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                  <text>By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Credit Woes? Don't fall prey to television money gimmick
Ann
Landers
1991, l.os Mfclc::s Timet
SyRchcuc and Crnwn
S,MicaW:_

Dear Ann Landen: Thank you
for wising up millions of readers to
those . sweepstakes gimmicks that
encourage people to buy magazines
they don't need for a chance to enter
a sweepstakes they aren't likely to
win . And now. there is another borderli ne "opportunity " on TV that I
hope you will put the floodlights on.
It's companies that want to lend
money to people who can't get cred It anyplace else.
These " big hearted" people target

their pitch to homeowners. All they
want to know is "Do you own your
own home'" If you do. no matter
how bad your credit is. they want to
hear from you. Just ~ign that little
piece of paper. anc you will get a
loan . Sound good'' Yes, indeed.
especially when tioe pitchman is
frie ndly and folksy. and reminds you
of your favorite uncle . Not so fast.
What you have really signed is an
agreement to give them your home
within a specified period of time if
you don't pay up. Believe me, Ann.
they will not hesitate to take it. Wised Up in Detroit
Dear Wised Up: If you can't pay
your bills. the hest course of action
IS to talk to your creditors, let them
know you want to honor the obliga-

Tuesday

Page10
Monday, July 27, 1998

lion and offer to make small payments until you gel back on your
feet. Unless you are a notorious
deadbeat, they will be patient and
cooperative. And P.S. : If you have
credit cards. take a pair of scissors
and cut them up.
Dear Ann Landers: A young
woman I see at the gym appears to
be starving herself to death . Over the
past year, her dancer's figure has
become nearly skeletal. I fear for her
life . but I don't know what to do
about it . My experience with people
who suffer addictions te lls me it IS
almost impossible to help someone
who refuses to believe there's a
problem. The addiction to starvalion , called anorex ia. is a known
killer. When I was a teenager. I suf-

fered from a distorted body image.
Although I had a nice figure, I
thought I was fat. ~
Perhaps if thf'wo~an at the gym
sees this letter1 she will recognize
he,e\f. fn ;'the{ mean.llme, IS there
anvthmg ~ shojlld do? It seems like
yo"' usual,advice, MYOB, is hean\ess in this case. What do you think?
-Santa Fe, N.M .
Dear Santa Fe: I'm trusting that
your assessment of "this woman's
condition is correct. By all means,
tell her of your concern and suggest
she contact ANAD (Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders). P.O.
Box 7, Highland Park. Ill. 60035
(http://members.aol .com/anad20/ind
e. .html). If she becomes upset, so
what' You will have done your best

to help her, and if something terrible
happens. your conscience will be
clear.
Dear Ana Laaden: I just read
the letter from "Sioux Falls," who
mentioned an employee ~ · ho left the
men's room without washing his
hands. When questioned a...out it, the
employee said he wasn't going back
to work, he was going to lunch.
That story reminded me of one
that circulated in my small hometown. In the '20s, when filffilers still
came to town by horse and wagon,
the general store provided a shelter
for the horses and a three-holer outhouse for the farmers.
One day, a farmer came into the
outhouse and saw "Charlie" poking
around with a long pole through one

of the seat holes. When asked what
he was doing, Charlie replied, "I
dropped my jacket down the hole."
The farmer could hardly di&gt;guise
his disgust. "What the devil would
you want with a jacket after it's been
down there? " he asked.
"I don 't give a damn about the
jacket." said Charlie, "but! had my
sandwich in the side pocket." John in Livingston Manor, N.Y.
Dear John: Generally, I don 't
care for bathroom humor. but I
laughed at that one, and I' II bet
many of my readers will, too.

July 28, 1998

Weather
Today: Sunny
High:BO; Low:60

~~

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 90; Low:70

"'·

j

' '

Leaf signs NFL contract, Page 5
Time Out for Tips column, Page 10
Ann Landers column, Page 6

MONDAY
POMEROY - Open enrollment and regis trati on, sum mer

University of Rio
Grand"e's Meigs Center in Middleport will be held Monday. 2 to
6 p.m. at the Meigs Center.
sess10n,

POMEROY - Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy, vacation
Bibl e sc hool, Monday through
Friday. 6 to 8:30 p.m. "Hooked
on Jesus" will be theme. To preregister, call 992-5673 .
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club , annual picnic . Monday
evening, 6 p.m. home of Donna

Jenkin s. Members to tour Janet
Bolin 's gardens at 5 p.m. and
Jenkin s' garde ns before the pic -

di sh. and shotgun for trip shootmg.

Meigs County's

nic .

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department, free immu nization clinic Tuesday, 9 to II
a.m . and I to 3 p.m. Meigs Multi purpose Center, Pomeroy. Child
to
be
accompanied
by
parent/legal guardian and to take
immunizalion record.

POMEROY - Mei gs County
Veterans Service Commission.
7:30 p.m. Monday, at Veterans
Service Office. Mulberry Ave.,
Pom eroy.
CHESTER - Meigs C.ounty
IKES family picnic, Monday, 7
p.m . at the Izaak Walton Farm.
Take table servi ce and cove red

RACINE - An organizational
meeting for the Southern Junior

the Gordon and Linda Fi sher gardens .

THURSDAY .
POMEROY- AA and Alanon
meetings , Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. 7 p.m. Tue sday.

POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club, Tuesday, 8 p.m.,
home of Alice Thompson . Members to take arrangement materials for fair class demonstrations .

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS Eastern
Local Board of Education, spe-

WEDNESDAY
Wildwood
SYRACUSE Garden Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m.
at home of Sara Roush, Church
St. , Syracuse, following' a tour of

cial session. 10 a.m . to di sc uss

personnel and other required
a~.:tion .

Day Sale
WHILE SUPPLIES

Prices Good 'uasday, July 28th &amp;Wednedsay, July 21th only

NO RAINCHECKS

LA T

FAMILY PACK ASSORTED

DEL MONTE

JACK FROST

Pork Cho s

Ketchup

Sugar

CENTER CUT PORK
CHOPS $1.89 LB

Lb.

SMITHFIELD

79c

28 oz.

F BUn EBDS

Hams
SLICED

SUNBEAM HOT DOG OR

Hambur er Bun

c

c

12 pk.

Lb.

99C LB.

SJ59

Sib.

FRESH HEAD

LAY'S

Lettuce

Potato Chips

u.s #1
IDAHO
POTATOES 99 C
liMIT 2 PLWE

2/$

.

5.5 oz.

Ass't Varieties

Head

UMIT 4 PLEASE

UNITED VALLEY BELL

R.C COLA

Cotta e Cheese

Products

24 oz.

/$

UMIT4Pul2

•

FESTIVAL

Ice Cream
99 !~..~

1aGru

c

BBQ Sauce
.c

59

12PK
12 OZCANS

WHISKAS

HUNT'S

Limit 4 Pluse

29

Asst. Varieties

Cat Food
5.5 oz.
Limit 5 please

5/$1.

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, _OHIO
PRICES EFFEcnvE JULY 28th &amp; .29th 1998 ONLY

"'"'J;ooc • The Melga County Horne,
herein a photo from The Dally Sentlnel'e flies, will
on Augult 10 fol·
lowing action taken by the Melgs_County Commissioners on Monday. Only two permanent residents ramaln !hera-

MRJDD to ask
Meigs voters
fo~ 5-year levy
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation will place a \.8-mill
levy proposal on the November ballot, but will change the proposal
somewhat in hopes that it will finally p;ISS.
Steve Beha. administmtor of the
Carleton School and Meigs Industries, the fiiCility operated by the
MRIDD Board. received authorization (rom the Meigs County Commissioners on Monday to place the
levy on the general election ballot.
The board has attempted several
times to pass the levy as a continuing levy. However. the new proposal involves a 1.8-mill. five-year levy.
If passed, the levy will be used for
general opemting expenses and to
fund an extensive capital improvement progmm.
According to a news release
issued by Beha. the levy proceeds
would be used to purchase two new
buses and would finance a twophase construction project which
would add 4.200 square feet to the
facility's adult services area and
4,200 feet to the school-age area.
That building program would take
advantage of $300,000 in state funding which was approved. but which
requires a local match .
The program employs some 70
people in addition to the adult clients
who receive paychecks through contract jobs.
The levy. if approved. would generate an additional $380.000 per
year.
Jean Trussell. the county's grants
administrator. and Jon Jacobs of the
Meigs County Health Department,
met with the commissioners to discuss a grant program offered through

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A continuing levy for fire equipment will appear on the November
ballot in Middleport following action
taken by Middleport Village Council
on Monday evening.

Good Afternoon
Today's Sentinel
I Section - I 0 Pages
Calendar
qassiOeds
Comics
Ed ito
Local

6

SPorts

4-S

Weather

3

7-8
9

2
3

Lotteries

0010

lY.YA.

Dally 3: 2-3-0; Dally 4:4-3-7-0

~-

the EPA. which provides funding for
sewer systems for qualifying residents.
The program allows states to
make loans to communities and individuals who have no existing sewage
treatment facilities. Qualifying communities or' service area~ must have
fewer than 3,000 residents, must
lack access to centralized waste. water treatment or collection system.
must improve public health, must be
low-income and have high unemployment.
Jacobs said that the program
would be ideal for providing sewer
service in areas such a' Reedsville,
Pageville and other outlying comIIIIIQilies where clusters of homes are
not served by any form of sewage
service. Package plants could be
built. Jacobs said. which could serve
the groups of homes.
Both Jacobs and Trussell said that
the program would not fund hookups
to existing systems. so residents in
Tuppers Plains who are seeking public funding to connect!~ that system
would not qualify under the program.
Jacobs estimated that approximately 45 percent ofthe septic tanks
and private sewage systems in Meigs
County are non-compliant under EPA
guidelines.
The commissioners also:
-- Authorized the payment of
county bills in the amount of
$4\5,723.90.with 265 entries;
--Approved Asphalt Materials of
Marieua and Middleport Terminal of
Gallipolis to provide bituminous
materials for August,
Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard, Fred Hoffman and Jeffrey Thornton and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.

By BRIAN J_ REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Home will permanently close on Monday. Aug. I0.
Action taken by the Meigs County Commissioners at their regular
meeting on Monday will result in the
closing of the home due to financial
concerns.
Commission President Janet
Howard stepped down as president
yesterday to make a motion to close
the home. with Commissioner Fred
Hoffman voting in favor and Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton voting
against the closing.
"The commissioners have determined that it is no longer economi-

cally fea~ible to operate a county
home due to the small number of persons eligible for such service and due
to the high cost of operating such a
home for a small number of individuals," the commissioners' resolution
said.
Only two permanent residents
remain in the home. down from \0
whom were housed there when the
commissioners first announced their
intentions of closing it in January.
Another resident is currently housed
there temporarily.
The resolution further states that
the relatives and guardians of the
remaining residents will be notified
of the closing date and given the

option of choosing where the residents will be transferred. and that the
Director of the Department of Human
Services will be charged with the
rsponsibility of determining in the
future who is eligible for county care.
Howard said yesterday that the
building will remain county property and will likely be renovated and
used for county ollice space, in order
to save money now spent for renting
privately-owned buildings.
The Veterans Service Office.
which has been the subject of discussion in recent weeks due to accessibility problems. the Board of Elections. lh~ county grants administmtor.
and the county's Litter Conlrol oper-

ation are all housed in rented office·
spaces.
The commissioners will maintain
beds in the building for use a.s an
emergency disaster shelter. Howard·
said.
The DHS Director. as part of his
duty relating to indigency determination. will also determine suitable
places of residence for indigent residents.
The commissioners originally voted to close the home in January. and
then in March. but later modified that
decision. closing the honie to new
residents only. The action was taken
after a levy proposal for the county
home's operation failed in November.

Financial condition of county worsens

County proposes ·half-percent sales tax
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
.In an attempt to remedy the county's increasingly-serious financial
woes. the Meigs County Commissioners are proposing an increase in
the county sales tax.
The county now collects one percent on all taxable sales in the county, and will seek an additional halfpercent, which will generate an estimated $400,000 to $600,000 per
year. The county's existing one pertax
generated
cent
sales
$1,025,185.31 for the county general fund last year. according to County Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell.
The county sales tax is paid in
addition to the state's five percent
sales-tax.
County Commissioner Janet
Howard, who made a motion to hold
two public hearings. as required b,1
law, on the proposal. said that the
county faces $350.000 in expenses
above gener~i operating expenses
next year: $100.000 to repair the
county's abandoned landfill. $50.000
to make required improvements to
the county jail in order to meet state
fire codes, $50.000 to expand and
make other needed' repairs to the jail.
$90,000. $32.000 of which was borrowed. to finance this year's purchase
of a new computer for the auditor's
otlice. and $60.&lt;Xl0 to retire the debt
incurred by the purchase of new sheriff's cruisers.
The commissioners, with Howard
dissenting. also voted to borrow
$\00,000 in orderto pay $54.043.53
in delinquent bills for the county
sheritfs department. as well as anticipated linancial needs for the department for the remainder of the year.
The bills consist of bills for housing prisoners in jails outside of the
county and medical bills and prescription costs for prisoners. which
the county is re4uired to pay.
Of the $485.979.80 appropriated
in the sheritl's budget in January. only
$9,980.70 remains. not including
funds for salaries. The budget contain.~ balances of$71.62 fQr supplies.

DISCUSS BUDGET • Meigs County Treasur-

er Howard Frank discussed the worsening con·
dillon of Meigs County's finances with the
Meigs County Commissioners on Monday.
Also pictured are Commissioners Jeffrey
$3.314.94 for food. $309.84 for contmct services. $6,000 for gao;o\ine and
oil. $300 for training. and $2.90 for
medicnl expenses fo~ prisoners. The
remaining line items contain zero balances. including office supplies.tmvel. housing. uniforms and other nonsnlary considerations.
"I haven problem with agreeing to
boiTDw money if I can't guarantee
repayment," Howard said.
Her comments echoed advice given the board earlier in the day by
County Treasurer Howard Frank.
who gave the commissioners a statement about the tinancinl condition of
the county.
Frank noted that the county auditor was re4uin:d to sign any loan documt:nts. guaranteeing rhat the ~oun ­
ty will have funds available to repay
any loan "hen due.
With a new commissioner coming
on board in January. .such a commitment could be risky. Frank said.
Noting that the L:ounty's growth
remained at about $K.5!MJ per year.
Frank said th;.at the ~.:ounty was. in

Thornton and Janet Howard, and In back·
ground, Patty Pickens, Republican commls·
sioner candidate. Commissioner Fred Hotfrttan,
not pictured, was also present.

effect, operating on a 30 year-old
budget. saying that any tinancial
growth for the county has stayed conscant for that long.

"There isn't anyone who can work
and live on a 30 year-old budget. bul
the county is doing that," Frank said.
"Any . time you spend the growth.
which has .stayed constant at $8.500.
you have to take it off(a department's
budget), and now, you have reached
a point where you can't take it off and
pay the bills."
Frank projects an immediale general fund deficit of $117.563 by the
close of July business on Friday. aml
said that the commissioners will like·
ly be re4uired to request an advance
on the second-half property tax set·
t\ement. which will be available
sometime in early August in order to
pay July bills.
When suggesting lh~ h_alf·pen.:ent
sal~!&lt;~ tax increase. Commi~sioner
Fred Hoffman acknowledged that the
proposal would likely be unpopular,
but abo said that the county wa' fac ·
ing un~xpected expeme:-. and no like·

\y growth in the near future.
"I won't be here next year, but I
know that the county is going to need
money in the coffers in order to pay
for the landtill. the jail and to pay oil
the'se loans," Hoffman said. "We've
abo spent $45.0lXJ by keeping the
county home open (beyond the
March deadline) anJ $45.0(X) has
gone: into th~ t..:ounty's insuram:t!
fund . I also expect that the sheriffs
ut!ice is going to reyuire $ I!Xl,!XMJ
he! fore the year i~ uvt!r."
Fmnk and Commissioner Jeffrey
Thornton aho not~d the nt!ec.l for t!t..:Onomic development , with Fronk eslimating the dosing of the Southern
Ohio Coal Company mines at2!XJ7 .
"If we don 't have some development by then. the county will be in
worse linancial condition than any
county in the state." Frank said. "We
stand to lose a million in real estate
alone ."
"The Meigs Local School DIStrict
would be re4uired to pass a \0-mill
levy just to make up their loss ."

Middleport Council asks yoters for continuing levy for fire equipment

'J'kk 3: 715; Pick 4: 6465
Buckeye S: 2-4-8-13- J 7

•;

Hometown Newspape•

County Home to close Aug. 10

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd,, Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

High Boosters, Tuesday, 6 p.m. at
the junior high building. Parents
urged to attend .

Braves
stop Reds
3·2 .
' ,. !lod Page 4

•

Community Calendar
T he Comm unit y Ca lendar is
publi shed as a free se rvi ce to
non·profit gro up s wishing to
an noun ce meeting and spec ial
eve nts. The cale ndar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
rai se rs of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a spec ific number of days .

Sports

· ~

0 1998 Otllo V11Uey PublishinJ Co.

Meeting in regular session. council authorized the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department to seek a 1.5mill permanent levy, which will generate $24.000 per year, for the pur·
pose of replacing a 20 year-old fire
truck and other equipment.
Don Stivers and Jay Buskirk, representing the VFD, said that the cost
of replacing the truck is estimated at
between $300.000 and $325,000.
The village currently receives proceeds from a one-mill levy to pay for
the village's ladder truck.
Proceeds from department
fundraisers and !he proceeds from the
sale of the existing Engine 12 would
be used to offset the cost of the truck.
Council held extensive discussion
and several votes relating to \lie levy
proposal. The original resolution
passed by counc'ii was lhe resolution
which finally resulted from the meeting: a 1.5-JIIill continuing levy.
However, Council members Steve
Houchins and Rae Gwiazdowski suggested !hal a levy proposal with a definite time structure. such as a IS-year
levy be approved, 11ther than a continuing levy, saying !hat a permanent
levy would be less likely to receive
approval from the voters.
Houchins and Gwiazdowski said
that tltey \Jere supportive of the levy
and said !hal their~renee fora IS-

year levy was motivated only by a and Middleport Hill Cemetery. Brewer said that high grass. displaced
desire to see it pa~s .
On the original vote for a perma- nags on vetemns' graves and other
nent levy, Gwiazdowski, Houchins evidence of poor maintenance are a
and Roger Manley voted "no." while "disgrace."
Brewer said that the cemetery
Sandy Ianarelli. Beth Stivers and
appears
to have not been maintained
Robert Pooler voted "yes." Mayor
adequntely
since Memorial Day.
Dewey Horton broke the tie vote with
Village
Superintendent Brent
a "yes" vote.
Manley
and
Village Administrator
A motion was then made to
Bill
Browning
explained that severrescind the motion so that an amendal
lawn
mower.;
had been out of comment could be made to change the
mission
and
that
the village was just
levy to a 15-year levy. and all memto
catch
up on needed
beginning
berS'v&lt;iied in favor.
maintenance,
juggling
mowing crews
On a second vote for a continuing
levy. Manley changed his vote to a from one area to another.
"yes" vote, and on a vote to amend
Max Whitlatch said that he wa.•
the resolution to a 15-year levy. offended by the condition of a nagGwiazdowski and Houchins voted pole which had been erected at the
"yes." while the others voted "no," cemetery in memory of former police
leaving the levy proposal as a 1.5- chief JJ Cremeans. Whitlatch said
mi\1 continuing levy.
that the pole was in need of paint and
Council chambers were filled to the nag in need of repair.
standing-room only as residenls aired
Ron Cremeans lodged a complaint
their concelns about several issues.
about the way a patrolman with the
Jean Craig updated cou~cil about department allegedly handled the
her progteSS iri investigating an aban- search for his son, Seth Cremeans,
doned property in the alley behind recently. Cremeans said that Patrolresidences on Soutlt Third Avenue. man PJ Richmond used abu~ive lanShe said she had been in contact with guage when searching the Cremeans
the owner of a property with high home for Seth Cremeans.
weeds and !hat the property was to be
Richmond said that shots had
cleuied up.
.beCn fired by Seth Cremeans during
Mill')' Brewer complained about ttlf incident, and !hat he and other
!he condition of Riveryiew CemetCI)' oltteerS had feared for their lives

while at the Cremeans residence.
John Fultz. owner of the Captain's
House Inn complained of loitering by
children and teenagers in the downtown business district, and about
excessive noise from stereos. saying

that seveml guests at the inn had
complained. and that the police
depanment had been called on several occasions.

Sam Eblin presented a proposed
Continued on page 3

VOICES CONCERN • Jetin Craig wu one of MYIIrlti Middleport !'MkMnta tllklreulng concema befoN Middleport Vlllege

Council on Mondlty. The council c:Nimbera -ltandlng room
only, with 22 ....dents ancl12 village employen aMincllng.

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 28, 1998

Commentaty
The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6{ufrd m 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Gen•ral Manager

DIANE HILL
Controller

7JII'Stadatl•e:C:amft,.,.,tothetdnorrromrtMJtr•o,. tbroH,.,.oftoplca
5llotf- (31111 wwr/1 Ot 1...) Mvt llle b. .t Chlt!Cf Ol bolt&gt;fl publl- ryp.cl ,.,,

Tuesday. July 28, 1998 .

