrrlar Needed for a
Sunday Route . On ly. Gallipolis
Ferry, Crab Creek, Jerrya Run
Road , Appl e Grove , Ashland·
Upland Road, Glenwood, 1·800·

Needed. P.A.M. Tran1por1 Spa ·
clal Call Toll Free 1·871·230·

CRMNG POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:

110

10 yoaro. (304)675-1904. belore
.5:00/leava meuage.

Training . Earn 128 -$32,000 /Ill
Yr. W /Full Baneflla . No Exp.

lido WMPO on Bradbury Ad ..
JlH 181h, 171h, &amp; 18th, 9a.m until

. . 740-985-3813

FREE ESTIMATES

You're Treetecl with R81pectl

•-'"nee

YARD SALE SECRETS! FIRST
OF ITS KINCI Proven Tech-.
nlquoot CASH RESULTS! Stnd

Gigantic Garage tale, Bradbury
Church of Chrlet parsanaQe ba·

Tuppers Plains, OH

ol age gpo&lt;l

Sato Go To Emplo'" Smoke
Shllor.

Phone (740) )~j--b()ll

iroivmNirrr

.'

Medical ProceaSOf

FTIPT No
noce&amp;88ry
Wllltreln. PC required. Earn ~
can 80().663-7440

tor a 20 lJnlt apartment complex:
please sand resumes or Inquiries
to · Attention Ca rolyn Emmons,
801 Milwkins Drive, Mt. Sterling,

Spin.

St. At. 11 "

~~tara

pro11, tnc. (800)·293·0700 (BOO)·
895-4473, Recent Driving SchoOl
Gllldualls Woic:oiT'ool

•Land Clearing &amp;

c ....~lt •. Slow Credit • BankrUptcy

•·

"PPLY FOR THIS POS ITION ,
CALL 1·800-524·1990, USE JOB
COCE 11726.

LPN'o And STNA'o Who Ara Ex·

driving record Conunan1al Ex·

Pomeroy,

G&amp;W .Plastics and Supply

25.271 .

as
To
Nicknacks
And
Whtalcl'la!ls. IIams For Yard
Sale Are oontauons From Em·
ptoyeea. Proceeds From Yard

•f111111 lr 1Millr Sll11

750 liaSt State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

wv

Driver-Long Haul &amp; Regional
Ha\4 A Career In 2 Hours! "Pakl
Health Insurance "Dental Plan
Available ~ 4011&lt; and life lnaurence •obtainotlle Saltty and
Producllvlty Bonuses Appllca·
Ilona Proce11ad In 2 Hours Or
Ltaal Raguir~manta , e mon1hs

l'rtdly.llondlr -

hour. 2nd ar&lt;l 3od ohlfto

available; 9Q.day aaaignment with
completion bonus . For th is posl·
tlon, Interim Personnel uses DIA·
LAPP, a 24·hour. 7-days.a-week
applicant screening system. TO

80().941-8310 Ext 2200.

COder/Analyst JackSon General
Hospital, Ripley, wv. haa 2
openings for full·tlma Coder/Ana·
lyal. Certification as an A.R.T.,
Coding Sptclallat or equivalent
experience with CPT and IC0·9
Coding required Tumor Registry
. knowledge or experience pre·
ferred . Aepiy to HR Director,'
Jack1on General Hosp ital, PO

Your locally based hauler for residential,
commercial and industrial refuse
removal. Serving Meigs County with
state of the art equipment and 20 years
in ·the refuse industry. Call today to see
how much you can save.

·

38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

$~. 50 pet

Investment Plan . E•p. A Plus.

Yard Sale

~ . Southern Ohio Disposal.

Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
pergama
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburlt
Progreaatve top line. . \
Uc. I 00-50 "~"'*'

Trucks ~ tractor
Trailers - decks ~ driveways
Equlpmsnt Cluntd &amp; Degreued
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:

lor immediate work at packaging
plant In Northwestern Ohio .
Transponallon and !'lOusing op·
Ilona ava ilab le. Starlin'g wages

1428.

Toots In tt. VIcinity: Ramp Of Silver Brlclgo. 740-446-8247.

70

111•$1111 MOilLE
POWER WISH

4814.

dy' Black /White Nama: •Fiaoh" CLERICAL $12 ·$18 /HR . FTIPT
Roward, Both Soagleo, 74(1-4~111- " 1 Positions Available. Will Train .
Fun Benollta: 401 K, Pd. Vocation,
40t 5, Kanauga Areo.

Dirt • Sand

(740)691·9407
1740)691·6029

A.VONI All Areas ! To Buy or Sell

German

Loll: 15 Month Slack .Polled Llmoualn Bull, O.J. Whlta / Kempor
Road, 740-446·2158.

Grading
•Septic Systems &amp; Utllftles

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEtl Craflo ,

(7401-446-2800

· Agl.'lcunural Ume,
Umeatone • Gl'lvtl

?tt7•
. ''a •Bed
• .

4300.

Fru Klttana Malts and Femates.
very Tamed! To Good t1om11

LPN Full· Time Wllh Benefttl For
20 Bod tCFII.tR Facltlly In Cheaa·
peake, II ln1erested, 7•0·446·

Needed . Babysitter In my home.
8.00-5 :00,!.1-F. Two children, 8 &amp;

experience· will train . Conditions

Free Hay. (304)895-391'2.

P.M.

All students· full and part time
opening• In customer ser~t~ea/

740-2!16o81181 .
Dalmatian pup to good home;

Johnaona Supermarket. 85 Vine
Street, Gallipolis, Application•
Being Accepted For Cashier /Of·
flee Anlstant Evenings And
Weekends. Must Be At Least 18
VIars Old &amp; High School Gradu·
ate, Work Experience Required .
Inquire Between 9:00A.M ·1·00

Equal Opponunl1y
AlflrmoliYo ActiOn EIT'!lloyor

NO PHONE CALUI PLEASE

oloo 4 Calico killona, 740-9927605.

Tradaamanl J Obsite Locations,
Contractors Names, Ph one t 's,
And Wage Information . 112.95 /
Mo ntn. On:ler Today! 800 · 943·
9090.
~

Musicians· looking for lead guitar
and bassist for group doing
country and oldies rock , John
Pick, 741Hi98-6212.

AKO 2 Yoor Old Famalo Rogla -

ttred St. Bernard, Good With
Children. FrH To Country Home, ·

Two

HVAC-Tecll
MlnHnum 2 yoera o-'""&lt;0 In
· Muot h1Mi EPA relrigo&lt;·
atlon cortl11callon and RSES cer·
tlfloatlon. Must haYI own nand~·· Truck furnllhed . Athena CO.
area. Excellent pay &amp; benetttl
Send RllllmOI" HVAC JOBS,
P.O. Box 2289, Alhenl. 01145701 .
Jewelry Salea Rttall Sal11 and
Computer Explflence Required.
A,cquls lt lons Fine Jewelry. 151

MACHINE OPE.RATORS neodod

. Giveaway

40:

Shopherda 1·male and 1-Femato.
Thoy are One year old. 1740)·256·
1725

:cRIDrr ·
'

crealivtl and wiUing

to excel. Rlltoratlve IJCf)lrlanct
and certified nuralng alllatant

Wedemtytr'l Auction Service,

I·

Hauling
Umtetone &amp; Gravel ~ '

FrH Eat/mat••

ft

•

~OH &lt;flm

.
.
'.

. Phone:
7i40-256-8147

Phone 740.992-3987

.;n,.
11!!1

Albany, Ohio

STEliiEMOEUA!KANET.COM

...............

I .'·:

~

YOUR

~aclne, Ohio 45n1

' -----·--" ·- --

PARn

HILL'S

28670 Baahan Road

i

·

•

I

175 N. 2nd, Mlddlepoli, OH

DIPOYIU

-

tELF STORAIE

tt2-7021

1

......

Glimltu4

'

•Deep cleans llfety
•DEODORIZES leaving carpet

==:::.

New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages •
• Replacement Windows I ,
· • Room Additions

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

R.,...,..,

'

INIEUCARPn

I

'C

FRALEY

H&amp;H

'

futher lRftrMitlll.
E"O

Gngee

lte~t~ember

740-99:Z.~~60

Wholellie IRIIIII • Fre Calalog •
CoH 1"·800-82HI8111 .

3 Kittens To Giveaway, 740· 388·
14o05 LIIIVil Mrl118go.
.

Licensed &amp; Insured 11!!1

· " 27 yl'8. exp.

Free Estimates
c·ontraetors Welco11e

EUM

lllllfiliJ ,,,, .
-/lfllfiiP."'

THE MAPLES

.

Free Eollmateo
740-742-3411
Bryan Re8116o
Suoan

fer

.740·992~7022 ,.,

VInyl Sldlng.Raofa.Dieb.

1·800·311·3391

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On .
Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.

UDder New Mgmt.

Activ ities A11 istant for 100 bad
'killed nura lng facility. Excellent
QppOfiUnlty for lhl right candlclall
to work with our realdents and be
a l'nlmber ol our tM/11. Houn are

Body Support, Anti· Naulla
Band• . · Megnetlc Plasters.

Tal

Soln Mator lol. Fru Info. 819·
4112-81124.

"DRIVE THE BIG RIGGSIII'.,~Se~c~o~nd~A~vo~·~G~a:_ll~lp_o_lls_._A~p~
p l~y
Rog. O.T.R - Trud&lt; Driving Train·
11vu Ftldoy.
lng No Expor. NtCtlla&gt;yll 21 &amp; JOBSITES USA MAGAZINE .
Ov¥ 1-tn-213--1303 (Toll Free).
Accurate Nallonwide Month ly
Publicaton Of Contractors Needs

Ill St. Rl. 1~3. 740-992-7941 .

1

•Jiandicapped

lion /Examlna1ion Information.
Federal Hirtlfull Benefits. 1·800~SOC En 151 • , 7 Daya.

1

Cheater, Ohio

Care for Elderly

-lJ

.

3 gray kittens , approximately 8
wkl. old, litter trained, Kathy JeH·

.CCCCft~ftftftCJftft
WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
~ JD COISftiDC'fiOI
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
.;n,.
GUnERS
~
Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding W!!1
Siding &amp; St~llil C Garages,
· Commercial &amp; Reeldantlal . .ttn.

(740)992-3111

HOME

Calli ,.....

bcioater pumpa,

Nowean-..,&amp;

Bottom, Ohio

886 4422

U1ilitie• ·

1t11l '-try 1 - .
(I} 14, 111 2TC

....,..

.a. .,

Jle:e•''N .

olllott In Allllnl 1o Oiled e1 ·

1011 and IIIOCialld

~Calllnole

Jerry L. Preece ·
Crown Cl OH 45623

5/25!99 2 mo. pd.

"IICAVAIING CO.

37011-1431.

1 FtmaleCIIIco, 740-441·f707.

Call For Free Estimates

.

paris • Will dellyet

PUBUC NOncE
.
Till Ohio ..._rlmlnt ol
...,...
Natural RIIOUI'Oet, Dlvlelon
of FOrlllry, Dlllrlct 4 will
hOlt on Open Houll from 4
to 1 p.ni. Ju~ 22 et ltjl

Coaatracllan

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
{Low Rates)

•Paving
•Lots
.,
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Patching
•Business
•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

. tHE APPLIANCE MAN
985·3561

949-2168 .

SIO"'I'od Envelopol GICO, DEPT
! , Box 1438 , ANTIOCH, TN.

Rd .. Pomoroy, OhiO 45789, Ann:

Now

HOWARD

Sa881Bome

•New Homes
*Additions
*Remodeling

We Deliver

Call 985-3QI

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

Public N.otlce

ft'ICIK!.SwuetHome.eom

CONITRUCTIO

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen .Five
Points &amp; Chester
We-Custom Spray
•Vegetables •Com
•Soybeans

(7) 1 3TC ·

Business Services
WICKS
HfiOLING .INC.

SERVICE

Owner

Gutters
Downspouts
~utter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMAT!ES

Start Otting Tonight! Ha\11 fun

ploylng 1l1e ONo OoUng G111n1, 1·
eoo.ROMANCE,IIIIIOnllon lle81 .

MAGNETIC HEALTH PAD·
DUCTS Jewelry, Shot Soles,

''I'M
BACK"
4.Ex~f!$~£'~~~JnNJA,on ~
len Young fol'lllll'
of

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR

U ,OOO WIIKLYt Mo111ng 400

Going Out Of Buolnoll Stlo: 40%
OH Store Wide, Wi lton Cake
Pano , D.J.'a Craft Shop; 2390
Jld&lt;aon Pttoo, 74(1.448.2134.

(740) 843-1252

JeJreJny...L. Roush
949-1701

"Howard L. Writesel

11o Help Wllnted

HlghY Approvod Govl. Clronl. Call
1-877-1111-3832 or Wrlll To P.O.
Bor/1 4300 , S . Gtenburnle, New
s.n, NC 285ft0.

