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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

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•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 26, 1998

Changes announced in Eastern district bus routes
The consolidation of Eastern
Local School District's three elementary schools and several road
clo~ings have resulted in some
changes in the district's bus routes.
Transpoltation Director An:h Rose
has announced the following bus
routes for the district's students:
Dolly Reed (Bus No.6): She will
begin on Bridle Trail Rd. (T-276),
Number Nine Rd (T-265), Little Forest Rd. (T-274), Hudson Rd. (T-273),
State Route 124 toward ~ Bottom
from Reedsville, State Route 248
from Long Bottom to Locust Grove
Rd. CCR 28). Cunis Hollow Rd. (T272) and CR 28 from Keno to State
Route 7.
Gary Dill (No. 9): His mute will
be essentially the same as last year.
He will travel Rainbow Ridge Rd. (T43 ). Long Run (T-149), Smith Ridge
Rd. (T-39), Dewitt's Run Rd (T-144 ),
Hayman Rd. (T-144), State Route
124 from Dewiu's Run to Long Bottom. Mt. Olive Rd. (T-114). Bigley
Ridge Rd. (T-251) and East Shade
Rd. (T-94 ). Due to a mad closure on
Long Run Rd.. Dill will travel
Stivers ville Rd. to Hayman Rd.
Nita Jean Ritchie (No. 16): She
wi II begin m Boston Hollow this year
and then travel the following roads:
State Route 124 from Indian Run Hill
to Eden Ridge Rd. ICR 50), Coolville
Rd. CCR 441. Lydia Rd. IT-313). Rice
Run Rd. (T-3 13) and State Route 681
from Rice Run to the Tuppers Plains
intersection of State Route 7.
Glen Ea'terling (No. 20): He will
begin on State Route 124 south of
Eden Ridge Rd. intersection and will
pick up all the children to and including Reedsville, State Route 681 to
County Rd. 50, Eden Ridge.
Bob White CNo. 19): He will
deliver all children in Alfred. Sumn-

er. ·and Silver Ridge areas which
includes the following roads: Carr
Rd. IT-231 ), Woods Rd. (T-240),
Keebaugh-Follrod Rd. (T-444). Sumner Rd. (CR 36), Bentz Rd. (T-158),
Alfred Rd. (CR 41 ), Tucker Rd (T306), Mudsock Rd. (T-304), Guthrie
Rd. (T-305), Silver Ridge Rd. (T293), Betzing Rd. (T-299), Panlow
Rd. CT-307) and Christy Rd. (T-295).
Carolyn Ritchie (No.5): She will
transport children from the following
roads: Owl Hollow Rd (T-279). Calaway Ridge Rd. (T-303 ), Brooks Rd.
(T-312), State Route 7 through Tuppers Plains. All students in Tuppers
Plains will be transported on Main
Street, Stale Route 681 to Owl Hollow.
Ellie Bernard (No. 7): She will
transport children on Success Rd.
(CR 46), Smith-Baker Rd. (T-283).
Lickskillet Rd. (T-262). Osborn Rd.
(T-264). Number Nine Rd. IT-265) to
Success Rd., Joppa Rd. (CR 43 ), Rye
Rd. (T-319), State Route 681 from
Rye Rd. to Limberger Ridge Rd.,
Umberger Ridge (T-270), Pine Tree
Drive (T· I~7) and State Route 7 from
Pine Tree Drive to schools.
Keitha . Whitlatch (No. 10): Her
route is basically the same as last
year. Eagle Ridge Rd. (CR 32),
Bashan-Keno Rd. (CR 28), State
Route 248 and all of Chester and
Horse Cave Rd. (T-126). However,
due to the closure of State Route 248

near Keno. it will be necessary to
stan the route near Keno and run it

backwards in an attempt to reduce
time once children are on the bus.
Ed "otter (No. 21 ): His route will
be almost the same as last year.
Riebel Rd (T-113), Oak Hill Rd. (T59), Scout Camp Rd. (T-112), Sand .
Ridge Rd. (T-{)7), Pine Grove Rd.
(CR 34), Vinegar St. (T-119), Flatwoods Rd. (CR 26), Whipple Rd.
(CR 53), Crow Addition, Bacr Rd (T152) and New Hope Rd. (T-91 ).
Alfred Wolfe (No. 8): He will
transport on Bailey Rd. (T-220),
Pomeroy Pike (CR 25), to the district
line, to Texas Rd. (CR 82), Wickham
Rd. (T-82 ), Pooler Rd. (T-221 ), Sumner Rd. (CR 36) to Sumner. Bahr Rd.
(T-404) and State Route 7 from
County Rd. 82 to the schools.
Rossie Dill (No.4): Her route will
be similar to last year's with minor
changes. She will began at Stethem
Rd. (T-309), West Shade Rd. (T·I56),
Skinner's Rd. (T-83), Rocksprings
Rd. (CR 20), Lover!&gt; Lane (T-81 ),
Aatwoods Rd. (CR 26), Old Forest
Rd. (T-224). State Route 7 from Five
Points to the Skate-a-way, all children
nonh of State Route 7, Warehouse
Rd. (T-382), Pomeroy Pike (CR 25)
to Chester.
The changes in routes may result
in shoner bus rides for some students,
and due to anticipated traffic congestion at the school campus, Rose

asks that students ride school buses
whenever possible, and asks parents
to refrain from transportina !he students to school.

. M9Wmomi~s pickups will be a
little flier than m !he past. IICCOiding
10 ROre. but children should be rally
earfy and waiting at !heir usual bus

Thursday

stop. Parents with questions about
bus drivers and bus routes should call
the district office at667-6079 durin&amp;

n:gular office hours.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 85; Low:65

c

~'

. - • ..I

~....,".

/

Vol. No. 49 No. 87

a1

Meigs County's

McGwire,
Sosa hit
homers
Page4

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Bombing suspect brought to U. S. for questioning

HEIFER GIVEAWAY· The FIII'IMnl Bank end
Savings .Co. onc:e lgllln gave 8WIJ e ~try
heifer to a ftr.t.,_. 4-H ~try club lllllllber,
Bl'lld Runyon. PJc:tured with Runyon n Paul

WASHINGTON (AP) - One suspect in the bombing of the U.S.
Embassy in Kenya has been brought to the United States for trial, U.S.
officials said today.
The suspect, Khalid Salim, believed to be a Yemeni citizen. wa.• Oown
by the FBI to New York, according. to U.S. officials here and in Nairobi who spoke on condition of anonymity. Officials here raised the possibility l~at other suspects might follow; the Kenyans have several suspects in custody.
Salim will be tried in the United States, officials here said. A complaint already has been filed against him in this country. officials said,
indicating evidence had been gathered very swiftly to reach the point of
filing charges so soon after the Aug. 7 bombing. That complaint was
expected to be unsealed shortly,
The exact date of Salim's arrest was not known, but another suspect,
Mohammed Saddiq Odeh, has been held by Kenyan authorities since Aug.
14, a week after his arrest in Karachi, Pakistan, on tbe day of the bombing. Odeh is said to be either a Jordanian or Palestinian who obtained
Kenyan citizenship in 1994.
Attorney General Janet Reno and FBI Director Louis Freeh called a
news conference this afternoon to discuss developments in the case.

Reed enci Ed Durst of Farmel'l Bank, Fair
Queen .JUlie Spaun and ROll Holter, winner of
the In-club contest

The decision to try Salim, and perhaps others, in this country also represented a swift resolution of a potentially thorny problem of whether
Kenya or the United States would handle the first prosecutions from the
bombing that killed 247 people. including 12 Americans. and injured more
than 5,000.
Kenyan officials were said to be eager to seek justice for the hundreds
of Kenyan victims but also wary that a trial there for an attack on a U.S.
target might invite new terrorist a..sauhs on Kenyan targets.
It was not immediately clear whether Salim and others would be tried
in New York or Washington.
Although the U.S. law criminalizing such auacks on Americans abroad
provides for trial in Washington, officials have said there is an existing.
sealed indictment in New York against Islamic militant financier Osama
bin Laden, whom U.S. officials have blamed for the virtually simultaneous bombings at the embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
A superseding indictment in that New York case might add the embassy
blasts to the older charges against bin Laden and attach the new defendants as well.
The federal grand jury in New York secretly indicted bin Laden several weeks before the Aug. 7 attacks, a source familiar with the grand

jury proceedings said. The indictment charged bin Laden with soliciting
murder, a source said, but it was not immediately clear what attacks-or
planned attacks were cited in the indictment.
The grand jury and the FBI field ntlice in New York had been investigating bin Laden's role in at lea.st three terrorist attacks or plots, oflicials said. They said investigators were trying to determine whether he
prov ided financial backin~ for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
an aborted plot in New York to bomb bridges and tunnels and a November 1995 car bombing in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, that killed five Americans.
In retaliation for the embassy bombings, the United States last week
staged cruise missile strikes against targets in Sudan and Afghanistan it
said were linked to bin Laden.
Meantime. the State Department said Iraq may have used Sudan ._,a
cover to obtain material for illegal chemical weapons outside the scrutiny of U.N. weapons inspectors.
The two countries established close relations after the Persian Gulf
War in 1991, and "we believe there were links between the Sudanese and
Iraq on this issue," James Foley, the department's deputy spokesman, said
Wednesday.

Free ticket
signup for Delta
Queen tours

Threatens severe flooding

Bonnie slows to a
crawl in North Carolina
dows .this morning. "Why not us?
By ALLEN G. BREED
We're better at it than anyone else."
Associated Pres• Writer
Heavy rain fell this morning in
WILMINGTON, N.C. - Hurricane Bonnie lost punch a~ it sloshed New Bern and Morehead City, but
across North Carolina today, but the the rain had trailed on to a drizzle at
storm's heavy rain and slow move- Wilmington. near the spot where
ment threatened severe flooding on Bonnie roared ashore. Wilmington
had collected 9 inches and Jackthe state's coastal plain.
Bonnie call)e ashore with 115 sonville had 10.4. Weather reponing
mph wind Wednesday but quickly equipment in some other towns along
slowed to a crawl and gradually lost the storm's path had been knocked
strength. This morning, its sustained out by the wind.
While severe Oooding was still
wind was down to 75 mph, barely
only a threat, the Neuse River was
hurricane strength.
There were no reports of wide- already out of its banks this morning
spread damage, injuries or deaths, at New Bern, near the central North
though nearly a half-milllon people Carolina coast Many streets were
had been ordered to evacuate in lmpa.~sable and 770 people were in
North and South Carolina. Some shelters, said Woody Maness, Craven
380,000 customer!&gt; lost power in the County's assistant director of emertwo states. Tornadoes in Beaufort and gency services.
The Pamlico River was over its
Tyrell counties caused only minor
banks
at Washington in Beaufort
damage.
County,
more than I00 miles northWhile officials noted the continuing threat of floods, they expressed east of Wilmington.
Officials scaled back their forerelief this morning that the damage .
casts of high tides in the region's
wa.' limited, at least so far.
"We coulc;J not be more relieved sounds, saying Bonnie could raise
this morning," Richard Moore, sec- water levels in some areas by 9 feet.
Bonnie's eye - the calm at the
retary of crime control and public
safety. said at a briefing today. "It storm's center - came ashore at
seems, for whatever reason, the Cape Fear at 2 p.m. Wednesday. By
winds did not do as much damage as 9 a.m. today it was centered near
New Bern and moving slowly northexpected."
Instead of dashing nonhward into eastward at6 mph. roughly parallelVirginia and back out to sea, Bonnie ing the coast hut still some miles
was expected to remain over North inland.
It was expected to continue movCarolina with a possibility it could
ing
toward the northeast. and a hurdrop up to 16 inches of rain, forericane warning was in etTect from Litcasters said.
"I was thinking, why us?" said Dr. tle River Inlet near the South CaroliWilliam Sailing. a Wrightsville na state line to the Virginia state line .
The storm was expected 10 be
Beach dentist, as he removed plywood covering his living room winContinued on page 3

NEW YORK (AP)- E.G. Marshall 's distinctive voice landed him a
radio JOb that launched him in show
business. a 66-year run in which he
was often cast as a lawyer or politician. He played them so convincingly that people sometimes mistook
him for the real thing.
The two-time Emmy Award winner. who reprised his role of lawyer
Lawrence Preston in a Showtime version of "The Defenders" last season.
died Monday evening at his home in
suburban Mount Kisco. He wa.' 84.
His agent, Clifford Stevens, did
not disclose the cause of death.
Andy Wolk, who directed Marshall in the Showtime series, praised
him for freshening a 30-year-old
character. "He's a great actor and a
great human being." Wolk said.
"The world has lost a great actor
and I have lost a wonderful friend,"
said actor Beau Bridges. who played
Marshall's son in the Showtime
~e ri es .

In an interview last year with The
Associated Press, Marshall pointed
out he had worn the same oxfords in
the 1990s and 1960s versions of
"The Defenders."
"He had the shoes resoled." Wolk
said. "Those shoes were maybe the
on ly thing old-fashioned about him.
He would come to the set each day
and come up with a gem that was
spot on for the character. "
Marshall's movie credil' included
"The Cai ne Mutiny." "The Silver
Chalice:· "The Left Hand of God."
"Twe lve Angry Men." "Cash
McCall." "Town Without Pity,"
"Compulsion ." "The Bridge at
Remagen. " and "Superman 2."
On Broadway he appeared m
"The Petrified Forest," "The Iceman
Cometh," "The Skin of our Teeth, "
.. Jacobowsky and the Colonel,"
"The Gambler." and "The Crucible.
His distinctive voice often wa.s
heard on commercials. He narrated
"In Memoriam: J.F.K." in 1966 and
for .everal years was host of the
annual PBS July 4 production. "A
Capitol Fourth."

