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                  <text>P11ge1o ·The 0a11y Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, August 18, 1998

--Flower show features artistic arrangements by local
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
.............tiff
The old senior fair building lithe
Rock Springs fairBrounds took on a
De•·~ look Monday as htmdmls of
colorful specimen flowers grown by
1\lCI) gardeners and the artistic
b'liUigemeniS they CIUicd filled the
hall.
It marked a time for gardeners to
show what they grow, and a place
for failgoers to see and appreciate
the taleniS of the exhibitors.
"Ohio Motor Coach Tours from
Meigs County" was the theme of the
artistic designs with Shelia Cunis
taking best of show for her entry in
"Stemwheel Festival." Reserve best
of show wellt to Peggy Crane with
an arrangement in "Franklin Park
Conservatory" while Judy Bunger
captured the award for creativity
with her arrangement in "Tecumseh"
showing a Native American theme.
Sweepstakes award winner was
Pat Holter who accumulated the
highest number of points for her
specimen exhibit.
In the junior division, the top
awards went to Becky Taylor, best
of show in artistic arrangements, and
Natasha Mohler, reserve best of
show. The sweepstakes award for
specimens went to Brian Dill.
ARTISTIC ARRANGEMENTS
Winners in the artistic arrangement classes. listed first through
third respectively, were:
"Dresdon", a design in a basket:
Deborah Jones, Shelia Taylor, and
Shelia Cunis.
"Stemwheel Festival". including
driftwood: Shelia Curtis, Judy
Bunger, and Betty Dean.
"Franklin Park Conservatory",
featuring foliage: Peggy Crane, Shelia Curtis, and Melanie Stethem.
"Cincinnati Reds Game", includ-

ina ml and white: Pauicia Holter,
Deborah Joocs, and Evelyn Hollon.
"Tecumseh", Native American
influence: Judy Bunaer, Alice
Thompson, and Shelia Ta)·lor.
"Outlet Mall Shopping". angular
desip: Shelia Curtis, Alice Thompson, and Melanie Ste~m.
"Hocking Hills", warm colon:
Deborah Jones. Pegay Crane, and
Shelia Cunis.
"Wahkeena Natun: Pn:serve",
table picture: Deborah Jones, PegiiY
Crane, Betty Dean.
"Soapbox Derby" showing
motion Ounior division): Rebecca
Taylor. James Werry, and Joshua
Mohler.
"Sea World at Aurora", showing
water (junior division): Joshua
Mohler, James Werry, and Natasha
Mohler.
SPECIMEN EXHIBITS:
First place winners with specimen exhibiiS included:
Roses: Karen Werry, Mel~a
Tracy, two; Patricia Holter; three;
Evelyn Hollon, two.
Gladioli: Pauline Atkins, two;
Alice Thompson, two.
Dahlias: Pauline Atkins, two.
Alice Thompson, Gladys Cumings.
Zinnias: Pauline Atkins, Shelia
Curtis, Cyndi King.
Marigolds: Briar Dill. Beuy
BEST OF SHOW- Sheila Curtis was the best of ahow winner with
Lowery.
her arrangement In the category •Stern wheel Featlvat• She used
Celosia: Briar Dill.
treasured wood collected from the Ohio River bank with aunflowerl
Sunflowers: Alice Thompson, and sorghum etock.
Steve Barnett.
In potted plants the blue ribbon
winners wen: Pauline Atkins, PegiiY
Crane, two, J8Ret Bolin, Janet
Theiss, two, with Patricia Holter
took a first in hanging baskets.
In the junior horticulture calegory, the blue ribbon winners were
Rebecca Taylor, Briar Dill, two.

Auguat19, 11198

Weather

talent~~

Cincinnati falls to Milwaukee, Page 5
A genetic roll of the dice, Page 6
Monitoring the fair scene, Page_7

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

'Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 83

Personnel matters comprised the
hulk of action at the recent August
meeting of the governing board of the
Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center.
The board approved employment
of the following, contingent upon
continued fundina and proper certific:ation:

CREAnvm AWARD - Judy Bunger took the creativity award foi
her modem deaign In 'Tecumlllh', a design with a native American
Influence. She ul8d leather horse figurine to enhance the arrangement of sunflowers, canna seed pods, and Hopl-dye amaranth
before a-horse blanket_background.

Doris Well, elementary supervisor; Kellie Thomas, alternative
school teacher; Martin Harrington,
alternative school teacher; Tanya
Meadows,
multi-handicapped
teacher; Men Kerns. inswctiona1
aide for the Adult Basic literacy
Education program; Patricia Mayhew, educational diagno~tician;

Melissa Daugherty, half-time
preschool teacher assistanl; Barbara
Knowlton, preschool teacher assistant; and Rosanne M. Krager, itinerant early childhood teacher.
The boaid also approved the following n:sipations: Jennifer Norris,
itinerant preschool teacher; Jacyln
on Page 3)

.•

The Rock Spring• Falrgroundl Ia buetllng ttlla weak
wHh fair actlvltlaa, and while
!hi grandltancl will attract !hi
blggnt crowell, the lhoW .,..
na located In the Ilveetock . . .
Itaya buey, too. The centetplaca for Junior Fair actlvltlea,
the show arena 11 home to qo.
loulll~ lltclck lhowl and JudgIng evenll, Including eevaral
open elau lhowl, which will
CGntlnue throughout the week,
I pet lhow on Friday, lind, of
cour11, the Junior Fait Uv.
llock Sale on Friday
_t;IJilUill ~~-:~r 2 i
.
aamil1 on .. ay evening
with the Jul)lor Fair Sheep
Show. Kurt John- of Columbus Ia pictured, top photo,
~pe~klng to beginner lhaep
· showmen about their projecte,
.and looking over their animals.
On 1 lighter nolll, youngsters
are lining up tiiCh evening at 4
pate thll year. The· pulls will
p.m. for thll dilly Kkldle Treetor PUIII, which allo take place culminate In 1 championship
In the llnlnl. Pictured above II
avant In the pull area near the
grandatancl on Friday evening.
Jolh Hupp, of the more
-aoned pullara to pertlc~
Brent Rosa, also pictured, lsln

JUNIOR RESERVE WINNER - Natasha Mohler took reserve best
of show with her arrangement in the class "Seaworld.• It featured
sunflowara, golden rod, and twisted vine, in s container of water.

Beat of the Bend ...
By Bob Hoeflich

Opening day of the 135th annual
Meigs County Fair was a hot oneand it's predicted that 11 will get
steamier as they week unfolds .
However, there wen: a lot of people on hand for opening day despite
the warmth.
· '
The first of two flower shows
was judged Monday and there wen:
plenty of entries on hand. The
senior fair building where that show
is staged needs a bit mo':f' lig~ti~g.
however The junior fatr butldtng
which ~as similar these days has

strips of fluorescent lighting which
certainly enhance the exhibits there.
Domestic arts are also auractively exhibited in the senior fair building as are the exhibits of the granges
and the schools of the county. All are
excellent so you'll want to .stop by
that structure.
·
The junior fair building occupied
by several youth organizations certainly is an:at again this year. The
many booths displaying the work of
the young people well demonstrate a
wide ranae of interest and are a positive indication of the tremendous
amount of work going into these
youth organizations. I certainly
want to tip my hat to them and to
their leaders who have to devote a
great deal of energy, creativity and
inspiration to their groups.

was working on one of the admis- queen and king of the Meigs County
sion gates Monday as a part Of her Fair.
work with Xi Gamma Mu Chapter
They will be making numerous
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
appearances at the various events
Monday marked Sheila's 22nd and will be photographed many,
year in working with the group at the many times as the fair moves on.
gates. And, this year while not
Julie is the daughter of Ruth and
doing her volunteer thmg for the Bill Spaun of Pomeroy and Chris is
sorority, Sheila is working in the the son of Leland and Margaret
Meigs Band Boosters food booth.
Parker of near Pomeroy.
It does take a heap of volunteer
work to carry off the fair.
And really having themselves an
Thanks to Sheila and others like outing at Monday's.fair were Mary
her.
Lou and Eugene Hawkins.
You'd never know it hut Mary
Julie Spaun and Chris Parker will Lou is supposed to be handicapped.
Sheila Childs Harris of Bradbury be putting in a busy week as the However, her altitude is tremendous

board member and such a gooJ one
at that.
Buddy had to work on the
evening a photograph was taken of
the fair board. No one mentioned
that Buddy was absent and so when
the photo was published his membership on the board went unnoticed
and unlisted.
Just an oversight, Buddy. Having
worked with you over the years I
fully know how much you put into
working to make the fair a success
from every standpoint. May you
always.

Shoemaker great
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bill
S~maker, who was crippled by an

By MARY BETH MARKLEIN

You are invited
to an event
honoring State Representative

USATODAY
.
Vassar College in Poughkeepste_. N.Y.. has been named College of the
Year by Time magazine and The Princeton Revtew.
.
A team of editors and educauon experts c1ted Vassar s 13-year-old
Exploring Transfer program, which helps disadvantaged students at community colleges make the transition to a four-year colle~e. The selecu~
team was looking for schools that encourage ractal, ethmc and economiC
diversity.
- ··
Nationally, 21 percent of community colle~e students _go on to four-year
schools. but 70 percent of Explorina Transfer s 538 part1c1pants have done
so 10 date . and more than 100 ha~e graduated, Time and The Pnnceton
Review say in their 1999 colle~e gutde, out Monday.
This is the second year the guide_identified a College of the Year. Last
ears clioicc was Florida A&amp;M Umvcrstty 10 Tallahassee. Eduors sa~ the
yurpose is not to identify "the best" school but to h1ghhght a ca~p11:5 that
fs creatively and ciTc~tively advancing the ~ausc of htghcr lcamtng m gen-

cral-ri:e Vassar program, though small. is "a valuahlc. model at a_ time when
atfimlllivc action is being rolle~ .back and opportuntttcs for low-tncome and
minority students are shnnkmg. the ed1tors say.

Tlte Sentinel News BotUue
992·~_)56
''I'
I

~'

Shoemaker rode the winners of
8.833 races during his career which
spanned six decades. He retired from

Horse harness racing in years
past was held on three afternoons of
the fair. However, more recently it
.has been reduced to two afternoons.
This year the racing program will be
held at I p.m. on Thursday and Friday. Hope you enjoy and do keep
smiling.
riding in 1990 and suffered his injury
one year later after beginning a second career as a trainer.

JOHN CAREY
With Special Guest
Candidate for Lt. Governor·

Maureen O'Connor
Thursday Aug. 20th
Senior Citizen Center

Pomeroy, Ohio
4:30 to 6:00 P.M.
$10.00 donatlo1 r...uestetl
Dress casual
. Pilei for Chana tor Carey, Donald Wilton, rr.u&amp;nr
196 Oak Ridge, Waflllon, OH 45112

REMINDER
LANDLORD IN THE
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT

a-

day night. From left- Moore. Fair
Julie
Speun end Fair King Chrlatopher Perker;
behind ataer.

.Eastman, Moore net grand, reserve
champion honors pt fair's steer show
Enn Eastman's 1,363-pound steer pounds - Sara Ervin. Brent B~~~:kley
will head the sale order in market and Joe Dillon; 1, 194-1,240 pounds
steers Friday ni&amp;ht after winning -Jennifer Clifford, Laura Brown and
grand champion honors in the 1998 Jessica Carr; 1.264-1,295 pountls Meir County Junior Fair Beef Show Rachael Moore. Joe Brown and Wes- .
Tllesday night.
ley Karr. 1,330-1.363 pounds - Evan
Rachael Moore's 1,288 pound Eastman and Sarah Clifford; I,•U.S·
steer was named reserve champion. 1.4.56 pounds - Myca Haynes and
fir.;t, second and third-place win- Josh Ervin.
nenineachclass, were: 1,100-1,170

Josh Ervin and David Rankin
were named grand and reserve champion winners, respectively. in the
steer showmanship contest.
Showmanship winners were. by
division: senior' - Laura Brown and
Tiffany Savage; junior - Josh Ervin
and David Rankin; intermediate Sarah Clifford and Evan Eastman.

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- Ohio Democrats and Republicans split Tuesday
over whether President Clinton's
admission of an inappropriate relationship with Monica Lewinsky
would damage Democratic candidates in the November elections,
especially in the 6th Congressional
District.
Rep. Ted Strickland. D-Ohio. and
Ohio Democratic Party Chairman
David Leland said the president's
personal problems won't affect
Democratic candidates.
But Republican Lt. Gov. Nancy
Hollister. who is challenging Strickland. saw an advantage.
Meanwhile, two out•iders, Washington political analysts Stuart
Rothenberg and Chart ie Cook. said
the scandal could damage Democrat•
in close races by discouraging their
voters to tum out.

Good Afternoon

All Landlords who rent property In
Middleport Village must submit an
updated list of their tenants
(full names and address)

to the
INCOME TAX ADMINISTRATOR
BY
SEPTEMBER 30. OF EACH YEAR

Today's

j

That could have a multiplier effect

Democratic chairman Leland said
that despite Clinton's peoonal trou more likely than Democrats to vote. bles, the American people strongly
But. said Strickland: " I don't support his agenda.
think (Clinton's remarks) will affect
"I don't think this will have any
the race. This race is about who is the impact on the congressional or
best candidate. I don 't feel that statewide races," he said. "He (Clin(House Speaker) Newt Gingrich will ton) made a mistake. he admitted he
take her (Hollister) do.)Vnor that Bill made a private. a personal mistake. I
Clinton will take me dOwn."
think this is also about Ken Starr
Strickland said Clinton's televised spending $40 m~lion and his se~­
speech Monday evening evoked a police squeezing out the best politirange of emotions.
cal advantage he can."
"I feel frustrated. sad, connicted,
Ohio Republicans disagreed.
angry and disappointed." Strickland
Hollister said she expects even
said. "It just seems tragic to me that more damaging revelations about
this incredible man with his tremen- the president 's conduct.
dous skills and intelle~t ... that some"I share Americans· weariness
thing like this would be allowed to and disdain in regard to this issue. yet
interfere with his leadership uf the I believe we have only seen the tip of
·country.
the iceberg," Hollister said in a writ"Sadly, I think for a period of ten statement Tuesday.
time, this will lessen his ability to
Clinton has ~ategorically denied
promote important policy issues in
Congress. I don't know if the presi- from the beginning of the inquiry that
dent can rebuild his standing arid the he "ask(ed) anyone to lie. to hide or
trust that will enable him to be a destroy evidence, or to take any other unlawful action."
strong leader."
because Republicans traditionally are

Meigs County Fair

Sentinel

l Sections • ll Pqes
Ce!mder

Qmll!eds
Comics
f.d!tor!a!s

1m'
Sporla

Wnfhrr

WEDNESDAY, AUG.19
Sponsor of the Day: Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling
Sponsor of a Day at the Circus: Big Bend Foodland
Children 12 and under ride free with S4 gate admission
2 p.m. - 4-H Style Revue- Hill Stage
4 p.m. - Karaoke to 8 p.m. - Hill Stage
6 p.m. - Junior Fair Swine Show- Show Arena
6:30 p.m. - Truck and Tractor Pulls - Pull Arena
II p.m. - Gates close

8
lf.IO
11

2
3
5
3

THURSDAY, AUG. 20
Senior Citizens Day
Sponsor of the Day: Vaughan's IGA
All senior citizens admitted free all day Iage 60 and over)
7 Lm. -Gates open
· 9 Lm. - Junior Fair Dairy Show -Show Arena
: II Lm. ~ Quick Bread Contest - Hill Stage
Noon - Open Class Dairy Show - Sbow Arena
12:30 p.m.- Flower Show Jud&amp;ing- Senior Fair Buildina
· I p.m. - Harness !'ICing
2 p.m. - Swingin' Seniors - Hill S~a~~e

Lotteries

Village Income Tax Administrator
P.O. BOX 106
Middleport, Ohio 45760.0106
or 740-992-2827

charge of the pull ot champiand the dally pulls. The
show arena has received a
fecellft In the form of new pelnt
and lighting for this yser's fair.

on•

Clinton saga could play to Hollister's
advantage in race against Strickland

and ynu just dnn 't notice that.
Mary Lou and Eugene were
marking their 40th wedding anniversary Monday and thought the fair
would be a good place to cclehrate.
They made their way about the
grounds in small motorized carts
and didn't miss a Irick.

An apology 1&lt;• Buddy Ervin, fair \ . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
· - - - - - - -.•.

vassar namedCollege of the Year

•l

auto crash in 1991, is rated one of the
all-time greais among American
jockeys.

S1ngl e Copy- 35 Cents

Personnel matters win -It's a busy place__,
ESC Board's approval

ORAND CHAMPION STEER - Evan Eat·
llllfl'l1,383 pouncllflllrwan tr'fiCI chlmplon
t - . In the Junler Fair Mlr'ut S11ar Show

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW •• Peggy Crane took reserve
beat of ahow with her "Franklin Park Conservatory' arrangement
featuring foliage and other plant material In creative mass

Indians turn
tables
o~
Devil Rays
PageS

•

·~

JUNIOR BEST OF SHOW - Becky Taylor won btiat of show
with her arrangement In "Soap Box Derby. • Wire meshing used to
create a race track effect wu used with sunflowers.

Sports

·01110

. ftdl3: 8-1-3; Pldl4: 5-5-2-7
~5: 2-6-14-16-17

lY.YA.

• 01113: 8-3--6; Dilly': 1-6-1-1
0 1911 Ollio v.u., .. Co.

. ..

••

• \0 .

,. .....'

