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                  <text>Page 12. The Daily Sentinel

Po.m eroy • Middleport, Ohio

Potential jurors named
for
Meigs
County
Court
term
.
.

'

'The following CIUUns were Jamie Maureen Woolen. Albany ;
selected as potential jurors for the Richard D.' Gilkey, Middleport ,
September tenn of !he Meigs Coun: Franklin C. Jewell, Pomeroy: Lois
ly Coun:
Marie Plotner II, Racine: Rtlla CharJeanette Mae Radford, Racine ; lene Smith, Pomeroy: PaulL Rowe,
Robert L. Jacobs, Pomeroy; Charla Racine: Eula B. He~sler. Middleport:
Alison Roach, Middleport; Bobby L. Belly J. Pugh, Pomeroy; Gary G. Lee,
MooR:. Langsville; Julia Ann Vaugh- Shade; Edward M. Cozart. Pomeroy;
an, Rutland; Robin' Renae Haning, Gay Ann Burke. Cool ville: Charles
Rutland; Michael Robert Duhl • Port- W. Cochran IV, Albany; Jack J.
land; 'Belinda Marie Bailey, Long Niday. Reedsville; Jack L. Lyons Sr.,
Bonom; Maxine Ruth Goeglein, Racine ; Jennifer Danyel Fink, MidPomeroy; Maljorie B. Wigal, Mid- die port; Emmell A. Rawson, Middlepon; Helen I. Roush, Middleport; dleport: David W. Dunlap. Tuppers
Hoby M. Landers, Pomeroy; Sandra " Plains; Dale Wallace ,Hill . Racine:
Kay Grindstaff, Racine; Simon Jones
B.randy Shane Barber, Reedsville:
Jr., Pomeroy: John Allen Gates. Jeffrey L. Hirzel. Reedsville:
Pomeroy; Susan R. Jenkins.
Pomeroy; Phillip K. Simms.
Pomeroy: Sherrie Ann Roush.
.Reedsville; Clara Suzanne Gilmore.
.Middleport; Mildred F. Pauley, Long
Bottom; Harold N. Hudnall. Albany:
Alice L. Hawthorne. Long Bonom;
Lisa Ann Byer. Middleport :. Tammy
Rowena Searles, Middleport :
.
Samuel H. Seckman. Long Botlom:: Nicole R. Benlley. Pomeroy:
Mi chael L. Linle. Middlepon:
Dorothy B. Stone. Pomeroy ; Victoria
E. Bumpass. Alban) : Delmar Herbcr1
Whale y. Middleport: Roger Alan
Abbon . Pomcro) : Ronald Eugene
Hawkin s. Middle po n : Andr..~ w JaL· k ~
_spn Raw son Ill. Re&lt;e)s\l lle: Robcn

O.:wayne L. Williams. Long Bouom:
Jeffrey A. Hawk, Pomeroy: Jodo H
George , Rutland : Charldone R.
Alkore. Pomero }: ~lo&lt;hael L Stgler.
RUlland ; Wilh am D. Roghlhou, e.
Pomero~ : Alben Rou;h. Pomcro};
Jessie Sue Blac kford . Pomeroy ; Jeff~l') Scoll Mu» er. Rae me : Mart} L
Cline. Pomero~. D&lt;lbert W. Fndle) .
Po menn. Ro &lt;ane M. \\'ollo am&gt;.
Po mern; : Mar~ Da•n Wolfe.
Rae one: - Frede roc ~ ~I - Bu rton.
Alban) ; R o,.-oe G. Bu, h. Ra,·ine: L&lt;e
A. Bu2 os. Shade: Carul Ann
Bu&lt;han; ,;-_Tuppe" Plaon,; Su1.anne
K. Adkin s. Modd!epon : A. Fron..:es
Shnmphn. Pomero): Sam Rite. Mid-

Jleport . John Charles Hensley, Tul&gt;' Frank Edward Blake, Middleport; Bryan Wilcox. Pomeroy: Vickt Lee
"'"' Plaoti, . MaT} Demse Freeman. Jean Aikin:. Racine; Donald A. Canan , PomeroY ; Vera Marie
Racone:
Sprague, Tuppers Plains: Kevin Paul Buchanan. Pomeroy: Darr~ll David
Alo,·&lt; Jane Stewart . Middleport: Musser, Rutland; Pamela Marie Rus· Hawthorne. Long Bottom; Frank G.
Roland E \Volt. Pomeroy: William D. sell, Middleport; Ted Riley Jr., Mid- Gilmore. Portland; Paige Kathleen
LJ\ender. S}racuse: Donald Edwin dlepon; Neda B. Mitchell, Coolville: Garfield, PomcrO) ; Wilham David
Graham. Pomcro} : Jane Ann Aan"s· .George W. Yonker, Racine; Clara J. lusus, Punland; Brenda C. Hauber.
lad , Pomeroy; Clara Humphrey. France, Pomeroy;
Long Bon um: Jimmi e Lee Maynard.
Pomeroy; Timothy R. Wamsley. MidRachael Lee Seth, Pomeroy; Lui a Pomero) . )n ann Fell y. Pumerily:
dleport: Ollie 'Eu•ene
'toun•,
"
" Mod-' Mae c·uc1·e, Rac'one·, Retha M. Gt-bbs . , Kimber!} Jean Seth. Middleport:
dleport : Dougla s Benton Eblin, Rutland: Sharon S. Hudnall. Albany : Lucille M. Kong, Middleport; Linda
Pomeroy: Tammi Darlene Causey, Carolyn s. Young. Pomeroy: Keith T, J. Gilkev. Shade : Sharon R. Harns ,
Reedsville; Wilma Marie Rizer, Syra- Bailey, Pomeroy; Debbie K. Brown. Syracu,.:: Brian John Knopp. Racine ;
cuse; Linda Wydell Hill , Racine; J.T. Rulland; Michael R. Little, Middle- Eldon S. Baker. SyrjlCuse; Donene
Tyler
Humphreys.
Pomeroy; port; Wendy L Giles, Pomeroy; · Ruth Dugan. Reedsville; Randall L.
L.awunce Dwoght Carpenter, Rul- Rebecca J. Wood. Albany : Janel Arnold. Racine'; Heather Elai.ne Skinland: Linda J. Foreman, Pomeroy: Louise Henline. Pomeroy : Joseph ner. Rutland .

OCA
PRODUCTS

POWELL'S
.....s.-.,,. ,.

M . HaiC) . Pomero y: George Dougl as
Lowthcr..Aibany : HaroiJ E. Thom"-'.

Middl eport : C)•noh ia J. Ba1eolian. ·
· Raci.ne : Clifto n J Jude , Vinton: Tresa E. Thumas. Cht.· ~ hire : Ril'hard A.

WE

ROlE HOUIS

1111-lOPM
291SECOID n.

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANnTIES
PRICES GOOD THRU Augu_st 21, 1999

2UTERS

&amp;

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
MRYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

Ko ker. Syrac use : Jon ·Tra vis
Mugr'age , Racine : Trina Ann Tern·

SANBORN

COFFEE .

plelon. Middle pori: June Ann Powers . Dexter: Kathy J. Saunders.
Albany : Shelly Darlene Henry, Middle pori. Joyce Aloce Crabtree, Middleport : Louise V. Bearhs. Pomerov: •
Mary E. Bonrcll, Middleport;
Karen Lis~ McDonald. Racine:
Brenda Fuller, Syracuse; Ishmael
Smilh, Langsville; Paul F. Marr,
Pomeroy; Stacy D. Tyree, Middle- ·
port; Barbara.- J. Ne.ece, Langsville;

$ 99
BONELESS PORK 101..

$119
End· Roast.•~................ ·
LB.

Southe~n's . ..

BONELESS COUNTRY SRLE

~

school year
starts Aug. 24
School will start for all students of
the Southern Local School District on
Aug. 24 with the same. lake-up limes
as last year.
Students will bring home various
papers aboul school policies and
programs. Parents are to sign and

return the pecess':'ry fonns all soon as
possible.
Breakfast and lunch prices will be
lhc same as la11 year. Students on free
or reduced-price lunches last year
will remain on the list until the second week of school.
There are very few changes in last
year's bus roules . allhough some drivers will be drivin&amp; different routes.
Parents with furthdt questions about
school bus pick-ups may call Daniel
Riffle al 949-2150 or 949-261 h
Students thai are new lo lhe Southern Local School District may enroll
at their respective schoo ls on Aug.
17.18, 19and23 from9-11:30a.m .
New kindergarten students should

register . at the _junior high sehoul
building. Parents need to bring their
chold's birth cenificate. Social Security ,number. Immunizati on record.

$

·

1
C
Bologna ........................ 59
C.

Pork Ribs •••••••• ~••••••~:·...
KENTUCKY BORDER .

39

CWIIol•l lb

JAMESTOWN BREAKFAST

USDA CHOICE BONELESS ~EEF LB.

LB.

.

99

$149
Bologna •••••••••• , •••
.English Roast ••.••••••
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEE~ 1 . $16 9
Chuck Steak •••••••• .

Cubed

34.5 oz.

·UNITED
VALLEY BELL
2%, 1%, OR
SKIM MILK

$ 99
GAL.

LB.

k•••••••

2/$1

Boating accident
.leaves one dead

WELCH'S
GUPE JELLY

FAIRPORT HARBOR (AP)- A
boa! missed a harbor entrance ·and
crashed into a Lake Eroe breakwall,
killing one person and injuring 1wo
others. the U.S. Coast Guard said.
The boat was coming from Geneva Stale Park aboul midnight Monday and was going al least 40 10 50
mph when it hillhe break wall, said
Ctiief Petty Officer Chris Fredrickson. The boat wenl over the break. wall and sank al the harbor aboul 30
. miles northeast of Cleveland.
The crash wa~ discovered abou1
seven hours later when a fishing boat

Marriage licenses
The following couples were

issued marriage 'Jicense.s ret:cntly in
lhe Meigs Coun ty Probate Courl of
Judge Roberi Buck:
Todd Ashley Marcum. 20, and
Amanda Sue Savage, 21, both of
Langsville; Howard Raymond Ervin
Ill, 21 , and Megan Belh Clark. 21 ,
both of Racine .

FRESH RED

.

Lb.

.

Grapes •••••• ~ ••••••••••
UNITED VALLEY BELL

1/2 gal.

C

8
9
.
9 ,. C

Orange Juice~••••••••• ·

9
·
9
C
Potato· Chip~!:!·••••
·

NABISCO SINGLE SERV~2 ,.

.

Tray Packs ••••••••••••
JIF PEANUT
BUTTER
(ASST. VAR)

$ 99

3

WHITE HOUSE
APPLE JUIC-E
\

99 cz3- 99 4
1
1BOZ

LIMIT I W/$10 ADD.PUACHASE
ADD PUACH.

64 OZ. GWS JUG
l

Tomonow: Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Pittsburgh blasts
Cincinnati from first
place with 12-6 win

-Page4

•
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50 . N u mbe r 51

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Despite encouraging statistics, school violence ·remains a concern
By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
Aaaoclated Pr. . . Writer
COLUMBUS (AP)- School~ in Lima in wesl-cenIra! Ohio are safe, bul there's nothing wrong with being
prepared, said Lima school bOard member Pal •Miron.
. " I don'llhink anyone wants to IFI their guard down,"
Miron said Wednesday as a two-day meeting on school
violence got under way in Columbus. "I don'tthink you
could ever over-react"
Gov. Bob Tafl and Allomey General Betty Montgomery sponsored the Safe Schools Summit, which
·
· focused on juvenile and school violence.
The meeting came ala time when. reports indicate
thai school violence, including lhe number of guns being
brought to school, is dropping.
.
Despite these statistics, there is little question that

school violence, whether R:al or anticipated, is disru_pl·
ing teaching and learning, said Pamela Riley, execultve
director of the Raleigh, N.C.-based Center .for the Prevention of School Viole~ce.
'
. "Our schools are basocally safe places, but we can no
longer assume thai," Riley said. "We have 1~ I'! an f~r
safety. We know !hilt the 'It can't happen here menlahly cah no longer be tolerated." .
. .
Tafl and Montgomery emphastzed that Ohoo schools
are safe places. Bullhere are troubling slatislics, Monlgomery said, noting thai 436 students ~ere disciplined
for having a gun _on school property on the 1997-98
school year, includong ·I01 elementary school 'studenls.
"While we must pn:pare ~or the unthinkable, we
don'l wantlo lum our schools tnlo armed camps or our
children into victims," Montgomery cautioned.

Mark . Guess' 239-pound gill won
grand champion market hog honors al
the Meigs County Junior Fair Swine
· Show Wednesday at the Meigs County
Fair. Reserve champion honors wenl lo
Nicholas Detwiller's 236-pound gill.
Their entries were also grand and
reserve champion in the gill competition
while Mary Rankin and Alan Walson
won grand and reserve champion in lhe
barrow conies!. ,
·
'llte lop UiR:e winneis in each individC
ual class were, in order by weigh! class:
GILTS
.
210 pOUnds- Christopher Barringer,
Lori Sayre and Aaron Gillilan; 211-220
- Johnathan Haggerty, Jimmy Alley and
Jessica Pooler; 223-232 - ~essica. Jusli.;e, Jennifer Goeglein and Alex Burroughs; 235-241 - Nicholas Detwiller,
Myca Michael and Allyson Pallerson;
243-250 - Shannon Price, Amber
Pooler and Ricky ·Colburn; 253-260Renee Colburn, Billie Jo Welsh and
E'laine Pulman; 262-270- Chad Hubbard, J. R. Hupp and Amanda Windon;
218-233- Stacie Wa1son, Elaine Put·
man and Ricky Colburn; 235-245 Mark Guess, Chad Hubbard and Kyla
Gibbs; 250-26? - Johnathan Hagger-

1

S~akers Wednesday included officials whose 'c om- ·
"There's no _quick fix . There'~ a con~ome!ation of
munoltes suffered school shootongs or, on lhe case of problems affecttng kids, and they II need tndovtduahzed
Zanesville, had Ia deal with lhe barrage ?f copycat ~lulions,'" said Roberta Duncan, who works wtlh 4,100
threats. .
. _
. ..
._
Gtrl Scouts.. near . M.~sfield a~ut one hour. north of
Zanesvolle Pohce Choef Doane Qu&gt;nn recounted how Columbus... We can I say .they d all benefit fro~ a twoleleph~&gt;ned bo~b threats clooed Zanesvolle and su!· par~nl famoly -lhal won I alwa~s be the case .
·
roundong Muskingum County schools several ltmes m
~lumbus pohce offi~r Tern Long, who has been
Ma7. and June.
.
'
_
. , . assogned 10 a Col~mbus hogh school the pasl four year.;,
Even when we arrested sox people lhc calls dtdn I came lo lhe sum mol for pracltcal advtce on preven~ng
go down," she said.
. ·
voole~ce, oncludong lhe . management of appropnate
Sh~ica Lad~, a 15-y~ar-ol~ sophomore a~tendmg th_e
clpthong and ~kb~s . . .
. •
sum mol from Lorna Senoor Htgh School, satd she bastBut commumcalton os lhe best way to prevent voo
cally feels safe al school.
lence, she saod.
'
"There's enough people al school I hal if lhe~ heard
""ll's ~i~g aware of your students,_that's your key. ~o
about guns, lhey would lell someone. II would corculate have ad_momslral?rs, and parenls and te:u=hers commumpielly fas~" Ladd said.
cale wlien behavoor changes," Long saJd.

ON THE MIDWAY - Away from the livestock bama and far from the
grandstand alta the midway of the Rock Springs Fairgrounds -for many,
the place to be during the Melga County Fair. Here, falrgoers can choose
from an array of teraptlng food or experience some thrills on.one of many
midway rides, like Taylor Dowlttr, II, and Bailey Williams, 3, Middleport, did
on Wednesday evening (below). Others, like 10 year-old Dillltln Johnson of
Cheater, like to try their hands at some midway games, like Skee-ball, for
a chance at a stuffed animal, a politer of a popular celebrity, or a goldflahl
Young and old alike are commenting on the absence of the carousel this
year, but Fair Board President Dan Smith said Iaiit week that the amua•
ment company In charge of rides, Bates Brothers Amunment Co., d)d not
Inform fair board personnel of what rides would be arriving, end that r!de
attractions are often spread out among several falra !luring the same wsek.
All the aamti, there are plenty of rides to enjoy, a variety of games to play,
and e number of food vendors to aatlafy any appetite-,- all on the m_ldway.

Guess, Detwiller show top market hogs

KELLOGGS 15 OZ. FIUII
LOOPS, 20 OZ. Ul$111
BUll, 13.5 01. UISIII
19 0. FIOSTiD
.MINI WHEATS, 01 20 OZ
FROSTED FLAKES .

&amp;OZ.

site.
Jason Dietrich, 26, of Ashtabula
Co~nty, was killed, lhc Ohio Division
of Watercraft said .
The third occupant, David Slaby.
23, of Jefferson . al so was found on
lhe rocks .

Indians swept by Texas, Page 4
Ann looks at online gambling, Page 6
Mature driving class, Page 5

