<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8212" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8212?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:07:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18628">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/5c2fa5c1b7f72264d7679e8acfa3f752.pdf</src>
      <authentication>04debf2f6598d447c8436e66002573fc</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26588">
                  <text>Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Training guide .do-g for 4-H

The 49 cntrie&lt; in the amateur
pamung show at the I 36th Meigs
Count) Fair were judged SaUirday
with Scou Needs of Pomeroy and
Bnan Gibbs of Middleport taking
the top awards in their respective

By BRIAN j. REED
Sentinel News Staff

categ ories.
The paintings will remain on display all week in the air-conditioned
Coonhunters Building for fairgoers
I;J view. Judging the show was
Charles Smith of Columbus.
Needs in the junior division took
both best of show and reserve beset

Dog care, grooming and obedience are quickly becoming
ular 4-H projects for . local
members, but one 4- H member
has devoted a full year 1o a
special project: training a
dog for the blind.
Sarah Clifford, daughter ol
Jim Clifford of Middleport and
Faye Clifford of Pomeroy. made a
trip to Colu.mbus last September
to pick up "Galaxy." fri sky Rot·
tweiler puppy. from Guide Dop
for the Blind, a ~onprotit urgani ~tion which trains Jug~ for usc
by the sight-impaired.
The purpose uf the project is tc

of ,show. while Gibbs' painting was
best of show in the senior di\;ision

.,

Since adopting Galaxy. Sarah

and her mother have taken her nn

\

Animal study in oil: Donald
Mohler, Joshua Mohler. no third.
Picture from life in oil: Scott
Needs, no second, no third.
landscape in acrylic: Natasha
Mohler. Pomeroy, no second, no
third .
Animal study in acrylic: No first ,
Hannah Williams, Pomeroy, Scleond,
no third . ·
.
landscape in water color: Julie
Spaun, Pomeroy, no second, no
third.
Painting ·in pen, pend I, ink or crayon: Scoll Needs; Billie Welsh, Tuppers Plains, and Donald Mohler.
Winners in the senior division

)" ith lui a Toban of Pomeroy taking
the sef\'c beset of show in that cate- , were:
, gnrv.
Landscape in oil: Anna Cleland.
· The winners in the clas ses of the Rutland:
Elizabeth
Mohler.
junior division . hst(d first through Pomeroy, and Diana Johnson. Long
th1rd . were :
Bottom.
.landscape in oil: Donald Mohler,
Animal study in oil: Lula Tobin,
Pomeroy. first and third ; and Joshua Pomeroy : Elizabeth Mohler, and
Mohler. Pomeroy. second.
Kellie Neece, Middl~port.

a

socialize the do2 . teach the doli!
basic obedience~ and to prepar~

r

•'

.

a

.a

;

··lj

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy

High: 808; Low: eos

' News policy
In an effort to provide our reader
·htp with currenl news, the Sunda
imes -Sentinel will not acCept wed- _
ings after 60 days from the date o
he event.
·
Weddipgs su.brn itted after the 60ay.dcadline will appear during th
·eck in The Daily Sentinel and th
allipolis Da~ly Tiibunc.
All club meetings and other new.
nic\es in the society section mlls
c submiued within 60 (Jay s o l
ccurre nce . All birthdays must b
ubmitted within 60 days of 1h

.

-Page40

a1
Meigs County's ·

Ho~etown

Newspaper

Middl eport • Pom eroy, Ohio

Vo lum e 50. Num ber 49

Smgle Copy- 35 Cents

Commissioners discuss center maintenance
and Woodland Centers.
By BRIAN J. REED
The building is owned by the county commission·
Sentinel N.e ws St.tt
A proposed maintenance arr.angement'among occu- ers.
pants of the Meigs County Multipurpose Building ·
Buill,\n 1981, the building has begun to show signs
will hopefully save the county money and all()w for of age: a heating and air conditioning problem last
lllore efficient handling of maintenance problems,
year cost the county thousands of dollars to' repair,.lhe
Meeting with the Meigs County 9ommissioners ·elevator in the building has begun to experience prob·.
during their regular meeting on Monday afternoon, !ems. and other routine maintena~ce problems are
Susan Oliver, executive direclor of the Meigs County becoming expensive.
The ' proposal that Oliver presented yesterday
~unci! on .Aging, presented a background statement
on a proposal which would lurn over maintenance of would allow the MCCoA to assume all responsibility
for quilding maintenance on a contract basis with.
the building to iter agency.
The MCCoA'shares space in the building, located other agencies in the building.
on Mulberry Heights adjacent to Veterans Memorial. , ,A slaff member now in place with the senior center
Hospital, with the, Meigs County Health Depa{tment . would perform maintenance work, excluding janitori •

Enright and Watson crowned sheep show
winners; Young shows reserv~ champion .
' By BRIAN J. REED

•

•

Sentinel N-. St.ff
Shannon Enright will sell the grand champion market
lamb at Friday's Meigs County ·Junior Fair Livestock
Sale, and Kelly Dalton Walson the reserve ·Chl\fllpion
lamb.
The two took home a variety of rosettes from Mon·
day evening's Sheep Show, held at the show arena on
·the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Bob Hare of Win.chester
serve&lt;! as judge for the show.
Walson was narJ)ed grand champion showman and
Enright the rese..Ve champion showman.
Watson's 127-pound ewe was first nam~d grand
champion ewe at the show, and her 137-pound wether
was chosen as reserve champion wether. '
Enright showed the reserve champion wether; weigh·
ing in at I 10 pounds, with the reserve champion ewe,
weighing 130 pounds, being shown by Chelsea Young.
Results in the market showmanship judging, by
class, and in descending order, were: Senior, 17 and
over, Enright and Walson; Junior, 15-16, Meghan Avis
and Theresa Baker; Intermediate, 12·14, Brook Bolin
and Meghan Haynes; Beginner, 9-11, Hannah Williams
and Otelsea Young.
_
In the ewe markellamb judging, resulls, by class, and
in des&lt;:ending order, were: Ewes 98-100 1~.• Meghan
Avis and Alan Moore; Ewes, 103·1 09 lbs.; Theresa
Baker, April Butcher, Abbie Chevalier, Bradley. Smith,
Slacy Wilson; Ewes 112-11.8 lbs., Meghari Haynes,
Billee Pooler, Sarah Yos~ Aaron Yosl; Ewes 123-129 ·
lbs., Kelly Dalton Watson, Chelsea Young, Alyssa
Baker, Jessica Di.llon, Eric Montgomery, Courtney
Kennedy, Ash O'Brien; Ewes, 137-138 lbs., Mathew
O'Brien and Hollie Davis.
In wether market lambs, results, by 'class, and in
descending &amp;rder,
Wethers, 85-91 lbs., Abbie

Chevalier, T.J. Moore, Alan Moore; WCthers, 102-110
lbs., Shannon Enright, Holley Williams, Meghan Avis,
Continued In
Show• on
3

· al work, and the MCCoA would be reimbursed at a months. she said.
rate of S20 per hour, with 53 percent of the cost being ·
The comn:issioners were required to lake no action
borne by the MCCoA.
on the proposal, but voiced their support of the
According to Oliver, the agencies in th.e building arrangement.
will be encouraged to put funds in a conlingency
In other business, the commissioners met with
account 10 cover future maintenance expenses.
· Mich'ael Swisher, director of the Department of
Such a fund would make it easier on agency bud- · Human Services, and approved recommended action
gelS if a major problem were to occur, Oliver said.
on the hiring of a social worker at·the agency, follow·
•
I
'
•
The arrangement will be more cost effective for all 1ng
an execuhve
sesston.
·agencies involved, and problems will be addressed
The board also approved the payment of bills in the
more promptly when they occur, and some could be amount of $1,469,453.79, which included disburse·
prevented by the use of an in-house maintenance ments for the second-half real estate tai settlement to ·
man~ger, Oliver said.
.
tqwnships and villages.
·
·
The maintenance manager at the MCCoA is very
Present were Commissioners Janet Howald and
well . qualified, and has been on staff for several Jeffrey Thornton, and Clerk Gloria Kloes. . .
FEEUNG SHEEPISH - The blutlng of sheep and
the enthuslutlc applause for sheep shOwman filled
the Show Arena of the Rock Springs Fairgrounds on
Monday night. Judging of 11111rkst lambs and ahowmsnahlp was the main order of bualnese
related lltory), and as with any IUCCftlful flllr competition, Iota of preparation ·Is . Involved behind the
ecenn. Left, Bany O'Brien helps 11011s Math- and
Ash groom their lambs for the Junior Fair Sheep
- · · • Show, while Rachael Markworth, 4, joined the fun
with the Pee-Wee Showmanship event, which followlld the 11111rkat lamb Judging. Thla annual show
gives the very youngest showmen the chsnct· to
prsctlce the skill, and to become comfort,llble with .
the animals they may be showing when they get just
a bit older. For RachHI, It · waa HCOnd natura.
Rachlel helped to bottle-flied Rosie the Ewe, and
aceordlng to her mother, An!Y Markworth of Tuppers .
Plalna, Rachael and Rosie are very ctoae. Incidentally, Rosie and Rachaal'* aunt, 4-H member. Aahley
Hager, did well In the official competition.

&lt;-

=-..-:---:=-1

GRAND CHAMPION - Shannon Enright
showed the grand champion 11111rket lamb, a
11 O.pollnd wether, al110 judged grand champion wetller ·at last night's Jun(9r Fair Sheep
Show. She Is pictured wltli Fair Qu. .n .K rlltlna
Kennedy and Wool Prtnceu Holley Williams.

Jarvis,

R~:~ssell

top poultry .s ale order

Corey Jarvis and Jared Russell won grand
and reserve champion, respectively, with their
market pen projects in lhe Meigs County Junior ·
Fair Poullry Show Monday afternoon.
In the showmanship competition? Sarah
Houser and Philip P•erce 'were named grand
and reserve champions, in that order. Other
wi'noers in that event were, in order by class :
senior, Odie Karr and Ed Smith; junior, Sarah
Houser and Melissa Houser; intermediate, TriPhilip
cia Congo and Jeremy Shanks;

cc urrence .
Only black and white or colo
lossy prints will be accepted.
All material suhmit(ed for publiation is subiect to editine.

Texas Rangers cuff
the Indians 13-6

•

By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP)- Spurt·
ing a brand new '"Return to Sender"
tattoo just above her "Elvis stamp"
tauoo. LaVera Chapel wailed at the
Gracelahd gates Sunday fGr a candlelight procession past Elvis Presley's grave.
The &lt;;andle Vigil. as il's called by
the Presley faithful. is the highlight
of Elvis Week, a series ·of memorials , dances and parties marking the
anniversary of his death on Aug. 16,
1977.
Presley, who died at Graceland,
his Memphis residence, is buried in
a small garden beside the house's
swimming pdol.
" I just fell I had to come," said
Chapel, 45. " I want to show my
patronage to Elvis for all the good
limes he ~ave me. and I'm here lo
FFA ON DISPLAY- Carrying out the theme "Magic In the Air with represent the fans who can't be
Junior Fair" members of the Raclne!Southem FFA expanded their· here."
Chapel said she has traveled from
e~hlbit in the junior fair bullillng this year to show diversity of the
or!janizatiort. The exhibit not only showed food production, but her home in white Lake, Mich., II
construction through a dlaplay of woodworking and welding pro, times for the gravesid~ vigil, and she
jects. Here, left to right, Kacy Ervin, Lori Sayre and Sandy Smith fin- has an Elvis tattoo to mark each
ish up the exhibit.
occaslott.

POPULAR EXHIBIT
Always popular with fairgoers is the domestic
arts display in the senior
fair building. There they
can see the creative tal~
ents of exhibitors
· everything from clothing
to · coverlets,
from
crosstitch to ceramics.
After the judging of the
190 entries Saturday
.afternoon,
Elizabeth
Lawrence assisted •In
arranging the di~Jplay.

Reds, Guzman· down Pittsburgh, Page 4
Time .heals wounds, Page 10
Meigs ~ounty Fair ·Flower Show, Page 10

Today: Sunny
High: tos; Low: 80s

Aoral study in oil: Elizabet.h
Mohler, no second. no third .
Pictur&lt;: from life in oil : Elizabeth
Mohler, Anna Cleland, Rutland, and
Melotly lawr&lt;:nce, Pomeroy.
landscape in acrylic : Melissa
Coleman. Long Bottom, n() second.
no third .
Animal study in acrylic: Louisa
Eads, Rutland, both first and second;
and Melody lawrence.
Picture from life in aCrylic: Anna
Cleland, no second. no third . .
Landscape in water color:
Melody Lawrence, Pomeroy.
Pencil. "'n, ink or crayon: Brian
Gibbs , Middleport; lula Tobin. and
Tina Sutton, Portland.
Other media: Rebecca Edwards,
Long Bouoml no second, no third .
Premiums of $4 for forst. $3 for
second. and S 1.50 for third were ·
awarded. Best of show entries.
received $5 in premiums, With the
reserve best of show receiving S3.

Sports

Augwt 17, 1llllt

Weather

Elvis fans shop, bop
bracing for annual
graveside vigil

)

a variely of adventure:-;. all fur the
sake of teaching ·the d(1g hn\\ tc ~
deal with people and the wurhJ
around her.
Galaxy has visited a number o1
places and met &lt;t variety oF people. ~ For example. Galrixy . ha ~
been a regular guest al Meig s
'
Industries in Syiacusc. where she
was acclimated to noise. people.
•
and wheelchairs, all things !hat
'
she Will encounter when · she
•
becomes a real working dog.
·Contrary to popular belief.
SPECIAL PROJECT
Sarah Clifford is pictured with
affection and attention are good
which
will
soon be assigned to serve as
Galaxy,
a
Rottweller
for guide ·dogs. becau se !hey
a guide dog for the blind. Sarah has spent the last year socialteach dogs to be tolerant and
izing the dog as a 4-H project
patienl of lhe people and things
around them .
Konnection 4-H Club. Labmdor Rock Springs Fairgrounds late
Galaxy lias received a lot of rctriercrs and golden retrievers last month .
love from the Clifford family. as arc becoming the most popular
grand
Sarah took home
is evident ·frOm a photo albunl 1. breeds for use as guide dogs. or a champion ribbon for , her project
which chronicles her life to date. mixture of the two breeds. · (as well as. a grand ·champion
Like any dqg. she has her own although German shepherds and award for her dog obedtencc proquirky behavior, su~h as dragg ing Roltweilers are also among the ject) but moie imponant than any
•
ribbons, she has made a differfull-sized blanket to the li res ide other· breeds used.
Sarah d'id noi train· the dog · ence for sOmeone 'who will ·come
on chilly nights. She is lovi·ng. ·
attentive and very weli-behavcd. specifically for her wotk as a to depend on the happy dog that
typical charac.tcristics for an ideal guide dog. That will be done by a Sarah has come to love.
Sarah said that she knows it
pet, and for a dog which will help profcssiorial traine r. But Sarah
did
teach,Galaxy
basic
dog
ohediguide a blind per&lt;on through !he
won't be easy, to give Galaxy up
. cncc skil ls. and Galaxy per- · -which she will have to do soon
world around him .
to
Jennifer formed well for the judge at the 4- - but she agrees that il'has all
According
Krawsczyn , advisor for (he K-9 H dog project judging h~ld at the been worth it.

Tuesday

Amateur painting entries judged Saturday

teaches valuable lessons

the dog for a lifetime of wor • •un
behalf of its blind owner.

Monday, August 16, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Want to show
your appreciation?
..

Pierce. and Corey Jarvis .
Other grand and reserve champions were:
raising pullets, Amorene Salser and Odie Karr;
raising broilers, Tricia Congo and Odie Karr;
fancy pOultry, Mike Salser and Mall Salser;
raising bantams, Melissa Snowden and Philip
Pierce; raising ducks, Mau'Salser and Melissa
Snowden; raising geese, Crystal South; pigeon,
Mike Salser and Man Salser; guineas, Man
Salser and Mike Salser; doves.·Matt Salser and'
Mike Salser.

- ---:::

~

Here are some of the most popular "Th~nkyou" ad sizes._·
(other sizes are available)
Please see Kathy or Dave at the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

JUIDGIING PHOTOS - It was no easy task tor Charles Smith of
Columbus who judged the mote than 200 entries in the photography contest at the Meigs County Fair. He was assisted at Saturday's
judging by Debbie Sp!!ncer, show chairman. The entriei will remain
.on display in the Coonhunters Building for the remainder of the
week for the enjoyment of fairgoers.

"

·.

r·~

·--· -·-· --:;::::::::.:-::.:-:::-:.-::.:-::.:-:.::""!1--,. ,. __..,. __...,...
2 col.

x 5"

$60.50

r-----------,

'
!

1 col. x 2"
$12.10

BEST
- Kelly Dalton .Watson was named grand
champion showman at the Meigs County Junior Fair Sheep
Show. She Is pictured with Meigs County Jult;~or Fair Queen
Kristina Kennedy. . ·
·

·1 col. x 3"
$18.15

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

1 Section - 10 Pages

2 col. x 4"

$48.40 .
2 col. x 3" \
$·36.30
PRESERVING FOOD - When it comes to canning food for the
winter, Meigs Countians do a lot of it - at least that would be an
observer's impression when looking at the numerous entries In the
Meigs County Fair canning competition. Kathy Keiter, left, of
Albany, arid Maxine Harner of Athens judged the exhibits Saturday.

10
7&amp;8
9
2

Calendar
Classlfieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Soot1s
Weather

-3

4&amp;5
3

Lotteries

2 col. x 2"
OHIO

$24.20

Pick 3: Q. 7· 7; Pick 4: 8-8-2-7
Buckeye 5: 4-6-22-26-JS

w,yA,
Qally 3: 3·9-5; IJaily 4: 1·2-7-3 ·
0 JI1,W Ohiu Valley

.-· -·-. --

...

~.

----

-·--·------·--·--------_...._ ______ -·-..
...

Publi~hing

Co.

TOP MARKET PENS - Corey Jarvia and Jarlld Russell won grand and reserve champion,
Odie Karr showed the grand and reaerve cham- reapectlvaly, with their market pen proJect• In the Meigs County Junior Fair Poultry Show
pion broiler projects at the Junior Fair Poultry Monday afternoon. Shown are, from taft: Fair Qusen Krlllina Kennedy, Runner Up Melissa
Holman, Jarvia, Ruaaell! Poultry Prtnceaa Melissa Kirk, Poultry Prince Robbie Weddle ·
Show Monday afternoon.
LITTLE MISS AND
MISTER '""7 Kayla
Salaar,
and Rusty.
Carnahan, 7, wers
named Melga Coun·
ty'a Little Mill and
Little Mlater at th~
Melga County Fair on
Monday morning.
They are pictured
with Fair Ou11n
Kristina Kennedy and
Leonard Koenig, fair
board member, and
repreaent.tlve of
Bob's Market and
Greenhouaaa, the
sponsor qf the event.
Salser Is the daugh·
ter of Mike and Kathl
Salaer, Middleport,
. .d Carnahan the
aon of Tony Carna·
han of Harrisonville
and S.andy Carnahan,
Pomaroy.

e,

Southern board prepares for new yea
, Th~ Southern Local Board of Education wrapped up one-year contract and approved Joyce Grady as a sub·
a handful of personnel mailers in preparation for the SliiUte cook and custodian.
•.
.
1999·2000 school year which begins Aug . 24.
·
Also, the resignations of Roma Sayre and Pete
The board approved the hiring of an elementary Sayre as reserve volleyball coach andTeserve softball
leachet through grant funds lo reduce class size in coach were accepted, and the board approved head vol·
grades one through three. The new teacher will be used l~yball coaches Tammy Chapman and laren Riffle also
at Syracuse Elementary.
coaching the reserve volleyball team .
Also, due to overcrowding in some classrooms, the
Kyle Wickline was approved as assistant football
board approved a motion that after school starts for the coach and Mil'k Ash, Michael Ash and Scott Wolfe as
year any new students in the district will be placed volunteer football coaches.
II was also approved for Southern High S!'hool to
where classroom space is available, not necessarily
where they live. Board member Dave Kucsma voted have a ·cross-country .team for the 1999·2000 school
~gainstthe motion..
year with Ryan Lemley as volunteer coach.
, This is expected to be a shorHerm problem as it is
In otller business, the board appr&lt;Jved the Southern
anticipated that construclion of the new elementary r. High School Student Handbook for the 1999-2000
school will simplify the distribution of elementary school year and approved a textbook for the BOE class.
The board also approved lhe $25 pay·to-play fee for
school students.
The board accepted the resignation of t~acher sports being placed into· the athletic fund instead of the
Wanda Shuler and approved Janice New as a DH general fund. Students pay $25 per sport up to two
leacher at Portland Elementary on a one-year contract. . ·sports to help cover the cost of athletic programs.
Patricia Cook-, who was earlier hired for the position,
. Present were Superintendent James Lawrence, Trea·
transferred to Shuler's position at Syracuse Elemen- surer Dennie Hill, board President Bob Collins and
tary.
board members Many Morarity, Doug Little. Dave
The board hired Tom Theiss as a bus driver on a Kucsma and Ron Cammarata.

�J

Tuelday,August17,1999

Commentary

n

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

r

t ,,,. •..,..17,1-

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
., Publlllher
CHNILBE HOEFUCH

DIANEHIU
COiibDIMr

o............
, . Sentinel

I

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

_.,..,......,. ..

•llrrDN',.,.. oltcp-

SI'NJft ,.,..,. pt1ll _ , . ot "'-) Mw 11.- bM ~ ot betlng pt I 1: Mt
~ . . . . . . . . , . , . .... and . . ,...,,...,.,_ EM:h Mould~.~
~ diO
a :eo to • ~ft­
. . _ ~ or J.ltw. llall to: L..ft.,. fer the «Htor. n.. Sentinel, 1ft Court~
""""'-ow;· Ohio &lt;f51fill; «, FAX to 7.fD.91112-Z157.
-

rida_.,_. .,.,_ ,_,.. ,..,...,._

• II,_...• • •""'•

.: Ohio legislation
:targets race in ·
'death penalty cases
Almost half the men on Ohio's death row are black. yet blacks make up
just 9 percent of the state's [X&gt;pulation.
It is,the justice system's worst flaw, said state Rep. Peter Lawson Jones,
D-Shaker Heights.
.
"Whether or not you Jive or.die, the most fundamenlal right of all, is contingent,on your race, gender, socio-economic status, and that of your victim," Jones said
Of the 196 defendants'on death row in Ohio, 97 ~or 49 percent~ are ·
·
black, according to the Ohio Public Defender office.
But yet how far should the state go in trying 10 reduce this discrepancy•
Jones wants 10 add even more res[X&gt;nsibility to jurors weighing the ultimate sentence by requiring that they consider the race, sex, age and income
of defendants and victims.
Jones' bill would require that evidence t~at the death penalty has bee'!
im[X&gt;sed unequally on certain members of the [X&gt;pUiation ~whether locally, in Ohio or nationwide ---:be submitted to a jury that is considering the
death penalty.
· Jones, who supports the .death penalty, emphasized that. the legislation
'would nQt affect the determination of a defendant's guilt.
·
,
"This has nothing 10 do with guilt. It has everything to do 10 mal&lt;e sure
: the deaih penalty is administered in as fair as a way as possible," he said.
· · His legislation also would require judges to collect demographic Statistics
, ::of defendants and victims in deal~ penalty cases, and require the attorney
: -general to compile the information iniO annual reports.
• A similar bill now before the Legislature, S[X&gt;nsored by Rep. Catherine
Barreu, D-Cincinpati, would establish a commission to study racial equity
in the justice system.
.
.
The commission would fook at Ohio's legal profession and justice system
10 see whether racial bias exists, and if it does, to propose ways of getting
rid of it.
The commission would examine how blacks, Hispanics, Asian-Americans and American Indians are treated either as JawyeJ'll, judges, employees
of the criminal justice system or victims or perpetrators of a crime.
.
The Catholic Conference of Ohio sup[X&gt;rts both bills, Jim Tobin, !he con.
ference's associate director, told lawmakers last week.
, The-death penalty sentencing bill "will n.ot slOp the enactment of the
death penalty," Tobin said. ''However, we hope it will help qddress a major
flaw in our current system- that of sentencing bias."
The attorney general's office is generally sup[X&gt;rtive of Jones' bill, said
S[X&gt;keswoman Jenniter l)etwiler. The office is reviewing the legislation now
and might suggest changes down the road, she said.
Greg Meyers, chief of the public defender's death penalty division, said
Jones' bill is a first step toward collecting consisten~ reliable data on the use
, of the death penalty. That in tum will help remove the "stain of racism"
· , from Ohio death penalty casi'S, Meyers said:
'~There hasn't been anything previously th'at functioned as a vehicle for
clearly and reliably getti'lg at the root of the problem," Meyers saj&amp; "People like to say, teasingly, 'You can do anything with statistics.' The fact is,
data is data."

