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                  <text>Thu

Wednesday, June 24, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 1~ • The Dally Sentinel

Weather

Olivia de Havill·and and thS\ 'French Patient'
year in an interview with The Asso- the corner.
By DOUGLAS J. ROWE
ciated Press in Paris, where she's
"When I made the lunch, it was
Allocia!M Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Olivia de lived since the '50s, she recounted not always on time. I would be lookHavilland's recent real-life perfor- his long, painful years of treatment. ing at a recipe, studying a recipe and
And now de Havilland - ·who's trying to make a dish he would like
mance could almost make Miss
Mela~ie look like a meanie. And we also endured a longtime feud with very much," she says,,self·effa~ing­
all know how gentle, sweet and giv- sister Joan Fontaine - has another ly.
Why all this for an EX-husband'
ing her "Gone With The Wind" "family situation," as she puts it.
She says Galante was diagnosed ·
" Because he is the father of my
character is.
She's taken in her seriou,:y ill ex- in February- with what, specifical- daughter and I'm grateful to him for
husband, 'Pierre Galante, and she ly, she won't say - and his (loctor having giv~n her to me," de Haviland their daughter, Oisele, have though! that it would be best for him land says.
not to return to his bachelor apart- ·
been helping to care for him.
Spoken like the Melanie Wilkes
who unwincingly cared for the C0nDe Havilland imparted. this per- ment _
So de Havilland and her daughter federate Army 's wounded and never
sonal detail during a recent interview to explain the unfinished state decided that he should live with her. fretted about Scarlett O'Hara's
She rearranged hef household, designs on her husband.
of her long-in-the-works autobiograAnd as if to let you know she's
giving the master bedroom to him
phy.
"A lot of real-life events, illness- and putting herself in an adjoining not angling for any medals, de Haves in my ·family, have impeded its bedroom - "just 12 paces from illand points out that no~ she's "sort
progress, but it will be finished one Him, so that at night he would -know of a bystander, a presence, the landlady" for the man she calls " my
day," said the two-time Academy someone was there."
Award-winning actress, who turns
At first, she and her daughter did patient, The French Patient. "
In her first visit stateside in a
virtually everything, including all
82 July I.
De Havilland los( her son, Ben- the cooking. After a few weeks. they decade, de Havilland isn't here to
jamin, to cancer six years ago wh~n d~cidcd they could usc some help. talk about" family matters. She's realhe was 42 - he had fought So now, for example. someone ly here to tout another theatrical rcHodgkin's disease since age 19. Last fetches a hot lunch at a cafe around release of "Gone With The Wind, "

which remains arguably the most
popular J110vie of all time. (Among
those arguments: its innation-adjusted domestic box-office gross totals
some $907 million, putting it StOO:
million abead of "Star Wars.")
The 1939 film, which won eigl•t
Academy Awards, had major rereleases in 1947, 1954, 1961, 1'.167
and 1989. This time New Line Clllema - which is sending more than
200 prints nationwide- is ,touting
technological . i!11Jlrovements:
revivtd color and remastered sound.
In addition, 12 minutes of the film's
negati ve have been digitally restored
to eliminate scratches, smudges and
other imperfections.
Audiovisual improvements aside, ·
de Havilland says the enduring
appeal of "Gone With The Wind"
stems from "the human element set against a compelling canvas.
'.'This 'huge panoramic· background," she explains, "that is The
War Between the States, and the terrihle devastation that meant."
And since all countries have

I

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7 p.m. with
work in master mason degree.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Annual meeting. Carleton College Board of Trustees,
7 p.m. Thursday, home of Robert Wingett, president. All members urged
to attend.
POMEROY- Town and Country EXPO meting, Thursday. 7:30p.m.
Meigs County Fairgrounds grange building. COmmiuee members and others interested encouraged to aucnd:
· POMEROY - Sharing and Caring Suppon Group, Senior Citizens
Center. Thursday, I to 2:30p.m. Bonnie McFarland to talk on Holzer Wellness Program.
·
POMEROY- AA/AI-Anon meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Catholir Church, Mulberry Avenue.
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW Post9053, Tuppers Plains, Thursday, 7:30
p.m.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Garden Club potluck supper ThurSday,
6:30 p.m. at the home of Nola Young.
·
RACINE - Racine Chapter 602, Auxiliary, Thursday. 6 p.m. at the
post home. Covered dish dinner: Meats and bevcr6ges furnished .
POMEROY - Board of Trustees of the Meigs County District Public
Library, regular session, I p.m. Thursday, Pomeroy Library.
SA~URDAY

.
CHESTER - Benelit for Shaun Long, Tuppers Plains. a"identally
sh!Jl this spring. Live music, food, an auction. Account established at
Fanners Bank with proceeds to go toward paying medical cxpen~cs.
POMEROY- Eastern OAPSE picnic. Royal Oak Park. Saturday. 4 to
6 p.m.

•

SUNDAY
REEDSVILLE - Whaley reunion, noon Sunday, Forked Run State
Park. Take lawn chairs and two covered dishes.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Open gym, Meigs ..Middle School, Middleport,
Monday. 9 to II a.m. for girls entering 7tli or 8th grades. Meigs Local
School District. Info on shoot-a-thon to be distributed.

Today: Sunny
Tomorrow: Sunny

High: 90s; Low: 70s

•

•

1616 EutemAve.
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer
'

•

I

Single Copy· 35

C~~~~

...

&lt;

,&amp;,"

'

First pe-r missive auto
tax hearing set tonigh~·
Ol.ivia de Havilland

Tile first of two public hearings on
a proposed p.ermissive auto registra- .
lion tax will be held at the Meigs
County Courthouse tonight.
The hearings are a requirement
before the $5 tax is placed on the cost

:

'

Notleef·PohUc Nodee!···

.

appl1!111US.

YOUNG DOG DEVOTEEA8ron Fife of Mldct...
port, a yooth member of lhe·Shllde Rlvw Coonhun..... ABBOCI•
tlon, was accompanying his grandfather, Bill Wootan of NeW
Haven, VI., who was busy Wednesday pr~p~rtng the Ploa Days
event at the Rock Spring• Fairgrounds. A8ron Is shown above
with 1 Plott hound puppy owned by Steve Fllkl«a' Beer Pen
Plotts of .K1111111ZOO, Mich.
.
-

w.

Meigs again plays
host to Plott Hound
Days observation ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of the National Plott
Hound Association. represeming
many states. have moved · into the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds for the
. 45th annual Plott Days.
The annual NPHA event will continue through Saturday, hosted again
by the Shade RiverCoonhunter Association. The public is welcome to
attend the events.
·
Wednesday, organizers were busy
a.'isisting people moving into the
fairgrounds' camping area Qr directing NPHA to hotels iri .the area (local
hotels were .already filled). ·
· Today's activities are limited to
Plott hounds and their human alicionados, incl~ding an all-Pion United Kennel Club bench show and a
nile raccoon hunt. (No raccoons are
killed during the events:)
Plott hounds are one of six UKC
recognized coonhound• and the only
breed that does not trace its ancestry
to the foxhound. The ancestors dr

l Sections - 12 Pages
Vol. 4!1, No. 411

.
.'

The Meigs County Commission·
ers voted earlier this month to hold
the public hearings on ~he laX, but
have not indicated, as a body, ifthey .
will approve the fee. The deadline for
(Continued on Pege 3)

·Meigs County fire departments
have been awarded a total of $20,476
in volunteer ·fire deplirtment gt'anL~.
Local fire departments awarded
grant,. include: Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department, $6,880; Rutland
VFD, SIQ,OOO; and Scipio Township
VFD, $3,596. .
The money from the grants will go
towards the pun:ha5e of communication equipment and protective gear.
A computerized ranking system i'
used to dctennine which departments will receive grants, according
to State Seri. Michael C. Shoemaker,
D-Boumeville, who announced the
grants this morning.
Many factors are _considered
including the department's budget,
total resident population, geographic
size, the number of fire runs, and
compliance with state mandates.
Special consideration is given to
departments requesting funding in .
order to meet state requilements (or
protei:tive clothing and brealliing

Today's Sentinel

•.

of registering a motor vehicle. ·
The countywide tax is being proposed by the Meigs County Highway
Department to provide local matching funds for Issue II, FEMA and other pubI ic grant programs.

Local VFDs
win funding
from state ··

Good Afternoon

GallipoiU

(614) 446-3672 .
CaU ToU Free l-800-521-0084

PuhUc Nodee! Nlic Nodce! NDe Nod~!

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

••

•

Meigs County's

Public Notice! Public Notice! Public Notice! Puhlie Notice! hlt6e Notice! Puhlie Notice!
n ues ay, une ,
, a evere Ha1 torm· itGa i~ is,
Ohio- Over 100 New &amp; Used Cars &amp; Trucks ·were affected!
These vehicles will be sold without repairs- We will pass the ,
cost of damage plus any F~ctory Incentives to you!
New &amp; Used Vehicle Damage Liquidation SQie· Now At•••
Gene Johnson Chevrolet-Oids
I
..
''Your Hometown Dealer"
•

PageS

a1

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

.

Reds
lose
again,
this
time to Chisox

•

By NICK FIERRO
treat,
Bridgewater (N.J.) C!)urlerIt 's like wa.tching an expert do
News
martial ans. What those women do
Shoney 's claims to offer one. with a spatula is incredible.
Years ago, Roy Rogers Family
My hrnthcr's favorite sandwich is
Restaurants tried to sell something the Pagano's Triple Checsestcak .
. similar to it. Chef America Inc.'s Hoagie with fried onions and rnushHot Pockets have a knockoff of it as rooms. In English. this is a rolla navor! Lots of sandwich shops bursting amount of chopped steak
througho~t the nation try to pass
with American cheese, provolone
something off as one.
cheese. C~ccz Whi1., fri_cd onions.
It's often. imitated but never lettuce , tomato and fned · mushduplicated. It's the real Philly rooms. He likes his with hot ~aucc,
checsesteak. And · unless .you arc a pizza sauce and red pepper seeds.
SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED - The Racine Area Communi· transplanted Philadelphian and can You can get this monster for about ·
ty Organization prasentad four $500 scholarships to Southern High make one yourself, you have to go to live bucks, but you may regret it if
School seniors at its May meeting. Kithryn Hart, RACO president, Philadelphia to get a real one.
you cal the .whole thing.
is shown presenting scholarships to Matt Dill, Nicole Hill and CrysIf you can't bear-the thought of
,Not so fast, though: You can't go
tal Coleman. Also rec.elvlng s scholarship was Nikki Robinson who to just any steak shop in Philly, you: not being able to sit down and cat on
was uQsble to attend the meeting.
have to go to a good one.
the premises, you can get a really
Oprah Winfrey did a show lhat, good steak at Tony Luke's.
•
featured a war between Pat's Origi- Tony Luke's has a wide selection of
nal Steaks and Geno's Stea.ks (two ;andwiches and like P&lt;~gano's, peoof-(he most well-known steak shops pie line up to buy the sandwiches.
Wedding ceremony planned
.
in South Philadelphia).
My personal favorite at Tony Luke's
Bob Wood am;l Sue Laudennilt exchanged wedding v:.ws in a ceremony on
Zagat's apologetically calls is its Pizza Steak with sharp proJune II at Daytona Beach. Fla.
.
.
Dalcssandro's of the . Roxborough vnl.one cheese and fried onions. · A
They will -repeat their vows at an open church wedding for family and section of Philadelphia the best.
killer. I just wish they were a bit "bigfriends on Saturday at the Chester Baptist Church. MusiC will begin at4 p.m.
Every daily, weekly or ·every-so- ger. Bull came up with a snl~tion --.,.
and the ceremony will take place at 4:30 porn .
often newspaper in the City uf I huy two! And you can sit down (or
A reception will follow at the bri.Je's h_ome in Racine.
Brotherly Love has had a best stand up) right there and cal.
chccsesteak contest.
To suin it up, as long as you stay
Williams named to HC dean's list
.
The ·very best of the best is Bill away from imitations you can't gu
Pagano's Steaks and Hoagies in the wrong. Remember a few hasic facts:
Teresa Wi;liams, Pomeroy, was named to the Hoc\rng College dean's list West Oak Lane section of Philly.
- It's a cheesestcak, nut a stcnk
for the spring quarter. Her name was pmitted hy the college on a list' recent- The steaks there have had people and .cheese. I mean, du you call' it a
ly submitted to area newspapers .
lining up oul~ide of the store on Fri- burger and cheese"!
day and Saturday nights for more
A steak sandwich is not a T-hune
Seinfeld mobbed by fans at Mercedes dealership . tnan 25 years. This is truly the taste un a kaiser roiL It's nut even
· worth traveling 71) miles to gel.
chopped steak on a kaiser rnll.
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry Scin- bulfet lunch.
In fact . the story is that the
If you go into any sandwich shop
lcld's trip to a Mercedes dealership
The midtown ~anhattan finn employees get -a bonus if the place outside of Philadelphia tlmt ha.' ·u
took a ium for tbc surreal when people Shearman &amp; Sterling was h&lt;~ding a sells out uf meat hy closing time. I ~hinglc saying something like " Rc•tl
who had gathered across the street to mock merger and acquisitions program can tell you that this happens mnrc ·Philly-style Cheese Steaks."' cuveal
gawk at a roomful of food-poisoned lor its summer a.'isociates at tbc hotel. than mos.l people would believe.
emptor. I went to a place like that in _
lawyers mobbed the car-collecting Alter the private lunch, some people
Just what makes Pagano's Steaks Antioch, Tenn., and I got what I paid · .
comedian.
complained of naus.:a, tightness in their so good'/ Sty"le. pure and simple. for -· ouch!
Scinfcld went to the Park Avenue throats and flushed •kin, said Fire
·There is nothing like watching a
- Beware of large franchise :
dealership "Tuesday to pick up a new Department spokeswoman Amanda
couple of ladies pour a mountain, places that will' give you something :
Mercedes E-60.
Schmidt.
yes a mountain, of prime steak on a on a hot dog roll. &lt;:::hecse steaks arc .
He soon found himself the object of
Extm police officers were sent to long hot grill, pouring in lots of oil ··special-order items, not las! food . ·;
unwanted attention from tbc crowd keep order as a crowd watched Scin(these things arc not lowfat. folks)
Anyway, go to Philly and shop ;
milling across the street in front of the fcld from outside tbc showroom.
and if you choose, mixing in fried · around: Find the place you like best:·
Drake-Swissotcl. where 25 lawyers The comedian. who reportedly owns
and.interns had been sickened after eat- more than 50 classic cars, acknowl- onions, peppers, mushrooms, etc. You'll never want to huy an imita':
and making it into a sinfully tasteful lion chcescstcak again.
•
ing apparently tainted tuna steak at the edged his fans with a wave.

.

Sports

· Politicians practicing politics, Page 2
McGwire belts 34th home run, Page 4
Call for blood donations, Page 8

.

High: 90s; Low: 70s

ln. searach- of the best
cheesesteaks in Philly

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

experienced war, everyone around
the world can "understand that film
right way" and how the characters
- played by Vivien Leigh, Clark
Gable and Leslie Howard ~ struggle with their need to survive and
their own personal conflicts.
"So there is an univer.al quality
about it, and that makes it eternal,"
she says. .
Even tho.ugh she won her Oscars
for 1946's "T9 Each His Own" and
for 1949's "The Heiress" and
sllirred in such other notable films as
"The Snake Pit," she will be forever remembered as Melanie. (She was ·
nominated for the supporting~tress
Oscar but lost to co-star attie
· McDaniel, who played Mam .)
· "Well! don't mind that, S e was
pretty admirable," she says, laughing. "It is, after all, the best-loved
film of the century.... Around the
world. And I'm not going to object
to being remembered for the character that I played in the best-loved
film of the century."

June 25, 1998

Calendar

8

C!a...ilieds

9-10

Comics
Editorials

Local

II
2
.3

Soorts
Wnthcr

4.5. 7
3

Lotteries
OHIO
Super Lotto: 3-6-18-33·42-45
Kkker: 9-4-8-S-7-7
Pick 3: 3-4-2; Pick 4: 4·9·7-5
W.VA.
,
Dlllly 3: ().2-8; DilDy 4: 7-2-7-4
0 111911 Ohio Valley Publl•llln&amp; Co.

~

Scllnc:e laborltory c:Uineta 111'8 going Into pi-In the duef.llborlltoly .,.. of the Mw East·
em Elemlntary School. Ben Myers end James Cline, working for Femham Equipment Co. of
WlltlrVllle, llbove, -lnatalllng the Cllb~ on Wldnlldly. At the MW school floor tile
gylllii!!IIUm floor'M1§, cfi!Uroom flxtliiM ·~"Diller finish wor1t era being complltM. 'Next~
at &amp;stiim High School, what Wlra once cleBtrooma have been reduced to shells .. both office
•~ end clsurooms ere raconflgured. Cl-rooms that once faced State Route 7 have
gutted lind will be rebuilt with mOdifications to house a media center end expanded ldmlnlstratlve lrBII. The lw!J buildings era expiCted to be open by the beginning of the new school
yeer.
·

•

totaling more tha~
$185,950 were awarded to voluntee ·
lire departments across Ohio. which
is in addition to the $72S,OOO previously allocated this year. This bring5
the total grant amount for 1998 to
$1,510,950 for 259 fire departments.
Shoemaker said. The grants are
· awanled by the Ohio Depanment of
Commen:e.
Grants

Mrs. Clinton
will lend hand
to Strickland

bien

Despite criticism back home,
Clinton arrives for China visit

XI' AN, China (AP) - Greeted
Clinton said he wa.' delighted to come at the South Gate of the Old
with a colorful ceremony evoking · begin his journey in Xi'an, and com- City began a presidential mission disChina's ancient culture, President pared it to .the American heartland puted at home, a sendotf marred by
formal diplomatic protest after ChiOinton said today he was determined where he grew up.
"We
.Americans
admire
your
ria
barred three radio reporters for
to pur5ue closer ties with Beijing
today's Plott hounds were used for
CINCINNATI (AP) - First lody despite crilicism back home. "As two accomplishments, your economy. Radio Free Asia, a U.S. government
boar hunting in Germany many yean; Hillary . Rodham Clinton will visit great nations, we have a special your hard work and . vision, your bro~a.~ter nettling to Beijing.
ago. Jonathon Plott left his native Ohio next month to help raise mon-. responsibility to lhe future of the efforts against hunger and poverty,
During the long journey to China.
Germany. came to this country iri · ey for lhe campaigns of two southern world." he said.
your work with us on peace and sta- Clinton said he will be striving lor the
1750 ·and brought a few wild boar Ohio congressional" candidates. a
Opening his nine~y trip, Clinton bility in Korea and South Asia," Clin- advancement of political and human
hounds with him,
spokeswoman for one of the candi· took his fi11t opportunity here to ton said. Yet he urged China to allow rights, an issue rankling a Congress
They are either brindle or black in dates said.
answer critics who u111ed him not to more freedom for its people, saying divided over his poli•'Y of cordial
color. with a brindle trim. Males can
Beth E&gt;avidson. a spokeswoman visit China.
"a commitment to providing all engagement and investigating his
weigh up to 75 pounds, with females fon:ongressional candidate Roxanne
'"There may be those here and human beings the opportunity to prior deals with Beijing.
being slightly smaller. They are Qualls. said Wednesday that Mrs. back in America who wonder develop their full potential is vital to
Of the growing controversy over
known f'!r their great courage and Clinton will be the featun:d guest whether closer ties and deeper friend- the strength and success of the new technology exports, Beijing's foreign ·
. stamina. and are also used for boar July 27 at a joint fund-raiser for Ms. ship between America and China are China."
ministry spokesman. T;m)l Guoqiang.
and bear·hunting.
Qualls and Ted Strickland in Cincin- good," he said. '"Clearly the answer
Clinton delighted the crowd by said today that cooper~uon on satelThe yearly event also consisL~ of nati.
is ycs. We have a powerful ability.lo opening his speech with a few words lite launches "benetits both · sides.
the NPHA annual l)usiness meeting
Ms. Qualls, 1he city's mayor is help each OCher grow. We can learn of Chinese: "Ni. hao rna?" - which Those who are in the mainstream of
and awards ceremony. set for·Satur- running ·against GOP incumbent much from each other. And as two means ·-Hello, how are you?" He bilateral rela.tions should have a cor: ..
.• ..
day at 9 a.m.
Steve Chabot in the ~ st Congres- great . nation.•. we have a special closed by saying "Thank you·· in rect VJew.
Clinton views his nine-day mis• :Some of the more pOpular events, sional District. Strickland is the responsibility to the future of the Chinese.
sion
to China, first by an American ::
hear field trials and da.~h races. will Democratic incumbent in lhe 6th Dis· world."
Air Force One touched down in
•
be held Friday ritoming. The field tri· trict.
•
Clinton and his wife. Hillary, sweltering Xi 'an; where quiet crowd' ·president since Geo'lle Bush in Feb; : :
als will be Held at a site in the coun·
"All the details have not been strolled through this ancient capital of evening onlookers lined the street~ ruary 1989, as the right way t&lt;l
try on Bunl(er Hill Road near Bar- worked out, but we do have a t:on; city escorted !Jy the mayor and his along his route to the old walled city increase America·s i mpacl on human
risonville. The da.~h races will be held firmtUion that Mrs. Clinton is com- wife, and a long line of women in yel- amid the modern one. Security was rights, nuclear weapons spread and
at the fairgf'OIInds beginning around ing." Ms. Davidson said.
low-gold ceremonial garb. Dancers stringent: Chinese authorities sta· for cooperation with Beijing to sta, ·
·
II a.m. Organizel'll stress that the
A messaae 8eeking details of the dressed as warriors perfonned an tioned water cannons in· side streets bilize shaken Asian economies.
bear. which is kept in a cage. is not visit was left at the White House elaborate welcoming ceremony that nearby.
Clinton's first stop today was
touched or injured by the hounds.
press office this momin~ . .
The extravagant ceremonial wei- China's anciellt walled capital.
dates back to the Tang Dynasty.

..

Once ·again, Congress wrestles,with elimina~ing HEAP
By CARL WEISER
Gennett News Service
· WASHINGTON - It's ~ummer.
but Congress is once qain fighting
over the pros ram that helps low- .
income Americans fight winter cold.
In a move that bas become as predictable a,, the
a House
Appropriations subcornmiuee, t:on·
trolled by Republican, this week VOl·
ed to wipe out lhe Low Income Home
Ener11y
Assistance
Program
(LIHEAP), which President Clinton
wanted to spend $1.1 billion on.
If experience is any indicatioil, the
H&lt;iuse will approve the cut -lariely •long party lines - allowing
election-boon~ Republic1ns to tout
their willingness 10 slow federal
spendina IIIICI DernQcrall 10 lhow
their t:ommitment 10 protet:tina the

sea.-

poor.

Right on cue Wednesday, Democ-

·oo called a news conference where
t

'I
Rep. Joseph Kennedy. 0-Mus., lutes of-Health.
u~ his t:olleagues visit 1n Inner"This is a question of prioritizing
city ne1jhborhood or poorrural town very limiled·funds." said Livingston
to "tell an elderly widow who. spends spokeswoman Elizabeth Morra,
her days, indoors. shiverina in an "That's the bottom line here."
overcoat ... that our government will
A proble.m for Livingston is GOP
do nothing 10 relieve tile chill."
Sen. Arlen Specter, Who c:hai"' the
But after such tfletoric the proaram Senate subeomminee that fund.~ the
likely will survive: The Senate will prognun and who hails from Pennrestore mosJ if not all of lhe $1.1 bil· sylvania. Pennsylv~nia would get
lion and the HOUIC. lackina the v~ • $73 million under Clinton'.s propos·
to override Clinton, will rettell.
al, second only 10 New York's $136
With the btJdaet squeeze tiJbten- million.
ing each year on most federal pro"lA his view, it's 'heat or eat' for
grams, .the debate renects mon: than lhe elclerly." Spectrer spokesman John
whethe~ 10 subsidize heating and, in Ullyot SlitL "This year, es in pnovi•
wann climates, air condltioninJ COlis · 0111 yan. Senllor Spec:ter is deterof ~.6 million "bouftehold&amp;. It also is mi!ICII to fullcl .lhe UHEAP proaram
a debate over priorities.
in hilsubcommiaee."
House Apptopt illiool Chaii!IWI
· Specter hll 1n lily in Sen. James
Bob Livinpton, R-U., uidlhe mon- Jeft'ords, R-Vt., ~ of the
ey- nulled 10 PlY forflealt6 gro. Labor and 81101111 Retoun:el Comint:ludina 1.2 billion boost . mittee thll countered· tbti House
in the btJdtet for the Nllional Insti· IICtion by votiiiJ 18-4 to •lhoriie

anms.

as

~-

.

$10 billion over five years for home
energy aid. Jeffords called the l'rogram "vital."
.It provides grants to states, which
then distribute the aid through utility companies or heatin~ oil (om~­
nies or directly to low-1ncome rest·
dents. .
When such help was first provid·
ed in 1973. oil )vas $55 a barrel. Now
it's $15 a barrel. fueling the Republican argument that a.'5istance is no
longer needed.
It amounts to "corporate welfare"
because the ta~ money ultimately
goes to the oil and power c001panies,
~~aid Morra. Livingston's aide. adding
that Republicans want the private
sector to voluntarily provide ene111y
assi~ance.

Program advocates warn endina
the prognun could drive poor rami·
lies into homelessf!CsS or result in
people freezing to /Ieath: Most (amit - -- .

ilies·using the progr~m earn less than

Sli,OOO. according to the Department '
of, Health and Human Services.
l.o!iina. the subsidy, said HHS
spokesman Michael Kharfen, "could
be a hazard to their health, ccl1ainly
during jleriods of extreme weather."
Cameron Taylor, who is on Jeffords' staff and is legislative director .
of the Northeast-Midwest Senate
Coalition, noted that la.•t year·S7 senators signed a le.tter supponing the
program .
"i have no reason to believe that
it won't come out with a strong fund:
ing level in the Senate," Taylor said.
Calling i~ "outrageous" that
House Republicans zeroed out the
prognun, she said that a quarter of
assisted homes have a person who is
disabled and. a third have children
under6_
I "Whll would happen to theae
pcopleT' she asked. "Would they filii
through the c~~~Cks?"
·

...... __ ...,.

_.....

_

.._ .....

.

�Thursday, June 25, 1998

.

.

,Comtnentarr
The ·D aily Sentinel
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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

~
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETI
Publlshe~

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

DIANE HILL
Controller

General Manager

·The Sentfnd w.tleonlft ,.,.,. to ttt. «1/tor from r•Rm on • brold ,.,,. of toplct.
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end Aytlm• photw numbw. S~lty • dat•lf ther•'• • ret•,.,c• to • prevlout arffcf•
"' l•ttor. Moll II&gt;: Lon.... lo 1110 EdlltH, TM S'lll/nol, 111 Court St., l'omoroy, Ohio
or. FAX lo .14-HZ-2157.