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
To Republican lawmakers and
the Clanton admmastrataon. who
are busy squabblang over whal 10
do walh the supposed budge! surplus. we offer a suggestion Use a
goo&lt;) chunk of the unexpecled cash
to dramatacally ancrease lundmg
for cancer research
Consadermg lhat 87 percenl of
those polled by USA Today sa ad
they would support a tax ancr&lt;ase
,1f the money was gomg lo light
cancer, !here's ce rtaanly pubhc
support For good measure how
about a nvelang speech from Presaden! Clanton m whach he vows lo
eradacale cancer lhc way John F
Kennedy

once

promJ scd

man

would walk on lhe moon '
_.,..,.phcnonum'* Spo&lt;lfyodotolflf&gt;IHIIItOtoroncotooptWvlousorlH:Io
There'd be hllle House Srcaker
• - · - to. uttots to,. EdHor, Tho s.nrlnol 111 Court Sl, Pomoroy, Ohio • Newt Gangrach could say 10 !hat ,
45718, ot FAX fO.Iff..WZ-2157
~o..-;.;;;;:.;;::o;,;;;;.;;;;;;,;,;;;;;;;;.;;;;,~-----------.----' and GOP plans IO usc lhe surplus
lor a dra)llt tax cut would probahly Iall hy lhe waysadc
Bu1 heyond bcmg good polaucs
a hclty mcrcao.;c m cancer luadmg
would be good pola cy Here arc lhc
lngh1cnang lacls
-- Over I 500 Amencans dac

Teachers' union head
supports charter schools
- public ones, that is

Berry's World
'''

''
\

'

'''

"

from cancer
every day
-- Half of
all Amen can
men and a
1hord
of
women can
expect 10 be
daagnosed
with cancer
durang theor
lafelame
-- At the preMoller &amp;
sen I rale oneAnderson
fourth of all
Amcncans wall une day dac from
lhiS msadaous dasease.
Yet only one penny oul of every
$10 an 1axes as spenl on faghllng

"small skarmiSh," the professor
sa1d "Thas (has not been) an
Amencan-style effort to go 10 the
moon , to crack the atom or to faght
a Gulf War The effort could only
support a few thousand mvestagators to fight unly a hmated engagement"
In sp1te of th1s , med1cal
research h.•s made great stndes an
the bailie agaanst cancer The sax
cancers that pnmanly alfect young
people, mcludmg leukemaa, have
been "essentially cured." Coffey
claamcd But lung, breasl, colon
proslale. bladder and braan cancer
contmue 10 fell malhons
Whale promasang breakthroughs
an research arc becomang more
ca ncer 'At prese nt . the cancer common ·- Coffey liken s the
research cup IS lhrce -fourlhs progress made an the la.'t 10 years
cmply DonaldS Coffey. a Johns 10 the slunmng advances an comHopkan s Unavcrsuy pro lessor and puler technology over Ihe same
rcccnl presadenl ol lhc Amcncan rcnod of lime -- 1he amuunl of
Assoc1al10n of Cancer Research. money we spend lighting cam:cr as
10ld Congress lasl week
an shockang dasproporlaon 10 1he
Colle) spoke ut Prcsadenl grave 1hrca1 posed hy the dascasc
R1ch.1rd M N1xon s dcd.1r~uwn of
Yet wnh so mut.:h headway
a war nn c.mccr an IIJ72 Some already hcang made. amaganc the
25 years lalcr lh" 'war ha&gt; pnssahalllacs II our government
IUrned out lo he hnlc more !han .1 dccadcd 10 lund somclhang thai the

.,;.

j

pubhc ardently wants
UNDER THE DOME -- We've
never been b1g fans of the Repubhcan Party 's cynacal and ceaseless
efforts lo defang the labor-umon
movemcnl Rcpublacan s want to
cui off the umons' nghl to conlnbutc to political campaagns, hut
domg so would take away an
amportanl countcrweaghl to the
dasproportlonatc mfluencc that
bag -money corporate Amenca
enJoys an the current Congress
Ycl somcumes the GOP cratacasm strakcs a chord Such was the
case wnh lasl week's revclauon
thai some unaonazed federal work crs have hccn usang thear taxpaycrfunded unaon leave lime 10 go
Chnstmas shoppmg

Yes Chraslmas shoppang
Under a lillie-known rule
unwnazcd workers arc allowed In
ccnaan .thsenccs from !hear regular
jOOs to ~.:ondull umon husmco.,;s
such .ts collccllve hargaanang
Emplnycrs ,arcn'l allowed lo counl
these .lho.;cncco.; ag:.11nst norm~ll
vacalaon Inne or nlhcr annu.tl
leave Bu1 1hc pnlacy ccnaanly
wasn 1 de,agncd In allow lcdcral
worker"' ltJ go Chn..,trna"' "'hoppmg
nn the tax: payer~; ' (.hme
Ycl !hal s hccn lhc practacc for
almost ::!0 year"' at '\orne Bo ... ton art!a ollu.:cs of the Sou~ll Sccunty
At.lmant .. tratwn The practtt:C dates
hack to a tunc when stores somelime s waen t open 1n the
cvcnangs But !hal 's hardly lhc
case today Never nund the tact
thai lhcsc v.orkcrs hkc all lcdcral
employees, already have generous
amounts of pa1d \acatmn and
annual lc.avc .11 !hear daspos.1l af
they ... an ' t mak~ 11 to the stores on
the weekends
Sn how dad Ihe lcadershap of Ihe
Amencan Federataon of Government Employees defend alsclf
when SSA honchos questaoned tha s
practace' As an amporlant "morale
booster"
"The practacc accommodates
those employees who, for rhalosophacal or other reasons . avoad
shoppang dunng evcnangs and on
Sundays,' the unaon wnlcs an a
statement to a federal mcdaalnr
Underslandahly, the mcdaatnr
dadn't buy thas argument and ruled
an favor of the SSA
Jack Anderson and Jan
Moller are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc

Chipping away reproductive rights
By Sara Eckel
When you wnlc ahnul rcprnducuvc nghls an &lt;\mcnca you rc
never shon nl malcn.al The re as
always a new sl ,\le m lcder,al
rcslncllon ~.:ormng tlo'An the ptkc to
ltmtl women s .lu.:cs-.; to .1horlHHl

Jusl 1has mnnlh lm cx.uuplc lhc
House volcd on .1 halllh.al rcsllllls
the nghts ol young women to get
aborlaons .tnd one 111.11 hmll ' ccalaan lalc-lcrm ,thoruons
We have hccn scclllg s u~.:h measures lor years and the or sheer volume can make even Ihe mosl ardent
rcproduclaw-nghts supponcr lccl
weary For years we· vc he en s.ty
mg that conscrvati\Cs arc crodtng
lhc nght 10 choose But lhc prohlcm " that 1hc more they succeed - the more lhcy chap away al Roc
\S Wade -- lhc less 11 hcco mes
news Wath each new measure -- .1
parental -consent law here ,, wall-

=--:===""""

1ng -pcraod
rcstru.: llon there
-- the SI[U,IliOn
hcc omc s .11 the
SlllllC
WOISC

and

.1l~lrrn1ng

But
every once 1n .1
whak we sec an
ahonwn
rcstncllon wtth

Eckel
amphcallons tha
1 reach hcyonal the nghl to
choose Ronald Reagan's gag rule
was one This measure. whach
Presadenl Clanton hltcd shortly
.alter he Cook olface, prevented doc lors who worked at ccn.un lcder.tlly lundcd clanacs lrom g1vang thcar
palacnls anformatwn about ahnrtaon It was as hratcn a form ol
ccnsorshap as there could ever he.
yet the law was on the hooks lnr

was consagned
to 1hc dustban
ol
haslory
Thas week ll's
on I he cover of
Tame
Mark
MeG wore 1 Ken
Grallcy 1 Who
cares af they're
spoiled overpaad athletes'
They rc heroes
agaan 1
And what
Shoales
ahoul our war
on dru g&gt;' Hasn't that hccn goang
on sancc the dawn ol lame' Sure
seems lake 11 Bul he y
cvc rythang old as new ag aan The old
· Thas as your hraan on drugs '
spot has hcc n updated. lor
anslanc c lnslead ol lryang an egg.
the woman an the new ad smashes
a kalchcn walh a lryang pan. to
and~e a lc the dangers ol hcroan
addac uon It would he a prclly
cllcctavc co mmcrcaal. I guess, lor
any hcroan abuse r who watches a
lot Ol lCicVISIOO
He d watch 11 and say, "Thank
you , Partnership for a Drug Free
Amcnca' That's 11 for me'" And
donate h1 s works to chanty
The ad JUSt confused me
thoug h In the onganal spot, 11 was
the egg-as-bram "frymg " an the
pan that made It work What's the
drug an the new ad? The frytng
pan? Was there an egg anvolved?

By the Associated Press
Southeastern Ohio
Today. Fog untal mid-mommg .. Then mostly sunny Highs in the
mid and upper 80s Southwest wand
5to IOmph
Tomght...Mostly clear untal m•dnaght .. Then fog developmg. Lows m
the mad 60s. Laght and van able wmd
Wednesday .Fog untal mad-mommg Then mostly sunny. Haghs near
90.
Extended rorecast

Reunion announced
The 63th annual Parker reunion
wtll be held Aug. 2, 12:45, at the Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
CAAtomeel
The Galha-Me1gs Community
Actton Agency will hold iL• monthly
board meeung, 4 p.m. ThuOOlly at the
Gutdmg Hand School m Cheshire.
~~

thiS week
Thas was supposed to lead to
some kand of closure, but sance
the Russaan Orthodox Church has
expressed douht about the authentaclly of the rcmams (alone an that
doubt, by the way) and rcluscd to
allcnd, causang Boaas Ychsan to
ancnd but keep has mouth mamly
shut, and sancc some of the
Romanov dcscend"nts declined to
ancnd , thas mall e. nnaal closure
became anstead JUsl another typical 20th century mcdaa event.
" Closure ," of course, IS a
recent concept Than gs used to go
and on lorcvcr and ever, amen
Today, at's nil sl&lt;lp and start, sl&lt;lp
and start
We love haschall, we hate
haschall , we want health ~arc, we
hate health care Ancacnt sloth
dung may he the only thang we
l:an agree on

Well we can he sure ol another lhan g an today\ world the
Wayans Brothers They have
alway s hccn wllh us The y wall
always be wllh us
(lan Shnales' new hook, "Not
Wet Yet," as available from
2 13 61 Puhl~ealaons , PO Box
1910. Los Angeles, CA 90078
The toll-free numher IS 1-800992-1361 )
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper IW!terprise Association.

•

Wednesday titght. .Partly cloudy
Lows near 70.
Thur.;day .. Partly cloudy With a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. H1ghs mihe mid 80s.
Fnday Panty. cloudy w1th a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows m the upper 60s and
haghs m the lower and m1d 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy wath a
chance of showers and thunderstorms Lows m the mid 60s and
haghs m the lower 80s

Meigs announcements
to utihze !he game room on Aug I
Reunion set
Descendants of George and Alma
Henderson will have a leunion at I
p m. on Aug. 9 at the Woodmen Hall
at Burlingham Members are to take
theu own table servace and-a covered
diSh: Be~~emges wall be provaded.

Trustees to meel

.

The Lebanon Townshap trustees
Center to open
Area teenagers are invned to JOin wtll meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
m the Fnday's fun. food and fellow- township bulldang
shtp program at God's Neighborhood
Escape for Teens. Nutntional food.&lt; Political picnic planned
Congressman Ted Stnckland wall
wtll be available free of charge.
teens can play non-v1olent v1deo have a political p1cmc an Vanton
games, computer progrJms, and cards County Aug 8, I to 4 p.m. at the
lree 'of charge m the center's game Swan Township Bu1ldmg. seven
room wh1ch 1s located on Main Street ,n1les nonh of McAnhur on Route
m Pomeroy There are pool tables 93.
available to use at a mimmal fee
Musac 1s played wh1le the center as
open. The center opens at 6 p m and
closes at 10 30 p.m II wall be open
Veterans Memorial
the same hours on Saturday for youth
Monday admassaons - Ed1th
O'Dell, Reedsville
~:onday discharges- none
Holzer Medical Center
(USPS 113-960)
Discharges July 27 - Crystal
O.aa•nll)' New.,.ptr Hokll•l•.
Shong, Karn Martm. Delver Swart,
Published every afternoon, Monday through
Susae Meacham, John Kmney.
fnday 1t I Cour1 St , Pomeroy, Oh1t1, by the
Sharon Leonard. R1chard Bryan.
Oh•o Valley Puhlislung Company S«oQd class
postage paid at Pomeroy, OhtO
Daasy Anderson
Membtr. 1bc Associated Press and the Oh10
(Published with pennission)
Nc:;wspapcr As5oc&amp;alton

years
u..:at10ns th.11 me studtcd lor one
Then there was the Communaca- purpose arc nllcn lound to h.avc
lions Decency Act, whach mcluded other. nllen wadcly vo~n.lnl uses
a measure that would make at aile- , Also. lorhaddang ,any son ol se~cn
g.al to dasscmanatc anlnrmalwn lahc mquary csscnla.ally .amounts to
.1houl ahortwn on the Internet For- censorshar And we· re not sup
tunatcly. 1hc Supreme Court rccog- posed In do th,al hcac an 1hc good
nazcd lhat thas was one ul many old U S 111 A
~.: lc~tr-cul VIol allons ol the F1rst
Rcg ,anJicss pi one s po•illlon on
Amendment 10 the act, and II was ahorllon rcslmlaons lake 1hesc
declared unconslllullonal
should gave p.ausc to .anyone who
F10ally. there as the measure v.tlucs our raghl to spc.ak .and !hank
rassed by the House ol Rcrrcsen- and an vcstag.ale lrccly Raghl now
lalavcs last month . whach hans the the lhought polacc m.ay only he
US Food and Drug Admmastra- all at idng rcproduclavc lrecdoms
lion hom ICsllng any drug th.lt But al !hey succeed then 1hcrc "
anduccs ahortaon, such •" the no 1e 1lang what they ' ll go .alter
French ahorlaon pall RU-486 Once next
.tgaan. lhas " a rcslraclmn that
Sara Eckel is a syndacated
ac.1chcs lar hcyond the nght lo writer for Newspaper Enterprise
choose For one lhang. the pursuat Association.
ol scacnlllac knowledge docs not
Send comments to the author
davade atscll neatly anto what IS and in care of this newspaper or send
as not polatacally correct, and med- her e-mail at saraeumaol.com

Do we need to worry ahoul E cola
10lcct10ns?
Where do we go from here' Is
somebody go10g to to[ch a suburban home to show the dangers of
mcthamphetamanc '' Or an cntarc
suburb ''
Wall at be on pay-pcr-vacw' Do
we need some k10d of federal program to pay for addacts to watch
at? If we want to stack wath cahlclrec TV, should we supply drug
ahuscrs wath sets, so they can
vaew the messages' Should we
anvcst m 1rca1ment rrograms
anslcad &gt; Nah
And rcmcmhcr health care
rclorm' That ISsue went down an
!lames somctamc an the Dark
Ages, a vactory lor conservatives,
and others who lave to sec Hallary
Clanton wath egg on her lace (A
mctaphoracal egg, that IS, not
somebody\ bra10 on drugs on her
l.tcc -- that would he creepy)
The. argumenl, al I rcmemhcr
my history correctly. was that II
the fcds should gel 10volvcd wllh
health care. 11 would JUst lead to
hcan-count10g ancff1cacnt hureau cracy, run by the pubhc sector.
Well, here we arc 10 the '90s And
health care has led to HMOs'
bean -counung IOcfflcaenl bureaucracies, run by the private sector
Tsar Ntcholas and the rest of
the Romanovs, murdered 80 years
ago by Lemn 's charmmg little
cotene, were fiftally latd to rest

Two frontal boundaries over the
Plams states meant strong to severe
stonm possible trom southern
Nebraska to north Oklahoma. and the
chance for scattered ram late m the
day in west and Gulf Coa.•t Texas.
High pressure m central reg1ons of
Texas and southern Oklahoma meant
partly cloudy to sunny skaes.
Cloud,, scattered raan and thunderstorms were stamng acros_&lt; the
West. maanly from southea.•l
Wyommg to nonhea•t New Mexaco
Strong to isolated severe storms,
mcluding heavy mans and gusty
wmds to 60 mph. were passable
The rest of the Rocky Mountain
states, the Southwest, and Cascades
and northern Saerra Nevada mountams expected scauered morning
showers to worsen by afternoon and
evenmg The potential for !lash
lloodmg contmued m Utah and An·
zona. as well as pans of Nevada
The West Coa.&lt;l looked forward to
partly cloudy to sunny skaes after the
mornmg fog burned off
Haghs today were expected to
reach over 100 10 cenlral Texa•. the
desert Southwest. the mlenor North·
west and most of Cahfomaa, where
broahng weather Monday promp1ed
heat wammgs lor the Los Angeles
area.
H1ghs were forecast In the 90s for
the rest of the southern taer and West.
and the central Plums, the 70s an far
northern Maine, Lhe Pacatic shorehne
and pockets of the central and north·
em Rocky Mounlams, and tn the 80s
everywhere else
Temperatures Monday ranged
from 122 at Thermal, Calif., to 43 at
Whitefield, N H

Today's weather forecast

Hospital news

The Daily Sentinel

A brief update on ancient history

By tan Shoales
Last Fnday the San Francasco
Chronacle ran a headline you
don l sec every day " ANCIENT
SLOTH DUNG EXCITES SCI ENTISTS " Oh hoy 1
Hcndnk N Poanar and S-.ntc
Paaho, lrom G-rmany's Unavcrsaty of Muna ch. and sc \cn US collaborators . lound
coprolllc
deposals an l~ypsum Cave. Nev,
whach arc yaeldang (!hanks to new
Clo,
DNA
an1lysas tcchnaquc s) anlorq.~. ~
0 IMbJNEA.Inc
matl on on prc -has1onc dacls and
anamal adcnufacataon
"Next questron Who do you thmk came up wrth
Accordang to Poanar '1 here s
the 'talkmg potnts' that Momca gave to Lmda?"
- gomg to he ,, run t&lt;n.lcccs (You
may want to ~all yo ur hr•&gt;ker
ammcdaatcly )
01 course. thas as ancacnl haslllry, a rclauv c term thc&gt;c days
Take aar travel lor anst ancc II
seems hk~ cons. doc sn l at sancc
the skacs were at·tuall y lncndly'
By The Aasociated Press
Nowadays we re crammed an lake
, Today IS Tuesday Jul y 28. the 2091h day of 1998 There arc 156 days lctl rude sardancs lorced 10 chec k our
an 1hc year
luggage whach ends up an l ~a ho
: Today's Haghlaght an Hastory
whether you rc lly ang there or
: On July 28, 1945 aU S Army bomhcr crashed anlo tho 79th lloor ol New not
Yprk's Empore Stale Bu1ldmg. kalhng 14 people
Passe ngers arc havan g sex
On th1s date
openly, gelling embarrass mgl y
In 1540, Kmg Henry VIII's chaef manasler, Thomas Cromwell. was exe- drunk and relaevang themse lves on
cuted, and Henry marraed has fifth w1fe, Cathennc Howard
serv1ce carts Why?
In 1794, Max1malaen Robesp1erre, a leadang figure of 1he French RevoluBecause, thousands of years
uon, was sent to the guallotme
ago. peanuts were replaced by
In 1821, Peru declared als mdependencc from Spaan
mustard-fl avored pretzels That's
In 1868, the 14th Amendment to the US Conslatutaon, guaranteeang due my theory
process of law, was declared '" effect
And baseball A few yemt
In 1896, the Cl" of M1ama , Aa, was 10corporated
back, Amenca's favorate sport

Today in history

By The Associated Preu
There's a threat of ram along
Oh1o 's nonh shore tomght. but the
rest of the state should have clear
sktes and maid condiuon.•. the Nalional Weather Servace .aid
Lows were foreca•t10 the mad· to
upper-60s
Partly lo mostly sunny skaes are
expected statewade on Wednesday
Temperatures should climb tnlo the
85-90 range
The record-hagh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station wa• I00 degrees in 1952
while the record low was 50 an 1962.
Sunset lomght will be at 8·50 p m.
and sunrise Wednesday at 6·27 a.m.
Across the nation
Scallered, heavy storms meant
potential for llooding today m the
Southeast, where heat still holds the
same gnp at has across the southern
tier, m the central Plams and in the
West
Energy moving out of the central
Plains was crossmg 1010 Tennessee
and expected to reach Alabama and
Georgia as the day progressed, bringmg the chance of early showers and
storms that could aggravate existmg
llood conditions
Later m the day, the nsk moves to
the Gulf Coast, bnngmg the chance
of heavy ram, wmd gusts to 60 mph
and haal.
Scattered ram and storms also
were poss1ble from New England to
north Pennsylvania, though the
Northeast otherwase expected partial
sun. A trough workmg across the
Great Lakes was bnngmg cloudy
skaes and scallered storms movmg
from Wisconsm toward Mich1gan.

Spend budget surplus on cancer research

,.,._,.tonwtlondo/lonayboodltod &amp;chshouldlncludo•llg,.,...,oddtOos,

By TERRY KINNEY
~
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI- The head uf lhe 1cachcrs unaon m Ohao's lhard largest
pubhc school syslcm suppons charter schools, as long as they rc publac
The Amcncan Fcdcrauon ol Teachers has always supponcd puhiK charter schools,· Tom Mooney, prcsadcn1 of the Cancmnatl Fcdcrataon of Teachers. saad Wednesday We 1hank u's umc for lhc Cancan nata PubliC Schools
to take that step '
Bul Mooney opposes the Oh10 Board of Educauon's deciSIOn to grant
charters to pnvate operators He comcnds 1ha1 "communuy schools"
allow•4 by the legislature are really pnvate schools funded by taxpayers
" If you look at what chancrs the state board has gramed
n's prcuy
clear thiS form of chancr school IS meant 10 be a way of pnvauzmg publac
schools." Mooney saad "That's clearly a deslrucuve approach "
In June, the board approved the farst hatch of commun11y sclfools, addang
Ohao to the states that allow pnvate cntllaes to operate pubhc schools free of
many state rcgulataons
Supponers of those schools say the tuition-free, nonsectanan msutuuons
wall promote compeuuon among pub he schools, beuer deal wnh students'
needs and operate more cheaply than traditional pubhc schools Under Oh1o
law, commumty schools must be sponsored by the state or a local board of
educauon
Mooney noted that sax of the I0 chaner schools the state has approved are
for-profit schools
"We don' tlhtnk the stale law as a good one because at creates schools that
tum public money over to pnvale groups ," Mooney saad What makes people thmk these people arc capable of runnang a school as a complete myst~ry ..
Charter schools are mdcpendcnl public sc hools, often desagned by teachers and parents, that operate Without many of the constramts amposcd by
local pubhc school dastncts A charter outlines whal sludcnts arc expected 10
learn, but th1s can be revoked af the school faals to mectlhc goals
Mooney saad he supports pubhc charter school s as a way to gave schools
greater autonomy
"Where I would cspccaally be cncouragang them as an lhc hagh schools
where dropouts are so hagh and atlendance so low,' he saad
"They can help recreate ncaghborhood schools m areas whach no longer
have enough chaldrcn to fill a large~ traditional puhhc school And they can
help break up large, ampcrsonal hagh sc hool5 where 11" too easy lor siUdcms
to fall between the cracks play hooky and end up droppang out
The nataon s farsl charter school opened an Manncs01a an 1992 Sancc !hen,
25 other slates have passed enahhng lcgaslatlon
The lirsttwo charter schools approved an Ohao wall open 1has Iall an Lucas
Cnunly under a $4 5 mallaon palm prOJCCI crcmcd hy 1hc LcgaslaiUre
Last month the slate board ol education approved chancrs lor I0 others
- nanc thai could open thas Iall an Akron. Cleveland Cancannau Dayaon and
Youngstown and another ncxl year an Dayton
·
Arlhur Hull . prcsadcnl ol 1hc Cancannatl Bnaad ol Educauon s.ud the
changes arc anev llablc
I bchcvc that we must get more markcHlncmcd more sen si ti Ve lO the
needs .and demands of parcms Hull saad

Northern Ohio may
get some rain tonight

Page2

Post811trr. Send address corrcctM&gt;nS to The
Dally Scnuncl, t 11 Coun St , Pomeroy, OhtO
45769

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The firSt Super Bowl game an
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Landa End ............................... 28
Llmltad .................................27'l.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19'1o
OVB ....... ................................. 41
Ona Valley .............................34'1.
Peoples ................................... 30
Prem Flnl ................................. 21
Rockweii ...........................G
RDISM11 ................................ 51ll.
8Mra .....................................51\
ShCKMY'I .................................3li.

