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Lydia Council of Bradford Church meets
on Al.gust 23 at Columbia Chapel.
The Women 's Retreat w1ll be
held on September 24 and 25 at the
Ohio Valley Cl!nstian Assemhl~ .
A personal brtdal s ho\\er "til be
gtven at the September meeung lor
Diane Bing.
The .September Lydia CounCil
meeting "ill be held on Scple!nhcr
7 at the church. Sherry Shamblin
will be the hostells.
Allcndme were Paula P~rkens.
Carolvn Ni~holson, Brenda Bulm.
Suzte. Will. Charlotte Van Meter.
Charlone
Hanning . ' Cherie
W!lli3mson, and Tra&lt;;1c Davidson .

Sunshine gifts for A~gust will
be given to Wilbur and Tillie Rowley.
Church supplies for July was
dishwashing liquid. and for
August, foam plates and cups. Pack
the pantry items ·for August will be
ca nned fruit , and for September.
sbap products.
.
·
Women's Fellowship will be
held at the Bradford Church on
August 26. Hal Kneen will present
a

program

about recyclin g.
Refreshments will be served. and

e\•cryone is. to bring an item that
has been recycled.
(1
Men's Fellowshtp will be held

D of A Past Councilors meet
Council 323, Daughters of
America, met recently at the
lodge hall with Delores Wolfe
and Mary H. Holter as hostesses .
Esther Smith. president, co nducted the meeting. She read
Psalm II 8. The Lord's Prayer and
the Pledge to the American Flag

. For roll call. each member was
to tell whtch recipe they received,
the name and how to make it.
It was reported that Elizabeth
Hayes was hospitalized at St .
Joseph 's Hospital.
Delores Wolfe gave the sccrc·
tary's report, and Ruth Smith

were given in uni son.

gave the treasurer's repQrt. ·

Members were asked to take a
recipe to the meeting, which were
then placed in a small .basket,
with each member taking a .
recipe .

Readings were given : "Sug·
gestions on How to Harvest Your
Garden," by Esther S~ith ; "H?w
you Tell When You re Gttttng
Older," by Errna Cleland ; "I' m A

Senior Citizen," by Ruth Smitti;
and "Joy is Homemade ," by
Betty Young.
The hostess served refresh·
ments, and games were conduct·
ed by Goldie Frederick and Mar·
garet Amberger. Door prizes were
won by Opal Hollen, Esther
Smit~. and Opal Eichinger.'
Also present were Laura Mae
Nice. lnzy Newell. Thel ma
White, Mary Jo Barringer, . and ,
visitors Sandra White and
Richard White.

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 80s; Low: 80s

cannot be guaranteed to be ·pri ntct.l a

specific number of days .
TUESDAY
'
REEDSVILLE
- Ohio Uni ver·
si ty Co lleg ' of Osteopathic Mcdi ·
cine Chi ldh ood Im muniLation Program will offer free nnmunizati'ons
for area chil&lt;)rcn from birth to 18.
years of age on TU&lt;$day, from 3 to 5
p.m. at Reed 's Store in Reeds vi ii,.

•

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Co un cil meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m .
at the civic ce nte r.

1

..-':'

ry, bui said that he had spent most of his life near the

"Old Stories and New Beginnin&amp;'" is the theme for Rutland's Bice.11tenni·
al Celebration, which will be held on Saturday.
The event is designed to bring the community and its friends together to
celebrate Rutland's 200th birthday.
. Th~ day's activities will begin with a parade through town at II a.m. A display of crafts will be set up in the Rutland Civic Center throughout the day. A ·
flower show will be on display at }he fire house, and other groups will set up
booths, incl.uding some businesses.
.
· .
A Goldwing motorcyle display ~nd antique, tractor display are also pl~ed.
The Rulland Department Store will sponsor a beard and miiStache eontest,
, with awards given .to the men wiih the longest beard and miiStach~ . That con·
test will be held at 5:45 p.m.
The U.S. Postal Service, working with Rutland Postmaster Margaret
Edwards, will offer a special "Celebration Station" pictorial cancellation. A
walking tour of the community 's historic homes will be available, and local
. produce growers have been invited to participate in a farmers' market

CHES T ER Shade Ri ver
Lodge , 453, F&amp;AM. spec ial meet·
ing, 6:30 p.'m ,. with wo rk in Master

.

RACINE - Racine Area Com·
munity Organization: Tuesday, Star
Mill Park, 6:30p.m. There will be a
potluck dinner.
POM EROY Immun izat ion
cli'nic, Meig s County Hea lth Department . 9 to II a.m. and I to 7 p.tn'.
Tuesday. Eac h chil(lto he accompanied by a parent or guardian . Immunization fecord to be p rcs~ ntee\.

A Mason tounty, W.Va. teenager has dted as the
result of injuries S'!'tained. in an automobile accident in
Pomeroy on Sunday mor:n·mg.
M :ucm~ Darst, 17, died on Monday at St. Mary's
Hospttal '" Huntington, W.Va . after being transported
there by MedFltght helicopter.
.
Steven L. Darst, 22, Syracuse, Mruune Darst, 17. and
Mtchael Russell, also of Mason , w~re also InJUred when
the 1988 Plymoqth Voyager van dnven by Steven Darst
struck a utility pole on East Main Street i~ Pomeroy.
Accordtng to the acctdent report tssued by the
Pomeroy Police Department, Steven Darst reached
down ~o ptck ~p an object from the vehtcle floor .and
crossed the nght stde of the roadway, sinking a ullhly
pole.
,
Steven Darst and Russell w.ere fransported to Veter.·
ans Memonal 1-fospttal by untts of Me•gs Emergency
Serv•:es,, and Mruune Darst was transported to . SL
Ma_ry s Hosp ttal tn Huntmgton, W:Va . by MedFhght
hehcopter.
:
.
Heav~ damage was sustamed by Darst's vehtcle, and
he was ctted for fat lure to control.

The Rutland Civic Center Committee will sponsor a pie and dec·
orated cake contest, a traditional event for the ,community's ~orne·
coming celebration. The items will be auctioned at S p.m. Napper
Trucking will sponsor prizes for a hog calling contest at 5:15.
Childrens' games will be held throughout the day, and several
organizations will have food available.
Events will center around the Civic Center and Harder Log Cabin,
.
.
.
which will house the art show.
1
Entertainment will be featured thro~ghout the day, including Jane
Wise, the Swing1ng Seniors, the choir from the ChuFCh of the
Nazarene, Big Bend Ooggers, D.avid Stiffler, a barbershop quarte~
Tammy Taylor and Bev Adkins, and Junior and Rita White.
.
The cgmmunity's octogenarians will be honored at 6:30p.m., and
contest winners will be announced at the .end of the day.
'Those interested in participating in any of the events, including the
craft show, art shay; and other contests, should contact Marcia Elliott,
who has led the coordination of the event, at 742-2233, or Mayor Jo
Ann Eads, at 742-3078. .
BICENTENNIAL SOUVENIRS - Mercia Elliott of the
Rutland Civic c.n., Commlttae, and Temmy ~ a
member of the coiilmlttae and a member of Rutland VIllage Council, arw pk:turedwlttl the t-ahlrt and hat dulgned
for the Rutland blcenlfnnlal commlttae. Featuring a apeclal blcentannlal logo, the heme will be avallabla for pur- .
ch . . . at Saturday'• celeb111Uon.

Jud.ge orders aluminum workers back to work

·Orientation for

be ane nding Meigs hi gh. School,
Tuesday. Aug. 24. 7 p.m . in the
sehoul cafe teria.

'99 Blazer® 4-Door

'99 Malibu®
.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Middle
School orientat ion will be held from
6 to 7 p.m. T~csday at the school.
· ThC program i·s for all incomi ng
sixth graders and nC\v incom ing seve nth and e 1ghthg rade rs.
WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAIN S - Eastern
Local School Board. 6:30 p.m ..
Eastern Eleme nt ary Sc hool ca fctori ·

. i

um.

POMEROY ~ Wildwood Garden Cl ub, I p.m .. home of Bony ·
"
Milhoan , Flatwoods Rd .

r

•Standard 4-wheel ABS
• Air conditioning
•Theft~deterrent system
•4-speed automatic
· tranSIIllSSIOn

•Standard 4-wheel ABS
•Standard Vorrec·· 4300 V 6
that puts out 190 hp and
250lbrft.oftorque
•Theft-deterrent system

Is the Fed finished raising 'rates or is _a third increase on the way?

•

POMEROY - The Behavioral
Health Care Unit of Veterans Memorial Hospi tal wtll hold an open house
Wednesday, 9 a.m. to II a.m. Tours
·
and door prizes.

s1,500 Cash Back*

BASHAN - Revival Wed ne sday through. Sunday at the Red
Brush Church of Chri st, Basha
Road. Guy Mall ot'y of Florida to be
the spea~er.

s2,000 ·C ash Back*

'· '

/

$IX INJURED- A helicopter fron Cincinnati Children's Hoipita! Medical Center takes off from a houaa In Germa[ltown
Tues~ay following . an expla.lon that Injured six when a
propane tank Ignited.
·

•

Alcoholics

Good Afternoon

Anonymou s. open .discuss1on meeting, 1 p.m . 'I:hursday, Sacred Heart
Ca'tholic Church, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta, beginntng meeting , 12 noon.
St. Paul Lutheran Church.

See Your Local Chevrolet" Dealer Today! ·
1-800-950-2438 or www.chevrolet.com

POMEROY - Caring and Sharing Support Group, I p.m .. Multi·
~urposc Senior Center. Rhonda Dai·
ley, guest speaker, Et hi cal Dile mm as
in Health Care.

Calendar

,,

No rnatter how you lo9k at it, you're in the money.

Band completes camp
Eastern High School's marching
band recently _completed march•ng
band camp at the Univers ity of Rio
Grande, algng with its new director,
Scad WoiiC ,
recent graduate of
Oh io University and former member
of the Ohio Un ivcrsiiy Marching
110.
The group spe nt the Week learn ing new perfonnam:c t e~.:hnique s and
drills. ending with a performance on
Friday for parents and friends ..

as· result of ·ace/den
·
.

GERMANrroWN (AP) -A leaky propane tank igni1ted' and caused a
house explosion that injured six people, authorities
Three children and three adults were hospitalized for burns and broken
bones following the blasl, whi.c h occurred about 5 p.m. Tuesday, accord·
ing to Fire ChiefGary Nesslage.
.
·
CHARLESTON, W.VJl, (AP) . A day-long accept.edthecompanyUsargumentthal"diminu· damage, valued at more than $10,000.
"The children were pretty sev~rely banged 'up," Nesslage said. "You
unofficial strike at Century Aluminum Inc. will tion or oom.plete loss" of business would result if
.Marco Trbovich ,' spokesman for the union in
could s~e where they had been thrown clear ·of the house."
cost the company as m~ch as . $6 million, a the strike continues.
Pittsburgh, said the nati o nal office sent a
The explosion sen1 debris up to 25 yards away.
· spokesman says.
, Posti .said' the company plans today to speak telegram to the local ordering members to return
Authorities didn 'I know the source of the leak.
The
losses
stem
from
one
day
of
missed
pro·
with
local USWA representatives about how to to work ·to avoid contempt o f court charges and
1
Housing developer Kurt Reason's family recently moved into the home
duciion, and restart costs after one production handle disciplinary actipns .
·a plant shutdown.
in this area about 10 miles southwe~'of Dayton. Reason wasn't home at · line had to be shut down, Alfred Posti, a
"We will begin discussions on lhat tomorrow,
Local union officials ' were not immediatel y
the time o( the explosion.
.
.
spokesman for the company in Monterey, Calif., because it was clearly an illegal strike,'' he said. available for comment.
·
His wife, Melissa, 35, had called plumbers Darrell Neal and Timothy
said Thursday.
"They not only· violated a labor agree, but
A judge could issue con tempt of court
Blashock to the home because she smelled gas, television station WKEF
"We will lose 25 percent of our metal produc· . they violated a judge's order to return to work." charges if a union refuses to ,follow a back-to ..
in' Dayton reported.
.
·
tion until we can bring it back up, again," Posti
The wildcat strike, a walkout in violation of a work order.
,
Reason 's condition w.S upgraded from critical to serious today at .. said.
'
labor-management contract, began Monday
Employees received a $1.30:an-hour raise
Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton. Neal, 43, and Blashock, 49, remained
, The workers returned to work Thursday night .after Eric Rhodes said he was fired · for over four years in a new·contract reached in. July.
in serious condition.
evening after the company threatened a shut· refusing to ,work where molten aluminum was
The contract also increases accident and sick·
The children were taken to Children's Hospilal'in Cincinnati. Joshua
down if the more than 1,600 wildcat strikers leaki~g from a damaged pot.
ness benefits and includes a 25 percent increase
Scott SlaiJim, 7, and Kenton Reason, 5, were in critical conditi90 Tuesday
failed to report to the plant in Ravenswood .
Rhodes said he refused to help' with a repair in pensions.
night and Kenton's sister, Katie, 7; was in fair condition, a hospjtal .official
A federal judge also ha~ ordered strikers to as aluminum spewed onto the floor. He said he
About 400 unio n members donned masks and
said.
return to work, and United Steelworkers of was fired after the incident two weeks ago., but face paint and set up an unauthorized strike
.America union representatives a~d company was reinstat~d after filing a grievance.
Monday night. State troopers were called in
officials met to end the unauthorized walkout.
He was fired again recently.
·early Tuesday after rock-throwing incidents that
U.S. District Judge Charles H. Haden II
Posti said management blames Rhodes for the shattered 24 car windshields.
·

new st udent s and fres hmen who wi ll

THURSDAY
POM EROY

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Rutland bicentennial agenda finalized

POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club, 8 p.m , home of Karen
Werry.

POM EROY -

-Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Numb er 55

about Rutland Police Officer Floyd l;lickman's parking
SenUnel News Staff
area in question and is opposed to timbering on the site. o~t of sight when patrolling for speeding in the village .
"I've had too many places in my, lifetime timbered,
Bir~hfield said that he felt it was unfai r to motorists
Rutland Village Council heard from a local man
opposed to timbering on village property on Tuesday and those memories have been lost' forever," Stewart ,for the officer to remain out of sight without parking
evening. '
said.
lights, and said that the village had earned a reputati on
Although the council lacked a quorum to conduct
Stel"art said that he had oollected 120 s.ignatures on . for being a "speed trap."
business, 'members .in attendance decided to hear from the peiitions, although some are from residenJS outside
Dewhurst said that Hickman is expected to "raise
visitors present. Counciltl)an Jay Dewhurst ,cited a of the community, and asked that oouncil reject the pro- bis salary" in fines, and Fetty said that, in his opinion,
recent attorney general's opinion Cl)nceming the Sun· posal to cut timber.on the land.
speeders are guilty whether they can see the patrol car
shine Law, and said that council members could assemDewhurst ·explatned that the proposal was just that or not.
ble ·without a quorum, as long as no official action is - a proposal from a timber company- and that coun·
However, Dewhurst said that Hickman would be
taken .
cil had taken no action to date.
asked to be more visible when patrolling for speeders,
Bob Stewart presented council members with peti·
He also said that council would likely hold public Fetty and other council members commended Hi ck·
lions which had bee11 placed in Rutland bliSinesses, in meetings on the proposal before any action is taken..
man for his overall performance in the job, with Fetty
opposition to timbering behind the village's sewage .
Co~ncil had briefly discussed the financial benefits saying that Hickman was "one ofthe best" officers that
treatment pl ant.
of selhng limber from the land, but Ste-Wart noted last the village has had.
A timber cotl)pany approached council about har· night that any financial benefits would be "short lived."
Council members also had a brief discussion of
vesting timber on the site several months ago, but coun·
Council member Dick Fetty said that no serious con· problems with yo~.ng bicyclers in the village, and discil has taken no a~tion on the proposal.
sideration hl!d been given to the proposal, and Council· cussed . the possibility of holding a bicycle safety
Stewart, a Rutland native who no longer lives in the man Martin Andrew, who presided at the assembly in course for children in an attempt to preve nt bicycle
. village, said thai hC was opposed to timbering the land the absence of Mayor JoAnn Eads, said that he fell the accidents.
.because of the aesthetic value, historic value and senti-, issue had been "blown oul of proportion,"'in that coun·
Present, jn addition to [)ewhurst Fetty and Andrew,
mental value of the trees on the property. ·
cil has held no public discussion on the proposal. '
were Council member Tammy searles, an'd Clerk Rose·
He said that he is. not opposed to timbering in theo·
· Rulland resident James Birchfield spoke to oouncil mary Snowden-Eskew.

an nounce meet -

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local School District Kindergarten
Orientation Meeting at Eastern Eleme n.tary School Tuesday, 9 a.m . Par·
ents who have not preregi stered
their child for kindergarten should
plan to atiend the meeting .

Atlanta humbles
Cincinnati again with
6-4 victory

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County.&amp;

ay BRIAN J . REED

ings and special ev.;nts .. The eate n·
dar is· not designed tb promote sa les
nr fund raisers of any type. ltcms arc
printed only &lt;is spal'C pcnmls and

Maso.n degree.

Oakland downs the lndiaAs 11-1 0, Page_4
Ann takes on family problems, Page 7
Time out for tips, Page 7

Rutland Council hears timbering opposition; Lack of quorum prevents actions· Mason teenager dte·

The Community Cale nd ar is pub·
lisheq as a free se rvice to non-profit
to·

Sports

Auguet 25, · -

Today: Showers
High: 80s; Low: 80s

Community
Calendar .
groups wishing

Weather

Tuesday, August 24, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Ly\lia Council of Bradford
Church of Christ met recently at
the c h~rch,_ hosted by Cherie
Williamson and ·Tracie Davidson.
Devotions titled "God Knows
My Kitchen Best ," were taken
from the book "Ungrateful Gift,"
and read by Cherie Williamson .
Tracie Davidson had a reading ,
"Only One," from "Coffee Time
with God."
'
Officer reports were given.
A report on Vacation 'Bible
School was given. The VBS was
very successful. A report was also
given on the family picnic at Lake
Alma.

Wednesday

I

Lotteries

a

'

OHIO
Pick 3: 0-8-9; Pick 4: 5- 7-9-0'
BuckeyeS : 4-6-13-16-21

W,YA.
Daily 3: 4-4-2; DaUy 4: 1-1-8-2
C !9W0hiu V1 llry l'ub1i.\ hingCo.

"Gash Back offers available only to residents of FL. GA, NC , SG and select counties in AL, IL, IN, KY. MS , OH,. TN, VA and WV. For more details caii1-B00·951l-CHEV. You must lake retail delivery from ~articipating
dealer stock by 9/30/99. Not available with special !&gt;MAC finance or t:ase offerr The Chevrolet and Maltbu .Emblems .are regtstered trademarks of the GM Corp. IC&gt;199~ GM Corp. Buckle up, Amenca ! II
.

•

·Slaying victim.f!1ay hav•
btitm beaten for testimony
CANTON (AP) -. A man who
feared retribution for testifying at a
gang member 's . assault trial has
been shot to death.
Dallas T. Green. 19, of Canton,
was shot three times early Tuesday
while standing outside a car. There
were no arrests.
Green, w~o was beaten 'Nov, 29,
testified against Victwan Demell
Dorsey last week at his
trial.
.
Dorsey, 25, was convicted and
was sentenced to six months in jail
for the attack, which occurred after
Green ~as· spotted with Dorsey's
ex-girlfriend.
Police Capt. James W. Myers
said detectives are investigating all
angles, including talking to gang
members of a Canton gang. Dorsey
has been in jail since June 6, when
his bond was revoked.

(

Allen Sinai, chief economist at Prim ark Glob- · · On Tuesday, the 'Fed increased its target for
By JEANNINE AVERSA
a1 Economics, also thinks there could be a third the federal funds rate. the interest that banks
Associated Pre11 Writer
charge on ove rn ight loans, by a quarter point to
WASHINGTON (AP) - By nudging up rate hike, possibly in November.
"We think the economy will continue to do 5 .25 percent. l;he r.ate had been bposted - by
interest rates for the second time this summer,
the _Federal Reserve signaled that it may stay on quite well and high er inflation on average will the same amount - for the firSt time in two
• ·
.
the sidelines if there are no new signs of infla- appear and push the Fed into one IJlore dose of years on June 30.
That triggehd a quick quarter-point increase
lightening this year, but it is a close call," said
tion or an overheated economy.
to 8.25 percent by commercial banks in their
But some ecoqomists wonder: Is the Fed Sinai.
High on Fed chairman Alan Greenspan's prime lending rate, the benchmark rate for mil·
through with just two?
The answer lies with what new economic data radar screen is whether the tight labor market lions of consumer and bu si ness loans, ranging
, .fro m home equit y loans 10 some credit card debt.
tells central bankers about the pace of economic could eventually spark inflation.
The Fed's goal is to raise rates that it directly
With the nation 's unemployment rate down to
growth, which has been brisk, and the prospects
its lowest level in three decades, employers for · controls and thus influence those set by financial
for inflation down the road, economists said.
On Tuesday, the Fed boosted two rates 1\y a aging for workers are wooing them with higher markets, such as 30·year mortgage rates, to slow
quarter point, saying its actibns ' 'should wages and benefits. While that's gQOd news for economic activity in such interest-sensitive sec·
markedly diminish the ·risk of rising inflation workers, it•s worrisome lo the Fed because those tors of .the economy as auto and home sales.
At the same time, the Fed raised its largely
increased costs could drive ltp prices.
going fot;ward. " .
Meanwhile, even though the economy has symbolic disco un t rate, the interest it charges on .
Investors hoped that language means the Fed
·will stop with just two rate hikes . Some analysts , slowed in recent months, it is still expected to direct loans to banks, by a quarter point to 4 .75
percenl.
said it reduces the odds of another increase this grow almost 4. percent this year, a robust pace.
The central bank left its policy directive,
Some analysts suggested that central bankers
fall . But others believe a third rate hike could be
in 'the offing this year, possibly as early as the will wait 10 see whether the economy slows on intended to sign al future moves, at neutral.
Analysts said this doesn ' t mean much
Fed's next meeting on Oct. 5, if signs of inflation its Own. '
'I
think
they
'will
move
to
the
sidelines"
and
because the Fed had also moved to a neutral
crop up . .
"The Fed could easily pull the trigger again," evaluate whether their actions are sufficient to stance after its last meeting on June 30, a change
said Paul Kasriel, chief economist for Northern cool off growth, said David Jones, chie f econo· that did not stop the central bank from rtiising
·
·
rates this time around .
Trust Co.
mist at Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co.

AEP, Buckeye Power reach services agreement
Officials of AmeriCan Electric Power and
Buckeye Power, Inc., have reached agreement on
a long term arrangement for power and energy

AEP wili assume responsibility for the design,
construction, oP,Cration and maintenance. of ihe
facility. Other services will be provided under an
services_
arrangement similar to the joint arrangement that
Under the arrangement, AEP will develop a ~ AEP and Buckeye established more than 30 years
510 megawatt peaking power plant in Ohio on ago in connection with the operation of the Cardi·
behalf of Buckeye Power. The plant will consist nal Power Plant located near Brilliant, Ohio. Carof three natural gas fired combustion turbines . dirial Pl.ant was the fi~l major generating station
Officials of both . organizations. are working ' in the United States to be jointly owned by an
together to complete details of the agreements. ,investor owned utility and member ·owned rural
Completion of the project is scheduled for 2002.
electric cooperatives.
•

•

'

'

f

(''

f

•

"We're extremely pleased to have completed
this arrangement with Buckeye Power," said E.
Linn Draper Jr., ch~i rman, president and 1 chi ef
exec~tive officer of AEP. "It will provide Buckeye with a reliable source of electricity over the
long term."
"The project will help us e nsure that we can
meet the long term e lectri city needs of Ohio's 25
electric cooperatives and their customers," said
Richard K .. Byrne, president and chief executive
officer of Buckeye Power.
.

.

�Wednesday, August 25, 1999

Commentary

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,... 2

Death Not-ices

Weclneed8y, Auguet 25, 11M18

The Daily Sentinel U.S. M'ilitary: underpaid, overworked
'Lswfislid i111948

\

tor. In the same period, the pay his fallen I I .6 to make ends m ee~ though Hickey ~ys that is
percent behind the Consumer Price Index (CPI). near to impossible whe~ most servtcemen are
(No te: We are including housing and fOOd working 16-hour days, SIX or seven days out of
allowances in military pay.)
the week.
.
.
- Congress passed a 4.8-percent military raise
Next to pay, the biggest problem ts the mosthat will take effect January I, 2000. This low also match between the number of active duty personincludes a provision to raise salaries every Jonu- nel and the increase in missions. In recent yell!',
ary for six years, i'n accordonce with the EO, troop strength has been drawn down over a tht~
'plus.5 p_ercen~ which clearly fails to bring the while there has been a 300-percenl oncre_ase '"
military up ' to the comp pay level of !975. Hick- missions, including Somalia, Haiti, Bos01a and ·
ey calfs this a " small piece of a catch-up" that KosovQ. The mil itary is literally being ov~r·
. ·won 't remove every one from the food stamp worked and underpaid.
rolls."
Hickey said, " Currently the Army, Air Force
Much of the problem, according 10 the DOD, and particularly the Navy aren't meeting recruitis that composition of the force is much different ment goals. Our greatest recruiters have always
than in years past. The young enlisted person for- been fomter service men and women who have
merly was a single man who bunked free at the passed on a -commitment to coun~ and palriobarracks and ate at tl!e mess hall. Now many of tism to their child ren while also impressin11 on
the young recruits are married with several chil - family and frien ds a good quality of life found in
dren, paying more for housing (and by many · the service. But now our veterans don 't have good
accounts, the military housing is unacceptable) things to say about military life; now many are
and food.
saying, 'my country betrayed me.'" .,
Many servicemen are forced to get second jobs Copyright 1-, Andonon &amp; Cohn

By JtiCk AnclerMn ·
•nd ~ Cohn

In 1975, the United States ended the draft and
instituted
on all-volunteer armed force with a
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
promise of "comp pay. " In short, the government
740-882-2151 • Fu: 11112·2157
said that military pay would be comparable to
civilian pay, resulting iri a financially competitive
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
recruiting environment. It was just another broken
promise.
Instead, America's defenders have fallen
ROBERt L WINGETI'
behind the pay . curve, and the Department of
Publlaher
Defense (DOD) estimates I 1,000 enlisted onili·
tary
personnel collected federal ,food assistance
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
Control!..benefits
last year.
GeMnll . . . . . . .
Sydney Hickey, spokesperson for National
Military F'l!"ilies Association in Alexandria, Va.,
-,.Sentlnel _ _ ..,,.. _ _ _
told us: "The DOD only knows that I percent of
l)pN _ _ , _ , _ _ . . _ ... _
_&amp;dt _ _ _ ..,_,.,
,_-"'-,-~---of...,.,,.___
the entire military force is eligible for food
~., . , . _ plttllte ......... .,...,..,. . . . . , ...... ............ ,.,.
stamps, but that is not taking into account the
number of children or whether a spouse works or
- " ' - - ID: 1.-.
TIMt SenHn&lt;l,
CcJurf St.,
~. . .,., OIJio ..._; ·or. FAX to TfiJ .U.Z1S7.
if the enlisted man ·has a secpnd job. We have a
good many more than I percent of fam ilies eligible."
.
" What is not being covered by
the media," Hickey says, "is how
close Our junior enliste&lt;) men are to
· Excerpts of recent editori_als of statewide and national interest from Ohio the wire. Our military families are
newspapers:
on and off federal assistance. Any
. number of .things could set the
Wll$
family back. Deployment means
· Tbe Cinclaud Eqqulrer, Aug. 22:
that the serviceman loses the allWhen Ohio lawmakers failed to genuflect to past Ohio Supreme Court important second job, or some- .
decisions and passed tort refomts anyway, the ruling by the court's 4-3 times a spouse must quit a second
majority was comically indignant:
job to provide childcare. Or If an
"Indeed, the very notion of it threatens the judiciary as an independent enlisted man is sent across country,
branch o( government and tears at the fabric of our constitution." .
. he must absorb the third of expensIt's ironic, to say the least, that the same Supreme Court justices who es that the military does not reim·
object to interference by the General Assembly have themselves "seized the burse. This creates a situation
power" of school funding· then abdicated it to a rural county judge.
where· we ·have servicem~n in If they respect the state constitution as .much as they claim, they should Kosovo or Bosnia worried· about ·
take lhc case back, consider new and recent evidence of school funding · whether or not their family back
home will have enough to pay the .
improvements, and clearly tell Ohio what, if anything, needs to be done. ·
bills."
The comp pay in I975 was a·
Tbe Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 22
couple of percentages ·below the
Columbus police officers have the power to ease their departmen~ the Employment Cost Index (ECI), the
city and its residents through a tight jam.
measurement of hourly wages and
,Or officers could plunge the city into a courtroom war with Washington, benefits. In 1980, President Ronald
a battle that would cost Columbus taxpayers millions of dollars and could Reagan instituted a 15-percent pay
pulllic Police Division in the hands of a federal judge for years to come. ' raise to try· and bring military pay
' " ' i i ...
Those are lhc stakes as the U.S. Justice -Department threatens to sue the up to speed with the private sector,
city over charges that the Police Division has engaged in a pallem of viola!· and for a few years it did. But it
ing civil rights. The city can avoid the lawsuit only by agreeing to revamp began 10 fall behind again in !982,
police management and policy in ways that are accept_able to federal offi· and now there is a .13,5-percent
cials.
ECI pay gap with the private sec- ·
A few years llgo, a vigorous effort to crack down on police abuse, to erad. icate lhe. bad actors and to polish the division's image might have headed off
federal action.
..
· But now members of the FOP have just two choices: Accept the unJ)Icas·
ant outcome, which is the consent decree, or go to court and risk something
far worse.
By William A. Rusher
1\vice -- in 1992 and 1996 .. Pat Buchanan
fugitive~
".. Jt. is entirely possible t.hot he
I have known Pat Buchanan
sought the Republican presidential nomination in
Tbe (Cievel•nd) Plain Daler, Aug. 21
·
· for 30 years, and count him as one
the service of his new cause. Both times he lost, (Pat Buchanan) could aJtract, on
One would think that Martin R. Frankel, the fugitive U.S. investor who of my good friends. He is a man
though far frQm ignominiously. Both limes he the Reform Party lifle, enough vot·
fled to Europe a~r allegedly stealing up to $300 million from insurance of real character -- a staunch
promplly endorsetl the winner .. Bush in 1992,
compani~, would be cowering in a hotel, afraid that room service might
ers who would otherwise support
defender of. the principles he
and Dole in 1996. ·
come courtesy of U!e FBI.
believes in, and quite simply
Now he has tossed his hat into-the ring again· Bush to tip many states into the
But thanks to creaking intercontinental bureaucracies, Frankel has been
beyond the various kinds of cor-but this time with a difference. He has refused 1o
handed a fugitive-'s grealest gift -time.
.
.
ruplion that afflict . ~ost polilipromise to endorse the winner of the Republican Gore column. And there, in all like·
, .He has spent it moving through France, Spain and Italy, staying well cians. He can be stern and uncompromising nomination, and is said to be talking with leaders
· lihood, would go control of the
ahead of Ia policia even though his poster has been faxed· to 170 countries where he believes important issues. are ·at stake, of ·Ross Perot's Reform Party about accepting
House of Representatives, as wei/as
,
belonging to Interpol, the international police organization.
but his sense of humor is never far from the sur- their nomination. Thus far he is ruling nothing in
No doubt about it, a little international cooperation among Jaw enforce·
face, and it makes him a truly engaging personal- or out, but he said recently, "I am going to follow the cu"ent razor-thin conservative
mcnt could 1\ave cut Frankel's Roman holiday short and brought him back
~
my~··
'
majority on the Supreme Court, not
to face a U.S. judge.
Moreover, 'he •peaks for a body of opinion in
And that scares me. For it is 'the rhetoric of a
this country that is larger than the dominant estab- man in the grip of a conviction more powerful to mention the vast powers of the
Jlshments in both major parties are willing to rec- than his grip on reality. Pat Buchanan may be presidency itself."
Poitsmooth Dally Times, Aug. 18
ognize
•·the blue-collar' workers. These men and coming to the conclusion that such a third-party
This summer has been one for the books. Perhaps more than with any
· other drought in recent memory, farmers have been at a loss as to what to do. women have been relentlessly downgraded by candidacy offers the best chance of focusing end up responsible for one of the biggest tragedies
The land is simply burnt up, offering no source of food for livestock and two related phenomena: the technological revolu- attention on the principles he believes in, and per- 1in modern American politics. For it is entirely
lion, which has opened scarcely imaginable vistas · haps even of winning a three-cornered race-for the possible that he could allract, on the Reform Party
the sun soaks up every last bit of moisture rteeded by crops.
.
of
wealth to those. able to take advantage of it, and presidency. You can be sure that there are thou· li.ne, enough voterS who would otherwise support
Thankfully, our government leaders are jumping on this with an effort t.o
the
concomitant 'shift of old· line manufacturing sands of barn-burning types around the cquntry Bush to tip many states into the Gore column.
provide funding /or farrners.
While, people don't need to sell their souls yet again to save the family jobs to foreign countries where the work can be · whispering exactly that in his ear.
And there, in all likelihood, would go control of
In addition, the nomination of the Reform the House of Representatives, as well as the cur·
. farrn with a loan, we would definitely support a system of stale and federal done just as well as here, and far more cheaply.
These developments are as inevitable as the Party .. if it can be had ., will bring with it $12 rent razor-thin conservative majority on the
.. farm gtlnts.
··
industrial revolution that prnduced the auto-- and million in federal funds fru the Buchanan cam- Supreme Court, not to mention the vast powers of
just as fatal as that was to the manufacturers Of . paign, thanks to the party's performance in the the presidency itself.
1996 elections. This is a dazzling sum for anx
buggy-whips .
The (Youngstown) VIndicator, Aug. 17
Is that the legacy that Pat Buchanan wants to
What is to. become of these millions of hard· candidate except a Bush or a Forbes, and must leave to lhe country he Joyes? I know how seduc·
Lamar Alexander is dropping out of the presidential race, which probably_
isn't a bad decision in and of itself, but we're at a loss to understand why it working, patriotic Americans who have seen their add enormously to the temptation Pat is feeling.
live the politics of pure principle can be. I know
On the other . hand, most Reform Party mem· how repellent political realities sometimes are.
livelihoods begin to evaporate? Pat's answer is to
tOok the Iowa poll to make him see it.
The Iowa poll is a trumped up, artificial venue in a state that is hardly rep- protect them, by law, from the competition of for- hers have a distinctly libertarian bent, and would But ·! pray that Pat will continue to wage his brave
resentative of this vast and diverse natiqn. Why should it be deciding whose eign workers who are able to do the same jobs at surely feel uncomfortable with Pat's staunch bailie within the Republican Party, and not cripple
far lower cost. In thus breaking with the sacred opposition to abortion and his support for the his country in the vain hope of sweeping the
political ambitions live or die?
.. It would make just as much sense 10 have presidential primaries decided principle of free trade, which Pat himself other social conse..Vative issues. At best, there· board.
·
· ·
endorsed as a spokesman for Richard Nixon, he fore, there would have to be a lot of bargaining Copyright!- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
at the .Canfield Fair.
For our money, the smartest ·candidate in Iowa was the one who didn 'I has opened himself to the charge of inconsistency. before Pat and the Reform Party could agree 'to
William A. Rusher Is a Distinguished Fallow
But there is nothing wrong with changing one's join forces.
· -'
bother til show up, John McCain of Arizona.
of the Clllremont lnatltute tor the Siudy · ol
.mind in the presence of new facts.
If they do, however, Pat Buchanan may well St.tesmanshlp end Political Phlloeophy.

on•--••

---

ID.,.-

111

Editorial views

Ruling

comically indignant

City can avoid lawsuit

·

-

Pat, don't abandon the GOP

A

greatest gift- time

Funding for farmers

The one who didn't bother to show up

.

