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                  <text>Wedn
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

[Time Out For Tips[
By Becky BMr
Meiga County Extenalon Agent
Family
and
Conaumer
Sciences/Community Development
Canning season is here again. To help
ensure the best results, there are some
important things to remember when pre._==::;_-'"--' serving fruits and vegetables from the garden.
Preserve only the freshest foods . The slogan ''Two hours from
garden to jar" is good to follow. This will help minimize bacterial growth that can lead to food spoilage.
Make sure all equipment is working properly. It is recommended that pressure canner gauges be tested annually. The
Extension Office checks canner lids on Wednesday mornings.
Call 992·6696 for an appointment to have yours examined.
Use clean, sterilized glass canning jars that are free of nicks
and chips. Any small crack will allow air in, which would prevent a vacuum seal from occurring.
Follow the manufacturer's directions when preparing lids.
Lids were meant to only be used once. because the seal would be
broken upon opening.
After filling jars, run a knife around the inside to remove air
bubbles. Leave the correct amount of headspace . Wipe jar top
with a clean wet cloth to remove any panicles of food that could
prevent the Jar from seal in~.
Use the right canner to process foods . A boiling water bath is
used when preserving high-acid foods, s!ICh as fruits, jellies, and
pickles. The acid level in these foods are high enough to prevent
bacterial growth.
Only a pressure canner should be used to process low-acid
foods . such as vegetables. meats, and combinations of them. The
pressure canner is also being recommended for tomatoes,
because the newer varieties are becoming• lower in acid. Lowacid foods allow the growth of bacteria that can cause the deadly foodbome illness known as botulism.
Pressure canners should be vented by allowing steam to
escape for ten minutes before pressurizing. This removes the air
that can interfere with a true pressure reading.
Process foods for the correct amount of time and pressure. To
have the latest research information on correct times and pressures, contact the Extension Office.
When the processing time has been completed, remove the
canner from the heat source and allow it to cool naturally. After
the pressure reaches zero, wait two minutes before opening in
case there is any remaining pressure.
Carefully remove jars from the canner and place on several
layers of towels for 12-24 hours at room temperature away from
a draft. Do not retighten lids. This could break the seal.
A good way to test the seal is to press the middle of the lid
with your finger. If the lid comes up after removing your finger,
the lid is not sealed. If the jar did not seal. .vou can either
reprocess it in another sterilized jar with a new lid within 24
hours, or refrigerate and eat it within the next two days.
Remove screw bands before storing. Label and date the jar of
food, and store it in a cool, dry, dark place. Use the oldest jars of
food first to ensur&lt; top quality.
When preparing low-acid foods for eating, boil the food 20
minutes before tasting to kill any botulism bacteria that may present. Even though the food was processed in a pressure canner,
this bacteria can still grow. This additional boiling will make the
food safe to eat.

AWARD PRESENTED •
Meigs County Auditor Nancy Park·
er Campbell received the "Outstanding County Auditor" award at
the recent Annual Summer Conference of the County Auditors'
Association of Ohio.
.The award recognizes county auditors who have completed 100
hours or more of continuing education during their term of office.
Campbell received a custom made paperweight of marble sal·
vaged during the Ohio. Statehouse restoration project, from CAAO
President Joseph W. Testa, Franklin County auditor.
In recognizing thia achievement, Testa said, "When you consider
that continuing education requirementa lor county auditors have
been in existence for just over two years, it Is truly an outstanding
accomplishment for a county auditor to have 100 or more hours of
credit." ·
Section 319.04 of the Ohio Revised Code requires county audi·
tors to complete at least 24 hours of continuing education during
their term of office.

Meigs Personals
Train Show underway
T11c seventh annual train show is
undc· vay at the Meigs County Publi~
Libr:.ry, 216 West Main Street,
.Pomeroy.
The sbow will continue through Friday. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., on Saturday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Sunday from I to
5 p.m. There will be six operating layouts along with a variety of railroad
memorabilia maps. pictures and special displays. Also on display will be a
scale model of the Pomeroy Freight
Station.
OU Dean's List released
Several Meigs County students
were among 3,540 Ohio Univer.;ity
students named to the spring quaner
Dean's List. earning at least a 3.3 GPA.
Local students included were:
Melissa Dempsey. Chester: Jennifer
Caldwell. Coolville: Tyson Rose. Long
Bottom; Amy Dooley, Middlepon;
Cindi Stewart. Middlepon; Lori Rus·
sell, Middleport; Rebecca Meier, Mid·
dlepcrt; Roben Baker, Middleport;
Chuck Legar. Pomeroy; Edward BachD:ivis. Pomeroy: ·Jacob Heck,
Pomeroy: Jeremy Putney. Pomeroy;
Kelly Grueser, Pomeroy; Penny Aeiker, Pomeroy; Rayen Young, Pomeroy; .
Sarah Anderson, Pomeroy; Tara

Grueser. Pomeroy; Travis Abbou,
Pomeroy; Aaron Drummer. Racine;
Jennifer Hill, Racine; Kimberly Jenk·
ins. Racine; Nicholas Smith, Ra.:ine;
Paul lhlc. Racine; Belly Kuhn,
Reedsville; and Crystal Summerfield,
Reedsville.
Rutland chun:h to host teen min·
iruy
The Rutland

Freewill Baptist
Church will be hosting the Teen Ministry of Elkview Baptist Church of
Elkview. W. Va. this weekend.
On Saturday night a presentation
will include a full-length drama called
'Once to Die" at6 p.m. The drama will
be performed by the teen ministry's
drama team. "'The Shining Light Players." It has been presented across
~rica since the late 1960s and has
also been performed in Great Britain.
The second event will be a teen
rally on Sunday night at 6 p.m. held
by the Elkview teens which will
include a song fest, testimonies by the
teens, skits and a message by Qallipolis native and youth pastor. Mark
Pyles. The pastor and congregation of
the Rudand Church invite teens and
adults from around the area to join in
the weekend activtties.

Tuesday, July 28, 1998

Teachers complete 'Towing the Line' workshop

Today: Sunny

A program sponsored by AEP's
River Transportation Division atuacted 24 area teachers at the company's
Lakin, W.Va. headquarters.
The program, ''Towing the Line for
Education," featured sessions on river
transportation, safety, maritime towing industry environmental concerns
and coal-fired and hydro-powered
electricity generation . Presenters
included commanding officers of the
US Coast Guard and the US Army
Corps of Engineers from the Huntington, W.Va. District, maritime towing
industry representatives and AEP
River Division Staff.
11le teachers toured the Mountaineer generating station, the Racine
Locks and Darn and hydro electricity
generation facility, River Transportlltion Division's headquaners, and
experienced a shon ride on an AEP
towboat.
Panicipants also received materials that will help them incorporate
lessons on the maritime towing industry, coal, environmental concerns and
electricity generation into their curricula.

Tomorrow: Cloudy

High: 80; Low:60

~

~

I

o

Reds
wallop
Braves 13-1
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 69

Single Copy- 35 Cents

National electric deregulation action off, for now
By JOHN MACHACEK
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- Congress has pulled the plug on a drive to pass a
broad electric deregulation bill but hopes to revive the two-year long effon
next year, says a House Republican involved in trying to craft a compromise that failed.
Rep. Bill Paxon. R-N.Y.. a House Commerce Commiuee member, said
Tuesday that the bill would be reworked this fall and reintroduced in the
next Congress.
"There is no insunnountable issue," he said after addressing a group
of professionals representing the energy industry and manufacturers.
House Commerce Commiuee Chairman Tom Bliley Jr., R-Va., dis·
covered last week that he did not have the votes to suppon a bill to require
all states to allow consumers to choose their own utility by Jan. I, 200 I.
Both Republicans and Democrats said the measure didn't go far enough

Concern for the people of Meigs
County who were involved in ·the
recent Oooding inspired a caring and
sharing project carried out by two
Senior Citizens Centers in nonhero
Ohio.
Dozens of boxes of cleaning
equipment, household supplies. and
bottled water, along with several
hundred dollars were sent by the
Strongsville and Willoughby Senior
Centers, who headed up fund drives.
The Strongsville Center in an
emergency fund raiser received contributions from organizations and
businesses including the Rainbow
Makers, Walmart, the city of
Strongsville. the Strongsville Recreation staff and the Strongsville
Recreation complex, along with the
United Parcel Service which delivered 64 boxes of cleaning supplies
and equipment to the Pomeroy
Senior Center.
The boxes anived by UPS and
were turned over to the Meigs County Cooperative Parish for distribution to those in need. The money
was retained by the Meigs Senior

Citir.cns Center for usc in in provid·
ing elderly Oood victims with spc·
cial assistance.
The Willoughby Senior Citizens
Center headed up a program to collect items needed in both Meigs and
Athens County and brought in a
truckload of supplies. along witli
nearly SROO. which they divided

SBA to open office in
Coolville for flood victims
A temporary office to help horne·
owners, renters, landlords and busi·
nesses who had damages caused by
· the recent flooding is being opened in
Coolville, according to an announce· ·
ment today by Small Business
Administration Regional Administrator Peter Barca.
Loan officers from the SBA Disaster Assistance Program will be
located in the village building, Sixth
Street, Coolville. The office will
open Thursday and remain open
through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
After that the office will be open
Mondays through Fridays, 9 a.m. to
6 p.m. until funher notice.
An office is also opening in the
Glouster Village Hall at Glouster.
In making the announcement Bar·
ca said, "I hope everyone who had
any uninsured or underinsured damages caused by the severe storms will
come in to meet personally with and
SBA disaster Joan officer. They will
be glad to answer any questions about
the loan program, hand .out disaster
loan applications. and provide as
much help as anyone may need or
want in completing their application."
Disaster victims arc reminded that

hctwccn the two counties.

In a letter to the center Carolyn L.
Moore, Willoughby Senior Center
manager said that the response to the
appeal which went out to help the
tlood victims was tremendous. She
said that she called Metro
Chem/Janitor's World to purchase
rubber gloves, that they sold her two
gross at cost, and then donated five
cases of bleach, and five 5-gallon
bucket• of disinfectant.
Many contributed, she said,
includin~ Centers at Eastlake, Fairport Harbor, Kirtland, Madison,
Painesville,
Wickliffe,
and
Willoughby. along with the
Willoughby Baptist Church Seniors
and the City of Willoughby.

Ohio University announces
scholarship recipients

RECEIVES FUNDING - The Meigs County Victims Aaalatance
Program was recently awarded $5000 from the Attorney General's
office to provide direct services to victims of crime. None of the
money Is to be used for administrative costs or salaries. Shown
here accepting the check from Holly Marvin,- Southeastern Field
Repreaentatlve or the Attorney General, center, Is John Lentes,
Meigs County Prosecutor, and Christi Lynch, victims advocate. Ser·
vices offered through the Meigs Victims Program Include mental
heahh aervlces, counseling, emergency clothing; shelter, food and
transportation.

i

... . i,
'

Meigs County's

CARING ENOUGH TO COME - Carolyn L. Moore, manager of the
Willoughby Senior Center, left, and Suaan Oliver, Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center director, atand behind a truck which brought
in boxea and boxes of cleaning auppllea for flood vlctlma. Moore
alao preaented Oliver with a check to handle aome of the special
needs ·of senior citizens who were victims of the flood.

LONG BEACH. Calif. (AP)For 50 bucks. you too can journey
into outer space. AI least a piece
of ~ou can.
A company called Encounter
2001 is offering 4.5 million pco·
pic the chance to send their DNA
and a personal message in a rocket that will.be sent 10ward Jupiter
and someday will reach another
solar system .
Encounter 2001 is an affiliate
of Houston-based Celcstis Inc ..
which launched a few ounces of
drug guru Timothy Leary 's as hes
- info orbit this year:So far. 4,000 people have
signed up, said Charles Chafer,
president of Encounter.
Jason Klass , 43 , want s to
include his hair samples and a
special CD containing songs from
a musical he co-wrote with hi s
girlfriend.
" We can't have children, and
in a deep philosophical way thi s
may be one way for my genetic
makeup to live on, with a minute
chance that it might be recovered
by another species and we might
be re -c reated, " he said . "And I
could fall in love with my girlfriend all over again on another
planet. "

Beat of the Bend column, Page 3
Manning signs with Colts, Page 5
Indians topple Mariners, Page 4

High: 80; Low:60

Help comes to Meigs
Senior Citizens Center

Space messages offered

Sports

July 29, 1998

Weather

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

Ohio University has announced the and Klindcr Orchestra Performance
names of local scholarship recipients. Scholarship; Kelly J. Grucser,
The following student' were among Pomeroy, Bessie J. Bloom Endowed
1,200 freshmen and 1,694 uppcrclass- Scholarship, Kibble Scholarship, The
men to receive awards.
Martha Harris Wurtz Memorial SchoiLauren Anderson, Pomeroy, Kibble arship.
Scholarship; Sarah E. Anderson,
Tara M. Grucscr, Kibble SthoJqr.
Pomeroy, Kibble Scholarship; Brian A. ship; Conncy L. Haley, Pomeroy, KibAndcn;on, Racine. James D. Euler hie Scholarship; Chad E. Hanson. RutMemorial Scholarship and Kihhlc . land. Kihhk Scholarship: Jacnh E.
Scholarship: Erica R. Am&lt;~!. Racine. Heck. Pomeroy, Kihble Scholar.;hip;
K•bhle Scholarship; Kclli L. Bailey. Paul W. lhle. Racine. Dean's ScholurPnmcrny, Kibble Scholarship and Vale· ship and James D. Euler Memorial
dictorian Scholarship; Brandon M. Scholarship;
Erin
Krawsczyn.
Buckley, Pomeroy, Kibble Scholarship; Pomeroy, Dcan"s Scholarship and KibJcnnilcr E. Caldwell, Coolville, Dean's blc Scholarship; Todd Mitchell,
Scholarship; Michelle D. Caldwell, Coolville, special anonymous scholarReedsville, Kibble Scholarship and ship; Kcllic J. Neece, Middleport, KibValcdictorian Scholarship; Carly R. hie Scholarship: Kevin M. Nccl,
Cha.,teen, Pomeroy, Kibble Scholar- Pomeroy, Kihblc Scholarship; Kathryn
ship; Jessica L. Chevalier, Chester, M. Nonhup, Cheshire, Valedictorian
Kibble Scholarship; Chad M. Clark, Scholarship: Jeremy W. Putney,
Racine, Kibble Scholarship; Matthew Pomeroy, C. Paul and Beth K. Stocker
0. Dill, Racine, Kibble Scholarship.
Scholarship; Tyson E. Rose, Long BO!·
Scott A. Dodson, Pomeroy, Kibble tom, Athens County Accounting EduScholarship; Chad B. Dodson, Middle- cation Scholarship; Nicholas M. Smith,
port, Kibble Scholarship and Don and Racine, James D. Euler Memorial
Ethel McVay Music Scholarship; Amy Scholarship and Kibble Scholarship;
E. Dooley, Middleport, Dean's Scbol- DcrekE.Smith,Racinc;AmyS:smith,
arship; Andrew W. Fields, Charles H. Pomeroy, Kibble Scholarship; Sabrina
and Evelyn Matthews Scholarship, Dr. D. Smith, Kibble Scholarship; Crystal
James H. and Nellie Rowley Jewell L. Summerfield, Reedsville, Kibble
Scholarship, Kibble Scholarship, Larry Scholarship; Corey P. Williams, Racine,
Gage Scholarship, John W. Reppcl Kibble Scholarship; Ryan E. Young.
Mernonal Scbolarshtp, and Paul H. Pomeroy, Dean's Scholarship and J~ilr
Black and Irene C. Black Memorial blc Scholarship; Sandra K. Young, Rut·
Scholarship; Christie Grossnickle, Don land, Kibble Scholarship; and William
· and Ethel McVay Music Scholarship A. Young, Kibble Schularship.

Good Afternoon
Today's Sentinel
• 1 Section • I 0 Pages

Certified Mammography

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
.

.

' .

.. .

,.

. . ,' '

Weather

Holzer Meigs Clinic

2
3
3

Lotteries

88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

10
7-8
9

.

The Best Care Is Prevention I Call today for an a !)pointment.

(740) 992-0060

The application filing deadline for
physical damage is August 29.
Residents are reminded that
Thursday is the last day they can
apply for · Disa.•ter Unemployment
Assistance through the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services. These ben·
efits are for those who lost their jobs
due (llJhe severe storms and Oood·
ing which occurred on June 24.
For more information on the program residents are asked to contact
the OBES' Central Ohio Telephone
Registration Center at614-728-4007
or Davis.Garick at614-466-3859.

JUDGING UNDERWAY ·Judging of 4-H proJects In preparation for the Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 14-22, 11 underway. Tuesday Uveatock proJect Judging took piece. Here Derek Taylor, 12

Holzer Meigs Clinic
,y,·&gt;j~Jfi.'-1-"'•'!

to be considered for all forms of dis·
aster assistance, including SBA dis·
aster loans, they must first call the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) teleregistration unit
at 1-800-462-9029, as a required first
step.
Barca added, "Homeowners and
renters who where referred to the
SBA when they registered through
FEMA's teleregistration unit, must
tum in their comploted SBA loan
application if they want to be con·
sidered for the Individual and Fami·
ly Grant (IFG) program."

QHlQ
. Pick 3: 063; Pick 4: Sl2t
Buckeye 5: 1-6-9-12-17

.

w.YA.

·Dally 3: 118; Dally 4:0219

H•re For Your Heolth, H.... Fo; Your Lif"U..!

c 1998 Qh;o Val~y PublbiUna Co.

I

in allaying concerns that federal deregulation would override or compli·
cate efforts already under way in the states.
The federal bill to deregulate the S208 billion electric power industry
- the last of the big monopolies -triggered one of the most expensive
legislative battles over federal deregulation.
The utility industry has spent.hundreds of millions of dollars lobbying against deregulation, which has been backed industrial users, independent power companies and consumers.
Sixteen states, representing 44 percent of the population, have already
deregulated electric power markets either by legislation or by order of
state regulators. Others are either considering plans or studying the issue.
A compromise federal plan drafted by Paxon and Rep. Steve Largent,
R-Okla., would have preserved existing state programs for consumer
choice. It also would have allowed states to decide whether utilities could

recover losses for nuclear power plants and other investments that won"t
be competitive in a deregulated market.
The Clinton administration proposed a " flexible mandate ." under
which states would be allowed to opt out of federal deregulation if they
could demonstrate through public hearings that they had a bener way to
reduce the price of electricity.
Paxon, who is retiring from Congress at the end of the year, said he
will work with Largent this fall in determining how to accommodate
regional and state concerns in a revised bill.
"Do not assume that you can wait until January when Congress returns
to help shape that legislation," Paxon warned the National Energy
Resources Organization, which includes representatives from the electric power, natural gas, petrOleum, and mining industries. "Steve is already
shaping it today."

Completes 38-year career

·John Riebel, long-time.educator, retires
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SenUnel News Staff
After a 38-year career in what
John Riebel calls "the school business", the Meigs County superinten·
dent has retired.
While he officially retired on June
30, Riebel has continued on as a consultant to John Costanza, the new
Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center superintendent. Riebel's last
day in the office will be Friday.
The long-time educator admits to
"mixed feelings" as he begins what
he deseri.bes as a time when he won't
have to "hurry through, or watch the
clock."
"It's been great all these years. The
board members, local superintendents, the staff here, have been fabulous, and it's those people who have
made my job enjoyable. I'll miss
them. But right now I'm looking forward to spending the next six months
reading, hunting, and doing things
with my family."
Traveling is in his plans and he
looks forWard to a leisurely trip out
west for some sightseeing. Hunting
has always been an imponant pan of
his recreation and being retired will
give him what he describes as "more

year old son of VIrgil and Gina Taylor, Is Interviewed by Judge Joan Calaway on his "Wraa·
cally Wabblta• proJect, which Ia a beginning
program on raising rabbits.

time to spend in the woods."
After a few months, Riebel doesn't discount the idea of a part-time
job. "A couple days a week, a few
hours, that might be nice," he commented.
·
Born and reared in the
Reedsville/Chester area, Riebel graduated from Chester High School and
got his bachelor's degree in education
from Ohio University. His first job
took him to the Albany School District where he taught and coached for
two years before being named assistant executive head. He completed
work for his ma.•ter's degree in 1965
at OU and became a principal and
ba.•ketball coach for his last two years
in the Albany district.
Riebel n;tumed to Meigs County .
in 1966 as superintendent of the East·
ern Local School District and

remained in that position until 1978
when he became a state instructor and
coordinator of bus drivers. a position
he held until 1983 when he was
named superintendent of Meigs
County Schools.
Riebel's tenure as superintendent
ha.• been marked by :hanges in the
delivery of education, the most recent
being the July I merger between
Meigs and Athens Counties into a
single administrative unit. He viewed
that change as a sign it was time to
retire.
In Riebel's office hanging above
his desk is a wooden plaque which
reads "This is the office of a deer
hunter. Please excuse my occasional
daydreaming."
Retirement will give Riebel plenty of time for hunting and for day·
dreaming •· all without apology.

JOHN RIEBEL

Lewinsky prepared to testify she, Clinton
discussed ways to conceal relationship
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Presa Writer
WASHINGTON
Monica
Lewinsky is prepared to testify that
she and President Clinton discussed
ways of concealing an alleged sexua) relationship, legal sources say.
Ms. Lewinsky's account to Jndependent Counsel Ken Starr's prosecutors is that "she and the president
were talking about cover stories lor
their relationship, as two people in
such situations frequently do; how to
keep it secret," one source said Tuesday night.
For example, said the sources, Ms.
Lewinsky, 25, says she and the president agreed that one way to explain
the fonmer intern 's frequent visits to
the White House Oval Office would
be to say she was going to see pres·
idential secretary and friend Betty
Currie.
Starr won Ms. Lewinsky's cooperation while trying to enforce a subpoena- or negotiate an arrangement
-for Clinton's testimony.
The sources say Ms. Lewinsky
also has identified for prosecutors the
person who formulated the controversial "talking pcints" designed to
help Clinton in the Paula Jones sex·
ual harassment lawsuit he faced. The
talking points, which she gave to
' "friend Linda Tripp, dealt with an
alleged sexual advance that Clinton
made to a White House volunteer,
Kathleen Willey, an incident known

to Mrs. Tripp.
The person who was the architect
of the talking points. the sources said.
is someone outside the White House.
The sources would not reveal whom
Ms. Lewinsky identified as helping
originate the talking points. ABC
News quoted sources as saying it was
Mrs. Tripp, but a spokesman .for Mrs.
Tripp denied it.
Word that the talking points were
generated by someone who doesn't
work in the White House was the
only favorable development for Clin·
ton in a day of bad news .
Starr is investigating whether
Clinton and Ms. Lewinsky lied when
they denied under oath that they had
a sexual relationship: whether Clin·
ton asked her to"testify falsely: and
whether the president and others
tried to obstruct the investigation.
Mrs. Tripp could finish her testi·
mony before a grand jury as early as
today, while Ms. Lewinsky - pro·
vided Tuesday with blanket immunity from prosecution by Starr- may
only be a few weeks behind her former friend.
While the status of Clinton's possible testimony wa.' unclear, there
also were signs of movement on that
front. The president's private lawyer.
David Kendall, and Starr's prosecutors attended a closed-door proceed·
ing Tuesday in the counroom of
Chief U.S. District Judge Norma HoiJoway Johnson.

The purpose was not clear. but it
could signal an auempt bY. the presidentlo delay testimony or quash the
presidential subpoena. In the past. the
opposing lawyers appeared before
Johnson when serious uisputes arose
- such as those involvin g auomey client confidentiality. Secret Serv1ce
testimony and leaks of grand jury
material.
Neither Kendall nor the prosec utors would comment.
When these developments are
combined with the continuing testi ·
mony of Secret Service officers. and
an appellate coun ruling ordering
White House confidant Bruce Lindsey to testify. it is clear that Starr's
investigation can no longer be viewed
as an endles&lt; endeavor.
"We may yet play a role in this ,"
House Judiciary Committee Chair·
man Henry Hyde said Tuesday. Hyde
has been patiently waiting for Starr to
submit a repon on Clinton's conduct,
so his panel can decide whether the
lindings men! impeachment proceedings.
Ms. Lewinsky will undergo severa) more interviews by prosecutors
before testifying. and the entire
process could take several weeks,
sources said. speaking on condition
of anonymity.
One of Ms. Lewinsky's attorneys.
Plato Cacheris. stood on a street corner outside his office Tuesday to
Continued on page 3

r-----Junior fair royalty---...,

Powerball drawing tonight
for record $250 million pot
GREENWICH. Conn. (AP) Businesses under siege from wouldbe Powerball millionaires got another headache today: Louery machines
around the state were not wt&gt;rking
this morning as the drawing for the
record $250 million jackpot
approached.
Clerks at supermarkets and convenience stones reported problems
with the machines, including stones in
Greenwich and Stamf9rd, which have
been inundated with Powerball players from New York and New Jersey.
"I really don't need this. This is
totally, totally ridiculous," said Ani·
ta Parone, a clerk at a Grand Union
supennarket in Stamford, who said
tbene were aboul 30 people in her
shlre and they were getting angry.
11le Powerball drawing is tonight.
Tbe record prize has sparked a huge
demand for tickets.

_ay 8:30 a.m. some machines
began working again. · 6iu others
were still down. Connecticutlouery
officials did not return repeated
requests for comment. The problem
was apparently confined to Connecticut, as computers for the Powerballloueries in various states arc not
interconnected.
Dave Wilson, manager of a Dahl's
Foods grocery store in Des Moines,
Iowa, the city where Powerball is
based, said all his machines are just
fine.
"Ours are running just smoothly.
Every louo machines has its problems. but so far, so good. With this
much activiJy, it could drop them
down. It's like any machine if you
overload it, especially with a $250
million jackpot."

