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Page 12. The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, August 5, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday

PEPSI, DT.
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291 SECOID ST.

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

PRODUCTS

s.....,

August 6, 11198

Weather

Indians hand loss to Angels, Page 4
Father losing control over child, Page 7
Flower show set for fair, Page 7

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Volume 49, Number 75

YOUNGSTOWN (AP)- A private prison marred by the escape of
six inmates and two murders would
face congressional scruti ny and
stricter prisoner screening under measures proposed by U.S. Rep. James
Traficanl.
The call from the federal level
came as state legislators wrapped up
hearings on the escape. still wanting
more infonnation.
Traficant, a Democrat from
Youngstown. said Wednesday he
wants tighter controls over what kind
of prisoners the Nonheasl Ohio Correctional Center can house . Most of
the prison ·s 1.500 inmates come
from Washington, D.C .. where Congress holds the purse strings on the
loca l prison system .
Traficant also pushed an amendment through the House Tuesday
night that would require a federal
study of the growing number· of privately run prisons - now in more
than 20 states. The measure sti ll
requires Senate approval.
"The ongoing problems at the
Northeast Ohio Correctional Center
in Youngstown should serve as a
wake-up call to the nation." he said.
"We need to identify possible security and personnel shortfalls at private
prisons and effectively address them.

WASHINGTON (AP) -A serious-looking Monica Lewinsky,
whose testimony could define the
fut•ore course of the Clinton adminis!ration, strode into a federal courthvuse today for her long-awaited
aonearance before a federal grand
.'
JUry.
She was ready to testify that she
had sexual encounters with the president inside the White House, sources
said.
The 25-year-old fonner intern
was whisked into a side entrance of
the counhouse, avoiding a crowd of
more than a hundred journalists that
had gathered overnight for today's
dramatic appearance. Ms. Lewinsky
hugged a female companion as she
stepped out of a car at the courthouse.
then quickly moveo inside accompanied by members of her legal team.
Sources familiar with the intense
preparation Ms. Lewinsky has undergone said it was difficult for her to
relive intimate details of her rela-

COLUMBUS - When it comes
to the Ohio State Fair, there's always
one hig attraction - food. Elephant
ears. Italian sausages. Fried cheeseon-a-stick. Roasted com.
Sure, they'll be on this year's
menu. There just won't be as much
of them. Instead. more picnic tables
and grassy areas will greet visitors to
the fair. which opens its 17-day run

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

This Week
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A comprehensive federal study will
serve this purpose."
Gov. George Voinovich has called
for the prison to shut down, but Attorney General Belly Montgomery cast
doubt Monday on the legality of a
forced shutdown.
Critics of prison operator Corrections Corpo,·ation of America. based
in Nashville, Tenn., complained that
it brought in dangerous prisoners in
violation of its contract and ignored
security needs.
CCA denied the allegations, saying human error may have been the
cause of the escape. Investigators also
said an employee, whose name bas
not been released, may have helped
inmates.
The company also said it would be
expensive and premature for the state
to shut down the prison.
Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, a
member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he would seek a hearing
on the issue of classification of
inmates.

"S hould someone be held
accountable for dumping high-risk
prisoners in a medium-security
prison?" DeWine asked in a phone
interview.
Four of the six inmates who
escaped July 25 were killers. Five

Sheriff Chance
were recaptured within two days in
the Youngstown area but the sixth
was still on the loose Wednesday.
Deputy U.S. Marshal Dave Hale
said Wednesday that no link had been
made between the final fugitive,
Ronald Holmes, 40. an armed robber
from Washington, and a lumber yard
break-in last week.
A truck stolen from the lumber
yard, located in Hubbard Township

adjacent to Youngstown, was found
Sunday in Amherst, N.Y., and police
said earlier that Holmes may have
used it as a getaway vehicle.
In Columbus, meanwhile, a legislative prison oversight commillce ·
wrapped up two days of hearings
unsatisfied that it had learned all the
details about the escape, at le'!-5t 13
stabbings and two murders at the
prison.
"We didn't get anything," said
Sen. Rhine McLin, chairwoman of
the Con-cctiollll Institution Inspection Committu.
One new detail emerged when
Mahoning County Sheriff Philip
Chance Jr. tcld lawmakers that police
received a brief911 call from a prison
pay phone reponing an escape possibly before prison administrators
knew it happened. Police called the
prison office and were told there was
no escape, although the prison's
motion detector alann sounded two
hours earlier.
McLin, a Dayton Democrat, said
the committee will hold a public
hearing in Youngstown next week
and would issue recommendations to
the Legislature within 30 days.
CCA did not return a phone call
seeking comment on the issues lawmakers raised.

tionship with President Clinton, but
she was ready to testify truthfully and
anxious to finish the painful ordeal.
The sources would not be identified
by name.
One source described how Ms.
Lewinsky cried during her preparation sessions with prosecutor$ working for Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr.
Ms. Lewinsky fciund it painful to
discuss sexual subjects that nonnally would be private, the source added.
And she viewed herself as someone
whose fate was detennined by her
fonner friend Linda Tri"pp, who triggered the investigation by giving
prosecutors 20 hours of recordings of
her conversations with Ms. Lewinsky.
Clinton has denied an affair- in
testimony he gave in the Paula Jones
civil suit against him amt in a televised statement. The president will
testify Aug. 17 by closed-circuittelevtston.

NEW STAMP- Middleport Pos11118sler Jim "Sunny" Sundquist
shoWed the design for a new, one-of-a-kind postage stamp rec·
ognlzlng breest cancer research. The Middleport and Syracuse
post offices will have special stamp unvelllngs on Saturday and
Monday, respectively, with special evenla planned for both days.

Special stamps
Association plans set for unveiling
.,~~

....

buned' ""ll'iaqnually to the National

~

Institute of Health, and the medical
research program at the Department
of Defense. The stamp was mandated hy an act of Congress.
Strickland wi ll speak at the post
office at 9 a.m., and will discuss

· Siritlnellilitwe Staff
Special postage stamps to be introduced this week bring special attention to two health issues, and two post
offices in Meigs County will hold
special events promoting both the
Plaro~ were the Middleport River Festival to be held Sept. 12 were •li&gt;stamps and public health.
cussed when the Middlepon Community Association met Thesday at P~oThe U.S. Post Office in Middleples Bank in Middlepon.
.
pon will launch a special one-of-aThe event will be held in Diles Park and downtown Mtddlepon and
kind stamp promoting breast cancer
will run from noon to 6 p.m. 1bere will be crafters, demonstrators, sideon Saturday, and the office in Syrawalk sales, window displays, food, entertainment and more, according to
cuse will unveil a new stamp proMyron Duffield, president.
moting organ and tissue donation on
A special meeting of the association will be held next week to comMonday.
plete plans for the event.
On Saturday, U.S. Rep. Ted
During the meeting, Mary Wise reponed on the outcome of the recent
Strickland will be at the Middleport
porch and entryway contest with first place going to Shirley Smith of Pearl
Post Office to help launch the sale of
Street, second to Roben Roehaver, South Founh, and third to Kay King
a special stamp to promote breast
of Nonh First Street. It was felt that the contest was successful in encourcancer research funding.
aging beautification of the village.
In the lirst postal issue of its kind,
Wise thanked all those who have been volunteering and helping with
part of the proceeds of the stamp will
the cleanup of the downtown shopping area, panic•larly along Nonh Secgo to hreasl cancer research . The
ond Street, as well as those who are watering the nowers and sprucing
stamp will sell for 40 cents, or $8 per
up the area in front of their businesses.
. .
sheet of 20 stamps, and will be valid
The Founh of July activities were reviewed and apprcctallon extendfor the current first-class postage rotc
ed to those who helped make the event a success.
of 32 cents.
The additional 8 cents will be dis-

Special meeting set next week
to finalize event's preparations

issues

Calendar
C!assilieds
Comics
Ec!itoi'ials
L9cal
Soorts
Weather

8

8-10
11
2
3
4&amp;6
3

Lotteries
•I . I\..

Super Lotto: 1-2-11-42-44-47
Kicker: 9-5-5-5-2-9
''
Pldl3: 4-5-8; Pldl4: 6-4-9-5 .

lY.YA.

Dally 3: 4-1-8; Dally 4: 9-4-3-8
0 1998 Ohio Valley Publisblnt !A

to breast cam:cr- a

At home
in Rutland
Community lines
up activities for
September event

New this year is a show that lets
Friday.
It's all pan of an attempt to attract the audience milk a goat and ride a
more families while offering more miniature horse. 1be Center of Sciinteractive exhibits for young people. ence Industry will have a display feaCall it pan amusement park and part turing hands-on science exhibits.
video game - with a lot of barnyard
Also new is a show that features
animals added to the mix.
an 80-foot dive into a pool and a
People want to feel safe and com- junior sprint car race.
Fair administrators say they are on
fortable at the fair, just like they do
at an amusement park, said General target to continue their financial tumaround.'
.
Manager Richard Frenette.
"We have to show them that
same type of atmosphere." he said.
The Ohio Expositions CommisVendors have noticed.
sion, which runs the fairgrounds, was
Wes Meeks of Sarasota, Fla., who $3.85 million in debt after the 1992
hopes to sell about4,000 bags of col- fair. State lawmalcers bailed out most
tCln candy from his stand, spends sev- of it, and a new administration was
en months out of the year on the road brought in to handle the operations.
Frenette cut costs and brought
at fairs and festivals.
"It looks better," he said. "The moii: non-fair events- suclt as auto
grounds look nice."
shows and horse shows- to the fairDuring the 1980s, the fair packed grounds during the rest of the year.
in huge C(j&gt;Wds and stuffed the
Last year's fair brought in $7.41
grounds with vendors. The fair million, but cost $7.86 million. That
claimed it was the world's largest in didn't include a $390,000 state subtenns of visitors and exhibitors. Years sidy for the junior fair, marketing and
later, it was discovered that the allen- other expenses.
dance figures were fudged. The num1be fair still receives a state subbers were impressive, but not enough sidy, but the Expo Center is on target
to prove the "world's largest" claim. to break even, Fn:nelle said.
More than 900,000 visitors are
1be fair expects tc bring in more
expected this year, but fair officials money this year by Rquiring food
sav thev aren't concerned with allen- vendors to tum over a percentage of
dance titles. They hope a smaller, their sales, instead of charging a flat- .
friendlier fair will help them compete · rent fee.
with the state's other attnctions.
Several vendm. including Meeks,
"We're not just selling an event,· thinlc the fair will try to bring in more
CLEANiNG UP- A11n Ivory c111ned 1111 food trdlr w.cln•
we're selling an e:tt:perience." said fair . customers now that they have a sl@kc
diY In COiumbut .. he pnpii'ICI for tile ltlrt of lt1e Ohio S1ate
. Air. Tile fllr Boentllllltftlek 1 new dell will Vllldon u 111e
spokeswoman Jill Schaller. "Wei'in how inlich is spent on .all ihose
boenl contll1uU eo l'llllce .,_
vtiiiOr-frtendl. TINt State F1lr
don't need 10 hot dog vendors any- crispy frenchfriesandstickyCII'IIIIIII
wtn
run
11um
Frldey
until
SUndly,
Aug. 23. (AP)
more."
.
apples.

The second annual "Come Home
to Rutland" homecoming celebration
has been set for Sept. 5. with a full
slate of events planned to benefit the
ongoing renovation project at the
Rutland Civic Center.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
will hold a Oower show in conjunction with the event. and choirs from
the Mount Union Baptist Church , the
Rutland Church of the Na1.arenc and
the Freewill Baptist Church wi ll perfonn .
Other entertainment is planned by
the Swinging Seniors. the Bells and
Beaus, Midnight Cloggers and Big
Bend Cloggcrs. David Sti mer Jr.,
Rachel Pridemore and local recording
artist Vernon Hendricks will also perfonn .
Veterans Memorial Hospital wi II
do health checks. and the Southern
! Ohio Coal Co. and Peoples Banking
. &amp; Trust Co. will have booths at the
event. An exhibit of native medicinal
herbs will also be set up.
The Meigs County Sherifrs
Department will fingerprint children
· and octogenerians from Rutland will
· be recognized.
An amateur pie-baking and cakedecorating contest will be judged by
Sharon Smith, and a craft show will
be held. A cow pally deed game and
a cow pally throwin&amp; contest are also
(Continued on Page 3)

'*

l

•

rclatin~

short overview of breast cancer legislation and support for breast cancer
research .
American Express has pannercd
with the U.S . Postal Service on the
project, and will donate 5 cents each
time an American Express card is
used to purchase goods at the post
office, until Oct. 31. Not to be outdone, the employees of the Middleport post office will donate a penny
for each stamp sold that day, up to
$200.
The stamps. accordi ng to Middleport Postmaster James Sundquist,
will be on sale for a two-year period.
"''m excited about this stamp concept. It's a chance for small donations
to make a big difference nationwide,"
(Continued on Page 3)
·

Less food vendors, more sights
will greet visitors to State Fair

Today's

BANKROLL

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

..

Lewinsky tells story
to s,~~r's grand jury_ for rRive~ Festiv.a~

Good Afternoon

Win A

Hometown Newspaper

Federal, state sources push
tighter private prison control

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press Writer

3
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THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUIIInTIES
PRICES GOOD THRU AUG•n I, 1991

Sports

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.. .:....- .

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�Thursday, August 6, 1998

Commentary

Page2
Thursday, August&amp;, 19118 ·

Friday, Aug. 7
AccuWeather* forecast for daytime conditions and

7

MICH .

The Daily Sentinel
'Lsta!Jfisfrd in 1948

:Why FBI kee.ps many files closed

By Joseph Spear
It appears there is something Bill
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Clinton didn't tell us tluee years ago
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157
when he ordered the automatic
declassification of government
secrets that were more than 25 years
old.
He exempted the FBI.
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
This is a little like promulgating
. new zoo rules and exempting the
ROBERT L WINGETT
elephants. According to the ComPublilhtr
mission on Protecting and Reducing
• Government Secrecy, there are 1.5
. billion pages of cenified secrets that
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
are at least 25 years old. An estimatGeneralll~~~ager
Controller
ed 200 million-plus of these lie amoldering in the FBI's vaults, second only to the Pen1agon, which has
n. SndMI
trte tdfor rrom ,_,.,.. "'· •
olllf:*&amp;
998 mo.,,.ton pages.
_ _ ,.,.,,.,_ .. _ , . _ _ _ _ •.......,.,.-,
When Clinton determined to
_.,_,.,...,.-.~·-,_.. .. . ...,..,. ... ,.....,_,. · · crack down on secrecy in govern, . - _,,., . . _ . 111 file EdliDr. , . S...~ 111 a-t Sl.. ...,.,.,..,., Olllo • ment, the bureau assened that its
oM7WII; 11G IIU ,...1-.JrST.
·
- files were too massive to finish the
job by the year 2000; that the release
of FBI files would violate privacy
laws; and that the wholesale release
of documents would imperil national security. The administration

,.,.....,
11toat1,..,.
__••leu•
,__Ot_),...llleOfi.,_,,.,F'
,,...,.'"'*'•·

Linda Tripp proves
a point beware
the holdover aides

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Ne xt time the White House changes political hands,
the new occupants aren 't likely to leave any room for holdover staffers,
remembering Linda Tripp.
With or without the kind of controversies and scandal allegations that
have scarred this White House, a disaffected aide ·can be a headache. That,
and rewanling the loyalists of the campaign, are reasons the winners recruit
from their own ranks. .
The whistleblower in the Monica Lewinsky case survived the switch
from Republican to Democratic administrations, serving the new one so
effectively as to gain a position in one of its most sensitive offices.
"I have never had any political agenda. I still don't," she said at th8 courthouse in defending her role and denouncing her critics after her eight days
of grand jury testimony. "I have been honored to serve presidents in both
panics."
She didn't sound honored in describing what she saw and heard after
President Clinton took over the White House from George Bush.
"As a result of simply trying to earn a living, I became aware between
1993 and 1997 of actions by high government officials that may have been
against the law," she said.
.
.
. .
Mrs. Tripp did not explain, but that t1me frame would mclude the su1c1de
of Vincent Foster, the deputy White Hou.&lt;e mom &lt;I' I for whnm •h~'tt worked,
and subsequent investigation; the firing of the White House travel office
staff; and the admittedly improper collection of FBI background files on
Republican political appointees.
.
. .
.
Those episodes predated the Lewinsky allegations of an affau w1th Chnton and an attempted cover-up, which Mrs. Tripp took to special prosecutor
Kenneth Starr on Jan. 12, alter tape-reconlina telephoK cooversatioM with
the former White House intern.
There also was the matter of Kathleen Willey, the White House aide said
to have told Ms. Tripp in 1993 that the president had just made a sexual
advance in the Oval Office. When Mrs. Tripp was quoted by Newsweek on
that incident in 1997, Clinton's counsel said she was not to be believed, the
comment that may have led her to stan talking after taping.
·· Jmagine how you would feel if your boss' attorney called you a liar in
front of the whole country," she said Jast Wednesday alter her testimony.
.. And imagine how yo~ would feel if that boss was the president of the United States."
By the time that happened, she was out of the. White House, in a public
affairs job at the Pentagon, with a hefty ratsc. m a Job that was pan-ume unul
she got it
The Clinton White House carries a lot of baggage. The office of the president \ counsel is among the most sensitive positions in any White House
lineup; doubly so given the succession of cases, from Whitewater to sexual
misconduct. raised against Clinton.
.
Tha( s the office in which Mrs. Tripp, the Bush holdover, served as a staff
assistant in 1993 and early 1994, gaining a hearty endorsement from Clinton·s then counsel. Bernard Nussbaum . "As you know, considering the
· extremely sensit ive matters the White House counsel's office handles on a
dai ly basis. I desperately need h substantive. savvy and experienced professional to play a lead ing role on my suppPn staff," Nussbaum wrote at the
time . "Linda Tripp meets this need ."
.
.
Personally. Mrs. Tripp didn't care for the Clmton crowd. She told fnends
they were undignified. unkempt, lax in their work habits. She'd preferred the
Bush style.
·

Letters to the editor
Lessons from animals

~ few - actors Jane Fonda, Harry
Belafonte, Tony Randall and Rock
Hudson; singer Eartha Kitt; civilrights leaders Coretta Scott King,
Ralph David Abernathy and Floyd
McKissick; football players Joe
Namath and Lance Renuel; baby
doctor Benjamin Spock; boxer
Muhammad Ali ; investigative
reporter I.F. Stone; and writer James
Baldwin.
At the time, Jane Fonda was a
rambunctious anti-war activist, and
the FBI regarded her as "subversive" and an "anarchist" They fol lowed her to college campuses and
military bases and wrote down every
word she said. When she appeared
on a nationally televised talk show,
FBI agents fai1hfully taped and transcribed her remarks and then
stamped their transcript: " Top
Secret. No Foreign Dissemination.
No Dissemination Abroad. Controlled Dissemination. For Background Use Only."
1es.
When Fonda was detained in
I obtained files on -- to name but 1970 on suspicion of bringing

bought
the
arguments and
consented to
let the. bureau
proceed at its
own pace. The
existence of
the agreement
was itself a
secret until it
surfaced in a
recent legal IL__;_
case, and the
Sptlll'
Washington Post filed a Freedom of
Information request for it
As it happens, I have some expertise in the matter of secret FBI files.
While working for muckraking
columnist Jack Anderson in the
early 1970s, I came into the possession of, oh, perhaps a thousand
pages of them. What I discovered
was that the bureau spent an inordinate amount of time probing the private lives of political figures, movie
stars, athletes and assoned luminar-

"drugs" into the country from Canathing in her possession and copied a
notebook which contained the
addresses and telephone numbers of
such well-known revolutionaries as
Kirk Douglas, Paul Newman and
Tony Cunis. The notebook showed
up in the FBI files . The drugs, incidentally, turned out to be vitamins
and prescription medicines.
The late writer James Baldwin's
file notes that on July 13, 1969, he
"arrived at Istanbul, Turkey, from
Athens, Greece, via Air France."
There followed the complele transcript of an interview lhat Baldwin
granted to a Turkish newspaper
called "Milliyet." It was marked
"Secret -- No Foreign Dissemination."
Eanha Kill was of interest
because she panicipated in civilrights rallies, including Martin
Luther Kin~ Jr.'s 1963 March on
Washinglon. How did the bureau
know thi s'~ Because " movie actor
Charlton Heston ... furnished a lisl
of movie personalities who planned
to panicipate in the march."'
Rock Hudson 's file contained
this national-security secrel:
"During 1965 ... a confidential
informant reponed that several years
ago while he was in New York he
had an 'affair' with movie star Rock
Hudson . The informant stated that
from personal knowledge he knew
that Rock .Hudson was a homosexual .... On another occasion, information was received ... that it was common knowledge in the motion-picture industry that Rock Hudson was
suspected of having homosexual
·tendencies. "
I think you can deduce from all
this yet another reason the FBI is so
intent on keeping many of its files
secret. And it has less to do with
national security than it does political security.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Wicked, Clinton is not. But he is no angel either
By Ben Vt'alauberg
h1lenniAial. , .
.. .
Feels like i~ . ooesn't ii? A ~fire
sequence of short scenes of rising tension
and then - a pause, before President Clinton is interrogated under oath by Ken
Starr on Aug. 17.
Starr was on the ropes, defending
againstchargesthathewasleakinggrand
jury testimony. Then, faster than you can
say Rule 6e, Monica Dipped. The president was subpoenaed. The stained dress
materilllized. The prosecution's stu' witnesses fell out over the talking points, and
the president's adviser.~ fell out over
whether he should talk. fight or take the
fifth. Before the house lights went up, the
president suddenly ··voluntccrcd" to tcs.tify.
Not that we· n: paying ancntion to any
of this. It's tawdry melodrama. It's a
sideshow. Who cares? It's all about sex.
Then again. so was Sophocles'
"Oedipus Rex.··
But as Aristo!le figured out long ago,
tragedy is something that we watch. even
though we wantto look away.And we are
transfixed by the unfolding tragedy of
Bill Qinton. Despite ourselves.
The tragic figure must occupy an clcvated stalion - because he is destined to
fall !Tom it Powerful, famous, charming,
handsome - Qinton has the requisil£
tragic stature and then some.
The tragic figure's fall must inspire

~

pity and fear, and for all the OYelhealt:d thctoric about a ·
ralin8 is below 40 pcn:ent The
this p~esupposes rigll-wing couspiJIK:y, a wid! lull, a Republicans have C8(Ued Congress and
a certain kind of sting. a perjury trap - Ointon is ultima~~&gt;- fiKR governorships. Clinton is dismissal
mixed chanlcter. ly the author of his own current predica- as "im:levant" Democrats are in panic
He can be neither ment And if the medium of his downfall mode: If the Republicans take the White
too virtuous nor wao; a stu'-struck intern - what could be . House the.following year, ro year.; of Jib.
too wicked. If he more inevitable'!
craltSm Will be wtpcd out.
is squeaky clean,
Our la.o;t disgrnced president, Richard
Gennifcr flower.; and charges of drnli ·
thenwccan'trec- Nixon. wao; tragically Oawed. By para- dodging hal almost derailed his 1992
ognize ourselves noia: They'tc out to get me - bet1fr get carnplign. Travel~. Troopagatc and
in him. And if we something on them flfSl Result'! The Whitewater allegation.&lt; hal mam:d his
can't identify Watergate break-in. The cover-up was first year in offtce. Despite these ncarWattenberg with his fall, then it graluitous. Exccpl. that is, to the paranoid dcalh expcricnccs, he then hegins (we
won't evoke 1n u.' Nixon. imaginatively overestimating his assume) an alfair with an intern which, if
the special, intcrcstod fear of tragedy: enemies' SIJ'Cngth.
exp!Nld before the election. wrcx:ks him.
There. but fur the grace of God ...
Ointon is the virtual antithesis of the · his party, and ckTil:ns of loyal allies he ha,,
At the same tome, if he is all bad, then paranoid Nixon. He may be, to borrow pledged to help in a tough political ye;~r.
his fall will not arou.&lt;e pity. The punish- sociologist Fred Goldner's term,
Now, the !ielliJclJX!Iuating m:..:hinety
mcnt and suffering of the wicked arc, "pronoid'·: They can't touCh me. I'll of Washington scandal grinds inexomhly
after all, fining moral desert' - morally skate. No comer so tight I can't schmooze ahead. The pres.,, the pmsccutor, the put&gt;.
instructive, ~. but not trngically
my way out. Smoked dope? Didn't lic,thecouns,theCongrcss, cachlo.:kcd
cathartic.
inhale. A lengthy affair with a lounge into their ass1gncd pans a,, if by tragic
Wtcked, Clinton is not But he is no singer? CaiBXI some pain in my mar- inevitability.
angel either. Unlike an AI Gac or a riagc. Skirted campaign-finance Jaws?
Washington's Greek chorus, led hy
Jimmy Ovtcr, Clinton has never pretend- Change the laws. And remember: If you Sen. Orrin Hatch, is now urging Clinton
ed to be bencr than us. Whether confess- deny il and I deny i~ they can't prove to confess and ask forgiveness. Will that
ing to causing pain in his marriage or anything.
be the national catharsis nccdcd to restore
winking about long-ago exploits in an El
If !)lc paranoid takes precautions far calm to the nation's political life? Or is it'
Camino, Ointon has always cued us that beyond what most would think I1CClCS- too little too late?
morally, he is in the fat middle of the sary, the pronoid takes risks far beyond
. They. say Americans lack the tragic
curve.
what most would thmk prudent And VICW of hfc. Maybe so. But then, it's only
Above all, the tragic character must be what a crnzy risk Clinton ran.
intermission.
implicated in his own dcmi!iC . His fall
Recall the landscape when Clinton
Ben Wa~ is a syndkated
must be linked as if by necessity to some- began the rclalionshiplhat ~in motion wrilerforNewspaperEnlerlJrileA.s»
thing within himself, to a tragic flaw. And this whole tragedy: It's 1995. Oinroo's dation.
"'\,

