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~ - ··"'-

PIQI10. The Dilly Sentinel

.. -- ··- _.,..._ ....." ....

. .,

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,.

. --

' '

policy aide Gene Sperling.
In the president's first personal
involvement in the slrike. he issued
a brief sulement from Air Force One
en route from Washington 10 Moscow
saying he had a~ked Northwest and
its pilots to "redouble their effons 10
resolve their differences."
White House officials have said
that if the strike reaches Labor Day,
Clinton may reconsider his decision
not to intervene and order a 60-day
"cooling off" period a.• he did last
year when a strike by American Airline. pilots was only four minutes
old.
··1would say that given the financial resoun:es that Nor1hwest has to
fall back on and what the pilot.~ union
ha.• to fall back on, and given the ads
both sides are running, we've got two
sides here unwilling to negotiate

with the present mood," said Terry
Trippler. publisher of The Airfare
Repon newsletter. " I hope I'm
wrong."
Northwest has estimated the strike
would cost it $175 million in the first
10 days but has not projecled losses
beyond tllat Northwest's6,100 pi lOIS
are getting strike pay of $1,300 a
month - which amounts 10 a total of
almost $8 million per month.
Trippler said he expected the
strike 10 last at least two more weeks
if President Clinton doesn't step in.
Another strike looms at Air Canada where pilots set a strike deadline
of midnight EDT toni3ht over issues
of pay and working conditions. Air
Canada was trying to find alternate
transportation for 60,000 passengers
who fly the airline daily.
On Monday. the first business day

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 80; Low:SO

of the strike. disruption was minimal
at the airpons in Northwest's hubs of
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Detroit and
Memphis, Tenn.
In contrust to the long lines of
leisure passengers on the weekend at
Northwest's hubs, Monday's busines.~
pa.•sengers had made other arrangements.
"I made my reservations about
two weeks ago and purposefully
booked anot.her flight," said Mary
Kru~. 30. a computer networkihg
specialist who travels around the
country every other week. She wa.'
flying from Minneapolis to Dalla.' on
American.
Nonhwest is the nation's si~th­
largest airline in terms of pa.uengers
carried annually and the fourthlargest in revenue.

bal scores could be considered a positive sign in light of the fact that more
student' taking the le;&gt;l speak English
a.' a second language.
Ba.~ili. however, disagrees that
math scores are_better becau.se more
students take htgher levels of math
~ SCience. SAT questtons mvolve
anthmetic. geometry and algebra. n01
harder subjects like precalculus or
tngonometry. he sa1d.
Instead, ~th scores have edged
up steadily s1nce 1994 because that's
when students were allowed to use
calcul~t~rs durin~ the test. he said.
Thts 1s the thtrd year of sconng
based on a new scale mtended 10 raise
the average score back to 500 and
make the results more statistically
sound. For comparison purposes.
scores from prevtous years also were
convened to the new scale, although
those for 1967to 1971 wereba.sedon
estimates.
Scores had fallen below 500 in the
late 1970s and early 191!0s. The math
score was 513 in 1971, and scores
were higher before that. In the late
1960s. verbal scores were 540 and
higher.
Despite steady verbal and dightly improved math scores this year.
students in the suburbs outperform
those from rural and urban areas.
SAT verbal scores are 13 and 9

points below the national aver.~ge for
students in urban and rural areas,
respectively, while those for suburban
students are 17 point' above. Similar
score differences exist for SAT math.
"This growing disparity is panicularly troublesome because 40 to 50
percent of African-American and
Latino students who take the SAT
live in large cities." S1e~an said.
All ractal and ethmc students
received better average math and verbal scores this year than in 1988,
except for Hispanic students, who
had lower v~rbal scores.
. But whtle scores generally
Improved, white students still gollhe
highest average verbal score - 526
compared with other racial and ethnic students whose score., ranged
from 434 for blacks to 49K for Asian,
A"an-Amencans and
Pacific
Islanders.
In muth_. the Asians' average score
wa.' the htghest at 562. White stu·
dents were second with 528 and the
other racial and ethnic groups gO!
between 426 for blacks to 483 for
American Indians.
This year's test also shows continued evidence of high school grade
inflation.
Students taking the test had a
· average of 3.23 on a .,..
•
grade-pomt
point scule, compared with 3.07 in

·1988.
Since 1988, the population of
high school student• with A-plus, A
and A-minus grade point averages
ha.• increased from 28 percent to 38
percent. At the same time, their SAT
seotes have dropped an average of 12
points on verbal and 3 points on
math
"What this means is tllat colleges
are going to continue 10 rely on the
SAT as a constant bar for comparison." Ba.~ili said.
Bob Schaeffer, director of the
National Center for Fair and Open
Testing in Cambridge. Ma.~s .• said
colleges and univer.~ities should not
rely on an SAT that is "profoundly
gender-biased."
Female students get better grades
in high school and college. yet the
average combined math-verbal score
for boys this year was 1040, or 42
points above the 998 average score
for girls. Last year, the gender gap
wa.' 40 poi.nts.
The rising number of girls taking
advanced math and science courses
wa.•citedforaslightiiiiiTOwingofthe
gender gap on this year's American
College Testing exam. or ACT, the
other national college-entr•nce test
taken primarily by student• in the
M"d
1 west, south an d West.

Senate probe faults agencies for shorting veterans
By JOHN HANCHE1TE
and NORM BREWER
Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON -The Defense
and VeterdnS Affairs depanmenii"
"failed in their responsibilities to
serve Gulf War veterans .. - both in
caring for sick veterans and in the
military's continuing lack of readi·
ness for future chemica~ and biological warfare. a Senate mvesttgauon
has concluded.
"The men and women who have
served in our nation's military
deserve better than what ill Gulf War
veterans have e~perienced, "the Senate Veteran.~ Affairs Committee said
in a repon to be released Tuesday.
The year-long investigation by a
staff of 20. while harsh in its assessments of DoD and the VA. noted that
DoD in 1996 had to recant its persistent denials that U.S. troops ~ere
not e•posed to Iraq• chemocal
weapons.
But. the repon said. those denials
··appear 10 be the product of negli-

gence rather than con~piracy." Also,
investigators said, DoD's estimate
that more than 100,000 troops could
have been exposed are probably
. ove(Stated.
E~posures to low levels o( chemical warfare agents bave not been
conclusively tied to illnesses suffered
by veterans and, the repon said,
"health effects of low-level e~po­
sures are not fully understood."
Committee Chairman Arlen
Specter, R-Pa., said he wa.' &lt;'Oncemed
tllat DoD and the VA remain "ill-prepared"to respond to anotller militmy
situation in which chemical and biological warfare agent' are used.
West Virginia Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV. top Democr.ll on the comminee. said the Pentagon 's own
inspector general also ha.' conduded
that more than seven years after the
wur "we are not prepared for the warfare of the 21st century and the casuallies and injuries that would result."
The Pentagon in the la.&lt;l couple of
years has signiticanlly increased its

investment in research to improve should be conducted, and some comdetection of warfare agents and pensation officers still fail to •·gra.•p
equipment to protect troops.
what is required to process properly"
But criticisms or DoD for being
slow to recognize those shoncoming
lose none of their sharpne&lt;s when the
repon addresses problems of the VA.
which is charged with providing
medtcal care and compensation to
vetemns.
"It is difficult for Gulf War veterans to comprehend and comply with
the VA's compte• and confusing
rules ·and regulations for obtaining
health care or compensation benefi Is." the repon said ..
While VA ofticials insist they
have been "proactive .. in responding
to the needs of sick veterans, the Senate investigators reached a different
conclusion.
Within the VA. they found, there
is "widespread misunderstanding of
tiS own policies, programs and
processes" related to the war. some
health care providers still do no!
know how veterans' physical exams

Eugene Will. Rutland parcels;
Deed. Ruben D. and Betty L.
Jackson to Jeffrey V. and Belinda M.
Vogt. Olive parcel:
Deed. Delmar G. and Vicki L.
Grillin Ill Delmar G. and Stuan E.
Pullins. Olive and Chester parcels:
Easement, Randy Lee Riffle to
Ohio Power Co .. Salisbury:
Easement. Retha and Larry Gibbs
to Ohio Power Co .. Rutland;
Ea..ement. Eastern Local Schools
to Columbus Southern Power,
Chester:
Easement. Kenneth and Mary
Woltman to CSP. Scipio:
Easement. Clifton R. Sr. and Margarette Fr~ley to CSP. Scipio:
Ea.o;ement, Tina Fraley to CSP.
Scipio:
Easement. Wilben J. McClain to
CSP. Lebanon:
Easement. Paul L. Carpenter and
Shawnette M. Cunningham 10 CSP.
Lebanon:
Easement. Jack J. and Tina M.
Kelley to CSP, Scipio;
Ea.'iement. Russell to CSP. Scipio;
Ea.'iement. John Jr. and Sarah S.
Fisher to CSP. Chester.
Easement, Pamela S. and Frank
M. Colwell to CSP. Chester.
Easement, Tom and Sheila Theiss
to CSP, Lebanon;
Easement, Mabel M. Goeglein to
CS P. Chester;
Deed. American Premier Underwrilers to Robert E. Miller. Rutland
parcel:
Deed, Roben E. Miller and Judy
M. Miller to Roben E. and Judy M.
Miller, Rutland pan:el;

Meigs County's

Meigs court news
Divorce asked
Andy l. Patterson. Syracuse. from
Terri L. Patlerson, Hanford, W.Va.
Judpneat miry
Home National Bant;. Racine,
received three judgmenls of
$16,048.28,
S42,022.60
and
$8,452.69 from Jimmie L. Young •.et ·
al., in a forecl~ure suit in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas. (

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Supreme Court: Adequate schools enough
: ~.

·-

GORE IN OHIO - VIce PI'Hklent AI Gore poled for a photo
with first QriCierlll C.rtaon Elementlry School In Dayton after .
hi IPOke there Monday. Gore also attended a fund-raiser and
apoka to a group of local Damocrata at the Dayton Convention ·
Centar during hla llap In Ohio. (AP)

Students air concerns :
during VP's Ohio stop ~
DAYTON (AP)- Vtce President
AI Gore got an earful when he a.~ked
some elementary school students
their biggest fears about the first day
of school.
Sever.tl of the Carlson Elementary
School students .aid they had been
scared about getting into fights. One
boy suid he feared someone was
going to "get in my face."
"Get in my face and show me
what !hat's like," Gore said.
The boy walked up to Gore and
began tilting his head back and fonh.
But he wa.~ only half the vice president's size. drawing laughs from the
crowd of 500 that gathered Monday
in the school auditorium to hear Gore
talk about education.
"The fir.11 priority is 10 have a safe
and drug-free school, to have a place
to learn· where kids don't have 10 be
afraid... Gore said.
Carlson. which became a yearround school this year, began classes July 22. Sixth-gmder William
Hinesmon told Gore the school has a
conflict-management program that
works most of the time.
"They iell y6u how to break up
fights and how to keep people from
getting suspended," Hinesmon said.
Gore later attended a private
$1,000-per-person reception and

spoke at a $1()()..per-person rdlly at
the Dayton Convention Center for
U.S. Senate candidate Mary Boyle.
Boyle, a Democrat and former
Cuyahoga County &lt;'Ommissioner. i•
facing Republican Gnv. George
Voinovich in the Nov. 3 election to
succeed Sen. John Glenn. D-Ohio,
who is retiring.

Gnre lauded the accomplishments
of the Clinton administration.
"We have a surplus in our budget
because of Democrdtic policies," he
said. "We have a cleaner environment. We have 5 million more children with access to health care."
And Gore reiterated his suppon
for Clinton.
"Let me say Ill is loudly and dearly," he said. " I am proud that Bill
Clinton's policies have made this
country a beuer place. I'm proud to
serve President Bill Clinton."
Even though he wa.• raising money for Boyle, Gore avoided the trouble.ome topic of his own fund raising.
Gore wa.• the target of a preliminary investigation by Attorney General Janet Reno's campaign finance
task force into telephone calls he
made in the fall or 1995 and spring
of 1996 soliciting campaign contributions.

FALL/WINTER
CAR CARE
SPECIAL EDITION

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Aaaocllted Press Writer
NEW LEXINGTON - Ohio's school children are entitled to an adequate -but not necessarily equal- education, the state Supreme Court
has ruled.
The 5-2 decision Tuesday repudiated an earlier decision by a Perry
County judge hearing testimony into whether state lawmakers have complied with a coon order to fix the way the state pays for public education.
The hearing was continuing today with school districts making their
case that they have been shonchanged. But the burden is on the state to
prove that it ha• provided a "thorough and efficient" system of education.
On Aug. 21, before he began two weeks of hearings, Common Pleas
Judge Linton Lewis, Jr. declared that "education is a fundamental right
guaranteed by the Ohio constitution" under the equal proleCtion clause.
That presenled the state with an even higher burden or proof- to show
that any inequities were justified by a compelling state interest.
"The justices have agreed that the goalposts were moved on the eve
of the hearing, and now they're back where we had e~pected them to be,"
said Todd Boyer, a spokesman for stale Attorney General Belly Monte
gomery.
The high coun also ruled that state lawmakers and officials had to

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1998
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FOR MORE INFORMATION

Carroll noted that the state has targeted it• education aid to the poorest school dislricts, and that Ale~ander did not factor in the way new money for education under the revised plan will be pha..ed in over four years.
Alrxander's ltstimony. though. will be moot in terms of Lewis' decision ..'J'!Ie judge responded to objections by lawyers from the state by
promtsmg that he would not consider the remarks if the Supreme Court
ruled in lht state's favor.
The state's witnesses testified la.•t week that lawmakers either spent
or promised more than SI billion since 1991 to help districts repair or
replace unsafe or obsolete buildings. Also they created a $25 million-ayear fund for ~ew textbooks. bought thousands of new computers and
provuled addtttonal money for all-day, every-day kinderganen and small·
er cia." sizes in poorer school districts.
Even with the additional expenditures. the gap between the state's richest and poorest school districts still will be in the neighborhood of $1.800
per student this school year, Ale~ander said, using estimates provided by
state education officials.
In addition, the local share of money spent on education ha.' been ris·
ing faster than the state's share, Ale~ander said. While the statewide average per-student spending- adjusted for inflation- has climbed from
$4,752 in 1991 to an estimated $5,730 this year, money r~ised locally
accounts for nearly 70 percent of the increa.&lt;e, Ale~ander said.
"If this trend continued, the state would continue to go out of the busi·
ness of funding education," he added.

Gallia's first '98 fatality
A Cheshire man died Tuesday at
Holzer Medical Center from injuries
s•ffered in a two-vehicle collision on
Slate Roule 7 just nonh of Cheshire.
James L. Hurlow, 21,76 N. Third
St., was 111\Rsponed to HMC by the
Gallia County EMS from the scene of
the 4: 13 p.m. cra.m. according to the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway-Palrol. .
Troopers said Hurlow was nonh-

bound when he auempted to drive
around an object in the road. He lost
control of the car he drove. slid sideways and went left of center. collid' ing with a southbound truck driven
~ by Gary A. Spenctr, 36. K544 SR
160. Bidwell.
Spencer was also injured in the
cra.•h and wa.1 taken to HMC by the
EMS, according 10 the repon . He wa.•
later treated and released, a hospital

spokesperson said.
The victim wa.' later relea.o;ed to
'the Fisher Funeral Home. Middlepan.
The car driven by Hurlow wa.'
severely damaged in the collision,
whi lc moderate damage was listed to
the truck driven by Spencer.
The accident, Gallia County's fir.~t
traffic fatality of 199!1. remains under
investigation, troopers said.

Flood hazard mitigation program
moves forward in Village of Rutland
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Two houses have been purchased
by the Village of Rutland a.' the vii·
lage's flood hazard mitigation program proceeds.
The program. funded by the Ohio
Emergency Management Agency and
FEMA, involves, in some cases, the

on Vltarlnl affaiR llaula. AIIO In attandllnce

U.S. Repraaentltlve Tid Strickland, apeak·
lng, pre~ented an American ftag recently to the
llelga Chapter No. 53, DlaabiiCI Amarlcen Veterans at their regular Auguat ..-tlrig. Strick·
land also held a quaatlon and answer aeaaion

waa DAY Stata Senior Vlcl Comllllndlr Martin

ROberta, who prllllltld a plaque to the chlptlr for axceldlng Ha marnbarlhlp quota for

direct purchase by the village of damage. repair and more damage.
homes within a frequently-flooded according to the EMA. Such steps
area of the community. Residents will reduce the cost of respon&lt;e and
muy also opt 10 have their homes recovery effons -- Ohio has been the
moved. elevated or "retrofitted," so subject of nine Presidential disaster
that they are less likely to sustain dedamtions due to tlooding in the .
past 10 years, the most recent being
future tlood damage.
The mitigation projects are in June.
designed to eliminate a cycle of
Continued on page 3

1998-1997.

ODOT plans new Meigs garage
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel N-a Staff
The Ohio Depanment of Tmnsponation is in the process of purcha.,ing land near Five Points for a
new stale highway garage.
According to ODOT District 10
spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo. ODOT
is in the process of purcha.,ing property in the Five Points area near
Meigs Memory Garden. about a half
mile south of the existing state highway garage.
George Collins. ODOT District 10
administrative a.-.istant, said construction . . the new 22,000-squarefoot facili!)i should begin next year.
The building will be used to store
the garage's II dump trucks and offer
a service bay and office space.
Collins said. The garage employs 30
· workers.
The building will teplace a garage

Today's Sentinel
l Sections - 12 l'llges.

Los:al

6
8-9-10
11
2
3

Soortl

4-5

Weatber

3

Calendar
OusiOe!ls

Comics

Editorl•!s

Lotteries
WIW

. Pick 3: 996; Pick 4: 1724
Buckeye 5: I-5-22-30-36

ltYA.

Mil-

o.Jiy 3: 6-8-0: Dilly 4: g.7-2-4
0 1991 Oblo Vll!ey

I

prove to Lewis with "a preponderance of the evidence" that they had sat·
isfied a constitutional mandate to provide an adequate ediiCation to all
public school student!.
While awaiting word from the Supreme Coun. Lewis allowed a state
finance expert hired by the coalitioo challenging the school-funding system 10 leStify that a wide gap still exists between the state's richest and
poon:st despile efforts by lawmakers to revamp the way they distribute
money 10 education.
Mumy Stale University President Kern Alexander said he analyzed
data collected by the Ohio Department of Education. He determined that
the roughly 180,000 students llltending scbools at the bottom end of the
per-student spending list got about $2,000 less each for their schooling
la.o;t year than the 180,000 or so at the top of the list.
"The quality of education is still a function of wealth," Ale~ander lestified.
That disparity is right where it was when The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Funding began its legal challenge in 1991, he
~d .
.
"This does not indicate there has been a systematic overhaul or education funding in Ohio," Alexander said during the second Wiy ~f the
coalition' s por1ion of the hearing.
Roger Canoll. a lawyer for the state, said Alexander's analysis did not
tell the whole story.

,...___-Presents flag----. Cheshire man becomes

Good Afternoon

Res~rve

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, No. 91

COMING...
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1998

Deed. Roben E. and Judy M.
Miller to Wesley Dale Manley. Rut·
land;
.Deed, Roben E. and Judy M.
Mtller to Anthony W. and Patricia A.
Eblin. Rutland:
Right of way. John E. and Luda I.
Anderson to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District. Letan:
Ri~ht of way. Heath and Di;one
Miller to TPCWD. Lctan:
Right of way. Mamie V. Headley
to TI'(;WD. Olive:
Deed. Vicki S. und Jackie L.
Cummin&lt;. Sharon L. and Cecil E.
Wolfe. Marilyn F. and Wendell Allen
Williams. Danny B. and Cordelia C.
Brown to Gregory J. and Pamela L.
Michael, Sutton parcels;
· Ea.,ement, Lcste• M and Carolyn
L. Ohlinger to Raymond L. and Carol S. Oliver, Meigs:
Deed. Raymond L. and Carol S.
Oliver to Ja..an L. and Brandi J.
Stewan, Sutton;
Deed. Kenneth L. and Karen S.
Byer to Michael P. Kloes. Middlepon:

McGwire
sets NL
homer mark
Page4

•

Recorder posts local land transfers
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Right of way. James and Barhar•
Fry to James E. and Connie E. Car·
leton:
Right of way, Donald E. and Vel·
va Peters to Buckeye Rural Electric
CO&lt;,&gt;perdtive. Columbia:
Right of way. Terry and Amy
Spencer to BREC. Columbia:
Deed, Joseph M. and Wendy C.
Egan to Joseph an~ Wendy Egan.
Chester:
Deed. Roben and Tana S. Wellman to Wanda R. Wyeth. Scipio:
Deed. Ray E. Wellman to Wanda
R. Wyeth. Scipio parcels:
Deed. Benjamin E. and Carrie M.
Browning to Kenneth R. Smith.
Columbia:
Deed. Jack Alan Dunaway to
Nancy Ja.,pers. Sutton:
Deed. Mark E. and Cindy Rhonemus to James S. and Connie H. Ruck·
er. Bedford pan:el:
Deed. Mary K. Yost and Nancy K.
Cin:le. Salisbury/Sutton tracts:
Deed. Edity Hubband to Ishmael
Jeffrey Smith. Rutland:
·
Deed. Linda J. and Randall E.
Bowsman to Howard B. McDaniel,
Bedford parcel:
Deed. Rose Angeletti Sisson to
Alfred N. Sis.'iOn. Pomeroy:
Deed. Randy and Amy Pyles,
Slwon and Mark Harvey, Charles F.
Jr. and Debi Pyles. Shirley C. and
Rollie Stewan to Randy K. and Amy
Pyles, Racine lots;
Deed. Opal Leah Will to Roland

Sports

Family Medicine column, Page 7
Ann Landers column, Page 6
Cubs edge Reds 6-5, .Page 4

Today:Sunny
High: 80; Low:SO

Math scores still up, verbal lacking in SATs
By DEB RIECHMANN .
Aalocllted Press W~
WASHINGTON -: Htgh school
semor.~ tmproved their . SAT math
scores .ag~m shghtly thts year, but
they dtdn t do any better than la.~l
year on the verbal secnon of the college-entrance test. results today show.
Students takmg the test had an
average _mal~ score of 512, up _a point
from last year and the htghest m 27
rear.~. The avemge score on the readmg._sentence completion and ":'ord~
sectoon of the test wa.' 505. That s_the
same a• la.&lt;t year and JUst 6 pomts
above record-low verbal scores '"
I~.' and 1994._
.
We can pomt to mcrea.&lt;;ed math
and sctence study as a rea.wn for the
current htgh m average math score,
but the .roc~-steady verba_l, scores are
more dtfficult toexplaon. satd DonaldStewartprestdentofthenonprolit
College -~oard that admmtsters the
Scholastic Assessment Test. or_ SAT.
. One ~actor -~ay be the dechne 1n
students .. famoh~ty wtth Enghsh.
Shetew an sat~j ·Th" year2.8 perced nl of
1·2 m•.. •on test-t ....ers o not
I
repon Enghsh a• lhetr first language
- ~ fro~ 5 ~~ent a dec;de ago.
PPY a." '· trector O pre-co1·
l~gealpCnograms Nfor ~aorkplanb sedEducatton
- ..,.
. h. enters. a. ew ""d he
fl· test
coac ong company. &lt;at I
at ver·

Slptwnber 2, 1998

Weather

No swift resolution expected
in strike against Northwest
By ASHLEY H. GRANT
Aai0Ciat8d Pre1a Writer
MINNEAPOLIS - Bot.h sides
involved in the N011hwest Airlines
strike have cauldrons of cash set a.•ide
to ride it out - which doesn't suggest a quick end to the standoff.
"Our pilot.~ have the suppon of a
strike fund that is substantial," said
Dean Smith. spokesman for the Air
Line Pilots Association. "We can go
a.• long '" il takes."
The pilots have about $65 million
on hand, while Nonhwest has about
S3 billion.
President Clinton said Monday he
ha.• a.'ked Transpor1ation Secretary
Rodney Slater to meet with company officials and the pilots' leaders to
try to restan negotiations. The panics
were to meet today. the founh day of
the strike, according to domestic

Wednesday

Tuesday, September 1, 1. .

Co.

built in 1953 that is now functionally obsolete, according to Collins. The
existing site is located on aboul4 112
acres of ground and is surrounded by
houses. leaving no room for e•pansion. he explained.
The Five Point' area was selected
for the new garage because of ill centrJiized location and proximity to the
planned Ravenswood Connector
Road, which will be the main anery
passing through the county, Collins
explained.
"It will a real nice looking facility," Collins said, adding that it will be
landscaped, planted with trees wnd
fenced. The building shoufd be similar to the new Gallia County garage
which,opened in May.
Pcruigo said funding for the new
building came from the sale of the old
ODOT centrJI ollice in Columbus.
"They had $9 or $10 million after
the sale und said they would build
thtee new garages in the state." she

said. "We were lucky enough to gel
one of the new garages." she added.
Cost of the new structure ha.' not
been determined, but Pedigo said,
"We're talking in excess of three million dollars."
Some neighbor.; have eKpressed
concern about water runoff from the
new garage. she said, adding that
their concerns are being addressed.
"We are very closely regulated by
the (Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency): probably the most closely
regulated agency in the state," she
said. "Everything would be entirely
contained."
Some neighboring property owners had the impression that ODOT
wa.• handling the matter in secrecy.
she ~d. explaining that negotiations
to purchase propeny are generally not
held in public.
She said at lea.11 one additional
meeting will be held with.a property
owner lo address concerns.