He had some experience in politics. He formed an environmentalist
political pany for a local election in
1988. "It wa.' a civics lesson for me
- what it takes to get elected. Well,
J didn't win," he recalled.
M3r'llall was born in Owatonna,
Minn .. to Norwegian parents. Biographies list Marshall's birthday as June
18. 19 10. But in a 1997 interview
with the AP. Marshall insisted those
biographies were wrong, and that he
was born in 1914.

~~~

Yanks snap losing streak, Page 4
MHS golfers lose match, Page 5
Ann Landers column, Page 8

•

Defender star
E. G. Marshall,
84, succumbs

He had a nair for political roles,
including his portrayal of President
Truman in 1975's TV movie "Collision Course." In 1995's "Nixon." he
played former Anorney General John
Mitchell. He portrayed senators in
1997's HBO movie "Miss Evers'
Boys" and the 19R6 movie "Power."
His powerful persona shone
through so convincingly on the
screen that people sometimes mistook him for the genui ne item.
"I was on the phone in the Senate
wing of the Capitol." he once
recalled ... A woman a.sked me how to
get 10 the third-Ooor Senate gallery.
She said. 'You must know, you're a
senator

Today: Sunny
High: 85; Low:60

Sports

August 27, 1998

Weather

School voucher program
begins third year in Ohio

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••
•

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kindergarten last year, repaired more
CLEVELAND (AP)- A school
school
buildings and improved test
voucher program which has allowed
scores
in
most grades.
low-income families access to private
Cleveland
public schools enrolleducation is beginning il~ third school
ment
has
increased
each of the last
year with 3,914 pupils attending pritwo
years
after
falling
during the
vate and parochial school s.
1980s and early '90s. More than
Meanwhile , the beleaguered
75,01Xl students are e•pected this
Cleveland public school system is
year, officials say.
improving and becoming more com" We've got parents coming in
petitive, a voucher program official
practically killing each other to get
says.
their kids in here," said Neil Stone,
Still at issue is the voucher proa public elementary school principal.
gram's constitutionality. Lawyers will
Holt said the voucher program had
make their arguments to the Ohio
problems
that may have contributed
Supreme Court starting Sept 28.
to
a
decline
in applications.
Donald J Mooney. a Cincinnati
attorney who represents anti -vnuchIn 1996. more than 6.1KXl parents
~r forces such as the Ohiq.federation
for vouchers for 2.000 class applied
'!f Teachers, says he win make two
room
position
made available in 56
ba.••iic arguments:
: -The funneling of stale dollars to private or religious schools . By this
religious institutions violates the state year's voucher lotlery deadline in
March, 4,393 applications were
constitution.
: · -Employing this program only in made. Sn the state extended the
Cleveland, and in no other dJStrict, deadline for the first time, and 5,396
vii&gt;lates the " uniformity clause" that applications were completed.
With different starling times for
prevents exclusivity. ,
many
of the voucher s~hnols, transEach parent of a student in the
portation
was a problem last year. A
progmm receives slate vcmchcr feu up
shortage
nf
buses forced the district
to $2,500 for tuition. The concept for
the progmm was to inspire the Clevc- to-transport nearly I.(XXl students by
l;md publi~ sch&lt;•&gt;ls tn he mnre ~om­ taxi, causing a nearly $2.8 million
hudgct nvcrrun .
pelitive in pmviding ctlucalion.
Applications were sent only to
: Bert L. H11ll, directnr nf the Clcvc(and Scholli'rship 'and Tutoring l'ro- parents of children in kindergarten
gr•m . which runs the vou~her pro- through third gmde.
SuhsL'IjUent mailings to interested
gram, told The Plain Dealer in a stowere easily mT.staken for
parents
ry today that the public sch•••ls are
junk-mail
hecause the schml district
doing a beuer jnh of auracting stuwould
only
give the atklrcsses of par~cnt.s- and the hacking of students'
ents,
nc~
names.
li~r the voucher pamparents .
phlets,
Holt
said.
The district restored full·day

--·-

&lt;)I

SURFING EVENT DOUBTFUL- Surfer Eddie
Layton of VIrginia Beach struggles to place signal flags along the beach for toclay's East Coast
Surfing Chemplonahlp on VIrginia Beach.

Competition was acheduled to begin this alternoon, but with the arrival of Hurricane Bonnie,
lt'a doubtful If the event will be held. (AP}

Dems hope to reap election
benefits from .Social S~curity
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Although they've yet to offer a spe·
ciflc plan for Social Security's future,
Democrats are hoping to make the
nation's retirement program " their"
cause in this fall's congressional
elections.
"It's an issue that shows up time
and again as one which Americans
are concerned about and one on
which Democrats have a home-field
advantage," said Olivia Morgan,
spokeswoman for the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee.
President Clinton got the ball
rolling in January when he asked
lawmakers to set· aside any federal
budget surpluses this year in case
they're needed to brace up Social
Security for an onslaught of aging
baby boomers.
Republican leaders, who wanted
to offer tax cuts this year, have been
divided over how to respond.

GOP leaders in the Senate have
agreed that most of the $1.55 trillion
government surplus expected over
the next I0 years should probably be
saved for Social Security. Republican
senators. including Pete Domenici of
New Mexico. the Budget Committee
chairman, and Phil Gramm of Texas,
have even talked with Clinton administmtion officials about the possibility of selling up a special account at
the Federal Reserve.
In the House, however, Speaker
Newt Gingrich sent the GOP rank
and tile home for Congress' traditional August break to pitch a plan to
Americans that would split the sur·
plus between tax cuts and Social
Security.
Gingrich has privately conceded
to colleagues that the SO-SO split he
has been recommending publicly
might not ny but says he thinks he
can get afleast $70 billion in tax cuts

over the next five years.
House Democrats. meanwhile, in
a closed-door meeting with Clinton
before they left town, indicated they
are more than willing to keep the dis pute over the surplus going all the
way through November's elections.
"I told the president ... that we
have more than enough members
ready to uphold vetoes if they come
on bills that would spend the surplus
for tax cuts for the wealthy rather
than saving Social Security first,"
said House Democratic leader
Richard Gephardt.
Considering the complicated and
divisive problems facing Social Security, the Democrats have found an
unusually popular stand.
Nearly four times as many Americans favor using government budget
surpluses to shore up Social Securi ty as favor using it for tax cuts,
Conlmied on page 3

Reno to probe Gore's fund-raising calls again
WASHINGTON (AP) - Attorney General Janet Reno is ordering
another look at Vice President AI
Gore's telephone calls soliciting campaign contributions to see whether an
independent counsel should be
named. officials say.
On Wednesday, Reno authorized a
second 90-&lt;lay preliminary investigation by her campaign finance task
force into the 45 telephone calls Gore
made from his of!ice in the fall of
1995 and spring of 1996.
Last December, she closed a similar 90-day probe of Gore's calls. saying there wasn't evidence to warrant
an independent counsel investigation.
Justice officials say that unless new
evidence emerges during this 90-&lt;lay
probe, Reno is likely to again reject
an independent counsel investigation
.,r these calls.
As required by the independent
counsel law, Reno relayed her,decision to a three-judge counthat picks
counsels, but the court did not imme-

diately authorize her to publicly licans, who have demanded repeatannounce it, according to officials edly that Reno appoint an indepen·
who spoke on condition of anonymi- dent counsel to look into the fundty.
raising activi tie s of the 1996 ClintonThis morning. Reno declined to Gore campaign.
discuss the issue. telling reporters at
Senate Judiciary Committee
her weekly ne~s conference: "I can't Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said
comment" Asked whether she would that although Reno's move "could be
have something to say later in the perceived as a delaying tactic, I feel
day. she replied, " I don't know."
it would be prudent ... to defer any
Gore spokesman Chris Lehane conclusive comments on this matter
said the Justice Depanment has not until after the attorney general has
told the vice president of any decision had the opportunity to discuss this
l&gt;y Reno.
'
with me in greater detail."
"Wherever this process may go
Hatch is scheduled to be briefed
and in whatever stage it may end. next Tuesday by Reno and !he former
we're completely confident that it chief of her campaign finance ta~k
will show that the vice president's force, Charles LaBella. on the case
actions were legal and proper," and on LaBella's July 16 memo urgLehane said Wedrtesday evening. ing her to seek an in,.tependent counGore 's auorney, James F. Neal, said sel.
the vice president ha.' been interCiting that memo and similar recviewed twice about the calls and "ha~ ommendation last fall from FBI
fully. completely and honestly Director Louis Freeh, Rep. Dan Buranswered every question."
ton, R-Ind., called Reno's decision
Reaction wa.' mixed from RepubContlaued on page 3

Those interested in boarding the:
Delta Queen steamboat while it is:
docked at the Middleport levee on
Sept. 12 are invited to register for a·
chance to tour the sternwheeler.
·
According to Myron Duffield •.
president of the Middleport Community Association, residents may sign:
up at the Middleport Department:
Store, the Ohio River Bear Company, or Peoples Banking and Trust Co.
in Middleport.
Registration is to be done in pairs.
only and all duplicate names drawn :
will be disqualified. Visitors on theboat will be limited to 100 and wilt:
be taken aboard in groups of 14 to 20:
at a time. Alternates will be drawn
and allowed to stand by in the events
of no-shows.
There is no charge to register to go
on the Delta Queen, said Duffield.
Residents may register starting Monday morning. Registration will continue through Wednesday. Sept. 9.
Winners will be notified in
advance and advised where and when
they can pick up their boarding passes.
The Delta Queen is scheduled to
visit Middleport from I to 5 p.m.
during the River Festival.
·
The stop in Middleport is a part of
the "Trampin' on the River" mystery
cruise from Cincinnati to Pinsburgh.
Duffield who performs as Professor
MyRoni will board the Queen at
Point Pleasant and do a 20 minute
calliope concert for the passengers
enroute to Middleport. A highlight of
the afternoon program will be a performance of the Queen's Dixieland
Band.

Economic
growth slowest
in 3 years
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
economic growth slowed sharply in
the April-June quarter as export sales
to Asia slumped, but American corporations managed to eke out a small
rise in profits anyway.
The gross domestic product - the
sum of goods and services produced
within U.S. borders- increased at a
sea.'Onally adjusted 1.6 percent annual rate, the Commerce Department
said today. That 's down from a tor·
rid 5.5 percent rate during the first
three months of the year.

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections · 12 Pages
Calendar

12

•

8-9-10
11

Lotteries
QH1Q
Pick 3: 4119; Pick 4: 4749
Super Lotto: 1-5-8-28-36-42
Kicker: 029910

.w.YA.
Daily 3: 312; Daily 4: 6589

�Thursday,August27, 1998

Commenta,Y
The Daily Sentinel

Page2
ThUnday, August 71, 1998

Friday, Aug. 28

By Morton Kondracke
that the public
'EstaiJ[u/id in 1948
Pundits are scrcanung for PreSI- wants Clinton to
dent Clmton's res1gnallon, but the remam presi111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
public wants h1m to stay. What dent He can't
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157
should pohllc1ans do? Wait for fur- Simply be run
ther ev1dence, legal and polillcal
out on a nul
It ought lo be clear withm a few
TI,e
CBSweeks whether Clinton has any New Yorlt limes
prayer of funcliOmng effecllvely as poll showed lhal
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
prestdent for the remaining two Chmon's JOb
. years of h•s term
approval ralmg
ROBERT L WINGETT
If ev1dence develops -- and, went up from 67 Kondracke
Publisher
unfonunarely, 11 well may -- !hal percent lo an
• Clinton comm1Ued perJury on Mon- astronomical 71 percent after h1s
day before Ken StaJT's grand JUry, Monday mght speech
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
then Impeachment wtll be a certamAsked by the Gallup polling
Gtneralllenager
Controller
ty, Democrats w1ll demand the pres- orgamzation whetherChnlon should
1denl s res1gna110R and he'll be be Impeached. 70 percent of US
forced oul
adults Sllld "no' and 26 percent
On the pohucal stde, 1f 11 devel- "yes" A ffiaJorlly of 52 percent sull
ops that Chnton can't govern any thmks Chnton 1s honest and trustlonger. hiS pubhc suppon may drop wonhy enough to serve as preSident
to the poml where colleagues con- In the CBS poll. 74 percent wants
vmcc h1m to go Th•s IS a less-hkely the mvesl1gal10n of Chnlon's rclaconllngcncy. bul 11, too. could hap- 11onsh1p lo Momca Lcwmsky to be
pen
dropped nghl now
As mailers stand nghl now, howOf course. II won 't be dropped
ever polls md1ca1e thai Chnton -- and shouldn't be dropped Starr w1ll
dcsplle a masSively d1smgenuous repon to Congress on hiS lindmgs
By JIM ABRAMS
speech Monday mght -- rctmns the wnhm the nell month and word of
Associated Press Writer
conlidcncc of the Amen can people. the contents C1ther w1ll leak or he
WASHINGTON -Seven months ago PreSident Chnton rose above the
Poht•calleadcrs shouldn't dec1de released
sw~rl of the cmcrgmg Lcwmsky affair and dehvercd a bold Stale of the
nauonal pol~ey based on poll results,
The polls md1catc that there arc
Un1on address that outhncd pnonlics on Socml Sccurny. hcallh care tccn- hut they also can't 1gnore the fact ctrcumslanccs under wh1ch the puba£e smokmg and campa1gn-financc reform
Facmg a host1lc Repuhhcan-run Congrc&lt;s and a scandal that won' t gn
away Clmlon has found hiS wiSh hsl largely unobtmnablc
In hiS 72-mmulc speech last January Cl1nton made 30 requests to lawl'A! /KIREP••
makers. leadmg off Wllh hiS proposal that every penny of any future budget
WMITTD
surplus go to assunng the future vmh1l11y of the Soc~al Sccunly system
Co.MJTA
He sought broad anli-lohacco lcg1slauon. mclud1ng an mcrca.&gt;e of $1 50
CM?
m the pncc of a pack of c•garcllcs, a $22 b1lhon child care mllmllvc. protccuons for pallcnts enrolled m HMOs and money to h1rc 100,000 new
teachers
Republicans hstcncd pohtcly but wcren 1 really mtcrestcd " I JUSt counted up 18 new federal programs.· Sen Pat Robens. R-Kan , sa1d afterward
" He s an Energ•zer bunny for federal programs
There's sull a month of legtslatmg to go m thiS sess1on of Congress, but
11 s safe to say many ofChnton s proposed •mt•auves will go nowhere There
w1ll be no mcrease m the m1mmum wage th1s year. no move to extend scll fmanced ehg1b1hly for Med1care to those 55 and older no extensiOn of the
Family and Medical Leave Act
Chances are shm that the Senate w1ll ra11fy the nuclear test ban treaty and
even shmmer that a comprehenSive anl1·smokmg b1ll, reJeCted m the Senate.
w1ll be resurrected W11h tobacco leg•slal10n defeated, the money the president counted on to fund educauon and ch1ld-care programs disappeared
Clmton 's plan to protect the rtghls of p.ouenls m HMOs was replaced m
the House by a Repubhcan versiOn he probably Will veto. The House passed
a campa~gn-finance b1ll backed by the \\1111e House, but Senate Republican
leadel'li have no mtenl1on of bnngmg 11 u.
The pres1dent's anempl to double th~ number of children elig1ble for
some
ch1ld-care subsldtes faded away after the GOP countered wnh plans that cen- By Ben Wattenberg
"androsteneand Daniel Wattenberg
tered on In cuts and block grants for the slates
As "news" becomes mdlstmdione" m McGH1s proposals for money to h1re I00,000 new teachers and tax credus to
w~re's
open
promote school conslrucuon went largely unheeded, although Congress IS gUishable from pornography, and
locker threatexpected to pass a higher-education b•ll that contams a Chnlon program to Geraldo and swarms of shnckmg
lawyers assail us on AII-Momcaened for a
gel colleges more mvolved m hclpmg poor youngsters
moment
to
A few Stale of the Umon requests d1d come true The Senate agreed m AII-The-lime televiSIOn, we owe
d1mm1Sh
hiS
Apnlto accept Hungary Poland and the C&gt;ech Republic 1n1o an expanded Mark McGw1re our thanks In h1s
feats. The drug
NATO Clmton has Signed legJslauon consohdalmg JOb-lrammg programs chase to break the maJor-league smor " nulrlliOnal
and prolecung ClliZcns from abuscs"by the Internal Revenue Scrv•cc long a gle-season home-run record -- still
viCwcd excluSively as the so-called
supplement." as
Rcpubhcan pnonty
11 has hecn
Spendmg b1lls sl1ll under cons1dcrauon for the fiscal year bCgmnmg Oct "Mans Record'; -- McGwtre IS g•vWattenberg referred 10 m a
I cnnlmh most of the money Clinton sought for a dean-water mlllaliVC and mg niCC JX.'Oplc somclhmg RICe lO
phrase that our
mcdtt:al rc~carch There sa ~.:hom~.:c Congress will agree to ray at least some gel excncd about He has rescued
preSident
could
appreCiate
tcmbaseball
from
boredom
He
"
giVmg
of the hack dues owed to the Unlled N,111ons

State of the Union wish
list mostly unfulfilled

he will lose fa11h w1lh Chnton
enough lo see him leave office.
Gallup asked if people would favor
Impeachment 1f they were convmced he hed before the grand JUry.
Fony-mne percent said yes, 46 percent no
A s1mllar quesuon was asked by
pollster John Zogby, whose 1996
elec110n soundtngs were the nallon's
most accurate. He found that 65 percent of hkely voters thought Clinton
should consider leavmg office if he
hed to the grand JUry.
Zogby also found that64 percent
of voters beheve Chnton should
cons1dcr qunung 1f he encouraged
others to he under oath Gallup
found that 48 per&lt;:enl would favor
Impeachment under those meumstances
Personally. I fear n's all too likely that Chn:on d1d perJure h1mself
he fore the Starr grand JUry That's
hecausc when hiS moment of truth
amvcd on Munday n1ght he conlinucd to he tu the Amcncan peuple
Wh1lc adm•llmg he had an " mappropnate" rclalinnsh1p wnh Momca
Lcwmsky he mnlendcd that when
he tcsulied under oath ahout that
relal1onsh•p 1n the Paula Jones case
m January. he gave an answer that
was "legally accurntc ·

That's JUS! nonsense In the Jones
lesllmony, he not only demed havmg
a sexual rela110nsh•p. but also
claimed he could not recall whether
he was ever alone w11h Momca
Lewmsky, other than to exchange a
few pleasanlnes when she was
dehvenng ptzza
IrCiinton lied 1n h•s Paula Jones
deposuion and to the pubhc 1n January, and then Monday n1gh1 hed
again to the pubhc. the chances are
he tned to he earhcr m the day to the
grand JUry If he d1d. he commmcd
pohl1cal su1c1de
On the ISsue of ohstrucllon of JUslice, Clinton flatly dcn1ed "askmg"
anyone to he or conceal ev1dencc If
Starr develops strong cv1dcnce that
he got others lo do the askmg thai
w1ll he another 1mpeachmcnl count
BeSides unpeachmcnl there arc
mhcr concel\ ahle s&lt;enanos tor
Chntun to he Imeed nul nl olhcc
For mstancc. 11 Starr's ev1dence "
strong 1f Clm1nn sL'CIII' to he 1n1,111y
ahsurhcd wnh sal mg h~&gt; own skm
and urgcn1 nauonal "''cs arc ·
1gnored. the puhhc "'·'Y cumludc
that he &gt;~mply h,IS to go
Or agam. 1f he seems to prm ukc
a nauunal cn&gt;~s -- such·" .1 gmcrnmcnt shutdown over hudgct 1ssucs
thiS Iall -- the puhhc n1.1y cuncludc
that he d1d 11 Simply tn d1ven aucn·
111m Irom hiS clhlcal pn&gt;hlcms
But thiS kmd of Sjll'CUI,Illon "
prcmalurc The rcalny we t.1t.:c 1s
gnm enough Ollcrcd the npponum ty lo make

.1

clc.m

cnnlc~swn

WVA

Dems hope to reap...
Sunny Pi CO!.&lt;!y CO!.&lt;!y

The Stale ol the Unum ,1ddre" has long heen a means hy wh1ch pre&lt;l·
dents mlroducc grand 1dcas. ,md Chnlon " hardly the liN hi he 1gnored
Andrew J.1ckson lned Ill ,1hohsh the Elcclorol College and llffilllhe preSident
10 ,, smglc term Ulysses S Gr.ml sought tl1e hnc-llem \el&lt;l And Theodore
Rom;c,~h

w.mtcd the government

10 ~uhs~thzc

clcllmn t.:ampmgn\

Ill

Berry's
World

Ill

Amcru.:~ms

a chance to dcmonstr:11c

pomnly 1a1sC!'i testosterone lc,cls 1n

alrcsh why scholars wnte ahout
·· Amen can Exc.:cp110nal1sm ·

order tn speed recmcry from IRJury

AmCIICU

ts a hcrou.:

.md promote the formullon of lean

nauon

Amcnc•1 needs heroes . Mc:Gw1rc s
quest 1s henuc After all the lloughesl rcc11rd he may hrcak '' Bahe
Ruth s and the Bamhmn the Sult,ln
ol Swa1 as routmcly dcscnhcd ,ts
nnmn11,1l · Moremcr McGwue
l!I\Cs C\Cry mdu.:aunn of hcmg ,1
\ er) mce m.ln While the president
1s .1pnlog1110g to Ius tcamm.llc:"i for
lymg In them MeG\\ 1re h,ls heen
th.mkmg h1&gt;
He stayed up unul 1 a m "gnmg
hasehalls fur each nne of them He
mscnhed each hall Wllh ,, person,ll
message. under the legend · 'i(J-50·
50 commcmoraung hiS recurdhrcakmg third strmght season With
~0 or more home runs
Yet. as Preston Sturg:cs wrote
'Of all lhmgs 1n nature. great men
alone reverse the law of perspect1ve
and grow smaller as one approaches
them · And the recent d1scovery of

.1

player must average one

humcrs m a 154-gamc sca:mn. a

pl.1ycr musl do somethmg more d1f ·
Jicull Avcr.1gc one homer per 2 56
g.1mcs . wh1ch 1s wh.u the Bamhmn
did m 1927 In 1%1. understandmg
th1s anthrncll..: B.1schall ComnH!&lt;O·
smncr Fonl l'nck ruled thut Ruth
rl.!m.uncd the ull·lnnc sml!lc-M:.tson
home-run champ ,md ''"'~ned

By The Aesoclated Press
A few scauered showers are posSible across Oh1o on Fnday, forecasters sa1d, but the outlook for the
weekend 1s good.
Partly cloudy sk1es are e~pected

0(J(hcr us' We an:

gtvm~

nur nymp·

holcpl•c pre&lt;1den1 70 percent
.1ppnwal rulings and makmg Vmgra
the lastest-selhng drug m the n,llmn.
Sull. skcpucs will harhor susplcums. however shghl, that McGw1rc
has hecn unfairly a1dcd hy a slugger's louie helper 1n hiS pursull ol
Roger Mans. who could have used
some Propec1a hy the lime he linally
caught Ruth. who. mc1dcntally.

Wlulc

M,~r,· ~I

1mprcss1vc

hnmcrs was a
athlcvcmcnt.

crab As this 1s wnllcn McGwm:
ncclls mnc more home runs m h1s
last ·n games to hrc.tk the M.tns
rcl,."orJ nne per ~ 1 ~.uncs To hrc.a~
Ruth\ rc~.:orJ. he needs '-'lt!hl more

m hiS

nc~l 2~

g,nnes nne per 1 I

g:.llllCS

Rcmst.nmg tile Rutln.m 1ecnrd
wtll .u.ltl dr.un.1 to ML·Gwm: s hts
loru.: ~.:has~ . •uu.l nwlcmcr 1t 1s .1
mark worlh} ol tlus cx.tmorJmur)

M.tns nr Ruth 1\s ol tlus wnttng.
a 162

~amc

111

the

lirsl I ~4 g.nncs Thus he may

sc,,"on .•mt.l 6l

en~

Ruth 's record " scll-evu.lenlly a

up hrc.1kmg holh IC..:orth one ol

grc~tcr

them. or none ol thcrn

lc.u Yet snmchnw. Amen-

And II m.1y not he McGw~re
'''"' ha'c pas&gt;~vely uncrll~&lt;ally
accepted the 61/162 rather th,1n Sammy Sos.1 of the Ch1cago Cuhs
(&gt;()/ 154 as the record lU heal
tra1ls B1g Mac hy only ,, couple uf
Such dnc1hty '"_the face nl arhl- homers h s getting so !.!XCIIIIl~
tr,ny hureaucr,lllc fiat 1s h1~hly mayhe Gcmldo Wlllmcnuun 11
uncharactensllc Much schnlarly
Ben Wattenberg is a senior reiresearch shows 11 Amencans often low at the Amcrkan Enterpnse
thmk of themselves as "rugged mdi- Institute and is the moderator ot
VIduahsls who tamed the lrnnt•cr PBS's "Think Tunk." Daniel Watwnhoul much help lrnm authnnty tcnMrg, who wrote lhl• week's
Snemlo~ISI Seymour Manm L1pset
column, writes regularly ror The
has ohscrvcd that a cnuplc nl Weekly Standard and i.• a con·
decades ago Amcncans and Canad1- tributing editor ror George.

Columnist of dual mind on politics
that all who preBy Jcseph Spear
1r: prcs1denl of the Unncd States sume to Judge
has d,,amped tn Manha 'Vmcyard Clmtnn on the
The Speaker of the House " rclaxmg ISSUC OIIIIICil sex
them•n Georgm The Senate MaJority should
Leader IS munchmg on catfish an~ selves he pure
Hush Pupp1cs somewhere '" MISSIS- and above suspiSIPPI
The med1a -- who knows what CIOn We there"I'm over Momcaed "
- the mcd1o do m AIJFUSl' Search nul lore suggest that
L-------------------------.J mudholes and sulfurous spnngs 10 every memher of
wallow m. no doubt. as a way nl Cnngrcss who
parue~patcs
m
Speer
rccharg10g their ballcncs
these pro.:cedmgs
he put under oath and requtrcd to
fer the dog days wuhoul fresh slufl respond to thiS qucsuun.
By The A..ociated Press
Tnday "Thursday. Aug 27th . the 2.191h day of 199H There arc t 26 days to ponder
Have you ever had sexual relaWell. not the Spear Fnundatmn lions wnh anyone other than your
left m the year
Today 's H1ghhghl 1R History
Th1s Uny-yel-lcnac•ous thmk tank 1s spouse or sigmlicantulher'1"
On Aug 27. J88J . the ~&gt;land vnlca nn Krnkatoa hlcw up the resultmg dedu!atcd to the pursUit nl excelBefore rcspondmg. they w1ll he
udal waves 1n lndoncsl3 s Sunda Stran clanncd some 36.000 hvcs '" Java lence We never sleep. "nd we never handed a can! wHh these words·
take vacations -- the hellcr In keep "Your answer should he g01ded by
and Sumatra
you. our loyal and steadla.sl n:adcrs. the folluwmg dclinllton (plcn.~c note
On thiS date
In 1770, the German pbjln&gt;&lt;lpher Georg Wilhelm Fnednch Hegel was up to snuff 10 thmkmg matcnal
thiS ts the same defin1110n that Paula
Lately.
we've
concerned
ourJones'
auorneys presented to the
horn m Stuugart
In 1892. fir( senously damaged New York's ongmal Metropolitan Opera selves wllh means and methods of president).
" For th: purposes of this sworn
ensunnsthat lh: upcommg congresHouse. located al Broadway and 39th Street
In 1908. Lyndon B. Johnson. the 36th pres1denl of the Unned States. was sional IOVCSl1gal10n and possible statement, a person engiiBcs m '.ex1mpeachmen1 of B1ll Clinton are ual relauons' wt.:n the person knowhorn near Stonewall. Texas.
·
conducted
10 as fair and 1mpanial a mgly engages in or causes conlliCl
In 1928, the Kellogg-Bnand Pact was signed m Pans. outlawing war and
way
as
poss1ble.
We strongly heheve w11h the genitalia. anus. grom.
providing ror the peaceful selllemenl of disputes

•
h
•
t
l 0 d ay I n IS 0 ry

shu~~~:~c~~~~~~g~~~:~~~~~~ ~&lt;~I!~~

I

hrea.st. mncr thigh or bullocks of any
person With an mlcnl In arouse or
graufy l'IC sexual dcs1rc ol any person

The Spear Foundauon Iurthcr
suggcsls th.11 a spccaal l;Ounscl he
appomlc~ In mvcsligate the truth of
the st.11cmcnts swum tn Sa1d l;Otm-

sel should pul nul an offic1al no11ce.
as w," done wnh B1ll Chntun !hal
.10yunc wuh knowledge of wrnngdomg h) those swcanng to fidelity
should step Jurw.trd and ral on them
Our pmJccunns md1catc that the
5l~-mcrnhcr

t.:tm~rcsswnal

Jury

wuuld he reduced by hall . at least.
and posSi hly hy twn-lhlnls
The Spe,1r Foundation further
suggests lhlll each and every mcmher
of the news m&lt;•tha who WIShes to
cover these procecdmgs (we would
ch&lt;K&gt;sc notlo pun•ctpate. thank you)
he ISsued crcdcnuals only alter
sweanng to exactly the ~me statement. Our calculatmns show the
Joumahsuc moll covenng the S~:an­
dal would he severely reduced by
such aciiODS. and the rcmatntn~ !l&lt;Mll
mi~hl even g1ve the aJliiCaran&lt;'C of
he1ng wcll-hrcd, sane nnd C1v1h1.cd

7·55 p m . Maples Apanments,
Umts of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Semce recorded sev- Opal Tyree, VMH.
en calls for a."ISlance Wednesday REEDSVILLE
I 41 p.m., volunteer fire depanUmls respondmg mcluded
menl
and squad to stale Route 681
CENTRAL DISPATCH
and
Banon
Road. motor-veh1cle acc•9 04 a.m , stale Route 68 I, Tupdent,
Mike
Blessmg, treated al the
pers Plams, Janel Hammons, Camscene,
B11ly
Shortndge, CCMH
den-Clark Memonal Hospnal.
RUTLAND
6 46 p m.. Race Street, Middle10 14 p.m.. Mam Street, Ruben
pun. Ronald Keyes, Veterans MemoSnowden.
Holzer Med1cal Center.
nat Hospital.
SYRACUSE
POMEROY
8.54 p.m .. Thnd Street, M1chael
10 57 a.m .. Spnng Avenue. Helen
Stump,
VMH
FISher, dead on am val.

ptp!l(jUC.Iks,

McG•me 1s on a p.llc 111 hn Mover

most

on Fnday w11h h•!!~' 10 the 80s. the
Nauonal Weather Semce sa1d.
Then a h1gh pressure area Will
build mto the state and bring panly
sunny and dry conditions for the
weekend

they h!rritcn to rcwmn. not hurcau-

ollic1.tl rc~ord. lc.tvmg Ruth not
.tn .tstcnsk

C\Cn

.

tn rmlc!'i

.nhlctc Wuh ~l home runs 111 12Y
g.UllC!oo. he 1s hilling ,, home run
e1cry 2 4l games. hellcr 111.111 e11her

tnnmg .md rcncx.cs. nul hrutc

Saturday.. Partly cloudy with a
chance of showel'li and thunderstorms Highs m the m1d and upper
80s.
Sunday. A chance of showers and
thunderstonns dunng the day ... Otherwise panly cloudy Lows m the mtd
60s and h1ghs in the m•d 80s.
Monday Panly cloudy Lows 10
the lower 60s and htghs m the lower
80s

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

Amcnc.t,

muscle m,1ss Wh1le h.mned hy the
NFL. tho NCAA .1nd the lnternauon- M.tns h1s mlunwu~ .astcnsk, llcnot·'' OlympiC C'omnullec. "andrn' 1s mg a record lor a I6:!-gamc s~:asnn
perfectly legal and 1n w1dc usc m But m IW I C111nnuss1nner Fay Vm
haschall ,, game that mostly rewards cent rccn~n•zcd Mans 61 as the
strength
McGwm; s u&gt;e of the ovcr·lhe·
counter product docsn 1 seem to
hot her hiS opponents. and to echo a
1.1vonle defense ol Clmton II II
docsn l hother them why should II
hothcr us 1 Indeed how could 11

'"'

Rain

Outlook good for the weekend

ans were hoth adviSed hy their gov·
crnmenls In sw11ch to the metnc sys·
tent Today. all over Canada road
&lt;~gns tell how far you have to go, 1n

Amcru:ans .tre not

T ~orms

By The Aasoclstecl Press
Southeastern Ohio
Today... Sunny. H1ghs in the m•d
80s North wmd 10 to 15 mph.
Tomght ...Ciear. Lows from the
upper 50s to the lower 60s Calm
wmd.
Fnday.. Sunny. H1ghs m the mid
and upper 80s
Ellended rorec:est
Friday mghl .. Mostly clear. Lows
m the lower lo m1d 60s

ab11i1y to persuade anyone In do
much of anything Yet. the puhhc
wants h1m to stay m ollicc If that
changes, he's gone
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor or Roll Call, the news·
paper or Capitol Hill.)

homer per 2 (15 game&lt;. wh1ch Is
what Mam d1d m 1961 To h1l 60

S,_.,

Today's w~ather report

hao;; constltuuonal powers. hut no

season

Helen C. FISher, 91, Pomeroy, d1ed Wednesday, Aug. 26, 1998, at her residence. A homemaker, she was born Apnl 7, 1907. m Racme, Ohio, daughter of
the late John Man Crary and LoUise Theiss Crary She was a fanner restdent of Senecaville, a member of the Pomeroy United MethodiSt Church,
the Me•gs County Senior Center and Ret1red Semor Volunteer Program
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Tom and Helen Fisher of
Cambndge, daughters and sons-m-law, Alice and Bob Wamsley of Pomeroy
and Louise and Jim Sm1th of Balurnore, seven grandchildren, 13 grcat-grandch•ldren; sisters, Maye Mora and Faye Wildermuth of Pomeroy: brothersm-law and a SISter-m-law, Mason F1sher of Mmersville, and John and V•olet Fisher of Umonlown, several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded m death by her husband. Norman T Fisher m January, 1986.
Graveside semces Will be held Saturday, I p.m at Beech Grove Cemetery. Pomeroy. w11h the Rev. Conme Fa1res offic1a11ng
Fnends may call Fnday, 2-8 p.m al the Pomeroy Chapel of F1sher Funeral Home In heu of flowers, memorial contnbul1ons be made to the Pomeroy
Untied Method lSI Church or the Metgs County Senior Center

• , COIU_!"~UI_ ~·(18• _:

and

kalmnctcr~ In tfnn't·gt\c-mc-ordcrs
r.hstanu.~ l&lt;tri ~o;tlll measured

Helen C. Fisher

I ~nollo!d l~1811· . •

INO

lay the whole truth nn the whlc.
Chnton agam dodged . fudged,
blamed others -- and hed Hardly
anyone 1n Washmglnn wdl trust u
word he says agam
The Chnl&lt;ln prc&gt;~dcncy " deeply
cnpplcd At the moment Clinton

could have used some Phen-Fcn
(Cimlon m1ghltry !lllllpeler) To preempt the doubters. we offer a mod·
est proposal Remslale Bahe Ruth's
60 homers '" 154 games as the mark
tnheat
To 1111 61 homer&gt; m a 162-game

Eastern classes begin Monday

AccuWeathe,. forecast for

McGV\tire, Maris, Ruth and Clinton

Votes arc hkcly bcltlrC the end ol the year {lO 1wo other maJOr mtcrnll·
uonal I'\\UC s to 1_!1\' C the prcstdl!nt lasl -trm:: k authonty tu negotiate trade
~•~rc~.:mcnh and to pay assessments to the InternatiOnal Mtlnctary Fund

r---Local briefs__,

Ohio weather

Should Clinton Resign? Not just yet.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Qhlo

Another •lea we've IICen workmg
on would .estorc and lcgahzc the
anc1cnl hut mghly cllecliVC trad1lion
ol duclmg a.' a way of scllhng differences among the personages of
wa.,hmgtun.
For hundreds of years, thiS oncehnnurahlc praclice m wh1ch two foes
woul~ take up elegant p~&gt;!Ois, stnde
uiT u llut.cn pa..:cs or so, and tum and
fire at each other, wa.s cnnSidcred an
honorahlc. means nf cxacllng retnllulinn for mlolerahle slurs and msults
Andy Jackson d1d 11. Aaron Burr and
Alexander Ham1lton d1d 11 Stephen
Decatur 11. Congressmen, milllllry
ollic•als. and postmasters general all
laced ofl at some pumtm 11mc
'
Indeed. the prnclicc wa.• so popu- I
lar dunng the I XOOs that a scm•-ullic•al national duelmg ground c~tslcd
1n Bladcushurg. Maryland ahoutu
m1lc fnnn the DIStnct A hundred ur