WediHitsd~IY, Aug. 18

It's appropriate, during this
Watergate anniversary period,
that fanner President Gerald
Ford receive the Presidential
Medal of Freedom, but Scptemher would have been a better month for it than Augusl :
Ford assumed the presidency 25 years ago this week U[X&gt;n
the resignation of then-President Richard Nixon, but his most decisive and
courageous act came a month later, on Sc)ll 8,
1974, when he granted Nixoo a pardon.
His action cost him dearly. His approval rating
took an immediate plunge from 71 percent in the
Gallup poll to 49 percent His JRSS secretary
resigned. He was accu'scd of hav- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
ing made a "secret deal" with
~ t)ltll farr . . . . . . .
'A
Nixon to gain the"presidency. The
twt+A
..
•pardon inay have ruined his
chances of being elected president
in 1976.
But it was the right thing to do,
and ~ord did it for the right reasons. The country was suffering
from a It pereent inflation rate.
South Vietnam was on its way to
losing I)Je war with the North. And
yet, the media. politicians and
much of the public was st.ill fixated
.
on the fate of Nixon.
In Ford's first press conference
~
·,
as president, on Aug. 28, nine of .
the 28 questions thrown at Ford .
concerned Nixon and ihe possibility that Ford would pardon him. .
· Nixon was facing almost certain
indictment and a trial on obstruction of justice charges. As· Ford
explained in his memoir, "A 1lme
to Heal," the whole process would
have taken a minimum of two
years and a maximum of six.
"The story would overshadow
everything else. No other issue
could compete with the drama of a ·
former president trying 10 stay out
of jail. It would be virtually impos- ·
sible for me to direct public allen·
tion to anything else.
"Passions on both sides would
,
He said he is noi sure how he would have
be arou~d. A period of such prolonged ·vitupera- . Had Ford agreed to a pardon ar the tim~, he
tion wolild be disastrous .for the nation. America could have been accused of "purchasing" his voted in ainton's case, but' that he is convinced
needed recovery, not tevenge. The hate had 10 be office with the promise of a government favor -- Ointon committed perjury in the Monica ~w\!t. sky affair.
.
dlaini:d and the healing begun."
which is a crime.
'
The logic of the situation, as well as all evi- , Also in the interview, Ford lamented the partiFord's role in reconciling the population and
re-establishing confidence in the government dence on the [X&gt;in~ sustains Ford: Nixon faced sanship that has taken over the House that he
rightly figured prominently in President Ointon's certain ouster from office. Ford was going 10 served in for 25 years that he said "tends 10 roadcitation of Ford at the meda:J ceremony on become presidcnl He didn't need 10 offer Nixon block good legislative action."
Ford was, as Ointon observed Wednesday, "a
Wednesday.
:JRything.
But Ford's execupon of the pardon -- and his · The logic also makes it possible that Haig, for leader of character; courage, decency and integri.
'
'
overall assessment of Nixon -- get criticized in patriotic reasons, offered a deal: He wanted the ty."
Some d,ay, if we're fortunate, we might have
Bob Woodward's new book "Shadow" (Simon &amp; lo~g Watergate ondeal 10 end quickly, but Nixon
Shuster). ·
was wavering hourly be~een the options of his like back in charge of the government again. '
(Mot19n Konclnc)le Ia- .x..utlve lldltor or
Woodward also explores at length the question resigning and fighting his inevitable impeachof whether the pardon was the fulfillment of a ment by the House and conviction in the Senate, Roll Call, the n.wapeper of C.pltol Hill.)

•. I•

W. VA.

. 1999

.
.
.......

Rain may arrive Thursday
By The Auoclatecl Press

·
The threal of showers will continue tonight in nonheast Ohio, but the
rest of the state should se.e partly cloudy skies. Temperatures willlle in the
low 60s.
·
UnseaS\)nably cool conditions will prevail in the northeast on Wednesday with highs in the mid-70s, the National Weather Service said. Elsewhere, the mercury will climb into the·80s.
.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 97 degrees in 1988' while the record low was 48 in 1981. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:27p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:46a.m.
Weather forecast:
.
.
Tonight. .. Par\ly cloudy. Lows in the mid and upper 60s. West wind 5 to
10 mph.
Wednesday... Partlrcloudy. Highs in the mid and upper 80s.
Wednesday night...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.
..
Extended forecast:
~ursday...Partly clo.udy with a chance of showers. Highs near 80.
Fnday... ~ostly. clear. Lows near 60 and highs in the lower and mid 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows60 to'65 and highs·in the mid 80s.

,. orked Run a ce brating
park system~s 50th· anniversary
Forked Run
State Park, .
Jteedsville, is celebrating Ohio
Slate Parks' 50th anniversary with a
customer appreciation weekend Fri.o;lay, Saturday and Sunday.
' Visitors to Forked Run State
Park can enjoy a discount on camp·~g fees during the s)iecial weekend
which i~ pan-of II ye!lf-long celebra~ion marking the 50th year of the
park system.
Saturday night, the camping fee
~~all Ohio State Parkscampgrounds
~ill be reduced to oqly 50 cents.
·' Special · activities 'are planned
. throughout the weekend at Forked
~un including a horseshoe tournament on Saturday at I p.m., "Path'v.ay to Fishing" Youth Fishing Ex [X&gt;
i&gt;n Sunday, 11-3 p.m. including
fishing techniques and demonstratipns, along with free giveaway
it,ems, and a demonstration on one·

Aaaoc~~ta~~

.,',

of America's fastest growing sports,
disc golf.
"Generations of Ohioans have
grown up with Ohio State Parks and
made us part of their family traditions," said Oan West,' chief of the
Ohio Department of .Natural
Resources' · Division of Parks &amp;
Recreation. '.'The . 50th Year Customer Appre~iation Weekend i~ our
way of saying 'thank you' to the
people who have 1supported e~r
state park system as we have grown
and improved."
.Ohio's state park system was created ,within ODNR in 1949. Since
then, the park system has grown to
include . 73 state parks in 60 acres
covering more than 204,000 acres.
At 50, Ohio State Parks have been
honored as America's finest by the
National Recreation and Parks
Association.

Three missing after collision on Ohio River
• . DAYTON, Ky. (AP)~ Rescuers
searched today for three people
'lrpssing from the crash of two boats
on the Ohio River. Three other peo·
,Pie were rescued.

:,The Daily Sentinel
{USPS 213·960)
Community Newspaptr Holdings, Inc.

":" Published

afternoon, Monday through
Friday, II I Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
, Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Second class
~tllge paid al Pomeroy, Ohio.
tV(!ty

' • Member. The Associated PreS$ and th e Ohio
N ew~pa per

A.'l.o;ociation .

Poslmaster: Send add'ress comctions to The
• ' Daily Sent in~ I. It I Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
. 45 769.

.

·

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Roule
One Weck ................................ .$2.00
One Month ................................ $8.70
One Yeu......................... ......... . $104.00

SINGLE COP,YPRICE
.

Daily. ..... .................................. JS Ct nt:s
· ~Subscri ~l"5 not desiring to pay the nnier may
. remit in advance direct to The Oailv Sentinel on
.a ahfee, six or 12 momh basis. c'redit will be
"'given canier each week.
No suMcriplion by mail ptrmilted in areas
.where home carrier se rvice is avai labl ~.
Publisher rrserves the right to adjust ra tes dur•injl the sut!Kription period. Subscription .rate
, changes may be implemented by changing the
' duration of the subscription.

..' .

,I

.

'

'Summer break a hollowed tradition

MAIL "SUBSCRIP'TION
Inside Meigs Count)'
13 Weeks................ : .......... $27.30
26 Weeks ........................... :S~5.l82
52 Weeks ........... ................$105.56
RatH OuUide Meig5 County
13 Wetks ............................$29.25

26 Weelts ............................ $56.68
52 WeeU ......................... .$109.72

Reader Services
,

Correction Polley

The boats collided in front of the
Watertown Yacht Club just east of
down,town Cincinnati at 11:18 p.m.
Monday, authorities said. Iilvestigators did not yet know what caused
the crash. ·

Stocks
Am Ele Power .........................35
Akzo .................................... ..47).
AmrTech ............................,. ..72{•
Ashland Oil ...........................391o
AT8cT .................................... 49"i.

Bank One ........................,, •• ;.55~.

Bob Evans ............................ 19i.
Borg-Warner ...................... .46"1•
Champion ...............................6'1.
Charm Shps .... :.......................5'!.
Clly Holding ............................25
Federal Mogul. ..................... 48'i•
Flrstar ,_ ................................ 26"1.
Gannett................................. 71'1.
Kmart ......................... :.......... 14'i.
Kroger ................ .................. 24 1't.

Lands End ......................... ....48:&gt;
Limited ................................ ..45),
Oak .Hill Fin I ......................... 18'1•
.OVB ............. ,......................... 33:&gt;
One Valley ..:.: ... ..................... 37~
Peoples ................................. 27),
Prem Flnl:.............................. 12~
Rockwell ........................... 60'/,
RD/Sh~ll ............................... 64'1•
Sears....................... ..... ........ 40"i.
··s h oney' s ............ ~ ..... ..... ..........2''..
_Wendy's ................................ 2~),
Worthington .... .................... 14 r.

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

Our main conctm in all stories l\ lo be
Accurele. If you know of II'! error In a
' story, call the newsroom at (740) 992• 21!i!. We will chtck your information

Mary !'athl.een Roush Hesson. 65, New Haven. W.Va., died Sunday, Aug.
15, 1999 1n Mt!chell's Adult Care Home, West Columbia, W.Va.
Born April 8, 1934 in New Haven, daughter of Ralph W. Roush. and the
late Iva F. London Roush, she was a homemaker. and a member of the
Fairview Bible Ourch.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Jack Orland Hesson: and
a son, Mark Shane Hesson.
Surviving in addition to her father are her stepmother, !Ia Mildred Roush ;
a son, Troy Lane (Donna K-) Hesson of Letart, W.Va.; a daughter-in·law, Julie
A Hesson of Sun City, Calif.; four grandchildren: a sister, Patricia R. Hem of
New Haven; a brother, James W. (Roberta) Roush of Gallipolis; and several
nteces aod nephews.
·
Services wjll be I p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home.
Mason, W.Va.. With the Rev. Joanne Clevenger and the Rev. Rankin Roach
officiating. Burial will be in lhe Graham Cemetery. FriendS may call at the
funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
·
·
''

URG Meigs Center seeks public input
The University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Co mmun ity College Meigs
Center will hold a series of community meetings to determine what
course or courses of sl udy lo begin offering thi s school year.
The center currently offers an associate degree ·in informal ion technology. This course of study was chosen based on communi ty need and
mt crest.
· The fi.rst meeting will be held Aug. 30, 7 p.m. at the Meigs Co unty
Semor Cthzens Center located on Mulberry Heights, Pome roy. '

Joshua Srott Miller, 21, of New Haven died Monday, August 16, I 999 a1 Pleasant v..Jiey H"'Pital.
·
•
.
·
He was the son of Vaughn MiUer of Hartford and Amanda and Rick Gilmore of·
Pom"l"Y· OH. He was employed as a conStruction. laborer with .Sevenson Co.. in
Oarles1on, SC,
He was preceded in death by a sister, Melinda Stanley and his ~terhal grandfather, Ray Stanley.
·
·
.
\ ·
. In addition to his parents. h~ is survived by two hrothers, Ouistopher and Stev~n .
M11Jer both of New Ha~en; maternal grandmother, Janice Stanley of New Haven;
paternal grandmother, Ruth Bush of Hartford, WV: aunt and uncle with whom he
made his home, \bona and David Frye of New Haven; a .nephew and sevcml .

Other Services
A~vertis ing. ............................... .. Exl.

110-'
qrculation .................................. Exl. 1103

Classined Ads. ............................. .J-:xL 1100

The Ohio Department of Transportation will dose State Rou te 681 , 1.2
miles ~es1 of Reedsville. betwee n No. 9 Road and Bridle Trail Road, on
Wedne sday from 8 a.m. until approx·imately I p.m.. for cul vert replace·
mcnt.

Items sought for fire victims
. Clothi~g. household items and furnis hings arc ~cing sought for 1hc
famtly of. Barbara Crum which was burned out of thw home Saturday
morn1ng t'n Guysv1lle. Clothes arc needed for Crum and her three chil&lt;lren: a 3·year-o ld girl . a 9·ycar·old girl and an R-y ear·old boy. llcms c~n
be lett rn care of Tonr and Shirley Jones, 42172 State Route 7, Tuppers
Plams. .
.
Harrisonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will hoSI the Scollish Ril e Players
Cl ub at.theMasoni€ Hall. Dinner wil l he served at6:30 p.m. at no charge.
The play wtll be perfmmed at 7;30 p.m. All maslcr Masons, their wi&lt;Ves
and families are invited to allend. For more info rmat ion. call 992-5327 or
992-228 t.
.
' '

Continued fro.m page 1
Williams, grand champiQn breeding
Theresa Baker. Kaitlin ' Dewhurst. , sheep showman, Ashley Hager.
· Billee Pooler, Kristina K'ennedy : reserve champion bre.eding . sheep
Wethers, I 14-121 lbs., Shawna Davis. showman; senior, 17 and oVer. no
Aaron Yost, Jessica Dillon. Bradley ' , entries: intennediate, 12-14, Holley
Williams and Ashley Hager; Begin~mith. T.J. Moore, Stacy Wilson ,
Ashley Hager; Wethers, 125-131 lbs.. ner, 9· 11 , Alyssa Baker and Hannah
April Butcher, Chelsea Young. Brook Williams.
Breeding sheep: Hampshire: AshBolin, Eric Montgom.ery, Stephanie
Wilson, Sarah Yost, Ash 0 'Brien; ley Hager; grand champion HampWelhers, 132-137 lbs., Kelly Dalton shire ram : Suffolk, yearling ewe,
Watson, Mendy Guess, Hannah Alyssa Bak.e r, Holley Williams, AshWilliams, Alyssa Baker, Hollie Davis, ley Hager; Ewe over t!"O years, Hannah Williams.
Mathew O'Brien .
Baker and Williams took grand
In the sheep breeding showr)lan· and reserv~ champion. suffolk ewe,
· classes, results were: Holley respectively.
RESERVE
CHAMPIONKelly Dalton
Watson's grand
champion awe
was also chosen
ch
k la.mb at
on day
evening's
Junior Fair
Sheep Show.
Pictured here
with the 127pouncl ewe,
Dalton Is joined
by Fair Queen
Kristina
Kennedy and
Wool Princess
Holley
Williams_

Adult volleyball league
The Mipdl eport Church of Christ will· have a volleyball league for
adults starting Sept 9 ending wi1h a double elimination tournament on
Nov. 18 and Nov. 20. The league is open to anyon e 14 or older. Te ams will
be determined by a draft on Sept 2 and all matches wi ll be held Tliursday
evemngs between 7 and 10 p.m . To register. stop by the Middleporl
Church of Christ for a registrati on form. Deadli ne for registralion is Aug.
29. For more information call 992"2914. ,

Boil order lifted

•,

A bo.il advisory for Pomeroy h ~s be~n lifted.

Meigs EMS logs 12 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer4:22 a.m., McCumber Road,
gency Medical Service recorded 12 Buelah Collier, treated at the scene;
ca lls for assistance Monday. Units
9:39 a.m .. New Lima Road,
responding included:
Robert Williams, VMH;
RESERVE .
- Shannon Enright ·was
Cf;NTRAL DISPATCH
11:34 a.m.; Township Road 13, named reserve champion showman at Monday evenlt\g's Junior
3: 18 a.m. , state Route 248. Long Gloria Hailing, O'Bicness Me.morial Fair Sheep Show. She Is pictured with Fair Queen Kristina
Bottom , Marlene Kesselring. Veter- Hospital. Central Dispatch squad Kennedy.
ans Memorial Hospital, Reedsville . assistt:d;
squad assisted;
I :54 p.m.. Memorial Drive.
8:2J.a.m., state Route 7, Tuppers .Po meroy, Janel McKue, Pl easa nt
Plains, Jam es Ebersbach , Holze~ Valley Hospital ;
Medical Center;
3:23p.m .. slate Route 124, Penny
10:08 a.m. , Grant Street, Middl e- Zorns. HM C. Central Dispatch
[Xlrt, Nola Bradshaw, VMH;
sq uad assisted.
1:04 p.m., Second Street, SyraTUPPERS PLAINS
cuse, James Gibbs, HMC, Syracuse
4:13. p.m .. volunteer fire depart~quad assisted;
,
men! to state Route 681, rekindled 1
8:34' p.m. , Eden Ridge Road, controlled burn.
·
'Reedsville, Lowclla Nutt er, Cam'den-Ciark Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
8:48 a.m., Rocksprings Road,
Andy Everette, VMH, Tuppers
Plains squad assisted.
RUTLAND

In ·Recognition Of
Pleasant Valley Hospital's
40th Anniversary.~.

SPRING VAlLEYCI NEMA
446 , 4524 OIDnOliTl1SWIST
JACKSON PIKE

7

I~A4

(FRIB/13- THURS .8/19/99)

BOX OFFICI WILL OPIN AT 6:30PM
FOR !VINING SHOWS,
12:30 PM FOR SAT ' SUN MATINIII

·• Free To·The Public

THE SIXTH SENS.E (PGt3)
7:10 &amp; 9:10 DAILY
MAnNEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

• Thursday
August 26, 1999

INSPECTOR GADGET (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:20 DAILY ,
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20

THE .BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (R
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAlLY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20

RUNAWAY· BRIDE (PGJ
7:0Q &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp;3:20

BOWFINGER (PG13)

520 W. Malrf St. •
Pomeroy,OH
P.hone 992·2588
VJnton - 388-8603
· Gallipolis- 446-0852

Road to close

Harrisonville Lodge 411

.S heep Show ....

7:10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:1 0 &amp; 3:30

News Departments
The rnain number is 992-2155. Oepartlnent u:tensions are:
General Manage[ .......... ..............F:xt 1101
New~ ......................... ... ................. Ex1. 1102
or Ext 1106 ·

Service will be conducted at II am. Thursday. August 19, at the New Haven
Funeral Home, with Rev. Brian May officiating. Burial will be at the Zirkle Cemetery, Letart.
Friends may caJJ on Wednesc)ay, August 18. from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeml horne.

MYSTERY MEN (PG13)

and make • coi"recllon if warranlrd.

"'

---------~

--

The Ohio Ans Council has approved a $600 grant to United Plan l
Savers of Rut land, the operators of a botanical refuge ncar Rutland.
The grant, through the council ', Hill Country Heritage Area Progmm,
will be used to develop signage for th e refuge about medicinal plants.
Grants through the Community Assi stan ce Awards program arc nory·match ing funds.
.
·

roustns.

'(ou are not what yoU eat

l

0

')

*., •

~

Joshua Scott Miller

.lf'P,...,

By

~

ja·IW I •

•

.T~day In History

~::had."
..
....

1-

IND.

"'

---

Receives grant

Mary Kathleen Hesson

a p•• ' that might have taken weeks or rnonlhJ
"oecrct deal" with Nixon.
,
Woodward asserts that then-White HOIUC to play oul
\\OOdwvd
faults
Ford
for
not
prcpuing
the
alief of Staff Alexander Haig )liUCIIted thencountry
for
the
pardon
with
"elaborate
on:hestnor
Vice President Ford on Aug. I, 1973, with a
"deal" - Nixon's resignation (meaning Ford's tion," but that would hiiVe involved delay An4
ascendancy to the presidenCy) in return for the would llllve looked like indecision on Ford's patt.
Ford lanced the boil in a month.
·
· promise of a pa(don.
\\OOdwvd also charges that Ford even yCJ
Haig denies doing so. \\l:xldward asserts that
Ford, in il!' i~ttcrview, confirmed Haig's proposal, fails 10 understand the full import of Wa!erglle
though he does oot n:port the exoct words that beo:ause, in an interview, Ford said that "90 per~
eent of Dick Nixqn was first cliSS. But be. had •
Haig allegedly used with Ford.
' Woodward does support Ford's contention -- 10 percent quirk thai got exploited by h!mself llid
· :then and ever since -- ·that Ford did not a&amp;RC to by olbers.''
any "deal." After consultina with aides and his . · However, in an interview I had with Ford IMJ
wife, Betty, Ford called Haig atl :30 Lm. on Aua. week, be makes it clear that he believes Nixon did
2 and made it clear "then: was r10 agreement, oo engage in impeachable offenses and would hayc
voted to oust him from office. ·
·
decision and no deal.••

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Vineyard. It's a split-decision vac;Won. president in 1928."
walk 10 an ice aeam shop.
.
Preu Wrner
They'll move on at rnondt's ·end 10
Abraham Linooln found asiOnecotThe president lOok the advice of
WASHINGfON (AP) ~ Playing a New York's Finger Lakes in a state rage at the Soldiers' Horne a short car- coosultant Dick Morris and spent hiS
fish rising in coOl waters, whacking a where the first lady will likely seek a riage ride from the White House a per- summer vacation ti,rnc in 1995 and
small white ball down a green fairway, Senate seat next year.
feet escape.
1996 golfing and hiking against ~
piloting a sailboat off a breezy roas~
Vacations have · generally been a
Grover Cleveland used a vacation backdrop of the Grand Thton MounAmerica's chief executives have been good thing for presidents.
getaway in the summer of 1893to give tains at Jackson Hole, Wyo. \biers lilce
getting away from it all ever since the
Truman liked the warm sun and · repot11:rs the slip and schedule scact outdoor, western family ·vacallpresidency began.
blue waters of Key West so much that surgery to remove a cancerous growth Morris had said
'
TheodOre Roosevelt rode horses be said he wished he could move dte in his mouth. Fearing thai news of his
On most ainton vacations the buzz
and hunted. John Kennedy sailed. government there "and just stay." As it condition 'Could be. used 10 uildenninc of the summer was how many rnulli,
William Howard Taft,' Dwight Eisen- was, he spent 175 vacation dilys on the his economic recovery program, gans ~ repeat strokes - the pres~
hower, George Bush and Bill Ointon southern tip of Florida over seven Oeveland had the 'operalion performed lOok on the golf course, or what booltJ
golfed.
Ronald Reagan rode horses and years.
·
on board a yacht steaming 10 his sum- he had read.
The Associated Press
cut brush on his California ranch, liking
Eisenhower was so pleased with mer·home at Buzzards Bay, Mass.
Last summer the world came with
TQday is Tuesday, Aug. 17, the 229th day of 1999. There are 136 days left
it
so
much
he
was
there
for
335
days
of
.
golf
in
Augusta,
Ga,
that
he
visited
29
When
Theodore
RoaiCVelt
visited
him
to peaceful Martha's Vmeyard. '
in the year.
'
his eight-year presidency.
times for a total of 222 days during YellOwstone National Park in the early
The
Ointons anived just hours after
Today's lfighlighl in History:
Harry Truman played poker late eight years as presidenL
1900s, reporters were told 10 stay away. the president's nationally televised
Ori Aug. 17, 1969, Hurricane Camille killed 248 people when it slammed
into the night with cronies on the sou~~
Calvin Coolidge learned 10 fish
Retribution was not long in corning. speech.acknowlcdging he'd had~ relainto the Gulf Coast. .,
porch
of
his
quaiters
at
Key
Wes~ Fla while vacationing on the lakeS of north- The reporter was arrcslcd, The New tionship with Monica Lewinsky that
On this date:
, The official White House log said· he em Wisooruiin. He spent the entire sum- . York Times reported on il$ front page. wM "riot appropriaae" ~had "misled
In J!i«J7, Robert Fulton's North River Stearn Boat began hellding up NC\V
"visit~ with members of his party."
mer of 1927 in a rustic lodge in the The horse was confiscated 'fhe dog people, including even my wife."
York's Hudson River on its successful round-trip to Albany.
Some presidents just returned to the Black Hills of South Dakota and drew was shot.
In an abrupt change of pace, ainioti
· In 186~, Federal batteries and ships bombarded· Fort Sumter in
comforts
of
home
homes
with
hi:adlines
after
a
public
spat
with
his
Despite
being
swatted
away
at
·
switched· from casual attire and
Charleston harbor during the Civil War.
names like Mount Vemqn, Monticello, wife when she returned hours late from times, reporters have swarmed after appeared before J;CpOI'Iers in a crisp
In 1896, a prospecting party disThought for Today: covered gold in Alaska, a finding that Montpelier, Sagamore Hill, Hyde Park a hike in the woods with a handsome vacationing presidents for most of the white shirt, dark suit and grave voice to
Secret Service . agcn~ blameless but century.
.
announce he had just ordered U.S.
· ~ould touch off the Klondike ' gold and the LBI Ranch. · ·
This
week,
Bill
and
Hillary
Ointon
flustered.
Ointon's
vacation5
'
have
gi'I!Crally
forces ·ro strike terrorist facilities in
rush.
embark oil their seventh presidential
Coolidge jolted reporters later that foUowed the golf course, with an occa- Afghanistan and Sudan to· rclaliate fur
ln. 1943, the Alli.ed conquest of
vacation, returning for the fifth time to summer by handing out typed notes sional celebrity sail followed by bombing.-. of the American embassies
. Sicily was completed as U.S. and
the Massachusens island of Martha's . reading; "I .do not choose to run for leisurely dinners out and perhaps a in those countries.
British forces entered Messina.
In 1945, Indonesian nationalists
dec Iared independence from the
Netherlands.
·
In 1978, the first successful transder if we even know the ness" when she scolded her friend for ordering a
•Erlca·Jon11. Atlantic balloon flight ended 8s . By S1r1 Ecllel
The waiter took the two women's orders. The
difference anymore.
American author Maxie Anderson; Ben Abruzzo and
hamburger. Of course, she had done exactly the
For it's not just the op[X&gt;site -- she sacrificed her friend's feelings at
Larry Newman set down in their first woman requested a salad; the secoml, a ham"saints" who put a moral the altar of healthy eating.
. burger and French fries.
Double. Eagle II outside Paris.
,
.
·
·
spin
'on consumption; it's
The first woman looked at the second woman
In 1987, Rudolf Hess, 93, the I.St member of Adolf Hitler's inner circle,
And that's the problem. with putting so much
in horror: "THAT'S what you're eating?'' she
the sinners, IOo. They. are m.oral weight on personal habits:· It distracts us
died at a Berlin hospita,J near Spandau Prison, apparently ·a suicide.
the ones · who have from the real moral issues -- the ones that are a lot
In 1988, Pakistani President Mohammad Zia ui·Haq and U.S. Ambas- said. And immediately, a pall was cast over the
answered the rise of lite IOugher than low-fat or high-fa~ smoking or nonmeal, with the seco'nd woman feeling angry and
sador Arnold Raphe) were killed in a plane crash.
·
cottage cheese and rigid smoking, paper or plastic.
Ten years ago: The Commerce Department re[X&gt;rted the U.S. trade deficit hurt and judged.
.
:
anti-smoking laws with
The remark was, of course, o)&gt;noxious in' the .
had shrunk to $8.7 billion in June.
"I think it goes back to our Puritan roots," says
Five years ago: Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman resigned under extreme. Yet when my friend Beth relayed this fashionable new vices. Defiantly puffing cigars Beth. "Everything l"e do in our culture· has a
pressure, the latest Ointon administration official felled by the Whitewater story to me, I was not shocked. For the incident and sipping martinis, they relish being .a member moral tone -- right down to "Do you buy your
struck me as nothing more than a dead-on illus- of the wicked and the damned. And they pity the shampoo at the Body Shop?" We like 10 hal-~
controversy.
· One year ago: President Clinton gave grand jury testimony via closcd·cir- tration of the way Americans equate consumption tofu eaters -- who just don 't know how 10 Jive.
rul.es thai ~:'II us, "I am being good" or "I IDn
\
Members of the· "sav~d" caste are equally bemg bad. But of course it doesn't always work.
cuit TV from the White House regarding his relationship 'with Monica habits with morality.
It's not just that we describe food in moral happy 10 accept the notion that their diets make Because when you think about it, the Puritans
Lewinsky; he then delivered a TV address in which he denied previously
committing perjury, admitted his relationship with Lewinsky was "wrong," tenl)s •• calling rich desserts "sinful" or "deca- them morally superior. They smugly buy the.ir could be pretty nasty."
11nd criticized Kenneth Starr's investigation. Russia allowed the ruble 's dent," (or example -- it's•that we attribute these whole grains and soy milk and wax poetic about
This is not to say that we don't have a certain
valpe to drop by up to 34 percent. The Federal Reserve ·Board approved the same characteristics to the people who eat them. .yoga and mediiation and mountain-biking.' They obligation to take care of ourselves. We do owe it ·
"You're so good," a co-worker once said to pity the cigar smokers -- who just don't 'kno~ to our friends and families not to drive our health
megamerger of NationsBank and BankArnerica.
me
as I purchased a granola bar from the office how to Jive:
Today's Birthdats: Actress Maureen O'Hara is 79. Actor Robert DeNiro
into the ground.
candy
machine. Another day, I wns making a
But of course, there's one big problem with all
is 56. Movie direciOr Martha Coolidge is 53. Rock musician Sib Hashian is
But we should at least acknowlcdjle that the
50. Actor Robert Joy is 48. Rock singer Kevin Rowland (Dexy's Midnight " bad" choice -- a chocolate and caramel concoc- of this: What you choose to eat or drink or inhale person who sips bourbon isn't doing any great
Runners) is . 46. Rock musician Colin Moulding (XTq is 44. Country ' tion -- when I realized that the candy bar was has absolutely nothing to do with how good a per- harm in the world, and the person who dowrts
singer-songwriter Kevin Welch is 44. Singer Belinda Carlisle is 41. Actor stuck in the metal coil and I had lost 60 cents. The son you are. You can smoke three packs a day and desi~er juice isn 'I doing any great good.
Sean Penn is 39. AciOr Bruce Penhall is 39. Jazz musician Evereue Harp is officemate near me had consoling words: "When- still he the kindest soul who ever Walked this
Domg good -- and, for that matter evil -- tal&lt;es
38: Rock musician Gilby Oarke is 37. Singer Maria McKee is 35. Rock ever that happens to me," she said. "I feel earth. And you can fill your pantry with organic a lot more work than that.
'·
produce and multi-grain pastas and still be a CopyrtghttM NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
musician Stevc'Gorman (fhe Black Crowes) is 34. Rock musician Jill Cun- saved "
So·, had been saved. Not from eternal damna-. worthless wretch.
'
niff (Luscious Jackson) is 33. Actor David Conrad is 32. Singer Donnie
Send commenta to the author In c1re of thle
Th~
aforementioned dinner companion n.wapaJMr or aend her e-mail at aaraau• Wahlberg is 30. Rapper Posdnuos is 30. Tennis player Jim Courier is 29. lion, but from fat and calories.
·
Or perhaps both. Because I'm starting to won- believed that she was establishi~g he~ '"good- ,. maotcom..
AciOr Bryt~n McOure is 13.