Star Bank .............................69'1.

Wendv'l ...............................22\.

Wortlllngton .........................13,_

-·-·-

Stoc:k reporta ar- tM 10:30
a.m. quoiN ~by A~
of Gelllpolla.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

i Advocacy

Marion L. Truitt
Manon L Truiu. 66, of 112 Jet Star Road. Hockangpon. daed Monday.
July 27. 1998, at hiS res1den1
Born on Oct 24. 1931 an Kansas Caty, Kansas, he was the son of the late
Harvey and Lucille Truitt He was a U S Au Force veteran of the Korean
War
He as surv1ved by has wafe. Sara Palmer Tnuu. of Hockangpon. a son and
daughter-an-law. M1tchell and Carol Truau of Piketon. five brothers and one
sister.
Besades has parents, he was preceded m death by a son. Walham Truall,
two sasters, and three brothers
Funeral servaces will be held Fnday at I0 a m at the S1ewan Cemetery
in Hockangpon With the Rev Helen Khne officaatmg
Arrangements are bemg handled by Whale Funeral Home an Coolvalle

Lewinsky talks
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON
- Momca
Lewansky 1s breakmg her s1lence and
telling pro!eCutors she had sexual
relauons wath Presadent Clanton. a
passable prelude to a deal g1vang her
complete ammunlly from prosecutiOn, legal sources say
In a nearly five -hour antervaew
Monday m a midtown Manhattan residence, Ms. lewmsky 's account
mcluded mformat1on considered rel evant to Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's cnmanal mvesugataon of
poss1ble obstruction by Clinton and
others, but she d1d not say Clanton
asked her to he, the sources saad
Ms. Lewansky's account closely
tracked her lawyers' proffer of evidence to prosecutors early on an the
probe. accordang to a key source In
that proffer, Ms. lewmsky wa.~ sa1d
to have admitted havmg a se1~ relatiOnship wath the presadent.
The source said the earher proffer
contained "a faar amount of mformauon" dealing w1th Ms. Lewansky's
conversations wath the presadent and
his confidants about how they would
deal with the Paula Jones sexual
harassmenl lawsuit agaanst Clmton
The pres1den1 demed under oath an
the Jones case that he'd had sexual
relat1ons With Ms lewmsky and she
tiled an affidavit m the su11 sayang "I
have never had a sexual relataonshap
wath the presadent "
Today, Starr's Washangton grand
JUry was resummg work and also wa.'
to meet Wednesday and Thursday
Watnesses could mclude Lmda Tnpp
- whose recorded conversataons of
Ms Lewansky tnggered the perJury
and obstruction mvestagauon - and
Secret Servace officers.
Six add1110nal Secret Servace umformed officers have been subpoe·
naed to testafy thas week . M1ke
le1bag, head of an assocaalaon of
Secret Servace officers. said Monday
mght
Leab•g said a total of II Secret
Servace personnel have gaven gmnd
JUry testamony m the Lewmsky probe
so far
The Lewansky-prosecutor talks
came on a day that Starr won a maJOraty vactory trom a panel of the U S
Court ol Appeals for the Dastnct ot
Columbia
In a 2-1 dec1saon. the panel reJeCt·
ed Clanton's claim of attorney-chent
confidenlaahty and ordered pre."denllal adviSer Bruce Landsey to
answer questaons before a grand JUry
The panel maJOnly saad none of

Landsey 's conversataons as a Whale
House adv1ser were protected from
grand JUry testimony But the judges
sa1d Landsey - as a deputy counsel
-dispensed legal advace an "atlea.\t
one" conversat10n.lhus permattang a
ruling on whether government
lawyers could withhold anformataon
an a cnmanal anvesllgauon
The answer was no, the maJonty
sa1d
"Wnh respect to mvesugataons of
federal cnmmal offenses and espeCially offenses comm111ed by those an
government, government attorneys
stand m a far dafferenl pos111on from
members of the pnvale bar," US
CarcUJt Judges Judllh Rogers and A
Raymond Randolph smd
A meetang wath mvesugators has
been a requaremenl for Ms Lewmsky's ammumly sance prosecutors
first confronted her Jan 16 wath 20
hours of secret tape-recordmgs on
wh1ch she alleged an 18-month presadentaal affmr and cover-up to Mrs
Trapp

group urges
ban of ,diabetes drug

WASHINGTON (APl - Some
consumer advocates want the gov·
emmentlo follow Bntam's example
and pull a popular daabetes drug off
the market. saymg 11 causes danger·
ous laver lOXICIIY that has killed at
least 26 people: worldwide
The consumer advocacy group
Pubhc Cuazen condemned the Food
and Drug Admmastmuon's plan to
ansteao upgrade warmngs to doctors
that pauents who are prescnbed the
daabetes drug Rezuhn must be
watched closely for Signs of hver
damage·
"How many more Amencans w1ll
have to dae or requare hver transplants
before Parke-DaviS and the FDA take
act1on to protect people m thas country by bannmg the drug'" wrote Pubhe Catazen 's Dr Sadney Wolfe m a
pelataon filed Monday wath the FDA.
But Rezuhn, w1dely haded as a
umque treatment for Type II or adult·
onset daabetes. offers an amponant
benefit for pataents who aren't adequately treated wllh other med1cmes.
the FDA responded
The problem 1s that doctors aren't
followmg the agency's repeated
warnmgs to closely test every d1a·
betac to see whether Rezulm 1s harmang h1s or her hver. saad FDA's Dr.
Florence Houn.
Deaths "have persasted smce the
first wammg. the m:ljonly of whach
showed there wa.~ not proper momtonng." Houn saad "More educataon

A second meetmg between the
former Wh1te House antern and
Starr's staff appeared lakely Ms
Lewmsky. 25. entered Monday's
meetmg w1th hmated legal protectaon
often referred to a.&lt; "queen-for-aday" status. Under that agreement
between prosecutors and Ms Lewmsky's lawyers. none of the answers
she gave Monday can be used agamsl
her
Robert Luskm. a former Jus11ce
Depanment lawyer and now a
delense allomey. saad Ms Lewmsky's cooperataon " makes 11 more
hkely Starr " goang to get Ms
Lewmsky s lesumony"
Defense anomey Nancy Luque
added. "I wouldn't let her speak
(w11h prosecutors) walhout some form
of •mmumty I can't thmk of any
advantage exceptio avoad an md1Cl·
menl l don't understand at unless
there's a deal "
Deputy Whitewater prosecutor
Robert Bauman and Starr's ethacs
counselor. Sam Dash. panacapated an
the questaonmg. along wath a female
colleague. the sources sa1d
"It wasn't a cross-examanalaon,
they weren'ttrymg to browbeat her,
they were just trymg to g~t some
answers." sa1d one source Present
for Ms Lewmsky were her lawyers,
Jacob Stem and Plato Cacheras
It was not clear how Monday's
talks would affect Clanton's legal
strategy

Today's livestock ,report
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio-Indiana darect hog poces at selected buymg poanls Monday a.• provaded by the
U S Department ot Agnculture Mar·
ket News
Barrows and gaits steady to weak,
an stances 50 lower, demand and
movement moderate
US 1-2. 230-260 lbs country
pomls 35.00-36.00. lew 34 50 and
36.50. plants 36.00-37.50. few 35.50
U S 2-3. 230-260 lbs 31 5035 00. 210-230 lbs 28 00-31 50
Sows steady to I 00 lower
U S 1-3, 300-400 lbs. 21 0023 00. '400-500 lbs 23 00-24 00.
500-600 lbs 24 00-26 00. few over
600 lbs 26 00-27 00
Boars over 300 lbs 15 00-17 00,
under 300 lbs 18 00-21.00.
Estimated rece1p1s · 34.000
Prices from Producers Livestock
Association
Tuesday's trends
Hogs steady: sows steady. canle
steady to strong
Summary of Monday's aucllons al
Creston and Hallsboro
Hogs
Markel hogs 33 50-37 60. hght
sows 23 50-26. heavy sows 26-30
Feeder pags 9 00-26 00 head.
22 00-28 00 CWI
All boars 14 00-22 50

Canle.
Slaughler steers, chmce 57 0064 00, select 50.00-58.00
Slaughter healers. choace 56 0062 00: select 50 00-57 00
Feeder callle
Yearlings steers 39 00-69.00.
he1fers 36 00-61 00
Calves steers 41 00-95 00. heafers
47 00-71.00
Cows.
Commercial and ullhly 32 0043 00, canter and cuner 36 00 and
down
All bulls 30 00-50 00
Sheep &amp; lambs
Choace wools 84 00 and down.
choace claps 75.00 and down. Ieeder
lambs 70 00 and down. aged sheep
32 00 and down

for health care providers ts needed.""':
Manufacturer Parke-Dav1s insasts :
Rezuhn IS safe when used properly •
It will send leners today to 500.000 :
doctors saymg the FDA has upgmd- :

:~~~d~e~~~~e~~~-~~!~';or ~~o;; :
IOXICIIy monthly for the first e1p:ht :
months of Rezuhn therapy Stoppmg ;
Rezuhn when laver tests show sagos •
of loxacaty can prevent permanent ;
damage
,
"People have to remember there ;
are 18 malhon pat1ents walh daabetes •
out !here. and they need treatment." :
sa1d spokesman Stephen Mock
:
But Pubhc Ca11zen saad warnmgs ·
aren't enough
As of June 5, the FDA had :
receaved reports of allea.&lt;t21 deaths ;
among Rezuhn users. 100 hosp1tal- •
azataons for laver toxaclly and three •
hver transplants m the fir.;t 15 months :
the drug wa.• sold Wolfe saad

'

FDA\ Houn saad 14 deaths hoked :
to Rezuhn mvolved Amencans The :
other seven occurred an Japan. the
only other country where Rezuhn as'·
sold. Wolfe saad Smce June 5 detaals
of another five Amencan deaths have.
been senl to FDA for evaluataon, htC'
added
Rezuhn was taken off the market ,
m Bntaan last December. when doctors worldw1de had reponed JUS! sax
deaths
·'
,.'

Middleport Council...
Continued from page 1
nmse ordmance whach addresses
boombox stereos and car stereos,
whach Eblin sa1d are a problem mto
the early mom10g hours.
Council revaewed the ordmance
and a proposed ordmance whach
would change the curfew tor mmors
from II p.m and 12 m1dmght on
weekmghl~ and weekends, respec·
uvely, to dusk A samalar ordmance
was passed recently m Pomeroy and
has been successful m ehmmatmg
lmtenng on streets by teenagers
However, many of those youngsters are now commg to M1ddlepon,
accordmg to Pohce Ch1ef Bruce
Swaft
Both ordmances w1ll be rev1ewed
by V1llage Allomey Lmda Warner
and consadered for votes at the next
council meetang
Donna Talhs. owner ol Oflice
Servace and Suppl~. addressed the
'"'~~e of enforcemenl of the parlting
ordanance m Middleport Gene
Chaney ot the pohce depanment.
who as charged wath the task of
enforcang the two-hour free parkang
rule. sa1d that some resadents and
busaness owners had been removang
the chalk marks from thear Jares an an
auempl to carcumventlhe ordmance
Brewer sa1d that she had removed
the chalk mark from her tare on more
than one occa."on. saymg that she tell
11 wa.&lt; destructaon of property. and
Cmag suggested that the v1llage rean-

stllute the use of parkmg meters,
However. Honon explaaned that the,
v1llage had deemed the parkmg
meters unprofitable
Chaney saad that he had develope4 '
another method for markmg cars
downtown and thai enforcement of
the parkmg ordmance would conunue
Nma Bogges.• complamed of a,
park.mg dispute on Daamond and
Hobart Streets. She sa1d that a ne1gh-'
bor wa.~ blockmg the vall age nght-ofway on Hoban Street, and suggested
that a street sagn be erected to venfy
that 11 as a pubhc roadway
Extensave d1scussaon was held an ·
open sessaon among Landa Brodenck. ,
who works m the vallage water
department and a' central purchasan~
agent. Carol Cantrell, the vallage's ·
mcome tax admamstrator. and Bryad ;
Swann, clerk/treasurer. about recent
changes an the operauon of the ta~ ­
office and ch~nges tn the way the vll· ~
lage approves purcha.'e orders
The hours for the mcome tax''
office were rc:&lt;ently changed, and
Cantrell was transferred to the w.atet
office for the remaander of the workday, whach she saad places a hardship
on her. and on taxpayers. whose ,
access to the office 1s now restncled
Councilman Roger Manley noted
that the change was made on a tnal
ba&gt;1S, and suggested that the opem,
uons be restored to !hear ongmal
manner

Meigs EMS has 10 calls .
Meags Emergency Servaces unals
5 03 p m . Lamberger Radge Rd .
answered I0 calls for assaslance on Edath O'Dell. Veterans Memonal: '
Monday
6 57 p m Eagle Radge Rd . BonCENTRAL DISPATCH
me Walker. Holzer Medacal Center
10 18 am. With Maddlepon Farsi
Responder. South Thard Ave . Glen
Dunbar. Vetomns Memonal Hospatal
II 48 a m . Momang Star Road.
Lavonne Groves. Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
2 46 p m . Chaldren's Home Rd .
Gertrude Slavers, Veterans Memonal.
7 39 p m . Bunemul Ave . Rack
Laudermalt. Veterans Memoraal,
10.04 p m. Pearl St , Racane,
Angel Ba1ley, Veterans Memonal
MIDDLEPORT
9 23 p m , assasted by Central
Daspatch, Overbrook Center, Everen
Deciding what to do wilh your
Delaney. Pleasant Valley
POMEROY
pension con be a difficult chotce
12 54 p m , Manuel Rd, Eva
, Lawson. Veterans Memonal
to make. Give us a call today to
RUTLAND
I 30 p m . Pamada. Jonathan
find out how Nationwide life
Robens, Veterans Memonal
TUPPERS PLAINS
insurance products and other

~nanciol services can help.

Paula K. Dillon

Assocrate Agent
Jtm Rogers &amp; AssOCiates

3310S Hiland ti, llaitt#l, Pomer~ OH 4l769

Ollke 740-992-2318 888-44S-9426

POMEROY
Near POIMI'OY-Mason Brlc!a-

.'

992·2588
VINTON

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GeUia CCIUIIIY Dllplliy Yard

~

• • • • • • • •

*t *

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' 1S51Uln St.

388111103

t,

'

'G

�Tuesday, July 28, 1998

Sports

The,Daily Sent~~}
...

-=~-=-=-=-------------------------------------- --~Tuesday, July 28,1998

Guillen's 1Oth-inning single
helps Braves beat Reds 3-2
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (API - Gabe
Wh1te couldn't believe the last of
Ozz1e GUillen's three s10gles. the one
that won the game
The Cmcmnat1 Reds reliever
threw Guillen. a reputed bad-ball hiller. one of h1s toughest pllches - the
slider low and away - w1th the game
on the line Monday mght. He was
stunned when Guillen slapped it mto
center field to g1ve the Atlanta Braves
a 3-2 VICtory.
"It was a great p•tch, .. Wh1te sa1d.
" It was 10 the du1 and 11 was away
and 11 d1d exactly what 1 wanted 11 to
do H1s (butt) went one way. h1s bat
went another and the ball went up the
m1ddle ..
GUJIIen's h1t kept the Braves
roll10g on the road- they're 5-1 on
a n10e-game tnp- and extended the
Reds· latest streak ol miSery S10ce
June 14. the National League\ most
extreme team has lost II 10 a row,
\\On 10 10 a row and nnw lost 10 of
II
Some of them couiJn't watch the
3-hour. 1~ - m10u1e loss. wh1ch featured Tom Glav10e gmng 1-for-3
before blow1ng a late le;Jd and
GUillen com10g through 10 the end
"Look at that little Gu1llen He
JUs I puts the ball 10 play... munager
J.1ck McKeon sa~d .. All he needed
was a s1 ngle We've got guys trymg
to h11 the ball out of the parl
"Gia\IOes the same way That\

why he's a 14-game winner. You
th10k our guys could observe that'
They don't have t1me. They're runnmg up to the clubhouse to get some
coffee. That's the newest trend ...
They miSsed one of Glav10e 's best
stans of the season and a passed ball
by Javy Lopez Ihal made the Braves
go an extra mmng 10 get the win.

Glav10e had a pair of singles,
10clud10g a perfect hunt on a squeeze
that made 11 1-0m the SIXth. Andruw
Jones scored both runs. stole two
bases and had a pa1r of luis off Mike
Remlinger. improvmg his career
numbers off the left-hander to 6-for11 w1th three homers
The way Glavme was pllching.
the 2-0 lead seemed like plenty.
"For Glav10e. that m1ghl have
been as good as 11 gets thiS year...
manager Bobby Cox smd. "He was
great. They got some little ground
balls and the passed ball ..
W•lhe Greene SJngled up the m•ddle for Cmcinnat1's first run m the
seventh. w1th the ball barely eludmg
Gu1llen \glove. Lopez let Ill the tymg
run m the e•ghth when one of
Glavme's fastballs deOected of[ h1s
glove for a passed ball.
The moment was a Oashback to
Lopez's trouble catchmg Ugueth
Urbma m the All-Star game.
"Usually h1s fastball m and down
smks a little b1t,.. Lopez sa1d. "!
should have caught it."
The m1stake prevented Glavine

from becommg the fir;t pitcher to
win 15 games th1s season and left the
Braves momentanly down. He gave
up only five hils over e1ght mnings.
"There were some crazy runs."
Glavme sa1d.
Rudy Seanez (~-01 p1tched m·t of
a threat m the bollom of the mnth.
and l.ope7 smgled off Stan Bel10da
(4-8) to stan the lOth. The Reds'last
two losses have come in 10 innings.
and Belinda was charged with both.
"I had to repair the damage somehow." Lopez sa1d.
After a sacrifice and a groundout,
Guillen put the Braves ahead by getting a single on White's perfect
pitch.
"It was a good pitch," Guillen
confirined. "I was lookmg for a slider. I was a lillie out front on it. 1JUSt
put the ball in play."
Kerry Ligtenberg got the final
tiuee outs for h1s 14th save.
Notes: Glavine went 2-for-3,
improving his batting average to
.298 (14-for-47). Teammate Greg
Maddux. also a 14-game winner. is
baning .283. ... Glavine won 14 of his
first 15 deciSions in Cmcinnati. In his
last three stans at Cinergy Field, he's
0-1 wilh a pair of no-decisions ....
Wall Weiss has missed I0 of the last
II games because of a sore th1gh ...
The Reds were swept in a two-game
series agamst the Braves in May and
have lost seven of their last eight
against Atlanta in Cincinnati

Boggs passes Ruth's career
hit mark, helps Rays beat A's
Alroundup
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (AP)Wade Boggs has come a long way
from his days as a kid on the Tampa
Bay ball fields .
Boggs hit a two-run homer and later passed Babe Ruth for 33rd place
on the career hits list as the expansion
Tampa Bay Dev1l Rays won their
team-record fifth strmght game, 11 5 Monday mght over the Oakland
Athletics.
"A lillie k1d from Bayshore L1111e
League passes Babe Ruth. It's a b1g
day in my career." Boggs sa1d " I
couldn't he more energJled than 1am
nghl now. That would be hard to do."
The 40-year-old Boggs had threehils He broke an 0-for-14 slump with
a smgle m the third . homered to highlight a five-run fifth and moved past
Ruth w1th an RBI single m the
e1ghth Boggs has 2.874 career hils.
"When you talk about a name like
Babe Ruth. I don ' t care 1f you beat
h1m m eating hamburgers. 11 \ some
kmd of feat ... Tamp.t Bay manager
Larry Rothschild s:ud. "11 was clec lnc It was excllmg I think the mght
belonged to Wade Boggs."
M1ke Blowers and M1guel Tejada
homered for Oakland. wh1ch lost 11s
season-h1gh seventh in a row
Boggs was lifted for p10ch-runner
Bobby Smith followmg hJS final hll
and rece1red a standing ov,1110n .1 " he
left the field
'" I thought there 'd he few clap,.
but the mat10n wns \'ery mcc. " Bog·
gs sa1d "It g1ves you chills - 11 real ly does. It was a lhnll ...
Boggs has had an up-and-down
year A liletJme .331 h111er entenng
the season. Boggs is currently hanmg
281. He has overcome several

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Boslon (Wakefield IJ -'1 ) ar Oakland (Haynes 7-

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NY Yankees (Conr 14-1) al Anaheim (Dickson
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Wednesday's games
Baltimore (Mussma 8-~) at ()moil (Caurllo 1-6),

7 O'ipm

Teus (Ohvrr S-7) 111 Toronln (Carptnler 6-4),
7 0'1 pm
Minntsoto (P..hllon ~-7) ar Kanw C11y (Pidaanlo
'1 -7) 80Sp m

NL roundup

Pur~horgh llicb..-r K-10) .11 Culur;lllo (Aslik:ll.) 1(.
IO),IJO'ipm
Chl lal!o Cuhs (CI;~rk fi. IJ) 11 Anwn.1 (Wolullt 01) IOO"ipm

CINCINNATI
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ChiCilJO Cubs 6. Am.oM 2

WNBA standings
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Mcll (Homo 4-

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Florida (0Jalo 1-0) 111 Hootton (Beraman 9- ~).

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M1lwaukee (Woodall 4-5) ar St Lou1s (Bonenrtefd 1-!li) 8 10 p m

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CLEVEL,ND

Tonl&amp;Jtt's pmeo

San Francuco /Rueter 10-6} at Mnntreal

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Our slatJsllcs show that mature
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6 ll

···•••···•··•••••••••••••••••••·.. 12
6

147

Monday's tcores
Sacrumen&lt;o 76. Ciwlone 70
CLEVELAND 81. Los An,cks 67

Ur;m 90. Phoemx 80

Toni&amp;Jtt's came

f'hoeni" Gl Houlton, 8:30pm.

:t~

)16

612
)00

(ill

2
2

'

II

over Pittsburgh at Coors F1eld.
The P~rates led 7-2 in the Sixth
before the Rockies rallied Neiti
Perez singled home the tying run in
the nmth.
Todd Helton hit a le:~doff smglc in
the 13th and beat the rel.ty bome on
Reed's double.
Jose Guillen. who had a careerhigh four hits, and AI Manon each
homered for Pitt-burgh Guo lien also
threw out

P~ret

althird h,Jo..;r Irom the

base Of the wall Ill ngiJI foo his 12th
outfield assist.
P1mtes leadoff m.m Tony Womack
had two h1ts and also set a muJor
league record for consecutive ai-bots
without groundmg into u double
play. He has gone 889, breaking the
mark of 887 hy Brooklyn's Pete R~Js­
er set in 1946
Astms 9, Marlins 1
Moises Alou. Jeff Bagwell and
Derek Bell each homered to hack
Jose Lima's six-hiller at the
Astrodome.
Alou had four hils for Houston. A
day earlier, his 25th home run ruined
San Diego closer Trevor Hoffman's
slreuk of 41 struighl soves.
Lima (9-6) struck out SIX dnd :
walked none. Florida sta11er Brian
Meadows (9-8) allowed seven runs
and. left with ~ strained grom ufler
gmng up two h11s to st;Jn the fifth
inning.