JUNIOR FAIR ROYALTY • Prince and
In ceremonial llllcl
i"uaaddy by tt1a llalga County Junior Fair committee at ttla Rutland Civic Centlr. Tile royalty
. will prealdl at tt1a fllr to be llllcl Aug. 17-22 on
.

prlncuan .,. IIIIMd

thl Rock Sprlngl FUgroundl. From thllaft thl
prlncaiHI_ are Bethany Cooke, bunny

: prlnceu; Jeulca Blrrlnger, beef prlnceaa;
. C..Uncll'll Smith, hOI'IIII prlnceu; Thereu
· Bllt8r, wool prlnceu; and BHIIa Jo Wlllh,
.....,. prlnceu; and back, Odie Karr, bunny
·prince; Eric Montgomery, wool prince; and
Chrta Blrrlnger, awlna prince.

�Wednesday, July 29,1998

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'LstllD(ufui in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 ·Fax 992·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENEHOEFUCH
Gtna111111anager
1Jte SadJMI

••~ 1ttttttw to lite «&lt;llor

,_. .. ,_,od

_ , - . (3/XJ-

DIANE HILL
Controller

from,...,_ 01. • brcMd,..,. ot topiC'I

«-}-file--.

ol 1»/ng publllll«&lt; TY(»d 1«-

-~~~~...,.,.- &amp;eh llhOflld - - •~~~gMJJn. - - ··
- . . , . , . . . , . , . . - s,...Hr• do,. If,_. ••• ,.,,.,.."'. prevlou•tK tD. U!toB ltJ lito E - Tho s-IMI, 111 C&lt;&gt;ur1 St, flomorcy, Ohio ,
467N; "!; FU "'-ll--zl/17.

Are ·House GOP tax cuts
a blessing or blunder?

Wlldnelday, July 29, 1~

By The Associated Preu
~tbeastern Ohio
Today. Fog until m•d-mornmg..Then mostly sunny and hazy
H1ghs m the upper 805 West wmd 5
to 10 mph.
Tomght Panly cloudy w1th fog
developmg alter modnoght Lows m

Spend budget surplus on cancer research

moon'
There· d be louie House Speaker
Newl Gmgnch could say to !hat and
GOP plans to usc 1he surplus for a
dr&gt;suc lax cui would probably fall
by ibe waysodc
Bul beyond bcong good poluoc s a
hefty mucasc 1n l:Onccr fundm g
would be good pohcy Here arc the
lngh1ciung facl&gt;
-- Over I 500 Amencan s doe
from cancer every day
--Half of all Amencan men and a

By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - For many conservalovcs 1hc plan h) House Repubhcans lo usc cxpecled budge! surplu ses lor a huge elccuon-ycar lax cui
makes clever poluocs. rcmondong 1hc GOP s slaunchcsl supponcrs whal lhc
pany IS all aboul
Bu1 lor o1hcr Rcpuhhcans - parucularly on 1hc more ccnm sl Scnale 1he proposal summons memones of lhe 1986 clccuon when lhe GOP los!
wmrol of 1hc Sena1c as DemocraiS used Socoal Sccuruy as a bludgeon
Wolh Ihe Congrcssoonal Bud gel Office now proJccllng SI 55 lnlllon on
federal surpluses over 1hc ncXI decade, House Budge! Commollcc Chairman
SERVICE'
John Kasoch. R-Oh10. wanls 10 usc $700 bolloon of 1110 cui !axes
WILL
He would usc an addillonal $700 billion 10 shore up Soc1al Sccuruy all
~ESEM
bul dcnyong Dcmocrals a chance 10 grab Ihe money lor new programs
Backed by mosl House GOP leaders , Kasoch says hos plan should shoeld
Republicans agaonsl Presodenl Clonwn's calli'! sci asodc surpluses unlollhe
1wo panocs aFce how 10 bolslcr lhc huge pensoon syslcm lor lhc cvcmual
rememenl of baby boomers Clmlon wams lhat 10 happen ncXI year
We wanllo solve lhe Soc1al Sccuruy problem for three generations, and
also help the Amen can people today get some of the or money bac~, " sa1d
Kas1ch, lestmg a theme Republicans could carry mto this fall's electiOns and
!hat he m1ght usc for a poss1ble 2000 pres1dent1al run
I MEAN,
The problem. though. IS that many on h1s own party worry thai Kasoch os
openong lhe door lo Democratic auacks 1ha1 Republicans arc threalenong
Socoal Secunly
Kas1ch~s pian caiis for usmg tens of b.iloons of dollars m 1nleres11hatthe
Soc1al Secunty trust fund accumulates to he I~ pay for the tax cuts W1th the
v1bram economy presumably leavmg most volers content woth their members of Congress. why do somethmg th. t nsks sumng them up, many
Republicans wonder
'The Whole House woll be saymg. 'You 're spendong Socoal Secunty to
cui 1axes. "' saod Senate Bud gel Commmec Chaorman Pele Domenoco. RN M "Thai' s 1he 1rus1 fund, are 1hey nol cntotled to the onlerest?"
By Joseph Perkins
Domenoco was chaorman of 1he budget panel m 1985 when 11 wrote a
My neighborhood gnll -and-ale
dcfocu-fighung plan !hal would have ehmonaled thai year'• cosl-of-hvong house has banned smokmg msode
Socoal Secunty mcrease
II&lt; premiSeS SIOCC the firSt Of the
Mosl Senate Republicans voted for ot woth the suppon of then-Prcsodem year Those who choose 10 hght up
Reagan bu1 Reagan later cut a deal woth Dcmocrals and abandoned hos sup- must do so 1n a designated smokpan for 1hc Soc1al Secunty savmgs In 1hc November 1986 elections. nmc Ing area outsodc I mus1 say. I like
oncumbcnl GOP senators were defeated and Democrats took over the cham- IhiS arrangement
I never cared lo brcalhe Ihe cog ber
h IS alway s dangerous anylome you support messong woth Soc.al Secu- arelle fumes ol olhcrs Nor dod I
ruy saod Doug Thompson . a consuhanl wuh Eddoc Mahc Co whoch helps hkc 11 when my clolhc s. my haar
GOP candodalcs · h os one ol the mosl dangerous pohlocal ossues you can even my sk on reeked of 1obacco
1amper wolh '
smoke
Domenoco. who has clashed wuh Ka,.ch all year over lhc Ohooan s ambo Bul havong mcnuoned allthos I
tonus tax-cuttong plans 1s nol alone 1n hiS uph.tpponess
must also say that I do notlokc the
AI a mcctmg lasl Wednesday wuh 10p House Republicans. several Sen- reason my l.11o11te watenng hole
ate GOP leaders questioned the poht1cal WISdom ol KaSich's approach sa1d wenl smoke loce
p.orllcopants who spoke on condot1on ol anonymoty The doubters mcludcd
It w.1s m.ondaicd hy C.illlorn1.1
Scn.ote GOP Whop Don Nocklc&gt; ol Oklahoma and Sen Slade Gorton. R- si ,I(C law whoch look cllcct New
Wash who was dclcatcd lor re-electiOn 1n 1986
Year ' D.1y h.mn1ng ..,;mokm ~ not
Senate MaJoruy Leader Trcn1 Lon R-MISs hkcs the odca of usong the only 10 rc st.lur.mls hut .tl so 10
surplus lor Socoal Sccuruy and lax culs bul nol the way Kasoch would do II h.Jrs
Loll has Domcmca and other scnalors workmg on an ahcmat1vC lhal
And Ihe prdexl ol lhos law w,as
would ann more money at Sm:aal Sc ~. : ullt v .mtl less at lUx L:U ls lcavmg a I ~'l l s1udy .ond dccl.or.uoun hy
• Republicans less pohiocally vulnerable
1hc U S Envoronment.ll Prmecuon
As lor possible attacks by Chmon Lou ISsued a warnong
Agenc y lh.ll secondh.ond smoke os
'II he ha.s any scnous hones lclt on h1&gt; body they won I make Stoclal a Cl.1ss A ~.:.m.:mogcn - as h.tz
: Sccurory a dcmagogoc , partiSan ISsue or 11 woll koll - kill - the ah1hty nl ardous as .oshestos. henzcnc and
us 10 make any senous reforms on Soual Securuy Lon saod I vc told the radon - .1nd th.at 11 c.1uscs some
While House !hal ·
1 000 lung -c .tnccr dcalhs a yc.11
Thai IS likely 10 have louie cllcci on Demou,lts who sec a potent pohll
Even lolks loke me who arcn 1
t.:Jg.lrcttc smokers who apprct.:J.llc
L:al1ssuc
• 11 1hcy pu11hos tnlloon-dollar '·"cui poor' " ·" oullhere scrwusly !here a smoke- tree environment susno
quesloon !hiS woll become ,, Soco .al Scc unl y dchale saod Scn.lte peeled lhal 1hc EPA's londonp
15
Mmonty Leader Tom Daschlc D S D And '" rc ready 10 have II I'd hkc were poloucally mouvatcd rather
ot to bcgm tomorrow
than based on sound sc1cncc And
Republicans arc ready to lire hack hy .or~ uon ~ lto.lt lor years Dcmocrauc
carl ocr thos monlh . a federal judge
controlled Congresses d1d nul save Socoal Securu y s surpluses bul spent
1hcm on o1hcr government programs
But for now many m the GpP arc wary
"Chn10n woll demagogue on anylhon g · saod Rep Raben Ehrlich. RMd , a Kasoch loyahsl " By the same Ioken you don I wanllo lead wolh your
chm "
By Joseph Spear
Today s diSpatch IS a red alcn II
EDITOR'S NOTE: Alan Fram reports on Congress for Tht Associyou havl' nol already begun prcpar
attd Press.
mg for the holocaust thai may bel all
us 17 monlhs hence, you should
bcgm on•medoalcly h may already be
100 laic
And please don t g1vc me gncl
ahout bemg slow on the draw llus 1s
the thord llmC I have called your
lcucr
h
Ms
Sock
rcgardong
lhc
need
lor
eduattentiOn
IO thos matter A columnost
cnl
I am respon d ong 10 a rcc
Y
- can only do so mucb ~r Mco cs Counl y rcsodenls
cauonn1 opponunlllc s fo
•
The rest IS up to you I refer of
When RIO Grande Communuy College and lhe UnovcrSIIY ol Roo Grande
h·
bei
ed Its Center on March 1998 we agreed wolh your asscssmenl of need cohurs~ W1 ~ yc:l 2000 cnsosd. ore
opcR "Grande Communoty College courses at the Meogs Ccmcr naon people for w •c a 01 her 1cmmas an poicn10
M
A
ua1calaslrop es pa1e
It ts. need you be rcmm dcd. thc
curnculum IS centered on lhc ICrocomputer PP1ICajobs Our Pnmary
s Degree and Ccrtllocauon It '' hoped that as further nee d d
f
d
BUSines
uons on
, a WI dcr range of degree
awn o a new mo 11,ennoum. an a
URG
Mcogs
Center
woll
he
ahlc
to
oftcr
the
de ve Iops
very propouous lome tOr an apoca1ypllc cvem The religiOusly mclmcd
opl;~":tdollon to offcnng the complclc MAB nssocoate degree m Middleport, should thus be thmkmg about whal
the Cenler recently finoshed ots cerlolied nursong assostant program Thos IS an to wear when they meet theor maker
80--hour tumculum provoded through 1he Crossroads program !hat prepares It os also the moment when the Y2K
students to get JObs 1mmedoa1ely followmg courses a! the Mcogs Center Fove bug may decommiSSIOn the planet's
of the students are now employed on rcgoonal nursong hom~s. ano1her plans computers. so surv1vahsts should be
10 conunue her trammg m nursmg. and another os contracltng for work as a seekong refuge m 1hc holls 10 whoch
home health a1d.
h
they can reU1:!at
Wt woll cont 1nue to prov1de educational opponunot1es 1n M1ddlepont at
If you believe the armageddon
ad JOBS We are dedicated to prov1dmg the reSidents of Me•gs County ISIS, the apocalypse and the gluch
1
~lth 1 kind. of quahty and pract1cal education that 1s needed to compete may amount to one and !he same
I" today's JOb market.
Gina Pines thmg Many of these prophets,
namely Chnsuan authors who are
Director, Rio Gn11de Meigs Center.
makmg bcaucoup bucks perldhng

th1rd of women
can expect to
be doagnosed
wolh
cancer
durong theor
hfetomr
-- At 1he
presrnt rate.
one-fourth of
all Amerocans
Will one day
d1e from this
Moller &amp;
IDSidiOUS dosAnderaon
ease
Ye1 only one penny oul of every
S10 on taxes os spenl on lighung cancer .. AI present. the cancer research
cup os lhree-founhs emp1y.' Donald
S Coffey a Johns Hopkons Umvcrsoty professor and rcccnl president
of the Amencan Assocoauon of Cancer Research. told Congress last
week
Coffey spoke of Prcsodcnl
Roc hard M Noxon s dcclamuon of
a war on cancer on 1972 Some 25
year~ later th1s
w..r hlls turned
oul In be louie more 1han a · small
skormosh lhe prulc&gt;&lt;or saod Th1&gt;
(has nm hccn) an Amcrocan-slylc
effon to go 10 the moon to crack the
atom or to loght a Gull War The
elfon could only support a few thou-

THE

SECRET

YOUR
TRYST_

sand mvest1gators to fight only a
hmued engagement "
In spue of lhos. medocal research
has made great slrodes on the battle
agaonst cancer The SIX cancers !hat
pnmanly affect young people.
mcludmg leukem1a. have been
"essentiallY! cured,"
Coffey
rla1med But lung. breast. colon,
prostate. bladder and braon .ancer
contmue to fell mdhons
Whole prom1smg breaklhroughs
1n research are becomong more common -- Coffey hkens 1he progress
made on tbe last 10 years to lhc stunnong advances on computer lcchnology over lhe same penod of lime -!he amount of money we spend
fightmg cancer IS on shockong d1spropon1on to the grave threat posed
by the doseasc
Yet wnh so much headway
already bemg made omago"e 1he
possoboluocs of our govcrnmcnl
decoded lo fund somclhong !hal lhe
pubhc ardcnlly wanls
UNDER THE DOME -- We' ve
never been hog lans of lhc Rcpuhlo
can Pany's cynocal and cc.1sclcss
cflorts to delang the lahnr-unum
movement Republicans want to cut
off the unmns' nght w controhute to
pohtocal campaigns hut domg so

would take away an 1mportan1 counterweoght to the dosproporuonate
onOuence !hal bog-money corporale
Amenca enJoys on the currenl Con
gress
Yel sometimes lhc GOP crllocosm
strokes a chord Such was lhc case
With last week s revelatoon !hat
some uniOniZed federal workers
have been usmg theor taxpayer fund
ed umon leave tome to go Chnslmas
shoppmg
'Yes. Chnslmas shoppong
Under a hnle-known rule . unoonozcd workers are allowed 10 ccnaon
absences from lhcor regular JObs lo
conduct umon busmcss, sul.:h a~ collecuve bargamong Employers arcn ·,
allowed to counl these absences
agaonst normal vacatiOn tome or
other annual leave But the pohc y
cenamly wasn't designed In allo w
federal workers lo go Chroslm.os
shoppong on lhc laxpaycrs' dome
Ycl !hal's been the pracllc c lor
almost 20 yc.1rs at some Bo!&lt;~ lon .1rc.t
offoccs ol 1hc Sou.al Sccu ruy
Admonos1rauon The pr.ocucc d.ues
hack

10 ,,

umc when

sU !fC"i

rca~ons.

Divorces, dissolutions sought
An acuon for d1vorce has been
filed m Meogs County Common
Pleas Coun by Kelly R Klem,
Pomeroy, agamst Larry Edward
Klem. Pomeroy.
An acuon for dossolutoon of marnage has been filed by Barbara A
Doell, Rutland, and Andy 0 . Doczo
IV, M1ddlepon
D1vorces have been granted m the
coun to Phylhs M Clone from Jerry
I. Chne, and to Jud1th L. Stewan
from Thomas L. Stewan. A dissolution action has been granted to Lance
Allen Boso and Mehssa Dawn Boso
An actoon for dossolutoon filed by

James R. Wildman

,Jvo1d

James R. Wildman, 79, Caryville, Tenn., formerly of Rutland, doed on
Tuesday, July 28, 1998 at Lafollette Med1cal Cemer on Lafollette, Tenn.
He was born m Rutland on Sept II. 1918, son of the late John and Laura Wildman. He was a member of the Wests1de Baptist Church He was a
coal moner and a U S Army Veteran dunng World War II.
Survovmg are hos wofe. Voolet May Wildman, Caryv1lle, Tenn , a son and
daughter-on-law, James 0 and Doana Woldman, Caryvolle, Tenn • a daughler and son-on-law, Lmda and Mack Maples, Newport News. Va . seven
grandchildren James "Rob" and Gonger Woldman, Chnlon, Tenn • Chnslopher and DeDe Woldman, Lafollette, Tenn , Losa D Woldman, Knoxvolle.
Tenn., Michael Maples, Chnton, Tenn , and Davod Maples. Newporl News,
Va.. and three great grandchildren Travis Maples. Newpon News, Va . Logan
W1ldman and Lmdsey Wildman, Chnton. Tenn.
BesideS h1s parents, he was preceded m death by a daughter. Darlene Wildman; two granddaughters. M1chelle Wildman and Shem Maples, a brother, Bolhe Woldman. and three SISters Norma Dean, Nelhe Nelson and Emma
Searles.
Gravesode servtces woll be held al 10 am on Fnday. July 31. 1998 at
Miles Cemetery on Rutland.
Fnends may call at the Moddleport Chapel of Fosher Funeral Home on
Thursday from 6 to 8 p m

.------,=--.,

smoke causes lung cancer-- wfule threats to ch1ldrcn and adulls "
Browner and other anlo-smuk
ognonng a larger batch of stud1cs
mg crusaders also went so r.1r as to
Ihat contradicted us flndmg
Two of the stud1cs the EPA question Judge Oslccn's on1cgr11 y
1gnorcd were actually sponsored because hiS court IS locatc&lt;.l m
by orgamzauons that arc anythmg North Carolma. one the n.otoon s
but sympathetoc to the tobacco leadong tohacco-produung sl.otc s
Bul these same anll -snwkong uu mdustry
One sludy. funded hy the sadcrs applauded the s,unc Judge
Nauonal Cancer lnslolule, found last year when he ruled !hal 1he
1ha1
nonsmokers
have
no Food and Drug Admonoslralwn h.as
Increased nsk ol lung cancer as a the authonty to regulate ug.ucth:s
result of exposure to secondhand -- a rul1ng to wh1ch the toh.a.: ~.:o
smoke durmg choldhood, on the ondus1ry slrenuously Ohjcclcd
The ISsue here re.1lly IS no1 so
workplace or from liVIng wuh a
pack-a-day smoker lor as many as much ahout s~condhand smoke
It's more ,ohout the corruptoon ol
40 years
Another study conducted hy scocnce by the EPA lor poloucal
the International Agency lor purposes And wh1l e lwdly .my w,1, .t potent ~.:.m.: 1nngcn
Research on Cancer .ond funded hy one sympathlles woth the unpopuThe law requores !hal a hroad- the World Health Organlfallon lar tohacco Industry ~,;avl' 101
hascd panel he convened lo make somolarly concluded !hal second - maybe I he nail on·, SO mollo"n
such tktc rmm.Htons and that the hand smoke poses no sognolocant ~mokcrs, the EPA cun JUst .,s cd sJ
ly vu.: tlmtzc other lcss -unpopul.u
panel 1ndudc representatives ol health nsk
aflcllcd ondustncs However. the
Dcspotc lhesc aulhontalove mdustncs that Iall under Jl-.; n:gu
EPA deliberately excluded tohac- s1ud1cs. dcspnc Judge Osteen's latory purvocw
Th.lt s why Judge Osteen s rul co-mdustry representatives lrom ruling last week strokmg down the
concluSion ot the EPA's 1993 mg \\as a VIctory not only lor the
I(S secondh,ond smoke rancJ
Moreover wrote Osteen . the study. the agency continues to cvol tobacco mdustry. hul .tlso lor
EPA adjuslcd cstahhshed prncc - decc1ve the puhhc that second- all Amcnc.m mdustroes By throw dun.· .md se~cnlllu.: norm~ Ln v.tll- hand 1s not merely .1 nup.;,mcc hut ong oul the EPA's lr,oudulcnl con clusiOn~ on sc~.:ondhand -.;nwk c
dalc the .ogency s publoc conclu- a proven heallh h:v,ard
"The
dceiSoon
(hy
Oslecnl
IS
the JUriSt has strm:k a hlow lor s~.:l­
sions
diSturbong.
"
saod
EPA
Admon~&gt;tra­
In other w!lrds lhe EPA dos cntll H.: JUStiCe
honeslly sclee1cd a small balch ol IOr Carol Browner. because 11 IS
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
Widely
.1cccpted
th.lt
secondhand
sludoe s lhat surportcd lis demcd
for The San D1ego Umon-Tri·
co nclusoon - that secondhand smoke poses very real health bune.

on North Carol ma arro vcd
at 1he same
conclusiOn
" EPA
publicly commoiled to a
conclusiOn
before
research had
begun " wrolc
U S DISiriCI
Perkins
Courl Judge
Wolham Oslccn Funhermore, 1he
JUdge added . the regulatory
.1gcncy v101.11cd lcdcral law. the
1986 Radon Gas and Indoor A1r
Qu.ohty Rcsc,uch Act on dctcrmomng th.ot secon&lt;.lhnnd smoke

Lewinsky prepared...
Continued from page I
announce thai h1s chen! had agreed to
provide "full and truthful test1mony"
to a grand JUry
Legal sources sa1d she would say
she had sexual relat1ons w1th Chnton.
contrary to hos denoals.
Ms. Lew on sky also os ready totesufy abool conversatoons woth the
president and others that could help
Starr bUild a case of obstrucuon of
JUStice against Chnton and hos confidants. sa1d the sources. who hke others wolhng to doscuss detailS of the
latest developments spoke only on

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPS UJ-960)
Commullky Ntwlplper Holdlap.lac.
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conduoon of anonymo1y
Ms Lew1nsky needs umnunoly
from prosecution because she s1gqed
an affidavot m Mrs Jones' sexual
harassment case saymg she d1d not
have sexual relations w1th Chnton
Givong a dofferent account to Starr
would mean she would have commolted perJury, a felony, on one
account or the other
Ms Lewonsky's parents " are
relieved the1r daughter os out of
harm's way," smd the famoly spokeswoman. Judy Sm1th Ms Lewonsky's
mother. Marc1a Lew1s, also was
granted ommumty to protect her from
prosec~toon as a result of motherdaughter conversations
Whole House spokesman Moke
McCurry saod ofChnton's reactoon 10
the 1mmumty deal forMs Lewmsky,
"lthmk he's pleased thallhongs are
workong out for her "
Later. McCurry added "Her
lawyer sa1d that she's goong to g1ve
complete and truthful testimony. and
of she does. thai should present no
problem to lhe presodenl "

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..... - - ...Ext. UIO

James R. Wildman
James R W1ldman. 79, Caryv1lle. Tenn . formerly of Rutland. d1ed on
Tuesday. July 28. 1998 atl-afollette Medocal Center on Lafollette. Tenn
He was born m Rolland on Sept II. 1918. son of the Iale John and Lau
ra Woldman He was a member of lhe Westsode BaptiSI Church He was a
coal moner and a US Army Veteran dunng World War II
Survovong are hos wofe, Voolet May Wildman, Caryvolle, Tenn , a son and
daughter-m-law, James 0 and Doana Woldman. Caryvolle, Tenn • a daughter and son-m-law, Lmda and Mack Maples. Newport News. Va . seven
grandchildren and three greal grandchildren
Bes1des h1s parents he was preceded m death by a daughter, Darlene Woldman. two granddaughters, Mochelle W1ldman and Sherro Maples. a brother. Bolhe Woldman. and three SISters Norma Dean. Nelhe Nelson and Emma
Searles.
Gravesode servoces woll be held al 10 am on Fnday. July 31 . 1998 al
Moles Cemelery on Rutland
Fnend:; may call al lhe Moddlepon Chapel of Fosher Funeral Home on
Thursday from 6 10 8 p m.

