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                  <text>•

Pege 10 • The Dally Se"thlel

Monday, July 12, 19H

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday

~. Big

Bend Girl Scout f)ay Camp goes Social Security, a
Hawaiian with ·'Aloha Me Ke Aloha' theme

Aloha Me Ke Aloha (Greetings
with LoYe!) was the theme for the
1999 Big Bend Girl Scout Day
Camp held at the Royal Oak Resort
Club near Five Points.
Appro xi mat ely SO girls attended
the camp. Hawaiian black sand, vol. canic rocks. and other articles donated by Mary Ball of Racine, were on
display. Day camp direttor was Jerrena Ebersbach and co-director was
Michelle Dickerson.
·.
, The Bro~nie. unils made their
own leis. grass sjirt. ·camp 't-shirt,
rainbow mobile, and seashell photo
frame. That age level stayed in the
building on Friday night and cooked
their supper. Attending wer.e Meisha
Dei wen, Victoria Freeman. Megan .
Tripp . Becca Donohue. Maria
Meadows,
Amber
Hockman .
Chelsea DaviS. Haile y Ebersbach.
Tiffany Johnson. Krista Inherst.
Branigan long. Joy&lt;~ Romi nes. .
Erin Dunn. KayIa Graham. Virginia
Bric·kles. Georgetta Brick le s.. Haley
"Tripp, Bo:"eiant Powell. Amanda
Meadows. Ni cki Smith. Amber
Tripp. leRnifcr Payne, Nikki law· '
son. Courtnev Mayes. Kerri Van·
Reeth . Stephame Shambhn, Ashley
• Romines. Bc1hany Ulqrich. Chassidy Wills. and Brittany Frazier.
The unit kaders and assiS!ants

•

· were Mp.:hdle Dickerson . Kolleua

·Frid ley. Trac; lawson. Melinda
Dunn. Gl oria VanReeth·. ana Cindy
. "Smilh.-,,Program aide w~s Jennifer
Roberts.
.• Acti,ities of the junior scouts
included makj,ng their ow n leis.
grass . skin s. rainbow mobiles,
seashell boxes. and d;y camp shins.
On . friday nig,ht they slept in the
building but on Saturday night erectcd tcnts .and spenl ovemighl outside.
Sunday morning the group had a
scavenger breakfast hum.
·
In the . group were Holly
Edwards, Molly Smith, Kelsey Fife.
. . ,..-.

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SETTING UP THE TENT - As a part of their day camp experience, junio~ 'Scouts slept in a tent which they erect~ and then had ·
a scavenger breakfast hunt the next morning. Working on getting a
tent up are from the left ~ethany Cook, .Chelsea Freema"t, Ericka
Cogar, Joauna Fetty, and Kayla F,etty.
·· • · .
, ,

Kayl a Gheen. Samantha Parson.
Joauna Fettl Mergan Wolfe. Megan
Day. Casey Smith. Tiffany Simpson.
Chelsea 'Freeman . Jordan Haynes.
Ericka Cogar. Jesstca Fisher. Kayla
Fetty. ·Amorette_ Salser, Breanna
Mitchell. and Kristin Barley.
Unit leaders and assistants were
Robin Dorst, Melissa Holm an.
• Bethany Co.oke, Shirley Cogar,
Dolly Parsons.' and lisa Mitchell.
O!her helpers were Brenda Neutzling, Denise ( Holman. Joy ce
: Romine. Dawn Romin~.linda Powell, Debbie Cooke. Ivar Powell , Jim
Holman. Justin Robson . and ' John
Cooke. :
At the closing program on Sunday, I he Racme Brownie Troop 1100
presented 10 the day camp director
and service unit team members a • DESIGNING T-SHIRTS - Both the brownies and the juniors
flag to be used 'ai fulure day camps designed camp t-shirts. Here Tracy, a Brownie troop leader, gives a
and activities.
...._
hand to.girls in her unit.
.
•

Federal Reserve Boa red prepare-s. for Yea(20Cl9 computer glitch

'

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P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

BY ED PETERSON
Social S«urity Manager in Athens

CONCENTRATING - Craft
projects can be challenging
sometimes as Bro'!"rile Kayla
Graham found out in her attempt
to create inainbo"t mobile.