"Jealousy is
:-:all the fun you
:~:think they

. --

''

Bv Morton KOI idl.c:ke

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-0112-2158 • Fax: 0112-2157

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

..... -.2

The Daily Sentinel Ford gets medal one month early
'Esl:46funetf m1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

7:'20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY

Tllf HAIINTM

9:30 ON LY

• 7:30p.m.
• Battle Monument
State Park

SIXTH SI:NSf

,.,~ 1:3~ 4:00, t,45, 8:15

[llotror)lill.&lt;! w.~ t&gt;O, Jocl Osw~ Too C'J!te.llml Wiliirs

RUN.41'1AY 11R11E ~'&gt; 2:0014:15, 7:30,10:110
[i:onedy) Ju'' ROO.IIs,R&lt;n•d Gera Hect• Elm..hlr Cu!ad
IIIP BLUE SEA

~'

[l\lnoi)Satoo&amp;""', li'omsJ!~ ~(A)jJ

•

2:311, 8:110

Sro!l..lrm\

Presented In tmJuntU4ln With The
· rtllnt Vleasant Mtlst ~rtes

3:30, 8:45
Pl! R..lier\5

DETROIT ROCK CITY (R)

DEEP BLUE SEA (R)

1:00,8:15

Ml'fCTWI GAm"'' I:45, 3:45, 5:45, 8:15

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 :20 &amp; 3:20

7:10 &amp; 9:10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10&amp; 3:10

,., ~

[HmrjliamNeesoo,li Ta)t&lt;,C.~ 1!\l..&lt;l\el o.en WOoo

1"1

&amp;

~""" 11\rmi!&lt;lrfllloces ~ .~!1M• Mol~. 'llf!j llmU
Matinees Sbown Everyday

ALL

ALL TIMES $4.00

· 13attle ~4lnument §tate Jlafk
''L

'

.

�;Sports

·The Daily Sentinel
.

'

..
Tuesday,August17,1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page4

. Tuesday, August 17, 1999

:J=Ieds roll over Pittsburgh 9-2
: By TERRY KINNEY
fOrmer teammate Ed Sprague .
'• CINCINNATI (AP)- Th&lt; trade Guzman would have held Pittsburgh
. for Juan Guzman is looking more scoreless . Sprague , who played wilh
:and more like a good thing for the Guzman in Toronto from 1991-98,
· Pncinnati Reds. And Guzman likes homered in the founh and hi1 his
' ~is new surroundings, 100.
20th home run in the seventh.
• " It's working out the way I'd
"Yeah. we ' re friends ," Guzman
· ~oped and the way I expected. This said. " I was tryin g to make good
is something that! was praying for." . pitches. and he hit them out. The firsl
Guzman said Monday night after one was a hanging slider. and the
. pitching the Cincinnati Reds past the second one was a faslbaiL It was a
:Pittsburgh Pirales 9-2.
good day for him."
Guzman has worked at least seven
:: "When you get a lot of ruas, it ·
•!'lakes it easy. II lets you challenge innings in each stan for Cincinnati .
hitters more. It's a different gam e Both wins have been again sl
JWhen you know your teammates will Pjttsburgh.
: score some run s for you."
'
"All three games he's pitched for
·· Guzman (2- 1) pitched effecti ve ly ' us 'have been well -pitched games. It's
-'for the' third consecmivc time since nice havin g a guy out there who's
' being acquired from Baltimore on been in this Situation before." said
. July 3 I. He allowed five hits. walked Reds manager Jac k McKeon.
: hon·c and struck out three. in seven
"We knew he was a good pitcher.
· !nnmgs.
He 's been 1hrough the wars. he does: · " I didn 't do anything different in n'l panic. and he knows how ·to get
the American League. The di fference hi tiers Out. ,.
is I'm getting some run s." Guzman
Former Reds p1tchc r Pete
said.
Schnurek (3-7 ) lost to Cincinnati for
" lt ":lakes i't a lot easi ~.::r to piich. the second time in six davs. He
When it 's a close game. )'ou' re trying al lowed four hit s. four walk s and
to not make a mistake. a nd vou end struck out two in i ' innin gs.
up _lrying to do too· much. - .
" Hi s s houlder is bothcrinl:! him a
. " I think. in the AL. I pitched ro;~l - little bit. hut I 1hink ~e · 11 " he all
ly good for the last two m&lt;'l nlhs. Thl· ngh1 , .. said Pillstiurg:h manager Gene
only problem I had wa ~ I v.as n' t g: e1 - Lamont. "Ht· was wild in the strike
ting any run support. ..
£om:· again. He's struggl ed with hi s
If not for a pair o f home run ~ hy control ull year."

:!"•

Lamont saod he lifted Schourek
early because he didn 't want the
Pirates to have to overcome too large
a deficit.
" He just didn 't loo k like he was
go ing to hold them . II didn ' t look
. like he had his good sluff," Lamont
s~id. "And we haven' t broken lose
&lt;Jffensively in a long while."
Pokey Reese 's lhree-run homer
.· keyed a four-run second inning for
the NL Central leaders. Mike
Camerorl also homered for the Reds .
"We were talking earlier about
how different guy s have been picking the club up all year, and tonight ,
Pokey hils a three-run homer to give
us a cushion. " McKeon said. "Every
nigh!, il's &lt;lifferent guy."
Greg Vaughn .walked to lead off
the Reds' second and Barry Larkin
doubled . Vaughn sc~red on a ground-,
oul ' by Ed Taubensee and - Aaron
Boone walked. setting up Reese 's
eighth homer.
Dmitri Young doubled to lead off
t~e third and scored on BAone's twoout single .
.
Jimmy Anderson gave up three
more runs in the seventh on .a wild
pitch and S&lt;l~rifi ce nics by Taubensee
and Boone . Anderson had walked all
three base runners who scored .
Came ron hit hi s. l(ith hon~er in the
eighth . ·
Nofes: Young 's lcouloff double in

a

MARAUDERS PREPARE - With the season opener with Gallla
Academy less that two weeks away, the Meigs Marauders are busy
with their two-a-day practices. Marauder junior Adam Bullington is
pictured.attempting a field goal out of the hold of senior quarterback
ABBOTT GETTING. READY-:- Grant Abbott is pictured running a ior their Aug. 27 season and home opener against Gallia Academy.
Grant
Abbott.
Meigs
will
travel
to
Ravenswood
on
Friday
for
the
only
pla.
y during Monday's
two-a-day pr~ctices as the Marauders prepare Meigs will travel
scriminalle of the preseason beginning at 6 p.m.
.
. to Ravenswood Friday at 6 p.m. lor a scrimmage..
CELEBRATION TIME comes for the Cincinnati of Monday night's National League game against
Reds' Pokey Reese, Barry Larkin (11) and Aaron the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates, who lost, 9-2.
Boone (far. right) as Pittsburgh backstop Joe Reese's three-run homer was one of the contrlbutOiiver watches in the foreground In the tilth inning ing factors in the Reds victory. (AP)
.
the third ga ve him a career-high 10- this season. in place of Scan Casey. 10 13 games .... Sprague . has h~
g :~me hittin g streak . Yo u~g _ s tarted at .. . Cameron's tw o-out singl e in the- eight two-homer games. Th1 s was hL~
first hase for o nly the second lime

s ixth e xtended · his career-hig h streak

because there was a guy on third
.base. " Palmciro said. "I gol a hall in
my zone. llhink it was a slider and 1
hi I it prei1y good .··
Sexson capped a five-run 1hird
inning with a three-run double to the
gap in iight -ccnler off Texas slartcr
Rick Helling, giving the Indians a 52 lead .
.
Clayton's sixth ho\J1er with 1wo
ouiS in the sixth brought Texas within 5-3.
·
Notes: Pop singer Sheryl Crow,
in 10wn with Lilith Fair, watched the
game ffom a broadcast booth . ...
Rodriguez has hit 18 of his homers

on the road . ... Palmeiro is '2-for-20
in hi s last six gameS with hoth hits
homers. . Baerga 's lasl start at third
for the Indians came on July 24.
1991. ... Injured Cleveland 3B
Travis Fryman took BP before the
game for the tlrsl time since going
on the disab led list July 4 with an
injured knee .' Fryman could begin a
minor league rehab assignment on
Aug. 23 if he doesn't have any set,
backs. ... Texas· 85 steals are two
more than its '98 season total. ...
Sexson has had a knack for big hits
this scas&lt;;m with 37 of his 87 going
for extra bases.

San Francisco
San Diego .
Los Angel es
C n lnra\IP

AL standings
E11strm Oi\"ision

· By JIM VERTUNO
.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Doctors
say Sean Elliott's dream of returning
: to the NBA after kidney transplant
. surgery is in the. realm of possibility'
after a successful operation. ·
•
Altho'ugh the 31-year-old Ellion

.\!:

New York
lloston
Toront o .
Bnltunure
:tampa Ba y
CLEVEI"ANO

"
,,

Cht cngo

-~~

l&lt;nnsas C i t ~

6

A tlnnHl 14. Colorat.J o fl

4.'0
-J.:!l)

' 't

An.wn:1 10. Chk~gu ~
Nc1\ Yor k -1" San O. ego J I I Ol
San Fr:tnctli CO 1. Montreal -1

~ -' 7

I&gt;S

St Loua -1 . Pht lmJelph1 n 1

"

,,"'

6 1...,

I

,,

o ~ k.l n nJ

70 49
64

Senulr:

l8

. i\nah~:im

l lonJJ ?. Lo!

t\r1g e k~

,\mrrican Ltague
ANAH EIM ANGE LS': Recalled LHP Jarr&lt;"l
Washl'ltil-n Irom Edmonton of the PC'L ·
·

5

17

't
"
:! b '

"'

60
69

P u t ~ h urg h !S\' hmult 10-!\t :u ( INC INN Afl
r \ 'tllonc 6- -U , 7 05 p m
~
/l. l tl••a u k~e rEidfl:il 1 -.~! at ~ l ou s t on 1Ebr!J&gt;n 6 · &lt;1.

'l t·

II

l'h•l adelphHl (Shum aker 0- 11 ;u Sr L ,' UI ~
8 10' pIll
A tlanta / Mu lholland 7-61 at Col&lt;1mdo rWnghr (}.

+ .

r s r e pl;l c n ~on _I. Q)_

~ I &lt;J 0~ p Ill

Ch 1 c a ~ o CLorrcunc 1-0 1 a1 Am n n :. I A nd&lt;' r ~n -'·
21. IOOS pm
New Yo rk 1 ~ Her 10-7 ) at S;m D1eg o 1W
W i l li am ~ S- 11 1. 10 : 0 ~ p n1
Flonda !Bu rnett 0-0l at l.os An~ el cs (J udd 1-01

Monday 's scores
T:~mpa Ba y 9.

Detrml 1
York 1. Minm!SO!il 0
T~ xas 13. CLEVElAND 5
Bos ton 6. Oak land 5
Sealllc: 7, Thronto ~
Chicago !i. An aheim 1
N ~w

10 10 p m

1

Wednesday's games
,\ tlanla / Millwood IJ -7) at CuloraJ9 (Bohanon
10·101. J OS p m
Munlrt:al ( Vasquez 6-SJ at Snn Franc1s..:o 10rt11
l _l-S)..\ .\5 p m
· Pin ~burgh (Corpova 7-5 1 a1 CINCINNATI
(Tnmko14-5), 7:0.5 p.m
Mll\loi'ukee (Nomo 10-5 } al Ho.u510n (Hampto n

Tonight's games

Oakland ( H e redt ~ 9- 51 3r B_oston t S aberh ~e n ~ 4), 7;05 p.m.
· Seattle (Abbun -~ -0 1 at Toronto fH~ntgen 7-9).
· T05p.m.
' Te11as (Sde 12·7 ) 01 CLEVELAND ( L1ngMQO 1·
1),7:05 p.m.
. 16-JJ. BOS pm
• Tamp;~ Hay (Will 7-RI at Detroit 1Mhcki 7-1 0),
Phil-adelphia COgea 6- 11 J at St . Lopis (Roncnfield
1·0S p.m.
l f.-5).8:10prn.
·
• Minnesota {Mays 5-4) ;u Balu mo re. (Mu ss ina 14-Cbi ~ ago (Tapani 6-10) at An zona (Benes-7,-l l \.
1'1. 7:35p.m.
· IO · O.~ p.m.
.
• Kan~as C: tt}- ( Rosado 7-lJ J at Ne W York (0
Fl or idu (Mem.Jow5 10·1 I ) at Los Angeles
~~rnandez. 12-7), 7 · ~5 p.m
.
( Dr~ifo1'19 ..J2), IO:l 'p m.
·
·
• Anaheim {Sparks 5-9) m Ch1cago rN a ~·arro 7- 10).
New York (Yoshii 7-8) at San Otego {Boehnngcr ·
i ·OS.p.m
.
6-5 ), IO~J5 p.m.

p.m

· Mmnesom {Ha wkin s 8-9) at Ballimore {Ert d:son
.
, Te11'1 s (Burkel! 3-6 ) r11 CLEVE LAND (Na gy 1.' ·
1J. 7:05 p.m.
• Tampa Uay (Witt 7-8) at Dt:t roit (Mlkkt •7-IOl:
7:05 p 01
Kansa$ City (Rdchen 1-1) at New York 1Pe11 111e
f0-8). 7:.'5 p.m.
: Anaheim (Belcher :'). 7) at Chi cago (Bald wm 6~1 ), 8:05 p.m.

. WNBA standings
Eastern Conference

8-10), 7:05p.m.

Atl3nt n

w
i1

P/lilnde1ph,i a
liJori da
Montren l

7.1 47
6J ~5
&lt;9 JO
JO

~ew Ymk ..

CINCIN NATI

. tJ o U ~ IO II

St Louis .
P.iu sbtrrf h
Mi1w!111 el'

i:!hii;Jlgo

L
41

""

Ct'nlrall)i~lslon
6?, 47

11
61
S&lt;J
q

"'.'i9'
'"
6!

" '"'
ox
"

l'l:L
60&lt;

!LI!

608
s~

..

-H 1

1\

•

'"' '"
W.'

Wl
SOB
lOU
J66
.1 ,16

Wrslern Dh ision
Anzona

:I!:LI'l:L
16

x-New York
Charlolle
Dctrol! . 1 ..
Or lan4o

15

\\'ashtng ton

CllEVELAND.

1.1 . 552,
-!8-1

u

16
16

U
11

16
JR

.J-48
4-IK
400

6 14

200

.'5 8.28
. 19 I I
l~5 A nge fes
18 11
~lin n e suta
14 IS
Phoe n1 1
!-' IS
U1:1h
1J 17
x-cllnt hed plil)'Off lx:rth

.\ ·Houston .24 .. . .
x-Sacrn nlt')lto

Eastern Di,·islon

Iwn

Iwn

l
)

·'

4'

10'·

Western Conference

NL standings

ll l

Ill

I'

J.l

"

h ~l

DET ROIT TIGERS Pl nccd LHI' Ju stm
on tltt: 1~-day dJ s:~ bl ed list Recalled RHI'
Matt Anderson from Toled o o f t~ lnh:rnatlo nal
l eJ gue, I
Nutiun11l League
COLORADO ROCKIES : Optioned RHP Bobb,
J qneJ to Colo rado Springs of the PeL
·
HOU STON ASTROS.· A ~· t n· ated _113 Ken
C amtniti from rhe 60-day disabled list Opti oned INF
RuH Johnso 11 to New Orleans of the PCL
MONTREAL EXPOS : Recallt:!d RHP Tony
Armas Jr. from H~rri.~hurg of th~ Ea stern league
Optioned RHP Shayne Benneu to ,O unwa of lhc
lnternatt onill ~ague .
·
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Placed RHP I:Jnan
Boduinger•on the 15-day di sabled list. ~troa e t1ve ro
Aug 1-1. Recailed RHP Stan Spencer. from ~~~s Vego s
of the PCL Recalled INF David Newllan from L:u

Monday's scores
Mm nesor.1 S7
H o u~t o n !'10.
1.(1 \ A n )l e h: ~

C lE VE L~\ N D

'iO

Utah 71
76 Cl1arl r•l!e f!S

"toni2h1's 2ames
W; t ~ htn ~ hlll
Sa,r ;u u e n u~

:11 Nn v Yor ~ 7 10 p tn
n1 PhM m \ 10 p m

Wednesday's gamt!S

Vegas.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Optioned RHP
lultan Ta..·arelto Fresno of the PCL. ,Recalled RHP
lpe Nathan from Fresno

Basketball
National 8a5kttball AWKiation
. ATLANTA HAWKS : Waived F Tyrone Co,rbin
and F Duane Ferrell
. SACRAMENTO KINGS · Si gned G Tony Delk
ro a multiyear c onlra~ t .
'
u

Football

Basketball

Wednesday 's games
" Seanle (Ffedd v Garc1a 1.1 -7) at Tonlmo (Wells
11 -71. 1:05 p.m. ·
.
•
· Oakland ( Appter 12-9) at Boswn (Rapp 4-5 ).'7·O:'i

BOSTON RED SOX · Retm til tl'd (' Sn •u
"Hand&gt;e r_!! frum an lntury rehnbi!Ltntton :1~\l~ nm~·nt
Stgned 0 [ RKk r\ sadoonan
CLEVELt\ ND INDIANS At·qutro:d '~ o C.1rlo.'
ll.lt'rj!a (rum the:- San Dt ego Padres' for :1 pl n ~ &lt;'r tp b~·
named nr ~·ash Opt w n~·d INF-OF Jo lbcrt•Cabrt:! ra tn ·
Buffalo of r ~c imcrnatmrml league Transkrr~d OJ
Jacob CruL trom lh~ l .~· dll~ to the 60-da} di .&lt;;abled
Th ,) m p~un

:". 05 p rn

:'i~t\

542,
-192
41 0

Toda\·'s games

M •mt r~:ll I Hcnnan~on :'i- 11 l m' S:m J.r: HlC I '&lt;'~,
r E~ t c s 7-7) . -1 0 :'ipm
·

6.l l
6.21
-!IU
-!In
4.1J

'10
6

10
II

.

'' "None of us gives a damn about

"The (new) kidney :s functioning
well ," Wright said . ·:sean had no
problems al all and Noel had no
problems. "
" His own kidney,s are s1ill func lionalto soi11e extent. in lilat they arc
slill pro~ucing some urine and water
volume, but are nol capable pf c arry -

._ life, his doctors said he should be
·. able to return to a normal life. maybe
· even basketbalL The NBA season
. starts in November.

basketball right now," Popovich ing ou1 the normal filtralion fun csaid. " If he never played another. lions."
game.. as long as he had his health
Noel Elliot was in a regul ar re covand the re sl of his life. t~at would be cry room and could be released from

"It 's dearly unprecedented. but
: he' s a~ very motivated individual,"

fine , ·we gu fo~ward as if he '~ not
going to be playing for us .''

''I'm certain ly not going to he the
: one who tells him he can't play ba&gt;: ketball again." Wright said.
Elli'ott. a 10-year NBA veteran
: and starting forward on the San
· Antonio Spurs championship team.
could leave the hospital within a
week and start. his worko~t regimen
, within the nexl two months if he's up
to it, Wright said.
Doctors have said it will take 2-3
months before they ' ll know if he can
1
pla'y again .
" We recommend some limit ation
: 0n a~tivity for six 10 eight weeks to
. ·all ow 1he incision to heal properly,"
.
: :wrighl said.
Elliott was Ill stable condnion
::after Monday's 'surgery and ·was

Baseball

:'i:'iiJ

flj C:

Wnttrn l)i\isio n
te~a s

Transactions

2:. Mtlw:aukt.'t' 0

H 1&gt;Ust1m

he Jcfl lh t! !ll tU rurSUC hi s faith . W &lt;l .'.
Browns: RouJ..ie Tim Cow.: h ~' ill IJ ;l\ cnpnrt 1r 1 m ..1!.. c m om fm fe ll ow
cL1im cd o lf waiv ers b] Miami . ·
he Cl c\' elan d"s starung q uarh.· rhack roo kll' 1\.n :- 81\l \\ n
The Dolphins were ~ wa rd e d _ the 1n Satu rJ av ·s cxhiPiu nn game
Bnmn . a ' L'Cn nd- rnund dra ft pick.
ri gh1 s to · Und cn,'ood beca use no again si the Min nesota Vik1ng., ,
,, a.., 3- nl--t. on flci J - ~ o ;:ll att empt s in
NFL te am with a worse n:(.:ord l-ast
But Tv Detmer is stil l pen( 1k d in t he Stc\.',l i.!r:-. · 7- 0- 2.1 . \ ' ICt or) O \ 'Cr
J :-. the lcam 's ope nin g day-\ tar1 c1.
vcar daimcd him.
Chu.:&lt;tgtl lll\ Fmtt ~ ..
- U ndcr ~vuod we nt AWOL alh:r hi . , coac h Chfi ~ Palm er ~; mi.
P.alriots · Nc..:'' En !:! land ..,i1m e d
first practice wilh the Vik ings ~m
Detmer has h\'e n the stan cr lor the u~ l n end Hcni·, .Lu "k. a~d !inrhctLc.·ker
Aug 2. leaving: hi s famil y. hi s agent Brow ns I 1-1 )' in hmh c.x hi bition · i{.lron AdJ nh ·
and team offi cials to speculate ab ~ut Qam es so far. whi le Cou( h. the top
Lu ~ ~. 27. ~ a~ origi nall y Jrafte-d
hi s motive and whcn;:ahout s .. Ovct·an draft Pic k. has come in during hy tl1c 1'\c'' Orl c:.m:-. Samts in the s~n· ·
Und erwo od ex pla ined his ab ~e nc e hy the seco nd and third quart ers. Palmer cn th rl'unJ of the 1990 draft. In 1996,
say1n g he was to rn betwee n a dc stre said he want s to ~cc what em:h can do he had '27 catc hc~ lor 2 W yard ", the
10 pursue the mini stry and thc.nccd 10 1n different situations.
mo~t n.:ccP1i on" h: a Smnt 'i rookie
supp ort hi s family.
Jets : While Vinn y Tcsta verd e since wide rec,ci h'l' Eric Martin had
Falcons : Running hack Jamal soli difi ed 'his pos ition as Nt:w York 's .1 ~ in 19R5 . He was released by the
And erson practiced in pads for the starter. the baule for the backup :-; kn R c d.., km ~ 1n Julv
Adams. c4. - had 51' 1ac k!es and
first time since ending hi s two-.wcek mt cns1 ficd when Ray Lucas had a
poor second h~lf against Gteen Bay four tackles for a loS&gt; of yard age at
contract holdout last Wednesd ay.
Lou1:-. 1:.Hla Stale U n 1\'crs it y .
Coach Dan Reeves said he \VaS on Saturday ni ght.
watching to see if Am!lerson . ' the
C oach Bill Parcell s said nin e-yc&lt;.lr ·. Li9ns: Dctnu t signed free agent
NFL's No. 2 ru sher last season wi1h vc1cran Sco tt Zolak will take most u( l in ~ h ac kcr Steve Morrison to'replac e
1. 8 ~6 yard s. was "mentally and the snap s 1n the team 's home ex hi bi- Malt Russell . who suffe red ·a seasonph ys ically" ready for a game siiUa - tion opener ag ainst Philadelph ia on ending knee inj ury· in Friday's exhiFnday night. Lucas, a form er spcc1al bition opcrier flt A llonta
tion.
.
M 1\ r r~ s on .pl aye d fu ur se as on S
" We ' ll see how it goes. and make tcams·'standout convened to full-time.
a decision laler in Ihe we ek whether quarterback last season. likely won'1 wi th lndianapolt s. He has. started29 '
he. goes Saturday (against Baltimore) see any action against Philadelphia. game' in hi s pro career. includ ing 12
or if we hold him off another week."
Steclers: Pittsburgh . released last season. when he had 65 tat l:'les
rookie · fre·e agent ki c'~er Mall and un,;- Sack.
Reeves sa.id .

