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Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Senior Citizens Center Racfne-Southern FFA competes in En"virothon ~.
•

activities announced
The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center has scheduled
the following programs and
activities for the week.. Senior
citizens are encourage&lt;) to atte~d
and participate in the senior
nutrition program noon meal
. served dai Iy.
A represe ntative from the
Athens Social Security Office
will be at the center on Wednesday, 10- 11 a.m. No appointment
is needed for this service.
A motorcoach trip to The
Wilps ncar Cambridge will leave
the ce nter at 8 a.n1.
The monthl y. birthday party
will be held Thursday fur seniors
with · Jun e hirt hdays Tammy
. Black will sin g at II a.m. and ~
program will he prese nted at I

p.m. by the Chester Courthouse
Prese nters portraying · early
Meigs County settl ers.
A round and square dance will
be held Friday, 8- 1( p.m. with
music by the Happy Hollow
Boys with Art Conant calling.
The p,ublic is invited to attend
and people are asked to bring
snacks for the refreshment table.
The public is invited to attend
the evenin g dinners served "Tuesday and Thursday, 4:45-6 p.m.
TI.lC suggested donation is $4
The Tuesday dinner will be pork
roast and dre ssing.and the Thursday dinner will be ham loaf. A
gospe l duet, Living Water, wit h
Mi chelle Garretson and Rita ·
Cunningham will si ng at 5:_30
p.m. Tuesday. ·

Vol ume so, Number 12
TEAM 2 - Racine-Souther FFA Envlrothon Team 2 consisted
from left, Chris Proffitt, Lori Sayre, Travanna Moore, Jimmy All•eY..
.. .
and Amy Wilson.
second team recei¥ed lith place.
Aaron Sayre, team .advisor, said:!
The second team was five points the teams worked hard going int~ ·
away from going to the state envi- the event and added that with a lot ot
rothon: They also received the highc hard work and a little extra effort thcf:
est score out of every team compel· teams can attain any goal they set. . ~
ing in forestry.

.

i

day, 9 a.m. until II :30 a.m. The
theme will be "We Shine for Jesus."
RUTLAND - Vacation Bible
school at the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church on Salem Street through
Friday, 6-8 :30 p.m. at the church .
TUESDAY
RACINE ~ The Racine Area
. Community Organization will meet
on Tuesday at 6:30p.m: at Star Mill
Park.

~

High School Library.

l'

c

RUTLAND Bicentennla~
commiltee meeting, (ivic Center"
7:30 p.1n. All interested residen1:i
invited.
~
~
CHESTER - Winding Trai '
Garden Club meeting Tuesday. 7:3 ·
p.m. at the home of Dehbie Mohler.

...
~

POMEROY - Meigs C~urit J:
Health Department immunizatio~·
clinic Tuesday, 9-11 a.m. and . l·l
p.m. at the Meigs Multipurposl!
POMEROY - Meigs ,J..ocal . Center, Pomeroy. Children must b; .
Board of Education regular meeting accompanied by a parent o~
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. in the Meigs guardian with child's shot record. '::

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DAYTON (AP)- COq~pelling testi·
I. --·-··· by aTennessee woman who was
abducted, raped repeatedly llllil held
captive 'for· a month bolstered the cas~
against the man found guilty of kidnappilig her, a prosecutor said.
"There's no question you could hear
drop in this courtroom when the
hi&lt;:ti·m was testifying," said assistant
Montgomery County prosecutor David
FranceschCIII. "The jury want¢ to
ltlaltow each and every detail of the hor·
riijc, eveniB that took place. She was just
~ brutally:" .
·"". ' .• .c : •
Rejecting 111 insanitY defense, a jury
on Monda:y convicted Kevin Caes, 34,
of Oarksville, Tenn. Caes was found ·
guilty of 22 counts of iape, thri:e counts
of felonious assault and one count each
of' kidnapping and unlawful possession
of a dangerous.ordnana:. ·
Caes show~ no emotion as he was led from the courtroom. He faces a
possible term of life in prison because the offenses he was convic:ted of
maxi.mum penalties totaling more than· 200 years. . .
·
Dennis Langer of Montgomery County Common Pleas Court set
.sentenCing for July 30. .
·
The jury deliberated for seven hours over two da:ys.
Franceschelli has said that Caes was sane and responsible when he .kid·
napped and repeatedly raped and tortured the 25-year-old Nashville woman
By AUDREY WARNER
captive July 17, 1997, to August 20, 1997.
OVP News S'-tf
Defense attorneys contended that Caes is a paranoid schizophrenic who
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.~ "We have seen
., ,._ not know right from wron,.
·
significant derailments in the last two years, and
Defense attorney Dana Martino said his client believed that God told
our focus tonight is on what needs to be done,"
him to father the worrian 's chil4ren. Martino said Caes, who was twice
U.S. Rep. Bob Wise said ai a town meeting Mon- ·
removed from the rouriroom "rot disrupting the trial, believes there is a
day night.
.
"cosmic intelligence agency" that controls everybody and has embedded a
Citizens from all over Mason County gathered
microchip in his buttocks to monitor his movements.
· .
·
at Central Elementary School to hear what Wise, .
Franceschclli said CaCs met the woman in Nashville on July 17 and paid · CSX officials and the Federal·Railroad Adminis·
her to perform·oral sex on him. After she got into his car, Frllnceschelli
tration had to say about recent dcrailmenis.
said, Caes shot her in the neck with a stun gun·and tied her up. .
Wise said it had taken two mooths to organize mente In MellOn Coun~, W.Va. - euch u
Caes then drove her to a trailer near Ointon, Ind., where the wom1111 was
Ille meeting because he wanted to be sure" top offi· ·the one the occurred In Hendereon In
handcuffed and bound with ·rope, the prosec~tor said. When she tried to
cials were available to participate and set a time November 11188, above, that Hnt I toxic
escape once, Francesdtelli said, Caes punctured her eye with an icc pick,
when the residents could attend.
cloud drifting toward Gllllpolle - _,.. the
blurring he~ vision. .
.
.
· "We will hear a lot ·of facts and statistics aub)ect of I town meeting between real·
On Aui t'3,.Caes put the woman in the trunk of his car an!! drove her to
tonight, but we must get 111 understanding of bow dents and CSX officials In Point Pleaalnt
Dayton-area home of his parents, wh!l were.on vacation, Franceschelli
we can all. work. togCther.on this problem," Wise Monday, hotttad by U.S. Rep. Bob Wlae, Dsaid.
.
·
W.Va. (OVP fll• photo)
was arrested l\,ug. 20.after sheriff's deputies found the woman ·
. The Federal Railroad Administration released
authority to fill vacancies caused by vacations,
IJumdCuffed, shaclcled, gagged and tethered in a basement bedroOm, She had
report during the meeting notin$ that CSX Trans· extended sick leave and retirements. . ·. · '
triggered a wire alann with a tW-Qr blade held in her mouth~
· .·
portation doesn't have enough maintenance workThe fc~eral agency plans to meet w1th CSX
Pollee sald they found gUnpowder and bomb-making material ill the
ers to repair tracks in the area where three train officials Thursday to discus$ the report.
·
·
aix:idents have occurred this year.
.
.
. Residential concerns have heightened since a
Ca:es arrived at the house shortly after deputies discovered the woinan,
The report also found miintenilnce workers are series of derailments ocx:urred in M.ason County
he led them on a high-speed chase. He was IWCil5ed of trying to hit a
used for jobs other than track repair. Another find· -including one in November 1998 at Henderson
l.dc:puty with his car before his capture. .
ing was track superintendents ·said they had no that · send a toxic cloud from a ruptured tanker
was indic:ted'on 23 counts of rape, but one of the counts was dis·
.

Town meeting tackles derailment concerns in Mason County

By H. JOSEF H.EBERT .
.
.A.aoclated Preaa Writer
WASHINGl'ON (AP) - 113 many as S,OOO
nuclear sc:ienlists and C&gt;ther officials with topsecret clearances at the Energy Department will
be given lie detector testS as part ·of a b~der
program to beef up security and anti-espionage

A Senate proposal, likely · to be offered within
It will be the first time any agency outside of
weeks, will be fashioned after the Rudman rec· the Central intelligence Agency and the"National
ommendation and ~uid be voted on by the full . Security Agency has engaged in widespread use
Senate beforo the summer~. Senate source5 of polygraph .tests on workers. The FBI uses the .
said Monday. .
. . devices to 5creen pros~ctive employees.
Richardson has called such a move unwise
The prospect of testmg thousands of worke111,
and qued that his initiatives - streamlining including ·most of the .nuclear weapons scientists

·released because of his age, was in
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson was c:xpectstable condition early Tuesday in · ed to provide details of the polygraph testing pro·.
the intensive care unit of Mount gram today at a Senate hearing where he also was
Sinai Hospital. He has not been . to resist broader restructuring of his department
~harged. .
.
.
- a reorgani.zation. that critipr say would give
The officers involved were weapons programs greater autonomy and safe·
~=~~:~==~~=~ placed on paid administrative leave guard nuclear secrets.
·
,while city prosecutors decide
Four Senat~ committees - Armed Servi~
whether the shooting was justifiable
lntelligen~:e, Energy, IJ!i Oovcmm~ntai Affurs
and whether the teenager ahould be: - were sc:heduled to hear from ~chardson as
Lotteries
ch ed with deli uen
well .as former Sen. Warren Ruci1nan of Now
~fticcrs chase:(the ~n on foot Hampshire, chairm111 of a presidential advisory
0 10
PI~k • .4 ~..o.· "'-k 41 8•7-3-7
fte . the
rted
. th panel that I.St week called for a dram alit reshuf·
1 r ~ 0 ~ man re!Kl.
•
""
.-""
a you
Ding of the Ener~y Department.
·
lllocuye 5: 6-20-26-32:37
~atchtn~ ht~ d~d~n rob~d
Rudman's For~ign l~t~lligence ~dvisory
W.yA.
tn~ at gunpo!nt an . r two 8 ots
Board, in a report h1ply cnltcal of secunty at the
DdJ' 3: 1-9-S; Daily·41 5-7-4-6
dunng the cnme, satd Command. er department, urged creat.ion of a semiauto~omous
o t99901*&gt; ..Wier l'll~th•tll• Co,
Andrea Gonza1ez, a po 1ICC
agency within ·the department to run the nuclear
e:===========~spo:::::k:es::m::;an::_._ __._ _ _ _J . weapons programs, including ·the .weapona Jaba.

oflic:es more clout - will protect America's scientists at the labs. Some worry about the rei~·
nuclear secrets. Part of the security push will be · ability of the polygraph and the possibility of
a wide use of.poiygraph tests.
career-ending "false po~itive". fin~ings. ~eri
Edward J. Curran, the DOE's director of the fear the department probmg thetr pnvate ltvea.
· counlerintel.ligence, said Monday that he an~ici·
Some offic!als at t~e weapons labs - Los
pates as many as 5,000 nuclear weapons sc1cn- v\lamos, Sand1a and Livermore - are worrteil
"lists a,nd other employees in sensitive jobs will be the push for s~ch widespread testing might drive
tetled, some possibly as early as Aug~st. &lt;:urran, topflight scientists ~way to univ~rslliea w1tere
a , vetera~ FBI ~~aent and countcnntelhgence they need no~ deal w1th such_scru~ny.
expert, 111~ he was the ~rst to be tested. .
Curran sud the tes~, wh1~h Will be l!lildlla, ,
The testmg p~ram ts expected to be m full tered by contractors, w11l be very foe~" lid
swing by September, with more than 200 tests a the rore questions limited to "deal onl)' wl!h
month, or 2,500. a year, Curran said. So far 56 . espiQnage" and not personal or "lifestyle'~ matcounterintelligence officers,. including some at ters.
.
.
.
the nuclear ~eapons laboratories, have been test"We've been very careful th~t ~·have C\ler)'·
ed voluntanly.
body 's concerns addresse&lt;L Th1s IS a technique
The regulation covering the tests will be pub· that is used in the interest \lf protectin~
lished in the Federal Register possibly this ·week, security. The more focused it is, the
lilt
followed by a 30-day comment period.
results," Cltrran said.

· CLEVELAND (AP) shot a. 16-year-old robbery suspect
in the back when he fired at them,
police said.

.,
•

c

Limit . 2 Please
4 roll pk

=

298 SECOND STR&amp;ET
.POMEROY, OHIO
.

PRICE$ EFFECTIVE JUNE 22, 23RD 1999 ONLY

drifting across the Ohio River toward Gallipolis,
prompting a "shelter in place" advisory for sec·
lions of the city.
Significant improvetrien~ have been made Qf1
·the track, according to Frank Pursley, vice presi·
dent of operational support for CSX. He said last ·
year CSX transported over 340,000 cars with only
15 rele~s.
"But that's 15 too many. We want zero and will
work hard to achieve that goal, • Pursley added.
Pursley said CSX has incre8sed efficiency test·
ing of crew, checlcing the speed of trains more m· quently, laid new rail, and replaced 10,000 rail. ties
with 25,000 more being replaced in August.
Emergency Services Director Otuck. Blake told
residents about the preparedness of the emergency
.response teams in case of another incident. Blake
,also said that CSX has offered training, money,
and material to help Mason County be prepared in
case another accident ocx:urs.
Mason County now has an eme~ncy. al~rting
system, wh1ch alloW$ emergency serv1ces to mtcr·
01pt television signals and give local emergency
messages to residents. Mason County is one of the
few counties in the state to have such a system.
.
ConUnued In • Town tnHtltlf1' on page 3

Nuclear scientists, DOE employf!eS to take lie detector test$

Good Afternoon s.hootJ,ng Of .t~ "JII

I

.'

By BRIAN J. ·REED
Legislation which will become effective in lem which was reported by the Ohio EPA last
Sentinel News Staff .
.
January will impose stricter clean air regulations year continues to worsen, and·needs attention.
Leachate, which is contaminated water from
The Meigs County"Commissioners discussed which could put a "real burden" on Ohio's coal .
a lobbying trip to Columbus last week during mining industry. The changes proposed by Pad· the landfill itself, is leaking from the site and
their regular meeting on Monday.
.gett, Carey and fellow representatives Rose Ves- contaminating the land surrounding the area and
The trip was made by a delegation represent· per, R·New Richmond, Sean D. Logan, D-Sali - causing erosion problems of its own .
ing eoonomic development and public officials nesville, ~harlie Wilson, D·Bridgeport, and
Thornton said that the highway department
interested in improving relations between coun· Nancy Hollister, R-Marielta, 'Would increase a would be contacted about the road repairs, and
ty departments and state officials. .
·.
tax credit from S1 to S3 per ton of Ohio coal noted !hat a grant has been sought from the GalCommissioner Mick Davenport and Jeffrey consumed by an Ohio utility, would decrease the lia/Jack.son/MeigS/Vinlon. Solid Waste District
Thornton were joined by Department of Human percentage of Ohio coal to be used by Ohio util· to make the repairs necessary to eliq~inate the
.Services Director Michael' Swisller, Economic ities from 90pertlinl to zero to gain the credit, leachate problem . .
·
·
Development mrec.tor Perry Varnadoe and Karin and includes other measures designed to · pro· .
The board ·approved several resolutions
Johnson of the chamber of commerce tourism mote the .use of Ohio-mined coal.
· .authorizing the. DHS to renew contracts for
office.
"If these changes are not approved, it will copier maintenance, software service, and
According to Davenport, ·the group met with risk the entire coal mining industry across the mileage for programs offered through
State Rep. John Carey, R-Weifston, State Sena- state," Davenport said, "including the 800 coal Gallia/Meigs Community Action Agency.
tor Mike Shoemaker, D·~umeville, Jean Carter . miners at the Southern Ohio Coal Company's
.They also approved a contr~ct with the
·. Ryan, deputy dire~lor of the Ohio Department of · Meigs Division.
Athens/Meigs Educational Setvice Center for .
Development, and Gordon Proctor, director of
Thornton noted .that up to . 500 other jobs Adult Basic Literacy Education clll5$es for par·
the Ohio Department of TranspOrtation.
relating to the ·mining operation would also be ticipants in the DHS JOBS program.
. Davenport.and Thornton saidJbat-the..IFiP.wlli. ·~ threatened. ...
.
The board also:
.
·successful, In that Meigs County's .delegaliori
Both Davenport and Thornton agreed that
• Approved an appropriation request of
was able to discuss issues importarit to the coun- . future lobbying trips would be planned to fol- $7,000 for the. salary of the county's workers'
ty 's economic future: . road improvements and low up on diseussions held last week.
compensation coordinator;
employment issues, among others. . .
'.
In .other business, the commissioners dis·
· ··Approved payment of bills in the amount of
. The group also met with Joy Padgett, R· cussed needed work at the former county land· $551,590.73;
Coshocton, who informed the group of proposed fill on Howell Hill Road.
. • Recessed their meeting until Thursday at I
changes to the conference budget bill relating to
The health department has advised the board p.m ., --:hen discussion of the county's pattner·
that an inspection on June. 8 revealed that road ship with the Ohio Department of Huf!lan Ser·
incentives for using Ohio-mined coal.
Davenport said that Padgett, who will soon repairs and cutting.of trees arid weeds is needed vices ·will be discussed.
. ~orne director of· the Governor's Office for . to stop further erosion.
.
Present, in addition to Thornton and Davcn·
Appalachia, urged the commissionerS to support
Keith Little and Joe Holland, who performed port, were Clerk Gloria Kloes and Jean Trussell, ·
the changes.
the inspection, also noted that the leachate· prob- grants administrator.
.

Pollee fnvesH,.aU!"'

Bath Tissue

.

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Commissioners consider lobbying trip a success

1::.~~~~~~!;·~~!:~:.thewomanfalledtotestifyabouttheallcged

Umlt 2 please

'

. H9metown Newspaper

a

.NORTHERN WHITE . ·.

VAN CAMPS
. 15 oz.

(Asst flav)
Limit 2 ple~:tsel

18 oz.

Watermelon
8•20 lbs.-avg.

•

By JIM FREEMAN
streets in some areas where the line must travel under
Paving work may not begin until September or · He also asked for a safety report from Anderson.
Sentinel Newe Staff
the streets; however, he remaril;ed that the streets will even October, he added.
In other businC~~s, council :
.
Council met with Lincoln Heights resident Glasgo
• Accepted the sole fuel bid from G &amp; M Ashland,
Pomeroy Village Council, meeting in regular ses· be repaired afterwards. .
sio11 Monday night, accepted a $1 ,108,012.75 bid for
"It will be a mess 'oVhile the work is going on," he Fairrow about curb problems in front of his house, and Minef1iville; for 71 cenis a gallon for unleaded plus
sal d.
·
with Gene Houda5helt of the Union Avenue. neighbor· · and 62 cents for low sulfur diesel fuel. The village is
' construction of i long·awllited village sewer project.
Council accepted the bid of Holley Brothers ConMusser said the contractor wants to start work on hood over sewer odors and loud neighbors.
r\ol required to pay tax on the fuel.
Mayor Frank Vaughan said the street supervisor
• Approved the second reading of an ordinance ·
struction, the lowest of {ive ,bids submitted on the pro- the project within 30 days and must be completed withject, which will run a sanitary sewer line from Legion in one year. ·
would examine the curb on Lincoln Heights, while establishing which ~illage employee• ar~ eligible for
Terrace to the Middleport corporation line, also taking
Bulk. of the funding for the projeCt will be through Police Chief Jeff Miller would"be asked to talk to peo· paid vacation leave. .
.
.
in the Monkey Run area.
the Community Development Block Grant project, pie who play loud music in the Union Avenue area.
• Amended an ordinance extending the Ohio Power
Appalachian Regional Commission and the State Cap·
It was also noted that signs have been ordered pro- .franchise an additional 12 years.
The highest bid was for $1,416,366.
Council President John Musser recommended the ita! Improvement Project.
hibiting the passage of large trucks over . Union
• Discussed removing a 25 miie&lt;per-hqur sign
Holley Brothers bid be accepted, noting that Village
The local share will be approximately $125,000, Avenue.
under the Pomeroy·Mas&lt;ln Bridge. The speed limit
Administrator John Anderson .and the engineer super- Musser said.
During ·open ·discussion, council members dis- there is 35 miles-per-hour.
.
.
vising the project, Gene Triplett, have examined the
"We're fortunate to get this kind of funding," he cussed having Fire Chief Chris Shank and Anderson
• Renewed health insurance for village employees.
bid and found all in order.
said.
·
·
·
·
check fire hydrants in the village.. '
· • Met in executive session to discuss "personnel
Musser said homeowners along the sewer route will · Musser also briefly discussed planned paving pro·
Councilman George Wright discussed purchasing matters."
be hooked up to the new ·line at no cost, although those jects, noting that some preparatory storm drain and new blinds for the police department and filling in ~
• Approved ·purchase of a computer program for
with septic systems will be responsible for filling in .. curb work should be done before paviqg starts, partie· · hole on Pleasant Ridge.
·
.
the mayor's cou1l from TBS of Youngstow~ for
th~ir .own septic timlcs.
.
.
ularly in low-lying areas with drainage problems.
Councilman Dave Ballard said some cars appear to $7,800.
. .
. .
..
. "Hookup is not an option," he said; explaining that
One problem is that storm drains may 'oVind up have been abandoned on the parking lot of the Union ·
Also present were counc1i members Gert Walton,
homeowners will be required to connect to the system. above street level af~r exis!ing pavement is milled off. · Avenue apartments and asked wliy police officers are Scott D1llon and Larry Wehrung, Clerk{freasurer
He also commented that the work will tear u·p the
"Water isn't going 1lnlril uphill," he .commented.
nor wearing their new hats:
Kathy Hysell and Fire Chief Chris Shank..

JAMES HANNAH .

JAMESTOWN SPIRAL

-Page4

Pomeroy Council accepts sewer project bid

~.AilliOCIDd ~ Writer

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

3 of the NBA Pl8yoffs,
trails San Antonio 2-1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

man
in Dayton abduction, rape

Prices ·oood·Tuesday, June.22nd &amp;Wednesday,.June 21rd .only

c

.

Meigs County's

- - - - - - - - - - C9mmunity Calendar-----,---------..&lt;:

SUNBEAM BIG

eoa

.

Roush family to hold national reunion

I

Reds defeat Diamondbacks, Page 4
Dangers of date rape drugs, Page 6
Time out for tips,·Page 10

Today: Mostly Sunny

High: SO.; Low:

New!!!game

June22, 1M

Weather
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 801; Low: 80s

TEAM {-Racine-Southern FFA Envirolhon Team 1 consisted of,,
from left, ·s teve Smith, Kacy Ervin,.Robert Forester, Kevin Tapscott
·
and Sandy Smith
'
Merrthc rs of the Racine-Southern forestry, soils,
wildlife and environ·
FFA attended. and .competed in the mental isSues. There we're 62 teams
Area 5 Enviruthon held May 4 at competing in the contest.
Camp Traver in Hocking County.
The two teams from Racine conThe cclnte·s t consisted of fi ve di r
s i st~d of f\ve members each. The
The 288 th anni versary reun ion of · Dri ve, Mt. Lebanon, PA I5 228- fcrcnt areas of knowledge: aquattc s. first tea m g~t 63 rd place while the
the Roush (Rausc h) and Allied Fam- l789. Tickets will be "picked up on
ilies Association of America will he arrival. Banquet.main entree choices
he ld at DeGraff on Aug. 6 and 7. . arc . ham loaf or chll' kcn. Resc rva~
wi II be a cookout a~d swim party at
TI1c reunion headq uarters. banquet. lions are due, by July 30 and space is MONDAY
Ge
neral Flartinger Park in MiddleRACIN
E
Rac
ine
Villauc
auction, group picture, picnic and limiJcd.
•
e
port
.
CounC"i!
meet
in
g
·M
onday.
7
p.n)
at
business meeting will be held at the
Annual membership fee is $2 or a
Ri verside Hi gh Sc hooJ·Gymnas imil, life membershi p is $50. Dues can be the municipal building.
HEMLOCK GROVE - Vaca'
ioo W. Moore St. . DeG raff, approx- se nt to Sheldon Roush. All volumes
Vacation ti on Bible School at Hemloc k Grove
MIDr LEPORT imately one block wes t of Route 235 of the Roush family histories are
Bible
School,
Middleport
First
Bap- Chri stian Church through Friday, 6
near the ce nter or town .
available and plans arc being made
ti
st
Church.
ti11migh
Fnday,
6 to to 8:30p.m The theme is "Shine for
ll1e banquet will "be Friday, Aug. to begin work on a new volume to
Jesus." There will be classes for
8:
3()
p.m.
'·Good
News@guspelnat 7 p.m. Tickets cost $9 for ad ults update the previous four volumes.
ages 2 through seventh grade. A picand $4 for children . No charge i&gt; · · Nine Roush brothers, two broth· roc k."' 992-2755 for informa.tion.
nic and swimming party will be held
. made' for children 3 and under. Th'e · e rs~ in- law and one first cousin
on
Saturday, 3 to 5 p.m. with the
MIDDLEPORT ~ · Middleport
picnic will be hc.ld the foll owing day served in the American Revolution
at 12:30 p.m. Picnic ticke ts cost $7 and settled in the Big Bend area. All Church of Christ Bible · sc hool closing program Sunday, 9:30a.m.
for adults and $4 fnr children 4-12. descendants of the family. whether through Friday. 9 to naon . The kick·
ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Children under three are free. Reser- from male or female lines, arc urged off will be Saturday' from 9 to II :30
Springs
United
Methodist
Church
a.m. and the closing program will be
vations and payments should bu sent to attend the reunion.
held Friday. June 25, at 7 p.m . There Vacation Bihle School through Frito Sheldon F. Roush, 117 Marshall

: NO RAINCHECKS

Tuesday

Monday, June 21, 199f

3

.'
.!