so duels were hough! on Bladensburg's IS acres Indeed. 11 was here
that Cnmmodon: DI.'Calul Wit' fatally •
wounded 1n 1820
Joseph Spear is a syndlpted
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Aaoc:iatlon.

Continued rrom paae I
accordmg to a poll taken lh1s month
by the Pew Research Center.
But wtlh the While House offermg no funher details about how to
use !he surplus to help fix the nauon's
re11remenl system, congresSional
Democrats headmg mlo the campa1gn
sea,on are findmg 11 necessary to fill
m some gaps themselves.
"We have to stan JUS! catchmg
up," srud Rep Jerrold Nadler.D-N.Y.
Many Repubhcans have long
favored al least partmlly pnvallzmg
Soc1al Securny by replacmg guar&lt;~n­
teed government checks w11h new
per&gt;onal accounts that wage-earners
would mvesl on Wall Street and a few
mfluenc1al Democrats have recently

supponed a pantal pnvatizat1on
approach.
Boosted by conservative lhmk
tanks, grass-roots groups and stock
brokerage firms, the 1dea has dom•nated even the Clmton admmiSlrallon's own senes of "town hall" discussions about Soctal Secunly th1s
year.
Clinton says he wtll put off
endorsmg or ruhng out any specific
plan for reform unul after the elections, when he wants Democra!S and
Republicans to sll down and decide
Social Secunty's future together.
Trad1Uonal Democrauc allies, hke
the AFL-CIO, are pressing congresSional candidates for commitments
about Soc1al Secunty's future now

Reno to probe..

Coatlnued rrom paae I

Cla.•ses in the Ea.o;tem Local School D1stncl begm Monday, accordmg to Supenntendenl Deryl Well
Some changes have been made m bus routes and parenL• w11h questionS about bus dnvers and routes should call the diSlnct office at f-IJ76079 dunng regular office hours.
The Eastern Local Board of EducaliOn will hold an open house at
the new elementary school and atlhe renovated h1gh school Sunday,
1-4 p m.

One-car accident reported
No InJUnes were reported followmg a one-car acc•denl al the JUnelion of Sand R1dge Road and slate Route 681 Wednesday around 12 30
am
Jumus E Marks, 86, Albany, was westbound on stale Route 681
when he miSsed the tum onto Sandndge Road and struck a stop Sign
and ditch, accordmg to a Me1gs County Shenfl's Office repon HIS
1989 Chevrolet Cors1ca sustamed moderate damage. the repon staled
He was c11ed for failure 10 matnt:un control

Theft of guns reported
four guns were reponed stolen recently from a Long Bouom resIdence.
Charles E Jones reported the guns were stolen someume dunng
the week of the Me1gs County Fan, accordmg 10 a Me1gs County SherIffs Office report.
Reponed stolen were two Mossberg 12-gauge pump-acuon shotguns. a Marhn sem1-automauc 22 Long R1fle and a Remmgton 12gauge sem1-automallc shotgun.

Truck impounded after pursuit
Ap1ckup truck mvolved in an alleged fleemg •oc•dent wa.s Impound·
ed by the Me•gs County Shenfl's Office early thiS mornmg
Accordmg to a MCSO repon. a deputy was altempung to mak~ a
traffic stop near New Lima and Z10n roads near Harnsonville when
the dnver of the truck sped away, later cra.•hmg m a d11ch on Z10n
Road The dnver then ran ofT.
Depu11es found a loaded .25-cahber handgun and a small plasl1c
bag contammg what appeared to be manjuana m tbe truck The truck.
a 1991 Chevrolet belonging Helen Mulhns, Z1on Road. was •mpounded

Meigs announcements

" mact•on"that "ha.~ done nothmg to yet to vote on the contempt Cllal•on. Grange meeting
Asked today about the nature of
allay our concerns that somethmg is
Harnsonv•llc Grange w1ll hold
senously wrong at the Jusuce Depan- the meetmg next Tuesday, Reno sa1d, their annual mspecuon on Fnday at
"We are lrymg to arrange to meet, as the Sc1p10 Ftrehouse. Hemlock
ment.,
Burton added that Reno's move lmd1cated, wnh the chairmen of the Grange will make thetr exchange VISremforces the decisiOn by the House JUdiCiary comm11lees, and we 'II see nauon at 7 30 p m
Government Reform and Ovemghl who's there."
Pressed lo s:~y more. she smd, "I Garden Club
Commntee, wh1ch Bunon chairs,
can't
d1scuss 11 because I'm trymg to
voted to hold Reno m contempt for
Rutland Garden Club w1ll hold an
brief
them m confidence so thai we open house and recep11on for the
refusmg to tum over the Freeh and
LaBella memos The full House has can conduct the mvesl1gat10R m the '!eg•onal d1rec1or on Aug 31 at 7 30
appropnale manner."
p m allhe Rutland Umled Methodist
Jusuce officials also satd Reno Church All clubs are mv11ed to
continues to we1gh whether to stan a auend. Hal Kneen Will be the guest
separate 90-day prehmmary mqUiry
Am Ele Power ......................... 45 mlo the rok of former Wh11e House speaker
Akzo .....................................41\
AmrTech ...............................47\ deputy ch1ef of staff Harold Ickes 1n Christian comedian lo appear
Ashland 011 ..............,...........50'!. campa1gn fund ra1&lt;mg
Chnsuan comed~an M1ke Warnke
The Ickes mauer was sa1d by Jus- w1ll appear at the Ash Street Freewill
AT&amp;T .....................................56'/o
Bank One ............................ ..4V. t•ce officmls to appear more senous Bapust Church m M1ddleport Sept 4Bob Evens ............................18'.\ atth1s pomlthan the Gore calls But 6, 7 p m mghtly Weekend events
Borg-Warner .........................43\ because Ickes ,. nol a covered person
mclude Susan Warnke speakmg Sept
Broughton ............................. 16'&gt;
Champion ............................. 11'.1 under the Independent Counsel Act. 5 at 10 am followed by a potluck at
Charm Shps ............................4~. there wa.' no deadline for a deciSion noon. Sunday school at I0 a.m folCity Holding ..........................37'&gt; on h1m
lowed by a noon potluck Wllh a
Federal Mogul ....................... 60'.1
If Reno were lo seek an mdepen- motorcycle rodeo at I p m Pnzes
Gennett ............................... 63~. denl counsel to mves11gate Ickes, she w1ll be awarded tor barrel roll. balGoodyear.......................... ..50'.1 would use the act's proviSion allowloon toss. slowest nder. motorcycle
Kmart ...................................15'~
mg
such
an
appomlmenl
when
she
tmveling fanhesl, oldest motorcycle
Kroger ..................................50'1•
Lands End ............................. 22Y. believes Justice Depanmenl mvesu- and other games Love oflenng Will
Ltd ......................................... 2~'i• gators would have a confl1cl of mler- be taken Pastor Les Hayman mv11es
Oek Hill Flnt .......................... 18~ esl
the pubhc
OVB ......................................... 41
Ickes ha.• demed wrongdomg
One Valley ............................30~
Gore has sa•d h1s calls only were
Peoples ................................ 25'.1
lo solicn perm1Ued soft-money conPrem Flnl ...............................18'1o
Continued From page I
Rockwell .......................... 35'1•
lnbullons for pany buildmg and
AD/Shell ............................... 43'~.
downgraded to a trop1cal storm,
issue ads
Seers ............. , ...............50 15 16
defined as a storm wnh wmds of less
Shoney's ............................... 2"!.
than 74 mph, by about m1dday, sa1d
Star Bank ............................. 60'!.
Marriage licenses
Jerry
Jarrell. d1rector of the National
Wendy's ............................... 21 't.
The followmg couples were Humcanc Center m Mmm1 "The
Wosrthlngton ....................... 14'1o
ISsued marnage hcenses recently m flood threat Will. and the ram threat
Stock reports are lhe 10:30 the Me1gs County Probate Coun of w1ll. slay around for a wh1le," he
a.m. quotes provided by Advest Judge Robert Buck
smd
of Gallipolis.
Charles Randall Lyons, 41,
ln1llal repons from Wnghls\llle
Delaware. and Judy Munel Sayre, 37. Beach east of W1lmmgton. showed
Pomeroy , John Fra'nkhn Selbee, 33. only slight damage - al least comHuntmglon, W Va. an~ Sherry Ann pared w11h the destruellon two years
M1ller. 31, Long Bollom. Leonard ago when the area was bit by humHolzer Medkel Center
Dantel
Slolls, 48, M1ddl~port. and canes Benha and Fran. one alter the
Wednesday, Aug. 25 diseherges
H1lda
Marguenle
Ttrado, 51, Gal - other
Mend• Musser, Eva Gahm, Her·
hpohs.
she! Brumfield and Stephen Donahue
Wednesday, Aug. 25 births
Mr and Mrs Ervm Mayes, daugh·
ter, Glenwood. W Va

'

Stocks

Bonnie

Helen C. Fisher
Helen C FISher. 91. Pomeroy, Oh1o. died Wednesday. Aug 26, 1998. al
her reSidence
She was born Apnl 7. 1907, m Racme. Oh1o, daughter of the late John
Man Crary and Lou1se TheiSs Crdl)'
She wa.s a former nmdenl of Senecaville, Ohto. She was a homemaker
and a member of the Pomeroy Umted MethodiSt Church. the Me1gs County Semor Center and Re11red Semor Volunteer Program
She " surv 1ved by a son and daughter-m-law, Tom and Helen Fisher of
Cambndge. Oh1o, daughters and sons-m-law. Allee and Bob Wamsley of
Pomeroy and LoUise and .l•m Smuh of Ball• more. Oh10. granddaughters June
Rhodes of Parkersburg. W Va , Marsha Henmck of Pala.~kala, Oh1o. Melissa Bader of Baltimore and Laura Wallace. Umted States Atr Fon:e, Alabama: grandsons J.R. Wamsley of Pomeroy. Larry F1sher ofWestmmster. Md.
and Martie Smllh of Balllmore. 13 great-grandchildren. sisters Maye Mora
and Faye Wildermuth of Pomeroy: brothers-m-law and aSISler-m-law, Ma.'iOn
FISher of Mmersv1lle. OhiO. and John and V1olel FISher of Umonlown, OhiO,
several meees and nephews
She was preceded m death by her husband, Norman T. Fisher m January. 1986, and by her parents.
Grnves1de servtces w1ll be held at I p m. on Saturday, Aug. 29. 1998. al
Beech Grove Cemetery. Pomeroy. Offie1aling will be the Rev ConniC Fa1res.
Fnends may call on Fnday. Aug. 28. 1998. from 2-8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Chapel of FISher Funeral Home.
In heu of flowers. the fam1ly requests contnbuuons be made to the
Pomeroy Un1ted MethodiSt Church or the Me1gs County Sen1or Center m
her memory

-·-·-

MI. Union Sunday school picnic
Ml Umon Bapllst Church. Carpenter, w1ll have us annual Sunday
school piCRIC Sunday Preacher
Charles Sw1gger w1ll be speakmg
Smgers mclude The Whnes and Carol and Mark Coleman The church IS
located 2 tn m1lessouth of Carpenter Pa.,tor Joe N Sayre 1nv11es the
pub he
Olive 'IWp VFD rundra1ser
The Ohve Township Volunteer
F1re Depanmenl w1ll hold a barbecue
ch1cken dmner and auc110n on Sept
5 begmmng al II a m and I p m .
respeclively, at the fire house m
Reedsv1lle The VFD " lookmg for
dona11ons and 11ems to auclion. 10
donate call Clarence Athenon at
985-3849 or Dale Smnh at378-6221
Preview set
Southern will host Me1gs 1n a foolball prev1ew Fnday n1ghl at 7 30 1n
Racme. g•vmg area football fans a
chance to see theu teams lor the last
urne before ne~l weeks season opener The two Jun1or Vars11y teams w1ll
play at 7·30 and the varsny teams
•mmed1alely followmg
Oranae Trustees
The Orange Township Board of
Trustees w1ll meet m regular sesSion
Tuesday. 7 30 p.m at the home of
Clerk OSie Follrod. Alfred
Dexter Church homecoming
Homecommg at the Old Dexter
Chnsuan Church w1ll be held Sept
12 w1lh dmner at noon and musiC
afterward All welcome

The Daily Sentinel

Hospital news

(USPS lll-'160)
Co.••alty Newsp~~per HolcUop..l~te
Published every dtemoon, Monday lhro.Jgh
Fnday, II 1 Court 51 Pomeroy, Ohto by !he

Otuo V.lley Publish1ng Company Sccoml class
posugc piid at Porncruy, Oh1o
M•ber. 1bc Assoclllcd Press and the Oh1o
Newspaper AsaociliiOn
r .......er: Send addl't1'i corrections to The

Dally Sentmel, II I Court St , Pomeroy, Oluo
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No suDscnptKln by ma.1l pcrnllllcd m areas

Woodrow Troy Zwilling
Woodrow Troy Zwilling. 85, Syrncuse, d1ed on Tuesday. Aug. 25, 1998,
al Veterans Memonal Hospnal Extended C11rc. Pomeroy
He was born on Nov. 16. 1912. m Danvil Ie. Va .. son of the late Fred and
Maggie Jones Zw•lhng. He wa~ employed for 21 yean at the Ru:er Oil Comny and Meigs lire Center, for 15 years as a secunly guard al the Gavm
~ani and for 12 years at the T H. Dav1s Ice Company He wa.• a member of
the Democr&lt;~l Central Comm•Uee and he was a Deacon Emenlus at the Ftrsl
Southern Baptist Church of Pomeroy. He wa.~ a former mayor of Syracuse.
served on the Syracuse Village Counc•l for 25 years and wa.• also a former
member of the Syracuse Ftre Depanment and Rescue Squad for over 25

WE NEVER

when: home earner SCI'\' ICC t~ ava~l1hlc
Pubhsl'lcr rescrve5 llk: nght to adJiril rates dur
1n1 the subsl.:nphon period Subscup!mn rate
changes may be tmplcmtntcd hy ch1ngmg the
dLirahon or the subscriptiOn

COMPROMISE ON

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13 Weeks
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QUAL11Y

26 Woc:h
•
ISJ82
52 Woc:u .. . •
II OS 56
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ll Woc:U
.129 25
26 Woc:U ..
15668
S2 Woc:U
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Btrr OCCASIONALLY
WE Do ON PRICE.

Reader Serv1ces

y~~ 1s survived by h1s w1fe. Jan1ce Zw•lhng, Syracuse: a son and daugh-

ter-m-law. Shelton R. and Catherine Zw111ing. Floyd Knobs, I"'! : a stepson,
David Lawson. Syracuse: a spectal nephew an~ _spouse, Frankhn and Phyl·
lis Hendnx. Syracuse: great-nephews and f~1hes, ~~rt and Jenny Hendrix Ashley and Robert Hendrix Jr.. and Pelle, Christt and Celestin Hendrix: all of Syracuse: a great-niece and family, Barbara~ J•m Riffle, Joey,
B lh
Jessica and Matlhew, all of Portland: a mother-m-law, Jane Teafonl.
~m:::;;.. a brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Sampson and _Jean Hall,
Pomeroy~ a sister-m-law, Emmaline Hendril. ~meroy; a stepsts~r, ~Iva
Glaze Pomeroy· several nieces, nephews, coustns and a host of friends ..
He' was prec:eded mdealh by his parents; fust wife, Sylvta ~ndrix ~wtll·
· . ·nfant son Fred Shelton Zwillins: a stepbrother, Wilham Smtih.
mgS:V:ces will
held at II a.m. on Friday, AUJ. 28, .1~8. at the F1111 :
Southern Baptist Chun:h, Pomeroy Ptke, Pomeroy. Off'K:tallng will be Rev. 1
Lamar OBryant and burial will follow ia Cannel c:esn.ry.
Friends may call on :nnanday, Au&amp;. 21, 1998. from 7-9 p.m. It !he
Pomeroy Chapel of FishCr Funenllfomo.

be

..

____.._

---~- ·

.

---- .

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Comi:tlon Polley

Oar - ._.,,. In .U sl«ics is to be
......._If you lulow otu rnorla 1
lloll, ..11 llle
2155.

w.

oe-

II (740) "l·
will died&lt; you

'"""""'tloll

ud .... I COiftdloofr WOITIJiled.

- -

Newl Departments

no . - .....,. 11 tn-2155.

POMEROY

, 620 Wnt M•ln St.
812-25.
VINTON

Depart-

-·----..lid.

co-.~ M a
1111
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�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
· Page4

_Thursday, August 27, 1998

t

McGwire hits 54th
HR, but Marlins top
Cardinals 7-6 in 10
maintain a two-homer lead over
Chicago's Sammy Sosa. who hit No.
52 on Wednesday afternoon in
By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
Cincinnati.
The Aorida Marlins got caught up
"The TV's on in the clubhouse.
in the home run hysteria.
How can you not'" McGwire
After watching Mark McGwire snapped when asked if he was aware
connect For his 54th homer and of Sosa's homer. "I can only take
falling behind St. Louis 6-0, the Mar- care of myself Let's just have fun
lins hit four home runs- three con- watching till the end of the.season."
secutively on eight pitches - in the
John Mabry also had a two-run
ninth inning and beat the Cardinals 7- homer in the Cardinals' five-run
6 in I0 innings.
etghth before the Marlins hit four
The game was scoreless through home runs in the ninth, including
six innings and then - Wham!
three on consecutive at-bats by Der"All of a sudden, runs galore," rek Lee. Cliff Floyd and Kevin Orie
McGwire !OIIid.
off reliever John Frascatore.
McGwire got the home-run barMark Kotsay 's three-run pinch-hit
rage staned with a two-run shot in the homer off Jeff Brantley tied it 6-6,
Cardinals' five-run eighth inning. and the Marlins won it in the lOth on
The 509-foot shot to dead center Randy Knorr's 'RBI double in the
made him just the third player in NL lOth orr Juan Acevedo (6-3) sent the
history to hit 54 homers, and the first Cardinals to their fifth straight loss.
''I'd have bet anything except my
in 49 years. Ralph Kiner hit 54
homers in 1949 and Hack Wilson hit children that we'd have walked away
a league-record 56 in 1930.
a winner." manager Tony La Russa
Still, another hi storic night didn' t said.
ease the sting of another loss in a disElsewhere in the NL. it was New
appointing season for the Cardinals, York 4. San Francisco I; Atlanta 6.
who have now become secondary to Houston 2; San Diogo 2. Philadelphia
McGwire's pursuit of Roger Maris' 0; Milwaukee 6. Colorado 5; Los
home run record.
Angeles 4, Montreal 3; and Pills"I know what America is watch- burgh 4. Arizona 3.
ing," McGwire said. "They're not
Mets 4, Giants 1
watching the Cardinals, they're
Hideo Nomo (6-11) pitched a
watching me."
three-hitter and struck out 10 as New
McGwire's homer helped him York retained its one-game lead in

Sosa's 52nd HR,
Wood's 16 Ks help
Cubs beat Reds 9-2

NL roundup

NICE SHOT, DAD!- The St. Louie Cardinale' Mark Mc:Gwl111 gets
congratulations from hie aon Matt after hitting hla 54th homer In the
eighth Inning of Wedneaday night's home game agaln1t the Florida
Martina, who rallied In the ninth and beat the Cardinals 7-6 In 10
Innings. (AP)
the NL wild-card chase with a victory at San Francisco.
Lenny Harris led off the game
with a homer off Orel Hershiser (991. and Brian McRae had a pair of
RBI singles for the MetS. who broke
a three-game losing streak.
Brans 6, Astros :Z
At Houston, John Smoltz ( 13-2)
won his eighth straight decision and
Javy Lopez hit a two-run homer.
snapping the Astros' five-game winning streak.
Braves third baseman Chipper

Jones strained rib cage muscles in
batting practice, then aggravated the
injury when he flied out in the first
inning. He left the game and is
expected to miss a few days.
Smoltz is 9-1 since coming off.the
disabled list on June 20 after recovering from an inflamed elbow.
Sean Bergman (11 -7) was the
loser.
Padm 2, Phlllies 0
Joey Hamilton pitched seven
strong innings and Steve Finley
(See NL on Page 5)

Indians tally 5-2 victory over Mariners
By KEN BERGER

walk. Pinch hiller Raul Ibanez
CLEVELAND (AP) - Rookie grounded to b:ond baseman Enrique
Richie Sexson blushed behind his Wilson. who tried to tag Davis and
first baseman's glove. Ken GritTey Jr. throw to first. Second base umpire
doubled over with laughter .., both Larry Barnell called Davis out for
teams enjoyed the show.
leaving the baseline. making it a doult could only mean one thing. ble play.
Seattle manager Lou Piniella was up
Piniella argued calmly at first but
to his old tricks.
then started waving his arms wildly
Piniella had one of the most enter- and pointing emphatically to the
tllining lirades of his career Wednes- baseline. He eventually walked slowday night, flailing his arms and kick- ly back to the dugout.
ing his cap all over the infield while
. "He said I can't point to the
arguing a double play in the ninth ground." Piniella said. " What am I
inning of Cleveland's 5-3 victory supposed to point to, the sky? The
over his slruggling Mariners.
player was on the ground."
"Awesome," said Indians shortBarnell motioned to Piniella thai
stop Omar Vizquel. who played one !}e'd been thrown out. So Sweet Lou
season for Piniella in Seallle. "That spnnted out for an encore, throwmg
was awesome. One of the best shows and kicking his cap and finally toss! have ever seen."
- - ing .it into the stands. It was thrown
Even for Piniella. known for his right back at him.
uproarious confrontations with
"Got my hat back." said Piniella. ·
umpires, this was one to remember. alternately upset and jovial afterward.
With Seaule trailing by two, Russ "Looks good."
Davis led ofl'1he Seaule nimh with a
Asked how he stayed so cool, Bar-

nell said, ''I've dealt with this man
Kenny Lofton had two hits and
for years."
provided the decisive run with his
Sexson. Cleveland's a 6-foot-8 41st steal - a swipe of third and
rookie, homered and had his first sprint home on a wild pitch that
four-hit game but may have enjoyed sparked memories of a similar da1h
Piniella's tirade even more.
in the 1995 AL championship series.
" I asked Grover if that was a big
"The team wa1 going along all
league performance. and he said lou this time without me," said Lofton.
was one of the best." Sexson said.
back in Cleveland after one year with
"I give it a 10," said Indians the Atlanta Braves. "But it helps."
staner Dave Burba ( 11 -9), who got
Steve Reed struck oul Alex
his first victory of the second half.
Rodriguez and Griffey in the eighth
Manny Ramirez hit his 32nd but allowed a solo homer by Edgar
homer and second in two nights for Martinez, his 25th. Mike Jackson got
the Indians. Griffey was 1-for-4 with four outs for his 33rd save.
a single and failed to homer for the
Sexson homered, doubled 1wice
second straight game, keeping him at and singled to raise his average to
an AL-high 44. The Mariners have .366 with two homers and II RBis lost five straight ro Cleveland and filling in well for injured first basenine of 10 this sea,on.
· man Jim Thome.
The AL Central-leading Indians,
Piniella's performance overshadmeanwhile, won for the seventh time owed all of them.
in I0 games and nashed some of their
"What can I say? It was long,"
old swagger in front of the 275th conIndians manager Mike Hal'!!rove said.
secutive sellout ·crowd at Jacobs "I don't know how anybody can
Field.
think of that many things to yell."

Scoreboard
CtNCtNNATt . . ..... ..........61

Baseball
AL standings
:w

L 1!&lt;1.

·"

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il~
,,,-51).1

1M 51

Bo~Wn .

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Oallimnre
·ru,-rlfltu ...

T:u11p.1 8ay ...

6.1

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HI

.177

Centr11l Divlllion
CLEVELAND ..
... 1 -'
Kan11a~ City ..
n
. .,59 7!
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510
... hO 71 . .J'iK
. NJ 7.1 A.'il

Wednesd~ty's

OH An:rlll'im 6. NY
1. Anahctm fl
Bmrton 7. Oak land 4
CLEVELAND .~ .

12" ·
1\ '

scores

Yanke..·~

... . NY

Yanlo:L'L'~

Sc;miL· .1

Kan.\:1~ Ci1y 7. Turunln 2
Min~llnla 7. T:~ mpa Bay .1
Ch1cr~n While Sux 12. BallinMrrc .IIi
Tt•xor..~

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24' ·
.l 6' :

Wednesd11y's scores
01i~al!n

Cuh1 9. CINCINNATI 2

N.Y. Mcts 4. San Fmnc1.~~o I
San Diego 2. Phil:uklphi:t 0
1\llunta 6. Houstnn 1
Finn® 7. Sc L.Ni~ 61101
6. ColnmJo .'i

Pill!lhor~h ..-. Arizuna .1
Lu~ Ar1~lc!l 4, Mtlnln:al .l

Today's ~ames

22' .

Westem Oivi.W.

Tel:u
Staulc .
(hldallll .

.62 72

Milwaulc.~

.'1:'17

... ... 5 1 Kl

~IWII

... 71 62
".1&gt;6 (&gt;1

Cnl\lr.\do ...

Ealllltrn Oivi..ton

Chka~o

·''

S:m Fr:u1o.:iu:o . .
Los Angrlc~ -- -

New Ynrk

.4W

JOII

Wt!item DivbioR
47

S:m Die~1l

lwl

72

Som L&gt;n:j:n (SJli.:IM:Cr 1).(}) :11 Phil;\l.klphia !Byrd
2·01. 1 .0~ p.m
NY Mch (Rcyn o ~n .'li -0) 11 1 San Fran.:r ~.: n
(Oarwin 7- 10). :U .'!i r 111
F l~~r iJa (Hcrn:mJcL 10-1}) a! CINC IN NATI
(P..uris .1-.1). 7.0:'!i p.m
Atlant:r (Nc;af:.le 12- 11 I at St. l.o.1ur s (Mnrri s -1_\). IUOp.m.
Olk:f~n Cub5 (Morgan 0-01 al Cnlnr..uJo (A~ta·
rio 11·1:\). 9:0:'!i Jl.m
Milw;IUkL'C (Rt"jlk' 1· 11 m Arlztrna (0(nc! 11 12). 10 : 0~ Jl.IU.
Monlrcal (Powell 1-4) 111 Lm Angt!lcs (l:&gt;reifuM
ft- 121. IO:O:'!i p.m.

Friday's games

M. Ottrvit6

A«iJa

Today'•c•me•
Minnesota
(Millon 7-10) al Tnmpn Ony (SMtorna
4-2).
12:U Jl m

(Su~K IM:;c.

6-71 at CINCINNATI (8r..'l"c 1-

Pillshurg.h K'nnltwn 12- IUJ at HOUliiOII Uohn+I), ItO~ ll.tn.
At lama IM:r0t.lu.11. 11-6) a1 S1 Luui5 IMcrck~.·r K-

Hdroa of the Piun~:r lcilguc .

Basketball

Il l. K: IOp.m
Chir:a~o Cutu (lrm· h ~d
(Thunr.~on M-K). t.I · O~ pm

l:l -71 til C tllnrou.Jo

Milwaukr..;: (Woud'\11 b-71 at Arizona

t,._lklc r :~u n

Transactions
Bose boll
A111trican Ltap:ue
MINNESOTA TWINS : Rc~allcJ U-lP Travis
Buptisl frum Salt lake nf PCl
NEW YORK YANKEE.'\ . Purclmscd the cuntrncl tlf RHP Jay T~~-~ mcr from Columbus nflhe lntr..,.llittional Lcu~;uc. Optinr-.:d RHP Ryan Br.Klky 111
Cnlumbt.u .
TAMPA UA Y DEVIl RAYS: AL1ivatr..'ll RHP
Alhte l...t~JlC l. rmmt~ 1~-Jay diloablc~ lui Plan:J
L..HI' R;unun Talrs on the 1 ~ - tlay di.'lablcJ li'l
N111ktn»&gt; lAIIKIK"

NL: Su!l ll~u rJcJ Alluntu Bnm:i Ill Andre!!
Go1larragll thrr..'C gat!W~ :111~ fint:J him SI .OOO ror

come in the most homer-friendly pnrk
in the major leagues- Coors Field,
where the Cubs open a four-game
series tonight.
" I know I'm going to Coors Field
and everything, but I just have to say
to myself that I'm not going to go out
there and try to hit a home run
because the home runs are going to
come anyway if I'm hitting good,"
Sosa said. " I've just got to try to be
patient. relax and calm down."
Sosa has been one of Wood's
biggest allies thi s season. hitting 15
homers when the rookie has been on
the mound. Wood has another thing
going for him these days - a rested
arm.
Wood backed off on his throwing
and had a stan pushed back earlier
this month after he complained of a
tired arm. It seems to have worked Wood has hit double digits in strikeouts in two of lhe last three starts.
His 16 strikeouts Wednesday were
his second-highesttotal, tmiling only
his record-tying 20-strikeoul game
against Houston on May 6.
" In his last couple of starts he's
shown that he's closer to where he
was in May," manager Jim Riggle~
man said.
"I've been able to bounce back a
little better than I thought! would, so
I think it's been a big help," Wood
said of the rest.
Gary Gaetti drove in four runs to
help Wood become the first Cubs
rookie to win 12 since Mike Harkey
in 1990. Wood allowed three hits and
walked three before yielding to Rod
Beck, who struck oul two in the
ninth.
When Wood pitched at Cinergy
Field on Mny 17, the crowd put
K's and cheered his strikeouts. There
were a couple of K-counters in the
stands Wednesday, but most of the
20.315 fans clearly were thert for
someone else.
"The fans came to see Sosa:"
McKeon said. "The last time they
came to see Wood. Now with all the
fanfare about the home run record.
it's Sosa. l wish more had showed up.
It's tough when two-thirds of the
crowd is rooting for the Cubs."
Notes: The anificinl turf wits
caked with mud From Tuesday night's
rain-delayed game. ... Wood ·has
struck out 223, two shy of the club's
rookie mark this century. Tom Hughes struck out 225 in 1901. ... It was
Wood's first win since July 31. He
had gone 0-1 with three no-decisions.
... Tomko has failed to reach the sixth
inning in four of his last live. starts,
going 1-3 with a no-decision .... The
· Reds struck out a Iota! of 18 times,
tying the club record for, a nineinning gume. Cincinnati also fanned
18 times against the Astros' Don Wilson on July 14, 1968.

Wikoff passes Woods, takes lead
in Riverside Senior Golf League play
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
After Keith Woods had led most
of the season, often by a huge mar~in, Jim Wikoff of Shade has come
on strong at the end of the season to
take a very narrow half-point lead
over Woods of Bradbury. Ohio in the
Riverside Golf Club senior league .
Wikoffs good. steady golfing was
panly responsible for the takeover.
however, when Woods was unable to
make Tuesday's call because of a
truck drivmg JOb, Wikoff benefited
greatly.
Fony Three players were on hand
fur the Tuesday round with the winning score being II under par. The
winning team consisted of Kay Wilson and Milt Maxwell of Chester,
Don Fields of Hanford and Harold
Clark of Cottageville. Two teams
were tied at nine-under par to take
stcond place for. the week .
The closest to the pm honors for
the week went to Jack Maloney on
number stven and Bill Yoho on the
14th hole. The seniors still have six
weeks remaining.
The previous week Wikoff shot
well to cut Woods' lead to 12 points
after Woods had appeared. to be
building a run-away for the championship. Charley Georgi of Point
Pleasant and retired Meigs School
teacher pulled in close in the top Four
at 126.5 just shy of Woods' 138 score
that week. This week. previous fifth
place golfer. Jack Maloney leap
frogged from fifth to third.
It was another great day for o;coring and another record for lowest
round was set by the team of Mick
Winebrenner of Racine . Donnie
Fields of Hartford, Milt Maxwell ''"d
Herman Knapp of New Haven. The
team shot a 15 under par 55 to hreak
the old record by two points. This
strong team had 13 birdies. an eagle
and four pars for their great recordbreaking score.
A total of Four teams tied for second place at eight under par.
The current standings follow : II
Jim Wikoff. 138.5; 2) Keith Woods,
138; 31 Jack Maloney. 132.0; 41
Charley Georgi. 130.5: 5J Dale Har·rison. 126.5; 6) Harold Lohse, 126.0;

71 Don Fields, 124.0; 8) Milt Yoho.II3.S;I5)BiiiHannum,II3.S; •
Maxwell. 122.5; 9) Peat Carnahan, 16) John Bobb. 113.5; 171 Elmer
121.0. 10) Bill Howard, 117.5; II) Click. 112.0; 181 Ed Wilson, 108.5;
Earl Johnson. 117.0; 12) Ralph Sayre. 191 Don Kay. 107.5; 20) lulher
116.5: 131 Jack Fox. t14.0; 14) Bill Smith. 106.0.

Southern to host Meigs
in football scrimmage
On Friday. area sports fans will
get their first official glimpse of two
Meigs County grid teams when the
powerful Meigs Marauders in•ade
Racine for a half-game match-up
with a league contending Southern
Tornado squad, vastly improved over
one year ago.
Last year, Southern surprised people all -year long. and are a much
more experience team this year.
Meigs is a proven program. gameming much success during coach Mike
Chancey's reign at the school.
Last year. ·Meigs edged Southern
after a hard-fought battle in the firstever football meeting between the
schools.
Friday's program will be~in with
a reserve preview at
7:30 p.m.
on the Southern High Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field with a varsity tilt starting around 8:45 p.m. or
approximately 20 minutes after the
reserve scrimmage.
Southern coach Dave Barr, now
an administrative a1sistant at Southem after teaching at Meigs the pnst
IWO years, said. "This gives us a
chance to establish ourselves as a
program. Coach Chancey has done a
good job at Meigs building a great

MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Fired Chris Ford.
and Dick VerliM:t, auiMant cno1ch.

~ouc: h ,

FtMotball
Nutktn•l footm.lll.riiJliW

BUI·T ALO BILLS: Cluiu-.'\1 I'K ('uk: l:nnluff
w:ri11cn from the O:rldanJ R:ritkrH . Rdcas~·J WR
UnJrc Willimus .
CINCINNI\TI UI ~ NGAI..'i · Waivctl K_ Jay Kirchnlf. Claunt:d L&gt;L Harry l.lcltt=.inrm nfl wmv..-r.l
hnm thr Ja~bnnvi llc J:t~urrr~ .
INUIANAI"Ol.IS COLTS : Wai\·rJ WR Kaip••
McGuin:. Signed WR Tutu Atwell
MIAMI DOLPHINS : Clnimctl WH Nou~·
Jnc.4liCI . WR Phil Suv,,y 1111!J Tf. HI.'IWrick l.u~lo: nH
W:UVCf~

SAN DIEGO CtiARGF.Rlri : Rdea~.:tl 1.11 T••mn

Jamn.
SAN FRANCISCO 4~ERS : W11ivcd K Jnhn
Bcchvr~m unJ L&gt;T (';1rlc1S TI1nr11hm . C l;~inw~ K
Watlc H.i~lley t•t"f wai"Wcrs from the Sran lc Scll·
hawl~ .
L.nuu~

and DT Crtfey St·unt tlrf wnivcoc frunr thr St
Runu

Hockey
NIIMH\al HU(kf1 1A1aur

CH ICAGO ni .A('KHAWKS: Si~IM.'\1 RW 1~ ­
Jic Olczylt
l&gt;ALI.AS STAkS: Sil!'"-"1 H.W lln:ltl Scwryn
hl a lliiC· VCIIf ClllllfiW.:I

progmm. It will be a good measuring
stick for us. We will cenainly see
where we are. cause having a progr~m like Meigs is where we want to
be."
Barr stated. "I think that we are
probably big~;er up front. but we'll
find out if that means better or not.
Last wed;, we had a good showing
up front. but against a different type
of line. Ponsmouth Notre Dame ( 146 winners over Southern) had a
smaller quicker line. This week will
be a different kind of test."
"Skill-wise its going to be a
tremendous challenge. One thing
you can count on is that a team
coached by Mike Chancey is wellprepared, •ery disciplined and ready
to play football." said Barr.
Coach Mike Chancey renected
Barr's scenario of the game saying it
was a good test for both clubs and a
game that was good for Meigs County.
Chancey also renected that a Barr
coached team is always very wellprepared.
Game time for the TornadoMarauder reserve tilt is 7;30 with the
varsity action following.

Southern, Eastern finish
third, fifth in TVC golf match
Host Waterford claimed the match
over Trimble. while local teams
Southern and Eastern finished third
and fifth respectively in the initial
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division golf match at Oxbow Golf Club.
Waterford earned five points
towards the seasonal standings with
an overall score of 166. Following
with total points earned and their
score for the day are Trimble 4/181.
Southern 31190. Miller 2/200, Eastern In02 and Federal Hocking with
0/203.
Southern scorers were Benji
Manuel and Troy Hoback tied with
47's, while Chris Randolph shot a 48
and Mitchell Walker a 49. Bill Coe
shot a 48 and Joe Cornell a 55.
Waterford was led by Casey Lang
with a day-high 35.
Lang led the team of Adam Conllllh, Josh Arnold and Aaron Clark.
-Ea&lt;tern was led by Justin Brewer
with a 49, Chad Nelson wilh a 50,
Matt King a 51 and Josh Will a '52.
Eric Smith shot a 55 and Jon Will a
62.

NLgames ...
(Continued From Page 41
homered For San Diego at Philadelphia.
·
.
Hamilton ( 11-11) gave up live h1ts
in winning for the sixth time in seven decisions.

Randy Myers pitched a perfect
eighth and Trevor Hoffman got his
·career-high 43rd save.