=

nlope Proceuad With Our

Brochures! Sa!lsfactlon Guar·
onlH&lt;II Polllge &amp; Suppllel Provided! Rush SIU•Addrtllld

742-311.8.

53560 S. R 338 .
Portland, Ohio

:...."'TulW''"'t~,

t.;..~=;..:;:si:.:6..:;:Ri;;;a;;.;Rd;;;;!..

ENVELOPE STUFFEAS WANT·

Alwl)'l tired? Run down? Want to • ' GOV'T POSTAL JOBS ' • To
fee l better? Find out how, 740- · 117.24 Hour. FrH Call, Appllca·

. ..••• c. ll"ed

marked • Bid tor "Daxtar
Wotor Uno Extenolon
Prolact Bid" and mailed or :
dallvwed to:
lllelga
County :
Commlealonera
Coulthouu
Pomeroy, Ohio 45781
Attention ot btddera ta
called to oil ollhl requl,..
manta cqntalnaclln lhla bid
packll, palt-rly to lhl .
Federal Labor Sllndarcla
Provlalona anci DIVIIBioon . Wogea, v1rloua
lneuranca requlremanta,
varloua equal opportunity
provtatona. ond .,. requl,..
manta tor • payment bond
and parforma.- bond tor
1110% ollhl eontnect prtea.
No bidder may wHhdraw
hla bid within thirty (30)
d1ya llhlr .,.actual IIIII of .
thl opening lhlraol. The
.lllllga
County
Commtaalonara ,.....,.,
.,. rtght to Wllve any lntor.malltl• or to reieet any or
•• bide.
Janet Howlrcl, .,..ldent
lllelga
County
Comml•lonwa
(8) 14,22

Help Wanted

Month. Reoelw 13 For Evory En-

30 Announcement•

..... c.........

Bide .n.11 11e Mid and

SEf'VIll,

Ext. 87311.

....nhlng
~ ...............rick

bond.

hydranta, lnd realdonllal

approxtmately the .same position a_s ment, disability or death. Eligible
the employee and the employer.
family members may receive beneThe result !s a package .of pro- fits on the worker 's record. A wage
People sometimes . forget the tecuon that Includes retlfement earne~ generally needs credit for 10
way in which the current Social benefits as early as age 62, disabil- years of work under Social Securi Security system is funded by ity benefits at any age, and sur- ty to qualify for benefits.
employees, ~mployers and the self- vrvors benefits for a worker 's fam!'or disability benefits, howev e!lJployed.
tly.
er, . "recent work" is required; the
This shared responsibility is the
Proposals for changing the sys- work credits must have been
key to the financing of the Social tern to meet the need for increased · earned in a specified period preSecurity system and makes it pos- fun~mg are urged W recognize the ceding the date of disability onset.
sible to maximize protection at deltcate balance m the present
Younger wage earners require
minimal cost to the individual.
fmancmg system.
fewer work credits to qualify. The
Today, employees pay 6.20 per- Any ·reform must assure that the amount of your monthly Social
cent of their earnings up to a maxi- cost of the systell) does not unduly Security benefit is based on your
mum ·of $72,600 a ,Year and- an . burden any one segment of society earnings averaged over most of
additional 1.45 percent all their over another.
.
your working career.
earnings. for Medicare hospital
For more information, call 1- · To qualify for SSI, a person
insurance.
800-772-1213 and ask for the must be age 65 or older or be blind
. The employer pays a matching booklet, The ·Future of Social Sec u- or disabled and have limited
6.20 percent of the employee's rity. Or you can visit Soc tal Securi- income and resources. Children as
earnings, plus 1.45 percent for ty · Online, at http ://www.ssa.gov, well as adults can get SSI because
Medicare.
The
self- our Internet website.
of disability or blindness .
employed' pay 12.40 percent, plus
You can have some earnings and
2.90 percent for Medicare , an
sull qual1fy for SSI payments. The
amount equal to both the efllploy- Some confuse Social Security and value of the things you own cannot
SSI
.
er'i and employee's share.
exceed $2,000 for an individualThe maximum amount of wages
A Gallup survey finds that many $3,000 for a couple. However, not
subject to the tax increases annual- people lend to. confuse Social all of your income and assets are
ly; however, the tax .rate is not Security and Supplemental Securi- counted when determining SSI elischeduled to change under present ty Income (SSI) because both pro- gibility.
law.
grams are run by the Social SecuriYour house does n't count, and
There are incentives and trade- ty Administration (SSA).
usually your ca r doesn't count.
Social Security is not the same Other items are also excluded.
offs that make the system work .
For the employer, the Social Secu- as SSI. Social Security is a social
For mmc information about the
rity tax becomes part of the cost of insurance program funded primari- eligibility rule's for Social Security
doing business. He/she gets a cred- ly through the Social Security taxes and SSI, contact SSA toll-free at 1it for the cost of his/her Social paid by workers, employer~ and 800-772-1213 and ask for copies of
Security contributions on his/her self-employed people . SSI is a pub- the fol1owing booklets , Under.federal income tax return.
lic assistance program finan ced standtng the Benefits (SSA Pub.
The employer also can hitegrate from general funds of the U.S. No .. 05-10024) and Supplemental
Security Income .(SSA Pu,b.No.OSSocial . Security benefits into Treasury.
The two programs also differ in 11 ()()()).
his/her own retirement . benefits ·
Use.rs of the Internet can type
other areas, such as conditions for
package for the employee.
www.ssa.gov
to access these and
eligibility
and
the
method
of
fi
gurSelf-employell people are able
other Social Security .publicati ons.
to deduct an amount equal to the ing payment.
· Under Soeial Security, benefits
employer's share from their federal

DAuto Up o stery • P us, Inc

!' . . . . . . . . . . . ........

lforeuld lllelga County
Commllllonera. Bid bonda
ahall be 1ccompanled lly
proof or Authority · ol lhl
olnclot .or ~gent algnlng lhl

Cull992·2156
ITAliT DATING TON IG HTI
HIYO Fun Moellng Eligible Sin·
g&amp;ea In Your ArM. Cell For More
fnformotlon . HOO· ROMANCE,

. ...... eu.-lulp

bkl omount tn filvor of .,.

11 0

Fr.1Pt ovr.1r rn

EO: I ,000 Enwlopea • $3 .000 I

740 742·8888

llld ohlok, calhll,. chlok,
or 111t1r or cl'ldn upon a
101v1nt bonk In lhl amount
o1 not • - u-10% or.,. ·

12, 1M and lhln II 1:00
P.M. at the uld office
opaniCI and rHd aloud tor
lhl tollowlng:
Thl lnalltlllllon of approx·
lmataly se,100 LF ot
polyvinyl chloride (PVC)
wluaa, 2

E;R .
Socllil Security Office, Athene

and

Plana, Speoltlcatlono, and

..... ._
au

Tu pln(l• ttn uti

Rutland, Ohio
· Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Fr1 .8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

Mend TJI. 1447; Twp. 321,

457111, unttl10:00 A.M., July

-

BY ED PETERSON, MANAG· income tax, putting them in are payable in the event of retire -

I

queatlon1 about lhl
Dtvlelon of l'or.otry'a pn&gt;NOTICE TO
~ram In Hooltlng, Zlllald,
COHTRACTORS
lohland FuntiCI, lhlda
Blalld propoula tor .,. River and GHforcl IIIII
lnltalllllon ol 111,100 LF or · Forwta and any olhlr 11M' .

a

Employees and employers share cost o.f program

Business Services

Public Notice

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

261~

Reliable person, help on pape r
rdute , :l-4 hra. day, 5 days weelc,
prafer someone with drivers II·

cenao. 74o-742·2852.
Saaking CtrtiUad Nurse Aid11.
Part lima. Rota11ng shifts. West
VIrg inia cerUflcatlon req uired.
Apply at Point Pleasant Center/
G•nu ls Eldercare , Slete Route
62, Route 1, Box 326, Point

Plelsant, Wo/ 25550. EOE.
Skilled Nursing Facility aeaklng
an AN to r full l ima on 11· 7 shift.
We ere also accepting appllca·
tiona for part time L.PNIRN. ROCk·
aprlngs Rlhlbllltat!on Cent~r Is a
100 blc:t skilled and intermediate
level fa cility. We havl an excel·
lent survey history and a very
stable staff. Thll Ia an excellent

opponunlly loo tho light candidate
for persona l and professional
growth. Submit resume to: Rock·
springa .. Rthabll lta tlo n Center,

38759 Roct&lt;apnngs Rd .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769: Corol Groening, Dl·
rector of Nursing . Equal Oppor·
lunilyEIT'!lla;lr

· 24 Hos .

Banks And Financial Institutions •
Earn 60% Of Their Prolits Trading
Forei gn Currency. For Your Free
Flapor t Call 1·800-392·0843, .

$5,000 Mini"""' Roqui..O.
E"RN $90,000 YEARLY Ropolrlng , NOT Replacing, Long Cracks
In Windsh ields t=ree VIdeo ~.

600·826· 8523

US · /Canada'.

www glassrrilchan!x.com
E"RN A COMPUTER, CASH &amp; •
CAR Of 'lbuo 'Cholce'l No Com- .
putor Sklllo Roqulrld . Can H18830Q.5067 (24 Hrs).
E"RN UP TO 1140 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form we ·
Do The Rest No Direct Selling~
Free Information Package 1·800.. · ·

311).9745 Exl. 27, 24 H01.

.

..

FINANCIAL PROBLEMS? Wo ;
Can Help, Regardleaa Of Credit! •
No Fees. Great 'Rat11 1·800·

93:1·M12.
Need Extra Income? E1rn Aa
Yo u Learn Complete Internet
Training Program &amp; MerkaUng '
Sys1em. L.earn How At www.biUI·
kyz.com.

�Monday, June 14, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

•
Monday, June 14, 1999

Pomeroy

o

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER
440
Beautiful, 2 Acre Lot. Cenrenary
Road. An Area Or Beautiful
Homes, S32,000, 740-446-2927

By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·

For Rtnt: rBulldlng On S.R. 33.
New Haven , WYA. 1.000 To

5,000Sq FL 7~2613

to appreciate, will sell house witha ut lots far $89,000, 740 -992-

5 Acres Frontage, Garfield
Avenue, City Utilities. S49,000,

5

2704, 740-992·5696

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE . S1 ,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES. ON GOING SUP·
PORT. SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1·800·
731·7233 EXT 2403.
MAXIMIZE pROFIT

dloport, houoo &amp; 3 tots, mus1 see

pOTEN.

IIAL1 san•• Rllurn $50 . $60K

By Owner 117 Howard Street ,
New Haven , 2BA. O-R . Steel
Siding; NeW Wlndov_raJRooflng&amp;
Heat·Pump, Full Ba sement,
Screen Porch , Storage eulldlng,
1Car Garage, Well-Ma intained
Call after -4PM Week · Davs.

By Owner _ Sandhill Road ,JPolnt
Plauanl. Brick Ranch - 3Bed rooms-2Saths. Basement Two-2
car garages. Acre Lot (740)441·

IIETABOLISE INT'L, INC. Is Of·
taring Anyone lnrerested In

0618
AsMtng $~6.000 . Firm, tmmediele
PO$SO&amp;Sioni740-25H702

course ..

11'1 MAACO Tne Name Synonymoua With Auto Painting And Bodywork• MAACO Is Now Award ·

vld at 1·(800)·333-6910

lng Fra nchise In Select Areas
Across The U S. If You Want To
Be A Part 01 The tt Auto PaintIng Franchise In ,l.mertca CALL

By Ow ner Excellent Location,
Very Attractive Price sao s
Please Call From 6 to 11PM

VENDING: Lazy Persons Dream.
Few Hours .. Great Income
Priced To Sell Free Brochure

(800)-820-6782
WORK FROM HOI\1E

Fuller

Brush Needs Reliable People To
Service Customers In Local
Area PT/FT Average $150 To
$350 Per Week Must Have

Phone t -800-3-W-3202.

220 Money to Loan
SSS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payments
On Propertv Sold! Mortgages!
Annultlesl SeUiementsl Immediate Quoteslll •Nobody Beats
Our Prices.' National Contract

Buyers 800-490-0731 Ext. 101

www nallonatcon~actlxJyefs com
$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII

Consol~

date Deblal Same Day Approval

NO APPLICATION FEESII 1-800·
88:1-9006 El&lt;l. 936. "Member Set·
tar Buslneaa Bureau• www help·
pay-billa com

15.000 INSTANT UNSECURED
CREDIT CAROl GUARANTEED!
PLUS BONUS $170 GIFT CERTIFICATE!
t-800·895 ·7496
SLOW CREDIT? SAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT? WE SAY YESI 1·
888·805·9026
.... Credit Card Problem&amp; .... Debt
Consolidation Stop Collection
Calls Reduce Payments &amp;
Finance Charges Avoid Benk-

f1411GY 1-1100·27().9894
CONSOLIDATE DEBT. Reduced
Mon111ty Paymen1s 20 ·50%. SIWe
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest

men!, call740;992·5696

DON'T SORROW MONEY! Tho
Debt Management Club (Not -For

·Profit) Can Pay Your Dellis And
You Don't Have To Pay Us Back·

· EVER! Send SASE To DMC ·
Dep1 4320 P D Box 4332 Valley
VIllage, CA 91617 818·763·1000
Ext.4320.
FREE MONEY! fl''s True N&amp;Ver
Repay Guaranteed $500 •

$50,000. Debt COnsolldallon, Per·
sonal Needs, Business. 1-800·

511·2640
WANT A VISA CARD?? S12,000
Plus, Unsecured Sad /No Creclll

OK! No Deposit Required. Every·
one Welcome! Call 1· 800 -285·
3588

230

Profe88ionai

Services
The complete cteanlng ser vice .