45169;

.Clinton·, GOP
view China through
.:different lenses
. ·By WALTER R. MEARS
· . AP Special Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON -President Clinton and his Republican critics in Con, ·gress sound as though they are talking about different Chinas in debating his
-policy on the eve of his summit journey ihcrc.
· . Where he sees a prospective partner, they warn of a potential rival riding
- ·an acquiescent American policy.· ·
He advocates engagement; they call his course hollow.
He claims progress; they see intransigence.
A Democratic ally. Sen. Dale Bumpers of Arkansas, said Monday there has
been phenomenal progress in China. and that it is 10 times as likely to keep
going with engagement as with attempts at punishment.
·
Sut Republican Sen. Spencer Abraham of Michigan called it "hollow
engagement" in which China's leaders figure they can do whal they choose
without risking U.S. rebuff.
"It is not a policy of give and take," said Sen. Tim Hutchinson of Arkansas.
. •·:11 is give and give."
.
The argument in the Senate is a strange sendoff for Clinton:s nine days in
China, the first presidential journey there in .nine years. One Democrat pleaded for a pause in the congressional debate on China pc)licy while he travels
there, saying that is \faditional when a president goes abroad.
Perhaps so. but not this time. Hutchinson pushed four amendments to
impose new U.S. sanctions against China to punish human ri'ghts abuses. He
said he.wasn'ttrying to embarrass Clinton and that they ought to stren~then
his hand in arguing for human rights. The House h&lt;is approved a series of punitive measures, on that score and against American technology e~ports and
. satellite launches.
. - None have cleared Congress, and Republicans are divided on the current
-.Senate amendments. so they are likely to be blocked. Congress will act later
::on Clinton's renewal of minnal trade status for China, an annual exercise,
~·annually e~tended .
.
:: A special House commillee has just been set up to investigate U.S. satellite
· cxpons for Chinese launchings, to dcte1111inc whether they led to technology
: leaks hannful to U.S. security, and whether Clinton's approval of them was
; intluenced by Democratic campaign contributions.
He says no on both counts.
.
All lold. 10 congressional committees have been looking into various
i aspects of U.S.-China policy. There !!fe more than 75 bills in Congress to deal
: wilh China. most involving sanctions. That '* more than were proposed during
: the previous three congresses combined.
_
_
To an extent. thin goes with the territory in a politically divided govern: mcnt. with a Democratic president setting lill"eign policy and a GOP Congress
: trying to inllucnce it. The administration said Clinton invited Congress 10 send·
: a bipartisan delegation to China with him. hut only Democrats accepted.
, On China policy. there arc differences within as well as between panic ~; ,
: conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats '"c allied. as usual, in oppos: ing renewal of the most-favored nation trading status the president. as usual,

Friday, June 26

By MoriGI 1Koudl.The tobecco wars are far from over in
Congress. but ~y the next big partisan light of this election year is being
reed up over patients' rights healih&lt;are

reform.
. The political dynamics are stanlingly
. similar to lhose.on iobacco: Dem&lt;y.l~S
think they· are pushing a popular cause.
They are largeting a dislrusled industry
as their bogeyman. And they c•pc&lt;.1 to
win politically whether they pass their
favorite bill cr not, •ince they can blaine
the Republicaris for killing iL
As on tobacco; Republicans ihink the
public can be perwaded --by them or the
HMO industry's ads -- to oppose the
Democrats' proposals "-' too government-intrusivc and costly, and that they
can successfully get away with passing a
''light" bill.
Some of the per.;onality dynamics are
even similar. A key player on the same
side of the issue as the Dcmocml5 and the
White HoLL'iC is a rcr.:gadc c"Oilservative
Republican, though on paticn~.&gt; ' righL•.
Rep. Olartcs Norwood (Ga.) ha• had an
even more instrumental mle than Sen.
John McCain (Ariz_) played on tobacco.
And1hc Senate's "Mr. No" on tobacco, Sen. Don Nickll'S. R-Okla., has hcCn
playing the same role on health care
reform. thotigh now he's rc\jsing his ac~
hustling lo produce a moderate proposal

. 1111S Pl..O'r
97UN~

FAMlLI~.

Berry's World
WHAT IW"'"ENEO
1"0 MY C(JfY OF
VANITY FAIR?
I

THREE

GUESSES!

instead of merely
ulalc hcalih care providers.
Nickles, head of a ~ GOP task
sharpening his
~·
However, as dirncted by House foo:e, had been purswng a SU'Iilegy
ax.
Speaker Newt Gingrich. R.Qa., the task designed simply to kiD the Democratic
Decisive
forcc _islikel)'torecommendsome "21st biD. co-sponsored by Daschle and Sen.
action
wao;
century initiatives" to expand consumer ~ Ke~y (M$5.) and Reps.
scheduled
to
choice, including tax-exempt medical Jolvi DingeD (Mich.) and Dick Gephardt
begin
almost
savings accounts, _eml'loyer insurance- (Mo} But he abruptly ~gan considersimultaneously
pun:hasing CQ'OPI2lllives and "hcallh ing aliernabves ahout the ttme ~ led the
this week with a
marts," where individuals can buy insur- Senate shoot-down of the McCain tobacDcmocralil:
ance as part of a stale-managed pool sim- co bill. ·
offensive in the
, ifar to .the Federal Employees Healih
"Having killed the tobacco bill,
Senate and a Kondracke
Benefits Plan.
.
Republicans don't want the onus oflust
Republican initiaAnd, as a politically clever add-on, killing patients' rights," said one HMO
live in the House, but the contin4ing bat- the Hasten task bee may include a set lobbyist.
tie over toboo::")has delayed the Democ- of caps on medical malpractice awanls
As in the tobacco ligh~ Democrats
rats, so the Republicans will move first.
when patients sue doctors, though they are armed with polls showing that big
A House GOP task force headed by still won't be able to sue HMOs. The . majorities of citiuns want oontrols on
Rep. Dennis Hasten 011.) is scheduled to idea is to open.up Dcmocnus to the HMOs, which even industry spokesmen
unveil "principles" for health care charge of being "tools of the trial acknowledge are about as unpopular as
reform almost c-ertainly including rights lawyer.;" when they oppose the liability tobacco comJ'Wlies.
of patients to full infonnation froni caps.
Even better for Democrats. instead of
providers, guaranteed access to obs_tetriAn actual bill embodying the Hasten endlessly repeating statistics as they did
cians and pcdiauicians, reasonable guilt"- pt'OflOSllls will be introduced allcr ~bout teen-age smoking, they can cite
antccs of servic-e in emergenc-y moms Fwnh of July recess, about the time the real-life horror stories of patients denied
and accelcraled reviews when service is Senate also is gelling around 10 debating care by ·money-hun!ll}' HMOs, patients
denied.
the issue.
who soote~mes died afterward.
The task force, being Republican,
Senate Majority Leader Trent Loll,
But HMO lobbyisL• and Republicans
almost ccnainly will reject proposals by R-Miss.,last week proposed a procedure say that. as on loba:co, this is an issue
Norwood and DcmncmL• that patients be to Minority Leader Tom Oa.o;chlc, D- whose icchnical details are not well
pe1111ittcd 10 . sue the1r HMOs and/or S.D.. for handling the debate, but undcr.;tood by the public, so un advcni.or
employers when services are denied; Daschle rcjc&lt;'lcd it as too restrictive. If no ing blitz could well convince vt~en; that
mandates ihat all insurance plans allow agn:emenl is re&lt;~Chcd, the Democratic too rcgulaiOI}' an approach would rilisc
patients to seck outside service; and tile bill will be brought up as an amendment premium ~osl5 3nd force ' :;orne small
creation of a federal bureaucracy to reg- to some other pending legislation.
employers to drop covcmgc, inc-rca.•ing
the anny of the uninsured.
There ought lo he a middle ground
here that allows P'!ticnts to sue their
hcitlth plans, "-' !he DcmocraL• 3nd Norwood propose. but cnps the atl)OUnt or
damages ihcy can get for "pain and suffering" beyond their. actual et:onomic
losses.

Major special intcrc.Ois involved in

this fight won 'tlikc such a compromise.
HMOs and I~Wge c01Jl01111ions thai illorurc
their employeco: themselves -- who c"tllluibute ma;t of their campaign money 10
Republicans- woil'tlike iL Neither will
lriallawycrs, who ovawhclmingly mnuibute to Democrats. For this rc~&gt;n.
don't expect a deal. Expc1.1 a brawl.
(Morton Kondracke is executive
alifiJr «'' Roll Cal, the newspl(lel' «''
Capliol HilL) .
.

Summer summaries: Politicians practice politics
By Ben Wattenberg
.
Now that we have reached the
longesl day (June 21) it is time for
short columns. columne.ttes. That is
not logical, but herewith several:
·

"Pork! "

Why ·~

Because politicians practice
poli1ics. A congressman from central
Pennsylvania who chairs the House
Comminec on Transportation and
Infrastructure seeks special goodies
for centml Pennsylvania. So, too, do
other members of Congress, from Los
Angeles, Biloxi. Montana. Seanlc.
Maine and all the places in between,
seck special projects for their districts.
These arc called "demonstration
grants:· or nowadays, "high-priority
projects" or '" member pr&lt;&gt;jccls," and

·

are the alleged lawyers. Thus begins the election
essence
of c,ampaign of 1998. Prepare to tunc
pork. Shame, out.
&gt;shame.
I have mixed emotions about
But· these · tobacco legislation. I used to smoke.
demonstratiOn · and stopped. Recently my . former
grants make up wife, .mother of my three older chilloss than 5 per- dren, died of a brain tumor, believed
cent of the to have been originally sited in the
$217 billion. lung, probably caused by smoking.
six-year new Not only smokers suiTcr: I have seen
hill. Some arc the pain of _the survivors. In my anger.
Wattenbetg
silly; many arc I am prclly close to SUI'fl011ing the
useful. mostly legal prohibition of tobacco.
for roads and bridges. Is it so hizni1'C
But I am also trying In ligurc out
to think that a congressman might which side..pro-cigarencs or anti-cigactually know what his own district arcucs. is the bigger liar. The "tnhacco ·
needs ot wants ·~ In any cvenl, the companies slart out way ahcud : They
'" father" of ihc Unil&lt;'&lt;l Slates Consti- systematically lied ahout and/nr suptution, James Mudison, understood pressed the lrulh about ihc severe
that lard could lubricate the·wheels of health damage caused by cigarcucs.
g&lt;Jvcmment and keep things rolling. But the anti-tobacco cause is catching
In its way, pork is the political equiv- up. Smoking-related deaths prohably
alent of Adam Smith's economic do not cost governments more
"invisible h3nd." A scrie&amp; of self- tnoncy; smokers die early, likely sav· interested local political decisions, ing money later in age-related proeven l"'rky ones, work toward the grams such as pensions. Smokers
. advantage of the public, by gelling were not tricked; when I wa• growing
Congress to pass nationally important . Ul' cigarcucs were called '"~onin
legislation.
nails" and "cancer sticks." AddicHave a pleasant lrip this summer! tion'! Yes, hul there arc mnrc cxsmokelli than smokers.
Speaking of not speaking the truth1
take the recently lilibustcrcd tobacco
I don't like the idcn of President
. hill. (Be my guest.) Democrats say Clinton going to China, hut I can sec
. that Republicans nrc murdering our why he feels thnt he should. lmJIOI'Iant
children. . Republicans say that country, a hillion pcqple, nuclear
Dcmocr~ts arcn 't interested in chilweapons etc., etc. But for nine days'/
dren. but only in more taxes, more NINE DAYS! Ha.• an American presspending for more dumb programs ident EVER spent nine consecutive
and much more money for sleazy t~ial days in a statc.yisitto a sin'gle nation?

A visit by an American president is or
high geopolitical value to the host
government.
What arc the !=hi-commies being
rewarded for'~ Surclv not fnr their
civil rights. civil liberties ami democratic ,-alucs. Surely not li&gt;r their suh·
jugarion of Tohct. China is run hy

IND.

91 °

thugs.

' I u~d to rlay \'i.\r~ily St~-:"r in ~nl­
lcgc. 3 hundn!d y~ar,: --~''· ott a r\)!oij ..

lion then called hallhad. I l,•wd it.
But I never did karn h''"' h' arrrc.-1atc soccer as a Sfk?Cialnr srnrt.
l·rcmcmhcrcd whv when ihe Gre,u
Smuns of Amcri...:a ·lust :!-I In lh\?

Great Swecthcans of lr,.n. Tite lune
American goal c'unc tuw,ml the end
of the ~amc. The announcer suucd it
was the lirst score lilr America in the
ia.•t 395 minute~ nf World Cup play.
(Ninety minutes per game.) There is
nut enough sccH'ing in soccer. Games
won hy 1-11 nr 2-1 nrc rnutipc_. A
World Cup linal ended at 0-11; a penalty goal shot&gt;t:nul determined the win,
ncr! Imagine an NBA final decided hy
a free-throw contest!
Anyway. the Great Swccthcan·s
gained a highly symbolic victory. II
· makes them happy. Feeling better,
swcethcans'! Fine. Now sUJp the terrorism!
·
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the Amtrican Enterprise Institute, is the author of "Values Matter Most" and is the host of the
weekly publk television ps:ogram
"Think 'lllnlt."

·Today in history
By The Associated Preas
; Today is Thursday. June 25. the 176ih day of 1998. There are _189 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On June 25, 1876; Lt. Col. George A. Cusicr and his Seventh Cavalry
were wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne Indians in the Battle of ihe Little
Bighorn in Montana.
On this date:
In 1788, the state of_ Virginia ratified the U.S. Constitution.
In 1868, Florida, Alabama, Louisian~. Georgia. North Carojina and South
.Carolina were readmitted to the Union.
.
.

•

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
schools on a
the access blacks students have to 'university of Missouri .:_ have been
Gannett News Service
growth spurt thai
majority-while schools, but also the transformed into w~itc-majority instiWASHINGTON - Last week at a has led enrollsurvival of some historically black tutions. In the process, hundreds of
poorly au~nded Capitol Hill press ment to increase
state institutions.
blaclt faculty and· staff members lost
conference, !he United Negro College over the la.oil five
Any strategy to safeguard the johs, and the spcc:JI role these schools
Fund announced it has won a $21 .9 year.; at twice the
access black students have to higher once played in educating block stumillion contract to help bolster South overall rate for
education must operate on two tracks. dcnL~ ended.
Africa's black colleges and universi- higher education
One is a strong defense of affinnative · · Earlier this month, the ncw hc8d of
ties.
institutions, while
oct ion ..The other is the protection and Virginia's higher education c~&gt;uncil
The initiative. underwriuen by the raising n building
enhancement of too nation's histori- was quoted in The Wa.,hington Post as ·
- U.S. Agency for lnteroDlional Devcl· fund of $280 milcally black collcgcs'iind universities, qucstioning the continued nc..'&lt;l for
opmcnt, is intended to improve the lion to improve
Wickham
of which the UNCF schools arc the thal-..tatc's two black puhlic univcn;imanagement, instruction and research their aging infracritical component.
tics. William Allen. an oulspnkcn critcapacity of the -15 higher education structure.
Two years ago, California ended ic of allirmatlvc action at while
institutions- schools that languished
As civil rights leaders struggle to affinnalivc actions programs ut ils schools, said that while Nnrll&gt;lk Sialc
under that nation's old apartheid sys- fend oiT eiiorts to end affinnation . statc.collcgcs and•,mAvcr.;itics, causing and Vhirginia , Siadtc univo~ iti\!s uru:c . (
tcm. ·
.
action in higher education, they would black enrollment at many of its most may ave serve n usc u I'UI'J&gt;nsc,
While the debate rages in I his do well 10.keep in mind the vital role prestigious campqscs to pl~mmet. In their roles nnw should be re-cxalncountry over aflinnalive action pro- the VNCF schools play:
Novembcl', voters in Washinston state incd. He quickly rclrcutctf from lhis
grams that pry open the doors of white • Academically, they arc among the will consider a similar measure ..Coun position in lhc wake nf a lnud Jllllllic
universities for minorities, the UNCF best of ihc nation's 103 historically challenges tn affirmative action pro- outcry.
has quietly gone about the work of. black colleges and universities. grams could severely cut black enroll·
In such a hostile clitimtc. the l'rienhancing the image and finances or Maybe more imponont, given the ment at many other majority-white vnte institutions that make Ul' lhc
the 39 black higher education institu· tenor of the limes, the 39 UNCF . schools in Michigan and elsewhere. .
UNCF are the last line of dcl~n"f ft\r
tions that fall under its tutelage.
schools all are private. Most of the
While a high· profile hattie over black higher education . But ti11hcr
In the eight years since Bill Gray other black schools arc state-run high- affi1111ative action rages, a l.ow-lcvel than circle the wagons, Bill Gr~y ha.&lt;
became president of ihe black collese er education institutions that can be assault on black higher education · worked hard to strengthen his !!l'IIUJl's
group, the UNCF has raised nearly adversely affected by the whims of institutions has ·taken a serious toll. base -and extend iL• reach.
$700 million- 51 percent of the $1.3 voters or the acts of legislatures.
, Since the push for integration began in
He has transfonned a once-fragile
billion the ·organization has taken in
Not so the UNCF schools.
the 1960s, four public, historically alliance of black schools into the final
since its founding in 1944.
lbey are uniquely positioned to black schools - Blucfidd Slate Col- barrier against those who w~ld deny
The fonner.fennsyl~ania con- wc:"her •the assaults on affirmative lege, West Virginia Stale College, black students access lo a quality colg~man has leJI:ii1the pnvate black acuorl- attacks thatthrealen notJJnly· Kentucky Slate College and Lincoln · lege education.

11

••

Dale L. McGraw, 78, SyrtiCuse. died Thursday, June 25, 1998 in the Arbors
of Gallipolis.
·
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Horne, Racine.

Cecil St. Marie

e!eolumbusl91"

"Beware of traveling workers wanting to do painting and other tasks, said
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
_A senior citizen in 1\tppers Plains was "ripped off" Wednesday b)l traveling painters who spray painted the roof and sides of an outbuilding 'including the window glass; Soulsby said. Reportedly, the workers were only
going to charge for the paint used and were going to place a sign in the yard
so they could get more work, he said.
They were going to paint the gable of the house as well as the winaow
frames, but when they got their check they said ltley would be back shortly, but never did return. he said.·
They went straight to the bank to cash the check,. he said.
"If the offer sounds too good to be true, then it probably is," he added.

I

W. VA. .

Theft reports filed with Meigs deputies

Unstable air-increases
: , By The' Associated Preas
Unseasonably warm and muggy weather will continue across Ohio tonight
and Friday, forecaster.; said. -.
·
·
Conditions again will be ripe for thunder.;torms like those that swept acro~s
nonhwest Ohio Thur.;day night.
Lows .tonight will be 70-75. Highs on Friday will be in the low to mid. 90s. the National Weather Service said.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta. tion was 101 degrees in 1988 while the record low was.43 in 1979. Sunset
tonight will be at 9:04p.m. and sunrise Friday at6:04 a.m.
. Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostlj&lt;'clear. Lows from the upper 60s to the lower 70s. Light
and variable wind.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs from the upper 80s to near 90.
Friday night ... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
. Lows from the upper 60s to the lower 70s.
· Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers iRd thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs near 90.
· · ·
·
.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a chance o(showers and thunder.;torms. Lows
in the mid and upper 60s ilnd highs in the upper 80s.
.: , Monday... Partly cloudy with a chance ofshowers and thunderstQI'IIIS. Lows
· in the mid 60s and highs in the mid 80s.

Deputies apprehend SEPTA fugitive
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Sheriff's Department has apprehended a local fugitive who escaped from a worksite on June 10.
According to Chief Deputy Dennis Salisbuiy; Joseph Sean White, 23,was
detained by deputies Tue.,day around 10:30 a.m;, after authorities had set up
- _surveillance at the residence they suspected he had been staying at.
He was booked into the Galli a County Jail on charges of parole violation
and escape.
.
Also charged in connection with the incident is his wife, Beverly L. White,
. 19, for obstructing justice and harboring a fugitive,
·
White, who wa.un inmate at the Southeastern Probation TreatmentAltcr- ·
natives Center at the time of his escape, allegedly walked off his job site at
the Brinager Fann in Reedsville.
- _

Recorder posts land transfers
The following land transfers were Cl!ester parcels;
recorded recenil y in lhe office of . · Deed, Middlcpon United PenteMeigs County Recorder Emmogene costal Church to Michael R. Johnston, Pomeroy~·
·
Hamilton: .
Deed, Joseph Alton.Swain, Joseph
Deed, Frances Irene Hannon .to
Michael Edward Hannon. Meigs par- A. Swain to Roben G. and Kimberly K. Roush. Sutton;
cel;
Deed, Billy Lee Sr. and Naomi
Deed. Ernest A. Wingett.
deceased. lo Charles F. and Paula J. · Sroufe to Larry Hendricks and Tina
Williams. Salem parcels;
. Chancey. Sutton parcels;
Deed, Fa1111ers Bank &amp; Savings
Peed. Jack and Mary Carroll to
Co.
to Edward T. and Patricia D.
Larry K. and Connie K. Hill. Olive;
Deed, William K. Marshall Jr. to _Baer. Pomeroy;
Deed, Alana R. and Lan:y L.
Richard W. and Gail A. Mason,
Lively to Rutland Furniture Co.,
Rutland.
•

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TRIVIA

Two tickets sh•re Super Lotto jackpot
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were two tickets sold naming all six
numbers drawn in Wednesday night's
$20 million Super Lotto drawing, the

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Juae U - Debra
Seabert, Shirley Harden, Dollie Sheppard, Bessie Supple; Virgie Stauffer,
David Morgan, Goldie Haskins,
Harold Rowe, Gary SkidmOre, Reed
Sturgeon, Gladys Bostic, Mrs.
Charles Tucker and son, Mrs~ Charles
Ebert and son. Burdell McKinney.
Guslji Mannon. Sandra Mitch.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Westfall. son. Point Pleasant, W.Va.
(f.ubllshed with permlssloo)

..
Ohio LoJtery said.
1be winning tickets were sold at
Bettor's Choicc-2-in Northfield ncar
Akron and a Dairy Mart in Carrollton. The players chose the discounted cash option and .each winner will
receive $4,671,902 before taxes.
The jackpot for Saturday night's
Super Lotto drawing falls back to $4
million.
·
There were 94 Super Lotto tickets
with five of the numbers, and each is
wonh $1,3S8. .The 5,047 tickets
showina four of the numben are each
worth $79.

GODZILLA PDn
· ONE EVENING SHOW 7:acl
STARTING FRIDAY

ROIIRT DUVALL.

D~2fe¥Rt,~

· ~-o ®~-o ~~o l3~o ~
~

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:
• OHIO G- WU MEDICAID .
• FEOE.RAL EMPL(JYEES • COMPENSATION
•BO ILE-AMAKERS
• CLAIMS PRO
• AETNA •EHPAESS SCRIPS •P.C.S.
•DI'•iiTED MINE WORKERS
.; UNITED H.EALTH CARE
~--BLACK LUNG • PAID •WU PEIR
• URlUE RH
.
eiliUERSIFIED • BLUE CROSS • AND OTHERS

. _·-·

Fifth Annual

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We're celebrating D3+ years of business
An• we owe II all 10 yeu- "lhlr c;u-ors~

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Reader Servtces

Cornt(ltlon Polley
Out mola &lt;011e0n In oil lo to be
II&lt;CIInie. u ,.. kaol' or .......... to •
•IIOI'J, coli tho ntwt.... m II (740) 99J1155. We will die&lt;k JMr lol'onillldoo
and make • -doo If Wlllnlllod,
News DeDirtmlnls

1'lle mllin DUmber b mllSJ. Dlfet1•
ment exteulou am
Ge.enl MINIIf&lt; ........................Eat. llOt
Ne.r..........................................~•• .EIL 1111
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Cluollled Ad&amp; .............................Eit. 1110

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Come Join us for Hot Dogs,
Popcorn, Lemo_n ade, Give-aways,
and Old-Fashioned ServMe

THREE REGISTERED PJIAilMACISTS

s..u,r....~..

-SWISHER• LOHSE

CY
E. MAIN . ,

992·2955

Service • Open

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Ch.rlea Riffle, R. Ph.
Ron1ld H1nnlng, R. Ph.
' Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 1.m. to 9:00 p.m.
· Sit.: a:oo 1m to i:OO
Sun. 10:00 1.m. to 4:00p.m.

Prescription• •

Fa

POMEROY, OH.

Kennath McCullough, R. Ph.

'til J

8

........

...._

._ ...

--- n-·f·.,]

Member I".D.i.C.

. ..fJl
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~rlday~. Ju~e 26th 11 am • 2 pm

26 Weclui .......,...., ..............JS3.82

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~ , Join Us At Our Pomeroy Office

toolde MelpC..IIIJ
13 Wceu........................... J27 .JO

s2 w..u .........................Jt09.72

F~rmers - Bank Presents Its

·•- ·

MAIL SUBSCIUmON

S2 Weeki •.._ •. ,....•- ........... .SI05.56
Roln O.lildo Molp C..tr
13 Weclui ...........................J29.2S
.26 Wccks ................. ....... .... $56.68

James G. Hudwn, 4S, .61462 Stale Route 124, Long Bottom, was cited
for failure to yield by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol fo~
lowing a two-car accident Wednesday at the intersection of SR 7 and Cour.;
ty _Road 3 (Leading Creek).
.
Troopers said Hudson was .~topped on Leading Creek at the intersection
·at8: 15 a.m. when he pulled onto 7 and collided with a southbo~nd car driven by Duane 0. Weber, 45, 582 Main St .. Rutla.nd .
· Weber was anempting to make a left tum onto Leading Creek at the time
of the crash, accordin2 to the repon. Both cars were sli_ghtly damaged.

Meig$ EMS units record 5 calls

A C1alittt Co. Ntwtplpft'

, ' D1ily Scnlinel, 111 Cou'rt St ,:PQmeroy, bhk!
4S769.

·

Citation Issued in one-vehicle crash

(USPS 213-HO) '
!

Patrol cites·driver following accident .

The follo:wing thefts complaints 1"ere received n:cently by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department:
Clayton Ohlinger, Carmen Road, Pomeroy, reported his 18--speed bicycle was stolen from Meigs High School Wednesday evening.
Pam Gheen, State Route 143, repdned Wednesday evening that 25 compact discs and 25 videotapes were missing froll! her trailer. ·
. ·
Richard Helton, Salem Center, reported that a hay tetter was missing froin
his property.
.
,
(Continued from Page 1)
Deron Howery; SR 143, Albany, reported that a large sum of money was
taken from his re~idence sometime in the last couple of days.
·approving the pennissive tax for this increase to $27.25 in other areas in
In addition. Sheila R~k. Success Road.. reported 1\tesday that her 1988 year is July I.
.
Meigs County.
Ford Thunderbird was scratched while parked at Eastern High School.
· Auto owners in Salisbury Town- i County Engineer Roben Eason
ship, and the villages of Pomeroy and 'has cited the competitive nature of the
Middleport, currently pay a $5 per- Issue II progmm and the need for
No injuries.were reported following a one-vehicle accident on Noble Summissive ta,x, I00 percent of which local matching funds for that program
mit Road ncar Mfddlepon Wednesday around 8:IS p.m.
goes to either the township or village. as .a reason for requesting the perJoyce Ann Romine; Racine. was westbound when she lost control of her
If the commissioners approve the
1990 Dodge Caravan after braking for a dog in the rond, according to a Meigs ,newly-proposed $5 ta~. the cost of missive tax. which must be approved
County Sheriffs Department report. The van went off the right side of the .auto registration for residents in by the commissioners before going
.into eftect. ·
,.
rond and struck and broke off a utility pole.
those areas will increase to $32.25. . The first public hearing will be
Damage to the front of the vehicle was listed !lS moderate. She was cit- ·including the deputy registrar's .fee.
held at 7 tonight in the Meigs Couned io MeiRs Countv Court on a ch~ of failure to maintain conlrol.
· and a ponion of the fee will be passed ty Common Pleas Courtroom..along to the township or village in
.which the resident paying the tax
Units of the Meigs County Emer- tion, Kenneth Brooks. Pleasant Val- lives.
gency Med,cal Service recor:d~ five Icy Htispital.
The cost of registering a car would
calls for a.'iSistance Wednesday. Units
RACINE
responding inclulled:
9:39 a.m., volunteer fire depart- .
CENTRAL DISPATCH
ment to County Road 28, automobile
3:48a.m., Lyons Den Road. Long fire, Sandra DeMoss owner, no
Mlii l'III'I'IIW modo her ..-n debut
Bottom, Genieve Lyons. St. Joseph's injuries reported;
In the 19'9 cootume drama John
Hospital;
6:S9 p.m., VFD and squad to
£&lt;111Ni:cl~t~llll911
l'&lt;~ul Jones. The film.was diremed
8:10a.m., Kerr Street, ·Pomeroy, Nease Hollow Road, motor vehicle
h' her father. John.
jJO W. MilD St. - Polll8t'OJ, 0
Phyllis English, Veterans Memorial accidcl!t, Matthew Wilson ·11nd
Phone 8112-11188
Hospital;
Howard Write5cl, VMH, Central DisViDtoD
- 888 8808
8:08 p.m .. Middlepon Fire Sta- patch ·squad assisted.
QalUpolla .;. -"8-0862

. l'he Daily Sentiii.el
Published . e~cey 1nemoon. Monday throu&amp;h
Friday, 111 Cour1 Sl., Po~neroy, Olliio, by I~
Ohio V.llcy PublishlftJ Companyl01nnctt Co.
S.::cond class poslage plld at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Me111tirr: The AaMK:itled Pleu and lhe Ohio
NeW!.ptpel Association.
Poll•uter: Send addras co~jqn$ 10 Tbc

Cecii"Sarge" "Bob" St. Marie, 89, Cadiz, died Wednesday. June 24, 1998
at his home.
He was born Sept. 9. 1908 in Petrolia. Ontario. Canada, son of the late
Robert and Sara Walker ~l. Marie. He retired from the U.S. Anny after 20
years of service, and attended the Nonh Main Street Church of Christ. .
He is survived by his wife. Tina Lee C:::assell St. Marie of Cadiz; a da~gh­
!er, Wanda Neitzel of Aurora, Ill.; n son. Larry St. Marie of St. Paul. Mmn.;
. II grandchildrell and several great·grandchildren; a stepdaughter. Nancy
Clark of Pomeroy; and one step-g~at-granddaughter.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Clarke-Kirkland Funeral Home,
Cadiz, with David Collier officiating. Burial will be in the Cadiz Union Ceme'tery. FriendS may call at the funeral home from 10-11 a.m. Saturday.