Today: Cloudy
High: 80s; l.Qw: 60s

ly, Nicholas Detwillet and Jennifer
Gcieglein.
·
BARROWS
210-222 - Britlni Hensley, Chaz
VanSickle and Christopher Jude; 225240 - Mary RanJtin, Jessica Justice
and Christopher Barringer; 241-257 ·Alan Watson, Amber Pooler and Billie
Jo Welsh; 260-270 - Belh Farley,
Myca Michael and J. R. Hupp; 211-238
- Kassandra Loowick, Bryon Haggy
and Brillani Dailey.
Grand and reserve champion market
swine showmen w.ere Chad Hubbard.
and Lester Parker, respectively. · ·
Firsl and second-place winners of
individual showmanship classes were,
in order by claSs: senior - Lester
Parker and Alyson Panerspn; junior Chad Hubbard and Nicholas Detwiller;
intermediate, group I - Kayla Gibbs
and Jennifer Goeglein; inlermediale,
gtoup II ·- Andrew Upton and Sarah
Stobart; beginner, group I - Mark
Guess and R~nee Colburn; ' beginner,
group II - Georgana KobleniZ and
Ricky Colburn. · -r,;-·
·
• Judging the eveni"was Scolt Ellis of
Newark. Markel hogs will be sold Friday

~~~~M5:~~m.~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.WATER)

For more - informati o-n abo ut the
sc huol nf allcndancc. call 949-261 1.

(ASST.

Sports

KIST '
(IN OIL OR

and custndv pllpcrs ih d1von.:e cases.

found one of the survivOrs disoriented and walking around on lhe rocks,
Fredrickson said Tuesday. The survivor, Kevin Gilmer, 23, of Jefferson,
directed the CoaSI Guard 10 the crash

Auguat to, 1ooe

We ather

13

$ 9
Ru~p Roast............... ·
USDA CHOICE BEEF 12.4 oz·1 LB. $
99
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Thursday

WedneSday,August18,1999

BLUE BONNE! SPREAD

LB

.

Margarine ••••••••••
3

FESTIVAL (ASST. FLAY)

$149

SJ79

Ice Cream .................... .
.

1/2 GALLON

MIORTON
70Z.

POT PIES••••••••••••••••
STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES
(ASST. VAR)

3/$

1

14.2515.25 oz

OR JAM

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32

oz.

14 OZ. DELUXE
MAC &amp; CHEESE
DINNERS OR 12 OZ.
VELYEnA SHELLS &amp;
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BOUNTY .PAPER
TOWELS
'

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SROLLPK

Win A

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Powell's Super
Value

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Cash!

MAR·
KET SHOWMAN _ Chad Hub· KET SHOWMAN - Lester Parker
bard waa named grand champ!· received reserve champion
on
market
showman
In showmanship . honors
In
Wednesday's Junior Fair Swlna Wednesday's Junior Fair Swine
Show Shown are from left: Show. Shown are, from left:
Hubbird Fair Qu.:.n Kristina ,Parker Fair Queen Kristina
·
Prlnceaa
Kann ad y' an d w 1ne p r 1nceaa Kann
Y. 8 n d Swine
.
Jessica Justice.
'
Jeaalca Justice• .

s

.d

GRAND ·
ROW - Mary
'f!I'On grand
champion barrow In the Junior
Fair Swine Show. She Ia shown
at left with .Queen Runner-Up
Mellaaa Holml!n · 111nd S"'!'lne
Prlnceas Jeaalca Juatlce. '

Fair amateur photography winners named

Good Afternoon

Today's

Senqnel

A~~

Cam~

Cass

Calendar
12
Class 7, Flowers and Insects, 2. Animals and/or Birds: Barbara
1--'C"-I!l!a!'!!ss!!in'-"ed""s'------"9"'&amp;._.1.,.0_ ' Marilyn Spencer, Renee Carson, Koker, no second place, Marilyn
11
Jo Kautz.
Spencer.
Comics
2
Enlargements,
Class
1,
Land·
Class 3, Adult P_ortraits: no
Editorials
scape · and Seascape: Barbara first place, Renee Oirson, Suzy
3
Local
Koker; Karen Smith, Chester; Parker.
4
Soorts
3
Weather
. Collins appc;~inted QDOT Disb let 10 dep¢y direc:tor
George Collins, Reedsville, was named deputy dtr~tor of the
Lotteries
Ohio Department ofTransportalion's District 10 office m Manella.
Collins who has been w'ith ODOTsince 1991, formerly served
01110
as Meigs County treasurer, was appointed acting deputy director _in
Pick 3: 1-7-1; Pick 4:4-6-3-4
March. Before serving as acting deputy director, he was Doslnct
Super Lotto: 11·21 -24-29-40-44
lo-'s business and human services administrator.
Kicker: 2-0-6-4-3-2
ODOT District 10 includes Galli a, Meigs, Athens, Hocking,
W.YA,
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Vinton and Washington counti~. _
Daily 3: xxx; Daily 4: xxxx
C IVYIJ Ohio Vallt-y PubliJhing Co . ,
ODOT director Gordon Proctor announced the appoontmenl.

ROW •• Alan Wataon won
reserve champion barrow In the
Junior Fair Swine_Show. He Ia
shown at left wltti Quean Run·
nar-Up Mallasa Holman ·a nd
Swine Prlncen Jeaalca Justice.

.

HOG - Mark Gueaa gll1 won
grand champion mark et hS~ In
the Junior Fair Sw1na
ow
Wednaaday. He Ia shown at left
with Quean Runner-Up Mellaaa
Holman and Swine Prlncaaa
Jessica Julltlca.

••

Suzy P~rkei of Rutland and
Smaller Snapshot, Class 1, Stacy Smith, Chesler. . \
Barbara Koker of Syracuse took · Meigs County Fair: Marilyn
. Class 2, Animals ' ~nd/or
best of show and reserve bes\ of . Spencer, Long Bottom; Jo Kautz, Btrds: Joyce Manuel, Racme; Jo
show roselles in the Meigs Coun· Pomeroy; Rachel Chapman, Kautz. . .
.
ty . Senior Fair's amaleu( photog- Syracuse.
Enl.argem;nts, Snap~hols
4;
raphy show.
Class· 3, Adult Port(ait: Suzy . Choldren s Portrao_ts, Rtchard
The photographs will remain Parker; Elizabeth Lawre,nce, Macomber~ Langsvolle; Barbara
.
Koker; Jerrena Ebersbac~.
on display ip the Coonhunlers' Long Botlom; Jo Kautz.
Buildi_ng throughout !he fair.
Enlargements, Class 4, Chtl·
Snapshots, Class 5, Nalu~e
Resulls, by class, and in order, dren's Portraits: Lori Neulzling, Closeups: Renee Ca~n; Janos
were:
Middleport; Renee Carson, Long Macomber; Langsville, Ruth
Bottom; Elizabeth Lawrence.
Spaun, Pomeroy.
Class 5, Nature Closeups: Jo
Snapshots Class 6, . Sports .
Kautz; Robert A. Bailey, Long and/or Sporting Events: Renee
Class
Carson; Carly Hayes, Pomeroy;
Bollom\
6, Sports and/or Sporting Jo Kautz.
· Class 1, Landscape and
2 Sections • 12 Pages - _ events: Jerrena Ebersbach, Middleporl;
Renee
Carson;
Robert
Seascape:
!3arbara Koker; Renee
•

C!ass

,

RESERVE CHAMPION MAR- .
KET
~OG
Nicholas
Detwlll.a' a gll~~~~w~n r~aa~a
champ o~ mar
og n
e
Junior Fto:lr Swine Show. He Ia
shown at left along with Quean
Runner-Up Mellaaa Hol~an
and
Swine
Prlncaaa Jeaa ca
Justice
.

Three bodies recovered from
boat collision in Ohio.River·

DAYTON, Ky. (AP)- Searchers have found
the bodies of the three people missing from a collision of powerboats on the Ohio River.
The bodies of Ken Middendorf, 37, Of Cleves,
Ohio, and Scou Martini , in his late ' 20s, from
Dearborn County, Ind., were found Wednesday .
morning. The body of Martini's wife, Pam~·la,
was pulled from the · river Wednesday aflernoon·.
said Dr. Mark Schweitzer, lhe Campbell County
coroner.
A fourth person in their boat, Middendorf's
wife, Kim, 35, was in fair condition today at Uni versity Hospital in Cincinnati after lhe crash ·)ale
Monday night near lhe Watertown Ya~hl Club,
easl of downtown Cinci~n·ati.
Two other people w{'re rescued from the crash ,
Brian Brunen, 32, and Nicole Purvis, 23, bolh of
Cincinnati. Brunen was in good condition today
in University and Purvis was treated and
released .
lnvesligalors said lhe collision could have
been _c aused by drinking, bad visibility, driver
inallenlion or high speed.
· Police said a Thunderbird Formula powerboat,
car.rying Brunen and Ms . Purvis, rammed in,1o the
Stingray Rally Sport powerboat turning inlo- the
yacht club's marina.
'
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Clo..,..liL!~
The Thunderbird wenl over the lop of lhe
ROSETTE WINNER - Suzy Parker took the best of Stingray, knocking lhe Stingray passengers and
show In the photography compatltlon at the Meigs Coun· Ms . Purvis inlo the river.
·
ty Fair. Her winning p:uito was a bliiCk and white 8x10 picThe impact sunk lhe Stingray and senl lhe
ture of a wedding couple, Jennifer and Ted Zamoch of Gal- Thunderbird spinning in a circle, its engine still
llpolla and was selected "beat" from the more than 200 running and Brunen unconscious inside .
entries. Parker waa also the renrve champion In the cookShawn Summers, captain of an excursion boal
Ia baking contest In the baking and canning contest. Here called the Victory, gol inlo lhe Thunderbird and
aha displays her champion entries.
shul off lhe engine.
/

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Thursday, August 19, 1999

Commentary

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P~~ge/12

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Death Notices

Thur.d8y, Augutt 18, 1M

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The Daily Sentinel Kennedy and son captured on tape

l)'pod--,.--.llmqbo-. ,_--·"liM'"'"'

By Chrla Matthews
WASHINGTON .. Before his assassmau on,
John F Kennedy had begun draftmg h1s memo1rs.
A taped installment. dictated two weeks before
his death, is especially poignanl given the plane
crash last month off Cape Cod
As we can hear from his grim tones, Kennedy
is despondent at the recent killing of South Vietnamese Pr,eSident Ngo Dinh b1em, who had been
a strong U.S. ally in the battle against communism That he was a strong Roman Catholic added
to the bond between the two men, •!~? to
Kennedy 's shame for havmg tnggered the coup
which cost Diem his life.
"Over the weekend the coup in Saigon took
place," we hear Kennedy's somber
voice. "It culminated three months
of conversatiOn about a coup. con·
versation which divided the govern·

PomrMI)Ii. Oltlo 46189; or, FAX to 7fO.UZfST.

ment here and in Saigon " ,

'E.stllbli.slid in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio .
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TIN Sentin~1. 111 Court St,

tiittcl. .,. lefttr• .,.H to: t..trw. ro rtN: fldltol;

By Ben W.ttenberg and Daniel Wattenberg
·
Before the even~ the Iowa straw poll had been hit from all sides as the
best contest money can buy ·- a unrepresentative, under-populated, undemocratic and tacky exercise in pseudo-politics. The Boston Globe labeled 11

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Donald A. Sprague

That fatal August cable told
Henry Cabot Lodge, Kennedy's
"one of the most undemocra11c functions in American politics." The Week- hand·plcked ambassador that the
ly Standard dismissed it as "a function of Big Money and Big Media, U.S. "must face the possibility that
celebrity and glitz."
.
Diem ... cannot be preserved."
TWo m1·tually contradictory strains of criticism had merged mto one b1g
As JFK is in thiS act of confess·
grouse. Sunken candidates like Lamar Alexander complained the sl(aw poll ing his guilt for clearing the deadly
was l:!Fcoming nothing more than a cattle auction. Therefore, George W. diSpatch, he mterrupts to chat wnh a
Bush, the anointed front-runner, with high poll ratings, high visibility and young visitor.
sacks of cabbage, would simply buy victory, short-circuiting the contest for
"Wanta say something? ... Say
the GOP nomination. It would be undemocratic because the most popular 'Hello."'
candidate was likely to win. (!)
,
"Hello," comes the high-pitchOd
Others argued that such an unrepresentative sample of Republicans gives voice of a young boy.
an unfair advantage to fringe (read "conservative") candidates whose
John Kennedy Jr was 3 years
strength is among activists not among the party regulars. It would be unde- old
. mocratic because so few people vote.
Then, following a pause on the
So what happened at that small, cash-drenched, undemocrahc cattle auc· tape, wh1ch I obtained from the
: bon? Winner George Bush called it "a festival of democracy," which sounds Kennedy presidential library, we
· about right.
hear the president of the United
There was a huge turnout, more than 24,000, which is thr~ times the
: number of Iowa Republicans who participated in 1996.
There was a secret ballot, not a featu&lt;e of the screwy Iowa caucuses.
Cash was not the ~-all and end-all of the campaign. The idea that the $25
fee was a poll tax was a non-starter. Tickets were ·bought by the campaigns, ·By TOM RAUM
Likewise, foreign policy has Taylor suggested. "In a war between
North Korea lastAug'ust
not the voters. The cost of buying tickets and barbecue is not large compared Aaaocllted Preas Writer
hardly been a blip on the radar the North and the South, would
to the expenses that will come later in the campaign. Moreover, participants
WASHINGTON (AP) - While screens of the 2000 U.S. presidential North Korea resort to using its mis- launched a ballistic missile
could vote their conscience, regardless of who bought their dance ticket. conflicts have subsided elsewhere, and congressional campaigns, siles? The answer is yes."
over Japan that landed in
Cash-poor radio talker Alan Keyes asked supporters to buy their own tick- it's been a hot, dangerous summer although Republicans still hope to
And while North Korea is desets-- and received more votes than former Vice President Quayle ..
for Asia - with confrontations turn alleged Chinese nuclear espi- 'tined to lose such a war, he said, Hit the Pacific. The United
Money was also offset by Big Media, for whom th~ event became irre- brewing in the Taiwan Strait, on the onage mto a campaign Issue.
could do devastating damage. to States fears the test of an
sistible. That meant free air time for lesser-known and -financed candidates Korean peninsula and on the lndl3n
Probably the most imminent ten- South Korea" in the process About
who would otherwise have been blanked out. Thanks mostly to cable televi- subcontinent.
sion-raiser is North Korea, which 37,000 u.s, troops -are stationed in even longer-range missile
. sion networks, a wider American public got a good look at some new faces,
And the Clinton admimstration is may soop test its Taepodong 2 mis- ·South Korea.
would further destabilize
and some face-lifted old ones.
mindful that any one of these trouble sile. With a believed range of 3,750
As to China, any military offenMost important we learned, again, that politics sends messages, and that spots might suddeqly burst into a miles, it could theoretically reach sive toward Taiwan could directly the peninsula and increase
when voters send 'messages it's wise for politicians to wise up.
full-fledged crisis that could involve l-!awail or Alaska.
entangle the United States. The 1979 pressure in South Korea
Leading 'the parade of "doing unexpectedly well" was Elizabeth Dole. the United States.
North Korea last August Taiwan Relations Act includes a
and Japan for missileHer fundraising , and her press had been poor. But her healthy showmg ·
The conflicts:
launched a ballistic missile over U.S. commitment to come to the
shouldn't have been so unexpected. She is a serious woman, running a seri-North Korea seems on the Japan that landed in the Pacific. The island's defense in case of an attack defense programs.
ous race, in a culture hungering for &amp;erious women who do what they do verge of launching another ballistic United States fears the test of an from the mainland.
very well. Wasn't that the least we should have learne'd from the rollicking missile, which could further destabi- even longer-range missile would
China views Taiwan President
reception tendered to America's women soccer players?
lize the region and increase weapons further destabilize the peninsula and Lee Teng-hui's advocacy of "state anything openly provocative before
We learned what we should have learned in 1996, that Steve Forbes is a proliferation.
increase pressure in South Korea to state" relations as a move toward President Clinton's September meet·
dogged player, with appealing ideas, from the so-called supply-side part of
-China could move against Tai- and Japan for missile-defense pro· Taiwanese independence -and has ing with Chinese Prime Minister
·: the GOP confederation. We learned that those attnbutes, coupled with lots wanese territory, perhaps one of the grams.
made it clear it would not rule out Jiang Zemin, however.
of personal money, can make a formidable candidate. Forbes hopefully offshore islands claimed by Taiwan,
U S officials have offered North force to keep Taiwan in line.
Meanwhile, India's announce. learned something too: He does bett~r as a positive campaigner than a neg· 10 response to what 1t sees as Korea economic incentives in
Such statements have already ment that it was creating a nuclear
ative'one.
provocative sovereignty claims from exchange for an agreement to end unleashed a torrent of pro-Taiwan deterrence program drew immediate
Spealcing of formidable candidates, we learned that George W. Bush is Ta1pe1.
missile development and other con- sentiment in Congress. "We must be criticism from the Clinton adminis. one. He gained a solid victory, promulgating sound ideas, although spending'
-An ~scalation of fighting cessions.
very clear with Beijing. The United tration, which hopes to persuade
comparatively little time in Iowa and choosing not to buy radio or television between India and Pakistan could
But intelligence reports suggest States will do what it must to defend both India and Pakistan to aban&lt;!on
spots. His only flaw: At his victory speech he chose to talk about victory bring them to the brink of a nuclear North Korea may be only days from freedom and stability in Asia," said
their nuclear programs.
· rather than principles.
war. Both militaries have gone on launching a test. "We don't know Sen. John McCain, R·Ariz., in
"Oearly, they're moving in the
We learned that the 2000 race will not be won by Dan Quayle or Lamar high alert recently and India whether one's going to occur or not remarks reflecting widely held
wrong
direction," said State DepartAlexander. Neither are old codgers, and we most probably have not heard announced Tuesday a new nuclear at this stage," Pentagon spokesman views.
ment
spokesman
James P Rubin.
the last of either one.
deterrent plan.
Kenneth Bacon said Tuesday.
John Steinbruner, a foreign poliIndia's
statement
came at a time
We learned that John McCain learned well some of the lessons of Viet·
Other world conflicts have quietBill Taylor, director of political- cy analyst with the Brookings lnsti· of increased military skirmishes an?
nam: Pick .your spots carefully; u&amp;e the terrain to advantage. Every time it ed-fornow.
military studies at the Center for tution, doesn't expect a military a day after an Indian scientist diswas explmned that he didn't compete because he opposes ethanol subsidies
Peacekeeping operations are pro- Strategic and International Studtes, move by China, "but I wouldn't rule closed that country can make a neupopular in Iowa, his reputation was burnished. Call him McGain.
gressing in Kosovo, U.S.-British air sees such a missile test as "pretty it Qui. Ev~ry lime that (China-Tai- tron bomb, which kills people but
Within the social conservative core, Gary Bauer beat Pat Buchanan. So skirmishes with Iraq have settled in 1mminent..,
wan) situation appears to get out of leaves buildings standing.
much for vosibility. A rookie presidential candidate finished ahead of one of at relative low levels, and even the
The long-isolated Nortti Korea hand, China does something largely
•
the best-known faces in American politics, a three-time candidate.
bloody 15-month war between regime has little to lose, from its symbolic to ' remind us they're not
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum
We learned that the Idea that conservatives dommate the Republican pri· Ethiopia and En trea appears to be vantage point, from testing and kidding."
covers national and International
maries is mostly myth. Exit polls invariably show that voters in GOP presi· windmg down.
improving its missile capability,
It seems unlikely China would try aHalra lor The Aaaoclated Pren.
denhal primaries are barely more conservative than Republicans as a whole.
In the 15 elections since 1940; Republicans have nominated conservatives
only thee times, Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan twice. (Reagan was so
conservative he thought the Soviet Union was an evil empire and that wei·
fare was hurting the people it was supposed to help.)
breakthrough would seem to percent of voters believe that crime is the most
The biggest loser in Iowa was the invisible pohtical party, the Democrats. By Morton Kondracke
After
seven
months
of
maneuvering,
polls
lie
with the Democrats on gun important issue facing the country today, fol• Where are players? When are they going to compete? Where are their festi nor
Democrats
indicate
that
neither
Republicans
control.
vals?
lowed by a dechne in moral values, 14 percent;
There is no question that the economics, II percent, health care and Medicare,
Ban Wattenberg Is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Insti- have gained a decisive political advantage look·
public overwhelmingly favors 7 percent; and education, 4 percent.
tute and Ia the moderator of PBS'a "Think Tank." He can be ruched via ing toward the 2000 elections.
Republicans have been touting the recent
..mall: Watmallaol.com. Daniel Wattenberg Ia a contributing editor lor
stronger gun restrictions -·
In June, the Hotline poll showed thai Social
lntellectuaiCapltal.com and George.
Wirthlin survey showing 68 percent public
undoubtedly more every w~ek Security reform held a slight edge.
'
approval of the GOP tax cut, but every other poll
as each new case of violence
In the Battlegrounq survey in June, restoring
suggests a preference for using the budget surplus
takes over the news.
moral values was topsliwiffi 25 percent, followed
for education, Social Security or pay in!,\ down the
In June, CBS found that 83 by improving education at 19 percent, fighting
By The Anoclated Preas
national debt.
percent of adults favor crime at 11 percent and cutting taxes at 6 perToday is Thursd,ay, Aug. 19, the 231st day of 1999. There are 134 days
What's more; Wirthlin shows that Democrats mandatory safety locks; 86 percent, extending the cent. "'
•
left in the year.
enjoy a slight advantage -- 43 to 40 percent -- on time for background checks at gun shows; 79 per·
Pretty clearly, both parties are seeking to cover ,
Today's Highlight in History:
the generic congressional preference q~estion, cent, requiring gun buyers to pass a safety test and their bets on all the traditional issues. Clinton
On Aug. 19, 1848, the New York Herald reported the discovery of gold with little change registered since April.
obtain a license; and 70 percent, registenng all favors tax cuts. Republicans are coming around
in California.
That, in turn, is at vanance With the bipartisan firearms with the government.
on patients' rights and may pass some token gun
On this date.
Battleground sJrvey in early June, which showed
By 61 to 33 percent, the public opposes allow· control. Everybody's for better education,
In 1812, the USS ConstitutiOn defeated the Bnllsh frigate qpernere east the parties tied. But that was a I0-pomt improve- ing people to carry concealed weapons as sup- Medicare reform, savmg Social Security .. and,
of Nova Scotia during the War of 1812.
~t~ent for the GOP smce January.
ported by Texas Gov. George W Bush, the GOP presumably, better moral standards.
In 1934, a plebiscite in Germany approved the vesting of sole executive
The latest report on the generic question comes presidential frontrunner
On morals, the Battleground survey indicates
power in Adolf Hitler.
in a GOP poll by John McLaughlin &amp; Associates
Also in June, the Fox News/Opinion Dynam- that the GOP has the upper hand. By 37 to 27 perIn 1929, the comedy program "Amos and Andy," starring Freeman Gos· m July showing Republicans ahead slightly, 41 to ICS poll found that voters said Democrats do a bet- cent, voters think Bush IS better than Vice Presiden and Charles Correll, made its network radio debut on NBC.
38 percent with 22 percent undecided.
ter JOb handling gun control than Republicans. In dent AI Gore at knowing right from wrong-- and
In 1942, about 6,000 Canadian and British soldiers launched a disastrous
In mid-July, the CNN/Gallup/USA Today poll July, the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found that congressional Republicans are better than
raid against the Germans at Dieppe, France, suffering about 50 percent casu- showed that 42 percent of U S. adults preferred t&gt;y 64 to 29 percent, the put&gt;lic was dissatisfied Democrats, 35 to 18 percent.
alties.
that Democrats run Congress and 37 percent sa1d with Congress' performance on gun control.
On taxes, the most telling poll yet may be
In 1955, severe flooding in the Northeast claimed some 200 liveS.
Republicans. Last December, Democrats were
Also 10 July, the Pew Research Center found Pew's July survey When voters were asked
In 1960, a tribunal in Moscow convicted American U-2 pilot Francis preferred, 41-30.
that by 55 to 35 percent, voters favor the defeat of whether the non-Social Security surplus should
Gary Powers of espionage.
The poll does show significant tmprovement 1n a Member of Congress who voted against gun be used to cut taxes or "to fund new government
In 1974, U.S. Ambassador Rodger P. Davies was shot and killed at the Congress' job approval ratmg -- from 55-36 neg- control and favor by 69 to 25 percent the re-elec- programs," cutting taxes won by 60 to 25 percent.
American embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus, during a protest by Greek Cypriots. ative in February after President Clinton's tion of a gun control supporter.
But another question pitting tax cuts against
In 1976, President Ford won the Republican presidential nomination at impeachment trial to 43-41 positive JUSt as ConWhat's not clear is how important gun control "programs for educatiOn, the environment, tiealth
the party's convention in Kansas City.
gress was leavmg for the August recess
-- or any other supposedly hot issue -- is in the care, crime-fighting and military defense," the
In 1977, comedian Groucho Marx died in Los Angeles at age 86.
The bottom line, both on the genenc question electorate 's scaJe of values.
public preferred spending over lax cuts, 69 to 22
In 1980,301 people aboard a Saudi Arabian L-1011 died as the Jetliner and congressional approval, _is that the public 1s
In the July NBC/Wall Street Journal s,urvey, percent. ,
made a fiery emergency landing at the Riyadh airport.
about evenly divided between the parties. That IS, education topped the public's list of congressionThe lesson -- and the bottom line for this year
Ten years ago: Pohsh President WoJciech Jaruzelski fonnally nominated Republicans have climbed out _of their impeach- al priorities at 30 percent. Reforming Med1care
lS that whoever defines the Issues best will win.
Tadeusz Mazowiecki to become Poland 's first non-Communist prime minis· ment hole, but no •one has yet gained the upper was second at 20 percent Culling taxes followed For who that IS, stay tuned.
ter in four decades. .
at 16 percent. Gun control ranked next at I 4 per·
hand.
(Morton Kondracke Ia execullvo editor of Roll
Five years ago: President Ointon abruptly halted the nahan's threeOn issues, too, there is no clear message yet, cent and patients' rights finished with 9 percent.
Call, the newepaper of Capitol Hill.)
Copyrtght1M NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
decade open-door policy for Cuban refugees.
W~rthlin, however, found thiS month that 23
although nght now the greatest potenhal for a

hot spots command world attention.

Ne,ither party has upper hand for '99

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Dr. Oscar W. Clarke, 80, of Gallipolis, died on Monday, August 16, 1999,
at his residence .
He was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Clarke of Petersburg, Va.
