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•

By The Bend

The D aily Sentinel

--- insisted that she was not his child.
Her mOiher demanded a blood tesL
It IUI'ned out that be was indeed the
father.
The girl was upset lhat be had
never apologized . for refusing to
acknowledge ber as his daughler all
those yean. She added. ~Now we
are all gening along fine." You told
her to forget about trying to force an
apology out of him.
I disagree. My father quit kissing
' Your silence emboldens lhem. me and t&lt;lling mt he loved 111e when
Speak up, woman' If Danny contin- I was 10 years old. He said I was ·
ues to have trouble. consider trans· "tpo big for that" He hugged and
ferring him to another ·school.•e&gt;·en kissed my 3 year old Sister, 'which
tbough it may mean paying tuition. made me envious.
It would be wonh it. And yes, home
When I was 45. I let him know
schooling is also a viable option.
how much it hurt that he never ver·
Dear Ann Landers: Not long · balized his love 'for me. He said it
ago, you printed a lener from "loose had been difficult for him to say "I
Ends in Corpus Christi." She said love you" to a grown up girl. It never
her father had had a vasedomy and dawned on him how much I suffered

have not yet spoken to the principal
because I doubt that he would be any
more helpful than the teacher. I need
some advice.-· A PERPLEXED
MOM IN GA.
DEAR MOM: Go to school and
speak to the principal as soon as pos· .
·sible. It is the- responsibility of the
school to see that all the children are
safe there. Bullies should no[ be tol:
era(ed, regardless of their back·
ground.
·

old son, "Danny," is being harassed
at school. He has come home three
times in the last two months with
injuries. Last week, we had to take
him to the emergency room.
I have talked to llis teacher, but
the situation has not . improved. All
she will do is keep Danny away
frorn the other children 'and make
him play in· another area. I feel he is
Qeing punished for the bad behavior
of others.
I asked the teacher if I should
speak to the parents of the bullie.s. ·

come from broken homes and have a
ro!lgh life. If I complain. it could
make it worse.
I have encouraged Danny to fight
back, even though I know this is not
the hest way to solve the problem.
but .it's alii could think of Today, he
carne home with a black eye. and I
am seriously considering filing
assault charges against the other
boy. I am afraid for my son's safety.
Danny has asked us to take him
out of school and teach him at home.
One of his friends is doing this . I

TomotTow: Sunny

High: 808; Low: 80s

·

Parents can make their own baby food that will be cheaper and
more nutritious than what they can buy. You don't have to have any
e~pensive appliances or fancy gadgets, just something to 01ash up or
gnnd .the food. A blender, potato masher. food grinder or food
processor works very well.
To make the baby food begin the · preparation by washing your
hands and the equipment in hot, soapy water, then dry. Use high
·quality food that does not have any sugar, salt or fat added to it. Wash
fruits and vegetables under running_water and remove the skin and
seeds. Al.so be sure to remove bones and all visible fat from meat.
Cook the food by baking, boiling .or steaming it until tender.
You can use food that you have prepared for the rest of the family, but remove the 'baby's portions before salt, sugar, fat, · spii:e~ and
seasonings are added. After the food has been cooked, use the food
gripiler, processor or even a fork to mash the food until it. is smooth.
Throw out any lumps or hard pieces that 10an ' t be pulverized. You
may need to thin the food by adding_. a linle liquid such as water, for·
mula or breast milk if it is too thick for baby io eat.
·'
Pour the finished product into clean, dry jars, plastic storage cartons or ice cube trays. Cover, label and date the containers. Refrig. erate or fruze. Fruits and vegetables can be refrigerated two to three
days and can bC frozen for up to eight months. Meats or egg yolks
should only be kep! in the refrigerator one day, however, they can be
frozen if they are used within two months. Meat and vegetable combinations will ~ safe for one to two days in 'the refrigerator or three
to four months in the freezer.
By spending just a linle extra time and energy. you can prepare
healthy and economical foods for your baby. You will have peace of
mind knowing what your baby is eating.

Co"mmunity. Calendar·---'--is

The Commumty • Calendar
pubhshed as a free service to non· profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any type. ltems ·are printed only
as ·space permits and tan not be guaranteed· to be printed a specific number of
days.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, regular meting, work in the E.A. degree, 7:30p.m. Tuesday. Refreshments.

. women. or course, it's wonderful to
bear those wonls, but ia the final •
analysis, it's how you IR treaiCd:
that counts.
Too often, the words are uttered
. but there is no loving 'treatmen~ and.
that, to me, is far IIIOIC damaging.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
, life of a loved one? • Alcoholism:
How to Recognize It, How to Deal
With It, How to Conquer It" can tum .
things around.
' sen.d a self addressed, long, business siz,e envelope and a check or
·money order for $3.75 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol.
c/o Ann Landers, PO. B0 x 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 6061 Hl562. (In Cana·
da, send $4.55.) .
.
To find out more about Ann Lan- 1
ders and read her past columns. visi! ,
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.crealors.com.

,. .·-

ITime Out .For Tips I
BY BECKY BAER
Melga County Extenaion Agent .
Family
and
Conaumer
Sciences/Community Development

because of his silenc e in those early
years.
When I left him tJw day, I told
him Iloved him. He · ~ "Me, too.•
The next time I visit&lt; :d him, he gave
me a bis bear hug an d whispered, ~I
love you." He died a few yean ago,
and I cannot tell yo. 1 the comfort it
bring~ me to hav. ! heard those
words.
Petbaps "Loose E nds" father has
no idea she is still su ffering and has
assumed 'she has forg otten about his
early lmltmenl •Of he r. He may also
be embarrassed. Whalever tbe reas on, he needs to
know how she feels in order to be
able to fix it. If he doe sn 't apologize.
she is no worse off th oan she is now.
--ANONYMOUS IN PENN.
DEAR PENN.:
For some
un'known reason, it is more difficult
for men to say "I lc ove you" than

Historians to gather
A gathering of members of 1he
Meigs County Historical Soc iety
and ~he Athens County Historical
Society and Museum will ~ held
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the south· ·
bound roadside park on Route 33.
The event will be a bring-your·
own'picnic and lawn chair event. A
feature " of the afternodn will be
reflections on Nelson S!Ory. a 19th
century man from Meigs County.

who wenl west as a young man and
. became famous for his catlle drive

from Texas to Montana.
Non-members and children with
adult supervision are in.vited to
attend ..

Computer training 'sessions
offered al Meigs
'.
· Ali Advanced Learning System
computer program is being, offered
to all Meigs Local teacherS.
The session will be taught on
Monday, Aug. 23, in the Meigs
High computer lab with each. sessicin to commence at 8:45 a.m. and
conclude at 3:15p.m.
Accordillg to Wendy· Halar, the
program will assist teachers in
understanding how computer programming can help students
improve their test scores in the
classroom.
In ad!lition an Atcess program
will be offered to teachers and other
personnel on Friday, Aug. 27. It will
also 1M: conducted from 8:45 am. to
3/15 p.m. Tl)e program is geared to
nelp set up a database. Those participating are to take a disk on which
to sa,::e their wo~k and to liring a list..
to be put on the Access database.
.

system.
..
"'
· A computer lraining session will
be scheduled at a later date for a

new program that will be available ment director of nun .ing, said t'hat infants he brcastfed for at least one
for the Meigs High and Meigs Mid- the Healt~y People 2000 Breast- year.
die School faculty which will facili- feeding Goal for the. n ation is that at
The in(ant feeding deci'sion can
tate writin·g assignments for stu· least75 percent of all infants will be ~av.e long term consequences on the'
·dents. Halar S.id.
· breastfed by the time they are dis- growth and success of our children.
To register for the ALS and charged from the hosp ital and that at said the"health nurse.·
Access. training , those. inu:rested are • leasr 50 percent will ' :ontinue to be,
Because of increased bonding;
to call §92· 2153 . · ·,
breastfed at six month IS of age'.
improved cognii,ive development
··Motlter's milk c :nhances the · and the many . health benefits;
. growth, developmen tt and well - ' br~a'stfeeding can help ensure a pos·
being of infants by . providing the itive start for infants and young
Hay show scheduled at rair
best possible nutritiot n and protec- ·· children. Maternal and child health
The Meig~ Soil and Water .Con· lion against specific i nfections and clinics and WIC projects have a
servation District and the Meigs allergies," according t o a statement strong mandate to promote and sup·
County Fair Board will' sponsor a from the Ohio De partmenl of port breastfeeding.
hay show at the 1999 Meigs County · Health.
Public health clinics in Ohio,
Fair.
Torres stressed th• lt the health including ali WIC ·clinics, have
Classes for the hay show are benefits of breastfee ding can be trained staff• who can •provid~
Class ·1, 75 percent or more alfa:lfa; translated into cost sa• ·ings for indi- ' research· based, culturally s~nsilive
Class 2, all grasses; and Clas5 3, 40 viduals, government 1 1rograrns and infoimatio·n about breastfeeding .
percent or less legumes.
"We must. provide Ohio mothers"
health maintenance or1 !ailizations.
Exhibitors must purchas~ a
She cited research results from to-be and their families with enough
membership or season -ticket . and . the University of Arizona ' w~icb - inform~tion to ·make informed
register their entries by 4 p.m. on indicated that breastf&lt; ;eding exclu- choices about infan( feeding . Once
Saturday at the Meigs County Fair sively for three til onths ·saves · the decisi(!n to breasif,~=ed has been
Secretary's office.
·
HMOs between $331 ; ind $475 per made, we must provide a supportive
Entries must be in place at the infant in the first year • Jf life.
environment to encourage the conMeigs Soil and Water Conservation .· Using the Arizona! tludy figures, linuation of breastfeeding.
Display area by I p.m on Monday, she said that if 75 per cent of Ohio
tntimately, our whole society will
Aug .. 16. Exhibitors m.ust bring one babies hom in 1995 w ere bniastfed benefit from having healthier mothwhole bale for judging and the hay (35,362), the potential! health care ers, babies and children," said Debbecomes the property of the Meigs . cost savings to HMOs: md Managed bie Babbitt, RN , Meigs Co.unty
County Fair Board.
Care Organizations in Ohio could WIC Director.
Hay must be grown • by the equal between S II. I '04,822 and.
For more information about
exhibitor and ·there must be I 0 $16,796,950 per year.
breastfeeding in Meigs County, resexhibits to make a show.
New research has a!so shown idents may _call the "Help .Me
'
that breastfeeding enl 1ances intel- Grow" Helpline at · 1-800-755lectual development.
GROW or ..' the Meigs County WIC
The J~nuary 1991: edition of · Program · qr Child and Family
PediatricS' contained : 1 study that Health Services Program at the
Breastfeeding Awareness Week controlled for confour 1ding factors Meigs County Health Departwent at
observance underway loc~y ·•
such as maternal ag&lt; :, education, 740-992-6626.
This is Breast feeding Awareness income, smoking and r narital status
.Incentives have been built . into
Week in.Ohio. and the Meigs Coun· and showed that childr ·en breastfed the'WIC program to encourage new
·ly · Health Department is using the for eight months· or ion! ter.had high- mothers to breaslfeed their children'.
observance as .·an opportunity to er IQ lest scores and pe rfonned bet· · Friday WIC mothers ~~:;ho bteastfeed
promote. the many benefits of ter . in high school tha n those not 'their babies will be guests at a cookbrcastfeeding.
,
brealitfed. The Americ: tn Aca.demy out at Diles Park in Middleport .
Norma Torres,
Health
Dep'\11of
Pediatrics recomt nends that
,

.

"

Meigs County's
Volumt?

lilY JIM FREEMA1'4
SilntlrMI N - Sblff

The Athens-based Coalition Against Superfluous
Highways reac:hed an agreement Tuesday with the Ohio
Department of Transportation and the Transportation
Review Advisory Council resolving claims brought in a
lawsuit filed by CASH in May.
AI the heart of the lawsuit is a"$77.9 million project to
n:plaa: the existing U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin with
a new, limiled-acx:ess super two-lane highway.
The agreement does not end debale over the proje¢1,
which CASH opposes.
..
Fred Gines, lead attorney for CASH, and OOOT's
counsel were expecled Tuesday to finalize a selllement
agreement resolving the issues and dismissing the lawsuit.
Under the lerms ofthe agreemen~ OD()T and TRAC
agree to·oomply with all requirements of the qhio Open
Meetings .Acl and agree that TRAC member G.. Kenner
Bush, former publisher of The Athens Messenger, will
not participate in any ofthe group's deliberations or votes
·
involving the Athens/Darwin U.S. 33 project.
OOOT and TRAC specifically declare .in the agreeinent that all previous deliberations, authorizations, and
decisions ofTRAC regarding the Athens/Darwin U.S. 33
project are "null and void." TRAC and OOOT,also agree.
to provide CASH with an •accounting of all ··funds

Fred M. Priddy, Rutland,. was.in named as a third party defendant in
courl again Tuesday afternoon for a the case.
It was noled thai tax officials
lax hearing l!y the Ohio Department ·
of J"axation. ''
· . were attempting to r~ach an agree·
The lax department all~ges that menl with the Priddys'"attomeys.
Priddy and his wife, Barbara, owe
The Priddys filed suit against the
the state approximately·$100,000 in stale in effort to stop the sale of
·income tax.
their belongings which were confis·
ThlO . hearing, b.eld in the Meigs cated in a law enforce"\enl drug
County ·Court of Common Pleas, operation in April. Mr. Priddy
began late and lasled only minutes plea~d guilty to a felony charge of
when it was decided that the tempb· possession of marijuana and is curr~ n:Jtrllilling order barring lhe rently serving an eight-year sen·
sale of t!te Priddy's ~operty wouTd · tence in the Noble Corre-ctional
als&lt;i ·apply to the stale since il is .., Institute in Caldwell.

Good Afternoon
Today's

POMEROY - Beegle family reunion, Saturday, II :30 a.m. Senior Citizens Center. Square dance to follow at 7 p.m at home of Ronnie and Leanna
·
Beegle.

Sentinel

2 Sections - 12 Pages

8

,\!

9&amp;10

11
2

3
4&amp;5
'• 3

.

Dally 3: 6-7·1; DoUy 4: 0-7-9-8
C 1999 Ohio Valley Pu~ll!llling Co.

'

MED
ELIGIBILI7Y

PROGRAM

'

SALEM CENTER- Star Grange 778, Saturday, potluck supper at 6:30
p.m., regular meeting, 8 p.m. Plans for Meigs County Fair display to be final ized. Officers to be,elected.

the_.Y b.iting..

~:~~~=~a;~:~1:f::

.. Entries in seniQr fair competi·.
-lions at the Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 16:21, must be made this
week.
The secretary's ,office on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds will be
openon Friday .and Saturday of thi s ·
week from 8 a.m. to .4 p.m tb accept
eimics.
,The deadline for entries in all
departments is 4 p.m . Saturday,
emphasized Debbie Watson, secre·
tary. Purchase of a 'membership or
season ticket is the only entr~ fee
required to exhibit at the fair.
,
Entries cannot be made by tele·
phone . but questions concerning
entrieS may be directed to the office
at 992-6954.
Reserved parking "'ill again this
year be offered for $20 a week. The
parking fee and picking qf the site
is to take place at the secretary's
office on Saturday. Watson noted
that the parking fee does not
include entrance onto the grounds.
Membership and season tickets
:reffiain on sale at various loC"ations

Two more deaths attributed to heat

Buekey~S: 7~8·13-19-36

. _POMER,OY - PERI meeting, Thursday, I p.m. Senior Citizens Center.
sen,. John Carey to speak.
·
.·
•

HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville Lodge 411 , R&amp;AM. Saturday, 7:30
,p.m. at the hall . Refreshments.

expended · ~n the project 19 date, and agree to pay that CASH had raised some valid concerns about the pro- last month for preliminary engineering, meaning that
CASH's attorney fees and expenses.
ject. TRAC then voted to form a suboommittee to further work is continyirlg. In additi on, the 4,500 petition signa·
CASH filed suit in Franklin County alleging that investigale the matter. ·
.
.
tures and letters gathered by highway supporter$ will still
. ~C. a nine-member citizen board that oversees high'
"Now that the process has been opened, TRAC and be considered in the TRAC's decision -making process.
way spending under the ausplces of OOOT, violaled state OOOT must be·aa:ountable to the public. They have done
"Our business is to build and take care of the high·
open meetings laws. CASH also alleged Bush was serv- the right thing in removing funding fdr tile project. We ways. not to argue with the lawyers," said Cull. The
ing on the TRAC unlawfully becauSe he had a conflict of feel that this lawsuit will result in a be tier process for all agreement had been agreed to some time ago, the only
interest due to his adVocacy in support of the project.
the people of Ohio," Acheson said.
difference is that the lawyers have signed it, he explained. '
"This settlement confirms what CASH has main·
However, CASH indicated it is not finished as far as The agreement now goes back to the Franklin County
tained all along: TRAC may not deliberale on the plan- opposition to the proposed Route 33 ·is concerned.
Court of Common Pleas for consideratiqn.
ning process of highway projects behind closed doors.
"There are many problems with this projec~" 'said
Route 33 advocate S'teve Story, Porriei"oy, said he is
By holding secret meetings and allowing Mr. Bush's 1e5.. Acheson. "We are hopeful that TRAC wi!l see fit to start disappointed that Bush has been removed from the decitimony and input to taint the process, TRAC violated the the whole process over. TRAC has not yet· responded to sion-inaking process. He said it was his understanding.
law. We are pleased thatTRAC and ODOT haye agreed , the staggering number of planning and environmental that a new law would make the conOict-of-interest statute
to comply with the laws," said CASH sp6kesman Todd problems that still exist concerning Route 33. We are for TRAC mirror those "of other state bodies. ·
Acheson.
preparing to fight for a solution .for ail the people of south·
Story said he is puzzled !hat they would not allow
As a result oflhe lawsui~ TRAC held a series of meet· east Ohio. Until we have that solution, we will keep fight- · Bush to participate since he has no financial .interest in
ings .this summer in which it passed new policies to ing."
the project and was originally appointed to re'P,resent
ensure that the public was notified of any further meet·
Nor has ODOT thrown in.the towel on the project.
southeastern Ohio on the TRAC. which was originally
ings of TRAC. TRAC also held a public meeting at ·
"Not by any means" has Ol'&gt;OT given up on the pro- comprised only of people from Ohio's large cities.
which citizens, including members of CASH and an ject, according to Michael Cull, TRAC coordinator.
''They singled him out because he is a very strong
independent consultant retained by CASH, were allowed
"We still are in favor of that highway," said Cull . "We advocate for highways and development in southeastern
to addreSs their concerns about the project.
belieVe the people of Appalachia want and need that high· Ohio; by removing his voice, we have to rely on folks
On July 2, TRAC voted to withh1Jid construction way." The TRAC is meeting Aug. 20, 9:30 a.m. at the from other regions."
..
funding for the project. However, TRAC approved $6 O.U. Inn in Athens followed by a meeti~'g of the Route 33
Story said pushing for the new· Route 33, which was
million for continued design, 'engineering and limited suboommittee. ·
·originally p1':111ned in the late 19S()s, will not stop "until
hardship right-of·wra.:.y_a,_c..:q_ui_s_iti_o_n_al_o_n..:g:......lh_e__:_pr_o.:.po_s_e_d_ _Pu_b-=li=-c-in~pu-t_w_il_l_be_co=ns-ide_red
__
at_·t_he_m_e_et_in~g-,-::Co-u_ll__
w_e_c_an_
. _d_riv_e_o_n..,it."

(fdt:f5!Ys igflJeCt ~f ta?t h~arlngl H

w.yA.

.

SATlJRDA'V
REEDSVILLE - Wells reunion. descendants of John and Laura Wells,
·.Forked Run Sate Park, noon Saturday.

Single Copy· 35 Cents

D~spute over prQposed highway remainS Ath~~~~~:i~l';;;rector Gordon Proctor stated sai~e agreement does not affect the S6 million approved

OHIO
Pick 3: 1.0·9; Pick 4: 1·2·9·9

THURSDAY
. POMEROY- Junior and Rita White of Kyger to entenain at Meigs Senior
Citizens Center, Thursday, 5:30p.m. No admission charg~.

MIDDLEPORT - lnfonnation meeting foi students, Meigs Middle
School, those interested in playing football this faiL Friday, 9 a.m. in the audi·
torium, seventh and eighth graders.

Hometown Newspaper

CASH, .ODOT settle lawsuit over Route 33

Lotteries

WEDNESDAY "
PAGEVILLE ~ Scipio Township Trustees, 6:30 p.in. Wednesday at
Pageville townhalL

· RACINE -Southern Junior High School volleyball meeting, 4 p.m. Friday. Anyone .interested attend.
.

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so Number 42

Calendar"'
Classlfteds
Comlg
Editorials .
Local
Sporta
Weather

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Council regular meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m.
at village hall.
·

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County Republican Party, special meting, Friday; 7
p.m. Me_igs County Co11rthouse, to appoint replacement for retired County
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton. Typed or hand-wrillen applications for he
position must be submitted to the Meigs County Republican Chairman
Bernard Gilkey by noon that day.

-Page 4

•

· POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, regular monthly meeting,
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the to;-vnship hall, Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.

. RUlLAND- Rutland Township Trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m. Rutland .Fire
Station.
·
·
,

Cincinnati climbs
over the Rockies 2-1

.

PORlLAND - Vacation Bible school, Portland First Church of the
Nazarene, Tuesday through Friday, 6 p.m. each evening.

.

Sports

Indians get past Boston 5-4, Page 4
Hubby becoming greedy person, Page 6
Family Medicine, Page 6

High: 808; Low: 80s

Reader's son being -·harassed at school-and teachE3r does nothing
Data- ADD lawwlen: My 7 year . She said, "that won't help." They

Augu81 4, 1111111

1

P.10
Tuasday, August 3, 1 •

Wednesday

CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION
'
(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES

· ONCINNATI (AP) - '!Wo more
people in the Cincinnati area died
because of heat, bringing the total to
14, authorities said·. No other deaths
.' were reported around the . state.
The latest ·victims ,were Mildred
Hayes, 69, and Alma William, 82,
the Hamilton County coroner's
office said Mo~day.
Ms. Hayes was · found in her bed
Sat~rday night after a .nephew
couldn't reach her by phone, said
Terry Daly, a spokesman for the
·coroner's office.
She had been dead about eight
hours, yet her body temperature ,had
cooled to only 102 degrees. The
'temP.rature in the bedroom was
99.7 dc!grees, Daly said.
·
· Mrs. William's body temperature
was 107.5 degrees when she was.
found Sunday by a friend who
arrived to take her to church. She
had a history of bean disease, which ' .
also might have contributed to her
death, Daly said.

· over the county.

Man sentenced in Long Bottom woman's death
The driver of a car in which an 18year-old Long Bonom woman died
following a Feb. 14 crash in Athens
Olunty was sentenced Monday to
four years in prison for her death.
TeddyCarpen~r, 21, Athens, earlier pleaded guiltY to dfivlng while,
intoxicated, criminal damaging and
involuntary manslaughler in connec·
tion with the death of 18-year-old
Jenifer Sellers, a 1998 graduate of
Southern High School.
Athens County Common Pleas .
COUrt Judge Alan Goldsberry issued
the sentence after Crystal sellers, the ·.
victim's mother, addressed comm~nts

to Carpenler.
scene of an acciden~ reckless operaSunday would ha~e been sellers' tion arid arson. ·
,
19th birthday, her mother said. Instead
Carpenter was the driver of a 1994
of celebrating the day with her, the Chevrolet Beretta involved in the fatal
fart)ily placed a headstone on lfer wreck: According to a Stale Highway
grave, she said.
Patrol report, the car was traveling
earpe'nter tearfully told sellers' eastbound on Johnson Road near The
· family that her death was an accident. . Plains at an . estimated sP.,ed of ·85
, · Carpenter originally faced five miles per hour when it slid off the road
felony charges of involuntary in 'a curve, Went airborne and landed
manslaughter, aggravated vehicular on its top before sliding into a creek
homicide, aggravated hort]icide, near the entrance to Athens. High
aggr~vated vehicular assault and School. The car was not submerged,
brealdngandentering.andfivemisde· the reporfslaled.
•·
meanors charges of vandalism, dri·
Patrol Sgt. Jeffrey Scholl said
ving while intoxicated, leaving the forensic lesting indicated Carpenter

was driving the car and thai Sellers

~as in the back seat on the driver's

stde. Another passenger, Alyshta
Whaley, 21, The Plains, 'who later
mamed Carpenter, was seated ~~ the.
front passenger seat Ne1ther , we.re
wearing seat belts, the report stated. In
addttton, . all had consumed alcohol
while .~nter and_Whaley also tested postuve for manJuana use, Scholl
satd.
After the crash, .Carpenter left the
women .in the car and broke into a
nearby construction trailer where he
van~alized _it and attempted to start a
fire m the smk, Scholl Satd.

Festival, Delta Queen ·visit _planned in Middleport
By BRIAN J. REED
. Sentinel New. Staff
.
_
A new festival ~ the Middleport Honey Bear Fes·tival - "and a return visit by the Delta Queen were
discussed by the Midt\leport Community Association during its regular meeting on Tuesday morning.
·
The meeting was held at Peoples Bank in Middleport. ·'
' ·
Myron Duffield, president of the association,
announced a finalized schedule of events for the
Honey Bear Festival, to be held in downtown Middleport on August 14.
The event will incorporale the bear theme in
honor of the Ohio River Bear Company, according
to Duffield, and the relationship between bears and
honey.
· A highlight of the event will be three appearances by Steve Conlon, who works with live bees in
creating_a "bee beard." Conlon; who has appeared
on television shows. such as the "Tonight Show"
with Jay Leno, performs his act using a ten~
designed to protect the audience. Conlon js from
Proctor, W.Va.
In addition to Conlon's appearances, the association plans entertainment by the Midnight Ooggers
FESTIVAL FUNDING - Sharon Smith of
Peoples Bank present• a check In the
amount of $7ll0 to Myron Duffield, prealdent
of -t he Middleport Community Aasoc:lallon.
The contribution represents primary aponeorshlp of the community's Honey Bear
Festival, to be held Auguet 14.

and Popular . Derl)and, a barbershop quartet.
Duffield, ·the "Calliope King," will perform
throughout the aflemoon.
· .
Other events will include a Honey Bear Contest, .
'in which entrants will enter their favorite bear in a
display at the Ohio River l3ear Company. The cutest
bear, bear which came the farthes~ oldest bear and
most unusual bear. will receive 30 percent discounts
on purchases ·at the Ohio Ri~~r Bear Company, and
Best of Show will receive a 50 percent d1scount
coupon. All' entries will receive a 20 percent off cer·
tificate. Bears will be tagged for ownership, and
will be on display from August 9·14, and returned
on August 16.
A Bee and Bear Costume Contest will also be
held, open to children aged three to five ~nd six to
eight Parents are·asked to dress their boys and girls
in a bee or bear costume, which will be judged. All
etltries w.ill receive a 10 percent discount "Bear
Buck" from the Ohio River Bear Company, and the
fio;t and second-place winners will receive a hand·
made.bear from the Ohio River Bear Company.
Any farmer or roadside produce vendor who
wishes to set up at the festival's fanners markrt
should contaCt Duffield at 992-4197. The market
will be limited 10 fresh produce.
Cmfters and demonstrators have been invited to
attend the even~ ~nd there will be no charge for
farmers market vendors, crafters or demonstrators.
A model railroad show, silent auction and prize
drawings, a chicken bat:becue to benefit the Volun·
teer Fire Department, special window displays and
sidewalk sales, food vendors and a walking tour are
also 'planned.

PeopleS Banking and TI']Jst Company will be the
primary .sponsor of the festival, and presented the
association with a $750 donation on Tuesday. Other .
sponsors include the Univ.ersity of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College, Pleasant Valley
Hospital's Middleport Clinic, Fisher Funeral
Homes, Vaughan's ·Supermarket, Fruth Phannacy
and the Middleport Community Association.
Duffield .reported that the Delta Qu c·en will visit
on August 21.
·This year, the boat will not dock in Middleport,
and passengers will not disembark. However, it will
stand off-shore for approximately 30 minutes, and
the Community Association will present a program
saluting the Delta Queen for its visit to Middleport
last year.
Area resident{; are encouraged to gather at the
levee area between noon and 12:30: A band·concert
by the Adelphi Brass Band will begin at 12:45, :md
calliope music will be played from I to 1:10 p.m. A
band concert for the Oel~1 Queen will continue until
1:20 p:m., and a floral prese ntation will be made to
the Queen at I :20 p.m. A 21·gun salute and balloon
release, under the direction of Feeney -Bennett Post

128, American Legion, will be conducted prior to
the boat's departure at 1:30.
In other association business, Duffield reported
that construction and renovalion continue in preparation for a new restaurant, Joca1cd at the inl~rsec­

ti on of South Second Av~nue and Cole Stree~ and
that the antique store at Downing House is expected to open bv Ouistmas.
It was also reported that new autumn flags had
been ordered.

�·c ommentary

Wednesday,August4,1999

D.eath Notices

.

The Daily Sentinel Democrats, GOP play acting in tax debate
'Eswfisfutl ml!Ua .

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Corraapondenl
WASHINGTON (AP) - Trying to get thei(

111 Court St., PorMroy, Ohio
740-W2·2158 • Fax: W2·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
RqBERT L WINGETI
Publisher
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genen~IMan~gW

Editorial views:
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspape(S:
'

Vestiges of common sense
The Vindicator of Youngstown, July 29
Desperation has apparently replaced whatever vestiges of common sense
Democratic leaders in Ohio once possessed:
Now, they seem possessed by some spirit of politics past -way past when Jerry Springer w,as Cincinnati's mayor and not the ringmaster of the
nation's sleaziest circus. How else could they even think of pitting Springer
against Republican Sen. Mike DeWine in next year's'election?
Just because Minnesotans slipped a few cogs and elected wrestler Jesse
Ventura as their governor, should Ohioans follow suit?
Surely, O~io's Democratic Party needn 't scrape the bottom of the barrel
.for a senatorial candidate. Surely, some Democrats in positions of authority
have more faith in the people of the state than do those who believe that
Springer's notoriety guarantees a political winner.