First permissive

··chance of area storms

unclectcd bosses -- in sum~ l'lh~r ~nn­
lext~.

Dale L. McGraw

Sheriff warns of traveling painters

,,,,,

e

UNCF barrier against assauH on black higher education

\

'An Olberwise routine traffic stop of a moiOrist Slllf*ted of driving under
the influenc11 .in Pomeroy lllle Thesday evening resulted in three felony
charJes. according to Pomeroy Police Chief Jeff Miller.
Gary G. Hines, 52, Middleport, was pulled over by Pomeroy Palrolman
Mark Proffitt for suspicion of driving under the influence, Miiler S;Bid. F~r­
the.- investigation revealed that Hines llad allegedly obtained Valtwn ptlls
under two different prescriptions, he added.
Hines was incarcerated in the Meigs County Jail on two charges of deception to obto.in a dangerous drug and one count of 1a111pering with evidence.
He is being held pending arraignment in county court, Miller said.

MI01.

'''

News in Brief:-

Tr,sffla, stop yields citation to ares ms~

AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions ami high

Patients' rights is next tobacco fight

Just a few years ago the topic du
jour, spread across the cover.; of magazines, featured on television and
headlined in newspapers. was this:
"Our Crumbling Infrastructure." We
were told that our bridges would collapse and that our highways were -in
ruins. City planners said traffic would
strangulate us because we weren't
adding roads. that wider roads would
decrease traffic deaths, that we needed more parking. Environmentalists
brooded about the lack of bike paths
and
mass transit . Why couldn't Amer· rcricwed .
·
ica get anything done• Gridlock!.
In the current Senate debate. live Rcpilhlican committee and subcommittee
Now ihc Congress ha.• passed, and
: chairman and five senior Democrats joined in urging the rejection of Ihe artti- the president has signed.· I he largest
: :china -umcndmcnts. They said the mci1surcs would do serious damage to the public works bill in American history.
:policies that can foster change in China toward human rights. the control of dealing with just these · issues, and
·arms proliferation and more op.:n lrudc.
And what do we hear
- Democratic Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware said Congress should have many more.
1 Mostly. just one word:
about
il'
granted Clinton n respite from action on measures involving China. even ·
"though some may he justified. '" The president"s mission is going to be made
_more dirficult as a consequence or the dcha1e that is under way,'" he said.

~Local
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OHIO Weather

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Farmer! Bank

&amp; Savings Company

· Pomeroy, OlfTuppers Plains, OH Gallipolis, OH
7401992'2.! 36 740/667-3 t61
740/446·2264

BANK

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·The Daily Sentinel

Sp.orts .

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·.

•

·ay The Auocleted P.....
Sammy Sosa and Mark MeG Wire
care about only one set of numbers final scores. Everything else is a
wa.o;te of time.
They both came up short Wednesday night.
Sosa's Chicago Cubs wasted his
record-tying homer in a 7-6. II·
inning loss at Detroit, and MeGwire's
' league-!eadlng ;l4th homer was St.
Louis' only highlight in a 14-Jioss at
Cleveland.
" It's really insignificant," MeGwire said of his first homer in 18 atbats, a 433-foot solo blast off Jaret
Wright in the fourth inning. "We got
: . ~ real beating tonight."
- · Sosa hit his 31st homer and 18th
: : in June in the first inning to match the
: · mark for one month set by Detroit's
; · ~udy Yorjc in August 1937, and
• : break the 1-:'L record of 17 by San
: : Francisco's \Willie Mays in August
:, · )96S.
~

· "A lot ofpeople have been think~ · ing about a record, but I'm not think. · ing about that," Sosa said. "I'm
: thinking about the game that we
: played, the situation we're in. We're
• . supposed to be winning, but we
: · ilon't play lhe way we're supposed to
~ : !JC playing. I just want to win some
,.~.- : ..games.n
Sosa has II homers in !2 games,
· ~d 22 in 25 games, but Chicago has
.: : lost four straight and II of 15. .
"He's been trying to carry us, but
.; : we' ve just been finding ways 10 not
.:: . let him gel us over the hump." Cubs
·:· : manager Jim Riggleman said.
Detroit tied it with two out~ in the
:·· · ninth on Bobby Higginson's l~run
: : homer off Rod Beck, and won in the
:: · lith on Gabe Alvarez's ba...s-loaded
:· : RBI single off Dave Stevens.
;
Luis Gonzalez hit a three-run
.

homer for Detroit, and Mickey
Morandini aodHeruy Rodriguez also
homered for Chicago. Doug Brpcai!
(3-0) wa.• the winner, aod Man: Pisciotla (0-2) took lhe loss.
At Cleveland, the Indians scored
seven runs in the 'first on Manny
Ramirez's graod slam aod Travis Fryman's three-om shot off . Mark
Petkovsek (5-4). Wrigllt (7-4)
allowed three runs and nine hits in 6
1-3 innings.
In other interleague games. it was
'{oronto 7. Montreal 6; Chicago
White Sox 4, Cincinnati 2; Florida 8,
Tampa Bay 4; Philailelphia II,
Boston 8; New Ydrk Mets 6, Baltimore 3; New York Yankees 10,
Atlanta 6; Pittsburgh 10, Kansas
City 3; Milwaukee 3, Minnesota I;
Texas 3, Arizona 2; Seanle 2. San
Diego I; Oakland 1, San Francisco 6;
and Los Angeles 6, Anaheim S, II
in'nings. In the lone NL game, Colorado beat Houston 8-6.
·
Yankees 10, Braves 6
At Atlanta. David Cone allowed
five hits in seven innings and Joe
Girardi had three hits and two RBis
for New York The Yankees have won
two of three games between the
teams with baseball's best records.
· Cone (10-2) had the first regularseason RBI by a Yankees pitcher in
mote than 25 years. Mariano Rivera
got his 18th save.
New York's Paul O'Neill homered
off Kevin Millwood (9-4). Javy
Lopez and Ozzie Guillen homered for
Atlanta.
Mariners 2, Padres 1
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 30th home
run and Seattle ace Randy Johnson
struck out 12 and reached base twice
at San Diego.
Griffey reached 30 homers before
the All-Star break for the third t;me,
•

joining McGwire as the only players
to accomplish the feat.
Johnson (7-6) outdueled Andy
Ashby ( 10-S). pitching a six-hitler.
San Diego's Carlos Hernandez home·
red in the ninth.
Mets 6, Orioles 3
Rick Reed pitched seven solid
innings and Mike Piazza had three
hits and a home run' for New vork in
Baltimore's first game in Shea Stadium agai~~ the Mets since losing
Game S of the 1969 World Series.
Reed (9-4) allowed nine hits,
including a two-run homer by BJ.
Surhoff, and also contributed at the
plate with a single and two sacrifices.
John Franco got his 18th save.
Blue Jays 7, Expos 6
At Montreal. Roger Clemens
pi~ked up his first victory in five
interleague starts a.• Toronto won its
fourth.straight.
Clemens (8-6) allowed five runs
. on 12 hits in seven-plus innings.
Randy Myers pitched the ninth for his
21st save.
,
Ed Sprague hit a two-J')In homer to
cap a five-run first against Shawn
Boskie ( 1-1 ). Carlos Delgado also
homered for Toronto.
Marlins 8, Devil Rays 4 ·
Derrek Lee hit a three-run homer
and drove in four runs in .Aorida's
victory over former Marlins pitcher
Tony Saunders( 1-8 ). ·
Todd Zei le added a two-run shot
for the Marlins. who won for the fifth·
time in seven game~. Brian Meadows
(6-6) went live innings for the victo- .
ry.
Paul Sorrento homered for visiting
.Tampa Bay.
Phlllles 11, Red Sox 8
At Philadelphia. Mike lieberthal
had three RBis as the Phillics tied
their season high for runs in ~inning

their fourth ~traighr game.
Carlton Loewer (2-0) gave up
eight hit• and seven runs in six-plus
inning.&lt; in his thinJ major league start.
Mark Leiter got his I Sth save.
Philadelphia cha.•ed Red Sox
starter Steve Avery (4-2) with a seven:run third. Nomar Gnrciaparra
homered for Boston.
Dodgers 6, Anpls S, 11 Innings
Trenidad Hubbard's RBI single in
the lith gave Los Angeles manager
Glenn Hoffinan his firlit victory io
three games since replacing Bill Russell.
Gary Sheffield and Raul Mondesi ~omered for the Dodgers, and
Cecil Fielder and Gary DiSan:ina
connected for the Angels.
Antonio Osuna (4-0) threw two
shutout innings for the victory. Greg
Cadaret (1-1 ) took the loss.
Brewers .3, Twins 1 .
At Minneapolis, Jeromy Burnitz
hit his 17th home run, and Milwaukee's Steve Woodard held Miimesota to one run inS 1-3 innings.
Woodard (5-S) gave up seven
hits, including Matt Lawton's homer.
Bob Wickman finished for his ninth
save. LaTroy Hawkins (4&lt;-7) iook the
loss.
Athletics 7, Giants 6
Matt Stairs: pinch-hit grand slam
in the ·eighth inning pushed visiting
Oakland past San Francisco.
Mike Mohler (~·2) pitched one
inn'ing f1&gt;r the vi,tory. and Bill Taylor worked the ninth for his 14th save.
Jim Poole ( 1-3) took the loss.
Jason Giambi also hit a home run
for Oakland. San Francisco's Barry
Bonds homered for the second
straight gaine.
Rangers 3, Diamondbacks 2
. AI Phoenax, J~an Gonzalez d~ve
m two runs to oncrease h1s maJOr
.

-

CLEVELAND (AP)- Cleveland
:; : Cavaliers general manager Wayne
·:.: Embry s~w Paul Pierce falling like a
··. : h1gh-arcmg Jumper allli tned desperately to make a trade to pick the
Kansas S\!lingman.
The Cavs couldn't pull off a deal,
ond P1erce went to the Boston Celtics
with the lOth pick in the NBA dmft
•. Wednesday nig~t. Cleveland stuck
.• . with the 48th selection, taking 6-foot-

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Aorida 8, ~ Bay 4

Philadl:lphia II , Bo11on 8

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N.Y. Meu 6. Bakimorc 3
N.Y. Yankcts 10, Allanta 6
Piusbursh 10, KMsns City 3

MilwllUkee .\.Minnesota I

Seaule 2. Son Diego I
Oakland 7, Son FronciKo 6
l...os Angeles 6. Anaheim ~- , II lnninzs

Thunday"11 Camt1
Milwaukee (Eidrtd 2-SI at Minnes01a (ROOke 8-~) . I: I~ p.m.
OakiDnd (Haynes ~-3) at Snn Fmncisco (Estes t).~l. J : 3~ p.m.

Seattle (Ctouck )-.6) nt S;~n Diego (Langston I·J ). S:OS p.m. ·
ChicaJo Cubs (\.Vood 7-31 ntllctroir fMrdler 7-~1. 7:05p.m

St. Louis (Aybar 3-3) At Cleveland (Burtxl 8-S). 7:0!! p.m.
Toronto (Williams 7-)) 111

frldoy'a Games

.

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Hounon (Schourek 4-') a1 Clevclnntl (Colon 7--'1. 7:0.5 p.m.

Baltimore (Ponaon 1·5) at Montreal (Hermnnson ~. 6). 7:05p.m.
Ros1on (MQitinez 9-2) 111 Aoridll. fFontciloc O-S). 7:05 p.m.
Thmpm BaY fJOOnson l -4) at Phillldelphia (G~n !'1.24). 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Yankee• (lrabu 6-3) nt N.Y. Mt11 U•.c:iter 9-JJ, 7:-10p.m.

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St. Louis
Pinaburah
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Chitqo Cubl (TrDchsel b--oll a1 Ka .. as City (Pichardo :\-6). 8:0.5 p.m.
St. LOuis ~Acevedo 2-1) a1 Minnesota (Morgan ..._2). 8:0!'1 p.m.
~ilwaukee (Judea 6-6) at CbiUJO White So1 I Baldwin 2-.'). 8:0.5 p.m.
uakland (~ill &gt;141• Colorado (lo"" 2-l). 9:05p.m.
Selltlc &lt;Swift. l-&lt;4) 01 Arizona (Suppnn 1-6). IO:OS p.m.
, Anaheim (Dicbon 8-4, Dl SAn Oieso (Brown 8-:t). 10:0.5 p.m.
Tuas COllver .l-5) 111 San Frandsco (Hcrshiser 6-S). IO:JS p.m.

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CleveiBnd 14. St. Louis .\
ct.i~"'-o While Su11. 4. Cindnn:ui 2

M. Tnmp:t Bay .a
PhiiUlphia II. Boston 8

~orida

Detroh 1. Chkaaq Cubs 6. II inningK
N.Y. Mcts fl. Baltimore .l
N.Y. Yonk~'t'l I 0. Allunla 6

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Milwaukc.-.: ~ - Min.:8ot" I
Coffimdn K. Hou11on 6
Ttxa~ ~ - Arizona 2
Sc:n.dc ! . San Di~·gv I
Oakl:nH.I 7. San Fnnu::ist•o 6
l.115 An~~:la:~ 6. An:1hcim ~ - II inninJI
Thuf'Jicb~'•

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H uu~I!IO t 1-:larton 0-0~

at Cult,.-:.do tSaip: 0.01..\:0.~ p.m.
Cl.ll.:l:.ntl iHuync!l ~-.\) al Stan Fn1nd5~o t Es1t:s 6-5). J::\:\ fl .m.

&amp;:-.ulc (('lou~ .\-6) IU San PicJo 4Lang51on 1·11. ~ :0:\ p.n1.

l1lklll!tl Cuh~ 4Wood 7•.\J nt I&gt;L•tmi14Moch1L-r 7- ~l - 7 : 0~ r.m
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1i•n•ntn i William5 7-.\) 01 Monmml il\!l'l:l6·6l. 7 :0.~ p.m.
.

·rump11Uay tSanlnna 1-01 a1 A(,;d:~ tHcm:~ntb.•~--U. 7:0~ p.n1 .
llnMun !Silbcrhlwcn K- ~) IK! Philndc)phia cBL'\.'Ch _q ), 7 : .\~ p:•.n.
IJnltimun·lErk(iW~ M-61 ~ N.Y. Mcu (Nmno 1·K). 7:..0 run
N.Y. YankL'\.'11 (WI-'II~ lj.2),nl Alln.nt3 tNI.'ap.lt! K-~). 7:-40p.m.
l'iU~ftlh ll..k:"''f !1-K) Ill K.uns11s {:it)' (lkklk-r ~·7). M :O~ I'·"'·
'
Cinl.'inA.lli (1\lmk&lt;J ~-6) 111i Qttd~tl While- Su~ (Parquc 1-0). M
:05 p.m.

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Anaheim 1Spovb l -0) :tll.;oS AIJCit:s IR«:)'(!S 0-.\), 10:05 p.m. '

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WIMBLEDON; England (AP)- ·
Wimbledon has lost six of the 16
men's see4s in the first three daysaod now Andre Agassi is in danger of
going out, too.
A&amp;assi, the 1992 champion and :
No. 1,3 seed, wa.• trailing two sets to
one again.~t Germany's Tommy Haas
when the second-round match was
suspended by darkness Wednesday
night.
·
The Ameocan was furious over a
C!IICialline call that helped Haas win
·: the third set.
A forehand by Haas was ruled
good, even though replays showed it
· was clearly out.
Ag115si stabbed the spot where he
saw the ball land, then approached
chair umpire Jobn Frame,
"It was nearly siK inches.( out),"
he protested. "It wa.~ out both ways.
It was wide and it was long.:•
· frame shook his heail and the call
stood, giving Haas a 6-3 lead in the
tiebreaker. Agassi saved one set
point, but succumbed on lhc neKt to
fall behind·4-6, 6-1.7-6 (7-4).
Play was then suspended, and
Agassi resumed his protest.
"In 12 years, I've never iiecn.ir
mis.~ ·that much," he said to Frame •
The Centre Coort crowd jeered the
umpire and linesmen .as they left the
court.
With the match scheduled 10
resume today. Agassi needed 10 do a
lot of work to reach the third round.
In a sign of how wide open the
men's field is, four seeds wenl out
Wednesday - No. 2 Marcelo Rios.
No. 4 Greg Rusedski, No. 8 Cedric
Pioline and No. 15 Karol Kucera. No.
1 Yevgeny Kafelnikov and No: I0
Alex Corretja were ousted eiu-lier• .
Rios proved what many people
thought: He didn't deserve to be seeded No. 2 behind PeteSnmpras. The
moody Chilean's dista."e for grass
wa.~ apparent as he lost in five set~
Spain's Francisco Clavet.
Rios griped about the ljne calls,
the tournament orgll,llizntion, and
especially the surface.
·
"Grass is not a surface to watch
tennis or to play tennis," he said.
"It's really boring."
Rios • priority was to catch the first
flight out.
"I'm trying to leave tonight, or
tor110rrow." he said. "Bull' ve gollo
go.'·

IU MER BALED
.•

We M11sf M•lre Roo• for Tlte flew MOflels
It's Tlte · To
.I Seledlon And
Are Good/

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air,' CD &amp; can .. tih, cruise, 4x4,
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.

Spain romps 6-1

•

.....
-·
.-.

.

Toron1o (Hen1Jea 8-4) a1 All:mm. (Smoltz 5-1). 7:40 p.m.

A~lllnll

'.

... ..

·

· Cincinnali {Harnisch 6-J) n1 DelroittHnrri!tr 0.2J. 7:05 p.m.

veterdn shooter later in the offseu.son,
it might signal the end of l)anny Fer·
ry's career with the Cavs. Ferry. 31.
wa.' bothered by· sore knees last season and averaged a career-low 4.2
points per game. He is due to make
$8 !IIi Ilion the next two seasons. but
there might be a way for Cleveland
to buy its way out of his complicated contract.

. ..

(Pertz 6-6). 7:05p.m.

T111rtp3 Bay (San&amp;Ana 2.0) at Aorid:l tHernandet. ~-.&amp;I. 7:05p.m.
Bos1on fSabtrtla,en 8-S) Ill Philadelphia tBcech 3-41_- 7 : 3~ p.m.
Ballimore (Erickson 8-6) at N.Y. Me-ts (Nomo '2-tl). 7:-M&gt; p.m.
N: Y-Yankees_{Wells 9-2) at Atlantll (Nt!:EI!Ic 8-SL -7:-ID.p.m. ,
~hubu1Jh (Lieber S·K) a! KaMas City fBckher ~ - 71 . R :O~ p.m.
,
Cilk:innati (Tomko S-6) al Chica,o White Sok fParqlk." -2-0). 8:0S p.m.
Texu (Vtn• Poppell). I) nt Arizona (Telcml!Co 2-1 ). 10:0!1 p.m.
Anaheim (Sparktl-01 a1l.os Angeles (lb:ycs 0-3 ~ IO:OS p.m.

league-leading total to 93.' and Rick homered for the Pirates.
Helling ( 11-3) tied teammate Aaron
Smith hit a three-run shot off
Sele for the major lea11ue victory Glendon Rusch (S-9) in the third.
lead.
.
Chris Peters (3-S) went five innings
Helling allowed five hi til and · for the victory.
struck~~ eight in 1 l-3 innings. John
National League
Weneland pitched the ninth for his Rockies 8, Astros 6
21st save. Mark Mclemore homered
Dante Bichette and Todd Helton
for the Range". Willie Blair (2-11) homered as Colorado overcame a six·
took the loss .
run deficit and two homers by Jeff
Pirates 10, Royals 3
Bagwell to beat 'visiting Houston.
At Kansas CitY.. Kevin Young had
Bagwell's three-run homer in the
three of Pittsburgh's season-high 19 first gave him 200 for his career.
· hits and Mark Smith and Jose Guillen Pedro Astacio (S-8) wa.• the· winner.
Sean Bergman (6-4) took the loss.

die of the first round. But Embry saw with something."
·
las Mavericks, who in tum traded
· Pierce, ~ 6-foot-7 guard-forward. as • C::leveland did not have a first- him to the Phoenix Suns.
an outside scoring threat to compte- round pick. having dealt it to the MilA reported trade that wouid have
ment Wesley Person and open up the waukee Bucks last September in the · sent Bob Sura to the Orlando Magic
middle for Shawn Kemp.
·
three-team trade that sent Kemp to . for a first-round pick never material"We had a desire to poi;ition our- the Ca~aliers from the Seattle Super- ·. ized. The · Cavs might have been
selves to draft Paul. Pierce," Embry . Sonics.
reluctant to give up a prover player
said. "As ' the draft unfolded we
Milwaukee took Pat Garrity, a 6- and add more youth to a team that
thought he might slip down, and we 9 forward from Notre Dame. w.ith.the will hove. four second-year players
were right. We talked to several Cavs' pick. No. 19 overall. The . among its top six players.
teams but were unable to come up Bucks later dealt Garrity to the DalIf the Cavs choo~e to acquire a

Mont~al

DO

ruling

Texas .\, Arizon&lt;~ 2

4~2~:

straight game for lhe filii time all sea- what needs to be done."
my game," Navarro said. ''I'm not
son, which was reason to celebrate.
"This is a diffiCult lime." second worrying about the pa..r. I told (catch"We were joking on the plane baseman Bret Boone said. "The er) Chad Kreuter to call whatever you
(coming home from Pittsburgh) that team's scuffling."
want to call. I want to deal, be aggresthis was our 'lhree-peat, ... Thomas
.
Thomas hit a two-run homer in the sive."
said. "It was good to hear laughter on first inning. his 13th, and Ordonez hit
His quick work paid orf in a faslthe plane."
a solo homer with two outs in the . pac~d 2 hour, 12 minute game. the
The Reds haven' t had anything to founh. Ray Durham matched his shortest nine-inning game of the sea
laugh about in a long time. They have career high with four hits.
son.
lost 19 of 22 and have been outscored
Jaime Navarro (6-9) snapped a
Scott Wincheste( (3-5) allowed
61·26 during lheir current skid.
three-game losing streak with the four runs and eight hits in four-lilus
"This is a repeal performance." win. giving up two runs on five hits innings for .the slumping Reds, who
Reds manager Jatk McKeon said. _ and three walks for·6 2-3 innings. Bill are on their longest losing streak
- - -.· "It's just about nightly. We' ve tried S1ma.• .got the last six outs for his ·since 1993.
everything. A couple hits in the third save.
The homers by Thomas ~nd
"I just ~ent out there and pitched Ordone:~rput Chica11o up 3.().
clutch is what we C?'Jid use. That's

Agassi
.upset with

.

Detroil7, Chicaao Cu bs 6. 11 innillls

MARTiN TAKES CUT • Melga' Pat Martin takes a cut agalnat
Wellston dur!ng Wedneaday avanlng'a Legion contaat. Wallaton
downed Malga 14-3. SH gama reaulta on page 7.

Frank

although he's not sure he was evq in
one.
Thomas and Magglio Ordonez
each homered Wednesday night as
the Chicago White Sox beat Cincinnati 4-2, lhe Reds.' II th straight loss.
Despite going 1-for-4. Thomas is
12-for-36 overall, raising his average
to .275.
·
"I don't know what a slump is,"
Thomas said. "I'm not hitting for a
high average, but I'm still having a
prel!y good season."
The White Sox won their third

10
t6 til
1811l

Gil

.4.21

45

-

Thomas is out of his hitting slump.

.732

.

)4
OokiMd
Seanle
J~
·llcde ' fa Gama
Toronto 7, MontrtAI 6

~land

Eut-·~
.....

. L

29

' Anaheim

sst n five minutes and you'll
be boo d on the 400 Series!

.

L
19
11
J9
41
44

w

f

.... .-

'

II forward Ryan Stack with the 48th
pick.
Stack, a raw talent who can block
shots and shoot 3-pointers well for a
big man. does not figure to help the
Cavs immediately.
·
"We hope we can develop him,"
Embry liaid.
.
·
·.
In a draft that was tricky to predict
a(terthe firlit eight or nine picks, there ·
was no urgency to move intiJ the mid-

w

New York

Cavs can't trade for Pierce, take forward with 48th pick
·

Reds drop 11th straight contest

Scoreboard

McGwire belts No·. 34, but Cards lose

The Dally.Sentlnel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh!o

Thuraday, June 25, 1998

Page4

1

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE

LVLVW " ' ' ' ' " ' ' f/11/

.

..

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'

. PARIS (AP)- Here's one way to
sneak into the Set:ond round of the •
World Cup: Malee' sure your final
tim-round opponent is a powerhouse with little or no motivation.
Not .thai anyone is accusing
Brazil. France pr Nigeria of not try·
ing, but they certainly lacked the door-die urgency of opponents Norway,
Denmark and Paraguay in games ·
over the last two days.
As a rs;sull, the way the standings
worked. those three teams played
well enough again.•t the best in the
. world lo render anyone else's hopes
meaningless.
·
for e~ample, even though Spain
set a toutnamenl-high in goal.s
Wednesday night in a 6-1 victory
over Bulgaria. it wouldn't have mattered if the Spaniards had pbnclured
· the nel I00 rimes. Paraguay pulled a
3-1 upsel over a Nigerian team that
had already clinched first· place in
Oroup D and rested seven of it~ reg- .
ular starters.
· "We rook the game seriously."
Nip:rian goalkeeper Peter Rufai said. "
"But not to the point of going 0111
there willing to die on the pitch, like
we u.ually do."
France also IIIII seven ·resulars.
includina su.~pendi:d playmaker Zinc·
dine Zidanc; in its 2-1 victory ·over
Denmark. Had ·lhe French won in a
rout, the Danes would have been al
the mercy of the group's other game • .
South Africa vs. Saudi Arabia, where
the South Africans could have stolen
second piiiCC by making up a f011r·
goal deficit. AJ it was. the game was
a 2-2 draw, with both Sludi 'lOeb
comins on questionable penalties.
"We los!. bul we can.r,po~ on,"
!laid Denmark teaCh Bo Johansson,
obviously reliewd. "PIIIICII was the
better tellll. It wu pxl 11!11 t_!tc lou
wun 'I blger."
Still, the move was somewhat of
a sunble by french coach Alme
. J~~~:quet. .

1'''1111
1997 DODGE NEON

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1996 JE.EP GUND CHEROKEE LTD val auto., ejr, loaded, 4x4 ................. 23,500
1996 CHEVY C1500 PU Ext. cab, auto., air,'titt, cruise, remainder of fact. warr...... S171950
1997 PONTIAC TUNSPORT Less than 1o.ooo miles. Loaded.' like new ......•19,925
19961UICK RIVIEU 2Dr., V6, leather; remejnder of fact. warranty..............'17,284
.1991 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 2dr., auto., stereo, 1o,ooo miles, bright red ...........'13,150
1996 CHEVY CORSICA Auto., air, stereo, more ...................................................'7,990
1995 GEO ·PRIZI Auto.,
. air, stereo, •32,ooo miles .................:.; .............................s•a,3.50
19961UICK CEITURYva, auto., air. sharp!... ................................................... 9,175
Many More ann~ Low Mile Factory Program

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'Aft

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Page 6 e .The Dally Sentinel

992-2196

NOTHING RUNS.

