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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Reds defeat
Dodgers by
seven runs

Super Lotto:
4-5-1 &amp;.-28-20-22
Kicker:
1-6-6-4-0-7
Pick 3:
3-3-2
Pick 4:
5-9·7-9

Sports on Page 4

•

a1
YDI. 41, NO. 12

•

en tine

'"

01117, Ohio Volley PubliShing Compeny

Mostly clear tonight,
lows In the mid 60s.
Tuesday, mostly sunny.
Highs In the mid 80s .

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 11, 1997

:Clinton plans to flex
:line item veto muscle

.~

I'

WASHINGTON (AP)- Flexing would say which items Clinton has il, under a law that took effect Jan. I.
a power sought by his predecessors targeted. The president kept a low Previously, preside~ls had to accept
·-for more than a century, President profile Sunday, venturing out only to · or reject a piece of legislation in its
·Clinton will use the line-item veto lo dine at a restaurant during the entirety. Many states also give their
delete cenain provisions from both evening.
governors selective veto power.
the new federal budget and tax-cut
White House spokeswoman Anne
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, Rlaws, top aides say.
rH Luzzallo would not say whether he Ga., has said that using the veto on
Clinton has unli I midnight EDT spent time consulting with aid~s or the budge\ and tax plans would ·viatonight to make the changes, and the reviewing hi; veto options alone.
late 'the spirit of cooperation in which
aides said in television . interviews
Rubin said that by using the line- Congress and the White House broSunday thai he intends to do so.
ilcm veto on the major budget and tax kcrcd the lcgi•lation. Clinton said he
· "When he invokes (the veto pow- bills, Clint9n not only becomes the would DOl. veto anything that 1was
er) ... it will impact both the spend- first U.S. president to exercise it but agreed upon liy both panics during
ing and tax items, n senior presiden- also sends. signals Congress that he · their negotiations.
tial adviser Rahm Emanuel said on will do it again if provisions thai disThere are precious few places in
CBS' "Face the Nation."
please him arc tacked onto spending the budget and tax plans where Clin. While denying that Clinton is bills,
· ton can veto individual items. Only a
employing the veto on selected items
"He will use (the veto) with the handful of 79 special-interest tax
~ for political purposes, Emanuel said
view that by doing so, he can create breaks in the $152 billion tax-cui bill
the actions will clearly communicate a useful and, I think, potentially very arc eligible. Some have been ruled
to the Republican-run Congre'ss "that strong deterrent to people," Rubin out as necessary or previously agreed
business as usual is over in Wash- . said. "He has thought this throu~ to in negotiations.
ington."
with enormous care."
·
•
Among spending items, a small
Neither Emanue I nor Trea•ury
Presidents have sought line-item policy aspect of the Medicaid proSecretary Robert Rubin, who vcto'authorily since Ulysses S. Grant gram has been identified as prQne to
appeared on ABC's "This Week," in the 1870s. Clinton is the first to get a l'eto. White House aides say such
·a provi.sion would be vetoed.

uation has reached the state

s
IIW
AI
'Price Includes All Rebttes to Dealer

SAT.9-6

•

-

Carey and AFL-C IO President
John Sweeney. on ABC, argued
against government involvement. "I
think the president is commiucd to
collective hargaining:· Sweeney said. ·'
A Fox News poll released Sunday

and lhat hiring replacements fur the

cou.ntry ho1s governors and husinc..;s

showed that more Amcrkan voters

185.000 striking union mcmhcrs
"docs e&lt;intrihute to that escalation."
"We're not ready to hire repla.:emcnt workers at . lhis point,'' UPS

leaders clamoring for White House
intervention.
Under the Taft-Hanley Act. the
president musl determine that the
nalion's SoliCty and hc:allh is impcril~.-""ll
he fore he can intcr\'Cnc to force an
end to the walkout. Hem1an said the
administr~1tinn is sensitive to the
plight of small husinesse.s anJ is
monitoring the strike's impact on the

sympathize with the striking workers
than with UPS. and only 28 percent
said they had hccn inconvenienced hy
the walk«)UI either at h(Jffic (~rat work.
or 'l06 rcgi slcrcd VOlL!rs inter·
viewed Wednesday and Th~r~day, 44
percent sympathized with the strikers,
27 percent with UPS and the rest
could 11111 s~1·y. Th~ margin of sarnpiing: error w&lt;.~s plus or minus J percent age p&lt;)ints.

CCOO(lllly.

"The

~ucstinn

of Taft-Hartley ...

Suspect dies in gun battle with patro'l
LAFAYETTE (AP) - State
troopers shot 'and killed a motorist
wanted on warrants for auempted
murder and assault in New York after
the driver opened fin: on the officers.
DanielL. Prall, 23, of Jamestown,
N.Y., died on state Route 29 aboijt 20
miles west of Columbus Sunday
afternoon after a trooper pulled him
over for driving on a road that had
been closed for construction. ·

a

•

some intervention,'' Kelly sai!J.

bargaining tahlc. we can settle thi s
strike."
UPS normally handles 12 million
parcels and lcticrs daily. The W&lt;!rk ·
swppugc's damage tn small husi ncsscs operations throughout the

ABC's "This Week."
UPS Chairman James Kelly, questioncd on CBS' "Face the Nation."
agreed hut would make no guarantees
ahout the fulurc . "The last thing we
want tn do, the la.~t thin~ I want to do,
is replace UPS workers." Kelly said.

MONDAY, AUG. 11
4-8 p.m. - Kai'IIOkl with Jaff Norttl - Hill Stage
4 p.m. - Kiddie Trllctor Pull - Show Anma ·
8 p.m.- Junior Felr Sheep Show- Show Arena (followld
by the Open Clals Sheep Show)
8 p.m. - Antique Tl'llctor Pull - Pull Area
8:30p.m.- .._,In America- Grandlland
11 p.m.- Galas clo1e
TUESDAY, AUG. 12
(Circus 1pon1ored byPhll Montroso)
7 a.m. - Gates open
.
8 a.m. - Junior Fair Rabbh Show- Show Are1111
10 p.m.- Touch Taam
1 p.m. - Open Ctau Beef Show- Show Ara1111

OPEN
MOfl••fll. 9-9
511.9-6

is one that &lt;cenis to me lies in the
fut,urc. not now." Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin said in analyzing the
strike's cL:,miJmi~.: implicJtions.
Ruhin stud on ABC's "This
. Week" that the lnw "has very stringent requirements. It hasn't, hcen
invoked in over 20 years. In fact the
last lime a president tried to usc it, he
was rehut'l'ed by the couns.•· ·
. UPS' Kelly urged Clinton In ~lep
in to stop serious damage lo the cconamy. Without such intervention, he
doubted an agreement can he ncgu- :
tiatcd soon. ''TI1crc arc so many open
issues. and we an: so far apart, i)
would he very dift'icult to gel it dune
in a short period &lt;if time without

mit to takiflg 1hesc issues had. to the

Vice Chairman John Alden said on

Meig·s County Fair.
OPEl
MOfL.fll. 9·9

or what

we define as a national emergency."
Herman also said the two sides
still have room for agreement. But in
a separate appearance on CNN's
''Late Edition," she cautioned the
. ponies not to ···cscalatc this slrikc"

The 134th Meigs County Fair
Is undeiWIY. Junior and Senior
Fair activities began over tha
w..Und, amid praparatlon•
both on th8 mlciway and In varloua showcen building• at
the Rock Sprlrig1 Falrgrounda.
Employ- of th8 Batn Brothers Amuaement Co. wsre hard
lit work on Sundll!f, putting
together their midway rides
1111d concession booths, and
local organizations were al1o
scampering to get their concslllon - • and dlaptaya In
ptacs for todly's anticipated
crowds. Right, AnthOIJ!f Talt of
Meldvllta, Pa., had the .job of
-mbllng and clelning the
bumper cer rldll on the midway
while, at the n1111 tl1111, members of th8 Chelter Garden
Club, above, _ . working on
1taglng of lhe Sen!or Fair
Flower Show. Pictured are club
members Betiy Dean, Dorothy
Karr and Dabble Miller. New
backgrounds will be In place ·
for this yaar'e 1how, according
to Mrs. Dian. The fair runa
through Saturday.

.AI

l

By JEAJ'911N&amp;--AVERSA ' 'I ihiOk ti'c wnulo have a proh-·
A1110C1atad Preas Writer
lcm" if the company did;hirc replace, WASHINGTON- Despite pleas ments. Teamsters President Ron
from business, PresKien~ Clinton docs Carey said tm CBS. He d ~c.l m~t clah·
not plan to intervene in the Team- orate.'
sters' we~k-old strike against U~itcd
Federally mediated talks broke oil'
Patccl Service. Butthe government is Saturday, hut Herman said she
nudging both sides back lo the bar- planned In telephone hoth pa~ies to
gaining table and is keeping a close urge them back to ,the bargaining
eye on the nation's health.
table.
"The president recognizes that
"We're digging in to urge the
these arc serious issues: the nall,frc of · Teamsters. to urge UPS , to sho.w a
pan-time work, pension protection · willingness tn compromise. We want
for American workers. These arc all them to show creater llexihility,;, .she
issues that we care about.·· Lahor said .
...
·
Secretary Alexis Herman said Sunday
''I'm convinced that there is still
on NBC's "Meet the Press...
room here for a selllcmenL If they
"But we don't belic~c that this sit- will redouble their crfilftS and com-

Fair
begins

I·· )

.monies Sunday. Also pictured are James
Chapman and Billie Pooler, first runners up,
and Daniel Buckley and Kelsey Fife, 1996 Lit·
ie Mister and LIHie Miss, who relinquished
·
heir titles this morning.

White House nudging both
sides in strike back to table

.I

'97CHM
SIZE ··
CONYERS VAN

ROYALTY CROWNED - Alban Salser, second from left, and Krlstl Warner, second from
right, will reign over the Meigs County Fair this
week as 1997 King and Queen. They were
crowned by 1996 Queen· Amy Smith In cere·

.•
'"

A State Highway Patrol news

release said Pratl was shot after he

pulled a 9mm handgun from his pickup truck and opened fi~c on troopers
Jcfl'rcy Reynolds and Daniel Finnell.
Neither ol'liccr was hit.
Patnll sp&lt;lkcswoman ·Sgt. Brenda
Collins said investigators dic.J not
immediately know which trooper
fired the fatal shot.
Pnill was wanted on felony war...

rants for aucmpted murder and first degree: as~auh in New York . Pnlir.::c
hclicvc Pratt ...,hot two men outside a
hur in Jamestown in mid·July, sai&lt;.l ..
Jamestown police Capt. Randall Present. The pickup truck Prall was dri ving h&amp;d hccn rcpnrtccj stolen from
Jamestown the morning af'tcr the
shoot ings, Prc .~o.cnt said.
·
The search lor Prau had focused
on Ohio. where he had.rclativcs

Informant's. role in militia trials will stay under f~re
WHEELING. W.Va. (AP) -An manutacture explosives, and he will taxes and penalties.
"The government frequently
informant who was attacked in be tried this week for allegedly proMountaineer Militia leader Aoyd viding resources to a terrorist group. points out that when thcy're~rying to
After that, he will be tried two ferret out criminal acliv&lt;ty, they're
Looker's first trial will likely come
more
limes in September and OctO- not going to get choir boys to be witunder allack again.
ber
on
charges of bringing explosives 'nesses against the targets of investi Informants are rarely "choir
gation," Are nella said.
across
state lines.
boys" and it is no surprise when
Testimony
during
Looker's
first
~fense lawyers contend Richards
lawyers attack them, said Peter
federal
trial
indicated
the
informant
became
a paid to make money and to
Arenella, a law professor allhe Uniowed
about
$50,000
in
child
suppon
escape creditors through relocation at
versity of Cali fomia at Los Angeles.
"When an infomlant's testimony to two former wives, $33,000 in a the government's expense.
Richards said he decided to go to
is critical, you'd be a fool not to go ' lawsuit default and thousands more in
the FBI because he was "concerned
after the informant's credibility," he 'tax liens.
Documents obtained by The Asso- about what the militia stood for."
. said.
Whether an informant tells the
LOOker, 56, of Stonewood, was ciated Press indicate Okey Marshall
convi~ted last week of conspiracy to Richards owed more than $20,000 in truth about his motive does not nee-

•

cssarily matter ; what matters in a con·
spiracy case is whether the defendant
agrees ·to a plan with a criminal
objective, Arcnclla said.
Bill Cipriani, Looker 's lawyer,
said lessons were teamed from the
verdict in the firstlrial.
"What it does is it tells us that
jurors don't care that Richards admitted being a liar if there was other evi·
dence that corroborates his story,"
Cipriani said Saturday.
·
But Jolyon McCamic, lawyer for
one of the other defendants, said the
guilty verdict does not reflect on the
three remaining trials

...

�Monday, Auguat11, 1997

,C..oiT!mentary
'Estufislid in 1948

'

111 Court SlrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-911:2-2154 • FIX 1192·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
PuiiiiMer

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G-IMan~ger

__ ,..,.,.,_.. _.,._ __ ,_,,.•. .,.IWN,.,.

--

' _ , , . _ _ _ ..... _ _ oiiOpiOI.

-----~_,.

-,

~--·..-..-.

.,...,...,..,.. ........ ........,. dllltll .....• • • • • • ID • plw' • arftcM
.. Ia: - - ... - . 111 c...t St., ,.,......,. 01110
UNf; at,I!U' .. llu..lf/17,

!

:Other communities are
_looking at city's success

•

_By MITCH WEISS
- A11oclated Presa Writer
TOLEDO- The fanfare over Chrysler Corp.'s recent decision to butld a
_'Dew Jeep plant in the city is subsidmg. But a spotlight still shines on the city, as other communtties study Its public campaign to keep Jeep manufacturing in t&lt;&gt;wn.
Toledo ran newspaper ads, circulated petitiOns and sent thousands of let. ters to Chrysler supporting the c;ty as the site for a new plant.
· The No. 3 domestic automaker agreed to spend $1 .2 billion to build a new
: plant and upgrade two other Jeep plants in Toledo.
: Chrysler said the lobbying made a difference.
_
Mayor Carty Finkbeiner also created ProJect Jeep - a team of c;ty and
state offic;als that came up w;th an attractive package of incentives.
"It was successful," Finkbemer said. "We've been getting calls from
other communities.··
United Auto Workers leaders in Flint, Mich., said they will talk to
: Finkbeiner and community leaders about the pubhc campa;gn.
· Workers and community leaders m Aint are wonied about the fate o~
: General Motors' Buick C;ty Assembly Center.
The company has said nothing publicly what i~ plans for the plant. But
, Buick City has no new products assigned beyond the 1999 model year, and
: there are expectatiOJ1S it will be closed.
·. The plant employs about 3, I00 workers making Bu;ck LeSabre sedans.
- Sales of luxury sedans have been relatively flat.
;
UAW Local 599 Pres;dent Art McGee said the success of the Toledo cam• paign is reason for the Aint area t~ rally around Buick_City.
· The upion recently placed ads m newspapers, touung the many awards
given to Butck City. More advertising is planned.
The two plants in Toledo make Jeep Cherokees and Wnnglers and
employ more than 5,600 people. Without a new plant, some people in the
' community feared that Chrysler would shift production -to more effic;ent
: factories elsewhere.
- But Toledo had an advantage over some communities. The Jeep was born
: jn the city, when the f1rst mihtary Jeep rolled off the assembly line in 1941.
•
"That helped," F;nkbeiner said. "No question about it."
GM spokesman Gerald Lames Said community suppon is important. But
he said it is just one pan in a company's decis;on to up~ or butld a new
factory.
. A company has to took at the m_vestmen~. Acompa~y can't afford to keep
a plant open just because t~e pubhc_wants t_t to, he satd.

..

(Letters
to
the
editor
..
'

:; ·Unhappy with contractor
•

: UDear Editor,
·
,
:
1 would like to commend Gary Boggess' letter to the ed;tor that I JUSt read
&lt; ·in The Daily Sentinel as we are going through the sa:ne thing.
.
We were flooded and our ;nsurance company sa;d they were gomg to
· cancel us unless we ra;sed our double-wide. Well we got a contractor to do
: the job, but he had to take our 12-by-48-foot Florida otT and our front porch.
: This was included in our esumate.
•
He had no crew and my husband and neighbors helped htm. We gave him
: $5 000 to stan and another $4,000 whtch he said he wanted. He hadn't done
: lh~t much with the free help. Got it raised and that was the last we saw of
: him.
_
We went to the prosecuting attorney hut he put us off for two months and
never returned our calls. We went to the sheriffs office in Galha County but
: they said it would be best to see the sheriff in Me;gs County as that was
• 'where it happened. We did and gave hts office the mformauon also, that was
: about four months ago and we still haven't heard anythmg about th!s s;tua• 'tion. We lost all of the matcnalthat was removed plus $9,000, and It was a
: year before we could fimsh the work and get the ma~enal for room and
' porch. We receive donat;ons and free labor and sull don t have outstde steps
'done. Like Mr. Boggess satd we feel tgnored. My husband has cancer and
: 'we really could use our money we lost for medical expenses. I thought the
: 'taw supported everybody and not just the ones they have time for. We are
; 's1ill hoping that something will be done about our problem.
_
'
·
Mrs. Robert Waldn1g,
1

._ ,

Racine

rax break no break at all
pear Editor,
·
"A tax break," says broadcaster Brokaw.
"A
bJl'ak for a majonty of Americans," sweet talks President Clin-

1••

. rn~t they are all beating their ~bests abOut is not a ~~·tax break anc
,,.hat they did gave has handles on tl.
Wh,pt the political dealers are crowmg _about are a few crumbs off then
IPOiitic~ltable, and that ;s years down the road .
1 Everyb~y pays taxes and everybody should get a break when break'
.
.
.
1m: bemg p~;sed out.
' Thi~ bre~~ is a phony. In fact. the load ts bcmg sh1fted around. SpendUng is womg up.
~ Thi. craz11 economic picture we have may not last. Probably won't last.
'lben 'hat?
.
·
Thi• nal~IO as well as the world is going through a social metamorhosis. W~t concerns n:te is can we retain our national identity. Washngton seem; far away, and like a mirage. I hope it (the mirage) passes
way, l!ut dqn't bank on it.
• _
' BrOjher ~~II Clinton and Comrade AI Gore talk of the Bndge to the
~1st c,ntur)i," I won~r tf constderallon is being given for an escape hatch
10 get qut? '

~

Gayle Price,
Portland

'

Tqd,fJY in history_
·: fYT&lt;bliMp:lltld
~~onday, ~ug.
' loft in

y is
ya,,..

••

Presa

II, the 223rd day of 1997. There are 142 days

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Page2

OHIO Weather

~y,Auguat11,1997

·Local News in Brief:

Thesday, Aug. 12
Accu Weather" forecast for

Kelly righted a listing FBI-in the '70s

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By JICk Anderaon
MCIJ8nMoller
Buried in the pages of America's
newspapers last week was the news
that Clarence M. Kelley, head of~
FBI from 1973 to early 1978, had
died at the age of 85.
It's rather appropriate that Kelley's death g~nerated little interest
from the media. For the most part,
the quiet, square-jawed Kelley
steered clear of public attention dur;ng his tenure atop the agency. And
that'sjust what the bureau needed in
the wake of J. Edgar Hoover's outlandish 46-year stewardship.
The tyrannical Hoover, who
headed the agency until his death in
1972, shamefully abused his power,
often using the FBI's resources to
make sure that he and his longtime
companion, Clyde Tolson, lived a
hfe of luxury. Hoover also used his
office to pursue private vendettaS
and to pry into the lives of prominent Amencl!nS. He had phones
tapped, bugs planted and had his
gmnshoes tail anyone he believed to
be suspicious.
Kelley did have some slips,
though. In November 1975 we
revealed that the FBI director and
two of hts deputies were wined,
d;ned and hosted for a weekend at
New York City's posh Waldor(Astoria hotel by Prudential, the company
that provided 11ealth insurance for
FBI employees.
And in 1976, Kelley admitted
that FBI employees had built and
installed a cabinet and window decorations in his apartment shortly
after he took office. Kelley sa;d the
decorations had been made without
his knowledge and that he planned
to return the cabinet when he left
office. He reimbursed the government several hundred dollars for
labor and materials.
That the inc;dents are so noteworthy .is a testament to how much
things had changed at the FBI just a

few shon years after Hoover's
death. Such behavior would have
been business as usual for the old
bulldog.
Aside from these two minor lapses in judgmen~ Kelley kept himself
-- and the agency -- clean. He
brought an openness to the FBI that
had been missing in the past. He
refused to cover up qency mistakes,
ordering his press office to acknowledge agency errors, past and present.
Kelley also ended the statistical
games that the FBI played with the
public. Under Hoover, the FBI made
itself look more effective than it
really was by concentrating on easyto-solve cases. Kelley, on the other
hand, made sure the bureau only got
involved in legitimate cases. As a
result, the "official" number of
cases investigated and solved fell
during Kelley's tenure. But the
emphasis had gone from quantity to
quality.
Perhaps the most positive change
under Kelley was the FBI's departure from Hoover's racist policies.

Hoover's FBI was paranoid about
black leaders, especially Or. Martin
Luther King Jr.
Hoover considered King a dangerous radical, a subversive influence who would tear apart society's
fabric ;f he wasn't stopped. So
Hoover set out to ruin King. He
ordered his agents to tap King's
phones, had him kept under constant
, surveillance and compiled a voluminous file of gosstp and half-baked
accusations.
The FBI's dossier on King could
. only be deS&lt;:ribed as a blackmail
file. Hoover kept such files on other
leading African-Americans as well.
Indexed under "~ac;al Matters"
were a host of secret files on prominent blacks, from boxer Muhammad
Ali and actor Harry Belafonte to the
Rev. Jesse Jackson and King 's
widow, Caretta-Scott Ktng.
Kelley abandoned his predecessor's bias against African-Americans and adopted a balanced racial
policy. He also took the FBI out of
the blackmail business completely.

And Kelley made a point of recruiting women and minorities to serve
in the FBI. The agency was no
longer the lily-white outfit it had
been under Hoover.
The 1970s weren't an easy time
to be FBI dia:ector. Embarrass;ng
revelations about Hoover's abuses
came to light on a regular basis.
Were it not for the steady leadership
of Kelley, the agency might have
fallen apart. Under Kelley, the FBI
was as honest and honorable a law
enforcement agency as could be
found anywhere in the world.
In our culture, which worships
the flamboyant and the outrageous,
;t is no surprise that Hoover's legend
still hovers over the FBI headquarters building that bears his name.
But Clarence Kelley, who did much
to restore the presllge that h;s predecessor squandered, deserves ap honored place in the history of his
agency for a job well done.
Jack Anderson and Jan Muller
are writers for Unit~d Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

,,,,,

At.

INO.

,,,,,

• IColumbusl84" I

W. VA.

'

Chance of thunderstorms
persists through tonight
,

mage "\'as suffocated as five white
officers pinned him to the pavement." One pohce officer was
acquitted, charges were dropped
against two others, and the betting in
the black neighborhoods is that the
other two ~ave nothing to worry
·about
In New York, Lucille Gager -- a
. 66-year-old grandmother of II and
evangelist with the Soul Saving Station, a Harlem church -- went to the
24th precinct station house to complain about a parkmg ticket The
pohce refused to hear her explanation. and one of them grabbed her by
the shoulder, ordering her to go

has been 'steadily weakened by
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani -- thoroughly suppons her lawyer.
Once 1n a great whde, a policeman charged with killing beyond the
line of duty is held responsible. In
New York, Paolo Colecchia. recently became the first policeman in 20
years to be sent to prison for a hom;cide while on duty. The dead black
man was 25-year-old Nathaniel
Gaines. A veteran of the Gulf War,
he had no cnminal record. Unarmed,
Gaines wa. shot tn the back on a
subway platform .
Gaines' father told the New York
Post, "As a Navy veteran. my son .