.

-~

BEING REPLACED -1111 Ohio Department of
Tranaportatton Ia making plana to repliCI the

Meigs County Stlta Highway Garage shown
hare with a new structure.

Plans finalized for Middleport River Festival
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Nawa Staff
Everything from classic car.; to
crafty creations, from sidewalk sale!
to stage enlertainment will be included in the Middlepon River Festival
slated for Sept. 12 at Diles Park in
Middlepon.
Plans for the event were finalized
Tuesday at a meeting of the Middleport Community Association held in
the conference room of Peoples
Banking and Trust Co., 11p01150n of
the festival which wiU be held from
noon to 6 p.m.
· A highlight will be the docking of
the Stemwheeler Delta~ lllhe
Middleport levee about I p.m. The
nearly 200 pusengen.wiU dilemblrtl
during a 20 minute Delta Queen calliope conceit by Myron Dulfield of
Middlepon. Duff'tcld is boardina the

.•
.

..

stemwheeler at Point Pleasant and
will be playing the calliope during its
trip upriver to Middlepor1.
Tentative schedule calls for a
parade to Diles Park from the Delta
Queen at I :20 p.m. and a welcoming
ceremony with presentation of a key
to the villaae at I:30 by Mayor
Dewey Honon.
Schedule for the rest of the afternoon on the stage includes I :45 10 2
p.m. the Riverbcnd Community OlofliS,' 2 10 2:45 p.m. the Delta Queen
Dixie Band Concat; 2:4510 3: IS, the
Swinain' Senlcn; 3:1510 4:15p.m.
lhe Sheppinl Brolhen Blue Grass of
PlrbnbutJ, W. VL; 4:15 10 4:45
p.m. the Midniaht Clogen; 4:4S 10
5:45 p.m. Everett Wectae Country

Band. Point Pleaunt.
Pusinaer' will be invited to take

a walking tour of the

town. and

at

.streets.
Tuesday's meeting Duffield present- Sepl. 9.
Cruflers. demonslrJiors of pioneer
It was empha.~ized by Duffield
ed copies of a map which will be proskills,
the entenainment, food booths,
vided to them before arriving in Mid- tllat there is no charge to sign up for
und
the
classic em show will take
dlepor1. The tour begins at the park. a change to board the sternwheeler,
place
in
the
park. Aquilt show and an
but
that
any
duplicate
names
drawn
goes up Seeond, down Second, out
work
display
by local artist Ja..an
will
be
disqualified.
Winners
will
be
Race Street to Founh and OUIIO Mill
notified
in
advance
of
the
event
and
Wetherell will be featured at the
leading back to the park.
Complimentary refreshments will advised where to pick up their board- 1 Riverbend Ans Counci I quaners on
.Second Street, a model railroad disbe served 10 the passengers at The ing pas.~s.
Festival foods including home- play prepared by David Robinette
Ohio River Bear Co. by the Community Association. Welcoming bag.~ made ice cream will be served at will be in the lobby of the bank where
are being prepared for the pas.&lt;;CRger.&lt; Diles Park and the Middlepor1 fire- a river display will also be featured. •
A letter of complaint about the
and when they depart, chocolate ros- men have planned a chicken barbecue to be held at the Legion Park on appearance of some village propcny
es will be provided for each one.
specifically the impound 101 on Thi.d
A hundred people will be allowed Founh and Mill.
A large tent has been secured for and Mill, and the Beech Slreel prop10 board the Delta Queen while it is
docked at the levy. Selection will be the park. Duffield announced, as eny was read and will be turned over
,made through a drawing. Residents ·protection against rain and to provide to Middleport Village Council. ·
·ma.v resister as singles or in pairs II shade. Forty new American flags _. Meanwhile, Community Associa~the the Ohio River Bear Co.,lhe Mid- have been donated by Feeney-Ben- ttot:t ~m~ are continuing cleanup
:dlepor1 Department Store or the~ nett Pmt 128, American Legion, 10 be acbvthes •n downtown Middlepon in '
.pies Banking and Trust Co. before used along the levee and on village preptuation for the River Festival.

'
'

..

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•

�Wednesday, September 2, 1998

Commentar~

PageA2
Wedn11d.y, September 2, 1998

Pomeroy 1 Middleport, Ohio

County Court news

Ohio weather
Thursday, Sep. 3
AccuWeathe.- forecast for

-T he Daily Sentinel

;Counter-terrorism experts get big bucks

from
these
By Jack Anclenon
'Estlz6fislid in 1948
6nns," coofumed
IWld Jan MoDer
American companies, increasingly an equally high
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
fearful
of lerrorisl slrikes, are making level CIA official
•
814-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157
,tempting offers to some of the top on that field.
' counter-terrorism experts in the US
Our FBI and
tnlelligence cornmuntty.
CIA
sources
The jiners in the multi national - declined to name
· as well as domestic -- ccr&gt;ora1e com- the companies
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
. munlty are a senous 1, p.:rcussion making
such
·from Prestdent Clinton's anack on a offers, but SaJd that
ROBERT L WINGETT
Aoller &amp;
terrorist base tn Afghanistan, and the they represent an Anclerlon
PubliSher
counter-threals Osama bin La&lt;lcn's unpn:cedcnted
• group has made m the wake of that.
trend to siphon away the best and the
Until now. U.S. companoes, even brightest in the government - those
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
those who operated abroad, mveSied who arc currently involved in intelli0-.1 llenager
Controller
linle on secunty against terronsm. But gence-gathering and pursuit of terrormany are now convmced that they've ISIS to prolect the American people tn
l ' l l e - · ow ,. ,.. , _ - 01 , 1 got to shovel money onto more secun- general
Y»&gt;od,..
ty to protect theor leaders. employees
The sources indtcated that those
and buoldongs.
corporations most concerned about
- ...,._,.,..,.
SpecHy
lllero 'o •
- 11
• , . _ _,.,
10: ,-_ . ,- ,
. . -•
.l'lleIf -~
51,
tJNr,
To help wuh that goal, top counter- retahallon have ues or contracts woth
111 co.n
...;=::.;::.;MK=.;::,..::,:'.:;':-:;::~~67~
......................................,.........,.........,.1' terrorism officials on the intelligence Israeli firms. But there arc several
-- ~ .
community -- parucularty at the CIA with Amencan Jewosh ownershtp
and FBI -- are beong offered financsal - who seem to feel they might be tarly substantial posstions to beef up geted for thetr ethnic background.
secunty at these companses
"It ts a tragic thing." said the FBI
"I've been offered enough up front source, "but It's a fact that some of
on a contract to offset leavong my gov- those concerns might be legotimate. A
ernment
pension early in the game," a group as hateful as Osama bon
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
top
FBI
counter-terrorist official told Laden's mtght well target a U.S. finn
Allocllted Pre11 Writer
our
assocoate
Dale VanAtta. "Several jUS! because its chainnan or CEO
WASHINGTON - After a month-long summer break, senators arc
of
us
have
gotten
bog-money offers comes from a particular ethmc backretumong to the Capstol to face a tangled agenda m an atmosphere clouded
by Prestdent Clinton's personal problems, a loomong election and onternatoonal economtc unrest.
In the normal course of events, Senate debates are unprcdoctable. Stnct
time hmots are difficult to obtam and there os no requorement that senators
· sttck to the subject of the pendong btll
And this sessoon has more potenttal distractions than most
The senators return to town JUSt two weeks after the president admitted to
the natton that he had a relationshop wnh Monsca l..ewonsky that he srud
" was not appropnate In fact, ot was wrong "
Clinton's four-mmute speech "ratsed the level of consctousness" among
the pubhc, satd Senate Mmonty Leader. Tom Daschle, D-S.D. Other
Democrats spoke more harshly about the prestdent's behavoor.
"My trust m hts credobohty has been badly shattered," said Sen Dtanne
Femstein, D-Calif., recalhng Clinton's earher densals of any se~ual relationship with Ms. Lewinsky
"lllere IS a great deal of anxoety among members, " Daschle conceded.
As if the Lewinsky matter weren't enough. attention quickly turned to the
threat of internattonal terronsm when the Unned States launched mossole
stnkes agamst targets m Sudan and Afghamstan .
In recent days, economtc unrest in Asta and Russ1a has hammered U.S.
financoal markets.
Clmton IS headed to Moscow for a long-scheduled meeting wtth Russoan
Presodent Boris Yeltssn, who ts struggling to survtve hts country's economoc

._of.,.,._
__ ,__.,._,,...,.._clwlceotl&gt;olng""*"'....,·

or-'

- _,..,..,w_o/l....,.be-

&amp;do--·..,_.,_,
Fvo_.,,

Returning senators face
-a stack of thorny issues

enS IS

All th Jse factors add to the normal unpredtctabtlity of Senate debates.
Daschle predocted, for •~ample. that dunng debates on foreign r od or
defense ; pendsng, DemocrJts might hnng up legtslation to give people a
right to appeal dectstons by managed-care health provoders
Republicans have their own managed-care boll, but Democrats have
refused to go along wtth Senate GOP Leader Trent Lou's proposal to pll one
btll agamst the other. with no more than three amendments allowed to each
"We have a huge health care agenda. and n begms wtth the patients bill
of nghts.·· Chnton srud m a speech last week m whtch he tned to focus attention on hos domestic agenda. He also urged Senate action on campaogn
finance
That ts another sssue that could emerge at any ltme. The Senate k1lled a
btparttsan effon last spnng to rewr~to ca"!pasgn laws to ban much of the
unregulated btg money that now flows sndorcctly onto campaogns as so-called
·soft money
·
A foretgn asd spendmg bill IS among the ftrst maJor Hems on the Scrl~tc
agenda and mcludes $18 boll son for the International Monetary Fund. whtch
IS under linanctal stram from the raptd dctcnoration of economics m Asta
and Russta.
The IMF money has strong support on the Senate. Its fate ss far less ccrtam m the House whsch does not return to the Capstol unul after Lahor Day
Through rhts week . Clinton wsll be on Russw and then Ireland Overseas
. tnps arc tradttlonally postuvc expenenccs for prestdents. even at Urnes of
: · pohftcal turmool at home
Amcncans wtll have days ol sccsng Clsnton m the role of leader of the
:: world's most powerful country. often surrounded hy cnthusta.,tsc crowds at
· . vartous stops
: Those tmages wtll also he clear to onlookers on Capstol Htll But whtle
: they may cause even Chnton 's strongest opponents to wnhhold cnttctsm
: whtle he IS overseas. the anacks on hss character and agenda wtll ccrtamly
: ·resume when he returns
EDITOR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rothberg heads the &lt;ongressional
: · staff or The Associated Press.

~~ Letters to the editor
:: Doctors, God and the federal government

ground"

More than a half-doun of our best
U.S. intelhgence counter-terrorism
sources do a~ that there will be terrorist retaliallon sometime, somewhere. for the Afghanistan and Sudan
military st.1kes. But they also do 1101
expect II illlY time soon. In the past. tl
has take~ months to plan sueh retaliation, anu terronsts have sometimes
waJted a year or more before striking
back.
The most classtc, and tragtc,
example is the December 1988 explosion of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie,
Scodand, which killed 270 persons.
As nearly as invesugators can fathom, the plannmg for the atrplane
explosiOn began after the United
Stales downed a ctvilian Iranoan aorcraft, and ended as a pamal Lobyan
retahauon for the bombmg of Muammar Qaddafi 's camps
Iranian-sponsored terronsts qutclcly claimed eredn. but both the Bntish
and American governments put out
stories that they were only one of several possible suspects. Behmd the
scenes, all the evtdence quickly began
pomtsng to Ahmed Jobril, leader of the
Popular Front for the Liberatton of
Palesttne - General Command.
Both the CIA and Bnush mtelll-

gence ptcked up reports that Jibril had
been shoppmg for funds for his antiIsraeli and ants-Yasser Arafat group
because his two pnmary sponsors,
Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi and
Synan Prestdent Hafez ai-Assad. had
run short of money.
The intelligence reports pomtoo to
a successful Teheran trip Jibril made
m July 1988 from his Damascu; base
when the Ayatollah Khomeins,
Hashemt RafsanJans and other lrantan
leaders htred him !Of blow up an
Amencan plane m retaliation for the
acctdental downing of an !raman passenger jet that month by the U.S S
Vincennes, killing a11290 passengers
As the tnvestsgatton progressed,
however. it began to appear that Jtbn I
may have handed off the operatiOn to
former sugar daddy Qaddafi. whose
sntelhgencc agenctes began to get
mvolved.
Qaddafi was sull smartong from
the U S. milstary ratds on Lobya Ill'
1986 -- whtch was Prcstdcnt Reagan 's
retahauon for the tcrronst bombong of
a Berhn dtsco whtch ksllcd two US
servtcemcn.
Some Republican leaders have
erroneously credited Prcssdent Reagan woth takmg a dcctstve stnke
agamst tcrronsm -- and succcedong on
cowmg Qaddali with su'h rmhtary
fon:e . In fact. the mtlllary operation
obvtously backfired Qaddafi got
engaged m the Pan Am I 03 terrorist
mcidcnt that k1llcd more than 10
tomes the number of Amcncans he'd
ever even been accused of kolhng
before.
lromcally. what qutcted down hss
suppon of tcrronsm has been the
U.N. economic sanctions omposcd
agamst Ltbya because he has refused
to gtve up two top Pan Am 103 suspeel~ So the economic noose ha•
been more cffcctsvc m modcratong hss
behavoor than the mtlitary action. It's
a lesson Prcsodcnt Clinton should
examine closely
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature Synclkate, Inc.

Double standard of black leaders
By Joseph Perkins
When National Basketball Associarson bad boy Lalrell Sprewell violently assaulted his coach last year, he
had at least one defender within the
black leadershop ranks --San Francisco mayor and former Californoa
Assembly speaker Wtlhe Brown.
"Maybe the coach deserved chokmg," satd Brown. empathizing wnh
the poor. mssunderstood Sprewell
''I' m not justsfying what he
(Sprcwell) dtd as right. But nobody ts
askmg why he dod st or what may
have prompted hom."
When the subJect of Lours Farrakhan came up at a Beverly Hills.
Calif. forum sponsored by the AnuDcfamauon League. Brown refused
to rcpud1atc the antt-Scmtllc. antt whnc black Muslsm mmtstcr
" I found that to be rclattvcly
tnsultmg," satd Brown, who felt that
hemg asked "to shed myself of that
associatton (wnh Farrakhan) . . ts
mconststcnt wsth democracy."
Ah. but there IS one promment
black figure whose words and deeds
arc so offcnstve to Brown that he IS
more than wtlllng to condemn htm
when he would not condemn
Sprcwell. a figure whom Brown ss
only too eager to repudtate when he
would not repudtate Farrakhan.
That man ts Clarence Thomas.

In a recent
speech to the
Association
of
Black Soctologists, Brown dssparaged
the
Supreme Court
JUstice as "a shrll
and cover for the
most
InSidiOUS
fonn of ractsm ."
He told the
Perklna
black sociologtsts
that they should
never even consider mvnmg the
htghest-rankmg black JUnst on the
country to appear belorc thctr group.
"He must not be allowed any comfort from any of us." smd Brown.
who went so far as to say that Justoce
Thomas' views represent a "legitsmtzing of the Ku Klux Klan "
Brown's verbal attack on Justice
Thomas reveals the patent hypocnsy
of certain members of thts natson 's
black leadershtp. It 's OK by them for
a black man to be a vtolcnt oflender- like Sprcwell. It's OK to be antsSemitiC and ants-whuc -- like Farrakhan (It's even OK by some of
them to be a murderer -- hke O.J .
Stmpson.)
But tf a black person IS guolty of
the putattve stn of bemg conservatsvc, then he ts a panah. according to

Brown and other like-mtnded black
leaders 11le views of black conservatives are unworthy of thoughtful
debate.
They m not welcome at conferences or meetmgs or forums hosted
by black orgamzatoons like the Association of Black Sociologists.
Even if they happen to sit on the
htghest court tn the land.
Brown and other myoptc black
leaders like hom have a cockeyed
notion that all 30 million black folks
in thts country ought to think ahkc.
But the black population IS hardly
monolsthtc. On a whole range of
ISsues -- from ahonmn to the death
penalty to school vouchers to smmtgration -- black Amencans arc tdcologically divtdcd.
And tf the black populatson is
dovoded on these nonrace ISsues. why
should there not be stmtlar dtvtsson
on race tssues'! Indeed, constdcr the
dtll'ercnccs of opmton that blacks
have about mtcrracsal datmg and
'
mamage
.
So why ss 11 so hard lor Brown and
other black leaders to accept that
maybe there wtll be stmtlar dtlfcrcnccs of opm10n on olhcr rn&lt;.:c 1ssucs?
Really. for Brown and most other
black leaders. there ts one htmus-tcst
issue that dctcrmmcs whether a black
person ts "one of us " or "a shdl and

cover for the most inssdious form of
ractsm." And that ts how that black
person stands on affirrnatove actoon.
If a black person is for st, he IS
welcome to appear before the Association of Black Soctologtsts or any
other black organt7.atton. But of he
opposes allirmattvc actton. or even
expresses some concerns ahout tis
smplcmentat10n. then he is hke Justice Thomas, bmther or sister non
grata.
But it IS ahsurd lor Brown anti hss
fellow black leaders to pa.-. judgment
on Justice Thom:ts. or any other black
persons. on the busts of how they
come down on allinnauvc action
Because then: arc a g&lt; •xl many
hlack folks hestdcs Justice Thomas
who question the cllicu'y Ill amrrna11VC action, hut who love

ti'\Cif raL:c no

less than Bmwn ur any other hlack
leader
Black Amcnca ss hog enough anti
strong enough to accummodatc
divcrstty ol opmton. even on matter.;
nf race. Unfortunately. there arc still
some old-style. ontcllcctually ciTctc
black leaders like Wtllsc Brown who
wntmuc to play the role ol ractal
thought pollee.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
ror The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Things have fallen apart in Russia despite aid

: · Dear Ednor.
Amenca has the best health care system on the world We have the finest By TONY SNOW
: . hospitals, the best doctors and the best nurses. I have heard nurses called Creatore Syndicate
: everything from the doctors' handmasdens to the angels of mercy
WASHINGTON .. Presodent ClinThey are not handmaidens: they form the pannershtp wtth doctors.
ton's trip to Moscow 1s the geopoli&lt;iNo doctor's olnce or hospttal would be able to function wothout them. cal equ1valent of a Jet nde mto the eye
. ·Some doctors, oncluding my own phystctan , due to thetr knowledge, mtelh - of a humcane. Russ 1a os falling hke
: : gence, wtsdom, kindness, patience and so very much •nurc, come as close to the House of Usher, and there's nothposStble for any human to be god.
mg outstders can do about u
But no doctor is god, and IllS unfatr of us to ask ur demand that they perThe prcstdent got stuck wtth thos
fonn a god-like act, 10h1ch usually happens when " . .1rc faced with euher a VISit because he suffered a bit of bu:\1
loved one or ourselves being faced wtth a life or death maucr
luck. He agreed long ago to JOin 10
No doctor can treat usJ f we do not go to thctr office and then follow what summury wtth Bons Yeltssn. Smce
snstructions they gtve us
shakmg hands on the deal, howe•er,
My anger here ts dorected at the federal government, the same one that thongs have fallen apart
allows Congress to gove ttself a ratse
Yeltsin looks more fraol and
Do you wonder why someone lights so hard to get elected to Congress - rummy than ever, and-pretenders have
and once they're m why they fight even harder to stay m office
lined up to take his place. He has fired
There should be a law on the btll of nghts that no member of the federal two governments in the past four
elected government can have a pay mcrcase wsthout th!&lt;._ approval of the months, thus creating a climate for
American people If they had to get our approval you would see them domg pollttcal intrigue. He has 00 reliable
a lot more to help all of us
pals .. only former employees.
One person deserves a large gold .nedal : the great comedoan Jerry Lcwts.
W~ne, the country's economy has
As of last year hos telethons have ratsed a btllson dollars
slid into the dumper. Although Russoa
The head of the assnctatton told htm they are wnhon three years of lind- has fluted publicly w1th the idea of
ong a cure thanks to htm.
.capitalism. the notion never has
Did the Federal government match dollar for dollar all that has been caught on. Communism dod too good
given'! Drd they gsve 10 cents on every dollar gtven
.
a job of destroying the central virtues
That would have been S 100 mtlhon. Our government can gtve btlhons of requored for a funcuonong market
dollars away to countnes all around the world, including th~se who hate economy.
So Russians merely swapped one
Amenca and who hate us, the Amencan people, for all the thongs we ,have
and all the things that we are which they will never be and which they wtll kleptocrucy for another. Gone are the
1
never have.
communist bosses with their comfy
lllere is something wrong with a government that puts others ahead of Its dachas and Swiss bank accounts. They
own people.
have given way to the oligan:hs,
Think of this at our next election.
barons who control gtgantic state ·
David Edwards enterprises and devote most of their
Pomeroy time to looting the treasury.

,

The Umted States,
the World Bank and
the
International
Monetary Fund have
sent upwards of
$100 billion to
Moscow since the
collapse of commumsm. Experts estsmate that oligarchs
and their minions
Snow
have expatriated anywhere between $100 bilhi&gt;n and $300
billion and spent the sums on gold,
jewelry. )fachts. estales on the Riviera
- and other lucre.
Despite such open corruption,
Western governments have looked the
other way. Earlier thos year, House
Speaker Newt Gmgrich joined the
administratoon m pushing for a 1n
hefty IMF loan to Russta ostensibly to
boiSier the economy. But the grant just
bailed out the bad guys by propping
up the banks where they store their
loot
In exchange for the loon, Russia
had to raose taxes and cut government
spending -- the standard IMF tourniquet. Ycltsm defended a tax scheme
that features punitive rat&lt;'S and a
bewildering array of schedules.
Nobody pays, though, because it's
cheaper to bribe the local tax man.
Still, the revenue code has become
a nuisance to foreign investors -- espotially smce Russia still hasn't devel-

oped such commercoal basocs as prop- has bet heavily m Russta. German
erty nghts, the rule of law and a stable mvestors have taken an especially big
currency.
hit - but American moner men fear
Assemble the pieces of the puzzle: that the looming dosintegrauon of RusWhen you com bone creeping Vlob rule sia could set off a chain of frulurcs
with a sadoma&lt;;OChi•lic I3Jt regime. elsewhere. That could put an abrupt
you get chaos. Cag} Citizens barter as end to our present prosperity.
often as possible 11 · hide their wealth
At the present moment, wtth
and avoid being ripped off. Boris Yeltsin tottenng toward the horii.On
Berezovsky, 3A o!ogarch saJd to be and old-fashtoned klcptocrats preparwonh billions, reponed earnings last ing to replace htm, there ss precious
year of $43,000. In shon, the former httlc Boll Clinton can do. In theory, he
Sovtct Umon operates on an econom- could propose hnkmg the ruble to the
ic par with a Stone Age village.
dollar, establish propcny nghts and do
The main dtffcrcnce between Mus- other sensible thongs (I steal these
covites and Bahncse tribesmen ss that tdcas from cconomtst Rochard Rahn),
Pacific Islanders don't have the but that won't happen So hts hest
world's largest nuclear force . As a option IS to nod politely when viewmg
result of government cul,, the Russian the historic sites -- and get out of town
military doesn't get patd, fed or cared ._, soon as possthlc.
for. Soldtcrs stay alive by selling theor
A scnoor Trea.&lt;rury Department omhardware, begmning wtth rifles and coal confided severul weeks ago that
ending up with nuclear weapons. And he and his colleagues were far more
these days, the buyers include such worri~d about Russta than any other
clients as Osama bin Laden and the pla..-e on earth He proved prophetic.
government of Iron.
Russta remains on sptrit the last
If all thss wcrcn 't had enough, socialist state-- a place governed more
Yeltsin committed the final bit of mad- by distrust and envy than enterprise
ness two weeks ago. After promismg and love of freedom . Predictably, it
to maintain the integnty of the ruble, has begun to collapse. One can only
he summarily devalued the currency. hope that 11 eventually sheds ots old
The devaluation instantly SUb)CCted ways with a whimper and not a bang.
citizens to high inflation rates and
made their non-dollar savings worthWrite Tony Snow, Craton Syn-less. This transformed the country into clkate, 5777 West Century Bl\'11.,
a linderbo~.
Suite 700, Los Aageles, Calli. !10045.
It also jeopardized anybody who

•

James Lloyd Hurlow. 21. Cheshire, died on Tuesday. Sept. I. 1998, as
the result of an automobile acculcnt in Cheshire.
He was born on January 24. 1977 in Gallipolis, the son of Samuel L. and
Hope M: Amos Hurlow. He was employed by Hills Department Store tn
Gallipolis and Subway in Pomeroy.
He was a 1995 graduate of River Valley High School.
He was a member of the Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Moddleport, attended the University of Rio Grande and was attendmg Hocking College. majoring in police science.
Survivmg. in addition to his parents, arc hts grandparents, Luther and
Jana Amos. Cheshire and Nora C. Hurlow. Gallipolis; and several aunts.
uncles and cousins.
He was preceded in death by his grandfather. Leamon Hurlow, an aunt .
Doris Hurlow, and an uncle, Plullip Bradbury.
Funeral services will be held on Fnday, Sept. 4, 1998 at II a.m. at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Middleport, wsth Rev. Leslie Hayman offictating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Friends may call at the church on Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p m
Arrangements ane under the direction of the Middlepon Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.