MUFFLER SHOP

See Steve Meadows

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

Mike Bing

~

'"'rn

.s -· -·-

::::---. WHERE: Saaro Palm
Racaway, Sonoma.
Coif.
WHIH: Sunday,

-e -~

c.
r. ~-

Junt28

DII'IIIDING CHAM·
PION: Mark Martin

~

~

r.

&gt;.Ill
~ _:I:

=
&gt;.
=

TRACK QUALII'Y·
lNG RECORD: Marl!

CD-

tnt

-CIS~

Martin, Ford, 112.807 .
MPh, May 2, 1997.

CDC

1-

~

0

--CIS

~

.._.

8U8CH GRAND NATIONAL
COMING UP: Lyaoi200
Willi iL Olan (N.Y.llftlamotlonlll
- N : Sunday, Juna 28

with a ~vlawofoneof

28, 1997.

' s. 0. r.rr.dt Jr., 2,000
• . ....,. L&amp;Joilt, 1,131

RACIIIICORD: Tarry lAbonte, Chevy,
84.188 mph, June 30, 1tte.
OTHIII PORMER -NERS: lAbonte,
wtio wiD ba at Saara Point w~h dot Cup
rwgullfl, hu won thl1 reoe four Umtl.
Ernie ll"'latl and 811 EIMott hiYI 1110

won.
NOTAILI: McLaughlin Ia lha only BGN
rwuutar avar lo wl!llha annual avant ot
. lha Glan .... Thlo Is lhl only ....:1 race
on 1ho achtdule. ·
'

Ward Burton

I.Himllt . . . .. 1.125
1,724
....... KIIIr. 1,715
t. Eitm~. 1.815

For Homeovmer s

MORNING SESSION-These girts took part In
lhe morning Millon of the 1998 Meigs lady
Marauder basketball camp. Pictured In the front
row from left to right are: Sarah Lantz, Autumn
Mclaughlin, Mirande Yqung, Chrtateena Young,
Maggie Molden, Samantha Pierce, Jennifer
Smith, end Cayla LH, Second row: Miranda
Baha, Brittany Hyaell, Casale Lee, RenH Bailey, Taryn Lentea, Juallne Dowllr, Sarah JenkIns, Jllllan Jenkins, and Anna Hartenbach.

Third row: Kayla McCarthy, Hollie Dugan, JUII
Young, Airs Little, Jennl Young, Megan Garnes,
Emily Ashley end Jodie Donohue. Fourth row:
Camp Staff Coach Ron Logan, Becky Smith,
Trlcla Dalila, Tracy Cott.y, Tonya Miller and
Mellau Werry. Abl8flt when plclura was taken
Katie Reed. Sponaora tor the camp were Dairy
Queen Bruler, McDonald&amp;, Subway, Vaughan's ·
VIdeo Department, VIdeo Touch and Wendy's.

Pear NASCAR Thla Week,
utrcmely jealous of Jeff.i
Oordon and .hit capabilities.
Why else would Wallace drive .
10 sloppy and put oo·rdon In
. the wall before blina p111ed1"
Oa purpose, 1 miaht add.
Rusty aettina looae? Come
onl The interview with Rusty
afterward said it all. Who's the
crybaby now when thinp don't
10 his wty? What 1 poor sport.
Wh11 com~s tround aoes
tround, Rutt.
In 1998, ·Jeff w.ill mt ke it
..three-time champ."
Rick Poucr
Jacbonville, N.C.

FIOIIIASl Will

l nsur::1nce

/

_

.............__. .,.

--

·-7~
Pa:•u••n

:;;:'

4

•

Obviously Rusty Wallue is

10....,. er-n. 1,877

l

.

1. Mlft ~ 2,0112

1.,.,.,.,.....

•

Dave.Harris
Ext. 104
For More
Information

Narr-. Chevy, 118.128 mph, Juno

2. M.~2.1101

· a. ...,..,..a-.1.7~.

-=

Call 992-2156

DI!I'IIIDING CHAMPION: Mike
McLaughlin

TRACK QIIAUPYING IIICOIID: Joe

lha world'l """ cllloo; " doain'
•gat any - . . , 11111.

ADVERTISE
ON THIS
PAGE

\

. . unriVIIed In aoling
........ !ltd by lha moat romantiC
o1 almoopholaa. A dallghllul maa1

-'1

.r.

~

The--of-

and lburon, bolh on lha
noo111om and"' San rr~~ICiecollly,

AACI! RECORD:
Bodin• and Dolt E - he.,. aiiO
taktn lho checl&lt;ncl flag hara.
Ernie lr..n, Chevy,
8U13 mph, June 7,, NOTAII.I: Martin ewapt both PCIIe and
race lilt ~· .. . Bodlne'a 11183 vlctCHY
.
111112.
OTHER FOAMJ!A -NIAI: lrvan,
waalha lui of car- Bud
from nearby ~llllnu, and RuatY Wallaet 63 Winston Cup wtna . ... wally Calion·
are the onty two· tlma wlnMrl, but Ricky badt Jr., a fine road ...., In good
equlp!'Mtrt, muat be conaldared • con·
Audd, tho loto Da-.y 4111ton, Gaoft

'

Cas

~

AlMOST Ht1lll COtll1llll

ale

992-2825

Iandor lor lila first Cup wtn.

Kragen .350

o:H

!..c

101 North Second Ave. ~ Middleport, OH

IZI

ill

THE WJNITON CUP II!AIEB
COMING UP: SaveMatl/

Q

~

"''0 DLEPOR1'; 0~

CRAFT8MAN TIIUCK 8EAE8
WINSTciN CUP 1 1 The annuol 8ristot Motor
. ':""- you equid - ~ ccmlng.
Spoedway . - t wu a otin'lng,
_....out.~,_,., MIYfltld IIIII hOd to
tiki
al-1mp0110n1 step . roca-long d u e l - Ron
1rt&gt;m CCMiotent top to Homlday and Jack~.
vlciOfY ~one: He did 10 with. . with Homlday -lng K two
yen In a row In hiS blue
guilD. dominating ""' .Pocono
Chevy.
500 In hiS Pontk•Ktontfuol
The hlgh-baol&lt;ad COl .....
Ford.
K wu a big doy for alai of
111an ill aharo of
drtvora. c...H Wollrip ltd lilt
metal. The l.olldlllnd10r
200 had plenty of competition
In ""' day -fading 10
lildh. Wtlly DollonbiiCh Jr' lin·
bock In ""' pack, but ""' ltad
·- a pri- matter betw..,
ialledBII8IIIOfl·hlgh-.
Horneday and Sprague. both
and
Dale few nolicet
wrth hiSoigl&gt;lh. •
'""""' ..,.. champions.

c-"" "

'

De1t NASCAR This Week,
Why is It 1h1t, after the

TOP TEN
-

rrilngl by

NASCAA lNI-- Manto Dullon. Last

I

Wlllk'll'll'lldng illn peril itt' ...

w.nteurton..,. lw'alucky 111 '-lh'llldlc! ....c:U eo fwlhll-.
a, M- auWHAT IS THE REAION .to tracks we've bean to lor
the second 11me. Not only
NASCAA This Wotk
FOR THE TEAM'S
my tum, but everybody's
In tho fall of 1995, the
IMPROVEMENT THIS
team will have i lot or deta
combination of driver Ward YEAR? "No mechanical
and notu that we'll be
Burton and owner Bill
lall~rea Is tha biggest
Oa"ls seemed like a match difference In our taam over able to UH to have a good
Donna Harrison
made In haa"en. In their
laot year. We Wlf8 eighth In evaluation of what we'll do
Sihillo. Mill . ·
al;hlh start 1ogalher,, Bur· pointa.aller TaUIIde9a last wHh the chaule lor lhe
aecond
go-round.
•
ton won his llrat Wlnaton
yur and had four motor.
HOW DO YOU FEEL
Cup race at Rockingham.
lall~rea In a row. Frank .
Burton, whoae younger
Leltton and Terry Elledge ABOUT THE TEAM'S
PROGRUI AI YOU
brother Jeff won three
ha"e .done a really good
'*'••~~t wrtM: ,_ICA
·-111m, alo
limes in 1997, has been
job jn making the motors . APPROACH THE
HALI'WAY POINT? "The
lOoking lor an encore
· live all dey. •
,.....,IMI.,Grna-.
blggeltthlng we nHd to
victory aver since, but this
FOR THE REST OF
N.C.year he and Pa-la show
THIS BEASON, WIU YOU kelp dOing Ia flnilhlng
signa of returning to
TEND TO TAKI MORE
. races. W.'ra aecond In
vlciiny lane, npeclally
RISKS IN AN EFFORT TO ovarall rap. run. I'm proud
alter Burton won· the pole
GIT A WIN? -• ~1 know, of the team and myaeH In
that .,..,. capable of doing
• Hila !)If to al Michigan r...,.tly.
maybe a lillie bil, but not
AGE: 30
much. You've gotlo finish that. I've been lucky not to
Krlneluaa.
&lt;:riW chlal Paul
IPOUII: TabHha
the race firat. You've,gotto be lnvalved In any wrecka,
lha""
!I ~and
CHILDREN: Sarah (11), lta"elhe mantallly whether and the tNm hu ClOne a
"'lha
Mabll1 .....
good
job
rnechanlcany
on
1=:
Jeb (5).
it's 400 miles. 500 miles,
on the -ion of
CAR: No. 22 MBNA .
500 lepa, we•.,. gcillq run lht car. We need 10 kMp
Jnmy Mayflotd'o
doing
that
and,
at
the
...
Pontiac Grand Prix, owned allllw lapa llrat. II you're In
ftrlt vlctCH')' - e
0 .-onelnlha
by Bill o..;,,
• po~nlon to win, the~ ol aame lime, - o f the
CAlliER RECORD: 128 cou,.. w.e'll go alter II wtth racn we've had a beller
~ Pocono 1500,.
''
cw than where ,...~ve
etarte, 4 polea, 1 win, 4
everything we've.gal. ...
top 51, 21 top 101, almost You know, the other 1hlng
finished."
.
$3.5 million In winnings.
Ia thot we'll be going back

.

.. llollbr LAibonle (71

1. - - ( 1 1
Defenda' ot tho Point

MediOcle performance

7.11u81r-.....,

2. J e l l - 1:11

Pocono dltlller

'!&gt;lucl&lt; I n -

s. .._ ...,_ 141

t.Jellllurton(81
He'! win soon

The big "'-kkl1nlugh
oi.DIIIa-(31
Arwavo ltMinl
5. ""' .......... (II

..1111o,...... •. "' ,.
The--·-L
I
M-

W8llrlp (Nfll

The laal hurrah

Ofl-

.....

011 THE SC111DUL1

-a
The Daily
Sentinel
111 Court St•.
Pomeroy
992~2155

-- -.--'Y-•
---·

flrll, adlo. lt'a - -

he cld . .m..•
- - he
WJiCJIId
IWICN'I1llt Wltk-

baing

..-.,ooon ._opera. I'd e11

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

Th•raturn of Cllrvsler to Winston Is IMminent ••• or Is It?

FMOfTHIWIII
IIIII Elnllllrdlll. lin ldrlllw
Dale
8c:tw

--

... ~

lhal'o""'- tnlng

The

rich hltiCH')' o1

N-

The 1991 Banquol300.,
Searl Point had • finiSh
lhalll just about un~
danltd In NASCAR hlotOfY. ·
Ricky Rudd took tho
chocknclllog bulofliclalo

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who """'''" know, lhe impelua
!J.I!OI"lnl rrom Daytona Beaeh;

JNSUPFICIINT 11¥10'1'
DINCI; Ji,.jy s.--. or '
iiCill)olroit.
tome other di!Wr, ml)' loaw \)'
Richard Ptny. the arc11e1t fi&amp;· thrown a ptecw~'- ; ·....
Jf!. ia lite itpy of Chr)laler
poddina"'*&gt;
10 IIVOid
~·
· drove a Oodp beina llfll!d . hipa
ia 1971.
Chryaler
Speodwly,'\uo N SCAR-Id
o.jlll will
fuod aoO.,.._ oltoeh aa acl.
..a l'etl)l
"Wt 11M IVIluatod all oflllc
Enlerprila already 1 1 ia vld II; I. end lhc rv~ ia
Ill&lt; ·craftamaa Tnoek Sorlea ..;111 !JI!IIIIcluaiw u far aa ' - lhc

till htatdt. ~ ....ly, roll·bor .
paddina ia 1101 ......... but WI
don't know lhltuotiiWI eo end
pick it up...
·
LIKE FATHIR LIKE SON:
llolll&gt;y H110il100 Jr., :ZO.,.ar-old
- of ille WI.- C1lp *in&lt;,
made hiiARCA debut in lho
2QO.milc Salunlay undirwd II .
......., 1 . - 1 ~.
Tbo al&lt;kr H..illoa u

rotum or Chryoler Coop. 10
Wlnatoa c., raclna -ld bt
imminent
NASCAR pmidenl Bill
Frucc Jr. hu ...romed thai
meetinp an U!'*r war between
deprvecl him 01 1N1 wtn.
offi&lt;iala of lho ....,...., body
PenaHr~ Rudd lor rough
lllll Chrysler. F..- aaid
.•. · ·
,~, p11 on lhc race track."
. emr clolofl'or hla- wllo "
driving, tho govtrn1ng body NASCAR Ia aellwty -iRJ on a Doell&lt; .RaJn.
But Pony cbanollrioaol lho Ill" ..kl Winotolo Cup dimiOr Gary. plana,IO ruo - · NASCAK
handed tho "lclory to
· a pmecu 10 make~ Dod&amp;•
,.oy: "1ttnndlal Nellon. ~,.. CGIIIidcr lhc Craftamaa 1'nlcll Striaa cvenll
Dav- Allison and Rudd ~ lnlrtpid a vlal&gt;le ptrl!apanoln diocuuionallllt
in
,Chrysler io tolkinJ oiiUIIIonotllplo._,- io no dolo,..,. brrt: McClun, wllo
-,
the Woftllon Cup Soriea.
-.......ti!OTruck
coocluoiwmh'or~IOI!o:Nll OW1Ialholllllor\WI-CIIp
- ralegaled to BtCOnd.
IUT, THEN AGIIoiN ... :.Yta, 10 .
ASCAit io oalkina oo
.O«urr&lt;d.
· 1{
'• Chevroltl, provldod an ename
discu11iont between NASCAR
rys
aboot
Winaton
Cup.
"NASCAR\
view
olf
~li"'l
j for tbe ..., In lhe AJICA race.
arrd Chryaler Corp: art eoinJ

AccessOries

proballlf--.

on, but ec:corditltto aomcone

~

t ~ wbere it iJ ri&amp;ht

•f1111 ilto w~m driven of~~!;/

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--

can 992·21'55
Dave Harris Ext. 1.04 ·
.For More ·Information .

0/owokandi
goes first on
draft night ·

game went three for three at the plale
with a home run and a pair of single,;.
Cumings added a pair of singles and
Wi ll iams a triple.
•
Meigs is now 24 on the season
and 1·2 in the conference. They will
trave l to Lancaster for 1wo on Saturday. and lhey wi ll return home on
Su nday to Jake o~ Columbus Kin·

cade. Wellston is now 9·2 on the season and 6-2 in the conference.
Score by innings:
We llston 330 010 24-14 19 I
Meigs
000 102 00.3 5 3
Kuhn. Ervi ng (6) and Newso me,
Dunn (6)
Ohl inger. Mart in (3). Cumings (8),
and Cu!llings. Whittekind (3)

Jumbo
Cantaloupes

All
Hanging Baskets

$200 Each

$550

Delicious Vine Ripe
Tomatoes

All Flats

ssoo

$ 99

4"· Pot

1 Gal.

•••• $1.49

, 99c

'NOW

Reg. $4.99

sALE

Pole Bags
•••• $9.t5

NOW

Perennials

$750

$3 50
4"

Geraniums

soc

•

'

action.

1. What ClfHI c:hillf Wll once a p01 •• •It Modlftld drlvtf It tha

2. ti'N!
------~~tnt-Gia._.
WINton Cup dWI .... t1
. •

Shltwna Manlly,
Drenner,
Mindy Chancey,
and Magan
Haynes. Filth row: Jeeslca Howell, Alicia Werry, MarJorie Brl!tton, Cory Hoover and Brittany
Wliliama. Sixth row: Camp Stiff Mlck Childs,
Charyl J1we11, Coach Ron Logan and Coach
Darin Logan. Abaent whan photo was taken
Shannon Price, Mary Schultz and Mind I O'Dell •
Camp sponaerw were: Dairy Queen Bralzer, Me
Donald's, Subway, Vaughan'• VIdeo Deplllrt·
ment, VIdeo Touch anct Wencly'e.

AFTERNOON SESSION·Th888 girls · took
p11rt In the attemoon -lon ot the 1998 Meigs
Lady Marauder Girls Baskatball Camp. Front
row (1-r): Tiffany Halfhill, Am~ HyHII, Jennifer
Shrlmplln. Second .row: Stacia Sima, Amber
··· ' Snowden, Mariau Whaley, Ashley Thomas,
Tangy Laudermllt, Brooke Williams, Amber VinIng; Miranda St-art. Third row: Aahlay
Roberts, Shannon Souleby, Stephanie Stewart,
Brooke Bolin, Llncluy Bolin, Katie Jeffers, Jeilalca BIBBttnar, Jaynee Davia, Katie Davie.
l'ourlh row: Tirzah Dodeon, Brandl Thoma1,

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Corraspondent
Wellston jumped out to a 6-0 lead
at lhc end of the second inning and
went on to defeat Meigs 14-3 in
American Le~on baseball action
Wednesday evening at Meigs High
School.
Wellston scored three runs in the
fi rst inning. Fe nwick and Erving
botlt singled, Ervin followed with a
double and Rouse had a two out si n·
gle.
In the second inning. Williams
singled, Clemons walked and Ward
doubled. With two outs Ervin doubled and Kuhn singled to make it 60 conies!.
Wellston added another run in the
founh inning on a double by Erving
and a single off the bat Of Kuhn to ·
make il a 7·0 contest.
Meigs started to climb. liack into
the game in Jhe bouom of the fourth
inning when Jeremiah Bentley led off
the inning with a towering home run
over Jhe left field fence.
·
Meigs made iJ a 7-3 contest in the
sixth inning, Corey Williams led of
tile inning wilh a Jriple. He scored on
a Bentley single. Jeremiah moved to
third on a wild pilch and. a stolen
base. He then scored on a Adam
·Cumings single .
Wellston blew the game open ·
with two runs in the 'seventh inning
and four more in the eighth when it
was called due to the mercy rule.
Kuhn lhe first of two Wellston
pitchers picked up lhe win, he and
Ervin combined to strike out II. walk
one and scauer siK hits.
Fenwick had four hils, all singles.
Ervin added two doubles and a sin·
gie, . Erving added a double and lwo
singles and Williams three singles as
Wellston pounded ouJ 19 hits.
Clayton Ohlinger. lhe first of three
Meigs pitchers picked up the loss. Pat
Mmin and turnings also saw mound
duties for Meigs. The three combined
to give up 19 hits, walk seven and
Slrike OUtiWO.
Bentley for the second straight

VANCOUVER. British Columbia
(AP) - · ' Fi vc trudes, plcn1y of
intrigue and a somewhal surprising
No: I pick - that was the NBA draft
in a nutshell.
. The league broughl its annual
coming-out party to ils most remote
lllld northernmost oulposl Wednesday
night. and the out·of·the·way experi·
ence didn't put a damper on the

/

8lil no
lhtlop 15
for .... Spttd.

!kl•adlo ..., 1'011111

Lumber&amp;

TRIVIA

Wbo'SICit

...- . Art. 10n:
- "TTile
.,._
ao-"" Ojllft......e.m-.lo -.,.,an

"" 11om ""' -·line
dWI ...... Sctadlrnotad
lhot -apologized..

Valley

....

t. 11111a ~INRI
0n his WaJ( beck
10. -

JGIIn CllriiiPWICNt TNI ~

mishap at the Pontiac 400. the
only rhina thai wa• 11id' w11
Rully did thia or thai?
Why waa .nothin&amp; nid about
Jeff Gordon '1 auempt to run
over Rusty and almost hook
his bumper on Rusty'a wheel
well?
Wonder Boy can run over
anyone. bul no one iaaupposcd
to touc:h him?
Remember. JO, whtt aoes
around comes around. Racers
art only human.
They aive back what lhey

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Wellston rocks
Meigs Legion 14-3

PHONEtt2·21"

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New Summer Hours Mon.·Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

Thursday, June 2S., 1998

-

992·21M

ser~tcn
See

Parts

UKEA~

""e

Thursday, June 25, 1998
..

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

'

" Michael Olowokandi of Pacific
University was oA10sen fi"'t bY, Jhe
Los Angeles Chppers, and the Van·. ·
couver Grizzlies grabbed Arizona
point guard Mike Bibby wiJh lhe sec· ·
ond pick before . trading away the
'point guard they seiecled last year,
Four other Jrades were made
involving the fourth. fifth. sixth,
ninth, 19th, 23rd and 29Jh picks.
Another was expecled to be com·
pleted today, sen&lt;ling Charles Oakley
from New York to Toronto for Mar·
cus Camby.
The Toronto Raplo)'S, after picking
Antawn .Jamison of North Carolina ·
fourth ovetall, sent him to Golden
State for his college Jeammate. Vioce ·
Carter, who was selected fifth.
The Phoenix Suns ·sen I guai-d
Steve Nash lo the Dallas Mavericks
in a Jhree-way trade also involving
Milwaukee. The Bucks gotlhe sixth
pick, Robert "Tractor" Ttaylor. from
Ihe Mavericks in exchange for the .
ninth pick, Dirk Nowitzki of Ger·
many. and the 19th pick. Pat Garrity
of Notre Dame. Garrily was then ~ent
Jo 1he Suns along with Bubba Wells,
Mmin Muursepp and Dull us ' I999
first. round pick for Nash. whose
parents came to the draft to represent
lhe Suns.
" ..J
"'
The Los Angeles Lakers
sent
guard Nick Van' Exel to Denver in
exchange for Tyronn Lue. the seCond
of the Nuggi:ls' two firsJ-round picks
(No. 23}. and Tony Bauie.
The UJah Jazz sent lhe 29th pick.
Nazr Mohammed of Kentucl&lt;y, Jo
Philadelphia for future considera·
lions.
Olowokandi, a 7-foot· l Nigerian
who grew up in England and has
been playing,competitive basketball
for onl y three years. w,as ove r·
whelmed by being pi~ked first overall.
" Seeing my name in the No. I
spot is unbeliev~bie. especially when
you consider where I came from Jhrte
years ago ..,.. not having played bas·
ketball - and then I~&gt; this, not lhe
No, 3 pick but lhe No. I pick," said
Olowokandi, who ave(aged 22.2
points and 11 .2 rebounds last season.

,

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25, 1998

Thursday, June
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
70

June 25, .1998

..110

Yard Sate

Galli pollI
Public Notice

'

.

Public

known eddraoooo oro 01 roquootod by the Ohio Ileal E8tall, to-wit:
llotod above, ond whooo Rules of Civil Procedure,
Sltllatld In lhl T-"lp
pruonl odd roll oro ludgamant by datault will Ill of Sclllk!, County of Malge
rondo,.d agalnot you and endS.. of Ohio:
unknown.
You oro hero by notified lor tho rollaf demanded In
Bllng In tho Village of
that you hove been nomad the ComplalnL
_
_..,..., Melga County,
Oatil thll 23rd day of Ohio, being ~ No. t5 ond
Defondonto In tho action
entitled Geo•v• Long, Juna,1"'.
No. 11 • ihown on lho flrat
LArry E. Spencer, plat of · .. td VIllage.
Plointlffo, vo. Lovl Newerry,
Clerk of Court1 Excapllng from Lot No. 15
Gertrude Long. Della R.
Stoon, Agno1 Hln11, William
By: Diane Lynch that portion ·conveyed by
Deputy C.C. Cuekler of Dana Welch
E. Nowborry, Clarence E.
Newberry, Laurence B. Submitted by:
~ deed recorded In Volume
Newberry ond George Chrl1topher E. Tenoglla
222, Page 117, Malge
Newberry, otol, Defendant•. (OOS5290)
county Died Rocorde.
Thla action haa bean Altomey lor the Pl~lniiH,
Thlgrentof haNin further
·
aUignod Cue No. 98-CV· George W. Long
. gronto unto lhl Granlltl
049, and 11 pending In the. (&amp;) 25; (7) 2, 9, 16, 23, 3C16tc
and thotr ..olgne lhl right
to uao wato• from a water
Court of Common Plooo of
Meigs County, Ohfo. The
PUBUC NOTICE
well on a lot adl-nt to Lot
object of lhll Complolnt
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
No. t5, now or formorly
domandl judgement, by
TRUSTEES
owned lly Harold D. Graham
advorao poosoollon, for
A public htorlng on the and Janet K. Graham, and
real property commonly annuol budget for the yeor the aald Grantt~a · ahall
found at tho Ncrth Side of 18118 ohali bo hold on tho have tho exclualvo right to
Bald·Knobb Stlverovllle 7th doy.of July, 1998, ot&amp;:OO ueo the won until a public
Road, Lebanon Township, PM ot tho Townohlp Hall, Wlllr IUpply II provided, In
accordance with the
Meigs County, Ohio, and Flockoprlngo Road.
provlolone of the dttd
more particularly described (I) 2511c
recorded In Volume 247,
as lollowo, to wH:
Page 443, of the Molga
SHuate In tho Township of
Public Notice
County Died Recordo. The
Lebanon, Ccunty cl Melga,
Grant- ahall aleo. have
and State of Ohio, and
SHERiFF'S SALE
bounded and described ao USDA Rural Dtvolopmont the right of lngraaa and
follows, namely, being In va. Tho Eelltl of Katherine egre11 tq enter upon tho
well aile prtmlatt lor the
the ooulh halt of tho wool W - , II al.
.
hall of the north·ont
Melg• County Common purp6.. of laying, re~eylng
end maintaining aald water
quarter of Section No. 32, Plue CoN No. 87-CV-125.
Township No. 3, Range No.
In pureuanca of on order Una to tho premltta
.
11 of tho Ohio Company's luued from Common Plua dtiCrlbed herein.
Locattd at 31400 St. At.
Purchaoo; commencing at Court, within and lor tho
the south-east corner of an County Of Molga, State of 684, Pomeroy, OH 457118.
Said property hoo bean
eleven acre lot deeded to Ohio, 011 thellh day of May,
t998, and to mt directed, I lpprelead at $35,000.00 and
Joanna Shain by Rachel will offer for llle 11 Public cannot aoll lor leoa than
Torrence Decker by dead ·of
February t o,t9t4; thence Auction In tho Molgo County two-thlrda of appraleemtnt.
eaot to corner of Frenk Courthouao, ~nd Street, Thla appraloal 11 baead
Horton'a eleven acre tract of Pameroy, Ohio on Frldly, upon e vlouat lnepoctlon of
land which woo deeded to July 17,
10:00 e.m. that part of the premleae to
him on February 10, t914 by ot eald ·day, tht following WhiCh aCCtll wae readily
Rachel Torrence Decker; 1-----....;..___.....,:_________

IN THE EIGS COUNlY
CO"RT OF
COMMON PLEAS
C111 No. H-CV-G49
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
·
•
George w. Long
11175 Cadiz Road
Lore City, Ohio 43755
Plaintiff,
ve.
Levi Newberry, his
linknown holra, aulgno,
ltgalotl, and dovi 1111, last
known eddroll Uhrlcha·
villa, Ohio
Cu.rrent Addreoa Unknown

--::-:-=----:---

Ond

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Gertrude. Long. her
unknown heirs, aoolgna,
legattll, and devlaoea, last
known oddroso - Uhrlchs·
villa, Ohio .
Current Addrau Unknown
and .
• Delio R. Steen, her
unknown hairs, asalgns ,
logatoo1, and devisees, last
known address Uhrlchs·
villa, Ohio
!=urrent Addreu Unknown
and
Irma Hllleg.aa, her
unknown · holra, a.. lgns,
. · ~otoeo, and dovloeeo, laat
~nown eddreao Uhrich•·
. ville, Ohio
.
· .Curroni·Addreos Unknown
and
· Arthur R. H.lnes, her
· unknown heirs, assigns,
logateeo, and devisees, last
known address Uhrlcha·
· ville, Ohio
· Current Addreu Unknown
and
Herman J. Ill nos, hlo
unknown hairs, assigns,
legateea, and devlaeeo; loot
· known addreaa Uhrichilvilla, Ohio
· .