By PATRICIA ·LAMIELL
emergency loan fund for banks, ~aid they e,xpect to set asid'e extra
A·P Business Writer ·.
t,hrifts and credit unions to cover ca'Sh before the new year.
NEW YORK (AP)...,.. No novice ewa withdrawals . . And it has , ' · Andrea Kov,1r is not worried
to onhne bankmg. Andrea Kovar ordered al 'ieasl one bigATM opera- e.nough to go b~ck to old-fashioned
zooms money ~ound daily from her tor, TransA\iiance lP, to get in shape paper ch~cks . But she does expec119
personal compuler. But since she for year 2000 or face poss1ble condepends heavily on.electrqnic fu~ds tract cancellations by its 750 bank
·,
'". transfers. she worries about the mil- customers.
lennium bu-g.
Consumers will . have limited
Kovar is one of 100 million con- recour.;e if problems do occur. Con,umc~s. inclu(ling most Social Secu- .gress earlier this month enacted leg: rity rcciriciHs. who have their pay· islalion. wHich President Clinton is
c heck o r 2overnmen1 benefits expected to sign, that would make
dcposiled el;.c troriically. Some 4 lawsuits difficult or impossible. A
million people pay bills by comput- number of states have similar laws
,· r.
on their books.
Because on line bankers like
But ti\e same bill also prohibits
Ko\·ar r.:ou ld he especially inconve- le11:ders from Lakir'!g ad\;erse .action
nil!m:ed when the calendar rolls over , against homeowners whose morton Jan I. banks and the federal gov- 1 gage payments ai'e delayed by Y2K
crnmt:nl are testing and ·rete sting problems. "
.
.
tho.ir sys lems to make sure the year 1 TI1e so-called ''.'Y2 K problem" is
2000 arrives wulmut hasSles. · .
·caused by the poss ibili1y that com·
Kovar. a .Coon Rapids.. Mlnr .. ~ p~ters originally programmed to
radio station manager. has seen t~eir , recogni ze only !he last two digits of
r~~ssuring pr~ss r~leases. Still, she
a year could interpret 2000 as 1900 .
worries. What if I he much-discussed
Of all the preparation that the Fed
computer glitch delay s the ·automat,·,. has taken . il is proudest of i-ts.rigoric depo sit of her paycheck, ,or the : ous leS!ing procedures. Along With
payment of some crucial bill? Whal four regional. organizations that sciif a late mort gage or ulility payment tie elemonic transactions, Ihe Fed
damages her credit rating 0
last month ' suc c.e.ssfully· finished
" You ' re a few days late on some- · testing ils computer fix by rolling
lhing. and they hi,t you with all kinds dales forward to :Jan . · I and running
of servit.:e charges, '' Kovar sa id . " To simulated financl31transactions.
clear those things up takes 10 10 15
The resuit 0 " The financial indosminutes. easy, out of a business day. try, we feel , is .very ready for year
None of us has ·the lime lo lry to 2000," a fed spokeswoman said.
clean up niesses that somebody else " We're not going to say !here 's not
has created." ·
going to be gli1ches . There are
The Federal Reserve Board says glitches every. day. But if it doesn't
. ills ready to answer •questions like · wor~ on Jan. I. is it a Y2K problem"
that. In addition 10 testing its elec- Maybe. Bul maybe not. "·
.
Ironic settlemen! systems , lhe Fed
Still, not all bank customers share
has ordered an extra $50 billion of the Fed's optimism.
new currency to put into circulation
About 51 percent of adults sur- ,to cover a spate of p,o!ential t ash veyed by lhe Gallup organization i.n
Withdrawals around the new year.
March said they_ were concerned
The Fed also has proposed an about Y2K, and almost two-thirds

Computer security companies
update virus detection software

keep scrupulous account of her ATM
slips in the final quarter of the year.
" I' m .telling ·you,' ' she said,
· " f,om October on, man,· you better
save c'very one .you've got."
·