Davis reunion set
The 80th annual Davos reumon.
descendants of Orlando and Katherme Shelone Davos. woll be held a11he
Rutland firemen's Park, Rutland.
Aug 2 A basket donner Will be held
at noon Relauves and fnends are
welcome to attend

more onformauon comacl Cal Gorby
al 742-2 166
4-H fund ra1ser planned
A 4-H yard and bake sale woll be
held at Long Bottom, State Route.
across from Sand Holl Cemetery
Road, Salurday
Trustees to meet
The Chesler Townshop TruSiees
woll have a specoal meeung Thursday.
7 p m at the town hall
Reunion planned
The annual Thomas reunoon woll
be held Sunday at Star M1ll Park.
Racme Donner woll be at noon

Hymn sing set
There woll be a chocken barbecue
and ouldoor hymn song featunng lhe
gospel songmg group, · Proclaom at JEWEL to meet
JEWEL (Jesus Enhanced Wosc
lhe Langsvolle Chnstoan Church, Salurday evemng Servong woll begon al Educatoonal Learnong). a home
6 30 p m and the smgmg woll stan al school suppon group woll meet al 7
7 30 p m Those attendmg are 10 take p m Tuesday at the home of Bnan
a covered dosh and lawn chaors and K1m Hupp For more mforrnatoon
Everyone os welcome to attend For call 992-7779

Athens disaster recovery
center to close tonight
A Dosaster Recovery Center on
Athens IS one of lhree on the Slale
whoch woll close at6 o' clock lomghl
The DRC's have been operated by
the OhiO EMA and FEMA m order to
after mformallon and serv1ces to resIdents affected by the June tloodmg
The center m Athens IS located at the
Southeast Psych~atnc Hospital
Dosasler voct1 ms woll stoll be able
to regosler for assoslance by calhng
FEMA al (800) 462-9029 and may
ask quesloons abou1 theor pendong
cases through 1he FEMA Helplone. al
(800) 525-0321
Dosaster Assostance programs
mclude temporary dtsaster housong

ru;soslance. grams for senous needs
and necessary expenses nol covered
by onsurance or olher programs, and
low-onlerestloans through lhe Small
Busmess Admomslratoon for dosaslerdamaged resodenual and busmess
property Dosaster unemployment
assostance tax assostance, cns1s counseling and other serv1ces are also
ava1lable to those ehgoble
To dale. ISO Meogs County Oood
voeloms have regoslered for assostance
through FEMA, and 77 have receoved
fundmg $119.259 86 has been dosbursed 10 local flood voCIIms. accordong 10 the latesl FEMA ligures

Diabetics are warned about
defective blood glucose monitor
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government IS urgmg dmbet1cs to
check 1mmedoately whether they're
usong a defeclove blood glucose monolor, sayong the manufacturer may
have mosled pauenls mto lhonkong a
recall was less senou s than ol really
IS

toon s unusual \\arnmg Tuesday came
a month af1er LoleScan Inc recalled
certam SureStep glucose meters thai
sometimes flash an error message
when doabetocs actually have dangerously hogh blood sugar
The malfuncloon - only m melers
made before August 1997 - earned
FDA' s most scnous recall classofica-

Middleport releases financial figures

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................... 44
Akzo ...................................... 49'·
AmrTech ............................. 49"Aahland 011 ..........................52'·
AT&amp;T .....................................59'1.
Bank One ............................ 52~.
Bob Evans .........................19),
Borg-Warner ........................49'1.
Broughton .............................. 15
Champion .............................12),
Charm Shps ...........................
City Holdlng ..........................42),
Federal Mogul ......................... 64
Gannen .................................64~
Goodyear ..............................61 '1.
Kmart ....................................
Kroger .....................................48
Landa End ............................ 27'1..
Limited ..................................m
Oak Hilt Flnl ............................20
OVB .........................................41
One Valley .............................34'tt
Peoples ...................................29
Prem Flnl .................................21
Rockw111 .........................40"!.
RO/Shell ................................st:.
Sea1'1 .....................................51\
Shoney's .................................3'1.
Star Bank ..............................89).

4'·

1n.

Wendv'a ............................... 22't.
Worttllngton..........................14l'.

-·-·-

Stock 111porti 1111 the 10:30
a.m. Quotw provklld by ~dvelt
of Gallipolis.

..

CONTEST WINNER • Shirley Smith of 359 Peart St., pictured
here with a granddaughter and friend, was awarded first place
In the Middleport Community Association's Porch and Entryway
Flower Contest. Judging was held on Monday. Robin Roehaven,
516 South Fourth, and Kay King, 143 North First, were second
lind third place winners. Ms. Smith will rocelve a $50 gift certificate from Bob's Market and Greenhouses, and Roehaven and
King will receive gift certlflcetes from Mitch's and Vaughan's,
respectively. The contest wae judged by the Chester Garden Club.
Myron Duffield, president of the Middleport Community Association, Is also pictured presenting the gift certificate.

Beat of the Bend ...
By Bob Hoeflich

Meigs announcements

uon

$10400

• .. •....._.............. JS Cent~

Dally.

Emma Jean Webster. 80. of Founh Street m Beverly. doed at her resodence
on Tuesday July 28. 1998
Born m Pomeroy on Jan 24. 1918. she was the daughter of !he late Getxge
and Frances Jenkins Bearhs She allended Moddlepon Hogh School and lhe
Beverly Baptosl Church She was a telephone oper:olor and leller allhe Walerford Bank
Survovong are two sons, Kol and Carol Neal of Ausun. Texas and Kom
and Mary Ann Neal of Mason, W Va . a stepdaughler, Charloue Ann Webster of Columbus, seven grandchildren and three great grandcholdren
She was preceded m death by her husband. Leroy E Webster. a stepson
Daniel Webster, and a brother. George Lee Bearhs
Semces woll be held on Fnday. July 31 . 1998 at I p m at Ewmg Funeral Home on Pomeroy wolh Pastor DaVId Snyder officmllng Bunal woll fol low m Moddlepon Cemelery
Fnends may call a11he McCurdy Funeral Home on Beverly on Thursday
from 7 10 9 p m , and althe Ewong Funeral Home on Fnday from 12 top m

The Food and Drug Adnunoslra-

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Sub$cnbcrs not dcs1nng to ply the earner rNY
rem•ttn advance d&amp;rcc:t 10 The Daily Senunel on
a three. s1x or 12 month baa.._ Cmht w1l1 be
gJVen earner each week.
No sub6crtpt&amp;On by ma1l pennltted 1n araa

Emma Jean Webster

Reunion planned
The Imboden famoly reumon,
descendants of Ernest Imboden and
Neva Imboden Gromm. will be held
Sunday, Aug 30, at Forked Run State
Park

'•

Who is afraid of the year 2000?

Responds to letter

7 40 p m.. Rockspnngs Rehablhtauon Center. Ra~mond Nelson, Veterans Memonal
RUTLAND
1.32 am , Meogs Mone No 2, Paul
C. Barrett, O'Bieness Memonal Hospital.
TUPPEKS PLAINS
4:48 p.m • L1sa Tucker, CamdenQark: Memonal Hospital

~~~~--:-----:-1

-·

Smoke screen politically motivated

Letters to the editor

Complaints filed
A complaont for foreclosure has
been filed by Bank of New York, Tulsa, Okla . agaonst Wolham E Kauff.
Sr. and Jenme M. Kauff, both of
Pomeroy The suit, filed m Me1gs
County Common Plea.~ Court, alleges
default on a note and mortgage With
a balance owmg of $57.783.98
A complaont for judgment has
been filed on the court by Bank One.
N.A , Manetta, agaonsl Joseph D
Rose and Patncoa L Smoth, both of
Racone, allegong default on a retaol
installmenl contract, woth a balance
owong of $13,725 30

Meogs Emergency Servoces units
answered sox calls for assostance on
Tuesday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12.40 a.m., fl(llley Rd, Sue Geog,
Veterans Memonal Hospital,
10.44 a.m .• Powell Sl .. Donna
Kent, treated not transported;
12:38 p.m.. Children's Home Rd,
Nora Jordan. Holzer Medical Center;

some

Med1cal records could be lost
JUSt 1n tome for the criSIS
books to thcor
In the worst scenano. clectncal
There arc dolcns of chat groups.
ready-made
planls shut down. makmg 11 omposso- and "slorcs" h, the score
audocncc , go
blc to do anylhong on our powerA couple on Mossouro os markclmg
so far as to
dependent socoely, lrom cleanong "Y2K Surv"al Domes" -- geodesoc
predoc1
1ha1
teelh 10 openong cans to sharpenong enclosures w. '1ncd wuh wood-humPrcsodcnl
mg stoves -- for a mere $7,000 each
pencils ·
Chmon Will
The cnsos, some say, could even A Wcsl Vorgonoa man " lcasmg lots
declare man1al
result 1n a global deprcss1on and la.~l for recrcauonal-vchlclc owners who
law, cancel the
anywhere from a few weeks to a few want to hole up m the mnuntams A
2000 elections
years Ohv10usly. the clear-mmdcd lady on Colorado ol fcrs a gu1dc to
and order the
should
be makmg some preparations mcd1catums that grow 1n the w1ld
m1htary
to
Speer
Bcmg a skeptic and a contranan. I
The
dcar-mmdcd arc
lake over 1hc
Many hardcorc survovahsts have say por&gt;h on all thiS nonsense My
Cllocs Shortly
!hereafter. lhc anlo-Chnst makes hos already found rural sanctuancs, forto- wofc and I nrc plannong a normal
appearance Tncn occurs lhe Second licd !hem and siUckpoled guns and week or I 0 or whalcvcr os needed al
ammo 01hers arc cschewmg our louie shad on lhc Delaware
Comong ol Chnsl
The abbrevoaloon "Y2K," of weapons hul have begun lo convcn coast
The mml we may do os gel a louie
course, IS a genenc allusiOn 10 the 1heor assets to cash and gold and have
extra cash. stock up on fircw&lt;x&gt;d. gas
year 2000. bul 11 often refers specifi- begun laymg up lood and supplies
cally to the cataclysm that could Espec1ally popular arc propane up the lour-wheel and stock some
hattcry-operatcd extra cans of beans and cat food
occur the moment that 1999 dis- rcfngcrators,
rad1os, solar water heaters and 011 Then we ' ll snuggle up on our comsol VCS 1010 2000
forters and watch the New Year 's
Because thousands of the com- l"mps
If all thiS leaves you a httlc con- festovotocs until the clcclrlcoty goes
puters that run the world arc programmed lo rccognoze dates of only fused, you can fond help on lhc Inter- OUI
two dogus, they won'! know what to ne!, wh1ch os hummong wuh Y2K
You woll contonuc lo sec lhe colmake of "00," and they could come communocatoon and commerce. G1ve umn, guaranteed I dusted off the old
crashing down Mossoles m1ght be 11 a try Ask your search engone to manual and dug up some ribbons,
launched Airplanes may be unable locate references 10 Y2K I JUSt d1d I JUStin case
to fly Telephones m1ght stop work- got 28,495 Go to "y2kchaos.com"
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
mg Fmanc1al records could disap- or "garynonh com" and follow the writer for Newspaper Enterprise
pear mto an electromc black hole hnks You m1ght be fimsh~ reading Assqclatlon.

Deanna Faye Lemley and James
Ryan Lemley has been d1smossed

Meigs EMS has six calls

shoppong dunng cvcnongs .ond on
Sundays," the umon Wille :-, 111 .1
statement to a federal mcd1a10r
Understandably the medoator
d1dn 't buy thiS argument and ruled
on Javor of the SSA
Jack Anderson and Nam
Moller are writers for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

TRUST

the upper 60s Loghl and vanable
wmd
Thursday Mommg fog OlherWise panly cloudy a chance of showers and thunderstorms H1ghs m the
m1d 80s Chance of mon 40 percent
Extended forecast ...
Thursday noght Mostly cloudy

--Court news--

ltmcs wcrcn I open 1n th~ cvcnrngs
But that s hardly the case to&lt;.l,o¥
Never mond the lactthatthcse work
crs. lokc all lcdcral employees
already have generous amounts ol
pa1d vacallon and ~mnu ,1l lc~avc .11
lhcor dosposalof Ihey c.on ·, make ol 10
thl! stores on the weekends
So how dod the lcadcrshap ol lhe
Amerocan Fcdcrallon of Govern ment Employees del end otscll when
SSA honchos qucstooned thos pra~
11cc 1 As an unportant " morale
hoosier"
"The practice accommod.ltcs
those employees who lor rholo
soph1cal or other

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Today's weather forecast

Page:2

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
To Republican lawmakers and
the Clonlon admonoslratoon. who are
busy squabbling over whal to do
woth the supposed budge! surplus.
we offer a suggesuon Use a good
~hunk of the unexpecled cash to dramatically mcrease fundmg for cancer research
Consoderong that 87 percent of
those polled by USA Today s31d
they would suppon a tax mcrease 1f
' the money was goong lo light cancer.
!here's cenamly pubhc suppon For
good measure, how aboul a nvelmg
speech from Prcsodcnl Chnlon on
whoch he vows 10 eradocale cancer
1he way John F Kennedy once
promosed man would walk on the

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Middleport Clerkffreasurer Bryan
Swann ISSued a monthly report of
account balances durmg the regular
meetong of Middleport Vollage Cooncol on Monday evenmg
Balances. wolh negatove balances
in parentheses, were as follows
Geneml lund. $96.444 28, Street,
$47.51217 , MonoGolf,$80662. Law
Enforcement. $324 60. Fore Equopment, $6.373 23 . Fore Truck,
$22 866 08 , COPS FAST ($177 44) ,
'•·· Economoc
'
Development. $27.825 7•.
Pubhc Transportation. ($19.880 76).

Law Block Gran!. $3,562 35, Refuse
$50.506 76. Dosaster Relief Gtant
$187 00. Water Debt SerVIce.
$104.941 17, Sewer Debt Servoce.
$80.574 85. Water Tank. $15.000
Water System. $81.543 40 Sewer
System. $49,768 57. Recreation
$439 24, Ceme1erv. $35.869 20

Tis lhe season of famoly reunoons
and a mosl unusual one--wuh
Pomeroy connecloons--woll be held
all week begonnong Sunday, Aug 2.
al Burr Oak S1a1e Park
The reunoon IS for descendants of
August Goessler. noted Pomeroy resIdent of years back. and hos brother
Some 50 people. mcludong about II
from Germany. are expected to be on
hand for lhe reunoon
Augusl Goe.sler was the founder
of lhe Goessler Jewelry Slore on
Coun S1 , on Pomeroy on 1875 A
nalove of Germany, he came 10
Pomeroy from Covongton , Ky , and
worked at the Bochman Jewelry Store
unto I 1875 when he opened hos own
bus mess
About 1910. Waller A Compton,
August Goessler's son-on-law. JOined
Ihe firm as a Jeweler and watchmaker and onlroduced lhe professoon of
oplometry 10 1he Goessler store
Augusl Goessler remamed aclove
on lhe busoness unto I hos dealh m 1928
and a1 thai ume Waller CampiOn
became proproetor of the store and
operated the busmess until h1s death
on 1943
Hertha E Jesse, a long-tome
employee a! the store. a.~sumed managemenl unul 1945 when Norbert W
Complon. Waller's son returned I rom
the armed forces and became owner
of lhe lamoly busone" Shonly after
hiS rewm to Pomeroy. Norbert marned Hertha and the couple operated
the busone&lt;&gt; for years alter that and
were go ven an assiSt by the or daughter. Ramona Compton And Ramona
os tak1ng an actove role woth reumon
plans
The busoness IS sloll opemung
today and os Clarks Jewelry Store
owned by Susan Clark
Some of 1he family will be traveling to Pomeroy on Tuesday. August
4. and mcluded m the group woll be
Norbert's three SISiers Marcella
Compton Haslam ol Short Holls. N
J Vorgonoa Compton Cope ol Marshall. Tex. and Carlena (Bolloe)
Campion Ward ot Hollywood Calol
The three mlers who were reared on
Pomeroy woll be althe pansh house
of Grace Eposcopal Church on

Pomeroy from II a m to I p m .
Tuesday and lheor local froends from
"back when" are cordoally onvoled lo
slop by lhe pansh house for a Vl"l
and a bu of remmoscong
Of course, !hey woll also pay a VIS·
ot to the Jewelry store 10 renew old
memones
So those of you who knew the
Compton siSters dunng the or earher
years on Pomeroy do drop by the
pansh house and help make theor
homecomang a memorable occa~1on
A 'bummer" for Clance Krautter
owner ol K and C Jewelers on
Pomeroy--bullhongs are gelling beller
S1x weeks ago Clance fell on the
deck at her home and lraclured a leg
She ha.' spent the past so x weeks on a
cast and lunctoonong woth a walker
However the cast was removed
Monday and shes makong gre"l
progress
Quole a problem for someone as
acllve as Clance The accodenl. of
course. meant thai she couldn't even
dn ve However. her SISler. Charloue
Elberteld came to the rescue and has
seen that Claroce got where she needed to go Clance does work some on
the store also and. of course that was
oul ollhe quesloon dunng lhe pa.sl sox
weeks
Remond me sometomc--whcn I'm
havong a humorous day and these
seem 10 gel less frequen1 --1o 1ell you
about my ongoong battle woth the
ants Meantime. do keep smohng

........
1:00, 8:40,
7:26

SA 248 to close
The Ohoo Depanment of Transponaloon woll close S1a1e Route 248
on Monday. al lhe sote of a slip JUSI
easl ot the JUncloon of County Road_
28 (Bashan Rd) The road woll be
closed unllllhe end of November
Gary Rubel Construcuon of
LewiSVIlle woll perform the work
Cosl of the contract is $985.393 62
The slop was the result of last
year's Ooodong. and fundong for the
repaors has been approved through
FEMA
The officoal delour woll be Siale
Roule 124 north to Slate Roule 681 .
to State Route 7

,

II

2:00,
7:00

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tliesday admiSSions - Ida Cowdery, Pomeroy
Tuesday d1scharges - none
Holier Medical Center
DI$Charges July 28 - Mildred
Sherwood. William McNellis, Roy
Bickle, Ada Ward. Michael Imboden,
Madeline Rces, Vicki Atha, Jayhn
Hams.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Cbilders, daughter, Thurman; Mr.
and Mrs. Jamie Stewart, daughter,
Point Pleasant. W. Vi.
(Publlshtd widl permlllloa)

41 M1111 Street, RuUond
(740) 742-2t00
Fresh Ground Round
HardwaJe Specials

.......
8:00,
8:00

Canning Supplies, Helbs &amp;
Spices
OpeD. a.tn. -7 p.m.
M•day.S.htnlaJ

W• H.wl.i9C.-~J~Fair
1lcbtJ

lllliblelt
7:18
ALL AGD, ALL TIIIU M.00
• • • • • • • • • • i • • • •

~BIG . . ·
~ \!111io . ·

·

�Wednesday, July 29,1998

Sports

The Daily Sent~~}
•

The Reds had a lot of help as the)
won for only the second time in 12
games. Atlanta had three mistakes in
a four-run second tnning that set the

Poley Reese and walled the next
three - Melvm Nieves on four
pitches. Sanders on fi vc and Barry
Lark in on four.
In all. he threw on ly I0 stnkes in
31 pitches. He had no idea why he
suddenly couldn 't find the strike
zone in the eighth.,
"You give up that many runs. you
walk that many guys. you go out
there and emharrass your'flf."
Wohlers said ... But at the -;arne t1me.
I felt good. I tried my best . I'm going
to walk with my head lugh . If th;tt's
not good enough for anyone else.
then tough ..

Cmcinna11 wm .

The Reds were m control long
before Wohler&lt; took the mound three Atlanta mistakes gave them
four runs and control of the game in
the second inning . But Wohlers' latest out-of-control outmg left every-

tone.

"We were fortunate !!Dough 10 get

some break\." said Sean Casey. who
homered and drove in three runs.
"You don't see th:Htoo often against
thiS team ."
.. We don't knm1 how to act 11 hen
we see gamts like lhal. " manage-r
J:tck McKeon &lt;:ud .
The only downstde was starter
Pete Harnisch, who left the game
after three innings because of a
strai ned right triceps. He went for a
magnetic resonance imi!ging test.
McKeon said Harnisch has felt
sore ness in the muscle at other times
this season. hut it was affecting his
fastball on Tuesday. The Reds aren't
sure if he'll have to miss a start.
Cincinnati took control in the
second. when it loaded the bases and
Millwood bounced a pitch to let in a
run Taubensee then doubled to left
- Ryan'Kiesko broke in on the ball
and couldn't run it down on the warning track - and shortstop Ozzie
Guillen dropped Reese's grounder to
let in another run.
Casey led off the third with his
second homer for a 5-l lead and had
a two-run single in th~ eighth-inning
rally that turned it into a blowout.
Scott Sullivan (3 -4) allowed one
hit over three innings in relief of Har-

Wohlers. \\.·ho clo,ed nul Atlanta's

one stunned.

.. It looks like he\ just trying to
get the ball overt he plate ... satd Regg~t Sanders. who drew " five-pnch
walk in the eighth . .. He\ not throw ing the ball the way he\ capable of
throwing it.
"It used to be he would come in
and say. 'Here 11 is. &lt;ee what you can
do with it .' Now 1t's ltke he saymg.
'I really don't know what I'm doing
and I hope it's there.' He's a linle
more timid ...
Wohlers had no expl;matton for
what happened after he entered a IiI game in the seventh . He walked
one in his first mning hut retired the
other three baners.
In the e1ghth. his pitch.- were
nowhere near the strike zone. He
walked Eddie Taubensee on stx pitches. gave up a tirst-pitch single to

World Sertes wut over Cleveland m
1995. has not recovered Ius control
since going on the disahled li st with
a tom muscle in his side last May.
Stnce returntng from a minor league
rehabil11at10n a'"tgnment. \\'ohlc:rs
has p1tched 11/~ mnmg-. and gi,·en
up five hits. 10 runs ami II walks.
Hts lat e~ l outing wa' tmtgh to
watch.
" II wu.., n't a good outm~ ... manager Bobby Cox "ml m a Jlat tone.
" It \\as rou gh. \\'hew"
Mo't of rhe game v. a...

hk~ that for
the NL East Jeadcf'.
Kevtn Millwood r 11 -61 la&lt;ted
three innings in another poor road
performance. The nght-hancler gave
up live runs - four earned - and
five hits as he fell to 4-3 with a 7.08
ERA in road games.

By JIM COUR
SEAlTLE (API - In what may
have been his tinal start for Seanle.
Randy Johnson's typified the way his
year - and the Mariners' disappointing season -have gone.
Johnson threw 142 pitche s in
recording his sixth complete game of
the season in Seanle's4-31o" to the
Cleveland Indians on Tuesday night.
··One way or another. it will be
over soon.'' Manners manager Lou
Piniella said. "You can appreciate the
perfonmance he gave tonight. "
"Guys like him don't come along
too often." catcher John Marzano
sa~ d.

The lnd~ans, a team trying to beat
the New York Yankees and get back
to the World Series, said they'd like
to have baseball 's most dominating
power pitcher of the 1990s on their
side.
" We'll take him. He'd be a ntce
pitcher to have down the stretch."
closer and fonner teammate Mike
Jackson said with a smile.
The Mariners might trade Johnson
before Friday night's trade deadline
rather than lose him as a free agent
at the end of the season. They have
already refused to renew hts contmct.
Johnson (9-1 0). in his IOth sea,on
in Seattle. allowed four runs on four
htts. matchtng a season-high six

a hit off a guy like him," Bell said.
walks. He had a dozen strikeouts.
" I think that's the one piece that we .. He's a great pitcher...
The Mariners closed to 4-3 on an
need - to get a left-hander.'' Jack son satd ... I thtnk that would be the RBI stngle by Edgar Martinez in the
last ingredient we'd need to get us bottom of the inning. but Mike Jackover the hump and hopefully get us son struck out the side in the ninth for
his 26th save.
back to the World Series."
Nagy went six-plus innings, giving
Manny Ramirez hit a three-run
homer and David Bell also homered up two runs and six hits.
Seattle's Ken Griffey Jr., who leads
for the Indians. who beat Seattle for
the AL with 40 homers, went 1-forthe fifth time in six games.
The Indians would love to have 4 with an inlield stngle. He hasn't
homered in five games.
Johnson .
"But I would be surprised if it hapThe anticipated grudge meeting
pened. ·· Cleveland manager Mtke between Johnson and Cleveland's
Hargrove sa1d. " I really would. As Kenny Lofton didn 't take place
because Lofton was replaced in cenmuch as r d like for it to happen."
JohnS11n didn't give up a hit until ter tidd by Mark Whiten.
In their last meeting. on Aprill5 at
Tmvts Fryman opened the fifth with
Jacobs Field. Johnson threw two
a double otT the right-tield wall
In the sixth. Johnson walked two inside p11ehes to Lofton, who reactbatters before Ramirez hit a two-out ed angri ly. Both benches emptied
homer to right to put Cleveland up 3- twtce. Johnson was ejected and later
suspended for three games. and
0
.. , hit it pretty good. but I y,as sur- Lofton received a tine .
Hargrove said his decision to start
prised the ball went out.'' Ramirez
said ... Randy Johnson is one of the Whiten tn place of Lofton had nothbest pitchers in the league so I was ing to do with their previous conjust lrymg to swing hard ...
frontation.
Martinez. a two-time AL batting
Jay Buhner's two-run single in the
seventh off Charles Nagy (9-6) made champion also rumored to be heading with Johnson to the Indians, said
it 3-2.
The Indians took a 4-2 lead in the he might retire if he is traded.
"It's something I'm really thinkmg
etghth when Bell hil Johnson's first
pitch over the left-tield wall for his about." said Martinez. 35. who went
ninth homer of the season.
2-for-3 to ra1se his average to .108.
In other AL games, it was New
"I was just pretty fortunate to get

Scoreboard

Ea.'iltm Dhision

ll' L 1:&lt;1.

N~v.

14
61

York

Ru~lon

T or(lnto

T.1mp.1 Ray

Ct.rVELAND

"'

Cl ll l .ll!.~ '

J( ,uh.lsC11y

!k HI'I!
Wt~ttm

k\.1'

..

s~ uk

o .•l..l.mJ

~~1

41

soo
491

m

49

:'i~

46
46
44

59
19

!.ill

P111 sb ur ~h

I&lt;
:!~ '

1&lt;

m

'"

41~

.11\

6()

DivisiOn
l1 4K
16
11
46

S;~n Frano~n

14

111

"
"
·~
''"
"
Tuesday's scores
41 1

II

6 Dclrflll 'i
TCA.IS '
J. K iiiiML\ 0 1y 0
Chll ·l~'' While! So11 ol Tan1p:1 Bay I
CLEVELAND 4 Sea11 1~ \
Bn, lnn M OuUanJ ol
N y Y;mke(! 9. An.~~im l

(l,11im1nn.•

I'(
Mmnc) oln

Tonight's games

B : 1 lwnor~ (Mussma !Vii) al 0t1~1 tCa.;ull,, l -M .

rm

1 n a~ !Oh vcr \ 1 ) ·" Tornn111 {Caqcnlt&gt;r ft ... ).

7 o ~:~ rm
M•nrw§nl~ tMd1nn 'i-11 a! K ~nsas Clly (Pich:m.Jn

'i-7 1 ~ o~:~ r ru
Tampa B.1y (Saunders 2-IJ) m Chh.:agn Whne s,,.,
t P•m~ue l· \ ). KO'i r m
t"LE~ELAND ( Wn~hl 9-61,,, ~anle tCioulk 'i71 IO Y'ip m
BosiOn (W:1Sd1 n ol - \I 011 0 01 kl:md ({)qU ISI t'l- I)
10 l'ipm
N y Yank ees (Her nandez ~-21 31 Anaheim
tSrarls 1-21. 10 '~ p m

Thursday's games
Balnmorc (Ke) 4-Jl at Detroit (ThompiOf\ 9-Kl

LO:'iBoston
P m (A very 7. \) at Onkland ( Rogets 111-4 1·
11~pm

Teus (Lo:uza ~ 1J o1 Toronto (Guzmon .~ · P- I .

7 =0.~~n~JO(:I (Serafini 4-J ) w 1{1\ASlU C1 ty ( lUid~~tr

10.81 "

~J~

I~

II'!

14

'" .....
'SK
II
19

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.5~
.519
.)17

I]

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1

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""
"
st•ore
l'il l

11

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Tu~sday's
72 PlulCOtll t'12

Tonight's games
L..m An~de~ .11 Wa.~htngton . 7 p 01
Sauamcmn a1 CLEVELAND . 7 p m

Transactions

GALARRAGA SCORES- The Atlanta Braves'
Andres Galarraga slides Into the plate past
Cincinnati catcher Eddie Taubensee In the first

Inning of Tuesday night's National League game
In Cincinnati, where the Reds won 13-1. Galarraga came home on Javy Lopez's double. (AP)

nisch, who remained winless since · 7-3 with a 2.88 ERA at Turner Field,
June 26. Harnisch is 0-2 with three holding batters to a .208 average. On
no-decisions nnd a 4.50 ERA since the road. batters are hitting .305
his last win.
against h1m . .. . Alan Hendricks, the
Not..: The Bmves are 5-~ on their agent advising Reds top draft pick
nine-game road trip .... Millwood is Austin Keams. made little progress in

a meeting Tuesday with general manager Jim Bowden. Hendricks ts
scheduled to talk to managing executive John Allen on Wednesday . ...
Paul Konerko. who came to the
Reds from Los Angeles in the tmde
for Jell Shaw, got the day off.

6). 7\5pm

Snn DteJO (HuchcOI.'k 7·4) at NY Mels (Joi'IC's
'J-6). 740pm
Mtlwllukcc (K;:wl R-4) 111 St Louis (Sto411emyre
9-9) 8·10p m.

Basketball

ll' L td.

14

.II

12

in Boston's third straight victory.
Mo Vaughn went 3-for-5 with a
triple for the Red Sox.
Tim Wakefield (12-5) allowed
three runs on five hits in 5 213
innings. struck out eight and walked
stX. Tom Gordon got three outs for
htS 29th save.
Jimmy Haynes (7-4) took the
loss. Oakland'., sea.o;on-high eighth
straight setback.
Orioles 6, Tigers S
At Detroit. Eric Davis hit a threerun homer and Lenny Webster had a
solo shot as Baltimore overcame a
five-run deficit.
Gabe Alvarez hit his first caree~
grand slam for the Tigers.
Rookie Sidney Ponson (4-6)
allowed five runs in the tirst, then
pitched five scoreless innings for Balltmore. Anmando Benitez got the final
two outs for hiS 14th save . Reliever
Bryce Florie (5 -5) got the loss.
Blue Jays 8, Rangers 3
At Toronto. Roger Clemens won
his eighth straight decision and Jose
Canscco hit a two-run double as the

Geiger, Benson, Whan,
Davis, Fife, Durst get
KCLLT special honors
Following Sund&lt;~y night's Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament
championship game. several awards
and pnzes were presented to various
players.
The Gallipolis Reds' Andre
Geiger won a trophy for having the
most home runs in the tournament.
He had five en route to closmg his
Little League career with a n-for-8
&lt;hawing at the plate in his last two
games.
Geiger. who wtll be a seventhgrader at Gallia Academy High
School in the fall. also
the tournament's top defensive player award.
Point Pleasant Fruth Pharmacy's
Mike Benson won an E.1:-.10n LL bul
for winnmg the home run derhy e.tr·
lier in the day . Benson hit ftve over

'l'""

the fence.
Winning a ·similar hat w;IS the
Middleport Indians' Donnie Whan
for hitting the lirst homer of the 1998
tournamenl .
The Rutland Reds' M1ke Davis
won an A2002 tieldcr\ glove for
throwmg a no-hitter against Oak
Hill Boh \ Sub Shop in secondround play.
The Pomeroy lndtans' Weston
F1fe was honored -as the tournament\ lead ing h1tter. He had 10 hits
in helping his dub get to the final
four.
Kenny Durst of Point Pleasant
Mead 's Body Shop got honors for
being the 199X st rt kenut ace. He
fanned 34 in lcadtng his team to the
tournamenllitle

Rangers lost their tourth straight.
Clemens ( 13-6) allowed three runs
and seven htt' in 6 213 innings.
walked two and struck out four.
Shannon Stewart hit a two-run
homer in the eighth, Toronto\ first
inside-the-park homer stnce Paul
Molitor against Te&lt;as in 1995.
Aaron Sele ( 12-8) lost his third
straight decision, giving up six runs
and nine hits in S 113 innings.'
Twins 3, Royals 0
At Kansas City. Mo., Brad Radke
pitched 7 213 shutout innings and
Todd Walker tied a Minnesota record
with his ninth straight hit.
Radke ( 10-8) gave up four hits.
struck out two and walked one.
Walker also matched the Twins'
record of reaching base in II straight
plate appearances.

L.
GUARDED - The Houston Comets' Cynthia
Cooper (center) goes up lor the shot while being
guarded on the way up by Phoenix's Umekl Webb

Comets down Mercury 72-62
HOUSTON (AP)- Not even a
double-double by Jennifer Gillom
wa~ enough for lhe Phoenix Mercury
to duplicate last month's victory
over the Houston Comets.
Cynthia Cooper scored 27 points
as the Comets beat the Mercury 7262 Tuesday night. winning their 14th
in a row for since a three-pnint loss

to Phoenix on June 24.
Gtllom led Phoenix with 23 points
and 13 boards - inclmling a career
high II defensive rebmUlds- for her
fifth career double-double.
Phoenix ( 12 -8 ! jumped ahead 9-0
as the Comets ( 19-1) missed their
first seven field goa l attempts. Houston used a 12-3 run to pull even at 20-

20 &amp; 50

Football

1

667

8 .579

lil
2

9

HI

I I 10
2 17

~ 24

~

~~

II

2

