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                  <text>The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page10

Tuesday
Weather
Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

.Monday, August 9, 1999

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 50s

hope so A&gt; lor me. I will alwa)s be
on your deb1 - FREE ON THE
WEST COAST
DEAR FREE: Your leuer u 111 do
murc gooJ than )OU "'Ill ev~r !&gt;.nO\\
I am m~trucung ...· ,~r~ tx'~ and g.nl
wh(l I' bcmH tuud11.:d hv an adult Ill
a '"' '\Y he nr- ~he lr.:ds J" not ng:ht 10
l)ear Ann Landers: I have wntten.;lhis letter to you m my head at
least a thousand times. and now, J

an adult tmmedtatcly and lei the
abuser know she was gam&amp; to tell
I wasn't brave- enough to tell any-

gn tmnlt."thatcly \n \a tamtl~ member
or a lavomc teal her and tell hun or
llt~r (lf )OUr dhL Oml o lt fca1 o f

have \lecoded lo pu! 11 on paper and
matl it. I want you to know that you
saved my hfe. My fa1her had been

one. but I dod clop ou11ha1 column and
I wrote on tl, "If you don'tlea&gt;we· me
alone , I woll !ell' I !hen handed !he

&lt;pcakong ou1 enahb perpc1ra10rs 1o
&lt;..:ontmuc mol~!)tm~. Jnd tht: lonl!cr II
conunue&lt; the nwre dlltlcul1 11" lor

sexually abusmg me for a long hmc

column to my father From that da)

on, !he abuse slopped He ne\Cr
I knew what he was domg was lo uched me tnappropfmtcly ag:am
wrong, but I was afrwd to 1ell anyone.
Perhaps other ahused ch1ldren
Then. ohe day. 1 read a leiter m your Will be helped by my letter and lind
column from a young g1rl wtth the Ihe courage to tell a parent a teacher
same problem You advosed her 1o 1ell or a uusted aduh what IS g01 ng on I
,.............;...................;....................................................,........;.............,

he1e "to tell tell tdl -

,

very much m1ss her"

For me. Doro!hea had been a role model and onsporau on. and I often
draw on her background and knowledge of the coun!y's h1 story long after
she had lefl her home for long·term care Unul1he las1 monlhs. when she
was stead1ly fadmg, she followed the soc1ety's w.:t1v1t1es closely. \\.11~

· cheered on hearong aboul an old fnend from !he Humane Sovoety of the
Un1ted States, as well as from local advocates for ammals , and co.nt mued
to read av1dly some of her ammal pubhcatoons to wh1ch she had subscrobed
lla&gt;t saw her three weeks ago, and then 11 was clear !hal she was raptd·
ly fadmg We 1alked ot summer peaches, people we knew, .md she hs
tened mtently to news of the orgamzat1on she had founded

Wha!l most adnmed abou1 Dor01hca was her unconventional Side She
had a dry . almost sardomc w1t , and could cause mcmment with JUst the
ra1se of !he eyebrow and a wry obscrvauon A1nmes worn out by "hal
she saw as !he c()unty's (and the world s) slow p• ogress on am mal wei rare ISSUes she 'snll reJOICed at even the smalleSI \' ICIOry -·as long as I
.knew her 18ec ause lor Dottle th1,s VICtory mean t that one l e~s creature
would suffer
ThiS ttny woman never 10h1rked unpleasant ta~k., She wa~ tor exampie, on the spotlo lake p1c!l!res ol the old" pound The color photographs
of disemboweled dogs, eaten by uther starvmg dog:-; , vic1c pamful enough
lor me to v1ew years later I can't 1magme what 11 cost her emotionally to
take them
Always nghltheie (whether a! the site of an an1mal d1sastcr or at a com·
mass10ners' meetmg)·Dorothea was never atrmd to get1nvolved. and she
1
took her board dutoes quole senously Early on. she helped organoze our
Spay/Neu1er Program, arrangmg herself, wrote lellers 10 the edna,. and
coordmated pubhc awarenes~ actiVItieS
A lover of mUSIC. lnerature and ammals, Dottle had mne cal&lt; when I
forsl mel her four years ago Allms1de cals, !hese well-loved and (us ually) well-behaved crea1Ures were her con Slant compamons. Each one had
a story and a personahly thai Dol toe could descnbe on de1aol Vos11mg her
was a treat, for cals twined around her stalue of S1 FranCIS, lounged on
tables or sofa, peered at V1s11ors from 1he staus. and were a ternfic source
of entertamment
Do111e was beautifully cared tor at the long-1erm care umt where she
spent her last year Many of the doc10rs, nurses. and mdes knew of her
from the commumly and seemed 10 take specoal care of her However, I
am not the only one to regret 1ha1 she was persuaded 10 g1ve up her furry compamons (all went 10 lcrnfic homes) a few years ago
After !hat, I suspect that 11 was ea.soer for her 10 !honk about leavmg
home, and afler 1ha1, perhaps 11 was eas1cr IQ start le111ng go of hie For
people hke Dorolhea FISher, ammals are a necessary part of her life .
indeed, they make hfe
How best to remember th1s woman's e ndunng love of ammals, particularly felme s? Nexf t1me you fmd a stray cat, starvmg and desperate

The Community Calendar is
published as a tree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
det~lgned to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space permite and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a specific number
of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - B1g Bend Farm
Anuques Club, 7 30 p m Monday at
the f31fgrounds
CHESHIRE - Disabled Amencan Veterans ofCheshlfe, Monday, a!
the hall. Dtnner, 6 30 p m , meetmg,
7pm
~OMEROY

- G~rls volleyball
practiCe, Me1gs Hogh School, Monday, 10 a.m
POMEROY
Roght lo L1fe,
Monday, 7 30 p m at !he Pomeroy
Lobrary
POMEROY - S1gnups tor Meogs
M1ddle School checrlead mg 1ryou1s.
Monday noon lo 2 p m and Tuesday,
I 0 a m to noon.

RACINE - Board of Pubhc
Affaors , Mond.1y 7 p m at the mun1C·
1pal bu1ldong

.,
MINERSVILLE .Vatallon
Boblc School. Monersv•llc Me!hod"t ·
Church, Mond&lt;~y th10ugh Fnday 6 to .
8 30 p m

Vacatoon B1blc
RACINE School. Racon e Forst BaptiSI Church
7 p m through Fnday Classes for all
ages.
TUESDAY
POMEROY ,- Meogs Coun1y
Genealog1cal Soc1e!y, Tuesday, 4.30
p.m ~~ the Me1gs County Museum
Kellh Ashley lo present program on
Covol 1War ancestry and help Will be
g1ven to those wnh Me•gs County
C1vJ\ War ancestors trying t.o prove
hneage
POMEROY lmmum ~au on
chnoc. Mc•gs Coumy Health Departmen! , Tuesday, 9 1o II a m and I to
7 p.m. mns off1ce on Memonal Dn·
ve Every chold 10 be accompamed by
paren1 or legal guard~an and have
tmmunt zauon record
POMEROY - Me1gs County
Board of Electoons, Tuesday, 9 a.m
SYRACUSE - 1Me1gs County
Chamber of Commerce monthly
general membershop luncheon , Carlelon School. noon Deanna Tnbe,
d1str1ct spcc1ahst, Community Devel opment, Ohoo Stale Umversily Exlenswn. Jackson. Will be guesl speaker

.md the

soon on ber desk. "No Name" com·
plamed about th1s dosrupuon 10 her
boss, bu1 he dod nothmg because he
was afra1d of !he co· worker
l had a stm1lar snuauon With a
boss who was afraod of an office
manager who also kept a televlston

on her desk One day. 1he rcs1 of us
Slood around and walched the TV.
pretendmg to be fascma1ed by 1he
program , and bombarded her wnh
questoons unul we became annoymg
Fonally, the boss had no chooce bu110
ask the woman to remove the TV
I have le;tmed 1ha1 unless a prob·
lem affects 1he boss personally, he or
she woll nol do anylhmg about 11 If
the rest of us momic and exaggerale
lhe bad behaVIor, the boss woll nouce,
whelher oilS a TV on the desk. onappropnale dress, or 100 much perfume
WISED UP IN SYCAMORE.

ILL.
DEAR SYCAMORE: Some
bosses .are man: ·sympatheuc than
others. but all bosses know thai thelf
offices, shops, and so on, function
beuer when there os harmony m 1be
workplace The boss who can sente
diSputes wothoul ahenaung any of the
d1ssidenL~ os a g1fted arb1tra1qr
Feehng pressured to havb sex?
How well-mformed are you' Wnle
for Ann Landers' bookie! "Sex ,and
the Teenager" Send a self addressed,
long, business size envelope and a
check or money order for $3.75 (this
mcludes postage and handhng) 10
Teens, c/o Ann Landers, PO Box
11562, Ch1cago.lll 60611-0562. (In
Canada send $4 55 ) To find out
more about Ann Landers and read her
past columns, V1S1l1he Crea1ors Syndocale
web
page
a1
www.creators com

SS remains basic thread in American life
By ED PETERSON ,
Social Security Manager
in Athens
August 14th marks the 641h
anmversary of !he signmg of !he
Soctal Secunty Acl by Presodenl
Frankhn D Rooseveh . pxcepl for
1935, perhaps th1s past year has been
the tnQsl cxcJlin g for Soc1al Secunty A nauonal doalogue has raiSed
many of lhe same tssues and

ha"c thread m 1he fabnc of Amencan hfe ""en afler 64 years More
!han 148 milhon workers are protecled by Socml Secunty, more than
44 molhon people rece1ve reuremenl,
survivor"' and dt.,.abtltty benefits from
Scx:1al Secun1y
'

mtc rgeneratlonal

Social Secunty. Thts means that the
public 1nterest that has gotten the program this far will probably contonue
to grow and that wose chooces will be
made about its future by the Amen·
can people .

Worken compensation may
rhere IS no ql;leSIIOn that Social
Secur11y ha' changed !he fat~ of
affect disability payments
People planning insurance needs
many Amencans It has helped independenl and productiVe people con- should nole that wh1le private msur·
lln'-'c to l1vc mdependent and pro- ance coverage will generally no1
ductive hves and has gaven many oth- affecl their Socml Secunly dosabohly
ers a fl oor of 1m::ome proted1on that benefits, workers' compensauon and
has kepi them above, 1he povcny hne other public d1sab1hty payments may
It ) ou would like more mforma·
Your Socoal Security disabll1ty
t10n. call Soc.al Secunty's loll-free benefits may be reduced tf you also
number. 1-800-772-1213, and ask for recetve workers' compensation or
!he hooklel, The Fu1Ure of Soc1al , other public d1sabiluy payments In
Securuy (SS A Pub No 0510055) OhiO 1fthe corilbmed amount of your
You may also get the publicanon workers' compensation plus 1he
from our websnc. www.ssa gov
Social Secumy benefits payable _10
you and your family exceeds 80 per·
Mos1 people are w1shing for many cent of the average eamongs you had
when you worked, your Soc10l Secu·
more successful anmversanes for

pose~

Slmolar chmces for !he fu1ure of the
program
Las! year Pres1den1 Chnlon called
for a nauonal doscusston on the
fu;ure of Socoal Secumy to address ots
financoal problems. Many · natoonal
and local evenls have been held to
further 1h1s Important diScussoon
Dall) aruclcs conunue to appear 111
!he country's newspapers There · 15
awareness and

quesllonmg about tl!e cho1ces !hat
w1ll soon face the Amerocan pubhc
SocJJI Secunty contmues to be a

nty dosaboh1y benefits w11l be reduced
by 1he excess.
Workers' compensation payments
are made to a worker because of a
JOb·related InJury or ollness. and may
be pa1d by federal or slate workers'
compensation agenc1es, employers or
•nsurance companocs on behalf of
employers
No!e lha!the 1o1a t amounl of com·
boned Socoal Secunly and workers
compensation thai you and your fam ·
oly reccove w1ll neVer he lower !han
you and your family's 101al Soc~al
Secunty benefits before the reduct10n Any adjuslmenl 10 your SoCial
Secunty paymcms wolllasl unnl you
s1gn up for Soc1al Secunty rettremcnt
benefi1s. the month you 1urn 65. or
the monlh your workers' compensa·
lion payments slop, whochever comes
, flfSI
''
If you rece1ve a lump sum worker's compensatoon seulement, the
offse1 may apply for months afler the
seulement

Web technology settles '-in at ru~tic summer camps
other camps woll follow suot
mg ahead
Jeff Dav1dson, ass1s1ant d1rec1or of
Don Bulens, preSident and ch1ef
The d1g11al pho1os, wh1ch Curns executJve officer of Trelhx Corp, theAmencan Campmg Association's
posts da1ly on Camp Pinehun's which makes the program used by , New England office, srud there are all
World W1de Web slle, serve the pur- Curtts, IS beltong on growmg demand types of cyber·acuvny at camps m the
po'c ot hoth promonng Ihe camp and for Web sites among small business- reg1on, mcludmg a Web sole With perboo,ung attendance, he says If nolh- es, oncludmg camps
sonal!dentificallon codes to let parmg else they have cut down on the
Bul Ed Andrews, a former execu- ents keep Ihe photos pn va1e
number of phone calls from anxwus nve d~rector of the Amencan Camp·
"It's the way of !he fulure ," he
mg Assoc1a11on, sa•d the Web may sa1d "You're gomg to see more
pare nts
After all. summer camp os oflen a ' have hmited appeal m an mduSiry camps JUmpmg on the bandwagon " - '
child's torsi exlended tnp away from that somet1mes bans dlw1ces as s 1m·
That was one factor that helped
home, and 1he nle of passage can be pie as portable rad1os
Kodak's PictureV1s1on Inc substdlary
"Some camp dorec10rs feel !hat bnng 1ts ln1eme1-based photo ~ervtce
rougher on parents !han on the chilthe mcumonuf1echi10logy into whal to abou1 50 camps na11onw1de last
dren, camp d1rectors say
IS supposed to be a respole from coty summer, company spokesman Tony
"Thai forst summer 1s, really, real- hfe IS mappropnate," sa~d Al\drews, DeFazio sa1d.
ly hard, as a parent, because you a consuhanl 10 1he Mame You1h
"There has been a 1remendous
don ' t have any sense of what your Camping Associatoon
mcrease 10 this kind of service on the
At some camps, old·fash10ncd Interne!," he sa~ d.
ch1 ld 1; doing up there," sa1d L1sa
'
Samel. also of Dracul, whose 12- networking t ~ all thai's needed lo
For some parents, !here may be no
year-uld son Alex JUS! re1Urned from keep !he kods commg , he sai41
got ng back
Camp Wawenock, on ~ebago
camp
Marlene Recchoa, of Faorfoeld,
For • CurtiS, the photos have Lake, IS holdmg orf on settmg up a Conn , ,said she has come 10 depend
become part of 1he da1ly routme, hkc Web s1te smce 1t rehes on word-of- on her computer to check on her 10gettong the k1ds fed and momtoring moulh adverusmg, camp co-duec1or year-old son w1thoutmterruptmg h1s
camp expenence wnh a phone call
acuvmes hkc h1kmg, 1arget pracuce Patncu1 Smoth sa1d
"We've
chosen
10
go
slowly
tryfrom Mom
and sw1mmmg or canoemg on Cres" I would ra1her sec the pictures
cent Lake. He loads the photographs mg to decode whe!her o!'s a markel·
and no! bug h1m ," she smd " Pari of
d~rec1ly mlo a computer usmg a pro- 1ng tool that IS appropnale woth us,"
·
the thong aboul campmg IS learning
gram !hat lets him updale the Web she sa1d,
Mean
whole,
other
camps
are
leap·
to be on your O\\;n "
sotc wothout arcane compu1er codes
It rema1ns to be seen how many

Rattlesnake Mounlam near the camp
m southwest Mame
1

By CHRIS GOSIER
Associated Press Writer
RAYMOND. Mame- Heads up.
campers Look th1s way, bunch up
together, and smile for the camera.
We want to show mom and dad

you're havmg a good lome!
Welcome to Camp Pmehurst,
where d1re~:tor Jack CurtiS has ..t new

Job: cyberpho!Ographer
Desp11e concerns ofpotsomng 1hc
rustiC camp expenence wtth htghlech gadge1ry. more and more camps
are usmg compulers and !he ln1erne1
to offer p1ctures of happy campers for
lhelf parenls back home
For Curus, •t's hoth good fun and
good marketing. And 11 reassures par·
cn1s hke Pat Zapert of Dracut, Mass ,
who logged onto lhe ln!ernet lo
make sure that her I 2-year-old son.
Ilnan, was havmg fun
''Thos allowed us to sec thai he
was ahve and well and obvoously
enJO&gt;mg lmnsell." she said. " I used
' 1 Vlftually every day "
One of !he pho!os showed Bn.1n
helpmg throw a fncnd m the water .ts

a b~rthday gag. Anolhcr showed h1111
eatmg strawberry shortcake at a

Fourlh of Jul y parly
Photos also showed the boys re&lt;t-

mg after a Sunday afternoon htkc up

'--for-~-~~-a~_~,,_,f~_,0~_:_~:_rb_:_~r-~o_a~·-~-~a~-·~e-1~-~~-h~-~·m_·:_·~-~-~u-r-ho-us_._ ___.~· WiIIis'

Community calendar

1s a famous person, the photo IS usu-

ally selec!ed by the famoly I am sure
the relanves whQ choose !he pholo
opl for one !hal will be nanenng 10
1hc deceased and show hom or her at
hos besl If the deceased IS wellknown. the paper woll have photos on
the If files and choose wh1ch one to
run
Dear Ann Landers: I JUSt read the
lcner from "No Name, No State,"
who ~a1d a co-worker kepi a celev1-

Dear Ann Landers: Here " ,,
qucslln n I have never seen doscus scd
m vour tolumn It has troubled me tor
a iun g lime Why do newspapers
when they pnnt an ob11uary, of1en use
photos thai arc anywhere from 20 10

· A tueless advocate for anomals, Dorolhea, along woth !he Me1gs Coun·
ty Humane Soc1e1y's secrclary. Rola LewiS, founded !he soc1ety back on
1970, drawmg up !he papers at her k11chen table That !able was !he snc
of much slrategiZI~g and plannong throughout Dome's mvol vcmcnt w11h
the Soclely. rogh1 Up 10 1998
Rota recalled that the odea for the orgamzauon came to them as they
commu!ed 10 the If JObs at Katser Alummum Bo!h women were appalled
al!he phght of anomals on 1he county and wanted 10 organ1ze. 10. among
olher !hmgs. 1mprove condmons at the pound sa•e ammals from cruel
1y and abuse, and promote spay/neuter m !he counly. R1ta no!ed. It ""s
a pleasure workmg woth Dorothea dunng the last 30 years. and we shall

