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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Monday,June10,1111

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

Ann
landers

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

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

*

r

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

----~---Graduation

.....

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

Ohio Lottery

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

·Avalanche
named ·-NHL
champions

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

Sports on Page 4

I

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

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

our

I

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

10..

•

•
Vol. 47, NO. 32
1 Seetlon, 10 P8gM

......

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

AGanMitCo.Nota

Commissioners
$ign CHS lease

I

r r•

Insurance·
·plan still
arousing
concerns

Document calls for medical facility

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

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

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

.

'

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

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

Middleport Council reviews plans for July 4th

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992-4485

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

1-800-516-2932

Cremeans faces citation
for trailer park violation

'

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

es

,,

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

g

�Commentary

~-~T~u~el~d~I~Y~·~J~une~!1~1,~1~8~81!_______________~------~--------~--!P~~~m~""~~!Y~·~M~~~~~~-~~~Oh~~~~~~====:::=~=:==

-

·Page2

Tueel:t.J, June 11, 1918

OHIO Vh•&lt;1ther
AccuW~ forecast

•

'

Can
Dole
raise
Clinton
'negatives'?
The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6fi.sMJI in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

•

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

'
'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

btfers to tht editor •r• w.kOIM. They abould M Ia• fh•n .100 IIWU'ft. AH hlrtwa
•r• .subject to Mllrlng •nd mun N tlgned Mil lncluft llddfftl •nd Mlephone num·
ber. No untlgned t•tt.,.. wtn 1M ~MJbll•hed. Lett.,.. •hould h In good ,.,,.,
MklrfiJSing IIIUftl, not FNtwan•llt'-•·

What they are saying
elsewhere across Ohio
By The Associated Press
Excerpts of cd110rials of statewide and natiOnal interest from Ohio newspapers:
The- Lima News, June 8
II 1s hard lo know what's more pathetic : Cincmnati Reds owner Marge
Schou's ignorant statements about Adolf Hiller, or baseball officialdom's
efforts lo slnp her ot'the franchise .
Yes, Schou's comments are otTensivc and ill informed . Bullhe U.S. and
Ohio conslilulwns protect the nghts of Americans to say such stupid things.
NL PreSident Len Coleman, speaking after a 5 112-hour executive council meeting. self-n ghteously procla1med: "This is the national. pastime. We
have the rcsponsib1h1y of leadership. Clearly as a spon we have 10 condemn
cthn1c intolerance."
For heaven '' sake. Baseball is now in Inc business of punishing incorrect viewpoints. That's quite an amh!liOUS rh1ssion. Will Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner now he punished for his recen t comments about Chnsuan
beliefs being for lose rs' W1ll players be censured for defiling the sacred institution ol baseball by utlenng obscenities, sexist com ments and other inanill es"

.-•

,,·

For the first time this year, it's possible to see how Bob Dole. R-Kan.,
could beat Pr&lt;sidenl Clinton ·- by driving up Clinton's negatives and then
by running a first-rate campaign of
his own.
It's not al all clear that Dole will
pull off this come-from-behind trick,
but he and other Republicans certainly are doing hener lately m exe·
cuting their .strategy, and the polls
should stan reflecting 11 soon. The
first pan of the GOP plan is to hammer at Clinton unul his record-high
approval ratings sink back into the
"normal" range for h1s presidency.
Thanks to the excesses of the
Republican Congress and Clinton's
own political acumen, his jobapproval rating has averaged 51.7
percent thi s year, according to
Gallup, and his disapproval raung has
averaged 40.8 percent. Over the past
three months. Clinton has averaged
54 percent positive, 38 percent negative.
Those numbers are way above the
average for his presidency. For 1995.
.he averaged 47.6 percent posi11ve,
43 .1 percent ncgative . ln 1994. it was
46.3 percent positive, 46.3 percent
negative. And for 1993, 48.6 percent
positive. 41 percent negat1ve.
Clinton· and Dole ran essentially
ncek-a~d-ncck against each other
durin~ 1995, hut w11h Clinton 's Stale

of !hi Union speech in January and

Dole's d•sastrous response, Clinton
leapt to ~ 12-point lead and reached
a high of 21 points in late April.

Morton Kondraclce
But by May, Clinton's apl'roval
ratmg had dipped from 56 percent to
53 percent and his lead over Dole had
dropped to 16 points~ -.
It's clear that Dole and other
Republicans have been doin~ their
damnedest to scrape otf Clinton's luster and remind voters why they've
doubted h1s truslwonhiness.
Whitewater is one anti-Clinton
vehicle. though there's lillie evidence that the case has wounded the
president vet. According to
Newsweek , 23 percent of voters consider it a "senous issue," and 64 percent say it's just "panisan politics."
But intense press attention could
change tl)at. especially because the
upcoming Little Rock JUty trial
mvolves contributions 10 Clinton's
own 1990 gubernatonal cam paign.
Meantime. Clinton's roll of foreign policy successes is slowing
down and Dole and other Republicans are blasting away at Clinton's
character.
In an almost Nixonian formula ti on. Dole told Republican slate

chairmen recently. ''I'm not in this
race to discuss Bill Clinton's charac·
ter." And then Dole slammed htm:
" But every time Bill Clinton says one
thmg and does another. every lime he
talks like a conservative but governs
like a liberal -- he puiS his character
and credibility _on the table."
ReP.ublicans charge that Clinton
promised a middle-class lax cut in
1992 and proceeded to raise taxes.
·promised to reform welfare bul hasn't delivered. and promised to balance the federal budget llul produced
a fiscal 1996 budget containing no
deficit reducllon.
The latest GOP ploy is to conven
a widely perce1ved Clinton plus-- his
theft of Republican themes, a 1act1c
mspired by White House political
adviser Dick Morris -- into a negative
reflection on Clinton's character.
A lop Dole a1de said. "No doubt
about it. We are trying to condition
the mcd1a so !hat every ume they pull
something from Dick Morns' playbook, lhe question arises. 'Just who
is Bill Clinton?'''
Said the aide. '' We want people to
stop considering him a genius when
he steals one of our themes, hke
school umfonns or a ban on gay marriages, and stan thmking of him as an
opponunist. We want them to say,
'This guy will do anything to get reelected. "'

I'M HOPING
MY PARENTS
LET ME ACT
LIKE ACHILD
THIS
SUMM~R

The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, June 9
The other B1ll Clmton stood up al Princeton on Tuesdi'Y· lhe one who
doesn "t subscr~be to the nouon that government IS 100 h1g. too costly, too
taxing. lOO mmJSJve
Th1s B1ll Clmlon proposed a tax credit of$ 1.500 for a student's first year
al a two- or lour-year college. and a hkc amou nt m the second year if the
student ea rns al least a B average in the first.
This tax crcdll. and lls alternative $ 10.000 tax deduction for family college costs, would apply up to $100,000 in mcome . That's rich. at least by
admim stration standards.
The Clmtun adminostrat1on considers these latest proposals a targeted tax
cui paid for by a targeted tax hike, an mvestmcnt m the future of Amenca's
m1ddle class. Its t1ming, ph1losophy and dearth of detail betray it for what
IllS a ta~ gcted pitch to voters, an mvestmenl in four more Chnton years.

;: . News Journal, Mansfield, June 7
•:
Some may consider the acuon a bil harsh, but we agree w1th the Lex;; ington Board of Education for its deciswn to suspend a bus driver involved
• m a rece nt acc1dcn1

;
Glenn Shock. a driver m the Lcxmglon School DIStrict, was suspended
.: for the final four days of this school year after an investigation into the May
: • 28 accident. Shock's bus rear-e nded another bus.
•Shock blamed the accident on faulty brakes. However, a subsequent
: mspccuon by the Ohio Highway Patrol showed the brakes were operating
: correc tly.

When the board held an executive session Tuesday. Shock declined to
c be represented. The board 1mposcd the suspension for June 5 through June
10
-.
Even If the collision was Shock's tault, acc1dents hke this can happen to
, the best drivers. The pmm here •s iloilo beat up on Shock, but to commend
• the hoard for its action
•
The Columbus Dispatch, June 4
.
Winning the post of prime mmister of Israel by JUSI a ha1r should tell
Likud's BenJamin Nelanyahu that lsraehs want hoth peace and securuy.
The almost 50-50 split among the Israel! electorate should send the new
leader the message !hal he must work to balance the complex, often-polarIZing demands and expectations of his nation's people .
· President Clinton musl emphasize thai the Unncd St.ates expects the peace
procc" 10 move forward . He 'Would be !ustified m tymg conunued Ame;•can support for lsrach secunty to Israel s commnmcnt lo the peace agreements.
· h ·Its nc1g
· hb ors. If. L1kud
Israel only will be safe when it IS al peace Wll
mtcnds 10 allow more Jew1sh seulemcnts in the West B~~k. thiS w1ll mflamc
Palcstm 1ans and possibly lead to a resumpt1on of hos ulmes.
The rough outlines of peace between Israelis and Palestm1ans have been
laid out A pennancnl agr~cmcnt is supposed to be reached m 1999. Whether
Netanyahu softens his attitude toward an eventual Palcsunmn slate w1ll dclcrmmc whether a true peace can he achtcvcd.

Berryls World

'

'.'

cq..~ ...... ~
•

•
r

Indian stone's

Wedllallay, June 11

0 1998 by NEA. Inc

"Would you like to see our dessert tray?"

:.L-----------------'

MICK.

As Michael Barone of U.S. News
&amp; World Repon points out, Clinton
already suffers about a 10-point
"trust deficit" -· the differente
between Clinton's mid -50s appronl
rallng and the mid-60s score another
president would enjoy at a time of
peace and prosperity.
However. tbere 's only one recent
poll answer that mdicates Clinton is
in serious jeopardy. According to the
ABC News/Washington Post survey,
fully 46 percent of voters said that
Clinton "does not have !he kind of
personal character and core values a
president should have."
AI the same time, though, 56 percent of voters said that "Dole is a
Washington insider who docsn 't
understand the problems of average
Americans. "

•.

leans for dispassionate w1 sdom .

I ask: What worldly w1se people
was Scaha talking aboul? In the classic style of a demagogue, he was
short on specif1cs, refcrnng only 10 a

Joseph Spear
1992 Washington Post report on a
priest who claimed to bleed, hkc
Chnst, from hiS hands -- a phenomenon called stigmata thai believers
view as a m~racle of God.
In May 1995, Parson Pat's coalition unveiled a ··conlracl With the
American Fam1ly." The first item wa.'
the aforementioned -constrlUllonal
amendment to "restore religious liberty."

.

I ask: Who has ever denied Pal
Robertson his rchetous libcnv '! You
can't read a newspaper or surf the
tube without encountering Parson
Pat 's pious puss promohng hi s crackpot theories and politico-religious
causes. The nation has been captured
by hberals, he says. The Founders
intended America 10 be a "Christi an
nation," he says The consliiUIIOnal
doctrine of separatiou of church and
state IS a :·lie of the Left." he says.

'
Both Hillary
Rodham Clinton and

Elizabeth Hanford Dole arc Ivy
L'Caguc-educated lawyers who have
enJoyed high-powered careers. Both

Sacs Eckel
women have -- or intend Ia have -groundbreakmg roles as 'first ladies.
And both women have had questionable fmancial arrangements that will
undoubtedly come to the fore in the
months ahead.
.
And both women would like us to
forget all of these things. ·
Ehzabeth Dole is doing a better
JOb. This is no surprise. since she's

.
to practice.
'

had her entire life
Throughout her wildly successful
career •• where sh~ has lleld two Cabinet posts, worked for six presidents,
was a federal trade commissioner and
a White House aide •• Elizabeth Dole
has played the role of demure Southern lady to perfection, even earning
the nickname "Sugar Lips" for her
ability to chann members of Congress when dealing whh issues
important '1o her presidential bosses.
Historian Doris Keams Goodwin,
who worked with Dole during the

Hillary Chnlon is trying to catch
up. But her recent ~ucmpls to play the
Mom Card -- writmg a book on childrearing and announcing thai she
wants another baby -- have been as
clumsy and as politically transparent
as the bouffant ha~rdo she spons on
her book Jacket.
So Liddy Dole. it would seem,
wins the Belly Crocker award. The
irony is that if you look at the
spec1fics of these .women's lives,
Hillary Clin1on turns out to be the tmd•tionalist. As New Yorker Writer
Elsa Walsh recently pointed out,
Dole was the one who decided to
forego marriage until she was 39 and
skip having kids entirely. And her
career has been far more indcpendenl
and trail -blazing than her counterpan's. Clinton is certainly a pioneer
10 her open role as a White House
policy-maker, but she is still essentially a helpmate, subordinating her

' ' ' ' '•lcotumbusl7e•l

...

..

...

,.

., .
lie Auodol8d Prou G'fJPh/&lt;SNOI

:. Wet system set to loosen grip on state Wednesday
•· 'By The Associated Preas
·- · · A few showers and thunderstorms
; will linger over Ohio tomght and
;, temperatures will remain mild under
cloudy skieS', forecast~rs said. Lows
" wero expected to be around 60.
·
The low pressure system that has
:· been causing all the rain will stan to
·: lose Its grip on lhe state by Wednes·~· day, the National Weather Service
•" uid. Drier air will begin to work 1ts
• way into the region and lessen the
.,, threat of showers and thunderstorms.
· · Highs on Wednesday will generally
'I' be 75-80.
The record-high temperature for
·'\ this date at the Columbus weather
·"station was 95 degrees in 1933 while
,.. the recOrd low was 35 in 1972. Sun- ·

"

The following land transfers were •
recorded between May 28 and June
·• 3 in lhe office of Meigs County
· Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
"
Deed. Arthur Dav1s to Joan Ann
. Lockhan, Olive lot;
Deed, Margaret K. and Glen R.
. • Bissell to Glen R. Bissell , Chester
" parcels;
.
'· • Deed, Home National Bank to
• Danny K. and Brenda L. Justice.
Lctan lot:
·
Deed, Howard and Gloria McFar·
lan, Marilyn M. and James Ch1lders,
Altbea M. Tana to James Caner,
Pomeroy lot;
Deed, Ollie A. Hill to Vincent E.
and Michele Vanaman, Rutland parcel;
John G. and Patricia A.
· Hudson to Lyne B. and Lmda S.
Johnson , Rutland parcel;
· Deed, Lyne B. and Linda S. John•son to John G. and Patricia A. Hud•. son, Rutland parcel;
'
Deed, Charles M. VanCooney to
Tommy Ray Walters. Middleport
, parcel;
,
Deed. Joseph W. and Barbara F.
Masters to Steven and Brenda Hand,
Olive lot:

Dew.

Livestock report

..

COLUMBUS (AP) - lndianaOhto direct hog prices at selected
buying points Tuesday by the U.S.
'.Depanment of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gills. steady to firm
; demand moderate on a hghtto modcrate run.
,. U.S. 1-2. 220-260 lbs. 55.0057.00. few 54.50: plants 56.00-58.00.
U.S 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 47.5054.50.
,, Sows : firm to 1.00 higher
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 41.00''hoo; 500-650 lbs. 43.00-47.00.
Boars : 35.00-38.00.
Estimated receipts : 35.000.

'

· ·'llhe Daily Sentinel

''
Ehzabelh

career lo her husband 's.
Dole, on the other hand, will bo \he
first presidential spouse to comma~d
a paycheck outside of ihe White
House. Clinton could never have g~l­
len away with something so radic~l ,
but the Doles have managed 10 ma~e
this sound like the conservati•c
choice..

(USPS 21:1-960)

,

P•blished every afecrnoon. Monday through
FridDy. Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy. Ohio. by lhe
Ohio Valley Publ11hina CompnnyiOIIJq(t Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4'769, Ph. 992·2136. Second
clw: po&amp;CaJC paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

Deed, Jos•ph W. and Barbara F.
Masters to Steven and Brenda Hand.
Olive parcels;
Deed. Roger H. and Christy L.
Roush to Jay Mar Inc ., Letan lot;
Deed, Charles W. and Samuel B.
Buckley, K•mberly S. and Raymond that's not necessarily set in stone or
P. Maninez to Wilma J. Buckley, · a~ything"
Me1gs parcels;
Deed, Ardis R. Waggoner toJames 0 . Childers, Scipio. 5.131 ~­
acres;
(Conil'n ued from Page 1)
Easement, Rena D. Harper to move by a female county environMonongahela Power Co., Ohvc;
mental health worker. whom Clark
Deed, Dwight E. and Ellen R
could not _name.
i , 1
Ross. Clairanna McClung, Arlene W.
" She told me it would
in the
and G. Edward Fyfe, Michael A. and hest interest for me to move my home
Jana L. Pinney, Betty and Robcn E. and get my children away from this
VanWinkle. Judiih L. Pinney. situation," Clark sa1d .
Clark and his family now live at
W111iam W. and Norma M. Ross,
an
undisclosed location .
Marion R. and Carl W. Custer to Paul
Dee
Franklin. a county registered
E. and Carolyn S. Rayburn, Lebanon
samtarian, who .visited the Clark's
parcels ,
Sheriffs deed. John R. and Violet home, sa1d she d1d not recommend
F. Hunnell 10 Leroy R. Chapman, the family move .
"He (Clark) indicated to me his
Pomeroy parcel .
ultimate goal was to have hts trailer
removed from the property." Franklin
said. We don't force people 10 move
from their home, but we go after
upgraded (sewage) systems to ehmmalc the problem."
Am Ele Power ................... 40.112
Franklin said the stench from the
~ Akzo ..•...••.••••....•••••..••••.•.... 59 114
Ashland 011 .......................40 318
discharge on Cremeans' property
AT&amp;T .................................62 1/8
could be smelled w1thm 75 feet of the
Bank One ..........................36 1/8
Clark's mobile home.
Bob Evans ..............;.........14 1/8
Stuan Lentz, director of environBorg-Warner .....................44 1.~~
mental
health forGallia County who
Chamtllon Ind ..................'.18 314
was
the
lead investigator on Clark's
Charming Shop ................7 5116
Federal Mogul .................. ,18 5/8
complaml. said "he was not aware"
Gannen .....................................71
any of his employees adviSed the
Goodyear T&amp;R ...........:...... 49 1/8
Clarks to move for health reasons.
K·mart ...............................12 314
Lentz found Cremeans and his
Lands End .........................22 112
wife, Carol. who jointly own the
Umlled Inc ........................ 21 518
Peoplll Bancorp ...........·........ 23
property. were in v10la11on of Ohio's
Ohio Valley .Bank ..............32 112
Household Sewage D1sposal ReguOne Valley .........................33 7/8
lation because of what appeared to be
Prem Fln1 ................................. 14
a faulty septic tank.
Rockwell ..........................58 314
In a May I " nouce of violation"
Royal Qutch/Shell .......... 154 1/8
Shoney'slnc .....................121/4
letter to the Cremeans,' Lentz wrote,
Star Bank ..........................69 112
"This Jot contains a mobile home thai
Wencty lnt'1 ........................18 518
IS
apparently served by a septic lank
Worthlngton Ind ...............19 7/8
of unknown size ... I observed a sep· Stock reports are the 10:30 tic .discharge into the ditch along the
a.m. quolea provided by Adveet railroad tracks which appears to ongof Gallipolis.
inate from the area in which the septic tank is located.

Cremeans faces
oo

Stocks

-·-·-

• MeMIIerl The A~~ociated Press, and the Ohio
,

New1popet At!'OC!ntlon.

•

POSTMASTER: ~nd nddmls corrtC1ion~ to
1be Dnily Scntmel. Ill Court Sr.. P(lmer~y.

•
Hopefully, there will be a day
when the image of lhe first lady will
be allowed to square with the rea~ty
of who she is . When she'll be abi&lt;&gt;Jo
say "Yes, I am amb1tious ' in ~y
career" or "No, I'm not." When 4!e
will not have to mute her s.uccess
with coyness and defercnc"C.' WhCln
there will bo no reason to question
her' sincerity if she says she want~:•
child.
·
·'
Belly Crocker has updaied ~r
image. Someday, perhaps, our first
ladies will follow.
·:,.

Ohlo4!5769

.,

SUISCRIPriON RATES

By C.rrltr or Motor ao..e
On&lt; - k............ ...... """' ...... ..... $2.00

.. On&lt; Mood! .......... ..... ... ..... ...... . .... $8.70
'" One'Ytar . .. . ....... ... .. ........ $104.00

.,

SINGLE COPY PRICK

-; Daily .......................... ............... J~Cenu.

"r

at---h,......

Sublcriben not det.htna lO pa)' the catriet INIY
remit ln advance dlm:t to 'The Dally Sl!mlntl I
" on I three, Mx or 12 III)Mb ba'li1. Credit will be

1

'

No •-ripdoo by mall ponnlu.d In .,...
where home cMTkr avk:c It avllillblc.

h-Mo(pc-o,

'

13 - ..... -...........................................Sl7.l0

.

--Molpc_,

1·3-

.... -...........................................Sl9.l.l

~ - .................................................1!6.11

..

52 -

..........................:..................... 109.72
'

Announcements
VFW Auxiliary
The Tuppers Plams VFW Post
9053 Ladies · Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at the post home. with dinner at 6·30 p.m. followed by mstal-.
lat10n of officers at 7:30 p.m. All
· members arc urged to attend.

