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                  <text>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

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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-

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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

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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

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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

.
'

....

.
.

"~-' (

~~

-

•

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .........

Friday, August 7, 1998

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Aug. 8
AccuWeathe,. forecast for daytime conditions and high temperstures
MICH

Alarmists object to recycled needles

The Daily Sentinel
'E.stUfisfrd in 1948

By J.ck Anclln«t
8lld J• Uolllr
At fmt cJance, the news looks

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-19:2-2156 • FIX 112·2157

rather scary: Hospitals 1ft putting
their patients at risk by reusina
medical devices tbal are only supposed to be used once. Tbe catheter
or syringe that your doctor uses may
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
1101 have been properly trated.
And what's worse, patients
ROBERT L WINGETT
aren't even being told.
Alons comes the Coaliuon
Pu~··Apillll Reuse Abuse -- or CAJtAto save the day. Billing itself u a
sroup of "medical companies,
healtb care providers and consumer
advocates," CARA. wants to make
everyone aware or the dangen that
_ _ , _ _ . ., . .·
_ ,..
_. .,_
pt'
1tot
J)podtolmay be lurki ng In
"""' hOSJII·
,...._
- ._
. . ,lll·__
--.
..
...
. I he"If 1---·
.
tal rooms.
_...,._,__~·-~~-.. . . . . . ,.,.._.....,
"Members of the media are
111 c.ur lt. - . . , , Olilo • being uked to help raise awareness
"' - -lc: • _.-.nR_.••~.~--~-.,.._.'•'•.-._n•n•·--------------------~.-----..- of the life-threatening dan~ers or
reuse," a press release notes.
There's only problem: There is
no crisis. And there are no consumer
advocates sounding the alarm.
A call 10 the CARA offices was
answered by Halstead Communications. a public relations firm in California
that helps hospitals and other
ByTOMRAUM
health-care
industry clients polish
AIIOCiated Press Writer
- WASHINGTON - The politiCS stalling an S18 billion payment to the
International Monetary Fund are tangled enough in WashingtOn. For Asians
. wanting the IMF to help resolve their economic crisis, the maneuvering can
·_seem downright incomprehensible.
"There are strong feelings. II is a serious debare," House Majority Leader
Dick Anney. R-Texas. wd Tuesday about the recent decision by House
Republican leaders to postpone action on an IMP bill until September. "II is,
from an academic point or view. a fascinatinc debare thai we will have. I don't
know how it will tum out."
Asian leaders are less than fascinated . They see their economies sinking
~ ·,.
'AI ••
and are lookin~ to the industrial world for a life oreserver. The rich countries
•I '
have a "paramount role ... in restoring economic vitality in the region," says
.(jj
Philippine Fon:ign Minister Domingo Siazon.
..1
Asian leaders warn of further social unrest and violence like the rioting this
spring that toppled the 32-year rule of Indonesia's President Suhano. As Sec. retary of State Madeleine Albright put it: "Misay can give rise to millrUSI
among nations."
Some GOP leaders have suggested the full SIS billion IMP request will be
granted - but 1101 until just before Coogress quits in October.
An exasperated Deputy Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers insisted
anew thai Coogress quit stalling, telling the National Govemon' Association
in Milwaukee on Tuesday: "I would say we have a long way to go" bef&lt;R a
turnaroUnd in Asia.
He said the "IMP has been critical to our contairment of the Asian finan. cial crisis to dale." But the lending institution needs more money to help
replenish accounts stnined by loans to Asia and RussiL
The crisis has already mulled in a slowdown in expcxu. an increase in the
U.S. trade defJCit and contributed to the recentllOCk market downdraft. American companies have over S130 billion of investment II stake in the region.
The financial problems may be Asian, but the politics in Congress seem
Byzantine.
They include disagreements between GOP critics of~ IMI\ an4 pro-busiBy William A. Ruther
ness lawmakers who support its efforts.
To put in my 10 cents' worth of
Furthermore, some Republicans are battling each other. Senate Appropriapropbecy first, I think that on Aug.
tions Committee Chairman Ted Stevens. R-Aiaska, is pushing for the full $18
billion. as is Rep. Bob Livings1on, R-La., chairman of the House Appropria- 17 President Clinton will testify
fully and accurately to the grand
tions Committee. The Senile has alrucly passed the leJislation.
jury,
admitting to a sexttal relationBut Anney has been fightins those efforts: Anney and Livingston are rivals
ship
with Monica Lewinsky, and
to succeed Rep. Newt Gingrich. R.Qa., as House speaker.
.
tetrcal
behind a squidlike (but nonAnney and Senate Majority Leader Trent L.ott. R-Miss .. meanwhile. have
perjurious) cloud or ambiguities and
both denounced JMF direetor Michel Camdessus and called for his replace"I don't recalls" on all questions
· ment.
having to do with subornation or
Also in the mix: anti-abortion activists. led by Rep. Christopher Smith. Rperjury and obstruction of j\lstice.
N.J., are threatening to attach to the IMF bill restrictions on funds fO( family
Then, on or about Aug. 18, he
planning prognms overseas. That would likely prompt a veto from President
will address the American people on
Clinton.
.
Such a restriction has already been attached to a related State Department television. (I) offering a sanitized
, bill that would pay nearly SI billion in back dues owed the United Nations. version of his testimony and (2)
admilling that his conduct was "a
: That measure also is stalled.
•
Albright had a difficult task explaining all this as she recently !raveled mistake," maybe even "a terrible
mistake," but (3) pleading that his
;: around the Pacific. Asked about the deadlock at a news conference in Sydney.
·Ausualia. last Friday, Albright said: "It is probably not appropriate for me to perjury on the subject before the
Paula Jones grand jury and his subdiscuss our domestic political situation while we arc abroad."
sequent
barefaced lie to the AmeriAusualian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer jumped in.
can
people
("I did not have sexual
· "Not being abroad," he said, "I could say thatm this country. not to speak
relations
with
that woman, Miss
for the United States, but in this country there arc people who don't understand
Lewinsky") were chivalrous efforts
that it 1s in our national interest to help Asia as best we possibly can through
to sh1eld his wife. his dauehter. and
this economic crisis.
-not least -- Miss Lewinsky herself
· "Our countries both have a national interest in this economic crisis passing
from
public embarrassment and
as quickly as possible and that the humanitarian fall out being as liule as poshumiliation.
·sible."
Miss Lewinsky's subsequent
deal with Kenneth Starr, however
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum coven national and International
Issues for The Associated Press and traveled with Albright on her recent (i.e., to tell the whole truth), has
now released him , he will argue,
trip to Asia.
from that obligation, which is why
he is "now free at last" to tell the

... - ,..,.,..-.. ..,e.-,_, llttlultl-• ,_.,--

It.,.-. "" -.

Asian crisis,
:Byzantine politics

their images.
Not exactly
the grass roots.
Ask
the
helpful CARA
represenlalives
who
their
•'consUIRa'
advocates''

are, and they'll

tell you they
11o11er a
really don't have
.AncllnM
any - yet. But they have "sent
information to (health-are watchdog) Sid Wolfe, trying to get interest." (We're lucky they didn't send
a letter to President Clinton. or they
might be calling themselves a federal agency).
And finally. ask CARA how
many cases there are of people
being hurt by re-used medical
devices.
"Nothing that has been documented." uys Halstead official
John lockhart. who is handling
media inquiries for CARA.
So what gives?
By the looks of it, CARA was
thought up by a public-relations
finn as a way to drum up business.
Although there's no evidence that

patients are beins hwt by re-used
medical devices, there's plenty to
SUJJeSI that the device makers· are
feeling a pinch.
The re-use of medical devices is
nothing new. Scalpels ud other
meW insuumenl5 are routinely sterilized by hospitals and used numerous times over. Many hospitals have
also been reprocessinJ plastic
devices like catbeten and syringes
for yean.
But a few yean aao. medical
equipment makers were given
grealer leeway by 11he Food and
Drug Adminisuation to label their
products.
Suddenly, some devices that previously had no labelins were now
being touted as "sinJie-use"
devices.
Meanwhile, in the late 1980s.
some entrepreneurial souls came up
with the idea of "thint-puty" reprocessinl. These companies would
contract with hospitals to reprocess
and repackage their used medical
devices. This allows hospitals to
save money and time by not havmg
to do the work themselves.
Since then, thint-party reprocening has grown into a $1$ million-a-

'

,......

year business, says Pam Furman of
the Association of Medical Device
Repnxesson.
The only ones who don't benefit
from reprocessing are the device
makers, who are worried about losing business to these new competitors.
Lockhart, the CARA spokesman,
says that his group doesn't have any
dues-paying corporate members yet
but that they're hoping to "tOnnatize" industry support at a meeting in
September.
"Our (llll1lOSC is just to get the
word out," Lockhart told us.
"Nobody wants to be first, but
everyone acknowledges that it's a
problem . ... We're hoping that this
' will generate intere5t from the
groups that we're hoping to work
with.'.' Lockhart says his group
doesn't want to outlaw reprocessing, bua rather get hospitals to tell
their patients when a reprocessed
device is being used.
But Funnan. executive director
of the AMDR. has a different spin
on the 1ssue: "I think (CARA) is
JUSt a competitive beef more than
anything," she says. "They sec
rcproccssors as a potentially formidable threat to their market."
Halstead Communications is by
no means alone in such endeavors.
Phony "grass-roots" campaigns
have become a staple for industries
that want to push their agendu
· without revealing sponsorships. A
few years ago, for example, medical
equipment makers helped fund a
group called Americans for Medical
Progress. which took out full-page
newsoaoer ads to ar11ue for support
or animal research.
In another case. the candy giant
M&amp;M/Mars was reportedly funding
a JfOUP called the Princeton Dental
Institute, which published a
newsletter for dentists claiming that
chocolate can prevent cavities.
M&lt;R recently, big utility companies
and industrial electricity users have
formed a mau of "grass-roocs"
groups 10 push their case in the battle over industry.deregulation.
J~~ek ADdenoa and J1111 Moler
an wrlten for United Fee..n
S)'lldlrate, Inc.

What the Republican party really wants

·Letters to the editor

Let's prevent death of a small town
We Wllllllo take this opponunity to thank the residents of Middleport who
responded to our previous letter concemi~g their v.illage government. In
case you didn't know, thatleuer was an mv1ta11on to JOin our effort to monitor the workings of our village officials.
This is simply a way for you the residents to take an active pan in your
community. In no way is 11 intended to harass or hinder these officials bu11o
bring 10 their attentton questions or problems of which they may not be
aware and 10 conect those of which already exist. In other words through a
combined community effort, we can make our town a better lown.
There were about20 people a1the last council meeting and each of these
folks voiced their opinion reference their problems. Some of the problems
presented to council were: condition ofthe cemeteries. repair_or water leaks
that had been going on for over a year, unacceptable condll1ons or some
• properties, the two hour parking and village personnel problems. Now we
• understand that not everyone will always agree w1th the results of their
: ·endeavors but if they are made to understand the whys and wherefores and
· not simply be ignored perhaps thai will result in a better attitude for all
involved. It has been proven you can't suit a lithe people all the time but let's
keep working on it.
.
Once again if you have ques11ons and or problems please call 992-7761
• or 992-2343 and we will try to help. If you do not want to call us, then get
: in touch with your Councilman and make him or her aware of your problems
• since they are there to serve you.
. ..
.
This town needs the interest of its all Its call.zens so let your vo1ces be
If these problems and conditions continue, one will be able to write a
. book titled • Dadt of a Small Town". How very sad if that were to happen.
- Get involved.
• ThrouJ!t these letten, we will keep you informed of our efforts and the
: results thereof.
:
Sincerely,

•

~-

deposition in a &lt;;ivil lawsuit later
thrown out by the judge.
With any luck, most Americans
will be too lazy to bother distinguishing between the peccadillo and
the lie concerning it (which a lot of
them reaard as either fcqivable or
irrelevant) and the entirely separate
offenses or suborning petjury (i.e ..
encouraging Miss Lewinsky to lie)
and obstructing justice (e.g .• urging
her to send his gifts to her to his sec·
rctary. Betty Currie). both of which
surely ought to be beneath America· s chief law-enforcement officer.
The rea.&lt;on I am confident that he
will "fess ur to the grand jury is that
pcrjury in his testimony to it would
put him on a fast track to impeach·
mcnt and removal from office.
Mr. Swrr will then. perhaps in
shows, announc.:c Ihat cvcryunc ''lR- Scptcmt.:r. submit his long-awaited
cemed has "suffered ~nou~h:· and rcpurt I&lt;&gt; Con~rcss. outhnintl Mr.
ask the Am~rican peupl~ 1u jum Clinh&gt;n's crimes in the Lewinsky
them in demanding that 1hc Starr mancr -- and also. quite posstbly. in
probe he closed down forthwith and sud1 h:llf-furgullcn matters as
consigned to the nsh-heap nr histu· Whitewater. Travelgatc. Filcgate.
ry.
etc.-- :md it will hc ur to the House
Both Mr. Clinton and his apolt&gt;- Ju,lkiary Cummiuec to decide
gists will try strenuously to imrly whether impcachmcnl is warranted
that any leftover issues involving by virtue uf any uf them .
subornation of perjury and ohstrucWhat will hapJICn nt that point is
tion of justice arc "secondary " 10 anybudy"s guess. No doubt there
Mr. Climon's own (admitted) per- will t.: snme Republicans in Con·
jury, which involv~d only a sexual grcss. nul to mention millions of
peccadillo. and was commiued in a them nuts ide. whu will demand

impeachment. They will be joined,
openly or covertly, by quilc a few
Congressional Dcmocrals who have
no desire whatever to fall on their
swords for Mr. Clinton.
Others, in both panics, will
favor a joint resolution "condemning" Mr. Clinton's various misdeeds, hut stopping short or
impeachment. This would have the
important effect of preventing Vice
· President Gore from a..ccnding the
Peacock Throne immediately. withoul benefit of election
From the standpoint of the
Republicans. the Iauer strategy will
have a powerful auraetmn. Two and
a half more years or Mr. Clmton
means a daily national bath in the
sordid. slcaly mess his admmtStra·
lion has become , quite regardless of
the state of the cconomy. Jt is ridi&lt;'U·
lous to suppose this will not ha1 c 11~
effect on those Americans wh,,
choose to vote (and those who arc
pondering whether to vote) this
November. and in the presidential
election or 2000.
Their Verdict will be Mr. Clinton's true l~gacy.
WUJiam A. Rusher Is a Dlstln·
gulshtd Fellow of the Claremont
Institute ror the Study of Stales·
manship and Political Philosophy.

The importance of being happy

----- ------

•

"Whatever
we may wish to
think," said the
British philosopher, "we arc
creatures
of
canh. Our life is
pan or the life of
the earth and we
draw nouris}lment from it just
Plagenz
as the planL• and
animals do.
"Many pleasures, of which we
may take gambling as a good example. have in them no clement or
contact with earth.
Such pleasures, in the instant
they cease, leave a man feeling dissatisfied, hungry for he knows not
what.
"Those. on the other hand, that
bring us into contact with the life of
the earth have something i!l them
profoundly satisfyina.
When they eea$e, the happiness
they have brouaht us remains."
Recently, there was a picture in a
magazine of a arandmotherly
woman lookina 11 us with a smile
on her face, holding a potted plant.
The caption under the picture

A reviewer of Prager's book thinks we may
be confusing happiness with pleasure or fun.
read: "Good, clean dirt under my
fingernails. I love it."
Russell would have immediately
recognit.cd her a.~ a happy woman.
We may of course he ovcn:sti·
mating the imronancc or happiness
in life.
George Apley tells his sun in
John Marquand's novel. ""The Late
George Apley:· that "a large part of
life consists of lcarninJ1 to he
unhappy without thinking too much
about it."
Then there is the remark of the
old ramily retainer in another story.
Asked by his adult daughter, "Arc
you happy, daddy?" he replies,
"Happy, honey?
Happiness is for 9hildren. Our
job is to do riJht."
It is possible, on the other hand,
that we don 'I put enouah importance on the punuit of happiness.
Praaer feels that "bcina happy,
or tryin1 to be, is no leu than a
moral responsibility because

whether we arc happy or not affects
not only us but our fncnds and family ..
Happiness may also. have much
tn do with our health.
"When you have a thought. you
make a molecule: · says Dcepak
Chopra. M.D.. guru of the
nund/body connectiOn in holistic
medicine.
'"If you have happy thoughts,
you make happy molecules."
While those happy molecules
activate the body's natural healing
mechanism, "unhappy" molecules
produced by negative thoughts
inhibit the body's response system.
A basic principle of Hindu healing is that "if you can make somebody happy, you can !riner 'lhe
healing response. To make happy is
to heal."

,.

Geo11e-P1apna Ia a .,.ted
Wl'lter ror Newtpaper Enterprlle
Asloclatlon.

-- --- - - -- - _________ _;____-I

•

Martha"A. Morris, 53, Gallipolis, died Wednesday, Aug. 5, 1998 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 31, 194-4 in Hartford, WVa. daughter of the late Wade and Ellz·
abeth Grimm Finnic~in. she was a homemaker. and attended the Lagrange
Church of Christ in Lagrange. Ohio.
Surviving are a son, Anthony (Pattie) Morris or Columbus; a daughter.
Amy (Paul) Rupe of Gallipolis; one grandson; two brothers, Frank Fmmcum
of Pomt Pleasan:. W.Va., and Jack (Margaret) Fmmcum of Gallipolis; and
four sisters, Mary Aycor.k of Sheffield Lake, Nellie Denny of Slatcvtllc. N C. .
and Allee (Larry) Eatls and Belly (Jim) Dovenbarger. both of Gallipolis.
She was at.o preceded in dealh hy a daughter. Martha Moms ; and by a
sister and a brother.
Servtces wtll be I:30 p.m. Sunday in the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home.
Pomt Pleasant, wtth 1he Rev. Charles Mash and the Rev Jack Finnicum ofr.ctating. Bunal will be in the Evergreen Cemclcry. Letart. W.Va. Friends may
call at the funeral home from noon· I :30 p.m. Sunday.

IND.

WVA.

Ice

•

S!my

Gallia County
Junior Fair
FRIDAY, AUGUST 7
4 p.m. -47th Annual Market Steer Sale - Show Arena
7.30 p.m. - OSTPA Sanctioned Traclor Pull - Pulling Track
8 30 p m. - Chris Fitch, Southern Retgn -- Mam S lag~

SATURDAY, AUGUST 8
10 am . - Farm Bureau Talent Show - ~1atn S1age
II am . - Ktddte games- 10 be announced
I p.m. - Mtm Car Demo Derby- Pulling Track
2 p m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena
7 p.m. - Demolition. Derby - Pulling Track
8·30 p.m - Daron Norwood- Mam Stage

Iraqi defiance will backfire,
Clinton declares in warning

""hsc urrenttactics wtll backfire .~
WASHINGTON (AP)- Continued lraq1 dcftance over U.N. weapons Chmon satd Far from hastemng ah
tnspccttons will "deny the lraq1lead· end to the sancuons. Iraq 's contmue~
Marjorie A. Newell, 68, Clifton. W.Va., d1ed Wednesday. Aug. 5. 1998 m crshtp what 11 wants most." an end to deftar: e ·· wtll pcrpcluav: !hose sancetght year.; of sancttons, Pres1dent tiOns and keep lhe lraqt economy
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal .
uml :: r taght mtcrnall unal control. .,
Born Oct. 6, 1939 in Mason, W.Va., daughter of the late Albert E. and Climon is wammg .
-'Thts wtll deny 1hc Jraqt leader·
Maxine Aowers Brumley, she was a DC inscncr for lmpenal Elcctnc. Mtd. "Unless Iraq reverses course, .
lhc Unilcd States wtll slop any and all sh1p what at wa nts must· an end to
dlepon.
She was a member of the VFW Stewart-Johnson Posl 9926 AuXIliary in efforts to ahcr the sancttons reg1mc, " sanctaons," he sa1d
Oflictal U S spokesmen cmphaClinlon satd Thursday in words
Mason W.Va
Sur.·iving are her husband, Donald M. Newell: a daughter. Vt.:ky S. dncctcd at lraqt Pres1den1 Saddam stzcd the dtplomattc route
"Let\ nol ratsc Ihe temperalurc
Rick"rd of Cliftoh; two grandchildren and a great-grandchild; a sislc&lt;, Diane Husscm
Meanwhile, Rep. Lee Hamilton, before 11" s appropnatc." " satd PJ
L Pope of Gallipolis; and several meces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by two sister.;, Margaret K. Bru~otlcy and an inOuenual congressional votce on Crowley, a Whtte House Nat10nal
forc1gn pohcy, suggested that, Securuy Counctl spok e&gt;man ··we
Barbara J. Smith.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday m the Foglesong Funeral Home. Mason. ··almost ccrtam ly, we Will move to arc consulung wllhtn lhc fU .N )
Sccunly Counul We arc gomg to
with the Rev. George Hoschar officiating. Bunal wtll be in the Kirkland confrontation m the days ahead."
Hamihon. D·lnd., d1d nol spectfy JUdge Iraq by at ~ action... not cntarcMemorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tontght.
whal k1nd ol confrontation but prc- ly by lis words ··
Statc Departm e nt ... pokc,man
dtclcd btparttsan support would be
James
Foley smd . " Were not calhng
slrong should Chnlon. dcctdc on the
11
a
cmis
al 1hc moment. stmpl y
Clyde Olen Young, 83, Success Road, Reedsville, died Friday. Aug. 7. need for mtlitary power- a sccnano
hccausc
1hc
e1·cn1 s have JUSI hap ·
1998 in St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg. W Va . followtng an extended 1he While House tmmcdtatcly played
pcncd
m
the
las
I 24 hours And we rc
down
illness.
ccnaml
y
gom
g
to need tunc lO dagc ... t
"Thts
"
a
famthar
pallcrn:·
satd
Born Dec. 18, 1914 in Reedsville. son of the late Clarence M. and Net·
thr
lah:q
cvc
nb
and to anal yt c
Hamthon.
scn
tor
Democrat
on
lhc
tie Mae Chevalier Young. he was a self-employed carpenter. a lifetime mem·
them ··
House
lmernauonal
Rclattons
Com·
ber of Oh1o Carpenters Union 200 in Columbus. a member of the Success
AI the Pcnt agoo. .. pokc~man Ken Church of Christ, ~nd more recently aucnded the Ltttle Hockmg Church of m111cc . He sa1d Saddam seems 1n1cn1
on pr ovokm g another open da'h wrth neth Bacon hkcw1 "C (hd not Jl.!..,cnhc
Christ.
the slluation a . . a cn .. as hut rather an
Survivmg are his w1fe, Josephine Barnhart Young; a daughter and son· 1hc West possthly lrymg lo lake
lraqt dtspulc wtlh lhc United Nauons
advantage
or
Chnton
's
prcoccupatron
m-law, Judy ami Charles Weber of Tuppers Plains; two sons and daughters·
·· II 's prclly 1ransparcn11o Ihe res;
wtlh
domcs11c
prohlems
in-Jaw, Larry and Nettie Young of Tuppers Plains. and Ray and Jamcc Young.
ol
1hc
world Saddam Husscm " up
Saddam
··"
ah•ays
tcstmg
:
he\
Reedsville; two sons, Robert and Gene Young, both of Reedsvtllc, 10 grand10 hts old tnck&gt; ... Bacon satd
always
probmg
...
Hamtlton
said
in
an
children and six great grandchildren; and several ~teces and nephews.
Still. whtlc the Un11cd Slates drc"
He was also preceded in death by two brothers. Kenneth and Clifford IO(CrVICW.
down tis lorccs 1n the Gull over the
The
U.N
Sccunty
Counci
l
brand·
Young; and a sister. Hcl~n CaldwelL
Private graveside services will be 2 p.m. Saturday 10 the Success Church cd as " lotally unacccptahle " Jraq ·s pasl several monlhs. lhcrc remam
19.000 m1l11ary men and women
frcezmg of cooperatiOn wnh U.N
of Christ Cemetery, with Evangelist Ron Hennen oflictatlng._
there. " a ve ry strung .md ready
1nspcc10rs
.
The
counctl
weapons
A public memona~ service w11l be held a1 2 p.m. Sunday m the Htckory
demanded llJUrsday lhal dtaloguc he force ... Baco n sa ad
Hill Church of Christ in Tuppers Plains.
Three warsh1ps and an :tttack suhThe family requests that donations be made to furthcrthe cause of Chns1 . resumed urgcmly hclwccn lhc mspccm::
:
mnc m the Pcr, i.m Gu1f rc gron arc
to rs and Iraq .
outfitted
wtth \on!,! -rJn gc uu1~c mls Cit nlon echoed 1ha1 scnllmcnl m a
s101emcn1 tssucd lmcr '" 1hc day. stles They arc pan oil he atrcrJft car·
"Iraq's rcrusalto cooperate with the ncr USS Abraham Lmcoln' s hallk
mtcrnatlonal w~apons mspcctors 1s group In all. 165 N3vyand Atr Force
warplanes arc m the area. Bacon satd
unacccplablc." h1s statement sa1d.
and
the
DemocratiC
National
Com·
WASHINGTON (AP) -A House
cvrr.miuee has voted to cite her for mtttcc violated campaign finance
contempt, yet Auomey General Janet laws.
"Every member of this commit·
Reno IS not bowing to congressional
Headquarters to open
tee.
Republican or Democrat. should Boil advisory
pressure to tum over papers .n a cam·
The
Tuppers
Plams-Chester
Water
The Mci g!rr&gt; Count y Dc m o~,;raiK
paign finance probe. She dismissed be embarrassed by thiS strong-arm District has tssued a boil adv1sory for
Pany wtll open tis hcadquarlcrs al
the request as "politicaltUillpering." tactic," Waxman satd.
the Texas Road. Lakewood Road and 220 E Mam St . Pomeroy. on Sunday
Reno
has
satd
she
expecls
lo
"I simply have to druw the line
Batley Road areas in Chester Town and sland up for what I bd ievc to he make a decision on seeki ng an indc· shtp. Restdents affected are asked to from 4-6 p m The opentng wtll he
a very imponant principle." Reno pcndenl counse l wtlhin three weeks. bOll cooking and dnnkmg water for followed hvy a picn~e - st y l c dtnncr
said after the vote Thursday. "Pros- FBI Director Louts Frech and Charles lhrcc m1nutcs before illS consumed . fund -raiser on hchall of US Rep
ol 11 ck c1s is $1'i
ecutions in America must be free of LaBella. former head of the depart· Samples of lhe wa1er will be 1akcn Ted Stn ckland Cost
per person. or $ 1 5 per tamil y
men1's campatgn finance task force.
poli1ical influence."
afler 1he hrokcn hoc is rcpmrcd and
Reno said she hoped for an wrote separate recommendations 10 results wtll he announced .
accommodation. But she rejected Reno thai she seck an mdcpendcnt
complying with a congressional sub· coun sel.
Republicans meet
poena, calling it "a form of poiiiiCJI
The Mctgs County Republican
In lcsumony before 1he commiuce
tampenng that no prosecutor in
Executtvc
Comm tllee will meet on
Tuesday. Frech satd he believed 1hc
America can accept"
Monday
at
7.30 p m at the Carleton
Republicans on the House Gov - facl 1hat ·1hc pcoplc under seruliny
School
m
Syracuse
The puhhc IS
ernment Reform and Oversighl Com· 1nctudc While House ofllctals and welcome .
mince recommended 10 1hc full 1hctr assoctales should leave Reno no
House 1ha1 Reno be held in contempt choice
"I couldn "t thmk of a stronger Antiques Club
for resisting a commllt~e suhpocna
The Big Bend Parm An11qucs
ordcnng her to turn·ovcr reports rec- argument lor an mdcpcndcnl coun- Club w1ll mccl al 7·30 Monday
ommending that she seck an tndc· seL .. sa td Frech. who made hts rcc - c vcnrng at the Grange ~mncx on the
pendent counsel to investigate cam· ommc ndatwn n1nc months ago
Roc k Srrrn gs Fnrrgrnunds
LoBell as teport was lllcu July 16.
patgn fund ra1smg. .
·
Bu1 Ftech and LaBella stdcd wll h
The 24- 19 vmc . selling up an
Reno
on th~ 4UC!-.IIon of turnmg over Right to Lire
cXIraordmary confronlalton hclwcen
The Rtohllo Ltlc will meet Mon Congress and l~c Justice Dcparlmcnl 1hc repolls say mg 1hat d1vulg1ng Ihe day. 710 p- :111hc Pomeroy Lthrary to
was along party lines. lndcpendenl dclmls wou ld damage lhc tn\Csllga· iln.tiiZe Mctgs County Fatr plans All
Rep. Bernard Sanders of Vermonl tton and have o chillin g cffccl on hooth workers arc ask ell to :.lllcnd
JOined 1hc Democrats '"opposllion. prosccu10rs elsewhere.
· The rull House will not conSider
Nevertheless. Burton mamtatned Enrollment for student•
the issue before September. when
Studen t:-. rn the Mcrgs Local
lawmakers return from their August that access to 1he reports was essen- School DtstriCI m grades 9- 12 shou ld
recess, said committee Chmrman tial 1f the commtllcc were to assess enroll al Mc1gs Hi gh School any day.
Dan Burton, R-Ind . "I hope that she Reno's rcluclance so far 10 seck a Monday lhrough Fnday. hclwccn
complies so that we don't have to do counsel. .. The comm tllCC has a need H 30 a.m and 2 30 p.m An open
to sec 1hcsc documcnls," he said
that, .. he said.
Sen Fred Thompson, chairman of house for new students has hccn &gt;e l
Rep. Henry Waxman, D·Calif..
for Thursday. 7 p m tn 1hc sc hool
accused Burton of trying to force the Scnalc commiucc mvcsuga11n g cal elena
Reno to seek the appointment of an fund ratsmg . added hts support 'The
independent counsel to investigate Bur1on comm tllcc stands on sound Board of Elections
allegations that Clinton-Gore '96 legal ~ro und ," he said
Regular mceling of 1hc Mctg s
Coumy Board of Elcclions will be
held a1 9 a.m. Tuesday.

