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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Cincinnati
beats Padres
by four runs

Pick 3:
9-4-5
Pick 4:
. 5-7-9-9
Buckeye 5:
3-7-15-19-29

Sports on Page 4

Mostly clear and cool,
lows between 45 and 50.
Thursday, mostly sunny.
· Highs 75 to 80.

•

en tine
llol. 48, NO. 79

Area man looks to build
_upon children's assets
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"Communities that Care - A
Community-Wide Approach to Preventing Youth Violence."
That's the title of a new program :
aimed at helping people raise good
kids, according to Dan Romuno of
Harrisonville, one of 50 Comm.unities that Care-registered consultants.
· Li~e the old Johnny Mercer song.
"Accentuate the Positive, Elimin~te
the Negati~e," the progra111 focuses
on 30 identifiable assets and works
toward establishing or strengthening
them in the lives of young people.
The program is based on "What
Kids Need to Succeed," a book by
Peter L. Benson Ph.D., Judy Galbraith M.A., and Pamela Espeland,
Romuno e•plained.
More than 270,000 young people
were interviewed mover 600 communtttes for the book. which prov1des
a checklist for parents and kids identifying 30 assets, he said.
·
The as~ts identified invol~c love
and famtly support, dtsqpltne,
friends, aqdemic and non-academic
school related activities, involvement in religious activities and per·
sana! qualtues. The more a~sets present, the better.
"A lot of this is JUS! common
sense," he said. "A lot of them arc

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 6, 1997

Cl1997, Ohio Valley Publlahlng Company

preny easy to get a chjld involved
with.
"Know what your children are
doing , communicate with teachers
and communicate with children,
know who they are associating with."
he said .
.
"The ultimate goal would be to
have all 30 assets," Romuno said.
"For the kids to get ... 26 of these, the
kids are in good shape. They will
develop, on their own, resist•&lt;• to
drug and alcohol abuse.'"
·
The program is designed to case
the transition from elementary school
to junior high school, an age where a
child's attitude toward alcohol and
other drugs can change, Romuno
said.
"That transition from elementary
school to middle school is where all
of a sudden the kids that will talk to
me ... t~al want to live a healthy life.
.. all of sudden their attitudes ...
toward school. alcohol and other
drugs have changed," he said.
Rom uno classifies drugs and alco- .
hoi as the biggest threat towards children.
·
"One of the things that I· sec ... is
that the kids go to panics, go to someone's house - half of the parents
won't have any idea of what is going
on at the parties," he said.
"There is more alcohol ahusc

New bleachers on way___,

•

going on with 14-to-16-year-olds
than most parents realize," he said. "If
parents knew about it ... they'd want
to put an end to it. It becomes the parents' job to research and find out what
the kid is doing ...
"Teenagers are the single largest
age group threatened with AIDS, and
over half of them are high on alcohol
or other drugs when they have sex,"
he said. "In addition, two-thirds of all ·
adults incarcerated were either using
drugs or engaged in drug-related
activity, or ,gelling money to buy
drugs, when they commined the
crimes that resulted in their imprisonment"

"Drug and alcohol use to some
degree are undermining our educa- .
lion system," he said. "Teachers have
to spend too much time having to discipline a small percentage of the kids
in their class, kids wanting negaii ve
attention."
.One aspect of the program that
Romuno likes is its focus on the
church - or mosque, synagogue,
temple, whatever- as a positive factor in a child's life.
The church has a lot of power,
between the home and the church, ·
schools could just · start teaching,
being educators and not disciplinar-

.,..''\

..

,

vices, said she is willing to meet with'
District 1199 representati~~s, but the
negotiations arc over The department
oversees the delivery of state scrvices.
" We imposed our last. best final
offer, " Ms. Drabik said in an interVIeW.
Members of District 1199 of the
Service Employees Internati onal
Union set up picket lines at daybreak
at prisons and slate offices.
All strikers were expected to
return to work today. but the union
has promi sed to walk out again in two
weeks unless a settlctnent is re'ached.
Employeos c•empt from collective bargaining were doing the work
of the striking employees, Ms. Ora·
bik said.
The fact-finder 's proposal recommends 3 percent annual rai ses for
thre e years. reduction in sick leave
benefits. elimination of a longevity

pay program and mandatory drug
testing for some empl'lyees.
"The state is trying to take back
that were negotiated 10
years ago:· said Mike Hcnncsscy,.a
parole oftkc r from Cincinnati.
Speakers at 'the rally urged the
~enefit;

crowd to lobby lawmakers to win

,

I

..... ....,

Ians

(Continued on Page '3)

UPS stands by offer
despite call for talks
ATLANTA (AP) - .Fallout from
the United Parcel Service strike
touched millions from coast to coast:
Small businesses and th.e health care

RECLAIM

OHIO
OHL, .· ~\\~
. . ,., .,f\~\ff\ rr;.

RECLA

~\\
01.111

.Jcos

01111 L

(M Jotos
011t1 ru&gt; '
Oun Vt·no~

' .

RIDi•lricl 1 ~;1 Oistvict 1100/SF. 0 ·

support for their side in the strike . workers to press the state for a better
Some carried signs that read. "Do offer.
" li's time to senlc it and to settle
you ride with felons? I do,.. and
"Child molesters arc not on strike."

industry were inconvcnicm:cd as

were surfers in Florida and ranchers

·H o u ~c ."

it fairly said.

no concessions." Burga

" It's a shame that as profession·
ais , we have to do this , .. said Stewart Harris. a striking psychiatrist
from the Pauline Warlield Lewis
Cj.:'ntcr in Cincinnati . ~'I'm with a·
bunch of good people here...

District 1199 President David
Reean told the crowd the state was
arr~gant for imposing its final offer
on the union employees.
,} ''The level of cynicism on their
part is staggering," he said. " We
'expect more out of our elected rep·
William Burga. president of, the rcsentatives than we do out of people
Ohio AFL-CIO. urged the striking who expect to make a prof&gt; I. "

White Hnusc !-. pokcsman Mike

No talks were schedu led as the
walkout entered its third day today

aging hntll s1dc.s to return to the har- ·

with the company delivering less th::m
I 0 percent or .the packages they

gaining tahle. hut didn·, plan to pcr. ~ o nall y intervene because the major

would, handle on a normal busine&lt;&gt;
day.
to get hack 10 the bargaining tahle
hcforc real damage is done'?'" Tcnm·

impact of the strike wo1s economic
The president could intervene 1f he
hclicves the strike poses ar~ imminent
threm to nati,&gt;nal hc:.Uth and sa fety.
" I think clearly that standord
no1 hccn reached at this poinL in the

stcrs president Ron Carey said Tucs·

view of tho preSident ... McCurry said.

"The. company is shu t down .

STRIKERS' MARCH- Members of District1199 of the Service
Employees International Union marched on the Statehou.s e
grounds in Columbus Tuesday as part of a one-day strike protesting the stale's latest contract offer. (AP)
·

able ... UPS &gt;pokcsman Ken Stcrn:id
said. "We cm.:oura.gc anyone who
wishes to sec thi s stnkc end to
express those conce rns tO the While

in the rural West.

......,

sequences of this strike arc consider-

Does'n ' t 'it make sense ror every bod);

day. "We ve proved our point... ·

McCu rry said Clinton was encour-

I"''

" Obviously, we· will con tinue to

In rcsponsc, thc giant deli ve l)' service repeated 'that lls last cont ract

assess the i mract. "

offer was fin al and sh ould he suhmittcd to the union 's mcmhcrship ftlr

sayin g she spoke by telephone to
Carey and UPS chairman James Kel-

a vmc.
Carey asked Lahor Secretary
Alexis Herman to ~ct involved and
cncoUragC the cm;pany to n:::-.um.:
' hargaining. hut said he oppOsed prc~­
identlal intervention. UPS. mean while. wants customer:-. to joi11 i.t!o&gt; c:lll
. to President •Clinton to Interve ne
under the ·rarely used Taft -Hartley
Act.
"We hclicvc it i~ time ror the president to step in a" the ccnnc~mic con-

Hcnnnn released a hriof statement
ly ;:md urged them to bcg 1n negotia tions.

The walkout by · the I R5.000
Tcamstcr-rcprcscntcd em ployees i!-.
the fir~ ! nati onwide strike in UPS ' YOyear hi ~tory. UPS normally mo\l'-.. ·
IlK I..',LjUi\';:ah;nt or (l pCil:Cil t &lt;lf tile U.S.
gro :-.~ nu tional produ ct c;Kh J&lt;.~ y.
UPS' comrctitors couldn't hi.Jndl c
all of th ~.: owrllnw packages and put
re!-.tricli tlns nn customer!-&gt; and new
hu sincss.

Rutland puts selection of grant
administrator on hold for now
I

Questions slated . · from the ir homes aflcr four to six
of rainfall.
to be answered , · inches
. The village can usc the grant funding to purchase and demolish flo odwhen officials
prune property and buildin gs. relomeet in Columbus cate houses or lift them from the
!3Y JIM FREEMAN

'OPEl
MOI.·FII. 9~9
SAT.94

Sentinel News Staff
Appointment of a grant administrator to oversee more than $1 million
in flood relief for the village of Rutland will have to, wait until after Aug.
20.
The
community
received
$1,048,000 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. the Ohio
Depanmcnt of Development and the
Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.
The biggest share, $782.652, is
from FEMA's Hazard Mitigation
Grant Program, while the Ohio
Department of Development is furnishing $231,000.
The grant stems from the March .
Oobding that forced · hundreds of
Rut!and and Langsville area residents

flood plain. or make them flood resi stant.
The question before Rutland Village CounciL now is who will administer the grant program. Council met .
last week in a special session with
floodplain commiuee members Joe
Bofin and Mik~ Duhl, and wirh concerned village residents.
David Gloeckner, Job •Training
Partnership Act supervisor. addressed
council on behalf of the JTPA program, which is interested in administering the giant.
Gloeckner briefly outlined his
experience and qualifications in
administering grants.
However, before selecting a grant
administrator, Bolin, Rutland Mayor
JoAnn Eads and Clerk Rosemary
Snowden-Eskew will attend an Aug .

.

"

Preliminary work ill underway on ·new visitors' bleachers at Meigs Stadium in· Pomeroy. The
site is being leveled to accommodate the new bleachers, with the excess soil being moved below
to raise the temporary bleachers above' the sidelines, according to Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley. The new bleachers should be ready for Meigs' first home game against Gal·
llpolls on Aug. 29.

Uni_
on's anger lingers
after one-day walkout
COLUMBUS (AP)- The unionthat represents medical professional s.
parole officers and others who work
at state prisons and hospitals complajned that the state is not ncgotiating in good faith.
The stat~ said it's not negotiating ,
period.
"They refuse to negotiate.
They 've taken away everything
we've had for years," Joan Earle, a
negotiator for ,Pi strict ·J 199 of the
Servtce Bmptoyees Jnternallonal
. Union, said Tuesday.
The union. which represents about
4,500 state employees. staged a oneday strike against the state, the first
since Ohio adopted collective bargaining in 1984. ·
· About 800 to I ,000 striking workers and supporters held a rally outside
the' Ohio Statehouse, complaining
that the state wants too many concessions and isn 't negotiating scri·
ously.
.
The union on Friday filed an
unfair labor practice complaint
against the staie with the State
Employment Relati ons Board. It said
the state unfairly imposed the term s
of a fact~ finders report, which the
union did not ac~.:cpl.
Sandra Drabik . director or lhC
Dspartment of Adniinistrativc Ser-

~

•-;;.' "!

20 meeting in Columbus to receive
more infonnation on the flood relief
program.
.
_ Ylllage residents Lilly Kennedy,
Giles Smith. Howard- and Marie
Birchfield, John and Janelle Harri50n ,
Dave Wilkes, Eugene Fink, Vincent
Mossman and Kenny Searles attended the Thursday night meeting, ask·
ing questions about the grant
timetable or when the program would
begin, how appraisals would be handled and in what priority and about
affected residents who may live outside of the floodplain·.
Snowden-Eskew said those were
questions that would have to he
asked at the Aug. 20 meeting.
Also attending the meeting were
Eads, and counc1l members Herb
Ellioll, Dick Fetty, Vera Martin. Judy
Denney and Danny Davis.
The Aug. 12 council meeting is
being postponed to Tuesday, Aug. 19
at 7 p.m. in the Civic Center, due to
the Meigs County Fair.
---------------~

.

BICENTENNIAL PLANNING BEGINS.....: Mar-· of the Meigs County Historical Society, was
garel Parker, left, Meigs County's chairman for ·named chairman for the county's observance
the observance of Ohio's Bicentennial, I 803- by the Meigs County Commissioners earlier
2003, met with the Ohlo Bicentennial Commis· this year. Names of her committee will be
slon Executive Director, Stephen C. George, announced later this month. While in Meigs
right, and Nicola Pickens Moretti, Southeast County, George and Moretti, a graduate of Eastcoordinator, center, last week to discuss plans ern High School and Ohio State University, met
for the county's celebration. Parker, president ' with representatives of other organizations.

-

..

�Com1nentary

Wedn•day, August I, 1917

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

P92
Wedneedly, August 6, 1997

Local News in Brief.

OHIO Weather
Thunday,Aq. 7

The Daily Sentinel
'Esta6fisfui in 1948

111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

..

What they are saying
elsewhere around Ohio

'·

Mexican labor leader is remembered
By J~k Anderson
and Jan Moller
He was the grand old man of the
Mexican labor movement. Until his
illness and recent death at age 97,
many observer.; believed he was the
most powerful man in Mexoco. Presidents came and went every sox
years, b~t Fidel Velazquez continued
on.
Even into his 90s, the onet1me
milkman greeted dozens of visi tors
each day at the headquarters of the
Confederatoon of Mexican Worker.;,
the dominant labor organizatoon
Velazquez headed from 1941 until
his death on June.
"I don't know why they should
fear my dying," he once confided to
us, his eyes twinkling . Between
puffs on a cigar, speaking in spuns
from shortness of breath. he
declared: "The (confederation) is
not an institutoon that depends on
man. "

the revolution triumphed. And. later
at Versailles, at the end of the Forst
World War, he defen&lt;\Cd the principles contained' in Article 123 of the
Mexican constotution, which deals
with social guarantees. We Mexi·
cans had a great deal to thank Gompers for."
As it happened, Gompcrs died in
El Paso. while returning from that
1924 tnp to Me~ico by train.
"I was also a close friend of
(AFL-CIO president) George
Meany for a lo'\8 time," Velazquez
continued. "And although he had a
reputation for betng very bad-tern·
pered, he always treated me with
affection."
Though he respected Gompers
and Meany, the Amencan labor
leader who impressed Velazquez the
most was the late John L. Lewi s,
longtime presodent of the Untied
Mine Workers.
"He helped Mexico, too, at the
time of that petroleum sotuatoon,"
said Velazquez, referring 10 Mexico's .1938 decision to nationalize its
oil Industry. The move shocked and
infuriated U.S. government and
bus~ncss leaders. but it was very
popular m Mexoco. " I was sent to

tour the United States with a labor
commission, visiting workers' orga.nizatioris there to explain the reasons for the oil expropriation and its
scope. And the first to give- us a
warm welcome was John L. Lewis."
Mexicans and Americans often
seen things differently. ·But after
more than a half century of dealings
with Americans, Velazquez wa.• not
as suspicious of Washington's
motives as many other Mexican
leaders.
"We will never succeed&gt; in solving all our problems, " he said.
"because the interests that we represent and the interests represented by
the United States are sometimes diametrically opposed.
"Of course, many common prejudices could be done away with.
Personally, I have never been, nor
am I now, anti-American. I don't
have that complex. I believe that in
the future the United States and
Mexico could get along better if the
will and effort to do so c.tsl on both
sides."
After we suggested Amcncans
often don't understand Mexico and
its people, Velazquez volunteered:
"Very often we don't understand

ther.; disagreed with this disongen ous assessment. The Mexican
labo movement is not likely ever
By The Associated Press
again to be the force it was under
Recent Ohio edotonals or statewide and national interest·
Vela quez. The old man -- known as
"Don Fidel" in Mexico ·- was
The Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 4
around too long, and had become
In the matter of ambassadorial nominations, the duty of the U.S. Senate too powerful, for any successor to
is to advise and consent II obvoously cannot do this if it does not conduct match his leadership.
hearings.
Hos pohttcal career began when
Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C .. chairman of th~ Senate Foreign Relations he helped to organize a milkmen 's
Commottee, has refused to schedule hearings on the nomination of William union in Mexico City in 1924, a year
• Weld as ambassador to Mexoco.
that also marked the beginning of
Why? Well, Because Helms doesn't like the-moderate-Republican Weld . Velazquez's close relationships woth
Weld is a thoughtful moderate. If there are any chinks in his armor. a U.S. union leader.;.
hearing would find them. The Constitution says Helms owes him a chance .
Samuel Gompers, the legendary
'to have his day before the commitlee
founder of the American Federation
of Labor, had come to Mexico City
for the inauguration of the Mcxocan
The CiJKinnali Enquirer, Aug. 2
president, whom the U.S. had
With its strong farming heritage. America's roots run deep in the land.
refused to recognize. Velazquez was
But those roots,are in danger of withenng away as farmland disappears assigned to look after Gomper.;.
-in Ohio and throughout the nation -gobbled up by our hunger for space
"To me, he was one of the most
for suburban homes, roads, industries and commercial developments.
outstanding union leaders in the
The Ohio Farmland Preservntoon Task Force, formed by Gov. George American
labor movement,"
Voinovich last year, suggested last month that state and local governments Velazquez once recalled in a rare
.pay farmer.; for the rights to keep their land away from commercial devel- 101erv1ew w1th our. associate Dale
opment More than two dozen states already have similar programs.
Van Ana. "He was very supponive
..
Last year, Congress created a program to supply matchong funds to help of our revolutionary movement. He
· states buy development rights. And it's looked at other solutions, such as helped Francisco 'I. Madero when
' ' waiving or reduCing estate taxes on farmland if farmers donate those rights.
Last month, Congress also moved to preserve a tax break for farmer.; by let. . ting them defer income with commodity contracts, despite and IRS ruling to
the contrary.
.
Since American farming is so efficient and productive, nobody's saying
that the shrinking land base means that someday we couldn't grow enough By Joseph Perkins
. liCe. now that the tyrant ha~ been of terror. from 1975 to 1979, during
to feed ourselves But it could lead to hogrer food pnces.
Noy So was barely 7 years old deposed ns leader of the Khmer which as many as 2 milhon Camho·
More imponant. it would dimintsh American 's potential to supply food
Rouge.
dians died of doscase, starvalton.
for the rapidly growing expon market, enhancing American's balance of when her family was forced to nee
overwork, torture or execution.
their native Cambodia.
Many
Americans
may
cons1dcr
trade in the global economy.
this
strictly
a
Cambodian
matter.
one
Noy .and her fellow Cambodoans
. For seven days and mghts, Noy 's
mother, father, five sisters and two that docs not concern the United have u champion '" Secretary of
brothers walked. on foot. from their Slate!\ But we arc a nation commit- State Madeleine All&gt;rigbt. who said
The (New Philadelphia) Times Reporter, July 30
Repubhcans have long advocated decentralizmg of government on the ttny vtllagc lo sare haven in . the ted to human nghts. And ol all the thos week t~althc United States docs
humun-rights v10lauims that huvc nol accept Pol .Pot's recent JUngle
theory that decision can best be made by thO&lt;e closest to the situation - that neighboring country of Thailand.
occurred
over the past quarter-centu- trtal ·- nm the least because 11 wasl
os, the state and local levels.
.
Though she was just a lillie girl
ry.
few
can
compare to the atroc1t1cs conducted hy the Kl11ner Rouge,
Now Rep. Henry Hyde. R-111.. has another po.,iblc application - col- !hen. Noy can remember her J'amithat
Pol
Pot
visited upon hos people. whh::h has comphcaty m the wali
lecting child support from delinquent parents.
· . -'ly 's exodus from war-torn CamboThat
ts
why
the United Stutes crimes commiued hy Brother NumHyde has joined with Rep. Lynn Woosley. D-Calir.. to sponsor a bill dia, along with thousands of other
must
not
stand
1dly
by. wah:hmg ber One.
which would have the Internal Revenue Scrvocc cnllcct suppon payments refugees. She remembers cxplodmg
developments
in
Cambodta
from
At the "moment. Alhnghl smd. bombs .
and the Soc tal Sqcunty Admmostratoon distribute them .'
afar.
Th1s
n:.uion
has
a
vested
interest
u.s.
orticials "arc exrtonng dtlkrActually, a nallonal system os already '" place The Chtld Suppon
She remembers gunfore. But most
Enforcement Agency. created 20 years ago. has a $3 billtpn annual budget of all. she remembers people dying 10 scc1ng Pol Pol answer for lu:-; war cnt ways to cn:-;ure that whmcvcr
cn mcs. Not jusl on behalf of the tnal there 1~. is appropriate. legal
and employs 51.000. Yet. it collects on JUSt 19.4 percent '!fits outstanding all along the perilous trail .
150.000 Cambodi an-Americans. hut and val1d in tem1s nlthc mh:rn.ltum- .
cases.
One or those who pen,hcd was
The federal government also hal\ sent money In the ~tatcs to upgrade Nay's frail young hrothcr. The ardu- al~u on hchalf of consdcntious al community." The problem IS . the
Amcnc~ms who oprosc despotism.
United Stutes will have to ligure out
• computer programs to truck down delinquent purcnh.
ous walk. through liclds and forest s
'Rather than st.:rap the ex isting system in dcfcrcm:c to .mother federal plan. and finally over mountaons, took a orprcssion and gcnocuk m any part ::. way to get the Kinner Rouge to
or the world
turn m:.er Pol PnL
perhaps the states should be given more time lo put the or technology to work. raraltoll on the lad
Besides. do we really want to open up a f1cld and gi\·C more power to the
As to Noy. 11 mailers not to her
This might have hccn an casi~r
Nonetheless. Noy consoders her that the tyrant who drmc her lamoly
IRS"'
.
u~dcrtakmg a month ago. hcfnre a
family lucky to have csc.1ped Cam- und hundredS of thousands ol nthcr
coup f(Jrccd F1rst Prime Mmi:-.tcr
bodia. Soon alter they lied. the or vol- refugees outofCamhodia b now nld
• The (Martins Ferry) Times·Leader, July 29
Norodom Ranariddh hom power.
lagc was overrun hy the Khmer and cnrcchlcd.
Ranunddh had engaged in " peace"
•
•• As the Ohio General Assembly struggios under a eourt mandate
to reform Rouge army. led by Pol Pot. then
Nor docs 11 m:1Uer that he was talh w1th the Khmer Rouge. grantithe funding mechaniSm for public education. we fear too many of our clccl- known as " Brother Number One." humtllatcd to the poi nt ot tears on a ng amnc~ty loht year to one of 11~
Many oltheir lriends and ncoghhors
cd leaders look at the dollars. but not at the children.
recent show Lnal. denounced by his leader". wh1ch m turn lead other
State officials have prqposcd rcducmg teacher-to-pupil ratios to a malli - were killed nr ma11ncd Those who former Khmer Rouge commdcs and guerrillas to defect to the governsurvived were conscripted to Commum or 1-to-15 in kindergarten through thtrd·gradc . That sounds great.
scntcnc..:cd lo se rve out the n:mamdcr ment
The ratto_ however. would only he required 10 Ohm's Ctght largest urban munist work farms.
of h1 s Iill: under " house arrest ··
Rananddh wa.s betrayed by SecIt's because ol that cxpericm.:c of
distncts.
ond
Prune Mm1slcr Hun Sen. who
She will not be satislied. nor will
If the state nnly funds the 1-to-15 rat in in the eight largest urhan districts. 22 years ago that Noy. nne ol un
now presides over the government
estimated 150.000 native Camhod•- rno~t Carnholhan expatriate~. until . on Phnom Penh. Hun Sen previously,
distncts in smaller cit1cs and in poor rum! area:-; will he left on their own.
Pol
Pot
1' hwught bclon.:: u legitiWe bchcvc It'S grossly unt rur to pay tor small !.:lasses lor ~omc or the ans liv~ng '" the Untied States. IS
mate court where he would he tncd worked m the C:unhod1an govern slate's children. and then dump other l'hildrcn inlo n\'ei-cmwdcd classrooms eager to sec Pol Pot hrought to JUSand runoshcd for his ri,e-ycar reogn ment wht.:n it was ha~.:kcd ny ComWe also helteve that goes agaopst the Ohto Supreme C.JUn·s ruling.

you, eother. We're Latins. and our
mentality is totally different from
yours. We are funher removed from
material things than from those of
the sptrit. We are better able to bear
poveny than mistreatment. If that
were understood in the United
States, we would be closer to you."
The whole-haired patriarch of
Mexican labor concluded the interview with an earnest exposition of
his hopes for the futu1e:
" The wish of Mexico's labor
movement is for the world to live in
peace, that the world be more unit·
ed, that no one try to prevail over
others," Velazquez told us .
" Because that is what effects and
hurts weak countries like ours. The
working class is, above all, peaceloving. It docs not want war under
::.ny circumstances, nor docs it wanl ·
to face problems every day '· mucl)
less with its next-door neighbors.
Whatever conflicts have arisen or
may arise in the future amQng
nations arc basically due tn the lack
nf mutual respect."
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for the United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

.