Carpel, Upholstery, Walls, CollIngs, and also Power Washing .
For a free estlmale call Clearly

Clean et (304)675·4040 Guarenleed World
·
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Untoa1 We Win!
1-888-582-33ol~

Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Info. Take 10%

740-286-008 t

360

'

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 -500 Acres,

We Pay Cash 1·800·2t 3·8385,
Anthony Land CO

10 Ft x50 Ft 2 Bedroom House
Trailer 740.388-8089

St 500 Call K&amp;K, (304)675·3000,
8AM-5PMI675-e:m after 6PM
14Ft X 70Ft Nashua, 2 Bdrms, 2
Baths, CIA, Gas Furnace, Factory
Fireplace
$8 ,000 00
After

410

HOUHI for Rent

2 Bedroom House In Eureka,
$275 00 plus Deposit Plus Refer-

ence&amp;! CaH: (740~384·2560
2 Bedrooms, Kanauga Area,

$27f&gt;'Mo ' 741).367-7015

740-379-2~

2 BR House at 2219 112 Ll"coln
Ave. F't F'leasanr,wv $275
month+deposlt HUO approved,
reference required Stove/Refrigerator Included
No pets.

14x70 HollyPark Mobllehome
2BR, Large Bath/garden bathtub,
separate shower, large livingroom w/high callings, new carpet,
kitchen has new top-of-the-line
gas stove, has gas heat, central
air 1nstalled In 1994, new steal
doors &amp;storm doors Asking

limitation or discrimination
baled on race 1 ector. religion,
HX familial ttltua or national
origin, or any lntBntion to
mike any such preference,
HrnllaHon or di!trlmlnatlon •

Thta nowopaper will not

knowlr9'! accept

-fcfreotestata
wl1id11o In violation of the
llw. Our . - . are hereby
lnfarmld ll1at all -lrogs

--.ctlnthls... - . , ""equal

_..ntybasls

310

l~oTATE

Homea for S.le

3 Bedrooms, 1 Beth, Laundry
Room, AIC, Oorago, Nice Yard,
$31,000, 7-7-c241.
~

room, 1 112 both, loundry, full

bnument, hill

J)001J

1 tt.z A util-

t974 KlrMWOOd 12X60, 2 bod
rooms, Good COnditK&gt;n $4,950 00

CaH (740)-367-7308 Evenings!

Depo~l

t 9$7 Oakwood. 3 BR, 1 112 BA

758 First Ave , 1 Bdrm , 1 Bath,
Newly Renovated, Washer Dryer

Washer &amp; Dryer, New Heat·
Pump, Porch, Carpart (304)675·

(304)675-3230

t988 Clayton, 14x70, 3BA/2BA.

House For Rent In Kanauga, 2
Bedrooms , $325/Uo, $325 De -

posH, 740-446-4107.

Paid 740-388· 1100

388·8335.
1990 Clavton 2 Bedrooms, A/C,
New Carpet, All Electric, May
Stay On Rented Lot, 740· 441 ·
022t
1992, 14x70, 3 bedroom Redman
mobile home, heat pump &amp; skirt·

lng Included, 740-742·2795
1994 Clayton 14x76 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Roman Tub, CJA, All
Electric, New D W. Storage BuildIng, Large Rented Lot, Very N1cel

Waterloo, House, $:325/Mo , Includes Water &amp; Garbage, Deposit
&amp; Reraflnces, 740·643-2916,

for Rent
14 x70, 2 bedroom, total electric,
S250 rent, $150 deposit, no pets,

740-742·27t4
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned , $260·$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740-

rented lot (304)875-4871 .

Trash Furmshed. 1 Mile From

Low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers, Limited Time 4vallable,

Gallpolls. $250 .00 Rant With
St 50 00 Deposit 740-446-0781

Looking To Buy Good Older

Homes, t-aoo'-383-6862

2 Bedrooms, Addison Pll&lt;e, $220/
Mo., $100 Deposit, No Pets, 740·
446-1637, 740-446·3437
28FI MoblleHome, Located 1

mile om Sandhill Road. $250 de·
posl11$275 Per Month (740)338·
9971
3 Bedrooms, 1 112 8a111s, tn POrt·

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
includes 6 months FREE tot rani
Includes waaher &amp; dryer, Skirting
deluxe steps and setup Onfy

tunily, 740 448 4639

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

port From $249-$373 Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunllles.
Pilot Program, Renters Needed 1·

800-383-11882.
MOdern 1 BA all Ubhlles paid ex·
capt electric Gallipolis Ferry

Area S250•deposll (304)675t 371 1(304)675-3230.
Nice 1 bedroom furnished apartment with prlwate yard , no pets,

740·992-5633

Twin Rlvers Tower now accepting
applications for 1BR HUO sub·
sldized apt, tor elderly and handIcapped EOH 304-675-6879

460 Space for Rent

Mobile home site a"""ble bet·
ween Athens and Poftferoy, call

740-3115-4367
Forlea•

Tobacco Allot. For Lease. 1835
btl, 25 per lb (304)736-4398

s

MERCHANDISE
Household

Air Conditioner, 17000 STU.
$150 . Sleeper Sofa, St85 .
(304)675-2691
Air Conditioners, Used Different
Sizes. Guaranteed! 740 -886·
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Aefrlgrators. 90 Day Guaranteal
French Clly Maytag, 740-446·

7795
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigerators,
ranges, Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIM Slflel, Call 740·446·7398,

1·888-818-0128
International Bears Teanle BeanIe Sat, McDonald's 1998 &amp; 1999
Complete Beanie Sets. Super Nln-

tendo System 740-44&amp;--o350
Used Furniture /Appliances Off
BulavJIIe Pike On Keeler Road,

740·446-4039, 740-446·104,04

5039

440

Apartments
for Rent

And Auction 6/26th, 9-4. Polnl
Pleasant Armory. Quality Dealers

t Bdrm, Exira Nice, First Month

"HOST FAMILIES NEEDEDIII'
Exchange Students From Germa-

$279 00 Per Mon111, Plus Utilities
740-446-2957.

ny, Japan, England, France, Rusala, Brazil. S!udents Arrive In Au·

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;

SchoolS For Further Information,

capt Electric, Privata Parking, No
Pe11. 740-446-2802.

736-3409

330

1 Bei:troom Upstairs 4partment In

Syracuse, $250/Mo., Deposit &amp;

Farlll8 for S.le

References Required. 7-40-992·

houses, oil Well, pond, well &amp; city
330-945-4505
l..ote

Local

High

1·110().785-4983

30, 6 Fl. Pine Trees, $30 Each,

-:740-446:-:--::-:--29,..21~·--~---

AMAZING

METABOLISM

Breakthroughlll Loaa 10-200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Rtautta, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended free Sam·

plos Call740-441-1982

Gandlo.CAN1tlono,
636 Srlclt SU.1,
Rutland, OH 45n5,

1 Bedroom , Partly Furnlahed,
Apartment
Downtown Point

water, $140,000, beaulllul view,

Attend

----~~---

7104Afler6PM.

48 acre farm on Klngabury Rd 2

350

gust To

ven

for

rent.

(304)882-2118, day·

Of Scents, Hours Monday -Sat·

Melga Countlu, $30,000 , 740·
388-9105

•
(-•)882n1
,me; -~.""" ng.
2 bedroom aparlmanl In Middle·
port, we pay water, . . . , &amp; IIIah,

15ACRES

month, $100 deposit, 740-992·
7808.

Works Good! $150, Call After 5
PM 74()-446-2398

In Tha 'Country, W1s1 Galllo

2bdrm opts , total electric, ap·

COMPAQ COMPUTERS! $0 -

prox 5 Acrea Claar, Rest In
Woods, Sltua1a~ In Gallta &amp;

you pay gaa &amp; .. ectrle,

RI!ADI' FOR HOBBES
Caunty, Lots Of Meadow, With
New Barna And Fencing, Ready

FOr Anlmlls. Lots .OI Road Fron·
Take

Divided Into 5 &amp; 10 Acre Tracl,

Bradbtny,

Both - 15 Acres For
$27.~00 Double Widta Are Per·
mltted 5% Down Land Contract

.... big )'IJU, 740-8112-11807

Wllh Approved Credl1
t.llpo. HIOD-21:1-8315.

Fr11

1200 par

Echo 2100 weed eater with blade,
used 3 hrs , excellent condition.
$150 llrm, Maytag wringer washer, set of rinse tubs, excellent

June Used Hay Equipment Sate;
4 9% Financing With John Deere

Credit Approval, JD1219, JD720,
NH474, NH489, NH486 Hayblne,
J0335, NH830, NH850, MF1560,

cond1Hon, $150, 740·742·37011.
For sale- Saara tenl, 18x10 foot,
used once, 740.985-4409

NH851 , Round Balers, New John
Deere Round Balers. Mower Co~
dltloners. 0% 12 Months 2.75%
24 Months, 3 75% 36 Months,

FULLY LOADED PENTIUM
COMPUTERS POor Credl1 O.KI
1·110().5;!()-6364.

4 75% 48 Months, 55% 60
Months , Carmichael's Farm &amp;

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

Lawn, Inc. 1-800·594·1111, Gallipolis, OH We Deliver!
For Salo Shennlu 4125 (25 HP, 4
WO) Tr•ctor, Call740-592-4310.

(HO&amp; Slate Top, Regulation Size),

Cat-553 Sheep Foot Roller·

Apartment Size Refrigerator,
Queen Size Waterbed , Exercise

Sat ,OOO, Cat· 215 Track Hoe
$31 ,000. 4511 Parte !railer St ,800,
16ft Trent Box $3,000 2,000 Ga~
ton Water Tan; SBOO.OO, 427

Bike, Norodlc Track Cardlo Glide,
Sltppltr Call740-446-2668
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In S!Ock

Chevy Truck Motor,$7~0 00
Mise · Steel Beams, Pipe, Vibrat-

Ing Tamp Ills 416 Cal Hoe Walar
Pumps. 16fl Trent Fool $3,000.00.

(740)-643-0122 8 00·4 00 alter
500 (740)-843-2918

G.E . Washer &amp; Dryer Almond
Cblor, $200 OBO 740·387·7152,

Hay Tadder 9 F1 3 Pt Hitch, Dou·

After5 PM

bios As A Ral&lt;e, 74()-367-7800.

Dhausem 8' ~ate pool table, llghl,
sllcU &amp; mise $1 ,000, 740·742·
2572

New Holland 258 Hay Rakl, New
Holland 477 Hay Bind, 841 Ford
Tractor, Set Cultivator•. Sickle
Bar, Mower For Farman Cub, 740-

Prlmeetlr- free Dlrec:TY Summer
Promotion. Call now 1-888-265·

448-n87.

2123

Rawhide Ca111e Trallsr t6 Ft. Pull
1\'pe, 740-388·8536.

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS FEN·
PHEN ALTERNATIVE TRI·PHEN
GUARANTEED 100% SAFE
JUST RELEASED TO THE PUBLIC ONLY $24 95 • 1 Month Buy
2 Monlhs Get 1 FREE I AS SEEN
ON TV. CELLASENE , H·VIA·
GRA Avatlable. Call United Phar·

Slontge

B'*"" SpoG,t·

30'x40'x8', Painted Sleet Sldf\1g,
GaiValumo Slttl Roollng, 15,ldl'
track door, 3' wall door, $6,888

pllances furnished, laundry room
facilities, clou to achoolln town.
Applications available at. VHtagt

Down, Low Monthly fnatallmentsl
Complete Home And Bualnest
Systems Avallabltl Frat Printer

Green Apll 149 or call 741)·1192·
3711 EOH

With Every Purchase! Cfldll
Problems OKI Almost Evarvona

Third Avenue, Galllpolle 2

4pprovedl Call Wllhin 48 Hra To
Have Your 111 Months Payment

Bedrooms, 1300.00 Plus Utlllllta
and one month Oeposlll (740)245-9595

Waived! Call Buyacom Now At
800-498·3267. Aile For Etctonoton
14000.

------

New Tllres, aaklng

1.800.00 Call (740)·387·0265 af·
tar4 OOpm
1989 Toyota Supra TIJrDo, 61K.
Excellent Condition .

(304)675-1183, After 5PM
1990 Chevrolet Corvette. Black

w/ Btack Interior.
(304)675-ntt

S13,500 .