Marjorie A. Newell

Pt. Cbudy Cloudy

Low pressure brings chance
of storms to area Saturday
By The Asaociated Preas
·. . .
A low pressure system hovering over Ohio means the posStbahty for showers and thunderstorms exists throughout the state today, the National Weather Service said.
It will be warm and humid today, with high temperatures reachmg into
the low 90s in some areas.
Expect partly cloudy and muggy conditiOns tonight with a chance of show·
ers and thuntlerstorms to the west. Ovem1ghtlows will be in the lower 70!'.
Rain is ab&lt;.1 in the forecast for Saturday. Highs will range from 85 to 90.
The record h1gh temperature ror this date at the Columbus weather station was 98 degrees set in 1918. The record low was 51 degrees se1 m 1990.
Sunset tonight is at 8:40p.m., while sunrise SaiUrday will be at6:36 a.m.
Weather forecast: ·
Tonight.. Partly cloudy. Lows from the upper 60s to around 70. Light wmd.
. Saturday...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms m lhe
aflernoon. Highs in the mid and upper 80s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday night.. Partly cloudy. Lows around 70.
Extended forecast:
Sunday .. .Partly cloudy. A chance of sl\owers and thunderstorms m the
aflemoon. Highs from the Opper 80s to arOund-90.
.
Monday ... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Mommg lows in the 60s Highs from 1he upper 80s to around 90.
Tucsday... Panly cloudy. A chance of showers and thundcrs10rms in the
aflemoon. Mornmg lows in lhe 60s. Highs from 1hc upper 80s to around 90.

Clyde·o. vo·u ng

Despite contempt vote,
Reno won't yield papers

Clyde Olen Young
Clyde Olen Young. 83, of Success Road. Reedsville, d1ed early Fnday
morning, August 7, 1998 at St. Joseph's Hospllalm Parkersburg, West V1r·
ginia, following an extended illness.
He was born on December I8, 1914-in Reedsville, son of the late Clarence
M. Young and Nellie Mae Chevalier Young. He .was a self-employed car·
penter, a lifelime member of Ohio Carpenters Umon No. 200 m Columbus,
a member of the Success Church of Chri st, and more recently a•tended the
Little Hocking Church of Chrisl .
Surviving are his wife, Joscphmc Barnhart Young; a daughter and son·
in-law, Judy and Charles Weber of Tuppers Plains; two sons aod daughters·
m-law. Larry and Nettie Young ofTuppers Plams. and Ray and Jamcc_ Young
of Reedsville; two sons, Robert and Gene Young, both of Rcedsv1llc, 10
grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; and several mcces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded m death by two brothers, Kenneth
and Clifford Young; and a sister, Helen Caldwell.
Private graveside services will be held ~n Saturday. August 8, 1998 at 2
p.m. in the Success Church of Chnsl Cemetery, wtlh Evange iiSI Ron Hen·
ncn offictatin;.
A public memorial service wtll be held on Sunday. Augusl 9. 1998 a! 2
p.m. at the Hickory Hill Church of Chnst 10 Tuppers Plams.

No witmer in Buckeye 5 drawing
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-!1601
Collmla.llJ Nrw1papcr Holdl..,.. Inc.

Publiabed every dtemoon, Monclly through
Friday, Ill Coun St., romcroy, Ohto, by the
Ohio Valley Publi.'\hlng Company. Second class

posllge paid at Pomeroy, Obto.
MNbcr. The Assoc:ialcd Pre• and the Oh10
Ncwspipcr Association.
Post.Jttr: Send address conect10M 10 The
Dally Scotinel, 111 Coun St., Pomrroy, Ohio

4l769

SUBSCRJmON RATES
BJ Carrier or Nolor Rout!

truth

By George R. PlageM
The polls show that we are
happy with the economy. They
don 'I tell us "~!ether we are happy
with our lives.
for the answer to that, the radio
talk shows may be the best place to
tum.
If the complainers and whiners
-we -hear filling the~irways with
their grumblings are a clue, we are
not a country of happy campers
despite the low rate or joblessness
and zero inflation.
A new book by radio host Dennts Prager, "Happiness Is a Serious
Problem" (HarperCollins, 1998),
says America is no1 as happy a
country as you might think.
Immigrants are puzzled by all
the complaining they hear in this
land or plenty and .. increasingly
safe cities."
A reviewer of Praser's book
thinks we may be confusing happineu with pleasure or fun. "The difference," he ssys, "is that pleasure
is experienced only durin&amp; the act
itself and disappean 100n after, .
JeMCnla while happineu penists."
Mary Brewer
This is a distin«ion also made
Middleport by Bertrand Russell.

-

He will
probably end
on a high note,
expressing his
relief that this
whole sony
episode
is
"'behind US, ..
and calling on
the American
people to join
Ruaher
him in perpetuating
and
expanding the current era of peace
and prosperity (for which he will. or
course, claim personal credit).
Thereupon the White House
spinmeisters -- Rahm Emanuel.
Paul Begala. James Carv1lle. Lanny
Davis, etc. -- will fan out onto the
television news programs and 1alk

Martha A. Morris

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

One Week ..............••.......•....•... .$2.00
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SINGLE COPY PRICE
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&amp;iven canter each week.
No subAcription by m1il pcrrnllt.cd m •reas
where home canicr tcrvice iJ av1ilahlc.
Publisher rescrtCI lhc: right to adJUSI rates durin&amp; the sublc:Fipllon pcrk&gt;d. Subscrlpuon ra1e
c:hanps II\IY be amplemenltd by c:hlnaiAI the
dUration of lhc subocripclon.

MAIL SUBSCRJFI10N

louldtMolpC..oiJ
13 -ks. ..........................J 27.30
26W..b ....•..•...................S53.82
~2 Wceb •••..•.....•.............. .S10l.56
Rata Oooaldo Mdp Coo•7
_ ll W..b ·········-·-··············J211.2S

26 ....................................$56.68
~2 -

........................... ~109.72

Reader Services
Correction Polley

O.r . .to t~~~~eenl t. oU llor!a it lo be
OCtUrtte. u ,ou kll..,. or ., omr In •
IIAlr}'o coU dot BOW""""" Ol (7401 !1922155. Wo wUl thel:k your l1lo11111don
ud ..U.a CGI"IOdlon lfwiiTUied.

Newt Departments
Tho Oloia aambor it tn-2155. Doport,...1 utnslou .,..,
Gtoonl Muqec...................... .EXLUOI
NOW\•.....•....•..•..............•.••.........Ext.IIOl
or Est. 1106

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
wet e no tickels sold naming all five
numbers sclecled in Thursday mght's
Buckeye 5 draw mg. the Ohio Lollery
smd.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$373,128. Players will share
$127,277.
There were 154 Buckeye 5 tickets
w1th fou.· of the numbers, and each is
worth $250. The 4,475 uckels showing three or the numbers arc each
wonh $10. and the 44,027 tickets
showmg 1wo of the numbers are each
worth $1.
·

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................43 ~.
Akzo ...................................... SO'Io
AmrTech ........................
46'·
·Ashland 011 ••.............•.•...•...•• 50'1.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 57'4
Bank One ............................. .47'/.
Bob Evans ............................ 18'1.
Borg-Wamer .........................44'&gt;
Broughton ............................... 16
Champion ............................... 11
Chann Shps ............................4'h
City Holdlng ..........................41'h
f:edaral Mogui ...................... 58'J:o
Gannett .................................64 o
Goodyear .............................. 56'1.
Kmart ..................................... 11'1.
"Kroger ..................................... 49
Landa End .....:.•.................... 27'1..
Ltd ........................:..................27
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 19
OYB .........................................40
One Yalley .............................34'!.
Peoplea ................................. 28'!.
Prem Flnl ................................. 19
Rockwell ........................, ...... 40'.&gt;
RD/Shell ...............................48'Sears .....................................47'1.
Shoney'l ................................3'!.
.Star Bank ............................. 73'~
Wendy' a ................................ 21o
Woerthlngton ....... _ ............ 14'1.
ft •••••

Meigs announcements

EMS units answer 7 calls

Seven calls for assistance were
answered by units or M~jgs Emer·
gency Services on Thursday. Units
responding were:
CENTRAL DISPATCH ·
9:37 a.m., Lynn Street Donna
Sampson, Holzer Medical Center;
7:31p.m., Old State Route 7, Pam
Oiler, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
MIJ)DLEPORT
f2 : 19 p.m., with Central Dispatch, Powell Street, Catherine Met'

Hospital news
Veterau Memorial ·
Thursday admissions - none.
Thursday discharges - Myrtle
Haning.
Hober Medlc:al Center .

-·-·.
. Dlactwaea ·Aq. 6 - Henry
Other Servlcel
.
Stock reporta lrt the 10;30 . Slcidm&lt;R, Mary Harris, Opal ereAdoadii~-·-·········· ..··········....KIL UN : a.m. quote• provided by Advttt ineens, Arth\lf Ray.
a.
...tlooa ..................................Ext. 1113 '
a..lflod Ad&amp;. .....•......•...••••.• --.Ext. 1100 :
'.

of Gafllpolle.

(Publilhetl with permllsloo)

zgar. Veterans Memorial;
7:32 p.m .• Zuspan Hollow Road.
Tyler Madden. Holzer.
POMEROY
9:16a.m., Pine Grove Road, Ken·
neth Newland. Holzer Medical Cen'
ter.
RACINE
I:31 p.m., assisted by Central
Dispatch, Stale Roule 124, Benjamin
Carroll, Veterans Memorial .
RUTLAND
11 :31 p.m., Main Street, wtth
Central Dispatch, Kelly Clark. Vet·
erans Memorial.

�Sports

The Daily
Pmabutp (Van Poppe! 1-0) • Los Antda (Bo-

Eat"" l)f.-iaoa

. ..

Iaa

}I'

New Yon
Boston .
BalUII'IJR

L &amp;1.

!ill

~~9
~n

l~ 'r

80 19

114

jj
jK
44 67
jK
j6

Tor()ftlo

Tampa Bay

491
)96

24
26'1,

.n

Cmtral Oiwision

DeffOit

so

6)
j2
jl

CLEVELAND
K.at1su City .
MutneJOia

a..,.,.

••46

.

lS8

Anaheim
Oaklond

II

4~S

!I 'll

. 4~8

o·. ,

6j

414

16

.149
HI

"'

so

Stlllllt

460

61
61
6)

WHtem Di"iliaft
62 jl
60 !n
jl
62

Te~a~ .

447
.446

2

II ·~,

II '~

Thursday's scores
KatWti C1ty 8. M.nnesou• 1
Seank ar DetrOtt. ppd .. ram
TeUJ 7. 8olloo4

Today '• games

Kanw Cny IRapp 9- 10) :u N Y Yanknt (Coot
1~ -.U.I~pm.

DH · Stank 1Fassero 10.7 and

Mo~r

8-SJ a1 De-

lrOII (Gtt:Uin&amp;tf\ ·6 md Mtchkf 12-7). 4.0:\ p m
Oakland (Stein 4-6) at T«onto (W•IItams 9 -6),

7·&lt;t' p m.
CLEVELAND (Gooden ~ -61 at Tampa Bay IAIwarez S-CJ). 1 0~ fl m.

Kansas City(Hanry 4-41at NY
I J-2). 7:JS p.m

Yankee~

(Wells

Baltimore (Euclc.Jon 11 -9) at Minnesota

(H1wkJB&amp; 7-10). 8:05p .m
A.nahr:tm (Dickson b-6 ) at Ch1cago While Sm
CSitotk-1 10.10), 8:05 p m

Boaon (P Marttnez 15-JJ at

Te~tas

(Helling 14-

6). ! : ~~ (l.m.

Saturday's games
Scanle (Cloudt 6-71 a1 Otcroi1 (Powell 2-2). 1·15
p.m.
H
10.
O.Ubrd (HaynrJ 7--41 11 TOfonto ( rnlgen
&amp;;. • :o~ p.m.
H
Kansas Chy (Rusch 6-14) ;~IN Y. Y:ankc;~n ( a~z6-:\ ). 4 .0~pm

CLEVELAND (Nagy 9-7)

ill T:mp:~ Bay (Rekat

1-1), 6-:l~ p m.

· A.nahr1n1 !Sparks 5-21 al Ch1cago Whue So1
(Na\'ano 8-L\1. 7.0.'i p m
_
Ballimorr (Ponwn j-61 ill Mmnuou (Rildlu: 10.
9) .8 :0~pm

Bos10n {Wakdicld
8::\.'i p.m.

By DENNIS WASZA[( Jr.
Aasocllled
Writer
Greg Maddux was in total control
-as usual.
Maddux (15-5) allowed three ruts,
Soturday's games
Oucago Cub&amp; (M. Clark 6-11) a1 St Louss (0.. walked none and struck out six for his
borne 1-2). l:l.'ip.m.
199th career victory in the Atlanta
Adatu (~1llwood 12-6) at San Frucisoo (DarBraves' 5-U win over lhe Cincinnati
'*'"N.Y
7-91. 4:0S p.m.
Mtu (Re,noso 2.0) a! Colorado (B.M Reds on T:•ursday night.
Jonrs ~-4), 4 :0~ p.m
The four-time Cy Young Award
...,;,... (felemaco 4-l)" M""'o&lt;al (Hanw\soo
9-9). 1 -~ P-l"fiwinner has 28 career shutouts lllld 89
MilwJ~ukee (Woodard 9-~) a1 CINCINNATI
complete games, including nine this
(Reyes 1·41. 7 Ol p.m
Philadelphi:~ (l..otwct s-tt ~ How1on (Uma 10.
season. He lowered his major league6). 8 .05 p m
. ki
leading ERA to 1.53, and needed just
P111sbw-&amp;)1 (Ueber 8-12) 11 l.-05 Angdet (hthc
92 pitches to finish the shutout in 2
6-~) . 10 l.'i p.m
hours, 5 minUies.
Sunda' '• comes
"You keep saying !he same thing
Milwauk«J~ICINCINN ATI.I · I~p . m
Antona a1 Montreal. I. J~ p m
over and over and its sounds like a
Ch•caao Cut» a1S1 lou•'· 2:10p.m
recording," Braves manager Bobby
Philadelplu:~ :11 Hou"ou. 2 . J~ (l.m
N Y ~tcu at Colnrado. J O.'i p m.
Cox said. ··He was absolu&lt;ely in
Ronda a1 S:m Dtewl. 4:05 r m
command ."
AtiJ~nla at San Fr.. m;,S&gt;:u. IHl~ p m
PlnUJurz_ll:u Lo1 Medea. s-o~ p m
In olher NL games, Philadelphia
beal San Diego 3-2 in II innings,
Basketball
New York defeated San Franciso 9·
8, Colorado downed Pinsburgh 5-1
and Montreal beat Los Angeles 9-0.
WNBA standings
Maddux didn't need much help
Eastern Conference
from his offense, but got plenty from
ll' L &amp;1. GJI
lam
Andruw Jones, who homered 1wicc.
.. 17
8 .6110
Charloue ..
... 1~
9 62.'i
"You' re always glad to lhrow a
CLEVELAND ..
New York .
. 14 10 58:\
shutout,"
Maddux said. "You got to
.IJ II 542
lk1roi1
.Waslung10n
pilch
good
and gel some breaks, and
····- ·· 2 21 .0117
I
did.
Shutouts
are great. They don'!
Western Conference
come
around
too
oflen."'
l-HouSion .
. .....2J
2 .920
PhoeniiL
... 1J 10 ~M
Andres Galarraga added his 34th
Los 1\ngeka
. 10 14 417
homer for the Braves.
U1ah .
1 17 292
Sacramen1o . . .• . .. .... . .6 I R 250
Iones gave &lt;he Braves a 1-0 lead
H lioched pl11yorr bc:nh
in the second inning by hilting !he
Thursday's scores
first pitch from Mike Remlinger (6Huuslon 75. Phoeni( 64
12) over the center-field fence for his
CLEVELAND 79, Utatl69
18th
homer.
1
Tonight'• game•
! II was Jones' founh homer and
Hou51on a1 Oe1roi1 , 8 p.rn
: sevenlh hit in 12 career at-ba&lt;s
WashinJ•on 31 Sacramcnro. 10 p.rn
i agains&lt; Remlinger, who allowed three
Saturday's games
, runs and seven hils in six-plus
Los Angeles at New York. 4 p.m.
Charl011e at CLEVELAND. 1 p.m.
innings.
Utah at Phoeni1. IOp.m.
Jones hit his second homer off
Sunday's game
reliever John Hudek in &lt;he eighlh.

L\ - .~) ~

Tcus (Selc I.18
- ).

Sunday's games
Seallk a1 Detroil. I : 0~ p.m.
Oakland a1 Toronlo, 1 . ~ p.m

CLEVELAND al Tampa Bar. IJ~ r .m
Kanw City al N.Y. Yankees, I : J~ p.m.
B.:&amp;ltimorc at Minnesota. ;us p.m
Anaheim a1 Chicago While So1, 2:0S p.m.
BoSJon at Tuas. 8 : 0~ p.m.

Lm Angckl at Washington. 4 p.m

Transactions

NL standings

Raseball

Eutrm 01¥ision
}I'
. .76
.60
. .'i6
... 47
41

X..
Atlanta ...

New

York ..

Philadl!lphia .
Monlrea.l
Aonda .

Houston
Cllicago

L &amp;1.
19 661

lill

ll
l7

.1.16
496

14',.,

68
74

409
. 1~7

19
Vi

Cmlnl Di¥1t.ion
.. 6R 46

196

ll
l7

..~00

. 64
j7

Milw:wk~ .

.'iJ 6(}
j I 64
ll 64

Stl...ouis
CINCINNATI
PiiiJburgh

--~~7

469
.44J
.44)

19

oteaa .......

II

14 '~

l7't:
17'1)

..........74 41

.62 ~'

Sao Francil(o ...

~;x~-~ - .............::- ~~ ~~
Ari10ni1.....

. . ..... .. 4J 71

AmPrican IAa~uP

TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Traded LHP Randy
Mycn 10 the San Diego Padr~1 for C Brian Loy&amp;l

and 11'pl:a{er ro br n&gt;~m&lt;r"d . Anian_t"t.l Loyd 1n
Dunedin o tj)e Aori!lol S1ate 1..-cugut S1gncd SSFellpe l...nprz nod usigned him to tj)e St. Ca1har1nes
S1ompers o(t~ New York-Penn l...L-llJUC
NaJional LtaJIIt

4 '~

Wuarm Di¥i1ton
Sa~~

p,...

F1ori4a (O,all 1· 2)" S.. Diqo (Asbby l l-6),
IO{)S p.m.
Atlanla {Gi.M-inc 14---4) 31 Sao Franasco (Rueter
12-6). 10: J~ p m.

BRAVES : Se nt RHP Mark
WOOlen 10 Richmond of 1~ ln1ernational Leasur.
Placed RHP Rud Springer on tnt IS-day di sabled
list Recalled LHP Adltm Outler from Richmond
HOUSTON ASTROS : Traded LHP Pe1e
Schoortk 10 the BoJion Ret:! Sok for CA~h. Aclivmed
LHP Dilly Wognrr from the l~·doy diJDhled li1t
·ATLANTA

12

Footboll

16
22

Natlon1l Foothall Ln1ue
DENVER BRONCOS: Agreed 1o 1ci-m1 wiltl
WR Rod Sm ith on as•x-yem 'OII Ir&lt;K-1 ex1ension.
SAN 1.M::GO (H.4,kGERS: Signed DE Jamal

:\O'~t

Thursday's scores
N.Y. Men9. San FranCISto8
Colorado~ . Pin,burgh I
Montreal 9. Lm Angele s 0
Philadt!rrhia J. San Die~:o 2 (II )
A1lan1a ~ -CINCINNATI 0

Tonight's games

Hockey
NatWJnal HorkPy l:n~~tue

ANA HEIM MIGHTY DUCKS .

Announ~rd

Jad. Ferreira. {!.Cf)(ral m:ll\.1gtf. has bci:n of~em! :m
unsr~t·l"l(lec.l ru'llilion with Ihe nrgan12:111on ;&amp;nd
P1enc Guuthk'f. rrcsitknl , will alstl serve,.., gt:At:r&lt;~l

Arizonn (8 . Anllen un 7-10) til MonHc al manaJ!.I!f
DI:.TROIT REO WINGS· Ai!rttJ 1t1 tem1s wi1h
M1l wnuko.!t lWollda ll ~ - ~J a1 CINCINNATI D Sl liHk Hnidy.
EDMONTON OILERS : Re-s igned LW Todd

(V~uez )- 101. 7 :0~ fl m.

r-m

(Hatni.\Ch 7 -~ ). 7.0."i
Ph11a&amp;kl['1hlg (Wd..:h 0- 1) &lt;II HouMun IR. JuhnMJn
1-01. K:05 p.m

M:u..:han11o :1two-year wnlrrn:l

NASHVILLE PKE£?ATORS : Signed D Jtlmic
Hew11rd
PHILADELPHIA FLYER~ : TradtLI G Johun
h:nfield J·.'i), H: 10 r .m.
• .
N Y. Mcls (Reed 12- 7) ul Colorudo (Aslocm 10- HeJbtrg 10 the S:m Jo!LC Sharb for a 1999 st\'enlhrnunl! drnft rn:k..
10). 9 : 0~ p.m.
Chic:1'o Cub5 (fmschcl

J

1 - ~) Dl S1 Loms (Ool -

NBA owners not impressed
with players latest offer
NEW YORK (AP)- The players
came up with a new offer to end the
NBA lockout. The owners were not
impressed.
"The owners were scratching their
he~ds and wondering why they'd
e&gt;en bother 10 put this on the table."
cl)mmissioner David Stem said after
he, his deputy and six owners ended
l11ursday 's bargai ning seSSion by
abruptly walking oul.
It was an unexpected twist to the
labor stalemale on &lt;he f1rst day of for·
mal bargaining since June 22.
"We were very disappointed. We
· made absolutely no progress." deputy
commissioner Russ Granik sai~ .
The meeting. anended by more
than a dozen players and six ow ner~,
lasted about 90 mmules hefore the
sides took a lunch break. When lalk s
resumed, lhe players spent about 15
minutes ou&lt;lming a new proposal their Jirst since April I.
Things look a turn for the worse
when union anorney Jeffre y Kessler
told the ()w ners lhey stood a gooJ
chance of losing two cases before the
National Labor Rela&lt;ion s Board and
arbi&lt;rator John Feerick.
··we came to negotiate. n01 to be
lectured on legal proceedings and
their ultimate oulcome:· S1ern said.
"The good dialogue of 1hc morning
was dissipated by &lt;he proposal and
remarks in the afternoon ."
"It blew my mind."' Karl Malone
said of &lt;he ensuing walkout. ," If I was
in Arkansas or Alaska and I read it in
the paper, I would have called som~­
body a liar. I would have sa1d there s
no way that happened. But sining
here watching it, i&lt; was unbelievable."
.
Union president Patrick Ewmg
and executive board member Dikembe Mutombo said the owners did the
same thing in negotiations several
yean ago.
·
"I thought it was a charade, more

acl ing than anything else hecause it
was just too spontaneocs, " union
director Billy Hunter said. "No sooner had we got (the new proposal) out
than they were up and wai~ing out of
the room . ll was funny.' ·
ll was "like a 4-year-old saying I
don 't wan&lt; &lt;o play anymore and I'm
going home," sa1d Malone, who cut
shon a fi shi ng and hun&lt;ing trip to
Alaska 10 JOin the talks. "Some of
I hem didn't JUSt hop righ&lt; up. Some
of them weren '&lt; running to gel out
&lt;hat door:·

Chamblee,
Lewis lead by
stroke in
Buick Open
GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP)Brandel Chamblee pll.yed the Buick
Open three times and didn 'I make a
penny. So he quit coming after missing the cut again m 1992.
Now he's back, and it appears his
luck has changed.
Chamblee and JL Lewis, each
seeking his first win on the PGA
Tour, shot ?-under-par 65s for a !stroke lead over lhree oiher golfers in
the first round Thursday.
Defending champion Vijay Singh,
Dudley Hart and Gary Hallberg shot
66s on the rain-softened course at
Warwick Hills Golf &amp; Country Club.
" I've never played well here,"
Chamblee said. '"Bull hadn't played
much lately, so I figured l'djusicome
and give it a shot. I figured, why not?
It worked out prelly well.' '
That happens a lot a&lt; Warwick
Hills. a user-friendly course where
Raben Wren won in 26-under 262 in
1987. Thai's still the tournament
record . Just last year, Sonny Skinner
shot62 in the opening round, malching the course record set by Fred
Funk in 1995.
"I didn 't make many mistakes,"
Chamhlee said. "I mean, you don't
make many when you shoot 65."
Lewis, who spent last season on
1he Nike Tour, go&lt; rolling with birdies
on the first two holes . He also pu&lt;
togelher a string of &lt;hree straight
birdies on the back nine. His only
bogey came when he drove into some
trees bordering the IOth fairway.
"I have a balanced game," said
Lewis, who has missed 13 cuts in 21
tournaments this season. "My biggest
weakness is fairways hit. "

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WAVES IN RUNNER • Texaa Ranger8 better Ju8n Gonulez
waves in runner Tom Goodwin from third IMIM as Gonzalez
watches Boston '1 Scott Hetteberg go after 1 wHcl pitch In Thuraday night's game In Arlington, TelUII- The Ranges won, 7-4. (AP)

Texas nine pounds
Boston Red Sox 7-4
SAFE AT FIRST • Cincinnati's Reggie
Sanders dives back to first base as Atlanta's
Andres Galarrage takes a throw late from
"Maddux is a masler," Reds manager Jack McKeon said. "He carved
us up. 'He didn ' l give us anyth1ng
good to hi!. "