-~

••

.i

•

�VVednesday,August19,1998

Com menta~

Page2

_Thursday, Aug. 20

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The specter of fanatical Moslem
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
terrorists seeking one-way tickets to
614-992-2156 ·Fax 992·2157
paradise tlirough suicidal attacks on
Western infidels has been burned
into the American consciousness -. but there are not as many of them as
Americans may fear.
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Since America first became !he
. victim of suicidal Middle Eastern
ROBERT L WINGETT
bombers 15 years ago, an erroneous
Publisher
public impression has been fostered
, !hat there are thousands of men will. ing to die to blow up American inno- ·
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
cents.
General Manager
Controller
President Ronald Reagan publicly said he thought Iran had trained
at least a thousand of these potential
n. Statl.d wekomn ,.,.,.. to 1M eflltor trom ,...,. 01• • lltNd ,.,.. oltopla.
Shott- (300 - " ' ,_,,,... 111e beot.,_ ol lMinfl pcr6Mrfwl. l'yPtd 111- martyrs·
Mdlllmq be odlfod. &amp;cJr lhould lncl"* r rlf/IYIIn,-.,
But several U.S. intelligence
Md ~ , _ ,..,,_, Specify • .,..., lilere'r • - - *' •-- 11111&lt;1o · •. sources tell our associate Dale Van
01 · tr:: l.rfflfW to llle EdHor, Tltr S...Unr4 111 C&lt;&gt;ulf St, Pomrroy, Olll&lt;o • Alta that such martyrs probably only
~~~~~;~~~~~-~~·~~~·~~~~~~~~·~--------------------~~---,• number in the dozens.

'Estahflrlid in 1948

Whispers, accusations
mark Clinton's career

It is presumed. at a minimum,

that three such "martyrs" drove the
trucks whose explosions killed more
than 250 people in the twin bombing

attacks at the U.S.
embassies
in
Kenya and Tanzania.
"But we don't
know yet for sure
!hat these indi viduals believed they
were going to die
in the aHal;k,"
explained one koy
Moller &amp;
CIA
analyst. Anderson
"They might have been told !here
was a possibility they could park the
vehicles and tben remote-detonate
!hem from a safe distance."
Terrorist groups themselves have
done their best to encourage the
image of suicidal children of Allah
eager to die for the cause of Islamic
revolution, Palestinian nationhood
or the like. "We are the soldiers of
God and we crave death! " was the
ringing boast of the Islamic Jihad
after one murderous auack.
Without minimizing the obviously ghastly damage that even a single
dedicated fanatic can wreak if he's

willing to trade his own life for ihose
of the enemy, we suggest 'that the
real problem is the determinedly
non-suicidal terrorist leaders who
dispatch such peons.
Consider the opening salvo in
another deadly round of anti-American terrorism: In April, 1983, an
explosives-laden van crashed
into !he U.S. Embassy in Bein•i,
killing 17 Americans. According to
investigators' reconstruction of the
incident, the driver of the van was
blown to bits - but not voluntarily.
Long after the incident, the CIA
secretly concluded he had been told
he'd have time to jump out of the
van before its deadly cargo was detonated by remote control.
Six months later. two devastating
truck-bomb explosions at the Beirut
airport killed 241 U.S. Marines and
58 French paratroopers.
Intelligence repons reveal that
both kamikaze drivers had met the
night before with a Lebanese Shiite
leader. who blessed them and
assured them that if they were killed

SPIN...

rBy NANCY BENAC
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Before Monica Lewinsky, there was Paula
Jones. And before Paula Jones. there was Gcnnifer Flowers. Scattered in
between, a string of lesser-known names and Jane .Does.
Almost as long as he has been in politics, Bill Clinton has been surrounded by winks, whispers and accusations about alleged sexual encounters

with women .

They are the background noise to his presidency. And, lately, the head·
lines.
Some of his accusers came forward reluctantly ; others were quick to cash
in with the tabloids . Whatever the merits of each woman 's accusations, Clinton and his presidency have been scarred .
"h's something that people will inevotably remember about him," said
presidential historian Leo Ribuffo, a professor at George Washington Uni·
versity. "lbe major sex scandal of the American presidency."
Today, it came down to this: A federal grand jury listened as the president
of the United States is questioned about whether he lied and obstructed justice in trying to cover up an alleged affair with a young White House intern.
Clinton has said he never had sexual relations with "lh~t woman," Ms.
Lewinsky.
Most Americans do not believe him . polls show.
His credibility, al least on this issue, has been damaged by the long string
of accusations.
"The first thing many people learned about Bill Clinton probably had to
ctn with l1PnnifP.r F'lowprc; no t hi~ P:conomic recovery package," said pollster Andy Kohut of the Pel'i Research Center. "II cenainly makes h1m more
suspect."
Presidential historian Roben Dallek predicted Clinton could well be
remembered to years her.ce as "a skin-chaser who was very smart and very
effective in some ways but also undermined his standing by the charges of
moral inconstancy."
"He could've had a much more lasting effect on our political understanding of the world if his _presid~nc~ ":'asn;t clou4edJ :· s~d J~ffre~ Goldfarb. a professor of sociology at the New SchOol for Soctal Research m New
York . " Because of all the scandals that are constantly surrounding him, we
haven't been able 10 hear his clear voice."
Questions about Clinton's sexual behavior date to his earliest political
campaigns. By 1992. his own aides had coined a phrase for the women coming forward: bimbo eruptions. By 1993, "Troopergate" became shonhand
for the stale troopers who claimed 10 ha~e helped arrange liaisons with
women for Clinton as Arkansas governor. Clinton repudiated their stories.
For all of that, the truth about many of the allegations against Clinton
may never be known.
·
After all the depositions, all the video footage, all the books, it remains
his words against hers in many cases.

Clinton did admit in a depos ition earlier this year thai he had sexual relations...:.. just once- in t977 with Ms. Flowers.
Ms. Fl owers. for her pari . said il was a 12-ycar affair. and laid out salacious detail s in books. on TV, even in Penthouse magazine. In 1992, she
released secretly taped tel ephone conversations with Clinton in which they
talked about the alleged affair and he told her. " If everybody's on record
denying it , you got no problem ...
Six years later, there arc echoes.
Pentagon employee Londa Tripp says Ms. Lewinsky confided she was
having an affair with the president and "that she was going to deny everything. that President Clinton would deny everything.'' Mrs. Tripp, too, has
tapes.
Two weeks ago, Ms. Lewinsky reversed herself and told the grand jury
that she did have a sexual relationship w11h Clinton, according to legal
sources.

The facts about Clinton's other alleged sexual encounters are no less
murky.
One-time While House volunteer Kathleen Willey used the political theater of CBS ' "60 Minuies"laso March to tell Americans that the president
made an unwelcome sexual advance when she went to the Oval Office in
1993 to talk 10 him about gelling a permanent job.
" It did not happen," Clinton testified in his deposition 10 Jones' lawyers
last January.
Clinton himself had gone on "60 Minutes" with his wife. Hillary, in 1992
when Ms. Flowers' accusati ons threatened to derail his presidential campaign. He acknowledged . "causing pain in ~Y marriage. ... I, think .mo~~
Americans who are watchong thos tonoghl, they II know what we re sayong.
Like the Willey accusations, much information about Clinton's alleged
affairs came out as a result of Paula Jones' sexual harassment lawsuit,
thrown out this summer.

Taxpayer upset

in !he attacks they would go to heaven.
But French intelligence reports,·
later shared with the CIA
added some fascinating information. Though the two drivers were
radical Shiite fanatics, their burning
religious passion was fueled by cold
cash: Each was promised $100,000
for the dangerous mission.
And each was told he 'd have several minutes to flee from his truck
before it exploded. Did they opt for
paradise over worldly wealth, or
were they double-crossed?
The next Shiite strike was a series
of simultaneous bombings on
Kuwait against U.S., French and
Kuwaiti targets in December 1983 .
Seven of the eight vehicle explosions were detonated either by
remote control or a liming device -hardly the mark of a kamikaze. And
the only terrorist who died needn't
have. He accidentally or deliberately
failed to use the safety fuse that
would have allowed him 10 escape;
his bomb exploded on impact.
What all this boils down lo is
this: For all their leaders· encouragement of self-immolation for the
cause, lillie over a dozen Muslim
terrorists appear to have died in
auacks on Western targets. And only
in a few of those cases docs it now
appear thai the suicides were intentional. Each terrorist may well have
thought he could gel away with it.
Though it is unlikely we will
know any time soon, this may also
been the case with the cast Arrica
bombings. It would not be a surprise
if turns out that the bombers were
persuaded they could get clear of the
bombs before they went off. Nor
would it be a surprise, for instance,
to learn that the primary suspect,
ultra-rich renegade Saudi businessmen Osama Bin Laden, had
promised them $100,000-plus each,
and/or their families, if they carried
oullhis "holy" mission.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moiler
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Reviewing the laws of etiquette
TONY SNOW
Creators Syndicate
The weather is still hot, and
Americans are pouring outdoors in
hopes of sweating off megapounds.
This makes it a good time to review .
the laws of etiquette governing the
footpath, of democracy known as the
jogging trail:
-- Never underdress.
Summer sports hurl offic.. blobs
into a kind of physical intimacy
they aren't used to. Out on the path,
most folks don ' 1 wear much in the
way of clothes. This can prove
embarrassing , since tank tops and
shons tell no lies. The Summertime
Exposed Flesh Factor ens ure~ that
people around you will not behave
naturally, and neither will you.
An appalling number of Americans seem to regllrd jogging as a
form of pornography or performance art. This is especially true of
lard bodies who wriggle into revealing, skintight logs. Nobody wants to
see Jabba the Hull or Roseanne
Arnold waddling toward fitness in a
clingy running singlet -- even if the
sight can provoke immediate. vigor"
ous and possibly permanent weight
loss.
Only bona fide jocks have the
aesthetic right to wear skimpy outfits . All others should don gear
befitting their proper places in the
hard-body hierarchy. I have decided, for instance, on an ensemble that
features black socks, a pocket liner

and a bike helmet.
-- Don't
stare.
There is
nothing rarer on
a jogging trai I
than actual eye
contact. People
gaze carefully at
every ripple of
the
anatomical
Snow
landscape but the
eyes. Nevertheless , men should not
gawk at sun-bronzed women in hal ter tops or other scanty garb. Such
behavior is tack.y and lecherous, not
to mention dangerous in the presence of fathers, husbands ,
boy(riends and Janet Reno.
II is politically and socially unacceptable for males to act like Humbert Humbert-- unless they're presidem.
-- Prepare for humiliation.
Only one person can be the
fastest on the trail, and chances are,
you aren 't the one. Several days
ago, as Washington temperatures hit
the 90s, I hobbled along a Potomac
River path. I tried a1 one point to
keep pace with a pert woman who
weighed as much as my shoe. But
after a short sprint. she breezed by - carrying a backpack bearing the
equivalent of about eight Manhattan
phone books.
"Isn't this heat just terrible?'"
she chirped cheerfully as she

passed. "It's soooo hard to run 1"
"Wheeee. Whuuuuhnn. Yuuuuuhhhhhn," I wheezed.
"Oh, I know!. Well, good
luck!!'"
-- Drink.
Develop a fluids strategy. Build a
course around strategically placed
water fountains, lakes, water puddies, fire hydrants, whatever. Bury
special brews in secret underground
hiding places if necessary. Avoid
indoor ambrosia hunts.
llearncd this lesson several years
ago. after running a ridiculous number of miles training for a marathon.·
I struggled into a carry-out deli to
buy a couple of desperately needed
spons drinks. As I stood in line, a
child at a nearby table shouted:
"Eeecyeccwwwwwww 1!! "
His mother leaned close and said
in a stage whisper: "Now. be nice,
dear. I'm sure the slinky man will
leave as soon as he gets what he
wants ."
-- Don 't believe the magazines.
Samuel Johnson described second marriages as the triumph of
hope over experience. The same can
be said of jogging. Runners' publications all promote huffing and
chuffing as a cure for everything
from bad sex to cancer. They claim
that a grueling regimen will trigger
special glands, which release gallons of endorphins, compounds that
make you giddy.
This whopper reminds me of the

time I told my kid brother that he
could make dice out of street tar if
he just squeezed the stuff in his
hand and stuck the goo in his shirt
pocket. Only suckers believe it. I
have run as much as 90 miles per
week without once experiencing an
encounter with the goddess of
sprinter's euphoria.
Do not feign a beatific smile
when lactic acid drains into your
muscles or your knees feel il.&lt; if they
were made of wood chips. Otherwise, people will wonder: Did this
person inhale .. nr has his (or her)
brain gone into oxygen debt?
-- Be nice .
Many people cop attitudes when
they ' rc pounding the footpath. They
sneer or stare blankly ahead, like ax
murderers . These stone-faced individuals exude the charm of a hemorrhoid, and like the annoying boil,
they make you wince . It is proper
form to annoy these folks with
hearty greetings and salutes.
-- Consider alternatives.
Running is a great way to lose
weight -- and your mind . So if the
pressures and annoyances of the
trail gel too intense. do the sensible
thing .
Take up bowling.
Write Tony Snow, Creators
Syndicate, 5'177 West Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045.

Creation of IBL a shot across NCAA's bow

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
letes like indenGannett Newa Service
lured servants?
BALTIMORE - This could be
If you think
the end of college basketball as we getting a college
know il.
degree os the
A new professional basketball answer, you' re
league - one that will focus on wrong.
recruiting college-age players Only 44 perwill begin operations in at least cent of the coleight cities next year.
lege basketball
The announcement was made players
who
Tuesday in Baltimore, headquarters entered Division
Wickham
Dear Editor,
.
_ f()r_the upstart International Basket- I schools between
1 would like to speak out as a work ing taxpayer here in Meogs County. I ball League.
· -1987 and 1990 had
just can't believe our commissioners would sit back and say "y.es" to any
The league will be an alternative earned a degree within six years
new tax at this time. In the past year we have seen people runilong around for players " who can 't make it from the schools that recruited
our county looking and taking pride in what they do, yes, raising mine and through the NCAA system, or who them.
your proper!)' taxes -- .and some say the biggest property lax increase in need lo go to work," said Art CipriThe truth is, most youngsters
Meigs County history -- and our comm ossooners want more.
ani . the IBL's chief executive offi- who play college basketball don't
Where are the hardtop roadS' Where is the county water? Where are the cer.
graduate. And precious few go on to
jobs' ll's key 10 a beller tax base if we have county water everywhere and
It will be a lot more than that.
play in the NBA.
•ood roads and why is it so hard to get Jobs on Meogs Coupty? We look ~oulh
If predictions of starting players
The IBL will offer players
~nd see growth and new busi nesses. We look north and see the same. One earning salaries in the low six-fig. money for college so they ·can purwould wonder, do our elected officials in Pomeroy want Meigs County to ure range hold up, the new league sue a degree at the team's expense.
have jobs' It looks as 1f no one elected into office can land one industry into will quickly replace college basketNCAA rilles place severe restricour county. I would think as grown up adults in the county seat you could ball as the feeder system for the tions Oil the money college athletes
work together for businesses and jobs for our county to bOost our tax base National Basketball Association.
can earn while in ·school.
instead of asking our out-of-work and low-income people to pay !he way for
Why should talented kids comVirtually all-the profits generated
more tax and spend in Pomeroy. our county seat. One would think elected ing out of high school play college by NCAA basketball go to "the
officials could do a bener job than that. Maybe you should start looking for basketball for free when tbey can schools and the coaches.
work come election day.
earn $100,000 a year or more hon· Colleges rake in tnillions annualF1oyd H. Oeland ing their skills in the IBL?
ly from ticket sales, broadcast cod'Rutland
Why subject themselves to \be'· tracts and the sale of athletic apparNational Collegiate Athletic Associ- ·el made' popular by its teams.
.
ation 's rules that treat student athCoaches gel lucrativ9 endorse-

Letters to the editor

cltation Issued In two-vehicle crash

AceuWeathe,.

Daily Sentinel 'Suicide terrorists are fewer than believed

- .. ,.,.nwd
.
...

-Local News in Brief:-

Ohio weather

Wednesday, August 19, 1998

j

Th~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ment deals with sporiing goods
companies.
The players who make this all
possible usually get a few years of
tuition-free college - but not a
degree - and few pairs of sneakers.
For many of the best players
coming out of high school , the
chance of playing for pay in the IBL
cities- Albuquerque, N.M. ; Baltimore, Cincinnati, Jacksonville, Aa. ;
Las Vegas, Richmond , Va.; San
Diego and Tampa - will prove to
be a irreSistible alternative to ~ollege basketball.
With eight teams (possibly as
many as 12) when it begins play
next year, the IBL won 't draw
enough players away from the
NCAA to shut it down, but it will
likely siphon off !"'UCh of the best
high school talent.
If that hap"pcns it won't be long
before the NCAA becomes a minor
league of the IBL.
To prevent such a ruinous turn of
events, the NCAA must undergo a
sweeping change.
It must find a way to compensate
athletes who play the intercollegiate
sports that generate huge profits for
its member schools.
·
· And it has to do something 10
$harply raise their graduation rate.
If it doesn 't, it will lose it5 cash

,,

•

cow.
Creation of the IBL is a warning
shot across !he NCAA's bow. College basketball coaches who earn
'hundreds of thousands a year will
find it hard to persuade youngsters
to play for free when the IBL offers
a hefty salary.
Under the current systetn, only
the small number of college athletes
who go on to a professional sports
career reap financial benefit from
their play.
The great majority of them arc
asked to seule for a pittance of the
money their play produces.
One way or another, this soon
will change.
If the IBL succeeds, it will bo
followed by a football league of
similar appeal to youngsters coming
out of high school.
If the IBL flounders, the idea
behind it is so appealing another
such enterprise surely will Hike its
place.
The NCAA can blunt the impact
of the IBL's creation by ending its
niggardly treatment of student athletes.
Or it can do nothing and be
swept asunder by the change this
new league
force upon il. .

will

Minor damage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident on West Main
Street Tuesday afternoon.
According to Pomeroy Police, Lee lane of Racine. traveling east on West
Main, was stopped in traffic preparing to make a left hand tum when her vehicle was hit'by a truck driven by Kenny Klein, Pomeroy.
There was light damage to both the rear of the Lane car and the front end
of truck driven by Klein. He was cited for assured clear distance. There were
no injuries. A third vehicle involved in !he accident left the scene, police
reported.

MICI-J.

[_ ...............................
Menefleld f53°/83°
________________ ,!

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•

Middleport details July financial report

!

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Bryan Swann, Middleport Village clerk. has released his financial repon
for the month of July.
Month's end balances were reponed as follows :· general fund, $107,620.04:
street, 49,785.04; mini golf course, 806.62; law enforcement, 324.60; fire
equipment, 6.272.97; fire truck. 24.329.89; COPS FAST grant (232.66): economic development. 37,825.72; public transportation. (19.880.76); Law Block
Grant, 3,562.62; Refuse, 57,173; Diaster Relief Grant, 187.00; water debt
service, 104,941.17; sewer debt service, 80.574.85 ; water tank, 15,000.00;
water system, 94,805.61 ; sewer system, 56, 119.93; recreation, 1.578.69;
cemetery, (366.88); meter deposits, 36,479.20.
Figures in parentheses represent deficit balances.