"There was a little fear in Scan ·
with everything going on." Rios
said. "The family is very. ve ry ·
close."
In a s1atemen1 released by 1hc hospita! , Noel said : "I am holh hon9rcd
and glad that can be here for my
brother in hi s tinle of need . .. . My
brother has alw ays been there for me,
and I will always be here for him .
The Lord is with us .."
Ell ion nc~ded a transplanl

the ho spital within the week . H~ he cause o f a co nditi on that s lows the
sh (luld be able to !Jvc a norma l' li f~: . kidne ys. preventin g them from prop-

few weeks after the Spurs won the
NBA. cpampion ship. that he was in·
need of a transplant.
He has had k1dn cy problems SJnce
June 1993. when he was d1agnos ed
with a kidney ,infcct1on whi le with
lhe Dclroit Pi ston s. A trade to the
Houston Rock ets in 1994 fel_l
through because of a fail ed physical ·
Slcmming from the kidn ey problem.
Had there not been a famtl y
mat ch. Elliott woulo;J ha1·c h een
plac ed on a tr;m splant wa1llng li st.
·. An estimalcd 62 ,000 A_m cnr.: ~n ~

: said. Dr. Francis Wright. the surgeon
Elliott received the kidney from with the one kidney. Wnght sa id.
crl y· filtering wa ste from th.c hlnnd. an:: aw.:tittn,g ~heart . lun ~. l1 wr. k1J ~.
• who perform ed the transplant _ hi s 3 2~ year-old hrothcr ..NOel. ·
Elliott' s ag ent. Armando Rios. The cause or the qiscasc - foc al ney or punr.; rc as . Las ! ~ .: ar. -UJOO ·.
: surgery Monday at Mctho9ist
Urologi st Samniy Vick . who said Ellioti met with hi s brother an~ .;cg mC ntr~ r glom erula r ~dcro s.is- ito people died hcfon: they cnuiJ _gel 'the
: spccialty ·and Transplant Hospilal.
remov ed Noe l's left kidney, said ntl1er members of his famil y Sund ay not ( lt,:;1r.
organ t h e ~ nccJcd. ·

ll

68

Iii!

~0 ~

'

- ~2

14

.4!\4

llhision
.jO

Pbornix Bl Houston. 8·]0 p m
Minne'nua at Los Angeles, 10:}() p.m.

" ...., w
"'
Monday's scores
54
.' .., 5~ 66

r.1.

" "'-t'"
J 7 70
,.
'"' "'"

l\1tmles0tJ .. :
PetJIJII

L

5~

c~nlr:.l

7' :

. ~08

58

expected to be moved out of in tensi.ve .care into a regular recovery
room by today.
The Spurs are thinking only of
Ellion's recovery and are not worried
aboul his retwn to the court , coach
Gregg Popovich said.

will be on medic arion the rest of his

C INC IN NATI 9 . Pitts bur!! h 1

,,
"'' ,,"'"
"

Iwn

.. 60

By The Associated Press
Antonio Freeman had a payday
unlike a•w other wid e rece iver.
Freeman si gned a seven-year, $42
milli-on contracl with the Green Bay
· Packers on Mond~x ..making. him· tlie
highes1 -paid receiver in the NFL ·
Freeman· s agent. Joel Segal. told
The Associaled Press the deal also
includes a.$10 million signing bonus,
the largest ever for a wide receiver,
and second-highest m team h1story.
The Packers gave quarterback Brett
Favre a $12 million bonus in 1997.
"It was everything I hoped and
dreained," Freeman ~ ~id . ."I'm just
happy to 'be a Green Bay Packer for a
long. long time to come . I love it .
here, and I always wanled to be
here. "
The con,tract im:ludes tWo void... able years. me aning the All- Pro
wideout can opt out of the deal after
five sea..;;ons. The contr~Ct is contingent on Freeman playing in 25 per-

ccnl of the Packers' offensive plays car as they were on .the ir way l tJ a
in any season .
team m ecttng .
"This is a landmark l:Ontrat: t, ··
Doctors \verc tutcmplln g to repa ir
Segal said. 'This IS something thai's a fractured humerus .:__ the hone
never been done before. h breaks lhc ·hetwccn the shoulder and the elh ow
ice for all the other receivers. ··
- and at least one of the art eri es that ··
Freeman . who hrieny parti cip.ited . ., upplit:s blood lo his ri ght h\ md .
in drills ~onda y morning. set career ·
Dye's surgeon. Dr: Tim Bonatu s
highs with 84 catches for 14 touch- said tl\c 28-ycar-o ld 's arm was
downs and a league-beSI 1.424 ~ ards. crushed rath er than scverelv cut.
despite ~reaking hi s jaw late in the "leaving the viability of the ;u'm in
qu esti on.··
year.
Last summer, the Packers offere.d
The next step following surgery
Freeman a fiv e-year. $17 million occurs during the next 24 hours .
contract with a signing bonus of just when doctors attempt to re -establish
over $3 million. Freeman rejected and maintain hlnod !low 111 the arm ,
the deal , choosing instead 10 play for Bonalus said.
.
the team 's tender offer of$Ll53 milHolmes was 9ri vi ng Dye ·s car
lion and ~come a free agent at sea- north on lnlerstate 17 about 10 : 1~
son 's end.
a.m. when the car veered into the
"I took a gamble, .and it worked median and rplled. Simpson and Dye
out," Freeman said. ·
were ejected from the vehicle . Only
Holmes was wearing a seal belt.
In other training camp news:
Holmes was in good condit ion
Cardinals: Offensive tackle
Ernest Dye was in fair condition at With a· cut on his forehead . Simpson
Aagstaff Medical Center. where he was released from 1he hospital after
'underwent
cx.tensive
surgery · being checked for pai,n in his left hip.
Monday evening following a car
Dolphins: D1mitrius Underwood.
accident. Teammates Lester Holmes a first-round draft pick relea sed last
and Carl Simpson also we're in the week, by the Minnesota Vikings after

:Spurs' Elliott gets kidney transplant' from brother

Scoreboard
Baseball

NFL training
camp reports

first thi s season.

Rangers whip Indians 13-5, kil·l Tribe's six~game win streak
By TOM WITHERS ,
said. ··[ wasn·l wam1ed up, so 1JU'I
Baerga . a three- time t\11-Star sec- homers. but th at little ground ball by
CLEVELAND (AP I - Some wenl ou1 10 &lt;ec whall wuld do ,' '
ond baseman with the Indians from Lee Steve~ s was the. big hil of the
managers despise making 'lhe \.·alk ·
Royce ClaytOn ·· and Mark 1990-96. was reacquired on Monday game ... said Texas manager Joh1iny
from the dugoutlo the mound tu pull McLemore al so homered for ·the from San Diego to provide veteran Oates. "That kept up going and gal
~starting pitcht:r or reSC\JC a reliever Rangers . who posted their 34th c.xperit!nce and exuberance to a teain · the matchup " " wanted, Ral'fy
on the ropes .
come-from-behind victory.
couming down lhe days umilthe real against the right -hander. "
· Johnny Oates isn't one of them. , Rodriguez. who homered twice season starts in Oclober.
Steve Reed came on and afler
"I don't hesitate to go tu the on Sunday in Chicago. hit a solo
Starting at third base and batting missing a high fastball, Palmeiro,
bullpen ," Ihe Texas manager said. homer in the first and connected for eighth, Baerga received a standing batting tor Roberto Kelly, drove a 2"They are our strcngih. so why no1 a 1wo-run shot, his 28th, in the ninth. ovation from lhe Jacobs Field fans 1 pitch over the wall in righl-ccmer.
"I'm not looking for home runs ... - some of the same ones whd hated Palmeiro has faced Reed twice. and
play that card~ "
Oales used three relievers after he said. "They're just coming."
to see him traded away in 1996 has a !hree-run homer both times. It
removing Slllfler Rick Helling and
Mike Munoz (2-1) gollhe win in when he came to bat in the third.
was Texas' firs! pinch, hi! homer this
they combined for five innings of relief Texas· relievers have given up
He struck out looking and made· year and the third of Palmeiro's
shuiOut ball as the Rangers snapped just two runs in their last 24 innings. an error that led to a Texas run in the career.
Cleveland 's. six -game winning
"The biggest ingredienl to a play- ihird as the Rangers took a 2"0 lead.
"! was looking for a pitch up .
~treak ·Monday night with a 13-5 · off team is the bullpen," said But after singling to cemer in the
,rout of the Indians.
Palme.iro. ~·usually, playoff games sixth, Baerga pointed to Ihe sky as he
Rafael Palmeiro, makin~ a rare are tighl and the bullpen thai domi- ·got another lengthy salute. He sinpinch-hitting appearance, hit a three- nate's will prevaiL I think our bullpen gled again the eighth. '
run homer and !van Rodriguez gives us an edge."
" It was really special ," said
homered twice for Texas.
·
Richie Sexson had three RB!s for Baerga. "Just to be in tjle clubho,use
Palmeiro was kept out or the Cleveland. which hadn 'I been beaten before the game. I couldn'! believe
starting lineup because of a sore so soundly since a 2) - !loss in New it. I was saying, ·Am I dreaming, or
right knee. Bu1 pinch-hitting for the York on July 24,
is this true?"'
"When we end a winning slreak, . Texas trailed 5-3 in the seventh
second time this season, he connected for his 31st homer in Tex.as' five- we just don'i end it. we blow it right 'when McLemore hit his fifth homer
· run seven.th as the Rangers rallied to out of the water," said Indians man- of the season. Burba.was gone after
beat the Indians in a possible post- ager Mike Hargrove .
allowing a single to Rodriguez.
season preview between division
Carlos Baerga contributed two Ricardo Rincon (2-3) struck out
leaders.
singles and brought some energy to Rusty Greer, but gave up singles to
"I went into the back to see if I bored Cle•eland fans , bul the Juan Gonzalez and Lee Stevens that
. could hit. and before I took a, swing Indians ' bullpen couldn't hold a one- tied'it 5-all:
·
! heard I was on deck," Palmeiro run lead for staner Dave Burba.
"You can talk about those

:Seven-year, $42M contract makes Freeman richest receiver

r•hltional Footb111i LtllgM
CLEVElAND BROWNS: Released lB Jerry
Rudzinski . LB Da,·id Menard. WR Sylvnin Girard.
WR Joseph Nustou; i, WR Mark Seay. DE Rod
Manuel. DB Kory Blackwell and DR &amp;t e Stokes
DETROIT LIONS: Signed lB Steve Morrison
Released WR Undre Wil hams .
GR EEN BAY PACI&lt;,ERS : Signed WR Ant onio
Freeman to. a seven-year -contract exrensiofl
lNOIANAPOUS COLTS Wa1 v~d LB Antony
Jordan. QB lim Kubiak and TE Joe Kuye ndall. ·
MIAMI DOLPHINS; Claimed DE Dtmunus
Underwood off wan·er! frnnl lhe Mmnesota V iking~ ·
S1gned WR Kio Sanford to a one-year contract
MINNESOTA VIKINGS· Released OT Chad
Abernathy and DT Jose White.
NEW ENGLAND FlATRIOTS: S1gncd TE
He nry Lu sk and LB Aaron Adams '
NI;W YORK JETS Waived G Ah::\ Bewstein.
PHILA[)ELPHI A EAGLES Released Ol Ed
Kohl
PITfSBli RfiH STEEI.ERS · R c k a~e d PK M all
D;wcnp&lt;'\ 11

Hockey
National Hockfy LeagutATI. ,\ NTA THR AS HERS Arqmr c:d F Denny
Lambert h om the Nas h11lle Prcd:llilr1 fnr tht" n ght s
10 C Rnnd) Rab!Hlllle
PHOENIX COYOT ES St )! m:J RW TJ, ,,
han s&lt;.'n W a muiln&lt;'Jr .-n ntract
fORONTO ~1 .·\ P LE I. EJ\ FS t\n thlUn~ ed the
r c ~ 1 ~ nar m n 1&gt;! AnJc1 ~ Ht'dber~ ~H I ~ I . llll ~ e nc r; 1l
Ol ilntl!!~· r and dm:cwr 11! plfiy&lt;'r &amp;·1 &lt;'lopmcnl

lll·tn'll a1 Orlrmdu.- 7 .10 11m

Tire 0 ·Wearin
Your Heart on
.,
Your eeve._
.

For Painless Job Opportunities See the Classifieds

The Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2155

Noel might he able lu go home in 35 days.
Wrioht said Noel matched fivo of
the sb; :1ntigel1 markers .
1
" It should be an extremely good
tran splant for Scan." Wrighl said
" Hi s brother is a better-than-average
match .... That bodes well. in partieular, for the long-lcrm results of the
transplant. ..
Doctors left Elliott's two kidneys
in place whi,le inserling lhe donor
organ on his right side!, dOwn in the
pelvis arCa·ncar the bladder, Wright
said.
Most kidney transplant recipients
don 't require removal of the original
organs· unless there is a lhreal of ·
some kind of infection, Wright said.

. Crenshaw finishes Ryder. Cup
lineup with Lehman &amp; Pate
By TIM DAHLBERG
· MEDINAH, IlL (AP) - The I).S.
Ryoer Cup team was filled out
M9nday when Tori1 Lehm an and
. Steve Pate were added 10 !he 12-man
: team Ihat will try tp win lhe cup back
· from Europe. next month in Boston.
Ben
Crenshaw
: Captain.
: announced the selection s. praising
· them as play,ers who can help the
: American team stop a stre ak in
: which Europe 'has won the last two

two of the last three holes.
"Pulling ·Ibis team together (s
. something I' II cherish the rest of n\y
life," Crenshaw said: ''No captain
could look down thi s lisl and say
these are not the best."
. Lehman, who was 12th on the
Ryder Cup points li st, ~d ·widely
been expected to be pickc for the
team. He is 3-2-2 in Ryder up play.
although he has been on lhc losing
side in botp the last two competi -..
tions. ·
""cups.
- Crenshaw also declared his team
''I'm sick and tired of losin g, "
: unified, despilc the controversy thai. Lehman said.
•raged during the PGA Ch ampionship
Pare , who was "14th .on the point s
~ when Crenshaw bla.slcd se veral top list, was somewhat of a surprise . .
players for makin g an issue out of
Pate played on one · Ryder Cup
Ryder Cup compensati on.
team , in 1991 in Kiawah: S.C.. hut
• " Thai issue is behind us. " was inj ured · in ct cUr accident the
Crenshaw said. " Regardless of what week of the event jnd played in onl y
happcnca this week and hnw il hap- 11111.! four-ball mat c: h.
pened, we have to he a !cam . Bos h.m
'' He's a ve ry, ve ry fi erce contpeti iS righ1 around th e corner. lor who will walk throu"h a wall for ·
Uni ficati on is a h1g part of I hi s and you if you ask him
C re nshaw
it ' s done...
t · said.
. In pi ck1n g L..: hman . a twn-timc
C rc n s h~m' said he did1i' f i11a kc hi !-.
R) der C up player. and Pal ~: . fin al pick until la1 c Sunda:- . nigh t.
C rcn.., h;m h ypa~~cd l i\'C- I IIl l l' cu p · then cal led Pat e. wh n \\il ~ a ll t:.td} 111
player Ficd CoU p le ~ and Boh E:-. lcs. l1cd. to LC!I him, HL' . ~ &lt;lid he conS1dwho would have pla)cd h is \\ ay onto cn~d Leo.! Janlcn . Chris Pcrr;. Esh:'
ihc team in Sun day·, PGA and Ha le Irw in an1on u other-. . bul
C hampionshi p if he hudn"t hu gL:yt:d ·a!:!nnl;cd 11\'Cr Coupl e~ .

w:·

c

'

I

'I,

'

'

ni ~ ht

hcfmc the ope ration .

Ell Hill announ( CJ las t month . a

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR ''THANI(

SEAN ELLIOTT

You"'"'

ADS

Want to show your appreciation?
Here are some of the most
popular "Thank
you" ad sizes.
'
.
(other sizes are available)
'
.Please see Kathy or Dave at the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy
or call99l-2l55 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance. .
.

'

-----~--------------------,

r-----------,

I r--~-------I
I
I

.

2 col. x 5"

$60.50

1 col. x 2"
$12.10

1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1 col. x 3"
$18.15

2 col. x 4"

$48.40
2 col. x 3"
$36.30
2 col.

x 2"

$24.20

'I

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Welcoming Birds to Your Yard
: By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Socl·
ety

carry off for their own homes what

~"Bare. ruin'd choirs, ·where late
1hc sweet birds sang .... "
. The above, from Sonnet Seven ty·
1hrce, renccts only one or Shake·
~peare's

many references to birds in

hi&gt; opus. The dramatiS! and poet
"'ems not to have cared much for
dJigs or cats, but he referred often to
il!lwers and many birds in his work,
hiost notably in 'Romeo and Juliet
when the lark alens the lovers to the
dllwn. Not all the poetry in the world .
can do these creatures justice .. Is it
,\]iy wonder why we welCome them ., ·
: From a bird's point of view, what
''lakes a homestead. a yard, anracti"e ?~ Birds. look for a consistenl
~~urcc

of 'Clear water, plants that

cij'fer them food. safe cover, and lots

uf nesting sites . But

Tuesday, ~gust17 , 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ir you are tou

\iily in your landscaping and upkeep.
you may he' unwillingly discourag~
ing a\'ian visitnrs.
" If tli~: yard is too manicun.' d - 1f
tl~rc arL' no g r:..~.-.:-. clipping:-.. lc~n c~.
M."bd twi g:-, th~n birds might s hun
V1.'HI. for th&lt;.:&lt;sc itt;ms an: all ncc-do;,' r.J
1"f1r nt: .-,t in g. "maiL' nab. Birds arc tcl'rlfi c at I'C i,:yfli ng and will helpfu lly

we consider "refuse.,,
Do you have a variety of trees
and bushes, evergreen and deciduous , shon and tall? You should, and
if not. think about planting some.

Birds require numerous levels of
plants. bushes, and trees in which to

find safe cover, practice nying. and
seek shelter.

You can in·stall a tuh of water
somewhere in your yard or go for a
more sophisticated water garden .
But remember to keep 1 the wacer
fresh all year long and positipn the
water sourc~.

such as a bird b:.1th, so

that birds can easily ny to bushes or
low tree branches to escape pre-da-

In the winter, seed would be most
w~lcomc as would suet. Once you
start feeding the birds. you ought to
tnntinue . The word &lt;:auld get out
that you're n'1t that "dependable."
• There are all sons of (nearly) squir·
rei-proof feeders on the market. if
you don't want to throw the seed on
the ground (fine in the summer. of
course. but no help 10 birds when it
snows) .
As for watching these delightful

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
On S.lurdoy, Sol*fnbtr 4,

Bonk parking lot lhe l ollawlng vthlcln :
11186 Nleeen P/U VtN
11 HIND11YOGC-7

1 - Ford llrI I YIN
11FIICU1.TSGUB41111

I L:-:-:-:.,.,J~,.,_.,=

creatures. Consider borrowing or
buymg a pair of binoculars. This

Uwrence,

will help you .to discover the more
funive birds ')nd provide you with a

Collection Officer
(8) 17, 20, 24, 27, 31

Tnui;h more accura.tc picture of thei r

~i

behavior. Consider a·pair of binocu-

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
'
· $8.00.PER DAY.

sa

...

open up new
. ; tn ices
and
inl'ormati()n
· : n.; ... nlarcL'S fm people 1\) takl! care
nl their Social Scct,Jrity busmcs.s .
t:,\ll" pcopiC whll arc too husy to
'c nll ur o.;t'op h)' thL' oll1ce. these
;;•.:rviccs c an h.: a lif~.&gt;sa\'Cr. The
!o.l'n ices a rT a'.'.ulahlc from SlH.:ia l
~ccurity Onltnc at www.ssu.gov.
,,. If you are fa Socia l Se.cur ity
~l('ncl"ic1ary. you can now rcq ucsl
WL"h s ltl'

.(rep lacement copy of the Socia l
Security .Pcnefi l statemen t (Fo rm
1099) ·you rq:e ive ·in Janu ary
~how1ng the to ta l amoun t of bene'j'its you rcc'eivcd Juri ng ·the pre·
~rfuus

y.car. The form

.~i s

,,

,~, .. , ,~

1--~-,.-.,.-,---­

A

' III I I

i ~ri co me .

Sec uri t y ·. ln come

'Jo get a current weather
.report, check the

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

Shop at home...

Buy from the Classifieds!
SAYRE
TRUCKING .

Business
Services

Hauling
Limestone &amp;Gravel

.Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
,31t1/99TFN

WICKS
HfiOLIHG IHC.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Businesses rJe Sure &amp;
lje II Part
·Of 'this ljear's
Special Jail Sports
Preview Edition!

tm•O'tme''

' Utilities ,

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirr,
Ag ricultural Lime ,
Mulch , Top Soil
(Low Rates)

(7401 992-3838

740-992-3470

Brllldozer &amp; B&lt;icklooe
Seroice•
H ouse &amp; Tr ailet· Sites
Land C learing ·&amp;
. , . Grading

S'eptic System• &amp;

Howard L. Writesel· .

Don 't Ne ed A Big Orw

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Call A Liule 011e

D.RIVEWAY STONE
Landscape Material,
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost
Light Hauling

8

up to

949,2168

ton

992·5455

4/2 TF N

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
s;tl;ng &amp; SIIIU

Linda's Painting
Take the pain out
· of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates
Contracton WJ!come

Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180

Albany, Ohio

Free Estimates

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

. 45771
7 40-949·2217 .
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM - 8 :00 PM

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
,Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422 .
Chester, Ohio
' 10/25198 tm

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

YOUR

Quality Driveways,

Sidewalks , Patios
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

740-742-8015
877-353-7022 (toll free)
B/11/'991

Lo~·a l

Serv n•n Heal rum p
C entral A1r . W1nrl ow
Un1ts, RV Ro o f top

Opportunity!
GSECO, 11220
fFiorissant, PMB 108, Florissanl ,

Henderson , WV

;ooo·s
.,\

IF,rn,.

•

•

.,

Weekly! Processing Mail
Home! FREE Supplies &amp;
Bonuses! Start lmniediate)y!
To Get Started 1-800·230·

Includes web

..

~F;R~E~E~IJn~te~rn~e~t~~~li~~::~l
unlimited money
AHitiate

FREE ESTIMATES
Co•t. IWV003506

Advertising Deadline·Thursday, August 19, 1999
•

O J'

Kathy a t

Ext.

105

Call for details

The Daily Sentinel

740-992•0038

For More I nformation

I

.,

BELOW.
WHOLESALEI
1·15kw (i.e., 7.5 kw ~94)
Call1·509-276-7382 or write:
Turner Dlaaela,

.•

l

•
"
'

••

•

'

••••

..
Phone (740) 593-6671

:!

1

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland , Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl t ops,
Four wheeler seats, motor~ycie seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 I' 5:00 ·
Over 40 yrs experience

••

28115 N. ShOrt Rd., O.r

WA - ·

'~:~~~~~~~~~~~

STRUGGLING WITH BILLS?
CONSOLIC t,TE INTO ON E LOW
. ' PAYMENT!!
Reduce or Waive Interest
Slop Lale Fees
Stop Collector Calls Avoid Bankruptcy
CONTINENTAL CRE DIT
COUNSELING
1·888-455-2227
NON PROFIT

Gotan 1 Miirli-dish7
Want 320 channels? C.all Direct
,Wholesale, .(A Canadian Company)
1·204-992·284 t
These .ads repre.. nt National Classified
. Ad\IIN'Il&amp;lng. Thlt news]:llper it not rnponsnbla lor
content If you hsva any QUe&amp;tlons or complaintt
alxM lhe'• adS piAUa feel !me 10 comac1 our
uJesperson at the pnone number list!Ml bllow,

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts

F actory Authorized
Deulers .
1000 St. ·RI. 7 South

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room additions &amp; Remodelln9
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing .
•Roofing &amp; GuHors
•Vinyl Sl.dtng &amp; Palnttng
•Patio &amp; Porch Decks
Free Estimates

... L a nd N o ta P o rtfo l ios

Colonial Fin a nCi a l

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

22 yro. Locnl

1-800-863·9006 Ext. 854 .
50%!!1NO APPLICATION FEES!I
I
WANTI;D: MOBILE HOME PARKS
80+ sites (occupied)
National company pays cash
Closes fasll!
888-653-2244 x13.

ll"l'i5i'iECIOs ED"HOMigsLow or 0 downl Gov't and bank
rape's being sold NOWI
Financing Avallable.Call Now!

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp;. Compar~
FREE
ESTIMATES ·
985-4473
1(22/TFN

1·800·730·7772, tixt. 8010

Buy,' Sell or Trade

CLASSIFIEDS!

,I

I

Clean Late Mode l Cars Or
Trucks , Low Miles. 1995 Models:
Or Newer. Smith Bu1c• Pon!lac ,
1900 East&amp;fn Avsnue. GallipoliS.

222'
START
DATING" TON IGHT!
H alle Fun Meeting Ellg1ble Sin·
gles In You r Area Call FOr More
In for mation. 1· 800·ROM ANCE.
Ext 9735.

'Wanled To _Buy: 350 Chevy En·
gine·: ~304)675-6704 .
·
Wanled to Buy : Comm&amp;rc ia! Gas

-P!Z.Za Oven! can: (740)·379-9000

Sta·rt Dating Tonight! Have tun
plaving tlie Ohio Dating Game. 1·
800·AOMAN CE. eKtension 9681 .

Wanted To Buy : Used Mobrl~
Homes , Call 740·446,0175. Or i304·675-5965.

Announcements .

110 '

Are you or someone you .~t now
fighting cenc:er 1 I survived call
me el 304-895-3092.
· New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens
740-592·18-42
Quality cloth ing and'hOusehO id
il ems. $1 .00 bag: sale every
Thursday. Monday lhnl Saturday

9:()().5:30.