The Light
T

By
Dave
Grate

of
Bottle
Gas
S1gn on moving van : "We
don 't even scratch ourselves."

***

In Hollywood, tf you don 't
have a psychiatnst. people
thtnk you're crazy.

***

One of lhe toughest things
about raistng ktds is
convinctng them that you
have semority.

Baseball
American IA•Kue
CLJ:VELAND INDIANS S1gm·c.l RHP M.ur
W,Kk In " o•unnr· l~.r t•IC ~.:n nlmcl lur !he IIJW \C l·

NEW YORK YANKEES llcM~n .llcc.IINI U.1k:
Svcum for ;u;.,lgnnll!nl Ret:.lll'tl Of· Sh.111C Spl'lllcr
lrum Columbus 1•f rhc lmcnklllnn;lll.c;r~uc
OAKLAND AlliU:.llCS C.1lk.&gt;ll up 01 M1kl·
Neil l frnm EJmonlon of lht I'CI. Oplltlllctl KHI'
Srcvc CooJJCIIy io Ellmcmmn

***

Potse: the ability to walk
fluently while the other fellow
is picking up the check.

***

ESP: what we claim to have
whenever we've guessed
correctly.

Nalionall lA•Kwr
CINCINNATI REDS Rt.."!.:alk:ll OF P,11 W ,ukJn ~
from lnJ1annpoh1 of lht lnrcmauunnl L..c••~uc

Eastern Conrerenc:e

Colondo 8, Pioosburp 7 (I))

Sosa hll a two-run homer in the
SIXth off Willie Bla1r. then h1t a 43Rfoot dnve to cemer fidd m the
e•ghth oO' Alan Embree.
"That's twice he's pulled my
pants down and cmharra"ed me."
sa1d Embree, who g:I\'C up Sosa's
home run Ill June. "I h&lt;I\C 10 figurt!
out a way to gel that guy nut ..
In other NL games. Colnrado
defeated Pillsburgh H-7 1n 13 innings
and Houston downed l'londa 9-1
Rockies 8, Pirates 7 (13)
Vinny Castilla homered 1w1ce and
doubled. and Jen· Reed hit an RBI
double with two outs in the boiiom of
the 13th mmng that lifted Colon1do

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS A .n• ~ncll 01
Darru01n Sc10neuux rnrhc Ch.Yit~rnn Ravt.."l" l.&gt;u~~ ul
!he: Sou1h Allwmc League

Basketball

De1ron
Washrng1on

t~tct. •·

sun

1-•1) 10 O"i I'm · -

New Yuri..

career-best with six RD!s. He has 102
RB!s, the founh slraJght year he's
reached the 100-RB! mark.
Before Sosa, the record for
homers at the begmning of a career
without a slam was 209 by Bob
Horner Three players finished their
careers with more than 150 home
runs and no slams - Glenn D:l\'is
( 190). Ron Killle ( 176) and Claudell
Washmgton (164 ).
Sosa set ;1 major league record
with 20 home runs in June. but had
hit just four in July unto I connect1ng
Sunday at Wrigley Field against
New York
"I've been swinging I&lt;K&gt; hard. try ing to hit the home run." he s:1id.
"The first at-bat he got me. ;md 1 said
to myself I have to be more relaxed
and go out there and make good con-

Transactions

~ -6 ),

myrl! 9-IJ). H 10 p m

II

Monday's scores
Aolan1a 1,CINCINNAT1 2i 10)

A1lalka (Millwood

CLEVEI.ANI&gt; ar Charlnlll!. 7 \0 I'm
U1.1h .u Huusmn, K:\0 p m

7·9) 7 0'1 r m
Arl.mra (Sn~nll~ 1)-ZJ .11 CINCINNA n (Knvll.dl·
IJ 7 (lllipm
Lu~ Anl!cb !Mhda lli--'l al Plul.ll.ltlrln.• iU.&gt;ew·
cr-'-11 71" rm
Sun l&gt;r~·gu (Hamihun 11-9) ,11 NY Mcrs (l...cucr

16'

Dl•iaion

"

;11 WaslunJ:Itln 7 I'm
S.r~.: r.unentn .11 CU ~ Vm.. ANU 7 I'm

Safl Fr.rm: 1~u1 !D.rrwm fl KJ .il Montr~·.ri (H,.r-

IO...&amp;l. 7.Wpm
I lomb !Lark•n 2-lli) ,,1 Housrun (Sdx10n:k

An~dcs

Thursday 's ~ames

p '~

57
60

Piusilor!!.h

Wednesday's games
Lns

Wednesday's games

t't111.:.1~ u

I ')(I

ll

Lotu~

CLEVELAND CNngy 8-6) ar Sean It (Johnson 9-

91 IQ-05 p m

'1 ~ --

,.,,. '2 •n •
" ,,.
46

~hlw,IIJkl."l"

Sr

(h:tmll (P(•wo:ll 1 11

I'm

...,.
21J'
IlK
'"
""
"
'121J

lo(l

Tonight's games
oo; r m

(ill

MO

Ctn lral Dhlodon

Monday's scores

7

L &amp;1.

., .,....

Fh)fll.lol

T3mp.• Bay II O:rkl.rllll "
A11.1hum fl lrCms.1 ~ C•i Y I
R.IIUmnrc !Pnnson 1-0) ,11

Sosa's first grand slam helps
Cubs beat Diamondbacks 6-2

flktn~m

••
,. .,••••
..

711

A1lanra
Nt:w Ynrli.
Plul.wklplu .•
M1mlrc.rl

Om .l~t•

\1

at An,1hr1m

Inning of Monday night's National League con·
test In Cincinnati, where the Breves won 3·2.
Pride scored on Ozzte Guillen's hit. (AP)

PRIDE SCORES- The Atlanta Braves' Curtis
Pride steps on home plate with what proved to
be the winning run as Cincinnati catcher Gulller·
mo Garcia walks away In the top of the 1oth

0 7)

l&lt;:a!11trn Oivl!!lon

.. ]7

Anahl:•m

~ -21

(DlJul\1

NL standings

H'

c~ntnl DI¥1~MM'I

CLEVELAND

r

'~ m
O!&gt;SiolO ( W,J ~J•n 4-1 ) oil o.ll.l.mU
'~

7J 10

w ,.L

B ~y

!Saunders 2-9) .rl Ch•t.li!il While So,;
&lt;ro~r'!!.k:1 · 11 HO"rm
('LI:VELAND (Wnt:.hl 11-bl .11 Sc.rt!lc !Ciout.k lli-

AL standings

.. r

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Now everyone can call h1m Grand
slumps. but also put together a team- means."
Slammm'
Sammy.
After striking out Bubba Trammell,
high 13-game hitting streak June 5Sosa
hit
his 39th and 40th home
walking Paul Sorrento and fanning
20
runs.
including
the first slam of his
"Even at 40 years old . 1 st11llove R1ch Butler. Stem got Mike DiFelice
career,
as
the
Ch1cago
Cubs beat the
the game as much as I d1d when I 5 to swing and miss at a third strike
Anzona
Diamondbacks
6-~ Monduy
years old play1ng Lillie League," But DiFel1ce reached first safely on
mght.
Boggs sa1d. ''I've always sa1d. the a wild pitch. and Stein struck out
Sosa had hll 246 homers - no
mmute that fire burns out. then 11\ Stocker.
player
in maJor league history had
Stein. however, did not make it out
time on to do something else Right
gone
longer
at the stan of a career
of the fifth. Boggs' opposite-field
now. it's ,1 forest fire ."
wuhout
a
slamuntil connecting in
Bryan Rekar ( 1-2 ) earned hJS lirst shot to left was his sixth homer. his
the
e1ghth
mnmg
at
Phoenix.
highest
total
m
a
season
since
he
hit
vJctory smce June 21. 1997. Blake
God."
he
sa1d. "I'm not
"Thank
11
in
1994
for
the
New
York
YanStem 14-6) took the loss desptte strikgoing to have to hear that no more."
ing out four bailers in the fonnh kees
The record lor most consecutive
Pinch-hitter Mike Kelly ha.J an
inmng.
homers without a slam at any point
"II will be nice to gel back home. RBI smgle and Stocker added a twom a career " 266 hy C;~l R1pken.
We need some home cooking." A's run single agmnst reliever Buddy
Sosa was teased by teammates
manager An Howe said. "We were Groom.
- souQdly beaten, hut we did swmg the
The Devil Rays scored four times ,;tfter ending hiS streak. wh1ch began
m 1989 when he hit hiS first big
bats They won the series hands m th~ eighth. keyed by Randy Wino's
league homer for Texas ag:unst Roger
two-run triple.
down. but we didn't quit."
Clemens.
Oakland dropped three games at
Blowers h11 a two-run homer in the
'T m sure he's glad to get thai
Baltimore and was swept in a four- sixth and Tejada had a solo shot in the
monkey off h1s back. because 11 was
game set agamstthe De' II Rays dur- seventh.
really JUSt " !luke thmg th;ll he hadIn the only other AL game. Anamg thelf tnp
n't h1t one." Cubs m;~nager !1m RigRekar, who stancd the season on heim beat Kansas City 6-1.
gleman
smd.
Angels 6, Royals I
the disabled list hecause of a strained
Sosa
tied hiS career h1gh lor home
Tim Salmon. Cecil Fielder and
lower ba~k. won for the lirst time
runs
in
a
season ami ;~lso matche!llus
smce he pllched for Colorado last Phil Nevin each homered as Anaheim
season. He gave up three runs m SIX won at Kansas City.
Garret Anderson of the Angels mnmgs 10 hiS fourth start of the year
Sports briefs-Stem tu:d :1 maJor league record by doubled to extend his career-high hitfanmng four m the founh inning. He tmg streak to 24 games. He t1ed
Football
became the ~9th pitcher to ;~ccom­ Boston's Nomar Garciaparra for the
WRENTHAM . Mass. (AP) plish the leal. and the liN since Wil- longest string m the AL this season.
New England Patnols light end Ben
Allen Watson (4-6) won for the Coates was charged with domestic
son Alvare7- then ll'lih the Chicago Wh11e Sox. now wilh Tampa Bay first time since May 13. teaming with
assault and banery after allegedly
- d1d 11 on July 11. 1997. against Shigetoshi Husegawa on a four-h11ter
shoving the mother of one ofh1s chilThe Royals lost for the seventh t1me dren to the ground. then pushmg her
De troll
" I uJdn't know .mylhing about it. in 10 games.
head on the hood of her c;~r Sunday
Angels closer Troy Perc1val. lead(Teammate) Kenny Rogers said I
night outside his home 111 nearby
probably set a record." sa1d Stem, mg the league with 29 saves. was
Franklin.
who recorded all four of hiS strike cleared to pitch. but d1d not appear
Coates was freed on $1.000 bail
outs m the founh mnmg. " I would He spent Smurday night in a hospi- and returned to pract1ce after plcndhave g1ven that up for the wm. I'm tal after compl:nning of diwness for
ing mnocenl lo Ihe chnr~es.
not a Randy Johnson p11cher by any the third time in three days

Trmpa

Baseball

{

LOS ANGELES DODGERS Ph• ~c~ RHP hmad Valdes on 1hc IS-Jay J1wtblc:J 1111 Purdr&lt;L~li
lht L:nnrracl of RHP Senn Malone)' trom AIIJIJ querque nf !he PCL
MILWAUKEE BREWERS PluL:eli RHP Ca l
EJdred on !he 15-day d1nbled hsl Relcuc::J RHP
Paul Waarter Purchued the tnnlf3L1 of OF Greg
hhrllllCl from Loubnllc ur the lnrcrnaiiOn.\1
Le;acuc RetaDed LHP Vakrio De Lm Sal'llns frnm
EJ P3sn of the Texu Wauc

6

II '~

12

12'~

Football
Nallanol F"'"boll

Lac"'

MIAMI DOLPHINS St&amp;ned WR Mu: hnd
Timpson to a one-~ COfllfaCI Waival L8 S&lt;l~$·
Ia M1ller
NEW YORK GIANTS Srgnc::d WR Jot Jurtvl·
C: IUS 10 lllhn:e-)'Uf COnfnk.1

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Aa'"d 1o rerm~
wuh 08 R W McQuanm on a four·)'CIIfconlrncr
TF.Nt ;rsSEE OILERS Acuv;ued OL T J
Wuhuraloo fn t1 1 ,,.., ('h)',lcnlly-una.blt-to-rerform
hi I

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-8687
Auto-010nen lftlurnm:e

Ufe Home Car Business
TJ.. ifl f,.V., • D....l TM

•

Rutland Bottle G~s
Rt. 124, RIIW Ol 742·2211

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page 5

Barnes, Mitchell fail initial drug tests

U~ATF shows displeasure

w1th latest IAAF suspensions
By BERT ROSENTHAL
NEW YORK &lt;API- Track and
field's natJonal govemmg body is
mcensed over the drug suspensions
of shot putter Randy Barnes and
spri nter DenniS Mitchell by the
spon'• world organizatiOn
"USATF 1s concerned and dismayed thai the IAAF chose to temporarily suspend two American athletes on the basis of unproven allegations that they have commilled a
doping offense," Cmg Masback.
execut1ve director of USA Track &amp;
Field. s.ud Monday n1ght "USATF
OQjects to the lAAF suspensions and
woll not enforce them
"U S. athletes are entnled to a full
and fair heanng proor to being
declared melig1ble to compete.
USATF has on several occaSions
mfonned the lAAF of its obligation&lt;
under the Amateur Spons Act. Therefore. we are outraged that the lAAF
knowingly breached our confidentiality rules. which were put on place
to protect those ult1mately determined to be innocent."
The lntematJonal Amateur Athletic Federation disclosed the indefinite su~penSJons Monday.
Masback sa1d that Barnes and
Mitchell would "rece11•e the full
suppon of USATF until such t1me as
it is determoned that they have committed a doping offense "
!AAF spokesman G1org1o Reonero
said today he could not comment

specifically on Masback's remarks.
But he said IAAF rules could not he
adjusted for different natiOnal federations.
"We know what the problems and
laws are m the U.S.... Reoneri sa1d.
"But we are the governing body for
track and field for all countries on the
world. and we have to apply the rules
for everybody"
He said it wa&lt; now up to the U S.
federation to act on the Barnes and
M1tchell cases
Barnes. the 1996 Olympic gold
medalist and the world indoor and
outdoor record-holder. and Mitchell .
the 1992 Olympic bronze medalist in
the 100 meters. were c1ted by the
lAAF for failing out-of-competition
drug tests April 1.
Barnes. who could face a life suspension for a &lt;econd offen&lt;e. was
tested m Charleston. W.Va.. and
Mitchell in Gainesville. Fla.
Mitchell is president of USATF's
Athletes Advisory Committee, the
athletes' voice in the national governing body, which has taken a

following Ben Johnson at the 1988
Olympics. Butch Reynolds m 1990
and Mary Slaney in 1997
Johnson is banned· for life after
two suspensions. but has requested
reinstatement. Reynolds sen·ed a 27month

su~pension

and now is com-

peting Slaney was found innocent
after several months and also is running agam
The suspensions come at a time
when lOC president Juan Antonio
Samaranch has suggested some perfonnnnce-enhancing drugs be stricken from the list of banned substances.
They also come as U S track and
field 1s seeking to regain its prestige
and reputation but has had difficulty
attracting sponsors and television
coverage.

Barnes
dione. a banned nutntional supplement.
Mnchelltested poso11ve for tcsto&gt;terone. If found gu•liy followong the
B sample. he probably would recc1ve
a two-year ban.
Renein did not know the testosterone level m Mitchell's sample The
allowable ra11o of testosterone 10

In detennining an athlete's drug
test, the lAAF examines aunne sam- epitestosterone (another natural sub~
ple twice. Reneiri said from Monaco stance) is 6: I. Any1h1ng above that
that only the A sample from Barnes level merits an invest1gat1on
and Mitchell have been tested. How Mitchell's suspensoon was handed
ever, that is sufficient to levy a sus- down last week. after he fmJshed lifth
pension
in the Goodwill Games 100 and ran
If the B samples are positive. the on the wmning U S. 400-meJer relay
strong slance against dnrgs.
HIS suspension was handed down lAAF then rules on the severoty of the team. If M1ichell is banned. he and
last week and represents his first drug punishment pending a hearing by the relay team of Jon Drummond.
USATF. If the B sample is negative . Tim Harden and M,uonce Greene
offense
The !AAF did not offic1ally the athletes are cleared
would be disqualified and forced to
Barnes was first suspended for refund all prize money from the meet.
announce the suspensions. and the
precise tennsofthe punishment have two years staning in 1991 for the
Mitchell was entered 1n the U S
steroid methyltestosterone at a meet Open at Edwardsville. Ill., Saturday
yet to be detennoned.
These are two of the most promi- m Malmo. Sweden. in 1990. This night. but the lAAF would noi allow
nent suspenSions m track and field. time. the substance 1s androstene- h1m to compete.

Leaf reports to Chargers' training camp
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Twenty
minutes late, Ryan Leaf ran onto the
pracuce lield to applause. A news
helicopter appeared. reconding the
quanerback's first few minutes with
the San D1ego Chargers.
Leaf low-fived a receiver, got a
hug from incumbent staner Craig
Whelihan and began warmmg up.
And then?
"He looked like a guy who hadn't been out here for four days,"
coach Kevin Gilbnde said after Monday afternoon's practice. "He was
sluggtsh on some of his reads. One of
those ones he threw down the sideline. he thought he was going against
Gonzaga State. The guy went over
and knocked 11 down."
There is no Gonzaga State, but
Gilbride's poml was more accurate
than a few of Leaf's pa..ses. Leaf
miSsed the first five practices of training camp. four due to a holdout and

the fifth while the Chargers and
Leaf's agent straightened out the
lenns of h1s contract, wh1ch includes
a rook•e-record $11.25 million signing bonus.
"You can see what we're exc1ted
about," Glibnde said. "He's got a lot
of talent and he's a real competitive
guy. 1 have to rem10d myself all the
time that he's definnely a work in
progress. He's no I gomg to be the
polished guy nght off. but you see
enough things that get encouragmg
and exciting ..
When informed of Gilbride's
assessment. Leaf said: "That's his
opinion. If that's wha111 looks likeand he's the ·guy who's JUdgmg me,
and he's the one who's gomg to put
me 10 - so if 1 look !Ike a rookie,
then I look l1ke a rook1e."
While he was holdmg out Friday
and Saturday, the team sent Leaf
videotapes of practices.

"The stuff that we've done the
past few days. we did that all summer," Leaf srud. "II would have been
good for me to get the reps. but me
missmg it wasn't really that b1g of a
deal."
The team said Leaf wasn' t available for Monday morning's pmct1ce
because he was taking h1s phySical
exam.
But it turned out that the Chareers
and Leaf's agent, Le•gh Stemberg.
were touchmg up the word10g ol the
contract. which could be wonh
$31.25 million over five seasons.
"li's something you couldn't
help," general manager Bobby Beathard said. "Neither side was comfonable with the way it was. Th1s IS
not uncommon ... this happens a lot. ..
So Leaf signed the deal at the
same time his teammates were staning the afternoon prac11ce under a
burning sun.

DRIVING to the basket with the Los Angeles Sparks' Sandra
VanEmbrlcqs defending on the play Is the Cleveland Rockers' Eva
Nemcova during the first half of Monday night's WNBA contest In
Cleveland, where the Rockers won 83-67 In part behind Nemcova's
team-high 15-polnt effort. (AP)

Rockers top Sparks;
Monarchs also win
WNBA roundup
CLEVELAN D &lt;AP) - Though
Cleveland shot almost 60 percent
from the field. Rockers coach Lmda
H1II -MacDonald chose to focus on
the delense
The Rockers held Los Angeb In
38 percent shootong 111 the1r H3 -67
VJctory over 1he Sparks on Monday
noght
Eva Nemcova led the Rockers
Wlih 15 pomts and a career-hogh mne

G1lbride said he d1dn 't want to
know what the delay wa' about.
"!just figured he wanted to make
a grand entrance ... the coach sa1d.
And why not, smce the Chargers
w1ll one day soon put thm future m
the hands of the 22-year-old. who USSISIS.
Cleveland JUmped ou11o a 7-0 lead
was taken With the second piCk in
but
Los Angeles came back to lie the
April's draft.
game
19-19 The Rockers led 36-26
Once Leaf showed up. the Chargat
halftime
and led by as many as 21
ers had 81 players Ol\ the f1eld -one
pomts
late
m
the game
over the limn. Free agent punter T1m
Isabelle
Fojulkowsko
had 14 pomls
Roth was cut right after practice.
and
a
gameh1gh
mne
rebounds
Also Mooday. defensive tackle
Mwad1 Mab1ka led the Spark'
Reuben Davis underwent surgery 10
W
ith
16 pmnls and e1gh1 rebounds
repair his torn left Ach1lles' tendon
Monarchs 76, Sting 70
A sJrnJiar Jnjury 10 his nght
At
Ch.Jrlolle. N.C. the Charlolle
Achilles' tendon 10 trmmng camp last
Stmg
laced
an opponent they couldyear cost DaviS the enllre season. but
the Chargers say DavJS m1ght be b&lt;~ck n't stop
Tu.:hd Pemcheuo ~ored 14 pomb
by late October or early November.
That's because this onjury was at the and sel records for ass1sts, 12. und
JUnction of the tendon and mu&gt;de. steals. five, by a Charlotte opponent
wh1ch gets a bener blood supply and as the last-place Sacmmento Monarchs delcated the Stmg 76-70 '"
can heal quicker.

WNBA actu&gt;n Monda y noght.
Latasha Byears \Cored 18 po1nts
and Tangeta Snuth added 16 poonts
and I0 rebounds as the Monarchs
handed the Stmg lhcu 1h11d slraoght
home lm"

Charlotte

coach

Mary.nell

Meadors st:.u1cd her postg~1mc news
conlercnce by &lt;lpologumg fnr her
t e:~m's medrnrre performance .