.

.

.

Growth shapes American polit-ics, policie$
By Don•Id ~mbr9
stocks. Now over 50 percent, about I 00 mill ion people,
First, these buy ;and·hold investors will act as an
WASHINGTON - The seemingly inexhaustible own a stake in Wall Street. Moreover, as Kudlow points anchor when Wall Street goe~ into one of its periodic
strength of America's free enterprise, technology -driven out, this new investor class has "profited mightily from slides, providing the market with more stability than in
economy, which -has produced the longest expansion' and the Sl6.6trillion gain in real.nousehold net worth over the past.
·
the strongest bul! market in our history, is i~piring and the past I 0 years, as stock ownership has passed homeNotably, when the mutual-fund industry- asked its
uplifting.
ownership as America's principal wealth holdi.ng."
fund holders why t~ey had invested in stocks_,85 percent
What isn't fully understood yet -is how this remark·
What is most poli~ically significaot .about the new said "for my retirement." When asked what they would
. able ·growth is going to shape American politics and investor class is how economically broad-based it is.
do in a major crash, 55 percent said they would stay in
policies in the years lo come.
Since 1989, stock ownership has exploded by 46 per· the market, 25 percent said they would buy-more shares, ·
,
In 1981, the year Ronald Reagan took office,_the cent among households earning between $25,000 and . and only I 5 percent sai,d they would sell. "
' · Dow was about 800, the economy was in' a tailspin, and $50,000 a year. 11 has risen 78 percent among people
These shareholders are also among the voters who
America seemed to have lost confidence in itself. Eight earning betwee~IO,OOO and $25,000. Notably, 49 per- tend to show up at the polling booths in larger numbers.
years later, spurred by the Reagan tax cuts, ·the U.S. cent of these investors are women, while 39 percent are And they are going to respond to political appeals to cut
economy was roaring back and the Do~ had shot up to non -professional while- and blue-collar workers.
capital-gains taxes, end the death tax, and lower income21JlP. The United States was leading a wave of economMuch of this growth in the investor class is a result of tax rates across the board.
.·
iC\i'eregulation and free trade, the Microsofts and Intels one of the most important economic revolutions in
We have already seen the investor class's huge influ·
were being born, and Reagan proclaimed that we were in human history: the .creation of managed mutual funds, ence at work in this decade. The capital-gains tax rate
:·The age of the entrepreneur."
·
which have opened up investing to milli ons of Atneri- . has been cut from 28 percent to 20 percent in the GOP
Afler a short pause in 1991, the fast-growth business- cans whci might otherwise be out of the stock market.
budget bill of 1997, fueling the stock market's higher
ea spawned in ·the· Reagan years surged · into a higher
Though the mutual-fund industry itself is relatively growth. The Roth IRA is one of the most popular savorbit over ihe next decade. The Dow has hit 11 ,000, up · young, 66 million Americans, or 40 percent of all house- . ings and investment incentives ever enacted. Next
350 percent The NASDAQ, that barometer of U.S. holds, hold mutual fund!j, either directly or through their month, Congress will send _President Clinton another
technology, is up 500 percent. The number of shares · . 401 k plans at work. Here again, the profile of those who tax_·cut bill. President Ointon will veto it, but the provi ~
traded daily hils e~plode4 from 160 million 10 over 800. are investing in .these funds shows that nearly half are sions in the bill will be popular with investor-class· votmillion. And there are plans for a 24-hour stock market. largely middle-class and middle-aged.
ers,' who can be reminded of that veto during n'ext year 's
But the broader political ramifications of the spreadMutual-fund industry surveys show that 11 percent of elections.
ing prosperity of democratic ~pitalism will be affected all fund owners have incomes of less than $25,000 a
Another sign of the investor class's growing influby the emergence of what economist Larry Kudlow calls year; 15 percent have incomes of between $25,000 and ence: Congress is now in the midst of a serious debate
the "investor class," which now owns the U.S. economy $35,000; and 17 percent have incomes of between about Jelling workers put part of their payroll .taJt:es into
their own stock funds, an idea that is especially popular
and could become the most powerful political force in $35,000 and $50,000.
the 2000 elections and beyond.
This is why I believe that the investor class i! going among younger workers wishing to build wealth for
And what a force il has become. At the time of the to have a Jorig-lenn influence on politics, policy and the their retirement.
1\vo \hings are certain at this point' about the revolu 1987 crash, only one-fourth of all Americans owned · future of the American eco_nomy.

Berry's World

Misty Maxine Dant, 17, of Muon, died Monday, August 23, 1999 at St.
Mary's lbpital.
Bora January 18,1982 ill PoiDI Pleasant she woslhe daughter of Cynthia
Arul VaoMeter Laudermih an41hc late David L. Darst. She was a student at
Waltamla High School, where she was in the Hi· Y Oub.
In addition to her father, she wos preceded in death by her paternal grand·

•

father, Junior Danl, and maternal grandparents, Okey Jr. and Dottie Ann
VanMeter.
SurvivalS include her parents, Cynthia Ann and Ronald E. Laudermilt of
Mason; two brothers and sister-in-law, David L. and Cynthia J. Darst of
Conway, SC, and Steven L. Darst of Mason; two sisters and brolher· in-Iaw,
Alishia D. Russell of Mason and Mary Kate and Dave McGann of Flourtown, PA; two step-siaters, Reva J. Laudermilt and Kim A Laudemtil~ both
· of Pomeroy, OH; a step-broiher, Ricky A. Laudcrmilt of Addison, OH;
grandmother, Pauline M. Darst of SylliCUse, OH; and several nieces and
nephews.
The funeral will be held at 1'p.m. on Thursday, August 26, at Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with Father Regis Schlick officiating. Burial will fol·
low in Sunrise Memorial .Gardens.
Friends may call from 6to 9 p.m. on Wednesday, August 25, at the funeral home.

•l t:;o'um' " !Wm· I

KY.

Betty Irene Dunbar Toney

011199

0 ~*·.' ~- · --·

-

Sumy "'Ctouc!y

...

Ctouc!y

.._.

r.-...

-

,.,._

""""'

.,.

More rain for parched portions of state
By The A11ocleted ..,...
.I
Much.needed rain seems lo be arriving all at one time in parts of Ohio.
The National Weather Service says 2-4 inches of rain fell on parts of
eastern Ohio overnight, prompting a flash flood watch today for Coshocton, Guernsey, Musi&lt;!Jigum, Noble and Tuscarawas Counties.
And more rain is on the forecast.
.
. .
The showers and thunderstomts will continue in Ohio tonight and
1-~~~~~~ as another line of slorms moves into the state from Indiana, fore1•
said.
. Lows tonight will be in the 60s and highs on Thursday mostly in the.

70s.

'

The record-high temperalqre for this date'at the Columbus weather sta,
tio~ was 99 degrees in 1959 while the record low was 46 in 188'7. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:16p.m. and sunrise "ntursday at6:53 a.m.
Toaigbt: Archance of shower,; and thunderstorms. Areas of fog. Lows
in the mid 60s: Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph:Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thursday: Partly cloudy with a continued chance of showers. Highs 75
to 80. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Betty Irene Dunbar Toney, 69, Pomeroy, died on Tuesday, August 24,
1999, at the Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital in Parkeisburg, W.Va. ·
· She was born on December 9, 1929 in Beckley, W.Va., daughter of the
late Richard Guthrie and· Ullie Maude Williams ·Dunbar. She was retired
from the Ohio University postal service after 30 years of service, and was a
member of the Workmans Creek United Methodist Church in Beckley,
W.Va. '
·
Surviving are her husband of 52 years, Roger G. Toney, Pomeroy; two
daughters and three sons-in-law: Brenda and Chuck LeDeaux, Coolville,
Josephine Hill, Long Bottom; and Sheila and William Cash, Ravenswood,
W.Va.; and five grandchildren.
Besides her pareniS, she was preceded in death by an infant brother,
Calvin Ray Dunbar.
,
.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, August27, 1999 at Fish· ·
er Funeral Home in Middleport, with Rev. Phillip Ridenour officiating. Burial will'follow at the Chester Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m.

0111'7

IW ...... ••

. . P''P bed••

c

1 ltD1a

Troopers cit ed Arnott fo r· driving unde r suspe nsion, fa ilure to cOntrol

and operating an unsafe vehicle.
SCIPIO TWP. · A Meigs County man·and a Fnlnklin County man were
transported to Veteran s Memorial Hospital· following a single .vehicle
acctdent Monday evening along State Route 684. .
The 1978 Ford F-150 driven by Johnny Ratliff, 3576'S. Champion
Avenue, Columbus, was totall y disabled and had to be towed fr0 m th e
scene foll owing _the wreck.
Troopers ftom the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported that Ratliff's veh.icle went off the left side of the road in to a
ditch, then struck a utility pole before overturn ing.
Troopers cited Ratliff for DUI and failure to con trol. Authorities said
.
Ratliff suffered undi sc losed visible-jnjuries.
Sidney R. Wise, 36330 Smith Run Road, Rutl anc;l, a passenger in the
Ratliff vehicle, suffered undisclosed minor injuries. Both men were transnor1ecf to VMH by Meigs County EMS.

'*&amp;1M gall by ............. honlle. ot:F1L11tle

a

J ltiiOIMdl hll4morelnlon lllwt-

Betty Irene Dunbar Toney._

Revival will be held Wednesday through Sunday. 7 p.m.. at the Red
Brush Church of Christ, Bashan Road. Guy Mallory of Florida to be the
speaker.

Thursd•y night: Mostly€lflndtd
cloudy with
a chance of showers. Lows in the
""""'
lower and mid 60s.
·
,
Betty Irene Dunbar Toney, 69, Pomeroy, died
A meeting of the Town and Country Expo comm itt ee will be held
Friday: Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms during • on Tuesday, August 24, 1999, at the Camden·
Thursday evening at 7:30p.m.
the night. Highs in the lower and mid 80s. ·
.
aark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstomts during the ·day...
She was born ort December 9, 1929 in BeckOtherwise partly cloudy. Lows in the lower and mid 60s and highs in the
ley, W.Va., daughter of the late Richard Guthrie
· The Lebanon Township Trustees will. meet in regular sessio-n on Saturmid 80s.
.·
day at6 a.m. at the township building.
and Lillie Maude Williams Dunbar. She was
Suaday: Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s and highs in the mid and ·retired from the Ohio University postal service
·
upper 80s. ·
'"
after 30 years of service, and was a member of
Southern
High
School
will
have
a
Mettthe
Team
even
t
o n- Thursday~~
---the Workmans .Creck United Methodist Church
7:30p.m. ·
in Beckley, W.Va:
Surviving are her husband of 52 years, Roger
!
_j
G. Toney, Pomeroy; two daughters and three
The Rutland Garden Club -will hold its annual open meeting on Aug.
Middle~rt
Mayor
Sandy Ernest Caruso, Racine, $100 and sons-in-law : Brenda and Chuck LeDeaux, Betty Irene Dunbar
30 at 7:30 p.m. at the Rutland United Methodist Chu rch, located across
lannarelli processed 12 cases in costs, possession of marijuana; Coolville, Josephine Hill, Long Bollom, and
from the Civic Center. Paul Neidhard of the Land Reformers will present
Toney
Mayor's Courl last week.
Charlie Geary, Middleport, $200 Sheila and William Cash, Ravenswood, W.Va.;
the program, about medicinal herbs and their use. Members. of all· area
Fined were: Gary T. McGuire, and costs, restitution, criminal mis" and five grandchildren: Wesley LeDeaux of
garden clubs and the general public are invited.
Crown City, $15 and ·costs, speed; chief; Joe Connolly, Middleport, Fleming, Willoughby Hill of Bristol, Va., April Cash of Ravenswood, and
·
Frances Knolls, Pomeroy, $25 ·and $100 and costs, open container; Atnbrea Cash-Brooks, Charleston, S.C.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by an infant brother,
costs, stop sign violation; Wayne A: Benji Rhodes, Middleport, $200 and
·
Calvin Ray Dunbar.
Pearson, Middleport, $100 and costs, restitution, pelly theft.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
all p.m. on Friday, August27, 1999 at Fish·
. costs, disorderly conduct by intoXi·
Forfeiting bonds were: Sandy
cation; Stephanie Connolly, $100 Nap·p.r, Middleport, $51, speed; er Funeral Home in Middleport, with Rev. Phillip Ridenour officiating. Bur- By AMY BETH GRAVES
for e veryo ne. We' re no t go ing to
Associated Presa Writer ,
and -costs, disorderly conduct; Ben John W. . Leach, -Cheshire, $51, ial will follow at the Chester Cemetery. ·
turn anyone away. We' ll work things
Friends may call at )he funera,l home on Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. .
CLEVELAND (AP) ·- Students out," Bolek said .
Harris, Middleport, $100 and costs, speed; and Deborah' L. Siebert,
disorderly conduct after warning; J'l.lbany, $48, 'speed.
who receive taxpayer money to
Parents became conccme;d after ·
0
anend private schools returned to U.S. District Judge Solomon Olive r
Company studies Kentucky River for power plants
opened the door to laptops and the classroom today, uncertain Jr. iuled Tu esday that vouch er oppo·
CAMP NELSON, Ky. (AP) Locks 8 through 14, said Ron Fel- By JIM SALTER
AP
Buslnees
Writer
camcorders,
pagers and cell whether they will be forced. to nents had such a st rong case against
An Akron, Ohio, po~er company tenberger, executive vice president.
ST.
LOUIS
(AP)
-A
product
phones,
the
Gameboy
and the change schools after a federal judge the voucher program th at It -should
wants to study Lock and Dam No. 8
The Lock 8 site alone, located in a .
created
in
1959
at
a
plant
in
Cleve·
Walkman.
interrupted the stale's pilot tuition be halted until he rules on its co nstinear Camp Nelson and 11 others on secluded area with little now but the ·
"It really sped up the technical voucher program .
·
tutionality. Oppcnent s sued last
the Kentlicky River as sites for small sound of falling water, could produce . land has made the world a different
revolution,"
sociologist
Geoffrey
Allendance
was
normal
this
month , cla iming the program vio ~ .
place.
hydroelectric plants.
electricity for. 7,000 households.
lates the ·separa tion of c hu rch a nd
The
Smithsonian
Institution
will
Godbey
of
Pennsylvania
State'Uni."
morning
at
Our
Lady
of
Peace,
a
Universal . Electric Power Cotp. · FERC has already pled study
Catholic school that has 80 students state.
has applied to. the Federal Energy permits for Locks 4, 9, 10 and 14, recognize the 40th. anniversary of ve.-sity said.
·
the
commercially
viable
alkaline
The
1950(
were
a
time
of
who receive vouchers, said principal
Regulatory Commission to study and permiiS for other sites are pend·
building at l.oc~s 1 through 5 and iog, an agency spokeswoman said ballery Wednesday when jt accepts increasing household convenience Sheila Bolek. St. Rocco school also
the first prototypes for its National - televisions, refrigerators, air- had all 50 of its voucher students in
Tuesday.
Museum of American History.
conditioners, washers and dryers the classroom, said principal Sister
"Traditional hydroelectric tech·
Those first batteries were made were becoming commonplace. But Judith Wulk.
nology is dead and has been for a by the Eveready Ballery division of the advances were limited to items
However, both schools, whicli
de~de," Feltenberger said. "It's too Union Carbide. The battery was you could plug into the wall.
started classes Monday, said they
(USPSllJ.Ofe)
expensive to install, and you can't
Community Ntwapapcr Holdlnp,.Jnc.
rebranded under the Energizer
In 1955, Eveready moved were inundated by phone calls this
sell it (or enough 111oney to pay for
name
in
1980,
and
the
division
was
researcher
Lew Urry from an office morning from concerned parents.
Published every afternoon, Monday throuJh ·
it."
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeloy, Ohio, by the
sold to St. Louis-based Ralston in Toronto to its Cleveland plant School officials told parents to send
But Feltenberger and his brother,
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Second dm
· Purina in 1986.
and told him to come up with a bet- their children to .school as normal
posiiJC paid at Pomeroy, Oh~.
Bruce, patented a cheaper technolo·
Batteries have been around since ter battery. ·
·
while they await a decision from the
. Mtmbtr: The A51ociated Press and the Ohio .
gy that puts turbines' on top of the
Newspaper A.Mocillton.
before the turn of the century. But
· Every ballery has ' a positive · Catholic Diocese of Cleveland· on ·
water rather than under it. The plants
POitmasttr. Send address corrections to The
until the alkaline, commercial bat- . electrode (a cathode) and a negative how to accommodate the students
DailY Sentinel, ttl Court St.,' PomC,Cy, Ohio
would
lake only about four or five
45769. .
teries could barely provide enough electrode (an anode). Both are without getting the voucher money.
weeks to build,· and, according _to
.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
power for a dimly lit flashlight, and placed in material (an electrolyte)
"The Catholic schools are here
By Carrier or Motor Route
permit applications, could produce
One Weck ...... ................ ... .......J2.00
then
for
only
short
periods
of
time.
that
passes
electrons
between
them.
anywhere from 2 lo 22.5 megawalls.
One Month ...... ....... ... ................ SS.70
Eveready's alkaline bauery As electrons pass from the anode to
One. Year..............'...................... Sl04.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
EMS answers nlne.calls the cathode, the battery generates
lnlily. .......... ............................. 33 Cenll
electricity.
Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may
of
Meigs
Emergency
SerBut as the electrons pass from
Units
remit in adv~a direct to The ~ily Sentinel on
vices answered nine calls for assis· the negative electrode to the posia 1bree. si1 or 12 month basis. Crcdil will be
aiven carrier each week..
tance on Tuesday.
tive, the capacity is decreased and
Am
Ele
Power
.......................
36'~
No subscription by mail permitted in areas
Akzo
.....................................
48~
..
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
·
the
cell eventually dies.
where home carrier serYicc is available: ,
Ashland 011 ........................ ..38'1,.
7:24 a.m., Bigley Ridge Rd.,
Publi ~her retcrvq: the right to adjust rates duriilg the 5tJI\Kflption period. Subscrip1ion rate
AT&amp;T .... :............................. ...47'k
moter vehicle accident, Thomas Bernadette Peters has lent her voice .
changes fillY be implemented by changing the
Bank One ............................55"1,.
Basim, Travis Lyons, Camden-Clark to many aninlated fe3tures, including
duration of the subscription.
Bob Evans·......................... :19"1,.
Anastasia and Beauty· and the BetM·t:
Memorial Hospital; · ·
Borg-Warner .........................~.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
·
~ Enchanted CltrisJmlls.
·
12:59
p.m.,
State
Route
7,
motor
lnalde Melp County
Champion ............ ,........ :...........&amp;
vehicle
accident,
Leo
Willmington,
13 W.ou.............. ............. $27.30
Charm Shps............................ 5'~
26 w................................ .$53.82
Veterans Memorial, · Andrew Wil ·
City Holdlng .......................... 22'k
.52 Week.s .......................... .S10.5.56
Mo!;lul
.....................
46'1,.
Federal
iams,
refused treatment;
\PR INGVA ~!. ~~ C!~lfM ~, ,
Ratts 0.11lde Mela• County
Flrstar..................... ........ .......28'1•
446~4524
~~
1:50 p.m., Rock Springs Rehabil-'
13 w..u ......................... :..S29.2S
Gannett ............... .................69'1,.
26 \Yeek.s ............................$56 .68
itation Center, Ethel Newman, VetTUES 8/24 • THURS 8/26!99
52 Wcta ..........................St09.n
Kmart ................. ...................13'1.
erans Memorial;
lOX OfFICI Will OPEN AT 6:30 PM
Kroger ...................................,.25
6:24p.m., State Route 124, Rusty
IOIIVINING SHOWS,
Lands End .......... ... ...............51'4
Reader Services
Meadows, Veterans Memorial;
Umlted ............................... ...41'.&gt;
THE SIXTH MYSTERY ME
7:23 p.m., North Fourth Ave.,
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 18
SENSE (PGI3)
(PG13)
Correction Polley
ova
...
:
.....................................
33
7:10 DAILV
7 :10 DAILY
with
Middleport
unit,
Jerry
AmtOur mala coacem Ia •II stOries Is lo be
One Valley ...........:.. ,.............. 39~. . strong, Veterans Memorial;
BOWFINGER ·
INSP~CTOR
Kt'Untte. If you knOW of •1 error in •
Peoples ............ ....................... 27
· (PG13)
8:04
p.m.,
Oak
Hill
~John
GADGET (PG)
ll0~ 1 · Clill. the BtWI""III ll (740) 99:Z.,
Prem
Fin
I
..............................
12
•
r
.
7
:15 DAILY
2155. We wUI chtt:k your lnfont)alion
7:00 DAILY
Call, Veterans Memorial.
Rockwell ..........................62%.
•acl m•ke • COI'I"tCIIon If warnatecl ~··
'ROT lAND
THE BLAIR
RD/Shell ..... ..........................64'/,.
RUNAWAY
WITCH
7:27
a.m.,
Hysell Run Rd., motor
BRIDE (PG)
Sears
.......
..................
..............
40
·
New• D,epartmente
Katie Miller, Mgr.
PROJECT (R) '
7:00 DAILY
vehicle accident, Royden Hawkins,
Shoney's ......................... ....... 2'/,.
Tbt moln aumboir Is 991-11!5. Doport7:20 DAILY .
Wendy'a ................................ 28'~
Veterans Memorial !1ospital; .
mut extension! nt::
520 W. Main St.
Worthington
...........
....
......
,
..
15'
1
,.
MICKEY
BLUE EVES (PG13)
Genentl M•naget ....................... .Exl. 1101
8:25' a.m., Hudson· St., MiddleNcwo ............................................. ExL 1101
.
' 7:00 DAILY
Pomeroy, 0 •
port , · Gregory Knapp, Veterans
NO PASSES , NO BARGAIN NIGHT
or Ext. 1106
Memorial.
Ncar Ma11on Bridge
FOR CUSTOMER APPRECIATION,
TUPPERS PlAINS
Stock reports are the 10:30
PRESENT TICKET STUB AND
Other Services
a.m. quotes provided
8:38 a.m., State Route 7, Cheryl
RECEIVE A FREE POPCORN;
Adt'ertlslng. ............. ,.................. .Exl. 1104
by Advest ol Gatllpolla.
(MON·THURS ONL\'l
Henderson, Camden-Clark . .
Clmllolloa ................ ..... ............ .ExL 1103
Classtncd 1\d• ............................. .ExL 1100

Town and country expo meeting slated

Lebanon trustees to meet .

Southern to hold Meet the Team

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

---~

Court News

Garden Club open meeting ·

Students return to voucher schools
day after judge interrupts program -·

Battery th at changed our way f life turns. 40

The Daily Sentinel .

Our Memorials
are Easy to
appreciate. Now
they're also
easier to afford1

Stocks

Summer
Sale

7

1

«91····-"' .... '
el . . tllj NEA.Inl.

www.comk::a.qom

.,.II hllve .the

~Llsinessman 's

Lunch Dot qom.·

tionary economic changes that are going on in America
right now:
·
·
I. As the nation 's economy grows, the -in vestor class
is going to grow bigger, richer, and much more pol itically powerful.
.
2. This emerging, fast-growth political constitu8ncy ·
• which will cut across all in come and racial lines .. is
going to deeply influence the shape and direction of tax
and budget policies for decades to come.
Dtatrtbuttd by Unlltd Futuro Syndtcato, tne.

H\

1o.

Now In Progress

IHJIII\f

-·-·-

992-2588

.

.'

SAUSBURY TWP. · A Gallia County man was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy fo llowing a two-vehicle accident on
State Route 7 ncar the intersectio n with Towns hip Road 376 in Meigs
County Tuesday afternoon .
According to troopers from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol, Leo I. Wellington, 4nO State Route 850, Bidwell, wa.S
attempting to make a left hand tu m off State Rou te 7 when hi s vehicle
was struck from behind by a ve hicle driven by Andrew P. Williams.
38141 Carpenter Hill Road,' Rutland. Both vehicles sustained heavy damage and were towed from the scene.
Troopers cited. Williams for assured clear distance. Williams was not
.
injured in I be crash.
ORANGE 1WP. • A tractor trailer driver avoided injury Tuesday
morning when his vehicle st ~uck a low-hangi ng electrical wire on a
Meigs County road. Timothy Culleton, 5092 SE 27th Street, Ocala, Fla.,
was headed north on Township Road 627 when his !998 Freightliner
k11ocked the low wire to the roadway.
.
According to troopers from the Gall ia-Meigs Post. Culleton wa5 'not
injured and his vehicle was undamaged in the incident.
OLNE TWP. · A Coolville man's pickup truc k ovc nurned in a creek
bed Tuesday morning after sliding on wet pavement on State Route 248
in Olive Township. Robert W. Amoll, P.O. Box 45 Rice Run Road,
·
Coolville, was not injured in the single- vehicle crash .
Troopers reported th at Arnou was traveling eastbou nd on SR 248 and
slid off the right side of the roadway while tryi ng negotiate a curve.