There is no way, however, that the sentence can be called
a reasonable penalty for a man's life.
away. "What arc you trymg to doT' ' was wdhng to giVe hts life 1f necesshe asked, "Shoot me m the back sary for hts country ... but not on a
like they did that boy?" (A 16-ycar- cold, dtrty subway platform."
old had been shot to death by a cop
Colecchta has been sentenced to
two days earlier.)
between 18 months and 4-1/2 years,
Offended by · Lucille Gager's although Judge Ira Glohcrman sa1d
•rreverent remark, four pollee offi- ,. the shootmg was "grossly excessive
cers -·she told the New York Tomes of any reasonable vtew ol pohcc
-- landed on her and threw her to the functton."
floor. Whtlc one jammed his knee in
There is no way, however, thai
her back, the others handcuffed her. the sentence can be called a rcpsonShe has filed a law sun In federal ablc penalty for a man's life.
court because, her lawyer says, the
The cxtcnl of police brutality,
New York Civthan Complamt especially against blacks, is nol
Review Board cannot be depended mcntmned in the prestdcnt 's homi on ";n these matters." A''rccent sta- lies on race relations. H;s main
tistical report by the Board -- whtch thru•t recently is on "multiracial-

ism." Clinton has asked his advisory
board how the various races in this
country can get along. And Clinton
emphastzed this theme m his Pittsburgh speech to the NAACP convention. (The late Johnny Gammage
was not mentioned.)
Historian John Hope FranKlin.
the leader of the president's advis&lt;&gt;ry boalrl, critic1zed the president
Chnton, said Franklin, made a maJor
address on race futures before a
black au4iencc in PitL,burgh, but it
should have been directed first at
wh1tes. "The white side," Franklin
'aid, " has been in control of vtrtuaily everything. so they're the ones
who need educating on what justice
and cquahty mean."
Co'ns1der, lor example, the
impact a Clinton speech on police
_brutal tty would have if it were delivered before one of the predominantly white police associations he likes
to surrounded himself with for photo
opportuntltcs.
As for multiraciaiiSm -- a.&lt; mexorable and valuable as that development is -- John Hope Franklin has
opposed Clinton's advice that the
advtsory panel focus on multiracialISm The emphasts, said Franklin,
should be on black-while relattons
becauS&lt;: that was where " this country cut its eye teeth on racism ." At
least put some sunlight on pollee
rac1sm.
Nat Hentoft is 1 nationally renowned
authority on the Fir~t Amendment and the
,..., ollhe Bill of RlghiS.

this phenomenon justice. So I would

to make the wearer look like a

Contestants at the Redneck Games
in Georgia who do belly naps m
mud
and bob for pigs feet .
1
There is also an art to both endeavors, I think. BarbiepitsDoll
collectors who have
You can 'tjust throw stuff into a column willy-nilly, mounted a Pink Anger rebellion to
protest bad ha;r and ill-fitting shoes _
and you can't be arb,itrary with a time capsule on
some Mattei products.
either.
LAWSUITS. I would tncludc
legal actions filed by a New York
librarian who sued "Primary Colmclude tn my ttme capsule an bramy nerd ... A sample of the hqutd ors" author Joe Klein because a
exquiSite quote from a New Mexico dtetary supplement made from the character tn the fictional work looks
rancher on whose property th~ Little noni fruit, which reportedly smells like her .. A Cahfom;a woman who
Aliens allegedly landed. He was and tastes like vomit ... Bagels with- sued the Walt Disney company
asked the origin of the "Alien out holes.
because her grandchildren were
Shme" that he as ddling to
SERVICES. Arttclcs about mas- allegedly traumatized when they
tourists at $2.49 a J and
eplled: sage stores that spcctahze tn walk-m saw a Mtckcy Mouse performer take
"My kids have been mak; g the back rubs .. The Florida hospttal off hts head ___ Three Yemen• men in
stuff for days."
that writes a big " NO" on hmbs that the city of San'a who sued NASA
That sort of says it all, don't you are not to be amputated ... Grocery for landing on Mars, which they
think?
stores that offer smgles' mghts fea- claimed thetr ancestors had willed to
So if I started my time capsule tunng live mus;c;ans, snacks and them 3,000 years ago.
consulttng servtce, here are a few of fruit beverages ... The Washmgton,
And clips about a few perfect
the things I would include to define D.C., company called Cause Cele- '90s people:
our times:
·
bre, which specializes in finding
-- Animal psychics who wtll tell
PRODUCTS. NECCO candied social causes for movie stars.
you what pets thtnk .
hearts that say "Fax Me" ... The idea
EVENTS, HAPPENINGS AND
-- A group of New York doctors
currently being shopped around Hol- OCCURRENCES . Clippmgs about who wtll provide an c-mailed "psylywood for a movie about a pope MJSS Amenca's new option to show choanalytically guided self-in4uiry''
who uses his martial arts skills to her navel .. The possib1hty that for $125 an hour
foil hijackers aboard his jet ... The "Casablanca" may he remade, with -- A Mt. Everest chmber who
condom carrying case designed to Sean Penn in Bogie's role ... A packed an espresso machine
look ' like an electronic pager ... A bomber in Chandler, Ariz., who has
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
been
obliterating
portable
potties
...
phosphorescent Cosmic Bowling
writer for Newspaper EnterPrise
'
ball ... A pair of vanity specs wnh A ku Klux Klan group in Aorida Association.
plain glass and hom rims, des;gned tluit wants to adopt a highway ;"

A cold front w;ll stall out across Ohio tonight before begmning to slowly push back to the north on Tuesday. Showers are ltkely across the state w1th
a chance of thunderstorms across the south. Skies will be mostly cloudy with
ovem tghtlow temperatures in the 60s.
The story for Tuesday will be more showers and thunderstorms likely over
the northwest and west central areas of Ohio for much of the day. Scattered
afternoon showers and thunderstorms can be expected for the rest of the ~tate
Htghs on Tuesday wtll range from the mtddle 70s over the nonh to the mtddle 80s 10 the south ·
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather stauon was 98 set in 1944. The low was 48 in 1967. Sunset today will be at
8 34 p.m . Sunnse Tuesday will be at 6:40a.m.
Weather forKasl:
Tomght .. Mostly clear. Lows in the m;d 60s. Light south wind.
Tuesday . Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 80s.
Tuesday mght.Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 60s.
Extended forecast:
.
Wednesdily ... Partly cloudy wtth a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Htghs ;n the upper 80s.
·
Thursday. Mostly clear. Lows 1n the upper 60s and htghs near 80.
Friday.. Mostly clear. Lows 55 to 60 and htghs in the lower 80s.
'

I

'

Weekend crashes kill 12
By The Associated Press

\

hit by a pickup truck on a city street.
At least 12 people have died 10 10 · RAVENNA- Kurt Schwab, 23,
traffic acc;dents on Oh;o roads thts of Ravenna, pedestnan htt by a car on
weekend, the St~t~..,Highway Patrol a Portage County road.
LEBANON - Harry E. Human,
and other law enforcement agencies
23, of Cincmnati, motorcyclist in a
said today.
The patrol counl' fatahttes from 6 one-vehicle accident on a Warren
-p.m. Fnday unt;l m;dmght Sunday
County road
LORAIN- Shawn D. Moynihan,
The dead:
SUNDAY
29, of Elyria, driver in a one-car acciDEFIANCE- Jerry E. Fitch. 34, -lle_nt on Interstate 90 in Lorain Counof Napoleon , motorcyclist m a one- ty.
GEORGETOWN - Douglas 0 .
veh tcle acctde~t on US. 6 10 Henry
Adams,
47, of Georgetown, bicyclist
County.
· OTIAWA- Keith A. Curtis, 33, struck by a pickup truck on state
of Gtbsonburg. dnver m a two-car Route 32 in Brown County.
acctdent on state Route I05 Ottawa
SANDUSKY -= Howard E. KeeCounty.
gan, 52, of Vickery, btcyclist struck
HAMILTON- R1chard S Ward , by a 'Pickup truck on a Sandusky
43, of Middletown. driver of an all- County road
terram vehicle man acc•dent on state
FRIDAY NIGHT
Route 4 m Butler County.
SALEM - Lewis K. Smith. 16,
OTIAWA - Wliham Russell , and Michael T. Ulman, 18, both of
48, of Toledo, driver, 1n a three-vehi- Sebring, were killed in aone-vehtcle
cle accident on state Route 2 in accident on a Mahonmg County
Ottawa County.
road Officials have not determmed
SAT,U~DAY
. which occupant was driving.
MARTINS FERRY - Corey F
West, I, o( Martms Ferry. pcdcstrtan

No winner sends jackpot to $35M
anttc;pated sales.
"I felt it was wonhwhile to boost
the jackpot to generate _more revenue," he said.
'
Sales 1n Super Lotto totaled
$8,969,341. Kicker sales totaled
$1.177,630.
There were 238 Super Lotto tickets with five of the numbers, and each
IS worth $1 ,036. The II ,351 tickets
showmg four of the numbers arc each
worth $68
In K1cker, two players had the
exact su.·d1git number to dann
$100,000.

CLEVELAND (AP)- The Jackpot for Wednesday's Super Lotto
drawmg wtll be $35 mtlllon after no
ti cke ts matched all SIX numbers
drawn in Saturday's drawing worth
$30 m!lhon, the Ohio Lottery said.
The Jackpot usually mcreases by
$4 milhon when no wmmng t1ckets
are sold, but lottery D;rector William
Howell satd the jackpot was being
mcrcased by $5 m!lhon as a result of

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·960)
f'ul:li1S~td every 11f1ernoon. Monday throulilh

Stocks

Fmby. Ill Courl S1 , Pomeroy. Oh1o, by !he
Ohm v~lley Pubhshm11 Company/G;mnen Co.,
PomtiO)', Oh1o 45Jf,9, Ph 992-2156 Stcond
clan poslagt p~1d at Pomeroy, Oh1n

Am Ele Power ........................ :43
Akzo......................................82'1•
AmrTech .......................... il..67"1.
Ashland 011 ...........................51 ~

Mtmbrr: The Associated Press, and the Otuo
Ncws~per Assoc&amp;~tion

AT.T..................................... 41'1t.

POSTMASTER: Send address correcuons to
The Da1ly Scnttnel, II 1 Coun Sr , Pomeroy,
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26 Weeh

Uueva lhlc, 89, of Colum'bus, a former Pomeroy resident, died Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1997 at Mount Carmel Medical Center, Columbus.
She was the daughter of the late ~- and Mrs. Harry Keiser. Others preceding her.in death were her husband, Henry lhle; a sister, Dorothy Hastier;
and a brother, Paul Keiser.
She is survived by a sister, Harriet Dillard of Lancaster; a sister-in-law,
Aorence Keiser of Columbus, and several nieces and nephews.
Services were at the Boulevard Presbyterian Church, with the Rev Robert
Armstrong officiating. Entombment was at Union Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be sent 10 the Anhritis Foundation or the Boulevard?
Preb terian Chun:h. Columbus.
·

John 'Wes' Sheets Jr.

86'

By The Associated Press

Time capsule consultant now available
By Joseph Spear
One of the things I think I could
do really well, tf the column bus•-'
ness went to pot, 1s superv;se time
capsule projects.
The two enterprises are simtlar in \
some ways. No columnist can justly
claim the pundit's mantle if he Qr she
can't define the age, whtch is also
what time capsule expens do.
There is also an art to both
endeavors, I think. You can't JUSt
throw stuff into a column willy-nilly,
'11nd yoU' can't be arbitrary with a
lime capsule either.
You have to choose the contents
carefully, so that a person who opens
the tube in a hundred years will be
able to feel what it was like to live in
1997, and perhaps be moved to say
~omething hke, "My, isn't this an
extraordtnary ;tem to mclude in this
capsule?"
1
For example, it would not be terribly enlightening, in my judgment,
to simply enclose an article about
the 22 percent of the educated and
well-read people of the United
States of America who believe that
extraterrestrials are in contact with
our planet. or about the sizable numbers who are convinced that Little
Aliens landed in Roswell, N.M., in
1947 and that our leaders conspired
to conceal this event from us.
A plain news story would not do

•

IMansfield ls1• I•

'.

A Pomeroy man was arrested Friday night after iodiCtrnents charging
htm with rape and escape were filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun.
~
Jamie D. Gerber, age unreported, ;s accused of raping his wife on July
24 on Laurel Street in Pomeroy, accolrling to Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office investigator Jeff Miller. He was onginally arrested by Pomeroy
Police on allegations of domestic violence and then ned the police department.when the rape allegations surfaced, resulting in the escape charge,
Miller added.
M;ller was arrested in Middlepon by Me;gs County shenffs deputies
and is bemg held ;n the Meigs County Jail pendmg an arratgnment.
Rape ;sa felony of the first degree cal'rying a possible penalty of 10
years in prison and a S20,0QO fine. Escape, as charged, 1s a felony of the
second degree and carries a possibl'e penalty of etght years and a $15,000
fine.

Utreva lhle

MICH.

Brutality never made _the newspapers
By Nat Hentoff
When I was not yet 20, I spent
nearly every night at a jazz club, the
Savoy Cafe, in the black part of
Boston. In an alley next to the
Savoy, white cops would periodically beat up certain black men of the
neighborhood. It Wl\5 intended as a
lesson in deterrence }be victims
were not arrested, but the cops' susptcion was they were capable of
domg something wrong.
· This brutality never made the
papers and, so far as I know, nobody
complained to the police comm;ssioner. In those days the police were
largely immune from criticism, let
alone pumshment -- especially when
there were complaints from that pan
of town
Ever since what A. Philip Randolph called the " unfinished •IVil
rights revolution," charges of police
brutahty often do make the papers.
But in a number of cities, as crime
rates go down , accusations of police
vtolence go up. The attendant publicity adds to black anger and frustration because pumshment of outof-control pollee ;s mostly light or
nonexistent
The late Johnny Gammage, driv\ng his cousin's Jaguar late at night
through a nearly all-whnc suburb of
Pittsburgh, caught the attention of
local police. They later said that as
he stepped out of the expensive car,
he seemed to he carrymg a gun. In
fact, it was a cell phone. As reponed
by National Public Radio, "Gam-

Pomeroy man fJeld on two charges

coaditions and

.

Bank One .............................52'1..
Bob Evans ............................ 17~.
Borg-Warner .......................54"1.
Champion ............................. 19%
Charm Shps .......................... 5'~.
City Holding ............................39
Federal Mogul ....................... 35~
Gannett ................................. 98'1•
Goodyear .............................. 65'!.
Kmart ..................................... 11~

Lande End............................. 28''

Ltd ......................................... 22~
Olk Hill Flnl .......................... 20~
OYB .........................................38
One Valley ............................ 43'Peoples ................................. 38~
Prem Flnl............................... 20~
Rockwell ...............................63'h

RD-Shell ................................ 54~
Shoney'a ...................................6
Star Bank .............................. 44'.4
Wancly'a .............................. .22"1.
Worth1nglon ......................... 20'l.

-·-·-

Stock reporta are the 10:30
a.m. quQtes provided by Adveat
o_f Gallipolis.

I

·

.J

John "Wes" Sheets Jr., 72, Cheshire, died Friday, Aug. 8, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born May 30, i 925 in Frame, W.Va., son of the late John Sheets Sr. and
Mary Alice Fields Dotson, he was a landlord, and attended the Clvisuan Community Church in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Surviving are a sister-in-law, Margaret L Sheets of Pomeroy ; several
nieces and nephews; and special friends, Ruby L. Coughenour, Bill Gloyd,
Alex Halley and Ralph Coleman.
He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Ezra Sheets and Charles
Sheets; three brothers in infancy; and a nephew, Don Sheets
Services were conducted at II a m. today, Monday, Aug. 11 , 1997 in the
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with Pastor Dan Wellman officiating. Burial was in the Standish Cemetery. Visitation at the ,funeral home
was held Sunday. ,

Meig~

announcements

School registration
Parents of students who are new to
the Southern Local School District
may enroll their children at their
respective schools from Aug. 19 to
22, 9-11:30 a.m. Bring binh certificate, Social Security card, shot record ·
and any legal custody papers. New
kinrtergarten students would reg;ster
at the Jamor high building. Parents of
first graders should call to find out
where their child will attend school.
The first day of classes ;s Aug. 25 and
lunch prices and bus routes will be
the same as last year. For more information call 949-26 I I.

Sayns to 1alher
The Martm and Emma Roush
Sayre family reunion w11l be held
Sunday at Star Mill Park in Racine.
A potluck lunch will be held at noon .
Dinner set
The 31st annual homemade noodle dinner will be held at the
W;lkesville United Methodist
Church. Homemade beef and chicken noodle dmner w;ll be served
along with homemade p;es and tee
cream.

Minor injury reported In accident
A Long Bottom man was slightly injured in a two-car accident Saturday at the intersection of State Route 7 and County Road 32 (Eagle Ridge),
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Matthew F Morris, 20, 47030 Showalter Road, was not treated at the
scene , according to the patrol.
Troopers said Manis was southbound on 7 at8:45 a.m. when he fa;led
to slow in time and struck the rear of a car driven by Lester L. Parker,
40, 37450 West Shade Road, Pomeroy.
'
Parker had slowed to make a left tum onto Eagle Ridge at-rhe time of
the crash, according to the repon.
Damage to both cars was moderate, and Moms was cued for assured
clear d1stance.

Area man Indicted for felcmy DUI
A Galltpolis man was indicted last week on a felony charge of dnving
under the mnuence.
Leonard L. Hurlow, age unreported, Galltpohs, was charged man mcident that occurred m May. The indictment alleges that Hurlow has three
prior DUI convicttons in the past six years.
He was also charged with driving under suspension, failure to use tum
Stgnals and solicitmg for prostitution, all miSdemeanor offenses
·
Felony DUI ts pumshable by an 18-month pnson term w;th a mandatory sentence of not less than 60 days, a $750 fme and alcohol rehabilitation treatment.

Theft reports made to sheriff
A citizens band radio and cellular phone were reported stolen from a
logging truck along Number 9 Road near ReedsVIlle either Thursday
evenmg or Friday mornmg
The Hems were stolen from a truck belonging to Pletcher Logging, New
Lexington, whtch ts working in the Shade RIVer State Forest, according
to a Metgs County Sheriffs Department report. The truck was also vandalized, the report stated.
In add1t1on, Shelly Pncc, Carpenter Htll Road, rcpoted Thursday night
that someone had entered her residence and stole her telephone and
answering machine.
_

Reunion set
Descendants of Abraham and
Margaret Fon:e Withams w;ll gather
Golf meeting set
A meetmg for all mlerested East- Saturday at the Southstde Park on
Depuues o( the Mc1gs County Sher;tfs Department Friday arrested
em H;gh School golfers will be held Dairy Lane, Athens, for a reunion. A Robert HolTman, Middleport, on a warrant chargmg domestic violence.
at Meigs County Golf Course on potluck luncheon will be served at I He ;s be1ng held m the Meigs County Jail.
Tuesday at 4 p.m. Funher quest;ons p.m.
should be directed to Coach Johnson
at949-2 107.Extra appearance
Christian corned tan Mtke Warnke
Reunion announced
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A gers who tried to run away when Sgt
will make an extra appearance
The Dorst reumoq w;ll be held tonight at 7 at the Ash Street Freewtll discount depanment store that pro- Randy Hickerson pulled over a
Sunday at the home of Carl' and Baptist Church' in Middlepon.
vided jobs and traming m a poor speeding car early Sunday. F;shcr
Ernest Dorst with a pOtluck dinner at
neighborhood was &lt;lestroyed m a not was weanng a bulletproof vest and
noon.
prompted by the killing of a black repeatedly resisted arrest, includtng
the usc of pepper spray. Hickerson
murder suspect by a white policeman
Nobody was hurt in the rioung or shot at him twice; one shot was
fire Sunday and there were no arrests, deflected off the vest and the other hit
said Officer Frank Leggett, assistant Fisher in the chest
Police satd Hickerson tmmed;atcCOLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- stown, Lancaster, Wapakoneta, su'pervtsor in police commumcations.
ly
tried
to revive Fisher.
The
area
was
qUiet
early
today.
OhiO direct hog prices at selected Mount Vernon, Bucyrus, Creston,
The
Dollar
General
Store
was
buytng points Monday as provided Caldwell and Gallipolis:
Hogs: uneven, 3.00 lower to 1.00 burned hours after people gathered in
by the IJ.S. Department of Agriculanger over the shootmg of Leon R.
higher.
ture Market News:
F;sher, 23, of Nashville. Pohce put
Butcher hogs: 40.00-59.75.
Barrows and gtl~: mostly steady;
Cattle: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.00 the crowd at under I00, but a witness
demand and movement moderate.
said 200 to 300 people were present,
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country higher.
Slaughter
steers· cho1ce 62.00- some throwing rocks and bottles at
points 55.00-56.00, few 56.50; plants
officers.
68.50;
select
55.00-64.00.
55.50-57.00.
The store provtdcd inexpensive
Slaughter heifers: cj10ice 61.50U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 50.00goods
as well as a job-traming pro68.00; select 55.0Q-64.00 and down .
54.00; 210-230 lbs . 45.00-50 00.
gram
for
a neighborhood dominated
Cows: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.00
Sows: steady.
by
the
Sam
Levy Homes housing
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 42.00-45.00, higher; all cows 49.00 and down
project
Bulls: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.00
few 41.00; 500-600 lbs. 45.00-47.50,
About $100,000 in merchandise
higher; all bulls 59.75 and down.
few over 1\00 lbs. 47.50-49.00.
was
destroyed , Dollar spokesman
Veal calves steady; choice 127.00
Boars: 38.00-41.00.
Cabot
Pyle sa1d. The fire also ftleans
and down.
Estimated receipts: 30,000.'
an
end
to a JOb-traimng program at
Sheep and lambs: 19.00 higher;
_Prices from Producers Livethe
store
that graduated more than
chotce wools 70.00-93.50; . choice
stot:k Assot:iation:
400
people
the past four years .
Hog market trend for Monday· 50 clips 68.00-95 50; feeder lambs 97.50
"It's
like
losmg my firstborn, " Cal
and down; aged sheep 54.00 and
cents higher.
Turner
Jr,
chairman
of Dollar GenSummary of last week's auc- down.
eral
Corp,
sa;d
Sunday.
"It's my
tions at HUisboro, Eal!&gt;n, Fanner·
great hope that thiS IS a nuke that Will
never reoccur. ••
In the pollee account ofthe shootmg. Fisher was one of three passcn-

Deputies arrest man on warrant

Shooting spurs Nashville riot

Today's livestock report

.EMS units log 15 calls
Umts of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Servtce recorded IS
cal)s for assistance Saturday and
Sunday Units respondtng included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH ,
8:59a.m. Saturday, State Route 7,
Chester, motor vehtcle acc;dent, Matt
Moms and Lester Parker, refused
treatment, Chester Volunteer Ftre
Department assisted;
12:13 a.m. Sunday, Royal Oak
Resort, Pomeroy, Renee Laudermilt, ,
Veterans Memonal Hosp;tal ;
3 19 a.m. Sunday, Pearl Street,
Middleport, Bonnie Lawson, treated
at the scene;
I p.m. Sunday, Pine Grove Road,
Racine, Vera Haymond, VMH ;
2·28 p.m Sunday, East Main
S[!'eer, ·Pomeroy, Raymond Granat,
Holzer Med1cal Center;
6J4 p.m. Sunday, Old Portland
Road, Jeanie Ross, VMH,
8.44 p m. Sunday, Glen Street,
Syracuse, Anna Brown, VMH ;
11:38 p.m. Sunday. Pearl Street,
Kwsi Lane, treated at the scene.
COLUMBIA TWP. VFD
2:57 p m. Saturday, Pomt Rock
Road, structure fire at Frank Shtltz
property, Rutland squad asststed,
firefighter Larry Birchfield transported to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
I0·18 p.m. Sunday, Ball Run
Road and SR 143, William Stalker,
VMH.
RACINE
6: 16 p.m., VFD and squad to
Rowe Road, structure fire at Shannon
Pierce residence, Shannon Pierce

and Bobbi Vance,_ treated at the
scene
REEDSVILLE
7:45a.m. Sunday, SR 124, Thelma Wc;s, Hocking Valley Hospnal :
9:19p.m Sunday, SR 124, Tom
Seyoc, Camden-Clark Memonal
Hospttal.
SYRACUSE
4:08 p.m. Satulrlay, VFD to Oak
Alley, smoke odor at Maxmc
Realmere restdence, Syracuse squad
assisted.
TUPPERS PLAINS
I: 16 p.m. Sunday, West Shade
Road, Chester, Bertha Smith, VMH.

"Bill Of Fair"

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 8 - Edward
Brown, Paul Brownmg, Wilham Darnell, Jess;ca Lyons, Frank Mills,
Mrs. Stephen McKenna and daughter, Krista! Oiler.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Saunders, son, Gallipohs.
Discharges Aug. 9 -Tanya Reffitt, Jess;e Nance, Dorothy Roush,
Margaret Hammond, Joseph Hall,
Peggy Geiger, Lee Carroll.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Metzler, son, Thurman ; Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Russell, daughter, West Columbia, W.Va.
Discharges Aug. 10 - Mrs. Rooney Saunders and son, Mrs. Scott
Russell and daughter, Sarah Sydnor,
Beverlee Houdasheft.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Combs, son, Racine.
(Published with ~rmission)

For Monday, August 11
7:00am
9:00a.m
9:00a.m
9.00 a.m.
12:00 p.m.
12:30 p.m.
I 00 p.m. ,
1:00 p.m.
I 30 p.m.
4:00-8:00 p.m.
4 00 p:m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
ll:OOp.m.

7:00a.m.
8:00a.m
!O:OOa.m.