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Meigs County's
Vol ume

so. Number 27

Hometown Newspaper

·'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy- 35 Cents

By JIM FREEMAN
including the Major Crimes Task FO&lt;Ce, the Meigs Coun- result of Mr. Priddy's plea of guilty to possession of filari· from bank accounts.
Sentinel New.a Staff
ty Board of Commissioners, and lhe Meigs County Sher- juana, Lenles said he would not pur.&gt;ue criminal charges
"What distinguishes thai case from this case?!' Crow
What a difference two months can make.
' iff's Office to be repre:senled.
against Mr. Priddy's family.
asked.
··
,.
On May 24, Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Judge Crow disagreed and allowed,
In a similar vein, Mr. Priddy agreed to give up
Knight told Crow that h~ · was asking
Lenles had a picss conference flaunting lhe conDeBacco to call lentes to lhe witness stand most of his belongings in exchange for lhe prosquestions that had nothing to do with the subject
fiscatcd belongings of convicted drug felon Fred
where he quickly attempted to demonstralC lhat ecutor not attempting lo acquire lhe family home
of a restraining order to which Crow replied he
M. Priddy, Rutland. Monday afternoon, Unles
Lentes had no authority to .hold or sell the Prid- on Loop Road, several ·automobiles, per.;onal
was trying to determine exactly what assets are
~as in court himself being asked if 11e · had lhe
dys' belongings thro~gh an agreement in lieu of belongings and .various items of farm equipmen~
at stake. Crow further ordered Lenles to comply
legal authority . to keep or sell Priddy's belongcriminal or civil forfeiture. He produced at least he said.
with his.earlier order to produce a .detailed list of
ings.
two oopies of an ogreement between the proocCrow also questioned lenles about the wordthe belongings seized and other items including
Altomeys for the 47-ycar-&lt;Jid Priddy, wl]o
cutor's office and Mr. Priddy, which did notoon- ing on lhe senlencing en'try ,which stated Priddy 's
lhe task force's internal policy ooncerning forwas arrested in late April on drug-related charges
lain Priddy's signature, and a copy of another fine would be paid from the forfeiture and the
feilur.es.
and eventually pleaded guilty to a felony charge
agreement signed after Priddy had already been . money then distributed between the prosecutor 's
"We can't have a situation where you
of pos•ess=on of marijuana, were in lhe Meigs
sentenced.
and sheriff's law enforcement ~~ funds:
and you alone, and your office alone, kr\ows
County Court of Common Pleas seeking to. perlcnles acknowledged !here was no civil or . lenles said the fine money was to come from
what is going gn, but no one else in lhe world
manently block the sale of Priddy's belongings
criminal forfeiture and lhat lhe coon was nol lhe cash conli$cated from Priddy, in effect saying
knows whal is going on," Crow said.
seized in a raid on his properties lhe evening of
apprised of lhe •agreemeril" between himself, that Priddy w.S 'going to pay ·the fine. However, . Prosecutor
DeBaceo ,also questioned Sheriff James
· April 27.
.
representing the State of Ohio, and Priddy.
t.enles on further questioning said his office had John Lentea M. Soulsby and'stJeriff's deputieS Mony ,Wood ·
Priddy, who was present at the hearing, was sentepccd
"Yes or no, did you file for forfeiture in any way, shape no intention of giving lhe money back to Priddy
· and Carl Hysell over !he subject of Priddy 's · '·
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May 24 to eight years in prison and fined $15,000 by or f()J1111?" DeBacco asked.
·
regandless.
. .
.· .. , ..
bond and whether or not there was a federal holder nollo .
. Judge Fred W. ~ UI. A separate appeal of Priddy's
"No," lenles replied.
Crow also llliked Lenles if he .had been involved in 'sim:· release him from jail. Priddy was on probation after servcriminal case is underway in the Fourth District Court of "Did Judge Crow have an opportunity to review an agree- ilar cao;es, specifically mentioning lhe Fife case in Middle- ing a federal drug-related sentence al the time of his most
recent arrest.
Appeals.
.
ment?" DeBacco asked.
.
l"'rt.
Soulsby said to the best of his knowledge there was no
Attorney Thomas J. DeBacco, Columbus, said lentes
"No," lentes said. '1lte agreement was nol reviewed
In lhal inciden~ which occun:ed on July 9, 1993, lawmen
had no legal authority to sell Priddy's belongings in an by any judicial officer of lhis oounty."
raided the home and business of 65-year-old Robert D. · federal detainer although Priddy's jail booking card said
gigantic auction lhat was to begin June 29. Thai auction
lenlesfurtherexplainedlhat"welaketheviewlhatyou Fife and confiscaled thousands of firearms, almost not to release him lrom jail because lentes said there was
was blocked lllhe last minulC by Crow who approved a can senle the (forfeiture) issue before the filing of a suil" $200,000 in cash and other ilems ranging from power tools a federal detaining order.
The Priddys are maintaining Mr. Priddy was coerced
temporary reslraining onder halting lhe sale billed as
Lenles said there were two issues between his office 10 electronic goods. Fife was accused, but never charged,
into
giving up his belongings in exchange for a lesser ·
"gigantic 4-day public auction" to be held at lhe Meigs and Priddy: lhe criminal issue involving lhe •plea bargain wilh raeke~ring, running a fencing operation -serving
charge
carrying less prison time.
County FaiJBJOOnds. At stake are lilerally • hundreds of . and the giving of Priddy's gOOds to lhe prosecutor's office. as a repository for stolen goods- andrunning an illegal
After questioning Soulsby, DeBacco asked ·for and
guns, dozens of caB and numerous other ilems including The !Wo oonsiderations we.re parallel but '\'ere nol con- pawn shop. Fife eventually pleaded guilty to a charge of
homes and property.
· . nected, he said.
. ..
trafficking in food stamps and two counts of receiving received a request for continuance, with tht; matter to be
Assistant Prosecutor .Charles Knight asked lhat lhe
Priddy agreed to lhe criminal pl"i' bargain to protect his . stolen prOperty, but served no prison time. In addition, Fife considered again on Sept. 3 at I p.m. · The .tel!lporary
hearing be continued to allow olher parties in the Case wife and son .from possible criminal charges, he said. As,a forfeiled his firearm cOllection, 5185,000 and $60,000 reslraining order was continued until that time. · '