.. . . .. .1....... ···· ····-··-·····-~
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Middleport firefighters log July calls

KY.

ill 1998 AccuWeall1er, Inc.

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Flurries

Middleport Fire Chief David Hoffman recently announced !hat the department answered II calls for assistance during the month of July.
Among the calls were a service run, two structure fires, three calls for
mutual aid to other departments, three calls for hazardous conditions. and
one rescue run.

BEF reports 36o/o earnings
High pressure offers break increase during first quarter
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans said Daniel E. Evans, chairman of the
from dog days of August
Farms Inc. announced a 36 percent board and chief executive officer.

By The Associated Preas
You can tum off the air conditioners for awhile.
The National Weather Service is predicting cooler temperatures with lower humidity in Ohio tonight and Thursday.
· If fact, a blanket might be called for tonight as !he mercury dips into the
50s. and possibly the 40s in the northeast.
Highs on Thursday will be mostly in the 70s.
The credit for all of this goes to a high pressure center that is moving into
the area from Canada. It will slide slowly 10 the east of Ohio on Thursday.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 101 degrees in 1936 while the record low was 48 in 1943. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:24 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:48 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Ciear. Lows in the lower and mid 50s. Light and variable wind.
Thursday ... Sunny. Highs in the mid and upper 80s.
Thursday night...Ciear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs 85 to 90.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s and highs in the upper 80s.
Sunday ...Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s and highs in the mid 80s.

increase in earnings per share for its
first fiscal quarter, ended July 24.
The results reflected strong volume growth and favorable raw material costs in the company's food producl~ segment. and continued positive
momentum in the restaurant segment's same-store sales.
Total sales for the 13-week period ended July 24 were $240.3 million, up 8 percent from $222 million
a year ago. Net income, which benefited from improved profitability on
both sides of the business, increased
36 percent to $14.1 million, or 34
cents per share (basic and diluted),
from $10.4 million, or 25 cents per
share. in the corresponding period
last year.
In the restaurant segment. samestore sales increao;ed for the seventh
consecutive quarter, rising 5.6 percent from a year ago. A new season(Continued from Page 1)
employment of a part-lime secretary, al menu featuring the company's
Casey, preschool teacher; Lynn if nee4ed. for the Athens and Meigs "Wildfire" barbecue product line
Dellefield, elementary multi-handi- offices.
contributed to !he sales gains, particThe board also chang~d Kim ularly at dinner time.
capped teacher: Tammy Reed, high
school severe behavior handicapped Christensen from part-lime employOverall, restaurant sales were up
teacher assistant; Janel Morgan. ment to full-time employment as 9 percent for the quarter, which conpreschool teacher assistant ; and preschOol teacher.
tributed to a 13 percent increase in
Present were Superintendent John operating profits.
Shirley Cornett. high· school multiCostanzo, Treasurer Carole Gilkey,
·handicapped teacher assistant.
"We are pleased with the continIn other personnel matters, the Board President John Depoy, Vice ued strength in our restaurant sales,"
board approved an unpaid leave of President Jeff Harris, board members
absence for Gary Cummins, SBH Jessie Barnhart, Robert Barton,
. teacher assistant. for the first semes- Howard Caldwell, Phyllis Knowlton,
ter of the 1998-99 school year. and 1.0. McCoy. R. Rex Robinson, Sheila
approved employment of Denise 'Fheiss a!'d Jeaneue Thomas.
The governing board will meet
Rowe as part-lime secretary for the
· . Athens and Meigs offices on an as- next on Thursday, Sept. I 0, 7 p.m. at
WASHINGTON (AP)- Seeking
needed basis at the discretion of the the Athens office at 507 Richland responses from their star witness to
President Clinton's testimony. pros· superintendent, and to approve Ave., Suite I09.
ecutors have recalled Monica Lewinsky for a second grand jury appearance that could help shape any
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio-lndiU.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 30.00- .
Announcements
ana direct hog prices at selected buy- 32.50; 210-230 lbs. 26.00-30.00.
ing point&lt; Wednesday as provided by
Sows: mostly steady.
Reunion announced
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
U.S . 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 18.00The annual Weaver reunion will
Markel News:
20.00; 500-600 lbs. 19.00-22.00, few be held Sunday at the home of Marcus Weaver, Sassafra~ Road. Letart,
Barrows and gills: mostly 50 cents over 600 lbs 23.00-25.00.
lower; demand light to moderate on
Boars: over 300 lbs. 13.00-15.00; W.Va. Picnic lunch will be held al
a moderate movement.
under 300 lbs. 17.00-20.00.
12:30 p.m. Those allending are to
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
Estimated receipts: 35,000.
lake lawn chairs. For more informapoints 32.50-34.00, few 32.00 and
Prices from Producers Live- tion call 882-2983.
34.50; plants 34.00-35.50.
stock Association:
,---.---'--'-----~--.. · ' · Wednesday's trends:
Special service set
Jim Blair and the Southern
Hogs so cents lower; sows steady;
Gospelaires will be at the Reedsville
' cattle steady.
(USPS 113·9601
Summary of Tuesday's auctions United Methodist Church. 9:30a.m.
CommuoHy Newspaper Holdlop,loc.
' at Caldwell, Eaton, Farmerstown,
Sunday, Aug. 30. Potluck dinner to
Published every afternoon, Monday iltrough
Lancaster and Wapakoneta:
follow.
friday, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
H
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Second clus
ogs:
00 I" h
• postag&lt; paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Market hogs: 29.85-37. ; og I OAPSE to meet
Member: The A.ssociatcd P= aml the Ohio i sows 12.00-23.10; heavy sows 20.00The Meigs Local OAPSE 17 has
. NeMpaper Association.
'
OO
changed
the contract ratification
Postmaster: Send acklress conccclons to The
27· ·
Daily Sen&lt;inel. 111 Cou" S1 .. Pomeroy, Ohio
Feeder pigs: 31.00 head and meeting to Monday at 6 p.m. at
45769.
down; 27.00 cwl. and down .
Meigs High School.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Roole
All boars I0.00-21.00.

·P ersonnel matters win

"While the performance of our new
Wildfire branded products has
exceeded our expectations, sales at
breakfast and lunch remained strong.
primarily as a result of our ongoing
focus on providing high-quality products and excellent customer service:·
On the food products side of the
business, volume from comparable
products, principally sausage. wa&lt; up
I0 percent from a year ago. Th~
unusually large increase retlected a
contribution of strong sales of BEF"s
repositioned line of summer grilling
sausages, including new packaging;
increased promotional activity; and
reduced wholesale and retail prices
for the company's sausage products.
With hog costs significantly lower - $32 per hundredweight compared with $51 - the segment's
operating profits were more than four
times the year-ago level. on a 6 percent sales increase.
"While all sausage producers are
benefiting from current market conditions, we believe our high quality
products, promotional programs and
the repositioning of our grilling
sausages have increased our market
share, which should help us in the
quarters to come," E.vans said.

JUNIOR GYMKHANA - Stephanie Story was named grand
champion In junior gymkhana competition at the Meigs County
4-H Horse Show Monday. She Ia shown here with 1998 Horse
Princess Sandy Smith, right.

NOVICE GYMKHANA - Angela Wilson was named grand
champion In novice gymkhana competition at the Meigs County
4-H Horse Show Monday morning. She Is shown here with 1998
Horse Princess Sandy Smith, right.

Prosecutors will recall
Lewinsky to grand jury

·Today's livestock report

. The 'Daily Sentinel I

Hospital news

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Am Ele Power ...................... 44'1.
Akzo ......................................46~.
AmrTech ..............................48"!.
Ashland 011 ...........................54Y.
AT &amp;T....................................56"1.
Bank One .............................47%.
Bob Evans ............................ 20'4
Borg-Wamer .........................44'4
Broughton ............................... 17
Champion ............................... 11
Cherm Shps .......................... 4"1.
City Holding ............................40
Federal Mogul .................-...... 63~
Gannett ................................. 63:0
GoodyMr .............................. 54'1.
Kmart ...................................17"1.
Kroger ...................................48,,
Landa End ............................. 24~
Ltd ........................................26"1.
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................18'1.
OVB .........................................40
One Valley ...........................33 "1.
Peoples .................................. 28
Prem Flnl ............................... 19'4
Rockwell ............................... 37'!.
RDJShell ................................47'!.
Sears .....................................53'4
Shoney'a ................................ 3'1.
Star Bsnk.............................87"1.
Wandv'e ...............................21 "!.
Wosrthlngton ........................13'.1

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 18 - Dawn
Myers, Crystal Jewell, Bessie Supple,
Monna Downard, Karen Jones. Carroll Burnelle, Norma Beaver, Earl
Slavens, Edith Hubbard.
Birth - Mr. and M". Jamie
Adamson. twin son and daughter.
Ravenswood. W.Va.
(Published with permission)

impeachment report to Congress.
Ms. Lewinsky was asked to
appear on Thursday. three days after
President Clinton's dramatic televised admission that the two had an
inappropriate relationship.
With the president and his family
on vacation in Massachusetts, the
political repercussions continued over
Clinton's confession. Hillary Rodham Clinton issued a statement that
she " believes in this marriage," and
a torrent of statements poured out
from Capitol Hill.
Several Democrats expressed disappointment thai Clinton misled !he
nation. a few Republicans - Majority Whip Tom DeLay among !hem demanded the president's resignation.
and some members of both parties
adopted a wait-and-see attitude.

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded three
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
respo~ding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:05 p.m .. Leading Creek Road,
Middleport. Robbie Clonch, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
5:15 p.m .. Pearl Street. Latonia
Thomas, VMH .
POMEROY
7:05 p.m.. Spring Avenue. Joseph
Connolly, VMH, Racine squad assisted.

PRODUCTION DIVISION - Sandy Smith was named grand
champion In the 1998 Meigs County 4-H Horse Show in the production division. See additional photos on Page 8.

REMINDER
LANDLORD IN THE
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
All Landlords who rent property in
Middleport Village must submit an
updated list of their tenants
(full names and address)

to the ·
INCOME TAX ADMINISTRATOR
BY
SEPTEMBER'30 OF EACH YEAR .
Village Income Tax Administrator

P.O. BOX 106

-·-·-

Middleport, Ohio 45760-0106
, .. ,. or-74()..992.;2827

Other Servlcea
:
Stock reports are lht 10:30
· · ~ .................._ ........... &amp;!- 1114 j a.m. quotH provided by Adveet

I

--- - -"--·-------. - -------'-~-r--1---.. .. -

Omololloll .................................&amp;t- Ull

!

of Gelllpolla.

eto.illedAtk ............................. .E,IL 1100 I ~~=========·

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Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohlo===----------W_ed
...nesd..,...~a-::y~,::A::ug::u::s::t::19=,=1998=·

Sports

The Daily Sent~~\
VVednesday,August19,1998

Gooden's finesse pitching helps Tribe beat Devi·l Rays 4-2

1

.....
RESERVE CHAMPION- Kristina Kennedy won grand cham-

FIRST IN SHOWMANSHIP- Kelly Dalton won gnind champion marUIIhowmlln honora at Monday's Junior Fair Sheep Show.
She Ia with, from left, Wool Prince Eric Montgomery, Fair
King Chrlatopher Parker, Fair QIMifl Julie Spaun and Wool
Princess Theresa Baker.

pion wether and reaarve champion market lamb at the Melga
COunty Junior Fair Sheep Show. Alao pictured, from left, are Wool
Prince Eric Montgomery, Princen Theraea Baker, Fair King
Christopher Parker and Fair QIMifl Julie Spaun.

~~Baker.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Kelly Dalton and her ewe market
lamb and Kristina Kennedy and her
wether market lamb took grand and
reserve champion market lamb hon·
ors, respectively, ,at this year's Meigs
County Junior Fair Sheep Show,
held Monday evening.
The shOw was judged by Kurt
Johnson of Columbus.
Dalton also earned grand cham pi·
on market showman and grand cham·
pion ewe honors for her 129-pound
lamb, and Kennedy grand champion
wether honors with a 112-pound
lamb.
Shannon Enright was named
reserve champion showman. Meghan
Haynes earned honors for reserve
champion ewe, showing a 121-pound
animal, and Holley Williams reserve
champion wether, with a lamb weigh·
ing I07 pounds.
Placing first and second in showmanship, by class and in order, were:
Seniors, Dalton and Billee Pooler;
Juniors. Enright and Mendy Guess:
Intermediate, Haynes and Brook
Bolin: and Beginner, Williams and
Bradley Smith.
Judging results for ewe market
lambs, by class and in descending
order were: Ewes 83-100 pounds:
Kacy Ervin, Melody Lawrence,
Shawna Davis, TJ Moore. Alan
Moore and Aaron Yost : Ewes. 101 ·
106 pound~ : Erin Harris, Jessica Oil·
ion. Brook Bolin. Holly Davis, Sta·
cy Wilson. Cinda Bratton and Sarah
Yost: Ewes 107-111 pounds: Abbie
Chevalier. Mendy Guess. Theresa
Baker. Holley Williams: Ashley
Hager, Bradley Smith and Matthew
O'Brien : Ewes 112-118 pounds :
Jamie Drake, Chelsea Young, Shan·
non Enright, Macyn Ervin. Joshua

The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts LarRESERVE CHAMPION WETHER -This 125-pound wether,
ry Spencer:
.
belonging to Holley Williams, took raaerva champion at Monday's
Dissolutions a&lt;ked - Lee E.
ahaep ahow. Atao pictured are Wool Prince Eric Montgomery,
Burnem, Gallipolis, and Eva R.
Wool Princess Theresa Baker, and Fair King ancl,Queen ChriatoBume1J1, Vinton. Aug. 17 ; Mary Ann
pher Perker and Julia Spaun.
Myers, Athens. and Thomas A.
Myers, Langsville. Aug. 14; Todd
- William Hysell. Pomuoy, and Kim·
berly Lee Hysell, Shade, Aug. 13;
The following couples were is.•ued marriage licenses recently in the Meigs Rose D. Fife. Reedsville, and David
County Probate Court of Judge Robert Buck:
A. Fife, Middleport, Aug. 10.
James Terrance Caldwell. 30. and Christina Lynn Cummins, 22. both of
Divorces asked - Christina D.
Racine: Ralph Arnold Topping. 82. Pomeroy, and Florence Taylor Cozart, Grady from Richard GIDdy, Long
67 Middleport: Paul Eugene Harris, 67, Racine, and Lillian Oretha Gibbs, Bottom, Aug. II : Kathy Ritchie,
67: Letart. W.Va.: Jonathan Dean Sanders, 24, and Emily Michelle Johnso_n, Racine, from Gary Jordan, Racine,
21. both of Reedsville: D11vid Kent Ramey, 43, Shade and Teresa Lynn Dtl· ' Aug. 10.
lie. 40. Amesville.
Dissolutions granred - William
Brody Slack and Pamela L. Slack,
Aug. 17; Patricia Anne Lyons and
Roberts.
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP) Matthew James Lyons, Aug. 17; Car"Our concern is that we must olyn Kay Gillilan and Mark A.
Following up on a visit earlier this
year, the Rev. Jesse Jac:kson is return- w ain put focus on the unfinished . Gillilan, Aug. 17.
ing to Ohio and West Vi'linla to dis- t,usinesa of America's economic
Divorces granted - Kay Hemsley
and Rollie Hems.lev. A.ua. 14.
cuss the SliP between riel! and poor. 'enda." Jackson said Tuesday.
"Tflere is so much focus and ·
Jacllson W33 co disa~SS plans today
To get a current weather
obsession
on Washington llxla)',and
for • $epl. 28 rail)' ill NeiiOIIville.
Ohk!. He Jehedulo4 now~ confer· the president's challenges, the impact
report, check the
cnc:•• flere, In NtiiQnvlllt, and has been to divert attention away
Col~mbul. Ohio. ICCOI!Ipelllod by . from undenerved areas" such as ,
Unlf*l Mint Wotbn l'lwldllll Cecil Appalachia.

Jackson to return to Appalachia

•

at faIr s sheep show

Actions to end
marriages filed

Marriage licenses issued

Kevin Butcher and Becky Karr Yost were named grand and reserve cham·
pion showmen. respectively, in the Meigs County Junior Fair Poultry Show.
Monday afternoon.
Other winners in that event were, in order by da.s: senior. Yost and Ed:
Smilh; junior. Odie Karr and Melissa Houser, intermediate, Melissa Kirk an&lt;t
James Westjohn; beginner, Butcher and David Tucker.
.
In the Raising Pullets competition, grand and reserve champions were
Sarah Houser and Mike Salser. Raising Broiler grand and reserve champi·
ons were Kevin Butcher and Brad Runyon.
Winning grand and reserve champion honors for fancy poultry were Man
Salser and Sarah Houser, while Man Salser and Mike Salser won grand and
· reserve champion, respectively, in ducks, geese and turkey competition
Ed Smith and Odie Karr had the grand and reserve champion market pens.
David Adkins of Lucasville judged the event.

H0 rti c uIture judging
Dalt~~ maJor Winner conducted during fair
Julie Spaun and Wool Prlncatl

RESERVE CHAMPION EWE - Meghan Haynes won reserve
champion ewa with thla 121-pound lamb. Alao pictured are Fair
King Chriatopher Parker, Fair Queen Julie Spaun and Wool
Princess and Prince Thareaa Baker and Eric Montgomery.

POULTRY SHOWMANSHIP - Kevin Butcher end Bec:ky Karr
Yost ware named grand and rei8MI champion showmen InMonday's Malgt County Junior Fair Poultry Show. :;e. additional photos on Page 12.

Grand, reserve
champions named .
in poultry contest

GRAND CHAMPION- Kelty Dalton will top the aala bill for this
Friday with her grand champion ewe, which also took grand
champion marUIIamb honors Monday. She Ia pictured with Wool
Prince Eric Montgomery, Fair King Chriatophar Parker, Fair QIMifl

RESERVE CHAMPION SHOWMAN - Shannon Enright waa
named reiBIVB champion marUI showman. Alao pictured are
Wool Prince Eric Montgomery, Fair King Chrlatophar Parker, Fair
Quean Julie Spaun and Wool Prlncaaa Tharau Baker.

•

Williams: Derrick Bolin, and Kristi·
na Kennedy; Ewes 119·124 pounds:
Meghan Haynes, Eric Montgomery,
Whitney Karr, Kimberly Ritterbeck,
and Michelle O'Nail: Ewes 125-129
pounds. ·Kelly Dalton. Alyssa Baker,
Billee Pooler, and Brant Dixon.
Wethers 98·1 0 I pounds: Brook
Bolin, Theresa Baker, Michelle
O'Nail, S!ephanie Wilson and TJ
Moore; Wethers. 104-108 pbunds:
Shawna Davis, Erin Harris, Shannon
Enright, Melody Lawrence, Chelsea
Young. Derrick Bolin. and Stacy
Wilson; Wethers 109· 112 pounds:
Kristina Kennedy, Alyssa Baker.
Whitney Karr, Mendy Guess. Holly
Davis, Sarah Yost, and Aaron Yost;
Wethers 115·122 pounds: Jamie
Drake. Abbie Chevalier, Cinda Brat·
ton, Matthew O'Brien and Alan
Moore; Wethers 123-128 pounds:
Holley Williams. Eric Montgomery,
Bradley Smith, Billee Pooler, Jessi·
ca Dillon, Kacy Ervin and Macyn
Ervin: Wethers 130-135 pound&lt;: Kel·
ly Dalton, Meghan Haynes, Kimber·
ly Rittertleck, Brant Dixon and Ash·
ley Hager.
Ashley Hager was named grand
champion breeding sheep showman
and Holley Williams reserve cham·
pion. Michelle O'Nail placed first in
the junior class. Hager first and
Theresa Baker second in the inter·
mediate cla&lt;s. and Williams first in
the beginner class.
Michelle O'Nail won grand cham·
pion Suffolk ewe and Holley
Williams reserve champion. In the
spring ewe lamb class, Ashley Hager
wa&lt; named first and second place. In
the yearling ewe class. O'Nail took
first place an9 in the cla~s for ewe
over two years. fir.;t place honor.;
went to Holley Williams.
Theresa Baker won grand cham·
pion ram honors.

See You
at the
Meigs

County
Fair
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,

W.VA.

.......,.S:;:;.;e~n~t:,:;in:;:.e:ol::......~.,;·.; ::::~....:~:--_..;...

To offer sto~ SIJQgestions, report lale- •
br~ aTKl offer news tips

Wednesday, August 19

Sponsor or the Day - "Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling"
Sponsor or a Day at the Circus· "Big Bend Foodland"
6:00p.m. · Junior Fair Swine Show· Show Al&lt;na
8:00p.m. Truck &amp; Tractor Pulls· Pull Arena
11 :00 p.m. Gates Close

Thursday, August lO
Senior Citizens Day- Sponsor or the Day "Vaupaos IGA"
All Senior citizens Admitted Free All Day (age 60 &amp; over)
Various Times: Kids Day,Circus
7:00a.m Gates Open
9:00a.m Junior Fair.Dairy Show· Show Arena
tt:OO a.m Quick Bread conies!· Hillstage
12:00 p.m Open Class Dairy Show· Show Arena
12:30 p.m Flower Show Judging- Senior Fair Building
1:00 p.m Harness Racing
2:00p.m. Swin&amp;in ' Seniors- Hill Stage
3:00p.m. Hog Calling Contesl· ShowArona (Sponsored by VaughansiOA)
4:00p.m. 4-H Tllent Show
4:00p.m. Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Al&lt;aa
5:00p.m. Dazzling Dolls- Hilt Suge