Clinton's choices: truth or

imp~achment

Charge, charge, charge/

... _ ~- --

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-- - . .1 . - - --·-

IToledo I 85' I

da, the authorities itemized every-

Dear Editor:
Here are some things I have observed in my lifetime. I was living in
Mason. W.Va. in the '40's and '50's. I was living on Brown Street.
I was looking out the window one day and I saw two birds out in the yard,
two starlings, a mother and her young bird. The young bird was about as
Aooher way
audiotapes would hwt Democrats - Ill impea:lunent
large as ils mother. the young starling was in the shade of an electric [Mile, By Mol lui I K01 idradGe
Having
sex
with
an
intem
is
not an of
delaying
least giving Republicans the chalu to
Lewinsky seems to have taken out of
and the mother was out in the sun hunting for a worm or bug. She found one.
iqleachable offense. Lying about it and things would be
¥g\IC that Voters should support them to
play
the fiKR serious potential tm&gt;f of
and gave it to the young bird. and some way, the young bird dropped the
concocting "cover stories" probably to
exhaust
keep
a
check
on
an
inesponsible
Clinton.
obsbUclion
- the infamous "talking
worm. and it was too lazy to reach down and pick it up. It chirped until the
aren'L But commining peljlly before a appeals of coun
Regardless
of
November
political
poiniS"
by
saying that she wrote them
mother bird finally came and picked il up and put it in the the bird's mouth.
fedetal
grand
jury
surely
is.
decisions
rejectcalculalions,
though.
Ointon
f~ an
with
TJ'iw.IIOI
with White House help.
About that time. I saw a girl carrying a little poodle dog in a store. After
For that reason, iffor IIG other, Presi- ing
lawyerepic deci~ion I1QW that could detennine
There are still suspicious ei:.:urnthe got outside, she set the dog down and ot refused to follow her home. She
dent Clinroo should make up his mind to client immunity
the future of his presidency: whether to stances - efforts to get Lewinsky a job,
had t.o pick it up and carry it home.
tdl the truth when he gives videotaped for White House
tell the uuth and nothing but the bUilt
her returning Clinton's gifts- hut these
Talking about birds made me think ahout the New England guy who said,
testimony to Kennelh Starr's grand jury consigberi
Various commentators. including for- could be explained away as somedling
'I hear a boid choiping." A guy said, "tha&lt; isn't a boid, that's a bird." The guy
mer White liouse aides David Gergen other than witness tampering and
on AIJ8u5t 17.
Bruce Lindsay.
Kondracke
aaid, "it choips like a boid anyway."
The latest turns in the case suggest
If Clinton has
and George ·stephanqloulos. say thai OOslruction.
Animals aren't as dumb as most people think they are. I read about a man
If OiniOn tells the truth to the grand
who was in his barn and he wanted a bucket, and couldn't quite reach it with that the truth may 1101 involve direct abandoned delay as a stralegy, his agree- Ointon slxluld tell the truth to the public
obstrucliort of justice or witness tamper- . ing to testify on Aug. 17 raises the possi- JXOOI~Y to "get this mauerbehindhim" jury, does he haw to go before the Amerhis cane, and a horse took its nose and nudged the bucket over so the man
ing.
bility that Starr will be able to issue a and "move forwanl on the country's ican people and humiliatingly confess it
could reach it with. his cane.
ll
SO. it ought lO makeJeUing the truth report to Congress in August or Sepiem- tusincss."
to them also? Conceivably not -Ill least,
I have published another book. It is the same size as a magazine: it has
easier,
ttDigh
the White House's bOOy ber.
Those
tR noble and valid reasons for
1101
riglt IIIN&amp;y.
100 or maybe 200 pages. I don't remember, because the printer has it right
language
suggests
that the president
And tha~ in turn, raises the faseinat- &amp;cUing the bUth, but there is a more pracHe
could claim that, having testif.OO
now. It will sell for $10, post paid. If you are not satisfied wilh it. return it
plans
to continue with his previous ing qucslion: Just what effect would a tical one: If he lies to the grand jury and to a federal grand jury, he is bound not to
to me and I will refund what you paid for it I never heard of another book
denialsevenofasexualrelalionshipwith highly chargal Starr report have on the gets caught. he' II be impeached for SIR. reveal what he said in public. There is no
wilh that kind of a guarantee behind it.
elections'!
It's pretty clear that Starr has set a per- such requirement for witnesses, of
Opie Cobb Monica Lewinsky - a perilous course.
jury trap for Qinton, much as Linda course, but Qinton could asscn it, as he
For unexplained reasons, Clinton
Obviously.
it
would
depend
on
the
Middleport
seems to have dropped another key clo- content,, but a.'suming that SUrr oould Tripp and Starr did once before in has in the past.
ment of his S1l'llltgy - maximurn4clay. rqx.-1 thai Qinton did have some son of cahooo; with Jones'lawycrs.
If his testimony leaked, Ointon could . ·
It's conceivable that the August 17 sexual rc)ali(lfiS with Lewinsky and lied
All the evidence suggc&amp;IS thai Oinlon blame it on Starr, strengthening his hand ·
In reading the front page of The Daily Sentinel on July 27 on how hard apemen! masks intent to continue the under &lt;llih alxJUt it and ••Jx.-r matters to lied the Jao;t time when surprised by ques- in ~ and with the public. He
Slalling Slr.llegy. C1intal migll arrive 111 Paula Jones's lawyers. wtJUid the public tions about Lewinsky. This time, howev- might still decline tb confirm the dclails.
up our county government is, I was appalled.
er, lying cou.ld be fatal to his presidency.
It is amazing how the citizens of our county can live on whatever they the videotaping session, answer some punish Dcmo&lt;.TJL,.!
Eventually, Clinton may have to 'fess
~
and
then
sutldcniy
decide
on
Or
as
some
Clinton
hmslcr.~
ferventWould he get caugll? He could delly up to the American p:oplc. CongJcss
have. It would be interesting to go back 10 years and see if the budgets of
our county were able to increase as Social Security and the dairy farmer advice from his lawyers to bilk at ly l'qlC biNxl on p:tlling. wuuld Dt:ma:- Lewinsky's as.scnions of a sexual rela- may demand his explanalion as it dis..
nwa ill&amp; cmain questions.
rats and Irtdepcndcnt' si"1Jiy shnlg and tiomhip, but he migll well get caugtt up poses of StilT's report. Clinton can delay
profits have.
Under
those
circumstlnt:es,
Slarr
cast
their ballols basal on other issues - in a web of conttadictions with Secret that m&lt;ment of lNih. What he dare not
I think the lelders of our county should go back to the Teddy Roosevelt
would
be
fon:led
to
go
to
crut
to~
or
even,
if the GOP overplays its hand. ServiciC .,a. While House Joss and do is tie IIIKJer oadi.
era. They could get horses and ride through the countryside shoutina
Clinton
to
nwrr.
Slftly,
Citoo
would
punish
Rqxlblicans?
~witnesses. The truth would be ear
(Morton ICondra&amp;:b Is exewtiw
CHARGE, CHARGE. CHARGE.
lotle in Gle Supane Collt, • Rit:hW . Despite polls indicating that the pui&gt;- ier.
. . . 1'1 Rol Cll, the-..... 1'1
•
A.L'"'. N"IXondidin 1974,1tutainbl migllnet lie doesn'tcarc about pesidenlial sex or Mpver. if Ointon did not IJdles.. Capilolta).
have
to
finish
answering
quesliMs
pra:even
lying
about
sex,
my
guess
is
that
a
1r111e
an
ohllnx:tion
of
justice.
he
would
Bearwlllow IWJe
CooiYIIIe (Melp County) tically until Election Day.
Starr report laced wilh sex. lies and have no need
,, to lie to save limself from
_.;,.__

Conservationists
·object to Alaska
drUiing proposal

OHIO Weather

.. .

- - - -- --

'i

--"---_;__...;~:....,;·_ _

' ' ..';_--..,..--.

• IColumbus I92' I

W.VA.

Chance of thunderstorms
arises on Friday afternoon
By The Associated Press
.
Rain will continue. today throughout Ohio, the National Weather Serv1ce
said.
The heaviest storms will be focused in nonhwest Ohio, where a nood
watch will be in effect most of the day. Elsewhere , show~rs and thunderstorms
are expected to develop, except for the southeastern pan of the state.
Temperatures arc c~pectcd to range from near 80 in the nonhwest to the
upper 80s in the south.
Showers and thunderstorms will continue across the nonhwest half of the
state tonight. Temperatures will range from the upper 60s in the east to the
lower 70s else where .
Showers and thunderstorms are also in the weekend forecast.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Mostly clear Lows 65 to 70. Light south wind.
.
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms 10 the afternoon. H1ghs
near 90. Chance of rain 30 percent
Fnday ni ght...Partly cloudy. A chance of an evening thunderstorm . Lows
ncar 70.
Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday ... Partly cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms in
the afternoon and evening. Low ncar 70 and hoghs ncar 90

Bloodmobile visit slated
for Pomeroy on Aug. 12
The American Red Cross Blood- .depend totally on the Red Cross to
mobile will be coming to Meigs supply blood for their patients. To
County Wednesday, Aug. 12 and meet the need, 240 donors are needwill be at the Senior Citizens Center ed each day. During July, three was
on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, from an average of 174 donors daily, it was
reponed.
I to 6 p.m
Thomas Angle, chief executive
The goal for the visi1 is 65 units of
office
of the Tri-State Region, said
blood.
the
low
collections have placed
To be a blood doom'. individuals
inventories
of 0 negative and A negmust be at least 17 years old, weigh
ati\IC
at
a
critical
leveL
110 pounds or more, he in good !len"We
need
people
with these
oral health and not have donated
blood
types
to
make
a
commitment
blood within the past 56 days. Most
people taking medications, including now to donate at a local bloodmobile
insulin and high blood pressure med- or center." He said 0 and A negative
types are at less than a half-day's supicatio~s . arc able to donate blood.
Officials .of the Tri-State Region ply. Donors with types 0 and A posBlood Serv ices of the American Red itive are also asked to donate to
Cross arc calling on area residents to replenish the ·rapidly decreasing
make commitment to donate blood. ' blood supply. To adequately suppry
Last week, the Red· Cross issued hospitals, a three-day inventory leva national appcrtl for blood donors to el is needed.
To help build up the supply,
help increase the blood supply. Howeve r. collecti ons locally have donors are asked to bring a friend to
renwined below what is needed· to donate 'blood, preferably someone
adcqua1 cly supply area hospital s. who has never given before. Angle
accord in g tn Sarrdy Black of the . said. that there is 50 percent chance
that a non-donor will have one of the
Huntington Red Cross ofli cc.
She said that hospital hlood hanks most needed types .

By H; JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - s~.:king a
balance between oil development
and the environment, the Clinton
administration has drawn up a plan
for the restricted sale of new oil leases on Alaska's Nonh Slope.
Details uf the lease sale, which
will open palls of a vast federal petroleum reserve in nonhem Alaska to oil
drilling , were being announced today
by Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt .
Development of the government's
National Petroleum Reserve - an
area the size of Indiana - in far
northern Alaska has been con&lt;roversial for years.
Conservationists fear oil produc.tion will harm ecologically critical
wetlands. lagoons and marshes that
dot the reserve's coastal plain and
each summer auract millions of
migratory birds as well as caribou
and polar bears.
B.ut oil executives con&lt;end the
field s can be developed and wildlife
and its habitat protected at the same
time. They also argue that unlike the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge farther to the east, the National Pelroleum Reserve was set aside specifically for development 75 years ago.
Just west of the Prudhoe Bay oil
fields , the federal reserve was created forthe Navy in 1923 to ensure the
nation's access to oiL Estimates on
the extent of oil deposits beneath the
reserve's tundra have ranged from
400 million barrels to more than 3
billion barrels.
Except
for
unimpressive
exploratory drilling in the 1940s and
again in the 1980s, the reserve has
been largely ignored as industry until
recently concentrated on the adjacent
and much larger 12-billion-barrel
Prudhoe Bay fields.
Babbitt said Wednesday any
development plan would have to be
··a balance based on good science
and broad consultation" and take into .
account protection of "sensitive environmental resources ... while recognizing the intent of Congress in des-

The Daily Sentinel

Reunion planned
Tile annual Matthews reunion will
be held Aug . 16 at the Matthews
Humc; tead on Turkey Run Road,
Cheshire. Tho~e attending are to take
a covered dish. Dinner and fellowship
' 'an at noon . Friends are invited to
join the family.

-·-·-

Reader Services
Correction Polley

Our main roncem Ia oil stories Is to be

~

While leases will be offered for
bid. the plan is expected to fall shon
of what oil companies have sought :
Freedom to drill with few restrictions
throughout a 4.6 million acre area in
the nonhwest comer of the reserve
including in an ecologically sensitive
coaslal plain.
On the other hand, environmentalists are questioniqg why the region
east of oil-rich Prudhoe Bay should
be opened for drilling at all when the
world has plenty of oiL
"The world is awash in oil," said
Bill Reffalt, director of Alaska programs at the Wi ldemess Society.
"We 've gol it selling at $14 a barrel.
Why are we in such a big hurry to
stan developing oil and gas (there
now) at a fairly substantial cost to the
environment?''
But the oil companies argue the
reserve can be developed without
serious environmental harm and that
leases obtained today are unlikely to
produce oil for years . In the meantime , domestic oil production,
already at the lowest since the 1940s,
is likely to continue to decline, they
say.
"We understand the stresses on
.caribou and birds in a much better
way than we Jsed to. We can mitigate
those distur~anoes," said Mike Joyce,
a b1ologis• for Arco Alaska, among
companies r.yeing the new fields .
Atcu Naska, already developing
a new field three miles from the
reserve's eastern boundary, British
Petroleum and other oil companies
are.especially interested in developing fields along a 20-mile-wide
coastal plain within the northeast corner of the reserve .
The area IS an extension of geological area known as the Barrow
Breach that includes oil-rich fields
already discovered east of the
reserve. Without the coastal plain, the
chances of large oil discoveries
would· likely "sharply diminish,"
according to an industry analysis.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 6
6 p.m. - Antique Tractor Pull - Pulling Track
7 p.m. - Parade of Champions- Show Arena/Dairy SweepstakesShow Arena
8:30 p.m. -Lone Star- Main Stage

FRIDAY, AUGUST 7
9 a.m . - 16th Annual Tobacco Sale- Show Arena
9:30a.m. - 40th Annual Market Lamb Sale - Show Arena
I0 a.m. - Pretty Baby Contest - Main Stage
II a.m. - 38th Annual Markel Hog Sale- Show Arena

-Local News in Brief:sridge work set for section of SR 7
For the next several weeks, motorists on State Route 7 near Pamida will
have to slow down a little.
The Ohio Depanment ofTransponation will be making repairs to bridges
in that area and will be restrU:ting traffic to one 14-foot lane in each direction staning today. The lane restrictions will be marked by barrels.
Bridge Overlay System: Inc ., Canfield, is the contractor on $293,000repair
job. The completion dat~ for the project is Oct 31 .

Lentes named local race coordinator
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes has been name9 Meigs County campaign coordinator for Ohio attorney general candidate Richard Cordray.
Cordray i s~ former state representative and state solicitor, He is currently
a profe ssor at Ohio Stale University and is an attorney on private practice.
He was born and raised in central Oh1o.
He will be campaigning in Meigs County on Monday.

Apparent low bidder named for job
Kokosing Construction Co., Columbus, is the apparent low bidder on the
next phase of the U.S. 50/32 widening between Athens and Coo.lvillc. The
Ohio Department of Transponation ope.ned bids on Wednesday.
Kokosing's bid bf $12.5 million fell 10 percent below the state's estimate
of $13.9 million.
,
Other hiddcrs for the job included Complete General Construction Co., ·
Columbus, wi th a bid of $13.3 mill ion, and Chapman Excavating Inc ., Brimfield , with a bid of $13.43 million .
The third phase of the widening project is 2.2 miles in length, running
from Guysville to the former Spanish Maine Truck Stop.
A fourth phase , 2.5 miles, is anticipated to sell in the summer of 2000,
hut ODOT officials are hoping that date may be moved up when a new rcpon
is issued in September by the state's Transportation Re view Advisory Council, the governing body which determines the state's spending of construction dollars.

Immunizations set for next week
The Ohio University College ofOste.opathic Medicine's Childhood Immunization Program (CHIP), a mobile health program. will provide free immuni zations for all area children from birth through 18 years on Aug . 13 from
2 to 4 p.m. at Reed's Country Store in Reedsville, and from 5 to 7 p.m. at
McDonald's in Pomeroy. McDonald's will provide a free food coupon to every
child immunized during the Pomeroy clinic .
In addition to providing required immunizations. CHIP, along with the
Ohio Department of Health is now offering the Hepatitis B vaccine free of
charge to all children through 18 years of age. The vaccine is a three-shot
series over a minimum of six: months.

A child's immunization records must be provided.

will be a four-person scramble, blind
draw. Cost is $50 a player and prizes
will be awarded. A steak dinner will
follow the tournament. For more
information golfers may contact the
Golf Course. 992-6312, or Keith
Wood. 9g5-4400.

Squads answer 8 calls

Hospital news

-

reserve.''

Volleyball team
An organizational meeting of the
Golf benefit planned
The first Roy Jones Memorial Meigs Middle School 7th and 8th
Conservation Golf Benefit will be grade volleyball teams will be held
held Saturday, Aug . 15 beginning at Monday at 6 p.m. Any gorls mtcrcstnoon at the Meigs Golf Course. The ed in playing should attend the metproceeds will benefit Ohioans for ing. Anyone not able to attend may
wildlife conservation .. The benefit contact Yvonne Young at 992-3058.

Stocks

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

ignating this area a petroleum

Gallia County
Junior .Fair

.Meigs announcements

Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered eight call s for assis·
tance on Wednesday. Units responding were :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:36 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Ruth Lewis; Pleasant Valley
r-------------~~·~~~~~~~~~ Hospital;
12:29 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Ruth McElroy, Veter(USPS liJ-960)
ans Memorial Hospital;
Am Ele Power ....................... 43'/.
Communlly Newspaper Holdlap, Inc.
Akzo ...................................... 49~.
3:19 p.m ., Overbrook Nursing
Pu.blishcd every aflemoon, Monday through
AmrTech ............................... 47'!.
Center,
Ada Starcher, Pleasant Valley;
1
Friday, Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ashland Oil ........................... 49'1.
7:23 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Second class
AT&amp;T ..................................... 58'1.
postage ~ id at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Center, Cun.is Roush, Veterans
Bank One ..............................47'1.
Member. The Associated Pre5.' and the Ohio
Memorial;
Bob Evan$.............................. 18
Newspaper Association.
8:58 p.m., assisted. by Syracuse
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The
Borg-Warner ......................... 44'1.
Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
Broughton·............................. 16'1.
unit,
Carleton Street, Walter Haynes,
45769.
Champion
.............................
1
0'!.
treated
not transponed;
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Charm Shps ..........................4"1..
By Carrier or MGior Route
One Wcek. ............. ... ............... . .$2.00
City Holding .......................... 41 \'.
One Month .......... :...... ... ........... .$8.70
Federal Mogul. ..................... 55'!.
One Ye~ r....................... ... .. ...... .Jt04JIO
Gannett
................................. &amp;O'li
Yeterans Memorial
. SINGLE CO PY PRIC£
Goodyear ................................ 54
Oaily........................................ 35 Cents
Wednesday admissions- Roben
Kmar1 .................................... 17't.
Sul~ribcrs not desiring to pay !he "rrier may
Dempsey.
remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel on
Kroger ..................................47•t.
a three, s ix o r 12 month buis. Credit will be
Wednesday discharges - none.
Lands
End
.............................
25'1.
given carrier each week.
Holzer Medical Center
Ltd
.........................................
26~.
No subscription by mail pcrmilled in areas
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 19
where home canicr service is available.
Discharges Aug. 5 - Emory
Publisher reserves the right to adjust rates dur·
OVB ....... ~ ................................40
Johnson, Annabell Cox, Opal Tuming the subscriptioo period. SubscJiption rate
One Valley ............................32'!.· bell, Patricia Webb, Betty Louder.changes may be impl~"!ented by changing the
Peoplee ................................. 28'li
duiation of the su}'scnptJOn .
milk.
Prem Flnl ...................,.............19
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Matthew
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
Rockwell ................................. 39
Jasklr Meigs County
Rhod~ s. son, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
AD/Shell ................................ 46'!.
ll Wuu ..................... ...... .$27.30
Sears ..................................... 47'li
Greg Van Meter, son, Langsville.
26 Weeks ........................... .S.SJ.82
Shoney's ..... ~ ..........................3'1.
tpublished with permission)
52 Wecb .......................... Jt0.S ..S6
Star Benk .............................. 71 '!.
Ralel OuUide Mtlat Couaty
Wendy'• ............................... 20'!.
I J W&lt;cu ........................... .$29.~
Wosrthlngton ....................... 14'!.
26 Wccks ............................$56.68
s2 w..u ......................... $1111.72

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I0:20 p.m., at Middleport Police
Department, Michael Pierce. Veterans Memorial.
RUTLAND
8:58 p.m., assisted by Central
Dispatch. Goose Creek . Naomi Donahue , refused treatment .
SYRACUSE
4: II p.m.. College Street. George
Kalatta. Holzer Medical Center.

At home

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio-Indiana direcfhog prices at selec:tcd buying points Thursday as provided by
the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture
Market News :
Barrows and gilts: near steady;
demand and movement moderate .
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs . country
points 33.50-35.0!), few 35.50; plants
34.50-36.00. few 36.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 31.0033.50; 210-230 lbs. 27.00-31.00.
Sows: mostly 1.00 lower.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 17.0019.00; 500-600 lbs. 19.00-20.00, few
over 600 lbs 21.00-2 1.50.
Boars: over 300 lbs. 13.00-15.00;
under 300 lbs . 17.00-19.00.
Estimated receipts : 34,000.
Prices from Producers Live·
stock Association:
Thursday 's trends:
Hogs steady: sows steady; cattle
50 cents to 1.00 higher.
· Summary ·of Wednesday's auc·
lions at Gallipolis and Mount Ver·

II. DIIJT1lf I&lt;.Q , . . tt8, 5:81
BAIBIIDII A 1:81, ttl,. t-41
TIIIBOlWII A , . . aa,i:tl
. . . PIIIIIE- A f:ll, 7tl
MAfiAI "'~ 1:11, 1:21,. 7'.41
111 NIIBIT 1IAP "' 1:11,4:15, 7:21

1:51,7tl

I&lt;.Q

sto[J, call the newsroom at (740) 992::,
We will check your lnformollon

....... "'~-t!,~

and make a cornction If wommted.

ElfUfTII ""'

News Departments
The moln number 1.1 991-1155. lleplrt·

~~ ~! ~&lt;.q

menc extensions a~:

n: .

Other Services

Ad..l1illq................................. Ext. liM ;
Cll'tlllltloii....................,,.........Ext. 1113 '
tC·:lwl=lled::Adr.=::.:
··"::.:
"'·::.:··..::.:
...::.:
... ·::.:
···::.:
· ......,·.._·Ext._I_I...JOO- ~
....

•

'-' I C~rs:

choice SM .00-

Special stamp unveiling

lt55.

Gene,..l Monagu....................... Ext. 1101
NeW\. . .
. .. . .. . . .. .. ··~::::

Slaughter

64.00: select 58.00 and down .
Slaughter heifers; choice 57.0062.00; select 57.00 and down .
Feeder cattle:
Yearlings steers 69.00 and down;
heifers 64.00 and down .
Calves steers 74.00 and down;
heifers 70.00 and down.
Cows:
Commercial and utility 36.0048.00; canter and cutter 29.00-37.50.
All bulls: 38. 50-51.50.
Sheep &amp; lambs:
Choice wools 85.00-90.00: choice
clips 65.50-88.50: feeder lambs 80.00
and down ; aged sheep 42.00 and
down .

(Continued from Page 1)
planned .
Each day. II people doc across the
(Continued from Page 1)
Soup beans and cornbread. hot
country
while await ing an organ
dogs and sloppy joes, home-baked Sundquist sa id .
transplant.
The U.S. Postal Service is
All breast cancer survivors arc
goods, tacos in a bag, icc cream and
JO
ining
with
the National Coalition
invited to han g pink ribbons. which
drinks will be sold.
on
Donati
on,
Tran splant Recipients
wi
ll
be
provided.
in
the
post
office
T-shins commemorating the event
International
Organo
zation and the
lohby
on
Saturday
morning.
will be available in advance . Orders
Organ Procurement Organizati ons
The
Meigs
County
Retired
Senior
will be taken at the Buckeye Farm
across the region to huild addit ional
Market, Joe's Country Market and Volunteer Program will offer a free
.awareness for organ and tissue donablood
pressure
clinic
on
Monday
Rutland Department Store. Orders
ti on, according to Syracuse Postcan also be placed through Marcia from 9 to II a.m. to help unveil the
master Bonnoc Brown.
new
stamp
promoting
organ
and
tisElliol! at 742-2233, or JoAnn Eads at
sue
donation
.
742-3078.

111111-

1ccuntt. 1r you kDow of an error in 1

non :
Hogs:
Market hogs: 29 75-35.00; light
sows 19.00 and down ; heavy sows
13 25 and dow n.
Feeder pigs: 9 00-36.00 head .
All boars 13.25- 19.00.
Cattle:

2:81, 4:a, 1:11

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Meeon Bridge

992·2588
VINTON
Gellll County Dleplay Y1rd
.
· 155 ...1nSL

•

•

.

-~

\

�Sports

The Daily Sentin,s.I .

Thursday, August 6, 1998

Thursday,August6,1998
NOTHING RUNS •

Brickhouse
dies at 82

BROKEN UP - Anaheim second baseman Randy Velarde (left)
finds the Cleveland Indians' Travis Fryman breaking up his double
play attempt second after retiri~g him in the lou!"' Inning of Wed!'esday's American League game tn Anahetm, Cahf., where the Indtans
won 5-4. (AP)

Ramirez's homer
pushes Indians
past Angels 5-4
After Jim Thome's one-out double
off the right field fence - just out of
the reach of Garret Anderson Ramirez hit his third homer in two
days and 27th of the season.
"In that situation, I'm just trying
to put the ball in play," said Ramirez,
whose two hits in six career at-bats
against Per~iva l have both been
homers . " I got a good pitch to hit and
I hit it out. (The pitch) was in. I got
a good swing and the ball just carried ."
The blown save was just the
fourth in 34 chances for Percival (25), who is winless in five career decisions against the Indians with a 7.50
ERA.
The loss was Anaheim's first in 55
games this year in whtch :hev led
(See INDIANS on Page 6)

By JOHN NADEL
ANAHEIM. Calif. (AP)- Manny Ramirez was just trying to pul the
ball in play against hard-throwing
Troy Percival.
Instead, he put it out of pl~y over the left field fence and into the
Anaheim Angels bullpen .
The two-run homer by the hot-hit·
ting Ramirez with one out in the
ninth inning lifted the Cleveland
Indians to a 5-4 victory over the
Angels on Wednesday, snapping a
five-game losing streak.
"The most improbable ending,"
Indians manager Mike Hargrove said.
" Who would have thou ~ ht Manny
Ramtrel would hit a two-run hvmcr
off Troy Percival. arguably the best
closer in the game? He's awfully
good."

Scoreboard
C61orado {ThomPson ~-R) at Piusburgh !Schmtd!

Baseball

6-IIJ . I :.l~

wn 9-9). ~ O:'i p.m.

Divbton

.w L
KO 29

en.
714
595

!ill

...

66

·Baltimore
Toronto

)~

51.~

JK

24

... 56

.491

26'~

Ta1"tKl Bily

.. 44

61

W(J

)7

JK

c~nlral

01\'lslon

CLEVElAND ...
Minncsola .
Kan ~as

Cily

Chn:a~o .

Detrmt

Te.~oas

6)

lO

.'i:'iH

ll
ll

60
61

459
455

49 6)
. 46 6l

4 .'H

Western Divistofl
61 l l
60 )J
. .'i l 6)
10 62

...

Anahetm

Oakland ...
Seauk

ll

•••

II

II ':
1~ ·':
16

545
5.H
.4-17

4-16

1'•:

,".