Erma Pearl Barnett
Erma Pearl Barnett. 86, P01nt Pleasant, W.Va.. died Monday, June 10, 1996
in the Pinecrest Care Center, Oalhpohs, following a lengthy illness.
Born Feb. 6, 1910 in Point Pleasant, daughter oft he l al~ John T. and Sadie
Jones Barnett, she ret ~red from lhe Mason County Board of Education with
44 years of service, including one year in Okinawa.
She was a graduate of Marshall University, a member of the National Educators Association , Daughters of the American Revoluuon, Hc1gh1s United
Methodist Church, the Friendship Circle Sunday School Class, Mason County Semor C1t1zens, Mason County Teachers Association, Creston Ladies Aid
Society, Delta Kappa Gamma and the Teachers Honorary Group.
She was also preceded in death by an infant brother, Guy Barnett; and
two sisters, Dai sy Dean Quarnstrom and Thco Mildred Rowan.
Surviving are three sisters, Clytice M. McBride of Indianapolis, Ind .. E.
Faith Gorrell of Dayton.;md Ada Stough of Minnesota; and several nieces
and nephews.
'
Services w1ll be JO·JOa.m. Saturday in the Crow-Husscll Funeral Home.
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Louis A. Hussell officiallng. Gravcstdc rites
and bunal will tallow m the Creston Cemetery. Leon. W.Va. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made 10 the activity dcpanmcnt fund
at Pinecrest Care Center or loa chanty of choice.

Crash leaves two injured
Two Rutland reSidents were Happy Hollow Road, a passenger in
injured in a two-car accident Monday the car. was not treated at the scene,
at the intersection of State Route 124 according to the repon.
Troopers said Fox ,was eastbound
and County Road 5 (Bradbury), the
on
124 al 6:25p.m. when her car was
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highstruck
in the side by a car driven by
way Patrol reported .
Driver Marsha K. Fox, 25, 33336 Ntna P. Butcher, 59, 376 Beech St ..
Happy Hollow Road, was transpon- Middlepon. Butcher wa.' northbound
ed to Veterans Memonal Hospital by on Bradbury and reportedly failed to
the Meigs' EMS. She was later treat- yield to Fox's car.
Damage was severe to the Fox
ed and released, a hospital spokespervehicle and slight to Butcher's car.
son said.
Ausun G. Fox. I. al so of 33336 Butcher was cited for failure to yield.

EMS units answer 10 calls

Beaver reunion
The Beaver fami ly reumon will be
held JuiJ&lt;,.13 at Racine Star Mill Park.Lunch will begin al noon. Bring covered dish.
Revival planned
Revival. June 17-22 . al the Rutland Free W•ll BaptiSt church. 7 p.m .
each evening. Calvm Minnis. evangelist. Spec1al smgmg
Memorial Tournament
The Bill Hubbard Memonal hlllc
league tournament, slam July 8. 20
team hmil. Drawing. July I. Sponsored hy Syracuse Volunteer F1rc
Dcpanmenl Contact Ebcr P1ckcns ,
Jr .. 992-5564. or 992-7181.
Rocksprings Grange
The Rockspnngs Grange chapter
will meet Thursday cvenmg at 7.45
at lhe Grange Hall . Racine Grange
will be guest. All members arc urged
to aucnd. '

f

THE ROCK

1100.~;)0 ~~ w;;:~s;o~OO . J:JO

.'·.

' ,..

,••)

1
~: ID.'h!O ~'7os::;- 1: 10, ):10 fPC,

,.

.... ..... QI

OOMIHOIII • • IO_

1100,9:10 DULY MT.SAT/stt.I:OO',l:IO IPG1J)

r--

1:~!:10

oRn6oNHEHRI

1

flo\IU' l'ld' .5AT/Ill'l . 1: lO, J ;JO l Pet))

r

spy u•••

I
I

MIS!I,~,~a ~~~~~~U

1

/:10,9:00 OIUU l¥d' .SA'I'/Q ,11 10 J:OO · Pml)

' :00,9:010 DULY I'Rl'.~T/IUI.I : 00,);20 II'Cll)
RUTLAND
Units of the Meigs County Emer7:10am. , Meigs Mmc 2, David L.
""••JuW!S.!J.~. oocrr
1;15 , 9: lO "'-D.Y MT.Bitr/!ldA. I :1 S, 3:)0...!!£lll
gency Medical Servtce recorded I0 Reese, treated at the scene.
' COIIHMG SOOifl
calls for assistance Monday, tncludSYRACUSE ·
J(M C~KIY In •cABLt GUY"
flli'T Ch'I'IrlCA1'U AVIIJl.ABLIU
I0:28 a.m .. John Street, Adam
ing two transfer calls. Units respondCaruso, VMH .
mg mcludcd:
MIDDLEPORT
3:50 p.m .. Middleport Police
Department, lilllolhy Justice, Veter-I.. •
ans Memorial Hospital ,
Date: June 8, 1996
6:26 p.m.. volunteer fire dcpanOn Wednesday, June 12, 1996, the Leading Creek
menland squads, motor vehicle acciConservancy District and Southern Ohio Excavating and
dent on State Route 124. Marsha and
Pipeline will be installing new valves on the existing 16"
Austin Fox, Ralph Butcher, refused
water line on Red Hill Rd. (CR 65). The purpose of the valves
treatment.
are
to connect and isolate the existing transite (type of
POMEROY
cement) line from he new high density polyethylene pipe
2:46 p.m.. Condor Slrccl. Lisa
Haggy. VMH:
(HDPEP-type of plastic) line across Southern Ohio Coal
II 22 p. m , Peach Fork Road.
. Company's nest Iongweii coal mine panel on Red Hill Road.
Rebecca Hess, Holzer Medical CcnIn order to make this connection, the main line between the
ter.
water traatment plant on SA 124 and Tank #2 on Red Hill Rd.
RACINE
will be isolated and de-pressurized. This work will begin at
6:29a.m.. Mount Oh vc Road. Earl
approl(imately 8:00a.m. on Wednesday, June 12, 1996 and
Ri1ch1c, Camden-Clark Memonal
should be completed by 4:00 p .m. During this time all,
Hospital .
customers on the following roads will experience little or no
.REEDSVILLE
5:55a.m.. SR 681, JesSie Nelson,
water pressure:
St. Joseph's Hospital.
Red Hill Rd. (CR 65) between SR 124 and Tank #2.
Painter Ridge, Price-Strongs, Molehan, &amp; Fairplay.
SA 124 from the water treatment plant (near Mine #1) to
the Intersection of SR 124 &amp; Painter Ridge (CR 1) including
Veterans Memorial
all of Hampton Hollow.
Monday admisstons- none.
All of Salem School Lot Rd. (CR 1 ), Including CR 1 A, Point
Monday di sc harges - Pearl ProfRock Rd. (CR 27), Laurel Rd., Sisson Rd., North Run, and SA
~u. Portland; Vclvcy Keys, Middle689 In the Point Rock area.
pan.
After the valve Installation Is completed, the District will
be restoring service and flushing air, so all customers In the,
effected areas are advised to boll all water used lor human
consumption until further notice. Also, the District requests
that all customers In the effected areas refrain from using
water from B:OO a.m. until 4:00p.m. on Wedneaday, June 12,
1996. Although your own water may still be flowing, the end
result Is more air In the 'lines on the hills and a longer time
period for flushing this air and restoring service to all .
customers. In addition, all customers east of Tank #2 and
west of Painter Ridge are asked to conserve water during this
time. These areas will be aupplled from tanks which can not
be refilled until the valve Installation · on Red Hill Ad. Ia'
comp~ed. If theie wah!r tanka are depleted, these areas will
also be without water eervlce.
'
The Dlatrlct apologizes for any Inconvenience associated
with thla outage, however this replaceme~ line will lnaure
the Integrity of our dlatrlbutlon IYStem during the mining
period and beyond. .
1 · Any queatloni, pleaee call the District office (614) 742·
2411, M-F,8:30 a.m.-4:00p.m.
Breilt A. Bolin, MaMger

NO,.ICE

Hospital news

HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNH

26 - ..... -...........................................553.12
5 2 - ........ _................................... 5105.56

·

new
·managar; IJI~~:~~'tt s~~rcJ:::
store operation• director; Bttth
bakery and dairy manager; Michl King, atore
manager; Mark Go888tt, Fleming Co. sales
director; and Kerry Steiner, Fleming Co. meat
dlvlalon. Cutting the ribbon Is atora owner Dick
Vaughan with Fleming President BasH Violand.

THE TAX BOOKS IRE NOW OPEN FOR SECOND HALF
. 1'995 COLLE(TION OF THE REAL ESTATE TilES~
ALSO FOR DELINQUENT TAXES.
CLOSING
DATE IS JUNE 28, 1996 -.
'
TUlLER TAX DEADLINE IS JULY 31, 1996

MAILSilii8CIUPTIONS
1

GRAND OPENING - Vaughan's Suparmar·
ket In Middleport waa officially opened ••
Vaughan's IGA at a brief ceremony Monday
morning. Vaughan'• IGA joins the worldwide
family of more than 4,000 IGA atorn. From left
are Larry Baker, retell counselor for the FlemIng Food Co., Ma1811lcin; Brenda Rapp, IQA
home economlat; Bob Althouae, Fleming Co.

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS

•'

·"

'

Sara Eckel Is a syndicattjl
writer tor Newspaper Enterprlllj!
'
As!lodallon.
Send commetlta to the aalhoiln.eare of thl1 newspaper or Hna
her e-mail at nraeumaol.c:om. • :

set tonight will be at 9 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:02 a.m.
Weather forecast :
Tomght... Panly cloudy with scattered showers or thunderstorms.
Lows 60 to 65 and highs in the upper
70s and lower 80s .
Wedncsday ... A mix of clouds and
sunshine with a chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Highs in the 70s.
Extended forecast:
Thuisday... A chance of showc~ or
thunderstorms. Lows 60 to 65 and
highs in the upper 70s and lower 80s.
Friday ... Dry. Lows 60 to 65 and
highs ncar 80.
Saturday... A chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows around 60 and
highs ncar 80.

::'.'Land transfers recorded

the issue during the ratificatipn
process. In the interest of total· freedom, they decided, lhc government
must be indifferent toward religion.
And that is why prayer m schools
is illegal today. N11 stale-owned inslituuon may be turned into a church, no
maHer how clamorous the maJority
Ye s. th1s nation' s Founders were th'at demands 11.
moral and God-fearing people. In
Fundamentalists like to pointlo a
fact, some of the most cclcbrmcd -- Thomas Jefferson quote that is
Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jef- engraved in his Washington memorferson, to -name two -- were dctsts ial: " I have sworn upon the altar of
who eschewed onhodoxy in favor of God eternal hos11lity against eV&lt;fY
simple vinue. They hei1cvcd 10 lhc form of tyranny over the mind -of
"rehgion of nature ," and accepted man." There, they say. TJ be)i_c~ed in
God as the Creator. but did not Ged.
hclacvc he mlcrfcrcd in the mundane
That he did. But he had a visceraffairs of mankind.
al diSgust of strident clergy. Those
One thmg ihey EXPLICITLY famous words came from a SeRt:. 23.
hclicvcd m wa'i sct.:ular government
1800, leiter to Bcnjamm Rush of
They held last IU the cnnv1c1ion !hal Philadelphia. Preceding t~em in the
the stale must never endorse a rcli·
lcller were these le ss- ramou~ words:
gion. and they specifically said so in "They (the clergy) hchevc thai any
the First Amendment They added a power confided to me will be exeprohibition in Anicle VI agamsl any cuted in oppusllion to their Sc hemeS
"rchgious test" t&lt;Jr olticeholdcrs
And they bolicyc rightly for I ha~c
The record IS exceedingly clear. sworn ... ••
The Founders debated the issue in
Joseph Spear is "' syndicated
thc1r assemblies; the stales debated writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
'

SUI d.

'''''

''

This is revisionist nonsense. In liquid fonn , 11 would 111akc -b1lgewater
taste like sarsaparilla. If you think I'm
full of bilge , p1ck up a book called
" The Godless Constitution: The Case
Agamsl Rehg1ous Correctness," by
Isaac Kramnack and Laurence Moore
(W.W. Norton &amp; Co .. 1995).

Johnson administration, recently
recalled her former co-worker on
"N1ghthnc " "You could tell. even
then, that she was very ambitious, but
somehow she managed to camouflage these career ambitions," she

INil

•

So for Dole to win the elcclion, he
needs not only 10 raise Clinton's neg·
atives, but also to make a case for
himsel f. He 's trying, delivcgng -his
speec hes with more punch and
addressing issues the country cares
about-- crime, the economy and welfare. But what he'll actually do m
office is still vague.
4
He docs make an eflccuvc case
that the Rcpubhcan C!Jqgrcss has
tried to keep its promiSes to halancc
the federal budget, reform wcllarc
and cut taxes. hut has been stymied
hy Clinton's vetoes. House Speaker
Newt Gmgrich, R-Ga., remains aliabiluy, but he has begun 10 show some
conlntion, which usually begets forgiveness from the American people
If Dole and other Repuhhcans can
dnvc Clinton's approval-disapproval
ratings from 53 to 38 percent to. say.
48 lo 45 percent hy August, they may
be able to cut Clinton 's lead to •ingle digits by the lime ol the GOP
convention in m1d-Augus1.
Then .. if Dole chooses a good vtcc
prcs1denlial running male -- he 1s still
after Colin Powell -· and stages a
good convqntwn chmaxcd by a r)psnoning acceptance specch,)'thc two
candidates could be nearly even
when Democrats gather in Chicago al
Ihe end of the month
· Clinton' should get a new bounce
and go into Labor Day w1th a lead.
but Dole will have demonstrated
comeback abihty. heancnmg his ba.,c.
All this suggests thai the previously suspect conventional wisdoll) is
right aflcr all : Th1s race w•llt•ghlfn.
(Morton Kondracke Is executiVe
editor of Roll Call, the ntwspaper
of Capitol Hill.)

A new image for the po.w er females ·
Belly Crocker. She was once considered the second-most recognized
woman m the world, after Eleanor
Roosevelt . She embodies lhc idea of
homemaking as an. Her name is used
·w•th reverence ("Honey. Betty
Crocker couldn 't have done bcuer")
as frequently as it is scorn ("What do
I look hkc, Belly Crocker?"). And
she has had more hairdos than Hillary
Clinton.
From the serene, pearls-wearing
mom of the '60s to the dress-for-success yuppie of the '80s, Belly Crocker has al least tried to keep up with
the limes. The newest Belly was
unveiled recently, created from a
computer-generated composne of 75
women who entered her 75th
apniversary contest With a sleek
pageboy, restrained earnings and a
s1mple gold chain, '90s Betty spons
a modern look that could go from the
boardroom lo the PTA.
If nothing else, it is a sign of
progress that the list of prominent
women now extends beyond a first
lady and a baking icon. Though in the
months ahead you can bet that the
two contenders for.the former will be
trying very hard to acquire the im1111e
of the latter.

'' ''

'·
.·•

Who's squelching Ralph Reed's rights?
Day after day. we arc pummeled
with the nolmn that America is a
teeming cauldron of religious persecution, and I thmk Ills tantamounllo
a Big Lie, a false assertion that is
repealed over and over until 11
becomes presumed lrulh.
As I wrile, the executive director
of the Chnsuan Coalition , Ralph
Reed , is hopj)ing around the country
promoting his latest book and hammermg tqe message thai religious
freedom IS so endangered that "people ol lallh"' need a conslllulmnal
amendment to protect !heir right to
worship as they sec til.
I ask: Who m this broad land -mher than the fundamentalist Chnsuans thai Reed and his patron Parson
Pat Robertson represent -- is pushmg
prescribed doclr~nc '!
In mid-Apnl. Supreme Court Ju slice Antomn Scaha spoke to a group
at the MisSISsippi College School of
Law and ripped into " the worldly
WISe" who diSparage religion "We
must pray for the courage to endure
the scorn of Ihe sophiSIIcalcd world. "
said thi s man on whom the nation

'

(Continued ffoll'1 ..... 1)
So when it was time •to move, "I
called them first 10 see if they still
wanted it .~
They didn't&lt;
''They really didn't have 1 place
for anything so big," Casto said.
Same with Huntington Museum of
An.
"So I just son of dropped it and
forgot about it."
What about the new Toyota plan I?
"I hayc no problem with that. I've
goHo get it off the property it's on,''
Which could be a feat. considering
the size, and the mud it's sunken in.
It 'will take a tractor.
'
"Trust me, it's heavy," Gilbert
Casto said.
Several local amateur historians
agree thai the nutting stone would be
a fine anifact for the Toyota plant.
"It could be displayed either on
the plant premises or nearby, they
could set up somethmg like that,"
said Henry Bailie, president of the
Kanawha Valley Historical and
Preservation Society. "'That has gotlen to be the way that sort of thing is
done."
But 11 's too soon for Toyota to say
whether it can use the rock.
"We canUt say right noV/ exactly
·whether we want n or have a place
for it," said Jim Wiseman, vice president of public affairs in the Georgetown, Ky., office.
"We'll talk to the folks involved
'lfld see if we can find a proper place
for it. We're building engines there,
so we hadn't thought about a huge
nutting stone.
"It would be very unusual for us
. to house such an artifact. but if there
were no other more appropnatc place
for it, we' re happy to consider it."
Dean Braley, president of Friends
of St. Albans Archaeology, said the
age 9f nutting stones can only be
determmed by the antfacts that surround them when they 're found, bul
it's possible that Casto's stone dates
back several thousand years.
Casto just hopes to lind a safe new
home for the an1fact.
1'1 donUt want to give it to anybody whoUs going to try 10 sell it or
do anything with it where lhc public
couldn't see it. because tt's a nice
piece," G1lbert Casto said.
"I'4 hate 10 see anything to happen to it. If someone 's interested m
il. I have no problem. I'd like to have
it in remembrance of my dad , but

l.tllcllng Creek

Dlltitct .