!wm· I

••
- -

:. Toledo

' ~ '' '

[ ll•n_lft_el!l 1~..:17!~ J

INO

•

•

• L~~~~~·!?!:_i

W.VA.

F/OOd•.• _c_o_nt_tn_u_ed_~_ro_m...:pa:....:..ge_t

......._ _ _ _ __

Sunny PI Clou&lt;ty

Clou&lt;ty

-

Rain

T IIOoms

Today's weather forecast
Extended forecast
Thursday mght. .. Partly cloudy.
Lows near 60.
Friday... Mostly clear. Htghs near
80.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the upper 50s and highs in the lower

By The Associated Preu
Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Mostly sunny. Htghs m
the lower and mid 80s. West wind 5
to 10 mph .
Tomght ... Ciear. Some valley fog
late. Lows in the mid 50s. Nonhwest
wmd 5 to I 0 mph becoming light.
Thursday. .Partly cloudy. Htghs tn
the lower and mtd 80s.

80s.
Sunday...Partly cloudy. Lows in
the lower 60s and htghs in the mid

80s.

The project in Rutland ha~ been
estimated at $829,000. with feder~l
and state sources contrtbuting
$600,000 of that cost. The actual cost
of the proJeCt cannot be known until
it ts completed.
The groups of homes targeted by
the progmm are dsvided mto two
groups. The first group IS made up of
homes on the flood way, whsch E'kew
said IS next tO a waterway, tn the flow
of the tnbutary. The second group arc
in the floodplain, which is the area
that tloods when a tributary overtlows
Once the village a.•sumes ownership of the homes that are to be purcha.'ied. they may no longer be occupoed. Properttes can be used for
parks and other pubhc use . but no
permanent structures can be buolt on
these properties.

In some ca.o;es, those restdents
whose homes are purchased outright
wtll also receive funds to relocate to
a new home
The vsllage plans to move a log
cabin located on Main Street, owned
by the Harder famtly. and relocate the
structure to the stte where Rutland
High School once stood. $4,000 has
been set aside from the grant program
to move the cabm. and Mayor JoAnn
Eads said last week that the village
hopes to ulttmately develop a park
around the cabin.
Vtllage officials have acknowledged that the program may result on
a relattvely large number of people
leavmg the vtllage. However, those
who panscipate m the program are
free to choose whether to relocate to
another home in Rutland. or leave the
vtllage.

EMS logs six calls
James Lloyd Hurlow
James Lloyd Hurlow. 21, Cheshire. died on Tuesday, Sept. I, 1998. as
the result of an automobile acctdent in Cheshire.
He was born on January 24. 1977 in Gallipolis. the son of Samuel L. and
Hope M. Amos Hurlow. He was employed by Htlls Department Store in
Gallipolis and Subway in Pomeroy.
He wa• a 1995 gr~duate of River Valley High School, where he was acttve
m football. baseball. basketball and wrestling. He received the Most Valuable Player Award for wrestling in 1995.
He wa.' a member of the Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Middlepan, attended the University of Rio Grande and was auending Hocking College. majoring in police science.
.
.
.
Survtvmg. in addition to his parents, are hts fiance. Jenmfer Marte Hayman. Mtddleport; his grandparents, Luther and Jana Amos, Cheshire and
Nora C. Hurlow. Galhpohs; his aunts and uncles: Fatth Bradbury, Ray and
Charily Co~. John and Glona Westfall and John and Melissa Amos, all of
Cheshire. Luke and Linda Amos, Columbus, Joe and Vivoan Hurlow and
Bill and Garnet Hurlow. all of Gallipolis, Jim Hurlow, Mason, W.Va .. Okey
and Janet Hurlow. West Columboa, W.Va.; Leonard Hurlow, Addison, Lewis
and Wilma Sptres. Leon, W.Va., John and Dar1ene Hurlow. P?int Pleasant,
W.Va .. and Betty Rogers. Gallipolis; and many beloved cousms. ·
•
He was preceded in death by hss grandfather, Leamon Hurlow, an aunt,
Dons Hurlow. and an uncle, Phillip Bradbury.
Funeral services wtll be held on Friday, Sept. 4, 1998 at II a.m. at the
Ash Street Freewoll Baptist Church in Middleport, with Rev. Leslie Hayman olliciatsng Burial will follow m Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Fnends may call at the church on Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Armngements ure under the direction of the Middleport C~apel of Ftsher Funeral Home.

No one is injured in shooting
outside courthouse in Marietta

Units of the Meigs County Emer- Chester. motor-vehicle accident, Largency Medical Service recorded si~ ry Carnahan. Tiffany White. Heather
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units Whtte and Jamse White. treated at the
respondmg included:
scene.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
MIDDLEPORT
12:18 a.m .• state Route 143 and
6:09p.m .. North Second Avenue.
Dexter Road, Langsville, motor-vehi- Casste Stewart, Chtldren's Hospital
cle acctdent, Milton Blair, Ohio State via helicopter ambulance.
University Hospital via helicopter RACINE
ambulance. Columbia Township and
3:10 p.m., VFD to McKenzte
Rutland volunteer fire departments Rtdge Road, automobsle fire. no
and Rutland squad;
tnjunes reported.
3:34 a.m., state Route 124, RUTLAND
Racine, Wesley Clark, Veterans
6.30 p.m .• Meigs Mine 2. Davtd
Whitt. Pleasant Valley Hospttal.
Memonal Hospital;
8:25 a.m., state Route 248,

Theft report filed
Robert Headley. Reedsv1lle ,
reported his 1983 Toyota pickup
truck was broken into while parked
at the Olive Township Garage on Joppa Road. accordmg to a Metgs County Shenffs Department report .
The truck's stereo wa.' stolen along
with tools. a tool box anti spare ttre.
satd Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Entry

wa.• made by forcmg open the latch
on the rear gla&gt;S, the report stated.
Kathy Ward. Portland, reponed
Tuesday that a hammer and anvtl
were stolen from her bam.
St"phanie Keyes, Portland, repon ed Tuesday evenmg that a tire on her
son's go cart was punctured wtth a
kmfe.

Meigs announcements
Friends or the Library
Friends of the Meigs County
Library will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library.

Pool closing
The Syracuse pool has closed due
to a lack of attendance.

MARIETTA (AP) - A former Marietta firing at lea.'t 16 rounds
wa,hington County Jail guard was from a handgun.
Chester VFD barbecue
charged with felonious assault after
Police said Mtchael Shrader. 37,
The Chester Volunteer Fire
he allegedly ran through downtown of Mariena shot up several parked Department annual Labor Day
cars and threatened pedestnans dur- Chscken Barbecue will be held Montin'
ing the Tuesday afternoon rush hour. day begmmng at II a.m. with chickThe four-minute shooung spree en. nbs and homemade ice cream. A
(USPS 113-!NO)
ended with no injunes when a Mari- parade will be held at I p.m.
Co•aounlly Newoopopor Holdl- '-&lt;.
~ etta patrolman drew his revolver on
Shr~der and ordered him to drop the
Published every afternoon, Mondly througb
Friday, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Oldo, by lbt
weapon. Shrader complied but strugOhio Valley Publosho!'&amp; Company 5caond eiUI 1 gled with the officer while bemg
poslagt pa1d at Pomeroy, Otuo
handcuffed.
Member: The Associated Poeso ond lhc Ohio
COLUMBUS(AP)- Ohto-lndiNewspaptf AssociatJOO.
The episode began outside the ana dtrect hog prices at selected buyPoltlauttr. Send addreas concc:lions 10 The
Washington County Courthouse mg points Wednesday as provided by
Dady Sentinel, 1J I Court St , Pomeroy, OhtO
45769.
when Shrader allegedly fired one shot the U.S. Department of Agnculture
SUBSCRimON RATES
from
a 9mm semo-automauc hand- Market News:
BJ C.rrie&lt; or Motor One Wcet ................................ J2.00
gun, then ran down the street linng
Barrows and gilts: fully 1.00 lowOne Month ....... .......... ........... S8.70
wsldly into the air, police saod.
er with some interest completely out
One Year.. .. ........................... $104.00
SINGLE COPY l'lliCE
of the market; demand very light on
Oaaly. •••....••. ···-········-·········l.S Cents
a hght to moderate movement
Subscribers not dcsirina to pay tbe earner may
ruul 1a a&lt;hana: direct 101'bclii&gt;aliJy ScneiDCI 011
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
I thret, SIX or 12 montll bais. Credit Will be
pomts 25.00-27.00. few 27.50; planl'
Am Ele Power ......................45 '1.
g•ven camer each week
Akzo ...................................,.. 311i!
No subscriphon by ma1l pmnined in areas
26.50-28.50. few 26.00.
where home earner SCNK:oe it available.
AmrTech ...............................47~
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs 23.00Publisher rcscrvcs the riJhl to adJUII raiCI dur·
Ashland 011 ..........................46'1.
25 00; 210-230 lbs. 20.00-23.00.
1ng the wbscripbOn period. Sublaiplion rile
changes may be amplcmcnted by chanain&amp; tbc ' AT&amp;T ..................................... 52\
Sows: mostly 1.00 lower.
Bank One ..............................41 '1.
dun.doo or lhc: iubsaiptk
U.S. 1-3, 300-400 lbs. 14.00Bob Evatii ............................19'J.
MAIL SIIISCIIIP'I10N
16.00; 400-500 lbs. 16.00- 17.00;
Borg-Warner
.........................
43~.
t.MeMclpc-y
Broughton ............................. l&amp;\
500-600 lbs. 17.00-19.00, few over
13 w.w ...................... J27.30
Champion
.............................
1
0\1.
600
lbs. 20.00.
26 w.w .................. - ...... m 82
Charm Shpa ........................... 4'1.
5 2 - . ......................... JlQS.S6
Boars: over 300 lbs. i0.00-12.00;
City Holdlng ............................3&amp;
Roles Oolslde,Mdlo Couey
under 300 lbs. 12.00-15 .00.
13 Vkells ................,•• _... ,1".J29.2S
Federal Mogul ....................... 52~
26 \Yeda .................. _, ____ .JS6.68
Estimated receipts: 31,000.
Gannen ................................. 59'1.
l2 - . ......... - .............Jt09.72
Prices
from Producers Livestock
Goodyear .............................49'1.
Kma.1 ..................................... 14'1.

Trustees to meet
The Letart Township Trustees wtll
meet Friday. 7 a.m. at the office
butldmg

The 'Daily 5en

e1 ,.
l

Reunion beld
The Ftfe reunion will be held Sunday at the Kyger Creek Club House
dinner at noon

Today's livestock report

Stocks

Reader Servtces
CorreCtion Polley

Kroger ..................................48'1.

,

O.r mola COIICCnl Ia lllllla'la lito be
accume. Jr you lmow ol u emil' fa 1
o!OI')', Clll the DOWSIOOII It (740) 992ZUS. We wtll doe&lt;k J&lt;Mir taro....aad aooke • &lt;OITOdloa tr warrulal.

News Departmentl
The lllllD aa11bcr II 99l-ll55. Depul·

m e a t . - ....:
CeDent
Mua&amp;et:-------------.lsL
UOI
Ne.._ _________________________
,,ll. lltn
or ltd. UN

Other ~

.u••,.t t 1 ____...............- ..........111- UN

-·------·-·-·---.Ild.
llll
---·
.J!sL UM

Ck I l'DII.....
Cloulllod A•

The Dall~ Sentinel • Page 3

Lends End .............................21'1.
Ltd ......................................... 22~
' Oak Hill Flnl ..........................1n
OVB .........................................40
: 0111 Valley ............................30'!.
1 Peoples .................................. 27
Prem Flnl .................................19
Rockwell ...............................39'1.
RD/Shell ..................................45

i

sears ................................... Aa'l.
1 Shoney'a ................................ ~
1 Star Bank .............................s-n..
Wendv'l .............................. .21 '!.

I

Woartblngton .......................13'.1.

1·

Stock rsporta ere the 10:30

I

-·-·-

Hospital news
Holur Medial Center
Discharges SepL I - Kayla
McClure, Dakota Pittenger. Kaya
Spires, Raul Gagucas, Grace Dunlap,
Lily Duncan, Anden Baker, Mrs.
Richard Weller and son, Ruth Wroblewski. Richard Patterson, William
Jacobs. Ariel Calhoun.

(Published with permission)

Association
Wednesday's trends:
Due to the large market of hogs.
the market trend IS not avatlable
today. Those needmg the trend should
contact thesr local market.
Cattle. 50 cents to 1.00 lower.
Summary of Tuesday's auctsons at
Caldwell. Eaton, Farmerstown. Lancaster and Wapakoneta:
Hogs:
Market hogs · 22 85-29.75 . light
sows 15 00-19 00. heavy sows 17 0023.!15.
Feeder pigs: 8 00-25 00 head;
25.00 cwt. and down.
All boar.; 14.00 and down
Cattle·
Slaughter steers; chotec 55.0061.00. select 50.00-60.00.
Slaughter hetfers; choice 54.0060.75; select 48.25-54 00.
Feeder cattle·
Yearlings steers 48 00-69.00;
heifers 43.00-64.00.
Calves steers 48.00-86.00; heifers
48.00-72.00.
Cows:
Commercoal and utility 30.0042.00: canter and cutter 34.00 and
down.
All bulls: 20.00-52.25.
Sheep &amp; lambs:
Choice wools 74.00 and down;
'choice clips 73.50 and down·

Couple issued marriage license

~ lllllr'iaie license was IsSued , Uwmx:e Adam$. o40, Reedsville,
=tly in the Meigs County Probate and Karen ~ lnhent, 33, Lona
1~;~~of;_;GI~IH~Ipolal;l.a;;;;;;a--;;;;;;/l Court of Judge Robert Bud tO David Bottom.

a.m. quotH provided by Aclvtlt

The following ca.o;es were settled
recently in the Meogs County Court
of Judge Patnck H. O'Brien.
Fined were. Harold D. Rice.
Athens, Ga. speed. $30 plus cost':
Steven R Scott. Cheshtre, speed, $30
plus cosl'; Aaron J. Stanley, Gallipolis. speed. $30 plus cost'; Brenda K David, Csncinnati. speed. $30
plus costs. Rtckey A. Wilt. North
Lawrence, seat belt. $25 plus cosl';
LeRoy R Dunaway, Oak Htll, overload. $282 plus costs; Gregory G.
Moiler. Wellston. overload. $529 plus
costs. Andy A. Trout. Albany. seat
belt. $25 plus costs; FranCIS R.
Delancy II, Parkersburg. W.Va ..
speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs. Cleveland E. Wsgal. Belpre. seat belt, $15 plus costs' Frednc
E LaCarbonare. Pomt Pleasant.
W.Va. speed. $30 plus costs:
Terry F. Martm, Csrcleville. speed.
$30 plus costs. Mary B Hemngton.
Wtlloughby, speed, $37 plus costs;
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Jackie 0.
Brooks. Cuyahuga Falls, failure to
yteld. $30 plus costs. Jolene Elcess.
Oak Hill . speed. $30 plus coSis; Carl
J Sealy, Vmcent, exptred tags. $20
plus costs. Delwon R. Laudermilt.
Syracuse. seat belt. $25 plus costs.
Ronald V Wtlson. Zanesville. speed,
$30 plus costs; Jerry Grueser. Le~­
tngton. speed, $30 plus costs. Julius
T Jones Jr.. Parkersburg. speed. $30
plus costs;
Anthony Westjohn. Pomeroy.
speed. $30 plus costs: Bnan M Pennington. Charleston. W.Va.. speed,
$30 plus costs ; Dale A. Pust, Finleyville. Pa. speed, $30 plus costs;
Jack B. Darnall. Pen Hook, Va ..
speed. $30 plus costs. Michael D.
Evans. Franklin Furnace. speed. $30
· plus costs. Roben B. Garges. Kellermg. speed. $30 plus wsts: Wayne E.
Rttcht~. Reedsvjlle, failure to control.
$20 plus costs. Sean Grueser. Racme,
overload. $75 plus costs, Roy F. Parker. Racme. overload. $125 plus costs;
Michael G. McKibben. McArthur.
seat belt. $25 plus costs; Jack D. Sorden Jr.. Mtddleport. speed. $30 plus
costs:
Bobby G. Rupe Jr, Langsvolle.
seat belt. $15 plus costs; Ahcia R
Mulford. Racine. fat lure to mamtam
a~sured clear dtstance. $20 plus costs.
Jason T. Han, Rutland, seat belt, $25
plus costs. Ryan E. Rickard, Letart.
W.Va .. stop &lt;~gn. $20 plus costs; ltmmy B. Wolfe. Mtddleport. failure to
control. $20 plus costs. Bmdford M
Anderson. Pomeroy. speed. $30 plus
costs. Rota Ca~to. Middleport, seat
belt. $15 plus cost~; James R. Lodwtck. Pomeroy. speed. $30 plus costs;
Clifford Murray Jr.. Pomeroy. seat
belt. $25 plus costs; Clarence W. Watson. Athens, seat belt. $15 plus costs.
lma V. Watson, Athens, seat belt. $25
plus costs, Patrtck J Mullen. Mtddleporl. seal belt. $25 plus costs:
Robert W. Arnott. Coolville.
underage consumptton, $200 plus
costs, three days pol suspended. probatson until 21 years old; Amanda
Adkms. Long Bottom. underage consumption. $200 plus costs. 10 days
Jatl suspended. probatton until 21
years old. 80 hours communsty servtce. Roben L. Writesel. Thurman.
underage consumption. $200 plus
costs. I0 days Jasl suspended. probatiOn until 21 year.; old. 80 hour.; communsty servtce, Ahcsa Mulford.

Racme. underage consump11on. $200
plus costs. three days Jasl suspended.
probation unttl 21 year.; old. Shawn
R. Ktog. Pomeroy. underage consumption. $200 plus costs. three
days jatl suspended. probatson unul
21 years old;
Samuel V. Rush. Racsne. undemge
consumpuon. $300 plus costs. 30
days jad suspended to five days. probation unul 21 years old: Charles
Johnson, Racsne. $30 plus costs. 30
days Jatl suspended 10 five days. probatiOn unttl 21 years old. Peggy
Caruthers. Racsne. contnbuung to the
delinquency of a rnmor. three counts.
$200 plus costs on each. I0 days Jatl
suspended on each. two years probatson. !10 hours communsty servtce.
furntshsng alcohol to a msnor. $200
plus costs. I 0 days Jasl suspended.
two years probatiOn. Mschelle R
Trussell. Mtddleport. dnvmg under
the mfluence. $850 plus costs, 10
days Jail suspended to three days. 90day operator's license suspenston. one
year probatson. Jail and $550 suspended upon completson of restdenttal treatment program.
Amber Blackwell. Pomeroy. pa..sing bad checks. $25 plus costs. resll·
tutson , Donna J Bentley. Pomeroy.
expsred tags. $20 plus costs: Joseph
W Lemaster. Ashvtlle. $150 plus
costs. five days pll and $75 suspended tf vahd OL present~d wsthm
90 days. one year probatson: speed.
$30 plus costs. possesston. $75 plus
costs, Jerrod R Vanlnwagen .
Pomeroy. assured clear dtstance. $30
plwr costs, General J Bays. Btdwell.
fa1lure to diSplay valid regtstratson.
$15 plus costs. unsafe v~hscle. $10
plus costs: Ronald D Pndemore.
Racme. dnvsng under tinancsal
responstbtllty actson suspe nsiOn .
$200 plus costs. 30 &lt;lays )atl suspended to three days. two years probatson. speed. $23 plus costs.
Doane Mslllron . Pomeroy. seat
belt. $25 plus costs Davtd A Smsth.
Albany. tao lure to dun h~adlsghts, $20
plus costs: seat belt. $25 plus costs.
Kenneth F Mstchell. Langsvtlle.
DUI. $950 plus costs 30 duys Jasl
suspenckd to three days. thre~ days
)atl and $550 suspended upon completion of restdenual treatment program. IH&lt;lays hous~ urrest. 90-uay
OL suspensmn. two years probation.
marked lanes. costs only; seat bell.
costs; Thomas S Fstch. Long Bonom.
dssorderly alter wamong, costs. 30
days pi I suspended to three days. two
years probutson. reslraomng order
ISSUed ,

Wtlllam Kslkenny Jr.. Chauncey.
DUI. $850 plus costs. stx months Jatl
suspended to 3 112 months. two
years probatson: Bnan E Durham.
Racme. dtsorderly conduct. $100
suspended. costs. restuuuon. one
year probation. restrasnsng order
ossued. Matthew A Durham,
Pomeroy. OISord~rl y conduct. $1!K)
suspended. co:\ts. restitUtiOn . one

year probatson. restrasnmg order
ISsued. Andre Harcnburg. Pomeroy.
contnbutsng to the delmquency ol a
mmor. costs, 60 days Jatl suspended.
two years probatton. restmmmg order
ISsued; Wtlllam A Smuh. Pomeroy.
seat belt. $25 plus cost&gt;. laslure to
control, $20 plus cosh. wmdow tsnt.
$20 plus custs.

Sundly A~g. 30 111111 T1lundly Sept. 3

MU81111111!0 ill 1:00, 8:111, 5:00, 7:11
INAKHYO ~
1:00, 3:15
-~--IMI'f R 1:00,3:40,7:20
WlllftllUC&amp;IJIBl "''' 1:00,5:38

IIMIICMIIIII1:15,8:25, 5:40.7:55
64 A
1:2Dt8:3J, 5:40, 7:50
111 PIIIIM TRAP 1'1 1:11, 4:15, 7:20
.1181111 BMIIII ~ 1:40, 425, 7:Z11
IAVNi PRNm RYAN " Z:OO, 7:00
lUll
"
t10,4:50, 1:11
M1 MTB1 ,.~
8:00,7:30
AI Ill: Gllllllllecelver ~ 531, 7:40
ALL AGEl, ALL TtMU $4.00

***************
BIG

[0 MoVIeS
'

VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT
INCOME TAX OFFICE
WILL BE CLOSED
SEPTEMBER 3, 1998
THROUGH
SEPTEMBER 8, 1998
PLEASE USE DROP
SLOT BESIDE
DOOR OF OFFICE FOR
PAYMENTS
OR MAIL TO
PO BOX 106,
MIDDLEPORT

081045760

Call For Mov1c l• m&lt;',

1·740-753·3400

Milt ln~c~ £V(R ~oAt •

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

McGwire's HRs set
new league mark,
help Cards win 7-1
Nlroundup
By The Aaaoclated Press
With two big swings, Mark M~:G ­
wire era.o;ed Hack Wilson from the
record boolt and moved within four
hOmer; of Roger Maris' record.
"It's a pretty awesome feat. I'm
totally e~cited," McGwire said after
homering twice to reach 57 and lead
the St. Louis Cardinals over the Florida Marlins 7-1 on Tuesday night.
McGwire hit a 45(}.foot drive off
Livan Hemanrkz (I O-Il) leading off
the seventh. then hit a 472 -foot shot
to nearly the same spot off Done Pall
leading off the ninth.
'The 57 homers put McGwire two
ahead of Chicago's Sammy Sosa and
broke the NL record set by Wilson in
1930.
"They lock like pingpong balls
going out." Marlins manager Jim
Leyland said. " I haven 't seen anything like it."
It was McGwire's seventh multi·
homer game this season and the 50th
of his career. leaving him four short
of Maris' record with 24 games left.
McGwire is on a pace to finish with
67 homer;.
"This is a great thing happening
in baseball," he said. "We don't
know if it 'll ever happen again."
At Miami. Matt Morris (5-4)
allowed one run in seven innings.
P'dll wasn't happy he gave up No.. 51 .
"I don't want to be part of hi story." Pall said. "II means nothing to
me. l don't care what number it is. I'll
hold my head up high because I went
after him with my best stuff."
In other games, Chicago beat
Cincinnati 6-5. San Diego beat New
York 9-8. San Francisco beat Montreal 9-7. Atlanta beat Houston 6·4.
Colorado routed Milwaukee 12-3
and Los Angeles beat Philadelphia 32 and Ariwna beat Pitlsburgh 4-3.
Cubs 6, Reds 5
AI Wrigley Field. Sosa went 0-for4 with three strikeouts, but Mark
Grace broke a 4-alltie in the eighth
with a homer off Gabe White (5-4)
that put Chicago ahead to stay.