•

tl will be of general1nterest.- G C.,
SAGAMORE HILLS, OHIO
DEAR G.C.: Unless the deceased

suon~z tht&gt; bclkT

By ALDEN WAITT, President
Meigs County Humane Society
ThiS pas! Thursday, Meogs County los! Dorolhea FISher. one of lis foremost defenders of anomals Las1 week. Dome docd m Veterans Memon
al Hospnal's EX1ended Care Umt, where she had been on care for over a
year Do111e was the fors1 prestdent of the Soc iety and served m !hal pOS1·
t10n for mos t of the o rgamzau o n's h1story ,

letter m your column smce I am sure

thl' \ 1ctnn tn h~al The ,tdvH:c Irom

lts!arted when I was m grade school

Remembering Dorothea

50 years old'· The p1cture one sees of
1he deceased IS thai of a yoong aduh,
and the Slory goe. on lo say, "Mrs X
\\US 93 years old ""Shouldlhe photo
dcpK1 a person as be remembers hom·
self. as 1he famolv remembers lum, or
as he ac!Ually w"as' Please pnnl thiS

'sixth sense ' takes top spot at boX 0 ffice

~~~~~:~e~;~~i~~~
LOS ANGEL!'S -

Paul Dergarabed1an, presodenl of
Ext11 bllor Rclauons Co Inc , wh1ch
tr.JCks box offtcc 11cket sales The
mov1c ad s used hushes and wh1spers
10 1ntngue f1lmgoers , he smd
'They say ~hen you wh1sper. !1
gels people 10 hslen They dod hslen
on !hts case," Dergarabed1an sa1d.
"People arc JUSt hungry for horror

Darkened

theaters turned wto mass seances as

1he summer ·~ lmes1 1fnght f1lm , the
!ale ot a ~oy who !alks w11h !he dead ,
debu1ed al No I in Norlh Amcncan
thealers ·'
The psy cholog•cal !hnller "The
SIX!h Sense" Slarnng Bruce Wolh s
and Tom Collenc look on $25 8 11111hon , accordmg to mdustry estimates
released Sunday
• Low-budget horror h1t 'The Blalf
Wttch Projcc!'' Slayed m second
place wolh $24 5 molhon Las! week 's
lop mov1c, the Julta Robcrts-R1chard
Gcrc comedy " Runaway Bnde," fell
to tlmd w1th $21 m1lilon.
"The Thomas Crown Aff""·" a

Arttsan Entertainment, d1stnbutor
of "Blair W11ch," and ots filmmakers
spenl JUS! $350.000 producmg !he
movoe Art1san expecls 11to lOp $100
m1lhon a! 1he box office by next
w~ekend.

"If 'S1xth Sense' wasn'l out 1h1s
weekend, we c)early would have
been No. I," sa1d Steve Ro!hcnberg,
Artisan execut1 ve v1ce pres1dent of
mov1es
domestic
d1s1r1buuon.
Along wnh four o!her maJor new
"Siar
Wars EpiSode I - The
releases, "The SIX!h Sense" had Ia
Phantom
Menace" finally dropped
contend wnh " Runaway Bnde" and
of
the
lop
I0 after II weeks The
out
" Bialf Wotch," wh1ch earned a combmcd $64.3 milhon las! weekend. movoe came in at No. 12 wilh $2 2
" Runaway Bnde" has laken m $74, I m1lhon, for a domestoc total of$412.8
mol110n in 10 days, wh1le "Bia1r molhon
Estima!ed grosses for Fnday
Wotch" has grossed $80 2 m1lhon,
most of 1t since gmng mto w1de
release 10 days ago
P1erce Brosnan-Rc nc Russo remake
"Even on 1he face of blockbuslers
ol 1hc Steve McQuecn -Faye Dun- hke !hal, we were able 10 work
away cnme caper ope ned at No 4' through !he clutter," said Chuck
w11h $ t 4 6 mil loon The superhero V1ane. head of d1s1nbuuon for DIS·
com 1c-book spoof 'MyS!cry Men" ney, wl11ch relea sed "The Soxth
prc1mered 1n soxlh place w11h $10 Sense "
"The S1x1h Sense" was the hoghtnolhon
'' Iron Gtant, ' an ;-tmmated film cSI·grossmg mov1e e\&lt;er to open in
ahoul " robol who I ail s llJ. Earth, wok Augusl surpassmg "The Fugotove,"
1n $5 7 mlihon to debut at No . 9 wh1ch 1ook on $23.7 millton m 1993
'Dock " a sallflC retelhng of the h was Wolhs ' second-best ~penong
Watergate.: scandal through the ant1cs ever. behmd "Armageddon ," wh1ch
o l Pres1Jent N1xon·s teen-age dog- grossed $36 1mlhon m Its debut last
walkers and secret adv tscrs, c ..une 1n sum mer
a dosappoonllng lllh w1 th $2 2 mil Playmg m 2. 161 !heaters, !he
lion m 1ts f1rst weekend, lot a total ol mov1e averaged $11 ,939 a screen
$.3 4 1mll1 0n S ilK~ opcn mg \\ledm:::-.· 'Bialf Wotcl1," wh1ch d1d a slratos·
day
phcnc $26,528 a screen v.hen 111111
Despotc a low-key ad C'iimpmgn. w1dc release last weekend, averaged
'The S1xth Sense' managed to II"'C $1 1 438 m 2. 142 theaters !hiS week·
above a c rowd ol new releases. ~md end

..

through Sunday a1 North American·
theaters, according lo Exhobotor Relauons Co. Inc. Fmal l•gures are to be
released 1oday
·
I "The S1xth Sense, " $25 8 molhon.
2 "The Blalf Wotch ProJeCI, "
$24.5 m1llion
3 "RunawayBnde,"$21 m1lhon
1
4 "The Thomas Crown Affa1r,"
$14.,6 milhon
5. "Deep Blue Sea," $ 11 m1lhon
6 "Mystery Men." $10 million.
7 "lnspeclor Cadge!," $8 4 mil lion
8 "The Haunllng," $6 3 molhon
9. " Iron G1ant," $57 m1llion
10 "Amencan P1e," $4 molhon

•

Saying no to bridal showers, Page 2
Reds, Indians post victories, Page 4
Leaving kids in summer heat; Page 10

•

Meigs County's
Volume

so.

Sports

Aug. 10, , . . .

-

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Number 44

Single Copy. 35 Cents

''

MRIDD issue going back on ballot in November
'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stan
llte,MeigsCountyBoardofMenlal Retardation and Developmental
Disabihloes will once agam lJy to pass
a permanent levy for capolal improvements and operaung expenses in th1s
fall',s general elecllon
The Meigs County Commission,ers authonzed the board to place the
1.5-mill, contonuing levy on the
November ballol dunng thetr regular
meetmg on Monday afternoon.
The MRIDD board has made several auempts to~ a levy for oper·
along expenses and Cli)Jotalomprovements, with an average outcome of
45 percent m ~upport.
Sieve Beha, director of the Car-

leton School and Meigs lndustnes, Meogs lnduslnes bu1ldong on SyraA second phase, wh1ch would be
doscussed 1he needs of the program cuse. due loa 40 percenlmcrease on completed during 2002 and 2003,
with the eommissooners. and was aduh cnrollmen1 and a 300 percent would bnng an addmonal 4.200
accompanoed by several children and mcrease on Early lnterventoon and square feel to me school program,
adult clients of the agency. as well as Preschool programs.
With the addlUon of two classroom
slaff members and olhers assocoaled
"A ithoug~ 11 was very adequate m learnjng cenlers, a facol11y cafetena,
woth the program
1982, the facll11y os no longer ade- which would allow for the full proAccordtng to Beha, funds ·gener- quate to meet our needs." Beha saod gram use of the gymnasoum, and
a1ed from 1he levy, of approved,
The cap11al cons1ruc11on prOJeCI knchen renovauons.
would be used lo connnue exostmg would onclude lwo phases of conTotal proJect costs, mcludmg sole
services. to mcrease serv1ces on pro- s1ruc1ion added to the ex1sting fac1l· development, have been projected at
portoon loan mcrease on enroll men!, lty, according to an MRIDD news $1 18 m•lhon over the four-year pento allow for the replacemen1 of 1wo release. The first phase would add od, Beha said, with $300,000 of the
buses dunng the nut five years, and 4,200 square feet to the Atlult Ser· cost provoded by a capotal construeallow for a capital cons!ruc11on pro- v1ces Program for habilitation acllv- loon gran! through the Ohio Depart·
JOCilO accommodate a grcwong space iloes and for a school-age tranSition men! of Mental Relardanon and
need
class, and would allow ror the reno- Developmental Disabohtoes
Beha sa~ d thai 1he programs have vauon of ex1sung space in the proAccordong 10 figures comp1led by
ou1grown !he Carle1on School and ducuon area.
the MRIDD board , !he addoloonall 5

m11ls would coS! approX1ma1el~· $38
per year on a home ,aJued a1
$60.00!J The te'') would genera1e
$380,000 per year coun1yw1de
Beha saod thai 1he program sef\ es
60 aduhs through Me1gs lndus1nes
and 70 choldren on Carle1on School's
school·age. presc hool and early on1ervent oon programs as uella; an01her
10 aduiiS and ch1ldren who receove
serv oces lhrough the agency s famoly
resource serviCes and olher on-home
programs
Beha es(omates thai another 15
students m 9ther county schools parllcopate '" Specoal Ol~mpocs. whoch
are coordmated by Carleton School
and Meogs lndustnes
CommtSsooner Janet Howard swd

Problems
down in
park: chief

New recorder is
continuing with
family tradition
•

spent many years on the courthouse as
By BRIAN J. REED
· well. as an employee of Thomas Sentinel News stan
Me1gs Counly's new recorder, her brother - as well as for Kloes
Judy Kiog, grew up around the cour- and then Eleanor Robson, who was
thouse, as the mece of a one-lime appoonted to !he posotoon af1er Kloes
recorder and the daughter of a cour- res1gned
After a stonl woth 1he law firm of
thouse employee.
King was sworn mas recorder on Crow, Crow &amp; Poner, Spencer wen1
Monday by Judge Fred W Crow III. to work as a, legal secretary and court
She replaces Emmogene Hamolton, reporter for long-lime Common Pleas
who retired late last month. King was Coun Judge John C. Bacon
ch1ef deputy m Hamilton's office, and
King noted thai her mother rel!red
had worked broeny for Recorder
Eleanor Robson, who d1ed on office. from ber courthouse work m the same
On Fnday evening, aft.er King was year that King staned woi'lilng on !he
on Monday morning. Also plctufed Is King's
SWORN IN- Meigs County Common Pleas
appom1ed by the Repubhcan Central Recorder's Office - 1982
mother, Letta Spencer, center, who was a longJudge Fred W. Crow Ill administered the oath
As a young girl, Kmg spent many
Commntee to replace Hamolton, h!lf
courthouse employee herself.
time
of office to Melga County Recorder ~udy King
former boss sa1d thai King helped afternoons m the Recorder's Office,
tram both her and Kay Hill, who has waiung for her mother, a single par- by the coun1y commissioner,;, lo a Elberfeld's, as a subs111u1e lypesener
She also worked for !he lelepholfe
• worked on the office smce Hamilton's ent, to fimsh her work and go home. compac.t tablelop mocrofilming for The Daoly Sentmel, and as a sec- company for 10 years. and was
,
She has seen many changes on the machine. That eariler machme was
appoon!ment m 1982
relary '" charge of pl ottmg progress cmplo~ed m !he Recorder's Office m
Kong has been around the office ar.d throughoutlhe courthouse. also used 10 phOtocopy documen1s, a on co nstructiOn of the Tuppers I 982 when Emmogene Ham1lton.
Recorder's Offoce for many years For example, the process of mocro- JOb now performed by an elee!romc Plains/CheS!er wa1er syslem
then Emmogene Holsleoq , was
Her uncle. John D Thomas, was filmmg deeds and other documents photocopier which sus m a corner Qf
appoonted
to replace Robson She
For many years ,.she slayed home
· recorder tor two tenns Shortly after maonlamed at 1he Recorder's Office 1he Recorder's Office
1o raiSe her ch1ldren. a son, Kevm and s1ayed on to help tram Ham1lton and
losmg !he Repubhcan pnmary elec- has gone from working at a large and
Before go on g to work m the a daughler, Knsun She and her hus- Holl, and w11l now add anolher page
non to Paul Kloes. he d1ed m office cumbersome. machme, which com- · Recorder's Off1ce for Robson , Kong
to her fam1ly's history of pubhc ser·
band, Gene, love on Pomeroy.
Kmg's molher, Lena Spencer, plelely, filled the area now occupoed worked for a reahor. as a clerk at
VICC

Woman's body found in
remains of burned home
JACKSONVILLE (AP) - Firefighters found the body of a woman
mside her burmrig home m southeast Oh10.
The fire apparently began wh1le Tern Ann Helsel, 36, of Jacksonville
and her boyfriend were sleepong. Aulhonhes say Joseph Radchff escaped
'from the house with minor cuts and smoke mhalauon.
Helsel's body was found Monday m a firsl-floor bedroom of the twostory house
The cause of the fire had not been determmed.lt was believed io have
slarted m the hvmg room
An autopsy was planned and the Slate fire marshal's office was onvestogaung. Glouster Pohce Choef Roger Taylor saod. .
Jacksonvolle IS about60 miles southeast of Columbus

Chauncey police chief
cited for theft in offi~e
ATHENS (AP) -Chauncey
Pohce Chief Dav1d M1lner has
been arrested on charges includ-

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

1 Section· 10 Pages
Calendar
Cluss!fteds
Comics
Editorials
l.9cal

Soorts
Weather

10
6-8

9

i
3
4&amp;5

3

Lotteries
IJ; Ill

Plck3: 1-1-8, Plek4: H -5-0
Bu&lt;keye 5: 1·7-18-34-35
W.VA.

Dally 3: 6·2·1 Daily 4: 9·9·5· 7
C 1999 Oh10 VallfY Publlshmg Co

mg theft m offtce, the Athens
County shenrf said.
Milner is accused of selling
of a firearm that was setzed by
the Chauncey pohce as eVI·
dence followmg a 1996 traffic
stop, • Athens County Shenff
David Redecker sa1d.
Milner was to be arra1gned
on charges of theft m orfice,
grand theft and receivmg stolen
property today in Athens
Mumc1pal Court
Redecker satd ruture charges
could be filed pendmg the out·
come of searches done Monday
at the Chauncey V1llage Hall
and the village garage.
Authorities were lookmg for
items purcha&lt;ed from the state
and the U S Department or
Derense, such as veh1cles,
boats. flak pckets and gas
masks, that are unaccounted
for, Redec ke r &lt;aid
Mtlner was no! available for
comment. H~&gt; telephone number 1s not

'

that allowmg the levy on the Novem·
ber ballol will g•ve local voters the
opponunltytoshowtherrsupponfor
the programs offered thJ?ugh the
MRIDD board.
In other busmess, the commiSs1oncrs approved appropnauons
adjusunents as follows· $865.46 from
Workers'Compensabon Salaries onto
the budget of the Mulu county Task
Force, $1,201 12, and $222 69, onto
the hne otero of Vick1 Midkiff,
Fmance, Early Start; and $86 02 onto
the budget of the Tuberculosis Office.
The board also approved appropriatoon requests for Juvenole Youth
Grant on the amounts of $228.91,
S13 25, and $21 24
. (Continued on Page 3)

Schools chief wants improved
relationship with local districts
COLUMBUS (AP) - School
administrators hope a meeling w1th
new state Supenntendent Susan Tave
Zelman woll 1mprove relauons
be!ween local boards and the Slate
fi!Ionday's meeting was the firs1
lome local admmiStralors mel wolh
Zelman smce a study depicted the
stale Educa11on Department as meffic•ent and overly bureaucrallc
Jetf Weekly, supenntendent of
Soulhern Local School DIS1ncl m
Columbiana County, sa1d he has
already seen progress. He sa1d peo·
pie in the Slale department are makmg themselves much more access1ble
to the dostnct than they were on !he
past He said h1s district has been g•ven some extra resources and a contact
to assiSt in problem solvmg.
"They arc commg down and
wanung lo work w11h sohool diStncls
actually ge1ung to know !he people
there on a first name bas1s,' he sa1d
Weekly sa1d he d1dn'tsee !hat kond
of cooperatiOn before
,,
"The school diSincts looked a1 the
stale department as mandating

Susan lave Zelman
changes for the dos1nc1S Wllhoul provldtng the necessary means to adJu~t
to those mandatory changes." he sa&amp;d
Zelman sa1d she IS bnngmg a huM -

ness philosophy 10 the department
and pmm1~es to work wnh d1strlc t~ to
meet their needs

" Schools are our cus1omers and
the cOre reason we ex1st "she sa1d
The study noted defic1enc1cs rang· safety 1ssues and other concerns
mg from paucrn of agenc-¥ employ- councol has been forced lo address
ees not relumong phone calls 10 ~per­ th1s summer
ception that the department v1ews
In other acuon. counc•l authonzed
local schools as an enemy ralher !han Swoflto hore two pan-lime employally.
ees 10 handle cooking for ]WI mmates,
Zelman ordered the s!Udy soon 1nmate laundry and cleamng duues a1
afler 1akmg office m March Con- village hall. The employees w11l be
ducted by Oay10n·based manage- pmd m1mmum wage for a maxtmum
ment consulting company KPMG . 11 of 28 hours per week
COS! $380,000
Counc1l also au1honzed the post·
. "I dod a )ol of field work before I mg m - hous~ for a new buoldmg
look 1h1s JOb and I was not SUIJlnsed mspector, who will work on a conby !he findmgs of !he sludy,?' she lrac! basos woth the vollage. as recsaod "The study gave us mformauon ommended by Councolman Roger
to sec where we are now and measure Manley
where our progress m the future."
lannarelh saod thai she had been tn
Many of 1hc supccmlendenls contact w1th a repr senta1ove of
0
altendmg the conference had q'ues- Rumpke, !he firm whoch
contracts
uons abou1 whe!her the depanmen!IS wnh the village for residential trash
ready 10 help dostnels once s(alew1de serv1ce Several residents have made
performance standards kock m next complamts agamsl the firm for exces
year D1 stncts meetmg fewer than 10 s1ve speed, poor servtce and other
of 18 mmomum standards w1ll be put issues, and lannarello saod that she
on _!!cademlc emergency or academhad mvncd a Rumpke represenlative
IC watch.
to the next counctl meetmg.
Counc1l bneny d1scussed the possobdlly of endmg !he contraCI woth
Rumpke and contractong Wllh a new
form
of problems. whoch have beeh
Col umbiana Gall1a
Jcl ferson
addressed
before, are not resolved
Lawrcn~,.e. Mc1gs Monroe and WashA motion for an emergency reso
tngton
· SBA IS comtmtl ed to helpmg luuon authommg 1he transfer of the
sm.1ll bu s messes overcome econom- VIllage's cable telev1soon franchiSe
IC lllJUnc s and we o ffc1 the lmanc1al from lnlerhnk LLP to Charter Comresourci.!S to accomplish th1s ,' munl eauons was deemed mvahd, m
Reg1onal Adnnmstmtor Kerry Kork- 1ha1 Man ley voled agamst the' reso·
luuon, makmg for a lack of a quorum
land sa1d
Vtllage res1dent Jean Cra1g sa1d
lnteresltd bu&gt;mcss ow ners should
that she had rcce1ved several mqumes
contact the SBA DISasler Area I about a semo r c 111 zen s d1scount for
Office a! 360 Rambow. Blvd. South, cable teleVISI On serv1ce, and asked
Third Floor, N1agara Falls. NY. 1ha1 council mvesuga1e 1he policy
14303- 11 92. or call 1·800-659-2955
lannarelli sa1d that act10n taken a1
for more mt om1auon and to obtam a 1he las1council meetmg to elunmate
loan apphcalion
smokong m v1llage hall and 01her VIlLoan .1pphcauons must be lage bu1ldings w1ll reqUire a new
returned to SBA no la!er !han Apnl ord1nancc. and appmmed Swifl,
3, 2000.
(Continued on Page 3)

SBA making disaster loans ,available
The U S Small Busmess Admm·
'imation announced that federal diSasler loans are avaolable to small ,
non-farm, agnculture-depcndcnl
busmesscs m varwus count1es Oh1o

"SBA's d1sas1er declarauon was
issued as a resuh of a som1lar ac11on
laken by the Secrelary of Agnculture
lo help farmers m these countoes
recover from excess1ve heat and
drought cond11oons that occurred
sonce May 15, 1999," saod SBA DIS·
asler Area Director Wolham E Leg·
g1cro Jr.
Und~r !hiS declaran,on. SBA's
Economic Injury DosaSier Loan program 1s ava1lable to agnc uhurcdepcndem busmesses and small agn c ult .~ral cooperatoves !hal suffered
econonuc 1njury as a d1rect res ult of

/

the severe weather 's effect on agn-

cuhural producers
For example, a busmcss thai sells
goods/~crv1ces dorcc1ly to agncultur·
al producers m.1y ha\e generated le~s
profits and be unable 10 pay b11ls
and/or meet expenses because the
weather conditions reduced the pur-

chasang power of the1r customers

Eligible small buSinesses may