6:00p.m. Kiddie Games Hillside Staae
7:00p.m Michelle Wright
7:00p.m Kllloke· Hill S!J&amp;e
7:30p.m. Open Class Hone Show
8:00p.m. ~orae PuU
9:00p.m. Micltclle Wrialn
It :00 p.m. Oates Close

play," Gamer said. " They ' ve
thumped us pretty doggone good this
year and we needed 'o have a win
against them."
The Brewer.; were coming off a 2·
8 roadtrip in which they were shutout
five times. including 17-0 and 4-0
losses to the Reds to open the trip.
"He (Woodall) wasn't tired or
anything," Garner said, " I didn't
want them to get anything going ."
Jemmy Bumitz hit his career-high
c...uollliHoustoo ................................17 49 .611
28th homer and Bobby Hughes
7'1:
Cbic'IO ................... .............69 :16 j~l
16•, added a two-run shot to pace the
Milwoobr: .. .
_...60 65 :48o
:;~ · Brewers' offense.
' St. Louis ...............................S9 64 .480
Bumitz. who hit 27 homers last
20·,
~:~J~ATi
~!
season. opened the sixth inning with
li.ll
Watemot•llloa
a solo shot to put Milwaukee up 4-1.
Snn Diego
......... 81 4t .648
19~
San
franc11t0
.......................
66
S9
~\28
I~
Hughes' sixth homer, a 422-foot
26~
JO~
~:%.~ ::::::::::::::·::::::::::::;~ ~ ::~ z.!~ blast to left. gave the Brewers an 8·
44'~
Ari ......................................47 78 .376
34
I lead in the seventh.
"The power has been the one
Tuesday'sac:ons
thing
we' ve really struggled with,"
I 2'4
DH: N.Y. Meu 6. Cotorado2: N.Y. Me&gt;s6. Col·
14'~
onldo)
Gamer
said. "When we hit home
15
Sao !&gt;;ego 7, Florida S
t9~
runs.
we
seem to add runs in other
Pinsbur&amp;h 6. Loo Ansetes 4
HOUlton 8, Pllitadelplria 2
ways.
too.
We've just really struggled
Atlaaca 8, San Fr.KiKo 4
as
a
team
with any sort of power..
O!i"''O CUbs4. St. l.ooiio I
1\
Milwauioe 8, ClNClNNA114
doubles
or
anything else. especially
tO
M001rcal 7, AriZOCUI I
t2
with runners in scoring position."
Today'• pmes
Woodall (6-7) allowed one run on

MILWAUKEE CAP)- Based on
recent history. Milwaukee Brewers
manager Phil Gamer wa.•n't taking
any chances against the Cincinnati
Reds.
With a 3-1 lell(l. Gamer lifted
starter Bmd Woodall with two on and

none out in the sixth inning. David
Weathers worked out of the jam and
the Brewers went on to an 8-4 victory over the Reds on Tuesday night.
"I was playing it like it wa.• the
last game we were ever going to

Scoreboard
Baseball

AL standings
Eutrrn Di•ilion

w I. rn.
............ 92 J0 .7S4

Ilaat

New York
Boston ......
.................... n $0
Baltimore .................... ... 61 ~M
Toronto
........... 63 62
Tamra Bay ........................ 48 1~

.593
.'-'6

Cen4n!Dhloioo
ClEVEI.ANO ................ ... 69 JS
Olicaao .....
...............$6 67

.SS6

.~

.J90

.4~S

.440
.4:\S

.391

W•cmiN""'Ataheim ............................. 61 !18 .JJ6
Teus ..................................65 59 . ~24
Se.nt. ...
.... :16 67 .4Sl
Oakland ............. .................ll 70 .440

Tuesday's scora

: lli

CINCINNATI (Harnisch 8-6) at Milwaukee
(Wood:u'd9-7), 2:05p.m.
St. Louis (Botlenfield 4-S) 11 ChiCIIJO Cubs
(Clark 7-tt). 211) p.m.
Monucal (Hermuson I 0-9) 11 Arizona

DH: Bostoo 4. Tuu I: Boston S. TeJ.UI4
Oallmt 10. Toronto S
ct.EVEl.AND4. TM1f'l Boy 2
Balli more 7, Minnnotll I
N.Y. Yankees J, KMJaS City 2 (I J)
llicqo While Sox 4, Anaheim J
Oetroit7 , Seanltl6

the frustrating things about a first
year team."
Bryan Rekar (1 -5) befuddled the
Indians but was hun by his own
throwing error and Mike DiFelice's
pa.~sed ball. accounting for three
unearned runs. Rekar allowed four
runs and eight hits in eight innings.
walking two and striking out two.
Kenny Lofton drove in a run with
a sacrifice fly. then tripled leading off
the seventh and scored on David
Bell's short sacrifice fly to make il4I.

Tom Martin pitched a perfect seventh. The Devil Rays cut it to 4-2
with an unearned run off Paul Shuey
in the eighth. and Mike Jackson
pitched the ninth for his 31st save .
Pitching for the third straight

night, Jackson allowed a double by
Wade Boggs and walked Fred
McGriff before getting Aaron Ledesrna to line into a double play.
" I hope we get to use him more,"
Indians manager Mike Hargrove said.
"That means we' re ahead going into
the ninth inning. I'll lake that. And
Mike ha.&lt; responded well."
Tampa Bay took a 1-0 lead in the
first. Boggs singled and scored when
first baseman Richie Sexson coiddn '!
get McCracken's grounder out of his
glove. It was ruled an RBI infield single. Sexson got a handle on the ball
in time to throw Bobby Smith out a!
home to end the inning.
David Justice singled with one out
in the second. took third on Sandy
Alomar's single and scored on DiFe-

9-9),

Thursday'spmes
Tampa 8, (Saurxlen J-11) Dl Ballimon: (Guz·
man 8· 12), 7 .. ~p . m .

· N.Y. Ynnkets (8utldie J-0) al Minnesota (RodngU&lt;Z 2·2 ). 8:0S p.n,
CLEVElAND (Bafbn 10-R) a1 Tc1uu (Stottle·
myre 2-1). 8Jl p.m.
Chicu1o White So1. (Errc: 2· 7) at Oakland
(Rugm II ·S), 10:05 p.m.
Detroit (Powell 2-l) at Anaheim (Olivares 6-8),
tO:OS p.m.
Toronto (Clemens 14-6) ul Scaulc (Swift 10-6).
10:0!\p.m

7 :0~

Atlanta
New York.. .

Philadelrhia .....
Monuenl ..

STOP

lice's passed ball. Omar Vizquel
drove in Alomar with a broken-bat,
bloop single to make it 3-1.
Ledesma reached on Sexson's
error leading off the eighth and
scored on pinch-hitter Bubba Trammell's infield single.
Notes: Cleveland second baseman
Torey Lovullo. promoted from
Triple-A before the game and playing
for his seventh major league team.
wa• 1-for-3 and made an error....
Explaining why Cleveland promoted
Lovullo instead of Enrique Wilson.
Hargrove said Wilson "is not the
offensive player we'd like to have a!
second base." To make room for
Lovullo, Cleveland designated vet·
eran utility player Jeff Manto for
asstgnment.

S:05t~~ (Kile 9-14) ot M......t ~ 2·
!), 7'0lp.m.
Loo Angeles (Mticki 6-6) at Fklrido (t..rldn ).
It\ 1 ·01i;nm

San Diego (Brown
t4-6). NO p.m.
Houston (Hnmplon
7), B:Ol p.m.

I~) at

9-6)

Atlant:a (Millwood

ol Milwaukee (Karl 9..

Transactions
Baseball
AIIMfk1NI Lftpe

fd.

Iii

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Pun:ha~d the co 1~
tmct oC INP Tore~ LoVullo from Bufflllo or the ln-

t.t
21 'h

nuipnwen1.

· 3~

rionedOFTrey Bc:amon toTnledo

.664

......... 68 ll ..~:n
... 61 6) . .
......... lO 76 ·~~
.... 44 Bt : 3~2

tematioool League. Dc:aisnat"'IJ INF Jeff Mnntn rnr

:n •

DETROIT TIGERS: Recalled OF Juan Encur·
nacion from Toll:do ohhc: lntcmruiunul Lat:ue. Ojl-

Did your home sustain damage as a result of
the recent flash flooding In eastern Meigs county?
Does your home still need repairs that other
· funds will not pay for?
Is your household low Income?
Do you own and occupy this .home?
TARGET AREA: Flash flood areas In eastern
Meigs County.
The Meigs County Community Housing
·- Improvement program will provide home repair
,. grants for low Income homeowners whose homes
~ were damaged as a result of the recent flash
•
flooding that occurred In the eastern portion of
1
, Meigs County
:
The CHIP Home Repair Program will provide
replacement/repair of such lmmedhtte repair
Items as: heating equipment, electrical wiring,
septic systems, roofs, hot water heaters,
plumbing lines, foundation repairs, and
handicapped accessibility needs.
Maximum assistance per household Is
$3,000.00. Assistance will be provided, until funds
are exhausted, based on Income, date and time of
application, and repair needs. Applications will be
accepted untii'September 15, 1998.
Flood affected households must be registered
with FEMA trough the telereglstratlon unit at 1·
800-462-9029 prior to August 29, 1998, and
provide documentation of this registration.
. To obtain and submit an application for repair
assistance, contact the Meigs Grants Office at
39350 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio. For further
' Information, contact Je•n Trusnll at 1·740-992·

eighth on Barry Larkin's two-run
triple and a sacrifice fly by Dmitri
Young.
"Our pitching didn't come
through for us tonight," Cincinnati
manager Jack McKeon said. "We
didn't do much hitting until the horse
had left the barn. h was one of those
nights."
The Reds took a 1·0 lead in the
fourth . Sean Casey led off with a
walk and moved to second on
Larkin's ground out. Casey scored
after consecutive singles by Young
and Jeffrey Hammonds.

Diabetes

paying for your testing supplies.
• Tast Strips

• Monitors

• Lancing Devices

• Lanceta

Express-Med... l-800-678-5733
Hablamos

G&gt;luml1iaLGas®

p.m.

NL standings

w I.
......... 8) 42

~

Poppet 1· 1), 7:0S p.m.

lkltton (Schoun:t 0-1) at KIUU&amp;I City (Pidwdo
6-8) 01 2:0l p.m.

Easttm Dl•lsioll

"Early on. I was feeling poor. but
then I got some good plays behind
me to help me out of jams and I felt
like I had settled down a little bit."
Remlinger said.
''Then in the fifth, that play at
third turns everything around. I go
from one out and the pitcher at first
to nobody out and first and third.
Everything just happened."
Milwaukee increased the lead to
6-1 in the si\th on Bum itt's homer.
Vina's RBI single and Grissom's RBI
double.
Cincinnati added three runs in the

Loo Anp:tes (Bohonaa 6-7) a1 Pinsbor&amp;h (Von

Houslon (Reynolds 14·8} al PhiladelphiA
CbiCilJo While So• (Siroeka 12-10) 111 011kland
(l.oewa' 6-4), 7:JS p.m.
(Stein 4-7), 4:05 p.m.
Colorado (Joan 5-6) at N.Y. Mets (Yoshii 4-6),
T~ Boy (Arrojo 11-9) ill Balllmorc (Mussina
NO p.m.
tt-6). 7:3l p.m.
San Fnncilco(Gardner 9-~) at Atloru1 (0\avine
Boston (Wakefield 14-~) at Kansas City (8ill'bCer
16-4), 7:40p.m.
().!)), 8:0S p.m
N.Y. Yankees (Pettine 14-6) 111 MiMCSOIII (Mor·
gan 4-2). 8:M p.m.
Thursday's pmes
ClEVElAND (Nagy 10.8) 01 Tms (Sdc: tJ.
Sao FranciscD (Ortiz 1·2) at Chicaao Cubs
10). 8:35 r.m.
(T~ tt ·7),2:Wp."'
Detroit (Tbomrson 10-9) a1 Anaheim (McDowell
St. Louis (Osbome 2-2 and Oliver 1-1) a1 N.Y.
1-2). IO:Jl p.m.
Meu (R«d 14-7 aDd B!air4-Jl). 2. S:OS p.m.
Toroo1o (Hentgc:n 1~9) at Seattle (Claude 7-8), _ DH' Arizona .(Wolcol! t-l aDd Sodowsky 2-4)
10:]5 p.m
al P6iladelphia (Schillint lJ.lJ ud Welch 0-l),

Iwa

six hits in five innings. striking out
six and walking one. Woodall took
the loser in the 17-0 rout by the Reds
at Cincinnati. when he gave up eight
runs in five innings,
"Not a whole lot of good things
have happened to us lately." Woodall
said. " It was good to come out and
get a couple of breaks. I got a couple
of breaks out there and we hit the ball
well. It was a good game for us."
Mike Remlinger (6-14) allowed
three runs on seven hits in 4 1/3
innings . Remlinger has lost his last
five decisions since shutting out Ari·
zona on July II .
Mark Lorena's two-run double
capped a three-run fifth when the
Brewers emsed a 1..() deficit. Geoff
Jenkins led off with a single and went
to second on a wild pitch. Jenkins
then narrowly beat Remlinger's
throw to third on a sacrifice bunt by
Wood:1ll. who reached on the field·
er's choice.
Fernando Vina singled home
Jenkins to tie it 1-1. After Marquis
Grissom advanced bolh runners with
a sacrifice. Lorena doubled to left for
a 3-1 lead.

tTelemaco4-7), 7JS p.m.
Snn oteao (Hitchcock 7-4) at florida (Meadows

Today's pmos

Flori... ..:.

The Sentinel News Hotline

Differens stuff. same instinct.
"It just comes out of you when a
guy makes an error or you get in a
jam from your own mistakes. you ' ve
just got to tum it up. a notch." Gooden said. "A lo! of times. the third.
fourth or fifth inning may become.
for me. my ninth inning. A couple of
more hits and !hal could be il."
Cleveland. which dropped three of
four to Baltimore over the weekend.
evened its record at 4-4 on the homestand and crepl within a game of .500
since the All-Star break ( 19-20).
"We' ve played close games with
a lot of good teams, " said Tampa Bay
manager Larry Rothschild, whose
expansion club dropped to (}.5 at
Jacobs Field. "You would like to see
some rewards. I guess that 's one of

Brewers capture 8-4 victory over visiting Cincinnati Reds

KaiiSlU City ........................~s 10
Minnesot•
............54 10
Detroi! ..............................A9 74

Nearly 300 entries in the horti·
Oats: David King.
culture division at the Meigs County
Barley: David King.
were judged Monday with ribbons
Potatoes: Cyndi King. Elizabeth
and premiums being awarded in each King. two. David King. two. ·
class.
Cabbage: Evelyn Hollon.
Robin Stephenson. Adams Coun·
Tomatoes: Darlene Hayes. Brian
ty Extension agent, judged the entries K. Justice, Briar Dill. Jack King.
with Peggy Cr.me taking the blue rib- Dorothy Brown. Debomh Mohler.
bon for the best display of garden
Lima Beans: Cyndi King .
produce. Other winners in that cate·
gory were Karolyn Welsh who took
Onions: Dale Hoffman, Briar Dill.
second. and Brilit Dill. third. Premi· Dorothy Brown.
urns for the best display category
Pepper.;: Opal Dyer, Brian K.
were $15 for first, $10 for second. Justice ..
and $5 for third
Beel~: Ooro!hy Brown.
Taking firsts for the largest and
Carrots: Dorothy Brown.
longest in several categories were:
Cucumber.;; Dorothy Brown.
Deborah Mohler for potatoes; Julie
Pickles: Jack King.
Tillis for pumpkins; Evelyn Hollon
Okra: Deborah Mohler.
for apples; Jack King for tomatoes:
Pumpkins: Peggy Crane, Briar .
David King for beets: Cody Dill and Dill.
Gerald Thompson for cucumber.;;
Zucchini: Darlene Hayes.
Jack King for sweet potatoes: Dale
Squash: Dale Hoffman.
Hoffman for squash: David King for . Squash: Deborah Mohler, Dale
cantaloupe; and Gerald Thompson Hoffman.
for com.
Gourds: Roy Holter.
Taking a blue ribbon in the freak
Watermelon: Briar Dill.
vegetables category was Evelyn Hoi·
Cantaloupe: Evelyn Hollon, David
ion.
King, Cody Dill.
Winning blue ribbons in the oth·
Apples: Darlene Hayes, four.
er classes of the show were the fol·
Grapes: Darlene Hayes, Roy
lowing exhibitors:
Holter.
GRAINS
Pears: E&gt;orothy Brown.
Com of various types: Gerald
Peaches: Roy Holter.
Thompson, five; Darlene Hayes, and
Berries: Roy Holter, Dorothy
Cody Dill.
Brown.
-----:

992-2156

By· KEN BERGER
borough High. "I can't throw it as
CLEVELAND (AP) - With run- hard as I once did. But the breaking
ners on and a jam in the malting. ball, I have a lot of confidence to
Dwight Gooden takes the same throw it even late in the count. It's
approach a~ he did a decade ago. He sort of become my out pitch."
goes to his out pitch.
Gooden (5-6) allowed one run and
Tile difference isn't obvious until eight hits in six innings with three
his wrist twists and elbow bends, and walks and four strikeouts. With the
- surprise! - out comes a na.&lt;ty curveball and killer instincts of a
breaking ball instead of the high heat. decade ago, Gooden ended his last
lbat's OK, says Dr. K.lt still counts three innings with Ks.
as a strikeout.
He slruck out Kevin Scocker and
Gooden dazzled the team from his Randy Winn with the bases loaded in
hometown a• the Cleveland Indians the fourth, then froze Quinton
salvaged a shaky homestand with a4- . McCracken with the tying runs on in
2 victory over the Tampa Bay Devil the fifth. He struck out Winn again
Rays on Tuesday night.
with a runner on second co end the
"With the fastball, I've got to rely sixth. All were on sliders. a pitch he
more on location," said Gooden. a had trouble developing as a young
Tampa native who starred at Hills- phenom with the New York Mets.

ofQnlO
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�Wednesday, August 19, 1998

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend ...

Page&amp; :
Wednesday, August 19, 1998

By Bob Hoeflich

Cousins who have a baby together should consider genetic factors i
Ann
Landers
1991,

r.... "-Ida Timet

S,..Sic:Me Md Cnw.or.

S)'ldic-.

Dear Ann Landen: My 23-ycarold granddaughter, "Delia," has been
living with her male cousin for several months. We thought they were just
good pals, but recent developments
proved we were wrong. 1lle family
has been informed that Delia is pregnant.
Delia has seen an obstetrician, but
she hasn'ttold him about her relationship with the baby's father as yet. Isn't
it imponant that she mention this? Our
famil y is worried that the baby may
have genetic problems.
Could you please tell us what kinds
of difficulties this child is likely to
have and whether or not it's possiblo
for Delia to have a nonnal baby?
Thank you, Ann. -· Worried in California
Dear California: 1lle chances of
cousins who are in excellent health
having have a normal, healthy child
are very good. H they were both diabetic or severely asthmatic, or had
heart disease or kidney problems, I
would be concerned. If there is no history of genetic abnormalities, there's
no need to worry.
You have said Delia is under a doctor 's can:. Suggest that she discuss her
concerns with her doctor.
Dear Ann Landen: Yesterday,
while standing at a customer service
counter in a department store, a
woman had a seizure. Although someone called 911 immediately and help
ani ved within minutes, nobody standing around approached the helpless
woman -- including me. I'm sure most
of us simply didn't know what to do.
Now, I realize there was something
any one of us COULD have done.
Although a person who has a
seizure may not be able 10 communicate, he or she can hear. II didn 'I occur
to me to at least try to comfort her and

Bloodmobile visits
Meigs County
Meigs County residents donated 82
units of blood when the Red Cross
Bloodmobile visited the Senior Citizens Center last week.
Multiple gallon donors were: Debra
Ingels, one gallon; Vanessa Compston,
one gallon; Cindi Stewart, one gallon;
Patsy Cornell, two gallons.; Paula
Wood, two gallons: Kenny Wiggins;three gallons: Linda Haley, si• gallons;
Bryan Shank, six gallons: Mary K.
Spencer, 10 gallons, and Paul Marr. II
gallons.
First time donors were Adam Bar: ton, Shirley Miller, Daniclle Peckham.
· Jennifer Heck. Shannon Jenkins, Con: nic Roush, Michael Kaufl, Jeremy
: Gatrell and Penny Elam.
Retired and Senior Volunteer Pro. gram workers assisting the lllondmo: oilc were: Helen Bodimer. Peggy Har·
ris, Bcny Spencer, June Ashley. Jane
Brown. Jim Grucscr. Sarah Neiglcr,
Alice Globokar, Nonna Jewell and Ted
Hatfield. The canteen was scrvod hy
the Trinity Church. Pomeroy.
Donors by community were:
Pomeroy - Jackie Hildcbrond.
Debra D. Morn. Thomas B. Han, Patricia J. Banon, David King. Barb=
· Smith, Daniel Lantz, Gerald E.
: Rought, Albert Parker, Paul Marr,
: Niese) Gerard. Harold Nor1on, Mary
' Voss. Adam Banon, Billy Spencer,
· Mary Spencer, Shirley Miller, Bryan
Shank, Linda Haley, Daniclle Peckham . Robert Taggan, Susanna Heck,
Donie Selby, William Radford,
Brandy Snider, Jennifer Heck, Helen
Blackston, Ivan Powell, Cyndi King,
Patricia Cook, Eunice Jones, Lois
Wyant, Lorena Brown, Joyce Hall,
Don Smith, Gloria Kloes, Wendy
Shrimplin, Anna Shrimplin and Dennis Gilmore.
Racine - Harry Holter, Patsy Cornell, Penny Elam, Staeie Arnold. Freddie Simmons, Dawna Arnold, Randy
Amoi.1, Kenny Wiggins and Sharon
Hall .
.
Middlepor1 - Cindi Stewart. Patricia A. Lyons. Vanessa A. Compston,
Jennifer A. Garey. Dinah Stewart,
Donna Hawley, Norma Wilco&gt;, Judith
Hunter, Richard Smith. Mildred
Smith. Shannon Jenkins. Conn1e
Roush. Shelly White, J;amara Nelson,
Donna Davidson, Toni Givens,
Michael Kauff, Jeremy Gauell and
Martha Fox.
Tuppers Plains - Lamar Lyons.
Reedsville - Johnny Roush and
Sherry Roush.
Syracuse - Bobby Onl, Leah Onl
and Tammy Chapman.
Long Bouom - Henry Bahr,
Dcbnllngels and Paula Wood.
shade - William C. Cook.
Rutland - Marta Blackwood,
Gabrielle Blackwood. Danny DaVIS
and Kimberly Banett.
.
Langsville - Kimberly Arpbright

and Joseph~&amp;~ g fie Red
TheB~mobile
nexl
"--'- C"111CrosS
at the .-.....
zens Cenlef will be Oct. 7, I p.m. to 6

p.m.

let her know that help wu on the way.
She was lying on a cold, bard floor,
probably frightened and embarrassed,
and I didn't say one word. I am
ashamed of myself.
Please, Ann, tell your readers thai
when someone is in physical disttess,
something CAN be done while waiting for help 10 arrive. They can offer
their voice. 1lle next best thing to
medical attention is reassurance. If I

am ever in such a situalion again, I'll
Dear Aim l.uden: I've nad sevknow what to do. - North Carolina
eral letters in your column about fam.
Dear N.C: There is more you can ilies that light about inheritances and
do when someone has a seizure. heirlooms. I hope your readers don't
According to Dr. Richard Rovner, think all families are like that. Ours
ehainnan of the advisoey board of the certainly is not.
Epilepsy Foundation of Greater
My grandmother had impeccable
Olicago, you should tun• the person taste and was an avid collector. She
on his or her side, loosen the lie and also could afford to buy the best -- and
collar or blouse and call for a doctor at she did. When Grandma died, we all
sat in her living room, exchanged
once.

wonderful, W81111 mcmorics and took
turns choosing lhc objects we wanted
from her lovely horne.
1bere were no arguments, and
nobody was grabby. It was just a civilized selection of things we had grown
up admiring. None of us would dream
of dcsecr-•ting Grandma's memory by
fighting over what she had left behind.
-- Lisa P. in Minneapolis
Dear Lisa: How classy. Your

grandmother would have been proud
of all of you. I'm glad you wrote. Your .
letter is sure 10 make an impression on
those who know that one day they will
be in your shoes.

It wouldn 't be the Meigs County
Fair if it didn't rain some and so the
first batch of showers peppered
down Tuesday.
Fairgoers didn 't seem to mind.