"I had a bad day, " Sosa said.
"You' re not go ing to do it all in one
day. I' II come bock out tomorrow and
maybe I can have the same kind of
day Mark MeG wire had. I' m pulling
for Mark. I want him to gel the record
fir;t. ..
Mall Karchner (2·0) worked one
inning for the win and Rod Beck got
three outs for his 41st save. Chicago
moved one game ahead of the Mets
in the wild-card race.
Padrn 9, Mets 8
Quilvio Veras drew a bases-loaded
walk to force in the go-ahead run in
the seventh after San Diego wasted a
6-1 lead.
Trevor Hoffman pitched the ninth
for his 45th save. breaking the club
record set by Mark Davis in 1989 en
route to winning the NL Cy Young
award.
Greg Vaughn hit his 46th and 47th
homm. went 3-for-5. drove in three
runs and scored three times. Randy
Myers ( 1-0) got the last out of the
seventh for the win. Turk Wendell (41) lost for the visiting Mets.
Giants 9, Expos 7
Joe Carter hit his first homer in 40
career at-bats as a pinch hitter, a
three-run drive that sparked a sevenrun si~th inning as San Francisco rallied from a 5-1 deficit at home.
Barry Bonds and Jeff Kent also
homered for the Giants, two·games
behind Chicago in the wild-card
race. Kent added a sacrifice ny in the
eighth for his IOOth RBI.
John Johnstone (3·5) pitched two
innings in relief of Danny Darwin.
and Robb Nen got three outs for his
34th save. Steve Kline (2-6) was the
loser.
Braves 6, Astros 4
Javy Lopez homered for his founh
straight game, a three-run drive in the
founh . After visiting Houston rallied
to tie it at 4, Ozzie Guillen drove in
the winning run with a two-out single in the sixth off Scotl Elanon (II)

Denny Neagle ( 14-11) won
despite allowing 10 hits and all four
runs in six innings, and Kerry Ligten·

Page4
Wednesday, September 2, 1998

Houston wins second straight WNBA title

Comets top Mercury 80-71 in tiebreaker

Whiten's clutch
single helps Tribe
'get by Angels 7-6

MOVE OVER, HACKl - The St. Louis Cardinals' Mark McGwlre
slaps five with first base coach Dave McKay after homering In the
ninth Inning of Tueaday nlght'a National League game against the
host Florida Marlins, who loat 7-1. McGwlre'a homers, which broke
the previous league record (56) aet by the Chicago Cuba' Hack Wll·
son In 1930, also put him four away from tying Roger Marls' lingleseason record (61 ). (AP)

the win as the Indians got their 14th
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mark last at-bat victory and eighth at
Whiten has done just about every- home . Tim s~lmon hit his 24th
thing the Cle\'eland Indians have homer for the Angels - his ninth of
asked of him.
the year against Cleveland.
On Tuesday night. the part-time
se~son. playing for injured fim
outfielder bailed out manager Mike baseman Jim Thome. is CJe,·eland's
.Hargrove:s failed late-inning,strate· holiest hitler including 16-for-34
gies with an RBI single in the ninth (.471) with five homm on the curas the Indians beat the Anaheim rent homestand . The fans booed
Angels 7-6.
loudly when Hargrove asked Sexson
"It really doesn' t matter where to sacrifice with the go-ahead nmner
I'm at when I'm playing baseball." on second in the seventh and ninth
said Whiten. who was playing in the innings.
Me~ican League when the Indians
The 6-foot -8 rookie had no sacri signed him on May 6. "I just try to fices in 402 plate appearances in the
do the best I can and try to help the minors this season and has none in
team any way I can. whether it's 110 career at -bats in the majors.
pitching an inning or whatever."
" If you notice. I didn 't ask David
Whiten actually struck out the side Justice to bunt with runners on r.rst
while allowing a run in a 12-2 loss at and second." said Hargrove. referring
Oakland on July 31 . On Tuesday to Justice's pinch-hit. RBI single that
night. he was back in his element tied it ot 6 in the seventh, "So I
the bauer's box.
haven'tlosl all my marbles yet."
Manny Ramirez led off the ninth
Cleveland starter Jaret Wright
'with an infield single off the glove of allowed si~ runs and seven hits in 5
Rich DeLucia (1-5).
2/J innings. fie walked two •md
Allen Watson came on to face Jus- struck out 'i.x. C'hud Finley - the
tice. who lined a single off first base- other platinum-blond staner man Darin Erstacl's glove. Ramirez allowed five runs and nine hits in 4
barely made it to second hecause he 113 innings with one walk ;md three_
dived back 10 first lo avoid a possi· strikeouts.
Justice tied it at 6 with an RBI sin. ble double play.
, Angels manager Terry Collins gle off left-hander Mike Holtz in the
i argued that first base coach AI Bum- seventh - throwing his hat at the
: bry touched Ramirez to alert him that ball for a blooper to right that scored
the ball was in the outr.eld. Bumbry Travis Fryman, who singled.
admilled getting close. but said he
"David Justice is not afmid of any
I never touched the runner.
left-handed pitcher in this league."
, "The rule is . you can't touch Collins said. "That's what he does
' him." Bumhry said. "' I ran toward best. gets his bat on the ball ...
him ;md was yelling to go. I realized
Cleveland took a 5-3 lead in the
I was too dose and backed off."
fifth with help from an unchamcter·
Olivares relieved . Richie Sexson. istic error by Jim Edmonds. After
batting .JN-1. l:&amp;iled to sacrifice when Cora singled to extend his hilling
he bunted hack to the mound. streak lo IR games. Ramirez groundRamirez was forced at third to set up ·ed a one-out single to center that
rolled under Edmonds' glove, allowWhiten's winning hit.
" I get a charge out of anything. ing Com to score.
man. whether it's a hit or throwing
Pep Harris relieved Finley with
somebody out ," said Whiten. known the bases loaded and got Whiten to
for his strong arm . "I just tried to stay ground into an inning-ending double
play.
on the hall •md put it in play."
Steve Reed ~2 - 2) got four outs for
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

PERROT

10

scallered five hits in seven shutout
innings at Dodger Stadium. and
Charles Johnson hit a two-run homer.
Bobby Estalella led off the ninth
with a 444-fool homer off Jeff Shaw,
who finished for his 39th save. Paul
Byrd (2·2) lost despite allowing only
one run and two hits in si~ innin~s.
Diamondbacks 4, Pirates 3
Omar Daal (7 -9) struck out a
team-record 12 baiters in eight
innin~s and vi siting Arizona won its
fourth straight. tying the cluh best.
Gregg Olson finished for his 24th
save. Chris Peters (7-9) was the loser.

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- When the.
Cincinnati Bengals sat down to vote
for their captains. they made a statement about Neil O'Donnell.
He wa.• one of the four chosen.
Signs were everywhere Tuesday
that o·Donnell ha.s completed the
transformation into one of the Bengals' lender;. He was a top vote-get·
ter in the balloting. then tutored a
receiver as he led the first-string
offense through its daily practice.
Afterwards, he fulfi lied the start-

pleased with that," coach Bruce
Coslet said, after announcing that
Donnell had been voted a co-captain. "It shows be's earned the respect
and the trust of the guys in his hud·
die and he's made great strides at fit·
ting in.
"That's one of the things I told all
of the new free agents - you have
to lit in a.s fa.st as you possibly can.
And he's done a good job with that."
There are still a few rubs. For one
thing, O'Donnell still has to get used
to the idea of being the staning quilr-

o·

terbuck in Cincinnati.
week." o· Donnell said. "J' ve been
In five seasons as the stuner for playing long enough to know you
AFC Central rival Pitt•burgh and two definitely want to give the fans and
with the New York Jet•. 0 ' D&lt;mnell • the people of CinciMati something to
had the Benguls' number. He staned cheer for." '
I0 games against Cincinnati, won
The fans are ready 10 see how their
nine and threw for 20 touchdowns quanerback drama unfolds when
and only three interceptions.
they stan playing for real.
He'll be cheered Sunday when
When the Bengals signed O'Donhe's introduced before a game against nell on July 7, they made it clear he
the Oilers at Cinergy Field. some- could win the job. Two solid e~hibi ­
thing he's going to have to get used tion games were enough.
to.
The only question left when the
"It's going to feel better each Bengals got around to the final ros·

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
New year. new team. same results
- a theme the Southern volleyball
team under the tenure of coach
Howie Caldwell has used in the past
several seasons in building a program
with unequaled statistics over the past
four year;. Southern continued to
uphold that tradition Tuesday night in
the season opener against Belpre, one
of the tougher teams in the Ohio
· Division of the Tri-Valley Conference.
Southern claimed the big league
openerhy defeating Belpre 15-5. 15·
6. Senior Kim Sayre and Kim lhle
combined for 10 scoring points each
and added great noor games to spark
the Tornadoes. Stacy Lyons added
six. Kara King two, and one each by
Katie Cummins and Laraine Lawson.
Belpre was led by Amanda Busbey with four points. Rachelle Morey
and Dwan Preston with three each.
and one from Michelle Brown.
Southern took a 5-0 lead in the
first match after Sayre serves, then
opened up a 6-3 lead. 9-5 was as
close as Belpre came before Sayre

Baseball
AL standings
Eutem Dlvlsion

.!! J. r&lt;t.

Iwa

y·New Yort .. ,.. .. .. ..
...... 99 :n
.128
Bmton ....... ...
..KO ~ . ~K8
Toronto ...
........ .12 66 .m

.

!ill

,

2R

Baltimore ... . ............... ..... 69

69

.~

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TompD Bny '\" ................. ~J

IW

.)i]

46!

Cn~lnl

Dl"ilion

CLEVELAND .... ............... 16 61

.m

Kan.,u City ....... .......... .. .64

.464
.457

ll h

. 44~

ll

74

Chicngo ......... ................. 6:\ 7S
Minnesota ......................... 61 76
Detroit ....
.. ........... n s ~

.:\84

Western Dtvlslon
Anahcim ..... .
.... .76 6.1 .541

IJ ~~

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2',
12
IJ

Tuesday's scom

N.Y. Yankees 7, Oukland 0
Se:~ule

IJ-1), 7:Jl p.ra

Oakland (Herdia 2·0) ac N.Y. Y11nkees (Cone
18-4). 7:Jl p.m.
Toronto (Escobar :l-2) Ill Kansns City (Rosado 710), 8:0S p.m.
Tampa Bay (Alvarez S- IJ) at Minnesota
(Hawkins 7-12), B:()j p.m.

7, 8os10n J

Thursday's gamtS

Chicago White Sox 9, Baltimore~
Toronto 2. Kans111 City I
Detroill1. Te~aJ 8
CLEVELAND 7, Anaheim 6
Minnesota 6, Tampa Bay~ ( 10)

CLEVELAND !Gooden 6-61 " O.&amp;roil !Thompson I().12), 7:0S p.m.

Tonittht's games

Bo11on
(Mill1inetll-4l ntToron1o (Williams 108). 7:0:'i
p.m.

Swtle (Suzuki 0-0) at Boston (Avery 9·6), 7:0:'\

p.m.
Teus (Hellinc 16-7) at Detroit (Moehler 12-11 ),
Hl5pm
Chicago W~i t e Sol &lt;Snyller 4-2) at Ballimore
(Pon100 7-8). 7.~p. m .
Anaheim (Sp:rl.s P.-2) at CLEVELAND (Colon

TampA Bay (ReWr l -1)m MinnesOfii(Radkc 10.
1)).

I:IS p.m.

NL standings

:rAtlanta.

Easttm Dh·blon

.!! J. r&lt;t.

. ................ 91

4H

.6S~

()O\'T \IISS TillS 0:\E!

1998 GMC Yukon 4WD-4Door
•sLT Decor Pkg.
•Power Seats
• Locking Rear Differential
•Front and Rear Air Conditio~
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•vonec 350 V-8
•Remote Keyless Entry
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!ill

New Yorlt.. ............. ............ 16 6.1
PbiloU:Iphio... ... ....
..66 7)
Montreal ........ .... .................. l ) 81
............. .41 92
Floridn .. .
Houston
Ollcaa;o .
St. louis .......

.S41
.47l

.)19
J)8

ll
2.1

J!'h
44

Ctfttral Dl•lsion
........... 81 .12 .626
.... .11 62 .lS4
................ 66 12 .418

20~

.471

21'h

.... 6l 14 .46H
.. .. ....64 14 .46-1

22
22:\

.............