Finley connected for his lith
home run in the first inning off Mark
Ponugal (8-41.
B~wen 6, Rockies S
At Denver. Bill Pulsipher (2-1)
pilched six shutout innings. Jeff Cir·
illo hit a solo home run and Phil Garner earned his SOOth •ictory

wilhM~~~~~~~~~~=~,;~:; .~;. ~~;:::C~".::;.":.~

1

Armheim (Fmlcy I~) al N.Y. Yankt&gt;t~ {Co~

18-4). 7·J.'!i p.m.

B•loiwm (Eri•k.oo 14·9) "'0&gt;0'"1" Wh"' s,.,

(P:irquc

.l- ~). M :O~

r .m.

Wilson's Army
sur pI.us

lose twinbill
to Wahama
Meigs dropped a varsity and
reserve dual golf match to Wahama
on Tuesday on the front nine at
Riverside Golf Course. Meigs
dropped to varsity match 168-185.
while the Wahama reserve picked up
a 180-224 win.
Jared Woods of Meigs and David
Reed of Wahama was co-match
medalist. They carded 40's, other
Meigs scores were Carson Midkiff
with a 44, Zach Meadows a 47, Tom·
my Roush a 52. Nick Dettwiller a 53
and Andy Davis a 54.
Meigs reserve scores included
Thad Bumgardner with a 49, John
Wilson a 50. Josh Napper a 62 and
Jason Knight a 63.

Friday's games

Tem (Hettin~

DH: White So• (Eyre16-7
and Snydcf
Bur''"4-2).
1·1.11"
Oicagn
2-7 nnd
4 : 0~
p.nt.
Anaheim (Hill 1-:'i) at Bolton (A~ 9- ~l. 7 :~

p.,._

B•y tAtvllln

tl·IO). 7 :0~p. m.

~.IJ)'" Oetroil tMoch"'

Oakland (Oquttt 7- IOJ at CLEVELAND {Colon

))·~;::.J;(it.wkios
9-1). l :Ol p.m.

].12),.

k.anso11 Ory (Rapp 10-11)

a1

r ...,., rw;m,ms
Baltimore (Ponson

- ~;~
). ?::\~p.m.
del
7(~1";~' ..2) AI N.Y. Yon""• (H.,nan77

NL standings
!MltmDi•itkln

Ira

Atlanu .....
New Yon ....... .

lll.

... AS 45

110
.6&lt;1 69
............................ .11 8.1
Florido .............................. -.47 86

-!phi·...

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................................. ~ !I

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...............62 10

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II not have the"lr

August 29
as advertised

DIAMONDS

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Phii:~Jclphia !Green ll·M) ill S11n Franci.'ICtl
tRucccr 1.\-Y), 10 : ~~ p.m.

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (API - Sammy
Sosa doesn't even wantto think about
Roger Maris' home run record as he
closes in on it.
There are more immediate things
to be done - signing baseballs to
thank lhe opposing manager, making
a young fan's day by handing him a
broken bat.
Sosa made more admirers and
moved within nine homers of Maris·
record Wednesday as he hit his 52nd.
a towering shot orr an advertising
panel on the third deck in left-center
field . The homer was the grandest
stroke in the Chicago Cubs' 9-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Kerry Wood ( 12-6) struck out 16
in eight innings, another indication
he's beyond those tired-arm days, but
was upstaged all around by Sosa. His
solo homer in the third inning, a 438foot shot off Brett Tomko ( 11 -10),
left him within single digits of Maris'
record of 61. Sosa is. two behind
Mark McGwire, who hit his 54th later Wednesday:
"This is not in my head right
now." he said. "I think it's nice to go
out and do the job like I've been
doing. but I'm not excited right now.
Maybe after the year I will be, but
tht;re 's still another month and a week
to go.
"I just want to be patient, be the
way I am now and see what happens."
He wa.' true to himself Wednesday
all the way around.
Before the game. he sent Reds
manager Jack McKeon a half-dozen
autographed baseballs - his way of
saying thank you for a nice chat they
had the previous evening.
He also delighted a young Fan
behind the Cubs' dugout by gi•ing
him a bai he cracked while lining out
in the ninth. It wasn't the bat he used
for homer No. 52. but the youth didn't care.
"He was almost crying when I
gave him that bat," Sosa said.
"That's why they came to the ballpark. to see the Cubs play. Hey, I'm
feeling great. the fans have been great
this year. I just hope we can continue the job we've been doing and
bring the fans back."
As they tight for a wild card spot.
the Cub&lt; are hoping Sosu and Wood
can continue the things they've been
doing for the last few weeks.
Sosa's homer was his ninth in the
last 17 games. a spun that has kept
him neck-and·neck with McGwire. It
was his 23rd homer on the road this
season, matching the club record .
shared by Hack Wilson ( 1930). Ernie
Banks ( 1960) and Dove Kingman
( 1979).
His next chance to add onto it will

~TJt~u:rsda~y~,-::A~ug::..u_st...:2:.:.7':..;1~998:::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~P~ome~~roy • Middleport, Ohio

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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 21, 1998

·Mercury to start WNBA title round against Comets tonight
1Jr IIEL REISNER

ing guard, is the only most valuable
PHOENIX (AP) - Cynthia · player the WNBA has known. She
Cooper c-.an have all the WNBA MVP won the 1997 regular-season honor.
awards. All Jennifer Gillom wants is also took
,
. a Iitie.
The championship-game MVP a&lt;
"My main goal all sea'IOil has she scored 25 points in a 65-51 rout
been just to make it to the playoffs of New York, and got this year's reg· and win a championship. and that's ular-season award a.• well.
whlll' ve been c~ntrating on.'' the
But the competition this time was
Phoeni&gt;&lt; Mercury center said. "That's close - Cooper averaged a league· lleen my main goal, not the MVP high 22 .7 points and 3.7 rebounds.
: :award and not any other award."
while Gillom had 20.8 points and 7.3
Cooper. Houston's peerless shoot- rebounds per game.
·

'fbe best-of-3 final s. beginning
tonight at America West Arena, mean
one more chance to fire up the conlroversy.
Game 2 will be Saturday in Houslon. and Game 3. if needed. will be
Tuesday in Houston.
The Comets went 27-3 in the regular season, had the longest winning
streak ( 15) in the WNBA this year,
scored the most points (76.2) and
crushed Charlotte by 14 and 16
points to advance past the first round.

Sheryl Swoopes was si~th in 5COI'ing and third in steals, jus! behind
team male Kim Perrot's 2.80 average.
Houston had Swoopes from the
stan this year. She gave birth before
the season last year and only played
in the la.•t II games.
The Mercury were 19-11 -good
enough for the No. 3 seed in the playoil.. and got an edge on second-seeded Cleveland by having the fio;l game
at home. They defeated the Rocken.
lost on the firstlry in Cleveland and

then closed out the series with a 71 60 victory Tue!iday night.
Bul Gillom said the Mercury's 6966-upset of the Comets last June was
more indicative of what lies ahead
than Hous10n 's lhree wins over
Phoeni&gt;&lt; later on.
"I think we're very even in talent," she said. "Now it's just who's
willing to play for 40 minutes. A lot
of il is going to come from the heart.
I mean, you can do the fundamentals.
you can do the things you've been

doing, but Houston is a great team.
and you're going to have to play
more than I 00 percent and give
something e&gt;&lt;lra in every game. "
Cooper agreed tht intensity level
would rise .
" I think they're a team that &lt;:an
give any team nightmares," she said.
"They are very physical. and. hty,
we're going to have to play grat
again•t whoever we play, because it's
the playoffs and because everyone
out there wants to play their best basketball against us."

Area racing notes
After previously announcing that
the historical "Hillbilly I 00" would
be run this year at the Ponsmouth
Raceway Park in Portsmouth, heavy
.flood damage at Pennsboro Speedway forced negotiations to bring the
West Virginia namesake back to its
home slate and the Ty fer County
Speedway at Middlebourne. W.Va.
This year's running of che 30th
annual Hillbilly 100 will be held a~
an unsanctioned event at Tyler Coun-

ty Speedway on Sept. 6 and 7 (Sunday and Monday). The Portsmouth
Raceway Park Race, under the
STARS sanction, will be held Saturday and Sunday with a new name.
The Oberling Motors-River Days
100." Both races pay $15,000 to win .
Although the "Hillbilly 100" ha•
no sanction. the STARS series ha.&lt; no
other engagement that day, meaning
many of the stars from that circuit
will most likely compete.
The annual spectacle begins on
Sunday, Sept. 6 with four classes of

cars-Sieel Block Late Models. Modifieds, Street Stocks and Dwarf Cars.
The 50-lap Hillbilly 50 for Steel
Block Late Models will also be run
on Sunday. Gates will open al 4 p.m.
Monday, September 7th will see a
whole new slate of racing action with
the gates opening at8 a.m. and qualifying for the Super Late Models
(Outlaw aluminum block) at noon .
Camping with or without hookups is
available and reservations &lt;:an be
made by calling Lou Hubbard at 740662-4111.

Skyline resuJDH racln1
Racing coruinues throughout Seplember at Skyline Speedway in Stewan with the la&lt;l Sprint show set for
August 29, followed by Steel Block
Late Models, Street Stocks and FourCylinders, through September. Also
on September 19 will be !he Harvest
50 for Super Late Models.

show this Saturday. August 29 at
Ohio's fastest 3/8 mile dirt oval. KC will be holding its sea'iOn championships with increued purses Saturday, September 5.
Currently, two local drivers, Larry Bond in the facemyer Lumber car
of Coolville and Scou Wolfe in the
CCK ConvenienceiMcDonalds/Virgil Hill Produce car of Racine, are in
the top five in poinL~. Bond is third
and Wolfe is 5th. Skip Waterman
leads John Osman and Bond with Jeff
Houser a three-time winner in fourth .

Latest ABL title-contending team disbands after one season
LONG BEACH. Calif. (AP) 1be Long Beach ScingRays, who

advanced to theAmerican Basketball
League finals m theor only season,

Osu 's Katzen moyer makes

Sl Cover' but needs C to Play
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Sports Illustrated's college football
preview issue features Ohio State's
Andy Katzen moyer on the cover and
ranks the Buckeyes No. I, but with
an asterisk: the junior linebacker
must be eligible if Ohio State is to
remain on top.
"Ohio State is No. I," the cover
reads. " If Andy Katzenmoyer Makes
the Grade."

The te~tlies nexllo a photograph
of the 6-fool-4. 245-pound Katzenmoyer posing in his home uniform.
Katzenmoyer, who won the
Butkus Award last year as the
nation's top linebacker, is taking
music, golf and AIDS awareness during the summer quarter to bring his
overall grade-point average up to a
qualifying 2.0, or "C" .

Fall fishing tourney slated
The Bend Area C.A.R.E. Fall
Fishing Tournament will be held
Sept. 19 at the Mason, W.Va., Levy.
A total of $1,000 in prize money
is to be given away. based on 100
fishermen . The tournament consisls
of one-person teams with no limit on
the number of fishermen ftshing
from one boac. There will be no minimum and muimum lengths. one and
only one fish per fisherman will be
weighed. All species of gilled fish
(catfish, carp, perch, etc.) are legal

and can be weighed. No turtles,
mussels, etc. will be weighed. Only
live fish will be weighed.
The fishing pool extends from the
Racine Locks and Dam to the mouth
of the Kanawha River. Check in will
stan at 6 a.m. with fishing times
between 8 a.m. 3 p.m .
Entry lee is $20 per person before
Sept. 16 and $25 after Sept. 16.
For more information or to register call Jason Roush at (304) 7736166 .

have disbanded.
"We're doing what every responsible corporation in America does look for ways to imprm·e the bollom
line, " ABL chief operating officer
and en-founder Gary Cavall1 sa1d
Wednesday. "This decision to close
the doors in Long Beach is pan of our
ongoing effon to streamline operalions. reduce expenses and improve
profitability."
The nine remaining teams in the
women's professional league begin a
third season the first week of November. Each team will play 44 games.
Long Beach was added as an
e~pansion team last year. and went
26-1 Rduring the season he fore beating Colorado and Ponland in the

playoffs to advance to the league
finals.
The StingRays led 2-0 before the
Columbus Quest won three straight
games at home to win lhe best-of-5
series.
" I've had more calls from the
media today since the day we staned. " said Linda Reid. the team's
media relations director. "I'm really
disappointed. I'm really angry. too.
We weren't given all the tools 10 ~ucceed.
"We really fell like we were on
the upswing this year. We had a great
team. too. We had one of the lop two
or three women's teams ever assembled . To not have an opponunity to
play devastates our players, coaches

and staff."
Speaking from league headquarlers in Palo Alto, Calif., Cavalli
called the decision " e~tremely difficult for us, especially w.~n you conSider the human factor.
"Unfortunalely,this is a business.
and revenues from season ticket
sales and corporate sponsorship in
Long Beach have fallen well short of
expectations." he said. "Frankly, the
financial losses of the team were just
100 greal to juslify playing another
&lt;eason there."
Reid disagreed with that assessment.
"We believe we would have sold
more tickets than maybe league peopie thought we were going to," she

·

·said. "I just feel really bad for our
players. Sometimes when stuff like
this happens, nobody realizes the
affect it has on the human beings
here." .
The StmgRays played at the Pyramid on the Long Beach State campus.
The 10 Long Beach players, all
signed to standard player conlracls
with the league, will be dispersed to
other ABL teams .
Natalie Williams and Rhonda
Smith were assigned to the Portland
Power: Cass Bauer and Katrina Price
to the Philadelphia Rage: Clarissa
Davis-Wrightsil and Pam Hudson to
the San Jose Lasers: Stacey Lov~lace
to the New England Blizzard·

MOSCOW (AP)- Former NHL
star Bobby Hull told a Russian newspaper that Nazis were not without
merit. that the black population of the
United Stales was growing too fast.
and that genetic breeding was a worthy idea. Hull strongly denied the
repon.
"Hitler. for example. had some
good ideas. He just went a lillie bit
too far." the Hall of Fame player tuld

the English-language Mo.vcow1imes. ·
The former Chicago Blackhawks
and Winnipeg Jets star also said the
Canadian government wa.~ too leftwing and was giving welfal'f' payments to people who don't deserve
them. the Moscow limes reported
Tuesday.
Asked if it would be fair to
describe him as a racist. Hull reponedly replied: "I don't give a damn.

I'm not running for any political
office.''

Today, however, Hull issued a
fierce denial of the report.
"The statements allributed to me
by the Mo.fcmr 1imes and now republished by other media outlets are false
and defamatory," Hull said in a
slatemenl released by his lawyer,
Timothy Danson.
Hull, 59, gave the interview last

week while in Russia as a guesl of the
organizers of the annual Spartak
hockey tournamenl.
Hull also touched on his relationship with his son, Brei!, who recently signed a free agent contract with
the Dallas Stars. It's been said the
relationship has .been strained for.
years. But Hull said they were close.
"He is a very loyal kid," Hull
reponedly said.

I

/ I
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I
.......

I

---- -...

I'HOHE!192-2196

1\f/oolEPORT • o"

•

THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT

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AECOIID: KAon

Sctvadel, ~129.182 mph,
Sept. 12, 1997

t
II

!lACE AECOAD:
Jeff Gordon. Chevrolet, 100.364 mph,

•c
~

Sept. 14, 1997

-

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"'-thin

1.... Gorden, 3,417
2 . .... MIRrl.
3.
3,1t4
4. fbly W....:., 3,QI3
5. 1ot10y Lltlonll, 2.N2

1.

a..--. ''*

OTMEII FORMER WINNERS; Tho fill
rae. has only been _, once. Gordon
alto ha won alj)llng ,_ here. 11

--

7. Jellknan. 2.r71
I. Dill e.m.d. 2.871
t . T...y LM;IO"M, 2.000

iP

'

·- Ellon
~·e.
s-y.r, 2.121
5.

10. ...,... Sdlr, 2.54t

WINSTON CUP SERIES
Mat1&lt; t.1a-11n fllllllP'Id Jeff

JEFF

GordOn'slouHace wklnlng
streak witn a vk:"tory In tne

WARNER

Goody't 500 at Brittoi Motor
Speedway. Gordon finilhed
fifth but saw his points lead
0\ler Martin dwindle to 67.
Several driv~ -

9--"=

=
...
!

BUSCH ORAND NATIONAl.
DaHl Jarrett appeared to have
the Food City 250 locked up ol
Bristol Motor Speedway, lead·
ing by mora than a straight ·

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NOTAII.I: Joe Ru11mtn ha been in
tho top flvo In 1111tne ..... here.

,..........___,..--,

Stacy

the points lead over Jack

SPf'ague, who finllhod fourth .

,..,......

Weekly rlllklngt by NA8CAA Thlt Week. Lilt WMtl'l ll'*lng II r"l

e. o.to Earnhardt (8)

1. J.rf Gordon 11)
Only atlpo to fifth
2. Marl! Mortln (2)
Putting the heot on
3. Dolo Jarrell 13)
Juol can't catch up
4. Ruoty Wallace 15)
Big comeback last week

Back in black?
7. Mike Skinner 110)
Rolling with t.1cRaynolda
8. Jeff llur1on f7)
Two straight top fives
'· JefM1y Mayfield (8)
Climbing back up
10. John AndNIII'(S)
Snowing Potty power

o. Bobby Labonte (4)
Banged In Brtstol

1t'IS

0

,.,.
....
.....,'

ON THE Sctt£DUU

....

,..,_

CMT 300, Loudon, N.H.
So~n 500. Dll11ngton, S.C .
Sept . 12 bide we. Richmond. va.
MONA 400, Oovtr, Del .
H..- 500, Martlnavllte. V..
UAW..QM 500, Concord, N.C.
Oc!.4
Oct. 11 Winston 500, Tau.dega. Ala.
Pepel400, Dlytonfl ~ . Fla.

Oct.,,

Oet. 25

111 Court St.
Pomeroy
992-2155

J _ Button

w .......

JT. lllbonte

G. Bodino

"""'

""""""'

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win · r*~ -~·'tt
R~~iJ~r'mJity'_v,,· ~~ekl~~t Jqpe,l (§ :W~
F l\~~~~1~ i
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The Daily
Sentinel

- "'"""

"'"""'

Chn·lube 500. Avondale, Mt.

....

B. Ubonlt
"'""""'
Elliott

J. """""'
J. Oo«&lt;on
J.,...

..... ,
..,.,

11uo oF THI

'-/TI\NI•(;;Q J!uuh ~rl)'trt .
b~ ~lng out of tum ,
fO\Ir oii a•llte.rootoit at
Brtotolu Proutoy; r\Jnnlng
oecond, wu1JYtng to paeo ·
th,olipP.f~car ol ~onn ..Tho
conlo'if Ill off a nino-car
malot; whlcn Included moot
of thaleacforo, and Preaalay'o
~ cau;h\, flre. wNow I know
why ~~re calling !'11m stupld,''Preooley said. Jones

Where would he write, or .tiD
CIObe-.ct!Dinquiooobcujolo
~

Mll1iT..oo-

...... Oorda, Fla.
OearMri, '

This il 1 wry coqxtilive inltJI..
lly lnll, jUII • ldon IIKM: 10 New

Yort ..S rnuaiciiDI so NlllniiJc:,
lboee ink:ratcd ia ~Cock w fiCin&amp;.
be !be)' driwn, rnod&gt;mia or .,..
joumalills..., ....... .....
Cborloae ... ,.._.-or lhe tams

- - ......... 10""'

are located. I wilh there were an ns-

By--

ier - . bullhe""' wrrr t«100 io ICC a job in NASCAR. iJ 10
come ro a.toae lAd pus 10me
rauna IJOUDd en penon. He miJht
haw ID Ilk&lt; """"" job 10 ""'"'
eodJ mod until he &lt;:an find a job ln
l¥ifta, but cheft is DO subtti!Ult' to
bema ,_lhebeanbeal oflhe sport.
Join~

t.1ichaol Watrtp anl10\M1C8d
that he IWld tho Wood Elrothont
would end a -~ portafter thii!IMIOI1.
Waltrtp, tho younger bmther
of Oamtll waJtrlp, finished 14th
and 18tllln poln1a tho last two
seasons. and he It 15th this
year. Hie only Winston Cup
v1cto&lt;y In 13 1N11001 wu tho
1996 Wlnlfon all-atar race, a
non-points event.
Wal1rtp drove the Ponnzoll
Poolloc for Chuck Rider !rom
1987 to t 995. He posted hla
~- boot flniah (aecond) at

north"

AGE: 35
FAMILY: Wife El!zabelh
"llu1!y, • chlldnln Ca111in t.1at1e
(8) and t.1llgl'Ot Caroll11
month!l)

CAR: No. 21 Cltao FOld
CNIHA AECOIID: 383
starts, ro wino, two polet,
16 top llvM, 77 tojl10o

CAREER EARNINGS:

$7,534,871 (Aug. 23, 1998)
HOW DID THE DECISION
TO LEAVE THE WOOD
BROTHERS COME AIIOUT'I
·n w11 a faJIIy easy deCision
to make. We had agrood a
coople months ago that I
would como back ond drive
the car In '99. I JJigned a lotte&lt;

THE FUTURE OF THE WOOD
BROTHEAS?"t'm Just talking
to people and ""'""~~ what the
boot opportunity out lhenlls
f« me. I never have ;eally
boon In lhia poo~lon be10AI.

of Intent at Indianapolis. Then

There are so many times In my

we ran tenible and then went
to Wal~na Glen and ran torr!bto. We've boon In lha aame
place (In points) for llno
y1111111, IWld we - . PfObobiY
bolter throe years ago. lhoro'l
not 1 tot of gtOWth when thai
happtnt.
"k '-'1 t.en Eddie
(Wood) ond Lon't fluh.
They've spent alot of money
and dono a lot of good thlnya.
We should bo gett1ny bolter,

career I just wish I would have
boon smart enough or confidoni enough maybe lo take a
chance and I waan1. That's
kind of what this lo al about.
I'm COI'1fidtnt now ond HH
clotln'l worll out, ~ wun1
meant to worll out.
"I dcn1 know Whal "'illllj&gt;'
pen with tho 1\\:&gt;od Elrothont,
...,_ Matt (Konoelh) will
drive a car"' whether they will
got onother drtwr or what. •

HOMETOWN: Owensboro,
Ky.,

N.C.

•llld;PMiioy .
1doWn.' •P,
on Hfln.' ' '' · ., !;,.._! : · .NAICAA'TII!e f'"!k givel
Itt opinion: Jbl!M aHniod to

beliangtng'aiOund' iu tho
trou9ft;al !lrto\0),, but ~ WO!JI~ .:
bo dlfflcuk' to tiiJI!!~ him Jor
any.' NAS9f!1' cq~~l\ave
weltad ..c&gt;lh~ip'~?!Jtr
caution, theoj
~ fhl, c'8ra
slngle·flle, whlcij !?Jid have
ovoldod lhla tl'\l&lt;lble.
"

1

now tlvoa In Shorrtla FOld,

TRIVIA

WHO'&amp; HOT?

r...

Canll&gt;bollsvitl&lt;, Ky.
Dear Samantha.
Not 1 chanc:e.

____ _

It you've got 1 queltion or •
wrfte: NAIJCAA
TN1 WM Y(U" Tum, c/o
the o.ton oaua., 2:500 I .

,

COftiiMII.,

llnlahet In the
top-.

1. Where II Molgwi· McCilft Racing hMdquartnd?
Aulltlll17

WHO'S NOT'P Ward Bu"on
quallfln well, but he hu live
llnliMI of 34th or worse In
the lui HVen racM.

992-6611

w-.

f"' $1.1

2. 'Nhlt NASCAA dftver once won a CART race In Surtn ParadiM,

555 Park St.
Middleport

• Deopl1e t.1ar1&lt;
Martin bolng distracted by 1ho death
of hit lather, stop.mother ond halftiller tho 1811 two
he haa flnlthod fourth and flrat.
Give the crodH to
Jlmn1y Fennlg'o toom
f« keoplng tho car
on • roll.

Mark Martin 11 keep·

tht heat on Jeff
Gordon wtth 13 straight

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.

N.C.-

lng

I

I

0

I

0

It)

•
CD

Is ~avlng a
todeolgn Ito
car for 1999. The winning fan witt watch the
new car run In the
Daytona 500 and drive
the car on a track.
See a dealer or call
(800)242-2424 for an
entry form.

Tony SI&lt;Wirt. foujhiiO id by !he
lapped cor of Buckahot Jooes.
Pmsley ond lora banged comin&amp; out of tum four, aettina off 1
nine-car pileup on the fronlltreiCh.
Pteuleyl"' ""ibt
(he
escaped), ond SI&lt;Wift ond Elton
Sawyer..,.. aiJo cotk:&lt;:ted.
"Buckahot Joncs,lhll~ ali i can
tay," l'lou\ey said. ''S'- IIUpidily.
, .... hean! !hem call him SIUpid
bo:f..,, and I didnl know why.
Now I know."
Jones ;aid: ''Once I knew I
coutlil '&lt;gel my Ill' bac~ I held my
bottom line and slowed up to let
Roben ond !he guy&gt; go bj. l can~
help it if SOf'l'leOOt comes beck

nre

then turned serioos about
racing. He ran Winston
Cup flom 1961-73, winning
once (Jacksonville, Fla ..
1964). His lffe was documented in the 1970s movie
"Greased Lightning."

down on me."

Accessories

Ridenour·

FOR YOUR FUTURE AND

The 'Nood Brothers, who
began fielding Cup cars In
1953 and have 96 vlctorteo,
also have boon struggling.
They have two wtno since
1987 (Date Janet11n '91 and
Morgan Shephard In '93), and
they have one top-live w~
Wafu1p In 85 lllar18.

started as a moonshiner,

See us for Your StihiPower Tools &amp;

"""*

Dear NASCAR ThisWedt,
I'm concerned aboulllale EMnhani. b he hlvina • bod ..-. or a
bod )UI on purpose? I hi&gt;&lt; IIOii&lt;ed
""" be -~ been doina
n(
'"'" the Dayton~ 500, hiiWt win.
Do )OO!hink -~ pouiblc he .......,
want 10 win?
-Blond

Waltrip, Martin say Gordon doesn't de~erve the boos

FROM TH[ ARCHIV[S:

www.srlhluaa .com

but we )ult _,,, "'yoo
have to lfy to fig&lt;Jro out why
that 11. A bt of tJmto ~
down to communication ond
that word ""' ....-y day
- "'*"'tlty.
"WW think maybe now that
we've dono lhil, maybe we'll
bo better. Maybe~ wilt opat1&lt;
oomethlny that will make uo
wor1! haftjer and clo bo118r."
WHAT DOES THII MEAN

Pocono In 1988.

Tho rich history of NASCAR
Wendell Scott, the most
prominent African
American owner/driver
In NASCAA Winston Cup
history, was born on Aug.
29, 1921 In Danville, Va.
Ukt so many others, Scott

S7/H£

Thll'lllll*

Aller INvtng tho Wood Boothn, MiciiMI wallrtp It confldonltlbout hll fulln.

NASCAR TNt Before tile B&lt;11t01 race,

TOPHN

workUJ1 ror • NASCAR sam «

ocpliDtion oonnc:w;.lcd with tbc rae... induooy.

Comp1on. helped by a

day waa involved, but retained

0.. NASCAR ThiiWedt,
My 110n tit lmior • the UDi¥er·
lily o( Cam! Florida in Orlaado,
Fla. ... il ~ in deoip cngi_ . , llld il ~­
in

SERIES

number of acctdtntt and
mechanical problomo by hla
rivals, won the Lund Look 275K
in Topeka, Kan.
Mike Bllto led early until hit
engine tailed, then a seven·
truck accident took out a num·
bel' of conteoderl. Aon Horna·

Dave Harris
Ext.104
For More
Information

orHIR ~WillERS: Hornaday

away wi1h 15 !apt to go.
But • cau1lof1 flag bottled up
the field , and d - enoueo.
Robert Prealty ~ wi1h
Buckahot Jooet while lfyiny IO
pau h ll lappeCI car. A nine-car
mefee rei!Jtttd on the front
Olrelch, colloetflg the second-,
third- and fourth-place cars.
AltM a owd flag, Jatrett'o car
tlowly, and Kovin Lep80" paoMd him In tho final four
' - · Jatnllt lhlrd.

.CQ

=
a:
~

including

Rusty Wallace, Ricky Rudd and
Jeremy Mayfield - led the """'
early. and Dole Eamhatdt UMd
""""' pit ll1t8t8gy to 20
laps midway llvough. But tho
end wao aJ t.18111n, 11 he led
the final1811apt on tho way to
hit flfth win of tho -.,n.
W.Oiace and Mike Skinner
bOttl went a lap down ear1y tn
111e race but recovered to finiSh
lhlrd and ttVtnlh, -I'"'Y.

Call 992-2156

.... _,tho 1111 two ..... here.

- -·" '"i'lfiiiOMiiUWTiffiiiWHiil-;,-a - -

c-.

ADVERTISE
ON THIS
PAGE

*·

Michael·Waltrip

.a-,2,751

7. PNPncni.UT7

e.nnF.-...ure
8. fiDI a.... 2.010

10. ~Sdw-*U33

~
Q,)

•

Jimmy Henlloy, Dodge, 103.160 mph,
JU)I 11 , 1997
!lACE AECOIID: Ron Homaday,
~ 118.358 """'· JU)I 12. 1997

fl--..

3. ... Md..a9*1. '""'

Ron Homadoy
I!IIENT QUAUFY·
--RECORD:

Gonion

Emie !Mwl.
NOTAII.I: KAon 8clndor _, both
po1et ond Steve GtlMcm flnlthod fourth
In bolhraceo here 1111 yeM.... Gordon't
only
lop-five
hit
Wino ""'
in 199!5111d
'97.

o.e..m.dl Jt.. , . .

--So»od••l
-SaWrday.
Aug. 29

have Auo1y Wallace, Ricky Audd m

z. w.a~:oJ. 174

•.,.,.,.....,...,z.-

l)&lt;y.)Mocoo-

k't 110 mucl1
In tho- "' tho coun1ty. Tho around tho , _ bou1alltJndnods
o f - - - - but tho best
p&amp;acee for lobtter n in the retOf'l
area around Wen Beach, which is
near I.Jic:onla.

I!IIENT QUAIJFYINQ

II

-Lou~225

Engjrd,

you haw to 001 - - mainly

PION: J.rf Gordon

Q,) rnt
• -

~

-you go to -

.-----::::-""-:"0'1 N.H.
wtEH:Sunclay,
Aug. 30

c.

~

CIW'TIIIAH
TRUCKlER&amp;
COIIIIII UP:

COl IIIII UP: CMT 300
Wll!ll!: Ha-npollilo lnlemlllonll

-~

~

992-2825

ltJ

0

rl)

108 Nor1h Sectlhd Ave. •Middleport, OH

fill • CIC ~

Guaranteed Service

-.!

Q,):!:!.

--

4f1SOUTl1TH•Ro

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-600-594-111

Hull denies praising Nazis, making anti-black comments

Pe ps The Easiest
Way o Cut A Deal
OnANewPo
_____ .,..

.

-

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
Acrosa from Gallia Aulo Sales on old Rte. 35 West
New Summer Holn Mon. -Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

rl)
rl)

Recently. another local driver.
Todd Smith in the Taz's Marathon #7
had a greattop-10 run at K-C.
Rodney Duncan holds a slim lead
over Chad Kemenah in the sprints.
K-C will take off Seplember 12
and September 19 to prepare for the
first annual K-C 100 for STARS Late
Models on September 26. a race paying $10,000 to win.
Warm-ups are a1 6:30 and racing
is at 7:30. K-C is located off route 23
south of Chillicothe. just four miles
north of Waverly on Blain Highway.

c

992-2198

...s;:::... 'td- ~ll~

... ...:-_

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

rl)

'Hillbilly 100' moves from Portsmouth to West Virginia track

MUFFLER SHOP

992-2198

~-

""=
...=

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

• Middleport, Ohio

Copyrtght t8M Tho Closton !N.C.)

Supply I'
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

'88 llo•d ••cottt

o.ft API far a .-.s or $1,oao callacl:

'88

~o•d cont:ou•
G.t% API far Ulllltlls or $1,0GO ca lllcl"

'88 IIOHI •xplo. . .

'88 llo•d Wlnd•t:a•
a.ft API far a ..-s or $1.510 calllcl'

1.1% API tor H 110111111."

OFFER GOOD ONLY AUGUST 28 ·SEPTEMBER 2!
I

See Your Best
Quality Ford Dealer

. . ..... ,# ... -·

• ford Credit APR lor qualified buyers varies by credrtworthiness ot buyer as delermmed ~Y ford Credit No! all buyers Will quality for lowest APR. See dealer to see If you qualify. 48
months at $21 .22 per month per S1 ,000 financed wilh $0 down on '97-'98 Contour, '97-'98 Escort (excluding ZX2) and '97-'98 Windslar. 36 months at $28.60 per month per $t ,OOO
financed with SO down on '97-'98 Explorer. Dealer participalion may affect savings. Residency restrictions apply. Musl have newspaper cutout to get Coupon Clearance $500. For $500
coupon and APR take new retail delivery from participating dealer stock by 912198.
_

PROLONG SUPER LUBRICANTS

:erfised

s1s•s 51

E119ln1 Treatmenl Engine Boosler T~nsmkslon futl Trlallntlll

519'5 513'5

Denhlllb GarreU lac.
Ripley, VN 28271
l·SOQ-964-3673

Q95

:il[tWOME.
Subscribe to the 7 channel
Preferred Pack
plus SHOWTIME, SHOWTIME2,
and THE MOVIE CHANNEL
for only $9.95 per month.
or ask .._ special savflgs 11 SHOWTIME

1111 THE MOVIE CHAIINEL•

~ADVERTISERS!!

CABLEVISION
C01111UNICATIONS

675-3398 or 1·800·766.0553
Call or visit our office at
1410 Jefferson Blvd.
In Point Pleasant

. LiNICIIJmt . . . . . . W3Ml I Ollf ....... ~ ld!llnO 10 .... CUifttiiiMI ot IIMCf Ifill 'flfiOM ~ .. ewrtl'il. Or.ICkhfubM OCIIIW"ftr ~
'llllh fill ullr. 30031 ...14T·I11oAITI

Advertise on this page

Call 992·2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104
For More Information

�Thuraday, August XI, 1998

By The Bend

I

The Daily

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoit, Ohio

Sentinel~~
COtiSTRUOIOtl
•

The following day, speak to
Lucille when she is sober and !ell
Ann
her she needs to gel help with her
drinking problem.
Landers
IWJ . Lu. Mr ·k• Tlfllflo
Look up the phone number of
SyftdocMC - · l• ~••••
Alcoholics Anonymous. find out
when the next meeting in your area
is scheduled, and tell Lucille that
,Dear Aan Landen: I moved unless •he gets help, you will notify
into an apartment complex about the authorities about her beating the
three months ago. A woman who children and they might be removed
lives direclly above me has two from her care. If she doesn't shape
adonble children. ages 4 and 2. up within 1he next 30 days. make
''Lucille" is normally quite plca&gt;anl, good on your threat.
bul when she drink&gt;. ,he hecomcs
Dear Ann Landen: You recentmean and is cnlircly loo rough on ly answered a letler from a young
her children.
woman in San Antonio. Texas. who
II breaks mv hean when I hear wa.' worried about her dad moving
lhosc lillie onC!\ screaming and I t&lt;Kl fa.,t into a reialionship after the
know she is healong them . I told my death of his wife.
daughter aboullhh I 'he also has lwo
As a funeral-home employee. I
children under 5 yea" of age 1. and sec such thing s every day. The disshe says I ~houldn ., g-el involved. lresscd dau~htcr should know !hat
She !hen qu&lt;Jlcd your well -known !hose who enter a new relationship
phrase. "MYOB ...
the sc~&gt;ncst arc the ones who have
What ahoul 11. Ann! I am I&lt;N1king the hcsr marriages. Men who feel the
w you for guidance. Please reply in loss of a spouse most deeply cannot
lhc paper. --Totally Anonymous
hear the thought of sleeping alone.
Dear Totally A.: II sounds as il eating alone and having nohody to
your neighbor is taking out her talk to.
unhappiness on !hose two defensePlease. Ann. tell the widower's
less children. Yes. there arc limes daughter that Dad hasn't forgonen
when I would say MYOB. hulthis is Mom . He more !han likely cannm
nol one nf lhcm.
stand the thought of he1ng without
The ncxl lime you hear the chil- her and needs somebody to Jill that
dren M:rcaming. ~n upstairs. knock hole in his hcan. -- One Who Has
on !he door and say. ··1 lhink lhc lil- Seen It Up Close and Personal
lie ones arc gelling on your nerves.
Dear Up Close: Your ohscrvaLcl me lake !hem for a few hours so lions arc righl on. according to many
you can gel some resl. ..

F\)LLV iNSURED

ftBB IDVICE

...........

SPECIAL SAI.I

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

'"FACTORY DIRECT"

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

$195.00
FREE Low E/Argon Gla
FREE Installation
FREE Estimates
•Arty size up to 93 united inches in

....' ';:=::::::::==:::::::====~
Review
Female

FANTASIA
The besl in female revues

exis~ng

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

Call for info: 304-675-9915

110 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
1-80().291-5600

STUDENTS WANTED

UJIITED lUll OFfEIIU

AMI X
Fri. &amp; Sat. Night
$2.00 Cover
GARAGE SALE Inside &amp; Out
R&amp;R Market, Hartford, WV
Some of everything out of old
store. Lots of everything for
everybody. 8:00A.M.

MOOSE LODGE #731
Returned by Popular Request
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nite

"INSURED SOUND"

Band

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
74().985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Une Of Water Storage Tanks •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:()0.12:00 Saturday

~ ~ Wf),._~,J.=.o..l
-~·~'
~~~y"3rd Anuual
~,t&gt;}
~ EXPO '98 ~ \