What they think about it depends on whether
the question is put on GOP terms or Democratic
terms. A Pew ·Research Center poll showed a 3·1
preference for spending over tu cuts; when the
money was.desisnated for programs dealing with
education, the environment, health care, crime
and defense. &amp;t the choice was nearly reversed
when it was an option between a tu cut' and " new
federal programs."
At issue now are House and Senate bills for
!().year tax cuts, totaling $792 billion in each ver·
sion, but with differing provisions on what would
be cut. One feature of botli meiSures: Neith&lt;:r
would cut taxes until the year after next. About 80
percent of the projected cuts wouldn 'I happen
until after 2004.
Republican leaders are trying to blend those
bills into one they can get approved by the House
by Wednesday or Thursday, and the Senate Fri·
day, before Congress recesses for a month's sum·
mer break.
That final version would be setiSide until after
Labor Day, then sent to Qinton, who said he will
veto it as excessive. The Republicans can't muster
the two-thirds votes it would take to override him.
But · they could sj&gt;end the recess telling voters .
about their tax ~ut bill.
·

thinllll first - that's Social Security and'
Medicare," White House Press Secretary Joe
Lockhart said Monday. The Republicans insist
th&lt;:rc's surplus enough to cover that and their tu
cuts. The White House says not.
Qinton has proposed about S250 billion worth
of tu cuts over 10 years, for retirement savings,
education tu breaks and other aims. The admin·
istration i5 willing to negotiate up a bit, but not to
anything approaching the Republican measures.
So the lines are set. Neither side can win out·
right. Neither side can afford to sunender.
.
Sen. Pete Domenici, the New Mexico Republican who heads the Budget Committee, said there
ought to be a grand compromise, but that it would
have to include a very major tax cut. But to Oin·
ton's Democrats, that would be capitulation, not
compromise.
Domenici sajd the alternative is gridlock, and
it would be the Democrats' fault.
They will say not, and blame R~publicans.

tax act together to take it on the road, congrea·
sional Republicans are negotiating on terms for
nearly $800 billion in cuts over the next 10 years,
so that they can pass it and shelve it. That way,
President Qinton's certain veto won't happen
while Olngress is on vacation and he has the
stage to himself.
Away from Washington, all this play acting
doesn't make sense to people who wonder why
Congress and the White House aren't seeking
terms on which they can agree rather than collide.
But in an arena bounded by politics and long·
rehearsed arguments about tu rates and government
spending. it sdunds sensible, ,at least to the debaters.
They've been around the tax track before. In
prior rounds over the past five years, Clinton has
used vetoes and the threat of them to push his
budget terms, to his and Democr•tic advantage_
He's made issues of Social Security and
Medicare financing - and now the expansion of
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. M•rt,' vice
the latter to cover prescription drugs. In the 1999
and columnlat tor The Aaaoclated
prMtclent
round, he also· argues that reducing the national
Pre111,
h..
raported on Waahlngton •nd
~ebt is more important .than a gian! tax cut
nat1on11
polftlca
for mora than 30 y•ra.
It is an article of Republican faith that when the
party campaigns for . tax cuts, it . r-----.....-:=:-:--:--::-----'----~---.;_-----------------,
0

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not into the hands of Washington
bureaucrats who think they know
11~
better how to spend it.
That essentially sums up the
endless hours of speechmaking .on
tax cuts and governm~nt priorities.
· Republican Sen. Phil Gramm of
Texas says the reaJ argument has
more to do with federal spending
than with cutting taxes. · That
sounds 'a lot like one of the ratio·
nales of Ronald Reagan's tax cut·
ling economic policy nearly 20
·years ago, which was that if the
The (Toledo) Blade, July 29:
government didn't get the money,
You can't go back to the garden. Not if the garden js Woodstock. Instead it couldn't spend it on programs his
of a love,in, this year's 30th anniversary of the historic 1969 festival ended Republican administration wanted
with looting and violence.
to undo anyhow.
About 225,000 people attended the event, which had little in common
Gramm, on ABC, said that the
with ·the original other than the name.
Republicans and the White House
This time around it was neither st~ust nor golden .·The conceit·goers are "much further apart than the
were reportedly searched at the gates to ensure they were bringing in no food public understands." Perhaps, but
or drink. And the musical acts reflected the times:1Fewer songs of peace and people do understand that the
love, more songs of alienation and angst. Some of the bands that performed Republican Congress is going to
even egged on the rowdiest of the fans.
pass something, Clinton is going to
The weekend was simply an excuse to party at a long rock concert No veto i~ and both sides are going to
one will remember the performances 30 years from now, not in the way that ilrgue that they were right. At least
today we recall such epochal musical moments as Jimi Hendrix reinventing people who are paying attention to
the national anthem.
the whole business.
Observers at this year's fest say conditions were squalid and the food and
drink were overpriced. But poor conditions don't excuse rioting. They don't
excuse violence.
If there is going to be another festival next y_ear, fine. Just don't call it
Woodstock. That's an insult to the name.
"
Humphrey's son) among women, lion. The leaders of the two )Wiies
By Chrla Matthews
WASHINGTON •• Gov. Jesse o and beating him among both college and their financial backers have
Ventura wants former Connecticut graduates and liberals.
already qecided the outcome. All the
The Columbus Dispatch, July 29:
.
governor Lowell Weicker to seek the
· Ventura may be calc'!lating that rest, the primaries, the caucuses, the
A mere five minutes once·separated Homa Amini from a fate that sh~'d Reform Party's candidacy for presi· Weicker, the well-born Yalie, can do conventions, are nothing but a cam·
rather not coniemplate. Now, two months later, the 3.1-year-{))d Hilliard dent in 2000. If Weicker does and the same next year on the national paisn show." ·
woman has been granted the hearing she .deserves before an immigration succeeds, expect the Democratic · Jevel ·- steal that hipper, staic-{)fWith the applause peaking,
judge.
.
,
·
candidate, most likely AI Gore, to be the·art electorate that the Democrats Choate took his hardest shot agai115l
All the potential ;victim of torture, t~is woman deserves to have her case the ultimate loser.
take for granted.
this country's electoral duopoly. •
· heard, based on the Conventipn Against Torture treaty, which was passed
What spurs my own belief in this
Why? Because Weicker, like
"I doubt that what is happening
, last year by Congress and is intended to prevent th&lt;: government from return· Ventura, is a liberal on social issues, 2000 scen:trio is a speech '96 vice in the Republican and Democratic
ing people to their native countries if they are likely to be tortured. The con· such as abortion rights. Like Ventu· presidential nominee Pat Choate parties this year is the Founding
, vcntion did not exist when her a.se originally was heard by an immigration ra, he will offer the strongest appeal gave last Saturday night to the Fath&lt;:rs' vision of democracy. This is
judge.
to those younger, hipper, live-and- Reform Party national convention.
the politics of family dynasty where
An appeals board acted in the only fair "ml!Dner conceivable. At the very let-live voters who tend to vote
It was not Pat's Fortress America power relationships and loyalties are
least, Amini can rest assured that she will not be jailed or deported without Democratic.
philosophy, his charisma or specific passed down almost by hereditary
getting the chance to plead her case.
This is the thrust of third-party policy prescriptions that stirred me. privilege. It is the p 'lilies of special
By sheer luck and mere minutes, Amini avoided a journey destined ft&gt;r a politics in the coming national cam· It was something more important: interests in which vote'rs are there to
country in which she fears for her life and safety. Now that she's been grant· paign. We're not talking about a something he said about· the direc· be spun: It is the politics where all
ed anothe'r chance, her case should be given serious consideration. Anything square, business conservative from tion this country has taken at centu- that matters is to win office, where
less would be an insult ·to all immigrants and to the value this country, places Dallas like Ross Pero~ but a liberal· ry's end.
:the views. of the two princelings
on a person's right to life and liberty.
leaning moderate from the Northeast
He spoke of how the big shots in (George W. Bush and AI Gore) arc
,.
backed by a populist wrestler from · ·the two major parties seem destined quite literally ·indistinguishable on
the midwest. .
to nominate a pair of privileged most of the major issues of our
Sandusky Regisli:r, July 28:
this
coming
twins, George W. Bush and AI Gore, times." .
For
a
preview
of
: The city of Oyde is contemplating the idea of requiring gun locks for
political
attraction,
check
the
numCan this assault on the two-party
without
the average voter having so
firearms that arc accessible to children younger than 18.
bers
in
Ventura's
victory
last
much
as
a
say_-so.
system
prevail? Can a Wcicker or
' Although this editorial board encourages people to put locks on their
"Even before the first hall is rent· other Reform Party candidate grab
guns, and applauds those who do, we don't think it should be made manda- November.
While
mocked
by
the
national
ed
or a single vote is cast we know first place in a three-way race next
tory.
and
jx&gt;litical
professionals
as
media
the
winner of the Republican con· year?
, It would be extremely difficult to enforce, requiring police officers to go
a
macho,
right-wing
screwball,
he
is
test.
We also know the Democratic
This much we know: Eight years
into people's homes and inspect their firearms. This goes beyond our Fourth
ticket
a
far
different
cat
than
tha~. As
will
be
led
by
one
of
two
men.
ago,
Ross Perot won 19 percent of
Amendment rights regarding the sanctity of one's home.
: The city wants to give away free gun locks, similar to what Ottawa O&gt;un· essayist Garry Wills has noted, the Most likely he will be the incumbent ' the popular vote. He did so after a
pro wrestler-turned radio personality vice president.
nationally televised display of flaki·
ty began doing in May.
lost
the
conservative
vote
to
the
"Quite
·
simply,
rank-and-file
ness
•• entering, tllen quitting, then
We believe that's a great idea. If parents with guns want to protect their
Republican
candidate
while
tying
Democratic
and
Republican
party
re-entering
the race. Then, having
curious children or protect themselves from a family hothead, then so be it.
the
Democratic
candidate
(Hubert
claimed
that
North · Vietnamese
Jllembers are irrelevant in this sclec·
Wonderful.
But requiring'them to do so is just going too far. '

1

•

PA.

W VA.

KY.
ICl 1999AccuWea1hoi,lnc.

·0 •*•· ~-· ·~~
&amp;my Pt. Ckuty

Clouay

8mwlra

T•ltOI'YI"ll

Rain

Aumes

Snow

Ice

Pleasant weather pattern
continues in southern Ohio
By The Associated Press
.
A weak cold front will bring a t~reat of thunderstorm s across northern
Ohio tonight, the National ~eather Service said.
An approaching high pressure system will bring a return to sunny skies
and seasonable temperatures in the 80s on Thursday.
And forecasters said the relief from the hot and humid co nditions
should continue at leasnhrough the weekend.
The record-high te!l)perature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
tion was 99 degrees in 1955 while the record low was 49 in 1950. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:43 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:33 a.m.
Weather foretast:
Tonight.. Partly cloud!f. Lows m the lower 60s. Light west wipd.
Thursday ... Partly sunny. Highs 80 to 85.
Thursday night.. Mostly clear. Lows near 60.
·
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 80s.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s ~nd highs in the upper
80s.
.
.
.
.
Sunday... J!artly cloudy with a chance of showers and th ~ nderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s and
in the mid and
80s.

'. .

Going too'far

·

Today In History
By The Anoclated Prua
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 4, the 216th day of 1999. There are 149 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 4, 1892, Andrew and Abby Borden were axed to death in their
home in Fall River, Mass. Lizzie Borden, Andrew Borden's daughter from a
·
previous marriage, was accused and acquitted.
• On this date:
In 1735; a jury acquitted John Peter Zenger of the "New York Weekly
Journal " of seditious libel.
·
In 1790, the Coast Guard had its beginnings as the Revenue Cutter Ser·
vice.
In 1830, plans for the city of Chic~go were laid out.
In 1914, Britain declared war on Germany while the United States proclaimed its neutrality.
In 1916, the United States purchased the Danish Virgin Islands for $25
million.
In 1944, Nazi police raided the secret annex of a building in Amsterdam
and arrested eight people- including 15-year-old Anne Frank, who~ diary
,became a famous document of the Holocaust. (Anne died at Bergen·Belsen.)
In t%4, the bodies of missing civil rights workers Michael H. Schwemer, And'rew Goodman and James E. Chaney were found buried in an earthen .
dam in Mississippi.
In 1977, President Carter signed measure establishing the Department
of Energy.
·
In 1991, the Greek luxury liner "Oceanos" sank in heavy seas off South
Africa's southeast coast; all 402 passengers and 179 crew survived.
Ten years ago:. Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani offered to help end
the hostage crisis in Lebanon, prompting President Bush to say he was
uencouraged."
.
,
Five years ago: Serb'dominated Yugoslavia withdrew its support for
Bosnian Serbs, sealing the 300-mde border between Yugoslavia and Serb·
held Bosnia.
'

a

ryn Hill. The erstwhile loyal listeners of KPFA
will tum to the Internet, which will also soon offer
all Lauryn, all the time. But it will be free! (In
your dreams.)
Sony's new Metreon, here in San Francisco,
recently opened, to national attention. It has
Microsoft stores, Discovery Channel stores, Sony
stores, a video arcade and a M111rice Sendak
extravaganza that's perfect for 6-year·olds whose
parents don't mind throwing 20 bucks at Japanese
corporations.
·
It's not a mall, though. It's an, I don't know,
"urban infotainment locus," or some such corpo·
rate analog. Corporations, apparently, arc now
deadly afraid of the term "mall." Bull have been
to Metreon. Trust me:
It's a damn mall. Upscale, of course, but still a
mall.
.
Lately, San Francisco has been concerned
about Internet access. ATI, the phone giant, has
recently purchased TCI, the cable giant The
intent, as I have gleaned from the media, is to ere·
ate the ultimate ISP(tih, lnternet Service Provider,
the millennia! sandman that gives us access to.our
paltry dreams).
. This occasion has given the city of San Fran·
cisco the license to give itself the authority to vote
on the fate of the Internet! Imagine that! ·
The controversy, apparently, revolves around
the "open access" vs. the "hands off the Internet"
camps. " Operi access" means that ATI (acco.rd·
ing to. the San Francisco Chronicle) will have to

Bonnie S. Walker
Bonnie S. Walker, 62, formerly of Letart Falls, died Tuesday. Aug. 3,
1999, at the home of her daughter in Cambridge.
Born February 13, 1937, at Grimm 's Landing in Mason O&gt;unty, W.Va.,
she was the daughter of the late Clyde R. and lcie Birchfield Tucker. She
was a retired licensed insurance sales agent and a homemaker. She attended
ihe Mount Moriah Church of God.
She is survived by a daughter. Debbi Lent, Cambridge, and by three sons,
Fred Miller Jr., Robert Lee Miller and Ricky T. Miller, all of Racine; seven
grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; fou·r sisters and brothers-in-law,
Anna and Wilson Wolfe, Racine, Chris and Gary Hickman, Lucasville,
Becky and Jim Hall, Siler City, N.C., and Cindy and Mike Capehart,
Ramusuer, N.C.; six brothers and sisters-i n-law, James and Elfreda Tucker,'
. Las Vegas, Nev., Robert ·and Lillian Tucker, Dry Fork, Va., Glenn and Anna
Lee Tucker, Racine, Thomas and Gill Tucker, Racine, Russell Jr. and O&gt;n·
~ie Tucker, Racine, and Terry and Darla Tucker, Racine;· numerous nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her hu sband, Virgil Walker, on December
10, 1998,' and by a brother, Gary Tucker.
Services wi)l be held Friday, 2 p.m . at the Mount Moriah Church of God
near Racine with the Rev. Brice Utt officiating. Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, from 6-9 p.m.
Thursday. The body will lie in state at the church one hour prior to services.

~Obituaries-~

accomm-'

Obltuarle• are paid •nnouncementa orn~ngecl by tOea! funeral homM. Obltu.orlea
requolll~ to
d.-Iring morelnlormlltton Ilion
Ia p;ovldod In the accompanying Dutil N - . ·
'
.

,,

'

Can this assault
on the two-party
system prevail?
Can aWeicker or
other Reform Party
candidate grab first
pltice in a threeway race next
year? ·,
troops overran his front lawn, he
overran the experts by winning a
, million-plus votes in New York, in
Ohio, in Texas, almost that number
in Illinois and in Michigan, and well
more than 2 million in California.
Does anyone believe the anger
manifested in these numbers against
the two parties and their Big Money
politics has lessened in the last eight
years? Or that liberals are less angry
at the corrupt system of campaign
finance than conservatives?
(Chrla Mallhawa, chief of the San
Francisco Examlmir'• Wa•hlngton
.Buraau, Is 'hoat of "Hirdblll" on
CNBC cable channels.)
Copyrlght1881 NEA.

"lease space on its wires to other Internet
providers when it upgrades its system." The
"Hands off the Internet" school, however,
believes that ATI can do ariything it wants, ·
because it's ATI.
Something will come down th~ pike tomorrow
that will the whole point. moot •· Internet access
thr~gh quasars, homing pigeons, or even good
old will power. Until that time, though, I believe
that telling a company what it can or cannot do
with its products is kind of pushy. On the other
hand, if ATI is going to charge me a zillion dol·
Iars a month for access, I might be a little upset.
Both sides have been lobbying the San Fran·
cisco supervisors, the "open access" reps more·
than the others. A "frazzled aide," after receiving
hundreds of calls, finally called the Open Access
forces (again, according to the Chronicle), telling
them, " ... we don 'I appreciate getting calls transferred from people bothered at home who don't
know what they're talking about.''
,
I don't know what that means, exactly, but I
know what the frazzled aide was 'talking about.
One caller actually said, "I am supposed to call
you. What am I supposed to say?"
. Why San Francisco has any say in this is
beyond me, though I'm certain that this say will
have national and international implications. All I
know is: We have an uninformed electorate trying
to influence the opinions of their equally unin·
formed representativjiS. I love this town.
Copyrlght1881 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

~=:~P - Myron Duflleld, president of
tlie Middleport (
A•soclatlon, presented a floral
arrangement and a complimentary membership In the assoela·
tlon to Jane Harris, who along with her l)usband, Allen, recently
purchased Dan's. The aesoclatlon welcomes new buslnesus
with the presentation•.
·

Man files suit claimhig abuse on job
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)- A man
claiming that hi!; former employer
failed to stop a co-worker from
harassing him 'on the job has sued
the company.
Benjamin Romero, who is Puerto

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS 113-9010)
CommuaiiJ Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

Pubhshed every aftcrnoofi, Monday throu&amp;b
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Pubhsh1ng Company.,Second class
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: 1'he A.wlciat~:d Press and the Ohio ,
Newspaper Associition.

'

Postmester. SeDd address oorrections to The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St 1, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769

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Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main toncem 'n all stories Is to be
acr::u rate. Ir you know or an error I• a
sfory, call the newsroom at {740) 99221.55. We will ch«k your lnrormaUon
and make a correction lr wuranttd.

News Departments
T .. e ~nain number Is 992·2155. Department exteasions aR:

General Manage&lt; ....................... EXI. 1101
Newt ............................................ EXI. 1101
or EXI. 1106

Other Services
Advertlsing. .................................Ext. J 104
Circu lalion .'.............. .................. Ext. 1103
Classincd Ad• ............................. Exl. 1100

Ric;m and a Mennonite, sai&lt;;I in the
lawsuit that Ramon Adams of Stryk·
er verbally and physically abused
him at the Williams Co. in Arch·
bold.
'
Romero, a mechanic and truck
driver, is seeking more than
$175,000 in compensatory damages
from Adams and the Williams ~o.

Bonnie S. Walker, 62, formerly of the Letart Falls community, pasS-ed
away at 5:15p.m. Tuesday, August 3, 1999, surrounded by her family at the
home of her daughter in Cambridge, Ohio.
Born February 13, 1937, at Grimm's Landing in Mas&lt;in County, W.Va.,
she was the daughter of the late Clyde R. and lcie Birchfield Tucker. She
was a retired licensed insurance sales agent and a homemaker. She attended
the Mount Moriah Church of God .
·
She was preceded in death by her husband, Virgil Walker, on December
W. 1998, and by a brother, Gary Tucker.
She is survived by ·a daughter, Debbi Lent, Cambridge, and by three sons,
Fred Miller Jr., Robert Lee Miller and Ricky T. Miller, all of Racine.
Seven grandchildren survive, Tommy Hill, Jody Hill S(llith, Brittaney
Miller, Ashley Miller, Amanda M1ller, Daniel Miller and.Dustin Miller. Two
great-grandchildren aiSQ survive, Kylie Smith and Cassie Springer Hill.
Four sisters ~nd brothers-in-law survive, Anna and Wilson Wolfe, Racine,
Chris and Gary Hickman, Lucasville, Ohio, Becky and Jim Hall , Siler City,
N.C., and Cindy and Mike Capehart, Ramusuer, N.C. Six brothers and -sisters-in-law survive, James and Elfreda Tucker, Las Vegas, Nev., Robert and
j..illian Tucker, Dry·Fork, Va., Glenn and Anna Lee Tucker, Racine, Thomas
and Gill Tucker, Racine, Russell Jr. and Connie Tucker, Racine, Terry and
Darla Tucker, Racine.
,
·
She is also survived by numerous nieces and nephews and many. fri ends.
Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday, August 6, 1999, at
the Mount Moriah Cnurch of God near Racin e. Officiating will be the Rev.
Brice Utt. Burial will be in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, from 6·9 p.m. Thursday. The body will lie
it .state at the church one hour prior to th e funeral service.
.

Police say tissue not likely that of missing Ohio girl

KETTERING (AP) - Human
tissue found at the 'former home of an
Indiana man convicted of child
molestation probably is not connect·
ed to lhe February disappearance of
9-yea(·old Erica Baker, police said.
Police in Marion, Ind., believe the
· Veterans Memorial
material
found on Donald Grenier's
Tuesday actmissio~s - Virgil
former
property
was too decom·
Tuttle, Middleport .
,., posed to be positively identified. ·
Tu~sday discharges - none.
Marion pollee Lt. Jay Kay said
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 3 Van Tuesday that during an investigation
Prince, Irene Duncan, Sylvia Weese, of the property, human tissue was
found in a bucket in a barn and that
Helen Hall, Ida Roush.
.tissue attached to a bone, possibly
(Published with permi5sion)
that of a jaw, was found in the back
yard.
r. Kay said the forensic anthropolo·

Hospital news

Stocks

Am Ele Power ...................... 37i.
Akzo ......................................42~.
AmrTech ..................•............ 74~.
Ashland Oll ......................... 38'~•
AT&amp;T ........... .........................50"1•
Bank One .............................. 54:0
Bob Evans ............................19'"

Borg-Warner ........................ 49~.
Champion ...,:............................. 7
Charm Shps .........~ ................. 6~.
City Holdlng .......................... 24~.
Federal Mogul... .................... 45~.
Flrstar ....... ...:.•. :....................... 26

Gannett ....................... .......... 73 ~
Kmart ....................................1 4'!.
Kroger .. ...................... ........... 25'/,
Lands End ............................. 44'1o
Limited .................................. 46'/,
Oak Hl!l Finl ....... ... ................. . 1~
OVB ..,................... ...... ...........33:&gt;
One Valley ................................ 38
Peoples.... _.......................... 28'i•
Prel'n Finl ........... ,... ................12'1.
Rockwell ........................... 58 'r,
AD/Shell ............. ... .................. 61
Sears .................. ................... 40},
Shoney's ................................. 2 ~.
Wendy's ................................ 29'1.
Worthmgton ........ .......... .......... 15

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

'

'

. EMS logs ·7 calls
Units of the Meigs Olunty Emer·
gency Medical Seryice rccoriled
seven calls for assistance Tuesday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:13 a.m., state Route 143,
Pomeroy, William Kennedy, Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital;
·
7:03 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middleport, Marie Burgess,
VMH;
.
11 a.m., Vale Street, Pomeroy,
Audrey Bachus, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
4:19 p.m., East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Mary Persons, VMH,
Pomeroy squad assisted;
5:33 p.m., South Third Avenue,
Middleport, · Clay Tuttle, VMH,
Middleport squad assisted;
8:02p.m., Bearfoot Hollow, Mid·
dleport, Hu gh Thompson , treated at
the scene, Middleport squad assist·
ed.
POMEROY
11 :47 p.m., Eagle Ridge Road ,
Chester, T1mothy Thomas Jr., VMH .
and Sarah Santee, VMH, Central
Dispatch squad and Chester Vol unteer Fire Department ass1sted.

gist who studied th e bone said it
probably came fram a teen-ager. The
sex of the person is still unclear.
Kay said tissue samples will be
sent to the state pollee crime lab in
Fort Wayne, Ind., by early next
week. He did not know when test
results would be known .
.
Police arc investigating whe1her
the tissue might .be that of Baker,
who vanisl)ed Feb. 7 while walking
her dog near her Kettering hom e.
• Tl)ey also are lrying to determine
whether Gr,enier is linked to the 1993
disappearance of Tricia Reitl er, 19,
of Olmsted Falls and Wendy Felton,
IIi, of Marion in 1987. They disap·
peared,.within two miles of Grenier's
home.
SPR itJG VALlEY WJFMA
OLOII\lllll 1 ..,.1 ,J
446·4524 1,'81.11\CK',(Hl I'll&lt; I

The Tuppers Plains-t:hester Water District has issued a boil advisory for
Met&amp;' County, Olive Township, for the followmg area: SR 124 from Forked
Run State Park (no! including the park), Riverview School Road to one mile
south of Reedsville. When a boil order is in effect, all who are affected arc
asked to boil their cooking and drinking water for three minutes before con·
suming. Samples of the water will be talr.en after the line 1s repaired. Results
will be reponed to the newspaper.

Cheer/eading·trvouts

·

Signups for the Me1gs Mi3'dle School cheerleading tryouts, seventh al)d
eighth graders, will be held Monday noon to 2 p.m. and Tuesday, 10 a.m. to
noon. Practices will be held Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, noon to 2
p.m. at 'the sehool, and tryouts will be held on Friday, Aug. 13, noon to 2 p.m.

Riaht to life meetina

·

l'!:'e Right to Life will meet MonClay, 7:30p.m. atthe 'Pomeroy Librwy.

Eastern Board to meet

·

The Eastern Local Board of Education will have a special meeting Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Easlern Elementary cafetorium for the purpose of personnel. grant approval, and other other business that may legally come before
the board.

Reunion announced

The annual Sm1th·Stoban reumon will be held Aug. 7 at the American
Legion hall in Racine. Registration is at l 0 a.m.

DAVtomeet

The Disabled American Veterans of Chesh~re will meet Monday at the
hall . Dinner will be served at6:30 p.m. and the meeting will be held at 7 p.m.

Meias Girls vo//evba/1 · ·

·

1

Bonnie S. Walke·r

Moyies are pretty much our lives

By lan Shoalea
Now that the brouhaha
over Kubrick's latest and last
has turned into another tiny
tempest in the enormous
teapot we call pop culture, let
us turn our gaze westward, to
San Francisco. (Mr. Kubrick
is gone, and' we must not
speak ill of the dead, except
to say, " If you're going t&amp;
make movies with interna·
tiona) appeal, and artistic intent, shouldn 'I you
leave the house once in a while?" "Eyes Wide
Shut" had no telationship to any reality, any·
where, not even any relationship to fantasy,
except those fantasies entertained a lifetime ago,
on another pre· WWII, more Freudian continent.)
Here in San Francisco, where movies arc prcl·
ty much our lives, .we're even more disconnected
from reality than usual.
Most consumers here are still pretty much
excited about Sfeing "Eres Wide Shut," for
'instance, despite the fact that it stars Tom Cruise,
and was based on an obscure Viennese novella
from 70 years ago. I love this town.
You've read about the KPFA flap in Berkeley,
of course. The mindless hippies vs. the heartless
corporation? America is in thrall. My prediction?
A few years from now the KPFA signal will be
sold to an FM station by the heartless corporation,
t~us giving us all more opportunities to hear Lau·

John H. Robinson Sr., 77, Athens, died Tuesday, Aug. 3, 1999. at O'Ble·
ness Memorialllospital in Athens.
Born .May I 9, 1922 1n Athens County, he was the son of the late Cecil P.
and Cora Rogers Robinson. He was a retired da1ry farmer, a World War II
veteran of the U.S. Army Air Corps and a member of American legion P.ost
21. He formerly was a Lodi Township trustee, Shade School Board member
and past president, director of Milk Marketing Inc., director of Jackson Pro·
duct ion Credit, secretary of the Landmark Cq-Op Board, member of the Soil
and Water Conservation Service Board, the Athens City-County Health
Board and Lodi an.d Athens Granges.
He is survived by his wife, Dena Johnson Robinson ; a daughter, Sondra
Sinc!air of Athens; two sons and daughters-in-law, John Jr. and Myra Robin son of Shade, and Jeffrey and Krisanna Robinson of Middleport; five grand·
children; a sister, Margaret Shafer of Dayton; a SISter-in-law and brother-in·
law, Shirley and Harry Bowles of Athens; two sisters-in-law, Virg1e Johnson
of Athens and Mabel Robinson of Lancaster.
He was preceded in death by two siste;;t., na Kelley and Marian Ponn,
and a brother, Roger Robinson .
.
Graveside services will be Thursday, 1 a.m. at Athens Memory Gardens,
with Willard Love officiating. Military graveside services will be conducted
by the American. Legion.
No calling hours will be observed. Arrangements are by Hughe's·Mo~uin
Funeral Home, Athens.

"" pubUahed M

Weicker: real thir-d .party .i.s on· the left

Only fair manner conceivable ·

Boil advisorv Issued

John ·Robinson Sr.

thursday, Aug. 5

"As the president said, we need to do first

No excuse for rioting

·.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

7

(FRI7/30 • THURS 8/5(99)

BOX OfFICE WILL OPEN AT 6:30PM
lOR EVENING SHOWS, ·
12:30 PM fOR SAT &amp; SUN MAnNEES
WILD, WILD, WEST (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 9:40 DAILY
SAT!SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:40
NO BARGAIN NIGHT

·

Ma~tory practice for all gii'ls playing volleyball at Me1gs H1gh School
will begin on Monday, Aug. 9, atlO a.m.

Mike Warnke to oerform

Christian co median Mike Warnke will perform friday through Sunday, 7
p.m. nightly at Ash Street Free Will Baptist Church. Admission is free. Susan
Warnke will be speak.ing Saturday at 10 a.m. Pastor Les Hayman invites all,

Fish and Game canceled

The Meigs County Fish and Game will not meet Saturday but will have
a regular meeting in September.

Visitation program started

Members of the Hickory Hills Church of Christ, Tuppers Plains, is initi·
ating a home visitation period in preparation for an increased attendance program beginning next week.

Board sets session

The Racine Board of Public Affairs will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.
·

Hudson reunion set

Hudson reunion will be held Saturday at Star Mill Park, Racine, 5 p.m
Table service will be provided.

Bedford trustees to meet

The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the town·

~-

'

Olive Township trustees to meet

The Oliv~ Township Tow,nship Trustees will meet at 7:30p.m. on Thurs·
day at the townsh1p g~rage on Joppa Road. The meeting will be preceded by
a 6:30 p.m. meeting with the OTA Insurance representatives.

Services announced

The Red Brush Church of Christ, Bashan Road, will have services Satur·
day, 7 p.m. and Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Speaker will be Denver Hill, Fos·
ter, W.Va.
·

Road closina

·. ·

Story's Run Road will be closed all day Thursday for replacement of a cui·
vert, the Cheshire Township Trustees announced.

classes In Dog Obedlen~t during the 4-H dog Judging on Friday
were, 1-r, Sarah Clifford; grand champion; Andrew Henderson,
honorable mention; · Grant Arnold, reserve champion; john
Krawsczyn, grand chl!mplon; John Curtis, reserve cha'!lplon;
and Taylor Russell, grand champion.

4-H Dog Judging results announced
Winners in the Meigs O&gt;unty 4-H
Dog Judging were announced follow·
ing "the ju,dging held at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds on Fnday.
Winners, by class, were: Dog Obe·
dience, Sub"':Novice A Taylor Russell,
grand chamP,ion; John Cunis, reserve
champion; Dog Obedience, Sub·
Novice B: John Krowsczyn, grand
champion, ·Grant Arnold, reserve
champion, Andrew Henderson, honor·
able mention; Dog Obedience, Gradu·
ate Novice A: Sarah Clifford, grand
champion.
Grooming and handling B· John
Krawsczyn, grand ch'ampion ; Dog
Guides for the Blind: Sarah Clifford,
grand champion; Dog Care, junior:
Taylor Russell, grand .champiOn,

~M oviE slO
0

4

~JI************
Locatod
~

• • • •

Rt. 33
7 Minutes North of Athens

Fri. July 30th thru Wed. Aug. 4th
Doors Open At 12:30 PM •

* * .,__

IIIMIY -

)'('VI4J4t

~"~

**

1:30, 4:110, 7:15, 8:45
ewoo..w em
fiSPfCTIII ~ 1:00, 3:110, 5:00, 7:00, 11:11i

iCaM&lt;Ifi.~Je ll&lt;M. lliilald ilEII. IIEdQ'

(WikMI iall'owl!td!&lt;il ~ Coer•t WI Ci!~&lt;;

Ill DAIIIY ''"~ 1:00, 3:1~ 5:30, 7:45, lO:«i
LoliJ€11 ldari$. L,. e~..

Andrew Henderson, reserve champi·
on; Dog Care, intermediate: John
Krawsczyn, grand champion.

Our
Memorials
.
are Easy to
appreciate. Now
they're also
easier to afford!
•,

.S ummer
Sale
'

'

Now In Progre11

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

!hiIT" llllse.1m~ Jemla """le¢ S~ '*'&gt;

Katie MOler, Mgr.
520 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0
Ncar Mason Bridge

Mati'"'e• Sbown E11eryday
ALL AGES, All TIMES $4.00

992-2588

EYES WIDE SHUT

I~

4:00,8:15

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VVedne8day,Auguat4,1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomc!!l'oy • Middleport, Ohio

Pstrlots' Costes suffers mild knee Injury, but msy not plsy In K'eekend scrimmage

Vikings get answers to Underwc,od's mysterious disappearance.