1:00 p.m.
4:00-8:00

Monday, August 11
Gates Open
Linle Miss and Mister Contest- Hill Stage
4-H Horse Show- Ho;se Arena (over the hill)
Draft Horse Show (Show Arena)
Junior Fair Poultry Show followed by Open
Class Poultry Show· Show Arena
Flower Show Judging- Senior Fair Building
Hay Show (Soil &amp; Water ConservationBooth)
Open Class Flower Show- Senior Fair Bldg
Hotticullure Judging
KAROKE with It~ North - Hill Stage
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
Junior F11r Sheep Show- Show Arena
followed by Open Class Sheep Show
Tractor Pull- Pull Track
Gates Close
Tuesday, AuiiUSt U
Phil Montro110- Sponsor or Circus
Gates Open
Junior Fair Rabbit Show- Show Arena
Toucbh &amp; Teamm- sponsored by 4-H Horse Comminee
Open Class Beef Show (show arena)
followed by Junior Fair Beef Breeding
KAROKE
Jeff North- Hill

�'

Monday, August 11, 1997

The J)aily Sentinel

Sports

.

&gt;

/

Remlinger's arm, Stynes' bat
help Reds beat Dodgers 8-1
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Los
Angeles Dodgers p1cked a bad t1me
to play one of the1r worst games
M1ke Remlinger p1tched a four·
hiller for hiS second career complete
game and Chns Stynes went 4 for-4
w1th a homer Sunday, leadmg the
Cmcmnat1 Reds to an 8-1 vJctory
The second-place Dodgers lost
two of three m the senes and lost
ground m Jhe NL West. slippmg to
2 In behind San FranCISCO What
made 11 worse was the way they
closed out the senes
The Dodgers malic three errors
and a handful of m1splays that were
ruled hns, managed only four smglcs
and wound up w1th their most lopSided defeat smcc a 14-0 loss m
Atlanta on Apnl 28
"That sltouldn 't happen, cspe·
c1ally this lime of yt!llr" sa1d Enc
Karros. who Singled home the
Dodgers' run wnh two outs m 1he
mnth "Our defense was absolutely
alroc1ous, especially m the first

1nnmg

'We had three errors and we
• should have had seven, probably
That's as bad a game as I've seen us
play lhl&lt; year I d say It was bad
Pathetic If we play like we played
lg\l)ly, we're gomg home for good.
nol JUst to LA '
'It was JUsl a bad game."' man
ager B1ll Russell sa1d "It happens
You don't hke to sec 11 happen. especmlly lhJS lime ol year"
Wh•le the Dodgers struggled. the

Reds got back-to-back vtctones tor
the tirst t1me smce July 16-17
Eduardo Perez drove 10 three runs
w1th a pa~r or doubles and Reggte
Sanders added a two-run homer as
the Reds 1mproved to 7-9 under
manager Jack McKeon, who took
over for Ray Kntght on July 25
sa•d~

"I'm exc1ted" McKeon

'The way we're play1ng. 1l's really

commg together Th1s IS the first day
that I've Iell the guys really pulling
together
' I told em m the clubhouse
We re not doormats anymore Thts IS
lbe start We can play w1lh the b1g
boys I JUSt wtsh we had more
games"
Cmcmnau remamed 1n fourth
place m the NL Central, II In
games bchmd Houston
The Reds won without leadoff
hmcr De1on Sanders, who got a cor
ltsone mJectmn for a bulgmg diSc 10
hiS lower back Saturday mght He s
expected back m the lineup Monday
mght m San Frant1sco
RcmhngeF (5-4), a rchevcr gettmg a chance to wm a spot 1n the
rotauon next season, allowed s10gles
to B•lly Ashley m the second mn10g.
Todd Zc1lc 10 the seventh ,md Nelson L~r~anu and Karros 10 the mnlh
The lett handcr, 3 0 m three stuns
lh~&gt; season, walked two and matched
lt c.trccr h1gh w1th ntnc "ilnkcouts
The Dodgers were hmmg 304
over their last c1ghl games bctore
Remlinger bcallhcm HIS only olh·
cr complete game was m hts maJor

By The Auociatecl Prell
Far removed from playoff contention, the Texas Rangers made
thmgs difficult for ALCenlral-leader
Cleveland ...._
"You know what they say about
the hrst-place teams playmg clubs
lhnt nrc 10. 12 games out," sa1d Juan
· Gonzalez. who hn one ofTeus' live
solo homers m a 7-6 v1clory Sunday
"They better watch out Teams that
far back can play free and easy and
let loose That's what we're domg."
Warren Newson hll two home
runs and Rusty Greer and Lee
Stevens also homered for Texas. II
games hehmd first-place Anaheim m
tHe AL West The five homers were
the most ever by an opponent at
Jacobs F1cld
Texas opened the scnes w1Jh a
VICtory Fnday mghl, then spht a doubleheader Saturday - Cleveland's
only VICtory 'm seven games The
lndtans have a three game lead over
Ch1cago and Milwaukee
"It's frustralmg the way lhmgs
arc gomg," Cleveland's Bnan,G•Ies
sa1d We ' re all struggling I'm a•
gu11ly as anybody We' re alllrymg to
hll a sJX-run homer, and you can't do
that "
G1les htl a two-run homer w1lh
two outs m the nmth off John Wetteland Omar VIZqucl followed wnh
a double. but Wetteland struck out
Manny Ram~re z for hJS 25th save
Mall WhiteSide (2 I) pllchcd two
scoreless mmngs
Thts team never lost confidence
durmg the bad limes and IS still conlldcnt now when we arc wmnmg "

league debut June 15, 1991, when he
p1tched San Francisco lo a 4-0 VIC·
tory over Plltsburgh
"When you get the opponunny,
1t's a dream come true," sa1d Rem~
hnger, 31 "It's the same lhmg now
Every day 1s d dream come true to he
here and have success "
The Reds took advantage of the
Dodgers errors and a poor perfor·
mance by Pedro Astncto (7-8), who
lasted only four mmngs and took hts
first loss smce June 24 Astac1o gave
up e1ght hils and siX runs, five
earned
Stynes, called up from the mmurs
all he start of the ser.es, went '1-for3 10 hts stan at second base on Saturday mght De1on Sanders' InJUry
opened the way for Stynes to make
the lineup aga•~ Sunday. when be got
a career-htgh tour hils and tmproved
to ?·for-7 as a NatiOnal Leaguer
Styncs was obtamed from Kansas
Cuy m a July 15 trade mvolvmg
pitcher Hector Carra.o;co
'Evcrylhmg the la'l two days has
been lamasllc," sa1d Styncs. wh&lt;&gt; got
to come out ollhe dugout and t1p h"
cap after the homer "But 11's only
two days and they re gone now I JUst
want to do the best I c.m when I gel
a chance to play "
Perez doubled home a pmr ol runs
m the tim mn10g, c•tendmg hiS hll
ling 'lreak to a career-h1gh e1ghl
games. and douhlcd home another

run m the third Regg•c Sanders lol-

.

'

'

BACK IN TIME -The Cinc:innati Reds' Pokey
Reese d1ves back to third base ahead of the tag
by Los Angeles ahohatop Greg Gagne aftet"
lowed wtlh hiS 15th homer and hiS
nt nth m IR games smcc he returned
!rom a sprmncd ankle
Stynes h1l hiS lirst m.tJOr league
homer. a !&lt;iulo sh()t m the s1xth oil
Mark Guthne for an K-0 le.1d
Notes: The tour mnmg slml w.1s
A~tat.:to \ shortest smt.:c hts last loss
on June 24 when he gave up sal( runs

"

Reese passed lhtrd on Chns Stynes' fourthInning tnfield single In Sunday's National league
game In Cincinnati, where the Reds won 8-1. (AP)

only l 2/l mnmgs or·' (l·2 loss to
Col&lt;&gt;r.ld&lt;&gt; Ashley lcll the g.une m
the SIJCih mnmg hcc.tusc ol slillnes~
10 hiS lower hack
Reds c.1tcher
Joe Oliver got .1 sh1prucnt ol ,\
dozen h.us dchvcrcd hy ,, Poslal Scr·
v1~.:e worker hclorc the !:!arne Oltv.
er w.1s c.lown to unc h.u hc~,;.tusc Ius
sh1pmcnt h1Kl hccn dcl"ycd hy 1he

In

UPS stnkc
Until lhls sene~
S1ynes h.1d only .1 p.ur nl three 1111
games m h1s ~,;~uccr - M.1y 10 .md
Mily 121.1st y~.:.1r lm K.m~.1s Cuy 111
Sealllc
Oulllclder C'uriJS Good
wm reported tn fnple 1\ lndJ,m.lpo
hs on Sund.1y He w.1s demoted
TI1Ur~.ty ,1ltcr le,l\ mg thl te 1111 111 .1

National
League
roundup

•
•

•

•
&gt;·

"'•
::
:
~

.

.,
•·
·;

:•

••

lOth for hiS 29th save
Rook1e Tony Saunders. who was
3·0 w1th a I 35 ERA 1n three stans
agamst Atlanta blanked the Braves
on two hns unulthey broke through
for two runs m the e1gh1h
In other games. Philadelphia heat
S! LoUis 8-0, San Franctsco got past
Montreal6 3 m 12 mnm~s . Houston
downed New York 11-8. San D•ego
beat Ch~eago 4-3 and Colorado
defeated Plllsburgh 8-7
Phlllles 8, Cardinals 0
Cun Schilling pllched a three-hiller at Busch Stadmm as Phlladclphw
contmucd Us surpnsmg surge The
Phllhcs, desp1lc hemg 32 games
bchmd m the NL East have wnn I0
of n
Sch•llmg (12 10) did not allow a
runner past hrst hasc He strut.:k out
c1ght m hts second shutout ol the sea·

son
Scou Rolen homered and drove m
three run"' St Lou1s losllor th\! nmth
lime m II games dcsp11c the return

ot nght fielder Bnan Jordan nul
s1m:c June 26 because u( u hat.:k
prohlcm
Giants 6, Expos 3 (12)
S.m franc~SC\1 cmnplcted ,, 7-l

•

~

•

Baseball
AL standings

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Saturday's sc:ores
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lk1n111~ l nrnnh•"

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fut"sch•y's ~arne~
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1n,,,,n 1 ·~·n 4-.fl) •J n~

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K Ul ~:l\ Clly (Rn~ 1d11 K K) 11 NY
Y •ni.:..""Cs (l 11fll: 11 'il 7 l'i j1 m
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AL leaders
HA I"I IN(, J llkll lt;L~ One •!!• 1~ I
(LIVI I /\NU
117 ~1
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(I E\IF.LANI&gt; 11\ W (_lark l ~o:.1111~
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H2 0 N~1l1 Ntw y ,yk
III~ Z Si:,111k l 2ll