Giveaway

1 Male B lack Cat , 1 Fj!mal&amp;
Orange. Cat , " Yrs Old . Shot s
,~ Current. 740-441 -0469 ,

112 German Shepherd, 11.2 DO·
berm an. 5 Weeks Ol d, Female.
To Good Home 74()..441-0118.

4 Mont hs Old Fr iendly Kittens.
740-379·9278 .
'7 kitt ens , some m illen pa wed
304·675-7223.
9 5% Lab , male, lixed, all shots ,
' BuCksh ot ' , to good hOme onlY.
740-742·8803.
Au stralian shep herd/ border cOl·
lie mix PUJ?S. 74(H42-2237
Big Bl ac k Couc h Folds nown
St orage Unde rn eath Fair Co ndi·
lion , Come To: Foster' s Traile r
Park, Trailer 111:5, At River Street In
Kanauga.
Nume ro us dog s to giveaway,
ag es 10 mont hs to ' 1 yea r ol d,
one has papet's, 7 40·992-7~7 .

a

AEiglstered Chow Puppy. months
ok1. Please to good home. (740)·

446- 1032
Siberi an Hus ky. Gent!P. Temp er.
li ttl e over on e year o ld

a

1304)773-5 132.

.

To Goo d Home 1f2 B o~ter Terri·
er, 112 Jack Russell Terrier. Pup·

PI'· (740)· 388·9325

Foun ct : Brown And White Dog .
Looks Li ke A Bird Dog, Around
LeGran de Bp ulevard &amp; 141. Cal)
Between 5 P.M. -10 P.M. 740·44 1·

9805.

.

Found: Brown Beagle Type Mae
dog. Found on State Rt. 588 1
mile past H.S. (740)·446-8142
L·OSI! Green Wa lle t AI K· Mart,
Possib ly In Shoppi ng Car l. Needs
Photos! Aewardl740-256·1772.

l ost: LARGE WHITE Male Dog.
Los t Near A io Gra nde. SUB -

STANTIAL REWARO I 740·245·
0485 After 6:00 P.M.
Mfss1ng· red bone coon hound,
Dex l er area. answers 10 'Red' ,
reward, call740-742·2182 .

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

6309 and 6339 State At. 588 Rodney,
Tuesday
· Wednesday
Jeans. di shes. jars. clothes all
sizes.
Be Pa id ln .Advance.
DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before ttle ad
Is to run. Sunday
ed ition· 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edi tion
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.
August f7. 18 . 19. Moving , 74044 1·0182
Bedroom
'Suite,
$500.00; Chrna Cab1net . $300 ,00;
Gompuler Stand·, $.20 .00 ; Book
Shelf, $35 .00; Reclinet , $40.00;
King Headboard . $25 .00; Make·
~P Table &amp; Seat . $50 00.
Yard Sale Tuesday aM Wednes·
day. 9 :00· 5 .00: 2 mil es east of
Porter on St. At ·554

Pomeroy, ·
Middleport
&amp; V icinity
All Yard Sale&amp; Mual Be Paid In
Advance, Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day b eforE! the ad Ia t o r u n,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1:00pm Friday.
·

Part· Time Poattlon of VIctim AOvoc ete· Pos ition available for
highl y motl\latad , de pendab le .
and ' responsible individual for 24
hoUrs per week . Duties Include :
ass•stmg victims of crime in Ma·
so n County, promoting victi m
rtg hts, an.enthng Circuit Coun anct
Ma~~strate Court wit!'l vict ims,
ass1Sllng ·victims tile tor C r ime
Victims Compensallon. sup erVISion ol volunteerS. and prepa·
ration of monthly reports . Muat
have at least an Associ al es De-·
gree. one year ex perltnc• . or
currently attending coll ege in a
victtm related field. Send lettet' of
interesl aM resume before August 23 , 1999, to Diana JOhnson ,
Mason County Pro secuting An orney, P.O. Bok 4 33, Po int Pleas·

ant. WV 25550. EO Employer. No

phone calls please.

·----'-----Experience
446-3888

HelpWant~

$2 ,000 . WEEKLY ! Mailing 400
Brochures! Sat isfactio/1 ·Guar·
an teed! Postage .&amp; Supplies Pro·
videQ! Rush Self·Addr essed
Stampe:d Envelope l· GICO, DEPT
5, Box 14 38, AN TIOC H . T N .
37011·1438. Start Immediately

Regist ered N urse s · All Specl a li·
ties (N ew Grads Welco me ). Have
You Ever Thought 0 1 Working In
The UK Or Australia? Call t -388·

' 368·4 720. Fax 41 6·389·0515 .
Worldwide Hftlthc are ~x ch ange
1801-1 Yon ge Street, Toro nto ,
OntariO M5E 1 W7 Email : w he~
canOtelsec . ~t.

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN

SBOO WEEK LY BE YOU R OWN
BOSS! WO RK FROM HOME
PROG ESSING GOV ER NMENT
REFUNDS. NO EXP ERI ENCE
NECESSA RY 1-1800 1·854·6469
&amp;~ . 5045.

COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1·
800-339-4204 Or I · 800-469-8 1&amp;C
For A!] po in·tm ent To Come To
Nashville , Te nneSse e .ltnd Audition For Ma)or ~eco id Prpduce rs .
Internet: www.wcin.ac
·

$800 WEEKLY
POTENTIAL ,
Complete Simple Gover nment
For ms At Home . No E.:penence
Nec essary. CAL L .TOL L FREE ·

Straight Seam Seamstress Want·
ed, 740. 388·9310, 9-5 .
Wan~ ed

1·(8001·906·3599 Ext 2601 .

part· tim e babysiller for
speci al needs child in the be nd
area 304-682-3339.

ASSEMBLY AT HOME U Crafts ,
Toys, Jewelr~ Wood. Sewing .
Typ1ng ... Great Pay! CALL 1-800795--0380 EKt. 1201 (24 Hrs) .

WILOUFE JOBS To $21.60 /HR.
I NC'. "BENE FI TS GAM E WAR ·

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or Sell .
Shirley Spears. 304-67S:1429.
~voo Products: Start your own In·
Home Business. Work Flexi ble
Hours, Enjoy Unlimited Earni ngs.
1·888·56 1·2866
.

. DENS.
SECU RITY.
MA INTENANCE. PARK RANGERS . NO
EXP NE EDED. FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO. CALL 1· 800· 8 13·
3585, EXT. #4211. 8 A.M. ·9 P.M.
7 DAYS Ids, inc.

140

CRUISE SH IP JOBS? Trav91 ,&amp;
Work World·Wide. For FREE Info
Send Your Address To : Cr ui Secrew. f24J492 Ma1n 51.. K . Pomt.
4169. Australia .
.

Business
Training

Golllpoilo Caroor

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hrs. $25K ·$80KI Yr. 1-800·
"536-0486 X 7777 , www.1cwp·com

DATA EN TRY · National B illing
Seeks A Full / Part Ti me Medical
Biller. Sa l ary Al'$ 46K Per Yea r
PC Required No E .11 perie nce
Needed . Will Train. Call t -888251·7475.
Do mino's P1zza of Pl. Pleasa nt
no w hi ring all pos it ions. fte~ib l e
schedule&amp; good pay 304 ·675-

5858.

Drivers : Free '3 -Week CO L
Training. Earn $26 ·$32.000 ! 1st
Vr . W I Fu!l Bene"fiiS. No E.:p .
Needed . P.A M Transport Specia l Call Toll Free 1· 877- 230 6002 Sun - Fri . 7 A.M. ·7 P.M .
www.pamtransport.com
Employment Opportunity : Position available for part·t1me assis·
l ant prosecuting altorney. Only
!hose admitted lo the pract1ce .ol
· law 1n th e State ol West Vi rginia
may ap p ly. Please subm1t re·
sume and co._-er tetter to Diana
Johnson . Mason Count~ Prose·
cuting Attorney. Posl Olf1Ce Box
433. Poi nt Pleasanl. West V11g1·
nia. 25550, by August 31 , 1999.
No. telephone cal ls please. Equal
Opportunity Employer. •
Experienced Line M,en COL Hel·
full. flaY. based on E~perience!
Can S1ar1 ; Monday, 8/16/99. Call:

(740)·256·6033
Long Jo hn Sliver's Is now Hlr·
lng
'
l ong John Silvers . the nation's
leadmg seafood QSR, 1S "looking
for se1t-mot1valed, energetic peo·
pie who are seek ing a new and
rewardlryg career. We have ca·
reer opportUnities for salaried
manager positions avallabiB In
Gallipolis. Be nefits include : Medl ·
cai/Oenta!IUfe. 5 Day Work Week
competitr,oe Salaries 401 K Tuition
Ass1stance 11 you have sqrne
rnanagemenl Skills, combined with
reslau rant exper.ence, we might
be e:c-act ly whal you are rooking
lor ! Apply in Person or Send Ae·
sume to · Ellen McDonald ; 229
Dunwoody Ct .: Asheboro . NC

27203 Fa• 1336 )· 672 -5271
can. 1-(888)-635-Fish. EbE

ot

MEDIC AL B ILLING. Earn Excel ten! Income . Full Train ing. Computer Requ lfed . Call Toll Free

(800)·540·6333. ex!. 2301
Of11ce seeking Medical Data-entry
reps for Entry· Level Position Ex·
cellent Pay PC Reg Call: 1·800298.8506.

Col.

(Careers Close To Home)

CallToday! 74()-44&amp;--4367.
1-800-214-Q452 .
Reg 190-05·12748.

150

l)choC!I&amp;
Instruction

a.

DAlli ERS ·· Owner Operators
Manufacturers Fleet N·e eds
Truc~s For Growmg Business
Ray or Jim (B00~-354 ! 1 1 1 1 '

Lost and Found

Found! Coon .Hound On Li ncoln
Pike Ca ll 740-256-6184.

70

.I

''

N.ow Taking Applfcatlons For
Onvers For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy ·
Onjy, Oomrno'S Pizza

Plumber wi th 5 Years
1n Commerci al or Rni de nti al
Wor k. Ca ll to set up Intervie w&amp;
Monday·FM ay. 8 :00·5 :00, (7-'0 l·

EM PLOYM ENT
SE RVI CES

8-11-99
I, Tracy Lynn Robertso n will not
be responsible lor any debt other
tl1an my ow n or those agree ments with my per sonal Signature .

AU. Yard Sales MUl l

In the .

740 742~8888

AS A· S·C. W'!VIN.jcsdes1gns.com/
products . 1·(888 )-769-7331 , ext .

40

Wanted to Buy

2526.

"LO SING. WEIGHT IS AS EASY

Lost: bu rgandy daily pl'anner
book, SA 7 between Mid d,!epor t
' and Cheshire. 740·985-3581 .

$$
WE BUY
$$
• Seller Financed Notes
• Ins urance Setllem e nts

$2,500 VISA'MASTE RCAR D UNSE·
CUREDI Guaranteed approval! !! E~ad
Credit/No Credit OKltncludes full cred·
it restoration. Memlfers of lhe BBB. Not
a scam. 1·800-400·6895 e~. 25.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
Case-IH Parts

BUSINESS. Grants, Loans ,
1 -8 00 - 969 - 1200 Ext.. 25
Tracer $a00/wk. Free business
~~~~~~r~l~ii:k Free check soltware. $$Auto Leans, Personal Loans. Debt
ch ecks by fax. phone, or e· Consolidation, Credit Problems OK.
. 202-298-0526 Fax Demand 703· Consumers Financial 1(800)247-51 25
, doc~413, Send SASE to: I '=!~='-V
!!o~id~'.!L..':~---1
, Dept CR. 1025 $$$OVERDUE BILLS!II
CREDI T
Ave. N.W., Suite 101 2, PROB LEMS? Consolidate
Debts!
D.C. 20036.
Same Day Approval. Cut Payments to

.-~----~------~--~r.oa.&gt;L~o.cro~--~--~ =

We deliver ALMOST anything

DIESEL

Local Truc~lng Compa"V SMiling
Qua li fied 'Truck Drivers Good
Pav And Benefrts Sand Re5urne
To Oriver, P.O . Box 109 Jack·
son . Ohio -45640, Or Call 1-7.-o,.
286·1&lt;463 To Schedule An lnler·

Auction
and Flea Market

Antiqu es . lop pr~ces pa id, Rive rine ~nt 1qu e5 . Pomeroy. ph1o.
Russ Moore owner . 740·992-

005 · Personals

60

un1ts

We Do •••

·

Joseph Jacks
74Q-992-2068

Own a mobile-based franchise
that fixes the nicks/scratches
caJS withclut painting the whole car.
Low investment.
FREE INFO PACKET!
1·800·696-2376 x31 0

992 -2735

Sl o p In And Se e
Stev e Riffl e
Sales R e pr es ent a tive
.:La rr y S c hey .

AT6:30 P.M,
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progresalve top line.
Uc. # 00-50 ·nno'""

Free Estimates

Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(304) 675·2457 Offkt
(304) 674·3311 CtK Ph.

t~J~rsdays

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

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

• Pa.r klng Lots
: Basketball Courts
·Driveways
• ~radlng Work
• Hauling Stone

Eagles
Club Bingo On

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

L--------~7~~~~~~1~mo~.~~~ :
'

'
~~~~~~~~----~ - ~----~~~~~~~~ ;

tt~~~~ 24 Hr. 'raxi
a.l(f Delivery ·Service

1-81!0-478-0410 .

740-992-52!2 I ~

Ca ll

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

CASH LOANS!
• Bad Credit OK
. • Easy Qualifying
•Fast Service
• Low Payments.
• Confidential

33795 Hiland Rd. ;
•
Pomeroy, Ohio

mo . pd .

750 East State Streel
Athens, Ohio 45701

HAVE DOCTORS, NEED BI LLERS.
FfT; PfT Medical Billing. No Experience
Necessary. Earn up to $40k+ working
at home. Must have IBM compatible
PC.
1·800-697· 7670.

I •

Drawing to be held at 12 pm on
Sunday October 10, 1999
Ca ll I - 740 -.~4 1 AOOI
or co n tuc t a n y Pvmcruy SI (U Utl M~·m l n· 1·

POLICE IMPOUND. Honda's,
Toyota's, Chevys, Jeeps,
Sport Utililies. Fee Required.
·
Call Now!
aoo.m-7470, ext. 7833

MYERS PAVING

l il t&gt;

l n f 'ut · rm~ l iu n

~omeroy

High &amp;I Dry. :
.
Self-Storage :

Pom~ roy Yulunhr~ r Etitergem:y s f/Und, lm~ Orporrded . .
Tic~ets: $10.00 Donatio n Each/1000 Maximum

Fo r Mor·e

Free Et timateJ
740-742-3411
Bryan Reeve•
S~an Reeve• .

TRUCKING

S999 HONDA FOREMAN
4S0 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY

"·

Ntw Conttructlon &amp;

Gar:ages

R. L.. HOLLON

7127199 2 mo. pet.

Sporuu~ re d by

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

Now Renting .

We Deliver

Hmellv

FREE ESTIMATES

l 04

Sunset Home
Construction
Remodtllng-KI1chtn Cabtntlll
Vinyl Sldlng-Rooft·Docks·

''a

Ext.

www.Sun•eiHome.com

P. M .~ 7

WomensCioll&gt;ng

Absolute Too Collar ; All U.S Stiver And Gold C oin s. Proofsets ,
0 1amonds, Ant •Que Jew91ry.. Gold
R1hgs, Pre·1930 U.S. Currenc~ .
Sterling, Etc A.equ•s1t1ons .Jewelry
· M.TS . Co1n Shop, 151 Second
A~rM.Je . GaJilpOhS, 740~·2842.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

30

·i

DAYS 1ds. lnc .

_-c:. :.·:. - - - - - - -

I'QJC»n [§CAl£ rrt: OOr .
!t/r'5 ~ Jl-f QASSI £DS.

r

EXT 141210 . B A M ..

L P N Top Pay, PICk your shift.
Cap•tal Nurstng Agency. 1 ·100·
576-6J.I8

· 90

:i!mo pd

7/ 16199 1 mo pd

Yard Sale

8111 Mood1spaugh Aucttoneenng .
Complete Auc1 1on ~enng Servic··
es Cons1gnm•n1 auct1on· Mtll
Srree1 . Mu:li:llepo-rt, Thursdays ·
Ohro Ltcen;se ,17693 740· 989· . Musicians- drummer looking tor
2623
lead gu11anst, baSiiSt and mythm
gu~tansU vocalist to do oldies ,
A1ck Pearson Auct1on Company,
rOCk and country, Jot\n, 740-fi98·
full t~me auctiOneer , comp lele
6212.
auctio n
serv1ce
licensed
Need someone 10 worlt 4 to t 2
•ss.Ohro &amp; West Vir91nta. 304shift , caring for the elderly. call
773--5785 Or 304-773-5447.
between the houn; of lam &amp; 49m.
Wedemeyer 's Aucljo n Serv•ce ,
Monday thru Fnday. 740-992·
Gallipolis. OhiO 140·379·2720
-4410.

(740) 388·9686

1· 740-985·3949

The-Woter-Mon ·
740-742-2080

(748) 448-11818'al

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!

992-2 155 Dave at

EXCAVATING

Reascnable Rates
:.!0 l t'l/1' .\ I . ,, , .,.;I'J/1 '1"

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

CJ'd. MR. roaD

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning'
Painting

Call

DOZER WORK

WATER HAULING

Call Now lor Instant Approvall l.,.

992-7834

Thursday, August 26 , 1999
• Meigs Maraqders
Southern Tornadoes
• Eastern Eagles

Caii98S·~1

No Embarrassment...
You're Treated with Respacll

If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holier Clinic in Gallipolis
'toll Free!
·DIAL

: Sentinel

KCB

RODNEV' KELLER
Owner/Operator

WORRYING!!!

dsed to

.: You may also .rcquest a verifi- ·

Gt\1\dll'~

Supplies

SHADE RIVER

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

services are in addition
·to the most frequently services
now .online ~i n wll ic h you may :

• swrt\~

Feed &amp; Show Supplies
'
And Sulliva n Show

PROBLEMS???

Tllt:~e

• 'ft\11'1

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site Preparation
Se ptic Systems

7/23 .1mo.

the Soc ial Sec uri ty program .

c-a l ion nf your Soc ia l Sec urit y, or

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /H R.

August 20, 21 . From 8 30 - 5PM
2219 Oak Street Poml Pleasanl
Numerous Household · ltemi .

80

20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner : Ronnie Jones

Hire a Vet

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

...

"rn:·hcn.;i\"1;:' \\Ch · page on wa~L'
reponing wh1"c h IIH.' iudL' ~ \·aluah lc
infor mati on to share \\ ith their
cmp luyccs .
And. there'!'&gt; t:vcn ~1 Soci11 l
Secu rity page dc.s igncd for children and teenagers with addition a l ha.:kground for pan:nts and
Lc :.il'l1crs to· usc when U i s~:u~sing

to:tx ob 1igat ion.

~ppplcmcn!a l

I

~&gt;~~'Q..L.I::i._I:OHIO 45631

740-7 42-2566

Complete Line of 4-H

8" Grovelless Leoch
100' · I000' Rolls 1" &amp; 3/ 4" 200# Wate1 Une
Full line of ~·Pipe &amp; Regulalo~ Water ·sloroge Tonks ·

JOlES'

....-.g Not MUI .

INC BENEFITS . NO EXPERt·
ENCE . FOR APP. AND EX AM
INFO CALL 1-800·113·3585.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIc inity

TREE SERVICE

HOWARD'S TRI- COUNTY SANITAnQN

Tuppers Plains, O H

\ SSI) ht.'nl..'fil an\llUilt You m.1y
n~L'd it 1~1 .' ho\\. In annthn tlgcn~'Y
Ill nhtam :::.~ rv1cc~ ur nt her be ne -

hClp . y~u de termi ne yo ur federal

.

C ulverts: 4" · 48" in stock

: ~, Rcn:nt addi t1nns to the Sn~· ial . fib . Employers wil l rind a L'lllll Scc[l nt y

Porta Jon rentals
Septic Tanks P1,1mped

740-985-3813

New
Social Security services on the Internet
..
f3Y ED PETERSON , MANAGER
Athens Soc ial Sec urity Office

500 gal. per day 1200 gal. cap.

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

70

Mighty Mac Aeration Systems

. Call 614-843-5426

Public Notice •

The se binoculars are relatively

Locust poles will encourage blue li~hlweight and easier to usc for
birds to nest there; however. mnkc- longer periods of time . Look fnr an
(the
sure 'thcrc are no \:als around IQ di~~ ohjectivc lens size or 35 .to
turh them . BlucbmJs are well kmmn lughcr the nl.Hnbcr. the better you
for Ilh.:ir wler&lt;HH.'L' · to human!'&gt; . Ytlll \\ill h~: ahk to St.'t' in low-light con..:an &lt;Kiuall) pi...:k t ho:~ &lt;lUng ones 11ut diti,)fl;o,) . Ynu tnJ.) a\;o,o wan t to
of the ncsl and pul thL"m had, "i(h, (\ ulos ~ a \\ide-angle field of vir:w
!500 Ill (lot)). whll"h \\'1!1 rnnkc tn.H.:k !hl h;innful ctr~'L' t~. ~tlthnu~h l 'J
111~ nf bird~ . in !light mul:h ~asicr. ·
1:~.:: s i:-.t thL· t'O!mpt~uwn . \Vhy an no) ill('
Happy\ie,,ing!
pan~nl~ . , ·
~

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

Home Notional Bank

free-roaming

they go for the birds.

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

The Homo Ndonal Bonk
.....Voo the right to rojoct
ony or Ill blclt or to ,.movo
ony unll from the ..11 ot
any 111M.
,
Arr1ngem•nt1 may be
mode to lntpecl any of tho

George

FU1 Money· No

Nrn 11.250 I* c.t8y 1-80C)...-504t.
!Of272092 PPR

CLASSIFIEDSI

1812 ChoonoiiOI c.....ro VIN

above nemed vehlclee prior
to .tho ..11 by calling 74o114&amp;-2210.

cats .· lars with a power of seven or eight.
Also dogs, panicularly breeds such· (The number refers to how many
as span iels. which are bred to hunt times larger th&lt; objec t will appear
bi rds. should he watched in ease than it appears to the naked eye.)
tors, particularly

111'11CU14531'UC11842

Help wam.d

110

In till

1815 Ford Bronco II YIN

eMil.

from the Classifieds!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Buy,·Sell orTt'lde

11G1FP23EtHL163018
The lonna of .... oro

Shop at home...

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Public Notk:e

Public Notice

19911, et 10:00 om the Homo
Netlonat Bonk )IIIII otter tor
oolo ot public ouctton on

r uesday, Au gust17, 1999

EARN A L~GAl COLLEGE OE·
OREE QUICKLY, Bach elo rs.
Masters, D octo ra l~. Bv Cor re·
spondence Base d Upon Prior Education And Shor l Study Co urse.
For FREE Infor ma tion Boo klet
PhOne : CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1·800-964-831 6.

E ~cellent OpportiJMity - Supplement Yo ur Income - Lear n In·
co me Tax Pr apar at lon 1 S W k~
Course . Classes 1 Day A Wk. 10
A .M. To 4 ·P.M. Call DanTa• , Inc.
Tuesda~s 10 To 4 0 1-740- 4468 178 Or 1·8Q0-221 -8 178.
.
~AD OOGS PALACE
PRO-WRESTLING TRAINING
ANO PROMOTIONS

20 Yrs . Exp e ri en ce . 800- 8590756. Trainer . B reit Sawve r , In
Me m o r ~ o f Mad Dog "Buzz •
SawY.er . Trai n to be wrest lers.
managers. or ballet, (Male or Fe-

male).

180

Wanted To Do

Babysitter With 12 yrs experience .
w11 1 care lor Child ren In my Home,
Excellent relere n~es 1740)-.. 41 ·

0359
Ce,r til ied Nursmg Assisl an, W ill
D o- In-Home Care! ,Ca ll : (74 0{·
446·~59

E &amp; S Lawn Service · Design, Implementation . a nd Service
Available for Spring Clean up :
fertilizing and plant1ng. Free ·estima tes. Satislac tion guaranteed .
Greg Milhoan: 3041675·4628.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don 't
haul your logs to lhe mill just call
.
304·675-1957 .
H. S. Co nlracttrg. Roo!ing. Sheet
Metal. 3-0 La p Shingles. Painting
Over 15 Years Experience . Deck
Building Free Estimates. Vinyl
S1d1ng. 740-441-0653, Call After
6·00PM
H9nes1, ..Qependabl e, House
Cleaning w1t h reasonable rates .
Small to large Jobs . (304)675-

2692.

.

J ims D rywall &amp; cOnstruction"
New Cof'!struction &amp; Remodel /.
Drywall, Sidinljl RoofS , Ad~l ­
tlons, Painti ng. 9tc . ( 304)674 4623 or (304)674·0155 .
Medical Transciiptlon. reason·
able rates , last turn around, com·
p!ete conltden tly A .A.,M.T cerli·
lied Connie Gray ;J04·458·2439
Mother 01 Two Will Provide Daycare In My Home, 74o-44H349.
Nurse /mother of 2 will baby sH
Children in my Home. ages 0-5,
Monday thur Friday. Call: Shan-

Med1 ca! Processor, FP / PT No
Experience Neces.sary, 40K PC . :"-:-on-'-17_40..:1·-:-44_1_·0..:22_1_ _ __
A&amp;Qu1red, Call: 1-800..66J.7440.
Sh rub s Tri mmed , Mul c hing ,
MOTHEAS &amp; OTH EAS WOR K
Pai nti ng , etc. Call Bill. Lu n
FRO ~ HOME I Maii ·Order. Part
Men age (:lP-4)675-7112.
11me &amp; Full Time . $650-$36001
month . Full Training provldedi 'For
State Certlli80 Nurs1ng Assistant,
FREE Booklet call : l-(8 88 ), 234 .
Will Sit For Elder ly In Privat e
Care. 740-.256-9282.
9897 www.cash·911 .com/home

' .
r

. ''

�I

Pllge I • The Dally Sentinel

fundl!y, August 17, 1999

The Daily sentinel • Page t:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
PHJI.UP
ALDER

•• •

ACROSS
1 Kloowir&gt;g
1 can•
13-·

a•

220 Money to Loan
W. do tr.ll•r dHioiiUon&amp;some
......, IJ&amp;Ih pici.· up 304-773-

-7.