"We &lt;lidn '1pl.oy like we're capable ol" play1ng ... Meadors smd "We
haven't changed anythmg- we're
JUst not gcllmg Ihe JOh done We've

got In gn hack lo where we were two
weeks ago Maybe we got sat isfied ·· .
And1e.1 S trn son scored IS 10 lead

Ch.orlolle 114-7). wh1ch stollle.1ds the
Eastl!rn Conf erence hy two games

over Clcvcl.md and New Yurk
Pen1chmo's 10 forst-half uss1sls
surp.1ssed lhc prcv10u" league record
111

a h.oll sci hy New York\ Teresa

Weatherspoon. v. ho had c1ght lasl
sca,on

Pcmchcuo s.ud cmotron w.1s the
key to a rare ro.uJ wm for Sanamcnlo (6- 14). sllll lust m the Western

Conlcrcnre. hut only ,, h.df-game
heh1nd Lo' Angeb. wh1ch lost Munday n1gh1 to Cleveland

Wooten seeks to confine hits
to field; Elway's shoulder OK
NFL camp reports
By The Associated Press
Playmg lootball and keeping hts
staning job w1lh the New York
G1ants aren't Tito Wooten\ only concerns these days. The s.1lety has
another battle every day - learning
to deal w11h the stresses of hfe
And in many ways. 11 'sa lot harder than play10g a game that mvolves
hittmg and physical contact. Thai's
pan of football.
Wooten\ baltic is to keep 11 out of
hiS everyday life Over the last SIX
years he's been arrested live t1mes.
mcluding a couple of t1mes on
charges of assaulting women.
The last time was on Dec. 7. hours
after Wooten played in the Giants'
victory over the Phil:tdelphia Eagles.
He was arrested and rharged w11h
s1mple assault for allegedly hlltmg
his girlfnend. Akma Wilson. in a
New Jersey motel room
A domestic Violence reslrammg
order was issued against Wooten, but
the charges were later dJSmtssed
when Wilson told a mtmicipal coun
judge the couple had made up
In early Januar~'· Wilson com milted sUICide wh1le Women w:ts m
LouiSJana registering for a college
course. She died of carbon monoxide
poisoning 111 the garage ol Wooten's
West Paterson. N.J .. home. his Mercedes idling next to her.

Broncos
Any lingering quest•ons about the
soundness of John Elway's surgically repaired throw10g shoulder were
answered Monday.
During a controlled scrimmage.
Elway completed a 40-yard sideline
pass against tight coverage that found
rookie Marcus Nash 111 stride Th1s
came one day after Elway completed long passes to Nash and tight end
Shannon Sharpe m a passing dn II
Staning safety Tyrone Braxton
bruised hJS left shoulder m the mornmg I'Orkout and d1d not participate m
the afternoon session Rook1e runnmg back Chns Howard fell a twmge
in his left hamstring in afternoon
practoce and left the field woth an 1ce
pack.
Bears
First-round umft p1ck Curl" Enis
was uccused of' se)tu.tl :l'i."i ;tult and i!'\
the subjeCt of a grand JUry JO\'CsllgaIJnn. poloce confirmed ~1onda y.

A woman reponed the alleged
assault to police on May 30. Police
referred the complamt to a Dallas
County grand jury after the investigation yielded no physical evidence.
The former Penn State running
back. the No. 5 overall selection 10
April's draft, has not yet signed. He
was said to be in the Dallas area.
where he is holding out after rejecting a six-year. $13.2 million offer
from the Bears.
Enis left Penn State a year early
"l feel like if 1 hadn't gone to and turned pro after accepting more
Louisiana. it would not have hap- than $1.000 wonh of clothing from
pened." Wooten said Monday in, a spons agent, a violation of NCAA
betwe~n practi ces at the Giants' rules.
49ers
traming camp at the University at
San Francisco signed first -round
Albany. " But when someone has her
mind set to do thai. it will come to pick R.W. McQuaners. a defensive
pass no matter where she's at. that's back who gave up his final year of
what my mother and my grandmoth- eligibility at Oklahoma State to enter
the NFL draft . to a four-year contract
er told me."
Since the death. Wooten signed a Monday night.
McQuaners. chosen 28th overall.
four-year, $8 million contract with
was
named lo the All-Big 12 football
the Giants and has gone to counselteam.
ing to deal with his nnger. •
Ollen
"I've learned to restroin myself."
Linebacker
Lemanski Hall had a
said Wooten, who says he telephones
slight
concussion
Monday morning
counselors or the Giants when he
after
being
knocked
down during
feels anger developing.
by
rookie
guard
Lonnie
practice
"You can't just go flymg off the
Gilben.
handle and do whatever you want to
"Things are a linle cloudy right
do," Wooten said. "You have to think
now,
but he rememben lhings, 110 the
and reason things out. You can't just
doctors
will check him out." coach
react"
J•

Jeff Fisher said. "But he bounced
right up. He was trying to get the
number of the offensive player that
hit him. We haven't told him yet.''
The Oilers. who have enJoyed
temperatures in the mid-80s dunng
the first two days of camp, practiced
through a heavy rain m the mornmg.
Tennessee got a lillie healthier as
offensive lineman T.J Washington
was activated off the physicaiiJ
unable to perfonn list. He had a muscle pull in his righl leg that kepi h1m
from passing the phySJcal the past
two days.
Cardinals
Cedric Smith. the blocking back
•n Anzona's shon-yardage formations. has a torn ligament in hJS nght
knee and will miss the season after
surgery
Team onhoped!SI Russell Ch1ck
tested Smith m Phoenix and found a
tom anterior cruc1ate ligament The
250-pound fullback was hun Fndny
when rook1e safety Pat Tollman
knocked him out of bounds on a practice play. Smith's shoe caught on the
anificial turf and he landed awkwandly.
Chiefs
Former MISsouri fullback Ernest
Blackwell. taken in the seventh round
last spring. left camp unexpectedly.
"Ernest came to me yesterday and
said that he had some issues that he
was trying to deal with and wanted 10
go home, " coach Marty Schollenheimer said
Also gone was Nate Parks. a second-year offensive hnenian Schottenheimer declined to discuss Parks'
situa110n.

-Sports briefs-s- cycling
LES DEUX ALPES, France (API
- Marco Pantani won the 15th
stage of lhe Tour de France and took
the overall lead from defending '
champion Jan Ullrich. Pantani began
the day in fourth place, 3 minutes, 1
second behind Ullrich, and gained
nearly nine minutes in the overall
standings.
Pantani took the 118-mi le stage
from Grenoble to Les Deux Alpes in
S houB. 43 minutes. 45 scc:onds, He
be•t Rodolfo Mwi by I:5411111 Fer·
1111K1o EK:11ti11 by I:59. Christope
Rinero was ~:S7 back, followtd by

Bobby Julich, S:43 bd. ·

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDITION
IS COMING AUGUST 14TH, 1998
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS AUGUST nH
CALL 992·2155 lO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION.
STEVE .KOEBE~ EXT. 105 • DAVE HARRIS, EXT. 104

,

�,

,...

By The Bend

~ .

.

. . ..

.

~uesday, July 28, 1998

The Daily Sentinel:

. -

.

~

.

~

....

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.. fir.

Page~ ·

1:7(

Cloan Late Modol Cera Or
Twcko. 19e&lt;&gt; Modolo Or Nowor.
Smlitl Bulclc PontiaC, 1800 Eall·

28, 1998 .

----------------------------------------~.----------------------~~~~--~
Physician dad shouldn't be nude in front of adult daughters
Tuesday, July

•n ,_...,Gollpolll.

...

Ann
Landers
IM. LA» M,cla TiiiiCI
Sylldkate and Crntun
S,..tea~~: .

Dear Aan Landers: I read with
interest your column regarding par·
ents, children and nudity. Your
advice was based on experts who
suggested it is best that children
older than 3 years of age not see parents or the opposite sex in the nude.
My husband is a physician who
"lw"ys told me and our two daugh·
tcrs Ihat because he was a doctor and
saw people in the nude all day long.
it was all right for him and the girls
to be nude in front of one another. I

ne•er liked the idea.
When we were traveling and the
girls were younger, we always
shared motel rooms with our daughte~ to sa•e money. My husband
never thought twice about walking
around without his clothes on and
saw no reason that the rest of the
family shouldn'l do likewise.
The girls are m !heir 20s now, and
my husband still lhinks he is right
about this. I should add that our
youngest daughter is uncomfortable
with her father walking into the
bathroom while she is showering.
Also, she has told me that she is dis·
gusted when her father showers and
dries himse lf in front of her.
Whal is your opinion of adult
children's nudity if the parent is a
physician·&gt;Please comment ·· Plan·

tation, Aa.
weight, sudden infant death synDear Florida: A father should drome {SIDS), attention deficit disnol be walking into the bathroom order, lower IQ, retardation, asthma
when his adult daughters are show- and so on.
ering, whether he's a physician or an
We had many arguments about
electrician. Bathroom doo~ have this during her first pregnancy. She
locks. Why on Earth do they put up made no auempt to quil e•en though
wilh this total disregard for their pri· support groups were available
vacy? It makes no sense whatsoever. through our insurance . After the
As for your husband , " Doctor, heal birth of our first child, whene•er he
thyself."
cried, she would smoke a cigarette
Dear Ann Landers: My wife is before nursing him . Our son seems
pregnant with our second child. to be OK, but I know that sometimes
"Miranda" still smokes, as she did it takes a while before problems sur·
throughout her first pregnancy, and face. With this pregnancy, Miranda
has made i1 clear ihat she is not made a brief attempt lo gi•e up
going to quit. I am trying to maintain smoking through hypnosis. bui it
a civi l relationship wilh her. but il is didn 't work and she gave up .
difficult. She knows all the hazards
I realize I should not have mar·
of smoking while pregnant ·· ried her and certainly should no1
increased possibility of low birth have had children wilh her. but it 's

too late to change that. I can 't find
anything about my wife that com·
pensates for her lack of consideration for our children. So. short of
divorce, which I don't want, how do
I deal with my feelings? ·- Mark in ·
Seattle
Dear Mark: I urge you two to
get joint counseling immediately.
Something besides Miranda's smok·
ing has soured your relationship. It
is apparent that your wife is addict·
ed and needs help to get off cigarettes, btil your •ehemence suggests
that you are seriously fed up with the
woman. and you need to find out
why.
Since a second child is on the
way. you must do everything possi·
ble lo salvage ihc marriage. Good
luck.

J

:1)4-Tn-5033.

ONE MAN BAND

Dear Ann Landers: I hope you
will print this in your column. My
sister named her son Marion, after a
favorite· aunt. That doesn 't sound
like a boy's name to me. Do you
have any ad•ice for my sister? ·•
Concerned in Springfield, Mass. :
Dear Spriagfield: She should ·
give him a middle name after a:
favorite uncle and deep-six the Mar-.
ion when he starts school, or the :
poor kid will be mistakenly assigned ·
to girls' gym and other female activ·.
ities all the time.

Community Calendar
The Community Calendar is puh·
lishcd as a rrce service 10 non-prorit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
nol designed to promolc sales or

rund raisers of any type. Items arc
prinled as space permits and cannot
he guarunlccd to run a spec ific num-

hcr or day s.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department. rrec immuniza·
lion clinic Tuesday. 9 lo II a.m. and
I 10 3 p.m. Meigs Multipurpose
Cen1er. Pomeroy. Child 10 be
accompanied by
parent/legal
guardian and to take immunization

record .
RACINE - An organizational
meeting for 1hc Southern Junior
High Booslcrs. Tuesday. 6 p.m. at
the junior high building. Parents
urged to ancnd .
POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club. Tuesday, 8 p.m.. home
of Alice Thompson. Members to
take arrangement materials for fair
dass demonstrations.
POMEROY - Auxiliary. Drew
Webster Posl 39. American Legion
2 p.m. at the hall. Girls from Bud ·
eye Girls State to gi•e rcpons.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - AA and Alanon
meetings. Sacred Hearl Catholic
Church. 7 p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY - Town and Coun1ry Expo 1998 committee meeting
July ~0. Thursday. 7:30 p.m. at the
sccrclary's office on ihc Rock
Springs Fairgrounds. All comminee
members and other interested in lhe
EXPO arc asked to anend.

Hosts wiener roast

WV Call
{304) Z73-S860
Ohio Call
(740) 98S-4Z97

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

Ronnie Wood . Lee Drake and
Paul Stephens entertained with a
wiener roast at !heir home in
Pomeroy.
Anending were Edwin and
Helen Oberholzer. Vera and
Howard Davis. Carolyn Chapman.
Cindi , Phillip, Stephen and Eliza.
beth King, Mae Gilliam, Lois and
Kenny Wyant, Roger Coc . Joann
Drake, Otis Howard . Denny, Julie.
Eric and Brad Runyon. Stephanie

/J

·-·-·-

{4!

ito\
-

"Easy Orcr tl1e Pl1011e Barrk l'irraniCiliiR'"
Air Conditioners .AI Low As '28 I mgpJb
Heat Pumps As Low At '38 1 mgnth
*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

attended ihc graduation parly ror.
!heir grandson, Michael BricklcS:
a1 Seneca Creek Swtc Park.;
Gaithersburg. Md .
. ·
They visited with Michael and
his family . Sieve and Sue and Jcf..
fcry Bricklcs of Germantown. Md.
The Woods also ancnded a
recent graduation party for !heir
granddaughter, Donna Wood al
her home in Columbus. She is ihc
daughter of Kenny and Yong
Wood of Columbus.

Personals
Jean and Norman Wood and
Iona Brickles or Pomeroy recently

BENN~TT'S HEATING &amp; COOLING
"WI1ere Qrrality Does11'1 Co11 More"
740446.9416. 1-800-872-5967

CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY •
A surprise 80th birthday party
was held in honor ot Lenora
McNutt Hudnall of Pearl Wood
Road recently at the home of her
daughter and son-in-law, Charlotte and Jim Hudnall.
Eight of the honoree's
surviving children attended. The
only one unable to attend was
Willard Hudnall of Pomeroy. She
also has a son, David, who is
deceased.
Her children and their
spouses attendin9 were Opal
and Dick Sharpe of Athens;
Howard and Adle Hudnall, Glen·
na Wade, A"red and Becky Hud·
nell, Bob and Edna King Hud·
nail, Charlotte and Jim Hudnall,
all of the Albany area; Joan King
of Pomeroy, and Gloria and
Larry King of Shade.
Numerous grandchll·
l;lren and great-grandchildren
attended, as did many friends
and neighbors.
Besides from those
attending the party, she
received many gifts and cards.
From 1937 to 1949 Joe Louis
made 23 successful hea•yweighttitle
defenses and posted 20 knockouts.

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education. special session,
I0 a.in. 1o discuss personnel and
other required at:tion.

SATURDAY
REEDSVILLE - Friends and
rchuivcs of John and Laura Wells.
annual picnic. Forked Run State
Park. noon Saturday.
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE
Eichinger
reunion. Sunday. 12:45 p.m. lunch at
Carleton School. Syracuse.
MONDAY
RACINE - Friends of the Meigs
County Libra!')' will meet Mondav ~~
7 a.m. at ihc Racine Branch. ·

Memory of

on his Birthday,
July 28
Sadlymlssed by
Mom,Dad&amp;S lsters.

.

11 0

Help Wanted

333 Page, Middleport, Ohio
Has

part-time

STNA

positions

available for all shifts. Please stop
by

and

fill

out

Jnterested, Phone

110

. (No Sunday Calls)

application

If

740-992-6472.

Jobsl Jobsl Jobsl
YCA,&lt;/11 C~:

• Medical Billing &amp; lnsura1ce Clerk
• Medical Transcriptionist
We are offering a Diversified Medical Occupations
!raining program that prepares you lo enter a variety ot
specialty areas in the medical field. ClassfOOI!l and onlhe-job clinical settings.

.. .
II

For more Information, call 753-3511 or

who passed away
seven years ago
- today
'
(July 27, 1991 ).
Sadly missed by
· family &amp; friends:

$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per sq.)
3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pine Construction
Custom Engineering

" WARNER INSURANCE
~JEFF

Help Wanted

POMEROY, OH.

614~992~5479

* HJI.Y SPECIALS *

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

•River Run Dog Food ...... $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•:Shade River Cattle Feed ...•...•. $9~75100 lb.
·Shade River Creep Feed ....... $10.25100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Ufe Date
Hours: M-F 8-5:30; Sat. 8-12:00 Noon

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

740-992-2104.

985-3831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Chester

. HELP WANTED

HVAC INSTALLERS ·
&amp; HELPERS
Experience Necessary
Apply At:
Warner Heating &amp; Cooling
or Send Resume to:
P.O. Box 8
Chester, OH 45720

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
It~~ 27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
!if:..
Phone 740..992·3987
;:r~· ·

....

BAUMLUMBER

No Job Too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

1 mo

'"•

Canning Tomatoes

440

Apartments .
for Rent

•

•

740-247-3644
' .

" ·s...t

Adult
Career Center

BlnlEGIS
11 OR 1-800-837-821

Cross Pointe
Now accepting
:
Applications
fpr the elderly and disabled.
. One bedroor:n and all
electric and rent subsidized
apartments
740-992-3055
1-aoo-750-0750 1

lllrob
l

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

985-4422

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
Alter 6 p.m.
(740) 985·4180.
Free Estimates

992-7943

Chester, Ohio
101251961t1n

(Ume StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING

"Huge Inventory''

Top Sol~ Fill Dirt

614·992·3470

740-698-7231
6111118 Un

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

Supply
lacks Roofing Bennett
740-446-9416
13111 Saflord
&amp; Construction
School Rd.

Joseph Jacks

JAMES
ALARM

.PLIJS

or

7/3/98 1 mo.

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

~ARPET

. 740-698-9114

6:00.
Ev~;~ryone

welcome.
Game Room open
5 pm-11:30 pm
Weekdays
Sundays 3 pm-10 pm
012311

m(J .

pd.

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

SERVICE
WV
304-882-3336

Burglar, fire, Closed·
Orcuit TV's
mo

pO

Gallipolis, OH
J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
·Replacement
Windows
·Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
·Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992·2772
Firsl Three Days
FREE POPCORN AND
BALLOONS
Opening July 1st.
THE ALMOST
EVERYTHING STORE
We Buy· Sell and Trade

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP
Candle Making
Supplies
•Wax •Scent ·Etc.
Refills
Variety of Gifts.
Open Tuea.-Frl. 10 arn-e pm
Sat. 10 am·4 pm
Cloied Sun. &amp; Mon.
SR 124, Minersville, 01-1

740-992-4559
1M1t

••r Cll41t pullu."
tn5tW I mo. p4.

THE APPLIANCE MAN

CRAFTY LADIES

"Need repair on any moke'l"

SHOP

• Washers
• Hot Water Heater
• Ranges
• Freezers
• Refrigerators
· • Dishwashers
• Dryer
Call Ken Young
(740) 9115-3551

Goose clothing,

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

Call 614~~843•5426

Personals·
ATTENriON LOVERSIII
1.-...o.1120r1211
$2.1111 p'mln/llull bo 11yro +
s.r.-u (111) MW4S4
WhitB wiclow Chrlsliln mala. NOS.

slates, saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items
Open 11 am·6pm
299 Third Street
Racine, Ohio

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
SeptiG System•
Trailer &amp; House Sites
RHIOIIIbll Ratn

. Jot N. Sayre
.614-142·2138

Free Popcorn &amp; Balloons
while !hey last.
Come in and see us at

202 Est Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·1074

MEIGS
REFRIGERATOR
·Residential
air conditioning
·Auto air conditioning
·Heat pump
·lnslallation &amp; Service
$25 service call.
Don Smth
37814 Peach fork Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
992-2735

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
5fl6ltln

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESnMATEES .

985 4473
71"D/tfn

Homeo.

740-446-Q17~. 304-tl7~·

5965.

Ef,1PL0Yf.1E tlT
SERVICES

lor a friend to go to church and • _ _ _;___ _ __

take out lor dinner and take walk' 11 O Help Wanted
and car ride. aoe 4s-60. hom Gal- .....,.,.,...,__,,...;,.,.-==~
lla/ Moigs County. Send le«er &amp;
us DANCERS WANT£0 us
photo please and phOne number.
E lie
· 1o ~ '"hl
Send c/o The Cal~ SontlriOI. P.O. grl.
xce$500(+)por
nl opportunity r I·~ r,.
week earnl'9 poBox 729-66 . Pomeroy, Ohio
tentlaL No exp necessary. must
45769.
be at least 18. Call 81H92·8387
Woman Seeks Loving Man 45+

For Life~ Relational'llp, Include

Phoio. POB 604. Karr, OH 45843.

(any1imt) or 30.-875-5955 after

S!&gt;m.Wed ltYu Sat
AVON I All Areas I Sl'lirley

S!&gt;oare. ~75-1429

30 Announcements
New To '100 Thrift Shoppo

Acctlptlng Applications At Super
8 Motel, Gallipolis, Apply In Per·

9 West Stm&amp;on, Arhena

eon. No Phone Coils .

. 740-582·11142

Quality clOthing and household

Items. S1.00 bag salt every
9:00.5:JO, '

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

Giveaway

Only, 740·256·9123 or 740·742·
1016
2 puppies . part Shephard mixed
to good home only. 304 ·875-

Arbors at Gallipolis ia currently
1cceptlng applications for state
tested nursing assistants. We
are looking for dependable applicants. Benefits are available .
II you have any questions,
please contact lisa Short at 446·
7112 . Applications will be ac·
ceptlld ~om sam 1o 4:30pm Mon·
day·fflday.
Arbora at Gallipolis is currently
acc.tptlng appUcalions lor AN's .
We are lookln11 for hard working

3628.

dependable 'appllcanll. Exptrl·

2yr old registered black lab.
needs lots ol room to run . Very
aggrassi~a. good watch doo but
not good with children . Call
(:l04)773-52t2. aher 6pm and be.
lora 10pm.

ence in long Term Care 11 preferred , but not naceuary. Banefits are available. If you ha..,. any
questions, please contact Usa
ShOrt at 4"6·71 12 . Applications
wilt be accepted from 8am to
4'30pm Monday ·Friday.

9 month old male Chihuahua .
rouse broken &amp; good with child·

ran . 304·675·5050, call belore
1pm.

Altontlon Certified Nurolng A•

1l1tantt: ~avenswood Village ia

now accspti"'O applications lor

Dishwasher. works but needs a
Free Puppies : Rottweiler, La·
brador. Mix, Friendly &amp; Playful, 9

Weeks Oid,

740-379-2262.
Garmon Shof)Nird,

Male, part
pert
chow. 7 months old . .30•·875·

5903.

Small, Very Cute. Half Rat Tlfrler
Puppies , 6 Weeks Old 740·256·

6629

lull

time and part time positions. Patd
vacauon and holidays. 11 interest·
ed, plaaae apply in person Mon·
day through Friday. 9am-.. pm or
write Attn : Georgie Boso, R .N ..

O.O.N.. 200 South Rllchle Avo ..

Ravenswood , WV 26164. 304 ·
273-9385. EOE, Genesis/Elder·

caralaciH1y.
AI/ON $8·$20/Hr NO Door To
Door Easy Cash , Fun , 1·800·

361 -o4e6 incl/!tlslrep

60 Lost and Found

Avon Representatives Needed:
Gal~s Area. Benefits:
•Earn Up To 50% On Sales

Brown leather wallet in vicinity of

•Wortc. From Home

Found: Red Bone Hound Cog ap-

·~ Olsccunts
oHands On Toan;ng

Pl Pleasant. wv. 304-117~· 1089 .

prox . 2 years old , near Eureka

7;10·256-6038
Conlldantlal Reward. neutered
male Beagle, lalt ear missing .
Pliny area. ~937-2954 .