·~~----------------~-------,

•

I MISS
THE

FIVE&amp;Pf~

ERA .

~

,....-....-

~.......

0 1W7 by NEA.InO.

"/ sentence you to three consecutive
BONKS on the head. n

There arc dozens of mutual tunds
that · allow onvestors to invc&gt;t with
$25, $50 or $100 a month. But how
far woll onvesting those small
amounts get you"'
There was a time when mutual
funds were sold as investments for
the " little guy" The pitch from fund
companies was that anyone who
-wanted to invest ougllno be able to
no matter what. In fact, the Kansas
Coty-bascd Twentieth Century Funds
(now American Century) even
allowed people to hecome onvestors
on theor funds with as little as $1.
That practice. however, has since
been changed .
The number of fund famohcs
offering low to no minimum initial
Investment requirements 10 open
accounts and low mvcstmcnl
account minomums to keep those
accounts going has qimintshed over
the last decade. But there still arc a
number of fund famolies that allow
investors to add small amounts of
money to their accounts on a regular
basis.
The trick to using those accounts
is consistency: Money has to be
invested method,ically month after
!f!Onth and year after year. Even $25

Earning 10 percent, monthly payments of $100
would grow to $20,485 in 10 years; $75,937 in
20 years; and $226,049 in 30 years.
.

a month can grow mto tens or thousand, ol Jnllars.
To show how consistency pays
oiT, I asked CDA/Wicscnhergcr. the
Rock land. Md.-ba&gt;cd mutual fund
research company, to run some numbers. In our example . the average
annual rates of return chosen were K,
10 and 14 percent; time periods
im;ludcd one, fo vc, 10, 20 and 30
years; monthly controbutoons ranged
from $25 lo $50 to $100; and no
taxes were figured into these colculatoons Here's a look at the results.
-- $25 a month mvcstcd m an
account earning 8 percent a year will
grow to $311 at the end of·one year;
$1,837 at the end of five years;
$4,5,73 at the end of I0 years;
$14,725 at the end of 20 years; and
$37,259 at the end of 30 years.
If that $25 was compounding at a
tax-deferred annual rate of 10 per·
cent, in one year tiS value would he
$314; i~ five year.;, $1 ,93~; 10 years,

$5.121: 20 years. $1X.9X4: and on.~o
years $56.512.
Bump the annual rate ol n:turn up
to 14 percent and a monthly mvcstmcnt of $25 grows to $2.155 in live
years; $32.529 m 20 years; and a
whopping $ I 37.}24 on 30 years.
-- If" $50 monthly on vestment "
within your reach. you would have
$3.674 '" live years; $9,147 '" 10
years; $2~,45 1 m 20 years; and
$74.51 X in 30 years ir that money
was compoundong at an uver.gc
annual rate of 8 percent.
Keep addong $50 a month 1n1o an
account compoundmg al 10 percent
annually and you'll have $37,968 in
20 years and $113,024 at the end of
30 years And . or that money were
compounding m 14 percent a year, in
live years you'd have $4.310; 10
year.;, $12,953; 20 years, $65,058;
and in 30 years, an impress1vc
$274,648.
-- Forthose wtth $100 a month to

Indiana man held on theft warrant
A 24-year-old man was arrested by Pomeroy Police on an lndoana war·
•rant charging theft.
Chester W. Stewart, address unreported, is being held in the Middleport latl pendtng an extradition hearing in Meigs County Court.

Youth charged in pellet gun theft

Betty Ward. Mees
W.VA.

Below-normal conditions
continue through Thursday
.

.

.

Dry and cool weather will conbnue across Oh1o on Thursday woth tern·
peratures 5to 10 degrees·below normal, forecasters said. .
.
.
A high pressure system drifting across the lower Great Lakes os provtd·
ing the unseasonably cool temperatures by pumping a northerly now of aor
into the state.
Record lows were set at several northern Ohio locations early this morning as the mercury dipped into the mid-40s. Temperatures generally were in
the 50s in the south.
Highs on Thursday will range fr~m the upper 70s in the northeast to the
low 80s in the southwest.

Betty Ward Mees, 78, Columbus, died Sunday, Aug. 3, 1997 at Mount
Carmel Hospital in Columbus.
,
Born in Pomeroy, daughter or the late Charles and Leah Blanchard Ward,
she was a retored clerk and bookkeeper for, Rite Orug Store and was a member ofTrinity Episcopal Church.
I
.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Michael and Irene Mees of
California; five-grandchildren; a brother, lim Ward of Florida; a sister and
brother· ln·law, Janie and Vic Miller or Dublin; and several noeces and
nephews.
.
_She was preceded in death by her husband, Robert F. Mees, on 1981 .
A memorial servoce woll be held at 2:~0 p.m. Fnday on the Grace EpiScopal Church in Pomeroy, with burial following in the Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Arrangements are by the Scboedinger Hilltop Chapel, Columbus.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Mount Carmel Hospice, 793
W. State St., Columbus, Ohio 43222-9988.

It's such a somple program, parents
can work three, four, five or more
assets into a kid's life easily, he said.
I hope to have cooperation of
churches in providing mentor.; for
students with multiple high risk factors- the mentor program is a pro·
gram that will make a difference.
Our job is to get our kids as competitive as possible with the rest of
the state of Ohio, with the rest of the
world, he said. Certain communities
have more real risk, for instarice,
there is less school age violence here
in Meigs County than in other areas .
"The basis of all prevention programs is emphasizing healthy
lifestyles, encouraging students to
make low-risk choices that are '"
their own hest interest -that will not
Jtarm them now or later in life bpposed to a high risk choice," he

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................43'!.
Akzo ..........
80'4
AmrTech ............................... 67'1.
Aahland 011 .........................52"!.
AT&amp;T .....................................38\
Bank One ..............................54~
Bob Evans ...........................17J•
Borg-Warner .......................55 '"
Champion .............................18'1.
Charm Shps ..........................5"1.
City Holdlng ................ ,/.........33
Federtll Mogul .......................36't.
Gannett ....;.........................100"1.
Goodyear .............................64'1.
Kmart ..................................... 11'1o
Lands End ............................30'•
Ltd.........................................22'1.
Oak Hill Flnl ..............:........... 2o't.
OVB

A Reedsville youth was charged in Meigs County Juvenile Court Tues·
day for the theft of a pellet nflc.
Billie Wells. Reedsville. reponed to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department that the pellet gun wa. stolen from his residence.
A suspect was questioned and admotted taking the pellet gun. It was
returned and the youth was released to hos parents pending a hearing '"
juvenile coun.

Area man cited following accident
An 18-ycar-old Pomeroy man was cited fo)lowong a one-car accodenl
· on Leading Creek Road near M1ddlepon Tuesday evening
Timothy P. Roush. Bailey Run Road, was westbound when he lost control of hts 1989 Ford Probe. whoch crashed onto a tree and went over an
embankment. accordong to Meogs County Sheriff James M Soulsby
.No injuries were reported, but Roush was cited on a charge of fa'ilurc
to control

Patrol issues citation after crash ·
A Racine youth was ttcketed for no operator's license by the GalliaMeogs Post of the State Hoghway Patrol fol lowing a tour-wheeler acctdent Tuesday on Letart Township Road 98 (Manuel)
Troopers said Bridgcn L Adkins, 13, 25004 AP,ple Grove Road, was
eastbound on the four-wheeler, one-tenth of a mile west of Apple Grove
Road, at I :50 p.m when the chaon came off the vchtcle, forcong II off the
right side of the road.
The vehicle then struck a mailbox , according to the repon. No damage was reported to the four-wheeler.
·

Today's livestock report

COLUMBUS (AP) ·- Indiana- 55.00; 210-230 lbs. 46.00-51.00.
Sows: steady to form.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 1-3 300-500 ' lbs. 42.00·
buying points Wednesday as provid·
ed by the U.S. Department of Agn· 45.00; 500-600 lbs. 45.00-47.50, few
over 600 lbs. 47.50-48.50.
culture Market News:
Boars: 38.00-41.00
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
Estimated receopts: 30,000.
lower;' demand light to moderate on
Prices rrom Producers _Live·
a moderate movement.
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs. country stock Association:
Hog market trend for Wednesday;
poonts 56.00-57.00, few 55 .50 and
50 cents lower.
57.50;
plants
56.50-58.00.
said.
Summary or TUesday's auclions
U:S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 51.00Meanwhile Romuno acknowl·
at Eaton, Farmerstown, Lancaster,
edges that Meogs County is a pretty
Wapakoneta and Caldwell:
good place to raise a child.
Hogs: 3.00 lower to 1.00 higher.
Units of the Meigs County Emer. "I thank God that I'm bringing up
Butcher hogs: 40.00-59.00.
my son in this community," he saod. gency Medical Service recorded three · Cattle: 1.00 lower to 1.00 higherc
"One hundred miles rrom here we calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
Slaughter steers: choice 62.00have kids that have to walk through ' responding tncluded:
67.75,
select 55.00-64.00.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
metal detectors to get into their
Slaughter
hcofers: chotec 62.00·
I :47 a.m., Union Avenue,
schools.
66.75;
select
55.00-63.00.
"I'm trying to help out and make Pomeroy, Shawn Gilmore, :Veterans
Cows: steady to 2.00 lower; all
Memonal Hospital.
it a little better," he said.
cows
45.75 and down .
REEDSVILLE
Bulls
: 2 00 lower to 1.00 higher;
6:57 p.m., State Route 124, Bill
Announcements Smith,
all
bulls
59.75 and down.
treated at the scene.
School beginning
TUPPERS PLAINS
School ror Meogs County students
2:17p.m., volunteer fire dcpanattending Eastern, Meigs and South- ment to Coolville Road, structure fire
Veterans Memorial
em Local Schools will .begin Mon· at Kerry Hetzel properly, no inJ~ries
Tuesday
adm1ss•ons - Emma
day, Aug. 25.
reponed. Reedsville VFD and squad
Robinson,
Racine.
assisted.
Tuesday discharges- none .
Cabin cleanup
In preparation for the Meigs
County Fair and demonstrations and
displays at the log cabin, a ~leanup
session has been set for 9 a.m. Aug.
7. Anyone willing to help is asked to
be there.

Area man looks to build

·. ·: . -Obituary----,-.-

Obi~J..te~ ~. peld announcement• arrenged by local lunenl hom11.
Obit...,._
an pgbll- 11 Nqutlllld to accommodatl thoH tlaalrtno moro
thin prowl-In lila -panylnt Dtalh NotloM.
I~

MeiQS EMS runs

Hospital news

It

Betty Ward Mees
Betty Ward Mees, 78, of Columbus, died Sunday, August 3, 1997 at Mount
Carmel Hospital in Columbus.
Born in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Charles and Leah Blanchard Ward.
she was a retired clerk and bookkeeper for Rite Drug Store, and was a member of Tronity Episcopal Church.
'
.,.' 1
She was preceded on death by her husband. Robert F. Mccs, on I981.
She is survived by a son and daughter-In- law, Mochael and Irene Mces of
Cahfnrnia; grandcbtldren Eric. Jennifer. Davod. Scan andRoben Mees; a
brother. Jim Ward of Florida; a sister and brother-in-law, Jame and Voc Moller
of Dublin; and nieces and nephews. Julie Klc1n . Joan Cuthbqt and Tom and
Susan Ward.
A memoroal service will he held Friday. August 8. 1997 at 2:30p.m. at
Grace Episcopal Church in Pomeroy, with interment following_tn the Beech.
Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy Arrangements arc by the Schocdmgcr Htlllop
Chapel.
·
Memonal contributions can he made to the Mount Carmel Hospocc. 793
West State Street, Columbus. Ohw 43222-WXH .

tR_utland Jfome
Cfurnisfiing s

u . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .

Meeting dme changed
The August ,Southern Consonium
for Chtldren board meeting has been
changed from Aug. 26 to Aug. 27 at
10:15 a.m. in the conference room.
8044 Dairy Lane. Athens.

invites you to drive a little
and save a lot!

Council m~ling
The Rutland Council meeting
scheduled for Aug 12 has hecn postponed to Aug. 19. 7 p.m. '"the Rutland Civic Center due to next week's
Meigs County Faor.

* :J9 .,.ear assodotion

with Rutland
Furniture

* Same great

ser~ic:e

* lo.:a,ted j~st 5 minutes

Save big on coinplete home furnishings including
carpet, living room 'suites, bedroom suites, dinettes,
appliances, and much, much more!

Board meeting
The Meigs Local Board or Education w1ll llJCel in regular session
Thursday. 7 p.m. at the district office
on the second fluor of the Pomeroy
munictpal building.

Buy now with_
12 month s.a.c:
financing and
0% interestll"

• •
---

(wtth approved credit

' Stock report• are
a.m. quotea provided
of Galllpot11.

The Daily Sentinel

.

invest regularly. an K percent return
would grnw to $7.34X m live years;
$18.295 in I0 years; $5K.902 in 20
years; and $149,tn6 in 30 years.
Earnmg 10 percent, monthly payments of ~100 would grow to
$20.485 in I0 y&lt;:urs; $75,937 in 20
ye:ors, and $226.1-)49 on }0 yea"'.
And if you're lucky enough to
have your IRA money mvcstcd into
a fund that rclurns an avcra~c of 14
pcrt:cnt over tmt~o:. $1 ()(I a nu~nth w1ll
grow to $1.2XO in one year; $25.Y07
on I0 years; $30.117 in 20 years. and
a hand~omc $54Y.2lJ7 in ~0 yc;1rs
As you can s~~. 11\ t:olhiStl'nl'y.
umc and compounding: thai m;1Ucr
the most when it CtllllCs hi hui!Jmg
n~.:st c~gs. The rc.dly hi!! re-turns 11 11
your money u1·en't sCl'l\ unt1l th.u
money has hccn wor~ing fur Yt.tU l"nr
ahout 20 ycms. Knowmg th;ll h\.'l~li"C
you make your lund 111\'-''tnh:nt.'
could make you a hc-t1r1 inn·shn
Dian Vujovich is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
Funds" and "StraiRht Talk About
Investing for Your Retirement.''
both of which arc publi•hed by
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
her in care or this newspaper, or
via e-mail at MisMutualaol.coln.

Lucy Kaylor, 63, New Haven, W.Va., died TUesday. Aug. 5, 1997 at her
residence.
Born June 14, 1934, in Graham Station, W.Va., she was the daughter of
the late Robert Gner and Garnette Clarke.
Surviving are a son, Jack Kaylor; a daughter, Kathy Kaylor Evre;a grandson and a granddaughter; a brother, Robert Grier Clarke of Charleston, W.Va.;
and three sisters, Kathleen Hubbard of Canton, Texas, Ellen Forbes of South
Point, N.C., and Marjorie Walburn or Moddleport
She was preceded in death by a sister, Marie C. Roush.
The body was donated to the Marshall University School of Medicine.
Memorial contnbutions may he made to the Marie C. Roush S~holarshop FuM
at Peoples Bank in New Haven.
Arrangements are by the Klingei-Carpenter Mortuary, Huntingron, W.Va.

•I ColumbusJe2• 1-

(Continued from Page 1)

munist Vietnam (which helped drive
the Kbmer Rouge out of power).
Neither he nor Khmer Rouge leaders
will have anything to do with each
other.
Only a remnant ol the Khmer
Rouge army remains. and they want
to come m from the Camhudian jungles But they can only do so if they
work nul tcnm wllh the Camhod1:m
government .
And one ol"thc e~mditums or such
an accord should he th~t the Khmer
Rouge hands over Pol Pot. to he folh•wed later hy nthcr Khmer Rouge
war t:nnun.lk
Whlll can Ioree Hun Sen and the
Camhudian govcmmcnl 10 work out
!lim:h an arr;.mgcmcnt with lht.:
Khmer Rouge? S1mplc
The Unucd States should usc its
lcvcrugc 10 rcr~uadc the rest of the
international cummumty to w1thhoh.l . .
all nonhumannanan a1d from Cambodia
W1thout such au.J. Hun Sen's government will almost L:crtainly cnllapk
The ohjct.:Hve 1n all this is not 10
l.lcstahll1zc lhc C.unh&lt;Khan gnvcrnmcnl. hut to hring a war cnminal to
real jusucc hdorc he goes gently
inlll the night.
Npy So and her tel low Camhodouns deserve no IC!IiS
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
ror the San Diego Union-Tribune
and a commentator ror MSNBC.

No injuries were reponed following a Tuesday afternoon blaze that
destroyed a Tuppers Plains area mobile home.
Tuppers Plains volunteer firelighter.; , assisted by Reedsville firefighters and emergency squad personnel, were summoned to the Coolville Road
residence of Kerry Hetzer around 2: 15 p.m
According to Tuppers Plains Fire Chief Brent Rose, Hetzer's mobile
home was completely gutted by the time firefighter.; arrived Rose said
the fi~e appeared to have started in the kitchen area No one was home at
the time of the blaze, he said.

Lucy Kaylor

INO.

Compounding builds your nest egg
By Dian Vujovich

Barry's World

MICH.

By The Aasoclated Preas

Pol Pot's crimes must be addressed

.

Mobile home destroyed by fire

Aa:uWeatlle,. rorecut for

Putlh!ihe!J c11cry aflt'tnoon, Monday through
Frida,, Ill C\ lllrt St .• Pomcro,. Ohto. b)' the
Ohio \ '11llty Pubhshtng ("nmpany!(i:tnMII Co.,
Pomo:roy, Ohil"l -f~7tl9. Ph 992-2 1,11 Sccnnd
''"'I'H"''S' patd al Pomtroy. Ot!ICl.

11

Mffllbrr: The Assocl~tcd Prr11, and the Ohio
Newsp.1pcr AL"""- tal ton.

(IPOS1'MASf£:Ro Send 11ddrc11 corn:..:uons hl
"'nllio~lt.

I II ("ourl Sl ..

PomtJ(l)'.

SUBSCRIFnON RATES
Canlttr or MGtor R01tt

One Ye~r .. ... ..... .
1

. .

SINGU, COPW PkiC£
Dlll~

.. ..

. . .,.... ...... ............. 3.5 Cen1s

SubKnbtrs noe d,lllri"'IO pay the c:an~tr may
rcmll in advance dtrut to Tile Dally St:ntind
on ••hrc:c.1ix or 1Z moalh Nais. Crcclil will be
aciven c:arrler each week.

No subtcriphon ~y mall permUted tn arcu
where tlomt c:ani1r servl« iJ 1111illlblc
1

PuNisher fCKr\'t~ the rlghiiO ld.J'III fila dur·
lhc sub~c:np1"n period. SubKripdon nit
1 1~::~:: :~it be ilnpltmtnled by chanJina: the

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'
Wedue8day, August II, 1987
Public Notlc:a
'NOTlCI! TO IIIDOERI
Notice lo htrolty glvon
!hat the IIOMII 01 Educlllon
ot tile llelgt Loc.l Sc-I
Dlolrlot, uo hot lltln
Street, Pomeroy, Ohlo
- · wiN offer for oela by

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-Piazza powers LA past Expps
··~

.

(,

'(

l \ I,JI" (

By The Associated Presl
Fortunately, he challenged me in
Not along ago, Mike Piazza might there again. It was a sinker, but obvi·
have taken his hustration out on a ously it wasn't as in as he liked it to
water cooler or reduced solil~ clilQ. be.
house furniture to kindling . '&gt;
"When you get a win like this
Tuesday night - even after a J. . instead of a loss, it can really pick
for-13 weekend performance in you up. Hopefully we can tum this
Chicago -the Los Angeles star lim· into a momentum-builder."
ited his smashing to b~balls in the
Piazza helped the Dodgers remain
Dodgers' 5·4 victory over the Mon- I 1/2 games behind San Francisco in
treal E•pos.
the NL West. · The Giants routed
"Four or five years ago, I'd be an Chicago 8·2 on Tuesday.
emotional wreck," Piazza said. ''I'd
In other National League games,
be smashing things . I still do that Florida beat Houston 6-5, Pittsburgh
sometimes, but .not as much a~y · edged Atlanta 5·4, New York outmore.
lasted St. Louis 5-4 in 10 innings,
The All-Star catcher homered Colorado beat Philadelphia 4-2. and
leading off the lOth inning- his sec· Cincinnati defeated San Diego 7-3.
ond home run of the game and 24th
Piazza hit a three-run horner in the
of the season - to give the visiting first inning, spoiling the NL·debut of
Dodgers their eighth
in I0 Canadian native Mike Johnson. Brett
. victory
'
games.
Butler and Wilton Guerrero opened
"It's a matter of more experience with singles. and Piazza followed
and a little bit more maturity," Piaz- with a drive to center.
za said. " You have to accept the fact
" It's nice to have his bat back,"
that you're going to struggle. You ' ·Dodgers manager Bill Russell said.
have to understand that this game is "That's what a guy like that can do
definitely not easy at times."
for you. One hit in Chicago? ObviHe l)lade it look easy against ously he came here tonight and
Expos closer Ugueth Urbina (3·8), showed what he can do."
tilasting an 0-2 pitch over the fence
Tndd Worrell (2-3), who allowed
in left-center.
a game-tying home run to Darrin
"I fought off a real tough slider 0- Fletcher in the ninth, pitched two
2," Piazza said. " It was a nasty pitch. innings for the victory. Worrell has

'I

I

w

•
''

71

Atlanta
Florida
New York
Montreal
Phi!adelphi•

' I

65
6)

57
)6

w

61
j6
52
47
45

Houston
Pinsbu~h

St. Louis
Cincinnati·
Chicago

w
San Francisco
Los Angeles

63

61

Smn Diego

Colorado
1\lesd.ay's raults

51
53

L&lt;•R••

East Division

L

43
46
48
53
74

.....