Wuttm mvllktn
.... 90 49 .641
S11.n Diego
San Francisco .....
...ll 64 . ~
.........69 10 .496
. ..... 64
~~~~-·.
Arizonn .. .................... .. 54

n

Hl

~

.460

Il
21
26

J !R

)6

ter cut Sunday was whether Blake
would stay or go. They decided to
keep Blake a.• the backup. with Paul
Justin at No. 3.
Blake, who wa.s selected for the
Pro Bowl in 1995 and staned the last
three sea.wns, declined to talk about
his status on Tuesday. Coslet says
he's not happy about being the back·
up, but Blake won't discuss his feelings about the role and how he 'II handle it.
"I don't care about that ri~ht
now." Blake said.

·'\ y

MARILYN ELIAS
USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO - High
school jocks slightly outscore other
boys with the girls. but girls on sports
teams are much less sexually active
than female classmates. says a study
out Tuesday.
"It looks like the double standard
. is alive and well in high ~hool. " says
Debra HalTner. president of the Sexualil)' Information and Education
01uncil of the United St&lt;~les. "Boys
who feel good about themselves
have sex. and girls who feel good
about themselves don't."
Past research has found athletic
participation improves the self-image
of girls and boys. she says. ·
In the survey of 611 high school
teenagers. athletes are somewhat less
likely than other boys to be virgins.
If se~ually acti\'e. they also start ear·
Jier and have more partners. says
• sociologist Kmhleen Miller of
George W•"hin~ton University. The
~ differences (or girls are much larger.
• she told the American Sociological

Colomdo 12, MilwDUkc:c J
Los Anaeku ), Ptail*-lpflia 1
Slln Dieco 9. N.Y. Mets R
San Froncisco 9, Momn:al7

Toclay's games
Cuh~ CTmchMI14-1). 2:20.,r.·"'·
"fontreGI ( azqurz 4- nl a! San Frand scu
(R~~.:tcr 13-9), 3JS p.m.
St. l..OOM,CMen:ker K-11) 11 Fiorillo (Sanchc:th7), 7:0:'i p.m.

CINCINNATI (Ben: 1-0) at Olicngt'

10

Tuesday's scores
Arizona 4 Pituburah J

r-------------------------------------.
~w:~~~Ali:::::: .
Milwaukee ........

72

S1. l...ollil 7, Aorida I Atlllllta 6, Hoollon 4
Chicoao Cubs 6, CINCINNATI l

RANDALL F. HAWKINS, MD

.

...
.-.

• STRESS TESTS
ECHO CARDIOGUPHY
• DIABETIC MANAGEMENT
• CHOLESTEROL COUNSELING
• BLOOD PRESSURE
• THYROID DISORDERS
• CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE

..
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Medical Office Bldg., 2520 Valley Dr.
WV
Suite 212 • Pt.

it hinder us throughout the rest of the
game. We wanted to light back. We
did that with defense. teamwork and
offense. We stuck together."
Michelle Griffiths Jed the Mercury
with 24 points. and Jennifer Gillom
had 20.
"We did come back quite a few
times. JUS! playing wit~ poise and
going to the players who were hot.
Michelle Griffiths and Jennifer
Gillom." Michele Timm' 'aid. " I
think we worked the otTense pretty
wdl but they are a great ball club."
The Comets never lrJiled in the
first half ,.nd withstood a mild
Phoenix rally for a 32-26 halftime
lead.
But the Mercu ry kept up the
charge early in the second half when
they tied the score twice and too~
their only lead uf the game. 47 -45.
with 14:47 left on a ba,ket by Grif·
lith,.

C-\H FOB YOl 'H .\10\EY!

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Associa~ion.

Among findings:
- 54( PC) of athletic girls never
had sex, compared with 41 (PC) of
those not on teams.
- 34(PC) of female athletes said
they had had intercour;e four or more
times. vs. 53( PC) of non-athlete
girls.
- By age 1~. only I in 10 athletes
llil\'e started sex. vs. I in 4 of the nonathletic girls.
"Spons changes the image girls
have of their hodies. They see them
as tools to be used. rather than
objects to be desired," Miller says.
"The coaches tell us. with this added
conlidence. girls have the power to
say no if they want to. They don't
have to trade se~ for popularity."
Athletic success garners boys
"extra status and popularity. plus the
locker-room culture may encoumge
them to be se~ually aggressive,"
Miller adds .
About half of hi~h school boys
play sports. ~he says. In 1971. I in 27
girls "'as on a h i~h school team: now
it 's I in 3.

·-.-· ·. -. ·

' '· f: ·','.
&gt;·

~

•.•,

.,

ok1·e.

..
.-

MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) - Cary
Middlecoff. a two-time U.S. Open
champion und winner of the 1955
Masters, died Tuesday of hean fail·
ure. He was 77.
A former dentist. Middlecoffwon
40 professional golf tournaments and
is tied for seventh on the PGA's
career victory list.
When back sui'Jlery forced Mid·
dlecoff to retire from l'Ompetitive
golf in 1963. he had about $290.000
in career earnings and wa~ among the
sport's leading caieer money win·
ner; .
"'Now they make that much in a
week."' Middlecoff once told
reporters.
He won the U.S. Open in 1949
and 1956.
" He's the greatest player we ' ve
ever had and his record bear; that
out." Dick Horton. executive direc·
tor of the Tennessee Golf Associa·
tion, told The Commercial Appeal of
Memphis. "In these modem times
with so much parity. I don't think
anybody could ever equal the record
he had."
•
Middlecoff eon~idered his 19S6
U.S. Open title at Rochester, N.Y.• as
"'probably my greatest accomplish~

:::1 :

-

- --

--

-

ment in golf." But. he had no greater
appreciution for a site than Augusta
National Golf Club, home of the
Masters. where he also was a twotime runner-up.
"I still love the place," Middlecoff
s:Jid in 1994. "I dearly loved playing
there."
Middlecoff had been in poor
health for several year;. A fall at his
home in 1993 resUlted in a severe
head injury. He had not played (!Oif.
even casually. since the early 19'l0s.
After more than 15 year; us a tour·
ing pm and another 10 yelll'S as a tele·
' 'is ion commentator. Middlecoff preferred privacy.
"Even if I could play real well
now. I wouldn't play the Senior
(PGA) Tour," he said in 1994. " I'm
just traveled out."
"He was a long, straight driver
and long-iron player and a great put·
ter." recalled Tommy Bolt. 82. who
played on the tour with MiddlecofT,
Born in Halls, Middlecolf allended high school at Memphi~ Central
and Christian Brothen and was 1ft
all -Arne~ soJfer at the Univenity
of Mis~issippi.
'
Inducted in 1992. Mlddlccofl' is a
chaner member of the ~nnesttee
Golf Hall of Fame.

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·. · U.S. ·open, Masters champion
Cary Mlddlecoff dies at 77

Board Certified Internal Medicine

OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:30·5:00, WED. 8:30-NOON
Acceptinl New P•tints

~IOHE

show.
Over a 3_2-second span. Swoopes
fed Janet Arcain for a layup then
blocked a shot that led to her own
ba.•ket at the other end. That made it
68-61 and the Mercury never got
closer than four points the rest of the
way.
"I've always been the kind of
player to feed off of defense."
Swoopes said of her key block. " I
just felt that if she (Brandy Reed)
makes that shot the game could have
gone the other way. At that point. we
:ouldn"t get anything going. We told
:lllr.;elves we had to concentrate on
defense."
Tina Thompson had 16 points for
Houston , and Swoopes scored II of
her 16 points in the second half.
"We knew they ' d make some
runs. we just didn 'tlet it bother us,"
Cooper said. "We didn' t want to let

Sentinel

Study says female athletes
are less sexually active
than un-athletic -classmates

Scoreboard
Te.., .. ......................
7) 6l .l29
Scanle ..
..................... 63 74 .460
O.klond .............................63 7&amp; .m
y-clinched playoff ber1h

(Continued from Page 4)
Salmon singled and Edmonds
doubled to start the sixth. and Garret
Ander;on cut it to 5-4 with a sacri·
fice ny. Wright was pulled after hit·
ting Gary DiSarcina to load the
bases, and Gregg Jefferies have Ana·
heim a 6-5 lead with a two-run sinpushed it to 13-6. then Lyons added gle. The rally ended when Kenny
the last two to seal the win.
Lofton caught DiSarcina overrunning
The momentum carried over to third.
the second game a.• Belpre took a I·
Notes: Thome, out since Aug. 7
0 lead tiut quickly fell to 3-1 on with a broken right hand. is sched·
Lyons serves. Southern slowly drift· uled to stan swinging a bat today. He
ed away from the tightest point of could start taking balling prnctice on
contention. 8-5. sparked by eightlhle Sept. I I and get back in the lineup on
points. including five that closed the Sept. 18. ... Lofton was caught steal·
ing in the eighth, snapping a streak of
game.
Statistically. Sayre was 13-13 18 straight steals. It was the IOOth
serving and 29-32 setting. while lhle caught stealing of his career. ... The
was 10-13 and 2-4 spiking with two Angels haven't had a winning Sepkills. Lyons was 4-8 serving with four tember since 1991 . They were 48-82
aces. and si&lt; kills. Fallon Roush was in the past five Septembers. includ·
7-14 spiking with si~ kills, Kara King ing a collapse in 1995. when they lost
was 4-5 serving with an ace. Heather the AL West to Seallle.
Dailey had a kill. Katie Cummins had
an ace and a kill. and Laraine L1W·
To get a current weather
son had a good noor game. Sarah
Brauer also added a kill .
report, check the
Southern won the reserve match
15-2, I5-4 led by Emily Sth·ers with
nine points. Tammy Fryar with eight.
Macyn Ervin six, Stacy Wilson two,
Stacy Mills two. and Rachel Allen
three.
For Belpre Katie Whitlatch,
Christie Lowe and Amanda Deserio
each had two.

The Comets trailed the Mercury
by 12 points with 7:24 to play Saturday before rallying for a 74-69 over·
time victory.
The Comets had the same magic
Tuesday night when they wouldn't
allow Phoeni~ to take over when the
Mercury took a 47-45 lead. Cooper
gave pan of the credillo Chancellor's
purple towel speech at a team meet·
ing Monday.
Chancellor held up a white towel
and told the team it wa.s purple.
"If I say it's purple, it's purple."
Chancellor said. "If I say it's so, it's
so. You listen to me tomorrow and
we'll win."
The Comet• got the message in
the second half Tuesday night when
the Mercury cut Houston's lead to 62·
61 with 7:40 to play. Swoopes start·
ed it with two free throws for a 6461 lead and then she really put on a

Southern spikers get
victory over Belpre

Bengals make O'Donnell captain, Blake backup quarterback
ing quanerback's job of talking to the
media about the upcoming opponent.
About a dozen reponer; and photographers formed a semicircle around
his dressing cubicle and got his
thoughts about the Tennessee Oilers.
Jeff Blake, whose job he took, was
ignored as he dressed by himself
three cubicles nway.
He's been a Bengal for Jess than
three months and he's still learning
the offense. but O' Donnell already is
thel'ocal point.
"I think it says a lot and I was

.... ~ Indians ...

YESI - The Houston Cornela' Cynthia Cooper celebraiH with
teammate Kim Parrot following their team'e 80-7111tJe.cllnchlng victory over the Phoenix Mercury Tuesday night In Houston. (AP)

'I

berg got his 25th save.
Rockies 12, Brewers 3
Jamey Wright (8-12) allowed five
hits in six innings to set a career high
for wins. and Darryl Hamilton hit a
three-run homer at County Stadium.
Mike Lansing drove in two runs
for the Rockies. who scored four runs
in the eighth following a 1-hour. 12·
minute rain delay and three in the
ninth. Bill Pulsipher (2·1) alloiVed
three runs and five hits in five
innings.
Dodgers 3, Phlllles 2
Jsmael Valdes ( 10-9). making his
first appearance in over five weeks,

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) - The Houston
Comets' biggest star; always seem to
come out in the second half.
Cynthia Cooper scored 23 points
and Sheryl Swoopes led a late second-half charge Tuesday night a.• the
ComeLs beat the Phoeni~ Mercury
80-71 fortheirsecond WNBAcham·
pionship.
"For the first time in this series we
didn't panic," Cooper said. "We
didn't get down on oullielves or
argue among ourselves."
For the second game in a row, the
Comets fell behind in the second half
and for the second game in a row,
they rallied to win to take the best-ofthree series 2-1.
"'I ' m so glad that we won our sec·
ond championship in a row." Comet•
coach Van Chancellor said. "'Thank
God for great players."

a minute

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�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Too much bed rest can make low back pain worse

Page&amp;
Wedne1day, September 2, 1998

lions associated with age or injury
and are very seldom the cause of
back pain.
About pne percent of back pain is
caused by potentially serious conditions such as osteoporosis, infection
of the spine or nervous system,
John C. Wolf, D.O.
tumors, abdominal aortic aneurysm
or kidney problems. The history of
pain and Olhet- associated symptoms
alerts the do.:tor 1.0 order plain Xsurgery. Now, however, we know rays or other imaging studies. In the
Question: I've recently bad a lot that almost all of these abnormalities majority of back pain sufferen. like
of back pain. My doctor just told me are the result of degenerative condi- you. Xrays don't clarify the diagnoto take ibuprofen and 10 do some
exercises. Shouldn't he take X-rays?
When my mother had a similar back
problem years ago she was put to
bed rest for two weeks. Why didn 't ·
my doctor recommend this for me?
Answer: Back pain is a common
complainllhattroubles 80 percent of
adults some lime during their life.
Your mother and I belong to this
popular club, so you're welcome to
join us, 1oo!
There are many conditions that
can cause back pain in adults. Fonunately. the mosl common ones
involve disorders of the muscles, lhe
bones, and/or the way they work (or
don't work) together. The reason
these are fortunate is that they are
not associated with serious or lifethreatening conditions but rather
with things like muscle injury, ligament sprains, arthritis and a condition that osteopathic physicians call
We Sell Money Orders
"somatic dysfunction ," In these disorders a careful history of lhe sympWe Wire Money
toms and a physical examination arc
Postage Stamps
usually all thai is necessary to establish lhe dia~~:nosis.
Film Developing
Since the 1930s X-rays have been
Pre-paid Phone Cards
routinely used to help evaluate complaints of back pain. Deformity of
Foodland Gift Certificates
the shape or location of bones ts
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
shown with these "plain" X-ray
films. Therefore, broken bones and
Columbia Gas Payments
tumors are often seen. In recent
Lottery Tlcketl
years, sophisticated imaging using
(exceptlluc:keye)
MRI or CT scanning have become
available. These newer imaging
tools are much more sensitive at
showing abnormalities in the low
.Ohio Yalley Bank
back - not only of the bones but also
cf the adjacent muscles. ligaments,
"Superbank" Services
nerves and intervertebral disks.
-Greeting Cards
These types of soft tissue are not
clearly shown by plain X-rays.
•Floral Sales
X-rays, MRI and CT scans often
•We accept credit cards
show some abnormality of the lowback structures. At one time almost
Asst. Varieties
anyone with such a positive X-ray
finding would be advised to have

Don't marry someone you don't love - and quit having sex with her
and other hard times in my life. I
don't understand why I don't feel
Ann
romantic love for her, but I don 'I.
Her parents are now pteSSuring me
Landers
into a marriage I don't want
How can I get out of this' She is
a very decent person and I don't
want to hurt her.
Dear Ann Landrn: R.ecendy, I
I need your advice fast because
asked a woman to marry me. I have her mother is talking about an Octoknown her for seven yean. We have ber wedding. Maybe seeing this in
been both friends and lovers. the paper will help. We all read your
Although I have never been faithful column. •· Not in Love
to her, I'm preuy sure she bas been
Dear Not in Lovr: If the chemfaithful to me .
istry isn't there. it is useless to try 10
After graduating from the same manufacture it. II won't work.
high school, we went to the same
Tell your fiancee that you have
university in a nearby stale.
given the matter of marriage more
Her family adores me. and my thought and havo decided against it,
family adores her. She has stood by for her sake as well as yours. If you
me through the death of my brother have given her an engagement ring ,

tell her she can keep it
Resist pressure from her mOiher
or anyone else 10 many the woman.
And plcue stop sleeping with bu. or
you could fmd younclf up that wellknown creek with no paddle.
Dear Au Laaden: Here 's
anodlet- one for your "llupid crook"
file . I laughed when I read it and
hope you will, too. •• B.T. in Houston
Dear B.T.: I roared, but I'd have
to say that cashier was preuy lucky.
Here's your contribution:
The Ann Arbor News crime column reported that a man walked into
a fast-food restaurant in Ypsilanti,
Mich., a1 5 a.m., flashed a gun and
demanded cash.
The cashier turned him down,
saying be couldn't open the cash

register without a food order. The
man said, "OK. I'll have an order of
onion rinp." The cashier responded, " We don't serve onion rinJS for
breakfast. "

The man became extremely
annoyed and stomped out 'That was
the last the cashier saw of him .
Drar Aaa Laden: I am writing
in response 10 the column about the
drunken fish. The writer explained
how, in an experiment he had fed
alcohol to several fash and found
that the intoxicated fish were nursed
by their partners until lbey sobered
up and could swim straight. He
added , "I wondered, when the
experimenl was over, if we humans
had similar compassion for our
intoxicated brethren."
Obviously, be has never lived

with an active alcoholic. For yem,l
was my buJband's nurse, punching
bag, clcanina lady and bank
account I was also the peacemaker,
storyteller and both mother and
falbrr to our toddler son.
I began 10 lose my compassion,
along with my self-esteem, when
month after month, year after year,
my "fish" never sobered up.
I have since struggled to swim
upstream alone, leaving my husband
to nounder and possibly drown.
Compassion? I have none left The
dark, murky waters of alcoholism
destroyed it
Alcoholics Anonymous, along
with the grace of God, saved my
husband's life and mine. too. My
son and I no longer live in fear of
what to expect when Daddy comes

amilp

~L7/77 ,...,..,.,a

home.
For those drowning alcoholics
who are trapped by the undertow of
this cunning disease, AA can be a
life preserver. Keep telling your
readers about it. -- Swimming Sober
in New Port Richey, Aa.
Dear Swimmio1 Sober: Congratulations on your victory. I shall
continue to tell my readers about AA
by printing letters such as yours.
The first step is as close as your
phone book. folks . l.ook up Alcoholics Anonymous, find out when
the next meeting is, and GO.

EASTMAN'S

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

Calif. 90045

Community CalendaF-------The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profil
groups wishing to announce mcclings and special events. The calcndar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items arc
printed as space permits and cannot .
be guaranteed to run a specific num-'
ber of days.

Shade River Lodge Hall . Chester.

SATIJRDAY

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Board of Trustees, regular session, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, township
garage on Joppa Road .

ATHENS
Guthrie/Story
reunion SaiUrday al the Athens
County 4-H building on the Alhens
County fairgrounds. Dinner will be
at noon. Bring table service and covered dish.

HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM, Stated
Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
All Master Masons welcome.
MIDDLEPORT -

Eblin family

reunion, Saturday. noon. Dave Diles
Park, Middlepon. Take covered
dish, table service, and lawn chairs.
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878, Saturday, potluck dinner, 6:30

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy •lldclleport, Ohio

p.m. following hy meeting at R p.m.
SUNDAY
LETART Homer F. and
Amanda Donahue reunion. Letart
Community Building. Lctan. W. Va.
Sunday.

sis or improve the tRatment; they
only increase the cost of bealtb ~Experience has shown that days
of bed rest prolong the disability of
musculoskeletal back pain , not
shorten it Most people with acute
back rain benefit from a day or two
of re~t but not strict bed rest Gentle
exer"ise 1.0 stretch and tone the sore
bac~ muscles and exercises for the
abdominal muscles promote a
quicker recovery. Heat or cold can
also help. The vigor of the exercises
is increased as the discomfort

decreases. Pain medicine, such as
the ibuprofen you are taking, is often
adequate but occasionally stronger
ones are needed for the first few
days.
Manipulative treatment can also
be quite benefiCial in reducing discomfort IIKl getting people back 10 a
nonnal life. If your back d1scomfort
isn't improving in a few w· oks, you
may want to consider &gt;eeing a
physician who can perform this type
of therapy. Some allopathic physicians (M .D.s) and all osteopathic

physicians (D.O.s) are trained in
these manual medicine techniques.
The treatmeDIS provided by physical
therapists and chiropractors can also
be helpful.
"FIIIIIily Medicine" io a wedd)'
column. To submit queatioas;
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., ohiO·
University Collec• ol Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
Att-s, Ohio 45701.

PLAY AND WIN WITH

•

•

•

FOODLAND

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Musicians Junior
and Rita White performing al the .
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center Thursday. 5:30p.m. after dinner.
Public invited . No admission
charge.
RACINE - · Racine American
Legion Post 602. meets at 6:30p.m.
Meal to follow.

-,rc:»...

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline .
Chapler 172. OES, Thursday. 7:30
p.m. Middlepon Masonic Temple.

~.-.

...

•CASH UP TO $500.00
•84,000 FREE GROCERY PRODUCTS
•10,000 FREE TURKEYS
•3 FORD RANGER·STEPSIDEPICK.UPS

CHESTER - Pomeroy Chapter
186, OES, Thursday, 7:30 at the

Chester Garden
Club hears Ohio
wildlife program
Speakers from lhe Ohio Wildlife
Division highlighted the program at
lhe recent open meeting of Chester
Garden Club held at the Chester Unilcd Methodisl Chun:h.
Game warden Kcilh Woods and
public infonnation specialist, Carol
Wells, Ohio Natural Resources, lalked
on the issue of banning dove hunting which wi II he on the Nov. ballot..
They said an out-of-slate group is
heading up the cfti&gt;rt o get a ban on
hunling doves and that this is jus! a
warning or a f1rs1 step leading lo somclhmg bigger. The two indicated.
acconlin~ to the gilfdcn dub reponer,
that a han on all hunting is their goal
and they urged a "no" vote on the

Society
Scrapbook
Awarded scholanhip
Michael Leifheit. son of Roger and
Lenora Leifheit of Pomeroy, has been
awarded a dean's scholarship from
Ohio Nonhem University where he is
enrolled in the College of Plumnocy.
Michael is a graduate of Meigs High
School. Ohio Northern otTers dean's
scholarships to ou!Jltanding entering
freshmen in recognition of their academic excellence.

issue.
II was pointed oul thai deer and

1urkey populalions need a.o;sistance to
regulate because of their destruclion to
farm crops and how dangerous they
arc on the highways.
A variely of pamphlels maps and
magazines were on display. The Ohio
Wildlife Division is 125 years old and
it was noted that Dislrict 4 of which
Meigs County is a part is best in the
best for huntin~ .
It was reported that Maye Mora is
ill and a card was si~ed for her. Her
96th birthday Tuesday was announced.
Beuy Dean and Janet Bolin, accompanied by Judy Bunger, judged the
Scioto Counly Fair flower show.
Janet Bolin made an angular
arrangemenl using grasses and canna
blossoms. She also made a tubular
arrnngemcnt with vines, hosla leaves
and hydrangeas Shelia Curtis arranged
an angular design in an angular container with blackberry lily foliage and
glads, and Mrs. Dean made one in a
crealive container making her angles
from callail slems, and yucca foliage
and sunflowers.
A buffet of finger foods and punch
was enjoyed after the meeting. Door
prizes were awarded 10 the guests.
Sunshine for August will be handled
by Pauline Ridenour. The Friday met·
ing will begin with a tour of Lula
Tob;m 's garden and a program "A
Rose is a Rose." Members arc to lake
rns&lt;.'S for an exhibil.
Belly Dean. Gladys Cummings,
Shelia Curtis and Janel Bolin auended
E&amp;J School at the Holiday Inn in
Columbus recently. Mrs. Bunger displayed an arrnngcmcnlll she made for a
wedding and pictures of the cake and
lables she dccoralcd. and Mrs. Cummings showed centerpieces used on
tables at !he OAGC convention.
Hostess for !he meeting was Pat
Holter. Kathryn Mora gave devotions.
and members answered roll call by
naming !heir favorile design. Members
of all clubs in Meigs County were present since the county meeting was
combined with Chesler's open meeting. Hint of the month was thai
herbs can be dried inside a car
parked in a sunny spot.

Trail ride to benefit SL Jude's
A saddle-up horse !rail ride to benefit St. JUde's Children's Research
Hospilal will take place on Sept. 19 at
the Dill Farm in Rutland.
"All riders are welcome on this trail
ride to raise funds for the world
famous resean:h center in it's balde
against childhood cancer and other cal~rophic childhood diseases," said