NL standings

RUNS Knol'llm~h Mmnl'~• 1 t 'II
G lrll11f1arr 1 Bt•llt.lfl '10 Grtll\"y S..: 111k
Kl J~ter Nl'w Ynrk /C2 I M 1rnn~l
~~~~~~ Ml Curt ~auk 11(1 runy(ltrk
Dt UttU 7}( 8 I Hunlc r Otlrl'll 7/t

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Muut~•,l• lf•h 717 I! IJ ln,l. sHu
ll•hu11uh I I ~ 1" l'i'IJ Wdh
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lk :!-1 1 lun, N~w Ytrlo: 207 (l.,mtn1
I \)flll\l I l(p Mil~~~~~· It thllllt ,, '&lt;lj l
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Tonl~ht's gam•s
Huulil llll ((,ar~ll-1 Ml II NY M~l ~
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ll•nJa cllruwn 10-M i nl All 11111 eM 111
llu~ J'i 1) 740 11111
ll ll~ I~U (.uh~ (It tUS1 10 01 U I~~~ All
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llnnU 1( l.ul~r M Ml 11 H lll'ilnll (H maplt111 1J7). MU'ipm

Tuesday's games
Tn

HOM1 RUNS I 1\1 HI IIIli N,"
Y1tlo: l7 {nil .. \ s, till• 1( M,(,tttn:
Clil.lllltl 1.j lltumt lii\IIIANI) \(1
1111 ) l.ltrl. U.. 1n11 !f M V111JJI1n
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S 101 I N liAS I S II I Hun1.r I),
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l'hii.U..:IplutM St l..tlll t~ ll
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1\1111111-1 II &gt;fill:! l
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Sunday's scores

J!

Sunday's SC()re!i

UH 1~,.., ~ -1 l!IVIIAND 1
lll VII AND .l h .u&gt; ,
l h r~ u,.: • Wlm,. s..,, "i s~ tllk !.
l»t tn11 l l•nn1tu,
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Ph111tk:l11lnt

Vaughn hll hiS 12th humcr and
first smcc July 22 Gwynn was ln
spend hts th11d straight mght 10 the
hospllal Sunday as a prcc.Jullun alter •
the stones were removed A team
tramer sa1d there w.ts a chance the
seven-lime NL haumg champmn
could play lomghl at hume
R1ckey Henderson stole three
bases tor the Padres who wun lor
JUst the lourth tunc m 12 g.uncs
Newly lU.:qUircJ Lance Johnson
homered hw ChH.:.tgn wh1ch has losI
n ol 17
Astros II, Mets 8
D.trryl Kllc won hts nmlh str.ught
deciSion us Hnuston s hillers helped
hm1 u\Cr(;ome hts worst st,lrt ot the

Cuughhn would not speculate
By The Associated Press
The Denver Broncos gol some what Jacksonville m1ght do 11
good news !rom John Elw.1y The Brunell IS lost lor the sea,on For
Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina now, the Jaguars w1ll turn lo Rob
Panthers can't say the same lhmg Johnson, who has thrown all ol sev·
en passes m two season~
aboulthe~r lirst-slnng quanerhacks
It's a whole new hallgame
Wh1le Elway smd Sunday he
now,"
Johnson sa1d 'I've done
could be hack m action sooner than
e•JI\)cled tollnwmg an InJUry Mark well 10 pracllcc Now we II find out
Brunell was Josl to the Jaguars and what I can do m lbe NFL "
Brunell Signed a live-year, $31 5
Kerry Collins to the Panthers w1th
sertous InJUnes suffered m e•h•h111on mllhon contract two weeks ago
Collins meanwh•lc, underwent
games over the weekend
Brunell. who camed the Jaguars Jour hours ol surgery on Sunday H'c
to the AFC llllc game I,ISl season m likely Will miSs three or four regulartheir second year InJUred hiS nghl season games Al the lalcsl. he
knee m Saturday n•ght's 3K-16exh•- should he back fur the Monday mght
bllion w1n over the New York home game Sept 29 agamst San
Gmnl' Colhns had hiS JaW broken m Francrsco
Unulthcn. the quarterback JOb on
Saturday mght's 23-13 loss to Denthe Panthers wtll he handled by JOUrver
The extent olthe IOJUry to Brunell -!lcyman Steve Beuerlcm. un JJ.year
rcmamed unclear Once the swclhng veteran· who was 3-1 as a stancr 10
goes down. Brunell will have an 1996 when Collins went down Wilh
arthroscopic rrnccdure ln lurlher scver,tl IOJuncs
· We were m a sumlar poSIImn
.tsscss the InJUry The Panthers smd
Collms would prnbahly he nut lor up last year. and Steve did a very •·•ruto s1x weeks, whu.:h mc.ms he could hlc JOh lor us ·coach Dom Capers
He has pl.1ycd well m b1g
rmss the tc.tm 's lirst lour regular scu s.ud
games,
not
only Ior U!'i hut throughson games
We remum hopeful th.ll the out h1s L:.treer ''
In Denver Elw.ty threw Sund.1y
d.un,i.lgc ts not too ex1cns1vc .md
..
Mark l:ould return at snmc p&lt;nnt, •
lor the lirslliiiiC stncC rurtunng hiS
••
* • cn.lch Tum Cnughlm said ul Brunell. nght h1ccps ten Jon Nul unly d1d he
• who led the NFL m passmg yards s.1y 11 !ell g&lt;lod , bullhe quiutcrh.~&lt;:k
•• (4,367) ,md rushmg yards for .t olddcd. . there s rmh.lhly a ch.mce
he would pluy lor the Broncos nc~t
qu.tnerbaek (W6) last sea«m
'
Sund.1y m their e•h•h1111m g.unc .11

Olerud. and ctght 1uns m "'iCVc n
mmngs He h.1d mil .1lluwctl nwrc
th.m l1vc runs Ill any ol lu ~ pn:v 1ous
2:) starts th1s yc.Jr
N~.:w York nMdc tWn cuo1s m the
Ill st mnmg ,as the Astrus S(;ored II vc
tunes Derek B'\lll.uer home~ed .md
Chuckle Carr drove m three run~ lor
Vlsltmg

Houslun

Rockies 8, Pirates 7
Rmk1e Nc1(1 Perez lnt ""RBI""
gle m the eighth mmng .uKI Colur.Jdu
(;omplctcd .a three !!·llnr sweep .ll

sc.t~on

Cnors Ftdd 1 he Rockies hc.u P1tt~
hurgh hy the ~amc K·7 ~u 1re lor the
sccund s tr~ught d.ty
D.mte B1chct ll: htJmcred .mU
Andre:-. Gal.u1 .1g.t Jrt)Ve 111 IW\1 1uns
ytvmg hun .1 mnJor lcagu..: h:.tJmg

K1lc (16- ~) gave ur Ill hils
mdudm~ a p~ur ol homers hy John

109 RB!s Larry W.llk" w,JS II !111
' drnrr•ng hun ln lX4

Atlanta Braves retain Maddux
with five-year, $57.5M contract
By TOM SALADINO
ATLANTA (APJ - Fnr nnw
Greg Maddux IS baseball's hlgheslp.ud rlayer

It's nn b1g de,JI."' Maddu• s,ud
shortly alter s1gmng ,, hvc-y~.1r ~,;nn·
lracl cxtensum Sundny With the
Atlanta Br.tvcs that Will pay hun

$'7 , million
Somchndy else wtll get more
next w(;ek m.:x t month whenever·
(See MADDUX on Page 5)

wmkl""

21 l •y kw Otklmt! 1 1

NL leaders
BAmNG l W tll:..:r t nlunuJ , lt(-1
Gwynn S m OM.j!n \HI Pi uz 1 I•" An
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S..m D•~i!'' '19 Mark Gr 1t• lht•l!tl'

l .. ~nkfunJ S1 U1U1~ lll
RUNS I W;~lk ~ r (nhlf:&amp;d( 10(,
U!j!Jlltl Hm• ~ 1n11 10\ G,t l t rr•~·~ &lt;"••I
nr.1Ju Hfl Annds S m I r llk:ISlU X'i It lj!
well Houstnn HI Ent YuUIIj! (. ulnn.J,,
76 ChiJ'IIlT Jonc~ A11allll 7l Mm1tkst
l..1.1s Ani!~k ~ 71
RBI Cml1rr '1:\11 Co lor 11.lt1 I~~ Ba~
wdl Huu ~ tun 102 l W,dkcr (nlomdu
97 Gwynn San l&gt;lt:[I.O .,6 C hiJ')Jl~ f
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Basketball
WNBA standings
kustt&gt;rn t:oor..nn«

.1\: L l&lt;t.

W...

Ntw Yurk

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-17!'1

-NOTICE"Hatr Century" Old Lady
Need1 Reeonotructedl
Major rrame work
needed. 8 rick laying
•peciali•t a mu11. One or
two houn experience
required.
Pleue call 992-7296.
Alk ror Deanua.

Maddux •••

Meigs County Fair Week
'
Savings!

Sale Prices Good 8/1,1 thru 8/16 1997

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

AthletiCs 41 Brewers 3
B..,wers 9, Athletics 5
At Oal&lt;,land. Bnan Banks hll hJS
tirst career grand slam and had .1
carccr-h1gh t1ve RBis as Milwaukee
salvaged a doubleheader spill
Jason McDonald promoted to
Oakland earlier m the day, hll a two
out douhle 10 thco11nth m the opener
Milwaukee's Bryce Flone 0 l)
pllched live mnmgs lor the VIctory
1n lhe second game l1mmy Haynes
(0 2) took the loss Tilson Bnlo
stanmg hiS first game lor Oakland
hit h1s lust home run ol the sca!'ion
Oakland's Billy Taylor 0-4) won
the opener dcspne hiS s11th hlown
save of the year und th~rd m lour
games Bob W1ckm.m (6-~) was the
loser
Orioles 4, Angels 3
At Anaheim C.1l R1pken 's two
run homer 1n the e1ghlh mn10g lilted Balumorc over Anuhenn JUst
hours alter the Angels lc.1rned le.td
oil hiller Tony Ph1lhps h.1J hcen

STEALS SECOND- The Texas Rangers' Fernando Talis (right) steals second base as Cleveland second baseman Tony Fernandez watts for
.trrcstcd tor t.:ocmnc posscssmn
R1pken s 14th homer J!rec lnl
rel1cver M1ke James (4 4) who h.1d
JUst replaced D.1rrcll M.•y The
Angels WCnl up 1 2m the seventh on
an RBI Single by Tm1 Salmon who
also homered 10 the sc(;ond mnmore
A.rm.mdo Bemlez (2-l) pllched I
Ill mntngs lor the Vl(; tory .mtJ
Randy Myers ~cltlhc l1n.tl three llUls
lor hts ]4th s,1ve
) Anahc1m s Todd Greene hom~:ted
In the SI:J\Ih to 111.: II .11 2
Red Sox 6, Royals 4
At Btlsltm Ntllll.tr Gan.:l.tp.arr.a h1t

the throw from the plate In the second inning of
Sunday's Amencan League game 1n Cleveland,
where the Rangers won 7-6. (AP)

,, twu·run homer 111 the thmJ 1nmnc!
,mtl douhkd hom~.: the co .thc,Jd run
In the c1ghlh .as Boston.. hc.1t K.m!&gt;.,l!&gt;.
C1ty Ill ex tend Kcvm App1cr s wtn
less stre.ak In l.:ll! h l st.lrts
Jun Cors1 (1 I ) prtd1cd twu
mpmg s lor the Vl ..:tory wh1lc Hellor
C,arr.lSUI ( 1·2) g.IVC ur the IW O
ctghth-mnm g 1uns lot the loss
App1cr who had wnn tu .. 1 .1 ~ 1 ~1x
dcl,;Jsrons .u Fcnw.1y P,uk l.tsteJ 4
2/\ tnnmgs , .illuwmg S IX hns .md
lour runs
Tigers 4, Blue Jays 2
AI Toronto. Or! mdo M1ller hll ,,

New Englund
mvest a th~rd - mund dr.ilt r~ek .md ,,
The 37-ycar-old Elway, IOJurcd • lot ol money m a guy m tlus huSI
l.tst Monclty drd say, however th.lt 1 ness ohv1ousl) h~.: s gmng to g~.:t the
co.tch M1ke Shanahan would makt; upper h.mJ
the Uccrston
Cowbovs Deum S.mc.Jcrs doesn 1
"I'd hkc to get some good plaY- seem to hc-wonymg .thout.J hul~m~
mg lfme 1h1s weekend," Elway sa1d diSc m hiS lower h.1ck th.u requucd
hut .1dded that he doesn't want.ln ,, wrliSnne lnJcclum .md kept hun

O.dl.ts th1 ~ se,\:\on
s.ud &lt;'owhoys h\:.ld tr.uner Jnn
M.IUrcr The~ vc mlormcJ us ol
the tnjury .nu.l .trc ke~..:pmg us
.tppnsed ol the siiU.Itlon I tkler .my
mcdu.: al 4Ul;StHJOs to the Red s mcd

push h1s comcha~.:k

out nl the

IColf sl,\IJ •

One of the most durable NFL
quuncrhncks ever Elway h,IS been
replaced JUst c1ghl limes due ln
InJUry and mtssedjusl mne starts due
to InJUry m regular-sc.L&lt;on pl.1y m hiS
14 prevmus seasons wnh the Brun
t:os
Elwuy smd he threw SO to 60
passes to wtde recc1ver Putr.ck Jcl
Jers
'I d&lt;dn l w.mt to press
I d1d
pUl some \'Ciocny on It It w~tsn't Li
lollipop · he su1d
Packers Green B.1y cn.1ch M1k&lt;
Holmgren ,tn&lt;.l gencralm.mugcr Run
Wol\ m~tst there 1s no kllker contro\crsy on the team tlcspltc Breit
Conway s lour str.ught r1eiJ go.11
mtsscs and sore leg that lorled hnn
111 miSs Fnday mght s game
Rook1c lrce agent Ry.m Longwell
k1ckcd three held goals 10 Green
Bay s 17 24 cxh1h1tton, v1c1ory o\cr
O.lkf,md hut W,IS under no lffUs\Jlns
th.1t he h.ts •' ch.m(;e lor Cunw.1y s
JOh
Brcu s gomg tn he our k1..:kcr
Holmgren sa1d
S.uJ Longwell "When )OU

Sunday
' Its Ime S.mders s.ud ,,Iter the
Reds K- 1 loss lo the Ph•I,Jdelphl.l
Ph1llies Its jUst a hlllc sore Inun
lhc shut 1 shnuld lie .tllug,hlln pl.1y
(tod.•y&gt;
Sanders 1s expc\.:tcd 'h,l(;k Ill the
lmeup tomghl m San Fr.mciSco The

wllh gellmg p.ud wh.H I m wnnh." "
• s,ud the Jnur· tune Cy Young Aw,lld
wmnc1
I don I wurry .thuut wh.tl
other guys rn.1ke ·

I

nMtr.:hcs w.1s I hour 10 manutcs He
tonkJUsl ~' mmulcs to hcut Ycvgc-

need lhc t.unc he smd
wh.tt I w.mtto dn

ny K,llelnlkm nl Russ1.1 tbe stxlh
r.mked pl.1ycr m the world
Sllll he s qu1ck l1l stlencc uny
suggcsuon Lh.u there ts no one tn
push hun tl1.1l he 1s one ol the
g.unc's .lii·LIIllC greats
"I dnn'tlouk .11 myself .md llunk
ol mysell .as the hcst ever or one nl
the best ever · S.nnpr.JS s,ud llecl
like I'm 10 the 1111ddle ol my c.lrccr
,10d I m dmng qune well ·
S.uupr.ts c,llls hunsell'l.ud h.tck
He likes hem!! .1hlc to go where he

He s domg 1l so well that he s
.tssured ol timshmg Nu I on
the ATP lour lor the lilth slr"1ghl
yc.tr
Muster tor one doesn'tth10k 1l s
hud th.ll tenms h,IS a dmmn"ntpi.Jyer
·on you lhmk 11 hurls (goll) th.n
T1gcr Woods drtves J50 y.~rds' h s
good," Muster s,ud II you gel

w.mls Wllhnutluss He ret uses must
lcquc"'t"' to du cnmmcrl.:Mis

I Jon l need the money I don t

(Cununucd trum P.1gc 4)

he s.ud
It rc.dly w.1sn l .a I.Ktor m the
ncguuuuons I w.1s more ~.:on~.:cmcd

15% off
Blk Sunflower, &amp; Striped
Sunflower, Wild Bird Seed &amp; Niger
Seed, Rabbit Pellets and Cat Food.

By TERRY KINNEY
MASON Oh1o (APl - Pete
S.unpras has won tivc tulcs tlus yc.tr
mdULhng two Gr.md Slam luurn.l·
mcnts He s m .1 strel(;h where even
.1 servtt.:..: hrc.tk ts noteworthy
S.unpr.JS he.1l lourth·r.mked
Thonl.ls Muster nt Austn.l 6 ~ 6-4
Sund.•y to wm the $2 J nulhon ATP
Ch.unrumslur It w,JS the l11st lllne
the wmncr here h.1s gone lhrough Ihe
week wuhoutlosmg •' set stncc Stcf,m Edhcrg J1J Jl 10 19K7
ll w.IS the 49th ATP Tour VIctory
lor s.unpr~l" .mU tJcU hun Wllh Dons
Bet.:kcr lor most tllles .unong .It,; II\ c

Nutmn:tl "'"llhalll.t •t=llt
liNliNN/\ II Ill N(,/\1 S Kilt 1\ul
Ill! Ji ll. d Y tlll&gt;t ~ ~ ll• Ill IJ,rtll
tll&lt;l WH c.. r ., SJI IIIII

M1~nesota

two run douhlc 111 the ~.: tghlh .mJ
Jusun Thompson p1h.:h~d ht s th1rJ
t;omplcte g.unc ol th~.: y~.:.u 1111
Dctrml
Roher! Person C~·K) lut D.unum
Eus l~y to

s!,ln lhr e1~hlh •\nd Phd
Nevm lnllowrd wuh ,, w,ilk Pmch
h1Ucr Jody Reed .tl.h..kd .a s.u.:nln,:e
hunt to move hnth runners mto sl nr~
mg poslttnn lor M1ller who l1ncd
r..:ltever D.m PIL:s.u,.: s li1st plldl to
h.: II Boh H.nnehn .1dc.lcU .1 homer 111
1he mnth
Thomr"m (II - ~) .II lowed e1gh1
h1ts

Cln(;I00,\11

The

Reds lineup

InJUry wdlpresum,thly nul mlcrklc
With h1s pl.ln!-. to pl.ty ~.:orncrh.Kk lor

Jel"i, John P~t~l the lurmer ln(.h ·
''"'' qu.•rterh~•..:k w,Js .unnng ln• e
rl.1yers w,uvcd by the leis on Sun
tl.ly
P .K I ~rent most o l l.tst ... ~.:.a~on on
the Jets devclopmenl.ll s4 u,JJ hut
w.\s a~.: tlv .ltct.l .u the end ol the sc.t
son due \o InJUries to N~.:1l 0 Donnell

.tnd Glenn Foley He

w.ts ~.:ompL:nng

With rult:y .uad lookte Chud.
Cle-ments In he on~.: nl 0 lJonndl ~

rn1ckups
Fo~r mhet pi.Jyrrs were Jcle.JSed
Runnmp: h Ilk [·n 1 Johnson s.ah:ty
Du.tne Build dekns1v~o: cnJ f-c1Ty
Grooms .tnd punter Monty K~.: y
Bengals I ou1 pl.1yers we1c cui
hy the Beng.tls nn Sum.l.1y IIKiudmg
dclens•vc h.1ek h Kclyn Borgcll.t
who w~1s signed .1... ,, lrce .t!!tJnliJom
Dctn11t m M trdl
Rnuk1e Ire..: .lgt..:nts lullh.tck D 1r
rell Medley ol Vlf~IR\,1 .mJ w1dc
rc~.: c1vcr Gcroy Sunon ol M.1ryl.md
.tbo Wl'fC w.uwd

Football Edition
Is Coming Aug~st 28th ·
1997

Sampras beats Muster in two
· sets to win ATP Championship

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Mti..r~tkdl

White SOx 1, Mariners 1
At Seaule, Doug Drabek allowed
two hils over etght mntngs and Nor·
bcrto Manm drove m two runs to
help Chicago pull w1thm three games
ol tirst-place Cleveland In" the AL
Central
Drabek (9-7) lost h1s shutout
when Ken Gnffey Jr led off the sev
enth wllh hts 36th homer, a 473-foot
shot tnlo the upper deck 10 nghl
lield
Chuck McElroy struck out Gnl
fey m tbe nmth after Seaule put run
ners on first and th1rd wllh no outs
Then. alter Mall Karchncr rchcvcd,
Edgar Mart1nc1 hll a shon ny to nght
fielder Dave Manmez He threw
home to Jorge Fubregas, whq taggcd
Joey Cora lor a game·end10g double
play
Karchner earned hiS fourth s.1ve
Omar Ohvarcs (6-7) took the loss

Yankees !1, Twins 6
AI Mmnenpohs. Chad CurtiS h1l
hiS lirst career grand slam, leadmg
New York to 1ls IOth v1ctory m 13
games
Curlls' th1rd-mnmg slam off
Trav1s M1ller (0-3) helped push th~
Yankees a season-h1gh 21 games
over 500 Ram1ro Mendoza (4-4)
worked three mn10gs and Manano
R1vtra go1 th~ last three outs for hiS
36th save
Seou Stahov1ak homered lor

Quick recovery could return Broncos' Elway to action

Scoreboard

...., •••• "'""

!l tlflll I

road tnp when J T Snow hll a
tlehreakmg two·run smglc m the
12th 10nmg
Wuh the buses loaded Snow hu
a houflcer up the m•ddle through
Montreal's drawn-m mllcld The
wm gave the Giants a 2 1/2 game
lead over Los Angeles m the NL
West
Earlier m the 12th lbe Expos
mtcnt•onally walked. Barry Bonds
The three ume NL MVI&gt; w,ts 0 for
II m the sencs wnh five stnkcouts
and " hitless m 17 at-hats
Padres 4, Cubs 3
Greg Vaughn. makmg u rare start
heeausc Tony Gwynn wa' Sldelmcd
by kidney stones. led ofl the mnlh
mmng wllh a home run onto Wave·
land Avenue as San Otego won at
Wr.glcy F1eld

Rangon mtmager Johnny Oates sa1d.
Newson pul Texas ahead 4-0
wnh a dnve off Jeff Juden (0-1) tn
the fourth, and made 11 5-4 w11h
another homer off the Cleveland
starter m the sllth Gonzalez, w1th
h1s 26th, and Stevens connected
consecutively otT Alb1e Lopez m the
e•ghlh Dnv1d Justice h1t h1s 22nd
homer for the lndmns
'
In other Amencan League games
Sunday, Ch1cago edged Seattle 2-1,
New York outslugged Mmnesota 96, Oakland spin a doubleheader
wtth Milwaukee, takmg the first
game 4-3 and droppmg the second 9·
5. Balt1more beat Anahe1m 4-3
Boston defeated Kansas Cny 6-4,
and Detro1l beat Toronto 4-2

NFL teams issue camp reports

huff

Marlins beat Braves 4-2 to continue dominance of NL champs
agreed on a $57 S million live year
contract ex tensiOn that made h1m the
h1ghest-pa1d player m haschall
We don 1 ex pee I Ihem to go
away Atlanta stuncr Tom Gla' me
sa1d ollhc Marhns · Sull Greg wms
tomorrow we get a spht .md they
gam no ground
Charles Johnson h1t ,, lc.ldoll
smgle
m the Marlins IOth and pmch
By BEN WALKER
runner Gregg Zaun took scumd
Not smcc the New York Yankees
last October has any team caused thiS wben rchcvcr M1ke B•cleckt (3 7)
made a w1ld throw on Cra1g Counmuch trouble tor the Atlanta Braves
sell
's bunt
The Flonda Marhns beat the NL
Alan
Embree rchcvcd and pmchchamp1ons for the e1ghth lime m II
hlller
Ale•
Ana' sacnliced John
games th1s season, genmg RBI smCangelOSI
followed
with a grounder
glcs by Edgar Rentcna and Gary
to
shortstop
Tony
Grattanmo
who
Sheffield m the lOth •nmng Sunday
threw
out
Zaun
at
the
plate
Rook1c
lor a 4·2 v1ctory
A sellout crowd of 47 649 at nght handcr Kevm M1llwood wok
Turner F1cld saw the Marlins cut over. but gave up the h11s to RenteAtlanta s lead 1n the NL East to 4 112 · na and Shclheld
It s very hard to 'a.Y why we vc
games
played so well agamst the Braves
'We heheve we can beat them
Johnson sa1d "They've all hcen
We feel like we can play w1th any
close
games There haven t hccn any
body Sheffield sa1d
The teams meet tnn1ght fur the blowouts They could h,l\c gone
finalume 10 the regular season w11h ellhcr way
Jay Powell 0 2) pnched I 2/J
Greg Maddux pllchmg ag.unst Kcv10
Brown Shortly belnre Sund.ty s scoreless mmngs lor the Victory and
game Maddux and 1he Br.!Ves Rohb Ncn struck out the stde m the

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Five homers help Texas beat
Tribe 7-6; Brewers split DH

Pege4
Monday,August11 , 1997

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

M.1ddux s ••gent Scnn Bur.IS
s,ud the deul rnduded .1 Slgmng
bonus ,md 1111 del erred money The
puck"gc .!Verages $11 'i million a
year and 1s guaranteed
1 love playmg here Its hecn a
great live years and !look forward
to the next hvc," smd Muddu•
Maddux ( 15-3) makes h1s next
start 1on1ght m the linaie ol a fourg.•me senes w1lh the Flonda Marlins
'You pay Jhe pnce 1f you want
the Cadillac ol pltchtng," satd
Braves shortstop Jell Blauser. who 1s
ehg•ble for free agency followmg
thiS season
Maddux smd the deal was actually mmpleied Saturday n~ght, so he

slmllcd ,u;russ the street to neagh·
horly BI,Jusur's house 1n north
Atla01.1 suhurhs
I went over thcr' .md told hun
to c.Jn wl1.1t he had tn do lo stay here
too M.tddu• s.ud wnh ,, nusch1c
vous gn n I st.tycd about an hour,
hall a hcvcrage .md went hnmc
Bor.ts who alsn 1s Blauser s
agent ind\CUled rrchmmary diSCUS
srons wllh Bmves general manager
John Schuerhol1 have begun
Blauser IS h1llmg J 16 w1th 14
home runs and 58 RBis
The 31-year-old Maddux, m the
lin at season ot a $28 mllhon II ve·
year contr.tcl thul pays h1m $6 5 nulhun thiS season, JUmped over Barry
Bonds 01 San FrJncJsco and Albert
Belle ol Cleveland m the salary
game
Bonds w1ll earn an average of
Sll 45 mtlhon a yenr, bcgmnmg 10
1999, and Belle makes $11 mdhon
"They made me a n1ce deal," sa1d

Tenms 1s

ne.~rly

somchody who\: a grc.tt p\ tycr 11 s
!!OOd for lCOOis
S,uupr.JS w.IS slung lO he c,JIIed
bor.ng ' hy the English press But
he would r.lthcr he honng Lh.m
(See ATP on Pa~e 6)

---

M.tdc.lux. who h~ls the 1m sl VICIOfiCS
10 the maJors Since 199 wuh 121
l....d he .1 tool nul to t.1k :-1t Smuc·
tllncs the gr~1ss tsn t gre( ocr on the
other s1de .md the Br.!Vcs h.1vc a hiSlory nl dumg wh,\1 ut,\kcs to wm '
TI1e nght-h.mder sa1d the negoll
.ttmns turned seruiUs the p.tst week
.md were qUickly resohed
A number was gtven."' he s,ud
That number was reached and 1h.n
w~ts tt There was no hu;kcnng buck
and Jonh There was no talkmg to the
press every day I'd gone through
that my ,last year 10 Ch1cago and that
was somclhmg I wanted to avo1d "
11te stgnmg was announced at a
Turner F1eld news con terence he fore
the Br.tvcs' 4-2, 10-mnmg loss to the
Flor.da Murhns
Mnddu• has a 180· I07 record m
hiS lith lull sea•on 10 the maJors, 85·
32 m h1s li lth season wnh the
Braves

0
m

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1
And Much More

Advertising Deadline Is August 2 I st
call 992·2 155 for more Information

Dave Harris, Ext. I 04
Don Riffle, Ext. 105

The Daily Sentinel

�Pometoy • Mlddlepolt, Ohio

,..,. I • The Dally S1ntlnel

llonday, Augult 11, 1117

gettins the right restart is pntty
WATKINS GLEN. N.Y. (AP)- important. I know guys like Rusty
Jclf GordollleMU billessons well. and Geoff have been around a while
'There is no betler eumple than and aR real good in those situations.
his victory Sunday ia \he Bud at tfiC ' I wasn't going to let Rusty get past
Glen, the lint I'OIId rae in&amp; win of his me like that again."
There was one more restart, on
NASCAR career and one that could
have evaped a pocnr student of the ' lap 75 following the last of five caution flags . That time, Gordon got a
apon.
On lap 6S, following a caution big jump on Bodine and came across
period, the 26-y--old Gordon was the stan-finish line about .10 car·
leadin,, with fOI'IIICt Watkins Glen -lengths ahead.
winnen Rusty -Wallace and Geoff : But Bodine wa5 able to make one
Bodine close behind for the restart. last run at Gordon,' moving within
As the leaders came off the last two car-lengths of the leader on lap
corner on the 2.4S-inile, 11-tum 76.
.
Watkins Glen lntemaliqnal road
"I think I missed a shill a little bit
course, Wallace tried to snooker and had to get on the brakes too earGordon. driving up on the curbing on ly," Go1on explained. "Geoff
the outside or the tum aitd uying to closed up on me. It's a mental thing.
get a nm before they reached the Maybe I was paying too much attenHagstand.
tion to my miJTOr, seeing whit they
"Rusty tried to jump me," Gor- v.icre doing.
.don uid. "I waited to come off (the
"I told myself just to be smooth
tum) and he was alri:ady outside of and hit my marks, and I was able to
tne."
get my head back together and move
It proved a costly move to Wal- away again," noted Gordon, who
lace, who was blocked by Gordon now has eight wins this season and
and wound up running third.
27 in his Winston Cup career.
"I tried to pass Gordon on the
"Honestly, I think this is one of
outside on that restart and ran out of the most satisfying wins I've ever
room," Wallace said. "I ~ot bogged had," Gordon said . ."For me per.down so much that Bodine got by sonally, this has been a very dirticult
me. ,, I almost got Bodine a couple transition to race on a road course.
of times at the end, but it just didn't
"Every time we go to Watkins
happen."
Glen or Sears Point (in Sonoma,
Bodine, the defending race win- Calif.), we make notes to try to betner, said, "Rusty probably coul~ ter ourselves," added Gordon, runhave wrecked me there, and I thank nerup to Mark Martin earlier this seahim for not doing that."
son at Sears Point.
Oordon, who recalled being
"I've just made mental notes and
passed by Wallace on a similar stuff (about) where I can gain speed,
restart l1$t year at Sonoma, said, "I ' the righ( gears, when to brake and.·
remembered that and I know that how to brake. But the key to road

••onafiChS t·~
y 7u··69
lrtl1
g ll
•
N Y. L •b rt
WIn 0 ver . . . I e y
~

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)The Sacramento Monarchs' suecenful turnaround stems from a
puiJIOliCful chan•e hi attitude.
After losins nine consecutive
games, the Mon-hs won their third
_straight. a 76-69 victory over tJte
New York Liberty Sunday night.
"We have decided that we were
JOing to play every game like a ·
championship game and have an attitude, work ethic and togetherness,"
said Monarchs coach Heidi VanDcrveer.
Latasha Byears led the Monarchs
(8-14) .with a season-high 23 points
and eight rebounds.
Bridiette Gordon had 19 points
and R~tltie Bolton-Holifield added
IS points, seven reboundS and four
auists for S~~:ramento. The Monarchs' tluee-same winning streak is
the lonpt of the season.
- _
Kylll H_a.m_pton scored ~on-

course racine is you've got to like it,
and I really enjoy it."
"-.
Gordon's Dupont Chevrolet
crossed the finish line 1.35-seconds
-about IOc:ar-lengths- ahead of
Bodine's Ford. The winner, who
earned $139,120, including a
$50,000 bonus from R.J. Reynolds
for winning while leading the season
points, averaged 91 .294 mph in the
race slowed by II laps of caution.
Rookie Robby Gordon, no relation to Jeff, had a career-best fourthplace finish, followed by Manin, Ted
Musgrave, Bill Elliott, Terry
Labonte, Steve Grissom and Wally
Dallenbach Jr.
Jeff Gordon, who started II th in
the 42-car field. quickly moved into
contention. He got all the way to fifth
plate on lap 20, fourth on lap 21,
· third on lap 23 and took setond from
Elliott on lap 27.
Gordon and most. of the leaders
made the first of two scheduled pit
stops on lap 28, but Gordon then
sliced back through the traffic, passing Wallace to rc;gain second place .
on lap 44 and finally passing Bodine
to take the lead on lap 53.
1be only time Gordon was out of
the lead the rest of the way was during a round of green nag pit stops.
He g01 back in front to stay on lap 62
when Darrell Waltrip finally made
his final gas stop during a caution
)ieriod.
Gordon, who went' into the race
with a 79-point lead over Martin in
the season standings, came out of it
leading by 109.
Dale Jarrett, running founh as late
as lap 78, fell all the way to 32nd
because of a mechanical problem.
He held onto third place in the standings,butfell260pointsbehindGordon. Defending series champion
Labonte is fou11h. 269 back.

high 17 points for the Libel1y ( 15-6)
and Vickie Johnson added 13. The •
Libel1y's lead in the Eastern Conference was trimmed to one game
over tile Houston Comets.
New York's Rebecca Lob&lt;J was
held to ,;even points on 2-of-6 shooting and one rebound in 38 minutes.
Lobo, who blocked three shots, also
committed eight turnovers. She also
struggled last week against Los
Angeles when she was 2 of 14 from
the field and finished with four
points.
The Monarchs shot 48 percent
from the field (26 for S4), while New
York was 26 for 62 (42 percent).
Sacramento had IOmore points than
the Libel1y at the foul line, going 21
for 29 compared to the visitors' II
for 13.
The game at Arco Arena drew a
crowd of I 0,162.

Here's the order of finish of the
Bud at the Glen NASCAR Winston

Cup race at Watkins Glen International, with staning position in
parentheses, driver, hometown, type
of car, laps completed, reason out if
any and money won:

Ann
Landers

I. (II) loft' Goodoo. p;. . . ._lod.. Cllm-olct.
90. Sll9,ll0.
2. (7) GlOif ~odiM. a........ N.Y.. Fool. 90.
171.195.
l . (ll) RUSl)' Wallo«. 51. I.GoiL fonl. 90.
S&lt;UIO.
4. ( 101 Roilby GordoL em;,.._Coil.. o.lel. 90. SJ9.l00.
'
5. (9) Mark Martin. Blltlvillc. Ark.. Fofd. 90.
5)6.100.
.
6. (29) Ted MUIJf1'\'C. Fruldin. Wis.. Fonl90.
S.'I.SOO.
.
7. (4) Bill EJllott. Dawtoft\ille. Ga. . Ford. 90

Dear Ann Landen: Here's the
situation. My mother, an attrBctive
- woman in her mid-SOs, has been liv, iqg with a man for IO.years. "Sam"
,.told her he was divorced but puts off
· discussing getting married. In recent
, years, Mom has quit working
_because Sam suppo11s her.
_. The truth is that Sam is still mar. ried tG his ·first wife. I found out
.accidentally seven years ago when I
saw Sam driving around town with

$21.0&amp;0.
I . 06) Tcriy Llbonle. Corpus Ctwilti. Tc:us,
Chowolel. 90. s.11.m .
9. ())) ~ve GriJSOIIl. o.cwm. Ala., Chevro..
1e1. 90, S26.m.
10. Ill Wollf Dol-b. 811111. Colo.. Chewolel. 90.116.515.
II )!3)). . Mf a.. ... Cl&lt;oodlbpoh. Mid&gt; .•

TT.
Last year. the group made several bomb threais against malls in
Swedish cities during the Christmas
shopping season. . . _
The predawn blast on Fnday was
the eighth attack linked to the city's
Olympic bid since May.
No one was hul1 in the explosion,
which sprayed glass, roof tiles and
debris from the pres.• section of the _
1912 arena.
The note from the group said that
arranging the 2004 Olympic Oames
would cost too much.

I 3. (6) SlttlinJ M_.i•. Col•ntbiL TtiUI ..
Cllem&gt;lct. 90. Sl'l. 725 .

Beat ofthe Bend ...

14. (1!1) Ken Schrader. Fe~Moa. Mo .. Chewrolel.
90. 124.485.
IS. C281 Jemny Mayflcld. Owtftlboro. Ky.,
Fool 90. Sl7 .995.

m Da~

by Bob Hoeflich

Elmhvdt. Kann!lpOii• . N.C ..

Ocvrokt:. 90. S29.~7S .

17. ('J9J Ridl:y Craven. Newbl.qh, ~Maint:.
Cllem&gt;tet. 90. Sll,m .
18. (.321 Dmdl Waltrip. Fnftklin. Tenn..
Olevrolct. 90, 523 .~35.
19. ll6t Mike Skinner. Sutan\·ilk. Ctllif..

Chevrolet. 90, S\6.7&amp;0.
20. C\OJ Jobn Andn:lli. lftdillftAPOiis. Ford. 90•
524,885.
21. (22) Ernie lr\"all. Salirw. Cnijf.• Ford. 90.

Sl4.m.
22. C31) 0:1\'idGtc-en.

""'mlbora.K~ .. Che\&gt;D

let, 90. S llJH.
23. (oiO) Rkk M:~.H . ~Ain,_loo.

Va.. ford. 90.

Sll.~.

2.&amp;. c.1.&amp;) Llnct Hoopt.'f. Pruneda it. C'~lif.. Potttiac. 90. 522 ..\80.

25.1171 Mkftael Wnlrrip.Owcnsboto. Ky.. l:ard.

90. 122.2&lt;~ 26. (.\5) Ky~ 1\etty. Rnod~an. N.C.. PontiOk:.
90. m.OilS.
·
27. clll t.~ny Wallace. St l.ouil. Ford. M\1.

121.9?2.
28. C2·U Bobb)' Hlmilkm. Nashville. Tcan.• Pun·
UK. 89. lilfi.9U .
29. (:16) Jeff Boonn. South Buslnn. Va.. Furd.
Kfl. li26.8SS.
.
JO. C42Ucft· G~. WhiL'house. Ttnn .. C'hc''rolet 89. SI4.29S.
31 (\~)Doney Schr01.:dtr. ONifl: Beach, Mil..
Fonl. 89. I11.6JO.
ll. Cl) Dale Jatretl. Hickory. N.C.. Fonl. MIJ.

128..16.&lt;.

H ( 12) Ste-.'C Port. Eul N«&lt;h Poinc. N.Y..

O!cvroltl. 81l. Sll.~l~ .

WE DID m- .1811 Gordan (-ring white lilt) cellibie• SUndey'• vk:IOI yIn the Bud et the Glen WJnaton Cup rece with- chief
Ray Evemgllem. The win wee Gordon'• first on • Wlneton Cup road
couru.(AP) · .
·
·
. 34. f!l Uimmy SpctK'l.T. s.,,....;~k. P..L . funl. lOt.
SIK.490..
JS. t I) Todd Bodirt~: . Chcnt~nJ . N.Y.. Oe\·n,.
~ - 87. fuel. Sl6.ol6~ .
36. f-41) Hut Stril:kl\n, Cak.'TIL Aht. Fun.l. n.
SIS ...JI!'.
li
37. ( 14) Bobby,l.Niofuc. C'OIJlUS Chri~ti . Tc:tol~.
Ponda:. ~ . tnJirc. 526.390.
.
~A . 07lllmikl: Ct~p:. Sranawll)'. W~l1. . Ponliac:, ~.SlUM .
~9 . (201 Breit W.-.·. O.:n•nJ. N,Y . l!lvd:'!6.

cqine. SIIUM.
-10. (~I ) Ricky Rudd." t'hi:QP..... v.... Fur~ ~..J.
lf!UlsmiSsiOI. Sl7 .K6~
41. OKI Wwd Bunon. Snuth BIKtnn. Va.. Pon·
liac. 14. CQJiftl:. SIII.MI~ .
u tl7! Chid Uttk:. s~. wa. .. Ptwia.:.
M. enfine. Sll .:t6~ .

lime of rlk't': 2 hours. 24 ~tUnuiL'S. ~~ a«OIU.

Mi1JJill of vic..1ory: 1 .3~

M."Cond~

C.tloul 10 car·

knJihl).

Caulinn oa,-:· ~ ror ttlnlt$.
WirtiiL'I' 's avera,:~: speed: 91 .29..J ll\flh.
LtiKI chanf:n: 10 amnnp; 9 driven.
l.ap ln,Xn: hrrru I·I..J: l~lliotl 1~ · 17 :
N\:~'hl:k IK-2'1: ktuon .\0-~: G. Bodine 3S·!i2:
J.G!Non ~.1-56: R.Waii:..."C 57.~11: T.l..abonte: SY:
D.W:thrip ~! . J.Wdon bV.O.
S..'Tks f'Oinls t.;.ltn: J. GOI'don 3.019: Mania
2.1J10: Jun.11 2.7~ :· T..Labtlftk l.7~; J.8tll10ft
l661: l!arnh:wch 2.~: B.Lahonl(' 2..163: ~ayfitld
H7J: Rudd 2..\~l: atKJtt lJ.\0-. Mup'h! 2.)09:
ik"UM !26-l: R.Wallk'C 2.1 tiM; ln'lill2.140; M.Wal-

nr 2.12l

Good news thus far for Mrs. Matj
Adkins, State Route 124, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Adkins became ill and was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy. From there, a doctor
decided she should' go to a Columbus
hospital for specialized treatment.
She was.taken to University Hospital and underwent replacement of the
aol1ic valve plus some heart by-pass
surgery.
She has been returned to her
home and _is getting alo,ng fine and is
cenainly pleased with her treatment
and the outcome.
Interesting outcome in the life of
Neal White of the Harrisonville area.
Many years ago, hey, we're talking like SO, Neal was serving with the
U. S. Anny in France and was
wounded. He was shipped to England
for hospitalization. In England he
met a young lady named Nancy stationed near the hospital and serving
with the RAF. A closeness developed. In fact, we could say that
romance developed. Neal's mail
was heavily censored for security reasons and he could not tell his family
much about his injuries aod his life.
However, Nancy was able to get in
touch with Neal's family and fill in a
lot of blanks since her outgoing mail
did not undergo the strict censorship.
In January, 1945, Neal was
returned to the states and was advised
that the young lady had been killed
in a bombing raid. About two years
ago Neal met locally through a friend
in Athens a man from England. He
mentioned Nancy and the fact that
she had died as a result of the war.
The man returned to England and
began checking around to see if
could locate any of Nancy's relatives.
He not only located relatives but also
located Nancy who had not been
killed in the bombing raid at all .
He advised Nancy of his visit with

.

'

...

~--~-· ,,

,.
_

• ....

f. •

CASH BACK · QR
1997

with Mom for not seeing the obvious. At the same time, I know how
much her pride would be damaged if
she actually had to acknowledge the
situation. Is there any way I can help
Mom get out of this no-win relation-.
ship without making her angry with
me?-- No Name, No City
Dear N.N., N.C.: It should be
apparent to you that your mom is in
deep denial about this relationship.
I'm- sure the rational side of her
brain knows what's going on, but
she doesn' t want 'to acknowledge it.
Abandon your efforts to save her.
She doesn't wish to be "saved."
Dear Ana Landen: I'm sure
ihere are many women like myself
who have diminished in height as
they have become older, panicularly

Socjal Security

if they are coping with osteoporosis, Luverne , Minn .
Dear Luverne: Smile sweetly,
as I am. It is depressing to be constantly aware of one's diminishing . and reply, ''I' m glad to have lived
size, and it ce11ainly doesn't help long enough to shrink a lillie. If you
one's morale when an acquaintance are lucky, it will happen to you,
you haven't seen for a while comes too ~"
D~r Ann Landers: My husband
