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                  <text>Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~------~------------------------------

Meigs AHA sets
American Heart Walk

DON·ATION- A check for $1 , 000 was _presented to the Kyger
Creek Middle School by Feen• !y-Bennetl Post .128, American
Legion, Middleport. Making the pr· e·sentation were Jerry Hawley, left,
post commander, Ellis Myers, rep resenta tive of the Ohio Education
Service Gro.u p, and Russ Mozing. o, legion ,repre1lentative, to Kyger
SChO.ol board members, Ruth WEtrden and Ron Hammond, le'ft to
right.

Cheer up, ·be healthy:
Study links «:tttitude with
coronary pr&lt;)blems
· Mr. and Mrs. Chad Wolfe

--'--HARPE~- WOLFE
RACINE - Brenda Ann ene Harper and Chad Allen Wolfe of Racine
were married on Apri l 15. IY99. at
4 :30 p.m. at their reside~ce in
Rac ine.
The bride is the daughter of

Lawrence and Cheryl M et~alf of
Guysvi lle. and the groom. is the son
of Charles and Loi s Wolfe. Robert
Lawson performed the ceremony.
Altcnda nts were Charles Wolfe Jr. .
Elizabeth Wolfe and Ashlyn Wolfe.

The Co mmun ity Calendar is published as a free service to non-prof1t
gro ups wishing to annmincc meetings and special events. The-calendar is. not
designed to promote sales or fund raisers of an.y type. Items are printed only
as space permits lind cannot be guaranteed to be printed a spec ific number
of days.
# .
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Vacation Bible School, Rutland Church of God, tonight
through Friday, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. "Under the Big Top: . theme . Crafts.
Snacks. games and Bible stores. For children three and up including
teel)agers.
"
'

PITTSBURGH (APl - Having a
positive outlook may help stern the
risk of recurring co rDnary prohlcrn!'.
acrord ing to a study rclea,:.;~d tmby.
llle study. which appear~ 1n lhc
&lt;.· .urrcn t issue or Psycho,:.;omau~.:
Medicine. looked at nearly 100
pa~icnt~ who h3d un dcrgqrie nn
angiopl asty -a procedure in 'which
a balloon -like device is used to
relieve anerial blockage.
Patients .w ill~ lower rn casure~ uf
self-esteem. optimi sm and fct:l ing:s
of control over their li ve.-. were mort:
li kely to experience a second hloc k.'
age. within . si~ months than those
with ·' better attit udes, according to
· the study .
"Our study certainl y suggests
that health care professionals.can try
to identify people who are at risk for
subsequent events and perhaps manitor the·ir behavi or, " sa id ·Vicki
• Helgeson, a psyc hology professor at
Carnegte· Mell on Untversny who
directed the study.
Researc hers questioned 292
angioplasty patients,to measure their
feelings of self-esteem, optimism

and to ntrol. Patients were then
· Jn·idcd into three 'groUps based on
thl·ir ~O:\I Tl'S.

rollow-up visits showed that in
20 pc rt;l'nt of the pmicms, arteries
hq!:-t!l to close again wilhin six
ll llHHhs. a co ndition ~mqw n as
. I CStl!llOS IS.

According to the · study, of rhe
1hird that scored th e highest on the
attitu~c tests. less than 10 percent
reported a seco nd corotlal)' problem.
C&lt;1rrespond ing ly. of those who
~coreJ th e lnwcsl on the lests, mofe
than 29 percent reponed experiencJil }! restcnosis .
Ms. Helgeson sard she looked for ·
ot her tndi cators, such as age, educa' '
tio n. occupation and rac e, but could
lind no correlation as strong as the
one seen with the attitudinal mea- ·
suremcnts.
, .
. The study bas its limit~tions ,
however. The rese~rc hers could only
coll ect data on the patients who
rcpp.ned restenosis -.others could
have experienced it and not known it
or kept the informat-ion' from their
doc tors.

Tuesday

Monday, August 2, 1999

The seventh annual American Heart Walk for the Meigs County Division
of the American Heart Association has been set for Tuesday, Sept. 28.
Scott Dillon is sponsor chairman, and recruitment leaders have been contacting businesses and groups to panicipate. Corporate sponsors this year are
the Home National Bank, City National Bank, R,ose 's Excavating, Tyrone
Brinager, Continuity of Care, Elks Lodge 107. and PDK Construction.
'
According to Dillon, the committee is working to make this year's walk
the best yet. He said that the working goal is to -net at least S 12,000 although
the goal is $16,000. Last year the event raised $11.370.
"Efforts are being made to reach every business and organizatio n with
information on how to panicipate". said Dillon. who noted that the committee wants the walk to be a community' e\ve nt showing people how easy it is
to incorporate walking into a regular exercise program as well as· raise funds
to fight hean disease which is Meigs County's number one killer.
This year's walk will be conducted in honor of Bob HiJeflich, a survi vor
of cardiovascular di.sease and a longtime volunteer of the Meigs County
Division of h~ American Heart Association. Alice Wolfe. committee member c.plained, "While we will be honoring Bob -in his strugg le with hean
disease, and we will be encouraging each team to sciCcl Someone from their
on grou'p to honor. We encourag1e survivors of · cardiova~Cul ar disease an~
their families , friends, and coworkers to participate in I he wa lk. Fund s raised\
wi ll supPort .research to further advance surgicaltcchn.iq ucs and .medication s
10 help those with hean disease and stroke.
New to this walk this year will he a survjvo&lt;'' tri bute wall. Each learn will
be given a post~r to list co-workers .. fri ends and fami ly who are victims or
survivors of hean disease. These posters will he di&lt;playcd in the community prior to the walk and also at the event .
"Our objective," explained Wolfe. " is w make people aware of how
extensive heart di sease is in pur commun it y. With ~ve ry one"s help. we can
Save lives."
As in the past years, all walkers will be given a Tribu te Patch to wear during the walk and all survivors of heart attack, stroke or cardiovasc ulru;
surgery will be given a choice of red cap o'r sur\;-ivor pin to wear. ,
Recruitment leaders COntacting businesses &lt;tnd organizations for new
teams include Linda Warner, John Redovian. Di ana Coates, Darla Hawley,
Peggy Harris, Maxine Rose, Cindy Johnston. Jane Frymyer. Joan Wolfe. and
Denver.and Nora Rice. Alice Wolfe and Lindli King w1 ll he cont acting past
te ams with _inform ation about this year's walk.
.
Anyone interested in fonning a team or walking as an individual sho'uld
contact any of the above recruitment leaders or Dillon, 992-2 161 or Wolfe,
949,2286. All team captains are asked to come to the Meigs Senior Center
on Aug . 25, at anytime from II a.m. t(J I p.m to p1 ck up their team materi als.

Weather
Tocltly: SUnny

High: aoa; Low: eos

Tomonow; Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 80S

Anguli 3, 1 •

NBA roster moves, Page 5
Ann on school harassment, Page ·10
·lime out for tips: Making baby food, Page 10

a1
Meigs County's

LETART .building,

Letart Tow nship Trustees. Monday. 6 p.m. at the offi ce

RACINE- Fri ends of the Library. 7

~ - '" ·

'

Monday. Racine Library.

RUTLAND - VacatiO n Bible Sc hool, Rutland Church of God. Monday
through Friday. 6:.10 to 8:'0 p.m. with cl:i'.&lt;ses age ihrce to. teenagers.
CARPENTE R - The Board of Trustees of Columbia Towns hip. Monat the lire station.

. da'y, 7:30p.m.

RACINE. - Southern Local summer band . camp sess ion. Monday
through ·Friday. Aug. 2 through Aug. 6 anJ Aug. 9 through Aug. 13, al Sou thern Junior High School. Greg Vance, band director. '

RACINE -;Vacation Bible sc hoo l. Son. Castle Fairc. Monday through
Friday. 6-lpO p.m. at Racine United Methodi st Churc h. C hildreil may bring ,
canned food ite ms to construct castle which will be donated to the United
Methodist Cqoperative Parish. For m,ore infonnation call Director Shelly
Barr at 949-2475. ..
·
Racin e -

Racine C hapter, Order of the Eastern Star. Monday. Refresh·

ments.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPQRT - Middleport Masomc Lodge 363, F&amp;AM. regul ar meting. work in the E.A. degree, 7:30, p.m. Tuesday. Refreshments.
'

'PoMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees. regular monthly meeting,
Tuesday, 6)0 p.m. at the township hall , Rocksprings Road ,' Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Coun cil regular meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m .. at vi llage hall .
·

Computers translate as people
speak, edit out sloppy speech
PITTSB URGH (AP) - Sloppy
speakers reJoice.
Scientists in an international consortium are developing compuler
technol ngy that translates co nversatio ns into si)( la nguages .
But th e new machines don' t
merely translate. tllcy also clean up
grammar atfd om it those awkward
· " um s" and " urs" that bog down

sentences.
"It can even recognize noises
like lip smacks ... sai d Alex Waihcl ,
director of lhe lllteractive Systems
Laboratories at the Carnegie Mellon
Universi ty School nfCnmpu ter Sc ience .
.
The speec h translation \c~.: hnolo ­
gy was demonstrated recent ly during ~~ video confcrem:e wi th people
in Japan, Italy. Korea a nd Gcrm;1ny.
'.' What time is it in Japan '.'" C MU
graduate ; tuJ enl C had Langley
asked .

Within 'second s, Langley's sen- .
tence was translated ·into Japane. e
and heard by a sc ientist pbsing as a
travel age nt in Kyoto. The agent
responded in Japanese and the corn.- ·
puler translated hi s response to Eng·
!ish: " It 's I a.m , in Japan ."
Lang ley - who does n't spea k a
word of Japanese - wcn l on 10
inquire ·about weather co nditions.
book a flight and reserve a hmel.
ihe•internat ional Consortium for
Speech
Tran slation Adva nced.
Research - C-_STAR - has a system wi~h more than I0.000 words
thar can allow spontaneous speec h
t ~rough a Web-based system.
If a mi s take in translation is
. made , it can be casify corrected
heforc it is transmitted. because a
sc reen ~ h ows .the translation aS it is
made but before it is heard at the
ot her end .·

I

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Clinton directs funding for drought, cooling assistance in region
From AP, Tribune Stltff Reporta

·
Ointon also said SIOO million was being allocat•
Further information is available from local FSA
Saying the current hell · wave hu caused great offices.
ed 1o provide air conditioners and fans for lowhardship, President Ointon on Monday announced
In addition 1o Gallia IJid Meigs. the FSA hu also · income families and senior 'c itizens.
-"I expect we · will be doing more things in the
emergency drouaJtt aisistance for farmers and money designated the assistance to Athens, Belmont,
for providing air conditioners and fans for the elder- Columbiana, Jefferson, Lawrence, · Monroe and days aheld," he said.
ly and poor,
At least 197 pcopl_e ·have died nationwide as a
Wuhington counties.
Speaking at the White House, Clinton announced
Oallia and Meip counties have each made disas- result of oppressively hot temperatures since July
emergency, low-interest loans would be made avail- ter declaration application$ to lbe state.
19. In Illinois alone, 80 deaths have been allributed
able to family farms in West Virginia and several
A declaration by Gov. Bob Taft would make the to the heat.
Funding 1o help low-income residents obtain air
counties in surrounding states, il!cluding Ohio.
counties eligible for federal usiatance
He said other effortl are being niadc 1o help farm.Ointon silid he would work with Congreu on a conditioners and other kinds of cooling has been
ers get water and hay for their livestock.
·
S10 billion emergency drouaJtt usistance request m~dc available throuaJt the state and is being
"It's litcnlly a pf!)blem for them 1o keep their '"to provide the resources to help our farmers and administered through Gallia-Meigs Community
livelihoods alive," Oinlon said. ·
ranchers to deal with the crisis today."
Action Agency.
Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, said the assistance
Fanners in Oallia and Meigs counties, along with
LOOKING AT THE DAMAGE - Agrlcultu,.
~ven other Ohio counties, are eligible for low-interwill help farmers in tli'e designated counties through ·
SICt ...IY Dan Glickman, left, firmer Terry
est emergency loans through the Farm Service "this difficult and tryinjl time.
•
Agency.
"I will' continue m)i efforts to ensure all Ohio Dunn, Sen. Robert Byrd, D • W.Va., and Sen.
. . The FSA will consider each loan application on its farmers who arc experiencing loss of crops and pas- Jay Rocbfeller, D • W.VI., right, dl.cu• the
own merits, taking into account the extent of losses, ·turcs due to the below average rainfall and above- drought In the ftekl at the Beckwith Farm,
the firm te
security available, repayment ability and other eligi- norma_!
receive any available assistance Monday, In ChariM Town,
oWned by Terry Dunn•
"he said.

W.va.

Commissioners will continue self-funded insurance
By BRIAN J. REED
new prescription dnlg program, which raised a
Sentinel H-. Staff
eo-payment for both generic and name-brand
The Meigs County Commissioners will con- prescriptions. The commissioners also instituted
tinue · the county's self-funded health insurance . ,a doctor's vi~it co-J'Illmenl and changed emerprogram 'for another year. Board President Jl~Jl!:l gency room coverage, all of which have helped
Howard announced the ooird's decision at their sa1!e tile program money.
·
.
.
regular meeting on Monday afternoon.
Howard said that another premium increase
While the county has experienced serious might be i_n order, but the board will forego
financial problems with the program in the past, action. on any ch111gcs in premiums or policies
Howard said ycstenday that an increase in premi- until they meet with their actuary, who deterurns _and a new prescription drug program, bolh . mines the condition-of the plan.
of which were instituted last year, had helped to'
&gt;' The commissioners renewed a contract with
relieve the financial pinch.
Medical Oaims Service, based in Ravenswood,
The county pays all but $30 of a $227 month- W.Va., to administer the plan for the county. '
ty · premium for single policies for employees,
Prosecuting Attorney John ·Lentes met with
and all but $200 of a $575 premium for a family ·the board to discuss a pendiqg civil lawsuit
plan. In a .self-funded program, premiums go 8g_ainstthe county, filed by Fred Priddy, Barbara
directly into a fund which then pays for claims, Priddy and Larry Wright, relating to the recent
and on several occasions since the plan has been seizure of propeny from Priddy's home near Rutin place, the county has ~n required to supple- land. .
, .
mentthe claims fund with money from the coun,
Lentes said that depositions of the plaintiffs in
ty general fund.
·.
.·
the &lt;:sse will be taken next week, and that he
Howard said that the aounty had saved expects that the CO(Dmissioners will be dropped
$20,000 alone ·during the pasl year because of a as defendants after the depositions are taken.

movie interests, said he told show
producers that he would come back
to help with Julianna Margulies' exit
from the show, but' " they didn't reall,Y, talk to me about it. " .
" Margulies has said she will leave
the show after the 1999-2000 sea-·
son.
Clooney, a native of Augusta, and
his family were the honorees Saturday at the A.B. "Happy' '· Chandler '
Foundation awards dinner. The
foundation provide s sc holarships for
Kentucky students .

In other business, the board approved a con·
tract with the Meigs County Department of
Human Services and the Rio Grande Community
College Crossroads program, for a job search
program for Fopd Stamp recipients. The program, Which will be funded througl) Tempo.rary
Assistance for Needy Families dollars, is restricted lo clientS in the DHS Ohio Works Fi l'St program.
It will provide 150 hours of instruction and
job search activities for 80 participants, · at a total
cost of $12,000. ·
·
Several transfers of funds were approved by
the board. Three transfers, totali ng S185,000,
were approved within the P~blic Assistance program at the DHS. Also approved were transfers
into the sheriff's office food line item, to cover a
bill to Powell's Super-Vatu, in the 'amount of
S1;233.45.
;•
The commissioners also approved payment of
bills in the amount of $221,390.38.
Present, in addition to Howard and Lentes,
were Commissioners Mick Davenport and Jeffrey Thomt~n, and Oerk Gloria K.Ioes.

Pomeroy CouncU OKs $204K paving bid
ARRIVES - The Gallla/llelga Community Action
Agency wl!l dlatrlbute 150 air condltloner. .nd 120 fine to needY
rnklllltllln both countiM, through funda
received from
. the atate. The $48,100 program will 111ow the agency.to dlllrlbute the appliM!=M to elderly •nd dlubled rulclentlt, and will
alao make provlalona for elecb lc billa which .... high due~ air
conditioning u•. Eligible partlclpantlt mull fall within 150 per·
cant of the t.denll ~rty guldellnN, and .... alao eligible for
. the HEAP prog,.m. Letha Proffitt and Tracy·Cundiff .... plctur.d
unloading a ·ehJpment of air condltlonet • which arrlwd 011 Monday at the agency'• Cl:lnhh hudql!llrt•ra.

_,u,.

Regional Briefs
I
C I b h
n·oman d''res .n
Orum us ouse ..61re

UIJ:

SYRACUSE - Sutton Town shtp Trustee s. Monday, 7:30p.m .. Syrac use
vi llage hall.
'
·

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 50. NumlJ c r 41

CHESTER - Free skin testing clinic by Connie Karschnik. R.N.. Meigs
County tubercu los is nurse, Chester Fire Statwn, Aug . 2 from 4:30 to 6:30
p,m. All ind ividual in food service arc required to obtain yearly skin tes ts .
. SYRACUSE - So uthern Hi gh Schpo l voll&lt;yball conditioning, grades 9'
12. Monday. 5 to 7 p.m ..C~ rl eton Sc hool.

Jusdce serves one up
to push Cleveland
past Boston 7~
-Page4

•

George Clooney may not guest on 'ER'
LEXIN(lTON, Ky. (AP) George Clooney may not be going
hom~ . again.
.
The acmr says he most likely will
not make· a guest · appearance this
upcoming seaso,n at his old stomping grounds, ihe television drama
"ER."
" No one ever talked to me about
it," Clooney said Saturday at an
awards dinner in his · native Ken tucky.
· Clooney, who left "ER" in the
middle of last season to pursue

Sports

. COLUMBUS (AP) - ·A mother rescued her 7-year-old son from
their burning home, then returned inside in an apparent effort to save a
litter of puppies and was trapped by the flames and died.
Firefishters on Monday found lhe body of June V. Justice, '26, at the
foot of a staircase.
·
They searched lbe house for a 5-y.ear-old son thought to be inside but
he later was found with a babysillet.
-,
The names of the children weren't released by fire investigators. who
said the 7-year-old apparently started the blaze by playing with a cigarelic lighter.
.
A third child of Justice's reportedly was slaying with a relative at .the
time.
Found with Justice's body were. the remains of at least ·five pit bull
..,
·
·
puppies and the mother dog. , .
'"My thought is she wenl in after the dogs," said fire Baualion Chief
Craig Bowman,
~, ·
·
• d runnmg
· m
· the kitchen
·
·
Bowman S81'd, 1e ad'mg
Water was .oun
smk,
investigators to believe Justice may have tried to put out th~ fire.

u
I ~ •
·
lc'l''l
I d$ l nnocent
Man pea
to ,, ,, ng COnlgl $ Uuen.s

STEUBENVILLE (AP) '-One of two defendants pleaded innocent
Monday to charges of abduc\ing ·and killing two college students.
Ntthan Herring, 18, of Steubenville, is charged with aggravated murder, kidnapping, burglary, robbery, gross sexual impo5ilion, receiving
'
·
stolen property and grand theft
auto.
Bond wu continued II $2.2 million for Herring. .
A tentative trial dale of Feb. 22
was sel by Judge Joseph J. Bruzzuse Jr. of Jefferson County Com1 SectiC!III - 10 Paaa
man Pleas Court.
Terrell Rahim Yarbrough, 18, of
10
ea!endar
PittsburaJt,
faces the same charges
7&amp;8
QISIIfte!ls
1nd pleaded innocent in July.
mig
Both could get the death penalty
l
Edllodtb
if convicted of killing Brian Muha,
3
Local
18, of the Columbus suburb of
Westerville,
and his roommate
4&amp;5
Soorts
Aaron
Land,
20,
of Philadelphia.
3
Weather
The Franciscan University students were abducted May 31 from
Lotteries
their house near the campus.
They were driven into Pennsyl·
omo
vania, about 15 miles east of
Plck3: 1-4-4; Plck4: 9-5-9-1
Steub.e nville, taken intci some
Burkeye 5: 3-S-26-32-33
woods and shot, authorities said.
W.VA.
.·
Their bodies were. found four
Dally 3: 3-6·2; DaUy 4: 1-i-5-3
days
later along U.S. Route 22 in
0 1999 OWo V•lley hbli1hina Co.
southwest Pennsylvania.

Good Afternoon

Today's

Sentinel

co

/

By .JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newt Staff

'

Motorists complaining about bumpy Pomeroy
stJeets are a little .closer 1o some relief after
Pomeroy Village Council, meeting in regul!ll' session Monday niaJtt, approved a paving bid.
Council approved the lmi&gt;esl -of two bids submilled for the project whi.ch calls for milling and
paving of Mulberry, Union and •Butternut avenues
1nd Lasley SIRel. The lowest bid of $204,639.90
was submitted by the Shelly Company while the
other bid of $268,585.25 was submitted by Blacklop Inc.
Council briefly discussed where the milled
pavement will be stored, but voted to go ahead and
lllCCpl the Shelly bid.
The company cannot start the work unlit early
September, said council ~ident John Musser.
Mayor Frank VauaJtan encourriged council.
members 1o .address the Meigs County Boand of
Commissioners in an effort to have a new veterans
monument placed in Pomeroy. .
..
. Vaughan, an Army veteran of.!he Korean Conflict, said he is concerned that some people want
the monument to be used as a "drawing card" fo(
some tourist attraction,. notably the Chester Counhouse. ·
· "J'his should be a memorial to show apprecialion lor the men and women who served this country," VauaJtan said. "We would like to,have it here
in lhe county seat; not as a lure 1o get people to go
somewhere else. II sho'\kl be a memorial, not part

of a tourist auraction."
He urged council members and.village residents
1o personally talk 1o commissioners 1o keep the
proposed monument from "being used as an advertisement"
· Chester and Racine have •~pressed interest in
~ousing the mQDument, , with Vaughan saying
Racine would make a good second choice.
"(!be monument) should be respected and bon:
orcd, not used as a drawing am:! by people who
have no connection with the service," VauaJtiD
said, adding that·lle wu speaking as a veteran.
· 'Ouring open discussion, Musser noted that the
mural II the comer of Sycamore and East Main
stRets is nearly ci&gt;mplete. Council' member Dave
Ballard pm;sed along a suggestion to illuminate the
mural with floodliaJtts.
Ballai'd commented on a large hole near the
junction of Mulberry Avenue and Lasley Street.
He also commented on two "pennanent yard
sales" on East Main Street '-l
Vaughan said he will talk 1o the 'residents there
as it is against Ohio law to hold a permanent yard
safe without a vendor's license. In addition, that
area is not zoned·for business, it was noted.
Ballard also noted he is seeking contributions
· for a new scoreboard for the youth league fields. ·
Musser also commented that junk cars have
been piling up behind Searles' 5Fvice Station on
\\\:st Main Street
·
That area cannot be used as a junk yard. it was
noted.
'
1

Fire Chief Chris Shank presented the Pomeroy
\blunteer Fire Department report for July showing
a total. of 28 fire runs including fi~e· automobile
accidents, four water rescues, · two false lllarm o,
three electric/gas emergencies, two automobile
fires, three brush fires, two Emergency Medical
Service assists, three. assists_of . neighboring fire
departments and four structure fires.
In other business, council:
,.,
-Approved the purchase of telephone stickers,
window stickers, coloring books and other ·items
· which will be distributed both door-to-door and at
the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival in October.
- P,nsidered a request from a village res ident
· to keep horses at the end of State Street in the Monkey Run neighborhood. Council was not opposed,
but asked Vaughan to talk to neighbors in the area
before making a decision .
-Approved Police Chief Jeff Miller 's obtaining a price estimate 1o netwerk the police department's computers.
-, · . ·
.
.. -Instructed Miller to produce rules and regulations q&gt;nceming a proposed police departmen t
auxiliary.
.
- Approved the mayor's repoit with the vi i!age's share of $6,489.
·
- Discus5W participation in the downtown
merchan'ts' fair booth with several council mernbers and the mayor volunteering loman the boo.th .
Also present were Clerk!freasurer· Kathy
l:lysell and council members Geri Walton, George
\Vrigh~ Scon.Dillon and Larry Wehrung.

Officials: education training R1USt prepare people better for wo.rk force

· •
·
·
f · b
f
No. rth _Dakota, G_ov. F_rank Keatin_g_.o_f Okla- knowledge .or a wtde vanety o JO s, some o
homa· and Gov. Jtm Gtlmore of Vtrgtma. Gov. which don't even exist yel
.
·
··
h
r
d
k
· COLUMBUS (AP)- Once, technical and · Mike Huckabee of Arkansas was scheduled to
Southv1ew saw ·t e percentage e stu, ents ta .. vocational education and higher education were auend but ' was late arriving and mis$Cd the ing career-oriented classes' grow from ' l9 per·
mu\ually exclusive conceptS.
forum.
.
.
.
cent to 61 in the four years since i t intraNot any more, a scbool administrator told
Hamilton satd studen.ts auendm!l techn1c~l duced career-oriented lab.s i n the 9th and lOt h
governors gathered at a panel discussion.
classes at Southview High School m SylvanJa grades, Hamilton said.
"They are complementary. We need both,'" in northwest Ohio are encouraged to go on for
Called technical [abs, they use computers
said John Hamilton, director of career-techno!- · bachelor's degrees .
.. .
to provide career information and give
-ogy .education for the Sylvania Cit_y Schools
He and other school .and "?liege ~mmiStra- examples· of how ~cademic knowled ge
District.
ton drove home the pomtthat m today s techno!- applies to the real world - using math, for
Ohio Gov. Bob Taft convened the meeting ogy-driven eeon\)my, studentS need both a firm example, lo calculate the amount of sod
Monday attended by Gov. Edward Schafer of academic
and the ability to use that needed for ·a new lawn.

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
Writer
A.aocl atM P-•
•-

CRASH CAUSES
INJURY
- A two-car accident on
Route
124 In Racine on Saturday cauHd
.minor InJury to one of the drlvel'l, the ·
Gallla-Melge Post of the Stille HighWll'f Patrol reported. Heidi N. Bumpua, 11,312118 Lovett Road, Portland,
w•• not treated 1t the acene of the
12:11 p .m. craah. Troopet'l•ld Bumpua waa aouthbound 011 124 when
the car she drow collided with 1 car
driven by Kelly J. Ferrll, 22, Roeky
Rlwr. Ferrla had pulled onto 124
from Third StrMI Into the path of
Bumpua' car at the time of the COlli·
alon. Damage to Bumpua' car waa
moderate, and alight to the Ferrla
vehicle. Ferrla w•• cited for fallul'l to
yield. (Photo courteay of the Racine
Yaluntwr Fl,. Department)

•.
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Commentary
111 Coult St.,

~.Ohio

740 U2-21N • Fu: 11112-2157

'
· Comm~nlty

ROBERT L WINGETT ·
Publlaher

&lt;OIMIEtlll
Ca 1111 nu

CHARLDE HOEFUCH
GIMfll¥11 I

·-

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-- - .,,
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· P

· Yesterdav in Wstoey .

.

A photographer's.
:view of Nixon's era
; By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
~"'-Wl'k

.

'

By .lei* AI, eon
Wllat follmn is a list of tqw entalivcs wbo
111111 Doug' Cohn
ha\'C taken up m 'dcncy in their Houle offices
WASHINGTON .. The discovery of one either by choice or beatUIC IIIey cannot atron1
homeless cor.gt&lt;Ainlll is ·111 anccdole&lt; the expo- houses or aplrtmCIIII in Wlshington, D.C., in
sure a dozen, 111 we reccndy reporied. is a seri- addition to their homes bKk home:
ous COCJCCm; but now our uncovering of21homeBob Barr, R-Ga.
less congtCSIIInat is downright alarming. And the
Midtael C.de, R-Del.
number is arowina·.
Nathan Deal, R..Oa.•
Apparently, our esteem for elected officials has
Jay Dickey, R-Ark.
fallen so low and their compensation has become
Wayne Gik:lorest, R-Md.
so inadequate dill this highly unusual, undigtliBob Goodlllllc:,' R-Va.
fied ~ - in most jurildic:tions, illcpl - living
Willi1111 GoodliiJ&amp;, R-Pa.
arranaement lias . . - unnoticed. ~. the
J.D. Hayworth, R-Ariz.
unreceptive reception given by most House memPete Hoelcstra, R-Mich.
bers to our investiption indicates that something
frnest lstook, R-Oida.
is inherc:ndy wrong here.
·
J8Ck KingstOn. R-Ga.
Rep. Ray LaHood, R·lll, who has been in • Scott Mcinnis, R-Colo.
charge
congressional retreats the last few
Mark San(ord, R-S.C.
.
years, said the issue of sleeping in the offices to
Joe Scuborough, R·AL
save money has come up at the
retreats, 11ut be has dismissed it as
"a silly lifestyle. Whenever I talk
to "!embers I encourage them to .
get ,away from the office. I don 'I
know of anyone back home who
does this. It's not healthy." 1
A spokesperson for a delegate
who maintains two homes told us,
"People ~y t:ollgtcssmen are so
rich, but they have to pay for two
of everything: two lftiMI(Iages, two
.,
utilities, two sets of furniture, two
home-owner's insurance policies. I
don't blame the members who
sleep · in their offices; it mskes
much more sense.''
"The story' behind the story,"
anot~r Hill insider told us, "is the
money factor, that is why so many
of them crash in their offices. From
a financial standpoint it makes a lot
1111
of sense. They can rent a dirt-bag
.EGO
apartment for $800 or $900 a
month and subject. themselves to
crime, or they can stay in their
office. The $1,000 or so .saved a
month by members who sleep in .
1 their offices is substantial for those
who have kids in college, or are
trying to save for .their kids."

