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•
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)

t ·

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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

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~ommentary
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Wedn81day, June 12, 1188 .

-

U.S.
drug
ageiits
..
fear
Mexican
.
k
ingpin·
The Daily Sentinel
EL PASO; Texas •• As the power

'EsMbfislid inl948

111 CourtSl, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Geneflll Manager

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

" L,.,. to ttY «&lt;llw.,. lllkomt. ~ •hoold I» ,_. tiMn SOO won:&amp;. AH ., .,.,_
OI'OIIUb/«f IO -"ffontl milO! I» 1/g- MHIInct-- ond.Wophotlo n""'" .
ber. No un~gned ,.,.,. will I» publl•'*~· L.,.,.. lhould 1M In good ,_,.,
..,~

:Bob Dole needs
a hatchet man

of Mexico's No. 1 drug lord, Amado
Carrillo Fuentes, grows by the day, so
does the size of Iris shipmenu across
this border, according to U.S. inlelli·
gence sources.
The Ciudad Juarez-EI Paso drug
· smuggting corridor here has been
called '"Carrillo's Crossing" because
more drugs fOme across this vulnerable spot than at any other port of
entry in the country.
Carrillo is so fean:d that several
years ago, a multi-agency anti-drug
task force called the El Paso Intelligence Center had to move its headquarters from the city to a local Anny
base, Fort Bliss. Carrillo's people had
been discovered tailing EPIC officials, and tapping their car phones
and home phones.
Believed to he in his early 40s,
Carrillo heads what has been dubbed
the Juarez Cartel·· but that only gives
a hint of his power. He is also chief
of what Drug Enforcement Administration analysts call the Federation · an informal alliance of several

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - What the new Bob Dole&lt;:ould use about now is some·
·body to play the role of the old Bob Dole - tough, sharp-tongued, ready
' to 'seize and exploit every Democratic vulnerability.
.
That kind of hard-line campaigning doesn'.t play well for the candidate
'at the top of the ticket. Presidents and would-be presidents prefer the high
road while spokesman, surroga[es and sometimes running mates do the auack
work.
.
Dole knows that, having done it, sometimes too stridently. He once joked
ruefully that when he went for the jugular vein, he got his own. Still, over
.the years, he was the man who could put a Republican edge on things, often
· i!l a quip that made it understandable and, for the opposition, unavoidable.·
.But aS _the seasoned, mellowed Dole resigns his Senate seat today to run
full time for the White House, there 's nobody playing a comparable pan for
·· him. He won' t have a running mate until !he convention, still tbree months
away.
·
.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich is an ally, but his negative ratings rule out
a high-profile campaign spot.
.
When Dole was campaigning in Chicago two weeks ago. a man suggested
that his ticket might suffer for the unpopularity of the speaker and the Republican Congress.
.
. ·"Some might say tha~" he replied. "I have to spell out my own age~da
for America. Bob Dole's agenda."
, .Beginning Wednesday, he will do so as a former senator. His resignation
makes him "a .candidate for president to the exclusion of aU else," said
Republican National Chairman Haley Barbour, adding that he already is more
focused as a campaigner.
.
He has remained a relatively cautious one, despite openings the Dole of
another era would have seized and exploited. He has dealt gingerly with
Whitewaler and other cases touching on President Clinton and his associate•, although he hardened hjs line after the disclosure that th~ Whit~ House
It was barely three months ago
got FBI background tiles on 341 people, most of them Republicans, m 1993, that the communist government in
in connection with access passes. Clmton. called 11 an honest bu.reaucrat1c Beijing thumbed its nose at the Unit·
snafu, and the process was stopped pan way through the alphabet.
ed States by holding.provocative liveBut Dole said the episode smells, that there should and will be hearings fire exercises in the Taiwan Strait and
in Congress on what "reads like a Clinton enemies list." He said he remem- by landing·three nuclear-capable misbered Watergate and the things that happened "because of these kind of siles near two Taiwanese ports.
tricks."
When a Chinese officiar was
.. Even a White House apology came with a counter-attack. Leon.Panetta, reminded that. under terms of the
the chief of staff, offered it, after saying that when Dole " has a tendency to 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, the Unit·
. shoot first and ask questions later" and did so when he spoke beside House. ed 'States has pledged to help Taiwan.
Speaker Newt Gingrich at a rally in Marietta: Ga., on Sa.'urday.
defend itself if attacked, the official
But in this campaign, Dole has been relatively restramed, althou2h rh-. remarked that America is too conDemocrats argue that he's lurching from one negative attack to another. Dole cerned about saving Los Angeles
says that's because he 's tellin!l the truth about Clinton's record, which he from a Chinese intercontinental hal·
-s!lid ·is to talk. like a conservatrve and govern hke a hberal.
listie missile to risk coming to the aid
, Dole said he was intentionally staying out of the Whitewater controver-. of its Taiwanese allies.
·sy, and didn' t comment when two former Clinton associates and Iris sucIt is against this backdrop that
cessor as Arkansas governor were convicted of fraud.
.
.
President Clinton recently requested
When he did speak of it later, it was to say that "I want to return mtegn- that Congress extend China's "Most
to our government, a mission that's ~ore important this week than even Favored Nation" trade status. But if
week ago." Mild words compared wrth those of hts early can:er.
.
China represents a Most Favored
; ; Republican strategy is to make character and cred1b1hty rssues agamst Nation ~ what does a country have to
i:linton, but they haven't undone the president's early lead so far. Nor has do to the United States to rank as a
))ole's decision to resign his Senate seat boosted his standing.
Least Favored Nation? Drop a bomb
: ~ · "I don't know any reason it would have any affect on the polls," Haley on the World Trade Center?
:aarbour the Republican national chairman, said Monday:
. .
The commies in Beijing are not
: : Perh~ps not but the polls certainly had an effect on it. Dole's campa1gn our friends. They don 't share our
:design had be~~ to run as the Senate leader who got things done. But he democratic ideals. They haven't our
:Cvuldn't get measures past balky Democrats, and ardent House conserva- respect for basic human rights. They
make a mockery of the notion of fair
'tives complicated the task, too.
.
. .
; Dole at first had resisted suggestions that he step astde as the maJonty trade. And they are building an offen~eader, at least temporarily. Bu~ lagging in the polls and snarled in Senate sive military capability that one day
-~sputes, he chose to resign outright. . . .
· .
. . soon will pose a clear and present
;;. 'Barbour said that has stirred and sohdtfied Republicans for the campa1gn,
&amp;t that undecided voters remain to be convinced on the issues . .Dole will
Ji, trying, full time, from now on.

OOOH, A BLOO&gt;E .
FROM111E
KATHIE LEE GIFF'OO)
COLLECTION ...

I

''

l
'

."

major Mexican drug traffiCking carleis that Carrillo put together. Once at
each other's throats, several of the
drug lords agreed with Carrillo that

By Jack Anderson
and
Michaei·Binstein
by working together they could
reduce the turf wars that often
evolved into bloody feuds ,
Some DEA sources speculate that
Carrillo resolved to form 1he Federation, which is organized along the
lines of the powerful Cali cane) of
Colombia, after surviving an assassination attempt at a popular.Mexico
City seafood restaurant in 1993.
Eleven men wielding machine
guns opened fire , killing three of his
bodyguards, an architect they apparen!ly thou~ht was Carrillo and anoth·
er innocent bystanden In the melee,
Carrillo and his family hid under a
restaurant table, and then escaped

without injury.
· Cirri Do came out ofthat situation
resolved to end this kind of factional turf baUle. As he consolidated his
power, he won the confidence of the
Cali cartel for his coolness and intelligence. They ,began directins more
of their cocaine shipments to him,
trustin1 Carrilfo to get them. into the
United States safely.
An idea of just bow much narcotics Carrillo is moving carne last
November, when U.S. inlelligence
tracked the flights of two French-built
Caravelle jets from Colombia to Carrillo's territory in Mexico. Informants revealed that those two shipments alone contained 25 tons of
cocaine -- with an estimated street
value of $SOO million.
A former Mexican counler-narcotics official, who asked not to he
named and is hiding in the United
States, explained to our associate
Dale Van Alta that Carrillo is making
billions of dollars in profits because
ofthe markup value of the drugs once
he gets them across the border.

MADE IN A

1/.S: SWEATS'I\OP
RY UNDERPAID, .
lllE6AL 1Mh\16RAN~

WORKING 60 HOURS
AWEEK

/

IT'S VERY

BECOMIN6

I

· On a sheet a paper, he d.ew a map
from Colombia to the United State$,
writing down the jump in price of
cocaine the flllther it moved north.
"Let's say the wholesale price of a
kilo of cocaine is $4,000 in Colombi'a or Guatemala. By, the ti~ it gets
to Veracruz l/8in Mexico 318, it is
$8,000 per kilo. In Matamoros
l/8further north 3/8, it is S 12,000 a
kilo.
"When it gets into Houston,
Texas, the wholesale price is $I 6,000
a ,kilo. That's a 300 percent jump just
from Colombia. And the retail price ·
.. the street sale price .. will be four
or five times that, maybe $100,000 a
kilo.
"The price of the drugs is correlated to the risk, as you can see," he
added. "The biggest pan of the mon·
ey isnot for the producer, or even the
transporter, but it is in the consumer
country .. the U.S. So the middlemen, the inlermediaries, make the big
money, and the biggest of them is
Carrillo." ·
The DBA figures that 70 percent
of all illegal (jrugs entering the Unit'
ed States comes from Mexico. And
they recognize that it is impossible to
stop the majority of this coming
across our 2,000-mile border.
Consider that in 1994 alone, the
U.S. Customs Service counted 232
million· people crossing legally into
the United States. They came in 82.3
million cars and ·2.8 million trucks.
Not all of them can he checked for
drugs, as there is not enough manpower or time ..If they checked even .
every third vehicle; the backup at the
border would stretch for miles. and
legitimate trade between the United
States and Mexico would come to a
.screeching halt.
On the other hand, as a recent
State Depanment report put it, "No
country in the world poses a more
immediate narcotics threat to the
United States than does Mexico."
Among law e~forcement o(ficials
in Texas, there is no doubt who is
most responsible for thauhreat. ·
Ja&lt;k Anderson and Ml&lt;hael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndkate, Inc:.

U.S. doesn't need China's trade

.:ty

:a

'~

-----

': EDITOR'S NOTE-- Walter R. Mears, vice president and c:olumnist
f~~ The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national politic:s for, more than 30 years.

Berry•s World
..

is"i:01tl6byiiEA.
... ~
Inc
"'A couple of double martinis, a big, rare
steak French fries. ·a ulsd with Roquefort
dres$ing. a hot fudg#l sundae and • brandy'
-- YOU'RE KIDDING/?"
.

danger not only to Los Angeles, but
to the entire United States.
Yet Clinton. the liberal Democrat,
is not the only figure in Washington

Joseph Perkins
who wants to maintain China's MFN
status. Many conservative Republicans, including party standard-bearer Bob Dole, feel the same way. They
believe that the way to eQcourage
democracy and promote human
rights in communist China is through
open trade.
But these same conservatives
don't feel as magnanimous toward
other nondemocratic, noncapitalist
countries. Indeed, there have been po
calls from Dole and his fellow
Republicans for MFN status for
Cuba. Or for Iraq or Libya or North
Korea. That's because most conservatives don 't want to 'do business
with regimes that are sworn enemies
of the United Slates.
Well , China has not publicly
declared itself an enemy of the Unit·
ed States, but its actions suggest as
much. Indeed, if Bdjing valued good
relations with America, it would not
have conducted war exercises in the
Taiwan Strait. It would not sell mis-

siles and nuclear technology to Iran . ceutical manufacturers. record comand North Korea. It would crack panies and movie studios lose an estidown on Chinese arm~ dealers who mated $10 billion a year to Chinese
are peddling weapons to criminal and thieves.
terrorist groups here in this country.
The net result of China's patently
Even if we accept the argument · unfair trade practices is that, while
that America's trade relations with they have built up the second-biggest
China ought not to be based on mil- trade surplus with the United States
itary or human rights considerations, .. trailing only Japan .. the United
the communist government's mer· States exports only $12 billion worth
cantiiist trade policy toward the Unit- of goods and services to China.
ed States is more than enough reason That's less than what we export to
to deny China Most-Favored Nation Belgium, a consumer market that;s
status.
1/lOOth the size of China's.
In 1995, Beijing ran up a staggerThe long and short of it is that the
ing $34 billion trade surplus with United States does not need China as
· America by taking advantage of our a trade panncr. They need us. We buy
free trade policy, even as it pursued 40 percent of their total exports. They
a protectionist policy of itS own.
buy an insignificant·2 percent of our
. And China continues to impose a exports.
30 percent tariff on U.S. imports,
No one .is talking about severing
which drives up the price of Ameri- trade relations with China. No one is
can goods beyond the means of most talking seriously about slapping Beiof China's one billion consumers. jing with trade sanctions for its failBeijing also employs various nontar- · ure to protect U.S. intellectual propiff barriers to thwan American busi- erty and its unwillingness to refrain
nesses, including licensing require- from protectionist trade policies.
But the Chinese don't deserve·
ments. trade quotas and local content
restriclions.
Most Favored Nation trade status.
If this were not bad enough, Bei- That should he reserved for countries
jing has done next to nothing to stop that are friendly to the United. States
the piracy of U.S. patents, copyrights and that practice fair trade.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
and intellectual property. All told,
for
The San Diego Union-Tribune..
American software makers, pharma-

Angry men and liberals taint the news

The problem with media watchdogs is, all they do is bark. What we
need are some media watchdogs that
will bite as well.
Take the Media Research Center,
which you probably never heard of
because it is conservative and the liberal media won't tell us about it. The
guy who runs it, Brent Borell III, is
the nephew of right-wing sage
William Buckley Jr. Bozell also
worked for Patrick Buchanan's 1992
presidential campaign. He sometimes
fills in for Rush Limbaugh, and he
once beaded the National Conservative Political Action Committee.
The liberal media therefore automatically assume he has a bias and
refuse to deliver his message.
Just the other day, for example,
Bozell called a news conference at
the Nationij[ Press Club, and wouldn't you know it, not a single representative from the three networks
bothered to show up •• thus proving
Bozell's point that the media are
engaged in a "nonstop campaign
against the conservative movement."
Well, you'll get the truth he.e, by
gum. What Bozell is doing is launching a $2.8 million campaign to educale America about tho media's liberal bias. He is setting up a World
Wide Web sile, dispatclrins e-mail
"cyber-alerts" on media trickery,
advertising in conservative publica-.

tions and distributing thousands of "I
Don't Believe the Liberal News
Medi~" bumper stickers. pens .and
refrigerator magnets.

· ·Joseph Spear
My sources say he. wtll not personally-handle the magnet distribution, as they have a tendency to stick
to his head. But that'-s neither here nor
there. My question to you is. what is
wrong with till: Media Research Center's approach?
Never mind, I will tell you: Bozell
doesn't suggest how to rectify this situation. Everybody knows the media
are crypto-Commies . What we need
to know is how to fix this mess.
. And I have to tell you, also, liberal bias isn't the only problem. Just listen to this litany of recent .IJledia sins:
.. The chief of naval operations,
Adm. Jeremy Boorda; who.commitled suicide after he learned
Newsweek wanted to question trim
about his right to wear valor pins on
medals, ... was led to his death by a
relentless lynch mob that has hounded the U.S. Navy," according to form~r Navy Secretary John Lehman. A
willing conspirator in the anti-Navy
campaign, he said, was the mediL
-- Front-page mentions of women
are declining, according to the watchdog group Women, Men and Media.

From 1994 to 1995, they dropped made . So, what to do?
from 25 percent to 19 percent. Last
The answer is not blowing in the
year, they dropped to I 5 percent. One winds, friends.
·
of the luminaries involved in the pro- ' It is flowing in tbe urine.
ject, author Betty Friedan, believes
Hear me out, now. I have sug-;
this "reflects a backlash against . gesled this solution ·before, but few '
women," especially on the pan of paid atlention. So let's run through it:
"angry white m.en."
again.
'
-- The reason that so many people
· Probably half the working p0pu- :
think O.J. Simpson is guilty of mur- lation is being tested for drug use, :
der --this according to O.J. himself · riaht? Why pout these valuable sam- .
.. is because "they were lied to" by pies down the drain? Why not launch :
the media. The details, he said, are a major experiment to isolate pani- :
available on his video for only cles in the piddle that will delect lib- ·
$29.95. O.J. also told a community erals, potential Navy hashers, O.J. :
college aUdience in California that he ' halers, angry men-- whalever? Then :
had been "victimized." He contin- all 'Ye have to do is test everyone in :
ued: "There's nobody out there the media and purge the liberals,.· .
checking the media."
weed out the unrighteous and, presto, :
·-Prosecutor Maocia Clark agrees there goes your prejudiced press. ·
with the man she tried to convict, as
They'll be~ pure as a mountain :
far as the media are ' concerned. stream, so to speak.'
"Why should my hair make the II . Joseph Spear is a syndkaltd :
·o'clock news?" she asked a New writer for Newspaper Enterprise ·
York luncheon audience.
Association.
I could go on, but the point is
One year ago: The Supreme Clourt dealt a potentially crippling blow to
federal affmnative action programs, ruling Congress was limited by the same
strict standards as states in offerins special help to minorities. Rescued Air
Force Caplain Scou O'Grady was treated to lunch at the White House and
a hero's welcome at the Pentagon.
.
Today's Binhdays: Banker David Roc~efeller is 81. Actress Uia Hasen
is 77. Former l"'esident Oeorae Bush.is 72. Singer Vie Dlmone is 68. Actorsinger Jim Na.bors is 66. Jazz musician Chick Corea is !1!1. Rock musician
Brad Delp is 45. Rock musician Bun E. Carlos is 4S. Actor nmothy Busfield is 39. Blues musiciiln KeMy Wayne Shephcnl is 19.

•

Pomeroy • ulddtePort. Ohk,)

Wednu lflly, June 12, 1tH

:Today'a weather forecast
S.•ll
-·~··

I
Oldo
Today... P.Uy sunny with showen and tluadentams likely. HiJh 7S
to 80. SQUtllwest wind$ to 10 mph.
Chlnce of raia 60 percent
. Tonight.:.Partly cloudy with a
chance· of dlowen and thunderstorms. Low SS lo 60. Southwest ,
wind S to I0 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent.
I

••

Thw1day... P.-dysunny. Achlnce'
of dlowers and thundentonns in the
afternoon. High in the lower 80s.
Chlnce of rain 30 percent.

...---Local briefs-.....

studcn~

$S more than last year.
CumnUy, students pay $SO while
the state reimburses the district $50,
meaning the district will pay S10.
,In other business. the board:
· • Renewed a contract with E.C.
Babbert Inc. for inspection and maint~ance of the high school sewage
treatment pl,ant at a cost of $7 5 per
inspection;
·
• Approved changing the June 25
meeting to Julie 27;
'
• Named .board members Scott
Waltoo·and John Hood' as clelegate
and a11ema1e to the 1996 Ohio School
Board Association's annual business
meeting.
Present were Board President
Roger Abbott; board members Walton, Randy ijumphreys and Larry
Ru~; Superintendent Qill Bucklc:y ;
and Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus.
Absent was ·board member John
Hood.

Help on proficiency exam
offered at Meigs
.High
being
.
.

Meigs High School is offering a
HI-hour summer inlervention program for students who have taken but
ot passeti the Ohio Ninth Grade Pro~ciency
Test
1
Students .:Vanting to take advantage of the free program will receive
instruction in the subject area they
need to pass, and will he given an
opportunity to take the test after com· .
.
pletion of the class.
If the student does .not pass· the
test he or she can still take it again
· ~t be '
m ..... o r.
The summer intervention classes
will he held on the fol!owing sched·

ule: . .
.
Wnun~-- July 22 and 23, 8 a.m
to I p.m: with a test date of July 24
Readmg- Aug. 5 and 6, 8 a.m
to I p.m. with a test date of Aug. 7.
Math. July 29 and 30, 8 a.m, to
, 1 P·".'·. o/;1th ~test date of July 31
Ctt1zensh1p -;- July )5 and 16 • 8
a.m. to I p.m. wnh atest date of July
17.
. .
.
Those wtshmg to s1gn up for any
or all of the classes are asked to call
the guidance office at 992;:2158
between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m., no later
Th · he 1 d
than Thursday. a! IS I. ast ay
in structors can order tesung maten·
1
as.

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Units of the·Meigs County Emer- · Yeauger, treated at the scene.
gency Medical Service recorded R.'CINE
II :OS a.m., Racine Fire Station,
eight calls for assistance tuesday
including three transfer calls. Units Christina Westfall, V'MH;
2: 19 p.m., Third Street, Roger
responding included:
Vining, refused treatment.
POMEROY
·'"
, 8:07 p.in., .wetzgal Street, K~nny . 'nJPPERS PLAINS
•8:58a.m., state Route 681 West,
Lunsford, Veterans Memorial Hos·
pita!; . .
Angela Edmond, Hol.zer Medical
10:21 p.m., Powell Stree~ Donna Cenler.

Clark denies...
is reasonable."
Clll!lt said he fought with Cremeans' wife, Carol, for months over
various problems, including the size
of the water bill; over his inability to
keep up with the rent payments after
he had a problem with an expected
govemment check; and who was
responsible for fixing water damage
to the trailer flooring.
He said he had a verbal agreement
that Iris family could stay on the property while paying off the rent in
arrears, but .that the Cremeanses
reneged and posted eviction notices
on their door.
Clark and Cremeans offered different recollections of the amount
past due; Clark said he fell one inonth
behind and Cremeans said his tenant
was five months behind. Clark also
alleged that Cremeans stopped·
accepting his rent checks because "he
wanted me out of there."
Cremeans said his son sent a
crew to help the Clarks. after' their
pipes burst, and said his fanuly's
dealings with its tenants were unrelaled to "whether they're rich or

poor.'''

Stocks
Am Ele Power •.••••••••••• :.....40 318
AkzO •••••• :•••• ,......................59 118
A1hlancl Oil .......................39 718
AT&amp;T ........ ~ .••.•••••••.•••••.•.••~62 318
Bank One ..........................36 114
Bob Evens ........................14 114
Borg..WarTter .....................41 1/4
Champon 1nc1...................18 114
Charming Shop .................. 7 114
C!J::ldlng ............................24
F
I Mogul ................... 18 ;114

Gannett .......................... ,..71 112

"Hardly anyone's been more poor
than
he said. "Don't bite the
.. ... ... ...
.... ......
~

-

~

- ---·-·

~

coatinued from page 1

hancl that tries to help you."
Because the pipes burst, Clark
said ·his carpet was damaged by
water and the floor of the mobile
home is warped. Clark has since
moved to.an undisclosed location and
may pursue legal action for damages
he blames on the Cremeanses.
. "I don't want to hurt nobody, but
I can't see poor people living under
these conditions when they don't
·have io, .. he said.