up to you and says, real friendlylike, "You are so shon --are you and I attended a party in the home of
sOme new acquaintances. I am
shrinking or what?''
.
That person would never go up to embarrillised to tell you I had too
someone who has gained weight and much to drink and cannot remember
say, "V(ow, you sure are getting much about the evening. My husfat," or say to a person who is losing band saisl I " talked too much, " and
his hair, "Gee, you're really going he refused to say more. I have a
vague hunch that I insulted the hostbald."
I'd feel a lot better if they would ess ' sister.
We will be seeing the same coujust greet me with "Hi, how are
you?" and go on to something else. . pies again soon. Should I phone the
What should I do when people say hostess now and apologize? I really
such things to me? -- Shoner in am embarrassed. Please advise. --

_

8

18
OR

•ta

CoiiiJ• Gnll leMte

or

148

~:~~25" ...

• boholeol ,.., title, ...

.,.API
FOR
41MOS

Gem of the Day: Two fourth -grade
teachers were overheard talking:
"Not only is he the worst-behaved
child in my class. He also has the
best attendance record."
Send q~stions to Ann Landers. Creators
Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite
700, Los Angeles. Calif. 90045&lt;P&gt;

_

Questions and answers
BY ED PETERSON

.~

Bartlett-Kuhn

Atkins installed Region II
Garden Club director

Pauline Atkins of Rutland .;.as . Garden Club. She is a long-tinie
installed as director of Region II , active member of both the Rutland
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs at Garden Club and the Star Garden
The Community Calendar is American Veterans~nd Auxiliary, the recent Ohio Association of Oar- Club.
_
published 118 a Cne service to non· Chapter 53, meeting at DAV Hall on den Clubs' annual convention held in
As regional director, she. wtll
profit aroups wisbina to announce SR 7 below Middl_epi.irt, 7 p.m. Mon- Cincinnati.
serve the counties _of Wasbt~gton,
meeting and special events. The day. Refreshments at-6:30p.m.
Atkins, a past county contact Athens, Hockmg, Vmton, Gal Ita and
RACINE-· Racirti.Board of Pubcalendar is 'lOt designed to promote
chairman is president of the Rutland Metgs Counucs.
sales or fund raisen of any type. lic Affairs meeting Monday, 10:30
' ·
Others from Meigs County attend·
Items are printed as space permits · a.m. at the municipal building.
ing the convention were Janet Bolin,
and cannot be guaranteed to run a TUESDAY
past OAGC president, .and Judy
POMEROY-- Bedford Township
spec:ifie number or days.
Snowden of the Rutland Friendly
Trustees, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the town
MONDAY •
'.
Gardeners; Shelia Cunis of the Shade
Disabled halL
MIDDLEPORT
Valley Club, and Gladys Cummings
of the Wildwood Garden Club. Bolm
took a blue ribbon on an exhibition
table setting entered _in the flower
show, and Curtis received a red rib."
bon on the reHective design she
entered.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Air respectable opening, he said. "They
Atkins announced that the fall
Force One" got bumped from its seat just edged out 'Air Force One' and·
regional meeting will be held Oct. 25
atop the box office rankings by the got the No. I spot, which I guess you
at Gallipolis.
debut of the Mel Gibson-Julia can call a victory. But considering the
Roberts drama "Conspiracy Theory." star power, I'm sure they hoped for
"Conspiracy Theory" took in a Jot more."
Rockwell said the weekend fig$19.4 million, compared with $18.2
million for "Air Force One," which ures also reflected the absence of
had been· in first place the previous summer Olympic games, which
two weeks, according 10 preliminary divened the public's .attention from
PAULINE ATKINS
figures Sunday from Exhibitor Rela- films al the same time last year.
"Here you've got the lop two pictions Co. Inc.
Artificial seaway
The only other new film that tures doing almost $40 ;j]!illion," he
The
St.
Lawrence Seaway is the
cracked the Top 10 over the weekend said. "That's quite a quantum
longest
artificial
seaway in the world,
was "How to Be a Player," starring improvement over last summer."
measuring
189
miles
long along the
Bill Bellamy as a smooth operator
Final figures were to be released
New
York
State-C
anada
border from
whose romantic escapades are dis- · today.
Montreal
to
Lake
Ontario.
rupted by· his sister's antbropology
. The top 10 weekend films, accordTallest flagpole
project. The film came in at No. 8 ing to estimates:
The
world's
tallest Hagpole is at
with $4.1 million over the weekend.
I. "Conspiracy TheQFY,:' $19.4
North
Korea, near the
Panmunjon,
With the opening of "Conspiracy million
border
with
South
Korea.
It is 525
Theory," a crop · of big summer
2. "Air Force One," $1 B.i
feet
high
and
flie
s
a
!lag
98
feet 6
releases each slipped one spot.
3. "Spawn," $9.1 million
long.
inches
"Spawn" fell to No.3, followed by
4. "George of the Jungle," $6.3
.
.
"George of the Jungle," "Men in million
Largest dam
Black," "Picture Perfect" and "Con5. "Men in Black," $5:7 million
The world's largest concrete dam
6. "Picture Perfect," $5 million
tact."
·is the Orand -Coulee Dam on the
An Rockwell, im entertainment
7. "Contact, " .$4.4 million
industry analyst with. Los Angeles·
8. " How to Be a Player," $4.1 Columbia River in the state of-Wash·
ington. It has a crest length of 4,173
based Yaeger Capital Markets , said million
feet, is 550 feet high and contains ·
the preliminary figures spoke more
9. "Air Bud," $3.5 million
10. "Nothing to Lose," $2.8 mil- 21.5 million tons (285 million cubic
about the No. 2 film than No. I.
feet) of concrete.
'"Air Force One' has got just ter- lion .
'
Huge waterwheel
rific legs," he said. The film has now
The largest waterwheel in the Most mileage
taken in $111 million in three weeks.
The state with the most miles of world is the Mohammadieh Noria
"That's heading to $160 million or
$170 million, which is a terrific mad is Texas, with 294,491 miles; . wheel arHamah, Syria. It 's 131 feet
Hawaii has the fewes~, with 4,106 in diameter and dales from Roman
blockbuster," he said.
times.
"Conspiracy Theory" had a miles.

Following a honeymoon in Arizona, the newlyweds are res1dmg m New

Marshfield.

Annual Yeauger reunion held
-

The Yeauger's 27th annual family
reunion was held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley.
Attending were Bob, Gcrri, Alex
Halley, an&lt;\ · Betty Mcintosh,
Cheshire; Don Yeauger of Canal
Winchester; Steve. Cheryl Ashley
and Meghan Halley of Middleport;

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

s

Amy Kuhn, Roben and Josh Haning
of Nelsonville; John, Ruth Ann and
Misty Carsey of Athens.
- A gift was given to Mcintosh for
being the oldest. Meghan Halley for
the . youngest, and Amy Kuhn for
traveling the fanhest. Misty Carsey
won the door prize.
·

Fastest airspeed
Expensive system
The fastest official airspeed record
The most extensive subway system in the world is the London was 2,193.2 mph recorded by Capt. .
Underground, in London, England. Eldon WJoersz and Major George T
with 244 miles of route, of which 86 Morgan Jr. . in a Lockheed SR-71A
miles is bored tunnel and 20 miles is "Blackbird" near Beale Air Force
"cut and cover." The system is oper- Base, Calif.. over a 15 112-mile
course on July 28, 1'176.
ated by a staff of 14,000.

'Air Force One' edged out by
debut of 'Conspiracy Theory'

MOUNTAINEER

N.Y. Reader
Dear N.Y. : Don't call. Apologies
for drunken behavior are awkward
and don't accomplish much. Apparently, when you drink, your brain
goes on furlough and your mouth
goes on active duty. Better vow to
stick to gi'lller ale, and you will
avoid such problems in the future .

with direct-deposit never _have to worSoclal_
Security
ry about a lost, stolen or misplaced
.
~.,. -..
Managar In Athane
check; an unprotected check sitting in
Q. In doing my financial planning, the mailbox when they are away on
I've realized that I don't know much vacation, if they are sick, oi if they
Neal and she and Nelli through letters at all aboul my Social Security pro- are hospitalized; and making a speand phone citlls have been in touch tection. Does Social Security have cial trip to the bank or standing in line
to deposit their checks. For more
several times. Na0cy married as did any free materials?
A. We have many free publica- information' about direct deposit, call
Neal, whose wife, by the wife, is
named Nancy also. The England tions.If you want a gOod overview of Social Security's toll-free telephone
Nancy and Neal hav~ also exchanged Social Security, call our toll•free number, 1-800-772-1213, any busifamily photos. · T!wre has been no number, 1-800-772-1213, and request ness day between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.
publication,
"Social When you call, have your Social
reunion planned by the couple-- the
everyone's gotten considerably older- Security... Understanding The Bene- Security number and it personal
-but who knows? Stranger things fits." It's a 40-page publication that check or bank statement handy.
Q. I recently received my "Pergives infonnation about Social Secuhave happened.
rity programs, retirement, disability sonal Earnings And Benefit Estimate
If you want to enjoy the comedy · and survivors, and it includes infor- Statement" from Social Security. It's
routine of 86-year-ol~ Clara McDow- mation about Supplemental Security really helpful in my financial planell who will be opening the local tal- Income and Medicare. There are ning. Now that I have estimates of
ent show at the grandstand -at the charts which give examples of bene- what my retirement, disability and
Meigs County Fair Tuesday night, fits. Other publications available ·. survivohi benefits ·will be, I'm curious
you should be in your seat by 8: IS from Social Security are listed in this what the average person gets in benefits. Can you tell me what the averp.m. Clara will do her routine before publication.
Q. I applied for a charge card and age benefit amounts are?
the 8:30 opening of the musical entithe company . asked for my .Social
A. For 1997, the average monthtled, "Made in America".
Security number. Isn't it against any ly Social Security benefits are as fol You might want to make a note · kind of law to ask for someone's lows: retired worker. $745; retired
MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH KUHN
Social Security number? Can I refuse couple, $1,256; disabled worker,
reserving Sept. 9 on your calendar.
to give it to them?
$704; disabled worker with a spouse
A. The law generally does not pro- and &lt;;hild, $1,169; widow(er), $687;
At 7 that eventng a meeting will
be held at the Meigs County Senior hi bit any use of Social Security num- young widow(er) with two children,
Citizens Center in Pomeroy to dis- bers by the private sector. If a busi- $1.478.
Deborah Lynn Bartlett and Joseph Edward Kuhn wc:e married during a
cuss plans and answer questions ness or bther enterprise asks for your ' Q. Does part-time work count for May 17 wedding al Athens Church of Christ.
·
regarding courses and programs Social Security number, you can Social Security benefits?
The bride is the daughter of L~rry and Judy Radford of New Marshlield.
A. Yes, part-time work does _count The bridegroom is the son of Clyde and Marlene Kuhn of Tuppers Plains.
which might be offered to Meigs refuse to give it to them. However,
County through the University of Rio that may mean doing wi_thout the pur- for Social Security benefits. As you
The service was perfonncd by Rev. Willard Love and nuptial music was
Grande. 'Everybody--but everybody· chase or service for which your ·work and pay taxes, you earn Social perfonned by Cris Kuhn , sister-in-law of the groom.
-is invited to attend the session so that number was requested. Although Security "credits." In 1997, you earn
Escorted to the altar and given in marriage by her sons, Brian and Bradley
an accurate renection on the interest Social Security can't prevent others one credit for each $670 in earnings Bartlelt, the bride wore an ivory satin gown with a sweetheart neckline, bow
and needs of the county can be not- from asking for your number, you you have-- up to a maximum of four accented keyhole back, and pleated sle.eves trimmed with lace and bows.
should know. that. giving .it to them credits per year. (The amount of moo- The full satin skirt flowed to a chapel length train . Her i.vory veil was held
ed.
Ront McDade.- Meigs County's does not give them access to your ey needed to earn one credit goes up with a headpiece of lace, pearls and sequins. She carried peach tig~r lilies
every year.) The most you would accented with ivory roses and ivy.
Economic Development Director, is Social Security records.
.
Q. My daughter keeps telling me need to qualify for any type of Social
extremely pleased that the leadership
Matrons of honor were Shari Gabriel of Athens and Christi Williams of
at the University of Rio Grande ha.• to sign up for direct deposit. What are Security benefit is 40 credits ( 10 Coolville, sisters of the bride. Bridal attendant was Amy VanHorn of Lakeoffered to meet Y!!th Meigs County the advantages of receiving Social years of work). Younger people need wood and Jessica Gabriel of Athens, niece of ihe bride, was junior attenfewer credits to be eligible for dis- dant. They wore tea-length j&gt;each sati·n dresses.
citizens regarding !he potential Meigs Security benefits by direct deposit?
A. Direct deposit is the most con- ability benefits or for their family
County Branch. '
Best man was Dennis Newland of Reedsville. uncle of the groom. Ushvenient and safest way to receive members to be eligible for survivors ers were Jeff Goebel of Gallipolis, cousin of the groom, and Tim Kuhn of
With the Meigs County Fair monthly payments. Beneficiaries benefits if they die.
Reedsville, brother of the groom. Brian Bartlett was junior groomsman.
underway, the week should bring
Flower girl was Jennifer Williams of Coolville, niece of the bride. Ring
some notable rain. , The question is
bearer was Bradley Bartlett. A reception was held at the Elks Lodge in Athens.
just how much. It always "has" to
The bride is employed as a secretary at Ohio University. The grooin is a
happen. Do keep smiling.
pilot for EXecutive Jet Aviation in Columbus.
·
. . .

Community calendar

1997 EXPLORER
OR

· In the aii-Auslralian doubles final,
top-seeded Todd Woodbridge and
Mark Woodforde won their third title
here, beating seventh-seeded Mark
Philippoussis and Patrick Rafter 7-6
(8-6), 4-6, 6-1.
It was only the second time since
the tournament began in 1979 that .
the No. I seeds won in both singles
and doubles.ln 199S, Andre Agassi
won the singles title and the Woodies won for the second time; they
also won in 1992.
The Great American Insurance
ATP Championship is a Mercedes
Super 9 toumamen~ one of only
thn~e played in the United States.
Among American tournaments, only
the U.S. Open and the Lipton Championships at Key Biscayne offer
more money.

her when he was sul'po!ed to be out
of state on business. (..told Mom I
had seen him, and she became very
upset with me and said, "You don't
know what you're talking aboutL"
After that, I dlo:cided I wouldn't
_interfere.
.
Sam frequently ··~ks" on holidays. I know it hurts her that he is
away, but it kills me that she defends
him, constantly makilW excuses for
his absences on her b~ay, Christmas and so on. She inJists that he is
very impol1ant to h~ company and
that no one else can,'ilo his job. I
know he is actually.'spending the
holiday weekend with his wife, kids
and grandchildren rigtit here in town
because I have seen ~im.
I get very angry l,jllld frustrated

Ponti11t. 90. S1l.J55.
12. (8) Jot r&gt;~emcchet. Latetlnd. Fla.. Oevrolel. 90. Sli.OIS.

16.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

.

Ter·r orists vow more
:bombs if ·sweden fails
to nix Olympic bid
"The contents suggest thai some- .
onecltie has written the letter, but it's
hard to tell before the !iCCUrity service has analyzed it," Stockholm
police spokesman Claes Cassel told

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Woman is in denial about live in lover who .won't divorce his wife

Gordon claims flag in Bud at the Glen
lly IIKI HARIUI

Mondily, August 11, 1997

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL

in,._

We're located
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00

INSTALLED

* Up to 93 United inches
* In Wood Doub.le Hung Opening
* Tilt In * Thermopane ·

* Double Hung

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available at addiilion1al (harae

�hge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 11,1997

Pomeroy •.Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Pege 9

fScenes of activities at the 1997 Meigs County Fair I

ANNOU t ICE t.1Et JTS

005

f'lrloniiS

UIJt Gldll Cell Howl 1·1100·2550700 ox1. 2ee12. 13.11 rar min.
Must be 18yra. Serv·U 819·1•5·

1434.

naca

.Easy Bank Financing

·Air Conditioners Installed 12800 a monlh
Heal Pumps Installed 138" a month
(Payments based on a~ credit)

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
·Free Digital Thermostat

WEIGHING IN - This lamb of Eric Montgomery weighed In at 99 poundl Sunday alternoon'" the Meigs Coun\Y Fair. Aaron Sayre
manne&lt;l the gate of the weighing cage as the

,
1
~,., ..
•

.

••

;-

l

I

I

1

)

' . . . . . . . ...
!

'\

, ..
' .
SOMETHING DIFFERENT- Sprucing up the
cattle bam at the Melga County Fair-this year
are two watarlall and landscaping diaplaya, one
the.project of the Shede Valley 4-H Club. Sunday afternoon club mambera Jared and Jeremy Hupp, and Matt Evans added the finishing

•.
touches to the exhibit which features colorful
flowera around a pond with water cascading
over natural rocks. The other landscaping
exhibit, also featuring a watarlall, Is in the commercial display of the Pine Grove Farm Feed
arid Supply.

The necessity for neutering
By Alden Waitt,
President
Meigs County
Humane Society
Overheard in the hardware store:
"Yes, she's only six months old -we didn't know she could gel pregnant that soon! But we arc going to
lei her have one liner and then will
probably have her fixed. We think the
· children should have the chan&lt;:c to
experience the hirth and the puppies.
of course ·-·lO teach them something
about life. Don't you'!"
Well. if you're going to teach them
about birth and life.lhen complclc the
lesson. Teach them about death. Take
them lo the ncurcst pound or animal
sheller and let them watch a stray dn!!
•and her puppies gct'euthani1.cd. Th:u.
after all. is what usually happens to
lhc hundreds Of puppies and kiuens
deposilcd •&gt;rpickcd up each wcck. lf
they arc the lucky ones. F:ll llx&gt; often.
their lives end miscrahly. starving.
infested with internal parasites and
•Ilea.•. hit hy cars or killed hy other
animals.
·
Leaving aside the person who
"clearly identities with the entire spaying or neutering process (,'Would ytlU
wantlhat done \O you ·'" .. mnyhe we
arc all not cut out 10 he parents or
even want to he. afler alll. let's look
·at some nf lhc reasons people don't
take advantage of the inexpensive.
,one-time procedure.. They carry
an&gt;imd scvc'f'~l myths &lt;~h&lt;mlthe whole
l'roccss and what it means.
. Myth One: Neutering (for males)
.ond spaying {l'or females I will make
him '"her fat and l:v.y. Actually. obesity is due loCXI..'cssivc culnrk intake

and lack of exercise -- same a."i IC.1r us.
Prnrcr !Ceding and \.!X~rcisc c&lt;mlrnls

thai .. same as it docs fur us.
. Myth Two; Every fcnmle .cm or
dog. fur health or psychological rca· ·
sons. should ·have one Iiller heforc
she has lhe operation. There is
absolutely no biological advantage 10
allowing the animal to produce a litter. any more lhan human females
have to produce a child. How or why
of these same people justify the
rights or necess.ities of males-- feline
and canine .. to breed wnh everything that moves is beyond the scope
of this column. Agam. not brecdmg
cjocs nothing to impair any animal's
health or psychological makeup. ·
• Myth Three: It will change his or
her personality. di~sition or: l_e,~l of
intelligence. Cats personahttes do
not develop fully until they are about
a year; for dogs, it is one or two rears.
U there is a personality change rn the
a~imal, it would have occurred Without surgery.
What you will have is an animal

some

untroubled hy estrus. "r heat. periods
or the scent of a fema1e in heat and
fewer Jllls!\ihililics of uterine or lcs..
liculnr lUtnor as he or she ages-- with
a signilicant dccrca'c in the incidence
of mammary glanU ..:an1..-cr in females.
Dogs go into hem semi-annually. and
cats may cxpericn'c scyeral heats
«Jvcr lhe course of a year -- six is not

COLUMBUS (API Nice
weather and some popular auractions
have helped attendance at this year's
Ohio Slate Fair as it heads into its
final week.
More than 491,000 people ha~e
passed through tbc. fair's gates
through Saturday. said fair spokeswoman Jill Schaller. That's about
20.000 more than last year.
" We've been thrilled," Schaller
said. "The weather has cooperated
heautifully...
The largest crowd during the lirsl
nine days of the fair came Saturday
when more than 80.000 people were
m the fair.
'.
.:People arc out there smiling, and
that's what it's 'all ahout. .. Schaller ·
said.
The new Jurassic Journey exhihit
has been the higgcst hit of the fair.
she said. It fcalurcs 30 full-size rcpliC~"i

of dinQsaurs

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
814-446-9418
1-1100-1172·5967 1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

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• State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

Lyons has remained at the head of
the nation's
blackahout
dcnominalion
despite largest
questions
lavish
spending and his marital fidelity. .
He listed himself as unmarried on
the propertv deed 10 a $?0o.OOO Aori·
'
dn house bought with Bernice
Edwards. I he Baptist Convention ·s
fonncr puhlic relations director.
Sh ,r1.1.1-·s· dcputl·c." ".·a1·d Mr".·. Lv&lt;&gt;ns·
•
·• ·•
·• b' d
t(\ld them shc.suspectcd her hus an
w:is havin~ an alTair with Ms.
Edwards.

Fruth Pharmacy In _
Middleport Is _Now Accepting
United Food &amp;·Commercial
- ..
Workers lnternatiQnal Union
Prescription Cards .and
United Healthcare
Prescription Cards
.

·vourHomctownPha'rmcJCJ.I"
786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT

992-8411 '

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CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
Bod~
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Quality Work at
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a Fair Price!
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550 Pa9a St.
MlddleP9rt, Oh. 45780 ' Stop &amp; Compare
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ESTIMATEES
614-992-3120

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814 Mll-2804

R. l. HOLlON .
TRUCKING

Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
Tho State of Ohio, Mtlgo ·
Coumy, American Mortgage
and tnvoatrnont company
va
Danlal A. Noaae, ET AL,
No: 96-CV-116 .

way, paning an Iron pin II
273.921111 for, rc.hrtnct.
Tho above doocrlpllon
wao proparod from tn
actual survey by Robert R.
Eooon, Ohio P.S. No. 7033.
Moy, 1992,
Rtlorenco Dttd: VOlume

olaalo In tho abovo .ontltltd Page 221 tnd Volume 275.
action, I will offer lor tale II Pogo 235.Parcol 2. Tract 1.
public auction on tho front Melga County Deod
atepo of tho courthouoo In Rocordt.
Molgo County, Ohio, on the
Tho abovo doocr- rool
2nd day of September, 11197 eotate It I part ot tho real
11 10:00 a.m., tho following 111110 that hot been
deacilbed real oototo.. 18oolgntd Audltor'a Porcol
situate In the County of Number 111-00031.
·
Raclnetowlt:
Tormo ol lllo: Tan
Situated In Sutton percent (10%) down at tho
Township, Meigs County, tlrna tho bid Ia accepttd.
State of Ohio and · belna .Balance to bo paid within
Section 31. Town 3 North. thirty (30) dayo. Any oum
Range i2 west of tho Ohio not paid within aald Thirty
company'o Purchase and (30) dayt ohall boar lnteroot
baing deacrlbad as followe: at the rato of 10.00% per
Beginning ·at a point In annum form tho dote ol
the centerline of County oole.
Road 30 (Foreat Run Rotdj.
Dopoolt to be wolvod lo
said point being at the oold to the plantlff, flrot
Southeast corner of Smlth'a mortgogt holder. .
Parcelo as described In tho
Pormlaeo commonly
Melga County Oood known 11: 44770 Foreat Run
Records: Volume 323. Page Rd. Pormanont parcel No:
377:
'
111-00031 .005
Thence North 89' 31' 49"
Jamto M. Soulaby
Eaat 384.72 feet olong tho
Sheriff of Molgo County
canterllna of aald County (7) 28, (I) 4, 11 3 t
Road 30 tocomer
a point
thel-===!;ij~~~~=
Southwest
ol at
Bing'•
Public
1.34 acre parcel; ~ ·
Th 8 VIII
-or p
1
Thonco North o' 47' 22"
•a•
omoroy I
Weal 868.39 leal along tho tho
accepting
appllcotlona
pooltlon
of Chlol lor
of
I
Weal line of the aald 8 ng Pollet. AIt- lnterootod
parcel and along the Woot , appllcanta ohould 111bmll
line of Amborger'a 2- 795 ' their reoume and llaloment
acre parcel to an Iron pin at of quallllcallono to tho
the Northwest corner of tho VIllage Olllceo In Pomeroy.
said Amberger 2.795 acre Salary shall be •20,000
parcel, passing Iron pine at minimum. Appllcantt ohall
36.4 loot and 3&amp;3.78 feet for ba a rotldont of tho Vlllago

h. ,
BOOKS PRESENTED- Meigs County Public
.Libraries In Pomeroy, Middleport and Racine
have received free copies of "Sex Cen .Welt, • 1
book almecl at middle school-aged children,
used In the qbatlnence education program
funded through an Ohio Wellneaa block grant
The program Ia administered by the Meigs

County Health Department Pictured presenting
the booka are, 1-r, Candl Heer, Nonna Torres ·
and Margie Skidmore, all of the health depanment, Robin Harris, of Meigs County Family
and Children First Council, and Krlstl Eblin,
repreoantlng the libraries.

r-=::::=::::=====r=========lr==::=::::=====T-========
Public Notice.
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
full)'dncrlbechdfollowa:
requoot cooperotlon by tho fo -.J!:om and oftor tho
Notlco lo horoby glvt
snuattd In tht County of DlroctorofTnlnoporlltlon.
oorlloot period allowed by
thtt tho Booord o1 Educttlo Melgo, In tho Stott of Ohio, h.awo H1 d~EtlfledS, t~~·no~~~~:, law. P --~ ...
of tho Etotom ~I SchOcl ·end In tho Townohlp of
a.._: ...,g. 4, 11197
Dlotrlct, 38800 SR 7, Olivo and bounded and end
propooao · the
Attoot: Kllhy Hy1111
Rttodovlllo, Ohio 45n2, dttcrlbtd aa followo:
lmprovomont of • portion of
Cieri!
will offer for 1111 by lllltd
Bolng In Soctlon 27 and ~~~= =~~uC::hlch It
Frank va':,'!'!
bid at 12:00 noon on 28, Lot 2&amp;2; btlng 1.50
R
lid
US R
,_
Mondty, Stptombtr a, 1997, ICrot, noor mlddlo on north
opa1r • o on
ou1•
John Muolint north of road 11 11 ma 33 (E11t Moln SlrMt) along
Prooldont o1 Council
11 813lntomttlonal bua.
All ooaltd tnvelopot oppoara on tho audltor'ollx tho Ohio Rlvtr beginning
CERTIFICATE OF COPY
conttlnlng 1 bid ora to bt duplicate lor the yoor 1114.7 0.19 mlloo wool of State Stato of Ohio
mtrktd cltlrly on the In the namo of tho Stilt of Route 124 and ondlng Vllltgo of Pomeroy ss
outtldt and lint· to the Ohio. ·
approximately 0.23 mllea County Molgo
TrtiiUrtr'l Olltca. Tonno ol REFERENCE DEED: till of Condor Stroot. Work
I, Kathy Hyiloll, 11 Clerk
lilt will be caoh or !"'"'Y volume 276, Page 23, and will Include ualng dump of tho VIllage of Pomoroy,
ordtr. Sold Boord rtllrvoo Volume 312, Pogo 29, Melga rock, extending lour plpea Ohio, clo htrtby canlly thtt
and minimal axcavollon tht foregoing Ia a truo oncl
tho right to · walvo County Dotd Rocordo.
lnformalltloa, to tccopt or Auclltor•o Porcol No. 09- noar tho Ohio River.
correct copy of ordlnanco
rejoct any and all, or perta 00213.000.
Said portion of highway . odopttd by the Loglatotlvo
of eny · and all bldo. Said roal eatote · waa within the municipal Authority oltht llkl Vlflago
Quo-no can bt onoworod appraloed at Three corporation llmlto bolng of tho 4th day or. Auguot,
by Mro. Llll Ritchie, Thouaand Stvon Hundred hereinafter rolorred to aa 1997; thtt tho publication&amp;
Trooourer at 885-4331.
and 00/1 oo Dollaro tholmprovomont, and
oleuch ordlnonco hot boon
(8) 4, 11, 18, 25 4 tc
,_,
,... 700·00).
WHEREAS, lht Vlllane
• modo tnd ctrtlfltd of record
· Salt of 11ld roal oototo to further doolrtl copperollon · occordlng to ltw; thai no
Public Notice
bo for not Iota than two· from tho Director of procltdlngo looking to it
_ ___;:...:;:::.;~:;.::::._...,.. thlrdo (2131 tho aforould Trtnoportatlon In tho referendum upon euch
IN THE COMMON PLEAS appralttd value. Cooh In planning, doolgn and ordinance hto bttn !Ikon;
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY, hond on dolo of oolo.
conotrucllon of oold end that tuch ordlnonco
OHIO
Sold tolo It aubjoct to lmprovomont.
and certlllcoto of
BANK ONE, ATHENS, M.A.
opprovtl by tho common
NOW THEREFORE, Bo It publication thoroof trt of
PlolnUif
Pltto Court, Molgo County, ordained by the council of rocord In Ordlnonce Rocord
vo
Ohio.
·
tho VII logo of Pomoroy, No. 648, pego 020.
BILL BUCHANNAN, aka
Jornoo M. Soultby, Shtrllf Ohio:
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I
BILL E. BUCHANAN, ET AL
Melp County, Ohio C$-2 Rov. 4/9te2
hove horounto ·IUbtcrlbtd
Dtftnclantt
(7) 28 (8) 4 11 3 tc
Thlo ordinance Ia htrtby my nomo and affixed my
~---No.-~v·~
'
'
d IC Itrt d I0 b I tn OmC
-11
...,..
....,.. I ...I, IhIt 4th day 0 I
Ltgal Nollca
Public Notice
emergency m11aurt by Auguot, 1997.
Shtrlfl't Sale of Rttl E - .
roaoon of tho nttd lor
KolhyHyotll
ORDINANCE NO.I48
npadlllng
highway
AI Shariff of Mtlgo
Clerk
County, Ohio, I htrtby ofllr
NAME OF STREET EAST
lmprovomonto to promoto
VIllage ol Pomeroy, Ohio
lor ealt at 10:00 t.m., on
MAIN (FRONl)
highway ttfety, tnd
Tho aforogolng Ia
F~.dty, Stpttmber 5, 11197, ROUTE NO. us ROUTE 33
provided II rocelvoo the accoptod 11 a bull for
A.D., on tht front lllpt Of
DATE OF ENACTMENT
offlrmollvo voto of two, procttdlng with . tho
the . Mtlgo County
8/4/97
thlrdo of tho momboro Improvement horoln
CourlhOutt, "'-roy, Ohio,
An emergency ordlnonct olocttd to Council, It ohell dncrlbtcl.
tho folowlng dttcrlbad roal ontcttd by tha VIllage of ttko tffoct and bt In forco
For ~ lht Vlllogo of
Pomeroy, Molgo County, Immediately upon Ito Pomeroy, Ohio
Tho tddroat of Hid roal Ohio, In tho mttttr of tho peooego and opprovtl by (8) 11,182 tc
_..It S11150Joppt ROOd, hortlnoflor doocrlbod tho Mayor; othtrwlao, It
Rttdtvlllt, Ohio 45772. lmprovomont, and to oholl ttko olftcl and bt In
Said real oototo Is more

-=

acres,

more

or

less,

excepting al! legal
easements and rights of

fof

period oltlma.
21, 28, (81 4, 11 4 tc

an

''F'!11.'-'
.e. ~~"'TOft"
.I

-

.,HI • • • .,.,, . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

ON!

'-'~

110 Court St.
992-4119

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291-5600

WV 1023477

Custom Slaughler &amp; Processing
Beef, Pork &amp; Lamb
W. Va Sausage Co.
907 Fourth Street
New Haven, WV 25265
(304) 882-3194

,

Limestone &amp; GI'IIVel
Septic Systems
1
Trailer
&amp;
Houoa SHes .

JEFF
WARNER INSURANCE
'

ReatJonsble Rstsa
Joe N. Sayre

POMEROY, OH.

Sayre Trucking Co.

614-992·5479

_ _ _ _ _ _....,-..,_ _ _ _S'2711Y'N
_.....,

614•742•2138

..._ _ _ _ _,:::m::;;m;.:1fn::.:.~
..

~

Special Designs

(014)3n-11278

Black Female Dachshund, one
year old. (814J-37g-22•2 or
(814~

No~ldes

Frll Klnena Orange Tiger, Grey·
Tiger; 3 months old puppies

Wearable Advenlsing

-,.m
33058 SR l3 P-r, OH

Gal Range, ·2 chairs, odd and
enda. 504 Stcond A-ve. Gall•polis,

'P.o.

Oh. after calling f(rlll (614)·4.46·
01152

992-4279

Long hatred luuen, gray/black
Tabby, female, Bwka oiCl 304 -

875-5758.

Howard L Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

949-2168

• Puppies 6Wks old. mother Shih·
Tzu, small house dogs, 304·6755050 ahef 10am.

60 Lost and Found
Found: 2 scared puppies in my
1 garage, pari German Shephard. 1
cannoll!eep lhem 30 .. 773·5058.

Found: Border Collil-type lemale,
brown collar, no 1ags, Syracuse

. lliclnlly,814·992-5115.

· Lost· mired· colored cat, in the

' 11'88 af Meigs Vet Clinic. call 614·
1112·6878.

70

· • Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Yos. Exp. · Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

LO"G'S
.COttSTROaiO"

Call 614·843·5426

Gravel, Sa11d,
Top S 0 II ,

FIII Dl rt

614·992·3470

Be Paid In AdVIftCI.

DE&amp;DLfNE: 2:00p.m.

1ho doy bo.... tho od
•torun.SundiY
odiUon • :1:00 p,m.
Frldoy. llondoy odnlon
-•o:ooa.m. s.tunlov.

Struts • Tune-ups

::d~~~:J;.

LEWIS TIRE
742·2792

&amp; VlclnHy
All Yard Still Mu1t Be Paid In

t-::======81!/9:'
""=,
·:
r

Advanc•. Dead lin•: 1:o0pm the
dl)' before the ld Is lo run,

MAN LEY'S ' Sun4ay
• lion day
1:OOpm Friday.
HOME IMPROVEM
. ENT

adltlon·

Giani yard sale. Aug uS! 8·1 0,
::~:.:;~~!Min and Snow·

Roofing, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,

Sunahine or rain, garage &amp; yard

1010 , Monday-Friday, 1oam·&lt;pm.
, 38400 S&lt;a••.Rd. 124,

"""*"~'·

' 8o
Auct. ion
Concrete, Etc.
P.O. BoK 220 Bidwell,
and Flea Market
Oh 45614
Crawford's Flea llarlon, Hendor·
aon, WY. Everyday n . c'"'"·

::;~q~!~~":.,~6 ~~r:,S04hlrno&lt;ure.

(614) 388-9865

r------------------,1
TRI-COUNTY SANITATION

Rick Peaoson Aue1ion Company,
full lime auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
Licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virg lnia, ·30_. ·

77.1-57850.. 304-ms.u7.

Riveraide Flea Market Opening

Fti, 8112111. SR. 7. 218, Somelhing
For Ewryone! VendOfs, 614 · 2~61722, 1A.II. ·1 Pll.

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck

90

Porta John Rentals

Absolute rop Dollar :. AU U.S. Sil-

New Aerlator Timers &amp; Motors

614·742·2566

1...----------------....;JI
r-------;...;......;.___.;...____,

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replarement
Monday-Friday. 8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m. - 12 noon

·Big Bend Fabrication,
• &amp; Weldl"ng Shop
Mac h1ne

wanted to Buy

ver And Gold Cains.

Septic Tanks Installed

"W.Sau. You
Jlfonqr"
.....,,_

•Build Garages
•Siorm Doors &amp;
¥r.ntlows
•Room Additions

Frtlfl Estlmstes

Limestone,

..AI.I. YoniSoln llus1

·

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

. 537 BRYAN Pj.ACE'
MIDDLEPORT
992·2772
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
•RephK~nt¥r.ndows

Over 20 years experience.

WICKS
HAULING