He was a graduate of Randolph-Macon College and of the Medical College
of Virgima. He was a former member of the Ohio State Medical Association,
a past president of the group, and served as chairman of the Council of Eth'·
1cal and Judicial Affairs of the AMA, and the Ohio Medical Education and
Research Foundation.
I
He was a member, elder and trustee of the Presbyterian Church .
He served as the president of the Holzer Clinic, as a trustee of Holzer
Hospital Foundation and Veterans Memonal Hospital, and was, at the ti111e
of his death, the medical d1rector of the Holzer Hospice Organlzallon and a
trustee of the Holzer Hospital Foundation .
Survivmg are h1s wife, Susan King Clarke; two daughters, Susan Stein of
Gahanna and Jennifer Anne Clarke-Mackessy of•Greeley, Colo.; four grand·
children, three great grandchildren and a sister and brother-in-law, Wlllene
and William Davis of Southern Pmes, N.C.
Besides h1s parents, he was preceded by daughter, Mary Elizabeth Sayre.
Memorial services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, August 21, 1999,
at the F1rst Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis, with Rev. Raafat Zaki offici·
ating. Private graveside services will be held at the family's convenience.
Friends may call at the , McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
C"apel, Gallipolis, from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Holzer Hospice, 100 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

I Monollold lsa•f78• ] •

INO

J~

Today In History

J

Dr. Oscar W. Clarke

any case inclined."

Asi~n

~-

"It's summer! " the father corrects:
How many limes have we ..en this wondrous
lie between father and son, both now _gone; caplure~ m that farn~us ph?to of ~e preSidents son
peenng through h1s dad s desk· .
.
Now we have wo~ds _to go w1th the p1cture: A
46 year-old father, v. •th JUSt days to hve, sto.ppmg
hi~ grim. ac"'?unt of .1 fellow lead~r 's fatahty, to
recite with hiS 3-yc_ar-old son a Simple paean to
the relentless changmg of the seasons.
•
(Chris Matthews, chief of tiM San Fr:::cc;

"I feel that we must bear a good
deal of responsibility for it, begin·
ning with our cable of early August
10 wh1ch we suggested the coup.
That first wire encouraged Lodge
along a course in wh1ch he was 1n

Democracy through a straw

.

States rcc1ting from what sounds like' a young
child 's nursery bock
.
"Why do the leaves ... fall?"
" It's autumn," the ,'Son replies with his father's
prompt.
" And why does the snow come on the
ground?"
"Because it's winter."
"And why do the leaves tum green?"
" Because it's .. "
.
"Spnng," hos father prompts agam.
;;spring," the young voice repeats.
.
And why do we go to the Cape, to HyanniSport?"
"Becalll!e it's spring." we hear the toddler say.

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Chance of rain.forecast
through region tonight
By The Associated Preas
· Spotty showers will end from west to east tomght after having done ht·
tie to improve Ohio's drought conditions, the National Weather Service
· Rainfall amounts were expected to measure on! y· a fraction of an
inch.
· U:Jws tomght Will be 55-65, forecasters said.
Cooler temperatures will continue on Friday with highs in ttie mid-70s
IQ low 80s. There's a slight chance of intermittent showers.
. · The record-h1gh temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 101 degrees in 1936 while the record low was 48 in 1943. Sunset tomght Will be at 8:24p.m. and sunrise F,riday at 6:47a.m
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Cloudy with a chance of rain. U:Jws in the mid 60s. Light and
variable wmd. Chance of rain 50 perc~nt.
. Friday...aoudy. Highs m the lower 80s.
Friday night. .. Decreasing clouds. l.Dws m the lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
,
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the.lower and mid 80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A chance ~f showers in the aft,ernoon. U:Jws
around 60 and highs in the mid 80s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy. U,ws in the lower 60s and highs in the upper
80s.
.
I

Meigs E S logs 11 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded II calls for assistance
Wednesday.
.
Units resp&lt;indi~g included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
5·07 a.m., state Route 7, Middleport, Raymond Cook, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
7:20 'a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middleport, Bertha Swanson, VMH;
5:58 p.m., state ·Route 7,
Pomeroy; Judy Koblentz , Holzer
Medical Center, Pomeroy squad
assisted;
10:38 p.m., Butternut Avenue,
Pomeroy, Roberta Meredith, treated at the scene;
10:58 p.m., Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Troy Yankuns, VMH.
POMEROY
12:57 p.m., Bradbury Road,
Cla rence Boyer, HMC;
· 2:02 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Rose Curry,
VMH .
RUTLAND

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Reader Services

12:16 p.m., Kingsbury Road,
Robert Mahr, VMH, Central Dispatch squad asSisted;
1:26 p.m ., Minersville Hill
Road, Christy Barton, VMH, Central Dispatch squad assisted.
SYRACUSE
10:58 p.m ., Union Avenue,
Pomeroy. Daniel Whittekind,
treated at the scene. .
TUPPERS PLAINS
10:51 p.m., Arbaugh AdditiOn,
Donald Sprague, dead on arrival.

Charles E. 'Tom' Young
Charles E. "Tom" Young, 73, Middleport, formerly of West Columbia,
W.Va., died Wednesday, Aug. 18, 1999 at his residence.
A retired truck dnver, he was born March 13, 1926 in West Columbia, son
of the late Joseph Wayne and Dessie Mae Stewart Young. He was a U.S.
Artny veteran of World War II and a longtime member of the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church.
He IS survived by his w1fe, Viola Helen Rife Young to whom he was married on Dec. 27, 1949; six sons and daughters:in-law, Danny and Linda
Young of Rutland, Glenn and Debbie Young of Bidwell, Steve and . Ga1l
Anderson Young of Springboro, Larry and Amanda Young of Tuppers
Plains, Keith and Sharon Young of Rutland, and Darrell and Melissa Young
of Middleport; two daughters and sons-in-law, Brenda Jones and Henry
Doerfer of Racine, and Roberta and Richard Dill of Pomeroy; brothers and
sisters-in-law, Darrell and Eleanor Young of Lakeland, Fla., George and
Elze'tta Young of Westfield, and Tony Young of Middleport; mother-in-law,
Garnet Rife of Middleport; 16 grandchildren, 17 stepgrandchildren, five
great-grandchildren and 28 step-great-grandcliildren; and several nie~es and
nephews.
He was also preceded in death by a brother, James Young; a sister, Veneda Knight; and a granddaughter, Amanda Lynn Young.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday m the Fisher Funeral Home-Middleport,
with Pastors Paul Taylor and Jimmy Stewart offieiatmg. Bunal will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire, with military graveside services conducted
by Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the Ame_rican Legion, Middleport. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Saturday.

Letters predict violent end to tormented man

Hospital news·
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Jac~
Peterson, Rutland.
'
Wednesday discharges -none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 18- none.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Shaffer, son, Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 34 ~
Akzo ................ - ................... .47'!.
Ashland 011 ........................... ~8 ~

ATI:T ..................................... 48~.

Bank One .............................. 55),
Bob Evans ............................ 19),
Borg-Warner ...................... ..48'1.
Champion ...............................&amp;~.
Charm Shps ...........................5~.
City Holding ......................... 24~.
Federal Mogul ....................... 47'1.
Flrstar .................................... 261,
Gannett .................................7o,..

Kmart ................................... 13~.
Kroger .................................. 23~.
Lands End ............................49%.
Llmlted.................................43"1.

Oak Hill Flnl ·............ :...............18

OVB .......................................33'1.
One Valley ...........................37"1•
Peoples ................................. 271.
Pram Fln1 ...............................12l.
Rockwell ...........................&amp;o1.
RD/Shell ................................63),
Sears ..................................... 40'1.
Shoney's ................................. 2~
Wendy's ................................ 28~
Worlhlngton .......................... 14'.1

-·-·Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
by Advest of Ga111polls.
'

Correction Polley
Our main coni:tm In all Slories Is to be
accurate. If you know or an error In a
story, call the newsroom at {740) 992~
1155. Wr will check your Information
and makt a rorl't(tlon If warranted.

Donald A. Sprague, 67, Tuppers Plams, died on Wednesday evening,
August 18, 1999, at his home.
He was born on January 2, 1932 In Meigs County, son of Helen Barnhart
Sprague, Tuppers Plains, and the late Wilbur Sprague .
He was an area truck dnver for most of his life, a veteran of the U.S.
Anny during the Korean Conflict, and a member of the Hickory Hills
Church of Christ.
Surviving, in addition to his mother, are his wife, Wanda; two daughters .
anti a son-in-law; Karen and Karl Kehler, Tuppers Plains, and Jenny Adams,
Parkersburg, W.Va.; two sons and a daughter-in-law, David and Dorothy
Sprague and Robert Sprague, all of Parkersburg, W.Va.; 01ne grandchildren,
three great grandchildren, and three sisters: Shirley Hetzer and Sue
Springston, both of,Akron, and Sandy Savoy of Tuppers Plains.
Services will be held on Saturday, August 22, 1999 at White-Moquin
Funeral Home 10 Coolville With Michael Moore officiating. Burial Will fol·
low at Success Cemetery, where military rites will be conducted.
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m .

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - The
man who shot his parents before
killing himself predicted a violent end
to his life m tw&lt;1 lengthy, handscrawled letters to his mother written
over the past two months.
The nearly 50 pages of pleading,
angry and self-pitying words tell of
Kevin Paul Smith's sll:uggle to maintain his sanity while enveloped in a
haze of mental Illnesses.
1:1e said he felt so alienated, from
his family that the only way he could
speak wi!h his parents, Paul and Diane
Smith, was to break into their house
and force them to talk at gunpoint.
On Tuesday, Smith's threat turned

SPRI NGVAllE YClllf MA
446 ,4524

Advenising...
Circul11hon .... .
Classined Ads.

.

. ..... .. Ext. 1104
. .......... .Ext. 1103
......... .......... Ext. 1100

Citation issued in crash
James E. Randolph, 22, 30965 Pine Grove Road, Pomeroy, was cited
for assured clear distance by the Galha-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol followmg a two-vehicl e accident Tuesday on State Route 7 near
Pomeroy.
Troopers said Randolph was northbound at 5 a.m. when he was unable
to stop in time and struck the rear of a northbound car ~riven by Michael
G Caton , 46, I Fisher St., Pomeroy
Damage to both vehicles was moderate, according" the report':

Stolen car recovered
A 1994 Ford Mustang convertible reported stolen in Florida In May,
1997, was recovered Wednesday afternoon by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Office in a pond off Strongs Run Road in Salem Township near
WJJkesv1lle.
Shenff James M. Soulsby sa1d the vehicle was submerged in a pond at
lhe old Wilkesville race track. Only the 11p of the antenna was showing
above the wa1er, he sa1d.

Man arrested on parole violation charge
An Akron-area man sought on allegations he violated his parole on
charges of breaking and entenng, rece1vmg stolen property and robbery
was arrested WedneSday afternoon by deputies of the Me1gs County Sheriff's Office at a residence on Dead Man 's Curve Road near Pomeroy.
Alvm Rhodes, 31 , was arrested following a tip by the Summit County
Shenff's Office. Members of the shenff's office special response team
arrested Rhodes who was jailed pending h1s return to Summit County,
said Sheriff James M. Soulst&gt;y

Man charged with disorderly conduct
Troy M. Yankuns, 26, 41114 Starcher Road, Pomeroy, was cited on a
charge of disorderly conduct following an mc1dent on Union Avenue near
Pomeroy Wednesday evcmng.
Accordmg to a Me1gs County Shenff's Office report, Yankuns went to
the •Whlllekind residence to start a fight. He was restramed by people
there who called the sheriff's office. Yankuns was transported by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Semce to Veterans Memonal Hospital in Pomeroy where he was treated for minor injunes and released.

VFW dance set
The Tuppers Plams VFW 9053 will sponsor a round and square dance
Saturday 8to 11 p m. True Country Will provide the music and tht c-aller
w11l be J1m Brown .

Water to be off tonight
Water m downtown Pomeroy, Sugar Run, and Nayor's Run wil be off
for two hours beginning at 6 p m. tonight The Pomeroy Water Department Will be rcplacmg valves. As a precautionary move, residents m those
areas are asked to boll their water once service restored.

Binational commission recommends
moratorium on Great Lakes bulk sal~s
WASHINGTON (AP)- A U.S.Canadian commissiOn says the United States and Canada shouldn't consider any requests for selling Great
Lakes water for at least the next six
months and perhaps not even then.
"There should be a bias m favor
of retaming water in the system and
usmg 11 more efficiently and effe~- .
tively," Leonard Legault, chairman ,
of the Canadian secuon of the
International Joint Commission,
said Wednesday.
There are no requests pending
in either country to move water out
in bulk via p1pelme, truck or Ship,
but an aborted sales proposal last
year generated concern on both
sides of the border, leadmg to the
current study 'that began six
months ago.
" You fix the roof when the sun
shines, and nghl now there are not
, any demands for big bulk
removal," sa1d Thomas BaldiOJ,
who •heads the commission 's U.S.
section.
There is sentiment in both governments m favor of makmg sure
the water doesn't become a longhaul commodity.
In Ottawa, Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy issued a
stateme nt promising to iiitroduce
anti-export amendments 10 the
International Boundary Waters

(FRI8/t3- THURS 8/19189)

THE.StXTH SENSE (PG13)
7'10 &amp; 9:10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10
INSPECTOR GADGET (PG)
7 00 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES 1SAT/SUN 1'00 &amp; 3:20

3 1/2" Doubles

HE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (R
7:20 6 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1 ·20 &amp; 3:20

RUNAWAY BRIDE (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:0013:20

Any

Any

Exp.

Exp.

From orginal 110 or 135 C-41 process rools.
See One Of Our Clerks For Details Of The FuJI.
Tru ·Color Film Club Card
Ha~e 6 Rolls De~eloped FREE

BOWFINGER (PG13)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN I ·20 &amp; 3:20
DETROIT ROCK CITY (R)
7:10 &amp; 9:10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN t. 10 &amp; 3:10
DEEP BLUE SEA (R)
9'300NLY

Try Us Out For All
Your Photofinishing Ne~ds
Frllily
INVERSAL 100161: ~ 1:00, 8:00, 5:00,
The Rllll'lt
7:00, tOO

r.art 111 ms ,.,~ 1:15, 4.10, 1:00, 8:45

219 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

•.

(Corody)lli9J 1M. Mr,e T~ JaiJJ!s Caan Bot Y~
TIAIIIIIII.l'IRI ""'~ t.1~ 4:45,8:00,111:85
(l1oriol) M;illli1goalj.Kale 1\:imis """ """' lloly •
Matinees Sbown Everyd"Y

ALL

ALL

SWISHER LOHSE

Pharn11acy

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Fri 8:00a.m. to ~;00 p.m., Sat. 8 am - 8 pm
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, OH.
Open Week Nights 'til9

'

•

4" Doubles·

$ 99

MYSTERY MEN (PQt3)
7:10 DA)LY
,
MA1tNEES SAT/SU~ I :10 &amp; 3·30

'

-.. .......

Treaty Act this fall, Meanwhile, ·in
Washington, legtsla:tlon already has
been introduced to ban bulk shipments of Great Lakes water pending
joint action by both nations.
"We know we' re situng on a liquid gold mine, but let there be no
mJStake - th~ Great Lakes will
never .be for sale," said Rep Steve
LaTourette, R-Oh1o, co-chair of the
House Great Lakes Task Force.
In general, experts are concerned
only about any large move to take
water out of the Great Lakes system.
Almost all of the water drawn out
for ~rngatmn, manufactunng and
drinking gets used locally and then
makes its way hack into the basin.
The commission cited a 1995 statistic estimatmg that withdrawals dunng
that year amounted to 88,000 cubic feet
per second and only 4,096 cubic feet
per second d1d not make its way back
to the system.
Of Ihe lakes' 6 quadnllion gaiiQns,
ram and snow recycle &lt;1nly about I
percent, Legault said.
"You can't think of the Great
Lakes as a virtually bottomless reservOir," he lold rep:n1ers.
"Once you go beyond that I per·
cent, you 're min mg."
As the study contmues. the commission intends to examine surf~ce
wa1er and ground water in the Great
Lakes basin.

'

(Adiolildwnin).iw{laiiiE"" Orne ~ .. ~lie

CONTINUES...

~

lOX OFFICI Wlll OPEN AT 6:30 PM
FOR EVENING SHOWS,
12:30 PM lOR SAT &amp; SUN MAONIES

News Departments

Other Services

-

,...

&lt;l llfHl&lt;Jlt ' ' " I
I
I " • J,\, I&lt;' " ' I '"

BACK·TO·SCHOOL

The mam number is 992-2155. Department ntenslons are:
General Manager. ..... . .... ......... .Ext. 1101
Ntw ~
, , Ext. 1102
or 1-: xt. 1106

into reality. Just before dawn, he
entered the family house in Edgewood He earned a loaded 9 mm semiautomatic handgun .
He confronted his father and began
shooting, hitting hiS father repeatedly
and his mother in the knee. He then
turned the gun on himself, fulfilling
his prophecy of a violent end.

I

~-~--

I

'

.

..'

�,SpOrts

The Daily Sentinel
.

•

Thuraday,August19, 1999

Page4

Imports once m9re
swell trade deficit

five-homer barrage leads Pirates·past Reds 12~
ltyJOEKAY
. CINCINNATI (AP) Dale
S'veum has a goatee, just like Mark
McGwire.
That's where the similarities end.
Unlike Big Mac, Svcum doesn't hit
. lepe-measure home runs . For !)early.
two years, he hadn't hit any in the
ll)ajor leagues, period.
• In
consecutive
at-bats
Wednesday, he 'looked more like that .
-oiher guy with the facial hair.
' Sveum hittwoofPittsburgh 's five
holllefS, a solo shot and a three-run
hOmer in consecutive Innings, as the
~rates rolled to a 12-6 victory over
lhe Cincinnati Reds . .
.
; : The Reds gave up a dozen runs
.f!K' only the Second time th,is season
:- the other was a 24-12 ~in over
Colorado on May 19 - and fell out
~ first place in the NL. Central,' a
)arne behind Houston .
When Sveum homered from botp
:sjdes of the plate in the fifth 1imd
;,.ixth innings, they knew it was one
-Qf those days that defy explanation.

&lt;

~f,langers

'!Thai's when you know you're
having a bad night when he hits
two," Reds manager Jack McKeon
said, adding, "Although he is a pretty good hitter."
M~Keon 's disbelief was understandable. Sveum had not hit a
homer in the nbljors since Sept. 17,
1997..
''If you go up there enough times,
some things are bound to happen. "·
said Sveum, who hasn't gonen to the
plate much as a major leaguer lately.
Last year. he failed to hit one out
in 58 at-bats with the Yankees. who
were on their way to a _record-setting
championship season. He balled only
. 155 and wound up in the bullpen.
warming up pitchers.
He was in the minors this year for
Arizona and Pittsburgh before his
July 24 call-up. T~e Pirates were
looking to add experience to their
bench.
·
On Wednesday. manager Gene
Lamoni gave Kevin Young a day of
rest. installed Sveum as the cleanup

lnd~ans

down

American League
roundup
CLEVELAND (AP) - Based on
·the explosive way the Texas Rangers
have been hitting lately, it was just a
: .mauer of time until they obliterated
· th.e .s uddenl y slumping Cleve land
: Indians.
·
Rafael Palmeiro hit a three-run
ho mer and Royce Clayton had a tworun shot in a five-run seve nth inning
· Wedne sday night that gave the
a 6-1 victory.
Rangers
.,

KVD posts

·'

. race results

Here are . the results · from
Saturday's
Kanawha
Valley
· Dragway races in Southside, W.Va.
Racers are listed in order of finish
and identifjed by hometown and
· vehicle.
Junior
Dragster
Division:
Charley Betts II, Huntington. W.Va.;
Janina Clay, West Hamlin , W.Va.
Modified
Division: . Mark
_ Adkins, C rown City, Ford; Fred
Loudner, Glouster, vehicle unknown
· Pro Division: Chuck Sanders,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Camarq; Gary
, Pashen, Be lpre, Nova
Pure Street Division: Marc
~rench, Middleport, Caprice; Nick
Wellman ,
Huntington,
W.Ya ..
Mustang

hitter and marveled at the results.
"There's an old saying: You never
know in baseball, •· Lamont said.
'' You never know what's going to
happen."
No one would have guessed this .
That's why Sveum enjoyed it so
much.
"Obviously there's a reason guys
like me keep playing," Sveum said.
" You feel you still have games like
that ldt in you. I' m almilst 36 years
old and to be able to do that again at
this level ...
.
"A year ago this time, 1 was
catching in the bullpen for the
Yankees. So sure, you sit back and
you think, ' What a fun night. ,.,
Francisco Cordova (8-5) overcarne a shaky first inning to get his
fifth victory in six decisions. He .took
a 12-2 lead into the ninth and gave
up four runs before leaving with one
out.
The 'Pirates had been struggling
oiTensively all month. batting .2 14.
They'd hit 15 homers. butl3 of them

'

Ea!it ern

::ra.m

Divi~ion

l!' I. E&lt;l.

... 7J
67

•New York

: •Boston
, .Yoronto ..
. "Bollimoroe

6Ll
558

46

'·'

.ll8

... 6l l8
.... ~J 66
69

,,

·:Tamp~ Rny
l:~ntn l

72

: ·Chic:ag n

"

· )ktmit

-

.no

.,62

"'-'
479
42-l

·""

71
7.1

\9.:!

6 .~

.5~

542

6':

.. 60
-18

60
71

500
.WJ

I I'·
B

.

. :O&lt;~ kland .. ·.
, '"Senu le
·~ A n o~im

"

.. 50 68

2 1'·

.&amp;OJ · • 2-J

\\'tostrrn Oh·ision
. .72 49

:. ' Tt=XIIS .

20
ll

Dh·isiun

' ·CLEVELAND

. ·Minncsou:a ..
. ' K.!nsos City

445

10

25'

595

Wednesday's scores
-..

Thursday~

Baltimore 2. Minnesota 0
Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 0
T~Jtns

6. CLEVELAND I

Colorado (1\ stncw l l-91 m Chicn11n rFarn~ worth
2-6) . .~ . 20 p m
Houston (R.:ynl&gt;lds IJ-~ 1 :tl Flonda ilkmp~ter ~6 1. 7:05p.m
,
Arizona (SIIlU it'myn.- J -11 111 Pm sbufllh ( Rn~·hic
11 -8). 7:05 pIll.
......
.
Montreal rPmYe ll 1 - ~1 at qNC INNATI (N.: ;~gl~
.~--n 7 :0~ p.m
·
U.s Angeles (K fhLLI'-11 1-f-61 tit PhtladelphtJ
(Person 7- l ). 1 ..\5 r m '
St. Louis rOiiver 7-Kl at New York {Hersh tser t 1-

Basketball

Kanias City iStein 0-0) at New York (Con~ 11 -7).
• 12 : ~

,•

p.m
Annheim (Oniz 0-0) at Cllicago (PMque 9-8),

WNBA standings

-: 2:0S p.m.
·..

Minne~ta

(Perkins 1-Sl at Baltimon:(J Johnson
;\:OS p.m. .
·
, ·• Oakland (Hudson 7- 1) A\ Boston (Mnrtmez 17-j),
. ·6:05p.m.
.
.'
• : Tuas (Morgan 12-7) at CLEVELAND {Karny
• .. 9-1}. 7:05pm.
: ·· ~·7).

.

.

.

Friday's games

•:
Kansas City (Suppan 7-7) at Tampa Buy (RUpe 7• .6}, 7:05pm.

·.. Chicago (Snyder 9-8) atBallimore (Pon-'on 1\ -8),
·. 7:35p.m.
. .
: • New York (lmbu 9-4) nt Minnesota (Radke 9-11 ),
: • 8 : 0~ p.m. .
. • . Boston &lt;Ponug:~l 7 ~ 10) at Texas (Loaiza S-1),
· :a:3' p.m.
.
• Detroit {Moehlrr S.l2) at Anaheim (I-inley 7. 10),

•. !0 :0 5p.m.

·•

Toromo (Hamillon 5-7) at Oakland &lt;Oquist

.:NL standings

Eastern Conference
. l!' I. E&lt;l.

yx-NewYork .
.. ........ 17 J]
Chnrloue ....................... IS 16
Orlando....
. ... 14 16
Detroit ...... ,....................... 13 17
Washington ... : ............... 12 19
CLEVELAND
...... 6 24

.567
.484

467
.433
387
.200

Gll

2':
~

: •Ium

83.\
II

. 63~

6

12
16
16
-17

.61.\
.484
.467
.4.H

6'1,
I0'·1
II
12

-·•

2Y,
24

:.. .
Cmtral Oivhlon
,• Houscun .:........................... 73 49 · .S98
, "CINCINNATI . ...
70 48 ~9.\
• "'St. Louis ......

.62

•.)iusburgh .
•, Mtlwuuk«
: ;Chi cn~o

60

Wednesday's scores
Orlando 93, Detrotf 81
Houuon 70, Phoeni.l 60
Los Angeles 72. Mlnnerotn 54

60 60
54 64
.. 51 6K

.m

..458

17

-429

20 '·

\\'ntu-n Ohision
70 Sl
. 61 59
• 'San Franc-isco .
.... ~~ b6
• ; San Dieao .~.
5~
67
• • L.m Angele! .
, • Arizon.,

5~

'.Co tor::~do.

68

r:ktroit at ChDrlollc, 8 p.m.
Orhmdo nt Minnerota. 8 p m.
Utah at Phocni~ . 10 p.m.
,
Houston at Los Angeles, 10:.10 p.m

MLS standings
Eastern Conrercnce

~08
~5!i
~-16

44.l

8'·

,."

16'

COLUMUUS .

Minmi
TampJ Br~y
New l::ngl;m.J
NY-NJ

~

J~

.J
..
l
l

::!1
::!1
II!
I)

GA
Jl

15

Jb
29
·~
17
21

.JO
·'"
J7
.J9

.111

29

We~tern Cunrcr~ncc

("llhtratlo

•

I .SOWPis Gf
.. 40 .J7

16"7
I~ K
IO L\
.1014
K IJ
~ 17

D.C. ......

Wednesday's scc.res
Culomdn ~- 1\tlonta I

~

Ium
579

I6 7

.

..

~

~2

·Of 'f:his year's

. Kiddie tractor pulls are taking place every day at the Meigs County
Fair in the show arena.
. First place winners in the two weight categories will go into a pull of
champi ons to be held at 6 p.m. Friday night on the pull track .
.
Monday's first place winners were Ryan Amos in the 35 to 55 pound
category, and Jeff Milhoan in the 56 to 75 pound class. Tu~sday's wm:
ners in the two classes were Samuel Evans and Clinton Kennedy ; and taking first places in Wednesd_ay's pulls were Austin Linscott and Zack Hen-,
dricks .
·
·

.
Watson wins open class sheep .show
'

.

·Chance Watson o.f Rutland showed the grand champion sheep in the
open class sheep show. held at .the Meigs County' Fair on Monday, with
,
.
·
his Suffolk ewe. .
The Baker family of Reedsvi lle placed first m the ewe. one year and .
under two class.
·

CLASS .WINNERS - Taking top spots in their respective age
categories in the Sheep Lead Class were, from left, Ashley Jeffers In the under age 8 class; Theresa Vaker, 13-15 years of age;
and Mendy.Guess, 16 and up.
·. ·
· . ·

Open .class poultry show results

Sheep Lead .Class winners named

•

Alyssa Baker of Long Bottom was the top winner of the Guys and Gals
Sheep Lead Class held in the show arena Wednesday night at the Meigs County Fair.
· She participated in the 9to '12 age group . Runner-up in that class was Brittany Facemeyer. Winner in the under eight category was Ashley Jeffe rs.
Theresa Baker took first and 1\shley Hager second in th~ 13 to 15 age category and Mendy Guess was first with Kristina Kennedy second in the 16 and
· up group.
·
·
. .
The part icipants were attired .in garments made of wool and l~d a lamb
into the show ring for the judging. They. were judged on ·the basis of their
outfits and their presentation with the lamb.

JtCQ'lliSitTIO?{S 1I?lf,f£/WU
"r . B\nfDAYS'SAVING"

SIDEWAI.K·SALE
" ~ATURDAY, AUGUST .21S,T. .
j&lt;

I .

'

Saw up_to SQ~ of .5elecled mermanclfSe,..

NL·w Enp. lnnd Ill San Jose. 10 .10 p m

GRAND CHAMPION SHOWMAN- Christina Miller, shown here
with her reserve champion Alpine goat, was named Grand Champion Goat .ShOW!IIIIn at Wldnses.t lay's Junior Fair Goat Show. ·

Sunday's games
Cht cago at Da ll as . I p.m.
Tampa Bay at COLUMBUS. 4 p 111.

Transactions

Jn Recognition Of ·
Pleas~tValley Hospital's
40th Anniversary.. :

Baseball
American Lu&amp;•e
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Pl ~ccd LHP Mark
Lllngston on the 15-day disabl ed list. Optioued LHP
Tom Martin 'tn BuffaiQ of 1h ~ lnt ernalio nal Le,1gue
Purchased the contract of LHP Chri s Haney and