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - In
the five games since GM {)()ug
Melvin swung two !rades to acquire
infielders Todd Zeile and Royce
Clayton and pitcher Todd Stotllemyre, the Te&lt;as Rangers are unbeaten.
It hasn'tjust been &lt;he newcomers,
however. The Rangers also have gmten plenty of help from holdovers like
John Wetteland and Juan Gonzalez
during the streak.
Weneland ended Thursday nighl's
game by s&lt;riking out Bos&lt;on slugger
Mo Vaughn wilh runners on first and
second for his 30th save, and Gonzalel homered as the Rangers &lt;&lt;tended &lt;heir winning streak wilh a 7-4
victory.
"We're playing inspired baseball," Rangers manager Johnny Oates
said. "You can feel it in the dugoul,
on the field and in the community.
This is wha&lt; we stan gelling ready for
in mid-February. If you look at the
sinning pitching, the defense, lhe
timely hilling, i&lt;'s a good feeling.
Winning breeds conlidence."
In &lt;he only other AL game Thursday night, Kansas City outscored
Minnesola 8-7. Seattle at Detroit was
rained out, with a doubleheader
scheduled for today.
The Boston· Texas. game came
down &lt;o Wetteland facing Vaughn as
!he tying run .
.
"I went to the mound thinking I
can 'tiel Mo come up as the tying run,
but thai's what happened and I had
~obody to blame bui myself," said
Wetteland, who has 30 or more saves
for the sixth lime in his career. "In
lha&lt; situalion againsl a hitter as talented as Mo, if you're going to lhrow

catcher Eddie Perez during Thursday night's
game against the Reds in Atlanta. The Braves
won, 5-0. (AP)

111nl'! run for 1hc second umc in Lhrcc
ga,;;es as New York won a wi ld one
over San Francisco.
The Mets. whose bu llpen blew a
four-run lead in the eigh&lt;h inning by
giving up &lt;wo &lt;hree-run homers, ral lied wi&lt;h a run in the eighth and two
in the ninth.
The Giants were 49-0 when leading afler eigh&lt; innings.
John Olerud hit one of four
homers for the Mels, who ·moved
within 2 1/2 games of &lt;he idle Chicago Cubs in the NL wild-card race.
Olerud has a 20-game hilling streak .
Lenny Harris was walked intentionally by Robb Nen (7-3) to load
the bases in the ninth , and Giants
manager Dusty Baker brought in
Mesa, who walked Luis Lopez on
five pitches.
Turk Wendell (4-0) pitched ou&lt; of
bases-loaded jam in the ninth for the

victory over Los Angeles and former
teamma&lt;e Carlos Perez.
Powell (1-1) allowed only a one out single m 1he first and a leadoff
Pbillies 3, Padres 2
sing le in &lt;he six&lt;h - hi s last inning
Rico Brogna had an RBI single in
- in gelling his firsl major ·league
the lith inning off San Diego clo;er
win. Mike Maddux and Anthony
Trevor Hoffman in Philadelphia's
Telford finished for &lt;he Expos.
viclory.
.
Jones opened &lt;he fifth with his
The Phillies, who snapped lhm
firs&lt; major league homer, a shot off
season-high seven-game losing
Perez (7-11 ). who was traded 10 Los
slreak avoided their second threeAngeles last week .
game ;weep at San Diego this season
Perez allowed seven runs and
and handed Hoffman his first loss
cigh&lt; hits in livc·plus inn ings.
since July II of last season.
Rockies 5, Pirates I
Scott Rolen led off !he II th wi&lt;h
AI Pinsbur~h . Dante Bichettc hit
a double. Brogna initially attempted
hi s 200i h car~er homer and John
to bunt, fell behind 0-2, &lt;hen singled
Thomson pitched a four-hiller as Colto score Rolen.
orado ex&lt;cnded Jason Schmidl"s winHoffman (3·1 ), who leads the
less streak to 12 consccu&lt;ive s&lt;ans.
maJors with 37 saves, pitched a perSchmidt (8-9) is 0-8 since becomfect IO&lt;h.
ing the NL's first eight-game winner
After the game, the Padres reacon June I. He has &lt;he longest losing
quired Randy Myers, grabbmg h1m WIO ,
.
_
streak by a Pinsb4rgh pilcher since
off waivers from Toronto to g1ve &lt;he Expos 9, Dodgers 0
Jose DeLeon lost II straight deci NL West leaders a lefl-handed comAt Montreal, Jeremy Powell com- sions in 1985.
plement &lt;o Hoffman.
bined wilh two relievers on a two-hi!·
Thomson (6-8) pitched the second
Mets 9, Giants 8
ter and rookie Terry Iones homered s&lt;raight complete game for &lt;he RockJose Mesa walked home the w1n- and drove in four runs in &lt;he Expos' ies, a club ·first.

year's
ib.e~~lal1all

&lt;\1;.; .tZ ;.~..; ;

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The·Daily Sentinel

••
••

LEXINGTON (AP) - Bobbi
Rahal has been part of the Mid-Ohio
Spons Car Course from the bcginoing.
'
· When the track opened in 1963,
Rahal's fa&lt;her, Michael. drove a
Brilish-made Cooper in the inaugur~1 event and 9-year·old Bobby was on
hand as an unofficial pi&lt; crew member.
"[I was a dust bowl." Rahal
tccalled. "I was relega&lt;ed in those
days to washing oO"the car. I remember the car came back diny and dusty,
probably from my dad going off &lt;he
!rack."
He firs&lt; raced &lt;here in 1974 and in
the ensuing 24 years has won vinually every honor possible in racing.
including the 1986. 1987 and 1992
CART season championships. the·
Indianapolis 500 in 1986 and lhc
national Driver of &lt;he Year award '"
that year in 1992.
.
· This weekend. Rahal will he dnving on wha&lt;'s considered his home
!Tack for the last time as he competes
in Sunday's Miller Lite 200. .
.
Rahal, &lt;he only owner-dnvcr IR
the CART series, has announced thnt
he will be strictly a car owner after
this season, ending a 17-year career
iii championship cars. The race Sund•y will be his 258th. a record for the
series.
: He said he's been greeted wannly: by fans on the first 12 stops of a
fll)"cwcll -tour that's been given the
name "Rahal's Las! Ride" by his
publicists.
..
: "What's been the mosl surpnsmg
inhe number of people who have
~ to me, •Don 't retire,"' said,
45, the oldest driver on the
"-'"'' ein:uil. "But I've had no second ihoughts about my .decision and
am looking even more toward the

future."

:• "This weekend will be doubly

~;t because of all Mid-Ohio has
meant to-me," Rahal said Wednesday

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Neil
O'Donnell is gone, yet the New York
Jets' quanerback debate rages on.
In Philadelphia, there's a new
front office boss, a new quarterback,
a new special teams coach. Still,
nothing much has changed at all.
It was only the first exhil&gt;ition
game, and the Jets' 29-15 'ictory
over the Eagles on Thursday night
hardly was cause for celebration in
New York or consternation in
Philadelphia.
But it did nothing to dispel the talk
!hat Glenn Foley must beat out Vinny Testaverde to be the Je1s' quaner·
back, just like he did with O'{)()nncll.
And it did nothing to quell the
questions, and they are many, about
the Eagles' lack of a running game,
offensive line continuity, special
teams cohesion - and, it would
seem, a winning auilude.
"Definitely, Ibis was below expectations," fullback Kevin Turner said
after the Eagles, 6-9-1 a year ago,
quickly fell bcllind 20-3. " II was
upsetting. But we did some good
things, and it wasn't all nega1ive ."
It wasn't all positive for the Jets'
quanerbacks, either, even as Foley,
who played barely a quaner, and Tes·
taverde, who played nearly two, each
led two scoring drives.
Foley completed only one of his
first seven passes before finishing 6of-13 for 67 yards. Testaverde, signed
after the Baltimore Ravens dumped
him and the Jets cas! off O'Donnell,
was 7-of-11 for 94 yards and a 12·
yard scoring pass 10 Blake Spence,
but he played mostly against secondunit defenders.
It wasn't enough to humor toughto-please Jets coach Bill Parcells. It
also wasn't enough to displease him.
"I'm not going into the quarterback thing," Parcells said. "I don't
think anyone was sensational."
Except maybe Richie Anderson,
who staned only because Curtis Martin, the former New England star running back who has been reunited with
Parcells, took the night off with a
hamstring injury.
Anderson led the first two scoring
drives by carrying 14 times for 66
yards, or only four fewer yards than
he gained last season. At one point,
he carried on six successive plays
during an 81-yard drive finished off
by his !-yard scoring run.
"We sputtered a little bit early, but
if we can run the football, that will
make everylhing go," Foley said.
"We really ran the ball well. When
our offensive line plays as well as il

it to a spot, you' d better have a lillie
extra mustard on it, and that's what
happened."
Wetteland, pitching in his lhird
straight game, walked Scott Hattcberg l~ading off the ninth, struck out
the next two batters, then gave up a
single to John Valentin. Wetteland
used a high fastball on a 3-2 count to
strike out Vaughn, who homered
twice in the game.
"I got John where I wanted to get
him and that's half the battle,"
Vaughn said. "But John made a good
pitch.! need to do·better with runners
in scoring position."
Mosi of the crowd of 32,132 was
on its feet to cheer the climax of a
possible first·round playoff preview.
Gonzalez hit his 33rd homer,
extending his major league-leading
· RBI total to 118, and John Burkett
pitched 6 1-Jinnings strong innings
for the Rangers.
Gonzalez's 429-foot solo homer in
the seventh was just the fifth ball hit
into the second deck in left field in
the five-year history of The Ballpark
in Arlington.
Vaughn hit his 28th and 29th
homers for the Red Sox, who won
eight of their previous I0.
Burkel! (7-11) gave up solo
· homers to Vaughn and Mike Stanley,
but the Red Sox managed just four By JACK CAREY
~Iller hits against him, all singles.
USA Today
Burkett benefited from several strong
Ohio State will start the 1998 footdefensive plays at third base by ball season in an unaccustomed spot
Zeile.
A year after watching rival Michi"Todd mttde some key defensive gan win its first national title since
plays," Burkett said. "That gives you
1948, the Buckeyes will go into the
a lot of confidence as a pitcher. We' ve season No. I in the USA
got a new team now. The two new TODAYIESPN Top 25 Coaches'
guys have solidified our defense."
Poll.
Florida State, which beat Oi1io

'

FOLEY LOOKS FOR RECEIVER • New York
Jete quarterback Glenn Foley looks downfield
during Thursday night's exhibition game

against the Phil11delphia Eagles in Philadelphia.
The Jets won 29-15. (AP)

did. it makes my job really easy."
the job:
The Eagles' offensive line, rebuilt
- The leis' Rodney Farmer
fort he third year in a row, didn '&lt; play returned &lt;he openmg kickoff 45
welL And thm made for a long nigh&lt; yards.
for quarterback Bobby Hoying and
-Ea~les kicker Chris Boniol
backup Rodney Peete, despite &lt;heir missed a 21-yard field-goal atlemp&lt;
relalivcly short time on the field .
thai was deflected at the line of scrimHoying, given little protection hy mage, and an extra point.
a line thai was miss ing Jirsl-round
-The Jcts'Dedric Ward had a 37draft pick Tra Thomas, mainl y yard punt return thai preceded Tesdumped the ball off to hi s running ta verde's 12-yar~ touchdown pass to
backs while going 3-for-8 for 44 tight end Blake Spence.
yards. Thomas had four wisdom
The Eagle, also los&lt; tight end
teelh removed Wednesday and didn"t Jason Dunn indefini&lt;ely wi&lt;h a
play.
sprained knee ligament.
Peete, who was 6-of-12 for 65
Aboul all they had to cheer was
yards, wasn't much better !han Hoy - No. 3 quanerback Koy Detmer's 19in g. bul theri neither were &lt;he Eagles' yard scoring pass to Kascem Sinceno
special teams in !heir first game under and Mall Stevens' 49-yard fumble
new assistant coach John Harbaugh. return louchdown, which occurred
For slaners. here's what Har- only 2:28 apan in the third quaner.
baugh watched in his first ni ght on
"Bul it's much too early 10 start

comparing this to what went on last

year," said Jimmie John son. lhc
Eagles' special teams captain last season. "We've got three more cxhihilion games to get it togethe-r ...

The &lt;rouble is. the Eagles have 16
more regular-season games afkr that.

· which may he far more than new
director of foolball operations Tom
Modrak wa n"ls to sec.

Modrak helped gather some of the
NFL\ hcSI talcnl as the Piu shurgh
Stcclcrs · dircc1or of st..:u uting . The

rebuilding job he faces acros s the
stale seems far more chal lengi ng.
"The higgeslthing we have lo do
is learn from the mistakes we made.''

Hoying said. "'The whole team has to
come together as the preseason winds
down and we get ready for Sea tile on
Sept. 6.''

Ohio State ranked No. 1 in Coaches Poll

It's Rahal's last
ride at Mid-Ohio

Advertising Deadline· fuesday, August25, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Eagles disappointed in 29-15 loss

Maddux blanks Reds on three hits

lwooo 4-7). IO:Ol p.11.

AL standings

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August 7, 1998

Scoreboard
Baseball

Sent~e}
.
ge

Friday, August 7, 1998

State in last season's Sugar Bowl, is
second.
It marks the first time since 1980
that the Buckeyes will stan a season
No. I. They have not won the national championship since 1968.
"'Expectations arc always high
here, " Coach John Cooper said.
"I will say that being No. I
means always wearing a big vest with

a bull's-eye on &lt;he front of it. hul
somcbodis got lo have it. But it
shouldn "t ancct how we play because
for everybody we play we're one of
&lt;he big games."
And &lt;he Buckeyes will play one of
those hig games right a&lt; the start.
Ohio Stale opens Sept. 5 at No. 12
West Virginia. which has 16 stancrs
back, inducting Heisman Trophy can-

dictate Amos Zcrcoue a&lt; tailback .
The Ohio Slate- WeSI Virginia
ga111e highl ights a Labor Day weekend sc hedule loaded wi&lt;h altracuve
games.
Also on Sept. 5: No. 5 Michigan
is at No. 24 Notre Dame; No. 17
Woshington 1ravels 10 No . 9 Arizona
Stale ; No. 10 Tennessee plays a&lt; No.
14 Syracuse and No. 2 1 Southern
Mississippi is al N(l 13 Penn S&lt;alc.

Big Ten champ, Rose Bowl no longer a lock

CHICAGO (AP) - The top
teams in the Big Ten won't just be
thinking about a trip to Pasadena as
at his team's headquaners in the a reward for a championship season.
Columbus suburb of Hilliard, about They could also be eying Tempe,
Ariz., New Orleans or Miami.
60 miles from the track.
Under the new Bowl Champi" If anything, I want to buckle
dov n and be even more determined onship Series, the Rose Bowl has
because I want to Jive evcrone who's joined three other postseason games
followed me a reason to cele~rate." to detennine a national champion
Rahal's sponsornnd others have based on a No. I vs. No. 2 matchup
been donating till season to a foun- each season·on a rolating basis.
dation set up in his nounc, with their
The Rose Bowl won't have the
dona&lt;ions based on his pcrfonnance. title game until 2002. And should a
The money raised will go to charities Big Ten champion be ranked first or
at each of CART's 19 race sites.
second nationally before that dale, it
Rahal said donalions have sur- could go 10 the Sugar, Orange or
passed the $110,000 mark and have Fiesla bowls to play for the champithe po&lt;ential of reaching $200,000 or onship.
more.
The syslem begins in 1999 wilh
He also said it"• unlikely his the Fi~ta Bowl as the championship
replacement as a driver for iiCxt yeu• game. ·
will be chosen before lhe end of the
"Righi now we have the Fiesta
season because he's hecn too Bowl and for the firs&lt; time in college
involved with team and foundation football history !he national champidulies.
onship is going 10 be detennined on
the field." Ohio Slate coach John

TUPPERS PLAINS FIRE DEPT.
WILL II HAVING A
FUND DRIVE SATURDAY THE
8TH OF AUGUST
STARTING AT 9 A.M.
FIRE ·PERSONNEL WILL .BE
GOING DOOR TO DOOR, AS
ALWAYS.
.I
TIIANit YOU FOR YOUR
SUPPORT.

Cooper said Thursday as coaches
held a preseason meeting wi1h the
media.
" If you arc fortunate enough lo he
No . I or No. 2. you arc going 10 play
in the Fiesta Bowl for the national
championship, so obviously thai' s

wha1 we arc lalking about right now.
II would he strange, indeed. to sec
I think il \great for col lege foo&lt;ball. " a Rose Bnwlmalchup hctween learns
The Buckeyes were chose n in a 01her than 1hc champions of I he Big
preseason media vote to win the Big Ten or Pacilic-10. It was a diflicuh
Ten title, with defending na&lt;ional transit ion for &lt;he howl known as the
champion Michigan second and Penn ··grand daddy " of all howls.
State third .

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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August 7, 1998

ByThe .Bend

House approves ban on 'soft -money' for campaigns
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Aeaoclebld Preas Writer
WASHINGTON - Backers of legislation that would rewrite the fundraising rules for political campaigns hope a House vote that favors such
changes will persuade the Senate to revisit the issue.
But a spokesman for the Senate's top Republican said a vote then: was
unlikely.
The House ended a months-long fight over campaign financing Thursday with a 252-179 vote for a complete ban on "soft money" -the unlimited and unregulated money donations 10 the political parties that led to congressional and Justice Department investigalions after the 1996 elections.
''This is a bill the Senate can vote for," said Rep. Christopher Shays, RConn., a co-sponsor of the measure, which was supponed l!y 61 Republicans, 190 Democrats and one independent. Voting against it were 164 Repu]).
lican~ and 15 Democrats.
The Senate has considered similar legislation twice and both times supponers failed to get the votes needed to halt GOP-delaying tactics and force
a vote. Majority Leader Trent Lon, R-Miss., has said he has no interest in
resurrecting the issue in the final days of the session.
''The Senate has dealt with this issue already. There is no more of a consensus now than there was in the spring," Lon spokesman John Czwartackl sa1d. He ad(jed that the priority for the remaining weeks is for the Senate

to complete action on the government spending bills.
The House bill, co-sponsored by Shays and Rep. Marty Meehan, I).Mass.,
would ban soft money at the federal, state and local levels. II also would regulate issue advertising that purports to educate voten but increasingly is used
10 inflllence elections, and expand disclosure requirements.
Opponents criticized itu an assault on American's free-speech rights.
"The effect of all this federal regulation is to chill free speech and polil·
ical participalion," said House Majority Whip Tom DeLay of Texas, who led
GOP opposition to the reform effon.
Buoyed by the vote, supporters of reform appeared undeterred.
Common Cause, a public interest group that favors campaign reform. said
it was mounting a grassroou campaign to lobby for Senate passage of the
bill in September.
Rep. Carolyn Maloney, 0-N.Y.. said she would lobby her senator to support the bill and urged members of the publit to pick up the telephone and
do the same.
"There is every reason now to stand up and pass it in the Senate," she
said.
President Clinton. who also suppons the bill, called iu passage a "heart·
ening sign for the health of our democracy." He urged the Senate to "heed
the actions of the: House and the will of the people and pass bipanisan campaign finance reform."

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Meigs County Court
Meigs County Coon Judge Patrick
William A. Crowl, Parkersburg,
O'Brien recently processed70 cases. W.Va.. assured clear distance, $25
and cosu; Keith G. Matheny, Albany,
Fined were: Todd A. Dill, DUI, S850 and costs, 10 days in jail,
Pomeroy, stop sign, S20 and costs, suspended to three. 90 days license
seat belt, $25 and costs; Trenton J. suspension, with jail and $550 of fine
Davis, M1ddlepon. $15 and costs; suspended upon completion of RfP
Alyssa K. Hoffman, Pomeroy, seat school; Timothy Fry, Middlepon,
belt, $25 and costs; Anthony C. reckless operation, $100 and costs;
Cook, Belpre, seat belt, $25 and Jeffrey A. Boyce, Point Pleasant,
costs; Terry Lewis, Racine, speed, W.Va., DUI, $850 and costs, 10 days
$30 and costs; Joyce A. Romine, in jail, suspended to three, 90 days
Racine, failure 10 control, $20 and license suspension, one year probacosts; Mark A. Haley, Jr., Pomeroy, tion, jail and $550, suspended upon
seat belt violation, $25 and costs, completion of RTP school, speed,
maximum bumper height, costs only; costs only; Kermit C. Cole;Thppers
James L. Barnett, Greenville. N.C., Plains, seal belt SIS aqd costs; Jason
~e&lt;l,ing, $~0 and costs; Jeremy S. E. Welch, Racine, undcJage conGrimm, Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and sumption, $200 and costs, three days
costs; James D. Ashton. Jr.. Hender· in j~il suspended, one year probation;
son. W.Va .. speeding, $30 and costs, Scon A. Ogdin, Pomeroy, speed,
scat bell. $25 and costs; Mary 7\.- S2Q and costs, seat belt violation, $25
Pambrio. Racine, speeding, $30 and and costs.
costs .
Gary A. Fitzwater. Pomeroy, DUI,
Christopher C. Anthony. Pomeroy, $850 and cosu. 10 days in jail susspeeding, $30 and costs. scat belt vio· pended 10 three, 90 days license suslation. $25 and costs; Fred B. Chap- pension, one year probation, jail and
man. Belpre, speeding. $30 and costs; $550 of fine suspended upon ,comChristopher B. Keyser. Westerville. pletion of RTP school; no driver's
speeding, $45 and costs; Mark E. license, $150 and costs, 10 days in
L10klicld. Pedro. speeding, $30 and jail suspended to 'three, concurrent,
costs; Dan A. Betlyn, Clinton. failure one year probation, scat bell. S25 and
to control. $20 and costs; Shcn A. costs. speed. costs only; Donald J.
Blackburn, Sugar Grove. speeding, Haning. Thppers Plains. seat belt vio$30 and costs; David M. Feuy II. lation, $25 and costs, fictitious lags.
• Pomeroy. seat belt violation, $25 and costs only; Michael T. Rcitmire.
costs; Lena K. Basley, Reedsville. Pomeroy, possession of marijuana.
speeding, $30 and costs ; David R. costs only; Thomas L. Lee. Albany.
Montgomery , Jackson. seal belt vio· DUI. $850 and costs. I0 days in jail
lation. $25 and costs; Scan P. Robens, suspended to three, 90 days license
Columbus, speeding, $30 and costs. suspension. one year probation, jail
Tabatha Bolan, Canton, seat bell and $550, suspended upon eomplcviolation, $25 and costs; Jerald C. lion of RTP school; Tory D. Swanz,
Doty, Urbana. speeding, $30 and Middlcpon, DUI, $850 and costs, 10
costs; Elena L. Guevara, Huntington, days in jail, suspended to three, 90
W.Va .. speeding, $30 and costs; days license suspension. three years
Stephanie L. Fausraugh, Columbus. probation, jail and $550 suspended
speeding. $30 and costs; Angela D. upon completion of RTP school, dri·
Byles. Belmont. seat belt violation. ving under suspension. $100 and
$30 and costs; Sandra D. Boggess. costs, I0 days in jai I suspended to
Ravenswood. W.Va .. speeding. $30 three, concurrent, three years probaand coSIS; Jo Ellen Sheron. Athens, tion. seat belt violation, $25 and
speeding. $30 and costs; Bethany A. costs, left of center. costs only.
Cunis Riffle, Middlcpon, possesPerrine. Gahanna. failure to control.
sion
of marijuana, $100 and costs;
$20 and costs; Gayla Castle.
Ravenswood, W.Va., seat belt viola- James Ash, Pomeroy, disorderly contion. S15 and costs; Ronald W. duct, SI00 suspended, costs, restrainBowen, Walker, W.Va., speeding, ing order issued; Kevin R. Klein.
$30 and costs; Mauhew B. Haskins. Pomeroy. assault. cosu only, one year
Gallipolis. improper passing. $20 probation, 10 days in jail. suspended
and costs; Lewis Taylor, Mason. to one; Sherry A. White, Racine,
W.Va., seal belt violation, $25 and passing bad checks, $25 and costs,
restitution; James Chapman, Midcosts.
James J. Jeffers, Pomeroy, speed· dleport, domestic violence, costs. 60
ing, S30 and costs; Raymond G. days in jail, suspended, two yean
Golden. Akron . seal belt violation, prObation; Bradley S. Ramsey, Rip$25 and costs; Christopher R. John- ley, W.Va., theft. costs, one year pro-son, Buchtel , speeding. $30 an&lt;! bation, 30 days in jail suspended;
costs; Corey R. Hill, Racine, speed- Arlene Gibson, Pomeroy, DUI, $850
ing. $30 and costs, seat belt violation, and costs, 30 days in jail suspended ·
$25 and costs; Gerald L. Marshall, to I0, one year license suspension,
GahanPa. seat belt violation. $25 and two years probation, resisting arrest,
costs; Clint M. Smart. Albany. speed- costs, two years probation, 30 days in
ing, $30 and costs; I..orre D. Osborne, jail suspended to 10 concurrent.
Long Bonom. seat belt violation, $15
Billie J. Ottmln, Long Bottom,
and costs: Andrew L. Reed. Pomeroy. $850 and costs, 10 days in jail sus- .
s~¢ing. $30 and costs; Alan Halli- pended to three; 90 day license susday. Outer. improper backing, $25 pension, one year probation, jail, and
and costs; Nancy Ackerman, $550 suspended upon completion of
Pomeroy, passing bad checks, $25 RfP school; Michael E. Moms,
and costs, restitution; Battina Hill, Racine, DUI. $850 and costs, 30 days
Racine, DUI, $850 and costs, 30 days in jail suspended to I0, one year
in jail, suspended to IOdays, one year license suspension. two yean prot.
license suspension, two years proba- tion; Vince Stone, Middleport. dri·
tion; driving under FRA suspension, vina under FRA suspension, costs,
$150 and costs, 30 days in jail. sus- six months in jail suspended 10 30
pended to I0, concurrent, two yean days, 60 day1 hoUie &amp;ITCSI, two yean
probation, defective exhaust, cosu probation.
only.

an entry-level digital video disc player (DVD).
Digital video disc players offer an
alternative for viewing movies at
home but are not expected to replace
VCRs soon. in pan because they cannot yet record programs for later
viewing. "Because consumers are so
familiar with the fonnat, they're not
going to be really willing 10 give it up
right away," says Trish Graham,
product manager for Zenith Electronics Corp.
VCRs are in 90 percent of U.S.
households.
You can expect manufacturers to
continue to improve video technology while continuing to reduce prices.
Some features found only in more
expensive units a few yean ago are
now common in lower-priced models: stereo hi-fi sound; power backups that save your programming for
a few seconds during momentary
electrical outages; and VCR Plus,
which allow you to schedule shows
for recording by simply punching in
a few numbers carried in the listings
of many television guides.
In many ways, VCRs have
become a mass-market commodity.
On a basic level. one manufacturer's
product is pretty much like another's.
The difference in picture quality
between a SII 0 VCR and a $400
model may not even be noticeable. A
Sl60 stereo hi-fi .unit may produce

audio just as appealing as a unit that
costs twice as much.
VCR makers compete by introducing extra features they hope will
distinguish their machines and grab
public attention. Some such advances
ca~ be found on many brand names.
Others are available from only one
manufacturer.
Here's a sample of some features
that may improve your video viewing and recording:
• Auto clock set No more flashing "12;00" with this feature. It synchronizes your VCR's clock with
local time using information encoded on the 1V signal. This is close to
becoming a standard feature. We've
seen this on VCRs priced as low as
$130.
• Cable Eye: One of the problems
with cable decoder boxes is thai they
control the channel fed to your VCR.
If you want to record Channel 4. but
the box is set for 5. you'll be aut of
luck. Cable Eye, available from such
manufacturers as JVC. puts your
VCR in charge. letting it automatically switch channels on the cable
box when a timed taping begins.
• Commercial advance: Hate 1V
ads? Poke a button on your remote,
and VCRs with this feature will fast·
forward to the end of the commercial.
then resume normal playback.
How does the VCR know when
commercials begin or end? "It's

Sen. Ruaell Feingold. 0-Wis., a co-sponsor of the Senate bill, said pas·

.