(Harnisch 7-5), 7 : 0~ p.m.·
Philadelphia {Wekh 0-1) nt Hoo ~lon (R . Johnson

Piusburgh (Van Poppel\ -0) ill l m Angeles (Bohanon 4-7), 10:05 p.m.
·
Flomla (Ojnla 1-2) ut San Die1o (Ashby 1~·6 ),
10:05 p.m.
Atl:ml:l (Giavine 14-4 ) ;~t SM Fmnmco (Rueter
12·6 1. IO::l5 p.m

C11y 4. Mmncso! a .l
Teus 4. Torontu .l
Oukhmd 1. N Y Yankeu I

Today's ~ames
a1

Mmnc~otil (Ser&lt;~finl

4-4).1 :15p.m
Seattle (fas~ro 10-7) at O.:troit

(GrdJing~ 1 ~61.

7 : ~p . m

Bost11n ISabcrhagen 11 -5)

~~

Tn:u (Burkell

fi-

Washin~lon

II J . IU~ rm

Friday 's games
Kansas C11y (Rapp 9-tO) at N.Y Yankees (Cone
1.~4J . I · ~pm

Scanle (Moyer ~ - RI nt Detroit (Moehler 12·1).
7.0.'i p.lll.
Oakland (Stein 4-61 nt Toronto (Withams 9-6).
7:0l p.m
CLEVELAND &lt;Gooden :\-6) at Tampa Bay (AI·
vnrez ~- 91. 7:0~ p.m.,.
·
Kan,a, City (Haney ~-4) a! N.Y. Yankees (Wells
I ~ - 2). U5 p.m.
Bnllimore (Enckson 11-9) at Mtnnuola

(Hawkins 7-IO l. !t05 p.m

An:1heim (Oi..:kson 6-6) at Chic01go White Sox

(SiroTkA IQ.IO).It:05 p.m
Bmton (P M:•ntncz l.'i-Jl at Tuas (Helling 146). 8 : ~' p.m

NL standings
£asttn1

:r..m
Atlanta ...

L e&lt;l.

Mon~l .

Floridil ...

. ~ .\2

.4Q1

.40ol
Jl7

Cent,.l [)l•ision
. ........ 68 .. .596
...... 64 !I I .5.'i7
Clritago .
.. _17 l7 500
Milw.:mkee .... .
... lJ 60 .469
St. Louis .. .
.SI 6J .4-17
CINCINNATI .....
....... ll 6) .447
PinJI:MlrJh
HousiOn .....

Western Division

San OiepL
San FranciiCO ...
Lot Anacles .. .. .
Col....to ..

.

Arizono ... .. .

.. 74
.... 62
....... l8
...... ll
. 4)

29
.14',

4'!
II

14'.;
17

17

649
.l44

~

.l09

63
71

447

21

JTI

Jl

12
16

Wednesday's scores
Florida .~ . Housron ~
Arizona 10, Chicago Cubs 7
Colorado 6, PinJ:burJh 2
Montreal s. Los Anaeta I
5Ift Francisco 6, N.Y. Meta4
CINCINNATI I J. AdaniD 9
S1. Louis S. Milwaukee I
Sill ~JO 4. Pliilildelpliio 0

·

Totlay's pmes

en.

!ill

Jfl.l

2'

6l!O

I)

L.ns Angeks

10
1

II

~-~1

0!17

l
9
I4

m
WI

m

" ""

II)

cZ'E

&gt;-Ill
_:z:
iii•

,...ll'..

~

-

!11 Fraeciaeo (Hershi~er 8-S) ar N.J . Meu
(Yctollll4-6), 12:10 p.m.

---

"'

0

NEW

3. !14. ~2 .. .
4. RIMy LaJoie. UM
5. a..::..tw:lt ..... 2,415
.. !len.,..., 2,471
1. mat Sldw, ,,..7
.. Tllrl,.....2,454

Jnrny......,..2.530
e.

..

~ U~Jonee.

1. TtnyL.Ibonel,1,37i

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

.. Jlllkrton, 2.351
t. DIIt~U17

10 . ..,.,.,. Splnclr, 2.200

- - - -- --For Hornco\·. l' t
ln sur,wcc

Cll:JEFF

WARNER

G

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

"

Ollot:~

1-7-

-

-IONCIWJetl Gordon, In his tilth try,
- t h e tnl-to win
lou' 8rlt:kyard 400s. holding oil
Mal1&lt; M.¥tln down the*-""· In
just 1994, Gordon- thlnl.
His llictofy also ended I ....,_
18C0 FOld wlmlngIn the II10lJII NASCAR viSit to
-..polls Malo'~.
A
by Dolt
. - . who ,., out of gos juot
post the midway point, prcbobly
cost the fOld drive' the roce. Ho

IIU8Cii OIWC) NATIONAL
Dttlo EarmMit Jr. did oot run
lfcU o f - - tniS tlmo
ond """"'9"d to ,.,....,. his

domtnationoltne-wltha

= (I)

!IJ

.5
j

~

Q

~

Tonight's games

~

Friday's games

~

....
=
.~

Houston a1 Deuoh. 8 p.m .
Washington nt Socramtnto. 10 p.m.

Transactions

1. -

Second both times

of the IMIOI"'.... Gordon

CAAFT1IMAN TRUCK SERIES
COMING UP: Slovens BeiVGenulne C8t

~'E

track Ia almost a perfect eire.,.... Bryan
Reffner and Joe Rottman have won poles
hll8, tn addnion to Cook.

~Q

Hcmldily fran GOiit&amp;i&amp;bl.

Tho 18C0 at Loudon. N.H..
arne down to 1 bllttte between
alv'dy Hrusloo,
tn a Cholly. ~ a..g Billie's
Foro on b llnallop. Houston,
27.yoo.rogost
victor In SuporTruck hlstooy.

IOOklo-.

the-

Aug. I

-"'

Bad tuck at Indy

Ninth at Indy
10. Stdnner CNRI
1hrlvtng wtth Mc:Revnolds

-.--

J.a..-

Bud • ,_ e».n, WJildN·Gitn, N.Y.

....
_ .300.
. ....
-.... 12
:til CMT
,_
N.H ••.·
Soot t -1110, Olllnflol\ S.C.
&amp;.pt. 12 bid~ .tOO, ~. w.

J.-

~­

Soot 20 -4110. DO-. Dol:

0

o.-.IASI

8. TOny .........,. 1111

....,. ._40D,...,.,,Midt

~-

Soot."
_ ....500.
-Concciftl.
"'
0C1t. 4 I..IAW.QM
N.C.
o.t."
!100, , . _ , . ; ....
Oct. I7 ,.,., 400, DlytoM lltliOh. Fla.

T. ~ ·

Oct. 2~

Oufe.LLbt 500. A¥onM, Ml.

Nov. 1
Nov. I

AC-DIICO 400, Flodlil .. .,._ N.C.
~ 500. Conalfid. N.C.

.._....

out

tlag--hid_,
the--.

The Daily
Sentinel

&amp;n, .11m1tt ran
of ga,
but NASCAR failed to tlwoW o

......
1(.-

·---

r.- . .

B.,_,.,

--

w. .......
0. -

...-..
0 . ......

caution
lotK ... btllthl, WWd !klton't car
lloPPOd an

Llny McReynotda, rtgh1, wtfl tllwaya remembet

II)McNIIoDutlon
NASCAR ThisWhen Lany McReynolds
joined Richard Childress

lop 10s, nearly $15 miHion in

first top-five finish, laying

winnings.

Suzuka aside since it was a

!!~oot

'though

Mark~nhas
~MYtnthot
~ 10 straight

--,..out

ttndof tlll· One could OfiUI, llld

111 Court St..
• Pomeroy
992·2155

John~ n. Wlllk
Dale Eamherdt'l, tell, Daytona 500 ......

non-points event, that holds
WHAT DID rr MEAN
a special place, loo. Nobody
TO YOU WHEN MIKE
can ever take that away from
Racing to become crew chief SKINNER GOT HIS FIRST
Lany McReynolds. being the
for seven-time Winston Cup
TOP-FIVE FINISH AT NEW
champion Date Earnhardt. " HAMPSHIRE? "I tl&gt;nk back lirst crew chief lhel was part
to some races in my career · of Mike Skinner's first topseemed like a match made
five finish ."
in heaven.
that I've been a part of thai
After e ......., and a half,
_ , really special races to
WHAT WILL YOU
REMEMBER ABOUT THE
me that weren't wins. Being
McReynolds swi.tched f•om
Earnhardt's team to Mike
a part and helping Kenny
nME WITH DALE EARN·
HARDT? 'EVOI)'Ilody talked
Skinner's, the 1997 rookie of Wallace in 1994 got his first
tho year. He and Earnhardt
lop-five finish at Martinsville. about Date's ftr!lt year without a win in 14 or 15 years.
never jelled, though Earn·
I think we finished fourth
That was Lany's first year
thanl. Thal'o wllen he was
hard! did win the Daytona
without a win in 11 years, so
500 in his 20th try.
subst~uting for Emle (lrvanl
HOMETOWN(S): Born in when he was hun. Thai was ~ was kind of a tittle earthshattering for me, too. 1ha
a preny special race, just
Birmingham, Ala., lives In
biggest fulfttlment I gol at
aeelng the look on his face.
Mooresville, N.C.
It meant a lot to me being a Daytona in winning that 500
AOE:39
was watching lhat took of
part of that. Being a part of
SPOUBE: Uncia
CHILDREN: Brooke (9),
6le11 Bodine's first win. That enjoyment Dale and Totesa
Earnhardt '!\;ere having and
Brandon (7), Kendall(witl
was a win, but being a part
Richard and Judy Childress
of that back.in 1990 will be
be 1 on Sept. 6).
awfully special. Now, being a were having. It was their
RECORO AS CREW
first 500 win and lhat was
CHIEF: 373 starts, 18 poles, part of Mike Skinner's f1rst
top-five finish and this team's special to me.·
23 wins. 114 top 5s. 180

lid lag at the ond.

-

&amp;don,_O..tlutlal

NASCAR This Week,

Our

I watched the Richmond race
and couldR 't believe that Rusty
Wallace didn 't get penalized for
pushing Jeff Gordon into the

track, Iike jumping starts and
causing wrecks, yet the
NASCAR officials never do
anything lo him .
LuAnn Fisher
Hazleton, Pa.

with Ron~·~
lis - . y "-t. A tap from
Sprogut~ CllOIIy 111111 Hornaday's into the wall, ~

--

CD
0&gt;
CD Ill
tiS

~U!llli

were turned, Jeff Gordon
would've been penalized.
Rusty Wallace seems to gel
away with everything on the

CIW"'WM TRUCK 8EI!IES
J8Cic Sprogut '*"" out on top
In ntthor of his bruioing DMIOS

4. Bobby l.8bont8 C4l
Waiting in the wings
5. Ruoty- (71
Slltlno~ .

Dave Harris
Ext 104
For More
Information

• • two-time winner, and Mike Skinner
won the other Flemington race.
NOTABlE: The roclng groove at this

'*" ., - ....

FEUD Of TMI WIEI
Dill Jaii'IU vs. NASCAR

RHP Paul Wnttner
CHICAGO CUBS: Exerd~d their options on
1hc commcu of Ed Lynch. geneml man&lt;~get" . ond Jim
RiggKmon. mnnnger. for tht 1999 sen!lon

~

boclme the first driver to win COOMCUtlve 11C0S With hiS Indy VlctDfY.

mtvtng • South - · \Ia.,
costing
vlctllly the- before.

s. Jell Burton C8l

Greene from the 60-day disnblcd list.

Nalkmal Lta~ue
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS Optioned RHP
Clint Sodowsky lu TUI.:Mm ofdte PCL. Rec.:;dlcd JNF.
Hanley Frias from Tucson
ATLANTA BRAVES. Agreed to terms on 11
rrunor-lenguc con1nx:1 with LHP Nurm Charlton and

souvenirs.

hid boon~ far ,.,.q,

3. Date Jormt C31
Traumatic loss

ANAHEIM ANGELS: Orsignntcd 18 Cecil
Fielder for ililig nmc nl . Ac.:liv;ucd 18 -0F Tudd

111

up some autographs and racing

Call 992-2156

wall.
hcrybody knows if the tables

Oetting bolter
1. Jerwty ~ C5l
Too last too soon

2.Mttrf&lt;MI&lt;tln121

Baseball

BOSTON RED SOX: Signed SS Adam Evereu
PUl ~ ha !ied the comrncl of OF Da"id Hulse from

cuisine at tho llnlel-atde restaurants ana food bOOths, then piCt&lt;

vlctllly at~_..,
"'"" In the IWgor 200. EarmMit

Amnlun IAaauf

races, with two victories.

TRIVIA
1. WhO was tne youngest NASCAA Grand NatiOnal (now Wintton
Cup) champlon?
2. What speedway president played ruming bock at the Univeraity

or South caroana'l

WII0'8 NOT'I

fano will, 11111
NASCAR hal now cotll.llmltt

-

Bnttt has not heel •
top-five flnOh alnce he was

two-litiSthe IIIII one OQCIII1ntl et

Dear NASCAR. This Week,
(My wife and IJ attend a race ·
when we can, but most of the
time we watch from the comfort
of our home .
We each have our own favorite
driven, and Dale £amhardt is
not one of them! We sat watching the Pocono SOO in shock
when Earnhardt (the scum)
ackkd yet another car to his long
list of drivers he's helped into
the wall!
Ke11 Schrader was the poor
recipient of !he latest "if Earnhardt can't pass ya, he'll crash
ya" award.
T.M day Eam"ardt rethea w1U
be the day everybody can
breathe a lillie easier and maybe
have a safer sport.
Benny HeOey
._
Sedalia, Mo.
" you'W

got a quatlon "' o

commont, wo1tl: NASCAR
Thill Week 't'CU"TI.m, elo

Thellaatoft - · 2SOO E.
,...,....,
- · Clottonto,
N.C. 211054

I=
...=
~

i

II
I

runner-up at the Bric:kyald
In 1994.

Riclvllond wttfl"tho ........

Valley
Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St.
Middleport

992-6611

• Who elsa but tho

Rainbow Warriors?
Every Brickyard 400
pit stop was perfect,
Jeff Gordon led the
majortty of the laps
and Ray Evemham's

crew oxcetlei:l whete
olhels failed.

Would you

belove ttl

Come September, lana
wll be able to purchase

aNASCAAB......
The new pmduet was
unveiled at the Brickyard
0Vfllth8~.

NASCAA'o m811&lt;ating
and licen$1g department
never misses a trick.

AIIOUND THE G.WGI

COLORADO ROCKIES' Ortioned RHP F...t
Rath IO C'nlorado Spring5 of lhe PCL Recalled OF
Detrick\\ Me fmm C1\lorndo S]lfing~ .
LOS ANGEL£~ OCJl&gt;GERS: Acti"nted INF
Bflbby Bonilla from IlK I.S -d&lt;~y disabled lisl . Op4ioncd INF Aiel Cora to Albuq~rque or the PCL.

FROM THE ARCHIVES:
Tl1o t1ch hiiiGfY "' NA8CNI

Ar&lt;:lent Watl&lt;ina Glen

tmornatlonal hll 1 hiatory
• tNt rivals ..., Deytcn.
Darlington and lndjanopolls, bul not wi1h cars. For ITIOI8 lllan two
- . , t h o Glen hosted

thl Grand Prtx of 1hl

·· sJJHI.:

UnHed States, bringing an
International flavor to the
quaint road course In tho

· www.adhh.a.COOl

' 828,112

c.... 1,132

t.Dale-181

Gonion 111

Two In a rf1tN

~ &gt;-"'
::I:

=~

Wednesday's scqres

city, and - " year tho town
- o i l tho downtown for a fan festival. Simp" tho local

Larry McReynolds

1. ~ TOIIIna, 1,878

I. lb.

Thil---

§81
-·-· :e(l)
~
~

WHEN: Saturday.
Aug. 8
DEFENDING CHAMPION: Aon Hornaday
TRACK QUALIFYING
RECORD: Tony
Cool&lt;. ClloYrolot.
98.232 mph. Aug. 9,
1997.
_.,
RACE RECORD: Aon
Hornaday, Chevrotot. 98 .232 mph. Aug.
9, 1997.
OTHER fORMER WINNERS: Hornaday

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goina 10 say rm not going 10
re.:n their call. I'm going~~ call
tiMib tlack and talk lo them . If
they colt me, I say thank you. I'd

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HISTOIUC ANl'tiVERSARY: wa sell tho most or and ~ put
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THE WINSTON CIJP SERIES
COMING UP: Budlet the Glen
WHERE: Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International
VVHEN:Sunday,Aug. 9
DI!FENDINO C PION: Jell Gordon
EVENT QUALIFYING
RECORD: Date Earnhardt, ClloYrolot,
120.733 mph, Aug. 9.
1996.
RACE RECORD:
Mer1&lt; Mottln, Fool,
103.030 mph, Aug.

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Detroit

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

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CHICAGO (AP)- Hall of fdl11e
broadcaster Jack Brickhouse, for four
decades the voice of the Chicago
Cubs, died early today at age 82.
Brickhouse was pronounced dead
at St. Joseph Heallh Centers &amp; Hospital near his home on the North Side.
Hospital spokeswoman Victoria Higgins said doctors listed the cause of
death as cardiac arrest.
She said Brickhouse was brought
,i. :~i··
to St. Joseph by Chicagc Fire Depattment ambulance shortly bef(,r. · I ".m.
... ' ..
. ""''~
after he was found unconscious at
home.
Brickhouse underwent brain
~.
''
surgery March 3 for a two&lt;entimeter tumor doctors discovered after his
leg gave way while he was getting
dressed to attend the Feb. 28 funeral
of Harry Caray. who replaced Brickhouse in the Cubs' television booth in
TAUBENSEE SCORES- The Cincinnati Reds' League game In Atlanta, where the Reds' scor- •
1982.
Eddie
Taubensee (left) slides into the plate past Ing seven runs in the last two Innings helped
Doctors said the surgery was sucthe
tag
of Atlanta backstop Javy Lopez in the them win 13-9. (AP)
cessful and Brickhouse was diseighth
Inning
!If Wednesday night's National
charged in April after undergoing
therapy at the Rehabilitation Institute
of Chicago.
Brickhouse spent nearly four
decades broadcasting the Cubs, first
on WGN radio and Inter TV. He also
broadcast the Chicago Bears for 24
years and worked games of the
Chicago White Sox and Chicago ~y ED SHEARER
tied. You can't take that away from Macon, Ga. "That's gets your adrenBulls.
·
All.ANTA,(AP) - Rather than them. "
aline going," Greene said.
His home run call -.:.• famous :
accept the' blamc, Brett Tomko gave
McKeon was especially pleased
The Braves got three-run homers
"Back, back, back: That's it 1 Hey- credit where it was due.
with Boone.
from Ryan Klcsko and Javy Lopez,: ·
hey' Hey -hey! "
"It wasn't me that did anything,"
"I like to sec him do what he's but blew 6-3 and 9-6 leads.
· ·
He was honored at Wrigley Field he said after a rough night for pitch- doing- taking the line drive instead
With the score 9-all, Young sinin 1979 for his 5,000th broadcast. He ers at Turner Field. "It was the hit-- of going for the home run," McKeon gled off Russ Springer (5-4) leading
retired in 1981 and was inducted into ters."
said. "He's hecn tough in the clutch off the ninth, Scan Casey walked and
the Hall of Fame in 1983.
Tomko, bidding for his lith vic- the last three or four days . Consis- Aaron Boone's brother Brct sacriHe began his radio career at age tory, was staked to a 3-0 lead in the tency is what we like ."
ficed.
18 in 1934 in his hometown of Peo- first inning, but the Cincinnati right''I'm getting a chance to play.''
After Eddie Tauhcnsce was intenria, grossing $17 a week. He came to hander couldn't hold it. He was bat- Boone said. "That's all you can ask tionally walked to load the bases,
Chicago in 1940 and laterwas work- tered for nine runs in 5 113 innings. as a young player. It's all about going Aaron Boone singled to right and
ing 80-hour weeks .
But Tomko avoided what would out there and playing with confi- pinch-hitter Chris Styncs and Reggie
''One time in 1954 I did three have been his eighth defeat when the dence."
Sanders added RBI singles.
shows on three networks in 24 Reds twice rallied from three-run
Boone has a career-high fiveJohn Hudek (4-5 ) pitched a perhours," Brickhouse once said. "First deficits and scored four in the ninth game hitting streak since being fect eighth.
I broadcast the final game of the to beat the Atlanta Braves 13-9 recalled from the minors on July 31.
"We didn't throw the ball well."
World Series, in Cleveland. Then Wednesday night.
His clutch hit in the ninth triggered Braves manager Bobhy Cox said .
back to Chicago for a wr~stling · Cincinnati's key hits qmc from a four-run rally.
"He's (star1er Denny Neagle) getting
show at night. Then I took the train Aaron Boone, who had a run-scoring
"Thai doesn't happen every day.'' some balls where he's not supposed
to Green Bay forth~ Bears game the double in the eighth and a two-run Young said of a comeback to beat to put them. Spnnger just got hit. " _
next day."
single that broke a 9-9 tic in the ninth; Atlanta. "You can't let against the
Neagle allowed seven hits. three ·
Brickhouse also put his voice to Dmitri Young, who had a single, two- Braves. Those guys arc a wcll -utlcd walks and six runs in six innings, :
barn dances, mao-on-the-street run homer and two-run double; and machine. We came out for all nine striking out eight.
·
shows, political conventions and con- Willie Greene with a two-run pinch- innings.':
Notes: Atlanta's Mark Wohlers :
dueled one-on-one interviews ,·:ith hit home run. It was the ·first pinch
Greene · coukln 't remember his relieved in the ninth and walked a •
six presidents. He covered both of the homer for the Reds since Mike Kel- last pinch-homer - "if I ever had bauer before striking one out. .. : :
ly connected against the Florida one. Maybe I did in high school."
(See BRICKHOUSE on Page 6)
Lopez matched his career best with ;
Marlins on July 22, 1997.
He said he got pumped up playing his 23rd homer. ... Andruw Jones' :
"Great comeback,:' Reds manag- before his family and friends who home run tn Tuesday ntght 's game ·
er Jack McKeon said. "Our c"Y' ,,,,_ drove to Atlanta from his home in was the 40th of hts
·_·:;_.:::...:.::.::..:::= - . .. ....~ :

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Indians ...

NBA executives soften stance
on 'cost certainty' for owners

(Continued from Page 4)
after eight innings. They were vict()rious in a similar situation Tuesday
night when Percival retired the side
in order in the ninth with two strikeouts as the Angels won a 5-4 deciston.
"I didn't beat myself," Percival
said. "They swung the bats and put
it out of the ballpark. I didn't get the ·
ball where I wanted it to go and·
(Ramirez) hit it."
· Tim Salmon's two-out, solo·
. homer in the seventh off Paul Shuey ·
: ( 4-1) had given the Angels a 5-4 lead . .
· Salmon has six homers in his last I0
games, and eight homers in nine
games against the Indians this year.
Shuey allowed two hits and the
one run in two innings. After the
Angels put runners on first and third
with two outs in the ninth off Mike
: Jackson, Paul Assenmacher relieved
and walked Jim Edmonds before
retiring Dave Hollins on a 1'"1"•1' t&lt;&gt;
third to end the game.
Jackson has 27 saves, but has
blown his last three chances. The
save was the first for Assenmacher
· since last Sept. 19.
• "Given the circumstances, I
thought we were justified in going to
Assenmacher," Hargrove said. "If we
had won six in a row, I might not .
have done that. We had lost five in a
-fOW."

• Hollins hit a tw()-run double in the
: third off Bartolo Colon to give the
·Angels a 3-1 lead, and a solo homer
' off Colon to open the sixth, tying the
game 4-4.
.
Kenny Loflon had two hits and
two RBis for the Indians, who scored
:three runs in the top of the siKth off
Omar Olivares to take a 4-3 lead.
Olivares, who has lost six straight
decisions since June 17, allowed
four runs and eight hits in 5 213
innings. Colon gave up four runs and
eight hils in six innings.
After the game, the Angels designated first baseman Cecil Fielder for
assignment and activated first baseman-outfielder Todd Greene.
Notes: Ramirez has driven in 32
runs in his last 25 games to give him
a total of951his season ... . Anderson
has hit in four straight games since
his 28-gamc hilling streak -longest
in the majors this year- came to an
end last Saturday..•. The game was
played before a sellout crowd of
43,104 on Disneyland Employee
Day. It was the Angels' si•th home
sellout of the season .... Angels first
baseman-outfielder Darin Erstad, hitting .303 with 19 homers and 68
RBis, sat out his second straight
game hecause of a slightly strained
left hamstring .... Salmon, hothered
by an injured right foot nearly all season, hit his first triple of the year in
. the third. h was a fly ball off the right
field fence that bounced away from

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP)- For months,
commissioner David Stem has been
insisting that NBA owners need
"cost certainty" in a new labor
agreement
Now that stance seems to have
softened a bit.
"Certainty is not the right word
from our standpoint, because we're
ready to accept that things could
operate within a certain range,"
deputy commissioner Russ Granik
said Tuesday, less than 24 hours
before talks were to resume this
morning at a Manhattan law office.
This morning's meeting were to
be the first formal discussions
between the sides since June 22 eight days before a lockout was
imposed by the owners.
Along with Granik, Stern and
union e•ecutive director Billy Hunter
the talks were expected to be attended by about a dozen players and seven owners, plus lawyers for both
sides.
The sides remain far apart on CC()nomic issues, especially on what percentage of basketball-related income
(BRI) should be devoted toward
player salaries. The owners had the
right to toss out the old labor agreement if salaries rose above 52 percent
of BRI, and that number jumped to
57 percent last season.
In previous bargaining sessions,
BUMPING Into New York center Rebecca Lobo (left) goes with the
Stem
tried to ensure "cost certainty"
territory when going to the hoop, •• Charlotte's VIcky Bullett finds
out during Wedneedly nlght'e WNBA con1e8t in Charlotte, N.C., where by asking Hunter to give him anumber (a BRI percentage) that would be
the Sting won 69-61. (AP)
acceptable to the players. Hunter
resisted, saying to do so would be
tantamount to BCC\Ipting a hard salary
cap.
In light of Oranik's latest state·
ment, it seems the owners would
accept an agreement that did not
include a definitive pen:cntagc of
and the Sting made 10 of 10 free in BRI going toward player salaries.
WNBA roundup
Oranik said owners would need
the final minutes to seal the victory.
In the only other game Wednesday "reasonable (cost) controls within
CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP) Andrea Stinson scored 19 points and night, Detroit beat Los Angeles 73- certain ranges."
In other words, if too much monVicky Bullett had 17 points and nine 61.
ey
was going toward player salaries,
Shock 73, Sparks 61
rebounds as the Charlotte Sting beat
would be in place to slow
a
system
At Auburn Hills, Mich., Korie
the New York Liberty 69-61 on
Hlede scored nine points in a 16-2 the growth.
Wednesday night in the WNBA.
"But if it's totally open-ended,
The Sting ( 17-8) pushed its lead second-half run as Detroit beat Los
then
it's not something that the ownover New York (14-10) to 2 112 Angeles.
ers
are
going to accept this time. We
led
the
Shock
(13-11)
with
Hlede
games in the Eastern Conference
did
that
last time and paid a price,"
20
points,
and
Razija
Mujanovic
with five games remaining. Charlotte
Granik
·said.
"You've got to know
leads second-place Cleveland by two added 15. Lisa Leslie matched her
what
the
outer
limit of that range is,
career high with 30 points and had II
games.
because
we
always
seem to hit it."
rebounds
for
Los
Angeles
(-10.14),
Vickie Johnson IC!I the Liberty
In
offers
put
on
the
table by each
which
lost
for
the
lint
time
in
four
with 21 points: and Rebecca Lobo
side
prior
to
the
lockout,
owners
games
under
new
coach
Orlando
had 12.points and II rebounds.
asked
for
a
hard
salary
cap
tied
to 48Woolridge.
Tora Suber hit a three-pointer with
50
percent
of
BRI.
The
union
offered
3:33 left to cap a 10-2 Charlottt fUn
10 slow future salary cap growth but
only if the BRI number exceed~l'AI A

Sting beat Liberty;
Shock whip Sparks

ltie'and's
r IVJ'1 SUS'nends
I'
f,
Ramirez .... Angels.right-handerKen- -Sml•th a~er nane/ says she
H1ll , SJdehned smce undergmng
I II
I'
arthroscopic surgery on his pitching
t
d
• samp,e
I
elbow June Is.thrcw45pitcheswith
ampere WI•th Urtne
(Continued from Page 4)
national conventions in 1944 for the
Mutual Broadcasting System and
worked conventions in 1960, 1964
and 1968 for WGN-TV.
A stretch of Michigan Avenue
near the Chicago Tribune's building
is named "Jack Brickhouse Way. "
"Saturdays and Sundays, which
were supposed to be the rest of the
world's leisure days, were my big
days hecauS~&gt; my job was to give listeners or viewers some relaxation
from the tough week they might have
had," Brickhouse said.
Brickhouse. who covered the
White So•'last World Series appe;rrancc in 1959, once said he would
have liked to have seen a postseason
meeting between Chicago's two
baseball teams, but he declined to
play favorites in that daydream.
"Ernie Banks woull! come hack
and hit a home run," he fa;; ,,. :,cd.
"The seventh and final game would
be called hecause of darkness."