Mets' win, Brayes'
loss drops Atlanta
to second in East
'"'
National League
roundup

YEAH, BABY! - The Cinctnnatt Reds' Aaron Boone (center) is
congratulated by teammates Se&amp;n Casey lind Mark Lewis after hitling a bases-loaded stngle in the bottom of the ninth innin!! of
Tuesday night's home game against the Colorado Rocktes, who lost
2-1. (AP)

Boone's clutch
single hel·p s Reds
top Rockies 2-1_
By JOE KAY

C INC INNA rl (AP) looktng tor d htgh

sCaso n by go mg 5 ~or II m the last
three game"' w.,, 17lor 1 when he
came to bat Jook tng tor a htgh ptlch
Sltdcr Fastb)IJI It dtdn't matter
as long as il was above the belt
·r felt good up there all ntght
Boo ne satd · I knew all I needed was
a ny ball I JUS[ wanted to make htm
gel a ptlch up that I could at least get
tn 1he atr He dtd and I was fortunate
to get enough ol 11 '
Boone lined the ftrst pttch to left
for a gamc·wmnmg smgle , the fmal
frustrauon m a game lull ot them for
Colorado
The Rocktes wasted a chance tn
the top of the ntnth agamsl Scon
Wtiii a mson ( 10-4) Bnan ~cRae
stretched a grounder up the imddle
mto a double wtlh one out and took
thtrd on Wtiiiamson 's ntnlh wtld
pnch
Wnh the mfield playmg m, Terry
Shumpert struck out for the lhtrd
ume Wt!IIamson also fanned Henry

ll was over
lloone htl a uebre aktng Stnglc
wtth th e bases loaded m the bottom
'o t the nmlh mnmg Tuesday 'ntght .
g. I\ mg the Ctncmnati Reds a 2· 1 vrcO VCI

th~ c,Jlo rado RockieS

CmL:mll..lll won for the e1ghth
nme m I U games -hy escaptng a
thrcattn the tup ot the ntnlh and then
takmg adv,mtagc of a wtld DeJean
(2-4) tn the bottom of the mnmg
The game was ued at I after seven
mmngs as Colorado 's Jamey Wnght

and Cmcmnatt 's Pete Harnt sc h were
equ.tlly sungy That left tt up lO a
, uuplc ut bookend bull pe ns Cmctnnatt s leads the NL' tn earned
run a\cragc. whtle Colorado s ts last
DeJean came on wuh one out tn
the mnth and walked Greg Vaughn ,
gave up a smgle to Barry Larkm and
walked Eddtc Taubensee to load the
bases, leavmg h1m tn a predicament
'W.1!k, htt, walk That'~ the game
rt gh•there," DeJean Said angn!y, Sltll

7 ~, mnmgs and M1ke

e t~hth

- HcrshtSer allowed stx h11s struck
out tour and walked two Masato
Yosh11 , demoted to the bullpen ,
rettred the stdc on four pnchcs tn the
nmth
It was Yoshn 's first reltel appear·
ance after 49 starts for the Mets
- Btll Pulstpher (3-2) allowed stx
runs - four earned - and mne h1ts
tn ll\e tnnmgs tn hts ftrsl start
agamst hts fonner team
In other NL games , tl was
Phtladelphta 6, Flonda 5, St LoUJs 6,
San D1ego 0, Montreal 9 , the Cubs 4,
Houston 7, Los Angeles 2, and San
Franctsco 3, Anzona I
,
Pirates 7, Braves I
At Ptllsburgh, Kns Benson
pttched four-btl ball for etght
tnnmgs, and all four Ptrales htts off
Atlanta starter Kevtn Mtllwood were
solo homers
The Ptrates dtdn't have a htt unul
Kevm Young htt hts 16th homer to

(See REDS on Page 5)

'

1n

PJ ,lLZa h1t ;~ three·run homer and
drove m Iour runs tor VJSJimg New
Ynrk
Ptaua had an RBI groundoul tn
the ftrsl and lm 2Jrd home run tn the

::ti!C o ver 100 tor the fir~t tune till~

'I U!lldLh
Ju~ t tiMt !.1st

ttJry

threc- ·run s

Boone whn had 1az~cd Iu s ave I

p1t c h

Ddc,m threw one up around

Mtk~.:

Over the course of my career
I 1c been streaky tn that way'
Ventura satd For a long pertod of
t 11ne I won 1 hit a lot of horne run s,
.tnd then I'll go tor a whtle where I
htl them usually more m the second
hall than the ltrst halt and I don't
know why '
'
Otel ' Hcrsht se r ( 11- 81 allowed

w psct wzth hnm;el t I 5 mmutes alter
Auton the ~.une e nded

BllUtll' \~ ,, ,

hi'

By IRA PODELL
Associated Press Writer
Robtn Venlum and the New York
Mets ~ave the Atlanta Braves m
unfamthar terntory - second place
The Mets , 15-4 smce the All -Star
break, are a game m lront of the
Bmves. who lost to Pittsburgh 7- 1
after the Mets defeated Mtlwaukec
10-3 Tuesday mght It's the firslltme
, stnce 1994 that the Braves have been
out been out of first place tn August
Ventura went 4-for-4 wnh a
homer and three RB!s for the Mets
• and has ·" ' homers and 12 RB Is m
htS last sc ' en games He had RBI
s tn~les tn the ftrst and thtrd mnmgs
and hll ht s 241tl homer for a 6-2 lead
•n the fifth He walked tn the seve nth
.tnd ,tdded a stngle tn the e~gh1h

Scoreboard
AL standings

Today 's games

Ea!i l~m

:wm
N~w ' nr\;

Gooden on !he 15 day disabled h~t A c ll~ated RHP
Jare1Wnght from the 15 da)' disabled ltst
DETROIT TIGERS Placed INF OF Gregg
JdTertes on 1he 15-day dtsabled h~t Recalkd OF
Kimera Banee from Toledo of thr lnlern:monal

Mon1renl 9 Chtcago 4
Houston 7 los A n s d ~s 2
San francisco ] An zona I

Baseball
Un1 s1on

:ll:
61
60

L

""49
45
"
41 64

fnro111u
B n~JI,Jn

fl:t.

Gil

llO

I

60

H1l11mnrc
( 1111p I Jll \

ll.'nlr tl Dn1ston

600

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41&lt;
JOZ

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",. 61'"61 m4 'I
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61

CUV II \Nil

t lm agn
K 1m 1\ () I\
Mlllll\ ~ot•

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Mont l1!ni (Pu.. ell0 l) •• Cim a!!D(Tr.tLhS('1 l 14)
2 10 p m
Phtl:uklplut (Bynl 11 61 ~• Flt'IIIJ~ 1Sprmgc • ~

OAK LAND ATHLETICS Addrd RHP
1\l r MtciUle l to !he roste r Opuoned LHP
Kubrnsk11o Vancouver of the PC!
Nahonal League

10 ]70~ pm

At lanm (Smoh l R -' ) 11 Ptlts burgh (Rit d m: 9 71

NL Suspended Allanm Bra..,.es C Edd1e Pc r~z
lour games and manager Hobby Co~ 11'.0 games lor
ndmn~ m n July 10 game agmnst Phrladelph1a Fm~d
Cox $5 000 RHP Johu Smoltz S2 SOO an d Perez

7 '~ p ll1

6'
17

Colorado tK1Ie 6 IOl n CINC IN NATI (Neagle I

"
11
~0

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l ) 7,'ipm
Nn\ ' ark ( R u~c t ~ 0 01 11 Mtlw 111h ~ (Pt"k:rsun I
I ~ Sm p m
~ os \ngcb t K ll r011 n 11 6) at H ou~to n !Holt 2
IOJ MO'ii ptn

SIOOO

Snn D1~g o t(ltmt nr Iii lOJ at St Lm1s t Merlhr
-1 -1) 8 10 pIll
San rmn ~ot ~t •• 1:-.lnt h&gt;lll ~ I 1 n r\rtzonn tAnd~rson
I l l 10

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"""'
100

"" ""' JIQ ""'
ruesda} 's scores

1~l u~ J

s{ otlk

Atll ht.:rm

10

~.!!!

II

Uuo.: lj!'-\ 1.} D.:lrm t 6
CLI VF L&lt;\ND 5 Ros10n -'
J.,wuto 1 New YOI'k I re~n~ 9 Mmne~om

K ms

1

Atl anta tS moltz S -' l al P1tbbu•gh (Schourek I S)

5

7 0~ pm

L~ (I I }

7 &lt;\ nulk!tm 0
S l.unpa Bay 2

s, r~ul e

ThursdaJ 's games
lll lor;:tJ n (,, , I tun I I 9 1 nt CINCINNo\ 11
1Gl!Wl.11l 0 OJ 11 l~ p m
l o~ t\tnLI&lt;~ 1\aiJes tS 'II at Houston (Rc)nolds
I ' 7) I l~ p m
1\lomn:J I ( lllU rrnan I 71 :u (hllngo iLtto: ber 8 4)
2 20 r m
Plu\uJciJ'hta !P~non 5 I) at R0r da (Nunel -' I )
7 0~•pm

O,lklm•l 12 Ballllnurt!' 2

Sa n Otego (Ashbv 9
l)M I0p TJ1

1

Today 's games
l uromo (l:.scohar 9 7) at New York (lm bu 8-\J
1 2 0~pm
.)
CLEV II t\NI) (Co lon 10-1 ) at Hos10n {Portugal
~

8) I

0~

11m

Balurmxe (j Jo hnson 2 5t 111 O~k. l a nd {Haynes 79)405pm
MmneS(Ifil tRadke 8 9) at Te~as (Loaiza ' I l
8 ls ,, m
K n n ~ a ~ Ct!'w' \ W1taS1d: 4 8) at Anahe im (Hill '
10) 10 35 pm
fantpa Uay (I ll~ nd 1 6) at Sealtle {Meche 2 I )
!0 3't pIll

'
Thursday's
games
Dctrol\ 1\\le ~&gt;cr 6 7) at Balu more (Ponson 9· 7)
1 ] 'i 1' rn
Boston (R'o~e I) l ) m Anaheim (Frnle) 'ii 10)
100.5 p m
(htcugu (Srrotk.t 7-1 0) at Oakland (Ohvares 9 9}

IOO.Spm

New Y11rk. Clll'mi'.:ns 9 4) a.t Siattl e (Moyer \0 51

IOO.Sp m

~

WNBA standings
Eastern Conference
:ll: I. fl:t. , Gil

fum

14 10
13 10
10 11
9 ll

Char\one
New York
Detroit

Orl an do

jJ

Washmglnn

7

CLEVELAND

6 18

l8J
565

m

409

292

250

,.•,
•

4
7

8

Western Conference
H ouston ,

I ns Ange les
Sacrame nt o

10 4
16
6
14 10
12 10

83'
727
583
'i4S

10

415

lY I.
65 41
44
58 48
41 62
41 66

...

New York

Atlant~

Vhlladclpl tta
Monu..:al
H onda

fl:t.
1502
191
l41
398
1&amp;1

Hockey

148

Mmnesota at De1rutt 7 30 p m
CLEVELAND 111 Orla ndo 7 ~0 p m
Sacramento at Charlotte 7 &lt;o p m

I

6
21
21

Thursday's games
Orl ando 11 W~ s hm l!ton 7 p m
Los Ange les 111 Utnh 9 p m

D• v •~ton

6l
61
54
52
49
4M

Hou ston

CIN CINN ATI
St LOUI S
Pitts burgh
Milwaukee
Chh.ago

42
4]
l1
51
16
56

\\'c, h:rn l&gt;n.sion
60 4S

17

San Fr.tn(ISCO
San D•~ gn
l'oloratlr&gt;

so

so

""

41
46 60

l 1~ An)!ek~

luesday's

.scu~s

1'1 1tdlltf@h 7 Atlanl.l I
liN( JNNA fl 1 (ulurndcl I
l'htl:ulelphta 6 1-lond;r 5
St l ~•u iS 6 S 111 Otef!!O 0
N~" York 10 ,..hl waukt_-.: ~

1501
187
501
491
461
462

2
II

12
ll
IS

Amencan Ltagur

AN~ H EIM ANGELS R oe~: ail ed

516
511

m

441
41&lt;

2
9
12
11

C Lkn MDI no
fro m EJnmnton of the PCL Dcstgnnted C Ch ultc
0 l.lrt cn For n~s1gn me n t
BALliMORI URIOLF_I\ l'l au!ll lB C~ l R1p._cn
(&gt;II the I~ d:t) diSa bled lm Re~ 1lkd IB Rynn ~h n nr
fmm R tM.heSI~r of thr ln1er 1a11onall cuguC'
BU.STON RfD SOX 1\LII\alcd RHI' Pedro
Manme2 Inun thL I~ J n h' •hleof h ~• OpuoncJ INF
I f&gt;U

M cr l. ont ! O l'~\1\ll~kt'l

I 'a/o!U~

Football

Baseball

I]
15

Tomght's games

Gil

Baskttball
Nattonal Haskrtball Assoc1a11on
NBA Named Chm W~ tll e r seniDr dtr~c l or of
cv~ nt ~ and aurncttons
BOSTON CELTICS 1raded G Ron Mercer F C
Pnpeye Jones and C Dwayne Sdimtztus 10 the
Den'w'er -' Nunets for F Danny Fort50n F Er1~
Wt\ hams G Ettc Wn!ihlni!IOn and a hrsl round draft
p1ck wuhm the next three years Stgned G Wa)ne
T11rner
DALLAS MAVERICKS Stgnad G Gr~g
Buckner
DENVEll NUGGETS Re-s1gned G N1ck Van
Exe\ S1gned G F George McOoud
LOS ANGELES LAKERS Agreed to terms wnh
G Derek Fis~r on n ~ve n year contract
NEW JERSEY NETS Stgned F C Janue Fe1ck
to a SIX year contract Wruvcd C Rony Setkaly
ORLANDO MAGIC Re stg ned F Bo Outlaw to
a one year conuacr Traded G N1ck Ander5on to the
Sxramento Ktngs for G Tanq Abdul Wahad and a
future fir ~ t round draft pack
SACRAMENTO KINGS Re stgned G Jon
Barry to a thue-year contr.~c l anJ f ·C Scot Pollard to
a two yea r contract

Transactions

8

1\J.esduy's store

F 11sten1 Ou&lt;tsloo

ARIZONA DIAMONOBACKS ReLalled OF
IJ::mte Powe ll hom Tucson of the PCL and optiOned
INF Edwtn D1az to lu ~su n
Al LA NTA BRAVES Pla~cd OF Ott s N"t. Ln on
rh~ l:li day dJ soblcdlt st re uoa~ 11 1e to Jul) 29
CINCINNAll HELlS Added RIIP Juan Gu t man
10 the roster Opuoned C Jason LaRue 10 lndtan:l•}()hs
of the lnt~rna tJOn al l~:agut:
COLORADO R,OC KI I;S Reca lled RHP Janie)
\\r1 gtit from Culuradu S p rm!o! ~ uf 1he PCL
ST LO UIS C1'ROINALS Placed OF Dnrren
Br~gg on the 15 d~y drsablcd hs1 Re~ •lled IN I
Ctmg Pnqueth" frnm Memph1 'i of the PCI

National FootbaU Leaaur
CINCINNATI BENGALS Churned OL Jamilln
Stephens off wruvcrs from the Pmsburgh Sreelers
Wru 'w'Cd C Bnan Uhl
DALLAS COWBOYS S1gned C Ben Fnc ke
and G Chad Bates Released WR Bil ly Powell ;md
RB Alan Ru::a.rd
GREEN BAY PACKERS St!!ned LB Lamon•
HolhnqueJI
JACKSONV ILLE JAGUA RS Watved lB Scotl
Voo der Ahe t~nd 01 Jam s Reade Stgned WR James
Baffle and LB Jam...e B111sley Named Scon Cohen
a.SS!Siant dm:~ctor Qf pro penonntl
MIAMI DOLPHINS Released RB I yro ne
Wheu tl~ y Stgned DE BarT) Mnchel\ and DT Crdnc
Wh ne
N( \v ENG lAND PATRIOTS Stgned TE
Brnndo'h Co ndte
•
TAMPA 'sAY BUCCANEERS Stgned I)L
Anthony Mcfar land

Mmnesota
Phoemx ................ ..
Utnh
Nc"' York 61 Uta h 59

1lam

A.fl tl)n,t

loUi s (Luebbers I

Basketball

AL standings

Crnlnl

~~a t St

Gr~ g
T~n1

or

lit ~ lnll'T~I;llitlll · ll

U ll lt\C.iO Wil li I SOX Opuom.J RHJI Kt l'
\hils 1(1 Blllllllll!h~m ''llhL Southt: tll l...c.Jgut
C1 J VII \NIJ INI)I \ NS PI Ret! RHP D111ght

Nahonal H(l('kty Lragut
ATLANTA THR AS HER S N01me~ Gel r@e
K111gst.:rn and Jay Uach a~ststanr coaches
CALGARY FLAMES Re Sl!!ncd D C01lc Hulse
NEW 'I ORK lSI ANDER."i Re s1gn«i G Fchx
Potvrn loa Clne year co mroct
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS Stgt~ed D LW St.-an
o 8fl ~ n ton one )enr controcl
PllTSBU RGH PENGUIN S S1yoed D Jtn lti le_!!r
10 ~

t" (&gt;-YC'&lt;IT

~ontrad

TAMPt\ DAY li GHTNING S1t.!n~d ~W Oalc
Rummsk.t to a two year con1ract
~
VANCOUVER CANUCKS Rc stg nl!d G G 1rth
Snow 10 a one' year m ntrau

NFL training
camp reports
By ARNIE STAPLETON

slart the fifth then proceeded to h1l
three more homers off Mtllwood (126) - by AI Marlm, Bnan G1lcs and
Warren Moms - m 1he ne&lt;t two
mnmgs
Benson (9-8) has allowed lwo
runs on I 0 htts m 17 mnmgs tn htS
last two stan s
Phillies 6, Marlins 5
AI Mtamt, Rt co Brogna and Mtke
Lteberthal htt back-to-back home
runs tn the etghth mntng to lift
Phtladelphta
Chad Ogea an emergency staner
for the Phtlhcs. held Flonda htlless
the ftrsl five tnnmgs He lefl after
gtvtng up three runs aqd three htts tn
the St&lt;th mnmg
Cun Schtlhng was sched uled to
start for the Phtl!tcs, but he returned
to Phtladclphta about two hours
before game ltme upon lcarmng thai
h1 ~ prcg 1Mnt w1fc was hosp1tahzed
Brogn.t led off the etghlh wtth hts
14th homer Ltcbcrthal follo11cd wtth
htS 22 nd ott Bn an Edmondson (4-6)
BREAKS UP DOUBLE PLAY - Boston's Jason Varitek (47) ts
An1.1ury Tckm aco (3-0) pllchcd thrown out by Cleveland second baseman Enrique Wilson on a sin·
thl: :-.cvcnth for the wm Way ne gle ~y Darren Le.wis in the fourth tnning of Tu~s.~ay ntght's
Gomes allowed two runs 1n the mmh American League game a_t Fenway Park, where the vlsttmg Indians
hci111C gcttmg h1 s 16th save
won 5-4. (AP)
Cardinals 6, Padres 0
AI St Louts , Darren Oltver
pttc hcd a lour-htt shutout and Mark
McGwnc:.; d11 ve lor 500 homers
sl.tllcd
....
...
Oltvet (7 7) had a carecr-lugh II
stnkcuuts ~tnd walked two to wm Iu s
thtrd str.11ght start and ptl\'h hts thtrd
had great sluft
caree r shutout The tour hils ~tlluwed
Marttnez was 15-3 wtth a .2 IU
were a t.:arcer low
ERA m the first half and started tor
The Padres' Tony G"'ynn went 0
the AL m the All-Star game slnkmg
for-4 to rcmam at career 2 995 hn s
out tHe first four baijj!rs he laced McGwtre, who smgled and scored
tw1ce has 498 career homers
By JOSH DUBOW
and five tn two' mmngs - to wm the ~
Sports Writer
game's MVP
·, ·
C ra•g P aquette went 2- for- 4 wn h APPedro
Marlmez IS back for 'the
But m h1s first start after that, he
a homer. double and th1 ee RB!s In
hts Cardtnals debut
Boston Red Sox Just not completely had lhe worst outmg of h1s career.
Bnan Boehnnger (6-4) worked
Marttnez allowed one run m' five allowmg mne :l"uns, seven earned.
se ven mmngs and allowed three runs mmngs tn hts first start back from and 12 hils m 3 13 mmngs After that.
on ftve htls.
,
hts ftrst stint on the dtsabled hsl, but he missed a stan for the liist time m
Expos 9, Cubs 4
the Boston bullpen couldn ' t hold the his maJor league career.
Vlad 1mtr
Guerrero,
Shane . lead m a 5-4 loss to the Cleveland
"I went seven , years wuhout
Andrews and Chrts Wtdger htl solo lnd1ans on Tuesday mght
mt ssmg
a
start, "
he
satd '
home runs as Montreal won at
"Usually I'm thO} one that 's " Hopefully, tl wtll be another seven
Chtcago, the Expos' fourth stratghl allo111ed to go a lillie !?nger, but before I mtss another one "
,
wm
today was an exception, Manmez
Paul Shuey (7-4) earned the wm
Brad Fullmer, Orlando (::abrera said of hiS early e&lt;tt "Hopefully, and Mtke Jackson pitched the mnth
and pncher Javter Vazquez each next lime Ill be out there for for his 24th save.
drove m two runs for the Expos
longer "
In other AL games , tt was'Toronto
The Cubs lost for the mnth 11me m
J1m Thome·~ second home run 3, New York I , Seattle 5, Tampa Bay
II games, spothng the first career ued the game, and Omar Y1zquel 2, Texas 9, Mmnesota 5, Oaklan&lt;!
start for Mtcah Bow1e (0·2), acqutred smgled m the game·wmner m the 12, Baltimtlre 2, Kansas Ctly 7,
Saturday from Atlanta
ninth to gtve the Indians their sev- Anaheim 0 , and Chtcago 9 , DetrOit
Sammy Sosa went 1-for-4 wuh enth wm tn e1ght games and spot! 6
three stnkeouls to rcmam tted wtlh M'lfttnez ' return from a shoulder
Blue Jays 3, Yankees 1
McGwtre for the major league home mJury
At New York, Joey Hamtlton :
Manmez struck out seven m five pttched stx strong inmngs and Tony
run lead al 41
Vazquez (5 5) gave up three runs mmngs at Fenway Park before leav- Bat1sta htt a ttebreakmg smgle m the
and seven hils m ftv e mmngs
tng after 78 p1tches Seekmg hts seventh as Toronto beat New York
Astros 7, Dodgers 2
IOOth career vtctory, he left wtlh a 4- tor the fitsl ttme tn etght lrtes thiS
Mtkc Hampton allowed three htts 2 lead before Tim Wakefield (3-8) season
m se ven mnmgs to wm hts st&lt;th blew hiS second save p f the season
Hamtltun (4-6) crutscd through
stratght dectgtOn and become the secThome hn a solo homer off the hrst five mnmgs, scattenng three
ond 15-eame wmner m the NL
Marltnez m the second. mmng, then hils and tacmg JUSt two over the
Hampton (15-3) won for the lOth added a lwo-run shot off Wakcftcld mtntmum before Joe Gtrardt led ot't
tune m ht s last II starts and matched tn the etghlh to ttc 11 at 4 In the the SIXth Wllh ht S ftrsl homer StnCC
Kent Bonenfield of St Louts wnh 111nth, Wakeheld walked two before July 9 1998 tytng tl 1- 1
hiS 15th vtclory
VtZquel stngled m Davtd Jusuce for
The Blue Jays recaptured the le ad
The Astros won for the mnth umc the game-wmner
an lntllng late• whdi.J'Iomer Bush _
m II games The vtStttng · Dodgers
' ' Any tmlc you can gel a btl ott doubled and scot cd on Battsl.t s sm ,
have lost II of 14 games
Pedro , lei alone a home run , tt's kmd gle ott Davtd Cone ( 10-6 ) Btlly
The Asttos scored live runs after o l ntc e, ' Thome satd
'Pedro ' s Koch ptlchcd lhc ntnth lot l11 s 22 nd
two nuts m the thtrd ttrnm g o il Pedro He's alw~ys gomg tu put IJ.tS ~ ave
leat)t m a posttton to wm I know he
was on the dtsablcd Its! , but he sttll
(See AL on Page 5)
(See NL on Page 5)

Thome's HRs help
Tribe beat BoSox 5-4
American League
roundup ·

We Can Take
Reservations
''Nine Months''
In Advance ...
Mark W.' Nolan, MD
'Michael w.·corbin, MD

MANKATO, Mtnn (AP) -The
Mtnnesota Vtkings are finally gelling some answers to the mystenous
dtsappearance of thetr firsl-round
draft ptck who went' AWOL after hts
first NA... practtce
Pass rusher Dtmllrius Underwood
sktpped out on the V1kmgs to allend
to a "famtly maner" and planned to
return to traintng camp today, hts
agent sa1d after finally trackmg
down the rookte, whose unexcused
absence tmtated the coachtng stafl
and caused many to worry about hts
safety
" He called to mform me that he
was plannmg to be back tn Mankato
tomghl He apologtzed for the way
he took off wnhout talktng to anybody or asktng for perm•s ston from
the leam or even letung me know or
anyone else know that he was domg
what he was doing, " agent Cratg
Dom ann sa1d Tue sday ntght
Coach Denn1 s Green wouldn ' t
dtscu ss Underwood 's statu s alter
learntng that the rookte was located
more than 24 hours after htS mysten 'ous dtsappearance
Earlter Tuesday Green was clear-.
ly' annoyed by I he mailer
"Obvtously, we're dtsappomtcd
Ihe guy would not want to ~lay football That 's really what tl comes
down 10," Green satd followmg
Tuesday mormng 's pracu ce.
Domann decltned to go mto
spectfics about the fam1ly matter or
the whereabouts of Underwood, the
lather ot 15-monlh-old twms
"He had lo deal wtlh a famtly
maner that had gonen to cmtS proporttons , and he had to take care ot

He partlctpaled m Monday morn· when the All-Pro cornerback tmghl
tng's workout , ate lunch wuh ht s suu up unul Tuesday, wben Jones
teammates, then between noon and satd " I see htm really trytng to push
the players meeung a1 3 p m , he h1mself somettme m September "
vantshed, leavmg most of h1 s clothes
However Jones also noted that tf
and personal nems , tncludmg a Sanders stts for all of September, he
B1ble, m hts room
would mt ss only two games because
The Vikings ISs ued a statement Dallas ha&lt; an early bye week The
saymg Underwood , who mtSsed ht s Cowboys' thtrd game ts Oct 3
sentor season at M1chtgan State agamst dtvtston nval Anzona tn
because of an ankle tnjury, left camp Texas Stad1um
wnl\out permtsston and wtthoUit
" If Deton mtsses only two balltelhng anybody where he was gom{: games , then we ' ve htt a home run ,"
or why
Jones said
Defensive coordmator Fogc Faz1e&gt;
Sanders' IOJUry kept htm out of
sa1d nothtng occurred dunng the ·• five games last year and hmtted h1m
mormng pracltce that would hav&lt;' . m lwo others The Cowboys were 8tndicated there was a problem And 3 m games he played and 2-J Wllhhts roommate, rookie defensive end out htm He returned for the firstTalance Sawyer, satd Underwood round playoff loss to the Cardmals
never said anythmg about leavmg and played m the Pro Bowl, but was
camp , although he satd Underwood sltll m pam two months later and
recetved a phone call shortly befon · opted for surgery
h1s dtsappearance
Mt ss mg tratmn g camp and preGreen refused to say what, tf any , season game s ts nothm g new for
dt sc tpiinary action Underwood faced Sanders who ear lter tn htS career
for hts unexcused absence from thre(' dtdn't start playmg too1bqll unul he
workouts
'
ftnt shcd th~ maJor league baseball
Underwood ts expected to bad seaso n
Jon es satd he doesn t c&lt;pcct the
up Stahn Colt net at left e nd
Co1,Yboys: The Dallas Cowboy• layo lf to be a problem
Other th an htS rch abtlttatton on
wtll have to wa tt awhtlc for the
htS toe, De ton tS gomg 10 be tn fool return of ' Pnme Ttmc ·
Cornerback De10n Sanders wtll ball shape by September." Jones
not return to lhe team un ttl satd · We tc not gomg to push anySeptember and even that may be a thmg any"ay It 's gotng to ha ve to
btl opttmtsltO. leam owner Jerry be obvtous to htm se lf and to everyJones satd Tuesday. Sanders 1s tn body th at he cannot m any way be
trammg camp, but not prat.: tlc mg compromtsed "
Wtlh the team as he rehabtlttates htS
Bears Cade McNown look part
left btg loe He undetwenl surgery to m hts ttrsi ptacttc e y,tth I he Chtcago
fix. an extreme case of turl rloe m Bears aller s1gnmg h1s contract II
Apnl
,
days mto ~amp
"[ know we won t see htm tn a
McNown the 12th ptck overall,
preseason game " Jones satd , con- ended hts holdout Monday wnh a
t mmng tor the ftrst . lime what had con!ractthat could pay htm up to $22
long been suspected
mt!hon over fi ve years The tntl1al
There had been no esttmate of deal ts tor seve n years and $15 mtl-

lton , but !he last two year5 are votd- ed to mtss any workouts The afterable and he can make an addtUonal noon sess1on was IImtted to special
57 mtiiion tn performance-based team s, so McNair, who has staned
•n cent1ves
the last 33 regular-season games,
He arnved late Monday after a was nol scheduled to parttctpate
solo dnve from Chtcago that tncl ud Dolphins Tyrone Wheatley, a
ed several wrong turn s and a shght bust for the New York Gtants , lasted
miShap when he di scovered he d1dn 1 less than a week mlo trammg camp
ha ve any change for a toll booth
" 'lib Mtam t
Buccaneers Ftrst -round draft
W~eatley was ummpresSive tn
ptck Anthony McFarland agreed to the Dolphms ' f~rsl scnmmage
terms wllh Tampa Bay, endmg a Sunday He earned seven ltmes for
three-day tratntng camp holdout
18 yard s Wheatley, 27, was the
General manager Rtch Mc Kay Giants' first rou nd draft chotce m
sa~d lhe Stx-foot , 300-pound defen- 1995 But he stan edJUSI etght games
Sive tackle from LSU would amve tn tn four seasons and earned only 14.
lown to stgn the deal Tuesday mght umes for 52 yards last year
and prac uce on Wednesday
The Dolphms acqutred Wheatley
McFarland was the first defenstve from New York m February for a
lineman selected tn the draft and se 1enth round draft c hotce
15th pick . overa ll HIS contract ts
Patriots Ne" England ·coach
beheved to be worth more than $6 Pete Carroll satd the left knee tnjUr)"
mtlhon ove r five years, mdudtng a suffered b) nght end Ben Coates u(
$4 mli!t on stgnmg bonus ,
practiCe Mondav wa~ nowhere nea~
Giants Jason Sehorn 's al!emptlo as senous a:-. reported Car.ro ll termed
re~orn to the New York Gtan ts ltnc
the InJU ry ·a \e ry m1ld stram a nd
up ts gomg to be del ayed abou1 ~ani the \ cteran Pro Bm." ler s statu s
another 10 days becau se ot a to111 wou ld be e' .J!u.Ited on a da1l y bas1 s
hamstnng m hts left leg
Coale\ \'a" unhkcl) tn part11. 1pate
The cornerb ac k. who miSsed ,all m Saturd ay . , 1n11 asquad sn nnm agc
of last season w1th a senous knee at Fu~bo ru Stad1urn•
InJUn had the tear dctet: ted Monday
Seaha"ks Vetera n reLCI\Cr Joey
mght alter undergmng an MRI '" GaHm~o ay and tJr,t rnund drat1 pa.:k
'New York
Luna1 K 1m! ~\L'rc no - ~ lwv.~ l or the
It JS almo-.t t:ertam !hat Sehorn th rrd co n s~c u ti\C Jav hecausc ot
w1ll mtss tije G1ants pre season open contrau d i Spulc'
er at Mmnesota on Aug 13
Gallov. a) ~~ 'ccl-..lllg more th an
One of the NFL s top cover cor th e $1 6 mtllt on he t' &gt;chcduled to
nerbacks Sehorn InJUred the ham rece 1ve m the tinal \Car ofh1s current
stnng workmg out about three weeks co ntrac t'
betore trammg camp opened He
The Scattk Pos r htJ e/lr gencel
dJdn 't thtnk tt was sen ous then. buttl reponed th at lhc Seahawk s arc o fler cramped about a week before camp tn g GaiiO\\ ay a ,cvcn-) ear $35 tnii opened
IIon deal. " htc h tndudcs a $7 mil Titans Tennessee quarterback lion stgntng bonus Th at would make
Steve McNatr left Tuesday morn- Gallowa) th e seco nd htghesl-pa td
mg 's pracltce wtth back spasms
recetver tn the NFI hchtn d Jerry
He was treated and IS no't ex peel R1ee of the San FranL 1sco 49ers

1

IOC bribery s~andal produces ancl.t ller conviction, witness for Feds
lly PAUL FOY
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A Salt
Lake Ctly busmessman pleaded
gu1lty to a misdemeanor tax charge
and agreed to atd the government's
mvesugauon after the ' Jusuce
Depanment brought tls first cnmmal
charges relaung to the Olymptc
bnbery scandal •
Davtd E Stmmons, who ran the
now-defunct
Keystone
Commumcattons, admttted Tuesday
to htrtng the son of one of the
lnternauonal Olymptc Commmee's
most powerful members for a bogus
JOb and htdmg the source of hiS
salary. whtch was patd by Salt Lake
Cny's Olymp•c btdders
It was the first cnmmal case to
result from a federal mvesltgauon
mto g1fts, favors, cash payments,
medtcal care and Jobs lavtshed on
IOC members and thetr relattves by
Salt Lake's Olymptc btddcrs.
Stmmons, appeanng Tuesday
, before U S Magtstrate Ronald
Boyce, admmed he tllegally deducted
as a busmess e&lt;pense the salary of
John Ktm, the son of South Kore an
IOC member Ktm Un-yong
' I knew tn fact the purported
salary was not genUtne. but patd
under a sham," Stmmons told Boyce
"The expense wa s taken as a busi ness deducuon '

Reds ...