GB

.623

.586

4 112
6 112

.568

.518
.327

Centr11t Division

L

Pet.

52
57

.540
.496

GB

60

.464

63
68

.427

12 1!2

.398

16

West Division

L
50

Pet.
.558

GB

•59

!545
.473
.465

I 112
9 1/2
10 112

51

61

Florida 6, Houston 5

Pinsburjh 5, Atlanta 4

Cincinnati 7. San Diego 3
Los Angeles S. Mooneal4, 10 innings
Colorado 4. Philadelphin 2
N.Y. Mets 5. StLouis 4, 10 innings
San Francisco 8. Chk::aso Cubs 2
Wlfdnnday's Games
·
Soan Francisco (Rapp 4-61 at Chic:ago Cubs {MuUhoUand 6-11 I. 2:20p .m.
Aorida (Drown 9-8) at PiusbUI'Jh tLollizo 11-71.7:35 p.m.
San Diero (Hamilton 9-3 1at Cincinnati &lt;Merclu:r 7-81.7:35 p.m.
Los Anrctcs &lt;Prut. 10-~1 al Monlreal (Hermanson 5-SI. 7:35p.m.
Houston (Gnn:ia 4-7lat Philadelphia. (Siephenson 5-51. 7:.lS p.m.
Cololildo (Thomson 3-61 at N.¥. Mets (Miicki S-7). 7:40p.m.
St. Louis {An.Benes 7-6) at Atl:ut13 (Mo4dux IS-3 1. 7:40p.m.
Tllund1y's G1mes
Colonxto &lt;Swift 4-~J at N.Y. Mels {Clark 7-7). 12:10 p.m.
Houston &lt;Hampton 9-7) nt Philadelphia IBC1.'Ch 0-7). I :O:"i p.m.
Aoridtl (Lcitcr·s-7} a1 Pittsburgh (Cordova 8-6). I :J:"i p.m.
S:m Francisco (Aivare1. I-OJ at ChiCago Cubs (Gonzale7.·7-5J. 2:20p.m.
Los AnJCIL'S {Norna 11).8) at Monm:al (BUIIin@:cr 6- I I), 7:35 run.
San Diego iJad::oon 2-8) .:11 Cindnn:ui (Tomko 6-J). 7:35 p.m.
Sl. Louis (Stoulcmyre I I -7) at Ad:uua (Neagle I:"i-2). 7:.:t0 p.m.

: ·t

.
:t

AmeriUn Lracue
Easl Division
BOlltimore

New 'York
Boston
Detroit
Toronto
Clevdo.nd
Milwaukee
ChiCD.lO
Mmncsoto.
Ko.n:iilS City
~-attic

w

L

69

40

65

45
59
58
58

,,

54
:"i2

w
57
ss
54
so

L

50
~s

Pet.

GB

.6JJ
.591

4 1/2

.473
.47)

17 It:!

·.478

17 It:!

.450

J. It:!
4 112
9

.422

12

.491

46

. 56
61
63

w

L

Pet.

48

.568

6)

17

Centl'llt Dlvblon
Pet.
GB
.SJ)
.SOil

West Division

GB

49
.566
64
Anaheim
:4W
12
Sl
60
.Tt:x.a.'l
4)
71
.m
21 It:!
Oakland
'1\laday's mulls
Detroit b. Clcvclllfld 4
Toronto 8. Minnesota J
Chicago White Sox l Ookland 0
.N.Y. Yonk..~s 4, Kansas City I
Boston 17. Tcx.as I
Anaheim 6. Milwauki!C ~
Seattle 4. Baltimore J
Wednesday's (;ames
.
Milwnukel.' (Eldred 11 -101 at Anaheim (Wa!Son 9-6). -W:'i p.m.
CI¢Vt:lnnd (Wrilhl :t-1) at Toronto (Hcntg:cn I 1-7). 7:J5 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees {Peniuc IJ -6) al Tcxa.~;(Oii\'cr 7·10~. 7J5 p.m.
Boslun {A\'cry 5-2) at Minnesota (Rohcnson 7-9).lt:O:'i p.m.
. IA:lroil (Mol:hlcr 7-IJ) :n Kansa.'l City {Rosado ·7 - 8~. 8:0:'i JUn.
Chk.-n"go White Sox tNnvarro 8·91 at Oak lund ( Hay~' 0·1 ). IO:.~:"i p.m.
Bal111110l'C {Ericl.:son 1 .\-~) :u &amp;auk (Moyer 11 --'). IIUS p.m.
Thundoy's Gamrs
·
IJelroil { Di~h~n 0-0) :u Kan ...a."' City (8l'lchcr 11 ·9), :2:0~ p.m.
Milwaukee (WOodard 1-1) at Oakl:md !Ri~by 0-4). -':05 p.m.
CIC~Jt:land (Smiley 1-0) at Toronto (Clemens 16·4). 7:J:"i p.m.
Bosron (SI!I.: 10-in :u MinncsOia (Bowers 0-0). H :~~. p. m.

••

.

.

.,
•.

••
·.,

· At Pittsburgh, Jason Kendall and
Jose Guillen homered in a four-run
fourth inning and Jason Schmidt,
traded by Atlanta a year ago this
month, beat his old team for the first
time.
The homers helped the Pirates to
a 5-2 lead against Tom Glavine ( 106), who missed his last scheduled
Continued on page 5

•

AUSTIN. Texas (APJ - Dallas
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has con·
suited with the NFL about an appro·
priate punishment for coach Barry
Switzer, who was arrested for carrying a loaded, unlicensed gun through
an airport .
"We are certainly interested in
looking at how and what the issue of
arms are involved with the league,"
Jones· said Tuesday night. "That's
part of it. Part of it is just counsel
within our own organization."
The most likely option appears to
be a fine , a source told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
Jones, who ha.• refused to answer
questions about whether Switzer's
job is in jeopardy, said he expects to
make an announcement on the mat~
ter "sooner rather than later."
The team owner said he was gathering "information regarding the
entire matter and making an assess·
ment of what's in the best interest of
everything we are doing. what we arc
doing off the field and how we move
on throughout the year.
"All of that is evolving into the
comments I will make regarding the
action with Barry."
Jones haS'Said he wouldn't sta~d
lor the kind. of behavior that led to the
suspensions of five players. including
Michael Irvin and Leon Lett, for violating the NFL's substance abuse policy in the past three yean;.
Jones said that a mista~e by some·
one in an influential position is "an
even more Serious matter than it
would be if it were a player."
According to NFL policy, all
league employees arc prohibited from
carrying firearms while on NFL
premises or while conducting NFL
business. A violation is subject to discipline by the commissioner.
NFL officials have said they ~rc in
contact with the Cowboys. but
declined to comment on any specific discussions.
Switzer was on~ of the first to
arrive at practice Tues\lay. Jones
showed up later, but did not talk to his
coach, choosing inste.id to climb a
tower between two practice fields to
watch the team from above.

12
33

5
8 It:!

Pirates S, Braoes 4

Jerry Jones
consults NFL
on punishment
for Switzer

Scoreboard
Nolional

blown his last two save opportunities,
and seven of 34 this season. .
"We battled back. but Piazza was
a ~ne-man wrecking crew," said
Fletcher, the Expos' catcher. "We
tried to crash him inside 0-2. He
crushed it like a 3-iron .."
Marlilu 6, Aslros 5
At Miami, Moises Alou's bases·
loaded two-run single with one out in
the ninth inning lifted Florida over
Houston.
Aloq hit a 1·2 tJitch from Billy
Wagner (7 -4) into right field, scOring
Edgar Renteria and Kurt Abbott
Wagner blew his third straight save '
cbance, spoiling Darryl Kilo's bid to
become the NL's first 16-game win·
ner.
Ro~b Nen (8-2) pitched a scoreless ninth for Florida, which moved
19 games over .500 for the first time
in team history.

Public Notlca
Public Nallu
liMn Mllgned C:.Ono. tf· •••• - -.. -·---431,111,41

LanySpeneer,

........................................... 0

Clark of Courta
1!1 tho . Federal Labor
Stondard Provlolono ond (7) 16, 23, 30;
Davla~Bacon
Wagee, (8) 6, 13, 20; 6TC

Food Servlc:oo Saleo ......... .

requlrementa, particularly

varloua

Insurance

roqulrtmenlo, liartouo equel
opportunity provlolono, and
tho requirement lor a
payment liond lor 100% of
tho eol)tracl prlee In tho
form ol a certified ehoek,
eaohlero cheek, or ltller of
ertclll upon 1 eolvanl bank
In lho amount of not le11
then 10'11. ollhe blcl amount
ln favor of tho alofotald
Vlltqe of ByrocuH.
No blddor moy withdraw
hlo bld within thirty (30)
da~ alter the actutl dille of
opening thereof. VIllage of
Syroeuoe ronrwe tht right
to waive any tnlonniiRita or
1
to rtjact any or all bldt.
JtniOI ZWilling
Clerk·TrNturor
VIllage 01 Syrac:u11
(7) 30; (8) •• 13
Public Notlc:e

Public: Notice

............................ ;.............. 0

Extrocurrlcular ActlvRieo ...
.... :........................ 36,288.76
Cla11 lllllrlale &amp; Feeo ......
..........................................0

,.....

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

O'Leary belts two long homers in Bosox win

Or-* In Aid

1,...

.......
·······--·············-····"'''"''''''0

Pomero.y • Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice

CV-074, llld 11 pending In l!nclng Fund C. lilt ........................... 201,137.73
Ule Court Of co- PIMI
Roeerwod
for
Of lllligl County, Ohio. i1le
oilltcl of the Compttlnl Eneunlbrol cno ..-.4.221M
Unr1 &amp;
Funcl.llnoe.
tlemlndajudgmont
!he Delendenl, JeiiiN II.
--·-·--- ..---204,101.04
•••••• bid at 1:oo P.M. Boyer. on ttl leooncl Claim Proprietary 1 Fundi,
TUMdey, lepttmloer 2, 1117, In lht tum Of a17,Me.52,
the following vehlclel:
plue lnleretl II 1 rtlt of ~~.~~.....- .... 0
1110 lniMnlllonellluo K $3.81 per dey lrolll lll8roll E8rNnge: on llt•lll&amp;•••tw ..
...:... - .............:................... 0
1111Zinllmlllonalllun K 30, 1H7; on Itt fourth
1111Zinlemlllonlllll.. 113 Clelm In the tum of Food leMc:el a.leo ..........
11112lnllmlllconal B.. 114 $11,531.01, plut lnleNII 11 ............................. 111,211.17
1113ln-MI B.. m • 1'1111 Df $4.06 per dey 11om ~Actlvtllee ...
1MI Chevy v.n 0.10 · Men:h 30, 1887, In order to ...........................................0
All 1111111 ,tnvelopeo loroclooe upon mor111ge1 Clato.......,. .. ,_ ......
eontolnlng bldo are to be· upon ,..1 . . - IOOIIIId II ............................. 12,100.&amp;
marked cletrly on the 122
Union
Avenue, Mloc. Reeelpta ......."372.75
oulolclo. Tormo of ~tie wlll Pomeroy, Ohio, which II G-In Aid
be eaoh or money order. moro fully d11crlbed In State Sourwe ........".........o
Sild Boerd ro~trvoo tho dftd recorded ln VOiu1111 . fldlr8t Souroee ..,...,,"""'''O
Reeolplo
•
right to Wlllve lnlormtlltlao, 317 • Page 301, Melgt Total
to oceopl or roiiCI eny end County Dftd RICOrde, llld (Operotlng) ........... 81,484.61
ell, or pert&amp; of ony ond all 212 Fifth Slretl, lllcldllport, Dlobu-ota:
bldn. Quoellon 1 cen lie Ohio,. which It more fully Expendllln
onowerod by llr. Paul lie· dHCrlbld In dMd rocorded Dllbu..--:
Elroy, Tr~noportatlon super· ln Volume 320, Pqo 357, lnltrucllon .........................o
Supporting Serv~&lt;:a :
o
vlooret (614) 742·2t80.
Melgt County D11d
All bldo munt be roctlvecl Rtcordt; end COlli of 11111 ExlriCurrlcuhir Actlvltleo ...
In, end bld epeclllcallon oellon; however,
no
ohttll mny bo obtained peroonal )udgmonl 11 Debt Strvtce. ................... 0
Employ.., Salarleo l
from, TREASURER'S OF· eought ogolnol lhl
Wag
..................... t4.233.78
FICE, 320 E. Moln Street, Delllldant, Jomea R. Bo~r;
Pomeroy, Olllo 4576D, (614) thtl lhl mortgegot be Employ••• Rellromonl
1192·5650.
forecloltd ond .thll the Banellta.................41,1114.03
Cindy J. Rllonomuo,
llano ond/or lnterlllo In or Purehtlld Servleea .... o.oo
Trtoourtr
on uld property, lf any, be Suppl._ I Mllorlall ..........
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
marohtllad end lht reel .......................... 119,400.61
OF EDUCATION
• - • tlUo qulellcltnd ulcl Other Ololocta ......... 150.00
P.O. Box 272 .
property oold In the Tollil Dltburaem..,ll •
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768
foroctooure eellon ond oil (Oper) .................. 2!15,t71.42
(7) 31, (8) 1 , 12, 11 4te
amount• due PlolniiH be Exc. Repto, Over/(Unclar)
pold from ptoctedo of the Dllb................... (157,4113.81)
Other Financing Soureeo
uto.
Public Notice
You are required to (U-)
State Soun:et~ ..... 17,1163.27
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS annwer tho Complaint
Federt~l Source&amp; .................
Sealed propo181o lor wltllln lwenly·elghl (28)
dayo
olter
lhe
loot
·
·
........................... 178,188.69
providing 400 tone, mort or
Refund of Prior YNro
leno, of otato opecllleallon publication of thlo Notlee,
Expand ................................o
404 11pholt!e hoi-mix In which will be publlohod
place on varloua atreats once eaeh week lbr olx (6) Total Other Fin. Source•
and loeatlono wllhln tho IUOCIIIlve WMkl. Tilt lai11 (UN1) .................. 194,051.86
Exea11 Ractlpti)Sourctt
Vlllqe of Syracu~t will ba publlc:otlon will be made on
doy
of
Autull1,
OVor/(Under)
lhe
20th
received by Syracuoe
Vllloge C.ouncll ol tho 1-897, and the lwtnty·elghl Dlaburoomonta &amp; Other
Munlelpal Building ol lhe (28) dayo lor antwer wlll U101111et ............... 36,558.05
oald village untll 10 1.m. commence on that erato. In Beginning Fund Catll
Augull13, 1887, when they tho caeo 01 your follureto Bolonce·......................491,12
will be opened and read 1nower or olhorwl.. Ending Fund Cash Btlance
r11pond ao roqueoted by ............................. 37,049.17
aloud.
fo r
Bldo ohall be Maled and 1111 Ohio Rut.. of Civil R • • er v e cr
morked 11 Bid for Vlllqe of Proeoduro, Judgement by Enc:umbrancee ................... o
Syroeull Stroot Repaving deltult wlll bo rendered UnrtNrVed Fund BaiiiiCI.
............................. 37,049.17
ond milled or dellvertcllo: agalnll you oiler for the
VIllage of Syraeuoe, Third rollel domended In the Agency Fund, Operlllng
Rtcelplo
Street, Syracl!ll, OH 45n9. Complaint.
Dellcltlllo 11 day of July
TIXea.:.............,.................o
AHentlon of blddero 11
' Eemlnge on lnveotmenta ..
callod to · all log a I 1997.

...,net

I

l

--~1,213,732.13
~

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

fo&amp;i'li;o;ipij;':·~":.~
..............,_...... 4,!1G.-.s2

~=

~

~=
~n~~ruo~~on

......2,401,120.11

Suppoo11tlg . . t1 ... ___..;
....................... 1AII,I11.07
ExlrKunk:uler Acllvltlel ...

............................. ee,m 11
Debt Senlcel ... 448,0118.32
l!mployeeo Solorloo l
WllgM ................... II4,233.78
l!mployeoo Rotlroment
lenellll.................41,1114.03
Purchnecl8ervlen .. 67.11
Suppl•• ' . . . . .'-..........
........................... 157,801.45
Other ~ ....... 1,621.00
Totol Dloburoemen1o .•
(()per) ................721,137.78
Exe. Repto, Over/(Undor)

IT'S SHO\VIMIO - Duane Weber of Rutland launches off the
atartlng pad In his 1982 5-10 pick-up dubbed 'Showtlme". Weber
recently won several bl~ races this seaaon and hao a good track
·
record for much success.

. Dlab ...................(315,042.2t)

Other Financing Sourceo
(U-)
.
~- Soun:et~ ..... 17,1163.27

F.,.,..
... . . . . . . .
........................... 178,181.5

Rutland's Weber
clainns big victory
'in .Kanawha event

~

Refund of Prlor Ynro

Expend •••••••••••••••••••••••.••• 7.50

Total Olhtr Fin. Soure11
(U-) .......:.......... 1114,~.38 1
Exe..o Reeelplo/IJourceo
Overi(Undlr)
Dloburoemenl~ I
Olher
UHI/Net ........... (t80,982.80)

Beginning Fund C11h
B•I811Ce •••••••••.••.••450,041.96
Ending Fund CMh 81181101
........................... 251,064.06
Rooerved
lor
Encum--.......4,2211.69
Unrooerved Fund S.IIIICI.
........................... 254.834.37

Caah In Banko (Net) ...........
........................... 259,064.08 .

Potty caoh Change Calh ...
.................1''''''"''''''"''''0.00

lnvootnuonll ................. o.oo
Total Fund BIIIIICI ............
........................... 259,064.06

MEMORANDA DATA
Aaaealld Veluotlon ...........
...............:........... 61,687,920
Property TIX Lavloo
lnolclo10 Mlll ............ 3.5000
0Utalde10 Mlll ....... 23.5000
ADM ..........................873.00
Number of Non-Cart.
Employeeo ...................33.00
Numbar
of
Cort.
Employeeo ...................se.oo
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS

BONDS

Baloneo Beginning of
Perlocl ....................20,000.00
New looueo • During Flocal
Pertocr .............................o.oo
Redeemed-During . Flaeal
Ptrlocl....................20,000.00
Balanee 8-»97 .............. 00
SUMMARY .
INDEBTEDNESS NOTES
LONG I SHORT TERII
Balance Beginning of
Pertoc1 ...............1,110,754.70
Now looueo·Durlng Flocal
Perlocl .........:...................o.oo
Redoomed·Durlng Floeal
Perlocl ..................470,t21. tO

FINANCIAL STATEMENT
Mloc. Rtcelptt .................. O
Combined Financial Report
Granll In Aid
ollhe Boord of Educallon
Stall Soui'C81 ................... o
For the Flocal Year Ended
Federal Soui'C81 ...............0
· Juno 30, 1887
Total Recatpta • (Operotlng)
Soureo
D01erlptton
............................. 36,286.76
Govemmentel Fundi
Dlobu..........,
R...lpll: Revenue
Expendllure
R...lpll
Dll&amp;bu......,.nle:
BlliiiCIII-30-II7................... .
TIXII .............. 1,472,411.11
lnii1Jucllon .........................O .........................c.l39,826.60
Eamlngo on lnvetlmenta..
Supporting ServiCII ........ o I eertlfy the following
............................. 16,127.34
Extracurricular Actlvltlea ... report to be correct and
Food Servlo:eo SaiN ... O.OO
........................................... 0 true, to the beat of my
Extracurricular Actlvltlen...
Debt Servtcea ................... o knowledge:
........................... 103,391.15
Employee• Salortea &amp;
llennlt E. Hill
ClaN Matorllln I Fnt...... Wqao ................................. o
Troaouror ollhe
...................................... 0.00
E"'ployoeo Retirement
Board of Education
Mloc. Recelp11 .... 16,136.911 Banellta...............................o .
614-949-2213
G-ln Aid
Purcll- Servlcoe .. 67.11 (8) 6; 1TC
S - Soun:ot2,283,732.23
Suppllao I Mllerlolo ..........
Fedlral SOUfOII.................
............................. 36,408.84
........................... 316,525.36
Other Objecta .......... 971.00 ·t _ _.:.P.:u::b:::llc:::.!:N.:o!!tic:::e!...__
Tout
Roealpll
• Total Olaburoemonta •• ~
PUBUC NOTICE
-...:..::.:::.::.:=:::::::__1 (Operating) ...... 4,208,324.15 (Oper) ....................39,448.95 On Saturdey,
Auguot 23,
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Dlllburoamentl:
Exe. Repta, Over/(Undar)
1997
at
10:00
o.m.
Ule Home
COURT OF MEIGS
ExpencllWre
Dlab....................... (3,1110.19) .
COUNTY, OHIO
Olaburoementl:
Other Flnenelng Source• National Bonk will offer lor
oala at public ouc:tlon on tha
FARMERS BANK 1
lnatructlon ...... 2,401 ,720.11 (Uoeo)
SAVINGS COMPANY,
Supporting Sorvlc............
Stale Sourcee ................... O bonk parking lot the
PlolntiH,
........................ 1,4911,612.07
F..,.rol Sourctio ...............o followtng vohlelea:
C111 No. 87 CV 074
Exlracurrlcular Actlvltleo...
Refund of Prior Yeoro 1993 Eagle Summit, Serial
Yo
............................. 86,293.91
Expend ................................o IJE3CA48C5PU083949
I
lzuzu, S.rlol
Jameo R.lloyer, 1111.,
Debt Servleea ... 448,086.32
Total Other Fin., Soure•• 1991
Dtlencho....
Employaoa Solarloa I '(Uoeo) ..................................o IJ~1l2118105712
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION Wqee.,.......................... Q.OO
Exceoa Recelpte/Sourceo 1987 Mezde Plekup, Serial
IJM2UF3118H0500762
To: Roger S. Roech, wh- Employee&amp; Retirement Over/{Under)
.
1987 Dodge Shtdow, Serial
1111 known tddrea111 are · Banellto..........................O.OO Dloburoamonlo I Other 1183BS44E2HN478783
.
122
Union
Avenue, Purchalld Servleee .... o.oo Uni/Net ............... (3,1110.19)
1987
Chryoler
LeBoron,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, and Supplleo I Molorlolo ... O.OO
Beginning Fund C11h
3216 Frtnldln Avenue, Potnt Other Ololocta .............. o.oo Balanee ................. 16,337.35 Serial
Pleuant, WV 25550, Total Dloburoemenlo • Ending Fund Caoh S.lanee 11C3BH56E8FN208514
pr11ont addre.. unknown, (Oper) ............... 4,432,712.41
............................. t3,1n.16 1982 Chevy Pickup, Sortel
nnd Marton Roach, whoae Exc. Repla, Over/(Under)
R a o.• r v e d
I o r 11GCOC14H2CF34e485
latl known addraooeo are Dllb................... (224,388.21!) Encumbrancat ................... o 1993 Ford Fleoto, Serial
122
Union
Avenue, Other Financing Sourctt . UnreNrved Fund S.lanco. IKN.IPT05H7P6118457
Pomeroy, OH 4576t, end (Uoeo)
............................. 13,1n.16 (8) 6, 8, 13, 15, 20, 22; 6TC
3216 Fr~nklln Avenue, Point State Sourcee .............. o.oo TOTALS
Plaa~tnl, wv 25550,
Federal Soure11 .......... o.o0
TIXta............... 1,472,411.11
preunt adclr011 unknown.
Refund of Prior Vear1
Eornlnga on lnvtatmenta:.
You are hereby nolllled Expand ........................... 7.50
............................. 111;121.34
lho.l you have been named Total Other Fin. Source•
Food Servlclo Selaa ......... .
Dolendanto In the action (UNo) ....................,........ 7.50
............................. 85,211.17
entitled Farmera Bonk 1
Exceao Recelplatsourceo
Extrecurrlcular Acllvltlea ...
hvlngo Company, Plalnllll, OVor/(Undar)
........................... 139,&amp;n.91
vo. Jamet R. Boyar, 1111, · Dloburaemenln &amp; Other
ClaotMalerlolt I Feeo ......
Delandantt. Thla ectlon hao UIOI/Ntl ........... (224,380.76)
............................. 12,900.69
Beginning Fund C11h .Mioc. Reeelpto .... 16,509.71