WASHINUfO_N (AP) - In one Watergate image, John Ehriichmln simply aJares with eve!)' inch of clenched and juuing jaw and out-lhrllstlower
lip.
'
In another, Bob Haldeman, rlso in the witness chair at the Senate Watergate hearings, bums in a sort of dirk yet inc:ancleKent aJow.
·
They had been Ricluerd Nixon's gatekeepers, the controllers of the presi·
·• · dent's politic:al environment ~ Haldemlil • White House ~hlef of staff,
Eh(lichmal). his other top aide.
.
Fred Maroon's photographs _rdlect the situation of all thra: in the summer of 1973: under siege but fiercely defianL
In an earlier shot, taken in far more controlled circumstances, Nixon steps
:between two White House columns and 11t&amp;lns to dissppear. The photograph
leaves just a trailing right leg. polished black shoe and right arm in view.
Maroon looked up from his camera lens and asked about Nixon's retreal.
''.He deliberately avoids ua," an aide replied, giving the photosrapller his
caption.
' .,
.
A quarter-century ago this month -Aug. 8, 1974- Nixon submitted i
one-sentence lener·of resignation'io Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and
e~ the 37th American presidency.
Now the Smitbsonil\fllnstitu.!ion 's National Museum of American flisto-'
ry i~ displ~ying· an uhi.bit with 14"5 of Maroon's 61ack-and-white i'mages
from the Nt~on era- many of them never published nor widely viewed, all
.stashed in a vault for the last two decades..
· .A large-format book, ''The Ni~on Years," with pqotographs by Maroon
'lild text by Tom Wicker, a retired New York nmes Washington bureau chief,
·will be published by Abbeville Press in Septeml!er.
' "For .25 years I ~ailed for the pas8~ons to cool in this.American tragedy,
· bu.tl ulbmately realtzed I would not hve long enough to see that happen,"
· s11d Maroon, a freelance photographer who has recorded the people and
monuments of official Washington for nearly SO years.
. For Maroon, the story began early in the Nixon administration, when he
··was given the opportunity to photograph the presidential workday, first ·a t
''the White House and then at the Comminee to Re-elec:tthe President. . . ·
· He continued to work on his own after the Watergste scllidal broke, cov. ering the Senate Watergate hearings, the House impeachment hearings and
·
finally, Nixon's. resignation.
"I simply had a sense I was witnessing a pivotal moment in American
history, and that I should stay with it until the conclusion," Maroon said.
In all, he shot 576 rolls of film.
"
•. When he began in 1970, ~aroon witnessed "a staffin control of everything that happened." In the week before Nixon resigned, control had been
·
'replaced by "uncertainty and apprehension ."
Maroon visited Ni~on's re-election comminee juat days afte~ the arrest
inside Democratic National Olmminee headquarters of a team of burgiiU)i
with ties to comminee officials.
• "You guys will do anything to get a little publicity," Maroon cracked to
Jeb Stuart Magruder~ the deputy campnign director.
"II never occurred to me at the time that they had anything to do with it,"
·Maroon said.
But the photographer gradually began to become aw~e of t!Je commit. lee's tight security, its general air of "paranoia."
·
·
. "I started !Jiking notice of things differently," Maroon wrote. "Surveil·
' lance cameras and rooms with a lot of electronic devices took on a new
. meaning. I thought I should photograph them and the shredding machine
.

..

When th~ Senate Watergate hearings opened, many of the people Maroon
had met earlier at tile White Houae and the re-election &lt;;ommittee '\'ere sum. mooed to testify and the photographer saw "the anguish ofthe situation
• etched on their faces."
.
Maroon ·said John Mitchell, Nixon's former campaign chairman, spotted
him in the Senate Caucus Room and asked what he was doing. .
·
"I told him I was continuing my photographic record cif the Nixon era
and asked whether he did not agree that what was. happening was of some

moment."

or

Today In History

•

"'

• James Traficant, D-Ohio
Gene 'nlylot, 0- Mils.
Aile! then: are more. Our sources in Bob
Barr's office figured Barr, the outspoken Repubn
lican from Georgia, was amona 50 congn;ssmcn
and women who bed down in their offices eve:!
niaJd: "F~ my own uperiencc Wlltina lhC
Mils a1 6:00 in the morning, I - congre oefl
walking around and I think, 'No, you dldn't oome
in any frool door this momina-'"

•I Cofun'll •

I

Juanita Bachtel, 90, Middleport, died Monday, Aug. 2, 1999, at her resi·
dence.
She was born Sept. 13, 1908, in Buckhannon, W.Va., daughler of the late
. Jolon Wesley and Amettie lbompson Dawson. She attended West Virginia
. ~esleyan Qlllege and was a member of the Heath United Methodist Church
Since 1944. She taught Sunday sdtool and was a member of the choir. She
was a member of the J',fiddleport literary Oub and also a substitute English
teacher at Wahama High Scbool in Mason.
·
She is ~urvi~ed by two daughters. and ·~-in-law, Kiny and George Dal las of Cahfomta, and Carol Tl\flneholl of Middleport; a son and daughter-in law, Forrest "Butch" and Carol Bachtel of Phoenix, Ariz.; six grandchildren;
seven great·grandchildren; lh= slepgl'311dchildren; nine stepgreat-grand.
children; four slepgreat· great-grandchildren.
. S~ was preceded in death by her husband, Forrest Bac'htel in 1967; a

~:~:·~~!r,T.:~:~i~!':n.sisters,

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CUium.)
ccnoltlhi1-,AI du-•Colln

•

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W.' VA.

·

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' By TheAaaoclaled ,.....

.

~ler temperatures are expected in Ohio again 'on Wednesday, but

theresa chance of showers or thunderstorms as a cold front drapes across
the state.
.
·
High temperatures on Wednesday will he in fhe 80s~
Overnight, readings ranged from a low
in Lancaster to 11 on the
lakefront ·in Cleveland.
. .
. The National weather Service said the mild conditions are expected to
continue through the rest of tbe week.
.

orsz

. The record·high temperature fpr this date at the Ollumbus weather sla·
liOn was 100 degrees in 1955 while the record low was 45 in 1965. Sunset tonight will be at 8:44p.m. and sunrise Wednesda&gt;" at6:32 a.m.
W~tber foreet~st:

. Tonight... Mostly clear. Patchy late night fog: Lows from the upper 50s
lo the lower 60s. Ught and variable wind.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid and upper 80s.
Wednesday night::. Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.
·
Extcndedlorecast:
.
Thutsday...Partly cloudy. High~ in the mid 80s.
· · ·
Friday...Partly cloudy. Lows In the lower 60s and highs in the mid and
upper 80s.
.
- Saturday..,Pru:t!y cloudy. Lows in the mid
highs'85 to 90.

The problem is, we are now faced with .
this kind of choice injust'about every facet
of our lives. Take water. Water used 1!1 be
like .air -- it was .an el'"ment. It was always
there, and we didn't think about it. But
nor.water .is a consumer pf'O!luct, and we .
are left.to figure out whether 96 percent of
our body should be composet! ofEvian or
Poland Spring•.
.•
I

•

•

one of the major reasons Americans
feel strused and pressed for time. ·
"There are so many things yqu
can choose to do, and you can only
do so many of them. So you feel like
you're miasing out ·on life," says
RobiRJOti, "Even tho cboice of w~t
television program lo watch -- if ybu
have 140 channels to look at, then
there are all of those that you don't .
have a chance to watch.'' .
What can we do about all this? I
don 'I know. But for starters, 'at least,
1 think I'll just grab the Head lf!d
Shoulders and go home.

,
Send eomment. to the llllthor
In ~ of 1111• n-•11111*' or Mnd

C

·.meigS . 0Unty man iS in 'fair' COnditiOn
l'nnJira f tabb•
a ft~(
"' rrl"-' ..,n S
1ng near B"d
I . We l'I' .
A Rutland man is. in fair condi-

Di
...

-

---l.eom. ..

relation between,exposure and cancer.
:
So what moliv~ed Uburdy to doctor his
research results, •to mislead the public Into believingthal power Jines cause cancer?
. ·
Well, at least one long·time skeptic of ttie
. EMFnCa~Jcer link, University of Maryland physic;s
professor Robert Park, told The New York nmes
that the kind of junk science promoted by Uburdy is not altogether uncommon for the fiel&lt;l,
whi~h seems to attract crusaders out to demonize
certain industries.
'
But there is also a 'huge financial incentive for
junk scientists like Uburdy. Indeed, on the basfs
of his fraudulent EMF research, he manaaed 1o
score $3.3 million in federal grants from llie .
National Institutes of Health, the Energy Departrnent and' the Pentagon.
. That'~ why junk science is such a growth
mduatry m this country. Scientists have a tremeri·
doua financial incentive to hype some putatiV:e
public health threat -- whether it be asbestos in
schools llld office b!llll;lings, pesticide traces in
foods or electromsgnetic ftelds troin power lin-'
M~reover, some scientists have an ~nholy .
alliance with trial lawyers, who use their research,
no maner how questionable as pretexts for multimillion-dollar personal -ini'ury lawsuits (sometimes payiog scientists generoua consulting fees
to tell a jury how, say, EMF can cause leukemia in
5·year.gld little girls).
·
.
The nation's utilities gol off lucky. The trial
lawyers were unsuccessful in using junk science
to shake them down for billions of dollars. It's a
pity that other industries targeted by junk scienlists and lawyers .. like the silicone implant
industry .. were not similarly lucky.

Copyrlghtt• NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Joeeph Plrklna I• r cotumnlat for Tt. Sen
Dl.go Union-Tribune.

-· ~ - di ____l . i~

.

.. The followmg acttons to end
.. 'marriage were filed recently in the
office of Meigs Olunty Clerk of
· Olurts Larry Spencer.

,. T.h e Daily Sentinel

Copyrlght111811 NEA.
her Hl'llll at

554. GaUia Olunty 911 was notified

lion today at Ohio State University of the incident ahout 20 minutes
Hospitals in Ollumbus with injuries after it is believed to have occurred,
suffered i11 a~ apparont ·stabbjng 1\Dd . di~p~tched the EMS to tbe
scene.
.
".
incident early Saturday at Bidwell.
Mich~l W. Thompson, 22, was .
Emergency personnel were able
initially transported to Hplzcr Med- .to keep Thompson alive and ready
'ical Center by the -Gallia County for ;transportation to the hospital,
EMS, and was later transferred by the spokesman said.
.
ambulance to OSll, a spokesman
Thompson's cond!tion was
for the Gallia Ctlunty Sheriff's upgraded .from serious on Monday,
Department's investigator's office a hospital •pokesman said. ·
·said.
· Invest'igators have been unable to
Thompson was stabbed in the ·- provide additional details about. the
,neck around 1 a.m., the spOkesman stabbing because they must wait
· said. The incident is believed to until Thompson is able to talk to
. have occurred in. the parking lot of them, the spokesman said. lnvesti·
The Komer convenience store at the . gators hope they can meet with the
intersection of slate rou_tes 160 and victim in two or three days.
,
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Utilizing junk science for big payoffs

•

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(USPSll:J....)

Com-IIJ Nowlpeper Holdtnp,IO&lt;.
f\Jblisbed 'every aRemooo, Monday lhroush
Friday, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Obio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co~ny. Second class
• postap.paid 11 Pomii'roy, Ob10.
• MCIIIbtr: Tbe Alloci.aed Press and tbe Ohlo
.. New!plper ..wocillktfl.

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Pult~er.

Send addrtss correclions 10 'The
Daily SCn1inel. 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio

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'

By SONYA ROSS
·

·condl•t···on·s slate·d to
Ml.·ld.
t .th roug h wed nesd ay
as
'I

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•

1

Girl Scout program
All girls who are not yrt girl scouts•are invited 10 join a special si,;..
week program designed just for them. The girls will meet five times..;..
but not during fair week- with the firsl evenllo be Thursday all he Catteton School in Syracuse, 6:30 to 8:30p.m.
·
Parents interested in enrolling their daughters Should attend the ThuBday meeting with' their daughters. Questions regarding Ihe program
should be directed to Brenda Neuuling at 992·5418.
·

Drama to be presented

The Hillside Baptist Church and the Po,.-er in the Blood ministry will
present an ootdoor drama, "Noah and the Ark" at 7:30 p.m. each niglit
during the week of Aug . 23·29 at the Hillside Baptist Church Amphith~ater, located off Route 7 o n Route 143 near Pomeroy. Admission is free .
Coocession stands will be available. Take Lawn chairs. For more infoimation call 992-6768. Dr: Jam es R. Acree. pastor, invites the public t)l
anend.
·

Rutland Bicentennial Committee to meet
The Rutland Bicentennial Committee will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
the civic center. ·
·
·

GOD'S Net program

Area teens are invited to panicipate in Friday night's fun, food and fel·
lowshil' !)rojecl at the God's Neighborhood J:scape for Teens. Nutritiori~l
foods will be available, free of charge for snackiqg wh ile teens are at the
center. Teens can play non-violent garnes; compuler programs, and cards.
Pool tables are available ..The center is open from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on
both Friday and Saturday nights .
.

C.linton encourages businesses
t
1
f
Lodge to meet
0 emp oy more rom Welfare rolls·
l!.egular meeting of Pomeroy-Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM will be herd

-·.

...

Gladys Dichland and Thelma

Services will be held Thursday, 2 p.m. at the Heath United. Methodist
~urch in ~idd_lepo~ with tbe Rev. Vemagaye Sullivan officiating. Burial
will follow on Rivemew Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call Wednesday, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at Fisher Funeral HomeMiddlepon.
•
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made 10 the Heath UnitCd
Methodist Church Memorial Fund, 349 s. Third Ave., Middleport OH
60.
457
•

''
By S8nl Eek1l
sheen. A girl
Where does t)le time go? It's a ·
'does
really
question most of ask ourselves just
need thaL
about everyday. We make great
1 spent a ·
plans. We write long lists. But come
gQ(xl 15 minnightfall, we often find ourselves in
. utes '. weighing
the same place: comatose in front of
the merits of
the television set, the "to do" list
cherry almond
left mdy unheeded.
bark vs. gingel
I recendy realized where a g!J9d
root extract,
chunk of my precioua time on God's until it occurred to me that I had no
green earth ·is going: the shampoo idea what any of this stuff: meant..
aisle . .Here's what happenei!:· I was Meanwhile, life was ticking by.
"bh, but Sara, ·. those ·are ·very
in the drugstore buying shampoo
and, like a dutiful cons~mer, reading ple~ut:able minutes," my friend
the labels in the iJlterest of making Katherine replied when I relayed
the best choice for my hair type and this story to her. She has a poinL I
lifesty Ie. There were many decisions buy beauty products the same way I
to make. Was my hair fine, limp. dry, used .to buy candy as a kid -- with
normal-tondry or normal·tOnoily? Do · loving care.
The problem is, we are now faced PQSed to make our lives simpler, has
I need to voluinize Qr hydrate? And
how much should I spend? There with this kind of choice in just about in m111y ways had the opposite
was the SI .SO shampoo that lookeil every facet of our lives. Take water. effect Because not only do we have
fine and ' the $15 shampoo that Wster used to be like air - 'it was an to learn how to use a1.1 this sluff, we
looked liki a museum piece. Was I a elemen,t. It was always there, and we even have to learn how to buy iL
chump for thinking the expensive didn'tthink about iL But now water You don't just purchase a computer ·
stuff in the fancy packaging was bet, is a consumer product, and we are or a llereo aystem. First you have to
ter? Or was I il chump for thinking left to figure out whether 96 percent · read a stack of boob and mapzines
that the cheap, stuff was just as of our body sho. ~ld be·composed of " to figure out what exac:tly you want
Evian or Poland Spring.
. -· a ptoc! u that )'OU will likely
good? " ·'
Then
there
are
credit
cards.
Once
repeal in about thra: yeara' time;
And then there are the flavors -·
the shampoo aisle can put Baskin· upon a time, there were three majo'r when the thing becomes obsolete.
All of this might sound like a
Robbins to shame any . day of the credit cards 10 choose from . Now
week. Key lime, I learned, ' every university, charity organiza· minor rant, but these decisions add
"removes dull buildup." Honey· lion and stamp-collecting clull has up. In fact, sociologist John Robinsuckle is "known to boost body." their own form of personaliZed plas- son, co-author of "nme for Ufe:
.
The Surprising Ways Americans Use
And then there is Rosemary Pepper· tic.
And technology, which w.:S supn Their nme," says that overchoice is
. mif11, .which "adds sheen."! do want

'

181f~~ot•

tco•• aalanal carr• 1pond1nl:011dent:
Ellano,
Clift; rorllgn uc11 M1lciNII COlt
IAe

Too much choice is'a waste of time

'

lw.-,·1 • ·

'I-t

.aTHER.

!b•

'

Peter DeFIIZio, D-Ore.
Luil Guticnez, D-01.

aow

?a;i

\

Qlarlcs 'nlylor, R-N.C.

CJMGVTM

· "I hope it's a fleeting tnoment," Mitcheli replied. '
.
Finally, it was August 19741 The Republican leaders of Congress had told · By Jouph Perklita
.
·
That was all trial lawyers like Withey needed
Nixon he didn 'I have the volts to stave off impeachment. ·Maroon phOn
. Mtchael ~ther, .a Sea~le
to beat a ~ast.y pnth to the courthouse. And that's .
tographed the growing crowds at the White House fence; the prayer vigil for tna_llawye~, ts credtted w•t.h
all "pubhc Interest" groups needed to hopnd
:·.the president at ti,Je Northwest gate; .the man with the hand-lenered sign t~~g to trial the first multv
power companies around the country to move
:· reading, ~ 4 Don 't resign."
'
mtll.•on·dollar..damage suit
electric lines, to install shielding. or to bury new
; But Ni~on did resign, and in a long, rambling speech said goodbye to the ag~m~t a uhhty_ ~ompany
power liries in tlie ground (at a cost of more than
, White House staff.
S1 billion a year, according to government esticlrummg pe~nal IDJUry from
:,:- "The speech went on· for quite along time&gt;· Maroon wrote. "II became electromagnebc fields.
.
mates). ·
.
: heart·w!enching. You were glad for him when he finished because you fell
The ~e was til~ back 10
Well, as ittums out, all the scary stories about
: such gnef for the country and for what was aoing on inside of him."
!993 m San D1ego. It
electromagnetic fields causing cancer, all the·lawm~olved a Serra Mesa (Calif.) couple, Ted and · suits seeking millions of dollars in damages from
Mtcllele Zuidema, whose 5-year·old daughter, electric companies, were based on a false;
Mallory, suffered from a rm:e form of kidney ca.t;J· premi~. ~or Liburd~ has recently been exposed'
cer.
Wi~hey blamed .san Dteg?
and Electnc as a sctenlifie fraud.
·By The Anoclated Prn•
.
Indeed, the federal Office of Research Integri:
Today.is Tuesday, Aug. 3,the 215th day of 1999. There are 150 days left powerhnes. for causm~ the 7htld s tllness.
. Well, ~_JU~ found no hnk be~een the San ty, an arm of the U.S. Department of Health and
;· in the year.
.'
Diego utthty s. power hnes and hlllc Mallory's Human Servi"''S, found that Liburdy "engaged .in
· Today's Highlight in History:
cancer.
The Zutdemas were devastated by the out- scie.nti~c miscond~ct ~n biomedic:al ~arch by
;: . On Aug. 3, 1949, the National Basketball Association was formed.
come.
Wit~~y, undaunted, .moved on to o_ther falstfymg and fabricatmg data and cl11ms about
On this date:
·
more
promtsmg
(or~ he hoped) EMF l~wsutts:
the. purported cellular effects of electric and mag·
In 1492, Otristopher Ollumbus set sail from Palos, Spain, on a voyage
Withey was convmced that electromagnehc netic fields."
lbattook him to the presenHiay Americas.
~eld&amp;. cause cancer-:~nd, at '!te tim~ he was. wagThis fin~ng by the integrity office, published
In 1914, Germllily declared war on France.
courtroom
Jthad
ag11nst
Btg
Electnc,
he
last
month m the Federal Register, is consistent
mg
hts
; - In 1923, Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as the 30th president of the Unil·
had
at
least~
widely
reported.
scie~tific
papers
with
earlier findings by the Lawrence Berkeley
; Cd States, following the death of Warren G. Harding.
to
support
hts
con~lusto~
..
to
gtve
h1m
real
hope
lab,
which
IO&lt;?k a hard .look at Uburdy's EMF
• . In 1936,the State Depanment urged Americans in Spain to leave: because
he
Jual
mtght
extract
an
asbestosresearch
back
10 1995 after a whistle-blower chal·
that,
one
day.
.· of that country 's civil war.
: : In 1943, Gen. George S. Panon slapped a private at an tirmy hospital in lik~ ~ breast-i.mplant-.li.k~ settlement from the lenged his. resul_ts.l.ab inves~gators surmised that
the c~ll btologt~t . unscrup~loualy discarded data
. Sicily, accusing him of cowardice. (Patton was later ordered by, Gen. Dwight nation s deepnpocket ubhlies:
_The
~wo
papers
wer~
pubhshed
year
before
that
d1d not fit hts concluston.
D. Eisenhower to apologize for this and a similar episode.)
.
Wtlhey
s
first
E~F
sutl
went
to
tnal.
One
of
the
lndeed,,practically
eve_ry maj~ study.of elccIn 1948, Whittaker Chambers, a former Olmmunist, publicly accused
;
papers
appeare~
10
the
Annals
~f
the
New
York
tromagnettc
fields
published
stnce Ltburdy's
; former State Depnrtment official Alger Hiss of having bc(en pan of a ComAc~':"Y of ~tences, the other·~ FEBS Letters, 199~ papers hu contradicted the scientist's con·
• munist unllerground, a charge Hiss denied.
:
In 1958,the nuclear-powered submarine "Nautilus" became the first ves· wh1ch IS pubhsh~d ~y the Federatton of European cluston that _po~er lines cause cancer. Perhaps the
Biochemtcal Soctelles.
.
most aulhontabve of these st~es was completed
' sel to cross the North Pole under water.
The
author
of
both
papers
was
Robert
P.
L1burtwo
years ago by th~ National Caitcer Institute.
In 1981, U.S. air'traffic controllers went on strike, despite a warning from
dy,
a
cell
biolot!ist
at
Lawrence
~rke!&lt;Y
NationIt
involved 6?6 children with leukemia and
President Reagan they would be fired.
al
Laboratory
m
Berkeley,
~hf.
Hts
research
62~
healthy
children matched to th~ cancer
In l988,the Soviet Union released Mathias Rust, the young West German
concluded
that
electromagnettc
fields
exert
a
b10n
pntoents
by
age,
ra&lt;:e and neighborhood. After
pilot who had landed a light plane in Moscow 's Red Square in May 1987.
.
logical
effect
th~tleads
to
a
variety
of
illnesses,
tracking
the
children's
e~posure to electromaa·
•
In 1993, the Senate voted 96-3 to confirm Supreme Olurt nominee Ruth
including childhood leukemia.
netic fields from power lines, they found .n o cor·
Bader Ginsburg.

Juanita Bachtel

-

Bob Sc:Mffer, R..colo.
John Sit to 1110 R-Ariz.

or

Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Death Notices

The Daily Sentinel Homeless congressmen continued: th&amp;lisf
~bt1.948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tue8day, A..- 3; 1999

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 36~
Akzo ,, .................................... 40"
AmrTech !.............................. 76~
A-"land 011 .... :..............:....... 38:0

ATItT ................................... :.51'1.

Bank One ........... :................ :.53'Bob Evans ••~ ......................... 19'1.
Borg-Warner ......................... 49'1.
Champion .............................. :6,,
Charm Shps ................... :.......6,.
City Holding .......................... 25'1.
Federal Mog(!l ...................... 47'•
Flrslar ,..........;..........................26
Gannett ...................................72
·Kma~ ....... ,............................. 14'1.
Kroger ..................................26'1.
Lllnda End ............................. 4S),
Umlted .................................. 45'1.
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 1~
OVB ....................................... 327•
One Valley ............................. 38'1•
Peoples .................................28,, ·
Prem Flnl ...............................12}4
Rockwell ...........................59'4
RD/Shell ........:......................59-,.
Sears .................................... 42'!.
Shoney's ................................ 2,.
Wendv's .......:........................29%
Worthlngton ........................14.,.

• .:.., .,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Other Services
AdvertiiiDJI.........,..................... .. .ExL 1104
Cir&lt;utolloa ................................. .Ext. 1103.
Cluslllcd Ad• .. ......... ................. E ... 1100

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Aa•oc:l.ted Pre•• Writer

this: What are the wage levels, what
are . people making?" Sen. Paul

WASHINGTON (AP)-Armed Wellstone, D-Minn., said. He said
with new .numbe!S reporting the he is always disturbed by Ointon 's
lowest percentage. of Americans on declarations that welfare reform has
welfare since 1967, President Oin- succeeded.
!On is urging bu~iness leaders to do
Laura Askew; a former w~ lfare
more hiring so public assistanCe: recipient who now WQrks in the
rolls can be shortened even more.
White House's mail room, said she
The president was traveling is proud to be off welfare, despite
today to Chicago ·to participate in a any hardships that may come as a
W.
, elfare to
' W.ark · partne~ht'p
con- · res u·Jt o f 1eav10g
· we Ifare· .
••
terence, which offers training for
"It's tike a wonderful ~eaven
businesses interested in hiring we.l- has been opened, and blessings
fare recipients. There, he planned 10 flowed out," she said Monday at a
trumpet a year's wonh of statistics welfare-to-work event with Vice
showing that people are moving
into the workplace as expected.
"It has exceeded, in many
places, our expectations," White
ilouse spokesman' Joe Lockhart
said Monday. "There have been
tens of thousands of companies
now who have taken a chance,
brought people in off the welfare
rolls,' and the vast majority of those
have been very happy with the
results."
Bruce Reed, Clinton's domestic
policy adviser, said Clinton would
stress that welfare reform isn't
complete until everyone is working. "This is not the time for Olngress to call it quits," he said.
The president also wm encourage businesses to invest in povertystricken parts .of the nation left
behind by the economic good times
-the theme of his tour of impov· erished areas last month. ·
Clinton also --:ill urge states to,
· spend $4.2 billion in unspent feder. al welfare money, and appeal to
congress to leave those funds in
place, administration officials told
The Associated Press on Monday.
Olngiess has periodicall¥ eyed that
money, and GOP budget writers are
considering taking some of it back
to use for other domestic programs.
Critics of 'the welfare law say .
Clinton should not declare the 1996'
'· welfare overhaul a success while
ignoring studies that show many
Americans who leave welfare
· aren't .e arning enough to escape
pov~rty.
"The data that is conveniently
left out by the White House and by
too many people in the Congress is

Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Service awa rds will be prevented and work will be
in the fellow crah degree.
.
•

.Road tO be ClOSed
County road 3 (Leading Creek) will be closed from Wednesday
through Sept. I for bridge repl acement, it was announced toda y by the
Meigs Olunty Highway Departl)lent.

Humane Society to meet

'

The Meigs County Humane Society will be having a general member·
ship meeting Sunday, 3to 4 p.m. at the Pomeroy Public Library. All mem'
bers, including ,new members, are welcome. A fundraising dance, Thrift
Shoppc vo 1untecrs an d ot h er matters
.. ,will be discussed .
•

Story's Run Road to close

Story 's Run Road in Cheshire Township will be closed all day on Thursday for replacement of a culven, the townshil' trustees announced.
·

GOP works to craft compromt'se tax cut br'll

President AI &lt;lore. "For me, it's
something I always wanted - a
stable job.''
By DAVID ESPO ·
'
meeting of members of the Hou'se
Gore released new figures Mon- · AIIBOCiated Press Writer
and Senate who were formally
day showing the federal govern: .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Repub- appointed to negotiate a comproment had hired 14,~28 people off licans are racing against. a self- mise ..
welfare, surpassing th.e . original imposed deadline tb craft a com proThe session was pure ly .ceremogoal, set in March 1997, of 10,000 mise bill that cuts. taxes more Ihan . nial. The real work had already
by 2000. Most of them are working $792 billion over the ncx1 ·d ecade begun behind closed doors, and it
at the Commerce · and Defense and emphasizes partisan d,ivisions involved only Republicans ..
depanments.
·
in Congress about the use of pro Archer met with Sen. William
As of last September, nearly 70 jected federal surpluses.
Roth, R-Del., who is chairman .of
percent of them were still on t~e job"'
"Mr. President · ... please recon- the Senate .finance Olmmittee. The
after a year - compared wi th 37 . sider your staunch opposition to two men then met later i.vith top
perce.nt of other, similar federal giving the people their money Republicans in each house: House .
workers.
back', " Rep . Bill Archer, R·Texas, Speaker Dennis Hasten a nd MajoriNew figures provided to AP on chairman of the House Ways and ty Leader Dick Armey of Texas, and
Monday show that welfare rolls had . Means Olmmittee, said Monday at Senate Majority_Leader Trent Lntt
dropped 49 percent from their all- a brief, ceremonial meeting of . of Mississippi an'd Sen. Don Nickles
time high in 1994. Rolls have fallen House and Senate negotiators on the of Oklahoma, the GOP whip.
by more than half in 29 states. ·
tax bill.
· Hoping to wrap up their work by
As of March, just 2.7 percent of
"Please resist the temptation to Wednesday at the latest, they had
the population - or 7.3 million spend this budget surplus on more numerous large decisions to make
Americans- was on welfare, the government program~ . We don ' t and dozens 'of smaller ones. Offileast since Lyndon B. Johnson was . need full-time government and pan- cials said that by day 's end, none .of
president In 1967, the figure was- time families, we need part·time the major issues had been settled.
2.5 percent
·
governme nt and full-time fa milies."
The House bill, for example, pro·
But the ·new figures also show
That drew a polite retort from · ' 'ides for a 10 percent across-thethe dramatic declines are beginning Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D- board tax cut, phased in over the
· to slow in smrie states.
N.Y., who asked Archer whether he next decade. The. Senate-passed bill ,
After large drops, welfare case- favored a "part ,time Marine Corps by contrast would lower the current
loads remained relatively. stable in o.• a part-time Federal Bureau of 15 percent lax brackel to 14 percent,
Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Investigation.''
'
and some income currently taxed at
New Hampshire, North Dakota,
The projections of federal sur- 28 percent would be tax ed at the
Oklahoma and West \lirginia . And pluses are "deceptive;" Moynihan lower rate.
they increased in New Mexico and said. If Republicans insist on their
.Both houses approved " marriage
Indiana.
.
. course, "we will see a · large and, penalty" relief by raising the stan. The figures offer further evi- unanticipated· .decrease in , govern- dard deduction for couples so il- is
dence that the toughest work in ment."
tw.ice the amount allowed for indi welfare reform may be ahead, as
Archer and Moynihan artic~lated : viduals. But the provisions arc
states deal with people who face opposing views al a brief evening phased in on .differenHimetablcs.
complex 'problems - poor educalion, domestic violence and drug
and alcohol addiction.