They found shelter as the rain fell
and most seemed relieved that a
decent rain was falling . It 's been a
while and we needed it. The rain
didn't hamper activities for very
long and soon everything was back
into full swing- and again , it was
hot.

Send questions 10 Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cdllu·
ry Blvd., Suite 700, !As Angeles,
Callr. 90045

Customer Appreciation Sale

EASTMAN'S

The coonhunlers building on the
fairgrounds appears to be preuy
closed up, but don 't let that throw
you, just go on in. The building is
air conditioned so naturally it has to
be kept closed.
The building houses all of those
delicious looking baked goods that
were in the competition. Of course,
sampling them is out of the question. Although the baked goods by
our residents do look great, keep in
mind it's against the rules to bother
them and also they' ve been there
several days already. So don'teven
think of it, no mauer how strong the
temptation .
. The coonhunters building also
features displays of garden crops,
entries in the photography competition and some excellent paintings.
I'm always impressed with some of
the paintings I see at the fair and
done by local artists. Neat. And I
c~n't even paint a board.

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Bananas

Two Rutland women captured the
top awards in the annateur painting
competition at the I 35th Meigs
County Fair.
Taking best of show was Louise
Eads with a landscape painting,
while the reserve best of show went
to Gina Tillis, who took five first
places in the seven categories of
exhibit.
Winners.' in the various categories, listed first and second
respectively, were as follows:
Junor Painting
Landscape in oil: Tiffany Green,
Holley Wiliams.
Floral study, oil: Tiffany Green,
first.
Animal study, acrylic: Josh
Williams, Julie Tillis.
Picture from life, acrylic: Benjamin Tillis, second.
Pen, pencil, ink or crayon:
Tiffany Spencer, Lee Musick.
Adult Painting
Landscape: Louise Eads, Gina
Tillis.
Animal study : Pani Wiliams,
Belle Edwards.
Floral study: Gina Tillis, Patti
Williams.
Picture from Life: Gina Tillis,
Bene Edwards.
Landscape: Gina Tillis, first.
Floral study:" Lula Sue Toban,
Melissa Coleman.
Pencil, pen, ink or crayon: Gina
Tillis, Tina Henry.

Lb.

Willi bonus c:aupn. Limit -

wtth $10 or more additional pun:IJ8•

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meet. One party is in one end of the
building; the other party in the other
end of the structure. New lighting
has been installed in the grange
building so exhibits look brighter.

While taking a break from their
work on the grounds Tuesday, Betty
Sayre and Sarah Neigler were
enjoying themselves.
Sarah commented that she got
into one of those telephone service
problems 10 the extent of over $10 a
month for several months . It look
that long to gel the charges permanently off her telephone bill. As
some of you know, gelling these
things straightened around is diffi.
Once upon a time, a building, cult and sometimes you don' t even
rather aged, was used at the fair- know how you got involved in the
grounds, as I recall, for housing firsl place. A tip, however, do check
chickens and rabbits during the out your telephone bills.
By the way, Betty said that memfairs .
Well, that structure very near the bers of the Racine Area Community
Rock Springs Grange Hall is these Organization will be handling the
days, Commercial Building 3. The gates at the fair twice this year-on
interior has been overhauled and Thursday and Friday. Previously
inside are a number of interesting they did only one evening. The
service and commercial booths. money the group receives will go
Another good volunteer, Roger towards the many projects carried
Williams of Middleport, was hold- out by the organization, known as
ing down the fort for the county's RACO.
new television station , WJOS 'IV
Members of the congregation of
27. Do stop by the building. It's
the Middleport Pentecostal Church
prelly neal.
who do such a great job in handling
And of course, the Rock Springs traffic and parking at the fair are in
Grange Hall, also used as a com- their 16th year so they're veterans
mercial building these days, is run- at their jobs. The hours are long,
ning over with booths which high- the weather 's hot and sometimes
light service and commercial ser- people are difficult, but look at
vices available in our county. Even them, bless their hearts, they keep
the political parties are there. But smiling.
that's o.k. Never the twain shall

I

Results from amateur painting competition announced

"'59

10.1b. bag

-Ripe

Monitoring the coonhunters
building during my stop there was
Mrs. Barbara Grueser of Rutland
who was joined now and again by

her husband, Jim.
Mr. and Mrs. Grueser moved to
Rutland from San Diego, Calif.,
about six years ago. Jim is a native
of Rutland.
They are involved in the retired
senior citizens volunteer program
and hence their presence in the
coonhunters building, and also are
active with the Meigs County
Humane Society. Both are bursting
with enthusiasm towards life and
their activities here especially the
humane society. Meigs County
needs people like Barbara and Jim
Grueser. Who knows? Maybe their
enthusiasm will be contagious.

378
Little Debbie Fudge
R~nds or Oahneal
Creams
Pltg.

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Wherryou shop at Kroger 13.out of 16 weeks
.·.·. and s}lend (Jt least $3 ~.00 or more in groceries
. :.ea(ij \\leek on ally one visit, yod~ve earned a

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BEST OF SHOW -Louise Eada of Rutland capture best of show
for her oil painting of a landacape In the amateur painting competlton at the Meigs County Fair.
·

Donna Neece takes best of show in photography contest

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Donna Neece of Middleport took
best of show in the amateur photography judging at the Meigs County
Fair.
.' She won the award with a photograph in the landscape and seascape
category, snapshot size, with the
men·e best of show going to Kelly
Osborne of Middleport for his entry
in enlargements, animals and/or
bin''· There were 157 entries in the
show.
Winners in the various categories, Iisted first and second
respectively, were as follows:
Snapshot size:
Landscape and seascape: Donna
Nease, Barbara Crow.
••
Animals and/or birds: Stacy
'
Smith, Donna Neece.
Adult portraits: Marilyn Spencer,
Ruth Spaun.
Children 's portraits: Renee Carson, Gina Tillis.
Nature closcups: Kell y Osborne,
Richard MaComber.
•' :fSports and events: Julie Spaun .
Ruth Spaun.
·'.' Rowers and insect: Julie Spaun,
Marilyn Spencer.
• Meigs County Fair: Robert A.
BES.T OF SHOW- Donna Neece of Middleport took beet of ehow
Bailey, first.
with
htr Hlacape picture In tht photography judging at tht .Meigs
Enlargements
County
Fair.
Landscape and seascape: Suzy
.
,
,
. .
Cirpenter Hysell , Todd McDade.
Sports and events: Robert A. JlaiAnimalS.! and/or birds: Kelly .
Chtldren s portraitS. Sharon
ley, second.
~bo
fi 1
Lawrence; Gma TilliS.
Flowers and/Qr insects: Todd
A:Uf; Irs ·portraits:
Sharon
. Nature closeups: Todd McDade,
McDade,
Carol McDonough.
Lawrence, Kelly Osborne.
Juhe Spaun.

___

-..-

.........

....

"~~'~ - •-

'A $!5.00 KtOgerGitt Certificate wll be Issued to~ the Ifni
ItemS or a~ assomnenc nor to~ $.JS.OO.

Pick up the punchcar~ at your
participating Kroger Store.
'

�Wednesday,

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

August

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

19, 1998

Wedneaday, August 19,1998

70

'

THE APPLIANCE MAN
• Washers
• Ranges
• Refrigerators
• Dryer
Call Ken Youn11

Call614·843·5426

SENIOR GYMKHANA- Sara Craig and Stacy Mills wsa named
grand and reserve champion, respectively, in the senior
gymkhana division at the Meigs County Junior Fair Horae Show.
Shown ara, from left, Mills, Horse Prlncaaa Sandy Smith and .
Craig.

tal.

110

The Community Calendar Ia
published as a frae eervlc:e to non·
profit groups wl.tllng to announce
meatlnga and special evente. The
calendar 11 not dealgned to promote aalel or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed 11 apace
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastem
Local School Board, regular meeting.
6:30 p.m .• at the old Tuppers Plains
Elementary School.

NOVICE SHOWMANSHIP - Angela Wilson and Llnzie Not·
tlngham were named grand and reserve champion, raepectivaly,
In novlca showmanship competition Monday at the Meigs County 4-H Horse Show. Shown ara, from left, Wilson, Horaa Prlncaaa
Sandy Smith and Nottingham.- -

TBUilSDAY
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 meeting Thursday.
6:30p.m. at the legion hall. Meal will
follow.

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FREE Low EJArgon Glas
FREE Installation
FREE Estimates
'Any size up to 93 united inches in
existing wood double hung opening.

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Many of our top UIH
prololllonalo are women.
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For lmmedlatelntorvlew
CALL MR. STEVE SMITH

Business
Services
ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE?
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Extension

7450

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Must be 16 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

On site custom sawing
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SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

Reasonable Rales
Joe N. Sayre

614-742·2138
Howard L Writesel

ROOFING
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Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

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ANNOUNCEMENT!
Usa Hess has joined the stall of ... :,.;;:;:;,.
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305 Upper River Rd .
446·2753
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BENEFIT POKER RUN
Starts 8/22/98, MIZWAY
12·1, 105 miles, ends,
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HAULING
Limestone,
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Top Soli,

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JUNIOR SHOWMANSHIP- Whitney Karr and Justin Allen wera
named grand and reserve champion Junior ahowmen In the 4-H
Horse Show Monday. Shown ara, from left, Allen, Horse Princess
Sandy Smith and Karr.

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

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Meigs County
Fair
August I 7-22

•

LINDA'S

•
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PAINTING

••

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Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it tor you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6p.m.
(740) 985-4180.

Free Estimates

7/24/11 ,..,,

408 General Hartinger Parkway, Middleport ·
(

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding ·Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamleaa Gutter
•Roofl"g
•Replacement
Windows
•Statlon1ry Docks
•Blown lnaulation
•Garages •Decks
241124 Poll Building

it

80

'Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
licensed
16E,Ohto &amp; West Virgin ia. 304 ·

(740) 592·5025 Athens, Ohio

Experienced. reliable person to
watch infant 3 days per week .
Must be available early AM end
some weekends In Apple Grove
area . References required .

1304)675;4831
Get Pa1d at Home tor Product&amp;
you assemble _No Selling!FAEE

DETAILS' Send SASE to Na1ion·
al Homemakers Co. P 0 Box
370040 Dept tO ,Maple Heights.
Ohio 44137
Help Wanted ~

Dflver' s license Knowledge Of
Gallipolis !Pl. Pleasant Areas, Fa·
miliar With ConstrlJctlon Materials
/Know ledg e 0 1 Olaer Truck Re·
pairs !Own Tools And Reliable
Transportation Required . Appll·
cations Are Available And Christian's Canst.. Inc .. 1403 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis . OH . 740-446·
45 14 For Appointment

1-888-667-3513
Remodeling
Plumbing

M8 J

Roofing

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

New Haven,

304-882·3336

Burglar, Fire, Oosed·
7fl7198 1 me pd

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

Joe Wilson
(740) 992-42n

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

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
. Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

P/B Contractors, Inc.
• Bobcat Service
• Concrete
• Masonry
·General
Commercial and
Residential

Free Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES

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

7 161 mo

(No Sunday Calls)

..
;,r~·

~
~

OAILV
HOROSCOPE
UP·Tl).OATE
SOAP RESULTS

992·6576
BlJying Hardwood Timber on
Shares: Also Pine Saw Timber

CALL NOWIII
1-900-n:l-1155
Ex1.11005
S2.99 Per Min.
Mus1 Be 18Y...

741l-256-6172

GUYS : Are you misunderStood??? Oo you need compassion??? Ta lk to Girls Livelli 1·

(900 )-884 -8700 Ext 3041 . $3.99
per/min . Must be 18yrs Serve U

1819)645-8434 .

DUMP TRUCK

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

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand

Free Estimates

985·4422

Owner: John Dean

Chester, Ohio
101251961ttn

•Room Additions
•New Garagea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio -

~ARPET

PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or

740-698·7231
1111/11 tfn

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

THE MAPLES
100 Memorial Drive East
Pomeroy, Ohio
Renta'ara computed according to your Income.
Lovely aportmentl featuring wall-to-wail
corpeting, with aiiiJIPIIancaa.
ALL PRIMARY unLITIES PAID
MUST BE 50 YEARS OF AGE OR
HANDICAPPED.
MUST MEET HUO EUGIBIUTY REQUIREMENTS
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
CALL (7-40) 992·7022

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts . Buying
wrecked o r salvaged vehicles .

304· n3·5033.
Want to Buy Used Mobile Home.

"Huge

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

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

CLEANING SERVICE
•Aaaldentlal
•Common:lal
•FREE Eatim1t11
•No Job Too Smail
-christian Owned&amp;

Oparitad
-om Certlflcatel
.. Avalllbll

740-167·5040

,,

614-846-6398
Mus1cians · guitarist. bassist and
female vocalist tor group doing
country, old rock and blues. John
Peck , drummer. Located in Alba-

rry, Ohio. 741l-696-6212.

Want To Buy; Dehumid ifier In
Good Condition_740-446-2732

Needed: Respectable . Dependable. References Required . For
Elder Care, Steady Ho urs, Very
Minimal Care Needed , 740·446·

6434.

Wanted To Buy : Junk Auto 's Any
Condltioo, 740-446-9853.

4807.

WHAT WILL THE
FUTURE BRING?
LOVE, MONEV, TRAVEL?
CALL NOW! ITS FUN,
IT'S EASY
1·900-740·6500 Ext. 3595

Wanted : Automobiles . Any Con·
dition , Also, Parts For Sale, 740-

388-9062, 740446-7278.

$3.99 Per Min. 18+

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Serv-U 619-645-8434.

30 Announcements

40

Giveaway

1 Male Looks Sia mese; 3 Fe·
! All Areas ! Shirley
males, 1 Weel&lt;s Old, 2 Looks like
Calico, 1 Looks Siamese. 740- Spears. 304-675-1429 .
256 -1094.
Accepting applications throu gh

tO While ducks wlblue eyes. to August 26 lor Regi stered l ong
Term Care Nur si ng Assistant
good home. 304·615·7183.

Class. High School diploma or

Basse ll eqlJivalent required . Apply : Point
Hound. 4yrs old . prefer country Pleasant Nursing &amp; Rehabilita ·
home. Pekingese. 2yrs old. 304· tion Center , State Route 62 N,
Point Pleasant , wv 25550 . ft:.
875-2457.
2 dogs,

~egistered

Glenmarx-Genesls Facility. EOE .
2 Male Kltlens. ApproK. 8 W8e ks
Old . Yellow &amp; While , 740-446-

4818 Aher 6 P.M.
992-5719.
Free Puppy, Part Chow. 740-4410784.
Inside cat to good home . 304882-27-44 or 304-773-50 18
Very Friendly, FamiiV oriented
dog , med s1ze. Good watchdog.
Part HlJSky I Part Golden Retrlev·
er, Can not Keep Him . Moving'

740-44Hl529

Lost and Found

Lost : 7 Month Old Black lab .
Rodney Area. Child 's Pet . Answers To Elmo. 740·245·5422 Or

740·446-0025. ASk For Anonda

70

Applications are be ing accepted
l or Home Health Aides . Applic·
ants should have a high school
diploma or G .E.D.. reliable trans·
portation, telephone in the home
and willing to work weekends &amp;
holidays . MlJst be motivated and
flexible . Experience in providing
direct care or work ing with older
adults a plus . Will train . State
tested nursing assista nts en-

courage&lt;! to apply.
Applic ations are available at the
Meigs ColJnty Multipurpose SenIOr Center. Mulberry He1ghts, Po·

meroy OH. An EOE Employer

Wonderful dog . medilJm·s,ze.
mate. part tab ? Has shots.
wormed, Doesn't bark , great com·
panion for. children/retired person.
approx . 1yr old. :l}4-675-6765

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

4 Family : LeGrande Blvd., Friday,

Seturday.
6/22/96 9 A.M. To 5 P.M. 101
Sisson Road . In Parler . Oh10 ,

Watch For Signs.

·

ALL Ylrd SlleiMult

Be Plld ln Advln&lt;e.
QEAQLINE: 2:00 p.m.

""' cloy btlorw ""' od
II to f\10 , SUndly
odl11on - 2:00 p.m.
F~. Mondly edlUon
• 10:00 .... So1urdoy.
AuguSI 19 Tl1ru 21s1, Cedarwood
lane, Oil Of Whl18 AOIK1, Of State

ATOUCH OF CLASS

Call For An
Appointment Todayl

10 Psychic s livelli 1-(900)2888863 Ext 9569 , $3.99 per min.
Mus1 De 18yrs. Serve u (619)645·

60

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

WESTERN MEDICAL
SERVICES.

740·446.()175 or 741l-67!&gt;-5965.

Young roos!er, 740-965·4288 .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SlRVICl

Imm ediate Work! SlJpptement
Staff For Major Hospital, EA. ICU,
Tete. Med . SlJrgery Units , Also
Homecare Assignments . Experience Preferred . Ventilator, Experience preferred but not required .
Available in SolJthern And Central Ohio. Choose Your Hours!
Lead1ng Nursing Service.

Questions about Ute? Rela tionships! Career! Money! love! Talk

Eight mixed breed puppies . 740-

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Medico! RN'S TO $31 .00/hr
LPN'S TO $21.00/hf

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 East·
ern Avenue. Gallipolis ..

t2/18/lfn

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

614·992·7643

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture.
will buy one piece or com plete
household , Osby Mart1n , 740·

(614) 992·3838

m

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

2526.

Personals

005

304-675-2792 De1Weell 6am-6pm.
Immediate part-time position
available in Mason County. WV.
and Meigs County, OH . to do Insura nce physicals and blood
draws . Fax resume to : 304·768·
4469 or Ma il to : Paramedical ·
Serv ices of America . P.O. Box
370, Dunbar, WI/ 25064 . EOE.

Antiques, top prices pa1d , River·
ine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio.
RlJSS Moore owner . 740 ·992 ·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Orcuit TV's

Wanted to Buy

HVAC Installer-Must be EPA cer·
tilied with 5 ~ears experience .
RSES certilication helpful . Competitive salary, paid vacation .

Absolute Top Collar : AU U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins . Prootsets ,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U. S. Currency.
Sterling, Etc. AcQuisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 second
Avenue, Gallipolis. 740-446-2842.

WV

.........

740-667-3513
Custom Homes

Galipolis. Ollio 740-379-2720.

90

MATERIALS

RUNNER /MECHANIC • Valid

Wedemeyer's Auction Service.

LANDSCAPE
DDIGNS

Traditional or Custom Design
Funerals, Weddings, Parties and Interior Design
with extensive experience since 1989

Localed in the lnsuraace Plus BulldlnM
across from the Court House.

'
...
JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Sat Aug. 20 21.22.

William Safranek, Attorney At Law

614-992·3470

360° Communications

with a Golden Buckeye Card

Ba ckya rd &amp; Deck Sale , pori · a·
crib. new &amp; like new boys baby
clothes 0 to 18mos. craft &amp; sew ·
ing sup plies, house hold Items
too many to list, 1-112 mll&amp;s out
M1Ustone Rd. olf Rt. 2 at Apple
Grove. 9am-5pm Thurs .. Fri ., &amp;

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Fill Dirt

Flowers By Craig

CELLULAR PHONES

at the Fair

2 -day Yard Sale ·Aug . 20&amp;2t .
Thurs .&amp;Fri., 9am -3pm, 2 miles
out Jericho Ad , tools, guns , everything.

SERVICE

"Your One Stop Computer Shop"

Cu!tOm Built Computers, p,...Qwned Computers,
Networks, Modems, Hard Drives, Printers, Upgrade
Your PC to a Pentium CPU and MB Today.
740-992-1135 for a Price Quote!
Frognetlntemet Sign-up point for
•
Meigs and Mason Counties
"' '-- ~ 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Expenen ced carpen ter with
knowledge in all phases of remodeling. Must be dependab'e. haw
own tools and transportation. 740-

&amp; VIcinity

of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
"exempt" property for his or her personal use.
This may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.

(UmeSton•
Low Rates)

For A Fresh Look
Call

Saturday 10-6 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10-5 p.m.
For more information call 992-6696
7/3Mfn

a '!:~!:c.u~~dtl a

Administrator.

Pt. Pleasant

JAMES
ALARM

September 19th &amp; 20th

Sponsoring

•

985-4473

~\d.

TJ.e Bend Area:. Large•t EXPO
Meigs County Fairgrounds

VAUGHAN'S IGA

NOVICE PERFORMANCE- Grand and ,...,.,. champion win·
nert In novice pertormance competition at the Me1g1 County 4H HorN Show werallelhany Riffle and Angell Wilson. Shown ft,
from left, Wilson, HorN Princess Sandy Smith and R1111e.