1---------

- ~·
11'

'

transbrakc, TCI converter. and Hurst
By SCOTT WOLFE
quarter
stick shifter. Rearend features
Sentinel Correspondent
·
Duane Weber of Rutland recently includ a nine-inch Ford with 5:14
claimed a big victory in the Pro-Class Richmond Gears, Strange Spool,
at Kanawha Valley Dragway outside Strange Pinion Support, and Moser
of Pt. Pleasant in his 1982 Showtimc Axles.
Tires and Wheels of choice arc
' Chevrolet S-1 0 pick-up. From a slow
ride to the boneyard to over )00 mile 26.014.5-15 Mickey Thompson's on
an hour runs down the 1/8 mile . the.front, mounted to a 3 1/2 Draglite
Weber has converted a once beat-up ·weld Wheel. The rear features 14 X
workin' ~man's 'truck to an cmaculatc . 32 Goodyear slicks on 14 x. 15
race car. show truck ; thus the name Drag lites.
The rear suspension is a double
"Showtimc'. That and the fact that
Weber used to build and show vehi- adjustable ladder bar variety with an
AVO Adjustable CqiiOovcr shock .
cles for a hobby.
Weber stated. ··when I lirst built Electonics on the vehicle are a Com·
the truck. I told pcople--'lf I never plctc MSD ignition system with Auto
win. at least it will look good losing'! •' Meter gauges, Dcdcnhcar Crossover
· As it turned out. ··shnwtimc" has Delay Box. and Shiftnoid Shifter.
Other features arc Harwood
had a fair amount of success. finishing 7th in Mndified points in 1994, Scoops. Halon Fire extinguisher. and
second in 1995. and sec~d again in Custom Aluminum Bed Cover. Paint
1996. ·He qualified for the Bracket is "Bright Blue" painted by R.M.
world finals all three years and has Auto Sales and Paint in Ripley. W.
four tina! round appearances and two Va .
The crew and special mentions
wins ii11996 and a win in a Gamblers
race in 1996. Weber has had two per- include Craig, Kevin and Brenda
fect lights (.500) back to back. and Venoy, Clifford Ashley. Tim Baum,
had to have a race-off the last night Edna Householder, Dallas Weber. and
other family members and fellow racof points bccaus of a tic .
ers.
Weber passes a special mention
Weber said. "I lost the race-off. but
it was exciting!"
io his mother Margaret Weber who
Weber now runs in the Pro Class · passed away last December.
in 1997 and has won a gamblers race
Weber races at Kanawha Valley.
and Pro Class win a .few weeks ago: Norwalk, and National Trail at
Weber bought the truck from a Col~mbus.
The favorite thing Weber passes
friend in 1993 for few hundred dollars. It was a stock S-10 without a on about drag racing is "The people
I've met and being around friends;
~otor or transmi.,sion and as he says
·:probably on a ride to the boneyard." and the rush of a good run ."
Through many long nights of - 1\.lso he takes pride in comments
hard work and the help of friends. the on his truck and "Winning isn't bad 1"
The worst things is "whenthc oth·
truck was race ready in June of 1994 .
With a 406 Chevy powcrplant u'ndcr er guy wins the light."
. Weber's Most Valuable lesson
the hood, the truck runs a 6.96 for an
learned
in racing is "to be confident •.
ET speed of 97 miles per hour.. The
hut
always
respect the other driver's
engine is cquipJ?Cd with Dan Heads
ability.
Be
humble in victory--you
and a TCI starter.
can
g9
from
hero
to 7.cro real quick!"
Weber. a printer hy lradc . runs the
Not
had
advice,
espec ially from a
car under the Showtime Racing bantrue
winner!
ncr in the Pro ET class. The truck is
fitted with a Powerglidc tranny. TCI

Piazza paces LA ...
Continued from pag~ 4
because oflcndinitis in his right
Achilles tendon . Schmidt (7-6)
allowed five hits in seven innings.
Mets 5, Cardinals 4
At New York. Edgardo Alfon1.0
hit a bases-loaded sacrilice Oy in the.
)Oth inning to give New York its 34th
comeback victory of the year.
.
Lance Johnson led off with singles
ugaiolst Tony Fossas ( 1-4) and
J3ernard Gilkey and John Olerud
. l&gt;unted safely. After Alex O.:hoa
1;roundcd into a fielder 's ,choice.
.~lfonzo followed with a lly hall to
right field.
Cory Lidle (5-I) got the victory.
o;triking out Gary Gactti with two on
~tart

in the lOth after a long ram-delay. The
Mcts , have won seven straight at
horne.
Rockies 4, Phillie• 2
At Philadelphia. . Eric Young's
two-out RBI double in the eig)uh
inning cup)lcd a three-run rally as
Colorado' ended a three-game losing
streak.
.
Darren Holmes (4-2) pitched two
scoreless innings for the victory and
Jerry Dipoto got the linal six out.• lor
his fourth save. Ricky Bottulico (2-4).
Philadelphia's fourth pitcher. took the
loss.
Phillies starter .Curt Schilling
ritchcd six shutout innings .

• • • • • • •••
. • • • • •COUPON

By The Aaaoclated Press
Boston had 24 hits. the most in the Stanton and Mariano Ro vera ·worked
The upper deck in right field at the .American League this season and a the last four innings.
Ballpark in Arlington seems to loom record for the most by a Texas oppoPaul O'Neill had two RBi s.
over the (ield, beckoning to left-hand- nent in a nine-inning game .
Angels 6, Brtwt"' s
ed hitters.
The Red Sox scored 18 runs on
At Anaheim. Dave Hollins had
Troy O' Leary of the Boston Red July 14. against Detroit, the most in three RB!s - two on a tiebreaking
Sox answered its call twice Tuesday the league this season.
two-run double in the fifth inning night.
'
. Helped by the big early lead, Tom as Anaheim won for the eighth time
O'Leary became only the second Gordon (6-9) allowed three hits over in I 0 games.
player 10 hit tWO homers irt One game six innings to post his first victory
Jason Dickson (11·4) pitched 5 I·
into the right-field porch at the 4- si nce June 22. Boston sent 14 hitters 3 innings for the win and Troy Per-·
year-old stadium as the Boston Red to the plate and pounded rookie · c1val pitched I 1-J innings for his
Sox pounded out a season-high 24 starter Jose Alberro (0-3) and reliev- 17th save.
.
hits and clobbered the Texas Rangers cr Matt Whiteside for nine hits in the
Dave Nilsson led off ohc fourt h
17·1.
and sixth innings with home runs to
third.
Elsewhere, New York beat Kansas
Yankees 4, Royals I
increase his season total to 20, and
City 4-1, Anaheim edged Milwaukee
At Kansas City, Kenny Rogers Jeromy Burnitz followed Ni lsson 's
6·5, Seattle edged Baltimore 4-3, made his first start in seven weeks second homer with his 21st to trim
Detroit beat Cleveland 6-4 Toronto and allowed only one run in five Anaheim 's lead to · 5-4. Burnitz has
topped Minnesota .8-3 and' Chicago innings .
hometed in five stra1ght games .
blanked Oakland 3-0.
Their seventh victory in eight breaking the club record set by SixO'Leary 's pair of homers were outings lioosted the Yankees to a sea- to Lezcano in 1979.
only a small part of the offensive · son-hcs! 20 games over :500 and
Bryce Florie (2-3) took the loss.
onslaught by Boston.
wi thin 4 112 games of AL East-lead- Mariners 4, Orioles 3
Nomar Garciaparra went 4-for-7 ing Baltimore.
At Seattle, Russ Davis homered
with a homer and two doubles, Wil
Kevin Appier (6- 10) gave up three over the center-field fence leading off
Cordero highlight~d an eight-run runs in the first inning and lost his the ninth inning for the victory.
third inning with a three-run homer, fifth . straight decisoon. He walked ·
Davis collected a game-winning
O'Leary had a career-high four ·hits two, struck out five and yielded sev- RBI in the ninth inning for the fourth
with three RBis and John Valentin, en hits and four runs in 7 1-3 innings.
Mo Vaughn and -Jeff Frye all had
· Rogers (5-4), the $20 million
three hits to send the Red Sox to a pitcher who was banished to the
two-game series sweep.
.
.
bullpen after an ineffective stan on
Texas lost for the seventh time in June 15, gave up six hits and one run
eight games as the Rangers continued in five innings, striking oul two and
thei r free-fall in lhc AL West . ·
walking two. Ramiro Mendoza. Mike

tome this season. His 16th homer
carne on the first pitch from Terry
Mathews (2-2). Baltimore 's fourth
pitcher.
Norm Charlton (3·7 ) picked up ·
the victory by pitching a perfect ninth
after Paul Spoljaric worked 2 2-3
inning s of scoreless relief.
The Mariners, who moved percentage points ahead of Anaheim in
the 1\L West. beat the Orioles for the
first time in four tries this year at the
Kingdome .
Tigers 61 Indians 4
At Detroit . Justin Thompson ·
pitched six innings and Phil Nevin
homered to lead Detroit past Cleve-·
land. '
·
Thompso n (I 0-8) gave up three
runs on six hits wilh three walks and
three strikeout '\ Cleveland 's Manny

Ramirez hJt a so lo horne run ·in the
folth. bul Thompson stranded five
lnd1an~

1n

sconng pm 1t1on .

,

The Tigers broke a 3-3 tic on Bobby Higginson 's RBI groundout off
Eric Plunk (3-:I J•n the sixth. Nevin's
solo horner. hi s fiflh . off Jason ·
Jacome in the scv~ nlh made il 5r3.

~...,~

SU~ER

MELTDOWN!

two months!
PEREZ HOMERS • Cincinnati's Eduardo Perez, left, is congratulated by teammate Barry Larkin after hitting a two-run home
run in the first inning during Tuesday night's game against the
San Diego Padres at Cinergy Field in Cincinnati. The Reds won,
7-3. (AP)

-Sports

briefs~

TRACK AND FIELD
. ATHENS . Greece (AP) - American star Michael Johnson won his
third straight 400-mctcr titl~ at the
world championships capturing the
gold medal in 44.12 seconds. the
third-fastest time in the world this
year, despite a left-leg cramp.
Marius Corbett, who was
unranked in the world 's top 10 in the
men s javelin before the champi·
onships. became South Africa's first
gold medalist with an African · record
throw of 290 feet.
·Sally Bnrsosio became the first
Kenyan worn :on. to win a gold medal
at either the world championships or
the Olympics. taking the I 0.000
mc1crs in a world junior record rime
of 31 :.12.92._
In the other finals. Cuba's Ivan
Pedroso. the three-time world indoor
champion in Lhc men 's long jump.
woo his sct:ond slraighl outdoor title
· at 27 · 7 112. and Carla Sacramcnwnr
Portugal ellrncd her lirst major title .
wi.oniog lhc women's 1.500 with her
season':-: hcst of 4:04.24.

It's That
Time Again!
Fair Days
.Are Here.
Pickens
liard ware
Supports
The Mason
County
Fair

PICKENS ·
HARDWARE

.'

Plus, choose between a .
FREE TeleTAC'.. or
a FREE Tote phone.
'

Sign up for our residential long-distance
service, and get 360 long-distance minutes
free for one year.

MASON, W.VA.
773-5583

FREE HEARING T~STS
will be glvan Ia Melts/Gallla Counties by

••

.

•.
'

·l

.'

•
:
•

~·HEARING .AID CENTER
Friday, August I, 1997
Ia Dr. A. Jackson Balles' Office
. 224 East Main, Pomeroy ' ·
9:00•Nooa

•

:
•
•
:

360° Communications
Cellular, paging and long distance, right down the street.w
For iniormation, call:

j51 East State Street, Athens, OH (614) 592-4911

• Cal TDII Frtt 1·800·634-5265 for an l1111111diatt appointment. a
: The tests will be given by a Ucenset1 Hearing Aiel Specillist •
a Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversation is invit8Q to a
have a FREE hearing lesllo see ~. this problem can be helped. Bring this a
a ·~ with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
a

a

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ARMCO, UAW, AND AU OTHER
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WALK.JNB WELCOME

'

PERFORMS AT FAIR • Danlelle Grueser, Meigs County's 4·H
horse performance against standards quallfler, partlclpatad at the
Ohio State Fair activities. She qualified In two c:laana, hunt seat
equitath;m and working hunter under nddla finishing seventh In
the eqliltatlon class. She Is the daughter of Danny and Debbie
Grueser and a member of the Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders4-H club.

a

a

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'I

.'

~

lnPol-t o1t10 \QOII'ICf ftqloiftd C..do! !til!~ ljlflly F~-": ff'ICI ~ ~ fD&lt; iox.tl t.tlh f* ~ ~ ~~
frlill' llld ~ SurW, I'Wlrf'CIIoll ~"'-'dn ~IA(f ...-d IOI!I'III'II'i ..wTit ""'' " '*d fl fir).w.:.ond ~
~.rNrctlm~Aifftft~oiiU~ lO mnM~•mooth ~ 12 l'rUittl\ Oller tllpl'ft.~ll, 1!91

�I

By The Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel

VVednllday,Auguste,1997

lt~

SyndtCIU:

AJI,elei

Til!ll!~

and Cru1on

Syndlu~

Dear Ann Landers: You pride
yourself on-printing.both sides of the
story. Well, how about printing this
one? Sorry it's too late for Mother 's
Day.
My mother gave me to my paternal grandparents to raise after she
found my sister and me eating ant
poison. I was. 4 years old, and my
sister was 2. When we became violently ill, she did not seek help for
us, although a medicoil clinic was
only eight blocks away. When my
sister died the next' day, Mom

'

'

I

blamed me for the tragedy because I ment to honor my parents. Sign me was older and "should have known - Permanently Damaged in Marble
beuer."
Falls, Texas
·
Eventually, I nioved back home,
Dear Marble Falls: How sad
but I was abused by my mother both that you've lived 72 years with so
physically and emotionally. As a much hate and bitterness in your
cpild, I feared her. As an adolescent, heart. This must have had a negaI hated her.
. tive, souring effec.t on .all your relaWhere· was our father when all tionships.
this was going on? Drinking, mostly.
You don't say anything about
He always had money for alcohol, your own family -- a spouse and
but there was never enough money children. I'm hoping that the last
for food, clothes or shoes for us kids. part of your life has been better than
Mom died at 89, and I don't the first. Please write again and let
know where she went. I'm sure it me know.
wasn't heaven, and she was so cruel
Dear Ann Landers: I am marand' vicious, even the devil wouldn't ried to an extremely good-hearted
have her.
man who is a certified m~chanic. He
I survived ·my miserable child- . can fix or build absolu.tely anything .
hood and achieved a modicum of He's an expert at c·arpentry, welding,
success, but I still find it difficult, at motors, plumbing and electronics -age 72, to observe the command- you name it, he can repair it.

Judging of the Meigs County Girl
Brownies: JoAuana Fetty ofTroop
Scout projects for the Meigs County 1067. Bethany King of Troop 1308.;
Fair has heen completed. Blue ribbon grand champion, Bethany King of
winners in the various categories Rutland Troop 1308; reserve cham·
were:
pion, JoAuana Fetty of Chester Troop
World of Well Being
1067 ..
Group project: Daisy Troop 1020.
Juniors: Mallory King and MadiBrownies: Sara Bradshaw of son King ofTroop 1196; grand cham Troop 1079, Ericka Cogar and Caitlin pion, Madison King of Rutland Troop
Nease of Troop 1120, Kay Ia Fetty of 1196; reserve champion, Mallory
Troop 1067, Bethany King and April King of Rutland Troop 1196.
Butcher of Troop 1308.; grand chamCadettes; Shelley Cummins of
pion, Sara 'B.radshaw of Harrisonville Troop 1115, Melissa Hart of Troop
Troop 1079; reserve champion, April 1208.; grand champion, Shelley CumButcher of Rutland Troop 1308.
mins of Southern Troop 1115.
Juniors: Cassie Cleland and lenSeniors: Allison Streetman and
nifer Roberts of Troop 1290, Andrea Bethany Cooke of Troop 1204,
Fetty and Amanda Fetty of Troop Melissa Holman' of Troop 1261 ;
1309, Chrissy Miller, Madison King grand champion. Melissa Holman of
and Mallory King of Troop 1196, Big Bend Troop 1261; reserve cham Sheena Ash of Troop 1276, group pion,BethanyCookeofMeigsCoun' projects Letart Troop 1290 and Tup- ty Troop· 1204.
pcrs Plains Troop 1039; grand chamWorld of Arts ·
pion, Mallory King of Rutland Troop
· Group &lt;projects: Letart Juni or
1196; reserve champion, Madison Troop 1290; Rutland Junior Troop
King of Rutland Troop 1196.
1196; Southern Cadette Troop 1115 ;
Cadettes: Shelley Cummins and Big Bend Senior Troop 1261 .
Jennifer Norman of Troop 1115.
. Brownies: Bethany King ofTroop
Sarah Houser and Becky H9user of 1308; Ericka Cogar of Troop 1120;
Troop 1180. Bridget Johnson of Kayla Felly of Troop 1067; Sarah
Troop 1208; grand champion,. Becky Lanu ofTroop 1079; grand champi·
Houser of Pomeroy Troop 1180; on, Kayla Fetty of Chester Brownie
reserve champion, Shelley Cummins Troop 1067; reserve champion,
Bethany King of Rutland Troop
of Southern Troop 1115.
Seniors: Melissa Houser of Troop 1308.
118.0; Stephanie Roberts and Tara
Juniors: Mallory King and MadiNorman of Troop 1261 ; no grand or son KingofTroop 1308; CassicCie·
rese rve champions.
land of Troop 1290; reserve cham piWorld of People
on, Cassie Cleland of Letart Troop
Group projects: Chester Brownies 1290.
1067 and Harrisonville Brownies - €adettes: Bridget Johnson and
I079.·
· Melissa Hart of Troop 1708. and VicBrownies: Sarah Lantz of Troop ki Nonnan of Troop 1115: grand
1079, Taryn Lentes and Samantha champion, Vicki Norman of Southern
Gilbert of Troop I 308, Myca Michael Cadettes 1115.
·
of Troop 1120; grand champion.
Seniors: Bethany Cooke of Troop
Samantha Gilbert of Rutland Troop 1204. Stephanie Roberts and Melis1308; reserve champion. Sarah Lantz sa Holman of Troop 1261. Nicki
of Harrisonville Troop I079.
Roush of Troop II KO; grand cham·
Juniors: group projects Tuppers pion. Bethany Cooke of Meigs Coun·
Plains Troop 1039 and Letart Troop ty Senters 1204: honorable mcnuon.
1290; Candice Fetty of Troop 1309, Nicki Roush of Pomeroy Scn1ors
Jennifer Roberts of Troop 1290, 1180.
Chrissy Miller and Mallory King and
World of Out-of-Doors
.
Courtney Kennedy of Troop 1196;
Group prOJeCts: Southern Dmsy
grand champion·. Mallory King of Troop 1020. Syracuse Browme·Troop
Rutland Troop ll'l(i; reserve cham- 1120, BigBend Seniors 126L .
.
pion. Courtney Kennedy of Rutland . Brown1es: Samantha Gdbcrt .
Troop 1196.
·.
.
Bethany Gibbs an~ Bethany Kmg ol
Cadette: Bridg~t Johnson of Mtd- Troop 1308; Encka Cogar ol Troop
dleport Troop 1208; grand champion, 112Q, Kayla Fetty of Troop 1067 .
Bridget Johnson .
.
.
Lindsey Houser ofTroop 1271 ; grand
Seniors: group prOJCCt Metgs champton, Bethany Kmg of Rutland
County Senior Troop 1261. Bethany Troop 1308; reserve champton. MalCooke of Troop 1204, Andrea Neut- lory King of Rutland Troop 1308.
Juniors: Madison King ~nd Mal7.1ing of Troop II KO. Stephanie
Roberts of Troop 1261 ; grand cham- lory King of Troop I I96, Jenn1 fer
pion. Bethany Cnokc nf Big Bend Roberts ofTroop 1290; grand chamTroop . 12.04; reserve champion. pion, Madison King of Rutland Troop
Stephanie Roberts ol Me1gs County 1196; reserve champion, Mallory
Twop 1261.
King of Rutland Troop 1196.
World of Tnday and Tnmorrow
Cadettes: None.
Group prnjccts: Southern Daisy
Seniors: Melissa Holman ofTr.oop
Troop I020.
1261 and Bethany Cooke of Troop

Alfred News Notes
••

Alfred UMC hosted Northeast
Cluste.r hymn sing recently with
1ncmhcrs from . Chester. Alfred.
Tupers Plain~. Pomeroy, Long Bottom , and At~cns Richlitnd Avenue
Methodist churches. the Keno
· ~hurch of Christ. and the T~pers
flnins &lt;;li!Jrch of Christ.
. ·
Pasto"Y Shllfon Hausman led the
~orvices . Special music was presented by the the Alfred Choir and Men's
Quarter. Jackie Hildebrant gave a
reading. Back to Read My Bible."
1!£freshments were served.
The chur~h and community
~~press symP'Ithy to the families who
recently lost their loved ones, Gerald

Guthrie and Carl, Ritchie .
J. J. and Ryan Bailey. Cold
Springs, Ky. visited their grandparents. Mary Jo and David Barringer.
Sarah Ca.ldwcll attended the wedding in Columbus of her granddaughter, Carrie Caldwell, to Martin
Vamos. Carrie is the daughter of
Charl.es and Peggy Caldwell.
Sandra Marcinku and Anthony.
Alamagordo. N. M. are visiting her
parents. Charlotte and Warren Van
Meter and other relatives.
Nanna Jean and Gerald Swartz.
RenO. were recent gUests of Nina
Robinson.