1990 Cougar, hlgil mllea, runs

great. looMs good, V·6, $2100,
740·949-2836 or 740-949·204~
1990 Honda EX Good Condition,
$3,500, 740-446-8239
1990 Lincoln Continental, Black
With Black lnterlorj Moon Root

740-245·51151
1990 Mercury Sable GS Sedan 6

,.

No
• 6 4 3

Motorcycle•

tAK &amp;432
• 73
West
Eaot
• Q 10
• K J 7 5
• Q J 10 8 6
• 9 7 4 3
• J 7
• Q 10 9

1980 Suzuki 750 16,000 Milts.

Good Condition, $600, 1981 va~;
maha 85Q Fully Dressed 28,000 ~

MIIH, St,200, 740-#1-G829.

~~.5 crrosf.6oVo~ 04oT~d~r=~~~: :
1270.

•

;

..

1993 GS 500 E. Suzuki Low,
Milos $2,100 00 Low Mllosl (740)"
~

256-1791

JDC Financing, Carmichael's

••

2.

Shill, 17 Hno, 21 Miles, $5,29it,'l
740-446-9364.
:

3NT

TATER U GIVE

YORE AUNT BECKY
A 8REAT 818

t

!

....

••i

~5-i-':~

t

•:

lion. $2.800. (304)578-2749.
1992 Geo Metro, Automalic, AJC,

Good Tires, New Brakes, $2,200,

Motor $1,800; 305 Motor, Hear

Run, 740-44e-7278.
1995 Pontiac Firablrd A/C , Au·

tomallc, V-6, T·Tops, 5•,000
Condition,

1997 Eagle Talon 28,000 Mllea,
Air, Cruise, Power Windows, Sun-

roo!, Call Aller 5 P.M 740·446·
7411.
1997 Ford Aaplre Low Mileage,

740-259-1417,740&gt;258-a228

Building
Suppll•

Block, brick, sewer plpes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc, Claude Winters,

Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245·

&amp; Qraln

Round Sales of hay for sale,

Was

$27,850 Now St9,990, 80xt35x16
Wes $79,850 Now $48,950,
100x175x20 Was $129,650 Now
$78,8!0 1-110()-406-5128

1971 Camper, 22Ft, Double!·'
Axle, Steepa 4, AC Awning, Fwl·

Chevys.

Jeaps And Spor1 Ulllltyl Good

Factory Wheels, Alloy, Rally,
Complete Inventory www acker·

NONDAS S1 00, $500 &amp; UP PO·
~ICE IMPOUNDS. Honda's Toyo·
Ia's, Chevy&amp;, Jeeps, And Sport
Utlllllas. Call Nowl 800·772·7470,
EXT. 6332.

720

TruckaforSale

1979 Chevy Stopalde Truck, 305,
Automlllc. $600 (304)675-5458

1984 lnternallonal dump true;,
DT 466, Allteon amomatle, 33,000
lion, $6,500, 740-992·2478.

Autos for Sale

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE

2340.

IMPOUNDS Honda'l Toyota'l,

Steel Buildings Never Put Up.

Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport Ullll1~ 800-m·7470, EXT 7832.

40x30 Was $6,212 Will Soli For
13,497, ~Ox88 Wee $17,690 Will
Sell $8,970 Chuc; 1·800·320·

1988 Chevy ChtVIIII Super
Sport, 350, 4 speed, lstr &amp; drlv·
able condlllon, 32,000 milts,
$3,600 llrm, call days leave message, 74()-992·2478

2340

Pete for Sale

4 AKC Boxer pups, ready to go,
741l-742-810t

1917 International Scout, $700

(304)578-2147

AKC Lob Puppies, Parlee! Time
01 Yaar To Train And Enjoy! 740·
387-01159

.
1981 Olda Cutlaaa, 11185 Cam·
aro Both need work Will 11H together wKh some ,_ par11 and 1

gallon ol paint

$21~0

(304)875·

7158 alter 5PM thru weak, any-

timewewnd

AKC, block LaDs, 5 moles. 7 wf&lt;s.

1984 FOrd Rangar, V-6 long bed,
$450.00; 1985 Plymouth Rellan1

old, tirsl ahola &amp; wormed, 1200,

day 740·949·0405, avts 740·

Station wagon; 4 ely Automatic ,

$500 00; Firm! t987 VIking Popup

Blue Point Slameae Klttena.
$50 00 (740}44e-Wt2

Camper, Sleeps 4, Stove, Sink,
Water, Heater, Ela(:trlc Hockup;

$500.00 Computor-$200.00.
(740)-258·1799 Evenings anor
800
t985 Sulek Regat740-258-1131 .
1985 Olda Cultaaa Supreme,
Great Shape, New 350 MOtor,
Power Wlndowa , Power Ooora,

Rat· Terrier
Puppiea.
Ttlle
Docktd 111 shots. wormed.
eacn Call before 9PM,
$75

oo

$2,500, 740-387-0021.

(31)-')675-71148

1987 Dodge 600E 75,000 Actual
Mllu AT, Air, PS, PB, New

Rlgistered Auatrallen Shephard

Pupplu, All Colors, 740·3880583.

Tlrae, Good Paint. No Ruat.

s1200. (304)675-5403

1993 Citovy 112Ton Long Sed, V·
e, 4 Speed wlbedllner. slide, rear
window, locking dtnerantial, A c ,
Excellent Condition.

$7,000.(304)675-7829 Aftlf 5PM
1993 Ford Extended CaD 4 WD,

.~

'

389o-

1978 3211 . MotorHome 37,000
original miles Onan Generator~

Double Root AC (Ice cold) , Ml- '
crowave, full kitchen , color TV;n
Bathroom,Shower, 5 beds. Very 1
goOd condition, dapendabla, :

CN[)- OF-THE- YEAI'.

FAANK5 r\ND 1115CHIE.F
HAVE ALREADY 6E(:,UN.

$7500 (304)675-890t

A WORD TO THE WISE

YOU MAY TIHIIK YOU'RE
c;ETTIN&lt;"&gt; AWAY WITH
501'1ETHIN&amp; WHEN YOU
FLAY THESE 'TRIC 1&lt;.S .
LET ME A55URE 'COU ·
YOU ARE .. OT.

42Mwtcal
Instrument

43

46 -..ring

tar 5pm

r

1989 Motor Home, Coachma..,

1

'

LOOM&amp; And Drives llMt New, 23 tf'
2 Ft Long $t2,995 00 740-4411.
0050

ovc rtnck.

WI-t'!' DON'T 'I'OU JUST GET
RID OF TI-lE CELL PHONE?

1992 Dutchman 5th Wt)eel 11
Camper, 30' Fully Equlppad, 1

$9,950, 740-~58-t290

8 Fl. x20 Fl. 74()-44&amp;-2927,

1987 Fleetwlng 24' motor home, '
Chevy chants, rootalr, cab air, ;
Onan generator, ga, &amp; electric, •
refrigerator &amp; stove. good tlree, ~
awning, only 27.500 miles, 740,!
7-42•2684,
I

•

oa

OPZE

VIEPXVII

E P Z E

X,.

ZLHDXYZ. '

ODIVII
QH

YZVVIE
DXMPE

GXRR

XV
YJDHC

XV

YRXVEIV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "Those who corrupt the public mind are tu&amp;l as evtl as
those who steal from lhe public purse • - Adlai E Slevenson

WOII
IAMI

got stumped
whtle assembling a btke 1
guess two heads are better

Ie

. - - - - - - - - - . lhan one unless they are deA 0 E G0 T
voidof ·----·Complole rho. chuckla quo1od
-..1--..i.L-..J..
-.1..-.J.L-.J.
by filling In tho ml...,g words
L
you d ..elop lrom otep NO. 3 below.

l

'""8

SERVICES

.·

'uNSCRAMBlE lErTERS TO
GET ANSWER

II II

SCIIAM-lm ANSWERS

Oon '1 r-t
by htgh pnm r
Shop tho classt(lod ltcllon

Wisdom- Clmk - Treat - Detect- COWARDICE
My mother was strict so I never dtd anythtng wild

or
unruly Her theory IS that a good prqtection against temptatton is COWARDICE

I MONDAY

·'

JUNE14I

t

:

Unconditional lifetime guarantn. •
Local references furnished. Ea'=~

tabllohed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740) •
446·0870, 1-800-287-0~76 Aog· '
e&lt;s Watarproollng
..:

----------------~·
Appliance Parts And Sarvtca A~

Name Brands OWir 25 Years ~~ \
perlenee All Work Guarantefd,.-

French City Maytag, 740-448- '

·

.:

Llvlngaton'a Basement Water
Proofing, all baeement repairs

Tuesday,
1999
Even if your big plans for the year
idtead gel buffeted abou1 a bit, don '1
act discouraged. If you stay the
, COUISC, they'll survtve the onslaught
' and all will work out Ia your satisfac:tion .
' GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Requests mode of others might be
granted today, but ifthey are, chances
are lhey'll have 51rings auached. Try
, 10 make do w1th what you have
•ins1ead of begg1ng for assistance.
Trying to patch up a broken
.romance? The Astro-Graph Match·
maker'can help you understand what
lo do to make the relationship work.
' Mail $2.75 lo Matchmaker, c/o lhis
newspaper, PO Box 1758, Murray
Hill SLBtion, New York, NY 10156
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Unless you can recognize the advanI.Bges changes offer, you may find
yourself needlessly swimmtng
aaainst the tide loday tn&lt;lead of
1oing along with events Go whh 1he
flow
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Although
you might aprreciate 1he value of

=~:,:;.~~=~·~ '

1884 S-10 4tcA Plelc·Up, V·6, Au·
tomlle, ~ Ttros, Nice Whul1,
~~uno Good! $1,500, 74jl·

done, lrte estimates, llfellmo
guaran101. 12yra on )oD expert·
enco. (304)695' 3887
Why Call Anyone Else? Wo Cln
Oo If Air/ M&amp;R General Contracling. Et0ctrlcal, Corpenlr¥.
Porchll, Troller 5e1·Ups, And Air

1985 Bronco II, 4•4, Aunt Good!

Conditioning, Also, Maintenance,
740-441-t40t.

All-._
Build new or repair old, no Job
too amall or large. MaJor credtt

I. ~~~~~~W~V~0~28~5~B~2~.~c~a~ll
.BP--.

DAYLIGHT INDOORS!
Brlghlon Any Setting Naturally·

Kitchens, Hallwaye, Bathroam,l

1995 FOrd Rongor, 5 Speed, Air,
AM/Ft.l Stereo With 57,000
Miles, A1klng SUOO, 740·37911270.

Like A Bright Ct!Ung Fixture, Bu1
Wllhout Elactrtcltyt The Original
IUNPIPI. • Since 1881 Free
llrochufl. 1-800 844 4186 1125

1998 Ford E3~0 Cargo Van,
47,000 Mites, 18' lloJt With Aluminum Romp, Air, Cesaeae, 460, VB. Excellent Condition, St5,850,
740-379-29115.

840

92 Chevy Astro, loaded, mull
- · 740-992.-2019

ZLHDXYZ

•

ASTRO·ORAPH

Valuo St3,800, Asking ~11,800,
740-448-7289

XA

IN THESE SQUARES

'

740-446-7289

1993 Chav, PlcM·Up Short Sod,

' EPHDH

PRINT NUMBERED lEHUS

----~--------------·
Concession Trailer Cuatom Built •

tree estlmale caii .Chat, 740·99211323.

4x4, Ekcellent Condition, Retail

by Luis Campo•
Celebrity C'4Jher crypt0(11ams ar• created from quotlt!onl by famous JMK)ple, put and present
Each kmef '"the cipher standi lor anc4her Todlt"• CW J ~· U

1---T.Iir-:::,.1.:...;1:...::,1'.,:...,1---1

.PEANUTS

1995 GMC Jimmy 4x4 Loll Dl
Extras! Excattont CondiHonl Retell
Value $16,800 Asking $14,800,

C.. Aftor 8 P.M 740-251H 287.
1985 Chevy van 350 Automatic,
7-40-256- 1831.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

67

whmevcr comes back and try 10 r un
the dtamonds Here, you e nd wtlh an

C&amp;C General Home Malntentnce· Painting, vinyl aiding;-•

Ram 3500 Asking $25,000. Call
-4:00pm (740)-44t ·0996
730 Van1 &amp; 4-WDI

v......

48 .._ Klpltal"
50 LlngUigl ·.
suffix
52 ,.ctor ou...,
53 SI'-'Y
fish· ·

and Sltnultancously rctam1n g ..:ommumcalt on wtth the dummy. W1n

XLT, Turbo 018111, $14,000, 740.
44EI·9317.

t997 Dodge Oleaet 1 Ton, 4x4

47~ond

ts more hkcl v' We ll , a

goodl $3,500 (740)·245-5829 11- '

nes

wo~~e~n11ers

41 Plotnlst
. Brulllck

3-2 dtvt&gt;tnn
w tll occ ur
8 pc1ccm o ! the tunc ,
w hcre.ts a 3-3 sp ltlts only abou1 half
as good at 35.5 percent
So, a fl cr w111nm g tn ck one, duck
a dt,Jmond, gtvt ng the oppo nents the
tn ck to winch they are always due

FOR EXAMPLE ~ELEAS ­
tNC. fiRE A&gt;IT5 INTO
HE TE"CHER5' LAI/ATORIE5 1'\l(:,f\T SEEI1
AMU~tNC. UNTIL. YOU
ARE CNJ(:.HT AI'ID
DISCI PLINEI&gt;.