.

me,"

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-961)

Goodyear T'R ........:......... 49 1/4
K-rnart ........ u~···················13 1/4
Lartdt End .............~ •••••••~ .... 22 112
Umlted Inc:..........., ............21 314
Peoples Bllncorp...................23
Ohio Valley Bllnk ..............32 112
One Yelley.: .......................33 7,.
Prem Flnl ...........................13 314
Rockwell ..........................57 518
Royal Dutch/Shell ..........154 1/4
Shoney'elnc ...........................12
Stir Bank .................................69
w.ndy 1m't........................1e112
Worthlnglon Incl. :............. ~ '118

_._._

Pub6dted every afternoon, Motw!ly throuah
friday. ·111 c...t so.. Pomc!OY. Ollio, by me
Ohio Vllllcy Mllllllna Co~yJIJ_. Co.,
- · Olllo 45769, l'to. 992-21.!6. Second
.... polcla!Pomero)', Olllo.

Stock report• •r• the· 10:30

a.m. quote• provided by A~veel
of Galllpo!le.

· Ma~btr. The Anocilled Preaa. and 1be Ohio
New- A-llllooi.

, .

Posnt.uniR: Stnd-. CO!!'Ctlom 10
'The Dolly Sentinel, Ill CooR SL, ..........,.,
()blo4l769.

., Conlero&lt;--

Ao40-}'CII'-old.Syracuse wOIIUIII -wasanested and chariect with bur·

glary after alleJodly breaijng into a Syracuse business 1\Jesday .

E•t_....f~
evenina.
Thursday night. .. Chance of thun- •
Cheryl Ann Crossan was arresled by Meigs County Sheriffs
dentorms. Low 60 to 6S .
deputies Danny Leonard and Randy Arnold inside of Chancey's Exxon
Friday through Sunday ... Dry.
· in Syrircuse after Slore owner Rick Chancey called the Meigs CounLows in the upper SOs to lower 60s.
ty Sheriffs Deparanent when he heard noises in the building.
Highs 80 to 8S. ·
Cro~san aJ!e1edly enlered the business through a side window,
aceordins to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
She is bering in the Athens County Jail pending a court hearing. Bur.glary is an agpavated second-degree felony punishable by eight-to· .
1 S years in prison.
.

Meigs -Local Board eyes
several .personnel actions
The Meiss Local BOird of Edu. cation handled several personnel
mallei'S at a brief meeting Monday at
the board's central office in Pomeroy.
The board approved malernity
leave· for Susan Metts, beginning .
Aug. 2!, and_ accepted the resignations of Mike Chancey as head ~ys'
track coach, and M. Christine Waker.eld and Linda ·smith as junior class
adv.ison, effe(:tive immedialely.
The board n:newed a contract with
the Southeaslem Ohio Special Education Regional Resource Center
(SEO-SERRC) for the upcoming
yeu at a cost of S2.•196.96 and
· renewed · membership with Educational Tccbnology Services (ETSEO)
for $1,406.90.
The board also renewed its contract with South-CentraJ. Ohio AAA
for driver's education for the upcoming school·year at a cost of $110 per

Woman charged.in burgltuy

'

Man cited in high-speed chase

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SPONSORING FAIR DAY - Burllle 011 C0111pany, Inc. will spoil· : ·
1or a day at lhl Meigs County Fair. Tule~ the Company llgned :
the contnlct and preMnMd 1 check to Fair Boerd Presldant Dan .
Smith. New this year the progr11111l• geared to Increasing ettendance by glv.en frH or reduced edmlsalon to children end tenlor
chlzen• on apeclfled dey. 'Burllle Day• will be obeerved on Sst· .
urday end children
be edmltted frH until noon. Plrtlclpat· :
lng In the contr•ct signing were frotll the left, Roger Spencer end ·
Smith repreMntlng the Meigs County Fair Board, and Steve Lit- :
tie, ..~lor district man•ger: end Larry Stuttlll', executive director, •
retell group, of Burllle 011.

An 18-year-old Middleport man was ch.Jged with felony fleeing
and reckless operation after a high-speed chase that spanned three
counties in two stales Monday night.
According to a Meigs County Sherifrs Department report. Deputy
Jim Heater was at the junction of stale Route 7 and Union Avenue near
Pomeroy when he clocked a vehicle traveling 74 miles-per-hour. When
he auempled to make a traffic stop, the driver of the vehicle fled, the
report stated.
.
Heater pursued the car, a 1991 Ford Escort, into Gallia County and
across into Mason County, W.Va., at speeds exceeding tOO miles-perhour, Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
. The driver, Tyler J. Wolfe was stopped and a,rrested in Mason County and charged there with fleeing.and reckless operation, Soulsby said.
No injuries were reported during the chase. Wolfe is free on bond.

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Rosa Lee Russell

Two.Pageville boys, ages 12 and 13, are facing felony vandalism
charges following an incident in Page ville early tuesday mommg.
Pageville resident Nancy Phillips re~r1ed a building.belongmg to
_ her was vandalized and spray painted wtth vulgar graffiti. In addtllon,
a 1993 Ford Thunderbird parked inside a garage was scratched, paint·
ed and covered with eggs and flour. Inside the car, vandals used spray
paint and syrup to cause additional damage, according to a Meigs
' County Sheriffs Department report.
.
.
One youth admitted to being involved in the incident and Implicated another youth who also admitted his involvement. Another youth
may also be charged.

•••

An Albany-area man was· jailed on charges of domestic violence
following an incident on North Run Road in Columl!ia Township early this morning. ·
.
Dennis Birchfield allegedly used a pickup truck to strike a veh1cle
being operated by his live-in girlfriend, Melissa S. Rowland, according to a Meigs County Sherifrs _Depanm~nt ~eport ..
Birchfield is being held pendmg a hearmg m Me1gs County Court.

Rosa Lee Ru ssell , 65, Sunbury, died Sunday, June 9, 1996 in MQII!It
Carmel East Hospital, Columbus.
.
.: ~
Born Dec. 15, 1931 in Nitro, W.Va .. daughter of the late Kenna .and L\tra
Mitchell Knight, she was retired from Milano's Steakhou se, Columb.us •.after
26 years ()f service:-She attended the Central Avenue Church of Christ ,ln
Christian Union, Columbus. ·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Elsa E. Russell, on Mar~h
15, 1993. They· were married on Feb.5, 1956.
.
·
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Surviving are five daughters, Linda Edwards a~d Cynthta Edwards, both
of Sunbury, Rosemary (David) Skidmore of Galhpohs, Tommie (Ted) Staton of Vinton and Rebecca (Randy) Denney of Btdwell; 13 grandchildren~
four brothers.' Jack Knight of Mechanicsvine, Va., James Knight and Ken·
neth Knight, both of Bidwell, and Davtd Kmght of San Anton~o, Texas;_a~~
five sisters, Noma Cable, Glenna Long, Max1ne Russell and Shrrley S;tunders , all of Bidwell, and Mary Ann Arthurs of Bancroft, W. V~. .
, ,•
Services were at I p.m. today, Wednesday. June 12, 1996 m .the Mo~~n .
Center Christian Holi_ness Church, with the Rev. George Colhns offic1a11!'S·
Burial was in the Morgan Center Cemetery. Arrangements were by tfie
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home. Vinton.
.,

Road closing slated

Jeanette B. Skeens

Man jailed on charge .

.

Crew Road in Salisbury Township will be closed temporarily Thursday so workers can replace a culvert. The, road will be closed starting
at 8 a.m. and will remain closed until work is complet~d .
.

Boil advisory issued
The tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has issued a boil advi-'
sory for Chester Township customers residing along state Route 7 from
state Route 24!Vsouth to Five Points, and Texas, Russell, Chambers,
Morgan and Frank roads.
The order is due to a water line break in the area.
'
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Bridge sltited for autumn repair . . .
·Repairs to a bridge on state Roule 124 between Salem Center and
. Langsville should be completed ?Y Nov. 30 this year, according to the
Ohio ,Depanment of Transportation.
.
The bridge. which has been limited to one lane traffic. was replaced
by contract in the summer of 1994 and ~ncountered l;'roblems dunng
construction including a flood that put. 11 under runnmg water. Prob·
!ems were found in the deck as heavy coal trucks passed over, resulting in traffic being limited to one lane, ODOT reported.
A contract will he let June 26 to replace the deck.
'

Middleport wreck investigated

·

A Syracuse youth was cited in a two-car accident in Middleport

tuesday morning, according to Capt. Bruce Sw1ft of the M1ddleport
· Police Department..
·
According to reports, the accident occurred at 8:40 a.m. on South
Third.Avenue when MichaelS. Ash, 16, Syracuse used a tum mdtcator for making a left t~m into a drive\llay. Realizing he missed the dn·
veway, Ash swerved right to park across the street and colhded wtth
a 1988 Dodge Ram, driven by Charles G. Lee. 52, Syracuse.
Damage to Ash's 1987 Nova was moderate,'while damage to Lee's
truck was light.
.
.
.
'Ash was cited for failure to yield. No ipjuries were reportcd.m the
accident.

Pool ·opening...
tion system will he completed by the
end of the week, according·to Bruce
Bumgarner of the Pool People, contractor for that phase of the project.
The new filter systam will save the
village from using 2,000 to 3,000 gal·
Ions of extra chemicals each year,
with constant recirculation and
refiltering of the water in the pool,
thus saving the village money over
the long haul, according .to Johnson.
Other changes at the pool include
ii!S!allation of new chain-link fenc ing, repainting of the structure,
removal of the wood frame stairs
. Whl.ch led to the top deck of the pool,
and replacement of the main steps to
the pool deck with steel and concrete
steps.
Weather and delayed approval ofplans for the project by the Stale
Depanment of Commerce BoW of

Continued from page 1

Building Appeals pushed back' the
expected s1a11 up date and completion
date for the project by more than a
month, but officials are haPPY that the
pool will be open for the remainder
of the summer.
Village officials are awaiting word
on plan approval from the State
Depanment of Commerce Board of
Building Appeals for the required
handicapped access ramp. which will
tie directly onto the we&lt;t side of the
.!:p::oo;::l:;_.______....;._..:_....,-:In World War I, the average life
· he f
span for fighter pilots at t ront was
three weeks. Some. 50,000 - onethird _ of the war's airmen were
ki)led.
..

Jeane\te Brenneman Skeens, 64, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Monday, June
10. 1996, at Charleston Area Medical Center, Charleston, W.Va.
:
Born Aug. 23, 1931 , in Cincinnati, daughter of the late Eu~ene lind
Winifred Barrett Klousis Brenneman, she was a member of the F1rst Uwt·
ed Methodist Church and treasurer of Circle 3 of the First United Methodjst
Ghurch for many years.·She was a member of the Ravenswood Lioness Club
and a former member of the Rebekah Lodge, Ravenswood.
·
She is survived by her husband, Donald Skeens; a daughter, Rebecca
Skeens· and a son, Dana Skeens, all of Ravenswood; three grandchtldren;
brother~ Robert and Hershel Brenneman, both of California, and Pete and ·
Charles Kious is, both of Cincinnati; and a sister. Linda Bingham.of Bion-

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Meigs announcements
Payment du~
· Payment for lot care for the Beech
Grove Cemetery is due. The charge
is $1.0 a grave and the amouni can be
paid at Pomeroy Village Hall or sent
by mail to Beeth 'Grove Cemetery
Fund. 320 East Main St. , Pomeroy,
45769, c/o Ellen Rought.
.·
Church dinner slated
·
Mt. Moriah Church of God, Mile
Hill Road; Racine, will hold a baked
steak dinner Saturday, $5 p.m. Cost
$4 .50, $3 for children, includes
dessert and drink.
Park program
··
Music will be presented Saturday
evening at the Star Mill Park. Racine.
Refreshments will be available.
·

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - none.
Tuesday discharges - Mabel
Niemeyer, Pomeroy~ Lee Layne,
Racine~ Rev a Smith, Middleport.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June 11 - Mrs.
Michael Litman and son, Mrs. Gregory Fife and son , Mrs. Thomas
Shope and daughter, Harry Hendricks.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. James
Fain, son, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs. John
Harrison, son, Chester.
(Published with permission)

Co•••••• bJ

Friday, J1ne 14, 1996
In Dr. A..Jackson Balles' OHice
224 East •In, PoiHroy

:
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9:00.Noon
:
.: Call TOll F. 1-800-634-5265 for •l••••lte appoilhlltnt. •
Tilt ltlh wl .. giYII 11J a l.klilml Hearila ~
1
Anyone
who hU troWie hetlrlug 01" utldiiSIBnding con\lllrullqn is Invited to I
a1 have a FAEE haarlnQ ... to- I thll ~ ~ be helped. Bring 1his 1

Sped••• •

C1J141011 wllli you lot yow FREE HEM. TEST, I $75.00 v~.
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Alii! DO, . . . AND ALL cmtiR

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1NIURANCI PROVIDERS
WALK- WILCOIIE

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Revival announced
Revival services will be held a1 the
Mt. Olive Communiiy Church, Long
Bottom. June 19-23. 7 p.m. each
evening. Gary L. BackCider of Bel'
!ville will be the evangelist.

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Great Gilts
from our
Hand...- tool
Power tools
&amp; fishing
sup~ies ·
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r&amp;Wt.,· HEARING AID CENTER

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Hospital news

-COUPON

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She was preceded in death by a son, Allen Gene Skeens; a brother, Arthur
Brenneman ~ and by two sisters, Francis Holland and .Eugenia McNair. : . ·
· Services will be held Thursday. II a.m . at the F1rst Unrted Methodist
Church of Ravenswood with the Revs. Dan Hogan and Jack Davis offtctating. Burial will follow in Ravenswood Cemetery.
.
•
Friends may call today from 6-9 p.m. at the Roush Funeral Home,
Ravenswood.
,:

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FREE HEARING ·TESTS

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' Death Notices::

'Youths .cited for vandalism

.ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
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irlll lie glw• 11 •tas/4iallla

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SUUCIIIPI'ION RA'IIIS

OloeWock..-,.;,........................................$2.~
Oloe ............................................. $8.
Oloe y,............................................... $1 04.00

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PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.·

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Sports

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The Dally Sentinel

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Plge4
·June1 1 •

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Youth helps Reds .down Padres 4..1

.,

By BERNIE WILSON
fourth.
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Just when
"I didn't know what to expect:"
it seems like the San Diego Padres' Mottola said of his tint encounter
slump can't get worse, it does. acainst Valenzuela. "I was just lookThesday night, a couple of young ing for a pitch to hit. He left one out
Cincinnati Reds did the damage. over the plate, Before the game, I
Rookie Chad Mottola hit a 432-foot was asking othe.r guys what he
horner and Kevin Jarvis won his first throws, and everybody kept•saying.
• · game in 365 days as the Reds beat 'I can't help you out.' "
San Diego4·1.
Jarvis {1-1), up for the second
It was the Padres' tiflh s~ght time this season from Triple-A lndiloss, and eighlh in ni~ games. They anapolis: won for the first time since
have lostlhree straight home series beating Colorado on June 12, 1995.
for the first time since July 1994. He allowed Tony Gwynn's homer
Their record on this homestand is 1- among his seven hits in 5 2/3
7, and they 've allowed the visito~ to innings.
score.lirst in all eight games.
"It just feels good to be a pan of
"It's been a rough hqmestand," a win," said Jarvis, 26. "That's what
manager Bruce Bochy said. "I know it's all about. If this team is going to
it's frustrating for all of us."
get hot and make a run and put a
Bochy was ejected for the second streak together, we need everybody
time in four games, · lhis time by on the pitching staff to do his pan. I
third-!Jase umpire Tom Hal lion for sure am happy, at least on this night,
arguing that a sixlh-inning chopper to be a part of lhat"
Joe Oliver had two of Cincin·
GOOD SHOT, JASON I- M..on County's Jaapn King (right) ~ by Chris Saba should have been
ruled
a
foul
ball,
not
a
double.
riati's
four doubles, including one for
congratulatiOns from tlllrd baH coach Jol)n Johnaon after King 1
"It
was
a
real
close
call,"
Bochy
an
RBI
in the third, as the Reds
awo-run "-off J11011 Dilley In the I8COI1d Inning of the flrlt game
of 1\.leldiY'• Anwrlcan Legion doubleheader against Gallipolis Poat said. "I guess ·it's frustration again. handed the Padres their eighth loss
~7 at Harmon Park. The bleat waa one of two hit In the game and
When you get in one of lhese things, in nine games. '
one of five,In the twlnblll, which saw the hoata win 16-2 end 10.0. the ball doesn't bounce your way on
Valenzuela, who lost for the lhird
. (OYP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
calls and lhings like that. I guess I time in five stans, gave up consecuwent over the line."
tive doubles to Eddie Taubensee and
Said catcher Brian Johnson: Oliver leading off the third- to
"Everybody goes through it. This is account for lhe Reds' first run. Olivour tum. What matters is how we er moved up on Jarvis' sacrifice bunt
react. Do we take care of it or let it and scored on Eric Owens' sacrifice ·
•
linger?"
· . fly.
Mottola's second homer of lhe
" I made two . bad . pitches
season, a two-run shot offi'emando tonight," Valenzuela said, noting
Valenzuela, cleared the permanent that he left the ball over lhe plate on
wall in ~traightaway center field and bolh lhe homer and Oliver's RBI
gave the Reds a 4.0 lead in the double. "I think that was the differ·

ence in tile game."
Gwynn hit 1 shot into the right·
center field seats leading off the
fourth. his second homer of the season. It went an estimated 427 feet.
Jeff Shaw and Lee Smith allowed

the Padres to !Old the bases in the
eighth before Smith gOI Rickey Hendenon to fly out to end the threat.
Jeff Br•ntley pitched a scoreless
ninlh for his 16th save.

~nudity,

June 12, 1991

Jn~ians tally 6-5 vict()ry over Athletics in 13-inning battle
CLEVELAND (AP)- A sloppy
game still lidded up to a win for the
Clevcllllld Indians and that WllfiOOO ·
enough for m~~~~a&amp;er Mike Hargrove.
Manny Ramirez redeemed him·
selt from 1 base-ruhning mistake
with.a game-winning sacrifice in tl)e
bottom of the 13th as the Indians
beat the Oakland Alhletics 6-S Tuesday night.
"I don't 6ave a doghouse - it
doesn't do anybody any good to
Jlave that situation anyway," Hargrove said.
. "Manny got my message when I
iold him about his baserunning m,iS'
'*e. He had every chance to go hang
his head, but he busted his butt after
ihat and won the game."
. With one out in the eighth and
trailing by one run, Kenny Lofton hit
a fly ball to left. Ramirez, thinking
he would score easily, trotted home.

Omar Vizquel, trying to get into

position for the go-~ run, how·
ever, was thrown out at second for
the third out before Ramirez toudled
home.
"We made two mistakes on that
play and those auys know it," Hillgrove said. "They heard about it
from me. Now it is over with,
though."
Hargrove sounded like a teacher
whose students had been properly
chastised.
"Every young player will make
mistakes and Manny did. Now it is
time for Mr. Ramirez to learn from
it. Omar was over-aggressive on the
play. He lhought be could make it.
He was wrong."
The double mistake gave Oakland
a boost.
"If Omar doesn't nin-. Manny
scores euily, · ~ said Oakland's Terry

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OYP Staff Writer

The first three innings of the
seco nd game gave the impression ·

·HomeAmerican
run powerLegion
gave lhebaseball
Mason . mthaakll' nag.pitcher's duel was in the
County
learn plenty of help in tallying 16-2
Only three runners- Dailey,
and J0-0 mercy-rule victories over teammate Bert Craig and King Gallipolis Post 27 Tuesday at got on base in those (rames. None of
Harmon Field in Point Pleasant. lhem made it to second base.
V
In the founh, Tucker, his club·
W.Ina;he first contest, the hosts took nightcap pitcher, saw Gallipolis get
lheir first steps .toward staying that Eric Humphreys and Stanley into
·way by getting five runs off staner scoring position on Joe Johnson's
Jason Dailey in lhe first inning.
sacrifice bunt. But Tucker held the .
· · The first of the two hits Mason runners at second and third while
County got in the frame was Joey throwing out Casey Canaday:Qn a ·
Mayes' ground single to center, nubber for the first out. Then Mark
which allowed Lane Young to score (Moose) Clark flied out to left to
the game's first run. After an error defuse Post 27's rally.
by Gallipolis shonstop Gary Stanley ·
In no other frame ~id Gallipolis
pnJason Roush' s grounder allowed come so close •lo scoring.
Jason King to score, the hosts
Ma son County cracked the
boosted their lead to 5-0 on Jeremy scoreless deadlock with a six-run
Tucker's. three-run homer to center not m the ~attorn of the fourth. Of
field.
the seven h1ts the hosts had m the ·
: Gallipolis scored in the second frame, three of them brought home
~~en Kevin Edwards, who walked · five runs. bf those, run-sconng .hus,
with two out, scored when Mark there was Roush s two-run blast
' llurns lined Chad Ord's 2-2 pitch beyond left center field, whi~h
~ hitorightcenterfield.
. .
landed onto an adjacent Little
' · • Mason County answered m· 1ts League field hosting a .game. The
; ~f of the inning with a three-run other homer was Dale John so n's
: birtburst starred by King's two-run two-run shot to right center field.
::homer to center field. Later in the
Mason County ended the game in .
· frame Roush's double to right field the fifth with Y·oung's one-out
: scored Mayes.
. .
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grand slam to left field that helped
: In the third, Galltpolts, whtch got the hosts remam undefeated.
; its final run of the game when
Gallipolis will play at Glouster
[Stanley scored on a bases, loaded ' today.
·
~ walk to Edwards, left the. bases lppjng totals-first l:llllll
: loaded. Ord and hi~ mates GallipoliS :., .... ....... OII 00 = 2-4-6
: app.arently learned from the · Mason County ...... 531 7x = 16-9·0
. experience, because Galhpohs got
, ·.
Gallipolis Post 'l.7
:only one runner (Stanley) to second Plllyer-pos, .
11.1! [ b hi
: after that. ·
.
, . Jason Dailey-p/cf ........... 3 0 0 0
: , Gallipolis stranded Sll runners 1n Jamie Gruber-lf ..............2 0 0 0
•
the 4 1/2-inning affair. ·
(See LEGION on Page 5)
1

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Tr"I•State Jun"•or Golf
c···rcu"lt to beg."•n .Fr"lday
The Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit,
a series of six tournaments for players I 0 to 18 years old, will begin Friday with a tournament at lhe Riviera
Country Club in Lesage, W.Va.
Other tournaments in the series
include:
.
.
June 21: Esquire Country Club in'
Barboursville; W. Va.
June 28: Spring Valley Country
Club in Huntington, W.Va.
Jyly 12: Portsmouth Elks Club in
Ponsmouth
July 19: Bellefonte Golf and
Country Club in Ashland, Ky.
July 26: Guyan Golf and Country
Club in Huntington
,
The ag'e divisions are I0-12, 1315 and 16_1g groups.
Entry deadlines for all tourna- .
.
·
befo
mentstsWednesdayatSp.m. . . re
th~ tournament. The entnes, wh~ch
Will also be . available at Rlvers~de
Golf Course 10 Mason, W.Va., Metgs
C~unty Golf Course !n Po"!eror,
Chf.fs1de Golf Course 10 Galhpohs
and H1dden Valley Golf Club tn
Point Pleasant, W.Va., can be handdelivered to the host course at that
time or mailed to T-SJOC, P.O. Box
945, Proctorville, Ohio 456669 two
days priorto the tournatneill.
· All tee times will be published in
The Herald-Dispatch on the Tburs·
day before the tournament The host
club can also be contacted for this
information .
.
.
In order to be eligible for player'
of-the-year honors, players must

Transactions
Baseball

AmtrianLape

KANS.S CITY ROY ALS oOptlon«J
~HP Je« Granger to Omaha of the Arneri. can A1sociution. Purctwed the ~~~~ra~l of
LHP Jose Ros11do from Om:lh11..
MINNESOTA TWINS: Signed RHP
OQvid Hooren ond RHP Charle!: Gillian.
NEW YORK YANKEES; Plu~ed
LHP Jimmy Key on rhe 1~-Uay disoablt:U
li11. Rec nlll"d RHP Jim Mec:ir from
., Columbus nf rhe International L.ca~:ue .
SEATTLE MARINERS : Acquired
RHP Bill Wertt from the ae~dand lnr.liuns for RHP Mik~ Butcher. R~called RHP
Edwin Hunodo from Tncomn or the Pacif• iC Con11 Lcn~ue , Opcioned RHP Paul
Menhart to TllComn.
TEXAS RANGER S: Auigned OF
Juan Pinello to Charlotte of tht Gulf Coos1
l.cngu~·-

••

TQRONTO BUIE JAYS&lt;Pl.lc&lt;d OF
Olis NiKOR and RHP Woody Williams on ·
the 1~ - day disabled lis!. Acti11a1ed RHP
Bill Ri1ley from the! 1~-d:Jy di.\abled lis1 .
Purchased 1he conlra.::l of OF Mi chael
Huff frOm Syracu•e of lhe lhternationnl
league.