1204; grand champion, Bethany
Cooke of Meigs County Senior Troop
1204.
World of Girl Sco uts
Group projects: None.
Brownies; Ericka Cogar of Troop
1120, Bethany King and Samantha
Gilbert ofTroop 1308; reserve cham-

The trouble is that family, friends fact, he may even enjoy lending a carries stiff penalties. It's a crime for
and acquaintances take advantage of helpful hand. It could give him a non-lawyers to give legal advice.
him . The minute he gets home from · feeling of satisfaction and a sense of
Please, folks, call an attorney if ·
work, the phone starts ringing.
pride knowing that he is needed and you need legal help. Many lawyers
Weekends are worse. I don't that his skills are recognized.
will be happy to give you a free conmind emergency calls, but I do
People who have a special talent SJJitation on your first visit. -- No
resent it when people lean on him to or area of expertise are always Legal Eagle in N.Y.
do routine maintenance swff.
leaned on by fainily, friends and
They call us. They beg, They acquaintances. If it's any comfort to
plead. They come' over and pound you, you're not alone. Read on:
on the door, interrupting our dinner,
Dear Ann Landen; I am a parafavorite TV program or lovemaking. legal. Guess how many calls I get
Moving away is out. We love our for free advice. Everyone says, "I
home, and, it's nearly paid for. just want to ask a simple l~al quesMaybe i(just one person sees him or tion." Just because I work for an
herself in ' this letter and backs off, attorney, they think I'm supposed to
some good will come of it. I don't know the 'law. Well, sometimes, I
know anyone who doesn't read your don' t know what I'm talking about,
column. -- Shreveport, I.,a.
and I might give the wrong inforrna·
Dear Shreveport: I have a feel - tion.
ing that you r husband may riot be
Here's what I DO know about the
nearly as resentful as you 1\Te· In law. Practicing law without a license

pion, Bethany King of Rutland Troop 1208.
1308 .
Seniors: Bethany Cooke ofTroop
Juniors : Mallory and Madison 1204.
King, Chrissy Miller, all of Troop
Girls that received all A's for two
I 196.
or more projcr.;ts were: Brownies -Cadettes: Bridget Johnson of Kayla Fetty. 3 A's, Troop 1067, and
Troop 1208; reserve champion, Brid-· Ericka Cogar, 4 A's, Troop I 120;
get Johnson of Middleport Troop Juniors -- Cassie Cleland, 2 A's,

DOUBLE

Troop 1290; Mallory King, 6 A's.
Troop I 191\: Tuppers Plains Troop
1039. 2 A's ; Letart Troop :2~0:
Cadette&gt; .. Vicki Norman, 2 A's,
Troop II 15 : Bridget Johnson. 4 A's,
Troop 1208; Melissa Hart. 2 A's,
Truop 1208; Seniors -- Bethany
Cooke, 6 A's. Troop 1204.

ALL WEEKI

U£~

COUPONS S(l.

Community calendar-----

Ohio. University
College uf Osteopathic Medicine

Get use to it - friends take advantage of those with special talents or work skills,
IW1.

The Daily Sentinel •,Page 7

.

.
· Page&amp;
. Wednesday, August 8, 1~
•. _ ___;;,• _ _ _ _ _ _""'!""""!_~__,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;-~---...,......;_~__,;;.;.._;.._...;..._....;..

Ann
Landers

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Family
Medicine

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit' groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
spec:ific number of days. ·

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Assoc iate ProfeSsor

of Family Medicine
Question: I sprained my ankle
while hiking in a state park. This is
the third or fourth time I've sprained.
the same ankle. Will it always be
weak and sprain easily'
Answer: Ankle sprain is the term
we use to describe a condition where
stretched or torn. These ligaments .
the ligaments in the ankle bec ome
connect leg bp"es to other bones in
the ankle, and help to stabilize the
ankle and hold all of its pans togeth·
er. Although the ligaments are quite
strong, they can be stretched beyond
their normal limits, partially torn or
torn in twor These conditions causes
· pain, swelling, and bruising .. the
typical signs of a sprai ned ankle.
Let me try to explain the ankle and .
the role of ligaments a little better.
The lower leg bones, the tibia and
fibula, toget her form a deep "ushaped" receptacle which supports
the foot bones. Thi s structure , the
ankle joint, supports the weight elf the
. body without any support from li ga'
ments as long as the person is standing still. The l1gaments serve the
important role of limiting the amount
of forward/backward and .turningin/turning-out moiion in the ankle. In
fact, if it weren't for the ligaments and
attached muscles, gravity could pull
the foot out of the ankle joint every
time the foot was lifted off the
ground.
Healing of an ankle injury takes
many Weeks. It is important to avoid
over-stressing the healing ligaments,
but it is equally important to encour·
age full flexibility of the joint. Your
doctor will talk to you about the specific exercises and activities which
are necessary for the rehabilitation of
your ankle. In a case like yours, with
repeated sprains, your ankle may nev·
er be as strong as it once was. You
might ask your doctor abou1 the need
for wearing ankle supports, particu- ·
larly when you're hiking or engaging
in other strenuous activities.

Auxiliary
members

hear report

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
versitY. College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, A!hens, ·
Ohio 45701.

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Ladies
Auxiliary, VFW, Post9053, Wednesday, 6:30p.m. Potluck and silent auction at .post home.

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Eastern
Local Board of Education, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the Tuppers Pl ains

uncommon herb~ and cvcrlar..tJng' lnr
TUPPERS PLAINS :· M.andutory
drying. Duor prizes. Refreshment\. . Eastern var~1ty chccrleadmg: dime,
All cluh mcnibcr!. wckunlc . Rcfrr.:!&lt;&gt;h- Tuesday, 6-8 p.m. at Tupper&gt; Pla1ns
school for purpose ur personnel con- ment~ .
school. Try-outs. call AnMie Rlg,hy,
sideration. renovation. and other bulil667-6742.
ness:RACINE
Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 1264. F&amp;AM. Wcdne,day.
RACINE -- Bovs interested in
RACINE -- SHS students plan - 7:30p.m. a1 the hall.
playing football fa; SJH. report to
ning to play golf meet at Meigs Golf
football building. Wednesday. 6:30
Club, Wednesday, 5 p.m.
RACINE -- Southern Junior High p.m.
Sc hon! foothall meeting. ·for hoys
CHESTER -- Chester Garden . wanting to play foo tball , Wednesday. THURSDAY
Club, Chester United Methodi st 6:30p.m. at thcfootball h·uilding. For
POM EROY -·- PERS/PERI noi,n
Church, annual open meeting. more information, call Tom Smi th at luncheon ' ru Senior Ciri~:cm Ci!nler,
Wedne sday, 7:30 p.m. Speaker. 949-2955.
.
mak e rcscn•ations at 992-2161 hy 9
Denise Arnold of Fragrant Fields on
a.m. Thur~day,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------------------------------------------. .

Let Us Make It Easy~
We're Right On the Way•••

,

U.S.D~A.

We Sell Money Orders
We Wi,re Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

CHOICE

12 PACK CANS

Boneless
E.nglish

Coca•Cola
Products

(except Buckeye)

•Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" Servlc.es
•Greeting Cards
·
•Floral Sales ·
•We accept credit cards

LB
6 ROLL PKG.

. FOODLAND

~ranula ted

Mardi Gras Giant
,.

Paper Towels

Sugar

A report on the American Legion
Auxiliary's summer convention held
recently in . Athens was given by
Lorene Goggins when Lewis-Manley ·
Auxiliary Unit 263, met at Dale's
Restaurant.
.
Goggins, unit pres.ident, said that

2-5
LB.

FOR

9

8

BAGS

58 members were in attendance for

the meeting conducted by Nancy
Brown, Eighth District president.
Judy LaBounty, Ohio Department
president, gave the address. Other
"distinguished guests were Guy·
Phillips, president of Athens City
Council; Jim Monty, Eighth District
commander; Paul Bragg, post com-

FOODLAND l2 OZ.

BOB EVANS

Lewis-Manley unit receive first
place certificates in Americanism,

Margaret Bowles, chairman; children
and youth, Florence Richards . chairman ; community sen.•icc, Helen Cul -

mer chairman; and publicity, Lula
Hampton, chairman.
The award for publicity was a bas '
ket decorated with red, white and
blue colors, containing a miniature

Uncle Sam hat, pens and pencils.
Hampton reported from the American Dispatch that grants to needy
families have already tnplcd the
1996 total to victims of flood waters.
She also spoke of the illnesses ·or the
Gulf War veterans.
The meeting opened in ritualist
fonn. Bowles was the acting secre-

tary for the meet ing. Following a
report 'from the nominating commit·
· tee. ttle same officer s were retained
for another year. They are Goggins ,
president; Fl orence Richards. secre tary ; Edith Ross, treasurer; Culmer,
chaplain; and. Bowles. historian .

·---·7.1·

.. 9

'IRI

Hill Phi Beta
Kappa inductee

... ..

··.

' •._.,.,

ttt

~

-

~A

•••. D!.!f.!!!~Y. PacUge•

Old Fashioned S-Quirt
Ice~ ................. ,.

.

Julie Ann Hill , Racine, daughter of
Thomas C. and Sandy A Hill , was
one of95 new members inducted into
Ohio University's Lambda Chapter of
Phi Beta Kappa, the oldest of all college honor societies.
Hill is the recipient of the Dean's
Scholarship and the Ernest and Max·
ine Wingett Scholarship. and rece nt·
Jy graduated with degrees in bi ology
and p~ysical therapy. She has been
accepted into the graduate physical
therapy program .
· To be eligible for inducti on, '
seniors •must have at lca.\t a 3.65
. grade point average , and JUniors
must have a 3..80 G.P.A. They must
also have distribution requirem ents in
three areas: foreign language, humanIties an'd social science and mathe matics and sciem.:e.

'

.HOLLY
.,.

FOODlliiD

LB.

BISCUITS

SOFT BATCH
COOKIES

Western
Style
Pork Ribs LB.•
SUPERIOR'S

TAVERN
WHOlE

Boneless
Hams

s 79

FOODLAND

NIL LA

Ice Cream

Orange Juice Turkey Breast

s

y,
GAL.

s

age

Nectarines

5

EASTMAN'S

to Limit Quantities· Prices Effective Thru

I

2 1285
Ct.

MEADOW GOLD

Twin Pops, Fudge Bars,
Orange Dream Bars,
Ice (ream Bars

t'llATURil

Potato Salad

I

c
La.

OHIO VALLEY • GALLIPOLIS
BIG BEND • TWIN RIVERS

ODLAND

"It's Fresh or It's Free"
We

Ice Cream
Sandwiches

DELl

BOB EVANS

c

MEADOW GOLD

99

IN OUR DELl

LB.

2v.m$3

JENNIE·O
BLUE RIBBON

FLORIDA GOLD

CRISP

JUICY

NABISCO

LB.

EA.

August lte Cream Sodal

-WAVERS

LB.

Head
Lettuce

s
·/

UNITED VALLEY BELL
CHOC. MILM GAL

4 PK.

KEEBLER

BONE· IN

ggc
8
2/ 1

Potato Chips

c

c

PIG.

FARMS

Whole
Fryers

ASST. VARIETIES
HERR'S

American ~ingles Orange Juice

Farm
Sausage ~~LL

mander'; Mickey Willian1s, Pomeroy,

incoming Eighth District commander,
· and several past district preside nt.

UNITED VALLEY BELL

SUPERMARKETS

Food

andWIC

lo•

.

I

I

Errors .

�'PIIge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Augult 6, 1997

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9
Pomeroy,

Pepsi&amp;
Mt: Dew
Products
Umlt 1add. purch $5.49
24 pk. 12 oz. cans

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS
Mondaythru
Sunday
BAM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

•

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard LIH Uuat S. Ptfcl In
AciVInCI. Duclllnt: 1:00pM tht
llf•Y before the ad le to ruit,

PIEICI Qft SGfiWUI

•v•'
..
Air CG!dtionen hiS!aled 12.. a month

•Financing

Heat l'mlps Installed s:~r a month
IPII"*"• bu~ '"'"""I&lt;MICI croclll)

Accepts Credit Cards

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH a. WV
t14 441 8411

1-80N72-ae71391 Satbd School Rd., GaiNpolis, OH

29oz.

Custom Homes

Remodeling

11 a 1 ·

.

.

Bottom Round

Steak~~-

Ritz
Crackers

$179

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Pori• ond Sert~icell

$2 ~.
69
Chops ............... ~•;. $1
$ _
59 Picnics .....· ····~···~~·.. 79e
T1p Steak..... ~~ ......~~·.. . 1
Steak .••••....•••.•...••••••

• Mowers • Chain SliWa • Weedaatera ~AuthOriZed
Dallier for:
I
-8rtgga &amp; Stratton • MTI).. Murray· McCollough •
Echo- Ryobl· Roper • Rally· Hydro Gear
AND OTtiERSII

''·

20

Complete Mac:hlne Shop Servke F•brialtion
Steel Sales, WeldiJII Supplies, Industrial Gas
lbMiiator Repair &amp; Replacement

Breasts~~·...

SUPERIOR

-·

Bologna ............. u.~~·.

Big Bend Fabrkation,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop

'

Crisco

$
399
R1 beye Steaks ........ .
FRESH BONELESS
.$
99

Chicken

Yra. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ron111e Jones

Monday-Friday· 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, 8:00a.m. · 12 noon

US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB.

Oil

250 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.

Phone: 614: 992·2406

48oz.

1

69¢

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Charm in
White Bath
Tissue

WVI0234n

..,0

,nerc1v,

Ohio

,

·-·

CELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

MANLEY'S

ForHandlcappld
&amp; Elderly.
Dally - Weekly Contract
Family Atmo1phare
209 S. 4th Street
Middleport

Rooftng, Plumbillg,
Room .Additions,
Drywall, Siding,
Concrete, Etc:.

_,. __

n

St.

!

•

I

I

Fax: 304-n3-5861

ELIM
HOME (IRE

. 992-6042

110 Court

liOME IMPROVEMtNT

'
I'

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

'
~

I

I

614·992-5479

P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
Oh 45614
(614) 388-9865

~-

- ..

-

(Lime.StoneLow Rates)

a· or metal sink with faucets base,
must take all, ~ou pick up, 614~
992·6968,

Female Beagle 2 Year Old, Good
With Childrfn, H·unts Rabbits,
814-:JII8.6850.

992-90577NO/I mo

614-992-3470

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

... ..
!

Sayre Trucking Co•.
614-742·2138

'11'17Mifn

..

Dally Rd., Racine

614-949-3060

John Williams, Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free ·estimates .
Providing Quality
Realdentral Service.

742 2925

·"
"W.SawYou
24 Hr. Eme,ncy
Free
E•limnle•
llfonq"
.,.. · -..t
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. ..__ _ _:.....,:::.:.:•-::..c:;,~· , .....__s;:;:e::.rv:,;;lc~•...;.
20 vra. Exp. · Ins. Owner:.Riok Johnson

Downy Fabric
Softener
FRESH

_

,$

.

cottsmoalott

64 oz.

QQ

Bananas ...••••. ~ •• 3/lb. 1.

99

.$

'.

VALLEY BELL

' .'
$119
.
Cottage Cheese :~n~ ·
0/
10

2

M•lk
.
$189
. I
. . • • • • • . . • •. . •.
\
gallon

UNITeD ORA~GE -

MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT

•
J

··

.

gaL

Coffee .............. .

_ UICe ••• ~ •••••••••••••••

FLAVORITE ·

DAIRY LANE

$1·
59 ·
S ugar ....................•
.

Sibs.

$.1 89

Ice Cream •••••• !'!::; •• $1

Clorox
Bleach

Carnation
Evaporated Milk

Del Monte
Ketchup

Gallon

12 0%.

2Boz.

1

~

Coupon #RV0125

Miracle

$
I

32 oz.

$

.