70

YardSale

6361 S.A . 588 , 2 Miles From
G.A.H.S. T.V.'s, Clothe&amp;. Somelh·

ing For Everyone!

ALL Yonl Solei Mull

Cosmetologist Needed Guaranteed Salary. Versus Commission. Paid Vacation , Benalits ,
74()-.4.46- 7267 .
Experienced Auto Body Man . Excellent Hours &amp; Pay, Apply AL
larry's Body Shop. 2046 Add;oon

25550.

Big. Blg Sale at Jesus Sign on At
7, 3 Miles .$.Outh ol Eureka . Wednesday,
Thursday,
Friday

9:00AM lo 5:00PM. Somalhlng
Clothes, Home Interior, Gas Flreplacelogs, Microwave, Car Dolly,

Misc. Wad. 7/29/98, 9:00AM·?
Bulavllla

451 Morton Woods Rd. 112 mi Ott

Estate Garage Sale: July 31st. &amp;
August 1st, 2427 State Route
218, Dishes , Pans , Wringer
Washer. Wash Tubs. Anliqua's.

Trailer. 3

Point Hitcn Field Ptow, Tools. 2
Hand l,.awnmowers, Misc. Items.
First Time Sale : Thurs . Fri 9·? 3
Miles Out Buia'lllle Pike . Toys ,
Furniture. Clothes. Housewares,
Etc .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

Full or part time barber lor Miek's

Barber &amp; Style Canter. 120 Easl

Main. Pomeroy . Call Mick Wil ~ams. 740-992·2367.
Get Paid at Home lor Products
you assemble . No Selling! FREE ·
DfTAILSI Send SASE to National Homemakers Co. P 0 Box
1700"0 Dept 10.Maple Heights ,

&lt;lrlio 44137

INTERMEDIATE SEVERE BE ·
HAVIOA HANDICAPPED bagln-

nln:J the 1998-99 school year tor
tne Athens · Meigs Educat ional
Service Center. Submit letter ol .
Interest. resume. 3 letters ol rec·
ommendalion , copy of transcript
and current certificate to John
Com.ilanzo. Superintenaent , 507
Richland Avenue, Suite 108 ,
Athens . OH 45701 by July 31 .

740·593·8001 or 740·992·3883

k&gt;f more tnlormation.

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST

tn

All Yard Salta Uutl Be Pal~
Advance. Deadline: t :OOpm 1ht
day before the ad 11 to run ,

Sunday a Monday edition·
F~day.

.July 30·31. August 1. 9:00·3 00
1.12 miles oft 124 on Noble Summh
Rd . Clothes. loots, d~r . wastier.
gas heater, mowers. Something
br everyone , 7"o-U2-24t2

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

E~t perl en c ad Medical Transcriptionist Needed ImmediaTely For
The Day Shitt Wilh Weekend And
Holiday Rotation·. Dut ies lnctuda
Transcr ibing Medical Dic tation ,
Pro ofread Reports And Isolate
Errors Belore Dis tribution . Verity
Pa!ienl And Physician tdenlificetion On .All Reports . Medical Ter·
minoiogy Course Required . Anat·
omy And Physiology Courses
And Previous Experien ce Pre ·
!erred. E•cellent Wage And Ben·
elit Pack~ge :

Contact

3 Family Porch Sate Regency
Apartmenls. Tuesday thru Friday.
ttems to nunerous 10 mention.
Moving Salt -now , 1st house
across R/R tracks . Redmond
Ridge, Henderson, 2-story blue

Rosie Ward
Director Of Human Resources

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jacison Pike
GallipOlis. OH "5631
740·44&amp;-5105
TOO 740-446-51 06

EEOIAOA EMPLOYER

trim.

80

7463.

Experienced floral designer parttime . Send resume to Box SF-23
clo Point Pleasant Register, 200
Main Street, Pt . Pleasant , WV

lito dly boforo . . Ill
II to run. SUnday
edition . 2;00 p.m.
Frtday. Monday ec1111on
·10;011 o.m. Sotunlly.

Utili~

Bidwell. 740·388·9902 Before 2
PM.

Pika. Gaiipol~ .

Be Plld In Advlnee.

DEADLINE: 2:011 p.m.

2 Bedroom Suites,

Babysltler Needed For Evenings
2:00 · 11 :30 P.M. In My Home,

Caregiver For Elderly Woman
Room. Board. Salary. 740·357-

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
2 Family: 7/31. 811 . 6/2nd. 9·7

1:00pm

Call Toil-Free 24 Hours. 1-888-

286-6875.

LOST OR STOLEN:

!&gt; 29 98 2 mos pd

Howard L Wrftesel

Wanted To Buy : Uaed Mobile

NO, NOA, 62 . financially IICUrt,
would like to meet a white female

ForE~el

New Haven,

"Ask

(Cui Out lor Futuro Olocounl)

005

seal. 304-675-5-428.

740-992·2068

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
Backhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,
New Construction,
Remodeling

New and Used

• Bobcat Service
• Concrete
• Masonry
• General
Commercial and
Residential

71

.TRUCKING

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Mobile oome or houu In MelOn
County on land contract . Hive

down payment 304-e7~7971 .

2 German Shepherds. Mala &amp;
Fem819. To Good Country Home

7/27/981

P/B Cantradars, Inc.

•••

for sale u-pick or
we pick

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1 mo.

ANNOUNCEf,1EtH S

40

Afross from the Court Uouse.

Free Estimates

5 0

Gun Shoot every
Saturday Night at

is the timf! for g-r-r-r~1
,,, NOw: b~
in the clossifieds

WL OUR OFFICE AT .992·21

1·740·949·2015

7/241981mo. pd .

Free Estimates

'7" column Inch ·weekdays
1
9" column Inch Sunday

Located in the Insuranct Plus BuildinK

~.

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

CALL

~~~~~~f.;)~~~~~

BULLETIN BOARD

.A

Gravel, Sand,

•Septic System.s
•Basements
•Excavating

il;'l.

Get Your ......, Aero•.•
Wit. ADaly S.1tl1el

-~·

.tf'

Limestone,

BACKHOE liD
DOZER SERVICE

Owner: John Dean

..

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

Computer Performance Upgrodeo
"Your One Stop Computer Shop"
Custom Built Computers, Pre.Owned Compute.-.,
Networks, Modem•. Hard Drives, Printers, Upgrade
Your PC to a Pentium CPU and MB lbday.
740-992-1135 for a Price Quole!
Frognet Internet Sign-up point for
Meigs and Mason Counties
11- ·- 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

JIM·'S

SNOWVILLE
R.ECREATON CLUB

••·'

'

4121filtfn

6:..

"'~'"

~

R•. L. HOLLON

g85-3301

Free Estimates

Jtlr..

12/1B/tln

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Call for Quote Today

2112!1211fn

360° Communications

~13 W. 2ND ST.

1·800·637·6508
~,.._ ...

9" Alb Pattern

~CELLULAR PHONES

.'

EOE
B.C.S.. with over 50 locations in Southeastern Ohio, is
opening a new program in Meigs County for a
teenager with MR/DD and has the following positions
available:
1) 40 hrS/wk; 3 pm Mon thru 8:30 am Sat; sleep-over
.required; daytime hours off; excell.ent benefit package;
2) 32 hrs/wk; 8 am Sat lhru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
required We are searching for compassionate
professionals with a team vision and a desired to teach
personal and community skills to · individuals wilh
mental retardation . The work environment is inlormal
and rewarding . The requ;rements are: high school
diploma/GEO, valid driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate automobile insurance
coverage. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training in the
field of mental retardation . Interested applicants need
to specify position of interest and send resume to:
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
P.O. Box604
Jackson, OH 45640-0604
All applications must be post·marked·by 8/4/98.
rtuni Em lo er.
E ual 0

WRITE PAINtED STEEL
BOOnNG AND SIDING

•

HEAD NURSE

• Medical Assistant • Phannacr Assistant
• Phlebotomist • Rehabilitation Aide
• Medical Secretary

News policy

IVA G.
JOHNSON

MICHAE L
PATRICK
BISSELL

"Commander, how does It feel to be back.on
Earth alter alx months of welghtleaai'IIH?"

614·992·7643

(614) 992-3838

(614)992~~

740.985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
. Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks •
Septic &amp; Cistern. Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:()()..12:00 Saturday

FREE ESTIMATES

In Loving Memory
of

Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

Joe Wilson

7

New Homes • Vlriyl Siding New

In Memory

In Lovin g

1998 Martin Street
'Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
·BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. G&amp;W
St. At.
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
Garages • Replacement Windows

In Memory

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

..

Chester

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

LENORA MCNUTT HUDNALL

Mil

St. Rt. 248

Room Additions • Roofing

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Wildwood Garden Club. Wednesday. 2 p.m. at
home of Sara Roush. Church St..
Syracuse. following a tour or 1hc
Gordon and Linda Fisher gardens.

In an effort to provide our readership with current news. the Sund"y
Times-Sentinel will nol accept wed·
dings after 60 days from the date of
the event
Weddings submiued after the 60day deadline will appear during ihe
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
0.' articles in the society section must
p· be submitted within 60 days of
. ' occurrence. All binhdays must be
submitted within 60 days of the
occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

TRPPRn

Remodeling

"Build Your Dream"

7(l0(96 1 mo pel

Send questions to Ann Landers,;
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles;
Calif. 90045

Parsons. Tammy Wheaton. Cheryl
Edwards. Karli Thomas. Kelly
Cutright and family. Fred Sleclc.
Joan Withrow . .Jean and Norman
Wood . Jan1cc DeBord. Elizabeth
and Maria Abdella. and Kenny and
Carrie Wood .

Custom Homes ·

On site custom sawing
·with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill

Miller reunion held
All c;ght children of the late J. Doyle and Gertrude Russell Miller were
able to be together when the family gathered for the 18th annual reunion
held at the Miller home in Middleport, with 88 people anending.
Debbie Gerlach gave the blessing prior to the carry-in dinner.
Dale Miller was emcee for the day, which was spenl reminiscing. taking
videos. playing games, swimming and having an auclion . Willard, Elmer
and Dale Miller served as auctioneers.
Weddings noted were Scou and Julie Hitch and Jason and Buffy Jenkins .
It was noted that a great grandson was born to Elmer and Paula Miller, a
great grandqaughter to Jack Miller and a great grandson to Gene and Della
Miller.
The deaths of Nan Herman and Jcssa Mae Brannan were also noted.
Trophies were presented to Floradell Gruescr. oldest auending; Jordan
Davis. youngest auending; Rebecca and Mauhew Lemons. Hartford, Wis ..
traveled farthest; Gene and Della Miller, married the longest; Scott and Julie
Hitch. married the shortest time; Angela Fields. best dish; Jason Abshire.
biggest bubble; Jack Miller, the gag trophy ; Ronald Miller and Mauhew
Lemons, egg·toss winners, and Grant Abbott and Kasey Williams, runners
up.
Auending were Jack Miller, Johnnie Miller, Missy and Jordan Da•is,
John and Brandon Davis and friends, Tiffany Cox, Robert Litchfield,
Danielle and Brooklyn Scott, Mike and Vickie Lacey, Annette, Brent and
Shawn Lacey, Billy Codinger, Josh Budd, Mary Miller Smith, Pam Smith,
Jim, Mary Ann and Brittany Smith, Wanda, Jason and Mary Lou Abshire,
Julie Morris, John and Jeff Cobb, Ronda, Nicholas and Joshua Ayres, Haly
Miller, John and Mildred Crooks, all of Columbus; Darin and Jacob Roach.
Angela, Wes and Laura Fields, Brandon ~oach ; Floradell Grueser, Mike,
Debbie and Tara Gerlach, Da•id and Lisa Averion, Jim VanCooney, and Mac
McLaughlin, Middleport; Dorothy Miller Roach, Raymond and Pam Roach,
Greg and Trudy Browning, Kasey and Jordan Williams, Stephen Browning,
Grant Abbott, Randy and Charla Roach, Lindsey Rr&gt;ach, Mike Lillie and
Gardner Wehrung. all of Pomeroy.
Richard Rawlings, Mason, W.Va.; Franklin Clark; l'oint Pleasant, W.Va.;
Ezra and Eva Mae Phillips and Jim and Barbara Lawrence, all of Syracuse;
Gene. Della and Tim Miller, Tucson. AIIZ.; Elmer and Paula Miller,
LaGrange, Ga.; Willard and Judy Miller, Wooster; Bill and Loraine Moine,
Sterling; Ronald Miller. and Rebecca and Matthew Lemons. Hartford. Wis.;
Janice Miller, Buckeye Lake; Dale Miller. Sandy Bonar. and Scott and Julie
Hitch. all of Maryville, Tenn.
Next year 's reunion will be held on ihc second Sunday of July at the
Miller "homeplace."
•

0 Au1o Porte. Buying

&amp;

wrecked Or IIIYIQICI VlhiCIII .

Auction
1nd FIBI! lil1rkat

Ri c ~

Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
service .
Licensed
auction
t66 .0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304-

773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

Wedemeyer' s Auction Service,

Gallipolis, Oltlo 740-379-2720.

Motor Route Carrier needed lor
Leon · E'lans area . 1·800· 982-

6397 art. 1781.

Nead Beautician 's Full Or PartTime For Busy Shop , 63 Pine

SirMI, Gallpol~ . 74Q.441-Q583.

Needed: Part Time Cake Oecore·
tor. Use Of An Airbrush &amp; kopy

Kokt Machine UsefuL Apply At
Oolry Ouesn. Gallipolis 74().446·

3278
90 W1nted to Buy
Absolute Top Ocllar: All U.S. Sll· Pan Or Full·Time Donia I Hyglenver And Gold Coins, Proploeto. 111 Noodod To Join Our Dtnlll
Olamondl, Ant~ -lry, Gold Team . Please Subrnlt Resumes
Rings. Prt·1130 U.S. Curroncy, To Oro. Smlln &amp; Jorgons•n 99S
S1erling, Elc. Acquioltiotlo .--y Jldloon 1'11&lt;1, Suite 101 . Galllpo• M.T.S. Coin Sho!J, 151 s-lid 111. Oltlo 4931.

llnllquto. Pomoroy. Ohio,
A..o Moor• owner, 74D·H2·

--For:

AniiQull • ciHn Ulld lurnlturt,

• Mll'f.r.E I1IIA
"""' .. Frtondly. bJlgcllno

..,..,..,~ 740

... 2142.

~llq-. lop ~~ pol(!.
I~•

252e.

A,._,.

.

AI :diG And Chlltengtug Posto JIUU.,.lW£ LPII
OMJI'I.1W£11t

' 0.
will buy ono pi- Or compltla pondablo. Apply In Poroon
AI .
IIOu-.IIOICI, Ool)y Martin, 740· 8clnlc Hill Nuroillg Carner. 31t
~
llucitrtdgl Ad.. - · OH 481114.

..

.

�Tuesday, July 28, 1998

,... 8. The Dally Sentinel

BRIDGE

..l\41'1T -AOD DOESN'T'
-

I"XAl:TLV
OF TWE. IDE/&lt;T- ~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

350 Loll &amp; Acreage
Taking Applications AI ilOmlno'a Pizza, Gallpotia, &amp; -.,y
~

OU!aolna.
-·rotai dell
pet·
son- wltli hardware
andJor

-

_...,.,._Port limo ,.:

HERSHEYVEarn S42K + /Yr. 4 ·8 Hra. /Wk .
Req. $8,995 lnv. 1·800-487.()227
24 Hrs.

altion, Rutllnd Deportmont Store,
710-742-2100.

IECUIITY OFFICERS

ond ho.. GEC or H.S. diploma.
Pakl hotktays, tree uniforms and
mort. Apply; James M. Gavin
" " - Plant, St. Rl. 7, Cheahlro,
Oh at ll'lt Main Guard House.
7ol0-~· 7331 EOE M/F.tW

230

proofing, all basement repairs
dona, free estimates, lifetime
guaranttul . 12yrs on job experi-

ence:304-t7!1-2145.

R A J -ng A Cooling

Free Eatlmatea
2o!IW. ~-

17yn. Expetlence
Lowesl Ralaa In Town

kllllall coach open for the 1998·

18 school year. All applicants

)1)441J.:IOM

Southern

Ohio 45771, SLSD Ia ail Equal
Opporto.wolty ~-

gram. fUieen hours per week .

Choloa ol $2.50 PI' hour stipend
or tuiiJor1 un1ta lor your grandchild
or a child ol your &amp;hOico. Paid
mileage and free lunch. For an
appUcatton ·or more information,

cal Olano CoaiOI, 740-992-2181 .
WORK FROM HOllE My Child·
ren Coma To The Office Every·

day! Earn An Ext"' 11500 ·S 1,1500
PI/Mo., Or $2,000 ·14.009 FIIMo..
Vii'll Our Website At www.own-

yourilo.com Or Call Toll Free I·
800-Jil8-32ti7.

140

Buslnets
Training

SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK GOT
YOU STARTED... But Your Em·

This newspaper will nol
koowingly accept
advertisements fof real estate
which is in violation of the
law. Our readers are nereby
informed thai all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal

opponunily basis.

ployer May Demand A little
Mora. Let ~s Keep You Learning.
Tr1tn At Night. Take Adult Train-

ing At Buckaye Hills Career Con-

740·245·5334. Flnahclal Aid
A - To Thole Who Qualify.
Southeastern Business Collage,
Spring Valley Plaza. 740·4464367, 1-800·214-0452. Accredit·

ed Mombar. ACICS Reg 190-o5·
127411

Schools
Instruction

150

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... But
Short On Skills? Gain Skills In
One Year 01 Training In The
Evenings. Buckeye Hiil1 Career
Center Continues In Ita 22nd

YNr Or Operation. Train In: Adult
Baalc Education. GEC Testing
Site, Office Tocllnotogy, Welding,

310 Homes for Sale
2 Story, 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Bath,
Family Room, LMng Room, Oinlng
Room , 2 Car Garage, Fairfield
Centenary Rd., Portert&gt;rook Sub·
division. Call After 3:00P.M.740-

446-9391
21 BurdeHt Addition, 3br, 2 lois,
fenced yard . Must sell. S45,DOO .

imaleiy 10 acres, 28x30 barn &amp;

lhed .

740·245 · 533~

For Catalog

And lnformatbn.

3br, 2 full baths , UR , LR, OA ,
large kitchen, fully equipped,
large loyef., 2-car attached garage . Gallipolis Ferry. 304·67!5·

1226.
5 Bedrooms, 2 Full Bath&amp;, New
Kitchen. Breakfast Nook , L.Ft

With Gas FP, C.R., Olllce, En-

180 Wanted To Do
ANYODOJOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch·
ing, ltower. bads, landscaping,
edging,
mowing,
sidewalk
etc ... Free Estimates. Call Bill

encee available. 304-675-6099.
Circle ·N· Convalescent Home,
Hal I Opening Elderly Or Hanl:JI·
capped Person In My Homo. 740·

411 ·1538.
Connie's Child Care has open-

lnga. S. R. 7. Tuppers Plains .. Cor·
ttfled In Me~s and Athens Counties . Reasonable rates, open 24
hOurs, aeven days per
740-

wee«.

867-8329.
Darst Private Care Home has
openings lor male or female et-

!llrly pallents. 7&lt;0·992·!1023.
Furniture repair, relinish and res·
toratlon. also custom orders. Ohio
Vallay Refinishing Shop. Larry

Ptllllips. 7&lt;0-992-t578.
Georges Portable Sawmln. don't

haul IO&lt;Jr logs to tte mill just call
31)4.875-IQ57.
·
Handyman Laborer. Painting, yard
wert: small carpentry. Reasonab6e
r11e11 p.-lc:ea per job. Phone 7•0·

...._

742-322!5 . If no answer. leave

11 The Heat Too Much. Or Just

No Tlmo' We Will Do Landscap·
ing, Mow Yards, Roofing, &amp; Car·
panter Work, C&amp;ll Anytime, Free

Elllmi11117&lt;0-38!HI968.
ProfessiOnal Ttee Service. Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In·

auronco. Bidwell, Ohio. 614·388·
9848. 814-3117-7010.

MEKIIJ EMPLOYMENT
SIII·Motlvatod, Clpenclablo, Ro·
IPICtlbil Hlrd Working Chris ·

11an women, 32. Looking For PIT
Opportunity To wort&lt; tn ConjuncUon With Present Job. Mon · Fri ,
Starling AI 4 A.M. Or 5 A.M. Until
11 A.M. Or Noon. Pravioos Man·
agement Exp. Al•o Works Well
With Public, CaH Rita. 740-985-

4187.

Wilf t1ke care of elderly people

In my homt or youra , ot will
homll In

Pt.

Pleasant or

~- 31)4.67~2405.
FI ' IMJCIAL

210

BuiiMN
Opportunity
INCmCEI

ONtO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that rou do bual-

1v1t1t - ' " you know. tnt!
1101' 10 unci tlvougl1 tho

mall until you h - lnvootlgatod
... aftorlng.

1984, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. large
kitchen &amp; living room area,

$8,500, 7&lt;0-949-7007.
1990 Fleetwood 14X70, 2br, 1
bath, ex. cond . Camp Conley

trailer court. 304-875·3735 leave

maaaage.

1994 Norris Clayton 14x70 2
Badrooma, 2 Batlll, 2 Cocks, CA.
$22,000, 7&lt;0-256-6851.
1995 Clayton, all eloctrlc, excel·
lent condition, call Tom Mdeflion,

7&lt;0-992·3348 Allar 5pm.
1998 Close out sale . Save big
SSS. 2.3.4.Bedroom homes . Trl •
State Homes, St. Albans, WV.

.z linanclng, 2

or 3 bedrooms. around $200. par
month . Call Credit Line 1· 800-

992·5292 aHor 5 p.m.
Brick house in Meadowbrook,
3br, 2 bath, large eel-In kitchen.
din ing room. hardwood floors .
screened-In porch , family room.
partial basement, large storage
building, CIA. natural gas fur~

naco. $85,000. 304-tT!I-1798.
Garage apartment, Middleport.
greal condition , new carpet. rwo
thldroom. bath", kitchen, large liv-

Ing room. dod&lt;. 2 112 car garaga.
owning roiocatlng. 7&lt;0-992·6243.
House For Sa.,, Mercerville
Area . Electric And Water For A
Trailer Hook-Up, Call 740·446 -

304-736-7295
Ooublewide 3br, 2 bath, Sl ,345.
down. S217 . per mo. Free deliv-

ery. 1-~1-tm .
Help save my credit, make 2
payments &amp; usume tow monthty
paymenta . Will pay to relocate .

Call304-75!1-7191.
Huge. 28x80 3BR , 1 112 bath .
Starling at ONLY $39,999 . Many

options available. 1·888·928·
3426.
Large selection ol used homes. 2
Quick delivery. Call 740·385·

month with $1075 down. Calli·
800-837·3238.

58711.
New Coublewlde 3BR, 2 balh .
S1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1·
886-926-3426.
NOTICE
Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
W.Va . LocatiOn Hu Been Or·

dared To liquidate

~II

Inventory.

0 Down , Low11t APR! 304·736·

3409.
Special 16x80 3BR, 2 bath.

S1.325 Cown. $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; lreeaklrtlng. t-800-89~-tm :

304-87!1-4879 or 304-67!1-1880.
Trailer For Salol 3 Bedrooms 1 11
2 Balha Cal 740-2811-0007

21140
Tl1rlo bldroom
·llr.
corner
or Sixth- 5 Palmer.
740·
111!-7571 .

....... 304-87!1-4874.

I ·5 BEDROOM HOllE&amp; FROM
$4,000 Local GOV'I . &amp; Bank
Repo's Call 1· 800-522·2730, X
1709.
Large three bedroom farm house.
carpeted, garage. S4DO plua security deposit; also apartment,

$275; 330-94!1-4505.
Nice 3br, references &amp; lteposlt.
No pots. 34-87!1-5162.

Pomeroy- 1o1M bedroom, SIR, _.
ly deco&lt;oled, HUC, no pets, small
ya"rd. patio, deposit, 740-992-

8888.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
17 Miles lrom Millon Exlt-8 Milos
from Point Pleasant. 2&amp;3 Bed·
room mobile home, slls on 1
acre , city water. very nk:e. $350.

HUD1304-582·5840.
1995 14x70 Clayton, 2 bedroom.

2 bath, perfact conciHion, all elec·
$15.~00

trlc,

can be uan at

Browns Court. 740-992-7880.

0008.
One bedroom aparlment In Mid-

dleport, all utilities peld, $100 dopoSit, S270 month, call 7&lt;0-992·
7806 8am-5pm,
River Bend Place now accepting
applications for HUD aub"dizad
apls. for elderly/handicapped or

disabled people. EOH. 304-862·
3121 or 304-882-3274.

Fumlahed
Rooms

Circle Motel low11t F.letea In
Tottn, Newly Remodeled. HBO,
Clnemax , Showtime &amp; Disney.
Waek~ Rates. Or Monthly Ratea,

Construction Workers Welcome

740-441 -5698, 740-441-5187.

-II
nook-ups. Call alter 2:00p.m.,

Sleeping rooms with cooking .
Also trailer space on river.

polis. $375 .00 Plus uuuues, Pus
Deposit. No Pall! 741-441-4343

Small 2 Be&lt;:11oom Mobile Home In
Porter, Close To Schools, Hospital , Stores. Newly Painted, Water,

&amp; Trash Paid, $250/Mo .. $250
Ceposlt, No Pet~ 740-3811-9325.
Three bedroom mobile home tn
Pomeroy, no pets, 740-992 -~ .

Trailer For Rent. 740-446· 1279.
Trailer for rent . furnished. $275
per month piUs utilillel. 740-992-

2481.
Two bedroom trailer lor rent
(available August 1St), nrce
country aettlng, central air, porch,
storage room, trees, big yard! 5
miles east ol Rac ine , no Inside
pets , references required, $350/
month plus deposit. 740·9•9·
~ovonlngs.

Apartment•
for Rent

440

740-385-4387.
Mobile Home Silo Available, Route 7 North, Galipolis. $1!50/mo.,
References Required, 740·2-45-

470 Wanted to Rent

446-4722.
Now taking aealtd bida on commercial lot on US 35 Hancleraon.
Mall blda to : Sldtra 2123 Mal·
vern Rd . Rock Hill, SC. 29732.
Opening dolo S a p - I, 1998.
RoiiMt the right to ,.ruu any
or au bkl1. For lrtfo caH. 603-388·

Sa&amp;r1 Whirlpool Tub Spa, Folding
PCP Cllampion Waller; Collection
01' Cape Cod Cinnorware, Nover
Used; Oecoratetve Wall Plates,
Smoking Pipes, Call 740-•46-

0839.
The Pomeroy Thrift Shop haa

moved to 145 North Saoond Avo·
nue. Middleport (Cash Bahra old
building) , buying- baby Items,
breakfaal uti &amp;· good dean used
furniture on consignment, Open

$37.00 Per 100; All Brass Com-

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;ton. Ohio, I ~537-9528

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winlers,

w.\llg cage. 304-576-2444.
4 gray hand-ted Cockatiel ba ·

bios. 2 months old. 304-882·
.
3438.

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Rangts, Refrigrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 7•0·446 -

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers , dryers. refrigerators,

rangas . Skaggs Appliances. 78
Vine Street. Call 740·448·7398,
1·800-499-3499.
Used Window Air Conditioning
Units, Different Sizes, Guaranteed,

740.886-0047.

a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 740·992·2526. Russ
Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AKC Chow Chow Puppies, 2
Black Males, 6 Waeks Old. $200
Eacll, 740-4411-.1947.
AKC Golden Retriever Stud Serv-

ice Proven $125. 740-41Hl615.
AKC Reg. male Aon. one year old,

very playlul, groat with kids, will ba
or 740.742·7103.

AKC Shoitle puppies. trl and
sable and white ; vel checked, ex-

cellent pedigree. $250· $350
each. 7&lt;0-696-1 085.

Cen~al Air Conditioning. Frae Es·

llmatesl II You Don't Call Us, We

!loth losel 740·418·6306, 1·800·
29Hl098.
740·

2 Swivlel Rockers , Mau\le Color,
Two For $25: 2 White Leather

AKC YorkSh ire Terrier Puppies,

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Mon-Sat

11·8. Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave . Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063.

2583.
I Bedroom. AIC , WID,

Hoo~ · Up ,

Near HOIZBf, $279/Mo.·, + Utll~ies ,
Oepostt &amp; lease Required , 740·

446-2957.

llopo&amp;ll, 7&lt;0-388-9946.
1 small bedroom apt, upstairs,
$190. mo. pius utilities &amp; aecuri·
ty deposit In Pt . Pleasant . 304·

740-446·2200 ·~·r 5pm,

A round bUtcher blOCk table &amp; 4
c hairs. Juice man juicer. 304·

675-3734.
Baby llems, Carseat, SUng, Etc.

Excellent Cond ition, 740·25~ 1614.
ATTENTION : We 'll PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 29 Pounds, 47
People Needed Immediately Offer

EIQiires. 71.!1198, CALL 7~0.411 1982,
Br~nd Newt Great Gift! CO/video
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out of box . $125. Holds up
to 9•0 discs, alao holds tapes .

Call 740·992- 6e38 altor 6 pm .
CO&amp; &amp; lapes notlr&lt;:luded.
10' tong , six 6' long, oak , good
condition , call 740 · 949· 2211,

Electric Scooters , Wlleelcllairs .
2br, Wedge apartments. no pets, . New ·And Used, Stairway Ele11a ·
dopoalt roqulr~-t7!1-2072 .
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
lifts, Bowman's Homecare. 740·

458 112 Second Avenue. Gallipc&gt;
lis, 2 Bedrooma, AC, Appllancea,
$425/Mo .. $225 Deposit, Utllitlea
Paid. 7-21211.

·-to

CMaty'o Fomlly Uvlng
"""*'&gt;y/Middleport

Oatmallon Puppies, $5D Each, 7

Woeks. 74o-388-t922.
Need a flea/tick mist kills adults
on dogt and
Ask R&amp;Q '

''''?

Coli I &lt;0-992-4514
Monday ll1rOl9t saturday
9:00om-9:00pm.

1·2·1 bedrooma , Stovt/relrlg.
eveltlt*, ulflltils and ,cabtl paid,
HUC ICCIPIId. Children Wol·
....... Alit lor Cltr1Jty.

pyjacklnc.com)
NOTICE
Fronc:h City "-! Grooming
Professional Grooming by Appointments . Over 15 yrs. experience, New bathing system, "Ultra
Wa~h", 650 Second Ave. Galli·
polls, OH. 740-448-1528.
Poodle' puppies, tiny toys, also
Schnauzer puppies &amp; adults.

shots &amp; wormed,

7~0·667·

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Livestock .

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

740-25&amp;-1233
Morgan &amp; Saddlabred 4yr old
gelding, good trail horaa. Sl.500

• A 86 5

1998 F1eiglllriner Cillllc XL lvltlt
olo spec. 77,000 milea, lull warranty package. calf for details.

West
• A 7 6

304-71'3-5540.

• 8 4 3

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDI
'96 Jeep ClasSic. 4 ooor automat·

tKQJ54
• 1 2
Soutb

,,

lc, loaded, 120.800 090, 15,000

'98 GMC Yukon 4WD, SLT pack·
age, white, CD playa'"'- leather
seats, garage kept, 9000 mile&amp;,

•

$32,1500, 740-992-8849.

v-a.

miles.
libergtaas body. nl'ft'
tires. soft/bikini top, wllull cowr.• •

$6,800. 080. 304-t95-3023.

Hay tor sale- $1 .00·$ 1.501 bale.
also mulch hay tor aale, $1.00/

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
1t80 ·1890 HONOA CARS FOR
1100 Salzod &amp; Sold locally This
Month. Call 1·800·522·2730 Ext.
4420.
1980 -1990Truclts For SIOO!!!
SOized And Sold
localtf TNs Month.
Trucka. 4x4's. Ett.
1·800-522·2730, X 3901.
1982 Chevy Camaro. S550. 1981
Eagle, 4-w&lt;l. $350. 304-5711-2428.
1982 Cutlass Supreme. 2 c. 280
V8 . Good Condition, $1,500.00
FN"m 740-992-4568 .
1984 Chrys ler 5th Avenue, De·

cent Car $500. OBO 740·44 10584.

1988 Buick Regallimiled, 307, V·
II, 7&lt;0-24!1-5457.
1986 Ford LTD. 3.8 engine, good
shape. great work car. asking

$750,
7103.

740 · 7~2·1~10

or 740-742·

1986 Ford Taurus, loaded, everything works goO.d, runs .oreat,
could drive to Florida. 90,000 ac-

tual miles. $1250 neg .. 740·992·
61124.

740

Daytona, S·sp.
Ford E•plorer.

$12,500. 30~ · 875 · 5441 or 304·
875-4118.
1989 Tempo Auto, Air. Tilt,
Cruise. Power Steertng. Power
.Seats, PB, 71,000 Miles. $1,400.
740-387 · 7~60.

740-446-9552.

1989 Toyo1a Cellca ST, air, automatic. am/lm cassette. white
with blue interior, great condition,

1991 Chevy Corsica, 3.1 Mul~i·
port engine . power winelowr. ,
cr uise. lilt. air, sharp car, onl)'
82,000 actual miles, $3200 neg ..

1991 Toyota Coro lla OX 83,000
Miles, 5 Speed, 31 MI. /Gel., AC, ;
Excellent Condition, 1~.500. 7~0·
446·3877.
1993 Codge Shadow E. s. Au·
tomatlc, AIC, AMIFMICassallo,
7..5.000 ml Good Condition asking
$4 .500 .00 Oa)is 740·446·3278 or

1993 Kawa&amp;akl Ninja •. 5,000 IC· ·
lual miles , runs &amp; looks great.
$2.700. ~7!1-5441.

HEALTH
INSURANCE

1996 RM 125 Suzuki Oir1 Bike
e•cellent conditlon ... New plastic.

graphic kit, FMF exhaust &amp; FMF
suspension, fully rebuilt motor wl ,
extra accessories $2,900. 304- .

eo.

67!1-3424.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1985 Welcrah Ski Boat 19 Foot,
HP, In-Board
Cuddle Cabin,
Mercruiser, Runs Good, Good
Condition With Skis, VIII, KAH

t•o

-

THE BORN LOSER

1993 LX650 Yamaha: 1995 VXR
650 Yamaha, Double Trailer,

1--lf\M f~ 7 Tf\OOC.
~ &amp;:t\1\IID'(OU 1

Flush Kit, $7,000 080. 740·256- '
1279.
1997 Bass Tracter Bantam 3x w/

tra""'· SI.OOO. 304-875-8958 alta&lt;
5pm.
35HP Johnson boat motor. runs

good. $800. 30H7!1-5131 .

Kawasaki STS Jet ski, still under

$5000, 740-949-2203 or 7&lt;0-949-

Wf!'9"boa'
· :~
Ski Nautiqua 1989 351 Ford 240 .

BIG NATE

HP 530 Hn1 Re&lt;Wihlte, Sid Boom

WAAT'5
&amp;ROCHURE!:.
ALL
U'l (:,()NNA
!HAT
USE 5011E
STuFF, Of MY LAWN-.~.,.. MOWIN6 MONEY

&amp; Cove[. Also Boat House with ·
Boat Lift. Will Stll Separate. 740.

44H25J alter 8:00PM

Sld11tlo181t. Ceop·V. closed bow. t60HP

TO 60TO
~~~~.....~50~C~CE.~,R CAMP'