\
-··~-- --...----~ ~--.4.-----,·---

.;. . .....

.'

VI

••

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�I

Commentary

Tue1day, June 22, 1999
P~ge

- Announcements: ~

2

TU11dly, June 22, 1. .

740.002-2150 • Fax: 092-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings,.Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HIU
. Controllet

.Manage your taxes;
··.·add to your income
By JOHN CUNNIFF
.
AP Bueln... AnalySt
NEW YORK (AP) - You are causing yourself grave financial damage if
· .you allow the Internal ·Revenue Service to overwithhold taxes from your
income, says Dan Pilla.
.
.
Pilla can demonstrate-this. To·begin, you receive no interest from Uncle
,Sam; why, the amount of the refund check' you receive is actually worth less
; ._ in buying power than the amount withheld.
.
.
.
. But far, far more important is what you could have done with that money'
had you held onto it rather than send it to Washington. Such as doubling or
tripling it just by using common sense.
·
That sense seems sadly lacking. Last year, more than .83 million tax
refunds, averaging more than $1,600, were issued by the IRS. This year,
refunds may reach 90 million.
Pilla, a tax litigation consultant to taxpayers, lawyers, accountants and
. members of COngress, shows how it can he done in his book, "How To Double Your Tax Refund."
From experi~nce, he knows that many who allow overwithholding can ill
afford to do so.,Why not, he advises, stop t~e practice and .pay down credit
. card debt instead, earning in effect 18 percent? .
' Or pay down 'the home mortgage bill and ·really score? Such as by ending.overwithholding and investing S130 a month in reducing your home
mortgage? That investment could return $8,321 to you.
Specifics: $130 a month or $1,570 a 'fear approximated the average
refund last year. Assume the rimrtgage involvep ·is for $100,000 at 8 percent
for 30 years, and is already five years old.
By adding $130 to each of 12 month'ly payments during the year the
. mortgage-payer will save $8,231 over the span of the mortgage, knocking
· one full year off the term of the note.
.Assume further that the morjgage-payei continues to pay $130 each and
~very month until the entire ·debt is paid off. The 30-year mortgage is thus
repaid in 22 years. Net saving: $49,974.
The irony is that a very large percentage of people allow their paychecks
.. to be overwithheld as a form of forced saving, fooling themselves and
. maybe committing their families to constant stress.
. ..
The possibilities mentioned are just the beginning. Pilla shows how vari,
ations in the use of that measly $130 a month can do wonderS in a 401 (k)
plan, or in an insurance policy or a brokerage account.
Instead, the money returned to the taxpayer is· reduced by having
.. . remained in an IRS account paying no interest while the value of those with:
· .held dollars is reduced by inflation, however slight.
. .
This year, a new problem could arise if IRS computers fail to meet the
. · Ycl!l' 2000 challenge. The Government ·Accounting office .this year
expressed concern that taxpayer refunds could be delayed.
Meanwhile, ·Pilla and other critics contend that the thrust of IRS promo. tiona! efforts to individuals and businesses encourage overwithholding. The
decision, however, remains with the taxpayer.
You have the right to adjust your withholding statement, Form W-4, on a
regular basis by informing your employer. The bOok tells you how to do so.
But do your homeWork: Beware of h~ving too little withheld and then
owing money on April 15. The IRS is acutely aware of how penalties and
· inlerest can run up the bill.

Today In History
ByTIIeAnoclated Preas
Today is Tuesday, June 22, the 173rd day of 1999. There are 192 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 22, 1945, the World War II battle for Okinawa officially ended;
12,520 Americans and 110,000 Japanese were killed in the 81-day campaign.
On this date:
In 18~5, Nafioleon Bonaparte abdicated a second time.
11'1 1868, Arkansas was re-admitted to the Union.
Thought for Todau; Department
In 1870, Congress created the
- - - - - - - - - ____ .-,_
of Justice.

mostly talking only thematically about such mat- the drain.
To catch up to Texas Gov.
ters, now -- he did mention teaching phonics in
Bush twists the knife by saying that, if he gets
George W. Bush (R), Vice PresiHeadstan, though -- is not conceding this ground to be preSident, he'll swear to uphold the dignity
dent AI Gore has to convince vot.
to Gore. He basically agrees. that Washington has of the presidency as well as to execute the laws.
ers that long Washington cxperia role in improving the country's social and cui- He also refers to Gore as "the status quo."
cncc is valuable preparation for the
turallife.
Gore obviously.wants to divest himself of the
presidency.
I think Gore's big problem, though, lies in Ointon ethical albatross, emphasizing what a
You'd think it would be obviescaping Washington's negatives rather than con- happily married man he is, recalling th-' he
ous, but it isn't. A CBS poll out this week indi- vincing people of its positives.
served in Vietnam and declaring that he has lived
cates that by 48 to 31 percent, voters would pre·
.·The public's preference for a Washington out- according to his values and faith. .
fer a candidate whose experience was gained out- sider fundamentally is an expression of distaste at · Ointon, though, can't help but remind people
side Washington.
everything that's gone wrong here over the last how ethically autistic he is. lAst week he claimed
This is a shift in public opinion from the two decade -- the gridlock, negativism, hyper-parti- w PBS' Jim Lehrer that RepUblicans have triC!I to
other times CBS asked the question-- prior to the sanship, government shutdowns .and nonstop destroy him because most Americans agree with
1992 campaign, when voters preferred Washing- scandals.
his policies.
.
ton experience by 46 to 40 percent, and prc-1988,
With "compassionate conservatism," Bush
He claimed he's kept most of his commitments
when they favored Washington by 49 to 35 per- clearly means to differentiate himself from the to the American people, though, "on one occacent.
cold, hard face that Congressional Republicans sion, much to my cte111al regret; I gave them
The 1992 example -- when outsider Bill Clin- have put oq their p_arty.
1!8Republicans 3!8 a little ammunition."
ton ended up beatinS, superlatively resumeed
Gore mocked "crumbs of compassion" and
The Gore campaign has been putting it out that
President George Bush -- proves that such early Democrats clearly intend to .try. to link Bush to · the Veep. was critical -- and his wife, Tipper,
wter preferences aren't indelible.
. Congression·alleaders, such as his fellow Texans, "unforgiving" -- over Ointon's Monica LcwinStill, this year's polls show that the public House Majority Leader Richard Armey (R) and sky lapse, but Gore is also enmeshed in the Cliiprefers Gov. Bush -- whose only government House Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R).
ncse fund-raising scandals of 1996.
.
'
experience is his five years in Texas -- over Vice · But Bush, who has a record in Texas far kinder
Gore may have announced in Carthage, Tc~n;,
President/former Sen.J.former Rep. Gore (D- and gentl~r than that of the GOP in the capital, but, for better and worse, he is a Washington ch_,Tenn.) !&gt;y roughly the same margin as it prefers an can escape the stain of Washington far more easi- actcr. Republicans tried to remind people of it'?&gt;'
outsider over an old Washington hand,
ly than Gore can.
·
staging a little show at the old Fairfax Hotel 0!1
. Gore's announcement speech Wednesday
After all, for six and a half years, .Gore h'as Massachusetts Avenue in D.C., where Gore gltw
•
showed he understands that he needs to remind been constantly seen standing behind Ointon, up.
:
people that Washington makes . a difference . in when he's not on ·a podium introducing and praisWhat Gore needs to do is demonstrate someboth economics and family life.
·
ing him.
ho.w how Washington experience makes a diffdrHe recounted a familil!f litany of improveThe danger for Gore, as a joke going around ence. Foreign policy is one opportunity: Perhaps
ments in the country's economy since 1992, Texas has it, is that after Ointon, the country he ·can use his Moscow connections to.get Russ. claiming credit for gOOd economic management · wants to take a shower and Gore is going down ian troops out of the Pristina airport.
··
by the administration of which he's ' r~--::::::=o-oc:=:::::----:"-------.,.-----"-:------'-------~
been a part. .
The line, "We remember what it
was like seven years ·ago. And I
never, ever want to go back,,. was
UNDER~MATE
meant to scare people into thinking
TH~ F'~E.
that the good times they now enjoy
. might evaporate if another Republican named Bush becomes president.
Gore needs to be careful when he
claims credit for the boom, however.
As Bus!J indicated in his de\&gt;ut
appearances, he wants to give workers and entrepreneurs, not the gov. 1.'
ernment, the credit.
The Bush line in Iowa, "Some
people think they invented prosperity the way they think they invented
the Internet," was an obvious jab at
Gore 's presumptuousness.
Gore's stress on the perils faCing
American families and his detailed
proposals for dealing with them -from universal' pre-school to encouraging religious groups to expand ·
their role in social service -- seemed
designed to demonstrate ihat: he has ·
thought deeply about how Washington can help people with problems
•Yhl.... fuM.net
close to home.
But Bush, even though he is

Don'T

Spotty showers,-low crop prices bedevil far.mers
By JAMES HANNAH
al economist for Ohio State UniverAHocllltad PraM Writer
sity.
, DAYTON (AP) - What could
Ohio doesn't produce enough
. he worse than being a farmer hit by com to have a major impact on ,
a drought? Being a farmer hit by l&gt;: prices, so it is at the mercy of big,
drought when many ·other farmers co.m-producing states.
·
growing the same crop are having a
The best combination for Ohio
good season.
farmers would be a poor com crop in
Plentiful rainfall in some parts of those states and a good crop in Ohio.
the country could increase yields That would increase market prices
there and lower crop prices for and give Ohio farmers plenty of
everyone, ' leaving . rain-deprived corn to sell.
farmers with both low prices and
Market prices have been down in
fewer crops to sell.
recent years.
The western Com Belt has had
COm has been averaging about
adequate moisture, but recent rains $2.10 a bushel compared to $2.71
diminished in intensity as they two years ago. Soybean prices are
reached Indiana and Ohio, making down to $4.58 a bushel from $6.45.
for drier conditions. . ·
Meanwhile, widely scattered
Farmers in states such as Iowa showers around Ohio ·are threatenand Nebraska produce the lion's . ing to put the state's farmers in tw.o
share of the nation's com.
different camps- the haves and the
"If they have .good'crops, it's have nots. Showers that drench the
going to be hard for the market fieJds of some farmers and miss the
(price) to work its way higher crops of their neighbors can result in
much," said Carl Zula~f. agricultur- different yields.

"The areas of Ohio who have
Widely scattered show·
been missed by .these spotty rains
have reason to be concerned," ers around Ohio are ·
Zulaufsaid.
threatening put the
However, it may be too early in state's farmers in two
the C9fn-.and soybean-growing season to get overly worried because 'different camps - the
the crops are not in a water-critical haves and the have notS.
·
stage.
Getting rain between mid-July Showers that drench the
and mid-August is usually the fields of some farmers .
important !ime, and farmers who and miss the crops of ·
have had little rain so far may get
their neighbors can
plenty of it later.
"Oearly the areas that don't have result in different yieldS.
rain now are going to need nun,"
said Zulauf. "But we have a long
Mike Sollars, who grows com
way to go to write this story for this
and soybeans on a 3,400-acrc fa(m
crop year."
The recent unusually hot weather in southern Ohio's Fayette O:lunl)',
is to blame for the widely scattered said hit-or-miss storms can he exasthunderstorms. Western Ohio bene- perating for farmers who desperalcfited last weekend.
ly need the rain and don't get it. :
"You'll sec the rain coming, ~d
"It just kept raining in the same
areas," said state climatologist Jeff all of a sudden it disappears," SOl. Iars said. "It'Sfrustrating."
Rogers.
·

to

· ;~~=disb;~~Z ~t~n:!%:~~~~:~~~~:~~;~~~ INS.must now clean up Clinton's 1996 mess

rematch at Yankee Stadium.
By Jack Anderson
Democratic fundraiser ·in hire.
,
In 1940, during World War II, Adolf and Jan Moller
1994, was to mine the
None of the employees were trained. AccordHitler gained a stunning victory as .
Across the country, thousands of bona-fide
""'at voting potential of ing to cona.....uional testimony from INS employ·Moliere,
· · are gettmg
· some d'1sturb'mg news m
·
..immigrants
~
-- the orie required task was to
.actor-playwright
(11122Franch
_11173). France was forced to sign an u.s. Citizens
waiting to he ees at the!'.,. time,
armistice . eight days · after German their mailboxes: Little white envelopes from the
naturalized, who most "approve, approve, approve" all applications tliat
·forces overran Paris.
· · Immigration and Naturalization Service informing
often vote for immigrant-' came in.
'
In 1941, Germany invaded the Soviet Union during World War II.
them that the addressee is about to he deported.
friendly Democrats. Over
The stark rise in deportations, JaCobs tells us,
In 1944, President Roosevelt signed the "GI Bill of Rights."
The reasons for the deportations vary - crimithe next two years, the is merely the fallout from the 1996 fervor. "There
nal records, lying on the appliCation, failure to
White House would take a · is no doubt in my mind that the deportation nu~.In 1969, singer-actress Judy Garland died in London at age 47.
In 1970, President Nixon signed a measure lowering the voting age to 18. pass language requirements. But the real reason · very hands-on approach to seeing. the campaign . hers we see today arc a direct result of the citiIn 1993, former first lady Pat Nixon died in Park Ridge, N.J., at lite 81. these notices are going out in droves has mostly to through. Aides were dispatched from Gore's zenship campaign," Jacobs told our associate .
Ten years ago: The government of Angola and the anti-Communist rebels do with politics. In all, more than 169,000 notices office to INS district offices around the country, Kathryn Wallace. "We have the backlog today
of II!• UNITA movement agreed to a formal truce in their 14-year-old civil went out last year, an unprecedented number. where they helped in finding funding for new because we ate ' trying to go back (over all tlie
war.
Denials of new citizenship applications are also · employees and extra office space to process the applications from 1996) and do it right."
Five years ago: President Clinton announced.North Korea had confirmed up by 251 percent. Nationwide, there is a backlog surge in applications. Some White House officials
Congress also played a role. Outraged by the
.its willingness to freeze its nuclear,program. The Houston Rockets defeated of more than two million citizenship applications. even helped district offices locate sites for the nat- evidence they'd heard and armed with an indothe New York Knicks 90-84 to win the NBA championship. .
.
This entire mess can he traced back to a 1996 uralization ceremonies and carried the authority pendent audit revealing that hundreds of thouOne year ago: The Supreme Court made it much harder for students who initiative by the Clinton administration to create a to keep INS offices open later than usual.
sands of immigrailts were naturalized withmit
arc sexually harassed by teachers to hold school districts financially respo)'l- million new voters oy Election Day -- or three
Hillary pal Harold ickes helped ensure that standard background checks, lawmakers 'ordered
si!&gt;le, ruling 5-4 that a key anti-bias law applies only if administrators know times the usual aino~nt. The goal was actually voter registration booths would he 1\)Cated outside the INS to review all its 1996 noonil and de~rt
about the misconduct. Actress Maureen O'Sullivan died in Scottsdale, Ariz., exceeded, with 1.1 million immigrants natural- of naturalization ceremonies, while "being very ex-post-facto ifneccssuy.
'
.f. ·
at age 87.
.
ized in time for the election. In the process, the insistent" that a Cliriton congratulatory letter be
INS officials admit that many of their currilnt .
. Today's Bi!'lhdays: Movie director Billy Wilder is 93. Author Anne Mor- INS was pushed to the breaking ·point, and it's sent to each new citizen. In May 1996,' th~ stan- deportation ·cases arc old, having sat for yct~is
row Lindbergh is 93. Fashion designer Bill Blass is 77. Actor Ralph Waite still trying to recover.
dard citizenship application was revised and because they were more djffieul! and because INS
is 71. 'Country singer Roy Drusky is 69. Senator Dianne Feinstein, J&gt;..Cal.,
Congress held several hearings on the.matter, turned basically into a voter registration form.
employees tended to set aside the dcniils tipd
is 66. Singer-actor Kris Kristofferson is 63. CBS News correspondent Ed . which later were quickly forgotten amidst a OurAt one point, when the goal seemed too prOCCIII the quicker applicationa first
,
Bradley is 58. Actor Michael Lerner is 58. Fox News correspondent Brit · ry of other administration scandals. Several INS immense, a memo between Ointon's office and
However, INS officials are a1 110 trying 'to
Hume .is 56. ~ctor Klaus Mari~ Bnindauer is 55. Singer Peter Asher (Peter · wh!s~leblowers c.~e forward to detail fr~dule1 the INS said, "the president is sick of (delays) and explain the hike in deportationa as a productivity
and Gordon) ts SS. Actor Andrew Rubin is 53. Actor David L. Lander is 52. act1v1ty m the C!t1zensh1p U.S.A. campatgn. But wants action. If nothing moves today, we'll have gain. Agency spokeswoman Elaine Komia poi'IB
Singer Howard "Eddie" Kaylan is 52. Singer-musician Todd Rundgren is little at!"ntion was paid. to the dire~ involvement to take 50mc pretty drastic measures." The INS out thai application processina 11v.rall ~~
~1. Actress Meryl Streep is 50. Actress Lindsay Wagner is 50. Singer Alan of Wh1te House offic1als, behav1or that often did move q~ickly from that point, hiring on about .increased dramatically -- SO percent this yew
Osmond is 50. Actor Murphy Cross is 49. AciOr Graham Greene is 47. Actor· skirted the ~x?un~arics.of propriety.
.
900 untrained volunteers withmit background alone. But that still doesn't square with the :t$1
Chris Lemmon is 45. Rock musician Garry Beers (INXS) is 42. Actor-proAn. exam.mation of the record, from fall. .of checks-- a violation of a federal employment law. pei'ccnt boost in denials from the previous year. r
ducer-writer Bruce Campbell is 41. Rock musician Alan Anton (Cowboy 1996, mcludmg l~ng-forgotten heanng tran~npts
Neil Jacobs, a director of investigations in DalIn the meantime, taxpayers arc payi~g dearly:
Junkies) is 40. Actress Tracy Pollan is 39. Rock singer-musician Jimmy and the CongressiOnal Rec~rd, reve:als furt1~e c- las, told us the INS adverJiscd for these jobs .on $171 million this year to process the backlog, ~p
Somerville is 38. Rock singer-musician Mike Edwards (Jesus Jones) is 35. · mail messages hetwee~ Pres1de.nt Chnton, H11luy Spanish radio stations and ended up with quite a from $88 million the year before. All to p&amp;y ror
Actress Amy Brenneman fs .35. Actress Paula Irvine is 31.. Rock singer Clinton:~ G?re, vanous. capj_net me~bers and few employees with criminal records or who the diAStrous results of yet an~er . OintG~
Steven Page (Barenaked Ladies) is 29. Roek musician Chris Traynor (He!- key pohtu::'l _mdcs d1scussmg die carnpmgn:.
could not speak English very well, something that administration ploy to boost his electoral chanccs.
met) is 25. Actress Lindsay Ridgeway is 14.
The ong1nal plan, h~tchcd by a Chtcago wasn't discovered until long after the point of Capyrtght 1•, Un- l'-.t,nc~C8M, Inc.

Which One lOVeS,"

A florida woman was cited following an accident on Mulberry Avenue
on Monday morning.
.
According to the Pomeroy Police Department, Leticia S. Averion, 62,
Heath row, Aa., was traveling south on Mulberry Avenue at the intersection of Alln S!reet when she went left of center and off the roadway in
order to avoid hitting another vehicle. She then struck a 'telephone pole,
ca using light damage to her Nissan Quest.
She was cited for left of center.
There were JlO injuries.
,

Ice cream social scheduled
An ice cream social sponsored by the Bashan Ladies Au xiliary will be
held Friday, 5 p.m. at the Bashan Fire Qe panment with sandwiches, 13 flavors of ice cream and entenainment.

.Shade River Lodge to hold meeting
.
PA.

I lllln.netd

~

a
success
One-hundred and fifty-two volunteers collected more than six-and-a-

Reedsville River Sweep

.

The Teaford reunion· will tle held on Saturday at Star Mill Park in
Racine. A basket lunch will begin at I p.m., with a pool party at the London Pool in Syrdcuse from 6:30 to 8:30p.m.

Io

le1"/W

Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will hold a special meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the lodge hall with work in the EA Degree.

Teaford reunion slated

0

half tons of trash along the Ohio River bank in the Ohio River Sweep
eye nt coordinated by the Forked Run Sponsmans Oub Saturday morning.
"It was a success," said Forked Run site coordinator Tom Hayman.
"Six and a half tons of trash were collected from several sites from the
Athens County line south to Tanners Run, a distance of some 17 miles,"
he said. Afterwards, lunch was served at the Forked Run Statc·Park shelter house.

MH~ s_enior career passports available

. Me•gs H1gh School seniors may pick up th eir career passports at the
h1gh school Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. .
.

ol Columbua le:t"/87' I

Caring &amp; Sharing Support Group meeting
The Cadng &amp; Sharing Suppon Group ":ill meet Thursday, 1-2:30 p.m.
·at the Me~gs Multipurpose Senior Ci1izens Center in ·Pomeroy. Guest
speaker w:ll be Karen Johnson from Rockspdngs Rehabilitation Center
who \ : ill speak on rehabilitation.
·
W. VA.

1·

Pomeroy-Racine Lodge 164

humid conditions
--..•.through Wednesday
The Aee~lated Press
·
·
.
It is exPected to ·he· hot and humid in Ohio tonight 'and Wednesday.
. Skies will he partly·cloudy, and an isolated thunderstorm is possible in
we.stc.[li Ohio by Wednesday afternoon.
·
Low~ topigh~ ":'ill he in the mid-50s in the east with the 60s in the west
·•· ~'"!!''~ w~.l agahrretum to the mid; a,nd upp~r 80s for Wednesday. · .
.
record h1gh temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 97 in 1988. The record low was 41 set in 1992.
Sunset ,today, will he at 9:04 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at 6:03

. ·- Weather forecast:
.
Tonight:.Mostly clear. Lows from the upper 50s to the lower 60s.
and variable wind.:
.
Wedn~y... Mqst!y sunny. Highs in the upper 80s.
Wed~y ni11ht ... Mostly clear, LOws in the lower·60s.
&lt;·
·· . ·Extended forecast:
.
'Partly:sunny. HighS 85 to 90. .
.
Cloildy. A chance of afternoon showers and thunderthie.IJiid 60s aild highs near 90.

Cancer Society open house set

·.

Stocks

.

1 ' •· ' '

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• I

, _ . . ...

:: The -Daily-Sentinel •
C - t l y Ne!npojlor Haldl.... lne.

. .

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-1 Obio \lol~rPtoblilllioa C?ompooy. Secolod d'*

Allociation.
·
' ,.,_ t • ~"" add... 'cOrndlorii
l)&gt;e'
~ Daitl' 51-1. 111..,-·ol S!~ ' Poilie,oy, Ollio
' •' 4S76?:
" •
,....
"
'

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·520 W. Main St. .i;

. SVIISCRJmON RATI!S
Br Canter or Motor Route

.. g: Yeu..,-...
~:::::::::~;:.:::::::~:::::=
l••• •• $104.00 • '
· ,

,1

~ .r..........~\...

08e

:~

~

' JM'narii'~.,.~f·,··, '·

City Holdlng .......................... 267.
. Federal Mogul... .... :............... 53~
Gannett .................:.................74
Kmart ..................................... 16~
Kroger-........,............................55
Lands End ............................... 42

COMING WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1999

Ltd ......................................... 45 1/•

Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 18
OVB ......................................... 32
One Valley .......................,....... 40
Peoples ................................ 26'·
Prem Flnl ..'...........................13'i.
Rockwell ................. :.......;..... 61'1o
'RO/Shell ...............................59"i.·

.,he Daily
.BABY Sentinel·

Sears....................................46 1' "

The Daily BABY Sentinel is a
Special Edition filled with photographs of local
kids- ages newborn to four ~s old.
The·BABY Sentinel will appear in the Juiy t 4th
issue. Be sure your child, grandchild
or relative is included .
Complete the lonn bel. and tneloM I npshol or
wallet alze ple1ura paua e ·
$5.00 charge lor eec:h
photograph. If I'IICir.lhali
one child Ia In picture
encloae en addl11onal
$2 per child.
Pictures must
(ENCLOSE
· belnby
PAVMENT
Wadnesday, ·
WITH
July 7, 1999
.PICTURE)
Plcturee can
•· 118 picked up ·
after July 14th

Stock reports are today's
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
Adves1 of Gallipolis.
·

VInton- ;JSB-8603.