1..:-1

~

MeigM County Fairground•

--

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCDON
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

740-992-2772

WICKS
HAULING

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

Ma J

Compultr Perlormonce Upgrades

Custnm Built Cumpulers, Pn-Owned Computers,
Networks, Modems, liard Drives, Printers, Upgr3dt

LX173 Lawn Tractor
• 15-hp overhead-valve engine
• 38·1nch mower deck
• Shift-on·the-go 5-speed transaxle

$2,799.
LOWEST PRICE EVER

(740) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

A

Remodeling
Plumbing

-.."
..-

WV Call
(304) 273·5860

~
•

0

/

T3IIC
Siring ' " • 30cc engine
• 17·1nch cutting swatlt
• Tap l Go string trimmer head

JS&amp;O Wtllt·BIIIInd MOWif
• 6.0.hp engine
• Seven cutting heights
• Handlebars fold easily for storage

LT1D Lawn TriCtor
• 13·hp overhead-valve engine
• 38·inch mower deck
• 5-speed in·line shift transaxle

325 Lawn l Glnln Trlctor
•17·hp air·cooled engine
• «·inch mower deck
• Hydroitatic drive

We didn't mean to make the decision tough, but with a full-line of products priced like
this - we understand if it takes you awhile to make a decision. This sale Is for a
limited time so hurry to your participating John Deere dealer today.

NOTHING RUNS UKE ADEERE'

•

~

••
u.

Ohio Call
(740) 985-4297

7120198 t mo pd

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Village of Pomeroy
deslrea to receive aeated
bids tor the following
vehicles and property.
t991 Ford Crown Vlctorlo
t986 Ford Bronco
197e tnltrnatlonot Oump
Truck
1978 Yamaha Motorcycle
1965 Futwln Boat end 18
HP Evlnrude motor and
troller
Meko Br81thlng air
Compronor Model K . ~1
(5.1CFM) 220 Volt
All tooled bldt ohall bo
roctlvtd In tht Ctotk't
office at 320 Eoot Main
Street, Pomoroy, Ohio on 01
btfo,.. September 8, 1998 11
11:00 AM EST. Tha Pomtroy
Council restrvll tho right
to accept or reject any or ell
btds.
Kolhy Hysell, Clerk
Vllltge of Pomoroy

Joe Wilson
(740) 992-42n

(No Sunday Calls)

Bennett Supply
7411-446-9416

1391 Safford
School Rd.
Galllpolla, OH

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

(614) 992-3838

JAMES

ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE?

SERVICE
WV
304-882-3336

New Haven,
,Mo.

·· ~ ..

Free Estimates
Owner: John Dean

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

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

12118/lln

2112.'9 2/tfn

Phone 740-992·3987

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

3127{fFN

740·367·5040

ALARM

misc.

Pt Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlty
Beanie baby/ Yard Sale. 2317 .
Jetterson Ave . Pl. Pleasant . be·
hind Wendy's, Frtday 8128, &amp;am- .
2pm . Beanies-Erln , Princess,

Gloria , Fortune. many more. Boys .
10· 12 jeans &amp; shirts. mens &amp;

LIIDICIPI
DDIGII

'AIOfll8fll fTMium-)(L, ball cards.

Beanie -baby/Carport Sale, all
new releases. S12&amp;up. door
prlze·Jabber, Fri./8128, 9·9 , 111 .
~ Conley Rd. 304-67!'&gt;-7223.

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

Moving 5ale! Thur. Fri. &amp; Sat. No
sales belore 10am, out 05het Ad.
Shfine Club . Records , tapes .
household goOds. toots. garden

hose, dotMg. bedding.

BO

lin.

.:...

~ARPET

PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740·698-9114
or

740-698-7231
1(11/lllfn

Burglar, Fire, ClosedCircuit TV's
7!27198 1 mo pel

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985e4422
Chester, Ohio
I0125/96/lln

1-900-860-4400
Extension 7450
$2.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645·8434

n:l-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

49·53 Ford Mere . Flat Head V-8,
Motor In Afl'i Condition 740.245·

92&amp;1.
. Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sit· ·
ver And Gold Coins , Proolsets .
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1 930 U.S. Currency, . ·
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S_Coin Shop. 151 Second

ANNOUNCEr,1ENTS

005

Pei'IORala

Awnue, Gall&gt;&lt;&gt;!~ . 740-«6·2842.

Antiques. top pnces paid , River·
tne Anliques . Pomeroy. Ohio . .
Russ Moore owner. 740·992·

2526.

IT'S EASY

1-900-740-eSOO Ext 3595
$3.99 Per MWI. 18+
SeiV-U 619-84!'&gt;-84J.I
30 Announcement•
-To Vou Tlwift ShoClPO
9 West SllmsOn. Alhons
740-592-1842

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture .•
will buy one piece or complete
household, Osby Marlin . 740·

992·6576.

Buying Hardwood Timber on
Shares : -'lso Pine Saw Timber .
Small Acreages ok. 740·25~ ·

Quality clothing and household
$ t.OO bag sale e11ery
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

6t72

"'5"'K'"Ine-n-s.-::6-::VV'..
:"'-:k-s-::::O,.;-;d.~77.4Q-:-:36::7;-· I

40

ooublewide or house on laM
contract . 304·675-7971 .

0187.

J &amp; D Auto Parts . Buying
wrecked or salvaged 11etHcles .

Hems

9:00.5:30.

Giveaway

5 Year Old Female Spade Collie

73_
304
3 · _ _ _ __
~
:...._
· 7_
· 50
.:..3.,..

245-5482.

wanted To Buy Junk Au la's Any

6 puppies, 112. German Shephard Condition. 740-44&amp;9853 .
&amp; 112 Collie, 4-white. Han. 1• wanted To Buy : Used Mob1le
brown , 6wks old. ready to

Homes Call 740·446-0175. 304·

6mo. old pan Collie, mate. red .
good w/kids, to good home only.
304-67!'&gt;-1 I 93.

Wanted : Automobiles . Any Con ·
dillon. Also. Parts For Sale. 740·

.:. 304.:.·.:. 895_·_334ll_._ _ _ _ _ , 675·5965

------------=-368-9062. 740-446· 7278.

9 Ft . Beige Vertical Blind. Er;cel·
lenl Condition. 740--446.0t15.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Abandoned 3 To 4 Week
Puppy, Looks like Beagle. Moth er Kilted , 740-245-5625

-Ab_a_no_o_ne-d-,-----1110 HelpWanted
To Good Home.
'NURSES &amp; CNA'S NEEDED"
Full Or Pan· Time , Compenit~e
A
Wage &amp; Benelils Available . pply
Or
Send
Resumes
To:
Trained. After 2 P. M. " 0 ·UI;- I Mariner Health, 1720 17th Street
5
993 Huntington, WV 25701, Alln : Hu·
Gorden Retriever Milt. Spayed le· man Resources
mal&amp;-;" 1 t/2 Years Old . Gentle, _
A.:_VO_N_'_A_II_A_I_ea-s,-!-:-Sh-lr..,..ley
Loves to Play Ball. Free to Good
Calico Killen
Killen Female.

home. 74Q-245-59J.I

Spears. 304-675·1429

Part .Airedale . 1 1/2 Years Old ,
Watch Dog. Gooel With Kids!

CNA, LPN needed All shills Top
pay . Capital Nurs1ng Agency

74Q-245-5625.

Six year

~ld

304·755·4670.

Cocker Spaniel ,

blonde. 74Q-992-2625

Taka the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you .
Interior
Belore 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.

You A Green Weedeater. A
Homelite Weedeater With Parts
Missing, 2 Rods W33 Zebco
Reels , 1 Black ROd Is Telesco pic .
1 Pruning Shears , Call John Dun·
can 740·386·9376. Will Relund

712•198 1mo pd.

INCOME LIMITS HAVE CHANGEOtl
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

----110 HelpWinted

THE MAPLES

NEEDED
EQUIPMENT OPERATOR
For Local Company.

100 Memorial Drive East

Pomeroy. Ohio
Rents are computed according to your Income.
Lovely apartmenta featuring Will-to-walt
carpatlng, with all appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID-MUST BE 50 YEARS OF AGE OR
HANDICAPPED.
MUST MEET HUD ELIGIBILITY REQUIREto!ENTS
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
CAU. (740) 99H022
Equal Housing Opportunity

Send Resu111t1 to:
Tht Dally Stntl11tl
P.O. lox 729·70
Ill Court St., Po•tro , OH 45769
I•

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

·-·-·-

TJIPPJUJ

"En•y Orer rhe P!.orte Bnrtk fi11nrtrirtg"
Air Conditioners ~· Low As 128 • month
Heat Pumps Aa Low Aal38 a month
*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*F,., Digital Thennostat
*Free Eltlmates

·lEHNEn'S HWING &amp; (OOUNG
"lf'laere QIUJiity·~'" ~ COlt More"
7.0.. 481M11•1ol00ol72-5t87

DRIVER /SALESPERSON
Ferrellgas Is A Nat1onw1de Pro ·
pane Company. Servmg Customers Through Local Oistncts. We
Are Seek.ng A Ori11er /Salesper ·
son For The Meigs County Area. .·

FOUNO:Biack puppy on Jackson
Avf!J in Pl. Pteuant. 304-675-

Free Estimales

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks , 1990 Models Or Newer.
Sm ith Bui ck Pontiac, 1900 East ·
ern Awnue. GalhpoiiS.

Shepherd To Good Home. 740·

LINDA'S
PAINTING

(740) 985-4180

Auction
and Flea Market

Rk:k Peafson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
lice nsed .
166,0t'tio &amp; West Virginia. 304-

5890.
IF SOMEONE TRIED OR

You1 Monoy Plus

Big

SOLO

~ard .

The

One Who Took Them Return, No
Charges, Plus Reward Alsol

Responslbr lilles Include Deliver ·
mg Propane1 Mamtarning EQUIP·
ment , Providing Serv1ce To Cus·
tamers, and lden11fying And Sell·
ing To New Accounts
Er;ce llenr Communrca!IOn Sk1lls
And A Genuine Commrtment To
Provid ing Superior Customer
Servrce Are Absolute Req uire ments. Candrdates Must Be Able
To Meet Applicable DOT Ae ·

quirements.

los!: Bull Black Angus . 1.500
Pounds . Yellow Ear Tag In Ea r.
Vic 1nity: Fai rfie ld Church , 740 ·

We Olter A Compet1trve Salary,
EJtcellent Benel1ts Pa ckage And
Bon us Plan. Interested Candi·
dates SI'IOuld Apply In Person AI:

379-2590.

(8) 21, 27, (0) 3, 3tc

,,,

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

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
An.
l t11 Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
~ 27 yra. exp.
licensed &amp; Insured

"Huge Inventory"

POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479
ATOUCH OF CLASS
CLEANING SERVICE

614-992-7643

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

CELLULAR PHONES

113 W. 2ND ST.

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

On site custom sawing
with a TimberKing
Portable Sawmill

Rainer/ Hudson· huge garage
sale, Sept. 1·3, Tackerville Rd ., ·
Racine . Tools . furniture . snow •
blade , toys . household ilems.

WHAT WILL THE

' WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

Garages • Replacement Windows

.ONE MAN BAND

ON LX SERIES LAWN
TRACTORS &amp; ArTACHMENTS

(JUSI 28-29, 9am II dar1&lt;. Somelh·
lng llr """Y'hing

LOVE. MONEY. TRAVEL?
CALL HOWitT'S FUN,

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

l..ocal~d in lhr ln!iurancc J,IU!i BulldlnJ:
across rn1m Ihe Cnurt llnust.

Ex1ra large yard sale, llrst traiLer ,
on loft on Loop Rd., RuUand. Au· ·

FUTURE BRING?

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Your PC to u Pentium CPU and MB Today.
740-992-1135 for u Price Quol&lt;!
Fn•gnetlntcrnet Sign-up p&lt;~lnl for
..
Meigs und Mason Counties
'1\ - ~ 114 Court Sl. Pomemy, Ohio 45769

••

NO INTEREST.
NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL APRIL 1. 1999·

~&amp;121,. t mo. pel

William Safranek, Attorney At Law

"Your One Stop Computer Shop"

LXI73 Lawn Tractor

~

360° Communications

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Sund•y I llland•y •dUion· ' ·
1,oapon Ftlcloy.

614-742-2138

740-667-3513

Roofing

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlty
All Yonl MUll Be Pold In : ·
- · Dtodllnt: 1:00pm 1llo • :
diJ before lhe ad Is to run, • •

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umes1one &amp; Gravel
Septic Sy8tema
Trailer &amp; Houae Sites
RI.,OIIIble R«ea
Joe N. Sayre

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

1-888-667-3513
Custom Homes

Brentwood Or. •&amp;th Houses on
~·Left.

flnancl,al obligations and arrange a fair distribution
of aasell. Debtors In bankruptcy may ksep
"exempt" property for his or her peraonal use.
Thla may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.

"Build Your Dream"

-a

• Washers
• Hot Water Heater
• Ran~es
• Freezers
• Refrigerators
• Dishwashers
• Dryer
Call Ken Young

•

4:00PM . Localed At 183 and t86

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of

Call

P/8 Conlradors, Inc.

(fill

•Major Medical Journals Document Success.
•Works on all Skin Colors, Hair Colors and Hair
Types
Free Initial consultltion. Contact:
SANDRA McFARLAND, Ucensed Electrologist
760 1st Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
446-19111 or 888-441·1900

(740) 985-3551

Two FIJ!Iily 'lard Salol Friday 6
Saturday, 8/28629. 9:00AM lo

SAYRE
TRUCKING

•Only form of Permanent Hajr Removal.
•Safe and Effective.

614-992-3470

....._Pn' Mnce.

-

ELECTROLOGY FACTS

"N"'" repair on any Make?"

For A Fresh Look

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

•Vinyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamleas Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Gar~gea ·Decks
24x24 Pole Building
1tartlng at $5995

949-2168

THE APPLIANCE MAN

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

1122111n

September 19th &amp; 20th

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
·Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimate.
No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948
8/25198 2 mo. pd.

740·742·3411

(UmeStoneLowRatea)

Umestone,

985-4473

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

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
Free Estimates

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

(Cu1 Out for Fulu,.. UN)

Tloe 8e11d A ret~ '• Large•t EXPO ,~~
Located at

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

4121111 tin

•New Homes

IOFFEI GOOD UIOUGII AUGUR 31ST)

MilWAY TAVERN
Uve Band

The last dlf for victims of the June II flod to
apply for Family Disutet Assistance ftom the
Meigs County Department of Human Services Is
Monday, August Jt. Contact the Meigs County
Department of Human Services at t7S Race Street,
Middleport, to see If you qualify for auistance. Ito
applications will be taken beyond the August Jt
deadline.

wood double hung opening.
•OptiOns available

Tonight at Draft House

Attend personal Income Tax
School. 13 weeks.
September-December, 1998
Possible employment CliJROIIunity
upon completion. · '
Umijed enrolment
Call DANTAX
At 740-446-6178

Honor students named

Sl Rt. 7

talna. GIIIIWirt. Pans. 4th .
On !Aft Pal SIYino CIW, .

Howard L Wrttnel

New Cenlfruetien &amp; Remodeling

•Trltn
GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631
• StUIRP
(740) 367·0266
Grlndinl
1-800 -950·3359
20 Yrs. Exp. •lns.-Owner: Ronnie Jones

Call 614·843·5426

GOOD TIMES
At. 7, Pomeroy
Welcomes Back Uve Band
"SWAMP JEUCE"
Fri. &amp; Sat. 28-29, I 0 pm-2 am
For details call 992-7986

SUISftBOME
COISftiUCftOI

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

JOlES

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

-"'

Gen. George Pauon was an unsucce"ful compelilor for lhe United
Slates in the 1912 Olympic pentathlon.

GIIHpolla
&amp;VIcinity
LMvo --.g Solo: quo! 28th,
2111h, 8:00 ·5:00, NICe Clothing.
Appliances, Btdspreads, Cur· .