a

Middleport council addresses
Park
Problems at Hartinger
.
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·commissioners open bids for Dexter water project .,

f;Sy BRIAN J. REED " .•
.
Allomey John lenles.
thallhe Ohio Valley Visitors Center. MasOn cOunSentinel News Staff
Triplett, LCCD Manager Martin Broderick and ty, W.Va. Tounsm office, and the Me1gs County
By BRIAN.J. REED
·
Bids· were opened Monday for a half-million board member Roben Snowden were pr&lt;Sent for Tourism Board have joined together .to chartel) a
S.ntl~el Newa ~tllff
.
,
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dollar water txlension project for lhe.pexler com- lhe bid opening.
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cruise boat for a series of fall foliage excursiot.s.
Stnct:r_rcg~lations at Mtddleport's Gene_ra\ Hort10ger Park have_been
munity. The Meigs County . Commissioners · .Jean Trussell, .fo~nty grants. administrator, ~- The boat trip willl&gt;e sold to the bus tour marappro':ed, 10 an altempllo curb prob!e":'s wh1ch may even force the VIllage opened bids-•from six contracting firms vying for announ~ thal 'the county·w11! receive $650,000 ke t for trips from Pomeroy to Gallipolis and
to close _the pool and park_ fqr._the rem'!mder_of the season.
·
lhe project during lhe board's regular meeting yes- in additional grant funding. for _the c::Dmmunity Pomero~ to Point Pleasan~ W.Va., Thornton said.
. Meeting .~onday eveilmg m regular sess1on, M•~leport Village Co~n- tenday.
•.•
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Housi~g Improvement Pi6jecl, which provides While dricked in the community, the boat will be
~I banned btcycles and all jlCts f'?m th~ park.._atijl di~ssed _wan; lo ellfl). leading Creek ConservanCy District, through funds for housing rehabiliWion and down pay. JVailable for public rcruises and tOT rental by C~Mo~
,_other problems!-' th~ P";'K, 10cluding. fights and v~dahsm.
. the Community Development Block Granl formu- ment assistance for qualifying households. organizations.. .. .
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Mayor Sandy lan~ar~lh sa1~ \hAl t~e M1ddleP?rt P~hce Department h~ Ia progra111, Appai.achian Regional Commission Tru~ll said thallhe latest grant will atsoprovide
. The commJss•o.ners met w1th Rick Lockshm of
. logged 30 .se~rate •nCidents !nvolviOg ~nru~y JUVentles 10 t~e park thiS and.wal,r and sewer improvement programs, will funds lor lead abalemenl'" conJuncborrw•th reha- F~rst Commum~auons of Akron, re~ardt_ng a negosummer. F1ght.n~, rock-lhrow.~ng,_ vandahsm at shelter ho~ses, and thefts extend lfi lhe-Dextei·area to provide water t\) some. bilitation projects.
,
tiated long diStance plan. Locksh10 satd that hiS . "
-. have been IOvesllgated by the po~•ce department 10 tncreasmg numbers as 60 households.
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Households wilh young children with high lead compa,J)y had en!ered •nlo an agre~menl wtlh the
the summer_pro!P'esses...
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Rose's Excavating of Racine was life apparent · levels and expecting mothers will qualify for lhe County Co,rnmissioners Association of Ohio to