1•

" Gallipolis - 446-0852 .

Dail)l.•••:•"•:·;~··,..•••oo••:t•···•·~~~··t"''35 Ctinq

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Pomeroy, OH
Phone 992·2588

SIN!'!-fi,COJ,Y PI!ICE

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P.O. Box 729, 'Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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The Above lnfonnation Will Be UltcJ In Ad

1(1 Phone N o - - - - - - - - - - Submitted By: _

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,qt~w. S..V.0.e

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PARENU'NAME: - - - , . - - , . - - -·_ _ _ _ _...;.__ _ __

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.

. Units of the Meigs County Emer- Avenue, Newaza Smith, PVH;
gency Medical Service recorded 12
i :29 p.m. Monday, North Second.
calls for assistaitce Sunday and Mon- Avenue, RObbie Oonch, VMH.
day. Units responding included:
'
RACINE
CENTRAL DISPIU'CH
5:38 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
3 a.m. ~nday, Broadway Street, department and squad to Stivcrsville,
Middleport, Jenitifer Hartline, Veterans motor-vehicle accident, Barney and
Memorial Hospital;
·
Billy Jones, refused trealnlerlt, Ernie
4:12 a.m. Sunday, South Serond Green, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Avenue, . Middleport, Don Caner,
RUTIAND
VMJ;I; ·
7:02 a.m. Sunday, state Route l2A,
4:42 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook Nurs- Ruth Young, Holzer Medical Center,
ing Center, Middleport, Katie Springer, · Central ~h squad 'assisted;
. VMH, Rutland squad assisted;
6:46 a.m. Monday, McCumber
10:24 a:'rn. Monday, Meigs Mine 31, Road, Betilah Collier, tre8ted · ai · the
Maynard Flkins. O'Bieness Memorial scene.
Hospital, Rutland squad assisted;
. · SYRACUSE
8:37 p.m. Monday, Railroad Stieet,
11:34 a.m. Monday, East Main
Middleport, O'Dell Blake, Pleasant Val- . ~tree~ Pomeroy, Geraldine Hawk,
ley Hospital, Middlepon·squad assisted. HMC, Pomeroy squad assisted;
MIDDLEPORf.
I :2Xl p.m. Monday, Maples Aput4:54 a.ln. Sunday, South Secood ments, Evelyn \\bfford, VMH. .
y

~·-·-

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Ohiq
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Nniplpti

Am Ele Power ......................421/w.

Akzo ..............:..........................42
AmrTech ...............................69\1
Ash 011...................:..............41 '/•
ATaT·............................"..•...••• 56,,.
Bank One .............................. 57~
Bob Evans .......................;......19
Borg-Wamer .........................54'1.
Broughton ....................... :..... 16\
Ch!lmplon...............................a~.

magistrate refused · to re1e.ase six
more members of a motorcycle gang
accused of racketeering until their
trials being in the fall.
"This group condones and initiates violence,'' U.S .. · Magistrate
Nancy Vecchiarelli said during bond
hearing Monday for members of the
A~engers Motorcycle Club.

Shoney' s ............................... 2'·
FlrstStar ........... :.................... 277/o
Worthlngton .......................... 12),

I

l'llbliii\Od !"'C'Y ofte!J&gt;POO, Mooday tluoup
Friclly, 111' Court Sl.; Pomeroy, Obio, by tbe

.

'Red' Handley

.Meigs EMS logs 12 calls

Paula Eichinger, chai• for the American Cancer Society's Community
Cancer lnforination Center, announced that the center for Meigs County,
located in the Holzer Home Care of Veterans Memorial Hospital, 507 Mul.berry Heights. will hold an open 1\ouse oo Wednesday from 11 a.m. untill
p.m.
.
.The CCIC's are sites designated for the public, cancer patients and their
families,' tq provide information about American Cancer Society services,
education and r~arch, along with other infornrilition and community
resources.
The CCIC will be open Monday through Friday from9 a.m. until2 p.m.
, There are over 70 of these centers throughout the staie, and the society
is seeking volunteers interesting·in helping with the local CCIC: lnforma. lion is available by calling 1 (888) ACS-OHIO.
·
.
. .

Six more.motorcycle gang members held without bond

Continued from page1
·'' Some •of the 100 residents at the speeds after the locomotive has
meeting voi~ their &lt;;&lt;&gt;pccms about - passed so that the last cars exceed the
rail condit}o.~s .and tnpn ~peeds in t!te 25 mph speed limit
area.
A CSX conductor disagteed.
Delegate Lisa Smith asked·, CSX
.
'
.
officials.to.cxplaill, w~at h'P,pened in
"Our engineers don't pick up the
the recent derailments.
speed
until the entire train is passed,"
· ' Officials reSJlOnded ·thai track
said
Conductor
D.R. Mick. Speed
jlefects were' blamt:A fur ,Jhe derailfrom
the
front
to
the
back of the train
ments t~Jis year .i~. Apple Grove on
docs
~ot
vary
by
more
than one mph,
Jan. 23 and in Henderson on Feb; 26;
he
said..
'
but the Ajlril 21 . derailment near .
Point Pleasant. was caused by a judg- . CSX officials agreed to 'check out
mcnt error, macle .by' an enginteling certain areas that residents were
. brilployee working,on the track. ··
especially concerned about, includ.• . May!V..elect George Nichols of ing MadisonAv.enue in Point PleasMason said trains seem to increase ~nt , Another project that is to he
n· '
' ,,
~f
worked on is the ingress aqd egress
.areas where
would be trapped
if
another
..,
' ·· &lt;VS.S n3-Ho) . '

L~

Raymond L. "Red" Handley, 90, Millwood, W.Va., died Saturday, June
19, 1999 in Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
·
Born May 1~. 1909 in Culloden, W.Va., son of the late Nide and Kate Martin Handley; he was a pipefitter in construction work and was a member of
the Steamfitters Local 565 of Parkersburg. W.Va.
·
Meigs Senior Center dance planned
He was a member of the ,Order of the Eastern Star ChiiPter 75 in Point
R~und, square and line dancing will be held at the Meigs Senior Center
Pleasant, W.Va., the Minturn Lodge 19 of the AF &amp; AM in Point Pleasant, the
on Fnday from 8 to 11 p.m. Music will .be by the Happy Hollow Boys. and
Scoltish Rite and the Alalfdin Temple, both in Parkersburg; and the Main
Art Conant will be the caller. It will be the last dance ·until September.
Street Baptist Church in Point Pleasant. He also attended the Millwood United
.Methodist Church.
·
Beaver reunion to be held
·
Surviving are his wife, Avis "Peggy" Adams Handley; a daughter, .Rl!th
· The 21st Charles W. and Fannie Lee (Wc,.&gt;lfe) Beaver fa'mily reuriion will
Wolfe. of Millwood; a stepdaughter, Barbara Pellico of Jacksonville, Fla.; a
be held July 10 at Star Mill Park in Racine with food served at noon. Bring
daughter-in-law, Anna "Sappy" Handley of Point Pleasant; a son, Roger Hancovered dish .
dley of Clearwater, Fla.; a stepson, Thomas Adams of.Phoenix, Ariz:;. four
Ho.t dog luncheon planned
grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and· a great-great-grandchild; and
Peoples Bank, Pomeroy, will hold a hot dog lunch Friday, 11-1 p.m. · four sisters, Lucille Sayre of Milton, W.Va., Dorothy Ramsey of Cenlerburg,
with hot dogs, sauce, chips and drinks. Any dorlations will he used to help
Geraldin~ Salmons of Elizabeth, W.Va., and Jenney DeLong of Galion.
raise money for the Relay for Life.
He was also preceded in death by two sons, Eamest and Paul Handley;
!\Yo grandsons, Todd Handley and Donald Pereto; a brother, Ira Handley; and
Benefit dinner for Tara Fisher
a sister, Ima Kems. '
·
A benefit dinner for Tara Fisher, a 14-year-old student at Eastern School
Services
wilf
be
11
a.m.
Thursday
in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
who was recently diagnosed with cancer, will be held Sunday, 1-3 p.m. at
Pleasant,
with
the
Rev.
Rodney
McColligan
and the Rev. Gerald Sayre offithe South Bethel New Tesiame·nt Church on Silver Ridge Road across
ciating.
Burial
will
he
in
the
Suncrest
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
from Eastern Schools. Fisher is currently undergoin!l treatment at Chil-·
funeral home from 4-9 p.m. Wednesday.
.
dren 's Ho~pilai. Fin~ncial donations may 'be made at any Farmers Bank
.· Masonic graveside rites will be conducted by the Minturn Lodge 19, AF
location in care of South Bethel Church(fara Fisher account.
'&amp;AM.
.
,

-The
was charged with child endangerment
a 4-ycar1!ld
who was hospi- . and was expected to be arraigned
f talized W,Fighing only 15 pounds has . today in lancaster Municipal Coun.
Juvenile Court Judge Steven.
1been accused.ofnearlY starving her to
1
death.
·
William on M01iday awarded tempo' The _girl, Britney Bunthoff, rary custody of the girl to Fairfield
/llescribed by a doctor·as "neurologi- County Children's Services.
~lyimpaired,"wasadminedtoFair. "We do not want Britney to be
;·field Medical Center suffering from returned to the mother pending the
' malnutrition and numerous bed sores. criminal case," assistant Fairfield
She w~ listed in stable condition County Prosecutor Gregg Marx told CLEVELAND (AP) - · A federal
Monday night.
the Eagle-Gazette following MontJ.-. . Her mother, Renee B~nthoff~ 26,
day's court hearing. .

e:. rown meeting ...

Death Notices ·1

Raymond

Pomeroy-Racine Lodge 164 F&amp;AM . ~ill honor its wives and widows
Sunday, 2:30p.m. at the lodge hall·on state Route 124 at Racine's eastern·
·corporation line. This will be a very casual affair with a short program and
a time for .visiting and reminiscing. Cake and ice .cream will be served.
Clarence Molden, master of. the lodge, invites all Masonic widows to
attend..
·

tm~

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7:10. e':tO DAILY

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 l

· , _Adftl'tlllll&amp;.t·~··•••oot..' \''"I''''''''''''.[JL 11,04

Cimllollao .................................EIIt 1103
, &lt;:!MIInc.J .w&amp;....I...... Jl(.....:....... :.EIIt. 1100

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3:10

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Florida woman cited following accident

Make-up day for ~uthem Local sports.physicals will be held friday, 24 p.m. for boys and g1rls grades 7-12 at Dr. Hunter's office in Racine.

By Morton Kondracke

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Local briefs:

Southern sports physicals make-ups

The ·Daily Sentinel Burden for Gore: public wants fresh start
'Esltl6fisfutf in 1948

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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The Daily Sentinel ·

·Sports
Knick~

·

.

Page4
Tuesday, June 22,1999

fend off sweep with Game 3 victory over Spurs

That is a cert ainty now as Houston had one of the
By KEN BERGER
best games of his career and the Kmcks did ju ttce to
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Brooms are now back m their the building Michael Jordan used to call "The Mecca
closets all over San Antonio. The NBA Finals are a real of Basketball."
The Garden was nothtng but a menace to tho Spurs.
se ries.
With a convincing victory in Game 3, the New York· who lost for the first time in 41 days. Tim Duncan had
Kmcks shattered the Spurs' , . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , hts worst ga·me of the
invincible aura and perhaps
serie s, scoring 20 poin ts,
Knicks take Game 3
rescued a series that·
but getting shut out on 0The New YOOc Knteks kept theu championship
seemed all but decided and
for-4 shooting in the fourth
hopes aiMt Wlltl an 89-81 VICtory over the san
~ nythin g but intrigumg
AntOf'lio Spurs. whO still lead the series 2·1
quarter.
when it arrived at Madison
Aside from David RobinTH£ KE VPlA'I
son's 25 pqints and 10
Square Garden.
Late., Jhe 3td quar1er with the game tied at 58 , Allan HQUston hit a
The Kni cks beat the
rebounds, Duncan dtdn't
3-polnt basltet as the shot cloCk; ran out to give the Knick&amp; the lead .
The KI"'ICicS never ua11ed lrom that pom1 on
Spurs 89' 81 Monday night
get much help as San Antowith yet another lineup
nio saw its NBA-record
up !heto
~ ..... "
..... ''' lhe
• •• •••••• '···. •• . • ~aucoopa
......._ball and p.....
I "·-··•:l-poonl OUII:IIII AI ltle
.•'
'' • Houlton frOm the floor
change and 34 potnts from
12-game winmng streak tn
Shot etoc1!. elq)lfH
,···
Kurt
•• ..
Allan Houston, pulling to
these
pl ayoffs come to an
Allan :
T'*"-s
Hou•tol'l
0&lt; ,·.~•, · ..·.
2-1 in the best-of-7 senes.
'end. It was the Spurs' first
... ......"" \" \·
~ .. .....0 ,~j.::=~.
For one thnllmg night. the
loss since drupptng Game
SP4well 24 , and
-:
sound of remote controls
JOM$01"1 (16).
0
2 to Minnesota in the first
~11)1'7'•o!
cl.icki ng across Amenca
round on May II , and their
me
tw~s eg
X
'
.,...,
o:
was drowned out by stgns
first
after six co nsec uti ve
0
0
of li fe at the Garden .
road
victones
.
11 Johnson shoo1a C\
Nouce to th ose who
SPURS
llJl 61r-ball
~
It
was
the
fJTst
t1me 1n the
0
jammed San Antomo s
"KNICKS
JoM•on
se
nes
that
the
Knicks
shot
L•rry
streets in a broom-wavmg ~~~::::__ _ _,...:__-'-----'--::=::";C~==) more free throws than the
traffic Jam onI) three """' '"•
..,J"'"' 0 """ c~"""~'' Spurs New York was 23ni ght s ag o· We may h:bc our;e J,cs a se ries, after a l~.
for-30, and the Spurs 18-for-22. Duncan was on ly 4"It 's al" "' s been a scnes ... satd Marcus Camby, lor-4. In Games I and 2, the Spurs shot 66 foul shots to
who dtdn't
much '"th hiS ftrst start for the Knicks the Knicks' 31
un11l he threl\ do" n a thundero us dunk in the fourth
" I don' t know what you'd call this tonight," Rob mquarter. "The onl' thtng San Antonio did down there son said . " Our team absolutely hates to lose , and we
" as so hd 1f, home c0u11 You re supposed to win on alw ays respond well after a loss. Always. Hope fully,
your home 'court 1'\ o\\. the) JUst put the 'emphasis on guysmte gm ng to take thts personall y and come back
us We have three •ames ,It the Garden"
with some more. focus and energy on Wednesday ..

do

That is when the Spurs, the Knicks and the formerly comatose finals return to the Garden ·for - an
intriguing game that will go a long way toward determining the first NBA champion of the post-Jordan,
post-Bulls dynasty era. After TV ratmgs for Games I
and 2 w~re down drastically from last seaso n, maybe
more wil l watch now.
" You saw the true character of the Knicks ," New
York coach Jeff 'Van Gundy satd. " We hung in there
when they were makmg runs, and we were very
res ilient "
Houston was 10-for-24 from the field in an electrifying performance that included a 3-pomter that broke
the oni y 'tte of the ga me as the shot clock exp ired in the
third . New York stopped every Spurs comeback, refusing to give them the lead after the Kmcks opened a 14potnt advimtage 10 an explosive first quarter.
The Spurs got withtn one pomt near the end of the
thtrd and cut the deficit to 81-77 on Sean Elliott's 3potnter wtth 3.13 left '"· the fourlh But Camby, who
soared for a tre mendo us dunk on an olfensivc rebound
for hts first points early tn the fo urlh, followed Houston's jumper with an 11 -footer that gave New York an
85-77 lead wi th, 2:20 left
.
The Spurs cut it SIX pomts twice - on a runnmg
one-handet by Ellt ott and a. tree throw by Rob'mso n but th a\ was all.
Dunca n, suddenl y tentattvc in the post after two
dominant games. passed to Mano Elite and Jhon got the
ball back ,, only to toss up an errant 3-pmntcr tlmt would
have cut 11 ro 88-84 tf 11 hadn't clunked off the front
rnn .
" It was just a stuptd play," sa id Duncan, rea liZing
that he $hould have shot the ball when he was closer•to
the basket. " I should have turned around and sho t the
baiL I made the wrong deciSion."

~~:~:t~~:,~~

the ball to basket over San Antonio's
Ro,bkl·
son (50) during Game 3 of the NBA Championship
Series last night Houston led the Knlcks with 3:$
points. (AP)
New York's Larry John son, who deserved much 'of
the credit for co ntammg Duncan, scored 16 points him - .
s~ lfdespllc Iu s ongoing battle with a spramed knee .
" We showed a lot of heart and cliaracter," Johnson
satd. "Thts IS the NBA Fmals. There isn't any lay down-and-quit in thi s team . We are still in this."

Taubensee's 10th inning blast lifts Reds -over D-Backs, 7-4

By MEL REIS~ER
AP Sports Wnter
·
. .. .
PHOENIX (AP) - The Cmcmnau Reds have a
thmg for road games . Wnh veterans hke Eddte
Tauben sec arou nd , u's litt le wonder. _
A week after hiS 16-game httttng streak was
snapped, Taube nsee broke a~~~ with a two-run homer
tn the lOth mntng agamst the Anzona Dtamondbacks, and the Reds stayed unbeaten m the Bank One
Ballpark.
" We JUSt see m to be playtng well o n the road ,"
Taube nsee said after the 7-4 victory Monday night.
"B~t we 've got tough games coming up fro m now
until the All -Star break . If you look at ou• road
sc hed~! e, the onl y tough te am we ' v.e faced is Atlanta
.so far.
.
.
And Anzona, whtch leads the NL West .. But the
Reds are 4-0 tn Phoemx after their first 1999 visit_.
They're also 15-4 '" thei~ last 19 road games and 2010 overall, compared with 15-2 1 tn Ctncmnatt.
" I don ' t know what it t s. If I did , I'd change it,"
man ager Jack McKeon satd.
An zona dropped to 21 -2 1 against teams at or

Meigs, Oak

·above .500. The Dia- .
mondb acks are 20-8
_against teams under
.500 and have played a
major leagu e- htgh II .
extra-innmg
ga mes,
gomg 6-5.
Dmitn Young , a
pinch-hitter, led off the.
lOth inning with a dou.ble off Vladtmir Nunez
( 1-1 ), and Taubensee,
who went 3-for-4, hit
the next pitch over the ·
right-field fen ce for his
seventh homer.
left, congratulstes Epdle
Although he bats
Taubensee alter his 10th seventh,- Taubensee
inning home run thai beat expected to step up
Arizona, 7·4, (AP)
against Nunez.
_
. " I didn ' t thmk
(McKeon) was gotng to ptnch-hll for me , because I
~as a left-handed hitter, and I had a chance to move

game postponed

Meigs led Oak Htll 14-11 in Eighth DIStrict American Legion baseball
action Monday evening at Meigs Htgh School. The game was called after
six tnnmg s due to darkness, the contest will be fimsheil 'on July 7th when
· Meigs vtsits Oak Hill .
II was a slug fest from the stai1 as both teams enJoyed both mnings
Metgs opened up a S-0 lead m the ftrst inning as Heath Rothgeb nailed a two
run home run to get things started.
· Oak Hill battled back and held a 10-8 lead headmg mto the ftfth mnmg ,
but Metgs stormed back and took an 11 - 10 advantage. The big blow in the
mning was a two run double by Jerem tah Bentley down the left ftcld. line to
put Meigs on top.
: Oak Htll tied the game on a bases loaded walk in the top of the sixth · "
inning, but Jamie Baker blasted a three run home run to dead center fteld to
give Meigs the 14- 11 lead m the bottom qf the tnnmg. The game was called .
~t the end of t~e mning due to darkness with Meigs holding the three run
lead
·
: Meigs is now 3-2-1 overall and 1-2-1 in the league. r.icigs ;.,;11 host
!=hillicothe Post 62 Tuesday even tng

the guy over," he said. " My job was
to pull the ball ."
One out and a walk to Aaron
Boone later, Pokey Reese added an
RBI single.
Gabe Whtte (1 -2) pttched 2 1-3
innmgs and go t the win desptte
all ow ing a game-tyin g, three- run
homer to Matt.Williams m a four-run
seventh . Danny Graves got three outs
for his eighth save in II chances.
" It doesn't mean much when we
lose," Willi ams said: "We' ll just
have to get them tomorrow."
White felt he let the bullpen down
despite the ':'in.
"We take a lot of pride in what
we do ," he said . "We think as a fam ily, and everybody wan is to do as
good as the nex t guy "
Cmcinnati built a 4-0 lead with
the long ball - solo homers by
Hammonds, and an

,,.

Vaughn.
.
Starter Steve Parris added a run·scorin g single.
But the Diamondbacks tied it in the
seve nth on an RBI double by Tony
Womack and Williams' 20th homer.
" We had some people out there
makin g plays. l,'hey .gave us a lot of
breaks , and we dtdn't take advantage
of it, " manage r Buck Showalter
.aid.
·
Panis allowed two runs and six hits ln
6 2-3 innings.
Arizona starter Brian Anderson gave
up four runs and nine hits tn 5 1,3
innings, striking out six and walking
• Barry
three.
leaps over Arizona's Travis He left with the bases loaded follow Lee 10 complete a double play ing Parris' single in the sixth. Darren
in the Reds' win last night. ~olmes struck out Reese and retired
(AP)
Hammonds on~ popup.
Anderson has all owed eight homers in stx starts this
ar.

Tuesday,June 22,_1999

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wild pitch scores winning run In the 12th inning

Tribe slips past Mariners in extra innings,
tie it 3-all '" the bottom half wtthout hitting a ~all out
of the infield.
,
Thome drew a two-out walk off Jeff Fassero. and
Ramirez fouled off four two-strike pttches before
walking
Alomar, kept out of the starting Ime up for the first
time this season , pinch hit against Jose Paniagua and
beat out an infield smgle to load the bases, and Wilson
walked on a 3-2 pitch to tie it.
"Outside of those walks in the eighth, I have nothing to compl am about," Seattle manager lou Pmiella·
satd . "That was a heck of a game"
. Trailing 2-0 aFter being blanked for 7 2-3 inmn gs
by Colon, the Manne rs scored three times with two
outs in the eighth on Griffey's RBI single and a tworun si ngl e by Edgar Martinez.
Seattle starter Jamte Moyer allowed two runs and
etght hits - seven singles - in seven innin gs.
Colon all owed stx htts. Using a fastball that regtstered I 00 mph tn the six th inning and 99 mph on his
99th pttch, he looked like he was on his way to a wm
when he got Alex Rodriguez to pop out to catcher
Einar Diaz'wnh two runners on in the eighth .
But Indi ans manager ·Mike Hargrove decided to go

By TOM WITHERS
the way to the screen.
1(P Sports Writer
" It wasn't much," Turner said. '' But I was the last
, . CLEVELAND (AP) - Those fans who stuck man standing at the plate."
.
around for the 12th toning dtdn't exactl y jump out of
With their 27th come-for-behind victory, the lndt tlteir seats when Chris Turner walked to the plate.
ans improved baseball's best record to 46-21 .
As he headed back to the dugout, however, everySteve Karsay (7 -1) pitched two tnnings to win his
one in the ballpark was on their feet.
seventh straight decision. He is unbeaten si nce losi ng
Turner watched Jose Mesa's wild pitch sai l past 'the season opener on April 6, and has already doubl ed
him and then greeted Jim ·Thome crossi ng the plate his five-year major league win total this season.
with the winning run Monday night as the Cleveland
Karsay, st ruck on the upper ri ght arm by a comeIndians won for the ninth time in 10 garnes, 4-3 over backer in the lith, retired Ken Griffey Jr. on ally ball
\he Seattle Mari oers.
to the warntng track in the 12th.
."There was probably 30 people -in the stadtum
. " I thought it was gone, " Karsay said. " He r ea lly
tonight who wanted me up in that situat ion, " said crushed it . Another inch or two and that was gone."
Turper, still looking for hi s maj or league RBI sin ce
Wilson, starting. for Alomar, went 3-for-5 as the
1997. "And they were all weanng Seattle uniforms.'~ Indians won won for the eighth ttme at Jacob Field in
Thome opened the 12th with a hard shot up the their last at- bat.
middle that second baseman Dav id Bell could onl y
"Every. night it's somebody new," Karsay said.
,knoc k down. Alex Ram irez, who had two hits, then "Toniglu it was Ennque. Another night it' ~ Robbte or
:·sacrificed. ,
Ken ny Lofton. We ha ve so many guys on thiS team
·. , Rob erto Alomar was wal~ed intentionally and that can get ·the job done."
:Ennque Wilson smgled ,to left as Thome stopped at
After Cleve land 's bullpen blew a 2-0 lead in the
.1hird. Turner fouled off the first pitch before the sec- eighth, costing starter Bartolo Colon what wou ld have
, ond one from Me sa (0-2) we nt mstde ·and bounced all been hi s ftr st wi n since May 17, the Indians rallied to

4-~

with his bullpen , and Paul Shuey gave up Marttnez 5
single for his fourth blown save.
,
"That"s the best start I've had all year," C~lon said.
"I ' m happy with the way I pnched, but I m more
happy we won the game."
.
.
Cleveland also rested Manny Ramtrez, who bru•sed
hi~ left index finger Sunday ntght. .
.
'Til be ready by Thursday," sa1d Ramuez, who
couldn ' t squeeze a bat and hadn't talked to re(!Orters
since spring training .
Moyer, who hasn't lost since May I, .~h~t out baseball's top sconng team for the first four mnmgs befo~e
gtvmg up a rup in the fifth on Wilson's RBI base hl,t.
The Indians made it 2-0 tn the sixth on Alex Ramtrez s
single.
,
Notes: It was the longest game 'this season for both
clubs .... Seattle.'s Brian Hunter was ejected in the lOth
by plate umpire Enc Cooper after swinging hts bat ill
the dtrt in dtsg ust after striking out .... The M~nners
had been averag mg 7.5 runs for Moyer dunng hts ~'":
ntng streak.
Ind ians outfie lder Ma~k Whtten, sld~­
lined al l season with a broken foot , wtll meel the Indt·
ans tn Toron to for the start of a seve n-game road tnp
Wednesday

: Wimbledon update

.