~~~~~

h

HOWARD·' s

742·2925

Free Eolimateo

r"-----~~---;
(lime StoneLow Rates)

Yard Sale

• EX au 5t •
BrGkeS " Sh0(k5

DREBILS

Proofsets.

Diamonds, Antique Jow&amp;lry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Storling, Elc. Acquisitions ,Jewelry
. U.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Socond
Avenue, Gall~lis, 614·446-2842.
Antiques. lutniture. glass. china.

coins, toys, lamps, guns; tools,

estates: also appra-1sals, Osby

Mar&gt;n. 614·992-7441.
An!iques, lop poices paid, Aivor·

me An tiques. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Mooro owner. 614·992-

2526.
Clean late llodel Caos Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Nawer,

~.~i~:;:~·~~i~~;· l9op EaSI·

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sat- .

vage vehicles. Soiling pariS. 304·

113 5033
250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
'
·
ADivision on Nichols Metal, INc.
Shephllod Logging Buyer 01 Sian·
ing TimbGr And land, Pine; Pul~
: 9;,;9;;2,.;-2;;.4;.;0;.;6_ _ _,.F00a00x..: 3-04-·7_7_3,.·58,.;..6..
1_. wood, AO&gt;d Saw T1mber. 614-682·
L.;P:.;h.;;o;;,;n;e::.;6;.;1,.;4;.

1 8402.

Wan1ed To,",Ouy Used Mobile

-- BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:
--

Home. Co.ll 614·446·0175 or 304-

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

'
"

f

'
'

FREE ESTIMATES

614~992-7643

-

'

(No Sunday Calls)

.

--

2/tW/Ifn

In The Poor House?
Consider:

EMPLOYMENT

614-949-3060

.~ERVICES

John Williams, Owner
Ucensed Electrician
Work Gliarant"d
FrH Elllmatea
Providing Quality
Residential Service.
24 Hr. Emergency
Service

•

. in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed _a ccording 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 call today

t=')
-

'

110

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
tlftlom Addltlona
-HewGaragft
•EIIC!rlt:al &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing ·
ofnhlrtor &amp; Etltrlor
.Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
88H215
Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

Help Wan led
BANKING

,,...

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ro·nnie Jones

Oh10 \/alley Bank. Is Seotng An
Experienced And Oualil1~d Indi VIdual To F1ll One (1) Full T1me
Pos1t10n As A CoiiGcTions O.ll1cer
In Tho F'•nanc1al Bunk Group. To
Oualily For Thls E•empt Pos1t10n,
VouW•IIf.l~ :
0

Locai.Area Pick Up
011carded Appliances
&amp; Many Metals.
. 614-992-4025
Call 8 am-11 pm

THE MAPLES

1·614·992·7022

'

Dally Rd., Racine

FREE

Will Your Utilities Put You

675-5965

CORPORAL ELECTRIC

.

'

992-90577110,1 mo

BIULI.g 1
IXCIIIftllll ,
I!!!