1979·1911 Coachman Motor
Home . Dodge Chassis: New :
Starter and water H&amp;ater, 1
ECI~Ipped with Aaof Air Runs 1

810

-

40 Set looM
41 11144 Invasion

nents' live card" to diVJdc 1-2 Wh1ch
PEOPLE, tT5 OUR LA~T
WEEI&lt;. OF :'&gt;CHOOL AND,
UNFORTUNATELY. THE

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Relkllntlal or oommeroill wlrlrig,
- ltfVIco or repelra Molter u-

cenaed electrician. Rlctenow

Electrical, WV0003ot. 304-8751786.

iiliie

••

"

11 Aplecl
12 GrHk portl~
19 Commerclelt

21 Iron
22 Neuler
pronoun
23 eoncur
24 Fota,e.g.
25 lnflrmHiel
•
26 Tldllyjll
27 Long, tlllck
hair
29 Fllhlonoble
beoch resort
30 Something
unlqUI
31 AntHoxlnt
37 The prlncesa'
lrrt18nt

the mtsstng six cards spht 3-3, you II
gel four c lub lnc ks and mne 111 al l. In
dt&lt;lmonds. you Wtll need the oppo-

.

,,I

•v•

or d!,nnonds In the lormcr case. 1f

ly Equlped, Real Nice $2400'
(304)458·1793

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Square Balas of Hay For Sale.

.l

Motor Ho,m&amp;l

1989 Chevy S· IO PICM·Up,
$2,295.00 Call: (740)·44t ·1136·
Monday - Friday

'

campers &amp;

Speed (304)675-2t51

1989 Dodge. !on, PS, auto, mlllty

710

For 1985 Chevy

Home
Improvement•

1989 Chevy 4x~ . Silverado, 5

AMIFM,

40x30 Was $8,212 Will Soli For
$3,497, 50x86 Was $17,890 Will
Sell $8,970 Chuc• 1·800-320·

Cover

S·I0$100, 740-44e-93&amp;1.

GVW air brakes. 9' dump bed,
anow plow brackets, good condl·

bad, $3,800: concrete finlahing
machine, 3' &amp; 2'; 740-992·20t 9

TRANSPORTATION

'••l

1998 Pontiac Trans·Am, Fully
loadedt Price Reduced to

2540.

(304)675·5072.

New gas tsnks &amp; body parts D ~
R Auto, Ripley, WV. (304)37~-l
3933 or 1·800-273-9329.

790

Listings Call 1-800·31 1&gt;5046 Ext.
1183.

Hay

'10\Jit 1-\0~W~K. ...

1998 Chevy Slluer, 2 door, with
LS package, loadad, 11,000 milts,
call altsr 5prn, 740-992-41-44.

Grain fed freezer beef, Robinson
Farms, Alfred Oh , call after epm,

Registered Llmousln Bulls: Red,
Black, Polled, 9 Months To 2
'!llano, 740-387-7800.

'1~~ '(~T, Wll.tltnoru: ...

~1/E: flt-11516

monds and two c lubs The 01 he r tw o
tricks mtght com e from e tthcr clubs

2 Yaar Old Registered Slack Angus Bull $800, 740-441-o909

Sadclto, $3,000, &amp;Oe-473-1181 '

C.Q/IIt

....

Tonneau

Seized Cars From $500. Sport,
Lukury, &amp; Economy Cars, Trucks,
4k4's Utility &amp; More For Current

Parcheron Mare, Registered 3
Year Old , Trained Harn111 &amp;

Budget Priced Transmisslon!l
and Engines. All Types, Acces•
To Over 10,000 Transm laslona ,
eve Joints, 740-245-56n.

LOSER
,.NO,. YOOBORN
.., ,..
AA'f r-IOT
00\ Of
NO\' Ul'{TIL '100

$10K, sell lor $7,950, 740·949·
2045.

wheel com

740-288-5395.

~- .

seven. one spade. two hearts. two dm-

630

Outstanding Angua And Chlangus Bulls, Reasonably Prlctd,
State Run Far!TII, Jackaon, Ohio

...,.

1998 Dodge Dakots Sport St 50JI

Steal. Buy, Sell. Acker Wheel 1·
800·994·3357. World&amp; Moa1

chlckons, 740-992·786Q

to Port of the

Odds, not
odd plays

"Tonneau Cover For 1997 Or1

5588 BOth PI No. Plnollas Park,
Fl33781' 727-464-7408

Guinea chiCkS $2 eacn, 2 montb
old, Rhode Inland Aad &amp; Wyandotte roosters , Brahma &amp; Poltah

....

Q

1997 Thunderbird Sport Coupe ,
70,000 miles AC/PBIPS, deluxe
V-8, beautiful car, sunroof, list

Old Motorcycles, Motorscooters,
Motoracooter Parts (Cuahman
preferred} Contact· 0 Mllehell,

74()-9115-3829

(

1995 Z-28 Camarro, T-Tops,

Loaded, Asking $12,000.00 Call
Altsr 400 PM 740-441-o996

Speed Queen And Automatic
Washer $75, Whirlpool AutomatIc Washer $75, l(enmora Dryer,
Heavy Duty $75, Air Conditioner

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$2t 95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100. All Brass Com·
pression Fittings 1n $lock
RON EV,.NS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son, Ohio, HIOD-537·9528

.

$11,ooq, 740-446-2300

Eagle VIsion TSI, 1993 Model,
Graen, Automa!lc, $8,000 OBO,
740·258--83112, Altsr 4 PM

Taylor Ice Cream Machine, 3
Head Baseball Card Collection.
Singles &amp; $lis, 740..,.6·2927

Opening lead; •

than two wtll norm al ly dtvtde
unevenly, and an odd number wtll
us uall y dtvtde as evenl y as posstble .
So, s 1x cards wtll break 4- 2 more
o fte n than 3-3, w he reas live cards
wtll s plu 3-2 more oflen than 4- 1
( Wtth two cards, a 1-1 sphlt s 4 percent more ltke ly !han 2-0.)
AI the table , these odds o llen
affect o ne's I me o f play. We' ll look
al vanous poss th!hltes th1 s week
Let's start wtth a rclalt vely ·s unplc
example. How would you plan the
pl ay in three no-trump aflcr West has
Jed the heart queen?
When 111 no-trump, stan by coum111g yo ur lop tncks H ere, there are

620

Liv&amp;ltock

Pass

1995 Neon 73 000 Actual Miles,

Hondas.

I CowbOy boO!
elllchment
28 Farm buildings 2 - ftlll1er
3 Pen llpe
32 to lncllnod
4 E - l y, ·
33 Backbone
poetically
34 foclf811 .
5 llrL, In Modrkl
JeuiCI S African fly
35 DOwny duck
7AclrHa -LM
3t Compete In I
Curtlo
a Yorklhlrw river
37-'s box
HAccompllshel 9 Terrtflc, In taen
talk
41 Unclotlmod moll

The f1rst to remember 1s that an

$4,2011! 1991 Grand AM Rebuilt

$175,740-992-5851.

110 BTU. Good Condition, St25,
Armoire Wood $150 740·379·
2720, 740·256-6989.

3.

even number of m1ss mg f.':ards greater

Impounds.

....

25 Joll lnhabltl!nto

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

5158

Excellent

DOWN

20 - NINI
21 Bridge faux

few of the more co mmon ones
around 111 your metnory bank

.

1992 Gao Storm GOOd COnditiOn,
AIC, Tinted Windows , 740·245·

Milas,

51 Glac:lel OIJ(&gt;Ch
54 Army
command
55 CrtcUt taam
56 ,.mrmed
57 -•urlng
t11ckl

By Phillip Alder
Ahhough you do not need 10
know all the odds for par11cular sun
dtvtstons, 11 doesn ' t hurt to carry a

1992 Corsica Vary Good Condl·

Condition I Call Now! 1-800-772·
7·.t70 Ed 7007

Wanted to Buy

North
1•

u.

you ' re

in charge of d1spcrsvns the

some very constructive advice today.

gams from a collectrvc endeavor,

you may not have 1he will nor desire

make ceriUm everylhmg 1S equally
distnbuted More than hard feehngs
will result if you're careless.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feh. 19) 1\'s

to follow !he recommended w1sdom

and suffer the consequenL'CS instead.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Just
because someone else lucked out
rcccndy hy cnJnginJ in a very risky
endeavor, doesn't mean you'll huvc
the •ame good fortune. Be sman, nlll
stupid.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0.:1. 23) Treat
your family today wtlh the "'me tolerance .and cons1dcrnuon that you
show your friend~ and c(ltnpanions.
Being less lenten! wuh lhem could
produce trouh(c
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) Be
careful what you say about Olhers
today Anydnng negative could cause

never

okay to

advance

a personal

in1erest at the expense of another, but
1oday the consequences for domg so
migh1 produce heny permanent damages
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) The
folly of a fooltsh pal could cos( you
money today tfyou're lax about your
involvements Try not to let others
engage you m anything 1ha1 might
deplete your re~ources
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
There 's a good chance you could
have two sets nf rules 1oday for gov-

behavior Your personal

n listener to reporl your conversation

ernmg your

verbatim 10 lhe offended party.
' SAOJ'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your facuhies for discerning
what is or is not a baraain might not
be operative 1oday. Jfyuu should go
shoppin1. restrain yourself from
Impulsive spendinJ.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) If

conduc1 may wtn you sell-approval ,
but

your socml conduct may nol.

TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May 20)
Should yn u have difficyhy tnday '"
rccog ni zrng and foctng up to rcnl1ty.
chances are you ' II do things that •

would minim11.c your
D o n ' t live in

a dream

ad van tages
world

"

41 .. CroCodHe -"

740·98~ ·

Farm &amp; La,wn, Inc 1·800·594tttl , Gallipolis, OH WI Dellvltrl

sena Perfect sleeper, fiJI size 881:,
l!lktra clean, under 4 years old,

West
PasF
Pass
Pass

South

•

740-388-8728.

It Sutgeon
17 EMtern ttu.
ta Mill - cocltlalt

AMwW tiD Pva•1DUI Puzzle

Dealer South

•

Boats &amp; Motor•
for Sale

1 Mo.IMnaible
7 THal panel•
13 Eleclrlclotn's

dept.
4 4 F - t c.,_
45 Apply lightly

Vulnerable· East-West

199A Handa 750 Magna vertj
good condition, like new ~ .000.1

(304)675-24031675-6735.

g 4

Soulb
• A 9 8 2
•AK
• 8 5
•AK8 52

4223

3 1 V·8, loaded, $3,200,
3510

• QJ

10 8

1986 Honda 250 sx 3 Whooter/
Serious Callono Only, After 4 PM '
740 4~8 8530.
:

750

06-tH9

• 5 2

Aoklng $4,295, Call 700·•46-

Series Skid Steer Loadere, 7.5%

560

740

Antllock Brakes, Power Door
Locks. Wlndowa , Drlvera Seat,
Cruise Control, THt Steering, Ga·
rage Kapt With 80,000 Miles,

11on t-800-733-3288 COD'S I
PRE·PAY ICREDrT CARDS

5Dx10Dx16

(3041875-7948

1999 Foreman 450 ••• · Eleetrte

Cars $100 ·$500 &amp; Up. Pollee

550

40R , E•cellant Condition. High
Mllll. $9 ,400 Call before 9P~

For Sale Or Trade, 740-258-

See The New John Otere 200

CFA Beeutllul Poralan Reglsltred
Klltano, Male &amp; Female, White,
Cream &amp; Blue, Firat Sholl &amp; Vet
ChtcMid, $150 Eooh, 740·2~8·
13t1.

ondltlonar,

dard, 4

maceutlcals NOW For lnforma-

149-0506

n ow; Air

1988 Dodge Colt, 4/door. S!an-

$22,500 00 Great Graduation
GIHII (740)-448--4548.

urday, 10·9, Sunday 1-5 , Also,
Making Body Lollona &amp; Shower
Gels!
'
C
Wt' d
• C
asa

Tak

(800)-352·1045

Erected! Iron Horse Bulktefa 1•

pte, 740-992·9989.

Pleasant (740)441.0772.
~&lt;)an&lt;~es 01 All Styles And 'JYpes,
2 BeQroom Apartment In Ntw Ha·
Will Do Aertlla Over 70 Varletlea

&amp; Acreage

610 Farm Equipment

AKC
Registered
Miniature
Dachshund puppies, red &amp; dtp·

740-7-42-2512.