Me1•gs EMs I.og S•. 8 ca 1·1s

Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service 'recorded
eight calls ·for assistance Monday. .
Units responding included :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:30 a.m., Lincoln Height s,
Jack L. Lyons and Rhonda · J.
.Lyons, Racine, se.ek damages in Pomeroy, Clyde Michaels, Pleasant . ,
Editor's note: A /awsuil oullines
excess of $25,000 from Donald P. Valley Hospital;
the griemnces of o11e party against
Smith,
Racine , and .Pullins ExcavatII :52 a.m ., V
.
. a 1e St ree t, Pomeroy,
another. It dtHs not estoblish guilt
ing Inc., Pomeroy, for .injuries stem - Audrey Backus, treated at the scene;
or innoc~nce.
ming (rom' an Aug. 28,1998, motor1:43 !).m., Follrod-Kcebaugh
The following lawsuits were filed
vehicle accident on state Route 124 Road, Tuppers Plains, Clarence
recently for c~nsideration in the
in which Smith was operating a Johnson, Veterans Memorial Hospi'Meigs County Common Pleas Olurl
vehicle owned by Pullins.
tal ;
of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill:
'
3:52p.m., South Second Avenue,
The Tuppers Plains Regional
Homeside Lending Inc. was Middleport, Mary Neutzling, VMH,
Sewer District on July 28 filed a
lawsuit against Doris 0. Eastman, awarded an $18,906.09 decision on· Middlepon squad assisted;
4.:27 p.m., Barringer Ridge Road,
Gordon Chevalier, DarreJI ·P. Cheva- · July 27 in its suit against Donald R.
Her, Helen Roberts and Ralph H. Richmond; et al.
"·
IPRIIIG VAll f i CltUMA
Chevalier. The district seeks to
44
I I&lt;&gt;UH lo~ll
I
6 . 45 24
obtain easements.
I ' ' k liN I" I
In' 'a suit filed .Monday, J. Freder~
(FRI 7/30 • TtjURS 8/5199)
ick Stanley and June A. Stanley,
lOX OFFICI WILl OPEN Al6:30 PM
Donald Steinmetz, 37, MiddleFOR EVENING SHOWS,
Athens, seek $35,000 in damages purl, was sentenced July 27 after
12:30 PM"IOR SAl &amp; SUN runNElS
from Marshall A. Slater and Anria J, pleading guilty to a felony charge of
Slater, Albany, · in a property dis- driving under the influence.
WILD, WILD, WEST (PG13)
7:1 5 &amp; 8:40 DAILY
pute.
.
Steinmetz was sentenced to 100
SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:40
In a foreclosure suit filed July days jail which was suspended with
NO BARGAIN NIGHT
30, the Bruner Land Company Inc., credit for 60 days served.
INSPECTOR' GADGET (PG)
Byersville, seeks foreclosure of a
He was also fined ·$1,000 and
7:00 &amp; 8 :20 DAILY
land contract with Stormy Angela · had his driver's. license suspended
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20
Charles, Pomeroy.
,
for five years.
United Companies ,Lending
Steinmetz was arrested May 9.
7:20 I 1:20 DAILY
Olrp., Columbus, filed two foreclo· This was his founh DUI in six years.
MATINEES SAT!SUN .t :20 &amp; 3:20
sure suits against Samuel A. Gibbs
· and Gloria J. Gi~bs, Middleport,
BIG DADDY (PGt3)
7:00 &amp; 9:1 0 DAILY
seeking $39,940.85 and $26,941.25.
MATINEES
1:00 &amp; 3:10
Karen Secoy, guardian of the
DEEP
BLUE
SEA
(R)
estate; of Frances L. King, Albany,
7:10
&amp;
1:10
DAILY
'
seeks damages exceeding $25,000
MATINEES SliT/SUN t :tO &amp;3:10
in a personal injury suit filed July
NO
NO BARGAIN NIGHT
28 against Northern Health Facili ties· Inc., Cleveland, doing business
520 W. Main St. •
as Rocksprings Rehabilitation CenPomeroy, OH ·
ter, Pomeroy. The suit alleges the .
Phone 992-2588
facility and employees were negli gent in a fall suffered by Mrs . King
VInton - 388·8603
on Oct. 4, I 997.
Gallipolis • 446-0852
A jury trial is recommended.

Suits flied

Judgment entry

Man sentenced on
felony DUI charge ·

Portland, Joey Dailey, VMH .
· POMEROY
1:45 p.m., volunteer fire depan-,
ment .to West Main Street 1 power
lines down, no injuries reported;
2:33 p.m .. VFD and squad to
West Main Street, possible structure
fire, Kenneth Lee, VMH.

RUTLAND
10:18 a.m., Holzer Meigs Clinic.
Pomeroy, William Booth , Holzer ·
Medical Center.

i

7

~"''~

IJim) lim Nem, Ll Ta)b, CaiW Zltaoklles,On1 W1oo

WID IIIli mY,.~ 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 8:45

!Co!!dJl WI Simi\ !em K&lt;o,!m'JJ 8ln1l Salna !lal'l
1m Bl.lf lfA ~ t30, 4:50, 7:30, 9:50
jHm)SM1 bool,lima&gt;.lo!,ll QDJ,Sml LJim

EYES WilE SIRIT

~'~

4:00, 8:15

\llllll)lon ~ lkO! Killll\ .llie: isollt9\ S,O., Pta!
Ma#Jtus Sllowll Bveryday
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

'·

�---•

The Daily Sentinel ·

·Sports

/

Tueeday, Aupust3,1t89 ·•

BOSTON (AP) - Two decisions it. ,.
went wrong for the Boston Red Sox:
Cleve land
manager
Mike
David Justice's choice to play and Hargrove said it was Jusuce's choice
Red Sox manager Jimy . Williams to rejoin the lineup.
move to bring in a struggling rel iev"It .was apparent that David 's
er.
wrist was getting better (Sunday). "
Justice, who missed the previous Hargrove sajd. " It was his call with
seven games with a sore left wrist. batting practice."
bit a tiebreaking, two-run homer in
Jus!ice, who said Sunday that he
lhe ninth inning tJ;Iatlifted Cleveland didn:t feel he ' d be ready to play in
to a 7-5 win over the Red Sox. · ' the series opener with the Red Sox
. With the score tied 5-5 in the on Monday, finished 2-for-4.
ninth, Jim Thome walked against
" I just -knew after batting rracRich Garces (0-1 ). After Garces !ice. " said Justice of his decision . ·
.retired Richie Sexson on a fl yout,
The Indians, who posted just their
-.Williams . called in.· Mark Guthrie. second win in seven games againsr
,Justice then belted the founh pitch Boston. pulled it ou! despite blowing
over tbe Red Sox bullpen in right. · . ~ five-run lead. It was Cleveland's
. " He hit a breaking ball. so tip sixth win in seven games.
your cap to the hitter," Williams said.
· Nomar Garciaparra went 3-for-3
" He won the battle, bin to me we ;,ad ~ith a solo homer for Boston, raising
, the right guy in there."
. hiS average to a league-leadi ng .362.
:- Garces was charged with bis first
"They've done great against us ...
, ~a rned tun after eight score less Sexson said. " It definitely makes
, appearances in 13 innings since you fee l better wi nnin g, the first
be1ng recalled from Triple-A on July game. "

ro. .

The Red Sox , winners in tWo of

three games thi s past weekend
against 1he Yankees ; lost for just the
second time in six games. They
entered the game 22-8 agains t the
AL's top four teams - Cleveland ,
New York. Texas and Toronto.
"We know we can play with those
teams." Boston 's Trm Nixon said.
Steve Karsay (8- 1l worked two
innings of scoreless relief for the
win. Mike Jackson pitched a perfeel ·
ninth for his 23rd savo.
Consecutive home runs by Thome
and Sexson helped Cleve land jump
to a 5-0 lead in the first be fore
Boston rallied to tic it in the fourth .
Boston starter Pat Rapp walked
Omar Vizquel to open the-game, and
Jacob Cruz tripled: Cruz scored on

. .. Guthrie has allowed eight run s in
tu s last four appearances. while his
ERA has climbed to a staff-high
6.57.
, "You guys can s it here all night
; and try to think of adjectives for how

· bad l am,'' he sa id: " But you won't
. (hmk of one bad e nough. It just does. n 't seem to be working. l wish l had
.an answer.''
,
. JustiCe, though, was happy wilh
: everything fo llowing hi s heroic
· teturn . His wrist felt good and his
' idea worked.
· " It's my first day back. " he sa id.
' _" I wasn't looking for anything io hit.
·- All I wanted to do was make so lid
. contact. That was my game plan . I
. knew I had (a home r) as soon as I hit

~McGwire's . HR

Pettitte foils trade -~
bid, helps Yankee$
beat Blue Jays 3-1f

National League
roundup
._By IRA PODELL
· ,'Asa.o ciated Press Writer·
", For the second straight day, Mark
. ,McGwire and Sammy S6sa matched
each other again.
Sosa hit his 41 st homer in the f~rst
_inning of Chicago's 6-5 loss to the
' Expos on Monday night. McGwire
responded in the fifth inning of his

six minutes. Charlotte Smith hit a
layup, Sharon Manning hit two free
throws and Stephanie McCarty hit a
jumper to put Charlotte up 15-10.
The Sting led by as many as ' 15 . CHARLOTIE, N .C. (AP) 27-12in the li~t half before takiebounding and some timely free'lhrow shooting enabled the Charlotte ing a 33-27 lead at halftime .
Sting to avoid losing a home game to
Stinson had l 8 points, her 13th·
the team with the Worst record in the straight game in double· figures, and
WNBA
'·
blocked three shots.
Melvin finished with 13 points
: And~a Stinson scored 18 points
and Andrade seven.
- five in the final three minutes In other WNBA action, Houston
to help lead the Sting to their sixth
straight victory, 62,58 victory over beat Sacramento. 75-70, M jnnestoa
t;he Cleveland Rockers on Monday knocked off Phoenix 73-56 and
Washington defeated Detroit 75-70.
night.
Comets 75, Monarchs 70 ·
" You look staiistically, that's the
At Haston. Sheryl Swoopes had
type of game you have to have to be
successful," Charlotte cqach Dan 26 points , six rebounds and six
Hughes said after the Sting extended- assists, and Cynthia Cooper added 22
their lead to one game over New points and six. rebounds as the
Houston Comets held off the
York in the Eastern Conference.
Monarchs
75-70,
·.. Charlotte led all of the second Sacramento
half, but Cleveland rallied in the finai Monday night.
Swoopes scored four points in the
'nine minutes to cut the Sting's le ad to
final two minutes as the Comets (20.SI -49 with 3:29 remaining.
Vicky Bullett made two free 4) extended their winning streak to
throws and Stinson followed \yith ·a six games. Houston hit I0 of 12 free
jlriving layup and a free throw to throws in the last four minutes to
push the lead back to sevl'n at 56-49. extend their home winning streak l O
Mery Andrade hit a three-pointer to seven.
:The Comets tra1\ed 64-62 after
bring Cleveland within four. 58 -54,
but Stinson added two more free Ruthie Bolt on-Holifield 's three. throws toput the game out of reach . pointer with 6: 14 to play, and then
· · The ~ling outrebounded the held Sacramento ( 14-l 0) score less
Rockers 32-22 and made 9 of II free until 34.6 .seconds remained .
H ou ston··~ Tina Thompson scored
:throws 'down the stretch tb earn the
.. win.
·
10 points and . became the sixth
, .' Chasity Me.lvin scored eight WNBA player to pass 'the 1.000points iri Cleveland's 14-7 run in the point mark.
Bohon-Holi field
led
the
final nine minutes after. being down
Monarchs With 16 points and
44-35 to cut the Sting lead to two .
11
,
1fwe can correct some of our lit~ Yolanda Griffith had her league- high
~le ·flaws, we can get several more 15th double-double with 14 points
wins before the season is over." and a game-high I 0 rebounds.
Lynx 73, Mercury 56
: Melvin said.
At Minneapoli ~. Sonja Tate and
Charlotte took the lead for good in .
_the first half after two ties in the first And[ea Lloyd-Curry, scoreless in the

WNB A round up

Mllliano Rivera, pitching; for the
first time in six days, got three outs
for his 28th save in 32 chances.
In other AL games,. 'it was
Oakland 7, Baltimore I ; Chicago 6,
By BRIAN OREFICE
Detroit 2; Texas 5, Minnesota 4;
A11oclated Preal Writer
Kansas City 12, Anaheim 4; and
Andy Pettitte showed George Seattle 4. Tampa Bay 0 .
Athletia 7, Oriola 1
Steinbrenner what kind of man he is.
and_ Kevin Appier showed ·the
Appier allowed one run in eight
Oakland Athletics what .k ind of innings in his Athletics debut as
Oakland won its sevenih straight
pitcher he can be.
Pettine , mired in a season-long gatl)e at home.
slump and reportedly on the verge of
Appier (I 0-9), acquired Saturday
being sent to t~e Philadelphia in a trade with Kansas City to boost
Phil lies at the trading deadline, Oakland's second-half playoff push.
responded in a big way to a public allowed three hits.
The Orioles, who have lqst five
challenge by the Yankees' owner.
The left-bander allowed six hits straight, played without Cal Ripken.
and one run in eigtit innings, his best The third baseman flew back to
performance of the year, as New Baltimore earlier in the day to have
York defeated former teammate his ailing back examined by the
David Wells and the Toronto Blue team's onhopedic speci~list.
Jays 3- 1 Monday night.
Scott Erickson (7-9) gave up
Pettine 's lack of aggressiveness seven runs on nine hils in 4~ innings,
drew the ire of his boss, who was snapping a six-game winning streak.
. DOUBLE PLAY VICTIM -The Cleveland Indians' David Justice prepared to unload him. But managWhite Sox 6, Tigen 2
slides into second base after baing retired by Boston second base- er Joe Torre argued 'to keep the pitchKip Wells pitched 5), solid innings
man Jose Offerman In the fourth inning of Monday night's game In er ' despite his struggles. and to win his major league debut, ani!
Boston, where the Indians won 7·5. Offerman's throw to first arrived Steinbrenner relented.
Frank Thomas went 4-for-5 to lead
in time to retire Einar Diaz and complete the double play. (AP)
On Sunday, Steinbrenner made it Chicago to victory at .Detroit.
- - • •
The Tigers lost their sevenrh
clear that retaining Pettitte was not
Roberto Alomar's grounder. Thome RBI single tied it 5-5 in the fifth .
prefe.~ence
and
1ssued
the
chalstraight
hts
10 fall a season-worst 22 ··
then hll ~Is _18th homer after Mann~
Cleveland staner Dwight Gooden
Rallltrez s smgle. Two pitches lat:t: .left the game. in the third with right le~~· to show what k10d of man, he , .games. under .500. Their 42·64 ·
,
,
.
.
,
record,istheworstintheALandtops
S~xson hll a dnve mto the left-field shoulder stiffness after ~iving up 15 · ,
That s .. Mr.. Stembrenner,
o'nly Florida and Montreal in the
screen f?r his 22nd homer.
.
four runs and SIX hJts m 2'tJ mnmgs.
GaTCiaparra had an RBI smgle Hargrove said that he likely will miss Petutte satd. I thmk he respects ~e majors.
and what I ha~e done. Maybe that s
Wells (1-0) was called up earlier
and Troy O'Leary added a two-run his neKt stan.
hiS
way
to
mouvate
me
.
Let
h1m
feel
in
the day from Double-A
triple as the Red Sox closed to 5-3 in
"We escaped," Justice said.
h_
k
e
h~
was
the
one
who
got
me
Birmingham
as an emergency staner
the b_onom of the fi_rs~.
"'They fought hard, like they usually
gomg.
.
for
the
injured
Jim Parque. He
~~?arc~aparra h1t a solo homer, h~s do against us."
.
. Pett1Ue (9-9) was backed by a allowed just two runs- one 'earned
_· \ · m th e thlfd and John Vale nuns
ttebreakmg two-run homer m the _ on six hits.·
etghth by Derek J~ter, who broke out
Brian Moehler (8-11) gave up five
of an 0-for-17 skid that ~atched the runs, all in the sixth, on five hits in
longest httless streak of h1s career. It 5 ~ innings. He 's lost three of follr
Cubs staner Kevin Tapani (6-9) . was the pitcher, however,. who was decisions and has a 9.10 ERA in his
So sa's homer was oversha dowed,
lost
his fourth straight game. The the .~eal story.
.
·
last six stans.
-too , as Cubs teammate Mark Grace
10 beheve the t,rade. stu~
~ho
hasn
't
won
since
w
I
have
Raogen S, Twlas 4
right-hander,
singled in the ninth for his 2,000th
10 the .~ack ·Of Andy s miOd,
June
24,
allowed
three
runs
on
six
as
.Ivan
Rodriguez homered twice
career hit.
···
1 think he bottomed ?ut and drove in four runs as Texas wori
in
eight
innings:
T?rre
satd.
hits
" Thi s IS a big milestone for me
MeGwire 's triple came · when hts last stan. He took ~tock of htm- its eighth straight game against
personally," Grace said: "For a i4th·
Tony
Gwynn robbed him of a homer self and reahzed thiOgs had to Minnesota
round draft pick, I think I've done
with~ leaping effort at the right-field change, .~nd he was going to trust
Ranger~ reliever JeffZimmerman
·
pretty well. "
the
ball
.
hlmse!f.
.
.
.
(9-0)
had his string of scoreless
fence,
but
couldn
'
t
hold
onto
Dustin Hermanson gave up Sosa's
10 appearances end at a club-record 26,
"
I
had
it
and
it
just
came
out,"
Astde
from
the
rehef
of
staymg
homer and Grace's milestone hit, but
not much else. Hermanson (4-10) Gwynn said. "I really don't know the Broox, Petuue got . some help but still managed to pick up the vic·
allowed five hits over 87, innings in how well he hit it. It just kept going from an old friend. J1m Leyntz, tory
and
going
."
.
Peuitte's
personal
catcher
in
1996
win
enabled
Zimmerman
10
winning for the first time since May
McGwire had four triples his ~he_n ~e went 2 1·8, played first base tie Whiiey Ford and Joe Pate for th~ ·
8.
.
.
rookie year in 1987 and one in 1988, 1 ~ his 99 Yankees debut and offered AL record for consecutive wins at
but had gone 4,618 at-bats since tben. a 11 !~le advice.
.
. the stan of a career. It also matched
It's the longest such 'streak· in major · . hWe talk~ a~ul..etusmg all of .h1S . Pate's mark of coosecutive wins by a
·
. pile es. more, salw yntz, who was rookie relief pitcher.
.
league history. · '
McGwire has hit 14 homers in 18 ' reac_qutred fr~m s.~n Dteg_o at ~he
Rodriguez, who went 5-for-6
1 t~lhng Sunday,_went 2-for-4 and is now 15July 2.5. Rtcalled RHP Dan Perkins from Sah Lake games to catch Sosa and lnove with- ~adiOg de~dhn~ . d'~ ~asn
of the PCL.
omAso".:;'t 10gy ek 1 ~ k n~w.
for-23 m hts last live games with
m four homers of h1s record 70TEXAS RANGERS: Assigned OF Tom
of
last
year.
t,
e~
o_
r
•
e
s,
."
fan
four
homers and 13 RBis.
homer
pace
Goodwin to Chulone of the Aorida State League.
The sluggers have homered on the favome du~ng hiS two _years 10 N!'w
Eddie Guardado (2-3) took tl)e
·
·
National Lfi111ur
AR IZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Placed RHP same &lt;!ay 14 times this season after York , was JUst. as effective as Pettttte loss for visiting Kansas City.
Byung-Hyun Kim on the 15-day di ublcd list.
for seven mnmgs, allowmg only a
Royals 12, AngelS 4
·
doing it21 times last year. '
Recalltd RHP Enk Sabtl from Tucson of the PCL
LOS I).NGELES DODGERS : Recalled C Paul
Kent Bottenfield (15-4) joined solo homer 1 Chlh Davis '" the
Jermaine Dye homered, drove 'n ·
LoDauca from Albuquerque of tiR: PCL. Optioned C
Angel Pena to Albuquergue
• Pedro Maninez as baseball 's only 15- founh. But Jeter broke through'" )he .four runs and scored three times to
.
NEW YORK METS : Added IN.F·OF Shawon game wmners
an d won 'oor t he , filfSt etghth.
J G rd' 1.d ff h . .
. h Iead Kansas
!ly to v1ctory .at
Dunston to tht ro~ttr. Optioned INF Mclv m Mora to
1
1
0
1
e
time in four post All-Star break stans . oe . ~a
e IOntng wtt
Anaheim. .
·.
·
Norfo lk of the lnttrnational l.eBgue
..,
for St. Louis.
a husthng double . He blooped a fly
The Royals staked Jose Rosado
Basketball
In other NL games, the New York ~all 10/~~ll~w leftdcen~[ that~~co~ (7-8) to an 11-0 lead before the leftNational Raskttball A.ssotiatioo
rum 1e
rappe ·
ter
uc
bander gave up three runs in ·the sev'
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: Named Bub Mets beat Milwaukee 7-2 to move
into
a
first-place
tie
in
the
NL
East
Kn~blauch
sacnliced, Jeter homered . enth. Rosado won his second str~igin
Oc 1 tp~a ~sm tanl coach
DETROIT PISTONS Re -s1gned .. G -F Jud
·
d ,
d S
. '
I made h1m look foohsh on the tan f h · f'
·
h.
.
an Franc1sco
.1 h b f
h .. W 11 (II ?) 'd s
or t e lfSt ume t IS season.
Bucchle1 to a multi year contract anrJ s•gned F an d AfiZOna e.eate
c e ore t at,
_e s
• sat ·
The loss was the Angels ' !5th in
16-6.
Mtchael CUrt) ton fi\e-yra..IJ.roptrncl
MINNESOTA TIMB f.RWOLVES : Signed F
• It was the same thmg, a cutter m. 17 games.
Mets 7,' Brewel'li 2
Wally StCLC"rbmk tO a thrte-year contract
·Rick Reed won . his ~eventh tBudt he got 'htlsl_khandhs m andd thebeballs
Jack McDowell (0-3), making his .
• PHILADELPHIA 76ERS Promoted Dnvc
10
,
,.
o ay aren .•1 e t ey use to
third start since returning from off- '·.
Coskey from vice presidem of morkeling nnd opero·
nons to §enlor vtct president
(See NL on Page 5)
the old days .
season surgery on his elbow and
1
PHOEN IX SUNS: Agree4 to term~ wi lh F

American League
roundup

helps Cards beat Padres 6-5

game, tying Sosa with a two-run
shot, his 498th career homer. in St.
Louis' 6-'5 victory over San Diego.
It was another hit, however, that
McGwire was really proud of- his
first triple in II seasons.
'
" They said it 'II never be done
. again, and I did it. I will think about
retirement artef · this season,"
McGwire joked after hitting his first
three-bagger since June 20, 1988.
M cGw ire now has SIX career
tnples. No player with 500 9areer
homers has less than 24.

By JOHN NADEL
match's biggest shot.
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (AP)
Duval hit what he would later call
:-;- Great start, rocky finish .
his best shot of the day down the
That made David Duval a loser to middle on the par-4, 449-yard 16th
' Tiger Woods in golf 's first appear- . hole , but the ball took one bounce
. ance on [Jet work television in prime ·into a rock formation some 300 yards
~-

Philadelph!&amp; ~($(hilling 14-4} at A m'idm
(Demr,srer 4-6). 7 0.5 p.m.
•·
At 11nta (M,!lwood 12-.5) lit Plmburgh (Bensoo,8·
8). 7·05 p.m
Colorado (Jamie. Wright ()..I) m CIN CINNATI
(Harmsch 10..6). 7.00 p.m.
Mcintrr:al (Vazquez *-51 at Ch1cago t Bowie Q. l ).
805pm.
'
·
Ntw York (Hershner 10-tH &lt;U Mliwmulee
(Pulsipher J- 1). 8·0.5 p.m.
Los A.ng tles (Dreifort 8-10\ at · Hbuston
, (Hampton 14-J). 8:05p.m
.·
.Spn Diego IBoehnngtr 6-JI nt St. Loots (Oltvcr
(&gt;..7 ), s lo p.m. .
·
San F rnnci~co (L Uemandez 5-10) at Anzona
C0aa110.5l. 10:05 p.m.

AL standings
F.utern rnvlsion

:r.am .

l!C · I. f&lt;l.

' New YO!t ......

... 63 41 .606
S9 49 546
.. ...... 57" 48 543
. .46 59 .438

""'

T(KOPIO .

Bost.on ... 1 ..... .

BahJ •oore ......
Tampa Bay .

63

406

Centnl Divlskm
CLEVELAND .............. 64 !.II
Chicago .. ....
... SO 54
Minneso!B . .
&lt;W 60
Kansas City ..
. ... 44 6\
Detroil ...
. ...... ,.1.2 ~

.609
48 1
42.l
.419
..196

. 4J

6
6':
17'·
21

I J'·
19'

20

·

12'

Wtstrrn Division
TeJ;as ..

.......

6~

.55

Otikland .

Seanle ...

............. .S2

Anuhe1m

.... ,.1.4

42 600
50 ,514 .
53 495 .
60

4n

'

II
18

Monday's ·scores
CLEVELANU-7. Bos10n S
C!J.ic3go 6, Detroit 2
· New York J. Toronto I
Tuas 5. Min n.e:oota 4
Kan~a s

City 1:;!;, Anaheim 4

Oakland 7. Ballimore 1
1Seanlt .f. Tampa Ba y 0

Wednesday 's games

· Montreal (PowtH Q..J) m Chicaw flra~: h se l .~ .
l-l\ 2:20p.m.
~
Philndc lphla (0gerl 6-9 \ al Flonda (Mt:ui('IWS R.

II ). 7:05'p.m.

Basketball

CLEVELAND { J~I Wnght 1-6) al Boston (P.

Martinez 15 -JJ, 7OS p m.
Chicago (S nyder 8·6) M De1roil (Thompson 9-9), ·
7:05p.m.
Toront~ . (Hamilr on J-6) at New York (Cone ' l0..5): •

7:35p.m.
.
Minnctota (Sampson 3-1) at Teus (Morgan 11·
6). 8:35 p m.
.
Kansas C il ~· (Suppnn. 5-6) ru Anaheim. (Fyhrit Q..
r 2), 10:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Bones 0-2} at Oakland '(Hudson ,5.! ),
10:0.5 p.m.
'
TampiJ Bay (Rupe .5-.5) at Seauk: (Halama 8-2).
10:0.5 p.m.

Toro'nto (Escobar 9-1) Itt Ntw York (lrabu S.J),
12 :0l p.m. ·
.·
· CLEVELAND (Colon 10..3) at Bo~aOn (Portuga l
6-8), I :05 p.m.
Baltimort (J Johnso.n 2·.5) at Oakiand {Haynes ?.
9), 4:0l p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 8-9) at Texas (LoaiZa J.l),
8:35 p.m.
·
·
.
Kansas City (Witasick 4-8) at Anaheim (Hill 3~
10~ IO
:Jl p.m.
.
Tampa Bay (Ei land 1·6) at Stattle (Mec~ 2·1},
10:3.5 p.m.

NL standings

WNBA standings
:r.am

Eastern Coqference

n

Charlout .. .
. .. 14
Nrw York ........ .
.. ........ 12
Detroir.. .
.. ... 10
Orlando .. ................... , ...... 9
Washington ............. .! ............. 7
CLEVELAND. ~ ....., .............. 6

L

10
10
rJ
13
I7
11!

f&lt;l.