quahty for loans uf up lo $1 5 million These loans are available al ,a 4
percent mtcrcsl rate w11h loan terms

up to 30 years SBA dctcnmnc s clog1bl1Jty lor the program ba~cd on the
~ 1 zc and type of bus mess and Hs
fmancial resources SBA Joe~ nnt
prov1dc loans to farmers
Counues tn OhiO that .He chg1hl~
fm tim program .1rc A.thcn~ Belmont.

By BRIAN J. REED
'
Sentinel News stan
Many of the problems whoch have
plagued General Harunger Park thos
summer 3re bemg ehnunated, according to Pohce Ch1ef Bruce Swift.
Swofl doscussed the park and the
handlmg of problems there by hos
depanment when M1ddlepon Village
Counc1l met m regular sess10n on
Monday evemng
Allhe last two meellngs of coun·
c1l, problems wnh unruly choldren m
the park and at the pool have been
discussed. and at the last meetong, 11
was decoded that a' pohce officer
should be assogned 10 the park for the
remamder of the summer season to
help allevoate problems With fightmg.
profanny. lonenng and other unruly
behaVIor
Sw1f1 sa1d thai an officer has been
assigned to the park from II a m 10
1 p m , four days a week . and thai the
problems have been largel y ehm•na!ed
Accordmg to Mayor Sandy
lannarelh. ·problems have been
reduced 10 practically nothong.'
smce !he off1cer has been tn place and
smce several offenders have been cited to Mayor's Courl
lannarclh also d1scussed !he rccen1
•nJu ry of a young ball player, who
wa&lt; cut by the sharp edge at a dugou1
bench
CounCilman S1eve Houchms sa~d
'that next year, counc1l should consoder honng a park manager or 0ther
s upervisor who (,':auld momtor the
park more close l&gt; wnh respect to

\

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ottio

Tu11d.y, Auguat 10, 1999

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'£stJ,fislid U.1!148

111 Court St., ~. Ohio
740 082-2158 • Fax: 082-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
PubliSher
DIANE HILL

eon,troller
I

Yesteatav In hlstorv
-

J.P. Morgan plays a golden game
By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON

~PnsaWrtt..-

PapA2

An end to Glass-Steagall
8yJKkAnd11wn
udDoupCohn
WASlllNGTON - L.ong bef~ tho financial
collapse of lhe latt 1980s. our banks wore in
many ·ways sacred spaces.. symbolizing order,
progrcss and lht undeniable beneficena of the
''character loan," collalemized by tlit promise of
personal qualities.
.. That f.Ciing stteldled back 10 lht post-Otpression era, whon lhe (ilass-Steagall Act had walled
off American banks from the sharks of securities,
iliSUJliiiCC and oommeroc, prolecting lht savings
of ordinary citizens from lhe rash of speculation
that htlped bring on lht great crash of 1929. Now
Texas Sen. Pbil Gramm and Rtp. Jim Ltach of
Iowa. bolh Republicans, arc busy 111nning a conference committct in Congrcss to rcpeal GlassSieagall and allow banks, securities firms and
insurance componies to buy eadl olhtr. '
.
The'Houst passed this legislation by one vott
last year, but lhe Senatc demurred. Then lhe bill
camt roaring back to win a 34~. 1o 86 bipartisan

- ~=~~nlh~ H~~ei~;~~;~

These ;ue lhrifts diat can be owned by a commercial compony (rel&amp;iling. manufacturing. etc.) as
IQng as lhey limit lhemsclves 10 only one. What
· worries small bankers is an lhat an operalor Hke
Wal Mart has cum:nUy applied 10 buy an Olclahoma S&amp;L from a commercial finn, wilh lhe
lhought of c:sl&amp;blishing brandies in other loca•
tions.
.
The cjeaJ may or may nol go lhrough. II
depends on which version of Ibis provision
emerges from lhe conference cormuiltee. Both lhe
House .and Senate bills oullaw any new unitary
lhrifts, but lhe House would allow lhe ~e of an
existing unitary savings and loan lo a commercial
enlerprise if lhe Fc:deral Reserve Board agrc:c:s.
Senators would insist lhat it be sold only 10 a
financial institution. They arc responding 10 small
bankers who fear competitors situaled close to
customers in large retail stores. No doubt lherc
arc concerns, too, about how banking standards
. would be mainl&amp;incd in such a collaboration.
That, of course, is a question for the rcgul~• .

and lbt biggest controversy in lhis bill is who is 10
oversee American financial institutions: officials.
at lhe Treasury or at the Federal Rtservt ? The
House preftrs lht Treasury and lhe concept of
banks as operating subsidjarics, and so does lht
prtsident. The Senatc insists on lht Ftde~l
Reserve (whidl would preside over superbanks
wilh asstts of m~ lhan Sl billion in the Holllle
version) and lht idea of holding companies. ~~­
loast tht Federal Reserve, an indtpendent body,
has no links 10 political campaign contributions~
, The Financial Services Act has been a lonk
time aborning. If it fails again this year, banks wi!l
oontinut 1o liberalize anyway, as lhey've bctn
doing for ytars wilh courts and governmental
agencies opening lhe doors. But it will take
longer, and lhe way will be harder to build American institutions that arc world ltadtrs.
·
(Cong,.Hion•l corrapondMrt: Ele•n~
Clift; fOreign encllllltlonel correspondent; Lee
Cullum.)
. ,
Copyrtgllt

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Today In History
\

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I

I

A

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By The A•oclated Press
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 10, the 222nd day of 1999. There are 143 days
..
left in the year.
On Aug. 10, 1846, Congress chartered the Smithsonian Institution,
named after English scientist James Smithson, whose bequest of $500,000
had made it possible.
·
In 1809, Ecuador struck its firsl'blow for independence from Spain.
In 1821, Missouri became the 24th state.
In 1874, Herbert Clark Hoover, the 31st president of the United States,
was born in West Branch, Iowa.
·
'
In 1885, Lto Daft opened America's first commercially operated electric
streoicar, in Baltimore.
In 1944, during World War II, American forcts ovetcame remaining
Japanese resistance on Guam.
In 1949, the National Military Establishment was renamed the Department of Defense.
In 1969, Ltno and Rosemary LaBianca were murdered in their Los Angeles home by members of Charles Manson's cult, one day afler actress Sharon .
Tate and four olher people were slain.
. In 1977, postal employee David Berkov. itz was arrested in Yonkers, N.Y.,
accused of being New York City's "Son of Sam," the gunman· responsible
for six slayings and seven woundings.

~

~Jl
/i

Rudy, Hillary try much-needed makeovers
Oprah, seems especially designed to appeal to
~omen, •who ought to represent Clinton ·s core
strength.
· But the Maris! and Zogby polls show that &lt;;:linton is only even with Giuliani among women
now. In February, the Marist poll had her ahead
amons women, 52-36.
Luntz predicts that Giuliani will not primarily
campaign negatively against Ointon, but will
emphasize his record and \.,ill promise to achieve ·
more for New York. And he thinks she will try to
position herself carefully on "quality of life" ·
issues like health.
Ltt's hope the. campaign goes that way. But, :
New York being New York,T,d bet on the nega- :.
lives. And one wrinkle of that is an underlying .
fear that electing one or the other candidate will ·
create a national monster.
If a Republican gets elected president in 2000 ·
and Hillary Ointon bec~rnes a senator, she'll cer:
tainly be on everyone 's short list for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004. She may
even be the front-runner.
.
, Meanwhile, in last week's Time magazine, :
contributing writer Jamts Traub quotes an acolyte ·
.of Giuliani's, Elliot Cuker, as saying of the mayor,
"All of his friends imagine him as president
.
someday."
If there is a negative "presidential factor" in
the New York race, it would seem to help Giuliani: It's hard to imagine Republicans ever nominating a pro-choice, pro-gun control and pro-gay
rights candidate, even if he is tough as nails.
On the other hand, it's not at all difficult to
imagine Clinton, if a Republican wins in 2000, as
the now hope of Democratic liberals.
So Giuliani's best argument for St nate· might
be: Ltt's end th is long Clinton soap opera once
and for all . •
(Morton Kondracke Ia executive editor ol
Roll Call, the newep~~per of Capitol Hill.)

Bercovici said.

"(Shatner) dialed 911 and dove
into lhe pool to render aid to his
wife." Bercovici said. Shatncr lhen
administered CPR.
The Los Angeles Fire Department
was called to the Studio City home.
but efforts to revive Mrs. Shatner

CHARGE ALED AFTER WRECK - A 19year-old Racine man was cited by lhe Meigs
County Sheriffs Office on a misdemeanor
charge of assauH following lhis two-vehicle
accident -at the junction of Blind Hollow and
Ro- rosds near Racine Monday afternoon.
Jamie T. Terzopplous, State Route 338, allegedly punched 17-year-old Willie Collins, Third
Street, Racine, in the eye alter Collins struck

were unsuccessful , spokesman Brian

Humphrey sajd. "Sadly, she was
beyond our help,'" Humphrey said.

W. IHI.

IC)'.

"

01-~.tnc.

Announcements

Daytime highs will star:t

~
......
...

...

Just say no to .brid(ll showers

EDITOR'S _NOTE: ,Lawrence L. Knuteon h• report,cl on CongreH,
the WhHe Hou.. •nd w..blngton'a hlatory lor more lhan 30 years. ·

'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
wife of actor William Shatntr was
found dtad in the swimming pool of
their home, an apparent drowning
that authorities said they were trtal·
ing as an accident.
Nerint Shalntr. 40. was propounctd dead at the scone.
Shatner arrived home at about
10:15 p.m. and found her at tht bottom of the pool, police Lt. Adam

'

'

Dlllrlbuled by UOited F...ure SynoiC81., In&lt;::

party lines. But all is not hannanious betwctn the two measures.

By Morton Kondrackll
all, there is a lot· not to like
New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a Republi about each of them.
cari, has been likened to Mussolini. First lady
As a U.S. attorney, Giuliani
Hillary Rodham Ointon resembles Madam Mao.
busted major Mafiosi, but he
No wonder the two Senate candidates are
also dragged an indicted stockattempting makoovers. ·
broker out · of his office in
Giuliani, according to The New York Times
handcuffs in front of a mob of
magazine, is smiling more and barking less as a
camerapeople to prove how
means of changing his image from that of an
tough he was against whiteauthoritarian bully to a "new Rudy."
collar criminals. ·
Ointon, losing ground in the polls amid accuAs mayor, he has Cleaned up
sations of caipetbagging and' left-liheralism, used Times Square and cut the crime rate -- but he also
the debut issue ofTalk magazine to revive the role · has humiliated subordinales, erected police barri•
of stoical wife that boosted 'her approval ratings ers against jaywalking ;md winked at police bruduring the Monica Ltwinsky scandal.
tality. He makes the trains run on time, .'but· he
Polls indi.l;ate that both candillales have a need resembles Singapore's Lte Kwan Yew.
to make people think better of them -- Ointon
Clinton, once touted as co-president, tried 'to
more lhan Giuliani. She is viewed favorably by . exile the detested media to the Old Executive
only 53 percent of likely New York voters, Office Building. and sicced the FBI on the White
according to the latest Zogby poll, and unfavor- House travel office.
· \.
ably by 40 percent. Giuliani has a 63-28 favoraShe concocted her famous plan for govembility rating. "
ment domination of health care in secret and proZogby found that Giuliani leads Ointon, 49 · . moted it, in part, by demonizing docto'is and the
percent to 39 percen~ in a head-to-head matchup. insurance industry. She campaigns for worthy
The lalest M,aristlnstitute poll has Giulia.ni up 47- cause;&gt;-- women 's rights and children's welfare 41 , a switch from January -- impeachment time - - but exudes a self-righteous conviction in her
-when she Wa!i leading, 53-42. A Quinnipiac Col- own rectitude and persistently accuses critics of
. lege poll puis the two in .a dead heat, 45-45. But. .evil motives.
in February, Clinton led 54-36.
. And, of course, she sticks with Bill in spite of
Anothtr argument for makoovers is that a sig- his infidelities. In a. poll in March, Zogby asked
nificanl portion of each candidate's supporters is what question voters most wanted to ask the two
motivated primarily by dislike for the other. . candidates. For Giuliani, people wanted to know
according to the one poll that's examined this sub- a.bout educat(on and healih care. For Clinton, it
ject
was, " Why are you running in New York?" and
In June, pro-Giuliani pollster Frank Luntz " Why do you stay with him?"
.
found lhat 36 percent of Giuliani backers said
Clinton was bound to be asked ' the Bill questhey were primarily anti -Hillary (vs. 60 percent lion repeatedly during the campaign. Now, she's
that were mainly pro-Rudy) while 20 percent of answered it in Talk in a way that reinvigorates her
Clinton supporters sai~ they were primarily anti - popular image as a victimized but strong and
Giuliani (whilt 63 percent were pro-Hillary).
understanding wife: He was abused, he is weak,
My guess is that fear and loathing of the two .but he's trying -- and, besides, I love him .
candidates actually is even greater than that. After
The explanation, straight o ut of a session with

I

~ &amp; Colin

WASHINGTON (AP) - l Pitrpont Morgan played run-()n games of Stn. Gramm strongly opposts
solitaire in his hotel suite ncar the White Housc and filled the room wilh lhe txpanding the Community Reinsmoke of expensive cigars. II was early on the morning of Feb. 5, 1895, and vestmontAct, which would require
the financier did not enjoy being kept waiting -even by lhe president.
financial institutiQRS lo make loans
The call finally carne from Grover aevol~d. who was laboring to res- in low-inco!l'le communities if lhey
cue lhe country from an economic depression won;ontd by a confidence- want lo play in. lhe new arena.
shattering run OJl the gold reserves in the U.S. Trcasury. "Have Y.Ou anylhing Henct this provision docs not
to suggest?" lhe president asked Morgan.
appear in his bill, though it's
Morgan believed he could stanch the flow and Save lhe country's credit favored by lhe Houst.
. By the 1890s, gold had acquired lhe shctn of mylh and power. Those who
Then thtre's the issue of privafavored kctping the United Stales on the gold siandard were dubbed "gold cy. Suppose an insuranCe company
bugs."
merges with a bank or a steurities
But much of the South and .West- heavy wilh fanne[S and ranchers, finn . Would personal mtdical
small businessmen and workers - saw lhe gold bugs as lhe cenler of an records then be made publie? The
Eastern conspiracy that arrayed farmers against capital, creditors against House says no. Tho Senate
debtors.
declines to mention the matter at
Their remedy was to 10pple gold and rtplace it wilh silvor, 10 put more all.
monty in circulation by coining silver dollars, lhus. eliminating tight money Fin~~~~~= ~~~!:~t!r~
and advancing prosperity.
·
In 1896, the demand for silv.oi would reach its highest point when tainly .l"illgive lhem opportunities
William Jennings Bryan olectrified tho Otmocratic convention by con- to borrow low-interest monty from
fronting S'!pporters of the gold standard and declaring, "Yo~ 'shall not cru- the Federal Home Loan Bank syscify mankind upon a cross of gol(j...
tern to lend to economic ,develop- .
. But meanwhile, the demand for che.P maney and lhe iqflation it would ment projtcts, not just house buy, bririg, lhe fear t~at lhe gold standard would be overthrown; alanntd Euro- ers. This will help lhem hold on to
pean and American investors and gold began a rclrcal across the Atlantic.
business customers who otherwise ·
By custom, not law, the .u:s. gold reserve had been maintained at $100 might move lo a larger lender as
million and that-level had a hold on the popular imagination. A dollar less they grow large( themselves.
than SJOO million was seen as a step toward disaster. And by 1895 the gold .
'Small bankers ~r~ ne~ous,
reserve was evaporating like a rcscrvoir in a summer drought.
however, about proviSions tn lhe
In her biography, " Morgan, American Financier," published this year by bill for unitary savings and loans.
Random Houst, historian Jeaii-Strouse wrote lhal ille Treasury gold rcserve
had fallen below S61) million by the spring of 1893. The president and Congress tried to rcfill it by issuing bonds. The gold flowed out faster lhan
before.
J11orgah promised 10 form an intomational. syndicate to buy gold and 1o By Sera ECkel
·
which the least · towels, salt and pepper shakers, a
"One of the worst things ··
_proltctlfie Treasury from further wilhdrawals.
On the-sitcom-"Oh, Baby," a sin.expensive item laundry basket.
"As he saw it, his efforts to siem the drain, avert default and restore con- gle woman in her 30s stands at the
qbout
being female is tlwl ·
was a S75 salad
But today's , bride no longer
fidence in tho dollar would prottct the billions.litvosted in lhe United States office bulletin board, reviewing the
bowl. I'm also receives spaghetti strainers and iton- every six mohtlts or so somt·
and reopen the channels for foreign capital," Strouse wrote.
.
postings of her colleague's wedconfused
by ing boards at her shower. Why one invites you to spend
.
But on Feb. 4, 1895, the Treasury canceled further negotiations 'with the dings and baby showers with a
engagement par- should she? She and her fiance what would·htive been a per·
financier. The president would compel O&gt;ngrel!S 10 authorize gold bonds for fritnd. Evory few. minutes, a co'
.
ties at .which moVell out of lheir parents' houses fectly good Saturday
a,fter·
public sale .insttad.
,
worker approaches and says she is
gifts -arc expect- years 'beforc, and they are possibly
Morgan. believing the news wo4ld result in a stock rnar!&lt;et crash, ordered collecting money -- for a baby
ed •' are gelling already living togelher. They have noon watching a friend, coout his)irivate railroad car. Al:riving in Washington, he was told Oeveland shower, a bridal shower, an engageworker or female relative
marritd and get- all lht basics.
was nod\•wlable..
;
.
,
.
menl ~. a son's soccer ttam, a ting engaged two separate achieveNo, a 1999 wife-to-be gets l'uxu- · open gifts."
"I have come to Washington to see the president and I am going 1o stay daughter's Girl Scout cookies. With ments? ,
ry items at her shower -- ·espresso that -- with the exception of maybe
until I see him," Morgan said, He retired 10 the Arlington Hotel, where he each request, lhe two women robotiBut mO.IIy, I'm against showers. machines, pasta makers and alll)lanslipped tire cards from their silver case· ilnd began 10 play solitaire whilt cally open their wallet and 'pass over One of lhe worst things about being ner of designer cookwar.e. The poor two very close friends -- I'm not