....

mileS. $8.895. 30H7!1-3324.
199~

LHS

BE~UTIFULLUXURY

CAR , leather seats. alarm sys."
lam, cellular phone, moon roo! ,
84k miles. nice car. call 740-742·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accetsorlea

SIO·gal. No
On Fence. 304·

•

Your Own Peaches, Yellow,
Bushel , Bring Container ,
6 Days Week, Raynor .
Orchard , 5 Miles South

1. -Gaii&gt;olls, Ohio 740-448-

VIckie. 740-448-2897.

1Mrs. C~

Chaplin

2 Dollar bills
3 Porltorveal

(Infectious

4Laave--

ell_.. ,

a.-

32 Knlgltl'a33 Climbing plant

5 Grut reopect

hoclleyteem
8 Sorrel
9 Actor

6 -Seoul'a

coun1ry·

10 Put (cargo)

on board
11 Concelll

Johnnv-

7 Edmonton

12 Type of lily
19 l&lt;nlcka' org.
21 llrietll

22 Feeling Ill

23 Author Ayn 24 Diet -(Latin
hymn)

25 Leave out
26 Bird o1 peace

East

Pass

2BVordl-a

All pass

29 Speech
30 Arrow polson

31 Item In a deck
37 -leand-

38Chlnese
sauce

An interlude
in London

I

HAD A 61RL FRIEND

.,

41 Hot wine
drink
42 Snotch

43

Attorney

General Janet
44 lillian prime

mlnlalerMoro
45 Pub miaalle

47

Oblalno

48 Willow
49 Shoulder

·'

of a rOIId
50 End of.

•

lhi'MI
52 Caoual shirt
541bp abbr.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnry Cipher cryptoorarns are c111a1ed from Qootabon s by famous people . past and present
Eactt lenei 11'111\e c-pher starlds lor another Tooay ·s clue D equals 8

'M T C

EVWEAOC

T C S E

AMTCWO

TCS E

MTCG,

SCNOM

AI

S X I C
XI

HAK'M

KAM

TV W M

LAV
LAV

MA

XO

ZNK'M
NM

IITCG? '

SCA

.. ·

DYOZNPSXN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I never graduated lrom Iowa. I was only there lor two
terms- Truman's and Eisenhower's.'" - (Lions') Alex Karras

T=~~;~' S© \\&lt;1{\ }\- ~ £ tfS" WOlD
GAM I
- - - - - - Edited by CLAY I. 'OILAN - - - - - - 0
of
be·
Rearrange . letters
the
four scrambled words
low to form four simple words

I

--,O,;.,..NrJ-T.I_TT""-il~,'
.

_

Our sales manager ~miled
broadly looked at our corporate
map and said, "''m proud lo say
that m every state we have

:-:

5

.

.

'-..L.-'-.L....-'---'.._

.

•

•

.

·'
,v
"'

FRHITT

~ I I 1I
....,.,~-H,...,A...,.,~
r

"
"

-II ~ ~~~~~:,: ;h~

•

_

·'

..

chudle qualed
by 11111ng tn the m1SS1ng words
you develop from srep No. 3 below.

.1:\ P~INT NUMBERfD lETTERS
~ IN THE SE SQUARES

I'

12
.j

r3

r I'

16

I

17

SACK HOME, 6\!T SHE'S
STOPPED WRITIN6 TO ME ..
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Frol1c- Mercy- After- Sod1um - MIRROR

Two fellows were talktng about superstittcns "I don 't
believe m that," one satd, "but I certainly get upset if I
break a MIRROR I"

ITUESDAY

·
,-..

JULY 281

...,..

.

.

~·

ROBOTMAN
-.

Very Utile, 74().245-9376.

--

..

7~().256-6757.

·'

•

wanted: Slide-In

Truck Camper,
9 Or 10 Ft., Self·Contairwtd, Muat

"''

Be· in Good Condition; 740·2566038.

"

SERVI CES
I

810

Home
Improvements

1972 Mack truck, 237 Mack mo·
lor, $2500 ; aet of 11umtnum
whoela lor lata modal 4x4 Chevy
truck, $350; 740-742·2675.
1982 Chevy S·IO. Black Emoron
paint, headers. 350 onglno &amp;

188i S·IO 83,000 Milot, Sport
St&gt;;&gt;lng, $2,495; 11189 Jeep Comanche, $2 ,295 ; Cook Motors,
7~103.

58,000 mttea, •·dr. load•d. 3()4.

875-!5040.

.

'

BASEMENT

ASTRO-GRAPH

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfelime guarantH.
Local references furnish1d . Ea-

taltllslled 1975. Coli 24 Hrs. (740)
446-0870, 1 -llll0-~87 ·0576 Rog·
""'Watetproollng.

Trucks for Sale

1184 Blazer, red . 4x4 Tahoe,

Round Baler, Ar1a Way 2
Orln~er. 10 Ft. Traneport
Com Plctar, 7&lt;0-379-2882.

5'1L V'OUS PLAiT .. ·

1995 Nomad Coiuxo, 30 Ft. Filth

Vehicles . No Turn Downs. Call

t 887 Ford 150 4 we,. 308 Cytlndlr. Runl GroaH Good Condition,
High- $3,600, 7ol0-379-2133.

"'-

ANOTHER ROOT 6EER
FOR M'f BROTHER SPIKE,

6 HP Motor, $800, 1699 Bob Me·

Easy Bank Financing For Uaed

Ill. cond. $3.500. 304-71'3-584C.

airing
10'10111

I •

1980 Fleatwlng with owning 1Tn. • ;

Credit Problems? We Can Help.

tranamluton , tinted windows ,
American r1cing wheels, shlrp,

740-448-9585, Or 740-41e-2813.

DOWN

_D,,...E:.....,...I

1972 Aristocrat 18ft., A/C, 1973 ~ \'
Smoky 15ft 12' Boat, Tral...- And • 1.

Wheel , With ·Slide-Out, Central
Heal &amp; Air, Microwave, Stere.o,
SeJf-Contatned . .1 Owner. Used

computer

5I Type ol oeecl

I

96 Toyota Gamry, 19K. loaded,
$18,1500080, 7&lt;0-985-3831.

~20

Good U10d Commercial Corpet,
S1.00 Par Yord Or Tiki II All AI
.50t Por Yord. Con Bo Boon AI
1743 Ctntenory Rood, GoNipolla.

3NT

Campara I
Motor Homes

after 5pm.

Avaiablo. 304-458·1089.

FARr,1 SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

790

llonl Garaga Kop_t, 740-258-8279,

Upton Used Cars Rt. 62·3 Milea
South ol leon , WV. Financing

Ranger. $300. 00.-875-6348

Pass
Pass

.=.-.

57 Started (up)6

27-·-·

.

New gas tanks 5 body parts. c &amp;
R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-372 ·
393Jor 1.(1()().273-9329.

3062 days or 740·742·8403

7~().992·3348

North

!..
....

~

36 Abhoro

North and South each won $733
instead of losing $81.

New Auto Body Parts &amp; Accessories for all type&amp; of vehlclea.
Transformers Auto. 304-675-~4

8118nlngs .

1995 Chrysler Sebring, excellent
conditio n, call Tom Anderson·.

West

......-

56 Declarea

K 4 3

Bed rail cap&amp;, lit Chevrolet trucks,
$25,740-448-2316.

1996 Coachman Catalina :..ue
Travel Trailer, hcallanl Condl·

1995 Cavalier, 2 door coupe, 5
speed. air, amllm cassette, rear
de(roster, 76,000-miles, $6200,

1 THINK THI5 15 THE.
ONE I'I..L-SH&gt;N UP
FOR 1 IT'S A G.'OOD
&amp;ARr.AIN 1 ONL'I' A
HUNDRED I!&gt;UCKS FOP.
A WHOLE WEf.j(. 1

4411-361~.

760

14G'::repoch
(2 well.)
15 Leu sloppy
16 Peldneoe, e.g.
(2 well.)
17 Concerning
(2 well.)
18 Compuspl.
20 Mexican coin
21 Native-l)om
Israeli
23 --Janeiro

34 Al1leu
35 l.8zybonH

By Phillip Alder
On a visit to London lasl spring, I
dropped into lhe TGR Bridge Club
near Marble Arch. I watched a few
Chicago slanzas being played for the
"small'" sum of about $1 .63 a point'
I was surprised at the defense
found on this deal by a world championship silver medalist Cover the
East and South hands. Defending
against five spades, you lead the hean
ace: lhree, four. eight Whal now?
South's four-spade opening was a
rea.'iOnable gambit. As a slam was
unlikely opposile a pa.&lt;sed partner,
South hoped to make life difficuh for
West
After West's five-hean overcall.
North h:ld a problem. Could they beat
five heans? (As it happens. yes, by
two tricks.) If not, five spades would
be a cheap sacrifice. So. Nonh bid on.
East has either one heart or three.
(Wilh a doubleton, he would have
started an echo by playing his high·
er card.) If Ea.&lt;t began wilh only one
hean. lhe contract is going down via
a heart ruff and the diamond ace. If
East has 1hr:ee hearts, though, how
will the defense prevail?
A club switch may be necessary,
but doesn '1 work here. The winning
play, which looks right to me. is to
cash 1he diamond ace at trick two.
Soulh cannol be ruffing since if Easl
had all seven of the missing dia·
monds, he would have opened three
diamonds. And wilh this layout lhe
defender.. eventually come to a club
trick for one down.
However. West conlinued with a
second hean at trick two, permining
declarer to dilch his diamond king.
Then a spade to the queen saw the
conlract home.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1995 ZXGA Ninia, Kawantu, new ·
lires. l4200. 7&lt;0-742·1066.

_C«_m_~--~
__
. 7______1_51_1_____

1993 Pontiac Grand Prill, bright
red exlerior, gray Interior. 84,000

WITH 6ALSII

6UARD UPI!

1986 Honda 4 Wheeler. In Very

Mercruiser inboard, wllraller, lila
jackets &amp; bumpers . $2,050. 740-

42 Alum
48Dollb&lt;ead
47 Taunt
51 lnteroct
53 Hlnael'a ailhlr
55 - Doria (hallan

DANCE AROUND, AN' KEEP YORE

Good Conclitlon, 7&lt;0-256-6574.