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

(740) 9854297
1120198 1 mo pc;1

August 20

All senior citizens admitted free all

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Ohio Call

DRAFT HOUSE

Entry Level Maintenance Worker
For 116 Bed Skilled Facility In
Ga llipolis . Must Have F'rior Work
E,;perience. Apply "rbor&amp; At Gal~lis , 170 P1necrest Drive, (Pinecrest) Al!enlion : Jerry McCoy,

773-5785 Dr 304-nJ-5447.

(304) 273-51160

MALE REVIEW
THURS., AUG. 20, 9 PM
FEMALE REVIEW
THURS . AUG. 27. 9 PM

be a1 leut 18. Call 614-992-6387

(anytime) or 304- 67~·5955 after
6pm. We&lt;lltlru Sat

992·42n.

4121111 tfn

WV Call

5/2WI1

Thursday~

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:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:01).12:00 Saturday

'Options available

HelpWanted

commlulono, weekly
bonuoeo, medlcol, 401K,
paid vocatlono, otock
ownerehlp, mgml

Sl Rt. 7

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Beacon Journal reported that a serie&lt;
of wriuen statements to Parks that
appear to be in Eberling's handwriting claim that Sheppard commis·
sioned Eberling to murder the doc; · :
tor's wife for S1,500.

TREE SERVICE

Help Wanted

tential. No etp necessary, must

dey before the ed Ia to run,
Sunday • Mond1y edltlon1 :OOpm Fr1dlj.

can relieve a debtor ol
G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY BANKRUPTCY
financial obligations and arrange a lair distribution

"FACTORY DIRECT"

r---..::..--------------------------------

992·7440

Calendar

ing a life sentence for the murder of
an elderly woman, was not credible.
" He lied so much, you don't
know what to believe," Tubbs Jones
said Tuesday.
The Plain Dealer and the Akron

Sheppard died nearly penniless in
1970, and his son is trying to clear his
name.
Prosecutor Stephanie Tubbs Jones
said Eberling. a former window
washer at the Sheppard home who
died at age 68 last month while serv·

S$$ IWlCERS WANTED SS$
Exceltan1 OjlllOr1uni1y lor 1ho right
(jrt. $500(, )per ..,.k earning po-

All Yerd Sales Uu1t Be Pakt In
Advance. Deadllna: 1:OOpm the

•Trim
GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631
stumP
•
(740) 367·0266
Grl"dlng
1·800·950·3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • lns.-Owner: Ronnie Jones

(740) 985-3551

SPECIAL SA I.E

Doubt surrounds Eberling's 'confession'

JONES

• Hot Water Heater
• Freezers
• Dishwashers

Free Estimates

CLOVERBUDS- Clovertlud 4-H mambara J*llcipatlng in the
llelga County 4-H Horaa Show Monday morning wera, from left,
Kyle Boggs, Jessica Riffle and Samantha Dequaale. They are
shown with 1998 Horaa Prlncaaa Sandy Smith.

FULL'I' INSURED

"Need repair on any IIUlkeT"

Over 20 years experience.

CLEVELAND (AP) -A prison
inmate who went to his death publicly denying he was responsible for
the murder of Dr. Sam Sheppard's
wife privately confessed his guilt to
a fellow inmate. two newspapers
reported today.
Richard Eberling acknowledged
he wa~ the "bushy-haired intruder"
that Sheppard had always claimed
beat his pregnant wife to death in
1954, according to a videotaped
interview with Michael Parks. an
inmate who had befriended Eberling.
The killing of Marilyn Sheppard
and her husband's much-publicized
trial inspired the 1960s television
series "The Fugitive" and a later
movie. Sheppard served nearly I 0
years in prison before the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled in a landmarl&lt;
decision that reckless media coverage
had violated Sheppard's rights. A
second trial .in 1966 ended in acquit·

Pomeroy',

J lamlly, Sat. A"'ii · 22. Sam 10 1,
rain or shine, 'rll of misc., all sizes
clothing, some x-large, Harts, one
mile ou1 ot Racine past Southern
High School. lef1 on Bashan Rd.
then left on Greenwood cemetery
Rd. top of h~ .

(Cut OUt lor Future Dltcountl

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

SENIOR SHOWMANSHIP- J811ica Wheeler, right, and Sanely
Smith- named grand and,_ champion senior showmen,
respectively, at the llelgl County 4-H Horse Show Monday.

110

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

LOHG'S
COHSTROCTIOH

SENIOR PERFORMANCE - Jessica Wheeler, right, was
named grand champion in the senior performance dlvilion at the
Meigs County 4-H Horae Show Monday morning while Jeuica
. Janey waa named reserve champion. Shown here ara, froni left,
Janey, Horaa Princess Sandy Smith and Wheeler.

Yard Sale

Rou1o 1150.

County Bou1~uo
8117-Z!. 10:00 am til? Rain or
Shine. Now oNpmon1s WMkly.
Loll ol Clothl. Crafts/ yar&lt;Wala

lllnllll-long.RL 160
Ewlngton 11m Aft» Rd. WI1CII

loiSVW

Ga- Solo l - 112 Prlcll

1122 8:30-3:00. ladltl 1215. Mona 31- 31, Shlrll 18, 280
, Up!dl~

E_.. .-

.- . Lovl,
!lo
11. Gtrla atre s 1o ax. Toyo &amp;

·Mtec. l'rldiY 1121 1:00AM tlll
toOI'M. t131 Ce*Wy IIDC.

Avon $8·$20 /Hr No Door ·To ·
Door, Easy Cash, Fun , 1-800 ·
361-0466 lnd/slslrep
Avon · $8 ·$20 !Hr. No Door ·To ·
Door. 'Bonuses' 1·800·296·0t39.
indlslslrep.
Brush Hogging Needed . 740 ·
441 -10t3.
Ch1ld Car&amp; Provider Needed For
Five Child ren Ages One To Seven _Early Childhood Oevelopmen\
Cerlificate Or Elementary Education Degree Helpful. Please Send
Resumes To CLA 446, c/oGalli·
polis Da ily Tribune. 825 Th 1rd
Avenue. Gallipolis, OH 4563t .
Ci t~ National Bank Point Pleas·

ant Division currently has open ing lor part -time &amp; pOSSible lull·
time teller p os itions . Please
send reslJme to : ATTN : Miss i
Scarberry P.O . BOlt 5 18 Po int
Pleasant. WV 25550 . No Phone

Calls PLEASE! EOE.
Cos meto logists Needed Full Or
Part-Time , Call740-441 ·0583 Or
740-256-6718.
DON And Nurse Manager Posi·
tion Available For 1 16 Bed Nurs·
mg Facil ity In Gallipolis, Ohio .
Salary Commensurate With Ex perience . Send Resume To 170
Pinecrest Drive. Gallipolis. Ohio
45631. Attention Jerry McCoy.
Administrator, EOE.
Oriver . Home Every Six To Ten
. Start Up To .3.t/MI. &amp;5%

l .orno-n Hook . 0/0s Ask Abqu t
. and Morel Heartland Ex·
pr151- ~1-4953 EOE

Electric: Mo1ort &amp; Con1ro1s Plont
Mgr 55 -ISK, Electrical Mainltnlnct 'Super 45 ·55. Smlll LOo

col Arol tOO Employee Plant,
Oilier~ Genl Stone. e.
gil E-.tlvl E~nt, 5100
Sl. llldQ. f, $ytw11ilt, OH

43510 Ph: 411·112·1008 Fax:
41HU-7S311.

.,

Now Taking Applications At DomIno's Pizza. Gallipolis. &amp; Pomeroy
Locations.
Outstanding opporllJnity lor a
highly motivated individua! to
se rve as Assistanl Dire c tor of
Nursing. The qualified candidate
will join a progress iv e health
care team providing services in
!he geriatric, high aclJity leve l
and rehabilitation areas of health
care . Th e candidate must be a
Registered Nurse with a va"d
West Virginia nursing license required . Two or mo re years of
nursing experience and a proven
tra ck reco rd 1n geriatric nursing •
administration requ1red . Knowl·
edge ol state. federal regulations
and OBAA gu idelines a musl. II
you have the geriat ric back·
ground reQuired tor the challenging an d rewarding posit 1on.
please contact Jill Bumgardner.
AN. DON, Po1 nt Pleasant Nursing
&amp; Aehabilllation Cen ter , State
Route 62 N, RolJte 1, Box 326.
Po int Plea sa nt. WV 25550, a
Glenmark-Genesis Facility. EOE .

(304)675·3005.
Overbrook Ce nter , 333 Page
Stree t, Middleport , has part time
LPN posit1ons available lor all
shifts . $500 sign·lJP bonus tor eli·
gible cand1dates. Please stop by
and fill out an application if inter·
ested, 740·992-64 72 . EOE
Overbrook C enter . 333 Page
Street. Middiepor1. has part time
STNA &amp; AN positions available
lor all shills . Please stop by and
1111 out an application if interested,

740-992·6472. EOE
PART-TIME TUTOR/MENTOR
The Pre stera Ce nter of Mason
Cou nty is looking for two MA·Iev·
el tutors/mentors to work an aver·
age or t 6 eve ning hrs. per/week
as part ot the Fami ly learn ing
Cen ter 's alter -schoo l program .
This is a great opportlJnity tor a
creative master teacher to be a
part of an outsta nding early inter·
vention program at Pt. Pleasant
Middle School One each to pro·
vi de reed1 ng and math ass istance . Contracted pos itio ns . w1th
a very competitive sala ry. with·
OlJ t benef it s. Re sumes will be
accepted thru 8/31/98. Positions
w111 beg in in mid -Sept Send
resumes to:
Prntera Center
Sherry Sites.
Employment SpeCialist

3375 At. 60 E
Huntington. WV 25705

EOEIAA
Seeking Registered Long Term
Ca re Nurs1ng As sis tants, parttime , rotating shills. H •gh School
diploma or eQuivale nt requ ired .
Pmnt Pleas ant Nursmo &amp; Rehabilitation Center, State Route 62
N, Route 1. Box 326 . Point
Plea sant , WV 25550 A Glen f!\8r1c.-Genesis facility. EOE.

Servk::e Technlcilln
leading So. Ohio HAVC ~ ·
ny nas Opening for SEIH Motivated
Technician . We ot1er Exce16ent
Pay with Fu~ Beneftts. Send Aft.
sume to: Serv+ce Techntclan, PO
Box 806, Jackson. Oh 4S640

Someone To Work Part-Time In
A Delivery Business And Increase To Full- Time In The Fulure. MlJSt Have Good Driving
Record , Be Good WUh The Pub-

lie. &amp; Able To Oo Heavy lillino.
Send Resume To : CLA 445, clo
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Tl11ra

.~
l ~~~ea;~~·~ls,~OH;;.4~~~1~needed.
opening . Must

when

allhe Potn1
101

PleiSMl WV.

�VWednesday,Auguat19,1998..·

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1998

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHn..LIP
ALDER
W.i 8e Music 10 lbu&lt; E.on.

~
~

... Me .. 10"" Besr'e.,.

it""

1tuck Driver • Running Eatnl Man
Job Opening Galllpolla ArN. Approxlmatoly
$30,000 .00

CJoujfiM

Year Experlence(minlmum), Class

A COL, Good MVR, No OWls.
Pan DOT Phyalcal&amp; Drug
SCfeen. Send Reaume To: P. 0 .
Box 7611, Gallipolis, Ohlo45631

Experienced In Heavy Trucks ,

Equipment, And Hydraulic&amp;. Salary Commenaurale With EKperl·
ence. Call Monday -Friday From
8 :0Q-~ : OO Alt -80Q-339·6~18

For

An Appolntmont.

All real estate advenlslng In
thiS newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes it illegal
to-adltertlse ·any preference,
llmflation or c:Uscriminatioo
based on race. cok&gt;r. religion.
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intenUon to
make any $UCh preference,

EMPLOYER
P.M. 74().256-6573.

Bualnats
Training

140

Short On Skills? Gain Skills In
One Year Of Training In The
Evenings . Buckeye Hills Career
Center Conllnues In Its 22nd
Year Of Operation . Train In: Adult

Basic Education; GEO Testing
Site; Offlca Technology; Welding;
Industrial Maintenance; Peace
Officer /Corrections; SUCCESS;
Auto Technology ; Air Condition-

Ing &amp; Heating; Farm Business
Planning ; Analyala; Computer
Specllallst: Customer Centered:
Healthcare Technician (Formerly

Nurse Aide); MR/ 00; Pre-Employment Training; And More...

Call 740-245-5334 For Catalog
And inb'matlon.
Southeastern Business College,

Spring Vallay Plaza. 740 -4464367, 1·800·214·0452, Accredit·

ad Member. ACICS Reg 190-0512748

School•
Instruction

150

advertised in this newspaper
are available on an Qqual
opportunity basis.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
·A Little Country In Town·- large
restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres. VIllage of Middle·

port. Secluded and private, close
to schools and churches. Private
brick circu lar drive. brick patio,
modern kitchen, family room wJ
fireplace. 3-4 bedrooms, two
baths, large for mal LR and OR ,
large foyer. tour original stained
glass windows. 30 minutes from
Athens, 1~20 minutes from Galli·
polis. For appointment call 740·

trimmed, mulch·
ing, flower bed&amp;, landscaping ,
sidewalk
edging,
mowing ,
etc .. .Free Estimates. Call Bill

304-675-7112.
Circle ·N· Convalescent Home,
Has I Opening Elderly Or Handi-

capped Parson In My Homo. 74().
441·1538.
Dependable Person Able To Get

Child On/ 011 School Bus In
Washington Elementary District,
near Spring Valley, Rte 160, Bula-

vllt 74().44S-8804
Dozer Work VIA Appointment ,

No Job Too SmaHI 740-388-9062,
740-446-7278.
Furniture repair, refinish and restoration. also custom orders. Of'lk&gt;
Valley Refin is hing Shop, Larry

P11111ips. 74().992-{1576.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the milt Just call

304-1!75-1957.
Painting. Plumbing. Remodeling,

Any And All Odd Jobsl Free Es·
t1ma11s. 740-24s-5151.

Reroofing &amp; Replacement 01 Sid·
lng, Free Estimates. Ask For Ro·
bert 304-675-5242, 740-4469742.
j
Room &amp; Board For Elderly M~n
Or Women , In My Home. 740·

446-3658.

.Z.ro. No MCMIOJ Down!

304-756-5815.
1 Acre 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths ,
Large Whirlpool Tub , wrap Ar ound Deck , Partial Basement ,
Amish Country, Hannan Trace

2 Bedroom House And 2 Apartments, 8oth Rented , 13 Pine
Street. Gallipolis . Call 740·4484999, Qr 740-594-3033.
2200 sq . fl . spill leve l. brick hall
way up, one car garage, .7 acres,
lots or extras , pnce reduced ,
need to see to appreciate, local-

ad In Syracuse. 74().992-2547.
2906 Meadowbrook Orlve, 3br,
bath. TV room. back porch. close

to schools. 304 -875-4360 alter

Two openings at High Rise Ad·
venture Daycare, certified provld·
er, on Salley Run Ad ., Pomeroy,

74().992-3509
wanted Junk Cars With or With·
OU1 Motors. can: 740-388--~
Wanting to do Housecleaning in
Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant Area . Ex·

740-446-7056 or 740·

446-8052

14 x70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 par mo. FrM air &amp; flee llkhlng. t-11&amp;8-928-3426.
18x7e 4br, 2 bath $1,195 . down,
$193. per mo. Free air, free skirt.
t -~t-{lm.

t4x70 3 Badrooma, 2 Bellis, Like
New Through OUI Free Dallvoryl
$10,900, 740-446-017~. 304-8751978 Uberty 12x55 Total Eleclrk:,
Like Now Through Out. Frat Dallvery, $6,950, 74.0-448·0175,
304-1175-5965.
1988

14~5

3 Badroom. t Story with Anachad
Garage, Approx 113 Acre. 118

len! condition, call Tom Anderson,

74().992·3348 A11er 5pm.
1998 Close out sale. Sava big
$$$. 2,3,4,Bedroom homes. Trl S tate Homes, St. Albans, WV.

Calt-800-948-5678.
1st lime buyers. E ·Z financing, 2
or 3 bedrooms. around $200. per

month. Call Credit Line 1-800948-5678.

yrs . experience. have references.

Middleport. 740-992·7965.

Asking $26,000. 740-~2897 .

Will haul junk or trash away. $351
pld&lt;up load. 304-{175-5035.

Nk:o 3 Badroom. t Balll. 1600 Sq.

WIH do babySitting In my llome, 12

Would Like To Oo Babysitting In
My Home. Live" in Bidwell and Addavilie School Districts. Certified
asl'ype B Provider for 12 years.
Has CPR training. Love ChUdren.
Plenty of Play Area Inside &amp; Out·

Mobl~

Ft. , Maintenance Free, 2 Car Ga·

raga. 740-446-9664
Price Reduced : 2-story, 3br ,
basement , new vinyl siding, dou-

ble lot. Bellmead&amp; . 304·675·
1534.
Prime localion 414 Third Ave
Gallipolis. Beautiful newly con ·
structed two story Colonial has 3
8R, 2-112Baths, LA . I FR. Formal

side CaU 74()-446-{1373

FINANCIAL

Dining Room with llardwood lloors.
Qak Doors &amp; li'lm. Fireplace . 1-11

Buslnase
Opportunity

2 car garage, Eligible tor tax

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi ·
ness with people you know. and
NOT to send money through the
mail unlil you have in~estigated
lilt ollerlng.

FREE
CASH
GRANTSI
College. Scholarahips.
BusinoS&amp;. Medical Blls.
N-Rapay.
Call Toll Free
t-800-218·9000 E•t. G- 2S14.
Ohio Valley Bank Ia' offering lor
ule 3 Apertment buildings (2
apartments per bu ilding) In the

Middleport. OhiO area. GoOd LO·
catlon . Contact KeUh Johnson at

IN·

Profaeslonal
Servlcat

Uvlngeton'a B•••ment W•ter·
Proofing, all basement 11paira
done, free lllimates, lifetime
guarantee. 12yra on }ob expert-

ence. I01• 3111.

Abatement. $169.900. 1-304-273·
2940
Ranch . Vinyl Siding , New VInyl
Replacement Windows, Attached
Heated Garage, Free Gas , Full
Basement , 112 Finished With

W.B.F., AC , Shower &amp; Sink In
Basement , Large Concrete Build·
ing , 26•38 Hardwood Floor&amp; On
1.4 t Ac res. Appointment Only.

Call 740-446 -3596. 740-4462300. 4409 Bullville Pike, Gantpolls. $115,000.
Ready to move into. Lovely one
lloor plan homo in Pomeroy. Living
room . formal dining room , built-In
kitchen with breakfast nook, two
Dedrooms. bath and a sunporch
affording a great vieW of lht Ohio
River. Full basement, plutered

walls hlghllghtad by crown mold·
mg, storm windows and dootl, insulated. carpetad, nice llghl fix·
tures , refrigerator and atovt go
with house. Locattd at 1oa Lt·

glon Torroco. $39,000. Call 740.

1192-5292.
Two otory house lor oalo by owner, k&gt;cated at 10:2 Ebenezer Sl. ,

Pomeroy. Throt bedroom, 1 112
bolhl. lull boaamenl, encloloG
back porch, prlcad ot $20,000,
cai304-77W173- !elm.

LlwlnttiOII'I loltMnl Woltf·
Prootln1, an baaement rep.tlrl

Two-car gorago apt .. 21n mobile

done, free ettlmatea, lifetime

hom1, 100x100 Lot 18. •th

·guaronloe. 12yra on job expori·
ence. JOt • ~817.

Stroal, Mason, WV 304·7735718.

ized apt. for elderly and handi-

mo. 304-87~·8197 or 304-8751851 .

~- EOH 304-{175-{1879.

312 Wotzgal St. Pomeroy, 3 Badrooms. $360.00/ Month, deposit
required . Toll Free 1· 888 ·840·

0521
1 ·6 BEDROOM HOMES FROM

,4,000 Local Gov't . &amp; Bank
Ropo's Call 1·900· 522·2730, X
1709.

AUGUST SPECIAL
ALL SINGI:EWIOES
$4111100WNOR

9.11% FINANCING

HUD accepted with good rolorlracl, 740-698-7244.
Two bedroom house, stove, no
refrigerator, no Inside pets, de·
po~l

requlrad, 74().992-3090.

Circle' Motel Loweat Rates In

Town. Newly Romodalod, HBO,

550

Fumlehed
Rooms

Also trailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2 :00 p.m.,

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobUe homes. air
water and trash Included . 740·

9621..

3 BR/2 BA

and setup. Only $187.06 per
month with $1075 down. Call 1·

800-837-3238.

Pomeroy, no pa" 74().992-5858.

Apartments
for Rant

1 Bedroom , AJC, W/0, Hook-Up,
Near Holzer, $279/Mo., + Utilities.
Deposit &amp; Lease Required , 740·

1097.
Wanted To Rent: A Garage In

Codcatlels, Mated Pciir, with eggs,

Galipois Area. 740-448-2427.

Houeehold
Goode

510

App lian ces:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges. Rafrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740 ~ 446 ·

n9s.

GOOD

2 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment,
Refrigerator. Sto\19, Furnished, 34
Smithers

Avenue,

Gallipolis,

$250/Mo .. $150 Deposit, 740·
44lHl427.
2bdrm . apts., total ele ctric, appliances furnished, laundry room
facUilles, close to school In town.

Applications available al: Village
37tt .EOH.

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers. dryers . relrigeratora,
ranges. Skaggs Appllan·ces, 76

Vine Street, Call 740-446-7398,
1-886-618-()126.
Polly'a Now I Used Fuml1uro
Flags &amp; Army Surpluslll

2101 Jel1erson Aw.
Open 9:30 - 5:110 Moo-Sot.
304~75-SOI'A (7832)
Used Furniture Store belOw Hail·
day Inn , Kanagua , Monday· Friday I O:OOAM · 4:00PM. Stop Byl
Used Window Air Conditioning
Units, Different Sizes, Guaranteed,

74().886-()()47.

Antiques

530
Bu~

1124 E. Main Streat. on At. 124,

5678.

2566.

Moore owner.

New Doublewlde 3BR. 2 bath .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

NOTICE
Oakwood Homes, Barboursville ,
W.Va . location Has Been Or ·
dared To liQuidate All Inventory.

0 Down, Lowest APRI 304-7363409.
Single_Parent Program. Special
lmancmg on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes . Payment• a1 low 11

$180/mo. Call now 304-755-7191
Special 16~~:80 3BR, 2 bath .

$1 .325 Down. $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; lraa sklning. 1-800-69Hm.
Trailer For Sale! 3 Bedrooms 1 11

2 Baths Priced
740-288·0007

10

Sale . $3.500

Unbelievable. new l4x80. no
payments after lour years . Call 1·

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dr ive
from $279 to $358 . Walk to shop

&amp; movies . Call 740-446· 2568 .
Equal Housing Opporturoty.
Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom.
All Utilities Paid , Upstairs, No
Pets, Gallipolis, Deposll Required,

74().440-9523.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middleport . From $249 -$373 . Cali 740·
992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·
!unities.

door).

•

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
112 Acre Lot, 1989. t4X60 Clayton . 24X36 Garage/B.tllg . _O_eck ,
Porch and more. Btdwell Area F&gt;h.

740-256-1380
2 acre lots or 8 acres . Betl1el

Road, WV. 304-1!75-7946.
lot for sele- Gallipolis. 90xl72 ,
nice neighborhood , quiet , 740·

446-4722.
Now taking sealed bids on com·
mercia! tot on us 35 Henderson.
Mall bids to : Siders 2123 Mal·

vern Rd . Rock Hill, SC . 29732 .
Opanlng date September 1. 1998.
Reserve the right to refuse any
or ell blda. Fot Info call. 803·386·

9436.

wv. Building loll, alnglo wldu
accepted. public woltr, 20

minutes from

new

Buffalo Bridge

on Jtrry'o R111 Rd. Clyde Bowtn
Jr. 304-516-2338.

8evetll 1- ocro parcela

eo..

remolo

beoUIIIUI land, Mtlga
Scipio
Townohlp, SR 882, 0Uif all SR
143). Ownlr llnanclng, (11800 per
ocre). can lor good map, 1-74G~93-854~.

540 Mlecellanaoue
Merchandise
"COOL PQWNI"
Central Air Conditioning. Free Es·
timatesl It You Don't Cali Us. We

Both Lose! 740-446-8306, f-80Q29HXJ98.
1 Grey Kro loier Sofa, 1 Mauve
Rocker Recliner, 1 Mauve Glider
Rocker. $400 .00 For All or Will

Saparaia.740-441 ·1286
Amana 18,000 btU window air
conditioner. works great. asking

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo .. 7410·446·
0006.
One bedroom apanment In Mid·
dlapat, 740.992-2178.
One bedroom apanment in Mid·
dleport, ail utlilffea paid, S100 de-

posit, $270 month. call 740-9927806 8am-5pm.