Isabell Dill of Dill's Farm.
For the trail ride, riders ask spon·
sors to malce a donation for each mile
cOinpleted of the 10 mile outing: All
riders, turning in money, wtll recetve a
ribbon: $35 or more will receive a ribbon and a special St. Jude's Hospital Tshirt; $75 or more a ribbon, !·shirt and
a spans bag; S125 or more a nbbon. I·
shirt, spoilS llag and a St Jude's Hospital sweatshirt.
. . .
Anyone interested m ndt~g ~r
sponsoring a rider, or fo· details, 1s
asked 10 contact Dill Ill 740-742-2849.

,.'.
•

Bam Raisin' arts frsdv~' .:omlna
The 18th Bam Raisil.' community
ans festival is being held at the Dairy
· Bam Cultural Art5'Centcr in Athens on
Sept 13.
Bam Raisin· features ans. crofts,
live entertainment, mll•ic, children's
activilies and food.
Jorma Kaukoncn of Hot Tuna and
former member of JctTenon Airplane,
will return this year for another
evening conc'Cr1.
.
Children and adults can cnJOY
horncmllde icc cream at the IL'C Crenm
Chum-on·. The Kroger Company
Children's Tents fCilturcs tic-dying.
face painting, and other fun activities
for the kids. Horse ride5 will also be
available for the children
Approximately 30 anislll from !he
region will exhibit and sell o w1de
range of merchandise including
. ceramics, photography. woodworking,
· jewelry, wearable art, and many "!llO'C
. handmade originals. Demonstrations
in felting, origami, candlemaki~B
and print making by local arttsts wtll
continue throughout the day. ·

Snyder's
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lYAIUILE
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Wednesday,

· hge I • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mlddlepor"., Ohio

Wedn111day, September 2,

September 2, 1998

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1998

70

dlen: lbey sing "I love you" at I,
know their ABCs by 2, manipulale a
mouse by 3.
And they do it all ... in diapers.
Much lD the horror of many
:p-andmotben - but with the
approval of many child-development experts - the age of polly
training seems 10 be edging upward.
Studies suggest that while 90 percent of kids were out of diapers by
·age 2 tn in the 1960s, not even a
quarter are trained that early now.
.The largest recent study, conducted
in suburban Philadelphia, found half
of boys and 30 percenl of girls
weren't potty-trained by age 3
"When he's ready, he 's ready,
and there's no usc pushing," says
Julie Heine of Vermillion. S.D..
whose 3-ycar-old son, Seth. still
.wears diapers.
Heine says friends and family
have no problem with Seth taking
'his time. In fact, he 's following in
the footsteps of two brothers who
trained well after their third birthdays.
But not everyone is pleased with
this growing army of droopy-draw.ered big kids.
"It's not unusual these dllys 10
_find children who are 3 112, 4 years
old who arc not trained, and this is
atrocious," says family psychologist
John Rosemond, a self-proclaimed
traditionalist whose advice column
runs in 200 newspapers. He blames
liberal child-rearing experts.
Beverly Clark, a grandmother of
four who runs three child-care cen-

lcrs in Massachusetts, is similarly
aghast "I've been in this business
for 30 yean, and when I started,
lhcr-c was absolutely no question. It
never even occurred 10 me that a 3ycar-old would come walking in the
do·.J£ who wasn't pony-trained."
Less appalled arc the makers of
co~ajor diaper brands Pampers, from
Procter &amp; Gamble, and Huggies,
!rom Kimberly-Clark.
"No maucr what your friends or
family say, your baby knows best
when it's time to pony-train." says a
magazine ad for Pampers' newest
product, a "size 6" diaper that fits
"babies" over 35 pounds- the size
of an above-average 3-year-old.
Huggies diapers and Pull-Ups
(basically underwear-shape diapers
for "big kids") arc aboullo come in
larger sizes, too.
"We're already seeing that in our
(Pu ll -Ups), the largest size is the
biggest seller, " Kimberly-Clark
researcher Tom Kolb says. Only
three years ago, he says, mediums
were more popular, an indication, he
thinks, that go-slow potty training is
gaining ground.
Some observers suggest that the
diaper companies arc driving the
trend, not responding to it. "What
they're trying to do, obviously, is
sell diapers," Clark says. And, she
says, busy parents with little time for
laundry and "accidents" arc easy
targets.
But the country's best-known
child-development expert, T. Berry
Brazelton, not only approves, he's
helping to sell bigger diapers.
Brazelton appears in TV ads for
the larger Pampers, telling parents:

"Don't rush your toddler into toilet erboff isn't worried about the laiCtraining or let anyone else tell you training trend - he agrees thai
it's time. It's got to be his choice."
pushing kids is a misiW: ..:.. bul he
Brazelton, a consultant 10 Pam- docs say it's 50iliCtimes busy parents
pers since: 1996, has been promoting who don't want their babies to grow
a child-led approach 10 pouy train- up.
ing for nearly four d'-.:ades. He
"You've got a lot of parents who
believes that kids arc le•s likely to have not had a chance to enjoy their
develop problems sud as bed-wet- babies, so they want lD keep their
ting and chronic const.;~ation if par- child!en babies as long as possible,"
ents avoid polly power struggles. says Meyerhoff, dim:tor of the EduAnd he says kids who learn a1 their cation for Parenthood Education
own pace gain a sense of accom- Center in Lindenhurst, m.
plishment thai's lost wben parents
But Rosemond, who endorses a
take over with training-in-a-day strict nO&lt;Oddling approach 10 par·
schemes and pushy incentive rlans enting, says: "There's no reason for
- bribes ranging from M&amp;Ms to a child who's over 2 112 to be
tricycles.
untrained .... People in my parents'
Heine says she's learned the hard generation just shake their heads ."
way that such tactics don't work. The 50-year-old grandfather of two
With her second son, she says, "we advises parents simply to take diatried everything, the rewards, new pers away from polly-shy preschoolunderwear, making him sit in it, ers. Doing otherwise "just extends
Cheerios in the 'toilet (for aiming the child's dependency ; it extends
practice) .... Nothing worked until the child's immaturity."
he was ready. "
And plenty of parents still agree
Some kids are ready at 2, Brazel- that potty training should happen by
ton says, some not until age 4. The a particular time.
" I'd like to see them out of diaAmerican Academy of Pediatrics
agrees and tells parents not to worry pers by 3," says Seattle TV reporter
about training at a particular age. Mimi Gan , 41, mother of Grace, 2,
But the academy's advice book and Chloe, S months, and a member
"Caring for Your Baby and Young of USA TODAY's Baby Boomer
Child" (Bantam Books, S17.95) Panel. Missing that deadline, she
says most children are ready to start says, would make her feel "I'd
the process around age 2.
somehow failed as a parent."
"I think by 4 or 5, if a child isn't
Little Grace is starting to use the
ready, you wonder if they're trying potty, but Meyerhoff warns parents
10 tell you something," Brazelton
that kids don't always cooperate
says. "And you add!ess whatever with grown-up plans.
that underlying problem is."
"It's not like the kid is a tube or
It's often, he says, a fear of grow- toothpaste you can put on the toilet
ing up.
and squeeze," he says.
Parenting adviser Michael Mey-

Nutrition: Coach your student - athletes to a better- food game plan
By HOLUE WEAVER BEA·

SON
llolvoe (La.) N-s-star
- As the school season begins, stu·

dent athletes arc taking the field to
ltclp the team to a winning year. It's
important at this time to coach your
kids on good nutrition . This time is
extremely important I&lt;' young athletes because of the pl-ysical development at this stage i:. their lives.
· Without adequate nutrition, normal growth 3lld ainletic performance can be affected. To ensure
adequate nutrition, it is extremely
important for the athlete to consume
a diet that will provide enough calories and essential nutrients that can
give a competitive edge.
What should a young athlete consume on a daily basis' The diet for

the young athlete is not that different
from other children. Eating a balanced diet based on the "Food
Guide Pyramid" will help the athlete
meet the challenge of the competition. Because of the higher activity
level of young athletes, increasing
levels or servings from all the food
groups may be needed to provide
adequate calories. Some young athletes may need more than 5,000
calories per day to maintain their
c•trrent weight.
In addition 10 adequate calories
and nutrients, a young athlete needs
to drink plenty of fluids. Fluid is
needed 10 replace fluid loss through
perspiration and 10 prevent dehydration . During competition, they
shOuld drink 8 to 13 ounces of cool
water 30 minutes before their event,

3 to 8 ounces every I0 to IS minutes
during activity and enough fluid to
replace lost water weight following
their event.
A pre-event meal is important for
the young athlete. The pre-event
meal will provide enough energy
and nutrients for the alhletc 10 perform d•Jring the sporting evcm. For
best .-csults, a pre-event meal
shouid:
- Be eaten two-to-four hours
befo.~ the competition
- Be high in complex carbohydrates such as pasta, cereals or a
baked potato
- Be low in fat, protein, fiber
and gas-producing foods, which
might cause discomfort during the
event.
- Avoid high sugar foods such

as candy bars. Sugar causes a sudden spike and then drop in the blood
sugar.
Tips for planning · meals for
young athletes:
- After events, high carbohydrate foods should be provided to
restore the lost glycogen from tlie
sponing event
- To provide extra cal .orics to
the young alhletc, additio~al food
may need to be consum('~ by the
athlete. Eating frequent meals,
increasing portion sizes, providing
between-meal snacks and gelling the
most of the extra energy from nutrient-dense, high-carbohydrate foods
can provide additional calories and
nutrients. Good choices for snt\cks
include bagels, crackers, fruit bars
and fresh fruits .

LINDA'S
PJ\IN'fmG
Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before S p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.

Parents who want to let their child decide when to give up di:lpccs, as many experts advise, often run. inlD a roadblock: the local
dllv-are center or preschool.
Although policies vary widely, many facilities either won't :ill
children in diapers or won't allow children to progress beyond int'anl
and toddler classes if they arcn 'I potty-trained.
Often, operators say, it's a matter of facilities and staff; sometimes it's a mauer of law.
"There are a zillion reasons," says Lynn White of the National
Childcare Asso.Ciation .
"You have to bring in a changing table, you have to have diapers
on hand, you have to have wipes, you have to make sure your staff
is trained," says Beverly Clarlt, who docsn 'ttake untrained children
at the preschool she runs in Norwood, Mass.
Many state laws prohibit caring for diapered and nondiapered
children in the same room because of hygiene concerns. '"'YS Marcy
Guddemi, a vice president with KinderCare Learning Centers Inc. of
Port-land, Ore., which has 1.150 centers nationwide.
Child-care guru T. Berry B1111.cltnn. a spokesman for Pampers,
says good schools and centers figure out a way to accommodate late
trainers. When a center has a rigid rule . he says. " I've been encouraging parents to say, 'If you're this insensitive to my child. I'll go
somewhere else."'
But Guddemi, whose centers generally keep diapered children
from progressing to older classrooms. says teachers work with parents to get kids trained in time. Most, she '"'ys. are ready by around
2 1n.
"We don ;! see the late, late polly training. " she says. But "we
have a lot of accidents, and that's the reason we have washers and
dryers at our centers. And we ask parents to bring exira clothing."
Alana Yallow, the president of Children's Discovery Centers,
based in San Rafael, Calif., says her 270 centers encounier more parents who want to push training - say with a 15-month-old - than
those who want to stall it

FALL/WINTER
CAR CARE
SPECIAL EDITION

110

(740) 985-4180.

um.-- Hauling
Houae a TraHtr Sites
Land Clearing a
Grading
Septic Sylllm &amp;
Utllltlel
Eltlmatea

Free Estimates

(614) 992-3838

7t241f181mo. pel.

~The B~~A~~IA:2.~x3.6_\
\ill
Located at
:PO
Meigs County Fairgrounds

ADVERTISING
DEADLINE IS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1998
Contact Dave Harris, 992·2155, Ext. 104

The Daily Sentinel
FOR MORE INFORMATION

--

lnlenedion US 33 &amp; SR 7 (northwest comer)

September 19th &amp; 20th
71311111n

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

·---·-

TRPPRn

"Easy Over tire P/1orre Bnrrk Firrnnting"

~Need

Sat11r~.y

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

985-4473

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

1-888-667-3513

electric Ice aeam freezer, etc.

• Hot Water Heater
• Freezers
• Dishwashers

Custom Homes
Roofing

M&amp; J

Remodeling
Plumbing

POMEROY, OH.

614·992·5479

Jm/TFN

(UmeStoneLow Ratesl

2,ACP74W4NX1415tlt

1112 Ford Crown VIC YIN

WICKS

2,ACP72W8NX217022
11lt2 Ford Crown VIc YIN
2FACP72W8NX218811

HAULING
Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470
In Memory

Denver and
Frances (Swick)
Hysell
BINGO
WED . &amp; THURS. 7:00P.M.
WED. STARBURST $250
AMVETS POST 23
KANAUGA, OH.

MIZ!NAY TAVERN

I

Married on
September 2, 1932
by Mlnlster Lewis Russell
at
. HyseU Run Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Your Anniversary
brings thoughts of home
and bow It was always
filled with love and
warmth and happiness.
Only the two of you
could have made our
home so special.
SatllymWed
Children, Grandchildtcn
and Great·

Gnndclllldlm.

In Loving Memory
of our parents

Rev. Cecil WISe
who passed away
Sept. 2, 1997 and

Leona WISe
Oct. 2, 1988.
Nodtlng is more beautiful
Than memories we haw:
ofyoa,
'lb us you were Ill spcdal
God must have thoupt

so too.
Fom-er we will miss you
As the year~ come and go.
In our hel!tl you Uw:
fomer
l!ccaUK we laml you 10.
Slllly . . . . "'

ibllee'llle
Pbll, Slllrley ...
Doll Wile

rage, gaa grill. Hoover sweeper.
Ttlree family· Friday, Sept. 4th ;
204 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

day South 4th Street. ChesNre.
0 B Garage Salol Sept 2.3 •• . Rio

E""'Y'hl"'l. 9am-5pm
Thurs .. Fri ., 3rd·4th , 9 o'elodl. till
6 1 112 m1le . New Lima Road. Au·

Grande North Eagle Rd . 733 .
Glassware, Sienko Hull Fireking ,

ui.nd.740.742·2757

50's End CoffeeTabMis. Whatnot&amp;
. Mole 9:()().. 5:00PM

Yard sale. 1. 2. 3. 51. At.
mile ott Rt. 1, rain cancels .

Electrk: Guitar, Super Nlntendo,
Saga , RollerBiadas , Microwave
Cabinet. Sewing Machine . Got!
Clubs, Police Scanner, CBFladio.

1151981 mo.

FrtH Estimates

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

1998 Martin Street
Pome~oy, Ohio 45769

1/25198 2 mo. pd.

Howard L Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

-

949-2168

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer a House Sites
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Mi les out Rl 87 . Herdman's
Residence . Fri &amp; Sat Sept . 4th &amp;

per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
. $2.99

Joe Wilson
(7 40) 992-4277

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

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

&amp;•••&amp;
Computer Performance UPQtldn

"Your Computer shop"

Custom Buill Computers, Networks Modems, Hard
Drives, Printers. Upgrade Your PC To a Penlium CPU
and MB Today. Pre-Owned Computers.
740-992-1135 For A Price Quote!
Frognot Internet Sign-up point ror
..
Meigs and Mason Counlles
... .... (t
'I\ ·- ~ 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

...

:,'\,

Located in the Insurance Plus BuildinR
across rrom the Court llmast.

9/ -4/98 and 9/5/98 . 9 :00AM to
5:00PM . 13 Pine St.· Furniture .
Household Goods, Tools , Smail
Appliances, Books and Nu ·
ITIMJUS Items.

005

A

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless Guller
·Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages ·Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Contructlon
Roofs,
Coating's Gutters
Slding,Piumblng,
Construction
Work

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks

740-992-2068
111/11'110.

Personals

Gentleman Seeking Companion·
ship From Nice Female For Talks,

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or
740-698-7231
1111111""

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

THE MAPLES
100 Memorial Drive East
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rente are computed according to your Income.
Lovely apartments featuring wall·to-wall
carpttlng, with all appllancta.
AU PRIMARY UnUTIES PAID
MUST BE 50 YEARS OF AGE OR
HANDICAPPED.
MUST MEET HUD EUGIBIU'TY REQUIREMENTS
FOR_FURTHER DEr_Alj.S
CALL (740) 992·7~
Equal Housing Opportunity

TRUCK
SERVICE

DUMP

Dl•count Prices

Bennett Supply
7404418411
13111 Slffonl
School Rd.
Ollllpolla, OH

St Fit 160 . Clott1ing , Books,
Household Misc.

Sepl 2nd, 3rd &amp; 4th 1 Burdette
Addn . B·OOam · ?Misc. cl othes .

Garage Sale: 9/Slh Onlyl 9-? 4.2
Miles Out Rio Grande On Cherry

IOyS.

R&lt;lge. Rain /Shne.

Yard Sale· I 00 Uberty St . ThlJr ·
Fri·Sat . 9·5 Treadmill . iron bed .
carseal , stroller. furnilure &amp; mise

Green Terrace in C:lntMary Sept
3. Guess. levi , Nice Baby
Clothes. Home Interior. Toys.
Bedspreads.

items.
Yard Sale· Poplar Heights Fri·Sal

Sepl. 4 &amp; 5. K&lt;ls clothes &amp; loys.

Huga Yard Sale 912, &amp; 9/3, 10·1

adult clothes. car &amp; truck acces·
sarles. lOts of misc .

Road. Watch For Signs!

900-860-8687 Ext. 4921 . $2.99 Crafts, Bedding. Nici&lt;-Nacks. Sept
Per Minule, Mu&amp;l Be 18 Years . 4th, 8-4; 915111.8-1
Se&lt;v·U t-619-645-8434.
In Eureka, Across From Gallipolis
WHAT WILl TH£
Oam. Tnursday &amp; Friday , Sept
AJTURE BRING?
4111. 5th. School Clothes.
LOVE, MONEY, TRAVEL?
CALL NOWIIT'S FUN,
IT'S EASY

1-900-740-6500 Ext. 3595
$3.99 PerM~ . 18+
serv-u 619-645-11434
30 Announcements
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens

740.592-1842

Quality clothing and hou se hold
items . S 1.00 bag sa le every

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9:Q0-5:30.

Open auditiOns lor
The Art Schoors Annual

Decombe&lt; perl01mance on
September 19, 1998trom10.
12am
The show Is entitled
'A trip 10 New Yor1c City'

by Maggie Roach.
Plan to recite a short story or

poem. Over ten speaking pans
are avaWable for adults and

children over the age ol seven.
Please can The Art School at

(740)441 -1988

lor more information.

TYPING &amp; TRANSCRIPTION
SERVICES, S8 per page. BIIli.

40

Giveaway

4 ducks. 6 rabbits. 15 old hens ,

740·669-4902.

6 Kittens· 2 Siamse. 1 Grey, 1
Black . 2 Chocolate Brown . 4
weekS Qld. 740-256-6176.

7mo. old part German Shephard
5

part COllie. 304-675-5903

Free To Good Home : 5 Month
Old White German Shepherd Mix
Female. 10 Mon . Old Male Black
Aklla Mix, 8 Kittens (Males /Fe·
male s), 1 Adult Fema le Cat I

Spayed, 2 Bunnies W /Cage &amp;

Food. 740-256-6419.

Iron pipe clothes line post , you
remove. you ca n have. 222 1 Jefferson Ave. Pt. Pleasant. WV.

Kittens. 6 weeks old. mired breed.

medium sized. some short tails.

Call after 5:30PM 740.367·0681 .

90

Moving Sale : 8 ·5, Sept Jrd. 4th .

5th, ThU1S, Ffl, Sat, KeHy Dri'le. 011
Georges Creek, Multi-Family Yard
Sale!

Palio Sale: Thurs 3rd, .Fri 4th, 24
Smill'lers Avenue.

Antiques &amp; clean used ilJrniture .
will buy one piece or complet,e
holJsehOid , Osby Mart in , 740·

Aoule

7. SOUth, Boys, Girls, Worn-

ens Clothes, Toys, Mounta in
Bike. Race Car Bed. Coffee Table,
Baby Items . Ant ique Bassinet
Toots, MiSC.
Sept 1st Thru 5th , t .2 Miles Out
218, Launctry Stove. Heaters,
8x36 Insulated Stove Pipe . Pa ·

pertack Books, O!Mr llems.

Sept 3&amp;4 . First House So uth 01
River Valley High School . Books.
Antiques, Cloth es. Dishes. Su ·
pnses.

913rd.

4th,

5th,

At 325 South,

Rio

Wooden Post With Backboard
And Hoop 741}-446-2732 .

60 Lost and Found
lost! Purple Box Containing lm ·
portant Papers. Between Bostic
Motors &amp; Vicinity ol Second Ave .
Rewardi74Q-256-6 176

ward . 740-992·5049.

Yard Sale

70

Etc.
3 Family : Infant ·Ad ult Clothes,
Home Interior. Household Items,

1987 Cor, Sept 4th, 5th, 9-? 2t

EVIIJlO Helgl1ta.

914th, 5th, 9·5, Animated Christ·
mas Dolls, Christma s Decor&amp;·
lions, Ladies. Kids, Mens Clothes.
Lamps , 4 Christmas Wreaths .
Two 4' Trees, Lots More! Hill I
Neal. S.R. 160, 5 Miles Past Holzer On Right, Signs.
Sept . 2,3.4. 9:00AM·? Past jumbO
on AI t41 . Mens ieans, Womens
C lothes. Dryer. Home Interio r.
Rugs. Lots More!

Thurs &amp; Fri. Sapt. 3rd. 4th. 9-5.

II

4 Miles South Of Rio Grande On
325. Narda Track , Household
items, Crafts. Clothing, Mens Size
XL Some 3X, Much More!

.Mltl!r....,.,
-·-,....--.......
.......
loiOrwl. .......

.

304-773-5033.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

36545 Flatwoods Ad .. Thwsday
3rd &amp; Friday 4th . Lots ol misc .
items .

•s

4 fami ly yard sale. Sept. 2·4.
Th 1rd St .• Mason . 9am ·?, boys ,
misses. women 's clothes , 10ys,
shoes . household ilem . Bean ie
Babies: curren1. new releases &amp;

retred.
5 family yard sale. lirst house

Run. 3rd. 4th, 5th.

I0 U
l?

7 family yard sale· Long Bottom
Community Center. Sept. 3 &amp; 4,
9am·7 Adult and kids clothes,
misc. hOusehold items.

All Ytrd S.lll Null 81 P1ld In

Advonct. Dtodllne&lt; 1:OOpm the
da,. before the ad 11 to run,

Sundoy

&amp;

Mondoy odl!lon-

Carport sale· Libby Fisher's.
Thursday. September 3. John

Street oft '1811owbush Rd .• Radno.
Garage

sale, 232 N. 2nd Ava ..

Middleport, Thurs. &amp; Friday, Sept.

3 &amp;4, rain 01 shine.
Garage sale· rrlday, 9/4/98 onty,

9am-4pm. 31384 Noble Summit
Rd. NB, loddler bPyl and girls,

maternity, dishes, tent, table and
benches. Longaberger. beanla

babieS.

3 laml~ yard oale, Sopt. 3·
5, CR 28 off SA 7, llrst house on
lhlno.

Racine A-lean Lttlon
Slpt. 411. ... e.nto?

740.446-9853.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 0 Help Wanted
"NURSES &amp; CNA'S NEEDED"
FlJII Or Pari· Time. Compeititve
Wage &amp; Benefits Available. Apply
Or Send Resumes To
Manner Health , 1720 17th Street
Huntington. WV 25701 Al!n" Hu man Resources

S$S DANCERS WANTED SSS
Excellanl opport unily lor the right
girl . SSOO(+)per week earning po·
tenllal. No e~~:p necessary. must

be at least 18. Call614·992·6387
AVON ! Ail Areas ! Sh•rley
Spears. 304-675·t429 .

3 family yard sale. Sept. 4· 5,
Cw1man's, SA 124 . one mile from
SolJlhern High School . Tools. fish ·
ing equipment. scanner. CO lJCh.
household goods. clothes, misc .
Priced to sen. 7:30-?

Badey

Cond~K&gt;n,

{anytime) or 304·675·5955 after
8pm. Wed thrlJ Sar.

3:0017\lln4onSU.Ot.

...,-In""""""'
.........."

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

We Buy Used Pallet s 4Bx40 .
304-675·2716.

left. RockhOld reaktence, ratn or

6J.I,'IMI--

Clean late Model Cars Or
Truck s. 1\:J90 MQdels Or Newer.
Smith BlJick Ponliac. 1900 Easl ·
ern Avenue. Galli~lis .

5ept 3rd. 4th, 51h. Burnell Road,
Kanauga.

Large

. . . . . . 1:01 p&amp;

6172

Wanted To Buy : Used Mob ile
Homes Call 740·446·0115 , 304·
675 ·5965.

Girls, Lots Of Womens Clothing,

else Equipment, Much Morol
Wtdntsdey, l Thuraday, 8:00·

BlJy ing Hardwood Timber on
Shares ; Also Pine Saw Timber
Small Acreages ok. 740·256·

Sept 3rd, 4th , 5th . On 554, By
Landfill Road, Between Cheshire
&amp; Porter.

Misc.

6 Femlly: tnlant ClOthes, Bovs &amp;
Stereo. Word Proceuor. Exer·

992-6576.

Wanted To Buy : Jun~ Auto's Any

Household Items.

UOpmF~doJ-

9-5, Levis &amp; Guess, Beanie's,

2526.

Grande, Good Men·s Clothing,
Ladies Dresses , ColJch, Lots

Purebrd
Fem ale
German
Shepherd 1 112 Years Old, Good
NatlJred, To A Good Home! 740·

3265

Diamonds. AntiqlJe Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre - 1930 U.S. Currency.
Sterling, Etc . Acquisitions Jewelfy
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
AvenlJe. Gallipo1ls. 740-446-2842 .

SatlJrday Sept 5th , 9·4. 5 Mtles

740-742-121 4call aftar 6pm.

Swing set accessories . good
shape, gltd!Jr. 2 swings . slide, ted·
der·tolter. monkey bar. 740·992·

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sit·

ver And Gold Coins. Proolsels .

Antique s. top prices paid , River ·
ine AnliqlJes. Pomeroy, Chi~ .
RlJSS Moore owner. 740·992 ·

For Everyone.

5108.

Wanted to Buy

-:-:--:--::--:::-::--,.,..,..,7--o:--

Saturday 915lh, 9·!5 P.M. 1275 Ev·
ergreen Road OU 160, Dishes.
Men, Womena. Children's Clothing, Misc.

Mixed pupp ies to good home .

Registered black La b. 3 yrs. old,

Rick ·Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer. complete
aucllon
service
Licensed
t66,0h•o &amp; Wesl Virginia , 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

lectibles. Lots Morel 464 Viney
Rd., 011 Ksrr.

Yard Sale! Sept. 3,4,5. From 9:00? 38 Smithers Ave. Something

male. to country home. 740·84.3·

Auction
and Flea Market

Wedemeyer 's AlJction Service.
Gall~l!s , Ohio 740-379-2720 .

Magnovox console TV. 740·949·

446-8627.

80

Large! Friday&amp; Saturday. Tools ,
Wellpump, Books , Antiques , Col·

2348.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
tOt Slasor (Bidwell) Thursday 9·