204J,...ill conaldar trade tor 1

1969 Dodge

BEEN HASSLIN'
MARY BETH
A6'1N !I

1981 Honda CB~OO, 14,000
, EllCIIIent Condition! Aaklng
740·245·9852 Evonlnga
Alter 5 I'M.

1988 Bonneville LE . maroon, 4dr,
new lirea &amp; brake&amp;, good co nd .
$3.200. 304-87!1-5792 alter !Spn.

$2.000 ~ 1.992

I'LL LARN HIM
ABOUT FI6HTIN'
1

Motorcycles

Board, $5,200, 7&lt;0-379-2133.

1 Eaklmo_,
(var.)
7 Loco and loll
13 Boling

Opening lead: ??

JU6HAID1S

warranty, thr" seater, 83 hora•
powtr, bought new July of '97,
thtee matching Kawasaki ski
vests and lraller all go with it,

gine $500.00 080 740-24!1-5670

INT

7238 Caytlmo; 740·682· 7083 Al-

1986 Plymouth Voyager LE
Sl.850 . Rebuilt angina, many
new parts. 304-675-6704.

1 988 Dodge Daytona 2.2 L En-

South
I t

BARNEY

~­

1979 CJ5 Jeep New Top. Good
Running Gears, 4 WO, 740-682·

1984 GMC Convoralon van, 305
V-8. PS, PB, PW, Pl. omllm cat- ·
sene. front &amp; rear air. 4 new lWei.
very good condHion, ready 1o&lt; VI· callonll $41500. cal740-949-2800.

Hay I Grain

• Q J 10 9

-to--

39 ~lolhod
40 Laalher atntp

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

1978 Joop CJ-5. 58,000 original

Saanen goat&amp; for sale . 304·675·

640

• 98 4 3
• 10 9 5
• 10 3

ACROSS

t A 9 8 6

ter9.

3828.

East

• K2
• Q J 1 6

m1os. 304- n:~-5540.

or wiltrada. 304-562· 1876.

7~().949·8005 .

Fib~rglus topper, bed liner. tall·
gate liner &amp; prolector lor Ford

Memory Gardena Galllpolla.Onlo
Call Colect: 7&lt;0-888-8506

630

Evening 740.416·3099

-7283.

For Sate Aeaaonebly: Two Grave
Spaces with vaults. Ohio Valley

Uaad Equipment. Carmichael's

Farm &amp; lawn Gallipolis, OH 740446-24121-t00-5114-1111 .

740-992·61124.

3 Pc. Sactlonal Couch W!h 2 End
$500, 7&lt;0-2~5-9507 .

As 2 .9% On Lawn Tractors And

Low Rate Financing On Now And

• 7 2

1990 Olds C~llass Suprema, Budget Priced Transmissions All - · '
LOADEC $3.&amp;00 .00 740 · ~~8· · Types, Access To Over 10,000 ·- . ._
3568
Transmissions, 740-245-56n.

992·2218.

Recliners In Couch Earth Tonea,

Witlt Uo About Financing Aa Low

• A K2

256-tt•2.

pies , CFA Aeglatered Persian
Kittens, Vet Checked, 740-367·

Tlck Mlet. Citrus scented. ·Trigger
spray. Biodegradable. (www.hap-

1 Bedroom Apartment, Sto~e &amp;
Refr igerator Included. 740·446·

Tractora, Hay Equipment; John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders. Check

Package, 380 Automallc , 8.000
Mllea. like Now, $18,500, 740·

7&lt;0-992-7627.

Feed &amp; Supply (740 ·9 92 ·2 16~1
about HIPPI Jock 00.33 Fltll

•

lawn Equipment. Compact Utility
Tractora From 20 To 39 HP. All
Slzoa Or 4 WC And 2 WC Farm

North
07·211-98
• Q J 10 5

1997 Ooclgo Ram 11500 Extended
Cab L1ranlie SLT Conversion

Very Small; Caushchund Pup·

nos.

•cooL QQWNt•

·a 2 Cappers.

740-446-ll231.

1~10

Buy or sell . Riverine AniiQues,
1 t24 E. Main Street, on At. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00

2 Car Boys
441.()708.

A Groom Sh:op -Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets. 373 Georges C(eek Rd .

very large, $150 firm, 740·742-

Antiques

530

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Reaidantial And Commercial

1985 Buict&lt; Rogal Linlled, 3.8. PS,
PB, PW. Pl. amllm casseaa, good
condition. $1200,740-949-2800.

I pair ol Quaker parrots, 2yra 01&lt;1,

Houaeholcl
Goods

Ohio .On Jackaon Pike 740-«6 2412 Or 1.(1()().594-1111.

tv J,.oci&lt; Sl 00. 7&lt;0-256-14411.

hatched first chicks. $150. pair,

Grubb'l Plano- luning I ropolro.
Problema? Need TunOcl? Cll lha
Avalllblt Nowl 2 Bedroom upper . piano Or. 740 ue 1528
114311.
ieYel opanmont lor rent. StOvt &amp;
Roclnt· Co&lt;call GreenWOOd Co- rflrlgerator rurnlahod. Call 304- Holl 2 112 ton otr conditioner,
good con~ . tnru tht wall . 30o4·
.-y RdJ
Rd.· 1 .~. 87!1-2100.
875-2072.
.
11 ocreo, 740-892·t542 or 740BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS ~T
BUCGET PRICES AT JACKSON
JET
AERATION MOt'OAS
lWo atory bulldl'l and tot, comot' · ESTATES, 52 Wtllwood Drlvo
ol Cherry StrMt Oat&lt; Alley, Syr- rrom 1279 to $351. Walk 10 allOp Repaired, New a Rebuilt in Slota.
IICUII, S9500. can. 740-992·2631, a movlao . Clll- 740·44t·2588. Cai Ron Evans, 1·800-!137-8528.
Equal Houo1ng Opportunity.
-:oi0-992·3684 or 740-992·28311.

___Dolt-

Large F~ing Cabinet W;th Securl·

560 Pets for Sale

MERCHANDISE

Your Area Buah Hog Dealtr For
Pana , Rotary Cuttara, Loaders ,
Titters, Finish Mowers, Etc. Car·
michael's Farm I Lawn Midway
B a - Gallipolll &amp; Rio Grande.

bale, CII_T&lt;0-742·2083.

Queen Sizo Bedroom SUKo 1400.

740-448-2398 Alii&lt; 5:30P.M.

7:00am-! O:OOpm.

nice neighborhood ~ quiet, 740-

800-283-2840.

Rio Granda, OH Call H0-245·
5121.

Groen Apts. 149 or call 740.992·
3711 . EOH.

Lot lor aatt-'Galllpolls. 90x172,

Prlmeetar- low Installation with
roball, first month tree, rroo HBO,
SlarOna apodal fQino-tton.

Wanted To Rent: 3 Bedroom
House In Gallia Co., Preleratlly
With Basement And Garage, Call

Commerclai ·Oftlce or Retail, 87

1OOx1 50 tot in Gallipolis Ferry.

~175.

5024, 7&lt;0-24!1-5151 .

Church pews, twelve 12' eng, lour

door).

Pool For Sale. 27&lt;~. Almost - ·
Asking $700. Evenings. 740-4411-

_.ton Fillings In Stock

340 Buelneea and
Buildings
t•Oo mo. Corner Building. 740·
992·6250 AcqulalliO.!!I JIJIXt

Solo Prior To Solo. T•mo Of Solo:
CASH OR CERTIAEC CHECK.

Mobile home aile a11allablt btt·
wean Athens and Pomeroy, call

2bdrm . apts .. total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room
facilities. clOse 10 school in town .
Applications available at : Village

Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Ft.

And May Be Seen By Calling
Keith Johnson At 740-441·1038.
OVB Reserves The Right To Ac·
cept Or Reject Any And AN Blda.
And Withdraw Property From

Chairs. Two For $25 ; 740·4483318

1br &amp; 2br apartments for rent In
Pt. Pleasant . 304·675-2 174 or

U&amp;ed sin111e wide, around $100 .

"Aa !a- Whert ta• Without Ex·
praiSed Or Implied Warranty

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshed and unfurn1shed, securil)i
deposit required, no pets, 740·

800-948·58711.

PI' month. Call 1.(1()().948-5878.

ello Boat IVCL08819H495, And
A 1998 Hondo Fourtrax 300 ATV
1812680. Public Auction Will Ba
Hold AI Tho OVB Annex, 143
Tltlrtl Gallipolla, OH On B1
8198 At 10:00 A.ll . The Above
Will Bo Sold To Hlghoat Bidder

Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100; P 200 PSI

2 bedroom trailer in Middktport.

Mobile Home 2 Bedroom In 'Galli·

Sale A 199:1i Mercrulser Carav-

460 Space.for Rent

510

$275 plus &lt;leposil, 7&lt;0-992·3194.

Ohio Valley Bank Will ONor For

304-71'3-5851' Muon wv.

2 &amp; 3 badroom mobile homes, air

2 Bedroom Mobile Home. You
Pay Utilities. &amp; CeposH, In Porter
Area $280/Mo., 614·386-9162.·

trim . $375 . Brown English aad·

TuOidi\Y·Friday, 11·4, 7•0-992·
3725.

conditioned, $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash included, 740·

875-49751eavo name &amp; number.

2 acre lots Or 8 acres, Bethel
Rood, WV. 304-875-7946.

llf1lngDoors
RoomI ·
- -HI
. ,.
Oak
lltm. Flroploel.
2 car g~raga , Eligible ror tar
Abatomllll. SI5Q.900. 1·304-273-

7ot0~6-

Unbelievable, new 14x8D, no
payments after four years. Call t -

Appointment, Price: $98,000 740-

Prima Locallon 414 Third ,t,ve.
Golllpolla. Baautllul newly con ·
olr\leled two atory Colonie! nea 3
8R, 2-1/2Bolha, LR, I FR. Formal

it. No Pats. Reference

Traillf and k)t in Gallipolis Ferry. · 1 Bedroom, Rio Grande. 3 "Blocks
Great for rental or starting out.
Fro"' Un iversity, $235/MD., Plus

304-675-1226.

$54,900, 7&lt;0-742-3033.

3 Bedroom, 'I 112 Baths, In Galllpolia, $325.00 Monlll, pluo depo&amp;'

Now Taking Application•- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartment&amp; $295/Mo.• 7•0·4•&amp;-

7795.

House. 2 Story Duplex. 1 Bed room Cottage , 13 Pine Street .
Gallipolia. Large lot Shown By

New 3 bedroom. two balh home.
.78 acre, 'Harrisonville area,

0521 .

2 bedroom mobile home In
Racine, no pots, 7&lt;0-992·5858.

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

heat pump, lhroo bedrooma. bath
and If.!. cal7&lt;0-892·3485.

Gallipolis, $375/Mo.. Cepoalt Re·
qulred, Call Toll-Free 1-888·840-

t Bill, 2bltha, Home For Rent. 1-

2580, 740-448-3151 .

In Middleport· ntw kitchen, oak
cabinets , dishwasher, disposal,

3 Bedroom Houae, 1 Bath, WID
Hook-Up, 172 Fourth Avenue,

992-2187.

New bank repos. Only two left ,
never lived in. Call 1·800·948-

AHractive one.floor home in Pomeroy. Beautiful Interior wllh 2
bedrooms , living room, dining
room, bulll·in kitchen, like new
stove and refrigerator. breakfast
nook featuring corner what-not
shalvll. bath, and a nice sunporch with windows and screens
providlng a great view o( the Ohio
River. Carpeted, full basement ,
plastered walls wilh crown mold·
ing. roomy closets with full length
mirrored doors; storm windows
and dOOrs, tuUy Insulated. 108 Le~ion Terrace . $39,000. Call 740·

2br In Point Pleasant. $350. per
mo. Depoall &amp; references re·
quired. 304-tT!I-1918.

948-5878.

lhrougtlout, pellet stove, HPICA,
appliances Included, 50 year vlnyt
siding, shutters, deck, 1 car ga-

446-4999.

Will hlul junk or trash away. $351
pCiwp lold. 304-87!1-5035.

derplnning. New Carpet. New

Coors. S8,950, 740·448·0175,
304-tT!I-5965.

New 3br $900. ~own. 1149. per
mo. Frae skirt 1·800-89t-tn7.

387.()286.

410 Houses for Rent

450

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom.
inc ludes 6 months F~EE lot rent.
Includes skirting, delu•e slaps
and setup . Only $187 .08 per

landscaped, on 1 acre, county ·
schools. 8 miles from Holzer. 740-

tuniliea.

-

3BRI2BA
· Set Up On Lot. Take Over Pymrs.
304-736-7295.

nice~

Gradouo Uvlng. I and 2 bedroom
apartmonta at VIHage Manor and
Rlveralde Apartmtnta In MldcM·
port. From $249-$373. CaU 7-10992·5084. Equal Houalrtg ()poor·

1978 liberty 2 Be~rooms, Total
Electric, 12x55. 220 Air, Vinyl Un·

6 year old; country alyle, 2·3 bodrooms, 1 bath, loft overlooKing liv·
ing room. tongue &amp; groove kitchen cabinetry, doors &amp; woodwork

rage. apa. storage building,

die, uaed a lew llmoa S95. 304582·1878.

New Haven, 1br furnished apt
Depo&amp;it &amp; references . 304·882-

RE~TALS

Daity Tribune, 825 Third Avenue.
Gallpols. OH 45831 .

Smokers. S400 Oopoal1 S4501Mo..
740.448·9!58li. Or 740-446-2205
Alit For VIrginia.

ized ·apl.lor efderly and handi·
capped . EOH 304-87s-8679.

9621.

Christian lady. non-drinker. nonsmoker. will clean your home . ..
Several years ••perience . Reler-

We Buy Land: 30 ·500 Acru.
We Pay Caah. 1-800·213-8385,
Anlllony Lond Co

ce

New western s.adc:fla, browfW'sitver

6 room house , CIA, $300 . per
month plus utilities, deposit &amp;

lui Lan~scaplng, Nice Nalghbor11000. CK&gt;&amp;e To Shopping.

NEECTOSELL
Call For Appointment:
740-448-9360 Caya ()!
740-448-8427 Evenings
MAKE OFFER

446-0008.

I.Jqoo.r l.lconw For Solo, $85,000,
Pamil " lnte&lt;osted. Sand , .
opoou To CLA 442 c:Jo Gallipolis

ant Pays Electric , No Pets . No

7~175 .

or 3 bedrooms. Staring at $2995.

$160,000

Country Setting. Living Room ,
large Kllchan, Washer IOryar.
Frlg ., Stcwe. Dlshwaahar Provld·

APT AVAILABLE NOW
lWin Rivers Tower now accepting
apptlcallona lor lbr. HUD aublkl-

closed Back Porch, Finished
Basement With Laundry Room &amp;
112 Bath. large Yard Wllh Beauli·

304-675-7112.

etlan

m.ooo.304-n:!-5132.

In

4 Room Houaa 52 Olivo St. 740·
446-3945

lsi limo buyers. E

3tH nouse in Mason, approx-

~

1978 14x70 Festival 311edrooma,
2 Batha, like New Total Elec~lc.
Oollvored $11,950, 304-t75-5985,

3, 4 Bedroom Ranch, New: Heat
Purl'l&gt;. CA. Rool. Vinyl Siding. Eat·

Me&lt;sage.

Boautlul 2 Bedroom

1734

Call 1·801HI43·5678.

In Kitchen, Qak Cabinets, LR, FA/
Fireplace Insert, Fel)ced Back
Yard, 241124 (Heated) Cetached
Garage, 740·245·5946 Or leave

Appllcalions Now Accepted For

HIO!HI9t~m.

304-675-2026 or 304-t7!1-5921 .

Industrial Maintenance, Peace

Call

1b76 4br, 2 bath $1,195. oown,
S193. per mo. FrH air, free sturt.

tral atr. 8x8 outside building, 7&lt;0992-t582.

ONicor /Corroctiona, SUCCESS,
Auto Technology, Air Conditioning &amp; Hea.ting, Farm Business
Planning. Analysts. Com puter
Specleliat, Customer Centered ,
Haalthcare Tectlnictan (Formerly
Nurae Aide), MR/DO, Pre-Employment Train ing, And More ..

outside. Chester area.

&amp; dryer, stove. refrigerator, ctn-

tar. Let

U• Know Your Interested.
Fall Registration Ia Open In Juty.
Stop In Or Call For A Brochure .

lddillon,

1990 Spruce Ridge 14x70 mobile
home, very good condition, 2
bedrooms. 1 &amp; 112 baths, washer

REAL ESTATE

610 Farm Equipment

2566.

~7!1-7117 .

to advertise ·any preference.
limitation or discrimination
based on race. rolof, religion,
sex familial s&amp;atus or national
origin. or any intention to
make any suctl preference,
Mm~ation or discfiminatjon.•

Cash Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackburn Realty, 740·

2217.

14x70 2br Champion. $4,000 .

AJI real estate adverttsing in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act ·
ol1968 which makes ~illegal

Real Estate
Wanted

ditioner. $4,000 with, 740·949·

14 x70 3BR, $999 Cown &amp; ONLY
$179 per roo. Free IIi' 5 """ llklr1·
lng. l-888-928-3428.

Local Schools, Box 178, Racine,

360

flee lnlilor, $3,000 will'&lt;lul air con-

must see. $40,000, call alllir 5pm
7&lt;0-985-3917.

pertence 11 preferred . Please
aend lnqulrlaa to Mr. James La·

Elementary with the STARS Pro-

-~
12x80 trai..r, can be used tor of-

aide

CPR cant PrOYioul coact&gt;lng ox·

Wanted· person• 55 and over to
help teach reading at Pomeroy

-.wv

12lr32
1 aero,
car-·
nowty remodeled In&amp;

muat poueas or acquire a
•pons medicine certificate and

Suportntonden~

"lklmmortljllclol"
3l&gt;r St99/mo.lrao air &amp; dollvory
onlyotOo--

t2lt60 2

Apartments
for Rent

ad. Water &amp; Garbage Paid, Ton·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ProfHIIonal
Services

livingston's b•sement water-

The Southern Local DiatrlC1 has
the poslt&amp;on of reserve boys bas-

wronce,

Price Fladuced: 2·11ory, 3br,
basement, now vinyl jlding, double lot. Bellmaada. 30.f-675-

Scenic Valley at Apple Grove,
WV. Building Iota, tingle wldu
acceptod, public water, 20
mlnulea from new Buffalo Br1dge
on Jerry's Run Rd. Clyde Bowen
Jr. 304-576-2338.

1534.

Wackanhut is Taking Applications tor full/part lime positlona.

Must submit to drug screening

Price Reduced: 1 112 story, 3br,
Garfield Avo . Pt. Pleasant. 304·
67!1-292• .

440

...

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9. ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Appllinca Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence Aff Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 740· 446 ·

.·
',.

7795.
C&amp;C General Home Main· '
tenence· Painting , vinyl siding,

...

carpentry, doors. wlndowJ, batha,
mot&gt;llt 11om1 repair and .....,. For ·
1
~•• ullmato 0&lt;1!1 Chit, 740.1192· · . •
8323.
Profeaalonel . 20yrl experience

with all muonory, brlott, block &amp;
llono. Alto room a6dltlona, go·
r~ges,

'·

etc. FrH 1111m1111. 304-

71'3-9550.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
R11ldentlll or corrtiTWdll wiring,
now or ropolrl. ~ U-

t9Q4 Ford F150 X l Pickup
Truck 5!1,000 Milot 740·448· · ctnlld electrician . Ridenour
Elactrlcol, WV000301, 304-t75244.1
1798.

,,

Generally speaking. the year
ahead should be happier and more
fulfilling than the past one. Good
results could develop from seeds you
planted previously.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You' ve
neglected your duties. and this ha.'n 't
gone unnoliced by someone else. It's
best to do what's expected of you
before you're called to ta.&lt;k. Leo. treat
yourself t,o a birthday ~ifl. Send for
'your Aslro-Gruph predtcttons for lhe
year ahead by mailing $2 and SASE
10 Astro-Gruph. c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill Station.
New 'l'oric. NY 10156. Be sure to
stale your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today's activitie.s should be fun, but
there are indications you may take
them too seriously. Be nice to everyone, even if you don't wanl1o be.
.LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) Com·
.a.

paring your slliiUs and resources 10
your peers' is not a good game to play
today. II could make you dislike a
friend for whal slhe has.
,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Kid·
ding oihers might seem like an innocenl lark for you loday, but be care·
ful whom you aim your ba!bs at. One
of your targets may ,lake your jousting to heart.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21 l Financial mauers are "iffy"
today. You'll do okay if you don't let
someone emilie do your thinking for
you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Indecisiveness could lead to your
undoing loday, so don't prolong
weighty decisions. If YDII do. you
may have lo make a snap judgment
with poor results.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Today you may be anxious to do all
you can for another, but the assian·
menl could be frustrating and impos~
sible. Take pride in the61ct you tried.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 The
demands of a self-serving friend
could annoy you ·more Ihan usual al
this_lime . Normally you tolerate it,
but not today.
·ARIES (March 21-April 191 If
you get involved in a competition
loday. don't do any boasting or coast·
ing. Should you relax even for a
moment. your competition may edge
pnsl you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Sub·
due inclinations to contradict olhers
1oday. Companions won't appreciate
.your commenls if they think you re
being superior.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Join1
endeavors. could be problematic
today, especially if you're involved in
an amngement where the ~ iability
falls on you. ,
- I
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your
ma1c won't want you making dcci·
sions for him/her lllday, or vice vcr. sa. For the sake of harmOny, respect
each other'ir wilha.
·

·'
·'·
,.

::-

...
. ...
••

·:11

-

�Wedn
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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

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

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

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

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

Tuesday, July 28, 1998

Teachers complete 'Towing the Line' workshop

Today: Sunny

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

Tomorrow: Cloudy

High: 80; Low:60

~

~

I

o

Reds
wallop
Braves 13-1
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 69

Single Copy- 35 Cents

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

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

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

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

hctwccn the two counties.

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

Ohio University announces
scholarship recipients

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

i

... . i,
'

Meigs County's

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

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

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

High: 80; Low:60

Help comes to Meigs
Senior Citizens Center

Space messages offered

Sports

July 29, 1998

Weather

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

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

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

Certified Mammography

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
.

.

' .

.. .

,.

. . ,' '

Weather

Holzer Meigs Clinic

2
3
3

Lotteries

88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

10
7-8
9

.

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

(740) 992-0060

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

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

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

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

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

.

w.YA.

·Dally 3: 118; Dally 4:0219

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

c 1998 Qh;o Val~y PublbiUna Co.

I

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

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

Completes 38-year career

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

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

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

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

JOHN RIEBEL

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

prlncuan .,. IIIIMd

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

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

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