~~~·

.

Hockey
N•lion•l Hockty Lnaue
DETROIT fHJ) 'A IJ'&gt;IOS AnnouncW 1he n:nrement of D Vyacilcslov Fettsov, who w;u nam!:d u·
aisaant coach oft~ New kney Dev1ls
LOS ANGELES KINGS· Atrced to ternu wtlh
LW Cr.u1 Johnson on atwo-)'tllr contrncr
NEW YORK RANGERS· Agreed to 1emu with
D Jan Mert111 .
PHOENIX COYOTES Nitmetl Lnurencc
Gtlman director of hockey opera11on1.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNtNG Announced a
worlin&amp; l,&amp;lftmt:nt with Chesapeake of !he ECHL

Collqe
APPALACHIAN STATE

Named Colin

He has the mental qualities to be a
real good player and the character
quality and leadership quality.)&gt;ut he
ts a rookie ... Mora said ... He's going
to be playtng the most important
position on the team and the hardest
position to play. You can ' t do anything about that. just prepare htm ...
Meanwhile. Mora satd he spoke
wuh linebacker Quentin Coryall for
the tirst time since the player diSappeared after pract1ce Sunday mommg.
"He went down to .. ee one or our

doctors and I have not heard the
re,ults.'' 'atd Mora. addtng that Coryatt was complatning of an injury to
hiS left shoulder.

PEYTON MANNING

At Phoenix. Andy Fox went 4-for4 with a homer .md Kanm Gama put

Amona ahead with a hase,-loaded
tnple in the f1fth D:11·id Dellucr i
broke ou1 of a . . lump w1 1h lhree "in gles and an RBI for the Diamond backs .
At St. Louis. the Brewers scored
five run' in the ninth off R1ck
Crou,hore (0-2) . Milwaukee 'taned
the mning with three con..;ecuti\'e ' ingles. Croushore then walked Jeromy
Burnitz and struck out pinch-hitter
Boo Hameltn before Jadsnn hit a
grand slam.
In other NL game ... il was San
Franctsco 7. Montreitl 1: Cincum&lt;~ti
13. Atlanta I: Los Angdes 7.
Phi lade lphia 1: New York 7. San
Diego 1: Houston 7. Florida :1: and
Colorado 12. Pitt,burgh li
Giants 7, Expos I
At Montreal. K~rk Ru~ter pitche1l
a two-h11tcr and -.mgled m the goahead run for San f-rancisco 111 a Jiverun ,evenlh mmng.
Rueter ( 11 -6) allowed only a oneout mlield singk to Terry Jones in the
first mning and Orlando Cahrera\
leadoff single in the ninth He stniCk
oul four and v.alked two.
Rueter. whnlosl his thr~e pre\ lOlls
starts. got his first RBI of the 'fason
with a si ngle ofl Jav 1~ r Vazquez I J9) 1n the seve nth .
Dodgers 7, Ph ill its 3
At Ph1ladelpht:1. E11c Karro' and
Raul Mom.IC'il hi! IWO-run homer\ ror
lh~

Dodgt!rs .

B1ian Bohanon 1-l-6) ~;1\C up
t'lghl hals O\er seven mnmgs, w~lked
one and matched a career hi gh wilh
~eve n slrikeouls II was his seco nd
win m four decPdons since bemg
traded 'to Los Angeles hy the Mets on

July 10
Gary Sheffield went 2-for-3 and
drove in two runs a&lt; the Dodgers won
for the IOth time in 15 games Tyler
Green 16-8) lost his fourth straight
s1an for the Phillies. giving up SIX
runs and six hit.., in "'I X mnmgs.
Mets 7, Pad res 3
At New York. John Olerud and
Brian McRae each homered and
drove in three runs as the Mets
snapped San Diego's five-game road
wmnm~ streak .
H1deo Nomo t5-8) won his third
straight start. giving up three runs and
lhree hils in five innmgs . He stmck
oul e1gh1 ""the Mets won for the seventh t1me tn n1ne games
Andy Ashby (14-6) lost his bid to
become the majors' first 15-game
winne1. He gave up four runs and s1x
hils in ~IX inmngs.
Astms 7, Marlins 3
At Hou ston. Scan Bergman
pttched e1ght strong innings and hit
a two-run double for the Astros.
Craig B1ggio and Carl Everett
each had a pair of hits and an RBI as
the Astros 1mproved to 4-0 against
the Marlins thts season.
Bergman ( 10-S). who allowed
1wo runs and seven hils. wa!'i replaced
by Trever Miller after allowing Todd
Zeile \ two-run homer with no outs
in the ninth . Kirt Ojala ( 1-1) went 5
211 innings. allowing seven runs
(onl y two earned) and SIX hit,.
Rockies 12, Pirates 6
At Denver. L&lt;~rry Walker homered
twice aod h.1d an 1nlield ''ngle to take
over the NL hatttng lead.
It was Walker\ 18th career mul 11 -hom er g.1me and h1 " -.1x 1h against
the Piro~te~. who h.1ve Jo-; f four of
five

Dutch racers claim French targeting
them in Tour de France 'witch hunt'

GALLON

GAS&amp;
ELECTRIC

HOT

WATER
TANKS
PICKENS

ALBERTVILLE. Fr&lt;~nce (AP) The Dutch TVM team wtll race 10 the
17th stage of the Tour de France
todily following medical tests lo
dclcrminc whclher lhc racer' 10ol\
illegal drugs.
"Dc~pitc faligue , the rarer' will
start.'' sllld Gu1do V:tn Calster. a
TVM te&lt;lm ofliciiil.
The cyclists were te,te&lt;l Tucsda)
for tllegal substance,. the
da)
French authorities placed two top
team offici.th under form.tl lnvesli gatton for allegedly supplytng race"
with EPO. a performance enhancm~
drug.
Jcroen Blijleven,. one of the TV M
racers. 'a id tod.t) all ot the tl';un \
cycli-.1\ had het'n told lo report lo
French uuthorilte'i in Rt.'im-. next
Monday morning. the day after the
tour ends .
Bl!jleven"' r:u lrd again'l Ftrnch
aulhoritll.!'\, '•1)' 10£: the y were con·
duct111g '' ··w llch-hunt' ' ;tga m'l the
racers "French justice c.lll do what ·
eve r it wanl~o,. The racer' have no
righh ...
French doctors adnnni' t ~rctl
blood. urine and capillary test' Tue,.
day and lhc racer" rc.1ch Iheir hole I :1(
about midnight.
Pnllre 4ll"o tnterrog:lh: d ' Ht&gt;nrrl\
Rcdant. a TVM oflicial. mo'l of the
mght before relca"1ng hi1n th1 . , morn-

"'me

HARDWARE

l

1

CHESTER HORNETS - The Chester Hornets
junior girls' softball team was the champion of
the Big Bend Youth League tournament recently. In front are (L·R) Kristen Chevalier, Amber
Baker, Allison Rose, Chelsea Wood and Tara

MASON,
W.VA.
773·5583

Fisher. Behind them are coach Dan Spencer, Jessica Dillon, Oanielle Spencer, Jull Bailey, Cattle
Crow, Jessica Baker, Carrie Wiggins, Tiffany
Spencer and coach Kirk Chevalier.

llALTIMORE OR IOU.:.'\ Rdo."asl·.l LHP Nurm
Charhnn All!valcd LHI' hmm) Key lrnm 1111.· hHtl .ly li1 ~ah lcd hst A)!rn·J tu 1crm ~ wu h RHI' lku
Kn.1J1Jl amJ iL, ~ II!liCd hun Ill S.1ta~ut :1 nt lhc (1(\ _

Nallonal Foothall Ln&amp;ut
Thursday's games
INDI ANAPOLIS COLTS Agu:cJ 111 term~
Arl:1n1a (Ne:t!lle 10-1Jl :11 CINC INNATI {P.Itm I- wllh QB Peyton Manmng Stgncd LB Wardel l
Rouse Ploccd RB Charles Krrby on •nJurol h'~ve
l l. I~ J"i rm
Flond:1 tHernand~l 14-71 a1 HouMun !Reynolds
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS Stgned DT Julian
Ptll lt\o1n to a thrtt· ytar t.:t1nlrncl
12-6). I J5 p m
(lm: ago Culls llnpanr 12 61 at Amona (Daoll 4·
ArM. F.-t..ll Lt1111W
~1 .7 Upm
Snn ~rnnct sco (G:mlnl'f K--H at Mon1real (ThurARIZONA RATTLERS Acrtvllh!J OS Cnrln ~
manl-0) 1 CK pm
Bmok1 FB -LB Jason Pohopek and FB-LI3 Trrrnncc
Lns Anaeles (Pilrk 9 - ~ l n1 Ptubdelpluo (Beech l Samuds Pla~d OS Shawn Parntll 110 the IIIJurecJ

Cbarlolie
CUVELAND
Nrno York.
Oetroi!
W.uiMJIOO

York 9. Anaheim 3; Boston 8. Oakland 4; Baltimore 6, Detroit 5; Toronto 8, Texas 3: Minnesota 3, Kans.,
City 0: and Chicago 4, Tampa Bay I .
Yankees 9, Angels 3
At Anaheim. Calif.. David Cone
became the first 15-game winner in
lhe majors, and Derek Jeter. Darryl
Strawberry and Bernie Williams
homered for New York.
Cone ( 15-3) won for the sixth ume
in seven starts. He allowed three runs
and six hits in seven innings and had
six strikeouts. The Yankees improved
their maJor league-leading record to
74-26.
Tim Salmon hit his 17th homer for
Anaheim. Garret Anderson extended
his hitting streak to a major leaguebest 25 games with a leadoff single
to center in the ninth, tying the
Angels' club record.
Jason Dtckson (9-8) took the loss.
Red Sol 8, Athletics 4
At Oakland, Calif.. Darren Lewis
hit a three-run inside-the-park homer
initially ruled a four-base error. and
Troy O'Leary added a two-run shot

By The Associated Press
They weren't typical homers for
Mar~ McGwire and Sammy Sosa.
McGwire hll JUSt his second opposite-field home run of the season
Tuesday night. increa..;mg hi ... maJOr
leag ue-leading total to 45 in St.
Louis' 13- 10 loss to Milwaukee at
Busch Stadtum.
.. He can hit it anywhere in this
ballpark against any type of pitchmg.'' Cardtnals manager Tony La
Russa said .
McGwire's 408-foot solo homer
in the eighth. which followed a grand
slam by Ray Lankford. and s;tcrilice
ny Ill the third gave hllll If)() RBJ,
this season. But 11 wasn't enou~h to
bealthe Brewer'. who won the ~arne
on Damn Jackson\ grand , Jam in the
ninth
" If you want to he &lt;t playoff conlend in~ 1eam you have to wm those
games ... McGwire said.
So..;a. who h11 hi"' first career
grand ,Jam the previous night. hit
another one for hiS 41 '' homer of the
season in the Chicago Cubs' 7-5 loss
to Arizona at B&lt;mk One Ballpark.
"It's always hatd when you· retrymg to do the first one... said Snsa.
who hit 246 homers before getting
20 on a I0-footcr by Sheryl Swoopes ht s first slam .. After the lirst one.
with 2:30 to play in the half. Coop- you get that out of the way. the preser's three-po inter just before the sure" olf. The other one you're not
buzzer gave Hou~ton o ~7 -::!6 half- even wailing for It w~'"' ju..; t there "
Sosa, who ha.., four homers in his
ttme edge.
last
three games and leads the NL
With Houston trailing 46-4~.
with
106 RBis. hecame the 16th
Cooper scored 15 poinh down the
major
leaguer- and ~l'onO thi ' year
s1re1ch us 1he Cornel' oul\co1 ~d
-to
h1t a grand "lam Jll co n ,ec u11 v~
Phoenix 30- 16 over the fin&lt;ll 12:38.
game' M1~e Piuzo1 clid i1 forth.: Lo'
Angeles Dodgers on Apnl 9 and tO.

Raseball

Nation11l Lta~ut'
ARilONA OIAMONDRACKS /'J ., ~~ 1 / IIJ
T r .1 v 1 ~ I..1.'C tlll lhc I 'i day Jtsahl~tl li s1 Wcc,dlt.'d
RHr Bnh W11lctXI lmm Tlll'Mln ol thc PCI.
COLORADO ROCKIES Srp.ncJ I.HI' l'hltd
McEiwy It• ;~ thrl-c-ycnr l·nntmcl c.,tenswn
ll.ORIOA MAKLIN S Plin:cd RHP llrt itn
McaOuw1 1m the /~ · day di"'blel.l h ~ • Purcha~J 1hc
t:onlra.:t of RHP Donn Pall from Charlot1e nfrhe: In·
l~rnalrnnal League Tramferred INF Kev rn M!llat
from Ihe I~ -day IO the ()().Jay dtmbk:d h:q
- --

experience at quarterback . The other
three quarterbacks in camp have
have combined for two NFL starts
and lllayed just 16 games. Kelly Holcomb. the team's No. 3 quarterback
last season, was filling in a&lt; the
starter in camp.
Mora plans to g1ve Manmng a
heavy workload to prepare him for
what hell be facing when the exhibition season begins Aug . 8 at St:attle . It was uncertain how much Manning would play when the team
scrimmages With the St. Louis Rams
in Champaign. Ill. . on Saturday. The
Colts also Will practtce wtth the
Rams in Champrugn on Thursday Friday.
"He's a young rookte w11h talent .

NLroundup

,\mtritiUI l.tllltUt

San Fran u~ ul { D;~rw•n t'l -tO ,,, Muntrcal ( H~· r ­
rn.msnn 1·') ). 7 0~ p m
Atlam.l CSmnlr z 9·21 .n CINCINNA T1 (Knv\1,, OJ l 7 0~ p n1
Lns An!!dcs tMh..:\.:1 ~ . .1) ~ ~ Phil,llll'lplua (I.L)&lt;'W ·
cr 4· \) 'J ~~ p m
S;m D1ep.o tHnnulton 11·9 ) .tl NY Met $ ( lc!l~t
10-41. 'J 40 p 111
Flood,\ tl...aB.1n 2· ''il at Houston (Sdtourct 6-t.l
140'iptn
t&gt;ltlwaukec ( WouobrJ 7 - ~ l :11 S1 Lllm ~ JW,u J
11 1'1 10 r m
P111 ~ ~ur~h tPcl~'f ~ 4-KI at C11lt1radl' tK1k 7· 1~ l
'I m p m
_
Chi ~ .t~n Cub ~ t Wc11~ ~· rt 0-0l .11 Anz o n.l
(lck:m.tell 1--ll. 10 O'i r m

Iaa

td.

l)"i(l

I

Thursday's ~ames
C LEVELAND,,, Charlnllc 1 lOp m
U1ah :11 Hnu~llln. II \0 r m

Eastern Conference
.654

1'1
I!
7

Soll folllll'lll o&gt;

:! I .
11

WNBA standings

-DIYffi?.~:.: :~: :.~: :·: : .~ !

J..,, A n i!d~'

Ho11 ~1n o

ToniRht's Rames

NL standings

~

')

ll '.
14'
I(J'·

Phr11.·nu
Ut.111

S.m FrarKI ~cn 1 Mnrnrc.tl I
CINC INNATI I \ Allaru,, I
Lns i\n~cl~ s 7 Phll.nkljlhl.l '
N Y Met~ 7. .S.m D1~~n l
Huu&gt;lon 7. Fluml,l '
t.h l w ,mkl~ I~ Sr I..&lt; H11 ' Ill
( ,,Jt,rado 12 P!lhi'our~h fl
Arw111:17 Ch ll' i\~1) t'uh' "i

S."'~ tSw10 9-

6). 10·Mpm

1'.

Tuesday's scores

9-S~ y Yilllkcet (Pettine 11-6l a1 Anahe1m (Finley

11-5fr1~o tBurt&gt;a

"

Ill

141

4'!

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CINCINNATI

1 ll f\ll\ 111

7 {):\

61

L'~ An~ek,;

Ctnlrlll DiviskiR
41

M i lllll.'S UI:I

An.1hcun

1-1&lt;1

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. 41
"" 6)""

B.llnmor~

'"
Ct&gt;n lroal Oivbion

Hi' Uslnn
Chtl :•go
Milwaukee
S1 loUJ~

AL standings
fum

1M

Flomi.I

Baseball

opener aga1n't Miamt on Sept. 6.
Having participaled in a month of
work during minicamp. ~ummer
schoo l and other voluntary workouts.
Mannmg ha' tmpres-ed wach Jim
Mora with his gmsp of the offense.
"Every day that he missed put'
him further behtnd . This is a time
when you do a lot of your funda-.
mental hard work and prepare for the
season:· Mora smd Tue&lt;day before
learning of the agreement.
The agreement came two days
after quarterback Ryan Leaf. the sec·
ond overall pick, agreed to a five year, $31.25 million deal with San
Diego that includes an S11.25 mill1on
stgning bonu:-..
Manntng JOins a team with little

Brewers top Cardinals 13-10;
McGwire hits 45th home run

Indians defeat Mariners 4-3; Yankees win; Rangers lose
ALroundup

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Manning signs six-year, $48M contract with Colts
By HANK LOWENKRON
spokesman Cratg Kelley said no
ANDERSON. Ind. (AP) - Pey- details were ava1lab le on the agreeton Manning says his rookie-record ment reached between Condon and
$48 million contract won't mean any- club president Bill Poltan .
thing if he doesn 't play well .
''There ts al so an $8.4 signing
.. People ask me what I plan to do bpnus after three years structured on
wuh my money. I plan to earn it.'' the incentives. which Will easily be
lndianapolts Colts quarterback satd reached ... Kremer said.
Tuesday ntght after agreeing to a six ·
Manntng and hi s father. fonner
year deal that includes an $1 1.6 mil- NFL quarterback Archie Manning.
lion signing bonus.
amved in lndianapolts late Tuesday
.. Whatever it is I sign for. 11 won ·t night from New Orleans. After signmake any d1fterence to me unbs r m tog the contract. the fonmer Tena product1ve quarterback in the nessee star was to join the Colts today
NFL."
at Anderson University.
The 6-foot-5 . 230-pound quarterKen Kremer. an associate of Manning's agent, Tom Condon. at lnler- back. selected first overall in the April
natiOnal Management Group, pro- draft." already designated the startvided the contract figures after team ing quarterback for the regular-seao;on

Reds hammer Braves 13-1
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI tAP) - Murk
Wohlers once again couldn't find the
plate. selling up the Cincinnall Reds'
most lopsided ,-ictory of the &lt;ea&lt;on
The Atlanta Braves' fonner clos·
er threw only four strikes out of 20
pllches in a wtld eighth inning. set·
ting up a seven-run rally and a 13-1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

THE MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES HAS
BEEN NOTIFIED BY THE STATE OF OHIO THAT ADDITIONAL
FUNDS ARE NOW AVAILABLE FOR VICTIMS OF THE RECENT
EMERGENCY CONDITIONS IN MEIGS COUNTY WHOSE
HOUSEHOLD DOES NOT INCLUDE A MINOR CHILD. PREVIOUS
GRANTS WERE AVAILABLE ONLY FOR HOUSEHOLDS WITH
CHILDREN. A ONE-TIME ADULT DISASTER ASSISTANCE
PAYMENT IN THE AMOUNT OF $500 IS NOW AVAILABLE TO
THOSE VICTIMS WHOSE TOTAL INCOME DOES NOT EXCEED
200o/o OF THE FEDERAL POVERTY LEVEL. IF A DISASTER
RELAT£D FAMILY DISASTER ASSISTANCE (PRC) PAYMENT HAS
BEEN MADE ON BEHALF OF A RESIDENT OF THE SAME
DWELLING, THERE IS NO ELIGIBILITY FOR ADULT DISASTER
ASSISTANCE. DISASTER VICTIMS IN MEIGS COUNTY ARE
URGED TO CONTACT THE MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES TO DETERMINE ELIGIBILITY FOR THIS NEW
ASSISTANCE.