I

north-1111 corner or Joanna

known add roes Uhrich a·
ville, Ohio
~ CurrontAddtasa Unknown
.:
and

Shein's olovon aero lot;
thonce lOUth to tho place of
beginning; tho same to
contain eleven acrea more

_• Clarence E. Newberry, his

or lesa.

unknown htlis, assigns ,
legatees, and evlsees, last
known eddress Adena, Ohlc
'current Address Unknown
LAurence B. Newberry, hla
unknown heirs, assigns,
legalees, and devisees, last
'known address Uhrlchs·
· ville, Ohio
' Current Address Unknown
,
and
. . George Newberry, his
.. unknown heirs, aaslgna,
· 1egate11, and devise... last
l&lt;nown address Uhrlcha·
ville, Ohio
: Cprront Addreas Unknown,
· Datondanta. ·
: To: ALL · OF THE
. DEFENDANTS HEFIEIN
· ABOVE NAMED, whoso laat

-

Sa ' J
27
0
t. UDe • 11:0 a.m.
10 1 Fro t St Lafi tt H t I

aye e

•"

Marietta,

0

Ohio

TIM appreiHrt

pollutllnll,

Notice

Ohio, I Jamal
ScMIIIbf, Sheriff of told
County Will offer for eale at
Public Sole, at tho front
IIIPI of tho Court HoUH, In
Pomeroy, Ohio, on tho 24th
day of July, A.D., 1 - at 10
o'clock A.M. of ukl day, lhl
following dtecrlbacf LAnda
and Tenomantl, to wll:
Situated .In the VIllage of
Syracuao, County of Molga
ond Slota ol Ohio: Bllng
tho N&lt;&gt;rth hoH of Lot No. 53
ond tho North hoH of Lot No.
54, oo motkld and ohown.
on Ouortu1 llrldgmon'o Plot
of tho oold Town
of
Syrocu1o, which parcel of
lond heroin convoyed lrcintli
100 fnt on Second Slrnt to
the Town of Syracu1o ond
58 fnt on Chorry StrooL
Property located at: 2421
Cowlly,

or..-,

Torma of Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) day 6f ult,
llalanco upon delivery of
deed.
Jamaa M. Soulally,
Shaflff Of Malgo e-ly,
Ohio
Stephan D. MU..,
Altomay

18 Wall Monumtnl Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45402
(1)11, 11,25 3 tc
Public Notice
SHERIFF SALE .
ComiiJIICial Federal
Mort~age Corporotlon

Public Notice

&amp; VIcinity

Public Notice

2ndllrHI, Syrocuao, OK.
on tho unpaid balance ot
Property apprtltld ,al tho bkl amount, unlell paid
Thlrty·Two
Thouund within (I) daya alter tho
Dollara ($32,000.00). Pro- date of 1111. Tho onllro
party cannot be told for balance. of tho purchaee
loaa than 2/3 of tho prk:o ahall Ill paid within 30
appraiNd vatua.
doya altar tho data of eale.
TERMS OF S.ALE: 10'.11o
Jamoo M. Souloby
dapooll In c11h cortlflod
ShltriH of Mllga County,
chock or bonk chock
Ohio.
payable to the SheriH Of
LArry R. Rothenberg, 323
Molgo County, Ohio, to be W. LAk..lde Avo., Suitt 200,
tendered at oolo at tho tlmo Cleveland, OH 441t3-1088
of occoptonco of tho bid. Attorney tor Plaintiff
Tho purchaoor aholi bo Sherttf'a Office,
roqulrod to pay lnterell at P-.y,OH
tho rate of ten percent (t 0%) (1)18, 25; (7)2, 31C

Residential &amp;. Mobile Home
. Air Con~itioners &amp; Heat Pumps

'·-·-·T.RPP.Rn

Air Conditioners A~ Low As 128 a month
Heat Pumps As Low As 138 a month
*Free

5

*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

·.BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;COOLING
"

Help Wanted

HVAC
Installers

Needed
Send resume
or
apply In person:

e

8

Chester, OH

45720

80skets from 0II cotegones.
• All •Items sold
th h' h b'dd L 1 • f ld
fO 8 1g 8Sf I 8r. g. Se ed10n 0 0 !if
baskets. .

1,\UOITOR ·s
PA~CEL
NUMBER 07-oo387.000.
Court Coati and such
other further relief · as the
court may deem justin lawn
and equity.
·
Terins: Cash, ck, MC, Visa &amp; Discover. Buyer's Prem.
You are required to
answer thlo Complaint
Lunch evalla.Qie. From 1-77 S., lake Marietta exn, S1,
within twenty-eight (28)
(Pike St.), go west 4 blocks, the Hotel will be on the
day a after the Ioat
northwest comer. Watch for slgnsi For more
publication of thlo Notice, information call 747P773-432t or e-mail us al:
will b' published once each
week lor olx (6) aucceaolve mlehaele@brlght.net lcngaberger® and tho other
waeka. The lui publication collection namea are lhe property of the Longaberger® Co.
will ba modo on tho 30th This auction 18 net sponsored by The Longabergar Co.
day of July, 1888, and tho
M E p
C
twenty-eight (28) daya for
· • • Utnam 0.
onawtr will commence on
76 E Second St Chilli th Ohl
that dale. In the Clll of
"
•"
CO e,
0
your failure to anawer or
740-773-4321 Fax 740-773-4322
otherwloe rea pond aa IL._ _....;._....;._;.;;..;...;..;;;,;.;..;..;.;;..;,.;..;;...;.;.;;;;._...I

710 Autos for Sale

l:ARPET

Pl.us .

Professional

..

'

.

.

i~

.,

FOR SALE
1996 Chevrolet 5·1 0 414
Pickup with eitended cab and
third door. Loaded with
bed liner. $15,000.00.
Call 740·992·2136 and ask for
Sheila or Desiree.

''

'

740·698·9114
or

740·698-7231
t/11/M ttn

'

1·740·949·2015

I~E CREAM SOCIAL
Bashan Firehouse, CR 28
Fri., June 26, 5 pm·?
t1 flavors of ice cream.
Entertainment, Buzz Slater &amp;
Home Remedies
Ladies AUK.

RADIATOR REPAIR

•Room Additions .'
•New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plull!blng
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Co11crete Work
(FREE ESTIMATESj
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy; Ohla

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive .
·
•Re-cores • New Radiators

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vlnyt Siding New

$1.25 per running,•foot ($39.40 per aq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths

Garages • Replacement Windows

For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

&amp;

Room Additions • Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES

Porches

SATURDAY: OPEN HOUSE

.

When: June 27
Time: 1:00·4:00 ·
Where:
33719 New Lima Rd., Rutland
742·4000

BADMLUMBER

.

·' St. Rl. 248
'·

MIZWAY TAVERN
Friday, June 26, 1998
·Jeff North - Karaoke

985-3301
Cheater

LINDN'S

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

PA~ING

•Residential air
condit1omng

Take the pain oul of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave me$118ge.
After 6 p.m.
(7401 985-4180
Free Estimates

•Auto air condilion1ng

$1.00 cover charge

' Heat pump
•InstallatiOn &amp; SCrVICC
$2S

servtt~e

c1111

3781 ~Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
992-2735

8i18/S81 pel.

lilf•:

"'-'
. ,;.: JD COISTIDCfiOI . it
fi!!'
1

•.

·•

:;,v...
.·.tii·~

:~
:M:\
Jn··~

a.

...
.. . . lot. . . . . . .
Phone

'

~

'

ifi'.'J

Owner: John Dean

.

.
~~~~t:t
'. ~
IIJ ~ - 1!. . Ill . I! . . ~llj
.
. . ~~! !!

ESTIMATEES
985·4473
7/22/tfn

. Water llne-100' thru 1000' Rolls
Sewar Pipe· 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
UIYift... . ..

e:IMJ.4:~:W~kdays
9:DO·t2:DOSaturdey
""""' o

for

caring,

dedicated

· Individuals. STNA's
. preferred.
.
Apply In person at:

Custom Homes

M&amp; J

Roofing

Remodeling
Plumbing

Human Resources Office;

,.
'

Memorial Drive,
I'
Pomero OH
_.1 ,.,

115 East

In Memory

lf

Joe Wilson

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(614) 992-:4277

LOttCi'S
COttSTROCTIOtt
.
• Vinyl Siding • Garages

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

,.

.
·' "' .

1
2

' '

'

' .. ·.

$

.. . ..

0000 0 ~ ~ 12 '948
~ 0,~
00~I 000~ ~ 0$17' 796
~0 0~I 0I~ ~o'o 0$21.,756

o o 01 0 0

ooo

,,

I

I

I 0 I

II

01

Our Motfttr · JUo ?.{oiU,

,

I

'

I I : 1: I

·. I

I

I

Call740·843·5426
.,...... , mo..

A (:jmftr foiy tfrtrt will nlfltr 6t.

•

CALL TODAY FOR
MOR~ ·IN'FORMATIO_
N
(740) 992·2117 or
:caoo) 992·2608

EIGS ·COU.NTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES

&lt;

• ·. '11rru !!'""ago, !Mo!Jl4. tftt nwrnin9 of Motfrtr's 'D•!i·
: &lt;.?J~Ourprr.cious nwtfttr. :.Jio Mom 'X,wu. pa.utdllW••!!F.~-:'
:fi71t sons. two iauofotm and a num6rrof
oranacMirrn miss frtr Vtry mucfr.
'}{tr SWI!tl •mift, frtr cfrorm and fttrOtntft Iouck
Sfu sufftrti a stro(J and could not Jptif{.
&gt;tntf in just a jtu1 i•!!' BrtW 7/t'!} W&lt;at
'Wt f!JiJtf (jotf to ll'antlitr tlit '"'"of fttr fuart,
-" ftW tfay, fatt'l wt {rrtw sfrt woufi soon tftpart.
'[wn tftougr. we (!row, slit's in a much 6ttttr
In our
6t t!U!t

""'""'!J

·
s
CELLULAR PHONE
-

'

360°

CIMPUIBR
PIRFIRMUCE
IPIRAIBI
·

-Your One St8p ·
c::o..puter SIM,pp"

Give us a call for sys,_m replllrs,
sales, upgrades or consultlng.
INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
IPO~·ER()Y, OH

"
JEff,·WARNER INSURANCE
.

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

DIY·

9:0().7:00, Friday

And Saturday, 3
Miles South 7, Cllppermilts
Orchard Hill. Fonow Signa. Toys,

Kids

And

Storm

Newt

AdOII Clolhlng. Now

Door, Troybultt Tmer, lllce

Al.l.l'lnl Salol Mull
Be P1tld In Adwtnco.
QEAQLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lhodoybolottlhotd
lo to run. Sunday
ldttlon • 2:00p.m.
Frldoy, Mondoy edition
• t 0:00 o.m. Sotunloy.

Friday &amp; Sa turdaY. June 26th ,
27th , ,0·5, Addison Township,

Swisher Hill Road. G~ls Clothing,
Household Items. Etc.
Friday 261h, Saturday 271h, 9 Till

6, 229 Fourth Avenue, If Fla!n,

Friday,
8:30 To
? 131
Myrlle Salurday.
A&gt;enuo , Kids
Clothes,
New Hems Etc.
Garoge Sole: June 25th. 26th,
143 Second 'Ave nul', Baby
Clothes. Fostoria Coin. Glass 1
Amotrcan Mlac
June 26th 27th, 4 Family! 7183 Rt
7 Soutn, Some Anuquss, Clotl'las
All Sizes, Porcelain Dolls, Nick
Knacks.
Rain or Shine. 6/2Bih, 10 A.M.
Home Interior. Crall Items, Fumi·
lura: Misc. Clothes. 011 St Rt. 233
On Ory Ridge Road. 2nd Trailer
On
Righi, 740·379·2386, Or 740·
379·2905.
wed , June 24th Thru Frl June

~::..~~~2~1~~~~!~ On 160,

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
Umell~ Hauling

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personal a
005
SOAP OPERA UPDATES NOWIII
1·900· n:J-1155

HOUM &amp; Trailer .Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sytlem &amp;
Utili lie I
Estimates

.

'

(614) 992-3838

t2/t&amp;'tfn·

. (Ume Stone·

Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

.R. l. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Plrt ·Sand

985-4422
Cheiter, Ohio
tom/llolln

Ext.1293
$2.99 per minutll
MuSI Be tByli.
Serv-U (6t9)645·8434
Wanted· couple with camper to

go wes.t as company, leaving July

6th or 7111, 740-247-490t .

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
llfllttry"

"Roof Coatln~
"VInyl Skirting
\
"Water Heelers ·
•Doors/Windows
"Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
*Fibetglaae &amp; Wood
Stepe

Dl•count Price•

Bennett Supply
T404tll418
13tl1 Safford
School Rd.
o.lll l;.';la,~OH;;,;...__,

New Conlfruc•iln &amp; R•••4.ellnt
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
Free E•tlm•tu

-1-

· (includ·
All kitchen holp lng cooking). Pick up IPIJik:allon
at Tho Cool S!&gt;ol. COOMII.
~palachlan Community Vlliling
Nurae Aasoclatlon, Hoaplct and
Health Strv!ce., Inc. Is attklng
· expert Reglattrtd NurMI to pro&gt;lde """ to ditnta In their etttr hoUrs {evenings and wtt kartds) . Quallliod RN'o muot haYo
a minimum ol one year of reetnt
clinical experience In a home
care or acute care senlng,
lent communication and problem
solving skill s and fle~~: l bHi ty. Conta ct Barbara Allen , Human Re·

••'*-

sources O i r ec ~ o r at JC0-594 8226 wilh Inquiries or send your
resume to P.c;&gt;. Box 768, Athena,

Ohio 4570t. EOE

Arbon at Galllpolla Is currently
accepting appllcatlont for AN 's
and LPN'S. We are looking for
dependable applicants . Must
hawo .a &gt;alld Ohio RN or LPN li·
cense. Experience in Long Term
Care Is preferred. Benefits afe
available. If you. have any quaalions, pteaae contact Li sa Short

at7-7112.
Arbon at Gallipolis Is currently
accepting appl lc ~uions for stat,p
tested nursing aulstants . We
are looking for depenttabte applicants. Benefits are available .
If you have any q~astlons .
please contact Llaa Short at 7~
446-1112 .
Arbort At Gallipolis Is Currentty

Accepting Applicallons For RN:s
And LPN's. We Are Looking 'For

Dependable Applicant•. Must
Haw' Avalid OhiO RN Or LPN l"
cense. Experience In Lorig Term
Care Is Preferred . Benems Are
A.vallable. If You Have Any Questions, Please Contact Lisa ShOrt
At 740.4ol6-7t12.

ATTENTION Corllilod Nurolng
AIIIIIIRtl: Ravenswood VIllage

Is now accepting applications for
full anct parr tim. positions. Paid
vacation and holidays. U Interest·
ed, please apply In person Mon·
day through Friday, 9am·4pm .
Write ann: Georgie Boso, R.N. ,

D.O.N . 200 South Ritchie Awnue, ·

RaVenswood , WV 2818C, 30,..-

273·9385. EOE Gtonmarkl Geni·
sis/ Eldorcara Facilloy.

Carleton SchoOl/Meigs Industries
seeks a substitute Health Services Coordinator (AN or LPN) .to
work wtth students and adults wtlh
developmental disabilities. Must
be a registered nurse or llcenHd

practical nurse currently licensed
in the Stale of Ohio. Send IHUmo

to:

S- Beha, Execu!MI DlroctQ&lt;
Corloton SchooiiMalgs tndu61110s
dly blfort the 1d 11 to run,
PO.Box307
Sundoy I Mondoy tdl,lion•
13t0 Cartoton St.
1:00pm.Frldoy.
Syracuoo, Ohio 45779
ln&amp;lde sale . Large moving sale . CHILD COMMUNITY SUP·
·Juno 271h &amp; 28th, 405 Spring PORT PROGRAM WORKER I
Ave. Pomeroy. Look for y~llow CASE MANAGER 20 H~urs per
All Ylrd Saltl Mult Bt P•ld In

Advonco. Doodllno: t :OOpm lht

lamps. coffee table. kitchen
table, refrigerator, washer, dryer,
freezer. king size waterbed. dishes. kitchenware, pioneer stereo
syst8m, birds. Tandy computer.

t986 Dodge Colt, 1987 Chevy

Cavalier. large pop-up camper,
porch swing, toys, games, boys
clothes (size med-targe, 28 to 34
pants), women and girls clothes,
and large misc. For additional in·

!ormation call7oiQ.992-69t4.

Multi· family yard sate- Friday &amp;
Saturday, 10·8. 456 Beech Streel,
Midcleport.

week. Seeking 'Person To Provida Intensive Cue Manage·
meft1 ServiCu To The Most Pro-

foundly Seriously Emotionally Dis·
lurt&gt;ed (SED) Children. ThiS Is A
Highly Visible Posillon In The
Cornorunlly.
Minimum Atcoplable qualltlc;a·
lions: Bachelor Or Associate De~
gree In Social Work, Mental
Health Technology, Nursing Or

ClOsely Reialld Field Preferred.
Ability To Work Responsibly And
lndepandently As Well As In

Concert Wllh A MuHI-Oiselpllna;r.
Clinical Team And Support St• .·
Abilily To Utilize Guidance Amt
Supervision . Valid Drivers L(·
cense, GoOd Drlvlng ·Record And
A Suitable Vehicle For Transp~)f·
18Hon .
Benefits Include Paid Vaeatlof},
Paid Holidays, 401 K Retirement
Plan And More . Send Resume
And Letter Ot Interest To Judith

Rain or shine· Sfl 124. Portland,
Ohio across from Porlland park.
June 25·? New treadmill, $225;
good color TV, $125; 3xt2 pool,
solar cover and all. 740-949·

Per Min . Must Be 18 Yrs . ~erv- U

2065.

6t9-64!H434.

Smllh, D~ector. T1i·County Manl61
Pt.Pieaaent
Health And Counseling ServiceS,
&amp; VIcinity .
313 112 West Main Straet, Mo·
.
Fri&amp;Sat June 26&amp;27, 146 English ""''"'· 01110 45651.

Would Have Thought....
HI00·329·t293, Ext. 9796, $2.99

30 Announcements
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
-Be Entitled To Aecei&lt;Je Your Cia-

belie Supplies At No Cost To

You. For More Information 1·888-

&amp;n-ese1 .
New To.,.,. Thrih Shoppe
9 West Slimson. Athens
7«1-592·t842

Quality clothing and nousehald

Items. $1.00 bag sale every

Thurlday.
9:00.5:30.

~onday

Road . Ladles bike., stereo,
speaker1, sateilile dish, rac:eMir.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Arttique auction· June 26, noon,
Second and Main. Pt. Pleuant.
local stuff, bottles, and advertis·

lhlu Salurday lng 740·992·5088. Conargnmenll
welcome.

Antique bottle show and sale·
Second and Main St., Pt. Pteal·

40

Giveaway
ant, Juno 26. 6·9pm. Juno 27, 9·
2 Kittens To A Good Homa, Litter 3Pm. 740·992·5088. Froo appral·
sals.
Trained, 740-U6-8390.
2yr old Billy Goat. 304-895·3492.
Riel! Pearson Auction Company,
3 kittens, 1 black/male, I cream/
male, 1 blackiwhite lemala. IIIIer

trained , 6·Bwks old. 304·675·

3332.
6 Teddy bear like puppies. good

with chiidran. 740·379·9250 Call
.aher 6:30pm.
8mo.okl plrt beagle/part spaniel,

nas shots, llxed,.dog house. to
good home. 31).1.675-7528

Black &amp; While SheiUe, Friendly,
Dalmatians. 3 male, 6wka Old, 2

lemaII. t yr old. 304-576-4005 at·
lor olprn.

Free To Good Home: 9 Month
Male Alcila Mix, 1 Year MaHI Beagle (No Papers); 2 Voar Tan Male
Cocker Spaniel (No Papers): 5

lull lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service. Licensed
166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia, 304·
n:J-5185 Or 304-773-54-17.

Companion to live with elderty
woman for room &amp; board . Non·

drinkarl. 30ol-675-t7CM.
Companion IO IMI·In with ordt.&lt;ly

woman in Gallipolis for roam,
board and wage, prtltr no'n
smoker, non drinker. References H

po86ible. Pteau call
7572. .

710·9~2·

Coupons lor cash . Earn up .to

1200 per woek clipping coupons

at I'IOme. FrM Information 1-800·

466·92221ld. 6865.

•

Driver Needed For Local ComPa-

ny. Clau B COL Tanke/ ueenn

Required. 11 Interested Plene ·

Call At 740·245·5511 Ask For
John Or Kathy.
$1 ,000~

Stuffing En,.tooes ·AI Home. ''"
Oetalltt. Rush (Long Selt-A:d·
Wedimeyer't Auction Service , dreosod Slamped En&gt;olopt) to:
GalllpoiL Ofllo 740.379-2720'
Aco, Depl: t3~t . P.O. Bor 5719,
Diamond Ber, CA 91785.
90 Wanted to Buy ·
15 ·20 Acres Along State Route

Easy Work! E•cellent Pay! ~· ­
semble Products A.t Home. CJIII

35. Wilh Acces To Highway, 740· Toll Free t·800·1e7·.5566 Eal .
59fl.2t28.
12t70.
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil- Erp. oOpondablt Dlosol Mochln· ·

ver And Gotd Coins, Proof&amp;et&amp;, iC With Own Tools; BefteYIIS PioDiamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold vided. Send Resume To: ME·
Ring1. Pre· 1930 U.S. Currencv. CHANIC, P.O. Bor t09 , Jactooon,
Sterling, Etc. Acqulsl11ons Jewelry OH45&amp;10.

· M.T.S. Coin Shop, t5 t Second
AIIOIIue, IJ8111po11S, 7ol0-406·2842. Experienced

Auto Body m(n.

Send Applications fO CLA437 Clo

Gallipolis Daily Tribune 825 Tlllrd
Aw. Ga~is, Ohio 1563t
•

Tiger Striped Klllons, 740·258·
6olt9.

Antiques, top prices paid. RiverIne Antiques. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore· owner . 7C0- 992·

2!!26.

Experienced In Atsidentltl C~­

Kittens : 8 waakS Old, Black
Male, Yellow Male. Gray Femala,
MuiUcolred. Female, Liner Trained,

Anliques &amp; clean used furniture. Etc,, O•n Hand Tools. Phon•&amp;
will buy one plle:e or complete Transportation, Call 740· 388~
household , Osbv Martin , 740For lnro References R)-

740-446·3769.
Long hair fluffy asSOfted color kittens, male and female, 7C0·892·

5597.
60 Lost end Found
Found: t/2 Grown Hlmalayn Male,

Vicinity: Porltobrook Subdhoioton,

struction Siding, Framing, Roofit&gt;Q,

982·6576.

Cl&amp;an late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,

J &amp; D Auto Parts. Buying
wracked or salvaged vehicles.
:JCM· n:J.!i033.

Wanlld To Buy: Junk Auto'a Any
Condillon. 740-118-9853.

Found: """ng ,...... Pitt Bull On

Ilk "" Lori.

loot: malt tong· ~ S!ttpltllll,
an1wer1 to •Sampson•. reward.
7&lt;10 - 3325.

Wanted: Autb'S In Al'fl/ CGitditlon,

Call 740·381·8082. Or 740·«6·
7271.

EMPLOYM!:NT
SERVICES

.

Energetic, Kind And
RN'I And LPN'o 111111·
eared In Carin~ For People)n
Our Progr1111ve Long ·Term
Care Facility. Mual Be S.nsntw

To Tho Nttdl Of Tho Eldany.
Pleaoe Applr IN Poroon ~~
SCeniC HIHs Nuralng Ctntt(, 31 I
BuciUtdgo lid.,·OH451tt.
PooiiiOn {)ptf1 For Part·Time flu-

mana ~ For Galllo County, lb
Investigate Animal AbuM, Nt·

gleci .And Cruollr Coooo. Sue·
Compllllon or Ohio
Poaco Olllcor'1 Trolnlng. Volld
D&lt;lvlfl llc:onll And DopoTranoportallon Roquhtd: Mull
Lovt Anlmall. Preloranco Wfl J1t
Given To CondldltH Willi ,.,..,.
ou• EJI:pet'lence And lOr Knowl•
1dgo 01 Ohio Anlmol C....,IJ'
Ctlllul

110 Help Wanted
AVON I All Artat I ShlriOy
Spoera. 304-t75-142t.

Arl&gt;oro At Goilipollo lo Curranloy
Acoepltng AppfloaiiOIIS For 8 LOST: Norwoglon•Eik Hound, ToiiOd liuroing A•olotont1. Wo
. -opoloncillll, Art looking For blp.i $ 'II Apneutered. mtdlum•brown eyea, piloanl&amp;. Art A•olalllt. "
ohy. Milling alnco Juno 15. 'lou Haw Arrt OUHIIono, Pltut
Bllclllbrown/Wtlitt booglt, t 8¥, ConiOct lila ShOft At 740·4«·
.
ntutored• Milling llnoo J,... t5. 7112.
301-11117·2854.

loAthtns store hiring np.,
&amp; receptionlat, call

Smtih 8ulclt Pontloc. t900 Eail·

nd: ,..,.,. sHgll. No Collar,
Rood, 7&gt;10-256-t3119.
FOUN · While/ton malo Blaglo,

&amp;toto Roulo 554, Noor Kygor,
7«1-3117•72111!.
LOST: Malo Cocltotiol, 3 tl2yralyt'1 old, _,_ 304-675-7423

Fast ptCIII salon, hiring In all

ern ltvenut_, Galltpolls.

740-4ol&amp;-3 1311.

dows area Gtlllpolla,
Ft&lt;ry. :JCM-e75--..

SUISETBOME
CDISftiDCTIDI

&amp; VIcinity~

HelpWented

World Wide Web Navigational
Secrets Revealed! You Never

World Wide Web Help! Amazing

Cal7ol0-406·8982.

H••••

Middleport

signs . Many Item&amp; . Sectional
sola. living room sub, dresMra,

Beale·

740·742·3411

Motor, Eloctnc Cook SI&lt;M &amp;
or, a W,..,.lor Boolded Rugs.

Communications

614-992·3470

•

Veterans Memorial Hospital, ,\

· · Annual Income

. P/B Contra•tors,
• In•.•

Umestone,

"Bui.. Your .DNi,.n'!

, Veterans Memorial Hospital SNF .Unit

"
Family Siia

614-742·2138

Help Wanted

STNA's
lobking

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeflng
$top &amp; Compare
FREE

'

110

is

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION .

@

740·992·3987

Free Estlmstes

.
.'
,•1 fi;t·~~~

211:1112111tt

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" lhru 48" plastiC culvert In Block
Full line of water storage tanks·
Septic &amp; Cistern tanks

~ lttwWM ·~

, Boet, Weedeaters, Tools. Pontiac

·Bobcat Service
Computer Graphics
•Concrete
Designs
•Masonry
All Landscaping 4
•General
Lawn Servlcea
·commercial and
•Commercial
Residential
•Residential
Free Ear/mares
Owner, Mickle Hollon
No Job Too Small
CheSler, Ohio
Brian Morrison
740·985-4422
(740) 985·3948
r'=======~~~====·::e/:1:1/:tm:•:·pd=~~

St. Rt. 7
•

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
. Commercial Residential , ' 1¥:- ~
27 yra. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured tlill' . AOVANeiO

tree Road, First Ho~.tse On Right.

Curtalne, Clothes, Kids , Adulls,

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeito.n e &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Treller &amp; House Sites
Reasonabla Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Dalal.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

~~~.tlh. ~~A/liM.~~ l!i'!)N:iii'!; tJ1n, IJl!'' ~.!!!
[11~ 1 fl!!!. ill!•: iJ!!Ir &gt;1•1 iii"• 11!!1

·~;J

First Three days
.FREE POP&lt;ORN AND BALLOONS
Opening July 1st.
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
New and used
We Buy-Sell. arid Tirade
Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while they last.
Come in and see us at
202 East Main St.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
992-1074

Road , To En~ . Turn Left To Bulavlll e Pike, Turn Right To Green·

Pomeroy,

(No Sunday Calls)

Call for Quote Today

4 Family: Friday 26th, Saturday

271h . 9·5, Out Bulavllle Porter

Back Porch.