4 P.M.Sop13rd.
2 Family: 437t Cherry Ridge
Road, Rio Grarode, 913rd, 4th, 5th.

•Roof Coatings
"VVnyl Skirting
"Water Heaters
•Door/Windows
•electric/Plumbing
Supplies
"Fibtrglaaa &amp; Wood
Sttpa

Mites North Of Holzer Hospital On

Huge: 844 Second Avenue. Fur·
nlture. Child Adult Clolhtno.

1Ql251961tln

"H111 laventtrf"

Garage Sale 5ept 3rd &amp; 4th At
87 Mason Co . C harles Pears on
Residence

Friday, Sept 4. 9· ? Approx . 1 112

Sports News!!! Point Spreads!!! 1·

45831 .

lost while Pekinese! Poodle mix.
one year old , recently groomed .
McClure 's Pomeroy vicinity, re-

PARTS

lecliblo Items.

011 Of 233 Turn On Wagoner

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

MOBILE HOME

Ftatrock At. 2 Community Yara
Sale Thurs. Fn . &amp; Sat. 9am ~I ?

Walke &amp; Frlendsl"lip. Send Ae ·
plies To : 553 Second .Avenue,
Apartment 403, Gallipolis, OH

Used 12" Cement Block 740·245·

CARPET R. l. HOLLON
TRUCKING
PLUS

Back · To-School Yard Sale 201
Brown St . Mason . Fri, Sept 4th
9am·? Rain Cancels! Name
bra nd Jr. &amp; pllJs size clothes.
rocker -recliner, student desk .
"Glory· Beanie Babies. baseball
cards. mise.

4:00 . No Early Sales Please .
Misc . Dishes, Kitchen Items,
Linens, Hand Garden Toots .
Some Furniture· Antique &amp; Col ·

5635.

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

5th.

Estate Tag Sale. 21 Edgemont Or.
Sept.3,4.5 . Thurs.. Fri., Sat. 9:00·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE?

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

,.

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

143. 112

I 30 BasiiMi Or. s.'5l98

P.O. Box 60, Coolville. OH 45723.

"Build Your Dream"

360° Communications

113 W. 2ND ST.

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

1-900-860·4400
Extension 7450

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF

Sept. 3-5. At. 7 be~de S.H. Gt·

Curtians, Oistlea, PH:tures. 81(1ding, Clothes. Thursday And Frl·

DESIGNS

P/B Contradors, Inc.

614-742·2138

740-667-3513

CELLULAR PHONES

auggeeted or Implied.
The commlulonere
reeerve tho right lo reJect
Pub~c Notice
any or 111 bld1.
Bide will N opened
The lllelge County
14, llltll, II 3:00
StptlmNr
SMrlll'e Depertment will N p.m.
ollerlng lor eele, by IHled
VlhiClll mey N IHn II
bkl, !he following vlhlclle:
111118 Chlvrol.t Ca~ YIN Carl Hyeell'e roeldonc• at
550 llleln St., RuUend.
1G1BL51H4JR177043
(9) 2,8.8
•
1tlt1 Ford Crown VIc YIN
3TC
2FACP72F2111XI m04
11lt2 ~ord Crown VIc YIN

740•742•3411

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Call

•Only form of Permanent Hglr Removal. .
•Sate and Effective.
•Major Medical Journals Document Success.
•Works on all Skin Colors, Hair Colors and Hair
Types.
Free Initial consultation. Contact:
SANDRA McFARLAND, Licensed Electrologist
760 1st Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
446-1991 or 8118-441-1900

no warranty or guarantee

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

7/22111n

ELECTROLOGY FACTS

2FACP72W4NX207220
1179 Ford Bronco YIN
V15HLCDe080
1989 Honda 3 Wheel ATV
Serl JH3T80807FC421867
Kewellkl4X4 ATV w. plow
Strl JKALF8C10RB537188
Vehicles 1old on caeh
onlyb8111.
Vehlcltl eold •• 11 with

Mason County Fair Grounds
SeJit. 4, 5, 6 8 am to 5 pm
For more information

Local Satellite
Provider
Best Electric Pomeroy

(740) 985-3551

'1992 Fora Crown Ylc YIN

~~S:i:zW:i!AMP JEU~C~EE.'m

992-6320

Call Ken Young

PubliC Notice

2nd Wed. Night
Lady's Night
Live Band

Call

• Dryer

Food and Refreshments AvailaLie

,•

•New Homes

repair on any make":"

• Washers
• Ranges
• Refrigerators

EUORICOR
SATELLITE
SERVICE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

THE APPLIANCE MAN

Doors Open At 4:30 PM and Bingo Start• at 6:30 PM.

Overbrook Center, A 100 Bed Long Term
Care Facility, in Middleport, Ohio, is
seeking applicants for Staff Development
Coordinator. Preference will be given to
AN's with expertise In the Staff
Development Area. Two or more years
Long Term Care Experience is preferred.
Acompetitive salary and benefits package
is being offered·to the right candidate. Any
interested person pl&amp;ase stop by and fill
oU1 an applicatiOn. No phone cans please.
E.O.E.

Full Une Of Water Storage Tanks •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekday•
9:00-12:00 Saturday

For A Fresh Look

(Cut Out lor fu1ur1l UN)

etealnl We Will Hate A
$t,ooo.oo Conrail Game
Door Prize of $t,OOO
Starburst latne $t,zoo.oo
PillS $t9.00 ,., Re.ular .......

.Director of Stclal Strvkes Dep tw1t.
Respoaslllltlts lldude Japatlul ..spital -'
lolg 111111 Care Unit. Quallflcatlotls htcWe LS.W.
Duties: MDS Initial and follow-up for LTC aad
supervising of the hospltol's diiJIIIIiNdt. Please
sud reiUIIIe to:
Jeon Lambert
Veteram M11110rial Hospital LTC
115 1/2E. Memorial Drive,
P01111r0y, Ohio 45769

Sizes. Toys, Bar Stools. Houae
Plants. Misc. lteml. 10:00AM . 1

Estate 5alel Friday aoo Saturday,

'38 a month

"Wiaere Qr~trUfy Doesn 'i Coli More"
740-446-9416. 1-800-872·5967

Post 128, 299 Mill St. Middleport, Ohio
AIIIIIIIIICU Tllat If 145-tsO Peotle Ate Pruent lletrt

Veterans Memorial Hospital SNF
Unit is looking for caring,
dedicated individuals.
Apply in person at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Human Resources Office

·Trim
GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631
·StumP
( 740) 36 7-0266
Gr\nclll\9
1·800-950· 3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins.-Owner: Ronnie Jones

BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;COOLING

AMERICAN LEGION "BINGO"

STNA's

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

ftEE SDIICE

*Free 5 Parts Wa"anty
•Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

992-2156

Help Wentad

JONES

01111tfn

Saturday 10-6 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10·5 p.m.
For more information call992-6696

The Sentinel News lotUne

Fur1htr, Tht Penurs Bank
end Sevlnge Company
r...tw~ tho right to rtJICI
any or 111 bldl aubmlttld.
Fur1htr, the above
cole..rel wUl N 101d In tht
condltlon II 11 In, with no
uprue or lmpll•d
warranuea giVen.
For further lnformellon,
contact Tim 111185-4289.
(8) 2,3,4
3TC

Fl)U.Y INSURED

12/lfltln

Heat Pumps At Low As

Public Notice

SUNSftBOME
COIS,.RUC,.ION

PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
IA:-1 ~,1.;::..1 G&amp;W
Sl Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
~~-y-~~~'i
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock

DIRECTOR OF SOCIAL SERVICES

Reserve Your Advertising Space Today!

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
CO.
'

Air Conditioners •• Low As 128 • mgplb

Public Notice
collllt8nll:
PUBLIC NOTICE
1M CHRYSLER
NOTICE 11 Mreby given
IIIII on s.turdey, SlptM!IIIr
CONCORDE
1C3HD58T5TF108173
5, 11M, 11 10:00 e.m., •
Th• Fermer• Benk end
pu~llo eal• will be held at
Compeny,
211 Welt Second Street, Snlnge
Pomeroy, Ohlo, The Porneroy, Ohio, _ , . . 111t1
Farmers Bank end Sevlnp right to bid 1111111 Nit, 1nc1
Company parking IDI, to Hll to withdrew the ebove
lor c11h tho following colleterel prior to 1111.

---

Plloo. 91

S/98 . Ty Beanie B1bie1. Boys

USA TODAY

Public Notice

Clothing 1T to 4T, MilcellanOOUI

4 Fa-1 3107 Bule¥ille

hi A• Air e.IIIHfl•i Elltltr-td lfli "•""" lttttuil.,,,
'1lp1 SeW By MIUitport Vol. Fire Depll'llllent".

COMING •••
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1998

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

&amp; VIcinity

jDay - care concern: Hygiene I

Week On

Yard Sale

Galli pol Ia

Parents no longer rush to flush toddler's diapers
By- Kill PAINTER
USA TODAY
Oh, those fast-track '90s tod-

70

Yard Sale

102,

A Well Established And Growing
Compa ny Is Seekmg Heavy
Equipment Mechanics. Must
Have A COL, Clean Dnving,
Reco rd, W1111ng To Work Over ·
time , Ability To Troubleshoot, 01 ·
agnose And Repair Heavy Equip·
menl . Good Communicat io n And
Wr itten Skills. Ab 1111y fo Keep
AcelJrate Records And Reports
MlJSt Have Own Tools AM Pos ·
sib4e Be Willing To Relocate.
Excellent Benel•t Pa ck age . EEO
Employer. Send Resume To : CLA
447 , clo Gallipol is Da ily Tribune .
825 Third Avenue . Galllpohs, OH

45631

A Well Established CanslrlJction
EQuipment Dealer Is Look1ng For
A Delivery Driver. Applicant Must
Have A Current COL, Clean DrivIng Rec ord And Be Willing To
Work Overt•me. EEO Employer.
Sand Resume To Box CLA 448,
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune . 825
Thir d Avenue , Gallipolis. OH
45631.
Accepting applications for wai·
tresses . bartenders &amp; cook . La·
Cantina Mex ican Restaurant.

30H75·71 15.

Acquisitions Fine Jewelry of 91
Mill Street. Middleport· part time/
full time help . Jewelry experience
preferred but no t required . Ac ·
cepting appl•calions Monday
thrOlJQh Friday, 10am·2pm . No
phone calls please

CABLE TV SALES
National cable company Is look·
IRQ to h•re sales representalives
to sell cable TV services door to
door In the Ohio. Kentucky an~
West VIrginia areas . No eJ~perl·
ence Is necessary, must have
own vehicle and be able to tnMtl.
The candidates must be •~e to
work wit' 1ut Immediate supervlslOn and have good organiza ·
tlon and communication skills
WI offor lu~ time poslllona wit~

. . . . - .Ful-

fil pac"'Ut Including 401-K op•
tiona, MildlY lnd VICitlon ~y.•
Lodging tlptnNI lf11 ~~~~- 1'01,
_. lnlormltlon piHH can 1~
100-542·2348.

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 2, 1998

I'

:: . Wednesday, September 2, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

;~:~EYOOP

Jr
I

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOI:

- --

i

'

ACROSS

PHILLIP

180

Arbors AI Gallipolis Is Cu"enlly

Accepting Applications For Full
Tlme Restorauve Aide. You Must
Haw Experience As A Restora·
live Aide Or In Rehab . We Are
Looking For Dependable Experi-

enced Applicants. Please Conact
Usa Short If You Have Any
Queslions AI 740-+46-7112

CNA, LPN needed. AH shills. Top
pay. Capllal Nursing Agency.
304- 7~70 Of 1-600-576-63411.
Driver neede&lt;l- OTR flatbed driv-

ers needed. small fleet. Newer
conventional cab, good pay,

Wanted To

Do

Georges Porlable Sawmill; don'l
haul your ioga 10 !he mill Ju&amp;1 call
304-675-1957.
House Wiring &amp; TroubleshOoling,
Also Appliaooes, 740-366-9452.
Mother Of 3 Will Babysit In My

Home Weelrday'e 740-446-4655.

12x60 lralier, can be uoed for of·
fico lrlller. 13.000 without a~ oondltloner, $4,000 with, 740-949·
2217.
12k85

Buslnna
Opportunity

home weekends. Ca!l 740-9.. 9-

-ooms.

101150 VIIMiale, CIA, 2
Shingled Roof, 10x32 Alum Patio
Awn., Sleps, 740-448-2828 Muet
Se-1

trailer, 8x10 pull-out, 3br,
newly rimodeled, must be
lllO'IId. 304-578-4146.

FINANCIAL

210

440

14 •70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
Sf 79 per mo Free air &amp; fr8e skirt·
lng. 1-888-926-3426.

2203 or 740-949-2045 or HO·
441 ·1593

fNOT1CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Drummer &amp; guitarist wanted, atM

recommends that you do buai·

16x76 4br, 2 ba1h $1,195. down,
$193. per mo. Free air, free skirt.

ness with people you know, and

1-800-89~-em .

to practice. vocals/ plus. not necessary, must be versatile, 7•0992-4414.

NOT to send money through the
mall until you have investigated

the ofte~ng .

EXPERIENCED CARPENTERS I
Carpenters Helpers - References. Truck, Tools And Valid Driv-

FREE
CASH
GRANTS!

er's License Required. Applica -

tions Available At Christian's
Construcllon, 1403 Easrem Ava.,
GaiC&gt;ol~. 740-446-4514.
Field Machining Company look-

Ing For People With Knowledge
Of Machining Princtples To Work

College. Scholal1h!&gt;s.
Business. MedM:ai Bills.
N..... Repay.

Cell TOll Free
1-600-2111-9000 Ext G- 2614.

230

Professional

Services

In Construction Industry. Travel
Required, Above Averaoe Pay.

For Immediate Consideration Call

Llvlngaton'a Be11m1nt W•ter~

614-891-7755, Or Send Resume
To A.i.M., 30 OKirronl 00.0, 12116,
Wa&lt;lhinglon, OH 43235.

Proofing, all basement repairs

Full Time Production Person.

11 :00 AM • 7:00 PM, 40 Hours

done, free estimates, llfellme

guarantee. 12yrs on job &amp;Jiperlence. 3IJ4.895.3887.

lp•lllliiiiiiiiiiiilili•••..

per Week, Rotating Weekends,
One- Two Years Experience in
Quantity Cooking. Some Knowl-

2BR houae In New Haven on lot
&amp; 112, fenced in backyard. $-4501
mo. + doposll . 304-882·3199 or

--2797.

3 bedroom, $300 per montt\ plus

ulilltlas, 740-992-6542 or 740·
949-2499.
3-Be&lt;lroom, stove, refrigerator, 2
bath, nice lot, $400/mo. + depoa·
II, no pels, Jericho Rd. 304-675·
4167.

47 112 Spruce Slreel, 3 Bedrooms, UR And Carport, $375/
Mo., $375 Securlly Deposil,
Available Now. Inquire Tope Fur·

nllure, 740-446-0332 11J-4, Refer-

enc:os Requlrad.
6 Room house In Clifton, WV.
1300/mo. plus deposit. 304 -773-

16x80 .78 acre, 3br, 2-balh,
fronl&amp; back porch, 2 oul build·
lnga. Day 304-675-2029 EvenIngs 304-675-7203.

5040.
1 ·5 BEDROOM HOliES FRO'II
54.000 Local Gov'l. &amp; Bank
Repo's C11111 1-800-522-2730, X

1709.

1980 Mobile Home 14x56 2 Bedrooms, All Electric. Ew:cellent
Condllion, 740-446-1675, 7404411-6298.

Lovely 4 bedroom house in Mid·
d!eport, equipped kitchen, AJC,

1963 Mansion, 14x52, lolal gas,

deposit required, call 740-9927833 after MOpm.

stove, refrigerator, urtderplnnlng,
air, very good cond. $8,500. 304-

675-7792.
1984 Nashua 14•70, 3bdrms, 1
bath, AJC, skirt, water soft. d&amp;Ck.

$9,750. 703-455-5685.

ganage, IIMI basemen!, reforences,

Nice, clean, 3br, references &amp;
deposl, no pelS. 304-675-5162.

Pomeroy, 109 Peacock Avenue.
one bedroom, $212 plus dleposll,
caN"""'Ings 7~.

1990 14x60 Fieelwood mobile
home 2br, 1 balh, wloulbuildlng,
u condillonlng. 304-675-5211 .

420

Price reduced-

1br trailer for rent, ulllllles paid.

1990 Spruce

Ridge 14x70 mobile home, very
good condition, 2 bedrooms, 1 &amp;

Mobile Homes
for Rent

304-895-3603.

sdge of Calering Produclion. Con-

112 baths, w..her &amp; dryer. slove.

tact Vance Howe, 740-245-5660.

refrigerator, central air, axe out-

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
condllioned, $260·$300, sewer,

side building, 740-992-6582.

water and trash Included, 740-

EEO.
General Food Service Worker,

1993 Skyline Spruce Ridge,

Slarl $5.20 /Hr., Move IO $5.50 I
Hr., University 01 Ria Grande, 4

16x80 Shingle Roof, Vinyl SIOing,
3 Bedrooms, 2 Ba1hs, $23,000,

Positions : One Salad Prep. One
Catering, Ona A.M. line Ser.-er;
One P.M. Line Server, E.O.E.
Contact Vance Howe, 740-245·

5660.
Hairdresser Needed For Busy
New Salon. Benefits. 7-40-441-

1680 Of 740-256-6336.
Heating &amp; Cooling Ca&lt;npeny look·
flO for Service Technician, start·
lng pay $10/hr.. paid vacation &amp;
holidays, send resume c/o The
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 729-73,

Poms&lt;oy, 01145769.
LPNJRN position available for the

rlghl candiOale. Rocksprings Re·
habilitation Center is a progres·
siva ICF/SNF center with an excellent reputation for delivering
exceptional care to the geriatric
population . This poslllon Is part
ume with excellent benefit paCk·
age. If you're Interested In joining
our nursing staff, call 740·992·
6606 or send your resume to
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, 36759 Rocksprings Ad., Pomeroy. OH 45769. Carol Green·

ing,OON.
NEW STARTING WAGES
Arbors AI Gallipolis Is Currently
Accepting Applications For State
Tested Nursing Assistants.
Come Join The Arbor Team With

New Slarllng Wages Along Wilh
Improved Staffing levels And
Additional Pay For Experience.
We Are looking For Dependable
Applicants. Excellent Benefits Are
Available. Flexible Evening
Hours. Please Contact Lisa Short
If You Have Any Questions At

740-446-7112.
NOW HIRING
$215 PER WEEK /PART· TillE
tQUARANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone OpertUOf Work For
LOCAL RADIO STATION
PROIIOnDNS
• OAY &amp; EVENING SHIFTS
AVAILABLE
• FULL. PART·TIME
OPENING
• NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
•WETRAIN
• OPPORTUNITY FOR
ADVANCEMENT
• HOMEMAKERS WORK
WHILE CHILDREN ARE
IN SCHOOL
• COLLEGE STUDENTS
WELCOME
App~ In Person AI:
17 Pine Street
GaiUpol~.

OH

COmer Of Pine Street &amp; First Ave
Thursday, Seplelrber 3rd

3 ·6 P.M. On~
Ask Fa&lt;: Mr. Ray
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE!
Part· Time Jewelry Sales Experience Preferred, But Not Necessary, Apply In Person. Acquisi ·
lions, 151 Second Avenue, Galli·

polis, Monday -Friday, 10·2 P.M.
No Phone Cels Please.
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Re habllltalion Center has opening s
for nursing assistants and LPNPH'S. Muat be able to work 12
hour shifts . Contact Angle Cie·

land a1 304-675-5236. AAIEOE.
Retail electronics computer store
seeks an experienced person for
sales/manager position. Send re-

sume clo: Tha Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Sox 729-71, Pomeroy, OH 45769.

Selol Pooltlon

'

Bankers Life and Casualty Company Is seeking a representative
to live and work In Mason Coun·
ty. We need aenlor citizens with
long term care Insurance, Medl·
care, and annuities. Position In·
eludta local field training &amp;

leads. Call al 304-343·0400. An
EOC. MIMi. RA9052.
Skatesville, USA. O.J. Experience
Helpful, Floor Guard, Concessk&gt;n,
AppllcaiOns Available From 12·4
Monday -Friday Lui Day 9/Sih.

WANTED: Heavy Equipmsnl Operators, Carpenlere And Drywall
Finishers, Minimum Of lWo Years
Experience Neoessary, Call 80().

339·6518 For Appolnlmenl, Bel-

ween 8:00A.M. ·5:00PM.

Wanted To

Dtptndalllt Ledy WHI
-*'~~· 304-e75-8738.

Do

00

This newspaper will not

knowingly accepi
advertisements fOf real estate
which is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

REAL ESTATE

310

Homes for Sale

•A little Country in Town•- large
restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres, VIllage of Middle·
pori. Seclucfed and private, close
to schools and churches. Prlvare
brick circular drive, brick patio,
modern kitchen, family room wl
fireplace, 3·4 bedrooms, two
baths,Jarge formal LA and OR,
large foyer, tour. original stained
glass windows. 30 minutes from
Athens, 15-20 minutes from Galli·
polis . For appointment call 740·

99H696.
2 Bedroom House And 2 Apartments. Both Rented. 13 Pine

House-

Furnflure ropeli, roflnllh and ro1o
IOrltlorl, IIIIo CUllom ordtll. Ohio
Valley Roflnlahlng Shop, Larry
Phlllpa. 7-.e51e.

740·592~73

1995 Clayton, all electric, exceltent condition, call Tom Anderson,

740-992·3346 Aflsr 5pm.
70'X14' With Expando 2 Br., 20'
Living Room. Large Master Br..
Excellent Condition! On Rented
Lot, Ready To Move Into, 740·

4411-1409 2 To 6 P.M.
AUGUST SPECIAL
ALL SINGLEWIDES
$-4119DOWNOR
U'll RNANCING
ONLY AT OAKWOOD HOliES

NITRO,WV
1-304-755-&amp;185
Doubiewlde 3br, 2 balh, $1,345.
down, $217. per mo. Free deliv-

ery. l-800-691-67n.
Hind)' llln Spoclol
2 Of 3 bedroom single wldes.
304-755-7191
Huge 29x80 3BR, 1 112 bath .

or 3 bedrooms. Slarllng al $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 740·385·

InclUdes 6 monlhs FREE iol rent
Includes skirting, deluxe steps

and selup. Only $187 .08 per
monrh with $1075 down. Call 1·

600-837-3236.
Single Parent Progr1m. Spec:lal
financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom

$11Wmo. Cali now 304-755-7191 .
$1,325 Down, $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; fr8e skining. 1·600-e91-6m.
Trailer on Broad Run Rd. 1 112
rooms, 2 AJC's, household Items.

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting

Unfurnished garage apt. on Mt.
Vernon Ave. Ideal for adults, no

$400 mo. Corner Building. 740992·6250 Acqulsllions (n.,l
door).

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Road, WV. 304-675-7946.

Do Vou Like Saclualon Yet Convenience And A Nice Neighborhood? Then You Will Like This!

House for sale by owner. 510
29th Street, 2·atory with 3 BR,
garage, screened porch·, central
heating/cooling , finished basement. 2 storage buildings. Call

Building Lois in Green Township

304-675-4257. 304-675-0886 or

Range For 5 Pius Acres, Sllli One

J.tit'lutes From Hospital &amp; Shop·

ping. Slartlng To Taka Names FOf
Phase 11 Of Mud Craek Meadows
Prieta Starl!ng In The $40,000

Lol lor sale- Gallipolis, 90x172,
nice neighborhood, quiet, 740-

446-4722.

UPSTAIRS APARTMENT FOR
RENT: Appilcalions Are Avallabla Al1403 Easlern Ave., Galli·
P&lt;&gt;ls, OH New Kilchen, Lorge (11
Bedroom, View Of The River, Gss
Heal. S3001Mo.. Deposil And Fief·
erences Required. No Pets, Call

740-446-4514 Fa&lt; Appoinlmenl.

450 ·

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Cinemax, Showlime &amp; Disney.

Weekly Rales, Or Monlhly Ra1es,

accepted , public water, 20
minutes from new Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Rd. Clyde Bowen

Jr. 304-576-2336.

360

Cash Paid For Land in Gslila
Coun1y, Blackburn Really, 740·
44a 0008.
We Buy Land: 30 -500 Acres,

We Pay Cash. 1-600-213·6365,
AnlhOny Land Co.

RENTALS

410

Houeaa for Rent

Tank $350: 45 Fl. Trailer $2,000;

30 Ft. Tool Trailer $1 ,eoo; Misc.

Sleei Baams From 12 ft lb 57 ft.
46 Inch Sheep Fool Roller
$3,500, 740·643-2300 Or 740643·2916 Aller 4 P.M. Or 740&amp;43-2844 After 6 P.M.
Close OU1 Sale On Every1hing in
Stock: Parts. Farm Equipment.

Ulilily Trailers, Tractors, Kessel's
Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,

New And Used, S1airway Eleva-

Tractof &amp; Equipment, 1 MHe Weat
Holzer Hospital, Jackson Pike,

tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
Litts. Bowman;. Homecare, 740-

Gallipolis, 740-446·6906, 740·
4411-7797.

446-7283.

i

Forage Harvester, 717 New HolGrubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repatrs .
Problems? Netd Tuned? Call the

land Super, 3 heads, 1 row. 2 row
&amp; graos, 740·696·5025 or 740·

piano Dr. 740-+46-4525

6911-3802.

JET

New Idea Corn Picker, 740-379-

2192.

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.

Col Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9526.

PIMPLES, SKIN PROBLEMS,
CELLULITE? Conlrol Group
Needed! $200 Bonus For "Before

&amp; After" Pholos if Publishad. Call

Tracy 740-441-f 984.
Queen soflside walerbed, $150;
Kenmore slde-by.. side refrlgera-

lor, $100; waler soflener, $75; 3
112 ton Lux·Air heat pump, $200;
muslseil, 740-992-4511.
Sola bed &amp; ioveseat $100. FuiOn,
$100; Super Single waierbed,
$50: 740-992·6640.
Soft·slde twin bed. 411. mi·
crowave cart. 36" steel door. 304-

NH Manure Spreader $800; Hay

Road, $325/Mo., Deposll &amp; References, No Pels, 740-643-2916,

MERCHANDISE

After4 P.M.
In KanaUga 2 Bedrooms, No

PelS, Reforences. 740-441-1544.
Three bedroom mobile home in
Pomeroy. no pelS, 740.992-5856.

Trailer For Ron~ 740-446-1279.

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, ftx-

510

Household
Goods

Appliances :
Recondi1ioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Refrl·
grators. 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cily Maytag, 740-446·

nss.

EIC. Provided. 740-446-1052.
Your area bush hog dealer for
parts, rotary cuners, loaders, till·
ers, finish mowers. act. Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn midway
between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande,

Ohio on Jackson Pike. 740-446·
2412 or HID0-594·1111
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial

Lawn Equipment Compact Ulillly
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes Of 4 WO And 2 WD Farm

USED

APPLIANCES

washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs· Appliances. 76

Deposil, 740-446-3617.

446-2957.
tbr apt. In Mason, stove &amp; refrigeratoJ 6 utilities furnished, AJC,
laundry room, ceiling tans &amp; garbage dlsposa.l, very nice, no

pels. 304-773-5352 or 304-8822827.

2 Bedroom

board, Sewing Machine, Beds,
Kitchen Items, Excel!. Cond. 740446-0639.
Need a used appUance? The Appliance Man, cal Ken, 740·9853551, gueranleed, we deiM!r.
Pally'o &amp; Uood Furniture
Aags &amp; Army Surpluslll
2101 Jefferson Ave.
Open ~30 - 5:00 Man-Sat
304-675-SOFA (7632)
Remodeling. Stove and good

Apartmenl, On Second Avenue Near Buslne&amp;&amp; Section 1st Floor Real Nice, Great

kitcnen cabinets still In place.

For Elderly Person Or Couple.
740-446-9539.

Used Furniture Store Below Holi-

2/bedroom apt ground level,
kl1chen appliances Included.
Rent includes electric, water &amp;

Complete $115; Full Beds Com-

3 Rooms Furnished Utilities Paid,

$285/Mo., Plus Oeposll, 740-446·
1340.

Preacher Curt Bench, 1 Year Old.
High Country Bow, sights. rest

overdraw $250. CVA Hawken
Muzzleloader 50 cal. $125. 304·

675-7229.

Chrl&amp;ty'o Fomlly llvlf19
Aportmenll

Pomeroy/Middl_..
CaM 740·992-4514
Monday lhfOI!gh Salurday
9:00sm-9:00pm.
1·2·3 btdroomo, Slove/refrlg.
avatlebfe, utilities and cable paid,
HUD accepled. Children Welcome. Ask tor Chrlaly.
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park, AC, No Pets,
References, Deposit. $325/Mo ..

Two 6x6 Chain link Gates, Post
And Hardware, $200, Ca ll Bet-

ween 6 &amp; 9 P.M. 304-675-3515.

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,

Baby Ostrich Chicks. $50ea.

304·576-2719.
Five Year Old Gelding, Broke To
Ride $500.00. Yearling Slud Coil
$250.00,740-446-1179.

Whirlpool 5900 BTU AIC,

Purebred Red &amp; Whtte Simmental

Us~d

Very Little, Excellent Condition,
Still Under Warranty $250; Jenny
lind Baby Crib, Brown Wood , No

Malress $75; Ladles Size 38
Black Leather Lined Jacket, Very