attending showers any more. When · '
smoking "a large Rosa de Santiago Celestiale."
·
their money witliout ever breaking female is lhat every six monlhs or so relation who lhinks she'll be able to the invitation comes, I RSVP immeThe invitation came at 9:30 the next morning. Morg81),.and his people
their conversation.
.~ someone invites you to spend what skirt by wilh a mere saiad spinner or diattly with a. brief reply. "I'm
wall&lt;ed across Lafayette Square to the White House. Morgan held an unlit
That scene perfectly sums up the would have bten a perfectly good · set of steak knives is in .for an sorry, but I'm .unable lo attend." No ·
cigar in his hand.
,
.
single-woman's dilemma: How do Saturday afte,rnoon watching a unpleasant surprise when her gift is explanations. No excuses. Just plain
After perfunctory handshakes, he found himselfignored :while Oeveland
you cope with the increasing tide of friend, co-worker or female relative held up for public scrutiny. Becau~ old no, thank you.
'
and his people conferred .among themselves. Morgan found a seat in a cor- ·
requests to provide your married open gifts.
somewhere along lhe line, wedding
It
may
seem
unsporling
and
ner of lhe presid~nt's office listening to the. others talk. He held on to lhe fritnds wilh money and dry goods ·'
Bridal showers are a relic from presents started lieing distribuled at · stingy, but irs had a terrific side
cigar but did not light it. ·
·
wilhout seeming bitte( a.nd cheap?
the llays when bridal showers made bridal 'showers. This has in tum effect. Because now when a friends
"He was in the position of a mossenger waiting for an answer," his son,
ll's not that I'm against w_edding sense. Back in the time when a ratcheled up lhe price of wedding tells me she's getting married, I can
in-law said later. "It was not a situation he was used to."
presents. When a friend gets mar- young bride moved from her par- presents, which now rtquire 'a small look her in the eye and honestly say,
At one point; a call came in reporting there was jUst S9 million in gold .ried, it's ca115e fqr celebration, .and ent's ho_use lo her rna. ital home, it bank loan to purchase.
·
"l'.m so glad."
left in the New York subtreasary.
it's nice to give her something that was customary to gather together
So I've decided to stop. I ito Copyrlght1 1111 NEA.
Morgan said that was unfortunate because there were $12 million in expresses y.our good wishes. But I and provide the young lady with longer consult,bridal registries, preSend comments to the ,uthor
drafts against that gold. Everyone knew that there was littlt chance O&gt;n- · am against bridal registries like the modest gifts to help her set up a ferring •gift-giving to order-taking.
In
ca,.
ol lhle n-ep~~per or •nd
gress, with its growing numbers of free-silver advocatts, would choose ·to
her e-mail at 18r• .,m.com.
one
a
friend
rcqntly
confronted,
on
household:
wooden
spoons,
dish
And
I've
made
a
unilateral
decision
~~
.
'
Finally, the president turned to the financier. "Have.you anything to suggest?" he as~td:
·
Morgan played his card.
.
He said he·had located a dusty but still v·alid 18621'aw that authorized the
. secretary of the Treasury to put the government into debt to buy gold coi~s
on his own authority without having to get congressional approval to issue
bonds to buy the gold.
.
The tension broke and the financier and the president began to work out
terms. ·
acveland asked if Morgan could guarantee that the gold being purchased
~ould not simply resume its flow out of lhe country.
The financier offered the guarantees, knowing that with his connections
he could kctp them - and realize the profits that went with the de_al.
Morgan stood. His trousers and th.e White House carpc:t around him were
covered in a fine brown dust.
·
J.P. Morgan had, without realizing it, ground the unlit cigar in his hand to
powder..

hatner's wife
found dead in
home's pool

.Ohio weather

1\lnJtf, Al91et10.1-

Meig$
eMs
r,uns
Units of !l!e
Meigs County
Emer, ·1· .

Shade Riv&lt;!r Lodge
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will hold its regular meeting Thurs. day. 8 p.m. at the lodgt in Chester.
Refreshments will be served.

Terzopplous' truck, according to Sheriff James
M. Soulsby. Collins was transported by lhe
Racine Emergency Squad t o Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, where he was treated
and released. The Racine Volunteer Fire Department also assisted. The .Gallia-Meigs Post ol
the State Highway Patrol is investiga!ing the
accident. (Photo courtesy of the Racrne Vol•
unteer Fire ~partment)

Death ~No. tl·ce·S

~J-

• ..

gency Medical Service recorded II
calls for assistance Monday. Units ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;.;..._.

responding included:
· CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:07
p.m .. U.S . 33. Pomeroy.
Homecoming slattd
Helen Ruth Bosler. 68. 5192 Fam1-To-Market Road 'No. 645. Palestine.
Homecoming will be held at the Byron Watson. refused treatment :
Texas.
formerly ofMeig, Cuunt). died 1\'londa). Aug. 9, 1999 in the MemO- .
, 3:36 p.m.. Unio n Avenue.
old Otxter Church Sept. I I. Dinner
nal
Mother
Franns Ho-.pllal. Pal~stm e
will be held at noon and the program Pomeroy, Aretta Flint, Veterans
By The Assoc:l8ted Press
'
Born
Oct.
26. 1~30 in in Sutwn Tc"' it&gt;htp. '-'!cog' County. daughter of the
Memorial Hospital;
After some showers and thundcrstonns tonight, partly sunny skies will at I :30 p.m. Singers are welcome.
3:54 p.m., East Main Street. late Herman L. and Mattie B. Bea,er'Hill. she "as a homemaker. and a memreturn to Ohio on Wednesday, tht National Weathtr Service said.
Pomeroy, Charles Eakins. refused ber of the Shalom United Methudi,t Chuf;ch in ,CarrolL Ohto. where she
Highs on Wtdnesday will lie in the 80s following ov~mi g htlows of 60- Woodmen to meet
resided ·before moving' to Palestine .
'
Burlingham Modem Woodmen tteatment;
65.
.
.
She
was
also
preceded
in
death
bi·
her
iirst
husband.
Charles Wolfe, on·
After lhat. no mote rain is in the forecast until Friday or Saturday.
.,. . will meet Saturday evening at 6:30 .-: 5:57 p.m., East Main Street. Dec. 21. 1990: a brother. Harry Hill : a brother m infancy. OUbcrt A. Hill:
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta- p.m . at the hall. The camp will fur- Charles Eakins, refused treatme nt:
·
II :01 p.m.. Stewart Holl ow Road, and a sister-in-law. Berqice HilL ·
tion was 98 degrees in 1944 while the record low was 45 in 1972. Sunset nish sandwiches, melon and drinks.
Surv
iving
are
her
husband.
Harold
L.
Bosler:
a
daughter.
Linda
(Larry)
Those attendin g are asked to take a Middleport, Roger Stewart . VMH:
tonight will be ai 8:36p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:39a.m.
dish
to complement the sa ndwiches.
II :53 p.m., State Route 7, Mod- Black of Palestine: a son. Mike (lo)ce) Wolfe Sr. of Chilltcothe: si' grandWeather forecast:
children and 12 great-grandc hild ren; four brothers. Clark (Betty) Hill of
dleport. Toya ·Penick, VMH .
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s. Southwest wind 5 to I0 mph.
Columbus. Carl (Connie) Hill of Cedar Hill. Texas, Don Hill of Fafchc. Texas,
MIDDLEPORT
Athletic Boosters to meet
Wtdnesday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid and upper ~Os
11 :42 a.m., Batley Run Road. and Jerry (Mary) Hill of Medina: and several nieces. and nephews.
The Southern High School Ath· Wednesday nighi .. .Mostly clear with patchy fog deve loping late. Lows
Services will be -11 a:m . Friday in the Cremeen~· Funeral Home. Raci ne.
let:c Boosters will met Thursday at 7 Charles Kn.appcr. Holzer Medical
in the mid 60s.
with
the Re v. Brice Utt officiati ng. Burial will be tn the Letart Falls Cemep.m. at the high schooL Parents and Center. Central Dispatch squad assist·
'
Extended forecast :
tery.
Friends
may call at the fu neral home from 4-8 p.m. Thur&gt;Ja) .
ed.
coaches are e ncouraged to\attend .
Thursday... Mostly clear. Highs from the upper 80s to the lower 90s.
RACINE
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows near 70 and highs in the lowe,r 90s .
. ~:41 p.m.. volunteer ftre depanSaturday...Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Southern School Board
menl and squad to Blind Hollow
The
Southern
Local
Boarll
of
Lows near 70 and hoghs near 90.
James R. Gruese~, 61. Colurnb.ia Statton, dted Mond~y. Au,g. 9, 1999.
Education will meet in special ses- Road, motor vehicle accident. Willy
Son of the late Adolf and Hazel Grue scr. he was born and reared in Minsion Monday, 7'· p.m. at the, high Collins, VMH,, Jamie Terzoppolous,
ersville.
He was a moulder at the Bonncl'Fouqcjry'i n Cllnt()n for 15 years.
refused
treatement:
school to consider personnel mauers.
by hi s wi fe of 40 years. Joy Gcx&gt;&lt;irich Gruescr: a son,James
He
is
survived
8:58
p.m.:
VFD
to
Third
Street,
EPA and Water Development Authnr-·
(Continued from Page 1)
R.
Gruescr
of
Navarre;
~wo grandchildren: and a ststc r. Sharon Hayhurst of
car fire , LeAnn Young owne r.·
The commissioners noted that.the ity, for the county's new septic tank Pancake breakfllst set ,
SYRACUSE
Canton.
A pancake breakfast will be held
courtliouse has traditionally closed on granl program ..
3:39
p.m
..
Fifth
Street.
Melinda
He waspreceded in death by a sister, Sandra Remy . .
.
.
Saturday.
8
to
II
a.
m.
at
the
HockThe commi ssioners also approved
lhe Thursday of the Meigs County
be
1
p.m.Wednesday
in
the
Monersvtlle
Ho
ll CemeGraveside
services
will
La~dermilt.
treated
at
the
sce
ne
.
Fair. which is nut week, but left the !he. payment of bills in the amount of ingport Fellowship f:lall. It is spontery.
with
Pastor
Frank
Odor
·offtciating.
The
David
Bogner
Funeral
Horne,
TUPPERS
PLAINS
sored by the Ladies Aide and the cost
decision to close individual offices to $385.583.67. witlt 152 entries.
4:3
1
p.m
..
state
Route
248,
motor
North Ridgeville. is in charge of arrangements.
.
Present. in addition to Howard .. IS $3.50.
the discretion of county officeholde,;.
vehicle
accident,
Jerry
Wolfe.
HMC,
·: Jean Trussell.. county grants were cOm~nissloncrs Jeffrey ThornShawn Moi r. treated at the .scene ,
adminislJ'BIOr, requested the •execu- ton and M,ick Davenport. Clerk Glo- Homecoming planned
Homecoming will be held at the Ce ntral Di spatch squad and Chester
Attorney
tion of documents from the Wate.r . ria Kl oes. and Prosecu ting
1
Hazel Church near Long Bottom VFD as~istcd .
Pollution Control loan fund_, Ohio John [ cute s.
Sunday. Morning service will he at .
9:30 a.m. with potluck dinner at .
noon. The Builders Quartet will be Mid~leport
TUESDAY, AUG.' 10
· (Continued from Page 1)
process of working with the ·"two singing at I :30 p.m. The public is
2 p.m. - Rabbi r Judging
Clerk Bryan Swann and council property owners about the problem. invited.
5 p.m . ~ Hog Show man ship
The Middleport Volunte~ r Fire
lannarelh noted that a villagemember Beth Stivers to serve on a
5:45p.m. - PPHS Band
Department answered 36 c~ ll s durin g
committee to write the language for wide clean up had begun yesterday,
6 p.m. ~ Greasy Pig
the ordinance.
and that resid~nts with items to be
the month of July, including IS ftre
6:30p .m. - Fair Queen Cont est
and rescue calls and 21 EMS calls.
Council voted at its last meeting to picked up should place them at curb7 p.m. - Famt'Tractor Pull
Am
Ele
Power
......................
36'1.
Vehicles were driven a total of 845.2
make all village buildings "srnl)ke side so that village employees could
Akzo .................... :................ 45uloo
9
p.m.- David Lee Murphy
miles,.;md 48 hours were logged by
frce ," but Iannarelli said !pat she bad pock them up. The clean-up effort
AmrTech ............................... 73'1.
· 'pal' _
started at the north corporatton hmmembers of the department for trainAshland 011 ..........................39'1•
c,ontactcd lhe Ohio Mumct """ague .
nd -11 .
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 11
b
h
r
d
had
be
tl,
near
Fruth
Phannacy,
a
wo
coning
and '47 for equipmen_l mainteAT.T oouoooooonoooon""""'"" "'"'"49\
0
aado~t dt lhe P tcy,dan
- eben tinue through town for the remainder
9 a.m.~ Fair Opens
Bank One.............................51"1.
nance.
vtse
a1an or mance mus 1
f h
k
II a.ni. - Hay Bail Toss
Bob Evans ............. :..............1$'!.
std .
otewee . .
Calls included ., vehicle fire, a
Borg-Warner ........................... 48 · brush fire , two slrut:ture fires, two
1 p.m. ~ ,Pedal Tractor Pull
pasCounc•
· ·1man 8 ob. Rob'mson• sa1'd
Council also
approved
the
mayor's
·
· · h
..... ---., .....................6;&gt;
3 p.m . ~ Cletu s T. Judd.
·'ted La
· p
reportoffinescollectedont camount .; Champion
rescue calls and se ven calls for mutuCharm Shps ............................Sio
lhat he ha d· vtst
wrence owe 11
f $3 234 56
3
p. m. ~O pen Sheep Show
0
al aid.
City Holdlng ............... :.:........ 24'&gt;
of
the
Sycamore
Street
area
followPr'
,
·
·
c
'
c·
l
members
. •
.
.
.
esen were oun 'I
Federal Mogul .......................43't.
mg lhe recent ramstorm,, .to onvesh-. Stivers, Robinson, Manley and
Flrslar ...........~ ............. ~ .........24~.
gate a dratnage complaont th~t Houchins, lannarelli and Swann.
Gannett .................. :............:.69\
Lawrence had spoken to counctl
Kmart ........ :...........................13'!.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) _S us- Mai er, 2 1. a?d the rape_and hcati.ng ncar the Kcntuci-y campu&gt; .
about. He said that he w~ in the
Kroger .................................. 24~.
peeled
railroad killer Angel Maturi- , of hts
lnend on ratlroad tracks
.
Lands End .............................39~.
Limited ......................... ,, .......43"!.
no Resendi z has been indicled on
Oak Hill Fln1.. ....................... 1'7"Ao murder and other felony charges in
OVB ..................:.......................34 the de~th of.a University of Kentucky
(USPS 113-Mf)
DAYTON (AP) .:_ The mother of
One Valley .................... !.......36'!.
CommaniiJ Newlpaprr Holdliip. Inc.
a 19-year-old man shot and killed,
Peoples ................................ 27 ~. st udent.
Published every afternoon, Monday llirough
Resendi z. 40, is suspected of nine
allegedly by a man who was under
Prem Flnl .............................. 13'1•
Friday, lll Court St., POmeroy, Ohio, by the
in Kentucky, Texas and Illislayings
house
arreSt,
has
filed
a
!"rongful'
Rockwall ........................... 57~.
Ohio VJIIey Publishins Comptny. Secon;d dus
nois.
The
drifter
from
Mex
ico
alrci
1
dy
dea!h
lawsuit
against
the
city,
MontAD/Shell
................................
65'
1
.
postage piid It Pomeroy. OhtO.
Member: The Asioci-'ed Press and the Ohio
S~ars ..•..••..•...•.........•.......•...•39 1 ~.
has been charged with multiple ·
g'!rnery County .and the polic'e aod
Newspaper A$1ociill ioft. :
Shoney's
................................
2'
1
•
co unts of murder in Texas and Illisheriff"s departments.
. p .,. Mtcr:' .S.nd address oorreaioll5 10 l;hc
Wendy's ............................... 26~1. nois.
Dally Scnl:inel, 111 Court St., POmeroy, Ohio
· Sheila Kennerly is seeking $10
Worthington .....•....••.•••..•;.. ,.14'~.
4l769.
Fayelle County prosecutors said
million for compensatory and puniSUBSCRimoN RATES
they will seek the death penalty for
BJ C.rricr or Motor Route
tive damages and $500,000 for loss
One W..k ................................ l2.0Q
Rese ndiz, who was indicted M o nday
of her son, Byron Kennerly, who was
One Month ... ..•••••••. :.................. $8.70 .
Stock
reports
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10:30
by a Fayette County grand jury fur
shot July
13 in the neck. The lawsuit
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Helen Ruth Bosler

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-·

·-MRIDD issue going back

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.

�-~ports

The Daily Sentinel
.

.

·

Browns' return ends three-year absence

Tuesday,August10,1999

Reds record 4-2
.victory over Pirates

•

.&lt;

Dawson's field goal
pushes Cleveland
past Cowboy~ 20-17

•

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) T he
Cincinnati Reds' chances of ovcnaking the Housto n Astros might have
improved
signifi cantly without gen By TOM WITHERS
fi~id goal with 8:06 remaimng m
eral
manager
Jim Bowden makmg
CAN'ION, Ohio (AP) - Their overtime for the Browns, who had a
another move.
prizedrookiequartcrbackplayed like .c hance 10 win in regulation. But
Denny Neagle look s like he' s
a seasoned veteran. So did the first- Danny Kight missed a 47-yarrler as
bad . '
,
year cornerback. The defense was as time expired .
Neagle has been bothered all seatough as advertised and their special
The winning drive was set up by
son by a weakened left shoulder tnat.
teams were terrific.
rookie
t.:ornerback. · Dayto n
in turn weakened the Reds' rotation.
Bo,m again after three years. the McCutcheon ·s second iinercep(ion.
Unlil Monday, he had n ot , lasted
Cleveland Browns aren't a typical
"This is a great stan for me ," said
longerthan si&lt; inn ings in eig ht stans.
expansion team . And in their dcbu1 McCutcheon.
whose
father,
But Neagle looked like the 20'Monday night on natio nal TV,' they Lawreru;e. a former NFL running
game winner he was two years ago
didn't play like one .
back. was in the stands. " But that's
for Atlanta, allowing one hit in seven
Capping a night of pageantry and all it was. Now. I have to build o n
innin gs- Warren Morri s' homer pass iOn, the new Browns made a 'ic- Ihis. We all have to, build o n thi s."
in beaJing the Piusburgh Pirate s 4-2.
tOrious return lo,the NFL with a 20Browns rookie quarterback Tim
'' He . did what Denny Neagle
17 overtime victory againSI the Co uch dazzled in his pro debuL
docs... Pirates manager Ge ne
Dallas Cowboys in the Hall,.of Fame C 0 uch. the No. I o ver;~ll pi&lt;;k in
Lamont said: " He changed speed s
Apn l's college draft · showed grc a~
game.
and was tough on right- handed hitFor the BroWns and Lhe ir fans . poise m his .first appearance in an
ters. 11 would be a real boost to those
there couldn
' t be a swecrcr erldtng 't i·J NFL unifom1 .
. .
guys if he' is healthy."
their three-year comebac k.
He compleled 11 of 17 passes for
YOU 'RE THE MAN I - Cleveland kicker Phil Dawson (center) is
He has already made a difference.
" I think whar was 1mpressl\e " 137, yards and a touc hdo wn , and ran hoisted airborne by teammates Pete Swanson and lril Smith (82)
Neagle (3 -3) is 3-0 with a 2.89
after Dawson's 20-yard overtime field goal gave the Browns a ·20-17 ERA in fhrce starts since commg oft
how we won i1." said lin ebacker 1wice for 14-1 yard s.
Chris Spielman. who plaved his llr&gt;l
Aflcr replacing starter Ty Detmer win over Dallas in the Hall of Fame Game Monday night in Canton, Jhe di sabl ed list for the second time