'Venus moves into second round; Serena nowhere to be found
By STEVEN WINE
p.P Sports Writer
WIMBLEQbN. England (AP) - Wtmbledon began
with lots of sunshine , no upsets and one controversy.
Venus Wtlliams beat Miriam . Ore man s 6- 1, 7-5
Monday, then was confronted by questions about her
younger sister, Serena, who withdrew Thursday. Serena blamed the llu, but skeptics suspect she wanted to
a_l;oid a potential fourth -rou nd showdown against her
.t:l):st friend, Venus.
"You don 't withdraw on a Thursday when you may
not have to play unul Tuesday or Wedne sday of the
next week," sa id nine-time Wimbledon champion Mar- ·
tina Navratil ova, a commentator for HBO. "Either Serena had another injury or didn't want to play agamst
jler sister.... I just wi sh they would tell the truth ,
because llu IS not the truth."
" Venus said her sister was indeed ill
"She wanted to play, " Venus siud . "She's. sick. I

-

~ ue ss

tt 's the llu .... Serena always wants to compete,
so she's not happy."
There were no suspicious absences on the men' s
stde, and Pe te Sampras began his bid for a sixth Wtmbledon tttle by beating Scott Draper 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Mark
Ph ilippoussis, a quarterfinali st last year, slammed 28
aces and overpowered Xavier Malisse 6-7 (4- 7), 6-4, 63, 6-4.
No seeds lost, although No 3 Yevgeny Kafelnikov
and Magnus Larsson were at 5-5 m the ftfth set when
their match was suspended at dusk.
Jennifer Capri ali and Anke Hul)er also stopped at 55 in the final set. After Capriati slipped and fell twtce
in the last game on the slick grass, her father signaled
from the stan ds that play shouh:l be suspended by runntng a forefinger across his throat.
Stefft Graf and Momca Seles easily won thetr openmg matches. Cover girl Anna Kournikova outlasted
Barbara Schwartz 7-6 (7-2), 4-6, 6-2 , then denied the

latest rumor about her personal life - that she's dating before unravelin g' agatns t eventual champion Jana
Novotna, and she's seeded sixth this year.
Brazilian socce r star Ronalda.
" I don 't have a problem to be underconfidenl," she
"The last time I saw htm was the onl y ttme I saw
him , at the French Open last year. " Kournik ova sa id said. " I'm a lmle ove rconfident, whtch can be highly
dan gerous also "
with a smil e.
Wllltams has won four tourn aments this year,
She had reason to be happy after beatmg the dangerous Schwartz , who upset Venus Williams in the tncluding Lipton, where she beat her stster in a final
neither of them seemed to enjoy, They haven 't playe~
fourth round at the French· Open three weeks ago
,
Williams bounced back from that loss by oyerpow-- each other since.
·Serena's withdrawal leaves Venus with a less
ering Oremans, an experienced grassco urt player
Williams soc ked serves at up to 123 mph, a weapon imposmg path to the final. After all, the kid sister
boasted earlier this year that she would win Wimblethat makes her especially formidable on the surface.
"The fastest I've had was 127, so actually I have to don.
brea k my record," Williams said. "I've been stagnant
But whtle Venus may not miSs a sibling showdown,
since October. That's no good. I' ve started thinking she will miss her sister.
"We always are together," Venus said. " We get on
about that. "
Williams reached the U.S. Open fin al at 17 and is with a lot of foolishness sometimes .... At Wimbledon
still seeki ng her ftrst maj or titl e nearly two years later. maybe I'll do a little on my own~ and take that step
She reached the quarterfinals at Wimbledon last year toward mdependence."
•

'Logistical problems loom for workers

Reds new ballpark could put the squeeze on Cinergy Field this year
By JOHN NOLAN
-Associated Preu Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - What the exterior ~f
the new Cincinnati Reds s tadium will lobk' like
is still a mys tery . Also un ce rtain is how workers
will tear down part ol Cinergy Fteld, while th e
Red s are sttll th ere , to start building the new
ballpark.
'rhe eastern portion of the parktng garage at ·
Ctnergy Field will need to be demolished , some
seating likely Will have to go and tt is possible
the left field wall will have to be pushed in ,
deSigners· of the new 45 ,000-sea t ballpark told
Hamilton Coun(y coll)miss ion ers Monday .
Any chan ges in th e pl ay in g field's dimension
would have to be appr oved by baseball, said
Mike Hand , vice pre s ident of the ballpark 's
designer, HOK Sport
ConstructiOn of th e baseball-only stadium ts
to start in the summer o f 2000. Hamilton County
- wh1ch' " providtng th e new stad iums for the

Red s an~ pro football's Bengals at taxpayers '
expense - wants the baseball stadium to be
ready for the 2003 season. The Bengals' stadium
is to be ready in August ' 2000.
County officials want the partial demolition
of Cinergy Field to be done safely but wtll leave
it to eng ineers and construction professionals .
" The co nstruction people and the architects
tell us it can be done," county admtmstra(or
David Krin gs sa id Mo.nday .
The Red s wtll have to absorb the money losses that co uld occ ur if the partial Cinergy demolition takes away outfi eld seats th e ballclub oth·
erwtSe could have sold, county commisSioner
Bob Bedinghau s said .
" It's kind of ltke remodeling yo ur kitchen ,"
Bedtngh aus' sa id . "Yo u go through so me shortterm pain to make sure you have what you want
at the end of th e day."
The $235 mtllton ballpark wtll have better
sight line s to the field , and catchy views of the

Ohio River and north ern Kentucky , Hand told
county officials during a s tatu s bnefmg on the
project
·
The next bneftng ts expected around Labor
Day. At that time , the design ers should be ready
to display drawings showing what the ballpark's
exterior wtll look like, Bedinghaus said.
In the plans so far are a brewpub-s tyle restau rant in the left field seattng area; a picntc area
beh,ind the center field fence and a snazzier
restaurant in foul territory down the right-fie!&lt;!
lin e. A gathering area planned at the stadium 's
main entrance would afford a view through front
gates of th e field.
The playtng fi e ld dimenSi ons env iSio ned no w
call for 328 feet down th e left field line , 404 feet
in ce nter field and 316 feet down th e d ght-field
ltne .
The sou the as t-facing stadium wil( have vtew s
of the Ohio River and northern Kentu cky.·
Hand sa id the co ntract or ' s miSsi on wtll be to

do th e work when baseball isn't being played.,
dunn g extended ro ad tnp s or preferably during ·
the off-seaso n.
Officials will also have to determine whether
the Bengal s' new stadium will be ready before
th e foo tb all te am ca n vacate Cinergy Field - the
29-yea r-o ld former Rt verfront StaQ.ium - where
the Red s and Bengal s play.
The demolttion will take down the east sectiOn of Cinergy ' s parking garage and part of the
center- fie ld seati ng bowl. Those areas will be
fenced off whtle Cinergy .continues in use , Hand
sa id .
·
Co nst ru cti on of so me new park ing facilities is
to start thi s year to rep lace the Cinergy parking
that wtll be lo st dunng the parttal dem olition ,
H an~ sa id
HOK Sport has de signed the. maj or- leag ue
ballpark • in Cleve land, Baltimore and Denvet
and. IS de signtn g new ones' " Detro it , Pittsburgh
and San Fra nciSco.

•

AT
Jamie
slides
hon1e safely in
cloud of
in last
nlalht's Legion
against
Hill. The

cc~1~!:~s~duewas
to
dar·knr~ss

with
leading
In the

'

~;
,V

,

• "·,

}J'Ilslxllh l~ame .

Bond bests Smith at Skyline; .
Venoy owns Kanawha Valley
'
Skyline Speedway
McDaniel, Albany 's John Powell ,
: Coolville's Andy Bond jumped Bill Stover, Jr.; Reedsville's Frank
Pomeroy's Todd Smith on the start Roush, Jeremy Blake, Mike
imd never looked back as he raced McPherson, and John VanDalc.
lo his second consecuttve Late
Kanawha Valley Dragway
tvfodel win at Skyline Speedway
Long Bottom resident Kevin
Saturday night.
Venoy captured first place in the Pro
'. Larry Bond set the fast time of race at Kanawha Valley Dragway in
,13 . 6 ~. but by virtue of the dash win,
Southside, W.Va., on · Saturday
Andy Bond assumed the pole with night.
Smith along side in second. Smith's
Venoy drove hi s 1972 Nova to
Taz's Mara!hon/Gene Johnson victory at I 08 miles per hour.
Chevy held second,
Point Pleasant's
right on Bond's tail,
Chuck Sanders placed
for much o f the ,
second m a 1982
~arly portions of the race. Smith's Camara
iud for victory was sty!llied, howevIn the modifted division, Greg
er, when Brent Steele colltded With Fulk of Jackson fini shed first Ill a
~im , sending both cars to the tail
1998 Mustang. Jeff Clark of Point
· That left Larry Bond in second Pleasant placed second in a 1974
and in hot pursuit. Bond woulq try AMX.
~igh slingshot passes off the :high
Middleport resident Marc French •
groove, making for exc iting racing, finished second in the pure street
but he just was not able to overcome divi sion. He was driving a 1971
hts brother. Andy Bond raced on for .Capritc .
the win with Larry Bond m second
Ryan Motes of S.altsbury, N.C. ,
and Todd Smith comi ng all the way won the pure street race in a 1990 Sback to third.
10.
Bruce Dennis of Marietta won
~the JUnior dragster race, Mike
the AM~A modi fi eds; Joe Memel Chandler of St. Albans, W Va .,
won the Street Stocks, and Jeri Tol - placed,first.
.
liver won the Pro-Streets.
Brandon Skeen of South Potnt,
Several local Meigs County dn - Ohio, was the runner-up.
vers rounded out the top ten in the
Dave Covell of Ashtabula, Ohio,
Street Stocks. Behind Ted Dille in won the Super Cltarged Warriors
second was Salem Center's Paul division , driving a 1923 T-B~cket.

I

MEIGS COUNn CHIMIEI OF CO-ERCE

WEEKEND GOLF

SCRAMBLE
1999

Date 06/26/99

Tlu. year'• fornw.t wiU be

If the 992 Exchange Is a Frn Part of Your
Telephone Service, Than You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel ...., .
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$200.00 per team ·
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Contact Jim Andereon. At 740•992-7631
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Holzer Clinic .•. f(eeping the Promise!

'I

,.

•

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·· ··

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tu,eacllay, June 22, 1999

Business Services

Pagel:
Tuesday, June 22, 199ti.

----------------------------------------~--------~~~~~.

Be alert concerning date rape drugs - it could save your Iif~
. Dear Ann Landers: Last weekend, I attended the funeral of a
youn g woman I knew growing up.
"Betsy" was 22 years old. Not onl y
was she intelligent and beautiful , but
she was a very responSible persoll.
Like most other young people,
she liked to have fun. She went out .
for the eveni ng with a group of
fri end!. and they attended a party
where there were about 30 others.
Betsy hadn 't been there an hour
before she stmted to compl ain of
di zz iness. and hausea.
She coll apsed on the fl oor an'd
lay there unco nsc ious whil e her

bodily reactions, even death .
Local newspapers fai led to report
that 'the week before. several other
young peop le had died after attending a club where that same drug was
put into their dri nks. '
An n, please encourage your readers to be extremely cautious when
"fri ends" drank , danced and partied att endin g clubs, parties (/r other
soc ial events where drinks are bei ng
around her.
Not one person attempted to help served.
her or call 9 11 : It wasn't until the ·
It doesn' t matter whether or not
wee hours of the morning. when the you know most of the people there.
kids were sober and the party was You never can be sure what someone
breaki ng up, that they took her to the wi ll do. In a split second, a person's
hospital. By then. the coroner sa1d whole life can change --or end. If
she had bee n dead for ove r eight this warnin g s~ves even one life, il
will he wprth the time it took
hours
Apparentl y. someo ne had slipped to write th iS lellcr. -- T.W., HO USa drug mto Be tsy's drink. The police TON
suspect the drug was much worse
DEAR T.W.: Many thanks fo r
than the ave wgc "dme rape"·drug It the opportunity to warn my readers
iS ~.:o l uJi css , odorless and tasteless. about the dangers of these drugs.
and hns a temlcncy to cause violent
If you are drinking anything at a

part y - eve n a soh drink -- be sure it has remarried and retired. He has
never leaves your hands and that you also acquired two very large Rotare aware of what is going on around tweilers.
you. If you not ice anyone experienc- • These dogs are treated bener than
ing diwn·ess or nausea, get him or he ever treated his own children.
her to a hosp1tal immediately. A life Nothin g is too good fur them.
Because they are so spoiled, they are
co uld depend on it.
[)ear Ann Landers: I read the not well beh aved. When we go for a
vi~t , they jump all over us, slobberletter from "Protecti ve '" the
Carolinas;· whose in-laws refused to ing and scratch mg. ·
We asked Dad if he would keep
keep their huge dog out side when
the
dogs in the yard or in the basetheir youn g grandson vi sited. It
prompted me to write to you about ment when we came to vi sit.
His answer' was: "Sorry. This is
my father.
their
home, and I will not coniine
When we were kids, my dad didthem
to the baseme nt. It would be
n't have the time of day fo r us. He
very
upsetting."
was c1thc r working or out drinking
We now know.he has more comwith his huddies . My mother rai sed
passion
for hi s dugs than he has for
the fo ur of us on her own , and 10 her
credit. I must say she did a pretty hi s grandchildren·.
We came up with thi s solution.
good joh of 11 .
Wc
go for shon visits for a couple of
We are all grow n now and mar·
hours
once a week on our own. No
rieJ , wllh children of. our own My
k1ds,
nu
spouses.
parents arc di vorced, and my father

!

tt MWiTe
Hepner

·11"

U

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7:00AM·8 PM

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of painting, and let

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,, -740·985·4180

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MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
. FOR A TOTAL OF
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YOUR

In an effort to provide our reader214 Ea11 Maira
ship with current news, the Sunday
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Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the dat~ of
992-6687
the event Weddings submitted after
. the 60-day deadline will appear. during the week in The Daily Sentinel .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ __,

Happy 15th
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Send resume to: P.O. Box 458,

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Mu st be licen sed In WV. Ca ll

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Fr.ee Puppies, To Giveaway Good
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Co mputer Usera Needed . Work
Own Hrs $25K ·S80KI Yr. 1·800·

Floor model color TV, wanes. 740-

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•

Lost and Found

Orlvera /Independent · Flatbed
Contractors, TfT, OTA . 80% Of
Gross. Free Plates, Permits, In·
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70

es. Avg. $1.00 Per Mile

Empty. Home Weekends , 800·
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Drivers : Free 3 · Waell: COL
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Ken Young Former
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: 1·740:.985-3949
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INGELS CARPET

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1

437-8764. Hrs. 8:30A.M.-5 ~M. .

Moving Sale, at Camp Conley.

Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As·
semble Product&amp; at Home. Call
Toll Free . 1·800·-467· 5566 Ed
12170

every thing must go.lurnlture,tel·
ephone.new eagles patchwork
animals , ball cards, new pprta·
power router, tablesaw,Tv's VCR,
radios clothes, cars , sheets,
covers,
Wed .·Sunday 9am·

Expenenced LPt-1 In physlan offlee. ~rop resumes oil at 3009
Jackson Ave between the hours

Hor~e•

&amp; Tack
New &amp; Used Saddles
Also riding lessons

Brya11 Reeve•
Su.on Reeve•

740·691·3290
fttt

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACTORY DIRECf PRICES

r""'"'•nd'"'"'

Cltu•l~tfl Sttr~

ANNOUNCEMENTS

FORMERLY Of II 0 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD II
VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

r,., •.,.,. r"" Srrl h ,,_.

Slh•111fl

QUAUTY WINDOW SYSTEMS

'·\ f

Exparlon,.. Timber Cullor. ExSkidder Operator
Needed. 740-682· 731 8.

Auctioneeri ng~

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full ·lime auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
Licensed
t66,0hlo &amp; West Virginia; 304·

FJELD SUpERINTENQENTS
Central OH Recycling Co Seeks
Suprs Respons ible For Dally
Ops. Of Job Sl1e . Must Have
Construction Supervision Bkgrd.
Specilically With Mater ial Handllng Equip.: Conveyor Bells ,
Shredders, Crushers, Etc Strong
Human Relations Skills In Addl·
tlon To Problem Solving With

FUVERSIOE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 7 P.M.,

May Require Travel Based On
Job Site. For Immediate Consid·
eratton , Call : 6H·B25· 6209 Or

1'73-5785 Or 304·773-5447

Go,.rning Agencies (OEPA) .
Fa.: 614-785-9464 AMn:All!;.
.FOODCONCESStON

Wedemeyer's Auction Serv•ce .
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-2720

once Pay &amp; Shift DIHerondol, ~­
ply AI SaoniC Hillo, 311 Buc:l&lt;rldge
Road . Gallipl&gt;io. 7olo-«6-7150.

Postal Jobs to $18 .35 /Hr. , Inc .
Benefits . No Experie nce. For
App. and Exam Info. Call 1·800·

813·3565, Ext8826, 8AM·9PM, 7
POSTA L JOBS To $18.35 /HR .
INC BENEF ITS. NO EXPERI·
ENC E FOR ~PP. AND EXAM
INFO. CALL t -800-813·3585.
EXT '4210. B A.M. ·9 P.M.. 7
DAYS las. inc.
Ra cine Piua Exprel l· apply In
per son only after 4pm. Th ird &amp;

Vlre Sttoet. Racine.

Ohio Fairs &amp; festivals July Thru
October, Sleeping Quarter &amp;
Tr8nsporta llon Provided . No
-"i A 1 614 88 5235
UIJ'\ ng
equ red,
" 5·

Wanted t 0 Buy

•

Someo ne To Care For Elderly
Fu ll· Time, Fl oo m &amp; Board Plus

Salary, 740-387-(1632.

Vacancy fo r Elementary Curr icu lum Supervisor. Applicant mu st
be able to provkte own lran spor·
union. Submtt 1ener ol intere6t, re·
sume , reference s and copy o f
current certificate to John Cos ·
Ianzo, Superintendent. Athans·
Meigs Educational se rvice Cen ter, 501 Richland Avenue , Suite
108 , Athen s, Ohi o 45701. Dead·
tine is June 30, 1999.
Va cancy for Part-ti me Preschool
Aide. App licant must be able_to
pro\li(ie own transportatiOn. Sub·
mn lener of Interest. resume, and
references to John COstanzo. Su·
penntendent . Athena·MIIIgll Edu·
calio nal Servic e Center, 507
Richland Avenue , Suite 108.
Athens, Ohio ll5701. Deadline Is

June 30. 1999.
Wanted ; Medical Office Recep·
tlonl&amp;t/Secretary ·Experience Ae·
qulrad Including T'yping Skills 1
Basic Knowledge Of Medical
Coding ·Able To work flexible
Hours. Send Resume To : B olt

CLA 476, Gallipolis Dally Tribune.
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

45631 .

WE NEED DRIVERS
NawEqulpmeol
Good Pay

KELU TRUCKING, INC.
Cal

7oi0-21111-G171
7oi0-2B8-D20ir
Well established Building Mate·
rial Dlstrlbu or located in Colum·
bus, Ohio In search. ol Oelivery
PersOnnel. Must have a COL
Class A or 'B Endorsemem needed . Experience a must 1 Send
brief resume to : Keith Eglofl .
1200 Stetlwood Road , Colum·
bus , OH 0 1 phone 1-!100· 589·
44t2; to set up an appointment.

c

Wildlife Jobs to S21.601Hr. Inc .
Benefits. Game Wardens, Secur·
ity, Maintenance, Park Rangers.
No exp. needed . For App. aM
Exam mfo r Call 1 ·800· 8 13·
3585,Ext.8827 , 8AM-9PM, 1Days
Ids Inc·.

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21.60 IHA
INC . BENEFITS. GAME WAR DENS. SECURITY. MAIN·
TENANCE. PARK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. ANO
EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·8133585, EXT. 14211 . 8 A.M ·9 ~M .
7 DAYS IdS. 1nc.
140

Business
Training
GIU!polla c.....r College

(Careers Close To Hom8) Call

Today! ·740-446-4367. 1·800·
214-Q452. Rag lt90·05-1274B.

150

Schools
Instruction
EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bao~elors .
Masters, Do cto rate , By Corre sponden ce Based Upon Prtor Education And Short Study Courae.
For FREE Informatio n Booklet

Phone CAMBAIOGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1·800.964-8316.
180 Wanted To Do

Carpentry Remodeling Additions,

Porches. Decks, 740-44~· 1316.

E &amp; S Law n Sef'\IICe: Design, lmp1ementat1on. ancl Se rvice .
Ava il able to r Sp ring Clean up
fertilizing and planting . -FrH 11d:
ma tes . Satisfa ction guaranteed .•
Greg Milhoan· 3041675-4628.

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. 511·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre -1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterflng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
· M.TS. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.

FUN IN THE SUN
Travel The u .S.A. In A Rock 1
Roll Atmosphere , 11 Your Alleaat
18. Free To Travel &amp; Can leave
Immediately Call Michelle, At 1•
888 . 720 . 2127 9 To 5 Est. 6121 st

AntiQues , top prices paid, River-

Thru 6125th, EOE

Ina Anllquoa. Pomeroy,- Ohio.
2526 . .

HOUSEKEEPING
SUPER·
H.S. CONTRACTING
VISOR Due To Starr Changes
Prolssslonal Contracrkrg Servicei
Hoizer .,.-nruo
•- ~. Care CenIer Is Now Shingles,
Remodeling,
All Kinds 01 Roo"""
3·0 lap Metal, Adei'Q:;

Russ Moore o~ner. 740 · 992·

Clean L'ate Mode l Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 -East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

want To Sell Vour Stuff? Call Rlv·
erslde Auction And Let Us Sell It

Fo&lt;\'Ou, 740-256.-£989.

Able To Accept Applications For
SLuperdviaoEr 01 HousekeAeplng Andd
aun ry xperience equtra
We Are Look ing For Oedicattd
People To Join Our Team. Apply
in Pe rson Or Send Or Fax Yo ur
· Resume To Aoger Hittle 380 Co-

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill jUSI tall

304.S7H957.

Addl110ns. Painti ng, Free Elll·
mates l Aes lden tl al , Call Alter
6·00Pm 740-441-0653. ,
tnte.rtor &amp; Exterior Palnlln·g, Ex·
penenceel , References. Reaaonable Rate s For Free Eatlm•te

IOnial Drive, Bidwell, OH 45614, Or 7ol0-388·804t.
Fax 740.441-1347 EOE.

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

:?2 yn. Local

740-742-34il

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site Preparation
. Septic Systems
~ODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

Auction
and Flei Mark·e t

Complete Auctio neering Servlc·
es. Consignment auction· Mill
Street , Middleport, Thursdays.
Ohio L icense t7693 740·989·
2623.

740-992-6215
Hoof HoUow Farm

KCB
EXCAVATING

ol8 30-4.30 304-675·11!37.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. , perienced

90

Poaitlona Avatlable For A 7 To 3.
RN Supervisor, With Exper6ence
Pay: 3 To 11 , LPN With Exporl·

• New Oeregee
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing .
• Rooftng &amp; Gllltera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pella &amp; Porch Deeke
Fru Eatlma,.,
V.C. YOUNG Iii

(7401 691·9407
1740) 691·6029

Free Ettimalea

1-740·985·3949
J'j

fl~lng

AwKable

For More lnformJ11on Call BOO·

Crown City, 740-256-6989

TOM~STOBART

fo~•Y

mo. pd.

.

SAYRE·
TRUCKING

Call 985·383•
wwtfi,SunaetHomc. com

Rid

·

lnsu~ance

Work Well Wllh Tho Public

Pt. Pleasant .
&amp; VIcinity

Bll! MoodisPaugh

From 1:30 A,M. Unt il 4:00 P.M.
$35.00 AppllcaDon FH. EOE.