recalled RHP Jason Rakttl from BuiTalo.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS : Acquired OF R1ch
. Becker frum the Milwaukee Brewers for a plnyer to
be named . Optioned OF Jason McDonald to Midland
of the Tex ns Ua,gue
National Leaaue
CHICAGO CUBS : Signrd 18 Mark Groce 1on
one-yelll' cuntract ex1ension.
PH ILADELPHI A PHILLIES; Sighed 18 Rico
Brogna to n mac-year contract extension.

,,

{

~'

,., -~·

Middleport Sto~
. Only ·

:

'

,SEIKO
and ·PULSAR·
WA,.CHES

1ft ~!!il
Price

·ALL LADIES AND MEN'S • IN STOCK·
SAVE AN ADDITIONAL

GRAND CHAMPION FEEDER- Joe Brown's Ieeder steer was
judged graml champion at Tuesday's Junior Fair Beef Breeding
: Show. Brown was named reserve champion showman.
.

Mature Driving program
slated by patrol Aug. 26

Football

National Hockty IAqut
ATLANTA THRASHERS: Agreed to ter1115 with
F Kel_l)' S: uchberger on a lhrte-yeaf contract.
· CALGA RY FLAMES: Traded D Steve Shindf~
lo the Wa!hington Capita ls (or F Be-noit Grauon.
Signed D Denis Gauthier
EDMONTON O ILERS: Signed C Child Ktlgcr
to a two-yenr contr:K"I
· ·
01TAWA SENATORS· Nnmcd Andre Srwartl
· ·~siswnt Cl).llCh . 1urmo Kckal;unen dtrector or plllyer
~nonncl . Frailk lil)' chtd amateur M:Uul. Ker1
Willi amson western US :tmateur s..·nut. and Ltwts
Mongcllu zo US . am.ltcur SCOU t
PHILADELPH IA FLYERS. RNt@ m:d 0 Karl
Dykhuh to a lhree-}·ear l'Onlracl
PHOENIX COYOTES A sst~ned 11 s~·an
fingnon and IJ Oiln I ocht 16 Jnkcrn uf thc Fm m ~ h
Elne Lt:-a,:ue .
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING St~ tk! d. IW c,1h11
Furbc~ tPH lht\"l"•p:;n ~·~ •nt rnc t
'

.

Results of the open class poultry show were ann ounced fo.llowing .the
judging on Tuesday.
·
.
Winners, in order, and by class, were : American poult ry, pullet and
cockerel , Elizabeth Bearhs, Pomeroy, and Odie Karr, Pomeroy; Asiatic
poultry, hen and c~k. Elizabeth Bearhs;.Mediterranean poultry, pu.llet and
cockerel , Michael Manuel, Racine , Zachary Manue l, Racme ; Conunen,
tal poultry. hen and cock. Elizabeth Bearhs; Bantam . pullet and cockerel, Douglas Hunter. Racine ; Bantam . hen and cock, Alban Salser, Rae me,
Odie Karr; Bantam feather leg, pullet and cockerel, Alban Salser, .B rian
K. Justice , Pomeroy; Ban tam feather leg, hen and coc k, Alban Salser, Eliz,
abeth Bearhs, Alban Salser; Bantam, other, hen and cock. Eli zabeth·Bearh1i.
T.urkeys Michael Manuel ; Ducks, Al6an Salser; Ducks , hen and coc~ •
'
'
Alban Salser.
·
:::

Special Jail Sports
Preview Edition!

Hockey

I

·II
12

rJe .4 Part

·
Na~lonal football LA'aaue
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Waivt:d WR Ronnie
AnderSon . Signed OT Todd Stewan.
CHICAGO BEARS: Rel ~ased LB Andre Cullins
nnd LB Jim Schwanll.. Signed LB Antony Jordan. .
CrNCINNAll BENGALS: Waived NT Marcus
DQw and WR Geoff Noisy.
'
CLEVELAND BROWNS: Signed OG Alex
Bernstein.
NEW YORK GIANTS: Annou nced the retiremen! ofCB Mark Colltns. Sign~d DE Hunter Adams
NEW YORK JETS: Signed WR Quinn Emly.

Soccer

.~

rJusinesses rJe Sure di

The Fal·r ··n Brl·ef·.--..,

Kiddie tractor pull results listed

pm

Basketball

II

August 26; 1999
• Meigs Marauders
• Southern
Tornadoes
•
• Eastern Eagles

r---

Saturday's games

National Basldblll As~lutlon
. CHA RLOTIE HORNETS: SiJi!:ned C Todd
Fuller. · .
.
'
MIAMI HEAT: Signed Pat Riley, coach. to a
contract extension.
. SEA1T,LE SUPERSONICS : Re-signed F Vin '
Baker to a seven-yi:ar contract.
WASHING10N WIZ~ROS : Agreed to t~nns
with G Milch Richmond on a foor-yur contract.

Friday's gam~s
I
9

exports to China posted their best
gain of the year. ·
.
The deficit w1th Me&gt;ico, 011e of
the Americas partners in the North
American Free Trade Agreement,
swe lled 9.4 percent in June to $2.5
billion as imports from that country
climbed to an all-.time high. .

~;";;jtc::i

GRAND CHAMPION
- Chris Trader is
the Alpine goat that won him grand champion honors at the Junior,
Fair Goat Show, held on Wi!d"nesday. Trader was also namefl
reserve champion goat showman at the show.

DC Umted ~ • Miamt . K p.m
New York - Ne~ Jersey nt Ltts Anp.o."l!!s: I.O·JO

4

Western Conference
yx- Houslon 25.. .
.. ........ 5
. x-Los Angele1
.... 19
x-Sacramento.
.. ....... 19
Phoenix ........ .:............ ,...... IS
M in~o111 .....,....
.. ......... 14
Utah ....... :............................ I)
y-dinched conference 1ill ~
•-clinched playoff berlh

l!' I. &amp;1.

.............. 74 48 · .607
. 73' 49 .598
.. .. ,... 64 56 .531
&lt; florida ..................... :...... :. 50 11 AIJ
·-. Momrea l ................ :....... ,... 49 71 .408

1

..

Wednesday's scores

5':

Tonight's game

. .. New York
, " Allanta .... .......
. ~ Philadelphia ...

•:

"'

CLEVELAND at New York. 7:.l0 p.m

Eastern Olt'lslon

,

Ium

9-:n.

, • IO:OSp.m.
. • CLEVELAND (Colon 12-4) at &amp;attle {Halllma
· :9-4), 10:05 p.m.

winner In the Guys and Gals Sheep Lead Claas .Wednesday night.
Posing with her for a picture Ia Holley Williams, the wool princess,
left, and Kristina Kennedy, Junior Fair Queen.

three decades, have been snapping up
foreign products. ·
The huge jump in the deficit in
iune caught imalysts by surprise.
Many had been forecasting a slight
narrowing on the belief that American exporters were finally seeing'
some improvement as Asian
economies began to recover from
steep recessions.
The slight gain in .exports only
pushed overseas sales back to thei.r
November levels.
The soaring trade deficit has created major p&lt;ilitical headaches for the
Clinton administration , which has
had to deal with rising cries in Congress for protectionisl legislation to
help U.S. industries. including steeL
The administration contends that
raising U.S. barriers to foreign prod~cts would send 'the wrong signal at
a time· when the U.S. economy is outperforming the rest of the world ,in
spite .or the huge trade deficit.
Congress has created a 12-membcr commission of prominent trade
experts to look at the causes of the
deficit and recommend solutions.
America 's politically sensitive ·
deficit with Japan ballooned by 19.3
percent in June to $6.3 billion for the
montlj. And. the monthl y defic it wnh
China also rose by 7.9 percent to $5.7
billion. the worst showi ng since September even though American

COLUMB US 4, N~w York -New Jer~y 1
l~"lmpn Bay I. New E n ~ l ll nd 0
Dallas l Colorudo 0

li'riday 's games

Today's games

.
,

Today's games
Mtlwaukee IKa•l ~ · 10 ) ~ ~ Huuswn !Holt .\· Il l.
I .~5 p.m.
· At lama (S mohz. !Hit m Cnlorndo (Kilt• 7- 111.
4:fl5 p.m.
Ptllshu rgh tRcn~1111 1'0-K! at CINCINNATI
I Harni sch 11-ft l. 7 05 p m

9). 7:40p.m.
San Fun ctsco 1Ruc_1cr Hl-7 ) at Mtlwaukee
(Pulsipher .1 -J). 8:05p.m

Bmton 7. Oak land -l
Chicago 4. Anaheim J
Kansas Cit)' .l New YO!"k 0

,

Los Angeles .............. .-..... 14 8 .1 ~6 .~ 1 IB
"Chicago ......... ;........... .... 12 10 I .\4 37 2.\
t:ffllll s... ,.... ·--- .......... .... 12 12 I 34 40 D
Soolose ......
12 10 ,9 IR 3 1 .f l
Kansa~ Cjly ................. 7 16 2 17 2e
43
NOTE: 'Three points for \'ICtQry. i1ne pl.lin t for
~;hooto ut wi n ond "lero poims for lo5s. Shontnu t
(SOW) is a subse1 of wins.

9). 7:40 P. .m.
San oie~o rCien~nl ~- Il l at A1lnmn (Ci l llY tlle 10-

' Sei!llll" 5.' Toronto I

T.OP WINNER :._Attired in a red wool •-•ter and Navy skirt,
Aly~ Baket with her g,.nd ch~mplon breeding - e was the top

WASHINGTON (AP) - America's trade deficit mushroomed to an
· all -time · monthly high in June as a
flood of foreign cars. computers and
clolhing sent imports to a record level, overwhelming a small ris~. in
exports.
The Commerce Department
reported today that the trade deficit
ballooned 10 $24 .6 billion in June a 16.3 percent increase from lhe
$21.2 billion deficit in May. ·
Imports of goods and services i-ose
. a hefty 3.9 percent in June to a record
Sl03 billion. At the-same time , U.S.
exports managed a 0.5 percent gain
to $78.3 billion, only the second
increase this year. ,
Through the first half ofthis year,
tljc U'.S. trade deficit was ·running at
an annual rate of $236 billion - 44 .
percent above last year's $164 .3 billion, which had bee n a record high.
The Labor Depanment reported
today that the number' of Americans'
filing new claims for unemploy01ent
benefits rose for a lhird consecutive
week. climbing to 287,000, an
im:rease of 4,000.
Economists had been expecting an
even higger rise. They view any .
number below 300.000 as an indicatiOn that the labor market is extremely tight. The governm~ nt rep01ted last
week that the unemployment rate in
June wus 4) percent. near a threedecade low .
The trade deficit set records in five
of the last six months. American
manufacturers and fanners are struggling to cope with the loss of markets
caused by the Asian financial crisis
while U.S. consumers, bolstered by
the lowest unemp loyment levels in

Arizona police cite
Holmes in wreck
involving teammates

Gll

,.

SHELLED - Cincinnati pitcher Brett Tomko watches as
Pittsburgh's Dale Sveum rounds
the bases after hitting a fifthinnin!J solo homer in Wednesday
night a National League game in
Cincinnati, where the Pirates
won 12-6. (API

The Rangers have scored. 44 runs fielding plays.
· Oakland 7-4, Kansas City blanked - hy percentage - in the team's Brosius and Joe Girardi to go 0-(orRoberto Alomar mad~ a diving New York 3-0'. Baltimore downed two-year hi story. ·
58.
and gotten 60 hits during a fourgame winnin~ strCak that has he lped stop . of a sharp groundef- hy Lee Minnesota 2-0 and Chicago heat
. Red Sox 7, Athletics 4
Orioles 2, Twins 0
them to a 6 1/2 -game lead in the AL Stevens and flipped the h;f(l uvcr hi s. Anaheim 4-3.
Boston made sure , Oakland will
Sco11 Erickson pitched a li ve-hit West.
back to shortstop· Omar ViLqucl to
Mariners 5, Blue Jays I
leave Fcnway Park trailing in the AL ter as Baltimore beat Minnesota at
Texas• has pounded C level'and force Zcile. c;layton then hit hi s sevLou Piniella earned . hi s I.OOOth wi ld-card race .
Camden Yards .
pitchirlg. hitting I 0 homers in win· enrh homer for a 6-1 lead.·
·
win as a major league manager as
Erickson has eight career shlltoul s
Jose Offerman tripled home the
ning the tirst thn.·e games of.th~ fourAflcr Tom Goodwin walked. St.'alllr sent Toronro ro its seve nth go-ahead run in the seventh inni ng as for the Orioles. His threw seve n
game · series by a combined 34- 10 Mark McLemore hit a ~ drive .into the · straight loss.
the Red Sox took a two-game lead ·shutouts while playing for the Twin~.
score.
gap in right-ce nter. but Manny
Ken Griffey Jr. and ot her over the As · for the fourth playofl'
White So• 4, Angels 3
.
John Burkett (4-6) pitched eig~t Ramirez made a running , backhand- Mariners poured champag ne over 1he spot.
Third baseman Troy Glaus made a
strong inning s to get hi s first victory cd catch and doubled Goodwin off head of a teary -eyed Piniella, whose
ll1e Red Sox have taken two o f throwing error with two outs in the
career record in sti nt s with the lhrec from Oakland. wi th the final eighth inning. giving Chicago the gosince July 22. He held Cleveland 's fi rst base to end the inning .
Texas. which has 1·7 homers in its 'Yankees. Cinci nnat i" and Seattle is gam'c of the series ton'ight.
lineup to one run and five Jlits and
ahead run at Comiskey Park.
·
had a season-high eight strikeouts.
last five games, scratc hed out a fi(st- I ,000-926.
Kevin Appier lost for the first
Paul Konerko homered for the
Burkett lowered his ERA from inn ing run when McLemore singled,
Piniella, incidentally. is the 18th time in four starts since the Athletics third straight day for the White So~.
.went to tliird on a one-out single by manager to h~ve both 1,000 wins and acquired him from Kansas C ity. ·
6.30 to'5.90.
Anaheim fell 23 games below .500
" I felt more comfortab le than I Gre_er and scored on a groundout by . 1.000 hits ..
Center fielder ' Rich Becker, for the first time si nce Oct. I, 1983.
'have all year," Burkett said .. " When Gonzalez.
Jay Buhner homered as Seattle obtained by Oakland earlier in the
it i ~ an important game, I believe I' m
Cjeve land tied it in the s ixth . completed a three-game sweep at day f~m . Milwaukee for a player to
going to do it. I was confiden t and Vizquel got a bunt· si ngle, stole sec- Sky Dome. The win moved the be named, batted leadoff and went 1felt good."
ond and scored on .Ramirez's one-out Mariners to .500 at 60-60.
for-3 and scored a run . The trade
Palmeiro snapped a 1·-1 tie in the , si ngle to right. , .
.
Devil Rays4, TigersO
.
came three days after Tony Phillips
seventh wi th his 33rd homer of the
Ramirez went to third o n David
Wilson Alvarez scooped up some broke his leg and was lost for the seaseason. Rusty G reer opened the Justice's single to right, but Burkett dirt and put it in' a boule as a Tiger ..son.
inning wi\h a single and went to t~ird then s truck o ut Jim Thome and Stad ium souvenir, then combined
· Royals 3, Yankees 0
PHOENIX (AP) Arizona
on a double by Juan Gonzalez before Richie Sexson to end the rall y.
with Albie Lopez on a one-hitter.
For the third straight night, a Cardinals line~Ran Lester Holm e.s
Palmeiro homered off Charles Nagy
Nagy said he had experienced fluGabe Kapler tripled .in the third game at Yankee Stadium was· score- will be issued ~ traffic citation for
( 13-8).
· like symptoms all week and said he inning for Detroit 's only hit . Swung less goi ng into the seventh i'nning. "speed not reasonable and prudent"
" Nagy . always pitches me tough. may have gotten 'a bit weak in the around toward center in a shift, left And for the first time in that span, in connection with · a rollover ac~i He just made a mistake and left a ·seventh.
fie]der Bubba Tramme.ll missed a New York lost.
, ·
dent that severely injured a team:
pitch up in the zone. I looked at their
" I thought Charlie pitched very di ving , shoestring try o n Kapler 's. . Rookie Dan Re ichert pitched mate. ·
defensive alignment and the second we.ll, but we just didn 't generate a ny- ball down the line.
four-hit b;lll for seven innings and
The state Department of Public
baseman and first baseman were . thing off Burkeu," said Indians manTerrell Lowery hit .a grand slam Rey Sanchez scored the go-ahead Safety said Holmes wa~ driving
back. I was just trying to hit it their ager Mike Hargrove . " Burkeu for Tampa Bay, leaving Cincinnati as run on shortstop· Derek Jeter' s throw- teammate Ernest Dye's luxury sports
way,, .and score the runner from knows how lo get people out and the only team in the majors without ing error in the eighth.
car about the posted· 75 mph speed
third," said Palmeiro, who has niite when he has command of his pitches one.
New York has scored only 12. runs limit in heavy rain when it veered off
home rs in his last 20 games. .
he is tough. He just dominated us."
Alvarez improved to 5-0 lifetime in its ·last fi ve games. Until Paul &lt;aihy Interstate 17 and ro ll ed
After Todd Zeile singled', Nagy
In other AL games , Seattle at Tiger Stadium. Tile Devil Ray s . O' Neill sing led in the fourth, he had Monday morning.
was replaced by Ricardo Rincon, stopped Toronto 5- l , Tampa Bay c~~~:Wa~5~-~2~r~o~ad:w~·li;.t~h~e~ir~b~e~s~t~~~~_;;:w~it~h•C
~h~il~i~~~~S~co~t~~------~---:0'·--. .
who was helped by two sensational defeated Detroit 4-0, Boston beat 1

San Francisco 5. folontreal 4
Pituburgh 12. C INC INNATI 6
Hous ton 6. Milwaukee 4
Phllilcklptua 6. St Louis 5'
,Lils Angelt's 7. Ronda 0
Arizona~ - Chu.:ago I
New York 9, San DieB,O I

:;AL standings

the eighth off Stan Belinda.
Sveum came to bat later in the
eighth and tried to hit a third homer.
He sttuck out.
"I got some decent pitches to hit
there," Sveilm said , " When you try
to hit a 'h ome run , you never do ." .
Notes: A magnetic resonance
imaging
test
confirmed
that
Pittsburgh left-bander Pete Schourek
has an inflamed left shoulder. The
Pirates have not decided whether to
put him on the disabled list.
Schourek complained of a sore
shoulder following his start Monday
night. a 9 -2 loss to the Reds ....
Svcum became the second Pirate to
homer from both sides in a game .
Bobby Bonilla did it twice in the
1·980s. Sveum had done it two times
. previously, the mosl recent in 1987.
.. . Tomko also gave up four homers
tnthe Pirates in Braden(on , Aa .. in a
March 27 spring training game.
Pittsburgh hit five in that game as
well ..... Reds owner Marge Schon
turned 71.

6-1, capture sweep of weekday series

Scoreboard
Baseball

were solo shots. They left that slump
in tancrs by liining five homers in a
game for the fourth time this seasun.
Brian Giles got the barrage started
with a three-run shot in the second
off Brett Tomko (4-6). who tends to
give up homers in bunches. Ed
Sprague led off the third with hi s
21st homer, and Sveum led off the
(ifth with a homer from the left side
that went 419 feet.
II was the fourth time thiS'Season
that Tomko had given up three or
more homers in a game. He gave up
five to the Mets on June 15.
His breaking pitches wercn 't
working, so Tomko stuck with hi s
fastball and got drubbed.
" It 's not easy to swallow," said
Tomko, who gave up seven runs on
seven hits in five innings. " l ' ll1ry to
. learn from it. " •
· Sveum batted from the right' side
1n the sixth against Gabe White and
hit a three-run homer that went an
estimated 411 feet and made it 10-2.
AI Martin added a two-run homer in

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Advertising Deadline·Thursday, August 19, 1999 .
Call 992-2155 Dav e at Ext. 104
m· Kathy .at Ext. l 05
For More Information ·

.

'

The Daily Sentinel

A 55 Alive/Mature Driving pro" gram sponsored by the American
Association of . Retired Persons
. (AAR,P), the State Highway Patrol
and the Gall ia Cun ty Counci I on
Aging will be held at thc·patrors Galli a-Meigs Post on Thursday, Aug . 26,
starting at 8 a.m.
The 55 Alive/Mature !;)riving program is a classroom driver improv~­
ment course for motorists aged 50
an·d o.lder. The program was devcl ~.ped by the AARP
. . .
"55 Alive can sharpen dnvmg
ski1\s, prevent acciJcnt s and keep
older drivers on the road longer and
more safely," said Lt , Richard E.
Grau, commander of the G-M Post.
"For many people , 55 Alive can also
save them money."
· '·
Ol1io law rcquira; all auto in~ur­
ancc carriers to offer a discount on
premium!; to quali lied g'ractuates of

approved· c&lt;}.u.rscs such as 55 Alive.
Poli cyholders should co n1act their
carriers fOr mort!· infonnntion about
such discounts.
. Registration fnnns cn n Oc picked
up m the Gallm Cou nt y Clluncil ml
Aging or the State Highway Patrol
ro:-a . Rc'gistration is limited to 30 StU ·
derits. and forms shou ld be rclUrned
hy t-\ug. 24. ThcrC is an $8 registration fcc for each .st uden t tn L"uvcr the
:- . tudcnl materials suppltcd hy AARP.
' Participants in the t.:o ur ~~ arc ·
ad\·ised that no smoking will be
:!I lowed in~idc the po!-~l. Thac will be ·
a lunch brcuk at 12:30 p.m.. and intcrlllittc nt break s will hl" mkcnthroug:hII Ul tllC day.
For more informati on. contact Ed
('o llms of AARP at 740-423-54 10:
Jean Niday of t!tc G;!ll;,...&amp;,unty ·
Cuunc ol nn A~ing at 446-7000; or
Grau at 446-2433 .

• Free To The Public
• Thursday
Augilst 26, 1999

20o/o
OFF.
ALLIN

STOCK.lOKAND 14KGOLD
· .NECKLACES AND ~RACELETS

-3 DAYS ONLY-

• 7:30p.m.
• Battle Monument
State Park
vresented In tmJundJm With The
r:::()lnt llleasant MOst §erles

'

13atOe Mllnument "411e llartl

we guaran~ee the lowest prices on IOk and 14k gold
chains ana bracelets.
Examp.e: Me~'s 14k rope necklace

'
Sugg. Retail $350 Our Regular
Price $119

$95

Tbls weekend only
Layaway for Christm~· 10% down

~CQ'lliSitz109{S 1I?lf,Jf/W££f,1 .·
TWO LOCATIONS:
CORNER SECOND AND GRAPE , GALLIPOLIS
91 MILL STREET, MIDDLEPORT
EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIR SERVICE

446·2842
992-6250

�•

.

.

.

.

•

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel

:·Dear Ann Landers: You have · games. The end result is that I am
printed 111any letters mentioning the ' now $13,000 in debt and a nervous
dangers of cyber-dating and Internet wreck .
pqrnography, buy you have never
I am overwhelmed with shame
addressed the issue of online gam- and humiliation because of this
bling.
~ddiction ..How could I have been so
. I first gambled online a year ago, foolish' If my husband were to disand won several huridred dollars. co~er what I have done. he would
That was unfoounate , because then, probably leave me.
I was hooked. Within a few shon
· Ann, I always thought that I
weeks. I was totally obsessed. No could control my urge to gamble. It
matler how much I won or lost. "I never occurred to me that my life
kept gambling.
would become hell because of it.
1 never actually. saw any money
I have miraculously stopped
change hands. and it all seemed like gamblii•g. but there is still a long
a · series of fast -paced. exciting road ahead of me . I worry about

Tobacco's song:

· ~edicirze
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associale Professor
of Family Medicine

TV?-

.

. Answer: ·The use of (obacco is
indeed a high-risk activity. · We
know that tobacco is linlced to a
· growing li st of health problems .
The reason you frequently hear
about the health consequences of
tpbacco use is that each addition to
the list is a "newswonhy" story.
. Also, the magnitude of health
problems and subsequent healthc:~re cOsts tO our country from
toba~co use make announcements
discouraging the use of this dangerous substance worthwhile .
Despite what one of my skepti-

cal friends who smokes says. the
anti-smolcing campaign by government and , media is based on good
scie ntific ev.idence.
It is also legitimate for government to insist on smoke-free workplaces because of the mounting
evidence of the dangers of secondhand smo ke . .
The same dangers. of course.
e~ist for your family members in
your own h~rne. Here , it's not the·
government's responsibility to
make sure your family is safe from
second-hand smoke - but it is
yours.
Thirty percent of all cancers are
directly linked to tobacco use. In
practical terms, this means that if
no one used tobacco . . the total
number of cancers would drop by
30 percent.
Also, the risk of certain types
of cancer .is partic ularly . high for

making the next month's credit-card resolve . Your story could help oth- have been taken over by a steampayment or having enough money ers --and their stories will help you. roller.
to buy a binhday gift for my son.
Dear Ann Landen: I just read
My husband and I have seen a
It will take years before I am out the leiter from "Hanford Conn.," counselor about this, and have been
of debt. Talk about a nightmare who said her in-laws should visit advised 10 set definite boundaries
without end. I am liv.ing it.
more often. I pray that my in-laws for his parents and refuse to be
I iun begging you 10 print my let- didn ' t read that.
manipulated. That advice was very
ter and warn others. I always prided
Even though my husband's. par- helpful. Please tell · your readers
myself on being a responsible adult. ents live more than 1.000 miles · that forced closeness breeds resentbut now, 1 see how easy it is to lose away. they manage to see us every ment and trouble down the road.
your way. It could happen to me . it two months. They also cook up
I' m just thanlr.[ul we went for
could happen to anyone .
""family vacations" that rob us of professional help before we became
, Tell your readers that online prec ious time we should be spendgambling can ruin their lives. I wish ing alone with our two small chilsomeone had warned me .
dren .
My ·•n ANONYMOUS IN THE MID- raws call us at least twice a week,
WEST
often to complain that we don't
DEAR ANONYMOUS:. You spend enough .time with them .
havo written a powerful letter •. When they aren"t visiting or phon- ·
one that is sure to educate many ing . they are mailing cards and prereaders. and I thank you for it. I sug· sents. Over the years. my mother-ingesl you look up Gamblers Anony · "law has succeeded in transfonning
mous in the phone book and attend our home into what looks like a gift
a few meetings .to stiffen your shop. Frankly. I feel as if our lives

a divorce Slatistic. Get the word out.
Ann . ·• NEARLY SMOTHERED
IN THE USA

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
Aaoss IIDII ~Aula Sales 011tld Itt. 35 West

(740) 446-2412

tobacco users . For example. as you
alluded to in your question. smok ·
ing is strongly correlated wllh lung
cancer. In fact, this habit is ·rcspon·
sib le for 80 percent of all cases of
lUng cancer.
The use of tobacco also signifi cantly increases the risk of cancer
in the nose and throat area fncluding the lips. longue and larynx- as well as in the esophagus,
pancreas , stomach. kidneys and
urinary bladder. It also increases
the likelihood of some noncancerous conditions. Heart disease, as
you mentioned. is certainly one of
these. ·
Other conditions you may not be
aware of include emphysema.
osteoporosis, stomach ulcers .
strolce, and it can even be responsible for abnormal pap smears.
Wow! I sure am glad I quit s'moking a long time ago.
· The exact way i·n which tobacco. regardless of the form that is
· used , causes cancer and other associated health problems is not clearly understood.
·
Some evidence suggests that
part of the problem is the direct
chemicai irritation caused by the
tars and nicotioe in tobacco . Other
evidence sugg·e,s ts that the free radicals produced by smoking tobacco
may also play a role . Even the constant hpbsurt to the carbon

monoxide in tobacco smoke may
be a causitive factor.
Research
is
currently
in
progress at many centers to identi·
fy the mechanisms by which
tobacco use causes disease . Equally imponant. medical. and socialscience investigators are also
working to identify ways to .successfully prevent young people
from starting to smoke and to help
smokers quit.
1
Tobacco use is, of course, a
problem in both urban and rural
areas. Most attempts to educate
citizens about the risks of using
tobacco and the ways to quit have
been a one-size-fits-all approach . .
Here at the Ohio University'
College of Osteopathic Medicine,
our new Center for Appalachian
and Rural Health Research is gathering rural specific data through
· intensive "grass roots" research.
·
I'm hopeful that this ·will be a
major step forward in developing
new programs that will improve
the health of our fellow rural citizens across the nation.

"Family·· Medicine" is

11

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

....-no..,._
,.....
....
.. -,,.:··---L-·
AH--m
• CralllmM Trllekl, Ram TouiiJI 200

8:30 p.m. • friday • ESPN
• BuiC~ Gr•d Natlonol, Pepal 200
Noon • Saturday • ESPN

l.

0...~.3.39

Stacy CGtnpton. 2 ,647

-

--.2.810

..........-..

.-.. Nw. Uu

- . YIIIIIICia. 2,521

Jeff Putvls. 2.565

Amy Houston, 2.516

.. RUIO'w.llcl.2.111

. . . Me' • .....,,

2.471

Ron~

Rll'ldy LaJoie, 2.44~

1. T•ry IMIOrh, 2.50t$
' 11..... SldrMt, 2,1508

Q!M~.2.343

•
• Weekly rankings by

N~SCAR

..

Dole Jarrett

Lead still bulldlng ,

2. (51

Jeff ao.-

Sertes-hlgll five

3. (3)

Mn Morlln

Just one win

4. 12) Bobby t.obonto
: 5, (4) Jeff Burton

\

'

.

.

My ~ and I are having a
dispute we hope you, s:•n settle·.

Be.-aty Kunkle

Frankfort. Ky.

mediocre, started third but was

&lt;driver In NASCAR history. was
not always so profiCient on the

playi~

Gordon, who has won more
races (47) a1 ae;e 28 than any

tag football

Mve led more had not h1s pursuers Insisted In playing strategic games designed to giYe