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP)
- Irish swimmer Michelle Smith,
winner of three gold medals at the
1996·'1\tlanta Olympics, today was
suspended for four .years after a panel determined she had tampered with
a urine sample.
The decision was announced by
the international swimming federation 13 days after a hearing by its
drug panel.
· The suspension goes into effect
immediately, the federation (FINA)
said.
Smith's lawyer. Peter Lennon,
was not immediately available for
comment.
Lennon has previously said he
would appeal to a higher court if
Smith was found guilty.
Smith escaped the maximum punishment- a life ban.
A four-year suspension, if upheld,
would effectively end her career. She
is 28 and would miss the 2000 Sydney Olypmpics and the next world
championships.
Smith was charged with mar.inu-

lating an out-of-competition drug
test on Jan. I0 by adulterating her
urine sample with alcohol.
In April, FINA announced that
Smith's samples, tested at the IOCaccredited laboratory in Barcelona,
Spain, showed "unequivocal signs of
adulteration" and "physical manipulation ."
Both samples allegedly contained
a lethal concentration of whiskey,
suggesting an attempt to mask the
detection of drugs.
Under FINA rules, tampering with
a urine sample is considered as serious as taking steroids.
FINA said today that its investigation found that the urine was
"manipulated by the swimmer" but
"the way of manipulation is uncertain ."
FIN A said it found that ·the manipulation was not carried t•u•. in the laboratory, during the transport or bj&gt; the
collectors of the sample.

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ed 63 pm:ent.
Somewhere in the middle is a
number that both sides can live with,
but the hiatus in talks has kept the
sides from moving closer to a com-

promise.
On non-economic issues, including a new drug agreement, Granik
said the sides are very close to reaching a deal.
"Prior to July I, we felt that with

a couple days of meetings '"" c:ould
solve those problems," Granik said.
Informed of Granik's latest state·
men! on cost certainty vs. cost controls, Hunter sounded hopeful.
Neither Granik nor Hunter would
say who should feel compelled to
submit the neKI formal proposal.
Owners have made four different
offers, while the players made only
one back when talks began April I.

Locals to play in minor
league football game
Saturday in Middleport
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Conespondant
Minor League football comes to
Meigs County Saturday when the
West Virginia Cardinals play the
Louisville Galaxy.
The game will be played at Meigs
Junior Hish School with kickoff at 7
p.m.
The Cardinals have two local
players on their roster - former
Meigs Man1uder standout quarterback Brent Hanson and linebacker
Ruben Rodriguez, who lives in Middleport.
Rodriguez is instrumental in bring
the game to Middleport. He recently
moved to the area and is a long time
veteran of minor league football.
Rodriguez played for the Hampton
Road Sharks before joining the Cardinal. He also played with the Virginia Storm, Manassas Invaders and
the Peninsula Poseidons. He received
all all conference honors 1991 ·93 and
in 1996.
Most of the team is made up of
players from the Parkersburg area
and it includes several former college
players. Former Ohio University
Bobcat Kevin Martells plays safety
and comer back. the team also have
players from .Kansas State, the University of Cincinnati, M3rshall, West
Liberty, West Virgina and Akron.
Both the Cardinals and Galaxy are
members of the National Football
Federation League, the United States
Football Association and the American Football Association.
Minor league football is played by
over 250 teams across the United
States. The teams play a full seasons
schedule and then pal'ltCipate in a
series of playoffs that culminate with
the top two teams playing for the
national championship in Orlando,
Florida, in the Minor League Bowl.
Tickets for the game are $6 and
are available at the gate or from

Rodriguez. For more infomJation
you can call him at992-5737 at home
or at work at 992-7772. Rodriguez
said if Saturday evening is successful, that another game may be scheduled.

By The Bend

\

The Daily Sentinel
.

Page 7

Thursday, August 6, 1998

Single father is letting daughter control too much of his life
Ann
Landers
IY97, Los Antdes Tina
and Crcaton

Syndica~

SyAd~~~~t .

Dear Ann Landers: What do
you think of a single father who has
18 pictures of his daughter in his
bedroom, 13 in the k.itchen, 15 in the
living room and Lord knows how
many at work. He also has all her
school drawings from the last seven
years on display in every rooin of
the house. She is 12 years old.
This man would like to move out
of his huge home to a smaller one,
but his daughter won't let him . She
makes all the decisions about what

to do and where to go. She picked
out the car he bought because she
liked the color. This girl spends an
obscene amount of money on
clothes, and her father buys her
whatever she wants.
I've been dating this man for five
years. We want to get married, sell
both our homes and build a new
house so we can stan our life together. His daughter refuses to agree to
it. She likes the house they live in
· now.
He believes he will be able to get
her to change her mind. Then, he
says, we can make plans for our
future . When I tell him how much
this bothers me, he says I'm heing
ridiculous. Am I? Please advise. -Frustrated in New York
Dear New York: If you marry

this man, be prepared to have your
life run by his daughter. Sbe is defi·
nitely in control, and the situation is
not going to get better. In fact, it will
probably get worse. My cond()lences.
Dear Ann Landen: The reader
in Ohio wbose husband spiked their
dog's drinking water with bourbon
asked if animals got drunk. Your
answer was correct. Animals can get
drunk.
Elephants in the wild and cattle
on a farm can get drunk on fermented grain. I knew of a woman who
purposely got her cat addicted to
alcohol so it would stay close to her
instead of showing cat-like independence.
You diagnosed the Ohio woman's
husband as either having a screw

loose or a serious mean streak. My
guess is that he is no meaner to the
dog than be is to himself. In other
words, he is probably an alcoholic
who need&lt; another drunk (the dog)
to "keep him company."
By the way, Ann, your frequent
mention of Alcoholics Annnymous
has saved many lives and has been a
tremendous help to their despairing
families. -- Sober in Greensboro.
N.C.
Dear Greeasboro: People who
give their pets alcohol to sec how
they will act are guilty of animal
abuse and should be reported to the
humane society.
As for mentioning Alcoholics
Anonymous in my column, I've
been a strong supporter for more
than 40 yean and have received

hundreds of letters from readers
expressing their gratitude. That
organization does a wonderful job.
It's free and can be found by looking
in your phone book.
Dear Ana Landers: This i.&lt; for
all daughters who suddenly find
they must cope with a stepmother.
I've been there .
My mother was sick most of her
life with a variety of illnesses. Then,
she got cancer. Six months before
her death, she was shopping like she
was going to live another 20 years.
Dad never uuered a word to discourage her. He said, "Anything that
gives her pleasure is fine with me ."
He was by her side until the day she
died.
I wasn 'I happy when he began to
date again, but I didn't say anything.

I realized he didn't want to be alone.
My father remarried eight months
after Mom passed away. With a
lump in my throat. I said, "Congrat·
ulations."
I don't always agree with my
father's new wife, but I hold my
tongue. The only thing that mauers
is that she loves my dad and takes
good care of him. -- Miami
Dear Miami: A beautiful sentiment from a loving daughter. Your
dad appreciates it more than you
know.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicare, S777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

Flower Shows to be a feature of Meigs County Fair events
Two nower shows where
exhibitors show what they grow and
compete for the best in arranging
categories will be a highlight of the
I 35th Meigs County Fair, Aug. 1722.
The shows will be staged on
Monday and Thursday with exhibits
to remain in place from the Monday
show until the Thursday show goes
into place, and the Thursday show
remaining in place until the fair
closes.
Classes of the show are open to
.the public for exhibits. Membership
in a garden club is not required.
However to e•hibil, registration is
required before 4 p.m. Saturday at
the secretary's office on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
"Ohio Motor Coach Tours from
Meigs County" is the theme of the

artistic design classes which will
take fairgoers from the Cincinnati
Reds, depicted with red and white
flowers , to the Columbus Park of
Roses, a design featuring roses, to
local events like the Sternwheel Festival where driftwood is included as
a part of the design.
In addition to the 21 classes in
artistic design, the show has 49
classes for specimen flowers and
horticulture displays, both for senior
and junior exhibitors, those under
19.
The show chairmen are Pauline
Atkins, Janet Bolin. and Chelcie
Brauon, and members from garden
clubs serve as committees. he Rutland and Rutland Friendly Gardeners prepared the schedule; the Wildwood club will provide judges'
clerks and ribbon placement;

Two accepted for pharmacy school

IN ACTION SATURDAY Ml11or League footJ!!!II I;OI\'ICS to
the Malgs Junior High School
Saturday at 7 p.m., when the
Weal Vlrglna Cardinal meet the
Loulavilla Galaxy. Former Meigs
quarterback Brent Hanson (11)
and Middleport resident Ruben
Rodriguez (56) will be on hand.

J

no discomfort in a simulated game

Brickhouse...

Thursday,August6,1998

Pometoy • Middleport, Ohio ·

NIKKI ROBINSON

MICHAEL LEIFHEIT

ACCEPTED TO PHARMACY SCHOOL - Two Maigs County high
school graduate• have been accepted Into the ~liege of Pharmacy
at Ohio Northern University.
'
They are Nikki Robinson, daughter of Carl an!! Carolyn Robinson
of Racine, and Michael Lelfhalt, son of Roger lind Lenora Leifheit,
Pomeroy.
.,
Nikki is a graduate of Southern High Schoql where she was •
member of the National Honor Society, quiz bow.l and yearbook.
Michael 11 a graduate of Meigs High School where he was active
in band National Honor Society, student council, the quiz team,
French Club, Senior Spirits, and a representative to Buckaye Boys
"
State.
Both will be freshmen this year majoring In pharmacy.

Walk- a ·- thon raise$ money
for fight against breast cancer

An Horizon of Hope Walk-A-Thon headed up ~y Burdette's Birds
Branch, consultants of the Longaberger Co., brought in .more than $1,700 in
a recent one-evening's walk at the Civitan .Park in Belp'/e.
Participants were Branch Advisor Theresa Mace of the Dream Weavers
Branch from McArthur, along with consultants Pam Vogt, Vickie Williams
&amp; Lisa Perkins; Branch Advisor Debbie Hauber of the Basket Bearing
Branch from Long Bottom, and Consultant Amanda Sehwartzel; Branch and
Region Advisor Connie Vale of the Teddy Bear Branch from Athens, and
Consultants Buba Lindner, Mary Ann McKibben, Tam'l!Y Boggess, Jennie
Coen; Sandra Sydensiricker and Laura Richards; Branch
Advisor Joy Burdette of Burdette's Birds Branch from Cwlville, and Consultants Joan Everett, Deidra Ferguson, Tammy Little, Pam.Little, .Kim Wagoner, Susie Ashley, Stephanie Yocum, Linda Walker, Jill Youell, Amanda
Tipton, Laurene Huffman and Becky Benson.
. ~'
Durinu the past three years of their campaign to fight .IJreast cancer The
Longabe;ger Company has donated $2 from the sale ol.each Horizon of
Hope Basket to the American Cancer Society. In additioo, the comp.,1y's
sales field and employees have also made personal contributions, brir.ging
the total support for those years to $1.8 million .
;·.
TURNS ONE • Kall
Morgan Cunningham, daughter
of Shawn and Leanne Cunningham, of Bidwell, waa honored
July 1 with • party In obeervanca of her flrat birthday.
A Noah's Ark theme WBI UHCI
for the party. Attanding In addition to her parents ware her
grandparants, Ron and Judy
Clark of Racine, Robert and
Sh.a ron Cunningham of Syr•
cuae, and har coualn, Kyle Cunningham. Other guesta wara
l(evln, Bllcky and Kody Taafot'd
of Bldwall and Cl811l Belle
Bradley , of BidWell. Sand!ng
glftl _ . Kall'1 great.grendpar·
enta, Mary and Simon Geist·
Whlta of Wlntarlvllle, and VJr.
l!lnja Smith of Clifton, W.Va.,
Rob, Pam 1nc1 Brooke Cunnlfllt'
him of SyreeuM, and Pliii'WCI
Rod, Ryan lind Ruaaan B11gle .
of Portland.

"Wahkeena Nature Preserve" Chester, photography; Middleport ly,$3.
In both classes an Ohio Associa- Exhibition luncheon table picture
Amateur, show signs; Winding Trail,
junior exhibitors; Rutland Friendly tion of Garden Club accredited Junior classes:
"Soapbox Derby at Akron" Gardeners, educational; Shade Val- judge will preside at the oral judging
ley, placemenl, and everyone will which will begin at I p.m. on both Showing Motion
"Scaworld at Aurora'' - Water
will join in the cleanup on Thursday Monday and Thursday.
The artistic classes in the Mon- showing
after the first show, and Sunday after
Artistic arrangement classes in
day show are:
the fair closes.
"Dresden, Longaberger Basket the Thursday show are
Ribbons and premiums will be
"Columbus Park Of Roses" awarded in three places in each Tour"- Design in a basket
"Stemwhcel Festival" - Featur- Design to include roses
class. The premiums are $5 for first,
"Kingwood Center at Mansfield"
$4 for second, and $3 for third in ing Driftwood
-Mass
"Franklin Park Conservatory artistic and junior artistic, and $1.75
"Amish Country, Holmes Counfor first, $1 .50 for second, and $1 .25 Featuring foliages
"Cincinnati Reds · Game ty"- Designer's choice
for third in specimen and oiher hor"Ohio State University Sports"Including red and white
ticulture classes.
''Tecumseh, Outdoor Drama" Depict any sport of your choice
Special awards in both senior and
"Mt. Gilead Gourd Show" junior divisions are best of show, $3 Showing Native American influence
Incorporate gourds as part of design
"Outlet Mall Shopping" premium; and reserve best of show,
"Ohio's Zoos"- Tubular design
$2; and and sweepstakes, $3 for Angular Design (Special Class)
Memorial at Mari"Hocking Hills, Autumn Beauty"
seniors and $2 for juniors with an
red white and blue
honorable mention, $1; and creativi- - Warm colors

"Ohio Village at Ohio Histoncal
Society"- Still life
Junior classes:
".Kings Island" - includin g
bright colors
"C.O.S.l. Center of Science and
Industry" - Designers choice
In the horticulture division there
arc classes for
hybrid tea. noribunda, grandinora,
and miniature roses; gladioli in several colors. dahlia, bo1h cactus. ball
and decorative; zinnia, dahlia and
cactus as well as small flowered ;
marigolds, cclosia, sunnowers,
hosta, calad1um, and collections of
perennials squash, and herbs, along
with hanging basket and other potted plants. In the junior division.
there are classes for zi nnias,
marigolds, sunnowers and roadside
· materials .

\Khaki marches on ... it's cool, casual and stylish
The l!lnclnnatl Enqulrar
.Khaki is no longer bland and
button oct down.
It's 'o hot, it's cool, as the look
proliferates on the streets and in
some of the hippest ad campaigns.
The nation in lhe midst of a
khaki revival.
The market for khaki has doubled from $450 million in retail
sales in 1993 to $920 million last
year, according to Fairchild
Strategic Information Services
(SIS). Americans bought 114 million pairs of khaki pants priced
$19.99to more than $100 in 1997.
"Khakis symbolize genuine
effortless style," says Amy
Rosenthal, senior marketing specialist for Dockers Khaki. "It's
also about a lifestyle."
Rosenthal point&lt; to the "casualization" of the nation to e&lt;plain
khaki 's growing prominence.
"Now that most businesses
have some sort of casual day or
relaxed dress code, k~aki has
become even more important,"
she says.
According to Colton Inc .'s
Lifestyle Monitor, which tracks
consumer auitudes and behavior
toward fashion, 66 percent of
offices in the United States participate in one or more casual days
per week, making khaki the perfeel solution to employees' dressing needs.
However, it's the growing
youth and urban markets that have
helped
khaki. shed its .conserva.
uve, preppy tmage.

.

The Gap commercials featuring rock, hip-hop, young skateboarders and dancing gen-Xers
trumpet the new khaki message;:
"Khakis Groove.'' "Khal..is
Rock." "Khakis Swing.''
Justin Gvozdu of Anderson
Township, Ohio, wears baggy Old
Navy khak.is.
"I usually wear a lot of jeans,"
Gvozdas says. "But I bought
these pants about four months ago
because I needed something that
was a linle lighter and more comfonable."
Chi-chi designers from Prada
10 Chane( have joined the khaki
brigade. In April, Calvin Klein
introduced a line of bed linens
known as the Khaki Collection.
That's a far cry from its roots.
Khaki. an ancient Hindu word
which means dust-colored or having a yellow-brown hue, has been
around since at leaSt 1848. ·
"British troops stationed in
India adopted the color after
noticing their all-white uniforms
became too dusty," says Peggy
Statzer, the owner of Khakis, a
Hyde Park, Ohio, shop that carries
a variety of khaki clothing for
men and women. "They started
wearing uniforms that were dust·
colored for practical reasons, so
the dust wouldn't be quite so
noticeable. True khaki is a color."
Shades vary, however, from
light tan to dark taupe.
.New fabrics, such as brushed
conon twills, and wrinkle-resistant technology have contributed

The Sentinel News HotUne

992·2156
TUPPERS PLAINS FIRE DEPT.
WILL BE HAVING A
FUND DRIVE SATURDAY THE
8TH OF AUGUST
STARTING AT 9 A.M.
FIRE PERSONNEL WILL BE
GOING .DOOR TO DOO~ AS
·awAYS• .
'. ft~ANK YOU FOB.YOUR.

'SUPPORT.

..,.
~\
.

+

..·

- ·~ .

'

t

r

KHAKIS SWING - The Gap commericial has taken the
nation's attention In promoting khakis.
to a new breed of khaki . while the
latest silhouenes have surpassed
the usual flat front and simple
legs.
_
Today's khakis are pleated,
baggy, boot cut, low slung and
hip-hugging. and can be matched
with just about any kind of top.
Khakis also arc shorts, sk irts,

vests. jumpers and suits.
Statzer believes khaki's comfori and versatility arc what
attracts most wearers.
"You can take khaki pants and
pair them with a coat and tic and
take that same pair of pants and it
works with a casual knit shi n."
she says.

NEED TO REPLACE YOUR
_OLD SUNGLASSES?
Our
Complete
Stock Of
Sunglasses

~PRICE

.-

�Thursday, August

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

By CHRIS SWINGLE
nutnbon, prescription and illegal
Roche1ter Democrat and drugs and radiation.
Chronicle
Once the child is born, parents
You can increase brain power by and caregivers can best help a
drinking eight, 8-ounce glasses of child's developing brain by talking a
water a day, rubbing the skin lot, reading aloud, playing classical
between your toes, chewing pepper· music daily and turning off the tele:ninl gum and coming up with vision. Hearing music and language
wrong answers.
changes lhe structure of a young
Research says so.
child's brain, impm ving the abtlity
Water purifies the blood going to lo learn math, reading and other
your brain, which has more fluid skills later.
than any other organ. Tile foot masSimilarly. if parts of the brain
sage nearly triples blood flow to the aren't used, they die. When
brain . The scent of peppermint researchers covered a baby chick's
increases positive brain waves for or kitten's eye when brain conneclearning. And testing different ideas tions should fonn for vision, the
- some of them incorrect - builds chick remained blind in ihat eye
the brain far more lhan knowing the even after it was uncovered.
right answer.
Barnes also shared with 1he group
While brain research is still in its these points based on brain research:
infancy, it clearly shows that the first
- Children should stan music
three years of life are crilical. says lessons between lhe ages of 3 and
early childhood educator Fred 10.
Barnes. who teaches at the State
- Foreign languages should be
University Agricultural and Techni· learned young. long before middle
cal College at Cobleskill, N.Y.
school or high school classes.
Between the founh and seventh
- Keep stringing beads, clay and
months of pregnancy. for example. other manipulatives available . Small
15 million brain cells develop every muscle uercise stimulates brain
minute . Tremendous damage can be growth.
caused by alcohol. tobacco. poor
-Adults should u!!derstand that