Ctolhen women 's rearus cOICh.

•

French wins
in KVD race

POMEROY DEVIL RAYS - The Swisher and
L.phae Pomeroy Devil Rays won went undefeated at
and won the league.tournament held In
!ivracuH last weak, claiming a win over the New
Hlven Giants In the championship game. The
Davll Rays also won the Big Bend Youth Minor
Llegue championship by going undelelted 1113o; claiming an extra-lnnlng_7-6 win over the Haw

s-o

•

Haven Giants. In front are (L-R) Gregory Muuer, Edgel Gobla, Caleb Devla, Adam Lavender
and Nalhen Cook. In the second row are Eric
Wood, Shane Milhoan, Kirk Legar, Aaron Story,
J.R. Greene and Randy Collins. Michael Ball-•
abaenl Behind them are coechae Kan llcCullough, Dennla Muaaer and Earle Wood •

,,

Tyler French of Middleport and
Joe Jones of Thurman claimed victories in Kanawha Valley Dragway
races Saturday 1n Southside. W Va
French. drivmg in the Junior
Dragster Divtsion. got by Ciji Casto
of Mason. W Va . and his 1995
Pro Flex . French's •peed was 70 19
mph.
Jones. driving in the Pro Divtsion.
used his 1977 Chevelle to outpace
John Turley of Hurricane, W.Va.
Jones' speed wa' .99.98 miles per
hour.
Racing in the Pure Street Division
was Danny Hall of Pomeroy. who
was beaten in the finals by Roy Dougles of Mt. Hope. French, driving a
·1977 Corvette, was OUtp:ICed by
Douglas' 1967 Firebird (83.81 mph.
compared with Hall's 78.34 mph).

,.

mg. l:in Moor". m whthe o.; utl ca o.;e
drug ' were found. rcmt~in cd in cu-. tody .
Sport1ng dJI'L'L' Ior Cee.., P1 1em and
team docror Andre1 M1kh:ulm.
pl:~~:ed under IIHt:, li galton Tue,day.
are li,cl y to he form.1lly charged .
TVM r;une under the 'po tli ~lll
when il emerged Ihat EPO had hccn
found in the c;1r of nne of 11-. offiLI.!I~
m March .
Police then found endcnce of
u,ed drug . . 111 ;1 -. uitca'e and (ra ... h c1 n
dunnt! ~ ..,~:; uch ol lhr tc.un\ hotr:l 1n
Toulnu-.e .md Mel t.. though lht: na111re
of thc drug' 1' '''II nnl kno wn
A th11d team h:1' hcen t·.~t~ gh l up
in the dDplnb . . c:mdalthat ha' 1r.ulcd
the Tour de F~:llll'C
French pol let' tlll Tuc ,d:1y \l'llt'Li

suspect mcdu.:a11011 in a \'a ll Uri\'Cil hy
oiTiu.1b of the D1~111.11 tc;un 111
Chamhery. on the Franco-Sw"' horder ncar Alberti illc. where the
cyd1-.1~ ,trnvcd alter the lOth -.1.1gc of
thr tornpc111inn
Around 100 dtht:' of mclhcalton
we re found in hndca'l'' among Ihe
t c&lt;~m ' -. h;,g.., dunng tl routine ln .. pec ·
lion hy L·u,tmno.; otlicials, poLio: said.
The drug-. were o,;ent to a pollee lahoralor) inlhc cil y of Lyon for analy ~ ~ ~.

C11ing unitkn uri ct.l judicial
-.ource..,, F1anCl~ Info r:u.lio reporlcd
that lhc mcdi c at tnn wao, a hanncd
-.uh.,t&lt;.~nc~ ThL' r:1d10 :1ddcd th:1t the
B1gmat cycli"t' .ii,D undcrwl'nl tco.;t mg th1 ' morrHng.

GYMNASTIC 8
TUMBLING
SIGN-UPS

11

•Pre School (3 and up)
•Recreational
·Birthday Parties
•Private Lessons
•Cheerleading Clirtics
•Power Tumbling Team
•Boys &amp;Girls Gymnastics Teams

Session 1 Starts August 31st
Call Now for Free Class Placement
Evaluation Held August 1Oth·14th

WPT GYMNASTICS
5 Co1111erce Dr.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 441·1510

�Page

6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 29,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~entagon prepares guidelines

on adultery and fraternization
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Pentagon is preparing to announce
new guidelines on enforcing rules
against adultery and fraternization,
ending a yearlong review aimed at
fixing a system that critics said gave
high-ranking officers special treatment.

Defense Secretary William Cohen,
who ordered the review, "has said on
many occasions that what he Is lookmg for is a consistent application of
the policy. " Pentagon spokesman
Navy Capt. Michael Doubleday said
Tuesday.
The new rules are expected to be
released this week. possibly today.
The guidelines would limit pros- ecutions in cases of adultery. a crime
' in the lllilitary and half the states, but
·would require stricter policing of frat.emization - any improper relation.ship between a superior and a subordinate, according to draft rules.
. Under the current system. officers
•· are not always punished for affairs,
· ·including with subordinates, critics
contend, while those in lower ranks
are prosecuted. Also. the Army, Navy,
Air Force and Marines handle cases
differently, resulting in charges of

. ~unfairness.

Cohen. who is traveling in Asia,

said last week. " I am trying to make
it as fair as possible" and "clear up
the ambiguities and inconsistencies
so that people understand fully to
what standard they will be held."
The Army would be affected the
most by the proposed fraternization
restrictions because it doesn't prohibit dating, sexual relations or other close relationships between officers and enlisted personnel as long as
the panicipants are not within the
same company or chain of command.
But the final rules could provide
exemptions for current relationships,
including for personnel who are married.
Fraternization is now punishable
by a maximum of two years in
prison and a dishonorable discharge
for enlisted personnel and dismissal
from the military for officers.
Adultery would remain a crime
under the Uniform Code of Military
Justice . Doubleday said the guidance
would provide "clarity" about
enforcing the law only in cases when
good order and discipline are disrupted or the behavior brings discredit to the military.
Commanders would file charges
only if an adulterous affair has disturtled morale or functioning in a mil-

itary unit, according to draft rules.
And commanders would be discouraged from pursuing old cases or those
outside a service member's military
unit.
The draft rules also would ease
punishment for adultery by allowing
a bad-conduct discharge instead of a
dishonorable discharge, which results
in losing all benefits.
During the review process, Marine
Corps Commandant Charles Krulak
argued against any attempt to ea.&lt;e up
on adulterers, suggesting such a
move would weaken standards and
the idea of personal accountability.
But Doubleday said the service
chiefs "have been very closely
involved in the evolution of this
whole process," suggesting they are
satisfied with the final rules.
Cohen ordered the review in June
1997. His directive came after the
controversy over the dismissal of Air
Force lSI Lt. Kelly Flinn. the first
female B-52 bomber-pilot, for lying
about an affair she had with the husband of an enlisted woman.
In addition. the nomination of Air ·
Force Gen. Joseph Ralston to be
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
was derailed after disclosure of an
extramarital affair he had years
before.

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday

8 AM·10 PM

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1998

,changing her name to Mary

· Joy Harvest.
:. Said application will be
heard In said Court, at 1:30
. o'clock on the 13th day of
"October, 1998, at tho Meigs

Pomeroy, Ohio
(7)

29 1tc

Public Notice

Chester Water District
rnerves the right to ro(eet
any and all Bid• or to
lncreaae or decreaae or
omit any Item or ltema
and/or award to the lowest

or best Bidder.
Each proposal must be in

ump ROGSI ••••••••

$119

LEGAL NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Meigs County Courthouse,
reaerves the right to waive
Tuppers PlalnaPomeroy, Ohio 45769.
JUDGE ROBERT S. BUCK Cheller Water Districts
39561 Bar 30 Road
(7) 29 11c
Reedovllle, OH 4Sn2
110 Help Wanted
740-985-3315
I~=====:::::::::;
Public Notice
Separate 1eated Bids for It
a water well (Number-&amp;) will
IMMEDIATE
NOTICE OF
ba received by the Tuppers
DRAWING JURORS
Pletno-Cheatu Water OPPORTUNITIES
Office of Commlaslonera Dlotrict until 10:00 o'clock
of Jurors, Meigs County, e.m. Auguet 10, 1998. and
in your area for
Ohio, July 24, 1998. then at said office publicly
To All Whom H May opened and read aloud.
Concern:
Specifications may be
On Thursday, the 6th day picked up at the Dlotrlct'o
of August, 1998, at 8:30 Main
Office located at 39561
excellent pay
o'clock A.M., at the office of Bar 30 Road, R1edovllle,
the Commissioners of Ohio 45772. Phone 1740for details call
Jurors of Meigs County, 985-3315. Fax I 740-985Ohio, Jurors wltl be publicly 3320. The Tuppers Plain·
1-888-628-9642
drawn for the September
County Common Pleas
Court, Probate Division ,

STNA's

440

Apartments
for Rent

Cross Pointe
Now accepting
Applications
for the elderly and disabled
One bedroom and all
·electric and rent subsidized
apartments
740-992-3055
TDD 1-800-750-0750 II

Love, Mom, Dad,
Amanda

11 &amp;- Melp Wanted
B.C.S, with over 50 locations in Southeastern Ohio. is
opening a new program in Meigs County for a
teenager with MR/DD and has the following positions
available:
1) 40 hrstwk; 3 pm Mon thru 8:30 am Sat; sleep-over
required; daytime hours off; excellent benefn package;
2) 32 hrS/Wk; 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
required We are searching for compassionate
professionals with a team vision and a desired to teach
personal and community skills to individuals with
mentSJ retardation. The work environment is informal
and rewarding. The requirements are: high school
diplomaJGED, valid driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate automobile ins1ura1nr.A
coverage. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training in
field of mental retardation. Interested applicants
to specify pos~ion of interest and send resume to:
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
P.O. Box604
JICkiOII, OH 45640-0604
Ali applications must be nn&lt;t-m.ortt•od by 8/4/98.

'!!!!:.~!!

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985·3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line-Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:D0-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday

*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

614-742·21;!8

4/21!M tfn

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

Custom Homes

Remodeling

JAMES
ALARM
SERVICE

M&amp;J

"Wit ere Qnality fJoem '1 Co11 More"

740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

ONE MAN BAND
~
(

1998 Mirtln 's treet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1

-

---

- -

---

--

P/B Contractors, Inc.

oz WHEATIES

• Bobcat Service
·Concrete
• Masonry
• General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates
No Job Too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985:3~ .

110

LIMIT 12
PLEASE
ADDPURCH
39~

...
SUNSHINE
DOG
FOOD

29~TVAR.TES

..
'
,.

'

$649
33-39

FINAL TOUCH
.FABRIC
SOFTNER

113 W. 2ND ST.

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Lan&lt;t Clearing &amp;
Grading
Sbptic System &amp;
Utllltlllll .
Estimates

oz.

SJLIMIT 6 PLEASE
ADO PURCH 59~

n A Bankroll
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

saoo

..

12/18/lln

985-3831
35537. St. Rt. 7 North

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks

949-2168

70

Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

........__,
HOME CREEK

11tO second Ave . 7/31 &amp; 8/1
9:00·5:00 No Early Sales .
Beanies, Electric Cooking Stove.

ino For EWtrYOne!

4 Family : Childrens Cl othing .
Toys , Mic rowave Oven. Swag
Light. Moret Thurs. Fri. Sat. 9·-'.
2135 St. Fit. 7 North.
50 Kristi Or. Across From Gallia
Auto Sales Fri. 7/31198 And Sal.

811198 g,OOAM
·?

7Am·1Pm 7131 &amp; 8/1 2200 SIAl
. 32SS . Gotlctubs, 98 Ford Run·
ningboards, Old LP'S, Much
Morel

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7943

713198 1 mo.

(No Sunday Calls)

2/12/92/tfn

L-----.;,;.;;;.;.;.;..;;;.;.,)

R. L. HOLLON
~

TRUCKING

· JD CONSTRUCTION
-..

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding · ·~·-·
,llfl&gt;.
An-.
Commercial &amp; R!!sidential
)ill ·
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured f"
10.
.,!..
Phone 740-992-3987
iJ•
..;:... .
Free .Estimates
Afi'.
·' '"·
Owner: John Dean
'1.''.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand

#Ae:-,.r.-.."l'''t~---~.r.-..~.llfr...M:-..Ar.o.
!) ' ll1 1 1~ 11: l, _, n : ;l"_ll , j ~ ll ;J·II 1- 1~ -ii.ll f II ' J~ U · ff ll! Il lIt

\0125196fttn

-....

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; 'Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES~
V.C . YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio -

.•

£ARPET

PLUS

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

or

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

740-698-7231

740-985-4422

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114

_ 61 11/91 tfn

•

LINDA'S
PAINTING
Take the pain out of
painting. and let me
do it for you.
· Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
Alter 6 p.m.
{740) 985-4180.
Free Estimales

Canning Tomatoes
for sal~ u-pick or
we pick
,•

'.':•
.

7!24.981mo. pd.

•••
l
•

INCOME LIMITS HAVE CHANGED! I
1 PERSON - $14,2QO
2 PERSONS- $16,200
AND AGE LIMITS HAVE CHANGED
IF YOU ARE 50 YEARS OLD OR HANDICAPPED,
YOU MAY QUALIFY FOR

THE MAPLES
100 Memorial Drive East

Pomeroy, Ohio
Ranta are computed according to your Income.
Lovely apartments.featuring wall-to-wall
carpeting, with all appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID
.. .MUST BE 50 YEARS OF AGE OR
.
. HANDICAPPED.
.
MUST MEET HUD EUGIBIUTY REQUIREMENTS
FOR FuRTHER DETAILS

CAIJ. (140) 992·7022

·'

Equal Hollsing Opportunity

..

·10:oo _•• m. S.tun:tay.
Big, Big Sale al Jesus Sign on AI
7, 3 Miles south of Eureka. Wed·
nesday,
Thursday,
Friday
9 :00AM to 5:00PM . Something
For Everyone!
Estate Garage Sale: July 31st, &amp;
August 1st. 2427 State Route
218, Dishes, Pans . Wringer
Washer, Wash Tubs. Anlique's.
2 Bedroom Suites. Utility Tra~er, 3
Point Hitt:h Fi8 1d P'low. Tools. 2
Hand Lawnmowers, Misc . Items.
First Time Sale : Thurs . Fri 9-? 3
Miles Out Bu taville Pike . Toys,
Furnilure, Clothes, Housewares ,
E~ .

G11orage Sa.le : Fri . Sal . Ret., PallO

Table. &amp; Chairs. Screen Doo'.
Building Mato&lt;iat. E•ce&lt;eise Ma ·

ESTIMATEES

Pa"'· Bumpe,, O'ums. Roto&lt;s .
Etc. Old Hand Tools , Tow Bar &amp;
Adaplet. 2 Miles F'om Cily Park.
Rt568, 740·446-1352.

am " 6 pm

========~I

~

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
"Huge lnfentory"·

' Roof Coatings
'VInyl Skirting
'Water Heaters
'Door/Windows
'Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
'Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps
Discount Prices

Bennett Supply
740-446-9416
1391 Safford
School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Garage Sale : Friday 8·4, Klei s
Clothes. Toys, Longenbe rga r,

1st , 9·4, Centenary, A t 141 .

askets, wooden
items
II

299 Tht'rd Street
R I . Oh'
aC ne,
10

Household llems. Anlioue&amp;.
Toots.Clothing.
MULTt·FAMtLY YARD SALE ·
Home lnl.,iOt, Tupperware. Toys,
tntanl. Child,en a Adull Clolhes.
Furn iture &amp; Many Household
IIams. 569 Maple Grove Road . Q
Milos Oull41 Fmm Gallipolis. 9
A.M. To 6 P.M. Fri &amp; Sal .
Thurs. Fri. Sat, Eureka .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
3 family garage sale- Friday 31 sl,
rain or sh ine. Formerly Jo's Gill
Shop, Syracuse . Bac._ to sc hool
cloth mg. lamps , antique radio,
good dresses , toys, whal nots ,
laney water glasses. jewelry,
shoes and baby clothing
AU Yard Salet Muat Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline : 1:00pm the
dey before the ad 11 to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition-

005

Personals
AnENTION LOVERSIII

1·900-680-1120 x1255
$.2.99 plmln I Must be 18yro~ ..

Setv-U (619164H4)4

LONELYIII
Need Someone To Talk To ? Ltve
Girts One ·On ·One 1·900· 436·
6773 E•t.8459 . $3 .99 Per Min.
Must Be 18 Yrs. Serv-U 619·645·
8434 .
While widow Chrisltan mi&gt;'e, NOS,
NO. NOA. 62, financially secure.
would l1ke to meet a wrute female
tor a lrtend to go to churCh and
ta~e out tor dinner and take walk

August 1St· 9:00a m. Aullanct
Church of God basement, rain or
shine. Huge. Low priCes.
Btg movmg sale· 2872 Thtrd
Streel , SA 124, Syracuse . Thurs·
day, Friday, Saturday &amp; Monday
9am·? Rain or shine
Ju~3 1.

Aug . 1&amp;3.

Friday &amp; Saturday, corner of Flat·
woods and Rockspongs Rd .
Somet hing l or everyone! 9 :00·

991-6576.

Ctean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smllh Buick P'ontiac. 1900 Ea stem Avenue. Gal~poli s.
J &amp; 0 Auto P'ans . Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles .

304· 773·5033.

Mobile home or house in Mason
Counly on land contract . Have
down payment. 304·675-7971 .
Wanled To Buy : Use d Mobile
Homes, 740-446 -0175, 30•-675-

5965.

EMPLOY MENT
SERVICES
110

HelpWanted
SS$ DANCERS WANTED SS$

Excellent opportunity for the righl
girl. $500(-.)per week earning poten tial. No eKp ne cessa ry, mu st
be at least 18. Call 61,.·992-6387
(anylime) or 304·675·5955 aller
8pm. Wed tnru 5at
AVON ! All Ar eas ! Sh ifl ey
Spears, 304·675-1429
Attention Certified Nunlng AI·
alatan11 : Ravenswood Village is
now acceptjng applications lor lull
time and part lime positions . Paid
vaca) 1on and holidays. II interest·
ed, please apply in person Man·
day through Friday. 9am·4pm or
write Attn: Georgie Boso . R.N.,
O.O.N .. 200 South Ritchie Ave .,
Ravenswood , WV 26164 , 304273· 9385 . EOE , Genesis/Elder·
care lac~i~.
AV ON $8 · $20/Hr No Door To
Door Easy Cash , Fun . 1·800 ·
361-0466 ind/sls!rep

Avon Rep resen1a11ves Needed :
Gallipolis Area. Benefits:
•Earn Up To 50% On Sales
•Work From Home
•Special 01 scounts
-Hands On Tra1n1ng
Cal l Toii· Free 24 Hou rs. 1-888 ·

New Pr ogram In Meigs Counly
For A Teenager With MR/ 00
And Ha s The Following Posjtions
Available ·
1) 40 Hrs /Wk: 3 P.M. Mon Thru
8:30A.M. Sat; Steep-Over
Required; Daytime Hours Off;
Excellenl Berielit Package:
2) 32 Hrs Ntlk: 8 A.M. Sat Tnru

6A.M.Mon;

Sleep-oYer Required ;
We Are Searchmg For Compas·
SIOnale Professionals Wilh A
Team Vision An d A Desire To
Teach Personal And Community
Skills To Individuals Wiln Mental
Retardallon . The Work Environ·
men1 Is Informal And Rewa rding .
The ReqUire ment s Are : High
SchOOl Diploma /GEO, Valid Driv ·
er's Li cense. Three Years Good
Dr1ving E~perience And Ade ·
Quale Automobile In surance
Coverage . B.C S Oflers Compre hensive Tram 1ng In The Field 0 1
Menta l t=letardation . lnleresled
Applicanl s Need To Specity Posi·
lion 01 lnlerest And Send Ae ·
sume To :

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
SERVICES
P.O.BOX 604
JACKSON, OH 451i41Hl604
All AppliCatiOns Must Be Post·
Marked By 8/4/98. Equal Opper·
fuMy Employer.
Babysitler Needed For Evenmgs
2:00 · t1 30 P.M. ln . My Home .
Bidwell , 740·388 -9902 Before 2

PM

Babysitter Needed In My Bidwell
Home Or Yours Stat! Date 9/:l/98
For 2 Boys Ages 3 &amp; 1, Monday
Thru Fuday. 8-2:30 PM 740-388·
Careg1ver For Elde rly Women
~oom . Board , Salary, 740 · 367 ·

Garage sale· July 30-31, Thurs·
day &amp; Friday, 9:00-5 :00 . Turn at
Memory Gardens on SR 7, first
house on left at intersection. Lots
ol girl's teen c lothes , women ' s
and misc. Also harvest gold gas
cook stove and canning jars.

740-!192-7643.

Woman Seeks Loving Man -45+

9: 001rr&gt;~:Otlpm.

"""' ..,.,

mtr!leta·s Rtatouront In Chester.

For Lllttong Relationship, lnctudt
30-31, ~Uit I, 9:00-3:00.
Photo, P0Q 604, Korr, Ott 4S643. JUly
112 mill off 124 on Sunmit
Rd. Clolhtl, toota. dryor, - ·
30 Announcements

on hHttr, mower•. Something

7&lt;63.

Cosmelolog1s1 Needed Guar·
anteed Salary, Versus Comm ission . Pa1d Vacation . Benefi ts.

740-446·7267 .

DRIVERS NEEDED Pierceton
Truck1ng Co. Immediate Openings
For bperienced Tractor TralleT
Driver . Needs Class A COL Wlll'l
Tank Endorsement. Good PaV.
Health tns .. Pens ion 740·4-'6-

0114

Experienced floral designer part·
time. Send resume to Box SF-23
c/o Point Pleasant Register. 200
Main Street. P't . Pleas·ant . wv

25550.

Motor Routt Carrier needed fo;.
leon · Evans area. 1· 800-982··

1397 .... 1787.

N11d Beautician 's Full Or PenTime For Busy Shop, 83 Pine

s-

GatlpOti~ 740-+1! -o!!ll3. .
I. cor nor of
NMdld: Part Ttmo Cilloo Decoro··
, _Rd.IF1d , _ " " " • tor, Uat 01 An Alrbrua~ 1 Kopy~

b - - · 740-7&gt;12-24t2.

Saturdly, Augult

. t--tl42
.
Qu,Nty CIOlltlng lnd hOUHhOid
ltima. $1.00 . bsC ute Ivory 1Wo 111111ily yltd .... - Hope
Thurlday. Monday thru Satunlly Rd., ~. Ohio. Juty 31 a N9;00.5:30.

AntiqUes &amp; clean used furniture .
will buy one piece or co mp lete
hou se hold . Osby Marlin , 740·

Garage sale· Fry's next to Salts·
bury Elem.entary, County Rd . 25 .
Fnday. July 31st 1 00·7:00, Salur·
day. Augusl 1st 9 :00·4 :00 . Misc.
items.

45769.

·--·-

2516.

Q106.

-

. New 1b 'lllu Thl1ft ~

Antiques . top prices paid . Rive rine An tiques . Pomeroy. Ohto .
Russ Moore ow ner. 740·992·

400.

Huge garage sale, Augusl 1-2,
9am·? 18 RaUroad Street, MiddlellaJ Meigs County. Send letter &amp; port . Water softener, • wheeler.
photo please and phone number Je&amp;p, dump truck , band s·aw.
Send do The Del~ Sentinel. P.O.
Box 729·66, P'omeroy. Ohio
Ju~ 30 to August 1, beside Sum·

ar&lt;l cat ride. age 45-60 , lrom Gat·

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Co1 ns. Proofsats .
DiamoncJs, Anlique Jewelry, Gold
Aings , Pre·t 930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling , Etc. Acquis itions Jewelry

1:00pm F~day.

Church yard sale· Syracuse Part

ANNOUNCEMENTS

90

Sewing Machine, C"fl Supplies.
MISC., 6930S!&lt;!IeRoute7Soulh
Moving Sale: 152 Foutlh Avenue,
GatlipoiS, Onto, July 31SI. AuguSI 286·6875.
1sl.&lt;nd. 9:00 r,u,
B.C.S.. With Over 50 Locations In
Moving Sale: July 31sl. AuguSI Southeastern Ohio, Is Opening A

SHOP
Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,

0pen

Wedemeyer' s Auclion Service .
GatlipoWs. Ohio 74(}379-2720. ·

chine. Lawn Mowers. Weedeai --

ers, Metal Ban Saw.' Auto &amp; Truck

412/tO/Ho

•

edl11on - 2:00 p.m.
Frtdey. Mondoy edl11on

CRAFTY LADIES

New Construction,
Aemo d eI.mg

773-5785 Or 304·773-5447

8o Paid In Aclvotnce.

';:========~~
I

b

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pea rso n Auction Company,
lul l 11me aucliOneer . comple te
auctio n
service .
Licensed
•66 ,0h io &amp; West Virgmta. 304 ·

DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
11M! dey belote the ld
Ia to run. Sunday

7122111 n

STORM DAMAGE
.AIRS
REP..
Backhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,

80

AU. V•rd SaiH Muat

985-4473

ENTERPRISES

Moving Sate·now, 1st house
across RIA !racks. Redmond
Ridge. Henderson. 2-story blue
trim.