_lannarelh satd last nt~ht lhal a teena11er at. the pool had .ev~n p~lled . a low bidder on lhe project, wilh a proposed bid of lead abatement eomponenl of the housing rehabi 1- provide long dis lance service to county governknlfe._ on one of the h_feguards. Several y_oungslers have been ejected fr~rp · $540,406.05. Other bidder.; ;were Cyrus L. Bowen itation progr..am.
, :
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ments at a rite of 7.9 cents per minute. According
10
lhe park and are forbtdden return.·.
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Construction Co., Mari.eua, $5,57 ,522:59;
The newest prograrif will allow for lhc rehabil- to Lockshin, some ~ounty departm~nts now pay
a;&gt;uncd voted last mg~t lo ban blcycl~ CJ:om lhe p_ark man attempt to ·Sibnegale CQnslruction Co., Belpre, $699,066; BP itation of 27 qwner·occupied homes, conducllhe up to 27 cents per miOule f~r long dJSlance.
allevtale the problem of b1cycle thefts wh1ch IU lD lh~ 10crease, n~t only at p· 1.
W.
p' rts .. lh $
The board agreed 10 rev1ew long dtstance rates
. B'll le d-b d ainl hazard reduction and evaluation
• the park. bullhroughoullhe vtll•oe An area for parking ~d locking btkes
tpe tne, est 0 mou • 550 •186·26 • 1
a ase P
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II' 'd-oTh· b
b'k
a1
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· Enyart and Sons Construction South Point, · on six rehabilitation projects and prov1de ~orne- m varwus county.dopartments be ore entermg mto
wt
proyt e , annare 1 sat , e an on 1 es was so pu 1 m1o p1ace
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any agreemen : .
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wilh the hopes thai ramping from the hillside near the park can II&lt; 'elimi- $812,374.10; and lawson Southern Oh10 Excava- buyer ~!Stance to ~0 house o. . ·
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tion Pipeline, Inc., Albany, $590,n4.14.
The program wtll be ava1lable to reSidents
The commissioners ••so. met Will! Mtchael ·
nated.
· . sa1d
. . that several Children
·.
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. sfruck · Th
·
•s cos1es 1tma
· · 1e 1'o
the pro'ect
cou' nty ·
···
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Iannarelh
had only barely avo1ded
bemg
, e engmeer
l was throughoullhe
.
·
· · ... swisher
. • director of the Department of
. Human
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$565 000
"
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Trussell also said that herapplicalion·was rated Serv1ces. and approved payment of· b1lls 10 the
by cars on· Genera 1 Hart.'mger p arkway wh'l1e rampmg.
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d
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f $148 553 2.~
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The ban on pets· is designed to prevent problems with aggressive dogs
The b1ds were labled pendmg rev1:w by SIXth.m the stale, an rece1ve •.a ratmg o 94 per- amoun 1o . .~ • .. ', ·
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which art creating a nuisance for park visitors as weil as problems with
Eugene Triplett, lhe project's engineer, le'din11 e&lt;;nt.
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. Presont, '" add•t•on lo Thornton, were comm!Sdog owners who are not. curbing their dogs at the park: .
. Creek Conservancy District and" Prosecuting . Commissione~ Jeffrer._ Thornton anno.unced . ~·oncrs Janel Ho.ward and Mtck D2venport.