Public Notice

Town::C..::.C:ounty.
--~-~
Ohio. llaOinnlng It I iltlkl Ohio.
~~~-·
children have different learning bearing South 12·1/2 Shlflll,llolgl
County. Ohio
styles. How ani Gardner of Harvard 1
~~OC:: 1~ (7) 23, 30, (8) u te
Graduale College of Education out- : dllmNr; 111enea South t •
lines seven "multiple intelli- 112 deg,... Wut 172 feet;
Public Nollce
gences," including spatial, linguistic thane• South 14 ·1/2
and mUsical.
degraea Waat 73 IIIIi SM1111'1 Sill or Alii Eallll
lllance North 40 d't:-:lt 1
The St1111 of Ohio,
- Kids need enough sleep to let wut 52 feet; 111ance
Mtlga County,
their brain review what they've 18 112 deg-• Eeat 172 The B1111t of New York, •
learned. Most adolescents, in norlic- fill; thanee South 71·112 Truiltll, under lhl Pooling
1
Eaet 115 l11t to and Servicing
Ag1111M111
ular, are sleep-deprived·, !hey r-aren't dplact
egr.., of
beginning. dated •• of ...
,..y 31, 1.....
.....,,
biologically programmed to awaken containing one half acre.
S.rln 11188-B
early.
Alao lila following In uld VI.
- Emotion is closely tied to Townehlp and Saellon. G.-gory A. Bush, aka,
learning. Adults should help toddlers
atlhl
~J=· at 11·•
and preschoolers learn to deal with owned by aeld
In purauanee of an Order
their emotions and get along "ith Jacobi; lhlnee South 18
of Sale In the abovllllllllld
others. Barnes, who founded and degr111 weal 18 feet ; Ktlon. I win olhr lor Mil II
continues to spend five hours a day thence South 24 1/4 public auction, It the front
degrtll Eaet 112 fell; IIIPI of the courthouH In
at an on-campus child care center, thence South 78
""-rov, In the above
says even 2-year-olds can start Eut 204 feet; thenee
named County, on frldiY,
learning to work out conflicts peace- 2t 114 dig,... Elat 8111eet; the 28th day of Auguet,
fully with other children.
to a eofl_pll,_; lhlnCI 11118, 11110:30 o'clock e.m.,
- 128 the following dncribld,...
- Kids, like adults, should be North 53 degrne E•eollta TO BE SOLD AS A
lnt; thence North 57 1/4
encouraged to drink lots of water- dogrell Ellt 115 feet; UNIT, eltuated In the
not juices or carbonated drinks. By thence North 11·1/4 deg-. Townehlp of Lebanon,
the time you're thirsty, you 're Eaet4411111; thence North 8 County of Mtlga and Stele
already dehydrated, which is haz· 1/4 degree• Eaot 81 '"'; of Ohio lcMrit:
thence North 1 1/8 dig,... l'8rCII No. t: Being a pert of
ardous to the brain.
Eaat 70 1111 10 a cave; Section 27, Town 3, Range
"A glass of water, in five min- thence South 15 degrtll 11, of the Ohio Company'•
utcs, will brio! down the an•iety wnt zos fill; lhlnee North Purcheaa; Baolnlllng at the
ievel of a child." says Barnes.
15 degr- WHI 118 fnt; North1111 corner of • llvt
thence South It 1/4 acre iotlormerty owned by
d1gr111 Weal 56 1..1; John Morgan, ..,., by David
thence South 42 1/2 Jonta; lhlnCI South to the
~ Wtll 311 IIIII to uld
Bouthllll corner of uld
Jacoba Northoeet comer live acre lot; thence well
thence along hie Eaat Una lour IIIII to 1 atakl; lhlncl
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Fos- SOUth 18 112 dlgrno WMI · SOUth to Long Run; lhlncl
ter, W. Va. speaker.
112 1111; thence along hie following lhl moanclerlnge
Una South 114- 1/2 d'tr- of uld run to llndll owned
73 feet; thlnce North by Jonn; thenea following
CHESTER - Hymn sin)!, Satur- Well
d't,... WMI 52 IMI to the llld lint _ , to lht
day. 7 p.m. Harvest Outreach 40
tho place of blglnnlng, place of beginning,
Church. Riebel Road. Chester. containing 2 and 13/100 containing twelve acrae,
"Higher Calling" to sing.
IICfH, mort or len.
men or Ina.
Reltrence Dood; Volume
Parcel No. 2: Alao the
SUNDAY
28, Page 357; Volume 22, following pnml- lltUIIId
POMEROY - Henderson fami· Page 809, Melge County In the ume s.cuon. Being
of 1 live acre lot eold by
ly reunion, Sunday, Mndern Wood- Olllclll Record•
Auditor'• Parcel No. 14· Mary Jane Slttllr and John
men Hall, Burlingham.
00335
Settlar to David Jon11, and
Said reel eetate waa containing one hall acre,
mora or teaa. Beginning 11
apprallld 111 S27 ,1100.00.
Salt of uld raal talllle to the northlllll corntr of aakl
bl lor not 1111 than two- live acre lot n"r 1 poplar
thlrda (213) the alorauld tree; thence WHI to the
apprallld velue. C11h In road; tlt1DC4 following the
hand on dell of aall.
road to whara the line
Said 1111 11 aublacl to comet lo the road; thlnce
approval by the Common North to the place of
Plea• Court, Melga County, blgloolng.
Parco! No. 3: The
30 Announcement•
following real ntltt
altuatld In the Townahlp of
Lebanon, County of Melga,
and Stell of Ohio: Being In
Section No. 27. Town No. 3,
and Range No. 11;
Beginning on the North line
of uld Section It a point
160 rode E11t of the
Northw11t comer: thence
Will following Hid North

::I::V";:

:::=,n1o1.

Community CalendaF----THURSDAY
POMEROY- AA and AI-Anon,
Thursday, 7 p.m. Sacred Hean
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
Au•iliary 9053 VFW, Thursday,
7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters, Thursday. 7:45p.m. Meigs
High School. All parents and ath·
letcs asked to attend. Plans to be
made for upcoming football season.

REEDSVILLE - Gun shoot,
Forked Run Sportsman Club, 7 p.m.
Friday.

SATURDAY
POMEROY
Burlingham
Modem Woodmen, Saturday, 7 p.m.
meeting. Door prizes, refreshments.
RACINE - Red Brush Church
of Christ. Saturday 7 p.m.; Sunday

DR. DANmL R. TRENT, D.O.
FAMILY PRACTICE

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 Thursday night, home
of Osie Foil rod.

NEW HAVEN, WEST VIRGINIA

MIDDLEPORT - Riverbend
Community Chorus practice, 6:30
p.m.. at Riverbend Arts Council.

ANNOUNCES THE QOSING
OF HIS PUCTICE AT

POMEROY PERS/PERI.
Thursday, noon luncheon. Senior
Citizens Cenler. William E. Coven.
Columbus. to speak.

138 MAIN STREET,
NEW HAVEN
WEST VIRGINIA

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE - End of summer
youth bash. featuring Christian rock
group. "The Crusaders" Friday, 8
p.m to 8 a.m. for youths. 12 to 18.
Take pillow and sleeping bag for..
lock-in.

Forked Run
Sportsman
Club Gun
Shoot

EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 28, 1998

POMEROY - Junior and Rita
White at keyboard and bass at
Senior Citizens Center, Thursday.
5:30p.m. No admission.

Fri. lug. 7th
7pm

WILL ASSUME THIS PRAala AND PROVID£
.... CONTINUED PHYSICIAN CARE AFTER THIS DATL

_______ _

Card of Thanks·

family of Sharon
Bailey would Uke
thank everyone

card's, flowers ll
during this time
OIU Joss. ·11 ~
rlmakes a family feel
co ba~ &amp;lends

"Yo11 m11st fiavt bun a

beautiful baby"
Srt fier today and wisfi
lier .J{appy 'Birtfiday
Sweet "r6"

Athletic Shoe Sale...

s10 OFF Mens/Womens up to $79.95

s1 S OFF Mens/Womens from $80 to 99.95
s20 OFF Mens From $1 oo and up
20o/o Off All Childrens Athletic Shoes
e

Buy2

Nike T·Shirts,

Buy a school

Sale
Room
1/2 off

gym bag, get

The

Gel.. J1c'1eon llalgelollrd

of AlcOhol, Drug Addiction
end Mantel Neallh Servlcll
II eppolntod by lhl Dtractor
of the Ohio Department of
Mental
Health
(4
..,apol-). lhl Dtractor of
the Ohio Department of
AloDhol ancl Dnot • J I Uan
S.illmf4 q;A I 111 and
the oounty c:o.-11 sla 111 a

Caps
Gym Bags
Backhcks

Public~ Gellte-JeckiOI'I Malge
01110, Till Flmllre'a Bank
lloml of Alcohol, Drug
and Saving• Compeny.
Addlotlon
P,rldng lot, to Nil lor Cllh
. and Mental Hlllllh Slt8antlcla1c• to following collltlnll:
11188 Knellki4-Whllltr
53 P.O.
"""'''"
Line
llox 514
JKALFIB13T851213
Gllllpolla, OH 41831
The Farmtra Bank and
Phone: au ue 3022
Savlnge
Company,
The Board atrlvea te POIIIIfOY, Ohio, ra11rww the
maintain a llalanootl rlgltt to bltllllltll ..... and
reprnentatlen
ef to wlt..,I'IIW the ,...,.
community 1111..
tlll4l OOIIIIINI prior te 1111.
WIICOIIIII llllntrlty Or l'urtllw, The , _ Bini!
11111111 applcand lavlngl OOIIIPiny

11.,,

In Gallla, olackaon anll
1111111 Countlea (1 0 (8)6, 7, Ute
appolnteee). Currently,
thlrl II one VIDIMJ to bl

...., _ lhl right to rajlct
.anv or Ill bide au~ t 1aa1

ftllltl by I llelp County

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

CoitiiiiiiGP\IMJC N011Ca
-otllllon n 11 In, with no
JIIIPGIIIIII..,._ .
ltNQIII'J11V-!I!.,. .._... _ _ 1hll expr111
or IMplied
IIICIIvNulll lntaniiM tn
..,. ,. ·--• •·-·
blfng conlfdlrad lor IIIII 011 llturdey, AufUII 8,
for further lnlonllttlon,
appointment can do eo 11y 1-.11110:00 e.m., • iJIUIIIIO
·-'loltl
w11 lllhlld
II ttl Will contact 'lim at • • •·
;:"ling an .,....
on 1111
leoantl
(I)S,"e, Ute
11.....,
llonlld A. Adklnl,
Eucvtlw Dlrtclor

,_oy,

~

South Una of linda dlldod

-=
-

Sale
Excludes

GARAGE SALE
Sat. Aug. 8
1 mile out St. Rt. 325 Baby
clothes, toys, kids clothes 2T,
3T, 12" bicycle. air cond., TV,
and lots more

Football
Shoes

Dazzling Dolls Baton Corps
now accepting new students
ages 3 thru 12
Contact: Nan Swartz

740-992-3796
Mizway Tavern
Fri. Aug. 7th Karaoke
Sat. Aug. 8th
Uve Band Bad Habit

Public..Notice
. IN THt! COMMON PLIAI
COURT OF IIIIJGI
COUNTY, OHIO
The F.,_ .....
Savlnge Company

$2.00 cover

Plaintiff,
VI.
Clndy~lka

Miilies Restaurant
now accepting
applications for prep
cooks, grill cooks, &amp;
waitresses. For more
information please
contact
Millie's Restaurant,
Bradbury Rd.,
OH

Cindy II. fllcl11111, at Ill.

Dellildeo...,
c..No.•t:vott
LIGAL N011Ca
IHERII'I"8IALI OP
RIALUTAT!

.... 28, , . . A.D~ 011 the
lrolll atepl of lhl ......

oounly Courthouae,
Pocu•oft
Ohio, ·1he
following delorlbld real

....,

Tlti!OIIo•lng real 111111111
.--1n1ecaon
2, Ren1• 13, siti1iellu1ry I

..

Services

SPECIAL SA I.E

• Bobcat Service
• Concrete
• Masonry
• General
Commercial and
ResldanOal
•
FrH &amp;tlnutea
No Job Too Sm.~ll
Brian Morrison
71

LowRatal)

WICKS
HAULING
Umestone,
GI'IYII, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

St,.Rt. 7

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

$195.00
FREE LowE/Argon Glass
FREE Installation
FREE Estimates
*Any size up to 93 united inches in

existing wood.double hung opening.

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
74()..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 Weekday•
9:00-12:00 Saturday
4121/Mtfn

•Options available

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
110 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291·5600
LIMITED TIME OffERIII

Custom Homes

On site custom.sawing
with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill
WV Call
(304) 273-5860
Ohio Call
(740) 985-4297

3rd

Annual~~~

"!!!!
--

Located at
l\leigs County Fairgrounds

lntcrseclion US 33 &amp; SR 7 (northwest corner)

September 19th &amp; 20th
Saturday 10-6 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10-5 p.m.
For more information call 992-6676

a
-

a
7/3011fn

(left
Computer Pertormance Upgrldea

Your PC to a Pentium CPU and MB Today.
740-992·1135 for a Price Quote!
Frognet Internet Sign-up point for
...

Meigs and Mason Counties

* JULY SPECIALS *
•River Run Dog Food ...... $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ......... $9.75100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed .......$1 0.25 100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Ufe Data
Hours: M-F 8-5:30; Sat. 8·12:00 Noon

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
985·3831
35537 St. Rt. .7 North ·

1

ROBERT BISSELL

COISTIIUCnON

•NawHomes

360° Communications

"-.

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

TRPPRn

"EaJy Ot,er lire

Pfrorrc

•

Barrk Finariciug"

Air Conditioners .as Low As 128 a mgnth
Heat Pumps As Low As 138 a mgpth
*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7122/tfn

8ANKRU.PTCY can 1111eve • c1111tor of
11-.ntlal olillglllonsllld llr&amp;IIJIII fllr distribUtiOn
of MMia. DlbiDra In blnkn.tptcy may keep
•analllpt" propetty for hll or her f*101181 Ull.
11118 111y lnCtutll a car, 1 IIOuM, clothla, lind
11o1 ululd goode.
·

For lnfonnltlon Rlgardlng Ban1truptcy contact:

{740) 512-5025 Athtna, Ohio .

j

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-764~

(No Sunday Calls)

~!A
..... ,.., f!f::- ~ ~ ..... ,;;,:.. ~~ ~ N~fli_ll, fil!a; fli~'- ::tl.!11 11_[! 1 ~~ 1 1 \il~t_, ~~ 1 . LJ..1 ~ 1 fJt 11.· t1L11 . (}l,!.11

LINDA'S
PAINTING
Take the pain out of
painting. and lei me
do it for you.
. Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
Free Estimales
7124/Vt 1mo. pd.

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding •Solllt
•Faacla
•Seamleas.Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Dock•
•Blown lnaulatlon
•Garages •Daeke
241124 Pole Building
alerting at $5885

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing a.
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
(614) 992-3838
12/11/11n

I

I

f!f':)

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio

~

iii'•,

Phone 740-992-3987
Free Estimates
Owner: John Dean

ill":

~
1/1:-.
111"

•Room Additions
•New Ga,rages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior • Exterior
Painting
.
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio -

CARPET

PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or

740·6~8~72:.! lin

INCOME LIMITS HAVE CHAN EDII
j PEt:ISON - $14,200
2 PERSONS- $16,200
AND AGE LIMITS HAVE CHANGED
IF YOI.l ARE 50 YEARS OLD OR HANDICAPPED,
YOU MAY QUAUJ=Y FOR

'I'HE MAPI.ES
100 Memorial Drive East
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your Income.
Lovlly apartmenta featuring wall·to-WIII
carpeting, with all appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAI,D
MUST BE 50 YEARS OF AGE OR
HANDICAPPED.
MUST MEET HUD ELIGIBIUTY REQUIJ'IEMENTS
fOR FURTHER DETAILS
CALL (740) 992·7022
Equal Housing Opportunity

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

.._

"Rill

lnfllltry"
*Roof Coatings
i 1
*VInyl Sk rt ng
"Water Heater•
*Door/Windows
*Eiectrlc/Piumlllng
Suppllel
"FFbtfllllll &amp; Wood
.
Steps
1

m.co&amp;lnt tirk:e•

BtnneH... Supply
740 hi •ue
13t1 Sifford
School Rd.

Yard Sale! Green Terrace In
Centenary. August 7,98 . Someth·
ing for E\leryone! 153 Green Ter·
race Court

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy
34009 Pine Grove Ad ., Aug . 9th,
10th &amp; 11th, flt"St In 3 ysafl.

All Yonl S.le1 lluo1 Bo Pold In
Advance. Dotdllne: 1:00pm thl
dly before the ed 11 to run,
Sund1y a Mondly ldltlon·

1:OOpm Ftldoy.
Big 5 Family Garage Sale. August

40

Giveaway

2 waShing machines , need re pairs. 304-675--4~7 .

4 Beagle P'-lllliOS. 740-992·2624.
8 wk old puppy, part Retriever. all

01&lt;1. 74().4.46-3734.

Queen Size waterbed. With Pad ,
Drawers, Mal!ress. line &amp; Heater.
In Fair Condition. 74"Q-441 - 1266
To give a.way· two wonderful fe·
male housecats. 3· 1f2 years old.
spayed. dectawed (front paws).
updated vaccinations . Child is !t·
tergic to tnesa !amity pets . Need
home Immediately!! Take one or
both, gentle with ch11dren. call anytime 740-992-4171 &amp; leave mes-

sage.
Two 5wk old kiltehs. 304 -675·
6116.
Two lemale puppies, half Airedale,
halt JaD. Russell. 740-667-3090
Yellow Lab, ma le . 2 112vrs . old ,
trl8ndly, good home only, preler
country home. 304·862·3325.
Young Beagle Male . 740-446-

2660.

60

Lost and Found

Found : Meigs H S class ring year
2000. found in Walmart . 740-367·
7734. leave message.
Lost 8·3-98 , 3 young sheep, Au·
ttand \ICintty, 740-742·3409.
Lost : pony. red wlblack mane and
tail, wearing" blue halter. Hysell
Run/Bailey Run vicinity. 740·992·

6650.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Household. Collectables, CIQthing,
Linwood Orrve Off lake Oriva. Rio

Grande. Augusl 7th. &amp; Blh. 9·5.
AU. YenS Slltet Must
Be Pilei In Advlnce.
QfAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day betore the ed
II to run. Sunday
.clition • 2:00 p.m.

Ftldoy. Nondoy odlllon
. 10:00 o.m. Sotutday.
Baby girl clothes. swing , playpen ,
high chair. bassinet, maternity
clothes . excellent conoilion . t 535
Adamsville Ad . oil 588 . Aug. 6.7 ,

&amp;8.

DB Garage Sale: 817th, ll/81h. Rio

Big sale · Pentecostal Church
basement 673 South ltd, Middleport , Oh . August 6· 7, 9am·4pm ,
Saturday 8th, 9-noon. School and

baby clothes,

lots of mise

Friday, 133 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy, grandfather clock, deep
freeze. voutn bed, office chair, Ice
cream chairs. carpeting , antique
stand, chandelier. blood pressure
kit, much more.
Moving sale, 245 Union Ave .,

Ap1.1 t. Thursday. Ftiday. 9·5.

Racine . Yard aoo bake sale, Saturday. August 8th, lOam. Between
Main and Vine Streets on Broad·
way, by Ladies Circle F.F.G.C.
Yard sale at the Chester Wells
residence . Long Bottom , Oh , Frl·

day 7th. 5atllrday 6th.9-5.

143, 4 112 miles, turn left on Smith
Run Rd ., Aug . 6th-81h, girls 1-6
clothing.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
2-family yard sale. 9th Street , Fri ·
csay 9am-Jpm. Pnces negotiable!
2814 Meadowbrook Drive. August 7&amp;8, Sam-5pm. microwave ,
golf-eQuipment.
wood/doors .
bathroom fixtures . ceiling lights ,

clolhif'9. drapes.

3-famlly yard sale, 2602 Mt . Ver·
~n A\18 . Sat . A.ug .8, kids
clothes-an sizes.

Aug eth-Blh 11 Blalne Line Gatllpotls Ferry. Waterbed , clothing
toys &amp; tots of misc.
Backyard Sale -August 7th 3408
Franklin Ave . Fri. 10-4 Cral1
items . girls clothes . waterbed .
Iris OOibs.

New· &amp; Used Items 6 Mil es Out

Jerry's Run Ad. Apple Gr0'19. Aug
4th thru Aug 8th. 9-?
Pre Yard Sale: Soft .side twin wa·
ter bed. steel door , collectors
plates , microwave carl. 304-675-

6036

SaL Aug B. Bam·4pm. 2304
washington Ave ., furniture &amp;

househOld goods.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
l ull time auctioneer. complete
auction
service .
Licen sed
1!166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia . 304 ·

773-5785 Or 304·773-5447

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
GaNipolls, Ohio 740-379-2720.

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Silver AI]JJ Gold Coins, Prootsets,
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings. Pre -1930 U.S . Currency.
Sterling . Etc . Acquisitions Jewelry
. M T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue . Gallipolis. 74o-446-2842.
Antiques . top prices paid. Riverine Antiques. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ru ss Moore owner, 740 · 992 ·

2526.

&amp; clean used furniture.
one piece or complete
'""'•"'" , Osby Martin , 740-

992·6576.

Clean Lata Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buic.k Pontiac . 1900 East ern Avenue, Galllpo~s

&amp; 0 Auto Parts·. Buymg
wreciled or salvaged vehicles .

ko Hull , Fire King Anchor , Hock·
lng. Others, 50's End. Collee Ta·
bles, Whatnots, More!
·

304·773-5033.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

La rge Yard Sate : Aug 7th . 8th .
9 :00 - 5:0Q Childrens Clo thes ,

Toys. 385 Gage Road. PalriOt. t/2

MileOfYAt.141 .

110

1

Help Wanted

Ottlilpolll, OH
- · ~.., urn..... ~L---~~~~--~ - a:mM~·~'------------

7pm.

Easy Work I Excellent Pay! As semble PrOducts At Home. Ca ll
Toll Free 1· 800 ·467 · 5566 Ext.
12170.
Experienced Timber Cuner Need-

od 74().£82. 731 B

Fast. Growing, &amp; Friendly At ·
mosphere. All Shilts . Will Train,
Send ~esponse To : CLA 729-69 ,
c/o Pomeroy Daily Sentinel, P.O.

Box 729. Pomarov. OH 45769.

Gama Meigs Community Action Is
seeking a lun lime agency Plan·
ner/Grant Writer. Background in
grant writing and non-profit operation&amp;. College Degree, excellent
wrbaf and written skills required.
Excellent benefit package .• Salary
commensurate with exper ience .
Send Aesumee with 3 refrences

to GMCAA. Box 272. Cheshire.

On . 45620 by 6/13198. GMCAA is
an equal opportU1ity employer.
Health Recovery Services. Inc. Is
A JCAHO Accred ited Organization Prov iding Health Care In
Soulheastern Ohio.

PROGRAM DIRECTOR· Full·
Time Regular Vacancy Available
At Aural Women Recovery Program . Master's Level Preferred
But Experlenc8 And Education In
Chem ical Dependency And
Women's Issues Weighted . Must
Have Strong SupervjsQry And
Managemenl Background. Skilled
In Budgeting, Human Resources ,
Programming . Planning And Continuous Qua lity Improvement.
Knowledge 01 Treatment And Re·
covary Strategies For Women
And Families Essential For Success . Requ ires Strong Leadership And Ovnamic Teaching
Capabilities . Will Be Required To

BoOn Call.

Please Respond With Letter Of
Interest, Resume And Three Pro fessional Reference$ To Human
Rer;ourees Manager, Health R•covery Services. Inc. tOO Hospital Dn ve. Athens . OH 45701 .

EOE.

Help wanted : Duke Cleane rs ol
Gallipo lis. OH . Apply In person '
from 12pm-3pm.

1·000-484·6800 Code 5-452

LIBRARY CLERK - Meig s Co .
Public library. Part-lime, mainly
evenings and weekends . library
ex"erience preferred . Apply bA ·
fore Aug . 9. at the Pomeroy, Mid ·
dlepon or Racine Ubraries.
Licensed Social Work For 116
Bed Skilled Facilttv In Gallipolis,
Ohio. Salary Commensurate With
Experience. Send Resume To Mr.
Jerry McCoy. Administrator· Ar - ·
bors At Gallipolis. 170 Pinecrest

Drive. Gallipolis. OH 45631 EOE.

LPN Part Time Must Be Available
For All Shilts. Ohio License R~ ­
quired . Contact Dorothy Harper,
740-446-7148

Needed: Energetic, Kind and ded·
tcated STNA'S (par1-11me) tnleresred in caring lor people tn our
specialized Alzheimers unil. Day

·sitive to the needs ol the elderly
and those with Alzheime rs and
dementia . Please apply in person
at Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
311 Bu ckridge Rd .. Bidweii.Ohio

456!4

Optomet1lc Assistant , part -time ,
m ini mum wage . no experience
necessa ry. wi ll trai n Send re sume to : Po1nt Pleasa nt Eye Cli·
nic . 201 · A Sixth Street. Point
Pleasanl. WV 25550
Part·t 1me Employee Th at Could
Work Into Fu ll-lime . PC Expenence Necessary. Gra ph iCS Helplui . Poinl Pleasant Pnnl!ng . 304-

675-3952.

Person For Full tPafl Time Posi·
lion Of Counter Sales And Truck
Driver . Electrical Experie nce A
Plus But Not Necessary. Apply In
Pe rson At W.Va . Ele cHic Supply
Co. 1885 Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis.

OH EOE MNIF/0.

Rewarding and challenging positions available for LPN 's wishing
to work with the dementia population in a secured Alzhe1mers unit
(part-time . all shills) . Mus t be
sensit1vt to the needs ol the elderly. Please apply In person at
the Scenic Hills Nursing c enter.
311 Buckridge Rd . ,b Bidwell . On.

45et4

Taking care o f elderly i n private
adult group home , call 740-992-

timt and pan Hmt positions. Paid

vacation and hoUdays. If lnte~esl ·
ed , please appty in person Mon·
day thropgh Friday. 9am-4pm or
write Atth : Georgie Boao. R. N..
D.O.N., 200 South Ritchie Ave. ,
Ravenswood , WV 26 164 , 304-

-

"""'""""
.,....IIIIDOol*

•

5023
TRUCK DRIVERS NEEDED
JCJ rRUCKING,INC.

.

"

HIRING tN
YOURAREA

IS

WE~FER :
OTA And Regional Work Available . Competitive Pay. Paid
Week ly, Di rect Deposit Avail ..
Heallh Insurance &amp; Vacation
Pay, Lilt Model Conventional&amp;,

AsslgMd Trac1ors

NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSAIIY

·•

' .

Frldoy Aug. 7th From 8 P.M. ·8
P.M. I SoiUrdly Aug. 81h From 9 ..
A.M. ·I 1 A.M. Meet Our Compo.
. ny Alp At
. COIIFOIII"III
IQ5 E.llllln
St. .
..Jldtlon.
OH 4t!e40
Fol More Info., Experlloicld Dott-

....,_On..._
lnex·
CIN Totl-frlt z• Hoin, 1....: I I":~·~~ca=n~d,..oo-a21-4211.
DriVIrl Ctll 1-100;
....-a.

.:

and evening shills . Must be sen-

Att.ntlon Certified Nur~lng A ...

Moving Sill: 11e1n /Shine, Frldor.

Sttlriay. A4oaull 8111, 7111, 11-2,
Ator Of ao Ceder, Furniture,
Toole, Elte1rlc: Mulclier, HowH·
R~~~~·· 8Fih~~7~f"d.~r

7463.

111t1nte: Ravenswood Village Is
now accoptif'9 oppllcalloo&amp; tor 1\JH

Moving Yatd Sale: 442 First Ave·
Saturday Auoust 8th Only. Rain
Does Not Cancel. Furniture. Lon- . 273·9385. EOE. Gtnosls/Eidor·
gaberger. Deluxe, Exorcise Bike. catt1aciily.
Lawn" Mower, Patio Furniture .
Avon $8·$20/Ht No Ooot To
Portable Basketball Hoop IHurty).
Wom1n1 Designer Clothes,
Coo&lt;, Elly Cesh. Fun 1·60().3.51·
Mona Outoner Cloohea, Boyo
Clothing. Chrlsrmos Decor. 9 Ft. -~
Chrla1mll Trta. Wrottha, Saga Avon • Sl ·120 /Hr. No Door To
Syatem, Gtuswott. Precioul Mo. Door. 'llonUHI" 1-800-2N.0139
menta. Solos Complott Body El· ~::,-~•luxe Welghl Sit. PIO- Avon
NHded:
nue. Galltpolts ln The Hou&amp;e Sale

Caregiver For Elderly Women
Room . Board. Salary, 740· 367-

Immediate janitorial help needed .
Big yard sate on Millstone Road,
3 miles_. Thurs.&amp; Fri . Foflow signs.

J

Moving Sale1 Furniture. Cloihlng.
Books And Much Morel 2000
Chesrnut. Fflday &amp; Satutday 9:00·

sago

-Drummer and Sax Player needs
Guitarist and Bass Player, wide •
range ol Music . 1-740·698·6212
John Peck . DriJIM'"I9r

Grande North 325, Tycoon Lalla .

SiQns. 733 Eagle Road. 9·5. Bien·

Babysil!er needed, part-time, all
shift&amp; . 304-882-3624 leave mea·

Big moving sate - August 6-7.
Baum Addition

Desk. table saw. cloths. toys. 132 90 Wanted to Buy
Merry Rd . Rodney Village II. Rod· _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:.__

~ Plus Familie s: Bik es. Boo ks.

25401 or call304-675·1324 EOE.

Caretaker needed : man &amp; wile ,
rent lree . Ward's Mountain Re treat. 304·576-2916 between 5·

2 Family 7-8 Rain or Shine 9·5.
ney.

ACTION YOUTH CARE. tNC. Is

5-7. 9am-? t6 South Third St ..
Mason . Beanie Babies, Lot s of
Clothing. Furnllure, Toys. Lots of
misc.

Three !amity garage salt· July 6·
7. Grace Weber residence. Reedsville across from Belleville
Locks and Dam . C lothi ng , !OYS .
variety of Items. 9am-?

9:()().5:30.

Areas I Shirley ·

seeking a Child &amp; Family Thera Pt&amp;l lor our Mason County (Pt.
Pleasant) office . Applicant must
be a Masters level Social Worker. Counselor or Psychologist
eligible to be licensed . At least
one yeiSir o f uperience In indi·
vidual and family therapy. Salary
range is $25 to $27 ,000. Closing
date Is Aug . 7. For more inlormatlon. wrlte Action Youth Care, Inc.
217 Stxth St . Pt. Pleasant, WV

30 Announcements
New To 'IOU Thrift Shoooe
9 West Stimson, Athens
74().592·!842
Quallly clothing and household
Items. $1 .00 bag sate every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

Sat.

large variety items.

Grande. 9-5 Mon :Jrd lhur sat am.

8434.

Lots Of School Clothes Ana
M~ .• B1 Pine Street, Frl, Sat, 8·?

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

AVON I All

Saturday, August 8. 35655 Rock·
springs Rd . 9am-3pm. Clothes
and vaious household Items.

Girls One ·On ·One 1·900·438·
6773 EKt.8459. $3.99 Per Min .
Must Be tB Yrs. Satv·U6t9·6-45·

(anytime) or 304-1!175-595!5 after

8pm. Wod thru

Spears. 304-675-!429.

Need Someone To Talk To? Live

. LONELYUI

be at Ntast 18. Call 61 ...09:2-6387

Six Family Garage Salt-1262
Neighborhood Rd . Corner Le ·

Sega Saturn . games, large women's clothes, dishwasner. Musehold Items. rain delay to August
13th, 14th, 740-992·1043.

~~· ~~~~~~~~~~ L.----.....;'::::01~2~:-=".J

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Personals

245-5014.

R L HOLLON

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
fill' Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Sidin~
.lfl:...
Commercial &amp; Residential
\
liE~ 27 yrs. exp. .
Licensed &amp; Insured

N:-.

5126/tln

Joseph Jacks

TRUCKING

1

949-2168

Adorable Killens , 2 Bla ck &amp;
White. 2 Calico. 2 Grey, 6 Weeks

~

.f.!' '

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ShOts. 740-742·3062.

f.\' JD CONSTRUCTION

·~

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

&lt;Complete

Room Additions • Roofing

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Free Estimates

STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
Backhoe, Dozer and
Utility Work,
New Construction,
Remodeling
992-7943
7131981 mo.

. Garages • Replacement Windows

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE '*'
113 W.
ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps

7fl7198 1 mo pd

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

CELLULAR PHONES

"Wirere Qrralily Doe1ir'1 Coli More"

•Garagea

Chester

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Located In lhe Insurance Plus Building
across from the Court House.

Burglar, Fire, ClosedCircuit TV's

740-992~2068

"Your One Stop Computer Shop"
Custom Built Computers, Pre-Owned Computers, ·
Networks, Modtms, Hard Dri-ves, Printers, Upgrade

WV

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

740-667-3513

Howard L Wrltesel

Andrew Wlf l ~ms Please Can 74G-

Jacks Roofing
&amp;Construction

1-888-667-3513

~~~•e B~~!~w::.~XP~~\J\
trn.f
Tl

Joe Wilson
(614) 992.:.t277

Racine, Ohio

005

304-882-3336

Tradilional or Cuslom Design
Funerals, Weddings, Parties and lnlerior Design
wilh exlensive experience since 1989

AOMISSI~/.J-a..~IJ~"&lt;OM~SSH)N

~~-

New Haven,

Flowers By Craig

FREI:

299 Third Street

JAMES

SERVICE

For A Fresh Look

mo pd

baskets, wooden
items
Ope• 11 cnn • 6 pm

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ALARM

Call

7!2fl/98 I

~

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

SHOP
Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone • Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonsble Rstes
Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138

Remodeling

~
"Build Tour Dream"

ONE MAN BAND

CRAFTY LADIES

SAYRE
TRUCKING

M&amp;J

(OFFER GOOD THROUGH AUGUST 31m

Slate Aou18 554.