,______-·, Obituaries-·;,
~

/

••

Troopers reports four accidents

Misty Maxine Darst

'

�•

Sports

The Daily Seniinel

Page4
Wednesday, August 25, 1999

Braves notch 6-4
victory over Red$

Jaha's homer helps
A's tqp Tribe 11-10

By PAUL NEWBERRY
ATI..ANTA (AP) - A couple of
days ago, the Cmcmnah Reds talked
of wanting to prove they were a true
contender. They figured there was no
better place to make such a statement
than Thrner field, home of the NL's
most dominating team in the 1990s.
· So far, they don 'I measure up to
the Atlanta Braves.
John Smoltz won for the first time
in more than two months and the
Braves snapped Pete Harmsch 's
streak of etght straight wms, be~ung
Cmcmnati 6-4 Tuesday riight to
extend thetr dommauon of the Reds.
Cinctnnau had 1 won 20 of 28
games when it amved in Atlarva.
never losing consecutive games during that one-month span. But the
Reds have lost two straight at Turner
field.
"Thts is not a good place to win."
said Harntsch, who was knocked out
tn the sixth when he gave up four
runs wtthout gcttmg an out. " I don ' t
think many teams come m and win
They nse to the occas10n and do
what they hwe to do."
The Braves have domtnated
Cincinnati the last thr'ee year~. wmning 2 1 of 25 meet111 gs Even though

By DENNIS GEORGATOS
" I'm very thankful for my decision
OAKLAND. Calif. (AP) - John to play Jaha."
Jaha's sore muscle above hi s shoutA.J. Hinch and Scott Spiezio also
der was wrapped in bandages. His homered for Oakland, which
brutsed midsection was taped and his remained tied with Boston in the AL
achmg knee was on ice.
wild-card mce
No, Jaha did nO! JUSt get out of the
The Athletics' season-high six
hospitlll. and he wasn 't audttioning homers gave them JUSt their second
for a role m a remake of " The win in II games against Cleveland
Mummy."
this year.
Oakland's achy slugger was holdJtm Thome hit a grand slam for
\t\g court in the comfort of the club- the Indtans in the first inning~
house after hitting a grand slam and
"They put a qu1ck number on us
a tie-breaking solo shot in the etghth but we JUst kept swinging," Howe
mmng in the Athletics' 11-10 vtctory said "This was a character bu;' 4 er.
over the Cleveland Indians on TQey roughed us up, but we can.
Tuesday night.
nght back It became fun , for me
Randy Velarde al so homered when we went ahead m the bottom of
twtce, tncludmg the game-tying solo the eighth.
blast before the deotsive blow by
" Velarde 's homers were huge . He
Jaha, hiS 30th homer of the season. •(urned on both of those. He 's got pop
"He 's held together by Scotch in ht s bat, and each of hts homers
tape ," Oakland's Jason Giambi said. rejuvenated us."
Velarde htt a solo homer that
"'He's the only player I know to have
McGwtre-ltke strength. He should be made it 10-a ll wtth one out tn the
comeback player of the year for all eighth. With two outs, Jaha htt hts
he's done. If I have to hold his hand ·30th homer off Paul Shuey (7-5)
to get huilto play, I'll do tt. " ·
T J. Mathews (8-3) puched 1',,
Jaha, who had offseason foot scoreless innmgs.
Billed as a duel between Steve
surgery and has dealt wtth pam all
season, wasn' t even supposed to Karsay and A's rookte Ttm Hudson,
play
the game mstead turned mt o an
He had sat out Monday because offens1ve show.
of lmgenng soreness from a colltSJOn
"Thts was ltke a play off game for
at first base with Toronto's Carlos us, " Cleveland manager Mike
Delgado on Sunday. He wasn't even Hargrove satd "We got off to a good
in the lineup unttl Oakland manager start. but they ' re a good ball team
Art Howe, respondmg to a plea from and they came nght back. Both of us
Jaha, decided shortly before game didn't pitch very well , but we sure btl
the ball well "
time to play him.
Hudson gave up mne runs and s•x
"I was preuy sore, but I did a lot
of therapy and soaked m the hot tub hits , mcluding Thome 's lifth career
after Monday's game, " Jaha satd. grand slam .
" When I got here today, I wasn ' t m
Karsay left after three mnmgs
the lineup and I was surpnsed. I went With ti ghtness tn hts right forearm
to An and nicely told htm I was and allowed five runs and four bus.
ready to play."
mcludmg Jaha's seventh career
Howe said he left Jaha out of the grand slam.
lineup on the assumption he was too · . Cleveland nearly won tt m"the top
sore to play. Even after Jaha told htm of the mnth.
he could go, Howe dtdn't change his
With the score 9-all, Greg
mind until watchmg him take batting McMtchael walked Dave -Roberts
practice.
and Omar Vtzquel !
"He looked good, and the rest is
Mathews relieved and Robert&lt;\
htstory, as they say," Howe said.
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

the Reds had won nme s trmght
senes, they couldn't change that pat-

tern
" We had a nice run ," manager

Jack McKeon smd' "We ' ll have to
ptck 1l up and start another one. It 's
no ume to pamc It's not like the end
of the world when you lose two tn a
row "
The Braves moved I 1, games
ahead of the New York Mcts, who
lost to Houston 5- l in 10 innmgs.
Ihe Astros mcreased their NL
Central lead over Cincinnati to I'n
games, and the Reds trail the Mets by
2 ~ games in the wtld-card race.
Smoltz (9-6), who had not won

since June 18, allowed only four h1ls
in etght innmgs and the Braves
scored four runs m the sixth to overcome a 3-2 deficit. Jose Hernandez
atoned for a defensive miscue wnh a
two-run double as Atlanta won tts
sixth straight.
'' It's been a long ttme," Smoltz
said after snappmg the longest winless streak of hts career "I've JUSt
been gnndmg along."
In mne starts, he was 0-4 wtth five
no-decisiOns and a 4.13 ERA, a penad that included hts second stint on
the dtsabled hst with a bothersome
elbow.
" He needed this for hts psyche ,"
teammate Chipper Jones satd . " He 's
been pttchmg good enough to get
'wtn s. but he 's JUSt been a httle
unlucky. It looks hke he 's on the road
to recovery. "
Smoltz has altered his dehvery to
take some of the stress off his elbow,
usmg more of a sidearm motion
rather than throw1ng stratght over the
top It sure worked _agatnst the Reds ,
whose offense was limtted IP a threerun homer by Aaron Boone m the
second after Hernandez botched a
double-play grounder to shortstop
that would have ended the mnm g.
"When I heard (Smoltz) was
gomg to throw Sidearm. I dtdn't
expect he . would throw a 95 mph
fastball and a.Davtd Cone-type slider," said Ctncmnatt 's Barry La;km,
who managed one htt against the
Atlanta nght-hander " That's why
he's one of the best "
John Rocker got hts 27th save
despne allowmg a run m the mnth
The Braves put together two runs

GETS FORCE OUT - Seconds altar Bret Boone's grounder,
Cincinnati second baseman Pokey Reese gets the putout at second
base on the Atlanta Braves' Gerald Williams to end the second
inning of Tuesday night's National League contest against the host
Braves 1 who won 6-4. (API
dectsions and a 2.90 ERA lor the get an out m the stxth.
longest wmning streak by a
Chtpper Jones led off with a sinCincinnati pitcher smce Tom ' gle, Bnan Jordan walked on foin
Browning won eight tn a row m pttches and Klesko !ted the game
1989. "
with a run-scoring smgle. Andruw
"That's the way 11 goes," said Jones singled to lett, puttmg the
Harrttsch, who missed a chance for Braves on top 4-~. before Hernandez
the tOOth win of his career. "I made hned a double to the gap in right-censome mistakes and they didn 't miss ter to bnng home both runners.
them. It was JUSt bad pttches."
" I never put pressure on my self"
The n ght-hander settled down after the error, Hernandez said. "I
after Ryan Klesko was thrown out at JUSt told myself to calm down , make
home to end the first , rettring 12 of all the plays and maybe you' ll get a
the next 13 hitters. But he couldn't btg hi~ "
'

o n f1ve hits m the first agams1

Harntsch (13- 7). whose wmning
streak was even longerthan Smaltz 's
winless skid .
After losmg at Cleveland on May
12, Harnisch went 8-0 wtth four no-

Astros beat Mets 5-1, -hike Central lead
National League
roundup
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Once again, the Houston Astros
were headed toward another tight
finish at Shea Stadium Unl!l Jeff
Bagwell sw ung away , thatts.
Bagwell btl a game-breaking,
three-run homer in the I Oth inning
Tuesday night as the Astros beat the
New York Mets '5-1.
Bagwell's 38th homer also made
htm the Astros' career RBls leader
wtth 943, one more ,than Houston
first-base coac h Jose Cruz. .
" I hope 11 wasn ' t my ias't RBI
with' the Houston Astros," Bagwell
satd.
After fouhng off a squeeze
attempt, Rtcky Guiterrez smgled
home the go-ahead run m the lOth as
Houston mcreased tts NL Central
lead over Ctncmnatt to I h 9ames.
New York shpped I h games
behmd Atlanta m the NL East as' the
Braves defeated the Reds 6-4. The
Mets. however, held thelf 2 ~,. game
edge over Cmcinnau m the w1ld-card
chase.
· A day after the Mets beat Houston
3-2 on Matt Franco's two-out sing}e
m the mnth, the Astros bounced
back.

not connect agatn until the I 29th . homer and J.T. Snow and Ellis Burks
game.
,
(See NL on PageS)
Vladimir Guerrero extended the
longest hitting streak . in Montreal
history to 29 games.
Phillies 18, Pad~s 2
Bobby Abreu homered twice and
drove m siX runs and Rob Ducey had
a career-best five hils as Philadelphia
romped over visiting San Otego.
Scott Rolen, who struck out five
times Monday night, fanned in the
first inning. But he doubled during a
four-run third and hit a three-run
double in the stxth.
Rico Brogna got four of the
Phtllies ' 22 hits. Paul Byrd (14-6)
lied Curt Schtlhng for the club lead
m wins .
Diamondbacks S, Marlins 4
Jay Bell made a double error 10
the seventh mning that gave Ronda
two runs, then hll a tiebreakmg
homer in the eighth for Arizona
The Dtamondbacks won thetr
fourth in a row and sent the Marlins
to thetr fourth straight loss.
Bell htt his 31st home run and
rookte Erubiel Durazo connected for
the thtrd time in six games.
Mall Mantei made his first
appearance at Pro Player Stadium
since betng traded to Arizona on July
MAKI:S LEGt6N BASEBALL DONATION - The
9 and puched the ninth for his 23rd Meigs County American Legion baseball program,
save.
sponsored by American ~ion posts In
Giants 12, Cubs 4
Middleport, Pomaro , Racl
and Rutland,
Charlie Hayes hit a three -run received a donation ol $1,150 I st week from the

"I think this was a characterbutlding type of win," Astros manager Larry Dterker said.
Dierker did all he could to wm,
even movmg All-Star second baseman Cratg Btggio to left field as part
of a double switch It was Biggto's
first appearance tn the outfield smce
1991.
" I think n's a sign of how thin we
are in our ranks of bench players
with all our mjuri.es," Dierker sat d.
Mike Piazza hit his 31st home
run, and eighth in his last 10 starts
for the Mets.
In other NL games, Mark
McGwtre ~~~ his 51st home run ,
tying Sammy Sosa for the maJor
leasue lead, m St. LoUts ' 8-4 loss to
Montreal Phtladelphia routed San
Diego 18-2, Anzona downed Aorida
5-4, San Franctsco beat Chicago 124. Colorado edged Pmsburgh 3-2 and
Los Angeles defeated Milwaukee 5-

2.
Expos 8, Cardinals 4
McGwtre tied Lou Gehrig 's
record of 493 home runs by a first
baseman as" St. Louts won at
Olymptc Stadtum. Btg Mac has hit
15 other homers at different posttions.
,
McGwne hit a two -run dnve in
the ftrst tnnmg, a 435, foot shot to
ce nter field . He btl No 51 i n the
Cardmals' I27th game; last year, he
btl No 51 m the I 26th game and dtd

'

New York

801100

A onda

.11: L £&lt;!.

lil!

69 57

Houston
CINCINNATI ......
20 · St Louis
Pittsburgh . .....
2111l
Milwaukee . .......
Chacago

. 68 !0

Torunlo ..

~7 68
. 56 70

Balumore
Tatnpa Bay

Central Divbion

76 49
60, 65
. 51 73.
'49 76
49 76

Cl£VELAND

Chicago
Mlnneso1a ..
Ott101t
K~nsas Cuy

.

\Vesltrn Divtslon
15 52
69 51

Teus

616
548

53 1
456

......

t6

411

24'/,

392
392
591

"
Thesday 's scores

~Tampa Ba ~

27
27 ~.

. s ·~

12

ll

6. Ch1 cago S

""BasiOn 7, Mmnesolll I
·aaltJmore 5, Kan!ms C1t)' 3 (1 0)
~Seaule 5. Deuou 0

-oakland I I C LEVELA ND 10

611

76
...73
63
.. 61
. 5l
52

l ':
II '·

606

528

.l98
.589

64

27

4%

69

444

71

423

WNBA playoffs

,.,

1\lesday's first-round scores

Euttm Conftr~noe Cbarlotte 60. l:ktro1t S4
Wesl~rn Conference: Los AnJeles 71,
13
14'1J "' Sacr.unento S8

65 .484

19\
22

Eastern Conference final
(Best-of-three)
Friday

74 52 .587
6l 59 524'
. 58 68 460
51 70 449
l6 70 444

San Francm:o
Los Angdes

Co\() rado
San Otego

New York at

8p m
Sunday, Aug. 2:9
Charlotte at New York. 8 p m
Monday, Aug. 30
Charl oue at New York. 8 p m , tf ne.:euary

8

161

17 1 '

18

Tuesday's scores

Charlott~.

Western Conference final

San Franctsco 12, Ch1cago 4
Adam.a 6. CINCINNATI 4

(Best-of-three)
•
Thursday
Houston at Los Angeles, 8 30 p m
Sunday, Aug. 29
los Angeles at Houston, 4 p m
MondaJ, AIIJ. 30
Los Angel~s at Hous10n. 10 p m , 1f neccsstvy

Montreal 8 St Loms 4
AriZOna 5. Aonda 4
Colorado J, Pmsburgb 2

Phtladelphta 18. San Diego 2
Hou ston 5, New York I (10)
Lo1 Angeles 5 Mtlwaukec 2

Today's games

Soccer

•

DH San FranCLSto (Omt 14-Sand Rueter 11 ·7)
at Ou caao (fapam 6-11 and l.ebt:r 8-,7) \ .OS p m

Today's games
San baego (Ciemc:nt 6-11) at Ph•ladelph• B
CLEVELAND (Colon 13 4) a1 Oakland (0qU ISI (Jiersun 7-J), I O.S P m
f
9 8) 4 O.S
CINCINNATI (Neagle 3-4) at AdantJ (GiaviiW!
• •
pm
0
10.9) l · JOpm
Toronto (Hamilton 6-7) al Anaheim {Fmley 8-1 ), ~
Los Angele s (Brow n 14·6) at Milwaukee
)
4. 0~ P m
R
(PUlsipher
3-4), 2 OS p m
ctu cago (Castillo()..{)) 111 Tampa Bay ( upe 1· 6
St L01.hs (Luebbers 1-2) at Montreal (Powell I·
10:5pm
:'5) 70S pm
BoS)on (Portugii l 7-1 1) at Mmnesola (Radke 9' Colorado (KI!e 7-1 1) 01 f msb urgh (Pelers 1-1)
12), 80S pm
?0:'5
'
1
B:~lt miOn:: (Lmton 0-I) al Kans;u City (Suppnn 7lr~ona (Stnttlemyre 4 21 a.t Rondo (Nune:~. S7J.80'i pnl
•
S), 7~S pm
'
Houston (Reyno ld s 14-9) at New York (Rogcn
8 15New York (lrab u 10-4) at Teu! (loruza 6 I),
· O:,~u (MOC'h ler 8-D) at Scanlc (Halanm 9-.S) 2-0) 7 40 P m
10 J5 p,m

MLS slate
Toni2ht's tames

7). 12 '5pm
B :~llmlOre

(Pon.ron 11 -8) at Kansas Cny (Wztam:k

4 - 10\S · O~pm

NL standings

An zona (R J ohnson l ~-8) at Fl ortdn (0emp51er
5-6). 1 05 p nl

Colorado ( /utar.:to 14-9) at Ptruhur!h IAndersor1
1- 1 ), I J5 p m
s~ n Franci sco &lt;L Ht!rnandez 7- 11) at Chr cngo
(8 owu: 1-~) 2.10 p m
M1lwnuk~::e (Peterson 1-l) ar San Die1o (Ashby
11 -71 ~OSpm
CINCINNATI rGuzmnn l- 1) ~ · Monnenl

COLUMBUS at Tampa Bay, 7 30 p m

Transactions

Eli Dennison Post 467 of Rutland. Post ·
Commander Eugene Fink (left) presents the check
to Hank Cleland, business manager of the
American LegloJtbaseball program. Also shown at
right Is Dennis McKinney of the Rutland Post.

DETROIT LIONS Namc=d Monte Clark part-

Basketball

lime

National Bask~tball Association
CHICAGO BULLS S1gned F M1 chael Ruffin
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS S1 gnl!'d F C1!'dr1c
Henderson to a three year contract
GOLDEN STA r E WARRIORS Rl!'-srg ned C
&amp;rck Damprer to a mlllllyear contract
MIAMI HEAT. S1gned F Tim James
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES Re-s•'gl'lf'd G
TeiTCII Brandon to a m.·yeaa- contract

scout

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS WaJved DT Tyree
Alh~on OT Tony Plant rn and S Gana Joseph
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Traded QB Bobb y
Ho)rng to ~he Oakland Ra1ilers for a conditional
2000 m th round draft pld:

Hockey
Naliomll Hockey Leagut
Srgned G Scou

ATLANTA THRASHERS

Baseball

Football

.-\mrritan Ltq:ut
CLEVELAND INDIANS Placed OF Kenny
Lofton on the 15-day d•sabled hst, utroactrv~ to
Aug 16 Recalled INF OF lolben: Cabn:n from
Buffalo of the lnteroat1onal League
DETROIT TIGERS· Acuvated OF Bobb y
H1ggrnson from the l.S-day d1sabled hst Placc:d OFDH Gregg Jdfenc: s on the IS-day drsabled bst
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS S1gned RHP J1m
Magrane
TEXAS RANGERS Recalled LHP. Corey Ul!'
from Uk.Jahoma of th~ PCL Opuoned RHP Da nn~
Patterson to Oklahom:~
.

Natlon•l Footb•ll Leagu~
CHICAGO BEARS Clamled DL Shane Burton
off wa1ven from the M1anu Dolphins
ClEVELAND BROWNS· Relcasc:d K Danny
Kight
DALLAS COWBOYS Released DJ Aaron
DelaTorre r1aced LB Brandon Tolben on InJUred

N•tional

-

:.

Fankllauser
DALLAS STARS Srgned 0 Brad lukow 1ch to
El one-year co ntroct
01TAWA SENATORS Srgned C Ke11m Mtller
D Kev1n Gnmt:s and RW Bob Pner to multl )'ear contracts
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS Srgned F K ~vy n
Adams and F Franusek Mrazek

'

- t.r.

Announcing...

L~agu~

ATI..ANTA BRAVES Trnded utP Joey f"'~ition
to the Oiicago Cubs to comple te an earlier trade
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Purdwcd the con·
trac1 of RHP HC&lt;:tor Ranure~ from Loursv111e of the
I nternattonal League
PITISBURGH PIRATES Pla.;:cd LHP Jason
Chnsuansen on rhe I.S-day d1sahled hst
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Traded RHP Kent
Mer.;:k~r to 1he Bollen Red So" for LHP Mrke
Mauhew1 and C Dav1d Benham Aiiljned Matthews
to Arkansas of tN: Tekas UBJUe and B~nham to
Potomac o( the Caroh na League
SAN DIEGO PADRES· Rttalled RHP Matt
Whu~s rde from l..as Vegu of lhe PCL

CONTINUES•••

Final Sale at

'8"'~9'"-H-d~ &amp;
1!1lf,44-4;:ea-et11-e. () ~ttJ.
All Merchandise
40%-70%011
9:30---4:00

219 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

Open Tonight Till 7 PM

WNBA playoffs

layup They went ''" a 16-3 run .
tone basket tn
holdin g Detroit to
Western Conference
Sparks 71, Mona..Chs 58
At Inglewood, Cahf, After a
poor-shooting f~r s t half, the Los
Angeles Sparks were 20 minute&lt;
away from a season-endmg loss.
The Sparks shot 9-for-35 and
trailed by II points at halftime
before Ltsa Les lie and Mwadt
Mabtka each scored 12 pomts in the
second half as Los Angeles rallted
for a 71-58 victory to advance to the
Western Conference finals in the
WNBA playoffs.
"We were a ltnl e nervous, " Los
Angeles coacH Orlando Woolril! ge
satd "We had a lot of pl ayers who
have not been tn playoff situauon
before. I JUst think we were a hnle
too overly h}ped. Once we relaxed. I
thmk we were fine "
In the ftrst play off game for both"
thr~e-ye ar-old franchtses, Woolrid ge
was angered by hiS team 's play tn the
first half
" I was lmd ," Woolndge satd. " I
bastcally told them when you I!JOk at
all of the hard work we've done , all

s ur vive a ncrvc·wrackmg w mn.er-

the s weat , the blood and tears we ' ve

take-a ll showdown wtth the Orlando
Mtracle on Saturd ay.
" I'm JUst totally drained, " said
Shock point guard Jenntfer Azzi .
who nussed II of 13 field goal s
"We had 10 work extremely hard JUSt

gone through, there was no way we
were going to let that thtng crumble
down the way we dtd m the first
half."
The Sparks ad vanced to a
matchup wtth the retgning two-time
champton Houston Comets The
best-of-three senes open s Thursday
ntght at the Great Western Forum I
The Monarchs scored the ftrst
basket of the second half to make 11
34-~ I, thetr largest lead of the game
Los Angeles responded , however,
wuh 6-0 and 7-0 runs to pull ahead.
38-37 wuh 14:04 rematning It was
the Sparks' first lead smce a 12 - 10
first-half advantage.
.
Tangela Smtth' s lay -up wtth
12. 14 left gave the Monarchs thelf

to get to this game, and we

were~ on

game. I don t want to say we were
sa11sf1cd JUSt to get here , but n was a

btg deal for us Charloue was supposed 10 be here "
The Sung wtll play host to the
New York Ltbeny on Fnday m the
first game of a best-of-three senes
The Shock sttllled 42-36 wtth JUst
under 10 mmut es to play, but
Charlote ralhed when Andrea
Stmson blocked Wendy Palmer's

GETTING A GRIP on the loose basketball is foremost on the mind
of Charlotte's Andrea Stinson as Detroit's Val Whiting gives chase
during Tuesday night's WNBA Eastern Conference semifinal game
in Auburn Hills, Mich., where the visiting Sting won 60-54. (AP)
last lead. 42-41. before Lcs ltc be gan
a 10-0 run for the Sparks by hilling
three free lhro\\ s wllh II 54 lett
Mahtka ended the run wt th a layup
wath 9 . 10 remauung
Monarchs guard Rtllht e BoltonHohlield ended the dmugh1 wuh two

playmg ttme.
" I wanted to make sure that he
was m guod hands when he lett here.
and I think tHat's a very good sttuatton for him. " Eagles coach Andy
Reid 'said.
, Hoymg, who h'\d lelt practtce
when the deal was announced. will
vie with Wade Wilson for 1he back up
job behind Rtc~ Gannon m Oakland
Alter a qu1ck rclrcshcr Ct)urse m
Gruden 's vers1on o l the West Coast
ollense. Hoymg ts ex pected 10 get
some playmg time 111 Monday
mght's exh1b1tion game aga1nst San
Franc1 sco

He

free throws. hut the Sparks 'responded w1th seven unanswe red points and
led by at l e a~t nme for the remamder .
of 1he g.un e
Les itd ftmshed w1th 22 pomts and
a game-h1gh 12 rebounds. whtle
Gordan a Grubin added 13 points.

·Eagles trade Hoyi,ng to Oakland Raiders
quarterback stluattons , I'd probably
put the Raiders' slluauon at the top
of the list ," ' said Hoymg 's agent.
Shawn Trell. " He has a chance to at
least battle for 'a backup spot and ,
looking to !rami ng camp next year,
posstbly a stanmg job "
Hoying thrived under Gruden late
m 1997, but lost hi s stanmg job and
confidence last year during the
Eagles' 3-13 season. The Eagles,
who have Doug Pederson startmg at
quarterback and rookte Donovan
McNabb as the backup, get a SIXthround pick in 2000. It co uld upgrade
to a fifth-rounder based on Hoying 's

Tinn MaruncL hrl a three-ru"
ho•.•. "II {.'orey Lee IU-1) as vtstting New York kept up 11s dommance
of Texas.
One day after the Yankees beat
By JOSH DUBOW
th e Ranger&gt; 21-3- the worst loss in
AP Sport• Writer
Texas htstory - New York needed
Pedro Martmez " back fo r the extra mnmgs to beat Texas for the
Bos ton Red Sox JU St m ume for a eighth ttme m II meellngs thts year.
w1ld -t:ard run .
The Yankees are 25-9 agains t Texas
Manmez struck out 15 tn eight since the bcgt nn1ng of the 1996 d!Vi·
mmngs, hi s best start in nearly two s10 n senes
.,
months. and the Boston' Red Sox
Ram1ro Mendoza (6-7) pttched
beat the Mmnesota Twms 7-1 to two scoreless mmng s for the wm.
remain tied w1th Oakland m the'AL
Manano Rivera pitched the lith lor
wtld-card Slandmgs
ht s 36th save.
'' He:; was electnc," Bos10n manMariners 5\ Tigers 0
ager ltmy WJihams satd ''I' in nol
Ken Grtffey Jr htt t-.. o home runs
here to compare starts. but that -..as offWtlhe Blatr (1- 10) to become the
one heck of a start, to say the least .. seve rllh player tn m aJOr league hi sIt had · bee n a whtle SJ nce tory wllh 40 hom t' r~ rn Jout ~ t rmg ht
Williams saw Martmez ( I ~ - 4 ) hke scaso ns
this Th e MVP of last monlh 's' All Gnlley &gt; AL - Ic.ldm~ -lOth and
Star game at Fe nway Park Ma n meL 41st homers hoth two-au n oppo~
was 2 2 Wtlh a 4 74 ERA 1n I he secsll e·fleld shots he lped Freddy
ond half. mduLhn g h1s ll fl\t sll nt on
Garc1a get hh ! ~ t h V~t.:lllf)'. most
I he dtsabled !1st rn h1 s caree r
among rookl!.! S 1n the m&lt;IJOT:-. Garcra
H1s return Irom rhc DL has been (13-7) ~t ruck out a carcer-hnz h 12 1n
clouded by tnt ss mg a start whe n he h1s fn~t career sh utou t.
..
arnved only 15 minutes before a
Griffe) has crght homc1 s 1n 26
game and by a tirade he d~rccted at games at Seattle ·~ n~v. Sakcn F1e ld
Red Sox management before hJS last
Blue Ja)· ~ 5, (\ngels I
start
Carlos Oel gad11 and Shawn
There were no such problems Green homered and Pal Hcnt gen ( Kagamst the Twm s.
10) snapped hts lhr.ce-g.une losmg
"That was the most dommattng streak for Toronto at Anahc1m · I
thmg I've ever seen m my hfc. bar
Rookt e Billy KlK h pit ched I 3
none ." Mmnesota 's Chad Allen said mmngs for his 25th sa\~
·
'
'' Hts fa stball was JU St explodmg I
Ramon Or11z ( I I) re111 cd 17 of
had no clue."
the ftrst .20 hatt er-. ht: j ,u.:.cd m hr s
Allen, who struck out twtce. aclu- . second maJor leag ue ~ta rt
ally left the plate smtlmg alter
crutsed al&lt;mg -wnh a 1-0 lead before
Marttne z fanned htm on a curve ball the Blue Jays took the lead m the
that started nght at htm and broke sixth on a two-o ut smgl e by Green
sh"fPIY over the plate tor a called and Delgado· s 36th home r
thtrd strike.
Orioles 5, Royals 3
In other AL games. tt was New
Alben Belle's two-run homer m
Yor~ I0. Texas 7. Seattle 5, Detroit
the lOth mntn ~ off Derek Wallace
0, Toronto 5, Anahetm I: Tampa (0- 1) ltfted B~lumore to victory a!
Bay 6, Chicago 5. and Balumore 5, Kan sas City after Ro}als reltever
Kansas Citv 3.
Jcf,f Montgomery blew a btd for
At Mmneapoh s, Martinez' broke career save No 300.
•
Roger Clemens' 11 -year-old club
Brady Anderso n lilt two sol@:
record with his 13th double-figure homers for the Onolcs, who won for ·
stnkeout performance of the season.
the stxth t1me m c1ght games anq :
Martmez tops the majors m wms handed the Royals thctr fttth stratght "
and leads the AL wtth 231 strtke- loss
outs
Scott Kamtentec kJ (2-4 ) got w11i
" I hit my spots," he satd "If and Mtke T1mhn earned ht s 17th
you' ve got the pitches tltakes to put save
them away, you JUSt go ahead and do
Devil Rays 6. White Sox 5
tt l had the pitches, and I just tned
Wilson Alvarct (H-6) won hi!
to mintmize them."
third stfa1ght dec isiOn smcc com mg
Maninez allowed four hits and an off the dtsabl ed hsJ and Jose
unearned run. He walked one.
Canseco had lwo RBl s lor host
Jason Ryan (0- t ) gave up four Tampa Bay
runs 1- three earned - and four hils
The De vt l Rays unproved 10 13-9
tn 4 ,3 innmgs m h1s major league
m August. scumg a team record lor
debut
w1n s· 1n a smgl c month
.
Yankees I 0, Rang~.rs 7
Jun Parq uc (9- 10) took the lo&gt;S

American League
roundup

more than seven rr. 1tes.

AUBURN HILLS, Mich (AP) The Charloue Sting too k advantage
of their experience
Despite trailing by etght pmnts in
the second half, the Sung maintained
thetr composure and rallted to beat
the Detrmt Shock 60-54 Tuesday
ntght to advance to the Eastern
Conference fmals tn the WNBA
playoffs
'
" Wh en we got behmd , we knew
what we had to do, " satd RhOnda
Mapp. who finished W'lth 16 pomts
and mne rebounds "We had to dtg
deep and pull thi s one out We 've
been m the playoffs before, and we
kn ow where we want to go "
The Stmg and the Houston
Comets arc the onlv teams to make
the playoffs m each. of the league's
three se asons. and Charlotte was facin g a Detro![ Shock te am makmg us
fm;l postseaso n appearance.
Charlotte also had the advantage
of ,more rest They hadn't played
smce a home loss to the Shock on
Fnday n1ght, while Detrott had to

an incredtble htgh after th e Orlando

Red Sox beat Twins:
7•1, maintain tie
in wild-card race

,

Hoymg. the Eagles ' thtrd-round
dratl chOtec from Ohto Stale tn
1996, had some bnlhant performan ces after laking over for Ty
Detmer and Rodney Peete m
Phtladelplua for the last siX games of
1997
The Eagles anointed him the11
quarterback of the future , but
Gruden felt to become coach of the
Ratders m 1998 Hoy1 ng struggled
from the start under new coordinator
Dana Btble. and never recovered hiS
·confidence m pas smg touc h

'

August 26th, &amp; 27th

Thursday's games

Thursday 's games
~
Ch1cago fS1rotka 8 IOJ ar Tampa 8:1y {Ei land 4-

New England at New York-New J~rsey. 7 p m
M1am1 111 DC United, 7 JO p m
Ka~ sa ~ Ctry at Chicago, 7 ~0 p m

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Moran claims STARS victory at K-C Raceway, pockets $8,000

I

Friday's games

J"i ',

401
'"

51
ll

Basketball

Wellem Division
Ari1ona.

.. New York 10. Texas '7 (11)

·Toronto S, Anahetm 1

lil!

1'&lt;1.

Central Dh·lsion

8~
10 ~

608
480

548
. 62 63 496
74 408

OM: land
Seattle
Adahe1m

52 71
lO 14

Mont r~a t

77 48

Nc;w York ....

,19

Phdadt:lplua .