And

1991 Chevy Lumtna Eurosport,

DhKl

Steel Buildings NeYer Put Up_

Free With One Year Lease.

WV $499 Down Single Wlds,
$999 Down Double Wide, 304-

Supply, 740·4•6-9416 GallipoliS,

$10 ,971 ,

Toii·Free 1·877-1102·5180.

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

S20 00 out ol !he lleld. (304)782·

992·2218

Regrlgerator Included, 740-4482583.
t Bedroom Fumlahed Apartme~t.
Downslalrs 1 t/2 Balhs, Air Con·
dlllonlng, All Utllllos Included Ex-

Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters , Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntertharm, Miller &amp; Coleman Air Conditioners I Heat
Pl!mpa Bennett's Mobile Home

Steel Buildings, New. Mus! Selll
40x60x14 Was 117,500 Now

550-MHZ COMPUTER I Will

Redman

Road

Moore owner.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Impounds ,

Rapo's. For Listings Coli 1-800·
319-3323 Ext 4420
1987 Grand Am, Nr COnd~tonlng,
Til, Cruise, Aillomalle, V-II , Sharp
ca~ •• .200. 740-441·1083

Tape, Air Bag, Air Conditioning,

640

Finance Bad Credll FREE Inter·
net Service! 5 Oaya Only! Call

Exclusive

$25.21, 5 Gal While Roo! Paint
$57.69, Anchoro $5 , Dooro &amp;

5121

540

Pollee

1994 GMC Jimmy SLS. Loaded,

Cylinder, Automatic , 4 Speed
Transmlaalon, AMIFM Stereo

6 00 p m 740-992-2526 , Russ

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp;, lur·

Homes And BEST HOMES, Ex·
elusive Dmch Are Localed on Rl
23, Chlll~othe, Just North 01 The
R1 35 /R1 23 Interchange. Call
Toll Free Number, 888-443-7421,
And Aa; For Tho CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION lnlormallon By
Mall Including A St ,ooo Certlll·
cata On A NAw Home.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetebl&amp;l

580

lon AIIJO'Ilnum Flbered Roof Paint

cloua Tasting Emergency Food

nlshed and unfurnished, aecurlly
deposit required, no pets, 740·

HOMES,

$125,740.388-8645

' Supplies, Immediate Delivery. Cal
NOW For FREE Catalog · 800·
Antique, Bottle, Adverllslng Sate
330-8002

TaMe Rt. 35 Nor111 From Gallipolis
TECUMSEH

Yamaha Stereo Keyboard, Does
.Everything, Perfe ct Condltlanl

D~countl\1oble Home
Pans &amp; Supp~
Huoe Inventory
VInyl Skirting KitS. $299 95, 5 Gal·

530

t-686·736·3332

Southern Ohio

Cut Deck, Contact JeH tlarrison,
Director Of Maintenance, Holzer
Med6cal center, 740-o&amp;46·5305

Y2K FOOD STORAGE MADE
EASYII Feed YOUR Family For
ONLY 89 Conls A Meal. Dell·

740-3811-9162

Ntlw Bank repos only 2 left we

(304)4511-1997

t672, 19 HP Kohler Engine , 60"

Call Any Time, Johnson's Used
Furniture.

Antique•

Musical
ln1trumenta

Cub Cadet Rktlng Mower, ~odal

Call Ron Evans, 1-B00-537-9528

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours· M T W 10 00
~m to600pm,Sunday1 -00to

llnance caH 304-722·7148

570

•"

1110 -ttiO CARS FIIOIII800

ACROSS

lOOt
14 Biblical
mountain
15 SlledOWS

'

Autos for Sale

$7,000.

For Sate Pearl Concerl Snare.
Drum(exeallent candltlon), lncludas· ease, 2seta stlclea, mualc
stand&amp;musle
$200.

Heritage Pool Table By Brunswick

Needed, 740-992-5088

Racine, $325 month, we pay wa·
ler, sewer and trash, 740·992·

PRODUCE
740-446·1933,
(www happyjacldnc com)

Don'! Gall Us We 8oth Lost! 74()446-6308, 1·81l0-29Hl09B

plano Dr 740·446·4525

510

Systemic Polaontng JD NORTH

Central Air Conditioning Added
To Ypur Furnace Complete Duct
Syatmes &amp; Furnac11, Heat
Pumpa Car titled Installer. If You

River Bend Place accepting applications now for tBR HUO Subsidized apt. for elderly &amp; handl·

capped. E.O.H (304)882-3t21 .

.

What's So Dlfforenl About The
HAPPY JACK 3X FUA COL•
'LAR? IT WORKS! Against
fli.u, IlC.IIL l Ml1U W!lbgut

'lmlled lime offer, call HIOIH79B19-I.

«6·0008

er Area. Deposit &amp; References
Requtred, You Pay All Utilities,

Two bedroam mobile home In

$200 74 per month wllh $1150
down Callt-800-837·3238

Frenchtown Aparlments , Now
Accepting Applications For 1
Bedroom , FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And HandIcapped, Equal Housing Oppor·

420 Mobile Homes

2 Bdrms, A/C, No Pets, Rental
Refrence Required , Water &amp;

$3995 Quick delivery Call 740385-9621

quired, 74()-441-()952.

Appliance~ .

992-2t67

Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

curity Deposit, Reference&amp; Re-

740-64~122 .

1997, 16x80, 3BR, 2 Baths, GardenTub, CA. 8k10 Building , on

800-383-8882

rooms, From $275 ·$350/Mo., Se·

0047

$19,000 Firm. Call740-256·9351

31110.

e roome, bath, full
. , . _ , - ga.-go, central

446·9539.

Goods

House, Trailer, Apartment , Very
Clean, No Pets, Water &amp; Tra&amp;h

1988 Redmond Danville 14x70
Also, Has Expando, Ver~ Nice,
Must Sell! .Asking $14,000, 740·

tage. More Land Available. Now

'

AU Electrtc, Ideal For Senior Persons , No Grass To Mow, No
Lawn, First Floor, For An Appointment To Vlel!f, Phone 740-

490

HooMup, $275 oo Rent Wllh Deposit. 740-446·348t Or 74D-44e·
010t After 5 OOPM.

1833/675-3003

141 IYI- lor !roller on
rtvwr on 124, SyrocuN, 740-992·

Ity hi&gt;oll

FORREHT

740-992-ll763

3 Bedroom, Central Air, Full
Basement Camp Cantey $350 +

Seal Point &amp; Siamne kittens for

sale. 74()-992·3216,

11" DlrtcTV Sttolllll Sysltml·
00, $100 ol 1ree prognommlr)g,

COOL DOWN

DOWNTOWN AMADENT

3 bedroom house, Wetzgal St. ,

Hud ao:epted, 740·742.0712

4e 314 Acres On Ward Road, ;o,p.
IH 1\L

Complete Air Condllloner, 3 112
Ton, 2 Ga s Furnaces, 740-448·
7404, GaM Af¥me.

Commercial store rront, 2.000·
square teet, Main St.. Pomeroy.
day phone 740-992-5009, night

$12 000 00 (304)-E75-2319

For The Beat Housing Deats In

All rMI DState advanlaing In

Christy's Family LWing , apartmenta , home &amp; trailer rentals ,
7-40·992·451-4, apartments availallle, furnished &amp; unlumlshtd

(304)882· 2099 between 7 309.30PM only

Please Help! 3 Bedr9om, 2
Batns. just take over Payments!

11111newspaper Is oubje&lt;tto
lNI F8deral Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whlcll makes ltiiOigaJ
ro adWwliae Many preference,

sse

710

Pete for Sale

Schna'uzer pupplea, 2 miniature
malel, AKC. Cllampion bloo&lt;!Hnes,
oal1 &amp; · 74CHI67-3404.

12 HP Whtol Horse House Mow·
or, Hydrostolle, 36" Cut Oldy em
Cloodyl740-!l67-7600
'

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
lrom $219 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·448·2568
Equet Housing Opponunlty

Now Taking Applications- 35
Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo., 740 -

RENTALS

12x60 Homette. Suitable rar adding to existing home or storage
structure
Good
condition,

Call K&amp;K (304)675·3000, BAM·
SPM/675-6277, AHer ePM

val. 1·800· 737·0073 Issued By
Merr1d&lt; Ban;, SLC, UT.

Acres $14,000,

Both And Get Discount. Great
Hunting Land , Full Of Deer. Has
Road Accesa To Wayne Nallonal
Forest Land Contract Available

Mobile Homes
for Sale

5 OOPt.l

1~

2-20 ACRE TRACTS
For Only $22 ,000 Each Take

Restared VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres Village Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint·

CREDIT

CARD • Guaranteed Approval No Credit Check • O%APA Ae·
. qulrements 18+ US Citizen, Have
Ct,ecklng Account. Phone Appro-

ty Ridge Ad ,
City Schools

Bidwell, OH 740-388-91575

rooms, 2 ba111s, $62,900 00 (740)·
245·5341

Heat-Pump, Appliances , Good
Condition, Must Sell, $10,900

VISA

Williams Hollow Rd . 68 Wooded
Acres Wllh Stream, $40,000.
Cash Pnce. Public Water. Friend·

Lot 2 15 Acres, Water, Sewer,
Driveway On Woodsmll l Road ,

Owner Aelocallngt Anxious 10
Sell Newly Remodeled I 3 Bed-

Non-Pro111 TCC 110().758·3844

PROBLEMS?

Golllo Co.: Hunters! Off SR 218 •

Off List Price on Gash Suysl

(304)675-4808 or675-3991

320

Whites Hill Rd , 11 Acres $14,000

560

Miacellaneoue
Merchandl18

- - - - - -- - - - - - ,_

Aportmen1 for ron! In Mkldloport,
no pell, 740-992-5858.

First Avenue, One And Two Bed·

House and Lot far sate 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $600 00 Down! located on Kriner Ad Contact Da·

TODAY 1-800-296 -2226 Fran chise Development $65,000 Min
CAsh Required www maaco com

Dyesvllla, 10 5 Acres With
Stream , Great Getawa~ Or Rem.
ole Living, Just $8.,5001 Rutland ,

5 Acres $16,000, Public Watar

Hl01l-31t ·5048, Ex! 3372
setter Get 01

Meigs Co.: PICM Of The WeeM-

Acres $13,000 On SR 325, Nloe

closed And Repossessed . No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 K For Current Listing Call

on..

BAUNERLAND
741)..141-1482

Or 9 Acres $12,000, Public Wa·
tar Oan11111a. Briar Ridge Rd., ·7

Gallipolis Area 2 Bedroom Home.

HOMES FROM $5,000. Fore·

Uh.

4563t

(304)882·3108.

On $5KI They Do II , Shouldn't
'lbu? COl t-888-7t«&lt;999.

working For Themselves , A Tremendous Opportunity. Toll Free
877-752_.,.18 Aile&lt; 2 EDT

Send Re sponse CLA825, el
oGalllpolls Dally Tribune , 825
Th ird Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

540

Aperb116w'll
for Rent

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Middleport, Ohio

-

Allroofl.iro) (CC)

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, June 14, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs DAR hosts Cameo Victorian
tea and conference held in Columbus
The Cameo Society of the
Ohio Society. Daughters of the
American Revolution, held its
annual Victorian Tea and Coilfer- ·
ence at the Haimerl Center in
Columbus last week.
' The event was hosted by
Return Jonathan Meigs .Chapter
of Meigs County represented by
Anna Cleland and Linda Bohner.
and the Columbus
Mathias Ridenour Chapter.
Theme of the Conference was
"A Victorian May Day Celebration. " Aimee Thomas. Cameo
registrar, ann ounced that the
members present represented lh'e
500 Cameo Society Members

VICTORIAN TEA HOSTESSES - Linda Bohner and Anna
across the State of Ohio, Char- . Cleland of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, · Daughters of
lotte Boerge r, chaplain. ar. 1 America, pictured second and third from the right, were coKathy Pullins, hi stori an. conduct- hostesses with !flembers of Mathias Ridenour Chapter of
cd a memorial serv ice in memory Columbus, for the Victorian Tea and Conlerence of the Cameo
of the eight members lost in death Society of the Ohio DAR.
during the past year.
to any member of DAR who can Burns. treasurer; Sharon Snyder,
The Cameo Soc1ety. organ ized show curre nt active membership regi strar; Kathy Pullins, historihy 1hc Ohio Soc iety Daughters of 1n
co njuncti on
with
a an; and Janet Burns, treasurer.
the America n· RevOluti on, was mother/daughter/granddaughter ·
Following the confere~ce sesini tiall y organized to . prom.ote relationship,
soon and May Day ac tivities.
understand ing. between genera ~'
Anna Cleland. her daughter lunch was served. Tea was served
tiuns and to enco urage the pas- Linda Bohner and gran ddaughter by Charlotte Boerger, chaplain
sage of genealogical information, Amy Bohner are one of several and Anna Cleland .
fam il y hi stori es and patri otisni to three ge neration members in the
Cameo will meet again at the
subsequent generatiOns. Cameo · Ohio Cameo.
.
State DAR Co nference in C.o lumme mbers. as members of the
Ohio Society Daughters of the bus in March. 2000. The neXI
DAR, also promote the objectives American Revolution state offi - annual Cameo Victorian Tea and
of the DAR: educational, hi"ori- .cers attepding were Marilyn Conference will be held May,
cal and patriotic activities.
Vaglia, vice regent; Wini Cloran, 2000, location to be announced
Membership in Camen is open orgamzmg secretary : Janet later.