Page 8 :·
Thu!Wday, August XI, 1998 -

Lona·s

Robcn G. Riordan of Coolville
was recemly named lo lhe presidenl's lisl for summer lerin al Washinglon Slate Communily College,
having earn¢ a pcrfccl 4.0 grade
poinl average.
Candace Tuule, Racine, Chrislina
D. Maxey and Linda K. Ayres of
Reedsville were named lo the college's dean's liS!, having earned
GPA's of al least 3.5.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Lost sman blad&lt; and wtllle lema~
cat, Roy Jones Rd. vicinity, Syra·

FERRELLGAS

11J.I JACKSON PIKE

cuse. rewa-d. 740-992-3575.

GALUPOUS, OH 45e31

LOST: White female cat. spayed,
3 1/ 2yrs old, vlctnily ol Fox 's

Driver needed· OTR llatbed drlv·
ers needed . smaillleet . Newer
conventiona l cab. good pay,
home weekends . Call 740-949·

Pizza on Sand Htll Road . AE·

WAROI 30(-675·7683 or :Jl&lt;-67!'&gt;7427.
2203 or 740·949·2045 01 740·
«1·1593.
70
Yard Sale

======::===
Galllpolla

J

Drummer &amp; guitarist wanted, able
to practk:e , 't()Cals/ pius . not nec-

&amp; Viclr tty

essary, must be versatile. 740992..,. 14·

-;;~;,~r-1

GalKa
Meigs
communily Action
seeking
an Administrative
Clerk

-

..._.....,

~

• • • · 2:00p.M.
. . . , IIIIDft . . •

Programs. Excellent organ iza·

II:Gllp.&amp;
,.._..:..,_

.._
.,... .... "'"'"'
ous 10soelo·tconomlc
baa-

.1.,.....,........,.

to war\ Witn

Comrrunity Services

---~--.

grounc11. Slna .....,.

trencu

wilh 3ref-

10 GMCAA, Box 212.

AuQuo12Wt. a St. en . _ ~. 0111o 45620 by 919198.
tilt 3112 Ml. 'nllltr Coutt ltfl GMCAA Is In oquai -rtunity
llldiOI-

~-

�.. .
P-. 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 27, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'Thursday, August 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

AJ.LEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

320 Mobile Homes

FINANC IAL

for
ATTENTION: We'll Pay You To
Lose Up To 29 Pounds {Or

47 People '"'"""
diatelyl Offer Exprias 9/12198
74(}.041-1911:2

210

Bualness
Opportunity

Mono)

BobyoiiiOf

.-."lor small

cltild

1n my home. Racme area. nonpnolor!od. 7&lt;ID-949-2797
General Food Service Worker.

Slart $5.20 /Hr Movo to SS SO I
Hr . University Of RIO Grande , 4
PooitJons Seiad PrOIJ, Catering, I
A M Line Server, 1 P M L1ne

Server, E O.E Contact Vance

-

· 7o40-245-56EO.

Htlrdresser Needed For Busy

New Salon Benefits 740-441·
t B80 or 7o40-25H336

1979 14Ft X 70Ft Wllh Exponclo,
38octooms,2Balho-Conlrlll

1983 Mansion, t•x52, lotal gas.

the Ollering

230

Professional
Services

Llvlngston'l

1990 Clayton 14x70 2 Bedrooms,

Proofing, all basement repairs
done, tree es11mates, lllet1me
guarantee 12yrs on job experience 304-895-3817.

Th1s newspaper Will not

S.neftts available Salea expenence a mustl Broadcasttng back-

ground helpful Send your re-

or

Rax Restaurants, GaiUpolls, Now
Hirmg , All Shifts , Expenanced
Pnllorred. AnlfY Within
Retail eleCtronics computer store
aeeks an experienced person for
aalellmanager position Send ,.

--

sumo cJo The Dao~ Sentinel, PO
Boo&lt; 72!HI. Pomoro/. 0H 45769.

Bankers life and Casualty Company Is seeking a representative
to live and work in Mason County We need sen1or Citizens with
tong term care Insurance. Medicare, and annu1t1es Position 10·
eludes local field tralnmg &amp;
leads Call at 304-343·0•00 An

EOC MIOIH RA9052
Sates- Why don't women answer
sales ads? Many ol our Op sakts
professMlnais are women. Finally
be pa1d what you're worth H1gh
comm1ssions, weakly bonuses ,
med1ca1 , •01 K. pa1d vacations,
stock ownerShip, mgmt opportunities. For 1mmed1ate lnt&amp;tvlew,
call Mr Steve Smith , 740·992-

7440
SkatesvUie, USA, 0 J Expenence
Hetpful. Floor Guard. Concession,
Applicatons Available From 12 4

Monday ·Friday Last Day 9151tl
Snack Camp looking For lndl·
vidual To Sendee Bars. Clubs ,
Conv Stores, Full Or Part-Time ,
CaN 1·888-271·2530
The Cool Spot, CoolvMie, now hirIng lor aU poSitions Musl be able
to work any shtlt Apphcations
may be ptcked up at The Cool
Spot
Wanted- expenenceel beaut1clan
and massage therap1st Send resume cJo The 0811')' Sentinel, PO

Boo&lt; 729-71 . Pomeroy, OH 45769.
WANTED: Heavy Equ1pment Operators. Carpenters And Drywall
Ftmshers, Mtnlmum Of Two Years
Eapenence Necessary. Call 800·

339·6518 For App&lt;&gt;ntment
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Wontod: Rotlll Seloo Clerks.
Now takmg applica tions , 2 fulllime &amp; 1 part-time positiOns Apply IR person Kipling SllOe Com·
pany, Rt 2 Bypass, Pt Pleasant,
WI/

140

Business
Training

Short On Skills? Gain SkillS In
One Year Of Tra1nmg In The
Evenmgs Buckeye H1lls Career
Center Continues In Its 22nd
Year Of Operation Train In Adult
Basic Education GED Tesllng

Slle. Ofloce Technology, Welding;
lndustnal Mamtenance, Peace
Officer /Corrections , SUCCESS,
Auto Technology , Air Condttlonlng &amp; Healing . Farm Bus1ness
Planning , AnalysiS , Computer
Specllallat . Customer Centered .
Heallhcare Technlc1an (Formerly
Nurse Aide) . M~ / 00 , Pre -Employment Tra1mng . And More
Cat~log

Soulheastern Business Colleg~ .

Spring Valley Plaza, 740·446·
4387. 1-800·214-0452, Accredit·
ad Member, ACICS Reg 190·05·

12748

150

Schools
Instruction

cond~lon,

19~ 1••72 Indies, 2 Bedrooms

1 3/4 Baths, Large Garden Tub.
Take Over Payments, Will G1va
Down Payment To Finance, 740·

245-9877
1998 Close out sale. Save big
$$$. 2,3,4,Bodroom homes Trl ·

REAL ESTATE

948-!678

"A L•nle Country In Town"- large
restored V1ctonan home Situated
on 12 acres, V1llage of Middleport Secluded and pn~ate, close
to schools and churches Pnvate
brtck circular drive. brick patiO,
modern kitchen. family room w/
fireplace . 3·4 bedrooms, lwo
baths, large format LA and OR ,
large foyer, lour ongmal stained
glass wmdows 30 m1nutes from
Athens. 15-20 mmutes !rom Galh·
polls For appotntment call 740

992·5696
2 Bedroom House And 2 Apart·
ments . Both Rented , 13 Pine
Street. GallipoliS, Call 740-446·
4999, Or 740·594·3033
3 Bedroom Ranch, 1 Bath, Big
Yard , Garage, Excellenl Concll t•on l 583 LeGrande, Gal\lpohs,
Many Updates. $84 900, 614-8371081 Attar 5
3br home on Garfield Ave 1n Pt
Pleasant Pnced m 70' s 304 ·

675·2924

740-446-1409300-SOOPM
NOTICE

AUGUST SPECIAL
ALL SINGlEWIDES
14911 DOWN OR
t.9'11o FINANCING
ONLY AT OAKWOOO HOMES
NITIIO.WV

1·304-755oal5

740·256-1147

Gaiii&gt;OIIs Ferry 304-675-8185

Hondy llan

Spoclol

2 or 3 bedroom single wldes

304-755-7191
Huge 28180 3BR, 1 1/2 bath
Starling at ONLY $39,999 Many
options available 1-888-928 -

3426
large selectiOn of used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooms Starling at $2995

Ouock delivery Call 740·385·
9621
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom .
Includes 6 months FREE lot renl
Includes sk•rtmg , deluxe steps
and setup Only $187 08 per
month With $1075 down Call 1New Jbr $900 down, $t49 pur
mo Free sk~rt 1-800-691-6777

5878

6 Bedroom Br1ck &amp; Vmyl 4 Mile&amp;
From Gall1pohs On Orchard Hill

888-928·3426

Road. Clly Schools, 1 Acre Lot
740·256·1348

Single Parent Progrem . Special
llnanctng on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes P•yment• •• low 11

House lor sale 1n Mtddteport.
seven rooms . three bed rooms .
balh and hall. recantty rerrode~d .
clOse to schOOls, 740.992·3465
corner ol 6th &amp; Hooker. priced reduced for qu1ck sale!
For more Information 740·992·
M1dd~por1-

2790
Price reduced· lhree bedroom bl·
level , one batn , country kitchen
with appliance&amp;. new carpet, new
v1nyl s1d1ng and gutters. new 3 car
garage, large family room out of
flood area, too many extras to 11s1.

7o4(). 742.4()()1)

$180/mo Call now 304·755-7191

Spec1al 16x80 JBR , 2 ba th
$1 ,325 Down, $205 Mo Free a1r

&amp; lree skortong 1·800·691-6777
Tra1ler lor sale or rent . 740 9927367
Tra11ar on Broad Run Ad 1 112
baths . lot , garage . 2 added
rooms. 2 AIC's, household Items

$17,000 304·882·3426
Tratlers m Leon 12x60 Ready to
move Into. on approx 1 acre
12Jt60 Handy man spec1al needs
work, must be moved 304·458·

1677
Unbelievable. new 14x80, no
payments after four years Call 1-

800-948-5878
Used smgle w1de. around $100
per month Call I·800-948·5678
Make 2 Payments. Move In, No
Paymen ts Aller 4 Years! 304-

736-7295

Pume location 414 THIRD AVE-

NUE GALLIPOLIS. Beautllul
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED two
story Col&gt;n•al has 3 BR , 2- 1/
2Baths LR , f FA Formal Dining
Room wllh hardwood floors. Oak
Doors &amp; Tnm Fireplace 1·1/2 car

340

Business and
Buildings

30x50 garage lor rent Deposit re-

quired 304-675-6574

Shingled Rool. 10132 Alum Pallo
Awn . Steps. 740·446·2828 Must
BaMovedl

Road WV 304.£75· 7946

Oaycart In Vtnlon Area . OpenIngs For Infant And Preschool
References Avatlabla, 740·388-

8521
QOIJencloblt Lady Will Do House·

ctoanong, 304-675-8738

10x50 Vmdale CI A 2 Bedrooms.

Shongled Roof. 10•32 Alum Pallo
Awn , Steps 7-40--446·2828 Must

Be MoYodl
12x60 tra1ter. can be used lor of·

lice tratlef, $3.000 wttttout

a~r

con-

ditioner, $4 ,000 wtlh H0-949
2217

14 170 3BR, $999 Down l ONLY
$179 per mo Free air &amp; tree skirt·

Dozer Work VIA Appointment.

No Job Too Smalll 7•o-388·9062.

lng 1·888·928-3426

741)..148-7278.

16x76 4br1 2 balh $1,195 down,
$193. permo Free a1r, free skirt

Furniture repalf. rtf~n lsh and res-

H!OQ.69t.Sm.

-lion.
also cuotorn orders Ohio
Valloy Refinishing Shop, Larry

,.,.,.,., 740-992~76

1970 Odyssey, 2br mobile home
on rented lot $4,000 OBO 30•·

675-3745

G-vo• Portable Sawmill, don't
hiUf your logs 10 tho mil )ust call
3()4.67S. I957
HouM Wiring &amp; Troubteshootlng ,
AIIO~ 740-388-9452

1970 Parkwood Mobile Home

~

$22,500 304-675 ·59-1 1 Othar
lo~ available
Appfox. 48 314 Areas 30.000 will
sell all or Separalal -42 39 Ga111a

City Ad)Oinong 8 1/4 Meogs City on
Ward Rd off State Rl 554 Van·
zant, Approx 4 Acres clear rest
In Woods -88 Jeep Comanche 4
cyl. 4wd. 250,000 m1tes Excel.
Cond•tlon Does not use any oil

lyr old Transmission $2 000 ·96
Yamaha Kodiak 400 4wd, 4

-lor; Excel Condition. only 31
mllu, Never been In mud - 94-

XTR Wlnchostor 30/30 Lovtr Ac·
11oo Rifle Only used twice Approx
4yrs Old $200. ·SKS 7 e2X39 R•
flo Blaclt, Fiber Stock Excel Con-

lot lor sale· Gallipolis, 90,;172 ,
niee ne ighborhood , quiet, 7•0-

1977 - ·· 3 Bodroomo, I 1/2
Batha. $4,500, 1939 02 Cstaplller

W1l haul junk or trlth bllll· S35l
pll:ltiC&gt; lOad. 304-e75-~.

4 98 acres . prwate , pubhc water.
most!y cleared. Flatrock area

1972 Flamingo Mob ile Home
t2X50 AI Eloclrk:. with washer &amp;

Wilt Babysit rn My Homo, Any
_,..,,.,1~·

740-992·5192

$3,500, 1968 Ford Crown VIctory,
$1 ,200. 7-4().388-8970.

""-·Col:7o40-~

or With·

3 lois . 4 Cole Slfee t, Pomeroy,

dillon lots of Exlras $200 00

Dryer

wonted Junk Caro -

&amp; Bank

Repo 's Call 1·800·522-2730, X
1709
lovely 4 bedroom house In Middleport equipped kitchen, AJC,

garage, full basement, relarences.
depooot required, call 740·992·
7833 after 6 00pm

deposit. nope~ 304-675-5162
gas,
$250 plus $250 deposM. relerenc·
es, 4 00·6 OOpm, 304·882·3842.
Pomeory- three bedroom . lP

Seplember I, 1998
Pomeroy, 109 Peacock Avenue,
one bedroom, S2t2 plus deposn,
Two bedroom house In Pomeroy,
HUD acceptetl with good refer·
ences, $350 plus deposit, no
pets, will consider purchase con-

tract 740-698-n44.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14X60 Trailer Rentl 2 BR, large
Open Living room All electric.

Aor Condllloo WID. Range, Refrlg ,

Very Good Condil lo n
93,50000 Flrmi74Q..44&amp;.1425

Dozor. &amp; Woy Blldo. Part Or All.
7o40-256-e I54

7o40-388-91 OS

446-4722
Scenic Valley at Apple Grove,
WV. Building lots, single wldea

accepted , public woltr. 20
mlnut11 from now Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Rd Clyde Bowen
Jr 304-576-2336

0006

One Bedroom . Upper Rouoo 7. No
Pets or Children, Water &amp; Trash

Included 740-446-2606

7806 6arn-Spm

Pomeroy· two bedroom, furnished,
lwo bedroom unfurnished; near
playgrounds, SO, sir, cull 740·
992-6886 after Spm.

Tara Townhou&amp;e Apartments.
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms, 2

Floors. CA. I 1/2 Bath. Ful~ Col·
peted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
PatiO, NO Pats, lease Plus 8ecur·
1ty Oepos•t Required . 7-40·••6-

3481
APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twin River&amp; Tower now accepting
applications for t br HUO subsidIzed apt for elderly and handi-

capped. EOH 30H75-e679

450

Furnished
Room a

460

740-385-&lt;4367

PM

510

Three bedroom mobile nome in
Pome{oy, no pels, 740-992·5858

8346

440

Apartments
for Rent

t and 2 bedroom apartments, lurmshed and unfurmshed security
depos1t raqu1red, no pets, 740-

Household
Goods

Appt1ances
Recond •tloned
Washers, Dryers , Ranoes, Refngrators , 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maylag. 740 -446 -

7795
Washers, dryers. retngerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

Vone Street, Call 740·446· 7398.
1·888-818.()128

come Ask lot Chr~ty
Furntshltd Apartment, 1 Bedroom,
All Utilities Paid, Upstairs, Second
Ava No Pels, GallipoliS, Deposit

740·446·9523

Furnished Efficiency All Utilities
Included. Central Heat &amp; AC ,

Clean And Oulet No Pets, 740·
446-2602.
Furnished Upstairs apanment .

Closa to Downtown Ga~pois and
Grocery Relorencos and OOIJoslt.
740-446-1156

Gracoous living. I and 2 bedroom
apartmeniJ at VHiage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·

port From $249·$373. Call 740·
993·5084. Equal Houolng ()pjtor-

.,._,

Ground ftoor apt 2br, wid hook....,,
reference• &amp; deposit, no pets

304-675-5192

Wanted to Buy Used 24'X70'

WORLD!!

SliiPIY. ike now. 304-675-8165

""'ler Good Shop. 740-446-9301

Good CondiUon $4,650 74o-2566869 u....e Mesoago

Grubb's PIII'IO· tuning &amp; repa~rs

630

1991 Chevy Conversion van,
Mark Ill, V-8, 4 Captain chairs &amp;
rear couch looks &amp; runs great

Good. Wasco Carioglide E1tercoso
Machlno, 740-446-2367
JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabuln In Slod&lt;.
Call Ron Evans, HJOo-537·9528

Livestock

Rad&lt;lng horJ8 gelding, road safo,
trai saill, $1200, 7-4().742·2050.
Reg

Morgan horae mare, 10

7-4().742·1050

)'INI11 old,

Regosterod 3yr old, ht 31", Jack
Monlature donkey, $800. 304·675·
62Je

mtarlor. air, amltm cass, auto,
power windows, pass fender
damage. asking $2200, 7-40·949·
2311 days, 74().849-2644 . -

710 Autos for Sale

King size waterbad mattreas w/

'89 Cougar, loaded, excellent
cond•Uon. price reduced. call 740.

teave message.

Match1ng couch &amp; love seat

$130 Sofa bed $50. 304·675·

992·2358 weekdays alter 4pm or
anytime -ends

7:JJ2

'93 Mu&amp;tang GT. Weld Dragllght
Wheels, Cobra manllold, 373

One Matchmg Washer and Dryer

gears. every bolt on lmagmabte,
$9500, 740·992-l!l:!o

$100 00. One Con1)1ete Set Flre&amp;tone T1res 245 x 70 X 15 ·
28,000 miles S100 00 7-40·256-

CELLULITE? Control Group
Needed! $200 Bonus For "Before

&amp; Aile~ Photos II Publoshed Call

Tracy 740-44 H 984
Queen S1ze Rill9rside Solid wood
Delu•e 7 P1ece Bedroom Suit,
Mauress/ Box Spnngs Very

Nlcel $800 00 74o-446-9627
ludwig Snare Drums - St1cks,
Case And Stand Excellent Con-

dillon $300 00 740-446-9555

The Pomeroy Thnlt Shop has
moved to 145 Nonr. Secono Avenue , Middleport {Cash Bahr's old
bUIIdmg }. buymg- baby 1tems ,
breakfast sets &amp; good clean used
lurMure on consignment, Open
Tuesday Friday, 11 ·4, 740·992·

Two Bedroom Suits, One 3 Poece
Living Room Suit. One 3 P1ece
Dining Room Set, and M1sc 7•0-

245·5236
Waterline Spec1a1

3/4 200 PSI

$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com -

550

Building
Supplies

JOOIJ Olerokoo Sport 4dr, 4·
wd, auto, ale, am·tm cassettlli,
30.000 miles Asking $14,500

Ewnongs 304-675·1849

3539

740

2730 E~ 4420

1983 Honda 200 3-Whealer
$650 304-675-2949

1962 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0, 260
VB Good Condllion, $1,500 00

1984 Honda Aspencade Motorcycle, loaded, EKcellenl Condl·

1984 BMW. 1985 Toronado
$750, 740·245-5812
1987 Ntssan Max1ma $3,000
1984 Custom Chevy Van , diesel ,

$4,000 304·895-3929
1987 Nlssan, red , 4-dr. runs

good

304-675-7961

1988 Bonneville lE, maroon. 4dr.
new t1res &amp; brakes , good cond
$3,200 304-675·5792 after 5pm

1968 Chevy S·IO, New Paonl Job,
Sharpl740-44 1-1419
1989 Cors1ca, white, h1gh miles,
aula. runs good $950 304-675-

5253
199t Buick LeSabre limited,
clean. good palnl, good cond

304·895-3516

97 Ford Expedllton 4x4 , loaded ,
only 13,000 m1les . garage kept

THE BORN LOSER

~

Golds Gym Weight Set With

40x20 (I Open End) Was $8,380
Will Sell For $2,680. Guaranteed

OlympiC S1ze Bench . And
Preactlar Curl Bench, 1 Year Old

Compete Chuck t ·tJ00.32o-2340

$450 00 7o40-441 ·0918

560

530

Antiques

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop -Pel Groommg
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad
740-446.Q231
AKC Boxer Puppies, Fawn , •

6 00 p. m 740-992·2526, Russ
Mooraownor

Males, 8 Weeks Old , $250 00
740-441 ·1602 After 4 OOPM

540 Miscellaneous

AKC Registered

Merchandise

Pups, 7 Weeks
Male,Femate.

"COOL DQWNI"

740·256-6969

limalesl II Vou Don't Call Us We AKC Regoslered, Small Yorkla
Both Losel 740·446·6306. 1·800· puppies, Vat Ctlecked Shots and
Wormed Also CFA Registered
291-\1098
Himalayan • Persian , 3 K1ttens

740 94 2644
· 9"""
1993 oodge Groen Daytona, 4
106,000 Moles, $2,000 OBO, 74o-

59.000 Milos. One Owner. $7.000
Elrm. No Calls Alter 6 00 PM
740·245·5705
1994 Cadillac Eldorado, 32 valve
engine, 62 ,000 miles, green w1th
tan leather Interior, alum wheels ,
v1nyl roof , nght front damage,
beautiful car, very cleanlll asking

$6900, 740·9•9·2311 days, 7•0·
949-2644 eves
199• Ford Escort, 5 speed, new

Condition, $800.740.256-1631
Honda 300 EX 4 Wheeler $2 500.

740-245·9633
Honda Motor Scooter CH•SO
Elite, 55 actual m11es. 2 new helmets m box. $1 ,500- 304-773·

9116

.750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale
1986 Laser Bass Boat, 1811
150HP Johnson. extras sharp

$6,000 304-773·5493
Summers nol o~erl Kawasaki
STS Jet ski, still under warranty.
three seater. 83 horsepower,

760

SOMETIME WE

or

1996 Olds Clera SL, AM/FM AT,

$200, adull poacocl&lt; paor, $180,
call740-742·3004

Now Open Sundays 1·4 Mon-Set
11-6. Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,

Baby bed, dressing tabla, high

2•13 Jackson Ave Pomt Pleas ant, 304-67S.2063

CreOn Problims7 We Can Help
Easy Bank Financmg For Used
Vehicles. No Turn Downs . Call

M'ate Pled cockat1a 1 w/cage &amp;
accessories, very tame . lalkmg

Upton Used Cars Rl 62~ 3 Mtles
South of Leon , WV Financing

PW, POL , 3 1 Engine, Call 740-

446-7657 AllerS PM
A Good School Carl 1985 Olds
Cala1s, Runs, Drives &amp; Looks

Goodl $900. OBO 7o40-441 ·1083

Vlcltle, 7o40-446-2697
~-&lt;458·1069

ar. $20 each , need RoCket. 740·

$80 304·576-3111.

Available

985-3403

French City Pot Grooming by Ap·

720 Trucks for Sale

Beanies for sa~·Erln, Prtnceu,
Cutty, Valentino, Whtaper, Fetch.
Jabber, Stinger, GG , &amp; Trackef.
304-773-9596

polnlmenl ·ultra Walh Bathing
8y1tem• 650 Second A~e Galli -

duly. Phone 304-e7~14.

Regllitered Labrador Puppies,
Champion Bloodlin e, Proven

1980 Chevy 112 Ton. 6 Cylinder.
Automatic, PS, PB., 81 ,000
Milos, $1,800.00 OBO 74o-446·

Each , Marrlt Aluminum Deluxe

843-2288

Headache Rack $400. 30 Ft 2

570

Inch Ratchet Slrap With Chain
Hooks, New 120 Each, 1-800 ·

61Q-4258

Brand Newt Groot Glftl CO/VIdeo
storage unit. Bilek 1nd cherry.
Never out of bott St:z&amp; Holds up
lo 940 diSCI, 1110 holds IIPII.
Call 740·992·&amp;&amp;3&amp; after 6 pm
COs &amp; tape! not ·

1971 Ford Ranger XLT heavy

polis 74(}.0411-1528

Musical
lnatrumenta

For Solo: AJIO Souphont, Baroly
Used, With Coso. Call 740·245·
8193AIIor6:ooi'M.

2905
1988 lsuzu ext. cab aulo , air,
sunroof, llidlng baCk glass, btd·
liner, k&gt;oks &amp; runs great $2 ,200

304-e75-2949
1990 Ranger, Extended cab, 5

119S Chovy Pick-Up 1SOO Z7t
Ludwig Snaro Drums Wlltl Sticka E•tondod Cab, 8' Bad, 80,000
With Cap, Aaklng $11,500,
Sland And Case. Excellent Con- 7Milos
-4().28&amp;-83112
dltltln $300.00 741)..448.9555

12 Scotlloh·
o..tlc
19 Actor Melon
21 Freed from
22 With no
trouble
23 L.eloure
garment
24 Skimpy
25 lnv.ln~a.
26 Name lor
Athena
27 Actor
Bruco29 Jal30 Sole
31 Jacob'a aon
37- Kapltal
38 Put out (a

!THURSDAY
S~IM\JSLV

Ii'S ~
~LL'I

NllTIW.BL£ I

~====::=~~~~~~=~your hudget. when

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years
penance Ail Work Guaranteed ,

e,..

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

French Coly Maytag , 740·446·
7795
C&amp;C General Home Maintenance- Patnling , vinyl s1dlng ,
carpentry, doors, w•ndows, baths,
mobikl home repair and mora For
free est1ma1e call Chel. 740-992-

Friday. Aug.

Gtva You A Deall 740·4•t·1236

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
ReatdenUal or commercial wiring,
naw Hrvlce or repairs. MaSter U·
cenaed elactrielan Ridenour

Electrical, Wl/000306, 304·875·

28. 1998

If you've hcen contcmplatmg a

6323.

24 Hol6 SIMCO

45 011 expcll'ler
48 Back-toachool mo.
47 Bohemian
49 Dtldlllounder

50 Bnuty....ton
purchoH
52 Nohoor lhMp
53 Swlaa canton

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo•
Cellbritv ~ crypiOgr'W'nl are a..'-d lrom ~1001 by llfTIOUI people

put and presenc

Eactlliaer in 1'1 cipher llandl lor llf10tNr Todlly'• due Z equl/l J

'S L K T

BC

SBOT

PNTPOTGC.

YSWEBRA
NWK T

ELD

V N BPN

XWR

'XL XC'

XWHSTE

IL

XL K T .'

IL

ORLV
ZWPOBT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He looked about as tnconspteuous as a tarantula on

a slice of angel food." - Raymond Chandler

'~~:t;~'

S@ \\~1A- ~ t. trs
Ulto4

~y

fl

WOlD
GAM I

CLAY I . ,OU.AN

O Rearrange
le"ers of
four scrambled words

the
be·
low to form four stmple words

I

PRUBEM

I

1 1 1 1

r

. .~1. -.~1~
1

3

L-1..Lf_.,EI_NJ._t

I!

I

GH L U C
I've devtsed a good memory
b-5
~ tesl 1th•nk everyone should try
. . . . _ .
to recall all the ntce thtngs they
. . - - - - - - - - - , have sa1d about thetr · · · · · ·

-,-J__,.I_,.I--,f,.-1

EARTTO
I
f--..f:---rl-r-1
-rl-rr
-1 0
I
_

_

.

.

_

.