them fleeting track position.
Others - most notably the
IOng·ShOt runner-up, Ron
Fellows- Mre impressiW. but

twisting, turning road courses.
•tt's not hard for me to go
back just three Of four years
ago wnen a gooa race for me
was if I stayed on the track and
diOn, miSS a shift,· GordOn
saki.
Those day~ seem like
anctent history, Gordon has now
won five road races in a row :
Watkins Glen In 1997·99 ancl
sears Point.1998-99. No one
has done that before. nOt even
road-racing specialist Dan
Gurney. whO won three in e rr:JN
ana tour out_of five at the old
Riverside, Calif., course in the

19605.

.......,_

•

..

'

Richmond, VB .

ffUD OF THE Wflk
1

"....

,,

....,_The

'*"'·

dOn't knOw what BIU EliOtt wu ~'
.
'1101 Inside or Joe Nemecnek and we 101 topthor, ·saki
Elliott, "hard tnoCCh !hill I hod to ftnlsh with o flat left.front

.

.

':

~

CUp, bUt hll best~ cuP finish Is 16th

CharloliB ~ 1997.
Green's current sponsor, KOdiak, Is

. 'BobBolnhaiiM ,
w~nsteea of 1 Wlniton
c.,.-wt.nhobull

offoll.

AGE: 41

• IIOMETOWII: Born and raised In
O....nst&gt;oro, My., IM!Sin Arclldale , N.C.

~

'

-

. I)(Mnt standlrc&amp;. It was prob~bly 1he most

0

has II top-10 finishes and five top
lives. The pole he \Wn at WatkinlJ
Glen OS hi$ second. and he i'1nks
eiJhtb In the !ICa'iOn standings.

. T~ num~11 do not1 howcvtr;
pleaSe~ relentlessly ambitious

tn
· ~n7. Now Hompo"llloe 101
•~•utualdatt.

'

WHAT tS l'ltl DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
QUAUFYIN. AND RACING? "For uslo
quality at Indy as weuao we dkl. we hod to put
all our etas In one basket. For one '-·
.wonced out. we lust had 10 sue1&lt; ft up""' 10.
and that's Yftlill.,. did. Quallfylflllo one thlc\tl
and the race Is somethin&amp; else. Between
ThursdiiY {pole day) and Saturdey {race day),
w~ had to work four ilmes as nard just to g;et
towtleoeweneededtobe." ·
YOU FINISHED 20TH tN THE
BRICKYARD 400 AFTER ITARTINQ THIRD.
WHAT HAPPENED? •We were decent. We
had very little practice the day before the
r&amp;ee:. What liUie we dld, we couldn't find
the handle. I was very concerned . The
a:uys worked hard. We threw 8 klt of atuff
at it, but I just didn't ale.ep well the night
before the race; knowlna we didn't have. a
cood ·napP)' nour· Cthe final t~raeuc:e) . The
Pit stocs were IIOod, IJut we just cauaht an
unlucky break ," and maybe Indy will be 8
turnaround for us. The coJ'npetiUon lets
tougher and tougher, but we'll see what
happens.•

In order. Darre/ll+altrip,
Do.rn:ll HDitrip. Bobby Allifon,
Dorrell H'Oitrip afld A fan JUJ!wtcki

It·••

Wallace.
'
"Na h; we gona do better tban
this," said Wallace. ''This race team

·'
Copyri&amp;Jll1999 Tl\e Gaston (N.C.) Gmrettll!l

,
'OOE "ON Uf ')(:&gt;Ol:J W!l 'E
:·eA 'a)!oueoH
:AeMp&amp;SOSJOOns e8apene1 ,: l

'

1

but We're not satisfied with the top
IO, .ei:her in ra~es or in points."

X

IRWIN 'S FUTURE: Kenny
Irwin, now offic;ially out as Robert
Yates' No. 28 driver at the end of
the year, said he has talked to sevc:ral o:her car owners, but nolle of
them is M~ric: Melling, whose No.
9 ford is being vacated by Jerry
Nadc8u.
·
At lease not yet.
.
'r.vini accoontnfhisdemille: He
wen:: to the shOp and asked to talk
· with~tes, and om the~ of a
~hour he:art-to&lt;beart, Yill~ cited

Dl•trlblllll!l&lt;lll)' tJnlver:!ial Press Syndlr.lle [800)

reasons why nc: didn~ bcheiiC :he pair· st,arts. He._was. however, s1xth earlt mg was llo(lriong and """'Y he bclle"Ved
cr th's siason at Sears Pomt, pref11 \loOUidprobably not gel better. Upol'i . .aci~g ihe sol1d finish ,a tthe sea·
heanng thinnai)'SJS. lf'Win agmXI
sons latur road race.
.
there Willi 00 sense ~:ontinuing. hen~..-c
"I thlllk that each year we go to
the "mutual agreemenl'' cited by Yates Wack.Jns Glen, l'~~e betn able to
in the pn:!iS R:lea5e.
learn moR: &lt;~bout what it takes to run
X
well (here:~" said Jamtt. ..The team

PASSING THE TEST: Dale
Jarrett'sAchillc:s' h«lls' ll.l'
J ad raefng. mean ing that his pursuers
missed an oppor1unity at the Glen
to chip away at Jarrett's edge in the
season standings. 'Which ~nt up
fmm. 274 to 300 points.
Jarrett has never finished htgher.
than fourth (his Watkins Glen plat·
ing) on a road coun;e and has only
four top-five l"inishes in 27 ca~r
25~134

1

FOf release weelt of

waRts to Win a championship. and in
order to fulfill that goal, ~ noc only
1\ave to bt competitive on the ovals
but the road courses as well.
''One of the most imponant
ihingsto learn on a road co11rse is
where the gains out~'Cigh the nU::s.
By that I mean, you ve golto know
when:: you can pass and rnpke up
time w_ithout hurt!nw; yourselfposl· ..
tion-wtse or runnm.: off the cou~.

Advertise on this page

'-&lt;

=
.,
=
. ,.,==-=
:8
-0' ·- 5t
.
..--·
Ci !!!.

zIll&lt;
~.

CD ~

Ill :I

NI

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:::31 ' .....

CD

.....

(II
· (II

\ll

cCD

~
\ll
\ll._.

Ill

\ll

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=-=

X
Dear NASCAR This Week,

~

· I noti.ced a mistake in your July
2 J Trackside Trivia. You asked
who drove the" Tim Flock S~iai
in the Southern 500? IOarrc:ll
Waltrip) drove this in the
TranSouih Financial 400 (t~
spring r.ace at Darlington).
J. Nicholas [dry
Sprln&amp;fleld, Ga.

You ure :Jbsolutt!ly corrn:t.

•·

n.e source wuuertal we used was
in error. bul we should ha~·(
caught it.

I. I

• •

aa•
•'

w.mor. wtr• ~~~~~~""'ceM
In Jeff Go«&lt;on1 1 't'ktory

oiWolldniGion. No
~R dltver h8d ever
"won five rOid racu k'l 1
row until Gofdon'l Sunday

111""""' loppod olf •
. tnK:k In 1997, end the

Ray Evemhlm-ted crew
has everr _,.. to share In
. . credit for

wa

AITENTION

ADVERTISERS!!

9f IJou Have 'the /tleed 'for ~peed...
we've got it!!!

Advertise on this page
'

Call992-2155

.

Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 195
For more information

1.............~...........................................................1

total·web
a. amont the first In our anam

Call Now And Sign·Up!
675·3398 or 1·800·766·0553

High Speed Internet
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CABLEVISION
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~

•

(/)

Au&amp;ust 16. 1999. • Oesl(l1· C;wt aGraptiiCS Inc SMaspta , Fla

ATTENTION .

ADVERTISERS!!

CCD

~»c

• JEFI' BIIRTON FAN CI.UB
ANNUAL DUES: $20 si~le.
S23 family
BENEFITS; T-shi~t. cet"tifiCate,
membership card, autographecl
postcard
MAtUNG ADDRESS: P.O. Box
1160, ·Halifax, VA 24558
WEB SITE: www.jeftburton.com .

1. What NASCAR track has the longest
granclstancl In the world?
2. wnat was Curtis Turner's hOmetow:i?
3. Who was the first driver to win a Grand National (now
Winston Cup) race 1n a car with a three-digit number?

SMJMSNV

.~

::z

Fan Tips

·z

~

AROUND THf GARAGE

i§ intertsted in winning rtces Jnd
championships. It's not (or lack of
effor1 - I'll guarantee you that. ...,.-

NASCAR This Week

' earlier in the season. In 21 starts. he

.,d Ruoty ~~~~won
tho ~lftod ~-

--1

Ill

X
Dear NASCAR·This W«k,
Can you tell me the Winston
Cup champ1o ns for the years i 981,
1982, 198). 1985 and 1992?
·Wend)' DtPtau
Ubano•, r..

I 1 .1 I

••••••••••••
V.lho'aHotVJho'&amp;Not

~

Wallace not. pleased with performance so far ~==R~·

By Monte Dutton

~ Saturday; won a500-lapper at Bristol

_..,. Rrst-

· hriM event therein
utO.Balwohodtounllt uta r.r • CliP ctate,

(none), win (none)

pressure.par,ked day Of tile 108SOII. \'10
needed h, and we need a low (leal
performances on rar:O day... . Before you can
win 8 race or finish In the top 10. you'vecot to
be parttclp&amp;tlng.-

··········~·

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. - By
the standards o: m~ drivers on the
Winston Cl!p cu~utt, Rusty
Wallace is ha.vmg a solid year.
Wallace, who turned 43 oo

H~looloonoollonol
Spudw., In _Loudon. Jutt
, east of ConcOJd. Rlctc

·

• NOT: Joe Nemechek has
flnishecl 16th or worse In the
last 10 races.

1

lllo....-Now

1~8Ying

at the end of the season, but his team (lot a

·

for the

at

1111 at lndl8flllpolls with ethlfll.ploce quallfylfll

Fellows finished second.

NASCAR 'IIIlo -k'o Manto
tiJvoo hlo aplolon:
'Excuse me, bUt diln't this - t ~ Ne.-k, bY his
own admission. drove il1to the c:o'.'t~:~ ·1@0 deep'?•
•
'

Iii 1996. He hao ri&gt;okJo.of.Jhe.yea- f\llf1l!f·Up In both BGN end
--

• MOT: In what Is likely his only
start of the season, Ron

we went from ninth to 2Bt)l. but that's just liosHop roclfll

,.
DUIIiln

ilio

199&lt;1·ond -

HOW DID n FEEL TO QUAUFY 10 WIU
AT INDY? 'For tho &amp;uys from 30th down In tho

dfo\lt

tire.

To U'tlt PQ4nt, DIYicl Green has newr ~n
to dupttcabt hla BUSCh Grand National
. IIUCCOIOinwtnoiOnCup.
·· A fonnef World [lanq A$80c:lat1on champiOn, Groen BGf\1 chamP'Onlhlp In

Roctc~) . polo

' ~-hek blomeil ERiott for I!Jjllatll lncldent that ritleptod
him to a 30II&gt;i&gt;tace flntoh. "I
nr; car In w~ too deep
and hooe comes Bill Elliott. and 1 -there was no -_y ho
was &amp;011111 to make h, • sold·Nerrfoclletc. 't still hail to 11&gt;
around the comer or else cet ~llzed. When he run,Jnto,
my boclc tire, h'a kind of stupid. ft'o o
~a~~ lap,•-•
runn~ JOOd, tho' c. to tom all to
we - runnllw •
el&amp;htfl and endecfup 38th (actually 30111) or aome1111na. ... I

sometimes."

N~AR This -

togerh.-r on a daily basil

betwetm ruces. Othen ht.1ve (.;..,_
"'en who wolf ·at the race sltops in
anmher capacity. .fuCh· a.t engirie
builder or fabricator. Som~ p11
crrws a~ mudl! up of -d.e~~d vofunteen who wori on •weelr.end.r for
little more tlwnfood and trow/
expe~es Tltert' are aJJ l:ind.r of
rombinatior!s.

-----·-. ·-

"-Dolton

IIEC:ORD: 59 startJ, 0 poleS, Q Wlrlf, 0 lOP.
1M! finishes. 0 top.iOs," more than $1.5
1111t11on 1n care« eom1nas
ARS11i Stort {Feb. 23, 1997, at

Bristol, Tenn .

Rlcnmoml 11"1111fNltlonal Raceway

practic~

CAll; No. 411&lt;odlai&lt; Che\folet Monte Carlo.

........... c.

DlrilfCQO) R**'W

'

it, rnl!tlning that ,they wort out cind

owned.by Larry Hedr\Ck

~.~.

Bristol Motor Speedw~

·

are almost ;,lS" many
answer.r to tlus question llf t4~re
are reams ..Some 1eams hove. pit
C'rt'W.r thai a~ full time or dose to

WIFI: ·Diane
"CiftLDREN: l(ayfle Ree {21

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

q . 28
SePt. 5
seot. 11

nr~re

Started lOth, finished 11th
Ninth at the Glen

only Gordon was dominant.

-=

Dear NASCAR This Wcc:k,

.

Everything went wrong

while Gordon was playing
smash-mouth. He led. 55 out of
90 laps and probably would

l
I

t..t~~nrn.O.II

Consistency on decline
Fought off setbacks
Won pole, finlshM third . .

.

You may call the Grants ·o ffice if you have any further
questions about the program. (7 40) 992-7908).
'

YourTurn
..•n

wins

WINSTON CUP SERIES
Jeff Gorc»n. mired In a sea.
son that Is by his standards

.,

·for participation will he available
beginning Monday, September 13 through Friday,
September 24, 1999 (rom 9:00 a.m~ to 5:00 ·p.m. at
the ·Meigs Country Grants Office, 11 7 East Memorial
Drive (Behind Holzer Clinic), Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

••••••••••••

tMy h11ve jobs independent of the
team they work for. and if so, how
, do they maintain their high le\·el
pf perfonnance when they work
together on r.ace day?

fROM LA~T WEEK

else was.

Appl~cations

information

Chevrolet, speed unllstecl,
Sept. 19. 1998

Comlnc up: Ram i'OtCh 200

TO&lt;Igll week all around

out front by tP'Ie seeond lap of
the Frontier at tne Gten, the
only official NASCAR race without a nUmber in the title at the
only track that ooes not refer to
itself as eltl'ler a speeaw~. a
superspeecsway or a raceway.
From lap tw-o on, lwe(yone

202 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

For more

members do between races'! Do

.· Jo8 Nenleohek vs. ~ EJ11att

'

·l

Advertise 011 this
page
Call992·2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105

1998
I RKe rKOrd:: Rick Carelli,

CRAFTSMAN TRUCKS

David Green

2-G

Mille Bliss. 2,385
KIWI~2,.JT1

1. (1)

•

740·992-4233
800·795-1110

1995

Last week's rankii'C Is In parentheses.

10. 1-1 Mlko Sklnnor

&amp;fJ'nwti

Whtrr. M~igan SpeedoNay
12-mile track), Brooklyn, Mich .•
100 laPS/ 200 miles
When: Saturday, hJg. 21

This Week writer Monte Dutton.

8. (7) D•l• Earnhardt
9. (9) Torry Labonte

£eo's Cruist

Quzlr,lnl record: Greg Bifrte,
Fofd . 131 .21B m()h , Sept. 19,

Ford. 169.571 mph, A:J&amp;. 19.

ComlftC up: NAPA 200

TOP TIN

7. 18) Ruoty Woltoco

Call us for all your
lravel needs

Qulllfylnc recont Hermie
Sadler, Chevrolet, 115.511

A1TENTION
Al)VERTISERS!

What do the NASCAR,pit crew

e. Ill Tony St-art

This program will offer housing rehabilitation t~ low
Income . homeowners in Meigs County. The program
will also assist potential home buyers in down payment
costs and closing cost. · Housing rehabilitation is also
available after the purchas-e to address health and
safety concerns.

Whwr. Gateway 1mernauona1
RacewaY (1.25-mile track), Madf.
son, Ill., 160 ISClS/200 miles
When: Frktay, Aug. 20
Dolondlo• .._,Rick
CareiH

··-- PROfilE -

J~ Slullf', 2,550

.. fOnt s....t. 2,8Sl •'

Accessories

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

.a

~~ Gtten.~

Elon S.WW., 2', 705

r. o• ElfMIKit. 2,7Dt

Ridenour
Supply

=•,_.: Jeff

Dele EMm.ut ..If., 3.102 l)"liBiftle. 2.130

.. ""Gt;wt:lon, 2.&amp;17

See us for Your Slitll"
Power Tools &amp;

Burton

mph. Aug. 16, 1997
Race NCOid: Mar11. Martin ,

IUSCHQRANDNAnONAL
1

QuelffJinl record: Jeff Burton.
Ford. 185.395 - · A&lt;e. 16.

'

The home-huy~r assistance informational meeting ·will
be held on August 26, 1999 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

20. 1995

Michigan Speedway

Gordon

POINT~ STANDING~

1999

I. ............ 2.051
.J. ~ L.IOOr1ile. 2.997
4. -~2.SM3

week-

The owner occupied housing rehabilitation me~ting
will be held on August 25, 1999 at 7:30 p.m .. at the
Pomeroy Library.

R.ce NCOnt. Bobby Labonte.
Chevrolet·, 157.739 mpH, Aug.

(2-mlle track). BrOOklyn, MiCh.,
200 lapsf400 miles
_
, Sund.,, Aug. 22

-- . ---l.JOt -,. .- . .
·

Meigs . County. has received a .funding award for the
1999 Community Housing Improvement Program!

' MARLEE HOPE MAYNARD
BABY BORN • Brad and Junle
Maynard a_nnounce the birth of a
daughter, Marl!'&amp; Hope on July
30 at the Women's and Chll·
dren's Hospital In Charleston,
w. Va.
·
The Infant weighed seven
ROIInds, 13 ounces and was 21
Inches long. Maternal grandpart(nts are Roger and Marvlene
Beegle of Racine; paternal
grandparents are Bill Maynard
of Racine, and Evelyn Porter of
Jackson.
• Maternal great-grandparents
are Charles and Mattie Beegle of
Racine and June Wickersham of
Racine. Patern al great-grandmbther is lottie Marcum of
· Naugltuck, W. Va.
The Infant has a sister, Madl·
sonGrace.
i

wtw•:

o.r.:IAc

l996

WINSTON CUP !liliES

Defludll• chlmplon; Jeff

"4-:12

There will be two informational
public to explain each program.

ON THE SCHEDULE

Comlnl.., Poosl ~

• Wlnoton Cup, Peptl 400
12:30 P-111· • Sundll)' • ESPN

·c.

..
meetmgs

\

...__..

ly column. To submit questions,
write to John
Wolf, . D.O.,
Ohio University Callege , of
Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, O.hio
45701.

.

992-2825

740 992-2196

DEAR NEARLY SMOTHERED: I · hope you and your husband will return to · the counselor
periodically, because your in-laws
are going to continue to mundate
you with gifts. It is. unfonunatclr.
their way of keeping you 10 then
debt

NOTICE TO THE PUB,LIC

ROaBIE WEDDLE
HONORED AT STATE FAIR
Robbie Weddle, 13, son of Joyce
and Clarence Wliddle, Portland,
was picked as outStanding of
the day at ·the Ohio State Fair
recently for his woodworking
· project. He is a member of the
Country Critters 4-H Club and a
student at Southern Junior High
school.

The Deily Sentinel• Page 7

Thursday, August 19, 1999

'Ho~ Can I Hurt You? Let Me Count the Ways!'

_fizm~ly

Question: It seems nery time I
turn on the TV, I hear newscasters
la[king about the dangers of tobacco. I know about lung cancer and
heart disease. What other risks are
as~ociated with tobacco use, and is
(he problem as bad as portrayed on

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NOTHING RUNS
UKEADEERE"

Page6

9nline gambling becoming dangerous obsession for many computer users
:

Thursday,August19,1999

Call 992-2155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

�..
Thursday, August 19, 1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Thur~day,August19,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

hge 8 • The·Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Yard Sale

70

Pometoy;
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

All Ytnl ..... MUll 8t Ptld In
Adwlnc.. OMdiiM! t :OOpfl'l tht
d•y before the ad Is to run ,

KCI

Mighty Mac Aeration Systems
500 gal. per dey 1200 gal. cap.

Sunday

EXCAVATING

Porta Jon rentals
Septic Tanks Pumped

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer

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

HOWARD'S TRI· COUNTY SANIJATION

740-742-2566

Services.
Site Preparation
, Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
· Owner/Operator

Call 614-843-5426

Hire a Vet

1·740-985·3949

SERVICE

TuppE!rs Plains , OH

740-985-3813
.

APPEALING -The artwork on display at the Meigs County
Fair is appealing to ali ages. A favorite of seven-year-old Hannah
West, daughter of Sandy and Mike West of fleedsvilie, was a paint·
ing by B~ky Mohler of the cartoon character, Tazmanlan Devil, rid·
lng a pig.

NOW THAT'S BIG - Sarah Caldwell of Tuppers Plains admires a
banana sq~o~ash . exhibited by Henry Bahr of Chester in the farm
crops department at the Meigs County Fair. It was a blue ribbon win·
ner. There were nearly 500 farm crop entries this year, the highesl
number of the decade.

CREATIVE ACTIVITIES...:_ Play dough creations, cloth'espln dolls,
and tissue paper flowers are among the Items being made by chll·
dren visiting the old log cabin on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds this
week. Here Maxine Whitehead, Reedsville, works with Paula Taylor
or Middleport and Jordan Jeffers of Rutland as they go creative with
colorful homemade play dough.
·

ADIJANCEO

-~

For. P,addmg arqund

time . Girls and their moms can get

help by ca llin g their loca l Pen- .
ney 's lingerie department for .

information on a Bra Fit Semiilar.
Shopping information :
Hcalthtex - health(cx .com. or
I (800) 554-7637 for Slorcs . .
JCPenne y - jcpcn''ncy.com.
Lands' End - land se nd .co m.
or I (800) 734-5437 for a catalog.
.OshKosh B'Gosh - oshkoshb·
gosh.com. or I (ROO) 692 -4674 for
stores.
Scar~ - sears.com for stores .
The Children' s Place - tcp·
kids .com , nr I (XXX ) TSP- KIDS
· for store s.
T.J. Maxx (MOO 1 2TJ •
. MAXX fo r stor.e s .

•

...

.

.I

block, "C learl y thi s. spot is a black
eye for the city of Monterey," Sum·
mers said.
·
·
s~,~mmers and his partners hought
the '3.5 acre s ite in 1997 for about $6
million . They sold two newer buildings on one e nd for about $2 miJiion .
The project calls for Stohan 's to
be moved and rebu'ilt into a small
cahnery museum . The resl of then
development would tn cl ude four
large buildings with IIS.OOO.square
feel of stores and restaurants, 4 7 condomintums and rental units, a plaza
overlooking the Monterey Bay and
613 parking spaces.
.
"It's a big development , yes, but
when you look at the ·history of Can'
nery Row, all the buildings used to be
big, " said Doug Thompson, chairman of the board of the Monterey
Peninsula Chamber of Commerce
who has been hired by Summers tn
handle publiCJ"clations on.the project.
Summers said opponents to the
project "are the local s who are
opposed to every proJect."
Monterey residents aren't the on ly
ones concerned.
The, Nation,al Trust for Historic
Preservation included Cannery Row
on its list of "E leven Most Endangered Historic Places· · last year. And
the Monterey County Herald 's ed ito·
rial page recently declared that the
City Council " should find a way to
s:iy no to the Cannery Row Marketplace without hindering the ci ty's
future opuons." ·
·
Steinbec k's he ir&gt; also tiavc .
weighed in. The author's son.
Thomas Steinbeck. says his father
would have welcomed the develop'
meot idea. But Nancy Steinbeck.
widow of ·the author 's son John
S,teinbcck IV. to ld the city council
that her husband ·'often told me
Steinbeck disliked the tourist traps
that had spru~g up to commercialize
Cannery Row."

•(304) 675-2457 Olfke
(304) 674-3311 Cd Ph.

CLASSIFIEDS!

: FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notice

Buy, Sell or Trade
lntht

CLASSIFIEDSI -

YQURM
E
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
.$8.00 PER DAY.

PU!IUC NOTICE
Vacancy: Eaetern Local
School Dlotrlct
Library Media Speclollat
Contact: Deryl Well
667·8079

~~·~s:~.-~·a~r3329 :

Business
Services

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473
7122!TFN

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
· •Room additions &amp; Remodeling
·New Garages
•Eiecirlcai &amp; Plumbing
•Roo11ng &amp; Gutters
•Vinyl Siding &amp; PainUng
•Patio &amp; Porch Decks .
FrH fsUmates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
•

22 yra. Local

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes·
Remodeling • Siding
•.Roofs
25 yrs E!xperlence

(740)992·2753
or 992·1101

Sunsal Bonae
Conslrucllon.

992-2735

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
_Sitli~tg &amp; Sll#il

Remodollng·Kitchon Clbinlls
VInyl Sldlng-Roo1t-DeckaGarages

Free Estimnlea

·--'l'f0-742-3411
Bryan Reevea
Su•cm Reeve•

1~·0~·311·3391

All Makes Tractor

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

Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

'RIVEWAY STONE
Landscape Material!
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost

Coolvlll•, OH 45723

Light Hauling

740 .., ....3

up to 8ton

992·5455

A·ns

MEIGS COUl\TY FAIR ''THANK Yoll.,')

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR

'

Want to show your appreciation?

Gutters
, Downspouts
.Gutter Cleaning
· Painting

Here are some ofthe most popular "Thank you" ad sizes.
·
(other sizes are available)
Pl'ease 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.

2 col. x 5"
$60.50

I
I

1 col. x 2"
$12.10

I
I
I

I.
I
I

'.
,.

••• ,

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

&gt;

1 col. x 3"
$18.15

2 col. x 4"
$48.40

·,

R. L.. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK

29670, Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740·949•2211
Sizes 5 ' x ·1 0'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8·: oo PM

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt ,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil .
(Low Rates)

'

2 COl. X 3"

.

Service&amp; .

.

' Home &amp; T1·uilcr Sites
: Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
· Sept.ir Syslemll &amp;

·

$36.30

UtilitietJ

. (7401 992·3838

2 col.x 2"
$24.20

Phone (740) 593-6671
6/29/mo.

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland ; Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

We Deliver

740-992-3470

(7 40) 742-8888.
1999 HONDA FOREMAN .
4$0 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY
Spomored by til e
Porneroy Yolur~trwr Emergency Sque&amp;d, lu~orpomled.

Tickels: $10.00 Donation Each/1000 Maximum

Drawing to be held at 12 pm on
Sunday October 10, 1999
·'

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2J38
3111/99 TFN

S.hop at home...

Buy from the Classified~!

'

750 East Stale Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

SERVICE

WICKS
HfiQLIHG IHC.

-

Stop In And See
•
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

7123199 I mo. pd

· HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

HauUng
IJulldozer &amp; Backhoe

• S\Ut'll~
Gt\1\6\1\9
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

740-992-52!2

1 0/25196 tin

''P"'t9D't72rm"

.-rr\1'11

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

949·2168

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

TREE SERVICE

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

"

L-----------.J

JONES'

·N ow Renting

Agricultural Lime,
LlmeatonE! •, Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
ChestE!r, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

. .
'
·
I
-------------------, r-----------, 1Ir----------.
.I

No Embarrassment. ..
You're Treated with Respect!

Linda's 'Painting

Free Estimates

Equipment Parts ·
Factory Authorized
· Case-IH Parts
Dealers .
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

740-992-2068

WORRYING!!!

740-742-8015
877-353-7022 (loll free)

Albany, Ohio

Don 'l Need .4 Big O""iie
Ct~ll A Lillie One

&amp;.

No Credit • Slow Credit • Banknuptcy
ReP9 • Dlvorded

Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

740·985·4180

7/27/99 2 mo. pd.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION

CRBDI,. PROBLEMS???

CONNECTION

Free Estima.ies
tontractors Welcome

Pt. Pleasant
&amp;Vicinity
2401 Jelferson A\lenue, Pt. PI
Aug . 19· 20, 8- ? Lots ol grea t
brand name school clothes, jew·
etry, mtsc .. adult clothes , retired
&amp; new Beanies

Auction
and Flea Markel

30

att 1/W 1 mo. pd.

unt!s

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St:,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
pergam,e
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Uc. II OQ-50 m1~

New Conotructlon &amp;

740.992·7643

YOui CONCRETE

Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On ·
Thursdays

FREE. ESTIMATES

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

Servlf'9 He,-it Pt~rnp,
Cen tral Arr. \'\lrno.J'N

IDWW.Sw••elllome.com

COMMIICW IICIIISIDIHTIAL

(No Sunday Calls)

Un,fs RV Rcof top

ROBERT BISSELL
· ,_(ONSTRUCTION

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

Cont. fW\1003506

Don Smith
37814 Peoch Fork Rd.

'

Call 985·3831

Fu1·

Mun·lnformutiun

Caiii ~ 740 - S4l -4001

Local Cull

nr contuct any Ponu•roy s,1uud Mf"mht•r

Four-Wheeler purchased at:
Rlveifront Honda , GaiiiP9IIS, Ohio
•

tteFFf~ 24 Hr. Taxi

al(l Delivery Service
We deliver ALMOST anything

Call for details
.740-992-0038

----------1

I

--------I

s

,.

•
r

'

Exc.enenced Line Men COL Hel·
fu ll Pay based on hpe riencel
Can Start Monday. 8116199 Ctll:
(7ot0)· 256-W33
Fast Money No selling Not MLU.
tarn $1 ,250 pet day 1·800·5044 .
1Dt272692 PPA
POSTAL JOBS To St8 35 I HA
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERI ·
ENCE FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1·800· 813·3585 .
E~T 14210. 8 A.M. ·9 PM ., 7
DAYS fds . inc
L ~ N Top Pay, Ptc k your sh ill
Cac:lltal Nu15mg Agen c;:y. 1-800 ·
576·6346.
Lic ensed Pra ctical Nurses. Ex·
ce lt ent Opp ortuMy to join the
long term heal!h care field: Rota!·
mg shills. lntermed1ate care .center. West VIrg in ia license re ·
~ Ui red . Pomt Pleasant Center/
Genesis ElderCare. State Ro ute
62. Route 1. Bo~~: 326 . Po in t
Pleasant, WV, 25550. EOE .
Local Truc1c1ng Company Seek1ng
Oua l1hed T1uck Drl\le rs Goo d
Pay And Benefits. Send Resume
To D river. P.O. 801. 109 Jack·
son . Oh io 45640, Ot Call 1·740 ·
26 6·1 463 To Schedule An Inter ·
'olieW.

Schooll

150

'.

lnetructlon .
Eacellent Opportunity - Suppa.:
ment Your Income • Learn ln ..
come Tax ' Prepa,.tlon 15 Wk t
Course, ClaiUI 1 Day A Wk. ta
AM. To 4 P.M. CaU DanTax, Inc.
Tuesdays 10 To -4
1·740-.ul·
81780f 1~221-8178 .

e

IIAD DOGS PALACE
PIIO-WRESTUHG ~
AHO PROIIOTJONS

;

·,

20 Yrs . Exper ience . eoo-e5a ..
0756. Tra iner, Brtlt Sawyer. ht
Memo ry ol Mad Dog "Buzz~
Sawye r. Train to be wrestlers.