740·367·5040

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

"FACTORY DIRECT"

614·992·5479

Coltractors, 1..

repair on any make!"

~

Call 614·843·5426

FREE

•Residential
•Commercial
•FREE Estimates
·No Job Too Small
•Christian Owned &amp;
Operated
·Gilt Certlllcatea
Available

• Washers
• Hot Water Heater
• Ranges
• Freezers
• Refrigerators
• Dishwashers
• Dryer
Call Ken Young
(740) 985-3551
~117/lllmo.

2ND

(740) 985-3948
(UmeStont-

~Neetl

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

e\
.:,

ATOUCH OF CLASS
CLEANING SERVIa

THE APPLIANCE MAN

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

:,\,

Wlllllm Safr1nek. Attorney At Llw

.

LOHG·s
COHSTROCTIO"

·

Business

(Cut Out lor Future Dlacount)

'7\ ··- 'I 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Dependable Part Time Cook
Needed for Successful
Meigs County Business
Evenings &amp; Weekdays
25·30 hours a week
Send resume to:

tent ial. No exp necessary, must

Bio Yard Salt: Saturday. Sunday.

(218) 3111).7200
FIX: (218) 311CH210
(7) 23, 30, (8) Ute
- ·--Public Notice

Help Wanted

girl. $500(•)ptr will&lt; earning po-

Two Miles From Cheshire . On

Ct.wland, OH 44122

by John F. Torrence and
Ellnbeth Torrence to
Gwenllyan Jonea by dlld
dated No"'mblr II, 11182;
following lhl lOUth
line or llld Ianda dlldad by shlfl!i·, hla of Alai Eiltlll
Torrence to uld Jon11
The Stall of Ohio,
about Eighty rode to the
Mtlga County,
Soulheelll comer thereof; FT Mortgage Companlll,
thenct North parallel with dbl, FT811ortgage SeMcaa
the Weal line ol aald ... auceuaor by merger to
Section to the place of MNC lloftgtge Corpor1lllon
beginning, containing about ve.
43 acr11,- or IMa.
Ronald IlNce Denny, at al
Parcel No. 4: The No.eeCV042
following reel utate
In purauance of an Order
eltuatod In lila townehlp of of !Ilia In the ebovl ontltlld
Lebanon, County of Melga, action, I will oHor lor ule at
Stall of Ohio, bounded and public ouctlon, lithe door
d11crlbad aa lollowa: of the Courthouao front
Sillllleln Section 27, Town atepa In Pomeroy, Ohio, In
3, Range 11, of the Ohio the above named County,
Compan(a Purchell and on the 28th dey of Aug.,
beginning llllhl aouthwHt 11111 111 11:00 o'clock a.m.,
comer of • 12 acre tract of the following dlacrlbld real
land prtHntly owned by ntete, allulltld In Sllllbury
Deyton Hayman, which 12 Townehlp, Malge County,
acre tract of lind Ia Parcel Slllll of Ohio and being In
No. One In a dlld racordod Section 31 , Town 2 North,
In Vol. 138, Page351, llalga Range 13 Well
lhl Ohio
.c o. Dood Recorda; thence
end
South 50 feet to • c:roaa cut
•• foil-:
In a rock; thence In a
eta point In the
Northenterly course, ~~;;! County Rold 5
crOMing two ere"" cut In
Road) Hid point
a rocll, about 1345 1111 Ill a
about 2700 1111
uniform dletance of 50 fill and
about 1450 1111
"from lhl Southerly 11111 of from the Southeut comer
:aakl 12 acre tract to a point of Soctlon 31; thence North
1 0 feet South of the 10 degrell 51 ' 14" Eaat
Norlhuet comer of aakl12 210.00' along thl cenllrllne
acre tract; lhlnel North 50 of aakl County Road 5 to 1
lnt;
and
thence point; thence South 11
Soutlt,llterly along the dlgr- 04' 48" Ealll 210.00
aouthlrly line of Hid 12 feet to an Iron pin aet,
acre 1r10t to the place of puling an Iron pin IIIII :Ill
beginning, conllllnlng 1
1111 and p111lng the
acre, men or 1111.
Clllllrllne of an old 111llroad
Excepting lnd
at aboul 125.71 IHI lor
to former g111ntore,
,.,_..;thence South 10
H. Slllnakar and Orpha
dig- 51'14" Wtat 210.00
Slllnaktr, their helre and feet to an Iron pin 111;
a11tgna
In thance North 86 dig- 04'
undtvklld
48" Will 210 flit to the
In ell the oil
point of blglnnlng, paulng
tht centerline of 11ld old ·
other mlnerela
and within the
railroad at about 1011.27 1111
hereby conveyed
and an Iron pin at 190:00
Parcell No. 1 to
hot lor reference,
lnclutlve, above
containing 1.005 ac?ll,
with the rlgllt to
mora or 1111, excepting 111
pramiHI, to
legal """'""' end r1ghla
drill lor,
of way.
and remove the
Current D11d Recorded
the IIICHUty
on Auguat 24, ·1995, In
thltefOI and lhl
Omclel AICOI'da Volume 24,
ao much of lhl
ae page 715.
RillY bl n-ury lor lhl Property commonty known
pu=~-=~•corded ae: 38500 Bradbury Road,
Pomeroy, Oh 45780
on 11/23/M In volume 15, Perce1114-02084.006
Page3118
Stld Praml111 Apprallld
Property commonly 111 sso,ooo.oo and cannot bl
ltnown u: 337M Long Run eold far 1- lllan two-thlrde
Road, Long Bottom. OH ollhllt amount.
45743
TEAMS OF SALE: Ten
Parcel 1: oe.GOOI2.000, 011- percent (10%t down at the
OOOU OliO I OloOOOIII.OOO · time the bid Ia accepted.
Slid finmlm Applliud Balance to bl paid within
at $30,000.00 and cannot bl thirty (30) days. Any eum
oold lor leu than two-lhlrda not ptld within aald thirty
of.:=:;oo;'SALE: Ten (30) dey• shall blarlnttreet
et the rete of 10.00% par
percent (10%t down at the annum from dille ofule.
time tho bid· It acceptiii. Jamee M. Soulaby Shariff
balance to be paid within Mefv• County, OH
thirty (30) daye. Any aum Cerllele, McNeill• • Rlnl
not paid within aakt thirty Co., LP.A.
(30) dey• ahall bier lnt.,.et By, lflrblrt J. Kremer
at the rate of 11.75% per 25200 Chagrin Blvd., Suite
onnum from- of aall.
240
Jemti i . Soullby Cllwllnd, OH 44122
Shtrlll Phone: (216) 360-7200
Mtlga County; OH Fax: (216) 3110-7210
Carllell, llcHtllll I Alnl (7) 23, 30, (8) e 3 tc

1$$ DANCERS WANTED ...
Excellent opportunliy for iho tight

&amp; VIcinity

Sutte:MO

PI

Aa lhertlf of II::C
·"
' • Olllo, I hereby
IIIOYI lor ....
at 10:00 a.m. on

l'urtllw, lito
II 0 li wiiiiiiOitlln the

the public road; thence
following lhl Olllllr of the
public rood South to the

Page 9

Help Wanted

110

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

Co., LP.A.
by: HerblltJ. Kramer
252011 Chagrin Blvd.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Middleport, Ohio

PubliC Notice

&amp;

Una of uld IICIIon about
Eighty roc11 to the centar or

110

70

Notice

Public Notice

P.O. lox 729·68

SHOE PLACE

992·5627

219 N. Second Ave.
Public Notice
PUBUC HOTICE
The elehtlln member

Nike Socks

The Daily Sentinel •

Thuntday,August6,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Water your brain, it's a smart move

6, 1998

EOE.

...

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 6, 1998

Pomeroy • M(ddleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 6,1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AIJ..EY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
p}UI.T.TP

ALDER
11 0

Help Wanted

PIMPLES, SKIN PROBLEMS,
CELLULITE? Contro l Group
Needed! $200 Bonus For "Be10f"e
&amp; After' Photo' If Putlhshe&lt;! can
Tracy 740-441 ·1984

140

Boslness
Training

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... Bul
Short On Skills ? Gam Skills In
One 'Year Of Training In The
E~tenlngs . Buckeye Hills Career
Center Continues In lis 22nd
Year Ot Operation Train In Adult
Basic Education, GE D Testing
Site. OHice Technology, Welding,
Industrial Maintenance, Peace
Officer /Corrections , SUCCESS,
Auto Technology , A1r Conditionln'g &amp; Heating , Farm Bu smess
Planning: Analysis, Compuler
Specllahst. Customer Centered ;
Health care Technician (Formerly
Nur se A1de) : MRIDD . Pre-Em ploymen t Tralnmg : And More.
Call 740-245-5334 For Catalog
And lnbrmatiOn.
Southeastern Busmess College ,
Spri ng Valley Plaza. 740· U6·
4367, l-800-2 14·0452. Accredll ·

&amp;d Member, ACICS Reg 190·0S·
12748

180 Wanted To Do
ANY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed , mulching . flower beds . landgcaph•g.
sidewalk
edg ing,
mowmg
etc .. Free Estimates Call Bill
3114-67~7112

Certified daycara prov1der. has
open1ngs all stlilts. across from

Ml&lt;ldlepOn Pa,., 740.992·5073.
C1rcle -N· Convalescent Home.
Has 1 Opening Elderly Or Hand•·
capped Person In My Home, 7~0-

«1·1536.
Furniture repair. refinish and restoration, also custom orders Oh1o
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry

PhHiips, 740-992-6S76
GeOfges Portable Sawm1ll, don't
haul your logs to the m111 just call
3114-67~1957

FINANCIAL

A.nracllve one-floor home In Pomeroy Beaultful mterior with 2
bedrooms. ltvmg room . dining
room . butll ·in kttchen, like new

stove and refngerator. breakfast
nook featunng corner what-not
shelves, bath, and a ni ce sunporch with windows and screens
provldtng a great view of the Ohio
Rtver. Carpeted . lull baaement ,

plastered watts wl1h crown moldmg. roomy clOsets with tun length
mirrored doors; storm wlndbws
and doOrs. fufy tn&amp;Wated. 108 L•
gton Terrace . $39,000 Call 7&lt;t0992-5292 after 5 p.m.
Corner lot, two year old furnace,
HW heater. roof . carport , small
shed. askiflg S5S.OOO, ptico nago-

tiabje. 740-992·2790.
Garage apartment. Middleport.
great cond•t•on, new carpet. two
bedroom . bath, kitChen. large livIng room, Cleek. 2 t f.2 car garage,
owner relocahng, 740-992·5243.
House For Sale 1n Vmton, Out of
Htgh Water' Reduced! 740 5961929 Very Nice Home
House. 2 Story Duplex , I Bed·
room Cottage. 13 P1ne Street.
Gallipolis, Large Lot Shown By
Appointment, Pnce $96.000 740-

446-4999
In Middleport· new- kitchen, oak
cabinets. diShwasher. diSposal,
heat pump, three bedrooms, bath
and tf2. cal740.992-3465
Prtce Reduced 2-&amp;tory. 3br,
basement new vinyl skUng, dou-

ble lol
1S34.

Bellmead&amp;. 304·67S·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Newly Remodle&lt;l Country Home.
Off&amp;rl quiet couhtry living on a
private 2 112 acre lol with local
schocls and downtown shopping
leas than 10 minutes away Faml·
ly pleasing amenities Including
new kitchen. Hardwood floors, 2
fireplaces . family /home office
space 3-4 bedrooms , 2 112
baths, many extras! $98,000.00
call 740-446-9762 or 740 -446-

2940

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
t2x60 tra1ler, can be used for ol'•ce tra1ler, S3 000 WithOut air con·
diiiOner. $4,000 wilh . 740-949-

New Haven, 2br home, garage,
river frontage . References, deposit , &amp; lease required 3().4..934·

7462
Nice 3br, references &amp; deposit.
No peU. 34-1175-5162.

Ground floor apl 2br, wid hoolo·up,
referen ce&amp; &amp; deposit, no pels
304-675-5t62

450

Furnished .
Rooms

NOTICE

Business
Opportunity

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busi ness w1th people you know. and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you nave i nvesttgated

1he olforlng

230

Professional
Services

Uvmgston' s basement waterproormg, all basement repairs
done, tree estimates . i1le11me
guarantee. l2yra on JOb experierce 304-675-2145.

12x65 New Moon tra1ier 1Ox12
pull-out. 3bedroom. oeen remodeled, greal shape . must be
mo~ted . $4 ,000 Kawasak• motor-

Oakwood Homes, Sarboursvllle,
W.Va. Locati on Has seen Or·
dared To Liquidate All Inventory.
0 Down , Lowest APAI 304-736·

Spoc1al 16l80 3BR , 2 balh .
$1 ,32S Down, $20S Mo. Free al1
&amp; tree sl&lt;&lt;llng HIIXHl91 -8m.
Trailer tor Sale $8,200 . 740·992·

6619.
Unbelievable. new t4x80. no
payments after lour years Call 1·

1100-9ol8-5678.
Used single wide. around S100

par mon1n. Ca111-II00-9ol8-5678.

330 Farms for Sale
t5 Acres t /2 Wooded , 112 Pastuere House, Several Buildings, 2
Ponds, Gresn School District, For
Sale By Owner, Priced: High 80's,

340 Business and
Buildings

HlOQ-6!!.1-6]77

AJI real estate adven1slllQ m
thiS newspaper IS SUbj9CIIO
the Federal Fa1r Housmg Act
ol 1966 wh1ch makes 1t1llagal
to advenise "any preference.
hmllahon or discnm1na110n
based on race . color, religiOn
sex familial status or national
oogm, or any 1ntent10n to
make any such preterence .
tim1tat 10n or d1scnm1nauon ~
Th1s newspaper will not
knowmgly accept
adven1sements for real estate
whiCh 1s 1n V10la110n of the
law Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised m thiS newspaper
are avatlable on an equal

' 1979 Bayview 14').( 70' Double
Expando. 3 Bedrooms. CIA. Call
after 5·00 740·256-1090
1988 Clayton. wlhaat-pump , 3br,
1 bath, good cond Will pay lor
delivery $11 500 304-675-3000
be!Ween 8am-5pm
t988 Redman t4x55 2 Bedrooms,
Gas Heat, CA, Like New, $7,900,

304-675-696S, 740·446.0175
1992 Clayton t6 ' X 50' , 2 Bed ·
room , 2 Baths, Very Good Condi·
t1on 740·368-8424 or 740-388·

8S13
1994 Noms Clayton 14x70 2
Bedrooms. 2 Full Baths. 2 Decks.
Central Air. 8xt0 Metal Buildmg.

740-256-6851

470 Wanted to Rent
17 miles from Uillon axil. 10
miles from Fraziers BoUom 8 ·
miles lrom Pt. Pleasant. 2 &amp; 3
bedroom mobile homes. Sits on
one acre land , city water, very

noce. $350 . Accopl HUD. 304·
562·5840.

490

Lease · Commercial Building

From Burger King In Gal·
2212 Eastern Avenue .
Area; Commercial

Loca11on In Galli·

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned . $260-$300 , sewer,
water and trash Included, 7~0-

Route 7 North,
Commercial

Sq.

Will

2 bedroom mobile home, nice

To Sull,

-~ Bui~.

Hlg~

Vlsabill·

ty ; Commercial Space In Mini -

yanl, wa1er &amp; ~ash paid, $300 per

Plaza Appro&lt;. 800 Sq F1. In Rio

month , $150 deposit, propane
gas , Hud approved, 740·992·

GranCJe , 257

.

~-

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
·A Little Counlry in Town· - large
restored V 1 c tor~an home Situat ed
on 12 'acres. V•llage of M1ddle·
port Secluded and puvate , close
to schools and churches. Private
brick c ~tcular dnve . bnck patio ,
modern k1tchen . lam1ly 1oom wl
fireplace . 3-4 bedrooms . two
bath s, large formal LR and DR .
large foyer. four oug1nal stained
glass wmdows 30 mtnutes from
.Athens. t5-20 minutes from Galh·
polls FOI' appomtment call 740·

w College,

740-

245-5040. 740-245-5060.

MERCHANDISE

For sale or rent- 14w6b house
trailer. au condti!One d. wash&amp;r

6 year otd, country style, 2-3 bed·
rQOml, 1 bath, loft OYet'lo&lt;H!.lf'lg livIng room. tongue &amp; groove kltch·
•n cabinetry. doors &amp; woodwork
throughout , pellet stove . ·HPICA.
appliances mcluded. 50 year vinyl
siding . shutters . deck. 1 car garage , spa, storage building. mcely
landscaped, on t acre . county
schoOls. 8 m•les from Holzer 740-

367-0286
Approw lmate ly 1 acre , 4br,
2bathl , 1/2 mile out Pleasant
~ldge

Road . $22,500 304· 773·

!5040.
LOI 2 112 Acres Rural Water
35'1150' Metal Building Insulated
Trail•r Pad , 6 Aoom House Not

Complelod, $32 ,000, 740·256·
1335.

-

NloO 3 l!ldroom. 1 Ba111, 1600 Sq.

Fl., Malnlenance FrM. 2 Car Ga·

r1gt1 Great Location 740·448·

1 112 11ory, 301,

llaJIIOid Avo. Pt
Plllloln1. 3Qoloe75-2924

Scen1c Valley al Apple Grove,
WV 8u1tdmg lots. Single w1des
accepted. public wate r. 20
mmutes from new Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Ad Clyde Bowe-n

beautiful land . Ma1gs Co , Sc1p10
Township, SA 692, (JuSt off SA
t43) Owm!r l1nanc1ng. ($1800 per
acre) call for good map. I -740-

S93·Bs.5

360

1·304-75~5885

large kilchen . tully equ1pped.
large Ioyer. 2-car auacheel ga rage Ga ll ipolis Ferry 304-e75·

excollenl buy, $89.000, 740·949·
2547.

Rac1ne OhiO · 2 acres . Morn1ng
Sta r Rd . $20.000 . 5 acres .

Sfl~terel S- acre peruls remote

ery 1·800·691·67n

• bedroom. 2 balh, 1 car garage,
with lire place . pool table &amp;
eQUipped kitchen, price reduced ,

Now taking sealed b1(j5 on commercial lot on US 35 Henderson
Mall bidS to Siders 2123 Matvern Rd . Rock Hill . SC. 29732 .
Opemng date September 1. 1998
Reserve the right to refuse any
or all bids For info call 803-366·

3 BA, 2betha, Home For F!ent 1·

3br. 2 lull balllS. UA. LA OR .

91&lt;3

2583.

Jr. 304-576·2336.

AUGUST SPECIAl
All S!NGLEWIDES
..99DOWNOR
9.1% ANANCING
ONLY AT OAKWOOD HOliES
NITRO,WV

and""'"'· no pelS. 74G-696-107S
Handy Man Special

2 or 3 bedroom ~ngle wldes.
304-75~7191 .

Huge 28x80 3BR . 1 1/2 bath
Starting at ONlY $39,999 . Many
c-ptton 6 available 1·888-928-

3426
Large selection of used homes. 2

or 3 bedrooms Slartlng al $2995

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land · 30 ·500 A.c ras.

We Pay Casn 1·800·213·838S,
Anlhony Land Co.

RENTALS

Free 1·888·84().()521
2br house full-size bastiment , 10
New Haven , WV plus deposit

304·882·3274 allor 12pm

Set Up On Lot, Take Over Pymrs,

304-736-7295.

740-9!12·Bs.2.
312 Watzgal St Pomeroy. 3 Bedrooms, $380 00/ Month , deposit
reqUired Toll Free 1-888-840 -

0521

3br house In New Ha'JIIn, stove &amp;
relrigerator. $300 mo. plus de·
posit 304·773·9171 Leavs massago.

8Jl0.837·3238

4-room cottage, no petalno child·
ren . adults-only, $260 .mo. plus

New 3br $900 . down, $149 per

$2e0. depoon, paid u11111loo, 304·
875-4534 after 6pm.

New bank repos . Only two lett.

never lived in Call 1·800· 848·
5878.
New Doublewide 3BR , 2 bath .

11 ,325 Down &amp; $205 II'" mo. 1·
8811-928·342e.

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nished and unfurnished, security
depOSit required, no pats , 740·

992·2218

888·61 8·0126
Used Furniture Store ' Below Holiday Inn . \n Kanauga . Monday

Thru Friday. 10·4, 740·446·4782.
Slop By.
Used Window Air Conditioning
Units, Different Sizes, Guaranteed.

740-886-0047

530

Buy or sell . A1venne Ant•ques ,
~ 124 E Mam Street , on At. 124,
Pomeroy Hours . M T.W 10 ·00
a.m to 6 00 p.m , Sunday 1 00 to

6 00 p.rlJ 740·992·2526. Russ

8-rOom house, CIA, $300 . ·mo.
utilities &amp; deposit, no pets . 304·

575-4874.
1 -5 BEDROOII HOliES FROII
14,000 LOCII Gov'l. &amp; Bonk
Ropo'a Call 1·800-522·2730, x
1709.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. 01\Ml. 1·BIJ0.537-9528

550

Building
Supplies

$425/Mo . S22S Deposil. U1olllles

304·675-4004.

Beach Street. Middleport, 1 room
elf1clency apt ut11it1es pa1d. ~ ­
POSit &amp; references . 304 -882 ·
2566

5121

.

Staal Bu1t~tngs , New. Must Sell

30&lt;40&lt;12 Wa s $10.200 Now
$6.990, 40&lt;60&lt;14 Was $18 ,400
Now $9.990 : SOx100x16 was

$27,S90 NOW $18,990. 6011200X16
Was $58,T60 Now $39,990, 1-

800-406·5126

560

Pets for Sale

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Wllh Cnildren. $100 740·446·
1455
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Ad .

from $279 10 $3S8 Walk 10 shop

Chrloly'o Family Living
Apor1mentl

•86·66 OX:i! computer, 4MB, sao
MB hard drive, WIN, CD ROM,
new color monitor. Epson 24 Pin
Printer, SOOO OBO, call 740 -992 -

Pomeroy/Mid&lt;lepon
Caii74Q-992·4SI4
Monday lhrough Salurday
9 ·ooam-~OOpm .

7 etactnc baseboard heaters, 5
used &amp; 2 new In box, assorled
lengths, 2 square 0 thermostats.
new In box. $125 lor all . 304·882·

332S

Gracklus hving. 1 and 2 bedrooM
apartments at 1111\igs Manor and
Alvers1de Apartments in MiCidle port From $249·$373 Ca li 740992·5064 Equal Hoos1ng Oppor-

A1'11 1que Roadmaster 25• g1 rl's
bike . 16" girl's &amp; 2e· boy's bikes,
Tandy eomputer with printer, roll·
lng invoice cab1net, typewriter
stand , br1e1 cases , ledger file, old
camera equipment, used trampoline. 740-992-5742.
Bean1e Babies , buy-sa la-trade ,
ava1labte tor sale now, Fortune ,
Erin . Wise, and others 304 -675·
7223 after 6pm

Now Tak•ng ,..ppllcallons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo , 740·446 0006
One b&amp;droom-iPartment In Mid-

dleporl, all ulllllles paid, $100 de·
p&lt;)si!, $270 mon1n. call 740-992·
780611am-5pm.

11 ·6. Fish Tank &amp; Pel Snop,
2413 Jackson /ANe Point Pleas-

ani, 304-67S·2063
C. F A. Aegi6tered Persian Cat 1
Shaded Silver Male, 1 3 Year Otd
Tort1polnt Female, 1 3 Year Old
Shaded Sliver Female, 1 2 Year
0~

Aed Female. 740-446- 145S

740-311H'885.
Electric Scooters. Wlfeelchairs,
New And Used, Stairway Eleva·
tors. Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts. Bowman's Homecare, 740·

polls, OH - New Kl!chon , large
Bedroom, View 01 The Rive1, EK·
cellenl Condl!lon, $300/Mo., Do·
posit And Aeferencts Required .

o446-7283.

No Pels, Coli 740·«8·4514 For
,lj)poln1men1.

388·8922, Ask For Tom Mile hell
French City Pet Groonung by Appointmenr "Ultra Wlltt Blthlng
Syate'!l " 650 Second Ave Galli·
polis. 740-446-1528

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. &amp; Album In S10Ck.
I Cal Ron EVWIS, 1-801).537·11528.
'

Kincaid oolld oak dry alnk UOO.
hulch like ntw, 2yra old
firm. Sola &amp; chair 2yra. old,
green· burgandy· bluo stripes
$250. 304-67~ 1570.

2412 1·1100-594·1111.

Livestock

Gentle pony &amp; like riew saddle &amp;
laying hens $2 .00ea . Pullets

Sl OOea Neugeben goal $75.
P1gmey goal $40 304-67S-4192
Morgan &amp; Sadd lebred 4yr old
gelding, gOOd lrall horse $1 ,soo·
or win trade. 304-562-5840.