I

�Sports

TUIIily,June11,1998

The-Daily Sentinel·
··

Colorado captures Stanley Cup

P~~ge4 •

Tuesday,June11,199S

•

Houston edge!s C9l·o rado; Reds win
By The Assoclaled Press
innings, with five walks and six
Donne Wall saw plenty of strikenuts. Mark Guthrie allowed
slugfests when he pitched for Tucson one hit in the ne~t three innmgs and
in the Pacific Coast League. That Antonio Osuna completed the threegave him a taste of what games arc hitter by pitching the ninlh.
like at Coors Field in DcRvcr.
Reds 6, Padres 3
Wall (3·0) stayed undefeated with
Eric Davis, who came off the dis·
eight solid innings Monday night, abled list earlier in the day, scored the
then stood by helplessly as Colorado go-ahead run in a four-run eighth
rallied for four runs after two were inning on a wild pitch by Doug
out in the ninth. But Tpdd Jones final· Bochtler as Cincinnati '"on at San
ly got the final ou1 with the bases Diego.
.
loaded. giving the Houston Astros a
The Reds' rally was aided by two
I 0·9 victory over the Rockies, who wild pitches and three walks by
arc 3-2 in their last five games after Bochtler (0-2). Thomas Howard had
scoring 58 run s .in thai span.
a two-run single , and another .run
Sean Berry and Derek Bell sup- 'scored on Eddie Taubensee's infield
. ported Wall (3-0) with three hits each. hit.
wi1h both. falling a triple shy of the
Lee Smith ( 1· 1) got the victory
cycle. Berry drove in three runs and despite facing only one bauer, getting
Bell scored three times as Houston Tony Gwynn to fly out with the bases
DAVIS SCORES- San Diego's Doug Bochtler, left, reaches out
won in Colorado for just the third loaded in the seventh. It was Smith's
for the ball aa Cincinnati's Eric Davis slides safely into home in
. lime in 14 games.
first victory si nce being acquired in
the eighth Inning Monday night in San Diego. The Reds won, 6· Elsewhere in the NL, it was New a trade. from California on May 27.
3. In background Is Reds' Chad Mottola.. (AP) ·
York 8. Atlanta 3; Aor:ida 5. Montreal
The Padres have lost four straight
2: Chicago 2. Philadelphia I; Los and seven of eight, losing three
Angeles 2. St Louis I; Cincinnati 6. games off their NL West lead in .three
San Diego 3: and Pittsburgh 5, San days.
Francisco 4.
Mets 8, Braves 3 ·
Pirates S. Giants 4
Todd Hundley homered from both
Pillsburgh won at Snn Francisco . . sides of the plate. singled twice and
giving the. Pirates eight victories in drove in five runs for New York
ninc games. as Jason Kendall singlcq against visiling Atlanta.
h om~ the winning run in the eighth
Hundley, . boosted his season
mmng.
homer total to 16, tying his career ·
S3\'C .
By The Associated Press
:With the score tied 4-4, Orlando high set in 1994. In his last seven
Manny Ramirez and Kenny . Merced drew a leadoff walk in. the · games, Hundley is 14-for-25 (.560).
Kevin Tapani was looking to pitch
for a contender. He made a good Lofton homered for Cleveland. Mark eighth off Rich DeLucia !2-2) and with four homers and 14 RBis .
choice. The Chicago White Sox.look McGwire's 16th homer of the season went to second on a wild pit,h .
Bobby Jones (6-2), who scattered
hrought the visiting Athletics within DeLucia gollwo outs before Kendall 12 hits and no runs in 7 1·3 innings.
like they.made a great one. .
The White Sox signed the free 5-4 in the seventh.
hlooped a hit over the head of short, was th.c winner.
agent to a one-year contract in the Yankees 5, Blue Jays 3
stop Shawon Dunston.
The game was marrcd.by a benchTino Martinez capped the Yanoffseason and ali he has done is go 7 ·
Kendall also scored the game- clearing incident in the fifth inning.
3 and become an integral pan of the kees· four:run first inning with a lying run in the seventh after enter- Losing pitcher Steve Avery (6-5) and
rotation that has Chicago tied for first three-run homer and Wade Boggs . ing the game as a pinch-runner.
. Hundley exchanged words after secplace in the AL Central with the went 4-for-4 as the Blue Jays lost Dodgers l, Cardinals I
ond baseman 'Jose Viwaino was hit
their season-high fifth straight.
Cleveland Indians.
Los Angeles held visiting St. on the right kneecap by the Ailanta.
Boggs opened the .game with a · Loui s to three hils, and Delino
"Everything 's worked out pretty
good . There arc a Jot of smart people double , advanced to third on a si ngle DeShields set up one run with two pitcher.
here," Tapani said Monday night bv Bernie Williams and scored on stolen bases and drove in another Cubs l, Phillies I
Doug Glanville and Terry
after winning his fourth straight Paul O'Neill's double. Martinez fol - with a sacrifice lly.
Shumpert
goi their first NL RBls and
game. 8-2 over the Boston Red Sox. lowed with his lOth homer of the seaChan Ho Park (4-2) earned the Jaime Navarro pitched a three-hitter
It was Chicago·s 19th win in its son to make it 4-0 before an out was
vic lory in his firs! start si nce May 8, for Chicago at Philadelphia.
last 22 games. it improved Tapani 's recorded .
allowing one run and one hit in five
Recalled from Triple-A Iowa on
Jimmy Key (3-6) allowed two
career record against Boston to 9-0,
and it gave the White Sox a 21 -5 runs and four hits over 5 2-3 innings
mark thi:t'season at Comiskey Park. for the win . New York has won IS of
" We do not feel invincible here, the last 16 games with Toronto.
but we sure like playing at home. " TWins 13, Mariners 6
The Twins hit five homers. includWhite Sox iilanager Terry Bevington
ing
the first two-homer game of Greg
said.
Tapani didn't feel like he was Myers· career, as they won for the
12th time in 16 games. Ron C:Qomer.
impressive, but'hc's not arguing.
"I didn 't feel like I was throwing who had four hits, Paul Molitor and
•
that well, but at the end when you Scott Stahoviak also homered for the
look up and sec eight innings. five Twins.
Edgar Martinez had half of the
hits, two runs and two walks with
nine strikeouts. I'll take that almost four · ·homers by Seattle. which
. extended its major leaguecJcadmg
every time out, " Tapani said.
_ The Red Sox will .take any game total to I05 and had at least four in u
:. : where one of their pitchers manages game for the lOth lime tiis season.
:: ' aoy numbers that translate into a vic- Ken Griffey Jr., with his 21st. and
Dan Wilson also went deep for the
: tory.
•
Tim Wakefield (4-6) worked
. on visiting Mariners.
Myers hit a solo drive in a Jour• two days rest as he moved up m the
' rotation to replace scheduled starter run seven th, which included a threeAaron Selc, who had a stomach flu . run shot by Stahov·iak that made it
"We knew Wakefield would have 10-S. Myers then added a three, run
: to go seven or nine innings tonight,·· homer in the eighth. his fifth .
• Boston manager Kevin Kennedy Angels 7, Royals S. 10 innings ·
Chili Davis returned to the start: said. " Our bullpen has been taxed
' quite. a bit and their arms have been ing forthc first time since June I. and
had four hits, including a two-tun
heavily used this week. "
Wakefield, a knuckleballer, went homer in the lOth inning. IT Snow
the distance, throwing 162 pitches followed Davis' homer with one off
'lim Pugh (0: I) as the visiting Angels
and allowing 16 hits.
•
In other AL games on Monday snapped an eight -game losing .areak
: nigh!. it was Detroit 8. Baltimore 3; to the Royals.
: Cleveland 5. Oakland 4; New York 5.
Chuck McElroy ( 1-0). rcccnlly
• Toronto 3; Minnesota 13. Seattle 6: acquired in the trade for Lee Smhh.
: California . 7, Kansas City 5: and got his first ALwin with 2-3 innings
: Texas 8, Milwaukee :i
of scoreless relief. Troy Percival
Ron Karkovicc homered . ·while worked the lOth for his 14th save.
: Tony Phillips and Robin Ventura each Rangers 8, Brewers 3
: had. three hits for Chicago. which
Darryl Hamilton wcnt2 -for-3 rtnd
: improved to 40-21. the club's best drove in three runs against hi s former
: record after 61 games since the 1951 teammates as Texas won its fourth
: team got off to the same start.
straight and stretched its lead over
•. Tigers 8, Orioles 3
second-place Scaltle in the AL West
'
The Tigers won for the third time 1o 6 112 games. the largest in fran : in ihcir last four games and eighth. in chise history.
' 48 as Qmar Olivares threw eight
Ivan Rodriguez and Kevin Elster
: shutout innings. the most by a Detroit each drove in two runs for the
· Rangers, while Mark McLemore
; pitcher this season.
~
Olivares (2-2) allowed four hils in went 3-for-4. making him lli-for-31
• winning for the first ttme since April in June.
; IO.'Thc· Tigers. who got two RBis
r from both Tony Clark and Kimcra
: Bartee. had lost eight straight to the
TELEvisioN
• visiting Orioles.
NEW YORK (AP) - ESPN will
; Baltimore, which has lost four
launch
a third network called ESP• straight, scored·all its runs in the ninth
NEWS.
a 24- hour sports news net· orr Mike Walker on a two-run homer
·
:by Bohhy Bont II a and a solo shot by w&lt;Jrk, on Nov. I.
ESPN said the network will feaCal Ripkcn .
ture scores. highlights. analysis,
Indians 5, Athletics 4
interviews, live press oonfcr~nces.
: Charles Nagy ( 10-1) hccamc the
·league's first 10-game winner and statistks and breaking news. working
· improved his career record against closely with ESPN's SportsZone
Oakland to 7-2. He allowed·four runs Internet site. The announcement
·on nine hils over seven innings with comes a little more than 2 1/2 years
one walk and seven S!rikcouts. lose after ESPN launched its second net·
Mesa pitched the ninth for his 22nd work. ESPN2.

White Sox triumph,
remain tied for first
place with Indians

,,

with 1·-0 victory over Fl.o rid.a in .OT

Marll111 5, Expo~l
. Devon White singled in the
ticbrcakin! run in the ninth inning
and Ore~ Colbrunn homered and
drove in three runs, lifting Aorida to
victory at Montreal .
The E~pos tied the game 1- 1
against reliever Robb Nen (3-0) in the
eighth on Moises Alou·s RBI single
before the Marlins scored four times
in the ninth.

Sunday, Shumpert snapped a 1-1 tie
in the eighth with ,a sacrifice fly off
Terry Mulholland (5·5). Shumpen
prevtously played in Kansas City and
·
Boston.
Glanville got his first major·
league RBI in the third with a two·
out single.
The only run allowed by Navarro
(4-6) was a homer by Benito Santiago in 1he seventh.

MIAMI (AP) - The Colorado nearly five hours before Krupp finalAvalanchr took a long time to make ly settled things with a sizzling slap
shon work of the Aorida Panthers.
shot following a faceoff.
Describing the play, Krupp said:
Few teams have had to work so
hard to complc1c a four-game sweep " Joey Sakic got the puck back 10 me.
in 1he Stanley Cup finals , but the 1bc Obvious play was to Bet the puck
Avalanchr finally ended the longest on net as quickly as possible. I
day in this year's playoffs with a stir- leaned into it, got 1he juice in1o and
ring 1·0 biple-ovenime victory Mon- it just went through."
Vanbicsbrouck. who had made 55
day niaht.
Before defqnseman Uwe Krupp saves in his spectacular performance,
scored the winning goal from tbe described it as a "broken play."
right point at 4,31 of the third over·
" (Krupp) just gave it his best. He
time, goaltenders Patrick Roy of teed it up and it seemed to come
Colorado and John Vanbiesbouck of • through a pair of legs or close 10
Aorida combined to stop 118 shots. them. I got the tip of my pad on it agd
"We just tried to concentrate on it went in. What can you say?"
gOod habits, simple uecution," ColWhat, indeed.
orado coach Marc Crawford said
While Vanbiesbrouck was at the
after becoming the first coach to win top of his B•me, Roy was never beta major team championship for Den· ter in a brillian.t career that had
ver. "Again, the winning goal was a brought him two previous Cups and
basic play - just put the puck on a reputation as one of the great playnet.·•
off goaltenders of all time.
That is what both teams did for
Had he ever made 63 saves in a

----Sports briefs.---BASEBALL
BAsKETBALL
NEW YORK (AP)
Richie
NEW YORK (AP) - Greg Murphy, a 22-year. veteran of the baking Parker. 1hc high school slar who
and food business. will be hired today pleaded guilty 1o sexual assault a year
as baseball 's new marketing head.
and a half ago. will attend Lo.ng
The hiring of Murphy. 47, was lslarld University.
confirmed last w~ to The Associ·
ated Press by sevenil officials who
Parker was one of the nation 's
spoke on the condition they not be most highly sought recruits before hi~
identified.
·
attack on a 15-year-old girl at his
Acting commissioner Bud Selig, Manhattan high school.
·'
scheduled to appear at a news con·
fercnce to make the announcement.
After the episode in January 1995.
has said the new marketing head will in which he received a five-year pro·
be responsible for Major League bation sente nce. Seton Hall rescind'
Baseball Properties Inc .. baseball 's ed its scholarship offeL Parker
licensing division. broadcasting divi- enrolled at Mesa (Ariz.) Community
sion and pans of public relations,
College. but did not play there.

ADMIRES TROPHY- Colorado'a Joe Saklc, winner of the Con
Smythe award, edmlr• hie trf:!phy with teammate Claude ·
· Lemieux following·Colorado's 1.0 victory over Florida In Game
4 of the Stanley Cup final a Monday night In Miami. (API

Martin appointed Miami
::~ssistant; staff complete .

: t;

OXFORD (AP)- Ray Martin, a
. ; fotmer Notre Dame player and assis: · lant coach at Aorida Atlantic, was
: :· pppointed an assistant coach Monday
.: at Miami University.
. .
:; : Martin's appointment completes
: ( the coaching staff under Charlie
• ~ Coles, who was chosen head coach

•
..••''

Scoreboard
NaliDMI Leapt
By 'fht Aaodalil'd Pms

Momreal

.'
••

MAGIC 101 WMGG

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Over 40 Years Of Dependable .Service

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..

..- .
.·
...
..•
. •

· 200 Gallons of
L.·P. Gas

BILL HUBBARD MEMORIAL LITTLE
LEAGUE TOURNAMENT
Starts July 8th - 20 Team limit
Drawing July 1
Sponso~:ed

by Syracuse Vol. Fire Dept.

Contact Eber Pickens Jr. 992·5564 or 992·7181
•

St. Rt. 7
Torch, OH

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Cint.-innmi tSmilcy ~..fl) a.! San Dic{!o tBcT}!man J-61. I0: .'~ Jl .m .
Only ,:amc-s scheduk.&gt;d

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Detroit tt. Baltin-.ore .l
CI•.'\'~L,.nd ~ - Ouklnnd -'

New York !t. Torom" J
B~on 2
l.t Senulc 6
Calit(1rnin 7, Ko.nsas City~- 10 innin~s
Tl'xns K. Mi lwauko..~ ~
1\atsd1y's Gamts
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New York jP.;uinc 9- .l ) at Toronto (Quantril 2·6). 7 : ;\~ p.m.
HO!itan !Esheimnn 1·2) :'II ChiC&lt;~l-O (Ma,.rnnt 1-2l. 8 :0~ p.m.
Staul~ [Well~ S- 11 :JI Minn~sota CA&amp;.uilera 0-0l. 8 :0~ p.m.
Califomin (Abbou 1-9) 011 Kamal City (limon 1·11. 8 : 0~ p.m.
Milwaukr~ (Mc'oonnld !'!·])Ill Teu~ {Hill7-4l.IB!'I p.m.

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WH~rir~ly's

Includes 200 Gal. Propane With
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St. Rt. 32

Jackson, OH

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:Marauder boys cage camp set June 24·28

The Plains
Logan
797-4092
380-2831
or 1-800-382-5657

St. Rt. 60N
McConnelsville, OH

·

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"FAMILY OWNED"

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Gilmtt

Nl-w Yurk cMcndoza'J· I ) at Toronto O;mzcn .l.J ). 1 2 :.1~ p.m
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Do.ston (Sci~ 2·4) at Chknf.o (frrnandcr:6-.lJ. l :O!i
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Oakl:md (Chouinnrd 0..2• a1 Oevelnnd (McDowell 6-4). 7: 0~ p.m.
Sc!"!lltlc (Wokou 4·6) at tdinnesoln tRndk.c ;a..6). R:0:1i p.m.

16 E, Main
·Logan, OH

'-: '· : The 1996 Meigs Marauder boys
:: :bllsketball camp will be held from
&gt;June 24-28 at Larry R. Morrison
.: ·dymnasium. There will be two ses:: ~ions the first session will be held for
:· bbys in grades 4, 5 and 6 and will be
.: held from and will be held from 10
·• )l,m, until 12 noon.

.. .

:~ f.-sports briefs~
.; fOOTBALL

• , FORT LAUDERDALE, A a. (AP)

:; .!..:. A tearful Brian Blades sat silent-

·; lYin court, listening to the tape ofthe

•1911

St. Rt. 588
Gallipolis, OH

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Rutland, OH

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Allnnlrl

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL

.

last mo.nth after Herb Sendek went to
North Carohna State.
Martm, 41, of Long Island, N.Y.
played for Notre Da~e from 197477. He has been an asststant coach at
Harvard, Southern Methodist, North
Carohna State, Tennessee, Shaw Umvers1ty and Aonda Atlantic.

...

Listen for
our ada~m

St, Rt. 33 &amp; 682
The Plains, OH

The Deily Sentinel • Ptge 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

call he made moments after a tus·
!sle over a gun led to his cousin's fatal
: ~hooting.
·
: 1. The voice of the Seattle Seahawks
·•biver, cauaht OQ tape in that first
; ~merlency call after the 12:38 a.m.
:shOOtins July S, 199S, echoed
through Broward Circuit Judge Susan

.-

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.... - · -··~ ......

The afternoon session will be for
grades seven and eight and will be
held from I p.m. until 3 p.m.
Cost is $25 and individuals may
register the first day of camp. Cost
includes T·Shin and prizes for indi·
vidual and team competition.

Sal&lt;,ic wa&lt; relieved 10 get a ditTerent kJnd of burden off his back.
Dcsritc some fine seasons with the
Quebec Nordiques, he was still rela·
live ly anonymous.
He got some notice Monday night
when he was awarded the Conn
Smythe Trophy a.&lt; the most valuable
player in the playoffs. Sakic scored
18 goals tn the playoff&lt;. one shy of
the record jointly held by Reg Leach
and lari Kurri.
The Colorado cap1ain broke out in
style - six of his goals were gamewinners . and he lhinks he might have
found a new identity.
''When you' re not in the playoffs.
you won 't get re spect. '. he said,
"'hut I'm a winner now."
Even in defeat . the Panthers
gained their own measure of respect.
"There\ not a guy in the room
that rm not proud of personally;·
Vanbi cs brouck said.

Schourek
encouraged by
his progress
SAN DIEGO (AP) Pete
Schourek, Cincinnati's opening day
pitcher this season, is eii£Oilraged by
his pain-free progress as he tries to
work his way back off the Reds' dis·
abled list.
The lef1-hander played catch with
no pain in his elbow Sunday, then he
threw harder and at longer distances
Monday for about IS minutes, still
reponing no pain.
Schourek said he would take
1oday off, then throw orr a mound
Wednesday.
·
He strained the ulnar collateral ligament in his pitching elbow. Last
week, a doctor told Sehourek he
should be able to come off the disabled list as scheduled June 15 if he
. gelS the proper rest and exercise.
Dr. James Andrews. an onhopedic
surgeon in Birmingham, Ala., examined Schourek and gave him that
opinion.
·
"Dr. Andrews seems to think rest
will .take care of the problem," Rc.ds
manager Ray Knight said. "When
Pete feels up to it. we 'II run him back
out there to pitch."
·
Also Monday, the Reds activaled
outfielder Eric . Davis and put outfielder Reggie Sanders on the ·15-day
disabled list, with a sore rib cage.
Davis leads the team with 12
homers and 39 runs hatted in, even
though he has not played since injur. ing his rib 'cage· while making a div·
ing catch May 25 .

dRIGINAL MEMBERS These 10 young
golfer• are the original members of the Meigs
County Junior Golf League that was started in
1991. Pictured In the front row from left to right
are: Jeremy Roush, Steven McCullough, David
Anderson, Brandl Thomas and Adam Thomas.
Seeond row: Adam Thomas, Sean O'Brien, Jar·

od Warner, Justin Roush and Ryan Pratt. The
Meigs junior golf league Will begin It's six.th
year on June 12 at 8:45a.m. at the Meigs County Golf Course. Play Is lor boys and girls
between the ages of 8·16. FQr more Information
contact Carol McCullough at 992·5322 or
Cheryl Thomas at the golf course, 992-6312,

County, Bengals may differ
over football stadium site
CINCINNATI (AP) The
Cincinnali Bcngals still want to play
their home games on the bank of the
. Ohio River. Hamilton County. which
will build the Bcitgals' new stadium,
may not necessarily agree with that.
The differences· must be worked .
out '"the county's ongoing negotiations with the NFL·s Bengals, eo~n­
ty commissioner Bob Bcdingh'aus
said Monday.
··These negotiations are best handled across the ncgoliatiitg table,"
.Bcdinghaus said.
He referred to the county's closed·
door talks with the Bengals and
baseball 's Cincinnati Reds about the ·
design and location of the ballparks.
They would replace .26-year-old
Riverfront Stadium , the Ohio River
shore ballpark that is ~ow home to
both teams.
Mike Brown. president and an
owner of the Bcngals, reiterated
Monday.that the riverfront is 1he only
site he wants foe the new tax-financed
football stadium.
But county offiCials recently
raised the possibility of building the
football stadium somewhere else.
One alternative site is cast of downtown. ncar the county jail.
Bcdinghaus. the county commissioner who tirst proposed increasing
the county'~ sales tax to build the new
stadiums. said he had spoken with
Brown prior to Brown's news con·
ference Monday.
Bedingha~s said 1he finahtadium
plans must meet two goals: keeping
both teams in the Cincinnati market
and revitalizing the riverfront area.
It was not cicar Monday whether
Brown would refuse to commit to '
. stadium built somewhere other than
the riverfront. Brown preferred to
think an agreement will be reached.
"When we're done with this,

Men's Softball Tournament
- June 15-16. Reedsville, rain or
shine. First 10 teams - $65 plus
two balls: 614-667-6122,
614-378-6267.
.
No alcoholic beverages.
,,

game and still finished with a
shutout?
"It was the first time. I th ink."
said Roy, who turned in his eighth
playoff shutout and 86th victory.
two shy of Billy Smith 's career
record.
His eight straight finals vi ctories
is two short of Ken Dryden's Stanley
Cup record.
Even though Roy had been successful before in the playoffs. thi s
Cup mfght have been the sweetest of
all. He forced his trade from Montreal
in December following a ·blowup
with management. Roy felt he had
been embarrassed by coach Mario
Tremblay, who left him in a game on·
an off night agai nst Detroit and he
wound up giving up nine goals .
·•J don't want to jab anybody,''
Roy said. " I just want to thank the
people who did support me in Montreal. Those are the ones I think about
today."

we're going lo end up on th e same
page," Brown told a news confer·
ence. ··The county people arc good
people. They' ve negotiated with us in
good faith .... and we're notlopking
to undercut them. We're looking to
work with them. That doesn't mean
we 'rc always going to be in IDo percent agreement."

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Park Avenues
LeSabres
Regals
Centurys ·
Skylarks
Bonnevilles
Grand Prixs
GrandAms
Firebirds ·

�P~gel• The

. Pomeroy • MlddlapOi"'., Ohio

O.Uy Sentinel

...