CHJCA'GO CUBS : Recalled RHP
Mike Campbell from Iowa of lhr Ameri·
can Auocicuion.
HOUSTON ASTROS o Signed RHP
David Bernhard. LHP Bri~n Bm~ll. C
JiliOO HIII: RHP lobi Huber, SS-28 Mntt '
: H
RHP E&amp;rnban MuJdOIIUdo, 28 JJJy
., ~~\·asc RHP Wade Miller, JB Uru
r Ni~ly. RF~Jamelo.Reeder, CF Geof(rey
.,. .Robntwn. SS Michael Wheeler, Wid CF
r · lbandel YO&amp;anJ.
•
t • • MONltiEAL EXPOSoReoalkd RHP
r ... U&amp;uedl Urbina (rom Ottaw• of lhe IIlier·
• o100no1 Leaa•· Oprionocl OF TCH\y u.r.
: : MillO OUIWl. Activated RHP Jose Poni·
, • - from 111e IS·diY disoblod 1111 Gild op• " lio.ed hirn to ouawa. SiJ.ed CF Ka~l

F• aioomon

2• l'lul Blonlool. RHP

Jnnjy

: .. SaJ"era.' ¥S Jeremy Carroll, 28 Jt~k ·
., M~CKIY. 18 A.-drew TrK)', OF Chna

r

s.-.'c·M - Boirtey, LHP nmo-

~ ~ fhy YOIIDJ. RHP'Rodney Steveuon,
~-

Colorado 7. Hguston !'i
Stl:.ouis'6.

Lo~

Anzdo -~

AL standings

IUm

Euslern Division
I. £&lt;1,
New York ............. J6 24 .tiOO
Dahlm~ ........... :... n 27
.SSO
Toron1o ..................26 · ~7 .413
Uos1on ................... 2.1i :n .403
CktMit .....~ ............. 16 48 .259

»:

Iwn

lill

·'
12

I I ~~

2l

C~ntnl

Dl•ision
CLEVELAND ....... 41 2 1 .661
Olicago ....... _, ...... 40 22

Minnesma .............. ~ l 31
Milwauko: ............. 29 32
K01nsas Ci1y ........... 28 36

. 64~
.~

,475

.4.18

Wuum Dlvl1ion
Tt:"-U .................... J9 24 .619

·se.1.nlc ................... , ~~ 29
Californi.-......... ...... 30 32
OaklanU ................. 28 3~

j i,
8'-:
II .

.SJ2
.484
.444

Today's games

Butern Division

R

AUan1n ... .. ....... ... 40
Monrrtnl. .. ...:..... JS
flOOdD ................... J I
Philadelphia ........ ...28
New York .............. 27

I. I'd.
22 .645
28
:\2
34
JS

Centnl DlvirJon
Housu:m ................. 33 :.2 .508 '
Sl. Louis ................ JO .1J .4/6
Pinsburgh ........... 30 :W .469
Chh:ngo ................. 29 M .460 .
CINCINNA11 ....... 24 :o .421
Wedem pivlll&amp;.
San Diego .............. 36 2R .:'i63
L05 Angeks ........... :\4 31 . ~i23
Srul Franei~eo ........ JI Jl .SOO
Colorudo ............:... JO J I .492

Tue5!1ay's li&lt;ores
PinJburgh 1, SM Frnncisco 2
9, Philadelphia 2

Chicn~~:o

Tuesday's scores

.Sj6
.492
.4;'i2
.43S

D~rirnore

12, Detroit9
CLEVELAND6, OakiJJnd ~ (13)
'New York 6, Torvn1o 4 ·
8011on 9, Oucap 2
Se..ttlc 18, MilllltiOta 8
Callfornin II , KlllW Chy 9
Milwau.kee 14, Tuas 4

lill
j~

9\
12
I)

{frtemnn ·).l),l:O!I p.m.
Florida .(Leiler 8-4) at Montreal
{FBSsero 5·5), 7:]5 p.m.
Athmla (~ndclilx 5-4} 111 New York
(Clark 5·6), 7:40 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Smiley 5-6) at Smn
Diqo (Beraman 3-6).. IO:lS p.m.

2

21
.1
l

.

Chicago (Costillu, 1-8) ut PhiludtlphHI
(Fcmandcz 2-4), I o05 p.m.
Hou,ton (ReYnolds 8-3) Ql Colorado

Thunday's games

.

Houston (KIIe 6-4) at San Franc1sco
(M Leiter 3-!H. 4:0!'i p.m.
·
· Aorida (Weathers 2-1) ll Piusburgh ·
,; (Z. Smith 4-3), 7:~~ p.m.

·
Yallk:s 6-4} Ill lltl~~ntn
(OliVIne 7-)), 7.40p.m.
·
San Diego (HamiiiOO 8-~) at Chi~1110
~ Anp~ (1.

2'~

4

4 '~

(Telcmoco 3-2), 8: 0~ p.m.

New Yoi'k

(Mii~ki

I· J) ut St.

.
lollli

(Andy Benn ~-7), 8:0!1 p:m.

Philadelphiu (Schilling 1-0) 1:11 Col·

orado (lbompson 3-6), 9:0S p.m.

•..

·. Today'' games

Nlil..._l Leaaue

•

Monir(al J. Florida'2
AtlantA 4, New York 3 (I J )

NL standings

Baseball

C

New York (Mendou. I- I) IU Toronlo
(Janzen :\-2). 12:lS p.m.
'
Baltimore (Ericklon 3-!5) n1 Deuoil (8.
Willinms0..4), l :l!'ip.m.
Milwaukee (Mirando J&lt;i) ar Tuas
(PIIv lik 8- l ). 2 : 0~ •p. m. ·
Boston ·(Sele 2'-4) a! ct}k:ago (Fernnn·
dez 6-J), 2:05p.m.
.
.
California (Boskic 7-2) ar Kant.u Cny
(Ro..OOO.O), 4:05 p.m.
Oaklnnd (Chcuin11rd 0.2) 111 CLEVE·
LAND (Mcllowe116-4), 7:05p.m.
' scurtle (Wokoll 4·6) 111 Minnesola
(ROOke 4-6). 8:05p.m.

Thunday's P!J10S
Texas (Oliver 5-2)' 11 Boiion {Clemens
)-6), 7&lt;05 p.Jil.

'

'

CLEVELAND (Henhiter ~:-4) 11 New
York (Rogen 4-2), '7 :33p.m. .
Olli.laad (Wojci~howlki 3·3) at Mil·
WIUtl.CC

(KariS· )), 8 :~ p.m.

.

..

1993 Ford Thunderbird LX 2DR
power seat, pQWer windOW!!, power locka, lea than 44,000 miles:
One of the cleanest cars you will find. .
sn
Sale Priced ·.:1, .

995

JD

said. "I've· been trying to create a
day here and there where we can gel
him a stan to keep his skills sharp." ·
Bullett recently spent 20 days on
the disabled list with a broken rib
and was sent down to Double-A
Orlando for a three-game rehabilita·
lion stint. He went 2-for-11 with two
runs scored and two stolen bases.
"He really got something out of
it and he came back here ready ·to
(See NL on ..age S)

Middleport Dept~ Stare
"Qn the

r·

Middleport 912.:1148

The Ji.viden Memorial Little
Leag\le Tournament will'be held at
Harmon Park in Point Pleasant on
June 29 ..The field will be limited to
16 teams. . .
For more information, call Rick
Simpkins at 675-4122.
·

CINCINNATI4, Snn Diego I

Major Lt~t~ur BaRball
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS o
Sigtled RHP Man: Van Wormer and LHP
Ben Norris.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Signed
RHP Mickey Call01wa)' and OF Mi~hael
DeCelle

Z

Baltimore (Mercker J-4) at k.ans.:as
· City (Unton 1·2r. 8:0~ p.m.
.. .
Toromo (Gulman 4-4) nt Cahfornt:l
(Anle~ 7-4). I~O!'i p.m.

Cubs beat Phils 9-2; ·
Braves top Mets 4-3

Local notes

'

TOSSES ONE-HITTER- M11011 County'l Jeremy Tucker gave up
a flrat-lnnlng hit to. Galllpolla Poll 27 leadoff hitter Jason Dalley
before holdlno the visltora hltleu after that Inning .., route to helpIng hla club notch a HHI mercy-rule victory. (OYP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

Legion baseball... &lt;continued from Page 4&gt;
Moose Clark-2h ............. 3
Gary Suinley-ss ............. .3
Joe Johnson-rf/p ............. 2
Eric Humphreys-c .......... 3
Kevin Edwards-3b .........0
Casey Canaday-1b ......... !
Mark Bums-cf ................ 2
Totals
19

0 0 0
I 2 0
0 0 0

0 I I
I 0 0
·o 0 0
0 ·I I
2 4 l

Mason County
P!&amp;ye[•pOS.

lil [ h hi

Dale Johnson-cf ............. 2 I 0 0
Lane¥oung-2b ..............2 3 I 0
Jason King-ss .................4, ·3 3 3
Joey Mayes-lb ............... 3 3 2 2
Jason Roush-rf ....... ........2 I I I
Gabe Scott-dh.....,...........3 I I I
Jeremy Tucker-IL ........ J 2 I 3
Travis Price-3b ....... . .......2 I 0 0
Brad Lilly-c ................... .3 0 0 0
Totals
24 16 9 10
Pitchers
Ord (MC): 5 ip; 6K, 3BB
Dailey (GaL): 3 ip, 3K&amp; 6BB
J. Johnson (Gal.): 2 ip, OK &amp; I BB

-*-*.Innigg tolals:sec:ond IIIDl

:Gallipolis ...............OOO 00= ·0-1-1
:Mason County ...... 000 64 = 10·11·1

Date: June 8, 1996
.
On Wednesday, June 1:!, 1996, the Leading Creek
Conservancy. Dletrlct and Southern Ohio Excavating al'ld·
Pipeline will .be lnatalllng new valv.e a on the existing 16"
water line on Red Hill Rd. (CR 65). The purpon of the valvea
are to connect ,and Isolate the existing transite (type
cemeilt) line from he new high density polyethylene P'~"'·l
. (HDPEP-type of . plaatlc) line serosa Southern Ohio ,.,...,.•
Company's neat longwall coal mine panjtl on Red Hill Road.
In order to make thla connection, the main line between the
water treatment plant on SR 124 and Tank #2 on Red Hill Rd.
will be lsolatad .and de-preasurlzetl. This WOrk wll'l begin at
approxlm11tely 8:00 a.m; on Wednesday, June 12, .19116
should be completed by 4:00 p.m. During this time
customers on the following roads will experience little or no
water preaaure:
Red Hill Rd.• (CR 65) between~ 12't and Tank #2.
Painter Ridge, Prlc.,.Strongs, Molehan,.&amp; Fairplay:
SR 124 from the water treatment plant' (near Mine 11) to
the Intersection of SR 124 &amp; Painter Ridge (CR 1) Including
all of Hampton Hollow.
All of Salem School Lot Rd. (CR 1), Including CR 1A, Pol1nt
Rock Rd. (CR 27), Laurel Rd., Slsaon Rd., North Run, and
689 In the Point Rock area.
After the valve Installation Ia completed, the. Dlatrtct
be restoring service and flushing air, ao all CI!Stomera In
effected areae are advised to b.oll all water ulad for human
consumption until further notice. Alao, the Dlatrlct requeata
that all cuatomera In the etrected ereaa refrain from ulll!tlnu ,l:
water froty~ · 8:00 a.m. unt114:00 p.m. on Wedneaday, June·
1996. Although your own water may atlll be flowing,· the 41Rd
raault Ia more air In the llnea on the hills and a longer ........ ·•
period for fluahlng thla air and restoring aervlce to all
cuatomara. In addition, all cuatomara east of Tank #2 and
weat of Painter Ridge are aeked to conaerve water during thla
1 time. Theaa.areaa will be aupplled from tanka which can
be refllltd until the valve Installation on Red Hill Rd. Ia
complettd. If then water tl!nka are depleted, thne arau will
alio be withoUt water aervlce•
The District apologlzea.for any lnc:Onvenlence aaaoclatad
with thla outage, however tftla raplacement line will lnau~
the Integrity of our dlatrlbutlon ayatam during the, mining
period and beyond.
.
·
•
Any queatlona, piHH can the Dlatrlct .office (614) 7422411, M-F, 1:30 a.m.-4:00p.m. ·

AUTO SALES
SOO &amp; Mzlln
Pom c&lt;oy OH 992· 7322

r..ld 11111 Bette lrOUed home with the

winning nm without a throw.
Chad Ogca (3.0) piil::bech scoreleu inning of relief for the win. CarlosRcycs (4-9), who bcpn the 13th
lfler Todd Van Poppel suffered 111
~~pp~~m~t injury while wwmin1 up,
toolt the lou.
Cleveland had the bases IOIIded
with two outs in the 12th, but firsl
baseman Sreinbach made a Jeapina
catch of shortstop Rafael Bournipl's
hi&amp;h throw of Julio Fnmco's sharply
hit groundball to end the threat.
The Indians tied the gtime j-5 in
the ninth on Murray's sacrifice fly
off Jim Corsi, the ti fth Oakland
pitcher.
Oakland's Willie Adams, in his
major league &lt;,!Cbut, allowed four
runs on four hits in the first inning
then yielded just lhree hits over the
next five · innings. The 23-year-old

Brent A. Bolin, Manager

~~........
. ~~

If w" cant t1 nd ;t . TIH·v cion tmak &lt;• 1t"

.'

Jipt·hander walked two- boUt in · cenrer for his 2,000lh career hit and
the fiiSt- and struck out IWD.
scored 011 Carlos Bae11a's si•th
"Hopefully I impiesaed the staff horner.
After Jim Thome lined a two-out
with my last five innings after that
sinale
to right, Murray hit his sixth
bold r~rs~ inning," Adams said. " I
know I have to earn my way up here. homer of the season and 48Sihofhis
I've had a great five days here and career. His three RBis m&lt;Sved him
have enjoyed the heck out of it."
put Carl Yastrzemski into ninth
Howe said Adams recovered place on the career list with I ,846.
from a shaky start. "But once be
Oakland's Jose Herrera led off the
made the adjustment, be was a total- game wilh a triple over the head of
ly different pitcher. He gave us a center fielder Lorton and scored on
chance to win," Howe said.
a sacrifice fly by Brent Gares.
Sreinbach broke a 4-4 tie when he
Left fielder Belle dropped a fly
led off the sixth with his ninth home ball by Giambi that led to Oakland's
run off Dennis Maninez.
two-run founh. Bases loaded
Franco and Murray achieved groundouts by Steinbach and
career milestones as Cleveland took Plantier made it 4·3. Mark MeG·
a 4-1 lead in the first.
wire's two-out single in the fifth tied
Franco lined a one-out single to it 4-4.

I Round the County _\

By Frank C.pebut
Incessant rain has tally put a
damper on the usual spring activities, .
Chicago Police Sgt. ioe Serb, the and golfen have been frustrated by
CHICAGO {AP) - The NBA
championship trophy apparently has watch officer in the district where lhe many cancellations. Sdll, the dme is
theft was discovered, said early here, and a full schedule of events
been stolen.
probably just means there will ~
Chicago police said Tuesday the today he had not heard anything some delays, or postpOnements,. m
27-pound trophy, which depicts a about it.
playing dates. Surely, the days
The newspaper, citing Chicago · ahead will get better. and all of you
gold basketball on the rim of a gold
basket, has been missing since late police and other unidentified author- will be in full swing.
May, the Daily Sourhrown newspa· ities, provided this a~count:
The trophy was shipped from
per reported today.
Now that students and teachen are
A spokeswoman for Tiffany's Tiffany's on a United 1\irlines night finished for the summer, several
Jewelers in New York, which makes from Newark, N.J., about 9 p.m. Junior Golf schedules are set to get
the trophy, toid the newspaper the May 28. A driver hired to pick.it up underway. Here, in our immediate
missing trophy was only a display at Chicago's O'Hare International area. the Tri-County Junior Tour will
model. But the newspaper cited an Airport noticed that the crate was get underway, weather permitting, on
unidentified source close to the unlocked. Five of the locks. appar- Tuesday morning, June 18, at Hidden
ently had been sheared.off, and t!le Valley Golf Course at 8:30a.m. After
in~estigation say.ing that was f.alse
that, the tentative schedule calls for
sixth was open.
and that the original was missing.
the young swingers to assemble at
Meigs County Course in Pomeroy on
(Continued fro~ Page 4J
Monday, June 24, also at 8:30. The
young folks will not play the next
pla,Y." Riggleman said. "Since that · the Cardinals, who snapped a three- week, but will return to competition
time, he's given us some good pinch- game slide and also ended a three- on Tuesday, July 9, at the Cliffside
hit at-bats and the game tonight."
game winning streak by the Dodgers. Course in Gallipolis, and then play ·
Bullett said he didn't take his
Los Angeles' Ramon Martinez (4at Riverside in Mason on Monday,
shan stint in Florida lightly.
1), back in the rotation after missing July IS. The annual Fun Day
"! wasn' t going to just go down one start .with the flu, gave up two
Roondup is carrently slated for lUesthere and lollygag around and go · runs on four hits in four innings. The day, July 23, at Hidden Valley. Any
through the motions," he said. "I Joss was his first in I I decisions dat- necessary changes will be announced ·
went down there to get my timing ing hack to.last Aug. 3. •
when needed.
.back and check my. rib and I did
The local tour players wiU co~
· Rockies 7, Astros 5
both. It's paid off.''
pete
in a nine-bole round each week
Pinch-hitter Thnidad Hubbard
. Ryne Sandberg had a double and snapped an eighth-inning tiewith an
with otheilf,layers in their respective
a bases-loaded triple and Sammy RBI single, and Vinny Castilla hit a age groups. The groups are for age
ten and under, II- and 12-year-olds.
Sosa hit his 21st homer for the Cubs, three-run homer against visiting
13- and 14-year-olds, and IS-to 17·
while 32-year-old Mike Campbell, Houston.
year-olds.
Cost is $S per person each
who last pitched in the majors two
Wilh the score tied 5-5, Anthony
week,
and
will
be paid at registration
years ago, pitched well In his Cubs Young (2-3) walked Walt Weiss and
time
(8:30
a.m.)
Shot gun tee-off
debut.
·
Jayhawk Owens with one out in the
time
is
9
a.m.
·
·
Campbell (1-0), brought up ear- eighth. Xavier Hernandez replaced
This·
year,
some
of
the
local
lier in the day from Triple-A Iowa, Young, and Hubbard greeted him
events ·8!1' on Tuesday. Tbi.s is to
limired the Phillies to two runs and with a single to center on lhe first
allow lcicallinksters some tlexibilifive hits in seven innings.
pitch.
Two runs in seven innings,
Houston tied the game 5-5 when
that's not too bad," Campbell said. pinch-hitter Billy Spiers hit a two."1 pride myself on not walking .run homer in lhe seventh inning.
guys, and I only had one walk."
Elsewhere in the NL, it was PittsExpos 3, Marlins 2
burgh 7, San Francisco 2; Montreal
Montreal scored twice in the sev3, Florida 2; Atlanta 4, New York 3 enth inning at Olympic Stadium.
in I 3 innings; Colorado 7, Houston
Wilh lhe Expos trailing 2- 1, Dar,
5; and St. Louis 6, Lo~ Angeles 3.
rin Fletcher and ClitTAoyd hit one·
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 3
out singles off Marlins staner Kevin
Donovan Osborne scattered nine · Brown (4-5). Pinch-hitter Sherman
hits and allowed one iun in 7 2/3
Obando hit a potential double-play
innings. He also drove in l~o runs
ball Ill shonstop, but second ·basewith a double and a bases-loaded
man Ralph Milliard couldn't comwalk at Los Angeles. ·
plete the play,lhrowing the ball past
Gary Gaetti singled four times for
first and into 1he Expos' dugout,
allowing Fletcher to score.
Dave Silvestri followed with a
single for a 3-2 lead.