Republican filibuster.
.
"Now I diink we're lbout ready 10 put it over the top," he said in an inter· ·
view.
·
·
To pt this far, the Shays-Meehan bill survived an unusual prooedure cnft.
ed by House GOP leaden thai stretched debate over many weeks and requi~
votes on several altematives and dozens of amendments. The bill with the
most support advanced to final passage.
An alternative, offered by a bipani:&lt;an group of freshmen, posed the
strongest challenge to Shays. But the House rejected it Thursday by a 221 147 vote, with 61 memben taking a peulral position by voting "present"
md reserving their support for the Shays bill.
On Monday, the House voted 237-186 in favor of Shays-Meehar..
The freshman bill would have banned "soft money" at the national level only. It also sought new disclosure requirements issue ads by outside groups
and increased contribution limits.
Republicans generally raise and spend more money than Democrats and
have struggled to preserve the advantage. As they investigated alleged fund'
raising improprieties by Democrats during the 1996 election, they said it also
made little sense to pass new campaign finance laws when existing ones were
being broken.

through the programming codes that
arc coming through ftom the broadcaster" on the 1V signal, says Lisa
Fa.•old, spokeswoman for the Consumer Electronics Manufacturers
Association. "They're coded slight·
ly different."
• Commercial skip. Another way
to zip through commercials. Press the
skip bunon on your remote once, and
the VCR will fast forward for 30 se&lt;:onds. Each additional push of the but·
ton adds another 30 seconds.
Sony_ Electronics Inc. adds a
clever lwist to ~-ommercial skip with
its "Sman Cue" system. After slopping at the end of the skip, il backs
up a few seconds before playback
begins, ensuring that you don't miss
any of your show, even if you were
a second or two late in pushing the
skip button.
• GuidePius: Scheduling timed
recordings doesn 'I get much easier
than this. Sony's 500 SLV-M20HF
will include a feature that displays
programming information for the
next two days on your 1V screen.
Point your remote, click on the show
you want to tape, and the VCR does
the l'f'SI.
"Using the guide, you cm scroll
thrnugh any time slot or any channel
up to 50 channels," says Tim Alessi,
sellil)l' marketing manager ror home
video at Sony. "If you want to
record, it's a matter of pres!ing one

Ann
Landers

-

1997, LOI ~ T-.:.
S)'lldk• ... Crealon

Dell' Aim Lauden: The Internet
was responsible for the ruination of
my maniage. Soon after "Denny"
and I mani~ five yean ago, he
became unemployed and immersed
himself in the 'Net.
Every night he was glued to the
keyboard and communicating with
cyber pals such as "Sex Slave" and
"Hot to Trot." I was appalled by this
and begged him to stop. He
promised that he would, and I
believed him. Well-- one morning at

bunon."
• Movie advance: Want to skip the
10 minutes of movie trailerS laCked
onto the beginning of many rental
movies? Movie advance, much like
commercial advance, can skip
through the preliminaries and automatically return to regular play when
the real movie begins.
·

3 a.m., I walked into the den, and he
was logged on to a child pornography board thai put me in a state of
shock.
I soon discovered that Denny was
the father of a 4-year&lt;Oid girl and
was supporting the child with my
money. I had valid grounds for a
divorce and proceeded with zeal.
My only regret is thai I didn't make
the discovery earlier.
It was like livina with a drug
addict. These Internet junkies lose
their sense of self and become total-.
ly unbalanced. There is no way a
normal person can live with someone like that. Lord knows I tried.
Sign me •• Glendale, Calif.
Dar Glelldale:.-Your lener is a
sad one. I appreciate the effon you
must have put fonh to write it.

Beat of the Bend ...

By Bob Hoeflich

"A lot of parents like that," says
Nancy Bird, manager of corporate
communications for JVC Co. of
America. because they can hypa.•s
promotions for videos they don 'I
want tempting their children.

The Mississippi Queen will be passing by our towns this Monday but it
may be very early in the morning so we could miss seeing the vessel.
However, on Friday, Aug. 14, the queen will be docked in Marietta
from 8 a.m. w 12:30 p.m., and will head downriver again going by our
communities. I'm told we will stand a beuer chance of seeing her then.
Our area will have at least six representatives aboard as passengers and
the group includes Abbie Stratton, Jean Nease, Karen Griffith, and Maxine Griffith, all of Meigs County, and Bill and Betty Thomas of Mason
County, W. Va.
A couple of the passengers have indicated thai they will try to get the
calliope going for the benefit of us onshore lookers on Aug. 14 and in
return, we are to be along the river bank waving profusely. We can do
that!

• Pluj! and play: Need to scl up
your new VCR'' Connect the antenna, plug in the VCR and consider it
done. with this handy feature. Every·
thing from selling the clock to recording the availahlc channels is registered automatically. Various manu·
facturers may call this feature by different names. such a.• easy setup or
sman setup.
• SmartFilc: What programs have
accumulated on that tape you'vo
been recording'' No need to guess if
you have a Sony unit with Smanfilc.
The VCR registers the programming information on a small chip
embedded in special videotape labels.
Just wave the tape in front of the
VCR, and it displays the information
on-screen.

A pleasant time for Mrs. Dorothy Downie, High Sl., Pomeroy.
Her son and daughter-in-law, Chuck and Barbara Downie of
Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, were here for a few days visit this week.
Chuck's brother, Allen, took time off from his employment so that he
could spend some extra time with the couple.
Chuck and Barbara left Thursday morning for their return 10 New
Hampshire and the next go-around will be over the Christmas season.
Allen is already looking to arranging some time off during that visit.

Auro VALUE PARTS SroRES
AND
ilACINQ AHEAD OF THE Cotii'DITIDN/
Free
Admission!

involved was soft-core pornography
in magazines.
Invariably, the perpettaton are
not aware of the damage that has
been done. Their level of denial is
massive. I have found it is more dif·
ficult for a pornography addict to get
into remission than a cocaine addict.
Also, pornography addicts are mDR
likely to relapse than cocaine
addicts.
Thank you for helping to spread
the word. Once again, you are at the
forefront of issues about which society is ignorant. -· Mary Anne Layden, Ph.D., director of education,
University of Pennsylvania Health
System. Philadelphia
Dear Dr. Laydetl: Your informative leiter is greatly appreciated.
Thank you for writing. Here's one

Gibbs family reullion held at
Elberftld home
The family of Roland and Meda
Russell Gibbs gathered recently at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charlotte
Elberfeld for the annual Gibbs Family Reunion. A large tent was set up
on the front lawn of the home of the
host and hostess.
The day was spent getting
acquainted md reacquainted with
the generations of Gibbs' families
attending in order to gather information for the Gibbs family genealogy.
Children of Roland and Meda Russell Gibbs are Dude Gibbs, Kathryn
Gibbs Werner, Russ Gibbs, Teresa
Gibbs Swatzel, Pearson Gibbs, Joe
Gibbs, Clarice Gibbs Krauner, and
Chartone Gibbs Elberfeld.
· Family memben attendinl were:
Raben and Charlotte Gibbs Elber·
feld. Pomeroy; Scott and Julie Dil·
lon, Pomeroy; Stan Coates and
Bobby Coates, Canton; Allan Elberfeld, Barboursville, W.Va.; Pearson
Gibbs, New Lexington; Mr. and
Mn. Marlow Frazee, Danville; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Wright, Warsaw;

Community
Calendar

RACINE - Red Brush Church
of Christ, Saturday 7 p.m.; Sunday
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W. Va. speaker.

And, of course, a little of Aunt Maude's philosophy. She always said:
"If you can't have everything, do the besl with e&gt;eryt]:Jing you have".
And do keep smiling.
'l

CHESTER - Hymn sing, Saturday, 7 p.m. Harvest Outreach
Church, Riebel Road. Chester.
"Higher Calling" to sing.

Test your tadfll lkllllln the Auto Value

NAICAR
Racing Simulator

Tl!a lmportanc• of "good
tHd"
By Bonnie Shiveley
Devotional Writer

You 11111 win 2 Tldcefl to the Chldotte Wl""on Cup RIIC4II

Auto Parts
• Monday August 10th, 1998
OH 992-2139
I

/

Door Prlzesl
,·,

•

..

.

~J

•

A field of wheal grows on sever'al acres along the road I trave: to
Xenia. Heavy spring rains must have
washed the weed killer chemicals
out of the soil. In the midst of gold·
en grain are many thistles and other
weeds. Every time I pass, I'm
• , . . reminded of the parable Jesus told
about the wheal and tares (weeds).
He said in Matthew 13:24-30; 3643 (NASB). "The kingdom of heaven may be compared to a man who
, s.owed good seed in his field." He
~: went on .to say that while the farmer
sJejlc..· an enemy. sowed tares in his
'
field. and.when the wheal carne up,
the weeds were evident, too. The
workers came and asked if they
should pull the weeds. but he said,
"No,"litcause the 1'0015 of the wheal
Would come up. also.
Jesus ended the story with,
"Allow both to grow IOP~r until
the hamst; and in, the lime of bar·
vest I will say 10 the"''eepen, 'Fil'lt
'·a-ther up the 1are1 and bind them in
bundles to bum thelll up; but aaiber
the wheal-into my birn."'
• In order 10 help people Under-

P.OMEROY - Junior Fair par·
ticipaitt$ with poultry, rabbits and
sbeep are 10 be at the fairgrounds
Saturday, 9 a.m. to set up pens in the
junior fair building.

stand the kingdom of heaven, Jesus
often told stories using familiar
illustrations - in this case, a wheal
field. The disciples asked Him to
explain the tares?~
SUNDAY
Jesus answere&lt;l. "the one who
POMEROY - Henderson famisows the good seed is the Son of ly reunion, Sunday, Modem WoodMan. and the field is the world ... the men Hall, Burlhigham.
good seed ... are ihe sons of tile
.
kingdom; and the tares are the sons
IUiBDSVll.LE - Annual Conof the evil one; 11111! ~ enemy who t noJiy, reunion, Sunday, ~ellville
sowed them 1s the ittvtl, and the har· Locks and Dam Shelter. Dtnner at
vest is the end of'lhe age; and the .noon.
reapers are angels ... just as the tares
are gathered up and burned with fire,
so shall it be at the end of the age." MONDAY
Jesus indicated thatHJe would send
RAOtml - Racine Village
fonb His angels to fake all the evil Council, recessed session, Monday,
ones and "cast them i.nto the furnace 7 p.m. municipal building.
of fire; in that p3ac,there shall be
weeping and gnashi of teeth."
POINT PLEASANT - Macular
He funher w
"He who has DC&amp;ineratiOII Su~ "'roup, II
ears, let him hear."
a.m. Christ !lpiJcojlll Church. l"oinl .
Jesus seeks genuintbelievers a!Kl ~ PleUan'
He is the only one
knows the
·
difference between tliose who truly
believe and those who ONLY SAY . TUESDAY
the~ believe in .H~m~ Lord and · , PO~ROY - Free immuniza·
Savtor. He 1s wtlhna to let us all liOn.clinic, Tuesday, 910..11 a.m. and
grow{together until the end of time. I IO 3 p,ll( II thO 'Meip Gotlilty
Then the pretenders will be separat· Heallh -- Depaninellt, l&gt;ttllllerry
ed into the flames and torment of HeiJhiS. · Every child mu$1 be
eternal hell. But He said, "The right· accompahied by parenllleaal
eous will shine fonb as the sun in the &amp;uardi'". Take child's inunllllization
kingdom of their Father." When the recotd. .
..
·
death angel comes for you, he won't
.• .·
.
.
ask. ''SmokingorNon·SmpkinjT'
~AY ·
. !" . .
That's a choice we blvi to make ' i'J1JPPBRS PLAINS - Junior
today.
.
high jirls interested in·tryiq 0111 for
F.alher. thank You for ICichina us footblll dloerleltler m ubd to lie
in lin.,le .ways 10 unclenlll!d ljilri· at the rliPI*S Plli111 ~
ltllllriltbl. I ..-.y.for my _frietldi!Q Sdlool, ·Watt eadly, 7 p.ia. (lali..
decide aovi that dlty. waft~ •to
~!*' Clll 992-4494, Clwiay Tiylor,
"aood aeed" in lbe world. Ameit. , advisor.

+

more lener that might make a difference:
Dar Au Landen: I have
learned something that might help
women whose husbands are using
the Internet to view pornography.
Last year, my husband began
5pending a suspicious amount of
lime on the computer. When I
checked what he had been accessing. I was shocked. He admitted he
had been looking 11 porno daily but
said it was just curiosity. I was hun
and felt betrayed. My husband
agreed to do whatever was necessary to make amends.
I discovered through a local computer store that there are several programs that will block inappropriate
material, including nudity, sexual
acts. violence, cult propaganda and

dru&amp; culture malerial. The software
was easy 10 install, and I am the only
one who knows the password. My
husband was actually relieved . Now. .
we can both enjoy surfing the 'Net.
Please tell your readers. - Internet ·
Patrol in Arkansas
Dell' A.ta.a: Thanks for the
tip. For those who are interested in
blocking such material. I sugg'st a .
visit to your local computer store to ·
ask which software would be most :
effective for you. Don't be embar- :
rasscd. You won't be the first cus- •
lomer who has "the problem."
·
Send questions to Ann Landen, :
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceo· ·
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles, .
Calli. 90045&lt;1'&gt;

--Family reunion new notes--

Members of the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital and
• ·their guests will be gathering al the home of Bob and Libby Fisher in
·Racine for their annual picnic at 6 p.m., on Thursday, August 27. Libby,
of course, is a former president of the auxiliary and"?~as held the picnic al
her home on several occasions. She and Bob are good hosts.

'

·.

Thank you. The letter that follows
will give you additional insight md,
hopefully, more comfon than anything I might say.
Dear Allll 1-.tm: You have
printed sevml lenm dealing with
computer pornography. I want to
thank you for bringing this problem
to the attention of the public. Psychotherapists, too. have just begun
to realize the extent of the problems
lhst have developed because of the
Internet.
I have been lrealing sexual-violence victims and perpetrators for 13
yean. I have not treated a single
case of sexual violence that did not
involve pornography. Most often, it
is video pornography. In almost
every case of sibling incest that I
have treated, the pomography

Continuing tradition, employees of the Meigs County District Public
Library and its branches at Racine and Middleport will again be at the
Meigs County Fair.
The library booth will bc;..ill.t1Je. ~nior,fair_-bui14ing and staff members . J"RIDAY
will be on the scene from-· Jo a.ni. to 10 p.m .• \tonday through Saturday,
SYRACUSE - End of summer
for the entire fair. They'll be distributing favo..'and will register visitors
youth bash, featuring Christian rock
for an attendance prize which is an Atlas provided by the Friends of the
group, 'The Crusaders" Friday, 8
Library organization.
'
p.m to 8 a.m. for youths, 12 to I8.
In addition, library workers are pRparin' fj!f the opening of a new Take pillow and sleeping bag for
branch library in the new Eastern Elementary S£_bool. Library space was
lock-in.
included in the building program and the facility will be operated-cooper·
atively by the Meigs County District Library and the Eastern Local School
REEDSVILLE - Gun shoot,
District
.
.
.
. .
1
Forked Run Sponsman Club, 7 p.m.
The hbrary wrll be umque m that 11 w1ll serve jlot only students but the
Friday.
public as well . Books in the library whether theY are the property of the
library district or the •chool district will be madt available to both stu• SATURDAY
.dents and the public and employees of both the library and school districts
POMEROY
Burlingham
• will also serve stude!l!S and the public. It's an e&gt;ciling nc.w concept in
Modem Woodmen, Saturday, 7 p.m.
·' library services.
·
meeting. Door prizes, refreshments.

.Look,,. Alllo , , _ ,

Page7 :
' Friday, AugUit 7, 1998

Internet pornography junkies harder 'to treat than cocaine addicts

.

~

.

saae was possible because its support increased with each vote to break the

VCRs continue to add features while prices keep falling
By BILL WOLFE
The Courier-Journal
You try to tape "Frasier" on your
VCR. Instead, to your horror, you
wind up with an hour of Barney.
"Dumb," you mutter to yourself.
"Dumb, dumb, dumb."
Take hean. It's not your fault. You
just need a smarter machine. Today's
videocassette recorders are being
designed and marketed with tools to
make setup, recording and playback
easier and more reliable.
At the same time. prices are lower than ever - an average of S154
this year.
If you're drawn to special features.
you can find VCRs that will :
• Prompt you step-by-step through
setup and programming with a helpful, friendly voice.

The Daily Sentineli

Mrs. William A. "Dude" (Sarah)
Gibbs. Pomeroy; Jeff Gibbs and
Lauren Gibbs. Cincinnati.
From the family of the late
Kathryn Gibbs Werner, Mrs. Roland
Smith, Lima; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Murray and Trevor, Lima; Mr. and
Mrs. Brian Akers. Hamilton; Mr.
and Mrs. Oreg Bowen and Jennifer,
Lima; Mr. and Mrs. Greg Stout and
Logan. West Union.
From the family of the late Teresa Gibbs Swatzel. Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Tate, Fon Washington, Md.; Mrs.
Marcy Maher and Tyler, Washington
D.C.; Mrs. Brenda Hopfer, Centerville; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Swatzel and
Tresa and Jamie, St. Albans. W.Va.
Oarice Gibbs Krautter, Pomeroy;
Keith Krauuer. Columbus; and Mr.
and Mrs. Rocky Thompson, Lan·
caster. Representatives of the family
of Joe Gibbs and Russ Gibbs were
unable to anend.

Beaver Family was held July II at
Star Mill Park in Racine, with 59
auending.
Table grace was given by Ernest
Bush. Recognized and presented
awards were Ernest Bush, 76, oldest
man; Flossie Bush, 75, oldest
woman. Parker Allen Holsinger, two
weeks, youngest boy; Abigail
Bearhs, two, youngest girl; Jan Har·
man, newest married; and Ray,
Mary. and Krista Proffitt of Cockeysville, Md. who traveled the farthest.
Krista Proffitt, Richard Deem.
Roben Forester, Rowan Holsinger,
Helen Bosler, Linda Black, Abigail
Beams, Joshua Simpson, Cline, and
Jan Harmon won door prizes.
Those attending were: Teddi,
Faith, David, April, and Deborah
Jackson, of Johnstown; Ray, Mary, ·
and Krista Proffiu. of Cockeysville,
Md.; Mary, Roben, Robena and
Joey Forester, Lilian Nakao, Leona
J. Cline, Shirley and Gerald Simp·
son, Flossie and Ernest Bush, Mil·
Beaver family reunion held
The 20th annual reunion of the dred Williams, David Yost, Jan Har·
Charles W. and Fannie Lee {Wolfe) mon, of Racine.

Richard Deem of Zanesville.
John Holsinger of Columbus. Grace ·
Rowan, and John Holsinger II, of'
Reedsville, Pat Collins, of Cir- :
cleville, Helen R. Bosler. Linda
Black, Johnny Charlie Myers of·
Carroll, Scva and Carol W. Cline,
·Branden Lee Foreman. Brad and
Staci Holsinger, of Long Bottom,
Lori, Rachacl, and Abigail Beams,
Dolores and Raymond Donohue. of.
Pomeroy, Jay and Parker Allen
Holsinger and Devan Hill, of
Hilliard.
Carl Cline, of Mason, W.Va.,
Mark, Regina, Joshua, and Tiffany .
Simpson, of M\ddlepon, Jim and·
Margaret Cline of Beverly, Kelly,;
David, Blake, and Chance McAiar-;
ney, of Whipple, Dave and Glorine•
Cline, of Waterford, and Mary and:
Roy Gillian of Chester.
The officers are Grace Holsinger,
president; Carol Cline, vice presi-·
dent; Shirley Simpson, treasurer and:
Mary Proffitt, secretary.
Next year the reunion will be July·
I0 at Star Mill Park.

�Frlday,August7,1998

Pag8 8 • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy. • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Friday, August 7, 1998

70

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

'The Magic Hour' does a disappearing act
LOS ANGELES (AP) - 'I'he laicnight 'IV wm have claimed 8I10iher
victim.
Eirvin "Magic" Johnson's talk
show was canceled ThW'Sday, after
less lhan two monlhs on the air.
1Wentieth Television, which produced and distributes "'I'he Malic
Hour," pulled the plug, citing the
show's low ratings.
''I've learned a 101 from this ex~
rience," Johnson said in a statanent
"We were improving with each day,
but this is television and shows arc
canceled all the time for one reason or
another."
The final original .episode aired
Thursday night, with reruns expected

to fill the time slot for the next four

weeks. 'I'he show's most highly raled
installment - fealllring radio personality Howard S!em, a venomous critic
of ''The Magic Hour"- is scheduled
to air tonight.
Rick Jacobson, president of 1Wentieth Television, which produces and
distributes the show, cance led the
hour-long talk show after consulting
with station managers across the coontty.
'I'he show had been enjoying its
best ratings since its June 8 debut after
comedian Tommy Davidson became
Johnson's sidekick on July 20.
"'I'he Magic Hour" became the
third talk show in the past year to be

Public Notice
..

PUBUC NOTICE
The alghiMn member
GaiiJe.Jaebori-Melsla BeNoni
of Alcohol, Drug Adcllellon
IJid Mental Health Servlcet
llippOIIIIM by the DINCtor
of the Ohio Dept~rtmant of
Mantel
Hnllh {4
appoint-), the DINCtor of

GRADUATES • Julie Wandling and Julie lawlon, alsten-in-law,
· graduated from Hocking College June 14, with aaaoclate clegraea in
: juvenile corrections. Both of them on the clean's list and
members of the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society.
Wandling is the daughter of Don and Cheryl Roush of ColumbUs,
granddaughter of Roscoa and Betty Fife and Walter Roush of Middleport and the late Marjorie June Roush. Wandling residea In
Meigs County with her husband, Dave, and son Melthew and is
. employed by Health Recovery Services, Inc.
laweon Is the daughter of Peggy Wandling. Albany and John
Wandling, Ballevllle, Illinois. lawson resides In Albany with her husband, Pet, and eon Cody.

the Ohio Depertment ol
Alcoholllld DNg Adcllellon

ServlcH {4 appoint-) and

the county Commlulonera
In Oallle, Jacklon end
11111111 Countln {I 0
appointees). Currently,
there 11 one vacancy to be
filled by a Melge County
Commlnloner
appolntmtnt

THOMAS MATHEW PARKER U
BIRTH
ANNOUNCED
Thomaa Mathew Parker, II was
born on June 20 at the Holzer
Medical Canter, Gallipolia. He Ia
the eon of Thomu Parker and
Amber Well of Shade.
The infant weighed nine
pounda and waa 22 lnchea long.
Paternal grandfather Ia Albert
Parker of Cheater .and the mater·
ilal grandparenta are Texanna
Well and the late Howard Well of
Pomeroy. Maternal great-grand·
mother is Gwlnnle White of
Pomeroy.

Van Meter reunion held

MADISON GRACE MAYNARD
BIRTH ANNOUNCED • and
Junia Maynard announce the
birth of a daughter, Madison
Graca, on June 8 at the Women
and Children's Hospital In
Charleston, w. Va.
The infant weighed 7 pounds,
9 ouncea and waa 19 inches long. Mettmal grandparents are
Roger and Marvene Beegle of
Racine and the paternal grandparents are Bill Maynard of
Racine, and Evelyn Porter of
Jackson.
Maternal graat-grandparents
are Charles end Mattie Beegle of
Racine, and tha paternal great·
grandmother Is Lottie Marcum
of Naugituck, W. Va.

SAMUEL EVANS
TURNS
SEVEN
Samuel Evan•• son of Marlin
and Debbie Evans, Racine, celebrated his seventh birthday on
July 14 with a party given by his
parents at the Chesler Skate-a·
Way. Family and friends attand·
ed the party.
'

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

Descendants of Jake and Maude
Van Meter celebera!ed their IOOth
wedding anniversary on July 12th at
Forked Run Lake.
The oldest person attending was
Ada Van Meter, the youngest was
Jennifer Newlen , one year old.
The longest married couple was
. Clarence and Iva Lawrence, wed 48
years. Sammie Kingston came the
lanhest. Chuck Evans had most chil·
dren there.
Others winners were Gerri Nonh·
way. Opal Van Meter, Randy Van
Meter, Justin Ncwlcn, Mark Neu·
mann, Ashton and Morgan. Grace
was given by Ada Van Meter. The
family spent the afternoon remembering stories about Jake and
Maude.
The next reunion will be on the
third Sunday in July, 1999.
Reponers arc great granddaughters Jean Theiss and Linda Bailey.

lndlvlduela lnttrttled In
being coneldered for this
30 Announcementa

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.

6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

$600.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

THE EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICT

740·992·3796

Ad deadline: August 13.
Say congratulations
on the ne.w
&amp;

&gt;
To re~rve space, call 992·
"~

2155 For Dave Harris, ext.
104, or Steve Koebel, ext. 105.

-

with his original sidekick, comedian
Craig Shoemaker, who was fired after

CO"STROOIO"

publicly criticizing the show.
Critics had pummeled the show
ever since its debut. An Associated
Press television critic described the
show as "an irony-free zone and. so
far, ber~ft of culling-edge comedy."
On the final show Thlll"'day nigh~
Johnson was up front about getting the

Mizway Tavern ·
Fri. Aug. 7th Karaoke
Sat. Aug. 8tli
Live Band Bad Habit
$2.00 cover

'
··

..

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

Draft House
Male Review Aug. 20th
Female Review Aug. 27th
For Tickets
CALL: 304·675·9915

.'
' ,

..

'"

Hour' is over. ..

\

~.~

lnllructlonl 10 bidders lillY
olltllned et the omce of
the T......,.,, T......,.

FREE Installation
FREE Estimates

bl

Plain• e - r y Building.

" c:ertlfted check ptlyebla

*Any size up to 93 united inches in

to the Tra11urtr of the
ebove bolnl of Education
or 1 tlltllfiCtory bid bond
eicecuttd by the blddlr anll
the eu1'11ty compt~ny In •n
emount equsl to nve IN'''
cent of the bid ahell ba

existing wood doub'e hung open ing.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
110 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291-5600

IUbmltltd wlll1e1Ch bid.

.,

Said Boerd of Education
rtMrvn the right to waive
lnlormalltlta to accept or
rtjtct any and 111 or fNirll of
any end all blda.
No bide mey be
wllhdriiWII for at leeat 1111rty
{30) day1 lfltr the
achlclultd cloelng lima lor
racelpt of blcle.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
UNRIIcllla
Treasurer ol Eillltm

HAULING
Umestonel
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

38900-SR,7
Rndevlllo, Ohio 45772

71'20198 1 mo pd

The B end

Large.•l EXPO

September 19th &amp; 20th
Saturday l0-6 p.m. &amp; Sunday l0-5 p.m.
For more information call 992-6676
7/30/tl'n

a.'!~!:~,!" a
Networks, Modems, lfard Drives, Pr inters, Upgr8de

Your PC to a Pentium CPU and MB Today.
740-992-1135 ror a Price Quote!
Frognet Internet Sign-up point ror
..
Meigs and Mason Counties
'I .._, '-1 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
• ...._

,:1'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

~

POMEROY, OH.

614·992·5479

3127/TFN

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

·----·--

TRPPIIn

,.

" Easy Ot•er tire Pirone Dmrk Financing"
Air Conditioners AI Low As 128 a moruh
Heat P)Jmps As Low As 138 a month
*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*free Estimates

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;COOLING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

740 446-!1416. 1-800·872·5967

"Witere Q11alily Doesn '1 Cost More"

LINDA'S
PAINTING

949-2168

.......

GALUPI:)US, OHIO

I

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me '
do It for YDU.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After. 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180.