EOE .

Both PositiOns:

Two family garage sa le. June
25th, 9:00· ? Grace Weber res• ·
dence , Reeds\IIUe , Ohio. Variety
·
of Items, sizes.

-

Diotrlbu11ng Apprtfl·

•

Model Ken worths With Reefers. West Coast
Carrier:

All Y•rd ~Its Muat Be P•ld In
Adv•nc:t. Deadline: 1:OOpm 1he
dey btfort tht ed Ia 10 run,

80

Be

Gallia Street, Portamou th , O tlk)

AV~ILABLE :

5:30pm. ewryday ,

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS
.

Will

DRIVING POSmONS

Middleport
&amp; Vlclnfty

•

1571

tk:e Applieatlona Beginning June
28th Through Jury 9th. Applif;:a·

wwt~. pamtransport .oom

Pomeroy,

'

.

LOaded &amp;

• Yard Sale

ICIIUon. 2:00 p.m.
ldltlon
• 10:00 o.m. Soturcloy.

boat covers, carpets, etc.

I

Regional &amp; Long H~ul ·
.
EOE
SQ0-293-0700 Or 800-695-4473

F~doy. llondoy

truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle ~eats,

j

CONTINENTAL EXPRESS
COl Class AWilh 6 Monlhs
Expor. DrMng School Grads
Considered. No NYC ··Home

Be Pold In ~dvtnco.

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,

WORRYING!!!.

.478-8653X 7777, ,_.:cwp.com
Driver

OfAQLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly before U1t ICI
II ID run. Sundey

-

-·

'

No Credit~ Slow Credit • BankrU'ptcy
Repo ·Divorced

740.992-3470 l

\

EOE

7941 .

Au. Yonl Sotea lluot

110 . Help Wanted
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochure111 Satlslactlon Guar·

Two openings for daycare lOr

anteedl Po&amp;tage &amp; Suf; l)lleS Pro·
v lded! Rush Self -Add ressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO. DEPT

children. Belley A"" Rd., ~

5. Box 1438. ANTIOCH, TN .
37011 ·1438.
$800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete

Simple

Government

Forma At Home. No Experience
Noceuary. C~LL TOLL FREE .
1·800·966·3599 Ext 2601.

ST~AT
Ha~tt Fun

DATifoiG

NURSING LPN'a And STN~'I

lion guaranteed.

no job too big or small. SoHaroc.
can 740·742Due To Stan Changes Hol zer 9010 ..
Senior Care Center, Ia Now Able
To Acc::epl Applicat ions From WiH Do House Cleaning, Honttt,
lPN'o And STNA's WhO Are El• Dope-. (304)773-81!t.

Or Send Or Fax Resume To

Baing ~coopted .

M1tllng Eligible Sin·

~SSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crall&amp; ,
Toya, Jewelry, Wood , Sewing
tnlormallon. t - 800 - ROM~NCE . 1\'ping
... Greal Pay I CALL t ·800:
Ext 9735.
795-0380 Ext 1201 (24 Hrs)
Start Dating Tonlghtl Have lun AVON! All Areas ! To Buy or Sell
playing "'• OhiO Dating Game. t· Shirley Spears. 304-675-1429.
8QO-AOMANCE, oxten!lOn 9681 .

...,

'

We clean homes or bu111neu11 •

4300. www.workforstudents.com/

TONIGHT! oh

740-992·3509.

Adull Homo. 740-992-5039.

perienced And Dedicated People
To Join Our T11m. Ohio License
Required . We Art Also Proud To
Announce Thai Applicallona For
Future CNA Classes Are Now

gtea In Your Area . Call For More

I'

Now ac cepting a ppli cations lor
various 11 hirt11 for the Eldo rado

All studanta· full and part time
openings In customer service/
sales dep. S10.35 per hr appt. No
experience· will fraln . Conditions

apply. Must bo 1B. Call 304·485-

;

'\

Cal 8oVd At 800-220-2421

2 Family: Bittersweet Drive, June
21st ·241h, Hours 1~ A.M. -4 P.M.

985-4473- '

1 mo. pd

I

4 gray &amp; while kittens, 2 mitten
paws, 2 male, 2 femakt, 740.992·

9n8.

(740) 843-1252

New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
· • Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
' FREE ESTIMATES ·

. Call

Tlo£'/(IJ flc46wifllp4•

• More HomeTin'W
• Local O!speleh
• Local Home Terminal

l ost: German Sh'e pherd Pup, 5
To 6 Months Old , Big For His
Size, Family Pet, VIcinity: Ever·
green Road , Bidwell , 740· 446-

53560 S. R 338

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing.
,I ·
Esttmstes

details and a competitive ptupa;al.

Life Home Car Business

• L&amp;Ie MOdltl Equlpmem

Giveaway
3 pups. 9 wks. old. molhar Beagle,
740-985-3662.

2688.

Plumbtra And Pl ptfltte ra l .U.

Days Ids,inc.
• Bener Pff'/
• Bener Benefits

Most Weekends

ROBERT 81SSELL
CONSTRUCTION

STETHEM@EUREKANET.COII
FREE ESTIMATES

v#uto-Orlmin ~

DRIVERS
FLATBED TRUCK DRIVERS
II You Ara Looldng For:

Pounds In 6 Months! I'll Help You
A each Your Weight Los s Goats!
TaUFree 888-781 ·9624.

60

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

,

.WICKS !
HfiULIMQ .IMC

1426.

3045.

JACKS ROOFING
~ &amp;CONSTRUOION

1,

740-992-S2J~

Insurance O:lmpany. Call us tOr m6re

'

WEIGHT LOSS. I Loll 90 +

II

High &amp;Dry[
Self-Storag.

EMAIL:

5128199 1 mo pd.

Wa nted : 7~0 · 4• 1·

Bart ender

Two commercial a ir condilioners/
furnaces tor scrap, 740 ·742 ·

FREE ESTIMATES
(7401667-6992

wtthd*

PHONE: (740) 985-4218j

Nights and
Oilier ~ E\101111 &amp; Tim!'•

Quali ty clothing and house hol d
items . St .OO bag aal e ev er y
T hursday. Monday thru Saturda y

.

l

Now Rentlnl

TYLER RYAN VaniNWAGEN
SON BORN • David and Kimberly Vanlnwagen, Racine,
announce the birth of their son,
Tyler Ryan, born May 20, 1999,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital In
Point Pleasant, W.Va. He
weighed 7 pounds, 13 ounces
and was 21 inches long,
Maternal grandparents are
Roger and Christy Roush of
Racine, and paternal grandparents are Jerry and Linda Vanlnwa~;~en of PomerQy.

1·800·809·7721

Light Commercial &amp;
Residenllal
New Construclion &amp;
Remodeling . .

740-992-3360

...

Protect. the imggrtant
people m your life.

Your locally based hauler for residential,
commercial
and
inaustrial
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 .

Construction

*Jfandicapped

INTERIOR
. ~ '. Before 6 pm leave
' ·'m.e ssage. After 6 pm

1 "

Golden anniversary to be noted

McKelvey named to MU dean's list

Southern Ohio Disposal

H&amp;H

No Embarraument ...
Vn111'"' Treated With ReSJI!ICtl

Business
Services

T M INC.

(304)675-6349.
Needed for ,Fri Ci ay

New To You Tlvifl SMppo
9 WOSI S!imson. Alhons
7oi0-592·1842

Help Wanted

tlono Can Be Plc'*l Up At 1238

Ban d Groups , that pl ay Roell
and/or Modern Cou nt ry. Prefer
Vouth Bands. Must be willing to
play on percentage. Call ;

40

412 TFN

Care for Elderly

me do It for you.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead

CLAS~IfiED,SI

...

.{se-,

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

ELIM
HOME

Take the pain out

!1

d!a .
,,.~1i'l11i'J11i"~'r
11'
_______

1-888·56 H!866.

30 Announcements

9:00-5:30.

In-

Home Buslneu . Work Fltxibll
Hours, EnJoy Unnmltild Earnlnga.

992-7916.

l1

REEDSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs. the Ea&lt;tern Local SchooiDistnct.
Friends and family are cordially
Ernest E. Whitehead of 65820 State
SUN. -SAT. 10:00AM ·10:00 PM • 992-oo20
Route 124, Reedsville , will cele- invited to join in the &lt;;elebration. It is
'l''r 1r
brate thei1 50th. wedding anmversa(y requested that gifts be omitted, but
Ken Young
~---------.;
,;;;;;;;;
cards would be appreciated ..
Sunday, June 27. at their residence.
An mformal open house from 2
tu 4 p.m. w:ll be hosted by the couPublic Notl~e
Public Notice
Public Notice
repair company for the past i o ple's three dau ghters and spouses:
.....the '· '
ye ars.
.
llatga
County
No bidder may
NOTICE TO
Jean Frydman of Glen Ridge, N.J.,
CommiMiontra or l!t certl- Ide bkl within thirty C*!l
CONTRACTORS
The y are the parents of three Jane and Wade Meyer or North CanSeelld propoula tor the n.. chack, cuhlara .check, ctaya after 1M IICIUel d~
so ns. Steve and Alexia Young of ton a~ d Juli and Walt Hensch of
lnolllllallon of 16,900 LF of or letter of credn upon a thto opening thtrtof. TJI!I
Punta Gorda, Fla., Jim and Karin Massillon. There are seven grand- 30 Announcements
County
Weier Une Extenelon, Gate aotvent bank In lha amount llalge
Young of Long Botlom, and children , one deceased, and a stepVlllvea, Wllllrtlne extanllon of not laaa than 10% ot lhto Commlaalonera . raMrV•
ttrvlce In Rutland and blcl amount tn .. vor of lhto 1M right to waive enl( lntor•
Bruce and Karen Young of Lan - grandchild.
Selem
Townth!pl, llelga llforaaeld Malga County malmee or to raJICI eny cjr
caster.
·
The fanner Maxine Pickens and
,
County,
Ohio, will ba Commtlllontra. Bid bonda 111 bide.
They have si• grandchildren, her husband were married at her
· received by the llelge ehlll Ill accompanied by Janet Howard, praa~=n~
a stepgrandson, two great -grand - family home by Eva~gel1 st Hubert
County Commlulonare at proof of Authority of the llelge
Emily Bnbbilt,
their
children and two stepgreat - Showalter. They arc members of the
office
at
the ·official or agont elgnlng the CommtMiontra
o trudem at
bond,
'
(8) 14 22
Courthouaa,
Poft!aroy,
Ohio
grandchildren .
Reedsville Church of Christ.
Heritnge C.llrilltiatt
Blda
lhtoll
Ill llllld and (7) 1 '3TC
457119,
untiiiO~OO A.M., July
The coupl e asks that g1ft s be
Mr. Whitehead is the owner or J.
A.caderny it•
12, 19911 and then at 1:00 marked 11 Bid lor "Dexter h--------1.-iom1tted. Cards can be se nt to Wetherell &amp; Son Jewelers, ParkersRaven1wood, WV
P.M. II the llld OffiCI . Water Una Extenelon
51645 Bigley Ridge Road, Long burg, W.Va., and Mrs. Whitehead is
opanld and rud aloud for Project Bid" and llllllltd or
mni11tait1ed duri.n.g the
the following:
dellverld to:
Bottom OH 45743 .
1998-1999 1chool
a retired vocal music teacher from
The
lnet.elletlon
ot
epproxMelga
County
year .an A average
lmetely 16,900 LF of Commlealonere
initiAtory, poetry,
1JOiyvlnyl chtorlda (PVC) CourthouM
laealth, haradwriting,
walar llnee and eilocletld Pomeroy, Ohio 48769
valuee, 2 booeter pumpe,
AHentlon of blddert Ia
•pelli"S· muda and
hydranta, and reeldentlal called to ell of lhto raqulr•
reading program.
Jay P. McKelvey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey of Syraurvlcae: The project IIICII· menta conlalnld In thla btd
SIIe wao aW&lt;Jrded
cuse, was named ,to the dean 's list at Miami UniverSity, OXford. To be
lion
will Ill the eommunlty packet, partlculai1y to thto
lroplti£• for Bible
named to the dean's list. a student must maintain a beuer than 3.5 grade
of Dexter In Salem Federal Labor Stanctarda
memory and {.aeing
point average.
Townahlp, Malgli County, Provlalona and Devl•
tile most creative 4th
Ohio, I I well •• CR 14, TR Bacon Wagae, vartoue
1148, and TR. 1447, '!Wp. 328, lneurence requlremente,
!P'ade aludenl.
Roade .In Salem and ·vanoue equal opportunity
Slae auo nuJde the
provlelone, and the requirepri.IIOiJonl&gt; lUI aU ~P•or'lt Rutland Townahlpe.
manti lor 1 peyment bond
Pl1n1,
SpaclllcaUone,
and
mad wa• reo'o-rni:•ed
bid forma may ba aecurld end ~ormence bond kw
.'
for her failf•f,ul
·at the .oHice of TrlpleH . 100% ol !hi contract price.
33795 HUand Rd;
Englnelrlng, 1i2 1/2 Court
Pomeroy, Ohio ::
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, A
Emily u the daua/tter
peymfDI of One Hundrld
of Debbie Babbill
($100.00)· (Non·rafllndabla)
· of Racine and
dollero will be raqulrld tor
uarry Babbiu of
e/221911 t mo. '
each 111 of pleno and apacGallipoiU and
lllcettone, check mede
~ ou now have the option of protec~ your fumily ~mbers
peyeble
the /P'UIIddaughler
to
Triplett
Englnunng.
·
Ber11ard anilliemice
TRI·STATE
MOilLE•'
.
Each bid mull Ill accorri'
U4valley
of
Racine.
IJor a business partner with low-cast
POWER WISH
penled by 4!"her a bid bond
We laitf/tly
In an amount ot100% of the
· · Trucks - tractor
.
thu
bid amount with 1 euri!Y
'
I(). or ZO.year level term life
utlllactory to the akw-ld
Trailers - decks - drlve:ct
Equipmenl Cteanecl6 Degr
JEFF STETHEM
insurance frOm Auto-Owners

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

W/.-HCED ORAINAG

Gutters
Dqwnspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Chaster, Ohio
1ot20-

I

l IIIII

ROOFING
NEW·REPIIR

l·t ~..,~·~iDiDL!ilua..~ ~D,h~

Special:

.. , .. ... A

Howard L Wrltesel

985-4422

..

...

R• L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

·• •29670 Bashan Road
•Racine, Ohio 45771

1.~740-~92·2068

LONG BOTTOM - The chil dre n o f Ken and Betty L. Young
will host an open house celebratin g . the couple's 50th wedding
anni ve rsary.
The open house celebration
will be held Saturd~ty, 1-4 p.m. at
·- 5 1645 Bigley Ridge Road , Long
Boti om, with refreshments being
sc rvctl
The couple was marned June
25: 1949 , at Russell , Ky. They
ha ve owned and operated an
applian ce repair company for 46
years and have been in Meig s
County operating an appliance

,//;:\
· ill'~

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

.
I Joseph Jacks

·voung anniversary announced

Free Estimates
Owner: John Oean

Culverts: 4"- 48" in stock
. 8' Gravelless Le«Xh
I00' · 1000' Rolk 1' &amp;3/4• 200# Water Une
Full line of Gos Pipe &amp; Regulators Waier Storage Tanks

ft~~f;;j~~~~d~tift
.
·'

Tuppers Plains , OH

110

Help Wanted

Preduetl: Swt your own

~von

GenUe man S..klng Co mpenlon·
ship From Nice Female Fo,. Talks,
WIUCI &amp; Frl endahlp. Send Rt ·
p li es To: 553 seco nd Ave nue ,
Apartmonl l ol03. Gaiiii&gt;Olll.

7 40·985·3813
·~

~

If'!-

HILL'S

St. At. 7

Phone 740·992-3987

Iff:..

17401 992·3131

f'

Mr. and Mrs.

New Homes &amp; Remodeli ng
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, S iding
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs, exp,
Licensed &amp; Insured

.~

Seplic Sy11e1111 &amp;
Vtilitw•

· · --===~

110

Personals

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

BuUdoser &amp; Backhoe

f

Associated Press Writer
.
,
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Three Ohio researchers are using the latest !n
hi gh-tech gene-splicing technology to try and grow a less mushy tomato .. •
Tomatoes grown for the processing market are usually about 95 perceilt
water. If that figure could be reduced by as much as 6 percent, t~e
researchers say, it could save the makers of ketchup, tomato paste and othtr
processed tomato products $75 million a year.
· " A beefier tomato will have higher soli~s . " Jerome Servaites, resea~
biologist 'at the University of Dayton who is part of a three-member teai(l.
said Monday. " In making ketchup and •tomato paste, you have to remm•e
more than half the water, and that's very expensive."
'
Serv.aites along with Richard Sayre, an associate professor of plant biqlogy at Ohio State University, and Candance Lowell, associate professor pf
biology at Central State University, wantl&lt;l boost the production of starch jn
the tomato and reduce a natural Joss of starch that occurs as tomato pla'lls
mature.

Week~

To place an ad Call992·2156

liCIVITING CO.

Biologists look to save ketchup maker~ .
money by creating a beefier tomato j
'
By JAMES HANNAH

·This

005

lOWliD

I look at it this way - it's his lost.
It 's been a year; and he has not on~
asked about the grand kids. Strang~.
isn't i~? -- B.L. IN CANADA
:
DEAR B.L.: It's also very sa4,
but he will pay a price for his inditference. When those grand kids ale
older, they will have no interest
him. You can bet on it. .
1
Feeling pressured to have seJI?
How well-informed are you? WFite
for Ann Landers' booklef "SeK a~
the. Teenager."
•.
Send a self addressed, long, bu4ness-size envelope and a check~r
money order for $3.75 (this includ s
postage afld handling) to: Teens, o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box · 1156 ,
Chicago, Ill . 60611 -0562. (In Cant
da , send $4.55.)
•
To lind out more about Ann La6ders and read her past columns, vi !fit
the Creators Syndicate web page ~t
www.creators.com .
l

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~pply

Will do Houll, Cltlnlng. Haw
Aelerenc::ts and EJI:perter,cel

(740)·388-8421· or (140)•44e-

2&amp;46

In Pen1on 4

FINANCII\l

Rhonda COO, AN DO.N. 3tO C®o
nlol Drive, Bldwon, OH 45614, Or
210
Fax 7&lt;0-«!· t347EOE.
.

Person 'Needed 10 do part· tlme
and substitute newap1per route
lor Early Morning Paper. S12 ..50
per hour. Approx . :i! Hrs Call~.

(304)675-5160.

Business
OPj)Ortunlty
.,~ PILl TO LOSE WEIGHT'•
'THERMO·LIFT' tml Cot! For
FREE 3 ·Day Trial Pak. I·UI22tl-85o12.

. '
I

�tuesday, June 22, 1999

Tuesday, June 22, 1999

P • 8 • The Dally Sentinel

The pally Sentinel • Page II.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crol8word Puzzle ,

BIUDOII:

PHILLIP
ALDER

Good &amp;election of used homes
w11n 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Oulck delivery Call740-

INOTlCEI
OHIO VAL~EY PUBLISHING CO
rtCof1lmen~s

that you do biJSI·
Rf.)l with people you know, and

NOT to oand money 1hrough 1he
mall unlll you have Investigated
lht otforlng

A Local Cigar Route. Basi Loco·
U0nt, NO Selling Posstble
$100 000 +Per Year Only Work
2 -8 Hr1 A Wk. Great Product, $0

Oown 0 A C Call t -800 ·552·
2119, 24 Hour11
AERO-COLOURS
Own A Mobile -Based Franch•se
That Flus The f\Ucks JScratches
On Car&amp; Wllhout Painting The
Whole Car Low Investment

FREE INFO PACKET! 1·900·696
2376 X310
AvaUable Local
..
Peps.l /Coke Route
Have Hi New Machi nes With
High Earning LocaUons 1· 800·

387·94t8

385·962t
AJI real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject lo
the Federal Fair Housing Ac1
of 1968 which makes 1t IMegal
to advertise Many preterence
llm1tat1on or d1scnminatlon
based on race, color religion
se• farn1tlal status or natiOnal
orlgm, or any lnlenhon to
make any such preference,
hmitatton or d1sCnm•nat10n •

Banks And Financial Institutions
Earn 80% Of Their Profits Trad•ng
Foreign Currency For Your Free
Re port Call 1· 800·392 0843
$5,000 Minimum Requ ired

BE FREE FROM SMOKING!
Just 7 Days! First T1me Ava11al:&gt;ie
In USA Be Smoke Free Wit h
Thi s 100,-. All Natural Relief Sys·
tem Call Today Toll Free 1·888·

511-4999

Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept

advertisements for real estate
which IS In VIolatiOn of the
law Our readers are hereby
lniOI'med that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are avaliable on an equal
opportunity basrs

310 Homes lor Sale
160 AC RE S WYOMING Limited
Supply At Prices Soon Olsap·
pearing Antelope Wild Horses,
Great Specuiafionl $195 On I

$236/Mo ($23 995/ 9%/ 15 1/2
Yrs} Toll "Free 1·8D0-945-3040
4 Bedrooms 31/2 Baths. formal
LRIDR Fin ished Basement Cus
tom K1tchen/ Cherry Cabi nets !
Sunroom overlooklgg small Pond!