Why .do national treasures become high price personal treasures?.
lllomu Jefferson's Louisiana Pur·
chase, with the siiftatures or thenAnn
President Jefferson and his secrewy
of state, James Madison, wu val lied
Landers
at SI million to S 1.' million. It
1 ~ . LM A"'dn
,..__ s,.-.·_. c"".
failed to sell a1 the auction but wu
11/'n. S)'lldk:•.
laler purchased for S772.SOO. ("A
bargain," the buyer said.)
The beribboned, 18-page docuDear Ann Landers: I recently
ment,
hearing the Great Seal of the
read an article in the Marin IndepenUnited
States, was the top prize in
dent Journal in San Rafael. Calif.,
thill was quite disturbing. It said a the private collection of Jane Engel·
copy of Thomas Paine's "Common hard, widow of Charles Engelhard,
Sense" sold at an auction for who sold precious metals and other
S123,000 and an account of the commodities. The two dealers who
Lewis and Clark expedition went for bought the proclamation suggested
S28,7SO -- more than II times the their transaction was as much of a
steal as Jefferson's original deal with
cost of the trip itself.
Napoleon.
The original proclamation of
Tell me, Ann, why are these pre-

cious American historic documciiiS Onassis' " miff" as one r-PCf called
in privale hands? It seems 10 me it, aave us a gliml* of hQw much
these uusures should be in the pe&lt;iple will pay for a piece of histoSmithsonian or some other place in ry. Altl!ou&amp;h the auction net wu
Washinston where we, the people. nearly $3' million, you can be sure
can see them. I remember so well that most of the objects sold will
my first trip to Washington, when I appreciate greaUy u time aoes by.
was 18, aod the wonderful docuThe only item I wu sorry to see
ments I saw there. I was so proud.
go on the auction block was John
These documents belong to the John's roclcina·horse. I wish he had
American people. They should not saved it for the son he may have one
be sold to the highest bidder... San day.
Anselmo, Calif.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a·black,
Dear San Anselmo: Your point is 28-year-old female who was raised
well taken, and I'm sure a great in Mississippi and New York by
many people will agree with you, elderly parents. I agree with "Chris
but the individuals who own these . in Heyburn, Idaho," who remembers
treasures have the right to do what what .things were like in the "good
they wish with them .
old days." Tiley weren't all tliat terThe sale at auction of Jacqueline rific, according to the stories my

---4-H news--MEIGS COUNTY 4-H NEWS
Pioneers 4-H Club
The Pioneers 4-H Club met
recently at the Drake home with II
members and one advisor in allendance. Camp and alumni night were
discussed. Members chase projects
and made plans to install ·office!1ll
Frisbee and football were enjoyed.
Kountry Kidz
The Kountry Kidz met at the
Chester United Methodist Church
with eight members and two advisors
attending. Officers wen: elected, projects chosen and meeting dates discussed. New officers were installed.
Meigs County Shepherd Club and
More
The Meigs County Shepherd Club
and More met at the Buddy Ervin
home with 22 members and three
advisors present. Dates of weigh-in
were announced and it was noted that
livestock pictures arc $10, dues $5
and project books $1.
Melody Lawrence, secretary. gave
the last meeting report and Jessica
Janey, health officer, gave a report on
what the spread of colds are and heat
exhaustion:
Basketball ·and trampoline were
enjoyed. A hot dog roast will be
enjoyed.
Meigs County Shepherds Club and
More
The Meigs County Shepherds
Club ·and More met recently at the
Buddy Ervin home with 18 members
and one advisor attending. Selling
candy bars to earn money for 4-H
camp, working on books and weighin on were discussed.
Advisor Herb Ervin demonstrated
laq~b docking and castrating.
Meigs Dairy Club
The Meigs Dairy Club met recently at the home of Ada~ and Abby
Chevalier with nine members and
three advisors present. Where to go
on a field trip, colors of sweepstakes
card and reminder that June is Dairy
Month was discussed.
A movie on "Make Mine Milk"
was watched. Ben Holter gave the
treasurers report, Rachel Chapman
gave the health report, Adam Chevalier the safety report and Tricia Davis
had roll call by naming milk prod-

Pioneers 4-H Club
The Pioneers· met at Drake's
house with 12 members and I advisor present. Alumni night dinner, 4- .
H camp and shirts for 4-H were discussed. A lesson on how to fill out
books was given. Jesslea gave a lamb
demonstration and Matt talked about
how to give a demonstration.
Board games were enjoyed. Carrie Wiggins aod Christie Gregory
served refreshments. Parliamentary
Procedure will he discussed by Joey
Dillon and Jamie Drake at the next
meeting.
Salem Center Go-Getters
The Salem Center Go-Getters met
at the Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Department with 17 members and
four advisors present. Meml&gt;ers
rccc ivcd their project books and the
advisors discussed the projects with
members. Judging dates were given
to the members.
Becky Scott and Erin Bush served
refreshments. Members were reminded of the deadline for determinin~
projects. Demonstrations for the next
meeting will be by Andy Myers,
Becky Scott and Kristina Kennedy.
Salem Center Go-Geners
The Salem Center Go-Cletters met
at the Salem Township Volunteer Fire
Department with 13 members and
two advisors attending. Judging dates
were reviewed and · members were.
reminded to bring aluminum cans for
recycling.
Becky Scott gave a report on tak·
ing care of sheep and Andy Myers
told about taking care of a steer.
Health officers, Melissa Kirk and
Erin Bush had a roll call of members
by having them answer · questions
regarding health.
At the next meetin~ demonstrations were given by Lindsay Bolin,
Eric and Chelsea Montgomery.
Refreshments were provided by Stacia Sims, Eric and Cbclsea Montgomery.
Kountry Kidz 4-H News
The Kouiltry Kidz 4-H News
Club held a candleli~ht installation
service. Project judging dates were
discussed and 4-H books were passed
out. The members decided that every
month a member would demonstrate

. EXCEWNG STUDENTSgraders were among the
two classes of Algebra I taught by
Lear who all pa..ed the
math portion of the Ninth Grade Proflc:lancy Test They are from
the left, front, Beverly Burdette and Amber Perkins, aecond row,
Jeremiah Smith and Joseph McCall, and around Leer, Stephanie
Kopec, Steve Bella, Tiffany Halfhill, Chris Krawac:zyn, Julie Spaun,
Shawn Workman and C. D. Ellis.

Students excel on
math proficiency test The two classes of Algebra I
eighth grade students taught by
Linda Lear at Meigs Junior High
· School all passed the math portion
of the Ohio Ninth Grade Proficiency Test which they took this
spring.
In addition 85 percent o( all oth;
er students in advanced mathematics classes passed tbat paT\ of the
test.
Lear said that the students
worked·very hard. "coming early.
staying late, doing additional work,
attending math labs." To reward the

students fpr their dedication to academies. Lear hosted a breakfast for
the group of excelling students on .
one of the last days of school.
"I am very proud of my students
,and their accomplishments, aad am
equally sorry that incoming stu·
dents. will not have the advanced
math classes available to them
next year," said Lear.
Advanced math . classes have
been deleted from the curriculum
for .the 1996-97 school year at a
"great loss," according to Lear.

----News policy--In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The .Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.
All club ·meetings and other news
articles in the society section must

be submitted within 30 days of
occurrence. All birthdays must .be
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.

All material submitted for publication is subject to cditin~.

one of their projects· to the class. In '•-----------=~
Cookies and chips were served by June Carrie Crow will present her · 1
bread making project. The next meetDebi Chevalier.
ing
will be at the Chester United
Pioneers 4-H Club
The Pioneers 4-H Club met Methodist Church.
recently at the Drake home with 15
members and I advisor present. Officers were installed, 4-H Traditions
and project books discussed. All
members will be required to do a
demonstration ..
· Jamie gave a report on how 4-H
MEN'S COLOGNES &amp;
has influenced her life. Nancy Pickens and Jamie Drake had refreshAFDRSHAYES
Dave
ments. Jessica Dillon and Matthew
Complete Stock
King will give pointers on how to
Grate
give a demonstration at the next
meeting, and Carrie Wiggins and
Christie Gregory will bring refreshRutlond
ments.

By

25% OFF

Professor: "Those who
cannot learn from history
are doomed to repeat it-next
semester."

***
matter what they

. No
say,
there's still prayer in school.
Usually around finals.

** *

What we really . need is a
compute~ that can figure
all the things in life that nnn't I
add up.

***

AMBER LAUDERMILT .

First birthday
celebrat~d
Amber
Dawn
Laudcrmilt
observed her first birthday recently
with a party at the home of her parents, Don and Jennifer King Laudermilt. Harrisonville.
Attending were her sisters, Jamie
and JoAnna, maternal grandmother,
Joan King, paternal grandparents,
Donnie and Donna Laudermilt, Julie
King, Shawn Reeves, Dave Reeves,
and Jack King. Jr, Gifts well! presented to the honoree and cake, ice
cream and chips were served. She i$
the granddaughter of the late Jack
KinJI.

•

Opportunist: someone who,
when he finds himself In
water, decides he needed
bath anyway.

***
Remember when

.
only

the
energy crisis was kids
having too much of it?

lllddllpOI't
• Vlclnlly

••

Klux Klu. Now we lTC ~na,at

~ ents. told.

People -

10 have fOfl')ltea the
from ICrllllllina cl~
on a w,ultboard IUid hlnaia&amp; tton the clothesline 10 dry. the stenc:h
of the quthouse (often the home for
snllu:s), bllhint in 1 tin tub in the
backyard, chopping wood for the
fireplace while lilts CJ11Wied up your
legs, and sewina Ill niaht so that you
would have a decent dress to we,r
the next day.
'- 7
1 laugh when my pem-talk lbout
how "great" the '60s were. ,They
seem only to remember the music
&amp;!'d fashionable clothes. Tiley have
forgotten the struggle to gain equality and the tremendous indignity of
segregation. We had drive-by shootings ti!J:n, too, but it was the Ku
SOle J)lhM

-h Olher. '

...

'

RUSSELL STOYER
CANDY

1 Pound- Reg. $5.75

ONLY

$4

49

SUNGLASSES
1/
.
/2 PRICE
PAPERBACK
BOOKS

30%0FF

collected 67 units of blood when the
American Red Cros~ visited the
Meigs Senior Center Wednesday.
Nancy Thoene received 11 one
gallon pin; Brian E. Johnson, three
gallons; Mana Blackwood, five gallons; Debra Mora, seven gallons;
Judith Hunter, eight gallons; Virgil
Windon and Ellis Mycrs recei vcd 14
gallons pins.
RSVP workers at the site were
Helen Bodimer, Ida Diehl, Joan
Corder, June Ashley, Charlene
Thomas, Jane Brown, George Nesselroad, Sampson Hall, Catherine
Crist and Barbara Grueser.
Donors were, hy community:
Pomeroy -- Harold Norton. Dennis Gilmore, Debra Mora, Janet Pcavlcy. Thomas Hart, Mary Spencer, Billy Spencer, Eugene Triplett, Helen
Blackston, Lois Wyant, Kathryn See;
Linda Foreman, Kristin Foreman,
Marvin Taylor, Cyndi King •.Eunice
Jones, · David Duplantier, Janet
Ambrose, Belly Lowe, Joyce Hall;
Paul Marr, Nancy Reitmire, Jerry
Rcitmirc, Janice Davis, Gerald .
Rought. Virgil Windon, Nancy
Thoene, Dale Thoene, William Radford, Gloria Klocs, Patricia Barton,

.,
'

I'm so thankful that 1can drink It
any pt1blic fOUIIIIin. choose any se4t
on the bus, eat at any exclusilt
reswtnntllld choose: the profcssi&lt;ft
or my choice. We've come a
way, baby; and I don't want to JIP
back. -- Felicia Barn• in New Yorio:

• •· PICKS, SPREADS,
' ;
FINANCE
lioROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
, 1·900-776-2525 EXT.
5961
'
$2.99
per min
'
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 654-8434
- .

•
Dear Felicia: Your letter has ~

.

ring of trutb, and I thank you far
writinJ. We have indeed come ~
long way, baby, and I see no chanoe
or gains back.
:

••
....

Send qaestioM to AIUI
den, Cmaton Syndicate, 5m W.
Century Bhd., Suite '700, I.e+'

Mindy Brinker, Scott Brinker. Brae)!
Kom. Lorraine Vcnoy and Brend4
Cunningham.
Long Bottom -- Henry Balor an
1
Trenma Harr1s.
Middleport -- Toni Givens, An~
Browning, Donna Hawley. Gloria.
Peavlcy. Norma Wilcox and Juditll'
Hunter.
.~ .
Mason, W.Va. -- Brian Jphnson .:
Racine -- Dorothy Sayre, Juditl1
Smith, Patsy Cornell, Dennis Bush;
Grace Holter, Harry Holter and Bon~
nie Smith.
•
Rcedsvil.le ··Teresa Talbott. ~·
Syracuse -- Darla Thomas, Car
olyn Charles, Vicki Morrow a ' ·
Pauletta Heodricks.
,
Portland -- Steghert Nease.
:
Lang» i lie -- Ellis Myers, Jo~
Argabright and J{im-Argabright. ,
ltutland -- Mary Davidson. Do~
na Davidson and Marta Blackwood.
Florida-- June Bush.
••
First time donors W'\)TC Kathryn~
See and Scott Baiton.
.
:
The canteen was served hy· the:
Ohio Eta Phi sorority.
:
The next scheduled bioodmobill! •
visit will be Aug. 7 fmm I t&lt;&gt; 6 p.m. :

J
111

•

••

•• •

:

·
!:
and Mrs. James 0 . Childers. Rutland.:
has enlisted in the -Air Force's:
Delayed Enlistment Program,acconr-in'g to MSgt Ted Corbitt of the Park-.,
ersburg. W.Va. recruiting station. •
. Airman Childers, a 1996 graduate:
of Meigs ~igh School •. is; scheduled ;
for enlistment · in the regular Aid
Force in October, 1996. Upon grad- j
uation from the Air Force's •ix•wcck I
ba.,ic training courcsc ncar San Ant&lt;~ 1
nio, Texas, Childers is scheduled to •
receive technical training in the gencral career field.

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS·SALE
•

DHV
CASSEm TAPES
Co1ntry &amp; Ohlles
REG. $4.99

ONLY

$3 39

TIMEX
WATCHES

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
-Hew 0.11118
•IIIII tell l Pllllftlllng
•llocltlng
olnltrlor • Eltl8rlor

Pllnling

1

Alto Concrtla WOIIi
(FREE ESTIIIATI!S)
V.C. YOUNG II
tt2-Gt5

triee• slasW a,...

150·600Jo
to
.
170°/o
.
STOREWIDE UQUIDA110N .

Chat-Line
Hey Guys!!! Your
spec,ia\ girl is waiting
:to hear from you!!
,_:24 Hou'rs A Day!!
Call now
l

'"

1-000:446-1414
Ext. 14n

$3.99 "er Min.
'" Must be 18 yrs
iserv-U (61 M5-8434

1

liNDA'S
PAINTING

"lli1EilliOI·iiiiiiOR
FREE, ESTI~ATES

,,...... ,.Ja .....

,.,,...

,.latl.., ~ •• de It
.

· YIIY RIISOIIAILI
· liAR RlfiiEIUS
,. 614-tts-4110
.v.t.l

.

'New Homes

'~arag•s
.
,_
~

•Complete

Remodeling
· Stop·&amp;·comparel
FREE ESTIMATES ·
-~

. 9$5-4473

:.

'

7122tM

27C

CAl

''"""""'' '

Free E1timotes

992·2768 or
992·3274

-

IWV010212

....

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

"No Job Too L1Jfr1e or Too SIMI/"
We wiH work within your budget

614-742-2193
TPN

Mason, WV

MGM
GENEIAL
CONTUCTORS
Skiing • Vinyl
Aluminum ~ Roofing
New•Repalt
Gutters &amp;
Downspouts
Free Estimates
992-3607

Residential - Commercial
Aopfing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Rem&lt;JQellng
pecks - Bathrooms .:. Kitchens - Siding
35 Yeers Experience
·

Industrial • Automotive ·
New Radiators • Re-Cores ·
AIC Condensers/Hose Assembly&amp;

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

(614) 992-2364

5121/H 1 mo.

.1-800-889-3943

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

.742·3212

'

.,_.._

Summer Images

I &amp; W PWnCS All. SUPPLY
Tuppers Plains, Ohio t5783
61t-985-3813 or 81~7-6484
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru.36"
4" S&amp;:D ·perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch ]5 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
l 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll'sthru 1.000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Gravcless l.oach pipe
Sl. Rt. 7

1-sOo-988~8988

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Ext. 7907
2.99/min 18+
T.T. Phone Req. ·

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
.

Serv-u
. (619) 645-8434
·

Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

.

New Location
Middleport, Ohio
With 3 Becis to
Serve You Better.
·12-$20.00
16-$25.00
Phone 992·2489

Gas pipe I" thru 2'\ - FiHings . Re~ulator~- Risers
Full assonmcnt of PVC. &amp; Flex fitting• &amp;: Water fittings
Full line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.

LDBOSK

~~ WILDING .
.I ·
!

~~-

IJRIICI
'

Quality Work ·

Compttltlve Rates
"· ·: Res.:
·I

614-992•2524
" Truc:k:

6,~,1-7'558
.. ·'

W'tma.

Needjlllrec:tlon?

, fLo\ie
~usiness

Famll,¥ Matters
AIIO~Your

Per,sO.,a.l ps~hlc: to
Asslit You
1-900-988-8600
Ext.1277
Per Minutti
18yr•.

DATE
LINE

Cheater, Ohio

512211 mo. pet.

Your swee;,eart as

Howard L.. Writenl ·

MElt
cltiSe as yollr phOne - . '"
IEAUTIFUL WOMlll
1-900-988-8988
· 'ARE WAITING TO
Ext. 6733
$2.99 per minute
MUSI·be 18 yrs old

Se!Vice 4
.._~6::.:,1 645-8434

NEW-REPAIR

YOU NOW!!!
t '900-446-1414
Ext. 4309
; S3,gg per min.
Muat be 18 yra.
Serv·U (619) 845 8434

5J16/9ol TFN

1·908-990·3737
Ext. 2261

. Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions ol
love, success, care, soul
mates, seH-help 'and
more.
1-900·255-0500

$2.f9 per min.
Mull be 18 ,,._
Serv-U 1619)845 8434
411MWI-.

Ad

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.
They have helped
millions fi~d lortune,
success an!;llove.
The luture starts today!
Call 1-900-868-4900
Ext. 4193 .
$3 .99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·u (619) 645-8434

.

EVERYTHING MUST GOIII

Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.

I.

Must be 16 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

30 Announcements
Men's aoftbiH rournament· June
15-16. Reedsville, rain or shine.
First 10 1eams· $65 plus two
bah. 614-667·6122,614·378·
6267. No alCOholiC bevet"ageS.

. 40

537 BnVAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992·2772
8:30 A.M.•3:30 P.M.

2 Box8s ol garage sate i tems.
Calico mother cat &amp; 4 male kit·
tens . Call 304 -895 -3854 after

S!&gt;m.
Female Beagfe I male mixed
bfack lab, 614·992·6122.
Free Kittens, All Colors, 614-446·

9 .. 2. .

Owner:· Ronnie Jones

Kinens, long haired, liter ttained,
active &amp; playful. :Jl4·675-8832.

Large Block 6u1ldmg, You Tear It,

•••.
.........

lllll't -pd.

1320.

60

Lost and Fo!!nd

lo1t: 10 year old .lemale Dober . man, Minersv il le vicmily, 614·

1192·6137.

WICIS
HAULING

.

Yard sale left overs. 304 -675 -

. Uc. • Ins. Owneo: Riel&lt; Johnson

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1x8,:bt4,2x6
8'.10' 30. .,.,
1t'•1B' 35¢. ft.
Alto IYalllble
4x4'1 - 4x6'a
114-985-4107
814-742-3337

~bet8yrs.
~rv-U (619)845·8434

·HtrillodtGrova Rei ·

15 Vrs.

Live 24 Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful
Girls

, Date-Line

787t .

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding.

1-900-446-1414
Ext. 6445
$3.99 psr min.
Must be 18 yrs old.
Service U
(619) 654·8434

MM ... M
'

Reatl~ For New Home! 614 -367-

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

(Lime StoneLowRatea)

Pon'MOf, Ohio

iverlastlags

Playful Kittens, Liner Trained,

CHAT LINE

, Thur.-511. 1M.

ScHtad

10 tear down
old house ror lumber and mareu als. 304-67S-1602.

PDGLIITID

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
your choice.
1:ooo-988-!)988
Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.

'

NEEDED: Some one

-

614-247-2120"""'-

FUGUNT
FIELDS

You Keep Material, ·614 ·U6 ·
3574.
Medium Black &amp; While Could Be
Blre! Dog, E1 4·446__.753.

All Kinds of Eorth Work
992-3838

,.....

. Giveaway

304-615·3851 .