.583
.545
.435
.409
.292
.2.50

Houston ........................... ,... 20
Los Angeles ....................... 16
Sacramento .......................... 14
Mirutc:Jota .............
.. .. 12
Photnix .......... ..... . . ... .... .. 10

4
6

.833
.72,7

10

.383

10
13

.. .......~

14

.54.5
435
.364

Utah ......................

-'

6
1
9'1

II

Monday's scons
Charlot te 62, CLEVELAND .56
Washington 75. Detroit 70
Minnesota 73, Phocrux 56
Housron 1S, Sacrame nto 70

l'

Tonight's game '
New York 111 Utah, 9 p m.

.W L f&lt;l.

Atlanta .......
.. .......64
New York .... ,.. ..
.........64
Pl'liladelphia ........................ 57
Montrta1 ............................ 40
FlOrida
......... 4 1

43

43
48
62
6.5

.598
598
.543
.392

387

li.l
6
21 1•l
2i~

Wednesday's games
Mtnnesora at Detmit, 7:30pm.
CLEVELAND at Orlando. 7 : ~0 p.m.
Sacramenlo at charlottr:, 7:)0 p.m.

Transactions

Centr•l 0\Ylsion

Houston . .

... 64

42

.604

.. ......... 60 43

.583

2\

Louis ........................... 53 .53
Pitbbursh ................... .5 1 53
Milwaukee ..... ,... :::............ .49 .55
ChiC !lAO .
. ..... .48 ~5

500

II

.490

.47 1

12
14

466

14',

CINCINNATI ......
1St

Western Dlvl!ion
Antona
.
.,. ~ 'San Franc1uo ...
• San Diego ....
.. Colorado ..
Los Angr1ts

.• .

60 47
.... .56 .50

501
.l28

~ ·,

50 .5.5
41 ~8
46 ~9

.476
.448
.4J8

12

, ~ Monday's scores
Montreal 5 Chicago I
St Lotm 6, San DK!:go 5
Ntw Yor~ 7 ., Milw~u~ et 2
Am:onn 16. San Francis(oo(i

...'

.

.

Footf!all

_Time is running out to
Salute Your -Friends and
Neighbors-from Rutland in
our Commemorative Edition::
for -it's Bicentennial

.

Natlon.al Football Lea1ue
ARIZONA CARDlNALS: Agreed to ~rlns with
WR David Bouon on a four-yfnr co ntract.
rATI.ANTA FALCONS: Placed RB Gary Dow ns ·
on injured reserve. Sigrwed RB Harold Green .
BUFFALO BILLS: Agl'fftl to ttnns with WR
Andre R.eed on a thrCC·)tar contract.
CA ROLINA PANlliERS: Signed OL Jerome
Dawis and DL Pia Sagapolutd r . Waivtd DB Ryan
Suuer. Released DB TYrone Lcgelle.
CHICAGO BEARS: Agreed to trmu wtth QB
Cade McNown 10 a .sevt:n-year co nn-act
CINC INNATI BENGALS: Signed CB Charles
F1sher to a four-year contract.
CLEVELAND BROWNS · Placed· QB John
Dutton on the waived-injurtd llst. Signed QB Thad
Busby.
'
GREEN BAY PACKERS· Waivtd LB Jeremy
Beucler. Announced RB Ouis MCCoy has returned to
the Nav~ . Announced the retirement of WR Robell
Brook.'.
· .
NEW ENGLAND PATRlOTS : P1~ctd TE
Devon Smith ·on inJural reserve.
NEW YORK GI,ANTS: Waived DE Greg
Derrick.
·
NEW YORK JETS: Rt:-signed FB Ktith Bym
torr on~:- year contract
OAKLAND RAIDERS : Announced P Jerr
BlAckley leftthC" team. Stgned TEScott Thompson

.

.

.

Baseball
Major Leaaue Baseball
MLB : Reduced the suspe nsion of Nrw York
Y~ nktes OF Darryl Strawberry b)'' ant 1 wrek to
August 4.
· ·
Amerlun Uaxue
ANAUEIM ANGELS· Activated OF Jim
Edmonds from the 60-day di5obled list Dts1gm11ed
OF Reggie WilliBnu for I:ISJignment
BALTIMO RE ORIOLES Recalled RHp Jim
Cor5i from Rochesler of the ln tcrnationlll League
CHICAGO WHITE SOX. Plm:ed OF DniTin
Jackmn on tilt 15-daY d1 s11bled lr st, rctro~ cth·e lo
Jul y 27 . Purchased the &lt;"Onlract of RHP Krp Well ~
from B1rmtnghom of the Soothtrn L=aguc ,
OETRmT TIGERS Rtt:allcd RHP Frnm:isco
CordeTO from Jackson\'J llc: of tht Southern League
MINNE,SOTA TW INS Placrd LHP Mark
Rtdnliln on the IS -dny dt5nblcd l1s1 . rc: troBt: ll\'e to

Chris Wina left the team.
SAN FllANCISCO 49ERS· Signed S Harold
Piersey to a one-,year contr11c1 . Waived FB Ed
·

~ssum

Hockey
NatiOnal Hocke' Uagu'e
ATLANTA THR AS HERS Signed C Ray
Ferraro to 11 two-year t:ontra.::l.
BUFFALO SABRES· Rt·stgntd D Ja.rnts
Pamck to 11 multiyear comract and LW Ckoff
Sanderso n and D Jason Holland to one. year conlrat U
CA LGARY FLAMES: Re -sig ned G Frtd
8rath,,,.arte
CAROLINA HURRICANES: Ag r ~~d 10 term s
wnh 0 Davt Karpa on a one· year contract
. C HI CAGO BLACKUAWK S S!g/ltd LW
Wrndel Clark 10 a one-year com rnct
COLORADO AVALANCHE Re-s1gned D Grtg
de Vrru nnd F Shean Donova n
'
· ·
FlORIDA PANTHERS : Re·signcd C Chm
We lls to a ont-ytar conlract 11nd D Juhn bk opin to a
1\\.0·yenr con!racl
NASHVILLE PREDATORS Stg!led D Rob
Boughner
PH ILADELPHIA FLYERS· Signed LW M1kc
M:~ncluk 10 11 one-year comr3Ct

f

.

PHitADELPHIA EAGLES : Announced lB

Eutem Dlwlslon

IUm

Rodnty Rogers on a three-yenr contract .
.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS· Tradtd G
Isaiah Rider and G Jim Jackson to che Atl an1::1 Haw k~
for G Ste,·e Smith and G Ed Gray. Re-signed F·
Jennn1.ne O'Neill to a fou r·ytar contract. .$tgne'cl F
Dedef Sch remp f co a two-year contro.cr.
SEATI LE SUPERSONICS: Renounced !he
rights to C Olden ~ol y ni ce. G Drew Barry. G Jopn
Cron)' lind G Aaron W,illiams Re -signed C Jelan1
McCoy to a two-year contr~C1 .

.,·

Western ConCerence

Wednesday's games

°

r.'

•

A tlanta (Olen I-ll at Pmsburgh CR1tchte 9· 7).
1. '15 p.m
.
•
.
Colorado (K ile 6- 10) ~ ~CINCINNATI (Ncngk 1JJ 7 ,1'i -pn1
. .
.
~.
'
Ne~ York tRogers O.Ot nt Milwdukc~: tP~:terspn
1- 1). 8 05 p.m.
.
Los Angdes (K Brown ll ·fll at Houston (Holt 2·
IOJ. 8:05 p m.
San D1ego {Clement 5· 10) at St LoUJs (Mercker
· 4-4). 8·10 p m. •
·
~an Francisco (Gardner ~ · 9) at Anzona (8
Anc 1'1003·2), 10.35 p.m.
·

Tonight's games

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11

c·

)

,,

Call992~2155 for details

Kathy Williamson Ext. 105
Or Dave Harris Ext. 1'04

.

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.

I!iaying not far from where he
grew up , Woods overcome a sluggish
start and dominated. til!: par-3 holes
to beat Duval 2 and I in the
"Showdown.at Sherwood," a madefor-television match-play competi·
. lion Mondlt.y night.
It was nothing more than an exhibition !'latch, but the world's top.ranked golfers were paid very well
for their three-plus hours of work.
Woods earned S 1.! .million, while
Duv'al collected $400,00li. Each will
donat~. $200,000 to charity, includirig
SI 00,000 each to the PGA •Toursponsored First Tee program.
. If either felt any pressure, it cer' tainly wasn't. evident, although ne.ither was at his best.
'., At a time' wbere the pressure per:
haps should have ·been on , Woods
. imd Duval were giggling like schoolchildren as they chatted while walk, ing down lhe 15th ·fairway. Woods
led 1-up at the time.
.
" I approached the matc h that
· bavid and I ale good friends, and we
were going to come out here and put
' on a good show." Woods .said . " I
, think it's a wonderful concept. "
· . So is thi s son of ih ing'the stait of
~ ~omethmg new?
:
" I hate to say it, but it 's basically
o up to the .. ratings," Woods said .
t "How high the ratings are will deter•
-••mine how successful it was."
~ Duval won the first two holes
~ with a birdie and a par, but Woods
won th~ next two; and added wins at
• the sixth and ninth holes for a 2-up
; lead at the tum.
:. A wm on 12 put Woods ahead 3•:up, but when D.~ val won 13 and 14,
. ::it was anyone's match .
·
-:; The players halved 15 before the

The

Tonjgbt's games

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP lla.ketball Writer
Nick Anderson. ·the last origi~al
member of the Orlando M~gic,
appears headed to the Sacramento
King!. and Steve Smith and Detfef ·
Schrempf liave joined the Ponland
Trail Blazers.
The pace of player movement
picked up Monday on the second
day since ihe expiration of a poe month moratorium on NBA trades
and free agent' signings . with
Ponland and Phoenix getting big
chunks of their retoolings accomplished .
The Blazers sign~d Schrempf for
$4 .2 million over two years, heating
out the Utah Jazz. and Portland al so
convinced Jermaine O'Neal 10 turn
down what he said was a one-year.
$9 mi\\ion-$10 million offer elsewhere .
Char les Oakl ey was in Los
Angeles to speak to the Lakers . even
as the Toronto Raptors had an .offer
worth about $6 million annually on
the table .
There · was still no movemenl nn
SHADOWS OPPONENT-" Cleveland's Michelle Edwards (right)
shadows Charlotte's Andrea Stinson during Monday night's WNBA the Penn y · Hard away or Mil ch
game In Charlotte, N.C ., where the· host Sting beat the Rockers 62- Richmond trade fronts, while the
58. (AP)
·
.
·
other two big-ticket free agent s first half, combined for 16 points McCray rebou nd e.d from· an early Terrd l Brandon a~d Vin Baker .~
dur-ing a second ~ half run for injury to score 14 second-half poinls &lt;- a~peare~ .almos t certam lo remam
Minnesota.
to help lead Wa shington .
wuh thelt old teams .
The Ly nx (12-\0) made · 10 of
' The All -Star guard di slocated her
. Rodney Rogers agreed to tcnn s
their first 15 shots from the fiCid 10 left ring finger early in .the game. but w1th the Phoemx Suns. M1chae\
the second half to break open a close returned. ,for the second half to help C~rry moved from Milw aukee to th e
game . Tate and Lloyd-Curry com- her team snap a four-game losing P1stons. Jud Buechler opted to stay
bined for 21 second-half points.
streak. Chamique Holdsclaw led the '" Detrott and Jel ant McCoy rc. Minnesota had five players in Mystics (7 -17) wi th 23 points and Signed With Seattle .
.
double fi gures , led by Brandy Reed .se ven rebounds . and Murrie\ Page
Sacramento, after schedulmg a
. new~ conference to announce tlte rewith 17: Angie Potthoff had a sea- added II points.
Jennifer Azzi led Detrmt (10-13) S1gn1n gs of Jon Barry and Scot
son-high 13. Marlies Askamp led
Phoenix (10- 13) with 12 .
with a season-high 22 pmnts but It Pollard, suddenl y ca lled II off.
Mystics 75, Shock 70
wasn 't enough to keep the. Shock General manager Geoff Petne
, At Auburn Hills; Mich., Nikki from losing their fifth straight .
mstead worked om a trade sendmg
·
.
·· ·
Tartq Abdiii -Wahad to the Orlando

!;NL gan,es...

Duval , meanwhile; played in the
Hartford Open before tra vding 'to
California and arriving Sunday
ni ght. ·
But he wouldn 't use fatigue as an

exc use .
"My game did not feel very good
today; it was really disappointing,"
'
he sai d.

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fr~m Page 4)

··.'

in a s~ven -run third inning as
Arizona beat San Francisco in the
first game of a series between the NL . ..
West 's top two t~am s. .
,,,
, Jay Bell added an RBI double in
the third-inning uprising against the
Giants' Kirk Rueter (9-6). Travis Lee
ended an 0-for-30 slump with a tworun single as Arizona scored seven
more runs in the eighth.
Marvin 'Benard homered twice,
his first career multihomer game, to
give him II homers for : San
Francisco. Ellis Burks was 4-for-4
with a double.
Arizona staner Armando Reynoso
(7-1) gave up two runs in the first,
including Benard 's leadoff homer,
and a so lo home run to J .T. Snow in
the sixth.

•

(Continued from Page 4)

. shoulder, allowed nine runs and 10
hits in three-plus innings.·
Mariners 4, Devil Rays 0
At Seattle, Freddy Garc ia won hi s
lith game, the most among 111ajor
league rookie s. and Wade Boggs
nioved to within five hits of 3,000. ·
·: . Garcia ( II '6) ail owed six hits and
fied his career high with I 0 stri ke-

oUis in i" innin gs. He hit a batter arid
walked one.
'
.
Boggs, went 1-for-3 with a fifth inning j ingle,
Mi cke y Calloway ( 1-2) gave up

three run s on siX hil s and three walks
in fiv e: inn ings for the loss .
Jose Paniagua got the final four
outs for hi s second save .
:

. I

~

WaytO TeeltUp,
·Bo Some Pro Shopp'

(Continued

•
•straight
decision and Mike Piazza -hit
:pne of three New York homers at
;Milwaukee.
. The Mets are 10-1 in Reed's last
'~'II starts ' ' .. ·~
, Reed (10-3) allowed two runs and
· •seven hits in seven innings . H e
!struck out four and walked two for
;the Mets, 14-4 since the All-Star
.
·
·break. '
Milwaukee starter Hideo- Nomo
:(9-4), released by the Mets in spring
·training, gave up back-to-hack
:homers to Robin Ventura and newly
:acquired Darryl Ha milton in the
·fourth , as well as Piazza's 22nd in
:the fifth . .
,
Diamondbacks 16, Giants 6
At Phoenix , Bernard Gilkey
;homered and Luis Gonzalez tripled

:AL
.. action...

I'

Not on!y that, Woods and Duval
have been paired 'together o nly one
other lime, in the third rouna of the
World .Series ,of Golf last year; a to urnament Duval went on to win.
Woods took it easy heading into·
~the~ .
.
.
the
event, han ging around the area
That meant a one-shot penalty.
and
playin g a practice round.Sunday.
Meanwhile, Woods hit two terrific .stiots to leave him I 0 feet from the
hole. ,Duval conceded, giving Woods
a 2-up lead with two holes left.
" It was one of the worst breaks
"'
I've ever seen, to end up in Jack 'slittie concoction in the middle of the
fairway,' " Woods said, referring to
Jack Nicklau s. the course des1gner.
"I hit it where I was aiming it." '
Duval said. " I've played the Shark
Shootout 'three times (at Sherwood
Country Club), I know it's there . I' ve
aimed for it every time."
This time. to hi s dismay, he hit it.
Needing a birdie to keep the
match alive, Duval's tee shot on the
232-yard 17th caught a ridge and ,
rolled 50 feet from the hole. Woods
was 40 feet a-:way. and lagged hi s putt
within 2 feet.
'
Duval then' conceded, and 'they
smiled and shook hands as the floodlights in stalled on thermal two hole s
, at Sherwood' before the match L'ast
shadow s across the green .
It was the fifth par-'J hole played
· by the pmr; Woods won the first four.
· ."The great · thing about mato.h
play is -1 was down early, I knew I
could come back," Woods said. " It 's
a game of l]lomentuill. The mome ntum changes, it's .like the NBA or
football, when a team gets on a ro ll.
_they get all pumped up. "
Woods, who has won three tim es
and has finished no worse than seventh since hi s post-Masters break. is .
No. l in the world ran kings - a
position Duval previously held by
becoming the first player in 25 years
t9 win fpur times before the Masters. f"A rivalry ? Not yet," Woods said.
"We haven' t gone head -to-head

· ~n

player deal, Rider and Jim Jackson has reportedly been offered $30 milwere seni 'to Atlanta for Smith and lion for three years to stay in
Ed Gray. ,
. Washington. Seattl e would like to
A subsequent trade sen ding acquire him in a sign-and-trade deal
Jackson from Atlanta to the Los involving Hersey Hawkins .and
Angeles Clippers for free agent . another player, but the Sonics al•o
Lorenzen · Wright was being di s- could try to trade Hawkins to a third
cussed, but Hawks ge neral manager team to c lear enough cap room to
Pete Babcock said the team s "were · sign Richmond as a free agent.

..

~

,

yet.

not even close."
"It would be nice to add depth to
our frontcoun , depending on how
heavy a price it would be on the rest
of our roster." Babcock said. "We
didn 't make this trade with a plan to
move one of these players on."
It was a pani cularly busy day for
the Blazers. who increased their
offer to the 20-year-old ·. O 'Neal.
O ' Neal got · a four-year contraCt.
Terms were not disclosed .
Rogers agreed to take ihe S2 million mid-level exception from the
Suns. who have already re-signed
Clifford Robinson and remain in the
hunt' for Hardaway The contract is
for three years. with the final season
at· the r layer's-option:
Curry took the Pistons' five-year,
$12 million offer over a four-ye3J',
$10 million offer frnm Milwaukee.
Buechler signed a one-year deal
with a player opt ion for a second
year using the team ·s $ 1 ~\ million
exception . said his agent. Mark
Banelstcin.
Schremp( insulted hy Seattle's
$1.1 million oflcr, dec ided 10 move
to Portland for two years at $4.2 million . His tina\ choices were Portland
and lJtah .
" He' s saved all his money, he just
want s lO win a championship," said
his agent. Tony Dutt.
Schrempf also drew interest from
the San Antonio Spurs; b.ut told them
he preferred to remai n closer to his
family in Seattle. The 36-year-old
spent the past five seasons with the
Sonics. who are courting Shandon
Anderson and Cedric Ceballos as his
replacement. Seattle also expressed
interest in Rick Fo~. but he is
expected to return to the Lakers .
San Antonio reponedly was close
to an agreement with Lamoqd
Murray of the Clippers.
.

~k~1~c.~o.:e~~~~r~~~.~a~deal was he~~o~n:~~ ~i~:;:ere~:~~:/~
the Trail Blazers-Hawks four- possible trade for Richmond. who

:Woods beats Duval in 'Showdown at ·sherwood'

Scoreboard
Baseball

Trail Blazers sign
Schrempf, Smith,
Jermaine O'Neal

Sting beat Rockers
62~58, . stretch win
~treak to five games

hge4

India-n s notch 7-5
win over Red Sox

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Auguet 3, 1999

i

1

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-ctL....:b

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Shop It ltomt...

Cases concluded in County Court
'

The followmg cases were concluded recently In the MeiJS Counl)l
Coun of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
Fined were Amy Rizer, Rutland,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Terry L.
Ottman Sr., Long Bottom, speed, $30
plus costs, Jacob W Landis, Long
Bottom, seat belt, $15 plus costs,
Douglas E Schlerelh, Medma, speed,
$30 plus costs, Mark A. Grierus,
Euclid, speed, $50 plus costs,
Matthew Burke, Pomeroy; seat belt,
$25 plus costs, Linda K Goforth,
Waterford, Mich., speed, $30 plus
costs, Larry R '(ogan, Franklin, Pa.,
speed, $50 plus costs; Michael R
Hams, Walertown, Wise , seal belt,
$25 plus costs, Trav1s R McFarland,
Mason, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Douglas R Ben1rem, Burcettstown,
Pa, speed, $30 plus costs, Marcy R
Roush, Middleport, ficut1ous tags,
$20 plus costs, Joseph W Whne III,
Spnngfield, speed, $50 plus costs;
Dav1d S Wiggers, Belpre, e.cess1ve
wmdow tm~ $20 plus costs, Douglas
D Knull, Athens, speed, $30 plus
costs, Juhe N Krolh , Cmcmnall,
· speed, $30 plus cos ts. Juloe A
McGUire. Langsville, speed, $30 plus
costs, seat belt, $25 plus costs,
Melissa J Goble, Pomeroy, seat
belt. $25 plus costs , Ne1l Metha, Lyndhurst speed, $30 plus costs. Crystal L Summerfield, Reedsv11le , stop
s1gn, $20 plus costs, John W Jeffers,
Albany, speed, $30 plus costs,
R1chard Caruthcr Jr . Pomeroy, failure tp control. $20 plus costs, Marlme J Landrum, Jackson, speed, $30
plus costs, N1cholas C Daniel.
Waverly, speed, $30 plus costs, Ella
M Bakov1tz, Ironton, speed, $30 plus
costs, Wilham J Barrett, Lancaster,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Charles E.
Cumuue II, Galhpolos, seat belt, $25
plus costs, Alan L Gossett, Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt,
$25 plus costs, Rachel A. Robmson,
Manon, W.Va, seat belt, $15 plus
costs, Wilham Harry Cromhsh, Galhpohs, seat belt. $25 plus costs;
Wilham L. Brooks Jr., Perrysburg,
speed, $30 plus cos~s. Lew1s E Pulver, Reedsville, expired tags, $20 plus
costs; JeSSica J. Lltorski, Watertown,
WISe ., seat belt, $15 plus costs, Laura A Arix, Chester, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; James W Latham, Athens, left
of center, $20 plus costs,
Emma L. Btrd, Racme, failure to
y1eld nght of way from a stop Sign,
$20 plus costs, Davey Ferguson,
Hunungton, W Va , seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Robm S. Barnnger, Reedsville,
speed, $20 plus costs, Jeffrey A
Rankin, Tuppers Plams, seat belt, $25
plus costs; James R. Couenll,
Pomeroy, expued plates, $20 plus
' costs, Jeffrey D N1ceswanger, Mal,ta, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Perry J.
' Ray, Charlotte, N C , speed, $30 plus
costs, Jack A. Andrews, Columbus,
speed, $30 plus costs, Stephen M
• Smder, Belpre, failure to control, $20
plus costs, Lmden J Kelly, Middleport, seat belt, $25 plus costs, Jeffrey
0 Peckbam, Middleport, seat belt,
$25 plus costs, Richard P Zmk, New
Haven, Ind , speed, $.30 plus costs,
Roben E MaJOr, Huntsville, seat belt,
$25 plus costs, John P E1chman, Galhpohs, speed, $30 plus costs, Caroline S Bennett, Galhpohs, failure to
y1eld, $20 plus costs, Krisu M Johnson. Long Bottom, fa1lure to control,
$20 plus costs,
James Arthur Hamson Jr, Park- .
ersburg, speed, $30 plus costs,
Charles B Williamson, Rutland,
speed, $30 plus costs, Randy E
Thompson, Athens, seat belt, $25
plus costs, Shem J Noonan, Athens,
speed, $30 plus costs, Anthony R
Fetty, Athens, speed, $30 plus costs,
- Roy A. Holley, Chesapeake, seat belt,
• $25 plus costs; CI~D Shockley,
· R1pley, left of center, $20 plus costs;
Michael J Busse, Denmark, W1sc.,
speed, $50 plus costs, Theodore
Royd, Columbus, seat belt, $25 plus
- costs, Wilham J Qutclde, McArthur,
seat belt, $15 plus costs, Matthew D.
Thompson, Logan, seat belt, $25 plus
costs, D1ana L Roach, Ltttle Hockmg. seat belt, $25 plus costs, Jesse J.
Thomas, Middleport, no helmet, $20
plus costs, Charles W. Cochran IV,
Pagev1lle, speed, $55 plus costs, seat
belt, $25 plus costs, Harley E
Hoschar, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
costs, LISa T. Hunt, Racme, seat belt,
$25 plus costs, Henry W. Doerfer,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Del
L Ogdm, Langsv1lle, overload, $525
plus costs,
Leshe L Baresw11t, Pomeroy, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Larry K. Fridley,
Columbus, excesSive wmdow bnt,
$20 plus costs, Dame! J Oto,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs, Nellie Allen, East Liverpool, speed, $30
plus costs, Sandra K Wnght,
'Pomeroy. seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Robert R Durst, Portland, failure to
mruntam ass ured clear diStance, $20
P,lus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
John P Bums Jr, Galhpohs, speed,
·$50 plus costs, seat belt, $25 plus
~osts; followmg too closely, $27
plus costs, Angela R Swmger,
Racme, seat belt, $25 plus costs,
_ Jerem18h E Heck, Athens, speed,
• $30 plus costs. seat belt, $25 plus
• costs, Mace! S. Barton , Reedsville,
speed, $30 plus costs, Mark D
Wynun, Flemmg, speed, $30 plus
costs, seat belt, $25 plus costs,
Michael P Wolfe II, Amhurst, speed,
$30 plus costs, Robert M Vancko Jr.,
-Athens, speed. $30 plus costs, Jen -

mfer J Cummms, Ractne, seal belt. bara Stahl, Syracuse, passmg bad
$25 plus costs, Robert W H1bb1ts, checks, $25 plus costs, resmut10n
Ca:nton, seat belt, $25 plus costs; prud, Michelle Stahl, Syracuse, three
Donna L. Hibbits, MasSillon, seat counts of passmg bad checks, S25
belt, $15 plus costs; Kenneth plus cost~ on each, restnuuon, three
Wheaton, Cheshue, seat belt, $25 days Jail suspended on each, Edward
plus costs; Marge Wheaton, Cheshue, Stark, Pomeroy, headhght viOJauon,
seat belt, $15 plus costs, Jeremy R costs only , Melissa G Stanley,
Gatrell, Middleport, speed, $30 plus Pomeroy, fa1lure to control , S25 plus
costs. Shelly Barrett, New Haven,
costs.
Denver R. Hoover, Ravenswood, W Va , seat belt, $25 plus costs,
Mary H Truesdale, Columbus,
dnvmg under suspenSion. $200 plus
costs, five days jail and SIOO fine sus- dnvmg under lhe mfluence, 30 days
pended if valid operators hcense pre- Jail suspended lo 14 days, $850 plus
sented wtlhm 90 days, one year pro- costs, 90-day OL suspenSion, one
batiOn, Jody L McVay, Racme, year probauon, no OL. $200 plus
domesbc VIOlence, costs, SIX months costs, 60 days Jail suspended to 14
jail suspended to 30 days, one year days concurrent w11h DUI , one year
probabon, nestrammg order, resisllng probatiOn, seat belt, costs only, posarrest, costs, 90-~ays Jail suspended sessiOn, $75 plus costs, possessiOn of
to 30 days concurrent, one year pro- drug paraphernalia, $75 plus cos1s,
bauon, Duane Johnson, Middleport, five days Jail concurrent, one year
reckless operatiOn, $100 plus costs, probauon, fleemg, costs, one year
Penny M Clark, Long Bottom, fail- probation, 30 days Jail suspended to
ure to control, $20 plus costs, Shaw- 14 concurrent; faiSificauon. $75 plus
l\• Cornell, Alhens, seat belt, S15 plus costs, one year probabon, 30 days Jail
costs, Jerrod L Arthur. Wellston. seat suspended to 14 concurrent, no OL,
belt, $25 plus COSlS, Bradley W $100 plus costs, one year probation,
Vance, Cheshire, expired negiStrabon, five days Jail concurrent, wmdow
$20 plus costs, James H Smuh, unt, costs only,
Westerville, seat belt, $25 plus costs,
T1mothy
W
Wickersham,
Charles A Hawkms, B•rmmg- Pomeroy, no vehicle regiStratiOn,
ham, Ala., speed, $30 plus costs, $20 plus costs, fleemg, $100 plus
Michael E. S1sco, Belpre, fa1Iure to costs, one year probation, 30 days JWl
control, $20 plus costs, Tyson K suspended to three days, cnmmal
Buckley, Syracuse, failure to dnve m miSchief, costs, 31) days Jail susmarked lanes, $20 plus costs, Richard • pended to three days concurrent,
E. Cook, Cheshire, speed , $30 plus restitution, Sara E Potter, B1dwell 1
costs, Todd A Morrow, Manetta dnvmg under financial responSibilispeed, $30 plus costs, EberL Pick- ty acuon suspenSion, $150 plus costs,
ens, Racme, seat belt. $25 plus cosls, lhree days Jail ang $75 suspended 1f
John A. Rankin, Tuppers Plams , seat vahd OL presented wnhm 60 days,
belt, $25 plus costs , Donald R Run- one year probation , Charles E.
yon, Athens, exp1red trailer tag, $20 McGrath, Rutland, diSorderly conplus costs: Wilma L Clark, Dumont, duct, $30 P\US costs, Penny R Hmdy,
Pa , speed, $30 plus costs, Cassandra Pomt Pleasant , speed, $22 plus costs,
D Stephens, Parkersburg, speed, $30 seat belt, $25 plus cos ts, Chns L
plus costs, James E Moore, Sharples, Marker. Cmcmnat1, speed, $46 plus
W Va , speed. 1$30 plus costs, Ben- costs,
Jamm P. Hickle, Pomeroy, seat bell,
Dale E Stewart, Racme, theft,
$25 plus costs, Henry L Hensley, costs, one year probation, 30 days Jail
Long Bottom, speed. $30 plus costs, suspended to five, Tom R Barber,
Roger D Anx Jr, Chester, wmdow Ravenswood, diSorderly conduct, $30
tint, $20 plus costs, Anthony L Fab plus costs, Carolyn Parsons, Leon.
non, The Plams, speed, $30 plus W Va passmg bad checks. $25 plus
costs, Jenmfer L Fackler. Pomeroy, costs, restuullon pa1d, Darlene
speed, $30 plus costs, Bobby R Park- Roach, West Columbm, pamng bad
er, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; checks, $25 plus cost:/, resutuuon
Olukoyode R. Badrey, Perth Amboy, pa1d, Mark Janell , Racmc , domestic
vwlence, costs, one year probation,
N J., speed, $50 plus costs,
'Melanie A Harter, Spnngfield, 10 days JO!l suspended to two days,
speed: $30 plus costs, Mane L Wilham T Hcndncks, Pomeroy,
Pelers, Berkeley, W.Va 1 speed, $30 DUI, $850 plus costs, 30 days J31l
plus costs, Donald P Ball Jr, Bluff suspended to I0 days, one year OL
Cuy, Tenn , left of center. $20 plus suspensiOn. one year proballory, neecosts; Edward P Ball, Po11,1eroy, Jng, $200 plus cosls, 30 days jail susoverload, $80 plus costs; Kelly L. pended to 10 days consecutive with
Buzzard, Middleport, fa• lure to yield, DUI, one year probation, speed, $40
$20 plus costs; Robm L. Nance, plus costs, reckless operation, $100
Racme, no brake hghts, $20 plus plus costs,
James R Blackwell, Middleport,
costs; Tammy L. Freeman, Pomeroy,
disorderly
conduct, costs, one year
speed, $30 plus costs, Terry Light Jr,
probation,
30
days Jail suwended to
Shade, seat belt, $25 plus costs,
Amy Slee,' Cleveland, seat belt, $15 16 days, underage consumption,
plus cos1s; Vtckie Fitzwater, costs, one year probatiOn, SIX months
LangsVIlle. passmg bad checks, $25 JWl suspended to 16 days concurrent,
plus costs, reslllullon pa1d; Tracy P possessiOn of a weapon wh1le intoxAbbott, MliSon, passmg bad checks,
Icated, costs, one year probation, stx
$25 plus costs, rest1tut1on pa~d, Gary
months JBII suspended to 16 days
Jenkins, Pomeroy, three counts of
concurrent, Dav1d R. Abbott,
passmg bad checks, $25 plus costs .. Reedsville, domeshc VIolence, costs,
each, resututlon. t~ree days Jail sus60 days JWl suspended to 23 days,
pended on each,
Virgmla Hart, Langsville, passmg one year probauon, diSorderly conbail checks, $25 plus costs, restitution duct, costs, one year probation, 30
pwd; Kimberly Feuy, Pomeroy, pass- days jatl suspended to 23 days conmg bad checks, $25 plus costs, three current,
days ja1l suspended, nest1tutwn, Bar-

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'

Shingled Roofs
Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofit
ProfessiOnal work at
an affordable price

, Landscape Material,
Thpsoil &amp; Mushroom

'

Compost

LiPt Hauling
up to 8 ton

Free estimates

992·5455

KCB

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
pargeme
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top lint.
Uc. t¥ G0-50 unt~~~n

EXCAVATING
Backblltl &amp; Bulldozer

Services
Site PrePllration
Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

1-740-985-3949
2mo

We deliver ALMOST anything

949-1701

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Wtnclows
•Room Additions
•Roof1ng

. '''!

z

2 mo. pd.