$189 900 (740)·441·51 18 or more
1mlo , Lea'.'&amp; Message Appt onlyl

URN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
De The Rest No D•rect Selling
Free lnlormah on Pac~age 1 800
3tiJ.8745 EKI 27,24 Hrs

FRITO LAY /PEPS I /C OKE
VENDING

ROUTE

$1 000+

WEE KLY POTENTIAL All
CASH BUSINE SS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP·
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PRO FI TS 1 800
73t·7233 EXT 2503
IIETABOLISE IHT'L, INC Is Of·
rer lng Anyon e Inte re sted In
Working For Themselves A Tre
mendous Opportun•ty Toll Free

877-752-4416 AMor 2 ~OT

Need A Loan! Try Debt Consoli

da ti on $5,000 • $200 000 Bad
Credl1 0 K Fee 1·800·710·0092
E" 215
Uh, Oh Bener Get Of Course
it's MAACO The Name Synony·
mous Wtth Auto Pamting And Bo·
dyworks MAACO Is Now Award·
ing Franchise In Select Areas
Across 'the U S If You Want To
Be A Part Of The 111 Auto Paint·
lng Franchise In America CALL

TODAY 1·800·296·2226 Fra n·
chise Development $65 000 Min
Cash Required www maaco corn

220 Money to Loan
S$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII Consoli·
date Oebtsl Same Day Appr'ova i

NO APPLICATION FEESII t-800·
86 3·9006 E1tl 936 "Member Better Business Bureau· www helppay-bills com
"·Credit Card Problems"" Debt
Consolldatlcn Stop Coilec tton
Calls Reduce Pavments &amp;
F.nance Charges Avo1d Bank·

&lt;14l1&lt;Y 1·&amp;00-270.9694
$FREE CASH

HOW$ From

Wealthy Families, Unloading Millions To Help, Minimize Their
Taxes. Write Immediately WINO-

FALLS, 847· A SECOND AVE ,
SUITE 1350, NEW YORK, NEW
YORK 10017
Bad Credit? Start Gelling Ap
proved For CredU And Loans Tomorrow! MC /VIsa lh 7 Days 1·
800-548-6588

BANKRUPTCY $79+ Slops Garnlshmentsl Divorce $99+ Also ,
Foreclosure Avoidance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStarl 1888 395·g030 www freshstartu-

saeom
CONSOLIDATE DEBT, Reduced
Monthly Payments 20 -SD-4. Save
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest

Non-ProtR TCC 8D0-756-3844
CREDIT

PROBLEMS? VISA

CARD • Guar111teed Approval •
No Credit Check - O%APR Re quirements 18+ US C1llzen. Have
Checking Account. Phone Appro·
va t 1·800·737·0073 Issued By

Merr&lt;:k Bank SLC, UT
FREE CASH NOW
From weanhy FamMies

Unloading Mlll&gt;Ons To Help
M1nirmze Their Taxes
Wnte lmmecllately

Fortune
1626 North WliCOit Avenue
Suite 249

Hollywood, CA 90026
FREE MONEY! It's True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500 •
$50 000 For Debt Consolidation,
Pers onal Need s. Medical Bills ,
Education &amp; Business Call Toll·
Free 1 800-72-4 6047 (24 Hrs)

WANT A VISA CAAO?? $12 000
Pius, unsecured Bad /No Credit
OKI No Deposit ReqUired Everyone Wel co me I Call 1· 800-2 85 -

3588

7 Year Old 3 Bedroom Ranch
!&lt;lome 2 Baths 28x30 Attached
Garage, 69 1f2 Acres Will Sell
All Or Ho use And Lot Meigs
County $150,000 For lnformat•on

Call 741).992·3537
Buy Homes From $10,000
1 ·5 Bedroom local Go11ernment
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
Poss1tlle, For Listings Call 800·

319-3323, EKI 1109
By owner 725 Page Street, Middleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to apprec1ate. will sell house without lots tor $89 ooo . 740·992·

Profelllonal
Services

The complete cleaning service
Carpet, Upholstery, Wails , Cell·
ings, and also Power Washing
For a free eslimale call Clearl~

Clean Bl (304)675·4040. Guar·
an teed WorkI
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUfiiTV 1891'1
No Fee Unleu we Wlnl
t-1188-582·3345

HEAL ESTATE

By Owner 1 11 Front Elm, New
Haven Byrs ol d 3/4 BR. 3 Full
Bath , Heatpump 75% fin ished
full-basement 2Car Garage, Cov-

e&lt;ad Porch (304)882·3240
HOMES FROM $5 ,000. Fore·
closed And Repossessed No Or
L.ow Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 K For Current listin g Call

t BOO 311 -5048, Ex1 3372
HOMES FROM $5,000. Foreclosed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trouble 0 K For Current Li sting Cali
1-BOD-3 It ·5048 EKI 3865
By Owner E~tcellent Location
Very Attractive Price $80's
Please Call From 6 to 11 PM

(304)875·4306 or 875·3991
Restored VI ctorian home situated
on 12 acres. VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private appointment cal\740-992-5696

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
14Ft X 70Ft Nashua, 2 Bdrm s, 2
Baths, CIA , Gas Furnace Factory
Fireplace
$8,000 00
Afte r

5 OOPM 740·379·2386

5 room, 2 bath, brick home, approx 300' frontage, 1 1/2 acres,

nlco kJCIIIon. on 124 ne" 10 rlvar
i1 Syraeuao, Oh, 74&lt;&gt;992·3880

New Bank utpos only 2 left we
fu'\ance call304·722-7148
smgle Parents Program $499
Down Limited Offer Cali lor de·
tails (304)755-7191

Take At 35 North From Gallipolis
For The Best Housing Deals In
Southe rn Ohio TE CUMSEH
HOMES, E•cluslve Redman
Homes And BEST HOMES, E1t·
clushle Dutch Are Located On At
23 Chllltcotne. Just North Of The
At 35 /Rt 23 Intercha nge Call
Toll Free Number 888 443·7421,

And Ask For The CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION lnlormatlon By
Mall Including A S1,000 CeJtili·
cate on A New Home
Aepo Ooublewide Save Thou ·
sands! 1·800-38U862

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
5 5 Acres Frontage , Garfield
Avenue Clly Utilities, $49,000,
oGalhpolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue Gallipolis OH

14•70 HoliyPark Mobllehome,
2BR. Large Bath/garden bathtub,
separate sh ower, large ilvmgroom wl hlgh ceilings, new carpet.
kitchen l'las new top -of-the-line
gas sto11e, has gas heat. central
air Installed In 1994 new steel
doors &amp;st orm doors Asking

2583
1 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment In
Syracuse $250/Mo , Deposit I
Relerencll AtQulred, 740-992·

7104 After 8 ~M
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port, we pay water, sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per

Work Or Storage $2 500

Frane~

C•ty Homes, Point Pleasant, WV,

304-675· t 400
1980 m h , electric two bedrooms
underpinning stove retrigerator,
new air co nditioner, $9500, 74Q949-2452, leave message
1983 Schutt 14)(6.4 2 Bedrooms 1
Bath , Kitchen Appl iances, 2lt6
Foors , Central Air, Great Condition $10,500, French Ctty Homes,
Point Pleasant. WV 304 675·

1400
1986 Clayton 14x70 2 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Gaa Nordyne 36M 10
Steer Gas /Electric Package,
Heat /Air, Spacious Interior,
French City Homes , Point Pleas·

am. wv 304·675· 1400

~.74&lt;&gt;256- 1249

2 Roomo &amp; Ba1h, $225/Mo , In·
eludes Utilities, No Kllchen: 1
Bedroom &amp; Bath lnetudoa Utilltlao,

No K-. 741H46·24n
2bdrm apts , total electric, appliances furnished, l&amp;ul'ldi'Y r.oom
lacllltles. close to school In tttwn.

Appllcatlona available at: Village
Green Apt&amp; 149 or call 740·992-

3111 EOH
no poll, 740-992-5858

1995 Dutch Mobile Home, 14X70

Vinyl Siding, Shingle Root, Steel
Doora, 2116 Walls, Thermopayne

Wlndowa, Deck S16 ,900. 740·
256-6960
1996 Clayton 14x80 A.C.. 3BR,
Taka

Over

Payments

$292 (304)675-8165
1999 Schull 2Bx84 4 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, OLN, Fireplace, 21t6 Walls
See At New Schult Home Center
French City Homes. 3411 Jack·
son Avenue, Point Pleasant, W\/

304·675· 1400
4BA, 2BA, $499 Down . A11ume
Paymenl8 ot $239 mo (304)755·
5lt60.

11-l..Q.W 1&gt;-U.T
$499 Down All Smgles, $199
Down Doublel, Super Low Pay·
mente, Limited Time, Oakwood
Homas , Barboursville, WV, 304·
Clt~rance Sal•

All Displays
Must Go DownPayments as tow
u 1411. ln1.,tlt aa tow as e.H
Limited lime only at 01kwood

Homu , Nitro, WV. (304)755·
5865

'HOST FAMILIES HEEDEDtlt'

Jacklon Awnue/Polnt Pl•asant.

Exchange Students From Gerrnany, Japan, England France, Russia, Brazil. Students Arrive In Augull To Attend Local High
SchOOls. For Further Information,
1 800-785-4963

(304)675-2063

Kitchen Cabinets

Ali

Wood May1og Waoher. (304)675·
5182.
16 HP SlmpllcliY Lawn Mower, 44'
Deck, Low Hours, Good Condi-

3430

It' Dl,.oTV Satellite Syotomo·
$69.00. SIOO of tree programrrilng.

Weak&amp; Old, $100 Each, 740.4469505

Hand Com Sheller, 740-446-n32

Male AKC registered German
shepherd , $50, 3 lemale regis·

1994 20 Ft Gooseneck Trailer,

740·319-2351

Christy's Family Living, apartments, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740-992·4514, apartments avail·
abte. furnished &amp; unfurnished

AIIAZINO

IIElABOLISII

Breakthroughlll Lose 10-200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended. Free Sam·

While H1ll Rd. 11 Aeres $14.000

Or 9 Acres $12,000, Public Wa
ter Danville , Briar Ridge Ad -7
Acres $13,000 On SA 325, N1ce
5 Acres S16,000, PubliC Water.
Gallle Co : Hunters! Off SA 218 •
Williams Hollow Ad 68 Wooded
Acres W1 th Stream, $40 000
Cash Pnce, Public Water Friend·

ly A1dge Rd , 15 Acres $14 ,000,
Cny SchOOlS
Call NOW For Free Mapa +
Owner Financing Info Ta~e 10%
Off L.lst Price On Cash Buys!
Ohio River frontage, Meigs Co , 8
acre with older mobile home,

$30,000 OBO, 740-843-5462
2 -20 ACRETRACTS
For Only $22 000 Each Take
Both And Get Disco unt Great
Hunting Land, Full Of Deer Has
Road Access To Wayne National
Forest Land Contract Available
740·286-0081

Real Eslate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres ,

We Pay Cash'1·800·213·8365 ,
Anthony Land Co.

All Electric,
Per·
sons. No
To Mow, No
Lawn, First Floor, For An Appointment To VIew, Phone 740-

446·9539

terod Garman ohepherd puppies,
$15, 740-995-3883
'

F•rst Avenue, One And Two Bedrooms From $275 -$350JMo , Security Deposit, References Ra -

qulred,741J.441·0952
For Lease One Bedroom. AC,

Ap1 326 Second Ave $250 DO
Per month Plus Utilities Security
deposit and l&lt;ey Deposit re·
Qulredl Reference Necessary!

(710)·446-2325

rlel ,.7~742·2545

What's So Oiflerent About The

HAPPY JACK :IX FLU COL·

410 Houses for Rent
125 Third A¥enue , 1 Bedroom ,
Available 7f15/99, No Pets, Utili·
tles Not Included. $320/Mo , 703-

Frenchtown Apartment•. Now
Accepting Applicatrons For 1
Bedroom FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And Hand·
!capped Equal Housing OpporFurnished upstairs two bedroom
apartment , large living room &amp;
kitchen, nice and clean, 740·992·

ven Coli after 5PM (304)675·
3469
3 Bedrooms, Living Room, Kitch·
en, Bath, Ut1lity Room, 1 Story, 85
M ill Creek, Gallipolis 740-446-

74D-256 9523
Gallipolis Area near Wal Mart 1
Bedroom, Utilities Paid, Deposit
References Required. No Pets,

74D-245 5893
Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments In Middle·
port .From $249-$373 Call 740·

992·5084 Equal Houslng Oppor·
tunlt18S
N1ce 2 bedroom apartment In Syr·

acuse, $200 deposit, $285 per
month Includes trash, 740·667·
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments. Includes Water
Sewage Trash , $315/Mo., 740·

446-000B
One bedroom furnished apart-

mont In Middleport, call740·992·

plleoUons now for 1BR lfJD Subsidized apt lor elderly &amp; handl·
capped E 0 H (304)862·3121
Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications lor 1BR HUO sub·
sldlzed apt for elderly and hand·
lc8ppad EOH 304-875-6879.

460 Space for Rent
90X125 MoblloHome Lot. Mason,
WV $90 00 por month. Includes
sewage (304)n3-5214.
Mobile Home Lot For ~ent: Reler-

740-385-4387.

MERCHANDISE

Outeh Lap White Vinyl Siding 8
Sq Ft + Trim , Aluminum Facia

$250, 7~15

Take It! America'&amp; Most Succeaaful Catnpground And Time·
ahara ~esale Clearinghouse Call
Resort Sales International 1-&amp;oo-

423-5967 24 Hour!l.
Gravely Walk Bohlnd With 30'
Mower And Sulky S550, 74D-245·
9589
Grubb's Plano· luning &amp; repairs
Problema? Head Tunad? CaM lho
piano Dr 140-448-4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. Hew &amp; Rebultt In Stock.
Call Ron Evano, 1-800.537·9529.
Kenmore Heav~ Duty 80 Sarles
Matching washer, Dryer Excel-

PHmnMr- )rH DIIICTV SUmmer
Promotion Catt now 1-888-285-

2123

'

RAPIO WEIGHT LOSS FEN·
PHEH ALTERNATIVE TAI·PHEN.
GUARANTEED 1OQ% SAFE.
JUST RELEASED TO THE PUB·
LIC ONLY $24 95 • 1 Monthc Buy
2 Montha Gat 1 FREE I AS SEEN
ON T.V CELLASENE, H·VIA·
GRA Available. Call Unlt&gt;t&lt;f Phar·

HouHhold

Goode

Sauooga, Ham, Pork Chopo, Hole

Air Conditioners, Used Ottferent

Sizes , Guorontoodl 740·886·
0047.
Appliances
Reconditioned
Waahera, Oryera1 Ranges, Refl'i·
grators, 90 Day Guar,-nte•l
French City Maytag , 74d·4-48·
n95

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
washers, dryers. refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appllanctl, 78

cludod, $325/Mo , Pluo tJeposlt,
74D-44H238, 740-441-ooOD

Vine Stroot, Coii74D-448·7398,
1-1186-818.Qt28

2 BR, Furnished, Fenced Yard wl
Garage , In Gallipolla Ferr~
S300 dopoolt &amp; $300. mon1h rent,

used Furniture /Appliances Off
Butsvllte Pike On I&lt;Hier Road,

2 ref8111neas. (304)675-4044

Coil Any Tl'"""onnoon'a uaed

Two bedroom mobile home in
Racine, $325 month, wt pay wa·

Furnlhn.
V,:hlrtpoot Waehtr H•av.y Duty

tor, sower and truh, 740·9G2·
50::;39:::..
__~--:----:-----l
:::
Apartment'.
for Rent •
t and 2 bedroom apartmonll, ftJ'·

$95; G E. wuhar $95; 30" Etectrio Range "a: Drytr '175; FF
AofrlgaratOf $150, Aelrlgtrator
Ulca Naw 1350, 1 YeariWorranty,
Woohtr &amp; Dryer Llk•l•w 150
Each, Skaggo Appu..,cu, 78
Vine Straot, Gelllpollo, 740·448·

nl&amp;hld and unlurnishect: aacurlty

1381

740-446·403~, 740· 448· 1004 .

s

no pots, 740· 530

Antiques

1 Bdrm,, Extra Nice, Firat Month
Frea Wllh One Year L••••·

Antique, Bottle, Advertising Sale
And Auction 6128th, 9·4, Polnl

$279 oo Par Month. Plus UIINtlea,
740-446-2957.

Pteaaan1 Armory Qual&gt;ly Doalero
- · 740-992·5089.

lrrllrance ATP 125 Bellows Drive
Irrigation Reel Machine, Includes
Reel, 6" ln.. ke Aluminum Pipe
And Couplers PTO Pump lnclud·

ed $14,000. Please Call 304·9254753

Hogs For Your Freezer, 7-40-245-

9047, 740-388-84118.

'

Teartnp, Down Older Home, AnM
yone nttrltted + 2 Dump.Truck

Old Mara 112 Quarter, 112 Mor·

cludaa: Harddrive, Keybolrd &amp;
Monitor. $200 For More Informa-

tion, Call 304-n3-584 I .

Watorllno Spacial : 314 200 PSI
$21 .95 Por ~ 00, 1" 200 PSI
137.00 Par 1OO; All Br111 Compra ..lon Fltllngaln Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Ohio, 1·&amp;00-531-9526
Wllght Lilting Equipment For
Sale $2100. (304)67~7758, Aftat
5PM
'

550

Building
Suppllea

Block, brick, 1ewer plpll, wind·
ows, lln1ala, etc Claude Wlntera,

Rio Grande , OH Call 140·245·
5121.

580

Peta for

Sale

5 AKC Rag1.1trad Black Labo
Have Boon Wormed. (304)875·
6046

For 35 Head, 5 Mliel From Holltr
Hospital Rt 180,740-3118-9946
L.a~lng Hena: 3 month Old Arau·

eana Putte1S 740-256-1615

AOHA ·yearllng stud colt, aorrel,

blaze:

whRe
~·· good bloodllnea.
$1100 740 ·593·2286 dayo or
evening a/wee-

kends
Chickens, 3 Months Old $3.00 A
Piece, Ducks 3 Months Btd, $6

.

Outstanding Angus And Chien·

tor sale, square bales, 30.C·

n:l-52&amp;9
Laroe Round Bales 120 A Bale,

74&lt;&gt;245--91147
sale.

S20.oo out of 1he lltld. (304)782·
2540
Square Bales of Hay For Sale

'

gallon of paint 12150 (3041875·
7158 after 5PM thru week, eny·

19B5 Buick Flagai740-256-1B31

5NOOI'Y!

90 Dodge Spirit , great cond At
AC, Crulao, Till, •$1 ,800 call aftor
8tJm 304·576-4047
CARS FROM $500111 Pollet Im-

original mllea Onan Generator. :

Double Rool AC (Ice•cold), Ml· ,
Bathroom, Shower. S bods. Very 1
good condition, dependable, l
$7500. (304)675-6901 .
-.

1992 Oodge DakOta, 4 Wheel
Drlva, 4 New Tires. Good Condl·
lion, $6,000 OBO (304)875·
7133

1997 Dodge Diesel I Ton, 414
Ram 3500 Aol&lt;lng $25,000 Call
aftor4 OOpm (740)-141-0998

tee*

1\lu

•I
' - lor
;;-

mas 1Wn

11 ...

20 Euclroll d

221111
QluaniAII•
n..DIIIm
2311o1Mn24 Acll.-

....

a:"'
crtmlnlll

g:::c;gtly
34AINnp
...... illy
MDII~ ...
• Mllidi43 Clolltlolll

....

41Acl-·
IIIOdel
47 . . . 11 • •

I SUPPOSE 'I'OU

COME I ALWA'{S
MAIJE TO PLA'I'

TJ.IINK YOU'~E
5UCHA6REAT

PITCHER,IIUJ.l?

RI6J.IT. FIELD?

BAilMENT

(llllbr.j

110"--DI
12 Pcl .... 113 DlmlnuiMI
IUIIbi
14 AUJ.'•

.....

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis C.mpos

ere-··

c.t.brly CIP*
.....

ZL

'LAHHBD

LZTMBB
AF

creMed
from
by flrncM people
put d
.. ...M_
_
,ql.C11tiC
_ ItT...,..duo
T-G

ZM

OAMB

DBVKZS

WB

KMS

MBUP

lAB

OKMAKDI.

CKJ
WFDJKMS
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Find a man wflh bolt) feel llnnly on the ground and
you've lound a man aboUI to make a dllllcuh pun • - Flelcher Knebel

'=~=' S@1t~lA-"t.trs·
l&lt;lito&lt;l

Rearrange lenero ol
0 lour
JCramblod worcla

1M
be-

low to lorm f011r almple words

I

LOVEVE

I
I
~~M~O=B~L=I~,
.~,'
Is I I ..
II
ENDUG
3

- I I 1 I
~

_

_

_

"It's never so much where
we stand ," granny lectured,
' but tn what dtrectton we are • •

_

I

~-------------------,

I

T uJ A Ny
1--1,....:.....;1;:;.-=.,1,:.;6;...:~~~..-I Q

.

Complote tho chuckle quoted
by filltn~ In the mlain; -rds
1-.;....L.--.1.--..1.'-...L..--.1.._... you develop
from step No 3 below

AND I SUPPOSE 'fOU
THINK '(OO'RE SUCH
A GREAT MANAGER?

e

~

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
SCRAM

...

..... build 0 big -

. , wiJtn

roo ..,.. with tht clossl(ifds

!TUESDAY

'

III

Starry - Rainy- Madam - Brawny- DARTS AWAY .

JUNE 221

\. •

E•-; ~

Fr,nch ,CIIy Moytag, 740·448-.
1715
..
..

"~

tenance· Painting, yln~l \ lidtng,

eorponb'y. &lt;loorli:'Windiiws, batho,
mobile home - " ' ond """'· Fortree aallma1e call Chat, 740-992·

8323.

Llvlngalon's 8asem1nt Water
Proofing, all ba1ement rtpalra
done, free estlmatel, lllttlme
guarantee 12~ra on job ••perl·

eneo (304)695-3867 '

M&amp;R General Con,tractlng 1

_.

Electric, Carpentry, Porcflea,

Trailer Sat-Up&amp;, And Air Condl·
llonlng, Aloo, t.!alntonanea, 740·
441-1401 .

ASTRO·ORAPH
Wednesday, June 23, 1999
A marked Improvement in your

materaal

Circumstances could

be

m

the offing for you 10 the year ahead.
Be constantly alert for Lady Luck's
offenngs of opportunitieS
CANCER (June 21 -JuJy 22) l-ove
11 expressed on many forms and

sometimes 1t means

no11ivirrg

your

Electrlc:.l lnd

loved ones everythong they want
every tome they wont 11 Tough Jove
may be the greatest goft you can gtve
today. Cancer, treat younelf to a
birthday gift Send the required
refund form and for your AstraGraph predJctions for the yc:llr ahead
by mailing $2 ,and self-addressed
stampecl envelope to Astra-Graph,
c/o this newspaper, PO. Box 1758,
Murray Hill Station, New York, ~y
10!~6. Be sute to state your Zodiac
ail•·
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) The word

Refrigeration

for loday is concentrate, concenU'Ile,

Residential or comrnerclal Mrtna.{
new sel"'loe or rapelra. Malter IJ. \
ctnlld tltctrlclan . Ridenour
Electrical, WV000301, 304·875-- ,

concentrate. There's a good chance
that unless you do so, some Significant ,details could be missed and
cause ~oy bog problems.

. ... .....,.

Build new or repair 61d, no job
too amall or larp, MaJor crldlt

carda .
tWV028882.
Call
(304)456-10491 BP t52e 110112.
'
'PIPE" DAYLIOHl INDOOIIII
Brighton Any Slllllng N~turally­
Kitchona, HIIIWII\'a, Sothroomot
Llkl A Bright Calling Fllluft, Bill
Wlt~out Elaetrlcllyt Tho Orlalnal
IUNPIPE. • Slnco 1191. Frao
Brochure. 1-81J0.844-47811125.

640

1188

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) Don't
get overly beguiled over the packagtng and forget to look al the produ&lt;t
todoy. espec1olly on business SJtuouons Take everythmg apart and look
at the guts for ots true value
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You
must clearly and dec1s1vely clarify
your guals and obJeCttves today m
order I( I he J1roducttve If your lnrgets
are ru7.1.y you ' re apt to miss the
mark

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feh

19)

You could be in~nrumentol in caussng
someone to paint htm or herself onto
a corner Do not try 10 offer ndvtcc
ahoutlhtngs you know ltttlc, no matter how good your mtc"tions ore

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

Impatience is your worst enemy
today, so 1fyou're working on some-

could prllducc confuston msiead uf

thing rother comphcaJed. take 11 slow
and easy. Determination and perse·
verance should prevail.
ARIES (Maro:h 21-April J9) Anes
has a tendency to put tbelr faith 10 the
wrong people' from 11me to lltne. It
could tum out to be an error in judgment to trust lhe logoc of another over

keenness

your own

SAGITIARJUS (Nov. B·De•
21) Beware of persons beunng lavosh .
praise und Oattery today. Le111 serve
as a warnong tn you thot this 1ndovid·
ual could have ulterior motive• to
take advaniBJC of you.
CAPRICORN(Dec: 22-Jan 19)A
poor choice of a leommote could
doom the endeavor today Make cc:rtain your plllner can pull his or her
own and he able to offer somethong
special whoch you cannot provide

TAURUS (Aprol 20-Moy 20) The
problems you have conccrmng Bdif·

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nnv 22J Trytng to hlcnd common sense with mtu·
11111c tnstmcts con somcumcs be ~m
a~sct Howe ver. today tht s mclhod

\'

Be careful.

ficuh job are all in your

mmd, nol en

the project. Self-created hurtle&lt; can
be ehmonnted by stepp1n~ hack and
reassessing thongs logicnlly
GEMINI (May 21-lunc 20) What
you think you want to do tnday may
be llosed on false tllus1ons about what
others believe are fun If you ondulge
m these ac1i v1ties. make sure n ' ll he
worth tl In you

II

Love ts like quteksdver 1n the hand Leave lhe hand
open and it stays, clulch 11 and 1! DARTS AWAY

•

Home Main--

.,

..

LRS ANSWEU

•
.
APJJIIenco Parta Anll Sarvloo: 1111; ·~
Genarat

·'

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

448·0870. t ·1100-287·0578. Aog· ' •

C&amp;C

WOlD
lAM I

CLAY I . POlLAN _;;________

~

Local referen"'a',furnfthtd . Et· ~
la~hed 1975. Call ' 24 Hrl. (740) '

Name Brandl ov.r 25' Yelfl

prtlMf'll

MFPB

VDFHZLLFDI

K

WATEIIPIJOOFINO
;
UncondlHonal Ulallme guaion!H. t '

•

~IIOICial'

·----41

81--"--:!~ome~~...._...;J,"~ 1

E~ttraal EJtOtllent Condition! Retail

Value $16 ,800 Asking $14,800
740-446-7289

-=~~~!~~~~~

,:1

perlence AU Work GuarantHd ,~ ~

1990 F-350 c - cab dually (XLT

•

ROBOTMAN

i

SE11VICfOS

0
H
.. , IIJIPrptNIIMitll

MOniMbrlny
37 Comp ••.• pt.
31 Adem'•

CIA

C.mper~ &amp;
MotorHOITiel
719::7::8~32:::1:-1"=M7o-=to~rH~o~m:':a~37:-,0::00:: ;

Factory Wheels, Alloy, Rally,
Stnl Buy, Sail. Acker Wheal 1·
800·914·3357 . Worlds Moll

1990 Chevy Sllvarado, 1989 Ford
350 1 Ton Flatbed, Very Good
Shepo, 740·448-8189.
'

t

~

ME'(. MANAGE~ , MOW

------"--:--...,-

19B7 Ford F•250, 4x4, 9 9 dlenl
Clood Shepol $5,000, OBOe (740)·
388·87•3 Allor 5'00 pm

LOOK AT

LASSiE!
6EN..ll !

PEANUTS

Budget Priced Transmlulona.

and Engines, All Types, Accooo
To Over tQ.QPOTranomflliono,
eve JoJntB,I740-245-tsen '

For Llsllngo CALL HOWl t-800·
319-332312168

1985 Ford Ranger Pici&lt;·Up, V-11, 5
Speed, Good Tiro~. Good Run·
nlng Dependable Truck, $_1 ,000,
740-379-2586

ARE BETI'ER

Hl1ch, $5 ,400, 740-4A6-3005, AI· ,
1Sr 6 PM

. . WaterpfOOfang. ,

Sale

DOG.~

THAI'&lt;I CATS, FRANC15 1

Car Trailer, Loaded, Wnlte With :

pounds, Repoa &amp; Talt Seizures.