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured

Trucking·
Limestone
Bulldo7.ing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

'on

SPOR'ISWEA" .
$10and under

Plene Write To: P.O. Box 262,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Howard hcavatin

J&amp;L SIDING&amp;
INSULATION ·

PONDEROSI
PRIMmVE
CAMPGROUND
. OPENING SOON
I
Bt.llt. 338 w. 8 mil""
from Ravenawood
erldge, 1 mile lrom
Apple Grove, Ohio.
Eleclrlc hook-up, dump .
alation•, non-portable
water, large loll.,
hiking, llohlng.
.Rent by-'&lt; or month.
3114-372- or

~

Outdoors, And Quiet Evenings At
Hom' Seetting SWF Age: 25 -35

1 Tl11

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Personals

SWM like&amp;· Chur1h. MoYies,

Free Estimates

..01111 Adtltiols

Milly- ..hnor- ~me- Hall'

005

367-0266 - 1-8()0-950-3359

eRtplac.-1 Wildows
..llllti'Gng.s
•5._ Doors &amp; wildows

Big Selectlonl

ANNOUNCEMENTS

1-800-291-5600

Psychic-Line

FINO TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
Through a Uve
.Personal Psyctiicl

1-900-255-0500

Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Sei'V-U (619)

645-8434
I

eo
Rick

Public: Sale
and AuctiOn
P.~rton

Aucdon

Compan~.

lull rime auctioneer , complel,.
auclian
service.
licensed
1&amp;8,0hio &amp; Wast VIrginia, :104·

•

wanted to Buy

Books: Srate And County History,
Guns. Hunting. f ilhihg, Biogra·
phies, Deba tes. War . 814 -448 ·

7282 EV011"'11•·

'

Clean late Model Carl Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer.
Sm1th Bu1ck Pontiac . 1900 Eastern ~&amp;o.~e. Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal·
vaOe vehicles. Selling parts. 304·

773-5033.
Non-Workin9 Washers, Dryetl.
Stove•. Refngerators, F,eezer1,
Air Conditioners. Color T.V. 'I, .
VCR'S, Also JunM Cars, .614·i:5e· '

1236.
Pay1ng Top Dollar for J\Jnk Cars,
TrueMs, &amp; Runn ing IJ&amp;hides To
$10 ·SSO. Dove, 6 14·U6·9S.75.
Top do llaf · anli(lues. furn iture,
glass . .chma . Clocks, QOIO, sil~t&amp;r ,
co~~ns . watc hes. esta!&amp;S . Osby

Mart1n, 614 -9~2 - 744 1.

fop Prices Paid Old U.S. Coins,
Sil¥er , Gold, D1amonds, All Old
Collectibles. Paperweights, Etc.
M. T.S. Coin Shop:. 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 614-446-2842.
TrucM topper tor 1989 Dodge Da·
kola, 304-895·3900.

Walk behind Gravely tmctor &amp;

mower. 304·882-2695.
Buy Used Mob ile
11 E14 -446-017S
.
Wanted To Bur 1 Acre 01 Land
Or lot With UUiities. Wanted : ·eabysiuer, With References For 2
Nights. One
614· 44&amp;-0146.

Dav.

Wamed To Buy : Auto' S &amp; Truck1
Any Condition, 614·388·9062, Or
614-446-PART.
Wan fed To Buy : Gcod Used
Small 8enneu Pianc, 614·245·
9102.
Wanted To Buy : Jun .. Autos With
Or Without Motors. Call Larry
Livel)r. 614- 388-9303.

EM PLOYM ENT
SERVICE S

Bam-8pm

Installed

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Pomeroy, Ohio

c:oud\lbed, n tatie, coftM labit.

61 ~992-4025

Limited Time Offer
Call •oday with your
window alzes for a free
quote!

94~21. 68

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

0

· Pick-up dllcarded
batteriei, IPJIIIancae a
many metals.
··

•Tilt-in
•Double Hung
•Insulated

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

'·

AnUCTIV
&amp; WILLING
TO TALIIII

.$195°

ROOFING

HEAl FROM

FREE

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

.

Thuracsar. Jun• 13th, hm· 3pm,
State Route 12·4, Mineflvill•.
wasMr &amp; dry.r, tmall applilr'ltfl,

pm

32124 Happy

BIB ROOnNG and
CONS,.RUCYION

/

"""""'

condition. 8,4-U8 ·111530 after &amp;

Binls#IWMIJ

FAX n3-5111

13. , •. &amp; 15, ... s. betwMn

June

1Qtlo'l tofl, G.l. Joe. Srar Waf a
tct. Will pay fair ptice ~Met on

Hollow Ad.
Mlddlepon, OhiO 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricktes

Ph. n3-9173
108 Pomero 'Street

wlflt 1M,.,_ a lerY#ca 10 lleck II up
Serving S.E. OhiO I WHI Ylrglnll
448 1411 ·
·TOll F,_ t-eoo-t72-5117

11112-7573

.'

't

-·

Meet your match

YOUR MESSAGE
BE Sl;EN HERE
I FOR A TOTAL OF
&lt;1 $7.00 PER DAY.

I

f" • "

Sgtt Rouae 12•. Towarda Au-

90

PorttMe

• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omarnental
Steps -Stairs, Sailings, Pallo Fum~ure, Fireplace
Hems, Planter hanger,, Trellises &amp; lots or other stuft!!

-

June 1Ztf't. 131h, 112 Ylle Our

713-5185 a. 304-773-5447.

.985-4422

.¢AN

lt. 124, hi' l Cllt.

Cancllllone,., Helt Pumpe,

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Roofl.. &amp;.
Block Work

--

SAWMILL

.
/IUIIIOrized AGA Distributor
• Waking Supplies • Industrial Gaaes • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair welding

and Manufactured Hou•lng.

IENN

H&amp;H
Home
Remodeling

AIL Ml.8 IIIAL

Rutland Furniture ·

.

FRO I!STIIIATU

r.

Calls)

l'dLUZ - ·

•Pelntlng

(11t)IIZ-Sps
11t IIZ·2751

u... ,., ......
H&amp;H

j ,. _,.

mo. pd.

i• IOIEIJ IISSELL
•
1: COISTRUmON

Sunda~·

i~ ~ . .

·Roollno

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

S20.00/ll.

day oditiorl- l:ot)pm F_,, Mo•·
- ...._ 1G:OO&amp;.m. s- ...

IIOIP.. I 5I. Rt 7, kHo af turmlOI'

614-949·2096
· TODD IISSELL

WELDINI &amp; FAIIICATIOI

· for lmmadllllll ln.t.llllllon.
l'l! : - &amp;..,;;,rr - • ' F,.Eallmlll..

"
!J

CHEAPER BAlES

F - . AH equ1pnw1t In stack

•Rainoclell.nO
•Siding

c.n-

614-992·7643

SMITII'S
COISTIUCnOI
•Addltlonl
•NewGaf8011

SUMMER
m01111

14•2112

UCINE IYDUULIC REPAII
&amp; MACNIIIE SHOP, INC.

Glrages • Repfa~e"'-nt Windows .
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

·-

CUIIDM . . . I Rnallalil.
··New Hom..

J. E. I'I!CW '• OWNER

}4ew Homes:• Vlny' Siding New

Pomeroy,~

30%0FF
DR. GUBOW
PIPES
30% OFF
COLD
POP .

,

••

I

Anseles, Calif. 901MS

.

SPORTS/
: :lNTERTAIMIIENT

1.,.

--Military -news
Harvey K. Price
·
Marine Pfc. Harvey K. Price was
recently promoted to his present rank
while servin~ at U.S. Army Ordinance Center and School, Aberdeen
Proving Ground. Md.
Price wa.~ promoted based on sustained superior job performance and
p(oficiency in his designated specialty.
. , .
Price, a 1995 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, joined the
Marine Corps in July 1994.
April D. ChHders
April D. Childers, daughter of Mr.

All Yard Sololt Mull a. "-id In
A -. - • • •: t:OOP"' Jftlt
dor bellw• 110 1C1 II 10 ruo. Sun·

...

Bloodmobile
coUects 67 units l
Tile Meigs County Bloodmobile Scott Banon. Deborah Orueser:

ucts.

of

,....,

lo&amp;t: Beagle P\IR, 6· 7 months old,
mate, o:l.c .- tolla1, Cook A-ld ..
Cheshire vicinity, j614) 367 -

7118&lt;.
Lost Molhtf , 01 Pearl Pin. Thurl·
day Evening Between Stowawa.r
Restaurant And Jack And Jilla.
Or Big Loll Store Or Parking. Reward! 814·367.· 74G7.
Lost: White Black, Brown Walker
Dog, Blown, Black Mi•ed Dog. M~
Creek Area, 614·258· 1318. 614·

Limestone, _ . .
Gravel, Sand,

441-1)968.

Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

70

Vatd Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlc:lnlty

ALL 't'ard Sllle1 Mull Be Paid In
Advante. DEADLINE : 2 :00 p.m.
the day before· the ad ia to run.

New24hr.
Dateilne
Meal the Man or Woman
pt your Dreama Nevar
be lonely again.

Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Mondor edition - 10:00 a.m. Sat·
uoday.

Wed ~no t 21h, Ran 0. Shine, 9·
? 10 Pine Str•l, Reclinet', Stone

CALL NOW

Jar~

1-900-1188-6003
Ext. 1021 ·
12,gg par min.
Muat ba 11 yrs.
Serv~U (814)845 8434

MiK lt&amp;n'4

Pl. PleaSI!nt
&amp; VICinity
Gunvlllo F,lidg.Community 11'-.
erni. It hoUMI, 33 flmilea, June
13th I 14th, lnlm Pt. P1eun, Rt2
N. toRt 17, to I milol to Gunvilo.

•

11 o

Help Wanted ·
$-WANTED·$

10 people who need to lose ..
weight &amp; make money, to \fY new
patented we1ght·loss product.
304-7"13,S083 24hrstday.
$200·$500 wkly fn your spare
lime. No ewp needed. Call now.
open 1 days . . ! 407~75- 2022 ht.
0526 H21
'ATTN : Pomt Pleasant" Postal
PoSitions. Permanent lull 11me lor
clerk/sorters. Full Benelits . For
exam, applica11on and salary mlo
cal l: ( 708)906 · 2350E xt.3670 .
8am-8pm .
AVON I All Ar-oas
Spears, 304-675-1 429.

I

S'hirley
.

4 Potential Leaders Seriously Interested In ln~osting Few Hours
We'ekty In Part· Time Business,
614-446· 1236.
AAA Driver's Educa t1on Tram1ng
School Instructors Needed For
The Galhpclis &amp; ~cmeroy Arva .
Permanent · Part -T1me. Ideal Fort
Ertta Income. W1ll Tra1n. Must ae·
Reliable_. Havt;t Good Ortving"'
Record And Valid Driver's L~o,
eense For At Least 5 Years. Sub-mit Resume to : ClA 388, c1o'
Gall1pohs Daily Tribune. 825 Third •
Avenue, Gallipohs. OH 45631 .
A.ble Avon Repretentative ~
ni:teded. Earn money for Christ·
mas bills at hom!Uat work . 1-800~92·6356 or 304 ·8~2 - 2645, Ind.

Rep.
Businen AssiSianl Needed .
Computer Skills Necessary. Ac·
taunting Ekperlence Preferred .
Send Resume &amp; References To:
CLA 387, CIO Gallipolis O.ilr Tri~
"',...· 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,

OIU!i631.

.

Christian babysluer, in our Racine
home, catl 6U -949 -29cO after
6pm.
Demonstrators Christmas At ·
ound The Worldf Gilts Of House
01 lloyd . Would you like a free
Chrislmas and earn extra ,ash?
CaK Carol, 814 -~9-330 t .
Drivers- straight I'UCkl, Ctast 0
license, over 21 years, goOd driv·
ing record , have phy_slcal. &lt;;ati

T.D.I., 304-422-oaea or

apply

tOtO Bfoadway Avenue, Parkers·

burg, WV.

Earn up to StOOD's wooklr SIUifi~
envelopes at hame. Stan now, no
experience, lreo supJ)Iies. lnlor·
mation, ,,o obligation, send SASE\

Quck Dept. 71, 3206-C, E. Colona!,
Or,. 11308. Orlando, FL 32803.

Home Tvpists, PC

users

n&amp;eoecs.

S~S,OOO Income patenrial. Call 1 ·~

800·513-4343 El&lt;l. ll-9368.
Salesman po1ition available, futr
time. tJiperience• re~u1red, stale 1
salary requirement. Send resume
to Bo• G·8, %Pt Pleasant Reg·
ister, 200 Main St., Pt Pleasan1

----'..C.__ :.

-'WV.:...:C25-'550',-'-

Se&lt;:unty Guards· must be ablit

tO:

work ant lhilt Including w.,e...,
kends. Mun l'lave clean ~alice ·

reco1d, good llfOrk llltory, rolioble'·

transpotrltion, drivers lictn&amp;41t
1nd home thon·t , Pay startl 11,. ,
S4.15 J* hoolr. 32·40 hourt pot

week. Call IU-188~287• Mon-·1
day· F1idly, e.m-•pm lor •PPI&gt;i'll' ;
f110IIt

�• P-. 1 • The c.lty Sudlnel

The DeiiJ Sentinel• Pag1 I

_Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tu11ct=y, June 11, 1118

'

NEA Croaaword Puaale

81UDGE
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

• • thl...

.......

Mobile Homes

for Slit

Would lJU To CleM HouN, 814·

FINANCIAL
, Business

614·982·5044 or814-DSa2-819ol

Opportunity

Country hOITII' '" town- 1 314 ac:r·
•• '" Mtddleport, OhtO lovely
11188 Schulrs S!&gt;edal Ednlon mobile home , 1 112 baths, carpet
1hroughour, plua many earraa
814·V92·7350. "o Sunday calls.

INOTICEI
lmmtdtalt openingt for part ttrM
llN"S and LPN'S. all aholts Comt permve wages, dift&amp;rential 1111uh M·
1 penenct, equal opportuntly em
• p!oyer Contact rt'lt 0 1rector or
Nursmg, Pmecrest Care Cenrer,
110 P1necr&amp;st Or.ve, Ga111pohs
Ohio, 45631614 448-71 , 2
lmmed1ate Operunga For Pari
T1me FIN's And LPN 1. All Sh•fts
Compe!it1v&amp; Wagn, D•ff.,enflll
W•th E•~erience Equal Oppor.
tuOily Employer Contact The Oi·
rec tor Of Nurs1ng, Pinecrest Clfl
Center, 170 Pinecrest Ortve, Galhpoh, OH 45631 , 614~·7112.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r•cornm•nds 1h11 you do bul l·
ntll WTth peoptt you know, and
NOT 10 Mnd - Y lllrough tile
m11il until you have 1nves11gated
thoolloring
4M Dnv.,.a Educltion Tr•rmng
School Instructors NetH:ted For
Tha Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy Area
Pwrmanent • Part·Timt Ideal For
Ern lnl::Qml W•ll Trarn Must Be
Reliable, Hawe Good Dnvmg
Record. And Valrd Orivttr'a L•·
certH Fot AI lea.lt 5 Ye"a Sub·
m1t Rttum• To . ClA 388, cl o
Galipc;lls Daoly Tnbuno. 825 Third
............ Ga~polo~ OH •5631

local Physrceans office IS looking
for L.P.N With recent Ptd•atriC ex·
pemtnce, m1f\rmum 1 year re·
quued
Wv
lrcense
Send
resumes to Box C· 7 CIO Po•nl
• Pleasanl Reg~stet' 200 t.tarn S! Pt.
PfeasantW¥

VENDI"G Won' t Gtl Roth Quick.
WtU Get A Steady, Cash Income
Price To Sell t-800-820-&amp;782

Now lakmg apptrcat1ons, Ham a
Stealchouse 324 Mam St PI
Pleasam, Wv

Dozer Work
c::enald contractor
•1veways ponds ,
available '
landsc::apmg
c Honest &amp; de
pendable WV 205542 304·675·

Now talc1no appltcauona tor lit·
pe r~enced roofers and carpBfnl·
efS Must have, hand tools 'lnd
uansportnon Starr•ng pay $7 25
ty 614 2•5-0.37

3984

230

Professional
Services

Johnson's Traa Senuce Trim·
mtng &amp; removal of tree shrubs &amp;
hOcigeL ~·5811·128~

Part· T1me L1't'e·1n Nanny Wanted
For 3 Year Old &amp; 6 Week Old
Good Pa~. References Requ1red
61 4 256- 1559

Qual•ty Catt Nurs1ng Serv1ces,
Now Hmng CNA't, PCA'a, And
HHA'11, Startmg Pay $6 50 An
Hour, Clients Are located In Chtl·
hcothe Oh10 For More lnlorma·
liOn, 1·800-526 7888

All real esrate advel1is1ng Wl
this newspaper is subtect IO
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes II Hlegal
to adveniSe ·any preference,
1imlla110n or cfscrimlna!Jon
based on race, COlOr, religiOn
sex tamillaf slalus or nattonaf
ortgln, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
llmllallon or discrimination •

SOCial Workat'l, Now Hinng $23 1
Hr + Benefits, On The Jqb Train·
1ng To Apply In Your Area, 1-80G339·6 150

2·3 bedrooms, bnck , DR. new
windows, carpet, complete new
kucl'len and bath, garage , lull
basemen~ 614-992-6389

VACANCY BEHAVIOR HANOI•
CAPPED INSTRUCTOR. Valod
Oh1o C8ft11u;allon Contact. Supt.
Ollrc:e By June 24, 1996 Gallla •
Jackson Vmton JVSD, P.O Bo•
157, Rto Grande, OH -4567,. 81•
245-5334 EEO

3 BA , 2 belt! ranch 2 car garage,
Sprong 'Iaiiey area. close to Holz
twHospital 614·446· 7940
Beauuful 3 bedroom Rancher on
Jerry's Run Rd 11 ~rs okt, split raJ!
lenee, narane, breezeway larne
•
•
•
porch, c;onc;rele
drrve. large barn,
fenced 1n Iiane lot &amp; out burld·
lnQIL $85,000 304 578 2494
E1ght room houae, Rac1ne, to ur
bedrooms, LR, OR, larrnly room,
ltrep4ace, large kllchen, lull altlc,
basement new cenlral heat and
atr, room lor three cars. 4 68 acr
es, could sen loll, $75,000 nego11able, 614·992·2924 or 614·992·
OSI71

BAHAMA CRUISE I 5 daya/4
mghts Under booked! Must Selll
$2991Couple L1m11ed T1ckels ~ ·
800 935-9999 ext 6589 Mon • Sat
9am 10pm
180 Wanted To Do

U 1ll er 9 6 Miles To Proclorvllle
Bndge, Two Star~. Colon1al Bnck.
3 Bedrooms, Double Attached
Garage, Housa Wtth 1 28 Acres,
$85,500, Or House Wnh 1 Acre
•.:.*82=,000:.:.;;·~6-14_·.:.
886=·7~2.:.1_7_ __
•- One bedroom home tn Pomero~
W1llsell on land contrac t 814·
992·5856

Any odd 10bs Pa•ntlng, carpentry,
repatrl, lawn work, etc 304-6757112

Rac1ne lour bedrooms, 24'1128'
LR~ OR, laundry room, rwo baths,
heal pump, gal1lge, 1 4 acres (MI
LJ. sro.ooo. e14·94g·2•95

Body work on cars &amp; trucks, reasonable rates. mmor mec:hamcal
repa•rs. o~ changes, call 6141.·742·
2935 aslc for K1p Ru~and
Dans lawn Care Re11dentlal,
Churches a. Cemetafles, Rea·
sonable Ral9sl614-3712847
Genera l Ma•ntenance, Pa1nling,
Yard Work Wtndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned Ltght Haullno,
Commencal, Reskfen1111 Suwe
6, 4 388.0•29
Georges Portable Sawm1ll, don't
haul your logs lo the mrll JUit call
~ -875-1957

Lawns Mowed &amp; Trtmmed , Have
Equipment, Reasonable Rates,
Semor C111ren D•acount, For An
Est•mate 814 245-5755
Prolets•onal Tree Ser~~ttee, Stump
Removal , Free Ealimateal In
suranc::e. B•dwell, Oh1o 611111 388·
9648. 614·381· 1010
Sun Val ley Nursery School
Chrldcare M-F 6am· 5 30pm Ages
2·K, Young School Age During
Summer 3 Oaya per Week Mini·
mum 6 u .&amp;46-3657

'""e

your

Wrll
tor elderly In
home
or hoapllai Ntghts Sun-Thun
Days Mon·Frl Call 30•-675-5795
ask for ltnda
W•11 Do 9abyslllmg In My HOme,
Ftea1bla Hours, Experienced Da~­
care, Can G1ve Refet'enc;el, C$11111·
441 0588.
W111 do lawn ma1nlenance, clean
garagel, guners, plant flowers,
ere for more Information, call
6 " ·992·20115
W1ll Provide Oualtl)' Chlldcare tn
Mv Home, Located Neat Holz.,
Hospual, Coli 61ol·4ol6·8113, For
MorolnlcrrreDOn.
Would Llkt To Babt'lll lnfanl To
Any Ago, Large Playgrvund, Rot·
.,...... 614·2•5-5887

•

SPECIAL New 1998 Ux80 Ncr
ns with Glamour Ba1h and S1ereo
Includes Central A1r Sk~rllng, De
livery and Set-up MOUNTAIN
STATE HOMES 30• 675-1 •oo

330

Farms for Sale

34 ac,es, 2 br mob1le home, 8·8
acres tr11a b1e, 11h1ng, $34 000
e 1• ·992·2822

..0 acre farm Wlthree. hOrse barns.
1ndoor rtd1ng area w1AOHA cham
pton stalhon, brood mares, yea1
rnos . 81 112 acres leru:ad new
barn, 6t4·286-e522

340

350

w

Miscellaneous

Pr1ce Buster Hl98 3bedroom
$825 down. l159fmo Free del1111
ery &amp; se1up Only a1 Oakwood
Horn&amp;a. Nitro WV 304 755-5885

Business and
Buildings

614·446·Z200

a.