•pm

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE
Complete Line of 4-H

WORRYING!!!

No Embarrassment...
You're Treated with Respect!
Call Now tor h'la·tanlt Allprclvalll..

~·

SHADE RIVER
A.G SERVICEU

'

Tour

WATER HAULING

740·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

17401 992-3131

25 yrs e:JCper.

The-Woter;-Man
740-7 42.:208~

740·742·8015
877·353·7022

I

Dump Tru'k Se!Yl(e
• Gravel • l,.1mestone
• Fill Dtrt • Etc
740-247-4292

'
l
~

7/ le/99 I mo pd

Linda's Painting
Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message After 6 pm

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room ldilluona &amp; Remodtllng
•NtwGaragH
•Eitctrlcll &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Gut1lrl
•VInyl Siding &amp; Polnllng
•Pitlo &amp; Porch Dtcltl
Froe&amp;t/!MIIs

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740·985·4180

992·6215

Free Estimates

22 yn. Local

Pomeroy, Ohio

29670 Beahan
Road
• Racine, Ohio
45771
740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

St. AI 7

Tuppers Pla1ns, OH

740-985-3813

roch ureal Satisfaction
Postage, supplies proRush Self Addressed
Envelope! G ICO Dept 4,
to $45,000/yr Process med1cal
1438, Antioch, Tn 37011lciai!TIS fr9m home. Tm1nlng provided 111 ,~-IH Start Immediately!
own computer 1-800-434-551 8

I

._

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 to
Sat. g:oo to 12:00

New COnltruellon &amp;
~KHchon

Cob!-'
VInyl Sldlng-R-- . ;
Garageo

No up-front cash depostt reqiHredl

LOANS BY PHONE
FAST AND SIMPLE
' NO CREPIT CHECKS(
Checking Account, Direct Deposited
Paycheck Required.
Call 1-888·891-MONY '
UPFRONT FEE
'

' WICKS
HfiOUnG InC.

'

a business pw1er wiih low-cost

10- ex 20-year level tenn life

.AIIID-0.»M-. .IJuruwnt:e
lN.'No fk14,.'ftgp4•

August 14th

Life Home car Business

Live Bee Beard Demonstrations
214 Eall Main
Po,..,roy
992-6687

Bee and Bear Costume Contest, Honey Bear
Raffle, Crafts, Demonstrators, Sidewalk Sales,
Farm Market, Window Displays, Call1ope Mus1c,
Model Railro~d Display, Food, L1ve Entertainment
and More Information Call 740-992-4197

August 4th 8 00 4 00 Golf Clubs,
gas gril l longaberger Baskets.
Bean•es and More' 553 M1tchell
Moving Sale Wednesday, 520
Claylick Road 1982 Olds Frenza
Low M1les, Runs GOOd $450, Full
Glass Storm Door's 4x.C Posts,
lnsulalion T ires Furniture Lots
&amp; Lots Of Mtscl740·256-9t 14

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

--

1999 HONDA FOREMAN
450 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY
Po~roy

Sput~ored by elte
Yolrulll!er Ernergeucy Squad, l11corporared.

Tickets $10 00 Donat1on Each/1000 Max1mum

Drawing to be held at 12 pm on
Su1clar October 10, 1999

Brochures! Satlslaclion Guar
anteedt Postage &amp; Supplle.s Pro·
v1dedl Rush Self-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT

TN

37011·1438 Start Immediately

$800

WEEKLY

POTENTIAL

Comp lele Stmple Go..,ernment
Forms At Home No Expertence
Necessary CALL TOL L FREE
1-800-966·3599 Ext, 2001
ACCESS to Human Resource
Development IS accepting app11
caliOn&amp; for the followmg pos ition
CASE MANAGER· Gallta County
Applicants must have a mlmmum
ol a Bachelors Degree tn soc ial
work/mental health or a related
lleld E;~~penenc&amp; In case management knowledge of mental health
services and •at risk" populatiOns
preferred Beginning rate or pay IS
$10 00/hr plus benefits Appl lc
ants for thts position may submit a
resume to Amy Boster Director
of Commun•ty Support Programs ,
PO Box 316 Gall tpotts 01'1
45631 Dead line for accepting ap
pltcaltons 1s August 10 1999
ACCESS to Human Resource Oe·
'oletopment Is a Certified Mental
Health Age ncy servmg Gallta
Jackson and Me1gs Counttes and
IS an AAIEEO Employer

ADMINISTRATOR

t~ques

Cosmetologist Need,ed Full &amp;
Part T 1m.e Pa1d vacat1ons, Free
C E U Hours 740-446 7267

8/5199· Don Fitch Sumner Ad
Home Inte rior Gravely mower
,9a m Spm Aatn cancels

Counselor Pos ttlon An Outpa
l1ent Alcohol And Other Drug
Agency Loca ted In Gall ta And
Jacksoo Counties IS Seeking A
Oualtlled Perso n To P rovide AI
coho! And Other Drug Coun-sel
tng Counselor Wllf Work W!lh Ali
Age Groups Knowledge 01
Chem1ca1 dependencv. Required
Bache lors Degree CCDC USW
And /Or LPCC Preferred Send
Resum• By August 20 1999 To
FACTS 1770 Jackson Pike B id·
we ll Ohio, 45614 Or FAX 740
446 8014 EOE MIFIH

Garage Sale! 1 day only Fnday
August 6th 8 1 ram or shine!
341 Rutland Street MiddlepOrt

ADVERTISE!

For Mort' Information Cnll I 740-541-4001 Local Call
o~ co nta ct any Pomeroy Squad Mernher

Four-Wheele! purchased at:
Riverfront Honda, Galllpolle, Ohio

ICJ;as.!oifietd AdvertiSing This
loatoer IS not responsible for
If you have any questions
jc~;~~~~~1:~ about these ads plleasel l
if•
to contact our salesperson
number listed below

BO

Auction
Starting Fall Season August 3rd
Everv Tuesday At S PM Truck
loads Of New Merch andiSe From
Several States Selling To Public
&amp; Dealers 1 Ptece Dozens &amp;
Case Lots
Terms Cash No Checlis
Beh tnd Lowe's Old U S 52 (Co
Road 1) 8urhngton OhiO Aucttan
eer Gary Bowen 740-894-1819
81lt MoQdtspaugh Auct10neerlng
Complete Auc ttoneermg Servtc·
es Constgnment au ctiOn Md l
Street Middl eport Thursdays
Oh10 L•cense 0693 740 989

2623

•

Auction
and Flea Market

EntoV Unllmtted Earnings
1-888-561 2866

Onver No Touch Fre~ght Start AI
32 Cents Mt /5 Yr • Exp 31
Cents M1 13 Yr 30 Cents Mt 11
'fr 29 Cents MJ /6 Mos 28
Cents M1 f2 -8 Mos Students Or
1 Mo Exp $350 Wk Pay Ra ti&amp;
Every 50, 000 MtiU Bonuses,
~1der Pr ogram Ra 1d vaca110ns
Ins
Avail
www cannonex
press com Call For Detail&amp; 1

800 845-9390
DRIVERS ·Owner Operators
Manufacturers Fleet Needs
Trucka For Growmg Busme&amp;&amp;
Ray Or Jim 800-534-1111
Dm·ers Free 3 -Week CO L
Trammg Earn $26 $32 000 l ist
Yr W / Full Be neftt&amp; No E;~~p
Needed P A M Transport Spe·
cta l Call Toll Free 1 87 7 230·
6002 Sun Fn 7 A M 7 PM
www pamtransport com

D.UA ENTRY · National 81 1\mg
Seeks A Full /Part Time Med1ca1
B!ller Salary At $46K Per Ye~u
PC Aequ1red No Experience
Needed Wtll Train Call 1 888·
251 7475
Do You Enjoy Working Wtlh The
Elderlv ' II So We Have The Job
For You Now Hnlng CNA s
STNA. s And Experienced HHA s
Apply AI 762 Second Avenue ,
Gall tpolls OH Or PhOne 740.446·
3808, Various Hours Current ly
Available EOE
Babysmer Needed for eventng
shift In my home only New Ha
ven Area (304)882 2216 •
Bus driver( a) Gallla end Meigs
Countlea (Full time and Subttltute) App lic ants 'must have a
high School dtploma 01 equlva l
ent Cornmerctal D rivers license
wtth school bus classlf1carlon ano
a clean driv ing record Expert
ence worktng tn a pre school set
t1ng preferred Beg 1nn1ng rate ol
pay IS $6 75/hr Deadline for appl l
c:atton ls August 10 t99 9 For
Add Ilona! tnformati'On or apphca
t1on call 740 441·3010 ACCESS
to Human Resource Development
IS an AA/EEO EmplOyer
Carleton Schoo l and Me tgs In
!3ustnes IS seekmg Qualified ap
pllc ants lor the tollowtng substl
tute pOSitiOns Bus drtver coo k
Health Serv1ces Coordmaror (AN
or LPN) habthtatlon arxt workshop
spec1ailsl {Adult Servtces ) Jant
to r ]amtonal cre w leaders sec1e
tary fct ertc a i teacher teach tn g
ass ts tant vehtcle atde van drtv
er Subm!l resume by August 13
1999 to Carleton SchootrMelgs
IndustrieS P 0 Box 307 Syra
cuse Oh10 45719 EEO

110

992~

HAVE DOCTORS NEED BILL
ERS FIT, PIT Medical Btlllng No
Expenence Necessary Earn Up
To $40K+ Working At Home
Must Have IBM Compatible PC
Call 1-800·697 7670 www med1s

taff net

•

HEATING AND COOUNG
Needed Immediately Service
Te chntc•ans And Installers Top
Pay · Insurance, Vacation And
Paid Holidays • 11 You re Unhappy
With Ya.ur Current PoSlllon •
Come And Jam Us Comfort Air
Of Gallipolis 407 Th1rd Avenue
GalltpoiiS, OH
Holzer Sen1or Care Center ts pre·
sently accepting applications for
Soctal SefVJCS Destgnee
Respons lbthltes Include but are
not ltmlted to completiOn of MDS
2 0 Care Planntng and other relat·
ed Soctal Servtce documentation
Licensed personnel onty (le LPN)
Please apply In person at Holzer
Semor Care Center 380 Colonial
Road Bidwell Oh no later than
August 4th 1999 No Phone Calls
Please
Housekeeper For Disabled Prac·
t1 c1ng Attorney l1ve-tn Salary
Room Board 614 2~7 5354

HVAC INSTALLERS
So Oh10 Company Has Open ing
For Lead HVAC Insta llers We
Offer Excellent PI)' W tth Futl Ben·
&amp;fits Send Resume To
Installers
PO Bo~~o 667
JaCkson, OH 45640
Local Tractor Trailer Dr iver
Needed For L.ocal Trucktng
Company Must Be Over 21,
Clean Onvmg Record Class A Lt
cense Wtth Tanker Endorsement
Home Everyda)' Interested Per
~ ens Only 740..245-9557
Local Truckmg Company Seeking
Oualtfled Truck Onvers Good
Pa)' And Benefits Send Resume
To Onver, PO Box t09 Jack
son Oh•o 45640 Or Call 1 740
286 1463 To Scfledule An Inter

v..w
LUMBER YARD
FORKLIFT OPERATOR &amp;
CLASS B COL DRIVERS
UPTO

$28,000
PER YEAR TO START
PLUS.
·MONTHLY BONUS·PROAT SHARING·

Help Wanted

AN Cl 1mcal Cootd1nator wallted
for newly created poSIIton tn Ga l·
ha/Jack•on area Ideal cand1date
will be 1nOependent,hlgt'lly organ
tzed &amp; ewpertenced wttn genatnc
pop ul ation all weeke nds even·
1ngs &amp; holidays oll Send resurnt
to Enc Haseme1er. Medal C»rec
tor On Call MediCAl Ass~1ati0n
P 0 Be»: 270 Athens Oh 43 70 1

AN Cltmcal Coordmator Wanted
For New ly Created POS itiOn In
GallipO li S Jackson Area Ideal
Cand tdate Wtll Be Independent
HlghlV Organized &amp; Expenenced
Wtlh Genatnc Populat1on w...
kends, Evemngs &amp; HOlidays Off
Send Resume To Enc Ha&amp;Semel
er Med tcal Dtrector On Call Medical Assoc1a110n P 0 Box 270
Athens OH 45701
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY Ca ll Now Toll Free 1·

800 339 4204 Or 1 800 469·8 16-4
For Appomtmen t To Come To
Nashv~ ll e TeMessee AM AtJdl·
11on For MaJOr Record Producers.
Internet www wc1n ac

Need someone to work 4 to 12
shtft canng for the eldaliy call
between the hOurs ol earn &amp; 4pm
Monday thru Fnday 740·992·

4410
NURSE PRACTITIONER
OR PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT
Oak H1ll Commun1ty Medical Cen
tars Aural Health Chn1cs Hava
An lmmedtale Open1ng For A
Full· T ime Exper !enc ed Fam1ly
Nurse Pracuttoner Or PhySICtan
ASSIStant Monday Frtday Com
pett1tve Salary And Beneftts Send
Resume To Oak H•ll Commun1ty
Medical Center Anen!IOn Brenda
Mct&lt;enz1e 350 Charlotte Avenue
Oak Hill OH 45656

EOE

POS ITION

Teache rs A1de ant1 Cook Pen
lime pOSitJons w tth benefits Atde
hours are M F II 30AM 5 30PM
C oo k hou rs are M·F 8 OOAM·
1 OOPM Mus! be at least 16 yrs
old w1th a HS d1ptoma or G£0
Aide e~per1ence worktng with
children preferred Cook patd
expenence as a cook preferred
Send res ume to R1ver Valley
CDS PO Box 544~ Huntmgton
Wl/25701 by Aug 6 EOE
Wanted Expenence d han styltsl
lO r pail o r full 11me DOS1t1on at
FOf.Y locks Ha1r Care Salon tn
New Hallf!n 304 8823794
Wanted Surveyor For Construe
!ton L.ay Ou t Of S1te Wor~ Su tld·
lngs H1ghways And Bndges And
Some Property Surveytng For
Flrm In Southeastern Oh 10 Five
Years EKper l ence Ustng Tata l
StattOn Knowledge 01 CAD And
SottOesk Survey Appllca ttons W111
Be HelpfUl Protess1ona 1 Aeg1stra
tton Not Requtred Send Aesu me
To CL.A 480 c/o Gall tpolts Dally
Tnbune 825 T h1 rd Ave nue, Gall•
polls Oh 10 , 45 631 • 8Jnei11S AM
Salary Pack age Commensurate
Wtth Exper ience Equal Opper
tun lty Employe1
Wild life Jobs to $21 60fHr
tnc Benefns
Game Warden s
Securtty Mam te nance
Pa rk
~angers No bp Needed For
A.pp /Exam tnfo Call 1 BOO 8 I 3
3565 EXT 8827 SAM 9PM 7
Days Ids Inc
WILDLIFE JOBS To $2 , 60 IHR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
SECURITY
MAIN
DENS
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO

EXP NEEDED FOR APP .AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 80Q 613
3585 EXT '1142 11 , 8 AM
7 DAY S Ids 1nc

9 PM

X Ray Tech / Uitla S ou nd 101
Po1nt Pleasant P hy s1ctans Of·
!tee Send Resume c/ o E 8 3
Pomt Pleasant Aegtster Office
200 Ma m Sl!eet P t Plea sant

wv 25550

1ll0

Business
Tratntng

~PAID VACATION~

Medtcal P rocessor FP/ PT No
E"penence Necessary 40K PC
Aequtred Can I ~ 663-7440

WORK

Program Coor01nator Pos1hon
Avall8ble For R~S 1 dent1ai Pr o
grams For Persons Wtth MAteD
In Jackson Ptke Athens And
Hock1ng Counties Requirements
Bachelor's Deg ree And OM Year
Expenence In A. Human Servtces
Fie ld Valtd Drivers L1 cense .
Th1ee Years Good Onvtng Ex·
per lence A nd Adequate Au to
mobtle Insurance Previous Ex·
pe nance Wnh Personnel Super
v1s1on Preferred Must L.tve Or Be
W t111ng To Reloca t-e W1thtn 30
Mtles / 30 M1nutes Of Jackson
Flex1ble Hours Ltheral Beneftt
Package Salary $20 22 000 I
Year Send Resu me To Buck&amp;ye
Commu n ty ServiCes, p 0 eox
604 Jacltson OH 45640·06,04
ATIN Cec1!18 Dead line For oA.p
phcants 8/ 4/ 99 ' Please lndtcate
Posttt on Applymg For Equal Qp...portunity Employer

Gallipolis CarHr College

- PAID SICK DAYS-PAID PERSONAL DAYS• PAlO HOLIDAYS·
-ANOMOREVEAR ROUND EMPLOYMENT
CALL TODD FRANKLIN AT
J1 -1-885-4421
Arflngton ·Bflll,. Luml»r
Columbus Ohio
An Equal Opportunity Employer

7

Own A Compuler? Put It To
Wof1( 1 $25 To S75 An Hour Par t
Tune Full nme 1 ~ 9640
www ¥oork from h0m&amp;-101.1ay net

SOCIAL

Full or part tme pos11i0n lor AN on
7 3 shift Aocksprtngs Aehablllta·
!ton Cllimer Is currenlly accepting
applicattons ror an experienced
nurse Joln1ng our team at Roc*
spnngs Is JOining ~ e)(cepttonal
group of' nurses that truly believe
In provtdmg ellcellent nurs1ng
care Full benefit package Submit
resume to ROcksprings Aehab11l
tat1on Center, 367'59 Rocksp rings
Ad Carol Greenmg DON 740·

Attn CNA s Home Health Agen·
cy Now Htrtng Fuii·Time And
Part· Ttme Positions Agency Wilt
Train For The PCA Pos itions
Must Have H S Diploma GEO Or
Some Expenence Caring For The
Elderly You May Plck·Up An Ap·
pl1catton To 266 Upper Aver
Road Gallipolis OH 45631 No
Phone Galls Please!

8/5 &amp; 8/6 fourth house past Na
zarene Church In Chaster Kids
fl othes and lots more

Huge Sale, 8/3 8/6 across from
PPHS 9AM ? La rge Clothes lnf·
ants HousehOld llems Mtsc

1-800-730-7772, ext 8010

Toys Jewelry w oo d, Sewtng
Typ1ng Great Pay! CALL t ·800·
795 0380 ~XI 120 I (24 Hrs)

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs S25K $80KJ Yr 1 800
536-0486 X 7n7 www 1cwp com

August 6th &amp; 7th 9AM·1 4 Fam l
ly, west Columbia 2 Mile• North
of Muon County F•lrgroundl
Bed Ltvtng Room Suit C 0 ~
B• cycles Electronics Clothes
and More

or 0 downl Gov'l and bank
repo's be1ng sold NOW!
F1nanc1ng AvaJiable.Call Now!

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafls

oven. tools clothes (all s1zes),
kitChen stulf, toys lurMure an·

Thurldly, August 5th Beantes
ShOes Toys G1rls · Boys Jr
Cloth1ng

overdue
With FREE
Easy, mar1ageable
Stop collectors
Genus 1 - 800·29~1-6~778
(1023)

Oh10 45429 EOE

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or Sell
Sh1rley Spears, 304-675-14...~

5 Family 2607 lincoln Avenue,

AERO-COLOURS
a mob1Ie-based franchise that
the mck!lscratches on cars Wlthpalnllng the whole car. Low tnvestJment. FREE INFO PACKET!
-800-696-2376 31 0

Davis MHA LNHA BSN ANC

Vice Preside nt 01 OperaiiOns AJ
Centurton Management Group
3490 Far Hills Ave , Kette ring

2 sales Willow Creek Rd , beside
Pamlda , a 2, 3 4 baM saw Hon·
eymoon wood &amp; eo a I stove w1th

Frt /S at , Aug 617
8 OOAM
I OOPM Sega B/W TV Lots of
Mtsc t001 • 22nd SIJPt PI

Middleport 12·6 pm
Fearurin!J

Friday Monday edition
• 10:00 a m Saturday

Cl fton WV Augusl 4 5 6 9AM·
? Clothing/M tsc Old 6o111es 2
Anttque Hair Dryer Cha1rs good
worktng condition Hydraltc Chair
&amp; Other Salon Equtp ChatnSaw
weedEate r Home lt te Gas Pow·
erect Water Pump &amp; 0U'I9r lawn &amp;
garden equtp

'

S2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 4QO

ANTIOCH

Hours

12170

Help Wanted

5 Box 1438

A~ Products Start your own In
Home Bus1ness Work Flex ible

Easy Work! Excellent Payt As
semble Products at Hom• Call
To ll Free 1·800 467 5566 Ext

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Centur1on Management Group A
Progressive Long Term Care
Company Is Currently Taking Ap
plicattons For An A.dmlnlstrat or
Lost Large W hite Dog Lost Near
We Are Seeking A Challenge
Rio Grande Reward! 140·245·
Driven IMtvldual With The Ab t11ty
0485 After 6 00 PM
To lead By Enmple And Ensure
The H tgheSt Standard Of Res t
Lost " Pa~r of Glasses along road
, dent Care The Appltcant Must
at Lower Five Mile or Crab Creek
Have EKpertence In Long Term
{304)675 4815
Care And Be A Licensed Nurs·
lng H ome Adm ini strator In The
70
Yard Sale
State 01 Ohto Candidates For
Thts Pos1tlon Must Possess The
Ability To Lead With A Focus On
Gallipolis
Marketing Financial Manage&amp; VIcinity
ment And Employee Ae latmns
Centunon Management Offers A
AU. Verd Sites Must
ExceptiOnal CompensatiOn Pack·
Be Paid In Advance
age tf tn-erested In A Chal!engtng
QEAQL!NE 2:00 p.m
Position Send Your AeSUII)8 And
lhe day beloro lho ad
Salary ReqUirements To Teresa
l Is to run. Sunday

•

Owner: Ronme Jones

HONEY BEAR FESTIVAL

Lost and Found

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

• '{rltn
.s\utn9
Grlt~6\t~9
20 Yrs

Aed female full blooded Dober
man 18 mon ths old 740 985

740 992 2969

TREE SERVICE
lnsUrnnce Company. Call us fOr roore

245 9754

Movtng sale· everything musl go
mslde &amp; out 8/1 8/8, 9 to dark
Township Ad 17/McG ralh Rd

JONES'

'

blt

Pupp ies To A Good Horne, 740·

*GUARANTEED APPROVAL!

All You Need ts a valid checl&lt;tng account/

$500.00 CASA

Sman Reeve•

now ha~e rhe ~~j31(lCel:npgyour liunily meffibers

Male Chocolate Lab wtlh ltttle
Beagle 740·992-6206

ediUon • 2 00 p m

1·800·929·8818

Free Eol;,;...te•
740-742-3411
Bryan Re"""'

740-992-3470 .

Large female rabbit gray &amp; whtte
740·992-4050 or 992-6805

Fo und· sand)' blonde Cocker
Spamel with green collar friendly

ON!' s1mple low monthly payment
Reduce/Eliminate Interest.
HAYI A VAUD U.S.
Save thousands while becom1ng debt MUST IE 11
CitiZEN DR
tree Programs for renters, horneclwrlers and even people w1th cred1t dJffl·
OWN A DOLLAR STORE $ cuiiies Speclahzmg 1n credit cards, CREDIT PROBLEMS STOP HERE I
accounts, med1cal bills and
1-800-227-5314
$ collection
Loans
unsecured loans Call 1-800-897B11l Consolidation
2200, ex\ 340 A501 (c}(3)
Home
EqUity
Not-For-Protll Orgamzat1on
Cred1l
Counsel1ng
www cambndgecred1t org
and

Canatracdan;

748-887-aaaa

277.

Ad

,OOO'S Weeklyl P'ocessmg Ma11
IFr·om Home! FREE Supplies &amp;
IPcl8te1gel Bonuses! Start lmmedJatelyl
To Get Started 1-800-230-

.........

All Makes Tractor &amp;
We Deliver
'
'
Equipment Parts
Lime•tone, Gra11el,
Factory Authorized
Sand; FiU Dirt,
Case-IH Parts
Agricultural Lime, ·
Dealers.
Mulch, Top Soil '
100051 Rt 7Soutll
(Low Rates)
Cootvlll•, OH 411723

Ktttens White &amp; Siamese Color
Good Homes Only (3041882·

60

$1200 Monll1ly lncoma, .\cttve

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

Kenmore Dryer 3 Element Long
John Beam Antenna pick up at
212 Midway DR New Haven

Regtstered female Dalmat1an, 3
years old brown male Chow 4
years OKt 740 949 2619

IT'S AN UNSECURED VISA

3111111AI1m&lt;l.od.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

Free Wood Needs Spht 1915
Chatham Street Ganlpolls

4288

WANTA

.,.,..,.Swu.IHdme.com,..