'frill care for you• Chtld in my

liome 1st Shl111 Monday ·ffiday.
Worrnauon

{740).,...1·1176,

Cllra

Ne«&lt;

A Loan? Try Debt Consol·
dauon $5,000 • $200 .000 Bad

Crodil 0 K. Fee. 1-800-770.0092.
En215.
Need a Loan? Home. Aut o. &amp;
Debt Consoltdauon; Good 01 Sad
Credit Call toll tree · 877-658-

055t

F i'&lt;Ar&lt;CIAL

2'10

Bualneu

::

Opportunity

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? Investor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage,
Real Estate Contract. Insurance
Annutty. Highest Pnces. Free
Quotes. Why Wa1t? Call Rich. 1·
&amp;88

··-FREE 3 DAY TRINo. I'IOCI('"
•• l.ooo Wo9'l boo81-.
l'[!llla • tnt.. from home, 1-

aoo

(!pl~762-1749

t-,

Ask b'Tm

INOT1CEI ·
OijiO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.

e·so

WANT

A

VISA CARD? $12 .000

Unseo.wed. Bad iNo Credrt OK,

E11eryone Welcome, 1·800·285·
~

recommends that you do bustnest with people you liinow, and
NOT to send money through the

230

~11

Approved Master Licensed Elec·
tuc•an ., WV025956 . EstuTiates
lor
Restdent1al
Sen11ces

until you have Investigated

lhe-..g

2.t C•ntllllilllnl PHONE CARD
. . Colact ss. $10. $20 - ·
Earn $500. $5K ...... CASH!

-

Local silo&amp;. 1-(8001·997·9888.
ARE U LAZf? I f\m And Earn

$1.000 A Day No Salhng Nol
Mlt.t Free Into. Package 1-8oo-

786-B849, 24,.. XT27.
AYOI- Yondlnv Raono. 10·20
Location&amp;. S4t&lt;-S 1OK $4,000.-f
Mo Income ALL CASHI 100%
finance avatlable I (800)-380 2615-24

rn

Beauty Salon: tor Sale. 7 Sta·
tionst A- 1 locatton . Plenty ol
Par1ting. 4 Tanntng Beds. wotl SeU
togo- &lt;» Separate. Call: (7401·
367-o612

Profeulonal

Services

(3041675-7927.

Beaultful Cleanmg... In your
home or business Carget and
upholstery to lntenorfexterior
watts , c!ecks anct dflveways. The
complete c1ean1ng serv1ce. C.ll

Ca.rty Cleln For Free Ellllnl..
~ 304-675-4040

Mount's Tree Serv1ce ,"The Tree
Proless1onals" Bucket TJucll
Serv1ce, Top. Tum , Removal,
Stump, Gnlld1ng, Free Estimates
Fully Insure&lt;!, Works Comp Btd·
well , OH cau AM Save, 1·800838 -9568, 740-388 -96-t&amp;. Owner

Rid&lt;Momt

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee UNess We W1t1!

1·868-582·3345

DENTIII. BILLER
Up

·:

to

$20-$40/hr Dental Brtrlng
SO-re Company needs poople

to process medrcal clatms from
home Trammg provtded Must
own computer 1·(800)·223·1149·
old 480
EARN $90,000 YEARLY Repa•r·
lf'IO, NOT Aeplaong, Long Cracks
In Windshields Free V•deo 1·
800-826-8523 US /.Ca nada

www.(l£assrne&lt;:harlllt.com

FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING
WEEKLY

ROUTE
S 1 ,000+
POTENTIAL
All

CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES. ON GOING SUP·
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS. 1·(8001·
731·7233 EXT.' 3303

INTERNET BUSINESS OPPOR·

All real estate advertiSing in
thiS newspaper is subject to
tne Federal Fa1r Housing Acl
of 1968 whtc:h makes it Illegal
to adVertise "any pretaronce

hmitatJOn or di5er•rmnatl0r'l
based on race, coklr, reiiQIOfl,
sex familial status or national
ongln or any IntentiOn to
make any such preference,
llmitatiOfl or dtscnm1nali0n."

This newspaper will not

knowlng'f accept

actvertiSements tor real estate
whtc:h IS In viOlatiOn ot the
taw Our readers are ~

.nformed tnat all ctwelllr,gs
advertised 111 this newspaper
are avwlabkl on an equal
oppon.unity basis

WHOLESALE CLUB. Earn
$25,000/Year wortung from home!
No sel·up lee! Call (888)·246·

REAL ESTATE

'WORK FROM HOME' · Growing
Company N~EDS HELP $399 ·
$4,999 PTIFT www JCSdeS·
lgnS"""' 1·(8881·283-2372

220 Money to Loan
US NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remamlng Payments
On Proper ty Sold! Mortgages!
Annu1t1es1 Seltlementsl lmme·
!liate auotesll! "Nobody Beats
Our Prices • National Contract
Buyers 800·490-073 1 Ext. 10 1

www natlonalcontractbuyet's.com
$$$ OVERDUE BlllSIII SS$ Consolldale Debts! Same Day Appro.

val. NO APPLICATION FEESII 1·
800-863-9006 Ext 936. www helppay-blll$.rom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Weallhy Fam1hes Unloading M1i·
lb'ls Of Dollars, To H~ M•nlmize
Thetlr Ta1es Wr1te Immediately

Wlndlalls. ~47·A SECOND AVE.
SUITE 1350. NEW YORK, NEW
IOAK 10017.
••• Credil Card DEBT ••• Debt
Consolldalion Slop Collec11on
Calls Reduce Payments &amp;
Finance Charges, Avoid Bank·

rupcy. 1·800-270·9894
CASH OR LOANI Farm Cap1tal
will purchase or loan aga1nst your
govenvnent farm p8Vn'IIK,Its, (CRPf
PFC) Call Farm Capital, 1(600)·

FARM N::T (327-1!2281
CREDIT

PROBLEMS? VISA

CARD. Guaranteed ApprovalNo Credit Check O.,.o APR Requirements 18-t, US C1tizen have
a Checkmg Account Phone Approval. 1-(800)·737-0073 Issued

by Merrld&lt; Btrtk. SLC, UT.

DEBT CONSOLIOATION
NoUplrontFeeo

Good or Bad Credit

Call Nowi1(Bnl·86t-9106

ELIMINATE BACK TAXES lor
Penntea-on-the -Oollarl New IRS
Ruling Makes II Easier. Stop
Wage Garnishments, Seizures,
Very Successful. Affordable

FREE Consulalatlon. 1-(800}·931·
9841 Exlt200.
FREE CASH NOW! Wearthy Famllttl UnlOading Millions To Help
Minimize Their Taxes. Wrlle lmmedtatety· Fortune-LPI, PMB 249·
1626 Norlh Wilcox Avenue . -So-

Me 249, Hollyood, CA 90028
FREE MONEY! It's True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500 •
$50.000. Debt Consolidation, Per-

&amp;0!101 Needs. Medllll bNis. Educa·
tOO &amp; Bu~ness. Call Toll-Free 1·
801&gt;-724-8047 (24htSI
GET YOUR CASH NOWI Oldest
Buyel'l Of Structured Settlements,
AnnuhiH, And Government 'Farm
Payments Also Purchasing Lotlerlee And Private Mortgages
Call Settlement Capital, 1-800·
959·0006 W¥Ww.selllemantcapi-

lal cam

HUGE PROFITS! Earn $25.000
in 3 weeks with S5,000 lnvest-

mentl Call I ·18001·213·5315 lor
ffoe Currency fleport
OVER YOUR HEAD IN
DEBT??? trOre breathing
room? Otb1 Consolidation. No
Ouallty\nglll FREE CONSULTA·
TIQN 18001·5511-1548 O&gt;C1214
www..llfVLICenSedl
BoncleO. Non-Pro1111Natlonal Co.

camore Str"t, Middleporl. call

7«l--367 ·1000.

310 Homea for Sale
$$$0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREO·
IT NEEDED' (.Oov't Aepo Con·
do's., TownhOuses, Homes!) 1·

(8001-434·2434 • ., 3205
160 ACRES WYOMING Unim·
proved land Antelope. and Wild
Horses . $26.995- $195 Down
$269 .49 MONTHLY. Owner Fi·
nanced To!t Free t-(800)-800-

8446.

.

2 Bedroom, Bath, New carpets In
4 rooms. R1ver V•ew, PoSSible
Land Contra&lt;:! (740)-256· 1071

319-3323. El1 1709
FORECLOSED HOliES Low 'Or
0 Down! Gov't And Bank Repo's
Being Soi(J NOW! Flnanc1ng

Avatlabte Call Nowl 1·(8001·730·
7772, Ext 8040

HOME FORECLOSURES · NO
MONEY DOWN! NO CREDIT
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1·800·916·
9191 EXT H5023

... HOMES FROM S.10,0CXU ..
1-5 Bedrooms Local Repos &amp;
Foreclosed Financmg Poss1bll)l
• For Lis1ings 1·800· 719·300 1. x

1185
House &amp; 7 Acres
In the Cpuntry 3 Bedrooms," Full
Basement large Barn Very nlce,
All ·nat Meadow Centerpoint Rd ,
near Thurman, $87,200 For more
Kllo call: (740l·286·0081
Musl Sell moved out Stale 124
Kmeon 3 Bedrooms. tlbath. CIA.

Ntce loll (740l·446-2159· (7401·
446-0603

Upper 90's. 740.384-2963
NICe two bedroom brick house.
wilh living room, d1mng room,
kltcnen. bathroom aM sunroom,
newly remodeled, also has lull
basement, two car two story garage. corner lot wtth nice yard. in
good neighborhood. asking

$58 500, 740·992·2333 or 740·
992·2326
Price Reduced- remodeled home ,
4 bedmom, kitchen , fr, Jr. bath ,
utllily room. ale , beautl1ul view of
river, basement wlfull bath, 740-

992·9012
Priced To Sell! 4 Bedrooms, 3
Baths, Brk:k Ranch On ·2. 12 Acr·
es Cathedral Ceiling, Partially
Finished, Full Basement, Attached 2 Car Garage, Pool, Beau·
tilul View, $114,900, 740-388-

8074.

~.

"""'""'- 740-992-e17e.

Tara TownhOuae Apanmentl.
Very Spacioua, 2 Bedr001111s. 2
Floors. CA. 1 112 - . fU1r Car·
1&gt;4led. Adul1 Poal Baby Pool.
PatiO. Sta rt S3501Mo. No Pets.
Loa•• Plus Security Oopooil "-'
qu~ted , After 5, 740-4.. 6 ·0101 ,
8tbe 74().4olfr318t

2

2

a

9!12·2167.

s.

"""'oom _.aHomo. Spnng
Valley _

-

Mobl1e

~sll

lWm RiYefs Tower now acceptiftQ
appMeatlons tor I BR HUO subSidized apl br -.ty and handif:a!tped. EOH 304-875-&lt;lf79.

Ro-

· 740-441-&lt;)772.

320 Mobile Homll
lor Sale
• As Seen On TV • 6 99% •
S499 Down • Call Far Details.
740-446-3093. O&amp;kWOOd - Gallipolis
'
1974 Kifkwod , 2 Bedrooms, all
Elecmc. Very Good Condition

cab ... TV all utu. pd.$250 .
mon no pets ~3603 -

new air eonditJoner. oreal

condition. $9500. leave message.
740-949-2453, I
1988 Redmond Danville 14x70
Also. Has Expando. Very Nice.
New Heat Pump, Asking $14,000,
7 4().388-8335

Skylme-14x80 on Rental
Central Air. Fire Place.

'''·ooo ceo (7401·379-2627

1991 , 14x60 Mansion. 2 bedroom.
total electnc. central air, stove.
refrigeratot. nlC8 condition. ready
to mov• , asking $14,500, 74!)·
949-9016.

1995 ClayiOn. Ool4l1ewide ?4 Fl X

48 Fl Payoff~ CIA, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Full Baths Electric. 740·742·
0104. After 3·30Pm.

S499 Down All Singles. $999
Down Doubles. Super Low Pay·
ments. Ltmlted Time , Oakwood
Homes, Barboursville, wv, 304·
736-3409
Clean affordable prevlo~sly
owned homes Large selection
available Call Karena at Riverdale Homes. 740-,38.5-4367.
Come see our large selection of
used home at Rtverdale Homes
Neat, clean , flnancmg available
-- Ready for dehvery Call Nikkt at
740-385-4367
Cross Lanes Horne Center Free
Set-up, DeHvery. AJC, Underpin mng. &amp; $500 WaiMart Shoppmg
Spree wtth each home purchased . Stop &amp; see your home·
town housing spectallst Woody
Willard (3041776·7699 or ,·8QO·
922· 9976 Crosslanes Exit of

164

Mobile hOmt for rent 1n Pomeroy
Two bedroom m Pomeroy,
,
nlshed , waler pa1d . $325/ mo.,

$150- &lt;811740-949-2093

'"""-· 9~ ·12:00 - ..

Ape• bnents
lor Rent

440

460 Space lor Rent

1 Bedt'Oom Apartment Across RIO
Grinde College, $290/Mo., AU
u~-

Peid, 1-888-84D-0521

1 Bedroom Apartmenl. Stove &amp;
RegrigeratOI Included. 740-4462Sil3

Special 28ll80, 3 or 4BR $1000
Down, $~22 per mo Free Deliv-

ery &amp;Satup 1·800-69Hn7
Double W1de On Lot $250 Oe -

1·800-383-&lt;l862.

340

Business snd
Buildings

STEEL BUILDINGS. New
sell . 4 12 P1tch 16x24xt0

$7 ,500. sell $3.990 24x24•
was $8.500. sell $4.990 1 (800}·
-106·512e
Two Retail Butldings, SOx30 One
Otl1ce settmg, and one
cated near the New '!!!~~M~·~•a·
son Contact K1m. (304)773-6000

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
100 Acres More or less lor Salet
(740~388-8504

too ACRES:
Great lor hunt1ng or Recreation
Land Lots of road frontage.
Touches Wayne Nalionat ForeSt
lor extra hunting; $85,000 Can be
dNided SOuth ol GaUipohs, near ·

Crown Clly (8001·213-8365
NEW ON MARKET
23 Acres 2 M1les Off SR 7 &amp; SA
216, South Of Gallipolis Slnglewides Allowed. Land Contracl
Available Only S27 ,000, 1·800213-8365

BUILDING LOTS '
FOR SALE
Water and Electric Ready For
Hook· Up . Nice Lota. $6,000.00
Each. Call 304-773--518(J.

Newlllauroiwood
Residential Building Lots lor Sakt
1n Laurelwood, Meigs County's
newest restricted subdMsion t
1f2 acres to 4 plus acres, 23.000
to 32,000 each Undergrotn:l util·
1Hes. paved s1reers. terri11C views,
Intersection of Rts 7 &amp; 33 near
Pomeror. Aookspnngs area
Call Family Homes 74()-992-2478
OJ viSII our model homes.

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres ,
We Pay Cash 1-800·213·8365.
Anthony Land Co

RENTALS

410 Hooses lor Rent

Renovated Farmhouse, Beautiful
and full of Country Charm 3!4
Acres level lot Paved fload 3
Bedrooms, 2 Balt1s, u11111y and
Pantry New White Kitchen Cabl·
nets, Ceiling Fans Throughout.
Windows Carpel &amp; Stove and
Frig . Included F1rep1ace SWE
School 15 minutes from town
beautlfut view from 11 112x28
Porch . Availaba Now! Asking

$74.500 . Call (740l ·379· 9000

II Day-(740)·256·6456 Eve-(7401•

3 Bedrooms, 1 112 Balhs , 422
Fourth Avenue, Between City
Schools , Central Air lnground ,
Pool Deposit, No Pets $625/Mo.,
740·256-9194, 740..446-&lt;t949
3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths 142·112
Porlsmouth Ad Gallipolis. $375 00
Month. Plus Utilities, Plus Oepos-.
256-1530

S -. 740-4411-!MIS Gallipolis,

+ Uti~ties.

MERCHANDISE

Na 2 br, apt app furn ref.+ deP.

304-&lt;!75-4302
Nr::e 2 br. all utiL rei app ftm .

'

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We&amp;twood Onve
from $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 7-t0-446-2568
Equal Housmg Opponuntty
Beautiful unfurnished luxury 2nd
lloor apartment with Cha1rllf1
Over 2000, Sq F1 view Ci1y ParK:
Ohio River. S&amp;OO OOtmonth Dis -

count lor lease! (7401·446•9836
'B eech Street. Middleport· two
bedroom, furnished, deposit &amp; relerences, utilities paid, 740·992·
0165
Brookside Apts Are Now Accept·
lng Applications For 1 Bdrm Apt,
With Washer &amp; Dryer Hookup ,
Water Paid $279 00 Month. Any
Ouest1ons, Call 740· 446·9611
Between 10.00Am And 9.00Pm.
Christy' s Family Living , apart·
ments. home &amp; trailer ren1als,
140·992-4514, apartments avail·
able, furnished &amp; unfumlshed
Country aparJment. etf1c1ency
apartment, completety furnished ,
all utilities J)aid, please call 740·

992·2292
First Avenue , Gallipolis , 1 &amp; 2
Bedroom Apartments, $250 &amp;
$300/Mo , Unfurnished, Securily
Deposit, Raferences Required
740·446·1066. or Weekends

1-1188-818.0128
Kenmore compact washer/ dryer.
two years old. both wort.. eKCellent,
$450 pair. glass kitchen table wtth
4 CUShiOn Chairs, $60, 740·992·

4494
Mollohan Carpets, "Drive A Little
Save A Loti" 202 Cl'ark Chapel.
740-446-7444, 7o40-388-D173
2 Dryers lor sale 31/2 to 4 yrs

old (0041675-&lt;!693

530

540 Miscellaneous

;.,,.,...,;~~~~~~.,-~I
~
1988 Chev S-10 Blazer, 5 Spd.
$3,000, Motorized Treadmill.
$125, K~rby G-4 wlattachments
$250. (304 )675·7879 II no an"'
swer leave message

95 Terry Travel Trailer, 271l w/27
Slide-out All the ewasl Wing ·
master 870: 12Ga , Ruger 10122

W!Scope. (7401·448-3117
B•by bed J dreaalng tlble/ car

-t304-875-2801.
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 bs, 30 OAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE! Natural. Dr.
Recommended. 740·441·1982
Free SaJ1l)les.
CaiHornia water bed king size
head board with shelves and mirror like new $175 304-67S..3035

COOL DOWN

448-4425
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and,
Riverside Apartmenls In Middleport. From $2-49-$373 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Hous1n9 Opper·
!unitieS
PilOt Program, Renters Needed 1·

901J.383-&lt;l862
Modern 1 Becroom Apartment

74Q.44H390
Now Takmg Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo , 740·

448-0008
For Lease One Bedroom, AC
Apt Corner Of Second And Pine
$250/Mo .. Plus Utiut1es. Security
ArK! Key Deposll References Ae ·
Qu~red No Pets! 740.446-«25
One bedroom furnished apart menr in Middleport, ca ll 740·992·

I

PartiallY. lurnist'led $250 month,
plus $100 depostl (304)773·

5040
Flental Property Conage Apt. 2br.
$250. Homestead Realty 304·

875-5540

Antique&amp;

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
t 124 E. Main Street. on Rt. 124.
Pomerov. Hours . M.T.W 10 00
am. to 6 00 pm, Sunday 1.00 to
6 00 p m. 740·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner.

740-441-&lt;1952
For LeaSe• Beautiful , spaCIOUS
two bedroom AC apt Uv•ng
Room. On Room at 57-1 f2 Court
Streel Tolaily new, Lots of Storage! $600.00/month. plus ut1hhes
Secunty and key depos1t No
Pet&amp;1 References Required (740)·

$400.00 1740)-446-3t 32

Central Air Cond1110nmg Added
To Your Furnace. Complete Ouct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces, Heat
Pumps Cer1ifled Installer. lr You
Don't Call Us We Bolh Lose! 740446-6308, 1·8Q0..291-D098
Couch chair and kwe seat, $300,
74()..992-4517.
Grubb's P1ano· tumng &amp; repa~rs
Problems? Need Tuned? can the
piano Or 740-446-4525
INTERESTED IN WAITING PO·

ETRY?

POETRY

CONTEST

$48,000 In Prizes. Possible PublicatiOn Send One Original Poem
20 Lines Or Less To· 11')1ernatlon·
al Library 01 Poetry, 1 Poetry FJtaza SuH:e 11835, Owings Milts, MD
21117 Or Enter Online AI
www poelry.com

JET
AERATION MOTORS
RePaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Cali Ron Evans, 1·800-537-9528.
Large trampoline, 3 1/2 years old,
$125 740-992·6134after7pm
Nice usel:t Appliances , turnnure ,
freezers . Bedroom Suites, DI nettes. Lots Morel (740) -446 ·

1004. (7401-448·4039 any lime.
Nordic Track Exerciser, $150 00
E· Force E•erciser
$100 oo

(740)-446-9709

OWN A COMPUTER. PUT IT TO
WORK $850 ·$3.500 MO. PT/F1
FREE Oelall&amp;' Log Onlo : http II
www hbn com Access~ 5298

fits •te Backhoe
$4.200. - l o r S1 .3otr MIS·
cellaneous hand toots. Tar Keme
$300.00: 4-0fl ••tended Trailer

$4,500 ...... 21.5 - ·
Jackhammers. air dnlll, con struction blankets, constructton
banels . Phone. (7..0HSU· 2916
attar 4.00. (740)·643·2e•4 alter

For sale Ont Owner 1980·400
JOhn Lawn and Garden Tractor·

Hydrosranc

df'MJ . ~ 60' mower
deck, 2 ,600 hfs Excellent condi tion (740)-446-3277
'

On Sland

3ll5 $15, Exercise Btke $15: 20•
Girts Bike $25: Large Kahn Snow
Blower $150. 2 Car Seats $10
Each, 74()..448-7928 Ever*lgs
Two living room Chairs, $75 both;
TV and stand, $100, all good
&amp;UidiOOn, 7..0..992-5907.
Upright manual defro&amp;l freezer.
cubic toot\ "' yeafS old. 1200, 740992-6134 attar 7pm.

U&amp;fd carpet- 10x 10 'llllllh pad;
12x:15 wiU'I pad; new 6x8, Gilbransen organ; 740-949-2118.
wanled : Your Life after Dealh Experience or Miracles 10 put In my
Book I'm wr111ng. Mail to John
Duncan , 1009 Slate Route 160

Vinlon. Oh. 4568!1

$21 95 Per 100. 1' 200 PSI
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jadcson, Ohio, HIOD-537-9528

550

Building
Supplies

(31 All STEEL B\JJLDINGS. llO·
UIOATION 40X$(l Was $19 ,800.
Sell $9,800. 50x100 Was

$26,&amp;00 Sell $15 .800 70x125
was $42,200, Sell $29,200 , Doug

(8001·379-3754
Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows. lintels, eiC Claude Winters.
RIO Grande , OH Call 740·2o455121 '

560

Pets for Sale

1 Year Old Female Blue Point
Siamese Cat, $75, Golden Re·
triever Stud Service . Pr ove n,
S150, 740·446·5418 Dayllme,

741l-441-06t5. Aftllf 5 PM.
2 Year Old Iguana $40.00 and or
Cage $150.00 (740)·388·9415
A K C Reg . golden retriever pups
6 wks old on 8·20-99 1st shOts &amp;
wormed $200 remale/$175 male

304·895·3386

630

AKC Aeglstered Yellow Lab Pups,
Shots 1&amp; Wormed, R8ady 4th Ot
J 1 S2500074Q-2ss-.6336
uy,
'
Fish. Birds . Pond Supplies.
.Sun 1·4PM. Mon -Sat 11AM6PM Fish Tank/Pet Shop, 2413
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant
(304)675-2063
Germen Shepplfd pupple• . 8
wks old can see mother&amp; lather
good stock,ijoOd natured $100.
ea. 304·675·8901
•
Jack Russell terr ier pups, 10
weeks old, tails docked, t~rst
Shots wormed. 740.698-7055.
Registered A1redale puppies,
make great hunters, farm dogs.
loyal gentle pets Shots, wormed.

$200. 740·992-7886
Beautllul AKC Registered Austra·
han Puppies, For Salel All Col·
ors, 1 sl Shots! 12 Weeks Old

(740l·381Hl583.
RegiStered Border Collin Pup's
Work•ng Parents, Imported Blood
Lines Good Marking 1st $hots!

(740}-379-9110

Ex-

oeiiOnt ~ . 740-245-5087.

TRANSPORTATJON

710 Autos for Sale
'79 Monte Carlo. good condition,
raly nms. 1350. 740-949-9006.
'88 Ford Taurus. S750. 740-~-

316Q

1937 Graham, 4 Door Sldan. 350
Chevy, Aulom , New lnlerlor Asll:-

ing $7,500.00 740-4&lt;18-3005

.

1974 MGB Convet"tlble· Partially
restored, needs paint • runs good

$1700. OBO 304-675-8745.

1979 2-28 , Camaro. 350. 4 bart.
Automatic, Interior Real Nice
Bodv In good shape New rims
and tires $2.500 Firm. Lots of

new porto. (004167s-see8.

1785
1987 Monte Carlo SS. most factory opnons including t-tops,
37,000 OCIUII mile&amp;, $10.500, call
740-949-3087- 5pm.

1988 Ford tempo. Nice $1400.00
1966 Pontiac Catalina $711 00
1740~258-1102

19118 Monte Carlo L S 305 engine
'$1800

3().4..67~1038

1988 Pontiac Trans Am V-8
White, Damaged left Front, Runs
Great! Good Rubber. 740·446·
7928 Evemngs.

1 989 Dodge Oyn1sty, 4 door.

$950.00 (7401-448-8705
1990 Dodge Dynasty One Owner.
Well Maintained! 145.500 m1les.

$2,500. (7401-448-1420 aher 5.00
1990 Lumtna New Air ConcltttOner,
Services Regular! Clean! Whoasale 7.t0-446-tt27
1992 Ford r,~. automatic air,
well malntamed. 75.000 miles.
$3200 OBO. 740-007-0452.

1992 J - Cherokee Sport 8 Cy·
IInder, Standard, Air, 1989 Chevy
Iroc V·S Automatic, Air , T· Top,

z

7411-245-9234.
1992 Pon1iac Sunblrd SE One
Owner. E11celtent Condition, low
Miles. $4,!500, 740-368·9416
1992 Shadow, looks and runs Mke
new, 70t(. cold air, automatic,
sunrool, 4 cy linder. spoiler, red ,

1993 Chevy P:V Silverado, A/C,
PS, •x4, TOWIIlQ Pkg 4.3 V-6, Ex·
cellent conditiOn, Blue Book Suggested Retail Value-$13,500,

Asking Price· 410,995 (740l·m·
7289
t994 saturn Sport Coupe 2, 4 Cylinder, Twin Cam, AC , Tilt , 5

Speed. $6,000, 740-256-e270
1995 Geo Pr11~. 56,000 Miles,
Autom , AJC. A1Jba.g, Runs Great

$6,500.00 740-441·9527.
1996 Oldsmobile Aurora. ellcel·
lent condition, low miles, ca ll Tom
Anderson, 740·992·3348 after
Spm.
1998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Fully
loaded! Price Reduced to
$22,50t1 00 Great Graduation
86 Cavalier AS Auns Good and
Looks good! $850 .00 Nego ..