Sharp, Never Worn , Originally

$275 Will Take $175; 2 Brown
RecUneJs $20 Each; Frigidaire

Deluxe Ranga, Green, Has Clock,
Timer, Oven Lite 6 Aange Top
Lile, 1 Burner Needs Repair $75,
740-367-7273.
Woodburner, Used Very Little,
Brick Lined, $100, Alter 5 P.M .

550

Building
Supplies

WUI Sell For $2.680. Guaranteed

Complete Chuck 1-600-320-2340.

•COOL DQWNI•

Cenlrai Air Condllioning. FrM Es·
llmalesl If You Don'l Call Ua, We
Bolh Losel740.«1·630tl, 1·600·
291-()()98,

Pets for Sala

4 Fsmale Eskimo Spitz, Full
Blooded, Molher &amp; Falher On
Premises, $75 Each, 740-446-

Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Sheets. :173 Georges Creek Rd.

740-446-0231.
AKC Bo•er Puppies, Fawn, 4

e Weeks

For sate Fall cutting of Hay Lecta
(Scottown) for more Information

call: 740-2!6·6065 or 1·937-322·
7929
Square Bales Mixed Grass, Cut

71 0

'69 Cougar. V-6 aula .. PW, POL,
nice car, $3600, 740-992·2356.
'93 Muslang GT, Weld Dragilghl
Wheals, Cobra manllold, 373
gears, every boll on Imaginable,
1971 MGB Roadster, new top,
new exhaust. good Interior, paint.
&amp; chrome, Twin SU carburelor,
klw miles. $3,500. 304-675-1550.

Old, S250.00

740-44f-1602 After 4:00PM.

BMW;

1985

Toronado

lor dogs wl1houi sySiemic poisons. ASK R&amp;G FEED I SUPPLY, 740·992·2164 aboul HAP·
py JACK PARACID! 11 shampoo. Con1ains NO Deoll
(www.happyJacklnc.com)
Jack Ruuoil Terrier Pupplaa, 8
Weeks Old, 740-441 -0553.

1984 Mercury Cougar $-400, 740.
_44_1_-o_1_32_.- - - - - - - 1986 Bonneville LE, maroon, 4dr,

1966 Ford Eacoll wagon, 23,000
actual

mlln.

&amp; dissenled, cage &amp; ail supplies.
$65 080. 304-675-1725.

740.742-2485.

14x16 Otftce bultdlng, moveabte,

Male Aottweller, Had ShOll, 8 Mo.
Old, Good Dlsposillon 1100.00
740-256·1116.

Automatic, Run• Great! Looks

compiOieiy linlshed. Troybulll
Cycle Bar mower. 304-675-5162.

304-675-n83.

4 Place Bdrm Suit. White Canopy,
Full Size. Call aher 4:00 PM 740-

Mice and rata tor 111e, tor more
Information call 740-992·2794 .

1989 Dodge DaY1ona, aulomallc,
air, PB, PS, Ilk, allvor, $1600 080,
740-992-6012.

Furnished Upstairs apanment.
Close to Downtown Gallipolis and
Grocery. R~s and Depoa~.

446-7496.
French City Pet Grooming by Ap·

1989 Mercury Cougar Nice

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom

Air condilioner, 5000 blu, $85;
T·back 1930's oak chairs. orlgl· Registered Labrador Puppies ,
nal, $20 each; caplaln chair, $3; ,Chemplon Bloodline. Proven
porch OIY!ng; $10: 741)-1149-4000.
Hunilng S1ock, Yellow Fomaltl,
Sho1a, Wormed, 1200.00 740ATTENTION: We'll Pay
643-2268
Losa Up To 29
Moro). 47 Paople Naodld
Two year old female Doberman,
dlalolyl Olfer Exprioo 9112/98. good wilh kids, $75, 740-992·

posit required. HUO accepted .

apartmenls at Village Manor and

Riveraida Apenmenls In Middleport From $249·$373. Cali 740992-5064. Equal Hou~ng Opporlunillea.
Ground floor 8p1 2br, wid hook-up,
6 deposit, no pets.
304-675-5162.

references

Lafayette Mail: 2 Rooms &amp; Balh
lncludod, Ail Ullill~s. $200.00 lo
$235.00 Par. Mo .. Otposi1 Requ~ed. 740-441 -1005.

Liks New Bundy Alia Ssxaphorle,
$800, 740-446-7903.

·sso. 740-992·

liks new 30" electric range $350.
Maple kitchen eablneta $1 ,300.

0006.

26,000 BTU air condiUOnar $325.
380ft . Walnut lumber 200ft. 12•
concrete blocks $.60ea. 304675-4004.

One Sodroom , Upper Route 7, No

LIVing room IUIIO, 2-ond lablll,

Grande College. $300.00 Per

Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouse

320

Free 1-8811-640-0"521

Apar1meniS S2951Mo.. 7•0-446-

Pete or Children, Water &amp; Trash

lrduded. 740-448 2108.

coffee-table solid wood, 2 extra

Cha!ro • fOOl ltOOI $800. 304·
t15-5106lflor 3pm.

bedroom aper1men1 in Mid· •
dllport. Ill Ulllitltl peid, $100 .(le- · Muma for ltle· 5 101 110. Cumpoah, 1270 mon1h, call 740·99t·
7606 6am-5pm,

polnimonl. "Ultra Wtoh ltthlnP.
Syalom" 650 Socond Ave. GaiiP&lt;&gt;I&amp; 740-+46-1528.

~740-44~~f--1~962~·----~---t · =~~76~.~--~~~~~

Kenmore dryer,
7689.

min's Greenhouse across from

Racine Loclil &amp; Dam, Monday
lhru Sa!Urday, 9an&gt;-5j)m.

1980 -1990Trucu $100 -SSOO
Pollee impounds
AH Makes Available
1-600-290-2262, X 3901.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Yellow Lobs, 6 Weeks Old Resdy
'To Gol AKC Papers Available,
740-245-9577.

570

1986 Ford Mercury Scorpio V-8.
Goodl740-387·7148.

Car

$1,600 080; 1966 Chevy Cavali er, Good Work Car $500, OBO
740-44f -QM4.
1ODO Plymouth Acctaim 4 Doors,

AJC, 4 Cylinder, Good Condlllon,
Runs Good 740-245-5867.
1992 hgle Talon Runs Excellent

$-4,200, 740-245-5466.

miles, $5300, 740.992·2290.

OKAY, f&gt;Oc; •• t40¥1 bo .I
rTAIIf&gt;7
-..._ .I bON'T

1987 Plymouth Mini van, 118,000

Miles, $1,200 OBO, 740·2561233.

ICNOW. IT'S A
MlltAC.L.f
TOM~, TOO.

1990 3/4 Ton Dodga Cargo Van,

•••-"'

1992 Ford Explorer 55K Loaded,

$11,000, While/Red lnlerlor, E•·
celisnl Condilioni 740-446-2510.

THE BORN LOSER

1895 Toyola T· l oo 4x4, 90,000

,..

Mile&amp;. Good Condition, Sell For

~, Cl-\1£1',

Payoll, $9,500, 740-446-3040.
1996 Ford F-150, 4•4 EXIended
Cab, XLT, V·8, Auto, Loaded,

740

"'I

Wi-ll\\ DO YOU
TI\ I~K. 11-WJT

,..

....

WI-lEN IKITIP...TIN6 CDNV~1la.l
Ill-\ tr'£, I&lt;JNOLY t..IA:llt&gt;
Til~ 5UBU15:

THE:.PWP05£D
S&lt;..HOOL L£VY?

,.

')
~

N-10 ~YTI-\IKG INTW..IEffiT I

POLITID,m.t&amp;l~...

MotorcyciH

1994 YZ126 Dirt Bike Excellent

1999 Harley Davidson 663 Sporl·
sler Custom, 627 miles . $8,500 .

304·192-3326.
66 CR 125 molorcycla,

new pariS,

great condition bul needs motor

work, $600, 740-247-3901.

blue ciolh lop, 45,300 acluai
miles, garage kept. very clean,
excellent condilion, serious lnqul·

ries only, 740·247·3901 aflar
6:00pm.
Ml~s.

One Ownar, $7,000

Firm, No Calla After 8:00 P.M.

sary Model, Mini Cond. Baby
Blue wiMapie Neck. $625. 304675-4299.
Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

740-245-5705.
1993 Plymoulh Acclaim llghl
blue, am-fm cassette, air, power

windows. $3,700. 304-675-7530.

1995 f'onHac Grand-Am SE, V•6,
loadtd, a~nfl)of, woll 1aken cara
of. $8,300. 304-6112·2048.

Good Tomatoes, Not Cannare AI1~

lbs

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1995 Taurus SHO, loaded, 33,000
milos, $18,000, 740-992-:1290.

:r..:

5 Grant's rival
eT....,,

9
10 Fablad Plaza
Nliclenl

22B:c'tr~

North
Obi.

loot
24 Grown-upt

26 Actor II8IH
26 Wordl of

East
PIISII
Pass

Pass

danlal
30 Emulllea a
leechtr
34 Straw hal
35Enclured
38 ,.,.,. of pie?
38 Last ayllilble
olawonl

K

deplh finder. $2,000. 304·675533

J.IEV, MAIWE .. I-lOW
SOON 8EI=ORE
SCI-IOOL SrARTS
A6AIN "?

Inboard, McCrulser, Low Hours.

$5,500, 740-367-7025.
Summers not over! Kaw.asaki
STS Jet ski, still under wacranty,
three seater, 83 horsepower,

I MAV I-lAVE TO
BORROW SOME
NOTEBOOK PAPER
AND llUN6S ..

IWEDNESDAY
.

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Unconditional life1ime guarantee .
Local references furnished. Es-

labllshad 1975. Ceil 24 Hro. (740)
«6·0670, 1·600.267-0576. Rogers WalerprOOfing.

C&amp;C

General

Home

Main-

tenance - Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,

mobile home rapa~ and mora. For
free eslimals call Chel, 740-992Dtve'a ~ Floorl
Tho Plalno, OH

Refinishing &amp; repairing existing
ftoora. lnstal~ng and finishing new
hardwoods floors lo your specifications . Fully Insured. References

available, 740-797-4723.

840

Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

R. Fuller Electric House Wiring &amp;
Trouble Shoaling, Soma lnduslraH, 740-388-9452.
Rolkfenlloi or commer~al Wiring,
service or repairs. 'Maeler li-

censed electrician . Rklenour

Elocoricai, WV000306, 304-175·
1766.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campoa
c-;,yCipher- ,,.,_
_ _ _ .,,......._, ...............
Each kittef in'*"- cipher..,. for another. Today'• due: I ..,.,. F

'N C K
GSWII,
C T

w

STJ

OKL

DCZH

ON

HDCTCZWVLV

GCSJ

CG

LGSEHII

WTIGSVLGKDLKGH.'

ZSGRSGHL

LYSLDYHG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Jusl the lirst baby step, aiming for bigger and better
things."- Alan Shepard, of his first, brlel s~ce flight.

'::~::~' S@\\Q\\lA-l££!rS
I.
the
0 sc:rombled
be-

8

_...:.;.:.__

_.:;._..;;: l~ito~ ~, CLAY

Rearrange
fOur

POlLAN

WOlD
GAMI

leHers of
words

low to form four simple words.

S QI U NY

UP"

Home
Improvements

French Clly Maylag, 740-446·
7795.

53 E,...tc0n1

One of my favorite bumper st1ckers read : Sorrow
Looks Down, Worry Looks Around, But Hope LOOKS

'

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence All Work Guafanteed,

elolhlngllem
49 Jecklil's 2nd
mile
50 Sgt., e.g.
52 Dildl palnlei'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Uplift. Husky· Crook· Y~llow · LOOKS ~p

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

810

GraiH
Woman•a

ANSWER

J.IAVE A
CALENDAR?

Auto Part&amp; &amp;
Accessories

SERVICES

42
44

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR

DO 'I"OU

a

New gas lank&amp; &amp; bo&lt;!y ports. D &amp;
A Aula. Ripley. wv. 304-3723933 or 1·600-273-9329.

precloul

40 Det.cllng
davlce

PEANUTS

1987 Woll Craft, 19 1/2 fl. Cuddy

204~. will consider trade ·lor

3t More

nearby!

15ft. Starcraft RunabOut wllrailer50hp. Evlnrude motor, skis.

6323.

59,000

Guitar-Fender Strat. 50th Anniver-

K&amp;N air filters, excellent condition,
$3,600, 740-247·3901

1992 Mercury Cougar, white with

1993 Euro Sport Chevy Lumina,

Mualcal
lnatruments

•ready Picked 24 lbs SfO;
·$6; Phone: 304-682-2237.

---

/t'1 f /)I~fi' J,.
I'VA'-VATt()t(J

1983 Ford Bronco 4l4, lull size,
351 motor. $2500; 1986 Chevy
Conversion Van , full size, . low

exctlllnt eondltion,

Male Ferrite 1Omoa old, neutered

8 Guardian

In a rowboat
made for two

runs good, looks good, $3500
080,740-742-1334.

new tire• I brPes, good cond.

$3,200. 304-e75-5792 aflar Sprn,
1888 Chevy S-10, Ntw Painl Job,
Sharpi740-44H419

7 Ancient poe!

3 Goad
4 Fire residue

19 Scienllal'l

Opening lead: •

740·245-58n.

Gel heal relief, condition heir

1 Ruaalan
rulen
2 Hardtat lo lind

11 Uti of noomeo
12 Make I VOW

In yesterday's deal, one defender
could see the killing defense. His
problem was to make it clear to part·
ner. In other deals. though, both
defenders must work together. each
having key plays 10 make. One crab
•• one botched stroke •• and the contract succeeds.
On this deal, how should East·
West steer their boat through the
rapids to defeat four hearts?
North made a negative double,
which showed length in both minors
but insufficient values for a two-over·
one response. Without the negative
double, North must overbid slightly
with two clubs, or respond one notrump withoul a spade stopper.
West leads the spade king, guar·
anteeing the king and queen. Here
comes 1he first critical play; East
must overtalce with the ace to unblock
the suit. Then he returns his remaining spade, allowing West to take two
more tricks in the suit. On the third
spade, East discards a discouraging
diamond lwo (or club two).
It's time for key play number two.
· West should realize that his side will
not be scoring any minor-suit tricks.
South has 10 have something for his
jump to four hearts. And. if th~
defenders have taken every s1de-su1t
trick they can get, it is usually right
to concede a ruff-and-discard. So,
West continues with another spade.
We have reached the final run.
East must ruff with the heart I 0. This
effects an uppercut Soulh oveoruffs,
but now West's heart jack will take
the setting Irick.
That's a beautiful defense, but if
East falls overboard at the las! stage .
and ruffs with the heart two, I hope
West docsn 't have a loaded harpoon

gOOd pontoon boat
ll====;;;;_
____

1984

DOWN

"

By Phillip Alder

198Q Chevy Chevette :2dr, 4spd .

$750, 740.245-5612.

WIIPDrM

'. 33 .,...
-Aviv

air, new paint, amlfm cassette,

ooughl new July of '97, 1nree
malchlng Kawasaki ski vests and
!roller all go wllh II. Priced 10 sell,
$4200, 740-949-2203 or 7•0-949-

1962 Culiass Supreme, 2 D. 260
ve. Good co ndlllon. S1,50o .oo
Firm 740-992-4566.

West
I•
Pass

4•

&amp; 4-WDa:

1960 ·1990 HONDA CARS $100
-UOO Pollee Impounds. All
Makes Available, Cali f-600·5222730 Ext 4420.
$f85. 304-662-3767.

. 21 - c1r1 rrence
: 31 Old Frencll
coin
,
• 32Ungenttamenly

'64 Chevy B~zer Tahoe 4x4, cold

750

Autos for Sale

14 Ft. Trampoline Can Be Seen

11ove &amp; refrigeralor. $275/mo. de·

Soutb
I•

1996 Racing Go-Cart ex c. cond.

7571.

Males,

BARNEY

Relldy 10 race. 304-662·3501.

AI 8455 Slale Roule 160, Gslllpo1~. $12~ Firm, 740-446-3062.

74o-446·6235, 740-446-0Sn.

Vane

Condillon, $1.800.740-379-2701 .

$9500, 740-992-6130.

Af:lll conlrol fleas, licks, &amp; miles

Mlacellaneoua
Merchandise

730

Reeking hO&lt;es gelding, rood safe.
lra.li sate. $1200, 740-742·2050.

&amp; Grain

.....

holding .,....,. 57 Polrdecl

1996 Ford Ranger XLT Aaklng

1986 Yamaha 3 Wheeler, Good
Condblon, $800.740-256-1631

Hay

c-r ..... for

Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: South

1985 Dodge short bed, 318 rilolor. $1.500 or lrade. 304·675 3312.

6402, 740-446-1156.

640

:;:..:::::r

•s

1980 Chevy 112 Ton, 8 Cylinder,

2905.

' 27
:

56

• AQ

•

Aulomalic, P.S., P.B .. 81,000
Miiea, $1,600.00 080. 740·«6-

. 25n....

•AKQ9873

J;

95 Yamaha Banshee. FMF pipes,

For Addltlonallnforriwlt!On.

540

keys Male &amp; Female, 740·256-

TRANSPORTATION

Block, brick, sewer pipes. windows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245-

560

Bull, 1 112 Yaars Old, Baby Don-

In May Belore Rain $1.25 740379-2630.

740-446-1214.

a.m.

Moore owner.

A,;i- 304-456-1069.

$19,500,740-367-0657.

pression Fittings In SIOCk
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohk&gt; 1-BD0-537-9528

DOG OBEDIENCE CLASSES
Now Forming, Csil 740-446-1864

to 6:00p.m ., Sunday 1:00 to

2 Angus Bulls, 4 Years Old Calving Ease, Call 740·446-7339,
740-448-4689.

$21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI

1124 E. Main Slrael, on Rl. 124.
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
6:00 p.m. 740-992-2526, Russ

Livestock

Waterline Special: 3/4 200 PSI

A Groom Shop -Pel Grooming.

530

&amp; references. 304-192·2566.

630

Sleal Buldlngs In Original Craie.
40120 ( 1 Open End) Was $6,380

&amp; movies . Call 740-446-2568.

furnished , utllllles paid, deposit

3725.

520

Tlppman proille pelnlbali gun w~h
accessories, $200, 740-992·
5005.

Beech Slreel, Mlddleporl, 2br,

!railer Good Shap. 740-+46-9301

5121.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weslwood Drive
lrom $279 10 $358. Walk 10 shop
Equal Housing Opporlunily.

Wanted to Buy Used 24'X70'

furniture on consignment. Open
Tuesday-Friday, 11 -4, 740-992·

• J 7 3

i
I

South of Leon, WV. Financing

Trans, S1.350, DBO 740-4463040.

plela $135,740-446-4762.
Sporting
Goods

Uplon Used Cars Rl. 62·3 Miles

620

breakfasl seiS &amp; good clean used

c:""
Hlywlrd movie

116"'--l•.......

I 34FuHrwoa
_, -

Soutb

nue, Middleporl (Cash Bah(s old

Wanted to Buy

088432
• 9732

KJ4

Ji

cr....

24 Jacab't 10ft

• 10 4

2

VIckie, 740-446-al97.

High Miles, Needs Some Body
Repair, Runs Good, Rebuilt,

Call304-675-6205 evenings.
day Inn, In Kanauga. Twin Beds,

Lawn Tractors And Low Rate Fi·
nanclng On Ne~ And Used
Equipment. Carmichael's Farm &amp;
Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740-446·

J •
J 5

Credit Problems? We Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles, No Turn Downs, Call

24121·600-594·1111.

$37 .00 Per 100; All Brass Com·

GOOD

74Q-448.8268

One 10n Chevy !ruck, hel tJo4 callle racks, $2500, 740&gt;2474793.

Wanted : Someone to Work on
Farm. Trailer, Utilities, Salary aOO

8 54
6
K 10 9 7
A Q 10 6 5
East
K Q 10 9 2
• A8

Cruise. $8,500, Aller 5:00 P.M.

The Pomeroy Thrill Shop has
moved to 145 North Second Avebuilding ), buying· baby items,

48

20 Gift - - Whirl 51 uw.ry genre
21 JFK pltMI
54 lmpote a lint
23 Tecl'l rola on
on

•
•
•
•

1996 Pontiac Sunfire, Air, Tilt,

$1,250; lnlernallonal Dump Truck
s1,200 740-379-2630'

740.385-4367.

70x14 House Trailer, Mitchell

895·3129 aflsr Spm.

15

~

.

17 Blbllcet 47 PaVIng goo
11 Building wing 48 Swlmmfng

$3,695. 304-5711-2919.

PayOff Only 740-2116-5745.

740-441 -1544.

Space for Rent

43 WI- toy
45 8wltcll

11 Sao dltuoe

1996 Hindu Accent 2dr, alrJ Juto
w/overdrlve, 40,000 miles, ·bucket seats, dual air bags, am-lm
stereo, must see to apperlcate .

Wagon $400; Superior Mower

Mobile home site available between · Athens and Pomeroy, call

675-3485.

wv.

ter Tank $700: 350 Gallon Fuel

2 Bedrooms, Kanaoga Area. Very
C1ean, No Pets, Deposit ReQuired,

Now Taking Applicailona- 35

Btdroom, living room, kllchen
ba1h. 132 S. Park Drive Poinl
304-675-3017.

Rocks SS.OOO; 2,0!10 Galion Wa-

Wllh Us Aboul Financing On

1 Bedroom house near Rio
Month , Deposit ReQuired . Toll

Dayton Superior Over Hang

Swivel lOCker ottoma n, wing·
back chair, gas !reo-sta nding
lireplace. large oil painting. 304·

740-4411-1156.

Real Estate
Wanted

Sl1eep Foot Roller $42,000; 200

460

Furnished garage apt. 2br, ale,

Scenic Valley al Apple Grove,
wv. Building lois, single wides

10' long, six 6' long, oak, good
condlllon, call 740-949·2217,
7:00am-f0:00pm.

3,000 Pd. Headecha Ball $2,000:
LaTumar Graver $7,500; 553 Cal

nan Trace Rd. CeQ 740.255-6202.

Lot left Of Phase I Asking

$30,000 For 5 Acres, 740·245·
9033.

12' long, four

Chorch pews, -

pelS. 304-675-1055.

$-450.00 740-441-0918.

Commercial-Office or Retail. 87
Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 Sq Fl.

Malcfling Hope Chesl $230; Baby
Crib Whh Layette, Etc, $50, 740.
446-3040.

tzed apt lor elderly and nandl·

capped. EOH 304-675-6879.

Green Ap1s. 149 or call 740-992·
3711. EOH.

Buslnesa and
Buildings

Broyhill Chest Of Drawers Plus

applicallons for 1br. HUD subsld·

Golds Gym Weigh! Sel Wilh
Olympic Size Bench, And

736-7295.

Toil Free (1) 800·218-9000 Ext
H-2614 FO&lt;Curranlllslings.

Now 3br $900. down, $149. per
mo Fret lkrt. 1-800-89f-e777.

APT AVAILABLE NOW

2bdrm. apts., total electric, ap·
pliances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school in town.
Applications available at: Vlllage

$22,500. 304-675·6911. Olher
lois available.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Floors, CA. 1 112 Balh, Fully Carpoled, Aduil Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, No Peta, Lease Plus Secur·
ily Oeposil Required, 740-•463481 .

Make 2 PaYments, Move In, No
Payments Alter 4 Years! 304·

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes

Remodeled 3br home 107 Pleas·

Tara Townhouse Apartments ,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

lrash pick-up. 304-675-2144.

4.98 acrts. private, public water.
mostly cleared, Flatrock area.

Than Asking Price Of:
t117,600
TAXES 130i /YR.
1-304-273-2140

Smail 1br lurnlshed apt all ulili·
ties paid , security deposit re·
quiad. 304-675-6512.

$17,000.304-192-3426

n3-5040.

Car Garage, Appraisal Greater

Included $290. Monlh . Deposil
required Toi1Free 9811-840-o521

Never oul of box. S125. Holds up
to 940 diaes, also holds tapas.
Call 740-992-6636 aflor 6 pm.
COs &amp; !apes no! included.

Farm Equipment

Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders. Check

Near Holzer, $279/Mo., -t: Utilities,
Deposit &amp; Lease Required. 740-

2 acre lots or 8 acres. Bethel

Beaulilui New Two Slory Colonial
3 Bedroom, 2 1/2 BalhS, LR. FR.
DlninQ Room Wi1h Hardwood
Floors. Oak Trim F~epiace, 1 112

Rio Grande area 1 Bedroom
Acroas from CamptJs, All Utilities

cherry.

610

675-6036.

New 1998 1•x10 1hree bedroom,

Appro.1. t acre, 4 br, 2 baths , 1
mile out Pleasant Ridge Road.
Central heat &amp; air. $21 ,000. 304·

PRIME
LOCATION
414 Third Avenue
Gallipols

992-6886 after 5j)m.

and

..,_

Ariltrlc8n
14 or • IIddy

Condlllon, Fully Loaded, S15,000,
740-245-9525.
'

741J-441·5696, 740-441-5167.

2 Bedroom, Panially furnished, 81
10 Mile from Route 218 on Han-

1 Bedroom, AJC, WID, Hook-Up,

5 Vr old home, 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths. Private Sening. 5 + Acres

4514

two bedroom unturnlst'led: near
playgrounds, SO, sir, call 740-

Construction Workers Welcome

9621.

340

Newly Aemodled Country Home.
Oilers quiet country living on a
private 2 112 acre lot with local
schools and downtown shopping
less than 10 minutes awlrf. Family pleasing amenities including
new kitchen, Hardwood floors, 2
fireplaces, family/home office
space. 3-4 bedrooms, 2 1/2
baths. many extras! $98,000 .00
ca ll 740-446·9762 or 740 · 446·

Pomeroy- IWO bedroom, fumiahed:

1 Bedroom Apartment. No Pets,
S210/Mo., Includes Water, $100

Large selection of us9d homes. 2

304-675-2924.

'

1104.

storage unit. Black

Movlngl! Must Settt Living &amp; Dining Room Furniture, Wall Cup·

baths. lot garage, 2 added

304-675-1350.

Brand Newi Greal Gihl CO/Video

740-4411-7323

992·2218.

3426.

3br, living room, dining room,
family room, 1 ·bath, central air,
newer carpet &amp; root, replacement
windows, tamlly neighborhood,
privacy fenced yard, 24ft. above
ground pool, many upgrades,
move in cond. Priced in 70's.

From Pennies On S1 Delinquent
Tax, Aepo's, AEO's. Your Area .

Pets. Contact Debbie or Judy AI

options available. 1-8 88-928-

2906 Meadowbrook Drive, 3br,
bath. TV room, back porch, close

6yr, 2·3 bedrooms, loft, tongue/
groove, pellet stove, HPICA. Bppllances, garage, spa, acre, Bula·
ville Pike, 7-40-367·0286.

Trailer Pant, Deposit &amp; References Required. No Pets 740·446·

chair, swing, slroiler, playpen, &amp;

13 ,..,.., Ill

1998 Chrysler LHS Excellent

Baby bed, dressing table. high

cat IHl 304-675-4548.

992-2167.
2 Bedroom Trailers, In Small

FAR I.1 SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

brary. $350.001 Mo Rent Plus
$350 .00 Oeposfl Required . No

Vine Slreel, Call 740-446-7398,
1·688-618-&lt;l12a.

Special 16x80 3BR, 2 bath .

Barn, Appro•. 6 miles oul of Gall"
P&lt;&gt;is. 740.256-1147

ond Ave .· Next To Bossard Li·

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

homes. P1yment1 11 low 11

lo schools. 304-675-4360 afler
6pm.

One Bedroom Apt At 651 Sec-

Slarting al ONLY $39,999. Many

Slreel, Gallipolis, Cali 740·446·
4999, Or 740-594-3033.

ant St. Many extras Inside 6 out,
A-1 condition. Call for info. 304·

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

180

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color. religion',
sex familial status or national
ortgin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.·

Apartmenta
for Rent

...

40 Dlltrlct In
1 CourtGtnMny
7 Worllahop tool 41 Conlownpllble

ALDER
110

Sllmel..,tng

,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 )
Family commitments should take
priority over otherl ob~ations ~Y·
Do not disappoint ov ones w arc
counting on you.
SAGJTIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
, .
h h
21) ll's been said thatli.e IS w 81 8J&gt;"

AS'I'RO-ORAPH

' ,
Thursday, Sept. 3, 1998
In the year ahead, your enterprising qualities will be ac!ivated and

enhanced. Though your awareness of
opportunity will be heightened, do
not scatter your efforts too lhinly.
pens to us wi)file we'rehbedusyl ~ak~ng
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Usu· other plans. I your sc
u e IS IS·
ally, you're good at juggliltg two sit· , rupt~, don't get upsel •• flow with
uations simultaneously. Today, how·
the tode.
ever, you may fail in both instances.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
'
. ledin acti"f
with
Do
Keep things simple. Know where lo .
n t get lnvo v
Vltes
look for romance and you'll find it. · friends today if you can't afford to.
vou won't en1"oy your - - ·.tion if
M ate hma keT
The
Astro·Graph
•·
·-··
you have lo worry about costs.
instantly reveals which s1gns
AQUARIUS (Jan. 0-Feb.
2
19)
romantically perfect for you. Maol
Today you might have to deal with
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this news·
someone rather unpleasut. Doe't
. paper, P,O. Box J7SS, Muf1'1ly Hill
·· Station, New York. NY JOIS6. ·
:you to react in a slmllirllllllllel'. : "

m:e ·

er. ARIES (March 21·Aprill9l Busi·
ness and pleasure might not make a
compatible mix today. s_o_do one or
the other. not both.
"'•URUS (Apn"I20.May 20) Sun.
'"
r
port you're hoping for today might
not be forthcoming unless you clear·
ly define what you need.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
can do whal you set your mind to
oda
ided' you don't ignore
I ·atyl, prov "t"c·a
· I factors Don"t
sm
yetcnt
•
de d
a rabbit's fOOl· only tea·
pen on •
. work '
son and logtc WI 11
•
Try
CANCER (J
21 July 22)
urn:
• •
~ to put matenal th1ngsdoabove
today. If you . : you
• you bope to gun and

~tps

!!'l ,_~II~

..

thisperson'smodeof~~ior~·~upwtthonelessvotcondtepop-'
1~1Y poll.

UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)This is

not a good day to focus on financial

. :. iisks in unfamiliar venues. Be cau·
.• · tiOIIs aoiil prudent in Ill cndoaVDn.·
even if othen. encouraae you to
behave odterwise.

••
'

20:.Man:,b .20)~: ' LE01Juty23-tr~:~.Jn'lllll~
~ _,.,u~ ..a~UJ _ --~
Unless you are ~J,IU ~not · .
....,.. thoee
people
, topromlte~do~nrfor~ . I'DIIIt ~with. The air is : ,
cr. lmpubtve COinml~ IOday
uncertainties.
could ~ly lnconven- you Ill· . .
WI
•
• . . Ill
PISCES (feb.

with

Ctt"'-th

SEPTEMBER 2 I

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