110

~-615-1•00

Store lor ren1 Fron1 of Ma1n St

SOCIAL WORKER : Tho Altlons
AIDS Task Force Is Sookon9 4
This newspaper will not
ltcensed SoCial Worker (LSW)
knowllngly accepl
To Serve As Caae Uanager For
The HIV Rural Canaorltum Of
adventsemeniS tor real eslate
Southeaatlt'n Ohio Thia Is A Full
which Is In vlolallon ollhe law
Trme Po11tron Funded By The
OUr readers are hereby
Oh1o Department 01 Heallh. The
lnlormad ltlal all dwellings
Succeuful Candidate WUI
~~~.-eftised In thfs newspaper
LSW CorUIIId In Ohio And Will
are available on an equal
HaYa A Minimum Of Two Years ·
oppo~unlty baSIS
Professional E1perrenca. E1pari·
ence In Workmg Wilh Persona
lnlected With HIV It Hlghl1 Do·
:m abie Thit Position fnvolvta
Moder'lte Travel S11rnng Dalt Ia
REAL ESTATE
July 1, 1!198 Salary Ia In Tho Mid
20's Wolh Excellent Fringe Ben· 1 - - - - - - - - . . . . , . . - - efls A Loner 01 Interest And 310 Homes for Sale
Currenl Reaume Should 81 Dl·
rec;ted To
Case Manager 1 112 srory, 4 br. lr , Dr , ff bas&amp;
Searcl'l, Athens AIDS Task men1 &amp; 1un porch, $38,000, call
Force. 18 North College StrHt. e_1_•_99_2_·_
••_ao
_ _ _ _ _ __
Athens OH 45701 Application• 1
111 Be Rec:e1vect Until June 14. 2·3 bedroom house, 50x100 lot,
19SI8. The Athens AIDS Task loc:Btad 1n Syracuse appltancas
Force 11 An Equal Opportunity •ncluded, call 814·91l2· 5767 after
Empk&gt;y«.
•pm

Want a rewarding career? We
are loolcrng for canng Individuals
who wanl to J0 '" the growing
number ol Profesaional Child care
Provtdera. Tratnrng and referrals
prOVIded free call Ju~ at ltnk It
30 4 · 523· 9 s 4o or 1·80o-ag 4•
9540
Yard Work &amp; General Main·
tenance Tool Prov1dad, 614·.&amp;11116
4646

FREE CENTRAL AIR 1or80
Commodore 3 Bedroom and
1·h70 Commodore 3 bedroom
Orter good lhru June 15 t09e
MOUNTAIN STATE HOMES

Po$1 Oll1ce Call 304 675 2174 ar

Pan T1me LPN 8 Hours Must Be
A~adable For Call In 614 · ••e
4814
Pos1al &amp; Go~·• Jabs $21 IHr +
Benef11s, No Exp W•ll Tra1n, For
Appl Andlnlc 1 800 536-~0

1181 Fairmont , 1-4al0. 3 bed
rooms, 2 bath, an electric, e·
houH walla, heat pump, 400 aq
It pt'HIUfl Mlled deeM inci~,~dtd,

Thtae bedroom home m eountr~.
Wtiles Holl Rd . Rutland. ono balh
tn--ground pool, 61o(.992·5067

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1972 Hometto Mobtle Home 2
Bedrooms 12r55, Racondlttoned
Thru·Oul. Some Furn.ture, S2 500,
Aner 6 ~M 614·245- 1516
1975 12•65, two bedroom, good
oondllton furn1shed $5500. (8t4)
742-3807
t978 Dtllll 2 bedroom new car·
cond $6.295 304 875
5708
pe~ . good

t979 Baron t4x70 With 7x14 Ex
panda 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Total
Electric With Backup Gas Heat,
AC &amp; 2 Porches 814·446·9543
FREE HEAT PUMP woill the pur·
chase of any multi sectron home
llmUed T•me MOUNTAIN STATE
HOMES~ 675 1400
Glenwood, 3/•acre w13bedroom,
2bath , t98Q Brandyw'"e mobile
home Sell lor $24,995 cash or
owner finance lor $29,000, with
$4.000 down 304·582 5840

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

I Acre footers. wa1er septiC. ga·
rage, bla cktop road 1n Add1son
area 614 388 8978
25 Acres , Hannan Tra ce School
D1stnct, Small Tobacco Allotment.
Mineral A1ghts, 614·256·1611
lots For Sale Approx 314 01 An
Acre 141 2 M1les From Gal hpol"
$12000 614 256 1559
Mobil e hom ~.J ot 1n countr~ ap
proll 2 miles cr¢m Shell plant near
OhiO over s ~o omo 304 578
"2683
River Frontage 1 3 Acre 10 M1n
From Galhpohs , Senous Calls
Only, 614·446·4053
Scentc Va ll &amp;~. Apple Grove
beaut•ful 2ac lots publi c water,
Cl~de Bowen Jr . 304 576 2336

RENTALS

41 o Houses for

Rent

:~oc:=:~ ::.=~
l&lt;ld -

OPEN HOUSE SPECIAL· 12.000
Rebate on New 1818 Noms
14X70. 2BA, 2 Ball. Plulll COrp&amp;\
Olah . . •her, and Oak Cabmets
IIOUNTAIN STATE HOMES
300-675-1400

for Rent
Furnished Efrtclency 2 Rooma
Share Balh , S185Jt.lo Uttlniea
f)lld, e07 Saeond Avenue, Gall•·
poliL 814-448 ••10 Allar 7 ~lA
Gtacous lrMg l and 2 btdtoom
apanmerus at Viftaoa Manor and
R1vtrt•de Apartments m Midd le·
port From S232·S355 . Cat! e,..
992 5064 Equal Hous•no Opper·
'""bel
ltrQt 1 Bedroom, lara• Llvlno·
room, Bath, Kitche n, Apanrnant,
S255tMo • Ut1htt .. Patd, 284
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis. eu.
388 1708, For Show1nQ
Ntce two bedroom apartment tn
Pomerov. no pets, 614 992 5858

Now acc::tpt'"g appbcalionl tor
one bedroom aparrmentt ApPii·
cahona can btl picked up 11 Pomeroy Cliff Apartment• Office.
814-W2-7172
One Bedroom Aparlmtnt 12001
Mo , 2 Bodrvom AparJptanl 121151
Mo , With All Ulthtltl-.at&lt;f, Ck&gt;H
To Un""""ry Of Rio Grande. 814388-W.. .
Twm Rtvers Tower, now accepdng
applications tor lbt HUD tubticfIZBd apt for aldarty and handi·
capped. EOH 304-875.ee7t
Twa apanmenll In Mictdleporl·
upsraus hat one bedroom, bath,
km:hen and LA, 1300 piUI uiiiii:IH
and depo111. down1talrt hat 1-2
bedrooms, bath, LA, DR, $350
plus UtilitieS and deposit. AYIIIable lmmec:tlately, references ra·
quested. 61.&amp;-992-7138
Valley Ap1rtm1ntt, Muon, WV
now accepnng appllcatlont for 2&amp;
3 bedroom ap11rtmeniL HUD Sut&gt;sidlzad 30...75-5548, ERA Town
&amp; Counlry Real Estate

450

Furnished
Rooms

Bedroom To Rent In Sing~ Home
1 112 Mtles To Gallipolis, Use
K•rchen, LIVIhg Room, Washer 1
&amp; Dryer, 814-441 -1291
Clfcle Uotel, Galltpol1s. OH &amp;14·
446 2501 or 61•·367-oe12 Elfe·
c::rency Rooms, Cable, Air, Phone,
Mocro....,. &amp; Ralrigerator
Rooms for rent week or month
Starling at $120/mo Gallta Holel.
614 446·95.!1)
Sleeprng rooms w1th cooktno
Also tra•ler space on nver Ali
hook ups Call a her 2 00 p m ,
304· 773-5651, MasonWil

460

Space tor Rent

Trarler Space For Rent On Ball
Run Road $100fMo., Relerences
Requited, 814·4•8·.&amp; 111 Daytime,
Or Even1ngs, 814-4o46·71S7.

2 Bedroom house lurmshed, 1n
M1ddlepor1 Clly L1m1ts no pets,
references S27 5m o 304 773
5165
A~a1table

July tst n1ce 2 bed·
roam . basement, garage. relar
ences, deposu &amp; no pets 304·
675 5162
House lfl Clifton, 1111 bedroom, hvtng
room, bath, kitchen full basement
b1g lot &amp; carport S275mo ptu1
Ullhhes Depo11t &amp; references r•
qurred. 304773-505.4
Roomata Wanted S2501Mo , Utill·
ues Paid. 614·446-8595
Unlurn1shed 2 bedroom house,
n1ce &amp; clean, no .nsrde pets, de·
postt req~onred, 614·992·3090

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12x65 2 Bedrooms, AC, $2501
Mo Plus DepoSit No Pers. Refer·
ences. 614·441 0318
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Unlur·
n•shed. No Pels On Krtner Road,
614-4411-9569
'
2 13 Bedroom Mobile Homes In
Porter Area You Pay Uttll tles,
ReferenceS/ Depos•t Req 614·
388·9162
2 Bedrooms Close To GallipoliS.
Green School, Garage 1325/Mo
Oepos1t 61,..&amp;46·4314
Small 1 Bedroom Mob1le Home In
Kanauga Utlllltes Furn1shed,
S1801Mo , 6t4 446 7406
Trailer lor rent tn Galhpohs area
61. 4•&amp;-8849
Two and three bedroom mab1le
homes startmg at S2•0-S300,
sewer wa1er and 1rash •ncluded
614·992·2187
Two bedroom mobile home 1n
M1ddlepor1. no pets, 614·9925858

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmems. lur
nts hed and unfurniShed, secunty
aepos11 reqmred no pets 614 ·
992·2218
1 Sed room Super N•ce, $2661
Mo . Plus Ut rli iiOS, Usually
Someth1ng Avatlablel Sun Valley
Aparunents, 81.&amp;·446-2957
2 bedroom apartment. $350 per
month, $200 depos11, ut1l111es pa1d,
no pets, 614 992 5724
2bdrm apts , total electnc ap
phances lurn1shed laundr~ room
fac1hl1es close to sc:hool rn town
Apphcallans available at V1llage
Green Ap1s r49 or call 61.&amp;-992·
3711 EOH

Furmshed 3 Rooms &amp; Balh, Up
starrs, Uttlltles Furnished, Clean,
No Petl, Reference, Oepotll Atqulrod, 614-«6-151g.
Furnished Apartment, Upstairs, 1
~edtoom, No Para, StcQnd Ave·
nue Gallipolis, All Ulrhttes Pa1d,
Dtpooi\81•·•oltl-8523.

510

Household

Goods
2•.ooo BTU Fndgedarre wtndow
A!C, 22Q votiB, oldef model, works
great $100 304-875· 73§.1
Appliances
Raconduloned
Washers, Dryert, RanQes, Relrt·
grerors, QO Day Guarantee!
Frenc:h Cuy Maytag, 814 -448·
7795
Country FurMure 30•·875 6820
At 2 N, 6mtles, PI Pleaaanr. WV
lues Sat: 9-6 Sun 11·5.

A ~reda le Pups, Oorang, 3 ft ·

2857

~·51•

814~1D42

84 Wmchat1er 30·30 ctllbtt, AKC Rott Welt.rl, TIHI Docked,

•saeo

5anb0rn air

com- O.W Ctawl

Was her Dryer, 30•
Elec tn c Sto ve 30 ~ Gas Stove,
Color TV $50 Each, M1crowa~e
S-10, A..r Cond ti!Oners. 6U ·256 ·
1238
VIRA FURNITURE
614· ...6..:1158
Quality Hou&amp;ehold Furfllllre And
Apptiances Great Deals On
Cash And Carryl RENf.2·0WN
And layaway Also Avaolable
Free Del,yery W1thln 25 M•1ea
Vrnv t 64 Panerns large selec ·
!tons, K11c;hen Pnnts m Stock Car
pet $6 50 and up Mollohan Car·
petS6 14 446 7444
Whirlpool Wash&amp;f' $95 Small Re
fngerator $75 . 8,000 BTU Au
ConditiOner 175, Hotpo1nt Dryer
$95. Washer To Match $95. G E
Almond Relngerator Newer Mod
el, $95, Green Refngidalre Ref~··
erater, $150, Hotpotnt Range Har
voat Gold $95. Skooos Apploanc es, 7e V1ne Stteet. GaH1pohs, 614
448· 73W, 1-800-4W-34gg
Zenlh floor model, color console
TV, otder model. hand&amp;oma cabt
ne1, QOOd piCture $75 304·675
73§.1

530

W&lt;y

IML $300 Fwm 814·388-g22Q

li111o ~-615-15&amp;4

All Natural Fat loll Produc1.
LOae Welght, F••t Btntr, In·
creased Energy $1 A Day 814.:....._.::..t;.:238::.;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Buy or sell R1vanne Anuques
112• E Matn Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours L4 T W 10 00
a.m roe 00 pm. Sunday 1:00 to
8:00pm 81 .. W2·2!;~
•

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Dln•ne 111 wtlh four chairs re·
chnet', lhret plew liYrng room su
lte, !11•949·2080
Eitel~!&lt;::

Heat Pump 2 112 Ton He•l Needs
New Reversing Valve e Years
Old, $200 080 61 .... 1 0706

580

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Roparrod, New &amp; Rebuit In SIOdl
Call Ron Evans. 1·800·537 9528

Strawbemas Taylor's B1rry
Patch, Open Mon, WIKI, Fri, 11-8,
Sat Till Noon, • 14·2•5-8007.

77 Oldsmob1le 98, 74k, v o ,
11750, ·as Dodge 800, 1Hk, vg.,
11350 , 614·~8·3228

"ew ae Olds ••2 T·Tops Grey
Sol..,, One OWner 20,300 Mllo1
Full Power, GBI8ga Kept
(614~
446·01t)g
Auto Loans Dealer will arrange fi.
nanc;mg eYen 1f you have been
turned dawn elsew~ere Upton
Equ1pment Used Cars 304· 458·

&amp;

Vegetables

18,000, 8,000 Or 10,500 BTU
Wtndow Atr Conchtionen, eu.

1009

720

Kerosene heater Ommy 230,
23 000 BTU suo Sears Ken·
maJe small retngator far camper
$50 ~- 372-8480

610

lota For Sale Gravel Hill Ce
metery Chesh~re , S200 per grave
•ndudnlQ Cornet' Stones and Per.
potual Care 81•· 387-&lt;!21•

1995 2 Horse Slant Load Gooseneck Horae Tra•ler W11h Reer
Tack W1th Dressing Raom. 301111·
882·2195

Farm

11182 Ford 112 ton F 150 4•4 New
Dark Shadow Blue parnt. chrome
wheels, 31110 50 tires, r1nted
wtndOwt,. bed l•nar, new fuel syt·
tem, new complete tune-up new
front·end steenng and suspen
tton parts, new brakes and bear· '
rnp, 19,000 actual mrlet Sharp
truck s•.500 Call 61•· 4•8 381•
aher 7pm

Equipment

loYeseat, Couch, Ct\a~r, Reg Bot" Cub low Boy Finaahad Mower,
Sprmos &amp; Mattress, 2 End Ta· Plows, D1!JC Grader Blade Carry
Dies falf ConditiOn 6U 2•5· All. 814-446 ... 1

1880 GMC good c;ond1t1on 304
615-5162

58.45

New Gas Furnaces, New Qalvan·
•zed Duct Work, New Hood Fans
614·379·2720 AFTER e ~M
New V1vrtar Flash for Canon
35mm camera, $50 Severalleet
of cham hnlt lencu1Q w•th post and
accessorres 1125. Call 304·675·
3423 E!Yel'llnQi.
Nordtc Tracie Exercrser Exc&amp;llent
ConditiOn, $400, 614-1111.&amp;1-1908

A &amp; S Furniture, Mason WV 304·
773 5341 New Store Hours
Mon·Fn
12noon 7pm
Sat
12noon·5pm We Buy • Sell .
Trade Ask lor Rocky
RCA enterta'"menl center Wlfa·
dio, CD. cassette player 2 large
speakers. $175 304 ·372~
Refrtgerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers. All Recondtlloned
And Gauran!eedl $100 And Up,
Will DeWar 614-869-61111.&amp;1
Sale 1 Trade Yamaha Rac1ng Ga·
Cart Ready 10 Race all ac::cessones
will 1racte tor • Wheelef ol
Equalvaulo C814) 38Hl594
Slate Man Garden Ttller, Like
N..,, $500, 614 388·81~
STORAGE TANKS 3.000" Gallon
Upnght Ron Evans Emerpr •ses
Ja(:t{son Ohio. HJOO· S37·9528

t;ar, Ford F250 31• Ton. 351
Windsor 2 wheel Dnve, 614· ••8·
2&amp;15 qr 30•-1175-2385

Ford 2000 tractor wlloader,
$6 850. 35 M F , $3,895 25• lrf·
ternat1ona1 d1esel, $4,89Si 1996
344 4x4 Rhtno $8 795. e1• 28!1
6522

1988 ChBYy 1/2 Ton V-6 Eng1ne,
PS, PB, A~r, Auto Trans, $5,495,
81• 448-4225 Cal Aftlf 4 ~M

It's T•me To Malee Ha~l 6 Used
Round Balers From 5001f To
2QOOI, 9 UHd Mower Condlhon·
ero From $1.250 To $8,500. NH
Rake Tedder Ltke New, Rakes,
Square Dalen, While 4 Row No
T111 Plant$r, Disks, Dnlls, Plows, 1993 S-1 0 Tahoe Long Bed. 4 3
Bobcats. Also Have Baler Tw1ne. Vortec:: V· 6, Aula Trans AC,
liay w,ap, Sprayer Parts. PTO Trades Welcome! Cook L4otora,
Shafts, Sprockel AsHmblles, Alr 814 446..0103
Condtllonmg_ And Hydrauhc Hot·
es Made To Order Compact IW5 Chelrrolot SB, 4r4. ac. am
Tractors • 99"- For •B Mo • 40 -60 fm Slatao, Stpd, hlteh, bed liner,
HP Trac;tors And Hay Equipment
300·713 5182.
6 9~ For 48 Mo .. Lease so l;tP
1995
Ford
f · 150 4x4 Autom11ic.
5300 2 WD S2991Mo • Car·
m•chaers Farm &amp; Law111 814·448· AC, Ercollant Condnoon, $15 500,
81•·3111-2880
2412 1·800·59•·1111

"'"'sell.

Use~ 2300 Trencher Co(l 61• · 80 GMC 112 ton V·B, JUII rebu1lt
eng.ne &amp; tranaml&amp;llon, new patnt
6!M·7842
I .
JOb, all new brake&amp;, many n•w
paris, asktng $3995, 6 U -992·
620 wanted to Buy·

.

'

5388

GRADE LOG WANTED . Delivered ar Wtll ptck·UP COI"'IICI: Harry lntern•t•onal Log Truclc S'"gle
GoldsberrytPaul MefC&amp;r Sawmill, A111e, lets Than 5.000 Miles On
Inc. 2808 US Rt35 Soulh oldo Eng~na, 814-446· 1•17
Wv, 25187 Phone 30•·675· 7598
lsuzu 1W2 A1111go 5 Speed. Black
or 30H75-7882
s2.ooo M11es, a,eat Shape!
$7,500. 614-387-0184. 814 -886·
630 · - Livestock
5540LeaveMellaga
Baby pogs lor sola. 814 949 2908
730
&amp; 4-WDs
or 61H49-2017

Varis

Pa1r OIO'ornteys, 614 388-9764
Reg.slet'ed Quarter Horse Mare 6
Years Old S1 300. 2 Weslern
Saddles, Angus He1fer 1 Cross 1982 Conwer11on Van v 8 , auto
loaded, very good cond1t1on, va
614·388-9191111
C1110n read~ . sharp rns1de &amp; out
~-875- J ~

TRANSPORTATION

Tandy 6000 t;omputer. screen,
keyboard, pttnt8f, set-up Jor hard
dt1VI on llopp~ disk. ewe cond
$600 OBO Lots ol 0111ra d1sks
304·615-9940

:::-:-:--:-:-7;:;.:;::::::;:: I new

WATER WELLS DRILLED
Fast Reasonable Servt&lt;::B 8U
886 7311

'8.&amp; Ford Tempo, 4 door auiOrMt·
tc, left rear rail light d1maoe.
97.000 molos, 1500 OBO, 814 949·2311 days or 614· 94g·264•

WolffTannlng Beda
TAN AT HOME
buy DIRECT ondSAVEI
Comm&amp;f'CIIIIHomt UnitS ftom
$198
Low oron!Ny payments
FREE colOr catalOg
Call TODAY 1 800-e.2 1305
Building
Supplies
Block bnck sewer p1pes, wind
ows, lintels, etc Claude Wmters,
Rto Grande, OH Call 6U· 245·
5121
Metal Roohng &amp; S1d1ng Galvan.
•:red. Galvalume, and Pamted AI·
tiler Farm Suppll81814·245-5193

Grvom Shop ·Pol Groomlna. Foa·
luring Hydro Both Don Shaoll.
Call81...ol8.0231 .
ol yr. old pony wlaaddle I btldlt,
$500, 81ol·gg2.~

Trucks for Sale

'118 F-250, au10mallc, lllidona Wind• in back, 300 8 c;yl , e.11&lt;::eUen1
cDndltlon, grea1 wortc b'uck, llrtl
$3500 tak.. •t home, e u -g•9·
2311 CII)'L

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

.... 11)75

Bran New 650 Kawasak• Ski
Jel 1995 Tra11er. $2 800 611
367 7912
:

199e Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 3 IAonltls Old, $28,000. May
Consider Trado, 6 1ol-«5-6 120

SI111Wbtmn, Pick Your Ownl CaU
Ctaudt Wont"" 814-2•5-5121

se.•••

2•8" Opllrnua speakers, 100 wan
Ball Cannon, 170 wan Optlmus
Amp. 1350 OBO Coli ~OHa2·
2577Mk 1D&lt; Chanly.

FruHs

1W3 Pontoac Sunbird, lE Rod, 5
Spotd, AC, 2 o Lllor, Approx.
31 ,000 Mn011, RHr Spoiler, Ercal/tnl Condoloon. 18,100, 814·388·
8728

1QQS Ford Escort LX, am fm ster·
eo, CO 'player, cru1sa control,
moon roof, get 35 10 38 mpg, cal
61•·W2·2906

Stud Set~t~ce Pupptts, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Br.alds
Payments Welcome, e t 4 318·
0429

RudolPh Wurlltzer Prano, Excel
lent Shape! $1 ,995 6U·256·
6611

u Ft v. Botlom John Boat . &amp;
Trailer Wnh Foo!control Torlung
Motor. Battery Depth Ftndvr :a
oars, $600, 61" 245-91 07
,

1894 Mercury Cougar XR7, VI,
32,000ma , toaded, PC cond 30+
885-32a7.

Puppy Palace Konnols. Boarding.

Fuel oil tank With 150 gallon1 ol
ol, 150. 814-~11-3228

19g) Chry""' Lollaron
Excellenl Con~iuon.
815-1 782Le... uoo-.
M•le~,

Sc:oo1ers
And
New /Used, van 1
Car L1h Installed, Stalfglidel, Lilt Siamese K1t1ens, Blu• Po1n1 CFA
Chana, Call For Brochure. 6 1• ReglltoriKI, 61 .... 1.(1797
.....7283
570
Musical
Five ton 11r condition, u1ed one
Instruments
summer, as•ung $600, (814) 7•22ta7
Fender Telleeaster ElectriC Gua·
Flex Home Cros1 Trammg Sys· 1ar Amencan Made $400, OU·
388-8135
tem Almost New, 81 •..ae-8778
Wheelcna~rt ,

Pole 9ldil Spl. 30"x•s,g-, 1 · 15"r8"
1 Vte.r old pool 151.&amp;2, triter new ' Sildlng Door, 1 · 3' Man Door,
loner 1100 304·87S· g715 alter Pa1nted S1aal Sldtng , Galvllume
5pm
Stool Rool
Ertel"'(. Iron.
12,500 BTU 1lr conchttoner, runs HOf,.Btdrt 1·800-352·10•5.·
on 110, one yr. old, $250, 6U·
• IIEPO BUILOtHGB
11112·§.121
Factor~ Has 2 All Stetl Quonset
170 XL Frollkin Log Sklddor Woltl Buoldlnas For Immediate Sail, (1)
Powor Shill Cable Wonch Husky 45r50. Never ErtttiKI. Will Take
Bruit 300 XL Knuckle Boom Log Balance OWed CaN Bll,
1·800-51 H!560
loader Mounlad On Tandem
Trallor W1a Cue Forklllt With
Pets for Sale
Bucket And Log Forkt, 814·4•8· 560

,.,7

1

AKC Rtg Boaton Terrier Pup·
P'll, E•cellant Bkwadhne Sholl &amp;
Wormed , Now TaklftO O.poail,
~ng $300 Each, 0 14· •40·

Blue sobl. '200 Gold tocket Chatr
S75 Blue captain stet (lor van or tOga! tank 111 up 1pteiala. Fish
RV) $100 304-675-5028
Tank &amp; Pot Shop, 2•13 Jachon
Booll By Redw.ng , Chrppewa, Ave. Po1nt Plea11n1, 304· 875·
Ton~ Lama Guaranteed Lowest 2063
PriCes At Shoe Calo. Gallipois
Dog &amp; Cot Grooming· r H - •
Camcotder For Salt. Panuonlc pnctl, 15yl'l IIIPtrtence. Call lor
VHS Very ~od Condition, $300. epptt. 00.-1175-8831
81•·-8330
•
Full blooded Sheltle· mtnlalurt
Conc:rtte I Platlie S.ptic Tanks, Colllo pupo. 1125 oach : AKC
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Flon RegitiiW'ed lhret ,._., old female
E'llnl Enterprises. J1c:k1on, OH Collie, liSIII·COior, 1200; 814·
1-800-537-9528.
7&lt;2-2050.

550
Antiques

Shena &amp;

Wormed, Hao;e . .en\1 On Ptem-

Upngh1 Freezer 18 Cu Ft $100,
6 14-&lt;48·38« Aher 7 ~M

Refr~ge ra lor.

Rem~Jwd. 111

prftiGr WIIIMHal llf tOOII, Ul..:l

Queen S1ze Waterbed W1th 8
Drawers, $225. Enlertarnment
Center $150, Sega Genes•• With
11 Games $125. 614-446·2221

New ~~thlte gas range $400 Used
2 months, w•ll aall $250 304-67S.
7V19

I:::-::;7.;_-=-:-::-::---.--

7 Brand New All Vinyl Wondows.
Still In Podcaga. 3o1 t/2 1&lt;19, Till In
Sathet, lntulatltd Gta11, Fua~n AKC
Reg111•rtd
Gtrm1n
Wala•na AI Tho Main Fr..,. And Shopllord Puppies, From Garman
S11h Frame, 1115 Each, 81.&amp;· l~rls. Call Riverv.ew Kennels,

Oueen Stze Or1hoped1c Manress
Set And Frame Never Used Slill
In Plastic Cost $800 Sell $250
81•·775-2360

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, reft~gerators,
ranges Slcaggs Appliances, 76
V.ne Street, Call 61-4-446·7398,
1 800-499 ~99

....,_1253.

81•·M ·302e
AKC RogiateriKI Bortr l'upptts
304J-87S 8095

8 1nch Jo•nltr Exc;tH•nr Candi
liOn, 1275, 014-37V-2700

E-tra large 1ndoor pel cage, used
2mo S85 double oven, works
great $50, Hunter oreen Queen
Anne tables wiglass tops $50pall',
darlc walnul roll -top daslc wJchalr
$35 304-8 75-8053.

Full srze bed frame, mattress &amp;
box sprongs 135. 304-675-7577

- - - - - - - - - - · 1 1tl7 1'1\maha FZ700, Now
1887 ~ Chlrow 2.2 Turbo 5 Braktl &amp; Tlrlt1 Loakl &amp; Run1
Spot•. llany Now Po.rta, e14· Good ln&lt;ludal Htlmeta $1 ,000
Or Tradt For • Wheelfr 814·
3711-as., 11-.3711·2133
1NI Chovy Calaliriry, po, pll. ac,
.tcyr 1ngine, .t door, good gat 1111 Harley Custom Sotll&amp;ll
mrleage. looks good, runs flnl, Springet, low mlas, $15,000 Sert·
atki"G 11,500 81•·381·1807at· OUI lnqUirlel only ploi ll. 1094
.., 5:oopm.
Pace cargo ua•ltf, carpol, ons1dt
fill BuiCk LtSibrt, tJcelltnt lrghll, IWO mOIQtcycle SII-U f)t ,
runnlna condition, v.e, PB, PS, * 1700 :!814 1949-2122.
•'
AC, Windows. $3800. f1•· 1g92 Suzuki GSKR eoow L~w
lot0·20450tfJ1•·M ·2302.
Miles, Good CondiUon, E•tra •'
304-e75-1782LNwMoas.-. •
1110 Geo Prl tlm·4doot, vary
good col'ldnion, one owner, auro, 1SI82 V.maha Blaster 4 Whe~;ler
PI, pb. cru111, at. 13,815. 304· FMF Racmg PIP&lt;t. $1,500. ln t~r·
B1S-f)78B
n11t0nal Scout 35 Inch Sup,r
Swa- $200, 61• 379 2262 ''
1100 Thunderbird v -e. charcoal
oray, IUIO, pt, pb, Crulll, ti~t 1996 Honda 2 Wheel Dr tve, ·3
wheel, pw, pf, power Mill, rear Vear Eatended Wahanty, Gl~ ·
defrOII.f, IC, l'l.ltO hladlighll &amp; 319·2249
dommor l$,goo nogo 304-a82- . . . . ; . . : . . - - - - - - - - . . 2030
Honda, Haw\ 400 Runt Gre'at
Aslung $900. 81• 388-919•.
'
18g2 Chevy Camero,
veraary Fully toadod.·R;d·,;;iiii.l750 Boats &amp; Motors
black ~tropes Askong $1
tor Sale
Coii8U·2•5-5912

3 .........y "'" .,
~. matts $200 Each. 111 S11011 &amp;
tte:lton 41, "• e 14-451 -U12 at. Wotmad, &amp;14 258· 1113.
·
tor 8:10pm.
AKC morll P"'schars, 1WO ltmalH,
3 Cushion Couch. Lov•nat, 2 S300 ucn one mall, S250, rlad)l
C1Jsh10n Brown Couch. • ~ 4· •46- June 15, acupt1ng deDOIHI

tnltle '"

l1lhlblllnl

48 . . . . . . .
41 ThlcltM ,.._

1 3 - - Lucy
14 Judge

LinCe 15 Lumber
_..,.

... Orwt
peNCrl81
13 Call - - dey
54 &amp; ; : w11ar"a
quality? •

(2 well ,
17 Zodlec. 1lgn
11 , . _ .._

5I Sumnil laude
5t German

12

-h

ApMIIIIWitS

MERCHANDISE

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We11woo d Drlve
from $244 to $315 Walle to shop
lim ited Offer! 1998 doublew1de &amp; mov1es Call 81 .&amp;·•4e -2588
3br, 2bath , $1799 down, $2751 Equal HouSJno Opportunity
monlh Free delivery &amp; s.etup
Onl~ at Oakwood Homes, Nttro Ellrctency apartment, across from
Ma1n Sl Post Olflee 304· 875·
Wll 30• 755·5885
2174 or 614-.&amp;48·2200
llmolod Ollor Only $500 down on
Furn•thed 2 Bedroom Apartment,
any new s1ngle w1de tn stock
Free del• very &amp; setup Only a1 Across From Parle, AC, No Pe11,
Oakwood Homea, N•tro, WV 304· References, Deposit . S3501Mo ,
61.-4..·8235. 61.-448-0577
755-5885
NOYt Bank Rapos Only 3 lelt Sfill
In wafl'8nty 30,.755· 7191

440

710

Autos for

Ul84 Ford Van, 302, automat•c.
ttres, e11H a sharp lnsrde
13,500 form Sunny Gobbs 304·

Salt