360° Communications

~~~..;..,

Free Estimate&amp;

. .,.o),

CELLULAR PHONES
113 W. 2ND St

W.rlnn4lnshlp

Gravel, Umestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

Quality Window Systems

$1,000 REWARD
For any information
leading to the arrest and
conviction of person(s)
vandalizing the
George Hicks property
on NyeAve.
Call 304-422-8941 days
614-247-2012 evenings

Uc. wv 011030
Roofing, Painting
Gutter•
Guaranteed
' Quallf31

"!:.f::4L·

PftJ~~"'.:-S!I!I

Garages • Replacement Windows

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 I

2 Rabbit Beagles, both running.
1 male. 1 1emalo. 304·

great petL
137·3570.

'il

Free Estimate
Residenrial &amp;Commertial

.. WILL BIUL-

DJR.:-II"'T
~'-'

BULLETIN BOARD
7" column inch weekdays
19" column inch Sunday

--.-- 2:0v rrn

M2·315o&lt;.

.

We can wash anything

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

1

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

2 Black labadote Retrievers 1·
male 1-female, 8wka. old . Call
bf.tween !it:3oam-e:OOPm. 304-

custotxl.

natural look

SOLID VIN~
REPLACEMENT WIN o
· ws

Giveaway

112 Dotson Four Years Old.
(8 14)-04,., 015

JC
~--CU_S_T_O_M--~
CONSTRUOION
.

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

Get Your Messag• Across
With ADally Sentinel

40

10125/96/ltn .

conllnoa of tho VIllage
Corporotlon llmlto within alx
months of hlo or hor
appolntmont 81 Chief. Tho
applicant shall bt required
10 pou a phyolcal
examlnotlon, given by a
llceneod
phyalclan,
that he or aha
tho phyalcal
noco 111 ry to
dutlet of Chlitf
. Applications shall
,pted

WcCofa Curiosiry Shop.
221 Main St, Pt Pfeesant
Open 10·5
·Tuesday lhtu Saturday.
Crafts and auppliea.

1·614-742-2925

Decks, Driveways. • farm &amp;

mildew • Restore the clean

30 AMouncaments

1oin .......... $10.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

House • Mobile Homes •
Privacy Fences • Patio

SERVICE
Limestone ~ Gravel
Dirt • Sand
Chester, Ohio

of Pomeroy or ehall be
Thence South 82' 17' 40" willing to rolocoto within tho

)

HoT PRESSURE CI.WIING

DUMP TRUCK

985-4422

reference:

west 394.60 loot to an Iron
pin: Thence South 1' 16' 50"
Eaot 400.63 feet to an Iron
pin found at the Northeaat
corner of Smith's Parcels
and deacrlbad In the Malga
County . Deed· Recorda:
Volume 323, Paga 377:
Thence South 1' 16' 50"
East 416.12 loot along the
East line of tho aa!d Smith
parcelo to the point of
beginning, containing 7.52

OHIOVAWY

Heavy Equipment • Remove
unwanted dirt, 'mold and

332, PIQI 839: Volume 330. ..-------~~~~.......~~------.

I·

••

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

414Mn

In pursuance of an order

A POPULAR PROJECT - Rabbits are a popular project with
members of the 4-H Country Critters Club of Racine. Here Tyler
Whitlatch shows off his Minllop doe.

985-4473

Don Gellry, Owner

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

heard of! So the major problems you
arc eliminating by spaying or neutering your animal is the numher or
unwanted puppi!:s and kiuens ou1
there .
(This column i~ dedicaltd to a
friend who took in an abandoned,
pregnant Dobennan in June. I.

divorced in 1972.thc year he married
his current wil"e. the former Dehorah
Louise Manuel.
With his new wife and her two
children. he moved In Florida to
hccomc pastor of Bethel Melrupoli·
tan Baptisl Church.
· ·
""One of the stipulations or hcing
pastor was you had to he married.·· ·
said church member Belly Andrews.

Remodeling

Rt. 1, Box 44-C
Mason, WV
25260

FREE ESTIMATES

"Build Your Dream"

Report: Rev. Lyons married
twice before, but denied it
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (API The Rev. Henry Lyons was perlcctto
take over the Bethel Metropolitan .
Baplist Church in 1972. except for
one thing: He was single.
So he returned to Cincinnati and
wed a woman he had met there. indi•
caling on his marriage license he had
never heen married he fore. In fact. he
had been married twice already. The
St. Pcte"hurg Times reported Sun:lny.
Lyons. head of the National Baptist Ci&gt;ilVentinn USA. has hcen
dng~cd hy questions ahout his marilal fidelity since July. when his wife
w:~s charged with scuing lire to a
house he owned with :.mother wnm~m.
llte newspaper discovered that
Gc{,rgiu records _.;;how Lyons married
Patricia Lucile Demons in 1966 and
divorced her in 1%~. then married
· Camilla Smith !hill Silm&lt; year. They

thllaLR......... CDIJIA

· Pan• and Sllrt~ke! I

a new version of the old scrambler,' said one
of the workera. The ride has 12 cars which spin
In circle&amp; while moving forward and backward.

State fair
attendance
up over last ..
year's mark

r

'

NEW TO MEIGS MIDWAY - The Twist, new
on the lair circuit this year, was one of 14
amusement rides erected on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds midway Sunday llftarn~n. •n Is

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-n3-5822
Fin-Ing lhrough' Notweat Financial

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

M&amp;J

4-H youngstitrs brought In their animals. Eric's
lamb Ia one of 89 which will be sold at Friday
nlghra livestock aale In the show arena.

Ba, B. Houston, D.D.S.

1-614-441·1050 -1-888-441·1

BENNE'IT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLIN.G

Custom Homes

~ MASON DENTAL CARE

~3 SECOND AVE.
•Software
•Computer Systems
•Parts
•Repairs
•Printers
•Accessories
•Custom Orders
•90 Day Same As Cash
•Financing
•We Recharge Laser Cartridges
•We Reftlllnk Jfl Cartrldgea
•We Re-lnk Dot Matrix

ELIM
HOME CARE
For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dally - Weekly Contract
Family Atmosphere
209 S. 4th Street
Middleport

992-5042
I/'NI7/2moo.

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

992-4025

·

EI!OCllvci Wnllcn And Oral

Communication Skills

.

• Abthry To ComputC F1gutes
o People Onemc-d Pcrsonaliry
• Minimum Two (2) Yeats Prior .

Collcc(lons E•per icrx:c
The Ouol1hcd Applicant Will Need
To Have A Fhwble 5 ·6 Day
Work Week, And Be Ava1labte
For Somo Evomngs \'Yt"en Ae·
ques1ed By Collcc11ons Manager.
Work1n9 Kno-Nicdge 01 Small
Claim Coull A Plus• Oh1o Vallef
Bank Oilers A Generous Bonol1tS
PaCkago Including _.0 i'(k) Retire·
mem, Opportunity For Career Advamement. And Merit Bonus Opportunities. Experience, And 1
Ouai1lied Porson[S) Should Complait An Application AI Any 01
Our Ollicts And Submit To Human Resources Depanment. Ohio
Valley Bank, Box 2ll0 Gallipolis,
oruo 45631 .

EOUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

'

'

�.

. Monday, Ausauat 11, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: ..\IUY-ooP .

DIDOI:

::
::: ·-~~~~;o)i;i~~~
~
•
'
•....

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

•
......
...

ALDER

~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

--- - -

..... 4 Tory"ttol

CiOTr-1

12 Roman 2,100

•

13 Comdor

14~

AVON t All Areu t Shlrltl LPN ond ........ wl bobplt i1 mr
home, 11-F. CPR and ftrlt old CM•
Awon S8 ·$18 Mr. No Door -To • ificallon, 3 mllil a • · rotoroncDoor. Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Relll· tl avaloblt. 114-11112-2129.
lng, 1·1100·738:"188 in&lt;I'SII/rtp.
Profauionll TrM Sorvtco, Saomp
Removal, Free Eatimateal In·
.
IUriOCt, Bi-t. Ohio. 814-388Cemetery sales? Its the be11 9148. 114-317-71110.

Farm 100 Acres More Or le11,
Hause And Farm Equipman~ 15
Mitis Of Rlq Grandt, 837-77332011.

.

RENTALS

kept secret in America . High

,commissions. bonuses, beneri.ls. Will Bat.,Jit Wr Home 24 Hours
lead~ healtlt plus 40tK. $500 lost A Day, 7 Ooy1 A Wolll, Ctrlifttd
smrt training bonus, cal 614·992· Ooycaro Provider, Call Anytime,

e,....._,.._

7440.

Computer Users Needed. Work
own hours. $20k to 150k/yr 1-

FINANCIAL
'

80Q.3.48. 7188 X1508.

210

Computer Users Needed. Work
OWn Hro.. 12DK To SSOK /Yr. 1100-348-71 ee x ttn.

1t72 Rlchardo troller with • .10

Buslnea

acr11 more ar 1111. three btdroomo, -D'al hOlt and olr, tltrtl

Opportunity

porches, two outbuildings, 1~
and rll'rigermar, wuMr and dry"· concrere walk, ehrubberr,
Tuppere Plllna
nine mll11

IIIOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
O.llverr Drlvera little C.aeaara recommend• that you do bull·
Now Hiring Hou~y Wage 01 $5.25 ntll wlrh PltOPfa you know, and from Ravenswood, WV, nh»
/Hr. Allor 3D Deyo, Clsh Commie- NOT to 11nd mone~ lhroueh the ,..... 10011 loept up 114-143-6122.

•ter.

mall until

tiona Paid Dally. • Tips! Flexible
Schoclutes, Bonus Plan. Apply At
GaHipotis $fO(e.

hive lnYIIIIOiliCI

tho olftring.

...,.,..._w .......

1. . Sonoma Elt Cab auto, air,
Trudmlll Paid 1410 Will Take l'lm,.,. 1 brush cutltro "" Mlo 4&lt;¥1, till. Ct\IIM, Clllltle, 10,200
- - Slclor"s Equlpmont 304-875- niin. ft3,VOO. 304-875-5194. ·
llobllo Homo Spoco Stott Routo f325 otmolt NIYtr Uold 7421 .
(304)175452A
141 I Roulo 775 Art1, Groen l.o'
cal Sc:hoot DiRict. 111 ... ,. .
Ulocl HOlt
'85 Toyota WCk. llllll'ld cab, -4xo4,
630
Livestock
sa, aUt of
MERCHANDISE
treated wooden bed, good work
corna'"-d 1.
4 Montlt Old Sttlllon Colt Hollar ....... 0110. etol-7•2-2050.
ft.IOtd AI
Broke 1300 080 114-251· 1233.
4222.1:110
1971 Jeep CJ5, must Mt to ap118Wo41!
50 Acres Pasture, Good For •o praclate f3,100. 304-578-4033
tfucl, Goad For 4 Montllo. Plonty allot 5pm or toaW meuago.
u ..d video aamtl, 11 ~182· olwator.
(114)311HV4e
3411.
I
11184 Ford Ranger Xl, 4WD., 'Go
I Month Alpino Bit~ Goats With luollnjocted V-e- onglna, tondor
Wood Dining TO:blt. l 1 Choir' Hams 150 Eadl; ar-. Egg Lay- l'lar.., tun visor, chrome whHts,
AIIUng $25), 814-24~
Ing Hens 12.50 Etch, 114·258- bocllinor, ouopon~on fill. exo:otlont condition, 114-8411-21421/tor
11215 Evenings I - ·

550

Strvlctl .

·substitute teachers- must have
or be al~lble lOr Olllo Department

HARTS MASONARY ·. Black.

Four Btdroam Haule In The
Country, Rtflr'llat And Depot·
ita Required, No Inside Pell,

Bltclt. brlc:ll. • - • pipoo, wtndowa, llntoto. IIC, Claude Wl-o.
Rio Grande, OH Call 814·245·
5121.

tiOOIIonth, (814)258-1724·

Old btlm type born and 24'x28'
to bt 1om dawn, .,... oillr,
114-VV:I-IItl!l

ol Educ:a;)on Cenific:ation.

~ears

perlance, rHIOnlbll
1185-3591 a~or e:oOpm. no jab to

·substitute teacher aides- must
have hiQh school diploma or
equivalent
'Subalitutt Htallh Service coordinator {RN or LPN.) mutl have

small or 10 BIG. WV-021 :!011
Uvln~stan't

basement Wlttrproof•na. all basemenl repairs
done, ,, •• esum·a ttl, lifetime
guarantet. 10yrs on jab ••peri-

·current Ohio Iiana.

enct. 304-875-2145.

Sendrnu~ID:

580 PetS for Salt
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Fe11uring Hydro Balh. Don

·
- Proo1lgt,
........
roam,
"'" both.2ll8
laundry
room,- air
condllonlng, tt4,000 or boot oW-

or, 11._31103. .

1801 Sun1hlne 1h80, ThrH

Boclroom, Two Bt111. Total Electric; Excellonl Condldon $17,000
Rrm. Call (814)378--2133 Altor

Kitdlln Corpot. 16.150 -On All
Room Size Carpeto, Mollohon
1 -'
1 ~_4..;4.:.
1 .:.
7444
erencea (ti~4)~.:';~3~e~AIIOf'll ;F..:u:.mlturo,=::.:.
_·___
lip.m.
Pollee
Cordlo11 Phone.
In Hartford, fl.lrni1hed or unfur· Cok»r T:V., W.lhtr, Dryer, Aeltri-niohld, no pot' good location. 2 gorator, Fttezor, All c a - .
bedroom, responslbie people Power Toole, VCR1 MJcrowave.
Mioc, 114-258--1238.
only, 304-882-:1555.

s..r-.

Experienced Mechanic With Mo·
torc~cle ATV and PWC Year
Round Work Stnd Reoume: CLA

All ... _

tilts

adver!lslng tn

-per " ..... to

Flatbed Step Dock OTR Drlvoro
NOfldtd. COL Ucenoed Required,
Call 1-800-462-523fl
Homo a·usinoso S.A.S.E. tt.OO
M.D. Only, S.P.F. lnf. P.O. Box
347358, San Francisco, CA
8-4134.
Housekeeper For Disabled Pracdc:ing Columbus Auorney, Live-In,
Some Personal Care, Drwet1 li·
cenae Required, Good Wagtl,
Room &amp; Boord, 614-2117-5354.

1997 t4x70

1897 14J80 3 or 4 Bedroom,
I1,3SQ down, $229/mo. Free air.

advertfsed in INs newspaper
are ava1abte on an 8CpJ8I

. Ho

I

rne8 01'

sale

3 to • Bedtooml Opdonal Family

Room, CA, _Foot Appro~mototy II
2 Acreo. 3 Minutoo From Haopital
and Town, Blueraweel Drive
$73,000 (114) 448... 173 8pm to
Dim
3Boclraamo, tboth; conlrlt hlau
air, city wator wl2,200~h. black
building In Lean. 147,000. 304-

I

I

O~terbfook Center, 333 Page Milfl From Gallpolil On Bulavine
Stroot. Middleport, Ohio hal part Pike, On t 112 Aero Flat Lo~ City
dme STNA pasltionl availabla lo&lt; School' tt29.000 Or Boot Offer,
all ahills. Please 11ap in and fill lte~l~ol-~4~48~03110~~·. , . - - - - - out an application, you may be I·
eligible for a sign-on bonus of up s Bedroom, c 'ape Cod, Over 2
to $500.
Acres, 1 Miles From Town

(614)256--111117

Part time receptionie!lbtlliRg clerk 1!::::!::::.:.:::.:..-~:-:-_:_
needed tor local physician·• of- 8.8 Acrea, ·2 year old sectional
3br, 2 battle, central air, NICE I
7 30 30

tV8V _BuicM SMylar-. good work
car, aood cood.; 11,100 or .trade
for Chevy S·10 or equal value .

304-1185-3414 oillr 7pm
1889 Ford Foottva $350, 114256-1130.

Quick delivery. Clllt-800-837-

32311

Limited Orterl 1997 doublowldo,
3br, 2bath, tt 799 down, 12791

Now 1997 t4x70 tltreo

includes e months FREE lot
Only
1.86 per month

su

s1050

down. Call 1.aoo-837-

Progressiwe long -Term C~re
Facility Specializing In Alzhelm-

or·s

care,

As Well '" Skilled

And &lt;-Rehab Services Has Re·
warding Positions Open For RN's
Or LPN's, Fui-Time Or Port-Time,

All Shilts. Apply In Parson At
Scenic: Hilli Nursing Center, 311

&amp;ckddgli Rd., llidwel. OH.
Radio Account Elecutlvt: Rare

"!lportunity to otep Into an ostobished account lilt. Looking fro an

experienced Radio Account Er·
ecuM who llalllf Ita"" wilh I
"td track record. $30,000
•
us annualty ID llatl Plea• call
prior to oonding' ruumo. Call

~r.

Business and
Bulfdln.gs

340

rwed.
We .-clllzeln :
Flnlflctnglor ttou. . Md rnoblloSelf4mployld•I'IIMnclngHornel,.,.,vvMWnt• BlU Con·

Small thriving buaintll. Bab~ 1
children's hems. S t7 ,000• lnven·
tory. 18,000. Serious inqulrle•
orly. 30&lt;4-875-4571 after 5pm.

eotiPiioft.-....,.,.

350

ty· CMh out tonny need.
. No appllcadon .....IJitewlsof
etadhotcamo to III!IIYCll today tarolreeena~lisl
100-1121·14021114-512-4001.

Lola

1887 YZ80 Yamaha 1500, Many

-Porto. (et4)3117-nsa

1&amp;80 Harley Ultra Classic With ·
Matching Pull Behind Trailer, ,
$14,100,114-4411-6541.

Valle~.

caoh Paid lor Land In Galtla
Count•. Send Prico, L-tlon I
'don to Blockbu rn Rouy,
I
Doocrlp
P.O. Box 783, GaNtpallo,OH ..
4513t .orCii: (014)-041-ooDI

,.00 "!''U fNfit.. 12fi&gt;.D YOJI't • .,

tR94 Harley Davidson Sponsler,
Loll 01 E&gt;traoi 18,700. Bt4-25610t2.
.

DML-Y f.\Oro:i&lt;.OPE.?

1805 Yamaha 350 WarriOr, Runs
Good, $2.000080 814-258-1318.

8 Now--me

eenee

Nonb
·Pass
4•

,.

parents

East

29 Abatemenl (or

Pasa
All pass

on lllneoo)
30 Ginger 32 Fencing
awortl

(equal)

....---1---+---1

.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

for Sale
1 2'· Aim. V-Bonom Boat, Seats,

Tralter, livl Well, Trolling Motor,
Depth Finder llanr Ext•ao, Verr
..... 11,000, 080814·258-IIBeJ.
1882 Thundercraft,18rt. wl1876

Johnson 7Chp engine, good

tVe8 Ranger 373V 1B' 12 -24V
Trolling Motor, 160 XP .Evinruda
Flbltglau Ban Boat Astro
.Gta11 Trailer. ~lshrinder, Acces·
aortoo, Neocl Stlt lmmoclietely An·

ytlme, 11,500 O.B.O. 014-&lt;41 ·
141!l
.
Tri Halll Open 1!aw Motor Boal 15
Faet, as Horle Power ·Mercury
Motor, New lower Unit, Gaur- .

r

...

....

0

_I I

I

-.-E-.-G
~

-II .

r
_

i

I

1
_

_

_

_

_

_

~-~~~pi~t~

by filling In the missing WOlds

L.....l..:...J..-lL-..L.-L....J you develop hom step No. 3 below.

--

antud To Sept. 1998, 81•·4-46·

0472.

760

.

i~
..
-· ;.- .....

Auto Parts &amp;

--

Accessories ·
11118 ChaVell

Supe1 Sport Hood,

dassl(ltds.

Victim • Pulpy- Notch -Feebly- HUMBLE
"I always remember how stamps stick to themselves."

the starlet chirped, "and that's how I remain HUMBLE."

I MONDAY

AUGUST11

•

Special Debate

'

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

ASTRO-GRAPH

I

and receplive 1oday. II is 10 your your eKpertise today. Whal you know
advamage 10 reslate your prcscma-. is superior to what your competition
BERNICE
knows. ·
·
tion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
BEDEOSOL
Condilions thai bear direclly upon
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Try
your work or career are more favor· 10 take an early recreatiomil break
able than usualloday. Step oul bold- today. Select activities that stimulate
ly and lake charge of these venues.
you menially and physically -- if they
Tuesday, Aug. 12. 1997
SAGITIARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dcc.
are
also competitive, alllhe belter.
.· In the year ahead, you 'II be more ·
21)
Your
ideas
will
be
besl
expressed
TAURUS
(Aprii20-May 20) The
aQibitiou.s and enlerprising·lhan you ·
through
oll1ers
loday.
Present
your
.
concerns
and
needs of family memh~ve been in the pasl. You might even
.
lhoughts
in
a
way
that
will
pennil
bers
will
be
a
priorily considera1ion
·taF on an ancillary endeavor to pro1hem to think they are lhe authors.
today. You'll be the one who'll mi.ke
ville additional earnings.
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Ian.
19)
sure
lhal their requirements are graiLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Others
Family members willlurn to you lo ified.
w'll instinctively know today thai if
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You'll
a job needs doing, you're the ~ne · 1solve a problem 1oday. You will provide
solutions
with
which
they
are
be
ambitions and industrious today,
whO'll get il done. Your responsible
totally
unfamiliar.
especially
if you're embarking on. an
altitude has earned others' respect.
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
20-Feb.
I
9)
·
exciting
new
endeavor. Much can be
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today
·You're a very good salesperson loday, ; accomplished. Get an early start.
. Y~ll might find yourself in a bus.iness
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
lll]langement where you can use con- and will be able to sway others to act
in
compliance
with
your
sugges·
.
.
You're
in a good cycle for promoiing
ficienlial infonnation advantageously
lions.
Use
your
gift
constnK:tively.
your
own
interests without being
to create a unique package.
.
PISCES
(Feb.
10-M.arch
20)
offensive.
If
you favor personal causLmRA (Sept. 23-0&lt;:t. 23) Asso.
Knowledge
you've
acquired
lhrous_l)_
.
es
1oday,
associales
aren't apt to
citlles who turned a deaf ear to you
yeslerday are likely to be compliant personal experience will contribule to . mind.

•I

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS

lbu'H be (lootirg on a cloud with
the buys yilu'H find In the

EJctllent Condition. 614 -2561071.

S.ERVICES

.....,

brl!lh~Y

44 LPopoed

45 A"--

·

15' Pop-Up; 1975 Mallard 27'
Awning ; Pontoon Boar 24' 35 HP
Johnson /Trailer, 1B99 Mc:CormickRoad, 614-446·1511 .

·e;:.,;;

39Wideotloe
alze
41 Glisten

·::~:~~, S©\\~lA-l&amp;£~s·

198Q Fleerwing 1T Awning bctl-

Upotolro Apartment Far Rent 1300.00 llonth - lotuot Pay For
Gal I Pllont · - Kl....., One
Lorge Bedroom · LIVIng Roam
And
BothDtpo·'t
• Excellent
No Ptto.
a-..Condition,
•r~. C··
Bo Soon Att:0
A.;:
3
nut, ~-llpolll,
~It•~•••
•
~
_
~114
For Al&gt;t&gt;alntrn1r1.
u"

21 Pull

24 Actor LadCI
2e Rook'o cry
27 Franklin ond
..,::;;;..._ _.,.....,
Hur
28 Of grand-

.,

lenr Condition; 1982 Coachman

Towo
- tn llld •
,, •·•
~room a,...r.,.,,.nt
chport, no pm.l14-882-5158.

In a

...

675-•956 . Evenings 304-BB2-

190

Beaulitul 2acre loll, public wettr.
C . Bowen Jr. 304-578·2338 or

fi=

THE ·ooRN LOSER

Ripley, WV. 304-372-3933 or 1100·273-9329.

~~~~~~~~~~~ jiii;;pj;;g";;;;;;;~~";:;ki;;;: ~~~~~~~~~~~

.l

Wi*.ge, loaded With E1tras, Ex·
-Condition, 014-448-11860.

New gas 1anks, 1 ton truck
.wheels &amp; radiators. 0 a R AU10o

dorson, WV. $15,000. 304-e75. _. __
1 .5:;i:;58:.•::r.:304.:.;..·8:.;7.:5-.:2,;.44:.:5:.

8': "

HOW?
taano.,.l
'l'lltllrfllopllfttnp
.....,..m
Col fir_
....., lion
WF1. - - . .711 El1T. 11

Motorcycles

et4-742-2792.

1::::.::::..;::.::______

__

foxy

reuon?

9 Prouder,

Full line of ~ulo body panels.
palmS: and supplies, al BO giaaa,
light assembly. Oxygen and acetylene tanks filled and exchanged,

Country home 20 minutes from
Pt. Pltlllnt off Rt.2 18/ecrea .3 Acres Redlflond Ridge. Hen-

Grove-Scenic

4-o1a
-Ingrain
5 Owns

5877

1.2 acre bt in Syracuse, 115,000,
8 t 4-992-4581.

•·
Apple

FRANK&amp;: EARNEST

Transmissions, -Access TransJer
Casvs &amp; Rear Ends, 614·245-

1 1f2 Aett LOI For Salt Cora Mill
Road (014)24s-5718

llncldln, oordtn IPGL pond, ga,.go, born. 3br, living room,
kitchen, bath, pantry, 3 season
.. .u
tal
parcn, .,..,.1 1 rcase, 1ronl 1
baclr. porch, walk-In CIOIII I
smell IIUdf, 87 , complete.
fi&amp;.000.304-S7&amp;.3I1511.

Mary
40 oa...
.. 42 Poellc limo

10- La Douce
u. Supper, e .g.
19 Comporathrt
tulllx
·

48 Prong&amp;
Karl Marx (where is he buried?)
50 Smooch
claimed, "Anyone who knows any51 Capable o1
(2 Wdo.)
lhing of history knows that great
53
tlnleal bit
social changes are impo!'5ible without
55 Eltotern
the feminine upheaval. Social
blahop
58 Song lor twa ·
progress can be measured exaclly by .
57 Cut
1he social position of the fair sex, the
59 Horae
ugly ones included."
: i, '--11.-.1-,..J_
I....I....L...J 81 w. hemlTwo parts of that (impossible and '.·
~.,.··•n.
feminine) are relevanl in Ibis deal;
one (ugly) cenainly isn't! The deal
occurred during lhe Bridge FedoraCELEBRITY CIPHER
lion of Africa, Asia and Middle Eas1
by Luis Campos
Championships in Cape Town last
Celebri!y Ciphal' cryptograms are CfMied from quota!IOI"'I by tamoua peoplt, pet! and pt8MI'II
Each letter llllhe cipher stands tor anothel'. /ode~ 'f C:W.. R eqt.JBII 0
May. How did Sou1h, wilh four
·apparently inescapable losers, make
four spades?
KAL- ·Ez-EWW-BTPZP
' A• I
LTZ
E
The declarer was Josephine Mor·cos from Egypt. She won the first
FUFCJZIIALO.
APL'Z
0 X J . KALLALO
.
.World Women's Team Olympiad li11e
Wf\EN YOO~ /&gt;o, BORN (.()5f.R,
in 1960 as pan of 1he Uniled Arab
PFBTLR
AZ'P
z. T . GCFEZMALO. '
·Republics
team.
She
opened
·one
IT IZ£N&gt;5 UJ'f: t-. ~
PZFALGCFL.LFC.
.j spa\le because she was third in hand,
OFTCOF
.
\
.: when a little license is pennitted.
· PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You leam as much lrom lho hand that you lead
Over West's takeout double, Nonh,
across the slreol as ~ teams from you.• -William Hun.
.Sophie Sarwat (who coaehes lhe
·Egyptian synchronized swimming·
WOlD
team), used the Law of Tolal Tricks
·in jumping 10 four spades. Knowing
.
ldltod ~y CLAY I . POlLAN
they had I 0 spades between them,
R.arrange letters of
she bid to lhe 10-lrick level. I would
four ICrombled words
L....:~cr::B:=!:::k6~2:_.!11 have been lempted 10 double again
low to form four simple words
with thaiWesl hand, bu1 she passed.
Marcos ruffed the diamond ·lead,
DAILEL
drew trumps ending in the dummy,'
ruffed 1he diamond nine, and casl
adrift Wilh a club to lhe 10 and king.
Correclly, Easl swilched to.the bean
, SUT¥R
·jack: queen, king, ace. West won the
3
nex1 club Irick and play:ed a hean lo
1
1~
' her panner's 10 bul without cashing
the club ace. Now declarer could discard dummy's remaining clubs on her
_E,_L__,..D -=.' .
nine-eighl of beans!
.
s 1 j&amp; 1 - will drink from the
of
I ·
knowledge wl'lile others will just
Karl Marx is buried in -Highgale
.----.,....,---:---------,
"
. Cemetery, nonh London.
\.
1he chuckle quo1ed
7......,.-s...,AI_Rrl;-.-vi_E..,I__,,

Budget Price Transmissions,
Starting al S~ :OO and Up, Used 1
Rebuilt, All T1pes, Over 10,000

&amp; Acreage .

WedgaRoalty304-e75-2722.
(814)218--3023. ltw Davlo, Jac:ll·
son County Sroadcasling, 285
POR SALE aY OWNER:
BRUNER LAND
Eul main StrHI, Jackson. Ohio 11t VJntDn Coulf,. In Galllpo!Ja. 1
114-71&amp;-9173
•5640. E.O.E.
Floor Plan, 3 Bedrooms, 1 Car 011111 Co.: Gallipolil, Neigborllllrlgo, Lot IIDXVD, Clt1114-37VShephard Logging Anyone Ex- 2720 For AppolnttMiil Onty AI· hood Rd., Laot Twol 22 Aoru
perience With Chain Saw, Also :•::..:.l:.l\ll=..- - ' - - - - - - 12•.ooo ·or 10 Acres $10,000.
Sk&lt;fdor Operator, 8t4-882.e-402.
Frltn&lt;IIY Ridge, 10 Ac:reo 11•.000.
Hou,u and property, appro1. 4a .. 8.6 Acres 17,500 Or 18 Acr11
Holp Wanted: Timber Cunor flO etta. ld•totarttr home. Beech 118,000. loons Run Rd. (21 10
Per Hour, Leader Operator, Sk!t &amp;,PornM~rOH.~2077.
AcieParcels.SIO,OOO•.
. dtr, E~~:perienced Onl~ Need · •o
Aptlly, Call el•-6112-7455.
HouM For Stle By Ownoro. Nice llotao Co.: Ntar Albany, Choop3 W~ 2 8alht, Ulilll)' Room. ar Than lo1 Rent • 5 Acr11
180 W8nledTO DO
Lorge LMng Room, Dining Room 17,500 · St.OOO Dawn • 11381
And Kitchen. Priced In The Mid Mo., For Five Ytall. Alexander
ANY ODD JOBS: Extorior point· FlftleL Call (814)387-01182 Far Schools.
lng, shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, Men Delli&amp;
11ndataping, sidewalks Kged, ;;;,;...;..::.;..::;.;;...______ Call For Free Maps + OWner Fl·
lawn care, etc:. Call Bill 304·875-. Park Drlv•S rooms, buemenc, nanc:lng tnto. Take 1~ Off lilted
nice lot. Call SomtrviJie Realty Pricel On Cash Purchlaesl
71 ; 2.
3114-a~"' .leon CillO 304- 1:.:=~..:.:.:_~:.:=::::..__
Chlkl caM" In my home, grMt fW'I :1::75~34:.::31:.:·------- Prime house site, Applegrowe
--• --·~
oc~-,·•·o rooponli
area on At. 2, county water.
....
.,... - for
• Mlddt.• Stc''onol
3br, 2~th,
tg kilchon. $10,000.
corwenienl
u
w.
Call wHk•ndt or alr.r ·
bl• llltl.,..,..,
port or Cheshire residents, c:all t.t pump, on 4lcrwa In Flattodc. lpm Mon-Fri. 304-578·2884.
114-11112-54115.
3114-1175-58110.
p::::::::.:.:::::::.:~:::::.
8evont5-..,. pei'Oiil
Chlldclro In lly H - Ar&gt;y•SNfl. UM Thltllorrgege Ptymtnt lor
$7,1001 Deyo A -It, Umlltd Spoco, Somllting-ThonlntlrHII
romoto, beautllul land; llotgo
Stard,.. A•~. 25th, Colt Now To ·'Pty your mortgago off 5-15 County. Scipio Tawnlhlp. SR 682
·~ Spot,
·•
Rooenro
114-441·1395• yooru~norl
-·~-:. ... _ . 7• 000 _ _ 1
"a •SA 143) · Owner 1
e.~~.n-..o.Galflpol&amp;
_.. _ _..... ~ .. _.
oil far goad map, 1·114·59 •
-~ roma- m
-·11
okelc ua1uro
·your
1tea
El!DIIIent:td corpontry •N
at1ng
yourLander
mar1.11n't
gage la::;S.C=5·; . . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _
doling. lnoidl and oulllde, and CiOIII"t you_,
360 Real Eslatt
dtcko. vtnv! 'ttldlng, add-on eddl· -"l'!lloram worita on mobllo homo
Wlnted
robultl Rtftronooo-Froo Eotl·
tlont. cabinet rofaclng .111 nniJ
-JmSI1UI304-675-1272.
Giorgio Portablt Stwmlfl. ·don't
,_ul )'tiUf logiiO tho m1 jull call
304-175-lV57.

oontlfon.614-247-4181.