2!6-1758
1987 Ford 48' High Ranger bud&lt;·

S I ,200.00740-36 7·0122. aller
Sllq)m
Slaughler hOgs year round 304·

576-2579

907 4th Street
New Haven. WV

304·882-3194

640

Hay &amp; Grain

1oo Large Aourld Ba6es 01 Mixed
Hay $15 Each, 100 Large Round
Sates From LasI Year S10 Eacn,
100 Large Round Sales Of Wheat
Straw With Grain Still On , $10
Eactl, 740-245-5047. Ew111ngs

675-5088

TRANSPORTATION

Blazer , red , ~x4 Tahoe,
56 ,000 miles. 4dr. lOaded.

Sealll

West

Nontl

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

3•

Pus

Pass

'87 Fool Ranger 4&lt;4, rei&gt;Jill motor
and transmission . runs good,
'98 GMC Yukon ~WO, SLT package, white, CD player, leather
seats, garage kept, 9000 miles.

$32,500. 740-992-6849

740-3"19-9110

sl1015 &amp; wormld; 740-667·3404
Two Norwegian Elk hounds, 1
male, 1 female, pr.ce on 1nqulry;
r•glstered MI. Cur, male. date of
birth, .August 10th 1997, parents
world champion squirrel dogs ,

$200; 740-66!1-31190

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

HIM WATCH
THEM SCARY
I

I

3114-675-61 53
1987 Econoline 150 Ford Van . •

Good conclioon. $2.300. 740-256-:. :
6570

1988 Toyola 4&lt;4 22AE 4 Cyl ,
158,000 M1ies. Body Good, Runs ·
Good S3,SOO, Tlade . 740·446·
39112.
1994 Dodge Grand Caravan SE.
has prime t1me conversion package w1th TV and VCR, Gold Spectal Edition. absolutely loaded,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
I.

71 .6K. $11 ,SOO. call 740:992·

Motorcycles

'80 Olds Delta 88 tour door sedan, blue w1th while vinyl top .
73,000 actual (certified m1tes). ·
See at 742 East Main Street or
call741&gt;992-7949.
1994 Honda CR250 740· 256 -

1972 Nova SS 396 Engine. 4
Speed Transmission. Pos1· Track
Rear End , Low U1les. Excellent
Conditi00174D-256- 1172

THE BORN LOSER

6790.

r
l..rnG Tlf\f..

1996 ~arley Davidson Heritage
Soli Tail Class1c, 600 miles, miRt
condition. over $25.000 mvested,
Includes all anginal parts plus
many extras, also matching tielmats. must sell, $t7,750 firm. 740-

r-10~,

~T ::0 &amp;000...
l.£f~ .ll[)T ~y

~1£.1
HQI.J'~

6117·3802

1960 ·1990 HONDA CARS FOR
S1 DO Se1zed &amp; Sold Locally This
Month. Call 1·800·522·2730 Ex1
1980 · 1990 Trucks For $100111
Local~

ms Monlll

Trucks. 4x4's. Etc

1·800·522·2730, X3901
1980 Ford Car MUST SELL!
$800.00 740.256-1631
1982 Cutlass S~reme, 2 0, 260
V8 Good CondiHon. $1,500 .00
Firm 740-992-4568
1987 Chevy Spnnt. automatic
transmission. 3 c yli nder. S500.

740-992·3147.
1987 Dodge Shadow. 4 Door ,
Auto, AI C, Tilt, 84,000 ml

,

rTAA.\'5 ~ !l~Wr\f.l
I-IOW'5 &amp;£Tf&gt;,:;r

LE.T') Jll5T ~y I'"'
l'f.TWE:ffi Mt-mi«:&gt; 1

l'r-'1

Kawasaki STS Jet ski, st1ll under
warranty. three seater, 83 horse·
power bough I new July of '97.
three matching Kawasaki ski
vesls and tra iler all go w1th 11 .
$5000, 740-949-2203 or 740-9-49·
2045, will consider trade lo r a
good pontoon boat

Sid 1hlo summer!
18ft. Deep·V, closed bow. 160HP

$1,400 00 OBO 7ol0·256-9114
1988 Bonnevute LE , maroon, ~dr,
new tires &amp; brakes , good co nd
$3.200 304-675-S792 after 5pm

1988 Chevy Serena GT 2.8 V·6,
auto, cruise, lilt , cassette &amp;

more. $1 ,800.ll4·773-5854.

looks like Now, $2 ,495, 1989
Jeep Pock-Up, $2, 19S; Cook Mo·
101&gt;, 7ol0·446-.Q103
1990 Grand Prix, lour door, runs
good. air, 1111, cruise, sharp,

1992 Plymouth Acclaim 4 Doors,
Auto, Air, Cruise. 98 ,000 mi ., 34
MPG. Runs 4 Looks Gr•all 740-

1993 ElorlneviUe. black, good con·
2900 or 7~9-1004 .
1993 Cavalier RS, new paint,
clearcoat, while letter urea, ntw

akl

resort
37 Coq

au-

movement
~Reddish

41

aurtap fiber

42 Once-a
time
43 Uaeda pool
45 llalul.
sweater

-

~::~~:~' S@~~1A-~t.~Se
....,;;.,;.::.:,:.:;_....:;;,~ I~IIH ~y CIAT I . 'O!UN
0

-·a- -.

WOlD
GAM I

ol 1he
lour ocrambled -d•
be-

low to form four simple words

I

~

DRAORM

__,s......,Rr-U--...C_H.,...~I.,=~

.