NL games ...

game~,

By The Associated Preaa
The Chicago Cubs got a high-caliber performance from Scon Bullett.
The outfielder went 5-for-5 with
four RBis Tuesday night, carrying
the Cubs to their fourth straight win,
a 9·2 victory over the Philadelphia
Phillies.
The Donnie Jones Basketball
"Every pltch that came, I was
Camp is coming to Point Pleasant right on it," Bullett said. 'T think
Middle School from Monday, June they couldn't have thrown a golf ball
24 to Friday, June 28.
· . by me."
A Point Pleasant· High School
It was the first five-hit game in
graduate, Jones, a former Marshall Bullett's big-league career, most of
University assistant coach, is on the which has been spent coming otT the
University of Aorida 's coaching staff. bench as a pinch-hitter. Given a r~re .
The camp staff consists of high start, Bu lieu made the most of it.
school and college coaches from .
Bullett, who took a .222 average
around the U.S. Past speakers for the wilh one RBI in 27 at-bats into the
camp have included Greg White, game, singled in Chicago's first run
Archie Talley, John Taft and Billy in the first. Bullett singled in anolh·
Donovan.
er run to put the Cubs up 4-2 in the
Enrollment is .open to students five fifth, and sealed the victory with a
to I7 years old and campers can reg- two-run homer that made it 9-2 in the
ister as late as lhe morning of the 24. sixth. ·
For more information, call 675"He played an oustanding
4402.
game," manager Jim Riggleman

Scoreboard
Shannon Swaino, CF E1han Bnrlow, RHP
Michnel Rnhilly, LHP Eric: Spnrb. LHP
Cunis Martin and RHP Dnnick Edison.

TRIES FOR TWO - Clnclnnatlllhortatop Barry larld!l flrw to flrat
ben after forcing out Sen Diego's Ken Caminiti at second baH In
the fourth Inning of Tuesday nlght'e National League game In Sen
Diego, wh.ere the Reda won 4-1. Larkin's attempt at the double play
was unsucceasful. (AP)
·

I(J other NL

plat in at least live. of the six tournaments.
·
For more 'information, contact TSJGC director Ed Wilgus at 8868910.
The· series is sponsored by Ashland Inc., Captain· ,D's, Hilliard
Lyons and the 1\ventiedl Street Bank
of Huntington.

Steinblc:h, who wu coverina the
plate.
.
.
"I siOOd there watdlin1 111111 be
was about • step and a hllf from the
plllle when am. was out. 'n!ey both
were wrong and our team was pretty excited It that point. We thoupt
that was pretty by."
Oallland 'manager Art Howe
agreed. "When they made the huerunning blunden I thouJht this was
our game." he said. "Good clu!ls
overcome mistakes, though, and
Cleveland sure is a good club."
With one out in the 131h, Alben
Belle hit a grounder to third baseman
Jason Giambi who commjned a
lhrec-base throwing error. A~varo
Espinoza walked and Eddie Murray
was intentionally passed, the last of
13 Cleveland walks in the game,
bringing up Ramirez.
Ramirez lofted a fly ball to right ·

NBA championship
trophy reported stolen

-in American Legion baseball,

Mason County
defeats Gallipolis
.t wice in twinbill

The Deity Sentinel• Page.I

Pomeroy .• Middleport, Ohio

Gallipolis (0·2)
PJayu-p081
1l1t [
Jason Dailey-cf...............3 0
Eric Humphreys-rf.. .......2 0
· Gary Stanley-ss ............ .. 2· 0
· Joe Johnson-lb ............... I 0
Casey Canaday-dh .......:.2 o
Moose Clark-2b .............2 0
Jamie Oruber-c .. .... ......... 1 0
Ben Craig-If.. ,................ I 0
Heath Shaner-3b... :.........2 0
Tutals
16 0

b hi
I
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1

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

StltiHI Cllsslffttls

...........
1

0
0
0
0
0

"2-2' 16

VINE RIPE TOMATOES
3~~8 . $

Father's Day Special
Large Selection of·
Case Knives Now
In Stock

O'Dell Lumber Co.
VIne St. at Third Ave.'
Gallipolis
614-446·1.275
634 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 614·992·5500

WAYNE'S
PLACE
Middleport, &lt;;lhlo

Tonight

Euchere Tournament
nun~.- Ladies Night
-D.J Brady
-Live Band
"The .Chain Gang•
' CHICKEN DINNER

'

LOSE ~: 10 LIS
IN 3 DAYS!
All Natural T-LITE'
wnh.Chromium Picolinate

..

FRUTH PHARMACY
992·6491

11

FATHER 'S DAY SALE

- 12; lTC
,., • '

'

o

Mason tounty (7..0)
PJayer-pos.
11.1! t h hi
Dale Johnson-cf ............. 2 ·r I 3
Ben Queen·ss ...... ... ....... .3 0 I 0
Jason King-3b ............... .3 I 3 0
Joey Mayes-lb ................ 3 1. I I
Jason Roush-lf................ 3 2 2 2
Gabe Scou-c ........_.......... .3 I I 0
Scott Yonkercrf .............. 3 2 2 0
Jeremy Tucker-p ............ 2 I 0 0
Tommy VanMeter-2b .... 2 0 0 0
Lane Young-ph ...... ........ I I I 4
Totals
·
25 10 11 10
Pitchers
Tucker (MC): 5 ip, 6K &amp; 4BB
Sullivan (GaL): 4 1/3 ip, 2K &amp; I BB

PuBLIC NOTICE
propooiod action. Written
Th 1
· 10 11 0 w t n 11 oommento, raquaate lor
appllclllona and/or verllltd public meatlnga, and
:complalnte were received •dludlcatlon hurtn~
·ind the following drah, . raquaeta muat be otnl to.
,. ro otd or final ectlona ' Hearing . Clark, . Ohio
:ar'!"too~ad by the 01110 Environmental Protection
Envtronmaniat Protoetlon Agency, P.O. tox 1•048•
Agoncy (OEPA) Laet Weak. ColumbUII, Ohio 43216-1048
~ ACTIO"'&amp;" Include the (Telephone: 114....,·2121).
·•
•• ·
·
"Final Acttono: aro ootlona
. ,adoption, modification, or of the director whloh .,.
.,.vocotlon of ordero (o."'tr aflacltve upon tuuanca or 11
than emergency onlero), tho I1 t d allectlve date.
loauance,
denial, I •
A 1 d
(tlodlllcatlon or revocation Pureuant 10 Ohio IV 81
o1 tlcenHa permll8 leaNi. Coda Section 3745.04, a
varlanceo.' or cartiflcaltt; final action may ba
and tha approval or app .. led
to
the
dleapprovat of plana and environmental board of
apeclllcattona. "Draft rovtew (EBR) by • peraon
Actlona" are wrlllon who woo ·a party to .a
etatementa of the Director proceeding before the
or · Environmental director by filing an ep.,..t
,.,...,....... (Diractor'e) within 30 daya of notice of
1111ent with roapact to the thl final R11on. Pul'lllllll to
1Null1co, denlel, etc. of • Ohio .Revtllll Code llectton
permit, ucanae, order, atc. 3745.07, a final ectton
tnter...tld peraone may l11ulng, denying, modltylng,
eubmlt w1tnan IIGftiiMIIIa c1r revoking, _or renewing a
requeat a public m•tlng pennlt, llotnll, or ve~anca
regarding draft aottona. which 11 not p..-ded by • .
comment• or public propoeed action, may ba
m..ttng requeall mutt be appealed to the EBA by
eubmllttd within 30 11ay1 o1 tiling an · appeal within 30
notice' ol lhl drift action. dayl of tuuance ollhl final
"Propoeed Aetll•n•" are· ICtlon. EBA. appeal• muet
written llatamlnta of tho be flied with. Emotronlllllllll
. dirootor'e Intent ,with aoard of Review, 231 Eut
rtlplet to the t11u•nce, Town Street, Room 300,
cfenlat, modification, Cotumbue, Ohio 43211. A
Nvocatton, or ron-1 o1 a copy ollhl appe~t mull be
......,tt, llcanM( or vrince. aerved on the dlreotor
Written com menta and ·within 3 daye alter filing the
••qu..t 1 tor • public appe&lt;!lwlththeEBR.
nieetlng regarding a
Ap~llelllon lor permit to
propoaed action mar be lnalaM1 11n
M., 11 It 1
eubmllttd within 3D dllyl ol
r
.
notice of the propC!eed Aggregate•, 10414 It At
aotton.. An adlucltoatton 331, Racine, ~H. liaollty
hilling may' be htld !II' • Deecllpllon: Att, AjlpNo-.
PIOIIOHd action 111 ha41rlng No. -774, Modification to
roqueet or objection 11 ~~~~
FlO I hoed by the OEM within
30 ~ o l l l l - ollhl

0.
0

•

Public NoUce

Public Notice

0
0

ty in their competition sclledule.· Two ·
other notable Junior Toun nearby an:
geld on Mondays and Fridays. The
Top Aite WVPGA Junior Tour plays
on Mondays, but all spots in that
schedule are fillell, hopefully witll' a.
few locals involved. Howcvet", tile
annual Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit
is wide open, with play on Fridays.
The lint event there is Friday, June
14, at Riviera. Entrees must be into
the officials by Wednesday of e&amp;~:h
week, so get with it if you are goi~g
to play in those. Cost is $22 for ages
10 to 12 since lhey only play nine
holes. ·
:,
Full schedules for the remainder
of lhose events show : June 2 I ,at
Esquire; June 28 at Spring Valley;
July 12 at Ponsmouth Elks, July t9
at ~ellefonte; and July 26 at Ouyan
Country Club.
.
Any J union interested in Coinpeting may obtain registration forms
from any local pro shop, but remel!lber that the form and fee must be in
two days prior to play.
Many other events for juniofS,
· adults, aild seniors are on sc~u!c,
so keep the clubs and enthustasm
ready for the sunshine. That is just
around the comer. So many nw;.
velous things have happened ali'Clldf
this year, on can only assume many
more are on the offing after this temporary siege of rain.

'Thurs. June 13
Sr•. Cltlzana Centei'
Serving lit 5:00 Pf'll
Millie bylhlt ~Feu

59

WHin OR YELLOW

,2

CORN$ 69
DZ.

. ROSE BUSHES·
•

sa99

~\~~ .:
G
"'C.~
~~v .

~-

PLUS: NO DEALER SERVICE FEE :Customer Gets Rellate!f •

ONE WEEK.ONLY!
THRU SATURDAY, JUNE 15

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

�•

•

L."'JJe Deily Sanllnel • P8gl r..

I

Page 6 • The Dally S1nlinel

Pomeroy • Mlctclleport, Ohio

Wedn11day, June 12, 1916

Wedneedly, June 12, 1M

.

GED students recognized

Pometoy • Mkldl1port, Ohio

~

•

PEPSI
PRODUaS

BYCHARLENEHOEAUCH
SentlneiMWa awt
Recognition of Adult Basic and
Literacy Education students who
qualified for their General Equivalency Diplomas (GED) highlighted
the annual banquet held at Meigs
Htgh School cafeteria Monday night.
John Riebel , Meigs County school
superintendent and director of the
adult education program, noted that
over the past year 2S students
involved in the county's program
passed the GED test.
"Our centers are open", said
Riebel , as he called on the recipients
to tell their story and encourage others who dropped out of school for
whatever reason to enroll.
"lbere's no cost to those who take
part," the director said, "we're just
here to help."
He noted that centers are open in
Middleport, Pomeroy, and kacine.
and that there are both daytime and
evening hours.
At the Middleport Li brary classes
are held in the basement. Monday
·throogh Thursday at 9:30 a.m.' to 3
p.m. The Pomeroy program is conducted at the Meigs County Community Action!ITPA Office on Hiland
Road and daytime classes, 9 a.m. to
3:30p.m. are held there every week
day .. as well as from 4 p.m to 8 p.m. ·
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.
At the Racine United Methodist
Church, the center is open on Tuesdays from 9;30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and on
Wednesday through Ftiday from 9
a.m. to 2:30p.m.
.
Riebel presented numerous cer.ti ficates to organizations and indi•
viduals who assist by' providing meeting locations, materials, and ,other

S•••IJ

Mad•J tin
lAM-tO PM
291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OIL

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANnTIES
,RICES GOOD THRU JUNE 15, 1996.

Dream Catchers 4-H Club
The Dream . Catchers 4-H Club
met recently at the Catholic Church
with nine members and one advisor
present. Dues, candy bars, fundraisers, projects, club rules and activities
were discussed. The project deadline
was announced.
Mike Salser, Jr. gave the secretary's report and Rebecca Houser the
treasurer'sreport . Tag was enjoyed by
the group. Rebecca Houser served
refreshm ents.
Salem Center Go-Getters 4-H Club
Salem Ce nter Go-Getters 4-H
Club met recently at the Salem Town-

DOUBLE
'

• SEE STORE

.

2 LITER

•
AWARDED PLAQUE - Cindy Park was presented a plaque by
Lloyd Blackwood, president of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club, at Monday's Adult Basic and Literacy Education dinner at
Maiga High SChool. She was one of 25 recognized lor having
acquired their GED diplomas In the past year.

women-

GED DIPLOMA HO~IOREES
these men and
arnoog thoM horiored at.an Adult Baalc and Literacy Education
banquet lor having earned ttielr GED diplomas
In the past year. In the group are left to right,

comments from several of the students.
Plaques for getting their GED
diplomas were presented by Lloyd Recipients were Cindy Park, PatriBlackwood representing Rotary
cia
A. White, Kresha Crawley, Mike
· which co-sponsors the annual event
Turner,·
David Park, Merk Kerns,
with the Meigs County Educational
Joan
King,
Linda Atkins, Bryan J.
Service Center.

front,
Butcher, Cindy' Park, Andrey
Harenbarg, Cryatal Barber, Robin Al.en, and
Violet Riggleman, and back, Mart Kerne, Brenda King, Mark Bolin, Mike Tlirnar, Judy Batey
·
and Joehua J. Wright

Justis, Debbie Maynard, Nadia Bush,
Robin Allen, Crystal Barber, Rhonda
Little, Tina Butcher, Brenda S. King,
Mark W. Bolin, Joshua J. Wright,

Round Steak.~.!! ••••••••

199

Breast •••••••••••••••~~•••••
PORK CUBED
$ · ·
.
u. . 249
Stea k••••••••••••••••••~•••••

NYStrip Steak·••••••••~

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW,

Diet Pepsi or

uspA C~OICE BONELESS BEEF

Pepsi Cola
12-Paclc 12-oz. cans

9(
·Livers ....................... 6

$399 .CHICKEN

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$

LB

S1rlo1n Steak.............

,

.

•

.

lb.

WILSOWs-~-~--

·-

FISCHERS

Bo

n.o 12.Pil&lt;s Per Customer
At This Price Please .

·

7

•

_,,

-

ship Volunteer Fire Department with
13 members and two advisors present.·
Election of officers was held,
members are to bting aluminum cans
for recycling. A ttip to the.Columbus ·
zoo was diScussed. Officers elected
were President, Rebecca Scott; Vice
President, Kim Ritterbeck; Treasurer,
Matt Kirk; Secretary, Chastily Jude;
News Reporter, Chelsea Montgomery; Recreation. Courtney
Kennedy and Ashley Colwell ; Health
and Safety, ·Erin Bush and Melissa
Kirk.

BOUNTY PAPER
TOWELS
ROLL

(

279

·

. (
Franks ••••••••••~•••••••!~~L. 79

•

•

JOY LIQUID
DISH
DETERGENT

·$ 139

a••••••·••••••••~~ ••••

220Z.

SMUC
GENUINE #1 IDAHO BAKING

Potatoes •••••••••••••••••••
10#BAG

,.

SHEDDS SPREAD

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS SKINLESS

Boneless
·. Chicken Breast

.

$ 199
.

.

S

GRAPE JELLY
OR JAM
320Z

(

$·16.9

•

County Crock.:~:......... .

KflOGER

Grade A
Large.Eggs
,_.,.
Get one

,

I

MAXWELL

$399

KRAFT

89(

Instant Coffee .::~........
.

·

· ·

BBQ · Sauce!~:~••••••••••••••
.DOMINO
SUGAR
.

ANDERSON'S
Furniture &amp; Appliance
•

$

18 oz.

news---

Sunday, June 16

Mon. 9:30-8:00
Tues. -Sat. 9:30-5:00

'

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM$219

Judy K. Batey, Violet M. Riggleman,
Valerie S. Duffiey, Brandy S. Barber, ·
Robin L. Butcher, Betty J. Collins,
and Andrey Harenberg.

'.

JIF PEANUI
BUTTER

I

·BONELESS CHICKEN

naming a famous 1110ther.
· Janet Connolly and Ruth Anne
Balderson presented the. program
which was an article '.'About Annuals.
They told the group that annuals are .
easy to grow in warm dry soil for
planting. Annuals ·mixed in with
perennials make a nice colorful
flower garden. Annuals can be used
· many other ways besides a flower
bed: They can be put in containers,
hanging baskets, window boxes, pots,
tubs or wall hangings. ·
. A game about annuals was played
and each person received an edible
nasturtium plant. Bingo was played
with ptizes awarded by Nola Young
am.! Margaret Grossnickle. The door
prize went to Janet Connolly.
Refreshments were served to
those named and to Pauline Myers.
Mary Alice Bise, Nancy Wachter,
Grace Weber, Janice Young, and a
guest, Wendy Hannum.
The June meeting will be a
potluck picnic at the home of Nola
Young. Each one attending received
acandle for a favor.

Father's Day

•

7 UPDR
PEPPER
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Club carries out
beautification projects

---4~H

$ 49

Accepts Credit Cards

tion.
He introduced David Mayes of
Hocking College who works with
students in Meigs, Athens and Hocking Counties. Using "Moving On" as
his theme, Mayes said th~t for many
the next step after getting the GED is
to work. toward an associate degree.
He gave several success stones of
students who received their GED and
then went on to earn associate
degrees. "We'll do whatever it takes
to help you," said Mayes.
services.
"Remember this ...... education
. He co mmended the Middleport- works, it pays, and it can happen," he
Pomeroy Rotary Club for their sup- concluded.
port. the Meigs County Department
Judge Raben E. Buck, juvenile
of Human Services for their referrals. division, spoke on the importance of
and the instructors for their dedica- education and incorporated in his talk

Community beauti'fi,cation prOjects were discussed when the
Riverview Garden Club met recently at the Hannum home with Marilyn
Hannum , Delores Frank, and Theda
Haskins as hostesses.
It was reported that flowers had
been planted at the Olive Township
Fire House and at Riverview School.
A vote of thanks was extended to Tye
Brinegador his donation of flowers
for the various projects. Frances
. Reed reponed that Maxine White' rad, Margaret Grossnickle, Ruth
Anne Balderson, and she had pulled·
weeds from the shrubbery at the
· ~eedsvllle Cemetery.
Mrs. Reed, president, conducted
the business meeting. Plans were
made for trash pick up during the
. month of June. Thank you notes were
read from the Nell Wilson family,
from Ell a and Ronald Osborne and
from Gladys Thomas for remembrances during her illness.
A scri pture reading from Proverbs
· about Mother was read by Marlene
· Putman. Roll call was answered by

CUBE 24 PK 12 OZ.

•.

•

·

CAMPBELL$
SUNNY DE~IGHT
.
$ 119 f PORK .&amp;
Citrus Punch •••:'.:~•••••••
BEANS
BANQUET FAMILY
.

Entree•••••••••• !:-!:. :~
0

MEADOW GOLD

Ice Cream ••••••••••••••••••
1/2gal.

UMIT 1 PLEASE WITH $10 PURCHASE

... '

$229

c

$ '99
,

·•
I .

UMIT2

34.50Z

UMIT1PLEASE

I

•

11

oz.

$

••••••

ARMOUR
MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND qAJHROO&amp;\ TISSUE LUNCH MEAT
4ROU
12 oz.
COFFEE

•

!ill

99(

BANQUET
TV DINNERS
6..75- 11

oz.

(
•

�•

:· ~ 8 • The o.lty S1ntlnel

W..tnudlly, June12, 1 •

......

14-year-old shares an age old truth - greed is ugly. ·
ly ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landen: You failed lo
caleb the full sianificance of the lc.l·
· ·

Ann
Landers
199~ ,

Lot Anadn

.... s,...

n..S~.d C~ ·

ter from "Bewildered in Ontario,"
who felt cheated when he and his
-brother learned their father had left
. almost all his money lo his second
.wife who had a son from a previous

nuorriage. "Ontario" f~ .lhat the year-old. Here it is:
·
stepson eventually would inherit the
Dear Ann Landers: 1 was rul
remainder of his father's estate.
upset when I read the letter froin
Please tell people to remember " Bewildered in Ontario," who was
when they mike out their wills that mad because he didn 't think he ond
they arc Ieavins more than just his brother got the amount of money
"stuff." Their wills arc their final · they wen: entitled to when their
cornmunication with their children. father died.
·
A will that benefits stepchildren
It sounds like they wen: more
ahead of natural children will be per· inten:slcd in their father 's money
ceived as a statement regarding the than in him. If that h&amp;ppe'11"1 in my
value of the relationship. I know family, I'd be ashamed to let anyone
what I'm talking about because it know about it. Greed is ugly. -- M.L.
happened to me. -- Pikeville, Ky.
Dear M.L.: Well said. And .now
Dear Ky.: The following letter, the last word from a reader in Albualso from Kentucky, gives a better querque:
response than anything I might proDear Ann Landers: I saw red
ducc -- and it was written by a 14- when I read the letter from "Bewil-

dered," who was upset because he adore her. Sign us- Grateful in the
didn't receive IIIOI'C money when his USA
·
fadler die4. Apparently, the ·father
Dear Oratcful: 11wtks for your
left most of his estate to his wife "of response. It's a sentiment that I hid
only nine years."
hoped more people would expn:ss,
. My father is 81. His wife is 42. but as the previous writer said, JR:C(I
They've been married for 13 years. is ugly •• and there's too much of it
If my father died tomorrow and left around.
everything to his wife, it wouldn't
Dear Ann Landen: I'd like to
bother me one bit.ln fact. I would be respond to "Fond Memories," who
happy about it.
buried her husband with his giasses
My stepmother has been terrific on.
to Dad. She has added many years to
My husband passed away recenthis life. After Mo~ died, Dad was so ly. Since he was very fond of playing
depressed we were worried that he poker and blackjack, we decided
would just give up, but "Mary" he'd look more natural with a deck
came along and the gloom lifted. He of cards in his hand -- and that's the
is a different penon, and we all way we buried him. -- Grace Fe~ll •

Younastown, Ohio
Dear GI'ICC: Beau~ful! I'm sure
he would have loved 11.
Dear Ann Landen: Then:'s been
some baclc-and-fonb ~bat;tcr in your
column about the uwgruficance of
the lowly penny. I submit the following item from Newsweek:
"!knew when: he was at night,"
said Michigan : · resident Betty
Tregemho, refemng to her hus~d
John's collecbon of mo~ than a~~~­
lion neatlr rolled penntes -- w~cb
he traded m recently for a new pickup truck.

a VICinlly

BISSEll IUILDEIS, INC.