Powell's
Super Value

This week

Free Cash!
Stop In The Store
For Details
Saturday,
Aug...t8, 11187

Expires: 8-09-97

Whip~

19
wltheoupon

•

UmH 2 Please add. purch He

1::.

- ~~~~
YARD SALE
732 Sycamore St.
Thurs. &amp; Fri. 10 am·4 pm
i..awnmower, Tonneau cover, sida
· rails tor Ford Ranger., misc.

ROCK-A-BYE BABY
Good Only' at
Powell's
SuperValu

on one 32 oz. jar of any Miracle Whip Product •. 1

-----------

i~'·

--------------------------~

1!2 Off Swimwear &amp;
Selected Racks
326 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant, WV
,.,...,1..,.0 AM·6'TPo':M'"l'!'~

INSULATION

SAW CHAIN

MIDDLEPORT

10 in .......... $10.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

. 537 BRYAN PL41CE

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 2o yeart1 experience.
Free Estimates

•Btliltl Garages
•Storm Doors &amp;

Call 614·843·5426

•R10111 Additions

992·2772

e:oo o.m,-3:30 p.m.

,

•Replacement W'tntlows

Windows

1

1·614-742·2925

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
F.BEE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calfs)

na
Local Area Pick u·p

Dlacarded Appliance•
·a. Marw Metala.
614-w.l-4025
Call 8 •m.S pm

.

YOUNG'S

.'tARPENTER SERVIa
.&lt;f!Dom Addltlona

"'""G••a•
-Electrical I Plumbing
oflooflng

"nWrtor I aterfor

.Palndng

Cone,..._.

. ·

. Alao
Work "
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
8112-6215

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

-- ,11 ........,

$2,000 REWARD!!
For Information
leading to the·
arrest and conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron L Miller

992-4025

Found: 2 Month Old Black lab,
Between State Street &amp; HedgewoOd Drive, Cllii614.,..46-QS.3.
Found: Syracuse vicinity, black
long-haired female dog with some
brown, Bordre Collie-type. ver~
ki&lt;nl~.

··-2·6168.

.

RL 1, Box44-C
Mason,WV

Rnancing through Norwest Financial

25260

THE MAPLES
in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring wallto-wall carpeting, with all appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements.
For further details calf today

t:=')

. 1•614•992•7022

E

-

BANKING
Otuo Valley Bank Is Seeing ~;
E11peoenced And Qualified lndi'viduat To Fill One ( 1) Full Timi
Posttton As A Collections Oflicei
In The Financial Bank Group. Te
Qualily For This hempl Posilian;
You Will Need:
•
• E!leclive Wrillen And Orai
CorTYnunication Skills
·
• Ability To Compute Figures.
• People Oriented Personality
•
• Minimum Two (2) Years Prior
Collecttons EJperi&amp;nte

The Ouohtied Applicant W11t Need
To Have A Flexible 5 ·6 O•y
Work Week . And Be Available
..-Family : 8!7th, 8/Bih, 9-5, 104 For Som~ Eventngs When Ae•
Second Avenue, Baby Clothes, quasl~td By Collections Manager.
Furniture, Typewriter, Mens 1 Worktng Knowle dge 01 &amp;mal) ·
Cla•m Courl A Plus! Ohio Valley
Womens Clothing.
BanH. Offers A Generous Benefits
426, ..08 Vale Road. Btdwel!, ~th, Package Including .-01 (k) Aetir89th, Co'mpurer, Antiques, Craft men~ Opportunity For Career AdItems. Kids IAdulls, Clothes, vancement, And Merit Bonus ~
Household Itoms 9·?
portuni11es. Erpenence Ar:~d
Qualified Person(s) Should Com~
5 Family Yard &amp; Movmo Sale, plete An App lica!ion AI Any 0f
Thurs. Fn, 7th, 61h, ·9-5, Nice Our OII1Ces And Submtl To Hu,
Clothes. Antiques. Furntlure, man Resoutees 'Depar tment. Ohjo
Househol!:i Whatnots, Ceramic Vall~~ Bank. Bo• 240, Gathpoha ~
Shop, And Much Morpl SA 279 11 OhtO 45631
'
2 Mile Out Of Centerville, lnrormatian:614--682-7 163.
o
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
Stuff O.S)(

8t7. 818, 819, 8 To 6, 11.- Kerr

EMPLOYER

Road. Off 160, Somering For Eve· · Cemeter~ salu? liS '"'e besf
ryon&amp;, Just FolkM Signs! ·
&amp; Yard 51111 Musl
Be Paid In Advanc..
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
th• day Dlfor•th• ad
is to run. Sunday
edition· 2:00p.m.
Friday. MondiV edition
• 10:00 a.m. S.turdav.
August 9th, 9-3. 112 Kineon
Drive. Across From Sycamore
Clinic, Complete Houserto ld,
Metal Beds, End ·Table, Glass ·
ware , Books. Pictures, Tools. &amp;
first Time Sale: Thurs, Aug . 7th,
Fri Aug 8th, 9 To 5 P.M. 1313 Hilda
Or1ve. Motors. Hunting. Fishing,
HousehOld Items, Clothing.

Garage Sale: 1st One This Year !
, August 7 -9th, B-?1007 Vance
Road, Levl Jeans, -Nice Dresses,
Fish Tank, Home lntenor, Crahs.

&amp; Bedspread SeL
Saturday, AuguSt 91h, C'hest11re
Near Red light, Atr Condtltoner.
Fuel Oil Stove. Coffee Table Set.
Misc.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Witt Your Utilities Put You
· In The Poor House?
Consider:

AVON - t8 -$t8 IHr. No Door To
Door . Ouick Cash! 'Bonusal'
Fun! h!K)0-827·41140 1ndlsls!rep. , :

4 Family, 1st Time : August 7th,
8th,, 9lh, S.Ft 554, Eno, lots Girls

From Gallia Auto sales.

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-na-ss22

Avon $8 ·$ 18/Hr, No Door -To 1.
Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Aelai·
ing. 1-800-736-0168 irdlsiSirep. :

&amp; Misc. Items.

265 Por1er Road , Btdwe/1 , Ohio
August 7111, 8111, 9111, 9 To 5.

8'72 Pinecrest Ou11e , Across

Barr, H. Houston, D.D.S.

Help Wanted

AVON ! Atl Areas ' Shlfle}'
Spears, 304-675-~429.

Friday, Saturda~. 8th, 9th, 9-3 ,

LinD L Housten, CDPJIIA

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

60 Lost and Found

Collec~abjes.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC: ~ MASON .DENTAL CARE
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

1990 Ford Conversion
Van With
.Wheel Chair Lift
67,000 miles, $14,000.
Electric wheel chair,
used 2 weeks.
List $4,800
· Will sell for $4,300

DREHEL'S

"· .

FOR SALE

s2·oo

I

UmH 1 Please add.

FAMILY NIGHT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1, Get 1 FREE After 4 P.M.
2 Large Pizzas w/1 item $12.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Location

'·

UNITED VALLEY BELL

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

LOtiG"S

Wanted To Buy Used · Mob1le
675 _5965

Home. Call 614· 446 -0175 or 30~.r

110

3 Family: Thurs. Fri, Sat, Ingalls
Road, 01 218, lots or Stuff.

CORPORAL ELECTRIC

· •Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws ·
•Wead Eaters
2 mi. oH Rt. 7
Leading Creek Rd.

Shephard loggtng Buyer Or Sta:f1.tng TtmOOr And land, P1ne. Pu lp.wooel. And Saw T1mber, 614 ·61126402.
•

gqod hofn:G onty. 304-ti7S.1t.93.

Limestone &amp; Gravel
70
Yard Sale
'
Septic Systen\1
· Trailer &amp; 1
Gallipolis
House Shea
&amp; Viclnlly
Reasonable
Rates
'
2 Family, Firtt Time This Year!
' Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 9-5, '!
· Joe N. Sayre
t
High Street. Vinton. Ohio. Clothes

'

J 8. D's Auto Parts. Buy1ng saC
'lage vot1ictes. Selttng pans. 30.4 773·5033
.

Yellow short 'haire,\1, 6mos. old,

female cat. god! w/children,

.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

.

Clean lale . Model Cars pr
Trucks , 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Butck Ponnac, 1900 EaS:t ~
ern Avenue. Galltpohs

_.41...0732.

IIULIIGI
DCIVItiM

HAULING

2526.

Free Puppies, Black labs. 81.--

Fraa Eatimataa

DRERELS

4 roll pk.

Free lovable kittens, 5 black, 4
long haired, 1 short haired, litter
ltainod. 304-675-3776.

Worht..,hlp

-.

WICKS

.

1193.

q ..,..,,

.

Giveaway

2 K!ttena Swka olet. calico, fe~
male, ·inapirable, good wlct'lild ~
ran, to good home only. 304 -1!7~

Roofing, PalnUng
Gutters
Guaranteed

"

Anttques, top prtces patd, Rtver lne A.nt tques, Pome roy , Ohio,
Russ ~co re owner, 614 ·992·

304·875-2887.

Lie. WV 011030

992•7074

Cfl.frl ai'Kiaupplies.

male, 111 ahola, lo good home.

· Free Estimate
Rllidtnlill &amp;Commerdal

Gravel, Umastone,
Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.
L!!==~~~~~

Anttques. lurMure. glass, chtna,
coms, toys, tam ps, guns. tools,
estates . also appratsats. OsDy
Marttn, 614-992-7-441

112 black Border COllie, Smos,

We can wash anything

WILL BIUL •
1087 CALL.

'

McCoy's .CUriosity Shop.
221 Main St., Pt Pleasant.
n...u....
.
. ...,_,, 10 5
Tuotdoy 11wu Sauorday.

40

mildew • Restore the clean
natural look

JC
CONSTRUCTION

"FACTORY
DIBECT
PRICES"
Quality Window ~ystt~mts·

1722.1 A.M. •7 PM.

SOFT CON\I.EASATIONI Beaull· ver And ·Gold Coti'IS, PrOo!sefs,
ful Women! 1•800 _25S. 0700 EJ:t. O!amonds, Anlt(lue Jewelry, Gqld
Rtngs, Pre- 1930 US. Currenc~.
•021, $3.99 !Min. 18 • ServU Slerhng, Etc. Acqutstttons Jewelry
819-8-45-4434.
• M T S. Cotn Shop, 151 Second
Aven ue. Gal11pohs. 614·446·2642.
30 Announcements

Decks, Driveways • Farm &amp;
Heavy Equipment • Remove
unwanted dirt, mold and

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS ·

Crawford's Flea Uarket, Hend~tr ·
aon . WV. Everyday 9·6 . Crafta.
an11ques, trad1ng cards, lurnuure,
toys, var1e1y. 304-675-S404 _ •

=~~----- 90 Wanted to Buy
005 · Personals
Absolute Too Dollar : All u.s. g,j. ·

1

1Ol25l96l1tn

Limit 12
Add. Purch 39¢
14.25-15.25 oz. .

Auction
and Flea Market

80

Frt, 8112th, SR. 7, 216, Somelhlf'IO
For E¥aryonel VendoiS, 614 ·256-

House • Mobile Homes •
Privacy Fences • Patio

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS.

Two fami ly yard sale· Wednes day, Thursday. Fnday. 8:00· 1
Corner ot Forest Run "nd l.ltners·
,Ytlle Rd. '

R1verstde flea Market OpeniOo

OHIOVAWY
HOI PRESSURE CWIIING

R. L. HOllO
TRUCKING

Po m t Plec:sunt

Carpon sale- August 7-8 , fuJ[
mobtle home b•hind Metgs fairground s. King lire wattrbed .
double WindOw, manv more tJems.

R1ck Peerson Aucuon Company.
lull 11me auctioneer, complele
auct1on
serv1ce.
l 1censed
Jr66,0h10 &amp; West Virg1ma, 304 773-?785 Or 304·7.73-S.47 .

7/22/ttn

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF SIRLOIN

'

ROBERT BISSEll
CO .. STRUCTION

614-992-3120

• State Route 338 • At VIne. • Racine, Ohio
949-2804

1998 Martin StrHt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

SMITHFIELD SMOKED (Whole)
'

21

•New Homes
•Garages
Quality Work at
•Complete
a Fair Price!
'"Remodeling .
550 Pasie St.
Mlddlepon, Oh, 45760 ' Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
Home.Ph.
ESTIMATEES
' 985-4473
Don Geery, Owner

...... '511'111..: ..... Sorvb "' ......
Cllt4oll' Poww Eq - 1 til Assoclatiol: c.rtiiiH 2(yell

Stokely's
Vegetables

1/4 PORK LOIN

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck
Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanks Installed
New Aerlator Timers &amp; Motors
.

D. Gca17'•
Bod, Shop

. . PORK CUBED

1

Guttera
· Downapouts
Gutter Clitaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

FREE EmMATES

$ 99

·

Augull &amp;·8, 112 m1le put Wha ·
le(&amp;Grocory on 681 , hfn.Som

TRI-COUNTY SANITATION

4/4/ltn

"BuiY Your Dnam"

oz.·

14.5-16

HOWARD'S

NEW-REPAIR

9

(814

.''

- -

I -Flldoy, .

111

~==~·~·F=~~~~~~~~moo~~~';·~~~,~~14=~4=4=1-=1~os;o=:1:~:a~a;44=1=·1:o:so~ ·~~~~~_~-"~~-~.·~----6-1_4_·7_4_2_·_2S_6_6____~

O'Sage
Raggedy Ripe
Peaches ·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

'

•We Recharge Laaer Cartridge•
•We Refill Ink Jet Cartridge•
•We Re·lnk Dot Matrix

•Free 5 Year Parts Waminly

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY- SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

~~F7~:

401 SECOID AYE.
IAWPOLIS, OliO
:~:are
:~;!~ersystems
~:: Orders
:~=S':~e As Cash

r-.. 8aAk flaaridp..

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT.QUANTITIES
_ PRICES GOOD THRU.AUGUST 9, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Sund1y &amp; Mondey ediliol·

kep t secret 1n Amen ca . High.
commissions. bonuses. ben@!it'sr
leads. health plus 401K. SSOO lalt
start tratn1ng bonus, call 614·992=~:
7440
CNA posttions available, p8rt tim;
and full t1me, sa lary $6 .09 per
hour. 614·992-7900 .
Computer Users Needed. Wor.t(
own hours. $20k to $50klyr 1..
800-348· 7186 x1508.
•.

c'ellnr~ Drlwers lillie Caesars
Now Htring Hourly Wage Of SS.25
IHr. Alief 30 Days, Casn Comtn~s-:
s1ons Paud Datly. +•lips! Fleribf•
ScMCiules. Bonus Plan. Apply Ar
Galhpolts Store.
~·
Oommo's P t z~a Now Accepting,
AppliC&amp;llons At : Galltpolis &amp; Pomeroy, Apply In Person.
Earn extra monet wilhout le;;~ving
home. lnvtte your lrtends for •
professtonaf Glamour Portratl
panw. Smtsfactmn guaratHeed .
For tnlounatton call 1·800 -487 5787or 1·000·•126·8363
E•pen enced

Mech;;~ntc

Wtth' Mo.:

lorcycle ATV and PWC Year•
Rouncl Work Send Resume : CLA·
419, C!O 'Gallipolis Oatly Trtbune·
825 thi rd Ave., Galhpol is, Ohio:
4563t
•
FIa toed Step Deck OTR DriversNeeded, COL ltcensed RcQutrCd ~
Caii1 -B00-4fl2-5236
:
Home Rus1noss S.A.S.E. $1 .00 •
M.O. Only, S.P.F. lnf. P.O. Box·
34 735 8. San Francisco. CA:
94t34

For tam11y garage sale · lOIS of
mce clothing, 'houSehold ttems,
weight bencr"l 8. wetghts , house
shuners, and many rruscellane ous item s, l tll tan WeeSe restdance. Oak Grove Rd ., Rac tne.
Friday, August 8th, Saturday Au ·
gust 9fh, from 9-5.

- - - - -·
Local Bu smess Seektng Worker·

Four fam11~ yard sale- Sam·Spm .
August 8-9 in Baum Addtlton be·
hind Rt. 7 ska!lng rmk south or
Chesler. Ohto Tools, lamps, ker ·
osene heaters. cann1ng tars.
camptng equtpinent, crossbow.
weedeater, clothmg, books. bacy·
c!es. CD'S, lumber, 1990 Mllsu ·
bishi, '87 Ford Tempo and mucn
more. Also over 200 mums tn 6
colors.

Loc-.1 ~ og Yard seektng genera(
laborer loader exoer1ence would ..
be helpful but no1 necegsary' ...
Wages bo~ed on erpenence .. •
Contact Dan !or appotnfment a(

Giant yard sale, August 8-1 0,
681 between Oarw1n and Snow •
ville at Hog Hollow.

For Carpet' Cl eanmg And Otller·
Rel ated Servtces. Must Have:
Good Ortvtng Reco rd, Send Re -sume To · ETC P:O Bm:. 541 , Kerr, ·
Ohto 45643.
•

JO•.e75·5159,
:-;----;--~:----·

Mature dependable baby sine,·
needed to provide care in ouf
home. tor 7 &amp; 3 years' old no:
eventngs or "Weekends, relerenc· ·
es requtred call 614 -992-7582 af.·
lf!l'

.11 '30

•

�VVedneedly,Auguat8,1997

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

A,LLEYOOP
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

41 Zolahtrolne
42 And othtra
(2 wcla.)
43 Grrtei rldgt

1 Hnallan
timber tree

4 G_,.

420
Offic. Dunes In Hea!lh Care Erwt
ronmenr Srarflng Data August

25, tGG7 Please Send Resume
111d Prev•ous Sa!art H111roy to
CLA PO Bo• ~18 CIO Galhpolrs

Oatly Tubune. 825 Thtrd Ave,
Gallipotta, Ohio 45631 Subm•t A&amp;.

kilN By August 15 1997

OPPOII'IUNI1Y
KNOCKIII

Now 11 1h1 Time To Exchange
Vour Hum-Drum CarMf' For The
EUI!Ing One 01 An OTR 0ttoo&lt;
VICTORY EXPRESS tiC.
Namod Among TOP PAY PACK·
AGES Narl Tru&lt;kload Carrt1r1 In

A Survey Of Driver WIQII By
Sigr'l'oll Inc. •
UMITEQ nilE OFFER

lnexpanenced Dn~~t~ers Earn Up
To IH.SO Per Qay Whlla Troln·

lng Stan CIIINI Bltare 812&amp;187
And Earn Top Wagoa Clan Siz.
t1 Ara Limlled SQ QON'T QE.
LAVI

Mobile Homes

OHIO

INOfiC£1
VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

recommends that you do bual·
nen wlrh people you know, and
NOT to send money lhrough the
mall until you ,have ~nvealtgated
lhe olforing

230

Professional

services

HARTS IIASONARY • Block,
btlc:k &amp; atone work, 30 yNrt ex-

penance, reasonable ratea 30-4

89S-3591 ah« 8:00pm, no JOb 10
amall or 1D BIG W'l-02120e
liVJngaton'a buement water·
proohng, au basement repatra
done, free esUmaUtl, l1f1t1me
guarantee tOyra on JOb ekpert·
~· :'IM-875-2145.

Hl79 1•b70 Schutt W11h E11pardo 2 Bedroom t.loblle Home. All
LN1ng Room And A 1986 12142 ElectriC 1250/llo, 1250 Oopoolt,
Add A-Room Four Bedrooms 1 :,B1~4~311:::.7-.;1BII.::;2.~-----112 Baths Family Room New Fur 2 Badroom Trailer For Rtnt tn
nac&amp;, Heat Pumo And Carpebng Chshire,l!l,•-387-75e0
814-2-45 5565

I

1986 Oakwood 14xM 2 bedroom
SB 500 304

2 bath, cenlral u
576-41105

1987 14x70 Prest•ge 3 be&lt;iroom,
2 bath, good condiuon $10,000,
61 4-98S-3901 or leave message
1989 Prasuge 216 waits, I'M&gt; bodroom twO bath launch·~ room a1r
COndlbonmg $16 000 or best off
er. 614-698-3803

1997 1o4x70 2 ar 3 Bedroom,
$995 down lt951mo Only at

1ntenor

Nnro WV 304-

ndon,

~~=: Homes

5885

1-IM3-5033
8 A.ll • 8 Pll ESHH

'Sigr'l'olt Inc
Fal, 111881uua
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
S•Ht Middleport Ohio has ....
tlmt STNA postliOnl avatlabfe tDr
all shifts Please stop •n and fill
o'Ut an application, you may be
elll•ble tor a stgn on bOnus of up

&lt;0500

Part Ttme Help Early Morning
Hours, Food PreparatiOn Expert.
ence ).~ply At The Ctty Perk • .a2
COurt St'"L Gaii&gt;CJjl&amp;
Pollal Jobs 3 Pos111ons Avatl
able, No Eapenence Neceseary
For Information Call 800 509·
0988 Ewt 6016

I,

I

I

All real estate advertising In
lhOs .-paper Is sOOjed IO
lhe F-.J Falr Housing lol:l
ot 1968 whlch mal&lt;ee l Illegal
to advertise •any p af&amp;i ance
limitation or dlscrmlnatiOr'l
based on race cob, religion,
sex tamllal status or national
origin, ex any Intention 10
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination •

PART-nME
Neod Employee Wuh SWiiChboard
Eapenance In Galltpohs Area,
Must Be Flextble &amp; Available For
All Sh1h1 Must Be W1lhng To
Ortve To Hunnngton For Appoint
ment Call Today, 814-448-•511,
Kol~ Tompo&lt;ary SeMce&amp;

• 8
•

.

"

Thls newspaper will not
knowingly accepl
advertisements for real estate
which Is In violation or 111e
law Our_,. are hefebJ
lnformedlhalal-ngs
ad\lerttsed in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baSis

REAL ESTATE

3Hl

Homes ·for

Sale

East

SAVESSIS
Oakwood Homes 11 the only
dealer m the tn state area that
bu1lds and sells then own
homes For factory d~rect prtces.
shop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
TRO ViV 3114 755-588S

.JOO NAlO

ITS BIG 1997 4BR. 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE $1 949 DOWN,
$3191!10 FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV 304 755
5885 Urntod Oflor

a

large selection of used home 2
or 3 bedi'OOms SlartN"'g at $3495.
Ou1ck delivery Call 1 800 837
3238
L1mtted Offerl 1997 doublew1cte,
3br 2bath, $1799 down, $2791
month Free deh\lery &amp; setLJp
Only at Oakwood Homes, Ni tro

wv 304-755-588~

1991 Geo Tracker 4X4 96 500
m1lea 1400 614 7oi2 257-4 alter
5om

330

•20.

1---....,....,..,..;=---

rmn

for Rent

.•

.,

LOUD IS THIS
ALARM CLOCK,

I

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rtverlne Antiques.
1124 E Matn Street, on Rl 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W tO 00
a ITI to 11:00 p m. Sunday 1 00 to
e oo p m eu-9g2 2526, Russ

3 Room Furni shed Apartment

540

Ft.~rn 1 shed t!.panment One Bed·
room. Upstairs All Uullttes Paid
No Pets, 854 Second Ave' Galii-

1:pol=':..8:.'~4:....~48=9523
::::::...__ _ __

Furn 1shed EU 1c1ency All Utilities
Paid Share Bath $110 Month 919
Second Ave (814)446-3945
Furnished Efhctency All Ut1httea
Pa 1d, Downll&amp;ltl, $200 t.tontn
919 Second Ave (814}448-3945
Grac1cus hvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llage Manot and
R•vertilde Apanments 1n Uiddfepon From S136 $304 Call 814·
992 506• Equal Hous1ng Opporturllnes
Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,
614-446 0390
Nawlr Ramodalod Duple• Apartment For Rent 2 Bedroom&amp;,
Large Bathroom And Badlyard,
Carport State Route 160, In Vin
..,_ Cai814~8HI•

OLD ASH VlLAGE
FORMERLY LAURELAND APTS
Newly renovated, 2br, central
heal/air, laundromat on s1te
close to achOof &amp; slores Call
30-t.882·3718 Mon-Fr1 10-2 or by
appc)lntment Equal Hous1ng Op-

poriUnltf
One bedroom apartment tn Pt
Pleasant Furntshed Very clean
&amp; ""' No.-~&lt; 30&gt;4-875-1386
Small one Bedroom 1n Outt set
tmg Washer/Dryer, Stove, Rhg
Included 1350 00 month 1300
Deposit No Smo«ers, No Pets 1n
illde (814)·446·9585 or(614)·

408-2205
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spac•ous, 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors, CA 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeltd Adult Paol &amp; Baby Pool,
Pat10. Start $350/Mo No Pets
LHH Ptus Secumy Oeposn Re
qUired 614 446-3481, 614 446 0101
T!1ree bedroom mobtle home lor
rant, no pew, 1814 992 5858

Moore owner

AKC Regtsttred Oafmatlon Pup
pies 6 Females 4 Males Vet
Checked Wormed 11 1st Shols
Stud S~rvtce For An AKC Male
Oalmatron Well Bu111 Gooa Na
lured S1res large Litters, 614·
256 1961

Anlique Oak Flatwall Cupboard
Maple Table CNurs, Corner Cupboard Hutch Call 6141 367 7209,
Leave Message
Are you buymg new lurnnure?
5&amp;11 your used lurnuvre to the Po
meroy Thr~h Shop There rs a real
need for couches breakfast and
d1mng room sets We atso buv
baby beds strollers play pens
toddler car seats and walkers
Ca-ll 614 992 3725 Tuesday thru
Saturday 10am 4pm at 220 East
Ma1n Street Pomeroy

Boots By Fledwmg C h1ppewa
Rocky Tony lama Guarameed
Lowest Pr1ces At Shoe Cafe Gal
hpohs
Buying apons cards•
I w1ll buy any Eh1es or new 01a
mond K1ngs U you t\8'/e cards to
sell let me know Call 614 949

Instruments
Fo1 sate console IJHino respon
s1bte party wamed to m&lt;Jke tow
n1onthty paymen ls on piano see
locally t.:.til 1 600 268 b?16

580

Complete Kmg S1ze Waterbed
614 379 2720 AFTER 6 PM
Concrete &amp; Plasttc Sep11c Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses. Jackson, OH
1·800·537-11528
FlEA CIRCUS'
ENFORCER8 Flea Products
Protect Your Pet Home And Yard
From Fie lnfesta110n WhJ ie They
K111 Freas &amp; Treks NOW• Gua•
anteed Ellect•ve Ava11at:lle At
These PanrC!pCIUng Stores
ODELl'S TRUE VAlUE
R&amp;G FEED
CENTRAl SUPPLY
VALLEY SUPPLY
BRQWNSTRUSTWORTHY