game in '"'" years . " We compc1ed . early in th e second quaner. Couch Ohio. (AP)
I'll tell you \~/hat. we ·re going to ht! .1_ O\'Cnhrew his fir s t a11emp1 be fo r~ ~~::.l.::::J..""":"':"'--~'"':"~':'::'~:-~=::--:;:::::'7:;:"::':~;:::;:::::;;)"f,;:::­
compctilive foOl ball leam."
completing 10 straig h1. He anJ rook - Policy grin ned from car to oar tal king quarter. Troy Aikman fini shed 9- tor'-nut
Bro wns
I I for S5 )'ards in limited act ion.
Before rhc BrO\\IiS stan )!Cttinp i~ Kev in John sn n hookt.!'d up f or 'L-l- ·all
.. · Cou··h
... · , ·,e·ned bc1he
J
. •
1
h
d
to
a
scven-vear.
$59
million
deal
"l thought Jason executed theh
ahead of lhcm.sclvcs. 1hcir· pcrfor- .' ·ard scoring r ay '" 1 c sccon quarol'fc nse very we ll ," Dallas coac
bel.ore dral't da ·'" ·
mancc wasn't nawless. But for an . t ~r. IZi\'i nl:! 1he Browns a 14-7 Icad .
• goo d to get
· t hat ,t"1rst
"You saw a lillie bit of whv. ·we Chan G ai ley said.
cx pa n, io n franchise given J·ust I I
"' It was
" wanted him ." Poli c)' said. " A lillie
But whether they had won or lost.
mpmhs to get ready fpr its· first ¥a me to uchdown pass. ·out o r Ihe way,
b.,,... .
the ni glll belonged to Cleve land ~nd
.
- Jacksonville an'd Carolina had Couch said . "Espec ially to ge t it to
the Browns. whose lirst win al so
ANAHEIM. Cliif. (AP)
Jason Garrell threw .two touchtwo vears - the Browns ar&lt; off to a Kevin. Hopdully. thai will be the
o.·ses
came in Chris Pa.lmer"s · d,ebut a~ an Whatever Barto lo Colon did against
d own ruflying- slart.
. fitst of m~ny for us ...
''i ' t'or D"llas
..
• ,,,h,··:-h
.:. rest·~d
....
th e Anaheim Angel s. he ought to bot·
Phil Dawson kicked a 20-yard
Cleveland president Carmen moSI of iiS regulars after the first NFL head coach. ·
" It wa S emotionaL ·· Palmer said . ti e it and se ll it.
" h was an incredible night for
" Th is is for 1he fari s of Cleveland .
Bartolo:·· batterymate Jesse Levi s
Th ey've suffered for lhree year&gt;."
Browns fans hadn ' t been able to sa id Monday ni g hl afier Colon
cheer 1hc ir beloved learn since Dec . pitched a ~eve n - hitter for his third
17, 1995, the final game at Cleveland career shutoul in the Cl eve land
Stadium after former ow ner Art Indi ans' 4-0 vi c tory.
" He threw the ball as well as anyModell announced he was movi ng
body I've ever caught in the bi g
his team to Baltimore.
But o nce MQdell left and the leagues'. He. was just do min atin g."
shock wore off, Cleveland ·fou ght Levi s said . " it 's a lot of fun catching
back and con'vinced the NFL to bring a 'guy wh6'.s always around the di sh
a learn back in 1999. The league .also . and throws as hard as he does with
agreed to · keep the . new team's nick· movement on the ball . Yo u feel like
you' re in a rocking chair. "
name. colors and history the same.
The complete game was the secTo showcase· the Browns' return,
ond
this year by the Indian s and first
the league switched this year's Hall
of Fame game from .Saturday to for Colon (11 -4). who pitched six of
Monday night so a prime-time audi- Cleveland•s nine complete games
ence could see the new Browns ' last season. The righl -hander had
debut.
five strikeouts, no walks and threw a
" It's a proud night for the NFJ.; season-high 128 pitches. ·
·
and Cleveland," commissioner Paul
" I gel really strong in the late
Tagliabue said moments before kick- innings and 1 just tried to go as far as
off. " Now the traditio n and hiSiory I could ,:' Colon_ said with bullpen
coac h Luis Isaac inlerpreting for
' THE SROWNS ARE BACK- The Cleveland . them is Meigs High Schoolteacher and golf coach
(See BROWNS on Page 5)
him . " 'Last year my fir ~ t complete
Brown are back. It has been almost four long ',John Krawsczyn. Krawsczyn decorated his
years since owner Art Modell moved the team to Pomeroy home for Monday evening's Hall of Fam.e
Baltimore, and many local football fans suffered. game between Cleveland and Dallas, leaving rio
The Browns have always had some of the most doubt that he is happy to have them back.
loyal fans in all of profess.ional sports. One of

I

I
I
I

Page~

-

Jul y 30, helping the Reds close within two games of theAstros in the NL
CentraL
The left-hander has lasted longer
with each start , and he seemed eager
to stay in the game when pitching
coach Don Gulleu lifted him follow·
ing a leadoff walk to Adrian Bro)'ln
in the eighth .
·
Neagle said a few words before
leaving the mo und. but insisted afterward he wasn ' t upset .
"I' m geuing bener, but I'm still
not there as far as sharpness and conIJol ," Neagle said. " I know that's
Iough to say with the results 1 ~~d.
but I know when I'm on my gam,
II 'S rea! l.Y a ~ood sign ~~~II can win
when l m still not there.
.
;
·
ll's also a good Sign any ume the
Reds take 10 the road . .
·
They have~ won 32 ot the1r last 4.2
away from C1ncrgy F1eld, and thell'
37- 16 road record is better than thy ·
home mark of any team except
Oakland .
.
.:
" You start playmg well o n ~~~
road , and 11 builds confidence . .
(See REDS on Page 5)

Indians notch 4-0
win over.Anaheim
'

.•

Scoreboard
'

San Francisco

Baseball

'

~L

L o~ An gele~
Col or~d o

standings

·&gt;

~
'Ntw York

Terunto .. .
:&amp;,ston
Jhlu more ....
~mp(l Bay ·

SS S4
52 60
50 62

San Diego

. 69

L

~l

Gll

....... .. 63

51

,.

lS I
..49

6-1

Monda)''s scores

Eastrrn Di,·ision

:.!:

48

1'

·~I

6.1

20

47 65

"

l"INC!NNAT I 4. Pinsl:&gt;ur!!h 2
Mnntrea l ~.S an 0JC!' l1 0
Flond:1 5. Sau Ft .tnt:ISL:O 4
i\tl anlil 5. H o u ~fnn J
St Louts 12. Phtlade lphia 6
l.o~ An !'-l'ie~ '1 . Nc1.1. Yor ~ 1
Ari7ona I 0, Chtt:ilgo 7

51/ot
464
..W6
-1 ~'1

Transactions

Mt h1:mlo.L.._. 7

(o lt)r~ffi,

(See INDIANS on Page 5)

rJusinesses rJe Sure di
(Je II Part
Of ~his Year's
I

•

.

Special J .a ll Sports
Preview Edition/

Baseball
A.mtrican Ltague
AL Suspt!ndt'd Seattle Marim:rs RHP Fra nktc
. R O llri guclS~ I' CII grunes nnd New York Ynnkec5 RHP
Jason Gnm&gt;lt!y thrct! !£&lt;lilies. omc.l lined b01h players
an undt s do s~ d nmounl for ~ct t oms th nt led 10 a brawl ,
l.lu rmg Fnday ~ ~ ilrnc .
ANA HEIM 1\NGELS Unco'nd]ltO II.illv n:lcascd
RHP J:ld. McDowell Re ~nllt=d RHP Lou i•otc from

h t1nonton of !he I'CL
CLEVELAND INDIANS . Placet! RHP Jnret
Crnlral Dh'ision
\\ ng.ht on the I 5-Uay d t ~~b led li s i.~Oes igmue cl LHP
O.EVEli\ ND .
... . '.. 67 44
TOOa]r'S 2ames
Chri ~ H&lt;~nq' :md RHP Jeff Tam fo n assignment.
Ot kago .
.'i I 59
'-'
Arimna t t\ndc,:rson ""-~l at lh t cn~n H tdxr l:l-51. A,;u'ah:d LHPTom Mnrti n from the Li-day dis&lt;1blcd
Min~soln
H
~:!
IY
!!' 20 P m
•
~
1
hst Ra.·:1lled RH P Dn\'td Riske from Buthlo of the.
Kans&lt;~~ Ci ty .
-16 65
21
Los Anteks t\':t ldo:~ R- 10) at M•, ntrt'al (Thurman Jnternauonal League:.
.!' .
Det rotl
-1-l 07
_. _7). 7 0~ II m
KANSA S CJn' ROYALS : Mll\'atcd RHP Jdt
San Fran.::t ~.::r- !Gardner -~-9) ~~ Fhm1b t Num:£ ""· Munt)!;omcry and RH P Terry M:nhews fro m the 15Wutrm Uh·iston
•
SJ. 7 05 p m
dily dt ~abled li st Opti oned RHP Ken Ra} to Onmlm
, , r. \ 66
-'5
W5
TC)I,I\S ,
CINC IN NATI {Guzman 0:1 I .u Ptusburgh of the PCL. Sem RHP Bri an Bar~r nutri ghr rcy
.. . . . 60 51
~-~6
Onkland
6
{Schourcf.. J -5). 7:0:ii p.m
Omaha
Seattle ..
. .. .. .'i4 .~8
482
!June n~L 5-I ~ ) m Phtladelrlua fPmo n
TORONTO BLU E JAY S Plal'Cd IN F Cnug '
.. -'6 65 41 ..
Anuhet m ... , ..
:o 6-.~J..St 7~11m
.i.i PIll
.
Grebed on the IS,day di iab led list, retroacth'C 10
•
I
Sail Dt(;'l&lt;l.l lrhhb~ 1{)-.'il at New York tRog~rs 1- Au[!.. 5. Rct•n llcd INF (hm WoodWard fr om
Monday 1s scores
01 'lAO p nl
Syra..:u•~ ol' the lnterri:lllonnl League.
KMSllJ City 5. Bos,ton 1
.
Houston ( R~ ) no lds 1&lt;+-7) ~ ~ Atlnnll1 {Gl:i\'inc 9National L:.eagu~
TDmp a Bay 10. Balumore I)
9). 7:40pm
COLORADO ROCKIES: Traded OF Brt.an
" Toronto 19, Te.oias 4
Colorado l A sta~t o . l 2-9 'l at Mihli!Uiket: {P&lt;iter§ on ~kRac to th~ Toronto Blue Jays for u player to be
' Seallfe 6. Chicago 4
·
l -1). M.05 p m.
·
. named.
·
f
; CLEVElAND ·4. Anaheun 0
MONTREAL EXPOS. Placed SS. Orl an do
"• New York. 11. Oakl and 8
Wednesday's games
Cabre ra on 15-da) d1sahl ed li st Purchased the co n·
·San r-ranet~co (Estd 7-7) at Fl on da !Fernandez traL: t of SS Geoff Bl um from Ouawa of the
\.,
Today's games
6-7). I 05 p m.
lntemn!lona l ~ag ue OJl(IOned KH P ) .D. Sm ar1 to
New York (Clemens 10-4} at Oakland tOh 1•are •
: Co lorad o {H M. Jones 5-9) at Milwaukee Ouawn.
~). 4,05 p.m:
(Woodard 11 -61.1:05 p m.
NEW 'YORK METS. Placed RHP Rick Reed on
" Baltimore (Po n ~on 10. 7) at Tampa Ba y (Erland 2Arizona (R_ Johnson ll -8) at Chicago (LorrDinc.·
the 15-day disabled hst Recalled RliP Dan ,\1urray
!11. 7'05 p.m.
fJU m Norfolk of the International U!ague.
1-0), 1·20 p m .
"' Toronto (Escobar IJ.8) at Mi nnesota (Radke 8Los Angeles (Park 6-9 ) at Montreal (Smith J-61.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS. Optioned INF
JO), 8:05pm.
7·0 5 p m
Edwards GuLman to Fresno of the Poc tfic Corut
; Boston (Rose 6-4) at Kansas City (Witasick 4-9 ).
CINCINNATI (\fill one 6-4) at PtiiSburgh Lcar,uc Recnlkd C Doug Mtr abelh from Fresno
8;Dl p.m.
(Sc hmidt 10- 8). 7:05 p.m.
• Detroit (fhompson 9-10) at Texas (Loaiza 4- 1). . St. "Louh (Stephtnson 2-0 J at Philadelphta (Wo lf
Brui.ketball
1!,35 p.m.
.
~ - 3) . 7:35 p.m.
,
National
Basketball Assoc:lation
.. CLEVELAND (Langston 1-1 l at Ana heim
San Diego (Hitchcock 11 -8) at New York (Dote!
LOS ANG ELES CLIPPERS: Re-stgned F
(~nler 6'10). IO,Ol pm
4- 1). 7:40p.m.
Tyrone:: Ne.~ by to a thri!e-yur Contract.
,. Oucigo (Sirotka 7-10) at Seattle (Moyer 10-6J.
l-iouston (Ltma 15-6) at Allnnta '(Maddu~ IJ -6),
MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Signed G HaywoOde
ID:05 p.m.
.
.
7:40p.m.
Workman t-o a one -year contract. ,
NEW JERSEY NETS: Agreed to terms wuh F
Scott Burrell JJO a one-year cootract and C Evan
Boston
&lt;Rete herr
Esc hmeyer on a mulli year cqotract
.
t.O).
p.m
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS:. Waived C Cuey
• 81ltimore (Mussina IJ-7) a1 Tampa Bay (Arrojo
Shaw
2._7), 7 : ~ p.m.
-SEATILE SUPER,SONICS: Signed G Vernon
• Toronto (Carpenter 8-5) at Mmnesota (Milto r~ 4Mu. w!'lllo a three-year contract
Sl Ul5p.m. ·
Eastern COnference
~ Detroit (Blair I -8) at Texas (Helling 8-7), R : J~
Football
· ~Lf&lt;l.
Iwo
!ill
National Football Ltagut
New
York
15
11
577
~CLEVELAND (Burba 8-7&gt; at Anahdm (SparkS
CINCINNATl BENGALS: WatYed LH Tim
Eharloue
..... 15 IJ 5.\6
I
3-8), 10:35 p. m. ,
Terry. G Scon Shaw and K Derek Schorejs
J
• New York (0. Hernandez 12-7 1 at Oakland [JcotrOII
. 12 '"' -'6::!
GREEN DAY PACKERS: Waived WR MichiiC I
Orl ando .
. 10 16 J 8S
l
(Qiivares 9-9), 10.35 p.m.
Vaughn.
.
,
&lt;'.
. .... 10 17
170
Chicago (Navarro 7-9) at Seattle (Abbou 1·0). Wa ~h 1n~ 10 n .
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS. Terrtu nated tl~ ~o n ­
9•
CLEVELAND
6
ll
221
10,35 p.m.
tract of DB Ray McElroy Placed C Philip Armour on
lllJured r\!Str''e ·
.
Western Conference
JACKSONV ILL E JAGU ARS· StBned (:El
Houswn . ......
21 5 808
Fernando Bry' m to a li Yt"-)'t&lt;~r c omraL:t Stgned OT
1
Lo s Ar~ge les
. ... r7 B MO
Mi~.c Webstef WruY~d WR Tory Taylor and DE
Ea.st~ rn Division
4'
Sacmmen1o
,. 17 I 0 630
· Hunter Adam s.
·
\!: L fi:L
y
lWD
!ill Minnesota ... .
. ... J 2 14 -'62
NEW '(OR~ fo iA,NTS: S1gncd DE M11: hael
Allanta
.. 68 46 .l%
1
9
Phoeni x
;. 12 I"" 4 6~
Stm han to a four-year contr:tl'L
67 46 59\
New York:
Ut&lt;~h
11 l."i .J21
10
WASHING IUN REDSKINS R elen~ed S
Philadelphia ... ""\'
61 ll
~ -~ -~
M
'
o
rcus
Str:~ntbn Signed S Wrndell Drm s
4l
Jl,\
Mont~n l .
64
~o ·
Mondav's scores
45
Flortda
19K
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Uta h 67. Cltnrloue 65
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fl-' .J9, ~M

'

Thursday, August 26, 1999
e'Meigs Marauders
• Southern Tornadoes
e'Eastern E

game in the bi g leag ues was here in
Anaheim , so I really wanted to go
nine.' '
Colon allowed o nly one baserunner as fa r as third. but slipped a
, call ed third strike pas t Darin Erstao
to end Ihe seventh-inniQg threat.
"llhought one of the best pitch06.
he made ail night w'as the strik e thr~
pitch he made to Erstad - a fastball
in," indians manager Mike Hargrow::
said. " He set that up real well."
Colo n has emerged as one of the
top contrOl · pitche_rs in the majors
because ·of a slight adjustment suggested by pitching coach Phil Regan ,
·who told Colon to shift his back foot
from o ne side of the pitching rubber
to the other.
''I've been listenin g to Phil , and
now my mechani cs are 'right. That's
why I'm able to throw a lot of
stri kes ," Colon said.
" He moved me from the left s ide
to ihe right side of the rubber arid
told me to stay on top of the baiL i
was d~opping my arm a little bit ·and
my ann was too low at the beginning

6

(s:!~a';~~r:~ ~!r:!e~uy
l,os

Basketball

lI

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"

l;ty JOSH DUBOW
AP Sports Writer
A ·n!versed call by the umpires
robbed Pascual Matos ' of his first
career home run .
Ali was not lost for the Atlanta
Braves' rookie catcher, who was a
liero twice in one ar-bat and got to
keep the ball from his first major
.
.
league hit.
After umpires changed their call
and turned a three-run ho mer into a
foul bail , Matos followed with a tworun, tiebreaking single in the eighth
inning to give Atlanta a 5-3 victory
ove~ the Houston Astros on Monday
night.
"If I die tomorrow," Miuos said,
·~that 's OK." ·
Matos retrieved the ball ·after hi s

Advertising Deadline·Thursday, August 19, 1999
Ca ll 992 "2155 Duvc ul Ext. 104
or Kath y at Ext . I 05
For Moo·e Info rmati on

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

two-run single and plans to send it to
his parents in the Bronx .
The Braves, who spent the previous six days in seco nd place,
reclaimed the lop spot in the NL East
by a half-game over the New York
Mets, who were routed 9-2 by Los
Angeles.
.
Matos, 0-for-7 in his major league
career, came up wilh one out and
runners on second and third in a 3-3
game.
On the first pitch from Doug
Henry ( 1-2), Matos se nt a towering
drive down the left-field line that
was initially ruled a homer by third.base umpire Larry Vanover.
" I saw it curve in front of the foul
pole five or seven inches," ·Malos
said. " When he called it fair, I told
myself to run the bases fast or maybe
·
he 'll change his mind."
Matos made it to the dugout and
began celebrating with his team ..
mates. 11te Astros argued and after a

brief di scussion betwee n the
umpires, Matos was called back from
the dugout.
Matos then lined a single past a
di \'ing Russ Johnso n at third to score
Ryan Klesko and Andruw Jones with
the tiebreaking run s.
'' I told myself, 'Oh. man, I' ve got
to hit again ,"' Mat os recalled. " But!
tried again to hit the bali hard and I
got it between third and shortstop. I
was still happy. "
In other NL games, it was St.
Louis 12, Philadelphia 6 ; Florida 5,
San F[llncisco 4 ; Montreal 8, San
Di ego 0; Arizona 10, C hicago 7; ant;l
Milwau,kee 7, Colorado 6 .
Dodgers 9, Mets 2
At New York , Kevin Brown ( 136) all owed two hits in seven scoreless innings before leaving with a
bl ister o n a finger o n his right hand .
Brown won his fourt h straight
dec ision as the Dodgers took three of
four from the Met s. w ho had led the

Nl East since Aug. 2. New York has
lost three straight for the first time
since an eight-game sk1d ended June
6.
Orel Hershiser ( 11 -9) ai lowed
three runs , six hits and five walks in
five inning s. Eric Karras had four
RBis.
Cardinals 12, Phillies 6
AI Philadelp~ia. Fernando Tatis
hit his third grand siam of the season
for St. Louis .
Tatis, who hit two grand slam s in
the same inning April 23 at Los
A ngeles. hit hi s third on Billy
Brewer's first pile~ in a five·r~n
fou nh.
,
J.D . Drew, the Cardinals o utfielder who is disliked in Phil adelphia
because he refu sed 10 sig n with the
Phi !lies after the 1997 draft, did not
play due to a bruised rig ht hand, but
was booed lou dl y during balling
practice .
.
Ron Gant homered 1wice for the

Ph illies .
Kent Merc ker (5-4) allowed four
hilS in the f1rst inning, but only two
after that. Steve Schrenk ( 1-2) took
1he loss.
Diamondbacks 10, Cubs 7
Matt William s keyed a six-ron
eighth with a go-ahead RBI si ngle
off Scoll Sanders (4-6) as Arizona
won in Chicago, overcoming Sammy
Sosa 's 43rd homer.
· Willi ams also had a 1wo-run single as A rizona won for the 15th time
in 19 games . The Cubs have lost nine
·or'12.
'
Omar Daal (I 1-6) won . for the
,eighth time in 10 decisio ns, giv ing
up two run s and four hits in s~ven
innings. ·
Marlins 5, Giants 4
AI Miami . Mik e Lowell hil h1s
first career grand slam and Dave
Berg hit an RBI .single off John
John sto ne (4 -5) in lhe ninth as
Florida rallied from a 4-0 defib t

Lowell 's s lam ti ed the game in the
eighth , spoiling what would have
been a triumphant return for Livan
Hernandez, traded by the Marlins
last month.
Jesu s Sanchez (3-4) got two .o ots
for the win.
Expos 8, Padres 0
.
At Mo ntreal, Jeremy Powell (1-4)
allowed six hits in eight innings and
Jose Vidro hit his first career grand
slam as lhe Expos won for lhe eighth
time in 10 games .
Man Clemem (5- 11 ) look the loss.
Brewers 7, Rockies 6
At Milwaukee, Mark U&gt;retta singled ho ~e the winning · run in the
ninth inning off Dave Veres (2-4) to
hand Colorado iiS founh straight
loss.
Angel Echevarria hit a rwo-out;
two-ru n homer in the ninth off Bob
Wickman (3-5) to ti e it at 6.

e·u hner's grand slam· ·breaks record, helps Mariners win 6-4
American League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Carlos Delgado and the Toronto
Biw Jays started the hit parade in
Texas ..Berni e Willi ams and Jay
Buhner fini shed it on the West Coast.
The Blue Jays got a team-recgrd
25 h its, including Delgado's fifth
h&lt;;&gt;mer in four games, and routed '· the
Rangers 19-4 Monday night
" It was fun , you have to enj oy it, 1 ~
Delgado said . " Next time it could be
the other way around."
Later, Willi ams hit a grand slam

for the New Yo rk Yankees and Jay
Buhner hit o ne for the Seattle
Mariners.
'
. Combined with earlier shots by
Fernando Tatis of St. Louis, Jose
Vidro of Montreal and Mike Lowell
of Florida, the five grand slams were
the most ever in one day in the
majors. Bohner 's s lam a~ Safeco
Field broke the record.
'·I did ?" Btihner said. " Ri ght on.
That's cool ."
Texas was 17-3 since the Ali-Star
break until Tcjronto.came to 1own and
won three o f four.
Horner ·Bush,. who homered·, and
Jacob Brumfield each had four hits
as the Blu e Jays broke the club
record of 24 se t on June 26, 1978.

against Baltimore .
In olher AL games. Kan sas City
Shawn Green and Tony Batista b e~! Boston 5-2 and Tampa Bay