Complete Inventory. www.ackerwhlel.com

EVERYBOI&gt;Y tc:,NOWS

·'

crowave, full kitchen, color TV, t

1981 Olda Cut1a11 , 1985 Cam- 1995 GMC Jimmy 4•4, Loll 01

ero Both nMd work. Will seu tO·
golher - aoma now pans and 1

1978 Stingray 18, Ft 4 Cylinder.

l

790

hitch, bodllnar, 123.000 mllee, bll
140-_
_ 740·9B2·1508
__
gray, se.ooo,
days,

'94 while Orand Prl• SE Coupe,
$8700, 740-1192·2939

BIG NATE

1997 Eagle Talon 28.000 Mlleo.

Lariat), dtenl, auto, gooee neck

710 Aulas for Sale

.,.l

~
J S Marine lo Lf{odad Up On,'
used Trade Ina. ANdy For Sale: i
1979 28 n Twin Enalna Thunlllr· \
bird With Trailer 112,500: 195-4,(
19 Fl concord Wltb9t 1100 HP i
Mariner Wl1h ll'lllar 55,500, 1118 •
t1 Ft. Strotoa Floh &amp; Ski With 1
115 SUzuld &amp; 1lallor $4,000; 1884,
Wolleraft 18 Ft With 4 Cyllndar
Wllh Trailer $6,800, OBO, 1988 · 1
I 8 Ft Baja Wllh 4' Cylinder I ' ,
Trailer $3 ,500, t977 21 Ft '
Checkmate, 4 CyllnO.r &amp; Trailer
$3,000; 1990 18 P,_._ Wlit II' 1
HP Evlnruda Wltl'\ Tralllr 13.500,

Air, Cruise, Power WindOWS. Su.n·
roof, Call After 5 PM nO-UB·

otter

om •

2 ........ -

Paaa

There IS the old rubnc of "thtrd
hand hogh " So, many would wm
trtck one w11h the club ace , then
(probabJ y) return the c Iub e1ght It
doesn' t matte r, though Declarer w oiJ
lose only fo ur tnc ks: one heart , two
doamonds a nd o ne club
Let's go back 10 Iric k one and
apply a nolher maxtm, "aces are
meant to kill kmgs " Eas1 d oes much
bener to play the club e tg hl True ,
South wms w1th the 10 or Jac k. bu1
1f the defenders never lead clubs
agam dunng the res t o f the deal, they
wtll eventuall) collec l two tncks on
the s uu, to go wuh o ne hean and 1wo
diam onds one down
Fmally. do you agree wnh We st's
pass over three diamond s' II 1s prudent, as partner IS a passed hand and
the vulnerab1llly ts unfavorable
However, woth th1s layo ut, three notrump w til probably make

lmalely 10hrs priced well unO.r

New goo t«nka &amp; boo;ly pafll. D &amp;
R Au(o, Ripley, WV. (304)372• :
3933 or t-600·273-9329.

Auto (740)·448·3243,
600pm.

Puo

nent ' s

[~D~\:JID?

t

~1999~~Ca:-:'rgo~Mat~a~2:':'4~F::-t-;EJ::--.cl::-o::-IOOII:":: :

Seized Caro From "00. Sport,
Luxury. &amp; Economy Cera. ltuckl,
740-266-!5395.
414'a Utility &amp; Mora. For COO.nt
Raglll&amp;rtd Angua, olght COW ,&amp; Liltlngs C~ll 1·8D0-31t·5048 Ell

Hly l Gl'lln

&lt;

1995 Z-28 camarro. T-Topa.
LOOdad, Asking $t 2,oo0 00 Call
After 4:00 PM 740o441-D996

gua Bulla, Reasonably Priced,
Slattt Run Farms, Jackson, Ohio

calf palra, alght 1 &amp; 2 ye1r old
helrare, e~eceltent biOQdilnee, 740-

lr'N~~ Wlm~.CQl"-tff:&gt;?'W~
'""
IT ~~\1\l~(,

780

45 Acras Good Paature, Good

1lrne -kend

THE BORN LOSER

onlY'&gt;~'

t995 Buick LoSabra Cullom, 4
O.C.S,LQBded, 740&lt;682-75t2

Warran11 11700 00 FINT)I 94-Geo
Metro- 120,000 mlleo, Good WOrk
car. S1,000 00 (740)-44HJ683

(304)87~6072.

1998 Yamaha Wave raider 1100,-

With Trailer $2,500, 740·258·
8160

M•tro, 90,000 miles, Factory

tor

~

aaklng $5,200, 740·992·1508
day&amp;, 740-949-2644....

lordable Ralel, 740-36!1jl358.

Round 8al11 ol hay

~-.

&lt;

Gambler Intimidator 20 ft ball
boat, dual consolea 200 hp. f
evinrude motor, fully equip. ,
bought new In 98, used approx- ~

86-Ford Aaorslar van ·S2DOO.OO
Automellc Good Shapet 93· Goo

Ha~

~
~
~

1994 Gra~d Cherokee Limited,

gan, Installment Pkln For Horses
To Good Home, 25% Down, Af-

640

1996 24 ft PonJune boat w/80 hp
nonda ,boat has bathroom, metal
top &amp; many e~etras.tandem 1111
trailer wl brakaa S16,500 can aftar 5 pm ~58-2047 .
•

Loaded, 4x4, Black JGold Leather
lntelor, CO Player, Good Price!
740.245-9143
f993 Mere Capri Convertab\ft

112 tone Pick-Up as-Pontiac

4 Arabian Mares Ont 10 Year

Uatd Dell Compuler For Sale,

9515

304-675-8755

8t Chevy Truck 112 ton. 80 Ford

LlvHtOCk

742·3033

....

boat t8112 ft runa great, rec1n~
reupholstered $1 BOO • w/tralltr

Glft11 (740)-448-4549

,.,.

11 Dr8ft 01'11·
13 a,.·.

Eul

Well , tn today 's deal , I thmk moetenths of players sotlmg East would
make the losmg play
To test yourself, cover the So uth
and West hands. Agamst three doamonds, your partner leads the club
three After declarer calls for dummy's four, how would you plan the
defense?
If you open wtth ~pre-emptive btd
in second pOSJ IIOn, you should have
a good su1t. Why? Because one
opponent has already passed, so you
are as hkely lo be makmg partner's
hfe a nHSery as your left-hand oppo-

tfltitfwAY
OF l-IFE f-1~-~{

1993 Gao Tracker 4 Speed, Ex·
cellent Condltior\, 740·245·9154.

t998 Pontiac Trana-Am , Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced to
$22,500 00 Great Graduation

North

1 UK
brcld

m a while."

!992 Soaray 220 f.llnl COndition,
Cuddy Cabin &amp; M4"1' Exlrlll Low
Hours, 740·388-99B1, 740·388-

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce1101'18s

%

2

••tr.lan"

- 3"""'4-- ...

33tt::a-!...

··-

By Phillip Alder
•
What IS the most popular s togie
IOplC of conversatio n? Surely IllS the
weather As Kin Hubbard said,
" Don ' t knoc k the weather, moetenths of the people couldn't start a
conversation 1f 11 dtdn ' t change once

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

· "'r
"I' Sale · ,

boOk :J04. 773-S996.

~

10 Ending for

5 Hllvllll
nokhidedgel
• Ofllw ......
7 Clllnll

OOWN

Thinking the
winning thought

??

750 Boats &amp; Motol'l

7411

5568 60th PI No Pinellas Park,
FL33181,127-464-7408.

Ford 1 112 Ton. one 1 ton 740 ·
386·8478
Window• 3 1, 5 Yurt Old, In·

Buy

A Piece, 740-256-1233

MIAL

grea1, look&amp; good, V-8, $2 IQ.O,
74D-949-2838 or 740·949-2045

,

..........

Opening lead: • 3

t 997 Yamaha Banah" 350 4 •

Trailer

Pus

3•

BORRY ANOTHER

19B7 Honda CR eo. S1100; 1994
Kawaookl Bayou 300 4il4, $3200,
FZR 50CC aport 1&gt;*8. 41000. 8 hp
pull behind finish ..,...,, 44' cut.
$450, call740-843-5450

wl)h

WHI

,_.buy

CORN

1990 Cougar, high milell, runs

1987 COuglllr, runs good &amp; looka
good, $1495, 740-992-2854

~

CUP OF

wheeler wlrevlrse alee. stan. rut ~
nice $2,900 caUS()II-875-3124

Nice, $12,000 (304)882-2542 ,.1.
1or8PM.

Old Motorcyctta, Motorsoootera,
Motorscoot•r Parts (Cushman
preferred) Contact D Mitchell,

740-992· 7300

CAN

daY.I

t997 Kawasakl300 Bayou ATV,

(304)67~·7 122,

Q 10 6 4 3

51 Atlnctt,. vllw
5I ActnN
JuquJIIne 111 You....,, .-yl

bJ

Pua

lock in deferenllal, llkt new,
used only 1o hra $2,90'0 304 882·3238
:

Windows ,
Speller
' Alum.
Wheels New Tires, Brakes,

See Th• New John Deere 200
Series Skid Stear Loadara. 1 5%
JDC Financing, Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc 1-800-594-

630

South

SIRIICt Dlrl-

1989 Mazda 828 LX. 4Dr, 4 cyl,

1996 Monte Carlo LS. Tinted

Galvalume Steel Roofing , S,1t8
track dOor, 3' walk dOOr, $6,888

620 Wanted to

RS175.~

K

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

2 2L, Automatic, AC , PW POL.,
AM/ FM Cassette w/equallnr
Sunroof, 204 000 ·miles, good

sliver wlmaroon Interior, aJc, ami
fm cassette, cruise , good tires,

Lawn, lne. 1·800.594·1111 , GaiH·
polls, OH Wo Dallvan

1111, Gelllpolil, OH Wo Dallwlrl

maceullcals NOW For Informa-

510

4 75% 48 Months 5 5% 60
Months, Garmichaal's Farm &amp;

Eroctedllron Horae Builders t •
(600)·352·1 045

-~~~·~~~~245-~5~t00~~----- :
740 Motorcyclel
'

1989 Harley Davidson 1200 •
Sporu11or. $7000, call 740·992· '
4572 evenings or 740·1192·3812; '

SE. Loaded, $2,195 ; t9BD Ply·
mouth Aceallm $1,495 ; 1992
Chev Cav $t ,595; t986 Chav
Borella $1 ,395, 1990 Oodgo 314
Ton ~U $1,895; 199f DOdge 314
Ton P.U.. Auto,Air, $3,295, 1991
VW Golt $1,495, B&amp;O Atao Salea,
Hwy 160 H, Gallipolis, 740·446·
6169,740 448 8865
199 4 Geo Prllm . Auto, PS,PB.
sunroot ro,ooo miles (304)675 .
2039 $5995 OBO
1994 GL Taurua, 59,879 mllaa.

24 Montho. 3 75% 36 Mon1hs,

GOT A CAMPG,ROUHD MEM·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? WO'II

1

(740)-448·8041

$1 ,495 , 1990 Pontiac Grand Am

OelKe Round Baiera, Mower Con·
dlllonera, 0% 12 Months, 2 75%

Stonge Bullclln Spoco
30 140'18', Painted S1ool Siding.

t

• J 10

•In•

lroUIIIId

23Tul
211 Pert Dl .... eye
211 Celeau51 e.~
21"wt.l Dl
In 1M51 Fa41a eu :lei

31 p

.. J 4

Minor Work, $1.200 OBO, 74D- ·,
3118-8823 Attar 4 P.M.
•
"'·

$2,995, 199 1 Pon11ac Grand Am

Credit Approval, JD1219. JD720.
NH474, NH469, HH466 HByblne,
JD335, NH830, N~850, MF1 500,
NH851, Round Balora, New John

FULLY LOADED PENTIUM
QOMPUTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl
1·800-520-6384

tion t-800-733-3288 COO'S I
PRE·I'!I.Y /CREOIT CAROS

Deposit 740·386·9598

:r.~':;aqulred,

Supply, 740-448·9418 Gallipolis,
Ohio

2588.

for Rent

2 BedroQms, Air ConditiOning,
Automatic washer, Water In-

$25 2t; 5 Gal White Root Point
$51 89, Anchors $5, Ooora &amp;

lent Condition, $300, 740·446·

Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

2 Bedrooms. 2 Baths, CA. Stove.
Relrrgerator, Water Trash Furnlehed , Very Nlcel $350/Mo ,

Gal·

Windows, Gae &amp; Electric Water
Heaters , Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts lntertherm, Miller A Coleman Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennelt's Mobile Home