Accordmg to court documents , dent of the Salt Lake Cuy btd com
comm1llee) can be mcnmmated for mqutry that led to an unprecedented el agency. d1dn t return a call askmg
I 0 expu!stons or restgnauons.
for an explanation of tts $13.216 conS1mmons htred John K1m "for the mtltee and later of the Salt Lake domg what they were htred to do purpose of mnuencmg hts father 's Organtztng Commtllee unul he was gam mtluence wnh the IOC "
Famtly spokesman B1ll Schechtei tnbutton thai Stmmons constdered
vole tn favor of awardmg the forced to res1gn m the wake of spouse
Howard Graff, a New York lawyer said the younger Ktm acted as a parttal repayment for Ktm 's salary a
Olympic Wmter Games to Salt Lake abuse charges
for the Ktnf fam•ly, sa1d the arrange· "ratnmaker"
for
Keystone payment made at the request of the
Cny"
,·
Welch arranged - and mtsreprc- ments for re1mbursmg Stmmons were Communtcattons,
mtroducmg btd commtllee
Stmmons to the CEO~ of Korea's ' John MacAioon of the Untverstty
Ktm was on the Keystone payroll sented - the deal that would lielp kept secret from lhe famtly
as marketmg manager for Astan oper- John K1m ebtatn permanent US res" It ts mdeed unfortunate that by maJor televtston networks on posst- of Chtcago. a member of the IOC's
auons from October 1990 to October tdency, Stmmons satd
tmphcauon, Dr Ktm has once agam ble cable-TV deals
new reform panel satd the reve la1992, but dtdn't bnng any busmess to
Welch's attorney, Tom Schaffer, been dragged mto a story concemmg
Accordmg to court documents, !tons m • Suhmons' pl ea agreement
the company and eventually stopped ms1sted that Stmmons acted on' hts I he alleged mtsdeeds of others," Simmons ,htred K1m at $50,000, then make tl 'even more tmplaustble' that
ratsed the salary to $70,383, and was Ktm Un -yong was un aware the Salt
showmg up for work. federal docu- own when he htred K1m and tllegally Graff sa1d
The IOC's own mvesugauon tn retmbursed by the btd commltlee and Lake boasters were paymg ht s son s
ments say
deducted ht s salary
Regardtng the posstblltty that March gave K1m Un-yong a " severe a small contnbutwn from Moms salary but he dtd not e.pectthe IOC
In a statement earher Tuesday,
Simmons contended he was domg the Welch wtll be tndtcted . Schaffer satd, warnmg " for hts conduct, but stopped Travel Inc of Salt Lake Ctty
to reopen tls mvesttgalt on
..::b::.:•d:.:d:::m::&gt;g&lt;....:::of:...t.:.o:.:me'-W."-"el:.:c.:.:h,:...~:.:o:.:nn=e:...r=re:.:s:...•·_ '..:'l:...f:.:a:::tl:...t:=o_;s:.:e..::e...:h::.:o:...w:_;_'W:..:e:::lc::h:...o::r:...o..:(t.:.:he:.....::b::.:
' d0 __..::s::.:
ho
: :r:..:t.....::o:...f..:h::.:a::.rs::h:..:e.:.r_s::a::.n:=c::.:u.:.on:::s:....o.:•:.:n-"-'h=e---'M=a::.:rk:...:.S:=Ia:::c::.k'C.Jpt::r..::e::s•.::de::n::.:l...:o::.f...:lh:::e:...::lr.::a.:...,v"0 f the (I OC) me m bers I ' e
r·
talked to , no one dou bts the facts of
the case The &gt;Ole ts suc IS hemg able
to prove that the sent or Ktm kn ew all
about thts,' MacAioon told The Salt
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - · Desptte holdtng the Utah Starzz to 30 per- worked well," Johnson satd " No one pte ked me up I was so wtde open, I
Lake Tnbune whtch quoted ~tm tn a
,cent shooung , the New York Ltbeny had to wnhStand a second-half rally couldn't beheve ll Maybe I humed too much"
copynght slOf)
and a last-second scormg play that seemed very famtltar
" We had tbe same play and they almost beat us wtth our play." satd New
The SLOC dtslanced ttse lt from
Vtckie Johnson scored 16 potnls as the Ltbeny beat the Utah Starzz 61- York coach Rtchte Adubato " I don't know what (W1lhams) called tl, but the predecessor btd co mmtttee
59 Tuesday ntght to pull wuhin one-half game of 1dle Charlotte tn the we call tl ' home run ' It was great executton and they had a chance to lie
" We are a different org amza tion
'
WNBA's Eastern Conference
the game up "
wtth a dtffeJent mtsston from the forUtah had a chance to send tt tnto oventme when Vtckte John son htt one
Vtck1e Johnson scored II potnt s tn the first half as the Ltbeny led 24· 8 mer btd commtllee, SLOC Vtce
of two free throws to g1ve the Ltberty a two-potnt lead wnh 3 9 seconds wtth 5·51 rematnlllg before the Starzz came back to narrow the gap lo J 1Prest dent Shell\ Thomas satd
kfl
I
21 at the half
S1mm ons \\ ,lS re leased \"! thou\
The Starzz:S Cmdy Brown handed the ball to Margo Dydek at mtdco url
Goodson and recently-acqutred Kone Hlede each scored 12 pomls for
ba,tl .unu l hts sc ntcnc ln£ on a charge
and she passed to LaTonya Johnson, who streaked down the nght stdc and the Slarzz Hlede 's consecultve three-potnlers gave Utah tls first of three
that carn es a rnaxm1Um penalty ot a
tossed up a lay-up wtth 0 9 seco nd left It rolled off the left stdc and lead s at •48-47 ,wtlh 7 20 to play
ye ar m pn so n anJ a $ I00 000 t me
Adnenne Goodson trted to ltp tl back m as I he buzzer sounded, but tl "as
Crystal Robmson and Teresa Weatherspoon each had 10 pomts for Nev.
]J.I st tce Dcranrn em auornc\s. "''11
short
York. each sconng etght tn lh~ second halt
recommend a lc111cnl ~c m cnLL'
"Coach (Fred) Wtlltams drew up the play nght before we dtd tl and tl

Johnson's clutch scoring he'l ps Liberty down Starzz 61-59

(Contmued trom Page 4)

Blanco to end the thrc,u
The Rocktes,are 2-2 .tl the start of
thetr 12-game road tnp All four
games have been deetdcd by one run
"We had a lot of chances," man·
ager Jtm Leyland satd ~I we JUst dtdn' t put the ball m play That 's the
ballgame We held them to one run
for gy, mnmgs, you're supposed to
wm "
Colorado had numerous opportunmes agamst Harmsch, but stranded
four runners m sconng pos1tton durmg hts seven innmgs
The Rocktes got runners to first

'AL contests ..•

NL games ...
(Co ntinued from Page 4)
' Darren Dretforl (8- 11 )
Giants 3, Diamondbacks 1
ChariiC Hayes htl a two-out .
three-run hom er m the c1ghth mnmg .
and L1van Hernandc1 won h1s t1rst
game m San Franc1sco s '11ctory at
An zona
T he seco nd place G tant s cut
A n zona's NL We st lead to 2 games
Hernandez (6 I0) , m hts second
..-: start s1nce bcm g at.:qu11ed by the
GiantS, allowed two hH s m seven
tnntn gs Robb Nen ptlchcd the ntnlh
for htS 24th save m 30 oppot1unttt cs
•

and th1rd v. tlh one out 1n the second
but fatled to score They loaded the
bases after Dante Btchelle s RBI smgle to the lhtrdc but Mc Rae flew out
After the ftrst two Rock1e s
reached m the ftflh, Larry Walker
grounded tnto a double play and
B1cheue grounded out
'
' Harnisch, who has been ptlchmg
wtth a sore shoulder that may need ,
surgery after the season, satd tl felt a
httle better Tuesday once he gol
warmed up
"It has felt bener the last three
games," sa1d Harn1sch , who wenl

seve n mnm gs lor the 1lrst 1tlme smc.:c
June I " I hope tl's gomg tn the n ght
dtrecuon There was a stretch there
where t1 was really bad and I que.;
uoned whether I should be gomg out

rn .tdc

h1 s

must cffel:tl\c st art ol the

'53

repa 1r a p ar11al

Walker stole a hJt ft o m ca~C} Ill
se&lt;tso n He "as d lot more aggress ive
than earli er 1n the season and 11 the fourth mnmg d 1' 1ng to c.tt ch h1• s
showed m hts results - ltve stnke- smkmg ltner m ngh t Casey grabbe d
Walker's itne dn ve m the ctghth
outs, no walks
Notes: McRae ob1 amed from the
' I was trymg to challenge people
there "
Met
s as part of a live -playe r trade
Wnghl had only one bad tnnmp. to throw the ball by peop le,' Wnght
out of s1x as he made an Jmpress tw satd "Thai's a good feelmg to have Saturday, stngled tn the second
tnnmg for ht s ftrst htt wtth the
return to the maJors Barry Larkm I had 11 tomght
'
Curtts Lcskantc got h1s
stngled wtth tv.o outs tn the fourtlt
The game matched the lop two Rocktes
and came around on Taubensee , h1tters m the Nat1onal League 4001h career stnke out, the most tn
Shumpert was 0double over McRae 's head m center Walker went b-for-4 d10ppmg hts Rockte s hiStory
362 for 4, endmg ht s hllltng streak at a
Wnght , who was demoted to thc: average ftve potnls lo
Cmcmnalt's
mmors on May 4 after four st~rts Cmcmnatl 's Sean Casey was I lor 4 career !ugh 10 games
was recalled before the game anc 'l droppmg hts average one potnt 1o Steve Avery rna) need surgery to

lt.:".lJ

I

m the rl)l.llor

cuff Th e left hand L:J \\t::nl tln !he d1s
ablcd ltst Jul) 24 .md 111 ~ I R I has
lound the lear, He II ge t o &lt;econd
opm1on Wed ncsd.l) from Dr Jam c:-;
1\.ndrews 1n B1m11ngham Ala
The
Reds opno ned catcher Jason LaR ue
lo Tnpl c-A lndt anapolts to open a
spot fo r pu chcr Juan G uzman
obtmncd lrom Balumore m a trade
Saturd ay
Wh en home plarc
umptrc Paul Nauert called Dm i1.11
Young out on stn kes m the th1rd
ttmtng a fan yell ed ' He ) ump I
hope vou rc..,1 gned 1" N~mert 1s one at
11 NL ' umpires whose ies1gnauons
"" ere accepted ·

(Conunued from Page 4)

Mariners S, Devil Rays 2
Tampa Bay's Wade Boggs went
1-for-3 and closed wtlhm four hits of
3,000, but Seattle ued Its longest
wmmng streak of the season at stx
Rookte left-bander John Halama
(9-2) tted the Manners' record by
WJnmng h1s mnth stratghl deciSion
and Ken Gnffey Jr and Alex
Rodnguez homered for Seattle on
consecutive pitches m the fifth
mmng off Ryan Rupe (6-5)
Jose Mesa earned hts 23rd save
for the host Martners
Rangers 9, Twins S
I van Rodnguez went 4-for-5 wtth

1

(304) 675-3400

It," Domann sa1d a He IS now focustog his energtes back on football I
mfonned him thai he would need to
be talking to coach Green He satd he
was looking forward to dotng that. "
Underwood •ne~plicably dtsappeared from trammg camp Monday,
worrying tbe team , ht s agent and hts
famtly, all concern• 1bout hts well bemg.
"That's been my only concern the
whole t1me," asstslant coach Andre
Panerson satd Tuesday before
Underwood was tracked down .
" Football 's just a game. I couldn't
sleep because of thts."
Domann d1dn ' l hear from • h1s
chen! unul Tuesday evening Netther
did Underwood's mother and brother
tn Phlladelphta
Underwood , a 6 -foot-6, 276pound defenstve end from Mtch1gan
Sta(e, was th&lt;; 29th selection m the
NA... draft He, stgned a five-year
contract Sunday for more than $5
mtlhon , mcludmg a pantally
deferred
stgntng
bonus
of
$1 ,750,000
The Vtkmg s werlt to federal court
tn Mmneapohs on Tue sday to keep
getting
a
Underwood
from
$543,561 80 portion of htS stgnmg
bonus tt wtred to hts Mtlwaukee
bank on Monday Underwood 's bank
agreed to freeze the account for 48
hours The lawsutl satd Underwood
breached h1s contract wtth the
Vtkings by fallmg to anend mand atory players meellngs and pracllces
and for leavmg tralnmg camp wtlhout permiSSIOO
r
Domann dropped off htS chent at
the team 's dorm Sunday afternoon ,
and Underwood , dressed m mthlary
fallgues, proclatmed "It feels good
to be tn Mmnesota, a long anllctpallon I got the war fattgues. gol the
Anny faugues, got to go to war "

I

Royals 7, Angels 0
At Anahetm Jeff Suppan (6-6)
pitched a five-hmer for hts first
maJor league shutout and Kan sas
C1ty blankel:l the oppostuon for the
first tune m \nore than a year
The Royal s became the last team
tn the maJors to have a shutout thts
season and had thetr fust smce June &lt;
22, 1998 agamsl Cmctnnalt
Mtke Fyhne (0-3) took the Joss
While Sox 9, Tigers 6
'
Cratg Wtlson and Chn s Stnglelon

three runs scored to keep up hts lOr· loss for the ,vtsumg Twms.
nd pace as Texas remamed unbeaten
Athletics 12, Orioles 2
m mne games agamsl Mmnesota lhts
Matt Stairs and Mtguel Tejada h tl
three-run homers , the thtrd stratght
season
Rodriguez smgled tn the first, game each had homered , "" Oakland
second, sixth and etghth mnings, and won tis fifth straight
Rookie Tim Hudson (6-1) pltchc d
is 19-for-28 in h1s last stx games
seven
sohd mmngs for Oaklanc !.
Juan Gonzalez went 2·for-4 wtth
three RBis to help the Rangers to whic,h won its e~hth · slra•gl\t at
thetr fifih vtctory tn thetr last SIX home to remain 2 f2 games behtn d
Toronto and pull w1lhtn a game Cl f
games
M1ke Morgan (12-6) got tbe wm Boston m the wtld-card race
Rtcky Bones (0-3) took the loss
and BenJ Sampson (3-2) took the

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Smglcton was 4· for-5 wtl~ three
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tor the Whtte Sox who have won
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John Snyder (9-6) gave up live
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earned htS 18th save

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'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

The Daily Sentinel

By. The Bend
.

.

A...

~I

1997, lo$

n. La. nd.ca..,s
VI '
cote

Ao~eles

{red'tors

.Qild.

Dear Ann Landers: When my $ 1,000 in hi s " alkt. Last night. he
, hu sband , "Darr yl," inheri t&lt;d a s ub- co mpla ined th at I " a; &lt;pen ding
slant ial amount o f money· seve ral . ' too mu ch o n grLICcnc s.
y ~ ars ago. I fi gured that we co ul d.
Yestt.:rday, the' girl !'! at ·lh~ .o ffi~c
at last. get rid o f the ha nd me do wn as ked me t \) Join tht.:m fl,r lunch.
f urnit urc and mismatched kitt: hc n and I had Lrouhk ..,L.I'.IJling tug~ th er
dishes a nd have som'e rea ll y nice :enough ..:hange f,JT the meal.
lhm gs in the h ouse. I mus t have
Da rr) I h a~ h :L'Il a goml hu ... b~ c ~ dreami ng.
han J , and I prnh.1hl! slh) U!Jn ' t
Darry l imrncdiat ely o pened a ~:o m p l a in . ~laybc I :-.lwuld a('~.· cp t
han l.. accoU nt in his name Lml) &lt;1 nd the fal'l th.ll the 1 n hnit ~1ncc i:-. h1..,
kept the inheri ted money . ~cpara t e . mo n c~ and k t it g l ) .H tha1.
He then stan cd to buy ·t.·xpens ivc
Me;u\\\ hil i.:. Ann . 1 a m !loCI.' I n ~
"tuv's" fo r h'i mself -- camcrJS. him . in ·' d i ffl.' r~.;·nt l1 ~h t . anJ I Jo n' t
C l\l~l pu te rs. gun s. too ls. ari d fina ll y like n . H L• ·Il l) IL\JH! l' r "L~l'lll' l1lo.. t: thL'
~~ htH\t . H l" ' nc\'cr c arrie~ k !&lt;os t ha n g(' n ~l"l l U ... . h1 ~ 1 11 ~- Jll .\11 I lll.lfl"l " ll.

.

.-

-

And P.S .. I still get cmbarra»cd
&gt;A he n co mpa ny co m&lt;S and ~ur
pl ac e looks like he'll. .. EMPIR E
STATE
DEAR EM.: It sounds as if
Darryl has bee n puttin g him se lf
and. hi s ind ulge nces -firs t a nd yo u
. are getting the left ove r crumbs.
Thi s is not wh at I co nsi drr :•n
equ a l partners hip. Ntllh ing will
L' hangc um tl· vou fi nd rhc c(1uragc
to as~ert yo ur':"el f a nd d(:tn a nd Ihat
he treat you more fairly . Yo u may
need the rapy to do thi s.
.
I urg ~: you to pay a'ncm i(ln 10
. what I ha\(' wri ue n It co ul d ma k ~
a huge differe nce in yo ur li fe .
Dear Ann Landers: I a ni " ri t· 1 n ~ in rc~pn n ~l' to the leth:r alw ut
pa~ nt'ul hrcast L:"Y~ l as pira t11m . · A
.~ urgcn n haJ b.:-en p~ r fo rmi ng as pi i' at io n ~ 1) 11 mL' for sc, cra l ~can. .
\\'h"-' n ,~ c mm"'"d w a nnthq 1\) \ \ n. I
. .: h.\ m!Cd !&lt;o U nze ~\ n .-. .
·

rhc Athens Soc ial Scc urit v otTi-l'r rnana i!CI EJw in P('tcrsn n
ret"d\· ~.;·J a phom.' cal i r~~cnti Y from an an:;.t ~-c~ I JI.'nL
'
The caller said that someone frum,Soc1al SL'CUI'll\ had ~.;' JIIcd
and :o;aiJ that a r~ pr..:: scntali vc .would' lik&lt;: to ma ke IJOihl? visi t
and help the . c all ~r increase her hc.ahh 'im,urmu..·e Protccu on. •
Pe r\:r~ u n said he irnm edi ;Hely knew .. omcthmg w as wru n ~
bl·cmse Social Security does (lOt sc nJ rcprl:se ntat ives door H.\
dO(ll' oflcring·hcaJth insurance.
V..'ith the permiss 1on of the horncnw ner he maJ c arTJ.ngemen ts w be at the home when the "~oci a l SC..: urity rc: prcscnta11 \'C .. \\·a,., to come L' alli ng. thi s .. reprcscntati \(··· wa.s ... elli ng pn \aJc ins uran ce and \\ hen confronted by Peterson admi tted ht:
had no ..:onnec ti on with Soc ial SecuriJ.V.
·
,
Tht: insurance agcn~ in thi S ca!S e is giVen lc~1ds from a phone
ha11~- ~ n Michi gan. He deve lops these leads by mak ing home v i s~
tts. Once he is i n si d~ a h'ome he is g·nerally 4bl c to se ll additional insurance es pec iall y if t.he trusted name 6( Soc tal Se~: uri - .
ty is somehow integrated into the sillcs scheme. Before thC "repre·se ntmi ve" left he theori zed that when someone from the phone
bank called the homeowner' the y might have sa1d t h~y we re
from Soc ial Security put he wasn't sure".
Pe te rson wants to alcn the public to companies that m is i n~
form in this 'manner. " Watch out for someone who say s ht: or she
is from Soc ial Sec uri ty a nd trieS to se ll you goods or scn·iccs.
said Peterson.
·
He suggested t.hat he b&lt; called, 592 -4448 . if a Soc ial Security recipient b~ li eves someone is mi sreprese ntin g himse lf as a
guve rnTT_lent or So'dal Sec urity emp loyee. He also aSked that res~
idents remembe r' that government employees carry proper ide ntificati on.

a

'

•

·,

.

~~reedy

person - not an equal partner

My new doctor asked , "Why are
you having thi s done'!" He to ld me
my hormone medicatio n could be
c a~ s in g the cysts to fill with Ouid.
I was shoc ked..
The surgeon referred inc to a
gyneco logist. wh o s;witched my
medication. 'l'he swe lling subsided
in a maner of days. and my bre asts
we m bad to no rm al size . That was
~1 x years ago. and I hav~ n ' t had
any prohlems since .
Ple ase tell the women who are
su ffering from nuid relent ion tO
nsJ.. thei r doc tors ,abo ut changing
hormone medi cation. -- MARGIE
IN TEXAS
. DEAR MARGIE: You did , and
I thank ';o u. Mea nwhile. it ' s
otlways a gOod idea to get a secorld ·
opini on and maybe a third .
Dea.- Ann Landers: Than~ you
f~, r pr intin g the lett er from ''Un sure
111 Baltimore. " I am a mother of a

child with Anent ion Deficit · are with them. .. LAKELAND ,
Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD ). FLA.
DEAR LAKE: Thank you, on
When I started dating my husband ,
behalf
of all family members who
he thought I was spoiling my son
and that the boy jusr needed more are living with ADD and ADHO
discipline . He could not under- children . They need compassion
stand why I would praise the child and understanding, and you have
for being well behaved three days provided it.
"A Collecti on of My Favorite ,
out of seven.
I finally persuaded him to c ome · Gems o f the Day" is the perfect lit·
to counseling with us. He was sur- tic gift for that special someone
prised to learn that the boy was not who is impossible to buy for. .
Se nd a self addressed, long,
a spoiled brat (his term ) but that he
bu
siness
size enve)ope and a check
had • an underlying disorder ,that
was causing the difficuh behavip r. or mo ney order [or $5 .25' (this
With the help of medicatio n and incl udes postage and handling ) to:
coun seling. our lives are much bet - . Collec ti on. c/o Ann landers. P.O .
ter. You were right to sugge &gt;t that ·Box II 562. Chi cago. Ill. 60611"Baltimore "
enc 9 urag e
he r 0562 (in Canada. $6.25 ).
To find out more about Ann
boyfriend to bec ome bencr
Lande rs and read her past ,.
info.rmed about ADD.
11 will help them work ~og'e the r&gt; column s. vi sit the Creawrs Sy ndi •
we h
page
at
as a famil y to ·understand how to ca te
www.c
reators.com.
live with this di s·order. My prayers

F~n~t-ions of mis:sing spleen do not have to be replaced

S.S. manage( alerts
· to misinformation

I

Page6
Wedneaday, Auguat 4, 1999

Hubby's inheritance turning him into

I'

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',I."

concern. The absence of a spleen
, results in no significant additional
•' 'ro
health concern s.
The reason that a person Gan do
without his or her splc.en is that its
functi ons arc either not esse ntial or
can be take n on by othe r body
organs. In the first category . the task
Jphn C. Wulf, D.O.
~~:::.,,.i"'
of removing worn out blood cell s
Associate Professor
con- ot
from cirCulation is not effectively
of Family · _M_e_d_i_c_in_e_....;:;;;;:;;;;;;..;g..,;;•;;~;;i;;;ne;.'h_i•__.
picked up by other ,organs, but it 's
not crucial and doesn't cause any
Questi on: One uf my friend s was · instance. an unl)elted driver in an serious health consequence. In the
in a car acc id~nt. ·Hi s spleen .~as . auto acc ident can be thrown forward second category, the body 's natural
rcmo \'ed. and now he is takmg: shuts and , thereby. strike his or her built-in reduQdancy allows a number
in hi s stomac h. Arc the shots to abdomen on lh e steering wheel with of other organs 10 compens,ate for
replace thc·duty of the spken ·•
a force s.uffi c tent to injure the the spleen 's 'role in warding off
Answer: T!&gt;e spleen is an organ
spleen. The rich n&lt;lwork .of blood infection. Other parts of the immune
that is located on the left side of the vessel s in the organ make such an system- the thymus. lymph nodes.
body deep in the abdomen . It serves, injury to it seriou s - perhaps even bone marrow and clusters of other
several imp ortant. but not c ssc~tia l.
life threatening .
lymphoid cells - - are spread
functiOn s. The primary function . of
When such injuries cause biced- throughout the body and also perthe s pl e~ n is to remove old bl ood
ing in the spl een , it may be neces .. form this vital task. These other
cells from circulati on. and it al so sary - as il was in your friend's si(
parts of lhe immune. system can
serves as part of the body 's immune uatibn - to re move the damaged · increase theit activity enough ~o
system. It also stores a certain quan · ·o rgan . This surgery can stop the nearl)l compensate for the loss of the
tity of bl ood .
internal hemorrhage and directly spleen.
Fortunate ly, bec au se of i.'·' toea", save the individual's life, .unless
l don't .know what type of medi·
ti on, a minor bump or brui se to the there are complications due td dam- cine your friend is receiving by
abdomen is unlikely to damage the age to other internal organs . and , injection into his "stomach.'' Shots
spl een . The spleen can . howe ver. be essential structures. However, once . are not actually given into lhe stom·
damaged in acc idents that cause sig- the individual recovers from his or ach, which is that hollow "commamficrint trauma to the abdomen . For her injuries, there -is little reason for__ ·

with shots

shaped .. organ where your lunch
goes. hut arc in stead given into the ·
tissue making up the · wall o f the
abdome n. Thi s is principally muscle
and fat . Two d ru~ s arc usually given
inio the abdominal wall, insulin and
heparin.
In sulin is ~ se d by diabc!i cs to
regulate the ir blood sugar. II is pos·
s ible tha t yo vr friend also dam aged
hi s panc reas in the aulo accident and
has consequently become a diabetic .
It is more likely, however, that he is
USing heparin to prevent the formalion of blood clots. This lrealment
may be necessary for a short time
after a Serious accident like he had .
If this is the case, he will have
stopped. needing these shots long
before thi s column is published. ·
Instead of worrying aboul your .
friend , ask him about his condition
and Wh~l YOU Can dO tO help him 3S
he re gain s hi s health . I'm sure that
he will be pleased that you are inter·
csted in his well-being .
"family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
Athens, Ohi~ 4570i.

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

Evening meals
The
Nutritional
Senior
Program evening meal will be
served on Tuesday and Thursday
with serving from 4:45 to 6'00 .
This ·evening meal is intended to
provide a nutritional meal at a rea·
sonable cosl; a suggested donation Honey Glazed Chicken
on Rice
for the evening meal is $4.00. The
public is invited.
Broccoli with Cheese

5

10

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Mixed VegetablaS
Bread
Creamy Frurt Salad

Cole Slaw

TUESDAY

Roll
Peach Crisp

'

Sweet Potatoes

Seven Layer Salad

Green Bean Casserole
· Biscoit

Roll

1:

Cherry Pine~;~pple Pie

lemon.lush

Fish and Shrimp
lyonnaise Potatoes

Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy

ColeSlaw

Buttered Peas

Hush Puppies
Carrot Cake

Biscuit
Cheesecake with

J

Baked Porl&lt;elle
Meshed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans
Breed ·
Blushi Pears

with all the fixings
Macaroni Salad
Baked Beans ·

Pineapple Upside

Home Made Ice Cream
and Cake

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SEP.T.

31
Meat loaf

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

Scalloped Potatoes

Tossed Salad

Green Beans

Garlic Bread

Roll

Jello.Cake

2

Banana Slices and Vanilla

..
•

, A blood pressure teslmg wtll
be conducted Tuesday, August 17
from 4:30 to 5:00. '

.

,August activitl~s
.'

FIVE GENERATIONS -Tyler Keith Cowdery, being held here by
his father, Jeremy Keith Cowdery of Newark is .t he fifth generation .
· In the family of Faye Stover of Guysville, second from right, Tyler's
great-great grandmother. His grandmother is Diana Faye Jones
Mayo of Vienna, W.Va. and his great-grandmother is Shirley Ann
Jones of Tuppers Plains, second from 'left.

End of summer program offered by
Black Diamond Girl Scouts Council
An e nd -o f-s ummer progrilm is bein g o ffered h)· the Black Diamor\J Girl Scout Council for girls who are not yet gi rl scouts. hut
interested in joining, at th·c Curleton. School in Syrncu.se.
The li r; t scS&gt;ion will he held Thursday from 6:10 to 8:30p .m. and
.wi ll wn u ny.e over. th e next six wee ks. There will he no meeti ng the
wct:k of the M cig~ County Fair. howl! ver.
Gtrls wi ll do a vari ety of ac ti viti es, such :iJol karn all about rainbows. do some Indian Lore programs, a:-:. well as learn ahhut coal min ing. One day the girl s wi ll ge t a c hance to learn the Girl Scout's e ig ht
bns ic ould nor skll b , such as ,kni fe safety, ty in g · knots and buildin g
ti rSt.
The cmt of this special program will be the $7 mcmherslt ip fcc to
j oin lhL' 'ic_oub . All nt hcr .~.:us l s incurred by hav in g the pn.lgra m '' ill he
paid t&lt;Jt by the Blac k Di amond Girl Sco ut Council. Big be nd Gi rl
Scf1uts. a nd donation s from loca l troops.. [nform at ion on fi nancia l
assisl&lt;UH.:c i., avail able uron req u c ~ L.
Those interested m enro ll ing Lheir dau g ht ~ rs should go t!) the Carle ton Schoo l' Thursday for sign up. Anyon'c wilh questions ~.:on c crni ng
the. program can call Brenda Ncutzl ing at 992-541 8.

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The Meigs ~ounty Seni.or meet this month due to the coun ty
Citizens. Center ~is open Monday fair.
through Friday rrom 8:00 a.m. to
' Thursday, August 26 - · lhe
4:30 p.m . Reguhirly scheduled
. activities are quilting, sewing, Caring and Sharing Support Group
cards, games, and pooL Weekly will meet from 1:00 p.m. - 2:30
activities are line dance team prac· p.ni. with Lenora Leifheit, RNC,
lice wilh Pauleue Harrison, instruc-. · Coordinator. Rhonda Dailey. RN,
tor. every Monday from I :00 p.m.· Veterans Memorial Hospital, ):Viii
. · 2:00p.m. and knilling circle every. speak about "Ethical Dilemmas and
Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.·noon. lhe Chronically Ill Patient."
'
'
The Exercise Room is open daily
from 8:00 a.m .-4:30 p.m. for pea- .
Thursday, A11gust 26 · the
monthly birthday party will be
pie to use the exercise equipment.
A representative from the Athens ·held, seniors with birthdays during
Social Secu.rHy Office will be at the the month will be honored. 'Joe
Cenler on Wednesday,August II &amp;
McCloud will present a program of
25 from 10:00 a.m.-11 :00 a.m.
gospel music at J..1 :00 a.m.
,
' Wednesday, August 11 • the
The annual trip to the Ohio
Stroke Survivors Support Group Stale Fair is Saturday, August 14.
wilt meet at 1:00 p.m. with Lia Seals are av-ailable at a cost , of
Tipton, OT, Holzer Rehabilitation, $28.00 for travel by. ~torcoach
Coordinator.
and fair aQmi sston .
Thursday, August 19 ·Senior
There was · such a large
Citizens Day al the Meigs County
resp9hse
to ·the September 30 lrip
Fair: Transportation will ,be providto
Cincinnati
for a Fun Lunch
ed from the Center for !hose want
Cruise
on
BB
Riverboats
!hal addi·
ing to auend the fair.
·
tiona!.
tickers
were
ordered
and a
Thursday, August ·19 - the
second molorcoach ·chartered. Final
monthly blood pressure clinic will
·
·
payment for the !rip . is due
be held from 9:30a.m. • II :00 a.m .
.September
15 as there are several
.
Friday, August 20 - The
people
on
the stand-by list. Call
Arthritis ~upport Group will not
Alice Wamsley, at 992·2161 for ,
more information about these (rips.