Free Estimates

•Trim
•I\UIIIP

ollnd•na
jM";t);;;a;; jjjfjjiiit Jonte '

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

985-3831
35537.St. Rt. 7 North

INSULATION
·VInyl Siding ·Soffit
·Fascia
.•Seamleea Gutter
. •Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garage• •Decka
;!4x24 Pole Building

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Limestone Hauling
·House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
~ Utilities

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
Chester

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Hom~s • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
'COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Estimates ·
(614) 992·3838

12/ltl/lfn

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
STORM DAMAGE
REPAIRS
Backhoe,Dozerand
Utility Work,
New Construction,
Remodeling
992-7943

614-992-7643

7/3198 1 mo.

(No Sunday Calls)

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

'-...

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

.JDID

Free Estimates

360° Communications

985-4473

SeNIOR cmtEN
DISCOUNT

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings

1/f:o,
l'~· -

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Ga rages, Pole Buildings, Roofing. Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
~
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured fll ll.
Phone 740-992·3987.
Free Estimates
Owner: John Dean

f?

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio
1012SJ9611tn

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

CARPET
PLIJS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or

740·698-7231

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

"""""

&amp;111.M ttn

INCOME LIMITS HAVE CHANGEDII
1 PERSON - $14,200
2 PERSONS - $16,200
AND AGE UMITS HAVE CHANGED
IF YOU ARE 50 YEARS OLD OR HANDICAPPED,
YOU MAY QUAUFY FOR

THE MAPLES
100 Memorial Drive Eaat Pomeroy, OhiD
Rents are computed according to your income.
Lovely apartmanta featuring wall-to-wall
carpeting, with all appliances.
AU PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID
MUST BE 50 YEARS OF AGE OR
HANDICAPPED.
MUST MEET HUD ELIGIBIUTY REQUIREMENTS
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
CALL (7:40) 992-7022
Equal Housing Opportun~

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
"Hue• lmntery"
"Roof Coatings
*VInyl Skirting
"Water Heaters
*Door/Window•
*Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
*Fibeiglaas &amp; Wood
Sttpa

8 1g sale- Pe nte Costal Church
basemont. 873 Soulll 3rd, Middle·
pori , Oh. Augu st 6-7. 9am-4 pm.
Saturday 8th , 9·noon. School and
baby clothes, lots of misc.
Satu rday. August 8, 35655 Rock -

spri ng s Ad. Qa m-3pm. Clothes
and various household Items.
Saturday. August 8th. 1402 Ou~ ­
ky Suee t. Syracuse behmd
Ctark·s Sto re (lorme rly Larry·sl .
9am-4pm.
Racine , Yaro and Cake scue . Saturday. August 8th, 1Oam. Between
Main and Vine Streets on Broad~- try Ladies Circle F.F.G.C.
Yard sale at the Che star Wells
residence, Long Bottom. Oh. Fri day 7th, Saturday 8th, 9-5.

YOUll SAVE MONEY
IN THE ClASSiflaJS
Alii THAT UO llllll

143, 4 112 miles, turn left on Sm1th
Ru n Rd ., Aug . 6th·8th , girts 1·6
CIQ!Iling .

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Personals

Andrew Williams Please Caii74Q245-5014.

LONELY!! I
Need Someone To Talk To? Live
Girls One -On -One 1·900-43 86773 EKI.8 459 . $3.99 Per Min.
Must Be 18 Yrs . Serv-U 619·645-

Announcements

1st time Ya rd Sale , 1200 Viand
S1., Pt. Pleasant , WV, Sat
AuQ 8. 9am-?
2814 Mead owbrook Dr1ve. Au·
gus t 7&amp; 8. 8am-5pm, microwave.
gol f-eq uipment , wood/doors.
ba throom llxtures. ceili ng light s.
clothing, drapes.
3·family yard sale:2602 Mt. Vernon Ave. Sa t. Aug.B. kids
clothes-all sizes.
Gara ge S81e , 26 05 Jefferson
Ave . August 8, 8am-1pm , exe rcise bike, treadmill, adult&amp;c h1ld·
ren clothes, misc.

40

Sat. Au g 8. 8am -4pm , 2304
Was hington Ave ., lurnilure &amp;
household goods.

Giveaway

2 was hing mac hi nes. need repairs. 304-675-4527.

4 Beag ~ puppies, 740-992·2624.

Flowers By Craig

•River Run Dog Food ...... $2.00 lb. per bag
(While coupons last)
•Shade River Cattle Feed ......... $9.75 100 lb.
•Shade River Creep Feed ....... $1 0.25 100 lb.
We carry Farriers Formula from Life Data
Hours: M-F 11-5:30; Sat. 11-12:00 Noon

across from tbe Court llouse.

113 W. 2ND ST.

299 Third Street
Racine, Ohio

jAMES
ALARM
SERVICE

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction

SPECIALS*

Located in tht Insurance Plus Building

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Joe N. Sayre
614-742·2138

For A Fresh Look
Call

740-667-3513

CELLULAR PHONES

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

Reasonable Rates

7fl71981 mopd

"Your One Stop Computer Shop"
Custom Built Computrrs, Pll!·Owncd Computers,

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

Circuit TV's

1-888-667-3513

~

Meigs County Fairgrounds
-Intersection US 33 &amp; SR 7 (northwesl corner)

SHOP

SAYRE·
TRUCKING

Burglar, Fire, Closed·

Traditional or Cuslom Design
Funerals, Weddings, Parties and Interior Design
with exlensive experience sint e 1989

~ ~'·&lt;·=:~.
· ~~- 3rdAnnual~~~
~ EXPO '98 'S_-12\
Area ~
\d \
Located al

PUBLIC NOTICE
NoncE 11 lllraby given 111at
on Saturdty, Auguat 8,
tll98, at 10:00 a.m., a public
1111 wtll b1 held at 211 Will
Second Str111, Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Farmere'a Bank
end Savlngl Company
parking lot, to sell for cash
to following colleterel:
1996 Kawasaki 4-Whnlor
JKALF8B13TBS82t3
The Fermer• Benk end
Sevlnge
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 1'11aervea the
rtght to bid at lhlo eale, and
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to salt.
Further, The Farmer• Bank
and Savlnga company
reaervea the right to reject
any or all blda aubmlltod.
Further, lht lbOVI
collateral will bl aold In the
condition It Ia In, with no
expreaa or Implied
warrantloa given.
For further Information,
contact Tim at 9115-4289.
(8)5,6, 73tc

Goose clothing,
slates, saws, clocks,
baskets, wooden
items
Open 11 am • 6 pm

New Haven, WV
304·882·3336

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(740) 985-4297

NOW OPEN
FUU.V INSURED

-

Ohio Call

Public Notice

Remodeling

"Build Your Dream"

(304) 273·5860

{8)7, 14, 21,284 tc

614-992·3470
GOOD TIMES
Night Club
SR 7, PDmeroy, Oh
"LIVE BANDS'
Fri. 10pm . 2 am
BUTZKRIEG
Sat. 10 pm· 2 am
SWAMP JEUCE
For more party details
call 740-982·19M

Custom Homes

WVCall

I.Qcel Sc:heola

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

30

MIJ

On site custom sawing
with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill

CRAFTY lADIES

8434.

ONE MAN BAND

Howard L Wrlteael

WICKS

4121/Wtf'n

liMITED TIME OFFERIII
(OFFER GOOD THROUGH AUGUST 31ST)

can rellava 8 debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair dlatrlbutlon
of 111111. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
"t•tmpt" property for hla Or her peraonal UH.
Thla may Include a car, a houae, clothlt, and
hOIIHhold gooela.

LowRataa)

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:()(1.4:30 Weekdays
9 :()0.12:00 Saturday

•options available

Business Services

(UmeStona-

St. Rt. 7

"-- .$195.00
FREE Low EJArgon Glas

Public Notice

ATOUCH OF CLASS
CLEANING SERVICE

740·367·5040

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
582·5025 Athens, Ohio
:

(740) 985-3551

"FACTORY DIRECT"

For lnlormaUon Regarding Bankruptcy contscl:

.· ~;;'

• Washers
• Hot Water Heater
• Ranges
• Freezers
• Refrigerators
• Dishwashers
• Dryer
Call Ken Young

SPECIAL SA I.E

BANKRUPTCY

.,

"Need repair on any make'l"

Call 614·843·5426

"And you know what they say, it's
not over until the fat lady sings." he
said. "Well, she's gonna have to sing
tonight because this is it. 'The Magic

P/I Contradors,
• Bobcat Sirvice
• Concrete
• Maaonry
• General
Commercial and
Residential
l'rH Eetlm•••
No Job Too Small
Brian Morrlaon
(740J 985-::st48

THE APPLIANCE MAN

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years e:,cperience.
Free Estimates

axe.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

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

and its new facilities with a
special supplement to
appear August 21, 1998

nervoumess 10 a lack of chcmisuy

·-

GARAGE SALE
Sat. Aug. 8
1 mile out St. Rt. 325 Baby
clothes, toys, kids clothes 2T, 111~t,t .
3T, 12'1 bicych~. air cond., 1V,
and lots more

(Cut Out lor Future Diocount)

LO"a·s

Public Notice
appointment can do 10 bY Sr., Klm11111y D. Simpkin•
requ..tlng en application lnd olotlph P. Gllbet1, 111 of
hom:
whoea realdencee are
ROIIIId A. Aclltlna,
unknown end cannot by
Extcutlw Dlrac:tor
real-bla diligence be
Olllle-Jaell19'1 Melp
aenftlllnld, wtllllke notice
Board of Alcohol, DNg
that on the 1tth dey of
Adcllellon
March, 11t8, Bene One
and llentll Health s.m- 11oft.... Corporetton Iliad
538'-'aei.Aine
111 «;ompltlnt In the
P.O. llox 514
Conunen Pltll Court of
GIIHpolle, OH 48«11
llt1Q1 County, Ohio In C11e
Phone: 814 448 3022
No. IICV021 on the docket
The Board atrlvae to olthe
Court, end 111e objoct
maintain 1 balenced and demand
of
repreeanlltlon
of which plndlngforIa relief
to
fore·
community mamllere and ciON the llan ol plaintiff'•
wolcomu minority or mortgege recorded upon
leNie appiiCIInu.
the fvllowlng dHCrtlled real
{8)8, 7,t3tc
n1lle to wit:
Property Addratl Ia:
Public Notice
311:14 Laodlng Creek Road,
llkldlttlorl. Ohio 45780 and
COURT OF
being mort pertlculerly
COMMON PLEAS
clncriMclln plllntlll'l mort·
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
gege rtCOrdtd In Mortgege
c- NO. tBCIIo21 Volume t, fNID• 783, of the
{JuciOe Crow) Melt• County Roeorder't
BANC ONE MORTGAGE
Olftel.
.
CORPORATION
All of the above n1m.d
Plolntlff,
deftndlnte .,. required to
anower wllhln twenty-eight
LEROY SIMPKINS, S., ot al
{28) doyo altar tot publicaDelendtnb.
lion, which ohall bo pub·
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
llthtd once 1 wHk for alx
FORECLOSURE OF
conaecutlve wHkl , or they
MORTGAGE
might be denied a hearing
Lee Roy Slmpklne, Sr., In IIOIH.
Kimberly D. Slmpklna and
LERNER, SAMPSON &amp;
Joaeph P. Gilbert, whoa•
ROTHFUSS
lui known addre11 11 2244
Attomoye for Plaintiff
Wllllama Hollow Rotd,
120 E. Fourth StrHI,
Gllllpollo, Ohio 45831, end
8th Floor
the unknown
helre,
Clnclnnati,Ohlo 45202
devltttl, IIDIIMS, execu- 513) 241-3100 .
lora, admlnlllratora, apoua- 7) 3, 10, 17, 24,31: {8) 7 6tc
" and 111lgne and the
unknown guardlane of
Public Notice
minor ond/or lncompt~lent
heirs of LH Roy Slmpklne,

110

Help Wanted

Day Care Center looking fol' part·
time, Sub. workers. Send resume

&amp; references ' to · Box SF-6 cl o
Poi nt Plea sant Register. 200
Main Street. Pt. Pleasant, WV

25550.

from the host's obvious on-camera

PUACHAII! Of SCHOOL
BUS FOR EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Sealtd propoaala will be
rtctlvtd by the Board of
Educetlon of the Eastern
Locol School Dlotrlct of
Reedavllle, Ohio, by 12:00
NOON on September 11,
1t88 end 11 that time
opentcl by the n.tsurar of
uld llolrd •• provl- by
law ler {1) 71· 72 fNIIMnger
echaol bue according to
epeclftclltlona of uld board
of tducltton.
Speollloallcioa and

The Daily Sentinel
Salutes

EASTERN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

canceled after going up against net·
WOik stalwarts ''The Tonight Show
with Jay Leno" on NBC and "Late
Show with David Letterman" on
CBS.
Both "'I'he Keenen IVOI)' Wayans
Show" and "Vibe," which made their
premieres against each other last
August, were pulled earlier this year.
Together with ''The Magic Hour." all
three were ttying 10 woo the young
urban audience thai Arsenio Hall had
cultivated for more than five years.
until his show's 1994 cancellation.
Producers of ''The Magic Hour"
had hoped to rely on Johnson's star
power to illiJliCt viewers, but the show
was hit hard with problems ranging

Yard Sale

6 Week s old puppies. Par t Copper nosed Beagle. part Australian
came dog 740·245·590 1
8 wk old puppy, part Retriever. all
shols, 740-742·3062.
Beagle/coo n mi x pup pies. 5·6
weeks old, weaned, 5 males, 3 females, 740-992-3358.
To give away - two wo nderful fema le housecats, 3-112 years old,
spayed . de clawed (front paws).
updated vaccinations. Child is allergic to these tamuy pets. Need
home Immed iately! ! Take one or
both, gentle with child ren, call anytime 740-992-4 171 &amp; leave mes-

sage.
Two Swk old kitt ens. 304-675·
61t8.
Yell ow Lab, male. 2 1/2 yrs . old.
f riendly, good home only, prefer
country home, 304-882- 3325.
Young Beag le Ma le, 740- 44 62660.
Young Female Cocker Spaniel to
o good homo I 740-44&amp;-~627

60 Lost and Found
Found: Meigs H S class ring year
2000. found in Walmart . 740-387·
7734, leave message

Yard Sale Aug 7&amp;8 , 9am-4:30pm.
6110 mila out SandhiNRoad.

80

Rick Pearso n Auclion Com pany,
full time au cti onee r. co mplete
se rvice . Lu;en sed
auction
166,0h io &amp; West VIrginia, 304773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
Wedemey er's Au ction Se rvice.
Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720.

90

Antiques. top price$ paid, River ine Antique s. Pomeroy. Oh io.
Russ Moore owne r. 740 -992 ·
2526.
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture.
will buy one piece or co mpl ate
hous ehold, Osby Mallin, 740 992·6576.
.Clean Late Model Ca rs Or
Trucks . t990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Bui ck Pontiac, 1900 Eastem Aw nue. Gallipolis.

J &amp; 0 Aut o Part s. Bu yi ng
wr ecked or salva ged veh icles.
304-77~5033 .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Lost pony, red wlblack mane and
!all . wear ing blu e ha lter. Hysell
Run/Bailer Run VIci nity, 740-992-

70

110
Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

2 Family Yaro Sale, Sa turday Au·
gust 8,1998. 8:00· 5:00. VCR, Universa l Weighl Sys tem. Misc .
Clolh1ng 193 LeGrande Blvd
2 Plus Fa mi lies: Bikes. Books ,
Household, Collectables . Clothing,
linwood Drive Off l ake Drive, Rio
Grande. August 7th, &amp; 8th, Q..5 .
4 Fami ly, 48 Hubbard Ave . Ka ·
nauga. Lots of n1ce school
clothes. home interior. Beanie Ba·
bies, ot her items. 9:00- 5:00. One
Day Only! Saturday Aug . 8, 1998

Wanted to Buy

Ab solute Top Dollar: All u.s. Sl iver And Gold Coin &amp;, Prool sets,
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry. Go ld
Rings, Pre -1930 U.S. Currency.
Sterling, Etc. Acqutsltions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coi(l Shop, 151 Second .
A""nue , Gall ipol ~. 740- ·2842

Losl 8· 3·98, 3 young sheep; Rutland Yicinfty, 740-742-3409.

6650.

Auction
and Flea Market

Help Wanted

S$$ DANCERS WANTED S$$
Excellent opponumty lor the right
girl. $500( +)per wee k earning poten tial. No ex p necessary, mu st
be atleest t8 . Call 614-992-6387
{anytime) or 304 -675-5955 alter
8pm. Wed thru Sat.
AVON ! All Are as ! Shirley
Spears, 304·675-1429.

ASSISTANT NANAGER FOR
TRANSCRIPTION POSITION
AVAILABLE -· Competitive Sat·
ary, Full -Time With Exce ptional
Fringe Beneti r Package . ReqUirements : Medical Term lnot ogy,
Good Typing Skills; Computer
Skills (Microsoft Word !Excel And
Word Pe rfec t 5.0): Prior Super·
visory Experience; Assoc iate Or
Bachelors Degree Prele" ed

D1ummer and Sax Playe r needs
Guitarist and eass Player. wide
range of Music . 1-740-698-62 12
John Peck. Drummer
Easy Workt Ell.ce llent Pay! As semble Pr oduc1s At Home . Call
Toll Free 1·800 -46 7-55 66 Exl.
121 70

Exper1enced T1mber Cuner Need·
eel 740-682-731 8

Fa st. Grow1ng, &amp; Fnendly Atm os phen~ . All Shifts , Will Tram.
Send Response To. CLA n9-69,
clo Pomeroy Da11y Sen11ne1. P.O
Bo• 729. Pomeroy, OH 45769
Oalha Me•gs CommuMy Ac tion IS
seekmg a l ull hme agency Pla nner/Grant Wr1ter . Background in
grant wntmg and noll-prolit operalions. College Degree . excellent
verbal and wnnen s!l.itls required.
EK cellent benefit package. Salary
co mmensura te with ex perience
Send Resumee w1th 3 relrences
to GMCAA , Bo( 272 . Ches hire .
Oh 45620 by 8/t3198 . GMCAA IS
an equal opportunity employer.
Hams Steak HousP. is now hiring
304·675·9726
Health Recovery Sf!rviCAS. Inc Is
A JCAHO Accred•ted Orgamzallon Pr ovtd1ng He alth Care In
SoutheaMern Oh10
PROGRAM QIBECTOR · Ful lTime Regular Vacancy Ava ilable
At Rura l Women Recovery Program Ma ste.n l evel Prefe rred
But Expenence And Educa tion In
Che mical Dependency An d
Women·s Issues Weighted. Mu st
Have Strong Su perv1sory An d
Management Backgrouno. Skilled
In Budgeti ng, Human Resources.
Programmmg , Plannmg And Continuous Quality Imp rove ment
Knowledge Of Treatment And Ae·
covery Strategies For Wome n
And Fam ilies Essen lial For Success Re quires Strong Lea derShip And Dynam1c Teac hing
Capablhhe s W111 Be Required To
Be On Call
Please Respond With Lener Of
Interest. Resume And Three Professional Relerences To Human
Resources Manager, Health Recovery Se rvices . Inc. 100 Hospital Dr~ ve. Athe ns. OH 4 570 1.
EOE
Help want ed : Du ke Clea ners Of
.Ga llipolis, OH. Ap ply in perso n
!rom 12pm-3pm.
tmme01ate 1anitona1 help needea.
1·800-484·6800 Code 5452.
LIBRARY C LERK- Meigs Co.
Public Library Part-t1me. mai nly
evenmgs and weekends. L 1b ra r ~
expe nence prefened. Apply bEl ·
lore Aug . 9, at the Pomeroy, Milldleporl or Racine Librar~es .
licensed Soc•al Work For 116
Bed Skilled Facihty In Ga llipolis.
Ohio Salary Commensurate W•th
Expenence. SeM Resume To Mr
Jerry McCoy. Admi ntst rator- Ar
bars At Gal hpol1s, t70 Pmecres t
Drive . Gallipolis, OH 45631 EOE
LPN Part T1me Must Be Available
For All Shills. Ohio Lice nse Required, Contact Doro thy Harper,
740446·7148
Needed. Energetic , Kmd and dedICa ted STNA 'S (part -ti me) mteresred 1n caring for people in our
spec1a11zed Alzheimer&amp; umt. Day
and even1ng shifts. Must be sensitive to the needs of the elderly
and !hose with Alzheimers and
deruent1a. Please apply 1n person
at Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
3t 1 Buck ridge Rd. .Bidweli,Oh1o
45614
Optometrrc Assistant , part·li me.
m~ntmum wage , no expe r1ence
necessary. will train . Send r~ ·
sume to: Pomt Pleasant Eye Clinic, 20 1-A Six th Street . P oir~ t
Pleasant, wv 25550.
Part-t1me Employee Tha t Could
work 1n10 FuU -t1me . PC Expe n·
ence Necessary. GraphiCS Hel p·
ful. Point Pleasant Prmt1ng . 304 675·3952

PINPL ES, SKIN PROBLEMS ,
CELLULITE? Control Group
Needed! $200 Bonus For "Before
1 AltAr' Pho tos. II Publi shed. Can
Tracy 740·44t- t984

Only Oua1111ed Applicant s Need
Apply To Hol zer Cl inic ; Human
Rela t1ons Depar tmen t: 90 Ja ck·
son P-ike : Gallipo lis, Ohm 45631 ·
1562. Fa11 To 740--4 46· 5532 , Or
Call 740- 446·5189. Equa l Opportunity Employer

Reward1ng and challenging pOS Itions ava•fable lor LPN's wish1ng
to work With the d~mentia population II'\ a secured Alzh ermerr. unit
IOa f! · tlme all shif ts) Mu st be
se ns1111.1e to the needs ol the el derly Ple ase apply m person at
!he Scen tc Hill s Nu rs mg ce nter,
31t Buck.r1dge Ad .b B1dwell. Oh
456t4

Baby gi rt clothes, sw1ng. playpen,
high chair. bas sin et . materni ty
clothes. excellent cond1110n . 1535
Ada msville Ad oil 588 Aug 6.7 .

Avo n $8-$20/ Hr ~p Doo r To
Door. Easy Cash. Fu n 1-800-351 ·
0466 1ndlsls/rep

Tak1n g care ol elderly 1n pr1vate
adult group hOme. call 740·992 5023.

&amp; 8.

Avon - $8 ·$20 !Hr. No Doo r To
Door. 'Bonuses' t -800·296-0 139
1ncVsl5lrep.

TRUCK DRIVERS NEEOEO
JCJ TRUCKING, INC.
IS HIRING IN
YOUR AREA
WE OFFER:
OTR And Reg ronal Work Ava ilable. Co mpe t1t1ve Pav. Pard
Week ly. Drrect Depos1 t Ava•l .
He al tn Insurance &amp; va cat1 on
Pay l ate Model Co nven110 nals.
Ass~ ned Tractors
NO EXPERI ENCE
NECESSARY
Fnday Aug 7!h From 6 PM ·B
PM &amp; Satu rday Aug 8th From 9
A.M -It AM Meet Our Comoa·
ny Rep At
COMFO RT INN
605 E Main St.
Jac.,sor., OH 45640
For More In fo, Expertenced Dnv ·
ers Ca ll 1·800·228· 4291 . lnex·
pet~en c ed Dnvers Call 1-800 -

ALL Yard 5a~l Mu st
Be Paid In Advance.
I!EADIJN£: 2:00p.m.
lhe clay before lhe ad
Is to run . Sunday

edition - 2:00p.m.
Frldey. Monday edition
- 10:00 1.m. Saturday.

Big Yard Sale· Sal urday. Sunday.
Two Miles From Cheshire. On
State Route 554
L ois 01 School Clothes An d
Misc .. 81 Pine Street. Fri . Sat. 8·?
Moving Sale! Furniture. Clothmg ,
Books And MU ch More! 2000
Chestnu t. Friday 8 Saturday 9:00·

?
Movi ng Yard Sale: 442. F1rs1 Ave ·
nue. Gallipolis In The House Sale
Sa turday August 8tt1 On ly, Ra1 n
o oes Not Cancel. Furniture. Lon·
gaberger. Deluxe , E-ercise _Bike,
Law n Mower. Patio FurOII ure ,
Porlabla Basketball Hoop (Hully).
Wo mens Des igner Clo thes .
Mens Des igner Clothes. Boys
Clot hing , Christmas Decor. 9 Fl.
Christmas Tree . wreatns . Sega
System. Glassware. Precious Mo·
ments, Sears Complete Body Exerciser, Deluxe Weight Set. Pic·
tures. Etc.
Moving Sate: Ra1n /Sh1ne . Friday,
Satur day. Au1Ju5t 6th . 7th , 9-2,
Rear Of 20 Cedar. Furn iture .
Tools. Electric Mulcher, Houu·
hold Items, Bikes, Toys , Power
Rider, Lawn Furnlluf&amp;, 740--44620M.

Plscount Price•

Avo n Representat ives Needed :
Gallipolis Area . Benelits:
• Earn Up To 50'% On Salas
•Wort From Home
• Special D1scounts
•Hands On Tramino
Call Toll -Free 24 Hours. 1-888 286·6875.
Babysl l!er needed. part-ti me. all
shills. 304-882- 3624 leave mes ·

sago.
C1reer Opportunlt••
Knowledgeable And Expenenced
lndMduals May Hal'l An
Opportunity For TM FoiiOwln(l
Posttions:
• Ultra Sound Tech (Full-Time
Ga"polis)
• Head Receptionist (Fult·Time GallipoHs)
• Medical Lab Tech (Part -T1me
GallipoUs)
• Assistant Medical Transcrip tion Manager (FutHime Gallipo·
is)

860·7364

EOE

140

Business
Training

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... Bul
Short On SkillS ? Ga1n Skills In
One Year 01 Tra1nmg In The
Evenings Buckeye Hills Career
Center Continues In lls 22M
Year 01 Operauon. Train In: Adult
Bas ic Education : GEO Test ing
Site; Olllce Technology; Welding:
Indust rial Maintenance ; Peace
Olficer /Corrections; SUCCESS;
Auto Technology : Air Condition Ing &amp; Healing : Farm Business
Planning ; Analysts : Computer
Specllallst: Customer Centered;
Healthcare Technician (Formerly
Nuroo Aide) ; MR/DD : Pra·Em-

ploymanl Training ; And Mort ...

Bt~J~~ttt Supply

Call

740·245·5334 For Colalog

And UOIII ..... l

740 4411411
1311 s.ilord

Soulll..ltem Busln..a Colltg~

Spring Valley Plu a.

SChool Rd.

Galllpolla, OH

'

7t0-4.a:
4367, t-80().214o0452, Aocredh·
t&lt;1 Mtmbe!, 1\CICS Rtg ~
12748

,,
t

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August 7, 1998

Friday,August7,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHU.UP
ALDER

180

Wanted To Do

Sale

310 Homes for

rv1 ER CHANDISE

ANYOOOJOBS

Shrubs &amp; weeds tnmmed, mulch- Nice 3 BecJroom. 1 Bath, 1600 Sq.
mg. flower beds, lendscap•ng, · Ft . Maintenance Free, 2 Car Gasidewalk
edging,
mowmg, rage , Great Location 740·446·
etc Free Esttmates Call Btll 9664
304-675-7112

1 1/2 story, 3br, Garfield Ave. Pt.

Cerllhed daycare provider, has
open.ngs all shUts, across !rom

Middleport Par1&lt; 740-992-5073
Ctrcle -N· ConvaNtscant Home.