also ho,;ered for the Toronl o. The 25 defeated Ballimo re 10-9 .
. hits were the most ever all owed hy
Yankees 12, Athletics 8
the Range rs, and tied 1he AL season
New York scored eight run s in the
high set by Baltimore aga mSI A1lama second inn ing. capped by Williams'
on June 13.
sixlh slam. to wi n at Oakl and
"It was une of those nig hts Jhat
. William s took a 2-2 pitch I hal he
every thin g they hil was either tho ught was low and began IJolling
smoked o r topped ," Ran gers manag- 10 first base. With his 1ea rnma1es
cr Joh nny Oates said . " Everyt hing la ughin g o n the bench . Willi aim
1hey hn fell m." .
returned to th e plate and hi1 the neXI
Texas reliever Doug Davis had a ·pitch ove r th e righl- fi~ ld wall .
''rough major league debut, ge ttinF
Chuck Kn ob lauch. Derek Je ter
· tagged for Jtl runs and II hits in 4' and Ricky Ledec also ho mered as the
innings. He gave .up a three- run Yankees won their sixth in a row.
homer to Green on hi s thi rd pitch and
Yankees statler Hideki lrabu was
later a ll owed home runs hy Ba! ista given an 8-0 lead, but lasted on ly
and Bush.
four inning s and gave up six runs.

Mariners 6, White Sox 4
Bohner hil hi s ciehth ca reci slam .
helping Scaule slO-p iiS fiyc -gamc
losi ng s1reak. Cbicag o lost its fifth in
a- row.
. Bohner had been 0-for-4 wi1h the
bases loaded this year before ho mering off Jo hn Snyder.
Gil Meche {3-2) walked fo ur early
in the game. but the 20·year-old
rookie senl ed down fo r the vic tory.
Rovals 5, Red Sox 2
Jermame Dye homered tw1cc and
•. Jeff .Suppan pitched a four-hiller
against hi s forme r team as Kan sas
City· won' at honie.
Johnny Damon ,tripled, doubl ed,
si'ngled and d rove in three run s as the
Royals· ended th eir four-game losmg

slreak. BaSion had won three in a
ro w.
Suppan (7 -6) was 1aken by
Arizona after the Red Sox did not
protec t him m the 1997 expa nsion
draft
Devil Rays 10, Orioles 9
Paul Sorren10 homered for the
secpn d &gt;traigh1 day and Tampa Bay
· beal Ball1m ore .for the sixth slraighl
time.
Sorre n1o hi 1 a 1wo-run shot off
Jason ' John son. who made hi s first
start again st his form er team.
. , The crowd of 17,796 at Tropicana
Field was.down from the 35.729 the
Devil Rays averaged
again.st
Cleveland with Wade Boggs trying
for his 3,000th hit.

Starzz, Liberty, Shock post wins; Mercury defeats Lyn'x 64-55
WNBA roundup
· SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
Margo Dydek had 14 points, eight
rebounds, six assists and five blocks
to lead the Utah Starzz to a 67-65
~ictory over the Charlotte Sting o~
Monday night.
·
After trailing 66-60, the Sting
(15-13) closed to 66-65 with 1:51
remaining on a layup by Dawn
Staley, but did not score again .
Natalie Williams , who finisped

with I 0 points and II rebounds, (10-16). The win, combined with
added a free throw for the Starzz
(11 - iS) with·I.O seconds left.
Rhonda Mapp scored I 5 points to
lead the Sting, who trail New. York
by one game for first in the Eastern
Conference.
' Liberty 80, Miracle 75
At _Orlando,
Fla .,' Crystal
Robinson scored I 8 points to lead
five New York players in,double fig ures . .
It was New York 's fourth win in
· five games, as it swept the fourgame season series from the Miracle

Charlolle's 67-65 loss at Utah on

64-44 advantage with 9: II remaining . ·
DeLisha Mi Iton had 16 and
La' Kesh ia Frett 12 for U&gt;s Angeles
(17 -8.). ,
I
Mercury 64, Lynx SS
At Phoeni&lt;. Maria Stepanova had
, 12 points and 13 rebounds for her
third consecutive double-t;louble.
Jennifer Gillum added !5 points
for the Merc ury (12: 14). who pulled
even with the Lynx for fourth in the
Western Conference. The. victory
was Phoe ni &lt; 's eighth straight at
home, a single-season club record .
Tonya Edwards scored I 8, while
Katie Smith and Brandy Reed each
added 12 to lead Minnesota (12-14),
which has lqst four straight and six
of seven.

Reds win ... (Continued from Page 4)
Lamont. said. "They' ve won quite a nation to strike out Morri s, who hit ·a
few late in the game, they've got · two-run homer i.n the fifth after first
some speed and power and their baseman Sean Casey and second
bullpen is real good ."
·
baseman Pokey Reese let Sprague's
- The bullpen wa s good. again popup fall between them.
l\ilonday as rookie Scott Williamson
"I w"'!. feeling real strong and I
r:ritched the final two innings for his was overthrowing . .my fastball,"
f6th save to go with 10 victories.
Williamson said. " This was a learn: "Jt 's hard to think he' s nor the · ing . experien ce for me . Againsl
rookie of the year," Neagle said . -Cleveland, I didn 't have my fastball
'!The kid is amazing . He's not only a and I kept trying to throw it . Tonight
Jtood pitcher." but he' s getting smarter I" as one of those nights, so I used the
with each outing. He to ld · me after fa stball as a setup pitch."
the game that he couidn 't find hi s
The Reds, 41 - 12 when they score
·fastball, and I told him that' s why first , look a 1-0 lead in the first on
;iou go with that slider."
Mike Cameron's leadoff double - ·williamson went with it in the he has five' hits in two games- and
.ninth afler Abraham Nunez singled shortstop Nunez's throwing error on
a·'\d- Kevin Young walked with one ' Dn\ilri Young 's grounder.
out .to pullhe potential tymg ru~ on
Cameron had a two-run single in
base. He got ahead· in 1he count the Reds' three-run fifth against Todd
against Ed Sprague withlwo sliders, Ritchie· (10-8), wh o had won four of
then struck him our ·with a split-fin; hi s previ ous five · de cision s. He
allowed seven hit s and four runs,
ger fastball..
Williamson used the same ,combi- three earned, in eight innings.

Browns win ...

NL standings

I

National League
roundup

KNOCKED AWAY- Charlotte
cent!!r Rhonda Mapp (left) finds
the basketball knocked out of·
her hands by Utah's Natalie
Williams (right) in the first hail of
Monday night's WNBA contest in
Salt Lake City, where lhe Stariz
won 67-55. (AP)
'
· ·

'

Larry Doby, the American
League' s first black player, debuted
·in 1947 as . a ·pinch hiner for the
Cleveland Ind ians . He s1ruck.ou1 .
In 1952 . Maureen Con nolly"
won lh e firs1 ·of lhree straighl
wome'n·s
Sing lq
titles
atWtmhlcdon · by beati ng LoUi se
Bro ugh 6-4. b-3.

•

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MAY ASSIST.YOIJ WITH
MEDICAE COVERAQE
~
. \ '\I '
-;
'
) ., FOB .YO
l'
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(Continued from Page 4)

of the season."
ninth inni~g s," Angels manager
Col on, whose previo us shut,out Terry Collins said. "I don ' t think he
was a four-hitter against . Pittsburgh even had to use his curveball much .
on June ·g, 1998, won for the fi(th He was dominating , but we hit some
time in six decisions.
balls hard. The doubl e play balls
· II was the third time i'n five starts were hit hard ." · .
·
that he pitched at least eight inn,ngs
Roberto Alomar and .E nrique
without issuing a walk. Colon went Wilson drove in the first two runs
3-0 to his final batter, Tim Salmon, with sacrifice flies ofi'Ken Hili (4but came back to get him on a called II). Jim Thome had an RBI double
and Manny Ramirez led off the
third strike.
"Early this year, Ban was a little eighth with his 29th homer to help
inconsistent . and pitched behind a the AL Central leaders hand the
lo t, " Hargrove said. " But in hi s last ·: Angels their 20th loss in 24 games.
Hill allowed three runs and eight
five starts, he 's gotten himself under
control , as far as locating his pitches hits in six innings and lost for the
and staying ahead of the hitters ."
seventh time in eight decisions:
" ltl)rcw the ball good, but! lost,"
: The Angels , who have been shut
oot five times in 17 games, had lead- the right-hander said following his
off singles in four co nsecutiv e ' IOOth career defeat. " You . can't get
. innings . But Colon retired the next satisfaction out of losing . It doesn't_
hitter in three Of those innings on matter how good you ,pitch. It 's just .
double-play grounders.
fru strating. I'm doing the best I can
; "He was stili throwing the ball do. "
9!!-99 miles an hour in the eighth and .

WNBA standings

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Matos loses ho·mer,· but still helps Brav~s defeat Astros 5-3 ·

Indians win ...

"

'i

T~sday,August10,1999

(Continued from Page 4)

cim go on for another century. "
: Clad in brown and orange, some
wearing jerseys with names like
K:Usar. Brown and Kelly stitched o n
their backs, Brow ns fans arrived
e~rly to tailgate in parking lots and
on · tree· lin ed side stre ets before
walking to Fawceu Stadium, packed
with a record 25. 156 fans .
" We ' ve wahed three years ," said
Scoll Moot of Canl on . " No1hing
matters now. our Bro\v ns are hack.' :
h en the Cowboys were happy IO
. sec the o ld orange h e l met ~ agai n.
" lr 's e:o()d to sec 1hc Dawg Pound
back in the NFL." Aik man s~id .
AI limes, the Brown s loo ked like
any first -year fr anchiSe. Th~y com-

mined three straight penalt ies o n a
dri ve in the first qu arter, and were
guilty of II · infraction s . overall.
Dallas· was even sloppier with 17
penal ties.
But Cle\'eland 's defen se, expec ted to carry the team, forced four
turn overs. Corey Fuller picked off a
p~ss from Aikman in the back of the
end zone to stop one drive.
" Thi s was everything I expected
and more, " said Clcvclilnd defen si ve
tackle Jen·y BHII, one of three carry overs on Jhc r&lt;1stcr from the ol d
Browns. ·· \Ve hau led . Wc we nt to
overtime and we WOf.l . Ynu can ' t· get
bcn cr than 1ha1. The Cleve land
Browns ca me back a winner.··

'&lt;);

YOIJ MAY
IP YOIJR'
I!AMII.'I
.
INCOME IS ·AT.~ OR
III~LOW 185 PER.CENT
OF .JlEDERAL
'

&lt; •

MEDICAL
ELIGIBILITY

·;\ jffq;,

*Family Size

'

• ;t'

.

•Annuallnr~_.

1

t ....... ~ ...........................:$12,948
2 ................... ~ ..... ~ ..... ~~$17,7-96
3..._....... ~t~~••••-~················~··· $~1 '756
' . .&gt; .:

$ '
4 •••••••• •••••••••••'•••••P••••••••
.$~6,856
•

(740). 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608

&gt; :0,

1..~ ,, •• •••'•• ...... , ••••

'

••

···········\!·•··· $31,452
'

·;

)

..

*Family must contain at least one child under aae

18.

..

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'

~lated e~s,

**Certain work
such as
care, may not count against income in
determining eUglbility.

i

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I

•••

G1JID.Ilp~~-~

CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATIO~

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PROGRAM

ME1GS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN' SERVICES

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Tueeday,August1~1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

B The Bend

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

'
T~eaday,August10,1999

.

.,..

.....

A.l:ldrMI Unlcuown ...

1111111 .

tAll J. DAYII

In And See

Larry Schey

1999 HONDA FOREMAN
450 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY
Spon.fored by the
Pomeroy Yolwueer Emergerecy Squad, ltacorporated.

· Tickets: $10.00 Donation Each/1000 Maximum

Drawln1 to h held at 12 pnt on
Sunday Octo ...r 10, 1999
7JiO East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Dear Ann Landers: I recently of sense, she will he graieful for
became. friends with a woman who your concern and thank you .for
is intelligent, funny and easy to he alerting her to the danger.
around. One .thing concerns me,
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
however. On at least three occa- ·and I will soon be married 25 years .
sions, I have seen "Mona" leave her and his' mother has yet to acknowltwo young children in the' car wiih edge a ny o ne of our weddi ng
the windows rolled up and .the air- anniversaries. I don't ex. peel a gl fl or
conditioning turned off.
even a card, but a phone call would
The last time she did thi s, .it was he nice. She lives in the same town.
noon, and the car was parked in the so it isn't as if a ca ll w11uld be
sun. I asked Mona to roll down the expensive. I can think of no reason
windows, but she ~aid the baby was why she chooses· to insulr us thi s
sleeping and she didn't want to wake. way.
him. She was away from the car for
I have always gotten along with
over 20 ·minutes.
my .mother-in-law and helped her
· and it gets extremely hot here . I
don't want to offend Mona. but I
cannot stand by and watch her children p.ut in ham1 's W3): . I'm sure if
Mona sat in that car for 20 minutes
with the air-:onditioning off and the
windows roll ed up. she would see

she

Call 614-843-5426

needed me . She
tell s everyo ne ·what a \l.:onderful

.,

SYRACUSE :___ , Meigs County

L
. ..

.

Business Services
WATER HAULING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

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

•Room addnlqn~ &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages
•Eiectrleat &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Gutters
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Patio &amp; Porch Decks

The-Water-Man ·
740-742-2080

FrH EstimoiH

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohlo

22 yr•· Local

7! 1·6199 1 mo pd

the former Bolin Mills Communiry
Church. Gloria Herdman will ·be the
evangelist. Pastor, Rev. Margaret
Robinson, invites the public.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 , Tuppers Plains, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. meting with dinner
preceding at 6:30 p.m.

Protect ~::inloortant ··
people ·ill
; · our
·life.
. ·.· ~Y.
.·...
· . ·

The aRnual Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council (SEORCi summer
meeting and golf tournament is
planned .for Monday, Aug. 30,.at the
.. . , au now have the ~-of pfl)tectir,lg your family meml-.ers
Chillicothe ,Country Club in Ross
County.
or a business partner with low:cast
Sam Crawford, executive director of SEORC, said .the golf touma10.. &lt;lr 20-year level term'life,
,ment will begin at 8 a.m. and contin'
ue throughout the day . .The tourna. men! and dinner meeting are open to
insurnnce from Auro-Owners
the public. Crawford said. "It is a
good time co visit and relax with
It;Stirance Cofll!llllY. Call us for more
people from across th, region."
Crawford said that tickets for the
late-summer meeting may be pur. details and a ClJTTIP'titive pittXlilll.
chased from SEORC, 837 E. Main
St., Oak Hill, OH 45656, 740-682/896. Banquet tickets are $20.
Go Ifers from throughout south.Aulo-Ownen lluurruu:e
eastern Ohio wi~ compete for prizes
Life Home ,Car Business
in a Callaway Handicap System
71ou.h /loi&amp;.n'il¥4•
Tournament.. Golfers who want to
play should ..call !'?raw ford at 740- · .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,&amp;..::.
682-7896 (or details on golf; cart, .
refreshments and banquet.
214 Eaot Main

To get a current weather
report, check the

KCB

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays .

EXCAVATING

AT 6:30. P.M.,
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Slarbursl
Progressive lop line.
Lie. # 00.50 11MMn

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services

Site Preparation
Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

l-740·985-3949 .
2 mo . pd.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217
Sizes 5' 'x 10'
to 10' ll 30'
Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
Stephen D. Mlleo, Atto~ney
at Law, 18 W. Monument

aealgneu of Timothy D.
Jonll, Whoeo eddreaoee
.,. unknown, wilt hereby
teko notice thai on the
December II, 1898, USDA
Rurel Development, ltlld Ito
Complelnt In Forocloeure
ond Marehallng of Liens In
the Common Pltll Court .ot
Melga County, Ohio, being
C111 No. 98-CV-109 ogotnet
Timothy D. Jon11 end M~ry
Uribe and Robert Scott
Teytor preying tor judgment
In the amounc of $6,661.71
with tnter .. t thereon
according to tho iarme of

Avenue, Dayton, Ohio
'454a2
.

Timothy D. Jonu ,
auppooedly deceased, Jane
Doe, Unknown Spouse of

Timothy D. Joneo, Robert
Scott Tayto• ooid Jane Doe;
Unknown Spouse of Robert
Scott Taylor and II Timothy
D. Jonea ta dtceaaed, all

hetra, devleeee, legateea,
executors, · executrlxv,,

tldminlatratora,
admlnlattatrtxu

and

• Retalalng WaD 8 Brick
PaUo ConsbucUon

500 gaL per day 1200 gal. cap.

HOWARD'S TRI· COUNTY SANITATION

740-742-2566
. Hire a Vet

the nota from October 1,
gf

aald

Mortgage Deed on tho
following dllcrtbed, real
1111te, of which 11id
Dtlendanto, Tlmolhy D.
Jonta and Mary Uribe and
Robert Scott Taylof aro the

·owners or:

JONES'
TREE SERVICE
• TOP

.'{rl"'
• p.e"'o"al
• sw~fng
Gt\1\ ·
.. 20 Yrs: Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

.

administrators,
and

aaolgnoea and Jane Doe,
Spouae of Timothy D.
Jones, If deca•aed, and If
deceased , all helra ,
devlaeee,

that

Defendants,

Timothy D. Jonea and Mary
Uribe and · Robert Scott

legatees,

set up any interest they may

...

have In aald premlaea

Hauling

Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Siding • New Garages
·Replacement Windows
•Room Additions
•Roofing

O..tnp Trwdt Service
• Gravel • Limestone
• Fill Dirt· E1c.

740-247-4292
'

Rtcil. Pearson Auct1on Company,
lull lime auct1oneer. complete
aUct 1on
serv1ce
licensed
t66 .0h10 &amp; West Virgima.· 30-4·
773-5785 Of 304·713-5447.
Wedemeyer 's Auci1on Serv1ce .
GaU~IS . Ol'llo 74;0·379-2720

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rste~
Joe N. Sayre :

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

Buy, Sell or Trade

FREE ESTIMATES

lntht

740·742·213!

CLASSIFIEDSI

3/11(98 Tffi

All Makes Tracto'r &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH 'Parts
Dealers.
rooo sr. Rt. 7 South
Cool~llf::!.H 45723

We Deliver

740·985·4180

Lime&amp;tone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultur~l Lime;
Mukh, Top Soil
(Low Rates) '

·Free Estimates

Hap-

II

• a. a:.

I

Self-~torage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeruy, Ohio

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
S~ptic

.

'••
~

•

~

••
•

UtilU~•

••
•
i

'
IIYDS PAIIIIO.
Henderson, WV
We Do•••
• Parking Lots
'
•
• Baaketbtill Courts
• Driveways ·
• Grading Work
•
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675-2457 Offluo

(304) 674·3311 c.ll'fa. J
FREE ESTIMATES l
Cont. IIW'/003501

'

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply •.
St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, OH

·•

·'

740~985-3.813
Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock

8" Gravelless Leach
lnO' · 1000' RoHs 1" &amp;3/4" 200# Water Une
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulalars Waler Storage Tanks

OWN A DOLLAR STORE

1-800.227·5314

••

17401 992-3131

7123199 .t mo. pd

~

I

Syttellll &amp;

, beams. LargeLogs
capacity.
into bostrds,l
~~~!~!~!~~~~~~:~::
• AIDS
value anywhere. FREE i