'

Clean Late Mode l Cars Or
Trucks , Low Mttes 1995 Models
Or Newer Smith Bu1c11 Pontiac
1900 East&amp;fn Avenue Gallipolis

Black ! White Beagle The
Name IS "Flash', Reward! (740)·
446·4015, Kanauga Area

7/23199 1 mo P11

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Ant1ques top pnces paid A t'o'er·
me An tiques Pome roy Oh10
Russ Moo re own8r 740·992
2526

L os~

740-992-5212

'

•

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S S!l·
ver And Gold Coins ProofSEHS
Diamonds AntiQue Jewelry Gold
Rtngs Pre-1930 U 5 Currency
Sterhng, Etc Acqul&amp; lhort&amp; Jewelry
u T S Com ShOp 151 Second
Awnue GaHipolls 740-446 2642

110

Help Wanted

OAIVEAS · CaMOn E&gt;proSS 99'4

Wedemeyer's Auctron Servtct
GaiiPDhs Ohio 7.C0..379 2720

Good w1th kids Very tuendly
(31&gt;41675 7755

Lost State Route 850,t Kerr, Oh10
Mate Dalmalion {740)·245-()()22

'

740.992·2068

Free Estimates

n3-5785 Or 30&gt;H73-~7

2 year old Female Col lie M1x

740-742·2526

33795 Hiland Rd;
Pomeroy, Ohio :

Joseph Jacks

(toll free)

7/23 tmo

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING

I

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Conaeetion

Call 98S·383X

'I

I

NowReadnc

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Concrete

Wells, cisterns, pools,
trees, lawn &amp;gardens

Feed &amp; Show Supplies
And Sullivan Show
Supplies

senice•

FREE ESTIMATES .

tralorp (304 )895-3703

Free to good home small dogs

8tp'"
.
Bulldo.er &amp; Baclthoe

COIIIIIICJAl . . IIIIIIEIIIW

2 Free Roosters Part Black Aus

call 740- 742 2773 or 740 388·

n:

House &amp; Trader S11es
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy11ema &amp; ,
Ulilitieo

1 Yellow Kilten to a loving fam1
ty
6 Wks-2 months old
(304)675-J)-11

Etecuie range to Maul away, 740·
,992 7585

. HOWARD
EICIVAIING CO~ .

INC.

Giveaway

6 Weeks Old Ktttans 740 256·
6806

Call for details
740-992-0038

.

""""
A
IIIII I

.

Pallo Caastnactloa

No Crtdlt • Slow credit" l!lllnkruptcy
Repo • blvordtd

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
g85-4473

BISSELl BUILDERS,

a."rl Delivery Service

CREDIT PROBLEMS???

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION;

992-1717

'•

• letetptag Wall 8 Brlclt:

j

R~ek Pearson Auct ion Company
full ttme auctioneer compl ete
auction
nrv1ce
Ltcansed
IS6 ,0hta &amp; West V1rgln•• 304

90

New To You Tt\rrtt ShQPpe
9 West S11mson Alhens
74().592 1842
Ouahty ctothmg and household
1tems S1 oo bag sate tlfery
Thursday MoMay thru Saturday
9 D0-5 30

9331

Albany, Ohio

ST. RT. 7
10 X 10$40.
10X 20$60.

t'et&lt;'~"?~ 24 Hr. Taxi

'~~~:,~Y. L. Roush

Contractors Weloo1111
7/Z7~

Frl 8:30 - 5:00

110

800-ROMANCE eidens10n 9681

Larry Schey

r-

~·- Cerlllled
...atlec:r..:~clallal,
.

TONIGHT!

30 , Announcements

•LawiiCan-Dnlp
·llalalauca • Plullq
·llalchlag

1·100-311·3391
Free Estimates

412TFN

OATING

40

Sitlillf &amp; Sf#lil

HARTWELL
STORAGE -

DRIVEWAY STONE

740-339-4160

"

STAAT

Auction
and Flee M1rket

playing the

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better Wa , Eve

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

Howard L. Writesel

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
'
Dirt &lt;'Send

(304)674-3311 c.l,..

Mon -

Personal•

Starl Dat 1ng Tonlgtlt l Have tun
Ohio Dating Game 1·

Sales Representative

-

005

The Dally Sentinel • Page
80

Ha11e Fun Meet 1ng Eligible Slngkts In Your Area Call For Yore
lnlormaUon 1 BOO-ROMANCE
Ext 9735

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

Truck seats, car seats, headliners.
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

3/11/99 TFN

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water St01age Tanks

1~1

Has part-time and
full-time positions :
•
available for RN's &amp;
SAYRE
LPN's. All shifts.
TRUCKING Anyone interested
please co~tact
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Michelle Gilmore,
Reasonable Rstes
ADON,
Joe N. Sayre
740-992-6472.
740·742·2138
EOE

an ad Call992-2156

place

Rutland, Ohio

-=====::rl

•

To

A &amp; D Auto Up olstery • P us, Inc

l'lct Simi, Midtii,trt, Olil

•

ANNOUNCEMENTS

' ra-.~~~--....--.~----~r---.-1

o~-.~Ae.

Culverts. 4" - 48" 1n stock
8' Gravelless Leach
100'- 1000' Rolh 1' &amp;3/4' 200# Waler Une

.{tJ[

Business Services

Help Wlntld'

110

•

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo~- Ohio

Tuesday,August3,1999

Bu from the Classlfledsl

..

~~®.&lt;~!~~~

•

Tuesday,August3,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(Careers Close To Home I
Cali Today! 740 446 4367
1·800 214·0452
Reg • 90 05-127 48

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE ·
GREE QUICKLY Ba ch elor s
M.tsters Do ctorate By Corre
spondence Based Upon Pnor Ed'
ucatton And ShOrt Study Course
For FREE Information -Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY I BOO 964 8316
Exce llent Opp ortunity - Supple
men! Your InCome
Learn 1 n
come Tax P reparation 15 Wk
Course Classes 1 Day A Wk 10A M To 4 PM Ca ll DanTa), Inc
Tuesdays 10 To ..; @ 1 740 446
8178 01 1·800..22 1 8178

MAD DOGS PALACE
PRO-WRESTLING TRAINING
AND PROMOTIONS
20 Yrs Ex_per ten ce BOO 8 59
0756 Tratner Brett Sawyer ~ 1n
Memo ry ol Ma d Dog "B uz.z·
Sawye r TrJ!I n .o be wrestle rs
managars or Daile! (Male or Fe
male )
•

180 Wanted To Do
OWN A PC?
PUT IT TO WORK!
S25 575/Hr PT 1FT
1 800.784·8556

www pcpays com ,

Person or married couple to ass
tst w1th m1tkmg and canng for
large datry herd Ho usmg ulllr·
tt8s etc lurntshed Respond to
P t Pleasant Aeg1ster E 8 4
200 Matn Street Pt Pleasant

wv 25550

PlUMBING
So Oh10 Company Ha s Open ing
For Expene nc ed Plu mbers We
011er Excellent Pay W1th Fun Ben·
eftts Send Resume To
Plumbers
PO Box 667
JaCkson OH 45640

POSTAL JOBS To S18 35 /HA
INC BENEFITS NO EXPE~I
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 81 3 3585,
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS Ids tnt
Receptton1s1 wtlh Med Traimng
Me~ Tech Med 81111/)Q Nurse,
X Ray Tech Off•c e Cteamng for
Po1nt P leasant Phys1c1ans 01
!tee Resu me to tlo E B 6 Polnl
Pleasant Register 200 Main
Street Point P teasanr WY.
25550

Babyst tt lng In my home m Nev.
Haven SIS a day meals tncl ud
ed Have Refe renc es (740 )709

8000
Corllftea Nur sing Ass1stan W111
Do In Home Caret Call (7 40(
446 3659
Cleaning Serv1ce ofhres rentals
homes prolesst ona l expenan ce
piOiess Jonal eqmpme nt 740 662
2603
E &amp; S lawn Servt ce Des1gn lm
plemen ta!ton
and
Se1v 1;e
Ava il able for Sprtng Cl ea n up
fert 1liZ1ng and. plantmg Free 86!1
mates Sat1s!actton guaranteed
Greg Milhoan 3041675 4628
G 8 S Cleanmg Pa inting Car
pentr)' Cement And Yard Worlo..
740 256 6827 Don t Fuss Call

Us!

Georges Po rtab le Sawm tll don 1
naut your tOQs to the m1ll JUS! call
304 675 1957
H S Contra cting Aoohng Sheet
Metal 3 D L.ap Shtngles Pam! ng
Over 15 Years Expen ence De ck
Bu tld mg 740·44 1·0653 Call M
ter6 OOPM
...._
H ouseclea ning From R to Grande
To Ga lhpol!s Br. Rehab le Efft ctent
lady Call 740 245·5104 Ask For
Diane

I

�'

-

1T~u~··~d~ay~,~A~u!g~u~8t~3~,~1~999!!_____

Pomerov • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·----------~~======~============~
NEA Cro11word Puzzle
~
PHILLIP
ALDER

220 Money to Loan

310 Homes for Sale

Jima Drywall &amp; Construction
New Conatruc:t1on &amp;. Remodel/

O'IE~

Drywall , Sldlr,g , Roots, Addl

Debt Consolldat•on, No Qualify·
ingl!! FREE CONSU LTATION
800 -556 1548 Ext 2l 4 www anewhorlion or ~J ltcansed JBonded
Non-Profit /National Co

Need More Breathing Room?

llont Pllntlng, ole (304)674·
&lt;1623 .. (300)67~155

lhrub1 Trimmed, Mulching ,
'ftllnllng, etc. Call a111: Leave
........ (304)171-711 z.

Business
Opportunl~

$1,000+ WEEKLY

... Unsecured Bad INc Cred1t OK
Everyone Welcome , 1 800·285

FROM HOME!!! Receeve $4 00
Per Envelope Processed , Sup·
plltl Provided! Guaranleed Pro
gram! CALL NOWI 24 Hours

3588
FREE MONE'V t II s True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500 ·
$50 000 Debt Consohciatlon, Per·
sonal Ne&amp;ds Medical ems Edu·
cation &amp; Bus1ntss 1 800 S 11

FREE INFORMATION! 31 0-288·
1616 EXI UP ,
',
!NOTICEI
OHIO VAU.EY PUBLISHING CO

2640

. 230

... Qllering

Professional
Services

Approved Master licensed Elec:
tnc 1an, WV025956 Est1ma1es
for
Residential
Serv •c es

ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
$1 000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM Free Info Package 1 800

(304)675 7927

7118-8849 24 Hrs XT 27

Beautiful Clearung
In youf
home or busfness Carpet and
upholslery 10 lnterlorl e•tenor
walls decks and C:lrlveways The
complete cteanmg serv1ce C•ll
Cletlrty C... n For Free Eatlnllte

Coke IPP Col'ng Card

Greal Loca1ions (Local)
High • I"""""' Machines
Free VIdeo 1-100-387·9418

1304·675-~

A\lallable Vendrng Routt I 0 -20
Locerlons $.CK -$101&lt; U 000 • '
Mo, InCome · ALL CASH! 100%
Finance Available t -800·38 0
2615 • 2• Hrs

lng740-4-46-9539
OENT~L BI~LER

Up To $20 $40

/Hr Dental BlUing Software Com
parw Needs People To Process
Medical Cla1ms From Home
Training Provided Must Own
Computer I 800-223·1149 Exl

460
EARN $90,000 YEARlY Aepatr·
lng, NOT Aeplacrng long Cracks
tn Windshie lds Free V1cteo 1•
800 826 8523 US /Canada
www glassmechano: com

FRITO

L~Y

VENDING

/PEPSI /COKE

ROUTE

$1 000+

WEEKLY POTENTIAL ~LL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LOCAL SITES ON GOING SUP·
PO~T SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1· 800·
731-7233EXT 3103
Health Food Store For Sale Ap
prox 15 000 16,000 Inventory
11 ,000 Shelvi ng &amp; Equipment
Price Negotiable Th1s Business
W1!1 ,ll1d $30 000 $50 000 In
Gross Sale To An Existing Busl
neu Will Not Discuss Price
Over Phone Call To Set· Up 1Ap·
polntment, 74Qo4.46o1207
MEDICAL BilliNG Unllmlled 1inc'ome Potential No Experience
Necessary Free Information &amp;
CO·AOM Investment $4,995 •
S8 995 Financir'lg Ava ilable IS·
land Automated Medical Serv1c
es Inc 800-322 1139 Ext 050
Need A Loanl Try Debt Consoli·
dation $5,000 - $200 ooo Sad

Crodll 0 K Fee 1·600· 770·0092.
E" 215
VENDING: Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours = Great Income
Priced To Sell Free Brochure

800-820-6782

TURNED DOWN 0~
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1·888·582·J34S

C~SH

NOW$ From

SUITE 1350 NEW YORK, NEW
YORK 10017

3 Bedroom House With 3 Acres
Land Few Fruit Trees 2 Bed
rooms &amp; Bath Up~Jiatrs 1 Bed
fOOm Fronr Room Dining Room
U11ilty Room Ki!chen Bath Down·
statrs Sits On Storys Run Road
Off Route 1 For More Information
Call 740 367-7576 Aller Noon
Price 149.500
3 Bedrooms Besemenl 2700 Sq
Fl Fireplaces In Ground Pool
Large Lot S A 588 Gallipolis City

Schools $79 500 74().446 7438

5 room brick 'anch, fwo bath
double garage full basement 1·
112 acres on river In Syracuse,

Buy Homes From $10 000
1 -5 Bedroom local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Flnancmg
Possible For L1stlngs Call 800·
319·3323 exl 1709

FREE MONEY! Its True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 For Oebl ConsolldaUon,
Personal Needs Medical B1lls,
Educallon &amp; Business Call Toll·

FOREClOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Gov t And Bank Repo s
Bemg Sold NOWI Fmancmg
Ava ilable Call Now! 1·800·730·
7772, Ext 8040

Free 1-800-724-6047,(24 Hrs)

HOME FORECLOSURES

CASH NOW! We Purchase
Structure Seltlemenl , lolterles,
Annuities Mortgage Note&amp; Call
Montclair Financial Group 1·800·
422-7311.
CASH Or LOANI Farm Capttal
Will Purchase Or loan Aga inst
Your Government Farm Payment• (CAP!PFC) Call Farm

Capital 1·888-FARM·ACT 1327·
6228)

CONSOLIDATE , I!BT Reeluced
Monthly Payments 20 ·50% Save
Thousands Of Dollars In Interest
Non-Prol~ 1CC 800-758·3844

C~EDit

PROBLEMS ? VISA

CARD · Guaranteed Approval
No Credit Check · Oo/.APA Re·
qulrements 18+ US Citizen, Have
Checking Account Phone Appro
val 1 800 -~37·00 73 Issued By

Merrlck Bank. SLC UT

GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldest
Buyel'l Of Structured Settlements
Annuities, And Government Farm.
Payments Also Plurchaslng lot
terlea And Private Mortgages
Call Setllement Capital , 1·800·
959·0008 www seltlementcapltalmm
Need a loan? Home Auto, &amp;.
Oebt Consolldallon, GOOd or Bad
Cr•dll Call loll free 877 658

0551

NEED AN EARLY

P~YCAY1?

No

Offlca VIsit Necessary Up To
&amp;500 lnatantly Cau Toll Free 1•

(877)-EARLY· PAY 191
VANCE FREEl L~O cc70036

~0 -

No

Money Down! No Credit Needed!
Take Over Very low Payments!
' ·600-91 6-9 191 11H5023
HOMES FROM $5,000 Fore
closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credll Trou
ble 0 K For Current Listing Call
1 800 31t ·5048 Ext 3372

NEW HOME FOR SA~E
Never Lived In 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths 1456 Sq Ft large Country
l ot, Counly Waler 7 Miles East
01 Jackson uS Route 35 6!10
Mile From Elementary Sc ho ol
Upper 80s 740-384 2963
Nice 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Home
Full Finished Basement W1th
Fireplace, 1 43 Acres located 4
M1tes From North Gallla $55 000
74Cl-367·7945
NICe two bedroom brick house
w1th living room d1n1ng room
kitchen bathroom and sunroom,
newly re modeled also nas full
basement, two car two story ga
rage corner lol with nice yard &amp;
good neighborhood 740 992

2333 or 740-992-2326
Restored Vlctor~an horne s11uated
on 12 acrea VIllage Middleporl.
sacludeel and pnvate appoint
rnenl call 740-992 5696
Spacious 48A Home on 1 112
acres or property llvlngroom
Family Room, DlnlngAoom 1 112
Bath 2 ca r garage carporUpan
try (304)882 2531 leave Mes

sage

(7ol0~367-(1611

446~1279

Apartments
for Rent

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments for
rent Atlsolutely No Pets Call
From 9AM·1 30PM (30.)675·
2117

I and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unfurnished, security
deposu requned . no pet5, 7&lt;10·
992-2218 •
'
t
I bedroom apartment ln Middle
pori. aU utlllt1e&amp; paid $270 per
month, $100 deposit, 740·992·
7806
1 Bedroom Apartment Across Rio
Grande College, $290/Mo All
Uhii!Jas Paid, 1·888-840-0521
1 Bedroom Apartment , Stove &amp;
Regngerator Included 740-U'\3-

2563
1 Bedroom , AJC. W/0 Hook Up,
Near Arbors f~iursmg Home, No
~ets Qu1et locations $279/Mo .
+Utilities, 740-446-2957
2 Bdrms Refngerator Stove Fur
mshed 34 1f2. Smither&amp; $250 00
Month Rent 1150~ 00 Deposit
2 bedroom apartment m Middle
port, we pay water sewer &amp; trash ,
you pay gas &amp; electnc, $200 per
month $190 deposit, 740·992·
7806

New Bank Aepo s Only 3 left. I

80Q-383-6862 ,
New 3BA 2 Bath , 14 W1de $500
Down $185 permo Free Air 1
8()()-691 6777
New 4BR 16 wide SSOO Down
$219 permo Free Atr 1·800-691·
6777

2 Aoorns &amp; Bath, $225/Mo • Includes Utilities No Kitchen , 1
Bedroom &amp; Bath Includes Utihhes

No Kl1ct&gt;en, 7~24n
28 Fl Trailer With Awning &amp;
Deck OverlOOking Ohio River Full
Kitchen &amp; Bath Furnished $225/
Mo • 1·888-840-0521
2bdrm apts , total eleclrlc appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities close to school In lown
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apls t49 or call 1-10·992·
3711 EOH

Cepos~.

(7ol0)-446-1340

~

.... 160, 74().4.46.3185

posn 1 800-38:1-6862

350 Lots &amp; Acraage

View, 741l-446·9539

NEW ON M~RKET

213-8365
6UILDINCI LOTS
FOR SALE

Elch. Coll304-n3-5188
LOT .spR!NQ VALLEY One
large Lot Approx 101 11111 C1ty
Water Sewer Nat Gas, Eleotrlc,
All Are Available lot 117 To
V1ew 74Q-446·9539
Mob1!8 Home lot For Rent ,
$100 00 Month In Crowl'! Clly
740-256-1491

20ACRES
$23 000 On Land Contract.
$1,000 Oown W /Approved Cred·
u Mostly WoodaCI, Great For Re·
creation Or Hunting Road Buill
To land Then On Into Wayne
National Forest Free Maps 1·
800-213-8365

360

BEAUTIFUL APA~TMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES ~T JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from S279 to $358 Walk to &amp;hop

Equal Housing Opportuni1y

Christy's Family Living apart·
ments home &amp; trailer rentals
740·992·451• apartments avail
able, fumlshed &amp; unfurnished
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apanments Un·

furnished, Securl1y Oeposl1. References Required 740·4-t8·t066
or Weekends 740-441..()952
Garage Apartment In Clifton real
mce $2SO 00 per month Plus

W•ter and Electric Ready For
Hook-Up. Nice Lot• $!,000.00

$100

dopo~t

1304)773-5040

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Mahor and
Al\lerslde Apartments In Middle
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
I unities
Pilot Program AAnrers Needed 1

8()()-353-6862
ModeF-n

1 Bedroom

Apa r tment

7ol0-446-0390

Nice Ground-Floor 2BR W!O
Hook up Reference Deposit No

-

(304)675-5162

Now Tak ing Applications - 35
west 2 Bedroom Townho use
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage TraSh, $315!Mo. 740

«6-()()()8

Real Estate
Wanted

we Buy lane 30 500 Ac:res,
We Pay Cash 1 800 2 13· 8365,
An,thony Land CO

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis,
Newly Redecorated Oepos11 &amp;
Re ferences Required 740 ·4&lt;16;

0893
2 Bedrooms $325/Mo + Utlhll&amp;s,
No Pers 7.C0-446 4313
3 bedroom home full basement,
central a1r Hud approved, $475
per month 74()-992· 1099
3Bedroomi2Balh large lot Canrral Air , Close to Town On JerIcho Rd/ Pl Pleasant No Pets
$400 OOMo +DeflOs•t lease Re quued
Apply 9 5PM on ly

1304)675-4167
TWo bed1oom house in Pomerb'p',
mce big yard and trees no inSide
pets, $400 month plus deposit ,
w111 cons1der seili ng on contracr
w11h references 740-698 7244

Middlepon Key at Acqulsllions ,
91 Mol
L 740.992-6250

s...

One &amp; Two Bedroom Apartments
Also House For Rent In Town No
Pets Depos it &amp; Aelrances Re
qUtrad 740-446-9342
One bedroom fu rnis hed apart·
ment tn Middleport, call 1•0 992
9191
Tara TownhouSe Apartments
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors, CA. 1 112 Balh Fully Car
peted, Adult Pool &amp; J3aby Pool
Patio Start S3501Mo No Pets,
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit Re·
qulred After s 740 446 0101
Before 5.. 740.4.c&amp;-3481
Twin Rivers Tower now accepllng
applicaltons for 1BA HUD sub·
sidized apt ror elderly and hand·
icapped EOH 304-675-6679
Valley View Aparlme nts Rio
Grande Oh Now Accepting ap·
phcallon for lmme&lt;hate occupan·
cy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Air Condil lOn, KitChen
appliances ,
Fenced In Play Ground laundry
On S1ght Managemen1 Wa1er
Sewage and Trash Paid Full hme
Studenls must met FMHA Qual
if1ca1!ons For more Information

call (740)-245-9170 Monday thru·Thursday 9 00 ·12 00 noon

540 Mlscel..._.s
Merchandise
IN W~ITING PO·
POETRY CONTEST

INTE~ESTEO

ETRY?

Household
Goods

0267

WOflK $850 ·$3,500 MO PTJfl
FREE Detalll Log Onto htlp II
wwv.- t'On com Access Code 5298
Plalform rocker, $75 stra1ghl
padded chair. $35 . sewmg ma·
Cfllr'1, $35, 7o10-992·5907

Appliances
Recond itioned
Washers Dryers, Ra~s Refrl·
gra1ors 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maytag , 740 446·

Prtrnee•r- tree DINcTV Summer

For Sa le ReconditiOned wash
ers dryers and retrlgeralors
Thompsons Appliance 3407
JaCkson Avonuo 13CM)675-7388

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vtne Street. Call 7~0·-"6·7398
Mollohan Carpets "DriVe A Little
Sav• A LoW 202 Clark Chapel,
740-.w&amp;·7oU4 7"l-388.QH3
New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga
Beds Chests Couches, Tables,
Much More! Stop And See us
74Q--«6 4782
Washer $95 Dryer $95 Electnc
Range $9S Refrigerator $95, Side
B'p' Side Refrigerator $195, Wash
er $205 Dryer $205. 1 Year War
ranty Freezer $295, Skaggs Ap·
phances 76 Vme Street, Galllpo·
tis 7.co 446 7398
Washer &amp; Oryef for

sate

304-67S.}

6693

530

Promotion Call now 1 888 265

2123

Rapid Weight Lout Fen- Phen
AIU!u nallve Comb•nat1on 100%
Sale Only S24 95 Buy 2 Get 1
Freel Lose 3 5 Pounds A Week
As Seen On TV Cellasene, HV'~gra Also A11allable Call Unlt8&lt;:1
Pharma,eeUIICaiS NOW For Into 1
800 733 3288 COO'S /Pre pay I

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine ~nliques .
112• E Mam Street on AI 12•.
Pome roy Hours M T W tO 00
am tofiOOpm Sunday100to

Aefngerator, Gold Kenmore, 13

5 years old.

ft

(2) STEEL 6UILCINGS 40x30
Was $9,970.' Se11 $3.470 50•75
Was $t9,600, Sell $8,900 Cave

0 800-379-375-1
'HOST

-f~MILIES NEEOEQIII'
E~~:change Students From Genna

ny Japan. England. France, Rus·
sla, Brazil Students Arrtve In Au·
gust To Attend local High
Schools For Further Information

I 80().765 4963
18'" DtrecTV Satellite Systems·
$69 00 3 month free programing
Um11eel time offer. call 1 800·779-

8194
t 995 lawn Tractor Murray 12 HP
8093

paid $3,300 6851 Offer (304)6751-181
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 bs, 30 O~Y MONEY
6~CK GUARANTEE! Natural Dr
Recommended

740-441·1982

Free Saffi1&gt;os
Bows For Sate Bear Whitetail
legend $60 High Country Safari
Hunter with rest $200 (304)675·
Buy Sell, Trade Smoking P1pes
74Q-446-4922, After 6 PM

spo.-. $225

m Letart Falls. c•ll 740...949
lor appolnlmenl

25x•o 30x60 -.sx90 50x140
"SOLO" Must Movel Fre&amp; Dellv
aryl 1 800 &lt;162 79~ x35
Washer/Dryer set 8 months old
Hot Point Brand, $400 Firm

1304)674-6127
Walerlme Special

3/4 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100 I' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com·
pression Fi1tings In StOCk

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio 1-800 537 9528
ENH~NCE~

' WOMEN CHEST

TABLETS Natural Alternative To
Implants Seen On Tv Grow t, 2
Even 3 Cup SIZilS GUAR·

ANTEED1

1-800-870 9938

Check Us Out

www thermo

D1scount Mobile Home
Parts &amp; Supply
~ge

lowniOry

Vinyl Skirting Kits $299 95, 5 Gal·
ion Aluminum Flb&amp;red Roof Paint
$25 21. 5 Gal White Roor Paint
$57 69 Anchors $5, Doors &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntertherm, Mtller &amp; Coteman Air Conditioners &amp; Heal
Pumps Bennetts Mobile Home
Supply, 740-446·9416 Gallipolis
Oh10
For Sale by 81d 1997, 31/2 ton ,
12 Seer Ahem Air CCJndHioner
Condenser and Indoor coil Send
bidS by 8/09199 fO GMCAA Box
272, Cheshire, Oh 45620

FULLY

LOACED

550

Building
Supplies

Block , brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels e1c Clautle Winters,
Ri o Grande OH Call 7&lt;10 245,

5121
Steel Butldlngs. New Must Selll
30x40x 12 Was S1 0,200 Now
$6 990, 40•60x1.C W•l $16,.COO
Now S10,871 50x100x16 Was

$27 .590

Now

$19 990,

60x200x16 Was $58,760 Now

$39 990, HI00-406-5126

560

Pets for Sale

A K C Min Schnauze~Boston
Terriers &amp; Shih Tzy shots &amp;
wormed 304 675-3361
•
AKC Cocker Spaniel Male, Ei
Months $50 00 , Jack Russell
Terrier" Mate. 1 Year Old
$50 00 7 40 256-6162
AKC
reg1stered
Mm1ature
Pinscher, 8 wk old, male, $250
740-247·2103
AKC Aegislered Shetland Sheep
Dog Pupptes, 1 Blue Merle &amp; 1
Black &amp; White Female Known As

1·800-520 631&gt;1
Generalor !5 HP 2500 Amp Used
One Time t 00 Gallon Stock Tank

$20, 74().388·0104
Go Carl New Tires 5 HP Briggs
a. Stranon Engine. 740·446-4310

ClOT A CAMPGROUND MEM ·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? We'll
Take Ill America s Most Sue ·
cesslul Campground And Time
share Resale Clearinghouse Call
Resort Sates International 1·800·
423-5967 24 Hours
Gravely Mower Electric Start
Runs Good $350 Horton Hunter
Supreme Crossbow With Target
l ilce New Cond1tion $200. 740·

245-9355

Hoi TuiJ seats 4 Works Good
S11200 OICier Model Grf.vely with
Br ush Hog , Tiller, Plow Sown

Blade Sulky $650 00 (740)-448·
7556
JET
MOTORS

~ERATION

Flepawed New &amp; Rebuilt In StOCk
Call Ron Evans 1·800·537 9528
Kenmore &amp; G E Washers While,
$75 Each Mayt8g &amp; Kenmore
Dryers $70 Each, Almond Kenmore Dryer $70 Call After 5 30
74().446-9088

3 Geldings 1 SIX VUr Otd A.qbi-

on One 2 Year Old - · Ono 3
Year Oki Appaloosa, Two t 1 Old
Mares t Arabian. One 112 Quar·

8358
4 Year old Golden Palomino
Mare, Broke to R1de ·11,000 9
'Year Old Reglatered HQHA
Betge Mare, Bread to Reglltered
AQHA In June Green Broke •
S2 500 1 Year Old Jaek·$500 oo
17-1(1~388-9736

alter 5:00

• year otd OH gelding. Incentive
fund gentte. would go green refn
er01 English, 7~5176

AKC Yorkshire Pupples 1 fe·
males $350 Mille, $300 Aeadv

"(30&lt;1~)6:7:.:5-:.:1::604::;,_ _ _ _ _ ':
1992 Toyota 4 runner SA 5. V-6

2 wheel dr., Sport Utllty. loaded.
w1th svnrool, exc.Uent condneon
1 owner 96,000 mills Asking ;
$10 50Q, (304)675-5164.