Health aging
and the
millennium

Join us at the Me.igs ·
Multipurpose Center on Thursday. ·
October 14, 1999 from noon-3:00
p.m. for the Fifth Annual Health
Information Fair.
New features this year include:
lTai Chi Demonstration by
Ramona Campion
•Herbal Sage' Tree Co~j~pany with
' Maureen Burns
•Breath of Life Tech (a machine to
filler pollutauts from your home)
There will also be screenings
for cholesterol, blood sugar, body
fat a naly s i ~, and blood pressure.
Be sure to attend to find oulthe
latest information and also win
some great door prizes. W¥VK
(formerly ",VMPO) will broadcast
live form the health fair.

Cole Slaw

,,

Bread

.

~

Purple Plums
Cook1e

25

30
Sloppy Joe
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Com and Lima Beans
Bun
Strawberries
Cake

oo

-

Hani Salad
Baked Beans
Macaroni Salad
Breed
Cantaloupe

27

Calico Bean Casserole
Carrol Ra1~1n Salad

I

-

-

'

83nana Slices in

Bread
Strawberry Hash
· Van tlla Wafers

Red Gelatin

Sepl1

Sept.2

Sept.3
Chicken Cacciatore
Mashed Potatoes
Broccoli/Carrots
and .Cauliflower

Shepherds Pie
CuCt.Jmbers/Onions/T omatoes

Bread
Grape Juice
Rocky Road Puddina

Pineapole in Orange Gelatin

HEALTH
NEWS

.. '

Pain Management:
· ·Patient's Bill 9f Rights
(NAPS}-Pain is one of the most
common reasons people seek medical attention . Recent surveys indi·
.cati that nearly 34 .million adults
· visit their doctors, at least once a
year, for the tr~atment of pain.
Studies have shown that up to 42
percent or cancer "patients do not
receive adequate p'ain ll)edieation.
.Many people with cancer or
chronic medical co~ditions experience moderate to severe pain that .
could be inappropriately treated
or undermedicated. Pain can have
a negative effect on a .person's
health and their quality of life,
resulting in needless suffering.
· emotional distress. loss of productivity and possibly slo\ver recovery
from illness. irijury and disease. ·
If you are taking pain medica·
lions, the California State Board
. of Pharmacy urges you to talk
with a pharmacist to learn more
about the medicines you are taking and the possible side effects
you may experience from them.
· When pharmacists, physicians
and other health care providers
participate in open and frequent
· communir.ation with their patients
it helps to insure that pain medications are accomplishing the results
for which they are intended.
This communiCation process
helps your pharmacist manage
and monitor your pain medication
therapy. In talking with you, your
pharmacist can carefully explain
dosage regimenB, discuss potential
side effects and how to minimize
those side effects llO that•you will
obtain the best possible pain relief.
To help you and your family
better manage your pain therapy
and to help you develop a rapport
with your pharmacist,· a patient's
bill of rights bali been established

'

The guest speaker for the Caring and Sharing Support Group July meeting was Kathy Thomas, RN,
PreAdmission Nurse Manager, The Charles E. Holzer, Jr. M.D. Surgery Cent.er. Ms. Thomas talked
aboui the new unit at Holzer Medical Center .und exp.lained the sen: ices available to surgery patients.
by th~ California Pharma~y Board.
Here is some information deseribing wh.at you ca,rt , expect when
talking with a pharmacist about
your medications:
• You have the,tight to considerate and respectful' care.
• You have the right to current and understandable informs·
tion concerning you:r medication ,
therapy and treatment.
.
• You are entitled to 1dl scuss
and request information from
your pharmacist relating to your
medication therapy, the possible
side effects and drug interactions.
• You have the right to make
decisions about your medication
treatment and to refuse a recom'mended medication treatment or
plan of care.
• You have the tight to expect
that all recorqs and discussions
pertaining to your medication ,
therapy will be confidential , ·and
that pharmacists will emphasize
that confidentiality to other people working with them in the
pharmacy.
·
• You have the right to compe"'tent medication counseling from
your pharmacist to help you
understand the medication s_ y_o u

''Serving Southern Ohio for over 23 years"
· Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chu x ·
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding Pumps

Saliabury Steak
"lashed Potatoes
Spinach
. Bread . · Cake

Taco Salad
Bread
Tropical Mi~ Fruit
Shertlet
Cookie

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Lift Chairs

Vegetable Beef Soup
Pimento Cheese
Bread
Wa ldorf Salad
Brownie

26

.

28

Senior Center

..

20

19

Ch1cken Pot P•e

.

26

Peas and Carrots
Roll

'

Wiener.with Meat Sauce
Lycronaise PotatoeS
Baked Beans
Bun
Watermelon•

·•

Chicken Patty
Augratin Potatoes
Brunei Sprouts
Bread
Peaches

'

Grilled Hamburger

Junior and Rita White will be
playing old time favorite music on
Thursday, August 5 al 5:30.

Peaches w1th Orange Sauce

. .

18

24

Sausage Patty on
Biscuit
Hash Brown Potatoes
Orange.Juice ·
· Applesauce

.:

24 BEACH PARTY

Pudding on GrahamCracker

13
Meal Loaf
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Peas and Carrots
Bread ·

-

Strawberry Topping

Down Cake

Ham Loaf
Sweet Potatoes
Cauliflower
Bread
Applesauce

23

Por1&lt; and Dressing

Mashed PotatoeS &amp; Gravy

-

12
Macaroni and Cheese
Creamed Tomatces
Cole Slaw
Breed
Apple Cherry Cnsp

19

17

Oven Fried Chicken

11

17

Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Broccoli
Breed
' Apricots

over Noodles

Red Gelatin
Cookie

Honey Bae Amb!osia
• 11

Beef Tips in Gravy

Ham loaf

Bread

•

Fru1t Cockla111n

•

''

Oven Baked Fish
Skin on Potato Wedges
Baked Beans
Btead
Cantaloupe

Spaghettl wrth Meal Sauce
Tossed Sa led
Garlic Bread

Soup Beans and Ham
Penny Carrot Salad
Lyonnaisa Potatoes
Cornbread
' .
Pineapple

Baked Steak in
Mushroom Gravy
Meshed Potatoes
Green Beans .

-

12

10

5

Enjoy A Nutritious
Meal at your ·senior Center
•

THURSDAY

'·

AUGUST MENUS

•

Everything
for the ·
Patient
at
Home

MasteCtomy Supplie s
· Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipmen\
Ten s Unit s &amp;
Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
Firs t Aid Supplies
Dressings

are- taking and how to use these
medicatiOns cOrrectly.
Patients have responsibiliti.es;
too-You ar.e responsible for providing ypur pharmacist with information about ail the medi cations
you are ta\ling, both prescription
and non~p~scription , as well as a
history of your d f ug and food
allergies.
.
The collaborative nature of
health ca re .requires that you
and/or your family fully participate
in managing your pain medication
therapy. The effectiveness of th e
care 'You ri:ceive and your satisfac- ·
lion with your course of drug ther·

apy depends, in part, on your communication with your health care
providers and your active involvement in your t reatment.
"By focusin g the same type of
widespread public a-ttention on
the importance of increasing med·
ication Compli8nce· a s is' given to
food labeling and health fitnes s,
we have a better-informed patieht
· population, achieve more effecti ve
h'e alth care and s ave v aluabl e
health cafe resources," says Mari lyn Shreve, Chair of the Californi a

Board's Consumer Educati on and
COmmunication Committee and
Editor of Health Notes .

&amp;C.

e'flelers
~
~212
.

WE HONOR

.

EAST MAIN ST

POMEROY. OH

'

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GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS :

·992 -3785

BOWMAN'S
HOME OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

MOIII'IT&amp;L aiD I ·

PATIINT LifT I

WHIIL CMAI .. I

. OXYQIN

Seroi11g The Co11m11wily Willt Care For 15 Year.•

SALES, RENTALS
&amp; REPAIRS
ELEC:TRIC WHEEI,.CHAIRS
BATH SAFETY EQUIPMENT
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
HOSPITAl BEDS
LIFT CHAiRS
STAIR GUDES
OSTOMY
DIAPERS &amp; CHUXS

HOME OXYGEN

.

24 Hr Emergency Serv ice
HPSp11,11~.1ry

lhcr,,rw,t On SL1f1

BY&amp;.
V\sl\ 9ur .

Stop

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
&lt;t t6-2206

1480 Jackson Pike

Gallipolis, OH
" ust Minutes om Holzer"

Tull

Fr·•·•·

1-HOO- I 1.';-2206

showroom
MEDICARE

&amp; MEDICAID ACC

Op erated Lh·: 1-"" wU Bowman • Mary Aura Bowmun • Dan Duwman

70 PINE ST. • AT THIRD • GALLIPOLIS

�I
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P11ge 8 • The Dally SentlllfJI

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 4, 1999

VVedneaday,Auguat4,1999

Business Services
,, , ·az " ......................

Grand and reserve miscellaneous 4-H judging results posted

JEREMY ROWE
BENEFIT HELD - A total of
$5,500 was raised In ·a Tri·Coun·
ty Benefit Run held July 10 to .
help with medical expenses
incurred by Jeremy Rowe of
Middleport who was seriously
burned in a -welding accident at
Meigs High School.

'

Seminar planned
resource
· for human
.
.
professionals
Human resou rce professional s
· are invited to attend a two-day inten-

sive ,seminar at the fourth Annual
Ohio U niversity Huma n Reso urce

Summer In s tit;.~te sched uled for
August IS and 19.
From labor law updates to
~ec~itment

anQ retention 10ols in

the public and non-profit sectors. the
institute offers a professional and

practical update for HR practition-

ers.
Topping the list of speakers is
Harvand University 's Jill Weaver,
competency and perfonmancc manageme~t specialist, and G.Ross
Bridgeman, employment law attorney and e~pert in tenn inati on,
tracts and discriminiluon

co n~

For registration infonmation. call
the Institute for Local Government
Admintstration and Rural Development (ILGARD) at (740) 593-9797.

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Renowned artist to
speak.at Dairy Barn
'

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For those ihlerested ·in

Catherine Chang Liu, a n ation~
ally acclaimed arttst , ts to speak

. Sunday at the Dairy Barn Southeas tern Ohio Cultural Arts Center. She is the juror for the Ohio
Society's

champion; Joseph McCall. rtstrve Chelsea Young, honorable mention.
cham pion .
Becomi ng Money Wise: Jessica
Tobacco and You: Meghan Boyles, grand champion; Becky
Avis, grand champion; John Cook. Taylor, reserve champion; Melissa
reserve champion; Tam Rose. hon- House and· Christina Miller, honororable mention.
able mention .
Alcohol Decisions: Julie Spaun.
You and Your Money: Whitney
grand champion; Meghan Avis and Ashley, grand champion; Robbie
Bethany Cooke. reserve champw n. Weddle. reserve champion; KimSetr-Determined: Melissa Kirk, berly Ritterheck, honorable mengrand champion ; Elizaheth Bird. --tion.
. Adventu~ in Home Living:·
reserve champt on ; Manhew Salser
and Mike Salser. honorable men- Morgan Werry. grand champion ;
Jessica Ju-stice. reserve champion; .
. tion .
And My World 1: ·John Cooke. Bethany Cooke and Brinany
Ha uber. hon orable mention .
grand champion.
Furniture' . and Woodwork
And My World II: Bethany
Recycling: Erin Gerard, grand
Natausha Arnon , grand c hampio n. C"oke. grand champion;
Rachel
Marshall ,
Mysteries of Microwave: Whit- champi on;
Carrie Myers, reserve ·Champion;
reserve
c
hampto
n
.
ney
Thoene.
grand
champion;
Jessi·
Laura Bailey · and Lindsey House r,
Designing Interiors ~ Andrea
ca Boy les, reserve champion. Luke
honorable mention.
Tedford. grand champion.
Guinea Pig: Sarah Ch frord. Lowerv. ho norable mention .
Collectibles: Bethany Cooke,
La~ndry for .Beginners: Tyler
graitd champiOn .
Cat 1: Chelsa Dilcher. grand Johns-on,. grand champion; · Morgan grand champion ;. Ryan Wachter,
champion.
Whi tney
Thoene. \Verry, reserve champion; Swcey reserve c hampion ; Meghan Avis,
re&amp;e rve champi on. Ashley Gibbs Ervin and Li ndsey Houser, honor- . John Cooke, Ty ler Johnson and
Tara Rose. honorable mention.
and Sarah Wachter. honorable men - able menti on.
Laundry - Advanced: Andrea
Rockets Away: Lu~e Lowery,
lion .
honorable mention.
Cat Z: Andrea Tedford. grand Tedford. grand champi on.
Science of ,Flight: Juhn Cooke,
Living and Learning with
c hampi on; Jc ssicn Taylor. re'Sc rvc
Children : Nicol&lt; Jones. gra nd grand champion; Luke Lowery,
champion.
Cats 3: Sara Camm arata. grand ~.:hamp10n. · Kay Willis. re sC r'v.e rese rve champi on.
You and Your Bicycle: Heather
c hamp1on ; Betha ny Cook.e , reserve chJmpi o n.
~1ore Living and Learning
Jones. grand c hampion .
champion.
Magic of Electricity: John ·
Small Animals: Sara Cammara- with Children: Lindsay Bolin .
ta. grand champion; Je ss ica Arnott. grand champion. Meg han Avts : Bentz, grand champion; Andrew
reserve champ1on.
Bisse ll . rese rve champion; Derek
rese rve champion .
First Aid: Sani Mansfield .
Teens Lea•n About Children: Taylor. honorab le mention .
investigating
Electricity:
grantl champi on; Sarah House r. Ashley Colwe ll. grand champi on;
reserve
cham pio n;
Natausha Arny Lee . reserv~ champion; C hristin~ Miller, grand champion.
Arnott. Meghan Avis. John Cooke. Bethany Cooke. honorable men. Rope: Meghan Avis, grand
Andrea Grueser and Amanda Win- tion .
champi on; Brandon Werry. reserve ·
.
Family
History Treasure .champion.
don. honorable mention.
· Looking Good: Rachael Morris, Hunt: S~ra Mansfield, grand ·chamLawn &amp; Garden Power Equip·
grarid champion .
pion ; Ben Crane . reserve champion ; ment: Tyler Johnson, giand chamKeeping Fit: Amy Lee, grand Meghan Avis, Enn Tay lor and pton .
1

annual

JUried exhibition , "Watercolor
Ohio :" The exhibition will open
at the Dairy Barn Sept. 18 .
Liu will speak tn ' the Dairy
Barn classroom and present a
. slid,e show. The program will ~un
, from 2 to 4 p.m. AdmisSion is
free .
.
•
Watercolor Ohi o ' 99 offers a
variety of oreative wate.rcolor
approaches using wate~:- so luable
media such as acrylic, inks and
casein. Tw o hundred and fifteen
. artists submitted 376 slides from
· which 88 works•were se!.ccted.
Barn· Raisin ' will offer an ideal
chance to ·check out Watercolor
Ohio '99 along wil~· the other fe stivities. Th,ere's only one $3
admission to both events. .

-

.

'

reserve champi on.

Brandon Fitch. reserve champion;
David Barnes, Jacob Barnes and
Nathan Cook. honorable mention.
Fishiaa
the utci'!Mdiate:
Josh Rathburn, grand champion;
Brandon Werry, reserve champion;
Kelby Brown, honorablr mention.
Keeping Fi~b Alive: Jordan
Pierce, grand champion; Tara Rose,
reserve champion: Kenneth Ryan
Barnet~onorable mention.
Safe
s
f Guns: Derek
Rou~h . grand c ampion; Robbie.
Weddle, reserve champion; Jacob
Hunter and Charles Lawrence, hon-

printed only as space penmits and
cannot be guaranteed to be .printed a specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. Service awards, work
in the fellow craft degree .
THURSDAY
POMEROY ~ Junior and Rita
White ol Kyger to entertain al
Me1gs Senior ..Citizens Center,
Thursday, 5 ;30 p.m. No ·admission charge.

,,

RUTLAND - Rutland Bice ntennial Commiuee , Thursday,
7~ 30 p.m . at the civic center.

9 a.m. in the audito.rium , se•,erllh
and eighth graders.

'

c...

•

"

.

court.

The. Court Is located

.

.

Probate Court, Courthouse,

2nd Floor, 100 E. Second
St., Pomeroy, OH 45769.
You

are

peuona

.

one

of the

entitled

to

administer decendent'o
ottate, ond II you wleh to be
conoldered lor appointment
to do eo you muet opply to
thle Court. II you do not
apply, It will be coneldered

&lt;

th1t ,you renounce your

right ' to odmlnloter the
eotete. The Court may
appoint any aultable arid
competent peraon to
admlnleter the

do eo.' Even II you decline
·
appointment yourallll, lfyou · =·
kn~w of any re..on why thlt
::
above eppllcent lo not
eultebte or comr-tont, you ~
ehould app.. r and Inform

-=

lhlt Court.

110

.

Exploring Our Insect World 1:
Da,•id Barnes. grand champion;
Jessica Arnott , rese rve champi on.
Corri: Aubrie Kopec, grand
champion.
From Seed to Flower: Becky
Taylor. gran9 .champion; Rachael

.\'

,.·"~"·,··&gt;••·-·········.···

FrH&amp;#IIWN

V.C. YOUNG ·fll
992·6215

.

Pomtroy, Ohio

WICKS
HfiULinG InC.
We Deliver
Limes tone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt ,
Agricultural Lime,
· Muk!. , Top Soil
(Low Rates)

740~992~3470

22 yro. Local

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

DEPOYSAO

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Pl,ul"blng
Free Est/metes

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
~
I
· Case-IH Parts
Dealers .

.,Joseph Jacks

. 740-992·2_068

KCB
EXCAVATING
Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
Services •..
Site Prepa~atiop
Septic Systim:Js
RODNEY KELLER
Owner/Operator

1·740-985-3949
2 mo pd.

:'HARTWELL
.
STORAGE.
.

ST. AT; 7 ·
10X 10~0.
10X20 $60.

'992-1717
Dora 't Need A 'Big One

Call A Little One

1

992·5455
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
. Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning .
Painting

3/11199TFN

FREE ESTIMATES

..

949-2168
4/2 TFN

Dump Truck Strvke
:. Gravel • Limestone
• Fill Dirt • Etc.

74D-247-4292

Call 614-843-5426

2623.

Fr ee Wool1. NeedS Spil t , 1915
Chatham Street. Galhpolts.

R1ck Pea rso(l Auction Company.
full l ime auctioneer. complete
aUc110n
service
Licensed
r66 .0hio &amp; West Virgmla . 304·

Stop In And See
·. Steve Riffle
Sales Repre s entative
Larry Schey

Wedemeye(s Autt1on Service .
GaiMpolis. OhiO 740-379-2720.,

Pupp•es To A Good Home , 740·
245·9754
Red . female . full blooded Oob81·
man . 18 months old , 740·9 85 ·
4288.
Registered fema le Da lmatian . 3
)'ears old. bro w n male Chow. 4
years ow:! ; 740· 949·26t9.

r-

60

750 East State Street
Athens, 'Ohio 45701

n3-S785 0&lt; 304·113·,..1.

Male Chocolate Lab w1tt1 l1ttle bll
Beagle, 74().992-6~.

Phone (740) 593-6671

Lost and Found

Fou nd· sandy blonde Cocker
Span1e1 w1th green collar, 1nendly,
740·742-2526
1

90

Now Renting

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

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

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

33795 Hiland Rfl.
p6,neroy, Oh'i'o

Mon - Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

.'

.

740~992-52!2

(740) 742-8888 .

7/ 23/99 1 mo. pd

• New Homes
. • Garages
• Complete
Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
. ESTIMATES

Su-.aal Home
Conatluctlon
.New Construction &amp;

Romodetlng·Kitchtn Cablneta
VInyl Sldlng-Roota·Decks·

' An11ques . tot:~ pr1c~s paid . R1ver·
me AntiQues . Pomeroy, Oh iO,
Russ ¥o or ~ own er , 740·992·

252t;

Free Estimates
740-742-.Ull
Bryara Reeves
Susa11 R eevelt

Tour

Now

25 yr; exper.

THE APPLIANCE MAN
985·3561

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

740·985·4180

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

• \\'e "·n'kl' all make' • l ,ul lppli;t lllT'

\It- 'rll

1999 HONDA FOR~MAN
. 450 ES 4X4 GIVEAWAY

7 40·339-4160
Fr~e

estimates

New Homes • .Vinyl
Sidmg • New Garages
•Replacement Windows
•Room Additions ,..
•Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Emerger~cy

Squad, l11 corpornled.

Tickets; $1 O.QO Donaiion Each/1000 Maximum

Fot· 'Mort• lnfo nnalion Ca ll

1 ~-740 ~ 541 ~400 1

WILLIS'
WATER HAULING .
SEAMLESS ·
Wells, cisterns, pools,
GUTTERS
.Siding &amp;St~l/il trees, lawn &amp; gardens
1·800-311 ~3391
Free Estimates
·Contractors Welcome
Albar~y, Ohio
7/27199 2 mo. pd .

The-Water-Man
740-742-2080
7. 16199 1 mo pd

Be Paid In Advance.
DEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before !he ad
I• to run. Sunday
'edltl_on ·2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
·10:00a.m. Saturday. .

8/6th, 7th, 2993 S.B. 141, Cente·
nary, Kids Clothes . Toys . Hou se·
hold llem s. Free Pictu re ,Window
&amp; Canmng Jars.
Movmg Sale : Friday AiJgust 6th ,
Saturday 7th, 309 l/ine 1 S treet .
Crown C1ty, Ohio, Wa shilr, Drye r.
Tools .. T.V.. Couch. Cha ir. Pan s.
Dishes. Etc. ~

Thursday. Fnday. Saturday. 8· 4.
Ka nauga, Behmd Rayburn's Mar·
ket &amp; S.E. EQuipment, ,@ Foster's
Tra 11er flark 15, Glassware!
Househola
Items . C lo thes .
Beanies . Cardloglide . Couch.
Rocker. Morel

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
zarene Church in Chesler. l&lt; 1d's
clothes and lois more .

All Yard Salu Mu1t Be Paid In
ilodvance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before tl'le ad 11 to run ,
Sunday &amp; Monday edlllon -

Local CaJl ·

o r cuntul.:t any Pomeroy Stfuud .\lemhe r

LIXI!&gt;m Friday.

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

August 6·7 , 9am -4pm . Rus sell
res1dence, Wolfe P&amp;n Road, Po·
me roy.
Big garage sale· first time In 7
years! August Ei· 7. 8am-5pm. At 7
tiypass TR 207. Pomeroy, Oh10
Glass, lurmlure , toOls and m1sc.

JONES'

Garage Sale! 1 di~ only. Friday
August 6tl'l , B·". rai n or sh ine I
34 1 Rulland S!reet. Middleport. 1

TREE SERVICE
.top .

• "'\'tlt1l
• siut1l~

• p.et'noval

Gt'"o'"g

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

.,

Free

(No Sunday Calls)

$2 ,000 WEEKLY! Ma iling 40 0
BrOChlJres ! Sa!ISfact lo·n Guar·
anteed! Postage &amp; Suppl ies Pro·
videO I Ru sh Se lf- Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO. DEPT

8/5199 · Don F1tch. Sumn er Ad .
Home Interior, GravAiy mower.
9am·6pm. Rain c.3.ncels.

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

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992•7643

,.'Gallipolis
' &amp; VIcinity

8/5 &amp; 816. fourth hous e past Na-

1/22/TFN

REYNOLDS

,

.

SfJOII.tlOred by dae

BISSELL BUilDERS,
INC.

110

SatUrday 8·5. Bike. 011:1 Oil Lamps.
Household, Books, Cl ot hes ,
More t Linwood Off Lake Rio
Grande

pari' \\Ill &lt;ll'liltr
'i l61'i lliglq l!i!lgt' Ktl .. lon g Boll om . ( lhio

Pome roy Volunteer

· Yard Sale

i

"I'M BACK" .

Connection

Free Estimates

70

4 Fam1lies : Fnday Only, 9·5 , 114

·7/23 1mo.

Ken You'ng Former Owner of

· (toll free)

'

AU Yard Sales Mu1t

Concrete
740-742·8015
877·353·7022

(304)675-4815 .

Feed &amp; Show Sup,plies

'

large yard sale· Salurday &amp; Sun·
day. No ctoth 1ng , rebu ilt co nces·
s1on tra.11er. 14' alumi num boat &amp;
trailer. car dolly, 1996 Jeep Cher·
okee large hobby horse. Ander·
son windows . lots or m1sC, l oo nu·
merous tq mention . Localed be·
hrnd Mason Fam tly Restaur ant.
Mas on . WV Fol low signs Cash
no checks.

orw

HONEY BEA·· FESTIVAL
August,14th
Mlddlepqrt 12·6 pm
Jo~eaturi11g

Live Bee Beard Demonstrations
Bee and Bear Costume Contest, Honey Bear
Raffle , Crafts, Demonstrators, Sidewalk Sales,
Farm Market, Wit;dow Displays , Calliope Musia,
Model Railroad Display, Food , Live Entertainment
and More. Information Call .740-992·4197

MYERS ltAVING

Henderson, 'NV
': We Do•••
· • Parking Lots
· · • Basketball Courts
. · ·Driveways
• Grading Work
• Hauling Stone
(304) 675-2457 Olflct

(304) 674·3311 CoD Ph.
FRBE ESTIJ\IATES
Cont. MWV003506

DOZER WORK
R.::asenable R l lf'.'

':~~·~;·~~;;:;~~~·
R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10/ 25!96 t!n

CREDIT PROBLEMS???

B

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

WORRYING!!!
No Eml!arraasment. ..
· You're Treated with Reapecll
.
.
Call Now for Instant Approvalll..

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

UldiMR. FORD
(740) ~HIOO n

/1 Wll'f 8t MtiM To Yaw [ an
You Tunc frt TO 1M 8eu 8uyl: .
! fn 1M Clout( lrdt

~

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005
STAAT

Personals
DATING TO NIGHT!

Have F.un Meeting EIIQibl e Stn·
gre~ In Your Area Call For More
I nfor mation 1-800 · AOMANCE .
Ext. 9735.
'
Start Dalln g Ton ightl Have fun
playing the Ohio Dating Game. 1•
BOO· ROMANCE . elltens ion 9681 .

30 Announcements
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson , Athens
740·!!192·1842
Qua lit y clothmg and household
Jtems $ 1 00 bag sale every
Thursda-y. Monda-y thru Sa.turday
9.00-5.30.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Lost: Pair ol Glasses along road
at lower Five Mile or Crab Creek.

Drive,. Off 01 S A. 141, 8/6U\ 7tr1
Time 8·4.

Call 985·3831
.

AG SERVICE"

Clean Lale Model Cars Or
Tr ucks . l ow Miles. 1995 Models
Or New er, Sm1th Bu1ck Ponliac.
1900 Eastem Avenue, Ga l ~po~s .

Lost· Large White Dog Lost Near
Rio Grande . Rewa rd! 740· 245·
0485 After 6:00 P.M.

Complete Line of 4-H

SHADE RIVER

1926

Lost Black / Whit e Beag le ;The
Name 1s: 'Flash', Bewardl (740}·
446·4015. 'Kanauga A.rea

2 Family Yard Sale. 260 Sa.nders

And Sullivan Show
. Supplies ·

Caijnlnll Jars. Quarts and Pi ~ts .
Preferably wide-mouth. (.3Q4)67 ~·

Lost Slate Route BSO; Kerr , Oh10
Male Dalmatian. (740)-245-0022

M il e Pas! R1ver Vatley H S. On
Utt_le Kyger Road

Garages

Free Es.t imates

985-4473

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

IDU!W.SunserHome.com

Wanted to Buy

Abso lute Top Dollar; All U.S. S1l·
ver AM Gold Coms. Pro ofsats.
D1amonds. An\iQue Jewelry. Gold
Rings . Pre· 19M US. Currency.
Sterling, Elc. AcQuisitions Jewelry
• M T s Co1n ShOp, 151 ·secona
Avenue. Gallipolis 74(}446-2842.

Found money, call to idenlily.

Moving sale· everything musl go,
lns1de &amp; o ut, 811·8f8, 9 to dark ,
To wnsh fp Rd . 17 /McGrath Ad ."
740-992-2969.
Mull1ple lam1ly. Saturday &amp; Sun·
day. 7th-8th . 500 Lincoln H11\
, (across from water lanks), Pamer·
oy, 9am·6pm.
Saturday. August 7. 9am · 4pm .
Four family, Home lnlenOI, lnd1an
items, children's clothmg m great
shape. good prtces . beSide
schOol in Rulland .
Thursday &amp; Friday, Gravel Hill,
536 H1Qh Street, Middleport 9am·

:Jilm

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity .

.

: l.M. ROWE TRUCKING

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofit
Professional \\&gt;ork al
an affordable price

740·742·2138

'

AT6;30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, 'oH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 StarbOrst
Progressive top line.
Lie. IH)!)-50 ""..,..

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On.
·Thursdays

Shingled Roofs

uptoBton

'

740887-G311

Landscape Ml!terial,

Light Hauling

'

1oo0 St. Rf. 7 Soutll
Coolville, OH 45723 .

CONSTRUCTION

Compost

. EOE

PARft

DRIVEWAY STONE

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
'

Comple1 e Au ctioneering Serv1c·
es Cons1gnment auct1on- Mill
Street, Middleport , Thursdays ,
Ohio llcens~ •7693. 7•0·989·

9331

0 C&gt;IWMAGE YSTEMS INC.

·Aooflng a GUIIon
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Polio.&amp; Porch Decb

SAYRE .
TRUCKING

Services

We are about or already have returned
someone that we have all loved and respected
bad~ to his loved ones and God.He particularly
liked. to hunt and fish as were the laws of the
land and America especially. He was an
American as is his father and ancestors before
him.He had many friends and I've known of no
enemies. Few people leave such a legacy. We all
have an obligation to society. Leave this world
better than you've discovered it. I feel that he
•
has accomplished his mission. Peace be with you
brother and whisper a prayer for us all who will
eventually follow. We all love you.•
J11mes E. Diddle

I
I

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

•Room oddRion1 ~ RelltOCMIIng

=

.

EULOGY TO TRAVIS ADAMS

,I

8" Gravelless leo1h
100' · 1000' Rolls! " &amp; 3/4" 200#Water line
Full line of Gai Pipe &amp; Regulato~ Water Storage Tanks

•NtwGallgtl
·Electrical &amp;Plumbing

-

In Memory

Call 992-2155 for details
Kathy Williamson Ext. 1'05
'Or Dave Harris Ext. 104

Tuppers Plains, OH
Culverts: 4" • 48" in stock

ClRPEmR SERVICE

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
::
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ::

,._,.. ·'" .

8111 Moodispaugh Auctione ering

Free to good home, small dogs .
call 740· 742·2173 or 740-388 ·

Good. 740-446·8329

•

A&amp;SEIIBLV •AT HOllE II Crafti.

naul away 740-

la rge Uprighl Freezer. Works

.7 40·985·3813'

YOU JIG'S

~

'"-

10

992-7565.

740·949·2286.

--=
-----=
=
--

·~·

33 PaR! Sbw~ Middleport, Ohio

giving due weight to thla

St. Rt. 7

mo.

,\){9~&amp;nwt

eatate,

6 Wteks Old K illen&amp; . 740·256·
6806

Call for details
740-992-0038

L. Roush
1701

7:00AM· 8 PM

Help Wanted

. Has part-time and
full-time positions
available for RN's &amp;
· LPN's. All shifts.
Anyone interested please contact
Michelle Gilmore,
ADON,
740-992-6472.

10 w.... Old 740-«6-3769

ALMOST anything

-

1st Yard Sale. Saturday. 2907
Birch Ave . PI Pl. , 8AM·2PM .
Size 10 m1sses . gym. eqUip. lit·
tie ol everything.