-nloaleep
7 PaotM
8 Fc.-whal

By Phillip Alder

VV2-2580.

Ou-...,16,1100. 814-992-27711.

1893 Laoor RS, 5 Sptod, Air,
10,000 Miieo, $7,200; 1992 Ply-

marble

3 Cooler

ltcan't run
away, can it?

1995 Toyota Tlcomo, 4WD, pickup. PS, PB. lit, bedlnor, l);arrolnd
Plato .. 5 op., 112,500, ti14-

1'981 Escort. Brlght·Biut, Stan-

1993 Buick Rogal f7.500, OBO
814--1.

1 Doc. holiday
2 l'ypo ol playing

360n--wMh

1991 Ford Explorer Sport 11,eoo
Mllao AMIFM Caoaotto And CD.
One OWner (et•~H

ohopo, $3,300. 394-576-4033 attor5pmartoavemesoage.
·

IVVI PtlnUac Sunbird LE, $2.700,
et4-44&amp;-3137.

month. Fr., dell~ter1 &amp; setup.
Only 11 Oakwood Homes, Nitro
wv. 304·lSS.5885.

DOWN

33 Trenomlt

me

IVVD rod Ford Pro~. automotlc,
3.0 L. V-8, AC, auioa, tnVfm caoMtte, excellent condition, aiJdng
S4500,114-ettl-5483.

dard, Book Value 12.700, Sale
For II ,550 080. (814)-Ma--6t!27

·

27 Kege
31 Enlrancea .
34 . Actroaa Arden
35 Zola heroine
37 Dry (dlahea)
38Jotephor

Opening lead: • A

.

llttoo, Dealer New 122.500

(1.1 4)ue

3B93.

.

Wei&amp;
Dbl.

1884 Chwr COmeraion Van list
For 0'11r $31,000 Under 8,000

Honda CR 125 recently rebuilt,
runt great. 12.000. Days 304·

379-21145.

°

So!lth

BARNEY

1893 Chivy Lumina 7 I'BIIangtr
llerll II~ TV. 11,000 IIIIas 17,500
(I 14)2511'-1270

1987 Pontile 8000. s·soo. 304·

1888 Ford E1cort Good Condl·
lion, In &amp; Out Red $1,100, 114·

food

Frlenda

Dealer: North

mlloogo, $71D5,

tt,700 OBO 814-441·121a Aftor

COMMHY

'lieW (814}446-4100

hlg~

114-11112-4581.

1093 Pontiac Bonneville SE,
73,000 miles, loaded, eJceUent

.... wes ....
Part-Time Help, Must Havo Ctoan
Driving Record, Wust Be Able To
lilt Heavy Bo•s. CaU For Inter-

condition,

Four wheeler· 1g95 Yainaha Timberwalf, 12700, great condilion,

875-1272.

I 20 Nevenllllett
!22 Four qto.
23 Allllne Info
25- Good

Vulnerable: East-West

1183 Chevrolet Lumina Van, 1
patMnger seating, excell&amp;nt

1818 Goldwing Aapencade ~ow

e.

18 Jordan'a
ntlghbor

. 43 More

• J 984

.

19B7 Blac:ll Grand Am, f 'Ooaro,

N•• Bank Repo•lt Onl~ 3 left,
owner financing available. 304·
755-7HI1.
·

Whln tho blrl&lt; ..,. no, lei
Alhlnollorlgage oar yull Lat
our sta~ help you got tho taan rou

5pm.

740

High Milu, Good Condition,

O K
ohap A WOOD HOMES, Nl·
TR&gt;, WV. 304·755-5885.
IT'S btiJ. 1997 4BR, 2BATH.
DOUBLEWIDE. 11.849 DOWN,
$319/MO. FREE DELIVERY I
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES. NITRO. WV. 304-7555885. Limil8d Offef.
La
1 ·
t ._... hom 2
rge seecllon
u-.u
•·
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $3495.

---

17 Arlzon.o city

--arm•

80 Rocen
62 Hairo1yle
63 Portico
64 And o1hers
·
(2 wds.)
es lllvo dweller
66 Muolcal wc.-k
87 Writer's encl.
68 Conaumed

1981 Goo Tracker 4X4, 98,500
mlfea, ..200. el4·7•2·2574 alter

tD83 Olds Omega, 79,000 tciWii

:ao:::~~~:.'7n~:,:~:~":il:~: ,.: ': .:~: :·~,.,: .~:.~:.:;: :.;.~:.'%.,=·:;~.:d.::~:;:.s-__ 13231==·- ------AlHE,. MORTGAGE

441-18541.

19g7 daublewldo I 1445 dawn,

homes. For taetory direct price'

.

.. Q 9 8 4

1888 Chev~ Conversion van,

350 V-8. Laadod, $5,500 Firm,
114'448·8280 Ahor 5 P.M. e J4-

1ges Handa 4 wheel drive 4·

SAVESU$.
Oakwood Homes II the only
dealer In the trl-otatt aru mot
builds and aella their own

I

Aoraatar van, 31,000

19110 Triumph Spidtro, 82,000ml.,
very goad cand .. $2,500. 304e75-3ttl8.

moulh Grand Voyager Goad Condilion, Trim Packagi, 014· 388908'1.

helplul. Quallliad applican11 may •·
1ubmlt resumes to P.O. 458,
Racine, Oh 45771. No telephone
....... pi

~rd

- - 304-675-6258.

FACTOill' DI1ECT.
NO MIDDlE MAN.

'

1887

1i88 Dodge omni, Run• Goad

1897 Flntwaad. 14X52. 2 BR.
Lb Now. (814)-VV2-5428

West
East
• 10 4
es
:9 K 72
.. J 10 5 3
t A K Q 10 8
tJ76432
•AQ7
• K3
8outlt
eKQJ87

miles on new ma10r, good condlltan, f3300,114-GV2-611 • ., .....
VV2-ZI77.

..!10. 814-245-5387.

1229/mo. Ff8e delivery I utup.
1-800-811-8777.

• 95
• 10 6 52

S:!Opn.

5815.

REAL ESTATE

lice. computer eaperlen~:e and

'8811onte carto. o14-1192-71 84.
AKC Labrador Retrtevoll, bloctt.
t1074 MGB, runs good, needs
vet chec-ed, flrsr lhOCI I ·&amp;ome
body work. $.2,500. 304·
warmocl, DOB 0112/D7, rtady lor 675-e397.
new hOmtl 8/12/i7, $250, St4GV2·2&lt;72.
1979 Cobra Mustang, New 302

5pm.

wood Homes Nitro.WV. 304-755-

With 2 Car Garage, Gao Heat, 2

l

710 Autos for salt

Wormed,·B1+38&amp;-111C.

1!188 Cadlttoc ANtwaod, Cit,OOO
miles $3,500. 304-e75-5424 ·~··

aldrUng, &amp; dallvory. Only at Oak-

advertlsemen1s for real estate
which Is In violation of the
law. Otx readefs 818 hereby
. lnbmedlhol all -ngo

310

l! or 3 Bedroom,

9 A 6

304-773-6305 oillr 5pm.

1984 MerCury lyn• $350 1 · 30~·

11 lnt•eated Please Forward A• 541-2869 Of aa.-588-871 4.
aune to: Human Retourct Dtrec- I::::.:=:.::.:::..:.::~:.:.;:___
-r 412 Second Ave.: Gallipolis, 4 Bedroom Split LIWI Wilh 5400
••
Otio451531
Sq. Ft. Including Full Basement

I•

TRANSPORTATION

e75-7112.

t~I'KJ'IIringly aa:ept

304-675-51511.

Cantl'ICIIISW

:1!47.

1984 Clnllnl Z-21 W/Hapl, 350-4
barrel engine, rune great, need
wlndshlel4 &amp; one rear ••••·
$1,000 OBO. 304-675-5740 Ilk
lot Oovlcl.

Oa,_ Homos, Nitro. WV. 304·
755-51185.

IIDorer. Loadef eJperienc:e woutd
be hetprul bul not nec:e11ary. '-"!"orippito•.rtltooltyllfirllbasllllisll.llll~
Wages based on exparienc:e. 1I~
Contact Dan for appoinuntnt at

plot

Ear corn to~ aala, alighlly dam·
aged, price negotlatH, 814-885-

miles, g:ood condition Inside and

$885 down, 1185/mo. Only at

This newspaper will not

Local log Yard aeiking general

'

AKC Garman Shtphtrd Pups,
Whita Champ Una, $150 Shots&amp;

Hay &amp; Grain

o.ul, automatic, new tires, 1985,
eu-992·6824.

--1987 14 Wtdo-1 both. 1611Vi
down, $13:SI/mo, with approved
Crtdl. can 1-800-681-llm.

at 11158 Whlcl1 makes h illegal
10 aMrttse ·anv PI ereience,
llmblion or dlscl'lminauon
based on race, color, r&amp;llgkJn,
Hit 1amllal s1a1us or nartonat
orlgtn, Of any Intention to
make any·such prefarance,
limitation ., dlscrtmlnatton.-

45631

Contract Occupattonat-n.or.

640

lt50C81412&lt;H4V5

1884 t4x80 3 Bedroomo, 2 lull
Balhl, Decks, C Air, Extras.
llult llovol 814-441-0155, 814441-27111.

·the Federal Fair HouslrigAI:J

418, C/O Gallipolis Oait,. Tribune
825 third Ava., Gallipolis, Ohio

l:onlracl RtopltOIY Thorapilt

Y01rting Colt Solid Point Wllh
White Markings (614)317-:Dt 17

ceiver And Turner, $350; 4 Cylin·
der Engine Out Of A 19811 T -

1993, Home, 3 Bedroom, 2
Full Beth, Control Air. F•lly Fu.Nihed, New Furnltu,.., Y1.11t Sell
(et41245--QII

1880,814-256~

Medl Home Health, The Areas
Full Service Home Health and
Durable Medical Equipment Company, 11 Looking For ttle FoRow·
.in; Contract AJsitions:

Goats tar ..... 8t4-94ti-2AV4.

Derk S!art Satetijto Dilh, Witlt Re-

E~~:perlenc:ed Hair Saylisl Needed
For Busy New Salon. 8U·441-

llodl Homolloallh

conlormotion. f2,000. 304-1755555.

•v Engine, S1500; 1SI71 Mercury
Capri, 4 c,lihder, Auto I•OO;

3:00

cartoton School
P.O Box307
~CUlt, 0Na 45779
EEO

81 AOHA intc. Fund M•o. nllybt

Doc blood, good disposition and

Shoo11. 373 Gaargoo Crook Rd.
014-44HZ!I.

1871 Fakmont To•J Remcuilltlng
All Floo,., Apptlonces,

ex· .... Set 114-317-0515.
raiiL 304-

btick I atone work. 30

Building

SUpples

lla., Plul Oapolil, 814-245-Sleol.

1879 14•711 Sc:hult Willi Expanda
VENDING: Laz~ Man's Dream. Uvlng Room And A 19118 12x42
Foor Haura • llg n. Pr1t:ad ~ Add-A-Room Four Bldrooma. 1
Frtt Btoch. 1-1100-620-4353.
112 Bdlt, Fanlly Room, Fur'*"• Hoot Pu-.. Md Clrpetlng:
230 Prolesslonsl
114-245-SSII5.

EIIPLOYIIENT OPPORTUNITIES Willi lHE
MEIGS COUNTY BOARO
OFIIIWD

•

~ou

3 Bedroom House For Rent, In
Country, Ntot Yord, No Pall, No
~Or Smoking, 13(01

North
QI.U-97
eAg632

- Hu sqvarna &amp; Gr..n Machine

.

52 R.......,1 ,002
S.C Streett
58

animal

15 Sold (Fr.)
1S Jacob'atwln

Spews. 304-675-14211.

..,..., ID Pwvwta.,. Ptadl

45~
ACROSS
47 Cal. obbr.
1 Rotun- 48C~cloth

I

�Ohio Lottery
Cincinnati
makes it
three in a row

Pick 3:
4-9-8
Pick 4:

o-s.7-s

Buckeye 5:
16-23-24-30-35

Sports on Page 4

•

en tine
\lol . ..a, NO. 82

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 12, 1997

cum, Ohio Ylltey PubllllllnO Company

A Gannett Co. NeWspaPer

LCCD funding resolution w.ins
approval from commiSsioners
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff

A resolution authorizing an application for grant funds for an exten·
~on to the Leading Creek Conservancy District's water system was
JPPfOVed by the Meigs County Commissioners when they met in re_gular ·
session on Monday.
The estimated cost of the project .,
is $618,000. It would provide rural
water service to 95 homes in the the
Dexter area . in Salem Township,
includh\g Bowles Road, Nelson
Road, Halliday Road, McCumber.
Road, Nicholson Hill and Beech
Grove Road.
Proposed funding would come
from the Appalachian Regional Commission. Community Development
Block Grants, and Ohio Water DevelCHECK PRESENTED - A check for $6,845 was ·preaented to
opment Authority.
Susie Heines, representing the Meigs County Speech end HearThe commissioners opened bids
Ing Clinic, by Me191 County Commissioners Monday. Presenting
for the replacement of the bridge on
the check to Heines, center, are Commlsslooers Fred Hoffman and
Childnm's Home Road in Pomeroy.
Janet Howard.
Bids were received fro.m Precon
Bridge Co. of Marietta, in the amount of the new county road map, which week. The hook will feature two-page
of $36,704.50, and Ohio Bridge Co. will be available for purchase by the maps of each township.
The commissioners referred to
. of Cambridge in the amount .of public through his department or
$61,600. The bids were tabled pend- through the county map office at the Eason a request from the Columbia
Township Trustees a request to
ing review by County Engineer coutthouse. The cost will be $2.
Eason also noted that a map in · change the nam~ of Township Road
Raben Eason.
Eason distributed the first copies book fonn will be available later this 368 from Farmers Road to Mattox

Road.
The commissioners presented a
check to the Meigs County Speech
and Hearing Clinic in the amount of
$6,845 for the purchase of a new
audio111eter for the program. The
check was accepted by Susie Heines,
who operates the program through
the county health depanment offices.
An audiometer is a device used to
test hearing in a soundproof hootb.
The board met with David Jenkins of the Depanment of Human Services, who asked whether the board
had established an insur_ance advisory board.
Commissioner Janet Howard ·
UTTLE MISS AND MISTER - James Thom11s Evans, 6, and
announced that the· hoard had been
Andrea Marie Buckley, 5, are Meigs County's Little Miss and Misformed to advise the commissioners
ter for 1997. They were selected following Interviews on the Hill .
on issues relating to the county's
Stage at the 134th Meigs County Fair Monday. James Thomas is
employee insurance. The committee
the
son of Jay and Debbie Evans of Pomeroy, and Andrea is the
is made up of representatives of all
of l!ryce and Pam Buckley of Pomeroy.
daughter
agencies panicipating in the county's
self-insurance program.
Members are Jenkins, represent-.
. ing eiJlployees of ·the DHS; Jon
_Jacobs, health depanment; Connie
· Karschnik, Tuberculosis board; Jean
LyOJlS, Emergency Services; Carole
Gilkey, Educational Service Center;
Janet Elkins. county counhouse; and
The Meigs County Commission- identical to one rejected by the vot;'
Opal Dy~r. Soil and Water Conser- ers have authorized the Meigs Coun- ers in May.
(Contlnued on Page 3) ·
ty Board of Mental Retardation and
"Although the levy railed this .
Developmental Disabilities to place a spring, otir needs have not changed,"
1.8 mill continuing levy on the Bcha told the commissioners. "We're
November balloJ.
pleased to be good stewards of the
The authorizatio~ was given at the puhlio's funds."
Swann. Absenr were council mem·
bers Mick Childs, Rae Gwiazdowsky, board's regular weekly meeting on . If the levy is approved. the funds
Monday.
will be used for the purposes of mainJohn Neville and Steve Houchins.
Steve
Beha,
director
at
the
Carlcnancc
and operation of the board's
The special meeting will be held
leton
Schools
and
Meigs
Industries,
programs,
as well as for capital
Monday, Aug. 18 at 7:30 p.m. in
rcquest~d the commissioners' per~ improvements to the hoard's faciliu~s
c\)unc\1 chambers.
mission to seek the levy, which is

MR/DD unit allowed
to again attempt levy:·

Lack of quorum prompts special meeting .
·Middleport ~a)'IJi'.Do.wey ''Mac" • Council· was to coniiider a third
HononcMiedforaspecialmeetingof reading and possible approval of a
Middleport Village Council after revised floodplain ordin.ance for the
only two council members showed village establishing the cost of perup for Monday night's regularly mits to build in the floodplain and to
scheduled meeting.
-::. -consider bids on health insurance for
village employees:

,•

. Honon shared· a letter~rom
Vaughan's IGA thanking thevillage
for the use of the 'pool during the
store's recent pool pany.
Present were Council President
Beth Stivers, 1councilwoman Sandy
lannarelli and Clerkltreasurer Bryan

(Continued on Page 3)

State fair livestock
sal·e nets.
.
over $110,000.for 4-H's best
.

COLUMBUS (AP) -It wasn't a
steer or a pig that stole the show at
the Ohio State Fair's -Sale of Champions.lt was 3-year-old Jordan Marx.
The youngster stood on the bluecarpeted stage Monday night and
proudly showed off the reserve grand
champion market lamb that his broth·
er, Adam, raised. Jordan was the center of attention as he waved to the
crowd in the Celeste Center and
struggled to hold up the purple 11anner describing the lamb.
"My brother and I get along real
well. I wanted to bring him into the
ring. It's quite an honor to be in the
ring." said Adam. IS. of Botkins.
Nelson Auto Group purchased the
lamb for $5,500.
The three-hour livestock auction
brought in $110.700, or which
$48,700 goes inlo a special fund for
. ~-H scholarships. A cap of $62.000 IS
set for the youngsters who raised the
animals.
The total for bids last year was
$212,000.

''

Alllll..... MEBiilass au•••
- - . 4 I:JUITS. I:UIBS,

••••1a

I.I&amp;HII,

"You can't depend on businesses
to spend $60.000 to $70.000 every
year. As long as we go over the cap,
we' re very happy. Last year was very
exceptional," said Rick Frenette, the
fair's general manager.
Gov. George Voinovich got into

the action by giving one or his
favorite tics w the Kroger Co. His
wheeling and dealing paill off as the
grocery chain plunked down $20,000
for the grand champion market lamb.
Later, the governor sold his sig·
nature on the tic, adorned with children, lor $~.000 to bump up Kroger's
purchase price to $32,000 for the
grand champion steer.
"I treasure this tie, " said
Voinovich, dressed in a straw cow hoy
hat and a brown suit. "I'm kind of
sentimental about it. But · he (the
Kroger executive) was willing to put
up a lot of cash for it. Nobody want·
ed this suit. It's 20 years old. But by
God. they wanted that tic."
The record price for the grand
champion steer was $69,500 from

Burger King-In 1986. Last year, the
top bid ·was $60,000, also from
Kroger.
" I'm a linle disappointed. I
thought it would bring in more," Ashlie Winegardner, II, of Lima, said of
the 1.215-pound steer.
·
Disappointed by bidding on the
grand steer. former Gov. James
Rhodes drove his golf carl over to
representatives from Kroger and Meijer Inc. He insisted they pay $30,000
for the all-black steer..
When a Meijer representative said
he would bid $27,500 if Rhodes wore
one of the company's bright red hats,
he refused. even at the urging of Lt.
Gov. Nancy Hollister.
·
"Bid $30.000 and take it home
and kill it. Do it for the kids, " he told
the 13 representatives from Meijer to
no avail.
Becky Garner of Bellevue. who
showed the grand champion market
lamb. had the reserve grand champion lamb last year. She made a total of
$13,000 over the last two years.

Clinton's use of veto invites challenges
,•

.]

'Prtcelncludll Ali Rebllelto Deller

•

For now, it seems unlikely that
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi· and New York state.
"When
you
know
the
presidcnt'is
Clinton's
historic action will be overdent Clinton hopes Congress will
turned
by
lawmakers when they
prepared
to
use
the
line-item
veto.
think twice about helping special
return
from
their summer recess in·
that
tends
to
operate
as
a
deterrent
interests.now that he has, for the first
September.
against
the
most
cgreg1ous
kinds
of
time, used his line-item veto power,
But use o.f the lveto sets the stage
killing budget provisions that would projects," Clinton said Monday 'ashe
went
on
national
television
lo
·veto
for
the Supreme Coun to decide! the
have helped some fann .co-ops, U.S.
1miaaer
question of-whether Con- .
the
three.
provisions.
financial firms with overseas arms
grcss had the right to gillc the president the power to veto individual
items in tax and spending bills. ·
Though senior Republican aides
said they had not yet forged a strate·
TUESDAY, AUG. 12
gy for dealing with the vetQilS, they
4-8 p.m. - Karaoke with Jeff North - Hill Stage
.said ono option was to negotiate new,
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena ·
acceptable language with the White
5 p·.m. - Junior Fair Board Auction - Show Arena
House, rather than seeking the two6 p.m. - Junior Fair Steer Show - Show Arena
thirds House and Senate majorities
7 p.m. - Antique Tractor Pull - Pull .Area
needed to.reverse the president.
8:30 p.m. - Made In America- Grendatand .
The vetoes were to items within
11 p.m. - Gaiea close
. two bills Clinton signed five days
WEDNESDAY, AUG.13
earlier. The bills were aimed at bal·
(Circus 1ponsored by Holzer Clinic)
ancing the budget by 2002 and trim7 a.m.- Gatel open
ming taxes. Clinton had until Mon·
9 a.m • ...;. Junior Fair Goat.Show
day to use his line-item veto on th&lt;
10 a.m. - Groom &amp; Clean Conteet
signed bills.
10 a.m. - Dntft HorH Conte1t - Infield
A spokeswoman for House SpeakNoon - 4-H Flo- Show - Junior Fair Building
er Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., said admin·
Noon -Guys &amp; Gels Sheep Lead Class - Show Arena
istration officials had not objected !( ·
2 p.m. - 4-H Style RIYUI - Hill Stage
the provisions.

Meigs County Fair

•

Scenes
from a fair
h's fun for everyone - that
Kids Day Circus, a new feature
at the Meigs County Fal.r. ·
Presenting three shows a ·
day, the ringmaster uses local
youngsters as his performers.
He puts them Into the spoHight
doing a variety crt circus acta to
spirited renditions of big band
and ragtime, the sounds so
typical of the "Big Top. •
Monday's shows were a real
success.
The kids were enthusiastic
about becoming a part of the
show, and enjoyed putting on
the costume• of Ilona and
tlgerl, taklng up the whip of the
trainer, performing "funny
clown antics, or turning Into a
dancing ballerina• .
And the audience which
overflowed the circus stnitlng
loved watching the creativity of
the children.
Twenty-minutes shows will
be presented three times a
day through Saturday.
The circus 11 set up lletwMn
the main gate and the old log
cabin on the fairgrounds.

•

•

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