Grubb 1 P1ano tumng &amp; repa1rs
Problems? Need lunod? Call the
p11no Dr 614·4.116 4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1r&amp;d New A Retl.ult In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9526
longaberger Baskets 1995 Fam1
ly Tradttions wlpro tector 8. OfiQi
nal bor $175 1996 Mothe• s Oay
Wlprot&amp;CtOr lrner &amp; hang tag
$100 1994 Bread Basket witmer,
protector &amp; d v1defs S30 304
675 5776
Many Open Top 55 Galton Bar
rels $2 Each 6141 245 558B Alter
6PM
Fu.ll SIZe truck topper $45 new
portable phone Will setl ar 112
priCe S25 614 949 2045

FruHs

Vegetables
CANNINQ TOMATOES
S3 Per Bushel Pick Your Own,
Bnng Conta1ners Don R Htll le
1ar1 Falls, OH 614 247 2532
Canmng 1omatoes $4 per bushel
u pick b~~ng your own con1arners
Ei14 247 2142

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

860 New Holland Silage C...._,
121 Badger (3) Beater Stlage
Wagon W1th Roof, (1) Badger Silage Blower, (1] H &amp; S 3 Beater
Tandem Silage Wagon like New,
614 2-iS-9557
Allis Chalmers tractor, B model,
new front tires runs exc:tllen1,
6141·985-3626
Husq~arna &amp; Green Machtne
trimmers &amp; brush cutters on aale
now Sider's Equlpmenl 304-875·

7421
JD 17X7 Double D1sk Grain Drill,
1H 620 Gra1n Ortl!, NH 256 Rake
JD 12 D•sk Taylorway 18 Fold·
Up Otsk JO 1210 400 Bu Gra1n
Buggy (6t4)66~5101
Massey Ferguson 285 Dtesel Ell·
cellent
Cond•uon
$10 500
1614)446-2359
M1I!UbiSht 2050 o4 Cyhnder Ote
set Tractor, l11Ce New Condttlon,
Very low Hours $5,000, 15 Mmtues From Gallipolis 614 ·379·

2601
New Holland 782 Forage Har·
vester ElectriC Controls 2 Row
Var1able Wldll'l Corn Head, 2
Wmdrow Ptck Up, New Knives,
F1eid Ready 61.4 388 9875
Livestock
He1let~,

6 Monrh Alp1ne 81lly Goals With
Horns $50 Each, Brown Egg lay
mg Hens $2 SO Each 614-2586265 Evenrngs &amp; Weekends

E~erc r se Btke $25
Bar $1 000 Leer Ford
Cap $200 Ou~rt Can
$2 00 Dozen 614 41\6-

S!eepmg rooms w1th cookmg
Also trailer space on nver All
hook-ups Call aher 2 00 p m ,
31J4.773-5651,11asonWV

550

Mobile home slle available bet
ween Athens and Pomero~ call
814·3Bs-.31!7

36 sheeiS ol bOx r1b alum1num lor
rOOfing Or SICMg, 42"1120" $450
614 991·1560

Household

Goods
.Air Conditioners, Wmdow Type
8,11011 And 10,000 BTU $150
Etch, Furnace, Propane, 75 000
BTU, $125,814-441-11043

-I

Pally'o
Uaad Fumhuro
2101 Jeflor1on Ave
Opan930 5:00 ManSet
304-875-SOFA (7832)

Whole or 112 Sides beef lOt' sale
comact K1m 30-4 773-9585

640
Wood D•n'"g Table, &amp; 6 Cha1rs
AsktnQ$250, 614 245-9682

Hurricane, Mam St 1,000sq It
Ofhce Space a~a1lable for rent
$4751mo 304 582 5840

510

6 Year Old Mare Good Trail
Horse Very Gentle eu 2415·
5087

Building
Supplies

Block bnck sewer p1pes, wu"'dows lintels, etc Claude W1n1ers
R1o Grande OH Call 614-245

5121

Hay

&amp; Grain

Ear corn lor sale shghlly dam
aged prce negotiable, 614 985
3Jot 7
M1aed Hay $1 75 A Bale 614·
446 0941 After 6 PM

Autos tor Sale

88 Mome Carlo, 614 992-7184

89 Pro Am Fueb1rd, t-top, fully
560 Pets for Sale
loaded excellenl shape, low
IIIIIHIIIIIIII
m•res, collector a edition, call 81 ..
G1ve You, Dog A Break From 7•2 3144 after 5pm Serious •n·
Summer Heat Alk J D NORTH 1. ~q!::~::"e:::•:..:on:.::!IY:...__ _ _ _ __
PRODUCE -614·446·1933 About 1.
HAPPY
JACK
1g71 Chevelle 4dr, 2spd on col
umn,
6cyl,
250
engme,
SHAMPOO. Kills
53 OOOact m1 , or!Q1nal paint jOb,
ere shape runs great, $3,500
P1&gt;t bel~ 1"9 $75 ' 304 875-621!7

potatoes
39 Shirl pariO
45 Giraffallko
onl!llol
46 Genettc
materlal
47 Tropical nut
48 Freshwater
porpoise
49 Solemn
pledge
51 Tamansk saJt
lree
52 lllnt
53 Math aUbJecl
56 Against
57 Spasm
58 RoH-rosa

was uncovered

1990 Ford Tempo ,J.u1oma11c
AMtFM Cassene, Good Cond1
liOn 11000,614-388-8813
1990 red Foret Probe, automatiC
3 o L, V-8, N;, cru.se. amtfm cas
sette. eacellent cond1!I0'1 askmg

14500,814-6611 54Ba
~991 Ponaac Sunbird LE, $2.700.

reslcd

wrote and pubhshed "To B1d or

'I

NO!

lo Btd " 1n 1992 Thai book and tiS
sequel

, DON AJ..l:&gt;
nuMP'S

fAit&lt;Y
HO.' ,

Yahama V~tago 700 st1alt
8 000 m1les two helmels • 1
304 675 6282
' I

~11:&gt;

JVST

Barclay.

$8

95 postpatd

800-274-

2221)
exccllcnl prologue lo 1he leadmg
and your panner read 1h1s hook. diS·

614 446-3437

~I'JIE BORN LOSER~--.

1993 Pont1ec Bonnevtlle SE.
73 000 mtles, loaded, excel len!
condillon, 6141 247 4161

1992 Yamaha Banshee 350 lw1n
Cylinder Good CondtiiOn St' BOO
614 379 2933

l~mJM\\\1~

,.

PC:~ 1-lfi.I'..T IT~

f.f.T Cf;)t.C.T I ~T

..

., ,.

fi ::D ~ 5T~ Tll.YIN&amp; TO TN..K

mD [

J TO IT!

51-!D IT Wf&gt;-5 1\

Fat TI\E. c.oFFf£ I ~!:.... 1

lhe Jable, you wtll become much
Iaugher opponents

Tlll&lt;

deal exhtblts lhe Law tn

acuon You hold !he North hand Your
panncr opens one spade and Wesl
overcall&gt; two hcarls

I

stdc

vulnerable

Wtlh netllier

whal would

Only one htgh-card poml

How

A Need A Car? No Credit Bad
Credit, Bankruptcy? We Can Help
Re-Establish Cred1tl Must Make
S150 Week Take Home 15%
Down On Cash Or Trade To
Ot.~ahfy For This Bank Fmancmg
No Cred11 Turn Downs I Ei14 41oi1
0607
CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boats,
4 wheelers motor homes lurn1
wre electrontcs computers etc
by FBI IRS, OEA Available your
area now Call 1 800 513-4343
Ell 5-11368
1960 -1990 Cars For $100!11

S&lt;Mzod And Sold
Locally This Montn.
Trut:*s, 4xo4 s. Etc
1-600·522 2730, X 3QOI
1980 · 1990 Cars For $10011!
S&lt;Mzed And Sold
locally This Month
Trudls. oil4S Etc
1 600 522 2730 X390 I
SEIZED CARS From $175
Porsches Cad rllan Chevys,
BMWs Corvettes Also, Jeeps 4
WO s, Your Area Toll Free 1
800 218· 9000 Ext A-2614 For
Current l1stmgs
Uplon Used Cars Rt 62 3 Mtles
Sout.h of Leon WV Fmancmg
Available 304--458-1069

720

ll'ucks for Sale

1972 314 Ton Chevy Ptck Up
Camper Spec;tal Ongmal Eng1ne,
A1r Cab Automatic $650, 61 4
256-6654
1978 Chevrolet 112 Tpn 350 En
gme Automat•c Steel flatbed
$000 6143BHB79
, 983 ford Ranger Topper Bed
liner, New T1res, Eng1ne Rebut!!
1f97
Runs Great S1 700
(614)256- 1443
1984 Ford F 350, Crew Cab•
S2 700 1968 Dump Trud $600
6t4 379 2370
1985 Ford F 150 300 6 Cylinder
4 Speed, Short Step Bed, '1/ery
Good Cond1Mn, $2 850 614
3711-9247
198Q Ford E350 7 3 01esel, AC
Auto 12 Vnn Bodr S5 000 000
t991 Ford E350 58 Gas AC
Auto 12' Van Bodr SS SOO 000
1993 Dodge "350 Cumrns le
Package Club Cab Auto A tr
Reese Hitch Gooseneck Hnch
Immaculate Cond Mn 1990 ford
F250 7 3 Oresel Auto 51 000
Udes Work Truck No Atr or Ra
d10
E rcellent
Cond1110n
1614)669-5 101

The pnmary concluSion ol lhc

..

Law nssumtng you cannot mak:c

1983 Gata•y E•ecutrve 1811
165hp Mercru1ser w/Sk1s &amp; ac
cessones $3 000 614 446 4401
1988 Ranger 373V 18 12 24V
Tro lling Motor 150 XP Evimude
Outooard S8 ~ 614 992 2770

SHE'~

ONE
OF
TH05E.

BROWN
EYE~.
ANI&gt;

A&gt;ID

·,'
1

heart, two d1amonds and twn clubs
However, mmus

1980 InternatiOnal bu s

~ew

lac

$2,995 Call 304 675 4061 304
875 6574 evenmgs 304 615
3165 BW!nJngs.
1991 Jeep Wrangler 5spd -4Cyl,
soh top chrome wneels good
cond 304 862 2657

300

IS a bcncfictal

sacnlice agamsl a makmg hvc-hcarl

I II

1..=,·
.

.

.

ISN'T THERE

ELSE
'(OU COlJLD
BE DOIN6?

.

a

I

sure fire

I

.

.

.

Coonplere

r~e c~uc~le

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
---~---c~-----'

\&amp;u'H bt (looting on a dood with
rite buys you'll find uo rite

c/osslfieds

IWEDNESDAY

Smtch · Unwed· Exult· Tornd · WITHOUT US
Grandpa to mother of three "The rnost1mportant th1ng
we can teach our children IS how to get along WITH-

OUT US I"

AUGUST6l

"
•:
,
~

.
L.e (CC)

ASTRO·GRAPB

York. NY 10156
VIRGO (Aug

SERVICE~
Home
Improvements

hul conslructlve

your chosen

ftcld of

Res•denttal or commerc1al w1r1ng
now serviCe or repa rs Mast;r L•
electocran R1denour
Etec1ncal WV000306 30.41 675

you re emhrolicd man unportant bar

ll

LEO (July 23-Aug

22) Even

lhough you m1gh1 have your mmd set
on dotng somclhmg a spec1fic way.
don't discount bneht allema11ves
loday

Know

romance

where lo look for

and you'll

find 11

The

Aslro-Graph Malchmaker mslantly •
reveals wh1ch s1gns are romantically
perfect for you Ma1l $2 75 to Malch·

PISCES (Feb

20-March 20)

If

rcl·trHcnl o~ good thmgs
LIBRA (Sept 21-0cl 231 Soct.al

g'Jmmg sessiOn Joday. don ' l expose

mvolvcmcnts

your aces until you're ready

thai Lontatn

ckmcnts

could he a

t.:Oill(lCIJtmn

peak

(Ocl

all of your cards at once !'tang onlo
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) If
you have a problem resoh•mg an
1mponant deCISIOn 1oday, sound tt oul

24-Nov

221

Hunches you get 111day pcnaonmg 10
1hc oulcomc ol events should be

on a JrusJed ally whose suggesltons
were of enonnous help previOusly
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) Do

be

rmhcr accurate Operale where lhcse

n01

perceptions arc most prevalent

loday lo solve an anttqualed problem

SAGITIARIUS (Nov

lhal come 10 you fro;;, oul of the blue

Refrigeration

Thmk p(lsJUvc dnd ~c..: yoursdl as

SCORPIO

Thursday Aug 7. 1997

1hmgs 1ha1 challenge your tmagmallon

Your sktlls .trc .11 .1

changes m

l:lectrlcal and

22J You

plc,tsanl expcnencc for you loday

some unexpeclcd

6313

lahlc 11 you aren ' l mvolvcd wllh
21-Sepl

.uc ~ull tn .1 tavorahlc trend where
your mutcn;ll mtcrcsts .m: t.:om:cmcd

ot tncndly

In lhc year .thcad lhcrc could be

C&amp;C Gerwral / lome Man
tenence Pa ntmq v1n~t s1dmg
corpentry doors WindOWS oaths
mob le home repair and more For
lree est1mate call Chel 614 992

quoted

by I l!.ng '" tke m1»mg word1
you develop from step No J below

SOMETil1N6

&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
\,Jncond1ttonal hfellme giJarantce
Local re ferences lurn1shed Es labl shed 1975 Call
14) 446
Or
Rogers

to

I bought a - - - . . - • -

t

Campers

way

bnng our family closer together

I

1980 Fleetwmg 1 r Awnmg E~cal
lent Cond1!10n 1982 Coachman
15 Pop Up 1915 Mallard ~7,
Awnmg Pon1oon Boat 24 35 HP
Johnson tTra1 ler 1899 Mc:Cor
n11c~ Road Ei14 4&lt;t6 1511

1786

LICVI 6
1

MYCULS
1--.,;,,:.....;j,...::..j,.:.....:;.;larTI--1
0

Motor Homes

840

5

conlracl worth 450

duwns m•ght prOduce bencfils

tory 34S engtne wt35 OOOm1

IRF"RA

Probably EasJ w1ll double and

endeavor Each of these shtftlng con-

1978 Jeep CJ5 must see lo ap
prec1ate S3 800 304 576 41033
aher 5pm or leave message

0

Sourh Will go 1wo down losmg one

5677

1989 Ford XLT Automatic A1r
302 Eng1ne Run s Good, Looks
Good $3 500 Frrm 61.4 992
5135

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1411o4 by ClAY I. POLLAN

Rearrange IeHan of
four scrambled words
low to form four s1mple

I 0-irtck contracl

Oudgo t Pnce TransmiSSions _..:_
Starling at $99 00 and Up Used 1 R(tbullt AU Tyoas Over 10 000 ••
Transmtss1ons Access Transfer
Cases &amp; Rear Ends 614 245

Now gus wnks 1 ton 11uck
wheels 8. radtamrs D 8. n Au la
R play WV 304 372 3933 or 1
600 273-9319

WOlD
IAMI

Here parlncr has shown al lcasl

19!i6 Chevell Super Spon Haod
E~:ctJI Ien t Cond11ion 6 u 256 • •
1071
::

790

GYKLYI

T~~~:~' S©\\~lA-L£t-trs·

&amp;

7422"!92

SFJNHMH

•

ftve spades You have live spades lor

Accessories

G1o1

CNH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "He was a man's man. an ac1or's aclor, always tolally
real~- Johnny Whitaker, on TV senes 'uncle' Brtan Ke1th

a Jolal of 10 So, b1d four spades. lhc

T11 Haut Open Uow Motor Boat 15
Fee! 8S HotSe Power Mercury
Motor New Lower Un11 Gaur
anteed To St'pt 1998 614 446
0472

Full l•ne ol aula body panels
pamts omd suppt1es also gla ss
light rassembly o~ygen and ac&amp;
Iyter~ tAnks hlled Md exchangeo

L HS C HM

bmcd 1rump holdmg

I!&gt;

t&gt;OT

Frberglass Bass Boat Asuo ~;
Glass Tra1ler Flshftnder Acces
•
aortas, Need Sel ltmlecltately An - 1
yt1me S1,SOO 0 8 0 614 4o4t
141S

Auto Parts

CH

C N H

YS X

I
LRMLVTPHMHSLH
UIYRKH

R S R

should h1d lo lhe level ol your cnm-

WELL,

Bass Hunter oass bOat two pad
ded sw1~et seats Mmnkota troll
1ng motor Marme battery $350
614 992 7230

760

J N R L N

P

game on htgh -card power IS that you

BIG NATE

1962 Thunder era!\ 16ft wt1976
Johnson 70hp eng1ne good
shape $3,300 30-i 576 4033 at
ter 5pm or leave message

R S

HOHMDJNHMH

you

five card suppon lor parlncr s spade
sun The nght b1d IS lour sp,tdcs

85 Otds staliOnwagon one ownet'
75,000 m•l•s. clean, new ttres &amp;
bal10rJ. $1200,614 9921011

Fp

KGNHMH

R K

'y s

R K

'SYCVMH

bid'

can you poss1bly act' Yet you have

I Suol 1m~ 1hOh u ~h •
1
Wf lra,ll'f 7 I t !~ IO&amp;kets II
tklmpers $3 000 614 4.'16 3814

by Luis Campos
Cipher CI'J'Piograms are c1eated trom quolalKlfl15 by lan'IOI.IS people past and p1esent
Each leiter 1n 1he ciphe1 slar.ds lor another Today s clue 0 equals Y

ThiS 60-pagc book provtdcs an

cuss lis tmphcaiiOns , and apply tl at

Days 614 379
614 379 2943

C~nty

gutde for compeuuve btdd1ng If you

Matchtng Pull 8Gn1na frailer,
$14 500 014 ol46-654f!

4~4

CELEBRITY CIPHER

for I he res I ol us Cohen has now put
oul "Introduction lo the Law " (Baron

t..OST ~E~
FI,ST TOOT~!

.

'Foll ow mg 1he Law," arc

o\crktll for mos1 players However,

1==-===-::.:.:.....:::.::::::..._ •I
1990 Harley Ultra Clnss1c Wi!h

1995 Chrysler Cmus loaded,
26,000 mtles $12,000 or trade lor
truck ol equal value, 614 9492451

Bul tl

almos1 unknown until Larry Cohen

•

TRANSPORTATION

710

It

Jean Rene Vernes

&amp;

2yr otd horse co l t pari quarter
horse so11 color W/Whlt&amp; blaze
lace 304 675 4029

MERCHANDISE

the se columns

Kimball Spmdle P1ano w1Bench
very good cond1t1on New Gu1tar
Acoust1ca1 Ep•phany w1Ca se
(614)-441&amp;-8616

3098
Cannmg Tomatoes S41 Per Bushel
U Pldl., Bnng Own Contau"'&amp;r, 614
247 2142

Stage three: the
simple approach

som e 40 years ago by Frenchman

Musical

1 7 Head Bred Cows &amp;
$550 Each 614 256-6230

Space for Rent

LOWEEZY!!

from Mars, you wtll have heard of the

Motorcycles

570

East

TRY IT OUT,

\0017-f

Wall Hybt1ds Male Poodle, HuskIes Samoyeds Chows Alaskan
Malamules An Age s Puppy Pal
ace Kemels, 61 4 388-0.429

.,,

Law of Tmal Trtcks .. perhaps m

1985 Chevy pick up 1&lt;411 John
boat, ou1s1de co1111wood furnace,
40ft ••tension lailder 24M w.ndow fan, 15· black/while TV g1rls
clothes 5 6x 304-675 1780

Weima raner cnate 7 months
AKC champion btoodhne excel
lent d1spostt1on s1t~er gray S250
61-4 992 7201

North

2•

By Phillip Alder

Merchandise

We•ma1aner Pups AKC Shots &amp;
Wormed 614 992 6712 Aher
4 30 P.M

West

16

Unless you have JUSt nown In

Miscellaneous.

3 P1eca llvtng Room Su11e Name
Brand Barkley EJcetlent Cond1·
lion. Call Alter 2 30 P:M 614-4-466278

South

1888 Ford Escort Good Condr·
Uon, In &amp; Out Red 11,100 6t4
319-21145.

AKC Reg,1s1ered Ped•gree Ge(
man Ronwetler St1.1d Serv1ce
304 862 3556

630

460

TO

SILAS?

2bdrm apts. Jotal electnc, appliances rurmshed, laundry room
fac1llttes, dose to school tn town
Apphcat1ons available at VIllage
Green Apts 1419 or call 814 902~
3711 EOH

Furn1shed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath No
Pets, Reference And Oeposl! Re
qu•red, 614 "4416 1519

crescent
24 Type of alreet
(2 wda.)
25 Asian chtef
26 Hawkeye
Stale
27 Singer Mart1n
30 Car
31 Dec holiday
32 Emereld 37 Sweel

YO'RE WELCOME

HOW

'

1
MCurlty
requtred no pets 614-

Fo1 Rent One Bedroom Apart
ment, $360tMo All Ut 1ht1es In
eluded 614 446·2477

MlkhaJJ-

herorne
16 Show respect
20 Beliefs
22 Slacken
23 Shoped like a

9 Actress
Madeline 10 Author
"'

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer South

:~~~~f~or~R~e~n~t~~~

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Or1ve
from $260 to $334 Walk to shop
I mov1es Call 614·4•6-2568
Equal Housmg OpporiUntry
Convement 10 PVH, 2bedroom
k 11cher bath lR No pets S300J
mo SJOO dePoSit 304 675-5786

40 Chess master

K 7 5

t1 Hardy

oign

4 Lessening
5 Fuel
6 Table scrap

toofs

Dlnesen

7 Dokola Indian
8 Directional

arrow

38 Carpenters'

• J 6 3
t K4

Apartments

Apartments For Rent On Fnst
Avenue, 61-4-446-8221

~

aAQJa
)

aAK864

_ __

851 Second Avenue, Galllpolla
Next To BoiSard Library, $350!
Mo , Plus Depo11t Requtred No
Pets Allowed References Ae
quested Call Debbie Or Judy At
614 446-7323.

a Q1
• 87 5
• J 10 7

to 9 4

Soulb

1 bedroom turmahecl apartment In

FACTORY DIRECT
NO MDIJLE MAN

2

2

1~vrrmm

;,

61• 446-9522.
1:::::.:::::::::.::::::..
______

440

s3

14 clllracllr 59 tllumlnatwd
15 White gypaum 60 Model'o aoeal
17 Owna
61 Roman 52
18 TM roce-- 62 Joyful sound
to the awlft
63 South
19 Pig sounds
American
21 Weeping troea
Indiana
25 Baby -~
84 Pl. of ESL
28Partol_.,h
211 Type of aklrt
DOWN
33 Garden tool
1 Bridge on the
34 Auctioneer 's
Aiverword
2 Greases
35 Totals
3 Strolghl - ~
36 Abaenl

4 3 2

r\~ &amp;£"-l

2 Bedrooms, Green School Oil·
tr~t $250/l.to. Plus Oepolil, Rot
erences 814-387~

1997 doubtew1de $1441S down, lll=;jdl:::::"""':::.':..·6~1~4~-99.:.2:.·:.21~78-=---S229fmo Free dehvery &amp; setup 2 Bedroorrs, 74 Court Street, Gal1--800 691 6777
llpohl, CA. Stove &amp; Refrigerator
Included, 61-4 •48-2583

Secretary II, College Of SCiences, 4 Bedroom Split leve.l W1th 5400 New 1997 14x70 three bedroom
Provtdes General Seu-etanal, Sq Ft lncludtng Full Basement 1ncludes 6 months FREE tot rent
Clencal And Techmcal Aaats· With 2 Car Garage, Gas Heat 2 Only $181 66 per month With
tance Including Reqi atration Of M1l11 From Galbpohs On Bulavdle $1050 down Call 1 800 837
Students Ouahflcatlons Include P1ke, On 1 112 Acre Fla.! Lot, C1ty 3238
H1gh School D•~om&amp; Or Equtval
Schools, $129,000 Or Best Offer
New Bank Repo'al Only 3 left
ent Requ~rtd Two Vear Secretarl· 614-446..0380
owner ftnancmg available 3041-'
11 Sc•enc:e Or Vocahonal Tra1ning
In Secretanal Area Preferred
8 8 Acrea, 2 year old sectiOnal 755-7191
Mull Have At least Three Years 3br 2 baths, central atr, NICE! Palest•ne Ad Glenwood/AShton
Prev1ous E~:pertenca fn Olflce SomervHie Realty 304 675 3030
Rd 196a Beaut1lul 3bt 2 bath, 1
Setting Must Have Experience l=or~304::.:.-fl.:.:.:75-:.343:.::.:.1.:.Jaa=n~C:.:•.:.•to:::..__
acre c1ty water $33,000 Will
With Computtrs And Word~ Pra.
E
take land house 1J!Ob1le hOme
C8110fl Send leuer 01 Interest
llHENS MORTGAG
COIII'IlNY
as down payment Owner f1nanc
And Resume lncludmo Names
Whenlhebaf'M says no, let
JnQ. 304-562 5840
And Addresses Ot Three Refer
Ai"«&lt;l Uort- say yea!! let
encn To Phyllis Mason PHR, Di-.Palestine Ad/Ashton Rd 2br,
rector Ol Human Resourcet Un•
our stan hliP )'OU getlhe toan yo..
1989 beautiful cny water 3/4
need
verstty Of A1o Grande, Campus
W.epM:Lalizt in
acre wtll 1ake land elc as down
Post Ofhca Boa F27, R1o Granda,
d
payment Owner l1nanc1ng 304
OH 45674 Before The Deadline
Financing for houiH an mo562 5840
bllahomeo
01 August 11 11197 EEOIM EmSaiHonployad· rwfinanclng·
Farms lor Sale
ployef
HorMimprovemint• BIM Con·
aolldAtioft..lnvel1rnent Prop.,.
275 ACJe Farm, Parttally Wooded,
Seelemg Regtstered long term
care Nutllng Asslslants for Inter·
ty· CMh out tor IRV nMd.
No Pest 1Hero1cal Used Borders
medtate Cate Fac:thty Rolallng
No apptlcarlon lee- AI kw&amp;ls of
On A Stream 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath
sl'!lfts. pan ume West Vlrvtma
cfad11 welcome to apply
House Free Gas 614 367 0638
cartlhcat1on requ1red J•ll BumC8ll today lor a free analySis I
gardner, RN OON, P1unt Pleas800-129·1- 814-592-«106
340 BusineSS and
ani Nura•ng and Rehab•llta!lon 1-..;;;;;;..;;;.;..;..;.:.;;..;.;.;..;.;.:....;.;__ 1
Buildings
Center, State Aoule 82, Route 1 Country home 20 m1nutes from
Box 328, Pomt Pleasant, WV PI Pleasant off Rt2 18/acres Small thnvmg busm&amp;ss Baby &amp;
25550 (A Glenmark-Multtcare lanced 1n, garden spot, pond, ga
chlldrvn 1 nems $17,000+ mvenfadtry) EOE
rage barn 3br hvmg room, lory sa 000 Sertous lnqutues
kttchen bath pantry 3 !.Bason only :JJ4 675 4571 alter Spm
Shephard loggtng Anyone Ex- porch, sptral tlaHcase, front &amp;
penance Wtth Chatn Saw, Also back porch, walk 1n closet &amp; 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Skidder Opennor, 614-882-8402.
small study 97% complete
Apple Grove Scen•c Valley
Help Wanted l•mber Culler $10 165000 Xl 4 5 76- 3156
Beauufut 2acre 1011, publrc wa1er
Per Hour Loader Openuor, Skid
FOR SALE BY OWNER.
C Bowen Jr 304-5 7B 2336 or
der, E 11penencad Only Need To 111 Vm1on Courl, In Galhpol•s. 1 Wedge Really 304 675 2722
Apply, Cal 814·682 7455.
Floor Plan 3 Bedrooms 1 Car
Garage. Lot 60IC90 Can 61-4 379 Pnme house sue, Appi&amp;Ofove
WANTED RNa klr 136 bed Inter· 2720 For Appolnlm~nt Only Af· area on At 2, county water
med•ate care fac1hty EJCtentive tlf&amp;PM
S1c ooa Call weekends or aher
benaht. package Salary com
6pm Mon Fn 304 576 2894
mensura1e wnh expenence Con· GOV T FORECLOSED Homes
tact Sandra Reitmire, RN, DON, From Penn1es On $1 Delinquent
Several 5 acre parcels
lakin Hospital Laktn WV 30-4
Ta 1 , Rvpo's, REO's Vour Area
$7,500 each
Toll Free 01 800 216 9000 Eat
675 0860 Ell 12-4 Mon Frr
remore, beauttful land Me1gs
8 OOam 4 OOpm Oeadlrne lor ap H 2814 For Cunentl1Stlng5
County Sc•p•o Townshtp SR 692
ply1ng 11 August 6 1997 Lakin
hust on SA 143) Owner financ•ng
11 an EEO Emptoyer
House For Sate 3 Bedrooms, 2 Call tor good mfp 1 6U S93
Bathl, 2 Car Garagtt, Graham 8545
Would Vou Be Interested In Schoo1Road,614441 1196
Learn1ng The Floor Cover~ng 1~:.:.:.:...:.:.:.:.::..:.-----:-­
RENTALS
Trade? There Is A B•o Demand Newl~ remodeled three bedroom