Has 1 Opening Elderly Or Hand•·
capped Person In My

Home, 740-

'-61·1536
Furniture repair, rehni&amp;h alld res-

toration. also custom orders OhkJ
Valley Rafintshlng Shop Larry

Phillips, 740-992-li576
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't

Ploasan1. 30H75-2924
Pnce Reduced 2-story, 3br,
basement. new vmyl stding, dou-

ble lot, Bellmead&amp; 304-6751534

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust ness wtth people you know, and
NOT to send money through the

matl unlit you have Investigated

lho olfenng.
230

Professional
Services

Llvtngston's basement water proofing, all basement repatrs
done, free esttmates, lifetime

guarantee. 12yrs on JOb experi·

ance 30H75-2145

2 bedroom mobile home, nice
yard, wale&lt; &amp; trash paid. $300 per

510

1001t150 tot In Gallipolis Ferry.

gas, Hud approved, 740·992·

Appliances
AecondntoneCl
Washers. Dryers, Ranges, Aefrtgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
Frencn City Maytag, 740·446·

304-675-1226

12x80 trailer. can be usad tor offlee trailer, $3,000 withOut atr c:Ondlltoner, $4,000 wuh, 740·949·

2217
12x65 Schultz, good cond. CIA.
turnace-4yrs old. range-4yrs Old,
new ca rpet. vrnyl, underpmmng
W1ll pay lor delivery $5,800 Call
K&amp;K Mobtle Homes . 304-675·

3000. 8am-5pm
14 x70 3BA. $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 permo Free arr &amp; free skirt·

ong 1·888-928-3426
14 ' X 70 1983 Clayton-lmcoln
Trailer, 3 Bdrm. 2 Balh , 10' X 22'
Front Porctl With Roof, 6' X 10'
Back Porch New Underplnn1ngs
For more rnfc. After 5.00 304-675-

3339, 304-ll75-3269
16x76 4br, 2 balh $1, t95 down,
$193 per mo Free air. lree skirt.

Road, WV. 304-675-7946.
314 acre corner lot In Camp Con-

74().992-3194

loy 304-675-3734.

Two bedroom. 1 112 baths. Vln1on. You pay doposll and u111111as

Molga Co.: lots

+

Lo1s All Nowll

baugh Rd., 5 Acre Lots $14,000
Ea Dyesvrlle,. Very Remote 11 +

Acres $10,500

Slta $19,000 Or 22 Acres With
$21,500
A~ga.

Cash

Price .

8 5 Acres $7,500

Back On The Market 1o Acres,
Teens Run Ad ., $12,000, Public

Water

1998 Close out sale Save big
$$$ 2,3,4,Bedroom homes Trl State Homes, St. Albans, WV.

CaJI1-800-948-5678.

ery 1·800-69t-6777.

3br. 2 lull ba1hs, UR LA. DR .
large ktlchen . fully equtpped.
large Ioyer. 2-car attached garage Gallipolis Ferry 304-67512~

3br. double lot 100x 100, ntce tocation. Mason aree 304-773-

Openmg date September 1, 1998.

For sa le or "rent - 14x60 house
tratter, air condttloned, washer
and~.

no pelS, 740-ll96-1075.

Honctj Man Special

Bashan Rd. $25,000, 740-992·

Scenic Valley at Apple Grove,
WV. Bultdmg lots, single wtdes
accepted, public water, 20
minutes from new Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Ad Clyde Bowen

Hugs 28xBO 3BR, 1 1/2 ba1h
Startrng at ONLY $39,999 Many
options available 1-888·928-

410 Houses for Rent
1 Bedroom house near Rio

Granda College $300 00 Per
Month. Doposll Required. Toll
Free 1-8BB-84().()~1

2br house, full-size basement, in
New Haven, WV. plus deposit.

304·882-3274 anor12pm.

Large selection of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Slarung a1 52995
Outck delivery Call 740-385-

312 Watzgal St. Pomeroy, 3 Bed'
rooms, $360 00/ Month, deposit
reQuired Toll Free 1·888·840·

9621

0521

3BR/2BA
Sat Up On Lo1. Take Over Pymrs.
304-736-7295.

3br house tn New Haven, stove &amp;
refrigerator $300. mo. plus de·
posit 304-773-9171 Leave mes-

sage
4-toom couaga. no pets/no chtlcf.
ren, adults-only, $260.mo plus
$260. deposit. pard ultltttes, ·304·

675-4534 after 6pm

4 bedroom. 2 bath. 1 car garage,
wtth ltre place . pool tab le &amp;
eQuipped krtchen, price reduced.
txceUen1 buy. $69,000 740·949-

New 1998 14x70 three becJroom.
1ncludes 6 montns FREE lot rent
Includes sk~rtlng, deluxe steps
and setup. Only $187 08 per
month wrtt- $t075 down Call 1-

6-room house, CIA, $300 mo
utll1t1es &amp; deposit, no pets 304·

2547

800-837-3238

6 year old, country style. 2·3 bed·
rooms 1 bath. loft overlooktng ltv·
1ng room, tongue 8 groove kttch·
en cabinetry, doors &amp; woodwork
throughOut petlet stove , HPICA,
appliances 1nctuded . 50 year vtnyl
siding. shutters. deck. 1 car garage. spa, storage butldtng, mcety
landscaped , on 1 acre. county
schOOls. 8 miles from Holzer, 740-

Now 3br $900 down, $149 par
mo Free skort 1-80()-691-6777

367.0286
Approximate ly 1 acre. 4tH.
2baths. 112 mrle out Pleasant
Ridge Road $22.500 304-773-

5040
A.Hracttve om~-lloor home tn Pomeroy Beautllul rntenor wllt1 2
bedrooms . living room. dtnmg
room . bu1lt-rn kltcnen . ltke new
stOve and refrigerator. breakfast
nook reaturtn g corner what-not
shelves bath and a ntce SIJn·
porch with wmdows and screens
prov;atng a great view ot the Ohto
Rtver Carpeted . lull basement
plastered walls wtlh crown moldIng. roomy clOsets w1th lull length
mirrored doors . storm windows
arkS doors. fully msulated 108 le·
gton Terrace . $39.000 Call 740-

11112-5292 oftar 5 p m
Corner lot, two year old furnace.
HW heater. root. carport, small
shed. asl&lt;lng "5.000. pnco n&amp;QO-

- · 74().992-2790
Garage apartment. Middleport.
great .condition, new ca rpel . two
bedroom. bath , kitchen, large Hvlng room, deck, 2 1f2 car garage.
owno&lt; relocating, 7-40-992-5243.

New bank repos Only two tell ,
never ltved tn Ca ll t-800·948-

5678
New Ooublewide 3BA, 2 bath
$1 ,325 Down &amp; $205 par mo t888-928·34~

call 740-446-9782 or 740-4464514
Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
w Va Location Has Been Ordered To Ltqu1date All Inventory
0 Down, Lowest APR! 304-736·

3409

•

Single Parent Progrem. Spec1al
financing on 2, 3 &amp;' 4 bedroom
homes P•ymentl •• low ae

S1801mo Call now 304-755-7191

Special 16x80 3BR, 2 bath .

$1,325 Down, $205 Mo Free air
&amp; """ sk&gt;11t1g 1-800-69Hm.
Trailer lor Sale $8,200. 740-9928819
Unbelievable. new 14x80, no
payments after four years Call 1-

800-946-5678

HOuse For Sale in VInton. Out of
High Water! Reduced! 740·59611129 Very Ni:O Hom&amp;

Used smgle wide. around $100.

House 2 Story Duplex . 1 Bod-

330 Farms for

room Cottage, 13 Pine Street,
Galllpolla, large Lot Shown By

Appolnlrnen1. Price: S9tl,OOO 7-40~999 .

In Middleport- new kitchen, oak
cabmets, Clianwasher, disposal,
heat pump, lhrM bedrooms. bath

875-41174.
1 ·5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4,000 Local Gov't

&amp; Bank

per month. Call 1-800-948-5679.

Sale

15 Acres 112 Wooded , 1/2 Pastuere House, Several Burktlngs, 2

Ponds. Green School Olslrlcl, For
Sal&amp; By Owner. Priced: High 80'o,
740- 4464)159. 74().245-9tl75.

Gallipolis. 740-446-7398 or 1·
998-818-01~ .

Used Furniture Store Below Holl·
dily Inn, In Kanauga Monday

Stop By.
Used Window Air Condlllomng
Units, Different Sizes, Guaranteed,

74().886-0047

available, utilities and cable paid,

HUO accepted. Children Woloomo. Ask for Chr~ly.
Furnished Ettldency All Ullllttes
Included. Central Heat &amp; AC,

Clean And Ouiol. 74().446-2602
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vlllage Manor and
Rlverstde Apartments In Middle·

.port From $249-$373. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing OpportunHies.

--'-11.

GIW1cl 11oo&lt; apt 2br, wid
references &amp; deposit, no pets.

304-675-5182.
1 Bedroom. Furnished /Unfur-

nlslted, Downslalrs, Ullllllos Paid.
No Pets, Parking, 6 Monlh Lease

$100. Daposll. $300/Mo 740446-3667.

Now Taking Applications- 35

West 2

Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo., 740·446-

0006.
One bedroom apartment In Mlddlaporl, all u111111os paid, $100 do·

posit, $270 month, call 740·992·
7806 8am-5pm
Tara Townhouse Apartmenls,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms. 2

Floors. CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,

Pallo. No PaiS. Laaso Plus Socuroly Deposit Required. 740-4463481.

APT AVAILABLE NOW
appllcallons lor 1br. HUD subsidIZed apt. tor elderly and handlcappacl

EOH 304-675-6679.

UPSTAIRS APARTMENT FOR
LEASE: Appllcalions Are Avail-

able AI 1403 Eas1orn Ave .. Galli-

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques.
1124 E. Main Street. on Rt. 12-4,
Pomeroy Hours M T W. 10 :00

a m 1o 6 00 p m.. Sunday HlO to
6 00 p m 740-992-2526, Russ
Moore owner

New Haven, 2br home, garage,
nver lronlaga References, de·
pos1t, &amp; lease required 304-934·

7482
No pats. 34-675-5162
Small 1br house on Monroe Ave
Referencu &amp; Deposn reQuired
No pets ~-675-3757
Two bedroom house Jn POmeroy.
HUD accepted with good refer-

ences. $350 plus deposit, no
pets , wl\1 consider purchase con·
tract. 740-698-7244

Appojntmonl

Upstairs efllclency with private
entrance. completely furntshed,
quiet surroundmgs, three miles
from the Ravenswood Ritchie
Bridge In Ohro. Per1ect first apartment. It's $390 a month, uttlrttn
are rncluded A $300 dapostt ts
required For more lnlormauon, or
an appointment call 740· 843·

5343 and leave a meosago.
450

Fumlahed
Rooms

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Clnemax, Showtlme &amp; Disney.
Weekly Rates, Or Montl'lty Rates,
Construction Workers Welcome

1 Mila From Roo Grande, $4001 74()-4.41-5698, 740-«1·5167

Mo., $400 Deposit, No Pets, 706864-3493.

17 miles !rom Mtlton exit 10
mtles from Fraziers Boltom 8
mile s from Pt Pleasan t. 2 &amp; 3
bedroom mob1le homes Sits on
one acre land , city water, "Yery

nice. $350. Accap1 HUO. 304S82-5840
1br trailer for rent at LarrY&amp; l.odt·

or In Lolar1, WV. 304-898-3803.
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homel, ail

condllionod. $260-$300, sower,
water and trash Included, 740·

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also trarler space on river All
hook· ups Call after 2.00 p m .

304-773-5651, MaSOfi'WII
Space for Rent
Mobile home slte available between Athana and Pomeroy, call

74().395-4367.

Mobile Home Site AvaUable, Roulo 1 North. Gallipolis. $150/mo.,
References Required , 740·245-

5024, 74().245-5151.

992-2187.

470 Wanted to Rent

2 Bedrooms, 1 Batn, 14x70 Avail·
able 8/1198 Call For More Info

Wented To Rent: 3 Bedroom
House In Gallla Co., Preferably

74().256-1050.
2br trailer, references &amp; (jeposit,
also trailer lot loousl Road on

rlgll. 304-675·1076.
Mobile Home 2 Bedroom In Gampoll' $375.00 Plus Utilities, Pus

Deposit No Ptlll 7-40-«8·0879,
740-443-4313

ancl112, Cll740-992·3olfl5.
Lol 2 112 Acres Aural Waltr
35'x60' Melli Bulkllng lnsulaled
Tralltr Pld, 8 Room Houso No!
Complolld. $32,000. 740-2581335.

8tm-!pm. 304-!17!1-3000.
commercial-office or Ro1all, 87 Mill St. MlddlaporJ. I ,4!50 Sq Ft. lnqunllllort$400 mo. Corner Building. 740· ThrH Ndroom mobllo homo In
992-6250 'AcqulaiUons (nort •Pl&gt;rnoroy, no pots, 740-992-5858.

Mobllo home lor ron! wl1h approved appiiC111lon, K&amp;K Mobllo

Wllh Basemen! And Garage, Call
740-448-2398 Altar 5:30P.M
490

For Lease

For Leasa· Commercial Building

Across From Burger King In Galllpolla, 2212 Eastern Avenue ,
Hlgt1 Traffic A1ea ; Comlt\&amp;rclal

Building, Comer locallon In ·Gallpoll a, 371 Sla1t ROU11 7 Norlh,
High TraHie At~a; Commeretal

puter, 350 HO, 8 RAM , used 20
11115-3356

Waterline Special

314 200 PSI

$37 00 Per 100, All Brass CompressiOn Frttings In Stock.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, OhiO, 1·900-537-9528

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
"COOL QOWNI"
Central Atr CondiUonlng. Free E&amp;·
timatesl If You Don't Call Us, We

Both Losal 740-'-66-6306. 1-80029Hl098.
12" Concrete blocks .60ea. gas
range $30, small air condttloner
$50, lawn mowe~s. replacement
windows , washer &amp; dryer $400 .

304-675-4004.
18,000 BTU Amanna Air Condl·
troner $125: Oak Desk $75. 740·

446-ll709

550

25" color
with remots, works,
console, $75; odds and ends of
bflcka, biOCIIS and SlabS Ol nta~O
coping tile: concrete wire; all
priced for quick sal!', 740-992·

2805.

For sale- natural Rackmg horsa,
tratt and road broke. $1200, 740-

742-2050
saddle. 740-742-3062.
Uorgan &amp; Saddlebred 4yr old
geldtng, good tratl horse $1,500
or wHI trade. 304·562-5840.
Quarter Horse. 10 Year old geld·
mg. does trail &amp; Barrell Asktng

S1 .200 00740-367-0122 altar
500pm
Slaughter hogs year round 304·

576-2579
Custom Slaughter &amp; Processtng
State lnspec1ed

WV Sausago Company
907 4th 5Yee1

100 large Round Bales Of Mllt8d
Hay $15 Each, 100 Large Aouod
Bales From Last Year $10 Each:
100 Laroe Round Bales 01 Wheal
Straw Wtth Gram Sttll On, $1 C

TRANSPORTATION

Was $56,760 Now $39,990, 1·

560

71 0 Autos for Sale

Pets for Sale

740-445-()231

'60 Olds Delta 88 fo ur door sedan , blue wtth white vtnyl top
73,000 actual jcerlllled miles)
See al 742 East Matn Street or'

call 740-992-7949

At&lt;C Boston Tern er pupptes. 6
weeks old. AKC Bo ston Terrrer
Stud Servrce 740-256-6498. or

740-'-61-1357
At&lt;C Dalmatian, 14mos

old

$150 304-576-2444

'94 Hyunda1 Excel, while, brand
new transmiSSion w/ warranty, excellent condtlton. 64.000 mrles.
asktng $3200 negotiable, 740·
742·2996 eventngs.

1972 Nova 55 396 Engono, 4
Speed Transmissron, Posi Track
Rear End, low Mtles, Excellent

At&lt;C mtnt Pinschers, 3 red , 7
weeks okJ. $150, 740-949·3026

Condotlonl740·256-1172

AKC Regtstered Boston temer
pups, 4 males, 1 lemete, ready to
go, mother and lather on premises, $200 eacn, to good homes,

1977 Chevy Cap1lce Clas sic.
PW. PL , Cruise Control, Tilt
Steering. AIC, 2 Doors, 8 Cylinder.
Great Engme. Body Good Shape•

740-992-3418

740-446-4855

7 electric baseboard heaters, 5
U'Sed &amp; 2 new In box, assorted
lengths, 2 SQuare 0 thermestats,

new In bOx. $125 lor all. 304-8823325.
AntiQue Roadmastar 25• girl 's

bike. 18' girl's &amp; 26' boy's bokos.
Tandy computer with printer, roll·
lng lnvorce cabrnet, typewriter

s1and, brio! cases. ledger fila. old

C. F. A. Registered Persian Cat 1

1980 ·1990 TrUCks f&lt;lr$ 100111
SOIZlld An&lt;l Sold

Shaded Solver Mala, 1 3 Year Old
Tortlpotnt Female. 1 3 Year Old
Shaded Silver Female, 1 2 Year

Locally This Month.

Trucks. 4x4's. Etc

French Ctty Pet Groomrng by Appointment "Ultra Weah Bathing
Syatem" 650 Second Ave . Gallt·
pOliS. 74Q-446-1526
Pekingese puppies, AKC regtsterad . 6 wks old, flrs1 shots &amp;
wormed, call after 5pm, 740-843-

5175
Puppies- mom- shepherd/retriever. dad- boxer, $10 each, 740·

992-1415.

poano Dr 740-446-4525

$200 740-li43-2288.

1-800-522-2730, X3901
1980 Ford Car MUST SELLI
1600 00 740-256-1631

s 13,900 30H75-5040.

'87 Ford Ranger 4x4. rebu11t motor
and transmission , runs good ,

1987 Chevy Sprint. automatic
transmrsslon. 3 cylinder. $500,
740.992·3147 .

1987 Dodge Shadow 99,000
M1tes, Runs Good, looks Good,
Sports Package, Turbo. Auto.
Spotler. Sunroo f, A/C , PS, PB,
$1,500. Or nade For Truck 01
Equal Or Greater Value• 740-446-

'98 GMC Yukon 4WO, SlT package, white. CD player, leather
seats, garage kept, 9000 mtles.

$32,500, 740-992-6849

Schnauzer, mlmature male. $200,
AKC champion grand stre. al so
Tiny Toy Poodle , whrte male.
shots &amp; wormed: 740·667-3404

Au1o, A/C, Toll . B4,000 mo
$1.400 00 OBO 7-40-256-91 u

Two Norwegran Elk hounds, 1
male, 1 female, pnce on rnqwy,
regtstered Mt Cur male, date of
birth, Augt.Jst 10th 1997. parents
world champton squtrrel dogs,

$3,200 304-675-5792 aftsr 5pm

$200:740-667-3090.
570

Musical
Instruments

Bundy II Flute· &amp; case $250 304·
675-6643 Leave message

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
BLACKBERRIES

$13-gal You P1ck $10-gal No
Weeda Bemes On Fence 304458·1667 Leave Message

JET
AERATION MOTORS
8/ackbarrtes are rlpet Also a
Ropolred. New &amp; Rebul~ In Stock. composter for sale Vlrgtl's Berry
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-5;37-9528.
Patch, east ot Syracuse on SR

1988 BOI'IIl8Vtll8 lE. maroon, 40r.

new trres &amp; brakes. good cond

t988 Chevy Bero1ta GT 2.6 V-6.
auto. crurse, !til, casselle &amp;

more $1.800 304-773-5854

MUST SELLI $600 00: 740-256·
1631
1986 Chevy C-20 Conversion
Van, ratsed roof. Good condition

30H15·6153
1986 Chevy, full -s ize , 1/2 ton ,
good tires, low mileage', oneowner. ex cond $6,000 304·

6570

Kolher &amp; Campbell plano lor
sale. $1 ,000 Good conditio,.,

304-675-4920
Ludwig Drum Sal Wilh Casas Call
740-446-7498
New English saddle, brownlsllver
trim $375. Brown English sad·
die. used a tew limes. $95. 304-

Close Out Sale On Everythmg In
Stock. Parts, Farm Equrpment,
Utlltty Tra1tera, Tractors, Kessel's
Trac10r &amp; Equlpme'nl, 1 Mol&amp; Wsst
Holzer Hospital, Jackson Ptke,
Gallipolis, 7-40 -446 -6906, 740·

'-66-7787
D6C dozer

Motorcycles

1989 Cavalier 2 Doors, Auto ,
looks like New. $2.495. 1989

Jeep Pick-Up, $2,195. Cook MolelrS, 740-446-0103

1990 Grand Pnx, four door, runs
good, air, 1111, cruise, sharp,

1992 Plymouth Acclaim 4 Doors.
Auto. Atr, Crutse. 96,000 ml , 34
MPG Runs &amp; looks Greall 740·
256-91 t4
1993 Butck Regal Gran
white, 3 8 V-6, 69,000 mtles,
&amp;d, excellent condition, $9500
080,740-742-2574 even1ngs

1985 Honda 200 Three Wheeler
Wilh Spare Parts $350 For All

5033

1994 Chevrolet Cavalier. AM/FM
55,500 Milos. $6.300. 740-4410469

Olllce Trailer 8'X 32'. $3.200 00.
Pallo! Dolly $200 00 740·4464782

Your area bush hog dealer lor
parts, rotary cullers, loaders. ltll·
ers, finish mowers. eel Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn midway
between Gallipolis &amp; Roo Granda.
ontOon Jackson Pike 740·446·

1995 Chrysler Sebring, excellent
co ndttlon , call Tom Anderson,

•

Prlmtater· low instalLation with
rebate, first monlh free, tree HBO,
St'arOne special $tlln1Uil8tlon.

800-263-2640.
Rtlrlgoralor $175; EIIIC1llc stove
$1257-7818.

llulldlng. 4000 Sq. Ft. Newly Buill,
WIU Flnllh To Sui!, High Ylllbil· Sura Llloalylt Expantt 500
ly; Commercial Space In Mint - Treadmill,
Llko Naw. Alklng
Plaza Approx. 800 Sq. fl. In Rio
Coli afto~8;30 PM 304Granda, 257 w. Collage, 740· $3!50.00
87!1-76113
245-5040. 74().245-5060.

2412 or 1-800-594-1111

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial
Lawn Equipmenl. Compact Ultllty
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. All

Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WO Farm
Tractors, Hay Equlpman1, John
lltore Skid S1Mr Lood..-. Chad&lt;

Wllh Ua Aboul Financing On
Lawn 'llaclora And Low Aala FI-

740.992-3348 alttr Spm
1997 Dodge Noon, 11,000 mllos,
2 doors. 4 cylinder, automatic, AI

C. Good CondHionl 7~ 1·0337

Up1on Usad Cars AI. 62·3 Milas
South ot Leon, WV. Flnancmg

Avallal&gt;e 304-458-1069.
720 Trucks for Sale'

~

I'P L-II'L Y~fi~~T ~TEN( I
ro yoo ~ N.:ro e£ff 7

~

1998 Yamaha Ttmberwolf. Includes New Gun Scabbard.
$2,900 Firm, 74Q-245~134.
1998 Honda 300 EX, ltke new,
very fast, $4,000, 740-992-2009

1r&amp;s, well-kept $4.500 304-6756118.
Kawasaki STS Jet skr, sh ll undet
. warranty, three seater, 83 horsepowe r, bought new July of '97,
three matchtng Kawasaki skt
vests and trarler all go w1th tl .

$5000, 740-949-2203 or 740-949Skllhls summer!

Nortb

Pass

6 NT

1986 GMC 1500. Good Condlllon, Mus! 5&amp;111 $2.600 00 740256-1758

c:andlea
3So-lghl
36 Freel Aelalre'a
olllel
37 Artlafa
equtpmem
39 Broke out

-

DOWN

1 llackarel'a
2 Actor Montand
3 CoaHtonoga
plica

4 A-.CI8lre
5 Mathlbbf.
6 Cola aide-

10 Small monkey
11 Preaa
12 Penny
19 Crlckel

longa_tance

end

23 Actor Peter 24 Uke duck's
feel
25 Incarnation or
Vlallnu
26 Wile o1
Geralnt
27 Fork prong
211 Run into
30 Historian's
concern
31 Quokar'a

='::y

7Givetlll
BEntertaiSumac
9 Seem agen1

21
22 u ... opencll

East
All pass

~oun

37 Baby food
38 Geronimo

waaone
40 Apple
centers
41 Dada'
mates
42 Ttlllbook
MC1lon
43 Actor
Andrews

45 Letters on a
crosa
46 Secluded
valley
47 Eyelid
problem

49 Rackel-atring
material
50 French

aummer

52 Over there
53 Dlrec1or Van
. Sont

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cdler ayptograms are created from quotations by famous people past and pt"esent
Each letter In lhe Cipher stands lor anothef Tod.!ly'sdue Pequal5 K

"GKYGDV
G II.
D

U H

VHGCF?

5 K

WYHGC

G

OSZIVJ'C

FGNH

J 5

c

GC

YHIDHK

cs

CGt P

C F H J

c s

AS Z . '
PGCFGYDJH
FHXUZYJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·we don't play lo be seen I'm addocted 10 mustc, not
aud1ences • - Mtles Davos

'::~;~~~, S@\\.~lA-l££trs·
141tod

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scromblod word1

low

I

IT'S A NEW SALL,
SEE"? I'LL TIIROW
11', AND '(OU'LL
CIIASE IL

446·3814.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

8

PEANUTS

16ft. Oeep-V, closed bow, 160HR
Mercruiser tnbOard, wllraller, hfe
Ja1kots &amp; bumpers $2,050. 740-

1988 Dodge Truck 318 Motor.

WE'LL

MORE

ALL

l LIED ..
IT'S NOT A NEW SALL !

FUN TIIAN 'f'OU'VE
EVER I-lAD IN '(OUR

RI611T,

A

V

~y

WOlD

IAMI

CLAY I. I'OUAN

the

be-

to form four simple words

GIZZGA

I I I I I'

Ramrod - Y1eld - Crush - Unroll- YOUR HOME
W1th today's technology I bel1eve that the televiSIOn
lets you be entertained by people you wouldn't allow tn

YOUR HOME'

IFRIDAY

Campers •

ca

Motor Homes
1973 Smokey 15Ft $1,700,1972
Aristocrat 18' 12.000, 16$9 Me·
Conntck Road. 740-446-151 t
1983 32 Foot Holiday Rambler

388-8718
Pop Up CamPer\ $300 00, Sleeps
6·8: wllt trade lor small p1ckup .

740-441-1033, 740-367-0514,
ask lor Shirley

SERVICES

might provide·you
with information 5/he think! could
or ~ve you money today.
~--- make
Unfortunately, this person could be
Saturday. Aug. 8, 1998
way off ba.~e.
The lure of investment could be a
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In
strong nllr!lction for you in the year
order to guln · status with your coah~ad. You'll do okay if you do your
workers today, you may be tempted
hQmcwork first. and deal only with
to promise something you can't
reputable oullil~.
deliver. Don't do it.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Indecision
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
is your nemesis today, especially in!
21) You miaht be too gullible for yeur
mailers affecting others. A wishyown good
If someone tells you
wa,hy atlitu'de could be contagiouA.
sJhe
CaUght
~h
Ness Mon111er.
Trying' to fatch up a broken.
insiSt on a~.
romance? ThC Astro-Crapb Match·
CAPRICt&gt;ltN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
maker CliO help you understand what
Loss o( small-but-valuable possesto do to make the relationship work.
sions is a po55ibility today, so don't
$2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o this leave yoor rinp ilillbe wasllltand or
kjll!jler,' P.O. Box 1758, Murray · ,
yoot' _
p&amp;,ne II !llf IIMis COUtU.
Sbllic)ll, New York, NY 10156. ;
AQtf/ARIUS ·.(1._,20-Ftb. 19) 'A!
VIRGO (Aug. 23&amp;pt. 22) Don't
frietlcl 11f
wh!i~ is an ~- ·
tum your beck on a friend whci' needs
plished time'-waltef ia!P,t . ltiilupt ·
your help today. You won't like .
your IChedulc Cildfy;
let
yourself ,lllef if ybU pua UP. diC . ltiMir .......
·vv. ,... ,
opportunity 10 lend I haiJd. ;..

wag

ASTRO·ORAPB

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond1t1ona1 lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished . Es·

1allllsl'&amp;d 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446-0670, 1-800-287-0576 Rogers Waterproofing
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
parlance All Work Guaranleel:t,
French City Maytag, 740-446-

1

1

7795.