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Bla ck Berries . $13.00 Gallon;
$3 50 Quart Available through

August (3041458·1667.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
1953, 30 Ferguson Tractor, Plow,
Disk &amp; Bush · Hog . $3500

(3041675-4971 1985 Chrysler 5th
A"'""'· $1.000 (3041675-4971 ,
HD6 Dozer Recentlv Rebuilt
$8,500 Firm; 400 Gallon Tanks
On Rubber $500 Each. 740-446-

2359

..., 04il&gt; Groat Dean (700}~

• K 7 6 2
• 8 3

• A 4 3
• 5

1000
47 Dodge heaVy 11011. .. original.
gOOCI ar.ape; •1 Dodge flatbed
dually for parts. S1200 tof both.

Soulla
• A J ,I

C81740-992-4494.

• Q J 10 5
•AK984

•

85 Fcwd Ranger. 411:4 Good .... _ ..
tion . 1,400. 98 Foreman 450 ...
Eltended
warr•nty 15.100

1985 Ford F-150 414 , Go"

lou!

_,

720 Trucks lor Sale
'

1978 El Camino, 20,000 On Motor
And Transmission Solll:t W1th
Topper. $2 .800 00 740 -245-5973,
Everwngs.
1982 Chevy S·10, V-8 Auto
GO'od Condition. $3500 OBO

(304}1;75-1550
1983 Ford Ranger 302 Autom,
Looks and runs good! $2,700 00

(740l·367·0239
1986 Dodge Aam Charger, Good
Condition, 9S.OOO actual miles

$2.000.00 (740}·441 ·1176
1989 Dodge one ton lruck w1th
utility bed, $2000, 74(}.992-2019
1989 Ford Ranger 4Ciy Ssp,
Good Condition. $1,700.00 OBO

(740l·367-0239

f&gt;Oyl/'l ••

96 Bronco XL 25K $16,500. ~
Owner Lots at Extras! {740)·

TtlfY''t

NOT

T~AT (,t,OStLY

I

r

t

~eL.ATfl&gt;.

1998i Honda Foreman ES 45t)r
4x... Like New. 450 Miles. WtncY,
shttld, Padded Rear, Rack Stor-4

..

6·00Pm 74G-38il-~

1998 Yamaha GP12ooR, Rlvitf
Vamaha
Modllied.
SSHP.
,eeMHP. 38 Hours Total Time .
lots Accessories. t304)674- 1
3418, After 6PM
~

8·17
THE BORN LOSER

,..1&gt;.. QUIC.I-\E
.
.

I

7

Helix

Motor

~

Wheeler. Or Farm Wagons Qt ..
Equal Value, 7~245-0485,
\.

750 Boats &amp; Motors '
''.\'\·
for Sale

s;.

•J

1966 15ft Star Craft with Bonner
Top 63 Johnson 28HP Oul ,

Board (7401-448·3564

•

·. '
1987 Cttallon. 18Ft. Speed Boal. •

New 1998, 3.0 engine, less than ~
60 hrs. b1mi top, canvas cover &amp; ~
accessories .
$5.000
Firm .~
(30&lt;t}773·5019
~

tncks m the. . suit you

r,::-

-

HE'S .JUST TRYIN&amp;
0 SHOW THE G.IRLS ·
HOW
HE IS!

COOL

----.r

........

are

t996 Kawasaki Jet ski 900 2XI :·
$3000 304-8822623
(
24 ' Hahis pontbon tloat 1985):
l;lardlop, newer seats. 70 HP.}
Evlnrude motor 1989, low hours 1'
with 1993 drive on trailer. $7800 1:
firm, call Bill 740-992-6678.
· :,

(7401-446-7469

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
•

New Replacement Gas Tanks

o:

LOOK WHAT
I FOUND ..

THIS PROVES M'f TJ.IEOR'f
TAAT TI-llS WIIOLE DE5ERT
USED TO BE UNDeR WATER ••

AN OAR!