managers. or balltl, (Male or F...
male).

180

Wanted To Do

Babysitter w ith 12 yrs axperiern:e
will care lor ch 11dren In ""! Home,
Excellent retertnces (740) -4410359
Babysitting in my home, certified
day care provider. call 740·949~

7009. •
Cert1f1ed Nurs ing Ass lstan, Wllf
Oo· ln -Home Care! Call : (740( ..
446-3659
•

Dependable child care prO\IIder;
CPR tra1ned . references available,
long John Sllver'l Is now Hlr·
740·949·3001 .
'
lng
·
.Bill Mooeilspaugh Auctioneering
Long John Sll\ler's, the nation' s
Comp lete Au~tioneerirn;~ Servic·
lead ing seafood aSR. is looking
es . COns i gnment auclion···Mill
tor sel!-moll\lated, energetic peo·
E &amp; S Lawn Service: Design. lm·
Street , Middleport , Thursdays .
pie who are seeking a new and · plementatlon . and
Service .
OhiO License 17693 . 740·999·
reward1ng career . we ~havEt ca ·
A\lail able for Spr ing Clean up,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
2623.
ree1 opportunit ies for salaried
fertilizing and planting. Free estl·
manager pos itions ava ilable m
mates . Satisfaction guaranteed .
Rick Pear$on Auction Company,
Gallipoli s. Benefits Include: MealGreg MilhOan: 3&gt;41675·4628 .
Peraonals
005
lu ll lime auctioneer, complete
ser\l lce .
Licensed . ca!/OentaVLIIe . 5 Day Work Week
auct1on
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
competitive Sala nes 401K Tuition
'LOStN!l WEt!lHT tS AS EASY
166.0hio &amp; West Virg inia , 304·
haul your togs to the mill just can
AS A·B·C. www.jcsdeslgns.com/
Ass
istance
1
1
yo
u
have
some
n:l-5785 Or 304-n3·5447.
304·675·1957. management skills. combined with
prooucts . t-(888}·769·7331 . e:w:t
222' .
restaurant e)!:perience. we might
Wedemeyer's Auction, Service .
be exactly what you are looking
Gallipolis, Ot'i1o 740·379-2720.
START DATIN!l TONt!lHT t
H. s_Contracting, Roofing. Shtlt
lor 1 Apply m Person or Send ReHave Fun Meeting Eli gible Sin·
sume to: El! en McDonald : 229 • Metal, 3·0 Lap Shingles, Painting
90 Wanted to Buy
gles In Your Area . Call For .More
0\ler 15 Years E~~;per\ence . Deck
Dunwoody Ct. : Asheboro , NC
ln'fOr1J1Stlon . 1·800-ROMAN CE , Absolute Top Collar: All U.s. Sll·
Building . Free Estimates , Vinyl
27203 Fax 1336)·672·5271 or
Ext. 9735.
Stdlng 740·441·0653. Call' After
ver And Gold Coins. Proolsets,
call: 1·(888)-635-Fish. EOE
--------..,.
. - - Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
6:00PM
Start Dating Ton i g~tl Have fun •. Rings. Pre-1930 u .S. Currency, MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Exce l·
Honest . Dependable , Hou~e
playing the Ohio Oatmg Game, ·1·
Sterling, Etc. AcquisitiOfls Jewelry lent Income. Full Training. ComCleaning wllh reasonable rates.
Boo-ROMANCE, extension 9681 ·
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Se,cond puler Reqwred . Call Toll Free
Small to Large Jobs . (30~)67·5·
(800)·540-e333 . .... 2301
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·2542.
AnnouncelllE!nls
2892 ..
Medical Processor, FP /PT N.o
Antiques, top prices paid. Riverine AntiC~ues. Pomeroy, Ohio. 'EICperlence Necessary, 40K PC
Housecleaning From Rio Grande
Required, Call: 1-800-663-7440.
Russ Moore owner. 740·992To Galllp'olls And Surrounding
2526.
MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS WORK
Area. Tnorough. Reliable Refer·
Magic Years Day Care pre Clean Late Mode l Cars Or
ences , Call 740·245-5104 .l,.sk
FOOM HOME! Ma il -Order. Pari
school now accepting applica· Trucks, Low Miles. 1995 Models
Fo1 Diane .
lime &amp; Full Time $650·$36001
lions for tall enrollment.. Magic Or Newer. Smilh Buick P.ont1ac.
month. Full Tra1n1r1g provided! For
Housecteanlng , Olfice Cleaning,
Years Day Care for' parents who
FREE Booklet call : 1-(888 )·234·
1900 E,astern Avenue, Gallipolis.
care . 18 yrs e•perlence. Li740.245·5267.
9897 www.cash-911 .com/home
censed by the Sl. of WV 304· Wanted To Buy: 350 Chevy En·
J ims Drywall &amp; Construction .
675·5847.
M.uslcians · drummer lookmg for
glne. (304)675·6704. 1
New Construction &amp; Remode l/
lead guitanst , bass1sl and rhythm
Drywall, Siding, Roofs , Addi• New To You Thrift Shoppe
Wanted To Buy: Used Mob il e gu1tartst/ lfOcal1st to do oldies,
tions , ~ainting , etc (304)674 ·
9 West S1imson, Athens
Homes. Call 740·446·0175,.0r 1··
rock and country, John, 740·698·
4623 or (304)674·0155.
740-592· 1842
6212 . .
304·675·5965.
Quality clothing and household
Medical TranscriPtion, reason·
'items. $1.00 bag sale &amp;\lery
Need a morning delivery person
able rates, last turn arpund .. com- ·
EMPLOYMENT
for the Charle·ston Gazelle tor the
,Thursday. Monday thru Satur.day
ptete confidently A.A .M .T certl·
Point
.
Pleasant.
Le
on,
Ripley,
~:OQ-5:30.
SERVICES
Evans areas ., 1·800-9'92·6397 , , r.ed Connie Gray 304-458-2439.
EICt . 1787 . &amp; Leave Message.
Mother Of Two Will Provide Day·
40
Giveaway
110 Help Wanted
care In My Home. 7.o4Q-4-41· 1349.
Need someone to work 4 to 12
1 Male Black Cat, 1 Fe male
shill, caring lor the elderly, call
Need child care betore or alter
Orange Cat , 4 Yrs Old . Shots 12,000 WEEKLY! Ma iling 400
between !he hours of Bam &amp; 4pm,
schOol at Hamsonvllfe ElementaCurre.nt. 740-441..0469
Brochures! Satisfaction Guar·
Monday thru Fnday, 740·992·
rY? .Call sneny at 740-742-7600.
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
4410.
'
All day child care available also.
112 German Shepherd. 1/2 Do · 'ol lded! Rush Self·Addressed
berman. 5 Weeks Old. Female, Stamped Envelope! GICO. DEPT
Now Taking Applicat iO ns For
Nurse/mothe r of 2 will baby sit
ToGoodHome740-441~ ,8 .
5, BoiC 1438, ANTIOCH , TN .
Drivers For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
Children in my )-lome, ages 0·5,
37011·1438 . Start Immediately. ·
Only, Domino's Pizza.
Monday thur Friday. Call e Shan2 TV ' s needs repa irs call 304·
non (740) -441 ·0221 '
675-5392
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
Outside Sates, Growing Satell ite
ln!jtallation Compa ny Look ing For
BOSSI WORK FROM. HOME
Shrubs Trimmed. Mulching,
3 Little Kitten , all white, Bob tails. PROCESSING GOVERNMENT
Sales Person To Make Sales,
Ptlotlng, etc. C1\l Bill. Leave
Blue eyest (740)·446-3732
REFUNDS . NO EX·PERtENCE
Appointments . Must ~a11e Car.
Mesuge (304)675-7112 .
Good People S~llls , Pa rt· Time l
4 MonthS Qld Fr.iendly Kllt8ns\ NECESSARY 1· (800)·854·6469
Full·
Time,
Satel
lit,e
Experience
We do trailer demo ll tion&amp;some
740·379·9278.
e~t. 5045.
Prelerred 1 r-.Aot Nee;essary, 740·
homes&amp; trash plck·up 304·773$800 WEEKLY POTENTIAL
962·3109.
6167.
.
Abandoned Pup5 to gl\le to good Complete S1mple GoVernment
home. Call (304)675·3628.
Forms AI Home. No Exper ience
Part ·Time Help Needed For Local
Will care lor ybur Child in my
Aeta ii .Store. Send Resurnes To :
All Kinds Apples, Free For Carl· Necessary. CALL TOLL FP.S.E ·
Home 1st Shlfll MoMay ·Fr iday.
P.O. Box. 141, Gallipolis,' OH
nirig Pies, 9336 State Route 7 1·(800)·966-3599 Ext.2601 .
'
Information
r;'40) - 441 -1 176 ;
45631.
Clara
North, Cheshire. Oh io. 740-367- A &amp; A Auto Detail, Wants A Part·
0611.
Time Worker. 220 Fciurth ' Ave·
Position Alfailable ·In Pomeroy
Will Do Painting &amp; Odd Jobs
A(Ba For A Residential Aide To
Australian shepherd/ border col- nue, Gallipolis, 74().441.0177.
$4.00 A Hour, 740-367..0140
Work E11enings And 011er· Nights
lie mix pups, 740..742·2237 .
ASSEMBLY AT HOME II Crafts;
In A S~elter Selling SeP1i ng
FINANCIAL
Full Blooded Siberian Husky, 1 Toys. Jewelry. Wood . Sewing .
Homele5S Men. 28 ·35 Hours A
112 yr. old . No papers . She Is Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1·800·
WeeJ&lt; $5 .25 Pe r Hour. Candl·
gentle. can be seen at 807 27th 7!l5·0380 Ext. M:201 (:24 H1s).
dates Should Be Responsible .
210
Business
Able To Woril With Limited Su St. Pt. Pleasant (304)675·3971.
ATIENT)ON:
per'olislon , And Have Reliable
Opportunity
~' Ope
&amp; La
Sat
OWN A COMPUTER?
!larage "'\1\11
Transportat ion . lntEjrested Pe rner
rge
.
PUT 'tTTO WORK !
""FREE 3 DAY TRIAL PACK"
sons ShouiO Respond To : PerS2S ·S7S/Hft PT/FT
ellite Dishes: (304)682·1 102.
· •• Lose Weight, boost energy,
sonnel, P.O. Box 454 , Gallipolis.
1-888-450.2794
HouSe Cat, 1 Year Old Catlco.
make a tortune tram home, 1.
OH 45631.
' Free To Good Home , 740-441www.work-from-home.netfblg$
(800)·762-1749 •Ask for'Tim
1304.
Registered Nurses All SpeciaJi·
- - - - - - - - - - 1 AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell . lies
tNOTtCEt
(New Grads Welcome) . Have
Mother &amp; 6 Puppies. Call Alter 5 Shirley Spears. 304·675·1429
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
You E11er Thought Of Working In
P.M. 740·441-1524.
recommends that' you do busi·
Avon Products: Start your own In· \he UK Or Auslralla ? Can 1·868·
nes.s with peo~;~te you know, and
Numerous dogs to giveaway, Home Bu si ne ss . Work Fle11ible 368 ·47:20 . Fax 416 ·369 ·0515 .
NOT to ,seM money through tt)e
ages 10 months to 1 year old . Hours, Enjoy Unlimited Earnings . Wor ldwide Heallhcare E11change
mail unlit you ·have investigatecl
1801 · 1 Yonge S t r~et , Toronto ,
1-888-561·2866.
one has papers, 740-992·7007 .
the offering.
Ontan o M5E 1W7 Ema11 whe ·
Siberion .Huskt'. Gentle Te mper, c '8r11 1ieCI Nurse Aides . Rotating canOtelsec.net.
2.9 Cents/Min/ PHONE CARD
st11 11S . lntermeatate care center .
a little O\l&amp;r one year old
ne Collect $5 , $1 0, $20 Ollis!
Sa1eltlte Te ch: Growing Sa teillte
West Virg inia certilica!1on re(304)773-5132.
Earn $500 · S5K lwlt CASH!
Installation Com pany Looking For
quired . Point Pleasa nt Center/
Loca l sites . 1· (800) - 997· 9686,
Techs . Experienced In Many
Three while roosters . 740·985· ~ene, sis Eldercare, State Route
:24hrs.
Dish Systems Or Cab le T.V. Re3564 .•
62, Roule 1, Box 326 , Point
quired. Must Have TL.JrCk Or Van ,
Pleasant, WV, :25550. EOE.'
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
Two year old ferriale St. Bernard,
Start A.S.A P. 740·862·3109.
$1 ,000 A Day. No Selling , Not
10 good country home. 740·9~.2· Computer Use rs Neede~l. Work
MLM . Free Info. Pack~ge . 1·BOO· .
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
2070.
'
Own Hrs . $25t&lt; ·$80KI Yr. 1·800·
COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1· . 786,8849.· 24 Hrs. XT 27.
536-0486 X 7777,-www.lcwp.com
800·339·4204 Or 1·800·469·8164
60 Lost and Found
Available Vending Route , 10-20
Courier : Immediate Opening De·
For Appo fntment To Come To
Found handicap stroller, found at pendable, Neat. Good Driving
Nash'ol llie. TennesSee And Audi· · Locations $4K·S1 OK . $4,000-tf
Mo . .Income A.LL,.CASH! 100%
lhe fair grotJnd, 'call me to lidenlify Re cord . M·F. 30 ·40 Hrs . / Week
lion For MaJOr Re.cord Producers.
f1nan ce ava ilable . 1 (800)·380·
304-576·2208.
Internet WWW.WCIO .ac
Company Car. Call 740·446·0353
2615·24 hrs.
For lnterv1ew.
Found! Coon· Hound On Lincoln
Straigt11 Seam Seamstress Want·
Betuty Salon : for Sale . 7 Sta·
Pike. CaA740.256·6184 .
CRUISE SHIP JOBS? lira11e l &amp; ad. 740·368·9310. 9·5.
t\ons l A· l Locat ion , Plenty of
WOrk World·Wide . Fo1 FREE Info.
Parking , 4 Tanning B&amp;ds , well Sell
Tr uc k 011ve r Needed . Class B.
Found :-Brown And White Cog , Send Your Address To. Cru ise·
togetner or Separate. Call: (740)·
Looks like A Bird Dog, Around crew, 1241492 Ma 1n st., K. Po1nt : CD( With Hazmat And Tank En·
361-()612
dorsemertt .For Home Heatmg 011
LeGrande Boulevafd &amp; 141. Call a , 4169 , Australia.
Between 5 P.M. ·10 P.M. 740-441 ·
Deli ver y Weekends 011 , In ·
DENTAL BILLER
surance. Paid Time Oft. Send Ae·
9.8:..:0:..:5:...
.
DATA ENTRY . Nat iona l Billing
Up to $20·$40 /hr Dental Sf!ll ng .
Seeks A Full /Part. Time Med1cal
sume To . CLA 481 , clo Gallipolis
Sohware Company 1ne9ds people ·
Lost: burgandy da ll y planner Biller. Salary A t 46t&lt; Per Yea r.
Dall y Tribune. 625 Third Avenue,
to process medical claims !rom
book, SR 7 between Middleport PC Required . No Exper ien ce
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1.
ho me-. Tra1n in g provided . Mus t.
_an&lt;I_C_h_es_h_ire_._7_40~·9_8_5·_35a_l_
. --I Needed . w1u Tra 1n Call 1·B96·
own computer. 1· (800)·223·1149·
want ec:t expenenced cook 304 ·
Lost: LARGE WHITE Male Cog, 251 -7475.
ext.460
' 895·380 3.
Lost Near Rio Grande . SUBSTANTIAL REWARD! 740 . 245 . 'Domino 's Pizza of Pt. Pleasant
EARN $90 .000 YEARLY Repair ·
Wp n led exper ienced cash ier
now hiring all posihons. 118)( 1ble
ing , NOT Replacing , Long Cracks
_048_5_A_fte_r_6_
: oo~P. _M_.- - - - I schedule&amp; good pay 304 ·675· help 304·695·3603.
In Windsh ields. Free Video 1·
5858.
wa nted par l· time babys itter for
Missing- red bone coon hound,
900· 626· 8 523 uS / Canada .
spec1al need s ch1ld in the bend
De1ner area, answers to ' Red '.
www .glassm~chanix . com ,
DRIVEFiS ·Owne1 Operator s
re..,..ard, ca ll740.742-2182.
Manulactu1ers Fleet Need s area 304-892·3339.
FRtTO LAY /PEPSI / COKE
Trucks For Grow 1ng Bus1nes s
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR.
VEND ING ROUTE . $1 ,000-t
70
Yard SalE!
A~ or Jim (800)·354· 11 11
INC BENEF ITS GAME WAR·
POTENTIAL
ALL
WEEKLY
DENS . . SE C UR ITY.
MAIN ·
CASH BUS INESS·. PRIME LO·
Dr l'olers: Free 3 -We ek C OL
Gal11Jl9ll&amp;
CA L SITES. ON !lOtNG SUP ·
Tra ining. Ea rn $26 ·S32 000 11sl TENA NCE. PARK RANGERS. NO
EX P NEEDED. FOR APP. AND
PO RT. SMALL INVESTMENT l
Yr . W /Full Be nef1ts. No E xp .
&amp; VIcinity'
EX AM INFO . CALL 1·800· 81 3·
EXCELLENT PROFITS I ·(800) ·
Needed . P.A .M . Trans po rt Spe·
3585. EXT 142 11 8 A.M ·9 P.M.
731 ·7233 EXT. 3303.
AIJ,. Yard S.lt1 Mu1t
cial Call Toll Free 1·877·2307 CAYS Ids. 1nc
8t P1ld In Advtnce.
6002 Sun · Fri. 7 A.M · 7 PM
INTERNET BUSINESS OPROR·
QfAQLINE : 2:00p.m .
www.pamtransport.com
TUNITVI Gr ou nd Floor Hurry
140
Business
the day before the sd
L1m1ted T•me Only! Call Toll Free
1110 run. Sunday
Gallipolis Ca reer cOll ege Is
. Training
800·858.0 170.
,, edition • 2:00 p.m.
Seeking Part·T1me lnstructo rs In
Friday. Monday ·e dllloli
The Following Olscip lmes· Com ·0
Gallipolis CarMr COllege
MEDICAL BILLING . Untlrn lted In ·
• 10:0f? ~.m. S.turdly.
(Careers Cl ose To Home)
mun1cat10ns ; Comput~r Appli cacoma Potential. No Experleflce
Ca ll Today! 74D- 446·4367 ,
tions (MS Office ): Computer Teet'!
Necessary , Free Information &amp;
August 17,.18, 19 , Moving,-A401·&amp;00·214-0452 .
Suppor,l i And 01f1ce Adm mi stra ·
CD.·ROM Investment $" ,995 •
441-0162.
Bedroom
Suite.
Han (Records Manage ment.
Reg ·~ ·05 ·1 :2748 .
~8 . 995 . Flnan~lng Alfailatlle . Is·
$500 .00; Ch ina CaDinet, $300 .00;
ShOrthand , Et c ) M mlmum 01
lAnd Autofnated Medical Servlc·
Computer Stand , $20.00 : Book
150
Schools
Bachelor' s Degree In Fie ld Re ·
es , Inc . 800·322·1139. E~~;t. 05 0
Shelf. $35 .00: Recliner , $40.00; . quired Please Subm1t Re sume
Void InKY, IN , CT.
Instruction
King Headboard . S25 00: Maile·
And Referen ces To Gall1pohs
up Table &amp; seat, $50.00.
Ca reer C ol lege, 1176 Jackso n
WHOLESALE CLUB .
Ea rn
EARN A LEGAL COLLE!lE DE·
P1ke , Ga lhpOII S, OH 45631 Galli·
Detlb le Dri\le Chapel 's New AC·
$25.0;00/Year working lrom home!
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelo rs,
Career
Coll
ege
ls
An
EQua
l.
poll
s
til11ty Building p 1 M11es Oul "RO·
No set-up feel Call : (888 )· 246 ·
Maste r s. Doctorale , By Corre ·
Opportunity Employe r
ute 141) Thu rs day · Saturday,
8100
spondence Ba sed Upon Pr10r Ed·
10.00 -5:00.
\
uc at1on And Short Study Course.
Housekeepe r For D1sabted Rrec·
"WORK FROM HOME" · Grow~
For FREE lnformat 1on Boo klet
tieing Col umbus Anor ney U\le · l~
Mov ing Sa le . Satu 1d ay AuQusl
Co mpany NEEOS HELP. $399 ·
P hOn e: CAMBRIDGE STATE
Some Care Dultes. Sa lary. Room .
21st. 8 A .M. ·5 P.M, 80 Lmcoln
$4 ,999 PT /FT. W\I¥W IC:I dts ·
UNIVERSITY 1·800·964·8316.
Board. 614·261· 5354.
lgns.com 1-{88S )·283·23n
Ptke.

'IW c.wr ! SCAlf !&gt;« '-'!AI
01/Yl N fi.E Ct.ASifEDS

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

•-Parking Lots
~· Basketball Courta
• Driveways
·~· Grading Work .
: Hauling Stone

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Development · plans in ·Steinbeck
country divide c&lt;;&gt;mmunity residents
MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) Developer Dan Summers . eyes the
rubble-strewn lot along historic Can' nery Row and sees tl filled with
dozens of new shops. restaurants and ·
condominiums.
His vision jsn't popular ·among
locals and conservationistS who want
to make sure the peo·pte and places
John Steinbeck wrote about don 't go
o.ut with .the tide.
" Peop le don't come to Cannery
Row to buy a pair of jeans at The
Gap," said Molly Erickson, a fourth
·generation Monterey resident. "They
·come Ia experience our unique history and our natural beauty. "
Opponents say a $50 million plan
to build dozens of new shops. restaurants and condominiums just yards
from where the crumbling fou~da­
tions of canneries meet, the Monterey
Bay 'will destroy the city's cultural
heritage ·and create terrible traffic
jams.
Summers. one of. three Palo Alto·
based . partners behind the Cannery
Row Marketplace plan, says dev~lop·
menl will fill a blighted gap in the .
area and bring new jobs and
$700,000 a year in revenues.
The City Council is scheduled to
decide Aug . 25.
The single remaining structure on
the site is the former Stohan's gift
gallery, wfiich in Steinbeck 's era
served · as a reduction planl where
inedible fish parts were turned In to
lcrtilizer.
·
Stohan 's 1s o n e Of the last vestiges
of the ·extensive canning industry that
made Monterey the "sardi ne capital
of the world " early in the 20th centu·
ry. The vibmnt , bustling industry supported by immigrant labor has since
been replaced by the Monterey Bay
Aquarium and blocks of tourist stores
and restaurants that draw c lose to 2
.
million visitors a year.
In the middle of this commercial
district sits the blighted, vacan t

We Do•••

the

dorm. the new lmprc.ssions sl ipper,
collection from lsotoner features
matte satin hallerinas ($20) ,and
washable suede ballerinas ($22).
,One of those so metimes ·
unsellilng times in a yo ung girl's
life is when she needs her first bra.
And the odds are that it won't fit
right. That's a shame. says Diane
Wei ss. national lingerie fit co nsultant for JCPenney, whi.c h offers fit
seminars for first -timers and their
mothers. "Mos t mothers were
ne ver l~ught . · so. they dqn't know
how 10 help their daughters buy a
properlY. filled bra," says Wei ss.
Complit:ating matters, Young girls ·
arc developing and grow ing rapidly. so their measurements ca n
change almo.sl overnighl. Weiss
.says gelling a proper fit each ttme
begins with learning how the first

WV

Fr iday. August 201tl only· 9·?
Aatwoocls Rd between SA 7 and
Pomeroy P1ke . Furmlure . baby
items. etc ~~ Items neYer been m
sale before. Rain cancels.

80

SYSTEMS INC.

HendE!rson,

t $19 ~ $22 ).

·an

DAAI~E

Mon.- Fri.'9:00 to 4:3Q
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

MYERS PAVING

Mon: t raJiti~Hl a l. ftlr
girls .' is th..: s,tripl'd llltKk n~:d; ll·,p
($16-$191 and solid twill Jum per
with cmhro)dery t$2X -$311). hmh
. from the Girls Club Line fr om
Healthtex .

Feed &amp; Show Supplies
And Sullivan Show
Supplies ·

8" Gravelless Leach
100' · 1000' Rolk 1" &amp;3/4" 200#Water Une
Full line qf GliS Pipe &amp; Regulalors Wa111 Slorage Tonks

School: The Well-Dressed Kid
By The Associated Press
jumper ($2i-$26J al&gt;o shows up at
Oh no. Your daught~r wants OshKosh B 'Gosh. charming !)
some of those big heels and plat· coordinated with a tlcccy cardigan
Jorm so les she's seen the Spice· and embroidered top ($i5 -$30 ).
Girls wear.
- As you might c~pect. there's
Find a compromise. says Dr:
abundance of· cargo pants from
Robert Bruc e . pediatric orthoped ic tlfe overa ll people at Oshj(osh
surgeo n at the Emory Untv~rsity B 'Gos h . They're available . for
School of Medicine in Atl'anta. boys and girl s · ($21-$28). Wear
lli'gh hee ls are especially mapprn - . them with flee ce vests and engipriatc for growing gtrls. whose neer stripe tops ($2 1-$2:1) .
skeletal systems are s till develop·
- Older gi rls want you to
ing, he says. Wearing shoes with a know they're almost grownups
2-inch heel and li'ttle sole under now. and their c hoice of clothing
the forefoot puts the ankle at about refle cts that. Boot-cut jeans or
a 30-degree ·a ngle 10 the ground- cargo jumpers ($30-$32) from
Genuine Girl by OshKosh B'Gosh
and at risk for injury,.
That;s like walking around all are just that type of sophisticated
day barefoot on tiptoes, he says.
. se lection . They can be worn with
"Whenever I see adolescents: , classic cardigans and thermal tops
even boys , for foot pain, I evaluate ($ i~ -$22). also m the line.
their footwear, often finding the ·
- Lots of classic ·pants and
shirts for boys can be found at
source of the it complaints .. ,
Youngsters of both sexes Lands' End Kids collections. Con should select shoes that have no sider the check . twill shirt
more than a l-inch heel. adequate ($23.50). worn ove r a Super-T
arch support. and a roomy toebox. ($ 12) . The pants could be relaxedBut if your daughter or son fit five-pocket jeans ($24). A variin sists on .tieing cutting-edge ali on for ·girls is the cord uroy
trendy, divert hi ~ or her attention cargo skirt ($22). Wear it with a
to some of these items at stores for ribbed knit crew ($Hi) .
the back-to,school season :
-The popular \'.lue pup found
-. Ever hear of a skant? It's a on Nickelodeon's Blues Clues is
pair of slim pan is at the same time the inspiration for the line of
it's a form-fitting, swingy s kirt for Blues Clues apparel at Sears . One
teen girls ($19.99). and you'll see item for boy s is a button -neck jerhow it 's put together at T.J. Maxx . sey s hirt with three clues and
· stores . Wear it with a black tank matching so lid blue shorts ($29.99
($7.9'1) under a sheer pink sweater · th e set). The cute puppy peek s out
. ($19.99).
·
from the hi gh waistline of a girl's
- The kilt that's built differ· blue check dress ($18.99)~
ently is at The Children ' s Place. It
, - For the young space cade t,
looks ltke a tartan kilt. hut it's there's a 'beys fleecy snap-front
really a plaid skort for girls ($18 ). color-b lock hooded jacket with
'It 's part o.f the store's Class Act spacesh ip · embroidery ($20-$23).
·collection , which also has a toorby •Healt htex . The look is co mpl e tdinatmg argyle vest ($18). ,Wear it ed with a long-sleeve French terry
with an embroide red poplin sh irt crewneck shirt with embroidered
($26).
spaceship applique ($20-$23) and
The girls' plaid sko rt or French terr y playground pants

Culverts: 4" · 48" in stock

UOp"' Fridoy.

Gallipolis
Ferry
Johnsons
Lane.Fri.&amp;Sat. 8·1 , new &amp; retired
beanies , womens &amp; g1rls clothes
ect. .

Complete Line of 4-H

Help Wanted

Mond•y edltlon-

Augu&amp;t 20 . 2 1. From 8:30· 5PM .
2219 Oak Street Po~nt Pleasani.
Numerous Household Hems,
Womens CIOtl"ltng

:(;&amp;W Plastics and Supply
S!. Rt. 7

I

11 0

·I

t

''

�\

Thursday,Auguat19, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

NEA Croa..w.ord Puzzle
PHJLLIP

17,__,_

40--·
-

ACROSS

• 8 1 3

··-

• QJ 4

21

ALDER

1 .......
7 p
'ut
13 lieu '

»t

NEED CASH?? WE Poy

Cash For Remaining Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annuities! Settlements! htlme
dlate Quotts!lt •Nobody Beats
Our Prlcu • Nallonal Contract
Buyer&amp; 800 490 0731 Ext 101
www nalionalcontractbuyers com

$$$ OYEADUE BlllSIII $$$ Conoolldlto Dobttl Somo Day Appro"'' NO APPliCATION FEES II I800-863-9006 Exl 936 www helppoy-blls com

SFREE CASH NOW$ From
Wullhy Families Unklad tng Mil
Ilona Of OQIIars, To Help Minimize
Their Taxes Write Immediately

B-l.Q-W o-o-T

All real estate advertiSU"1Q tn
thiS newspaper Is subteet to
the Federal Faar Houseng Act
01 1968 which makes it lttegaJ
to advertiSe ..any prefentnce
limitation 01 discnm•nation
based on race color, religion

sex fam1hal status or natiON!
orfgln, or any lntenuon to

make any sucn preference
llmltaUon or discriminatiOn •

Wlndtatls, 847 A SECOND AVE ,

\

SUITE 135() NEW YORK NEW
'1011( 10017

Thl$ newspaper WID not
knowongly accep1

... Credll Caret DEBT .... Debl
Consolldallon Stop Collecllon
Calle Redu ce Payments &amp;
Finance Charoes Avoid Bank

ad'verttsements tot.real esrate
wttlch IS tn vioktlKm of the
law at. f"(l:aders ara hereby
Informed that all dwelhogs
adYertts8d In this newspaper
are avallabfe on an eQual

rupcy. , 100-270-9894

CASH OR LOAN! Farm Capllal
wiD purchase or k&gt;an aga1ns1 yow
gD'o'I!NM'IInt !arm payments (CRPJ
PFC) Call Farm C8Pl!al I (800)-

FAAM ACT (327-6228)
CREDIT

PROBlEMS? VISA

CARD Guaranteed ApprovalNo Credit Check 0% APFI Re
qulrements 18-+ US C1tlzen hcMI
a Checking Account Phone Ap
proval t {8001 737-0073 Issued
by Merrick Bank SLC, UT

DEBT CONSOLIDAnON
No Uplroo~ Foes

Good or Bad Cred~
Clll-1 1(877)-861 9106
EliMINATE BACK TAXES lor
Perinies-on-the Pollarl New IRS
Ruling Makes It Easler Stop
Wage Garnishments Seizures
Very Successful Atlordable
FREE Consulatation H800) 931

9641Ellll200

oppottunlry basis

31 0 Homes for Sale
HOME FOREC LO SURES NO
MONEY DOWN! NO CREDIT
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1-800-916
9191 EXT H5023
~HOMES

FROM 110,0001-

1 5 Bedrooms Local Repos &amp;
Foreclosed Financing Possible
For Listings 1 800 719 3001 x
1185

House &amp; 1 Aaes
In the Country 3 Bedrooms Full
Basement large Barn Very nice,
All flat Meadow Centerpoint Ad
near Thurman S87 200 For more
lnlo call (740)-286-0081
Must Sell moved oul Slate 12-t.
Klneon 3 Bedrooms 1/bath CIA
Nice loti (740) 446 2158 (740)
4-46-0603

Nice two bedroom brick house
with living room din1ng ro om
kllchen, bathroom and sunroom
newly remodeled also has full
basement two car two story ga
FREE MONEY! II s True Never
corner tot w1th nice yard in
Repay Guaranteed $500
ne+ghborhood
ask ing
$50000 Debt Consolidation, Par 1 !'~~ ._:;-~~- 740-992 2333 or 7"0·
sonat Needs Medial bills Educa·
_992_2_32_6_ _ _ _ _ _ __
tton I Business Call Tolt-Free 1Price Reduced- remodeled home
800-72-.eo47 (24hrs)
4 bedroom kitchen Jr lr bath
GET YOUR CASH NOW' Oldest ut+l+ty room ale beautiful v1ew of
rtver basement wl full bath 7"0
Buyers Of Structured Settlements
992 9012
~nnullies And GO\o'ernmenl Farm
Payments Also Purchasmg lot
Priced To Sell! 4 Bedrooms 3
taues And Private Mortgages
Bains Brick Ranch On 2 12 Acr
Call Settlement Cap1tat 1 800
as Cathedral Ceiling Partially
959 0006 www settlementcap•FiniShed Full Basement At
taltom
tachM 2 Car Garage P'ool Beau
tlful V1e w $11-t. 900 740-388
8074
HUGE PROFITS• Earn $25 000
1n 3 weeks with S5 000 Invest
Renovated Farmho use Beatllllul
~~,:~w~:tm s31stor and full of Country Charm 3/ot.
Acres le..,el lot Paved Road 3
Bedroorns 2 Baths ut•llty and
Need A loan? Try Debt Consolidation $5 000 - $200 000 Bad Pantry New White Kitchen Cabinets Ceiling Fans Throughout
Credll 0 K Fae I -800· 770-0092
Windows carpet &amp; Sto'o'e and
Ext215
F11g Included Fuepta ce SWE
School 15 mtnutes from town
Need a Loan? Home Auto &amp;
beaul•ful -w1ew from 11 112•28
Debt Consolldallon Good or Bad
Porch Ava tl abe Now• Askmg
Cred•t Call toll Ires 877-6S8

0551

$74 500 Call (740)-379-9000

OVER YOUR HEAD IN
DEBM'?? N&amp;ed more breathtrlg
room? Debt ConsoUdatlon No
Quallylnglll FREE CONSUlTAnoN (800~556 1548 .,., 214
www anewhorizon.OJg Lansecll
BoncSed Non-Proftth.4atlonal Co
RECEIVING PAYMENTS? Investor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Mortgage
Real Estate Contract, lnsurflnce