Eastern Di vision

L

49
11 50
66 59

Atlanta

A:L standings

-

II:

O.S p m

(Thurman 5-9),'7

Eastern Dil'islon

Jwn

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Sting &amp; Monarchs
win, earn berths
i_n conference finals

By KEN BERGER
PHILADELPHIA (AP) If
Bobby Hoying is going to be a successful NFL quanerback again , he
couldn' t ask for a better chance.
The Philadelphia Eagles traded
the former Oh10 State standout to the
Oakland .Raiders for a conditional
draft pick Tuesday, reumting him
wtth his former offenstve coordmator. Jon Gruden.
After being buried at the bouom
of the depth chart in Philadelphta,
Hoyt ng wtll get a fresh start wtth a
coach who knows 'him
"It you look at all the teams'

Scoreboard
Baseball

VVednesday,August25, 1999

-

,

By BRET EMRICK
and SCOTT WOLFE
D(;nnie Moran of Dres den ~ scored
1m etghth STARS Nattonal DITtCar
Racrng Lea gue sanc:tmned VIctory of
thc season S.llurday at K -C Raceway
near Chtlltcothe , pockettng $8,000
lor h1 s Wm m the "Southern H1ll s
50."
Jim N1c1 took advant agt' of Chad
Kcmcnah 's last lap nn scue to datm
h 1s ~ccond spnntr feature wm. a wm
wort h $2.000, wh tlc 'Fast Eddte"
V.Jlcllc daun cd the Ohio Valley
Dwarl Car &gt;pcctal event
Starlin g seventh a,board th e
Mc Cull ough
lndustnes/Eddie's
Sunoco/MasterSbtlt ChasSIS/Fisher
Motorspons Engmes No 99 Moran
Rac m~ Ponuac Grand Pnx, the
thrc c-ttme STARS champton shot
pa, t race long leader Chub Frank on ·
,, lap 43 testart and held off Frank by
les~ tha,nones econdtos coreth cw m

Tent h starti ng Mtkc Balzano wound
up third wnh mnth starun g Steve
Shaver fourth and 13th startmg Gary
Stuhler ftfth. Completing the top ten
were 14th stanmg Steve Casebolt Jr.,
John Mason, R.J. Conley, Delmas
Conley (the last car on the lead lap)
and Rod Conley.
Frank powered into the lead from
his outside front row bet'th after one
lap wtth pole sitter Skip Wattennan,
Delmas Con ley, R J. Conley and Rod
Conley tratilng Frank opened up a
three car length advantage over
Watt erman by lap two wtth D
Conley takmg the runner-up spot 'on
lap 3. R J Con ley shuffled past
Watterman on lap 4 and two laps
later Moran worked h1 s way past
Rod Conley for fifth .
Mora n grabbed fourth from
Watt erman on lap 8 with Frank
catch1n g lapped trafftc on lap 10.

Indians ...
(Co ntmucd from Page 4)
Alomar greeted h1m wrth a s1ng!c up
!he n11ddlc tLl dnvc 111 h1 s iJ41h run o l
the ~c,\Son, male lun g h1s career h1gh
But Oakland agam oed th e game
whCn Velarde connected for th e second time. the firstmuluh omct-homcr ·
u.un r: o l Ius ...:,uccr.
. . Shuey £PI G1amhr lO g1oun d out ,
hvt J.ih!l connec ted for hJS fiftll mul tlhnmcr g.unc ol the yc.u an d 1hh o l
hi~ ~,_·;u ccr

'

Frank ran uncontested for the next "B" Mam C had Kcmc nah of
few laps as Moran cont~nued hi s Frcmilnt had the ltcld cr"c rcd lortlw
charge to the from taking 1h1rd from "Southern Hill ~ 25" sp1111t -..u pOlR J. Conley on lap 13 and then sec- tton of Saturd.&gt;y' ptog t.tm . c'IIVe tll1g
ond from Delmas Conl ey on lap 15 . tht.! f1cld grccn-ttJ-c hl!Lh.r: tcd m litCl One lap later Shaver broke mto .1ll y uncoJHc stt:d Lt -.; bu m· l ul J .J. .1nd a
the top ftve wtth Balzano shoo ttng to l1all lap~. Kcmen.th 11icJ ,, IIItle '""
fourth oil lap 18 . Frank cont1nucd hts hard to thrcd d the ucct.liL· hclwlll' n
charge through the back markers 1wo lapped' em, a i~l \u lll pt.' d thl' thm
keepmg a nearl y one Second lead on c ushHJn uti th ~ h.tt; h.dllll'-' 111 tuln
Moran On lap 20 Balzano worked number t\Hl alte r lc-,td1ng lr11 111 -the·
h1s way to third as Shaver grabbed onset.
founh
Kemen.d1
.tnJ
16-)C.I I·II Id
Stuhler then grabbed ftfth on lap Jonathan Stc1 en' of Ch tlil cut hc
23 as Frank ran alone for the next 20 paced the held 1111 I he "'" "' " 1th
laps. Wnh only sev en laps remamtng Kemenah taktng ,, huge ic.uJ A lnt ol
the races only caution flew on lap 43 ac tion took plac e h,Jek "'the· p.1c k '"
when Jerry Rt ce slamm ed the Jnn N1er, Mark Keegan .md Alvm
frontchute wall droppmg l111n from Roepke battled w11h Stevens lor the
the actmn and puttmg Moran nght on runner-up slot
the back bumper of Frank for the
When the chccketed ll.te h.tcl f.J IIrestart
en Alvm Roepke won I he ' b.ttt lc lor
On 1hc restart Moran went to the second a~ he led Kceg.m .1 ntl Sco tt
low groove with Frank going to the Miller across 1hc.Jrnc TlM II ! H) h.td
top of the track as they entered turn started lOth. l llh and l 21 h JCspcco ne. Moran kept himsel f gl ued 10 the t1 ve ly to score 1o p l1vc lm1s hc s
bottom racing mto the lead on lap 44 Stevens was ltfth , lotlowcd by Bu tch
openmg a two car ·length lead on Schroeder. Ron Myers. Boston Reid .
Fran Moran kept htmself in the lower Ed Neumetster and Hud Hort on
groove over the remaining laps takEd Valett e lOok over I he lead fro m
ing the checkered nag as Frank raced Jaso n Gl1 ck with three I" P' 1o g u to
off of turn four.
clatm the companton dwarf ca r leaThe $32,000 event drew 35 dri- tore over Tracy Frmcr, Jaso n Gltc k
vers to the htgh-banked 3/8ths mile Kelly Mo ore. Karl Jones. Mark
track wtth Mtke Wilson Jr. setting Bernard. Mtke Hto.kman . Pete
quick ume at 14.008 seconds. Stac khouse. Bill Hostellar a.\d Mtke
BORLA EXHAUST heat race wins Reeler
fell to Moran (SCOTT PERFORSTARS NatiOnal DirtCar
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-------------------------

NL

contests....

(Conunucd fro m. Page

each drove m three runs to lead San
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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Energy

Wednesday, Auguat 25,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

D~partment

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Aaaoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Energy Department
official who initially pressed for an inquiry toto
China's suspected theft of nuclear secrets from a U.S.
weapons lab has generated a new controversy over
whether he's been forced out his job - a clatm
strongly denied by department officials.
Notra Trulock began work Tuesday for a private
contractor, only 24 hours after he announced his resignation from the government and told reponers he
departed because he was being squeezed out o( the
ongoing spy investigation .
Energy Undersecretary Ernest Moni z said in an
interview Tuesday that Trulock " in no se nse was
forced out" and that he ~ad been asked to stay as
deputy chief of the department's intelligence office.
Moniz said Trulock had indicated a desire to leave the
department for some time.
A career civil servant, Trulock has been a controversial figure often at the core of the government's,
handling of a three -year esptonage investigatiOn

involving a Taiwan-born sdentist at the Los Alamos
weapons lab in New Mexico.
Trulock, who resigned on Monday, did not return
several telephone calls on Tuesday.
Montz acknowledged that Trulock no longer was
involved 10 the Los Alamos investigauon and said
there was no reason fQr him to be. The department
under a presidential direclive in early 1998 created a
separate counterintelligence office, headed by a veteran FBI official, to deal with investigations such as the
Los Alamos case, Moniz said.
The int~lligence office, where Trulock worked, had
other duties including assessing what secrets may
have been lost to China as a result of esptonage.
Moniz satd Trulock had been involved in making that
assessment.
Earlier this year, Energy Secretary Bill Richardspn
gave Trulock a $10,000 achievement award for hts
perststence m pursuing the Los Alamos espionage
concerns back to 1995.
Trulock had been demoted from chief to acting
deputy chtef of the intelhgence office. When Richard -

son arrived in the fall of 1998, he put Larry Sanchez,
a CIA official who worked with him at the United
Nations, in to head the office.
Moniz said Sanchez had tried to keep Trulock on
as his permanent deputy, but that Trulock didn't want
the No. 2 job after being told he would not replace
Sanchez.
Largely because of Trulock's persistence, an FBI
investtgation was begun in 1996 focusing on a Taiwanhorn scientist, Wen Ho Lee, at Los Alamos. The investtgatlon continues, although Lee, who was fired in
March for secunty violations, has not been charged
with a crime.
Praised by some senators as a hero, Trulock in recent
months has been the focus of criticism as-well. .
He was rebuked sha'lliY by former Sen. Warren Rud'
man, R-N .H., in June after Trulock complained that he
had not been allowed to see in advance a report by the
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board on
security at the department. Trulock accused the panel of
trying to "shoot the messenger" because it recommended reorganizing the DOE intelligence activtttes.

In a scathing leiter to Trulock, Rudman accused the

ernment Secrecy at the Federation of American ScienBy DEB RIECHMANN
tists.
said Congress is overreacting.
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- To shine light on Ameri- .
"Thts ts all part of the frenzy about Chinese espica's secret past, gov-ernment reco rd keepers have onage that ts dnvmg Washington crazy," Aftergood
worked the past three years to declasstfy 600 millton satd . ."The tdea that they ' re going to reread material
pages of documents - some as th1n as onio n skm. oth- that 's already been declassified is preposterous. It wtll
ers yellow with age
basically cripple the declassification program by dnNow, because Washington fears that nuclear vmg it in circles."
weapons information has sltpped madver1ently from
Prese nt efforts to lift the veil of government secrecy
the government's attic, the bleary-eyed declassif1ers are dnven by an executive order President Clinton
mtght have •o do it agam.
signed in 1995. The order instructs federal agenctes to
Legislation headed for approval in Congress would open by next April classified records that contain hisrequtre all these documents to be re-examined to make torical mateiial and are more than 25 years old. Excepsure they don '.t contain sensittve detatls ·about 1he U S. ltons are narrowly defined.
nuclear arsenal.
•
In the past three years, more than 600 million pages
"I support efforts to release government mforma- have been declassified.
tion to the public, but in doing so we have to be careSubjects range from the Cold War to Vietnam,
ful nol to continue to acctdentally release sensitive POWs to UFOs. Researchers are rewriting history with
nuclear weapons design data that countries like Iran new information about the U.S.-Sovtel arms race, the
and (raq could use to advance their own nuclear failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. a 1973 coup in
weapons programs. " satd Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz.
Chile, covert action around the globe.
Steven Afterguod, who directs the Project on GovThe public already can access 400 .million pages

and reckless accusations."
"You have misconstrued your obligations to be can·
did as a license for calumny. And, intentionally or unintentionally, you have repeatedly marketed fiction as
fact," Rudman wrote Trulock.
More recently, the former intelligence chief at Los
Alamos, who himself has been singled out for criticism.
accused Trulock of inappropriately singling out Lee in ·
the espionage investigation because of Lee's Chinese
heritage.
Trulock has denied singling out Lee because of hi~
ethnic background.
·
Twlock also clashed with the DOE's independent
mspector generul because of the ~G 's recent report that
failed to support Trulock's contention that senior DOE
officials had blocked htm on the espionage issue.
The inspector general, in findings made public Aug.
13, said investigators "were unable ,to reconcile the
conflicting information" concerning Trulock's allegalions ahout interference by his superiors.

paper~

that have been unsealed. An additional 200 million
pages are declassified, but are not yet on public
shelves. Nearly 1 billion more pages still must be
reviewed.
Declassification was moving at a fast clip until last
year when some lawmakers worried that nuclear
secrets still classified under the AtomiC Energy Act
weren't being properly protected. Sens. Kyl ; Richard
Shelby, R-AJa.,, chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee; and Bob Smith, I-N.H., wrote to National
Security Advise~ Sandy Berger saying that "in a frenzied attempt" to meet the April 2000 deadline, docu-

alleged security violations at Los Alamos National
Laboratory in New Mexico, lawmakers sought even
tougher scrutiny.
.Buried in the defense · authorization act for fiscal
2000 is a provision that would make last year's law
retroactive. It would require record keepers to reinspect documents declassified since the executive order
took effect about three years ago.
"In a recent 140-page study of improperly released
nuclear weapons data, the administration detailed
numerous examples of key design information that was
not intended to be released, but, in fact, was released,"
ments containing sensitive nuclear weapons informa- Kyl said.
tion may have been released or were in danger of being
Already approved by a House-Senate conference
released.
committee, Congress is to vote on the bill after its sumThe prospect prompted Congress to pass a law last mer recess.
year that required declassifiers to come up with a plan
National Security Council spokesman David Leavy
to scan documents, page-by-page, looking for nuclear ' would not disclose the administration 's reaction to the
matenal - unless the records were "highly unlikely" proviston, except to say: "We have to be reasonable
to contain such information.
while balancing national security concerns." He also
Thts year, after a government scientist suspected of would not speculate on whether Clinton would sign the
giving nuclear secrets to China was fired in March for bill.

U.S. teen· to plead guilty to dismemberment murder ·in Israel
By EUN·KYUNG KIM

pleased ahout the convictton but "the bottom line the case would be heard at the court appearance ~ext
remains unacceptable."
week.
.ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP)- An American teen-ager
"It is our vtew it is an insult to JUStice, and Mr.
Sheinbein fled to Israel after he was suspected of
who angered U.S. lawmakers when he . fled to Israel Sheinbein will be free to walk the streets of Israel kJIIing Alfredo Tello Jr., also 19.
after Maryland authonties hnked him to a dtsmember- under the most likely scenario when he is 33 years of Tello's burned and dismembered hody was found in an
ment murder has agreed to plead guilty next week in a age," said Ganster, who learned about the plea agree- empty garage near Sheinbein's home in Aspen Hill,
Tel Aviv court:
ment only Monday night in a fax sent by Israeli author- Md. , on Sept. 18, 1997. Sheinbein went to Israel sever.Nearly two years after he left this Washington sub- ities.
at days later.
'·
"It
should
have
been
our
case,"
he
said.
"Mr.
The
killing,
and
afrerward
Sheinbein's
flight
to
urb and •launcqed an international extradition battle,
Sam.!'el Sheinbein will accept a 24-year Jail sentence to . Shembein should have been returned here, and we Israel, raised a furor among Maryland's Hispanic orgabe recommended by his attorneys and Israeli prosecu- would have asked that they cqnsult us before entenng nizations and Latino community, which accused prosetors.
mto this plea agreement. ..
·
• cutors of negligence in allowing Sheinbein to escape.
He is scheduled to enter his plea on Sept. 2.
I
The State Department was not told about the agree- In Congress, several lawmakers threatened to cut off
American aid to Israel unless the teen-ager was
The 19-year-old Sheinbein, who clatms Israeli citi- ment either, depanment spokesman James Foley said.
zenship through his Israeli-born father, will serve hts
"We stated we would have P.referred to see this trial returned here to face charges.
Tello's parents declined to attend Ganster's news
sentence in Israel. He pleaded innocent in the case last take place in the United States. But since it was the
month.
view of the lsraeh courts that it should take place there, conference Tuesday but had him release a statement
that said: "The Tello family feels that justice has not
. Sheinbein could be paroled. after 16 years, or after we wanted to see justice done," Foley said.
serving two-thirds of his sentence. under terms of the
Ida Baum, spokesman for Israel's Justice Ministry, been achieved in this case, that Mr. Sheinbein and his
plea agreement announced Tuesday by Douglas confirmed the agreement but said he had requested the family have continually manipulated the judicial sysGanster, the Montgomery County state's attorney·. He Amen cans withhold disclosure until Shembein entered terns of both Israel and the United States."
Shembem's attorney has challenged Maryland attoralso could leave prison on weekend furloughs in four his plea in court. Ganster said Israeli pro~ecutors
years.
authorized .him to release the information .
neys to prove that Sheinbein took an active part m the
Eitan Maoz, an attorney for Sheinbein, refused to killing wtth his friend, Aaron Needle.
Ganster, who said his prosecutors were not consulted before the agreement was reached, said he was comment other than to .say that any developments in .. Needle committed suicide in a Maryland prison just

Associated Press Writer

Did somebody say

•••

dence, R.I., to southern New Hampshire.
The makeover includes new menu boards, a visu~l customer order
display for drive-through windows and new uniforms.
But it's the new colors that have generated the biggest mess.
Although nary a peep has been heard about the repainted restaurants in old cities wtth big commercial distncts, officials in historic
New England towns are appalled by the colors.
·
:'Children may like it, but adults are enraged by it," said Paui 'Carroll , chairman of the Canton zoning board of appeal.
"Town leaders are enraged by it,"
.
Canton won't permit the new colors. Nor wtll tis South Shore
netghbors of Randolph and Hanson. In the Cape Cod towns of Hyannis and Bourne, one McDonald's owner suspen'ded plans to repaint
because of the outcry over his restaurant in Falmouth.
" It 's ltke one big Coney Island washboard by the bay," said
Raleigh Costa, president of the Teattcket Civtc Association in Faimouth. Costa has asked the owner to change the restaurant back to its
original brick.
The owner has promised to check with corporate headquarters in
Oak Brook, Ill., to .see if the company allows any flexibility in the
new decor. Gonzalez said repainting is not mandatory.
In Yarmouth, local authorities permitted a McDonald's to open on
the condition the building confotm to traditional Cape architectural
standards.
Mark and Janice McBee, th e restaurant's owners, ignored the
town 's wishes at their peril.
Angry letters were fired off to local offictals and newspapers,
describing the new McDonald 's as "glaringly ugly," with colors
"heretofore only seen by those ingesting halluctnatory drugs."
"I think even Ray Kroc might be dismayed, " wrote one person,
referring to the restaurant chain's founder.
Finally, the McBees agreed to repaint the store after weeks of
stormy public debate as well as negotiations between the building
department and McDonald's lawyers. The McBees did n'ot return calls
seeking comment.
As for Bauer, he is looking forward to returning to his favorite
fast-food restaurant - as soon as th e red, white and yellow di~ap pears.
"I like the food," he said.
"But I' m going to make sure I like the paint job before 1 go back."

Prosecutor says man admitted
creating 'Melissa' computer virus
FREEH,OLD, N.J. (AP) - The
man charged with creattng the Melissa computer virus that clogged e-mail
systems around tne world admitted
he created the bug, a prosecutor
alleges m court pal.?,"rs.
David L. Smtth, \[ormer computer programmer, was arrested in April.
A brief filed in state Superivr
Court by Supervising Deputy Attorney General Christopher G. Bubb
says Smtth waived his Miranda nghts
and spoke to investigators when
police arrived at his apartment
" Smith admitted, among other
things, to writing the 'Melissa' macro
virus, illegally accessing America
•

•

Online for the purpose of.posting the
.virus onto cyberspace, and destroying the personal comput~rs he used to
post 'Melissa,' ., Bubb wrote.

Defense lawyer Edward P. Borden
Jr. told the Asbury Park Press of Neptune that he disputes Bubb's assertions. He refused to comment further,
the newspaper reported today.
The Melissa virus was disguised
as an e-mail marked !' imponant message" from a friend or colleague of
each recipient, It cause a affected '
computers to create and send 50 additional infected messages. The volume
of messages generated slowed some
systems to a crawl.

McPaint?

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Network
1·1:100-1577-22?'13

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THERE IS HELP!
School ts almost back tn session and before these problems
anse , be prepared . Call the Child Care Resource Network
(CC RN ) lor FREE referrals to child care provtders in your
area, 1-800-577-2276. CCRN ts a program of COAD- The .
Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development.

)

T4e Daily Sentinel
Page7

Wednesday·, August 25, 1999

DOE official of making "wildly inaccurate assertions

Lawmakers fear nuclear secrets may slip out in declass·ified

By LESLII;: MILLER
Associated Press Writer
YARMOUTH, Mass. (AP) - Dr. Robert Bauer couldn't believe
his eyes .when he drove up to get a cup of coffee at his local MeDonaid's earlier this summer.
Workcrs were slapping,firecengtne red, canary yellow and blinding
white paint on the weathered sfiingled walls that had beeri so typical
of Eape Cod's rustic architecture.
Bauer, furious about a paint job he con~idered gansh and cheap,
fired off a blistering letter to the eatery's owners threatening a boycot!.
'
Amid com'munity pressure, the owners agreed to repaint th e restaurant cream and replace the bright red roof with cedar shingles. •
It's a struggle that's being replicated around eastern Massachusetts
as McDonald's owner-operators repaint their Golden Arc hes to
update the image of the 44-y ear-old chain,
"What we're trying to do is refreshen the stores, make them look
· better, in some cases, a little cleaner," said Robin Boorstein Mayhew,
who co-owns two McDonald's on the South Shore.
"The concept behind a lot of it was to give a fun look, a clean
look."
Analysts say it's fairly routine for restaurant franchises to regularly update their properties.
· McDonald's latest makeover comes as part of a turnaround after
the industry leader suffered declining sales and inroads by competi'
tors.
The chain last year gamed market share at stores open at least a
year, in part because of·successful promotions.
The company's stock has soared from a 12-month low of $26.75 on
Sept,, 21 to· $41.12 1/2 a share this morning on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Restaurants in the Northeast are the first to try the new "youthful
spirit" color scheme, but franchisees in markets around the country
also are choosing to gtve themselves a faceltft, a company spokesman
said.
.
"The acceptance of this has been excepttOnal , " said Henry Gonzalez, president of McDonald 's Northeast Division. Owner-operatprs in
Philadelphia have adopted the new colors and traffic is up, he said.
All told , Gonzalez said, McDonald's owner-operators are spendtng
$31 million in four months to enhance 310 restaurants from Provi-

By The Bend

denies China spy investigator forced out

before his trial was to star1.
"This was actually what has been called a 'thrill
kill."' Ganster said. "They killed Alfredo. Tello for the
mere pleasure of it. They actually planned on kilhng
another friend of Mr. Sheinbein and Mr. Needle down
the road, and this was basically a practice murder."
Ganster said authorities collected DNA, fingerprints
and other evidence, including a handwritten, notarized
confession signed by Sheinbein and Needle.
Officials-also have a "recipe for murder" Sheinbein
wrote that listed tools needed to kill , such as the saw he
allegedly used to dismember Tello, goggles, disinfectant, garbage bags and a tarpaulin.
"We still feel that we would have had a.very, very
strong case against Mr. Sheinbein," said Ganster, who
added that the teen could have faced life in prison if he
were tried in the United States.
Once Sheinbein is freed, he could still be arrested
and charged with first-degree murder if he tried to enter
the United States or any country that belongs to the
international police organization Interpol, Ganster said.
"There's 0o double Jeopardy," he satd.
Sheinbein's father, Sol, living in Israqf faces
obstruction of justice and hindering investigation
charges in Montgomery County, Ganster said. ·

Some adult children feel they have -reasons to stay away from elderly parents

Ann Landers

In Tuesday's special election,
4,015 people, or 61 percent, voted
down the plan by the Arkansasbased retail giant to rezone a 32acre plot to use as a store site; 2,605
people, or 39 percent, voted for the
plan.
The site has sat idle for nearly 20
years since Union Pacific Railroad
shut down its engine turnaround
area. The ground was badly polluted
by an engine repair shop and any
buyer would be obligated to help
clean it up.

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

Dear Arin Landers: You have
pnnted several letters from elderly
parents who co mplam about how

much they dtd for thetr ch tldren and
how ungrateful 1hcy arc -- nev~r
conung to vis tt and so on My mother tmght have been one ot those P.•r'\ ents who wrote.
When I was growing up. she
made sure we children knew how
perfeq she was and how ternblc, we
were. I was too fal, too loud, loo '
greedy. too stupid , too cvcry thmg
Nothtng I dtd was ever good
t.•nough. and she nc,cr mJsscd an
t•J)porlullll)' 1t1 \Ct me know it

I Cannot recall one happy
moment of my cht ldhood. She
wouldn't allow us to get help
because she thought it would reflect
poorly on her parentmg skt lls My
siblings and I grew up to be alcoholtcs and drug addtcts
Now. she whmc s abou t how her
ungratelul ch1ldren do not v1s lt her. I

am happy to co ntribute to her financtal support, Ann, but I learned long
ago that I have to stay far away from
her m order to mamtain my mental

health
Please don 1 assume that all
elderly people arc samts whose

'

Vresented In tooJundl(ln With The
Jldnt Jllea§flnt MUst ier1es &amp;
liaWe M(lnument State Vii~
~aln LocaU(ln • Mas(ln tt:Junb' UbraO'

some counseling so you can

reduce your hostility' toward your
mother I d6n' t know what tl IS dotng
to her, but tt is certamly eating you
up ms1de It so unds as if your mother was very unhappy and took tl out
on her ch1ldren. This is nol an

unusual scenano. Please pay attention to what I have written, and try to

Attenlton Defictl DISorder (ADD).
: I. too. am "extroverted and
1mpuls1ve." I come from a famtly of
intelligent . eccentrtc· folk who· are
creauve and product-Ive We are
however. restless and dt stracuble .
Founeen years ago, my son was

dtagnosed with ADD, and I realtzed
that I dt~played many .of the same
symptoms
'Ttred m Akron" has already convinced her husband to seek counselmg. and that ts half the battle There
are medicaltons that can really help.
m combmation wnh counseling and

get your siblings to seek counsehng ,
too. I suspect you all need tl
Dear Ann Landers: I have never
felt compelled to wnte you until I
saw the leuer from 'Ttred m Akron ,"
whose husband has had 35 JObs in 10
years I got goose bumps when I

ashes. I am better organtzcd, mon:
productive , Jess distracuhle . ..::almcr
and more evc n·lempcrcd I have a
successful new career and can set

read that a counselor said her hu sband was "extroverted and unpul saVe " I am sure th1s man has adull

my Qwn hours
· Please tell 'Ttred" 10 check thts
out before she gtves up -- NEW

behavior modificatiOn.
I feel as 1f I have nscn from the

-------=----Time· Out For.Tips
you know wh1ch arc best for you'!
To bcgm wtth you need to realize
thai there is investment nsk, and H
can come tn four le ve ls- I) sec unty,
2) safely of princtpal and tncomc, 3)
growth and 4) speculatiOn
;:;
These levels form a pyramtd wnh
By Becky
thc base hctng level one and the ltp
Baer
bemg level four At the first level
you want see umy to take care of
baste lmanctal needs You will need
an emergency sav mgs that can be m
the fom1 of cash, sav mgs accounts,
certtficates
of deposit and money
Extension Agent
market
funds
Family and Consumer SciYou should have health , life and
ences/Community Developdtsahtltty
msurance. A stable remement
ment
plan
that mcludes an IRA,
OSU Extension
'Keogh or 40 l(K) should be tn place.
There IS so much talk today about Before gomg to the next level , there
the stock market and mve sting. How should be enough avatlable money
do you know what to do " ·How do saved to cOver six 10 nine m~ nths of
you know how to jnvcst') There ai"e ltvmg c.penses.
At the next level , safety of pnnctso man y option&gt; that can help yo u
reach your financtal goals, how do pal and income arc stressed. Invest-

ments such as corporate or mum CJ·
pal bonds. treasury
se~.: untJes . \ong · term CO' s, zero
coupon bonds and real estate (your
home ) are acqutred to produce
m come

':&lt;.

Follow ing arc some constderattons lor the begmnmg mvestor

Realize that you are not go tng to get
nch quack Yu~u have to learn how to
go wtth the ups and downs of the
market You do not want to put all of

These mvestments are not ·as hq- your egg s in one basket.
Dtvc rstficatt on ts the key to
utd, but there will probably be a
higher yteld. wtth safety sttll bemg sound inve sting Spread out your
emphasiZed Real estate is mcluded nsks . b~ca use every company and
because 11 offers tax benefits and mutual fund has the capabiltty of
usually apprecmtes quite sig nifi cant- losing money at some umc.
Don't 1nvest 1n stocks and bonds
ly.
·r
Level three deals wtth mvestmg unttl you have at least ntne months
for growth Investments in thts level wonh of tn come saved for cmergenare riskier. They are not as hqutd, ctes. Thts money can be kept tn &lt;;:DS
but the potential for growth ts there. or monev market funds.
Arc You mvestmg Ifor mcome or
Mutual funds, convertible hoods and
for
growth' Do you want immediate
rentable propeny fall tn thts categoincome
or long-term apprectatton'
ry
stocks , bonds or mutual
Choose
Speculation is at the top of the
nsk level. It can involve speculative funds that correspond to your goals
stocks. commodtties and gold and Know what to expect
Begtn wtth mve sttng only tn
other prectous metals that can greatstocks
and bond~ of maJor compaly fluctuate in value

Thomas family.·holds 25th annual reunion
TI1 e Thomas Famtly reuniOn was
held lui) 3 1 and Augu st I, cclcbratmg 25 years wnhout tnterruptwn of
thdr annual farml y rcunton
The famtl y. met on July 31 at the
Amencan Legton tn Mtddl epo rt ,
vas1tmg, pby111£ games enJoytng
mu stc .md_ food Attcndtng were
Fr~:U · Th o ma~.

Bob

and

Jl.!an

Thom.tS . Jom and Ann Thoma),
John

Gu1a. C.1t1c and

Whttn~y

Thomas. Todd Thomas. Shawn

Th omas. Peggy Thomas, Charles
Thomas. Daisy Thomas, Barbara.
l&lt;lenncth, Thomas and Sarah
Batlt eld, Roben Delay, Robert and
Vtrgtnla Arbaugh. · Kelly Canan,
M tchael Hatley and Jan Genies.
Wmnang

pnzes

were ·

Ann

Thomas. Mt chael Hatley (both twottmo wmncrs). Sarah Barfield , Calle
Thomas and Todd Thomas.
The "No Doubt I Am a Thomas"
group met on August I at General

Hartinger Park tn Mtddleport for the Thomas, Bob Arbaugh and Mtchael
Thomas "Feast of the Year " The Hatl ey
Also m attendance were Larry
group enJoyed another meal , vistted
and gave gtfts to the tollowmg· Peck, June Thomas, Rosella StewShawn Thomas for traveling the far- art. Stephanie. Dantellc and Tony
thest, Hazel Peck. oldest tn allen- Kmg . Joe. Ltsa and Josh Thomas
dan ce, Josh Thomas, youngest , Jim June Thomas and Walter Thoma~
Bob Thomas was elected prestand Ann Thoma&lt;. most tamtly mem bers presen t, and Todd Thomas, dent for 2000 and Jean Thomas as
wtnner of the door prize, the secretary Mr and Mrs. Bob Tiwmas
were offtccrs for 1999. and were
"Thomas F~m1ly Tree "
Other prizes were won by A I. commended for thetr work

The Commun11 y Calendar 1s pub, ll shcd as '' lice serv 1ce h) non-prortl
g10ups ""'lslimg to an~oum:c mcc tmgs and "pcual ~\ cnt s The calend!lJ 1s not dc stgncd to promote sale s
or fund rmsers ul,my type. Items arc
pnntcd on ly Js space permit s and
cannol be guaranlccd lll be pnntcd a
spC L' Iftc nu~mbc r nf day~

~'cd nc sd.1y,

9 am
and door pn zcs

10

II a.m . Tours

ley. guest speaker. Elhtcal Dtlemmas
to Health Care

BASHAN - Rcvt va l Wednesday th10ugh Sunday, p m . at the Red
Brush Church of Chmt, Bashan
Road. Guy Mall ory of Flonda Jo he
tho speaker.

POMEROY - Btg Bend Gtrl
Scouts Servtce Untt. 7 p m. Metgs
County Publtc Ltbrary. Pomeroy
Leaders should bring "Safety Wt se"
hook.

THURSDAY
Alcoholtcs
POMEROY
WEDNESDAY
Anonymous.
open
d1scuss1on
meetTUPPERS PLAINS
Eastctn
Local School Board . 6 10 p m , . ing . 7 p.m Thursday. Sacred Heart
Eastern El ementary School cafeton · Catholtc Church. Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy
um.

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
meellng. 7 30 p m Name drawm g to
be held.

POMEROY
Wtldwood Gar. den Club. I p m , home of· Betty
Mt lhoan, Flatwoods Rd.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
•Beta, bcgmning meeting. 12 noon.
St Paul Luth~ran Church.