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Racine Grange discussed federal legislation.
Racine Grange was presented
information concerning currently
·proposed •legislation to U.S. Congress called the National Hate
Crimes Protection Act.
Keith Ashley, legislative chairman, informed the members that this
legislation is unnecessary due to
already existing laws that protect the
public. He stressed the danger in
·passi ng this legislation as it will
make it illegal to speak ill of any
group including sexual preference
groups. It would also make it illegal
for religi ous groups to deny employment to any person whose lifestyle
was in opposition to the beliefs of
that religion. The legislation would
curb freedom of speech and freedom
of religion as guaranteed by the First
Amendment: The Grange voted
unan imously to oppose this l~gislation and to inform federal legislators
of this position.
The members also discussed the
current changes occurring in telephone billing ~nd in electric deregu- ·
lauon. It was pomted out that southeast Ohio will be the losers in deregulation of electricity as rates here are

the lowest in the state.
An update was given on the
effons to preserve the Buffington
Island Battlefield. The last minute
cancellation in Meigs County Com- .
mon Pleas Court of the e~identiary
hearing was discussed along with
the (ailure of the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers to follow their regulalions in the procedures to grant a
loading dock permit.
A fl oat was planned for the
Racine Pourth of July parade.
Work is set to construct the float
on Friday evening. July 3. Plans for
the Meigs County Fair booth will be
made at the July 8 meeting when
Hemlock Grange will be visiting.
Charles Yost, master, discussed
the continuing improvements being
made on the hall. He also set the
election of officers for the August
meeting.
·
Information was presented to the
membership on a reputable company that restores and rebinds im'portaal old books like family Bibles. .
Also, Racine Grange will visit Star
Grange.
Upcoming events include the

CODY BRUCE CAMPBELl,.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED·
Jeff and Tabitha campbell . of
Syracuse announce .the birth of
their first child, a son, Cody
Bruce.
·
·
Born on April 23 at Cabell

Ohio State Grange Rural Life Weekend on June 12-13 at Friendly Hills
Campground north of Zanesville!
There will be line and square daneing, workshops on investments ana
crafts, and a rare performance of the.
Eighth Degree. Camping or dormP
tory space is available, but reserv11~
lions for this are required.
•
Mary
Virgi ni a
Easterday,'
Women 's Activities Chairman,
reponed .that sales of the new Ohio
State Grange cookbook are going'
well with only a few left to sell.
Bernard Shoemaker, state Gran~
master, and Sen. Oliver Ocasek,
state exec utive committeeman, were
both reported gravely ill.
Emma Ashley, lecturer, had a.
program on Aag Day. She empha;;
sized the failure of the public a~
sporting events to place their handJ•
over·their heans at. the singing of the
national anthem · and when a fl a~ .
pass in parade.
~
A quiz on flag etiquette w~:
given foll owed by a candle lighting::
ceremony on the colors
the fla~
and the singing of several patriotiC:
songs.

of

Programs planned ,
.~.

Hemlock Grange holds meeting
H~ml oc k Grange met recently iu
lock Grange received q very · good
the Grange Hall, with Rosalie Story score on inspection.
conducting the meeting. Naricy
Vada Hazelton, lecturer, held a
Well&lt; CWA, reported . that more program on Flag Day· and Father's
cookbooks are available for sale.
Day. A reading , "What the Flag
Jim Fry gave a lcgislati ve repon Means" Was read by Barbara Fry.
.on a bill before Congress. concern- "Ten Marks of a Good Citizen" b~
ing guns sold at gu·n shows. A spe- Margaret Haning, "God Bless Amercial program on hean ng will be held ica" by Sylvia Midkiff, the group
in August.
singing of "The s·tar Spangled· BanHemlock will vis it Racine ner" and a poem, "Father's Day,"
Grange on July 8. The election of were also · included. The program
officer&amp; will be ·held in Augu st. concluded with everyone commentThere will be a contest judging at the . ing on their father.
·
July meeting. Grange will once
The July janitor will be Sara Culagain exhibit at the fair.
l urns.
Wally Bradford . and Berni ce
The July meeting will be preced'
Hawk wer~ reported ill.
· ,
ed by hamburger and hot dog cookPatty Dyer, deputy of Meigs out. Some members will make
County, inspected the Grange. Hem- homemade ice cream.

LARISSA HAYMAN ·

JOSIE HAYMAN

FIRST BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION • Larlasa and Jo1le Hay·
man, twin daughters of Jam11 and Melinda Hayman, recently
. observed their first birthdays at the,famlly home at Long Bottom.
.
A party ~arrled out a "Barbie DoW' th11me. Refreshments
Including cake and Ice cream .were aerved.
Attending were their parente and brotllara, Josiah and
Jonathan, Diane and Sarah VanCoaney, Glenda, Ambar and
Stephanie S~. Clair; Richard Stanley, Matthew and Faith
Caplinger, Elizabeth and Sarah Lawrenca, Brandl Nlcholette
and Autumn Walla, Frankie, Brittany and .Marty Tolliver. . .
Se_ndlng gifts were paternal granclparent•, Jamaa and Jean
Hayman of Merritt Island, Fla., mat!!jnal grendparantl; Frank
and Shirley .Wells, Timmy, Jllff, Chrl1tapher and Callyn Cowdery, and Bill, Melissa, Josh and Alex Morris.

A variety of programs will be carried out at the Senior Citizens CeO:
ter this week.
•
Seniors are encouraged to atten11
the activities and to participate in t1i
senior nutrition program 's noof\
meal served daily.
·:
A trip to the Sav-A-Lot store will
be Wednesday, call Wanda Vining at
992-2161, if you are interested in:
going on the van.
"'
The monthly Blood Pressure.
Clinic will be held Thursday from
9:30 to II a.m. A program by th.;
Senior Sense Troop "Using Medica.:
lion Wisely" .will be presented at It .
Thursday. This is a progra!ll through
Winning Wellness sponsored by t~
Ohio University College of Medl{ .
cine through a grant from the Ohio
Department qf Health.
·
~
The Arthritis Group will meet oti
Friday at 10:30 p.m., with Sarab'.
McGrew, R.N., coordinator. Dr;:
Thomas Blodgett, a . dermatologist~
from Holzer Clinic will speak aboui•
skin cancer.
The birthday party for June wili ·
be held Thursday, June 24. The prtlgram will be at I p.m. by Chester
Courth9use Presenters portraying
persons from Meigs County history.·,
The public is invited to attend the
evening dinners served on Thesdayi
and Thursday from 4:45 to 6 p.m. :
The suggested donation for the meal
is $4. A rqast beef dinner will be
served on Tuesday and a Salisbury
steak dinner on Thursday.·

~~r~~e~ 0 ~our H;~~~~~. fo~~

ounces and was 17 inches long.
Qrandparents are Gary and
JoAnn Willford, Racine, and the
· late Robert Campbell and Georgian Whited of New Knoxville.

IT'S A

the Mason County Library Lawn

on

CHICAGO (AP) - Women who
exercise vigorously while trying to
qu it smoking arc twice as likely to
kick the . habit than wannabe exsmokers who don 't work out regularly. a new study finds.
The report also offers good news
to female smokers who fear that giving up·tobacco and nicotine will lead
to weig ht gain . Researchers found
that women who worked out as they
tried to quit gained only about half
the weight of those who did not
exercise.
Of the 134 women in the group
who exercised regularly, 19.4 percent kicked the habit for at least two ·
month s after their program ended
while ' 10.2 percent of the 147 nonexerci sers did the same.

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 150s; Low: 40s

Meiss County's
Volume

so,

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MACKENZIE SELLERS
TURNS SIX - Mackenzie
1\aron Sellers celebrated his ·
sixtli birthday at his home,
along with his mother; Catlna
Wolfe, his brother, Jacob, and
his sister, Kaylee.
·
The party featured a Jeff Gordon theme, with a cake provided
.by Vaughan's Supermarket.
Those attending were Ann
Sellers, Mlkey and Justin Engle,
Ruth Sellers, Agnes Sellers,
Cheryl Sellers, Stacy and Brit·
tany Black, Brenda Wolfe·,
Kenny, Mandy and Ryan Powell,
and Suzanne Sayre.
J.a mes Wolfe and daughter,
Valerie, Julie Spaun and ca;ol
Wolle also attended.
Patricia Fisher sent a gilt. ·

BUFFALO
p·
o
PCORN
\
"'" • 8HICKEN
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.BY

BRIAN J. REED
'
Stntlntl Ntwl Staff
·
: The Village of Middleport has a new mayor and a
new councilman.
. Sandy lannarelli, who has served as acting mayor
$i,nce Mayor Dewey "Mack" Horton suffered a
stroke earlier this year, assumed the mayor's office
at Monday evening's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council.
: Judge Robert E. Buck administered the oath of
office to lannarelli prior to the meeting, and will ·
process the necessary paperwork at his office on
Tuesday, he said.
Horton, who is recovering at his home, submitted
his resignation as mayor to lannarelli, effective yesterday. Iannarclli was elected president of council
during its organizational meeting in January, and
therefore automatically assumed the mayoral duties
at the time of Horton.'s illness.
In reading Horton's resignation last night,
lannarelli commented on Horton's accomplishments,
and praised him for his years of service.
"When he came into office, he inherited some
problems that were already here," lannarelli said,

noting thai the village had incurred $80,()()0. in debt,
along with other financial problems, which the vii !age continues to face.
·
"Think kindly of him," Iannarelli said.
.Robert Robinson, who was nominated without
competition in the May Democratic primary clection, was appointed last night to fill lannarel.li's
vacant council scat. The resolution appointing
Robinson stipulates that he will assume his regular
council seat in January, at which time lannarelli will
reassume her seat the council table.
Jean Craig; who currently serves on council, will
likely be unopposed· in the November mayoral race.
She was nominated in the Republican primary, and
faces no opposition unless a write-in candidate files.
In other action relating to Horton's resignation,
council members elected Steven Houchins as president of council, and appointed Rae Gwiazdowski to
fill Iannarelll's position on ·the village's finance
committee.
·
During the business meeting, council. discussed·
several problems and issues relating to the operation
of General Hartinger Park and the Mi&lt;!dleport Pool.
Iannarelli said that problems with fights and

mauer

lr-~~iiii'i~:~:~~!t~!::':;
··~!
Aaroo..was .se!Jipg .2.$·1'Cni.Jillp!i
I
II.O&lt;~H'\Ia when
rponey was taken on Thu~day.
"I just want (the teen-age~) to apologize and give his money back,"
she said. ·
.
~o boys, ages 16 and 17, ·were in custody, sheriff's spokesman
Brad~aemer said.
They arc c;harged with delinquency counts of complicjty to theft and are
scheduled for a June 22 court appearance, said·Toni Pagano, juvenile court
spokeswoman.
,
HAMILTON (AP)- A clergyman convicted of repeatedly raping his
daughter has been sentenced to 17 to.SO years in prison and fined $7,500.
But a judge declined to classify the Rev. Darrell Bell, of Middletown,
as a sexual predator, based on coun-ot'dered psychological examinations
that concluded he has a low probability of repeating the offense. ·
Butler County Common Pleas Judge H.J. Bressler also noted Monday
that Bell had not been convicted of a sex offense before.
Bell, 45, plans to appeal his conviction. He declined to comment in
·
court, as did· his daughter.
Bell was returned to the Butler
County jail but planned to post I 0
percent of his $500,000 bond to be
freed d.uring appeals.
::;eltttute.Q If released, Bell must be confined
1 SectiOIII • 10 Pages
. to his home except Ia go to work,
------------1 church or his lawyer's office, the

Today's

~

~55~~~~~~~3

Pick 3: 4-S-2; Pick 4: S-1·2-9
Jluckeye 5: 10-16-25-31-35

w.yA.

DaUy 3: 9-1-8; Dally 4: 8-3-1-6
0 t!199 Oblo Vatky hbllahlq Co.

Bell has been a minister and an
judge
ruled.
· AK Steel
Corp. worker for 2.S years,
He has served as associate pasior of
Bethlehem Temple First Pentecostal
Church.
··
·The judge ruled that Bell is a sexu~lly · oriented offe 0 der, a less
severe finding than being cl~ified
as i 'sexual predator.
.
Bell will have to notify local
authorities about where he is living
and will be required to check in
periodically with those authorities.
But the police will not be required
to notify Bell's neighbors, 8s wpuld
be required if Bell had been ruled to
be a sexual predator.

Quarter Pound Sausage Patty
.......