. .

5 Femlly. 2607 Lincoln Avenue ,
Tl'lurtday, August 5th. Bean1es.
Shoes. :roys . G1r ls- Boys Jr
Clothing.
Auguat 6th I 7th. tAM·'l' ~ Fam1·
ly. West Columbia , 2 Mllea North
or Ma•on County Fairground I
Bee\. Living Room Suit, C D.s.
Brcycles. Ele ctronics, Clothes ,
and More.
Clifton , WV , Aug ust 4.5 6. 9AM·
? Cloll'llng fMISC Old Bottles. 2
Anllque Hair Dryer Chatrs . good
workmg co nd1hon Hydrallc Cha1r
&amp; Other Salon EQUIP Cha 1nSaw.
WeedEater . Homell te Gas PQW·
ered Water Pump &amp; Other lawn &amp;
garden eqUtp.
Huge Sale , B/3·816. across from
PPHS 9AM ·? Large Clothes . Infants. Household Items M1sc

5, Bo•

Help Wanted

1438 .

Help Wanted

Toys. Jtwelr~. Wood . Sewing,

Starl"'!! Fail Soaion Auguol 3rd

Eleclnc range

We deliver

110

Auction
and Flea Market

E'tlery Tuuday -"1 6 PM Truck·
lOads Of New Merct'\andise From
Several States Selling To Public
&amp; Dealers. 1 P tece Oozen5 &amp;
Case Loti
Tenns. Castl, No Checks
Behind lowe·s 010 U S 52 (Co
Road 1) Burtmgton. Qnlo Auctioneer Gary Bowen. 7-40-894-1819

Look1ng For A Good Home , 1
tp,tale . Brown &amp; Black Mtril: lngs ,
Female : B laCk &amp; Brown . Approx

t"U'"~"",?~ 24 Hr. Taxi
a.l(l Delivery Service

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply ·

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1 ·
740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

tion.

' .

)'&lt;'

24!1-SESl.

I

HILL'S o1
SELF STORAGE

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

Robert E. Buck, Probate
Judge
Judith R. Sluon, Clerk
4.4 Notice of .Heerlng on
appointment ol Fiduciary.
(814

(7401 992·3131

and Carson Yost, honorable men · '

~

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ESTATE
OF
DAVID
.O,JfTHON'(
SCHATSCHNEIDER,
I DECEASED.
No.
1 31055, Dockll14, Page176
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
To the following ptreona:
Bohdan Schatochnelder,
Addreu Unknown.
Mit. VIola B. Savetekl hao
Iliad an application In this
Court., · aaklng .. to bt
appointed to admlnlater
d~ent'a ettate.
The hearing on the
application Will·· be held
1\Jeoday, Auguet 24, 1199 at
1:30 o'clock ,P.M. In thlo

Je1re1n~

80

2 Ab"a ndontd Or Lost Pupp tU

Laaac:r.,.~;ct•"at.

UtiliiU.I

MONDAY
CHESHIRE
Disabled
American Veterans of Cheshire,
Monday. at the hall . Dinner.. 6;30
p.m.; meeting, 7 p_. m.

=
---Buy·from the Classifieds! ----Public Notice
Public Notice
=
PROBATE COURT OF · relatlv' priority of right to -

RACINE -So uthern · Junior
Hi gh School vo lle yball rn eet,j_ng ,
RUTLAND - Rutland Town - 4 p.m. Friday. Anyone interes ted
ship .Trustees, Tuesday, 5 p.m . ' auend. ,
·
Rutland Fire Station .
.
.
MIDDLEPORT - lnform alion
RACINE - Racine Grange meeting for students . Meigs Midmeeting Thursday, 7:30 p.ni . at die School tho se interested in

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic SytleiiU &amp;

Giveaway

1 Cat To GOOd Home. Declawed ,
Neutered. House Trained 740·

Call992-2156

To place an ad

.

Shop at home...

POMEROY - PERl meeting,
Thursda y, I p.m. Senior Citi ze ns
Center. Sen . John Carey. to speak.

llouse &amp; TraiiHr Sites

Basic Ar-chery: Alyssa Baker,
grand champion; Robbie Weddle,
reserve champion; Joshua Nelson

EAST MEIGS ~ Eastern
POMEROY - Beegle family
Local Board of Education, spe·
reunion , Saturday, 111 :30 a.m.
cial meeJing, 6;30 p.m. at ,Eastern .
Senior Citizens Center. Square
Elemenfary cafetorium. Subjects, SATURDAY ·
.d ance to follow at 7 p:m at home
personnel and grant approval.
REEDSVILLE
Wells ~f Ronnie and Leanna Beegle:
POMEROY- Girls volleyball
reunion , .descendants of Johh and
pfacti·ce, Me·igs .High .School,
SYRACUSE .Girl Scout Laura Wells, Forked Run Sate
RACINE - . Annual Smith- Monday, I0 a:m . ·
·
event, Thursday, Carleton School, . Park, noon Saturday.
Stobarl reunion, Saturday; Ameri - ·
6 ;30 to 8 ;30 p.m. Thursday with
can Legion hall , Racine .
POMEROY - Right to Life,
the program to go for six weeks.
HARRISONVILLE HarMonday, 7;30 p.m . . at the
Questions concerning the pro -· ri so nville Lodge 411 , R&amp;AM . SUNDAY
Pomeroy Library.
gram and enrollment in girl Saturday, . 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY - Meigs Couilly
scouting rna~ be directed to Bren- Refreshments.
Humane Society; general memPOMEROY - Signups for
da Neutzling at 992-5418.
bership meeting, 3 10 4 p.m. Sun- Meigs Middle School cheerleadSA!oEM CENTER Stat . day at .the Pomeroy Public ing tryouts , Monday noon to 2
FRIDAY
•
Grange 778 , Saturday, potluck Library. A fund rai sing · dance, p.m . and Tuesday, ' I 0 a.m. to
Meigs County supper at 6:30 p.m.• re gular meet- Thrift Shoppe · volunteers and · noon.
POMEF\OY
Republican Party sp'ecial meetin g ing, 8 p.m. Plans for Meigs Coun- other mailers will be discussed .
Friday, 7 p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse to appoint replacement for retired Coun\y Recorder
Emmogene Hamilton Typed orr~-.,.,.-----------'--...,..-'-------------------------::hand-wrilten appli cations for the
:.Jlllllllltllllllllltllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllltltllllttlt L!
position must, be submiued to th e
~
Meigs County Republican Chairman Bernard Gilkey by noo n that
-day. ,

raisers of any type . Items are

·llalchlwg
- htalablg Wd I Bilek
PaUo Coaatncllall
. . . c.rtUied

BegnBulldo•er &amp; Backhoe
Se"'ice•

Art As Expression: The.esa
Baker, grand champion ; Brillany
Hauber.
reserve
champion,
Stephanie Burdette. John Cooke.
B.ecky Taylor and Chelsea Young,
Morr1 s, reserve l: hampjon .
honorable mention.
Indoor Gardening: John
Let's Explore the Outdoors 1:
Natausha Arnoll. grand champi on, ·Cooke. grand cham pion.
Vegetable Gardening 1: Tara
Talisha Beha. reserve champion.
Rose,
·grand champi on; John
Exploring Ou• Forests: Be ver·
ly Burdeltc, grand champton; Rob- Cooke. reserve champion ; Sarah
bie Weddle . reserve champion ; Lantz, honorable mention.
Bethany Cooke and Michael Tay- Demonstration judging results
lor. honorab le mention .
Demonstrations· - Individual:
. Ohio Birds: Tabitha Jones , Brooke O' Bryant , grand champion.
grand champion ; Natausha Arnon , Whitney , Thoene . reserve champireserve champion.
on; Nathan Cook. Jennifer Grady
Trapping Muskrats in Ohio: and Rachael Morris , honorable
Chris Cowdery, grand champion; mention.
Demonstrations· Team: Shane
Hannah Williams, reserve champi·
Milhoan and Eric Wood, grand
on
Fishing for the Beginner: Champion.
Derek Roush, grand champion;

'

...... Cara·II lp

40

orable mention.

announ ce meetin gs and special

events .. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund

HOWARD
IICAYATIII&amp; CO.

ror

the Grange Hall. Electton of officers will be held.

Time is running out to
Salute Your Friends and.
Neighbors from Rutland in
our Commemorative Edition
for it's Bicentennial
.

Meu11rina Up: Robbie Weddle,
grand champion; Erin Taylor,
reserve champion; John Bentz, hon·
orable mention.
Makin1 the Cut: Autumn
Hauber, grand champion; Adam
Johnson , reserve champion.
Nailing It T01elher: Brandon
Werry, grand champion.
Shielded Metal AK Welding:
Lester Parker, grand champion;
Robbie Weddle, reserve champion;
Kelby Brown, Adam Johnson and
Chris Parker. honorable mention.
Adventures with Your Cam·
era: Betsy Sheets, grand champion.
Exploring
Photography:
Becky taylor and Kenda Wheeler.
grand champions.
.Adventures with Adjustable
Cameras: Beverly Burdette; grand
champi on; Stepnanie Burdette,

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to

water ~

colors , the Dairy Barn will be
hosting an ideal warmup for the
upcoming watercolor show.

Watercolo·r

Grand and reserve champions in
miscellaneous 4-H fair judging at
the Rutland Civic Center last week,
have been announced by the Meigs
County E&gt;tension Service.
The champions and those recei ving honorable mention in their
respective projects were as fo llows:
Dis.overing 4-H 1: Cassie
Hauber. grand champ ion.
Discovering 4-H 11: Autumn
Haubir, grand champion.
Exploring Animals: Andrew
Bissell. grand champion; Jennifer
Grady, reserve champion; Amanda
Eason, honorable mention.
Exploring Me and My Home:

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ANTIOCH , TN .

37011·1438 . Sta~ Immediately.

Typ•~···

Great Pay! CALL

1-t00-

19!1-0380 Extl201 (24 Ht1J.

DR IVERS ·Owner Operatora
Manuf1cturers f il i i NMI11
Truck&amp; For Growing Bu•ln. . s
Rir{ Or J1m 800·534·11 11.
Dnvers Free 3 - Week COL
Traming Earn $26 ·132.000 1111
Yr. W / Ful l Benefit&amp; No Exp.
Needed PA .M Transport Spectal Call Toll Free 1~877·230·

6002

Sun ·Frl,

A.M. ·1 P.M.

1

'!fi'WW.pamtransport.com
Ees y Work\ Excellent Pay! A• ·
semb le Products at Home. Call
Toll Free . 1·800·467· 55&amp;&amp; Elllt

12170

.

Full or par! time postlion lor RN on
7· 3 shirt Rocksprings Rehablllta·
lion Center Is curren tly accepting
applicat ion s lo r an elllperienced
nurse. Joining our te;am al Rock·
spr ings 11 JOining an ••ceptiOnll
group ol nurses that rruly belieVe'
1n provi ding excellent nur&amp;lng
care . Full benefit package. Submit
resume lo: Rock springs RehabH i·
tat1oh Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Rd .. Carol Green1ng OON , 740·
992-6606.

HAVE OOCTORS. NEED BILL·
ERS. FIT, PrT Medical Billing. No
E•periance Necessary. Earn Up
To $40K+ Wo rking AI Home,
Mu5t Have IBM Compatible PC .
Ca ll 1·800-697·7670. www.medis·
taft net
locar Tructting Co mpa~ 5eeklng
Qua li f ied Tr uck Drivers. Good
Pay And Benaflls. Send Resume
To · Driver, P 0 . Box 109 Jack·
son . Oh10 45640, Or Call 1·740286-1 46 3 To Schedule An lntarvl9w.

LUMBERYARD
FORKUFT OPERATOR A
CLASS B COl. DRIVERS
UPTO
121,000
PER YEAR TO STAAT
PLUS:
-MONTHLY BONUS..
·PROFIT SHARtNG· PAto VACATION.

..fAID SICK DAYS-

.

-P-"10 PERSONAL OA.YS- PAID HOLtDAYS· ·
- AND MOREYEAR ROUND EMPLOYMENT

CALL TODD FRANKLIN AT
&amp;14-IM-4C21

Arlington ·Bl81r. Lumbtr
$800 WEEK LY POTENTIAL
Co mplete Simple Government
Forms AI Home . No Ellperience
Necessary CALL TOll FREE ..
1·8()0..966·3599 E.ld. 2601,.

Columbui,Ohk)
An EQual Opportunity EmplOyer
Med 1c a1 Pror. essor, FP! PT No
Expe ri en ce Necessary. 40K PC
~e~uir9Ci . Call: 1 -~3-7440.

" STARSEARCH "99" •• .
Singers . Bands . Groups
Need so meone to work 4 to 12
Styles!Ages . Ma;or Record Labe l
shift , cari ng tor the aldt~rly. call
Agent s, Seeki ng New Art1s t's · t&gt;e!Ween the hours of 8anr&amp; Cpm,
Co m1ng To Portsmouth. OH . 901· · . Moru:la~ thru Frl day. 740· 992·
427-26 39. 91:!1·427·951444
~~1.:.0·:_--~-----

Au

ADMINISTRATQ.R

'

Centu rion Management Group, A
Progressive Long Term Care

Company Is CurrenTly TaM;Ing Ap·

Own~ A i:o ~puter? Put 11 'To
Work l $25 To $75 An Hour, Part·
Time. Fllli-Tirrle. 1-800-294·9640.
www . work·from·ho~ lodSY,. net .

p llcatlons For An , Admlnistrator.
OWN APC?
We Are See~ing A Cha llen ge
PUT ITTO WORKI ,
Dnven Individual With The Ab1l lty
$25 -$75 !Hr. PT 1FT
To Lead By Example And Ensure
1·800· 764-8556
T he Highest S tand ar~ 01 Res1·
www.pcpays.COfT1
dent Care . The App li cant Must
Have Exper1ence In Long Term
Per son or marned couple to ass·
is ! w 1tt1 mllkmg and caring to r
Care, And Be A licensed Nurs·
ing Home ACministrator lr. The
large dairy herd. Hous mg , utili·
State Of Ohio. Cand ldales For
ties . ate. furnished. Respond to :
Th 1s PoSition Must Possess The
Pt . Pleasant Register E.B.4.,
Ab 11ity i'o Lead Wilh. A Focus On
200 Main Street , Pt. Pleasant ,
Ma rketing , Financial Manage·
wv 25550.
ment. And Employee Re lations
POSTAl JOBS To $t8 .35 /HR .
Ce ntunon Managem ent Orrers A
INC. BENEFITS, NO EXPEAI E~&lt; c eptiona l Compensation Pack·
·ENCE . FOR APP AND EXAM
age If Interested In A Challenging
INFO CALL H00 -8 13·35&amp;5,
Position Send Your Resume And
E)(T 1114210 . 8 A.M ·9 P.M ., 7
Salar y AeQuiremenls :ro Teresa
DAYS fds. inc
Davis, MHA , LNHA , BSN , RNC
Vice Pres ide nt Of Operations At .
AN Clinical Coordinator wanted
Cenlurion Manag.e ment Group,
for newly crea ted positiOn 1n Gal·
3490 Far Hills Ave . Ketter ing .
Jia/Jackson area. 1dea1 candidate
OhiO 45429. EOE
will be indep endent,htghty organ·
1zed 3 e•perienced with geriatriC
populat ion . all weekends , even·
Attn .. CNA's H"on1e He 81th Agen ·
ings. &amp; holioays off Send resume
cy Now Hiri ng . Full -Ti me A.nd
to Eric Hasemeier, Medical Direc·
Part-Ti me Positlo'n s. Age ncy Will
lor. On Gall Medical Associatio.n.
Tra in For The PCP. Positions .
P.O. BoJC 270, AlhenS, Oh, 45701 .
Mus! 'Have H.S. Diploma, GED, Or
Some Experience Canng For The
AN Clinical Coo rdinator Wanted
Elderly Vo"u May Pick-Up An Ap For Newly Created Position In
plication To : 26 6 Uppei River
Gallipolis, Jackson .A:rea . Ideal
Road, Gallipolis . OH 45631. No
Candidate W1JI Be Independent
· Phone Calls Please!
Hig hly Organtzed &amp; Experienced.
W1th Geriatnc Population . Wee·
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
kends. Even1ngs &amp; Holidays Off.
Shirley Spears. 304·675·1429.
Send Resume To : Enc Hassemei·
.Avon Producl s: Statt your own In·
er Mec\lca l Director On Call Medl·
Home Bus iness . Wor k Flex ible
cal ASSOCiatiOn . PO. Bo~~; 270 ,
Hours, EnJOY Unlimited Earmngs:
Athens. OH 45701 .

I-888·SG1 ·2866 .

SINQERSI GOSPEL OR CLEAN

Carleton SchOol and Me igs ' In ·
dus trles is seek1ng Q·u allfied applicants tor the followmg substl·
tute positio ns: Bus driver. cook .
Heallh Serv1ces Coordinator (RN
or LPN). hab1iilatioh and workshop
spec1ai1SI (Adult Services) , janr·
tor. tanitOnal crew leeders. ' secretar y/cle r lcal. teacher. teaching
ass1stant. 'o'ehicle aide. van dr1v·
Submi t re sume by August 13,
19 99 to : Carleton SchoollM,eiQS
ln dustrt es . P.O. 'SOli 307, Syr a·
cuse. Ohio 45779 EEO

COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free ,1·
800·339-4204 Or t~800~69- 8164
For Appointment To Come To
Na shville. Tenness~e And Audi·
!10(1 For Major Record Producers.
Internet: WNW.wcin ac

Do You EnJ OY Work jng ·With The
Elderly? II So We Have The Job
For You Now H~r~ng CNA·s.
STNA.·s And E•penenced HHA's.
Apply At 762 Se con d Avenue .
Galllpohs, OH, Or Phone 740.446·
3808 . Various Hours Currently
Av.a!lable, EOE

Wanted Ellperlenced l'lair stylist
for pan or lull tlm.e posillon .at
Foxy Locks Ha lr Care Salon in
New Haven 304·8823794.

SOCIAL WORK POSITION 1- '
Program Co'ordinator PositiOn
Available For Re sidential Pro ~
grams For Pe rsohs ' With MA/00
tn Jackson. P1ke , A.thens And
Hocking Counties Re(luirements ·
Bachelor's Degree And. One Year
Ex.perience In A Human Services
Freid , Val1d D riv er 's l1c ense .
Computer Users Needed. Work
Three Years Good Duvin g Ek·
Ow n Hrs. $25K ·SSOK/ Yr. 1·800·
per1ence. And Adequ ate Aut o ~
536·0486 X 7777, www.1cwp.com
mob1ie Insurance . Previous E ~~;,
perience W1th Pers onnel SuperCosmetologist 'N eeded . Full 3
VISIOn Preterred . Must L1ve Or Bt!
Part Time Pa 1d Vacations . Free
W1tl rng To Afti OCa te Wllh1;, 3Q
C.E.U. Hours. 740:446-7267
Mtles /30 Minutes 01 Jac kson ,
Counselor Pos1110n • An Outpa·
Flell lble Hours. L1beral Benefit
11ent Alcoho l And Other Drug
Package . Salary. $20 ·22,000 1
Agency Located In Gallia A"nel
Year Send Resume To· Buckeye
Jackson Count1es. Is Seekmg A
Commun1ty Ser.-1ces . P 0 Box
Qualified Per son · To Pro.-1da AI·
604 , Jackson. OH 45640·0604.
coho I And Other Drug Co un sel·
ATTN Cec1 ha ..Deadhne For Ap•
1ng. Counselor W1U Work Wilh A(l
plican ts: 8/4199. Pleas e IndiCate'
Age Groups Knowledge Of
Position Applying For. Equal Op-:
•
Chem1ca! dependency ReRuired . . ponunlty Employer.
1
Bachelors Degree. C&lt;fDC , U SW,
Teacher's A1de and Cook Par tAnd /Or LPCC Preferred , Send
time pOsitions With benefits Aicte·
Resume By August '20. 1~99 To :
hOUIS are M·F 11 30 AM ·5:30PM
FACTS ." 1770 Jac~son Pike. Bid·
Cook hours are M·f. 8:00AM·
well . Ohio. 45614 Or FAX 740·
t :OOPM Must be at lea st 18 yrs
446·8014. EOE,M/FIH.
old wilh a HS diploma or GED~
DATA ENTRY . National Bill ing · A1de • ellperlence working w1th&lt;
Children prelerred . Cook • pa1cf'
Seeks A ·Ful l/Part l'ime Med1cal
Bill er Salal'¥ AI $46K l'e r Year. experience as a cook preferred ~
Send resume to : Rl\le r Valley.
PC ReqUired . No E•pert en ce
CDS, P.O Boll 5441 , .Huntington.
Needed Will Train Call 1·888·
WV 25701 by Aug . 6. EOE .
251·7475.

'er.

DRIVERS · Cannon ·E){pi"e$$ 99%
Dnver No Touch Fre1~ht. Slarl At
.32 Cents M1. 15 Yr • Exp : 31
Cents Ml / 3 Yr : .30 Cents Ml 11
Yr .. 29 Cenls Mt. 16 Mos ... 28
Cenls Mi. 12 ·6 Mos .. Studenls Or
1 Mo E•p. $350. Wk . Pay Raise
Every 50 ,000 M1les Bonuses .
Rider Program Pa1d VacatiOns
Ins
Ava•L
www.cannone• ·
press co m. Call For Details 1·
80CHW5·9390

Wan led Surveyor For Construe -:
tlon lay·Out Of Site Work , Bulld· .
1ngs. HIQhways And Bridges; And Some Proper ty Surv eying For
Firm In Southeaslern Ohlo. Five
Years E•perience Using Total
Stet1on . Knowtectge Of CAD A.nd
Sohdesk Survey Applications Will
Be Helpful. Professklrml RegistratiOn No! Required . Send Resume,
To : CLA 480 c/o Gallipolis Daily·
Tnbune, 825 Th ird Avenue. Galll·'
polis Ohio. 45631. Benefits Ant(
Salary Package Commensurate.
With E-penence Equal Oppor· •
luMY Employer.

'

�I

Wednesday, August 4, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednnclay, Auguat 4, 1999

Middl~,

Pomnroy •

ALLEYOOP

•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page11

aJUDO&amp;

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHUHP
ALDER

ACROSS

~~r·

-

10-----

110

Help Wanted

210

N1ght &amp;hilt 7pm 9am SmaH group
nome call for mtervlew 74 D-992
5023
Wildllte Jobs to $21 60/ tir
Inc Benefits
Game Wardens
Security Maintenance Park
Rangers No hp Needed For
,t,ppJEIIiam Into Call1 BOO B13

3585 EXT 8827 8AM 9PM 7
Days lds inc
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR

INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR "pp AND
EXAM INFO CALL t BOO 8t3
3585 EXT 1421t 8 A. M 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids 1nc.

X Ray Tech / Ult ra Sound

tor
Pomt Pteaunt Physicians 01
11ce Send Resume c/o E B 3
Point Pleasant Rag•ster Off1ce
:200 Mam Street Pt Pleasant
WI/ 25550

140,

Business
Training

GllllpoHI Career Coltege
(Careers ClOSe fo Home)

Call Todayl 740 446 4367
1 80D-214 0452
Reg Jj90-Q5-t274B

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Ba chelor&amp;
Masters Doctorate By Carre
sptmdence Based Upon Pnor Ed
ucahon And ShOrt Study Course
FQr FREE lnlorma110n Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE

UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 8316
Excellent OpPortunity - SJJpple
men! Yow Income
learn In
co me Tax Preparation 15 Wk
Course Classes 1 Day A Wk 10
A. M To 4 PM Call Dan Tax Inc
Tuesda~~ 10 To 4 0 t 740 446
8178 Or 1 800 221 B178

MAD DOGS PALACE
PRO-WRESTLING TRAINING
AND PROMOTIONS
20 Yrs Exper ence 800 859
0756 Tramer Brett Sawyer In
Memory ol Mad Dog ' Buzz •
Sawyer Tram to be wre.stlers
managers or ba l!el (Male or Female)

180 Wanted To Do
Babys•tiiAg n my home In New
Haven $15 a day meals. mclud
ed Have Aeterences (740)709

8000
Cert 1fied Nursing Ass 1stan Will
Do l'n Home Care' Call (740(

446 3659
E &amp; S Lawn Serv 1c~ Des,gn lm
plementatiOn
and Serv1ce
All3113b!e lor Sprmg C lean up
lerhllz 11g and planting Free esti
mates Sat1 slact•on guaranteed
Greg Milhoan 3041675-4628
G B S Cleamng Pa nhl'lg Car
pantry Cement And Yard Wbrk
740 256 6827 Dori t Fuss Call

Us•
Georges Portable Sawm111 don t
haul your Jogs to tne m1ll JUSt call
304 675 1957
H S COntracting Rool1ng Sheet
Metal 3 D Lap Shingles Pamt ng
011er 15 Years E~~:penel'lce Dec~
Building 740 441 :'o653 Call A.f

ter 6 OOPM
Housecleamng From R10 Grande
To GallipOliS 8y Reliable EIIICIMt
Lady Call ~ 40 245 51 04 Ask For
o~ne

Jtms Drvwall &amp; Construct on
New Construction &amp; Rem odel /
Drywall S1dmg Roofs Add 1
tlons Pamtlng etc (304)674

4623 or (304l674 0155
Non Smoking
Responsible
Teacher On Leave Will Babys11
Toddle~ Age Ch-Ildren In My
Home 740 245 5823
Shrubl Trimmed Mulchll'lg ,
Ptll'ltlng etc Cell Bill Leave

Menage (304)675-7112
W1ll do elder!){ care have expen
ence and references !'lights on!~
NA tra1n1ng 740 949 2329

FINANCIAL

'"'iii

NOT Replacmg Long Cracks
In Wtndshte lds Free Vtdeo 1

600 826 8523

US

!Canada

www glassmechann' com
Health Food Store For Sale Ap
prox 15 000 16 000 Inventory
$1 000 Shel11!ng &amp; Equipment
Pnce Negotiable ThiS Bus•ness

Wolt Add S30 000 $50..000 In
GJOSS Sale To An Ex1stmg Bus1
ness Will Not DISCUSS Pnce
Over Phone Ca!l To Set Up Ap
powllment 740--446-1207
MEDICAL BILLING Unlim11ed In
come Potent1al No ExpeJ 1e nc e
Necessary Free !nlormat1on &amp;
CD ROM Investment S4 995
SB 995 Fmancmg Avatlable Is
land Automated Med1cal Sen11c
es Inc 800-322 1139 Ext oso
Need A Loan • Try Debt Consoli

dal on 15 000

$200 000 Bad

Cred1t 0 t&lt; Fee 1 800 770 0092
Ext :215

220 Money to Losn
$$$ OVERDUE B!LLS!J! $$$Con
sohdate Debtsl Same Day A.ppro'
val NO APPL ICATION FEESH 1
BOO 863-9006 txt 936 www help
pay b1l1S com
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wea lthy Fam1hes Unloactmg Mil
nons 01 Dollars To Help M•n.m1zs
Thelr Taxes Wr1te Immediately
Windfalls 847 A SECOND AVE

SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW
'r]JRK 10017
''Credl1 Card DEBT'' Debt Con
solldaiiOn Stop Colleci!On Calls
Reduce Payments &amp; Finance
Charges A11o d Bankruptcy t

800 270 9894

Business
Opportunity

$1 000&gt; WEEKLY WORKING
FROM HOME 11 1 Rece1ve $4 00
Per Envelope Processed S1,1p
plies Prov ded i Guaranteed Pro
gram• CALL NOW! 24 Hou rs
FREE INFORMATION ! 310 2BB
1616 Ext UP
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that vou do bus I
nesS' with pe opl e you know and
NOT to send money through the
mali unl!l you h&lt;tve lnvest•gated
the offenng
"

ARE U LAZY ? ! Am A.nd Earn
St 000 A Day No Selling Not
MLM Free Info Package t BOO
786 8849 24 Hrs XT 27
Availab le Vendmg Route 10 20
Locations $4K $10t&lt; $4 000 -+1
MO Income ALL CASH• 1OO'Y.
Finance Available 1 B00, 3BO
2615 24Hrs
Best Home Based Business'
Own An Internet Casmo Become
An Internet Junket Rep Mm In
vestment $3 750 516 578 1405
BUSINESS SpACE RENTAl 01
flee Space Or Sales Rooms For
L.ease On 2nd Ave Galllpohs
Close To CoufiMuse &amp; C1ty
Building 1 2 3 4 Rooms A!t N•
cety Decorated A C Water Sew
er 811ls A re Pa 1d Make Vour
Cho ice Now Yo u Must See
These Spaces PhOne For Show

lng 740 &lt;146 9539
DENTAL BILLER Up To $20 $40

CASH Or LOAN I Farm Caj:/ 1181
Will Purchase Or Loan Aga inst
Your Government Farm Pay
ments (CRP /PFC ) Call Farm

Capital 1 888
62281

F~RM

ACT 1327

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monthly Paymen.ts 20 50°o Save
Thousands 01 Dollars In ll'lterest
Non Pl'olit TCC BOO 758 3844

CREDIT

•

Complete ly remode led house 4
bedroom lam ly room I1V1ng room
k•lchen ullhty room &amp; balh basement w1th ttath new carpet
throughOut central air beautiful
vlew of river call 740 992 90t2
appointment only

GET VOUR CAS H NOWI O!Cesl
Buyers 01 Structured Settlements
Annuities And Go'llernment Farm
Payments Also Purchasmg Lot
lerles And Pr~vat&amp; Mortgages
Call Selt!emel'lt Capital 1 800
959 0006 www set11emantcep1
Ia! com
Need a Loan? H'ome Auto &amp;
Debt Consolidation Good or Bad
Credit Ca I toll free 877 658
0551
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
Olll ce V1S1l Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Free t
(877 ) EARLV PAY
t st
AD
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OVER YOUR HEAD IN DEBT???
Need More Breathmg Room?
Debt Cqnso l datiOn No Qualify

nglll FREE CONSULTATION
800 556 1548 Ext 2t4 wwwane
whor~zon org Ucensed /Bonded
Non Pro! t /National Co

RECciVI~G PAYMENTS? In
vestq,r Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seiter Fmanced Mortgage
Real E&amp;tate Contract Insurance
Annu tv Highest Pr~ces Free
Quotes Why Wa1t? Ca ll R1ch 1
BOO 8BB-6450
WANT A VISA CARD? $12 000
+ Unsecured Bad /No Credit OK
Everyone Wel come 1 800 285
FREE MONEY! Its True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 Debt COI'ISO!IdaUon Per
sonal Needs Med1cal Bills Edu
catio n &amp; Busl'lless 1 BOO 511

2640

230

Professional
Sentlces

Approved Master Licensed Elec
triCilln WV025956 Est1mates
lor
Re siden tial
Sorv1ces

t304)675-7927
Beautiful C!eanmg
In your
home or bu s ness Carpet afo d
upho lster~ to mtsnor / e~~:tenor
walls decks and dnveways The
complete c!eanmg serv1ce Call
Clearly Clean For Free Estimate
I 304-675 4040

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wm 1

1 888 562 3345

Dowl'lt Gov 1 Anet Bank Repo s
Be1ng Sold NOW ! F1MnC1ng
Ava ilable Call Now! 1 800 730
777:2 Ext 8040

HOME FORECLOSURES

No

Money Down! No Cred t Needed!
Take Ov~r Ver~ low Paymantsl

HOMES FROM $5 000 Fore

310 Homes lor Sale
2 Bedroom House With extremely
large lot PriCed upon InspectiOn

t304)675 2510
3 BedrOom House With 3 Acres
Land Few Fru1t Trees 2 Bed
rooms &amp; Bath Upstairs 1 Bed
room Front Room Ommg Room
Utlil1y Room Kitchen Bath Down
stairs S1ts On Storys Run Road
011 Route 7 For More lnlormatlon
Call 740 367 7576 After Noon
Pnce $49 500

Ohto 740 992 3860
Buy Homu From $tO 000
1 5 Bedroom Local Government
&amp; Bank Foreclosures Fmancln g
Possible For L1sltngs Call 800

319 ~3 EK1 1709

LOT SpRING VALLEY One
Large Lot Approx 101 x171 C•IY
Water Sewer Nat Gas Electnc
All Are Available lot t 17 To
VieW 740-446-9539
Mob•le Home Lot Fo r Rent
$100 00 Mont h In Crown C•ty
740..256 1491