POMEROY -Caring and SharPOMEROY - The Bcha&gt;toral
Health Care Untt of Veterans Memo- tng Support Group. I p.m , Multinat Hospital INti I hold an open house · purpose Scnwr Center, Rhond a Dai-

SACRAMENTO, Caltf (AP)
- The Ca ltforma govern ur must
decide whether Ronald Reagan
tans can diSplay the Republtcan's
hkcnc ss o n l11ctr cars
The ln.:~nsc plateS', whu.: h
would be destgned by th e Reagan
Prestdcnttal Ltbrary and the
Department of Motor Vehicles .
were approved Tuesday tn a 30-4
state Senate vote.
.

Gov Gr.ty Dav1s . a Democrat.
h.ts IHH sa1d whether he wou ld
Sll!n th e measure 1nto law
.. D.tvls ~j s awa re of Reaga n s
posttwn 1n ha swry us the first
Ctllllornt.l governor to he clc.: tcd
ptcstdcnt, s p ~ l h's\\Oman Htla ry ,
McLc.trl

~.11d

,

fh!.! ~,;ar tags' $50 tl11tlal cost
and ~40 .tnn u,tl tcn cwa ls \\tHJ id
gn tnw.ll d the -lOth president ~
lihl.ll )'
Rc~tg.tn .

8K . !u..,

rnad~:

lev.. puh ·

IlL' dJlJll':ll.lllle" "IlK!.! .um ounr.: mg
ft\c y~..·.1t s .~~~) th .u he h.b
Allht.'lllll'l · , d i ..,L',I "l'

WOMAN IN PHOE.N IX
• DEAR NEW WOMAN: You
told her. and I hope she sees your
advtce and takes H I could not have
prO!Iuccd a rcspon '" th~t was any

better -- or as good as -- yours
You vc walked tn her shoes Thanks
for wnung
Dear Ann landers : I feel as
though I am·betng treated unfatrly
by my across the street ne1ghhors
Wl; hav e been good f ncnd:.. for many
years, and have done each other several favors The1r dau ghter,.., g~tt1ng
nlarncd next month The y kn ow I
ha\'e a small \ 1deOLapmg bu:..mc..,.., ,
and that my speetalty ts wedd1ngs I
have 1101 been a"l-.l!d to\ 1deutape the
wedd1 ng and I am te rnhl~ hun h!
thiS

Am I cnwkd tu a n e'&lt;planauc;n 1 I
..,urc v. ou ld 11\...c lu lla\ c nne I m .1n
oldet" gu: and mature l.! nough to take
1t. hut I don t kno\.1. hm\ to dl l

HARRISONVILLE - Testtng
chmc by Holzer Medical Center,
Sctpto ftre statton. Testmg to mclude
cholesterol, bloOII sugar. blood pressure. and body fat analySts_ Semor
citi zens to meet at 1th1s time. Puhlic
mvtted.

family reum on, Satutday. ; p m .

Old Man s Cave State Park at the
sheller house left of the v1~11tH ·s
center Those attendmg arc to take a
covered d1sh a nd fam1ly memOiahll -

ta Campmg Sites avatlable
HARRISONVILLE
Harnsonvtlle Lodge 411. F&amp;AM. to
host Scotttsh Rtte Players Club at
Masomc Temple on Saturday. dtnncr
at 6·30 p m , at no charge. followed
hy pay at 7 30 .
CHESTER ShadC Rt vcr
Lodge, 453, F&amp;AM, special mecttng, Saturday Breakfast at 8 a m .
wtth meetmg at 9 Work in the Fellow Craft degree.

SATURDAY
LOGAN ...:.. Annual Staneart

9th ANNUAL

GALLIA COUN1Y GOSPEL SING
Friday, August 27
5:00 pm till 12:00 pm
Saturday, August 28 5:00 pm till12:00 pm

GALLIA COUN'IY FAIRGROUNDS
State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio
CAMPING AVAILABLE
CALL

mrs They bd\C proH' n thc1r \alu e.
there t ~ a lot of mformall on ahuut
them , and you t:an ah~a)~ find a
huyer m case you want to sell Buy
stock that you Lan antti..: lpatc \1.111
apprel..t,\lc or pay h1gh di\ldcnd:-.

. Stay away from brokers who arc
cun)ti:ln tly re~.:ormnend1n g tra9t: ~
The commissiOn that · they demand
wtth ca~,; h transacuon can conr.ume
you r profits

'

lose Dory 't gtve m

{

•

Li~l'

.mJ tcad her ra~t ~.:olumn~ . \ 1\ll
the CrcdWr~ Syndicate wch page at
\\\\\\ ne:.Hor~ com

dn IO"\l' try to fi gure out what ~ ·c n t
y., ron g. "o 11 can be- uv01dcd I..tier
F1n&lt;J II) thc · hc~t v.ay to keep
abr~a~t ol v. hat as happcntng 111 thts
con::. t.mtl ~ Lha ngmg and chal\cngmg
m.1rkct ts to read AntelL·~ can he
found Jt:g:ularly m trade publu.:a ...
liOns. new spapers and mass maga-

10

lJOe!;

If you do your homework and
WISely constder each market slrale·
~) and "hat you want from your
fund s. your money should grow.

more. If you

BER

•

8' X 8'
Treated Deck l(jt

sgggg

QuaUtty Treated Deck Package. lnc:lutles
allumber M1d hardware lor a pertect decl&lt;.
Need somethmg bigger, want - N hlr'lcy.
bring
a piclufe 0&lt; a design and let us help
you create the dect&lt; of your dreams Rail Kits

Us

sold sepemety

I ,
I I I I
..................
·····t

Wasp and
Hornet Killer

as low as

$1599

gallon

OUr -

quality exterior

point. Long

lasting and htgh hidtng. Fade and mtldew
resistant Easy 6011p and water cleanup.
ready mbced, custom and comPuter
matched colors available
FLAT ,
SAnN

2 for
~5
17 5 OZ.
Kills on contoct wnp and
hornet spray SAVE NOW I

'1619

White Painted and Galvanized Metal Roofing
Now tn stock. 29 gauge white painted roo~ng
panels, lays a full 36" fO&lt; fast roofing Also
check out the quality galvanized roo~ng in
'SI/ond corrugated. oil three awtlabte 1n lenott.l
up to t 6 feet At O'Dells we offer qualtiy
oducts ond a chooce Del'
IS t""'
2' coverage

!I corrugated
10 corrugated
tZCO&lt;rugated

sue
$7.29
$8.71

3' cowr-o!

8' sv 1_ $7.71
8' w hte panted 111.12
tO fN $8.71
to wtwe paned 113.10
1ZfN $11.89 _ 1Zwlltepainled · 116.18

P.1'*
LUMBER
VINE STAT THIRD AVE 634 EAST MAIN ST
O'DELL

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•740 446-1276

POMEROY, OHIO

740 992-5500

one of the more critical fattors in the determination of benefits is
the amount of income both earned and unearned that is ge_nerated in
a household. For that reason, the federal gouernment deueloped the
IEUS program. The Income Eligibility Uerific~tion Sys~em ~as crea~ed
so that the Ohio Department of Human Serutces receiUes mformatton
on income and other benefits from three sources. Those sources are
the Ohio Bureau of Employm~nt Seruices, the Social Security
Rdministration, and the IRS.
The 1EUS system checlcs the records of those three agencies against
the Ohio Department of Human Serulces (ODHS) records to identify all
sources of income and benefits receiued by the assistance group. In
addition to the IEUS check:, the ODHS is also able to uiew and
eHchange information with the Ohio Bureau of Work:ers'
Compens~tion.

In reg.ards to ouerpayments made by the agency, there are numerous auenues to recouery to those benefits. Ouerpayments can be
DON'T MISS IT!!
recouered by uoluntary repayment agreements, recoJJpment of
30 TO 40 GOSPEL GRQUPS
money from future benefits, and by withholding the amounts from
ADMISSION FREE!!
Rain or Shine In or Out
:...- . future income taH returns. R new computer system called RBRCUS has
Bring Chairs Some Seating Available ··- - recently been installed that will. enable the agency to rec_o~d. and
track: the recouery of payments and other fraud related actiUittes.

Concession Stand
'
For. info call: 740-441-1929 1 bGI

.1' ./' ·, r ,I' ,I' .I' ./'

;.r

Whether used by themselues or in a group, this eKchange of information can be a powerful tool in the fight against fraud .

,I'

I

•

$3 75 (t ht s mdudes postage and
h a ndhn~ J 10 Brtdes c/o Ann Lande". PO Box 11562. Chtcago. Ill
606li-IJ562 (In Canada , send
$455 I
Tn fmd out more ahOut Ann Lan-

Dcc1dc ahe ad of ll me tht:: max 1
mum .mwunL that yo u arc wtl II ng to

..
•

addressed. long . bu smcss SIZC envelope and a check or money order for

REPORTING INCOME
MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT O.F HUMAN SERUICES
Hotline 740.-992-388.8

•.

..1'..1'..1'..1'..1'..1'..1'..1'.1'

tuw;rd them. rm sure I'll get an
mvttatt on 10 the weddtng, then
what &gt; - OKLAHOMA CITY
- DEAR E.M.: Go . be gractous.
and kee p your mouth shut. Your
netghhors do not owe you the job In
fact. they may have assumed you'd
prefer to he a guest instead of an
empi O)CC
When planntng a wedding, who
pays for what'' Who stands where 0
The Ann Landers Gutde for Bndes'
has all the answers Send a self

•

'1519

Community Calendar

'
Californifl governor to
decide if Reagan makes
it to license plates

• Free To The Public
• Thursday
August 26, 1999
• 7:30p.m.
• Battle Monument
State Park.

g~t

1997, los Angeles
Cre&lt;ftors

Voters say no to proposed Wai-Mart
By KIM CURTIS
Associated Preaa Writer
EUREKA, Calif. (AP) - Voters
have rejected a proposal by WalMart to build a store on property
that some consider this fading timber town's final chance to develop a
deep-water, commercial port.
"I think what our community
said is we can't be hought and we
control our future," said Patty Berg,
who led the fight against Wal-Mart.
"I'm ecstatic. I thought it was going
to be much closer than this.''

wretched children abuse them. Some
old folks are downright mean. and I
can attest to that fact. -- STILL
SCARRED IN TEXAS
DEAR TEXAS: I hope you will

�•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

&lt;:;ounty Hands - On Career Camp held

First Meigs

fi.mtly

~edicine .
Associate

with this sy ndro me. however.
The re I S no cure o r c.vc n a single

Ohio

treatment that helps all s~ffe rcrs.
bu t there an: a number of treat-

Unlv..-.lly

Professor

College or
Oet~lhlc

of F~mily Medicine

Question: I have a friend who
had h~r leg brok en in a car acc ident .about o ne year ago. The
bones healed. or so · her doctors
have toid her.
Despite the healin g, she is crippled by severe pain in that· leg.
They are treating her for a condi tion called refl ex sympathetic dystrophy. What is this '?
Answer: Rell ex sy mpath etic
dystrophy is an older ex pressio n
that has fallen from th e preferred
list of medi cal termin ology
because it fails to accurate ly
desc ribe this health problem .

not equal lack of hope fur those

IOJury

intense pain w.here the origi na l
was not to the nerve s .and

me nts that g1vr· hcncfil.
It typically requires the combincd efforts of physicians in sev·
aal spec1al ti es to ge t optima l

there is no ide nti fiab le damage to

relief. An ort hopedi c surgeon, a

them .

neu rolog ist. a pai n management

Medic1M

This makes Type I actua ll y sy n- e•rert and a psvcholo"ist or osvonymo us with the' older rdlcx · In Jaws.
-~- ~~-w. riter
~~
· ley appears
~
~-~
Peter Bench

sy mpathetic dystrophy co nd!tion..

as

referred to as "causalgia" in older
medical lite rattue.

·

For a diagno sis of CRPS, the
pain mu st nol only be more i'nt cnsc
tlian would be expected. it mu st

The mode_rn name for thi s co n- . also fail ·lO improve as thl: injur y
dition is "com.p lex r egtona l pain herd s.

s yndrome " (CRPS). This cu mberso me label · more accu rate ly

And as I· stated carltcr. the pain

renects the co mpli cated an.d some what variable na ture of thi s d isor-

der.
The cons istent. feature. of the
problem is pam that is far more

intense than the de gree of injury
would normally · produce.
I'm sure that your friend wi ll
vouch fo r th is The patn also
.involves the region '--- in yo ur
friend 's case this is probably the
· entire leg or both legs - rather
than just. the area of inJury.
CRPS is subdivided int o two
categories. The first. ca lled Type I.
is used to describe re sidual.

is in the entirl: reg ion. typi~nlly the
injured limb, not JWil. at · the ·pnint
o f trauma . Th ere is .associa ted
abnorma lity in tempera ture regubti on and sweating in that part of
the body as well a~ a change 111
sensory percepti on.

use of them.
Charle s Mcntgcs. representing ~
the Garnet · A. Wilson Public
Library of Pike County, recommended approl'al uf Affiliate ,
mcmher contracts for·Ross Cor- ·

Cit~·

Ltbrat)'. the Board

,

.""'~ :'

-,,
'

.

\,,,,'
\

invo lvi ng mcdi C ~n cs. phys·ical
therapy. co unseling and occaSion-

Th~se

OVAL

40 742-8888

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

•••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

• .BtAue HEARING AID CENTER ••
friday, August 27, 1999
••

questions , · write to John C.
Wolf, D.O ., Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medi·
cine; Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

•

••
•

l

~

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

8124/99 1 mo. pd

YOUIIG'S

HARDWARE

DaHy· Sentinel

1 03 South 2nd, Muon, WV

Phone:

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Roam oddHiono &amp; Romodollng
•NewGsrogu
•Eiectrlcol &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp; Guttera
•VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
•Palla &amp; Porch Docila

773·5583

frH

Public Notice

Public Notice

materials and peitormlng
PUBUC NOTICE .
, NOTICE Ia hereby given all labor nocesaary for the
that
on
Saturday, replacement of the existing
Sopamber 4, ,1999, at10:00 steam bollera and appura.m., a public sale will be tenant equipment at the
held at 211 Woat Second · Southern Hlg h School.
StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio, The Work shall be In conformity
Fti'IIMir't Bank and Savings to tho Drawings and
Company parlclng lot, to sell Specifications prepared by
• tor caah the following cal· Marr Knapp Crawfls
Aoaoclatea Inc.
!-I:
Plano and Spoclflcatlona
1813 JEEP CHEROKEE
for
Information purpoaea,
1J4GZ78S8PC569599
1993 FORD THUNDERBIRD are on file- at the Office of
the . Superintendent of
1FAPP6249PH189813
18INI
OLDSMOBILE Southern Local School
Clatrlct, District Office.
tG3CW89B7G4311160
Building,
Box 176, Racine,
The. Farmora Barik and
. Company, Ohio · and tho Ofllco of ttt_e
.Savlnga
Pomeroy, Ohio, raaarvee Architect.
Caplea of Specifications,
1111 right to bid at thla aala,
ond to withdraw the above Drawlnga and Proposal
aalloteral prior to 111o. Forma together with any
Further, The Farmers Bank

further

Information

after the. ·documents are

returned within fifteen (15)
days after receipt of bids,
chipping chargee prepaid.
Each bid ahall be accompanied by a Bid Guaranty
and Contract Bond In an

amount equal to the total
sum

or

the . proposed

Including all add alterna-

tives; all in accordance with

the current atatuteo til the
Stale of Ohio. Bonde will be

observed

and

requirements to be applied
under the contract.

Contract will be awarded

for:
Mechanical Construction

The Board of Education,
Southern Local School
District,
Racine,
Ohio
reserves the right to waive
any lntormalllles and to

award ,of contract to the

reject any or all bids.
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF
THE SOUTHERN LOCAL
DISTRICT
RACINE OHIO ·

succeaaful blc;tder.

James

returned to all unsuccessful

bidders aubaoquent to tho

Attention or blddora Is
pa_rtlcutarty called to the
requirements aa to condl·

A;

Lawrence,

Superintendent ·
Dennis E. Hall, Treasurer
(8) 20, 25 2TC

desired,

may be obtained by tho
Bidders from tho Office of
the Archltacta, Marr Knapp
Further, the above collal· Crawfla Aaaoclatoa Inc.,
eral will be aold In tho con- 104 ~air Avo., NE, P.O. Box
dition It Ia In, with no. 1002, Now Phllsdelphlo,
expreaa or Implied war· Ohio 1146&amp;3- All proposals
ohall.bo madt 'ln conformity
rantlea given. ·
wtth
tho General Coda, of
For further Information,
contact Shannon at -992· Ohio, and shall be In sealed
envelope addrasslfd. to the
.1330.
Board
or
Education,
(B) 25, 26, V 3TC
Southern Local School
District,
Racine
OH
Public Notice
endoraed
"Boiler
Replacemant for Southern
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
High School" on tho out·
BIDS
Sealed Prapaaata will be oldo of the t!Welope.
No Bidder shall withdraw
received by 1111 Tr..aurer ol
the Board ol Education ol hlo bid for a period of olxty
the Southern Local Dlatrlct, (60) days after the date or
until .12:00 PM (Noon), receipt of blda.
A deposit or Fifty ($50.00)
E.D.S.T., (Eiftern Daylight
Savings
Time)
an Dollars Ia requlrad Ia obtain
September 2, 1999 and one (1) aot of Drawlnga and
which
lmmltdlatoly thereafter will Speclflcatlona
be opentd ond road aloud deposit will be raturnod to
for the furnlahlng of all tho respective party after

sa.f ely

ond Savings Company
ntHtVee tho right to reject
ony or all blda submitted.

E1Utnllft

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Public Notice
Public Notice
receipt or their bid, and . tiona of employment to be

992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohta .
22 yro. Local

•
T1re 0 ear1n
Your Heart on
Your eeve?
.

• NewHomei
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
985-4473

•

PHONE 992-2155

, START

DATING

TONIGHT!

~ Have

Fun Meeting El ig ible Sm·
gles In Your Area . Call For More
Information. 1-800 -ROMAN CE",

Take·the pain out
or painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTE'RIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

74.0 ·985·4180
Free Estimates

Start Da ting Tonight ! 'H.Jve lun

playing tile Onk&gt; Oating Go""' I, •
800-ROMANCE. ol&lt;lt!nSion 9661 ..

30 · Announcements
Naw To 'mu Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Atnens
740-592· t842
Oual •ty clothing and household
items . $1 . 00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru S8tur'day

9:()().5:30.
THEII!Ntii•U
Ha s Retu rned, II'S Furnitur·e To
Former LocatiOn: 241 Third A.ve·
nue. GallipOlis. Phone: 740-446·

Finally, The Mini Mall Has A Var1
. iety or Everythi ng From A To Z
Located At 356 Second Avenue ,
PhOne: 740-441-1142.

7ry Shopping Downtown
Galfipolis And Sawt!"

Giveaway

2 All Wtlite Tom Ki!l enS , 8
Weaks

Old,

Part ially

utter

Trained. 7-ta-446~9935 .
Female Doberman. red, two y-ears

tter-~~~ 24 Hr. Taxi_

Mrl Delivery Service

NewConltructlan&amp; ,
RlmOdttlng-KHclltn cabinets
Vinyl Sldlng-Root.Oecltl-

We deliver ALMOST anything

Gorollfl
'

'

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays ~.

·'
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coveralf
$500.00 Starburst
Progre111ve top line.
Uc. I IJ0.50 11nl/llll

DEPOYSIG
PARft
All Make8 Tractor &amp;
Equipment Porta
Factory Authorized
Case;-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/vii'-, OH 46723

Call for details
.. 7 40~992-0038

Sidewalks, Patios
25 yrs experience
Free Estim&lt;\tes

877-353-7022 (loll free)'

Tuppers Plains, OH

740-985-3813
8" Gravelless Lea1h
I00' · 1000' Rolk I" &amp; 3/4" 200# Water Line
Full ~~~~ of Gas Pipe &amp;Regulators Water Storage Tonks
h .. ... .. .

..

MYERS Plllll

Henderson, 'W\1
We Do.••
• Parking Lots
• Basketball Courts
• Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone

(304) 675·24S7 Ollke
(3041674·3311 c.al'tt.
FREE ESTIMATES
Cont. •WV003506

R. L•HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Culverts: 4" · 48" in stock

I

Quality Driveways,

8/11!99 I mo . pd.

.S~. At. 7

111111

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

YOUR

740·742-8015

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply

7401:1f..O.I .
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPIIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FR££ £STIMATES

949·2168
4/2 TFN

IJ!!!Mimer7a

piJ

Hmel!ps

Bulldo•er &amp; Bac/Jooe
Se"'ices
Hous.e '&amp; Trailer Sites

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

rDUll SAVE MONEY
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
AND THAT'S NO RULLI

.

10 wk. old male Ieinen, very' cute

HOWARD
EICAVITING CO.

.

SABRINA LARABEE AMAZING
POWER LOVE SPECIALIST! Reunite Loverl , Solves All Prob·
JemJ . 100% Guranleed. Can 1·
8n-724-1865. ·

-882-3324.

Suaaat Bome
Coaatructloa

7/22/fFN

For Painless Job Opportunities- See the Classifieds

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

Linda's Palntlnt

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

KCB
EXCAVATING
Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services
Site Preparation
.Septic Systems
RODNEY KELLER
' Owner/Operator

1·740·985-3949
2mci. pd.

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Cheater, Ohio
10125196 tfn

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Septic Syote~ &amp;
Utilities

1740) 992·3838

Shop at home...

Buy from the Classifiedsl

DOZER WORK
F-?t'
! tl

''~()11,

) nu-~

J! 1 i! 1 r?, !/r~3

r \fll'l/1 ' 1/l' t '

(740) 388·9686

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes •
Remodeling • Siding
· 'R oofs
25 yrs experience

(740) 992·2753
or 992·1101

'JACKS RoOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Pa.inting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks
740·992-2068

f

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Beahan Road
Racine, Oh lo
45n1
740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

740-985-4288.

Free Puppies, 9 Weeks . 1f2 Lab
Retrievers. 74'0 -2 45·5946 Leive

Message .
Good Homes Only: Ge·nue . Male
Puppies. Will be small Dogs. 74D446·3376.
Kinens · While &amp; Siamese Cotor.
Goo d Homes Only. (30 4 )882-

AIJ, Ysrd Selot Mull

Be Paid In Adve~ .
DEAQL\NE: 2:00 P-~
lho cloy before tho od

II lo run. Sunday
.e dlttoil · 2:00p.m.
F~doy.

llondoy odhton

• 10:00 1.m. S.turday.

740·742·2138
3/11/99TFN

Garage Sale - Moving , Friday

Don 't Need .4 Big One
CaU .4 Lillie One

27th, Saturday 281h, 9-5 . 1354
Green Valley Drive, 3 Miles North
01 Ho_spital Up ~oute ' 160, Left On
Evergreen. Left On Green Valley,
Second House On Left (Beige) A
little Of Everything, Cash Onfyl

Landscape Material,
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost
Light Hauling
up to 8ton

Garage Sale: Thursday 8126. Friday 8127. Saturday 8128, 9·7 Furniture, Clothing, Mis cellaneous,
234 Evergreen Road , ¥ary Skkjmore. ·
·
Huge Garage Sale: 2 Electric
Ranges. Bar Stools. S1n ks. Misc.
l!ems, All Sizes Clothing, Friday,
Sa lur d~y. 9·5 , 3679 S.R. 325,
-South or Rio Grande.

· Pomeroy,

992·5455

CREDIT·PROBLEMS???
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

WORRYING!!!
No Embarraaament. ..
You're Treated with Reapectl

-

son. Ohte •S&amp;&amp;O Or C. I 1-UO·
286-1 463 To ScheduMI An lnteJ ·

MEDICAL BILliNG. Earn Eite&gt;&amp;l·
lent lneome Full Trairuno ~ ·
puter Requued Call TcU-fi11e
800-540-6333 E.d. 231l1 .

••

OffiCe seekrng Medical Oata..fl)lry

reps for Entry-ll\&lt;ef Postuon~ liT

Cali·

PT Excellent Pay PC Reg
800·298 8506.

I

IIOTHERS &amp; OTHERS WORK
FROM HOME! Matt~Order . Part
T•me &amp; Full T1me $650 -$3,6001·
Uo . Fu ll Tratning Provided! For
FAEE Bookl et Ca ll 1-888·234·
9897 wWw cash-91t .eotrWt1ome.
Musictans- drummer IOOiclnQ, tor
leaCI gwtar•st, baSSist and rt¥Om
gLlltari st/ vocalist 10 do oldtes ,
roclc and country, John, 740-§88-

Help Wanted

•
"WORK FROM HOME• - Grow1ng 6212
Company NEEDS HELP. 1399 ·
$4 ,999
PTJFt . www .jcsdes- · Need 7 Ladtes To Sell AVOI'I . l.C0446-3358
•:
tgl5.CDm 1-888-283-2372
$2,000 WEEKLY! Ma tli ng 400
Brochures ! Sat tslactton GvaranleM! Postage &amp; Supplies Pro·
v ided! Ausl'l Self-AddresseCI
Stamped Envelope t GICO. DEPT
5. Box 1438 . ANT IOCH . TN
3701 1·1.&amp;38 S~rt JmrnedLately
$800 · WEEKLY PbTENTt AL
Coinple1e Si mple Government
Forms At Home. No Exper •ence
Necessary. C~LL TOLL .FAEE-

HI00-966-3599 Ex!. 2001 .
""'DRIVE THE BIG RIGGS '! I'"
·• Reg .. O.T.A. · Truck Dnvi ng
Training No Expe r. Necessary!!
21 &amp; Over t-877·213-1303 (Toll

Froo).

Applicat ions are being accepted
tor lhe posihon ol Nutritio n Pro·
gram
Assistaht.
App li cants
shoukt have a hi!)h school dLplo·
ma or G.E.O., reliable transpot'1a·
lion. telephone In the Mme ana
be hiQhry 'organized' and sell moti·
vated . Should have elt:perience lh
bas ic !Jookkeepmg. computer
entry. be able td lift up 10 fifty
(50) pounds and !he ability to accomplish multiple tasks . Appilca·
liOns are available a):.. the Me tgs ,
Multipurpose Senior Center. Mul·
berry Heights. Pomeroy, OH An

da"-

EOE E"""-

.

ASSEMBLY AT HOME II Craf1s .
Toy s. Jewelry, Wood . Sew.ng,
Typing .. _ Great Pay! CAll I-BOO·
795-0380 Ext. 1201 (24 Hrs)

AnENTION:
-AComputer7
Put It To World
. $25 -$75' !Hr. PTfFT
1·888-B90-34l31 .
www.pc-income.com
.'I'TENTION :
. OWN. A COMPUTER7
PUT IT TO WORK I
S25 ·S75/HR. PTifi'
1-888-4511-2794

. www. work-fro~home.neUb~$
AVON! All' Areas! To Buy or Sell
Shirley $pears. 304-675-1429.
A11on Products: Sti:.rt your own In ·
Home Business. Work Flex•ble
~ours. EnJOY Unlimited Earnings.
1-SSS -561 -2866.

Need a morntng de/Lvery pehi.D n
for the Chaneston Gazette bf the
Pomt Pleasant , Leon . R 1 ~fy
Evans areas 1· 800-982-6 3 !1 7
Ext 1787 &amp; Leave Message.
Need someone to work 4 If ·12
shlfl, ca11ng lor the el.der!y.,,ea lt
between the hours of sam &amp; 4Pr"
Monday thru Fr iday, 740-99'2'4-410.

New Haven ChUrch would lik_e to
h1re a p 1an •st ror Wed . e'olen ln g
ct.ou practice &amp; Sundav mor11ihg
Service tor more into. calf 304 •
8822804 .or 304-67~5043.

Oul$1de Sales. Grow•rlg Satctll'lle

InstallatiOn Company Lookmg ~r
Sales Pe rson To Make Sa'IIIS .
App01ntmen1s. Mu·st Have yar .
GOod People Sk1Us. Part-Time I
Fuii-T1me . SateiiLie ExperienCe
Preterred . Not Nec;essa ry, 740·

862-3109
Pan t1me: · recepuomstl bJUing ger'k
lor local phystc•an·s off•ce. txpen'·
ence wtlh computer, coding ~0
medical tulltng preferred. Sencr Ul·
sume to P.O. Box 458, Racine;~ .
45771 .
.
•• •

Part· Time Maintenance PosltiqA
[304)882·3626
.&gt; ••
POSTAL JOBS To $18 .35 fHI(
INC . BENEFITS , NO EXP~AI~

ENCE FOR APP. AND EXAIII
INFO CALL 1-800·813·358(
EXT U2 JO. 8 A.M . -9 P. ~ ...
DAYS lOs. me.
~•

t

Satellite Tech . Grow tng Satellite
lnslallalton Company looking For
Techs E•penenced In Many
Olsh Systems 01 Cable T.V. Ae ·
qu1reo. ·Mus I Have Turc~o: Or Van ,
Start A.S.A.P 740·862·3t09

SECURITY OFFICERS . · .

Wacke~hul

tS taktng applicatloris
for full/pan tLme pos •tions . UUsl
submit to clrug screen1ng and
have GED or H.s .· diploma Pa1d
holidays. lree untforms. aM m·ore .
App ly James M Gav1n Pow~·
. Plant, Stare Route 7. CheshL~e . Ot'l_
af the Mam Guard House (746) -

925·3000. EOE MIFIDN

nn.

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

DRIVEWAY STONE

110

PIIJ """ - loll Send -

Seektng a person to live-in a no
mMag8 Elderly Housmg Prorec ·
Compuler Users Needed . Work
2~26 . •
In lhe Pomeroy, Aactn e . Mtdt!Le Own Hrs. S25K -S80K/ Yr. 1-800·
port area. Must be able to dq. of·
.Manure. 74o-446-7104.
S36-0486 X
www. tcwp.oom
lice work and get atong · well With
others . Evening call coverage·ie
One year old red male Doberman . Courier: Immediate Opening De·
qutred as part ot ·lh LS posti!On. ·Apvery gentle, 740-992-5551 .
pendable, Neat . Good Driving
plicants may be requ1reel to sub
Record . M·F. 30 ·40 H rs. /Week
mit to a police check a nc dru g
60 Lost and Found
Company Car. Call 740-446-0353
lest Send lener ol &lt;ippi1Cat10n fr,
Fo,r Interview.
·
eluding a br1ef h 1~10ry. experiencE
. Lost Sm~ll telmate mi•ed breed
dog wh1te w/ darlc faee &amp; ta ll .. Direct Dig ital Sol utions have im· · and lh1ee (3) cUrrent references
c/o: The Da lly Sentinel, P.O 13'o ..
short haired. dlsap'p eared on mecllate ope nings tor ins.talla·
129·87. Pomeroy. Ohto 45759
Thur. Aug. 19th on Jericho&amp; At. 2 lions &amp; ser11ice Tech .Servtng the
304-675-5485.
satellite Industry no exper. necSINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEA'N
essary, will !rain the iighl canCOUNTRY. Call Now Toll' Free ..T
Lost: Great Dane . large black didate if you have a wtiiLngness
800·339·420-4 Or 1·800·469-8164
male, answers to Max . rew8rd, to excel!. call Bill a1 1·800-754For Appointmen t To Come To
·Pageville area. 740-992-5686.
1939. a truck is required .
Nashv tlle Tennessee And AurH·
Lqst LARGE WHITE Male Dog, Domino's Pizza of Pl. Pleasant
lton For MaJor ReCord Proelucers
Lost Nea r Rio G rande , SUB· now hiring sa fe dr ive rs app ly m Internet www.wc1n.ac
STANTIAL AEWARDI 740-245· person 304-675-5858.
Soelel Servlee DireCtor/Director
0485 After 6:00P.M.
of Adm issions. Ou~lfty, Comm lt'
DRIVERS -Owner Operat Ors
Lost: white tamale cal . Unio n Manufacturers Fleer Needs
ment... the Keys to our Suceess!
Avenue vicinity, ramily pet, 'Sno- Trucks For Growing Bus iness
Full Ttme Aequ tr es a BSW De
wy·, 740·992-5 447 , Judy, 138 Ray Or Jim B00-534·1111 .
gree or eq uLvalent degree a.no
'West Virgin•a ~~cense. Compre·
Bunernut. Pomeroy.
Drive rs: Free 3 -Week COL
hensi 'o'e Mnelits paCka ge wtl 1n
70
Yard Sale
inCludes 401 (k) Pomt P1easan1
Training . Earn $26 -$32.000 /1s1
Yr. W /Full Benefits. No Exp.
Center/Genesis ElderCare. S :at ~'
Needed. P,A.M. Transport SpeRoute 62. Route 1, Box 326
Gallipolis
ci al Call Toll Free 1-877 -230Po inl P leasant . WV 25550
6002 Sun · fr i, 7 A.M. ·7 P.M.
Equal Opportun1ry Employer.
&amp; VIcinity
www.pamtransport.com
Wanted · Lead Ouitar. Ba;s
238 First Avenue, Friday, SaturPlayer And Keyboard Playms
day, 8 · 6, Texas lnstrume'n ts Tl· Fas\ Money : No selling Not MLM .
For More lntorma110n . Call 740·
. 83 Calculator $70: AUdLOVOX Cell· earn $1.250 ,P8f day. 1-800-5044 .
38.8-8801 After 2·00Pm
•
101272692 PPA
u'lar Phone $35.