Avenue, GalliQOhs. 740..446-2842

FREE

Top Soil,

Chester

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Gravel, Sand,

July 31si. ·Aug 1st. g Front St.
Mason . Two Longaberger baa·
kets , furn iture , home interior,
clothes. etc.

· M.lS . Coin Shop, 151 Second

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Limestone, .

3 Family Porch Sale Regency
Apartments. Tueaclay thru Friday.
ll&amp;m&amp; 10 numerous 10 menlion.

740-667-6427 .

5126/tln

HAULING

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

P.O. Box 8
Chester, OH 45720

•

Ctolhes.Housohokl
1 Family: 7131 , 811 . 812nd. 9·'
2361 S.R. 588, 2 Miles F'om
G.A.H.S. T.V.'s. Clolhes. Somolh·

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

..--~...;..-=

•'

'

MEIGS

lost: male Golden retriever. Tup·
pers Plains vicinily, $100 reward .

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

WICKS

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

HelpWanted

Experience Necessary
Apply At:
Warner Heating &amp; Cooling
or Send Resume to:·

'·

Confidenliai Reward , neutered
male Beagle . left ear mtufng.
Pliny area . 304-937 ·2954.

Howard L. Writesel .

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

•River Run Dog Food ...... $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ......... $9:75 100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed ....... $10.25 100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Life Data
Hours: M-F 8-5:30; Sat. 8-12:00 Noon

(614) 992-3838

HVAC INSTALLERS
&amp; HELPERS

LOST OR STOLEN;

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
·VInyl Siding ·Soffit
•Fascia
·Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
·Stationary Docks
·Blown Insulation
·Garages ·Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

740-992-2068

3127/TFN

* JULY SPECIALS *

740-247-3644

Free Cash!
Stop In The Store
For Details

POMEROY, OH.

. 614-992-5479

$ 79

FOZ DELUXE FROZEN·
PIZZAS

2/

EXCAVATING CO.

HELP WANTED

640Z

ASST.
VARIETIES

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Responsible for 24-hour administration- of
nursing services on Skilled Nursing Facility. Must
be an Ohio Licensed AN . Administrative and
Clinical experience in geriatrics preferred bul not
required.
Contact: Human Resources,
115 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-2104.

IJ.~

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

let 7pm. 304·773-5348.

529982 mospd

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

614-992-7643

18 LBS.

1 mQ pd

Jacks Roofing
&amp;Construction

"-

HEAD NURSE

$ 39

7127198

360° Communications

HOWARD

711611 mo oo

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

CELLULAR PHONES

7120198 1 mo pd

-'

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

Puppies. 6wks old, hall copper
nose beagle. other half ? Call af·

7

(304) 273-5860
Ohio Call
(740) 985-4297

3-9 oz.

Gal.

5903.

REFRIGERATOR

WV
304-882-3336
Burglar, Fire, ClosedCircuit TV's

"Build l'our Dream"

On site custom sawing
with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill

BETTY CROC
HAMBURGER
OR TUNA
HELPER
/G M•lk
I ••••••••••
20/0

cJ1ow. 7 mont hs old . 304-675·

·Residential
air conditioning
•Auto air conditioning
•Heat pump
·Installation &amp; Service
$25 service call.
Don Smth
37614 Peach fork Rd.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
992·2735

New Haven,

2/$5

$ 8

304-675-1725.
Mate, part German Shephard. part

localed in lht lnsuranrt Plus Building
across rrom lhe Court Hou.'ie .

SAYRE
TRUCKING

St. Rt. 7

"Easy Ot•er rlre Phone Bank Fi11anring"
Air Conditioners As Low As 128 a monJb
Heat Pumps As Low Aa 138 g mon!h
*Free 5 Parts Warranty

OR

UNITED VALLEY BELL

A

lo tarm """"'· 740-!192·

Free pupp ies part Dalmatian.

Nelwurlu, Modems, Hard Dri&gt;es, Printers, Lpgrdde
Your PC to a Pentium CPU and MB Today.
740-992-1135 for a Price Quote!
Frognet Internet Sign-up point ro,r
........
Meigs and Mason Counties
'I .._ 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

•

GRAHAM$,
12 oz. WHEAT TOTAL

JERZEE
EVAPORATED MILK
Yippie!
Alison Marie is
Sweet Sixteen! ·

c

15.25 CINNAMON

---

,.

ftrm presenting tho Bid
printed on the outside. All
Bld1 mu1t be in sealed
packag01 and clearly
marked, "Well&amp; Bid".
The Tuppe11 PlainsCheater Water Dlotrlcl

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps

1-G-EN..,.E_U_L_M_IL-LS-t

11

.

Custom Buill Computers, Pre-Owned Com puters,

·

&amp; VIcinity

Female dog and female 5 month

old puppy
0155

60 Lost and Found

WV Call

any lnlormalllltl or
lrrogularltiel In tho Bidding.
By ordtr of the Tuppert
Plalno-Ch11ter Water Dl•trlct.

a 11aled envelope with the
name end addreaa of the

Call 614·843·5426

c

Lb

Public Notice

(7) 29, (8) 3, 2tc

Free Estimates

Compufer Performance Upgrades

1pm.

"Your One Stop Computer Shop"

~ Washers
• Hot Water Heater
• Ranges
• Freezers
• Refrigerators
• Dishwashers
• Dryer
Call Ken Young
(740~ 985-3551
7/1 7/981 mo. pd

Over 20 years experience.

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

-

"Need repair on any make?"

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

9 month old male Chihuahua ,
house broken &amp; good with chlkl·
ren. 304·675·5050, call before

...

~

ALL VARIETIES IN STORE

Children 2 months to 11 years of age.

NOTICE
1998 Term of the Common
Notice Is hereby given Ptoos Court of said County.
that Mary Claudia Mltscke,
I. 0 . McCoy
Caae No. 29200, o.l At. 3,
Wallace Bradford
Cherry Ridge. Pomeroy,
Commissioner• of Jurora
Ohio 45769, has applied to
Drawing will be hold at
the Common Pleas Court, the office of tha Meigs
Probate Dtvtston of Meigs County Board of Elections
County Ohio, lor an order locatad at 112 Mulberry Ave,

THE APPLIANCE MAN

CO"STROCTIO"

LITTLE
DEBBIE
PRODUCTS

NOW ENROLLING

Public Notice

(CUI OUt lor Futurt DIICOUn~

LO"G·s

$ 79

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Pt Pleasant

3628.

LIMIT 4 W/$10 ADD PURCH

Gingerbread Hoase

Public Notice

2 puppies . pan Shept\ard mixed
to good home only. 304·675·

24 PK CUBE

2 LITERS

EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION PROGRAMS

Public Notice

PEPSI &amp;
MTDEW
PRODUCTS

298 SECOND ST.

Ohio looks for way to close private prison
CLEVELAND (AP) -With the to hold inmates from the overcrowd- sions or attempting to find fault with
. escape of six inmates from Ohio'' ed Washington, D.C., prison system. an entire facility and staff until all the
only private prison, attorneys for the
Warden Jimmy Turner said sug- facts are known."
:: state are checking law books on a gestions of a state takeover amountCCA said a woman employee who
unique question : Can the state shut it ed to "extreme measures before due may have helped the escape has been
down?
process." A buyout would cost $228 sus!!fnded and could face criminal
Attorney General Beny Mont- million and would mean the loss of charges.
gomery hopes to have a legal opin- taxes for the city, he said.
The inmates cut through two
_,ion in several days on the options.
"While the company understands fences and may also have been
;:: In an interview, she said privati- the concerns of Ohio's political lead- helped by prisoners who created a
• zation is "with the best intentions. but ership, we expect that the democrat- yard disturbance as a diversion. CCA
:a bad idea." and that the prison just ic process applies to us all ," he said. said.
• needs more oversight.
"lllat means not drawing conclu"The whole issue is making sure
~he residents are safe, and that's the
.responsibility of government, not of
ACCESS TO HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
the private sector," she said.
The i-ssue emerged after six
inmates, including four killers,
escaped on Saturday from the North~. east Ohio Correctional Center in
Youngstown. about 60 miles southPRESCHOOl!CHILDCARE
,east of Cleveland.
584 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
Ronald Holmes. 40, an armed
~ robber. was the only one still at large.
740-992-7328
An intensive manhunt. which CCA is
obligated to pay for, was scaled
· down. But police continued to check
.possible sightings.
We offer:
Gov. George Voinovich, speaking
•Infant/Toddler
Care
and
Learning
in Washmgton. D.C., denied that his
(2 mo. to 3 years)
: suggestion to close the prison was an
•Part/Full Time Preschool and Child Care
election-year gimmick in response !Q_
a public uproar about the escape.
- (3 years to 5 years)
"When someone is not paying
•Before/After School Services (6 to 11 years)
attention, you let them know you will
Hours of Operation: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m .
shut them down," he said. "This is a
Symmer Eyn Actiyities for all ages.
way of getting their auention, hitting
Qa!!y Rates
them over the head with a 2-by-4."
County assistance available for eligible parents.
. The prison is operated by the Corrections Corp. of America, of
Call/Come VIsit • 992-7328
Nashville. Tenn .. and has a contract

1998

(I!Mit.

Koko Mochtne Useful. Apply At
G1tttpotta 740-448-

O.try OuHn.
3278

�~: P9 8 • The Dally Sentinel

, 'Wednesday, July 29, 1998

Pomeroy · ·Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 29,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

~~

:! ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BIUDGE

ALDER

38How

t Engoge In o

40 The King - -

1111"9 light

41 Guklld
42 Hot chocolate

7 FlaiiiN

12 Unconcett'f&amp;id,

Full or pan limo bart&gt;er tor Mick's
Barber &amp; Style Canter, 120 East
Mam . Pomeroy Call Mlck W•ll.ams, 740-992-2367

Get Pa10 at Home lor PrOducts
-you assemble No SellingiFREE
DETAILS! Send SASE lo Nalion-

al

H o memaker ~

Co P 0 Box

3700.CO Dept 10,Maple He•gtlts.

Ohio ..137
Now TaklriQ Applications AI Doin·
1110's P1zza. Galllpol~. &amp; Pomeroy
Locations

Outgoing, expenencad retail person with hardware and/or dell ,
grocery experience Part time po-

sition, Rutland Department Store,
740-742-2100

Georges Portable Sawmtll, don't
haul your logs to the m11t just call
304-675-1957
Proless•onal Tree Servtee, Slump
Removal Free Esttmatesl in·
surance , Bidwell. Oh10 614-3889648. 614-367-7010

SEEKING EMPLO'fMEHT
Sell-Motivated. Dependable. Respectable Hard Workmg Chns·
tlan Woman, 32, Lootung FOf PfT
Opportumty To Work In Conjunc·
lion With Present Job Man -Frl ,
Starting At 4 A M Or 5 A M Unlit
11 A M Or Noon Previous Management Exp Also Works Well
W1th Public, Call Alta , 740·985·
4487
W111 haul junk or trash away $351
llid&lt;Uilload 304-67!&gt;5035

Party With Christmas Around
The World! Earn Comm•ss•ons &amp;
Free Merchandi se No Invest-

FINANCIAL

ment 740-44&amp;-9219 KH Supplied
Rewarding And Challengtng PosltlOnS AYIIIIable Ftt

• FULL·TIME LPN
• PART·TIME AN
• PARJ.TIME STNA
Musl Be Friendly, DoiQOiriQ &amp; Dependable .Apply In Person At

Scenic Hills Nursmg Center. 311
Budutdge Rd . Bldwf&gt;l, OH 45614

Business
Opportunity

210

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through th3
ma11 unt11 you have Investigated
lhe offenng
FREE
CASH
GRANTSI

SECURITY OFFICERS
Wackennut •s Taking Applications lor luiUpart lime positions
Must submil to drug screening
and have GED or H S. diploma
Paid hohdaya, free uniforms and
more Apply , James M Gavm
Power Plant. St AI 7, Chesh1re,
Oh at the Ma.n Guard House
740-3e7·1331 EOE MIFAW

SUMMIT TRANSPORTATION
Openings

For om D,_.,

• 29e Per Mile
•S1250PerHour
• Unloading &amp; Dnl!l Pay
• Per&gt;onal118d ~lcll
• Home Week~
• 401 K - Vacallon. Holiday Pay
• MedlcallnSIJfiiiiC8
Call 800·876· 0680 Man -Fn 9 00
AM ToSOOPM
The Southern Local D1strlct has
the position of reserve boys basketball coact1 open lor !he 1998·
99 school year All applicants
must possess or acqu~re a
sports med1cme certlf1cate and
CPR card Prev1ous coaching expenance IS preferred Please
send 1nqulnes to Mr James Lawrence . Supermtendenl, Southern
Local Schools. Box 176 , Racme.
Oh10 45 771, SLSO IS an Equal
Oppor1un1ty Employer
Wanted· persons 55 and over to
help teach readmg at Pomeroy
Elementary w•th the STARS Program F11teen hours par week
Cho1ce of $2 50 per hour stipend
or tuition units tor vour grandChild
or a child ol your cho1ce Pa1d
m11eage and tree lunch For an
applicatiOn or more mformaiiOn,
call Diana Coales 740·992·2161
Wanted Exper~enced And Responsible Part To Ra1se One
Story Frame House And Small
Garage For Material Reference
ReqUired, Call740·992·2326

WORK FROM HOME My Child·
ran Co me To The Ofi1Ce Everyday! Earn An Exira $500 -$1,500
PlMo . Or S2,000 ·$4,000 FI!Mo .
VIsit Our Webstte At www own·
vourllfe com Or Call Toll Free 1·
800-708·3267

140

Business
Training

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK GOT
YOU STARTED... But Your Em ployer May Demand A Little
More Let Us Keep You Learnmg
Tram At N•ght Take Adult Tra1n·
lng At Buckeye Hills Career Center Let Us Know Your Interested
Fall RegistratiOn Is Open In July
Stop In Or Call For A Brochure
7-t0-245·5334 F1nanc1a l A1d
Awllable To Thoso Who Doal1jY

Southeastern Busmess College.
Spring Valley Plaza. 740 -446 4367 , 1·800·214·0452, Accredited Member. ACICS Reg t90-0S·
1274B

150

Schools
Instruction

LOOKING FOR A JOB •. Bul
Short On Skills? Gam Sktlls In
One Year Of Tra1n1ng In The
Evenmgs Buckeye Hills Career
Center Contmues In Its 22nd
Year Of Operatton Tram In Adult
BaSIC EducatiOn, GEO Testmg
Slle. Off1ce Technology, Weldmg,
Industrial Maintenance, P~a ce
Officer /Correchons, SUCCESS.
Auto Technology, A•r Conditioning &amp; Heat1ng , Farm Business
Planning , Analysll , Computer
Specialist Customer Centered,
Healthcara Technician (Formerly
Nurse A•de ). MA/00, Pre-Employment Tra1nlng , And More
Call 740·245 -5334 For Calalog
And 1ntonnat10n

180 Wanted To Do
ANY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed mulch~
tng , flower beds, landscap•ng.
sidewalk
edging , mowing,
etc Free Est1mates Call 8111
304-675-7112
Clrc .. ·N · Convalescent Home ,
Hu 1 Opening Elderly Or Handl·
c:appoct Person In My Homo, 740441-1538

Conn~e ' s Ch1ld Care ·t1as open·
lnQI. s. R 7, Tuwon Plains C.r·
tifled In Metgs and Athens Coun11el. Rea1on1ble rates. open 2•
hOUII • .-n days per -k. 740-

IMIH329.
01r1t Private Care Home has
openings tor male or female el·
dollY polionll. 740-992·!5023
Fumtture repair, refinish and res·
torltion. atso euttom orders Ohio
Volley Refinishing Shop. Larry
f'lllllll. 740-992-M76

College Scholarships.

Business Medical B1Hs
N-Ropay
Call Toll Fr..
Hl00·218-9000Exl G- 2814

230

Professional
Services

L1v1ngston's basement waterproofing , all basement repatrs
done, tree estimates ; l1fellme
guarantee 12vrs on job experi·
ence 304-675-2145

A &amp; J Hoodng &amp; Cooling
Free Estimates
24hr Emergency&amp;Jrv~ee
17yrs Experience
Lowest Rates In Town
304-e75-2056

House. 2 Slory Duple•. 1 Bed·
room Cottage, 13 Pine Streel,
Galhpohs, Large Lot Shown By
Appomlmenl, Pnce $96,000 740446-4999
In Middleport- new kitchen, oak
cabmets , diShwasher, disposal,
heat pump , three bedrooms bath
and 112. can 740-992-3-465
Like new. must sell. $80,000 Lo·
cation! Crew Rd. close to MHS.
contemporary style house, 1 acre
lot. 1 112 baths. family r9om ,
Buck stove. all Jenn·Aife ap pliances 2-3 bedroom garage
decks, Trane H P 740-992· 7292
or 304-895-3490 llelore 2 JOpm
Price Reduced 1 1!2 story, 3br,
Garfield Ave PI Pleasant 304·
675-2924
Price Reduced. 2-story, 3br,
basement, new v1nyl skiing , double lol , Bellmeade. 304·675 1534
Prima Location 414 Third Ave
Gallipolis Beautiful newly constructed two story Colonial has 3
BR, 2·112Ba!Jis, LR, I FA Formal
Dmlng Room w1t11 hardwood floors,
Oak Doors &amp; Trtm. Flr&amp;lllace 1-1 /
2 car garage, Ehglble tor tax
Abatement $169 900 1·304-273-

2940
Three bedroom house, central a~r.
co rner ol Sixth &amp; Palmer, 740·
992-7571

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

oa-

•Summer Spec:tal•
3br S199/mo lree air &amp; delivery
only ol
Home•
Nl1ro,

wv

304-755-5185

All real estate adven1s1ng 1n
th•s newspaper 1s subtect to
the Federal Fa1r Housmg Act
of 1968 whiCh makes it tllegal
to advert1se ' any preference.
hmltatton or d•scnm1nat•on
based on race color, rehgton,
sex tam111al status or nat1onal
ong1n, or any •ntent1on to
make any such preference.
l1ffi1tat1on or diswmnat•on •
Th1s newspaper will not
know•ngly accept
advertisements Jar real estate
WhiCh 1S 10 VIOiahon O!lhe
taw Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwelicngS
actven.sed '" thiS f)Bwspaper
are ava•lable on an equal
bpponun•ty ba s•s

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
2 Story, 4 Bedroom. 2 112 Bath,
Fam1ty ~oom , Ltvlng Room, Orung
Room , 2 Car Garage, Falrlleld
Centenary Ad , Porterbrook Sub·
diVISion Call After 3 OOPM 740·
446-9391
36 Wmdsor Court Pt Pleasant 3
or 4 bedrooms. FAG furnace. Cl
A, fmtshed hard-wood floors, fife·
place . smgle-car garage. full-dry
basement. priced m the 70's
304·675-7285
3br, 2 full baths, UR , LA , OR ,
large k1tctlen fully equ1pped
large toyer , 2-car attached ga·
rage Gallipolis Ferry 304·675·
1226
5 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths. New
1&lt;1tchen, Breakfast Nook. L A
W1lh Gas FP, D R . Olllce , En closed Back Porch Flntshed
Basement W1th Laundry Room &amp;
112 Bath, Large Yard Wtth Beauh·
tul Landscaping, Nice Ne•ghbor·
Mod , Close To Shopping

$160.000
NEED TO SELL
Call For Appointment
740-446·9360 D"Y$ Or
7~6-8427 Ewn~ngs

MAKE OFFER
6 year old . counlry slyle. 2·3 bed
rooms, 1 bath, loft ovelioolung liv·
mg room. tongue &amp; groove k1tch·
en- cabineuy, doors &amp; woodwork
throughout, pellet stove, HPIC A,
appliances tncluded, 50 year vmyl
siding. shutters, deck t car ga·
rage. spa, storage bu•ld•ng. nicely
landscaped. on 1 acre colJnty
schools. 8 miles from Holzer, 740·
367~86

Attract1v1 one floor home In Pomeroy Beat.tllfu! mtenor w1th 2
Jedrooms . 11v1ng room. dm1ng
room, bu1IHn kitchen, li ke new
stove and re tngerator. breakfast
nook featunng corner what· not
snetves. bath, and a mea sun·
porch w1th windows and screens
providing a great VI8W ol the Ohta
R1ver Carpeted, lull basement.
plastered walls w•th crown mold·
•no. roomy closets with full length
m1rrored doors . storm w1ndows
anct ooors. fully msulaled 10fl Leg•on Terrace S39 000 Call 740·
992·5292 aller 5 p m
Bnck house 1n Meadowbrook,
3br, 2 bath, large eat-In kitchen,
dining room, hardwood floors,
screened· tn porch. family room,
partial basement, large storage
buildtng , CIA, natural gas fur·
naco $85,000 304-67!&gt; 1798.

11 Tho HOol Too Much, Or Jull
No Tlme? Wt Will Do l.andlclp·
1ng. Vlrdt. Roofing, &amp; Clr·
penrer Wort!, con Anyllmo, FrH
Etllml1111740---

GOV'T FORECLOSED Hom11
Fro.m Ptnn111 On $1 Dellnq..nl
Tu. Repo's, REO's Your Area
Toll Froa ( 1) 800·218·9000 Ex I
K-2814 F« Cunwnl ~llngl

Used single w1de , around $100
per monlh C8111-800-948-5678

340 Business and
Buildings
Commerclai-Ofllce or- Retail , 87
M11i St Middleport 1,450 Sq ft
$400 mo. Corner Building 740·
992-6250 AcQuiSitions (next
door)

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

2 acre lots or 8 acre&amp;, Bethel
Road, WV 304-e75-7946 •
Lot for sale· Galllpohs, 90x172,
mce neighborhood , Quiet. 740·
446-4722
Now taking sealed bid&amp; on com·
merc1al lot on US 35 Henderson
Mall bids to Stders 2123 MaJ·
vern Rd Rock Hill, SC 29732
()pe"'"9 dale Saplember 1. 1956
Reserve the nght to refuse any
or all b1ds For 1nfo call 803·36&amp;-

9436
Racine- Dorcas/ Greenwood Ce·
melary Rd I Oak Grove Rd · I 5 .
11 acres. 740·992·6542 or 740·
949·2499
Scen1c Valley at Apple Grove,
WV Building tots . smgle wldes
accepted. public water, 20
minutes from new Buffalo Bndge
on Jerry's Run Ad Clyde Bowen
Jr 304-576-2336
Two story building and lot. corner
ol Cherry Slreel &amp; Oak Alk!y, Syracuse. $9500. call 740-992-2631,

740-992·3564 Of 740-992·2839

360

16176 4bl. 2 balh $1,195 down,
$ f 93 per mo Free atr, free Sklfl
1-f!OI}69Hin7
1978 14x70 Festival 3 Bedrooms.
2 Bath's, L•ke New Total Electric,
Dalwered $11 950. 304·675-5965.
740·446·0175
1978 L•berty 2 Bedrooms, Total
Etectnc, 12x55, 220 Air. Vinyl Underp•nn•ng , New Carpet, New
Doors $6,950. 740·446·0115.
304·675·5965

1988 Redman 1415~· 2 Bedrooms.
Gas Heal, CA. L1ke New, $7,900.
304·67!&gt;6965, 74()-446-0175

Real Estate
Wanted

Cash Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackburn Realty, 740·
446-00011
We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1·800-213·8365

AnlhonyLandCo

12x60 tra1ter. can tMI used tor oflice trader, $3,0u0 wdhout aw conditiOner. 54 .000 w1th , 740·949·
2217

t4x70 2br Champ1on $4,000
304-675-7117

pr1e11 per )oil Phone 740742·3225 , II no antwtr, leave
a1

a

House For Sa le , Mercerville
Area . Electnc And Water For A
Trailer Hook-I.Jp, Call 740-446·
2580, 7~3151

14 x70 3BR, $959 Down &amp; ONLY
S179 per mo Free arr &amp; free skirt·
lng 1·88&amp;-928-3426

Garage apartment. Middleport.
great condition, new carpet, two
bedrOQm, balh , kitchen, large ltv·
lng room. d8dl. 2 112 car garage,
owning rolocabng. 740-992-5243.