Annuity Highest Prices Free
Quotes Why Wall? Call Rich 1-

800-888-&amp;150
WANT A VISA CARD? $1'2 000
+ Unsecured Bad INo Credit OK
Everyone Welco me 1 800 265

3588

230

Professional
Services

Appro'o'ed Master L1censed Elec
ulclan, WV025956 Estimates
tor
Residential
Serv1ces

7arn-9pm
Three bedroom hou se lor sale
one and 1f2 Mths fully lurn1shed
nice yard close to park 417 Sy
camore Street Midd leport c;:all
740-367-7000
Three bedroom 1 &amp; 112 story cedar and stone home, stone chimney large wmdows, two baths
basement covered deck large
garage 18 1/2 acres, priVate
near Pomeroy 74D-992 6176

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
• As Seen On TV • 6 99% •
$499 Down • Call For Details
7 40 o446 3093 Oakwood - Gath
polls
1966 Richardson three bedroom
bath and half refrigerator stove &amp;
w1ndow a1r conditiOner $5000 f1rm
740 843-5267
t97o4 Knkwod 2 Bedrooms all
Electric Very Good Cond11ton

(304)675-7927

$4600 00 Call (7 40) 367 7308

Beau!llut Cteanmg
In your
home "' business Carpet and
upholslery to lntenor/exterio r
walls decks an.d driveways The
complete cleaning serv1ce Call
CIMrty CIHn For Free Estimate

Even1ngsl

I 304-675-4040

1978 Liber ty tra1ler 2 br , 1
ba S5 000 304-675-7244

Mount a '{rae Serv1ce 'The Tree
Professionals ' Bucket Truck
Service, Top Trim Removal
Stump Grinding Free Est1mates
Fully Insured Works Comp Bu:fwell OH Call And Save 1-800838 9568, 740 388 9648 Owner
Rick Mount

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unte&amp;s We Winl

1-BBa-582·3345

REAL ESTATE

t975 Nashua 14x65 2 br new
central atr 8x20 covered porch/
under pinnmg exc cond $7 000

304--882 2970

1978 Regent Mob•le Home tor
Sale 2 Bedroo m 14:r70 Goor;t
Cofldlllon (304)675 5413
1980 14x65 two bedroom two
baths, new a1r condltlon&amp;-r, great
condition '$9500 leave message

740 949 2453

-

2 Bedroom. Bath One Car Ga
rage! 2 Bulldlnsl V1llage ol Crown

Clly (740) 256-1071
Buy Homos From $10 000
1 3 Bedroom local Government
I Bank Foreclosures Financing
Possible , For llttlngs. Call 800·
31 9-3323 Ext 1709
Five room house. full
central air,
near new

aon

start b~.:~~;.~~l~
home,

3557

New Bank Repo s Onty 3 left 1·

Part1al

utii1I1BS

paid

(304)67!Hi512
2 hOuse 1r111ers 1 br AJC cable
TV all utll pd no pets $250 a

man 30+895-3603

2 house trailers 1br 32 rt A1C
cable TV all utll pd 1250 a
mon no pets 304 895-3603

3 Bedrooms, $300 00
(740) 367-0611

~r Month

Green Twp "' Restr icted Lot
S150 oo Per Mon1h 1•0 ~•6
0885 Allor 5 30 PM
Mob•le home lor rent m Pomeroy
area no pets 7A0-992 5858
Two bedroom mobile home lor
lease $2!50 month security deposit ol S200 no pelS references
required trash Included 740 992
2979 attar 6pm

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 Wide $~00
Down $185 per mo Free, Atr 1
800-691-6777

2 or 3 bedrooms, close to Rio
Grande, OH No pets 740-245

New 4BR 16 wide $500 Down
$21 9 per mo Free Air t 800-691·
6777

440

New Bank re pos only 2 left we

finance cal 304-~71411
Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Publtc AuctiOn A 199-t.
liberty WelfOrd 14K60 M/H
tl31242 At 10 00 AM On 8/281
99 At The 0\fB Annex 143 Third
Ave Gallipolis OH Sold To
H1ghest Bidder 'As ts -Where rs•
W•thout Expressed Or Implied
Wa rra nty &amp; May Be Seen By
Calhng The Collect•on Dept At
740 o441 1038 OVB Reserves
The R1ghl To AcceptiAeJact Any
&amp; 4.11 Bids &amp; W ithdraw Items
From Sale Prior To Sale Terms

01 Sale CASH OA CERTIFIED
CHECK
Spec•at 28x80 3 or 4BR $1000
Down S322 per mo Free Dellv
ery &amp; Setup , 800-691-6777
Double Wide On lot $250 De
posit t 800-383-6862

340

Business and
Buildings

STEEL BUILDINGS New must
se ll 4 12 Pitch 16x24xl0 was
$7 500, sell $3,990 24ll24x10
was $8 500 sail $4 990 I (800)
406-5126
Two Reta11 Buildings 50x30 One
o!11ce setting and one rellll IO·
cated near the New wat-MariiMa·
son Contact K1m {304)n3-6000

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
tOO Acres

~ora

or less lor Sale!

(740)-388-8504
tOO ACRES
Great lor hUI'lllng or RecreatiOn
Land Lots ol road frontage
Touches wayne National Forest
lof extra huntmg $85 000 Can be
dNided South of Gallipolis. near

CrownC1ty (800) 213-8365
2 u Acres Homesite Green
Township Gallla County Scenic
Ou1et Close To Gallipolis Some
RestriCtions 74D-245-5776

NEW ON MARKET
23 Acres 2 Miles Off SA 7 &amp; SA
218 South 01 Gallipol iS Sin
glew1des Allowed Land Contracl
Ava•labte Only S27 oeo 1 800
213-8365

BUilDING lOTS
FDA SALE
Water and Electric Ready For
Hook-Up Nice Lots $6,000 DO
Each Call 304-n:J-.5186
lot for sale 1n M•ddleport mce
area 74Q-992 2326
Nawtllau~

Restdentlai BulldlflQ lots lor Sale
In laurelwood Meigs County's
newest restricted subdivision t
1f2 acres lo 4 plus acres 23 000
to 32 000 each U}"!derground ut•tilleS paved streets terril~ vi8WS
1ntersect10n of Rts 7 &amp; 33 near
Pomeroy Aockspnngs area
Call Famtly Homes 740 992 2478

or VISit our model hOmes

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 -500 Acres
we Pay Cash 1 800 213 8365
AnthOny Lanes Co

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
1 2 BA House &amp; 1 2 SA Apt
lor one year lease Security Oepos•t Requ ire d (304)675-4035,
"'
from S.5PM

$11 coo oao (740) 379-2627

1991 141tx7211 2- Bedrooms, 2
Baths Shingle Roof Vinyl Stdmg
Excellent Condition $16 500 0 0

(740)44£-8113
1991, 1~60 Mansion 2 b9clroom
total etectrtc central air s1ove
refrigerator mce condition, ready
to move askmg $14,500 740-

949 9016
1995 Claytofl Doublewlde 24 Ft X
48 Ft. Payoff CIA 3 Bedrooms 2
Full Bath s EleCtriC 740 742
0104 After 3 30Pm
19911 Flfttwood Win gate t4x72
2 br 2 ba W/A. C WI sklrUng h·
nanclng IWIIlatM ~7s-&amp;055
89 Clayton 14K70 2 br 2 ba sunken garden tub, centfal air wl fire
place 2 t Ox2 0 covered porches
priced to sale 304 895 3114 1
304-e75 3614

3 Bedroo ms 2 Baths 142 112
Portsmouth Ad Gallipolis $375 00
Month Plus UIIIIUes Plus Oepos

II Day (740) 256 6456 Eve (740)
256-1530
4 br t 1/2 ba central air/heat t
car garage chain !Ink renee/ lire
place app turn 1 yr lease $525
rent+ dep 304-675-7873
N1ce 2BA +full basement on
North Main St $325 00/month
piUS Ullllti8S &amp; d8f;l0Sit {30o4)675
1851
Three bedroom house with river
v•ew Minersville area deposit
and references requ~red. $400
month plus u!!lh1es 74Q-992·6777
after Sprn

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14Ftx70Ft 2 Bedrooms For Rent
In Bidwell Cal 740.446-9669
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
condil1oned S260 1300, sewer
water and trash Included 7-t.0992 2167

Rental Property CottaQe Nil 2br
S250 Homestead Realty 30-t.·

675 !1540
Valley V1ew Aparrmants Fho
Grande Oh Now Accept•ng
pl lcallOns for Immediate occu
oancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts Atr
Conc:t•tton•ng Kitchen appliance&amp;
Fenced •n Playground LauMry
On Sight Management Water,
sewage and T111Sh Paid Fu• Ume
Students must meet Ohio Housmg F•nanea A.gency Qualltica·
!tons Senior Ctllzens Welcome ,
EOE For more Information call
{7-t.O) 2o45 9170 Monday -thruThuO&gt;day 9 00 12 00 noon

460 Space for Rent
For Rent a t Acre Tialler lot near
the At 2&amp;87 IntersectiOn Has all
ut•ht1es and garden spot $75 a

monlh 1304)895-3$68
Mob•lre Home Space Green
School 0 1slnct 4 M1les From
Holzer Hospital Some Restr1 c
hons Apply 740-446-4053

Baby bed I dNssing table/ c•r
.... 3Qt.675-2101

Nice used Appliances flJrMure
freezers Bedroom Suttes 01
nettes Lots Mort! (740)-~461004 (740) u6 4039 anv ttme
~

OWN

COMPUTER PUT IT TO

WORK $850 $3 500 MO PTJFI
FREE Detail&amp; Log On'o http II
www hbn com Acoess COde 5298
S~nger Sew~ng Mactnne On Stand

New Cond1t1on $125 Stmmons
Couch L1ke New $250 2 Aeclmers sso J$75 End Table $25 2
lamp Tables $tO Each , TV
Stand $tO , 2 Area Rug 5118 $30
3K5 $15 Exere1se Bike $15, 20·
Girls Bike $25 Large kahn Snow
Bl ower $150 1 2 car Seats $10
Each 7 40 446 7928 Evenmgs
Used carpel 10x10 w1th r/a d,
12K15 w•lh pad new 6x8 Gllbransenorgan 740-9492116

Vwnon Oh 45686

1 and 2 bedroom apartments furnished and unfurnished securtty
deposit requ ired no pets 740
992-2218

ReisH building, 1600+ square loot
cor ner location 87 Mill Street
Middleport Key at Acqulslhons
91 Mill Slraet 741)-992-8250

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Pe r '00. AU Brass ComPf'&amp;SSIOO Fit11ngS In StocK

1 bedroom apartment m Middleport all ut1llt1es pa1d $270 per
month $100 depoSit 740-992

Trailer lots for rent In M1ddleport
Ohio near school $75 per month
call 740-985-9853

JaCkSOn QniO

7806

471t Wanted to Rent

1 Bedroom Apartment Across 'Fho
Grande College $290/Mo .4.11
UbllbBS Paid 1-888 840-0521
t Bedroom A!C W/ 0 Hook Up,
Near Arbors Nursing Home No
Pets Quiet Loeat1ons, $279/t.to ,
+ Uti~ties 740-446·2957

want to rent 1m111 larm with

houll (304)175-1215

MERCHANDISE

Household
Goods

, 1 br partly rurn aJ]t Clown town
PI Pleasant74D-441oOn2
1Bedroom Apt in Mason Stove/
Retr1gerator Ullhlles Furnished
AJC LaundryRocm/Celling Fans
&amp; Garbage Disposal Very N•ce
No Pets (304)17'3 5352 or

(304)862 2827
2 bedroom apartment In Middle
pon we pav water sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric $200 per
month s1eo deposit 740 992

7806
Nice 2 br, ap1 app rum ref+ dep
:104-675-4302
Nice 2 br all uril ret app turn

Air Condltmners USed D1Jterent
Sizes, c;;uaranteedt 7-t.O 8860047
Appliances
Recondlttoned
washers Dryers Ranges Refngrators, 90 Day Guarante'l
French City Maytag 740 4o46-

7795

APPLIANCES

1-888-818-0128

3711 EOH

First Avenue Gallipolis 1 &amp; 2
Bedroom AJJartments $250 &amp;
$300/Mo Unfurnished Secunty
Deposit References Reqwed
740·446•1066, or Weekends
740-44 I --()952
For lease" Beautllul spac•ous
two bedroom AC apt Living
Room On Room at 57 112 Court
Street Totally new Lots of Storage! $600 OOJmonth plus utilities
Security and key deposit No
Pets! References Requtred (740)
446-4425
Grac1ous llv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing OpJlor
IunitieS
Pilot Program Renters Needed

800-383 6862
Modern t Bedroom Apartment

740446--0390

446-0008
Now Accepltng Appllca tlo ns
:2BR All electric Equal Housmg
OJ]portumty Famtly Enwonmenl
Rani $225 &amp; UJl {30&lt;4)882 3716
For lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Corner 01 Second And Pine
$250/Mo Plus Utilllles Secunty
And Key Deposit References Ae
Ql.llred No Petsl740-446-4425
Tara Townhouse Aparrments,
Very Spac1ous 2 Bedroom$ 2
FlOOrs CA. 1 1!2 Bath, Fully Carpeted Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pobt
Pallo Stan $350/Mo No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Oepostt Re·
qulred After 5 740 •46-0101,
Befole 5 740-446 3481
Twtn R1vers Tower now accepting
apolleatlons for t BR HUO subsidized apt tor elderly and hand

&lt;appea EOH 304-675-6679
TWo badr.oom In Pomeroy aU ullll
lias paid $350 per month deposit
and references required 7-t.O

992 5009
Upstairs Furn1shed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean, No Pttst References
I Deposit Required 740 446

1519

1979 Z-28 Camaro 350 " barl
Automellc Interior Real Nice
Body In good shape New rims
and tlrea S2 500 Fum Lois of

naw parts (3041675-8868

Sell $9 800 50• I 00 Was
126 800 Sail 115 BOO 70xl25
was S42 200 Sell $29.200 Coug
(800) 379-3754
Block br1ck sewer piJ]es wmd
ows lmlels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

Pets for Sale

1 Year Old Female Blue Point
Siamese C.al $75 Golden Retr~ever Stud Service Proven
74o-441-D615 After5P.M

A K C Reg golden retrlev$r pups
6 wks old on a 20-99 1st shots I
wormed $200 temalel$175 male

7399
2

Dryer~

for sale 3112 to 4 yrs

old (304)675·6693

Antiques

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
486 75 Megahurts Compt.tter 48
Meg Ram 500 Meg Hard Drive
Speakers Modem Keyboard &amp;
Mouse Mon1tor Wtndows 98
740-441-1106
5 Beanie bears Princess For
tune Erin Peace Glory all to r

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Up To 30 tbs 30 DAY MONEY

BACK GUARANTEE! Na1Ural Dr
Re commen ded 740 441 1982
Free Samples

CllOLDOWN
Central Air Conditioning A.dded
To Your Furnace Complete Duel
Systmes &amp; Furnaces
Heat
Pumps Cerhfted Installer II You
Don t Call Us We Both Lose! 740
446 6308 1 800-291-()()98
Discount Mobile Home
Parts &amp; SupPly
Huge Inventory
VInyl Sklrllng Kits $299 95 5 Gal
ton Atum•num Fibered Roof Pa•nt
$25 21 5 Gal While Roof Paint
$57 69 Anchors $5 Doors &amp;
Windows Gas &amp; ElectriC Water
Heaters Plumbmg &amp; Eleetncal
Parts tnterlherm Miller &amp; Coleman Au Conq1t ioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennelt s Mobile Home
Supply 740 4443 9416 Gallipolis,
OhiO

304 675-3361

was

AKC Registered Yellow lab Pups
Shots &amp; Wormed Ready 4th Of

July. $250 00 740-251;-&lt;;336
Fish Blr ds, Pond Supplies
Sun 1-4PM Mon Sat 11AM 6PM Fish Tank/ Pet Shop, 2413
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasartl

Glass &amp; Wood 3 Place Collee &amp;
End Table Set $140 Wooden
Rocker $25 6 Ft Artificial Fig
nee $20, 740-446-4705 Bet
ween Hour&amp; 8·3
"
Go Cart For Sale Good Condl
tlon Asking S400 (304)882
Gold S1der by S1de Refngerator
$125 00 Almond Wh~rlpool Re
trlgeralor $90 00 While Kenmore
Washer and Dryer Set $150 00
White GE Washer $75 00 Call at
ter 5 30 (7-t.O) 446 9066

GOT A CAMPGAOUNO MEM
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? Wall
Take Il l Americas Most Sue
cesslu! Campground And T1me
share Resale Clearinghouse Call
Resorl Sales International t 800
4:23-59437 24 Hours
Gn,1bb s Plano tumng &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call lhe
p1ano Or 74()...W6-o4525

INTERESTED IN WRITING PO
ETA¥? POETRY CONTEST
$48 000 In Pnzes Poss•ble Publl
cation Send One Qnglnal Poem
20 lines Or Less To tnternatlon
at l•brary Of Poetry 1 Poetry Pia
za SUite \lJ 835 Owings Mtlls MD
21117 Cfr Enter Online At
www poetry oom

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repcured New &amp; Aebu11t In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

I NT

1985 Pont•ac Fiero 4 Cyhnder,
AutomatiC "Cold A1r Condllion tng" New Motor $1 000 080
7-1\627

1994 S 10 Blazer 72 000 mile&amp;,
e11cellent condlllon PW PS PB,
atr 4:r4 cruise V-6 $13 000 call

1988 Monte Carlo l S 305 eOQine

t995 Ford Aanoer 4X4 AC 5
Speed A.M/FM Sltreo, 58 000
Miles Ask1ng $9,000 7-t.0-37s;

$1800 304-675-1038
1988 Pont1ac Trans Am V 8
White Damaged Left Front Runs
Great! Good Rubber 740-448
7928 E...mings
1989 Dodge Dynasty 4 door

$95() 00 (740)~8705

'

EN!OO

$2 500 (740)-&lt;018-1420 aller 5 00
1990 Ford Crown VIc Wagon A
Beautuut Watt Matntatned. High
M11Nge, E~tcellent Condlloo Only

1998 Honda Foreman ES 450
4xo4, like New ~50 Miles Wlnctshiekl, Padded Rear Rack Stot·

1992 Ford Tempo, automatic air
well maintained, 75 000 miles
$3200
740-667 0452

oao.

1992 Otds Cutlass Suprema
While with blue lntenor 4DR

Shot!&gt;

(304)67~153

New 1999 Honda EX two months

$3650, 740-949-2045 evenings
1993 Chevy P:V Silverado A/C
PS. 4x4 TOwing Pkg 4 3 V-8 Ex
cellenl condition, Blue Book Sug
gested Retail Value S13,500
Asking Pnce $10 995 (740) 446

446·8588
1994 Pontiac Grand Prix SE 2
door GT Performance Package
58 000 miles air cr~ouse amllm
cassette power sunroof 3 4 V 6
rear damage ask1ng $2850 740
992 1508 days or 740 949 2644
evenings
199&lt;1 Saturn Sport Co~e 2 4 Cy
IInder Tw i n Cam AC Tilt 5

~7

""""'ng'

Beautiful AKC Registered Australian Pupp1es For Sale:l All Col~ rs 1st Shots! 12 Weeks Old

!roc 350 Tune
Port
67 OOOmlles Clean S5 500 OBO

(740)~5$3

(740)-368·9415

Registered Border Collin Pups
workmg Parents Imported Blood
Lines Good Markmg 1st Sholsl

95 Fordo Mustang 3 8 Iller

89

5 sp
loaded 83 000 miles $7 700
neg 304--n3-5616

(740 )-379 9110
(304)675 6132

580

Fruits' &amp;
Vegetable&amp;

Bla ck Bernas $13 00 Gallon
$3 50 Quart Avai lable through

August (304)458 1667
Red Raspbemes Now A'o'allable
Tay'lors Berry Patch Call In Eve
1ngs 740-245-9047

98 Bonneville P SIP 8 /Crw se
AM/FM Cass nice car must sell
304-675-4843

1996 Kawasaki Jet sk1 900 Z~l

$3000 304 Ba22623
1998 Sea doo GSX llm11ed red
and purpfe, brand new condltiQn
130 horsepower with tra1ter

610 Farm Equipment
1953 30 Ferguson Tractor Plow
Olsk &amp; Bush Hog
$3500
(304)675 4871 t985 Chrysler 5th
A\ftnue $1 000 (304)675 4971
Cat 215 Hoe S30 00 427 Chev
Motor S650 45 Par ts Trailer
$1700 16 Trench Box $3 500 00
3 Arrow Boards $1,200 each
Yard Concrete Bucket $700 00
2 000 Gat Water Tank $650 00
Miscellaneous Sleel Beams Plate
Tamp that fils 416 Backh oe
$4 200 Sandblaster $1 300 Mls
cellaneous hand tool s Tar K.eltle
$300 0{) 4011 extended Trailer
$4 500 Buckets that 111 a 215 hoe
Jackhammers a1r drtlls eon
s1ruct10n blankets co nstruction
banels Ph one (740) 643 2916
alter 4 00 (740 ) 643 2644 afler

pollee Impounds &amp; Repos

For

llsl1ngs C~ll NOWI I (800)·
319 3323&gt;&lt;2156
Oh1o Valley Bank Will Otter For
Sale By Public Auct1on A 1987
Ford E14 Van 1324441 &amp; A 1985
Mercury lyn• 41620067 At 10 00
A M On 8/28199 AI The OVB An
nax U3 Th ird Ave Gallipoli s
OH Sold To Highest Bidder "As
IS Where IS" WithOut EKpres'sed
Or Implied Warranty &amp; May
Seen By Callmg The
1 1
Dept at 740·441-1038
serve~ The R1ght To Accept /Re
jeCI Any &amp; All B1ds &amp; Withdraw
Items From Sale Prior To Sale
Terms Of Sale CASH OR CER-

TIFIED CHECK
Rutland Cer 5ales
Clean, newer used cars good
vartety, reas onable rates 740742 331 t or 740-742-1400

720 Trucks for Sale
1976 Ford Runs Good 740 379

2196

Gel'll silage wagon tandem, 3
beater &amp; root call 304 675-4308

1 983 Ford Ra nger 302 Aut om
Looks and runs good I $2 700 oo

630

Livestock

1995 16Ft Stock Trailer In E~~:
cellent Shape 740.2-45 5087
A.tpme billy S65 OOI Aipine nanny

$50 00 304 576-2602

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Straw lor sale S2 501 bate four
miles north o1 Harrtsonvllle on SR

143 740 698 6254

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1970 Starcrall 22 Ft Cam per
Sleeps S1x Full Bath Excellent
Condillon, $2 800 740.446 210.9

•

(740) 367-0239

1966 Dodge Ram Charger Good
Condition 95 000 actual mtles

$21100 00 (740)-44 , 1176
1989 Dodge one tpn truck w1th
utility t&gt;ed $2000 740 992 2019
1989 Ford Ranger 4Cly, Ssp
Good Condition $1 700 00 080

(740) 367-Q239
1995 GMC Jimmy l oaded! Ex cel
lant CElndJtJOn Blue aook Sug
gested Reta•l Value $16 500
Asking Price $1-t. 000 (7-t.0)-446-

7269

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Quorum- Jewel- Phony- Answer- ENEMY
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ITHURSDAY

ASTRO-GRAPH

,e \cn th 1nk ahout tosstn~ m the tow

cl hKin)

Electrical and
Refrigeration

34 Mythical

SCJIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

840

-

30_.,tlne

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Home
Improvements

Rainbow Bulldera
Build new or repair old no JOb
too small or la rge Mator cred•t
cards
tWV029582
Call
(304)458 1049 BP '528 8092

Joln26~•U1ch
'
28 PintaU

THESE SQUARES

SERVICES

Livi ngs ton s Basement Water
Proofing all basement re pa 1rs
done free estimates lifetime
ouaranlee 12yrs on job expert
ence {304)895 3887

24 Comic

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

IN6,MOM I'M
Jli5T ENCOURAGING
HIM TO READ •.

\

C&amp;C Gene ral Home Mam
tenence Pa•nt ng vinyl s•dlng
carpen try doors windows baths
mobile home repair and more For
tree est1mate call Chet 740 992
63:23

22=-··
-

,___._ _..._...__ _.__.'-_, you develop from step No

t 995 24Ft Gt,lll Stream Conquest C lass C MotorHom~,
19 000 miles $27 500 304-88~·

Appliance Parts And serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E~~:
pane nee All Work Guaranteed
French C1ty Maytag 740 446
7795

.....--

:he chuckle qooled
by f1lhnv 1n the m1wng words

1977 Coachman Camper 21ft
AC
Awn+ng,
Microwave

Unconditional lifetime guarantea;
l ocal references fur nished Es
tabl1shed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 1 800 287-0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

lnvol...,
(2--)
12E~

1-.1:l:"""r.lQ.;...IT!"C"""T_U"""TL_E,---.--11
;u~~~~~~~~I' I I I .

-//?##.-*-

17931(304)458 1805

810

11~

dei-

r--------"'...,

roar

3323

10--

s,.m·.~

1-..J.-.L.-J..-'--.J

l

...r ~ . I

W

1973 Executive MolorHome
25Ft Long New carpet new
Air new awntng m1crowavo real
mce condition $7400 (304)o458

Now' (800) 772 7470 Exl 7832

600

HD6 Dozer Recently Ftebulll
$8, 500 Firm 400 Gallon Tank s
On Rubber $500 Each 740 446
2359

3933 or 1 800 273-9329

1983 Allegro motor home 36k
miles stove oven m1j:;rowa..,e
lurnace balh canopy outs1de
gas gnll sleeps B $10 000 740
992 2088

$500 CAR FROM $50011' Buy

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

New Replacement Gas Tanks D

790

BIG NATE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

$2,900 00(740)·245 9268

For sale 1997 Chevro le t Cam
aro 36 ooo miles loaded excel
lent condition 740 669-0904

THE BORN LOSER

$9 400 740-742-3602

CARS $100 $500 • UP PO·

LICE IMPOUNDS
Honda s
Toyota s Chevys Jeeps, and
Sport Ullhlles Fee Requtred Call

")

1996 t 7 N11ro bass b()al 90hp
Mercury 011 •nJected 4 blade tur
bo stainless prop, aerated live
wells extra butt seat, 42 PLB
thrust , MotOI" Gutde trolt1ng motor,
2 new battenes, 2 wide angled
lish llnders, one owner, garagt
kept cover, while wllh teal greeti
metal !lake showroom cond1t1on

&amp; A Aulo Roplay WV (304)372

(740)·441-1083

ti~~E

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Fiberg lass truck cab slldmg
windows and screen Uts Ford d'
bed $300 f1rm 740 949 3t t2

86 Cavalier AS Runs Good and
Looks good! $850 00 Nego

L.OANS

.

Glftll (740)-446--4548

6PM

STUl&gt;ENT

old factory wananr,, $3950, call
740-992·2459 Clays or 30-t.-882~

760

1999 Honda Aecon 3 Months
Old 3Year elltended warranty
$3250 00 (30o4)882 29M Alter

fl.~ PAY

3418. Alter 6PM

1992 Shadow looks ancl runs like
new 701&lt; cold a1r automatiC
sunroof, • cylinder, spoiler, red

5

All pass

Cec1l Beato n a Bnlosh pholographer. cla1med · She has a face that
belongs 1o the sea and 1he wmd, With
large roc kong horse noslnls and 1eeth
that you JUSt know bue an apple every
day 'About whom was he talkmg'
Doctors supposedly recommend
eating an apple a day though why
they would WISh to reduce busme ss
1sn't clear to me Apparently eattng
fish 1s good for the bram So, 1f you
eat a lot of seafood, you should have
no trouble findmg the best play here
What would be your approach m
three no-trump after West leads the
spade five and East puts up the Jack'
You have 29 combmed h1gh-card
pomts and a good five-card sun m the
dummy !row can there poss1bly be
any problems ? Well firSI check your
top tncks. There are only seven one
spade (g1ven lnck one), three hearts.
one d1amond and lwo clubs The
e&lt;tras can come from the d1amond
su1t, but 1fthc fmcsse IS losmg could
a spade re1urn from East be le1hal 0
Yes, tf the spade s are sphlttng 5-2
The defenders moghl cullecl four
spades and one d1amond (If the
spades are 4-3. It docsn t maucr wha1
you do )
However. you can d1sarm those
spades by duckmg at tnck one Th1 s
allows you to cut the opponents'
~ commumcatton 1n the su\1 Presumably East w1ll return a spade estab

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1998 Yamaha GP12ooR Rlv1
Yamaha
Modified,
SSH't
66MHP, 36 Hours Total Time.
lots ~ccessorle&amp; (30,.1674·

1992 Pon11ac Sunb1 f d SE One
Owner, Excellent Cond1tlon low
Miles $4 !00, 740 388 9416

33--- ·-Jong

3 ,. • ...,.,
4-lt.gln

By Phillip Alder

ogo $5200 740-388-9416

Honda Helix Motor Scootw
250cc Engine Perfect Cond1110n,
Make Offer Or WU! Trade For ~
Wheeler Or Fafm Wagons Ol
EquatVatue 7«J-.2-t.5-0485

1 llueiCIM\
~
2 SocJihad

A fish a day keeps
the defense away

I

1
owner
Saddlebags!Full Face Halmet
low Miles $3 000 (30.tl576..
2954 Kevin Price
'

$, 875, 740-388-otiiM

BODACIOUS
BONDIN'!I

9e Bronco XL 25K $16 500 Adull
Owner l ots of Extras! {740) o448•
7~1

3 NT

DOWN

Opemng lesd • S

89 Modal Cadge Caravan Ne'tf
Tries S850 00 (740}-256-6002
;

1989 Lincoln Contlnari'tal Signature Series AJC, PS, PB Runs
Good , Looks Good' Asking

$2 500. 740-367-7480

ONLY TWO
WORDS FER THAT--

TUtiD'C

===

18-•111

8868

1998 Pont1ac Trans Am Fully
l oaded! Price Reduced to
122.500 00 Great Graduation

Dogs

wA K 3
• Q tO ?
• K 6 53

Pass

onglno
25 T1nll
27NolaHlftco
2t · - Boot"
31Roman32 Card ...., ••••
call

34 Anl8rctlc
1and.. opoltlm

1·800-319-3323 Eld 4420

Blon.de Female Registered Pekin
gese 9 Months Old Very Gentle
Call740.446 0319 After 5 PM

SqUirrel

a KQ9

FROM $500 Pollee lropounds
And Tax Aepo s For listings Call

1995 Geo Prism 56 ooo Mites
Autom AIC Airbag Runs Great
$6 500 00 740.441 -9527

started

• 8 7 52
1 K 4 3
• Q 10 9 7

SOiitll

1986 Che'o'y 1/2 ton •Jtll van

lie

~::;:rout

24 Gunolhe

• J 4

• J 8 4

eon·.-,_,.

23 Molonoll"org

Eul

$1 500 304-675-6693

(304)875-2063

Tw o

I

1977 Chevy 4~~:4 Trucil Naw En-,
gina Trans , &amp; Exl"laust Good,
Tires, 77 000 M1les $1 50Q 7&lt;40441 1083

24ft Party Barge Pontoon Boot
GOHP Mercury 1ra1le r $5 5'00
(740) 446 7469

Registered Airedale puppies,
make great hunter~ !arm dogs
loyal gentle pets Shots wormed
$200 740 992 7888

11 ActorGulago&lt;

A 2

a A 10 6 5 2
• 10 8 5
• 52

90 1/2Ton Cl'lev Silverado 350•
4WO SMOOOO (304)675 2004

Speed $6 000, 74o-256-6270

Jack Russell terrier pups 10
weeks old tails docked . llrst
shots wormed 740-698•7055

a
Wesl

,

51 ()Iii I ...

54-•
letiCilog -

20 Coin flf France 55 Brown pl ......

•AJ986

1000

$6395 741)-742-3602

FOR SAlE FUllY LOAOED
PENTIUM COMPUTERS Poor
Cred1t OKI 1 (800) 52D-636o4

t 500 m111a Plffect Condtuon
Take over Payments Senous En
qulry only Great Deall (140)_.46="

7A0-992 5025

47U-(poeL)
41 Stir

16 Dekriollillid

tte9 S·IO Chevrolet, Pl ck-i.tf,

~

46Cal--.-v

17a.-

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South
Wesl Nortk East
Soulll

-

AKC Registered BostOn Terriers,
Show Quality! Shots Wormed,
Ready to go
$300 now
$250 00 each 2-femal&amp;$ 1·mate
DepoSit W!ll hold! {740)·368·9325

.

.,.,

•

"'a · • Puule

43 Type flf n I "I
t$ Soup CUI 2 ' ...

$ianolet
15 Add

1997 Nlasan XE pickup 36,Q08
miles, llf tilt cru ise delud
Cl'lrome and wheels $8500 744;
992-5518 bator• 21)m or after

1991 Dodge Grand Cara...an Hd
3 3l. Air Cru1se, Tilt Steering ~
Auto malic CO Player PS PB 1
~uns Great 13,000 (304)675-'

1980 -1890 HONDA CARS

Sofa &amp; Recliner $200 4 P1tce
End Table Set $150 1•0 ot.46·

3324
OldAohVIIiave

$1700 080 304-875-8745

1994 Plymouth Acclatm 3 0 Liter
$3 500 OBO 1993 Plymoulh Ac
cta•m 2 5 Liter $3 200 OBO 740

$80 00 304 675 1602
Christy s Fam•ly living apartments home &amp; trailer rentals
740-992 4514, apartments ava•l
able furntshed &amp; unfumished

MGB Con11trt1ble Panlally
restored needs paint runs good

AKC Dashounds Poodi:S and
American Eskimo Spitz shots!

Buy or sell RIVenne Anllques
1124 E Mam Street on AI 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm SundaytOOto
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

Brookside Apts Are Now Accept
ing Applications For 1 Bdrm Apt
With Washer &amp; Dryer Hookup
Water Paid $279 00 Month Any
auest1ons Call 740 4-t.e 9611
Barween 10 OOAm And 9 OOPmr

197~

7289

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

0165

1937 Graham 4 Doof Sedan 350
Chevy, Autom New lntanor Ask"'11 $7 500 00 740-4-46'3005

304-895-3386

530

Beech Street Middleport two
bedroom furmshed deposit &amp; ret
erences utllllies paid 740 992

'9-t Grand Prix SE excellent condition 16300 080. 740-992-29(19

Well Maintained! 145 500 miles

(3) ALL STEEl BliLDINGS LIQ-

560