4 Bedrooms, Ali Electric, AIC,
$500/Mo , Plus DepOSit, 740·367·

4313

~

Furnished , UpstairS, Second
Avenue, No Pets, Utilities· Paid,

enooo Raqu0od,740-25B-1922

~~~.m~.~~a~fr: ; 4~~~~::

Hugal"""'tory
Vinyl Skirting Kl1s $299.95,

ion Aluminum Flbered Roof Paint

9523

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $260· $300, sewer,
water and trash Included , 740992·2167.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

June Used Hay Equipment Sale
4.9% Financing With John Oeere

3418

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

Still Available 2BR. unfurnished
house, 507 1/2 2nd St , New Ha·

3342.

1979 International 2 Ton 118 Flat

Oiscount Mobile Homo
Parts &amp; Supply

:

24hrs $5500 CAiao 1974 Baja old

Stllll Bod, $5 000, 740-379-2427

tunlty, 741J.44&amp;-4639

River Bend Place accepting ap-

(304)·675-5540

Cherry Dining Room Sat. Table, 8
Choirs, &amp; China Cabinet, $800,
740-256-1851 .

...

Value St 3.800, Asking $11 ,900, •

1111J2 SUzuki

"00i--

41Pon~J

12--1

e

South

C
S ville
I
1964 adlllae a
new ong ne

1991 Chevy Lumina Eurosport,
31 V-6. loaded, $3100 OBO, 74D985-3510.

610 Farm Equipment

5304 after 6pm

2·3 Bedrooms $300 month ~ Da ·
posit &amp; Relerences, No Petsl Lin·
coin Ave Homestead Realty

Laney Amp, PL 50 rebArb. $100,
e~tcellent con"ition, 740·992·

4425

451 ·2591

oncesl Call (7401·384-2560

Musical
Instruments

Will Oo RefillS O~r 70 varieties
Of Scents, Hours Monday ·Sat·
urday, 10·9, Sunday 1·5 Also,
Makln!J Body Lotions &amp; Shower

• Q 9 3

• 75
• Aa

FouftraiC Good Condition , Needs /

Antllock Brakes. Power Door
Locks , Windows, Drivers Seat,
Cruise Control, Till Steering, Ga·
rage Kept With 80,000 Mllea,
Asking $4,295, Call 740·44&amp;4223

(www happyJacklnc com)

Baldwin Snare arum With Stand
&amp; Case, Sticks &amp; Pad Included,
E~tcelient Condition, $350, 740·
446-9555• •

t A J 9

$550 OBO And 19B8 Honda 250.!

1990 M4rcury Sable GS Sedan 6
Cyllndor, Automa11c, 4 Speed
Transmlnlon , AM/FM Stereo
Tape, Air Bag, Air Condlllonll)g,

I

638 Brk:k S1reet,
flutlond, OH 45n5,
74Q,742-2512.
CandiBS 01 All Styles And 'fYpos,

Gel&amp; I

For Lease One Bedroom, AC
Apt. Corner of Second and Pine
$250 00 per month, plus Utilities
Plus Security and Key Deposlll
Reference Required (740) -448-

35t8

RENTALS

' Candle Creations,

I

,

2566

condlllon $2,500
Aftel 6PM

Wanted to buy· can,ry or cana-

570

• K Q9 8
.. tO 7 5 3

&amp; Runs Goodl $1 ,500, 740-379·

M&amp;J Auto
7~3118-9693 or 740-742-IStO

Bod, Phone 1740-446-3598

(304)675-4548.

Eul

""4, Eicallent Condition. Retail ,

wwd
11 AulD

111101'

• A 52
• A 9 8 5

bike, Looks Good ; Run&amp; Good. "

tomatic, electric windows, electric
-seats, e~tclltillnt condition , runt
good, 1111 wheel , cruloo eon1rot 4
good 1oe~ $1050.

Antique Matching Drauer And
Baby bed, Playpen, Swing, Car
Seat Stroller, Creasing Table

4 Cy·

t969 Dodge Dynasty, 30 V·8 au-

t019.

Car , 1973 Maverick V-8; 500
Gallon Elevated Fuel Tank 5 HP
RototiUer. Fa m Wagon, Antique

~,4,

-

41;::, .....

11 Hcne IIIJtlwe
171a I It Pill
11 'Cflliii'M

West

linder, 4 Doors, Automatic, Looks

1984 Cadillac Coupe DeVIlle ,

CFA Regiatertd Himalayan kitlena, variety of colora, 740·742·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Equal Housing O!Jportunlly

t988 Mercury Topaz

Sellt Only $100, OBO, 740·2459239.

Full-Blooded Roll Puppies, 6

•• 8
• K 54

1

Package: Auna Grtatl 115,500

1986 Chavy van , Auto , 6 Cyt
$1 ,500. (304)675-6693

CFA Persians 1 Male, 1 Female,
Both Spade &amp; Neutered', Must

0013.

1993 Chev Ptck·UP Short Bed,

740-448-7289

Chect&lt;ed, $150 Each, 740-256·
1311

1978 Ford V-8, 4 WD, 1981 K·

trom $279 to $358 Walk to shop

Tax

•KQ2

1985 Buick T typo Rogal, digital
dash climate control, h~pertech 1994 Explorer. e Cylinder, 4 :
chip $5500.304·675·2714 or 304 Oooro, 4x4, Air, Brand How Tow ,

Kittens , Male &amp; Female, White,
Cream &amp; Blue, First Shott &amp; Vet

6194

&amp; movies Call 740·446·2566

And

319-3323 Ext 4420

CFA Baeutilul Poralen Aaglltered

limited time offer call1 -800-n9-

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive

Impounds ,

576-2092.

$325 00 Month, Call (740) ·446·
4359

Melga Co.: P1ck Of The week ·
Dyes ville, 10 5 Acres With
Stream, Great Getaway Or Aemote Living, Just $8, 5001 Rutland 1

1988 Skyline 14x80 3 Bedrooms,

lng Included, 740.742-2795

Repo's For Listings Call 1·800·

Full BloOded Beagle Pups, Sho1s
&amp; Wormed, $50 Each, 7•0·388-

Apar1ment for Rent, 1Bedroom,
1Bath, Central Air. Appllcanes

' BRUNER LAND
740-441-1492

420 Mobile Hom11

1992, 1.Cx70, 3 bedroom, Redman
mobile home, heat pump &amp; sk1rt·

Fish, Birds, Pond Supptlu
Sun.1·4PM, Mon ·Sot ItAM·
6PM. Filh Tank/Pel Shop, 2413

Pollee

1979 Ft50 4x4 E1tondod Cab,
351-M onglno, aaotng St100.
740-949-3221
t985 cnovy van 350 Automatic, :
740-256-183t
t 986 GMC Solari van Runo
Good, $1,195, OBO. 740·441- ,
0950, 740·4-U-0118.

Cal: (740)-368-Bt 52

MerchandiH

I=:::;::;:::=:":""-:-::-:-=-=-:::::-:::-

1038

1tiiiii ·1910CAAS FROM$500

tion Call otter 5:pm (740)·446·

Apartment for rent In Middleport.

In The ' Country. West Gallia
County, Lots 01 Meadow, Wit h
New Barns And Fencing, Ready
For Animals· Lots 01 Road Fron·
tage More Land Available Now
D1v1ded Into 5 &amp; 10 Acre Tract,
Take Both -15 Acres For
$27,500 Double Wldes Are Permitted 5% Down Land Contract
With Approved Credit Free
Maps 1·80G-213·8365

7802

740-448·9B04

B&amp;T CoonhOund 2 ynrs old, wall
Started! Champion Bloodllneal

pies Call74D-44t-1982.

Must Selll Asking $14,000, 740·
388·8335

Building , Rented Lot, $11,500,

JiJy, 74Q-254H3311.

8 oo p.m . 740·992·252&amp;, Ruos
Moor• owner

12Ft

Chovys, Jotps, And Sport Utili·
tin &amp;OO-m-1&lt;10; EXT.IB32
1970 Ponllae Lomana wun 350
Rocket Motor, $600, Call Ahar 5,
304-ll75-58t2
t97t Opel GT Great Condlllon.
$2,500 1971 Chovollt. Good
Projoet Car, $1,500 (304)675·

..

lloelley-

North
110-H·ft
.. J 10 7 8 4 3

i

..... , ..

14 'nlllw
11 !dmotiDI

U~ POUCE I~~:.~~~~]l:~1::;:.
I

IMPOUNDS Honda's Toyota'l,

AKC Rogl&amp;tered Yellow Lab Pupo,
Sholl &amp; wormed. Ready 4th 01

540 Mlscellsneoua

Haat, 740·256·6495 , Or Even·

15 ACRES
READY FOR HORSES

1988 Redmond Danville 1-4x70
Also. Has E~epando . Very Nice,

2 Bathe, A/C , Fireplace, Cock.

Buy or sell Rlver ln~ Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street. on At 124,
Pomeroy Houri. M.TW 10 00
a m to 6:00 p m., Sundly t 00 10

2 Bedrooms. Washer, Cryer. Gas

$12,000 00 (304)-875·2319
1972 Homette 12x56 1 Bedroom,
I Balh , l&lt;ll che n, Appliances,
Great For Camping , HunUng ,

Court, Galllpollo Caii74D-448·
9B32, 7 - 7.

month S100 deposit, 740·992·
1806

4563t

360

736·3409

310 Homes for Sale

Month Only Oakwood Hom.. ,

2704 740·992·5696

Nice

230

New 3BR $411 down , SUI

Send Response CLA825, c/

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Repa&gt;&lt;·
lng, NOT Replacing Long Cracks
In Windshields Fr ee Video 1·
800-826· 85 23 US /Ca nada
www giassmeChanbt CQm

New 1999 14,~t70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lOt rent
lnctudes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deiulte steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month wrth S11 SO
"down Caiii·B00-837 3238

Nitro, wv,(304)755-5885.

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
tO ·20 Locallons $4K -$10K
$4,000 +/Mo Income • ALL.
CASH! 100,..-. Fi nance Ava•lable
1·80Q-360·26 15 · 24 Hrs

New Bank Aepo'&amp; Only 3 lert, 1600 363-6862.

1 B•droom Apartment. Stove &amp;
Regngarator Included, 740·446-

CARS $100,$500 &amp;

A Great Friend Toy Poodles

AKC, Vet Cheeked, $300 , See
· 740-379-2839
AKC Lab Pupplao, Porfact Time
01 Vtar To Train And Enjoy! 740·
36HJ659

. . .,

40 l'lrtDI . .

1 ....... .......,
711 ....
41a-tal
Ifill .....
42 AlleloM
121Dvlell-111iorwDI
41 Oppn .. Dl

,,

Antique Iron Baby Bad, Vintage
Lamps, Hand Crafled SNdll &amp;
Mortl Colt.ctora Cloaet, 3rd,

....

ACADM

".

.,

.. ''

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•

. . . 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 22, 1999

Wednesday

'"

June23, , . .

Weather

Becky

8elr

Melgl County
Ext8nllon
Agent, Fllllllly
~n~~eon.- ·

Science•

.
• Aie

I

CommWIIty

Developn..nt.

'

cakes some of your favorite
desserts? Does the idea of eating a '
ll!i&lt;:e of scrumptious spice, luscious
\cmQn or a delicious devil's food
cake make your 'mouth water? If so,
why not make one tonight? We know
'lhat cakes are simple to prepare by ·
!Ising mixes, but they are also quite
easy to make from scratch. You just ·
.need to remember a few simple .
,uidelines.
There are two basic kinds of cake
:. butter cakes and foam cakes. Butter
'Cakes are made with butter, shonenillg or margarine, flour, sugar, eggs, a
liquid and a leavener such as baking
fOwder or soda to make the cake rise.
· Ditferent fl avorings are used for
different types of butter cakes like
cocoa for chocolate, vanilla for white
and ye ll ow and various fresh fruits or
fruit flavorings for other appetizing
cakes. '

oblona, loaf, cupcake or specialshaped pans may be used. Grease
booom and sides with shortening.
Fill half-full and pl&amp;;e in middle of
prehe!Hd oven. Don't let pens touch;
there should be one-inch cleiiDIICC
around each pan.
Bake the minimum amount of
time, then cheCk for doneneSs. If a
toot.hpick inserted in the center
comes out clean or if you lightly
touch the cake with your fingertips
and it sprinas back, it is done. If it is
not done , continue baking.
·
When done, lake the pans from

the Qven, let them stand on a cooling

nK;k for ten minutes, then remove the
cake from the pans to finish cooling
on the rack
Foam cakes may be angel food,
sponge or chiffon cakes. They
depend on beaten eggs or egg whites
for the leavening. Angel foods have
no additional leavening, fat or egg
yolks. Sponge cakes use whole eggs
and pos~ibl y some leavening. Sponge
cakes make excellenJ jelly rolls or
strawberry shortcakes. Chiffon cakes
are a combination of buuer and foam
cakes. They use separated eggs, Jeav-

ening and fat.
When prepari ng an anael food ~ZWD frosting, a cooked ,frosting, a .
When preparing foam cakes, do cake, there should be no traee of d,ustillg of powder~ sugar, some
not grease pans - the egg whileS need grease or egg yolk on the bowl or the type or alazc; or ~ tro,sted.
1111
to climb the sides of the pan for vol- beaten. Egg whites will be bealen
Cakes s~ bC f?Yeial for storume.
until foamy, then sugar will be beale n age .. Cooked frOSdrlg cakes should
Leave the oven door closCd until in two tablespoons at a time until the not be ai r tight. Unfrosted or butterthe minimum baking time has whites are very stiff.
creant frosted cakes can J,le frozen.
expired. The cake is done when
The dry ingredients will then be
If the cake has a whipped cream
cracks in the top of the cake feel dry folded in carefully by bringing a rub- topping, a cream fi lling or cream
and no finger imprints remain after ber SJ&gt;iltula down the side, across the cheese frosting, it should be stored in
touching. Immediately after remov- bottom and folding over the top until the refrigerator to prevent food poiing the cake from the oven, tum the they are no longer visible.
somng.
pan upside down to cool 'for at least
Make sure cakes are cool before
Baking cakes from scratch can
two hours. This allows the cake to storing or they will become sticky. provide a fun IIJld Oavorful treat for
solidify at its highest volume.
Cakes may be frosted with a butter- your fam ily. Why not give it a try? ·

Legion baseball results, Page.s
Fath.er- in-law's inappropriate advances, Page 7
Internet taxation inevitable, Page 6

Tod•y:Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 80s
Tomonow: Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 80s

31
'Meigs County's

1

• r•

~~

..r • "'

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohto

• 1 -' ..

·

Tradihonally butter cakes were
made by alternately adding the eggs ·
and liquid to sifted dry ingredients.
Many recipes today are designed .to
use the one bowl method where all
· jngredi ents ara combined with a
mixer on low speed for 30 seconds,
. then on pigh for three minutes. Layer,

.. ,
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Community ·
Calendar

.

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or

TUESDAY
· RACINE - The Racine Area
Community 'Organization. will meet
Qll Tuesday at 6:3'0 p.m. at Star Mill

By BRIAN J. REED
S.nUnel N-• Staff
.
School officials are paying ·close .attention to
the results of the fourth-grade proficiency iests
. which were released last week. The leSt ·was
MARIETTA (AP) phase of a $7 million Marietta College administered to fourth graders in Ohio public .
residence hall conatruction project is about to get under way here.
schools in Man:h.
The first phase includes building two residence balls and a student cen·
·According to the Ohio Department of Educa·
ler. A second phase will involve the conarruction of two new buildings.
tion, til) percent of the students met the final proThe project is part of a larger five-to-10-year campus reslructuring plan ficlent standard on the reading portion of the test,
that will cost 1!11 estimated SSO mi.lion, Marietta. College President Larry a 12-point improvement from results a year ago.
Wilson said.
The reading portion of the test is subject to
Some of the work is expected to begin in the next week. Plans
close scrutiny by lldministntors, teachers and parinclude more than doubling the size of Ban Johnson Field House to 111ake ents, bcc:auac of the Fourth-Grade Guarantee, a
it a full-service recreation center with an indoor track.
provision of Senate Bill 55, which will require
Funding for the projects will come from a combination of sources. fourth gradet;S to pass the test before thH are pro·
Marietta Col.lege currently has about 1•100 students; ·
·
moled io the fifth grade.
·
new gu.,antee will so .into effect in the
aNaNNATl (AP) ~ A paper manufactum will pay an $(!0.000 penal· 201J0.2001 school year, but will allow promotion
ty and j)rovide 11101e safety training becen• of an accident that Jed to a work· 9f llludenta who fail the reading.portion if tbutu·
er's death, officials announced Tuesday.
dent's reading teacher and principal agree thll the
Miami Valley Paper Co. Inc. also agreed to more safety and health inspec-1 · child is prepared academically for the fifth grade.
ti~ the Oa:up.cional Safety and Health Adminiatntion said.
.
Another part of SB-SS requires school districts
. A Feb. 22 chemical explosion at the Pranldin plant burned the face, neck to offer intervention .services to students in the
and hands .of Robert Pennix. The Somerville resident later died from ·the .firs!, sea~nd and third grades not reooing at grade
·
injuries.
level. Districts ue also required to offer intervenIn March, OSHA cited the compa- tion to students not proficient in three or more
ny for what it called inadequate tnin- ueu of the proficiency tests.
ing about chemical haDrdl and pro· Students are not required to attend the inter·

,.

_as

RUTLAND - Bicentennial com·
mittee meeting, Civic Center, 7:30
p.ni. All interested residents invited.
POMEROY - Catholic Women's
Club meeting Tuesday with mass at 6
p.m. with covered dish picnic at the
social hall to follow.

of .Priddy forfeitur·e, process not unusual

·*

ac
"...

Company settles OSHA citations

Check out the other
Road Show offers ·
atyour Chevy;. D~aler!

.CHESTER - Winding Trail Garden Club meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Ill' ,..the home of Debbie Mohler..
POMEROY , - Meigs County
Health Department immunization
c)inic Tuesday, 9- 11 a.m. and 1· 3
p;m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Cenler, Pomeroy. ·Children. must be
:a:companied by a parent or guardian
With child's shot record,
.'

.

I

laws.
The company,
35 miles north
Cincinnati,
manufactures
piper and tho coatings U!ed in

~=rations.
"'-"'UJ- 88)18 SOII1e

:WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - America~ Cancer
Society Community Cancer lnforma· ·
lion Center, open house, II a.m. to I
.p.m. Wednesday, at Holzer Home
(:are of Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Mulberry
Heights.
,,

Cf8Bhts 81"6 SulcldBB

HAMILTPN. Ohio (AP) -"JVo!ice
thinnonth, uouthwest Ohio coroocr
hu ruled thll a vehicle wu used to
commit suicide. But statisti~ show
that means of self-destruction'is still
rare.
· "lWo cases don't make a ·trend,"
Butler County Coroner Richard P.
Burkhardt said Tuesday.
Aooording to the Ohio Depai'tment
of Health, three people committed
suicide with motor vehicles in 1997,
the most recent year for which statistics ue available.

Lotteries

tHURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Carleton College
Board of Trustees annual meeting
'l'llursday, 7 p.m. at the home .ofPresldent Robert L. Wingett. All board
members are urged to attend.

omo
Pk:k3: 7·1-9; Pkk4: 7-9..{)..7
S.cke)'l5: 1-4-15·23·3S
W.JA.

DaiiJ 3: 11-6-5; Daly 4: 5-4-3-3

S-10.2WD
.
$2,000 Cash Back·
or
$163/Month 36-Month Leaset
$l63 Due at Lease Signing

,•

. REEDSVILLE Riverview
· oSrden Club meeting Thursday, 6:30
p.m. Potluck dinner at Belleville
bam Park in Reedsville.
·
fkiDAY
· RACINE
Make-up day for
';'loothem Local spans physicals Fri·
lllay, 2-4 p.m. for boys and girls
. p ooes 7-12 at Dr. Hunter's office.

(Tax, title, license and registration are extra,)
,.

'

Malibu•
~1,500 Ca:sh Bac;;J&lt;":"''I'&gt;J'•
•f\'

t·; .

&lt;;f;

.;•'·
' 0"
. .... ·~·•·
'J· '

;J

• ,..

,. . "' . ,_,.,

,1,;;., ;·.~·~·-·t.

.:... ·;..._,.~-

1-

.$199{Mlonth 3:6#MS'rtth Leaset.,.: ,.,
$1,3~$ Due at Leilse Sigrung
(Tax,'1:ide, license and registration are extra.)
. ''

By JIM FREEMAN
Slnllnel " - -...
,.,.,.
The Meigs Local Board of Education, meeting
in regular session Tuesday night at Meip High
School, took a big step toward seeking the con·
struction of three new school buildinp: a middle
school and two elementary schools.
The board voted unanimouslr to request per·
mission of the Ohio School Facihties Commission
to participlle in the State Oassroom Assistance
Program, a~ which hu helped conslnK:I a
new K-8 elementary school in Eastern. Local and
is helping fund conatruction of a new . K-8 in
Southern L9cal.
,
Current)y the state is proposing to pay
$25,421,604, matched by ·a local share of
$5,701,000, approximltcly 3 mills, for a total of
.$31,122,604 for the building project.
Included in .the molion wu a request to place a

.

See Your Local Chevrolet Dealer Today!

By JOHN MoCARTHY
AnaciMid " - WiiiiW

CX&gt;Lt.JMBUS (AP) - The state's chief regula-

. MIDDLEPORT - Women 's minIstry meeting Saturday, I p.m. at the
ASh Street Freewill Baptist Church.
-'II women from all churches are
invited to attend and participate,

.I '

•

when the Sena&amp;e'voled to accept House changes to
·a lons--taht bill to bring Wliipcdlion to Ohio's
electric power indultry.
The Public UtiHties Commission of Ohio will
have to hire llleaal elalit new staffers to handle the
~ ol documents utility companies expect
to ftle in their pJ111110 make transition from a rea·
ullled market to a competitive one.
Then, before the end or next year, the livemember CXIIIIIIIiaalon will have to decide how
much in reauJator-approvcd lnVCIImentl each utility can cllim from cuatomen.
"It would be Uldul to have a worklhop,"
PUCX&gt; Chlirman Alan Schriber said after the 29-3
. Senate vote qn Tueaday.
.
Oov. Bob fift made Schriber the point man in
the dlln•IOill between tile utilities ·and their

. '•

.'
'

'Cull 8ICk oft'lra IIYIIIIble only to l'llldenta of FL, GA, NC, SC and Sellct counties of AL, IL, IN, KY, MS. OH, TN, VA and WV. For more details
-.r~~a~~ dllvll y from partlclpdJlll dealer lltoc:k by G/30/99. Not IMiilable wtth special GMAC finance or IIIM4! oflert.
.

'

cd 10860-cHEv. 'ibu
.

,

'

·

at .
mu

lM d.ir.9l.tit

t8-10 ~lll .bMicl on 111118 Chellrolel 8·10 2WD and MSRP of $14,273; 36 monthly paymlllll total $5,888. Malibu paymlllll buecton
~IIIli and MSRP
of •17,4116, M111011111ly fM¥11111111 total $7,8M. Option to purc:halellt lease end br 111 amount to be determined at J. . . llgnlniJ. GMAC must lpRrDVe ~Mae. Ayallabl
1y to
re tldct Ill of FL. GA, NC, SC IIlii Mlec:t oountlee of Al, IL, IN, KY, MS, OH, TN, VA and WV. For more dlllalls Ct1111·800·G50-CHE'I. 'fbu mutt tllklll..1all deHVwy frOm ~on II
dlllll IIDdc 11r 7/1.1 " tDr MtlllbU and 7131/G8 br 5·10. MIINge
of UO per mile- H,OOO mil... Leuea paya tlr malntiiiiiiCe, rlpllr and ~~eceu wear If~ ng
lwi ....... ..ty 1111 11 II liable tDr till unpaid monthly paymllntl. Payments may be higher In aome states. Not available with customer cuh offers.
· eue

cha•

C1111M1 QM Corp. Buc:tcll up, Amerlcallll'

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bond issue before district voters on Nov. 2.
and retract the bleachers. During earlier discus-.
·
f
· the work was.p1anned to coma
• ·de WI'th re fi n·
The board also met With representatives o two ston,
building design firms: SSOE of Toledo and ishing of the gym floor.
·
Columbus, and Schorr &amp; Assoc. of Dublin. lWo
In personnel matters, the board hired Joe
weeks ago, the board met with representatives of Gilkey as a bus mechanic and hired Dale Harrison
Marr-Knapp-Crawfis Associates Inc. of New as reserve volleyball coach for 1999 season. The
Philadelphia and McDonald, Cassell &amp; Bassett . board also accepted the resignation of .qary L.
Inc.
King u a substitute employee and the resigaation
The board scheduled a special meeting for of Michael Childs as a teacher at. Meip High
Monday, 7 p.m. at the district's central office in School. In addition, Patsy A. Thoma was hired as
Pomeroy to rank the design firms for further con- a substitute secretary.
sideration.
In other business, the board approved final
The bleachers in the Meip High School gym· revised appropriationa of $18,897,907.84 for the .
nasium will receive an extensive facelift under a 1998·99 school year and temporary appropriatiOns
$94,300 renovation project approved by the board. or$ 19,002,803.23 for the 1999-2000 school year.
MARS Inc. of Corinth, N.Y. was contracted to
Present were Superiritend~nt Bill Buclcley,
conduct the· word during September and October. Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus, board President John
The existing bleachers will be refinished and mod· Hood, board members Scott Walton, Roaer
emized, and an electric motor installed to extend Abbon, Randy Humphreys and Wayne Davis.
munity through its fiOO!I hazard mitigation pro·
gram. Mayor JoAnn Eads said thll she hopes the
village can complete most of the work on the project befof1! the celebration, including the comple·
lion of work at the Harder cabin, which h~ been
moved to a site next to the Civic Center. ·
The theme for the bicentennial celebrati011 is
"Old Stories and New Bcginninp." Events for
the ~:~~lebration will include Myrides, pie baking
and cake de()orating contests, a flower show, an
herb show, a 'craft sale, ind entertainment, all
events which are usually planned for the town's
homecoming celebration.
Special ev~nts for the bicentennial are also
being planned. A parade will be held at 11 a.m.,
followed by a religious service at the Civic Ccn-

ter.
A farmers ' market will be set up at the Civic
Center, and anyone who expects to have excess
produce, and those who sell goods at other farmcrs' markets, ue asked to anend the Rutland
event. There will be no charge for the farmers'
market or the craft sale, in an effort to encourage
partir:ipation.
. .
Councilman Jay Dewhurst will coordinate L
classic car show, and Maureen Bums of the Rutland Department Store will oversee special window decorations and other improvements to the
business district for the celebration .
The committee also plans to coordinate a speContinued In .• Rutlend '*-nf'Mnlllr on
page 3

PUCO focus moves to regulatory agency
tor thouaht of the workload he had just taken on

POMEROY - Gospel concert,
"t'Jather by the River" with the EanhCll 'Vessels Saturday, 7·9 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Parking Lot. The concert is
'!(IOnsored by the Pomeroy United ·
Met~odisr Church. In the event of
iuin, '!he co~ will be held at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church;
Second Street
·

The state also released the resulls of the sixth·
grade proficiency tests last week. Those tesll
w~re less encouraging, with 33 percent of an estimated 126,87S students meeting the proficient
standard in all five resting ueas.
Compared to lut year 's sixth-grade class, sisnificantly higher pen:eittages of 1999 students
met proficienlle~els in mathematics and citizen·
ship, and higher percentage&amp; of sixth graders in
1999 scored at the advanced level in mathematics.
There was a decrease in the percentage of sixth
graders who met proficient score standards in
writing and science.
80 percent of sixth ft..,._rs, compared to 89
...-the writing jlortion,
percent last year, passed
while reading scores remained the same al 53 percenl Math results were up five points from 47 to
52 percenr. citizenship up six points from 66 to
72, and science results down from SO percent to
47 percenl
,
Local sixth-grade scores were as follows:
EASTERN LOCAL- writing, 79 percent; reoo·
ing, 48 percent; math, 61 percent; citizenship, 52
percent; MEIGS LOCAL- writing, 78 percent;
reading, 44 percent; malh,'37 percent; citizenship,
76 percent; science, 40 percent; SOUTHERN
LOCAL- writing, 73 percent; reading, 31 per·
cent; math, 21 percent; citizenship, 4S percent;
science, 34 percent.
.

Rutland Bicentennial plans reaching final stages
By BRIAN J; REED
Sentinel " - Staff .
PI- ue now being finalized for Rutland's
2llllth birthday. A committee of Village Council
members, businea owners and members of community organizations held a meeting on Tuesday
evening to continue planning for the event.
'I'be bicentennial celebration will be held on
August 28 during the community's annual homecomins event, with activities centering around the
Rutland Qvic Center. Other activities lllld points
of interest will take visiton throughout the community. ·
In addition to being a birthday celebration, the
event will aive Rutland residents and visitors a
chance to 1ee the many improvements to the com·

It's a great time to buy or lease the Chevy ofyour dr~ams!

SATURDAY
• SNOWVILLE - Snowville Unit·
ed• Methodist Church homecoming
Saturday, II a. m. There will be a pic·
ni&lt;: luncheon.

vention sessions, which will begin in ' Meigs
Co'unty next week. but distri~ts are required to
offer the.m.
More than 51,000 fourth graders across the
state are involved in district intervention pro·
grams to better prepare them for the fifth grade.
Statewide results of other portiona of the
'fourth·grade test also reflected general improve·
ments. Those test results show thai,· comparcid to
1998's founh-&amp;rooe ·class, a significantly higher
percentage of students met the proficient standard
in each of the five test areas.
65 percent passed the writing portion, · com·
pared to .S9 percent last year, S1 percent passed
the mathematics section, compared to 42 percent
last year, 71 percent passed the citizenship por·
Cion, compared to 57 percent last year, and 53 per·
cent passed the science portion, an improvement
of 4 percentaac points from last year.
Fourth grade proficiency test results in Meip
County, by school district, were reponed as fol tows:. EASTERN LOCAL: writing, 79 percent;
relding; S1 percent; math, 4S percent; citizenship,
63 percent; .and science, 44 percent; MEIGS
LOCAL: writing, 60 percent; reading, 51 percent;
·math, 31 'percent; citizenship, 6S percent; science,
44 percent; SOUTHERN LOCAL: writing, 43
percent; reading, 40 percent; math, 31 percent;
~itizenahip, 42 percent; and science, 25 percent.

r--:::.-eSe_n_ti-.n-e"""l ~':mp&amp;nydeniesitviolatedany Meigs Local Board votes to participate in building program

•

: " TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
l'lains Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
!1053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Name drawing will be held.

.,,

Good Afternoon
._
Sldlotll • 1.... .• -..-

, CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM special meeting Tuesday,
7 p.m. with work in the EA Degree.

Concerning the sale of approximately 1,000junk cars
confiscated near Rutland, Lentes described the sale as an
emergency meuure, saying that even prior to the drug
case, the Ohio. Environmental ProteCtion Agency and
residents of the Rutland area had contacted his office
concerning the junk can.
·
"The EPA and (Meigs County Health Department)
wanted the cars disposed of; we wanled to. get rid of
them," he said.
. ·
Lentes said he was considering paying to have the
cars towed off and destroyed, but found they could be
sold for $4S each to a car crusher, Randall Hall of Marietta. "We could not afford to auctioll them off one-by·
one," he said. The sale yiell;led $4S,OOO, he said.
He acknowledged two of the can were sold separate·
ly to a Pomeroy resident, but said that wu an private
agreement betw~n the resident and the car crusher after
the vehicles were out of county ·control. "After he (the
.car .crusher) bought the cars, he could do whatever he
wanted with them," Lentes said.
·
Lentes also sold a herd of cows included in the forfeiture agreement to a Danville area resident for the
lump sum of $10,000. "We're in the business of law
enforcement, not .in the business of talcing care of ani·
.
Continued In "Priddy~ on pege 3

School offici;~ls examine fourth, sixth grade proficiency results

Park.

' POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board .of Education regular meeting
. Tuesday, 6:30p.m. in the Meigs High
School Library.
·

Smglc Copy- 35 Cents

By JIM FREEMAN
your family should noc benefit from
his wif~ to keep her residence."
Sentinel N - Staff
criminal wrong-iloing."
"We could have tried to take .it, but
Although the ~nt drug-related forfellure of i tems
Lcntes explained ·there ue two types
didn 't," he said, adding that hoo the mat· ·
from Fred M. .Priddy, 47, of Rutland, represents an of forfeitures: criminal and civil._
ter resulted in a criminal forfeiture, "We
unusually large haul for local law enforcement, there Is
A criminal forfeiture Is done throueJ!
could have gotten less, but then again we
nothing unusual about the forfeiture procedure illelf, the courts with the state having to prove
could have gotten more." He remarked
according to Meigs County Prosecutor John R. Lentes. that confiscaled items are linked to drugthat the county' ~as several signed doc:uPriddy was artested in April following an investiga- related activity, Lentes said.
menta from Priddy yielding the items for
lion by local law enforcement age,ncies and subsequentHowever, a· civil forfeitUre, such u
. forfeiture.
ly pleooed guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana. that being ilsed in the Priddy CIK, is genThe forfeiture had nothing to do .with
He was sentenced to eight years in prison and may face erally an agreement between the state
his sentence, Lente&amp; said.
an additional two-year federal charge, Lcntes said.
and defendant that is not filed in the
"The sheriff's and my .initial concern
As part of the plea agreement, Priddy forfeited courts, he expllined. A civil forfeiture is
is that we've got a bad guy who thought
numerous items including real estate and two houJ!CS, quicker and carries no burden of proof,
he was above the Jaw and sent hi!" away
more than 7S vehicles and almost a thousand junked Lentes said. However, the money raised
for 10 years," Lentes said.
vehicles, over 160 guns and numerous other items through.a civil forfeiture· must still be reported to audi·
In particular, questions have sorfaced concerning the
including bulldozers, farm tractors, knives, motorcycles, tors and apptopriated before it can be spent.
sale of some forfeited items including junk cars and a
furniture an4jewelry.
"Priddy knew the procedure, knew a forfeiture would herd of cows, and the use of items, particdlarly vehicles,
Meanwhile, the topic P,f Priddy's arrest lllld forfeiture be fonhcoming," Lcntes said, ,remarking ' Priddy had by law enforcement officers.
has been the subject of constant street comer speculation been subject to a similar forfeiture during an earlier fed·
Lentes said he realizes that people are asking quesand discussion over the handling of.the matter.
. eral case.
lions about the forfeiture. "People should ask questions
"lf someone commits a criminal drua offense, any
One problem was that the homes, vehicles, guns and to see that thinp ue on the up and up," he said.
· assets acquired through drug-related ~ivity or its pro- other items were not in his name, making the subject of l "I want to explain that this is not an unusual thing.
ceeds can be forfeited to law enforcement," said Lentes. a.forfeit,ure difficult, Lentes explained.
This hu been overseen by the Ohio Attorney General's
"The thoory behind forfeitures is to take money from
"We went to the table with him to reaolve this," Office every step of the way. They have been involved
criminals and use it to fight other criminals. Also, you or Lentes said. "In exchange for his agreement, we allowed in it and they do this sort of thing every day," he said.

1• 1 J~t L

·''''

Hometown Newspaper

'

D~spite siz~

••

-Page4

•

Volume 50. Number 13

''

belt Arlzona,
88118 has five-hit

-.......... ..- .........
J

'

-··-·-

·•to • ;..... .... ~ .•

.,

..
•

'

biaaat customers that led to the puaage of land·
mark bill, which industrial users had pushed for
·most of this decade.
.
fift said he would sign the bill, which leava
the PUCO in charae of implementing most of the
changes the bill makes.
:'The Public Utilities Commission h~ the
expertise to undentand what are velj complicated
i•ucs," Taft said.
The Senate f.aed its version or the bill on May
19, but the legislation on the floor Tuesday w• far
,different than whll went~ to the House.
In private Ialka guided by Schriber and Speaker
JoAnn DaYifllon, R-Reynoldaburg. and, repraen·
tativa of the utilities and indllllrial usen compromised oil several lingering iss~ Consurnen'
Counsel Robert 1bngren IIOOd In for residential
CUIItotners in the Ialka.
·
The ·Houae added provisions allowing residential customers to buy electricity in municipal
aroupe, make it easier for utilities to collect the cost

•
I

'

of lost investments from consumers, and require
the utilities to ICparale their marketing divisions
from their tnnamiasion and distribution units. Both
thole functions will remain regulated monopilies.
Sen. Bruce Johnson, whO also satin on the talks
thll produced the compromise, WJed his colleagues to concur with the House changes, even
tboilgh he didn't ape with everything thll cham·
ber did. The Senile had VOied along straight JIIII'!Y
linea, with Rq!ublicalll prevailing, after the privMe
Ialka broke down in May.
·
"Uke it waa in the Senate, It Wll I very diffi.
cult aeries of nepati0111," said Johnson, R·
Columbus. "I would have to say thla bill may be
the best consumer packPte in tile country."
Sen. Robert Hlllll or Younptown, who with
fellOW Democrata Rhine McUn of Dayton and
Grea DiDonato of New Philadelpltia voted qailllt
the bill, disagreed with Johnaon 'I UICIIment.
Haaan said the bill aave utitilia and the bi&amp; users
all the breaita.

--

•

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•

l

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