1983 Ford F-250, XI.T 4x4, Ole

I
1
1

(7ol0~25&amp; 1565

I

South

1995 Jeep Wranger Excellentlf

TRAN SPORTATI O N

710 Autoe for Sale
1500 CARS

F~OM

$500tt1 Buy

Pollc:e Impounds I Repos Fot
listings CAll NOW! 1-800·31 9332312156

CARS SUlO, $500 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUNDS Honda' &amp; Toyota's,
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utili·
ties Cafl Nowl 800 772 U70,

EXT 7832

1977 CJ·S 304•V 8, 3Spd Ex cellent Condition Soft top &amp; blktnt Top 6" Lift 35 Sx:12 5 Tires
Outlaw 2 wheels, Nerf Bars, Roll
Bar Console New Jet-Black
Paint &amp; Plenty ot extras
000

s•

1910 •litO HONDA

CA~S

FROM $!500 Pollee Impounds,
And Tax Repo s For uanngs Call
1983, 944 Porsct"le goOd condi·
lion $3 500 or OBO {740)·388·

8591 '"130&lt;1)-e33-8937
19M
$975
gme .
Mise

740

Motorcycles

3100

'

•

1996 Suzuki Katana 600, 608 t
m1tes blad&amp;pwpte, quick fBSt &amp; '

cheap! $3.200 00 060 740 992 ;
1506 clays 7o10-949-2&amp;4-18Y06.
1998 Harley David~n 883 Spor1
star black wllh extras,(excellenl ,

:::_:cond::;i1t::;""::;n:::l-:_:7_:40::.::992:::..:58=28::__ __ ';
97 Pace enclosed 6x14 traile• ~
rear ramp door and side door call •
30'·882·3487 leCMI message 1
Honda Helix Motor Scoott•. •
250cc Eng ine Perfect Conditio~

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

1989 Dodge

$3 500

I 00 000

~rles

Miles , Good Condition Needs
Few Repairs, $900, 740·446·
7614
1989 Dodge Daytona runs good
5 sp • amtfm cass 4 good tires

$800

'

1986 Ford Tempo , auto
740·388 ~9693

runs

or 740·

992-6326
1992 ford Thunderbird 89,000
miles, loaded air, $3,000, 94
Hyundal 73,000 miles S2.000

4

Collie Pups For Sale, $75 00
Each 7-40 441 0865

$3650, 740-9411-2045 evenings

1989 Pace Arrow motor home,
model 37J 37' long , &amp;Ide aisle, ' '
washer &amp; dryer microwave/con- '.
vection oven, sleeps 6. 2 000 mile •
on motor &amp; lransmt&amp;slon, &lt;10.000 1
miles en chass1s, Onan genera- '
tor rear view ca,nerafTV, 2 TV. ~ 1

FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO

286·8218

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Canning 1oma1oes, you pick, $3 a
bushel we pick, $4 a bushel. Jim
O'Brien, Let11rt Falls. 740·24 7·

2113
For Sale Home Grown Melons
Tomatoes at Troyer s Wood
Crafts 9 miles west of Gallipolis

Stale AI 141 U!kln

~d

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

$6 000, 74().387-0671

FAIR SPECIALS
JULY 5 THRU AUGUST 30
Lawn Tractors $150 011 On l T's,
$200 Ofll)('s And Grs $250 Off
Trak s. Financing As Low As
59% For 36 Months Or $250 On
On C,ompact U11ilty Tractors,
5210's, 53 to's And Ga1ors Free
Delivery Carmichael Farm &amp;
lawn , Your Local John De9r6
Dealer. G,.lllpolls Ohio 740·446·
24120r 1800-594 111 1
J D 200 Gal Sprayer Rotary Hoe,
30th Grain Auger 2211 Gra1n Ele
valor, 3 Gra111ty Wagons (740)·
256 6011
JoM Deere nacto r 1010 Spe
Ctal $3350 (304)576-2667
See The New Jo ttn Deere 200
Senes Skid Steer Loaders 1 5"/o
JOC Financing &lt;..arm1chae l s
Farm &amp; Lawn Inc t 800-594·
1111, GallipoliS, OH We Deliver!

'.

----------'"-" ~·'·
810
Home
'I·
Improvements

1'

-------~------~---··
I'
BASEMENT
~~
\r!

i

ers Waterproofing

Goftll (740)-446-4548

610 Farm Equipment

L

448·0870 1 800 287 OS78 Rog· :

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am. Fully
Loaded ! Price Reduced to
$22 500 00 Great Graduation
91 Buick Park Avenue Good
CondlhOn Leather and Loaded I

ITUESDAY

'• tt

SERVICES

'l

\

.

All types of masonry work, bri~ .; ' !
block, stone concrete 20 years~ ::
e~~:perlance rree estimates, 304- ~
~

n3-9550

Appliance Paris And Service All
Name Bran&lt;;ts over 25 Years Ex·
perllil,nCiil All Work Guarantied, ...
Fren ch Clly Maytag, 740-446·

n95

C&amp;C General Home Main
lenence Palnllng, vlnvl siding.
carpentry doors, windows, baths,
motnle home repair and more For
free estrmate cal l Chat 740 992·

ASTRO-ORAPR

when faced wtth makmg
tmponant dectstons that may have a

friends today,

befora completmg your plans
PISCES (feb. 20-M arch 20) ProJects that pile up on you because of
auempung to do more than you can
comfortably manage could y1eld accr-

you'lllum ' out to be wrons. Let your

dcnts. Be cognrunt of your limlla·

direct affect upon your penonal

pals

LIBRJI , (S.pr.2'3-0cr. 23) RegardWednesday, August 4, 1999
Call your own shots in the year

ahead

C1r·

(7ol0) 256-6412

63:13

cumstances. Don't allow those with
less w1se heads make Judgments for

720 Trucks for Sale

livingston s Basemen t Water
ProoUng all basement repairs
done free e&amp;tlmates llfetlm'e.
guarantee 12yrs on job tlltperj-

you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Trymg to
sain 1he suppon of othen today
could be a Herculean task, because

1982 Chevy 5·10 V-8 Auto
Good Condition $3500 080

(304)875·1550

enca (304)895 3887

1985 Ford F-150 351 Motor, 58
liter, Suparcab long Beo low
Mileage Excellent Cond1t10n One
Owner! $2,400 00 080 740·256

M&amp;A Elactc!cal Coht1actlng
Trailer Set-Ups
Carpentry,
Porches, Trailer Set Ups, And Air
Condltronlng. Also Malnlenance,

6471

74().4.41-&lt;lt 93

1985 Toyota Pickup 4.x4 w11h
flal·bed Will negollate (304 )675
5667
'

Rainbow Builders
Build new or repa 1r old no job
too small Of lafge M8jOf cre dit
cards
MWV029502
Ca ll
(30d.l458· 104Brl BP t528 8092

1988 Dakota v 6 Automatic
78K E•cellent Cond111on $3 295
1994 Dodge Conversi on Van
W!lh All Opllons Cook Motors
740 446-0103

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

.

1988 Fuii· Size Van (304 )675
6153
'

-

840

,

Electrical and
Refrigeralion

Res10en t1a1 or commercial Wiring
new serv1ce or l'epa11s Masler l 1
cense d electnc •an A1denou1
l:lectr Jcal WV000306 304-675·

1786

•

3
140 , _ . . _

•

--

41llle .......
42 Farm
43 Upon

45 CalciiM (a

-~)
·47=~ ;
48 I'NIIx lor

--

•

50;,:·._
52

a.-.

H&amp;}wad

53-1,002

CELEBRITY CIPHER
OliCny

by Luis Campo•
c-. CIYS*)Oi.IIS ar8 Cf'Mtlld from q; I li 4 by famous peopi8

'D X G

EC! t.a.i'in '-cipher ltandl to.~

MSAK

BCMU

EO
TOO

DZWD

DZTSP

JM1: and preseot

roa.ys e1v11 v 8QUI.Is B

OWHGO

VECGWERCWRK

DZG

TSGBBTRTGSRK

TO

GEPGSG

\

URRWCDZK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'WI1en you're the top dog, everybody wants to pul
you 10 the pound • - (Baskelball player) Charles Barkley
h

WOIO
lAIII

I
I

E

c L A R' E

PREIG

I

~1II I
....,.:W~A~M:.,;O~D~E~~~art
~ I 1 17 I I
·

....,.:P...:.;.A5..:.:R:.,;O::_:,.V~~•...=:

L...-L-.J......J--.L....J'"

The s1gr.t. hang1ng 1n the local health and beauty spa read
Cosme11cs are. an • - - · · · •

G)

,

Complere the chuckle quoted
by fdl1ng 1n the Q'ussmg words
you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

Helper- Teptd, Avotd - Tnvel - OVER RIPE

·'

1996 Olds Calais 4DR, 4Cyl, 5-

da)IS. 740.949 26« MS

Zane-

37 Gel

"The pnme of hfe " the ma~ told h1s w1fe • 1s that
fieetmg moment between green and OVER RIPE ·

FISHING. BOAI!NO HUNTING ,,

~~2~~ Condition (3~4)882

199Et'Piymouth Breeze 51,000
miles. while with gray Interior
auto, cruise. air am/fm can • 4
dr , asking $7 800, 7&lt;10·992· 1508

c.mptlell
31AIIIhor

SCRAM:I.ETS ANSWERS

Or Just Aelaltlng In Your Own '
Camper &amp; CampSite Overlooklnq ; '
Blue Lake To View 740·446·

1
'
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llletima guarani.
Local referen ces furntshed Ea· •,
tabi1Shed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)

1996 Oldsmobile Aurora , excel·
lent cond1tlon low ffVles, call Tom
Anderson 7&lt;10·992·3348 after
Spm

orw
H--vur
30-

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

',

9539

1995 Plymouth Neon, 4 dr, auto
am(lm cass ate 87,000 miles
nice car $4150 , 1993 Toyola
Tercel 2 dr -t sp htgh m1les
good work car, $1595. Rutland
Car Sales 74Q·742 3311 or 740
742 8888

-lx"

--10

27Dtvt-.-

e

:~e::~;. ~=~~!~:::g!l~ 1~f :~~ ::
call back

1995 Mercury Tracer aUlomallc
air, new llres cassette, low mile

age sharp $5800 740·992·8810

24T-

25"8y!M-

261YJ&gt;eol-

__.J.L...J._..J
1.-.J.L...J._..J..

1

1992 Shadow looks and runs like
new, 70K, cold air, automatic
sunroof, 4 cylinder spoiler red

1994 Ford Taurus Show All F'ow·
er Keriess Enlry, New Tires, Au
Jomallc, 4 Doors $4,000 Booka

type

6

(304)675-2063

\

BIG NATE

1973 Molar Home, Dodge Cha$· ~
sies $2 ,000 Or Trade For Box '

SieOilS 6,$3 500,740.448 1420

2644 8\1'88.

I

1972 Starcralt camper SIOYB, Ra- ~1
fngerator , New Water Haater, 1 1
Tires Air, $900 C.all Anytlm&amp; .' "'
7&lt;11).256 9137
~

Sh..-p (304)675-8153

1993 Dodge Stealth auto amnm
cassette ale alloy wheels, sun·
roof, silver wilh gray Interior, front
fender damage $3 760, 740·949-

-"

____

1974 Coachman Motorhome.
Dodge Chassis 75.000 Miles,

Responsible pllrty wanted 10
make low monthly paymenls on
p1ano See Locally Call 1·800·

i

Campers &amp;
-:·' '
Motor
Homes
..:.,..:.,::..:.;:::.;;___,,

790

1992 Oldt, Cuttiss Supreme
Wh ite wllh blue Interior 4DR

Musical
Instruments

I

New Replaceme11t Gas Tanks 0' '
&amp; ~ Auk&gt; Ropley WV (304) ~72·
3933 01: 1·800•273-9329
r I

Fish Birds Pond Supplies ,
Sun 1·4PM Mon · Sat II AM·
6PM Fish Tanli:/Pet Shop 24 t 3
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant

570

I

•

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Englne111, All Types, Acces$ 1
To Over 10.000 TransmissionS. ,
eve Jolnl$ 7.0·2&lt;15-5677

~Tru~~~·7_;&lt;o-~44-l_;~~~--------~·

Aottweller Pups, 1st Shots &amp;
Wormed $125 Each, 5 Le1t, No
Papers 7.C0-44B·2197

I

•'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

740·742·2357 RJ Au108

Registered Airedale pupp1es
make great hunters farm dogs,
lo~al genlle pets Shots, wormed
$200 7 40-992 7888

I

•oo

A~.

Pus
Pass
Pass
Pus

After wmnmg wnh dummy's diamond ace, declarer played a spade lo
hts ktng. led a club to dummy's ace,
and cashed the spade ace (If rhe
spade queen had appeared, South
~ould have had 17 top tncks.) However, he dtdn ' t know whtch red-sun
card to d1scard When the spade
queen d1dn 't drop, the ·contract was
htsrory Declarer had to lose the last
tnck to East m rhe red sun from
wh1ch he d1dn't d1scard
Instead of gonig for the spades
1mmedtately suppose declarer starts
by takmg h1s four club tncks, dis·
cardmg a couple Of spades from the
dummy Then he unblocks the spade
'kmg, crosses to dummy's hean kmg.
and cashes the spade ace What does
East d1scard? He ts down tu rhree
cards m each red sun And when he
commus h1mself. South discards
from lhe olher sun
Let 's suppose East releases a
hean Declarer rhrows rhe useless
d1amond 10. plays a hean to h1s Jack,
and cashes rhe heart ace, which
esrabhshes rhe heart mne as the 13th
tnck

TH~ BORN I.O~SE!OI.!R!!..------.

$5 800 Of lake 01/ef Payments! ~
Sea Ooo GS 2 Seater, 85 h,t1
$350 firm (3CM)675-2867
'
Brought New '" A4&gt;rll. Trailer, LMi
~ Jacket , Cover (7401 ·247·2511
1988 Beretta new engine and
can after 4 00 PM
transmission, $2,500 1992 Che·
vy 5·10, 69 ooo miles $2 Soo
1986 Baytlner Inboard , Outboard,
1991 Pontiac Grand Prix St
Cuddy Cal&gt;ln, Excellent Condltlon, 0
(740~&lt;1&lt;46-0519
740 He 0038
•' ·

OOOgo Neon 5 Speed,
740 446 9582

==

llquide
2311oN
uncanny

Pus
Paas
Pus
Paas
Paas

would you contmue 7

245-0485

10 go Augu51 2nd 1304)895-3926

For sale· 51 Bernard puppies, 5
weeks old, $150 each phone
7&lt;1(}-992·2721

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1986 Dodge Daytona, runa good

1988 Dodge Oynasty, Autoinatlc
Good Col}dltlon, S1 ,300 1 995

LMo-.y

&amp;II

WHI
Paas

How much mfonnatton 1s our
government keepmg from us' Oscar
Wtlde felt rhal some of 11 related to
the discovery of the ~ountry. "Of
course, Amenca had often been discovered before, but t1 had always
been hushed up "
In today 's deal from lhe Vancouver Spnng Nauonals, South wanted
h1s hne of play hushed up, but he was
betng ktbtlzed by a JOUrnalist, Maureen Denmson from England See tf
you would have done better You
push mto the adven1urous seven notrump West leads a diamond How

=-.,..,--......,..,-:::----:'
1986 Honda 250 R sat up for ~
cross countrr racmg. hke nuw •t
304-882-2692

•

22~1or

By Phillip Alder .

. ..

•

Pv&amp;zle

21-

If you bid
up, play up

Baby Gold Wing Make Offer 7ol0

Cutlass Good Work Car
Also B1g Block Chevy En
Complete S 1 500, And
Big Block Parts 740-.C46-

3 a-.
4ConiUIM
5 Unltoi1118N
1Fio&lt;1dlclly

•• 7 3 2
Soulh
a K
• A J t?
• K Q 10 2
a K QJ 8

lead· • 6

To Sale Terms Of Sale CASI. .
OR CE~TtfiED CHECK.
~

11

12"-T- pleyer
MILl I

.,. I I

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer Fut .
Sale By Public Auction A 19ti I
Toyota &lt;1~~:4 PU 1219689 At 10 00 1
A M On 8121199 At Tho O~Y j
AnneK, 1•3 Third Avenue GaiU 1
polis OH Sold To HigheS1 Bktde1 1
"As Is - Where Is• Without Ell :
pressad Or Implied Warranty£ 1
May Be seen By Caning Tho COl· '
lection Dept A.t 7&lt;1CI-U1 ·1038 •
O~B Reserves The R1gh1 To Ac :
cept /ReJeCI Any &amp; All 8lds &amp; ,
Wtthdraw Items From Sale PriM~'

oond

Nog (304)773-5878

2a
4NT
SNT
7NT

'

7.40-,;,.,7_4.:2_-1.:3_;16;:,__ _ _ _ _~- '

Hay 1001 bales. 120 last years
hay 112. call 7&lt;10·992 ·~ 98 after
4 or 7&lt;10-742·2405 aflef 6

• 3

• Q 10 7 5
) • J g. 7

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

:_;~~~~~~----- ·

-

M&amp;J Auto

740.2~

.

I

88 Dodge Caravan, 7 pass , V·6, :
good conclftton 13SK mills ~ 1

Hay &amp; Grain

6 4 3
6 5 4 3
10 8 4

10ma11e. 1011000 Mies $1.200 Or ,
080,740-256-1233
I
I

sel, Must Seel CeH after 5 00

a to PwuAa

EaA

Q8 4

1989 Plymoutl\ Voyager \f-6 Au·• 01

1992 Plymouth Voyager, 1979
Ford Van , 3/4 ton, IIC cao

h

6 AS

.,

1304)695-36981 After 5PM

640

• K8
• A

::

~

ACROSS

6AJIOt7&amp;S2

Converston (Houston Texas) ~ 1
gnr; velour tnterio•.-. front and rear
atr, all eJtras 14800 080, 7~~
992·1 508 days or 7AJ0~949·26U .,.

Cooditioo 740.367·5039

AKC Reg istered Yellow Lab Pups,
Shols &amp; Wormed, Ready 41h Of

.liMy

&amp;Iz• converalcQ.o ,
"'"· 302 automadc, Ivory Co~ .

----------------------------~--------------------------:•

-"

•

run

For Sale 3 Appaloosa Horse&amp;
One 8Ft Satellite Di sh Call

She111e $300, 7oi0·37!H!836

300 s $300 Off 400's And Z

Grubbs pta no· tuning &amp; repaJrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call lhe
plano Or 7&lt;10-446-4525

Uvestock

good dopendatole car $595

PENTIUM

COMPUTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl

256-141S

HID0.3111-3323 Ext &lt;1420

•lOll com

COOL DOWN
Central Air Cond itioning Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Systmes I Furnaceii, Heat
Pumps Certified Installer If You
Don 1 Call us We Both Lose! 7•0·
446 6308 1-800-291-()()98

PriQodl (7-10~

•ooo

STEEL BUILDINGS • 5 ONLY!

Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

to buy Uaed Tin any

~llonollly

Maio&lt; Credi1 Cards

cu

I 888-81&amp;-0128

1987 Ford

wid111,

ter 112 Morgan, lnstalkntnt Plan
For Horses To Good Home, 25%
Down Allordalllf Ra10S, 740-388--

Air Condlhoners, Used Dlflerent
Stzes. Guaranteed! 740·88~
0047

7795

w....d

WWWpoelry(X)m

OWN A COMPUTER. PUT IT TO

510

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

630

Lrtt Chatr Electuc. Paid $1 ,000

ME RC HAN DISE

620 WJ&amp;itld to Buy

5'8,000 In Pnzes Possl:lle P~
cauon Send One Ortglnal Poem
20 Unes Or Lass To lntematiOn·
al l1brary Of Poetry 1 fl'Oitty Piau Sui10 11835. Qw;ngs MilS. MD
21117 Or enter Onhne At

Will Take $800 , OBO 7&lt;10-367 -

7229

&amp; movlu Call 740 448 2568

23 Acres 2 Miles Off SA 7 &amp; SA
21 8, Soulh Of Gallipolis Sln·
g1ew1des Allowed Land Conrract
Available Only $27 000 l -800·

Attai4 building 1600• square bot

~o rner tocat10n, 87 Mill Street

60' Hitachi TV tnmmed m oak 6
months old brand new condition

APARTMENTS ON 2ND. AYE
Near Business Section Ideal For
Seniors, 1st Floor Real Nice To

3 adjacent plots Kirkland Memo·
nal Gardens $1200 (30 4)895·
3422

740-385-QI7

3 Room Furnished Utilities Paid
9&lt;1 locust Street $280 00 Plus

Apartment For Rent 6 Mitts
North Of Holzer Hospllaf State

446-35'5

Mobtle home site avallabl• bet·,
ween. Athens and Pomeroy call

38' Cut $400. Melllnk Safo 22H
16 112 w 140, $50 740·446·

Spec1al 2811:80, 3 or 49R $1000
Down S322 per mo Free Dellv·
ery &amp; Setup 1·800·691·6777

3 Acre Hilltop Homesite, 14 MIL
Additional Acras Green School
DIStriCt Between Ei 9 PM 740·

Homo Lot70()-256-1922
Fo&lt; ~- - ""'*
RecMecl.

3 Bdrm Unfurnished, Pt Pleasanr
Area, E~~:cellent Condition Ae
lrences And Oeposll Required 1·
304-675-2015

New Bank repos only 2 lefl we
finance call30'4-722 71&lt;18

Double Wide On lot $250 De

460 Splice for Rent

6 00 p m 740·992-2526 Russ

Apartment tor rent In Middleport.
no pets 7.C0·992·5858

1

I

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths CA. Stove
Relrlgerator Water Trash Fur·
mshed Very Nlc:el S3501Mo

1996 Noms 16&gt;&lt;80 iaR 2BA
AR/Sklrllng Flnenc:lng AVIIIIable
(304)&amp;75-6055
~.

164

(304)675·2510

740-446-1-1(19

$16 500 00 (740) 446·8113

Cross Lanes Home Center Free
Set-up Delivery, AJC Underpin·
n1ng, &amp; S500 Wa!Mart Shopping
Spree with each home purchased Stop &amp; see your hometown hOU!IIng IPIClill&amp;l Woody
Willard (304)776·7699 or 1·800·
922 9976 Crosslanes Elut of

2 Bedroom House with extremely
large lot 'Priced upon 1nspec110n

A/C , Very N1c:e, 7&lt;10·446·2003,

740-446 3870 .

$499 Down A ll Smgles, $999
Down Doubles Super low Pay
ments llmlled Time Oakwood
Homes, Barboursville W'i/, 304·
736·3409

800-27().9894

Card DEBT.. Debt Con·
solldatlon Stop Collection Calls
Reduce Paymenls &amp; Finance
Charges Avoid Bankrup tcy 1

Schultz, 1411.72
2
Heatpump 2Balh
Included
$11 500

8-L-O.W O.U.T

Completely remodeled house 4
bedroom family room liv1ng room
kitchen, ullhty room &amp; bath base
ment with bath , new carpet
throughout centra l air beautiful
\llew of river call 7&lt;10 992 9012
appomlment only

••crec~n

1 7-1(1~256-6011

1991 14ft1172tt Shingle Roof V1nyl
$1dang
EII:Cf:!llent Condlllon

740-384-0138

Wealthy Fam111es Unloadlflg Mil·
11on1 01 Dollars, To Help Mlnlmlu
Their Taxes Wr ite Immediately
Windfalls, 8.C7·A SECOND AVE ,

1972 Basset! House 12~~:65 2 br :..
2 ba vefy n1ce cond stove/re·
fng S3.,500 :1M 675-5687

ShaPe ,116 000, 74().367-7724

51 acre farm wltwo bedroom
house, 2 car garage attached, on
124 approximately 3 ml~s west of
langsville $75 000 caSh firm

$FREE

Leave Message

1990 ,.x72 Skyline 2 eecrooms
2 Ba t hs, 18•8•8 Deck 12x l 0
Shed Natural Gas Heal In Great

3041

2 Bedtoom Gas Heat ww Carpet,

440

(304)675-6825

2 bedroom house 1n Mason price
redu ce d while boss 15 away
phone 740·992·3557 or 740 992·

Between Athens and· Pomeroy. 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
condrtroned, $260·$300, sewer,
water and lrash Included 7•0·
992 2167

1969 2 Bdrms New Carpet
Washer Dryer. Gas Stove Rel ngerator M1crowave, 2 Window
IVC s $6 500 00 1•0 245 59•6

De ck

310 Homes lor Sale

1987 14x75 Ft Forest Park. &gt;3
Bedrooma 2 Bathl, With CIA In
~ Rolor""""' &amp; Ooposl1 RoquirBd 740-388 sno

Mob11e' Home lor Rent Call (740)·

1988

REAL ESTATE

7~7•2-271•

14 Ft x70 Ft 1999 Fleetwood
Tra1ler 2 Full Baths 3 Bedrooms,
Furmshed To Take 011er Payments 740-379-2734

BA LA OR

Th1s newspaper w1ll not
knowingly accept
ad\lertlsements for real estate
which IS 1n violatiOn of lhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised m !hiS newspaper
are available on an equal
oppor1umty basis

month , 1150 .depos it, rio p•••.

Mon1tl

740.:188-8335

!

· $250 •

3 Bedrooms All Eteculc Trailer
With Washer/Dry Hook up S350 J

1988 Redmond Dan111lle 14x70
Also Has ExpaMo Very Nice
New Heat Pump Asking S14 000

ISS OVERDUE BILLSIIl SSS Con-

pay·blls com

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1985 Oakwood 2 Bedrooms. 2

All real estate advertiSing m
this newsPl&gt;er IS subiftct to
the Federal Fa1r Housing Act
ot 1968 'Wtl lch makes n 111ega1
to advert1se ~any preference
hm1tat1on o~ d1scrimlnat1on
based on race coklr rehg1on
sex lamlllal stalus or national
ong1n or any lnten110n to
make any such preference
hm1tal1on or dlscr1m1nat1on ~

12ld!O !railer 10181 -

Oepo.. 7o10-388-9686

6a1hs

Ohio 7&lt;D-992 3860

val NO APPLICATION FEESII I·
800-863-900e E" 938 www help-

HOMES FROM $5 000 Fore·
closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credrt Trou
ble 0 K For Cunent llstrng Call
1·800-31 1 50o18. Ext 3875

141165 electric 2 bedroom
2 bath new a~r 'COnd1tlofler under·
pmmng great cond1t1on $9500
74(}-949-2.52

220 Money to Loan
solidate Debts! Same Day Appro-

740.367-7000

~ 1980

Best Home Based Bus1ness1
' Own An lntirnet Casmo Becom&amp;.
An Internet Junket Rep Min In·
~ment S3 7SO 516-578·1405
BUSINESS SPACg RENTAL Of
f1ce Space Or Sales Rooms For
lease On 2nd A11e Gall1pohs
, Close To Courlhouse &amp; Clly
Bulk:Hng 1, 2 3 4 Rooms All Nl·
caty Decorated, A C Water Sew
er 81lla Are Paid Make Your
Choice Now You Must See
These Spaces Phone For Show-'

•n

WANT A VISA CARD' $12 000

WO~KING

recommends that yOu do bus•
ness wllh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have m11estigated

Three bedroom houst for ult,
one ana 112 baths, fully furnished.
Sy
nice yard close lo park,
camore Street Middleport call

Tn level thft&amp; bedroom, fWD
barhs, 11ving 10om tam11y room ,
RECEIVING PAYMENTS ? In
, dlntng room two garages base·
VBSIOr Pays CASH NOW FO(
ment btQ porch ask•ng $65.000
Your Seller Fmanced Mortgage
740-7&lt;12·3039
Aea l Estale Contract Insurance
Annu•ty H1ghes1 Pnces Free
.. HOMES FMOM S10,000t•• 1 •
Quotes ;Yhv Wa1t ? Call AICh 1
5 Bedroom local Repos &amp; Fore
800 8111l-6450
closures Frna('lcing Poss1ble For
l.Jstings t-800-719-3001 x1 1B5

f-IN A NCI AL

210

'tOUR HEAD IN DEBT???

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

objecuves that are meaningrul to you
could be JUSt the oppostte for assOCI·
ates. Leo, trea1 yourself to a b1nhday
sift Send the required refund fonn
and for your AStro-Graph predtctions
for the year ahead by ma11mg $2 and
self-addrassed stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
1'0 Box 1758, Murray H11l Station,
New Yqrk, NY 10156 Be sure to
state

your Zodtac s1gn.