Handyman Uborer Palnllng. yard

- . srna1 carpentty. Reasonable

House and 58 acres, some ttmber. all rntnetal nghts, excellent
deer and turkey hunting, $40,000,
740-669-3765

Mobile Homes
for Sale

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
3 Bedroom House. 1 Bath, WID
Hook -Up, 172 Fourth Avenue ,
Galllpolls , $375/Mo , Deposit Reqwed, Call Toll-Free t -888-8400521
4 Room House 52 Ohve St 740·
446·3945
6 room house , CIA, $300 per
month plus uliht1es. depos•t &amp;
references 304-675-4874

1 · 5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4,000 Local Gov'l &amp; Bank
Repo's Call 1· 800-522·2730, X
1109
Large three bedroom farm hOuse.
ca rpeted , garage, $400 plus securtty deposll , also apanmenl,
$275, 330-945-4505
Nice 3br. releren ces &amp; depos11
No pelS 34-675-5162

1990 Fleelwood 14•70. 2br, 1
bath , ex cond Camp Conley
tra1ler court 304--675·3735 leave Pomeroy- four bedroom SIR. new·
ly decorated, HUD. no pets, small
message
yard, patio, depos1t, 740·992·
1990 Spruce R1dge 14x70 mObile 6886
home. very good co ndltton, 2
bedrooms. 1 &amp; 112 baths, washer 420 Mobile Homes
&amp; dryer, stove. refrigerator cen·
for Rent
tral a1r 8x8 outSide bwlchng 740992·6562
17 Miles from Milton Exlt·8 Miles
from Point Pleasant 2&amp;3 Bed 1995 14x50 2 Bedrooms , Must room mobile home, slts on 1
Be Moved. $4.000 00 And Takeo- acre. city water, very mea $350
ver Payments 740·256-6040, Or HUD1304·562·5840
740·256 6123
1995 t4x70 Clayton 2 bedroom.
t 995 Clayton. all electnc, excel - 2 bath, pe~ct cOndition, a't eleclent cood•t•on. call Tom Anderson. tri c. $15 ,500 can be seen at
740·992·3348 After 5pm
Browns Court, 740-!92-7660
1998 Close out sale Save b•g
SSS 2.3.4.Bedroom homes Tfl ·
State Homes, St Albans . WV
Cal1·800-948·5678
1st lime buyers E -z ftnanc1ng . 2
or 3 bedrooms, around $200 per
month Call Cred1t Lme 1· 800·
948·5678
3 BR, 2batha, Home Fa Rent t •
304· 738· 7295
Doublew•de 3br, 2 bath, $1,345
down. $217 permo Free delrv ery 1·800-691-6777.
For sale or ren t· 14x60 house
tra 11er. air cond itioned. washer
and dryer. no pets, 740-696-1075
Help save my cred1t. make 2
payments &amp; assume lOw monthly
payments Wilt pay to relocate
Cal304·755-7191
Huge ~8x80 3BR , 1 1/2 balh
Slarllng Iii ONLY $39,999 Many
options ava •lable 1 · 8~8 - 9283426
Large selection of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting at $2995
Quick dehvery Call 740-385·
9621

38AI28A
Sel Up On lol, Take Over Pym!s,
304·736·7295
New t998 14x70 three bedroom,
•ncludes 6 monthS FREE 101 rent
Includes sklf ttng . deluxe ste ps
and setup Onlv $187 08 per
month w•th $1075 down Call1 ·
800·837·3238

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. a11
cond•tloned, $260·$300, sewer.
water and !rash Included . 740·
992·2167
2 bedroom mob1le home 1n
RaCine, no pelS, 740-992-5658
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home. Mer cerville Area, Washer /Dryer, AC.
$300fMo . $200 OepoSft, Water
Pa1d . References Requested ,
740·256-1367. Aher 5 ~M
2 Bedroom Trailer 8 mites out Rt
216 $185 00 Monlh Renl Plus de·
posll 740·446·8172 740·2.56·
6251
2 bedroom trailer 1n Middleport,
$275·plusdeposll, 740-992·3 194
Mobile HOfTle 2 Bedroom In Galhpohs $375 00 Plus Ut1lll•es, Pus
DaposH No PeiS'741-441-4343
Small 2 Bedroom Mob1le Home In
Porter. Close To Schools, Hosplt~l. Stores, Newly Pamted. Water,
&amp; Trash Paid, $250/Mo • S250
Oeposi1, No PelS, 740·388-9325
Three bedroom moD1Ie home '"
Pomeroy, no pets. 740-992-5858

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 Bedroom, AJC , W/0, Hook -Up,
Near Holzer, $279/Mo. + Ultlitles
Depos•t &amp; Lease Required . 740·
446-2957
2br, Wedge apartments, no pets ,
deposn requ~r&lt;&gt;!l 304-675-21ln

456 112 Second Avenue. Galllpo·
Its, 2 Bedrooms, A.C, Appliances,
$425/Mo , $225 Deposll, Utililles
Paid, 7~2129
Applications Now Accepted For
BeauiHul 2 Bedroom Aparlmlnl In
Countfy Setting Living Room,
Large K1tchen, Washer /Cryer.
Fng , Stove. Dishwasher Provided Waler &amp; Garbage Paid, Tenant Pays Electric, No Pets No
SmoketS S400 Oopqsll $450/Mo.,
740·446·9585. Or 740·.. 6·2205
As!&lt; For Virginia
Available Now! 2 Bedroom upper
level apartment for rant. Stove &amp;
refngerator furnished . Call 304·
675-2100

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Weslwood Drlvo
from $279 IO $358. Walk IO Shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Hooslng Oppor1unlly
Brand New Apt Ala Grande
Available AuO 1st, All UnltlltlesPatd. Walk1ng Distance To Cam·
pus, 740-245-5100

Chrloty'o Family Living
Aportmot1lo
Pl:&gt;meroy/Middlopon.
call740-992-4514 ·
Monday lhrough Se1urday
9 ooam-9 aopm
1-2-3 bedrooms , Sn&gt;ve/ratng
ava1labie, utilitieS and cable patd ,
HUD accepted Children Wel come Ask lor Christy
Grac10u8 llvmg t and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1l!age Manor and
Atverside Apartments In Middle·
pan From $249·$373. Call 740·
992-5064 Equal HOUSing 0pportunki8S
New Haven, 1br furnished apt
Deposit &amp; references 304-882·

2566
Now Tak1ng ApplicatiOns- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo , 740·446·
0006
One bedroom apartment 10 M1d·
dleport, all utilities pa1d, S100 de·
posll, $270 monlh, call 740·992·
7606 8am-5pm
One Bedroom Apt AI 651 Sec·
ond Ave Next To Bossard Ll·
brary $350 00/ Mo Rent Plus
$350 00 DepoSII Required No
PelS ConlaCI Debbie or Judy AI
740...6-7323

APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twin A1vers Towe1 now accepting
apphcattons for 1br HUO subsidIZed apt tor. etderly and handl·
capped EOK 304·67!&gt;6679

450

Furnished
Rooms

Ctr cte Motel Lowest Rates In
Town . Newly Remodeled . HBO,
Cmemax. Showllme &amp; D1sney
Weekly Rates, Or Montflty Aates.
Construction Workers Welcome
74().441 -5698, 7~1 - 5167 .

Mob•le Home Stte Available, Route 7 North, Gallipolis, $150/mo,
References ReqlJifed , 740·2455024 740.245-5151

470 Wanted to Rent
Wanted To Rent 3 BedrQom
House In Gatt1a Co , Prererably
With' Basement And Garage Call
740.446-2398 After 5 3:1 ~t.\.

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers . Dryers Ranges, Refrlgrators , 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cuy Maytag, 740·446·
7795

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers . dryers, retugerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vme Street, Call 740-•46·7398 ,
1·1100-499·3499
P,olly't Now &amp; Uood Fumllu,.
Flags &amp; Army Surplusllf
2101,Jefferson Ave
Open 9 30 • 5 00 Mon·Sal
304-675-SOFA (7632)

440

530

Used Window Air Conditioning
UI"Nts, Different Sizes, Guaranteed,
74()-886-0047

Antiques

NOTICE

1 bedroom furnlshea apartment In
Middloporl, 740.992-2118

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
w Va Locat1on Has Been Or·
dared To Uqu1date All Inventory
0 Down . Lowes! APRI 304-736·

1 Bedroom. Rio Grande, 3 Blocks
From University, $235/Mo , Plus
Dsposll, 740-388-9946

·cooL QQWNI•
Central Air Conditioning. Free Eallmalesl II You Don'l Call Us, l'le
Bolh 'Losel 740·446·8306, 1·800·
291-()098

1 small bedroom apt, upsta ~rs.
mo plus uti/lUes &amp; securlly deposll In PI Pleasanl 304·
87H97~ leave name &amp; nurrll8r

S190

Tra•ler and lot In Galllpolt.S Feny
Great tor rental or starung oul
304-675-4679 or 304-f75-1660 t»

1br &amp; 2br apartments for rent in
Pt Pleasant 304·675-2174 or
740-446-2200 aftor 5pm

Ttailar F« SalOl 3 lltdrooml 1 1/

2bdrm. apta .• 10111 electric, appliances furnlahtd, laundl"f room
laclllllto, closa 10 ICiiOol In town.
Appllcallons evalloblo t~ : VIllage
GrHn Apll. t49 or call 740-952·
3711 EOH

2 Bllha Cal740-288-0007
Unbelievable. naw 14x80, no
payments after four years Cell 1·
11()().948-5678

Fiberglass topper, bed liner, tallgate liner &amp; protector for Ford
Ranger. $300 304-675-6348
For Sale Reasonably Two Grave
Spaces with vaults. Oh1o Valley
Memory Gardens Galhpolls,Oh•o
caw ColleCt 740-886·8506
Good Used Commercial Carpet,
S1 oo Per Yard Or Take 11 All Ar
· soc Per Yard Can Be Seen At
17 43 Cenlenary Road. Gallipolis,
740-446-9585, Or 7~6-2683 .
Grubb's P1ano· tunl.ng &amp; repa~rs
Problems ? Need Tunad? Call lhe

plano Dr,740-446-4525

He•l 2 1/2 ton alf condtttoner,
good cond thru the wall 304·
675-2072

JET
AERATION MOTORS
R&amp;llalred, New &amp; Rebu1H In SUlCI&lt;
CaH Ron Evans. 1-1!00·537-9528
lqour lk:ense For Sale. $65.000.
05 Perm1t II Interested, Send Re·
sponse To CLA 442 cJo Gallipolis
Dally Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
GallipoliS, OH 45631
New western saddle, brown/sliver
trim $375. Brown English saddle, used a few 11mes $95 304·
562-1876
Prlmeater- low mstallaiiOn w1th
rebate, first month tree, free HBO,
SlarOne spec1al $49 lnalallallon.
1100-263-2640
Quean Size Bedroom SUite $400,
Large Flh.-g Cabmet Wtth Securl·
1Y LOCk $100.740-.256-1448

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
1996 Klofl, 4WO. 3 cylinder dtesel
comJ)act utility tra ctor model
3054, 30 hp. 50 hours, fronl
W81ghiS, 5' buShhog, $8200. 740·
992-30115
SUmmtf CIMI"MCI on 111 HUlet"
varna lawn mowert a 1trlng
trimmer• Guaranteed lowest

prtco.
Stdm Equlpmonl CorttponJ
30W75-7U1
Your Alea Bush Hog Dealer For
Parts, Rotary Cutters, Loaders.
Tlllers , Fin1sh Mowers, Etc Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn M1dway
Between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande,
Ohio On Jackson Pike 740·446·
2412 Or 1·.1100-594-1111
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commerc•al
Lawn Equipment Compact Ut111ty
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors, Hay Equipment . John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders Chedl
With Us About Financing As Low
As 2 9% On Lawn Tractors And
low Rate Fmanc1ng On New And
Used Equipment CarmiChael's
Farm &amp; Lawn Galhpohs. OH 74o446-2412 1-1!00·594· 1111

630

Sears Whirlpool Tub Spa, Folding
PCP Champion Walker. Cottect1on
Of Cape Cod Dmnerware, Never
Used, Decoratelve Wal.l Plates,
Smoking Pipes, Cali 740-4 46-

0639.
The PomeroY Thnft Shop has
moved to 145 North Second Avenue, Mlddleporl (Cash Bahrs old
bulldmg), buytng· baby nems,
breakfast sets &amp; good clean used
furniture on cons1gnment. Open
Tuesday-Friday, 11·4, 740·992·
3725

Llv~tstock

Morgan &amp; Saddlebred .tyr old
gelding. good 1ra11 horse $1,500
or Will trade 304-562-1876.
Saanen goats for sale 304-6753628

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
1910 ·1V90 HONDA CARS FOR
5100 SeiZed &amp; Sold local~ ThiS
Month Call 1-800-522-2730 Ext.
4420
1980 -1990Trucks For $100"!

SeiZed And Sold
Locally ThtS Month.
Trucks. 4x4's Etc
1·1100-522-2730, X 3901
1982 Chevy Camara $550 1981
Eagle, 4-wd $350 304-576-2428
1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 b 260
VB Good Cond111on. $1 .500 oo
Flrm 740·992·4568

1986 Buick Regal Um1led . CJJ7. V8, 74()-24!&gt;5457
1986 Ford Taurus, loaded, everything works good , runs great,
could dnve to Flonda, 90,000 ac·
lual m1les. $1250 neg. 740-9926624

18,000 STU Kenmore A/C 220
Vol1 $200 304-675-1931.
26.000 BTU sir COndlllorllr $325.
50 gal. electrit water heater $60 .
Complete set maple cabinets
SUOO new, framing lumber,
·nsq. clay Siding $2~ . sq 200
amp electric bo• $100 Ulld
doors, 112 HP gerbago dlspouls,
$80 now. dthumldlflaro 175.

Fled -

304-075-4004.

3 Pc. Sectional Coucl1 With 2 End
Aecllnars In Couch Earlh Tones,
$500, 740-245-9507

Building
Supplies

4 gray hand -fed Cockatiel ba·
btes 2 months old 304 -8823436
A Groom Shop -Pel Groommg
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

740-446·0231
AKC Chow Chow Pupp1es, 2
Black Males. 6 Weeks 'Old, $200
Each. 740-446-1947

1986 Plymoulh Voyager LE
S1 .850 Rebu•lt eng1ne, many
new parts 304·675-6704
1988 Bonneville LE. maroon, 4dr,
new ures &amp; brakes, good coM
$3.200 304-675-5792 after 5pm

1989 Toyota Cellca ST. a~r, automatic . amlfm cassetle, wh1te
w1th blue mterlor, great condition,
740-992-7627
1991 Chevrolet Caprrce Station
Wagon , Loaded , 65,365 M1les
$4.500. 7~6-0924
1991 Chevy Corsica, 3 1 MlJIII·
port engme, poWer windows ,
cruise, lilt, air, sharp car, only
82,000 actual miles, $320Q neg ,

AKC Golden Re~1ever Slud Serv·
leO Proven $125, 7~Hl615

140-992-6824

AKC mm1 P1nschers, 3 red , one
blade and rust, 7 weeks old, $250,
740·949·3026.

MI~S. 5 Spee!l, 31 M1 /Gal , M; I

Excellent ConditiOn, $4,500, 740·
..6-3e77

AKC Registered Boston terrier
pups, 4 mates, 1 female, ready to
go. mother and father on prem1s·
es, $200 each, to good homes.
740-992·3418

1993 Dodge Shadow E S Au·
tomatlc , AIC, AM/FM/Cassette,
75,000 mi Good Cond1t10n asktng
$4,500 00 Days 740·446·3278 or
Even1ng 740-446-3099

AKC Sheltle pupp1es , trt and
sable and whne . vet checked ex·
cellent pedigree, $250· $350

1993 Plymout h La&amp;er. 83.700
miles, 5 speed, cru1se, atr, amltm
casselle, spo11e r, fleadt •ght cov·
ers. $5000. 740.992-9008

each, 740-896'1085
C F A Registered Pers1an C8t I
Shaded S1lver Male, 1 3 Year Old
Tort1po1nt Female, 1 3 Year Old
Shaded Silver Female, 1 2 Year
Old Red Female 740-446-U55

1991 Toyota Corolla OX 83,000

1993 Pontiac: Grand Prix , brtght
red exterior. gray lnttnor. 84,000
ml~s $8,895 304-675·3324

1994 Pontiac Fireb •rd, V-6 automatic, all power. tow miles,
Handsome AKC Reg mate Wei· •r7500. 740·952-7614 or 740.992·
maraner seelis compansh1p ol 3085
stnkmg female Weimaraner who
loves to play fetch &amp; take long t995 Chrysler Sebring, excellent
walks 304-nJ-6146
co nd1tlan, call Tom Anderson ,
740.992-3348 after 5pm
NOTICE
French Ctty Pet Grooming
1995 Pontiac F1reb1rd, fully load·
ed. 1-tops, new tires. 55,000 miles.
Pro tes s1ona1 Groommg by Ap- askll'lg $9,900, 304-675-6723.
pomtments. Over 15 yrs experience, New bathmg systefT), "Ultra 96 Toyota Camry, 19K, loaded,
Wash·. 650 Second Ave Galli· $18,500 080, 740-985-3831 .
poliS, OH 740-446·1528.
Credit ltroblems? We Can Help
Poodle pupp1es. tiny tovs . also Easy Bank Financing For Used
Schnauzer pupp1as &amp; adults, Vehlclll, No Turn Downs. Call
AKC, shots &amp; wormed, 740·667- VIckie, 740-446--2897
3404
Seized Cars From S175 Porsch.
ts, Cadlllecs, Chevvs. BMW's,
570
Musical
Corvelles Also Jeeps, 4 WD's.
lnetruments
Your Area Toll Free 1·800·2 18·
9000 E•t A·2814 For Current
Usod Sundy ClarlnOI, 740·446· Usllngs
4237 Laave "181Sage.
Upton Used Cars At 62·3 Miles
580
Fruits I
South of Leon . WV F1nancing
A1111iablt. 304-456·1 OS9
Vegetables

BLACKBERAiiS
$13-gal. You P1ck $10-gal. No
Weeds , Barnes On Fence. 304·
458-1867 Laave Message
Pick Your Own Ptachis, Yellow,
110 Bushel, Bring Container,
Open 8 Days Wtek, Raynor
Peach Orehard, 5 Miles Soulh
Route 7, Gallpolls, ONo 740-4464807.

720 Trucks for Sale
1989 S-10 .63,000 Miles , Sporl
S~lng. $2,495, 1989 Jeep

Com-

anche. $2,2G!; Cook Moton.

740-448-01 03.
1993 S-10 4.3 V-6, Tahoe Pock·
oge. Topper 45.000 Miltl, Exctl·
lenl Con&lt;llllon, $5,500. 740·241&gt;-

5837.

•K65 32

~ I

1994 Blazer, red , 4x4 Tahoe ,
56,000 m11es. 4-dr loaded 30•675-5040

23 Amount

• J 9 6 5
• K4

•

tKJ962

tQ10873

• Q 10 7

• 9 8

South
• K .!

2..5

44 Wide ohoe olzo
45 Pengulno' org.
46 Sgt., o.g.
48 '!ype of Ure
51 Rolulng
(2 wdo.)
55 Makeo amends
56 Boxer Gene 57 Jury list
58 Moot dlotant
point In an

orbit

26 Mohammedan
pnyerleoder

28 Singer Stevena
29 Opp. of WSW
30 Type of CUf1

DOWN
1 Uncooked
2 Actreoe

Thurman

3 Dohou-ork

7 Snipped (hair)

4 Edge
s Caeser's
language

8 Jar covers

10 Bog
11 Explosive
inits.
13 Slir

9 Language

18 Ebert's

31 Pronunciation
38 College olllclol
37 Before, to •
poet

medicine

very short

6 CuroUve

sulllx

19

,.

4NT

BARNEY

1998 FreiQhUmer Class1c XL. with

~.NT

fi.

ranty paCkage, call for detailS,
304-773-SS40

I DON'T TAKE

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

BRIBES!!

'96 Jeep ClassiC, 4 door automatIC loaded, $20.800 OBO. 15,000
miles, 304·773-5540

THAR'S $1.00
IN TH' HOLLER

1'.1ss
Pa:-:s
l'a:-.s
Pa:-;s

OIH'IIIIll.!

4t
~. t
li t
l'ass

220ut-meal
23 Goddess of
the moon
24 Take ott
(cargo)
25 Cruel peroon
27 Alps, e.g .
(abbr.)
32 Actress

Pass
l'itsS
l'ass
Pass

l•·•ul • 4

Luplno
34 Singer
Jackson

A strange

35

Bikini and

others
39 Plano piece
43 Misbehave

sequence

'98 GMC Yukon 4WD, SLT pack·
age, wh 1te, CO player , leather
seats. garage kept. 9000 m11es
$32,500, 740·992-6849

partner
Reteree'okln

20 Poun!CI

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South
Wt•sl North t:ast
South

1997 Dodge Ram 1500 Ellended
Cab Laramie SLT Conversion
Package, 360 Automatic, 8,000
Miles. L1ke New. S16.500. 740·
256-1142

(2 wde.)
45 On cloud(elated)

47Yes--7

1978 Jeep CJ-5. 56,000 original
m1les, V-8, hberglass body, new
t1res. softlblktnl top, wlfull cover
$6,800 OBO 304·895-3:123
1979 CJ5 Jeep New Top Good
Aunn1ng Gears. 4 WO. 7-40·6827236 Day11me. 740·682·7063 Aller 9

1984 AMC Eagle aula 4w!l. 2

Motorcycles

1981 Honda CB900, 14,000
M1les. Excellent Con~luonl Ask1ng
$1.700, 740·245 ·9852 Even~ngs
AHer 5 ~M
1986 Honda 4 Wheeler, In Very

Good Condllion, 740-256-6574
1995 Honda Magnum VHF 750, 4
cylinder, 800 m11es. aslung $6000.
740.992·3e86

'"\-A.v~s- 7-2.~
www trankandtmn t com

....._.

1995 ZX6R N1nJ3, Kawasaki, new
tires, $4200, 740.742· 1066

THE BORN LOSER

1996 AM 125 Suzuki Dtrt B1ke
excellent condition . New pla&amp;tiC,
graphic kit, FMF exhaust &amp; FMF
suspenston, fullv rebuilt motor w/
extra accessones $2 900 304 ·
675-3424

I"DID YOJ K~ 1 0NC£ S\Ut&gt;IE.D..,
TOe£. f\ ef\~1~"- "'?
-~.....

I"Cf\1-l

'(()() PIC\URt ME.. I~ f\

Q 1993

Th!lvea/Dt51

by

NEA

Inc

..,

nrw 7

By Phillip Alder
Here is anolher deal from the
high-stake game at the TGR Bridge
Club in London Look only at lhe
North hand. After lwo passes. your
partner opens two spades. strong
What would you respond?
Tmditionally, a jump raise from
two to four shows atleaSI four decenl
trumps but denies a side-sun control:
no ace, king, void or singleton. So,
North should raise to lhree spades, a
pos1t1ve response with trump support
(Agreed. a positive response normally shows at least eight pomts. so starting with two no-trump. the negative
reply, isn't wrong. But that hand is
worth eight points: seven in high
cards and at least one for 1he doubleton diamond )
Now Soulh made a good b1d: five
clubs. He was lookmg for help in that

48 Jce-T'omuolc

49 OneDoy--

nme

50 Football
coach Shute
52 Amer. long.
53 Look Ill
54 Nautlcol

rope

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Clptw!r ayp~ogram&amp; are crealed lrom quolallons by famous people pasl and presenl
Each little~ lf1 the ctpher slaOOs IOf anolhet Todays due J Bquals 8

·v

C M S' G

At 1h1s point. it seems lo me.
North sho..!d cue-bid five hearts. He
has already denied an ace. so why nol
show his king? That would make 11
easy for South to settle in six spades.
When North jumped to six spades.
though. South thought his partner had
somethmg useful m clubs. so he went
on to rhe grand slam
Seven spades ISn't hopeless ..
baSically, 11 needs !rumps 2-2. Then.
aflcr drawing trumps and ca.shing I he
five d1amond wmners, declarer can
ruff both his club losers m the dum·
my However. wilh 1he trumps 3- 1.
Soulh eventually went one down.
What were the linancml ram1f1Ca·
tions? Well, as lhe slake was about
$1.63 a point, if North-South had
stopped in six spades, each would
have won some $1600, mstead of los·
ing $80. Crazy 1

1985 Welcrafl Ski Boat 19 Foot,
Cuddle Cabm, 140 HP. In-Board
Mercru~&amp;er, Runs Good, Good
Cond•Uon With Skis, Vest, Knee
Board, $5.200. 740-379-2133
1997 Bass Tracker Bantam 3x w/
trailer $1.000 304-675·6956 aller
5pm
Kawasaki STS Jet Ski. st1ll under
warranty, three seater. 83 horsepowe r, bought new July of '97,
three matchmg Kawasaki skl
vests and tratler all go with 11 .
$5000, 740-949·2203 or 740·949·
2045, w111 cons1der t1ade tor a
good ponloon boal
Ski Naut1que 1989 351 Ford 240
HP 530 Hrs RediWhlle. Sk1 Boom
&amp; Cover Also Boat House w1th
Boat Lift W1ll Sell Separate 740·
446-6253 aher 6 OOPM
Ski thla aummerl
18ft Oeep-V, closed bow, 160HP
MercrUiser mboard, wl!raller lite
Jackets &amp; bumpers $2,050 740446-3814

UHUEG

B

F P U8 G

JPVGBVS

'' IN SUCH AND SUCH

FIELDS THE POPPIES BLOW .. ''

350 Chevrolet engtne, 740-985·
3406

IU

E B S' G

YP UKVC US G

I MA 8 S

I

R US

SMPIBD

B S C

E B P G UP
PMKBHDSS
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'The purpose of hie IS to help olhers

C M.'

help them, won't you at least not hurt them?" -

1f you can 't

Leo Buscagl1a

! CAN'T FIN15111T BECAUSE I
DON'T KNOW WHERE WE ARE ..

~y

IeHan of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words

the
below to form four s•mple words

TRUTEG

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PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

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UNSC RAMBLE
ANSWER

When a falher s1ngs m the
shower 1t usually means that
the fam1ly hasn 't used all the

c;· C-o~~~~:.Y~hte

Jchockle quoted

by fltltng 1n Ike m1~smg word i
you develop from step No 3 below

FORI

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

~~ -.