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smoking, which . is prohibited in the pool area, will ·
be addre5scd by park personnel and the police
department, if necessary.
Street Supervisor Kenny Madden noted mainte-.
nance problems at the park restrooms. He said that
he had been called 'at home late in the evening last
week to clean the restrooms, which are to be cleaned
and locked wfien the park closes.
Council also discussed other maintenance and
safety issues at the park, including an injury sustained recently by a ·spectator, at a ball game, who
received a serious cut from the metal bleachers in
the park. lannarelli said that she wouid coord' .ate
efforts between the village and the Middleport Youth
· League, which has agreed to assist with maintenance
of the park, to see that the restrooms are cleaned
each night and locked at the time the park is clos~d . ·
Sam Eblen, who serves on the village park and
.recteation committee, said thai the council should
consider hiring a park manager for next year, noting
that many of the problems discussed last night
would likely continue until a manager is put in
place.
Iannarelli also thanked lim Thomas of Valley.

,

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Lumber(fhomas Do· it Center and several of his
employees, who assisted with painting and other
repairs at the pool . Thomas' employees and village
crews assumed responsibility for completing the
repairs upon the passing of Arn old Johnson, who
was overseeing ihe repairs at the time of his death
last month.
"It's too bad that it takes a tragedy to pull us all
together, but the work got done, and it was d&lt;?n e
well," lannarelli said.
'
lannarelli noted that the pool repairs and work at
the Riverview Cemetery were both completed in
time for the Memorial Day holiday, and praised
those who worked for their cooperation.
~he also thanked Bob's.. Markel for donating
flowers for the downtown beautification project, and
members of the Middleport Community Association
and other volunteers for their work on that project.
lannarelli. also noted that many residents had
cleaned ~p their lawns and were keeping grass cut.
She said that the village will begin enforcing a new
ordinance addressing high grass and weeds and
unsightly refuse, including furniture and other trash
Continued In Middleport council, page 3

Firefighter• of the Syracuae and
Racine volunt•r fire departmantl
re8p01ided Monday around 2:40 p.m.
to the Sacand Street, Syrecuae, re•
ldence of Floyd Michael Raltmlre.
Flreflghtere found tht hou11, which .
auttalnad avare fire, emoke and
water damage, fully ablaze upon
arrival. Firefighter• remallied on
-n• until about 5:30 p.m. A report
on the fire waa not avellable . tlils
morning.

Or small."

·*Made By Gallia C(Junty~ Own
·Steve Evans Co~ntry Sausage

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' HAMILTON (AP) - · .A 9-year-old entrepreneur said a teen-ager
stole $6 from his lemonade stand was easy to recognize. He had striped red
hair.
Aaron Faughn supplied the description, and on Sunday two teens were
arrested by Butler .County sheriff's deputies. Their names were not
released.
"I was sad whe!l it happened, but now I (eel better because the people
cared about me and tried to help," Aaron said Monday.
Sheriff
Don Gabbard said his office investigates all erimes, "no

OWO ·

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Two Hamilton teens arrested
for $6 lemonade stand ,,.,

Lotteries

89¢ Bags Of Ice

-Page4 .

lannarelli assumes.Middleport Mayor's post; Robinson appointed to council

To ge~ a current weather
report, check the

s~·ntinel

-

helps Reds to 8-4
win over the Mets

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 7

Good Afternoon

tn downtown Point Pleasan t. W. Va,

Exercise helps women quit
smoking, stay smoke free

WNBA roundup, Page 5
Meddling mother, Page 6
Time out for tips, Page 10

Today: Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: 50s

1

A regatta gospel sing will be held

June 27, beginning at I :30 p.m..
Si nging will be the "The Johnson's
New Generation" of John son City,
Ky.; 'Jim mie McKnight of Dunbar.
W. Va., and the "Faithful Witness"
of Charleston. W. Va. It is suggested
that those attending take lawn

June15, 1000

Weather

Clergyman sentenced for raping da•:Jah terl

Gospel sing planned
on

Tuesday

C::olmi~UE:s - Reatoratlon
on tht
'c heater CourthoUM contlnuae with tht ippllcatlon of calling
'platter. Here, Jody and Joe Cuattr of Cuatw'a Stucco &amp; Pluter,
Mlddlapo!'t; epply pallttr to the dawnatalra calling of the 17&amp;year building which Wll built In 11123 an~ HI'Wdaa the ...t of
county gOYtmment until June, 1841. In ..cer~t ywre, the build·
lng h11 ..-1vtc1 a new roof, wlndawt, floOring, h11Ung and ventilation and other lmprovamenta.

missioners

. . ..-::. 's Compensation plan

By BRIAN J. REED
tax on tritiler sales,' could create a financial hardSentinel N_. Staff
ship on the county general fund if allowances are
The Mei~ County Commissioners adopted a not made during ihe 2000 budget planning process.
special 10-step plan to reduce workers compensaMichael. Lonchar of MGB Architecture and
lion COlts when they met in regular. session on Engineering, Lancasle!, met briefly with the comMonday afternOOn.
missioners to discuss the procedures required in
The county has eKperienced a high number of applying for grant funding for the construction of a
workers compensation claims in past years, placing new jail.
it at a high-premium risk.
Lonchar has met with the commissioners in the
Participation in the new plan, which will be . past to discuss possible plans for a new jail, and
·overseen by Commissioner Mick Davenport, will . yesterday. discussed the "campaign" which will be
allow the commissione~ to take advantage of ·a needed to pass a sales-tax increase if the commisreduced premium rate.
sione~decide to seek such a tax hike.
The plan is designed to reduce risk of on-job
The commissione~ have discussed placing a
injuries, and is coordinated by the County Com- one-percent sales tax increase on the November
missione~ Association of Ohio. The commissionballot, with proceeds from the tax to go to the operers have also appointed Joan Hoffman of the lrca- ation of a new jail.
surer's office as the worker's compensation adminThe commissioners have tieen assured that they
istrator, in addition to her regular duties.
could likely receive grant funds for the construeIn other business, Meigs County Auditor Nancy tion of a facility, but the state will no longer award
Parker Campbell f11el with the board to discuss. grant funding lo counties unless they are able to
changes in the·taxation of manufactured· homes, .to show the ability to operate facilities after construetake effect ne~t year. According to Campbell, the lion.
new legislation will eliminate the local one-percent
The commissioners have discussed building a
sales tax now collected on the sale of second-hand 40 to 60-bed jail on county-owned ,real estate
mobile homes and other manufactured housing.
behind Veterans Memorial Hospital. The jail would
• Campbell said thai the new legislation will also replace the 19th-century jail adjacent to the courtrequire the county to pu~lish its list of delinquent house, which has been deemed unsafe by state fire
mobile home taxes, which has not been required in and corrections officials.
the past. Publishing the list, similar to the list of
The commissione~ approved the renewal of
delinquent land taxes, will COlt approximately existing contracts between the County Department
$1,200, and coupled with the 1068 of the local sales of Human Serv'ices and several child care

provide~.

beginning July I.
Those facilities are AC&lt;;:ESS Headstart and
Gingerbread i'louse, Middleport and Rio Grande
Child Care Center, Rio Grande; NOVA 'Learning
Center, Athens; William and Mary Kiddie Acadomy, Wellston; Tri-County Community' Action
Agency and Little Rascals, Athens, and Day-Care .
Connettion, Nelsonville; Hocking Valley Day
School, Athens; Miss Paula's Day Care, Gallipolis;
and Athens Church of Christ Preschool, Athens.
The rates for these centers .fall below market
·rates.
Davenport announced that the Ohio . River
Sweep will be held on Saturday. Contacts for the
annual event are Kenny Wiggins at the Meigs
County Office of Litter Control and Recycling, and
Tom Hayman of the Forked Run Sportsman's
Oub, who will oversee the event in the Reedsville .
area.

Davenport urged public participation in the
river Qleanup project.
The commissioners also:
- AtiProved lranSfers of fundS for the Veterans
· Services Office, Community Corrections and
County Auditor;
- Approved the appiopriation of funds in the
county crafte~' grant program;
-Approved payment of bills in the amount of
$332,362.09. ·
• Present were Commissione~ Davenport, Janet
Howard and Jeffrey Thornton, and Oerk Gloria
Kloes. ·

Allies watching for Serbs to meet first deadline for troop withdrawal
By ROBERT BURNS
AP MIUUuy Wrlllr · ·
WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Ointon administration
officials say they are satisfied that the Yugoslav military is making a sincere effort to meet today's
deadline for emptyina a swath of southern Kosovo
of all soldiers and police. The territory includes a
section of Kosovo being patrolled by American
troops.
It remained unclear hOw NATO would respond
.if it discovered Serb straggle~.
"They arc makina a •trona effort to get them
9ut," the Pentagon's chief spokesman, Kenneth
Bacon, said Monday. "I can't predict now, 24 hou~
before the deadline, what will happen. But they are
certainly making a very strong effort to get them
·ouL"
·
His commcniS suggested doubt that 11\e deadline
would be met. NATO had said it would resume
bombing Yugoslavia if the Serbs deliberately
dragged their feet in leaving Kosovo, a province of
Serbia, although Bacon's description of the Serb
withdrawal effort seemed to indicate a willingness
to let the deadline slide a little.
"The roads are jammed; so they 're having a hard
time ~tiling them out," he said. "But ":'e basically
sec a 5IIOna effort to try to comply."
·
A:J the Serbs pulled out, NATO troops continued
to pour in, numbering about 14,000 as of Monday.
They · include 1,000 U.S. Army soldiers and .1100
U.S. Marines, the vanguard of a U.S. force eventually to total 7,000.
.
' A continaent of about 200 Russian troops
remained at the Pristina airport in central Kosovo
. while U.S. and NATO officials saught to·work out
an arranaement for the. Russians to participate in a
peaoekoepina force under NATO control. The Rus·

•

sians are pushing to have their O..n geographic sector of Kosovo to patrol while resisting NATO's
demand that all peacekeepers in Kosovo answer lo
NATO authorities.
Defense Secretary William Cohen made plans to
meet Russian Defense Minister .Marshall Igor
Sergeyev on Wednesday and Thursday in Helsinki,
Finland, to hash out the peacekeeping dispute. They
were to bejoined by Secretary of State ~adeleine
Albright and Russian Fomgn Minister Igor Ivanov.
More Russian peacekeepers were heading
.. toward Kosovo today, the Defense Ministry said.
Russia had sent an It-vehicle convoy from Bosnia
to resupply its troops.
Ru5sian control of the airpon has caused 110
embarrassing diplomatic standoff. The surprise
arrival of the Russian troop&amp; ahead of NATO has
given Moscow greater leverage in negotiations over
its place in the peacekeeping force.
.
Albright told a Wliite House news conference
Monday a range of issues would be discussed at the
Helsinki talks. Despite the stalemate at Prlstina,
"there has not been long-term damage from this" to
U.S.·Ruasian relations, Albright said. "We'll work
the Russian part out because.there is good will:" she
added.
·
·
President Ointon was to discu~ the situation
with Russian President Boris Yeltsi~ in Cologne on
Sunday it a meeting of the world's seven richest
nations and Russia.
· It will be up to the commander of NATO's
peacekeepers in Kosovo, British Lt. 'Gen. Sir Mike
. Jackson, to determine whether the Serbs ,have lived
up to the "military technical ag/eement" they
signed June !I that laid doWn deadlines for pulling
out of KOIIOV(). It gave the Serbs until today to
vacaiC a stretch of southern Kosovo; they are to be

· completely out of a middle section of.the province
by Friday, and out of Kosovo altogether by Sunday.
The area of Serb withdrawal in southern Kosovo
includes large parts of the !CCior U.S. peacekeepers
are patrolling, as well as parts of the German, Italian and British socton, including the provincial capital of PristinL Thus it includes Serbs who are
eiiCllll)ped with the Russians at the Pristina airport.
Bacon said the Serb forces were struggling with
clogged roadways, a shortage of transport vehicles
and vehicle breakdowns. He showed repone~
vide9 tape from a U.S. surveillance drone that
shoWed an estimtlled 300 lo 500 military and civilian vehicles forming a convoy hclded north from
south-central Kos&lt;ivo on Monday. The convoy was
being monitored by U.S. Army Apache anack helicopters. .
"We do see firm evidence they are trying to get
out." Bacon said.
Between 14,000 and 15,000 Sero army and
police forces have left Kosovo, Bacon said, plus
about 20 percent of their estimated 300 tanks, about
half of their armored troop carriers and as much as
15 percent of their artillery.
The military agreement signed with NATO
required the Serbs to l)ave I00 percent of their air
defense weapons out of Kosovo and beyond a 16mile buffer ZOfle in Serbia by last Saturday. ,Bacon .
said all of these weapons had been withdrawn
except for an unspecified number of anti-aircr.aft .
artillery guns, "whic~ they arc working to move as
soon as possible." He said some of these are broken
down.
After t1le Helsinki meeting. Cohen wtis to meet
with NATO defense mioiste~ or their represent&amp;-.
tives in Brussels, Belgium, then fly 'to the Balkans
to meet with U.S. troops.

•

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