614-992-7643

ROOF TRI,JSSES
Southern Yel!ow Pine Construction
Custom Engineering

Don Sn&gt;1 tl1

MEDI
·ELIGIBILift
PROGRA

992·5513

9:00TIII?

SAYRE
:, TRUCKING

Everyone welcome.
Game Room open
5 pm-11:30 pm
Weekday•
S1,1ndays 3 pm-10 pm

Stick • Tlg • Alt:.mlnum Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

3 Family Sale : Thura. Fri, Sat.
4867 Stitt Route 850, Bidwell,

5/28/lfn

Welding Supplies • Steel Sales

l

2 F1mily: Frldoy Only, Rodney II
8·4, Childrtna, Womona, Clothoo
&amp; ~tams, Dryor, UgtD, Morel

949·2168

Oxy· Accet Regulator Repair ·

Rib Pattern

Storage Buildings

U Polo luiJding
starling ot $5995
X

6:00.

ROOnNG
AND .SIDING
.
9"

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEV.ICE

WBI,.E PIII,.ED S'fDL

June 26, Noon
'
2nd &amp; Main St., Pt. Pleasant
Local stuff, bottles and
advertising. 740·992·5088
Consi nments Welcome

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

SNOWVILLE
RECREATON CLUB

ANTIQUE AUCTION

:'_,.

•-'"'

·

•

Floor lnstallatlon
FREE ESTIMATES

Antique Bottle Show and Sale
2nd &amp; Main St., Pt. Pleasant
June 26, 6·9 pm
June 27, 9·3 pm
740·992' 5088
Free
· I

INSULATION
• V'..,l Siding • Soffit
o fascia 0 $eamleN
Guitar • Roofing
• Ra,t c-1 Wmdows
• Statiouory Docks
• Blown lnwlotion

740-992·2772

.

In loving memory of
JUNE LOUISE
GRIFFIN
who departed 11111
lite one year ago qn
June 25, 1997. We all
know that Mother Ia
finally at peace and
rest and joined with
our Heavenly Father·
and her aon, and our
brother, Phillip.
. Aathe preacher
spoke at her,funeral
... Mother was truly
"a vlrtuoua woman
and was crowned to
her husband and
children."
So ladly missed by
your loving family,
husband,Erneatand
.children: Larry,
Errol, Roger, Pam
and Debbie.

Howard L Wrlteael

U

CALL

"WI! ere Qunli(y Doesn'l Co!l More" .
. 740-446•9416 1•800•872•5967

J&amp;LSIDINO &amp;

•Goragas•Oacks

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

Parts Warranty

VI.

P.O. Box

BACKHOE .111
DOZER SERVICE

"Ensy Over tlw Pl1011e Bnnk Financing"

In Memory

Carol Lynn Thelao, at al.
By virtue of an Order ot
Sale No. 97CV-t38 to 1111
dlrocttd from the Court of
Common Plaaa of Melga
110

JIM'&amp;

I

Warner Heating
&amp; Coohng

300+ 8 AS KET AUC'fJON
0

Public

enume no reepontllllllty
lor, and gMI no weight to,
unknown legal manere,
Including, ,but 1101 ........ to,
COl rc tlltd or Iatini ctet.cts,
and/or the prtHnct of
h.lnnful or toldc chM!Icala,

'"'II

Current Addreoa Unknown ·thence north on aald Frank t-;:::;::;:;;::;:;P;u;:bl:;lc;:Sa::;le;:an;:d:=A:u;ct;:l;o;;n:::::::::::::;:::;;
'
and
Horton line to the north line 11
William E. Newberry, his of sold lot; thence west
· unknown heirs, aaslgna, alpng aald north Uno to tho
. legatees, and devlaees, last

nalla~M.

Notice

9

Lawt. Pay By Tho Col Plul ,....
ago. lilblllty ~-- l'nltl~ J.
tl lnttlllftd PltiM 8 - ..._

IUI'nl fnctwt6na Tine
By July a, IM To -

Acta:a a
COuilty

~ -~. lnc.. IU).

Box2tl, G ' I * OH-1. •

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 25, 1998

Pomeroy,• Middleport, Ohio

•

.' ' 'I

~Th~u~nd~v·~y~,J~u;ne~25~·~1~.~------------------------------~Po~~~ro~y=·=M=I=dd=~=po==rt=·=O=h=~==~~===============T~h=e=D=a~lly~Se==n=tl=ne=I=·=Pa~ge~1~'
.
-~_- ,i

ALLEYOOP

PHILLIP

ALDER
440
Oak Hill, Ohio Trud&lt;lng•Compeny
Looking For Experienced Semi
Tractor Trailer OriYtri , EJCcellent
Pay I Insurance Package, 7408112-6et3, Bo-.,e-s.

CU81011 FIT ButlOIAS

Me·rk Cronk, Owner 1·740..871 -,
1378 Windows ·Stdlng -Doors · ·
Rooltng. lloonotd ond tnlurtd.

E~~p~rltnctd wponttr wHI dO rfo l

Overbrook Cente r, 333 Page

modeling, dtcka, vinyl siding ,.

Stroot, Middleport, Ohio hao lull
Umt and part time STNA poal·
tiona avallab" tor all shift&amp;, an·
~ont 1nter11ted please stop by

plumbing . Fret eatlmates . Call
Jim Shull. 3~·875- 1272. Roloronceo upon roquelt.

and fill out an application . 740·
~72. EOE .

POsTAL JOBS TO 111.31/HR.
Inc. -eenefltl. No Experience. ·For
App. And Exam Info., Call 1-BD0813·3585, Ell 6.74 , 8 A.M. ·9
P.M., 7 0ayo ldl,lr&lt;:.
Rooren and Siding Installers
Needed Fo'r Immediate Employ·
ment, Apply In Plraon At Chris·
tlan'a Construction, 1403 Eastern

Avo .. Golllpolls , OH 7•o-u8· ~t4.
.

Furniture repair, refinish and re~­
tOfatlon, also cuttom ordtra. OhiO
Valley Refinish ing Shop, Larry

Phlll_,s, 740-812~576 .
Georges Portable Sawmill. don't
haul ygur logs to 1111 mill )uti can
30-4-675-1957.
Painting, Plumbing, Remodeling,

Any And All Odd Jobol Frll Estimates, 740-24!1--5151.
Professional TrH StNICe, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In·
aurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 61•·388-

SCenic HUla NuJSing Cente r. 311

96-t8, 6,.-367-7010.

Buckrldgl Rd., Bidwell, OH 45614
Is Now Accepting Applications
For A Full-Time LPN (Shifts 3:00
P.M . · 11 :30 P.M. &amp; 11 :00 P.M.·
7:30 A.M.) Must Be Sensitive To
Tho Naoda OF The Elderly

Will Do C(IITIIMrtlal &amp; Residential
Cleaning No Job 11 Too Small,

Ctl Ba1h. 7-10-367-7886.

FiNANCIAL

Pltall Apply In Parson At The
Front Desk Between 8:30 A.M. •

4:30P.M.
Scenic Hills NurJing Center, 31 1
BUCI&lt;rtdgl Rd., Bidwell, OH 4~14
11 Now Accepting Applications
For Friendly Outgoing .ttnd De·
pondablt STNA's Please Apply
In Person At The Front Desk Bet·
- 8:30A.M. -4:30P.M.

Scinlc Hills Nunlng Center 311
BUckrldge Road , Bidwell . OH
45614 Ia Now Accepting Applies·
tiona For Part·Time Laundry And
HOUIIkHplng Aides. Please Ap·
ply In Person At The Front Desk
BatwHn 8:30 A.M. -4:30 P.M. No
PhOne Colts P -.

..

Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Applications For
A Part- Time Restorative Therapy

Assistant 10:00 A.M. -8:00P.M.
Must Be STNA· Restorative Experience Hefpful But Not Re·
qulrad. Dependability A Mustl
Please .ttpply In Person At

Scenic Hills Nursing Center, Bet·
ween a:30 A.M. -4:30 P.M.

SUIIIIITTRANSPORTAT10N
Openings For OTR Orivar&amp;,
• .2111 Per Milo
• $12.50 Per HOur
• Unloading &amp; Drop Pay
• Porlonall:ttd Olopatch
• Home Wttkty

• 401 K-Vocation, Holiday Pay
• Madlcallrisurance

Call 60D-878-0880 Mon -Frl 9:00
A.M. To 5:00 P.M.
.
Teaching ·positions available al
Carleton School. FuiHime and
subStitute opportunlllt!i for teach·
era with current Ohio Department
ot Education Teaching CerUIIcate.
To be contldorod tor lull time employment, applicants must 1110

hM'8 or ~ eligible to obtaWI Ohio .
Department of Educalion multlhondicOI&gt;Pod -UOn.
Send rttiiJmt by June 30 10:

Meigs County Board ot Mental
Aetan:tation and O..elopmantal

...

OAKWOOD HOliES
Racln Stllobrotlon, 0 Down 8.99
APR. 304-J'38.34Ilil.

-' t/2 acrea, water, titc••rtc and
•wer, choice 11101- Roady for olnglo wldt, dOublo wldo or build

mo. tree elr &amp; t*tlrting. t-eo&lt;HJ91·

nome. One mila from Ohio Atver

·

18K80 3br, 2 bltll, $1,325. dOwn,
~7~: FIN 11' &amp; sl&lt;irt. 1'
tll63 Champion, !10&lt;12, two badrooms; 1994 Spruce Ridge Sky-

llolgs Co.: Rutlond, Whitoo Hill
Rd ., Ready To Sellll 18 Acru
$1-4,000 Or 9 Acres $12 ,000 .
Darw"le, SR 32S, Nlct WOOded 9

19a7 14K80 2 Bedrooms, Good
St,.po, Asking Price 18.800. 7-10&lt;146-2~. ·
1992 Commodore, 14 xao. on

Friendly Ridge, Nice 18 Acres

Bath, ! lot tor a~lt· Gallipolis, 9011172,
nice neighborhood. quiet, 740-

ABANDON HOME Make 2 'peymenta , auume loan. owner fl·
nandng evoN-. 304-755-7191'.

All real estate edvelriSing In
thiS newspaper ia aut&gt;)oCI to

tna Federal Fair Houlljng Ai!t
of 18811 which makoa • Illegal
toadvertlse'anypreferenco,
llm~tlon or discrimination

based on ....,, color. retlglon,
seK famHial status Of' national
origin, or any intention to
• make any such preference.
lin111allon or dacrimlnafion."

Tl11S newspaper will not
'

knowingly IIOCI!pl

1-

_,...,.,.."" A181which IS In vlola1lon of 1111
law. OUr are her8by
that

-In

aii-Nngo

this,__

day. June 22. This Is All Out 01
Doors Work, vary Physical And
Long Hours. We Work 7 Days A
Week And You Must Be Willing
To Travel , Have A Valid Drivers
License And Be Able To Pass
Drug SCrotnlnQ. Apply In Pinion,
10 A.M. To 3 P.M. Mon. Through
Fri. At The Knigl'ltl Inn Rm. t5,
404 Chillicothe Street. Jackson,
Ohio 740-288-3128.

Wanted
Cuh ' Paid For Land In Clallla
county, Blackburn Roatty, 740 •
4'8

Huge 2aK80 3BR, 1 112 bath.
Starting at ONLY $38.88t. Many
options available. 1 ·888-928-

3426.
Hurry! 1993 16~t70 moblta home.
two bedrooms, two bathroom&amp;,
numerous upgrade• Including
CA. cothtdral co~ngs. all drywd,
real rock underpinning. garden
tub, ate. E•Ctllont condition. Must
bo moved. A must Itt, prlctd to
oell at $18,400, coli 740-982-

11qo.

3 Bedroom, v..-v Clean, Stove &amp;
-·,
Aofrlgorotor, Control AJC. Lorge
)!i!d· 2~'t"raNgePtt,At 17·~-~'
-

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

0

••

~~-

Homn for Sale

$2.800. 740-&lt;146-3708.

30-1- n:~-5104 a11or 5:00pm.

Two bedroom In Pomeroy, 1300
per month, $300 dopoo~. poy own
utllltllo, no poll. 740-812·2381.

Win 011 or rorot. 3o-l-576-28t0.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260 ·$300 , sewer, water and
tr.llh - - 740-992-2167.
2 bedroom mobile home In
Rictno. no pots. 740-lt2·5fllle.
2 BadrOGm TreHer, C&amp;oH To Gal·
llpolio, 740-256-8574.
2 Bedrooms, No Pels , Cily

NEW BANK REPO'I Onty 3 loft!

dOwn , $382. per rnoilth. frio "" •
-. t-IBHtlt~m.

Lovely Country Home On SR 1
South With A Brtothtllklng Rtvor
VIew. IIOry PriYOit Sot1lng On 2 11
2 Acre• But Only 10 Mfnutea
From Glllpotlo. 3 -4 Bodloooo•. ~
112 Batha. Hardwood Floora. 2

Fall Rtgiltrotlon Ia Ooon In July.
Stop In Or Call For A Brochutt . .
740-245-533-4. Financial Aid ~~~--Hoot
KMchon. MillY Eii1ru.Pump,
Wt1t1't -~ ·
Longll $1 10,000.
1, I 'I *To T'hoM WhO OUiilt;'.

::1-tng.

And~-·
110 WlntadTo Do
NlfODO.IOBI
Int.
8IWubl
llowor
'bOda,
· londoooplng,
- · ......,_
oldowol~
odglno. mowing,
ooc ... Freo Eatlmoloo. Coli SUI
304-1'15-7112.
Clrclt -N· Conv~nOrtH~~·
. . 2 OpoNnga-.,.
--lclt~ Plroon In My Hlomo,
7-1-15311,

Ized apt, lor tldor!Y and handicapped. EOH 304-67!1-8879. .

Scooters, Electric Wheelchairs,
Sates : .Rental, Trade , New 4
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 7•o-

448-7283.
Furnlahecl •
Rooms
tCircle M.o ttl Lowest Rates In

Town, Newly RtmOdolod, HBO,

IClnamalt,

Shawtlma &amp; Dlaney.

IWHkly Ratto, Qr Monthly Ratt&amp;,
Construction Workers Welcome
'740o44t--. 740-441-5167.

rooms' with cooking .

on rlvor. All
at1or 2:00p.m.,
, Mason WV.

460

Space for Rent

50K123' 1ralltr space In Mlddlaport, 740-992-3194.

Coli Vlrglnto l . Smith Rlllly At
740·448·1108 Or Call Coro AI
74D-~!I-9430 For Moro lnlormo-

WITH 8tKKEN8 THE BEAUTY IS
MORE THAN SKIN DEI!P.
Your deck 11 the centtr of your
entertaining and r.creallon acrlv-

11111. So don't lutt give It a "finIsh•. Give It a quality Slkkens
flnllll with tna Catol OEK or Rubbot DEK ayatams.
PAINT PUIS 1304)17~014.

Woll Sun Quast Tan'll~g Bad
Longenburger Baskel. ~me In·
terlor. 740-256-1088.

01 Parking Located; 28 Codal,
Galllpolio, 7&lt;0-251!-88t11 .

.550

lon.

-port, -utlful

two ttory, 3

b(. 2 bolh, lorgo l.r. I lr .. ook
dOorl I trtm, 8mtln't CUllOmcabinets, Jenn·alr range, dish·
welftlr, dlti:Ched 1111101. by apo

point••,., 740-182·5243.

:

Modern Homo In VI""'", Willi VInyl Sldl~ AC. HP Nico Corpoll
FIMhld,Mr,.,r, On 2lote All
S55-00C!. 010 !!II ID.

·-·----v01'111-

,.., .... -27.1. .

MO Second MeAve, MlddiUI Ot1·

no.... proollocotlon. oxcollent

cor-•·
-1.116,000.
- ltllllfll-.
Prloo-.
IIALETAYLOR-TY

SchOoil, locottd Clost To Clalllpotl, 7-10-&lt;146-3907.

,__

,,._.,, ......
TAXIfiCW.

Now 3br ltlai/down Slit/mo.
Froo Sot-up a DoHvory. Only 3
Lolli Only II ooe- NI-

tro

wv.30-1'75HIIS.

1WO 2 bedroom trollora. tOII!IO a
12XIfl, atove and refrigerator.
goa, Now lime Rd., ...,.,
7-10-742-2103.

ween Alhens and Pomeroy,

c~ll

Block, 'brick. aewer plptl, wind·
owe. Nntefs:. etc. ·Claude Winlera,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245. 5121.
Pole Building Specials: 24'K•2'K9'

with two 1O'xB' overhead doors.
one 3' entry, Insulated roof &amp;

· Household

seamless ouuer. erected price

Goodl

1

---------Appliances:
Recondltloned
Washers, Diyers, Ranges. Aalrl·
gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag , 740·4•8-

$6946 . 30'x48'x9' with one 14'x9'
·Sliding door, one 3' entry, seam loll gutter, orocttd prtca $7385.

Poaclllon Post Frame Bulldam
lr&lt;:. 1·800-396-3026, 740.812·
M16.

n 95.

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Faaturlng Hydro Bath . Don
Sheela. 373 GaorQes Creek Rd.

740-4-III.Q231 .

AKC Engllth Springer Spaniel
Pups, 6 Weeks Old , tst Shots.
Wormed, $150, 740 -256-1935,
Afllr 5.

UHd Furniture Start Bilow .Holiday Inn . Konauge. Bods. Couch-

es, Oreuert , Tlbltl. Dasks,
Lamps And Morel Summar Hfl .

Monday Thru Frldoy, Hro . 10·8,
740-448-4782.
Used Window Air Condllloning
Unlla, Dlfleronl Slzoa, Guaranteed,
740.888-0047.
t::'lft

_.,

AKC Reg Golden RttrMr Pups,
ready on 7-6-118. M-11·75 FM$200. Col NOWt 30H8!1-338tl.
AKC Aoglotored Aott Wellora.
Ready To Go 6/26198 . 2 Molts, 3

Sport!
ng
Goodl

Femllfll, 7-40-388-9788.

Molt Slut Merlo. 1 Malo
Bird. Jenday

conure. H8nd
ratted. Tame. S3~0 . Grey and
white Cockatiel $50 .' 740-9928914thor 5pm.
Open SUnday• 1-4. Mon-sat
1t ·8. Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave. Point Pleas·

-

PbiiWD I Boutht Won1 Fft My
LOI, Muot Soli, M Do- &amp; S.C
Up. 1-tOo-3134112.

Moore-.

Four lomele Himalayan kltttno lor

540 MIIICIIIaneoua
Merchandlae

sale, vet checked and wormed ,

tlinOIHI II li&gt;U bon, Cll Us, Wo
Bolli LOMI 741) 448 1301. 1-tOo281-11088.

Largo gotdliah for outdoor ponds.

Sl5. otch. 304-875-11145.

_CIIy,__,.
NOTICE

330 F1m11 for Sale

seoo.

llnlnd GrNt Glftl c~
otorogo
unit.
lltck
ond0111 oi!ICIJ.
$125.
up
lo 140 dltCI, Olio hOidl llptl,
Cott 7•0.tt2-1138 ahtr 1 ,....

.

-Openl

Profellional Grooming by .Ap pokltments. Over t5 yra. e11peri·

ence, evening appointments
ovolloblt, 850 Second Avo. Galllpolio, OH. t-10-&lt;146-1528.

P..abrod Siborlon hutky IIUI&gt;Pin.
aiX-Did.twoJIICI&amp;-. IMI
block I. wliltt, $125 each. 140-

3l'H408.

fMlC.1 C,IJPPLIE:'i
"'LIVE:STOCK

..
Farm El'.llpmeut
400 Formoll, both In oxcollent
"'-· 7-10-1115-31102.
I.H. 254 4 WO. Troctor 25 HP F.E.
~
1
2 0e-Ft. Flnilll740-24!1-!MI7'B.

•.ooo.

chorrJ. ;~-~~·~S~TX:·II~:Iti:Ritllng~~lo~w~n
now. lo,eoo.

1

=·

1 ledraam Unfunilshld, 11t
Ftoof, AI Furnlohod Ex·
oopt Eitctrlc, Control Locatioft,

7401W Ill.