20ACRES
$23 000 On Land Contract
$1 000 Down W / Approved Cred
11 Mostly WOOded Great For Re
creation Or Hunting Road Built
To Land Then On Into Wayne
Nat1ona! For est Free Maps t
800-213-8365

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 8365
Anthony Lane! Co

RENTALS

41 0 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom House 11'1 Gall•pohs
Newly Redecorated Deposit &amp;
References Required 740 446

0893
2 Bedrooms $325Mo + Ut111!les
No Pets 740 446-431~
3 bedroom nome lull basement
central a1r Hud approved $475
per month 740.992 1099

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x60 tralter totar electriC $250 a
month $150 deposit no pets

286 2554

7'10-742 2714

MAKE OFFER! House Ancl Lot 2
Bedrooms 1 Bath $600 00 Down
Near Bidwell Contact Dav1d At

1987 14x75 Ft Forest Park 3
Bedrooms 2 Baths W1th CIA In
Bidwell References &amp; Oeposll Re
QU!ted 74Q-388-9770

800 333 6910
Spac1ous 4BA Home on 1 1f2
acres or property llvlngroom
Fam11y Room 01n lngRoom 1 tt2
Bath 2 car garage carport/pan
try (304)BB2 2531 Leave Mes
sage
Th ree bedroo m house lpr sale
one and 112 baths fully furmshed
n1ce yard close to park 477 Sy
camore Street Middleport call
740 367 7000
--HOMES FROM $10 000! .. t
5 Bedroom Local Repos &amp; Fore
closures F1nanclng Possible Far
LIStings 1 600.719 3001111 18S
HOMES FROM $5 000 Fore
closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Crect1t Trou
be 0 K For Current Llst l~&gt;~g Call
1 BOO 311 504B Ext 3875

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1969 2 Bdrms New Carpe,t
washer Dryer Gas Stove Re
lrigerator Microwave 2 W1ndow

AIC s S6 500 00 740 245 5946
Leave Message
t972 Bassen House 12x65 2 br
2 lla very nlt:e co nd stove / re

!rig $3 500 304 675-5687
1980 14x65 alectr~c 2 bedroom
:2 bath new air conditiOner under
pinf'l!ng great CMd1110n $9500
740 949 2452
1988 Redmond Oanvi le 14JC70
Also Has Expando Very N1ce
New Heat Pump A.sk.ng $t4 000

740 366 8335
1988 Schutz
1402
2
BR LA OR Heatpump 2Bath
Deck
lnc ~ ud ed
$1 1 500

1304)675 6825
1990 t4x72 Skyline 2 Bedrooms
2 Baths l611.8x8 O!Ck 121110
Shed Natural Gas Heat In Great

Shape $16 000 740 367 7724
1991 14ftx721t Shingle Rool V nyl
Sidi ng
Excellent Condition

$16 500 0017401 &lt;146 8113
1996 Norns 16X 80 2BA 2BA
Financing Av•ltable

AR/Sklrll~

(304)675-£055
BLO.WOU.T
$499 Down A l S1ngles $999
Down Doubles Super Low Pay
ments L m11ed Time Oakwood
Homes Barboursville WV 304

736 3409
Cross Lan es Home Center Free
Set up Delivery AIC Underpm
nmg &amp; $500 WaiMa rt Shoppmg
Sp ree with each Mme pur
chased Slop &amp; see your hOme
town housing specialist Woody
Wllla1d (304)776 7699 or 1 BOO
922 99-76 CrossLanes Ex•l of

164
New Bank Repo s Only 3 Left 1

800 383 6862

REAL ESTATE

Water and Electric R.. dy For
Hook-Up Nice lots IS 000 00
Each Caii3CM n3-5188

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0

PROBLEMS? VISA

CARD Guaranteed Approval
No Gredll Check O%APA Ae
qulrement$ 1B+ US C1t1Zen Halle
Checkmg Account Phone A.ppro
val t 800 737 0073 Issued By
Merrick Bank SLC UT •

BUILDING LDT5
FOR SALE

360

CASH NOW! We Pur chase
Structure Settlement Lattenes
AMUIII&amp;s Mortgage Notes Call
Montclair Financial Group t BOO

5 room brick ranch two bath
double garage full basement t
1/2 acres on nver !n Syra cuse

CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1 800
731 7233 EXT 3 I03

310 Homes for Sale

House For Sale By Owner 3 BedrC\oms 2 Baths W1th Large Cov
e~ed Deck Also A 30x40 Garage
3 Miles From Rio Grande Ideal
Starter Or Ael•rement Home 740

460
ROUTE
$1 000+
POTENTIAL
ALL

This oowspaper w1fl not
krlOWingly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which IS 1n viOlation of the
law Our readers are hereby
inlormed thai all dwel1ngs
advert•sed m th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportun1ly baSIS

closed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Paymenl Cred1! Trou
Ole 0 K For Current Ustmg Call
I 800-311 5048 Ext 3372

3 Bedrooms Basemen t 2700 Sq
Ft Fireplaces In Ground Pool
Large Lol S R 588 Gall polis C•ty
SchOOls $79 500 740 446 7438

FRtTO LAV /PEPSI /C OKE

th1s newspclper Is subjeCt to
the F~ral Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 which makes it tllegaJ
to advert1se ·any preference
limitation or d1scnm~natton
Oasea on race, color mhglon
se11 1am1t1a1 status or natiOnal
ong~n or any 1n1entt0n 10
make any such preference
llmrtallon or d1scnmn1atl0fl•

FREE MONEV' 11 s True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 For Debt Consolidation
Personal Needs Med•cal B1lls
EducatiOn &amp; Bus~ness Call Toll
Freet SQ0-724-6047 (24 Hrs)

!Hr Dental Billmg Software Com
pany Needs People To Pro cess
Medical Cla1ms Fr.om Home
Tramlng Provided Must Own
compute r 1 aoo 223 1149 Ext

VENDING
WEEKLY

AM real estate adverttSHlQ In

1 800-916-9191 KH5023

422 7317

440

Apartments
lor Rent

NEW ON MARKET
23 Acres 2 Mtles Off SR 7 &amp; SA
218 South 01 Gallipolis Stn
glewtdes Allowed land Contract
A-..adab!e Only $27 000 1 80 0
213-8365

EARN S90 000 YEARLY Repaor

3588

21 o

350 Lots l Acreage

Business
Opportunity

New 3BR 2 Bath 14 W1de $500
Down $185 per mo Free Air 1
BOO 69 t -6777
New 4BA 16 w de $500 Down
$219 permo Free Ar 1 BOO 691

6777
New Bank repos only 2 lett we
11nance call3&gt;4 722 7148
Spac1ous 1984 Mansion Mobile
Home 2 3BR' IBA HeatPump
Front Porch $7 000 Oayt1mel
(304 )675 2716
Evemnql

(7401992 4477
Special 28xBO 3 or ,.SA $1000
Down $322 per mo Free Oellv
ery &amp; Setup 1 80().691 6777
Double W1dt On Lot $250 De
po~t t 8(10 383 6862

350 Lots

a Acreage

3 Acre Hilltop Homesite 14 MIL
Additional Acres Green School
01strlet BetweM 6 9 P: M 740
44&amp;3545
3 adJacent plots K!fkland Memo
rial Gardel'ls $1200 {304)895

3422

Between A.thens and Pomero~ 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile horue5 a•r
conditioned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash Included 740
992 2t67
2 Bedroom Gas Heat ww Carpet
A./C Very Nice 740 446 2003

740-446-1 4(19

540 M•cela.neous
Merchandise

Modern 1 Be&lt;lroom Apartment

740-446--0390
Nice Ground Floor 2BR WIO
Hook up Aelerence Oepos1t No

Pots 1304)675 5162
Now Ta•ung ApplicatiOns - 35West 2 Bed1oom Townhoust
Apartmell1S
Includes Water
Sewage T1ash S315ft.Ao 740

4460008
One &amp; Two Bedroom Apartments
Also House FQ:r Rel'lt 11'1 Town No
Pets Depos•t &amp; Retrences Re
qutred 7:40.446 9342
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spac•ous 2 Bedro oms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully car
petect Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Patio Start $350/Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit Re
qulred After 5 740 446 Ot01
Before 5 740-446-3481

DeposN, 740.388-9686
3 Bedrooms All Electric Trailer
wtth Wasner/Dry Hook-up $350 r

Month (740) 36Hl611

Apartments
lor Rent

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Ap.anments for
rent
Absolutely No Pets

t3041675 2117
t and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unfurnished secunty
deposit requ ~re d no pels 740
992 22t8
1 bectroom apartment •n Middle
port all utilitieS pa•d $270 per
month $100 deposit 740 992

7806

PENTIUM

Lawn Tractors St50 OU On LT s

GOT A CAM PGROUND MEM
BERSHtP OR TIMESHARE? Welt
Take It! Americas Most Sue
cesslul Carnpground Al'ld Time
share Res* ClearinghOuse Call
Resort Sales International 1 800

423 5967 24 Houts

ocapped EOH 304 675-6679

245 9355

t7401 245 9170 Monday th1u
ThuiSday 9 00 12 00 noon

460 Space lor Rent
Green School D1stm:t 4 Miles
From Holzer Hospital Some Re
strictlons Apply 740 446-4053

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repa1rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

plano Dr 740-446 4525
INTERESTED IN WRtnNG PO
ETRV? POETRY CONTEST
$48 000 In PriZes PoSSible Pubtl
cation Send One Ong~nal Poem
20 Lines Or Less To lnternat1on
a! Library 01 Poetry 1 Poetry Pia
za Sull:e t 1835 Ow1ngs MHIS MO
21 lt7 Or Enter Qnhne At

www poetry com
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebu•tt In Slock
Call Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528
Kenmore &amp; G E Wasl'lars White
S75 each Maytag &amp; Kenmore
Dryers $70 Each Almond Ken
more Otyer $70 Call After 5 30

91 M•l Stree~ 740.99H250

FREE ' Details log Onto http If

www hbn com Access COde 5298

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

A r Conditioners Used Different
S1zes Guaranteed' 740

aee

0047

Appliances
Recol'ldltloned
Washers Dryers Ranges Retri
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maytag 740 446
For Sale Recondllloned wash
ers dryers and relr•gerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407

Jackson AYBnue
QOOD USED

OWN A COMPUTER PUT tT TO
WORK $850 $3500 MO PTJFt

t~)675-7388

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vine Streel Call 740 448 7398

,,

Rapid We1ght Loss! F.en Phen
Alternative CombinatiOn 100%
Seta Only $24 95 Buy 2 Gar 1
Free.! lose 3 !S Pounds A Week
As Seen On TV Cellasene H
V1agra Also Available Call United
Pharmaceuticals Now For Info 1
800 733 32B8 COD S /Pre pay I
Major Credi1 Cards
Refrigerator Gold Kenmore 13
cu It 5 )'$ars old spotless $225
In Letart Faits call 740-949 4000
for appointment

Mollohan Carpets ·orlvf A Little
Save A Loll· 202 Clark Chapel
74()-446 7444 740-386-0173
New And....l,Jsed Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga
Beds Chests Couches Tables
Much Morel Stop And See Us
740-446 4782

25X40 30x60 45JC90 50x140
"SOLD" Must Move I Free Dellv
ery11 800-462 7930 x35

Washer &amp; Dryer lor sale 304 675

Antiques

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
121 STEEL BUILDINGS 40•30

Was S9 970 Sell $3 470 50~:75
Was $19 600 Sell $8 900 Oave
@ BOO 379 3754

HOST FAMILIES NEEDEDIII'
Exchange Students From Germa
ny Japan Englanc France Rus
SIB Brazil Students Art ve In Au
gust To Attend Local H1gh
Schools For Further lnlormahon
1 800~765-4963
18• DlrecTV Satellite System•
$69 00 3 month free programmg
L1mlted tlme offer ca ll t aoo 779

Deposot (7401 446-1340

8194

Apartmel'll lor rent In Middleport
no pets 740-992 5~58

6Cl' Hitachi TV tnmmed m oa~ 6
months old bral'ld new con dition
paid $3 300 aest Offer (304)675
1481
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE

Up To 30 bs 30 DAY MONEY

APARTMENTS ON 2NQ. AYE
Near Business Sectio.'l Ideal Fo~
Seniors t st Floor Real Nice To
View 740-446 9539

BACK GUARANTEE! Natural Dr
Recommended 740 441 1982
Free Samples

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

Buy Sell Trade Smok1ng P1pes
7404464922 Atter6PM

Gracious li'lllng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments 1n M1ddte
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Ho~smg Oppor
tumhes
Piklt Program Renters Needed I

800-38'1-6862
One bed room furrHs hed aparl
ment 1n Middleport call 740 992
9t91

or Of Engl~h 74o-643-5176

Hay 6 Grain

7'10-446 7300
STEEL BUILDINGS

5 ONLYI

Hay tOOt bales $20 tast years

Washer/Dryer sat B months old
Hot Point Brand $400 Firm

1304)674 6127
Water lin e Spec1a1 3f4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per I 00 All Brass Com
pression F1Umgs !n Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

ANTEEDI

550

t BOO 870 9938
www thermo

Building
Supplies

2 -ALL STEEL BUILDINGS, t 40JC60 &amp; 1 - 50x100 Must Sell 30
- 50% Oft Or Best Offer aoo-379-

3754

560

Pets for Sale

A K C Min Schnauzers Boston
Terriers &amp; Shih Tzu shots &amp;
wormed 304 675-336t
AKC Cocker Spamel Male 6
Months $50 00 Jack Russell
Terrier
Male
1 Year O!d
$50 00 740.256 6162
AKC German Shepher.d Pups
Fam ous Snowcloudlme 3 Pure
Wh te 7 Silver /Sable PuJebred
BMgal t&lt;1tten s ~ :2 Males Lell Lots
OIGIIner '740 245-9213
AKC
reg1stered
Mm1ature
Pinscher a wk old male $250
740 247 2103
AKC Registered Shetland Sheep
Dog Puppies 1 Blue Merle &amp; t
Black &amp; Wh1te Female Known As
Shelhe $300 740 379-2B36
AKC Reg sterad Yellow lab Pups
Shots &amp; Wormed Ready 4th Of

Juo

$500 CARS FROM $500111 Buy

7402~336

IMPOUNOS Hooda a Toyota s
Chevys Jeeps .A:nd Sport Ut1ll
tits Call Nowl 800 772 7470

EXT 7832
1977 CJ-5 304-V 8 3Spd E&gt;
canent Col'ldlllon So" top &amp; blk•
nl Top 6" Lift 35 5x1 2 5 Tlres
Outlaw 2 wheels Nerf Bars Roll
Bar Console New Jet Black
Paint &amp; ~lenty at e11tras $4 000

Neg 10041773 5678
1980 ·1180 HONDA C"RS

FROM $500 Pollee lmpoul'ld~
And Tax Repo s For L st~ngs Call
1 800-319 3323 Ext 4420
944 Porscl'le good cond•

tlon 13 500 or OBO t740I 388
8591 or 13041 633-8937
Cutlass Good Work Car
Also Big Block Chevy En
Complete $1 500 And
Big Block Parts 740 446-

3100
1986 Buick LeSabre Good Shape
~uns

Good $2 200 Serious Calls
Only 74().441.()616
1988 Chevy Cavalier Z 24 2 dr
black with black velour Interior
(very ctean) sunroof alr ask.mg
$2 200 740 992 t506 days 740
1989 0Qdge Aries 100 000
Miles Good Condition Needs
Few Repairs $900 740 446
7614
1989 Dodge Daytol'la runs good
5 sp amllm cass 4 good t1res

sew

runs

M&amp;J Auto 740 388 9693 or 740

t992 Olds Cutlass Supreme
White W1th blue Interior 4DR

Sharp (3041675-6153
1992 ShadOw looks and runs hke
new 70K cold air automati C
sunrool 4 cylinder spOiler red
$3650 74(}..949 2045 even1ngs
199• Ford Taurus Show All Pow
er Keyless Entry New Tires Au
tomattc 4 Doors $4 000 Books

$6 000 740.367 0671
1995 Mercury Tracer autqmauc
u new tires cassette !ow mile

age sharp $5800 740.992 6810
t995 Monte Carlo looks and
runs like new one owMr 1993
Chevrolet 1500 Senes Extended
Cab &amp;llice!lel'lt condition loaded

m 5949

COOL DOWN

For sale St Be rnard pupp•es
$150 each phOne 740-992 2721

3884 S2 995

For sale St Bernard puppies 5
weeks old $150 each phone
740-992 272t

1996 Oldsmobile Aurora excel
tent conclltiOI'I lOw miles can Tdm
Anderson 740 992 3348 alter
5pm

Registered Airedale pupp1es
make great hunters farm dogs
loyal genua pets Shots wormed

1998 Rontlac Trans Am Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced to
$22 500 00 Great Graduation

DISCOUnt Mtli:Nie Home

, Parts &amp; Supp~
Huge lr'l\lentory
..
Virl)'l Skirting Kits $299 95 5 Gal
ion Alum~num F1Dered Roof Paint
$25 21 S Gal Wl'llte Roof Paint
$57 69 Ancho rs $5 Doo rs. &amp;
Windows Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters Plumbing &amp; Electr ical
Parts ll'ltertherm Miller &amp; Cole
man Air Condlltoners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett s Mob1l e Home
Supply 740.446 9416 Gallipoli s

OIIK&gt;

740 992 71100

•

88 Dodge C1ravan 7 pass V I t
good conditiOn, t35K m11es $800
740-742 t3,6

1996 Olds Calais .40R 4Cyl 5
Speed Mint Condition (304)882

Bfff'l

i! i

Dt!.ll•~"~~*'T~n

fn
iF

MISSINfi/

:--..

;tl

&amp;..rSZT'S LAST

t.UT &amp;..OST!

:CM::d~~~;8~~~26=9=2~~~~~:.

i

~

8-4-

"'

MU.~T 'l'OU N-W"-'fS &amp;.

aoo I

1272

f'.!&gt;KJ~6

'

FOR ~Y 7

t 993 Honda Aspencade L.ots 01'
EJCtrasl Low M!te&amp; Excellent Con
dition Must See! $10 500 Call A! ,

cond111orol 740.992

5~8

245-04a5

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Weal

North

Easl

INT
2.

Pass

2•
3 NT

Pass
AIIJltlSS

Pass

Benpmm D•sraeh a Bnt1sh pnme
mm1s1er m the last century, sa1d,
Frank and exphctl • that Is the nght
hne to lake when you wtsh to conceal
your own mmd and to confuse the
mmds of others
,
In today 's deal from Vancouver,
West found a clever defense that
sowed a m1sleadmg seed mto the
mmd of the declarer
North used Stayman to try to
uncover a 4-4 maJor-sun fit But
when South demed a maJor wuh hts
two diamond rebtd North settled for
three no trump
At the firsl table, declarer, Dutch
world champ1on Wubbo deBoer,
ducked h1s club ace until the thud
round Then he played a spade to
dummy's kmg When thai won, he
took a successful heart finesse Next,
deBoer cashed h1s four d1amond
trtcks and the heart ace Fmally he
exiled wuh the club five llus end
played Wesl who had to concede a
tnck ·declarer s moth •• to the spade
queen N1cely played'
At the other table though after

declarer Israeli mrernat10nal p.nd
A:mencan restdcnt Sam Lev con

BIG NATE

t986 Baylmer ll'lboard Outboara
Cuddy Cabin Excellent Conchtlon

eluded that M1lner couldn t have the
spade ace So alier wmnmg wl(h the
heart JI.H:Ik Lev Crossed to dummv
wl(h a dtamond then played a spade
to hts queen However when that lost
to the ace and West played another

740-446..-.0038

heart declarer couldn

760

than c1ght trt c ks one spade lwo
hearts four diamonds and one club
Nicely misled'

$5 800 or take O'ller Payments' 99
Sea Doo GS 2 Seat&amp;r B5 hp
Brought New In April Trailer lila
Jacket Co11er (740) 247 25'81
call alter 4 00 PM

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget P rice d TransmiSS IOns
and Engmes All Types Access
To Over, o ooo Transmiss io n''
eve Joints 740.245 5677

l

wm more

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1974 Coachman Motorhome ~
Ooctge Chassis 75 000 Miles
Sleep I 6 SJ 500 740 446 1420

•

1976 Prowler Camper t8 Ft Very
Good C ondition S2 500 74111
446-6754 After 5 P: M
,•

Don 1g&lt;l stung by high pr1m 1

FISHING BOATING HUNTINQ
Or Just Relaxing In Your OWT}
Camper &amp; Campslle 011erlookll'lg
B lue lake To V 1ew 740 446

9539

Shop tilt chlsu(ird stel1011

IWEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN
I

Home
Improvements

&lt;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

•
,

•

Uncond•hona l llfet1me guaranlee '
local references furnished Es '
tabhshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740);

446 0870 I 800 287 0576 A91 •
ers Waterproofing

~

--------------------:

All types of masoncy work brick '
block stoM concrete 20 vears ..
eJCperlence free estimates 304 •

773 9550
Appltanct Parts And Service AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perlerce Ali WOrk Guarenteed r
French City Maytag '14Cl 446
7795
C&amp;C General Home Main
tenenca Paint ng 'llinyl siding
carpentry doors wmdows Oaths
mobile home repa ir and more For
free esttmate call Chet 740 992

6323
livingston s Base ment Water
Prooling au basemen! repairs
done lree es11mates llle111)'1e
guarantee 12y rs on job expert

3887

M&amp;A Contracting Electrical And
Ae Molding Trailer Set UJJ&amp;
Porches Carpentry Ar'id Repairs
24 Hours 740-441--o193

720 Trucks lor Sale

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Re sidenti al or commercial w~r ! ng
new servic e or repairs Master 11
censed el ectricia n A den ou r
Electr ical WV0003U6 304 675

1786

I Emullted

-Arno

11 Tho CMmo
12 Sewing looll

13 Draft 8IICY
1SMio--tung
20 Allng21 E• ..... lf
22 Some orgonlc
compoundo
231nclalorw
24F....... LL11a'

··-

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-ny

50-QUIV.,.
52 Tolk

53=

lmpudenUy to

Thurmlln

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebnty ClpNt' cf'/PtOQrams •~ CtU.ted from QU0Cat10nS 0y tamous people po~sland present
Each iett.r 1n lt.. qt.- standi fOf another Toc»y's cliNt C ~Is V

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'The only lh&gt;ng that savas us !rom lhe bureaucracy •s
ns 1nefflclency ' - Eugene McCanhy

•

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I don t take vacat1ons one
dummy sa1d so I wont have

r~7M~U~J~P-R~E~-,~tocomeyh omeand "

l

ASTRO-ORAPH
Thursday, August 5, 1999

You're now entenng a new cycle
tmpress1ve Improvements can

where

be made both soc1ally and materially The year ahead could be one of

many favorable ctrcumstallces
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Th1s IS an
excellent day for nesottattons of all
types whe1her 1hey are w11h bustness

assoctales or someone who ts dear to
your heart If somethmg needs to be
d1scussed do so now Know where to
look for romance and you'll find n
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
mstantly reveals wh1ch s1gns are
romanltcally perfect for you Maol
$2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o thiS newspaper PO Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station New York NY 10156
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) ASide
from the great pnde you'lltake 1n a
JOb well done there IS a posstbliuy of

penpheral

advantages that come

along w1th 11 01hgen1 effort has 1U
rewards

LIBRA (Sept 23 Ocl 23) Sue

cessful measures ca n be taken today
to Improve a couple o f fnendshtps

that m1ghl need a lntle shonng up
Now IS 1he ume to butter up that per·
son wnh whom you'd hke to get closcr
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Good changes 1hat affect your fin an
c1al wherewithal could be on the way

However •f they do not

come

through today be patient They re
comtng

SAGITIARlUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) You always have a way wuh
words bultoday thiS talent may be at
a htgh pomt You could be espec1al
ly effcc11vc m matters that requue
mtncalc ~.;ommuOJcatlon skills
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Instead of bluntly VOICing your
tlemands today, use lhe soft sell or
understate your requests The use of
subtle suggesuons allows the other

pany to respond more read1ly
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Your strong leadership skills may be
needed today for somethmg m wh1ch
you re tnvolved that has potenual
benefils for all concerned Take the
tmUall\'e

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) If

•

e

80TWHAT
HAPPENED?

3933 or 1 800 273 9329

t~IB95

pies

6 I
I O Comp lete the ch uckle quoted
I
1
•
•
•
bv t.llmg 1M the m1u ng words
L--lL--A-..J.~.J..--.1-_J you develop from step No 3 below

New Replacement Gas Tanks 0

ence

5 TV'aP

1-de7 O.rkwaod
I 51onvY rwfuul

47-41 River In

_

&amp; R Auto Ripley WV t3041372

570

1985 Ford F 150 35 1 Motor 5 B
Lllar Supercab long Bed Low
Mileage Excellent Condition One
Owner! $2 400 00 OBO 740 256

Soulb

kmg and queen of clubs Rene Mil
ncr "'nched to 1he hean 10 As he
dtdn l cstabhsh his club sutl the

Baby Gold Wing Make Olfor 740.

810

4a-

25 Uke pie?
27 Bulhy hairdo
21 Wiohlng2!1 Oltoenrill
31Golaby, ll
lime
33Tumtowar&lt;l
38 Port o1 LA
40 Growing out
41Southwelllm
lndlull
42 Mlpobbr
43 Skinny 1144--the
groundn46Compulw·

wmnmg the first two tncks wtth the

Honda Helflli Motor Scoote~
250Cc El'lg iM Perfect Cond•IIM.,

1304)458 \049 BP 1528 8092

Glhll(74()l 44&amp;-4548

6471

~tMS

1986 Honda 250 A set up fqr
cross country racing like new

17401256-6412

Respons•ble party wanted to
make low monthly payments on
plano See locally Call 1 BOO
268-621B

'"'''---" Of A FAMOU$ PIA,.,IS

'\&gt;-1~/:$

9t Buick Park Avenue Good
Condition Leall'ler and Loaded!

FOR SAL8 CONSOLE PIANO

i~ISTif'lfi

Mq&amp;Qrcyclea

Roll weller Pups 1st Shots &amp;
Wormed $125 Each 5 Left No
Papers 740-44&amp;2197

Musical
Instruments

Tttf ONLY

'

Rainbow Bulldtra
Build new or repalf old no Jtlb
too small or large Major credit
cards
lfWV0295B2
Ca!!

$200

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

OhiO Vall.ey Sal'lk Will Oller Fo1
Sale By Public Auct1on A 199•
Toyota 4x4 PU 1219689 At 10 od
A M On 8!21199 AI The Ovfi:
A.nnex 143 Third Avenue Gallf•
polis OH Sold To Highest Bk:lde(
•As ts - Where Is" Without Ex,
pressed Or Implied Warranty 8
May Be Seeo By Calling The Col~
lectlon Dept At 740 441 1038,.
OVB Ae&amp;erves The R1ght To A~
cept ! RtJ8CI Any &amp; All Blds "
W1lhdraw items From Se!e Prlo5
To Sale Terms Of Sale CASK

123 000 Miles $2 500 (3041675
2443

Collie Pups For Sale $75 00
Eactl 740..441 0865

446 6308 1 80D-291-D098

1995 JeeJ) wranger Excellent

XLt Lanai

t991 Caveher Black Tinted
Windows A!C C 0 Rul'ls Good

(VII)
3 Wrilor Ephron

opponent's ~ind

SERVICES

t3041895 3378

-

38 " - '
37 Aclar MlMO
3tF.....,h

2 Smolllslend

By Phtlllp Alder

COndition. 740.367 5039

992 6326

.,.,....,..
35 Eua.ngtu

1 Dec hollclay

Try to get into your

S1 0 500 t304J075'5 104

790

WOildnO onlor
32-Towor
34 Stocldng e.fl

DOWN

Openmg lead • K

I

949-:1644

Cherry bed full s1ze p1!tow top
mallress &amp; Oox springs Included
DP exerc•se b1ke anhque chest
of drawers 740..742 1347
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces ti•at
Pumps Certified Installer 11 You
Don 1 Call Us We Both Lose l 740.

RECKON I

1992 Toyota 4 runner SR 5 V 6.
2 whee! ctr Spot! Utility loaded~
wlln sunroof ex!»llenl condition ~
1 owner ee 000 miles Ask ing,

740

........

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South

OBO 740.2e6-1233

1998 fllarley Davidson 883 Sport
1
star black w1th extras (excellentt

740

• A J
• K Q 8 5
• A 53 2

1989 Plymoutt\ Voyager V 6 Au ~
tometlc toa ooo Ml:kta $1 2oo On

CARS S100 $500 &amp; U~ POLICE

1989 Ford F150

• Q6 3

(304)67.5'-

:'e::_r:5.:_P;M::.:_74::0.:.:38=8;9.:_78::0::,.,~::---:

t986 Ford Tempo auto

Soul~

6153

3323 112156

good dependable car $595

Block Dnck sewer pipes wind
ows hntels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

Van

COiilllllwlloat

51 Ell l d
M SIDII mowing

*"*'

:JC!Ingood

• 9 (
• 9 8 6

• K QJ 7

a 4-WDs

1986 Full Size

46 JFI( ......
4&amp;Airlcen ......
4fc.nt

61tc....m.- $Stgnorec
20 c••n• box $6~23u...57-2eTl-27 Grell

Eul
• J 10 4
•K9862

• A 7 5
• 10 4

Must See 19BO Chevy t Ton..
Faatory Reb1lt 350 El'lgme Nelfllll
Tlfe'S $3 OQO OBO 74C&gt;-25&amp; 1722 I

(~)675

Pollee Impounds &amp; Aepbs For
listings CALL NOW! t 800 319

1984
$975
glne
Mise

Well
• 10 7 3 2

1987 Suzu~ Samaur! $1

19B3

• A J 6
• 10 4

t 995 S 1 0 lS Extended Cab 4
Cylinder 5 Speed Fluns Look&amp; t
Great! Hard Shell Tonne,du Cov
er Below loan $6 800 740 446 1
1968 740 388 8637 See At Auto
Trim Center

OR CERTIFIED CHECK

710 Autos for Sale

Steel Beams All S1zes And
Lengths 10 Per Lb Steel Cab~e
t/2 Inch Thru 1 Inch .. 35 To 75
Per Foo1 Culverts OF! X 20Ft
Call For Pricing L&amp;L Recycling

Washer $95 Dr-yer $95 Electric
Range $95 RelngeraiOf $95 Side
By S1de Refr~gerator $195 Wash
er $205 Dryer $205 1 Year War
ranty Freezer $295 Skaggs Ap
pllances 76 Vine Street Gallipo
hs 740 446 7398

•"or

4 year old QH getd!AQ Incentive
fund gentle would go green n11n

TRANSPORTATION

Buy or sell R1verlne Antrques
t124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm SunclaytOOID
6 00 p m 740 992 252e Russ
Moore owner

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Un
turnished Security Deposit Reter
encas Reqwred 740 446 1066
or Weekends 740...441-Q952

tar t/2 Morgan ll'lstallment Plan
For Horses To Go!ld Home 25%
Down Affordable Rates 740 388....

Prlmeatar· fi'H Olreery Summer
Promotion Call now t B88 265
2123

t740)44' -0772

Chnsly s Fam1ly Llvmg apart
ments nome &amp; tra iler rentals
740 992 45t4 apartments avail
able furnished &amp; unf\J'nlshBd

Voar Old APPaloosa Two 11 Old
Mares t Aflbkln One t/2 Ouar·

640

EEK &amp;MEEK

8780

730 Vans

IIH&lt;-99

• K 9 8 2
• Q 7 5 3

17.0~256-1565

3 Geldings 1 Sil Year Old Arabi
an One 2 'Mar Old Arabian One 3

hay 112 call 740 99~ 5698 aner
4 or 740.742 2.05 aNet6

530

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
!rom $279 to $3SB Wa)k to shop
&amp; ma\l!ts Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housmg Opportulllly

Livestock

Platform rocker $75 straight
padded chau $35 sewmg ma
ch ne $35 740 992 5907

Check Us Out
step com

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

630

Nortll

1993 Ford F 250 )(LT 4x4 Ole ~
set Must Seal Call alter 5 OQ ,

0267

1 Bedroom Apartment Partly Fur
mshect Mam St Pt Pleasant

Aparlment Fo r Rent 6 Miles
North Of Holze r tjospltal State
Route t60 740 446 3t85

256-1&lt;145

Retail building 1600+ square U,t
corner location 87 Mill Street
Middleport Key al AcquiSIIIOns

TABLETS Natural Alternative To
Implants Seen On TV Grow 1 2
Even 3 Cup S1zes GUAA

3 Room Furnished Utilities Paid
94 Locust Street $280 00 Plus

wanted to buy used Tin any
wldlh Reasonallty Priced! {740)

Lilt Cha!t Electnc Pa1d $1 000
WI!! Take $800 OBO 740 367

1 Bedroom Apartment Stove &amp;
Regugeralor Included 740 446-

2Mrm apts total electt~c ap
pllances lurnlshed laundry room
taclhlles olose to school m town
AppliCatiOns available at V11fage
Green Apts 149 or ca ll 740 992
3711 EOH

620 Wanted to Buy

$2 500 1 Year Old Jack SSOO 00
17401 388 9736
&amp; 00

WOMEN CHEST ENHANCER

28 Fl Trailer With Awning &amp;
Deck O....erlook1ng Oh1o RIVer Full
K1tchen &amp; Bath Furnished $225/
Mo 1 888 640 0521-

11 11 Gaiii&gt;OIIs OH We Delver!