LIIDI'S

PAlmi&amp;

11111101 lliiliii
I'RU lllWATES

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

' lr I' I &amp;et •
t. yw.
111r "IIIP'KI
1 IPIIIICU

Ull

"•taw
tao
· ~;:==~::::"'::100==~
IOIIIT IISSILL
COISIIImOII

•

•Gan~ges

11"'11 IIIPIORIIIIII
Sieling, t:oncret., .tc.
P.O. Box ZZO. --~ 011.
614 388 98651111111

FOODLAND

First birthday
celebrated

Coca Cola
Products

Ground

_Tiaira Leann Richmond, daughtet of Misty Pierce and Heath Rich·
· mond of Middlepon, celebrated her ·
·first binhday with a pany at the
ll:fiddlepon Park on June 5.
. A Lion King cake was served
_with ice cream and pop. Attending
.; · were her parents and her sister, ;
Natasha Knapp: grandparents, :
Kathy and Jerry Strickland, greatgrandparents, Doris and Basil
.H,aypes, Amber Evans, Lori Pierce,
Kayla and Stephanie LeMaster, Lisa
-a.UfSandra Painter.
Tiaira is the granddaughter of the
Uite Michael Pierce. Sending gifts
were her grandmother. Shirley
Tyree, and Becky Tyree. ·

Pk:k-up dlle8rdad

llettao1ee,IPPII- l
·.IIIIIIIY melala.

. 614-992-4025

Beef

•Addlllonl

F'' .'

•Siding

tft;,,U~ tlfet«~

Hellt Pumpe,
lnltDCII

for lllllltldlltl

: ..... -

ofloollng

"NO Job Too urge or Too.Smell"

-Pelntlng
f1PIE EITIIIATEI

(114) •• 511311
114 112-2711

•

.

H&amp;H

.

H0111e
Remodellnl

loofl•t .&amp; ·
llock Work
Free E.tlmtiCe•

992·276i or
992·3274,

--

IENN

Ptt. 773-1173
108 Porne
Street

S1ntng S.E. Ohio a Waet VIrginia

ToH Frae1~117

·

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

(614)
992·2364
.

110

.

742'·3212

nl11!

SAVI!R$...•

DUMPTAUCK
SERVICE

plastic 'Ia
·gallon

Orange Juice

$ 29
~

0

9-11 oz.

JEFF JONES

Jones earns
nursing degree
. · ·Jeffrey Dean Jones. son of Frank
arid Diane Jones of- Reedsville,
· rec~ntly graduated from the nursing .
program at Hocking College, . Nel·
son ville.
: . The 1982 Eastern high School
graduate is . em_Pioy~ at Veterans
Memorial Hospttal, Pomerov where
he has worked as a paramedic for I0
y~ before entering school.
.
: , He is a member of the Me1gs
County Emergency Medical Service
and the Reeds ville Squad 90. He
plans to further his n~rsing career
and will be returning .to Hocking
c~llege in the ran.
· ·'J,.,nes. his wife, Linda, and their
Bradley and Taylor, reside
.~

Cookies

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783
li14-985-3813 CK 614167~
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"

Seven Up

O'Bienea . Memorial Hospital luis . an
Immediate, full·tlme position available. We
otr• a very comp8tltlve alary
as well
as excellent education and other health
related beneflta, . Supervisory experience
preferred. Five years of hospital nursing
experience required. A minimum of 2 yeeri
critical c:are experience required.
cations can be picked up In the Human
Ruourcaa Depalbihli1t, O'B'-a Memorial
Hospital, 55 Hcepit,al Drive, Athens, Ohio
45701.

Ext. 7907

$195°0
._

2
··

$ 99

GIJttttrs .

2.99/min 18+
T.T. Phone Req.
Serv-u

'Mr. Bee

99

13oz.

Hagan
Ice Cream

·~· i
il .• ~

MULBERRY HEIGHTSo Exceptionally N~ Home with a ve,Y
~location. 1 112 story lrama home wllh ~t and nice

hanlwood flooring. Drywall Interior, paneled Breezeway,
electric H.PJC.A. Appliances, paved driveway, 1 car garage,
sloping yard. ~ bedrooms, basement, &lt;;1oae to Hoopltal and
local doctors ollice. NICe area, perfect reHrement home for
the young Of !he old. Cell lor you appolntmen11
,

Sqt

99

$

Maxwell House

Coffee

HALEY ENGLISH

36-39oz:

s

·9 9

6

FREE
Rolls ~J

LETART• Lttrge level lot filled wllh flowers, lruil f!aes and
also a ·14' x 70' mobile homo wllh room addition, patio,
applla~s. 3 bedlooms; 2 baths, alec. heat, CIA, well and
TPC available, HPtiC and JICilJIIOU8 River VIew.
ASKING $31,5011

Approximately 3 Acras of Level ground wllh 8 24' x.45'

· building/trailer tot with TPC water lep. Drilled well, eeptlc.

Banquet Meals
EAS.TMAN'S •••

ASKING $54,5011

: Moflon Building. Some fencing, drtveway to building. Also a

Asst.

English observes
fi.rst birthday

Installed

5118$4 TFft

6-11 Oz '

Your Community· Minded Low Priced SuperrnarL-fs
'lilf
Ohio Yallay ·Open 24 Houra • CloH Mid. S.l- Sun 8-10
Buckeye- Mon. ·Sil 7-11; Sun. 8-10; Big !lend· Mon.-srt 8-10
Twin Rivera· Opa!l 24 Houra. Cion Mid. Silt.; Sun. 8-10
. O.lllpOilt· Mon.· Sit. 7·11; Sun. 8-10 .

· Along pawd road. NICe 8it&amp; suitable for home. gatden and or
; IVeiiiDCk.
.
ASKING $30,000
8UCI('I'OWN !lOA~

Very ~ tew11 811e thet contains three

tots. Paved road. TPC water available. Nice building or
. mobile home 11118 with a River VIeW.
ASKING $8,5011
RACINE· Ap()te Grove Road-,Approx. 1.873 Acres, ground
with a 1119t - 14' x 70' Mobile Home. 2 bedrooma. bath, front
porch deck ceiling fans, appliances. Central Air, S.G.
FurnaCe TpC waler, IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII
.
·
ASKING .$29,1100

WE NEED U&amp;nNOSI Spaclll requaeta for wooded
pi'Ofii'1Y, 11ao raquaeta for Tuppera Plaine,
CIIMIIIF IIICI For Ferm unci All OVer. Buyerw ara
heN to find thel SPECIAL PROPERTY! IF
YOU WANT TO SELL "NOW IS THE.n~EII" .Gril!
USACALLI
·
·

c:omlnlli

3574.

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

..eplac._l WWows
..tiltl S:.ages
.Stq ~ &amp;wittlaws
..aa.AMII111s

992-3838
'

•ng, Toys, Ca r Stereo 1 Kic ker

Speaker, Ballcards, D•shes , Kn•ck
Knacks, Etc .

6/13t h, 14th, 151h lillie Of Every ·

thing. 1056 Second Avenue.

16114\h., , 5th. 2 Miles Out Kemper
II

Sceattd

Gera•I-

Ewlrlatf•p

Tlu..s.L 1N
Hlmlciclt On!¥e Rd
Pameroro Ohio
-7173·
__ ,..

Summer Images

SAWMILL

New Location
Middleport, Ohio
WHh3 Beds to
Serve You Better.

B"""silw Mil

614-992-2524

3:1124 Happy Hollow Rd.

Truck:

Middleport, Ohio 4576()
Danny &amp; Peggy Srickles

coin&amp; , watches . estales,,. Qsby
Martin, 614·992·7'441.
·

....

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. CJ)ina,
Silver. Gold, Diamonds, All Gld
Collectibles . Paperweights:- Etf:.
M .T.S. Coin Shop , 151 SeCond
Avenue; Gallipolis. 614 ·446-284~r
Truck !Opper lor 1989 Dodge 'OA;.

kota. 304-895-3900.

J

~

;

Walk Dehtnd Gravely tracfoif '-&amp;
mower. 30 4·882· 2695.
·
Wan1ed To Buy Used Mabife
Homes_ Call : 614·446·0175 ; :
Wamed

To Buy :

1 Acre

..
..

..'
!

Ol'taAd

CX Lot Wilh Utililles, Wanted.:·'fl-·
by sitter, With Referenc:es "F~2
Nighi!,'One Day, 614·4o48-014a.a :

&gt;•-

EMP LOYMENT
SER VICES

11 o Help Wanled

••

$·WANTEI&gt;-S
10 people who need to lose
weighl &amp; make money, to 1ry new
patenred weight-lOss product.
304~713-5083 24hrSid8t
· t

$200 ·$500 wkly in your sf&gt;a(e
lime. No exp needed. Call oow,
open 7 daya. 14071875-2022•E•}.
0521&gt; H21
, '
$35,000 1VR. INCOME Pol&amp;n!lal.
Rea&lt;11ng Books. Tot! Fre. (1t 800898-9778 Ert R-281 4 For Oetalit: ' ·
' A.T T ~ : Point Pl easant' Po st31
Posi tions Perman ent fu ll timt 1dr
clerklsoners. Full BP,elils . ,F,qr
e11am. application ana salary.info
call : (708)906 -2350EKt. 3570.

Bam-8pm.

AVON ! All Area s I ShirleySpears, 3l4 :67S. 1429.
··
4 Potemlal leader ~ Ser~ou!ty
terested In Investing Few Hour s
Weekly In Part -Time Busin_!!U,
614-.446-1236.
' ~

in·

..,.,1.,.... "
' .......

GEIIEUL
CONtUCTORS
Siding • VInyl
Aluminum • Roofing
New•Repalr

Gun.rs&amp;

..........

'

'

Downapouta
.F... Ea~ ,

982-31107
. 11111111-

"

•.

Phone 992·2489

MGM

1. . .11888800
!xt127'7

'lliulflo'lblla Ph I iiCI
lttt

Top dollar - antiques, lu1 p 1t~e.

glau. ch ina . cloCks . gold, Silver,

12-$20.00
16-$25.00

. 614-742·2193

Neild Dlnictlon?
.Love
Business
, Family Matters
Allow Your
Personal' Pllyc:hlc: to i
AealatYou
'

~ (111) •••

Paying Top Dollar For Junk Cars, ·
Tr uc:ks, &amp; RUnning Veh•cle,s To
S10 -$50, Oao.Je. 614-446-9575. ·:

A.AA Driver's Education TraiRing
School Instr uctors Needed FOr
The Gallipolis &amp; Pomeror Area:.
Permanent · Part-T1me. Ideal For·
EXTra Income . Will Trt~ in. Must Be
Rel iable , Have Good Dtt~ i ng
Record And Valid Driver' s · u ~
cense FOt" AI Least 5 Years. ~ub­
mir Resl.lme To ; CLA 388 , ..cJ~
Gallipolis Oail~ Tribune, 825 T.ft!rf
Avenue, Ga!lipolls, OH 4'5631 . • • •

!m/1

mo. pd.

.

Herlls

Road. Girls Clothing 0-4 T,

T.V., Household Items.

H&amp;H·
Portflble

5IWI- pd.

'

Non- Worktng Washers , Dryers,
Slaves, Ae frtgerators , Freeze~.
Air Condilio ners. Color T, V.~ .
'IJCR's, Also Junk Cars. 814· 2'56 ·
1238.

.. .

..

TFN

FRAGUNT
FIELDS

.

Free

614-441·7558

814-241'12120--

773-5033.

15 Yrs. Exp. uc. · Ins . Owner: RiCk Johnson

.

Pent by - k or month.
3CM-372-5688 or

J &amp; D's Auto Paris. Buy ing sfi ·
vage veh1c1es. Selling par!s -, 3(111 ·

• Top • Trim • R~;~moval ·
• Stump Grinding

Quality Work
Competitive Rates
Rea.:

· lara-lola,
hlldng,
flailing.

Sale

(614) 441-1191
1-800-5 08-8887

SlmCE

al81lona, n011'fiOI'Iallle

Brown, Black MiKed Dog, Mill
Area , 614·256·1318, 614 ·

' 614-446-7171.

WILDIII

l!lactrlc hook-up, dUmp

: While Black, B1own Walker

7, Home ln!enor, Childrens Cloth-

Owner: Ronnie Jones

LEI.USK

Bridge, 1 mila from
Apple aro.., Ohio.

LOST: female Boxer, brindle co l, lasr se'!n Thursday 6!6/96 on
9 Mile Rd. Call colle-c! 304 -

3 Family Garage Sale : 4 Miles
South, Willis Funeral Home, Rou te

20 Years Experience • Insured

-

PONDEROSI
. PRIMmVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On $L Pt. 3aa W. 8 miles
from Ravenswood

Minersville v•cinily, 6 14- '

Gallipolis
&amp;·Vk:lnhy

Top, Trim, Removal ·
&amp; Stump Grinding

All Kinds of Earth Work

-

lo S!: 10 yea r Old fema le Oober-

Ya~

Howard Excavotin

614-1192·2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

Clean Lara Medel CarJ .. Or
Tr ucks, 1990 Models Or ~er,
Smith Buick Pomiac. 1900 East- ·
ern Ave nue. Gallipo liS.

617191!: ~aclc male dog
with tail clipped, Keebauoh Rd vi-

1-800·291·56,q9,

Truc:klngUmastona
Bulldozing and
Bac:khoe
Services
_ j
House Sites and
Utilities

Bool!.a; State And County HC.11ry,
Gun s. Hunling , Fishing, 8iO_bra ·
pht es , Deba tes, War, 8t)·l46·
7282 Evenk\ga. .
• .. .,
'

sale lei! overs;. 304 -675 -

JONES' TREE.SERVICE

They have .helped
millions find fortune,
success and love.
The future starts today!

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

8 week okf male k•ttens, blue
call614 -992·7472 anyl•me.

Losl· male German Shepherd,
Bald t&lt;nob-Pontand area. 614843· 5390 or 614 -742-1418.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Pomeroy, Ohio

t96&lt;J'S toy·s, G.l. Jot, Star l¥__ar's

ect WtU pay la1r price ba~Cf on
condi tion. 61 4..4,tHS630 after 6
pm
:~

clnil)', 814·985-4463.

Limited Time Offer
Call today with your
window sizes for a free
quote!

949-2168

(619) 645-8434

537 BRYAN PLACE

OFFICE 992·2259.

Large Block Building, You Tear It,
You Keep Material, 61&lt;1 ·446 -

ored. 304-675-1340.

•Double Hung
•Insulated

Downap6uts .
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
IHSULAnON

.:4

Kittens. long haired , liter tra 1ned,
active &amp; playful. 3JHI75-8832.

Male Beagle, full blooded, rr i co l-

.Free Estimates .
•'

Kinens to good home. all co lors.
CaM eveni,ngs 304-675-1879.

Pomeroy, Ohio.

367.0266-1-800-950.3359

~

3749.

low seat, 13$ Burie~nut A.ven ue,

•Tilt-in

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yt&amp;.
Serv-u (619) 645-8434

&gt;!__ .;·

Asst.

•

IC·CCU NURSING MANAGER

1-900-988~8988

, ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Ext. 4193

12 pack

a mo. old Norwegian Elk hound
German Police Wolle, white, ha~
had al11holl &amp; wormed. 304-1175-

~ad&lt; Lab, 814·992·6122.

Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittings - Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; flex fining• &amp; Walcr linings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

Cai11-91J0.868-4900

Diet or Reg.

2mo. old, 4-females. 1 male. Call

anytlma 304-675-8213.

Female Beagle &amp; m,.le m••ed

4" S&amp;D- perf. - solid pipe
. 4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp;: 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" 1hru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (I 00' roll's thru 1.000' roll'&lt;)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe

Wanted to Buy -

$ Black m•xed breed pupp ie-s,

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

HOWird L. Wrltetel

Real Estate Generel

Potato Chips

Haley Francine Engli.sh, daughter
of Jeff and Janie English, celebrated
her first binhday recently a with a
p8rty at her home.
.
· A cookout was followed by 1ce
cream and cake.
Attending were her sister, Abby
Stew.an, her grandmother, Dorothy
Amberger, Meg · Guint~er .and
Chelsea, Mila Woods, Ahson and
Christian, Anne Casci, Bruno and
Rocco Chris and Julie Schtrfel and
sim. ' Karen Bendell, Becky
Guinther, Nicholas and Jacobs,
P$lge Cleek, H~nnah and Olivi~..
. Sending gtfts were paternal
gt:Jndparents, Howard and Phy II is
English and Anne Chapman.

R

$

12 ~eeks Old 614·256-9340.

Black &amp; WMe Could Be

Meet your match

range

3 Female, Brit\any Spaniel Pups,

985-4422

l.,

Giveaway

lens. Call 304 -895-38fj4 afler
Spm.

St. Rt. 7

Cheater, Ohio

Fresh Sealtest

40

I &amp; WPWTICS AID SUPPLY

R.L.IOLLON
TRUCKING

-·-

90

Personals

6267. No alcoholic be\feraoes.

1-800-4189-3943.

Public Sale ; :
and A6ctlor( ; ~

80

005

Calico molhar cal &amp; 4 male kil·

Dlrt•Sand

20 oz. NRS $2~79

rnurad8y, JuM 13th. 8am-3pm.
S1111e Rout• t24, Minersville,
... ' ...,.,. ...... opplienc"·

' ANNOUNC E r~ENTS

First 10 leams- $85 plu1 rwQ
ba11L614-667-6122. 814-378-

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding ·

Limestone • Gravel

Umlt 2 with addlltlonall
pure: has•

&lt;li.,.,

R1ck Pearson Auchon Cocr-pan.-.
full 11me au(l•onaer. co~et e
auct• on
serY tea.
Ucensed
166 ,0tuo &amp; · Wes.1 VIrginia, ~··
773-5185 Or 304-773-!1«7. •

Men'aaahbaH tourna'ment· June
15-HS. Reedsville. nUn ot tnin&amp;.

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
t ·
.
Complete Remodeling ·
· Decks "- Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
· 35 Yea,.. erp.rtenCII

Industrial• Automotive ·
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Conden~raftloae Assembly&amp;

MVIRL

30 Announcements

BIB RDDniG and
CONS,.RUC71DI

441 lt11

RIIIL

•

FAX 773-AI1
Mason, wv

•

wllh "-,..,I Hr.tke to IMCA It up

RIAL nHI!

REDUCE : burn all Ia~ like OPAL
lable ta and E-VAP dluret1c.
Anilable Fruth Pharmacy, Mid·
diepaft

We will wOik wilhln y.our budget

.

Mobile Home 'Heating &amp; Cooling

CLASSIFIEDS

6 pack

---nl,

N. IOR187. vo e milooiO Gurwille.

Authorized AGA DIStributor
• Waldng SUppiiae • Industrial ~ • Machine Shop
SaMcae • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding ·
• Alumlnum/Stainleu • TOOl Dreuing • Ornamental
Steps ·Stalls, Railings, Pallo FumHure, Fireplace
Heme. Planter hange,., Trellises &amp; lois ol other stuff!!

and ManufaCtured Housing
F-.AII

-NawOa,..a
oflema 1tllllij

21M3 8ASHAN AD.
Pw •• Ohio 45T71

•,

MLYIIIIBIR8.
·
••

...... .._.

2 Liter

Sibs or
mo{e

at an

Orror. chlflll 'COOl·

-

SMIT•'s
COIRIUmOI

aam-Bpm

.

.

:=:::;::::::;;::::::

Ji'REE

Tenderbest Quality

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

••'•"
..

m~~e~

$5.00. .......
&lt;011CI&gt;'bad. enc1 '"*·coliN·- ·
1 11nr
614-992•7643
{114.... 3013""..... . .
•
Pt. Ple•lflt .
{1141141-2011FAX
M.l.l.
&amp; VIcinity : ·
(No Sunda'-·.Calls)'
L
--JS~~~~~---J!1~4~~~·=·~~~~=-~MG==HT~~ ~----~~--~~~:~:· ~~~ GunviHe R tdgt.Communily tale,
·~ .~' L.--------~~~----~~----~-----=~;·~~~-~·
•1 . .
•
hu..,.
6ml, 19 houMI, 33 llmilies,' .klnf'
•
Ul G
FrY•• •
13111 &amp; 1...,, """' Pt Pleal11rt,. RI2

MULEY'S
!looting, Pootft Addlilona

C..l
614-949·2096
TODD IISSILL

• Repl.cement Windows
-~ ..

(FREE ElmiiATES)
.. V.C.
YOUNG Ill
. 812.f215
Pon18107&gt; Ohio

I

oCornplete

TUTORING

Room .........., ___ • Rooting

· Allo Conawlll Work

Remodeling .
Stop a Compare
FREE ESnMATES
985 4473

nAIRI RICHMOND

. Gar~~gn

C:U.W•tt'41-.,ah1Mg .