-~----w..n.
~~~Were 1

Chlrlotlo u •••••
5pm or

DrttllnO , _ , at-r, IWing,

'~
' - · bn, bod, a I'"' aot.
.

304·67~197 .

1985 . Mercury MlfC:JUIS $500;
1995 Chrysler Cirrus , S11 ,500,

740-24S-53i3.

· 1988 Dodge Colt. New tires, battery, paint and front brakes. 740·

99H914 afllr 5pm.

1987 Buiell Con1Ury Stotlon Waaon.7~53.
1987 Chevy

Cavauaf, 4dr; with

AC . Folr cond . t500. 740-98269 t 4after 5pm.

South

ttHTOyOta 4 - · 6c,llndor,
rloo. St7,5QO, Blue Book Voluo
$23,275, 7-10-&lt;146-S!in.

Pe[l'et Condhlon, All Accesso-

1978 16ft Trl Haul bOll 70hp.: •
motor &amp; trailer w/10me acctSIO- "· •
rles. Boat &amp; lflotor In real good :

shape, Asking $3,300 form. 74Q- ' •
448-3488.
.
1987 Fisher 11&amp;1 bOttom 15h. alu·
mlnum Jon Boat 1987 Carolina · :
boat uauer, galv-nlzed, with

Crodll Proliloma? Wo Con Hotp.
Easy Bank Financing For U1ed
Vehicles, NO' Turn Downs, Cell
Vlcklo. 740-448-2897.
Upton ulied Cora At. 82-3 Mlltt
South of Leon, WV, Financing

1981 lnuirnatlonal Cargo Star

740-7~~-

19a2 Ford ohortbtd, motor and
body good. runo good. S775, 740812-3175.
.
t9a8 Ford F-180, 314 Ton PlcttUp. $2.&lt;100. 740 448 3870.
' t888 Font Ranger. 5 ......,_ """·

-

Footlvol ond Folr Food Booth lor
Solo. Will Conlldlr Trodo. 740~0803
.
.

'

sa.ooo.

,

THE BORN LOSER
r Dr.i.O:&gt;TINbi ~fUL!
i"-~Ta£=&gt;:&gt;! ~tl'lc,l

•

BIG NATE

CUIIMI, Loadlre,

,._,._ Etc. CorLewn Midway

a f!to Clritncls.

Pllio 7•0-4481.

-Good.-.

,. . llionco H XLT, 4 WO, Auto,
All ~r. Runt ClOOdl 8otly E•cotlont Conditlonl $3,800, 740·

-

e

West North
Pass
4•

East
!NT
All pass

By Phillip Alder
This deal appealed to me because
declarer overlooked a key clue: Terence Reese used to say that there are
no blind leads, only .deaf bridge
.players. Well, there, are no automatic plays, only robot players.
· Dcs:lilrcr is in four beans after Ea.~t
opened with a weak no-trump, showing 12-14 high-card points. West
leads the spade jack, which declarer
duck.s to East's king. Ea't cashes the
ace-king of clubs, then plays a third
club. Needing the rest of lhe tricks,
how should S.Outh contlnue?
The deal occUlTed during the 'yearend tournament in Blackpool; on the
northwest coast of England. The
winners of the Swiss Pairs were
Rhona and Bernard Goldenfield. but
they would ha.ve been relegated down
the rankings if S&lt;!tJth had drawn the
. right conclusion here.
For South io play the trump suit
without loss, the right line in isolation
is a first-round finesse. Knowing this,
South played a diamond to dummy's
:ice, followed by a finesse of the heart
eight. As ·you can see, he went one
down.
·
South should have counted the
points. Ea~! had already produced I0
points in the black suits. If she had
the heart' king as well. it would bring
her total to 13. This would mean that
Wesl wpuld have both the king. and
queen of diamonds. But then. surely
he would have led the diamond king.
not the spade jack, at Irick one.
Therefore, East had a lop diamond .
Ergo, West had the heart king. And it
musi be a singleton becau~~e . Eao;~
opened one no-trump. guaranteeing
al lea.~t two cards in every suit. So.
South should have cashed the.heart
ace at trick five.

PEANUTS
WIIAT A FACE !

$3,400. 304-182-3237 afllr 5pm.

;

1"""7

1980 Floatwing t1W11tng 1711. &lt;
1972 Ariatocrat 1811. 1873 SmokJ '
1511. 1899 Bob McCormlcll Rd.
7-10-&lt;146-1511

..

,----t

740-687·32225'1

ITHURSDAY

'J .

••

1tl8 30h. Sprinter travel trailer.,.._
lui owninp, CIA I heal. UMd 4 &gt;

· '

31 Addhlonal

. ,.

'

helplngo

: ;

_,'*

-I!Mnt

&lt;10 More
41 ::":'""
42 Tax egcy.
431na ond44 Cable
411 Moon

I

.

~

.•

...

fl(1(k1HJ

•

47 Mohammedln :
prarer ~uMr: :

48UHI

.· .

lraybOard
50 Language

•
•- ,
...

lutfl•
52 WOrd on

a .• •
towel
.. -,
53 Anglo-Sixon -

\

.• - '-

letter

CELEBRITY CIPH-ER
by

Lui• campo•

c: ...

. ."
" .

Celebttty CIDNr Cl\"'lliiOO''f are Cl'ell.cl hom quotations by ramo. people. put and prna'\1
Eld'lliitt.,-in ttw dpher standi lot anolhef. Toe11y'f Clt.M: G «~U~~IJ Y

•

•.v M P

ZDMUF

.

C D J F z ·F

'

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BDHQ

'PMHLBJL
TFPB.

NMOO

FOPF

DHF

UODPF.'

TFHHFBB .

BVF

PM E I O . G

N L P

HD

O'M Z F

FOBDH

FZFH•

ULEF

YOVH

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION · "He was an idol to me as a great Italian Amencan and
a Qreat Blnller."- Marton Scorcese. ol Sinatra

_'. .,.=;.; ~;.; :; .;~:. . '...::S:..@-=!'!l~.~,!~trs·

WOlD
tAM I
• . ,J

..

8R-rango lottoro of !he
four scrambled
below to form four simple -ds.

I

-d•

RUCLOA

.l. I 1 I 1· l
.

'

0

•

I

CHIKT
3

'

::::~~

I ( i t11..~·

- • J

6

-

.

If hard work .is lhe key to
success, I think some people
would rather • • • the - -. -

--p---,
-

I I I e

.vou

Complete tho chuckle

qu~tod

by filltng in the m1uing WOt"d$
develop f~om uep No. 3 bela,w .

r r 1· r r I' I' 1

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS

Don'cHcwe
To Spy the 8esr Burs tn
the Clossl(le1h-

camper, like now. kltchonlllvlng 1
room llldl-out, ~n bed, ctn11r 1
·t&gt;alh. sldo-by-sldo, priced to Hll, ·~

.

'

Wonderlul
Ute

lll~hdllll

WILL SETTL-E INTO TIIEIR ·
I'ROI'ER SIZES AHI&gt; PLACES,
ANI&gt; VOI/'LL IE IEAUTIFUL

t

199~ Jayco Deltgner Series :M'

:~

33 Coutlon
38 Clerlcttl

• ~:~~:.r~:~~RfS I'

I.III.L SOMEDAV. SIR ••

I'LL NEVEl 8E ALL OF VOIIR FEATVRE5

8EAIJTIFUL

~ ~:: :s::s

24 No
25 Rom•n

l)l'lnce••

7 E Nl
a
--.l.--.1.-.1.'--..J.L-,..1..
• .....J.
l

1973 23ft. Dodge COOcordl, golf
eiiCiflc heat, microwave. double·dOor refrigerator, 16ft. carefree •

21 Beta,. thlo
·'
time, old-atyle ·. '

2$ It- talrl
29--

•'

1972 StarCrah, can for appoint:

,20 Went by cer · .

' garm~~nt

-----C-R- 1

mont. 740-843-5387.

..

27 SllrWaro

,.
II

Weaver· Growl- Vague · Chintz - WATER
The jilted coed concluded that if all the big fish that
got away were in the sea. there wouldn't be ;my room
for the WATER.
'

•

.'
'

..
JUNE 251

24 Foot ·Travet Tralllr. Slatpll' ~
Roof Air Condillonor, Very Good' •
s.._. Aototng 12.aoo. 740-258-. '

1312.

.

=

•"

I

Pop-up compar. SloOps 1. Groot
conditioft. AC/hoot. ()von. otow,
and sink. Electric,
or bit·
1o&lt;J. I3.000. 740·8t2~D14 eltor

ta•.

Spm.

.;

."

•
:

'

~

' ' I

•

•

.

. 810

Home
lmpronmenta

730 Vant .&amp;4-WDI

740448 . . 1.

DOWN

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer. North ·

R Auto, Rlploy, wv. 304-3723833 or HIOD-273,11321.

Campet I &amp;
Motor HOlliN

51 Perched
57 MortHICitlon

50

SIG!O.

tNt Cliovr Von t/2 Ton.Loollo
Good.
$1.000,

Tl\1=&gt;~?

•
'

lli'4 Ford F·ISO 4&gt;4 4 Spied,
For
ft,II.OOO. 7-I0-256-t311.

Buoh Hog Ooolor For

..,
lo-11\Y DO T~'l' PUT !&gt;I-\OW~ U"f.
rnt:&gt; Gl m~ ~I!:? lo-11-'£1 WO'£j

,

18t2 Font EKptoi,; 68.000 mlllt.
1&amp;.000. 080. 30-"875-&amp;4311.

18t7 ROd Ford Rongor XLT Au··
tomottc. AIC, AlumiJMim Whottt,
Power SI!Mrlng, Power Brak11,
110,700, 780-1146-0337.

r

I

Oldlt But Goodlo: Wlnnobogo •
Nil» Condition! $2,500, 740-318- •

18t7 Dodge Dokcito 4 Cl'llndor
Magnum. 5 Spootl, 14,000 Milot,
Noodo Minor Work On Bod,
.17.500. OBO, 7-10-258-1233.

..,

I

..ooo.

1995 Ford Rongor XLT, 19,000
mlloo. 4cyl. 5tp. loodtd $7,500.

1&gt; K 6 3

• 7 4
•K -J 43
I&gt; A K 10 8

A body porta. D &amp; ·

Apptllnc:e Portl And Stnolco: All

Nome

Brlrldt Ovor 25 V..ro El·

petilftCI All Work Guaflnllld

Fronch City Moyoog, 740·44e:
77116.
.
CIC Gonorol Home Mow
tononco- Pointing, vinyl tiding
...,.,.,_ - . . - · · be...:
For
liM o.. owto col Chit, moro.
74G-De28323.

- - rapltlr ond

140 Ellcblwl and .
Rahlgw;tlon
"=' · ...., or commtrclll Wwtng

11

/,VN(:./1

2-1995 Ki\'fll&amp;akl 750SS waveRunners w/double tratler, great
shape, oarage kept, low hours.
080. 30-"875-12t5.

=~=·~~~~==!1-~31=2=·~----~··

1990 Toyoto 4x4 PIC!o-Up, 5

. , _

GOAL.S•
. .

1889 C!ltvroltt Subprbln,2500,
31• r,on ~ 2-whHI drtve. ex. cones.
" lout. "" rust. 304-675-3123.
1990 Chevy SIIYirtdo 350 long
bOd. outomalic, - · positive
tracuon rear~•nd . two tone,
~-ns-s1 :11. 304-77350:11.

Spotd, 110,000 ,Milos, 7~
42711.

Moblll Homee .

I..ON6·TfJM

1993 2111. Mirada Cabin Cruiser,
ln/outboerd motor. 4.3 engine.
plus Ill ICCISSOrlel . 30•·675•
83!i9 afttl! 5pm.

awning, king Jlze bad. new ties, 1
4.0 Ona generator, runs great 1 1

720 Truckl for Sale

$575, 7~1310 .

·FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

8HP Mariner engine amall •oiling
moror, fish finder. $2,000. 30•·
87!1-5756.

790

P•rseghllln

Count those points

a7!1-3660- - -·
186.4 Evlnruda Sweet 11 Trl haul, :
to hp. Evlnrude molor, Evlnrudt •
•alltr, 740-7~·2580. ·

11nb

Ci. -~ ~ :"ora-

• 10
12 Type ol conbol 411111uml.-.d
·
14 Aqultlc
41 O..IIOjecl
mammela
51 siontrtng from
15 Prayor
cold aymptomo
16 - Katpitll
54
17 Foolbtlll coech 55 Abduct

Opening lead: • J

$7500.740-142-7101.

-goa

East

Pass

'DO Cna.tah, open bow, 18', 4 cy-.
lil'cter 110, with acceasor111,

-s

. •J

~:=+:::+7~~

workforce
23 Prlvoto IUctt.r 1 Steppod on
2 Phi - Keppa
2t1 Not llrlghl
3 Chooool
27 Numllor of
4 Weddlng--peglt
cordolna
word
.
Roman tMc:k?
5
Play
by
30'1YJMof
Comparetlve
Scholar
oum
autllx
12 Sounding llkl
32Mostm-n
34 City In Oregon 7 LeaVHout
a lion
35 Sind partlclea 8 F-pert
13 Prlnterl'
31 Shinto temple 8 G-k portico
rnee•urea
11 Futuro lltya.'
37 Wood oorral
11 DIMncumber

• J 2

Four Wheel Drive, Need• Re·
polro. $1,850 Etctl, 7•o-u84111 .

shlpo. 30-4-47!1-2714 or 304-67!1-- 2011. Citation Wllfjlilor, In/outbOard
motor, t70HP.·$4,885 . 30.·6751517.
4221 .
1988 Pontiac Bonna•lllo SSE,
power windoWs, power brakes, AJ 22 Ft. Sea Ray Cuddy Cabin
C, amlfm ca..ette, $2600, ~- Hardtop lncludao Dining Ar81
With Sink, Aicolool, Stovo. BIJIH-In
273-3307.
tea Cnatt, Soereo. Pon -A -Pony,
1989 CorJica V·6. Automatic, AI Now lower Unit. Glmblo Rlnga,
C. S2.395: 1889 Jeep Comlllcha Eahaull Manifold. St11ring Ca·
~lck-Up Bucket Saata. $2,295,
bill, Battery, Stelnl11s -Sieel
Cook Molotl, 7-10-448.0100.
Prap. Cuatomtrtd Storage Cpvtr,
.
18.500. 7-10-&lt;146-7toa.
1989 Ford Te~r~po, runs good,
needs windshield , lois of new 35 Horse Power Johnaons GOOd
ptrtl. $800. 080. 304-67!1-73811.
~Col- 1
P.M. !JO&lt;otl'1!1-51 ~1 .
t89t Chevrolet Covollar. Nice
.Clean Car, Au1omatlc, New Tires Kowooakl STS Jot 'olol, odl undor
And Cold Alr~1759.
warranty, thrH M•r, 13 ,_...
power, bought new July ol 't7,
199t llotlgt Ottyuona Shtll&gt;y llJr- three matching Kawasaki sllr
. bo Fuly Loaded, High Milos, E•· v1111 and trail,, all go with lt.
cellent Condlllon, $4,000, 7•0- 15000, 740-94 ..2203 or 740-tM•
379-2847, LtiY8 .......,
204!5, will consider trade tor 1
1993 Buick LaSabre Limited, good pontoon bOll.
Loaded, Clean, 73,000 Mlloa,
lloCAIACE
19,000, 740-448-27115.
1967 Oceanic Su Imp 180hp.
Mercruilor In/board ongino. 18ft.
199.t Cavaua~ AS ." 4dr, auto,
4cyl. loaded. gOOd cond. 89,oqtl deep-V w1114111r, life jackins I
bumpers. 740-446 -3114. Make
· rni!RM.850. 304-578-2668.
olllr.
1994 Pontloc Sunblrd. Y-6. 5
, Spttd, 21 ,000 Mlltt, Rod, 111,300 780 . Auto Parll &amp;
OBO, 740-251-1252, 740-258A~

*

!':T::'T:'T=~ • •

boYw8gel

• Q 4 2
• A Q J 10 9 5 2
.. 9

1888 Yamahe warnor, gooo con·

saoo.

1 Cui ol bMf
II CMIIed

20LIIVJJIM

. South

,.... Good ,... 351 -

CC.afltpoonal~.

112 M:":L

1985 Mercedes 190 E. 4dr, high
mlloago. ...000. 304-675·1851 or

30-"87~.

INFonltrocior-4'-hog;

I

n Mtklloj "-

-

2981 .

Cor1trol Air Col-iliog. Frw Eo-

1983 M ~ stono , • Cylinder, Automatic. 1&amp;95. 740 441 0380.

·118-15-91

6 5 -3

• Q 10 8 · 7 2
• Q9 1 4

Mercury motor, trailer. tackle/
lures. other eKiriS. $8,500. 30.t- .

1982 Cutlaos SUpreme, 2 D. 280
V8. Good Condition, $ t ,aoo Or
Bast Ollal, 740-812-4568.

·.•

•• • J•

&lt;10 Olateolded, Jllra
-....,.
42 Plabrlllra'a

•

•K

20ft. NorriiCrah bass hOtt, 200hp

1700, PS, 31.000 actual mlloo,

Goldin Retriever Puppltl, AKC
$200, ShOts /Wormed, 740-379-

TD9' • • •

I.J!~~~n~ic~o~co:r:n•:•~lo~l,~7:4:0r
·
o r

740-742'1019.

Drlflla, H- fiiUt ahoora, llko
I? IP ;o L 7--2171.

19114 Honda V85 Sabro, ttoocc,
t•,500 MIIH, Water Cooled, Shift Drlvo, U1oe - · 740-441-CI443.
1991 Hondo 250x 4 - loll
01 ~ Btut11740-441-1418.

tlon . St000,'74D-812-7.a7.

1980 -19110 Trudia For SHIOIII
Seized Ard Sold
local~ This Month.
lluckt, .,..•._ Etc. .
1·800-522·2730, X380t ..

'•'

11 Hot or cold

West
. • J 10?

'92 X2 Jl1 Ski, IJtCellenl condl·

-- ~t08t.

6:00p.m. 740·8t2·252e. Rutt

•u•um

1loo bocliOC!JII -

.... 304-87!1-21183.

1tl2.

.-onc~-.oocumy

Trlco~

..ttl. 74o-446-1032.

Antlqun

..20. '

,.,__,_

ACROSS

• A 8 7 5
• 8 6 3
• A 65
1

Motcin
for Sale

$1110 Stlrtd &amp; Sold Locally Thil
Month. Call t -a00-522-2730 Ell.

1618:

Australian Shepherd Puppies, 1

Ping driver end three wood with
ttHI ohoh and rogular lltK. The
driver Pill 1 wooden nead with
to• loll StOO. lor bot11 clubs. 30467!1-Sillle.

530

Peta for Sale

560

rangoo. Skaggo Appllanceo, 76
Vlno Stroot, Coli 740-448-7398,.
t-1100-499-3499.

,.,. --In . . . , "

dlpooh roqulrtd, no pots, 74ollflll-2211.

Many Eii1raa To L~tt ·snow Con- •
dltlon' ,. ,9!10, 740-388-9780 Attor 5:30 P.M.

2 Honda 300 Four Wheelera,

N.orth Carolina car, no rust, h .

Supplle•

-7--3417-

, ..., z bletOOin ••nn•• tur-

EEK&amp;MEEK

188-t Honda Aspencadt Too ..

tom, 2573 Yateo Crossing Rood,
Milton, WV. We "do vacuum
packing. 304-743-5400.

1987 ·Toyota. Ctllco, 5sp, olr,

Building

Mobile homo site available bot·

t/3 corot. round dlonoorid - lim e. paid
witt toile $550;
nancing ovolloblo.. 304·755·
2br, $250. month, no polO, rolorMlrqulo wedding HI 112 corol ,
7191 .
. , _ owqtiAd, 304-675-88&amp;1.
size 7, paid St400, will lOki
St250; woddlngo1jown w1111voll
New Doubltwlde 3BR, 2 bath.
3 Bodroorno; 2 Bttho 14K70 In
11,325 DOWft &amp; 1205 ....-mo. t - Portor Area. Ooposlt &amp; Rtlwor&lt;:- . slzo 7, polO 1700 Will tlltt, $300;
740-387.Q2Mor7-llillt.
888-128--.
11 Required, Utlllfltl Not Includ125·CFM gas compr1110r. call
Slntll p,...,__ Special ed, 7t0-3U-9t82.
7-·754eollor5pm.
.
financing ort 2, 3 6 4 bldroom
Air conditioned. two bedroom
hom11. Payment• •• low ~e
lraller on Front StrHI In Mldd•
18,000 BTU All COndillonlr. 740I110. CIInow304-7!5-5115.
. port, roody lo .
Into. Call to 448-7123.
oppty
_
_
11
Cof
3Q4-882-2318,
_
_
..,,
ook
lor
SIIOclol 11&lt;10 38A. 2 both.
1183 Cub Codot Aiding Lown
$1 ,325 Down, 1205 Mo. FrH olr
11141 48' Dock, 11
'lroo o~Wttng.t.-..1-trn.
Ttollort lor rent 2br a 31ir, quoll- HI'. Wltli Cu. Ft. Trellor. E...•lont
tlollor IUJ. 304-17WI04.
~ 13.2110. 740o441o0043.
-·ICIUI
,.,. bocliooon tn11or with _....,,
Boonlo's: Amerlcon TriO S1.300,
Mopll' saoo; Aodor ssoo. 740eloted In porch, tn Tuppera
Plolno. 1275 rnont!1 plrla dlpoolt , _4, - 4 P.M.
117_tlt1 __
ond
ATTINTIOII: Wo'll ,.AY YOU
QnlwAIC
·-.wv_7_ td
_ ......
TO LOIE U" TO 2t - · 47
S300 month plut dopoolt, 740· . . . . NMdtd liiWI¥7 I) Ofllr
EoiplrH, 71Ditl, CALL 740-441M ·31tM.

...
·'"',,.,.__
,.,,.....

.

Waterline Spacial; 314 ~0 PSI
$21 .95 Per 100 ; t• 200 . PSI
137.00 Par tOO ; All Bran Comprouion FltUnga In Stodc
RON EVANS. ENTIAl'AISES
Jacl&lt;ton, Ohio, 1' 800-537-9528

· Buy or sell. Alverln~ Antlqull.
12x65 Trailer w/1 acre of land,• 1124 E. Main Street on At. .124.
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
14x70 irailer w/2 acres or tend.
a.m. to 8:00 t&gt;m., Sun&lt;\IY 1:00 OJ

Loaded 2Bx80, 3br, 2 1f2 bath
with all opllont, onl~ $2,.t99 .

LOOKING ·fOR A 'JOB ... But
Short Ori SkUll? Goln Skllla In
Ono ' VII&lt; Of Trolnlng In Tho
Eveningl. Bucklyl Hilla Carur
Center Continue• In Its 22nd
-Of Opoootlon. Train In: A4Uh
Bltlc Educotlon.
Tooting
Silo, OIIICO ToclinO ,
lnduttrlal Malnt1nance. Peaca
0111cor '/COrreciiOno; success.
ACito Ttcllnology, Air ConditionIng 1 Heating, Farm Buslnell
Planning, Analyal1, Comp!f:tr
Spoclellot, Cuotomor ContorOd,
HllltliCirt Ttcllniclln (Formerly
Nuroo Aldi) .'MR/DD, PrfoEm·
ployrnonl Trolnlng, And Moro ...
Coli 740-245-5334 For Colllog

applications lor 1br. HUD subsid-

Washers, dryers, retrlgerators,

No pets. Rent $300 month . Call

.Still under warranty, owner fi -

Schooll
lnatructlon

lWin Rlvors Towor now accepting

3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath ·House In Rio

lWo bedroom nou... Front Street,
Mason , wt fence In yard , fur ·
nlshed with refrigerator, stove,
washer &amp; drjtr. Deposit roqulrod.

12x80 3 Bedroom Houu Trailer

o.ys Ida, Inc

tor. let Ut KnOw 'lllur lntorllttd.

Pomeroy Thrift Shop now buying
large outside toy• and baby
lteml, walkers, toctdter car seat&amp;,
etc. Tuesday through Friday. One
tiM TY lamatl) Beanie Baby wllh
every $25 Or more purchale, '
7-10-812-3725.

APT AVAII.AIII.E NOW

0000 USEO APPLIANCES

992-e9141fter 5pm.
I -1 BEDROOM HOliES FROII
14,000 Local Gov't. &amp; Bank
~;J:t' Callt -600 -522-273 ?· X

.

dillon , $2,800 . OBO. 304-5782553.

1810 ·1"0 HONDA CAAI FOA

110M.
GrandaArat.t -708-8&amp;4-3483.
3-4 br hOu.. lOcated In Pomeroy.
Newly romocloltd with new carpet
and kltcMn cabinets. 1450. per

..200 080. 740-94..2317.

::

p,...,.,.

North

198• Harley Davidson Sporttter
1000, runt great, loolla great.

710 Autos for Sale

Hou111for R1nt

2 Bedroom Conage On Bulavme.
1/2 Milo From Porter, NO PETS,
Water, Trash Paid, H0-3aa-

tt81 Kowaoakt 250 Stroot Blko. cond. $400. llrm. 304-882·. :

750 Boatl &amp;

MERCHANDiSE

410

=·

MotorcyciM

Nelson 's Custom Proce11ing
now open . Formerly Jones Cua·

TRANSPORTATiON

• 7438~7.

REAL ESTATE

WILIIUiiE JOBS TO S2UOJHA.
Inc. IJaneflta. Game Wardens,
Stcurtty, Malntonaco. Park Rangera. No Exp. Needed . For App.
And Exam Info Callt-800-8133e85, &amp;1. M75. 8 A.M. • 9 P.M., 7

Train AI Nlghr. Taite Adult TrainIng At BucQyo HHia Carotr Con-

Full-Blooded Jaroey Cow Duo To
Froohen With 2nd Call 7112,
1850. 740-215H230.

Space Approx. 718 st wtth Plenty

RENTALS

EIIIIAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

YOU STARTED... But'Your Em·
player May Demand A litllt
Moro. lot Ut l&lt;etp You LHrnlng.

Wtoka Old . Y!tanod, $50. 740·
992-7779. .

1~·~·~0008~.~~~~~~~ For Rent ElCOIItnt Olfloo Or Rotal

420 Mobile HOIIIIII
for Rent

OOT

French Alpine Goat, Buck, 8

Ettata

FREE DOUBLE·WIDE
Stop by Oakwood Hom11 ol Nluo, wv. &amp; reg111er to win rree
doublowldt, no glmmlckt. Only
otOIIIWOOCI,_oi....,,WV,
304-7151-NM.

Experienced tn Heavy Trucka,
Equipment, And Hydraulics. Salary Commensurate Wllh Expetl·
enca. Call Monday -Friday From
li:D0-5:00 At t -800-339-6518 For
An Appointmlnt.
.

""

Real

Wo Poy Clth. t ·800-213-8385 ,
Anthony Land CO.

MECHANIC:

150

360.

payments, 2br, 2 bath, linonctng .
available. 304-755-5566.

WANTED- EQUIIIIIENT

Bullnftl
Training

Angus bull, -'Yrt old, $100. John
ONingor. 304-882-~.

tr, doubla-wldts ONLY! no singlo oldes. 30H73-5944.

B
We uy Land: 30 -500 Acres,

lliJPO(tunity baA.

310

gan Riding Mare . Good Troll
Horse; 8 WHk Old Gurolo Gottd
Stud Coil . 740-357-7575 , 740·
387-ota3, 7.o-44t-o&lt;25.

loll lor oalt·publlc water &amp; saw· ls;;pj~~;;;;;~;;;;;,;;;:

month and security deposit. 7•0·

TriiCI ventures E•ptorations, Inc.
Will Begin Taking ApplicaUona
For Seismic Workers On Mon·

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK

,

.
Divorce Forces Salts· Take over

. , . , . . _ on en equal

~

.ue.4722.

.

6 Vear Old Gentle auaner Mor-

Ac:ros $17,000, City Water. Dyes·
villa, Huntara, Very Remota 11 +
Acrosl10,500.
Golllo Co.: Galllpolle. NelghborhOOd Rd., Nice 10 Actt Building
Slto $18,000 Or 22 Acru With
Pond S2 t ,500 Cash Price.

All Electric, Whh Stove A Rtlrlg- !
9 &amp; W Garage, St. Rt. 338, lolart, erator, Underpinning Included,
Ohio, 740-247-3522 . propane Must Be Moved, $11,000, 740tanka filled lor grils &amp; AVo.
· 2!6-8040. Or 740-256-8123.
Livingston 's basement water· 1995 Ciay10n, 14&lt;70. all oltctrlc,
proofing, all basement repairs o•collont condition, call Tom Andone , free estimates, lifetime darSOn 740-812-3348.
·
guarantee. 12yrs on job expert·
9.5 Acres With 2 Mobile Homes
once. 304-67!1-21~ .
With Additions Fruit Trott, Outbuilding, Price P.tductd $28,000,
740-388-8838, 740-388·8323.
'

~/

740o441o1412

19H Hlllcrtll, 12K~ . t&lt;Ctllant

1985 1'x~ 2 BtdrOOJnS, 1

Service•

2 Small Ponlta Child Salt SsOo
Each, Both For $800, 740·448·

· BRUNER LAND

condition , two bedroom, central
atr, alleteeulc, uMd aa summer
home . must be moved, full fur·

1981 Governor II, 3br, C/A,. new
carpet. 30-"875-38-40.

Ren!

7-40-687·3222.
a acres or 2 aero lots on Bfthet
Rd. wv. No slnglowldoa. 3o•e7!1-7948.
·

balhl; 740-843-5327.

$7000, 7-10-985-3543.

740

Mlacellaneoua
MerchandiM

Boot Romp on 1~ no&gt;ct to Fool!td

line, 72x14, two bedrooms, two

n~htd.

for

540

Run Stan Park, prlu reduced ,

rented lot In Middleport, cto• to $18,000. $2,000 Down • $2t21
210
BuBinell
shopping, schoolo, pool &amp; pork.
Mo., Or 8.5 AcrH $7,500.
Opportunity
Three bedrooms, two full battle,
Call For Free Mapa + Owner Fl·
total electric, 2xe walll. cathedral
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 'celllnga, 3 ton central air condl· , . ~;~;li~a~kt~10~%~011~~llo:ttd~
Po.rcli0st1l
recommends that you do busl· !loner, two skylights, front porch
Lot for' eale, 1.2 acrea In Syraness with people you know, and and back deck, carport, 4' tbOYI
CUlt, $12.000, 740-812-4S81.
NOT to send money through the ground, pool with now 'pump. llnor
mail until you have Investigated and solar cover, privacy tenet In
1t1t olfenng.
· back far pool , new outbuilding, . Lot for aa... 1.5 acres located In
$20,000 flrm, cell 74D-8t2·!1053., Syrocuoe Village on Roy Jonos
1eawt massage If no answer.
1
Rd., $9000,740-992-4581.
230 Profa11lonal

P.O. Box307
~- 011104577D.

140

(ATTENTIOH DIVELOPEAS,
CAIIPOROUNO
COUNTR'f EITATI!S)
38 .2e Acros, APpro•. 1 Aero
Lake, Mobile Home With Large
Add On Clolllo City Wotor And
Eilctrtc $125,000 Moro.-croago
AYOitollto. 740-388-8871,

t• K70 3BR, IM Down &amp; ONLY
$178 PI' mo. FtM lk' &amp; frM skirt·
lnQ. l-888o928-342e.
t••70 3br Slti down, $198 per

em.

Apertmenta.

Puzzle

__L7_________________________________________
•••l
NEA Crossword

- ........... Motltrl;
centld tltc:trtclan . . Ridenour
~.:;:.rlcol, WV0003q8, 304.675 .

•

tivc: you're punuing- reprdless of kind.
the: ~lc:5 you may have~ face. . AQUA~IU~ (Jan. ~Feb. 191
Keep pluuing!
, Family obhgauons requlnng person·
VIRGO (AIJg. 23-Sept. 22) 1r. alanention today Rhnuld bc.siven top
BERNIC~
your point of view is prejudiced priority. Sweeping the~ out of sisht
BEDEOSOL today, your chanceo of IIIICCeSS will be · is not a laslins !IOiution.
limited. To brollden your horizortS,
PISCES (Feb. 20-M~h 20) Co!!·
•
keep an OJ;ICn mind.
·
ditions .are not as dirftwlt a.~ you
LIBRA (Sc:pc. 23--0cl. 231 Be i!IUI(!ine today. Po5itive tloink.i11g will
Wtlr'J of being dr1wn 11110 UiiUIIion enable you to see the: truth of the sitwllerc: you'll have to shoulder some· uaaion. · ·
- ARIES (Man:h 21-April 19) Life
CANCER (June 21-July 22)Tricd one else's bunlell today.
SCORPIO
({kt.
24-Nov.
221
An
ha.'
a lot more to offer 111!111 material
and
medtodl-lhc: belli way~ to
objective:
ol'
silninc-ltlyou
ntWJI
thinpt
If you allow younelf 10 dwell
hMdlt: ticklish developmenll today.
1101
be
equally
HpeCial
,to
othc:n.
on
perishable
objects. you could
11tis is one or lhoole tinlel when you
Cllll'l be 100 cOIIIIr\lllive. Get a Don't ovcrmte~ if you genen~e a low overiO!Ok your blessinas today. .
level ol' enlhusiasm.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
011 life by ..-~~~ the
SAOmARRJS
(l'iov23-Dec.
.
most
in~ the: clllllcnjes in life
influc:nccs thll'U pem you m the
21)
A
clay's
wort
for
a
clay's
pay
is
a
offer
the: paliat rcwadl. 8car this
yar lhead. !lead for your AslroOnpll j.edk:liaall by 'mailing $2 to mocto WOI1hy of ailaplion today. Dis- in mind if you have to t:Otllend with
Asao-Gtlph. do !his newspaper, . appoinlmenl is pnllllblc if you expea difficulty today.
GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) You'll
P.O. Box 17511, Mllti'IY Hill Slllioa. mordsan you d rve.
CAPRICORN
(Dec:.
224an.
191
have:
to risk letting depression take
New Yort. NY 10156. Be sun: to
Try not to blow iflliJRifteanl issues over today if you' re 100 withdrawn.
lillie your zodiae sign. •
out
of proponion today. If you get Plan to· keep busy with pals as ellerLEO (July 23-AIIg. 22) This isll't
uptiJhl,
.othen miaftt respond in getic and c:nthuaiaslic as you arc.
the day to let up 011 • c:rilicll cbjer:·
,,,

ne

Jump

'

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-.
' .
•••
.' .

Cetebrole! lsraelo 50th lCC)

-·

.- •

.. •

•

~·

�•
(

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, June 25, 1998

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 90; Low:70

.

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

POMEROY -- Board of Trustees
of the Meigs County District Public
Thursday. Pomeroy Library.

POMEROY-- Town and Coun~ry
EXPO '!'eting, Thursday; 7:30 p.m.
Meigs County Fairgrounds grange
building. Committee members and
others interested encouraged to
attend.

SATURDAY
CHESTER -- Benefit for Shaun
Long. Tuppers Plains, accidentally
shot this spring. Live music, food, an
auction. Account established at Farmers Bank with proceeds to go toward
paying medical expenses.

POMEROY-- Sharing and Caring
Support Group, Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, I to 2:30 p.m. Bonnie
McFarland to talk on Holzer Well ness
Program.

POMEROY -- Eastem OAPSE
picnic, Royal Oak Park, Saturday, 4
to6 p.m.

POMEROY --AAIAI-Anon meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue.

SUNDAY
REEDSVILLE
Whaley
reunion. noon Sunday, Forked Run
State Park. Take lawn chairs and two
covered dishes.

TUPPERS PLAINS-- VFW Post
9053, Tuppers Plains, Thursday, 7:30
p.m.

RACINE-- Albert and Eliza Hall
reunion. Sunday. 12:30 p.m . at Star
Mill Park.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Open gym.
Meigs Middle School, ·Middleport.
Monday. 9 to II a.m. .for girls enterRACINE -· Racine Chapter 602, ing 7th or 8th gmdes, Meigs Local