One Bedroom Apt. At 651 Second Ave . Next To Bosurd li·
brary . $350 .00/ Mo Rent Plus
$350 .00 Deposit Required . No

Pats. Contact Dobbie or Judy At
740-446-7323
Pleasant Valley Apa~rnanta
Are taking applications for 2br,
3br, &amp; 4br. Appliclltlona are taken

Monday lhru Friday !rom 9-4. 01llce ~ loca1ad 11 1151 Evwrgi'Hn
Drive, Pt. Pteaunl , WV. 304·

Pomeroy Clltl Aportmonta, loca1ad
11 245 Unloll Ave,._., """""&gt;¥ Is
now occapllng oppllcallono lor
twa I 111rH -..om opotWntnta.
Contacl ..._ . 11 tho Mondoy through Frldoy, aom-

!Cim.

Church paws,

two~a

12' long. lour

10' long, six: 8'
oak,
condition , call 741)-9•19 -:!217,

7:DOam-10:00pm.
Electric Scooter&amp; , Wheelchairs,
New And Uted, Stairway Eleva ·
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
lifts, Bowman's Homecare, 740·

446-7263.
Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repairs .
Problems? Netd Tuned? Ceil the

plaoo Dr. 74().446-4525
Hide-a·Bed, 2 Traditional Love
Seats, (mauve/blue floral) Like

New. Wingback Chair, Double

---·

King alzo walorbed manreu w/
belllOI. $40. 080. 304-e75-7707
\

Kittens, 740.387-n05.
Stud Service AKC Registered
Ronweller, Champion Blood Line.
Excell Temperament &amp; Disposi-

tion, 74~245-5823

Muelcal
Instruments

570

Small Monthly Payments . Will
Finance With App roved Credit.

Saa Locally. 800-{135-761 1.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

BLACKBERRIES
$13-gal. You Pick $10-gal. No
Weeds . Berries On Fence . 304458~1667 Laave

Messaga.

Good Tomatoes , 25 pound box
$10 .00 . Canning Tomatoes , 25
pound box $5 .00 . Some beans .

304-882-2237

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
16 Ft Cattle Trailer, E~ecellent

• K4

1987 S-10 4· WD w/bed cover.

Asking $2,850. 304-895-321 1.

1990 Chevy 1500 4x4 Silverado, ·

new shocka, struts, exhauat,
tune-up. etc. no rust. runs great,

BARNEY

$1000 080, can be aaan at 144
Mulberry Ave, Apt. · 1, Pomarov.

74().992-3713, 74().376-9863.

$9500, 74().742-2249.

1 JEST DISPISE EATIN'

Marte Ill, V-8, 4 Captain chairs &amp; :
rear couch . looks &amp; runs greaf.,
$11.500. 304-1175-2949.
'

992·2358 alter 4:00pm -kdaye.
anytime weokonds.

446-8491. .

t

'94 Z-28 Camero 3~0 LTI. rod
with black lnlorlor. 1-lops, 82,000
miles, sharp, $1 1,000 080, 740·
742-2554.

1998 Dodge Caravan, 1. 100'
ml"s 4cyl, 2.4-lltor-EFI, PB, PS.'

'95 Niuan 240SX , great condi·
tlon. all power, security system.

dalrost &amp; wlporo, sealS 6 pal·
songen, asking $20 ,000. 304·
675-5080.
•

moving, must sell, $13,000 080,
74().992-4003.

97 Ford Expedition 4x4. loaded.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

only 13,000 mll11, garage kept ,

$25,000, 74().387-ll2e8 6-Bpm.

0751

740

1880 ·1tll0 HGNOA CARS FOR
1100 Seized &amp; Sold Locally This
Month. Can 1-800·522·2730 Ext.
4420.

1963 Honda 200 3-Whoolor.:
$1150. 304-1175-2949.

1980 -1990 Truclls For $100111
Selzad And Sold
Locally This Monll1.

Etc.

Motorcycles

1984 Honda Aopencado Motor-·
cycle, Loaded, Excellent Condl· :

tlon, $4,500 Firm, 740-386-9780 Aitar 5:30P.M.
1986 Yamaha 3 Wheeler, Good·

1·800-522-2730, X 3901 .

Condition. $800. 740.256·1631 .

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 D, 260

'

V8 . Good Condition. $1 ,500.00
Firm 740-992-4566.

1994 Honda Gold Wing SE Low :
Ml""oe. Lots 01 Extrasl Excallont.
Condition. $12,500, 6 A.M. ·5 ~M . •

1983 Pontiac 6000 Body Fair,

446-7371 .

Good Work Car Or For Young
Driver. $400 OBO 2534 Georges

Creek Road. GaAipol~ .

-~

740·367 -7444, Evenings : 740· ·

•

'fHE BORN LOSER

,.

1996 300 EX Extra Wheels &amp;

Twts, $2,600, 74().367-7945.

1886 Old&amp; Della 86. 2dr. 69,000
original miles. needs Interior

work. $500. 304-895-3080 or 304895-3237.
1988 Bonneville LE, maroon, 4dr,
new ures &amp; brakes. good cond.
$3,200. 304-675-5792 after !lpm.

1989 Flrebird Formula 350 TPI
Engine Runs Good, $3,300, 740.
446-0047.

1998 400 Foreman 4-wneeler, ex.
cond . 3-year warranty. $4,300 .

740.387.7480. 740-446-9552.
1992 Plvmoulh Acclaim White 4
Doors. Auto, Air. C lean In Sid&amp;

and out side. 740-256-9114.

~'ltlf'\JU.

750 Boats 6 Motol'l
lor Sale

1\t-'ii~l£

1-11\1\0UT

E.~EroS1~ 1

1996 Dutchman, fully sell-contained, loaded, assume loan, no

1996 Polaris SL 780 Jet Ski, 2,
seater, 95HP, low hours. u .

cond. $3.800. 304-895-3060 or
304-895-3237.

BIG NATE

"'"8oa1Troller
will1 purchase ol
1811. dosed bow Oeep-V w/
16()-tP Merr:ruiser motor runs
greaVnaecls gimbal bearing.
$1,800. 740-446-3814.
Kawasaki Jel Ski, 440cc, &amp;Keel·

1993 Black Chevy Z28 Camara.
gray interior, loaded , SS,OOO
miles, 350 V·8. asking $11,000.
304·882-3741 or 304-882-2429.
1993 Dodge Green Daytona, 4
Cylinder, 5 Speed , Air, Loaded,

106,000 Miles, $2,000 080, 740.
258-1233.
1994 Toyota T-100, Automatk, 6

Cylinder. $8,125 .00 740 -4463570
1995 Bu~k Riviera Blacll 2 Doors,
V-6, Super Charge, Au lo, Full
Power, Stereo &amp; Tempera1ure
Controls On Steering Wheels.
Traction
Control
Anti· Lock
Brakes , Air Bag , leather Seats,
Passenger Side Temperature
Control, 6 Speaker Delco Stereo
·with Auto ·Reverse Cassette.
Sounds Great! Auto Headlights,
~litO Mirrors, Very Spacious In·

Kawasaki STS Jel ski, still under

belwHn Qllllpolo &amp; Rio Grtnde,
Ohio on Jaeltlon Pike. 740-446·
2412or1-aoo-894-1111
Your Artl John Oeer1 Dealer

For ReoldenUol And Commercial
Lawn Equlpmorll. Compact Utlllly
Tr~etora From 20 To 39 HP. All

Sizto Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Asking
304-875· Troclora, Hoy Equlpmtnl. John
ChKII
mauage ~no on- 0.. SkidWith Uo About Flnonclng On
Lown Tracton And Low Rate FInancing On New And Uood
Equlptnanl Carmlcl1aot'a Farm 1
Lawn GolllpOIII, OH 740·446 2412 1-aoo-894-1111.

L -.

Very Nlcel

Onlo Valley Bank Will Offer For
Sale A I 998 Honda Fourtrax

1812945, A 1988 Clltvy Cavalier
1185609, And A 1997 Ford
Taurus Gl 1181435. Public Auc·
lion Will Bo Hold AI Tho OVB

Annex. 143 Third Ave ., Gallipolis,
OH On 9/5198 AI 10:00 A.M. The
Above Will Be Sold To Hlghoat
Slddar "As Is - Wh'ore Is' Wllhoul Expressed Or lmpllod Warranty And May Be Saan By Call-

2045, will consider trade for a
good pontoon boat.

balhs, lot, garage , 2 added

Auto Parts &amp;
Acces&amp;orlas

760

conhtlnen
25 FinisheS tho
calte

27 City In - I I
2S Actor Nowllo

29 Actress Ryon
ond-.
31 Settle by

33NHI
. 38 Radical IIIII-

Upton Uud Call Rl. 62·3 Milos
South of Leon , WV. Financing

Avallol&gt;lo. J04.458-1068.

790

1980 Chevy 112 Ton Truck
81 ,000 mill PS, PB, 8 Cyl. ldfJ,
11800,00 080 7-2905
1982 s-10. v-e. good condlllon,
$1~000 7~1-101111.
1988 GMC S7.ooo. 1511. canto
Bed. 304-675-181111.
1818 IIUZU Ill. Clb 1~10, tit,
tunrool, olldlng beCk glooa, beclilne&lt;, loolca &amp; runo
S2.200.
304-1!75-:!MI.

-1.

51!&gt;. Long

. 41 Character In
Othello

42

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I I I

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

•

•

IWEDNESDAY

AUGUST19I

campel'l&amp;
Motor Homes

1979 Prowfer, 5th wheeler, clean. :

olaaps 6. awning, air, $3,895. at
Shl~ Water Campground 304·

738-3342

I ~90 Vik ing pop · up, sleeps 5,
au. stove &amp; sink. easv to pull. •

$1,500. 304-{175-2949.

:

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

Appliance Parts And Service: AN
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence All Work Guarantted
French City Maytag, 740·•4e!

·
.
.
·

1795.
C&amp;C

General

Homo

Moln-

carpanlly. doors, wlndowa ballla
mobile llom8 rapH and

mOr.. F« ·

free estimate cal Chet, · 7•0·992' •

.

~-

Proftllionel. 20y11 experience

wllll all moaonery, brk:ll, l&gt;iock &amp; ;
llont. Alao room addlllona, garages, etc. Free eatimolao. 304- •
773-9550.
I I

840 Electrlcll and
Refrtgll'ltlon

proper allen- . the same way you treal 1hem. The
tion to your responsibilities. Sweep- . choice is yours. ·
~.,..
ing them under the rug isn't the .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
.-.._
answer; tackling them head-on is.
temperamental co-worker might be
Thursday, Aug. 20, 1998
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Don'l more difficult than usualt_o_gel along
Your greatest benefils in the year push yourself 10 your physical limit with today. If you light his/her fuse, ·
ahead are likely to be found where today. What you accomplish won'! you'll regret il.
you least expect them. Synchronize jus1ify 1omo1Tow's sore muscles.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) It's
yourself with the tides Molher ·
SCORPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Sue· best not to mix friends who haven't
Nature, and don't swim against her cess is in the offing for you today, gotten along in tl.e pas!. Your intercurrents.
provided you don't put more pressure ference could provide a. recipe for
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Maintain· . ' on yourself than your tasks warrant. trouble.
ing harmony betwee? you and your : In this instance, cqasting can be a '
TAURUS (Apr_ii2().May 20) The
m,ate could be a dehcale procedure : virtue, not a penalty. .
·• world may not ~t you kindly today.
SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. Be careful not to tum innocent fam·
today. If either one of you gets aft' on '
the wrons foot, it will negatively i 21) To maintain peaceful relatjon· · ily mem)lers into targets for revenge.
affect the balance of yuur alliance. ' ships today, keep in mind that disGEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) Be
Knowrwhere to look for romllllCC and . Gussians with friend$ aren't the place selective about whom you share your
you'll find it. The Astro-Graph for unresplvable topics.
. .P~ with today. Don't discuss what
Matchmllker instantly reveals which ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan, 19) · yOII liave in mind with an associate
sijns are romantically perfect .for · · It's a sensible reaction to proiCCt what · whole response$ m ·always negative. ·
you. Mail $2.7' to Matchmllker, c/o · we fcelis ours. However, be careful
.CANCER (June 21 •July 22)
this newspaper, P.O. Bax 1758, Mur· nQI to be.ntOre possessive thin the sit- · ·. Uttciontrollod 11111tcrial desire could · ·
ray Hill 'Statian, New York, NY uatio~ wlltllltl today.
· · ~ you to be diacnchantod with
lo.'IS6.
AQUARIUS (Ju. 2o-Feb. 19) If :. your lot in life lqday. l&gt;oll't worry
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) You you fail to be cooj)elllive today, odt- . fabol!t what the other IUY'I got
won't feel free to enjoy yourself .
will notice, and you'll be lrciiOII .enjoy what you have,

ASTRO·GRAI'H

ttnenee- Painting, vinyl aiding, •

720 Trucks lor Sale

·eo.

of tho
40 -We All?

Sprawl · Blend· Knife - Jerkin - WEEKENDS

Ford Ranger Par'1s, Bed, Doors,
. And Many Other Auto (

toblllhad 197~ . Call 24 Hrs. (740)
448·0870, 1·800.287·0576. Ragera Waterp1 oat:. ~g.

tJattngs.

.

Two colle;1gues come to work on Monday with less
than an optimistic view. They try to make both WEEK·
ENDS meet.

74().245-!Bn.

01 Sale: CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

Your Area . Toll Free 1·800-218·
9000 Ext. A-2814 For Current

conciliation

1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines . All Types. Access .
To Over 10,000 Transmisslona,

Uncondl1lonai liteume guarantee.
Local references furnished . Es-

suso.74().~

24 Dyelftil

8

SACKDOO..,::R:.:;.._,..-_..-J

Bids , And W ithdraw Property
r:rom Sale Prior To Sale. Terms

Bad,

holder
23 GMtlc

e

TilE I=IWNT DOOR'? SUPPER
DISHES 8ELON6 AT THE

$17,000. 304-882-3426

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1994 Fold Rangar XLT

22 Eert Grey

0

\.111-lAT ARE '(OU DOJN6 AT

rooms, 2 A/C's, household Items.

1038. OVB Rosorvoo Tho Righi
To Accapt Dr Raject Any And 1&lt;11

Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4 WO't .

21 Wyomlftil city

'~~:~:~' S@\\4{\~-l&amp;t-trs~~

PEANUTS

Trailer on Broad Run Rd . 1 112

inQ Keith Johnson Al740·441-

Selzad Caro From $175. Potscllas. Cadlllaca. Chovya, BMW's,

20 Take-lrorn me

Bikini top
Are there three ways to peel
43 Roof edge
orange? Yes, no and maybe I
44 Vaae-shllped
You remember yesterday's deal . I
~.
explained !hal with A·Q-x of a side lmr+-1-+47--My
suit in your hand and thre" iow cards 6r+-,._-+-l-+Hellrt
46 Eve'a garden
in lhe dummy, you should cash the
50 Tolte to court
ace first, planning to le3d 1oward the
52 Gungrp.
queen on 1he second round of the sui!. ·
53Swlurlvw
Very clever, and all that But when I
used 1he deal in a lesson, 1wo out·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
played me .
by Luis Campo•
Predealing the cards for a large
Celebnly Cipher CIJI!togtillms are aelled from quota1ions by famous people, pfl$1 and ptHOnl
Each letWtr.., me CJphef ltands lor another Today's dult: A squMs Y
class takes a long time . So I cheat
slightly by giving everyone cards in
sequence. You w1ll see what I mean
HK
UHVLGIVFGL
·vaL TGNSR N J
when you refer to today 's diagram .
Notice how everyone has a useful
M G N K L
N J
SGHVLG
M N' L V GA.
VB L
poker hand or two. It does save time,
VBL
bul occasionally causes me 10 have
SBLR
I K H 0 L
KVLM
N R UA
TIR
citrus juice squirled inlo my eye.
The room was in six spades. The
s . KNXLGKLV
MIKKLK .
MNLV
deal was actually like yeslerday's,
wilh Wesl having king-doubleton of
XIFDBIX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Life is lull of lnlemal dramas, inslanlaneous and
hearls. Yellwo skilled players. Dotsenaalional, played lo an audience of one.' - Anthony Powell
ty Noyes. of Darien. Conn. , and
Alfred Spelbrink. of New Canaan,
WOlD
Conn .. would have made the contract
GAM I
even if Wasl had had king-third .
Edited ~y CLAY I. I'OLLAN _.;__ _ __
Here 's whal I hey did.
They won the firs! Irick wilh the
Reorrange leners of the
:our Krambled words bediamond king. drew !rumps. cashed
low to form four simple words .
the club winners. look dummy 's diamond ace. and led lhe diamond 1hree
ONTREM
from lhe dummy. When Easl fol lowed low. instead of ruffing, lhey
discarded !heir low hearl 1 As Wesl
had all the high diamonds. she had to
win 1he trick and was endplayed. If
West returned a minor-suit card, il
conceded a ruff-and-discard. However. if West led a hear!. it would be
away from lhe king around into
Soulh's ace-queen. Brilliant 1
Remember this lose r-o n-loser
play. II migh1 be your rescuer.

$5000, 740.949-2203 or 740-949-

Credit Problems? We Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehlctes, No Turn Downs, Call
Vicki&amp;, 74o-«6-2897 .

Your area bush hog dealer for
partt, rotary cuttera, loadar1, till·
era, finish mowers , ect. Car·
mlchltl'l Farm 6 Lawn midway

1

II Ms.
llftil
11 T o1
128-Mirtln

three matching Kawasaki s~l
vests and trailer au go with it,

As Is Ferguson 50 Needs A

Etc. Provided. 740-446-1052.

·~wc:lty'

"""'

5 Dnlt agcy.
I Ruin
7 Provide (with

.......

13 Utah hrs.
18 Gold (Sp.)

warranty, three seater, 83 horse-

5181.

land Mowing Machine. Pracllcally
Now! 740-387-7584.

lrHiau troct
35 Afterword
38 l'fpe of CUIYO

4 OICatprto, lor

power, bought new July ol '97 •.

1062.

Massie Ferguson 6 Ft Pick -Up
Disk ; Masale Ferguson 14 Inch
High Clearance Plow, New Hol-

Still

lant condition, $800, 740 -9927878.

Now gas tanks &amp; body parts. o &amp; ·
R Auto, Rlplay, wv. 304·372·
3933 or t-800-273-9329.
·

tires. good price . $3.500. 304875-3269.

34=:.n

I

1996 Kawasaki 900 ZXI Jet Ski :

91 Honda Acco rd LX, 4 door,
133,000 miles , asking $5500,
looks &amp; runs great . 740·992·

Massey Ferguson 50, gas , live
power. good hydraulic, good

Ot-IL'1' BWTm
TI\Of.I-W'I'I£ COQD

Ql£5\::&gt;TILL

ronaiN&amp;

304-675-4889 or 304-{175-3288.

1989 Tempo Auto, Air, Till,
Cruise , Power Steering, Power
Seats, PB. 71 ,000 Miles. $1.400,

"'&lt;1

~

2 Row ~ew Idea Corn Picker ;
Gehl Silage Wagon And Hi Throw
Blower. Good CondiUon, 740-446-

740-258-1834.

Inhabitant of I

1 Goofs

2 Concelltld
3- La Douce

...

AJC, AMIFM, tinted windows, rear

Paris, 740.388·9062, 740446-7278.

JOhn Deere 850 4)(4 Drl~e Tractor wiNew loader Budl;et $12,500,

dlocrlmln.tlon
32 Orlglnol

By Phillip Alder

$15,000.740-245-5075.

440-n67.

DOWN

30 C..Uin

Excellent Condlllon, Call At 74Q: ,

leave Message

Stock : Parts, Farm Equipment ,
Utility Trailers, Tractors , Kessel's
Tractor &amp; Equipment 1 Mile West
Holzer Hospital, Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, 740·446·8906 , 740-

burning

27 That 1111111

Yet another way

terlor &amp; Trunk, 60,000

Close Our Sale On Ewrythlng In

2e = b i l l

'

1995 5-10 4 WO LS, PS. PB, N;;, •
Cruise, Tilt, 5 Speed, 4.3 Liter, '
Towing Package, 58,000 Mlle.-. !

Under Warranty,

55 Juice fruit
aectlon
58 Art daco
20 NeeciiHhaped
Illustrator
23 MMtonno
57 Mallctoul

lead: •

ALONE It

'89 .Cougar, loaded , excellenl
condition, 80,000 miles, call 740.

Ml~s.

- · e . g.

111 T e . -

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Saulb
Wesl No rib Eul
Pass 3.
Pass
2•
Pass 5.
Pass
4 NT
Pass
Pass 6t
5NT
s.
Pass Pass
Pass

•

van.·

1991 Chevy Conversion

311
40 ~
10 HMIMt to find .q Bar bow
12 HephaMI
45 Red-- . .
14 CncMd
411 Unlock, to 1
15 Comlllllnda
.,.,..
18 .._1'-P oW 11oet l n c - t
11 n.,.. with
s1 cMwec~
Ngelo and
54 NYC's

•AQ

Condlllonl Asking $1.200.00. Call
740-2566·1469 Alter 6:00PM or

0·5 Sweeper w/attach·

saoo.

•AKQ654
•AQS

5829.

short bed, very good condition,

'87 Chevy Celebrity, • dr, 4 cyl,

10 9 8 7

Saulb

LeBaron. V-{1, 4-dr. 304-675-2289.

Wanted : Someone to Work on
Farm . Trailer, Utltlttes, Salary and

King Kuttor 8 Fl Flnlah Mowor.
Ulld vary lillie. $900.00. 740·
379-2227

•

las, Vet Checked, tst Shotsl
Have Parents; Himalayan Persian

• 3
• J 10 9 8
• 8 7 6 5

1989 St 0 Clltvy 4 WO Pick-Up. .
4.3 V-6. Auto Tronamlulon ..
Good COndftlon . $4,650. 740-2!8··
8869 l.eaYe Meaaage.

710 Autos for Sale

Trucks, 4x4's,

Easl

.

$4,000. 304-882-2823 after 4pm. :

740-446·2055 or 740·448-3929,

AEIWION MOI'ORS
Ropalrad. Now &amp; RabuiM In Stock.
Cal Ron Evona, 1-800-637-9528.

304-895-3237.

1989 Flrabird Formuli!, white, 350
engine, auto, V-8 . I 986 Chrysler

740-446-1528.

Wanted to buy- feed grinder/mixer, 740-992·7&amp;03.

JET

1954 Wllly'o 4-WD pick -up, re -:
built, 4cyl , cab In good ohapo,
bed-rough. $500. 304-895-3080 or ·

Registered AKC Very Smail York-

pol~ .

Beds, Cherry Rocker, Entertatn·
ment unita, TV'S, Minnkota Trolling motor. Lawn Furniture Call

LaovoMosaaga

• 4 3 2
t A 3 2
• K J

down paymant. 304-675-5522.

Wheel $2.200, 740-258·6278 Al-

Call 740·992-6636 alter 6 pm .
COS &amp; tapeS not lnclutlad.

•JI0987

'93 Ft50 4x4, 72,000 ml.,s, many
...... 74CHI67·9816.

1988 CflOvy S-10, Now Paint JOb,
Sharpl74o-&lt;41-1419

ter4P.M.

675-5808. E.O.H.

Scenic Valley at Apple Grove,

French Clly Pat Groo!Ting by Appointment. "Uitr• Wa1h Bathing
Sy1tem• 650 Second AVe. Gam-

storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out of bo• . $125. Hold s up
to 940 discs. also holds tapes .

Now Taking Appllcailons- 35

(next

(www.happyjac:kinc.com}

Brand Newl Groat Giftl CO/video

Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Ft.
$400 mo. Corner Building , 740·
Acquisitions

py JACK PARACIDE II shampoo. Contains NO Oeotl

740.446-{)390.

2651 lor appointmonl.

992· 62.50

PLY , 740-992· 2164 about HAP-

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,

Commerclai·Oflice or Retail, 87

par montll. Call 1-800-948-5678.

sons. ASK RaG FEED I SUP·

Baby Bod (White) Good Condition. 74().388-6293.

340 Business and
Buildings

Used single wiae, around $100 .

Get · heat relief, condition hair
AWl control fleas . ticks, &amp; mites
for dogs without systemic pol ·

304-1!75-5162.

Nicely furnished 1br duplex apts.
on MI. Vernon Ave . Ideal tor 1
person . Upper S250.1mo. plus
electric . Lower $295.1mo . plus
electric. $200 . deposit. Also 1br
upstairs at 402 21st Street , !urnished . $250./mo . pius electric .
No pets . References . 304-675 ·

800-948-5878.

Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10 :00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

$250. 740-949-2893.
Ground floor apt 2br, w/d hook·up,
referen ces &amp; deposit, no pets .

388-8714

or selL Riverine Antiques,

8:00 p.m. 740-992 -2526 , Run

$1,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. t888·928·3426.

Also 3 Babies 011 The Nest. Also
2 Tame young Cocka1rels . 740 ·

SPINET /CONSOLE PIANO:

740-446-4782

Beach Street, Middleport, 1 room
efficiency apt. utilities paid, de·
posit &amp; references . 304·882·

New bank repos. Only two tell ,
never lived ln . Call 1-800·948-

.

304·937-

TRANSPORTATION

o

Months Old $175.00. Call 740 441-1602 After 4:00PM.

1br &amp; 2br apts . for rent in Pt.
Pleasant, WV. 304·675·2174 or
741)-446-2200.

Green Apia . 149 or call 740-992·

New 3br $900. down, $149. per
mo. Free skirt. 1-800-691·6m.

AKC BoKer Puppies. Fawn, 4
Mates, 1 Female, 6 Weeks Old,
$250.00 Each. Also. 1 Male, 1

MERCHANDISE

446-2957.

Quick delivery. Call 740 -385-

Sheets . 373 Georges Creek Rd .
740-446-0231 .

Hs Forry. 304-675-4075.

Three bedroom mobile home in

440

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don

Trailer spaces for rent in Gallipo-

14x70 2br t~alter for rent at South·
side. WV. Security deposit re-

conditioned , $280-$300, sower,

992-5578.

74().38f&gt;.4387.

Wanted To Rent: 3 Bedroom
House. Preferably In Gallipolis
Area, Must Allow Pet&amp;, 304-458-

qulrad. 304-{175-5502.