~~~~~~~~-~~~~·~
2l~~~-----------­
11l85 Dodge Caravan. 4cyl
S2.000 l~rm 30.-675· 6336 evenong•

""'n•na•
1985 Ford f · 250 • WO, IAotor
' 87 Ford Mustang GT, 5.0, s W•th lets Than 25,000 Miles,
opeiKI. aor, wlntt, tntod ,.;ndowa, Gdod Torao. $5,000. 614 •46
looks good, S31i06, 81H42-3802.
8035
•gg Thu-.t SC. two door, 3.1
lot&lt;e, v-e, •Ill• modalturbjl, PS,
PB, AC, 5 apead, power oaoll
and locka, "Grtal Car," 11200
neg ~ 81•·882·7Ha or f14ot4"
2870.

tg&amp;8 Bronco KlT 4 WD, 614·

... 3563
1990 Dodge Ram Van B· 250,
72,000 lilies, $6.000, Cen Be
SHII At&gt;·Galhpohs Oally Tribune.
825 Th~rd Avenue. Gall ipoliS
OhM&gt;

1973 Volkswagen Super Btado,
11,800, 814-ggz·7574.

1992 Chevrolel ConverSIOn vln,
1975 L01Coln.ol8,000 Actual Milts VanT1que. while With gray str1pe,
A· 1 White. llaroon lnl. Sao: Tom auiOmltiC, color TV. VCFt electrt4;
Windows, etKtrlc m•rrors, eteetrlc
KHMI, 81.-448-7787
rear seat, makM Qu"" bed, like
1g77 CC&gt;Mine, New Eng~no, Now new, 38,000 miles, lllclhO
Tran1m1111on, Now Exhauu, And lt•.soo. call 814 ·8g2·S012 lhtr
Now Tops. $1 ..«8·1417
6pm

ss

,,

DO

I'VE WORKED

FER
BEIN' YORE

UP A
CONTRACT--

WHAT

l GIT

I6ET

NONE OF

NEitVOU5

T~ESE

F't.A'fli116

FACE CARDS
j.jAv'E DOGS
ON TI-IEM ..

JOE
BLACKJACK;'
THE FAMOUS
11(1'/ERIWAT
WITI-I •

6AMSLER ..

~
,...of)

Tt4AT'S

~ SUPPOftl&gt;
TO If ON~

.. .

,

-II

THE BORN LOSER
~

~--~

"ffil~~~

YOU'~&lt;:€:

t1XlK Ull£
COF"FEE.!

1877 Prowi&amp;r 20Ft 1Q73 Flee!
Wood 11 Ft. 1976 Blazon 24 Fit,
24 Ft • Pomoon, 1699 UcCorm1d1
Road, Gal hpo~s 61 4·446·1 511
1977 Starcraft Trt·Haul , E~~tmru 1

8 Mound

4 Ugly

22="
23 Put 0111

North
3 NT

fma111g"'·,.hlllllltSII

HYernellero
27 Ott trw
21 llalll!t

Q

mowemenl

30 Pettoe, etc.

,.,.,....

c.:-.:

41

Alter the lwo classes 1n Buderim.
Margaret Mtllar and I drove back lo
north Brisbane for an evening group of
t06 at the Toowong Bndge Club They
had requ es ted the lesson abou{ watch·
mg spot cards and enlrtes
Ben]amm Franklin satd. " Keep your
eyes wtd e open b efore mamage. h alf
shut afterwards. - At the bndge lable.
though , vou must keep your eyes wtde
open boCh before and after the appear
ance or the dummy Most saw ihe right
line in thts deal
Agamst lhree no -trump. W es t leads
the spade queen Ho\4 would you plan
the play'
Tht s contract looked so easy Wtn
the hrsl trtck play a club to the ace.
cash the dub queen cross to the heart

47=::: . . .;
41 Slightly -

50 S.tt

•

;

51 EmpiCifll
52 Future LL.Be.'
111111
5$ Soth

S&amp; ·Turf

"

57ActarMineo-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
c_., C-E Cf)'J)IOQ!'Imt M
H'CL

by Luis Campos

CfHied from quG!aiiOftl by famous peOp6e pasTand priHnt
leHenn ,_ apher st.-.dllounothet Todly sdue D equals G

ach

XIOL ,

SaiY

HI&lt;

LHDBVA·VSN

XNCHLK.

NJ

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VBLX

U H J L,'

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TNFGKL.

HV,
YSLRVA·VSN

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~

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ONFDUII&lt;.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "It you don't calch lhe ball, you catch lhe bus " Baseball manager Rocky B"dges, to an ~nept detens1ve player

T EBH0 R

I I

f

l

.,
2

I 1

I

ENBOL

when nonvulnerable. mmus 100 mstead
of plus 400. and 800 points when vuln er
able mrnus 200 mstead of plus 6001

ME f\OT

~nclal

By Phillip Alder

r-_W_U____F_A_L--,/ ..;,'
.
•:

/

We have a ne1ghbor who 1s
always telling everyone how to
- . _ .
run the1r lives My husband
N MT U T
think_s !hat's eas1er for her than
1
0
!-·--,r-,..--,~.,-.....,,....-.1. runnrnq • · • - ••

15 I I I

r

the chuckle quoltd
1L _.L...JL.....J.-.1-..J.....J
I I 1O (...omplele
by Mhng 1n the m•ss1ng words

\

Home

lnstr-'

25 RepNt

s1ve &lt;m tournament sconng, 500 points

~lt-10

W~T~?

SERVICES

24 atringed

East
All pass

85 . $2.500 lnm 304 675 63
even1ngs

you develop from step No 3 below

BIG NATE

Improvements
BASEMENl
•'
WATERPROOFING
''
Uncondthonal hfehme guaran1efi
Local relerences furmshed Call
(8141 446 0870 Or 16"1 23r.
0488 Rogefs Wa ter proof1ng E~
18~ r shed 1975
•

~"-TE, WILL VOU

C.OI'\E TO TliE
FRONT OF THE
c.LASS, PLEASE,

HEC.k , I C.OULD'I/E
DONE TH"'T WITH-

CAN YOU
FIND SRI

OUT

LAWKI'I ON

THE MAP 7

LETTERS TO

LEIWINC:.

M'l DESK

SCRAM-I.ETS

'

The

Treasure You
Is the
Sov1nrs You'll Find In 11te
Classified Section.

A&amp;J Home Improvements· roo"}
add•llons, lct!chen and balh remodeling, tntlaM and repatr Window~
deck, porches and pa11os, 10oltn
and ~1nyl Siding, Install e•ler r '
StUCCO, Stone al'ld btlck, d&amp;m&amp;Qelf
s•dewalks, steps and tuck p01nl!:r
1no For est1mate call-614·9921'
9979