•NIWHomes

14WII12

,.. . Hom.. • \ili'ly' Skiing New

-Raa111•, «lloo•

..... ca.r'oll•c"*l a Plulllblng
RaaGne

.. ....
rlor' Eldlllor
tie It
'-"1111•

j

I

EASTMAN'S

lldlllpart

(LimeStoneLow Ratee)

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlc(nlty
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline : 1:00pm the
day before lhe ad Is to run, Sun·

WICKS
HAULING

day edition- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon·

day edition I O:OOa.m. Saturday.
12th, 13th , 112 Mile Out

Rou1e 124, Towa rds Ru -

.Umeatone, ,
Gravel, Sind,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

14 , &amp; ,15, 9-5,
St Rt. 7, kna at summer

Earn up to S ~ ooo·s weekly stttlfil)g •
envelopes al home. Start now, no1
experience, free . supp lies. lnlbr&lt;·

ma don, no

obli~bon,

send SASE:

Buck Dept 77, 320tJ.C, E. Colonial
D&lt;.. 1308, Orlando, Fl 32803. " ··
Home Typis ts, PC usen nteded .•
$45.000 ihcame poten ~ al. Call f · . ·

800·513-4343 En B-9388.

_ ,, r.

1:'

Hous&amp;hDid Goods Van Operaro.011ver N&amp;f.lded Immediately €01!. •
&amp; Hqusehald Goods ' E1~;:. Re -~

quired, Dtalrt To Provide Quali!Y ·
Service A Muet, We Hao.Ja Tht ~"
Basr LOidtft In The Buainaaa &amp; •
Plenty 01 Work . Pltih Apply 'AI·.
t80 Columbue Ro1d, In Athltril 1
Or Can Milt 1·800·848-111191

Matelnlo.

·

.

"

'

I•

..

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio
Wedneat.y, June 12, 1996

The Deily Sanllnal• P19

Pomator • Mldclaport, Ohio

. :~.

NBA CrOIIWOrd Puszle

••··
-~-======-~~~=-~=-~~~--=-=----------------------:•..

PHJTJ,IP.
for Rent

O.lnonatretora- C nr~armas At·
ouOcs The Wortdl G1ft1 Ot Hauu
01 lloyd . Wo uld rou like 1 frtt
Cbr1stmlt lnd earn tX'Irt ttt J\?

~

Cal C11ol 81 4-14~ 3:10 1

·~·
llfiOI'I"'O
por1ComAN'S
ond ~PH'S,
Ill lot
lhihL

Opponuntty

14 a70 Comm odore 3 bedroom
Oller good lhru June 15, 11~DI

facllltlu , dose to echool in IOWn.

tlOUES

FREE HEAT PUMP woih tho pu1·
chase ol any mullt aectiOn horM

l•moled Tome MOUNTAIN STATE
OHIO VAllEY PUBliSHING CO HOMES 304-875-1 400
!NOTICE I

Nul\tng, Pinecr"l Care c.' 16 Pon..,rul Drive , o.mpoRo
Ollio. 45831 814-4411-7112.

recommends tl'lat you do bu &amp;t·
neal w11h people you know, and
NOT to Mnd money through the
mall until yo u have •nvelltgated

ln{mediolt Oponingo For Pori
TiN RN'o And lPN'o, A" Sl'iftl. lht oflororv
CtmpoliUvt Waves. Dtfr...emial

G lenwood 314acte wl3bedroom
2ba1h, 1D8D Brandyw.tina mobile
home san tor S2• .ii5 cash or
OWner finance lor $~ . 000 . With

$4,000

'*""' 304 562 5840

With Experience, Equal Oppor- AAA Driver's Educatto n Ti'a1ntng
tunnt Emptoyer Canted The Di· School lnstru ctor 5 Needed For L1m1t&amp;d Ollef l 1DD8 doublew1dt
3br. 2bath $1 789 down , 12751
r~10r Of Hu rling. P~nKFe~t Care The Galhpohs &amp;. Pomeroy Area

Center, 170 Ptneuftt Drift, a.f..
Vpoi~ OH 45831 , 814....7112

Pwrt'l'llntnt ~ Part· Ttme Ideal For
E•ua Income Will Tram Uuat Be.
Rehab!&amp;, Have G ood Or~v tng
Reco~~:t AM Va lid Dnver·s Lt ·
cense t or At Least 5 Years. Sub
m u Resume To CL A 388 , clo
Gal~ pohs Da•lt Tnbune, 825 Th~rd
A'tl8f\Jt, Galltpoils, OH ~ 5631

Local

PhytiCt&amp;nl offct II toaking
b r l PN wtll'l r~tnl ~tric ll·

penance, mtmmum 1 yetr rt·
qu tred Wv
llctntt
Send

re sumes

Box C -7 clo Point
Pleaoanl Reg;51er 200 Main St Pt
PleasantWv
10

ProleSSIOnal

230

Services

58

~~:J ladoes To Sal """"· 61 ..

lan dscaptng. etc Honest &amp; de
pendable WV 2055 42 304·6 75

3984

hr 614 245..0437

1979 Baton 1 ~X70 W1tl') 7JI1~ E• ·
pando 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath, TotJt
Elec tnc W1th Bac;kup Gil Heat
N:; &amp; 2 PorcheS 6 14·448·9543
Umted Offef Only $500 dowA on

a n1 new Stnglo wode on Sloe•
Free deiove•y &amp; se1up Only at

New Bank Repos Only 3 ieh. Sbll

1o_n_WOJ-:18_n;:.ly.:30.:.4_·.,.75:.:5-.:7_1.;.9'-:_ _

OPEN HOUSE SPECiAl $2,000

MOUNTAIN

GOod Pay, Aefere.nces Reqwrad,

STATE

HOMES

614 258·1559

Xl4-675-1400

Part T•me LPN 8 Hours Must Be
Avatlable For Call In 6t 4 446
4814.

Pnce Buster 1996 3bedroom
1825 down, $159/mo Free del•v·
ery &amp; se1up Only a1 Oakwood
Homes, N•tro WV 304-755-5885

Postal &amp; Gov' l Jobs S2 1 1Hr ...
Benefttl, No Eap W•ll Tram, For

-

~lo

And

1-1100-!&lt;36-3040

All real esrare adventslng in
lhiS newspaper IS SUbiect IO
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1 008 which makes it mega!
to advertise "any preference,
llmltaiiOn or dlscr1mlnahon
based on race, color, religion,
sew tamllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,

Salesman pasmon avatlable, tull
11me, eMpefl&amp;nce required, slate
salary r~ut remenl Send resume
to Boa G ~ 8 . "4Pt Ploasant Reg
•sler, 200 Matn St, Pt Pleasant

wv 25550

S&amp;cuflty Guards must be able to
work any shth tncludtng wee·
ke nds Must have clean pohce
record, good work history rel1able
tr ansportahon , dr111ers license
and home phane Pa~ starls at
$4 75 per hour 32 -40 hours per
week Call 614 · 669 2874 Monday Frkfay, Bam 4pm for appomt~

""'"'
SOCIAl WORKER

limllallon or dtsenminatton.•
This newspaper will not
knowllng~

accept

adllerttsemenls tor real estate
which is Jn violation olltle law
Our readers are hereby

Tho Athens

AIDS Task Force Is Seek•ng A
l•censed Soc1al Worker (LSW)
To Serve As Case Manager for
The HIV Rural Consortium Of
Southeastern Oh•o Th11 Is A Full
T •me Posttton Funded By The
Ohto Depar1men1 Of Health The
Su ccessful Cand1da1e Wtll Be
LSW Cerllfted In OhiO And Wtll
Have A M1mmum 01 Two Years
Proless• onal EJ~penence. Experience In Wot:klng Wtth Persons
Infected Wnh HIV Ia H1ghly Do·
suable Thts Posldon Involves
Moderalt Travel Starling Date Is
Ju~ 1, 1996 Salary is In The MNl
20's W1th Excellent Frmge Ben ~
afla A Letter Of Interest And
Cuuent Resume Should Be D1 ~
'8Cied To
Case t.tanagor
:Search, Athens AIDS Task
~ rce, 18 North College Street,
~m.1n1 OH 45701 Appllcarlons
~1. 4 Be Rece1ved Until June 14
~ ,1 98 The Athens AIDS Talk
~ 'rce ls An Equal Opponunlly

lnfonned thai ail dweUongs
a~~~ertised

in this newspaper
are avaUable on an equal
oppor1Unity basts

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes lor Sale

SPECIAl New 1996 U•BO Nor·
r1s With Glamour Bath and S1are0
Includes Central Atr, SlcwUng, O•
,hver1_ and Set· up MOUNTAIN

STATE HOMES 304-e75-1400
330 Farms for Sale
34 acres, 2 br mobile home, 6·8
acres tillable, askmg $34,000,

614 992·2822
40 acre larm wlthree horse barns,
andoor ridu'1g area wiAOHA cham
pton stalhon. brood mares, yeal·
10gs, 81 112 acres. lanced , new
barn, 614-28&amp;-6522

340

Business and
Buildings

Store for rent Front of Maan St
Post Ollace Call 304·67~2174 or
614-446-2200

350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

1 Acre footers, w ~;ner sepnc ga
rage blacktop road m Add1son
area 614 388 8978
25 Acres. Hannan Trace School
DaSlrlCI, Small Tobacco Allolment,
M1neral RighiS, 614·256-1811

1 112 Story, 4 br, lr, dr, fr, base- 1::;;~:;.:.:.::;;:;;;.:_.;.::.:;...;.:;..:;.__
menl &amp; sun porch, S36,000, call lots lor rent' Now 1ak1ng appltca
t1ons Country Lane Mobile Home
814-992· 44
Park Galltpolt s Ferry WV 30.4 ·
2·3 bedroom house, 50x100 lot, _s_,_5-_s_•2_'-,-- - - - - - located 1n Syracu se, app11ances lots For Sale Appro• 314 01 An
ancluded, call 614~992 5767 aller Acre 141 2 Miles From Galhpolls

oo

1

.

_

.

:

.

Raver Frontage, 1 3 Acre 10 Man
From Galhpohs, Serious Calls
onty, 61~-446 4053

:

3 BR 2 bath- ranch 2 car garage
i_lnpioySf
Spnng Valley area, close to Holz·
Soclal WOrkers, Now H1nng S23 1 er Hospital 614·446-7940
Hr + Benefits, On The Job Tram
1ng To Apply In Your Area, 1·800· Beauttlul 3 bedroom Rancher on
Jerry's Run Ad 11yrs old, sphl rail
339-6150
fence, garage breezeway, large
Takmg Appltcattons Bartender 1 parch, concrete dr~ve large barn,
Waitress. Full· Ttme. Apply In tenced on hoiSe lot &amp; OUI buoidPerson AI Carra Tavern, 856 ongs S65,ooo 304-576·2494
Second Avenue, Gall1poi1S
E1ght room house Ractne. lour
VACANCY BEHAViOR HAND!· bedrooms LR, OR. lam1 lw room
CAPPED INSTRUCTOR. Valtd t11eptace large kitchen, lull atttc,
basement, new ce ntral hea t and
OhiO Cert1hca11on Conrac1 Sup1
a1r room lor three cars , 4 68 acr
Off1 ce By June 24, 1996 Gall!a
Jackson Vmton JVSD, P.O Box es, could Sen lois, $75,000 nego·
157, R1o Grande, OH 4567• 814· tlab!e, 814·992 2924 or 6, 4 992
:

Mob1le home 101 1n country ap·
prox 2 m11es tram She~ planr n&amp;ar
Oh•o nver S100mo 304-578 ·
2683

~

2· 3 bedrooms, bnck , DR, new
w1ndows , carpet complele new
kitchen and bath, garage, lull

~

$12,000,614 258 1559

.

4pm

____

ba- 614·992-G380.

6971

245 533o1 EEO

Estate of Otv1lle Philhps 1s selling
a three badroom ranch 1ype
house a lrame house and 82 19
acres, more or less, at 37282 and

WilDliFEICONSERVATION
JOBS
Now Hiring Game Watdons, Sacur~ry Matn!enance, Part~: Rangers etc No Exp neceasary for
application and 1nfo cal 1·800-

37284 Hoiill'( Rd. Snowville, Sci-

plo ToWnsh ip, t.tetga County.
Ohto, described 1n Volume 299
299·2470. ext OH318C 8am-9pm.
Page 1b7 Me1ga County Deed
7 days
records. Call 614·992-5132 to ar·
Yard Work &amp; General Matn· rang&amp; appolnlment to vtew prop·
etty Sealed wrmen bids only, of at
tenance Tool PrOVIded, 814· 446
least $70 000 oo 10 be recwv~td
46ol8
by Crew and Crow, Box 668 Po·
170 Miscellaneous
meroy, Oh•o 4575g on or before
::::':':"':--::-::-:=='::':"-=--:-~-1 noon. July 3, 1996 Ten percent of
B~HAt.tA CRUISE I 5 days/4 the purchase pnce due at the
mghtl, Under booked! Must Sell ! hme ol btd Balance due upon de·
S2991Couple Umited Ttckela 1· hnry ol the deed Real estale 10
800·935-9999 e•t 6580 Man · Sat be sold as 1s
::llllm:.:.:..
· .:,:10:.pm:;;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ , GOV T FOREClOSED Homes

-------------1

180

Wanted To DO

Fo• Pennoes On S1 Deionqu enl

Tax, Repo's, REO's Your Area
Any odd )oba. Pa•nllng. carpentry, Toll Free Pl 800·898-9778 Ext
re~rt. lawn work etc 304·675- H 2814 For Current Ust•ngs
7112.
Miller. g 8 Miles To Proctorville

Bodr WDft on cars &amp; trucks, rea-

Brodge, Two Story, Colonial Bnck
3 Bedroom•. Double Auac hcd

21135 uk lor K;p: Ru~and

S85 ,5oo. Or House With 1 Acre
$62,000 814 886 7217

_..ble

riltl. mnor mechamcal
repatrt, oil changes, call 814 742- Garage, House Wrth 1 28 Acres,
Don's Lawn Care Aes•denttal ,
Churchel, &amp; Ceme[afles . Rea One bedroom home m Pomeroy
W111 sell on land co ntracr , 6 t4 ·
sonebloRaMtsl814 37Q 2847

992-5858

Genettl Maintenance , Pa1ntmg,
Yafd Work W1ndows Washed
Guners Cleaned laghl Hauling,
Commerlcal, Residential, Steve

814·388-0429

Georou Portable Sawmall. don'l
haul your logs to lhe m•H JU&amp;t can
304-875-1857

Ractne, four bedrooms, 24'x28'
LA, OR, laundry room, two baths,
heal pump garage, 1 4 acres (MI

lJ. s10.ooo. 6,. 949 2495.

Three bedroom home 1n country
Whites Hill Rd , Rutland on&amp; bath
1n-ground pool, 614·992 5067

La..wns-Mowed &amp; Tnmmed , Hav&amp;
Equ1pment, Reaaonable Ratea
S.naor Cuazan Discount, For An

320

Eodmn. 814·245-5755.

12x80 mob1le liome, good cond•·
tton, new roof, all flppllances an·
eluded, .5000 614 - 992~3571 or

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

ProfeaaJonat Tree SetVlee Stump
Remova l Free Eslimatesl In
suranc,, G•dWell, Oh10 614·388

814-992-5323

- · 81&lt;-307-7010
Sun Valley Nursery

1972 Homene Mob tl e Home 2
Bedrooms t 2•55, Recondmoned
Thfu OuL Some .Furnuure, $2,500

School
Childcare M·F 6am-5.30pm Ages
2 K. Young School Age During
Summer 3 Oaya per Weelc Mlnim.un ft14......S-3857

I'

wv 304· 755-5885

Johnson 's Tree Serv1ce Tr 1m· Rebate on New U98 Norris
ming a removal of tree shrubs &amp; 14x70 2BR , 2 Balh. Pluah Carpe~
Dishwasher, and Oak Cabanets
hedge• 304·596 1285

Pan T11ne LIVe-In Nanny Wanted
For 3 Year Old '&amp; 6 Week Old

I

monlh Free deli ver y &amp; se1up
Onl y at Oakwood Homes Nm o

::-....:::-~~-;.;;...:____ 1Oakwood Homea, N11fo, wv 304.·
Dozer Work l 1censed contractor 755·5885
ava ilable lo r driVeways ponds I :c--:---::-------

Now takiRD appUc:ehont for ex penenced roofatl 1nd carp&amp;rnlert Mutt have, hand tools and
transporlabOn Starting paw- $7 25

Wrll Do BabystUmg In My Home,
Flextble Hours, EJIPer•enced Day·
care, Can G•ve Refer.snces, 614

441-0568
)

Will do lawn ma'"lenance, clean
ger•g•l. guttert, planl llowera,
•tc •
more anformarion, call

ror

81 ..982-2085
Will Pravldt Quality

Chlld~ro

In

My Home, located Netr Holzer
Hotpta:l, C.ll 8U·448-81 13, For

Mort lnlormolion

Sc:emc Va lley, Apple Grove
beaut1fu! 2ac lots, public water

Clyde Bowen Jr . 304-578-2336

742-3807

.

'

1991 Fa1rmont, 14•80 3 bed·
rooms 2 bath. ali eteclrt(:, 6~
house walls heat pump, 400 aq
fc pr~sure treated deck lnduded,

614·992-5044 or 8t+II92-G134

Counrty home In town· 1 31• tcr·
es m Middleporr, Ohio Lovely

1988 Schult's Special Edition mo
bile home, 1 112 balhs, carpet
lhroughout, plus many e:-ctrat
814~992 7350 No Sunda,. calli

Appt ~ oti on o

tueiiablt ot · Villogt

Gr.., AptL 148 or call 8 1+1192·

3711 EOH.

••

BE AUTiFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES , 52 Westw ood Dr~ve
from $2U 10 $315 Walk to shop
&amp; mov tea Ca ll 1 1 4 ~ 448 · 2588
Equa1Hou1111g OpporlifliiY.
EHtcfency a~nmanr. across

tram
Mairf Sl Poll Olllct. 304·875-

2114 Of 61 ..... ~· 2200
Furnished 2 Bedroom.Apanmenr.
Acrou From Pa rle, AC, No Pets,
Relerences, Oeposu, $350n.lo .
Furnished 3 Rooms I Bath, Upstaus, UDittlea Fur rwshed, Clean,
No ?eta, Reference, Oepoail Re·

1

q ut red 6 14-~46-15 1 9

Furrw shed Efllc tency 2 Rooms,
Share Ba l h, S1851Mo Ut•ll11es
Pa td, 607 Second Avenue, Galh·
pd1s, 814·446-4416 Aher 7 P.M
Gractous hv1ng 1 allfd 2 bedroom
apar tments at V•llage Manor and
R•versule Apartments an Mtddle ~

port From $232·$355 Call 014·
992-5064 Equal Hou11ng Oppor
tUOID8S
Laroe 1 Bedroom, Large LIVtng·
room . Baltl K11chen , Apanment
$255/ Mo Ultlt t1 es Pa1d, 264
Fourrh Avenue , Gallipolis, 614 ·
388 1708 For ShoWing
N1ce two bedroom apartment In

Pomeroy, oo pets, 614·992·5858
Now accept•ng apphcallons for
one bedroom apartmenla Applt ·
ca110ns can be p1cked up at Po·
meroy ChU Apartments Oll1ce,

614·992-7772
One Bedroom Apa r tment 12001
Mo 2 Bedroom Apartment S2951
Mo , W1th All Ut1h1tes Patd, Close
To Unrvers1ty Ot Rto Gtande 614·

RENTALS
41 0 Houses lor Rent
2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
Tratler AC, In Gathpolll, 6t4· 446·
8849 For lnformalon

1----------2 Bedroom house, furmahed, '"
Middleport C•ty l1m1U, no pels,
references 1275mo 304 · 773·
5185

House 1n Clifton, 4 bedroom, hv1ng
room bath, kitChen , full basement
bag lot &amp; cafpon $275mo plus
utthltes Deposit &amp; relerences re~

ilo~trequored, 814 992 ·3090

Very mce house, 3 bedroom. 1
bath, garage, sun room, fenced m
back y•rd, sto~e furnished Out·
sld• pot§ only S500mo+uttlinet+

$500 depQsiL tali 30+675-7789
420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
2 /3 Bedroom Mob tle Home s In
Porter Area You Pay U!l ll!tes
References/ Oepostl Req
614

388·9162
127Q

Smail 1 Bedroom Mobile Home In
Kanauga, Ut1Ut1ea Furnlahed,
S1801Mo, 614·446-7.0S
Trailer for rent In GalhpoUB area

614·448-884Q
Two and three bedroom mobtle

homos, llartlng 01 $240-$300,
sewer, wate:r and truh tncluded,

814 992·2167
Two bedroom mobile home In
Middleport, no pet1, 8U·982·

5858

440

Apanments
lor Rent

'1 Bedroom, Super N tce , $2881
)Mo.. Plua Uti huea. Uaually
Something Ava1lablltt Sun Valley

Apar.,.nll, 614-446-2957

Groom Shop PI-I Groomtng Fea·
tuflng Hydro Balh Don Sh ee ts

530

Buy or sell Alverane Anl•ques.
1124 E u,un Sttaet, on Rl 12...
Pomeroy Houn 1M T W ~ 0 00
a m to 8:00 p.m , Sunday 1 00 to

540 Miscellaneous

Two apartments an Mtddleporr ~
ups!Birl has one ~droom, bath,
kitchen and LR, $300 plus ublatl8s
and deposn, downstatrs has 1·2

bedrooms, bath, lR, OR. $350
plus utlllt•es and deposit Avail·
able •mmed•arely, references requested, 614 992 7136.
Valley V1ew Apartments, R1o
Grande
Now accepting appllcat•ons tor
two bedroom apattments Apan
ments have a1r cond111onmg,
kttcl'len appltances, fenced m
play;round, laundry lacthty, on
&amp;tie managemer\t and water, sew
er, and trash pa1d by owners For
more 1nl01'ma11on plase call (81~)

245-9170, Monday-Thutsday

~om

Noon to 3pm EOUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY &amp; RURAL ECO-

NOMIC AND COMMUNITY DE·
VElOPMENT

450

Furnished
Rooms

Cucte Motel, Gahlpohs, OH 6 t 4
446-2501 or 614 ·367 0812 Efle
Clefley Rooms. Cable, A1r Phone
MICIOwave &amp; Refrigerator
Rooms for rent

week or month

460 Space for Rent
Tra•lar Space For Rent On Ball
Run Road $100/Uo, References
Required, 614· 4•&amp;·41 11 Day ttme,

Or E-..gs, 614·446·7157

470 Wanted to Rent

12,500 BTU alr cond jlloner, run a
on 11 0. one yr otd, 1250 , 814 ~

992·5&lt;21

PaWef Shtlt Cable Wmch Husky
Brute 300 XL Knuckle Boom Log
loader Mounted On Tandem
T,atler W18 Case Forklift Wtth
Buckel And log Forks 115 1 • ·~~6·
1417
18,000 , 8,000 Or 10, 500 8TU
Wmdow A1r Conditioners. 614 ~

446·7075

4w15h Above grouna pool , plus

1300 30.t~-675-3358

6 Ft Satellite D1sh, l tke New,

$1 ,500, OBO. Sal 01 Proto Deep
Well Sockels, S t50, OBO 614·
245-9102, Ahor 6 PM
6 Inch Jotntar Excellenl Cond1 ~

non. $275. 614-3N-2700
6 112 HP SO Gallon Maga Force
Atr Compressar Nwm Been Run
Or Hooked Up To Power, $380,
614 446 0519
7 Brand New All V1ny l Wtndows,
Still In Package S4 112 •40 Tilt k'l
Sashes. Insulated Glasa. F.u&amp;1on
Weldtng AI The Matn Frame And
Sa1h Frame, 1175 Each 614
446-4514

Boots By Redw1ng Chippewa,
Tony lama Guaranleed Lowest
Prtc:es At Shoe Cale. Galhpohs
Concrete I PlasiiC Sept1c Tanka.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson. OH

1-800-537-9520
Dmelle set w1th lour cha 1rs , re ·
clmer three ptece hYing room su
110, 614-94~2080

Electflc
Scooters
And
Wheelchatrs New /Used , Van 1
Car Lift Installed. Statrghdes l 1ft
Cha1rs, Call For Brochure, 614 ·
446~7.283

Fie• Home Cross Tratnmg Sys
tern Atmos1 New 614 446-8ns
Fuel 011 tank with 150 gallons of

Od, $50, 61~ ~ 949 · 3228

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu1l1 In Stock

Call Ron EVOII$ 1-800,537-9528
Kerosene lleater Ommy 230,

23.000 BTU $140 Sears Ken
more small relngator lor camper

$50 304-372 8480
lots For Sale Grav&amp;l Htll Ce
metery Cheshtre $200 per grave
1nctud1ng Corner S1ones and Per
potual Care 814 367 0214
Maple Standard Stze Bed , Ma t
tress Box Spnngs &amp; Dr&amp;sser,
Good COnditiOn, 814 44&amp;34t6
New Gas Furnaces. New GalvanIZed Duct WorM;, New Hood Fans.