2 yr. old, Red Doberman . very
good with children, $100, 740 ·

Mobile home site available btl·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

100 Alfalfa mixed hay rolls In
barn . SIS each or $1,200 . /all.

1978 Chevy 4 Wheel Drive. V-8.
305, $3,000 .00 080. 740·446·

Pets for Sale

560

Lot $80. Available Sept. 1st.
304-882-2ll17 Cal before 2pm.

470 Wanted to Rent

992·2218.

Large selection of used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $2995.

Building
Supplies

Stool l!uldlngs In Original Crate.
40x20 ( 1 Open Endl Was $6,380
Will Soli For $2.680. Guaranteed
C0111)1ota Clluclc HIOQ-320-2340.

304-n3-585t, Maeon wv.

420 Mobile Homat
lor Rant

nished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

options available . 1-888-928 -

Tuesday-Friday, 11·4, 740-982·
3725.

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·2455121 .

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur-

H.andy lion Special

furniture on consignment, Open

Sieaplng roome with cooking .

ery. t-IIOIHI91-67n.

2 or 3 bedroom single wides.
304-755-7191.

nua, Middleport (Cash Behro old
building), buying- baby Items.
breaktaat aeta &amp; good clean uaed

Two nice 2 bedroom houses In

Couple. P!lono 740-446-9539

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

The Pomeroy Thrift Shop has
fMIIId IO 1•5 North Second Ave-

Hay 6 Grain

Bed tlllnp
e1 1.8mb
or por11

cnam c.__

$2600, call74().992-3465.

Wllh Topper. 10,000 Milos On
RobuMt Englna, Has U11 &amp; Shift Kh,
Clean Inside &amp; Outl Asking
$8,000, can After 5 ~M . 740.245-

304·882·3194

3~.

'87 Ford Rangar 4x4, robujll melt"'
and transmission. runs good.

1986 Chevy 4 WO Short Bed

Now Haven, wv

Morgan Farm, Rl.
2018.

Block. brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows. Mntela, etc. Claude Winters,

pooH.

Cusklm Slaughtar &amp; Procasalng
State lnspoclad
wv Sau&amp;age Company

Sears Kenmore Oven, Good

740-441·58911. 740-441-5187.

no peta, $350/$375 rent plua de·

Registered Quarter Horse Year·

ling. 740-643-2654

640

dapolll.

Mldd"PP&lt;t. appllancas lurnlohad,

74().985-3549.

ab" Spa; boll1 In excollonl condl·
Uoo. Call 740·9115-4262 aftar 5:00
pm.

Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
137.00 Par tOO; All Bra&amp;&amp; Compresekln Fittings In Stoclc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
- · Olllo, 1·800-537-9528

450

Fair steer, grain fed. freezer beel.

907 4th Street

Clnemax, ShOwtlme &amp; Disney.
Wetkty Rates, Or Monthly Rates,
Construction Workers Welcome

lurnlshad, no pata, $37~ ronl plus

2 Bedroom MObile Home in Galli·
polls, Great tor Elderly Person or

ONLY AT OAKWOOD HOMES
NITAO,WV
1-:104-755-58111i

tnatattotion,

CondHion, $130, 740-446--o026.

erences Required. No Pets , can
74().-44&amp;..4~14 Fot Appointment.

Rlby Rentals
Two nice 2 bedroom houses in
Pomeroy. secluded. appliances

~~

19 Month Old Filly Colt $450,
740-446-9878.

For 1ele- Regular Buck Stove,
glass Inserts ; Hot Springs Port-

UPSTAIR.$ APARTMENT FOR
RENT: Appllcallono Are Avai l·
able AI 1403 eaatorn Ave .. Gallipolis. OH Now Kitchen. Larva (1)
Bedroom, Vlow 01 Tha Rlvar, Gas
Heal. $30Mio.. Dapoall And Ral-

992-2167.

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom ,
Includes 6 months FREE tot rent.
Includes skirting, deluxe steps

close to sc11ools. 740-992-3465.

3·4br houae in Hartford, $2SO .

encea, $350 plua deposit, no
pets. will consider purchase con·

1995 Clayton . all electric, e•ce l·

StarOn&amp; opeciaf

800-263-2640.

APT AVAILABLE NOW
lWin Rivera Tower now accepting
appllcallone lor tbr. HUO aubald·

Rldga 14x70 mobile home, very
good condition, 2 badrooms, 1 &amp;
112 baths, washer &amp; dryer, stove,

3br homa on Garfield Ave. In Pt .
Pleasant . Priced In 70's . 304 -

House for sale In Middleport.
seven rooms, l hree bedrooms ,
bath and halt, recently remodeled,

0521 .

Two bedroom house In Pomeroy,

304-736-7295.

From· Pennies On $1 Delinquent
Tax . Repo's, REO' s. Your Area .
Toll Free (f) 800-2 18·9000 Ext.
H·2814 For Cwrent listings.

quired, Call Toll-Free 1-888-8-40-

Price reduced· 1990 Spruce

pancy 74().245-9525

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homos

Hook-Up, 1~2 Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis. $375/Mo.. Daposll Re-

For Rent: In Mason, WV. Trailer

Set Up On lol, Take Over Pymrs,

year old. country style, 2·3 bed·
rooms, 1 bath, loft overtooking living room, tongue &amp; groove kitch·
en cabinetry, doors &amp; woodwork
throughout. pellet sto~e. HPICA.
appliances included, 50 year vinyl
siding, shutters. deck. 1 car garage. spa. storage building. nicely
landscaped, on 1 acre . county
schools, 8 miles from Holzer, 740-

month plus $100 deposit. 740667·3083.

460 Space for Rent

Miles Bulavllle. Immediate Occu-

675-2924.

3 Bedroom House. 1 Bath. W/D

Prlm11tar- low Installation with
rebate, lirll monlll lree. lree HBO,

Avenue, bath and 112, $300/

IGAservfceclosk.

out·

. mica Top, 72' Long, Good ConditiOn, $75, 74G-379-9110.

Floors, CA. t 112 Belll, Fully Carpeted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo, No Pats, lNia Plus SecurIty Deposit Required, 740-4483481.

Condition. $7.900. 74Q-448-0175,
304-675-5965.

axe

Office Desk , Metal With Nice For-

Tara Townhouse Apartments ,
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms, 2

Pick up application at vaugnan·s

3426.

Many UIJ!jatos, $8:4.900. 614-8371081 Altar 5.

urllit"s &amp; deposit. Evenings 304·
67s-4975 or Laavo rriOS58gl.

Fraa 1-688-640-0521

730 Van1 6 4-WDI

Complete king bid . 304-8755162.

Small tbr apt. $190 . mo. plus

Gal Heat, Central Air, Excellent

refrigerator. ce ntral air.

540 Mlecellanaous
Merchandlee

Apartments
for Rent

ThrM bedroom apartment, Spring

Radman 2 Badrooms,

3 Bedroom Ranch, 1 Bath , Big
Yard, Garage, Excellent Condi·
lion! 583 LeGrande, Gallipolis,

1 Bedroom hou&amp;e near Rio
Grande College . $300 .00 Per
Month , Depos it Required . Toll

Electric

Huge 28x80 3BR, I 112 bath .
Starting at ONLY $39,999. Many

Home For Sale. New~ Ae·
rn:&gt;delad, 2 Badrooms. 1 Bath, Air,
2 Buildings On 1 To 2 Acres

230

Be t.lovedl

6pm.

367-o286.

SE~IOUS

Awn., Steps, 740-4-46-:2828 Must

Road, County Schools $62,000,
74().256-9164.

stuubi &amp; weeds

740-441 · 1038.
QUIII£S ONLY

t0x50 Vlndale. CIA. 2 Badrooms.
Shingled Root, t Ox32 Alum Pallo

side building. 74().992-6582.

992·5696.

DaltwoodNttro,WV.

ANY ODD JOBS

210

ReglltofToWin
'FREE'-!
304-756-5815.

~965.

Preocllool
304-175-15847

pa~oncod .

Nitro,WV.

1978 Festival Total

111g1c y.,. OayCaro

180 WantaciTo Do

Oftlyi~­

Ttis newspapar will not
knowingly accept

Financing.
FrM Sol-Up I Air.
Oftlyl

cansod by 111o Stoto 01 WV.

1411 Down. All S111gla Idle.
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1.1

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

ursday

Wednesday, August 19, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS

MondiiJ thru
Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMn QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1991
RAISING PULLETS - Sarah Houser• left• day In the Meigs County Junior Fair Poultry
and Mike Salser dlaplayed the grand and Show. They are shown with 1998 Poultry
reserve champion raising pullet project Mon- Princess Kristina Westfall, right.

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 83

es, but the large number of troubled
districts raises questions about
whether state leaders will enforce the
standard• or commit the resources
necessary to oversee dozens of districts, the newspaper said.
" I don'tthink the Department of
Education is going to have the
resolve to get involved in every one
of these school districts," said Senate
President Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati.
John Goff. state superintendent of
public instruction. agreed.
"Simply training school districts
has not brought enough pressure to
bear that all kids have to achieve at
a higher level," Goff said. "But we
haven't fully come to grips about
how we should go about doing this."
State lawmakers have ordered the
Education Department to create
report cards that detail proficiency
test scores, attendance rates and
dropout rates for each district and
building in the state.

The districts won't be officially
ranked until next year, but the newspaper's analysis of data in this year's
reports showed the majority of students in property-rich suburbs, struggling urban area• and poor rur;ai communities all fail to meet the performance goals.
The analysis, averaging three
years of data. found among other
things that:
• Average scores on the fourth-,
ninth- and 12th-grade m'athelnatics
exams met the 75 percent passing
threshold in only 10 districts.
• Students in 360 districts failed to
meet the math standard for the ninthgrade test, which students must pass
to graduate from high school.
• In 97 percent of the districts,
average scores on the fourth-grade ·
reading test failed to meet the 75 percent passing threshold
• Only 23 districts met the standards for attendance and dropout

TOTAL

OR

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MARKET PENS - Ed Smith and Odie Karr,
from left, will head the sale order for poultry In
the Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale
Friday night after winning grand and raMrVe

champion honors In the market pen competl·
lion Monday In the Meigs County Junior Fair
Poultry Show. They are shown with 1998 Poultry Princess Krlatlna Wntfall.

, $
e Ju1ce:::' 1

SEASON'S BEST TROP!CANA

Oran

t

SJ59

FINE FOWL- Matt Salser and Mike Salser,
from left, were named grand and I'IIMn/e
champion in the Meigs County Junior Fair

Poultry Show's dueka, geese and turkey com·
petition. They are ehown with Poultry Prlnceaa
Kriatlna Weatfall.

(ASS/'T VAA)
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Newark settles sexual harassment suit ·
. NEWARK (AP) - Two people
woll be demoted and the city will pay
another $99,999 to senle the sexual
harassment case of an assistant tire
chief. city orticials announced.
Safety Director Robert White will
~

moved rn an unnamed position in

the city' s Parks and Recreation Division. Fire Chief Robert McKenna
will be demoted to assistant chief
Mayor Frank Stare announced Tues~
day.
The moves become effective Friday.
Stare praised their work, but said
the legal problems associated with
the lawsuit need to end.
"This was one of my toughest
days in making the decision that
affects these two men," he said.
As part of the senlement with Anita Stickle. Newark will pay her
$99.999. in addition to $200,000 the
city alreody has paid.
In return. she will drop a contempt-of-court action claiming that
Newark failed to implement a 1997
agreement seuling the lawsuit Stickle also agreed never to seek the posi-

lion of Newark fire chief.
" It's been difficult for me and for
the firefighters," Stickle said. " Hopefully the city will move on and be
proactive."
Firefighters auending the news
conference gasped when the financial

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BOUNTY

PAPER

29c ~;"'

By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer

na •• ..,. MULES?weren't the only
participants In Wednesday morning's draft
hof!IS show held at the Meigs County Fair.
Here, Rodney Tuttla ol Cheater exhibits two

12

99c

TOWELS
SINGLE ROLL

By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer

KRAFT AMERICAN
SINGLES
oz.
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The case of

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

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mulaa In the log pull competition,
team and driver maneuvar the logs around a
aerlaa of cones set up on the pulling track.

Public defenders again challenge
execution plans for 'The Volunteer'

C·

CHEF BOYARDE.E
CANNED PASTAS
ASST.
VARIETIES

Racine In his 1992 Ford registered a pull of 218
feat-9 Inches, during Wednnday evening's
pull.

Win Bankroll
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

ssoo

Free Cash
Stop In The Store
For Details

The historic log cabin on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds Is a
popul• place this week for the ·
young and old alike.
·
Inside fairgoera are enjoying
the antique furnishings, many
more than a century old, as
-n as the structure ltaeH,
now 169 years old. The cabin
consists of two rooms with a
atone fireplace and a narrow
stairway, which leads Into an
attic. A feather tick bed, a
leather settee, an antique
dresser, and an old-fashioned
telephone on the wall are
among the attractions.
The cabin was buiH In 1829,
and In 1987 was dismantled
aruLmoved Jrom lfl original
locatt~·Seneca Drive near
old U.S. 33 to the fairgrounds.
Since then It has been used
during the fair as a place where
lessons on life of yestarxaar
are presented.
·
Children this week are
enjoying blowing bubbles,
playing with soft clay, making
potato prints, and creating
seed pictures.
Wednaaday was play clay
day, and numerous· young·
sters, ln~;ludlng Jacob Boston,

Kendrick Osborn, Carty Kimes,
Zach Carson and Samantha
Cummins, top photo, gathered
Inside the cabin to pound, to
squeeze, to make fun things.

Little Samantha Cummins
found the furnishings fascinating. Here, above, she looks
at herself in the mirror of an
antique dresser.

Starr's prosecutors gather DNA
sample from Clinton for analysis

CINCINNATI -

seulement was announced.
Stickle has been a Newark firetighter since 1979 and was named
assistant chief in 1989. She has complained since 1994 of se~ual haro~ss­
mem in the department.

49

WOLFE PULLS - The truck pulls have
always been a fair favorite, Chad Wolfe of

4 ROLLPK

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Day of fun in the cabin---.

New school standards
proving tough to meet
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio's
public school districts are having a
tough time meeting the new academic
standards approved last year by state
lawmakers. The Cincinnati Enquirer
reported today.
A computer analysis by the newspaper showed that more than 90 percent of the public school districts fall
short of meeting the standards.
The analysis of the data compiled
by the state Department of Education
shows only 10 of Ohio's 611 school
districts are considered "effective,"
meaning_ they meet at least 17 of the
18 goals.
Fifty-six districts are considered to
be in "academic emergency," the
newspaper said. Those districts fail to
have enough students passing their
math, reading, writing and citizenship
proficiency exams. They also reported inadequate auendance and dropout
rates.
Schools that fail to improve could
face a state takeover in extreme cas-

Brewers lose
to Cincinnati
Page4

entine

2-12 PKS

c

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Can Clinton get past scandal?, Page 2
McGwire belts 49th home run, Page 4
A great day for the fair, Page 8

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

$ 99
PEPSI &amp;
MTDEW
PRODUCTS
2 LITERS

Sports

August 20, 1998

Weather

8

Calendar
Classifieds

Comics

2
3
4&amp;5

Editorials
L9Gal
, Sports
Weather

3

Lotteries
l )dl•

Super Lotto: 1-22-21-42-45-46

l&lt;kkei': 2-4-3-9'-0-5
Pick 3: 6-4-8; Pick 4: 8-4-0-6
~3: l-7-6;Daily4:
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Wilford Berry Jr.. who is trying to mentally ill and not competent to
become the first person e~ecuted in decide his fate.
Ohio since 1963, will once again be
Berry was sentenced to die for
appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. shooting his boss, Cleveland baker
Public defenders representing his Charles Mitroff, during a 1989 robfamily say they will appeal a ruling bery. Berry. 35, has said he wants to
Wednesday from the 6th U.S. Circuit be executed rather than spend his life
Court of Appeals. The court said on Ohio's death row while court
there was no reason to reconsider a appeals continue in his behalf.
On March .J, Berry was on his
May 22 ruling that Berry is compeway by prison van to the execution
tent to decide to drop his appeals.
"If left unchallenged, this decision chamber at the Southern Ohio Corwould allow Wilford Berry to be exe- rectional Facility in Lucasville when
cuted without a reliable evaluation of the U.S. Supreme Court refused to
his competency to give up and die," allow the e~ecution.
State officials have asked the
said Greg Meyers, a lawyer in the
Ohio
Supreme Court to set a new
state public defender's office in
execution
date, but one ha• not been
Columbus.
set.
Auomey General Betty MontHe remains in a state prison hosgomery said she was pleased with the pital in Columbus, where he has been
appeals court's decision.
since · he ·was beaten in September
"With .today's ruling, judges at during a death-row uprising at the
every level - local, state and feder- Mansfield Correctional Institution.
al -have ruleil in favor of our posiThe Ohio Supreme Court ha.•
tion that Me. Berry is competent," she ruled Berry is competent to give up
said.
the right to appeals. In May, a'threeAttorneys representing Berry's judge appeals panel upheld the ruling
mother, Jennie Franklin, and sister, and said Berry's mother and sister
Elaine Quigley, argue that Berry, have no standing to try and block his
known as "The Volunteer" because death sentence. Wednesday's ruling
he has asked to waive his appeals, is upheld the others.
I

'

WASHINGTON - In developments that could mean more trouble
for President Clinton, prosecutors
gathered a sample of his DNA and
turned to Monica Lewinsky for additional testimony about the presidential affair and alleged cover-up.
Friends and associates of Ms.
Lewinsky said she was hurt by Clinton's characterization of their relationship, that Ms. Lewinsky felt that
she and the president had a deeper
bond with emotional ties. One friend
said when Ms. Lewinsky tiled a
sworn affidavit in January Jenying a
sexual relationship. it was in an
effort to protect the president.

DNA testing.
The developments came amid
conflicting versions of Clinton's
grand jury testimony Monday. A
knowledgeable legal source told The
Associated Press on Wednesday that
the president acknowledged in his
secret testimony that Ms. Lewinsky
perfonned oral sex on him several
times at the White House. White
House officials did not respond to
requests for comment on the source's
account
The New York Times, however.
quoted a Clinton adviser as saying the
president did not make such an
acknowledgment. This adviser said
the president declared more vaguely
in response to questions that "I've
already said that it was improper."
The Times' source said Clinton contended that the type of sex he had
with Ms. Lewinsky did not fit the def-

in ilion of se&lt; used in the Paula Jones
sexual harassment lawsuit against

him .
According to the lega l source.
Cli nton first read a prepared statement admilling that he took part in
what he called inappropriate. intimate
physical contact with the intern.
Advisers say Clinton had hoped to
limit hi s testimony ahout tntimate
matters to the statement.
But pru:-.ecuLors pn::-.:-.cd further.
and he acknowledged spe~ific "'exu-

al encoun ters. according to the legal

source. who only spoke on condition
of anonymity.
Clinton's account of their relationship. including the exchange of
gifts between the two as well as their

When the president in his teleencounters. was to be tested wda y
vised address Monday night said he
during Ms. Lewinsky 's second
had an inappropriate relationship
appearance before the grand jury
with Ms. Lewinsky, he "didn't really speak to the pain everyone else has
experiencedinthis."oneoftheformer intern's friends said.
Several sources said Wednesday
the DNA sample from Clinton went
THURSDAY, AUG. 20
to prosecutor Kenneth Starr's invesSenior Citizens Day
tigatoi's so it could be used in an FBI
Sponsor of the Day: Vaughan's IGA
"
analysis of a dress Ms. Lewinsky said
All senior citizens admitted free all day (age 60 and nver)
was stained from a se~ual encounter
Various times: Kid&lt; Day Ci rcus
with the president
3 p.m. - IJ,og ca11·ong contest -Show Arena (sponsored by VaughMs. Lewinsky, 25, turned the
an's IGA)
dress over to Starr's office three
4 p.m._ 4-H Talent Show
'
weeks ago after she reached an
4 p.m. -Kiddie Tractor Pull
agreement to testify in e~change for
5 p.m. - Dazzling Dolls_ Hill Stage
immunity from prosecution.
6 p.m. _ Kiddie Games_ Hillside Stage
Asked about the DNA sample.
7 &amp; 9 p.m. - Michelle Wright
White House spokesman Jim
7 p.m. - Karaoke- Hill Stage
Kennedy said, "We are going to
7 30
respect" Clinton's stated desire to
: p.m. - Open Class Horse Show
" 1· " h
.,
8 p.m. - Horse Pull
rec aom is private it.~.
II p.m. _Gates close
· It was not known when the prose~:utors got the sample or whether the
FRIDAY, AUG. 21
saplple was from Clinton directly or
Sponsor of the Day: Rutland Bottle Gas Co.
from Bethesda Naval Hospital where
· Children under' 12 ride free with $4 gate admission until 2 p.m.
Clinton undergoes periodic physical
Various times: Kids Day Circus
1
e~aminations. It also wasn't known
a.m. - Gates open
9 a.m. - Pet Show - Show Arena
what sample the prosecutors
oblolined. Blood and saliva are two
II a.m. ,- Junior Fair Obedience Show- Show Arena
commonly used materials used in .___
, _p_.m_,__
s_s_ra_c_in,;;,g_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J

Mel·gs County Fal·r

"_ame
__
'•

.
••

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