Mobile home Site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
740 385 4367

Wooden BunkBeds Can sepa
rate Ladder mcluded/Mattresses
(one unused) (304)675 7314 a!
ter 5PM

7806

See The New John Oeere 200
Series Skid Steer Loa!Mtrs 7 5%
JDC Financing Carmichaels
Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 1 800 594

740-446 9066

Jackson Ohio t 800-537 9528

2 bedroom apartment In Middle
port we pay water sewer &amp; trasl'l
you pay gas &amp; electric $200 per
montt'! $1 oo deposit 740 992

Trek '-- Flnanc1ng As Low As
S 9% For 36 MOI'IIhS Or $250 Oft
On Compact Utlt l t~ Tractor1
5210 s 53 I 0 &amp; And Gator&amp; Free
Delivery Carmichael Farm J
Lawn • Your Local John Oeera
Deallr Gallipolis Oh10 740 446
2412 Or 1 aoo-s94 1111

4 Year old Golden Palomino
Mare Broke to Ride $LOOO 9
Year Old Registered HOHA
Beige Mara Bread to Registered
AOHA in June Green Broke

Mobile Home Lot For Rent Reier
ences Required 740 2S6 1922

6693

1 Bedroom A!C WID Hook Up
Near Arbors Nursmg Home No
Pets Quiet Local ons $279/Mo
+ UllillieS 740-446 2957

s200 011 LX s And Grs S250 on
300 1 S300 011 400 s And Z

8356

1 Bedroom Apartment Across Alo
Grande College $290/Mo All
Ut1l1ties Pa1d 1 aBS 84Q..052t

2583

FAIR SPECIALS
JUlY 5THRU AUGUST 30

42~=-1
.,__

11 1111 - 17Soull--

19B8 Ford F 150 e Cylinder 5 '
Speed AJC E~~:cellent Cond1t lon
$3 650 Call Alter s P:M 740 388

610 Farm Equipment

COMPUTERS Poor Crect•t 0 Kl
1 800-520 6364

Gravely Mower Electnc Start
Rul'ls Good $350 Horton Hunter
Suprema Crossi:IOw Wllh Target
L1ke New Condition $200 740

1 8$8-818.0128

440

LOADED

15 """" oft to

78K Eltcellent Condttlon $3 295
1994 Dodge- Conyers lon Vaq
Wllh ol.ll Options Cook Motols..,
7'10-&lt;146-0 103

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Fiberglass truck cap for full size
truck asking $300 excellent con
d•t•on 740.949 2112

FULLY

14~--

GoocJ condltton 13500 080
Cannong 10"""001 IOU pld&lt; S3 I t304)e7S-1!150
'
bust.! .,. pick $4 a bushel Jrm
0 Brien, Letart Falls 740 247
1988 Dak ota V. 6 Aulomatt

2113

-

12 Ador Jlln -

720 Truc:ks for Sale .
tSIZ Cl'lt~Y S 10 V 8 Aut n

Bea ni e Bab1es ror Sale S3 00

Twin RIVers Tower now accept1ng
app li cations lor 1BR HUO suO
s1dlzed apt lor elderly and hand
Valley V1ew Apartments Rio
Gral'lde Oh Now Accepting ap
pUcat•ons for lmmedlate occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts A.r
COI'IdiUonlng Kitchen appliances
Fenced 1n Pla yground lauMry
On Sight Management Water
Sewage and Trash Paid Full 111ne
Students must meet Oh10 Hous
1ng Finance A:genc~ Oua111Jca
110M Samar Citizens Welcome
EOE For mo1e Information call

Fruita a
Vegetables

580

t7401 25H909

7795
2 Be(lrooms 2 Baths CA Stove
Refrigerator Water Trash Fur
nlshed Very Nice! $350/Mo

Au Condllloner 24000 BTU
Whirlpool Caolerator (30&lt;4)882
268a

I

40 So ~~·rt

you become aware of someone today
who sorely needs some asstslance,

allow your nobler and gentler
1nsuncts to prevatl Come to thts
son's md wtlhoul any fanfare

per

ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19) What
you say.

how

you acl and even

what

you wear could be closely scruun1zed
by those with whom you II be
Involved today It behooves you to be
at your best
TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
When 11 comes to matenal matters
you'll be m your baohw1ck, cspectal
ly when they tnvolve famtly or home
needs

so don't hesttale to handle the

checkbook today
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It may
not come oul of a textbook or be
learned from a teacher bul you could
be 1n store for a very constructive
leam1n@ expertence resulting from a
personal encounter today

CANCER (June 21 July 22) A
petentlally profilable S1luat1on that s
brought to your attenlton today could
use your spectal mp1.11 Even tf the
endeavor IS already underway see tf
you can become mvolved

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Cereal . Gnpe · Vapor Meadow APPLIED
The s1gn hang1ng m the local health and beauty spa
read Cosmet1cs are an APPLIED art

AUGUST 41

\

�P~

Thursday

Wednesday, August 4, 1999

Pomer.,y • Middleport, Ohio

12 • The Daily Sentinel

Thousands may be spent on Kennedy crash. investigation
By MEUSSA B. ROBINSON
Atisoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGTON - When John F.
Kennedy Jr:s plane was first report·
ed missing . the go,•emment sent
sailors and pilOIS, aviation experts
and even two hydrographic survey
ships.
Two week.s later. federal costs arc
still being totaled, but estimates surpass $500,000 but much of that
would have been spent anyway.
· Some factors;
. • The U.S. Coast Guard total cost
was close to $492,000.
• The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration spe nt

Gun wound
treatment
cost $2.38

about S55,000 to operate the Rude · made ''a.' for tht..' hunJI·Jt-~a ."' SJJJ
and Whiting in the &gt;earch for wreck- a tanul) spo~~sman .
Pre;~d&lt;nt Clont,&gt;n hom &lt;ell has ta~ ­
age.
• Forces from the Navy and Atr en respon~tbllu~ h'r auth\mzmg th..:
Force were sent. including one ship c\1fJordma~ dlon to n. . . .-0\er th..:
that otherwise wouiJn ., have been at pn\Jh: plane . HI! bJ.,~d ll on the
sea. The Defense Depanmen1 would Kenned\ familv's rok " in our
not release figures until n completes national.llH'S. ;nd hccJU!-1.' of the
enonTtous lo~~) thai the~ ha\ c ~u~­
its review.
• The Nati onal Transportation talned in our lifetime~ ...
Tile co~ts are hard to cJiculate. J.t
Safety lloard ha; cmharkcd nn an
Jn\'esti gauon that,\ expected to take least in Lt!ml~ ot dl!h:nmmng \\hat
six to nine JlHmth~ and in\'\)IH· was SJ"' nl tor the Kenn edy crash that
wouldn't have been spe nt otherwise.
numerous experts.
AllhDugh, thL' fL.:dcral . gm:crnThe USS Briscoe, a Navy guided
menl's role \\' rl" L'~IL'ns.i'' C'. it didn 't m1ssile destroyer on \l&lt;hich the
come at thr: Kl:'n nl'J) famil) ·~ Kennedys gathered privately 10
. request.
release the ashes of JFK Jr.. 'his v. ifc
"The onJ, rc4""'' the fanHI) ~arolyn Bessette Kennedy and her

1s

an estimate

o~

STORE HOURS ·

Moaday ••ru

s....., .

ho!&gt;.pt tals tn t\'t.iry land and New York

that year. from South Carolina emergency rooms in 1997 and other
"'0UTCCS.

" We have been concerned th at a

89

I AM·lO.PM
291 SECOND ST.

what

the nation spent treating gunshot
victuns in 1994. based on d'ata from

there," O'Dell said.
Likewise for NOAA. which
would have had 10 spend about
S30,000 of the $55 .000 cost regard,
less of the Kennedy crash. said
Jeanne Kouhestani. a spokeswoman
for the Commerce Dcpanment,
which includes NOAA . That means
the Kennedy mission cost an additiona! $25.000.
The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation
Safety -Board will never ·have e&gt;timates for the Kennedy crash because
tbey don't break down costs on a
case-by-case basis. spQkesmen said.

COCA
PRODUCTS

By KATE N. GROSSMAN
Associated Press Writer
CH ICAGO.,... The cost of treating
.. ., 1hc natiOn's gunshot vict i,ins in a
rt'ccnl year was $2.3 b!lli'on and the
gove rnment paid half the bill v
rc,carchcrs reponed today.
The figure

ha'&lt; ~n fuel. he said.
•
"The boat is there. the crew is •

cally operates with a crew of 100 and
probably costs about $25,000 a day.
F ederanon of American Scientists, a saod John Pike, an analyst with the
Federation of Amencan Scientists
n onprofit resean:h group.
11le Air Force contnbuted 10 the
The Bmcoe. w1th a crew of about
3 SO, "as o n a traming missiOn off search as well. prohahly addin~ thou \! 'irgin1a when it was dive ned to tbe sands of dollars. said Pike.
··1 would be puzzled if they came
K enned\ mission. so some of tbe
up
with a number that was only ten•
c JSIS prubably would ha\c been
of
thousands
for the air component. ,.
i1 ocurred anyway.
.. Even on its way up there. it. was he said.
The Coast Guard would ha,·c
a ole to du some oflhe tr.iinmg." said
•ncurred
much of its $492,000 in
Lt. Cmdr. Lydia Robcnson, a Navy
costs
even
without panicipaling in the
spokes woman.
·
The USS Grasp. a Navy salvage ~earch because its personnel g(t the
ship that's smaller and less compli- sante pay whether they are on a misc.lled than the Briscoe, was sent from sion or not, said Jack O ' Dell, a Coast
p on and retrie,·ed about 75 percent of Guard spokesman. The only extra
tl1e plane. A .s hip of that class typi- cost for the Kennedy mission wou ld

~ oster. Lauren Besseue, costs rough·
1~ , $100.000 ada) to run. says tbe

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU August 7, 1999
DOUBLE COUPONS

R.C. COLA
PRODU

• SEE STORE FOR DETAil.S

fo lks don 't see gun vic:&gt;lcnct! as
their problem .. lhey see it as someone
e l ~c 's problem ,'' said one of the
,rc &lt;c·arthers, Philip Cook, .director of
the Sanford Institute of Public Poli cy at Duke University.
.. ·n1c costs are shared by everyone
through governme nt payment ln that
&gt;\Cn.,.~. we all have a stake in reduc ing gun violence ."
k11 (t f

2/$

.1
S1rlo1n Chops••••••.•••...•
$ 79
Ch1cken .Breasts ••••••• ·, 1

This has nm been lost \11l manv
L' itt l!s and co.unlies - ar tcast.2 3 are

B~NELE!S PORK

pur~uiilg gun ri1akcrs in court l\)
1'42COVC'r moftcy SjJcnt treating gunshot

vic tims.
'
T he srud y puhl1 sht..~d in tnday.\
1llUrnal of !he -American ML•JJ . .·al
t\s~ociation looked al th~ L'l1SIS hospi tals 1nt urrcd tn:oHing alrn n~ l
I ~5.0(~l gUnshot mJuriL' S.. including
fa1al one s The , a\c'r;lgc cQ:-t per
lllJUr) wa.., $ 17.000. \\' he n a ,·ictiin
w:1o; lmspitaliJcd . the average llfctimc .

""" . jumped &lt;0 S35.000. the
rc..;carrllers est imat ~d.
A n:-scarchcr not in voi H~d 111 th~
s,t udy sa id it whs a soltd analys1s .or
the 'iimitcJ data that is avail able.
. Mark' Cohen, a Vanderbilt Universi·
ty economist Who docswresearch in
thi s area, said the hreakdow11 of who
bears the costs of gunshot wounds is
the study:s most valuable component.
The government, mostly through
Mediqtd and Medicare payments.
paid $1. 1 b~li on of the total cost: the
· study found . Pri vate insurers covered
I~ percent of the cost. and vict ims
picked up another I9 percent. '
The rc~earchers speculated that
victim.s' cOsts are oft en passed on to
other patients because man y victims
can't afford treatment.
,
Despite the seemin gly hi gh numbers. Cohen sa id the costs are small
when compared to the $1 trilli on
spent un medH.: al care annua ll y.
" If you did away with gun shot
injurie s. would you reduce medical
· costs'!" Co hen sa id. "Not by m4uh ...
He said fraud is more cos tl y to
hospital s than gunshot wounds .
0

1.1.

$ . S9

CHAJE &amp;
.SANBORN
COFFEE

LB~ .

BON:L.ESS SKINLESS

$ 99

C

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters ..........~:.29 .
$
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$·1 89 FISCHER'S . .
119
Top Round Steak •••••• .
· ·Bologna •••••••••••• ••
USDA CHOICE ~ONUESS B~.E~a. $199

34.5 oz.

LB.

UNITED VALLEY
BELL
2%, 1% ·
.

LB• .

Short R1bs..........

.

OR SKIM MILK

·

$"1''

~::;::::~:::_.......:. SJ69
JAMESTOWN SPIRAL

·sn ed Ham

GALLO~

NABISCO
RITZ
CRACKERS

....~:. 99c

.2 /$5

··

1ion .

1 LB.

FRESH .

•

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

Red Sox defeat Cleveland, Page 4
Ann on great sex, Page 8
4-H judging results, Page 6

•
•

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Margar1ne St1cks.... .
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DAIRY ~ANI (ASST. FLAY.) ..
2/$
Ice Cream ......~.~~.:~?!!... ·

By DAVID JACOBS
..... oc:l.ted Prws Wriblr
CIRCLEVIu.E (AP) - Stories ltbout
troubles flllltm are facing bicause of this
summer's drought quickly came to. life dwing.a tour of some parched fllnns, Gov. Bob
lift said.
,
·
" This is a very whnd a serious situation ·
for thasc who arc farming. who are taking
risks, investing. providing the food," Taft
said \\tdncsday. "Th~ brings it home, d:iVe5 it home -the waency of the situation."
Taft spent two bows touring fllllts in
Pi&amp;:kaway County, one of 39 OOWities in the
centn1 and southern parts of the state he .
recently asked to be s~cd for drought ·
damage. Today, the federll Agri~ulture
Department's Stale Emergency · Boand is
expeciCd to evaluate crop losses.
...
The ears of Pickaway CQunty com on
WCdncsdily were dry and shrunlu:n, not full
of kernels as they should be this time of year. ·
Mites attacked soybean jilanls which only
came up to his knees, rather .than his waisL

During his tour, Taft ~ that he neighboring states, making fllnners eligible
had asked the state's congressional delega· frir low-interest loans.
lion and U.S. Agriadture Secretary Dan ·
The nine southern Ohio counties included
()liclanan to find fedenl money to help · were Athens, Belmont, Columbiana. Gallia.
farmers. Taft boped for crop disaster pro- Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe and
grams, a li~ feed program and low- Washington.
cost loans.
•
Piclc,away. County wa5 left out, although
In WISitington, the Senile approved $7.4 530 .farmers have ·reported produCtion I~
billion in emergency aid for farmers hurt by ranging from 30 percent to 100 percent.
drought and low crop priees. llle House has
"It's some of the driest s6il l .have evei
yet to consider ' farm aid, although Speaker · sceq." Taft said during the' tour of the county
Dennis Hastert has said he's com milled to south of Columbus. ·
passing some type of help.
Aside from worries about crops and
Rep. John Boehner, R·Ohio, the only con- finances, tbe dryness also raised con~m
gressman from Ohio on the Agriculture about possible problems for an annual fall
Committee, is watching the issue closely, pumpkin festival bere. Usually•. the regiou
said spokesman Dave ScltniUger.
produces thousands of ils own pumpkins.
" The governor's . concerns are well- . This year, some inay have to rome from elsefounded, and we share them," SchniUger where in Ohio.
said. Emergency low-interest loans and other
"This won' t be the happiest pumpkin fes·
help is likely, he said.
tival in Circleville, will it?" Taft asked farm, Some help .already is on the way. Earlier ers.
this week, federal officials declared as disas:
Taft toured Jerry arid Betty Wolf&lt;it'd's
ter areas all of West Virginia and parts of four family farm, where a field normally full of

By Jill FREEMAN
Sentinel N - Steff
BELUNGHAM, Wash. (AP) -A Tacoma native who had returned for
A new law modifying conDict of interest rules
family ·and high. school reunions died while hiking near Mount Baker, for members of the Ohio Depanment of Trans~'
portation 's Transponation aDd Review A«,ivisory
Whatcom County sheriff's deputies said.
/
Council hu rome under .fm: by groups opposed to
Bruce Perry, 38, of Wyoming. Ohio, and his best friend were descend.
ing from the 6,972-foot summit of Twill Sisters on Tuesday when Perry a local highway proji:ct. . ·
-p.:
Coalition
Against
Superfluous
Highways
slipped on a steep snowfield, tried to stop himself, bounced hard and landand,the Buckeye Foresl Council said they will orgaed on his ice ax, sheriff's Sgt. Ron Peterson said.
·
.
nize an association of public interest grOups: to stop
"It was just an .accident.. They weren't doing anything reckless or careimplemenlation of Hoose Bill 287.
less," Peterson Sllld.
·
The legislation, signed into law Tuesday by
The body was recovered late Wednesday at about the 5,4QO..foot level
Governor Bob Taft, renamed several highways and
111d was taken to Bellingham for an autopsy. · ·
also included a provision eliminating the ament
Peterson said Perry, a product development manager for Proctor and • ronDict of interest rule for memhen; of the Transponation Review Advisory Council which is
Gamble, attended a Camily reunion last weekend. This weekend he had
responsible for prioritizing and approving funding
planned !0 attend his 20th class.reunion at Stadium High School in Tacofor Ohio projecls.
ma. where he h~ been class presidenl
CASH aDd BFC are opposed to HB 28"/ because
He left a wife and three boys. ages 7, 4 and I.
it would allow former Athens t,tesseoger publisher
G. Kenner Buoh,··a member of the TRAC,Io partieipa~e in deliberations and votes,c:onoeming a pro.· ONCINNATI (AP)- Laboratory tcsls are being perfqrmed by the Ohio . posc,d relocatloo of Roote 33 from Athens to Dar·
Department of Health to detennine if 20 E. ooli ca.&lt;;es in southwest Ohio are · win, .a projccl the groups oppose.
related and come from a single.source.
·
·
· Tlie groups filed a lawsuit in Franklin County
eallier this year which was dismissed eallier this
A team from the federl!l Centers for
week after they and ODOT agreed that Bush would
Disease Control is helping trace the
not participate in di5CUS5ion and votes on Route 33.
source of the bacteria, which the
The suit explained that Bush had voted on the
•health department has identified as E.
project even though he sefVed Is co-chairman of the
coli 0157:H7.
. ., Highway Usen Committee of the Southeastern
That is the strain that first appeared
Ohio Regional Council, an organization which
in
1993
in
the
Northwest,
when
300
advocates and supports highway projects in the
2 Sedlo1111 : 12 Pages
people were stricken after eating
region.
,·
According to Todd Acheson, CASH
--~hamburgers
from
the
Jack
in
the
Box
120
Cal pwpr ·
~-restaurant chain.
spokesm1111, "This legislation is a direct attack on
the public interest. It will permit the. administration
C!m!Dec!s
9&amp;10
The bacteria has infected eight peato st,l:k the council with representatives of srecial
Comics
1l
pie in Hamilton County, six in Oer·
interests. Business groups who advocate highway
_~;oEd!!Jill!to111rtJlau;lsL-_ _ __,l~
. --,-I' m&lt;&gt;n1 Co~nty and six in Butler Coun· . construction will "f''W be able to authorize spending
rn..1 1
3
. ty, said Jane Beatltard of the Ohio millions of taxpay~dollars on their favorite high...,...,L-_.1 Department of Health. No one has way
projects."
·
~
Spolia
4&amp;5
died from the infection, but some of . ' . Jason Tockman, representing BFC, questioned
3
the infected people have been hospiWeather
the merits and prOcedures behind the legislation.
talizM, she said.
'
"lt makes common sense that those voting on
Lotteries
"The CDC team will ..,...ist with the
the use of Ohio highway monies should not he affil food survey of the victims'; to 6nd out iated with woups advocating particular projects. It
OHIO
is absurd that the governor and the legislature
'
everything they've eaten and where
Pkk 3: 9-0-5; Pick 4: 7-6-8~
would
change the law without hearing from the
they all: it;" Beathard s~d We!lnesSloper Lotto: 5·11-12-29-41-46
community and public organizations throughout
day.
Kicker: 2·1-6-3-3-9
. Ohio most affected by this change."
· E. coli can be transmitted through
Slate Representative Joho Carey (R-Well5ton)
W.VA.
cOntaminated waler, uncooked fruits
said
this morning he supported HB 287, saying
Dally 3: 7-5-0;Dally 4: 9-0-6-7 "
and
V..getables
and,
in
many
cilses,
by
regional
representation is important in making
o 1999 Ohio Valley Publillhins Co•.
eating u~dercooked ground beef.
highway decisions.

Ohio climber dead after falling on Ice ax

.

20 stricken with E. coli bacteria
Good Afternoon

Today's

UNITED VALLE~ BELL

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FARM FRESH PRODUCE - It's been • long time since you could buy frHh produce on the
atrHt In downtown Pomeroy, but this summer, Jeanie Price h . . been dohig • brisk bu.slness from
the corner of East Main end Court StrHts. P.rlca, with a friend, picks the produce fresh from her
fields·and brings It right to town, where It moves quickly from the bed of hsr truck. Soma of the
sweet corn and tomatoes coma from other fllrms, but moat of It comes from her own fields In
Pagevllle and on Charry Ridge near Pomeroy: cabbage, green and red peppers, melons, and soma
unuaual Items, too: eggplant, tometllloa, end sight varieties of hot peppers. Price eald ehe con·
aldars the operation a summer hobby.

! .
)
\

I

BARREN LAND - Ohio Goll•mor
Bob Taft, right, and Agriculture Director Fred Dailey examine soil at
Rhoades fllmlly fllrm In
County, ne,ar Clrclevll.. on
dey. Taft end other state
toured two fllrms for • look et
end pastures d1111111ged by the
droughL

"That's the whole idea of the TRAC," he said.
· "That 's the reason,for having people from different
parts of the state on the TRAC."
When TRAC, was first organized, the original
members were appointees from rDajor urban ceoters. Carey and other stale represematives were 'able
to change the make-up of the group to include
memhen; from sootheastem Ohio and other parts,of
the state they claim art nesJ&lt;Cted for highway
fund·
1
ing.
' ·
·
"It doesn't make sense that they can't advocate
for highways," Carey said. "We wanted an advocate
for our part of the state. (Bush) has been a pretty
good advocate. He 's done a good job."
The old oonftict of interest rule prevented advocates of specifiC highway projects from being
appointed to the TRAC. the new law only probibits
the appointment of paid advocates in highway pro·
jects.
"The eurrent r~triction is imponant sinoe the
TRAC is supposed to be an impartial board in
regirds to the projects it reviews. The removal of
the eurrent conDict of interest clause opens up
TRAC to members who have very specific agendas,
and TRAC will lose credibility as a board that can
prioritize and fund transportation projects objeclively aDd in a manner that is host for all the citizens
of Ohio," Tockman said. "Environmental issues arc
likely to he of little .concern to TRAC members
hand picked by highway interests and local business groups."
No member&gt; ~f CASH or BFC were asked to
testify regarding this bill, even though the lawsuit
was ongoing, Acheson explained,
"This amounts to stealth legislation on the pan
of the General AsSembly. This special inte.rOst pro·
vision· was snuck through as pan of the Highway
Naming Bill, apparently to prevent any meaningful
public. input. The· governor and the legislature
. should he ashamed of themselves," .he said
romeroy attorney St~ve Story, C&lt;H:hairman of
the Southeast Ohio Regtonal Council's Route 33
committee, has maintained that Bush's membership
in the TRAC does·not represent a conflict of inter,est.
~
.
"The fact that Bush is interested in better highways for the region does not represent a conDict of
interest," he said earlier... Everyone has an interest
in good lransponation."
.
He said SEORC memhers are not pa1d for advo·
eating development in southeastern Ohio.
. ..
TRAC memhen; faced stiffer conflict-Qf·.i~terest
rules than other stale board members, he sa1d. Thts
gives them lhc same rules as. everyone else, he
explained.
!!.
1

Syracuse Village Council., meeting in regular session Tuesday night, approved raises for village offi'cials to take effect at the beginning of the next term in
January, following the November election.
The mayor's salary will raise from $!50 a month to,
$400 a month; council members from $25 to $35 a .
month;·.. coun clerk from $75 to $100 a month and
clerk/treasurer from $500 to $550 a month.
O)uncil also approveil the purchase of two bulletproof vests which the police officers will be required
to wear while on duty.
II was noted that a ban on unnecessary water usage
iri the village been lifted following recent rain showers:
·'
Conservation measures are strictly voluntary, it was
noted.
.
.
· Council approved closing the pool after Aug. IS
due to the fair and the begiqning of the school year.
Scheduled pool parties will still be, held, it was rioted.
Potholes were also discussed and it was noted that .
some pa!chi!lg work would'be done . In addition, it was .
noted that the maitl pump ' at the pool will need
replaced before next year.
.
Clerk(freasurer . Janice Zwilling submined the
financial repon for July showing the following bal- ·
ances: general fund, $36,900.79; street construction,
$19,195.44; highway, $2,523.53; fire, $11,979.49;
water, $11,367.57; .pool, $5,781.90; guaranty meter,
$3,629.37; cemetery, $201.80; law enforcement,
$681.40; total, $92,268.64.
Also present·were Mayor George Connolly, council
members Larry Lavender, Bill Roush, Mony Wood, ,
Donna Peterson and Eber Pickens Jr., and police officer Richard Wamsley.
Not present was Councilwoman Kathryn Crow.

Middleport VOC lf?vels down
The Middleport Department of Public Affairs has
released the latest laboratory results from samples of ils
drinking water.
Levels of two volatile organic compQunds,
dichloroethylene and trichloroethyl.ene, arc both down
·.
from the June readings.
The level o~ dichloroeihy(ene decreased from 1.15
parts per billion to 1.14 ppb. and the level . of
trichloroethylene decreased from 1. 7 ppb to 1.6,
according .to the repon from samples collected on Jtily
14.
The village has begun testing the levels of VOCs
each month.

House eases legal services cuts

$349

·$189

soybeans is bam:n.
·
"It got so dry that we couldn't plant,"
said Mrs. Wolford. who estimated losses of
several thousand dollars.
Her husbarid told Taft the summer !::--.,.'lilt
drought has ~n made· wo~ by a dry
spring that left fields withou! moisture
resen.:es. That's why rain is still needed this
year, Wolford said.
" Rain not o~ly affecls this year's crops
but crops for years down the road,.., he said.
Despite the drought Wolford remained
optimistic.
.., I know this is something that ~on 't be
forever, .. he said.

New TRAC conflict of interest rules Syracuse Council OKs
draws fire from project opponents officials' pay raises ·

HAPPY .BABY
DIAPERS

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Taft tou·r s dro·u ght-stricken farms

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Middleport • Pom eroy. Ohio

Volum e 50. Numb e r 43

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•
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TodiiY:Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

Regional Briefs

12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

County Court
The followmg cases .were recently resolved in the Meigs County
Cou~t of Judge Patrick H. O'B rien .
Ftned were : Anthony C. Rou sh,
Syracuse, obwucting offic ial business, costs. probation. restraining
o rder i s~ued. six months jail suspended 10 live days. six months
house arres t; resist ing arre st, costs,
probation. 9li-days jail suspended to
five days concurrent , six months
house ~ arrest concUrrent; criminal
damaging , costs, proboti on, 90 days
jail suspended 10 five days concurrent , six months house arrest: R.
Michael Bauer, Coolville, fai lure&lt; lo
control. $ 100 plus cost: left of center,
$ 100 plus costs: Herbie Mitchero, ·
Pomeroy, expired license. $100 plus
cos ts, three days jail . suspended:
speed. $25 plus costs;'
James J. Hawley, Pomeroy, drivin g under FRA suspension. $200
plu s costs. 10 days jail suspended to
three days plus $100 suspended if
valid OL presented within 30 days ,
one year probation; failure to control,·
$30 plus costs: David T. Snipes.
Mooresv il le. N.C., speed: $26 plus
costs; Christopher Courcll. Portland,
reckicss operation, $100 plus COS IS,
three day s rcs idc ntial -treatrnent program; Shaw n King , Pomeroy. domesLi e viole nce, costs." 30 days jail suspended to one day, one year proba-

4

2 LITERS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

....

Augn81 5, 111118

Clinton having requested $340 million for fiscal 2000
By ALAN FRAM
and the Senate having already voted for ~300 million,
Auochrted Press Writer
·
WASHINGTON (AP)- The House is ready to ease the final figure is likely to grow.
The
25-year-old,
nonprofit
corporation
receives fedplanneil cuts in legal aid for low-income Americans as
eral
and
private
aid
and
distributes
grants
to
local boards
Congress tries to wrap up some of its spending work
of'
la\Vyers,
who
then
provide
free
legal
assistance
to
.
before embarking on ils August recess.
··
The House planned to resume debating a $37.7 bil- low-income people in civil cases.
The overall Commerce:Justice bill faces a White
. lion measure today that would finance the depanmenls
of Justice, State and Commerce and smaller agencies for House veto threat because the measure provides less ·
than Clinton wants for legal aid, hiring local police offi·
the coming fiscal year.
·
·
cers,
protecting endangere~ species and U.S. paymenls
And the Senate 'was ready to continue conside~ing a
$14.1 billion t)leasure financing the Interior Department to international organizations.
The measure, written largely by Republicans,
and cultural programs. That measure h31i become a battleground over mining and· other issues pitting industry includes nearly all of the $4.8 billion Clinton requested ..
for the 2000 census.
against environmental concerns.
·
Bowing to budget pressures. it declares $4.5 billion
The House Commerce-Justice measure had contained
an emergency, exempting that money from spendof
it
$141 million for the Legal Services Corp., which provides free legal representation in.civil cases for the poor. ing limits and paying for it out of expected federal surBut in an alliance of Democrats and moderate Repubh.- pi uses. De!J1ocrats, then conservatives, lost separate
cans, the House voted 242-178 Wednesday to boost that · attempts to knock that emergency designation o~t of the
bill.
figure to $250 million .
.
'
The Senate began debating the Interior bill last week
"Simple decency and a commitment to equal j ustice
as
Democrats
succeeded in knocking out four provisions
under the law should be enough" to win support for the
that they considered anti ·e nyif9!1.!11~~.~·
corporation, said Rep, Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y
But supporters of the d~leted language were expected
On the losing side were conservatives, who try lo .
slash Legal Services' budget virtually every year. .This to try reviving their provisions.
Among them is Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas,
year they cited a new report by Jhe General Accounting
who
for the fourth time wanls to delay the Interior
Office, ·Congress' official auditor, which found that five
of the corporation's local offices had ,~ounted 75,000 Department from forcing oil companies to pay higher
royalties to the government for drilling on federal lands.
cases in 1997that they couldn't document.
With the stan of fiscal 2000 less than two months
Rep. Dave Weldon. R-Fia.• called the undocumented
cases "one of the most outrageous misrepresentations of away, the House has so far approved 10 of the 13 annuany agency ... probably one of the worst in this centuty." al spending bills for 2000.
The Senate lias approved nine, including a $68 billion
The $250 million still falls short of the $300 million
provided for Legal Services this year. But with President measure financing agriculture and food progr!lfl\S.

•

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