C&amp;C

General

Home

Maln-

lonanco- Palnllng , vinyl siding.
carpentry, doors, ,windows, baths,
mobile home repall: and more For

•.

: •0 •

tree os11mala call Ch&amp;l, 740·9926323

•

cenaed electrician. Ridenour

Eltclrlcal, WV000308. 304·875'
1786.

.

.&lt;=·

todaJIIi

yours

Refrigeration
Aoaldenlfll or commercial wl~no.
new aorv1ce or "f))lrs. Ma111r u,

UN5CRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1233

790

PfiNT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

WIIOLE LIFE!

Dodge Dakota V-6 1994 Motor.
$200 A Piece. 080 740-256-

extended cab and topper, air,

88,000 miles. $87PO. 740-985·
4495.

UICI

2045, will cons 1der trade for a
gOOd pontoon bOat

'91 Dodge Dakola, V-6 truck with 840 Electrical and

nancing On New And Used

Equipment carmichael's Farm &amp;
llwn Gallipolis, OH 740-44624121-&amp;oo-594-1H1 .

OC , TOOf&gt;..'l' 7

667-3802

bal1ery, 4-dr. $4,500 304-773-

$26,500, can 740-992·50n

675-4651 .

W~P-I 'LL II

740-441-1083

1993 Cavalier AS, new patnt,
clearcoat, white letter tires, new

S82-5840

Older-metal storm windows w/
screens, 28x62 &amp; 3"&amp;8' double
wall unit pipe &amp; unit cap. 304-

THE BORN LOSER

Budget Priced TransmiSSIOns All
Types. Access To Over 10 000
1988 Chrysler Ne'o\ Yorker good ~-T~ra_ns:..m~ls:.:s_~_ns:...7-4~0..:·2~45:.·:.56:..7~7:..__
condr hon 304-882-2219
1
New gas tanks &amp; body parts 0 &amp;
1988 Ponltac LeMans lor sale or R AutO, Ripley, WV 304-372·
trade lor automatrc Runs good. 3933 or 1·800-273-9329

Cassette, ABS, Good Condition,
turbo, ttl! , rops

I&gt;IS6UST.

3710

740-992-6924.

740·387·7727 or 740.387-0239

a..efr ,,..,

ctal Edltron, absolutely loaded.
71 6t&lt;, $11,500 call 740-992-

Ktncatd solid oak dry sink $200 ,
Open hutch ltke new, 2yrs old
$595 flrm. Sofa &amp; Cl'!alr 2yrs. old ,
green· burgandy-blue
stripes

1953 Ford Tractor $2,800 00 Call

60 •• IT

ago wi1h TV and VCR. Gold Spo-

Attachable Screen Room, RV
Wtth All Tt\e Extras In Good Condtl tonl $9,500 Negottable. 740·

610 Farm Equipment

' ~

1994 Dodge Grand Caravan SE,
has pnme ltme converston pack-

1991 Chevy Corstca. 3 1 Multi~
port engine. power wtndows,
cru1se, ltll , atr, sharp car only
82,000 actual miles, $2950 neg .

Kmg Cole &amp; Woodburner Stove.
Good Shape; Wood For Sale
Also, 740-256-1424

If,

MtMO,Y l&gt;II&gt;N'T JUST

158,000 Moles. Body Good, Runs
Good $3,500, Trade, 740-4463982

Kenmore Window A/C, 8,000 Tame Blackberrtes $3 OOquart
BTU, Runs on "0 vall $125.00.
S1000gallon 30H75-4514
740-448-4705

$250 30H75-1570

i~Nif'S

/

1988 Toyota 4x4 22AE 4 Cyl ,

lmponal Top Of Tho Line Wrth
Roese Hrtch. Bicycle Rack, 18 Ft.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~

1987 Econoltne 150 Ford Van,
Good Condition, $2.300, 740-256·

$2995. 740-992-69~4 . '

1~4

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

675-2246

Weal

ZNT

1986 Chevy S-10. New Paint Job.

74Q-367·0514, ask tor Shtrley

34~-

Soulb

Sharp! 740-441-1419

Leave message 740-441-1033,

• J 6 2
• 7 5 4 2

By Phillip Alder
If you would like to read about
some 85 of the mosl famous deals of
the last 30 years, buy "Learn from
the S!ars" by Mark Horton and Tony
Sowler (Batsford). However, I found
the book disappointing. True. the
deals are great, and there are some
interesting biographical snippets. but
the writing and punctuation could be
much better.
The deals cover all aspects of the
game and feature almost all the most
highly regarded players. This example, from the 1995 Bennuda Bowl in
Beijing. is instructive.
South'sopening bid showed 20-21
poinls. He upgraded by one point
because of all those aces and kings.
The original auclton was lenglhy and
conventional. but it came down to
North's offering South a choice
between six spades (in a known 4-4
fit) and six no-trump. South selected
the Iauer for two reasons: He had
weak spades, and often one has time
to delay the evil moment in a notrump comract
This Iauer consideration was relevant here. In six spades, declarer
musl immediately commil himself in
the trump suit In six no-trump.
though, South, Jeff Meckstroth. could
win the firs! tnck in hand with the
diamond ace. play a spade to dumAiy's queen. then abandon spades. He
cashed a .:ouple of clubs. When
Wesl turned up with a singleton
there. it became most unlikely he had
slarted Wtlh two singletons. So,
Meckstroth contmued with the spade
jack. When East discarded. declarer
could claim 12 tricks: three spades,
lwo hearts, three diamonds and four
clubs.
The book is $22.95 postpaid from
Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call
(800) 274-2221 10 order.

1979 DOdge 4 Wheel Drive

7020.
1987 Dodge Shadow, 4 Door,

28 Entice

9JI0952

De~aweq

Montana
57 Store fodder

The top deals
are described

A TIRE II

$2600 call 740-992-3465

16ft Mach 1, 120HP Mercrutser
boat, inboard/outboard, many ex-

56

Opening lead: • 9

AUNT LOWEEZ.Y'S
OUT BACK CHANGIN'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1986 Trans Am Good Condition.

$2,500 00 740-'-61-()215

BARNEY

2 112 Ton Army Trucks , 6 WO's
Made By ·General Motors, 1970's
Models. 740-388-9376; Any1ime

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2·0 , 260
Good Condillon, S1,500 oo
Ftrm 740-992-4568

pnocleceBIIOI'

18 c.vlar
20 Savingsaccount abbr.
21 Supply with
lurids again

Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: South

1994 Blazer, red, 4x4 Tahoe
56.000 miles. 4dr. loaded

va

::r:;,~

46 Payche par11
48Wlld-ol
India
51 Baby awan
546055 Ewry60
mlr1ulaa

32 Singer Baker
33 WHI!ndles

Soulb
• J 9 7 4
• K7
t A K5
6 A K J tO

Excellent Condillon 740-682-7318

4420

Month Call 1-800-522-2730 Ext

•K

1988 6400 John Deere Sktdder

oollars. ahar 6pm 740-742:3065

7-=.

25 Holda back

~

• Q r. :1

1987 Ford 48' High Ranger bucl&lt;e111Uek, 740-378-o279

1996 Harley Davtdson Hentage
Solt Tatl Classrc, 600 mtles, mtnt
condtllon . over $25.000 tnvested,
tncludes au ongrnal parts plus
many extras, also matchtng he/·
mets. must sell. $17.750 firm, 740-

Wormed,

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

1986 Burck Grand Nattonal
73,000 mrles, excellent condttton.

t!IK74:1

7 40

:J

•:asl

•AIOfi :l

$8,500 00 740-&lt;-40-'619

118 07 \II

.

!f li

Wt·"'l

450 Automa11c. $1.900 oo 740·
44&amp;-4619

1980 · U90 HONDA CARS FOR
5100 Seized &amp; Sold Locally Thos

Dalmatlon Puppoos, $50 Each, 8

... q

7~2-7318

AKC regtstered Shetland sheep
dogs, 6 wks old , 5 males, sable &amp;
whtle, 1 tn color. all have whtte

Weeks, Wormed. Shots, 740·
388·8922, Ask ForTom Mttch811

• q ttl

Sawbuck, Excellent Condttton

$7 5. 740-446-2529

Beanie Babres. buy-sale -trade,
available lor sale now, Fortune.
Enn, Wise, and others 304-675·
7223 after 6pm.

446-nB3

¥ II H I

6969.

Registered Labrado r Puppres,
~hampton Bloodline, ·Proven
Huntrng Stock, M/ F Shots.

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used, Stairway Elevators, Wheel chair And Scooter
Lilts, Bowman's Homecare, 740·

160 A Barko Loader New John

Deere Engona 1,500 Sarlos CT-A

1994 Honda CR250 740-2566790

camera equipment, used trampoline, 740-992-5742

Brand Newt Great Giftt COivldeo
storage unrt. Black and cherry.
Never out of box $125. Hokls up
to 940 dtscs, also holds tapes .
Ca ll 740-992·6636 after 6 pm .
COs &amp; !apes not Included

North
6 K q HZ

1979 Bonneville Runs Great But
leaks Water $375, Ntntendo
Wtth 4 Controllers. 13 Games.

Old ABO Female 740-448-1455

29 Pooplo Wan~
To Get Paid$$$ ForThe)'oonds
Or lnch&amp;s You W~ losa.
In Tho NOX130 Days.
Call Tracy 7-10-'-'1-1962

Hay &amp; Graln

640

Each, 740-245-5047, Evenings.

800-406-5126

30,000 miles, $16,500. 740-992·

3194

asking

Now $9,990: 50x100x16 Was
$27,590 Now $18,990, 60x200x16

1998 McDonald's Beanie Babies

1----------TV

Livestock

$6 990; 40x60w14 Was $16,400

AKC Registered' Labrador Puppres. S Weeks. Fust Shots.
Champron Bloodline, 740-256·

Beantas. 74Q-446-4922

630

304-882-3194

Bloek, bnck, sewer pipes, windows, hntels. etc Claude Wln!ers,
Rio Grande OH Call 740-2455121.

'97 Ford F 150. 5 4 111ro engine.

1984 Chevy Suburban 314 Ton,

Building
Supplies

1998 McDonald's Beanies 51•11
on bags. $125 30H75-5776.
$100 /581, PIUS 1997 McDonald's

Ford 5000 Diesel, Ford 3000 Oteset. Late Model 45 HP John
Deere Diesel. 135 Massey Fer guson Otesel. 740-286-6522.

New Haven. W'J

A Groom Shop -Pet Groomrng
Featurtng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

7·00am-10 OOpm

5858

Items, $75. AT&amp;T Notebook com-

Stael Butldlngs, New, Must Sell

House for rent. no pets. 740-992·

Bedroom. View Of The River, Excellent Cond11ton, $300/Mo , DBposit And References ReQuired .
No Pets. Call 740-446-4514 For

Two truck loads or mtsc yard sale

30x40x12 Was $10.200 Now
530

Ford 2000 Industrial, live power,
power steering , nice tractor.
$4.000 30«75-3824

Gen1te pony &amp; hke new saddle &amp;

Thru Friday. 10-4, 740-«6-4782,

·Church pews. twelve t2' long, tour
10' long, six 6' long, oak. good
condtl ton, cal l 740·949·2217,

340 Business and
BUildings

door).

9:00om-9:00pm.

1·2·3 bedrooma, Stove/refrig.

Two 4011 Storage Vans. S1.200.00
Eadt 7-40-256·1270

$21 95 Par 100. 1" 200 PSI

Repo's Call 1-800-522-2730, X polis, OH - New Kitchen, Large
1709

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

NOTICE

Cal 740-992-4514

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting

Ntce Jbr. relerances &amp; depostl

Newly Remodled Country rtome
Oilers QUiet country lt vt ng on a
prtvate 2 1/2 acre lot with local
schOols and downtown shopping
tess than 10 mtnutes away Family plaasing amenities including
new kitchen, Hardwood floors, 2
ftreplaces, family/home office
space 3--4 bedrooms. 2 1/2
baths. many extras! $98.000 00

fllmlly Uvlng
Apootmonto
Pomeroy/Middlopo&lt;1.

Ch~oly'a

3725.

pool Alr 'Condtltoner $150.00, New
Amanna Air Conchlloner $350 00.
Whtr!pool Washer like new
$205.00, 1 year Warranty.
Skaggs Apphaoces 76 Vme St

Brand New Apt. Rio Grande.

Available Aug. 1sl. All UnllllllosPald. Walking Dlslanca To Campus. 740-245-5100

The Pomeroy Tholl Shop t'las
moved to 145 North Second Ave·
nue. Middleport (Cash Bahrs old
bulldtng). buy1ng- baby rtems .
breaklast sets &amp; good clean used
furniture on consignment Open
Tuesday-Friday, 11 -4 740-992-

Used Hot pornt washer &amp; Clryer,
4yrs old. $350 304-675-3000
between 8am-5pm

!rom $279 10 $358 Walk to shop
Equal Housing Opportunly

'89 Nissan troD&lt;, 74().985-3939

Washer $95 00. Dryer $95 00.
Electric Range $95 00, Noce Whrl-

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Ortve

Monday lhrough Saturday

3426.

Mobile Home, Good Condition
12'X 65', partly furnished, central
air untt, water bed. dmette set,
stoYtt, relrlgerator call after 4·00

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Jr. 304-576-2338.

2 Bedroom Homo In Clly Llmlls
$275:00/Mo plua $200.00 Deposit
740-446-3117 or 740-446-3548

2 or 3 bedroom songla wldas
304-755-7191

2566.

&amp; movies. Call 740·446-2568

Ractne Ohio· 2 acres. Morning
Star Ad, $20,000. 5 acres.

Pm 740-367 -012«1

9143

Applications a.allable al: VIllage
Groen Ap1S t49 or call 740-9923711. EOH

Now taking sealed bids on commercia/lot on US 35 Henderson.

1st time buyers. E -z lonancmg, 2 beautllul land, Meigs Co., Scipio
or 3 bedrooms, around $200 per Township, SA 892, (just 011 SA
month Call Credit Line 1-800· 143). Owner flnonclng, ($1800 per
948-5678
acre). call lor good map, 1-740593-8545.
3 BR, 211olho, Homo f&lt;lr Rent 1·
304-736-7295
360 Real Estate
Wanted
AUGUST SPECIAL
ALL SINGLEWIDES
$-4HOOWNOR
We Buy Land: 30 -500 Acres,
wa Pay Cash. 1-600·213-8365,
9.11% FINANCING
Anlhony Land Co.
ONLY AT OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV
1-304-755-5885
RENTALS

'A little Country in Town"· large
restored Vtclonan home sttuated
on 12 acres, VIllage or Mtddle·
pori. Secluded and private. close
to ;chools and churches. Private
bnck circu lar drive. brick patto,
modern kitchen, lamtly room w/
llreplace, 3-4 bedrooms, two
baths. large formal LA and DR,
large Ioyer, four orlgmal starned
;tass windows 30 mtnutes from
Athens, 15-20 rrunutes from Gampolls. For appointment call 740-

675-2421

2bdrm apls , total electric, appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities, clos.e to school In town

Beach Slreel, Middleport, 1 room

Severel 5- ecre paretll remote

Doublewide 3br, 2 bath, $1 ,345
down, $217 per mo. free deliv-

3Bedroom, 2/bath. full basement,
112 acre plus, 2 car garage.
fenced yard, Camp Conley. 304·

Near Holzer, $279/Mo, + Utilities,
Deposit &amp; Lease ReQutred. 740- .

elf1ciency apt. utlllltes paid, deposit &amp; referencas . 304·882·

50n.

1995 Claytop. all electnc. excellent condtltan. call Tom Anderson,
740-992·3348 After Spm

310 Homes for Sale

992·5696.

992·2218

446-4722

9436.

740-256-6951

Refrigerator Frost Free $150.00
S&lt;le by Sid&amp; Aelngorator $250 00,

1 and 2 beclroom apartments, furnished and unlurmshed, security
deposit raqutred, no pets, 740-

448-2957.

Small deep freeze, 36" storm
doot, hosprtal .bed wtth mattress.

-IDI'IevlouaPuzzlt

44 lnfllltlon.

1 Acnoa

13 Show pllllnly
14 Aeltlm
15G!Marww
lltlelo
16 Cflv In Ohio
17Cth

610 Farm Equipment

hours, mint condltron. $295. 740·

Apartments
for Rent

$425/Mo .. $225 Doposi1, Ullllllas
Paid, 740-446-2129.

loon 740-388-8424 or 740-388- Reserve the nght to refuse any
or all bids. For lnlo call 803-366·
9513

REAL ESTATE

440

lot for sale- Gallipolis, 90x172,
nice nelgt1borhood, quiet, 740-

Mall bods to Siders 2123 Mal1992 Clayton 16'X 60'. 2 Bed- vern Ad Rock Hill, SC. 29732

Thts newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
whtch rs m oola110n ot the
law Our readers are hereby
mformed that all dwellings
adverttsvd rn thts newspaper
are avallabl8 on an equal
opportunity basts

Rollencosraqulrod74().98B-7052 ·

456 112 Second Avenue, Gallipcr
lis. 2 Bedrooms, AC. Appliances.

1994 Noms Clayton 14x70 2
Bedrooms. 2 Full Baths, 2 Decks,
Central Air, 8x10 Metal Building,

2101 Jallorson Ave.
Open 9:30 · 5·00 Moo-Sat.
30H75-SOFA (7632)

Mini Farm In P&amp;trlol area $300.00

Prices Oh Cash Purchases!

room, 2 Baths, Very Good Condt·

Polly'•- 1 UMd Fumllure
Rags &amp; Amry Surpluslll ·

A Month Rent, $300.00 Deposit,

1988 Clayton, wlheat-pump, 3br,
1 balh, good cond Will pay lor
between Bam-Spm

\/me Street, Call 740·446·7398,

1·998-818-Q 11!8.

1-800-691-6777

delivery $11,500 304·675-3000

ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76

1 Bedroom AIC. W/0, Hook-Up,

Gellll Co.: Gallipolis. Ne1ghl'bO·
hood ~d . , Nrce 10 Acre Building

Fnendly

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,

and have refertncea. 740·388·

$13,000. Also. On SA 325, Noco
Wooded 17 Acres $18.000. Ctty
Water Near New School, Kee-

.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

430 Farms for Rent

Rutland Whites Htll Rd ., Just Ott
New Lhna. 16 Acres $14,000 Or 9
Acres $12,000 Danville, Briar
Ridge + Goff Acts. 7 Acres With
Nice Pond $12,000 Or 8 Acres

Pond

7795.

9162

Call For Free Maps + Owner Ft·
nanclng Into. Take 10% 011 Usted

1988 Redman 14x55 2 Bedrooms,
Gas Heat, CA. Uke New, $7,900,
304-675-6965, 740-446·0175.

All real estate advertrstng tn
thts newspaper ts subfeet to
tne Federal Fatr Housmg Act
of 1968 whiCh makes tl Illegal
to actvertrse ·any preference,
limitatiOn or discnmrnat10n
based on race, color, rehg10ri,
sex famlltal status or national
ongm , or any tntenllon to
make any such preference.
limitation or dtscnmrnatton •

mon1h, $150 depoall. propane

Two bedroom mobile home In
Middleport. $275 plus deposit.

BAUNEALAHO
740-&lt;141-14112

Household

Goods

52114

2 acre tots or 8 acres. Bethel

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Bull&lt;llng An&lt;l More Mid 20's f&lt;lr
Apjlointmord 740- 256-1380

3/4 acre on Meadow Hill Drive on
Sand till Road. 304-675-5211 .

320 Mobile Homes
for Sele

haul your logs to tne mut just call

30H75·1957

112 Acre Lot 1989 Clayton U'X
60', Dec!&lt;, Porch, 24X 36 Garagoi

41 Pie Ingredient?

ACROSS

·

Dot't
Milt

LIBRA (sept. 23-0c:t. 23) Awell.
.. '

.

~

your activities today. Keep

everyth~ out in the open -- just to.

frustrare ·the gossips.
.ARIES &lt;March 21_-Mril 19)
Friends you'll be-involved with today
won't be impressed by airs or affectations. Pretenses will produce the
opposite of whatever you hope to
achieve.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Someone you perceive as an ally
mipt not be as supportive as you
thin~! today. AI tilt present time, this
individual's Intentions aren't in harmony with yours.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your
thinking may be illlllractical and clisjointed today. Don't waste time and

elfon hia!Png a vebicle witb ~

.wheelS.
·

I

"

•

CAN&lt;;BR (June 21-My 22) You

·could malle some bl!d buys when
·l!bopfifta ~ if ~·rc more aJO·

...................... COli- •• .
IIIDnlift&amp; ·" ""- illd - . •.... el ... lloll. Doft'tlle di.nled bY .
' PISCES (Peb. ~~ 20) Do !filley pw'tfli,...
·

•

r

AUGUST?!

�Page 12 • The DIHy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frldly, Augult 7, 1988
~~-

,..,

-

if£cto

urc
•
WanloiP - llt.m.
Wr t 11&gt;; Scrricel · 7 p.m.

.........

Wonhip -9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
UMVF Sundly 6:30 p.m.
Fi111 Sunday of Monlh - 7:30p.m. servia
Tloppen ....... St. .....
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 o.m.

WO!Ihip - to a.m.
Tuesdoy Servi&lt;:e.'l· 7:JO p.m.

lloiley Maa - 8:30 Lm.

Aposto l; c

Church of Clm st
......, Clllordl ofQNI
212 W. Main St.

Mlnillcr: Donny BIM
SUnday Scllool . 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp- 10::!0 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sertices · 7 p.m.
......., Wllllldt ClotrdltiCIIrtal

Box 467, LIU&lt;IOJnB

33226 Qllcl,.n's Home Rd.
~ Sc:llool - II Lm.
Wonh1p - IDa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

M10011, W.Vt.
Paslor: Neil Tennan1
Sundly Setticea- 10:00 L!"· Uld 7 p.m.

Mllcleport Cllwdl ol Qtllt
5lh and Main
Paslor: AJ Hansoa
Youlh Mialstor: Bm Frazier
Sunday Scllool - 9::!0 a.m.
Wonhip- 8:U , 10::!0 a.m., 7 p.11.
Wedoesday Servicea - 7 p.m.

: a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m. Uld 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi« - 7 p.m.

" - CluirdltiCIIrlat

Wors.lip - 9:30 Lm.
Sunday Scllool - 10:30 a.m.
Pulor-Jeff"Y Wallace
111 and 3rd Sunday

F,... WUI Bapdot Cllardo

A&lt;h S1ree1, Middleporl
Paslor: Les Hayman

Sunday Service · 1:00 p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

BeanraiiOW' Rid&amp;&lt; Cllw.... ofCIIrlat

Paslor.Terry Slewan
Swlday Sehoul -9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 6::!0 p.m.
Wednesday Sarvices - 6:30p.m.

Raillod Flnt Bapdot Cllwrdo
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Woohip · 10:45 a.m.
l'omcro) Flnt Bapclst
Eu1 MainSI .

u.. Clotrdl "'CllriJI
PO&lt;neroy, Hurioonville Rd. (Rll43)

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Flnl Soulbent Baplill
41Bn Pomeroy Pike

Puoor: Ropr WaiJOn
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wcdnaday Sertices - 7 p.m.

Pastor: E. lamar O'Bryant

Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
wo,.hip · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

1'iipfen l'ltlii OiJJrdltla.M
liii!IUmelllal
Paslcw: Terry Stewart

Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Wonhip Service - 9 LID.
Communion - 10 t.m.
SUnday Sdlool - 10:13 a.m.
Youlh- 5:30pm Suaday
Bible Sludy Wednadty 7 pm

Flnl Bapllsl Charc:h
Paslor: Mark Morrow

61h and Palmer St, Middlepon
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.

Worship - IO:t5 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Radae Flnt Bapllsl
Pas1or: Rick Rule
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:&lt;40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Settices ·7:00p.m.

llradbury Cllllrdo ofCIIrlat

Pastor: T01n Runyon
Sunday Sdlool - 9::!0 a.m.

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Rllllud Cllwrcto or Cllrlol
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

su..r Ruolltplill

Pascor: Bill Lillie
Sunday School · 10a.m.
Worship · lla.m., 7::!0 p.m.
Wc:dntsday Services· 7:30p.m.

ML Uoloio Bapllol

Pastor : Joe N. SayR

Sunday Sd!ooi-9:4S a.m.
Evenina- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Bndforul Clttardo o(CIIrtot
Comer o( St. Rt 124 It Bradbury Rd.
MiniSier: Dou&amp; Shamblin
Youlh Miniller: Bill AmbetJer
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sarvloes · 7:00 p.m.

111c1u!rJ Hilla Cllwrdl oiCiirlot
l!van&amp;ellSI Mille Moore

llelhlehem Bapllat C..rdl

Oreal Bend, Roule 124, Racine, OH
Pastof : Daniel Berdine

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday WonhiP. · 10:30 o.m. &amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Boblc Srudy • 7:00p.m.
Old Betbel F,... WIU Bapdot Cll....
28601 St. Rt 7, Mi&lt;fdlepon
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Serv1ces- 7:30
Hillside Baptist Cburch
Sl. Rl. 143 jUSI of! Rt7
Pas10r: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
wo,.hip - 11a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sundly Sehool - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
Uberty Cllriallto Cll....
,
Dexler
Pallor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.
lllullday Service · 6:30p.m.
La....Die Cllrtotiaa Ckardo
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7::!0 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Ht1111eck Gron Clloardl
P•stor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school • .10::!0 a.m.

Woohip · 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

VIctory Bapllst Jndapeodtnt
525 N. 2nd S1. Middlepon

ReedaviDe Cburdl of CbriJt
Pasror: PhiliP S1urm
Sunday Scllool: 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp Sarvice: 10::!0 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Pastor: James E. Keesee

Worship - IOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Settices · 7 p.m.
Fallh Baptlsl Churdl
Railroad Sl., Mason
S"nday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Clmst;an Un1011
Htrtr.nl Church of Cbrillla
C~rtotiaw Uoloio
Hartford, W.Va.
PasiOf:Jim HuJhes
Sunday ,School - II a.m. ·
Wonhip ·9:30a.m., 7::!0 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;es - 7:30 p.m.

Foi'HI Rua Bapdsl
Pastor : Arius Hun

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Ctunch of God

ML Moriah BapdJI
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
PaSiot: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

ML Moriall Chardl of God
Racine

Worship · J0:4S a.m.

Allllquhy Baplill
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor!lhip - t0:451.m.

Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.
Ruillnd Free Will Bapllol
Salem Sl.

Paslor. Rev. James Sallerfield
Sunday Scllool · 9:45 a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Rallttd Clourde ol God
PUior. Ron Htalh
Sunday Wonhip - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sarvices · 7 p.m.

Paslor: Rev. Paul Tayk"

Gmm
S26 E.

:tZ· Sl.,1 Il'olaeroy
Cliudl
I

~Rev .

c..tn!C-..
AIIMIJJ (Sy.-.e)
Paslor: a..d Emrick

D. A. duPiantler

Holy Euc:lwilltnd
SundJy School 10:30 Lm.
Oll!ao bour lollowi"l

Sunday School -9:45 a.m.
WorMip . ll1..'m.

Wednesday Scrviu:s · 7:30p.m.

H o iHlP '·'·

Eale"'""
Paslor: Kcuh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

. , . . . ...... CIIe....

3111!17 Sllle a- 3;z,, Lanpvlle
'-:Dr. JD. You"l
Sunday oc:hool - 9-JO o.m.
Swldly wonhip - ID-..10 t.m. It 1 p.m.
Wednadoy prayer oervice - 7 p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

,._

Pastor. Keith bckr

Sunday School · 10 t.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

.........

Ctl~:~
PISIOr. Rev. Vlclor Rouh
Sunday Sdlool9-..l0 a.m.
WO:.:C,- II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed
y Service • 7:30p.m.