M

;;

'Services
House &amp; Trailer Sites

740-992-5212

10125196 rtn

POLICE IMPOUND. Honda's,
Toyota's, Cheilys, Jeeps,
Sport Utilities. Fee Required.
Call Nowl
BCJO."n2~7410, ext. 7133

4

Brdldooer &amp; Badcho"

Agricultural Ume,
Ll me stone • G rayel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

I

HOWARD
'
EXCAVATING CO•. '''•

High &amp; Dry

.

oLI " ' '" . . .
'

$ Improve your •quality of life with insur- mation. 1-80().578·1363
$ ance settlement. Hutchens &amp; Assoc. SAWMilLS 252 Sonwill Drive, Bullalo,l

We deliver ALMOST anything ·

Call for details
740-992-0038

or

be

A &amp; D Auto

SERVICE
Complete Line of 4-H
Feed &amp; Show Supplies
And Sullivan Show
Supplies

Call 98S·383I ·

Upholste~y •
Rutland, Ohio .

··

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

(740 .742-8888

WAttiOOII.

C~ntractors Welcol!'e .
· Albaray, Ohio
7127199 2 mo. pd.

Pay oft overdue
with
FREE
Easy, ma11agteaolej
Stop collectors.
. Genus HI00-299-6i771SI
023)

Nef~,d

A Big One
Call A Uule One

Don '1

STRUGGLING WITH BILLS?
CONSOLIDATE INTO ONE LOW
PAYMENT! I
Reduce or Waive Interest
Stop late Fees
Stop Collector Calls Avoid Bankruptcy
. CONTINENTAL CREDIT
COUNSELING
N!88•455·2227
NON PROFIT
$$Auto Loans, Personal Loans, Debt
Consolidation, Credil Problems OK.
~;;1~iEil:O.euniiE'R'EN15Tii~l~:~~;~~~~r~ Financial 1(800)247·5125

i.OANS BY PHONE
FAST ~NO SIMPLE
NO CREDIT CHECKS!
$1200 Monthly Income, Active
Checking Account, ·Direct Deposited
.Paycheck Required.
Call 1·888-891-MONY

Gutters .
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning.
' Painting
4/2 TFN

2"i

CREDIT
Consolidate . Debts!
Day Approval. Cut Payments .to
NO APPLICATION f'EESII
I HI!00··86:lt-9006 Ext. 854.

ROOFING
IIEW·REPAIR

949-2168

WE BUY

I - U00 - 9 6 9 - 1 ::zoo £ Kt

Howard L. Writesel

FREE ESTIMATES

DRIVEWAY STONE
Landscape Material,
T~psoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost
Light Hauling
up to 8ton

992·5455
BuyerS are waiting!
CALL TODAY

800-368-3541 bL 1805

CJ:tllu.'!21
TRI·Timeshares

HARTWELL
STORAGE
ST. RT. 7
· 10 ~ 10$40.
10 )( 20 $60..

992-1717

A n.~me rw un rrusr ;n rimCJ/rlll.! rcui'C1

www.trl·tlmaahllre.oom

Plus, Inc

Mon • Fri 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

WHOLESALE!
1-1s11w (i.e .. 7.5 kw- $494)
Call1·509-276-7382 or write:
·
Tumer Dlesele,

Colonial Financial

PERFECT OPPORTUNITY To
Home in The Wo~ds
l&lt;:.oruteo Industry. Develop A 8
l1fe••tvle Ol!lckly. NOT MLM. 1
13!;9-8336, Ext. 3100.

a,l Delivery Service

BELOW

• Land Note Portfolio&amp;

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 to 4:30 :
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

,(£',~~~~ 24 Hr. Taxi

DIESEL

$$
• Seller Flna.nced Notes
• Insurance Settlements

$ $

'

1·100·311-3391
Free Estimates

I _J1~~~~~~~::gg;!L NY 14225.

•hDEBT CONSOLIDATION'..
MEDICAL BILLER
.
ONE simple low monthly payment
to $45,000/yr_. Process medical .
Reduce/Eliminate interest.
from home. Training provided. Save thousands while becoming debt
own computer. 1-800-434-551 tree. Programs for renters, homeown·
ers and even people with credit diHiculties. Specializing in credit cards,
collection accounts, medical bills and
unsacured loans. Call 1-80().8972200, ext. 340. A 501 (c)(3)
· Not-For-Profit Organization.
www.cambrldgecredit.org

I

11 11 11

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS
Siding &amp; S•llil

)

'·•
~

Now Renting

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

.

740-992-3470 .••

Y401£1-8.1

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

INTERIOR
..
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

WICKS
.
HfiOLI"G I"C~

DIPOYSAG
PIUS

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.

745 East Molilet Sl, Hani&amp;!&gt;nbl&gt;'g. VA

ANNOUNCEME NTS
Personals

·LOSING WEIGHT IS AS EASY
AS A· B-C . Call Joyce At 1- 888 769-7331 . Ext. 222 .
ST,I.RT
DATING TON IGHT!
Have Fun Meeling Eli!)it&gt;le Smgtes In Your A.rea _Ca!l For More
Information . 1-800-AOMANCE.

independendy owned .m4 operdled
. Equ•l Housing Owortuni!y

Low or 0 down! Gov't and bank
r.epo's being sold NOWI
Financing Available.Call Nowl
1-800-730-m2, ext. 8010
IAdventiis.ing. This newspaper 11 not reSI&gt;On-

CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ,
ESTIMATES
985-4473

H you have any
or complainls about these ada
for content.

7/22fff'N

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDS!

GalllpOits. 740-446-2842.

Clean Late MMel Cars Or
Trucks , low Miles, 1995 Models
Or NewEir. Sm11h Bu1ck Pont1ac .
1900 Eastern A'119nUe, Gal ~polis .
Wanted To Buy· 1955 Gatha Aca·
oemy H!Qh SchOOl Year Boolc ~ Win
Pay Reasonable Amount . HO·

446-2t88.

Start Datin'g Tonigt'li! Have lun
playing 1f1e Ohio 0a1ing Game. 1800-ROMANCE. extension 9681 .

HOME &amp; HELP L.OANS
The Community E11cet!ehce Cor-

110

HelpWanted

U ,ODO WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochures ! SatisfactiOn Guar·
ante8d! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro.·
v•ded! Ausn Self·Aelctressed
Stamped En\lelope! GICO, DEPT
5. Box 1438 . ANTIOCH . TN .
37011· 1438. Start Immediately.

poration w11l start accepting preapplicatio ns lor the HOME and
HELP Prog.ram on August 17.
1999, 9 :30AM to 3:30PM . at the
$800 WEEKLY
POTENTIAL
Po in1 Pleasant Housing Authority Comple!e S1mp1e Government
Ollice . 404 Second Stree t. Pomt
Fo rms A1 Home'. No Experience
Pleasant . WV. Applications Willi
Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE be taken on Tuesday of each
t-8Q0.966·3599 E~ . 2601 .
week . The HOME Program is designed to improve homeowner'"REGISTERED NURSEs~ i p opportun ities lor the very
low and low income West V1rgi·
Expert ANs to provide care to
nia families . The HEL,P Program clients in their homes. Both part
is also designed to "h8tp very" low
lime and lull time positions witl'l
and toW income fa ln!lies who
every other weekend scheauled
own their home. This prog ram is
~is11 responsibil,ties ava il ab le
~or emergency loans for structural
Qualified applir.ants must have a
and/or construCtion problems that
minimum of one year of recent
threatens the heahh and safery of , clinical e:c De rience · in a home
the inhabitants. The Commun itV ·care or acute. care setting, excel·
Exce llence Corporation Is a loan lent CommunicaUoh, problem
orig in ate ~ lor lhe West Virg ini a
sol~&lt;ing skills, and fle11.ibility. Call
Housing Development Fu nd. The 740 -59 4· 8226 with inquiries or
Community Excellence COrpora· send your 1\!su~ to Appalachian
tion Is an Equal Housmg Oppe r· Community. Visit ing N urse Asso ..
"tunil)' Agency.
ela tion, Inc ., P.O. Box 768 .
Athans . Ohio 45701 EOE
· New To You Tl1rift Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens
ASSEMBLY AT HOME II C' alts,
74!).592·1842
Toys , Jewelry, Wood , Sewing,
Ot.,~alily ctottfing and household
Typing ... Great· Pay! CALL 1-800·
items . $1 .oo bag sale e'o'tHY 795·0380 EX1. 1201 (24 Hrs) . .
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:Q0.5:30.
AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or Sel l.
Shirley Spears, 304-675-1429.