Hauling .

.·

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

The
Daily
Sentinel
.

Love American Style A Fun WfltJ
To F;nd LOVE 1·900·945·6100
. Ext 7325, 12.99 !Min. Must So I 8
¥4llars_Procall Co. l502-954-7.a2.

40

UlU11ll.SruuelRom.e.com

'

I

'

2 mo. pd.

·Personals

LOSING WEIGHT IS AS EASY
AS A· B-c, ·cau Joyce At 1·188·
769-1331 ' Ex!. 222.

TREE SERVICE

Sll.lan ReeNJ

740·992·5212

Get the latest in sports news from the

Albany, Ohio

JONES'

(No Sunday Calls)

High &amp; Dry
·Self-Storage ·

I

Ctllrecttn WtlcoMt

005

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Phone: 740-44 1-&lt;1154 .

740·992·7643

Now Renting

F»ICKENS

Free E6tinuJte6

ANNOUN CEMENTS

Also. New T.V. Shopping Channel
Clothing, Featuring ptu's Sizes Located AI : 314 Second A11enu8 .

Free E•timate•
740-742-3411
Bryari Reeve•

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

condi ti on . you ca n safe ly ass um e
that medical sc ie nc e has n't ye t elucidated the ca use of that group of

Good clean .soli lead 304-8U2e95.

old.

Empire Wall
Heaters

_attached to a medical

1·100.311·3391

Call 614-843-5426

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement WindowS
•Room Additions
· . •Roofing
· COMMEIOAIIM IESIDEII!W
FREE ESTIMATES

problem s

purchased at:
Ohio
Honda,

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

• ·Anyone who has trouble hearing or underslanding conversation is invited to•
• have a FREE hearing lest lo see n lhis problem can be helped . Bring this•
•
• coupon wilh you for your FREE HEAR ING TEST, a $75.00 value.

Radiant
&amp;
.
Blue-Flame
Natural or
LP Gas

More Information Calll -740-541-4001 Local CaU
cOntact any Pomeroy Squad Member

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

•
•
•

••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••

lhe rCJXlfter on the: beach. Director .

Si4iltf &amp; StiliI

Or
Tri.tckl. Low M•les 1995 Models
Or Newer, Sm •th Bu •elc Pont 1ac .
1900 Eastern Avenue GaMipok

0522.

11!1

Call Toll Free 1·800·634·S26S lor a•lmmeaiCite appointment.
The tests will be given by a Ucensed Hearing Aid Specialist

-$10.00 Donation Each/1 000 Maximum
IDr-ihl• to be hold at 12 p• on
ISu11tlay October 10, 1999

7/23 1mo.

•

tion_

Pom~Jroy Volwaleer Emersen.ey Sq&amp;UJd, IIU!orportUed.

To Or•ver, P 0 Box 109 Jaell ,

Clean Late Mod•J Ca rs

~

Ext 9735.

Spotuored by the

CaD 985·~1

AGSEJMCI!"

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

7127/99

1999 HONDA FOREMAN
450 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY

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

SHADE RIVER

In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
9:00 ·Noon

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

j.., a coopcr:uivc rcgii.m·
w~tcm chartered hv the

typic all y are sufficient to produce
physical and emot ional di sa bili ty.
Any time you sec the lab el
"sy n~rome"

Rutl~nd,

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

Rat••&gt;

740-992·3470

us, Inc

O&lt;otnoncl•
"-"'·
Gold
Ruoags.
Pre-1930
US
Current)'

•n•

Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agri{!ultural Lifru:,
Mulch, Top Soil

(Low

Hire a V.t

1.0ea1 Trucmng
Ouahf1ed Trucll Dfi'f'ef5 GOOd

AntiQues. top pncn ~~ . R1vtr·
Ani!QUt1 , Pomeroy, OhiO,
Ruu Moore owner. 740-99225:!6

W.Delto•r

c..._, s-mu

AbiOtWI Top DolLar All US Stl·
.,., And Gold C01ns Proofaetl

--.... r........ 740--446-2842

Limeatone, Gravel,

7 40-742-2566

Phone (740) 593-6671

l &amp; D Auto Up o stery •

will be glve11 l11 Malgs/Gallla Cou11tlas by

•
••
•
"Family Medicine" is a •
weekly column. To submit ·:
ally surge ry -that helps to dimin·ish
the physical and emotional pain
while restoring ncar normal FunL'-

Porta Jon renblla
Septic Tanks Pumped

rcctiQnal Insti tute and Pkk ~h- ·•v :
Ross County Jri inl Vocational .
SchoQI.

Ofie n loss of strength and llcXt bility of th e part deve lops as the
co ndi tion persists.

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Thetr combined experti se ci ftcn
res ult s in ;t treatmen t plan --,-., •

In th e case of Type U. the symp·
s
s · lbe · h ·
h
wms of the disorder arC indis tin - • 1 Ieven pi e rg IS t ' e V-OICe on t e '
marin
_ ~ra!iu on Q_uint's boat. _
gui shable from · Type I. but the 1
_
~
ori g inal injury did produce a
detectable abnormalliy in tht.• nervo us system . This condi tion was

Code. The Board conducted a
vigorous discussion on the issue.
an~ instructed Enc S. Anderson. .
OVAL Director. to convey the
draft to the Librarians' Adl'isory
Committee:. and OVAL Council

500 gal. per day 1200 gal. cap.

Help W.l1te!f

110

W•nted to Buy

Sterling, Etc AcquiSn.,.. . -....
· M TS COin Shop, 151 Seeono

Mighty Mac Aeration Sy11teins

HOWARD'S TRI· COUm SAIIITAnON

approved a Formal Educatinn al lihrarv
:
Pnliq' to allow OVAL staff in · State · of Ohio in lt/ 71 Viand:~: .
pursUc ,struclUrcd karning: . cxp~.·n·- Eblin of thl:' Mr1g' Counr~
cm:cs. Th.: Board au thurizcd a · ~Lihrary Ou&lt;trd rcrrcscnts the
..:untracl with Buchan~ui SounJ M~ig ~ County Di ~t ri'.:t Puhll..:
and Ctmununication'. Inc .. A:-h - Libran .

-Causes of CAPS unknown; Doctors can treat painful condition
chiatrist arc usuall y co nsulted.

and the · members \Yill have the

Jackson

Ed\\'ards anJ Anwmfa Haney. arts ·
lnstrunor Hdpcrs fnr th!.! fouranJ . . \,mmunkatitll1" cluster: Paula day c&lt;;1inp were: Sari' Putman.
E11:h1n~·~r. He ~tlth Sen kcs dustt•r; Mi\.:hdk Bud.k\ . Jc~si..:J Brannon ,
Nan~- ~ ~AJjndge. Human Rcsoun..:~.:s Stal-'cy Brewer." Karric La mpert.
l'lu-;tcr; Jan ~ 1 illl'r Jnd Radley Carn~ l.1 ghtfuo t. and Jennifer
place .
Faulk. Indu strial ond Engincenng Shrimpl1n. Nancy Morrisey. Ct,n nc'-'
Local in~trul..'tors v.cr.: : Dnn duster: and Tamm! Chapman and Enslen and Linda Faulk ..;cncd as
Vaughan and Jayne Col lin s. bus inc~..; Kc' 111 Sheppard. En\'inmmcntal and ~.·amp director~.
and management cl uste r; Beck: . Agricultural Clusta.

s: mptom s. Thi s is certa inly true
fm complex rcgiona'l pai.n syndmme.
·
Thi~ lac k uf und e-rstaiu.iing- doc s

changes in the Ohtu Revised

Joseph Oth~ .
· On the recommendation or
Roxie Underwood. represen ting

FUN ACTIVITIES - Fun activities that promoted interaction
among students were ' included in' the Meigs County Hands-oil
Career Camp, held earlier this summer at Eastern Elementary
School. Students from throughout the county participated in the
program, for students·5·7 . .

ities. fLx..· usmg on the ~ix main ,:ar.:&lt;.'r
~.· lu ste rs. Th.: ..:nmp \\ aS frc.: . with ·
husing pm' 1dcd throu gh an Equ1t~
Mean~ Su~._·cc 's Il l granl Lhat promotes gende r equity in the v.urk -

John C. Wolf, D.O.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

The Oh10 Valley Area land. Ky. to '"'tall a &lt;ound sysLtbranes Board of Trustees held tern in the OVAL Learnmg Space
thetr regular meeting at the sys- recommended by Da1c Harrison.
tern headquancrs tn Wellston on representing Bnggs Lawrence
August 19. The Board Bylaws County Pubhc Lthraf) .
Commillee met prior to the meet~
The·Board appro\'ed a creauve
ing.
program between OVAL and·
Mark Oakley. representing the Northern Ohio Library Associa·
Nelsom ille Public Library. and tion. to share Ellison dtes, used
Chair of the Bylaws Committee. primarily fGr creating paper
reported to the board on the . shapes used in chi ldren's services
progress made by the committee progmms. which have a high unit
in rafting a new set of bylaws for cost. NOLA will add the OVAl
the organizati on. recognizing the dies io their automated database.

BUSINESS MANAGEMENT - Don V~ughim, one of two instruc·
· tors in the business and management cluster at the recent Hands·
on Career Camp, is pictured with some olthe students who partici·
p:ated.
·

opportuni ty to explore Jiffcn:nt
types orcareers wi th· hands-on activ-

90

OVAL Board of Trustees meets

-

The first Meigs County Hand sOn Career Camp .was held r&lt;e&lt;ntly
at the Eastern Elcmentar\' School :
for students in grJdcs 5- i Studt..'nh
from Eastern, Sout hern and Meigs
Local Schools participated in the
program. The camp gave students an

~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, August 25, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Wedneac:tay, August 25,1999

Help wanted- ni ght shih , 7p m9am. Cal
c992-5023 lor Interview.

7P.M. ·BP.M. 740·446·9219.

&amp; VIcinity

NOw TAKING APPLICATIONS
FOR NEW Gl&gt;LLIPOLIS STORE
PART TIME OPENINGS .
Interested Candidates May Fill
Out ApPlications In Pe rson At
The Kroger Store located At The
Silver Bridge Plaza Starting Monday, August 23 - Friday. August
27 Between 9:00A.M . -5:00 P.M .
We Will Be Accept ing Applications For AU Part-Time Positions.

Everything goes! Frfda.( &amp; Salur·
ctay. Tunle residence . TeK.Ss Rd .

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill MoodiSpaugh Auction eering .
Comple te Allcl ioneering Servlc·
es. Consignment auction· MLII
Street. Middleport. Thursdays
Ohto LtCense H693 . 740·989·
2623.
ALe~ Pearson Auction' Company,
lull time auctioneer .• complete
aud10n service . 'Licensed
lti6,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304n:l-5785 Or 304·n3-5447.

Wedeme:yer's Auction Service.
Gallipolis. Ohio 740-379-2720.

INC . BENEFITS . GAME WAAI
DENS
SECURITY.
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR .A.P P AND
EXAM INFO. CALL 1·8 00·8 13.•
3585. EXT ,4.211 . 8 A.M_ -9 PM
7 DAYS Ids, inc
.

140

Business
Training •

Gelllpolla qareer College ~ ·
(Careers Close To Home) • ..
Call Today! 740-446-4367 , ·
1-B00-214·0452.
Reg •90-05·1 2748

150

Masters .

hristmas Aro und T he World &amp;
Gtfts, Now Hiring Sales Representatives . All Area 's. Also Bookmg
Parties , Call Monday -Fr i day,

. KROGER

August 27-28. 8am - 5pm . 137
Pearl Street. Middl eporl. Aa in
cancel&amp;, lots of children's clolhes.

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 IHRJ

Schoors
Instruction

H ouse~eeper F
Disabled Prac·
tieing Columbus Attorney. live·ln . ·
EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE ljE.
Some Care Dulles. Salary. Room .
Gf'EE OUICKLY, Bachelo~s
Board, 614-.267-5354.

Ml~dleport
All Yard Selea Mult Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:00pm the
day before the ad 11 to run ,
Sunday &amp; Mondly edttlon·
t:OOpm .Frlday.
•

80

· Gallipolis Career College Is
Seeking Part-Time Instructors In
T he Following Oisc ipimes: CommunicatLons; Computer AppiLCa ·
lions {MS Office ); Computer Tech
Support ; And Offiee Administration (Re cords ·Managemem .
Shorthand , Etc .) Minimum or
Bachelor's Degree In Field Re quired . Please Subm it Resume
And Refere nces To: Gallipolis
Ca'ree r College . 1176 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631. Galli·
~otis Cereer College Is An Equal
OppOrtUnity Emptoyer

EIIQible Benefits Include·
• Company Paid TraininQ

• Health tUe Insurance
• Wee~ly Pay Perlads
• Retirement Pian
• StOCk OwnerS~Ip Plan
• Company Paid Vacations

• Employee Credit Uniqn
• New Store Enwonment
NO PHONE CA.LLS PLEASE

MINORITIES AND FE.MALES
ARE ENCOURAGED TO .PPLV
EOE

Doct ora ~e .

By

Cor~@··

spondence Based ·Upon PriOr EaucatiOh And ShOrt Sludy Cou r ~e
For FRE E lntormatLon Boolr.Jet
Ph one CAMBRIDGE STAfE
UNIVERSITY 1·800-964·8316
Excellent Opponun•ty - Suppfe·
ment YoUr ln co r:ne . learn i,-l,i'
come Taw Prepa ratton ·,s WI&lt;.
Course . Classes 1 Day A Wk. ~9
A.M. To 4 PM Call OanTax . Inc.
Tuesdays 10 Tp 4 @ 1: 740-4{661780r 1·800-22 t·8178
•
MAO DOGS PALACE
PRO-WRESTLING TRAINING·
AND PROMOTIONS
20 Yrs. Ex Per ence 800 s!lS0756 Tra111er Brett Sawyer, lri
Memo ry ol Mad Oog ·sun~

Sawyer Tratn

to be wrestlefs .

managers , or ballet, (Male or fe-

male)

·

180 Wanted To Do
Carp.entry, Remodeling, Addilions.
Porches. Decks 740-441·t318
·
Cerlified NUISinQ Ass is tan . W LII
Do - In· Hom e Care! Call: (7 40( 446·3659
' •
•
Chilo Caie Prov1deCI In My Hom"&amp;',
Non-Smoker.- Excellem Play Area· ·
Nulrious Meals. 149·245-58.23. • '
Chlldcare In My Home 15 Years.
Experience, Aelerences . 7 A.M: .:
5 P.M. Call Anytime . 740-245:

5052

•
--.i:

'

�'

•

Wedneaclay, Augu.t 25, 1999

Page 10 • The Deily Slntlnel

'Wedneaday, August 25, 1999

The Daily Sentinel 1 Page 11

Pomeroy 1 Middleport, Ohio

:~LLEYOOP
•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGII:

I 7 "Money-

ALDER

---fled""

12 cam.r
13 Fol..
14 Sp.nfoho
opuldng

540 Mlsnl181_..
Doolgn. '""
plemantatlon. and S.rvlca
Availtbfe tor Spong Ctean up.
t.rti&amp;illl'lg and ptanung ffM a artmetal. SalllfiCIIOn guaranteed

E &amp; 5 '--" -

Glwg-~

GIIOI'Qel Portable SawmiH, don't
"""' logs 10 ...... jull call
.31)&amp;..175:--1951.

s

ContraCting, Roofing, ShHt
Melal, 3-0 Lap SNnglts. l'lkrtlng
H

'0\ler 15 Years Expenenoe. Deck
• Bulldmg ~rae Estimate&amp;. ¥\nyl
Skiing 740441·0653. Call After

6:00PM

DEBT"" Oobl C....

10IIdltion Stop Co11ect\on Calls
Reduce Pty!Mnts &amp; Finance

Avoid Bankruptcy 1·

Charge~

80Qo270.-.

CASH Or LOANI Farm Capital
W•ll Purchase Or Loen Agaln•t
Your Go..,ernment Farm Pa~·

mon11. ICRPIPFC). Coli Farm
Coplloi1·181·FARM·ACT 132762211)
cOitSOLIDATE DEBT. Aoduc:od

UoniNy PaymeiQ 20 ·50%. s..
Thousands Of OoiiM'S In llMrett

-TCCIJ00.75f.-

· ttouMdeanmg, Honest, Depend-

able. References Available, 740·
:JIB 8086
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construcllon.
New Construchon &amp; Ramodetl
Drywall, Su!mg, Roofs. Add•·

,Ions, Palnt1ng, etc (304)674&lt;623"' 13041674-0155
Mag•c Years Day Care pre
schocl now acceptmg apphca·
lions lor fall enrollment Magic

Years Day Care for paren1s wno

care 18 yrs axpenence l•·

CREDIT

PROBLEMS ? VISA

CARD • Guarantlld Approval •
No Cred1t Check • O%APR R•·
qulremlnts 18..- us Citizen tia';'l
Chod&lt;lng Account Phone Approval 1-800· 737-0073 Issued By

Mi nim ize Tht•r Taxes Wr'lte Immediately Fortune ·lP 1, PMB
249-1626 North WtlcOIC AVI •

Sullo 2&lt;9. Ho&lt;lyM&gt;Od, CA 90028

W1ll Load And Haul • Am•fhlag•
Away Call Between 9 00 A M •
700P.M Al740 416 6467
·will Do Pamltng &amp;. Odd Jobs

$4 00 AHour. 740-367.01&lt;0

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

$300K 1st YR NOT MLMI Mag
nettc Savmgs Card + Termmal =
"Pay For Results Adverllsmg• 5K
lnv 888 -564 -6847 x5oi56 (24
Hrs~

INOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING Cb
recommends that YOf..l do business wlln people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough the
mall until you have mvesllgat&amp;d
the oflenng
2 9 Cents / Mm PHONE CARD
Flte EASY SS MONEYI 1 FEW
Hours! Earn $500 - $5 ,000 /Wk
CASH! FREE S11es 1 800-9979888, 24 Hrs
AAE U LAZV1 I Am And Earn
$1 000 A Cay No Selling Not
' M.LM Free Into Package 1·800786-8849, 24 Hrs XT 27

GET YOUR CASH NOW! Oldest

lal com
Need a L.oan? Home, Auto, &amp;
Debt Consolidation, Good or Bad
Credit Call toll free 877·658·

0551

RECEIVING PAYMENTS? In·
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Financed Monoaoe.
Reel Estate Contract, Insurance
Al1nU1Iy H1ghftSI Pnces Free
Quotes Why Wait? Call R1ch. 1-

IJ00.86&amp;-&amp;150

Professional
Services

Approved Maater licensed Elec·
tncian WV0259!56 , Estimates
lor
Res1d'tntlal
Services

10041675-7ll27
Beautiful Clean1ng
In your
home or business Carpet and
uphols tery to lntedor/ext&amp;rlor
walls. decks and dnveways The
complete cleanmg serv1ce Call
CIHrty CIHn For Free EIUmiM
!304-6~

Mount's Tree Service 'The Tree
Professionals" Bucket Truck
Service, Top , Tnm , Removal,
Stump. Grlrldmg Free Estimates
Fully tnsurtd , WorkS Comp, B•d·
well OH Call .And Save. 1·800·
838·9568 7•0·381!1·96•8. Owner

Rick Mount

AVAI\.ABLE VENDING ROUTE

TURIOED DOWN ON

10 20 locat •ons $4K -$10K
$4 000 +fMo, Income - ALL
CASH! 100% Fmance Available
1·800-380-2615. 24 Hrs

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

No Fol UnleSS Wo WWII

1.a88-582·3345

FRITO lAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE
S1 000..WEEKLY
POTENTIAL
All
CASH BUSINESS PR IME lOCAl SITES ON GOING SUP·

POR1. SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCEllENT PROFITS 1·800·
731·7233 EXT. 3403.
INTERNET BUSINESS OPPOR·
TUNITYI Ground Floor Hurry
Limited Time Onlyl Call Toll Free
800-858-Q170
Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli dation $5,000 · $200,000 Bad
Credit 0 K Fee 1· 800·770· 0092
Ext 215

NEW! FREE OEADLERSHIPSI
One Hour /Day May Equal $1 ,500
/Manti'! Earn 5% To 15% While
You $ 1eepl SEE www SPOriS·
wash com EZ For lnlernet Beginners Tool

Cash F'or Aemaln1ng Payments
On Property Sold I Mortgages!
Annu ities! Settlements! lmme·
dlate auotes!ft 1Nobody Beats
Our Prices • National Contract
Buyers 800-490 0731 Ext 101
www nahonalcontractbuyers com

$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII ISS COn·
Debts! Same Day Approval NO APPLICATION FEESII 1·
11()0.863-9006 Exl 936 www hflppay-bllls com
soUd~le

$FREE CASH NOWS From
Weallhy Families Unloading Mil·
lions Of Dollars, To Help Minimize
Ttlelr Tall&amp;&amp; Write lmmediatelv.

Windfalls, 847·A SECOND AVE .
SUITE f350 NEW YORK, NEW
YORK 10017
FREE: MONEY! ll's True ~ever
Repay Guaranteed $500 •
$50,000 Debt Consolidation, Per·
sonal Needs Bus iness 1-800·

51 1·2640
BANKRUPTCY $79+ Slops Gar·
nisnmentsl Divorce $99+ Also,
Foreclosure Avoidance Program.
Homeowner Loans FreshS1art t •
888·395· 8030 www freshstartu·
NCOm

and full of Country Charm ""

Acr" tt¥tl lot Paved Road 3 For sala 3 35 ecrea corner ol,

Bedrooms. 2' BIUt~, ullllty and
Ponlry Ntw Whho kllehln COb!·
nets, Calling Fans Throughout,
WlnCioYJ&amp;. Carpal &amp; Ston and
Fr~g Included Fireplace SWE
School 1.5 mlnutn from town
buutlful ~1ew lrom 1 I 1/ 2x2B
Porch AYIIIIbl NOW/ Al•lnQ
$7~ .500 CaU· (UOI-379·9000

Hanging roc:l! &amp; Foaluong RD1
$25,000 304-H2·3«0 or 30"·
1182-2833.
In ~. ""' toes "' .......
1 2 acres . the other 1 5 acrtl ,
bolh for $15.000. call 7•0-992·

.OUI

Reel Estate

360

wanted
""""""' lAnd Co.

140-367-7000.

RENTALS

Three bedroom, 1 1 112 SIOfy cedar end atone
atone cNmnap, large wmdows, two baths,
basement covered deck, larga
gara~e . 18 1/2 acres,. pr iv ate,
near Pomerop, 74CHIB2-tlt76

nome.

410 Hou- for Rent
2 Bl&lt;troom 9rick

Cotta~.

&amp;eellent Location, Aeterences I De-

"Tiilo bedlron. t:.th, modem ~itch­

posit Required , $395/ Mo , Call
740-441-0364..

en. dining room , IIYing room,
basunettt. C8t1'0ft $2-i.OOB. might
talte late moc1et pickup on trade,
740-742·2480

2 Bedrooms, $325ttl4o. + Utilltlu.
No Pols, 1&lt;0 ue o313

320 Mobile Homes

4 br 1 112 ba central alrlheat.1
car garage cham link lencli/ fire
place, app. furn 1 yr lease $525
rent+ de9 304-675-7873.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes lor Sale
$$$0 DOWN' HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDED! (GOV'T REPO CONDO'S, TOWNHOUSES, HOMESI)
1·800-434·2434 EXT. 3205.
1789 Addison Pike 3 Bedrooms,
Includes 12 Acres &amp; Free Gas
Need Qu~k Sale, Pr~e Roducedl
call For Details, 740-384-0063

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths With Large
Covered Oeck A 30 By 40 Ga·
rage, Appro1 4 Miles From Rio
Grande College On State Route
325, Souttl, Ideal Starter Or Aetlr·
men I Home, Asking S•9 900
Prtone 7o40·286-2554
3 br 1 ba house, cent heat/air ,
city water with 2000 sq foot
building Leon area owner fl·
nanclng ava1lable $39,900 cell
304·541·2889

5 Rooms , 1 Bath, Partial Basement , Gallipolis City Schools ,
$4.500 Down Owner Will F"mance.
74()..44 1-1 108
Buy Homes From $10,000
1 ·3 Bedroom local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Financing
Possible , For Llslings Call 800·

319-3323, EXI 1709
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Oownl Gov't And Bank Repo's
Being Sold NOWI Flnancmg
Available Call Now! 1·800-730·

7772. Exl. 8040.
HOME FORECLOSURES • NO
MONEY DOWN I NO CREDIT
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1· 800- 916·
9191 xH5023

-~K.oy
Doposit. NoPlllll740
tt8 4425. lloTare Townhou" Aparlments ,
Vary S_I)ICIOUI, 2 aedrooms. 2
,_., CA. I 112 Ball. Fuly Cor·
peted Adult Pool I BabJ Pool,
Pallo,' Sllrt S350/Mo No Peta.
leasa Ptua Security Deposit R•
qulfed, Afltr !5, 740·448·0101,
Be10to5, 7-.:1481
Tw1n Rlvefl Towet now IC(»pting
I
lor 1BR HUD sub·
ap1 lor eldlriJ anel f'llndupsta~rs Furnished. 3 Rooms ,
Bath, Clean, No Pets! Rtfet'encn.
&amp; Oepqsll Rtq~lred . 7•0-446·
1519

Valley VIew Apartments, Alo
Granda, Oh Now Accepting applications fOf' Immediate occu·
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Aptt Air

Condtllonlng. Kn-. appltoncoo,

Fenced In Playground Laundry
On Sight Management Water,

-.go ano 1lash Pot•l.

2 br, new
1975' Nashua 1
cenllal elr, 11120 covered porch/

14Ftx70Ft. 2 Bedrooms For Rent.
In BidWtll, Call 7.ti()..446·9G69

under pmn.r1g axe cone! $7.000
XW--882-2970

Between Athens and Pomeroy. 2

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. a1r
conditioned $260-$300, sewer,
watar and trash Included, 740·

1980 1-4165. two bedroom, two
new central a1r, great condition $9500, 740-949-2453 leave

batl'l

992·2167·

message

2 Bdrms , $225 00 Month lnclud•
$100.00 Deposit No
Patsl 7oi0-446·3617

1985 MOdular Home, 2~•55 With
All Appliances. 5 M1les From A1o
Grande Ma)' Lease! $22.500.
740-245-9667
1988 Forest

.ng Water

2 house trailers tbr 321t liiC.
cable, TV all · utll pd $250. a

Park. t 4x70. electric. mon 00 peii304-895-3603.

Full limo

Students mu11 meet Oh10 Hous·
mg Flnanct AgencY' Qualifications SeniOr C1t1zena Welcomll
EOE For mora Information call
(7401·2•5-9170 Monday -\tuu
thursday: 9:00-12:00 noon
4

460 SRflce fllr Rent

three bedroom, two tun baltl's, fully
lurnisheCI central air $12,500,

28R Mobile Home1, $225
month, in New Haven (304)882·

740-992-2000

:1219.

1988 Re~mond Danville 14x70
Also. Has Expando , Very Nice,
New Heat Pump, Askmg $1,.,000,
740-388-8335

.3 Bedrooms,

$25000
(7o40)-~-o&amp;11

Per Month

Mobile home lor rent In Pom,roy
area. no pets, 7.c).992·5858

1~90 1&lt;\x72 Skyllr,e 2 Bedrooms.

2 Baths t6lC8x8 Deck, 12x10 Two bedroom mobile home lor

Mobile home site available between "thens artcl Pomeroy, call
7~

Retail building, 1600+ &amp;quare loot,
corner location, 87 Mill Street,
Middleport Ke~ al Acqu•slt•ons,
91 Mil Strtet. 740-992-6250.
Trailer lots lor rent in Middleport,
Ohio near school, $7!5 per month

~1ERCfiANDISE

510

Houaehold
Goods

t and 2 bec1room apartment&amp;, fur·

BOOD USED

1995 Fleetwood 14 Ft x72 Ft 2
Bedrooms. 2 Full Baths, CIA, All

ntahed end" unlurnlahtd, security
deposll raqulred, no petl, 740·

washers. dryers. rtlrlgerators,
ranges Skaggs Appllenc.s. 78
VIne Street, Call 7oto.••6·73118,
1·888-818-0128.

y~•rehe•sl

priced to nle
304-675-3151•

• • "w 0-U-T

--.oov$499 Down All Singles $999
Down Doubles, Super L.ow Pay·
ments Limited Time Oakwood
Homes, Barboursville, WV, 304·

736-3&lt;011

Brand New 80's 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Just $239/Morlth Free
Delivery and Set·Upl only one It
this Price! Hurfyl Oakwood, Galltpolls (740}-448-3093
Brand New Doublewlde 3 -6edrooms, 2 Baths, only $340/monlh
Fret OtiiVtry and Set-Up Umlleel
Offer won't last1 Only at Oak·
wood, Gallipolis, Oh (740~ ·oi46·
3093
Clean ettordable previously
owned nomes Large selepllon
avallabl• Call t&lt;arena at Fllvtr·
dale Hom9s, 7.a-385-4367 ~
Come see our large select1on of
used home at Riverdale Homes
Neat clean llnan,clng
I
Ready lor delivery Call Nikki
740-385·4387
Cross L.anes Home Center Free
Set-up, Delivery AIC, Underpin·
nmg, &amp; $500 WaiMart Shoppmg
Spree with each home pur
chased Stop &amp; s.. your home·
town houfllng specialltt Woody
Willard (304)776·7699 or 1-BOO·
922·9976 Ctosslanes Exit of

164
large selection ot ulld homes, 2
and 3 bedrooms available Exceltent condl!lon Great starter
homes Call Cheryl, 7•0·385·

4367

1 Bedroom Apartment Acroat Rio
Grande College, $290/Mo , All
U1illtlll Paid, 1 818 84o-o521 .

Special 281BO 3 or 4BR $1000
Down, $322 per mo Free Oellv·
ery &amp; Stt~ 1-800-691-6n7
UHd 1tU Fleetwood Ux72,
2br, 2 ba, w AC/ w aklrtlng orr
rentel lol near Gelllpoll• , Fl·
nanclng av.llabla 304-t75-6065.
Double Wide On lot $250 De·
posit, 1-800 383-ti862.