Paslor. Olad Emrick
Sunday Sehoul - 10 Lm.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Thullday Services • 6::!0 p.m.

a- of Slltroii Roll- c~urdl

t'l)
PISIOr. Vemapyeluvon
...... (MWI

lcadinJ O..k Rd., Rudtnd
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday oc:hool- 9::!0 Lm.
Sunday worabip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 LID.
Ml..mlle

Paslor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia - 7:30p.m.

..........,

_H.._CIIurdl
75 Pearl Sl., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John N.. ille
Otild,.n'a ,.rvia - 10 a.m.
WO!Ihlp - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvioe - 7:30 p.m.

W~

Pl&amp;ior: Connie F'wa
Sunday Scl1oot • 9:JS Lift.
Wonhip -10::!0 Lm.
Bible Sludy Tueaday - 10 t.m.
Rock~

H7aell Rww H..... Cllwn:h
Sunday School · 9::!0 Lm.
Wonlrip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Setti&lt;e - 7:30p.m.
1..t11re1 am rree Melllodlal Cllwrdo
Plllor: Dovid DeWitt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. md 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Sa!'Yice - 7:00p.m.

Paslor: Ke11h Rider
Sunday ~1- 9:15am.
Wonh1~ - 10 a.m. ·
Yoolh Fellowslup, Sunday -6 p.m.
RuJiud

Sunday Sd!ool • 9:30a.m.
Worabip · 10:30 Lm.
Thursday Settlces -7 p.m.
Saln!Cetler
Pastor: Ron Fierce

Ralltlad C..•oMy Cllu....

Puoor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School - 9::!0 a.m.
~:::r.Eveniaa - 7 p.m.
W
y SettK:CI · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Woohip · 10:15 a.m.
s-tile

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

L &lt;IIter -D ,Iy Sa;nts
Reafpalad a.... t1 1.- Chrial
of LaUer Dty Sthllt
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pas10r: Jerry Sinser
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Worabip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

lletbu,

Putor. Oewayne Stuller
Sunday Scllool - tO a.m.
Wonhip - 9 t.m .
Wednesday Servi«s - 10 a.m.

Sy-nniClourcloo(God

Evening - 7 p.m.

Wcdnaday Services· 7 p.m.

Apple and Second SIS.
Pasror. Rev. David Rusaell
Sunday School Uld Wonhlp- 10 a.m.

Catholic

Evenina Services-6:30p.m.

Sacred H.. r1

Calholl&lt; Cborc:h
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992-5898
Paslor: Rev. WallO! E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m..
Sun. Mus · 9:30a.m.

Wednesday Sarvices - 6:30p.m.
Ch•rdll oiGttl oiPiap•e&amp;:y

OJ. While Rd. off Sl. Rt. 160
Paalor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.

..-.:4:30 Salutday
Suodty~ - 9:30 .....

33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy HIIIIIOf
Sunday Scllool · 10 a.m.
EYHina7:30 p.m.
Tuesday It Thullday . 7:30p.m.

lolleft J. Coal

Radio.,.,.

c....t-sRacine, Ohio

The Cllun:h o( J.,..
Cbrlll of Laller-Dty Sololt

Pas101: Dewarne S1uller
Sunday Schoo - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 o.m.
Bible Sludy Wed. 7:00p.m.

S1. R!. 160, 446-62-47 or 446-7486
Sunday SchooiiO:l0-11 a.m.
Retief Sociely/Prialllood ll:OS-12:00 noon
'Sacranienl Service 9-10:13 a.m.
Homemlkinl meeriq, lsi Tl!urs. - 7 p.m.

M....... Siar

Paslor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worihip - tO a.m.

l.tlth e r dll

Eu1Lectr1

81, ..... Ladieru Cllw....

Pastor: Brian H1rkness

PincOrove
Rev. Donald C. Frilz
Wonhlp- 9:00a.m.
Sunday Sdlool . 10:00 Lm.

Sunday Sehool· 10 a.m.
Woohip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Radne

Oar S.•loior Loollittu Church
Walnul and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: Dovld Rusaell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip · II t.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Cool•llle Ualled Metllodlll Puia11
Paslor: Helen Klino
Cool&gt;llk Cllw....
Main .t Fiflh St.
Sunday School· IOa.m.

8L...., LatWu Cllu....
Oner Syctmore It Seooncl St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C Frilz
Sunday Sd_-1 • 9:45a.m.
Worallop · II a.m.

Wonh~ · I0:30 t.m., 6p.lll.

p

I

,.

Wedaaday Sarvices - 1 p.m.

a...r~ofllio~
l'oolor: ....,,·-rtGrato
Sunday Sdlool- 9::!0 t.m.
~
II L_m., 6 p.m.
W
ServKlOI - 7p.m.

. . ..t
.

....... Clotrdltlllio .._ _
"-:Rev. Samuel W. Baye

Gnllu I.JIIIIed Mttllodls!

Hoddqport Cllu....

Grand Slreel
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wor~hip - II a.m.
Wednesday Settices ·'8 p.m.
Toidl C~ardl
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
wo ..hip - 10:30 a.m.

MI. Olin Uoiled Motbodlal
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pasoor: Rev. Ralph Spire•
Sunday School . 9:30 o.m.
WO&lt;Ship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thur.oday Sen ices - 7 p.m.
Mdp Coopera!kt Parish
Nortlltul Chiller
Alfred

Nazarene

Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sehoul · 9:30 a.m.
Wonolllp- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Mllklleport Clltordl o( 11M N...,_
Pu lor: Oreaory A. Cundiff
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WednesdayServices- 7 p.m.

Pa.11or: Shuron Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Servi&lt;:e.'l - 7 p.m.

RetdiYIIIe FetlowUip
of I he Naaa,....

C~urc:b

Pnslor: ~Randolph
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sehool - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Teresa W•ldcck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

..L

=
=

-.:.!Ncms l~~e

BIN Qulckel992-em

your
local
churches

RIDENOUR
. SUPPLY

H~ C..oauolly

Cbordl

Paslor: Theron Dumam
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

1/4 mite pal ~·Iiiii
Fon Mcip on New Lima Rd.
Pasror: William Van Meier
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday· 7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.
OiftoJI Ttberudo ClliJidi

Oilton, W.Va.
Sunday Sdlool · 10 t .m.
Worablp - 7 p.m.
Wcdncaday Service -7 p.m.

New Ure VIctory Ceoler
3n3 Geora.. Crtek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Slalen
Sunday Sarvioes · 10 a.m. It 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. .t Youlh 7 p.m.

=

..,..._H~ol ......
(II Barlillpm d!uodl orr Route 33)

Pentecostill
Ptllei:OIIII A11 e•biJ

Paslor. Rdlen Vanco

W

•

Sl. Rt 124, Racloe
Puror. WilHam Hobaclo
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Eveaina - 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Servi«s · 7 p.m.

wonhlp - 10 t.m.
y aervice - 6:30 p.m.

Middle-* C.....uty Clno....
575 Pearl Sl., Middle poll
. Pastor: Sam Anderson
Suoday SehooiiO a.m.
Evenina - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:~ p.m.

Middlepor1 .....hcooCII

Th.ird Ave.
PISIO&lt;: Rev. Oark Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sarvice&amp; - 7:00p.m.

Faldl Vtfley Ttberude Cllw....
Bailey _Run Road
PIOICW: Rev. Emmell Raw.on
Sunday Evenina 7 p.m.
lllunday Service -·.7 p.m.
S,--M. . .

EvcniiiJ - 6 p.m.

Presbytc11an
SytOCIIIC Flnt Uolled l'rabJ!eriaa
Paslor: Rev. Kriuna Robin!OII
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.
Han11oiirille Presbylaiao Cllardl
Worship - 9 a.m.

Huel eo.m..ltjiCIIu....

Sunday Scllool -9:45 a.m.

OffRt 124
Paslor. Edsel Han
Sunday Sehool -9:30 a.m.
W&lt;mhlp. 10::!0 a.m., 7:30p.m.
O,...lllt C..•u!ll&amp;y CIHudo

Sunday ~I , 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Mlchllopot1 l'l'abyiortaa
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Scvt~nth

DilY AclveniT'-'t
....,.,.yAd..atc
Mulberry llts. Rd., Pomeroy
PISIOr: Roy Lawinslty
Saturday Services:
Sabbolh Sehool - 2 p.m.
Worship · 3p.m.

M- Clltpel Cllurdl
Sunday ocbool - 10 o.m.
Wonhip • II i.m.
Wednesday Smlice - 7 p.m.

,.

Flldl~....

S...i;~~:!Ot.m.

Wonhlp-10:45l.lll., 7:30p.m.
Wedntsday 1:30 p.m.
•.

llfL.v:.:,~l;~
Suildoy Schoql- 9:30a.m.
l!...i.. - 7p.m.
Wodneday Service - 1 p.m.
U.....•hllll Cllw ....

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pua
PUIOr: Rev. Jlol1on E. Smllh, Sr.
Sunday~- 9:30a.m.

WePrescriptions
Fil Doctors~

214 E. Main

1182-1130 Ponwov

EWING FUNERAL HOME
D~gniYy n StJtvlce Always

992·2955

TIIIN to c1e1n '""-'. ,......,
..... ••
.....,
_
_..•• •

.

Clean out your basement sa••• SEIMCE
992-2121
or attic with the help o!.!lle
r ·...1071
St. At. 248, Cheater, Oh.
CLASSIRED SECTION/ 112lbtrl tltntldA~. .
~~::oe:!an~8d~in~~~~~~:JL.. .~~~~~~~~~~oa!
.J~1~:!~~A~•=m~yA:~:·~.:~:m:~~~~::::::::~::::~J.~

....

Cllu .... o( J - Cllrill,

fttlolliuon'F........ M......,.
New Ume Rd., Ruiland
, _ , ~·- ~· J. ltabmSa!'Yicea: WtdMsday, 7:30 ~.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m. '

Established 1913

GALLIPOLIS - Congress. man Ted Strickland and fellow
Appalachian colleagues are pushing legislalion lhrough Congress
Ihal will increase inveslment in lhe
Appalachian Regional Commission and the Economic Develop. men! Administralion and targel
more funds to lhe most economically distressed areas, like much
of soulhern Ohio.
"Both of these agencies are
crucial to bringing more goodpaying jobs to our part of Ohio,"
Stricklll.lld .~14 . ., . . .
.; .
"By strengthening their miSsion, and py ensuring lhal the bulk
of !heir resources is targeled
toward areas like souJhern Ohio,
we can significanlly bolster our
continuing mission lo grow and
expand our local economy."
The Economic Developmenl
Partnership Act will authorized
nearly $2.2 billion for both the
EDA and the ARC through 2003.
(The $2.2 billion does nol include
$2.25 billion in funding for the
ARC's road building program thai
has already been provided Jhrough
~he lransportalion bill).
Strickland said Jhe bill has been
approved by the Commillee on
Transportation and lnfraslructure
and will report to the Banking
Committee Ihis wrek.
"It will be a tough fighl , bul I
believe we may have a vole on lhis
bill before lhe full House this fall, "
Slrickland added.
: "This is exactly the kind of
proactive ac1ion Appalachian
communilies should be pursuing,"
Slrickland concluded.
"Not only are we continuing
the fight 10 protect the ARC and
the EDA from the conslanl threal
of budgel cuts, bul, by working to
pass lhe Economic Developmenl
Partnership Act, we are increasing
the posilive impacl these economic development iniiiaiives will
have on our working families in
southern Ohio. "

Sunday Sd!ool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10::!0 am
Wednesday Settices- 7 p.m.

Fellowship SUnday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 1:00 p.m.

Un1ted Brctllr!'ll
MLH. . . U..... 1,._

.. QliiJ Cllw....
few Communily of( CR 82
Paolor: Roben Sanden
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sarvices - 7::!0 p.m.

Good Morning

Ideo Ualled B....,_ 1o Cllrbl

Today'a ~=•·.Seatbw

2 1/2 miles norlh or Reedaville
oa Sltte Rou1e 124
PutOI: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday Sehoul - II a.m.
Sunday Wonhlp • 10:00 Lm. .t 7:00p.m.
Wednadty Services- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Yoolh Sarvice - 7:30p.m.

~islJtr ~Jmtral ~

.:am:c•

21M Soo,lh Socond ilflo.ollddJopoo~ OH

.

?~141

lliuce R. F'. . . - Dildw

12 Sections - I 42 Pages

I·
.......... {~­

...~

.'·

5811 EM! MIJn snei I~. OH740-8112-5444

M..,_ c-..,.' Ow.,

of thundll1torml

page A2

entinel

1M 1/o 11.4 -

-

Searching for a
loeal church?
Check the Sentinel
evety Friday/

Vol. 33, No. 26

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Edltod1ls
Along the River
Obituaries
Soorts

C2&amp;6
03· 7
Insert
A4
C1

AS
81·8

c 1998 Ohio VaJicy Publ ishina Co.

.

cocaine inlo Meigs and the surrounding counlies began
some lhree years ago.
The primary sources of crack cocaine for lhe local
markel are Chillicolhe and Columbus, Lentes said, and
those pipelines leading south into Meigs, Gallia, Alhens
and the surrounding counties are a target of the task
force . And, Lentes said, just as enforcement agents know
where it's coming from, they are able to pinpoint, almost
to an ef acl sile, where il's going.
The appeal of crack lo !he recreational drug user is
multi-faceled. II is compacl - an "eight ball," or eightdollar purchase, is usually the size of a mothball. A small
amount of the drug can be purchased for a small amount
of money. Most appealing to the user: the high achieved
from crack cocaine, !hough very fleeting, is the most
intense "up" high available.
It is almosl immediately addicting, so il keeps the
cuslomer coming back for more al o·nce.

Earlier lhis summer, four people were arrested and
charged wilh lrafficking in c rack, and I.entes said that
further arresls are inevitable.
Before lhe arrival of crack inlo Soulheaslem Ohio,
marijuana posed the only serious drug problem in Meigs
County, and illegal activity resulting from marijuana
was limited to lhe actual cultivation and sale of it.
The usc of marijuana, Lenles said, rarely results in
violenl behavior.
"Mosl of the crimes !hat my office investigates, such
as assaults, theft cases, domestic violence, have a direct
link 10 the abuse of alcohol." Lentcs said. "I've never
seen a case of violent behavior which was a result of
marijuana: use.'
Crack is a different story. There are IWo basic differences in the way crack affects the communily, Lentes
said.
Fhst, those involved in trafficking in crack cocaine

are not local, and !hey are violent.
' These are hard-core criminals," I.entcs said . "They
will hurt others. The dealers threalen their cuslomers,
the customers lhreaten !heir dealers, and !hey have both
Ihreatened local law enforcement officers."
Those who use and deal in crack are also more apt to
commit other violent crimes. Like the cocaine from
which it derives, crack is a slimulant, and when abused,
oflen leads to erralic behavior.
Those who use crack always deal wilh an unknown
quantity: while il is often cut wilh soda, it has also been
cui wilh slrychnine and olher dangerous substances, and
the purity of the cocaine is always in doubt.
"When you deal wilh marijuana, vegetalion is vegetation," I.entes said, "but if physiological conditions are
just righl, the firs! time using crack can kill."

Another fair draws to a close Final resident
1

moved from
county home

Trying to escape the hot
temperatures, right, Cheaney
Wagoner, 8 months, (pictured
In stroller) gets a little help
from her friend, MeltiiiW
Akers, 5, who tried to cool her
off with a small hand.,.ld flln
while he waited on a 111CHl0f18
lut week at the Gallla County
Fair. Below, Heidi Griffith, 10,
(pictured) challenged her
younger brothera, Boone, 8,
and Colton, 9, In a round of
·~fun 'factory. ~· Colton went on
.{.._to win two"'"'~ ea~
·· "lilmaalf .a~'lliorn Legtlom

atu'ffed prize.

.

By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme•sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - After Jwo years of debate, angry confrontations and
threats of political reprisal againsl lhe Meigs County Commissioners, the
final resident of the Meigs County Home was relocated on Friday morning
and the facility was closed.
Closed facility
According to Mildred Jacobs,
who has served as acling adminis- ii======
tralor of the home for the past several months, three residents -- Jwo
women and a man who
remained at the ho~ _were relocated 10 a privately-owned personal
care home in Pomeroy on Friday.
The Meigs County Commissioners had set Monday as lhe final
day for operation of lhe home. The
commissioners originally voted to
close the home in January, and
then in March, bul laler modified
thai decision, closing the home to
new residents only. The action was
laken after a levy proposal for the 1~~~\~~~n~
county home's operalion failed in lr
November.
Commission President Janet
Howard said last week thai lhe
building will remain the property of
the counly, and will likely be converted inlo a counly office annex, 10 house agencies such as Ihe board of eleclions, fair housi11g and graniS adminislralion offices, and velerans services office.
The commi ssioners will mainlain beds in the building fo r use as an emergency disasler sheller, Howard said.
The commissioners have ci ted both financial and liability issues as their
reasoning for closing the home.
''The commissioners have determined !hat it is no longer economically feasible Jo operale a county home due lo the small number of persons eligible for
such service and due to Jhe high cost of operating such a home for a small
number of individuals," lhe co mmissioners' resolution closing Ihe home said.
Relalives and legal guardi ans of Ihe three remaining res idenls were Io
have been notified by the commissioners of the impending closing of the
home. Those relalives were allowed the opporlunily lo determine where the
residents would be placed, according to Howard .
Under the commissioners' lalesl resolulion, lhe director of lhe Department of Human Services will now be charged with the responsibilily of
delermining in the future who is eligible for county care.
The DHS Direclor, as part of his dut y re lati ng to indi gency determination,
will also delermine suitable places of residence for indige nt applicants.

·.

First earing set on proposed sales tax increase
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - A proposed increase in the
sales lax in Meigs County will have its firsl
public hearing on Monday evening.
Atlheir July 28 meeling, the Meigs County
Commissioners proposed a half-percenl
increase in lhe county's sales tai'The counly
currently collects one percent sales lax on all
1axable purchases, which is collected in addilion to the slate's five percent sales tax.
The first public hearing on the proposal was
set for 7 p.m. tomorrow evening at lhe Meigs
County Courthouse.

The commissioners cile an increasingly
light budge! as the reason for !he proposal, and
several specific projects which they say will
require immediate auention, and significanl
funds in order 10 complete. The commissioners anlicipate $350,000 in expenses above
general operaling expenses nexl year, including lhe repayment of three bank loans which
were signed lhis,. year.
An eslimated $100,000 will be required to
repair lhe abandoned landfill in rural Salisbury
Township, which repairs have been mandated
by the state EPA, $50,000 to make required
improvements to lhe county jail in order to

meet state fire codes, and anolher $50,000 lo
expand and make other needed repairs to the
jail.
.
Addilionally, the county spenl $90,000,
$32,000 of which was borrowed, to finance
the recenl purchase of a new computer system
for the auditor's office .
·Jn addilion to meeting operating and capilal
improvement expenses, lhe co mmissioners
face repaymenl of a $60,000 loan to relire lhe
debl incurred by Ihe purchase of new sheriffs
cruisers and recently harrowed SI 00,000 to
meet current operaling expenses of lhe sheriff's department, specifically to pay for lhe

expense of housing prisoners in out-of-county
facilities, and to pay medical bills incurred by
prisoners whi le in c~ s tody of the sheriffs
depa rtmenl.
County aud itor Nancy Parker Campbell
esti malcs Ihat an additional half-percent sales
lax will generale $400,000 10 $600,000 per
year. The county's existing one percenl sales
lax ge neraled $1,025,1 85.31 during 1997.
The counly will be responsible for all
expenses involved in co nverting the laxation
rale on all cash registers, compuler syslems
and other equipment for local retail merchants.

Domestic violence task force forms intervention program
:

•r.•r .,,
740-982-2644
740-982-6298

1

Strickland cosponsors
legislation to bolster
ARC, EDA funding

ltdold8a Ul! Clloardl
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleporo
PutOI: Lawrence Fo!eman

Yout~

Pastor. Sieve Reed
Sunday Scllool - 9::!0 a.m.
WonhJ. • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
ednesdly . 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowahop service 7 p.m.

·News Watch

SU•en,. Word o( Ftl!ll
Pas!or. David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.

!Jrands FLORIST

MOWER CUNIC

KEROSENE HIOATER REPAIR

Sunday Scllool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

a....
Cllrtollu ..... ~ Clowrdt
SUnday service, 10:00 t.ro., :00 p.m.

···5432
Maat'!r~r!c!~=lclan

Lotan, W.Va. Rt. I
Plllor: John Han
SUnday Scllool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Sludy - 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Roben E. MUller
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II:I~ a.m:, 7 p.m.
Wedneldty Seivice ·,7 p.m.

Crow'• to:ainlly Rtltaurant
.'
~ Kridy Ft1ed Ctrlclcfn'
·~8 W:'M&amp;in St., Pomeroy

JNSUitANCE

FolmewiRIIoCiooardl

Clirtolltw ....... ,., c-ur
Salem SL, Rutlaiod

Ftlllo hll C.,.. Cllw ....
Loaa IIOIIom

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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • August 9, 1998

By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - The local image of lhe crack cocaine
user is changing, as lhe insidious drug and lhe problems
which accompany it move inlo soulheastem Ohio. Sale
and use of the drug are on the rise in the region, according to Meigs County Prosecuting Allomey John Lentes.
"Crack" is chemically purified and very potenl
cocaine. II is cut wilh a variety of subslanccs - usually
baking soda, cooked with water 10 a pellet form and then
smoked, oflen through a glass pipe designed for !hat purpose. The "high" achieved lhrough smoking crack is
much more inlense than thai achieved by using regular
powdered cocaine.
I.enles' office supervises the mulli-county Major
Crimes Task Force, an agency which invesligales drug
trafficking activity and other major crimes in Southeastern Ohio. According 10 Lenles, the influx of crack

Coolville Road
Pastor. Rev. Phillip Rldenour
SUnday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonltip - 10:30 Lm.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

, ... a..,.n 0,..... Cllwrdo
Suaday aarvice, 10 a.m.
Wednesdoy oervia!, 7 p.111.

Plllly cloudy, c~~~nce

Officials •• Crack cocaine use, ·investigations on the rise

Wlol!o'a Cllopel W..,.u

CaMry Bible Cllordl
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pallor: Rev. Blackwood

923 s.'!bird So, lollddlepoil
l'ulor l!raie w..,.rd

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

PISIOr. Rev. Ropr Wlllfonl
SUnday Scllool · 9:30 Lm.
WO!Ihip- 7 p.m.

m-.so11

Sa!'Yice lime: Sundty 10::!0 a.m.
Wednesdoy 7pm

Details on

I tdoul Cllon:lo

hllll Felu•*P CIWIOie,.,. Clortat
Pastor. Rev. Franklin Dickens
Sa!'Yi«: Friday, 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Wednesday Servi.::es- 10 t.m.

I

Fr hw Goopel M....,
Bald Kntlb, on Co. Rd. 31

Otl •• ' C hl!Tlil(",
11.- OA: .1 Mlaotab..
47439 Reibel 'Rd., Olestor

,_.,Jolon lt'hay Wade
603 Second Ave. Maon

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tmts

PIIIOr: Jeff Smilh
SUnday School -9:30 a.m.
Wonloip Sa!'Yice 10:30 a.m.
No SUnday 01 Wednesday NiJhl Sarvioes

Sunday Scbaol - 6 p.m.
Wediladay Servlca - 7 p.m.

.W..LIIic"PTiil:o_i O!urdl"

pt~ge

Nnr

Klnpburylload

Wonhlp - 10:30 p.m.

lletbol Chrde

Worship · JO a.m.

Culotuoll-

a.lnto ti ... Na a-.
, _ , Mirt Malaon

SUnday Sa!'Yices: 10 t.m . .t 6 p.m.
Woclaeadoy SerVIces - 7 p.m.

• Featured on

90
Low: 60s

movie
empires

Seoolllllolllel NewT--!
Silver Rid&amp;c
Pulor: Rober! !lllbcr
Sunday Sdlool- 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 Lm., 7 p.m.
wedllelda, Service -7 p.m.

....... J1nl

~lev. Mliy McDtnid

HI:

entertainment

Foil Goopel I .........

Suoday School - 9:30 t.m.
Wonllip • 10::!0 Lll\.,6:30 p.m.
Wednelday Sal\'icea - 7 p.m.

Worship- 9 a.m.

Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.

Wolllhip - 9:30a.m. (hi ol 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednc.o;day Service· 7:30p.m.

ty d.l.... tt ... " ,_

' - ' ...~l.Jojod D. Oritntn,Jr.
SUnday Sdlool - 9::!0 .....
Wriip • Ut..lO 1.81. Uld 6 p.m.

1411 Bri&lt;faeman Sl., Syr...,,.
Rev. Mite Thompl4lii,Paslor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

TueS&lt;jay Services. 7 p.m.

United Methodist

lat:UIIIod Statio~

W~·ices - 7p.BL
Wedneldal' : fot OoriiJ. 7 p.BI.

Cirmet .t Bas!uTn RdJ.

Chetler

Sunday School . 10 o.m.

.,, .a-..,
... " ....at;

Wonllip - IO:llla.rn, 7 p.m.
WodnadayScrvlco -7p.m.

Patt Cloopel

SUnday Sd!ool· 9 t.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

.,

'

Putor: a...t Emrick
Sunday Sc!!Po'· 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Pl8e Gran Bible HoH.ID Cb....
1/2 mile off Rt 325

Meigs fair

·,

"

· GALUPOLIS - Looking lo reduce the
incidence of cases enlering the local court
syslem lhe Gallia Coimly Domestic Task
Force has formed an inlervenlion program to
help !bose charged with ballering their
spouses or other family members.
The batterers' inlervention program will
accept referrals from lhe Gallipolis Municipal and Gallia County Commo~ Pleas
courts. It will accept people conv1cted of
domeslic violence and related c riminal
offenses, a d will offer group sessions and
other services 10 batterers.
• Naomi Krause has been named lhe progri m's facil itator, and sh,e and . addi~ional
information aboutl.be program w1ll be mlro-

duced at a luncheon set for noon Wcctnesday,
Aug. 26 at !he Stowaway restaurant.
Cost of lhe program will initially be
underwritten by the municipal court, from a
mediation fund the court has for such programs.
"I am always more lhan happy 10 assist a
community group such as this i~ addressins
a problem faced by this oourt .and t~is counly, '' Municipal Judse William S. Medley
said.
A lask force subco~t~miltee created lhe
program. ·lis members were Hilda Tirado,
execulive director of Serenity House; Paul
Dovyak of the social work department allhe
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Comt

munity Collese; Jesse Payne, vice
president of lhe Oallia County unit
of the NAACP; Lori Ellis of
FACTS; David Weinhold of
Lulheran Soc:ial Services; and
Rebecca Baird of SouJheastern
Ohio Lesal Services.
''The batterers intervention program should provide an effective
altC11111ivc to fines, jail aod community . service," a task force
•1 ~ .,
release noted. "The judges have lhe
discretion to order that a convicted
offender altend and comple1e the baneiers
inlervention progr•m as a condition of probalion."

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The court has lhe author- now have another tool to lry 10 remedy the
ily to make allendance and problem for the fulure," she said.
completion of the program
The program is consistenl with exisling
an alternative to full prose- practices and procedures Medley· now uses,
,, cution of the c harge .
in conjunction wilh recommendations from
"The batlerers interven- the city solicitor's and prosecuting allor·
lion program is another pos- ney's offices. These practices include:
itive step in the di recJion of
• Issuance of a temporary proleclion
'! a firm community response 'order at the firs! court appearance of the
to domestic vio lence," accused;
!1-c• Separaling the parties pending a resoluexplained Margarel Evans,
·· ~
assistant Gallipolis ci ly tion of lhe case;
sol jcilor.
• Referring the victim 10 Serenity House, ·
"Domeslic violence is one of the mosl if practical;
frequenlly charged crimes in municipal
Providi ng the victim with literature
Continued on page A2
court, and the court and the solicitor's office

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