40

Giveaway

1 Ro oster And Utile

740·245·5464.

Blac~

Hen .

.

3 months o ld Yellow and White
Tom Cat . Liter Trained . ( 740)446-9935
Adorable K11tens. To Good Home,

740·446-3479.
Free PuDpies, 6 Wks Old, 112 Lab
Retrtevers . 740·24 5·59 46 leave
Message .
· ·
Maltr.ess &amp; Bo:t Sprinqs . Ful l
Size. Good Condition·. (304)675·
3511 ~

Upright piano, good condi tion . recen tly tuned . call 740·74:2·7243,

740·742·2100.

60

Lost and ·Found

Found - large dog on Flatwo ods

Rd ..

740·992·3535.

Found: Set Of Keys , Between K
Mart &amp; Huttons Car Wash . To
!dentitv. Caii74D-446·02t8
Los t! If You Found The lost
Purse Of lenor a Ferg uson At
~t Foodland , Jackson P1ke, Thl.lrS ·
day 8/5, Please Return Only Pictures 01 Her DECEASED. Son.
Please Call 740 -256- t 222 Or

. 740·446·2055
Lost Large ,While clog Lost Near
Rio Grande. Reward! 740·245·
0485 After 6:00P.M.
Lost: pink bible case. redlight at
33 &amp; 7 intersection VICini ty, 740·

985·3526.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Avori Products: Stan your own In·
Home Business. Work F!~xi ble
Hours."t::nJoY Unlimited Earnings.

t ·888·56 t ·2866 .

Route 14t . Ram /Shine . Tools .
AntiQues . Flor al Arrangemen ts .
T.V. , large Clothes, Furn1ture . Lit·
lie Everyth1ngl

Pomeroy,
Middleport ·
&amp; Vicinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm tht
. day before the ed Is to run,
Sunday &amp; Mond11y edition·
1:OOpm Frlday.
Aug t2·t3 , 5 tamlly , croBbow
with scqpe , yard u111ily tra1ler. new
lertil iler spreader. exerc1se
equip ment, trash &amp; treasures lor
everyone . f1rst house past MethOdiSt Church m Chester. Rt 248
Thursday &amp; Friday, 12th ~t31h ,
782 H1gh Street. Mu:JOieport. 9am4pm . Baby bed w1th mattress. two
strollers. youth clothes.
'

Cool. Apply In Person No PhOn8
Catl5 ~'tease. sn State ROUf8 7.
Local Trudung Cc&gt;mpany Seeking
Qualified Truck Onven Good
Pay And 8enehts. 5end ReSume
To : Onver, PO Box 109 Jaclr:son , Ohio "5640 . Or Call1-7 40·
286·1463 To Schedule An lnter-

v,...

Mainten ance Po6thon Open.
Please send resumcf to Route 1,
So.11 366 , P oint P leasant , WV
25550 Ptease. no phOne caUs.
Mee! ic al P rocessor. FP/ PT No
Expenence Necessary, 40K PC
ReQuired , Cafl 1-IJ()0-663-7.WO
N.ght shift, 7prn-9am Small group
Mme. call for Interview. 7.C0..992·

5023. .

Now TaWing App licatiOn s For
Ouvers For GaUtpol•s &amp; Pomeroy
ant;. Domtno's Pizza.
Own A CompUter? Pu 1 It To
Work ! $25 Tq $75 An Hour, Part·

nne, Fu~·Tff1'18 , t-800-?.94·9640.
www.work·lrom-hOme-tOOay net

"'

.

OWHAPC?
PUT IT TO WORK!
$25

-$75 ot11. PT 11'1'

1--800-784'-8556

·www.pcpays.c:om
POSTAL JOBS To $ 1 8 35 / HR.
INC . BENEFITS. NO EXPERI·
ENCE . FOR ~PP. AND EXAM
INFO C.\ll 1·800-813-3585 .
EXT U2 1 Q, 8 A.M -9 P.M . 7
Reg 1stered Nurses' All Spec1ali·

ties (New Grads Welcome) Have
Yp4 Ever ThOught Of Worlcmg In
The UK Or Auslfal~? Call 1-888·
368-4720 . Fax 416-369·05 1S .
Worldwide Healthcare ·Exchange
1801'·1 Vonge Street , TorontO.
Ontario MSE iW7 Email : Wtle ·
can 0.1e1sec .net
·
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1· .
800·339 · 4~04 Or 1-800-469-8 l 64
Fo r Appomtment To Come To
Nashville . Te nnessee And Aue!ltion For Mater Re cord Producers.
Internet. www won ac
Stra•gtlt Seam SeamstreS6 Wan1ed . 74().388-9310. 9·5.
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr.
lnc .Be nel 1ts . Game -War d$nS,
Secur 1ty, Mamtena'hce . Park
Range rs No Exp Needed·. Far
App ./Exam Info Ca ll t·8 "0 0-813J .
3585 , EX T.8827, 8 &amp;.M-O PM 7

Days Ids me
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 fHR.
INC . BENEFITS . GAME WARDENS.
SECURITY. · MAIN·
TENANCE . PARK RAN&lt;;lERS. NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP. AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1· 800·813·
3585, EXT 14211 8 A M. ·9 P.M . .
7 DAYS fe!S. inc.
"WORK 'FROM HOME" - Growing
CqmDany .NEEDS HELP. $399 $4 ;999
PT /Ft. WWW .JCM8S·
1gns.com 1·888·283-2372

140

Co mpu1er Users Needed . Wo rk
Own Hrs. $25K ·$80K/ Yr. 1-8005364$86 X n71 , www.1 cwp.com
Cosmetologist Needed , Fu ll &amp;
Part T1me Paid Vacallens , •Free
C.E.U. Hours. 740-446-7267
Counselor Posit ion - An Outpa tient Alcohol And Other Drug
Agency located In Gall1a· And
Jackson Counties. Is, Seeking A
Quat ifiee! Pers on To Provide Al cohol And Other Drug Counselmg . Counselor Will Work With AU
Age ~rouDS . Know ledge Of
Chemical dependency 8equired .•
Bachelors Degree, CCDC , USW,
Ane1 tOr LPCC Preferred . Send.
Resume By August 20. I 999 To: :
FACTS, 1770 Jackson P1ke, Bid·
. well , Oh io, A5614 Of f AX 740446·60 t4 . EOE,M/F!H.
CRUISE SHIP JOBS ? Tra v'e t '&amp;
Work World-Wide. For FREE Into.
Send "Your Address To . Cruise·
crew. 1241492 Main St., K . Po int.
0 , 4t69, Australia .

Dr i v~rs
Free 3 ·Week COL
Tra ining Earn $26 -$32 .000 ! 1st
Yr.
t Full Benefits , No EMp.·
Needed . P.A.M . Tra ns·port Spe·
Clal Call 'roll Free 1-S77·230·
6002 Sun · Fr i . 7 AM , ·7 P.M . ·
www.pamtransporl.com

w

Business
Training ..

Gallipolis Carei!r College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740·446-4367 ,
1-800·214·0452.
Reg .t00-05·127 48

· 150

CLASS A COL ORtyERS . DeG1·
c ated . Reg 1bf'IBI &amp; OTA . Solos
$ .30/Mi. Tea ms $ .34 /M I. / Split.
100% Company Paid Health BenMedi cal . Denta l. Vision.
Company Pa id Retirement Plan
PLUS 4011&lt; After 90 Days (With
Match1ng). Company ,Paid Vaca·
lion And Paid Holidays. 95 % .No
To.uch Freight. Satellite Communi·
cation . Cred it Union , Dir ect De·
posit . Assigned ConVenlionals.
Company Pale! Uniforms. Stock
PurChase . Call 800 · 555 -CWT$.
ewt. jobs@con-'(tay."com. Con-Way
Tru c~load S~HIIICes . CWT Is An
EOE

Oiredor of Admissions a nd Mar·
5 Famil ies! Thursday And Friday ket1ng . Healt h/ Nu rsing , back·
9 :00Am. 4 :00Pm . 104 Second ground. abil ity 10 wr ite marketing
Ave. Grace Double Suoller. little plans, sales calls. relate to phys iTike Toys tncludmg Van. lnfanl. cians and 'discharge planners
Children And Adult C1oth mg . well. Inte rested can didates
Cordless PhOrie , Tv Beanie Ba· should subm11 the1r res um e to
bies , Decorative Pottery , Lamp · Roclispr1ngs Rehab Center.
36759 Rockspri ngs Road,. PomerShades'. Drapes.
oy. Ohio 45769 . Attn : lisa Yehl.
Administrator. 740·992·6606 .
M.L Yard Sales Mull ·
Equal Opport~nl ty Employer.
Be Ffald In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
DRIV ERS -Owner Operators
the day before the ad
Manulacturers
Fleet Needs
Is to run. Sunday
T1ucks For Grow1ng B usiness
· edition · 2:00p.m ..
Ray Or Jim 800·534-1111 .
Friday. Monday edition

81g Sale· 8/1 Oth. I tth , 5 MilaS Out

Holkllly tnn Wants Futl Time une

DAYS Ids inc

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

En. 9735.

• 10:.0 0 a.m. Satultiay.

RO,ERT BISSELL

A.~nue .

Canning Jars. Quarts and Pmts.
Preierably w1de-mouth . ( 304)675·
1926 .

740·992·7643

Linda's .Painting

A.bsotute top Dollar: All U S. Sll·
v61' Ancl Galt~ Co1ns. Pr oofsets.
Otamoods. AntiQue Jewelry. Gole!
Rmgs , Pre·1930 US Currency,
Sterling. Etc .AcQUISitiOns Jewelry
· M TS Co1n ShOp. t51 Second
AntiQues. top prices paid. Rf\/Bf·
me AnhQues. Pom eroy, Oh10,
R uss Moore owner, 740-99:2·
2526

.'
COIUIIIOll OIIIIISIDINTW ·

Free estimates

' " " Estimattls

LEGAL .DESCRIPTION executors, axecutrlxaa,
'ATTACHEO HERETO AND admlnlatratora,
BY REFERENCE MADE A admlnlstratrlx81 and
assignees be required to
PART HEREOF
and

New Homes • Vinyl

J.M. ROWE TRUCKING

7 40-339-4160 · ~a · Announcements

$500.00 CASH

Taylor, and If deceased, all
hel ra, devisees,· legatees,
exec utora, execu trlxea,

admlnlstratrlxe•

.TRUCKING

•

Public Notice

1998 until patd and tor

'

'

New Roofs • Repairs;

Porta Jon rentals
Septic Tanks Pumped

I .

I

• Lawn CUe • Design
• Malatanance ~ Planting
• Malcblng

Mighty· Mac Aeration Systems ·

992-6687

toracloaure

IISSELL IUILDEIS,
INC.

Shingled Roofs
Vinyi Siding &amp; Sofit
Professional work at
an affordable price

No Embarrassment...
You're Treated wHh Respect!
Call Now for Instant Approvalll..

SAYRE '

JACKS ROOFitfG
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

'

· PoTrU!roy

Public Notice

an ad Call992 ·215b

'

Sentinel
Public Notice

2623

Bee and Bear Costume Contest, Honey Bear
Raffle, Crafts. Demonstr11tors, Sidewalk Sales,
Farm Market, Window Displays, Calliope Music,
Model Railroad Display, Food , Live Entertainmenl
and More. tntormation Call-740-992' 4197

HOI MUI.

1012721192 PPR

Comple1e Aucttaneering Stf"11•C·
es Cor,s1gnment auctton- Mill
Street, M1adlepOrt, Thursdays .
Ohto license 17693 7·0-989·

Live Bee Beard Demonstrations

CONSTRUCTION

-

Jeremy L. Roush
949-1701

.

Public Notice .

To place

. . . ._. . . . . .

1~1

..

Fealuril•g

REYNOLDS

~_,.,
-....,..!h-11 •
Holzer Clinic .•. Keeping the Promise!

POMEROY - Me.igs County .
Board o( Elections, Tuesday, 9 a.m.

,

Auction

B1U Moodtlipaugh Auct10neeung .

•

-.g

earn $ 1.250 per Clay 1·800-5044.

and Flea Marbt

...... 14th
llhlllleport 12·6 pM

005

s~

Chamber of Commerce, monthly
gener~l membership luncheon, Carleton School, noori. Deanna Tribe, ·
district . spedafist, Community
Developme'nt, Ohio· State University
Extension, Jackson, will be' guest
speaker.
·

80

HONEY BEAR FESTIVAL

(No Sunday Calls)

'

daughter-in-law I ~m. but her
actions speak louder than words.
She has another son whu has been

I·

'I

Four-Whnler purchased at:
Riverfront Honda, Gallipolis, Ohio

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
·Free Estimates

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

SEORC sets annual
golf tol!rnarnent

(740) 593-6671

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

Community .Calendar--Th~ Community Calendar is published as a free service to non -profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. Tile calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund ratsers ,of'any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
specific nuR)ber of days.

Toll Free 1·800-467-55e6 Ert

90 . Wanted to Buy

phones him and has se nt cards when
he has an anniversary. We are very
Neither
how uncmTi fortabl e and dangerous i! hurt by her behavior.
is. Please, Ann, help me find a way my husband nor, I have ever mento tell her that children ~ie every .tioned this' to mv mother-in-l aw. and
year because they are 1eft in cars we don 't plan to. However. we have
without proper ventilation: -· NOT talked about having a big bash on
BREATHij'W EASY IN THE our silver annivCr,sary and nol invitSOUTH
ing her. I know this is petty. but I
can't
help thinking she deserves the
DEAR N.B.E. . 1]'1 THE
SOUTH: Never mind ·tact. Mona snub. Telf me . Ann , Is revenge
needs to he told ASAP in a no non- always wrong?-- ANGRY IN NEW
se nse way that leaving her children . YORK
DEAR NEW YORK: If you
in the car with the windows rolled
up and the air-conditioning off can have a big bash celebrating your silbe fatal. If that woman has an ounce ver weddin~ .anniversary and leave

' '

Phone

For Murt&gt; lnfor111atiun Calll - 740~ ~1-4001 Weal Call
or co'nuu·l any Pomeroy s,,U8(1 Mrmher

ha~

married three times. and I know

Help Want8d

12170

Sales Repre ~e ntative

whenev~r

110

Easy Work! Ext*llenr Pay! At·
M~ Pr06UCtS at Home CaM

Fast Money. No

Steve Riffle

, We .live in a su nny, wann 'state ,

Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Buy, Sell or Trade

Stop

..

The

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Schools
Instruction.

EAAN A lEGAL COLLEGE CEQUICKLY, Bac he lor s,
Masters , Docto rate , By Cerra·
spondence Based IJpon Pflor Ed·
ucat10n And Short Study Course .
For FREE lnformau on Boolilet
Phone CAM'BRIOGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t-800.964-831~ J .

GAEE

E:tce ll en1 Opportunity - ~up~:Sie­
ment Your Income · l earn In·
come Tax Pre parat io n 15 Wk .
Course . C lasses 1 Day A Wk . 10
A.M. To 4 PM . Call Dilf"\T;:I); , Inc.
Tuesdays: 10 To 4@ 1·7 40·446·
8178 Or 1-BQ0.22 t ·81 78
MAD DOGS PALACE • ·
PRQ-WAESTLING fRAINING
AND PROMOTIONS .
20 vrs . Expenence . . 800-859 ·
0756 . Tra1ner. Breit Sawyer, lrJ
·Me mory ot Mad Dog ·-e u z2 "
Sawyer Tra m to be wrestlers .
managers , or ballet. (Male or Fe·
male )
•

1
180 Wanllid To Do
Certi11ed Nurs1ng Asststan, Will
Do·ln·Hom.e Ca re ! Ca ll; (740(·
446-3659
Dependable child ca re pro"v1C!er.
meals &amp; snacks pr ov1ded. CPA
trained . references available, reasonable rates, 74Q-985·42f30.
E &amp; S lawn. Servlce : Des1gn, lm·
plement tion . and
Seriilce .
Ava1t te or Spring Clean up.
fer 2ing aM planlmg. Free estimates. Sa!isfactlon guaranteed.
Greg Milhoan: 304!675-462~
Georges, Portable Sawmill, don't'
haul your logs to the mill just can
304-675·1957.
'

' H. S. Comracting. Roofing , Sheet
Metal. 3-D Lap Shingles, Pa1n11ng
Over 15 Years E11perience .. Deck
Bwldmg . 740·441 -0 653. Call AI ·
ter 6 OOPM
·Jim s Drywall &amp; Construct1on
New Const ru CtiOn &amp; Rem odel ;
Drywall , S1dlng. Roofs . Ad di·
11o ns . Painting , etc . (304)674 4623 or (304)674·0155.
Non-Smoking
Respon'slble
Teacher On• leave Will Babys11
Toddler Age Children tn My
Home, 74G-245· 5823.
Salle$$$ ln ter iorfE" ten or and
Roof Pa int ing . Wasn Hou se/MobileH omeS. Neat Work Experience/References. (304)€575·1327.
Shruba Trimmed, Mulching,
Painting , etc . Call Bill. Leave
Meaaave (304)675-7112.

HOLZ~A SEN tO A CARE CENTE R Is Currently Accept ing Appi1 C8 110n~ For Social Service As ·
State. C.ertified Nurslng AssiStant.
sls tant. Responsi bilities Include
Wilt Sit For Elderly In Pr lvat~
Sui Are Not limited To - Comple- .
740·25&amp;9282.
lion 01 MDS.2, Care Conferenc e
Attendance. Care .Pianning And
FINANCIAL
Other DocumentatiOn.

Licensed Personnel On ly, ie. LPN ,
LSW. Those Interested . Ple.ase
Apply AI HOLZEA SENIOR
CARE CENTER , 380 Colonial
Road. Bidwell, Ohio 45614 .
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE .
LPN . Top Pay. Pick yoUr shill
Ca p1!al Nursing Agency. 1-800·

576·6348.

.

210

Business
Opportunity

$ Earn Extra Income $ Merchan-

disers A nd Oemo nstrators At
Local A~ tall Stores . W ill Train
Only Dependable People Wit h
Good Work Ethics And Trans ·
portation Need Apply, 1· 800· 464·

ssq.

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