Complele lhe chockle QuOied

by fdl1ng 1n the mm.n g word ~
you d evelop f rom step No 3 be low

5

ers Waterproofing

Models So Don t Ba Len With A
Chill, Let E&amp;M Heating &amp; Cooling

42-- about
43Wlld"-P

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Home
Improvements

Up For Warmth Folks Let ElM

By Phillip Alder
If you read a begmner's book, lhe
author Will recommend :hat declarer
count lop tncks tn a no-trump contract, bul lose rs whcr tn a sutl contract. All well and g '0&lt;1 , bul when
there ts a trump &lt;utt, 11 ts a good tdca
to count wmners as well. Sometimes
thts wtll potnl you m the nght dtrec tlon .
As an example, there are two
ObVIOUS lines of play In lhts SIX·Spade
contract Whal are they, and whtch IS
the better' West leads the heart
queen
Counung ht s losers and findtng
so me only tn clubs. declarer thought
he needed a 2-2 club spltt. So, he won
wtth the heat1 ace. drew trumps, and
played t wo rounds of clubs . However. East happt ly took two tncks m the
sull 10 del eat the s lam
Now lei 's counl wmners. There
arc II SIX spade s. two hearts, lwo
dwmonds .md one club. Therefore.
one more lnck ts requ~red Thts
could come I rom clubs, bul a 2-2 spht
os only a 40 percent shot. If the mtss·
mg dtamondsspht 4- :1 ·· a 62 percent
probabtltty •· dummy 's fifth dta·
mond can be eslabhshed. And tf the
dtamonds don't hchave , declarer can
fall back on the clubs
Thts 1s lhe n ght hne · Wtn w11h lhe
heart ace. play a dtamond 10 dummy's ktng. rull a dtamond tn hand.
reiUrn to dummy w11h a trump, and
rulT another dtamond tn hand Have
they spht 4-J? II not, draw trumps
and play lot the 2·2 club break But
when the dtamonds do dtvtde favorably. draw frumps. play a club to
dummy's ace, and cash the kmg-stX
of dtamonds. dtscardtng Jwo club
losers from hand
Count losers and wanners

magazlno)

40 lmpoverlahod
41 Aotolnod

'(Oli NEVER 1-lEARD OF ..

tlo£1-1

Healing "&amp; Cooling Have Them
Ready WI Wilt Clean , &amp; Give· A
10 P«Mnt Check, •11 Makes &amp;

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

WAY

446·0870, I·800 287-0576 Aog·

1786.

9 Mortar mixer
tO S.Ohaped

6 Earlleat born

Crease. Weary· Drunk · Voyage · YOUR WAY
I've come to the conclus•on that alltnammate objects
seem lo be able to move JUSt enough to get 1n YOUR

Unconditional hiellme guarantee
Local references lurmshed Es · •
tabHshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)'

Speed, 7o40-36HB58 Anytime.

molding
11 S.ucy

UNSqAMBLE FOR
AN'WER

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Fall WIU Soon Be Here II WIN Be
Time To Crank Them Furnac••s

North
2.
4 NT
5 NT
6•

BE CAREFUL ..

IIASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

$8.300 304-882-2046

Shots, Wormed, $200 Neg 74o2!i6-6192

Hunting Stocl&lt;. Yellow Females .
Shots, Wormed. $200 00 740-

SETTE~t

$1,500 304-675-2949

1995 Pontiac GraM·Am SE. V·6,

3 112 lon ale w/ A-coli, $500, 2 11
ton ale, $300, wheel hay rake .

Below Coat . Ntw 20 Ft 3/8 's

LITTLE TALK A60liT
515TER5 .

'{OU 6U't'5

1990 V1kmg pop-up , sleeps 5,
atr, stove &amp; smk. easy to pull .

loaded, sunroof. well taken care

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

IF 5~E l-lEAR5 '(OV, 51-!E'LL GET
'(Ol) SHlf'f'ED OFF TO SOMEPLACE

New gas tanks &amp; body paris D &amp;
A Auto, Ripley, wv 304·3723933 0&lt; Hl00·273-9329

810

word

7 Dye compound

aN.....,o-

PRINI NUMBERED
IE ITERS IN SQUARES

InteriOr, V·ti auto. air, cruise, sler-

AKC Shel11e Ma le, 11 Weeks
Sable /Wh1te Perfect Mark1ngs .

Grode 70 Chains $25 Each, 318'1
9200 Pound Ratchal Binders $25

51-!0lll.D AAVE A

74o-245·5677

SERVICES

days or 740..949-264-4 8YtS.

5 Wedding-page

L-L-...1..-1--L-...1..-.l

Budget Prtced Transmt sslo'.ns
and Engmes . Ali Types . Access
To Over 10.000 TransmiSSions.

790

muaurn

Aida

35 Idiotic
36 Jury llat
37 Meaoler

.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1995 Pontiac Grand Pr11 SE. 4
door 48,538 miles, while y.ollh gray

1998 Teenle Beanie Complete

ber, Ani&amp;, Slinger, Fetch, Whlsp·

1::, Wlll..INo\ Jffi'~

1986 Yamaha 3 Wheeler. Good

1996 Dut chman . lully sell -con lalned . toaCSed, assume loan , no
down payment 304·675·5522

Set $75 00 740· 446·4332 Alter
600 PM

Beame Babies- GG Tracker, Jab-

~

1986 Honda 250 Four Trax.

llres, 35,000 miles $3500 OBO.
1986 112 Nlssan King Cab picltup,
$1000, 740·992·2178

740·367·7705

chair, swing, stroller, playpen, &amp;
car seat ~75~ •

Of\, Tf\1&gt;.-T BILL W~TON 1
WI\Y Dl{)toli' YOU 51\Y 50 7

::::..::.:..:::::______ L.;;;;,i,;ihi~gnew July of '97, three
Kawasaki ski vests and
1991 Plymouth laser RS, 16 I '
valve twin cam. 2 door hatchback.
tra1ler
go w1th II Pnced to sell,
green with gray 1ntenor, a1r,
$4200. 740-949·2203 or 740·949crulse stereo, standard . askmg
2045 , w111 cons1der tra de lor ~
S1950, 7-40 ·949· 2311 duys or
good pontoon boat

NeijOtlllllt&lt;i •I eo, asking $6650, 740·949·2311

Central Air Condl11onn'IQ Free Es-

'I
IIJITIN&amp; 1 DON'T You K'"OloJ Tl\£
MME. Of 'ffi£ ~ES\COO'
OFTI\£ UNI1ED ~'IA1E)

rr

$1500, call740·742 ·1314 alter
7pm

Truck Paris. 740·388·9062. 740·
446-7278

Steel BUidlngs tn Ortgmat Crate .

Mil)(:(.£. I'W"£ 7

lion, $4,500 Form, 740·388·9780
After530PM

1993 Euro Sport Ctlevy Lumina,

80().406-5126

...CN-.1 YOU TELL ME. BILL C.Ur-.ITOO'~

Motorcycles

Ford Ranger Paris. Bed Doors.
Motor, And Many Other Auto I

sight

-7

•

1980 ·1990 HONDA CARS 1100

1983 Camaro Z-26 2,600 nlnes
$15,000flfm 304-4175-1725

AN~YA1ovf

1997 Ford Ranger 4x4 $15,500
or take over payments 304-679-

$25,000, 7o40-36HJ266 6-9pm

Firm 740-992·4568.

SlfOfPfiJ' ¢:::::::::~

$19,500, 7o40-387-oll57

1971 MGB Roadster, new top,
new exhaust, good interlor, paint,
&amp; chrome, Twin SU carburetor,
low miles $3,500 30-4-675-tSSO

-ssoo Pollee Impounds, All
Makes Available, Call 1-800- 522-

CoMfVI,)IVt:

1996 Ford F-150. 4x4 Extendeu
Cab, XLT, V-8, Auto, Loaded.

75,000 ml $4.500. Days 740·446·
3278 or Evonlngs 74().446-3099

qui~er.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

ed Chevy Blazer 4x-t
miles, 4·dr. AJC 304-675-

Kenmore dryer, $50, 7•0-992·

7689.

beautiful

Count those
winners too

1991 Ford Aerostar XLT van, 3

TRANSPORTATION

S.lno

21 Tllkes umbrage
at
DOWN
25 Emit roya
28 Opera houH,
1 SHppery ftlhea
2 Two-toed llloth
La32 Snow vahlciH 3 sta.. .,.....
33 Ringo of light
mouthod
4 Printer'a
34 CompoHr of

Opening lead • Q

door. 92.000 miles. blue woth blue

$6,990, 40x60114 Was $18.400
Now $9,990. 501100xl6 Was
$27,590 Now $18,990. 60K200xt6
Was $58,760 Now $39 990, I·

28 draw, arrows,

5•
6.

$6,500 304-675-2949

520

am IO 800 pm, Sunday I 00 IO

9 OOam-9 OOpm
1·2·3 bedrOOins , Sto~e/ref r1g
available , utll1hes and cable pakt,
HUO accepted Children Wet-

THING IN TH'

Auto Transmtaslon .

1993 Dodge Shadow E S Au tomallc, AIC, AM/FM Cassella.

old $100 XI Bow, 3S·SOibs .. 25·

3•

1989 SIO Chevy 4 WD PICk·Up

256-1233

Sporting
Goods

I •

TATER-- YO'RE
TH'CUTEST

Low Mileage , $9,800, 740-367·

Steel Buildings , New. Must Sell
30x40x12 Was $10,200 Now

2566

Mon!laY through Saturtlay

1989 E· l SO Conversion Van, 351
Engone, RR, TV VCR, RA, Very

5121

Buy or sell . R1venne An11que s.
1124 E Main Street , on AI 12-4,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

Chrloty'o Faml~ Living
Apartments
Pomeroy/Middleport
Cati 740.992-4St4

Lawn Tractors And tow Rate FInancing On New And Used
EqUipment Carmichael's Farm &amp;

888·818.0128

Beach Street, Middleport, 1 room
effictency apt u't lltles pald . depos •t &amp; refere nc es 30-4·882·

245·5100

5sp, Bees Liner
74o-446-1426

Cylmder, 5 Speed , Air, loaded,

$100 :J04-675-5253.

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk 10 shop
&amp; mov ies Call 740-4•6 ·2568

Deere Skid Steer Loaders Chedt
With Us About Financing On

South

BARNEY

ate, 4Cyl

Block, br~ck , sewer p1pas , windows, lintels. etc Claude Wmlers .
Rio Granda, OH Call 740-245 -

looner Ne)V 5,000 BTU 's $350,
Skaggs Appt1ances . 76 V1ne
Street, Galhpohs 740·446·739a. t·

740·446·9539

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

1985 Nossan 4X4 Kong Cab, ps,

4 3 V-6

Furuno Uarlne Base Rad10, all
channels. antenna. coax power

Join Coltlne
41 Hlw8Jien
O'IMIII limber 7 France's piece 44 Curvy 11111r
13 Glouy paint
45 ROM-14 WHd doilqy
rOM
15 Fell Into dlauH 48 Make lroto
18 - up
51 L.oen oMrll
(bocOIIIH
54 Rllnod
unlntoxlcated) 55 Tranaportetl by
17 "-!Ilion
delight
18 Yole gneduate 58 Tltreetlrneo
20 Summer on tho 57 Delicately
1 Plllvwrtahl

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: South

pb .

$2.800

38 TV..,...-

• 2
• 9 6 5 3

620 Wanted to Buy

Washer $95. Dryer $75 . Electric

CVA 50cal Muuleloader, side
hammer, synthetiC stock, 2yrs

Green Apis 149 or call 740·992·
3711 EOH

3465

0657

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacltson, Ohio, HIOO·s:!l-9528

2 Bedroom Apartmenl, On Second Avenue Near Business Seclion 1st Floor Real N1ce, Great
For Elderly Person Or Couple
2bdrm apts , total electric , appliances lurnlsned , laundry room
lacihlles, close to school 1n town
Applications available at. Village

'87 Ford Ranger 4x4 , 6 cylinder.

Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740·446·
24121-800-594·1111

pression Fmongs In Stock

1 Bedroom. AJC. W/0, Hook·Up.

pels 304-773·5352 or 304·882·
2827

Electric Scooters, Wheelchans,
New And Used. Stairway Eleva tors. Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts. Bowman's Homecare, 740-

740-886.()()47

Frost Free Refngerator S150,
Whtrlpool Washer 1 Year War·
ranly $205, Gtbson Freezer
Upnght $150, Ammana Air Cond1·

1br api m Mason, stove &amp; refngerator &amp; utlhttes furnished. AJC ,
laundry room, ce1hng fans &amp; garbage disposal , very nice , no

Tractors From 20 To 39 HP A.ll
Sizes Of 4 WO And 2 WO Farm
Tractors, Hay Equipment John

$21 95 Par 100, I' 200 PSI

Range $95, Gas Range $75.

446·2957

Compost tumbter , office desks ,
nice dining room suite, 740-9922378

1980 ·1990Trucl&lt;s $100 ·$500
Poloce Impounds
All Makes AVllllallle
Hl00·29o-2262, X 3901

Used Wmdow Air Conditioning
Units, D•lfarenl Sizes, Guaranteed,

992·2218
Near Holzer. $279/Mo , t Utilities ,
Depos1t &amp; Lease Requtred , 740·

Your Area John Deere Oealer
For Residential And Commerc1al

3725

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

oeo. 7o40-742·t334

More, cart 74H98-2003

Lawn Equipment Compact Utility

West
• 4 3
• 6 5 2
•96542
•QJJ087
• Q 9 7 4
• J 10 8
• J
• K Q 10
South
•AQJ1087
• A K

'84 Chevy Blazer Tahoe 414, cold
air, new paint, amtfm cassette,
runs good , looks good , $3500

extras, 740-667·9816

Reacnm Freezer, Prep Table,
Grocery Carts, Cash Regiaters,
Watkin Cooler 11 Door, Much

Swivel rocker onoman, wingback chair, gas tree·slandmg
hreptace. large 011 pamung 30(895-31 29 after Spm

MERCHANDISE

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

'93 FISO 4K4, 72,000 miles, many

Clock, Pizza Oven, New Shelving,

PIIIPLES, SKIN PROBLEMS,

Space for Rent

North
08·2198
• K 9
• 3
tAK653
•A8742
East

EEK &amp; MEEK

•

Ohio on Jackson Pike 74Q-446·
2412or 1·800-584-1111

COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT
Dell Caae . Meat Slicer. Time

6089

C~rcte Motel Lowes! Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO.
Cmamax . Showtlme &amp; Disney
Weekly Rates, Or Monthly Rates.
Conslructlon Workers Welcome

Gallipolis, 140·448·8906, 740·
446-7787

payments. 7o40-992·7190

$2600, pnce negoUable, 740·992·

7:01)am.10.00pm

baffles $40 OBO 304-675·7707

UPSTAIRS APARTMENT FOR
RENT; Applications Are Avail·
able AI 1403 Ea&amp;lern Ave, Gall"
palos, OH Now Kitchen. Largo (I)

Stock Parts , Farm Equipment,
Utility Trailers, Tractors, Kessel's
Tractor &amp; Equipment. 1 MIJe West
Holzer Hospital. Jackson Pika.

1998 Ford Aanger Extended C.b,
Super Deluxe Pacbge. take over

Your area bush hog dealer lor
parts. rotary cutters, loaders. till·
ers, finish mowers, ect Car·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn midway
between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande.

condition, call 7•0-949-2217.

Industrial Meal Grinder, Works

Mobile home zute available bel·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, can

Two Tra1lers On Approx1mately 2
Acres 2· 3 Bedrooms, Great lor
rental, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Balhs .
large k•tchan. X·large 2 Car Ga·
rage 740·388-6453 or 740-386-

Churt:l1
-six
· -6' tong,12'oak,
long.good
lour
10' tong,

required Toll Free 888-840-0521

3 Bedrooms, CA. No Pols. Refer·

Trailer For Renl, 740.446·1279

8156.

Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
poano Dr. 740-446-4525

2 Bedroom Part~ally furmshed 81
10 Mile from Route 218 on Hannan Trace Ad C8ll740.256-6202

Roush Rental Is now accepting
applicatiOn&amp; for renting In Mason
HUD accepted 304·773·5944

Overdrive $6.500 00 740·446·

R10 Grande area 1 Bedroom
Across from Campus, All U111111es
Included $290 Month . Deposit

74()-441·5698, 740-441·5167

ences Required. $325/Mo , Plus
Deposit , 740-4-46-Qt 81, After 6

Fuel Injected. Power Steering,
Power Brakes, 5 Speed W1lh

For Sole 32 Bulb Wolfe Tannong
Bd. $1,200.00 7-4().388-8903

740-448-4514 For Appointment

t4x65 referanc~;ts requ1red, no
pets 304-675-3834.

Close Out Sale On Everything In

Ford F·2SO 4 X 4. 302

ment on Middleport, 740·992·
2178.

1br trailer lor rent, utilities paid

2 Bedroom on Sandhill Rd

610 Farm Equipment

1991

446-n83

Bedroom, View Of The River, Gas
Heal 1300/Mo . Deposil And Aelerencea Required No Pets, Call

992·2167

Cydt Bar,..__304-675-5162.
~ed

t 972 Chevy truck, asking
$3,000 30H75-4075

Troybulll

One bedroom furnished apart-

Small Porch , Deposit. No Pets!
~eferences 7-40-256-1044

Brand New Apt Rio Grande Nov.
Available, All U111i1tes Pa1d Walk·
tng Distance To Campus. 740-

304-475-5847

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom TownhouSA

I ·5 BEDROOII HOMES FROM

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 acre lois or 8 acres , Bethel

2651 lor appointment.

dleport, all utilities paid, $100 de·
posot, $270 month, call Ho-992·

Equal Housing Opportunity

10KS0 Vmdate , CIA, 2 Bedrooms,

Nicely furnished tbr duplex apt&amp;.
on Ml Vernon Ave Ideal tor 1
person Upper $250 /mo plus
electric . Lower $295 Jmo plus
electric . S200 deposit. Also 1br
ups111rs at 402 21it Sueet, furnished $250./mo plus electnc .
No pets Reference&amp; 304·675·

One bedroom apartment in Uki·

door)

for Sale

completely finished

...,..Req~red

320 Mobile Homes

$400 mo Corner Bulldmg 740992·6250 Acquisitions (next

Prteehool

180 Wanted To Do

Mo , $375 Secunly Oeposll ,
Available Now, Inquire Tope Furniture. 7-tO «6-0332 10.•. Reler-

CommerCIBI·Off•ce or Reta1i 87

Mogle Y•ro DoyCarw
Now accepttng apphcattons lor
Fall Enrollment Mag •c Years
oayeare lor parenls who ca re Ltcon&amp;ed by lho Stale OIWV

rooms, L/R And Carport, $375/

garage . REAL ESTATE TAXES
$3091'1EAR $169 900 1·304·
273-2940

Moll St. Middleport 1,450 Sq Ft

Included. All Utilities, $200.00 to
S235 00 Per Mo . Deposit Re-

Apartments $295/Mo , 740·446·

•1 112 Spruce Street, 3 Sed -

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes, a1r
cond1Uoned , $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash mcluded, 740·

New Doublewlde 3BR . 2 bath

6 year old, country style. 2·3 bed-

9946

ory t-8ro69t.sm

$1,325 Oown &amp; $205 per mo t ·

rooms, 1 bath. !oft overlooking llv·
mg room. tongue &amp; groove kilch·
en cabinetry, doors &amp; woodwork
throughout pellel stove. HP!CA.
appliances Included. 50 year vmyl
s1d1ng, shullers. deck. 1 car garage, spa. Slorage bUJidmg, nteely
landscaped , on 1 acre, coun1y
schools. 8 miles from Holzer. 740.

$295/Mo, Deposit, 740·388-

304·895·3603

New .bank repos Only lwo le!t,
never lived 1n Call 1-800 ·948·

5-rooms &amp; bath 1-ac rfl yard ,
bncK front, while steel siding, in

1 Bedroom house near Rio
Grande College $300 .00 Per
Month, DaposU Requ1red Toll

Doublew1de 3br. 2 balh, $1 .3•5
down, $217 permo Free deh11·

800-837·3238

5 yr old home , 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths 1'r1Yale S~llmg 5 .. Acres
Barn, Approx 6 miles out of Galli·

410 Houses for Rent

call .....ngs 740-698-6002.

70'x14' Plus A Large L R. 16x20

L.owoSI APRI304·736·3409

31 o Homes for Sale

pol~

1s1 ume ouyors E ·Z llnanclng, 2
or 3 bedrooms, around $200 per
month Call Credtt line 1·800-

14KI6 Ontce biHidong, moveable,

74tJ.446.0390

Nice, clean, 3br, references &amp;

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville ,
W Va loca11on Fmal Weekend,
Al l Homes Must Gol 0 Down.

367·0286

LOOKING FOR A JOB ... But

Call 740·245·5334 For
And lnformallOn

advert•sements for real estate
wh1ch IS m OOtatiOfl otlhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwelhngs
advertised 1n th1s newspaper
are a~a1lable on an equal
opportunity bas•s

RENTALS

$4,000 local Gov' t

call Tom Anderson.
7o40-9112·3348 Alter Spm.
lent

Lafayette Mal: 2 Rooms &amp; Baltl

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

3 Bedrooms, 5 M1les From ~­
tal. 1 Mile Ott 180 AI Evergreen .

1995 Clayton. an electnc . excel-

FARt,l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

qu"ed. 7oW-44HOOS

Pnce reduced· 1990 Spruce
Ridge t-4x70 mobile home, very
good cond1Uon, 2 bedrooms. 1 &amp;
112 baths. washer &amp; dryer, slave.
ietrlgeralor, cantr41;l a1r, 8x8 out- b~Ji!d'lg. 7-4().992-0582

Coil l-8tJO.Q48.!i678

k"""'ngly accept

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1-800 -213-8365,
Anlhony Larod Co.

6441 Evenings

State Homes, St Albans, WV

OllophonecalsacceplodEOE

Real Estate
Wanted

Free I-888-84(H]521

7-4().256-1684

WMGG · FM 117 Portsmouth
Road, Gallipolis , OH .45631 No

Sal11 Executive needed to sell
and service local/regional accounts. SSiary plus commtssk&gt;n.

Porch, A&lt;kong $15.000, 740-&lt;446·

1992 2• Ft x48 Ft Clayton 3
Bedrooms , 2 Full Balhs, Stove,
Retngerator Included, Extremely
Excellent Condition, Must Move!

aume end 1111ry hletory to:

Eti..,n•••

198• Nashua 1•x70, 3bdrms, 1
bath, AJC, 1k1rl, water 80ft, deck

Jacuut Beth , Heat Pump 10x10

e..ement Weier·

360

very good ooncl 304-675-:r=

$9.750 7-55-5685.

All real estate advert•s•nt,J '"
thiS newspaper IS subject 10
tne Federal Fair Housmg ACI
1968 whiCh makes it •!legal
to advert•se ~any preference,
limitatiOn or d1scnmnat1on
based on race color. rehgoo
se~~: larmha1 status or naOOnal
ongm or any tntentiOn to
make any suctl preference.
hmitaliOn or d1SCnm1natoo •

~

Underpinning

recommends thlll you do bus1 ·
ness With people you know. and
NOT to send money ttlrough lhe
ma11 until you have Investigated

To Set-..."" • -

AMMo

Potches,

$7 000 00 7-4().3116-8371 .

Ouahlled Truck Drivers Good
Pey And Benefits Send Resume
To PO Bow: 109 Jackson. Ohto
45640 , Or Call 1-740·286· 1463

mont 740-446-11219 Kl S..,.,r;ed

Air,

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Local Trudllng Company S..kong

Party Wllh Christmas Around
The World! Earn Comm•u10ns &amp;
Free Mtrchandtse. No Invest-

Sale

ACROSS

!.

11 comes to
earmarked lor weekend acttvltlcs
you run rampant. you'll have no
money left when you really need 11.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 221
Repress urges to sound olT at the ho'-'
today. Keep tn mtnd that though slhc
mig hi not he nght. s/hc ·s still tn
charge
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. H -Dcc.
211 Gl\·e othct&gt; the hcnelit ol 1hc
dnuhl today. or y(tU may preJudge
someone who has your hcsl interest
al heart .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Try not 10 offer unsolicited advice
regarding a friend's personal affairs
today. Even if asked, weigh every
word you say.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~0-Fcb. 19)
This could be a producttve day,
Vtded rou're left to your own deVICCS.
Assoctates may try 10 steer you otT
course.

change of rcstdencc, tt 's prohablc
you'lllind the housmg you destrc m
tne year ahead . Your new surroundlngs will make you proud and happy.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
mighl hcsi talc to praise others today.
A IwinE" of jealousy makes you feel
angry you're nol in the spotlight. Get
a jump on life by understanding the
inOueto~es that'll govern you in lhe
year ahead. Send for your Aslt'l)o
Graph predictions by mailing $2 IO '
Aslro-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758. MWT&amp;y Rill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sUI'!: to
PIS&lt;::ES (Feb. 20-March 20~ If
state your zodiac sign.
you arett'l sincerely dedicated ki the _
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23)Siick to tasks you attempt loday,lhe results

pro-

,J

N

'l

work on somc-

thtng lri&lt;ky
your heart and tntnd
arc elsewhere
ARIES (March 2 1-Apn l 19) You
nrc.. a generous person, . l!.fld lhts ts
good. when what you oiler is yours
Don'l lend someone so melhtng
you ' ve borrowed.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) You
and your mate may take opposing
postttons on an tmportant matter
today. This abraston can be soolhed
through com promise. Gtve tl a shol.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) fasks
you might stare you in the face today.
The lillie ones you !II do gruJgingly,
while the big oneS;may go ut•done.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Every now and then , it elevates our
spirits to pamper ourselves. Be careful n~to go 10 extremes when gratifying extravagant wishes today.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) People
sinc:erely fond of you might lind you
diffieuh Jo please tOday. Show proper appretialion for those who strive
10 be your friend.

~

AUGUST 271

�f!lll12 • The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 27, 1998

Society Scrapbook-----·.llftwer family reunion
. 1lle Brewer family reunion was
held Aug. 9 at the home of Mr. and
Iotts. Ronald Beegle of Racine wllh
"7·auending.
Before the picnic. lhe prayer was
offen:d by the Rev. Jason Gibeau!.
Tables were Jecorated with si ll
Obwers and a tahlc was n:scrvt:'d

display old '.unily

Ill

photo~raphs .

· Games ''· - ~rc playcJ with volh:y~11 and crafls hv Cmta Beeck. A
Brewer
familY
histltry .. was

researched and prepared hy Don&gt;lhy
S.:hon and printed hy Ken·y Doh·
bins.
. · Families prc:-;cnt ~mJ Jcsl·cnt.li.ult s
of Adam Brewer and M;u·"''nl Pal·
tcrsun Brcwcr wert· Mdi~sa Jant·
Gil~eaul and Rer. Jason Gihcaut anJ
daughters Jatlc and Jasdim~t or Point
Pleasant. W.Va. ; Alhert (Moses)
Brewer and Rose Wol fc Brewer
!ami I ics we n.: Charles and Wand;.!
Minard o f Clllumhus. dt:st·cndants

of- John Henery and Lydia Bush
Brewer were Dornthy St·holl of New
:.Vashington. Florence and Clyde
Schull of Point Pleasant Timmy and
Criss Shull of Point Pleasant. Ralph
and Becky Shull of Poinl Pleasant .
Muki Sewer of Chillicothe and
Pauy and Cody Hinderchot . David
and Paula Brewer of Long Bollom.
Doris Goodrich of Long Bollom,
John Brewer of Marieua; descendants of David Alterman Brewer and
E'mma Ervin Brewer, David A.
Brewer of Portland, Marilyn Beall
of Columbus, Mark Beall of Columbus, Ronda DeGenere and friend
Bill Fikerhills, Clyde and Myraa
Close of Waterford. Rita Mark and

Timothy Garrell of Columbus,
Lcanna Beegle of Racine, Emma
Brewer of Reynoldsburg, Rodney
and Patrece Beegle of Portland and
Ryan and Russen . Crista and Scou
Blower of Lanc:oster and Chessa and
Drew; dcscendaniS of Thomas and
Nella Bush Brewer were Pat McCulloug h of New Swickk·y. Pa .. Sandra

Sdn":ary ,,f Monoc1 . Po1.. and Dcl lx·rt V;mM\..·tcr o l Cnlumhus.