For Ouahl•ed Installers. H~gh Ear· one ancl 1!2 bath home m ~.Met~
mg Potential 11 Interested In Tak· pdtt, 6 I4 992 3465 aher 5pm
410 Houses tor Rent
lng Schooling To Become A Cer·
k h
Ulltd Installer Please Send lnqul· Sectional 3br 2bath 1g IIC en
1 Bedroom House In Galhpol•s,
"'s To ClA
clo Gallipolis heat pump, on -4acres m Flatrock
Ocpos•t 8 References ReqUired
304-675-5690.
Oa1ly Tubune. 825 Third Avenue,
No Pets SJOO!Mo " Ulllt!I&amp;S
Three oedroom br1ck ranch style 614.1141 1308
Gan•poltl. OH 45631
home. lR OR l1rep1ace, two
batns, garage, on one acrv on 3 Bedroom House For Rent, In
110 wanted To Do
Frank Rd calle14·992 7184
Country N1ce Yard No Pets, No
24 Hour Care, For Eklerlf' Or
Drugs Alcohol Or Smok•"11 $3501
Handicapped Person In My Use That Morlgage Payment for Uo Plus Deposit 614 245-:--SOS4
Something Bener Than lntereSII
- 8 1 4.... HIOOO
'Pay your mongage oil 5 15 3 Bedroom House 2 Batns, t st
ANY ODD JOBS E11tenor pamt .,.eats sooner!
Avenue References &amp; Depos11
lng, ahrubs &amp; weeds !rimmed "Saw $25,000 S75 000 or more•
Aequtred $385/Mo 614 446
landacaplng, sidewalks edged
'Uake sure 'fOUr lender 1sn 1 &lt;993
11Wn Cllt, eiC. Call Bill 3114 675 m1scalcula11ng your mortgage
• Or 5 Bedroom House Oepostt &amp;
7112.
an&lt;l cost•no you thOusands•
'Prog1am works on rnob1le home References Aequned Pho~ 814
Cltlldalre In llr Horne A"'f Sh1h, loans too•
446 1104
8 l)aJo A Week, L1m1lod Space,
HOW?
A Good 2 Bedroom House In PoSWdng Auo. 25th, Coli Now To
Tho Mortgage Savings
meroy New V1nyf Wmdows To Qe
Rllttvl Spot, S14·446·03e5.
Program'
Installed By August 1St For Rent
E..-n .....,.,.., Gallipoli&amp;
Call for Fr" lnlormahon
With Option To Buy With Good
ToUFrte
Relerences No lnsrde Pets De
Eaperiot- carponlry and ramo·
1·8a8·343-4736 EXT 19
deling. lnalde and ou111da,
pOSit Requ1red S3501Mo _B 14·
69S.7244
declca, vinyl sldmg, add on adch~ 320 M bile Homes
tlons. &lt;Obinat refacrng or newly
0
Beavulul large 2 s1ory corner lot
rabullt. References Free Eatl·
for S~le
816 Ma1n St Pt Pleasam, Wv 3
-JimShul304-ll75-1272
1 TIME ONLY I
Bedrooms L1vrng Om1ng Room 2
Gtoron Ponable SawmUI, dan't
B-l-0 WO U Tl
Full Baths S450 Month $400
hlul yow ~~ 10 lhe
JUII call
$499 Down on select S1ngle sec
Oepos•t No Pers 1ns1de (61 4}
304-87~1857.
ttan $999 Down on select mut11
-446 958S or (614) 446 2205
secuons 2-3 or • BedtOom mod
LPN lnd rnochtr Witt I:Mibysl1 lf1 my
els ava~able Oakwood Homes
Fraz1er 1 BononvM1I1on area 3
home, M-F, CPA and first 11d carNitro wv 304 755 5885
bedroom house, patnled, new
dllc:alion. 3 ,_,, • day. refafenc
carpet, free wallfiHWIIge 1451
eaMiabfe, 814-8922129
t971 two bedroom 12x60 m
mo 304 582·58-411
eludes concrete steps underpin
Pf'otltlionll Tree Service, Srump .n1ng, slove, refrigerator. new car' House tn Pomeroy for tale or
Aemcwal, free Eadmaleal In· pet m hallway and mu1er bed
rent. st•-992-3090
tut'lnct, Bidwell, OhfO 614 388
room $2900 call 61-i ega 6031
SMMI, 814-387 7010.
and teave message
Houae In Waterloo, 1300/Mo,
Oepostl &amp; References, 814-843SIIm11rlll 25yra e.11panence
1972 R1chard1 trarler wtth • 10 23:10,1!11~2911!1
All eUeratlona welcome Senior acres more or tess. three bed
cldzons dlscounl Call Teresa rooms, central heat and ""· lhroo 420 Mobile Homes
304-875-1721
porcha11, two outbulldmgs, stove
WHkll Houaeci{Jamng, Refer· and relrlgerator washer and dry I~.,....,~~-.-::---::~~::::-~~
er concrete wal~. shrubbery, Hx70 Suirable for 1 ci'Mid, no Inera~ Needed, 81~ 11 37
"'':up-rs Pla1ns water mna miles
'' ,.atde peta, Applegrove, WV 30•·
Wilt Blbtlalt My Hame 24 Houra from Ravenswood WV, n1c1 57'8·28QO
A Illy, 1 081'1 A Week, Corufiad place wei kept up 614 643-5122,
Oernre ProYidet, Call Anyume, leave message tl no anMtl
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mablle hom••
11...-1111111
llaiiJr!O II $280 S300, - · . .
19g7 Fleetwood t4X52 2 BR
tor and trash mcludad, 814-8112·
Will Do Babyolni"1Jin llr Home, LUNew i6!4J 9Q2 5426
2187

... 1111 9522.

A Groom Shop P•t Groommg
Featuung Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Cretk Ret
614 446-0231

I:.::..:::::.:.:.:..:.._ _:._:._:.___
~~.:,.:.:::;.:.._....:c_:.:,:.:c.:....

s~

J 9

• 2

AKC Borer pupp1es 3 males 2
f•malea, wormed, dew c1aw1 re
moved, tails docked 304· 895·
3117

2 Bedroom Trailers In Smlll Trail
er Park, Oepoalt &amp; Rer.rence1
Reqund, e 14-44&amp;-1104

sklrhng, I dehvery Only 'II Oak
wood Homes N1tro,WV 304 755

VICTORY EXPRESS INC.
WF

Bronze &amp; White, et•·2o4S..8758

187-4 MGB, runs good,
some body work $2,500
875-11397

·-·lllillli••••lilii;l,gg7
14x80 3 or 4 Bedroom, 11 and 2
$1,359 down S229tmo Free
mshed and

Application Call Your Future Em·
ploror-Tocjoyll

EOE

2 Small lop Eared Rabits, S10
Each 1 Grty &amp; White &amp; One

2 Bedrooms, No Pets S2251Uo
$135 Oepostt,614_.....3S17
New 1997 14 Wtde t bath, $6991 1:;:::..=:::::.:.:.::..:::::~~-­
down, St391mo with app1oved 3 Bedroom Uobite Home In Ce,._
credit CaN 1·800-691-e777
tenary S2751Uo S200 Deposit,

Tim a Custom CaJpantry, no Job
to small, wtll don all grva h1m 1
call 304·882 3921 Frea tst1

~:!io~rear references

No&lt; leo
Apphancet Sev•ral Recond1
tiDned W.lhera, Dryers, 90 Oa,
Guarantee I French City Maytag
1704 Eastern Ave (814)·&lt;146
7195

2 Badroom
erences 1
8la

11r

For More lntormatlctn And An

47 - 8 -,....,...._
lnd
50
Legllllla
c-It
54 --Claar Dey
12 Noo1h of Jlt.
55 One who IIIII
13 More axpoud
lhlnga gofng

tor Rent

Fun Tune Off~te Personnel Need·
ld Wilt'! Emphallt on Collecbonl.

44Wtllthy

211

23-Dec.

If your thoughts lend to focus on

a specific fnend, loday. u could be

afraid of lrymg new me1h0ds

It can be resolved 1f you are resource·
ful and mnovatlve
GEMINI

(May

21-June

20)

because you're on h1s or her mmd as

Somethmg you've learned recently

well Check 11 oul for yourself

can be used lo your benefitloday to

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) A
cond!llon thai

could benef11 you

euher ftnancially

or career-w1se

m1gh1 have an excellenl chance of
(Jan

answer
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
m1gh1 have some unexpected mler-

mamfesung Itself loday
AQUARIUS

1mprove an alhanee I hat has been faltenng. Search your memory for the

20-Fcb

19)

rupuons m your rouunes tOday, bul

maker, c/o 1h1s newspaper. P.O . Box

Seek creatove outlets tOday. because

you won'l dtshke lhem. In facl , lhey

1758, Murray

you're hkely to be reckless and tm·

may 1um oul Jo

Htll S!allon, New

be

fun

�Ohio Lottery
San Diego
hands Reds
6-3 defeat

Super Lotto:

4-11-18-21-23~0

Kicker:
7-9-9-1·1·1

Pick 3:
6-1-8
Pick 4:

Sports on Page 4

Cl .. r tonight, lows In
tha 50s. Friday, mostly
aunny. lijghs In the mid
80s .

3-0-1..()

•

entine
Vol. 48, NO. 80
C1tt7, Ohio Valley Publishing Compony

3 Sections, 52 Pages, 35 cints
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 7, 1997

Strike s.e nds irked UPS customers elsewhere
ATI.ANTA (AP)- Paralyzed by the United Parcel Service strike, some
businesses were considerin'g reducing !heir reliance on the delivery giant, even
as the company prepared to resum~ talks with the Teamsters union .
Both sides agreed to a request by Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service Director John Calhoun Wells to mee1 today for the first time since the
costly suike began four days ago.
But regardless of whe~ the strike ends, some said they'll never be so dependeni on one shipping company again ,
Ross Rosenquist, parts manager at Bi-State Machinery Co, in Greeley,
Colo., said company officials were angry and looking' for another carrier to
'use in place of UPS "from here on out."
"It's a wakeup call for the entire industry," said Peter Howard, a vice president of Ross-Simon, a jewelry catalog company in Cranston, R.I. "It's going

'

to be hard to replace the quality of UPS service so I can't say I'm going to
walk away from them, but we will certainly look to have backup plans and
look to diversify more."
.
Some of UPS ', biggest customers, such as J.C. Penney and Lands' End,
said Wednesday, it's premature to discuss whether the strike will affect their
future with the company,
UPS, which normally delivers 12 million parcels and documents a day
around the country. has lost 90 percent of its business since the strike began
at midnight Sunday. Some I85,000 Teamster employees in the company's
U$. workforce of 302,000 walked out
. "We,have seen no sign that the company has changed its attitude, so we
arc not particularly optimistic about these new talks," Teamsters president
Ron Carey said, "But we'll be there, trying to reach a reasonable agreement

that provides good jobs for American workers,"
,
11lc company repeated that it doesn't plan any major revisions to the offer
made before the strike. The key issues arc the company 's heavy usc of parttime workers and its pension proposals,
" We're going into talks. but we still have a fi'nal oflcr on the table that
we want taken to our people." UPS spokeswoman Susan Roscnbcrg ,said
President Clinton, despite appeals from UPS and some business leader&gt; ,
repeated that he didn't believe the strike called for presidential intcrvcntiim
Labor Secretary Ale&gt; is Herman, who had called Carey and UPS chair·
man James Kelly to·urgc new talks, said she was encouraged,
"The president and I feel strongly that both the company and the work ·
ers, as well as the American people. have much to gain in a qu ick resoluti on
to this dispute," she said.

Sun
.
block
'

Brilliant daylight
prompts warning
on UV radiation
By BRIAN d. REED
Sentinel ,News Staff

There are plenty of sunny summer days left, and sun worshipers
should think about protecting
against skin cancer as they head to
local pools, faraway beaches or the
backyard for gardening.
A common misconccpti )0 is
that precautions should be taken
only on hot summer days.
In Jruth •. heat does not cause
·M!nbwns.llr skin damage.ln'sleaci',
it is the intensity of the sun that .
c~uses the damage. On cooler
summer days. like those eKperienced in Meigs County during the
past several days. the ris~ of sunrelated skin damage is just as high
as on 100-degree days, and winter
days also pose a less-serious risk,
Clouds block only as much as
20 percent of UV radiation, and
that radiation can pass through
water. so it is dangerouS tO assum~
that swimming protects from dangerous rays.
,
The U,S, Food and Drug
Administration rccommc'nds seven
steps to salcr sun exposure:
• Avoid the sun. especially
between I0 a.m. and 3 p,m., when
the sun'&gt; rays arc at their strongest
• Always usc sunscreen, Products in the form of lotions. creams.
ointments. gels and wax sticks,
come in a variety of SPF levels,
from 2 up,
SPF levels of 15 and above arc ·
considered appropriate for most
skin types, and products should be
applied liberally 15 to 30 minutes
before going outdoors. Infants
should not be e&gt;poscd to sunscreen: in&gt;tcad. clothing should be
used to cover all nposcd skin,
• Wear a hat Sunglasses arc also
recommended for eye protection.
• Cover up. Lightweight; loosefitting , long-slcevod garments arc
hcst Wet clothes increase the risk
of ski.n damage. .
• Avoid artilicial t3nning. The
type of rays emitted by tanning
bulbs arc linked , directly, to
melanoma. according to some
experts. Special ullraviolct tan- ,
nin~ bulbs arc used to stimulate
mi:lanocytcs. the cells in the skin

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FULL SIZE ·.

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P-.
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'Price Includes All RebatH to Dealer

MOTORIST TRAPPED -Two Injuries were
reported , following this head-on collision In
Minersville Wednesday. Firelighters and emer·
gancy periCiflnel are - n above working to

"'·

free Janet McKnight, 28, Syracuse, from ~r
1988 Chrysler. McKnight was transported to St.
Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., via MedFllghl. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

.Minersville crash leaves .2 injured

'

Alsn Wednesday. n P&lt;irtland man
A 28-year-old Syracuse woman and emergency personnel worked to
admitted to the. intensive care free her, A MedFiight helicopter was injured when the mutorcydc he
unit at St. Mary's Hospital in Hunt· landed at the s~.:cnc und tr;mspl'rtcd dr&lt;l\'~ w~nt off County Road 31
(Stivers ville). the Gallia-Mcigs Post
ington, WVa,, following a head-on her to St. Mary's,
Dailey was tak~n to Votcrans nfthc State Highway Patrol reported ,
collision on State Route 124 in Min·
Memorial Hc)spital hy emergency
Clarence W. Weddle. 53. 59154
crsville Wednesday around 8 p.m.
Janet F. McKnight,...,. westbound , medical service~ . He was later trans- SR I24, was transported to VMH hy
ncar Brown's Trailer Park when her ported to Holler Medical Center. the Meigs EMS. where he was Inter
1988 Chrysler was struck head-on by pending transfer 111 St. Mary's Hns- treated and , released, a hospital
,
spokesperson said.
a 1988 Chevrolet Malibu driven by pital.
Bolh
were
reported
in
stahlc
con·
Troopers said .W~ddlc was cast·
18' ycar-old Ryan Dailey of Happy
hound
. two-lcnthS nf a mile cast nf
dition
this
mornin~.
Hollow Road, Middleport, according
11lc
,
highway
w:t.
,
hlocked
li&gt;r
Lebanon
Township Road 13K (Trouto Meigs County Sheriff James M,
more
than
lwo
hour:-;
with
traffic
ble
Creek).
at K:45 p,m. when he
Souls by.
heing
routed
over
MincrS\·illc
Hill
atlcmpted to avoid ..::ollision with a
Dailey lost control of the car after
· its left-rear wheel fell oiT. according . Road. The Ohio Department of dug in the road ,
to the report. It appeared that McK- Transportation placed cinder,, on the
He lost control of th~ motorcycle
night saw Dailey's car approaching a' hitEhway where transmission fluid and it slid off the right side of the
rn~d. according to the report.
her car was partially off the roadway. and oil had spilicd,
Charges arc pending against DaiThe motorcycle was moderately
McKnight wa' pinned in the vchi·
cle for over an hour as firefighters le)!. according In the- report. \ .
damaged.
~as

EASY PREVENTION- Tllese young swimmers at the Middle-

port Pool can avoid some risks of akin cancer by following simple prevention tips. The use of aimSCIMII and avoiding hlgh-lnten·
slty sunning hours help prevent melanoma and other akin cancers.

38,300 skin cancer cases this year.
An estimated 9,500 deaths will be
attributed to skin , cancer. Some
7,300 of those will be from
melanoma. the most serious form
of skin cancer, and some 2,200 will
be from other forms of skin cancer,
For those who arc diagnosed
with skin cancer, radiation therapy ,
is being increasingly used as a safe,
effective and , relatively painless
treatment. even in advanced cases,
skin cancer incrca.."'ic the chances
According to the American Society
ror successful lrcacmcnt. The hest for Therapeutic Radiology and
time to do skin exams is after a Oncology. radiation treatment
shower or bath,
offers a number of advantages in
A variety of signs and symp·
the treatment of skin cancer_
toms indicate the possibility of skin
For example, skin grafting is
cancer, Changes on the skin.
unnccssary with radiation therapy.
~hangcs in the size and color of a
.while surgery usually requires cosmole or other growth. scalincss, , mclic surgery or skin grafting,
oozi ng. bleeding or a change in the
Skin cancers around the eyelids,
appearance of a bump, nodule or nose. lips and cars can be treated
(.: hangc in sensation itchiness or
with cosmetic results using radi:Jtion therapy. and hospitalization is
pam,
Melanoma will account for
rarely required .

which produce the pigment melatonin.
Commercial operation of these
beds is regulated by the Ohio
Department of Health and the cosmetology board, and those who
insist on using them for tanning
should take special care in follow ing time restrictions and using
protccCi\'c cycwcar.
• Check skin regularly. Early
detection hy noting symptoms of

family, friends lay ·Vern Riffe to rest
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Clive on~-hour servi~c at the school Riffe
l{cri remembers former House helped create by calling in favors
- : ~~peaker Vern Riffe as a man with from lawmakers despite claims by
opponents that the state didn "I need
: nany names.
·
"Whether you called him Vernal. another college. About 300 people
, pad, Pops. Papaw, nephew or cousin watched it on television monitors.
Riffe's sister, Ilene McKenzie,
1~ home. Or Vern, June, Junior or
collapsed
after the service and was
j~upe in Scioto County," he said. "Or
taken
to
Southern
Ohio Medical Cenhether you called him Mr. Riffe,
ter.
Mrs.
McKenzie.
71. of Cincin·
r.Speaker or Boss in Columbus. Or .
nati,
was
listed
in
critical
but stable
1 hether he called you 'Padnah' condition.
hospital
spokeswoman
i e have lost a dear friend ."
, Veri, president of Shawnee State Sally Schisler said. Ms. Schisler said
)niversity, , made his remarks no other information would be
~ednesday d~rihg the funeral for the released unless Mrs. McKenzie's
condition changed.
~6-year member of the House.
Joe Harris, who grew up in Scioto
I• Riffe, who was speaker for a
County''Vern Riffe Country"1eeord 20 years. died July 31 of can·
and
went
to
Shawnee State, said Riffe
ll"f at age 72.
' About 70&lt;1 people attended the was an inspiration to people in the

l~

l

r

area.
"He instilled in all of us the faith,
the certainty and the conviction that
Ohio, and primarily southern Ohio, is
the heart of it all," he said in the euler
gy.
Ri!Te 's nag-covered casket sat on
the stage in the Vern Riffe Center for
the Ans. The silhoueue of a while
cross was projected against black
drapes in the background.
Classes were canceled for the day
and securily at lhe funeral was tight
with streets blocked off in the immediate area and only invited guests
allowed in.
Gov. George Voinovich, con·
gressmen and local mayors and county commissioners were among those
who attended.

Pulp mill permit appeal decision
not likely to be issued until fall
But Tom Zerbe, lawyer for the

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Associated Preas Writer ,

North America,

CHARLESTON, W,Va. - A state
board wound up weeks of hearings
on the, appeal of an air pollution permit for a proposed Ma,on County
pulp mill, but it will he months he fore
hoard members make a decision.
Tens of thousands of pages of
technical and scientific data arc part
of the record the Air Quality Board
will review before deciding whether
to uphold the permit issued in June
1996 by the state Division of Environmental 'protection,
And it will likely be late October
or early November before the panel
can issue its ruling, said Rebecca
Charles, lawyer for the board , which
hears appeals of the state agency Us
air pollution decisions.

Ohio River at Apple Grove in Mason
County. hut its option to huy that land
expired in March and has not liccn

The company

~.:hose

a !riitc on the

renewed. The pcnnits arc specifiC to

that site and cannot be translcrrcd ,
In Wednesday's dosing arguments
before the hoard. a lawyer for the
Ohio Valley Environmental Coulition
contended that the state agency failed
to take into account the amount of
dioxin that already exists in the Ohio
River.

Dioxin is a highly !oxic byproduct
, of the chlorine dioxide bleaching
process the plant intends to usc, It is
known to cause cancer and also is
believed to interfere wiiiilhc human
immune and reproductive systems,
even in amounts too tiny to measure.
Any dioxin added to what already
Several envirom)'1ental organiza·
tions and individuals appealed the exists will exceed standards, lawyer
permit, which they contend ignored Jason Huber said.
"11lc Office of Air Quality has
the existing levels of a toxin known
as dioxin and how much additional routinely turned a blind eye to evidioxin the pulp mill is expected 10 dence .,. that this facility can in no
way comply with the regulations,"
generate,
Parsons &amp; Whittemore of Rye Huber said.
''The Office of Air Quality has
Brook, N.Y., first proposed the mill
in 1988. The company said it would shown us ... they are willing to
cost an estimated SI. I billion and appease industry at the expense of the
would be one of the largest mills in environment ," Huber said.

Divisi&lt;m or Environmental PnliCction

and its Office or Air Quality. ilis••grccd.

"The appcllunts · problems arc
really with the slandurd, and this
agency is hound hy the swndard:·
Zerbe said,
·~The

hurdcn was on the director to

show that the applicant was in violation of the stundards, He couldn "t do
that, so he issued the permit," Zerbe
said.

In testimony prior to dosing arguments,

state

engineer

RCnu

Chakrabarty acknowledged that if the
plant is built, "l)lcre will theoreti cally and probably be add&lt;tional
dioxin emitted into the air and the nvcr.
Although the mill is cxpe\:tcd to
emit about onc -forty-thitd of an
ounce of dio&gt;in per year, Chakrabarty said, that amount contain9· many
millions of molecules of dioxin .
' According to Chakrabarty, as little as a single molecule can affect
development of a fetus. In addition ,
she said, dio&gt;in is not excreted by
humans or animals, but instead,accumulates in their fatty tissues over
years of exposure.

..

I ,

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