•

~~~-------~~--~~
1973 Executive MotorHome \

.........

25Ft long New clirpet, new rOQ(. ~
Air, new awning, microwave, re~l}
nice cond1hon $7400. (304)4sa.;~
17931(304)458-1805.
'

21ft:.~

$2,900 00(740l·245-9268

~

Don 1grt Slung by "'gh prrcts'
ShOp th&lt; clonr(i&lt;d st&lt;llon

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN
ltl ~ GI-l Nl~ '/JA~ ~ ..
M~ l\1'
Sl1CIIJ

t

Unconditional lifetime guarantee.}
Lo ca l reterenc&amp;s furnished . Ea- r
tabMshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (7..0)~
446·0870. 1·800-287-0576 Rog-4
ers Waterproofing
'

I

•••

(Sept 23-0cr 23) It's

Appliance Parts And Service. All .
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 740·446.1.

ASTRO-ORAPH

7795

ll11ings1on·s Basement Water
'Proofing. all basement repairs
done, tree estimates, hletlme
guarantee 12yrs on job experl·

ence 13041895·3887

•

M&amp;R Contracting Electrical And
Re-Moldtng Tra11er Set Ups
1
Porches . Carpentry And Repa1rs
24 Hours, 740 -441-0193
'

Wednesday, August l 8, I 999
Through your logical han61ing of

a

downward trend that might have
been plaguing you, you can tum
things around In the year ahead
that'll brmg about a number of favor-

able changes.
• • LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're
emphasis today might be on uans·
fonning what is ouimoded in your
mind into something useful A problem could arise when you discover it
is still valUable to someone else Leo,

good you can dwell along h nes that
do not lrm1l your 1hihkmg to traditional concepts today However,
check thmgs o ut w1th others before
you auempt to put anything inlo
action

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 221 So
long as they don'l step on anyone
else's 1ocs, hright ideas you gc1 today
pcrtamang to ways you can further
your cmccr can he Impl emented

SAGITTAR(US !No• 23-Dec.
211 Valuable knowledge can he garnered today through all types of Interac tion \.. lth olhers The Important
thmg to keep m mmd IS helpful
ms1ghts can even come through loss-

Rtlnbow Bulldera
,
Build new or repair ,Old, no lob
too small or large Ma tor cred•t
cards
t1WV029582
Call

treat yourself to a birthday g1ft Send
the required refund lonn and for your
Astro-Graph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and self·
addressed stamped envelope to Aslro·

(3041458·1049 BP .528-8092

Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O Box

work for you. Do not be unduly mflu.

1758. Murray H1U Staloon, New
York. NY 10156. Be sure lo stale

enccd

840

Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

Res idential or commerc1a1 wiring,
new service or repairs Mas1er Ll•
censed electri c ian Ridenour
Electncal . WV0003 06, 304 -675·
1786
'

Today·s clue 5 equals u

WO
BZX

(KAF

K1

YHCC

ATZXCD

DTSZM,

BP

your

Zodiac

VIRGO

sign

(Aug

23-Sept

22)

es
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jnn. 191
Just because somelh ing d1d

"€' work

for another doesn't mean it will not
by the

failure or others.

...

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Everylhing can be ironed out today if
you d1scuss important issues wilh

Should

someone w1th whom you've been at

i'!

odds '" a manner that is not judgmen1al or finger pointing.

someone tell you sometlung
the stnctest c onfidence today,
make certain you do not reveal it t o
anyone else, even a person you think
you can tru sl

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Although you may noi gel rich ioday,

LO

IOVOVLOIOX

ATIOUOI

C T. P R

BVOIHEB'P

JIHZEO.

CTZr,t

(ETc ' s v ·z H P R

l

PROUO

ZOBC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Once upon a lime. baseball was an JnSttiUtton Now tt
belongs in one." -

(Sportswr~ter)

•

Dave Kindred

'::!:!~' S©"\\c{}lJ.-l&amp;~ifS•
&amp;AMI
CLAY I. POlLAN-------lertera of the
0 four terombled
beWOlD

Illite~ ~y

Rearrange

words

low to form

four

simple worda.

K E T C0 S

I

S RT UY

W E N. 0 R

1::

Ihsr-r,-,.--T,--.,--4~

.:. .I, .
e

=:·=:·=:·=:·=-~

L.
,..

YEJCOK

"Forget your mrslakes. the

mom told her children. "but al·
ways remember what they - - -

·C~mple1e

•
the chuckle quot;d

by filling in the m11S1ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

"

Employ· Brawn · Musky- T1db1t · WISDOM

i

e323

by Lula Cempoa
CeJebnty C1pher cryptograms are created from quotat•ons by famous people past and
present Each letter 1n the Cipher stands for another

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

(

C&amp;C General Home Main ·
tenence · Painting, vinyl Slding 1
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repair and more For
tree est1mate call Chel , 740·992•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

SOMEONE

SERVICES

WATEAPROOFIHG

auflix

SOMEW~ERE

. - Ahl$} .

HI· low Camper $2,200 00 Jll(.
(740~388-9869
'

Home
Improvements

53 Medical

OR M'( OTI-IER
TIIEOR'( THAT
15 MISSIN6
AN OAR ..

1977 Coachman Camper.
AC ,
Awn1ng ,
Microwave.•

49C...
50 12131, e.g.
52 Mil. rank

-

3933 Df 1-800·273-9329

Cempera&amp;
Motor· Homes

Nicole
Kidman

•·-:-'·'---'·--'-·---'·--...L·---'·

&amp; A ,r.uro. Rtpley. WV (3041372·1

790

48 Eai
47Emu,.,_

I

PEANUTS

'

40 ~.:··l
public&gt; .
41 Aide(-.) .
42' Mllroihon .
unit
43 Mlmlco
45 Dlil-

~--r-:,6-1-1..;..,,..;.....;,,,_;.;,,,..~-f

•

241t, Party Barge Pontoon Boot•
60HP Mercury, trailer $5.500

760

(pre!.)

38 Punct.,.l

trymg 10

estab lish. give hrm one of them as
qutckly as possible. East musl play
the spade nine, forcing Soulh lo wrn
with his jack. South leads a diamond.
but West should go '" rmmediately
with the king If you· are 1rying 10 sei
up panner's s u11, lake an early Irick
10 reium that surt. A second spade
establishes four winners for East
wh1le he sull has ihe diamond ace as
an enlf¥· Now ihe contract is history.

BIG NATE
WELL.J-ADIE':&gt;. NOOODY
EI.Sorc. IS GOING. IN,
&amp;UTI WILL'

Do---··
'·

30 Howai,.n

spades, one heart, one diamond and
five clubs. Note that il doesn't help '
West to win trrck three with the (I,..
mond king, because he has no spade
left to play
Let's reium to trick one. West's
lead ol the spade seven marks South
w1th ' the A-l-8 (or A-l-8-4, but ihen
the contract rs probably impregnable) When an opponeni has two

Scoottrt

12 loot Jon Boat br sale wtltl
Trolling Motor, and a- cessor;
$400 00 Call (740~258-6663

3 NT

whtch gave him nine tricks: tWo

'
~saoll~c 5f':;~~~~ci,;~~t~~n4~
Honda

(740l·388·9415

Ruttlnd Car Sale•
Clean, newer used cars , good
variety, reasonable rates . 740742-3311 or 740·742·1400.

L.fT IT
6ET YOU

I&gt;OH'T

•

-------;B:-:A-::S=EII:-:=ENT~------:-

$500 CAR FROM $500111 Buy

fRANK &amp; EARNEST

89 Mod•i Dodge Caravan New(

1998 t1onda XA 100 Dirt 'Bike~
Like New, S 1,895 00 Call Afi!W

23 Gaddou ol •
the moon ..
24 UMdlherlnll
2s corn illy
26 Upright
(-.)

Three-no-trump conuacts usually
develop mto a race Can declarer get
10 nrne tricks before the defenders
snare five? Well, who should win ihe
spnnt rn ioday's deal? West leads ihe
spade seven in answer io his panner's
weak-two openrng.
Two spades showed some 6-10
h1gh-card points with a decent sixcard suit . South was right nol to worry aboui hos smgleton heart when
overcalling 1wo no-trump. (His alter·
native was to pass ) North's raise was
aggressiv~. bui he knew Soudt could
place ihe missing high cards from ihe
brdding.
Easi held the first trick with his
spade queen. Back came a spade io
Soudt's Jack. Declarer played a diamond·to dummy's e1ght, which won.
Now Soudt led a club to his hand. fol·
lowed by a heart to dummy's queen,

1991 Dodge Grand Ceravan ~

1994 5·10 Blazer, 72,000 mllee;
excellent condition. PW, PS, PS.
atr, 4x4, CI'Uise, V-6, $13,000. ca•
740-992·5025.
•

c ......
220ne..
dlmenolonar .

27 Small .
numbeni

By Phillip Alder

3 3L, A1r, Cruise, Tilt Staertnlt
Automatic •• CO Player. PS.PBt
Runs Great $3,000. (304J875r

age. $5,200, 740-388-9416

Pass

North

First to nine, or five

trade tor p1c11:-up or 4-wheelfl
304-67s-&amp;901
•

Motorcycles

West

19 ThoM
holding olflc!t•
21 Did. IMJnclry '

31
37 Incorrect

RI&amp;HT IA'··K
IN THAI II

mail

Tries $850 oo (740~256-6002

·--·-

4

Openirig lead: • 7

GITS DONE PASSIN' TH' HAT-AN' WE'LL D'\NCE

1988 F-ISO Cargo van. cargo
cabinels.par11 I*'·
5 Inch pipe lUbeS on lap of lfUC11
custom wheels, good tires, ~
tor plueub111. elsdrldaoa or c.
penten, used daily, ~

88&amp;8.

1 n 1o1-. Aug.
2 Nile queen, lor
lllorl
7 Fine porcelain
. 3 Leal bi1
4 a.gtnning tor · S Roman 1119
1 "Yol"
10 Wild party
5 ap.nwork
11 City in IIIah
12 Singing Home
&amp; Th~okf

29 ..

WAIT TILL TH' FIDDLER

89
lroc 350 Tune
Pori.
67 ,ooomlles. Clean. $5,500; OBO

CARS $100. $500. &amp; UP. PO·
LICE IMPOUNDS. Honda's

· 2NT

•

810

89 Pontiac Grand Prl.:s, V-6,
Auto. AIC, GOOd CondiUont (740)446-3697

Souib

BARNEY

Tirea. Rms. First SU)OO Take iiJI

I look• goO&lt;I $2800. 080

DOWN

Vulnerable: 8oth
Dealer: East

(7401-441·1083

police Impounds &amp; Repos For
Lls11ngs CALL NOW! 1-(800)·
3 19-332~ x2156

580

• K Q 10 9 6 3
• 10 5 2

Glftll (740}·446--4548

Very loving small female dog, , &amp;
112 years old, we1ghs 4-5 IDs ,
Chihuahua/Min Pm m11, marked
like Pinscher. needs good home,
Wanted Beagle Puppies , At A
Reasonable Price. Preler Male ,
740-446·7872

East

• 7 4
•AJ86 3

740

Nowl (900~712-7470, Ex1 ?832

$100. 740·742·2632

West

FROM $500 Pollee Impounds,
And Tax Aepo's For Listings Call
I -800-3 I 9-3323 Ewt 4420
miles One Ownert Dependable
wQ.rk car ~ 1550.00 (740)·441-

Q9 7

•QJI0?2

1999 S-10 Chevrotel. Picl· UP
1,500 rrnlal Pllrfecl Conclftton
TaU owr Paymenls 5eOoul En-

7527

1986 Okts Cutlass Clara, 144,500

K

• 9 •

"""'

1HO ·Uto HONDA CARS

(3041675·8132.

Squirrel

•

'ondbetor•
· $8500.
740'
992·
5778
2pm
or aflel

cage. -

Dogs.

started

1997 Ntssan XE PfOkup, 31.000
m1t"s, a1r. ltlt, eru1st, deJuq

(7401·379-2268

Toyota 's, Chevvs. Jeeps, and
Sport Utilities. Fee Aequired . Call

Two

Nortll
• 5 2

72111

730 Vans i. 4-WDs

Llve&amp;tock

$3650. 740·949-2045 evenings.

AKC Registered Boston Terners,
Show Quahtvl Shots. Wormed.
Ready to go. Was $300 . now
$250 00 each 2·1emales 1-male.
Deposit wll hbldl (740)-388·9325

1996 GMC Jimmy~.,_.
lanl Condition Bh~e Booll Sug·
ge&amp;led Rellll VIIUI· $11 ,500.
Aslung P1b $14.000. (740~&amp;;

(740~37&amp;-2360

~ Grand Pr1x SE. excellent condition, $6300 0!10, 740-992·2939.,

$37 .00 Per 100, All Brass Com·

Washers, dryers. refrigerators.
ranges Skaggs Appliances , 76
Vlna Streel, Call 740-446 -7398.

1

-., Re- CtoannghOuse. cau

Smger Sawing -

s... Bums. Ptale

Tamp that

Take II! America·s Mo&amp;t Successlul Campground And Time-

pressiOn Fittings ln Stock

0000 USED APPLIANCES

(3041-&lt;!75-2015

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
BEASHIP OR TIMESHARE? We~

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers . Drye'rs. Ranges. Retrl·
gralors. tO Day Guarante'e!
French City Maytag. 740·446·

Jackson A....,., (3041675-7388

... Rlneo&amp;A

1995 16 Ft Stock Tra1ler In

Waterhne Special: 314 200 PSI

For Sale· Reconditioned washers. dryers and refrigerators
Tttompsons Appliance . 3407

Apar1menr lor Rent· very niCe 2-3
Bedrooms. Pt Pleasant, Wv Deposit
Reference
Required!
$350 .00 Per Month Phone ·

.... 5:30 {740) • t6 9066

Air CondUionlfs, Used Dlfterent
S1zes. Guaranteedt 7"0·886·

7795.

28 Ft. Trailer With Awmng &amp;
Deck Ovenook1hg Ohio River, Full
Kitchen &amp; Bath Furnished $225J
Mo . 1·888-&amp;lo-0521

9191

Houehold
Gooda

0047

2 bJ central air, on 112 acre lot,
North ol PT. Pleasant on At. 2
$300 a mon. $200. dep. you pay
own utU call toll frH 1·888·367·

WhHe GE Wl&amp;her $75.00 C.N e1·

t•

W•nt Ia rent 1111•11 f•rm with
........ (304!17HZI8.

510

304-&lt;!75-4302

rent

470 Wanted to Rent

7806.

Gold Side-oy-Side Retr•oentor.
S125 00. Almond Whirlpool RefngeraiOf, $90.00 White I&lt;INnore
Washer and Dryer Sei·S150.00.

ers $50 /S75: End Table S2G. 2
lamp Tables $10 Each; T.V.
Stand $11): 2 Area Rug 5&gt;8 $30.

Ohio
call 740-985-9853.

2 bedroom apartment m Mtddleport we pay water, sewer &amp; trasti
you pay gas &amp; electnc, $200 per
month, $100 depostl, 740-992-

s•oo

Mobile home site available bet ween Athens and Pomeroy, can

In Mkkileport.
near school. $75 per month.

(3041882·2827

Go-cart For Safe. Good Condi·
tton. Asking
C3041812·

New Condition. $125; Simmons
Cauch , Lilla N.,., $250: 2 Reclin-

Tra1ier lots for

1Bedroom Apt m Mason. Stove/
Refrigerator, Utilltle.Ji Furntshed.
AIC. LaundryRoomiC&amp;~hng Fans
&amp; Garbage Disposal Very Nice
No Pets (304 )773 •5352 or

CrocM OK! H800fli208364

332A

Cat 215 Hoe $30,0Q., 427 Che¥
Motor S650 ., •5· .Partt Tr•iltr
$1700, 1f1 Trench Box $3,500.00:
3 Arrow Boards S1 .200 tach,
Yard Concrare Bueter $700 00;
2.000 Gal Water Tanll: $650 00.

6110

Moblire Home Space, Green
School Olstrk:t, 4 Mites From
Holzer Hospital. Soma Restrlc·
llano /lWf, 740-446-4053.

AetaU buikling, 1600+ 'square bot.
earner IOcfltlon . 87 M1ll Street,
Middleport. Key at Acquisitions.
91 Mill Snet. 7..0.992-6250

740-446-2957.

FOASALE RJU.YLOAOEO
PENllUM~I'ID

f«' Renl. a1 Acre T.-lolnoar

740-3115-4367.

1 Bedroom. AJC. W/0 Hook-Up.
Near Arbors Nurs~ng Home. No
Pets. Quiet Locattons. $279/Mo .•

Apartment for rent in Middleport,
no pets, 740-992·5858

New Bank repos only 2 lei! we
l1naooe call304-722·7148

Parts, lnttrlherm. Miller &amp; Coteman Air Conditioner&amp; &amp; Heat
,Pumps. Bennelfs Mobile Home

Rom Drive. Fax/Moden. Prinler,
Monitor. Huge Software Bundle

1he R1. 2&amp;87 lmorsec-. Has oil
utilities and garcftn spot $75. a
monlh.(004)895-3568.

7806

New 4BR 16 wtde, $500 Down.
$219 permo Free A1r, 1·80D-691·

6n7

$25.21 ; 5 Gal Whne Root Ptinr
$S7.69, AnchOrs SS. Doors &amp;
Wiftdows; Gas &amp; Electric Water
H•aters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical

740-4&lt;18-9682.

son. WV Intersection. $300/Mo ,

1 bedroom apartment 1n- Mkldle·
port. all uliliiiBS paid, $270 per
monlh, $100 deposit , 740-992·

800·691-6m

New JBR 2 Bath, 14 Wk:le $500
Down , $185 permo Free A1r 1·

,,_,IO&lt;y '

Huge
Vinyl Slurung Us $299.95, 5 Gillon Alllfi'WlUm Fiblrea Roof Palm

Resort SaleS lnlamatiQnal. 1-300423-5967 2. Hcus.
Power Mac. e115 \;Omputer. 8
MB' flam, 350MB Hard Dri¥1. CCJ.

301180 Building For Rem. - -

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nlshed and unfurnished, secuf11y
depo'Sit required , no pets, 740992·2218.

2bdrm. apts , lolai alectric, ap·
pltances furmshed, laundry room
lacillttes. close to school m town .
ApplicatiOns available at· VIllage
Green Apt, . 149 or call 740·992·
3711 . EOH.

New Bank Repo·s Only 3 Lett, 1-

Valley V1ew Apartmenls , Rio
Grande, Oh. Now Accepting applications for Immediate occu·
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apt5. Air
Condilioni , Kitchen applianCeS,
Fenced inlta,.ground. laundry
On Sight Management Water,
Sawogo ond Tra&amp;h , _ FtAI .,..
Students must meet OhiO HousIng Finance Agency Oualiflca ·
hons Santor Citizens Welcome,
EOE For more Information Clll.
(740)-245-9170 Monday -thru·

(740~367-&lt;&gt;611

aq) .

Large selecllon of used homes, 2
and 3 bedrooms available Excellent condition Great starter
homes. Call Cheryl, 740·385·
4367.

992·5009 .

3 Bemooms. $300 00 Par Month

anti., 1'0 ~. 7~992-5858

baths

and re1e rences requtred , 7ol0·

a

1978 Regent Mobile Home for
Sale 2 Bedroom, 14x70 Good
1 980 t 4.:65. two bedroom, 1wo

..... · in P\lmervr.......
... paid, $350 ""' month, -

2 house traders, 1br. 32 ft . A/C ,

$4600 .00 Call . (7401·367·7308
E,...,;ngsl

Cond- (3041675-5413

Oisoour&lt;
Home
,..,.-&amp; Sur&gt;ply

OOio

Green Twp. Restricted Lot ,
$150 00 Per Month. 740: 446·
0885 Allor 5 30 PM.

2 Bedrooms. S3251Mo • ..- Utilities,
No Pets, 740-446-4313

7am-9pm

Ber-een Athens .ana

ney, large 'lllllndows, two baths,
basement. covered dtcll, taroe
garage, 18 112 acres. private.

NEW HOME FOR SALE
Never, lived In, 3 Bedrooms , 2
Baths, 1456 Sq Ft Large Country
Lot, Counly Water, 7 Miles East
Of Jackson, U.S Route 35, 6110
Mile From Elementary School ,

...... ""' - .

Tt\IM bedloom, 1 I 112 Rwy cedar and stone home, stone d'lim-

Buy Homes From $10,01X)
1 -3 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures FlnanCit"'Q
l&gt;oss1ble , For listings Call 800-

14Fbt70Fl. 2 -

In-·

&amp; 3 bedroom rnobite homes air
conditioned , S26G-S300. sewer.
water and lraah included, 740-

900·3113-&lt;l862

8100

Cal7--

sate,

...... 1 1 2 - fuly . . . _
nice yard. elase to 1)4111. 4n Sr·

B-l-0-W Q.U.T

TUNITYI Ground Floor Hurry
Llmiled Time Onlyt Call Toll Free
800-858-0170.
MEDICAL BILLING. Unhmitad In·
come Potential. No Experience
Necessary Free Information &amp;
CO-ROM lnvestmerrt $4,995 •
$8,995 Flnanc1ng Available Island Automated Med1cal Servlc·
es, Inc 800-322· 1139, E•t oso.
Vo6d In KY. IN, CT

Threa bedroom houa br

are

you at work where you can feather
your nest to make lhings aliule softer, especially if you don't exclude
others.

ARIES (March 21'-Aprii

19l

Because what

you · say today will
hne a strong rnnuence over your
peers. you must be exceptmnally
careful. Don 't introduce anythmg
negative into a relationship

TAURUS (Apri l 20-May 20l
Don't be so qmck to prejudge some- ,
one negatively and act before you

know where she or he IS coming
from You could be pleasantly surprtsed by the suppon this person 1s
givmg yo11.
·

GEMINI (May 21 -June ~Ol Seek

oul companion s today whose think·
mg IS. more in I me with yours, espeCially when tn work related situations. Nothtng Will be accomplished
wuh those whose ... iews differ from
yours.

CANCER (June 2 I -July 221 The
!&gt;queaky wheel ts likely to be the dne
who gets the attention today, but tle
cardul when you speak up that you
do so in an unoffcnsrve manner or
V(hat yoU get mtgf"ll be an a,. tn stead
of oil ~

"H ave you notrced. "the professor asked hrs psychology maJors, "thai most people would prefer happrness
rnstead of 'NISDOM?"

AUGUST 171

.'

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10
Tuesday,August17,1999

•

' Wednesday
August 18, telle

Weather

Texas crushes Cleveland 15-4, Page 4
Spotting learning disabilities, Page 7
Meigs County Fair Talent Show, Page 7 ·

Today: P. Cloudy
High: BOa; Low: 150s
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

aside so we can be a family agatn .
She said she could not forgive me

for moving away.

Dear Ana Landers: I am 60 and
One thing led 10 another, and we
have just been diagnosed with can- have not seen each other for two
cer. My problem is my daughter, years. It was not all my fault , nor
·:Ingrid." She lives in another stale was it all hers. We both messed up.
Ol!ld has my only four grandchildren .
When I traveled to her city to
'I went through a nasty divorce a few visit, hoping to make amends, Ingrid
years back and spend 10 long years would not let me see my grandchil• ·
dren .
alone .
She claimed I was an unfit grand. Three years ago. a former swe&lt;lheart came back into my life. I left mother because I "abandoned" her
the city where Ingri d lived and mar- and her children . j don't understand
ried the wonderful man. We are very ·, how it is possible to abandon a 30happy.
·
year-old wbman with a husband and· ·
My daughter did not wam me to children. The visit was &lt;l Jisaster.
move away ahd became extremely When I returned home . I \\fOte to
hostile when I did .
Ingrid, begging her 10 put her anger
'

. When I called ·last month to tell
Ingrid I had been diagnosed with
cancer. 'she said my illness didn't
change how she felt. even though
she was sorry about it. She talked as
if I were a passin~ acquaintan~..·r .
This just abo41 broke m~ heart.
Now. I will have surgery without
seeing my grandchildren . Lik~ nay
cancer patient , I am scared of

.

surgery ahd wan I to see. my daughter

before I enter the hospttal.
How can l convince Ingrid to
forgive and forget and ICt us be a
family ag ain ' ~ Time may he shorter
than we thi~k . No matter how she
hun me . I ~m wtlling to let bygone s
be bygone s. hut ~ he is not. Can you
help ?
CORPUS · CHR ISTl.
TEXAS
DEAR TEXAS . -- r or the

moment. focus on getting 1hrough
your surgery, and do not allow
Ingrid's behavior to drag you Jown .
Turn 10 your husband and frienJs for
a ff~ction and wantllh , and be grate·
ful for 1heir suppi&gt;rt .
Time may soften higrid's bitter
and scllish outlook. I'm keeping my
fingers crossed, hoping that all will
turn out well. Please know yo u are
in my prayers.
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
in re sponse to the letter from
"\Voi·c hcster, Mass ., " who rece ived
a friendly phqne ca ll from a man
who claimed to be planning a belated bal'helor party for her new husband .

The man '"''as professional. but
ask~d some intimate arid personal
que stions. She reali zed it was a scam
whc n she. tried to call him back and
th~ r~

wa.'i no su.;;h person at the number he had given ,her.

another oppor1uni1y to caution my
except the scam artist offered to sent , readers about people who read weda limo to pick me up for my fiance 's diJlg announcements or obit uary
notice s in the newspaper and prey
"bachelor party." .
The guy knew my n.ame , my on the family for their own purposfiance ts name , where we worked es. never give out personal infonnaand what high schools we had ti on over the phone . Ask for a busine ss number where you can can the
anended.
I couldn 't figure out how he had persun back. If the caller is up to-no
so much information about me until good , he will ring off promptly.
l saw a copy of my engagement
Planning a wedding ~ What's
announcement in the local newspa- right'' What 's wrong? "The Ann
per. It listed all those details. along Land ers Guid e for Brides" will
with my photograph, I don't know r.ct:civs your anxietY. Send a sel(what that man wa~ted, but you can addresscd, long , business-size enve -..
be sure he was up to no good.
lope and a l:hcck or money order l"or
Please, warn brides who have $3.75 (thi s in'cludes postage and
their pictures in the newspapers that handlin g ) to: Brides, c/u Ann Lan any scum of the street &lt;.:an use their ders , P.O . Box 11562. Chicago, Ill.
informati on the same way mine was 60() 11 -0562. (In .Canada. send
use to fool me, -- ALMOST DUPED $4.55.) To find out niore about Ann
IN MASSACHUSEITS.
Laridcrs and read her past .:olum ns.
. DEAR ALMOST DUPED-- visit thl'. Cr~ator ' s Sy~dicat e web
Your leite r prove d me with yet page at WW\\ .crcators.cQm .

The same thing happened to me.

-Winning gardeners selected at Meigs County Fair flower show
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
and Shelia Curtis .
Sentinel News Staff
''Birds and ·see s". mterpre tiv~ :
Meig s County gardeners di s- Belly dean, Pat Holter. and
played the ir talent for growing ond Melanie Stelhem, Pumcroy.
showing beautiful fl owers even in
"Forest Fires ". warm colors:
time"s of drought at Monday ' s De~orah Jones. Peggy Crane , and
Meigs County Fair flower show.
. Janet Bolin.
'
While it h3d been expected that
"Big Rock Candy Mount ain",
there would be fewer e ntries in the · including rocks :. Becky Taylor,
'two shows of ttie f~ ir, the final fig- Pome roy ; Nata sha Mo hl er, and
ures showed an increase - a total Jos h Mohler, Pomeroy.
o f911.
"Gone Fishing": Joshua Taylor,
The spect me ns ·at Monday ' s Ethan Nottingham. Long Bollom:
's how, while fe wer in number, rep- and Becky Taylor.
resented good qualify in a variety
In the hortit: ulture di visio n.
of plants . The artistic arrange - winning ribbon s for their speci ~
ments carrying o ut the theme mens and plants were :
"Mother Earth - Father Sky" were.
Roses: Pat Holter, 1hree blues ,
attractive, many unusual in des ign, four red s; Melva Tracy of
and all show'ing the creattvity of Pomeroy. fi ve blues; three reds and
1he arrangers.
.
o ne white ; Alice Thompson of
The accredited judge of the Pomeroy, fiv e blues. one red, and
Ohio As soc iation of Garden Clubs, · o ne white ; Evelyn Hollon of
Faye Collins of Minford ,. who Racine . two .blu e.s and one white;
·-· judged the show. complimented Carrie Morris of Rutland , one
the garden &lt;tub representatives on blue ; -Lisa Stethem. one red and
its quality.
two whites; and Peggy Crane of ·
Ribbons and premiums were Middleport, one red.
awarded in three places in eac h
Gladiolus: Alice Thompson.
class. Rosettes were given for best four blues, one :.-hite; Evelyn Holol· show, .reserve best of show, ere- lon .' one red; Pauline Atkins. one
. .
, alivit)' in design, and horti culture red; and Ladona Boyd, Shade, one .
BEST OF SHOW - Betty Dean of Pomeroy won "best of show"
's.weepstakes to the exhibitor dis- white.
in artistic design at the Meigs County Fair flower show Monday
Marigolds: Pauline Atkins, two afternoon. Her design was a creative vertical In the "Redwood Forplaying the most specimens
recei ving ribbon ·awtlrd s. T.he blue s; Lula Toban, Pomeroy. ·qne est" class. It !eatured a redwood slab container with sunflowers,
roselles were given in both the red ; and Ladona Boyd, one white.
fantail willow and spruce.
·
Zinnias: Briar Dill . Long Bot, senior arid junior divisions of. the
RESERVE BEST OF SHOW -A traditional design in "Rivers and ·
show.
"
tom , one blue: Ladona Boy d, one
Streams:"
won "reserve best of show" for Pat Holler of Pomeroy.
Receiving the best of show for · red ; and Lui a Toban . one white . ·
She
used
sunflowers, bamboo; lotus pods, and .cattails in her
her ex hibit in " Redwood Forest"
Celosia: Deborah Mohler.
arrangement
Pomer oy, une blue; Lula Toban .
was Belly Dean of Pomeroy.
Pat Hul.ter of Pomeroy took one red, and Briar Dill, one white.
reserve best of show for her des ign
Sunflowers: Bria r Dill. one
si:&gt;owing water in the "River and blue; Belly Dean. · one blue. one
white.
S1 re~m s" c-lass; while Ja net Bolin
o f· Rutl a nd won th e crea ti vi ty
Ho.s ta: .Mt·lanie S,Lct he m. one
award for her inspirati onal dcsi'"gn. hlue and one white ; Sheli a Cu rt iS.
·•s unrise.··
a red .
Caladium :_ Mel an ie Stcthem.
In the junior di visi on the wi n_ners were Josh Mohler,' besl of .blue and red; Betty Dean. white.
Goldstrum: Paulin e Atkins .
show; Bec ky Taylor. reserve best
of show and Briar Dill. horti cu l- blue, and Belly Dean . white .
Collection of Perennials: Eveture swee pstakes.
In the artistic design division. lyn Holl on, blue; Mela nie Stcthwinners, li sted first to third respec- em . red , and Pauline Atkins . white .
ti vely. were as follows :
Collection of squash: Deborah
"Sunnse", in spiration al: Janet Mohler, blue.
.
Bolin, Pat Holter . .a nd Pauline
Hanging basket of geraniums :
Pa1 Holte r. blue and red; and Joyce
Atkin s, Rutl and .
''Colors · of the Rainbow'', cre- Manuel , white.
'
Other potted plants: Joyce
ative mass : Janet Bolin , Pat Holler,
Manuel. blue; Peggy Crane. red
.and Deborah Jones, Raci ne .
"Redwood Forest". creative and white .
vertical design: Betty Dean, Pat Junior Division:
Briar Dill , blue , red and white
Holter, and
Shelia
Curtis ,
for
zi·nnias , blue, red and white for
Pomeroy.
" River and Streams'' t water sunflowers, red and w hite for
JUNIOR BEST OF SHOW- Josh Mohler with his arrangement
the "Gone Fishing" class won "best of show" for junior designs. His
showing': P~t Ho.lter, Melanie roadside materi al, and blue for
container was a tackle box, his plant material, dock, butterfly weed,
Stethem, .Pomeroy; and Deborah marigolds_; Becky Taylor, red and
goldenrod and cattails.
white for marig o ld s; and Josh
Jones.
"Our Solar System": satelliti c Mohler, blue for roadside mate ri al. ·
SWEEPSTAKES AWARD ~ Pat Holter won the horticulture
A second show will be staged at
design : Shelia Curtis, Betty Dean,
sweepstakes award at t~e flower show. She was presented a rosette
and Pat Holter.
·
the fair Thursday.
. by the OAGC Judge Faye Collins of Minford.
"Eye 'o f the Storm", · a spiral
des ign : Pat Holter, Belly Dean,

Parker family reunion held at
Eastern Elementary School

TUESDAY
ATHENS - Lupus/figromya lgia support group meeting
Tuesday, 6: 30 to 8 p.m. in Grosvenor Hall West Room Ill , on
the ca.mpus of Ohi o Univer sity. Those with the disea ses are
invited tO attend and famil y members are welc ome.
POMEROY - Meig s Athletic Boosters. Tue sday. 7 p.m ..
. Meigs Hi g h School
FRIDAY
t
1
POMEROY - Rep . John Carey. open door sessi on. Meigs
C&lt;~ un ty Courthouse. I to 2 p .m.
- ATHI;:NS - TRAC meeting. Friday. Y:30 a.m. at the Ohio
University Inn . Alhens . Cf) mmcnt S frum gruup s supp orting and
opposing Athens- Darwin U. S. 33 project.

I

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50. Number 50

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Investigation continues into hazardous materials spil~
An investigation is continuing into a lanker truck . complaint was burning eyes, Byer said.
·The Gallia-Meigs Posl of the ·s tate Highway Pa1rol
spill on State Route 124 'near Salem Cen1er on Tuesday
1hat promp1ed officials lo close ·Jhe road unlil ·a haz- said the lanker, driven by Dwight ·Bogert, 51, Sardinia,
ardous m'alerials team can. complete cleanup of toxic overturned in1o a di1ch a1 3:50 p.m. · while Bogert
anempted to navigate a c urve in the eastbound lane of
mauer that spilled from 1he _truck.
.
.
Meigs County EMS Director Robert Byer said the 1U
The accident caused the tanker to rup1ure, causing
hazmat learn based al Tuppers Plains responded 1o the
scene and helped decontamina1e people who may have some of the caustic soda, also known as sodium hydroxbeen exposed to some of the 3, 750 gallons of caustic ide and lye, 1o leak. Byer described the substance as a
soda the truck carried thai spilled following the accident. strong alkaline used in the manufacture of chemicals and
.The team . also assisted in containing the spill, he soaps, and in petroleum refining. .
added.
The patrol advised that the matcrial.caused no immeFour people were taken by the EMS to Holze.r Med- diate danger if inhaled, but would kill aquatic life if
ical Centcr after the spill, including Jack and Jason allowed 10 enter a small nearby stream. Authorities used
Ervin, arid Mike Wolford and Michael Qay. The biggest sand and sawdust to dam the ditch, although the pa1rol

the scene 'with minor visible injuries to Cabell Hunting·
said some of the solution entered the stream .
The patrol estimated thai between 350 and 400 gal- ton Hospital . He was admiued and in fair condition
lons of 1he solution was released following the accident. today. said SpOkesperson fo r the Huntingto n, WVa .,
The highway was closed and traffic was detoured hospital.
around the site. The Ohio Department of Transportation
The patrol reported thai charges may be pending folanticipates the road would be open for traffic again by lowing the c9mpletion of its investigation.
1his afternoon
Byer added that the emergency was similar to trainA Hazmatteam from 1he Public Utilities Commission · ing exercises and mock disas1trs under1aken by emerof Ohio and the Meigs Coun1y EMA were called to the gency personnel. Two members of the l"ocal hazmat
scene. The patrol advised that amounts of the solu1ion team, Donald Sm ith and Chad Griffith , were treated at
being recovered were pumped into another vehicle.
the scene, he said.
The team initially set up command post at the Pick
The accident occurred near ·one resi dence. and the
. resident was asked to leave until the cleanup is over, &amp; Shovel Grocery a1 Salem Cen1er, then lalet moved
according .to the patrol.
·
. closer to the accident scene. Numerous agencies
The t311ker 's driver was airlif1ed by MedFiigh1 from responded to the acciden t, Byer said.

a

a

Tuesday 4-H Horse Show results posted
The Meigs Couiny· 4-H/FFA Horse ·
Show was held Tuesday morning at the
horse arena a1 lhe Meigs·· coun1y Fairgrounds.
In the Showmanship Division, grand
and reserve champions were, in order by
class: Whi1ney Karr and Jessica Janey,.
senior; Ma1lhew Smith and Kesa Norman, junior; and Mallory Hill and Kyle
Boggs, novice.
Winners in individual categories
were, in order by class: Ashton Bush,
junior English showmanship; Holley
Williams, novice English showmanship; '
Whitney Karr,' Jessica Janoy and Kenda
Wheeler, senior western showmanship; ·
. Matthew Smith, ~esa · Norman and
Bethany Riffle, junior western showmanship; Mallory Hill, Kyle Boggs and
Joshua Williams, novice western showmanship.
Winners in 1he Cloverbud Lead In
.,vere Lydell Norman, Jessica Riffle and
Samantha King.
Grand and reserve champions in the

production class were Cassandra Smith Williams and Mallory Hill, "novice
and Mat!hew Milhoan, respectively.
western showmanship;· Ashton Bush,
- In the Performance Division, grand junior hunter hack; Matthew Smith,
and reserve champions were, in order by Ash1on Bush and Bethany Riffle, junior
class: Whitney Karr and Jessica Janey, 1rail; R. J. Leach, novice trail.
senior; Kesa Norman and Matthew
In Gymkhana Competition, grand
Smith, performance; Joshua Williams and reserve champions were, in order
by class: Stacey Mills and Sara Craig,
and R. J. Leach, novice.
Winners in individual performance senior; Stephanie Story and Angelia
ca1egories were, in order by class: Hoi - Wilson, junior; Susan Brauer, novice.
Winners . in individual gymkhana
ley Williams, noviCe working hunter
under saddle ; Whitney Karr, Jessica competitions were, in order by class:
Janey and Kenda Wheeler, senior west- · Stacey Mills, Sara Craig ·and Sarah
ern pleasure; K'e sa Norman, Manhew Grueser, senior barrels; Stephanie S1ory,
Smilh and ·Bethany Riffle, junior west- Sonny Folmer and Angelia Wilson,
em pleasure; Josh Williams, Mallory junior barrels; Svsan Brauer; novice barHill and R. J. Leach, novice western rels; Stacey. Mills, Sara Craig and-Sarah
pleasure; Holley Williams, novice hunl Grueser, senior pole bending; Ange.lia
seal equitalion; Whi1ney Karr, Jessica Wilson, junior pole bending; ·sara Craig
Janey and Kenda Wheeler, senior wes1- and Stacey Mills, senior cones and barern horsemanship; Justin• Allen and rels; Stephanie Story, junior cones and
Melissa 'Grueser, junior western iiorse - ~arrels; Stacey Mills, Sara Craig and
SENIOR SHOWMANSHIP/PERFORMANCE - Whitney Karr and
Janey won
manship-pony; Kesa Norman and Sarah Grueser, senior speed and con1rol; grand and reserve champion, rl!apectlvely, In both senior division showmanship and
Bethany Riffle, junior western horse - Stephanie S1ory and Angelia Wilson, performance In Tuesday's Junior Fair Horse Show. Shown are, from left; Fair Queen
manship-horse; R. J . Leach, Joshua junior speed and control.
Krlatlna Kennedy, Karr and Janey.

.

~

The Community Calendar is published as a free .service to non profit groups wishing tu announce meetings and specia l eve nt s.
The calendar is not designed IO promote sales or f~nd raisers of
any type . Items are prin ted only as space permits and ca nn ot be
guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days .

Reds past Pittsburgh
7-3
-Page4

.The 64th annual Parker ·reunion Parker. 2,000 miles; largest family,
was held Aug. I at Eastern Elemen - Jnmes and Bobbie Parker. Brandon
tary School. Willis Parker asked the and Jim Monroe. Joe 'Poole took
grac~ before the can;y ~ in dinner. A
fami'ly pic1ures.
Present were Ralph and Jenny
spec ial treat was roast pig furnished
by Lester Parker.
Parker. Roy and Pau line Parker,
President G ladyss Parker con - 'June Ashley. Irene Parker, Mildred
dueled. the business meetin g. Offi - Caldwell: Jack. Anita, Brad , Breu
cers elected were Glady ss Parker. and Jackie Parker. Leslie and Ryan
president; Ralph Parker, vicl' 'prcsi- Ba rc swilt, Pain .· Lesler and Le ster
den!; Howurd Parker. s ~ crct &lt;~r v-t rc a - Parker II. Nancy Parker Campbell,
surer: Martha Poule. gift; : Joe Nelli e Parker. Mary E. Parker, Jue,
Poole , ph otograph er; Nell ie Parker. Murtha und Will Puo le : Suzy and
news rcpol-tcr: Keith A-.; hil.': . hi ~1 n ri - Tom Hysell. Hnmer and Sarah Park an . The group voted 10 ha\"l' nL'x t cr. Jack L Frederick . Wilma and
ycar·s reunion :.u the sam&lt;: pla&lt;.:c. 1f Howard Parker. all local : James and
possible. at I p.m. on thr fir~t Su n- Bubbi l! Parker. Jmuny and Brandon
daY in August.
·
Monroe . Belpre: Willi s and Rodney
Martha Poo k prcs q H..:.d gift s l o . Park er. Glad ys and Thco Parker,
the oldcsl wom an. Irene Park er. 1n: Parkcrshurg: : Larr y. Brenda and
· oldest man . Ed :-.lm Park t: r, HI . Laura Parker. Los Alam os . N.M.;
younges t girl. Chri~tim: Harper. 18: · Ej..l ~o n and Hdcn Park~ r. 1 Albany :
yuun·gest hny. Brandon Mnnroc . 2: .land Jnd Kristin Harper. Carmd.
Ionge!-. I marri ed. Helen al'l d Ed . . nn . [nd .; Helen Parke r Hart , Shade :
Parker. 54 years: ncwcs1 marncd. F ran ce~ r= rcdcri ck. Smithvi ll e.
Leslie Leigh Parker and Ryan Lee W.V&lt;L Gerald Cr awford . Beaver
Bare, wilt. June 5, 199Y: !rave led Fall s. Pa.; Claydon Kersey, Cirfarthesl . Larry. Brenda and La ura clcv ille.

!

.. , ou now have the option.of prOtecting your f.u1tily memlxrs
. . . or a

bu~iness partner wid1low~o r;t

Brown show top steers

er calf steer went 10 Joe Brown and
Wesley Karr's 1,300-pounil mar- Collins.
In the market steer cOmpetition, David Rankin, while grand and
ket steer won 10p honors in the 1999
Meigs County Junior Fair Beef Show winners were, in order by weigh! reserve cbampion feeder calf heifer
Tuesday evening, winning grand class: 980-1,071 pounds - Macyn went 1o Janet Calaway and Joe
• champion and lopping the market Ervin, Brandon Fackler and Kimberly Brown, respectively.
In breeding beef showmanship,
Pierce; l,lll-1,205 pounds- David
steer sale order.
In addition, Karr also won grand ·Rankin, Josh Collins and Brent Buck· Josh Ervin won grand champion
champion steer shoWman, with .Josh ley; 1,227-1,265 pounds- Erin Har- while Janet Calaway took reserve
Ervin' receiving reserve champion in ris, Evan Eastman and Jessica Carr; champion.
1,300-1,325 pounds - Wesley Karr, · . Grand and reserve champion
that evenl
awards were also · presented in the
Reserve champion market_ steer Joe Brown and Janet Calaway.
In the dairy marke1 feeder contest, various beef breeds: Chianina -·
· went_10 Joe Brown with his 1,312grand champion went 1o Alyssa · Jariet Calaway; Limousin- Kimberpound entry.
Winners in the steer showmanship Holter with Cllris Parker receiving ly Pierce; · Maine Anjou, grand and
·
reserve - Janet Calaway and Joe
·&amp;&gt;ntest were, in order by_class: senior reserve champion.
RESERVE CHAMPION SHOWMAN •• Josh
In feeder calf 'showmanship, held Brown; Simmental - Josh .Ervin;
- Wesley Karr, Josh Ervin and Cinda
crossbred,
grand
and
reserve
-Janel
champion
steer
showErvin
was named reserve champion steer showBratton; junior- David Rankin, Erin · earlier in the day, grand and reserve
Calaway
and
Joe
Brown..
man
In
Tuesday's
Junior
Fair
Beef
Show.
He
Is
man
In
the Junior Fair Beef Show. He Is shown
Harris and Macyn Ervin; intennediate champion went 10 Da~id Rankin and
judging the events was Jeff Fisher shown here with Fair Queen Kristina Kennedy · here with Fair Queen Kristina Kennedy and Beef
,
- Whi1ney Karr, Jessica Carr and Joe Brown, respectively.
of
Waverly.
and Beef Prlncesa Janet Calaway.
Princess Janet Calaway.
Grand and reserve champion feedJanet Calaway; beginner - Josh

Meigs County D.r aft Horse Show winners narped.
.

.

'

Changes in the Meigs County Fair Draft Horse
Show resul1ed in a large n11mber of -e ntries in this
year's competition, held Monday al the grandstand
of I he Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
·This year's show allowed exhibi1ors 1o show
direc11y from their !railers, and was overseen by the
Sou1hern Ohio Draft Horse Association .
Ralph Bloom of Hillsboro was the judge for l.h e
event.
Winners, by class, were:
Belgian : junior champion stallion, Dave Coen;
senior champion slallion, Lester Manuel_; grand
champion slallion, Dave Coen; junior champion
mare, Charlie and Belly Watson; senior champion ~It,,.,
mar'e, Jim Kessinger; grand champion mare, Jim
Kessinger; Percheron: junior champion stallion,
Brian Jus1ice; senior cham'pion stallion, Chuck Whi1·
lington ; grand champion stallion, Chu~k Whining- '"''''"'
ton; junior ... champ~on mare, Lisa Waugh; ·senior ""-"'-'.RESERVE
MARE- This Belgian mara was Junior champichampio_n mare , Chuck ~hi1ling1on ; grand cha~pi~n
GRAND CHAMPION MARE- Jim Keaslngar' of Green Valley Farms,
mare, ~1sa Waugh; Geldtng and Grade Mare: JUntor Galllpolla, Ia pictured with the grand champion mare which he showed on arid raaarva champion Balglan mara at Monday's Draft Horse Show. II
Is shown by Charles Wetaon.
champ tOn,. Lester Parker.
at Monday'a Draft Horae Show.
·'

Good Afternoon

I0- or 20-year level term life

Today's
insurance from Auto-CMners

Sentinel

2 Sections - 12 Pages
Calendar
Classlfteds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Sports
Weather

Insurance Comf"BY- C1ll us for m&lt;""
derails and a competitive prop1sal.

.Auto-Ownenlmuranee

7
9&amp;10
11
2

Animal care at the fai
Taking care of their animals Ia_a andurlng fact of fair
for Melga County's 4-H youngsters. The youth can be sun
feeding, watering, washing and cleaning up after steers,
hoga, sheep and other animals on a regular baala In the
llvaatock barns and nearby wash areaa. Myca Michael, 11,
of Racine, a member of tha Four Corners 4-H .Club, Is
shown cleaning up her hogs' area In the hog barn. Brandon
Fackler, 12, Rutland, a member of the Shepherds 4-H Club, ·
Is ahown washing hla steer getting raady for Tuesday
nlght'a Junior talr steer show.
·

3
4&amp;5

3

Ule Home, Car Busmess

li.&amp;'NJ fl.6&amp;,'1lq,&amp;•

Lotteries

214 Ea•t Main
Pomeroy
992-6687

,
I

Kar~

.

/

OHIO
Pick 3: S-S-3; Pick 4: 9-6 -8-7
Buckeye 5: 5-17- 16-25 -33
W,YA,
paily 3: 7-2-6; Daily 4: 0-7-6-7
C L99Y Ohio Y•lky Publishins Co.

UTTLE BOY, BIG HORSE - Belgium d raft horses like this one
are big animals. Tuesday night owner C. Douglas Carr Invited
several youngsters visiting the draft horse 'barn to sit on the
horse. FQ!Ir-year-old Josh Oehler, son of Shalla and Robart
Oehler .of Patriot, was one of them .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="429">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9865">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26590">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26589">
              <text>August 17, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="880">
      <name>hesson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