'88 Ford Taurus $75Cl, 7.t0 9923160

Mollohan Carpets "Or/118 A Llrtle
Save A Lor' " 202 Clark Chapel
740-446-7444 740-388..() 173

Apartment lor rent In Middleport
no pets 7o40 992•5858

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Hous.ng Opportunity

Building
Supplies

550

GOOD

USED

condhton,

1990 Dodge Dynasty One Owner

2 Year Old Iguana $40 00 and or
Cage $150 00 (740) 388 !MIS

28 Fl Trailer Wllh Awning &amp;

2bdrm apts total electric appliances furn1shed laundry room
facilities close to school in town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740-992·

White Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer
S140 While G E Washer S70
Call Aller 5 30 PM 740-4489066

Sl50 740-446·5418 Daytime

Washers dryers refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine Street Call740 446 7398

Mo , 888 840 0521 ,

HJ00·53N~528

For Sale Recond itioned wash
ers dr9'ers and refrtgerators
Thompsons ApJlllance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304)675-7388

304·675-4302
Deck Overlookirtg OhiO RiverlFull
K•tchen &amp; Bath Furnished $2251

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

UIDATION 4011i60 Was S19.800

510

QOOd

tilly rim&amp; $350 740-949-9006
L1ke new hft cha1r $100 organ
$300 dressJir &amp; chest $100
740-992-3860

7«J-.38!5--4367

Apartments
for Rent

710 Autoe for Sale
'79 Monte Cark)

Mobile nome site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

9322

1988 Redmond Oanvtlle 14 ~C70
Also Has ~JCpando Very Nice,
New Heat Pump Ask1ng $1-t.OOO

2 Be&lt;:lrooms $325/Mo -+ Utilities,
No Pets 74D-44&amp;-4313

Pa rtially turnlshad $250 month
plus $tOO deposl1 (30~17735040

Wantel:l Your lite after Death Ex
parlance or Miracles to put m my
Book 1 m wntlng Mat! to John
Duncan 1009 State Route 160

Now Takmg Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo, 740

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or Come see our large se!ecllon or
0 Oownl GO'o't And Bank Repo's used noma at Riverdale Homes
clean, llnanctng available
Being Sold NOW! Financing
AvaHable Call Nowt 1-{800)·73o- ' " 0 •••0• tor delivery Call Nlklcl at
7n2.Exts~o

4367

pos•t

2 Bedroom House 3 M11es Down
7 Beautiful River View $350/Mo,
74()-441-9501

1988 Skyline 14xBO on Renta l
Lot! Central Au Fire Pl ace,

160 ACRES WYOMING Unlm
proved Land Antelope and Wild
Horses $26,995 - $195 Down
$269 o49 MONTHLY Owner F1·
nanced Toll Free 1-(800)1 800·

Large setechon ol used homes 2
and 3 be&lt;lrooms avatlable Excel
lent condillon Great starler
hOmes Call Cheryl 740 385·

2 Bedroom F.:.rnished StOO de-

740 245 9667

S$$0 OOWNI HOMES NO CAED·
ad 3205

Cross Lanes Home Center Free
Set up. Delivery AJC: Underpm
rimg "l $500 WaiMart Shopptng
Spree with each home purchased Stop &amp; see your home
town housing &amp;Jl&amp;clalist Woody
W1llard (30o4)776 7699 or t 800922 9976 Crosslanes Ex•t of
164

Valley- Ftelerencet &amp; Oeposil Rt
qutred 1.w-44' -()772

New one bedroom apartment
a!so one bedroom house call
740 992 9191

1985 Modular Home 24x55 With
All Appliances 5 M1les From R1o
Grande May Lease! $22 500 ,

740-986-8335

(600~434-2434

Clean a/fordable previously
owned homes large selection
ava•lable Call Karana 111 River
dale Homes 740-385-o4367

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Spnno

2 Bedroom Bnck Cottage Excellent Location References &amp; De
POSit Requ ~rl:td $395/Mo Call
740-441 0264

310 Homes for Sale
IT NEEDED! (GO'o' t Rapo Con·
do a Townhouses Homes! ) 1-

So499 Down All Singles , $999
Down Doubles Su'per Low Pay·
ments L1m•ted Time, Oakwood
Homes. Barboursville WV 304·
736 3409
-

800-383-e862

FREE CASH NOW! Wealthy Fa
mmes Unloading Millions To Help
Mm1m1ze Their Taxes Wute rm
mediately fot'llK!e-LPI PMB 249
1626 North Wilcox A'o'enue Su
11e 2o49 Holtyood CA 90028

•

•'

•

41 C••• flauwedl-:~:r.T.;t;;t.;;

z

TRM~SPORTI\TION

, _ to

•

Fnday. Augu&lt;l 20 1999
M ore
running
around
or
unplanned travel could be poss1ble
for you m the year ahead For some
of you born today there 's a chance
you nught even Journey out of the
cOuntr y

LEO (J ul v 23 Aug 22) Your lal
ent for organ1za t10n and your ab1bty
to effectively delegate who should he
dotng what wtll prove to be two very
valu able assets today as you go
aboUI your work Get a JUmp on hfe
hy understand mg the Influences
that II go..,crn yo1.11 tn the year ahead
Send the rcquued refund form and for
your Astra Graph predictions by
madmg $2 to Astra-Graph , c/o th1s

newspaper. P 0 Bo&lt; 1758. Murray
Htll Slaloon Ne" York. NY 10156
Be s ure to state your Zod1ac stgn

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Forlunatelv for yo u today could he one
of tho se rare days when you squeeze
m unde r lhe w1re JUSt tn the n1ck of
ltmc even th ough you may leave
thtn g~ tn th r.: last mmutc

LIBRA tScpl 23-0cl 23) Don I

should lhmgs look bleak. m
an m\nh c1nt-nt you vc undertaken
) 1 u II l•t.
' rcmarkahly stron~ ltn~~~~ 1 .md 1fns could surJmse eve n

)'OUI 'iC II

SCORP IO (Oc l

24 No v

22!

Thc1c '" 1 ~ lrnng pctss thllrt y tod.Jy
th.u you 1111ght rc.1p gams tn several
w 1ys v11u tJ lcotsl expeL!
Once
npc nul lhc..,c m.1lcrtal avenues could
prmJuu: .Jg.un

SAG I riARIUS !No' 21 Dec
2 1) Be Ill x1blc md ready t o ll ow
w1th

cvcrus

1nd.1y hccau sc although
lhm,gs m1ght not gn c~~:actly as you
plan the rc..,ulls could be cnmparablc
to those for wh1ch }OU w1 shcJ

PISCES (Feb

20-March

20)

Somethmg unusual and of a fleetmg
nature could help you ach1eve an
amt&gt;tuous ObJecuve today However,
you musl be able to recogmze 1t
qutck:.ly m order to take advantage of

It
ARIES

(March

21 Apnl

!9)

Arrangements you have w1th your
more progress i ve &lt;:ontacts wtll prove
lo be your best source for advanctng
your personal mteresls today Traditionalists co uld slow yo u down

TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)

Don 1 r eadily d1 4count a co ncept you
get today that you m1ght concel\e as
rad1cal Although 11 may be a depar ture from you r norma l way of thtnk
mg 11 cou ld be cxtremeJy lnnovnuve

Scvcr,JI hargmns lhat othcr;.s ha\C
m.crlookcd could pop up r'1ght under
your nose today cnabltng you to p•ck
up some thmgs lhat'll prove to be of
great value to you

carefully when mvolved m con vcr
sat1ons today A va luable pomt of
v1ew you hadn t constdcred cou ld
prove t o he extremely helpful to )OU

AQUARIUS (Jan

20-Feb

19)

Another t:hance meeting &lt;:auld be m
the offing today wtth a person you
may have met on l y recently Because
of the encoun ter 11 (;ould retnforcc a
bas1s for a fnendshtp

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) L1Sien

CANCER (June 21 July 22) S"
cra l m.:w step savers m•ghl spnng
frmn the application o l new and
untned pr()(eLiurcs to old a~;stgnments
today The } will cnharu.:c ynur prn
dUI.: tl\lt} well tnal the luturc

t

An old card shark told me that small debts produce a
debtor A large debt Will produce an ENEMY

AUGUST 191

�•

, . 12. The Dally Sentinel

In publishen' endless recycling
of the Bible. one marketing maneu·
ver ·is to package a biblical book or
selected passages in a paperback
with a popular inuoduction
designed to attract readen . Cheap
for the publisher, and the reader getS
easily digestible Scripture.
Last year a British publisher
issued a series of this sort. '' Pocket
Canons," with introductions by
poeiS and novelists who spent as
much effon runriing · down Holy
Writ as building it up. One called
the biblical God " bloodlhirsty" and
another said lhe Book of Revelation
is " sick."
· 1be lateSI bid'· ts debalable in
other ways but more successful: the
"Classic Bible Series" from ·St.
Man in 's Press. also originally a
British production . Four paperbacks
are jus~ oul. with eight more in the
works.
One of the first· volumes is '"'llle
Gospel of St. John: The Story of the
Son of God " ($11.95 ),. It bundles
· the text of John from theo New
Jerusalem Bible with a brief fore·
word by Piers Paul Read, an introduction by John Drane, and excerpiS
from •· A Dictionary of Biblical Tradition in English Literature" (Eerd·
mans. 1991) with references to
Shakespea. e and Swift. Norman
Mailer and Anhur Miller.
. Read is a Bfitlsh novelist bestknown for his 1974 nonfiction boOk
" Alive : The Story of the Andes Sur:
. vivors ... Though he"s no Bible
scholar, he's an ouiSpoken believer.
in this gospel aod in the Jesus it pre·
sents. Read says John " was clearly

wriuen by someone who . . wit· teachings and deeds of Jesus.
nessed the events he describes,"
Scholan have since pushed the
something many univenity leachen dating of this gospel back to the Iat&lt;
would dispute.
first century. Drane says it has been
That conservative outlook con- argued that John could have been
tinues with the introductton by the earliest of the four gospels, writ·
Drane. · a British Baptist ministe&lt; ten between A.D. 40 and 65. Argued
and longtime lecturer at Scodand 's by whom? References are needed.
University of Stirling.
And Drane overstates the situa·
Bible readen often ignore schol - Lion when he claims recent developar! y batdes. but Drane repons that ments have " shattered" the older
50 or 60 years ago. many professon . skepticism about John. Even tlioogh
gave John a tough time. lbey dis· this is a concise introducuon. Drane
missed John as a second cenwry should anchor such assenions with
document shaped by Greek philoso- more good examples.
phy. wilh liule connection to n:li·
Similarly.
he
able traditions about

uons m Jerusalem show that ·'most
of rhos geographical infonnalion (in
John} resiS on a real knowledge of
the city as it was before A.D. 70."
But he pro\ides only two specifics,
""h no description: the Pool of
Bethesda and the " pavement"'
where Jes us met Pilate.
Drane offers a very interesting
theory to explain lhe over-all shape
of John ·s gospel. He minks it went
through two edttions. as follows : In
us original form. John was a highly
Jewish work, possibly written in

Palestine .
So maybe
section "In the ·

Word: the Word wos with God and
the Word wos God " ) was added
later 10 lure Gentile readen in the
Greek world.
At the ending, the last verse of
Chapter 20 sounds like the gospel's
logical conclusion: " These are
recorded so that you may believe
!hat Jesus is lhe Ouist. the Son of
God. and that 'believing thi s you
may have life through his name.'"
And i!'s apparent that here or
there throughout the text. an editor
has insened explanations of Jewish
cusloms and e1pressions 10 guide
OUISiders.
When all those added materials

rem o, cd. Drane suggests.
v.hat"s kft IS the ongonal first edt·
uon as .,.-nuen for Jc\\ S. \\'hat '-'C
have toda) IS the «eond edmon.
pitched to Gc:nules.
Other \ Oiumes nO\\ a\ ad able In
the Classic Bible Series: "The SQng
of Solomon"" Cforn•ord b) John
Updike}. •·The Hebrew Prophets "
(fore word by Desmond Tutu) and
" Great Saymgs of Jesus" (foreword
b) Ri chard Holloway). lnlrod uc·.
tions are e ither by Drane or
Lawrence Boadt. an Ameri can
Catholic priest teachm g at the
Washington Theological Uni on.
art

..

•

'

'

•

..

..

'.

'

.

so.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Number 52

Single Copy· 35 Cents

ley. Randall M. Booton,' trustee. Inez Boring and Marlha didate for Pomeroy Mayor last spring, as were council abilities will be decided in Novembi:r. The MRIDD
purst. for clerk; ORANGE. John A. R;mkin, lewis F. candidates Scou M. Dillon, Geri Walton, Bryan Shank board is seeking an additional tax of 1.5 mills for main·
White and Edgar Pullins, all for trustee, and Osie M. and Victor C. Young 111. Kathy Hysell is the candidate lenance, · ~apital construction and operating expenses
Follrod, clerk; RUTLAND. Joe Dolin for trustee and for Pomeroy Village Clerk. Young is a Democrat; the for the Carleton School and Meigs Industries work·
Opal Dy.er for clerk; SALEM, H. Dannie Lamben for olheJ:S are Republicans .
shop.
trustee, unexpired term, Cecil E. Johnson, Oaude L.
In Middlepon. Jean Cr~ig is lhe Republican candi·
The Meigs Local School Board seeks approval o f a
Hale and Jack L. Ervin. all for fullterm, trustee, Donnie date for mayor, Bryan Swann for clerk. Stephen · 23-year, 3.95 mill lev~ and bond issue for capital
G. Scott, clerk; SALISBURY, Bernard D. Gilkey, Larry Houchins, and Bob Robinson for village council, and improvements, specifically for the construction of new
R. Thomos and Ted A. Warner, for trustee, and Richard Donald L. Stivers and · Myron J. B. Duffield for· full school building~~ in .the district, as well as for operating
Bailey for clerk; SCIPIO, Randy Butcher and Kevin W. terms on the board of public affairs . Bernard D. yilkey expenses.
Payne for trustee. and Connie K. Chapman for clFrk; is a Republican candidate for an unexpired term on the
Voters will determine the fate of several local tax
SUTTON, Larry Ebenbach and Delben A. Smiltl for board of public affairs. Robinson and Duffield are issues. The Lebanon Township Trustees will request
trustee and Kenny Wiggins for clerk.
Democrats; the olhers are Republicans.
the replacement of one mill for five years for fire pro·
SCHOOL BOARDS
Candidates for office in Rutland, Syracuse and lection; Chester Township the replacement of one mill
Three hoard of education members will be elected in Racine run on a nonpartisan ballot. In Syracuse, Larry for five years for operating and maintaining cemeteries; .
each district in November. Candidates for the Meigs W. Lavender is the ·candidate for mayor. Edward M. Scipio Township the replacement of a- half-mill for five
Local School Board are Penny Burge, Roger A. Abbott, Wood and Bill Roush filed as council candidates, years for Ihe operation and maintenance of cemeteries;
Norman R. Humphreys, Jr., John P. Hood; in !'astern James A. RifOe for the board of public affairs. and Jan- Columbia Township, lhe ·renewal of one mill for five
Local, John C. Rice, Timothy Dillon, Sheila l. Taylor, ice Zwilling and Sharon S. Cottrill for clerk/treasurer.
years for fire protection; Rutland :Village, renewal o( -a
Mike Manin, Dave Weeks and M. Rick Sanders; and in
In Racine, Douglas Johnson, Jr., and Douglas C. 2.0 mill current expenses levy for a period of five years;
Southern Local, William G. Murphy,.OavidA. Kucsma, Rees have filed for the board of public affain, Karen S. Pomeroy Village, renewal of a one-mill, five-year levy
Robert E. Collins and Don P. Smith. Jeffrey Harris, Lyons as clerk/treasurer, and Larry Wolfe and Gregory for fire protection;. Racine Village, a replacement of .7
Jeanetle Thomas, Howard Caldwell and Don. Poole W. Taylor os council candidates.
mills for five years for fire protection; Sutton Township
have filed as candidates for the board of the
In Rulland, Councilman Richard Felly, who is seek· the replacement of one mill for five years for fire pro·
Athens/Meig~~ Educational Service Center, formerly the
ing re-election, is lhe only candidate 10 file for office.
lection; Olive Township, renewid of 1.5 mills for five
County Board of Education.
·
TAX LEVIES
years for fire protection; and Letan Township, the
VltLAGE OFFICES
A countywide levy request from the Meigs County replacement of a mill for five years, also for fire pro·
John W. Blaeuner was nominated as Republican can· . Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Dis· tection.

Regional Briefs

.

..

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·.

--

--

-

-- - --

-~-

Man·involved in boat accident
was under influence of alcohol
CLEVELAND (AP)- One of the three men involved in a fatal boal
crash 0 n Lake Erie was ·under !he influence of ab::ohol, according lo lhe
Lake County coroner.
Ja.'iQn Dietrich, 26, of Austinburg, had a \Jiood .alcohol conlenl of 0.15
percent, aboVe the legal limit of 0.10 percent, Dr. Salvatore RizZo said.
Dietrich died when !lie boat he was riding in struck the breakwater in Fair·
pon Hatbor late Monday.
··
.
His two companions, Kevin Gilmer, 23, and David Slab~, were
injured in the crash. They were in stable condition today at MelroHeallh
Medical Center in Oeveland.
Ohio Department of NaturaJ .Resources investigators said they were
interviewing the two men to delermine who was driving the boat and
whether any .charges would be brought.
ResuiiS of Gilmer's and Slaby's blood alcohol tests were no.l available
Thursday: The tesiS were done after the men were rescued, nearly eight
hours after lhe crash.
.
·

..

I egg, beaten
3/4 cup grape jelly
I and 2-3rds cup peanut butter
chips
.
Preheai oven to 375 degrees F.
Grease a 9-inch square baking pan;
set aside.
' Stir together flour. sugar and baking powder: cut in butter wuh pastry
blender or fork until mix:ture resembles coarse crumbs . Stir in beaten
egg until blended .
Reserve half of the mixture; press
remaining mixture· onto bonom of.
prepared pan. Stir jelly slightly;
spread evenly over crust . Sprinkle I
cup peanut butter chips over jelly.
Stir remaining 2-3rds" cup of the
peanut butler chips into reserved
crumb mixture; sprinkle Over top.
Bake in pre.heated 375-degree· F
~ven 25 to 30 minutes or until light·
ly. browned. Cool completely in pan
on 'wire rack . Cul into bars. Makes
16 .bars.
· ·
Nutritional information per l·bar
serving: 250 cal., 5 g pro., 33 g
carbo., II g total fat (6 g sat. fat) , 25
mg chol., 125 mg sodium ..

...

Pt. Pleasant train derailment dumps coal, blocks traffic Friday morning
Seven CSX coal cars jumped the track at the over this latest incident.·
place. Wise will be following all information
121h Street crossing around 6 a.m. Friday. dump"Qearly promised safely procedures to pre' regarding4he derailment. .
ing their loads. tearing down a fence and closing venl derailments when Bob met in Poinl Pleasant
"I am devastated for the people of Point Pleas·
a ponion of Viand Street. There were no haz· in June (4tthe site of the derailment) have failed
Continued In ,
anjous materials on lhe train, accor~ing to Point to fully protect our communities," a spokesman
'Train Derailment• on
3
Pleasant Fire Chief Steve Cavender.
for Wise's office said.
·=-------...:.:.=:....::.===.:..:......:.:.:..!::.=:....:.---,
CSX officials arrived around 8 a.m. lo begin
. According to the spokesman,
surveying the damage caused by lhe derailment lhe congressman is eager 10 review
Gary Wollenhaupt of CSX Transportation said at the circumstances surrounding this
9:40 a.m. that clean-up crews should amve in the accident. He will ask how this
city .by 10:30 to begin the process: AI thallime, could have been avoided in the first
Wollenhaupt was unable to give an esti·
DisCUSSING SITUAllON - Steve Sanmated timeframe for the clean-up of the ter of CSX apeaka with city and county
mangle~ cars and trac_
ks. He also satd a officials about the dan)&amp;gM cauHCI by
CSX.Uam crew was enr&lt;1ute from Hunt- Mveo derailed coal cars at the 12th
ington 10 discpnnect mohble train cars Straet croaalng early. Friday. CINn up
from the derailed ones in order lo open crews were scheduled to arrive In the
up Viand Street to traffic.
city by 10:30 a.m. and 1 train crew to
Two elected officials who are fight· dlsco11nect movable cara from the darning to improve safety on the rails, Con· aged onea to open VIand Street were on
gressman Bob Wise and Delegate Lisa the way from Huntington. (Photo by
Smith, have expressed deep concern Michele Carter.)

Ohio's jobless rate remains at 4.5 percent

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 1l Pages
Calendar
C!assiDe!ls
Comics
Editorials

.·

Locai
Sports
Weather

9&amp;10

11
2

3
4
3

Lotteries

Recipe from : Hershey's , Food
corp.

OHIO
Pick 3: 5-4-0; Plck 4: 6-4:8-9
Backeye5: 7·13·14-16-18
W.yA.
Dally 3: 5·3·9; DaUy 4: 1·5· 7·3

Community
Calendar

mote sales .or fund raisers

Meigs County's

..
·
·
Sentinel News Staff
·
1be Meig~~ County Board of Elections was expected
lo cenify the !)ames of candidates for township and vii·
!age offices and school board, and to cenify several
local tax levi~ and issues at a meeting on Friday mom·
·
ing.
.
The filing deadline for lhese offictl' ;md 'issues was 4
p.m. on Thursday.
TOWNSWPS
Most townships will elect their clerk and a lruslee.
although some toWnships will elect trustees to fill
·unexpired terms.
.
Candidates who filed for office, by township, are:
BEDFORD, Elmer Bailey and Tony Corsi for trustee,
and Barbara J. Grueser, .for clerk; CHESTER, Elmer· C.
Newell, dary R..Dill, for full term trustee, Alan Holter
and James Bailey, for trustee, unexpired term, Janel R.
Life, for clerk; COLUMBIA, Mary M. Brady, Larry J.
Barnes and Amy J. Radeki,n·Crihfield, all for clerk,
Jimmy C. Haning· and Marco Jeffers for trustee;
LEBANON, John R. Krider. Donald R. Dailey, and
Garry Smith, all for trustee, full term. Lawrence G.
Johnston and Lawrence Hayman, trustee, unexpired
term, Dorothy A. Roseberry and Annette R. Vance. for
clerk; LETART. Cbris!opher T. Wolfe, Paul Eugene
Hill, Jr., and Charles R. Wolre, Jr., all for trustee, Joyce
White and Peggy Hill for clerk; OLIVE. Br,ian K. Bai-

Cellular One:· of Athens
is now AT&amp;T Wireless Services.

marganne ·

of· any type. Items are
printed only as space per·
mils ahd cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

C 1999 Ohio V1llcy Publishing Co. ·

Something good just got better.
The leading

wirele~s

.

'VEGGIE' CARS- A race between veggle cars, made mo$tly ot
vegetables, was one ot the events held as pert ot kids' games
Wednesday afternoon $t the Meigs County Fair. Here, young·
aters regl$ter their creations with Fair Queen Runner-up MelleN
Holman.
·
·

SUPERCHARGED KIDS -· The Mountain Dew Chug shown •
here was one ot several contests held during Kids' Games at
the Meigs County Fair Wednesday. In ad.d ltlon to chugging the
caffeine-laden soft drink, youngsters also ate watermelons
and raced 'veggle" cars.

Ladies' Day baki.ng winners

AT&amp;T Wireless
Services offers a national net;,...ork and a f;,mily of innovative .and practical calling plan's chat meet
.
every .need. So 'whether you call around Athens or around the country, we've got you covered. Like · never

AT&amp;T Wireless Services

.

Winners in the antique oractor
pull Wednesday at the Meigs Coun·
ty Fair were, listed in ord~r by class:
3,5QO.pound - Raymond Cot·
terill, Pomeroy; Jonathan Runyon,
Pomeroy; Edison. Hollon, RaCine;
Curt Jeffers, Pomeroy; Bill Bur·
bridge. Pageville;
·
· 4,SQO.pound - Edison Hollon,
Racine; Ted Smith, Racine; Tom

Sayre, Lelar~ W, Va.; Marl in Evans,
Racine; Larry Hollon, Racine;
5,500-pound - Brian Llewellyn,
Albany; Eric Smith, Chester; John .
Thomas, Pomeroy; Ryan Battrel,
Albany; Scott Payne, Vinton;
6,500-pound - Larry Hollon,
Racine; Royce Newell, Reedsville;
Dale Han, Rasine; Russell Douglas,
Albany; Brian Windon, Pomeroy.

MONDAY
LONG BOTTOM
Revival services, Hazel
· Communfly Church ,' Mon day through Saturday,
Monday through Saturday,
7:30p.m

wW-w.att.com/wireless/

•

.I

Cl999 AT&amp;t Credit approval and ~n activatiOn fee requi~. Full terms and con&lt;U!Ions are C'!)ntlined in the _AT&amp;TWtltome Guide, kate Sheet

or Ciilling Pliln.

Open class horse
·show results p()sted

Draft horse contest results

ATs.T

I BOO-IMAGINE®

~~------~----~--------·

The following were winners in the open
class horse show held Tuesday at the Meigs
County Fair, posted in order by class:
· Youth showmanship Jessica Ash ,
Keshia Norman, Kyle Boggs, Ashley Roush;
Melissa
Youth western pleasure Brooks, Jessica Ash, Jessica Janey, Brandis
Bolin, Mallory Hill;
'
. Open walk trot - Lori Hayes, Melissa
Brooks, Cindy Scon,Johnny Morris, Brandis
Bolin;
Open western pleasure- Melissa 8rooks.
Cindy Scott, Brenda DeQuasie, · Brandis
Bolin, Jessica Ash;.
Open pole bending
Bobby Johnson,
Stephanie Story, Dale Stanley, Nicho las Pratt,
Aaron Reeves;
Youth barrels - Stacey. Mills, Mia Shest.i ·
na, Chad Lee, Nicholas Pratt, Nathan Gor·
don;
Open barrels - William Greer, Mike
Jones, Darla Stanley, Mia Shestina, Mark
Roush.
·

Antique tractor pull winners

service in Athens is now part. of the largest digital wireless network in North America.

before. For a list of AT&amp;T st'lres in your area, please call 800 661-0611.

COLUMBUS (AP)- The stale's
jobless rate remained at 4.5 percent
for July. unchanged from· June, the
Ohio Burea~ of Employment Ser·
vices said·IOday.
A slight increase in sum111er unem·
ploymenl claims Wi'S offset by mod·
est job growth in several industries,
including manufacturing, OBES
· Administrator James J. Mermis
said. He said the .IOta! number of
people in !he labor force is at a high
for the year.
Ohio's rate was ~lightly higher
than the natibnal figure of 4.3 per·
cent, also unchanged from 4.3 per·
cent in June.
It's just the third time since October 1992 thai Ohio's jobless rate
was higher lhan the national per·
centage, Mermis said. Ohio also had
slightly higher unemployment lhan
the national rate in July .1998.
The stale's July 1999 rate was
down frorn the 4.8 percent of July
1998.

FRIDAY
POMEROY . Rep .
John Carey, open door ses·
sian, Meigs Cot.Jnty Courthouse, I to 2 p.m.
ATHENS TRAC
meeting. Friday, 9:30a.m.
at the Ohio University Inn.
Athen s. Comments from
groups supporting and
opposing Athens-Darwin
U. S. 33 project.

-Page4

I •

By BRIAN J. REED

With AP Photo NY607
By The Associated Press
Peanut Butter and Jelly Ban
make a sweet. addition to a child's
lunch box. Kids can help make lhe
ban by stirring in the peanut butter
chips or spr~ading the jelly.
Peanut Butter and JeUy Bars ·
· I' 112 cups all-purpcse flour
112 cup sugar
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
112 cup (I stick) cold butter or

special events. The calen dar is' not designed to pro'

TOIIICNTOW; Sunny .
High: 808; Low: eo.

Hamisch, Reds shut
out Pittsburgh,
reclaim first place

Board of electi_ons to certify candidates, issues

Easy bar cookie
recipe___: and kids
can lend a hand

annqunce meetings ·and ·

Indians .down Texas 8-0, Page 4
Ten tips for abstinence, Page 12
Sermonette, Page 12

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 808; Low: SO.

Volume

.

The Com111unity Calen dar is published as a free
service
to
non -profit
groups
wishing
to

Sports

Augu8t 20, 1111111

Weather

- - - - - - - A comeback for the Gospel of John?
8y RICHARD N. OSTI.ING
AP Rclipua Writer

Friday

Thursday, August 19, 1999

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoi1, Ohio

,

Res·uits of the draft horse contest held
Wednesday at the Meigs County Fair are as
follows , in order by class:
Class !·Log Roll - Glen Tuttle, Rodney
Tuttle, Chuck Whittingtot., "Eric Tuttle, Mar-

lesia Boivin;
These women, Connie Qulvey, Donna Jenklne and Maxine Rose, ware choun win·
ners In the Ladlea' Day at the Fair quick brNd contest held at the Hill Stage on Thura' ANTIQUE TRACTORS..:.. Bill Burbridge ot Pagevllle w . . one . dey afternoon. Qulvey entered a Banana Nut bread, Jenkins a zuchlnl parmeean bread,
ot several local farmers and tractor enthuelaata to participate In and Rose a lemon poppy bread. The contest wa• held In conjunction with a baking
Wednesday's antique tractor pulls, held on the Infield ot the demonstration by OSU Extenelon Agent Becky Baer, and ·was judged by Sharon Smith
and Lhida King ot the extension agency's nutrition program.
.
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
,
1

Class 2·Wagon Obstacle Course - Rodney
Tuttle, Eric Tuttle, Glen . Tuttle, Marlesia
Boivin, Chuck Whittington ;
Class )·feed Run - Rodney Tuttle, Eric
Tuttle, Glen TOttle, Marlesia Boivin, Chuck
Whittington.

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