Bed• rail caps, ttl Chevrolet trucks,
$25, 740·446-2316

-l£

WOlD
T~~;~:~T ~©\\ll}A
t.!r~"
GAM I
ltlltod
CLAY I . POUAN _.:..__ _ _ __

L-..1.-.J.l......l..-.1.-..J.l....J.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

IRD

OSMI

sutt for seven.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Thnft · Platd. Jomt - Adhere· PIN HEAD

Our sales manager sm1led broadly looked at our corporate map and sa1d , "I'm proud to say that m every
state we have a PIN HEAD "

Budget Pnced Transm•sslons All
Types. Access To Ovar 10 .000
Transrmssoos, 74(}245-56n
New Auto Body Parts '&amp; Acces sones tor all types of vehicles
Transformers Auto 304·675·3324

IWEDNESDAY

New gas lanks &amp; body pariS D &amp;
R AUIO, Ripley. WV ,30'·372·
3933 or 1·800.273-9329

790

teat

mark
33 Relative

•AJ983 2
t A 4
• A J 4

1994 Ford F 150 X L PICkup
Truck 65'.000 MilOS 740· 446 ·

Bill -,

21 Acrobollc

East

West
•Qt0742

1987 Ford 48' High Ranger buck·
ellrucl&lt;, 740-378-6279

760

....rona)

CalWomll

Prevlouo Puzzle

drtnk

ethlcolly
13 Ou1 of bed
14 L8rge deer
15 118~ e.g.
16 - up (confuse)
17 Photo(pk:ture-taklng
18

• 5

1987 Ford 150 4 WD, 306 Cyhn·
der, Runs Grealt Good Condition,
HQh MileS $3,600, 740-379-2133

740

07-29-911

• A 8
•Qt0?6 5

new ttres 304-458·1817

3 1/2 Month Old Colt, Brown.
Black &amp; While , Steel Toe Trap
740-256-1233

Satelhte d1sh , $300, Morn1ng Star
Ad . 740-949-3511

1972 Mack truck, 237 Mack motor, 52500, set of alummum
wheels tor late model 4x4 Chevy
truck, $350, 740-742-2675

olo spec, 77 ,000 miles, lull war -

1988 Dodge Daytona 2 2 L EnBlock, bnck, sewer p1pes. wind- gine $500 00 OBO 740-245-5870
ows, hntels, etc Claude Winters,
R10 Grande. OH Ca ll 740· 245· . 1989 Tempo Auto , Atr, Tilt,
5121
Crurse, Power Steenng, Power
SealS. PB. 71.000 Miles. S1.400.
560 Pet~ for Sale
741).367-7480. 740-..!&gt;9552

Usea Furniture S!ore Below HOliday Inn. In Kanauga Monday
Thru Fnday, 10·4. 740-446·4782.
Slop By

SpeCial 16x80 3BR, 2 balh
$1 ,325 Down. $205 Mo Frte air
&amp; free Sklrtng Hl00-691-6m.

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used. Stairway Elevators , Wheelchatr And Scooter
LiNs. Bowman's Homecare. 740·
446-7283

Tame Blackbemes $3 OOquart
$1000 gallon. 304-67H514

Mob1le home site available between Athens and Pomeroy, call
74()-38!&gt;43e7

540 Mlscellaneoua
Merchandlae

3409

Church pews, lwlllve 12' long, lour
10' long, sl• 6' long, oak, good
condition, call 740·949· 2217,
7:00am-10·00pm.

Sltver Queen Sweet Corn, No Or·
der Too Large Or Smalll 74D-682·
6850

550

1 Bedroom Apartme.nt . Stove &amp;
Aefrtgerator Included H0-446 2583

New Ooublewlde 38R 2 bath
$1 ,325 Down &amp; S205 per mo 1·
888-928·3426.

Brand Newl Greal Glftl CD!vkloo
s1orage unit Black and cherry
NIMir out of bOX. $125 Holds up
to 940 dlses, also holds tapes
Call 740· 992·8836 aller 6 pm
COs &amp; l8pes nollnciJded

North

460 Space for Rent

t and 2 bedroom apartment ~. lur·
nlshed and unfurnished, sec1Jr1ty
depos1t requ11ed . no pets . 7•0·
992·2216

New bank repos Only two left ,
never hved 1n Call 1·800· 948·
5678

ATTENTION: We'll PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds 47
People Neede!l l~alely Offer
Eq&gt;110s. 7/31198, CALL 7~11982,

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

Sleapmg rooms with cooking
Also tra•ler space on river All
hook-ups Call aller 2 DO p m •
304·n3-560 1, Ma&amp;an wv

Buy or sell R1venne Antiques ,
1124 E Ma1n Street. on At 124 ,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm , Surtday100 to
6 00 p m 740·992·2526. Russ
Moore owner

New 3br $900 down.1149 per
mo Free skrrJ t-8Cl0-69Hi777

A round butcher block table &amp; 4
cha~rs Ju1ce man )Ulcer '304·
67~3734 .

580

Walerline SpeCial 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Compression F111ing1ln SIOCk
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Oho. HIOQ-537·9528

Two bedroom tra11er for rent
(available August 1St), n1ce
country sen10g, central a~r. porch,
storage room . trees, b•g vard! 5
m11as east of Ractpe, no •ns•de
pets references reqUired $350/
month plus depos1t . 740 9492644 evenmgs

Apartments
for Rent

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

-to

---

ACROSS

PHILLIP

JULY 291

ROBOTMAN

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1995 Nomad Deluxe, 30 Ft F1fth
Wheel, W1th Stide·Out. Central
Heat &amp; Air, M•crowava, Stereo.
Self·Contamed , 1 Owner, Used
Vt&lt;y Ultle, 740.245-9378
Wanted Slide-In Truck Camper ,
9 Or 10 Ft., Sell-Contained, Must
Be In Good Condlllon. 740·2566038

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

~3-Aug.

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perience All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag , 740· 446:
7795.
C&amp;C Ge-neral Home Maintenance- Paintmg , vtnyt siding ,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths.
molllle homo repair and more Fo&lt;
free estimate call Chet, 740·992·
6323.
Professional 20yrs elperience
With All ma&amp;On8fy, brick, blOck &amp;
stone. Also room additions, ga rages, etc Free estimates 304 773-9550.

840 Electrical and
Refrlgentlon
Residential or commorclol wiring,
now sorvtce 0&lt; rtpliro. Mellor L&gt;
cenaed electrician . Rldtnour
EIICirlcal, WV0003C8, 304-675·

1786

wait on others to take the initiative; There is ample justification for yqur
control the dynamics yourself. ·
expectatrons if you continue to be
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your realistic and pragmauc m your finan22) Condi·
greatest a\settoday is your ability to cialand commerc1al affaJis .
tions are prom1sing where fulfillment expand upon the ideas and suggesARIES (March 21-Apnl 191
of meaningful objectives is con- tions of your contemporaries. Put
Today it looks like you'll be much
cerned today. Zero in on what you your imagination Ul work.
luckier in worldly affairs than soc1al
hope to achieve, and chances are
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. ones. Try to focus your interests on
good you'll pull1t off. Know where
21) Material prospects continue to the former.
to look for romance and you'll find
look encouraging today. so make the
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)·
it. '!'he Astro-Graph Matchmaker! most of situations that enhance your
Don' t be mtluenced by companions
instantly reveals which signs Bf!! financial po:;ition. There are improvewith devious intentions today. Things
romantically perfect for you. Matl ments you can make.
will work out smoothly. provided you
$2 75 to Matchmaker. c/o this news·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) operate in allegiance to your highest
paPer. PO. Box 1758. Murray Hill Don't be reluctant to tackle 'somestandards.
Station. New York. NY 10156.
thing you've tried and failed at in the
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -S~pt. 22) past. It isn't likely you'll fall short of
financial
dealings today. adhere to
Chances are. you'll be luckier than your expectations the second time
• methods and tactics that have been
usual in just about anythmg you around.
· tested and proven to be successful.
undertake today. There's one excepAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Let your competitors experiment on
tion, however: don·~ gamble on You're in a cycle of reciProcity, and
Jlelt procedwa.
something you know little about
the seeds you 'vc planted in the put
CANCER (June 21-July 22) PeeLIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If there
will come to f111ition· tpday. Your .pic ~ coopcr111ion Is essential to
is something important you want t~ kindness to others may now be
your plans should be, encouraaed 10
finalize. this is the day to do 11. Don t repaid.
su(llllllt you 11 lhls time. Don't be
PISCES (feb.' 20-March 20) reiUCIInt 10 Ilk fur usiSIUICe.

ASTRO·GRAPB

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional l•fet1me g'lJalantae
Local references furnished Es laiiMhed 1975 can 24 Hrs (740)
44!&gt;0870. 1·800·287·0576 Rogers Waterproofing

I

,.

- -- -- ·~ ~---- -~------::.·"- -- - -- -----.....

..

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
· Page10
Wednesday, July 29, 1998

Internet can be a h~me wrecker or lifeline of support
Ann
Landers
IWI, l.o5 AnreJc' T~t~~e~
SyOOicw llld Creators

Syrw:hcaae.

Dear Ann Landers: I was interested in the letter from "Bye Bye
Forever in Texas," who said the
Internet was responsible for the collapse of her marriage. Mine, too, is
teetering on the brink of ruination
for the same reason.
My husband of 22 years has
become a recluse. He refuses social
invitations, has quit attendins our
children's activities and lies to me
about the amount of time he spends
surfing the ' Net. Like an alcoholic ,
he apologizes and promises to do
better. but once the computer clicks
on, he Stls there, transfixed, until the
wee hours of the morning .
I don' t understand the attraction .
Most of what I've seen is garbage ..
pornography. crackpot philosophy
and nonsense .
The young boy in Oregon who
murdered his parents and then shot
two schoolmates to death had also
constructed five lethal bombs using
instructions he obtained from the
Internet.
I love my husband and don't
want my children to go through the
trauma of a divorce, bull am sick of
attending events alone and inventing
excuses for his absence. I believe the
man has a full-blown addiction, and ·
I've begged him to get counseling.
He refuses. What now? -- Wits' End
in the Midwest
Dear Midwest: Your husband
has, as you described, an addiction.
And, I might add, he has lOts of
company.
If he flatly refuses to get help for
his problem. you have two choices:
You can make a life for yourself that
doesn't include him. Go with family
members and friends to the movies,
the theater, card games and so on, as ·
tf you wero a widow, which in a
sense you are . Or you can get really
tough anJ tell him he can seek profess ional help for his addiction or he
will have to move out and take the
computer with him.

And now, dear readers, there is
another side to the Internet "problem" that must be considered. Keep
reading :
Dear Ann Landers: I want to
share an Internet experience that is
heartwarming. It could provide a
sense of balance for those who are
screaming about what a bad influence the Internet is on society and
how it is ruining marriages.
Two years ago, my 42·year-old

son, Steve, was in a horrendoUs
mountain-bike accident that left him
in a lengthy coma. Four months ago.
Steve died after the life support systems were removed .
During this difficult time. my
friends in a chat room for people
over 60 kept me going with their
kindness and suppon, not only on
the Internet but with cards and
words of encouragement sent by
"snail mail ."

.

'

EASTMAN'S

That wasn't all . They sent me a together.
My unmet Internet friends have
card that had been signed by chatroom friends from 10 different showered me with such warmth and
states, along with a gift certificate understanding that I now know that
for me to have a full day at a spa kindness and goodwill can be found,
with massage. manicure. facial ·· the even in cyberspace. --U. P. in Los
works'
Angeles
Dear U.P. in L.A.: Leiters such
I call these compassionate buddies, whom I have never met, my as yours are reminders that we must
angels, for that is what they are. not lose faith in the basic goodness
"Linda in Maryland" was the coor- of people when we r~ad about the
dinating angel who pulled it all horrendous crimes and man's inhu·

·Family Medicine column, Page 12
Indians rally, top Mariners Page 5
Ann Landers column, Page 12

'•

~\~~'l'
•

High: 80; Low:SO

Tomorrow: Rain

j(

High: 80; Low:SO

"''I

Send questions to AM Landers,
C~ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angdes,
Calif. 90045

Meigs County's

FOODLAND
ONE STOP CONVENIENCE

(except Buckeye)

GOING TO STATE FAIR Stacey Mllls on her horse
"Jean Lucky S\l&amp;le" qualified
to participate In the Ohio State
Fair horse show, Aug. 1-6. She
will participate In cones and
barrels and speed and control.

Umlt- with $10.00 or more purc:haH. Goocllhru 811/98.

•Ohio Valley Bank

L----------------------------------•------~

"Superbank" Services
•Greeting Cards
•Floral Sales
•We accept credit cards

Bi-Rite
Paper

4
Rolls

I.Q.F 3 lb. bag

64 oz. b~

Boneless
Chicken Breast
Filets

Whitehouse

Apple
Juice

3 lb. or More USDA Beef

Style
/ Bucket.Steaks

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Wildwood Gar·
den Club, Wednesday. 2 p.m. at
home of Sara Roush, Church St ..
Syracuse, following a tour of the
Gordon and Linda Fisher gardens.

'

Lb.

G~lde.n
Ripe 31bsJ$
Ch1quata

USDA Choice Beef

Sirloin Tip
Roast

THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA and Alanon
mee ting s. Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m. Thursday.

Bananas
United Valley Bell

POMEROY - Tow~ and Country Expo 1998 committee meeting
July 30, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
secretary 's office on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds. All committee
members and other interested in the
EXPO are asked to attend.

Chocolate Milk

. s 29

G1llon
FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education , special session,
10 a. m. to discuss personnel and
other required action.

Stokely

Peanut
BuHer oz.,••

SATURDAY
REEDSVILLE - Friends and
relatives of John and Laura Wells,
annual picnic, Forked Run State
Park. noon Saturday.

Vegetables

18

2/S
Chicken
Noodte Soup-S 99
Fooclland

SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778. and Star Junior Grange
878. regular sessio n. Saturday.
potluck supper. 6:30 p.m. followed
by regular meeting and election of
officers. 8 p.m.

F
a Crowd!
Your eonvenlence

Mills. 14. a member of the
Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders Club, and
Whitney Karr. 13. who belongs to the
Kountry Kidz 4-H Club have been
named Meigs County's delegates to
the Ohio State Fair.
The two were selected at the 4-H
Perfonnance Against Standard State
Fair qualifying horse show held July
. 18 at Henderson's Arena. Jackson.
Participating in that show were 38
4-H club members from Hocking.
Jackson, Meigs, Pickaway. Pike,
Ross and Scioto Counties.
4-H members eligible to try out
for the State Fair Junior Fair Horse
Show showed their horses in a minimum of two and ma~imum of four
classes. Classes included showmanship, horsemanship/ equitation, pleasure. gymkhana. reining. trail, plea-

$ .

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO VALLEY,
TWIN RIVERS

Dally from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. aod
3 p.m . • 7 p.m.,
ll tba.e is 100ft than 3 cuRomen.ia Une ar
• ftllllrer, -will open IUIOrber reg!Aier.

We " - " the Right 111 Limit Quentltlee • PrieM EIIKtlve ThN s.t., Augwt 1, 1111111 • USDA Food Stlmpe 11111 WIC Coupone M cept1Mt • Not IIMponllble for 'l'ypoglllplllc or PICitorlll Enora.

sure driving, driving reinsmanship,
and jumping.
.
To be eligible to participate in the
State Fair Junior Fair Horse Show 4Hers had to meet a qualifying score
or minimum time in at least two of
their classes.
Judges for the show were Chris
Strine, Ashland, and Steve Caner,
Mechanicsbu_rg. Participution rosettes
were given to all 4-H members and
trophies awarded to those who qual·

i!ie.fl.

.

The State Fair show Will be field
Aug. 1-6.
Mills qualified in cone~ and barrels, and speed and control on her
horse, "Jeans Lucky Su.•ie." Karr
qualified in showmanship, horsemanship. and western pleasure on her
horse, "Eyes of Boston."

4-H judging in preparation for the
!35th Meigs County Senior and
Junior Fair got underway Tuesday at
the Rutland Civic Center.
More than two hundred livestock
projecL• were judged during the day
with grand and reserve champions
being named. and several honorable
mentions being awarded.
Receiving awards in the various
projects categories were:
Beef Breeding 1: Josh Ervin, grand
champion.
Beef Breeding II: Cheryl Jewell,
grand champion.
Feeder Calf: Elaine. Pu1man.
grand champion; Joe Brown, reserve
champion.
Market Steec: Alison Rose. grand
champion; Joe Dillon, reserve champion; Jennifer Clifford. Josh Ervin,
Brandon Fackler, Derrick
Fackler, honorable mention.
Dairy Calves and Heifers: Donny
Beaumier. grand cbampion; Ross
Holter. reserve champion.
Dairy Cows and Management:
Tricia Davis, grand champion; Ben
Holter, reserve champion.
Dairy Market Feeder: Donny
Beaumier, gr.md champion; Alyssa
Holter, reserve champion.
Goat: Ben Crane, grand champi·
on; Carrie Myers, reserve champion.
Basic 4-H Horsemanship: Angela
Wilson, grand champion: Keshia
Norman. reserve champion; Bethany
Riffle, Joey Riffle. Holley Williams.
honorable mention.
Basic 4-H Horse Science: Kenda
Wheeler. grand champion; Kacy
Ervin, reserve champion.
Light Horse Selection: Hollv Milhoan, grand champion; Manhew
Smith. honorable mention.
Horse Nutrition: Jessica Wheeler,
grand champion.
Equine Reproduction and Genetics: Holly Milhoan, grand champion.
Draft Horse: Manhew Milhoan.
honorable mention.
Dressage: Jessica Janey. Stephanie
Story-Schwab, Cassandra Smith,
honorable mention.
Poultry Production - Pullets:
Melissa Houser, grand champion;

stock proJects were Judged Tuesday at the Rut·
land Civic Centar.
Sarah Houser, reserve champion;
Odie Karr. Manhew Salser, honorable mention.
Poultry Production - Broilers:
Robbie Weddle, grand champion;
Melissa Kirk. ·reserve champion;
April Butcher. Brent Kevin Butcher.
David Tucker. honorable mention .
Raising Fancy Poultry: Robbie
Weddle, grand champion; Michael
Salser, reserve champion; Brent
Butcher, Kevin Butcher, Melissa
Houser. Odi.e Karr. honorable mention.
Ducks and Geese: Robbie Weddle,
grand champion; Matthew Salser.
reserve champion; Donald Russell.
Michael Salser. honorable mention.
Markel Lamb 1: Alyssa Baker,
grand champion; Matthew O'Brien,
reserve champion; Shawna Davis.
Chelsea Young. honorable mention.
Market Lamb II: Kristina
Kennedy, grand champion; Theresa
Baker. reserve champion; Jessica
Dillon. Ashley Hager, Holley

_Linda Tripp strikes back
after completing testimony
WASHINGTON (AP) - Her
credibility was attacked by the president's lawyer. her government tile
was leaked to the press. and she
endured countless jokes about her
appearance from TV comedians.
Wednesday. in the sweltering heat
outside the federal courthouse. Linda Tripp broke her silence and struck
back.
The Pentagon employee, whose
20 hours of audio tapes triggered the
Monica Lewin sky investigation.

blasted the "legions of paid prevaricators" who vilified her. Her list
included Clinton lawyer Roben Ben·
nett.
She also set the stage for a potential clash with Ms. Lewinsky's testimony by denying she had anything to
do with controversial "talking
points"- a document given by Ms.
Lewinsky to Mrs. Tripp that was
designed to sway testimony in the
Paula Jones case.
"Imagine how you would feel if

Williams, Stephanie Wilson, .honorable mention.
Market Lamb III: Melody
Lawrence, grand champion; Kimberly Ritterbeck. reserve champion;
Derrick Bolin. Shannon Enright.
Kacy Ervin. Mendy Guess. Erin Harris, Michelle O'Nail, honorable mention.
Sheep Breeding- Beginner: Holley Williams; grand champion;
Alyssa Baker, reserve champion.
Sheep Breeding · Intermediate:
Theresa Baker, grand champion; Ashley Hager. reserve champion.
Sheep Breeding - Advanced:
Michelle O'Nail, grand champion.
Squeal Appeal: Erin Bush. grand
champion; Myea Michael, reserve
champion; Jessica Pooler, Matthew
Salser, Michael Salser, Sarah Stoban.
honorable mention.
Going Whole Hog: Betsy Sheets.
grand champion; Christopher Barringer. reserve champion; Kay Hunt.
Lester Parker. Alyson Patterson. Bil-

lie Jo Welsh, honorable mention.
Hamming It UP: Kim Mayle.
grand champion; Jessica Justice.
reserve champion; Elaine Pulalan.
Jason Rees Wyant. honorable mention .
Swine Production - Advanced:
Christopher Barringer. grand champion.
Rabbits I: Joshua Nelson. grand
champion: Brittany Hauber. reserve
champion; Sarah Clifford. John
Cooke. Rachael Morri,, Becky Taylor. Derek Taylor. honorable mentton.
Rabbits II and Ill : Courtney
Kennedy. grand champion; Becky
Yost. reserve champion; Stacey
Ervin. Jennifer Mayle. honorable
menlion .
Rabbits - Advanced: Julie Spaun,
grand champion; John Krawsczvn,
· reserve champion: Andrea Neutzling.
· honorable mention.
'The Normal Animal : Jenntfer
. Harris. honorable mention.

Train show underway

your boss' anorney called you a liar
in front of ·the whole country," said
Mrs. Tripp after her eighth and final
appearance before Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr's grand jury.
"Imagine if that boss was the presi·
dent." Mrs. Tripp said in a reference
to Hennen's comments about her
credibility.
"Imagine how you would feel if
someone you thought was a friend
urged you to commit a felony," she
Conitnuedon page J

Ohio shop workers reportedly hold
winning ticket in Powerba/1 jackpot
WESTERVILLE (AP)- A group
of 13 machine 1Ttop workers today
told neighbors 3JI,d relatives that they

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials

BIG BEND, BUCKEYE,

18-19oz.box

More

Sta~y

2 Sections - 12 Pages

Foodland
Assorted
Cereal

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE
Eichinger
reunton. Sunday, 12:45 p.m. lunch at
Carleton School. Syracuse.

QUALIFYING . FOR - FAIR
Whitney Karr qualified for
State Fair In showmanahlp,
horsemanship and weatern
pleasure on her horse, "Eyea
of Boston" at the rec:ent completion held In Jacklon.

Meigs selects 4-H State
_Fair horse show delegates

Today's

10.5 oz

Single Copy- 35 Cents

More than 200 livestock projects
judged foiJ 135th Meigs County fair
c

Food land
Granulated
Sugar 51b.
bag

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume Number 49, Number 70

Budget Stretcher

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

Braves
wallop
Reds 11-5
Page4

•

., ··
"'~

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and spec ial events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund rai sers of any type . Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
he guaranteed to run a specific number of day s.

CARPENTER Board of
Trustees. Columbia Township, Monday. 7:30p.m. at the fire station.

.

manity to man . .
My rea&lt;15rs have taught me more
about compassion, generosity of
spirit and genuine goodness than I
could have learned in any post-graduate course of philosophy at Harvard or Yale.

-Towels

•.

Today: Cloudy

Sports

July 30, 1998

Weather

fll-,

Community
Calendar

MONDAY
I
RACINE - Friends of the Meigs
County Library will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the Racine Branch.

Thursday

Local
Sports
Weather

12
8-9-10
11
2
3
4~5-6

3

Lotteries
QHlQ
Pick 3: 308; Pick 4: 0614
Super Lotto: 4-13-14-16-37-41
Kicker: 815255

lY..YA.

Dally 3: 759 Dally 4: .9783
e 1998 Ohio Valley Publishin&amp; Co.

held the sing!~ winning Powerball home.
lottery ticket wonh a record $295.7
"They're moving. I'm sure." she
million.
said. The station said the winners
The winning ticket was sold at the were stockroom workers.
Richmond Speedway gas station in
The previous record jackpot for a
Richmond. Ind., 100 miles west of single winner was $195 million. also
Columbus. Hoosier Lottery spokes- in the Powerball game, won by an
woman Diane Balk said. The buyer Illinois couple in May.
·
chose the $161.5 million lump-sum
The huge jackpot in Wednesday's
payment rather than the larger jack- drawing. swelled by repeated drawpot spread over 25 years, she said.
inss in . which no one. wQ.n the top
Broadcast reports this morning prize, created a sensation in the 20
said that 13 of about 170 employees states where Powerball is sold - and
at Automated Tool System, which
in neighboring states where hopefuls
makes industrial parts in an office sometimes drove for hours for a
park just north of columbus. pooled · chance at the big one.
their money to buy 130 Powerball
So many tickets were sold, lottery
tickets in Indiana.
officials had said there was a 90 perBy midmorning, workers outside cent chance there would be more than
the plant could be seen joking around.
one winner.
giving each other high-fives and
"We cenainly expected two or
receiving a cake. Sean Allen. gener- three (tickets). But this stuff hapal manager of nearby Allen Comput· pens," said Chuck Strull, executive
er Supplies, said he delivered the director of the Des ·Moines. Iowacake to , congratulate the lucky based Multi-State Lottery Associaemployees aJ ATS.
tion. which oversees the game.
Delaware County sheriff's
Strutt said the winning numbers
deputies guarded the scene as an drawn Wednesday night- 8, 39, 43,
attorney met witb people inside.
4S, 49,111d Powe:rbllll3- wae less
Jenn~i~lertold WCMH-TV 11111
likely llS be chosen.
.
her brother; who has three children,
"H!Illllll beinp tcod to pick nUQIwas among the winners. She spoke to bers that DlWI somethitll to them reponers near her broth6's 1110dest
Coatialied oa 1111' 3

The seventh annual train
show Is underway this week at
the Meigs County Public
Ubrary In Pomeroy and six layouts of model trains are conatantly operating for the enJoyment of visitors. The show Ia
open to the public from 9 a.m.
to 9 p.m. through Friday, 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Saturday, and from 1
to 5 p.m. Sunday. Besldea the
trains, a wide variety of photoa,
railroad related Items end
memorabllla are featured In
the display. Bob Schmoll, formerly of Middleport, now living
In Rio Grande, 1hows one of
his mOdel train outflta. He
hOlds an engine which he
rec:tlved for Chrlatmuln 1151.
David Robinette, left, and hll
son, Nathan have created a
replica of the old Pomeroy rail·
road freight atatlon and It 11 on
display at tile lhow. 5everal
months of work were *lUlled
In planning and making the
repllcl. 11le original atatlon
In the location now occupied by McDonald's. Old pho~ and ,_. cllpplnga of the
llatlon - also featured with
. the r.pllCI cllaplay.

'•
•• !!

'

•

,, '

'

·.. '

•

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