340

Bualnesa and
Building•

Two Reta11 Bu1ldlngs, 50a30 One
office selling , and one retail. IO·
cated near the New Wal Mari/Ma
son Contact Klry1, (304)n3-6000

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
2 44 Acres. Homel llt, Green
Township, Galtla County. Scenic,
Qulet, Close To Gllllipolls, Some
fteslriCfiCH'IS, 74().245-5776

Jaclclon Avenue, 13041675-7388

APPLIANCES

Mollohan Carpets, ·or1.-e A Little
Save A Loti" 202 Clark Chapel,

~~~are

Rolllll ClurinOhouM

ea•

Resort Salel lnWtnational 1·800&lt;123-5.9117 24 Hol.n.

Grubb's Piano· tumng &amp; repans
Problema? Need Tuned? call lht
pilno Dr 1.a U6 4525

INTERESTED IN WRITING POETRY? POETRY CONTEST
cation Send One Original Poem
20 Lines Or less To lntemaUon·
al Lilnlry Of Poeby, 1 Poeby PI•

---

za. SUOio 11835. Owings MVIs. MD

21117

Or

Enter

Online

At

AERATION MOTORS
Ropairod. &amp; Rol&gt;ulll In SIOcl&lt;
Cll Ron Evant. t-800-!537-9528

two Mirrors 2ot"x68• Each , Gold
Frame Gots Around Both Mlr·

.... $75080:7~548
Lazy Boy 0uaen StZB H"""A·Sod
Couch. Navy Slue With Mauve
Accents, New Condition , Only 9
Months Old $500 080, Two La·
dlea 10 SpHd Sikes. On Yellow,
One Slue, 130 oeo FoJ aom

7..,.

...,....a

locust Post lor sale 7Ft $2 00
each 13041675-111:!4
Nice used Appliances, fumlture,
frtaurs, Bedroom Sun,s. D•·
nettes. Lots Morel {740)·4.t6·

t004. (7&lt;0)-4411.-o39 •nvOWN A COMPUTER. PUT IT TO
WORK $850 ·$3,SOO MO PT./Ft
FREE Details Log Onto http 1/
www hbn com Access Code 5298

-

Dlrec:TV Summer PromotiOn Call

now t·8fl8.265.2123

Regular Size Wheelchair Good
Shape: Pair Of Crutcl'les, Adult
Size, Good Shape, 7.a-446-4385

3

Apartment for rent In Middleport

no pets 740.992-5858

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Housing Opportunity
Brookside Apts Art Now Accept·
lng Applications For 1 Bdrln Apl,
With Wesner &amp; Dryer Hookup,
Water Paid. $279.00 Month Any
Question• , Cell 7oiO·••e·9611
Between 10 OOAm And 9 OOPm
Ohrlsty's -Famlly Living , apart·
manta, home &amp; trailer rentals,
7..0.992·4514, apartments avail·
able, fUmlshed &amp; unfurnished

For laue· Beautllul , spacious
two bedroom AC apt Living
Room , On Room at S7 t/2 Court
Street Totally new Lots or Star
agel $600 00/month. P'UI .utilities
Security and key deposit No
Petsi ,Rtllrtnctl Required (740~·
446""12!
Furnished Apt Downstairs 3
ROoms, Bath , All Ut11iUes Pa id!
919 Second Ave $275 001mor.,

(7&lt;0)-4411·3945

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments et Vlllagt Manor and
Rlvaralde Apartments in Middleport From $249·$373 Call 7-iO·
992·508-i Equal HOUSirlQ Oppor·
!lJililles
Pilot Program Renters Neeoed 1·
800-383-6862
Modern 1 Bedroom .Apartment ,
740 448 0390
New one bedroom apartmenl,
also one bedroom house, call
740.992·9191

'540 Miscellaneous

740-4411-4541
11" OlrecTV S.t•lllte 8yetemt·

oo.

C~SH7?7 MMX

·o·

Wtllterllna Special

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Compr81860n Amngs In Slade

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

1·800·969&lt;lll74 124 Hr.l

www dlamondaellers net WE

SELL

DIAMONDS FOR LESSI'OiE INTERNETS BEST PAICESI NO
COMPUTER NEEDED. CALL
877.726-3753.

Building
Supplies

550

Sk)ck, brick, sewer p ipes, wind·
ows. lintels. etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121

Pets tor Sale

560

AKC Boston Terrier Pups For
Sate, Also, Stud Serv1ce, 740·
388-0147

2 Brown s Tickets For Chicago
Game, &amp;'28199, 740-256-1267

AKC Oashounds, Poodles and
American Eskimo Spitz shots/
wormed 304-675-3361

3785

.AKC Reg Aottweller ~ups, gar·
man blood line, bred for fam•ly
companion raised with children

ARTHRITIC PAIN RELIEF! •1

molel 1250 304-565-4&lt;02

Joint And Muscle Dietary Supplement In The U S. Contains GluCo·
samlne With Hem. 30 Day Mon·
ey Back Guarantee Sand Check
Or Monay Order $19 95 {1 Month
Supply) PJL Enterprises, 6698
West Kenyon Ave • Denver CO

80235
Baby bed I dre. .lng table/ car
aut 304-&amp;7&amp;.-2801.
BETTER FEET In One Waekll
Sweet Silk Foot care System
Call Toll Free 1-888 549·7994
COMPUTERS· 10 Down . L.ow
monthly payments Y2K Compli·
ant. Almost everyone approved
Call FIROCOM Advanced Tech·
nolog~es 1·(800)·617-3476

Beau!llul Rottweller Puppies
Wormed And Shots. S100 00

Each 740-4o08-2197.
Golden Retriever, AKC Pups
$300 00 Must See! {740) - 379 2639
Registered Border Collin Pups
Working Parents, Imported Blood
Lines Good Marking 1st Shots!

17-!0)·379 9110

570

580
'

lngs 740-245-9047.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

DISABLED? Find A Doctor
FAST www.cllsabilltyiX!CS com

Hugo '""'niOty

Vlnyt Sklnlng Kits 1299 95, 5 Gallon Aluminum Fibtfld Roof Paint
$25 21, 5 Gal While Flool Paint
$57 69 Anchors $5, Coors &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air ConcUiioners I Heal
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home

Supply,
Oh•O

740o4~·9416

Gallipolis.

Frul1s &amp;

Vegatables

Red Raspberries, Now Available.
Taylors Berry Patch, Call In Eve·

446·6308, 1·800o29to00i9

DOcc&gt;unl MooiO Homo
Pono a Supply

Musical
Instruments

Sundy Flute. $200 (304)6756643, after 5PM

COOL DOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace, Co~Y~f~lete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furn1ct1, Heat
Pumps Certified Installer. If You
Don't Call us We Boln Lose! 74().

spe&lt;I!On. 740-985-3894.

1110 ·1HO HONDA CARS
FAOII '500 Pollee Impounds
And Tax Repo s For Listings Call
1-800-319-3323 Ext 4420
1985
Lincoln
Continental,
$250 00, Has Salvage Tille, 1989
Olds Cullan Cierra, 5700 .00.

740--441-0382
1986 Chevy. Monte Carlo Good
Condition $1,500. (30•)882·

2426

rwo

1988 Pontiac Grand Prix,

a~r,

810 Farm Equlpmen1
20 ton 5 hp wood splitter exc
cond S800 30-4·675·7937/ 304·

675-5053

H06 Dozer Recently Rebu ilt
$8 ,500 Ftrm 400 Gallon Tanks
On Rubber $500 Each 740·446-

2359
New Idea ct)opper 709 power
unit, 767 super chopper, 866 hay
piCk-up&amp; 763 3 row corn head
304-675-4J(l8

•

Needs

Good Body, Runo
Tr11n1. Work .

11,500. ~~

We st
o K~ 5

1991 GMC 1500 StiNt 4x•1 I '

• J

1918 Chevy 112 ton uUI van

----.--.bod
1m S-10 Bllzir, 72,(..::'"

runs good, 1600
M&amp;J Auto, SA 160, Vinlon
Hours Monday lhru Friday 12..

1992 Shadow lOOks and runs like
new 70K, cold air automatic
sunrool, oi cylinder, spo1ler red
$3650, 740-94g..2045 everungs
1993 red Tempo 4 door, 4 cylinder, 5 speed, air, 78,000 miles,
very nlcet R J . Auto Sales 7.40·
742·2357
1994 Plymouth Sundance, 4 Cyl
5 Spd . Ale. Cassette, Sports
Package 60,000 M1les $3,500 00
080 1.40·256·6169 Or 740·258-

1233
1998 Pontiac Trans Am 350 V·8
LS-1 Corvene Engme, Automatic ,
T-Tops , Monsoon Stereo With
t2 Ol&amp;c CO Changtr In Trunk
Oark Navy Metallic Wlttl Grey
Leather Interior. Will Take Pay Ott
Or Reasonable Offer 740·4.t6·

4548
1999 Ford EKplorer $100 lOBO
Seized Anct Selling Locally Fee
t-80&lt;&gt;-o409·7S11 Ext 9025

91 Ca'Valler btack,AC !CO player
windows, runs
304-&amp;75·2443

S2.tso oeo

good

95 ford Mustang 3 8 liter , 5 sp
loaded, 83,000 mllea $7,700
neg 304-773-5616
98 Bonneville P SfP BICr'ulse,
AMIFM Cass nice car must sell

304-675·4343
Rutland C.r Salet
Clean. newer used cars, good
varjety, reasonable rates, 740·
742·3311 or740-742-1400

Journey

Howard

futore

58 Prim

•K109876
tK983 2
6 4

word

DOWN

28 Sflpped on leo
29 Hoolery oh30 Lone
Plt'formence
31 Moot llko pfo?
33 Lovf"!!
36 Writer 1 encl.

1 Abate
2 Now Zulartd
parrot

1 Aruba end

4 Gools
5 Ridoro'
neodo

8 Bo ofrold of

Barbado1

9 Acorn, e.g

West

Pass
DbI

$1.000080. 7-!0·256-11134
1978 GMC General 290 13
Speed Travel Dump, 18' Aluml·
numBed, New Paint Job, 740-

•

1997 Nissan XE piCkup, 36,000
miles air lilt. cruise, deluxe
'Chrome and wheals , $8500 740992·5578 before 2pm or afler
4pm

religion
posolblo

North
Pass

eflort (2 wdo.)

22 L.egol wrft
23 Army order
12 wdo.)
24 Pough·
keepolo

Easl
3W

••

Pass

All pass

school

25 Hoopllal
worker

27 Buufng
lneect
32 Same
(comb. form)
34 Prisoners
35 Of nerves
39 Exits
43 Cursed
45 Alert
47 Observed

·Another double
open for debate

1981 Honda CX500 Custom Motorcyc le.
Tires, Baltery,
Plugs, &amp; Brakes tdi1liUa 21 ,700,
$800 Includes 2 Full Face Hel·
mets. Call ~- n3-5723 Ask For
RUSiy

taw

By Phillip Alder
It

strange the way, thmgs go 1n
groups •• threes, some would say I
IS

cannot stop see1ng deals

1992 Harley Davidson. FXS TS
Springer. Sol1 tale, Immaculate

48- -mo (film

technique)

contamtng

49 Scottish cap
SO Regret
52 «;ollectlon of

dubto~s penalty doubles. In thts deal,

15 5 1304}882-20411

thou~h. the double had no effect on
the number of trocks won by declar·
cr, o nly on the score he recetved at
the end
Agamst your four-spade contract,
Wesl leads what you know from the
aucuon to be the smgleton heanJack.
You wm wtth the queen , then cash the
spade ace, East dtScardmg a heart.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1997 Honda 300EX Eacellent
Condition, New Tlre.s, Not Roda

MUC11. $3,200 740-3674122
1998 Honda Foreman ES oi5D
4x4. Like New. 450 Miles. Wind·
shield Padded Rear, Rack Stor·
age, $5,200, 740-388·9418
1999 Honda Recon 3 Months
Old 3Year &amp;~tended warrantp

••

$3250 oo 1304)892·2964 Allor

anecdf)tes

53 Oblalned
54 Mother sheep

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty c 1ptler cryptograms are created trom quotations by lamous people pasl and
present Each letter 1n the C1pher stands lor another

Todays clu9 N equals G

'OSNGK

How would you contmue?

6PM

GW

XF L

wouldn't meet w1th umversal
approval, but the modern tournament
player loves to pre-empt whenever
the opportumty prese nts uself
The declarer was Palnck Huang ,
m osl people's ptck as the best play·
er ever from the Far East.
After a heart lo the queen and the

I"[~'{
~DFOKf&gt;.,

5TU-J(.K.t•Hf"E. 1

ASFM

XFSHNFX "

'VFLTL

BOO

S ML

MS

·I L M

XFGIIRW

I H K F .'

760

ruffs away the hcarl ace. As South

GAMI •

Au1o Parts &amp;
Accessories

THIS

IS " GOOD

TI I'\E To BE

IN THE
(H,...N'-IN

WOI'\

•n•rs

Rearrange

f

cr would ruff 10 one hand and discard
hi s heart lm ct lrom lhe other Yet

when West t11C:d t o cash the dtamond
ace. Hu.mg ruffed, played a trump to
dummy s queen. and threw hts heart
loser 011 the established dtamond

New Replacement Gas Tanks D
&amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV {30•)372·
3933 or t-800-273 9329

of

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

I

13

I' I I

L=~·~~·:;~-~~·=~

I=N~:

r

I-,;W;....:OT-N"""TN_K1 -I· ..
I'"

15

I I I

.

•

•

.

..

I"

~

limb. · a colleague mused about
the boss 'before he can turn

1• 17 I I

0

· -• -

Complete the ctlud:le quoled
by hl!1ng 1n the m1ssmg words
• you develop from step No 3 below

1740~446-61144

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1989 Pace Arrow motor home.
model 37J, 37' long side aisle,
washer &amp; dryer, microwave/con·
2,000 mile
vectlon own, sleeps
on motor &amp; transmission, oiO,OOO
m11es on chassis , Onan genera· ·
tor, rear view camera/TV, 2 TV,
stereo, caii740-9•9·2111, If no
answer, leave message &amp; we will
cah back

Hourly. Amuse. Slush ·Likely· MOLEHILLS

My father doesn 't like ,new technology

e.

Don 1 get stuni by h1gh pncPS'
Shop th•
'~"""'

'"""(i&lt;d

I. OQ 1he other
hand . bel1eve that machmes were made lo make moun1atns tnto MOLEHILLS

I·WEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN

1993, 35 II lnnsbruck Tra ...el
Tra11er, witt\ Expando Excellent

AUGUST 25l

Condhlon 1740)·367-7755
1995. 24Ft Gull Stream Con·
quest Class C. MotorHome
19 000 miles $27.500 304·882·

3323

Home
lmprovemen1s
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Uncondllional hletlme guarantee.
local references furn ished Es·
tabllshed 1915 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870, ~-800·287·0576 Rog ers waterprootlng

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement cepalra
done !rae estimates, lltet1me
guarantee. 12yrs on job eMperi·
ence (304)895·3887

840

'He II have to be out on a

1-r,E:.....:.T.,rC..,F-EFTil'-r--11 over a -- -

the Den list 's Coup

1983 Allegro motor home. 36k
miles stove, ovan , microwave,
furnace. batn, canopy , outside
gas grill, sleeps 8 $10.000, 740.
992-2088

810

the

1--,..-T.:-r"'T'--t

Jac k
Hua ng had found a vanauon on

1979 Mtdas Motor !'iome SelfContained, Generator New Aefrlg.,
Carpet, and Upholstery Ready -

for-Y2K

0

,

four scrambled words beInstead , het ore playmg the second
low to form four simple words
trump . Hunng c a:-.h e d the three club
Wl~nc" cndmg tn hand Now. when
R A p WU D
Wcs1 won w1th the ~pade kmg, put hts
'--r.:..Yi--~_,...:..11-i
2
p:utner on h::ad 111 dtamonds, an d
_ _
r
rc~...~.:n~:d the hF:mt rutf. he was endL=~::;~~;-;.=;---'
pl ,1ycd It he returned a club, declar-~r
C E EL

I I' .1 I I

Budget Pnced Transm•sslons
and Eng1nes All Types, Access
To Over 10.000 TransmisSions,
eve Jo1nts. 70-245-5677

790

WOlD

I

6pm

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commerc1a1 wiring,
new service or repairs Master LIcensed electric ian Ridenour
Electrical WV000306. 304·675

1786

mtgh\ be w1se today I~ forego lar:ge.gntherings, even 1f you re m a soc• abit- mood They'll eventually gel on
your nerves, whtlc small grbup!li of
pal s could make you feel at ease

ASTRO-ORAPB
Thursday, August 26, 1999

I

Although an arrangement mtght
be fotsted upon you by chance m the
year ahead, the poss1bllny is that you
· will end up formmg a very fruitful
allmnce w1th tins person Both pan1es
will benef1t
,

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sepl 22) There
always momenls when thmgs can
gel a tnne d1fficult over who accom-.
modates who m deahngs wtt~ your
mate However, if some type of comare

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) You 'll only be ask1ng for defeat
11 you Impulsively allow yourself 10
mi smatched compeuuve
involvement where the other guy has
the edge Why take on a no -win
arrangement?

@CI mto

'

a

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19}
Try to select compamon s today who
do not take them selve s or hfe too
scnously Bemg aroilnd people whQ
prOmi se tsn't made, the snuauon
are ego-oriented could become down
cou ld get worse Know where to look
- • -·rigllt uncomfortable
f ur romance and you'll find 11 1be
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
A stro· Oraph Matchmake r Jnstantly
The loss ~olumn could be waumg f or
reveals which stgns are romanucally
you if you don 't handle your
perfect for you. MatI $2.75 10 Matchmaker, c/o this new spaper, PO Bo~
1758 Murray H1ll StatiOn , New

York, NY 10156
LIBRA (Sept

2J.Oc1

23)

Although you might be confronted
wnh duucs at work today that are far
more d•rri~,.:ult to perfonn than usual,
there w1ll also be greater compensauon than usual for work well done

SCORPIO lOci 24-Nov 22} ll
,I

..

J L T P

BOGRL ,

w1th a low dmmond to the kmg , and
latls

74 StarcrBft Cruiser, 24' with tfall·
er, s1ove &amp; water tank. all a~s·
sorles $3.600 or trade for Ford
•x4 truck, 740·992·4028 alter

Dodge Ram 3500 PU f506471 AI

OR CERTIRED CHECK. 1

X F G M R

wh1ch IS a little

still has a heart loser, the contract

1986 , 181f2 It eayllner Cuddy
Catlin, CB depth llr1der Extras!
Ooc:K 3 (740) 446 6844

6323

10 00 AM On 9/.,99 At The
OVB Annex, 143 Third Aile Gallipolis, OH Sold To Highest Bid·
dar ·,o,s Is -Where Is" Wtthout
Expressed Or Implied Warranty
&amp; May Be Seen By Ca!ling The
CollectiOn Dept At 74().441 -1038
OVB Reserves The Flight To Ac·
cept JFieject Any &amp; AI! Bids &amp;
Withdraw Items From Sele Prior
To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH

0 S K R L

spade ace, s uppose declarer contmues
wtth another trump. West goes m

750 Boa1s J. Motors
tor Sale

69 Chevy short bed truck. needs
exhllult, rabullt engine. great
cond 304 -674 -1 44!5 between
7pm-8 pm only or 304·882·2726

Ohio Vallev Bank Will Offer For
Salt By P,ubllc Auction A 1997

S E

wnh the king. puts hJS partner on play

C&amp;C General Home Ma lntenence· Painting, vinyl s1dlng
carpentry, doors, windows ba1hs,
mob1le hOme repai' afld more For
free tstlmate can Ch&amp;t, 740-992-

Black 1990 S-10 Spon Sunroof
Excellent Cond•tFon, $2 895: 1994
Cavalier 2 Doors, $3,295 Cook
Motors.740-446-0103

BMBXSIP

East's three-heart openmg btd

Save $900, 1m, green, Kawasa·
ki Prairie 300 4 wheeler automat·
ic , paid $4 ,900, asking $3,999,
304·773·5379

Appliance Parts And Ser..,lce All
Name Brands Ove r 25 Years Ell·
parlance All Work Guaranteed,
Fren ch City Maytag, 740·446·
7795

bOiween 7Pfl1'8 pm on~

C:~y

11
clump
13 lllinOII City
18 Belabor

19 H•ttl•n

Opemng lead: • J

Motorcydea

1999 S-10 Chevrolet P1 ck-Up
t ,500 m11es Perlecot Condition
Take over Payments Senous En·
quiry only Great Dean (7 40~·446

1000

10 Celeb&lt;otory

20 W1th every

SERVICES

t 975 Black Chevy 2 WD. 350,
Brand New Small Black Motor,

6 Hulled groins

.'

3 Tavern

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer North

1996 Bronco XL · 25K Mag
Wheels Tint Glass. Auto, 0 0 V·
8, LOCkOut Hubl. New T~res, Stereo, Adult Owned, 116,000 Firin,
740-446-7527, After6.

720 Trucks lor Sale

388o8579

nerbarhood 51

• Q8 3

3407 OYOnlngs

1991 Dynasty Automatic. Looks

~ GNel

26 AucUoneer'e

• Q

1995 Ford Ranger 4x4, AC, 5
Speed . AMIFM Stereo, 51,000
Miles. Asking $9,000, 740·3789270

New 1999 Honda EX. two months
old, lactory warranty, $3950, call
740·992·2459 da~s or 304·882·

•

.. A Q 5

740-992·5025

1989 lincoln Conllnental Signature Series, AJC , PS, PS, Runs
Good, looks Good! Asking ·

115-r-'
48 Uyero

23 etrd
(comb. torm)

Soutb
AAI09 ?64

excellen1 condition PW, P'- $.
air, ••4. crulle. V-6, $13,000, ._ I

740

4 3 2

•

Armolrong
40Eaurs
41 11U-·• unft
42 ~
44 Aq..-11&lt; bird

15 Ju lonl
55 llounlaln 16 Nohoor o!Mep
(ovorgTMn)
17 Roww'o need 56 Belore thl1
16 llo. Gordno&lt;
lime
21 Rodlo holohol 57 Slgno of tho

• J 7 6
oAK 2
East

A 10 54
J 10 9 7 5

00

$2,500 304·895-3940 after 5 pm

1&amp;89 Corsica lTZ, excellent
shape , retail $3, t 50 asking

tinted

t

miles ,

Honda Helix Motor Scooter
2SOcc Eng•ne Perfect Condition,
Make Offer Or W111 Trade For 4
Whttllr. Or Farm Wagons Of
Equal Vai~M;t 74Q-245-0485

31.4 200 PSI

$21 ,95 Per 100: 1' 200 PSI

$69
3 month •free programing
with NFL Ticket Purchase. t.lmlted
time ollef, call t-800-179-8 l94

55 Gal Fish Aquarium w/ whole
set-up Kid$ Hobby Hone Also,
'2 Kings Island Tickets (30o4)875·

oa·

WANT A COMPUTER? BUT NO

Merchandise
112 Carat Diamond SOlitaire Ring,
Very High Grade Diamond. Less
Than l)ne Year Old, 11 .100 OBO

1979 Olds Toronaelo 57,000
mllea. almo~t mint condition
rage kept never driven In salt,
one owner, pnce neootlable on in-

1992 Pontiac Sunbtrd SE One
Owner, EKcellent Condition, Low
MileS, $4,500,740.388-9416

What tt We Could lOOk: And Feel
The Way We Old 15 Years Ago?
Faster Weight -l.oss. Tight Skin,
Enhanced l:nergy . . Call Today

21ldrm apts , total electric. ap·
.pliances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
G
Apl ••9
11 740-992
;~:-"EOH 1
Dr ca
•

1978 Th'unclerblrd, DilmonCI Jutn·
lee Ed1tlon, All Options, l!l3.t80
Actual M11e1. lmllllc~lata Condl·
tton CoUeC1ors Item Call After
•ooPM 7~2817

740-386-9693 or 740-892-6326.

530

Moono owner

13500 firm. 740-5114-9957

Used Chain Link FenCe, 7•0-446-

Jacll&amp;oo, Otuo, 1·800-537 9528

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, o~ At. 12-4,
Pomeroy Hours: M T W t 0 00
am to 600 p..m, Sunday 1 00 to
6 :00 p m. 740-992·2526, Rusa

IMPOUNDS. Honda's Toyota's ,
ChtyYS, Jeept, And Sport Utili·
tiel Cell Now! 800 - 772 · 7~70 .
lqiT 7832.

1992 Mercury Topaz GS. au·
tomatlc , 4 door, runs good, Ice
COld air, $850, 1990 t..IFISUblshl
EClipse, 5 Speed, llr COndlllomng,
sunroof, runs good, $1295 , 1989
Ford Tempo , au1omat1c, runs
good, -4 door, excellent coJlelttlon,
$700 1986 Ford Tempo 2 door,
runs good automatic, $450. 1987
Nlssan Sentra, 4 door, automatic,

okl 13041675-6693

2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port. we pay water, sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gaa &amp; eJectric, $200 per
month, $100 deposit, 740·992·
7806

CARS $100, $MO &amp; UP POliCE

Roll Top Des,k 36WX44DX240
$300 table &amp; 4 Cha•rs . $50
(304)675-6643, After 5PM

1 Bedroom Upstairs, Clean No
Pets, Relarencea, $300/Mo, Paid
UtliMI", 740-446-3667

value Of 1250 oo 7&lt;0·4o06-2529

CALL NOW For Uatlng1l 1-800·
319-33:2312:158

Goodl $1,400740-367-7576

C-11 HI00..51Hl359.

Antique Quilt, Japanese Lantern
Pattern. Will Sell For Appraisal

$500 CARS FROII POOIII euy
Pollee lmpoUndl I Repel. Fee.

985-3590

Sola &amp; Recliner $200, 4 Piece
End Table Set . $150. 7-i0-448·
7399

1 Bedroorh 1 A/C, WID Hook-Up,
Near Arbors Nursing Home, No
Pets, Quiet locations, $279/Mo,
+ Ulllills, 740-448·2957

710 Autos lor Sale

12.500, 740-367-7480

7104

19711 Joop CJT

1994 5 ·10 • wo Loaded, Mu1t
Sel $1,500, 740-317-7945.

R1t1red Ty Beanie Babita. $8·
$35, also old and new Stjlr Wars
toys, call 7oi0·985-4418 or 7•0-

Two sets ol concrate steps for
mobile hOme S100 each Can lle
" ' " at 167 Layne St Ntw Ha·
ven, Wv

Nortb
• Q 8 3 2

liner. 90k milt&amp;, Clll 740·915·
ot124.

TRANSPORTATION

$1800.740-992-7619

Whole E - 740-361.0280

Antiques

1&lt;13. 740 891 8254

door automallc. 116,000 miles,

QUICK CASH
AI D's Used
Furniture, Buying Partial Or

2 Dryers for sale 3112 to 4 yrs.

501 ba~. lour
..... o t - o o S R

1973 Plymouth Duster, 360 K&amp;~th
Black engine . too much to lilt.

JET

Chovr 4z4 350._4 Speed,

11,1100. OrOSO. 7-.oal9

Hay &amp; Grein

Take Ill Ameuca's hlost Successful Camperound And Time·

Teehnology We
Finance
Down'! Past Credit
Problems OK!! Even II Turned
Down Batorell Reestablish Your

7&lt;0-446-7""", 740-368.0173.

640
_

1~n

Ceb,

Aouj1. $MD, 740 ,,. !852.
Good,

Straw· fOr Hie· S2

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEM·
SERSHIP OR nMESHAR6? Wo~

1 Bedroom Upr.talrs Apartment In
Syracuse. $250/Mo, No Pits, C.
pos1t I 1 Veer lease Required,
740-992·7104AfterBP.M

Downtown Gallipolis, 1 Bedroom,
New Bank Repo's Only 3 left 1· · up:stalrs, A/C Newly Carpeted,
800-383·8882
Complete Kitchen, 740·446-0139
New 3BF\ 2 Balh, 14 Wide $500
Fl'rst Avenue, Gallipolis 1 &amp; 2
Down , $185 permo Free A1r 1
Bedroom Apartments , $2SO &amp;
SQ0-691·6777
$300/Mo , Unfurnished, Security
Deposit References Required .
New 4BR t6 wide , $500 Down
$219 permo Free Air, 1-800·691- 740·•46 1d66 or Weekends
740..441-o952
6777
New Bank repos Ol'lly 2 left we
11nance call304-722·7148

,.---,

For Sale. Reconditioned washers, dryers and refrigerator•
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

{740) 446-8113

I

PENTIUM

Must Sell Now. 30x!50, 45a80,
SOx100!! Must Uqu1date, Will Sell
At lnvolcell FREE DELIVERYII 1·
800-21 t ·9594 x59. '

440

•

LOADED

COMPUTERS. Poor Crtdlt O.KI

STEEL BUILDINGS · 3 OI&lt;LYI

1991 14hx72ft -2 Bedrooms , 2
Baths, Sh1ngle Roof, Vlllyt Siding,
Excellent Condition $16,500 00

1 bedroom al)artment In Middle·
port, ell ullliliee paid, $270 per
month. $100 depqslt. 7ot0-992·

FULLY

For sale or tracllt 1or h.,. 8 bllty
goats beautiful markings. ctre·
fuMy rlilld $S5 each 304-571 •

2392

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges , Relrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee !
French C1ty Maytag, 7•0·~•6·
7795.

tease, $250 moni h, security de·
posit of $200. no pets relerences
requlfed, trash tneludld '140-992·
2979aft8f6pm.

Electric, PayoH Of $J!.4.000, 740- 912-2218

BACK GUARANTEE! Nlturol, DT

Recommended . 740-441· t 1112

amall term with

llouM. 130411754-

Shed , washer Dryer, Fndg,
Sto..,e. Set·Up On Rental L.ot, 2
M•les From Holzer Hospital, Great
Shape, $15 500, 7o40-441-oB08

Apartments
tor Rent

--

Up To 30 Ills, 30 DAY MONEY

PAIIIESTAfl.

470 Wanted to Rent

Comta With Another
$1 ,000, 740-3117-757e

BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE

call740-985-9853.

W•nt to rent

1173 Ford ltuc* ..... Automlflk:.

$48,000 In Ptluta Poasibll PuW-

7&lt;0-3711-Z!St.

plae1 2 1ox20

This news~ will not
knowl"illr IICCepl
8dvertiS8ments tor real estate
which is 1n VIOlatiOn oflhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
adVertised tn thiS newspaper
are available on an equal
OpJX)rtunity baSIS

1250IMO.. PI"' Uijhllol Slcurlly

Mobile Home lot Available Now

89 Clill'flon 14x70,2 br ,2 ba
ken garden tOO, cennl aJr

All real estate advenislng 1n
this newspaper Is subjeCt to
tbe Federal Fair Hous1ng Act
of 1968 whiCh makes it Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
limitatiOn or CI1SCI'im1naf6on •
based on race, color, rellgiOfl,
sex familial status or nat1011al
origin, or any Intention to
make any sUCh preference,
limitatiOn or diScr'lmlnalion."

01- ...........

" - EOH ~'IS&amp;79

We BuY Land 30 · 500 Acres ,
We Pay Cash 1-800.213·8365,

•n

=

3 Bedroom House With 3 Aerts
land Few Fruit Trees. 2 Bedrooms, &amp; Bath Upstairs, 1 Bed·
room Front Room Dining Room ,
Utility Room Kitchen, Bath Down·
sta1rs Sits On Storys Run Road,
OH Route 7, For More Information
Call 740-367-7576 Aller Noon,
Price $49,500 f1rm

)$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

W..., end Etectrtc ReHy For
-o\lp. Nlcl Loti....000.10
&amp;I:II.COII-17W1"-

~~~~~~17:..::806=------:----::::-:

DENTAL BILLER Up to $20 ·$40

•• Lose Wel~ht, Boost Energy,
Malle A Fortune From Home, 1800-762·1749 Ask lor Tim

Apt Co&lt;nt'

I

Renovated FarmhOuse, S.aulifUI

ono ll1d

Now Taking AppUeaUon1- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townl'louae
Apartments, lncluelts Water
Sewege. Tr1sh, $315/No , 7•ott6 ()()(W
For leaH One Bedroom, AC

-tllul VIIW,
2 Clr$114,100,
GoroQo. -740·311~
.107~.
.