614-37Q-2720 AFTER 8 rM

Now SKS &amp; box shells, $125. ex-

24,000 BTU Fndgedatre w tndow
AIC, 220 valls, older model, works
grtel $100 304-675-735&lt;
Apol•ances
Recond lttoned
Washers Dryers, Ranges, Rein ·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty Maylag, 614 446

ms

'v

Counuy Furntture 304 675 6820
Rl '2 N. Gmtltl, Pt Pleasant. WV

Tues·Se19-&lt;l, Sun 11 ·5
Electrac Range Call 304· 675·

1780
Uprtghl Freezer 18 Cu Ft S100,

814·448 3844 Aher 7 PM
box springs $35. 30+875-7577
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Wuher a. dryers. retragerators .
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
V1ne Street Call 814-446· 7398,
I

800-•99·3498

Refr1getator, Washer Dryer 30"
Electric Stove, 30~ Gas Stove,
Color T V. $50 Each, Microwave
140, A11 Condilionars, 614·256·
1ZI8
Uud Furniture 130 Bui.IHe Pike,
lamps, Desks, Cha1r1, Beds, En·
tertamment Centers , Tables,
Cnests, Typewriters 814 · 448·

4782

VI'RA FURNITURE
614·446·3158

And Layaway Also Awolablo

Q Free Oeltvery W11h1n 25 Mtles

Whorlpooi Walhtr $95, Smail Re·
lrigoralor' $75, 0,000 BTU Air

814 775 2360

And GauraniHdi t 100 And Up,
Will DeiiYef 614·660-6«1

TAN~S

3,000 Gallon

Upughl, Ron Evans Enterpnses,

Jackson. Ohoo, 1·600-537 95211
Tand~ 6000 computer, leteen,
keyboard , prtnter, lGt-up for hard
dnve on floppy disk, eac cond

$600 OBQ lots ot ox!la disks
304-G7S.IKMO
WATER WEllS DRILlED
Fasl Reuonable Serv1ce 614

686-7311
Whirlpool clothes dtyer, $50, 814742-2187.
550
r

•M'tal

Building
Suppii,S

AKC Roll Wetlers Taal s Doclcad.

AKC Reg Boslon Terne r Pup.
ptes, Euellent Bloodline ShoiS &amp;
Wormed , Now Tak tn l) DepoSit,

Asking $300 Each, 614 -4466270

cFA Blue cream Pers1an lemale
1 112 yrs old, all shots and de

Clawed $200

:K)4-&lt;J 75-1;223

Oog &amp; Car Groommg reasonable
prices, 15yr&amp; e•penence Call for
appts 304-€175-8831

Root1ng0)

Stdan.g

G~v.i.n*L

' I~. Glityalumt,,ond Painltd.J\1·
ttzor fatmS~eptoes614·245-5193

~··Bldg Spl 30'•45'111', 1 · 15'118'
. Sliding boor, 1' · 3' Man Door,
Patmed Steel Sid•ng, Galvalume

no-

•

1111 Coralca 4 Door, Auto, AJC,
~

Door, AuiO, AJC, Power

Lebaron Conv GTC Auto AI C.

Paw., 26,000 Miieo, $9,500 OBO.

814-37Q-27211

1993 Chrysler LeBaron GTC Low

1993 a lllubishi Eti•PM. 5 SpHd.
Red, Sumoot. A1r, 58 000 Mtles,

Askang 19,500, Mamtenance
Records, 814 448-95&lt;5
1913 Plymoulh Sundance, Au ·
IOmiiiC, Att, Rear Spo1ler, 48 ,000

Mlieo, Askong $5,300 OBO 614·

0429
570

• Q5

aller .tpm 304 875-6358 or 304 ·

WHI

Eaat

•842

SpHd, 8 ,000 W1l81, Len Than

•JI0 73 2
• 75

•
•
t

Book, $15,500, 814 ·3~-

• 7 5 4

• 9

675-2151
1996 Chevy S-1 0 414, LS., Aor, S

1989 Harley Cuatom Solltail

Spronger low mtes, $15,000 Sell·
1nqulr1es onl y please 199•
Pace cargo u aaler. carpet, 1n1tde
lights, 1wo molorcycle t el· ups

$1700 (61&lt;)949-2722

199• Mercury Cougar XR 7 V8,
32,000m• lOaded, exc cond ~-

895-3287

Mtles, Good CondHIOil, Ew trl l l
304·875- 1782 l8EW&amp; Message

Rudolph Wurlttzer Ptano, EJ~cel·
len t Shape! $1 ,995 614·256·
6611

Lois 01 Ext•aol814 446· 1588,
E•entngs, 614·441 -1803 Oaylome

14 Ft 'II Bonom John Boat &amp;
Tra11er Wllh Foolcomrot Torlltng
Motor, Battery Dep th F1nder, &amp;

SEIZED CARS From $175
Porschea, Cadillacs, Chevys,
BMW's, Cor~~tttes. Also Jeeps 4
WD's, Your Area Toll Free 1-

610 Farm Equipment

800·898·9778 Ext A 2814 For

1995 2 Horse Slant Load Goonneck Hone Trailer With Rear
Tack WHh Dresstng Room, 304

720 Trucks lor Sale

Curregt L111ings

Cub low Boy Flntshed t.9ower,
Plows DI&amp;C Grader Blade Cany
All, 81~·448·4641
Ford

2000 lractor wlloader,

'89 F 250, auJOmallc, slidtng wtndow m back, 300 6 cyl , e11cellent
cond ltton , greer work truck , ltrst
S3500 takes 11 home, 614 949

Ft

8522

3237

michael's Farm &amp; Lawn 61•·446·

694·7842
620 wanted to Buy
GRADE lOG WANTED Deiiv

W•. 25187 Phone 304 675 7598
01304 675-7682.

1980 Chevy 1 Ton Good Shape.

New T1res, $1 .•oo, 614·446·2848

Livestock

Wondsor 2 wheel Ortve, 614-448·
2845 or 304-&lt;375-2385
1988 Chevy 112 Ton V-6 Engine
PS, PB, A11, Auto Trans. "$5,495:
614·446-4225 Cali Ah., 4 P.M.
1988 Dodge Ram-4 wheel dnve,
one owner, 65,000mt S8,500 Call

304·6 75-3030 days,
4232nights

30~ · 675·

1993 Ford Ranger XtT AMIFM
Cassette AC, 814 388-0406 Al-

ter 5 P.M, Or Days 8 4 304 57S
4563

Reg1atered Ouartel' Horse Mare 8

014 446 0103.

lor sale, OU·949-2Q08

Yea•s Old $1,300. 2 We11ern
Saddlea, Angut HeUer's Cron

o

1995 Ford F- 150 4x4 AutomatiC,
AC , Excellent Cond11ton, S1 5 500,

814·379-286l)

TRANSPORTATION

80 GMC 112 ton, V·8, JUS! rebutll
eng1ne &amp; transm1SS1on, new pa•nt
JOb, all new bra lees, many new
paris, ask1ng $3995. 814 ·992

Autos for Sale

5388

1972 Scamper t81t pull behmd ~
camper, sleeps 6, totally self con·
ta1ned Detachable awntng, de m,nd pump, shower, range-lop 1
DY8n, furnace, and hot water 18'*
Must see to apprec1ate Only
S3 000 Call 614 4.tl6 3814 alrer .;
7pm
·

810

K 4
• A 10

33C~chrm.

a6

t Bridge on the
Rl-Unltll of
rnlallnce
3 ..... tfpl

111011

z

32 Chemical

2

8 No-.llat

4 IWrda

5 Wading bird
6 Drooped
7 Bank
atatement
abbr.

1•

I t

3•

Pass
Obi

Pass

Judlth 9 An O'Neill
10 Face p!Orl
11 Supported
19 Rage
20 Emerald ' ·
22 Fellnee
,. •
23 Fl-plec•
24 And others , .
(2-wde.)

25Hou26 Le.tl"f action
21 SIIPP"rv
28Midclay .

Pass

29 Grefted, In
heraldry

31 Flying toy
34 Actre••

.

'"'

,.

C:X.£, 1 NEVER S/1_\oJ
" OOJ!!LE &lt;:£»...Tf£. .
e£1'0~

The next mommg, alter a qutck tnp
to downtown Brisbane on the ferry, I
went over to the Brisbane Bridge
Centre to play in tis Wednesday mornmg duplicate with Meta Goodman .
&lt;This game is recommended as long
as you don't mind smokers, eepectally
smce the lunch is excellent and
cheap I We could come home only second , prtmartly because I forgot my
contract in one deal. h:ould have tak
en 12 top tricks m three no-trump. but
thmking I was m the laydown s1x
ch1bs. I took a stupid finesse &lt;only stu
pid m no trump, not m clubs! at tnck
one and held myself to mne tricks
We d1d well on th1s deal desptte a
biddmg misunderstandmg
One normally opens one diamond
when 4·4 m the minors, but I opted to
btd my stronger su1t m case partner
ended on lead
'
Easl should not have made a one dtamond overcall . she should have
made a takeout double
Meta intended two spades as a fit·
showmg JUmp in competition, promis
mg spades and clubs However, we
had never d1scussed 11 I thought she
had either a weak or strong JUmp
shift In case it was the latter, I ra1sed
spades
East felt she had ,enough ammo to
beat four spades, but Meta showed
that East needed a fourth ace
After winmng tnck one w1th the diamond ace, East switched to her sin·
gleton club. Meta won In the dummy
and called for a low spade East
ducked this trtek but won the next
spade and tried unsuccessfuUy to give
partner a diamond ruff. Now Meta
drew trumps. ran the clubs and conceded one heart trick for plus 590

,,

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•
44 - 0o.-l1ini
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46 Skeleton

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holder • ·
Frame for
•·
48

oxen
50 New

Deal

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of 1hem I like 'Lust for Ltfe,' of course." - Kirk Douglas
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..

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lAIII
Edited ~y CIAY I •oll.~&amp;~N:..:;::::::::--=-

0

.

'

..'

Reorronge letten of
four scrambled words
low to form four words

•

&lt;

SENHUD

I

OTBUD

BIG NATE

Uncondl!tonal hl&amp;ume guaranlee
Local references turntshed Call

nog , 814·9112·7478 or 014·1149· 730
287Q

vans &amp; 4-WDs

1884 Chevrolel 4JI4 Silverado,
loaded, 350 aulo 18,000 30•·

A·1 While. Maroon lnl. See Tom 875-5815 or 11115-3237
Kessel, 614-446-7787

1985 Ogdge.._ Caravan, 4cyl ,
30~·~ ,2,000 firm 30~·675·6336 even·

lrvs ,

1986) Ford F· 25D 4 WO, Motor
With Leu l'han 25,000 M1I8B,
Good Ttres , S5 ,000 , 614· 446

8035

1Q88 Bronco XtT 4 WD, 614·
446-3563
1888 Chev. S-10 4x4 Blal81. 4 3

-------Eng1ne, Tahoe Edauon, Good

Condllian, ss:800 Firm, Call After
5 PM. 814 441 0898 0• ~ea-.
Mt~

tOOO Dodgo Rom Van B-250 ,
72,000 Milto, 18,000, Con So
Ston AI' Gtiiipolio Daily Trobunt.
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis

Ohio.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
10 GET ANSWER .

l

W,O.TE, WHERE
Olol THE MAP

(614) 446·0870 Or (614) 237 ·
0488 Rogers Waterproofing Es·
tablashed 1975
•

99N

..

., '

I!&gt; NEW

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS

~EALANO~

A&amp;J Home Improvements· room
additions, knchen and bath ramo·
dellng, tnstall and r&amp;pait W.ndOWa,
declc, porches and patios, roohng
and v.nyl ltdmg msta11 extenor
stucco stone and briclc, damaged
s•dewalks, stepa and tudli pom1
tng For estu·ftate call 8t4 ·992·

Sovlnfl

You'll Find In tilt

Clossl(led Section.

Bother- Noble -Awful- Mutton- HER OWN
We have a ne1ghbor who ts always telltng everyone
how to run their lives My husband thtnks that's easter
lor her than runmng HER OWN

'

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~

JUNE 121

!WEDNESDAY

'

Appliance Paqs And Serv1ce· All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
penence All Wotle Gu.aranreed,
Frenc h Crty Maytag 814 · 446-

..

..

~rze WS GO,~... I'OSAY

7795

IT'S SIJME."f111N' B'TWEEAJ

C&amp;C General Home Malfl•
tenence- Palntmg, vtnyl sldtng,
car~ntry, doors, w1ndowa, baths,
fOOblle .home repa.1r and more Fot •
tree esttmate call Chat 8 t4· 982~ ·
8323
•

'PGT'flll'ltr' ANP
'SAUARA DIJNE •...

.

'

DRYWAll

Hang, f1nsh, repatr
Ce1lmgs textu red, plaster repa~r
Call Tom 304 67~ 4186 20 years
expenence
Earls Home Matntenance, v1nyl
Sldmg, roolmg e.ret~or and 1ntert·
or palntmg, power washlng, room
additions Fr•e Es11ma tes 814·

'
Floo!lng &amp; gutters c~omplete home

1986 Oldamobtle S&amp;dan. 23Ft
Car Trailer, will Sale or Trade.

'

• '• •

·.:.·

61Z0Wt&gt;l it&gt;l ...
1-JAA.T 00
11\lt-\K.?

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFiNG

$7,500, 614-367-0184, 614·886·
5540 laal/8 Mossage

11195 K car $750 304-G75-7930
1988 Celebrity, high mtleage, runs
good $800 304-773-5284

31 Hepburn, for

Home
Improvements

89 Thunderbird SC, two door, 3 8
litre, V·8, ehte model turbo, PS
PB, AC1 5 speed , power seats
and locka, '"Great Car," S5200

1984 Chrysler New Yorker, runo
'Uf88"850· 8t4-1192-7210

-

DOWN ·

..

lsuzu 1992 Amigo 5 Speed, Blaclrl
52 ,000 Mtles, Great Shape!

!

ca

:;s Tie up -1
56 Fair gr1ICit
57 s.ln

23 Succinct
21 PluMta ltllm
30F""'*
Japa-

27QI

Ron's TV Ser111ce. speciAitztng In
Zenith also serv1cmg most other
brands House calla, 1 · 800· 797~

·call

·-

"'~!:;,-~IT'5 Fit-IMl..Y

t977 Starcralt Tra Haul, Ev1nrude

.

,, .

THE BORN LOSER

85, $2 500 111m 304-675-6336

International log Truck Single
Allie. Leu Than 5.000 Udes On
Eng.ne, 614·446-1411

1184 Chevette, .t~spd

.

1974 Chateau Travelef camper,
sleeps 5-8, good cond1t•on. ask·
tng$3000, 614·985-4194

84 Ford Tempo 4 door automat·
1c left rear ta11 11ght damage,
97,000 mtles , SSOO 080, 814 949-2311 days Of 8H 949 2644
IY&amp;nlngS.

1975 lanooln 46,000 Actual Miles

A Q 10 6 3

54H~

22~Loullhll.

1981 Fo1d 112 ron F-t!IO 4x4 New

or 614-IW9·2017

PIQI

A 9 8
A Q8 4

SERVICES

1993 S 10 Tahoe long Bed, 4 3
Vor1ec V·8, Aula Tfan15, AC,
Trades Welcome! Cook Motors.

71

Campers &amp;
·Motor Homes

1998 Palmlno Camper Traaler AI
C, Heat, Refr~getafOr, Stove, Sink,
Awmng, Macrowave 61 ~-U6·

wr.

Baby

790

1978 Chevy 112 Toh P1ck -Up

Dark Shadow Blue pamt, chrome,
wheels, 31x10 50 ures. tinted
Ralce Tedder -L•ke N.ew, Rakes, Windows, bed hner new fuel sys
Square Baler&amp;, White 4 ·Row No tam, new comptete tune·up1 new
TiJI Planter, D11k1, Drills. Plows, tronl ~ end S[aeung and suspen ~
Bobcats, Also Have Baltr TWine, s1on parts. new brakes and bear
Hay Wrap, Sprayer Parta, PTO mgs 88,000 actual mtles Sha~p
Shalta, Sprocket Aaaembhes, Air 1ruck 14, 500 Call61~· 446·3814
COnditioning And Hydraulic HOI· aller 7pm
es Made To Order : Compact
Tractors &lt;4
For 48 Mo , 40 ·60 1986 GMC good condition 304·
HP Ttactora"And Hay Equipment 875 5182
8 9% For 48 Mo,; lease 50 HP 1987 Ford F250 314 Ton, 351
24121 ~ 800· 594-1111

-

•

IMliii'VS

2000t, 8 Used Mower ~nditlon ·
ers From $1,250 To $0,500: NH

5300 2 WD $2991Mo.. Car

6AM8l.ER, PI.A'f
SO SLOW?

Auto Parts &amp;
• Accessories

Ahor 8 PM

It's T1me To Malrle Hay! 8 Uaed
Round Balers From SOOt To

RIVE~80AT

Ball boat, trailer, 40hp molar &amp;
aCC81SOtleS $1 500 304·576.-

231 t day~

$8,850 35 MF . $3,895; 254 ln- TI\ICk $900, 814-446-0519
lernattonal d•esei, . S4~895, 1998
344 4X4 Rh1no, $8,795, 61•· 286-

\AII-I'( DOES
tt JOE BLACKJACK'
'
THE FAMOUS

3!133or 1-600-273-9329

11M19

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

21 Oppoeltll ol

Still trying to win

PEANUTS

1988 21
Cen tury Cuny Cabtn
Mar 1ne Radto, Good CondtiiOn,
$1 3 000 614 446 1588 A'ter 5
P.M 0!'6 J4 44Hfkl3Dayume

New gas tanks one ton truck
wheel" radlat)rS tloor mats, etc
0 &amp; R Auto, R1pley, WV 304 372·

;:-:..-:-:;.;.:.7,~;;.:::.:-;~~-1 Auto Loans Deater w111 arrange Ji
Strawbemes, Pick Your Ownl Call nancmg even tf you have been
ClaudeW.ntefs.8t4-245-5121
turned down elsewhere Up1on
Equipment Uaed Cars 304·458-

Kid
411 Hn
50v.ttlcle
51 ltluslcltl medley
52Yn-53 Roman 1101

Carol -

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1982 Camaro t-topa complete
body 304 675 S815 or 304 ~ 895~

Paldl, Open Mon. Wed. Fn, 8·8: 446·0109
Saint Noon, 814·245-9047.

IIIII SUndllnce

15 Pulpit
llloclellnMcl
17 Dye
tl PUIIIIII'IIng

Opening lead: • 7

Askorv $900.614-388-9194

1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee Lar-

S13S0:814 949-3228
New 86 Oids •42 T Tops Grey

...,...,_

By Phillip Alder

;;::r.:::::-r:-~-;:-7:"-:-:--::~-1 Stiver, One Owner 20,300 Mtles
Strawberries Taylor's Berry Full Ptlwet", Garage Kepi
(614~­

a.

40 . . . . of (oull.)