!TUESDAY

C&amp;C General Home Manf.
tenence· Pam!lng, v.nyl SldlnQ.
carpentry, dOors, w1ndows, balht,
mob1le home repalf and more FdJ
tree estimate c;an Chel 814 · 99~
8323
'
DRYWALL
'
Hang, hnrsh teporr
•
;
Cetllngs textured, plaste, repa1
Call Tom 3CM 675·4186 20 yea
ellpenence

~~~~~~~~~~!~~;~selllo bl~hday

Earl s Home Matntenance, vtn
stdrng rool1ng ellter~or anb m1er •
or pa•nung; power wash1ng:, room
add1tiona Free Esumates, 614·
gg2·4232

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.BEDEOSOL

' Plumbing ~ ,
Heating

Wednesday, June 12, 1996
In lhe year ahead, you might make some
Important changes 1n your career These
allerahons will be postttve and could
enable you 10 find a more lucrallve mar·
kat lor your knowledge.
GEMINI (May 21-.IUM 20) Do not resi81
Chllnge today because It could help you
to realize a goal you'va been lrytng to
achieve wllhout much auc:cee8. Do not
get 111 your own way Gemini, 1rNt your·

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IIUIOf U,

a
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mathng $2 and SASE to Aslro· Graph, c/o
lhiS newspaper. P 0 Box 1758, Murray
Hill SlabOn, New Yoll&lt;. NY 10156 Make
sure to state your zod1ac stgn
CANCER (June 2t.July 22) Good lh1ngs
could happen Ieday 1n your one·on-one
deahngs. prov1ded you keep an open
mtnd and try to be generous wrth your
negot1al1ng pa~ner
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) The btgger the
tssue, the betler you w1ll handle thtngs
Ieday This could be true especoally tn sit·
uattons thai alfect your status and your

career

"

canttd tlecutcian, R1Hnout
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Cutter· Loony· Datsy- Jungle- IGNORANT
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"Be

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1881 Oldtmabllo Sadon. 23 F1. callont COflditoon 13700 814·•48·
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VIRGO (Ailg. 23·5ep1. 22) You will have
good luck 1n rtsky slluaiiOns today ThiS
could be the nght 11me to lake a calculal·
ed nsk
,
LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0ct. 23) You mtght
experience some dl&amp;rupttons In your nor..
mal routine today However, you wtll welcome these dtstractlons
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov 22) Excttlng
developments will become apparenl
today regard1ng a pffi19CI you share Wllh
/mother You have hoped lor this kind ol
a developmenl

,.
I'

SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23·Dec. 21) Largerthan-usual gams wrll be poss1ble today
from work or from a servtce you pro~~t rde
for others Thrs poSitive effect m•ght not
be as slrong lomorrow
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 19) Today
vou m1ght have the ab1hly to expand on
somethtng thai's already good You can
lake advantage ol thiS oppo~unotv ot you
make fhls maner a pnorrty
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.F41b. 18) An ..etoes
you 've been harbonng regardtng the oul·
come of an event mtght be put to res&amp;\
Ieday II looks loke you 've been worryong
inva•n
PISCES (Feb. 20.Marcll 20) You could
be more fortunale than usual ot you try 1o
neCwork Ieday Make yourself available
so lhaC you can be reached ea61ly, even 11
you move around a lot
ARIES (March 21- Aprll II) Keep your
eyes open lor out· oHhe·ordtni'Y &lt;level·
opments that could 'lfe£t your f1nancoal
affa1rs favorably Ieday
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) This could
tum out 1o be a red· laH., day for you ~
you have go~ luck and you exercise
good judgment Thlt w111 be a dynamic

cornblnalian.

I

"

1\

JUNE 11

I

�•

•
P8ge10 e The Dally Sentlnelb

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 11, 1991

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

.-'llle-c--~~~~-lty-C-.Iero-da.-1s-----Community

pulllllllled as a 1M HI"Viu to noo·
MIDDLEPORT •• Middlepon
.profit
-'-'"'-to UIIOUIIft Mosonic Lodge, F&amp;AM , special
'" aod
.- - events. The rneeung.
·
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at the
,me:1f'll
special
· I he Master Mason
1iempe.
I Work m
,•mdarlsnotdenlpeo:ltopromote
I
Ill
fund _,__
degree.
,
1!1 or
•._n of any lype.
· • Items ap-'-•-'
_..._
·~ na.... asspac:e penruu
·a-"•-··-"be••aran•··"to
POMEROY -- Meigs County
au~e.... number
·• ... , _ . run • Chamber of Comm~rce luncheon
•• .,_.
.-r··•'"'
.,. ...ys.
· TUESDAY
Tuesday. noon at Trinity Church .
. • RUTI..AND •. Rutland Village , Tom Weaver, jobs specialist for
• ' Council, 7 p.m. at the Civic Center. Southern and Eastern high schools
will be-guest speaker.
· POMEROY .. Home School SupCHESTER -- Chester Township
•pon Group for parents and children
&lt; at the Pomeroy Library meeting Trustees meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
room, Tuesday, 10 a.m. For more the township hall .
· information call Tammy Jones, 992·
RACINE ~- Regular meeting ,
6743.
Racine Lodge 461. 7:30 p.m. TucsMIDDLEPORT .. Hobson Chris· day, work in the master mason
tian ·Fellowship Church, revival. degree .
Monday through Sunday. John
Elswick, evangelist . Special singing. WEDNESDAY
.

calendar---------picked up. Everything must be II the
curb by I p.m. Friday.

CHESTER •· Chesler United p.m. at the lodge. Refreshments.
Methodist Church vacation Bible
~inc BoardofPubsc hoo I WI'II be held "'d
we nes day 1. RACINE-Aff .
through Fn'da Y •Ore
'
h'ld
fi
IC
a1rs,
Thursday,
)0:30 a.m. at
t ren,agcs 1\'e
through sixth grade, 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m. the annex.
with lunch provided; and from 9 to
RACINE R · V'll
Th
11 :45 ·a.m. for children, ages three day ••d Fn'da.. Iacme d1 ageN urs·
b
and four, with snacks provided.
-·
Y c eanup ays. o It·
teries , tires. gas tanks or oil will be

•rou-

not cancel. For infonmuion, 9492746.

SATURDAY

Ohio Lottery

Mason
Legion tops
Gallipolis

Pick 3:
518
Pick 4:
1621
Buckeye 5:
2·1 0.34-36-37

SUNDAY

RACINE m
·• nerry family reunion
to be held Saturday, home of J1'm and
Ka~n W•""'. Coun St. Rd., Mom1'ng
... ,4 p.m. Meat pro";ded.
Star" are•,
w
~
Family and friends invited. Rain will

POMEROY .. Rev. Arius Hun,
past of Forest Run Baptisl Church, to
be guest minister at Naomi Church,
II a.m. Sunday.

Sports on Page 4

lower 80s.

•

r~-----=====!:::=:::=:::::~-~l~--!stlP&amp;;bU~;.;~lJ~~~~-:-~-:-~

MIDDLEPORT-- Feeney Bennett
Post 128, 6 p.m. Wednesday, instal·
Iarion of officers and dinner. Meeting
10 follow at 7:30p.m.

Public Salt

! **'"''
'"*** ***i~i~~~~~~~~i
~~:Q~~
;..
!
*

1

,1' 11 ~ 1/11(; 'f!.E to~T •
p.Of'll 1,. · ('llt.a£ /-lDNit.t4 Plt,f:~II/S
vJI'I'i I'J &amp;fZ11'14 -1'tiliiM~EI-VE~
&amp;"r-1'~ p AI'll' A or, I'-

THURSDAY
PORTLAND .. Southern Local
Building Comminee will hosca free
farmer.;' feed Thur.;day, 7 p.m. at
Karen 's Market (forme rly Harris
Farms), Portland. All district fanner.;
and residents are invited to anend .

1'• ., :_,f!-1&gt;~1't•N':&gt; ~
v

r•fl..

*
*

!

o,

Vol. 47, NO. 33

After more than 35 years service

· the American Chemical Society.
of
Referred to by Newsweek as the
"nation's n\osl prestigious academic
honors organization," Phi Beta Kappais the oldest academic honor socicty in the country, founded in 1776 at
the College of William and Mary.
Honoring breadth and achievement in
the liberal arts and scien.:es. election
to the society requires a 3.65 GPA for
seniors and a 3.80 GPA for juniors.

Dole leaves ·c apitol HHI

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF BUDGET

HEARING

.

The Boord of Truoteoo of
Columble Townehlp will
hold 1 Budget Hoorlng ol
1ho roguler moe11ng July 1,

By NORM BREWER
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- Sen. Raben J.
Dole became Citizen Dole on Tuesday, leaving Congress in a risky gamble to wrest the presidency from Bill·
Clinton.
"The Bible tells you for everything tbcre is a season ..., " Dole said,
barely holding his emotions in check.
"I think my season in the Senate has
about come to an end. But a new season is about to stan."
Little more than an hour later, at
2 p.m . EDT, Dole's career of 35
years, five months and eight daysincluding eight years in the House was over.

1MS ei 7:30 p.m. Ill the fire
atilt! on.
Gloria Hlllton, Cleric
Cotumbte Townahlp
(S)

11; 1TC

TruttMI

DOLE MOVES ON • Bob Dole waves aa he leaves the U. S.
Capitol Tuesday with his wife Elizabeth. The Republican from
KJtn... ended 35 years In the Senate when he for21111lly resigned
his seat to turn his full attention to the presidential campaign.
(AP)

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·-·-·-·-·-

'

.

Kansas Lt. Gov. Sheila Frahm, a
Republican. was sworn in as his successor, giving the Senate a record
nine women. GOP senators were set
Wednesday to · name Trent Loll of
Mississippi their mlljority le'!'ler. But
Tuesday was Dole's.
In a speech scrubbed of the panisanship and intrapany quarreling that
rendereihhim largely ineffective in
recent months, Dole talked of how
values had shaped legislation, of
friendships that had survived congressional battles. of the need to
"come together, Republicans and
Democrats.
Dole's speech brought a hush to
the chamber, interrupted only by
11

applause - or laughter when hi s hours, to see Dole leave. Wednesday
famed wit broke through his often- he sets off on a seven-state campaign
husky voice . His wif~. Elizabeth, and swmg.
Campaigning in Gl~ndale, Calif.,
daughter, Robin , watched from the
packed ~allery. Longtime aide Sheila Clinton urged a crowd to applaud
.Dole, s~ying "He's given over 30
Burke, sining by Dole, wept.
"For ·me. America 's greatest years of his life to service in the Unit·
tomorrows are yet to be lived;" the ed Stales Congress and I think we
72-year-old scnalor.concluded. "May ought to give him a hand today."
Dole's farewell speec h never
God bless America. And may God
made
reference to Clinton .." We can
bless the United States Senate."
Then to applause that lasted until lead or we can mislead. but whalev·
he left the chamber more than seven er we do· we wi II be held responsiminutes later, he walked the noor, ble,". he said- seemingly touching
smiling, greeting well-wishers of ·on the "characler" iss'!c that is a big
part of his campaign. But Dole quickboth parties, shaking hands.
Outside, a couple of-thousand peo- ly said he was speaking generally. not
ple waited, some more than two of the 1996 elections.

Pool openi

By TOM HUNTER
·Sentinel News Staff
Residents of the village of Mid·
dlepor1 will soon have a place to cool
off during the summer months, with
the planned reopening of the Middleport Swimming Pool at General
Hartinger Park.
The pool ha.~ been closed since
spring 1994, due to repair demands to
the 42-year-old structure. Preliminary
Cremeans · said p'roblem . was
From AP, Staff Report$
estimates on repairs to the pool were
WASHINGTON - The com- caused by an unusually wet spring set at over $80,000.
. plaints of a former tenant ))ave that saturated the ground plus unusu·
Last year, village .residents and
become an election-year headache for ally high water use by the tenants. businesses raised over $50,000 in
congressman-businessman-landlord Their water' bill was $125 a month donations, labor and s.upplies tc:&gt; help
while "mine at home ls $9," he said~ save the community pool from a per·
f.rank ·Cremca.ns· o( Ohio. ·. . .
The tenants, 1 Roben ·and Denise manent closure. 1lle monies, comThe Gallia County General Health
Clark
and children, were paying . bined with a grant through the Ohio
District found a Cremeans-owned
rental property in violation of sewage $135 a month, whiclt included water. Department of Natural Resources,
The Clarks, whose (ive children provided the . village .with enough
~tandards. Officials told the Republican congressman . and. his wife to include an epileptic son, contend they money to repair the structure.
either plan 'for regular pumpings of were forced to endure substandard
Among the repairs being made to
the septic tank serving the trailer'ten· conditions because they're 'poor. · the pool are a complete overhaul of
"People shouldn't be treated the electrical system and steel reinants at 277 Georges Creek Road or an
enlargement of the septic sysiem's unfair just because they're lower forcement around the pool. A new
income," said Robcr1 Clark, who has steel and concrete deck e~tension for
leach bed.
Cremeans said he ordered imme- moved his mobile home to a new sunbathers was completed by Banks
diate pumping of the septic tank on rental propeny. "Just because they Construction in late May on the
Tuesday and then the rental site near got money doesn't mean they're any south side of the pool, behind the
•'
Gallipolis. 90 miles southeast of different."
existing kiddie pool.
Clark
bridled
at
a
Gannett
News
Columbus, would be retired .
The new deck extension will serve
He said he didn 't want to be a Service story Tuesday in which Frank two purposes. with the top to be used
landlord, and bought the property Cremeans said the damage to the sep· for sunbathers and the area under the
POOL OPENING IN WEEKS • Shaun Braley ·. Renovation work is being completed on .the 42·
because it is ne.t to his concrete tic system was the Clarks' fault year-old pool. Village officials hope h can be
de~k to be used as a new shelter·
of Nichols Metals, Mason, W.Va. welds 11 secplant. He wanted to use the sand and which Roben Clark denies.
reopened in time for the ·Fourth of July holiday
house for the park, according to Mid- • tion of pipe to fit on the existing chain link
"That was messed up when I · dlepon mayor Dewey Horton.
gravel on it.
weekend.
(T. Hunter/Sentinel photo)
~ence of lhe Middleport Municipal Pool while
"We'd like 10 close it but,the peo· movcd .in," .he said.
Installation of a new sand filtra·
another worker assist$ him Monday afternoon.
Cremeans said the Clarks didn't
pie have nowhere else to go:~· he said.
Continued on pa2e 3
''What are you going to do'/ It's noth- complain about the sewage until
·after they receiv~ an eviction notice .
. ing but a nuisance."
"If there was a problem they
A family that recently moved its
•
trailer off Cremeans' property filed should have ·notified someone where
He would not elaborate, but said, could fall through .
400-mile' trip to Billings wasthe fir.;t '
JORDAN, Mont.· (AP) - A
the complaint; telling health officials they,'n: paying their checks and it Freemen leader who was nown by "The mere fact that the FBI allowed · ·"It's possible what's happening time he has gone beyond the FBI
of a stench permeating their home would have been taken care of," he the FBI to meet a)ailed comrade car- this to happen is a very positive today could end up in an agreement perimeter. And he is the only Freefrom raw wastes the septic system said. "I'm not sure this guy (Clark) ried a deal back to the anti-govern· step."
·
or could end up in nothing," the offi- man known to have done so who was
Continued on page 3
· menl group, and a source said a sur·
couldn't hold.
not surrendering .
The FBI said it arranged safe pas· cial said.
"If Edwin had been the leader
sage
for
Clark
to
meet
with
LeRoy
Clark,
one
of
the
original
owners
render could come as early as Thurswhen
I was there. thi s would be over
Schweitzer in his Billings jail cell on of 1hc now · forcclosed land th e
day.
Edwin Clark returned to the ranch Tuesday, "In ·another effon to reach Freemen occupy, has emerged in already.'' said Colorado state se·n.
recent days as the apparent leader of Charles Duke. a leader of the solate Tuesday and most of the Freemen a peaceful resolution.'·
The
arrest
of
Schweitzer
and
those remaining in the remote 960- called Patriot movement in his state ·
could be seen entering a barn. preFreemen
leader
on
federal
who broke off negotiations with the
imother
council member.; Judy Denney and sumably 10 discuss the surrender · charges of fraud and other crimes acre farm complex on the eastern Freemen last month. "We tried to
By TOM HUNTER
Montana plains .
Gladys Barker voting against the res· proposal.
Sentl"el News Staff
sparked
the
80-day-old
st,andoff.
Accompanying Clark on the FBI make him the leader. He was the
"They've preuy much agreed it
·
Rutland Village Council discussed olulion.
.
"Edwin
had
to
become
at
peace
·
plane
to Billings were three negotia- owner of that land. If he goes out, ·
· heard a report from Dave Davis won 't he a gun battle," the S&lt;&gt;urce with LCRoy about it," before agree- tors from the CAUSE Foundation, everybody goes."•
tlte upcoming renewal of a two mill
levy that will "keep the lights on" in of the village maintenance depart- said. ''I'm extremely hopeful at this ing to the surrender plans, the source . thiro-party mediators the FBI brought
Clark is wanted on several :
point. It's an extremely positive
the village of Rutland, during their ment. Davis stated that the utilities
charges:
impersonating public offi"He
didn't
want
to
go
forward
in.
The
group
has
represented
a
for·
said.
(egular council meeting Tuesday commillee needs to speak with Sam sign."
cials
by
helping
to issue bogus arrest
without
checking
with
LeRoy
fir.;t."
mer
Ku
Klux
Klan
leader
as
well
as
The source, who is familiar with
· evening at the Rutland Civic Center. . Hicks concerning propeny on which
survivors
of
the
deadly
1993
Branch
warrants
and
subpocnas'on
behalf of
A senior federal official in Wash·
. · : The one year levy, which was he plans a subdivision ncar th~ end.of the FBI strategy and spoke to The inglon also said Clark was carrying Davidian siege near Waco, Texas.
Frccmcn~invcntcd courts. and crimi Associated Press on condition of
approved-by voters last f&lt;lll. paid for Salem Street.
Clark
had
been
nal
sy ndi ca li sm for knowingly
Previously,
a
proposal,
which
Schweitzer
anonymity, said progress was made
the ~elighting and replacement 'of
Davis also slated that he attended toward a deal that could lead to sur· reviewed. But that official, who also allowed to go to an FBI checkpoint belonging to a group that advocates
streetlights through the village of a meeting wit IT emergency manage· render of ihe 17 remaining Freemen. spoke on condition of anonymity, just outside the ranch for negotiations crime, violence or terrorism to further
Rutland. Council approved a resolu, menl officials concerning flood relief
cautioned that the agreement still and then return to the compound. His political goals.
by Thursday.
tion to place a replacement levy on . monies for repairs to the sewage plant
tjle November ballot for renewal of
thi: measure.
In routine financial review by the grant process, in efforts to secure
"Freedom, Family &amp; Fun" will be AB&amp;T Auto, Clarence Bradford and sponsoring cash awards for the win- held. For more information, contact
council, the following village funds relief funding.
the theme for this year's annual Joe Evans.
ners. Any questions about the tractor Gary Norris al Home National Bank.
balances were reponed for the end of
· held discussion concerning res· Racine July 4 celebration which gets
Groups wanting to enter the pull can be directed to Dallas Weber 949-2210.
May by village clerk/treasurer Rose- idents who need to have a second underway with a flag raising cere·
The Star Mill Park Board will
parade
should contact Marilyn Pow- at 742-3020.
mary Snowden Eskew: General sewage tank for 'reinals on their mony at 9:45a.m. by the ~inc Post
The third annual Racine Area sponsor the cntcnainment on the
ell
at
949-2676.
All-terrain
vehicles
Fund, $7,131.60; Civic Center, property. Leiters will be sent to noti· 602 of the American Legion and a .
(ATVs) will not be pennitted in the Community Organization Frog stage from ito 10 p.m. Any band or
$1,545.27; Police, $1 ,115.44; Law fy residents of the requirement.
parade at 10 a.m.
Jumping Contest will be held at 5 group wanting to perform can contac1
parade.
Enforcement. $287 .33; Street,
- approved a move to two meetThe parade' will form at Southern
p.m. with cash awards in tWO age Dale Han at 949-2656. The boaro
A
bicycle
decorating
contest
will
$1,8.59.09; Highway, $3,800.75; ings a month which will be the sec- High School at 9:15 a.m., proceed
groups,
.1-15 and 16 and over. ]l)nior will have craft s'p~U&lt;es available and • .
be
sponS&lt;&gt;red
by
Drs.
Douglas
Hunter
Water, '$4.47134; Sewer,'$5,913.55; ond and fourth '1\tesday for 8 three down Elm to Third Street, to Vine,
and Mel Weese with cash prizes for division prizes are $40, $25 and $10 space can be reserved by contacting
Sewer Debt, $20,182:59; Utility month trial period.
Fifth and back to Elm before return· first. second and third places. KSS with senior winners ~iving $100 · Han.
Deposit, $8,367.21; Replacement
- approved a .SO cent hourly raise ing to the high school.
SJli'C(I Stable will sponSQP' the horse $75 and $50 for first, second and ; The Racine .Volunteer Fire De)lanFund, $19,588.87
for Bill Gilkey, town marshal, effecFloats will be judged in two divi- and rider groups with trophies to be. third-place, respectively.
1 menl and Aux1hary w1ll have chickIn other mailers, council:
llve emmedtately.
·
·
I'
·
d
1·
·
Registration fee will be $5 for · en biubccue and homemade ice
.
L.
s10ns, re tg1ous an non-re egtous awarded. Anyone with questions can
- approved minutes from the May
. PresenI were counc11. mcmuds with first, second and third· lace c,all 992-7644.
seniors
and $3 for juniors. Rent-a- cream at the fireh~se starting at II
meeting
Dtck Fetty, Danny Dav1s: Gl~ys entries winning cash prizes spon~
.
Tbe
Big
Bend
Faim
A!ltique
Club
frogs
will
also be available. For am. and RACO w1ll. sponsor chit• approved,May Mayo~s Report in Barker, Judy Denney, MaJ11l Birch- by Home Nationlll Bank, the Racine
·
w
ill
hold
an
antique
tractor
pull
at
more
infonitation
contact Aaron drcn's games starting at noon.
•
the amol)nt of $2,858
field and Vera Maettn, mayor JoAnn Vol teer F' n.ft...... I, KaRn'
Young at 949-2545'.
. The .celebration will en.d with
- approved construction of new Ends, and cleric/treasurer Rose Mary "-~~
tre .....-uoNn
s Star Mill Park at2 p.m. with Harmon
A
home
and
Cooling,
Racine
Mowrun
derby
will
also
be
fireworks
at I0 p.m.
Heating
Snowden Eskew.
vtw!'houses, S!M.Supply, Southern
side~alk along Main Street near
er
Clinic
and
Home
National
Bank
Heatlng
~d
Cooltng,
Cross'
Grocery,
'
.
l;)epol Street by a 4 to 2 vote, with

Clark denies he
damaged system

Source says Freemen may surrender Thursday

Rutland Council discusses
renewal of street lamp levy

~=~·a:;~~~;~ ~~~~~~~~~k~:; . ~F~eedom, Family &amp; Fun• theme for _Racine's July 4 festival

Save .1Oo/o ·oH On .

$15 99

35oenl8
A Gannett Co. Naunp•~r

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio,
.
. Wednesday, June 12,1996

2 llectlone, 12 P8QM

CHESTER ·• Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM will be held Thursday, 8

1 Wyatt.
· 1 · a seniordmajoringd' in· bio·
oglca SCiences an pre-me ICme, IS
a member of Beta. Beta Beta and
Golden Key honorary SOCieUes. He JS
also a member of the Student Alum·
ni Board. He is the S&lt;&gt;n of Terry Wyatt
and Brenda Phalui of Middlepor1:
Petrel, so~ of Ben and Jannme
Petr~l of Rae me," a semor maJOring
'" biOchemistry. He ts a member of
Phi Kappa Phi and Golden Key honorary soctclles. and IS also a member

I

*
. •

Sorority inducts three new members
· Three area residents were induct·
cd into the Lambda Chapter of Phi
•:Beta Kappa at Ohio University dur. ing its annual ceremony June 7..
. Inducted were Allison Gannaway
ofVinton. Trevor A. Petrel of Racine,
. and Robbie W. Wyan of Middleport.
Gannaway, daughter of Thomas
and Judith Gannaway Of Vinton. is a
junior majoring in biology and phys. icaltherapy. and is a member of Phi
Kappa Phi honorary society.

Partly c;loudy tonlg!lt.
Low In 50s . Thursday,
partly sunny. High In

' ' INGELS CARPET

"

--~----------·-··-'11

.

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