21n-.
bT

IHr Dental BFIImg Software Com·

'"""FREE 3 DAY TRIAL PACK"'

213-13M

Ftni1hed. Full 8atecnenl. AI·

:.1 -ifi:n;;;;;;;;jNi";;;~;;,~

367-o612

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Repair·
lng NOT Replacing, ~ong Cracks
In Windshields Free VIdeo 1·
800..826·8523 US /Canada
www glassmechanix com

...

Priced To Sam .t &amp;.drooma. '
Salha, Blicl&lt; On 2.12 ~·
II Clll'leclra1 Ceiling, ,_rllllfr

251-9382

Beauty Salon: for Sale 7 Sta·
t1ons1 A·1 Locat•on , Plenty of
Parking, 4 Tanning Beds, well Sell
together or Separate Call (740)·

pany NeedS People To Process
Med1cal Claims Ftom Home
Training Prov1ded Must Own
Computer 1·800·223·1149 EKt
460

211, Sovlfll Of Gallipolis Sin·
glewidll Alowtd. Land Cona'~
~a--. Only $21,000, 1-100.

for Sale

OVER YOUR HEAD IN PEST???
Need More Breathing Room?
Debl Consolidation , No Ouahfty·
mg!l! FREE CONSUULTATION
(800)558·1543 Ext 21-i wwwanewnorlzon org Licensed /Bonded
Noo-PnJfii/NatOnal Co

230

NEW Oil~
2 3 -. 2-00SR7&amp;SR

- 50&gt;110
lot. '" port, c-1740
112 2110.

Three bedroom house ror sale ,
112 bolhl. tully l\l'nishod
niCI yard, em. to pan.:,
Sy·
camora Street, MICidleporl , call

Annuities And Government Farm
Payments A.lso Purchasing Lotteries And Private Mortgages
Call Seltlemenl Capltal. 1·800·
959·0006 www seltltmtnteapi-

6167

tMtdrOOnt

FREE CASH NOW• Wealthy Families Unk&gt;ael.ng M1ll10ns To Htlp

Need child care before or after
school at Hamsonv11l&amp; Elementary? Call Stlelly at 740..1-42·7600
AI day child care aYallabte atso

We do Hatler demohtlon&amp;some
homes&amp; !rash p1ck-up 30~-773 -

ownl(· ftlfO

7....9pm

Buyers Of Structured SeltJements,

Ma"'

For .... by

-BarO,SI.C, UT

censed tly the St. of WV 304·
675-5847

Still Patnlmg lnlenor, Exlef•or,
Free Estim ates "C/Ieap~st In
Town. • 740-388·0866 Ask For

•

··~ Coni

MerchMcliM

-"'--

370..'•-31 Aatronlul

ACROSS

PHILLIP

I

reso urces carefully today If finann:tl
trend s appear a tnffe uncertain , don "t
gel mvolved in any l ops1ded JOint
ventures

PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20! A
presumptuous co mpnruon m•ghttake
11 upon hnn or herself to make o. cnt•cal dec1s1on for you today 1f you
appear the leasl btl unccnam Mumtam control

ARIES (Mard• 21 Apnl

19 )

There l.sll 't any reason why you can I
achieve your financtal atms today but
1~ won ' t be wonh It 1fyo u swap your
pnnc1ples f or profit Don ' t forsake
your h1gh standards

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) If
there 1s so m eo ne you don t hkc who
IS part of a group you do hke , be careful not to show •mpat1ence wtth tlus
adversary's ,\niles when 111 the1r company today M aintain a class act

GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20) E'en
1f you fe el you are nght O\er a disagreement w1th an aulhonly f1gure
todaf, back off a pace or two Everything wtlltum o ut fine 1f you don 't
1
try to fight c1ty hall

CANCER (June 21 Jul y 22) You
can expect an unpleasani response
today 1fyo u try to 1mpose your rnclh·
ods nr opm1ons on fnends N t1h ody
every wms potnts hy bcmg a know-

ll·all
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Any deal
1s likely to collapse "'hen there 1s an
sn 1f you ~et
tn\'olvcd m a colh:lll''C l'ndca\or
today ,make cert;un lhere s an equalfl y of mput hy all

:thsencc of panty

GeographiC EKPiorer (CC)

�i

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy •

Middleport, Ohio

VWedneaday,August25,1999

Arkansas
school
district
experiments
with
color
coded
uniforms
!! K~I~~E~ EV~RETT
~~~ eBL~~ss

rlter

.

Ark. (AP) Keepmg trac k oFf, students
W
Ch
. m. the
.
a atson . apel School Dtstnct ts
ar~n~~~!~~~;~:· All the1r clothes
·
·. d
E' emenlary stu ents are wearing khaki or blue slacks and
white, blue or bur•undy
polo•
style
shins.
High
sc
hoolers
wear
h'
h.
·
d'·
w tie , unter green or burgun y
shirts. .
·. .
k Casey Mounts, . a 5-year-old
~nd:rgartner at Edgehwood Eleebn ary, ,wore_navy s orts and a
ba Y blue shut - blue IS her
·

favorite color- and navy shorts
" The idea behind the law was
when her mom picked her up mainly to get the s~hool boards to
Monday.
.
deal with the issue ·• sa id Kevm
'':We. had our dou bts at r·.rsl, " sn11th
· , a state representative
'
· from
Chrmtc Mounts_said "It sound- Stuttgart. " It 's gotten a lot of
ed hke 11 _was cunmg down on attention because of the shooting
mdt vtdualtsm. Once they got at Columbtne and the trenchthem and tried 'them on they coats."
looked rea.lly cute .,
.
·
· Two students gun ned -down 12
Other schoo ls cou' ld f'ol low the schoolmates and a teacher before
district's load ·
·
killing thems.c lvcs Apr,il 2() at
The Legislature has asked all Columbine High School in LittleA
. sc
· hools to look . ton. Colo .
. r kansas publtc
mto whether untforms would suit
. The gunjnen were said to be
thetr needs. Referenda would be members of a group · that wore
put on school election . ballots dark trenchcoats .
nex
· Tltc ,o, 500 -stu dent. f:tve-sc
· ·. h oo 1
. t year
· ·

" It 's an issue of local ~ontrol.
Watson Chapel district had hoped you ..1 cou ld go to church in
to reduce school violence by relythese.:· he said . Only hats. whi~h It best works when it 's thought,
in• on fences teacher supervision are shll allowed, set some chtl- fully planned out by all parties
• a cnv
· -provided
.
involved - students, teachers,
and
police officer. dren apan.
Now .. many think uniforms
Th~ ~rka_nsas School Boards -administrators. and parents," said
also can help : Parents say it's Assoctatton ts neutral on the col- spokesman John Penninglol).
easier tO dress their kids children ors.
. I .
'. .
d
sady tt e tmtnatehs colllpelttlldon an
a mtmstrators ope tl ea s to a
• . 1y scu mg
.
Holzer Medical Center
more oru'r
Dec k·c'd out tn
· ·wnn
· kl c- f ree
Frklukh · k1 ·h .
d
k d .
Dlsclutrges: Mrs: Michael Shaffer and son.
~
s
ons
an
a
tu~
e
·m
Birth
.
while po·to. shirt. IO -year-old
s: Mr. and Mrs. 0 avt'd Ho ffman o f M'ddl
1
eport,
son; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Dial said he felt comfort- Gregory Gibbs of New Haven, W.V~ .• son.
&gt;ble - and anonymous.
Satyrdly
. . "Evervbody alm ost looks the
No discharges or.births reported.
·
·
·
·
,
Sund•Y
.
·
same and people do~'l talk about
-----Dlscbarges: Mrs. David Hoffman and son; Mrs. Gregory Gibbs and son.
Births: none reported.
·

PEPSI, MT.
DEW, DT. PE
PEPSI
DR.
. ONE,
.

STORE HOURS

PEPPER, 7 UP

Monday thru
Sunday
IIM-10 PM

2/$499

291 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU August 28, 1999

6 PK 24 OZ. NRS

JUICY JUICE

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
JAKE ROUSH
TURNS ONE • Jake Chayton
. Roush celebrated his 'first birthday on ~uly 23, at home, with
family and . friends. Following a
cookout, cake and ice cream
were served. "!)laney's 101 Dal·
mations" was the theme.
',
Present were his · parents,
Mike and Christi Roush, his sister, Carlee, maternal· grandparents Sam and Debbie Boston,
.paternal grandparents Jeff and '
Dabble Tillis, great grandmother
Mary Roush, great-grandfather
.Bernard Gilkey, aunts Debbie
·Halley, Billie Halley and Casey
·Tillis, and severalf!lmily f~iends. ·

DOUBLE COUPONS

• SEE STORE FOR DETAILS ·

By The Associated Press
For year~. Pierre Franev ex ulted
the .commandmeht " Don ' t-spend all
evening in lhe kitchen!" Franev. a
master chef. wrote a ·reg ular col~mn
for The New York Times that fea- ·
tured recipes that wo~ld take less
than one hour to prepare.
Now. three years after h;is death,
300 of his newly discovered recipes
have been published in "Cooking
With the 60-Minutc · Gourmet"
. (Times Books. $30). His partner and
pupil Bryan Mill er is co-author.
Friend and fel.l ow top chef Jacques
Pepin wrote the forc\vord, ·and
Fr.aney's daughter Glau~ia Franey
Jensen Wrou~· the introdu ction.
·
In his notes about Turkey Steaks
with Mustard Seeds and· Mu shrooms. Franey said he often used
turkey cutlets as a ".pinch hitter" for
vea~and chicken. He said the recipe.
which takes about 25 minutes to pre pare and cook; was developed after
he found a bottle of mustard seeds·in
the back of the pantry.
Thrkey Steaks with Mustard ·
Seeds and Mllllhrooms
Preparation and cooking time : 25

minutes.
4 tablespoons olive oil
4 slic;es turkey breast (about 112
pound each)
,
:Salt and freshly ground pepper
· 3 tablespoons yellow· mustard .
seeds
.
1/2 pound mus)!rooms, sliced
2 tablespoons :finely shopped
shallots.
.112 teaspoon finely chopped garlic.
·
3/4 cup ripe plum · tomatoes,
peeled and cui into small cubes ·
·, · I tablespoon red wine vinegar
. I 12 cup fresh .or canned chicken
broth
. I tablespoon butter
2 tablespoen s finely chopped
parsley or· any fresh herb
. Heat I tablespoon of the 6i 1 in a
nonstick skillet large enough to hold
· all the turkey pieces in one layer.
Sprinkle the turkey slices with
salt and pepper and press mustard
seeds onto both sides. · Add the
turkey slices to the skillet and saute
o_vcr high heat until lightly-browned·.
about 3 minutes on ~ach side. Trans-

fer the meat to a serving platter and
keep it warm.
Heat the . remaining o live .oil in
.'the skillet. Add the mushrooms. salt
and pepper. Stir and cook over hi gh :
heat until li ghtly browned. Add the
shallots and garli c. Stir briefly and
add the tomatoes. vtncgar and broth.
Add any liquid that may have
;iccumulated aro und the turkey.
Over high ·heat, reduce the li quid in
the pan by half; stirring in the butter
and parsley at the end . Pour the
sauce over the turkey slices and

'

100% FRUIT

·JUICE

$ 49
FRESH PORK COUNTRY SnLE'

$

RI

.. ·

eb

.

·

Ll.'

.

!~ .... ~'•.•............•........
,.-

'FRESH PORK

·

460Z. CAN

.1 19

WHITNEY'S.
PINK .
SALMON

$. 69

1
$
19
Sirloin Chops•..•.....!~:.. 1
.

Quick Cooking:
T1,1rkey Steaks with
Mustard Seeds
and Mushrooms

LB.

Cubed Steak...........

.

2/$

FRESH PORK

.
3

$ 99

USDA•CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB. .
Str1p Steaks........

FRESH GROUND

LB.

Chuck ••••••••••••••••

FRESH

. ..

..

Ground

.

,

LB.

R o u n d ••••••••

~

USDA BEEF BONELESS CHUCK

I

der

f .••••••

.

SJ89

FRE!H BONELESS &amp; SKINLEff

Ch1cken Breast......

·. ·

$-119

"

14.75 oz.

JERZEE
EVAPORATED

MILK
'

·.

2/$

$139
· .

,

$ 49

UNITED
BELL 2%, 1%
.OR SKIM MILK ·

$1'.' '
1 GAL

.
·. Yellow C

5/$1

, ears

.. o r n • • •·• • • • • •
..

BLUE BONNET STICK

.

~

:·

·

•

D •t
or1

·

,

·s·

.
90Z

.

o s ••••••••••••••••

.1,. 9

Potato Chips •••::::••
. .PEPSI &amp; MT• ·FINAL TOUCH
DEW PRODUCTS
.FABRIC
2 LITERS

.

SOFTNER

,. '

.... $)69.

serve. Makes 4 servings.

••••••••••••

BORDEN AMERICAN SINGLES

BROUGHTON HOMESTYLE . · ·

.

.

·c .·'·
'

.

46 oz.

s· . . .
199
;
$
.
·
.
2
•

·
16'oz.
:
C· h e e s e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.

.BATH
.TISSUE

4
3)$ .19
~~!·...
·1

$699 '

TIDE ULTRA
PAPER TOWELS . LIQUID LAUNDRY
.DETERGENT

., BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value.

Ice

(Ass'f Flav)

•

STOKELY'S
TOMATO
, JUICE ·

99
.1 ANGEL-SOFT

·s

M a r g a..r . l n·e11b.(r.eg.orlowratr2/

(ASST. FLAV)

Auguet 2t, 1M

Weath er

Cincinnati drops third game to Braves, Page 4
Ann on strange living arrangements, Page 6
1999 Fall Sports insert inside today's Sentinel

Today: Showers
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

------Hospl"tal news------

P0 WELt'S
· WE

Thursday

Cream!~:~.~=-~~~~~~~~

FO! DELUXE
.P1zzas ......

.·

MARDI GRAS

·3/$ ·· .·
·
I

SINGLE
ROLL

LIMIT 3 PLEASE ADD. PURCH. 2/89'

$5!!

'

36ROLLS

.

Win A

$500

..
'

Meigs County's

-Page4

·H9metown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 56

Single Copy - 35 Cents

The Eastern Local School Board to .consider offering free breakfast

By BRIAN J. REED
school principal Rick Edwards, agreed that most stu~...,...-...,.,-----.,....--...:::~-..,.--..---.,..-~-~----=..,.,,
Santlnel News Staff
dents whose pareots could not afford breakfast
'
·
·
The Eastern Local Sohool Board' will consider offering free breakfast already participate in the free breakfast program.
to all stude~ts, but not .until later in the school year. ·
"The students who do not eat breakfast are not
Meeting in regular session on Wednesdai evening, the board met with doing so because they don't wa~t to, not because they
the district's lunchroom .supervisor, Carolyn Ritchie, who discussed the can't afford it," Jewett said. .
advantages and disadvantages of a free breakfast program, and shared
"The students who would be hungry in the mornwith the board an overview of the costs associatetl with the breakfast pro- ing are already getting a free breakfast," Jewett said,
gram and the level of reimbursement from the state.
· but all agreed that many higher'income parents also
T~e Meigs Local School District has offered breakfast at .no cost for a send their children to .school without breakfast,
number of years, and the Eastern district has been considering doing the because both parents are involved in getting to work
same since last school year.
·
themselves.
_·
The importance· of breakfast to school performance is cited as .the pri- ·
Ritchie · also noted that the Meigs Local School
mary reason for offering it at no cost, but the district must now w,eigh the District. reports a 60 percent free and reduced lunch
advantages of offering .free breakfasts against the costs involved, and eligibility rate, while Eastern has an eligibility rate of
must also consider what increase in breakfast participation would result. 38 percent. . (Part of the reason for the. discrepancy,
According to Ritchie, appwximately 200 students ale lunc.h )ler day at however, may be due to the .fact !))at students in the
Eastern Elementary School last year, with a considerably lower participa· .Meigs Local School District are directly certified elilion in the high school.
.
gible for free and reduced lunch by the state, while
Ritchie said that 87 percent of the students who qualify fot free and Eastern parents must apply for eligibilily at the
reduced lunch - who automaiically qualify fot ' free breakfast - ate beginning of the school year.) .
.
breakfast. Most.breakfast participants wer.e free and reduced-lunch eligiIn order for a {ree breakfast program to be finanble.
.
.
.
cially feasible, Ritchie said, the district would ~eed
The district is reimbursed at 21 cents per breakfast served, regardless an eligibility rate of at. least 60 percent.
.
of whet~er the student pays for the breakfast or not. Students who pay for
They also agreed that the largest current participa·
'
lion ·and the largest likely increase in breakfast parDISCUSS BREAKFAST PROGRAM- Carolyn Ritchie, left, lunchroom supervisor
the breakfast are chiuged 75 cents, Ritchie said.
Breakfast in the school district usually consists of cereal, a breakfast ticipation would come from the lower elementary for the Eastern Local School District, discussed the advantages and costs of a free
sandwich with milk, French toast 'sticks or a doughnut, all served with grades.
.
.
.
.. .
breakfast program with the district board on Wednesday evening. Alao pictured
fruit juice and milk - food that is easily handled and quickly eaten,
Joyce Htll, a .f mt grade teacher tn the dtstrtct, was are from right, board mambars Roger Willford and Greg Ballay Clerk Llea Ritchie
, in attendance at t~e meeting, and said that time and Board President John Rice.
.
·
'
··
'
because 'o f the time element involved, Ritchie said.
·
·
·
The cost to the district in offering free breakfasts to all students; at the restraints could be worked out in the lower grade, .
current rate of participation, is estimated .at $13,560 for the sch(/ol year, where scheduling is more flexible, and agreed that "benefits wo!!ld out- and Diane Wolfe as a high school special education teacher.
· ••
.
.
The board also voted to discontinue the in-school driver education proRitchie said, because of the increased cast involved in purchasing food weigh problems."
and paying empl_oyees needed to accommodate an increase in participa- .
In othe• action, the board hea.rd from Charles Faulk, newly-elected gram, due to the discontinu.ation of state reimbursement.
tio·n.
.,
president of the Eastern Athletic Boosters, who discussed the need for
.The board also:
"If we· offer free breakfasts to.. all students, and participation among roof replacement on the high· school weight room, as well as problems
• Hear&lt;i reports from Jewett and Edwards;
~aying st~de~ts increases significantly, the district will lose mijney 'big that the boosters may face with concessions at home football games if a
• Approved several students for open enrollment for the new school
ttme;": Rttchte satd. .
·
·
· new multi-purpose building at the field' i~ not' completed.
year;
.
"I think offering free breakfast to all students is great, but is it finanThe b.oard agreed that the boosters would likely need to ~se space in
• AUocated $50 per teacher fqr classroom supplies;
dally feasible? I don't know." ·
the new bus garage for a concessions area until construction on the new
• Approyed a new science course of stuoy;
.
, Board President John Rice said that the financial impact,,of offering· concession stand is completed.
·
• Met in executive session fo discuss contract negotiations and pend- ·
free breakfasts is not as important to him as is knowing that students who
Faul_k also expressed .the boosters' concern that a new Jl'/hcy, allowing· ing litigation. .
'
·.
·
·. · '
need breakfast before s.tarting the school day, but do not receive it, would holders of Golden Buckeye cards to receive discounted admission rates to . . Present, in addition to Superintendent Deryl Well and· Board President
be s.erved. ..
aihletic events could affect lhe boosters' coffers.
John Rke, were Board members Roger Willford, Greg Bailey. Mike MarRitchie, as well as elementary scnool principal Molly Jewett and high
The board hired Chad Griffith as a high school lang~age arts teacher, . tin, and Ric~ Sanders, and Clerk!l'reasurer Lisa Ritchie.

..

E~~t:!~r~~~~L~~o~~~~d ~!?.~~m~~~~~h~~~~~! Man:: stabs, injurf)s three aboard Amtrak train

trict will give students and their evening is as follows: from S to By AMY BETH GRAVES
··cian, said it appeared the attack began in a dining car.
p.arents a chance to meet .teachers 5:15p.m. staff will be introduced;·· Aasoclated Prasa Writer
and administrators and tour school from 5:15 to 5:30, tours of the
OLMSTED FALLS (AP)- A man stabbed
It wasn't immediately clear whether some of
facil!ties at a speCial open house buildings and grounds will be con- and ·wounded 'two conductors and a passenger the victims were stabbed in other cars, but
event scheduled for Monday.
dueled; and from 5:30 until 7 p.m., aboard an Amtrak train outside Cleveland early police found heavy blood in two other cars and
"Back to School Together" is students will meet with teachers today, then surrendered, police said.
blood trails through four.
..
the theme for the open . house, and principals and pick up sched- ·
The suspect stabbed a conductor, then started
Jessica · Franz, 17, of Detroit, \Vas asleep
which will help students, teachers .ules. Door piizes and refreshments · slashing at pt;ople within his reach, wounding when a wounded conduc.tor stumbled ·into her
and parents get a good stan on the will be provided.
the two other·victims, Olmsted Township police compartmeQt and felL ·
T~e event has been coordinated Chief Dennis McCafferty said.
"It was such a shock," said Franz, who was
new schMI year, .w hich will' start
for students on Tuesday.
by the Eastern Local Continuous
The suspect was wounded in a hand. A fifth on her way to school at s ·mith· College. "I'm
·St·udents in grades 7-12 can Improvement Planning Advisory .person complained of chest pains after the -just glad it's over.''
.
pick up schedules at the open · Team, which is made up of 24 attack and also was hospitalized.
·
·
The LakeShore Limited·, which carried 330
house event, and find out their members. The team is comprised
Police did not know a motive but said. it did people and runs daily between Chicago and
homerooms.
of staff, students, and community not appearJhat the suspect knew the victims.
New York, was approaching Cleveland when
Students in g.rades K-6 can and business people of the Eastern
Officers found an 8-inch knife hidden in the the attacks began abqut .1 a.m.
.
suspect's panis, the police chief said.
A conductor stopped the train in Olmsted
meet their teachers and visit their Local community.
Patrolman Kim Kort, a crime scene techni- Falls, 14 miles southwest of. Cleveland.

ns cause
.

Police had received a call reporting an unruly
. passenger, McCafferty said,
"When officers got on the scene there was a
lot of pandemonium. People wete po.uring out
of the train," he said.
''The suspect was mixep up with th·e cro~d~
and a witness came forward and· said, 'That's
.him, that's him.'"
,
Police Lt. John Minek earlier had said the
suspect llpparently was wounded as passengers
wrestled the kn.ife from him. McCafferty said he .
could not discount or verify that information but
said he was still gath·ering information.
. McCafferty said he may have b.een wounded
when he tried to hide the knife. ·.
The suspect and victims were not identified.
The other passengers were put on buses to be
taken to Cleveland.

.Federal agency reviews coal dust sampling program

.

Pomeroy and the surrounding area received an estimated three
inches of rain over the 24 hour period from Tuesday tQ Wednesday,
MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (AP)- Miners have
. · complained for more than 20 years of a fatal flaw
causing some temporary road closings.
According to the .rain gauge at Meigs County Emergency Ser- · i.n the program tci control coal dust that causes
vices, 'located behin-d Veterans·Memorial Hospital, 3;2 in~hes of rain black lung diseaSe: Mine operators have been
.
fell on the area.- The most ·intense period of rain was Wedne:sdliY expected to police ·themselves.
J:
Davitt McAteer, now the head of the federal
evening, when areas of Pomeroy reported as much as 1.5 inches
.Mine Safety and Health Administration, likened
· .
·
rain in an hour.
the ·system ·in 1991 to ordering highway speeders
State Route 7 near Forest' Run Road was closed to trafftc last to turn themselves fn.
·
night for period, causing a detour by way of the Pomeroy Bypass.
"At 67 miles per hour, you'd be required to
The Meigs Couniy . Sheriff's Office reported this morning that pull over, fill out a card that says you were viola!-.
other Jemporary road closings were made necessary by the heavy ing the law then send it to the State Police," MeAteer said.
raiqs,
that no roads remained closed on·Thursday 'morning.
At the time, McAteer was a public interest
lawyer focusing on workplace safety and occupationa! illnesses like black lung di~ase,
Now the head of the agency he criticized.then,
McAteer -has set a news conference at a
Moundsville coal mine late today to outline "new
steps in the long-terln plan to end black lung disease." .
·
.
.
The federal program developed to limit minCOLUMBUS (AP) - The decomposed body of a man found in a Fairers' exposure 10 coal dust was heralded in 1977 as
field County co~nfield may he the victim of a slaying in Columbus three
the step needed to end the crippling, ultimately
fatal disease. But the program has garnered noth-.
weeks ago, police said.
·
ing but complaints since then.
Columbus police and Fairfield
"It's no secret that the method of taking dust
County sheriff's deputies searched
samples used since 1977 .is run through with failthe cornfi~ld · near Millersport
Wednesday after homicide detectives received a tip . .
2 Sections - 28 Pages
. "I received information about
By MARCY GORDON
·
three weeks ago that a person could
AP Business Writer
have been killed at aColumbus resWASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's barikers
Idence," Columbus detective Pat
have gotten into the sermon-writing business. It's
Darn told The Columbus Dispatch not fire and brimstone they're offering, but ·a way
for a story today.
,
to cool passions arising from fears of a Year 2000
" We were able to develop infor:
catastrophe. They're preaching that the world
mation that led us to Fairfield
won't come to an end, that in fact life will go on
normally after the mill~&gt;nnial date change.
County." ·
The American Bankers Association is distribIn a search warrant for the Columuting a folksy sample sermon for clergy to help
bus residence filed in Franklin
them debunk expectations of a Y2K meltdown
County Munjcipal Court, police
that would cripple the banking system.
said AI Flynn is thought to have
"We wanted .to reach out to the religious combeen killed July 30 with 'a hatchet
munity,"
John Hall, a spokesman for the trade
and sledgehammetwhile he slept in
group
said
Wednesday, referring·to the four-page
his living room.
homily
that
it is distributing to bankers to share
Police searched the residence and
with
their
local
ministers, priests and rabbis.
retrieved a sledgehammer, pi~ces of
The heads of the country's ATM nerworks,
Daily 3: 2-2-8; Daily 4: 6'2-9-0 .
wood flooring and a bottle of
C 1999 Ohiu V~llc)· Publis~ing Cu.
meanwhile,
urged cmisumeis not to withdraw
bleach.
·unusually large amounts of cash, while assuring

a

Regional Briefs

Pollee believe that body found in
cornfield may pe victim of homicide
Good Afternoon

ure," United Mine Workers President Cecil
Roberts said Wednesday. "In some instimces, a ·
lot of illegal things have been done.
.
''Worse, · we still have miners suffering from
black lung disease," Roberts said. "There is no
question we need a better system for monitoring
dust levels in underground mines.''
Some industry leaders, including the UMWA,
have urged the federal agency to take over
responsibility itself for collecting the under- '
ground dUst samples. The agency has said that
· would be an enormous undertaking in terms of
manJl'/wer. ·
•
In 1991, then U.S. Labor Secretary Lynn Martin accused mine operators of "widespread cheating" in the program.
.
.
Under Martin, the agency' accused 504 mine
operators with 4,700 sepalat.e incidents of tampering with the samples they sent to an MSHA
testing lab. · ·
.
The nation's largest coal producer, Peabody
Coal Co. of St. Louis, pleaded guilty to three
criminal counts of tampering and paid a $500,000
fine.
. As ·early as 1978, miners were complaining to
MSHA about the program's flaws.
Employees of 15 different western Pennsylva.
·nia mine~ told about problems with the program

during public heari~gs held by MSHA he.ld in ·
Pittsburgh in 1978.
,
,. Qne miner, Fred Uslak, told he~rirg officers
that at his mine, "We have people that get a (too
high) re,ading and the next day they are told to ·.·
take it again until they get the sample the C&lt;11Rpany wants."
·
"Mostly the men, after they carry it five or 10
days , they get so disgusted carrying that thing that
they'll do anything to get a good sample," he
said. ·
'
·
.
Other miners told of heing sent home and
docked· a day's pay for refusing tosjgn a card saying the sample had been correctly taken before the
.sampling began.
.
'
···' Mine operators disputed Marti-n's . sweeping .
allegations, but .later that year federal prosecutors·
filed criminal charges against 43 individuals and
33 coal companies in West Virginia, Virginia and
Kentucky.
,.
Most eventually pleaded gutlty to the charges.
But many civil ~omplaints filed ·against mine
operators· ultimately were dismissed.
In 1995, the feoer~l Mine Safety and Health
review commission; an. administrative appeals
panel, ruled that. the _government had failed to
meet. its burden of proof in as many as 3,000
cases.
.
·

Nation's bankers offer sermoo tQ quell Year 2000 fears

ay's Sentinel

l
(

I

Ramirez pounds·three .
homers In lndlans12-4
spanking of oakl8iid .

•

.I -

. ..

Sports

•

them that their cartls will work •normally through
the year-end date change.
The sermon aims to counter the belief fostered
in some religious and s~rvivalisl literature that
the Year 2000 will bring an apocalypse.
"Things will work, " it says. "Hos pitals wilL
be open. Police and fire departments will be prepared. Pow.er companies will be fully staffed.
Banks will keep you.r money safe.
The seimon urges:. "We want to go into the
new millennium with hope, eagerness and faith
in this new century of promise. We don't want to
be crouched in our basements with candles,
matches and guns.
.
"There are, aftd all , two ways. to cross the
Red Sea. With Moses, who with God's help, led
the children of Israel into a bright, hopeful future.
Or with Pharaoh, who in trying to preserve the
old, hurled his chariots, his officers and his army
into the sea."
.
Spokesmen for the American Anglican Coun-

cil and the_ U.S. Catholic Conference declined
comment Wednesday on the sermon. The distrib·
ution of it was first reported by the American ·
Banke r, a trade publication.
At a news conference, the l'\TM network exec·
utivcs advised consumers to treat the last week'
end of the millennium as they would any long
holiday weekend. The network companies,
which arc members of the Electronic Funds
Transfer Association, link banks and other financia! insfitulions with hundreds of thousands of 1
ATMs nationwide as well as _point-of-sa le
machines used to pay for' purchases in grocery ·
stores and other retail locations.
Dennis Lynch, president and chief executive
officer Of New Jersey-based NYCE Corp., said
all the ATM networks' computer systems have
been fully tested and found "ready and· C\)mpatible."
Contingency plans also hav.e been prepared,
Lynch noted. 1

•f

, '-

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