VIRGO (Aus 23-Sept 22) If you

less of wh ich side you choose to suppori »he n cnushl In the mtddle
hetween t\ \'O drssentins

fi~ht

1

uons

11 out on dlf::ir own

SCORI '10 (Oct 24-Nov. 221
Chances a re good that 1'ndiv1duals
who are

not usually antagontstlc

may be so 1oday. If you get mvolved
in one-on·&lt; me Situations, brace your·
selr for son 11e possible turbulence

SA Gin ' ARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21 ) In your haste to get thmgs done
today, unple &lt;ISant constquences could

be

In store for you rf you contmually ignore P" &lt;oper procedures and proceed tn a re1~ kless fashton
CAPRIC t JRN. (Dec 22-Jan 19)

Mailers tha1t relate to

your

finances

mu&lt;l be har. lied prudently and cau-

trously todo:.'~ Lody Luck is no where
to be found at lhrs ume, so act carefully and re "pon51bly.
AQUA~ : IUS (Jan 20-Feb

19)

persn;tm adopttng a negauve anhude
about things today, you would severely reduce your effect• vencss and product" tty R c.1flirm your posnrve,

cr1tical

opllrlUSIIC cmlll.)ok

ly Check a II the details for flaws

Your

past d l1 1hgent efforts

will count

for very hulc ltoday if you try lo brins
matll• ers to a

head premature·

.ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19) If

thmgs go wrong for you financially
today, don't look to place the fault on
othen If you truly wan1 to fix the
problem, look rn the mrrror
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) It'll
create long range 111 w1ll of o1hers 11
you aren't as considerate of them ns

you should he tnday solely for the
purposes of fulfilling your own ambl·
nons
GEMINI (Mny 21-June 20) Acl·

mg first and thmkmg later 1s one of
the problems you suffer from trmc to
ume and 1h1s could be one of those
days Try to put graater emphasis on
the Iauer
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don'l
loan anything you can t afford to lose
to anybody today, but cspecmlly
avord loanmg anythmg to one who
has proven to be a poor credtl nslc

It'll be your loss

·

AUGUST 31

�1 •

•

By The Bend

The D aily Sentinel

--- insisted that she was not his child.
Her mOiher demanded a blood tesL
It IUI'ned out that be was indeed the
father.
The girl was upset lhat be had
never apologized . for refusing to
acknowledge ber as his daughler all
those yean. She added. ~Now we
are all gening along fine." You told
her to forget about trying to force an
apology out of him.
I disagree. My father quit kissing
' Your silence emboldens lhem. me and t&lt;lling mt he loved 111e when
Speak up, woman' If Danny contin- I was 10 years old. He said I was ·
ues to have trouble. consider trans· "tpo big for that" He hugged and
ferring him to another ·school.•e&gt;·en kissed my 3 year old Sister, 'which
tbough it may mean paying tuition. made me envious.
It would be wonh it. And yes, home
When I was 45. I let him know
schooling is also a viable option.
how much it hurt that he never ver·
Dear Ann Landers: Not long · balized his love 'for me. He said it
ago, you printed a lener from "loose had been difficult for him to say "I
Ends in Corpus Christi." She said love you" to a grown up girl. It never
her father had had a vasedomy and dawned on him how much I suffered

have not yet spoken to the principal
because I doubt that he would be any
more helpful than the teacher. I need
some advice.-· A PERPLEXED
MOM IN GA.
DEAR MOM: Go to school and
speak to the principal as soon as pos· .
·sible. It is the- responsibility of the
school to see that all the children are
safe there. Bullies should no[ be tol:
era(ed, regardless of their back·
ground.
·

old son, "Danny," is being harassed
at school. He has come home three
times in the last two months with
injuries. Last week, we had to take
him to the emergency room.
I have talked to llis teacher, but
the situation has not . improved. All
she will do is keep Danny away
frorn the other children 'and make
him play in· another area. I feel he is
Qeing punished for the bad behavior
of others.
I asked the teacher if I should
speak to the parents of the bullie.s. ·

come from broken homes and have a
ro!lgh life. If I complain. it could
make it worse.
I have encouraged Danny to fight
back, even though I know this is not
the hest way to solve the problem.
but .it's alii could think of Today, he
carne home with a black eye. and I
am seriously considering filing
assault charges against the other
boy. I am afraid for my son's safety.
Danny has asked us to take him
out of school and teach him at home.
One of his friends is doing this . I

TomotTow: Sunny

High: 808; Low: 80s

·

Parents can make their own baby food that will be cheaper and
more nutritious than what they can buy. You don't have to have any
e~pensive appliances or fancy gadgets, just something to 01ash up or
gnnd .the food. A blender, potato masher. food grinder or food
processor works very well.
To make the baby food begin the · preparation by washing your
hands and the equipment in hot, soapy water, then dry. Use high
·quality food that does not have any sugar, salt or fat added to it. Wash
fruits and vegetables under running_water and remove the skin and
seeds. Al.so be sure to remove bones and all visible fat from meat.
Cook the food by baking, boiling .or steaming it until tender.
You can use food that you have prepared for the rest of the family, but remove the 'baby's portions before salt, sugar, fat, · spii:e~ and
seasonings are added. After the food has been cooked, use the food
gripiler, processor or even a fork to mash the food until it. is smooth.
Throw out any lumps or hard pieces that 10an ' t be pulverized. You
may need to thin the food by adding_. a linle liquid such as water, for·
mula or breast milk if it is too thick for baby io eat.
·'
Pour the finished product into clean, dry jars, plastic storage cartons or ice cube trays. Cover, label and date the containers. Refrig. erate or fruze. Fruits and vegetables can be refrigerated two to three
days and can bC frozen for up to eight months. Meats or egg yolks
should only be kep! in the refrigerator one day, however, they can be
frozen if they are used within two months. Meat and vegetable combinations will ~ safe for one to two days in 'the refrigerator or three
to four months in the freezer.
By spending just a linle extra time and energy. you can prepare
healthy and economical foods for your baby. You will have peace of
mind knowing what your baby is eating.

Co"mmunity. Calendar·---'--is

The Commumty • Calendar
pubhshed as a free service to non· profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any type. ltems ·are printed only
as ·space permits and tan not be guaranteed· to be printed a specific number of
days.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, regular meting, work in the E.A. degree, 7:30p.m. Tuesday. Refreshments.

. women. or course, it's wonderful to
bear those wonls, but ia the final •
analysis, it's how you IR treaiCd:
that counts.
Too often, the words are uttered
. but there is no loving 'treatmen~ and.
that, to me, is far IIIOIC damaging.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
, life of a loved one? • Alcoholism:
How to Recognize It, How to Deal
With It, How to Conquer It" can tum .
things around.
' sen.d a self addressed, long, business siz,e envelope and a check or
·money order for $3.75 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol.
c/o Ann Landers, PO. B0 x 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 6061 Hl562. (In Cana·
da, send $4.55.) .
.
To find out more about Ann Lan- 1
ders and read her past columns. visi! ,
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.crealors.com.

,. .·-

ITime Out .For Tips I
BY BECKY BAER
Melga County Extenaion Agent .
Family
and
Conaumer
Sciences/Community Development

because of his silenc e in those early
years.
When I left him tJw day, I told
him Iloved him. He · ~ "Me, too.•
The next time I visit&lt; :d him, he gave
me a bis bear hug an d whispered, ~I
love you." He died a few yean ago,
and I cannot tell yo. 1 the comfort it
bring~ me to hav. ! heard those
words.
Petbaps "Loose E nds" father has
no idea she is still su ffering and has
assumed 'she has forg otten about his
early lmltmenl •Of he r. He may also
be embarrassed. Whalever tbe reas on, he needs to
know how she feels in order to be
able to fix it. If he doe sn 't apologize.
she is no worse off th oan she is now.
--ANONYMOUS IN PENN.
DEAR PENN.:
For some
un'known reason, it is more difficult
for men to say "I lc ove you" than

Historians to gather
A gathering of members of 1he
Meigs County Historical Soc iety
and ~he Athens County Historical
Society and Museum will ~ held
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the south· ·
bound roadside park on Route 33.
The event will be a bring-your·
own'picnic and lawn chair event. A
feature " of the afternodn will be
reflections on Nelson S!Ory. a 19th
century man from Meigs County.

who wenl west as a young man and
. became famous for his catlle drive

from Texas to Montana.
Non-members and children with
adult supervision are in.vited to
attend ..

Computer training 'sessions
offered al Meigs
'.
· Ali Advanced Learning System
computer program is being, offered
to all Meigs Local teacherS.
The session will be taught on
Monday, Aug. 23, in the Meigs
High computer lab with each. sessicin to commence at 8:45 a.m. and
conclude at 3:15p.m.
Accordillg to Wendy· Halar, the
program will assist teachers in
understanding how computer programming can help students
improve their test scores in the
classroom.
In ad!lition an Atcess program
will be offered to teachers and other
personnel on Friday, Aug. 27. It will
also 1M: conducted from 8:45 am. to
3/15 p.m. Tl)e program is geared to
nelp set up a database. Those participating are to take a disk on which
to sa,::e their wo~k and to liring a list..
to be put on the Access database.
.

system.
..
"'
· A computer lraining session will
be scheduled at a later date for a

new program that will be available ment director of nun .ing, said t'hat infants he brcastfed for at least one
for the Meigs High and Meigs Mid- the Healt~y People 2000 Breast- year.
die School faculty which will facili- feeding Goal for the. n ation is that at
The in(ant feeding deci'sion can
tate writin·g assignments for stu· least75 percent of all infants will be ~av.e long term consequences on the'
·dents. Halar S.id.
· breastfed by the time they are dis- growth and success of our children.
To register for the ALS and charged from the hosp ital and that at said the"health nurse.·
Access. training , those. inu:rested are • leasr 50 percent will ' :ontinue to be,
Because of increased bonding;
to call §92· 2153 . · ·,
breastfed at six month IS of age'.
improved cognii,ive development
··Motlter's milk c :nhances the · and the many . health benefits;
. growth, developmen tt and well - ' br~a'stfeeding can help ensure a pos·
being of infants by . providing the itive start for infants and young
Hay show scheduled at rair
best possible nutritiot n and protec- ·· children. Maternal and child health
The Meig~ Soil and Water .Con· lion against specific i nfections and clinics and WIC projects have a
servation District and the Meigs allergies," according t o a statement strong mandate to promote and sup·
County Fair Board will' sponsor a from the Ohio De partmenl of port breastfeeding.
hay show at the 1999 Meigs County · Health.
Public health clinics in Ohio,
Fair.
Torres stressed th• lt the health including ali WIC ·clinics, have
Classes for the hay show are benefits of breastfee ding can be trained staff• who can •provid~
Class ·1, 75 percent or more alfa:lfa; translated into cost sa• ·ings for indi- ' research· based, culturally s~nsilive
Class 2, all grasses; and Clas5 3, 40 viduals, government 1 1rograrns and infoimatio·n about breastfeeding .
percent or less legumes.
"We must. provide Ohio mothers"
health maintenance or1 !ailizations.
Exhibitors must purchas~ a
She cited research results from to-be and their families with enough
membership or season -ticket . and . the University of Arizona ' w~icb - inform~tion to ·make informed
register their entries by 4 p.m. on indicated that breastf&lt; ;eding exclu- choices about infan( feeding . Once
Saturday at the Meigs County Fair sively for three til onths ·saves · the decisi(!n to breasif,~=ed has been
Secretary's office.
·
HMOs between $331 ; ind $475 per made, we must provide a supportive
Entries must be in place at the infant in the first year • Jf life.
environment to encourage the conMeigs Soil and Water Conservation .· Using the Arizona! tludy figures, linuation of breastfeeding.
Display area by I p.m on Monday, she said that if 75 per cent of Ohio
tntimately, our whole society will
Aug .. 16. Exhibitors m.ust bring one babies hom in 1995 w ere bniastfed benefit from having healthier mothwhole bale for judging and the hay (35,362), the potential! health care ers, babies and children," said Debbecomes the property of the Meigs . cost savings to HMOs: md Managed bie Babbitt, RN , Meigs Co.unty
County Fair Board.
Care Organizations in Ohio could WIC Director.
Hay must be grown • by the equal between S II. I '04,822 and.
For more information about
exhibitor and ·there must be I 0 $16,796,950 per year.
breastfeeding in Meigs County, resexhibits to make a show.
New research has a!so shown idents may _call the "Help .Me
'
that breastfeeding enl 1ances intel- Grow" Helpline at · 1-800-755lectual development.
GROW or ..' the Meigs County WIC
The J~nuary 1991: edition of · Program · qr Child and Family
PediatricS' contained : 1 study that Health Services Program at the
Breastfeeding Awareness Week controlled for confour 1ding factors Meigs County Health Departwent at
observance underway loc~y ·•
such as maternal ag&lt; :, education, 740-992-6626.
This is Breast feeding Awareness income, smoking and r narital status
.Incentives have been built . into
Week in.Ohio. and the Meigs Coun· and showed that childr ·en breastfed the'WIC program to encourage new
·ly · Health Department is using the for eight months· or ion! ter.had high- mothers to breaslfeed their children'.
observance as .·an opportunity to er IQ lest scores and pe rfonned bet· · Friday WIC mothers ~~:;ho bteastfeed
promote. the many benefits of ter . in high school tha n those not 'their babies will be guests at a cookbrcastfeeding.
,
brealitfed. The Americ: tn Aca.demy out at Diles Park in Middleport .
Norma Torres,
Health
Dep'\11of
Pediatrics recomt nends that
,

.

"

Meigs County's
Volumt?

lilY JIM FREEMA1'4
SilntlrMI N - Sblff

The Athens-based Coalition Against Superfluous
Highways reac:hed an agreement Tuesday with the Ohio
Department of Transportation and the Transportation
Review Advisory Council resolving claims brought in a
lawsuit filed by CASH in May.
AI the heart of the lawsuit is a"$77.9 million project to
n:plaa: the existing U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin with
a new, limiled-acx:ess super two-lane highway.
The agreement does not end debale over the proje¢1,
which CASH opposes.
..
Fred Gines, lead attorney for CASH, and OOOT's
counsel were expecled Tuesday to finalize a selllement
agreement resolving the issues and dismissing the lawsuit.
Under the lerms ofthe agreemen~ OD()T and TRAC
agree to·oomply with all requirements of the qhio Open
Meetings .Acl and agree that TRAC member G.. Kenner
Bush, former publisher of The Athens Messenger, will
not participate in any ofthe group's deliberations or votes
·
involving the Athens/Darwin U.S. 33 project.
OOOT and TRAC specifically declare .in the agreeinent that all previous deliberations, authorizations, and
decisions ofTRAC regarding the Athens/Darwin U.S. 33
project are "null and void." TRAC and OOOT,also agree.
to provide CASH with an •accounting of all ··funds

Fred M. Priddy, Rutland,. was.in named as a third party defendant in
courl again Tuesday afternoon for a the case.
It was noled thai tax officials
lax hearing l!y the Ohio Department ·
of J"axation. ''
· . were attempting to r~ach an agree·
The lax department all~ges that menl with the Priddys'"attomeys.
Priddy and his wife, Barbara, owe
The Priddys filed suit against the
the state approximately·$100,000 in stale in effort to stop the sale of
·income tax.
their belongings which were confis·
ThlO . hearing, b.eld in the Meigs cated in a law enforce"\enl drug
County ·Court of Common Pleas, operation in April. Mr. Priddy
began late and lasled only minutes plea~d guilty to a felony charge of
when it was decided that the tempb· possession of marijuana and is curr~ n:Jtrllilling order barring lhe rently serving an eight-year sen·
sale of t!te Priddy's ~operty wouTd · tence in the Noble Corre-ctional
als&lt;i ·apply to the stale since il is .., Institute in Caldwell.

Good Afternoon
Today's

POMEROY - Beegle family reunion, Saturday, II :30 a.m. Senior Citizens Center. Square dance to follow at 7 p.m at home of Ronnie and Leanna
·
Beegle.

Sentinel

2 Sections - 12 Pages

8

,\!

9&amp;10

11
2

3
4&amp;5
'• 3

.

Dally 3: 6-7·1; DoUy 4: 0-7-9-8
C 1999 Ohio Valley Pu~ll!llling Co.

'

MED
ELIGIBILI7Y

PROGRAM

'

SALEM CENTER- Star Grange 778, Saturday, potluck supper at 6:30
p.m., regular meeting, 8 p.m. Plans for Meigs County Fair display to be final ized. Officers to be,elected.

the_.Y b.iting..

~:~~~=~a;~:~1:f::

.. Entries in seniQr fair competi·.
-lions at the Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 16:21, must be made this
week.
The secretary's ,office on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds will be
openon Friday .and Saturday of thi s ·
week from 8 a.m. to .4 p.m tb accept
eimics.
,The deadline for entries in all
departments is 4 p.m . Saturday,
emphasized Debbie Watson, secre·
tary. Purchase of a 'membership or
season ticket is the only entr~ fee
required to exhibit at the fair.
,
Entries cannot be made by tele·
phone . but questions concerning
entrieS may be directed to the office
at 992-6954.
Reserved parking "'ill again this
year be offered for $20 a week. The
parking fee and picking qf the site
is to take place at the secretary's
office on Saturday. Watson noted
that the parking fee does not
include entrance onto the grounds.
Membership and season tickets
:reffiain on sale at various loC"ations

Two more deaths attributed to heat

Buekey~S: 7~8·13-19-36

. _POMER,OY - PERI meeting, Thursday, I p.m. Senior Citizens Center.
sen,. John Carey to speak.
·
.·
•

HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville Lodge 411 , R&amp;AM. Saturday, 7:30
,p.m. at the hall . Refreshments.

expended · ~n the project 19 date, and agree to pay that CASH had raised some valid concerns about the pro- last month for preliminary engineering, meaning that
CASH's attorney fees and expenses.
ject. TRAC then voted to form a suboommittee to further work is continyirlg. In additi on, the 4,500 petition signa·
CASH filed suit in Franklin County alleging that investigale the matter. ·
.
.
tures and letters gathered by highway supporter$ will still
. ~C. a nine-member citizen board that oversees high'
"Now that the process has been opened, TRAC and be considered in the TRAC's decision -making process.
way spending under the ausplces of OOOT, violaled state OOOT must be·aa:ountable to the public. They have done
"Our business is to build and take care of the high·
open meetings laws. CASH also alleged Bush was serv- the right thing in removing funding fdr tile project. We ways. not to argue with the lawyers," said Cull. The
ing on the TRAC unlawfully becauSe he had a conflict of feel that this lawsuit will result in a be tier process for all agreement had been agreed to some time ago, the only
interest due to his adVocacy in support of the project.
the people of Ohio," Acheson said.
difference is that the lawyers have signed it, he explained. '
"This settlement confirms what CASH has main·
However, CASH indicated it is not finished as far as The agreement now goes back to the Franklin County
tained all along: TRAC may not deliberale on the plan- opposition to the proposed Route 33 ·is concerned.
Court of Common Pleas for consideratiqn.
ning process of highway projects behind closed doors.
"There are many problems with this projec~" 'said
Route 33 advocate S'teve Story, Porriei"oy, said he is
By holding secret meetings and allowing Mr. Bush's 1e5.. Acheson. "We are hopeful that TRAC wi!l see fit to start disappointed that Bush has been removed from the decitimony and input to taint the process, TRAC violated the the whole process over. TRAC has not yet· responded to sion-inaking process. He said it was his understanding.
law. We are pleased thatTRAC and ODOT haye agreed , the staggering number of planning and environmental that a new law would make the conOict-of-interest statute
to comply with the laws," said CASH sp6kesman Todd problems that still exist concerning Route 33. We are for TRAC mirror those "of other state bodies. ·
Acheson.
preparing to fight for a solution .for ail the people of south·
Story said he is puzzled !hat they would not allow
As a result oflhe lawsui~ TRAC held a series of meet· east Ohio. Until we have that solution, we will keep fight- · Bush to participate since he has no financial .interest in
ings .this summer in which it passed new policies to ing."
the project and was originally appointed to re'P,resent
ensure that the public was notified of any further meet·
Nor has ODOT thrown in.the towel on the project.
southeastern Ohio on the TRAC. which was originally
ings of TRAC. TRAC also held a public meeting at ·
"Not by any means" has Ol'&gt;OT given up on the pro- comprised only of people from Ohio's large cities.
which citizens, including members of CASH and an ject, according to Michael Cull, TRAC coordinator.
''They singled him out because he is a very strong
independent consultant retained by CASH, were allowed
"We still are in favor of that highway," said Cull . "We advocate for highways and development in southeastern
to addreSs their concerns about the project.
belieVe the people of Appalachia want and need that high· Ohio; by removing his voice, we have to rely on folks
On July 2, TRAC voted to withh1Jid construction way." The TRAC is meeting Aug. 20, 9:30 a.m. at the from other regions."
..
funding for the project. However, TRAC approved $6 O.U. Inn in Athens followed by a meeti~'g of the Route 33
Story said pushing for the new· Route 33, which was
million for continued design, 'engineering and limited suboommittee. ·
·originally p1':111ned in the late 19S()s, will not stop "until
hardship right-of·wra.:.y_a,_c..:q_ui_s_iti_o_n_al_o_n..:g:......lh_e__:_pr_o.:.po_s_e_d_ _Pu_b-=li=-c-in~pu-t_w_il_l_be_co=ns-ide_red
__
at_·t_he_m_e_et_in~g-,-::Co-u_ll__
w_e_c_an_
. _d_riv_e_o_n..,it."

(fdt:f5!Ys igflJeCt ~f ta?t h~arlngl H

w.yA.

.

SATlJRDA'V
REEDSVILLE - Wells reunion. descendants of John and Laura Wells,
·.Forked Run Sate Park, noon Saturday.

Single Copy· 35 Cents

D~spute over prQposed highway remainS Ath~~~~~:i~l';;;rector Gordon Proctor stated sai~e agreement does not affect the S6 million approved

OHIO
Pick 3: 1.0·9; Pick 4: 1·2·9·9

THURSDAY
. POMEROY- Junior and Rita White of Kyger to entenain at Meigs Senior
Citizens Center, Thursday, 5:30p.m. No admission charg~.

MIDDLEPORT - lnfonnation meeting foi students, Meigs Middle
School, those interested in playing football this faiL Friday, 9 a.m. in the audi·
torium, seventh and eighth graders.

Hometown Newspaper

CASH, .ODOT settle lawsuit over Route 33

Lotteries

WEDNESDAY "
PAGEVILLE ~ Scipio Township Trustees, 6:30 p.in. Wednesday at
Pageville townhalL

· RACINE -Southern Junior High School volleyball meeting, 4 p.m. Friday. Anyone .interested attend.
.

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so Number 42

Calendar"'
Classlfteds
Comlg
Editorials .
Local
Sporta
Weather

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Council regular meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m.
at village hall.
·

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County Republican Party, special meting, Friday; 7
p.m. Me_igs County Co11rthouse, to appoint replacement for retired County
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton. Typed or hand-wrillen applications for he
position must be submitted to the Meigs County Republican Chairman
Bernard Gilkey by noon that day.

-Page 4

•

· POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, regular monthly meeting,
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the to;-vnship hall, Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.

. RUlLAND- Rutland Township Trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m. Rutland .Fire
Station.
·
·
,

Cincinnati climbs
over the Rockies 2-1

.

PORlLAND - Vacation Bible school, Portland First Church of the
Nazarene, Tuesday through Friday, 6 p.m. each evening.

.

Sports

Indians get past Boston 5-4, Page 4
Hubby becoming greedy person, Page 6
Family Medicine, Page 6

High: 808; Low: 80s

Reader's son being -·harassed at school-and teachE3r does nothing
Data- ADD lawwlen: My 7 year . She said, "that won't help." They

Augu81 4, 1111111

1

P.10
Tuasday, August 3, 1 •

Wednesday

CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION
'
(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES

· ONCINNATI (AP) - '!Wo more
people in the Cincinnati area died
because of heat, bringing the total to
14, authorities said·. No other deaths
.' were reported around the . state.
The latest ·victims ,were Mildred
Hayes, 69, and Alma William, 82,
the Hamilton County coroner's
office said Mo~day.
Ms. Hayes was · found in her bed
Sat~rday night after a .nephew
couldn't reach her by phone, said
Terry Daly, a spokesman for the
·coroner's office.
She had been dead about eight
hours, yet her body temperature ,had
cooled to only 102 degrees. The
'temP.rature in the bedroom was
99.7 dc!grees, Daly said.
·
· Mrs. William's body temperature
was 107.5 degrees when she was.
found Sunday by a friend who
arrived to take her to church. She
had a history of bean disease, which ' .
also might have contributed to her
death, Daly said.

· over the county.

Man sentenced in Long Bottom woman's death
The driver of a car in which an 18year-old Long Bonom woman died
following a Feb. 14 crash in Athens
Olunty was sentenced Monday to
four years in prison for her death.
TeddyCarpen~r, 21, Athens, earlier pleaded guiltY to dfivlng while,
intoxicated, criminal damaging and
involuntary manslaughler in connec·
tion with the death of 18-year-old
Jenifer Sellers, a 1998 graduate of
Southern High School.
Athens County Common Pleas .
COUrt Judge Alan Goldsberry issued
the sentence after Crystal sellers, the ·.
victim's mother, addressed comm~nts

to Carpenler.
scene of an acciden~ reckless operaSunday would ha~e been sellers' tion arid arson. ·
,
19th birthday, her mother said. Instead
Carpenter was the driver of a 1994
of celebrating the day with her, the Chevrolet Beretta involved in the fatal
fart)ily placed a headstone on lfer wreck: According to a Stale Highway
grave, she said.
Patrol report, the car was traveling
earpe'nter tearfully told sellers' eastbound on Johnson Road near The
· family that her death was an accident. . Plains at an . estimated sP.,ed of ·85
, · Carpenter originally faced five miles per hour when it slid off the road
felony charges of involuntary in 'a curve, Went airborne and landed
manslaughter, aggravated vehicular on its top before sliding into a creek
homicide, aggravated hort]icide, near the entrance to Athens. High
aggr~vated vehicular assault and School. The car was not submerged,
brealdngandentering.andfivemisde· the reporfslaled.
•·
meanors charges of vandalism, dri·
Patrol Sgt. Jeffrey Scholl said
ving while intoxicated, leaving the forensic lesting indicated Carpenter

was driving the car and thai Sellers

~as in the back seat on the driver's

stde. Another passenger, Alyshta
Whaley, 21, The Plains, 'who later
mamed Carpenter, was seated ~~ the.
front passenger seat Ne1ther , we.re
wearing seat belts, the report stated. In
addttton, . all had consumed alcohol
while .~nter and_Whaley also tested postuve for manJuana use, Scholl
satd.
After the crash, .Carpenter left the
women .in the car and broke into a
nearby construction trailer where he
van~alized _it and attempted to start a
fire m the smk, Scholl Satd.

Festival, Delta Queen ·visit _planned in Middleport
By BRIAN J. REED
. Sentinel New. Staff
.
_
A new festival ~ the Middleport Honey Bear Fes·tival - "and a return visit by the Delta Queen were
discussed by the Midt\leport Community Association during its regular meeting on Tuesday morning.
·
The meeting was held at Peoples Bank in Middleport. ·'
' ·
Myron Duffield, president of the association,
announced a finalized schedule of events for the
Honey Bear Festival, to be held in downtown Middleport on August 14.
The event will incorporale the bear theme in
honor of the Ohio River Bear Company, according
to Duffield, and the relationship between bears and
honey.
· A highlight of the event will be three appearances by Steve Conlon, who works with live bees in
creating_a "bee beard." Conlon; who has appeared
on television shows. such as the "Tonight Show"
with Jay Leno, performs his act using a ten~
designed to protect the audience. Conlon js from
Proctor, W.Va.
In addition to Conlon's appearances, the association plans entertainment by the Midnight Ooggers
FESTIVAL FUNDING - Sharon Smith of
Peoples Bank present• a check In the
amount of $7ll0 to Myron Duffield, prealdent
of -t he Middleport Community Aasoc:lallon.
The contribution represents primary aponeorshlp of the community's Honey Bear
Festival, to be held Auguet 14.

and Popular . Derl)and, a barbershop quartet.
Duffield, ·the "Calliope King," will perform
throughout the aflemoon.
· .
Other events will include a Honey Bear Contest, .
'in which entrants will enter their favorite bear in a
display at the Ohio River l3ear Company. The cutest
bear, bear which came the farthes~ oldest bear and
most unusual bear. will receive 30 percent discounts
on purchases ·at the Ohio Ri~~r Bear Company, and
Best of Show will receive a 50 percent d1scount
coupon. All' entries will receive a 20 percent off cer·
tificate. Bears will be tagged for ownership, and
will be on display from August 9·14, and returned
on August 16.
A Bee and Bear Costume Contest will also be
held, open to children aged three to five ~nd six to
eight Parents are·asked to dress their boys and girls
in a bee or bear costume, which will be judged. All
etltries w.ill receive a 10 percent discount "Bear
Buck" from the Ohio River Bear Company, and the
fio;t and second-place winners will receive a hand·
made.bear from the Ohio River Bear Company.
Any farmer or roadside produce vendor who
wishes to set up at the festival's fanners markrt
should contaCt Duffield at 992-4197. The market
will be limited 10 fresh produce.
Cmfters and demonstrators have been invited to
attend the even~ ~nd there will be no charge for
farmers market vendors, crafters or demonstrators.
A model railroad show, silent auction and prize
drawings, a chicken bat:becue to benefit the Volun·
teer Fire Department, special window displays and
sidewalk sales, food vendors and a walking tour are
also 'planned.

PeopleS Banking and TI']Jst Company will be the
primary .sponsor of the festival, and presented the
association with a $750 donation on Tuesday. Other .
sponsors include the Univ.ersity of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College, Pleasant Valley
Hospital's Middleport Clinic, Fisher Funeral
Homes, Vaughan's ·Supermarket, Fruth Phannacy
and the Middleport Community Association.
Duffield .reported that the Delta Qu c·en will visit
on August 21.
·This year, the boat will not dock in Middleport,
and passengers will not disembark. However, it will
stand off-shore for approximately 30 minutes, and
the Community Association will present a program
saluting the Delta Queen for its visit to Middleport
last year.
Area resident{; are encouraged to gather at the
levee area between noon and 12:30: A band·concert
by the Adelphi Brass Band will begin at 12:45, :md
calliope music will be played from I to 1:10 p.m. A
band concert for the Oel~1 Queen will continue until
1:20 p:m., and a floral prese ntation will be made to
the Queen at I :20 p.m. A 21·gun salute and balloon
release, under the direction of Feeney -Bennett Post

128, American Legion, will be conducted prior to
the boat's departure at 1:30.
In other association business, Duffield reported
that construction and renovalion continue in preparation for a new restaurant, Joca1cd at the inl~rsec­

ti on of South Second Av~nue and Cole Stree~ and
that the antique store at Downing House is expected to open bv Ouistmas.
It was also reported that new autumn flags had
been ordered.

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