Auxiliary. Thursday. 6 p.m. at the School District. Info on shoot-a· thon
post home. Covered dish dinner. to be distributed.
Meats and beverages furnished.
·
POMEROY -- Veterans Service
Commission. Monday. 7:30 p.m. at
· oflice, Mulberry Avenue. Pomeroy.

Bell ringers
are sought

,

t

The Middleport Church of Christ
will host a visit Hy an American Red
Cross Bloodmobile on July 2 at its
family life center.
The demand for blood dues
increase during the summer months
due to the increase in a.:cidents primarily so church members are hoping for a good tumout during the _vis- ·
it . The goal has been set for at least
50 pints of blood.
Hours of the visit will be from 12
noon to 6 p.m .. and the public is invited to stop by and contribute. That
will be on Tuesday. July 2. and the
church at Main and Fifth Avenue in
center
is located across from the
Middleport.
Martha and Jack Greenaway
marked their wedding anniversary
.h
.
h Lf
H
wot an outmg at 1 e a aye 11e 0 1e1
in Marietta. · The anniversary date
was June 17.
The couple really gets around.
Martha observed her 87th birthday on
June 22 an Jack will be 93 on July 20.
By the way, Jack has a tie-in with
the Titanic. Hi1 father. David Greenaway. was an apprentice pipefitter at
the shipyards in Belfast where the
Titanic was built before coming to
this country. Jack thinks that was just
a tad before work was begun on the
Titanic. however.
·

As if you di4n't have enough to do
on the 4th of July. huh? '
Racine, Middieport and Rutland
will be having holiday celebrations
which should keep you busy.
However, if you're interested in
native America affairs, the third
annual Fourth of July Intertribal
be staged July 3-5 al
RACINE·· Southern Local Board of powwow
the
Spartan
Stadium
Complex in
Education, special session, Monday.m 7 p.m. at high school in Portsmouth.
This annual Indian celebration
Racine.
will feature authentic native American dancers, singers, artists. music
TUESDAY
RACINE-- Meeting to offer input an9 food representing a myriad of
on Southern Local K-8 building native nations throughout North and
.
plans. Tuesday. I p.m. Southern High South ·America.
Gates
open
at
10
a.m.
each
day
School Plans available for review at
'with
a
grand
entry
of
dancers
at
noon.
high school.

will

Ewing Chapter of the Sons of the
American Revolution will participate
in a national Bell Ringing Ceremony
on Independence Day at 2 p.m.
The chapter is asking for volunteers with access to bells in churches. courthouses. town halls. university buildings and other buildings to
participate by ringing the bell 13
times beginning at 2 p.m.
Last year. over 20.000 ringers parlicipated in the celebration. in honor
of the 56 members of the Second
Continental Congress who adopted a
resolution of Independence on July 2,
1776. approved the Declaration of
Independence on July 4. 1776 and
signed it on August 2, 1776.
Volunteers are aSked to call Jim
Lochary. president of the local Sons
of the American Revolution at (740)
448-7269.
.
.

READ
YOUR
LOCAL
NEWSPAPER

By Bob Hoeflich

Library. regular sess ion. I p.m.

FRIDAY
BASHAN
V&lt;;Jiunteer Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary. ice
cream social. beginning at 5 p.m.. hot
dogs, sloppy joes. ham, hot sausages.
THURSDAY
pie. coffee, soft drinks and II flavors
of homemade ice cream. EntertainSYRACUSE -- Annual meeting. ment.
Carleton College Board of Trustees.
7 p.m. Thursday. hoJlle of Robert
POMEROY- Meigs Local Board
Wingett. president. All members
of Education, 7 p.m. Thursday, office.
urged to attend.
'

REEDSVIlLE-- Riverview Garden Club potluck supper Thursday,
6:30p.m. at the home of Nola Young.

Beat of the Bend ...

POMEROY·RACINE LODGE -164
FREE-AND
~
ACCEPTED MASONS ~

150'8 Anniversary
Open House at the Lodge Hall
On SR 124, Racine, OH
June 28, 1998 - 2·4 PM

park feature is also being planned !n
conjunction with the concert so you II
. want to take that in also. Art will be
di!jPJ&amp;yep in the niini-park on Coun
·St.
~

Meigs County's

By DOUG ALDEN
Associated Preu Writer
· COLUMBUS- Businesses told workers to stay home today, cut back
operations and turned off lights aild computers as a heat wave in the Midwest strained power supplies.
·
Utilities asked residents to take similar steps, such as turning down
air conditioners and cutting back on appliance use until temperatures drop
from the 90s. That's not expected until next week.
·
"When we go to the public and ask them to reduce their power, it's a
major step," said Deb Strohmaier, spokeswoman for Columbus-ba.'led
American Electric Power, which has customers in pans of seven states.
· Honda shut down production at its East Liberty plant today because
there was no guarantee the automaker would have power throughout the
day, said spokesman Roger Lambert. Production at Anna and MArysville
continued.
.
LTV Steel in Cleveland ordered heat-related cutbacks for the fmt tiine
in three years. In Lorain, USS/Kobe Steel Co. idled two bar mills and
lwo oxygen plants.

To offer ~o~ suggestions, report late_breaking news and offer news tips

Public Notice

wUh ... w the ebove
coli•..,.• prior to ••••·
Further; the Ferm~re Bank
end 'evlng• compeny
reH"'l!l! the right to reJect
eny or lilt bid• •ubmiHed.
Furtfler, the ebove colleteral will be · •old In the
condl~ It 11 In, with no
expr•• or Implied war·
rantltl given.
For further lnlormatlon,
contect Jim ot 885-4288.
(&amp;, 24, 25, 26, 3tc
Public Notice

concrete •uppller Of Round
12 Ohio · Public Work
P-roJect. Thll material ehell
conform to the Pertinent
State of Ohio of Hlghwaya
Conlllructlon and Materlele
Speclllntlon Manu•l
THIS WILL BE A'ToTAL
TONS BID: The MBE
Supplier will bclld tolel ton•
of AC·20 Uqul 11181 un .,.
delivered lor •fixed emount
Of $25,000.00.
Bid ~IIICIIIone m•y.,.
picked up •• the Melga
County EngiRHr'• Office or
tht OHice of the Melg•
County CommiHion....
The Board of Melg•
County Commlulonara
m•y - p t the lo-•t bid,
or Hleot the .,.II bid lor the
Intended purpo... and
reMt'Vellhe right to eccept
end/or reJect 1ny or ell bide
and/or any tHtrt tllereof and
will aw•rd a cont,.ct to IIIII
bidder whiOII I• In the .,.II
lnterut of Melg• County.
Glori• Kloee, Clerk
. Board of Melg• County,
Commleelon•r•
(I) 18,25 2tc

REQUE81' FOR PROPOSAL
Notice to Contnctore:
In •ccord•nee with
Public NOtice
aectlon 307.81 of ·the Ohio
ReviHd Code, ...1111 bide
NOTICE Ia hereby given • will .,. received by the
thlll on Seturdey, June 27, Bo•rd ,of Melge county
1Sifl, et 10:00 •.m., • public .. Commluloner•, Court
••le will bo held •t 211 Wut Hou••· Pomeroy, O.hlo
Second Street, Pomeroy, 45718, until 8:00 .A.M., on
Ohio, The Fermera Benk . Mon•y, June 211, tess. The
end Sevlnga company bide wilL th•n be open•d
lot, to
lor ceeh and re1d •toud 11 1:30 P.M.
colleterel:
on Mondey, June 28, 111911
111110
for AC.ZO liquid.
CORSICA
Thla will be en MBE
tG1LT54G2LE133843
PROCUREMENT
The Farmer• B1nk end CONTRACT for •upplylng
Sevlnga compeny, Pomeroy, AC-20 bltumlnoua liquid,
Ohio, r•••rv•• the light to delivered to till dHign•ted
bid ot thl• ••••· end to pl•nt of the •eph811

••II

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.

million budget.
The additional county permis.~ive
tax
would benefit the townships and
The first of two public hearings on
a proposed permissive auto registra- villages who do not have a permistion tax was held on Thursday sive tox in place, Spencer said, helpevening, and gave County Engineer ing tllosc townships and villages
Robert Eason and his administrative . with road improveii)Cnt~.
lmjlroving the county's roads and
a.,sistant, David Spencer, the oppor·
bridges
is at the heart of Eason's protunity to justify the proposal. . .
posal.
Approximately 2S people attendSaying the he prefers to call the
ed the event, held at the Meigs
County Courthouse, and, with the pnl!IOSl!l a "u.'ler's fee,· rather than a
exceptio!! of Eason and Spencer, "tax." Ea'911 said that the funds genmost of those who spoke Ill the hear· erated from a permissive tax would
ing spoke in oppo!lilion of the pro- be used to m~ the county more
competitive in seeking fund.• from the
posed tax.
Ohio
Pu)Jlic Work../lssue Two proThe tax. which would add SS to
the cost of registering every vehicle gram, from which the county has
in the county, must be approved by received $3.7 million to date.
The colinty currently receives
the Meigs County Commissioners
$2.2
million in funds from the Auto
before going into effect.
· The villages of Middleport and License and Gasoline fund, which is
Pomeroy and Salisbury Township the primary soun:c: of maintaining,
placed a $5 pennissive tall in 19g7, repairing and inspecting the county's
and 100 percent of that tax goes to the roads and 'bridges. The county highpolitical subdivision.whicll collects it. way department is also l'efponsible,
If approved, the county-wide per- by law. ftft inspecting and repairing
missive tax would provide the coun- all township and vi llage:owned
ty with an additional $81.~. ~~ bridses. .'?
Eason and Spencer said thai.most
would increase the cost of reg1stenng
• a standard passenger car from $22.25 residents on county roads demand
to $27.25. and to $32.2.5 in those hand paveinent. rather than dirt roads.
three communities with a pennissive All bul 13 miles of county-maintained roadways .are paved.
tax already in place.
That public expectation. co'1!The county highway depanment
bined
with state RJandalcd requirecurrently operates on a $2.S

Howard E. Frank

HERB DAY
GARAGE·
1 DOOR
OPENER
..

SATURDAY, JUNE 27, NOON • 4:00
Come and sample dishes prepared with our own fresh h'erbs herb
.
'
butter and Iced herbal tea. Talks on how to plant, care for, and
harvest herbs.
Learn how beneficial FRESH herbs can be.

....

1!2H.R

f.

ST. RT. 124 • PORTLAND, OHIO

f

.

Underwood announces

:•

1 lacwltr+'" AicliiiW e1

For FY;e·ot 111111

r THIIiiOICIB

.
I Au~G...IC Ugh...j With 4·1/2 ...... O.lllrr.,:.£~~1-t
. , . . ,. ......"lor ................ ....

.......... TtcllnoloU
New crop of flower8 J':'st coming on -Great for thoee "flll·ln" spots. .
Buy 2 at regular price get 1 I=REEI

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE &amp; COUNTRY MARKET

,,.at

' llu1nllllll1d Door CUilbOIIullan ,
1 From 1'111 Worlct'l'
lllnufiCiurlr
Of Gr ••• Door Opeftan
. ,

llllrJI Olllr Ellis Jill 31,a
......... 1111111 Calpollt .
'IIIII Plrtlelltltlll llllller.

. Country Market
Formerly Harris Farms.• St. Rt. 124, Portland, Oh.

614·843-5211

LDW.El.

•

.,

ttoiM lmprouaNniW.IIha t.e

.

-'

'

'\1:-

EXPLAINS BASIS • David Spencer, rlallt,
aclmlnletmlve eulltllnt for the County Hfgh. wey Dlpet1ment, UHd IIIWI'III chlrta of ftgUrM
to expleln the depertment'• request for 1 15

By BRIAN j, REED
Sentinel News Stefl

'

Karen's Greenho~s• &amp; Country Market

p~

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...

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Sentinel NewJ Steff
Plans to mine gravel near Portland
have been put on hold until at lea.~t
Oct 20, following a recent decision
from the chainnan of the .Division of
Mines and Reclamation's Reclamalion Commission.
The Meigs County Historical
Society and the Buffington Island
Battlefield Preservation Society, represented by attorney William C. Mar. tin of Jackson, filed an appeal of a
pennia issued on May 1 that would
allow strip mining on the site, which
is associated with the Battle of Buff. ington Island, Ohio's only Civil War
bailie.
.
In the Battle of Buffington Island
on July 19, 1863, a force of about
8,000 Un~1101diers ro.Uted a smaller force of Cdnfetlerate raldefs com. tnandcd by General John Hunt Morgan. The' running battle through the
Portland area ended Morgan's foray
through Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio

and cut off his escape into westem River.
Virginia (now West Virginia).
The company is also seeking a
In addition to the appeal, which by permit from the U.S. Army Corps of
. itself would not stop the mining, Engineers to install a barge loading .
Thomas Snyder and George Wi Ison facility along the Ohio River, but
and the Sons of Confederate Veter- . even without that pennit, gravel
ans, Camp IS3.S, Ohio Division. could still be removed from the area
sought a temporary stay on mining by truck.
activity which was granted effective
On June 18. the company filed a
1une 17. The action will remain in notice of appeal from lhe decision
effect pending a hearing to begin on granting temporary relief. which was
Oct. 20.
refused, The Reclamation CommisOn May 7, the Division of Mines sion upheld the chainnan's decision
and Reclamation approved a surface granting temporary relief and schedmining permit authorizing Shelly uled merit hearings to begin on Oct.
Materials, Inc. to operate an industrial 20.
minerals mine in Meigs County. The
"We are getting ready for our part
company announced its plans to of the appeal, • said Margaret Parker, . Jlline lhe anea !n 1~.
president of the Meigs County His- .
torical Society.
The proper!~ owned by the comThe group is slill collecting sig- ·
. pany Is' largely encompa•sed by state natures'in support of saving the batRoute 124, the baulelield monument tlefield. The petitions will be pre- .
and Bald Knob-Stiversville Road. sented to elected officials lo demonSome of the property is located . strate public support for the battlebetween stale Route .124 and the Ohio field.

·Majority oppose. permissive auto _ Hot weather greets hound ·hunters
By
registration tax during initial hearing Senbnel
45th

10% PENALTY.Will Be Charged.After The
July 8th Date on Reed Estate Taxes.
MEIGS ~COUNTY TREASURER,

!

rem,Ja,arlly

By JIM FREEMAN

July 8, 1998

i

AEP also had several plants off-line or running at reduced capacity.
"h's just unfonunate timing. We're working hard to gel up and running," Ms. Strohmaier said.
·
""
.
FirstEnergy, which serves much of northern Ohio, implemented its
interruptible load program, under which 80 large industrial customers
scale back their operations to conNerve energy in exchange for lower r.1tes,
_FirstEnergy hoped to prevent taking more drastic mea.,ures, including mandatory blackouts in certain areas.
"Right now, we're holding our own," spokesman David Poeppelmeir
said. .
·
Ms. Strohmaier said AEP also asked 28 of its inteOTUptible load customers to stop or reduce operations.
Meanwhile, Cleveland Mayor Michael R. White asked youngsters to
stop opening lire hydrants to cool off. He said the city would install extra
water-saving sprinklers on hydrants in neighborhoods not served by city
pools.
"A loss of water pressure due to an excessive number of open hydrants
could result in a tragic loss of property or life." White said. At one point,
the city wa.~ getting five calls hourly about open hydrants.
·

Portland mining halted

Last Day To ·Pay Sec~nd Half Real
Estate Taxes -~Will Be

It

"We' re prObably dOwn more than half," company spokesman Tom Fer·
rail said.
Ms. Strohmaier said AEP wa.~ one step away from calling for mandatory four-hour blackouts in certain mas during the afternoon, SOR)elhing
the company has never done, she sai'd.
"
Hopefully, "we're not going to go there," sbe said.
AEP, Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp. and Cinergy of Cincinnati asked
customers Thursday to also delay use of applian&lt;:es such as ovens, dishwashers and washers until after 9 p.m.
Ms. Strohmaier said AEP significantly cut back power use Thursday,
more out of,necessity than to be an example. She said by using just a few
of the 16 elevators at the utility's Columbus headquarters, shutting off
lights and not running air conditioning AEP was saving 17 megawalts of
electric use. She said AEP's maximum output is 22,000 megawatts.
"It's a litde toa.~ty in here, but every little bit helps," she said.
Parts of the state already were recovering from severe lhunderstonns
Wednesday before the energy warnings were issued. The stonns knocked
the Davis-Besse nticlear power plant near Toledo off-line.

.

EXTENSION GRANTED

Dinn«er .f or Members and Guests
Refreshments
tome Out and. Help telebrate 150.
Years or .Just to Ask questions.

Single Copy . 35 cents

AEP urges·power cutbacks during heat wave

r~~~~~~~~~i;.~~~~~~~E~i~~~~~~J~~~~~~~~~
s.r.
M~j~Bit;rown•ll
Awnue,
Ohlo41780.
PrelllltM Appnlleed
at te,ooo.oo and nnnot .,.
oold lor ltM tllln two-tlllrdl
01 ttitt 8mouni.
Terme of Salt: Clnnot.,.
IOid lor ltll 111111 two-tlllrde
of 1111 •~reiHd Vlllue. Ten
percent 10%) depo•lt d•y
of Hie, lance due In 30
daye.
.Krl.. 0. Felty
800 Well St Clltlr
Second FlClevelend, 01144113
Ja"'" M. Soul•by
Sheriff
(I) 11, 11,25 3 tc

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.~

Shernl'•
TlteSIIteOI
County
The Leeder Mortg._
ComtHtny
ve.
David B. B•um II at.
No. 118-CV-0117
In pur81111nce of •n Ord•r
of Sale In the nove eniHied
action, I will Offer for ..1. •t
public euctlon at the front
atape of tht courthouae In
Pomeroy, Ohio In the •bova
named County, on the 17th
dey ol July, 111911, at 10:30
o'clock •.m., the following
ducrlbed reel ••tate,
•ltu•te In the County of
Melga and St•t• of Ohio,
•nd In· the Vlll•o• of
Middleport to-wit:
Situated In the Vlll•o• of
Middleport, County of
Melg•, St•t• of Ohio, •nil
bounded and d...rlbed ae
lollowe, to wit:
·
Being filly (50, flit ofl of
the Southelll part of Lot
Number Two {2) edlolnlng
the property of Mr. Brownell
and running beck to the
fence two hundred elxty
(280) feet.
Addr... of the Property:
Br-nell Avenue
Ohio 45780
Located

11-game
losing spell
Page4

a1.

Sentinel News lotllne
Public

Reds end

•

I KNOW it rains a lot, but just
think this means you don't have to
water the nowers and garden . Into
the bargain, the rains cool the temperature a bit and you don't have to
use the air conditioning. Look at the
money you're saving. So as the rain-·
drops keep falling on your head, do
keep smiling.
·

56

Sports

McGwire belts 35th homer, Page 4
Sermonette, Page 12
Ann Landers column, Page 12

Today: Sunny
High: 90; Low:70

Page 12

You may be gelling a good look at
some of the Victorian .costuming
which is being created in Pomeroy
this summer for personnel to wear as
they welcome visits by passengers on
the Cumberland Princess.
·
Plans are being made to present
some of the personnel in the colorf~l
costumes in conjunction with . _
month's concert by the dhio University Communiversity Band. The
concert hils tentatively been set to be
held on Court St., at which time personnel serving as greeters will be
introduced in their costumes.
And, i!Y the way,

Juneze,

Weather

t' '

• ••• '

. CHARLF$TON, W.Va. (AP) A six-state proposal asking the Environme"I:JI Protection Agency to !lOft·
en ·~· plan to reduce smog&lt;au.•ing
nit~s oxide emissions is quelilionable because it wa.• drafted with the
help of polluting industries, an environmentali!ll said.
~
"No matter how they try 10 spin
it. thiK is an effon 10 weaken EPA's
cleanup plan." said,frank O'Donnell,
executive director of the nonprofit
Clean Air Trust. a Washington, D.C.
coaliliOn of environmental groups .
Ohio. Well Vi1Jinia, Vi1Jinia,
Allblma. Michi1111 and· Tennessee
on Thunday submitted 110 emiaions
plan dill would be 111 llltailllive to
EPA's proppul last fiiiiO foKc 22
11a1es in the East IIIII Midwest to
reduce their o2011e·producing emissions from Ill udllty and indllllrill
•

soun.-es.
Thursday was the last day for public comment on the EPA plan.
Illinois. Indiana, Kentucky, South
Carolina and Wisconsin ~~&amp;reed with
the basics of the six-stale proposal,
but they planned to submit sepanate
proposals. West Virginia Gov. Ccc:il
Underwood said.
Underwood formed the coalition
of st~ 10 respond to the EPA
· . Smog-causin11 nitrogen QKide
comes from factorie~ and the smokeSlacks of coal-buming power plants.
O'Donnell said some states
declined to join Ullllcrwood bec•n"C
an e-mail from an Ohio utility executive indicated Ullllcrwood aide
Corky DeMarco wanlcd utilities lo
publicly oppoiC the plan as llrinsent
while they achlllly supported it.
The e-mail, written by American.

JIM FREEMAN
Newe SUfi
Activities in lhe
annual Plott
Days got officially underway Thursday with events tailored solely for
Plott hound~ and their owners.
The event serves a.~ the annual
gathering and meeting of the National Plott Hound Association which ha.~
met at the Reick Springs Fairground.~
the last two years.
An aii-Piott United Kennel Club
bench show. raccoon treeing contests
and other event, culminating with
nighttime raccoon hunts were the
events planned for Thursday. Participants' dogs merely receive points for
how they perform during the hunts.
no animals are killed.
Jefl)' Hare of Narrows, Va., who
participated in the bench show, said
he attended la.~t year's Plott Days in
Pomeroy, but did not participate in
the hunts. ·
He said some of his friends, who
· own other breed., of dogs. would be
coming from Virginia to altend the
event later.
The hounds mosdy spent the day
relaxing in the shade of barns built to
house livelilock during the Meigs
County Fair, while some owners
complained about the heat.
"We're 1101 used to this heat," said
Han: who, like otheB, was expecting
the upcoming nile hunt among the
woods and hills of Meigs County to
be a hot•.steamy event.
, He said he wa.~ one of the lucky

menl., to inventory and inspect ifte
county's roadways and bridges, carries an increasing cost to the courity.
"This is 1101 19SO," Spencer said
last night. "It's not 1930, or even
1980. We have a responsibility to do
·the best we can to maintain our county's roads. The public expects that."
Many of those attending yesterday's hearing expressed concern that
the new fee would place a burden on
tho.'IC who can lea.~t afford it, a concern that Meigs County Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton voiced when
lhe public bearing.~ were set. Thomton ha.~ said he will IIOIIikely support
the tax.
"We're overtaxed the way it is."
one man said last night,
"Five dollars doesn't seem like
much when you throw around figures
like' two and three million dollars,"
another man said, referring to the
highway depunment budget.• but
there are a lot of people out there on
fixed income~ who find lhemNelves
trying to choose between ~ying
food and paying a heating bill.•
"This will'be a burden fur them. •
The final public
be
held during the comm· . ·
, ' regular meeting on Mondtiy, t which
time a vote must be taken on the pro'
posal if it is to JO into effect. The
deadline for approving the tall f&lt;M: this
year is Tuesday.

1!\;:m

IT!~_Itistate

HOT HOUNDS· UnUIUIIIy hot end humid wtlillfNr greeted pertlclpenls In tile Plolt Days evwnt It the Rock Sprlnp Fllrgroundl
Thul'ldlty. Jerry "-of Narrow~, VL, right, ••• - o f the contMtetnta In the eii-Piotl hound UKC bench llhow end 11 allown
here cllapllylng Chlmplon PR Here's Wolf Creek Jeck.
few Plott owners to get a local motel

room.

Another repeat visitor wa.~ Linda
Mack of Placeville, Calif. who last
year won the group's trophy ti&gt;r the
farthest 1111veled participant. Last
year she said she was pleasantly su·r-.
priscd to discover southea&gt;;~em Ohio's
rugged. hilly terr.1in.

smog-reduction proposal

Electric Power Co. oi'ficiat. Dale
Heydlauff, wa• published in the
~oanoke limes in Virginia. DeMarco ha., said his comment was an offthe-cuff remark and 1101111e seed or a
conspiracy.
The e-mail, which indicated aov·
.emors were talking to utilities.
proved the'govem6r's proposal was
drafted Min·collllboralion with !lOme
or the nation's biue!lt polluters."
0' Donnell said.
·
Underwooo said he wa.~ disappointed thai all II State~ did not ape
to submit the proposal together.
"It would be better fron'l a polili·
cal inn~ perspeclive. But each
state hu its own problems," Underwood Slid.
The siX lilies who sipcd the joi..
propllUI pledJed to reduce thole
states' nitrous oxide emissions by SS

percent of 1990 levels by April 2002
.and 6.5 pen:ent by April2004.
The states also pledged to meet a
new eighl·hour EPA ozone standard
. by 2009. which is three yean~ earlier
than the deadline set by the 1990
Clean Air Act. The 5landard ma.wra
the amount of ozone emitted over an
eight-hour period.
'
· EPA proposed to reduce utility
emission by gs percent. emissions
from major induSirial SOU!CCS by 70
percent and those from small industrial soun:es by SO pen~ent.
The reductions were supposed to
occur by 2002, but EPA indicated it
was studying whether to extend the
deadline 10 2004.
The governors' proposal will
.require energy companies 10 make
·e~pensive ~:apital iJivestments and
consumers will have to pay&lt;more for

.•

..}

power. bul those sacri tices will be
mild L~1mpared to what would be
imposed if the L-urrent EPA proposal.
is approved, Underwood said.
The Ohio Environmemal Protection Agency estimates the cost for
Ohio utilities to comply with the U.S.
EPA !llandards at $1.3 billion initially and SSOO million in annual operating cost~. It also could result in
more losses in Ohio's coal-mining
industry, which ha.~ lost 12.000 jobs
since the mid-1970s mostly due to
clean'air requirement•, it said:
"The proposal we are submilling
will provide significant emission
reductions while providinJ a rea.~­
able.time frame to allow utilities and
industries to plan for and instill new
• pollullon contrOl equipment at their
facilities," Ohio EPA director Donald
R. Schreprdul said Thursday.

Meanwhile. fel!ding sever•l hundred Plott owners has proved a major
ta.o;k. The clubhouse of the Shade River Coonhunters Association. · the
group h'1"ting the event, has become
· Continued on pase 3

Good Afternoon
Today'$

Sentinel

2 Sections - 12 Pages
Vol. 4!1, No. 46
Calendar
C!assifoeds

. 12

Comics

!!-!-Ill
II

Editorials

2

LoraI

3

Sports

Weather;

3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 097; Pick 4: 98S I
llt!Cktye 5: 2-4-13-IS-31
W.VA.
•
Dally 3: 100; Dtoily 4: 7671
v 19911.Ollio Valle)' Pulltlslll.. Co.

•

••

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