Year EJ~[ended Warran ty. 6 14

Budget TransmiSSIOns, Used IR•
bu1!1, All Types , Acceastble To '
Over 10,000 Transm11110n, Alao
Overhual Kns, 614·245-5677

Fruhs
Vegetables

I WOULDN'T
CHANGE MY
NAME FER
LOVE NER

MONEY II

1996 Honda 2 Wheel Dnve 3

760

COnsid&amp;rTrada,614-448-6120

LIKE
NAME

TO CHANGE YOUR
TO Mtt. BEANBAG

1994 Harley Oav•dson Softa ll
Cus1om less Than 4,000 Miles,

77 Oldamob1le 98, 74k , v g •
~--..;...------1 $1750, ·as Dodge 600. 114k. , 8 ,

sao

Mtt. SMITH••I'O

Swamper $200, 814·379 2282

2683

3 Monlha Old, $26,000 May

·--Jokwt-

South
•KJI073
• 5

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

BARNEY

1992 Yamaha Blaster 4 Wheelef
FM F Racmg PtJ)e, $1,500, Inter·
nattonal Scour 35 Inch Super

1ga5 Ford Escort LX, am lm s1er
eo. CD player cru rse control,
moon root. get 35 10 38 mpg call

edO

.,_NYC

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
South
Weal North East

~ow

1994 Dodge Shadow ES, 2 Door, Oars, $600,614 245-9107
'$6,700 OBO, 614·256 a34o, 614
258·6487

31 Osslnf
alllftUA

6 ar.lo:lltiW

20--out

t

a u~

11514 ~ 912·2906

Musical
Instruments

Motorcycles

Honda , Hawk "00 Runs Great

1993 Pon11ac Sunbird, LE ROd, 5

08-12·118

• K 9 6
• J 9 82
• KQ J 3

EEK&amp;MEEK

wheolo 34,DOomo $13 000 Cali

19 92 Suzu ko GSXR 800W

1Klnt -

Aawaarto PICtla • P\111111

4110--'
..wl
walwak
13"42 -lllld14Arcto:tKIII&amp;H 415 8utch - and

Ht9~ Jeep Wrangler soft top,
U lckey Thompson llfU I Outt.w

1993 Pomlac Grand AM GT, Ex·
cellent Cond1hon. low M1les. Take
Ovet Payments, 81~·367· 716g

Male AKC Regasrerea Pomera
n1an Puppy, Ci'lamplon L1ne, S250.
Border Coll1e Puppy, Not AegiS·
lered. Female Huslcy, $?5 , 614
Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding
Stud Serv1ce Puppies Groom1ng
Buy, Sit!! &amp; Trade, All Breeds
Payments We lcome , 614·388 ·

epm.

379·2249

.. Cylinder, 5 Speed, A1r, AMIFM
Cassene, 57,000 Mtles J\sk•ng

446-8627

North .

740

MT-of
811sat't'4-"1

12~

1192 Che¥roltt Convtttlon Van,
Vt.nT)qUI, wh111 Mch gray 1t11pe,
au ~amaDc:. color TV, VCR • .-ctdc
wnidowt. elf&lt;;lnc rf'lkrort, e&amp;eettlc
,.., Mit. mau a queen bed. ~ ke
new, 38 ,000 m1lea, u kl ng
1 14,500 . catl 614·992 6012 alter

256·11340, 61 .. 256-&lt;3467.

Sp e ed, AC, 2 0 L1ter, Approx ,
31 .000 MNes, Rear Spo~er, E~cel·
lent Condmon. $8, 100 61~ 388
8728

Stool Rool. 18,444 Erocltd " iron (614) 448-3243
$85,
Waohe1
To
Molch
US,
G
E
HoiMBidlt
1-800·352· 10&lt;15
1':::~:::-=-:=-:::-=----....:...--2 bedfoom tparlme(lt, '350 per
111117 BIIICil Chevy SS MoniO Car·
Almond Rolrlg.,alor NOII\'Or Mod·
IIEPO BUilDINGS
montll. S2ro dtposil, tn~del poid, tl,
$95 Gr- Ra1rtgidolre Ralrtg- Fac1ory Hao 2 Ail SIMI Ouonool 10· 1 Ownor, 3e,!IOO Mllto, Llko
01+992·5724
eroler, $150; Ho1p01n1 Ral)llt Har
n •• ld 1ngs· FOf 1mmedlatt.Sell, (1) I.
1;1:;;1•:"~·8=1~4-;:258-=-:1:;304::;_.--:~:-:--::
2 -.om. lurniahed OPI. deposit '"" Gokl $95. Ska119o Apphanc- out
45x50,
~ever Er..,ted Will Tallo 1987 SholbJ Chergor 2 2'1Urbo 5
os.
78
Vine
SIIH~
Gtlhpoiil,
814·
required, port of utilbOS poid. :JO&lt;I.
Balance Owed Call 8111:
Speed, Many Now Porto, 814·
446· 73U8, 1-1100·499·341111
675-6512
t-800-511-2580
. 448-8253
Conditioner $75; Horpoinr Dryer

UJiiJO Geo Pt~stm - •doo r, ve r y
fOOd COnd1110n, one own•'· auto.
Pl. pb, cru•••· ac 13,975 30• ~
87S.S788

Full blooded Shelue mm1ature
Collie pups, I 125 each, AKC
Reg•slered three year old fema le
Collait, lasste-color, $200 , 614·'
742-2050
I
'

7'13-59311
---

1988 Bu1ck LeSabre, excellent
r unnmg cond1tion, V· 6, PB. PS,
AC, power windows, $3800, 614·

Dew Ci!IWI Removed. 111 Slooll &amp; t.tdes, Excellen1 Cond111on, 304·
Wormed, Have Parents On Prem- 075-1782l-Message
ose• S300 Fwm 014·3U-9220

EQual Yaula (614) 367·0594

STORAGE

1Nt Chevy Colobnly, ps, pb, ac,
4cyl engine, 4 door, goo d gu
mileage, looks good, runs fine ,
•~•nt 11 ,500 114·387-7607 af·
ttr5:00pm

Sunbird

614·386-81114

New. $500, 814-388·9194

081Q

28.000 Moles, $8,100 OBO 1994

sate 1 Trade Yamaha Rac1ng Go
Cart, Ready 10 Race, au accestones.
w•ll trade lor 4 Wheeler of
State Man Garden Ttller, Ulce

eu-••e-

AKC
Regtslartd
German
Shepherd Puppies, From German
lmporta, Call R1verv•ew Kennels,
614 44115-1942

RCA en1enatnmen1 center wlra·
d 1o, CO. cassette player, 2 large
Relrtgeralors, Stoves Washers
And Dryers, All Recond1Uoned

1882 Butek Cenlury, 3 o uw. V8 , Auton'ebC, PS- PB. loakl. 1\Jna
ID nvea Goof. 11.000,

82,000 MiiH, 14 ,500, OBO 1m

630

$175 304-372-9460

NowTopo. 814-4411-1411

AKC Regastered Suer PupPtl l

ered or Will ptek·UP 'contact Harry
GoldsbenyJPaiJI Merc&amp;f Sawm•ll,
Inc 2606 US Ri35 South s1de

speaker~

Trantl'!'lflltOn, New Elhaull, And

30•-875-8095

A &amp; S Fur011ure, Mason WV 304773 5341 New Store Houra
Mon-Fr1
12noon· 7pm
Sat
12noon-5pm We Buy . Sell •
Trade Ask ror Rocky

•
•

June 15, accepung depo sl ll,

814 949-3028

Used 2300 Trencher Call 8U·

Oueen Stze Waterbed Wtth 6
Drawers $2 25, Enlertatnrpent
Center 11501 Sega Genests Wtth
11 Games St25, 614-446-2221

Eng.,., -

moteo. $200 Each. 111 Sholl &amp; 949 2045or8,. 94112302
. 81+258·17V3.

882·2195

Queen S•ze Orthopedic Mauress
Set And Frame Never Used Still
In Plastic Cost $800 Sell $250,

Goods •

A11edale Pups, Oorang , 3 Fe·

2187

614·9Q2-2291 or 814 992 -6391
or 304· 773-61113

Household •

$500 81+1192-3048

Ftve ton atr condllton , used one
summer. ask1ng $600, (61~) 742-

cellent Bn11sh lnlteld 303 &amp; box
shells, 1100, 614-742 1123

510

4 ~r old pooy wl saddle ' bndle,

$300 eoch, one mole $250, 100dy

Workmg couple wnh c:haldren
need nice, roomy, rental home tn
P.t Pleasant immedtately Call

MERCHANDISE

Sale

AKC mtni Pinschers, twa ltmalel.

• Merchandise

acces~mes.

Pets tor

Coll814-446.()231

Antiques

Blue sofa S200 Gold rocker cha1r
$75 Blue CiPia.n seat (for van or
AV) $100 304-&lt;375-5028

1 and 2 bedroom apertntntS. fur·
Quality Houaehold Furi'IIL!re And
niahecl end unlurnlahed, aecurlty - ... Appliance• GrearD~IIsOn
dopo11t requored, no palo. 814·
Calh AndCarryl ~NT2-0WN

992·2216

7354

net. ~d picture $75 30ot·675·

Twtn R1118f'S Tower, now atcepting
app!lca!lons lor 1br HUD subs1d
IZ&amp;d apt for elderly and hand•·

Full saze bed, frame, mamoss &amp;

Mobtfe Home For Rent. 814·446·

560

386 9946

_7_73:...::50:.:54;.;;....;.._ __
1,q.:;u.:.".:."";:..:.30;..&lt;Roomale wanted $250/Mo. Utl h~

Pad
l ·ue::.:;1.:..;.';;;·.:6.:.14.:.'4.;.4;:8.:
·8;:58:;5:;__ __
Unfurnished 2 l:ledroom house,
ntce &amp; clean no InSide pets, de·

,._model, ~ co~,::;~:;=======-

All Natural Fat loss Produ c t
lose We 1gh1, Feel Better, In
creased Energy $1 A Day 614
4&lt;t6 1236

capped EOH 304·675-6679

Block, briCk. aew•r pip81, wind·
owa, llmefa, eliC Claude W1nUtt'l,

Zonl lt
TV, older modtl, hlndiOITIO cab•

170 Xl F18nkiwt leg SI&lt;Nldtr Woth

Furn11hed Apartment, UpstairS, 1
Bedroom, No Pels, Second Avenue Gallipolis, All Uuhl•e• Pa1d,
DepoSit, 614·446-9523

1877 CO&lt;Vtho, -

pol 18 50 and""' Mollohan Cer· Rio Glondt , OH Coli 814 245
ptll81.....75121

614-446 8235, 614 448.()577

Starung 11 $120/mo. Gailoa Ho1el
814·446·9580
Real Estate
Wantttd
Sleeping rooms W1th cook1ng
l·l""a·n·d-W_a;...n-te·d20-Ac..;.•.;.•.s·o·,·m·o-ro Al10 lratler space on r111er A! I
hook-ups Call aftef 2 00 p m
304-773-5851 , MaoonWV
In Mason Co Call af1er 4 30pm
304 762
2035

VIR~ I •• Petttrnl llf0t &amp;elK·
ttont., K1..,. Ptfts ln SM. c..

800 ~m. 814·9112·2526

360

Aher6PM 6t4·245-1516
1D75 12x65, IWO bedroom, good
condation, lurmshed $5500, (814)

eptt , 1a111i eleculc, applioncto fu rnllhtd, laundry room

2bdrm.

MOUNTA IN STATE
304-G 75.1 400

Business

210

poouvo _ . , dlllorontiel wilt • ·
penef"'Ct, equal opportunltw emplayer. Contact the DirectOr of

INANCIAL

Suppllll

FREE CENTRAl AlA. 11x80

CorTl.,~ore 3 Bedroom and

ALDER

BullcllnQ

Apartmtntl

ACROSS

992 4232

0015

!!::!===~::!=~~~~==~lo:ok; for romance and you'll ltnd tl

.

wv 304 576-2398

ASTRO-ORAPR

'

·.

remodelmg decks. &amp; sad ing, 35•
yeats expettence, B &amp; B RQotlng
and Construcraon, 14 ·992 -}384
Or t-800 869 3!143

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

e

820

Plumbing &amp;

Heating
Freeman s Heattng And Coohng
InstallatiOn A.nd Service , EPA
Certified Resadentll!, Comme,clal

614·258 1811
840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Thutrsda)(,'J une13, 1996

RSES CERTFIEO DEAlER
lAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heal Pumpo, Air Conditlon4ng If 1
'lbu Don' Call Uo We Both Loiol
Free Ettonlllts, 1-800-29t -00118
61 Hte·e308, WV 0112145
'
Rnidentio! 01 CCIIIlmtfclol wfri111.
new tent1ce Of replirt. Ma..., U.
conood otaclrlcia 0. Ridenour · "
Eleclll~l. WV0003ot 304·175· '''
17118

•

,,

Two endeavors lhet appeared 10 be lola!·
fy tqliOductlve In lhe past might be revl·
taliZed In lhe year ahead. You were ctos·
er to oucceealltan you realized. This time
you will kiloW batter.
GEMINI (May 21.JUM 20) II you art
lnttuenced by your aaeoclat•·· auggta·
'tiona today. you might be thrown ofl
court111. Set your own f*llllld abide by
your own pr-dlllll. K~w where to

The
Astro·Graph Malchmaker tnstantly
reveals whtch Stgn&amp; are romanllcalfy per·
feel for you Mao I $2.75 to Matchmaker,
c/o lh1s newspaper, P 0 Box 1758,
Murray HMI S1a110n. Naw York, NV tOt 56
CANCER CJuna 2t·July 22) Although
you may feel an urge to spend your lime
letsurefy today. you musllake care not lo
~egfecl your responstbililies
LEO CJufy 23•Aug. 22) Associate wtth
enJOyable companions loday , bul take
care noiiO tmpose your will on them You .
should haue respect for the wtlf of the
rllajorily
VIRGO CAug. 23-s.pt. 22) Striving for
lofty goals wtll be an admrrable desire
tqday Hawever, try to keep your feelings
In chad&lt;. If something goes wrong, dOn'l
blame OIIMIIS
U8RA Ca.pt. 23.Qcl. 23) Asaoclalea wli
not bo receptive to your suggeatlona
tqday If thty think you hav~ a cfoaed
mind. At fe~. you should be willing to 1
lia1efl
•
SCORPIO (001. 14-Nov. 22) Conttant
vigilante will be nuntlal tOdtly If you
managt 1 delicate davafopmanl for
aomeone .,... Do not fat your gua1d
\

down, even

SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23-0.c. 2t) For
1he sake ol harmony, both you and your
mate should try lo bulk! on each olher'~
ideas Thts woll be a 11me to butkl bridges.
not barners

CAPRICORN CDec. 22-.lan. 111) Your
phystcai and menial energy level could
be high today , bul you might not be more
producltve Try to dlstlngutsh between
assertwe and aggresal¥8 behaviOr
AQUARIUS CJan . 211-F•b. ttl) Avoid
associating wtth a clique today r some of
lhe merrlbers make you uncomfortable
Instead. try to fi~d companlona who
spend !heir time In mora pleuant.ways
PISCES (Feb. 2Hiarch :Ill) If you want
olhers 1o help you to flnlth ·a matter WltfCh
1n1ereata you. ahare 'JOOI objectfvea with
them " you dOn't, lhey may hot support
you
ARIES (Merch 21-April ttl) H looks aa H
you'll be In a lafka1lve mood today, ao
you mull
you say. Hyou dOn~
you might diaclole • sacret '
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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-Community .calendar- ~Members honored ............

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family

:·

Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Ac;sociate Professor
cf F&amp;tnily Medicine

Que;ti~n:.l've had problems with iunioi -c·~ · nearty block-the u'rethra
leaking urine for several years when
I cough or strain. It has gotten quite
a bit worse lately. I talked with my
. doctor about this several years ago.
He didn't offer much hope for
improvement of my condition. Is that
true? Isn't there much that can be
done for those wh!&gt; leak urine? .
Should I see another doctor?
Answer: Like most body functions, the process of urination is given little concern until it no longer
works properly. Leaking urine, the
situation we doctors call urinary
incontinence, causes a risk of skin
irritation and infection and creates a
major social problem. Incontinence
troubles many individuals; with the
elderly population being most commonly afflicted by it. Fifteen to 30
percent of elderly individuals living
at home have incontinence as do
nearly half of those in nursing homes.
W01nen are troubled more frequently than men regardless of age, ·but
after age 70 the number of men with
incontinence increases dramatically •
so that their numbers approach those
for women.
The process of urination is actually quite complicated, and an abnormality in any of several body systems
can cause leaking urine. Let me
explain a bit about the process to help
you understand where problems that
lead to incontinence can develop.
The un nary bladder can be
thought of as a stretchable container
with walls made up of muscle tissue.
II is co nnected to the kidneys, the
source of urine, by two tubes called
ureters and drained to the outside of
the body by a single tube .called the
urethra.
Under normal circumstances, the
bladder slowly fills with urine. This
stretches the bladder and slowly
increases the pressure inside it. The
nerves' endings in the bladder send
information about this pressure to the
. spinal cord, where the information is
processed. Once the bladder holds
about I 112 cups of urine, t~e nerves
of the spinal cord send a signal to the
brain that we recognize as "I've got
to go."
The automatic signal to urinate
originates at the spinal cord, bu'tthe
need to urinate can a(so be strongly
influenced by the conscious portion
of the brain. That is how each of us
can normally wait until a convenient ·time before urinating. Emptying the
bladder leaves only two or three
tablespoons of residual urine, and this
decreased volume relieves the bladder pressure and, therefore, removes
tho urge to urinate.
Damage to the ~:!ladder or urethra
often leads to incontinence. This can
be a consequence of childbirth or
surgery . .Pressure from an enlarged
prostate gland or from a malignant

and bring on incontinence. Damage
to the nerves of the bladder or spinal
cord can cause incontinence. This
damage may be due to diseases of the
nervous system or pressure on the
nerves of the spine caused by a ruptured disk or spinal tumor. Finally,
damage to the brain - from such ailments as stroke or dementia - can also
bring about incontinence,
As the number of possibilities I've
just mentioned would indicate, the
processes of identifying the cause of
incontinence is often complicated. If
your doctor doesn't have sufficient
training to help you with this problem, and this i • '· an insult to him or
her because no physician can be an
~pert in all areas, then you should
si!li another doctor. Choosing a urologist, a surgeon specializing in urinary problems, is likely to get you the
help you need. The important message, however, is that almost everyone with incontinence can be helped,
and many can be cured.

The Community c.leDdar Is the annex.
published as • free ~ervke to DOll•
profit II'OUps Wisbiq to IIIUIOUDCe
1UPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
meetinc and special events. Tbt Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies Auxcalendar is not deslped to pi'OIDOtc iliary, Thursday, 6:30p.m. dinner fol·
sales or fund raisen of lillY type. lowed by .instal,lation of ollkers at
Items are printed as space penaits ·7:30p.m.·
and cannot be panmteed to run a
speeillc number ot days.
RACINE-- Racine Village ThursWEDNESDAY
day and Friday cleanup days. No batCHESTER -- Chester United teries, tires, gas tanks or oil will be
Methodist Church vacation Bible picked up. Everything must be at the
school will be held Wednesday curb by I p.m. Friday. •
through Friday for children, ages five
POMEROY -- Rock Springs
through six.th grade, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Grange, Thursday, 7:45 p.m at hall.
with lunch provided; and from 9 to
Racine members to be guests.
II :45 a.m. for children, ages three
FRIDAY
and four, with snacks provided.
POMEROY -- State Rep;esentaMIDDLEPORT-- Feeney Benneu tive John Carey (R-Wpllston) will
Post 128, 6 p.m. Wednesday, instal- hold an open door meeting at the
lation of officers and dinner. Meeting Meigs County Courthouse from II
a.m. to noon. District residents with
to follow at 7:30 p.m.
questions concemi~tg state government are invited to attend.
THURSDAY
PORTLAND -- Sout]Jem Local
RU'ILAND -- Revival, Believers
Building Committee will bost a free
Fellowship
Ministry, New Lima
farmers' feed Thursday, 7 p.m. at
Karen's Market (formerly Harris Road, Rutland. Lesley Allen of ChillFarms), Ponland. All. district farmers icothe, evangelist, 7:30 p.m Friday,
Saturday and Sunday. Special
and residents are invited to attend.
singing.
•
CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM will be held Thursday, 8 SUNDAY
p.m. at the lodge. Refreshments.
POMEROY -- Rev. Arius Hun,
past of Forest.Run Baptist Church, to
RACINE -- Racine Board of Pub- be guest minister at Naomi Church,
lic Affairs. Thursday, 10:30 a.m. at II a.m. Sunday.

Elizabeth Hayea, left, and Zelda Weber, were honored at a recent
obaervance of the 82nd anniversary of Cheater Councll323, D~ugh­
tera of America. The Council waa lnatltuted by Ada Morrla who Ia
now at the Rock Sprlngi Nuralng Center. Hayea and Weber remlnlaced about their yeara In Council and ware p,...ntecl fruit baaketa. Alto recognized waa Goldie Frederick who received,her &amp;0 year
pin. A decorated cake baked by Joan Baum waa HrYecl with other
refreshments. Hayea preaented $25 In memory of her family.

.

CELEBRATE THE SAVINGS
DURING

OUR

tb

1969

1996

THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
JUNE 13th, 14th &amp; 15th

* HOT DOGS * POP
* DOOR PRIZES

OPEN 9 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M.

SPECIAL PRICES
ON ALL HOMES

'

OVER 25 HOMES ON DISPLAY

·SPE,IAL FINANCING
FANTASTIC SAVINGS

ACS -to
include
inserts in
newspaper
The American Cancer Society is
making its annual appeal through the
newspaper this year. Rather than
door to door solicitations, it will be
inserting a special 'maile~ inside
today's Daily Sentinel.
"Meigs County residents are a
busy people. Rather than solicit people at home, we are offering a more
convenient method for them to make
'donations this year," said Jim
Thomas, president.
The inserts include a selfaddressed envelope for residents to
send in their donations and "I0 Steps
to Healthy Life," a listing of activities people can do to reduce cancer
risk. The donations are sent to' 444,
. Second Ave., Suit 200, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
"By inserting through the newspaper, we are guaranteed to reach a .
wide audience. We will reach more
people this way than through a door
to door·crusade," Thomas said.
Among the services the American
Cancer Society provides to the county are support services such as.! Can
Cope, Reach to Recovery and Look
Good/Feel Better, as well as patient
services including transportation,
wigs and prostheses, medication
reimbursement and durable medical
equipment.
"We have made great strides
toward eradicating this devastating
disease. Much work stillpeeds to be
done, and we are asking for the sup- ·
port of Meigs County residents so
that one day we can say the disease
is no longer a threat to us, our children or our children's children,"
Thomas said.
For more information call 446- · ·
7479.

....

;'

,

LET US GET YOU INTO
YOUR HOME QUICKLY.
EASY FINANCING AVAI.LABLE.

.

.

.

. .

SPECIAL
.LOW.PRICES .
LOW PAYME.NTS .

PLEASE GM ...
·YOU CANNOT AFFORD .10 BUY
·.UNTIL .YOU SlOP HIRII

Qlat~•CAN.

IUCIIUC .
POWIII

We Recommend
The Electric Heat
Pump With All
Our Models

IT HEATS, IT
COOLS,, IT SAVES.

IHI EILIP
WIIPIE OUill
C.ANCIEifZ

AMERICAN
!I CANCER

fsoaETY®

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