15

•

6

I I 1

L.....JL-..L.-1.-'-..J.,

LORNUL

With today 's technology I
believe that the television lets
you be ·entertamed by people
~~~ ~ouldn't allow 1n • • • •

I.

h,.--.;.,:...;;,.,~.,,,;.6...:,,...:..,,r--i A

Comp leJo 1he ch,ckle q,oted

V

L_J_...L_.L-...1-..J........I

RATS! M'( TEAM
LOST A6AIN ..

THATWASNrT

by l.ll1ng 1n the m•ss.ng words
you develop from step No J beloYw

WilEN IT WA5

A REAL6AME

OVER,DID

TloiATWM

IT

SA'{ ''TilE

A MOVIE ..

Bed ra11 caps, fit Chevrolet tructs .
$25. 740-446·2316.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

END"?

Dreamy • Swept • Amuse · Glance · ANSWER
I've concluded that teachers are the only people who
have learned to ask a question and wa1t for the AN·

Budgel Pnced Transm 1ss1ons All
Types. Access To Over 10,000
TransmiSsiOns, 740-245-5677

SWER!

Naw gas tanks &amp; body parts 0 &amp;
R Auto, Ripley. WV. 304 372-

ITHURSDAY

3933"' 1·1100-273-9329.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

AUGUST 6l

1981 camper 16', sen canta1ned,
commode and shower, New
Tires 11.wntng. Very Good Cond•·
llon $2.500. 7ol0·9494877

1973 Smokey IS Fl $1,700, 1972
Arlslocral 18' $2,000, 1699 Me·
Co'!"l&lt;l&lt; Road, 740·446-1511.

Ha-

.

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished. Eslabf~hed 197S. C~l ~4 Hre. (7ol0)

446-0870. 1·800-287-0S7S. Rog·
ers Waterproor'"O
Appliance Parts And Sef\'H:e. All
Nama Branda Over 25 Year~ E•pertence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag , 740· 446-

n95.

BLACKBERRIES
$13-gal You Pick $10-gal. No
Weeds. Berries On Fence . 30-t468-1667 r.m. Mlwge

1994 Chevro,et Cavalier. AWFM
Casseltt, ABS , Good Condition,

free estimate can Chet. 740-992·

B1ackblrrloa oro· rlpal Also a
compoSitr lor sale. Vlrglrs Berry
Palen, aau or 5'tracu10 on SR
124.

1995 Ch1\'&amp;ler Sabring, excellent
condlllon, call Tom Anderson,
740-992·334811111r !5jlm.

Tame Blackberries. $3 .00quart
$10.00 gallon. 3114-67S-4514

South of Leon, WV. Financing

Ava-.304-458-1069.

31 Utah

I

1988 Dodge Truck 318 Motor,
Dodge Dakota V· 6 1994 Motor.
$200 A. Piece, 080 740·2561233.

C&amp;C General Home · Maln tenence- Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, wl~ws, baths,

Uplon Uaod Coro Rl. 02·3 Mil"'

Indians

30 Young alrt

PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

banery, 4·dr. $4,500 . 304·773·
ell33.

55.500 Milas, $8,300, 740-«10469.

calm
29 Soulhwesblm

A

2!6-9114.
dillon. one owner. call 740-949-

elnglng group
26 Hard WO&lt;k
'1:7 Period ol

one?

lackels &amp; bumpers $2,0SO. 740·
446·3814.

1991 Chevy Corsica, 3 1 Multi port engine, power windows,
cruise. lilt, air, sharp car, only

62,000 aCiual miles, $2950 neg .,
741)-992-6824.

valley

24 Plllyground
equipment

b+-l-+-+-l-

Mercruiser Inboard. w/trailer. life

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

23 Deep, narrow

255-loh

EaR
Paaa
·Paaa

lr IS here thai the rnfamous and
oft-misundersrood suit-preference
s1gnal occurs. You disregard both 1he
trump su11 and lhe suit being led for
the ruff. That leaves rwo other suirs.
hearts and clubs here. tr East re1Ums
his highest diamond. he is showing
an entry (or porential enrry) in lhe
higher-ranking suil (hean.s). Howev·
er, 1f he returns his lowest diamond.
he is sugges1ing an entry in the low·
er-ranking sui1 (clubs). Yet. as he has
no side-sull entry, Ea.st musltable his
middle diamond. rhe six.
Afrer ruffing, West will switch ro
the heart king. (If he tries a club, hoping panner has rhe ace. declarer can
gel home.) Now the defenders can
take five lricks: the spade ace, the
heart queen , I he diamond ace and rwo
diamond ruffs.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

790

Grow oldef

22 Enthuelaetle

By Phillip Alder
46 TMI'l'a bane
Here is the third interesting deal I
47 --do--n
WatChed during my brief ViS II tO the
49 Jackie's 2nd
'TGR Bridge Club in London la.sl
50 Out ol the
spring. How will the play go if Ea."·
-"' Ioree
West defeat South ·s contract of three
(lbbr.)
spades'1
52Ac:treaa
llyl'NlNote Nonh's good pass over three 1......1.-'--'-.....1-..L..53 Commetelafa
spades. Despite 18 high-card points,
his spade fit wasn't wonderful and his
lack of aces was worrisome. (If
Nonh does bid. il musr be four
CELEBRITY CIPHER
spades, not three no-trump.)
by Luis Campos
c.~etwt~y Ciphef CM)k)QramS 1 ,. Cftl81ed rrom quotaiiOI"e b'f I1JJT10U11 people past and present
At the time, West led the heart
Each ilinefin 1hecipheratandt for another T«My'1 W. Hequals P
Icing. Declarer won wilh dummy's
ace and called for the spade king.
When the defenders didn"t find lh~ir
diamond ruff. declarer lost only three
, p X
NX
cxxo .
1s
HKVT
L S 0' I
tricks: one spade. one heart and one
diamond.
0 s t
ZJCGD
ts
VLLGDIXL
G'Z
To keep the defense alive, West
mus1 lead his singlelon diamond.
VJLGXODXC . '
ZGKXC
LVRGC
Having liule choice but to assume it
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "When people are laughmg, !hey ·re generally nol
is a singleton. Ea.'l wins with the ace
killing one another."- Alan Aida
and rerums a diamond •• but which

1998 Honda 300 EX. like new.
W1\' laSI, $4,000, 740.992·2009.

760

11

The third
didn't happen

$2,900 Fvm, 740-245.0134.

4420

12 Dried up

21 Gamut•

38 Slow muelcol

1977 Chevy Capr1ce Classic.

PW. PL , Cruise Conlrol. Till
Sleerlng, AJC, 2 Doo1&gt;. 8 C~lncler.
Gr11a1 Engire, Body GOOd Shaoel
740-446-485S.

t1 WWII11111

1D Euencea
11 Dam!

Opening lead: • 4

~Q:_7

1998 Yamaha Timberwoll, In·
eludes New Gun Scabbard,

Has. well·kepl $4.500 304·67S·
6118.

$2995, 7ol0-992-6624.

Schnauz.er. miniature male, $200,
AKC champion grand sire. also
Tiny Toy Poodte white male.

THEN TH' WICKED
OL' WITCH SAYS1
"I'LL KILL HER DAID
WITH A PIXEN
APPLE H..

1986 Chevy C-20 Con~tersion ·
Van, raised roof. Good condition .

dillon I $9.500 Nogollable,
388·8718

Reg1stered Border Collie Pups,
Only Females lett. Vacclned &amp;
Wormed Asking $ISO 00 Call

1 NEVEl LET

1979 Dodge 4 Wheel D11ve.
MUST SELL! $600 00, 740·2581631

1989 Cavalier 2 Doors, Auto ,

$10 aacn. 740·

BRING TATER
OVER FER
KIDDY TV!!

$2600, cal 740-992·3465.

'94 Hyundal Excel , white, brand
new transmission wl warranty. excellent condition, 64 .000 m1t es.

DOWN

wing
321Mp
1 w. c..t coli.
2 Exper1a
33 Euenllll
34 Par1 ol • ahlp'l 3 Frantdurter
hull
flotclln
4 Pl. ol E8l
35 I.e., In lull
5 HlghHI card
36 Dl..ctor
Woody6 tto.t
37 lla. Redarave 7 Join (a couple)
ln1Mf1'11ga
3tWelkawlil1
long...,.
a Dance ltep

•A
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East

Models. 740-388-9378. Any1ime. .

1988 Chrysler New Yorker good
oonditlon 304-882·2219

~o&lt;er .

•QJ98653
• 72
• 10 8 5

199~

161! Mach 1, 120HP Mercruiser
boat, Inboard/outboard, many ex-

742·2996 evanmgs

10 9 2

Soulh

Excellenl Coodillorl740-682·7318

710 Autos for Sale

asking $3200 nego llab le, 740·

•

•Q8743

1988 6400 John Deere Sk1dder

740

28 Pari or a blnl'a

• 9 8 54
+A 9 6 2

• 4

eilruCio, 740-3711-6279

5175

992-t4t5

• 742
• KQ 8 3

t='rl'lc
element
Ingredient

( 2 -.)

Eul
• A 10

WHI

1986 GMC 1500 , Good Condl·
11on, Must Sell! $2.800 00 7~0-

1983 32 Foot Holiday Rambler
Imperial Top 01 The Una W1th
Reese Hitch, S•cycle Rack, t8 Ft.
Attachable Screen Room, AV
With .All The Extras \n Good Con-

Pupp1es- mom- shapherd/retnev-

EEK&amp;MEEK

eKQJ73
• K J 6 5

3710.
Quarter Horse 10 Y&amp;ar old gelding, does trail &amp; Barrell Ask ing

55

Z50nlhlr-

• A J 10

740-682·7318

1988 Chevy S·IO. New Palnl Job.
Sharp! 740-441·1419

6&lt;, dad·

• K

160 .A Barko Loader New John
Deere Engine 1.500 Series CTR
Sawbuck , Excellent Condition

Pekingese puppies . AKC 1regis 1ered. 6 wks old , llfst ·shots &amp;
wormed. call after 5pnf, 740-8-43-

&amp; Garden

Tractor, With Loader, 3 Point
Hitch, In Good Condition , $2,800,

able At 1403 Eastern Ave .. Galli·

Dalmatian Puppies . $50 Each. 8
Wee ks, Wormed Shois. 740·

- · $200 740-&amp;U-2288

C ~ mpact Case Lawn

UPSTAIRS APARTMENT FOR
LEASE: Appllcolions Are Avail·

.5343.end 1eaYt a meosago.

Now Open Sundays t-4. Man-Sat

Cho.&lt;e~

condillon, call 740·949·2217 ,
7il0am-1 O:llq)m.

Twin Rivers Tower now acceptmg
appllcallon&amp; tor 1br. HUO ·subald·
!zed apt. for elderly and handitap90d. EOH 30H75-6679

an appointment call 740·143-

AKC reg istered Shetland sheep
dogs, 6 wks old, 5 males, sable &amp;
white, t trl color •. all have while
COllars, after 6pm 740.742 -3065

'Registered Labrado r Pupp1e1,
Champion Bloodline , Proven
Hunting Stock, M/F Shots,

pews, 1we1ve ll long, lo'"

Lawn Tractors .And low Rate Fl·
nancmg On New And Used
fQ\Jipment. Carmichael's Farm &amp;
Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740·446-

Seized And Sold

Brand Newt Great Gift! COIYideo
storage un1t Black and cherry
Never out of box $125 . Holds up
to 9-40 disc&amp;, also holds tapes
Call 740-992 · 6636 alter 6 pm
COs &amp; tapes not included.
10' tong , six 6' tong, oak. good

APT AVAILABLE NOW

ore Included. A $300 dopool1jo
required. Foi mort lnlormallon, or

AKC Reg is tered Boston terr ier
rups. 4 males. 1. female. ready 1o
go. mother and lather on premises. $200 each. to good homes.

3981.

1· 2·3 bedroom• . Stov.e/relrlg
available. ul1ht1es and cable paid,
HUO ac~epted . Children Wel come, Ask fo1 Christy.

Upstairs elflctency wltl1 private
entranc•. completely furnlsh&amp;d ,
qultt turroundlngt , ttlr" mll•a
rrom the Aaven1wood Rllchlt
B&lt;ldgo In Ohio. Perlld fll11 IJillrt·
ment. It's $390 a month, utilities

AKC min1 P1n sche rs. 3 red , 7
weeks okl, $150.740-949-3026.

6969.

29 People Wanlod
To Gel Paid SSS For The Pounds
Or Inches You wm Lose.
In The Nel&lt;l 30 Days.
Call Tracy 7ol0-441·1962

Brand New Apt .' Rio Grande
AV81fable Aug 1st, All Un.UIIies·
Paid . Walkmg Distance To Cam·
pus. 740..245-S100

$150. 304·576·2444.

1998 McDonald's Beanies Still

3648.

Equal HOUS1f"9 Opporlunoly

old

AKC Registered Labrador Puppies, 5 Weeks, F1rst Shots,
Cnamplon Blood hn e. 740 -256·

2 Very Good Wmdow Air ConditiOners. 740-446-3600. 7~0-446 -

&amp; mO\' Ies Call 740-446-2568

AKC Oatmat1an , 14mos

looner $125; Oak Desk $75. 740·
446-9709
.
on bags $12S. 304-67~Sn6 .

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Onve

Deere Skod Sieer loaders. Check
Wl1h Us Abou1 Financing On

Hay for sale . square &amp; round
bales . 1st &amp; 2nd cutting 304 -

740-992·3418

18 .000 BTU Amanna Air Condl-

Tractors, Hay Equ ipment . John

Block. brick . sewer p1pes . windows . lmteis. etc Claude Winters.
Rio Grande . OH Call 740-245-

Central Air CondiiiOI'IIng. Free Estimates! If You Don 't Call Us, We

Pa1d, 740-446·2129

Lawn Equlpmenl Compacl \JHIIIy
TraCiors From 20 To 39 HP. Al l
Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm

Slale lnspec1ecl

2bcirm apts ., total electric, appliances l urn.shed. laundry room
facilities. close to school in town
Applications available at · Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740-992·
456 1/2 Second Avenue, Gallipolis. 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Res1dential And Commercial

wv Sausage co,.ny

AKC Boston .Temer puppies. 6
weeks old . AKC Bo ston Terrier
Stud Serv1c9 740·256-6498, or
740-441-t357

t2• Concrete blocks 60ea. gas
range S30, small air conditioner
$50, lawn mowers, replacement
w1ndows. washer &amp; d1yer $400

Your area bush nog dealer for
parts, rotary cuners, loaaers, till·
er&amp;, finish mowers. ect . Carmlctlael's Farm &amp; Lawn m1dway
between Gallipolis &amp; Rkl Grande.
Ohio on Jackson Pike . 7-40-446·
2412 ()( t -800-594-1 1t 1

=""look

21 Te- IIMeblll 56 Antagonism
players
51 Sblw

4485

2 1J2 Ton Army Trucks , 6 WO's
Made By General Motors. 1970'1

ColO.

48 To a higher

20 Sault - llarll1

66,000 miles . $6700 . 740·985·

Kubala 14 HP 4X4 Diesel Wl1h 4
Alla1chmenls $3,800.00 740-2561156

44 Aclr.a lllerUI
45 Neighbor ol

17 Ninny
18 "JWie olmut

'91 Dodge Dakota , V-6 tnd With
extinded cab and topper air. :·

$13,900 304-675-5040

IU-

1 Opllmla1lc
7 OWituma

15 HollO abOrt
51
16 Une on a map 54
Went on a

720 Trucks for Sale

guson Diose!, 740-2118-6522.

Custom Slaughler &amp; Processing

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3711. EOH

Ford 5000 Diesel, Foro 3000 Oleeel , Late Model _.5 HP John
Deere Diesel, 135 Massey Fer·

Two truck loads of misc. yard &amp;ale
items. $75: AT&amp;T Notebook computer. 350 HO, 8 RAM . used 20
hour&amp; , m.nt condition. $295. 7•0·

446-2957.

Bo l~ Lose' 740·446·6306, 1-800·
291-11098.

D6C dozer, turbo, tilt , raps
$26,500, caD 740-992·51172.

saddle. 740-742·3062.

740·l146-G231 .

"COOL DOWN1"

Gallipolis. 740·448·8906 . 740·
o446-n87

Two Gravelots 1n Ohio Memory
Garden 7~0.446-7432

1 Year Old Full-Blooded St Bernard Neutered. Male. Very Good

Antiques

1953 Fora Tractor $2,800 00 Call

630

Moore owner

1 BeCJroom, AJC, WID. Hook-Up,
Near Holzer, $279fMo , + Utilities,
Deposit &amp; Lease AeQu•red, 740-

No PelS. Parking, 6 Monlh Lease
1100 . Deposit, $300/Mo , HO·
446-3667.

3 bedroom nouse. Mtddleport.
$300 per month, pius utilitieS.

rno Free skirt 1-1100-691-lim.

Apartments
lor Rent

1 Bed roo m hOuse nea r Rio
Grande College $300 00 Per
Month . Depos it Required . Toll

6542.

New t998 14x70 three 1&gt;8!1room.
ulCiudes 6 months FREE lOt rent.
Includes skirting , deluxe steps
and setup . Only S 187.08 per
month with $1075 down . Cati1·

440

1 Bedroom, Furnished IUnlurnl&amp;tled. Oown&amp;laiiS, 1JhliUes Paid,

9621

Pm 740.367.0126

9182

410 Houses for Rent

Ou1ck delivery Cali 740-385 ·

Mobile Home . Good Condition
12'X 65', partly furnished , central
air unit, water bed . dlneHt set .
srove , refrigerator. call after 4~ 00

Pomeroy, no llOIS. 740.992·5858

Refrigerator Frost Free $150 00
Side by Side Aelngeraloo $250.00,
Washer $95 00, Dryer $95 00 ,
Electric Range $95 00, Nice Whripool Air Conditioner $150.00, New
Amanna Air Cond111oner $350.00,
Whirlpool Washer like new
S205 00 . 1 year Warranty.
Skaggs Appliances 76 VIne St
Gallipolis. 740-446-7398 or t ·

lunlties

3 bedroom house. Racine. $300
per month, pius utilities. 74D-992-

3BR/2BA

Mobile home for rent with ap ·
proved appllcallon, K&amp;K Mobile
Homes, 8am-5pm, 304-675-3000
Inquire at front office.

Slle $19.000 Or 22 Acres Wl1~
Pond $21.500 Cash Price
Friend~ Ridge 8 S Acres $7,500

9411-5678.
304-736-7295

Oeposn. No Pe~l740-44H313

1 Bed room Apartment. Stove &amp;
Refrigerator Included. 740·446 ·

Bashan Ad . S2S.OOO. 740-992·
5072

t Sl lime buyers E -Z linancmg. 2
or 3 bedrooms, around $200. per
Ftlonth Call Credit Line t -800·

Mobile Home 2 Bedroom In Galli·
polls. $375 00 Plus Utilities, Pus

G•llla Co.: Gallipolis. Nelghrbohood Ad . Nice 10 Acre Building

446-4722

1\vo 4011 Slorage Vans , $1 ,200.00
Each 740-256-1270

Waterline Spec1al 314 200 PSI
$2t .95 Per 100 : 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com plllsslon Rttings In Stock

Two bedroom , 1 112 baths , Vmton . You pay Cleposil and utUihes
and have references . 740-388·

. Lol for sale· Gaihpol ls, 90x172,
nice neighborhood. qu1et. 740-

3725.

4yrs old, $350 . 304-675·3000
be1We8r18am-Spnt

Meigs Co.: Lots + lots All New!!
Rutland . Whiles Hill Ad , Just Off
New Lima , 16 Acres $14 ,000 Or 9
Acres $12,000 . Danville , Br iar
Ridge + Golf Ads . T Acres With
Nice Pond $12,000 Or 8 Acres
$13,000. Also. On SA 325. Nice
Wooded 17 Acr•a $16,000 , City
Wale r Near New School. Kee baugh Ad , 5 Acre Lo.~ !~4.00C
Ea. Oyesv111e, Very Aemote 11 +
Acres $t0,500

Call For Free Maps + Owner Ft·
nanctng Info Take 10% Off Listed
PriCeS On Cash Purchases!

The Pomeroy Thrift Shop has
moved to 145 North Second Ave·
nu&amp;, Middleport (Cash Bah(&amp; olel
buildi ng), buying· baby 1tems ,
breJkfast sets &amp; good clean used
furniture on cons1gnment. Open
Tuesday· Frlday. 11-4, 740-992·

Used Hot point washer &amp; dryer.

Three bedroom mob1ie home In

Back On The Market 10 Acres ,
Teens Run Ad ., $12.000, PubliC
Waler

Relrlgeralor $175, Electroc Slave
$12S 740-44&amp;-7616.

96~3356

BRUNER LAND
?CG-441-1492

1998 Close out sale Save b1g
$$$ 2.3.4 Plidroom homes. Tn .
State Homes. St Albans , WV
Callt -800-948-5678

Ooublewtde 3bl, 2 bath , $1 ,345
down, $217 permo Free deliv·

3br, double lot 100x100. nice IO·
cation. Mason area . 304-773 -

Road, WV 304-67H946

9436.

992·!1696

1226

2 acre lots or 8 acres, l!lethel

111bale, trS1 monlf1 free. 11eo HBO,
S1ar0ne special S48 lna11111tlon.
800--2640

plano Or. 740-446-4525

ForlaaH

1br trailer for rent at Larry's L()Ct(·
er In Letart, WV 304-895-3603.

992·2167

Prlmeatar· low l nstailallon with

Grubb's Piano- tumng &amp; repairs .
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

1/2 Acre Lot 1989 Clayton 14'X
60', Deck, Porch, 24X 36 Garage/
Building 4nd More Mid 20's For
Appotntment 74D- 256-1380

1995 Clayton, all electric, e•cetlent conaltlon. call Tom Anderson.
740.992·3348 After 5pm

opportun~y baSIS

Close Out Sakt On Everything In
Stock Parts . Farm Equipment.
Utilily Trailers, Tractors, Kessel's
Tractor &amp; Equipment. 1 Mile West
Holzer Hospital Jackson P1ke .

675-4%1

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

314 acre on MeaOOw H1ll Drive on
Sand Hill Roa~. 304-675-5211

16x76 4br. 2 bath S1.t95 down.
$193. permo Free air, free sk1rt

3114-67S-4920.

Older-metal storm windows wl
screens 28.1182 &amp; 3·&amp;e· double
wall unit pipe &amp; unit cap 304-

Commercia l-Office or Retail, 87
Mill St Mii:ldieport 1,450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Building 740992·6250 AcQuls•tlons (next
door)

12x65 Schultz. good cond, CIA ,
lurnace-4yrs old, range-4yrs old.
new carpel , vmyl . underp1nn1ng
Will pay lor del1very $5,800 Call
K&amp;l&lt; Mob1 le Home s. 304 -675 ·
3000, Sam-5pm

3339. 304·67S·3269

74D-3Ci7·m7 or 740-367.()239

Onlce T1aller 8'X 32', $3.200 00.
Pallal Dolly $200 00 740·4&lt;16·
4782

Single P1rent Progr1m. Spec1ai
financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Peymenu 11 low 11
l110hno Callnow~-755-7191 .

314 acre corner lot in Camp Con·
ley 304-675·3734

14' x 70' 1963 Ctayton-uncoln
Tra1ler, 3 Bdrm , 2 Bath, tO X 22'
Fron1 Porch With Root , I' X 10'
Back Porch . New Underpmnmgs
For more mfo. Alter 5.00 304·675·

Kolher &amp; Campbell piano for
sale . Sl .0 00 Good condition

3409

cycle 7SO 4cyl. $800 304-S76 ·
4146

14 &lt;70 3BA. $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 per mo. Free air &amp; free sk•r1lng 1·888·928·3426

610 Farm Equipment

562-5840.

304 -67~1226

210

King Cole &amp; Woodburner Stove,
Good Shape . Wood For Sale
AJso, 740-256-1~2-4 .

New English saddi&amp;, brownlaMver
trim . $375 . Brown English sad·
die. used a ftw times. 195 304-

t00x1 SO lot In Gallipolis Ferry

2217

FARf11 SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

-lo--

41 llol1lt beef

13 ~noisily
14 &amp;.nllal
cl1erKtlr

, --~~-:--::--:--

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

4514

740- ~159, 7ol0-24~9675

Pnme Location 4 t 4 Thud Ave
Gallipolis. BeauUiul newly constructed two story Cotontar tlas 3
BR , 2· 112Baths, LR , f FA Formal
Dm10g Room with hardwood ftoors,
Oak Doors &amp; Trim. Fireplace 1· 1/
2 car garage. Elig ible lor tax
Abatement. $169 900 . 1·304-273·

410 HOUle&amp; for Rent

ACROSS

mobile home

raper and mo&lt;e. For

6323.

840 Electrical and
Rlfrlgeratlcin

ASTRO·GRAPB

~

LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0ct. 23) Hang Beware of the lemplation to pu'h
out with pals today inMeadofimpos· yourself beyond your capabilities
ing on a group that makes you feel today. Seek a.~sistance for endeavors
uncomfonoble. They miaht be even lhaHequirc more know-ho\\Lihan you
more irritating !han usual today.
hove.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) If
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Try
the outside world doesn't treat you as not to conduct your affairs in ways
kindly as it should today, don't bring . rluucould put you in opposition to the
your griev~ home.
majorily today. Being out on the limb
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0e&lt;:. alone is a lonely experience.
21) Everybody makes mistakes ,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
sometimes; and there's a possitlility ' Strive to do your best today, but don't
you niiaht dO lli tOday. If you "' to;· I(IICh _unreasonable. impo~ to :
cover lhem up, you'll CI'CIIe
beilll number one. In .so~ Cli~Um·
complications.
·
I SWICCS, second place tsn tlhat bad.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
GEMINI (Maylt-June20)1fyou
Be budget-conscious today. U1c1 lim- . flil to respect the ideal and opinions
it your spendinJ to lmmedilil needs .rA others today, they will have little
only. Goins Into debt for IDI'RIIIIina .reprd for youra. Give credit where .
you Clll't llll'onlllnoi'llllllt IIIOIIIY t:Ndlt is due.
manaaemeat.
·
.
CANCER (June ~l·luly ~l Be
· AQUARIUS (lan. 20-Feb. 19) olttrcmely CII'CfiiJ 111 fi11anc•al or
U• yout bell j . . . . I' crldcll IXIIIIIII'Cill dalinp.today. Makina
•ul !!I 11 ..,._ If Jti11 ~ .. . ......lYe l'lltml · wilhoat thlnlr.itll
oddll ........... ,..• • •;lllllltl
clc&amp;lll illllield o( prof-

Friday. Aug. 7. 1998
Ventures you tackle on your own
will provide you with excitemen! and ,
large·rewards in the year ahead. Only
bring partners into the act as a last
reson.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don' t do
anyrhing 10 offend those who~ sup- I
pon you need to advance your mter·
ests today. Make allies. not enemies.
Get a jump on life by undmtandi~g .
the innuences that'll govem you tn
the year ahead. Send for ~~r AstroGraph predictions by ma1hng S2 to
Astro-Or:lph. c/o this newspaper.
Box 1758, Murmy Hill Sllltion.
York. NY 10156.BeSiftto._ .
your zodiac sijn.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be
sensible rcpntlna your holllh hlbill
today. Pnctice rnoclenlioa II Ill
aspects, llld if there II'C faodl orllrr
erages you shouldn't COIIIUme.lelft until you Clll IMIIhaiiiiOle
,I

arearer!

rm- :-~·

cr.-e

,..

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday

Thu~y.August6,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Oprah's black angels and other winged idols have a home in Beloit, Wis.
By EDITH LEE WEBSTER
, RCaegtholalw
. Cb~-L .
RSoclcfpord
1JC
I.. au1 s
"'"' ID
101
:: ~\h~10
ago,
0
t 1. Y
~venly

r::

r::.

watch over the histone
.
The
. Ange1M_u~um m the church
contams the nauon s largest pnvately owned collecllon of angels.
The museum fea1ures 12,000
angels on loan from collectors Joyce
and Lowell Berg. -~ 1nterna1J0nally famous collecuon Includes 1~ms
represenung more than 35 counmes.
. In add111on to the Berg CollecjJOn, the new museum boasts almosl
600 black angels donated by Oprah
Wonfrey.
.·
More than 2,000 people have v1sited the museum since it opened this
spring. They have come from 28
states and eight different countries,
:;ays Nora Gard, the museum·s executive director.
The Winfrey connection dbesn"t
hurt, Gard says, but the interest in
the museum is fueled more by the
popularity of angels in general.
"'There's a growing curiosity in
angels, and people want to know
more,'" Gard says. "Things like
(TV's) 'Touched By An Angel' feed
into it, and with the coming of the
new millennium, there is a heightened onterest."
Some museum visitors have told
Gard they were auracled by their
Chrislian belief in angels as God's
messengers. Others have a New Age
auraction to what they see as
guardian spirits.
"That"s passionate belief in the
unknown is very strong out there,
and people come for that reason,"
dard says. "The angels are sort of
self-interpretive, depending on your
backgrounds and beliefs."
The Berg angels range from fine art
to whimsical, such as the winged
pink poodle. Sometimes with wings
and-or halos; sometimes without,

the angels' poses show _them playing The _Angel Museum, they f~M:C a dra- angels in 1976 during a vacalion in
!"usJc, huggmg or kissmg and pray- mauc mural called "Heritage Florida. Now they hunt for anpls
mg.
Angels·" pam
. ted on •LL - •Lu"' west wall, everyw,,..,.,
u"'y go, espcct"ally flea
"We never m:eamed that there the circular work features four markets, estate sales and antique
were so many d~fferent w~ys that an~els i_n motion. Janesville, Wis., malls.
.
cool~ dep1c1 angels, . Jor,ce artiSts Valen~ Saxer-Rosenberg and
Their ~llecuon - "12,031 and
rg says. It boggles the mmd.
Dan Ballweg s mural reflects cultur- counung, Berg says - mcludes
Fans :m&lt;' friends of TV ta11r. show al diversity and unity, symbolizing pieces more than a century. old.
host Wmfrey be~an sendm~ her Beloit's immigrant and migrant
St. Paul, the historic church that
angels after she wd on 1he an that labor heritage.
houses the museum, sits on the Rock
she could not find any black angels.
Roman Inc. of Roselle, m.. a pre- River in Beloit, near the WisconsinWinfrey's angels vary in size, miere line of angel collc:ctibles, and Illinois border nonhwest of Chicashape, color and materials. They are Mary E. Matthews, co-founder of go.
made of fabncs, porcelain, flowers, the 1,500-plus member Angel ColThe building is made or brown
crystal, seeds and nuts, paper, glass, lectors Club of America, have both brick, with a peaked roof, Roman
wood, shells, feathers, metal and singled out the Berg Collection as arch, bell tower with parapet and
resin.
the largest pnvately held collection high, round, stained glass windows.
One of her donations is a satin in America and possibly the world.
The Romanesque style is typical
and lace sachet angel sent by Jane
The Bergs' began collecting churches in Italian villages.
Wannstedt, wife of Chicago Bears
coach Dave Wannstedt. Another is
of Rosa Parks. the Civil Rights figure who staned the Montgomery,
Ala., bus boycott. Others Illustrate
themes of Christmas or Kwanzaa.
the African-American holiday.
All of the museum's angels sit in
oak display cases.
The Berg Collection is grouped
by defining factors, including
media, season, occasion, purpose,
origin and company.
The collection includes angels
made of fine porcelain, ceramic,
acrylic, copper, glass, leather, com
husks, tree roots and spagheni.
Many of the angels are displayed
according to the season they depict,
including Christmas, Mother's Day
and other holidays. Others are
arranged for the occasions they represent, such as a wedding or birthday.
Angels made in Israel, Ireland,
Italy and other countries share shelf
space.
Some of the angels are displayed
according to the well-known companies which produced them, including Hummel, Precious Moments and
Lenox.
When visitors enter the gallery of

:ISIS

Wilen St Paul parish was \:IDS¢
ia 1988 Beloit Colle• bought the
. . ' and used 11.o-for storage
building
Beloit 2000 a private developmcni
group, bought the church for a plan
to create. Herillje Park, ~ut when
tbe buildina was flot used 11 was set
for demolition.
'
In December 1994, former

Today: Plltly cloudy
High: 801; Low: 60a

·shioners convinced the Beloit ·
bty Council that the church was a
.
historic landmark wortb preservmg.
St Pauline a not-for-profit organizatlon established in June 1995, and
the City of Beloit have a 10-year
agreement for tbe site wh1ch 1s sull
owned b the ci . '
y
ty

Tomorrow: Pll'tly cloudy
High: 801; Low: 60a

Lewinsky account sets
stage for Clinton's side
WASHINGTON (AP)- Keeping
her composure while presenting :m
account that President Clinton will
confront in I0 days, Monica Lewinsky has told a grand jury that she and
Clinton had a sexual relation;hip
inside the White House, and discussed ways to conceal their involvement, a legal source says.
Ms. Lewinsky, telling 23 strangers
on a federal grand jury about her sex
life, set the stage Thursday for Clinton's testimony by closed-circuit television Aug. 17.
In stark contrast to her testimony,
Clinton has denied having sexual
relations with Ms. Lewinsky-once
in sworn testimony in the Paula
Jones sexual harassmcntlawsuil and
again in a televised stalemenl.
After spending 8-112 hours in the
federal courthouse. most of the time
in closed session with the grand jury,
Ms. Lewinsky, 25, was not lold
whcther she would have to testify
again. That raised the possibility that
she could be recalled after Clinlon
becomes the firsl sitting president to
give grand jury testimony in a criminal case that targets his conduct.
Clinton could be asked. as he was
by lawyers for Mrs. Jones in her civil lawsuit against him, whether he
was sexually involved with Ms.
Lewinsky, based on a certain dcfinition of sexual relations. The actual
definition presented to Clinton in
Mrs. Jones' sexual harassment lawsuit has not been made public.
"I have never had sexual relations

19t6UNCOlN

WAS$1,495

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Lucky
13 will try to prove that they truly are
lucky.
Not that anyone has serious doubts
the group of 13 machinists and
assembly technicians won $161.5
million in l:JSt month's Powcrball
jackpot.
But 101Jay, their attorney was to
leave for Indianapolis to tum in what
he says is the winninatickct.
Larry Sturtz planned to travel
alone by car to Hoosier Louery headquaners, where the ticket needs to be
validated. Stunz has said he isn't .
worried about theft because of legal

Auro VALUE
PARTS SroRES
.PART88TOR.8

1tilt///~ ~tlfl r:z

4 cyl, A/C, auto, PW, cruise, AM!FM radio, stereo

4 cyl, NC, PS, PB, PW, POL,

NASCAR

4 WO, V8, auto, PS, PB, PW, P. seat, POL,

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Tcr"rorist bombs exploded minutes apart
outside the U.S. embassies in the
Kenyan and Tanzanian capitals tuday,
toppling a four-story building and
killing more than 50 people. More
than 1,000 were injured, of11;:ials
said.
Americans were among the dead,
and the U.S. ambassador to Kenya
was injured, the State Department
said. More than 40 people were
. killed and I ,000 wounded in Nairobi alone. said Red Cross spokeswoman Nina Galbe. Witnesses said at
least nine were l:.illed and 16 hurt in
Tanzania.
An Arabic-speaking man was taken into custody in Nairobi by Kenyan
poliL-c in connection with the bomb-

ti~.

Racing Simulator

Good Afternoon

You may win 2 Tickets to the Chadotte Winston Cup Race/

~'
-

-

Cleaning away Payback

is coming
Ruling orders
workers' comp
reimbursement

tionship with Ms. Lewinsky and then
conspired with her and others to cover up their relationship.
Clinton went about his business 81
COLUMBUS (AP)- Some peothe White House, serving as host of
ple
who repaid workers ' compensaan anti-crime event in the Rose Gartion
benefits in the last three years
den and escaping reporters' questions
will
get
reimbursed under a court rulabout Ms. Lewinsky that were
ing
thai
could cost the state SI mildrowned out by the blare of a mililion.
tary band. His aides projected a busiThe Ohio Supreme Court ruled Sness-as-usual air.
2
on
Wednesday against a require"His mood is great," While House
ment
that
injured workers repay bendeputy press secretary Barry Toiv
efits
they
received
bet weed two decisaid.
sions:
one
ordering
them back to
"We're hopeful that this means a · ·
work
and
another
against their
four-year investisation that has cost
appeal.
upwards of S40 million is finally
The ruling affect' only claimants ·
coming to a conclusion," Toiv said.
since
1995 whose injuries were serireferring to Starr's investigation,
ous
enough
to miss work. said Jim
which sJarted with the Whitewater
Samuel.
a
ipokcsma~ for the Ohio
land deal in Arkansa.• and e1panded
Bureau ofWorkcrs' Compensation.
to questions of obstruction of justice
He wa.' unsure how many workinside the White House.
ers
were involved. hut cstimaled
On Capitol Hill, House Democrawould total about SI milrepayment'
tic leader Dick Gephardt showed his
lion.
Each
year.
about 330.000 Ohio
weariness with the Lewinsky inves.
workers
ftlc
injury
claims. hut only
ligation. "I'm sick of hearins about
15
percent
miss
work.
it," he told a news conference.
A computer search wi II he used to
He said it would be a "grave misdetermine who is due money, said
take" for Starr to send a report to
Kevin Waller, a spokesman for the
Congress on the investigation in the
Ohio Industrial Commission.
weeks leading up to the fall elections.
The issue arose ancr the state
"Thai would be very partisan, very
changed policies in February 1995
unfair and demeaning to the process
Crews
from Dfellr 1111d Miller Inc., Reynokllburg, haVe been
about paying benefits during appeals.
that I think all of us believe is imporwortdng to CIMn the village Hllllrl In Pomeroy this week. EquipPreviously, benefits were stopped
Iantto this country," he said.
ment 1111.bien UNCI throughout the downtown- this - k and
when
a doctor determined the patient
Ms. Lewinsky began working at
wiH move on to other ...... of the village next - k , according
was
ready
to return to work. If the
the White House as an intern in mid- . to 1 village empluyel.
claimant
successfully
al'flCaled, ben1995.1n the spring of 1996, she was
efits were resumed and a check was
transferred to the Pentagon.'
lo.!"'"'---------------~------.1 issued for back benefits.
In the case presented to the court.
· a fircfiglilcr/paramcdfc was in)urcd

steps he has taken to protect the ticket's integrity and his clients' claim.
'The winners have 180 days from
.&amp;II~ July 29 drawing to present their
ticket fdr validation.
The ti,ket has been kept in a safety deposit. box. A copy was faxed to
Hoosier Lottery officials, who said it
looked valid. But rules require the
original to be turned in before a winner is declared.
Validation could take a while. So
if the ticket is for rCijl, the money
probably won 'I be wired to the winners· bank accounts until Thursday.
Powcrball, which operates in 20

states and the District of Columbia
but not in Ohio, offered a record
$295.7 million jackpot. The ticket
holder decided to take the $161.5 million lump-sum payment option. After
taxes, a 13-way cut would be wonh
$6.8 million to each.
The supposed winners, who nicknamed themselves "the Lucky 13,"'
work at Automation Tooling Systems
in the Columbus suburb of Westerville. They bought 130 tickets spending $10 apiece- at a gasoline
station in Richmond, Ind., about I00
miles away.
The person who bought the ticket

planned to buy at another store, but
the line was too long.
Most of the winners have
remained anonymous, except John
Jarrell, whose name was slipped to
reporters by a relative. After the
media swarm, their lawyer advised
the other 12 men to hide as long as
they can.
In a news conference on his lawn,
Jarrell, dressed in black Harley
Davidson apparel, said be would buy
a new home and a motorcycle for his
wife.
He said other members of the
group talked about investing and buy-

ing houses and cars.
When asked whe1her co-workers
who didn't play were sorry. Jarrell
replied: "There's probably a few of

Aug. 13, 1992.
He was receiving temporary, total
disability payments on July 24, 1995,
when a hearing officer ruled that he
them."
had improved enough to be assigned
One might he Robert Kronk, who to permanenl, partial disabili1y slatus.
said he dropped out of 1he pool three
The officer ruled 1he change was
monlhs before the drawing aflcr sev- effective March 23, the date of a docen years as a member. He wanted to tor's report. That made the injured
choose his numbers in&lt;tcad of having man liable for overpaymcnls for four
them picked at random. Kronk said months.
he was sure 1hc winners would "take
The court opinion, wriuen by Juscare" of him.
tice Alice Robie ReM•ick, said the
An ATS spokesman has said some hearing date is lhe appropriale date
workers have lalkcd about va&lt;:ation for ending temporary, lola! disabili lime.
ty.

Blasts outside U.S. embassies
leave 50 dead, over 1,000 hurt

4 cyt, A/C, auto, PS, PB, AM!FM radio, stereo

Test your racing skills in the Auto Value

with Monica Lewinsky," Clinton testificd in the Jan. 17 Jones deposition
after the judge allowed Mrs. Jones'
lawyers to show him "definition
number one." Clinton added: "I've
never had an affair with her."
Ms. Lewinsky, a former White
House intern. left the courtbouse
.Thursday pale and drawn-looking.
Her spokeswoman, Judy Smith, later said she testified "truthfully. completely and honestly."
"Monica and her family are
relieved that this ordeal finally
appears to be coming to an end," Ms.
Smith said in a statement read to
reporters.
The legal source said Ms. Lewinsky stuck to the account she has been
telling prosecutors "this past week,
under an agreement that granted her
and her parents blanket immunity
from prosecution.
That account includes testimony
that Ms. Lewinsky and Clinton had
sexual encounters inside the White
House, including in a study near the
Oval Office, and discussed how they
could conceal their relationship. But
she says Clinton neverinstrucled her
to lie under oath. the source said,
speaking only condition of anonymi1y.
PlatoCacheris, one of Ms. Lewinsky's lawyers, said his client "did a
fine job."
Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr is investisating whether Clinton
committed peljury in the Jones lawsuit when he denied a sexual rela-

Single copy . 35 cents

Lawyer for 'Lucky 13' departs to val.idate ., winning -aeket.

WAS

RAciNG AHEAD OF THE CoMPETITION!

Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 76

4 cyl, standard, AMJFM radio
NEARLY 600 BLACK angels from Oprah Winfrey draw visitors to
WAS $6,495
the Angel Muaeum.
.
1-.;..;.,;,;;,.;;;;..;;.;._-:~~

BORG)(WARIER ..

Braves shut
out Reds 5-0

Hometown Newspaper

Front Wheel Drive, 4 cyl, Air condition, auto

AND

Importance of being happy, Page 2
Mississippi Queen is coming, Page 7
Exploring the 'good seed', Page 7

•

Names omitted from dean's list
Cynthia Krauner and Melissa Nicholson, both of Pomeroy, were inadvertently omitted from a list of students named to the Hocking College's
spring quarter dean's list. Students must have at least a 3.3 grade point average and 12 credit hours to meet dean list requirements.

Sports

August 7, 1998

· Today's Sentinel
Z Sectloas • 1l Pqes

Pomeroy Auto Parts

Celrpd•r
Dwlflcdl

11am to &amp;pm • Monday August 10th, 1998

Comks
f4itqrielp

119 W. Second Street • Pomeroy, OH • 992·2139

WgtMr

Door Prizes!

Lotteries

Free Popcorn • Soda ,.,

7
8-10

11
l
.3
415
3

Crowds crawled over a mountain
of twisted and broken concrete and
metal looking for victims, calling out .
\ \ 1! .11 &gt;I• · •
HI ' •· to ,, ,.., ,. .
and waving their anns for help to free
' " " ' " . " " ' " ' " ' ' ol "' ' . ! .. .
'"' ·"' ,.,. ' ""
trapped people. Windows were shattered as far as I0 blocks away.
Bodies were dn1ped out of windows in a charred bus, and shanered
cars were left smoldering on the street
amid the debris. Dazed and bloody
survivors lay on the ground until they
were led away.
"Once the rubble is cleared further
we expect to find more," said Galbe.
Added another Red Cross worker
·· ;.· , :
who refused io give his nome: "There
arc too many dead to count."
Passersby helped rescuers, and
ferried the injured to hospitals in their
CHARTING THE COST - Ohio Senate surrounding school funding at the Statehou..
own cars. At least 54 people were
Minority Leeder Ben Espy, D·Columbus, on Thursday. (AP)
being treated at Nairobi Hospital.
referrld to • chart during 1 news conference
'The nearby German embassy was
also damaged in the blast, but there
were no reports of injuries there.
In the Tanzanian capital of Dares
Salaam, a car bomb uploded in the
U.S. Embassy parking (Jli. At least
nine people were killed and 16
"School districts arc not required the new standards, and then cuminjured, witnesses said. OffiCial con- By PAUL SOUt,fRADA
to
spend more money,'' he said. pared that to the c~tra state aid they
finnation was IIPI immediately avail- Alaoclated Preea Wrltll'
"They
arc only required 10 repriori- will get next year.
COLUMBUS -New legislation
able.
lize
the
way they currently spend
Smoke rose from the damaged that requires academic standards and
money
an unfonunate necessity . The gap for the 159 districts that
linancial
accountability
will
cost
buildings.
after
watching
school districts fool- responded was more than $2112.6 milOhio schools more than SI billion, a
ishly
waste
taxpayer
dollars on ltion. If the comparison were extend'urvey by Senate Democrats sllid .
"They just don 'I have the money administrative penonnel while text- ed to include all the districts, the figto do What Oencnal Assembly wants books remained outdated and build- ure would topS 1.1 billion, Espy esti·
mated.
them to do,"' Senate Minority Leader ings fell into disrepair."
The Republican-controlled LegisRiclwd Murray, sulv-..rintendent of
Ben Espy, 0-Columbus, said ThursAn umcd robbery at the Subway reataurant in Pomeroy on Thursday is day.
lature pushed through a package of the West Muskingum School Diilrict
"Bullfeathers,"' responded Sen. school reforms last summer. lnclud- in southeast Ohio, said tbere is no
llill under iuvatiption.
.
.
·
AccordinJ to ~ Oliof Jeffrey Miller, a female subject, whole fdea. . Gene WiltS, R-&lt;lalloway, who wrote ed in the legislation were require- way to cover aS 1.3 million defiCit in
tiiy il unknown, QIIIC into the.....,. at aounct $:30 p.m., onlereda 10ft the academic standards pmt of tbe ments for- balanced bUdgets, money an $8 million budget without askiiiJ
drink, then pulled aJUII on the clerlt and demanded tbe cUh ia thc cuh
set aside for maintenance and text-~ voters for a biJ increase in property
lcafslation.
books, as well as certain academic taxes.
He
said
the
survey
does
not
rcpistcr.
1
'"There is just no way to reshuffle
The wOmM!lcft thc roatauranl with .. atimated
and sped away ia rc¥nt a S!:ictltifit sample of Ohio's standards.
Blpy asked superintendents of the I the cards in that deck 10 make it wort ,
a piCkup tniClt driYell '"a Jnlli. Accorcliq to Miller,ICvenlluda froth wit· ' S!:hool disericts. He also said tbe new
~ iDCiudiq ~of the IUbjel:tllld tbeir vcbicle,~~e beill&amp; fol- rcquireliiCIIIS are not 111funded man· state's 611 school districts to tally up 1 without euning programs,"' Murray ••..
how much extra it would cost to meet . said.
i•
dates.
loWed by tbldepiltm-.
.

ing. said an Associated Press photog.Jphcr who witnessed the incident.
Police made no immediate comment.
"There was no warning and there
has been no claim of responsibility,"
said State Department spokesman
Lee McClenny. ,"They were terrorist
attacks."
The militant group Islamic Jihad
vowed last week to strike American
interests because some of ils mem·
hers were arrested in Albania and
handed over to Egypt, according to a
report Thursday in AI-Hayat, a daily
Arabic-languagen'ewspaper in London.
.
The State Department said the
blasts occurred within five minutes of
each other in the capitals, roughly
450 miles apart.
"You can sec a huge crater behind
the building, and a bomb went off at
the embassy in Tanzania at the same
time," said a U.S. Embassy official in
l"airobi, who refused to give his
name.
The blast in Nairobi at 10:35 a.m.
(3;35 a.m. EDT) toppled the four·story Ufundi Cooperative buildinc
toward the embassy, which was badly damaged. Coope111tive Bank
House. with government and private
offices, also was damaged.

X4r,;

Senate Democrats challenge
cost of accountability proposal

Police pursuing I ads in
sandwich shop robbery

rea-

• Look lot the Auto Vslue Blimp I

mo

.
'

....

.
.

"~-' (

~~

-

•

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