Alfn-d United Methodist Women
Nl'llic P;~rker kJ 1he program
"Cirl'lcs 111' Listening" when Alfred
Unill'd Methodist Women met at the
d1urd1 on Aug . I X.

Nina Rohinst1n . ~hrtha Elliott ,

Osi'e h&gt;l lroJ.

Sarah Caldwell.

Martha Poole anJ Thdma HcndcrSilll hHlk rart in rl.."aJing anJ disCUSsio n. Th..: \:Cnh..:rpicn: was J hca11
su rrounded hy ~ ltHll'~ and an cx tcndcLI red r ihhon .
The focu:oi wa:'\ on ilhuscJ women

givings for Festival of Sharing.
Parker appointed Charlone VanMeter, chainnan, Florence Spencer,
and Nina Robin son nominaling
comm inec. report to be made at September meeting.
Henderson gave the mission

report on April Johnson Bristow's
call to the mini stry as reported by
Martha Henegar in the Scplcmber.
1990. Interpreter. Ms . Johnson was
studying fur the minislry and was
refused by a while congregal ton
because she is an African-America n.
She is .now serving in a church in
Plano. Texas. El lion had the prayer
calendar and chose Karen Lair. mi ssionary in Decatur. Ga_ The society
signed a hirthday ~..:ard for her.

During the soc ial hour. Follrod
served
a~kcd

rcfrc~hrncnts .

Robin son
the grace . The nex t meeting

will he Sept. 15 at the church . Van·
Meter wi ll lead the pledge program.

Painter reunion

A fall picnic is planned for Oct.
Members answered the roll calli hostess. Door prizes were won by
18 at Lake Hope, McArthur. Dinner by telling what lhey liked about the Opal Hollon, Charlone Grant, Laura
will start al 12:30 p.m. Nexl year's fair.
Mae Nice and Opal Eichinger.
reunion will be held al the .home of
Also present were Belly Young,
Charlotte Granl. secrelary proRalph and Madeline Painter, Mid- tem, gave the secretary's report. Erma Cleland, Marcia Keller. Inzy
dleport, on Aug. 8. 1999.
Treasurer Thelma White gave her Newell, Goldie Frederick, Margaret
Present were ; Mary Rauch, Pam ·report.
Amberger, Mary Jo Barringer and
Rauch, Steve, Robbie, Rosalyn and
Games were conducted by visitor Sandra White .
Richie Rauch and Rosalie Parkin- Dolores Wolfe and Opal Eichinger.
son, Barbara and Lcs Bowman, all
Refreshments were served by the
from Newark; Russell Painler,
Sheila Ballard an·1 Howard Oliver,
Mandy Ballard, Missy Wagner and
AI~ I
Devin King, all of South shore, Ky.;
.::21I "W , . - . ~,
Russell Jr. and Cathy Painter, South
~'
Point; Deb Painter and Rusty Taylor,
"Quality Service Starts Right Here"
Chris and Becky Wagner, Ryan and

The IOth annual Paintt:r rcumon
was held Aug . lJ at the homl! of

Focus snipturc wa ... from Exodus.
During the husincss meet ing

Glenn and Dchhie Brown. Rutland.

which was ope ned with prayer by
El lioll and group reading of the
UMW Purpose. 25 friendship calls
were reported. President. Parker read
a thank-you leiter from Rev. John
and R~v. Lois Rogers and a leuer
from member Marjorie Guthrie.
Names were chose n for Five-Star
Giving . Announccmenls were made
about District Annual at Logan
Immanuel Church on Sept 19 and

with 4J mcmhers present.
A potlu(.'k dinner. hu'iinc~s meet·
ing , swimming and visiting were

s-..•..··p·.··..e::.,

Manhew.
Brian
fromPainler,
Grove
City;
Ralph
andWagner
Madeline
Diana Bing. Middleport; Bill
Maxwel l. Chester; Becky, Bethany
and Ryan Amberger, Racine ;
Dorot hy and Harry Brown. Terry,
Paula and Samantha Brown, also
..
Racine ; Sam and Lorcua Brown, 1-------....,~-.,.---.,.-~,.,.
Pomeroy ; Glenn and Dehhif Brown,
1994
Kindell. Kristin. and Kelby, Rut· VB, A/C, auto, PS, PEl, l'W,
land .
WAS $22,495

s

held.
Prizes were given and a white
clephanl exchange were held . The
door pri ze was won by Rosalyn
Rauch . Officers for ncKI year arc :
Bill Amberger. president: Glenn
Brown. vice preSident: Becky
Amberger. secretary; Madeline
Painter, treasure r.

Past Councilors' Club

· The annual inspection at the
recent meeting of Hemlock Grange,
held al the Grange Hall.
Kim Phillips was thanked for all
ihe work she has done on lhe outside
of lhe hall .
Discussion was held on the
eJthibit for the Meigs County Fair.
It was announced that installation
Qf officers will be held in October.

Ie

The grange is still selling cookbooks. Roy Gruescr gave the legislative report.
Hemlock Grange will visit Harrisonville Grange on Aug. 28. A new
member, Rosalie Johnson, was welcomed into the membership of lhe
Grange.
Linda Schoeppner, lecturer, held
the program , "Birthdays." A game,

"Birthdays for Everyone," was won
by Margarel Haning and Golda
Reed .
"Flowers and Birthslones."
another game, was won by Jane
Frymyer.
A reading. "About Birthstones:
What They Mean." was read by Mrs.
Frymyer.
Muriel Bradford. Nancy Wells

Mini van, 6 cyl,
WAS$26,495

6 cyl, A/C, 5 spd, PS, PB, .iuir!u'
WAS $15,495
.

and Kim Phillips also had readings
1992 TOYOTA EXT CAB 4X4
about birthdays. A relay game was 4 WD, 4 cyl, standard, PS, AM/FM radio
played.
WAS $11,495
The ptogram ended with every- l---:._.:__ _ _ _-::l-::9-::9-::7-:f:::O:::R-::D,-f::-.-::1-::5"'0_]1l..!JlJ...L..LJ.L...LII._-I
one receiving a birthday cupcake.
6 cyl, li/C, auto, PS, PB, AM/FM slereo, 1/2 ton pickup, long wid bed
The Seplember meeting will be pre- WAS $15,495
ceded by a potluck dinner.
Hem lock Grange wi II host
4 WD. 6 cyl, AJC. aula, PS,
Pamona Grange on Sepl. 4.
WAS$23,495

WAS$6,495
Ohio State University
Exlension ·is offering "Let Us 'Rock
Your World," an outdoor/environmental education workshop.
The workshop runs from 4:30
p.m. Sept. 17 to 4 p.m. Sept. 18 at
Hervida 4-H Camp near Waterford .
Registration costs $25 and is due by
Sept. 14. For additional cost, college

credit is avatlable.
Participanls will learn how 10
teach sludenls ~bout Ohio's geology
topics of the earth's structure. rocks ,
fossils and landscape . Featured
speakers are: Greg Schumacher,
Geologic Mapper. ODNR, Division
of Geological Survey Rocky Free·
man, Geology lnstruclor, Marieua

College Bob Reed, Orienteering
Instructor, relircd County Schools
Superinlcndenl
Dr.
Almuth
Tschunko, Biology Professor, Mariella College Brad Bond, author of
Grindstone Country · 2nd Edition
The workshop is designed for
school

tcat..: hcrs.

4· H advi sors,

parents of school children, ouldoor
educators and environmenlal enthusiasts.

For additional information residents may conlacl Teresa Stone,
Ohio Stale University Extension,
206 Davis Avenue, Marieua, (740)
376-7431.

Boy/Girl Scout leaders as well as

Front Wheel Drive, 4
WAS$16,495

~-----:::JiVJniJilMffi~\,ii
4 cyl,

WAS $12,495

1---------::-=:::':'-:
6 cyl, A/C. auto. PS, PB,
WAS $17,495

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

to

announce meet-

ings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053. Thursday, 7;30 p.m. at
hall .
REEDSVILLE- Eastern Local
School Board, special mecl ing.
Easlern Elementary School cafciOri um, 5:30 p.m., 10 discuss and
employ personnel.
ROCKSPRINGS - Town and
Country Expo commi uee mcettng,
7:31) p.m .. fairgrounds .
FRIDAY
· HARRISONVILLE
Har·
riionville Grange will hold their
annual in spection on Friday at the
Scipio Firehouse. Hemlock Grange
will make their exc han ge vis ilalion
al 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Friday's Fun,
Food and Fell owship project, 610;30 p.m. at God's Neighborhoo&lt;l
Es.cape for Teens, Main Street.
Game s, pool tables and musi c.
snacks.

SATURDAY
CHESHIRE - Valentine and
Audith Young Well reunion Salurday al lhc Kyger Cree k Club House.
Luncheon wtl l he p01luck
PORTLAND - Lebanon Township Trustees Saturday. 7 a.m . at .the
township building.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Hymn si ng .
Sunday, 7 p.m., with Connie Robinsun and Famil y at the Ash Street
Free Will Baptist Church in Middleport. Pastor Lcs Hay man iqv ites
publi c.

CHES HIR E - Homecoming al
the Poplar Ridge Ch urch Sunday
··v ith carry·i n dinner at noon. Ser·

vices I :30 p.m. with Pastor John
Elswick. Si ngin g will be Marti
Short, Chester, and the Brady Fami·
ly.

the 251h annivcr&gt;ary of lhc lc,lival.

paintings. the re arc categories for

·n1c1-c is a limit of l(lur items per artists

W&lt;Kld carvi ngs, sculpture. ha skc t
weaving and ceramics. 'fllcrc wil l he
first and Second prizes in c;u: h Gll cgory.
The Art Show wi ll al so include a

and a si1e lunil of 24 hy '0. A $4 per

well a'i musical entertainment on

MONDAY
POMEROY -

Meigs County

Veterans Scrvi~e Commission, 7:30

p.m Monday at tl1c Veterans Service
Office. Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Humane Society meeting Monday, 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Public Library.
All members are urged to anend.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Middle
School Academic Boosters meeting
Monday, 6 p.m. al the school. All
parenls of 6ht, 71h and 81h grade sludenls are urged 10 anend .

RUTLAND - Rut land Garden
Club, open house and reception for

linalc parade and Sunday, Sept. 13,
from noon to I p.m.

Area artists arc invited to enter their
works in this ycar·s show a'i a part of

item is charged for profcs"i ion &lt;.~ l entries
antJ $ 1 per item for amateur entries. No
fcc if dwrgcd for youth nr chi ldren

4 cy,1 A!C , auto, PW ,
WAS $11,495

1----....;,-----:-:::"::-:::'
WAS $11,495
4 cyl, A/C, auto, PS, PB, AM ,IFM
WAS $7,495
4 cyl, A/C, auto, PS, PB,
WAS $12,495
I
6 cyl, A/C, auto, PS, PB,
WAS$7,495

4 cyl, A/C, auto, PS, PB,
WAS$5,495

POMEROY - Grace Episcopal
Church, summer picnic at Royal
Oak Resort Sunday, II a.m. beginning with an outdoor eucharist
Take a covered dish and own !able
service and beverages.

The Ohilko Coal Fcst1val Art
Show in Wellston has been scheduled
for Sept. 9- 12 and will include a vari ety of art.s for judging.
In addition to photography and

ti&lt;m on Salurday. Sept. 12 a I p.m .. "'

CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Baptist Church annual Sunday
school picnic with speaker Preacher
Charles Swiggcr and smging by The
Whiles and Carol and Mark Co leman . The church is localed 2 1/2
miles soulh of C:~rpc nler. Pas10r Joe
N. Sayre invites the public.

CHESTER - Descendants of
lhe laic John L. Jeffers and Viola
Riggs Jeffers. reunion, Sunday, I
p.m . at Meigs County IKES Farm.

Ohillco Coal Festival Art Show planned

Nantucket Ba.,.kct weaving dl!m&lt;mstra·

•

The Past Councilors· Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of 1----------=....,..,==.,.,..,,.,..,=...,.ll:!LLL-I=LL..L.J"--1
America. mel althe lodge hall, with
Thelma White and Mary K. Holler, VB, A/C, auto, PS, PB,
hostess.
WAS $26,495
Dolores
Wolfe,
pres ident, 1----~------,,-,-,,..,.-==c:-:=presided allhe meeting . She read six
verses. chapler II · Hebrews.
WAS $9,495
The Lord's Prayer and the Pledge 1---------,-.,...,lo .the American Flag were read in
6 cyl, AJC. aula,
umson.
WAS $1S,495

Hemlock Grange holds annual inspection at hall

4 cyl, 4 sp. stand,
WAS$5,495
4 WD, V8, auto, PS, PB,
WAS$32,495

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy will bill and takel
assignment on the following diabetic suppl
with a prescription from your doctor:
Blood Glucose Monitoring Systems
Glucose Testing Strips
Lancets
When your Medicare deductible Is paid, we
bill Medicare for 80% and your seconnarul
insurance for the remainder. This can result
you not paying anything for the above dlalbetlcl
supplies. If you have any questions see
Debbie, Monday through Friday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

4 WD, 6 cyl, A/C, aulo,
WAS $18,495

P~.

· 4 WD, 6 cyl, A/C, auto,
WAS$8,495
4 cyl, A/C, Auto, PS, PB,
WAS $13,495

Weather
Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 60s
Tomorrow: Ptlltly cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

·n1c sho w wi ll hl! prolCssioR..'llly
and aww·ds will he given to
lirst. sccomL and third pla,cs in ct11..:h
t.:atcgOI)' f.L\ WCII a"i a hcst of .\h OW

Thursday evening. Sept. 10
llleArt Show is held each year dur- award sponsored hy the Soulhern Hills
ing Ohillco Days al lhc Wellslon A11\ Council. There wtll he " Peopb
Choice award and a Sharon Davis
Sylvestor Memorial Public Library.
Check in limes for 1hc art show arc SIUhhc Award in honor of one of the
Fri. Sept. 4 from 4 lo 6 p.m. and Sat. early founder&gt; of the Ohillco An show.
For more infunna tion ahuut th..: An
Sept. S from Ito 3 p.m. Check oul will
be Sat., Sept. 12 afler 1he 6 30 grande Show cal l W4-JJ81 or 3X4- .~2711 .

I

vision video and the one shown in court on Thursday.
In an elementary school in Nelsonville York School District in Athen~
County, for example, hot meals used to have to be brought in. Now, the
kitchen in the new building means sludenls can eat lunches prepan:d on site.
At other schools, peeling paint and crumbling ma.'iOilry has been replaced;
while computer labs and weigh! room~ have been added.
Fischer said the state ha.~ recognized ils n:sponsibility 10 help districts provide a safe environment for children. He poinled oulthal until I'l91. school
buildings largely were considen:d a local responsibility.
Before 1957, the state never provided school building aid, he said. Between
1957 and 1991, the state kicked in $174 million.
The Legislature also has promised to provide at least $300 mill ion more
annually for construction projects - !hough lawmakers did not identify a
source for the money.

and unsafe schools likely will be eonsiden:d.

Industrials fail to rally
after Thursday plunge

,.--Wishing well in place

NEW YORK (AP)- The Dow industrials slipped this morning after Wall
Stn:et faltered in a bid to bounce back frum Thursday's 357-point plunge and
steep losses in Asia.
.
.
1lle Dow. at one point up a.s much a~ 78.53, then gave up tl~ gams and
was down 31.92 at 8,134.07 in morning trading. Its drop Thursday of357 .36
European stocks rebounded after opening sharply lower, but the n:covery bid
came too late for Asian markets, where some key indexes plummeted to levels last seen more than I0 years ago.
lnveslors remained nervous about Russia's growing economic and political turmoil and about whether the economic crisis that began more than a
year ago in Asia will spread to Latin America.
Thursday's weakness on Wall Street, including a _4.2 percent plunge in
1he Dow Jones industrial average, added to the negattve sentnnent.
1lle drop Thursday of357.36 points was the lhird-biggest point~ ever,
trailing only the 554.26-point plunge of Oct. 27, 1997, and the 508·J)omt col·
lapse on Oct. 19, 1987. The percenlage drop. while the biggest since la.o;t Oct()ber's swoon, was not close 10 the record 22.6 percent of the "Black Monday" cra.•h of 1987.
1lle drop Thursday left the Dow down I, 171 points from its July 17 record
high of9,337.97, a drop of 12.6 percent.,
.
.
It wa.~ the first time since la~l October s selloff, whtch also was mduccd
by fears that foreign economic troubles would hun Ameri~ ~panie~. that
the Dow has finished a day more than 10 percent below tts pn:vtous htgh. a
loss commonly referred to as a "correclion." A sustained drop of 20 percent .
marks a bear market.
Major European markets opened wilh a tumble. with London and Frankfurt blue chips falling by around 5 percent befon: showmg a powerful rebound
by the afternoon.
In Moscow, Russian shares fell by 1.25 percent. a drop that was modest
compan:d with recent heavy losses. Otber ~tern European markets were
hil much harder.
Big Asian markets never saw any chance of recove~.
. ·
Tokyo blue chips dove to a 12-year low, Hong Kong s key tndex fell 1.2
percent despite heavy buying by the gove~ment.
.
The panicky selling was set off by Russta's econom!c troubles. The Rus.~­
ian government struggled today to find a wuy out of !ts mess. :Whtle ~ppo­
sition leaders wen: clamoring for lhe removal of Prestdent Bons Yeltsm.

1lle video was shown during the founh day of testimony in a hearing
scheduled to last 1wo weeks. The hearing is being held in the coun where
school dislricL~ sued the sUite in 1991.
The video was a slarlt contra.'t to a 1996 public television special thai provided a glimpse into the problems at inner city and poor. rural school districts.
1lle PBS special "Childn:n in America's Schools" focused on the disparity
in educational opportunities in different pans of Ohio. ·
Shots of a waterlogged light bulb and interviews with teachers describ·
ing flooded classrooms were contrasted with scenes of slate-of-the art computer labs and other educational extras in wealthy, suburban districts.
Many critics of the Supreme Court ruling say some of the justices may
have been swayed by the show.
In several cases, some of the same schools were shown in the public tele-

Thn:e sentences administen:d by
Meigs County Common Pleas Coun
Judge Fn:d W. Crow Ill wen: upheld
during recent appeals to the Founh
District Coun of Appeals.
Appeals court judges disagreed
wilh an appeal filed by William
Lemasters, who was convicled May
25, 1993, of two counts of aggravat·
ed murder and kidnapping and one

count of aggravated robbery in the
1991 sholgun slaying of Jeffrey L.
Halley and his 12-year-old son Jeffrey S. Halley.
Lemasters a.~ked for post-conviction n:lief from his sentence claiming
he had ineffective legal counsel and
that his legal counsel did nol seek to
discreditlhe testimony of state's witness. Michelle Drennen. based on her

A wiShing well on display In the cattle barn during the Meigs County Fair Is now In place at
the Middleport home of Paul and Laurie Reed, who purchaltd the well at the Junior Fair Livestock sale. Proceeds from the sale of the well, and a landscaping display IIOid last year, have
been plac:ed In a fund ntabllahed last year for the construction of a new livestock show arena. Assisting Ed Hupp, right, In assembling the well are Jared Hupp, left, and Weilley Karr, center.

mental health history and drug use.
In denying the appeal, the court
cited scver.tl inslances in courtroom
tnlltscripls where Lemasters' altomey
highlighted Mrs. Drennen's mental
health history and drug use.
· The appeals court also upheld the
sentence of George Dunwoody who
pleaded guilty to rape on July 22.
1997, following an April 27, 1997

incident in which he forced an 8-year- Crow in the wake of the 1993 riot at
old boy to orally sodomize him in the the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville. the appeals court
boy's home.
The court. ciling the seriousness of upheld the sentence of Keith LaMar,
lhe offense, disagreed with Dun- who was sentenced to dcalh on sevwoody's claim thai he should not en counls of murder.
LaMar served as a member of a
have received the maximum sentence
"death
squad" fanned during the riot
allowed by law.
.
to
kill
prison
informants.
In a Scioto Counly case heard by

Inmate sticks by story of 'confession'
by Eberling in Sheppard murder case
LANCASTER (AP)-An inmale views. he repeated his claim lhat
who claims to know who killed Dr. Richard Eberling confessed to killing
Sam Sheppard's wife said he would- Marilyn Sheppard. ll's an account
n'I bencfil by making up stories about that most people involved with the
the case lhat inspired "The Fugitive" case dispute.
• Pieced together from a videotaped
television series and movie.
"I never requested a dime. a day discussion with an attorney earlier
off my sentence. nothing." Raben and an interview Thursday, Parb told
his story this way ;
Parks said Thur,;day from prison.
Authorities asked him to find out
"I'd have to be a damn fool nolle
what
he could aboul Mrs. Sheppard's
tell the truth." he said.
death
because of his n:cord of cn:diDuring one of several rnedia inlerbility IL~ an informant.
So he befriended Eberling while
the two were at the Orienl Corn:ctional Institution ncar Columbus.

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

1 Se&lt;tion- 10 Pages

4 cyl, A/C, auto, PS,
WAS $11,495

Pharmacy

Lotteries
milO

Pick 3: 9.().3; Pkk 4: 7-7-S-6
Buckeye 5: 14-21-22-24-2S

.w.:YA.

n.lly 3: S-.5-1; Dally 4: 8-94-7

••

--

By JOHN AFFLECK·
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND- A fugitive who
had escaped from Ohio's only privale
prison about a month ago has been
recaptured and returned to Ohio.
U.S. marshals. along with local
deputies, caughl Ronald Holmes on
a Buffalo. N.Y.. street about3; 15 p.m.
Thursday. said Dan O'Donnell. a
supervisory deputy with the marshal's office in Cleveland.
Holmes, of Washington. D.C., ·
was one of six prisoners - four of
lhem convicted killers - 10 break out
of lhe Nonheast Ohio Correctional
Center in Youngstown on July 25.
The olher five were recaptured with·
in two days.
An informant lipped authorities
that Holmes, 40, was in Buffalo. For
a few hours, marshals watched the
home where he was staying and saw
him arrive. When they approached.
he tried 10 run bul was caughl quickly, O'Donnell said.
"II went like clockwork ... he said.
Details about who owned the
·home or how long Holmes may have
been Slaying there were unavailable.
Holmes, who was serving a 17 -to
51-year sentence at the NOCC for
armed robbery, was returned to Ohio
Thursday night. said Jay Peck. t~e
supervisory deputy U.S. marshal in
Bulfalo. He had no other information
aboul the relurn.
" We 're certainly ~lad lo hear lhe
la'l inmate wa.~ captun:d." said Susan
Hart, a spokeswoman for.C'?rrections
Corporation of America, a Nashville,
Tenn.-based company lhat runs the
private prison. She declined to com·
mem funher.
A message seeking comment was
lefl for Warden Jimmy Turner.
" It really is a tn:mendous reliof."
Youngstown Mayor George McKelvey said Thursday night. "My fear
was that some innocent per&gt;on might
be hanned by one of the escapees.
Thai would have turned a bad si tualion into a lragedy. We were very fortunate. Youngstown and Buffalo
dodged a bullet this time."

h was there that Eberling allegedly confessed to going to the Sheppard
home in suburban Cleveland in 1954
lo burglarize il and -rape Mrs. Sheppard. When she bit him and cried for
help. he killed her.
In March, Parks told Cuyahoga
County prosecutors aboul the alleged
confes.~ion. But lhe warden at Orient
said aulhorities weren't interested.
"They want to know thai Sam had
somelhing to do with it," Parks said.
So at Parks' suggeslion, Eberling
wrote a differcnl confession. It said
Mrs. Sheppard's hu~ban\) otTered
Eberling $1.500 for the killing.

Police in Youngstown suspected
that Holmes slole a flatbed truck from
a suburban Hubbard Township lumber yard near the prison live days
after the escape and fled the area. The
truck was found a week later in a
Buffalo suburb.

Taft will discu~s farming
issues in Gallia Saturday
Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Taft will be in Gallia County Saturday morning to discus.~ agri ·
cultural issues and other matters of
interest to southeastern Ohio, the Taft
campaign announced.
Taft and his wife Helen will be at
the Clearview Fann, owned by Matt
and Non:en Saunders. from 8-9:30
a.m. for a briefins and discussion
with area agricullllrl{ prodtK:Cn on
flood relief, tobatco production, soil
and water conservation concerns and
economic development
The f11111 is located II 1061.5
State Route 7 Soulh, Gallipolis. The
fann's entrance is directly across SR
7 from Ra!xoon Road Anyone needins more information locllly can contact Noreen Saunden 11 446-2974.

Back in
custody
Last escapee
from private
prison arrested

_c ourt of Appeals upholds pair of local convictions

o t998 Ohio V.ttcy Pulrlioliioa Co.

I

Cincinnati
beats Marlins
by three runs
Page4

NEW LEXINGTON (AP)- S.:hool computer labs, newly painted walls
and restaurant-quality kitchens wen: the stars of a state-produced video shown
in court.
As viewers wen: treated to a video tour of new or renovated buildings.
the narralor- Randall Fischer, executive director of the Ohio School Facilities Commission- described how the state ha.~ distributed or promised more
than $1 billion in construction help since 1991.
The point of Thursday's pn:sentation: Convince a Perry County judge that
the Legislature has made mon: money available to schools under a new funding system.
The Ohio Supreme Coon cited the condition of buildings in its March 1997
ruling which thn:w out the system as unconstitutional. Justices said poor district~ wen: treated unfairly.
.
Judge Linton Lewis Jr. will decide whether the state has made enough
changes to consider the system fair. Legislators' commitment to fix run-down

SWISHER LOHSE
Kenneth McCullough , A. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, A. Ph.
Mon. lhru Sal. 8:00a.m. 10 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10;00 a.m. lo 4;00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main
Friendly Service
Pomeroy, Oh.
Week i
'till9

This land is whose land?, Page 2
M·ariners hand loss to Indians, Page 4
God's treasure is you, Page 5

State presses case on school improvements

entrie s.
juJg~.:tJ

Sports

August 28, 1998

-_,E

U.'

and how they ran he helped by li stcning to their rrohlcm~ and aiding
their scan.: h for freedom from ahusc .

Friday

The prison wa~ under scru uny
before lite escape because of 13
stabbings, ircluding two fallllities.
~ince it opened in May 1997.
But the breakout increa.&lt;ed lhe
intensity of the criticism. with state
lawmakers holding hearings to discuss tougher regulations on future
private prisons in Ohio.

"All are welcome and encouraged
to altend," said Mrs. Saunders, who
is Gallia County's clerk of courts.
The Tafl~· visit is part of a twoStale Sen. Robert Hagan, Dday, nine-city swing through eastern
YoungSiown,
said Thursday night
and southern Ohio that began this
the Holmes capture will allow pubmorning in Steubenville and ends
CLEVELAND (AP) _Rep. Louis Stokes, who is retiring after 30 yea:-'
lic officials to better focus on an
Saturday afternoon in Chillicothe . . in Congn:ss, has n:versed his plan 10 sit ~~ the governor's. race and wtll
· investigation to find out how lhe
1lle Tafts are to be in Athens tonight endorse fellow Democrat Lee Fisher, the ftsher campatgn satd today.
for a reception with former Vice Pres"It's my understanding that that is correct," Fishe~ campaign spokes· escape occurred and make sun: il
doesn't happen again.
ident Dan Quayle.
woman Judy Barbao in n:sponse to a n:port m The Plam Dealer about the
The Tafts will be accompanied at endorsement announcement scheduled for this evening.
CCA said la.o;t week it ha' taken
the Galli a County briefing by State
"We are looking forward to the congn:s~m~' s support.·: .said Alan steps to toughen security. They
Rep. John A. Carey, R· Wellston.
Melamed, Fisher campaign chainnan. !!There tsn t another PQltttcal figure include using a metal detector to prelift, cunently Ohio's secretary of in the state whose support is mon: imponant than the congres.~man·s. and vent guards from bringing in contra•
state, is opposing Democratic candi- his active help in the campaign is somethins we .greatly look forward to."
band. installing additional razor wire
dale Lee Fisher for the governor's · Stokes. who had planned to sit out the campatgn over a local Democrat- between fence.~. building three: gun
seat, to be vacated in January by' . ic Party squabble, could not be rcKhcd for comment IOday. A message seek- towelli and using four, rather than
Geo!Be \binovich.
,ing comment was left 11 his Capitol Hill off'ICC.
two, vehicles to patrol the area.

Stokes plans to endorse
·Fisher race for governor

..

·'

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