Rac"lne Counc· t ·n·t· ates trashservice fee increase ·Homeowner
education CIBSS

1.annarelli said·lhat.council wi'l_, have.r~ co~.!inue to moni.tor lhe situation
1 1 11
ai the park, and may have to constder closmg 1t for the remamder of the sea. ,,
son in onder to protect lhe public safety if problems persist.
'
Increases to the trash collection rate were considered fund,.$58,189; fire, $48, 158; street, $59,531: stale highIannarelli.said lhal overtime iosues and a shortage of man·power prevents _during last week'~ meeting of Racine Villag~ Council.
w'ay, $5,900; water, $ !60,000; utility deposit. $5. I&lt;JO;
Contlnu~ In "Middle rt Council' on
e3
It was noted that it has been 10 years since the price refuse, $39,000; cemel&amp;ry, $15,500.
for jlarbage collection was last increased. jl.acine reSi,
Oluncil observod lhal closc "watch woul,d' have t? be
dents now pay $6 per month for the we~kly service·with maintained on alllun.~, especially the general fund and
·an additional 50 cents per bag over /our bags. In addi- · tl)~ refuse fun~.•
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tion, the 9illage provides free· pick-up. fo~ the spring
Oerk Karen Lyo~s reported rece1v1ng a letter Mrs.
cleaning.
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Inez Wickline regardtng her property adJacent Star M•ll
·.Council adopted th~ firsl reading :gf an ordinance . Park. So'me people using the park have been parkmg on
raising the rate by $~ per month and .also increasing the Wickline property ~e'!' the shelte_r house an.d par.k
f
ed
·1 h
11 1 b
price per-bag over four bags ~o 55 cents.
enlran~. Sh~ in orm . counc• s e WI no e responsl'
Even with ,lhis pending increase, it was noted that ble for acc1dents or damag7 that m!ght occur, .and .
Racine
residents will still gelling a cheaper rale than thanked council for lhe mowmg the VIllage had don&lt;,
CINCINNATI (AP)- A slate court will hear lhe .case of two northMiddleport and Syracuse ($9), Pomeroy (S 12), ·outside , adding it would now be done by me":'bers of, her ·famDy.
eastern Ohio public officials who sued the tobacco industry ' on behalf of
Racine ($1_1.50) and Ravenswood
. , W.Va. ($16.50). If
, Lyons reported t_he s_tate audnor s est1mate for ·the
rt d
all Ohio taxpayers, a. federal appeals court ruled.
·
given final approval the rates will go into effect Sept. I. 1997 and 1998 a~d1ts WI II cost $10
. .900
. · Th ey repo e
The 6lh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a judge's decision to The billing will also coincide wilh water billing dalss. · this is just an esltmate and that. II m1ght be lower, she
throw out of federal court the 1996 lawsuit by Timothy Hagan, a Cuya-·
During the discussion, there was talk ·of making lhe said, 'addi~g they will charge only for ·the hme spent.
Mga County commissioner, and.Thomas Coyne Jr., mayor of Brook Park
refuSe collection mandatory (or all village residents . No
Streel Commissioner/WaterS~pervis()r John. Holman
in suburban Cleveland.
·
action was [!lken on this iS.ue.
reported there needs lobe _a ~~~-m froll) Vine Street to
But the appeals court said U.S. District Judge Patricia Gaughan erred in
It was also noted thallhe village needs to start putting Yellowbush Road as there IS not enough water gomg lo
February 1998 when she simply dismissed the lawsuit, rather than send it
aside money to 'replace the trash compactor.
..
Yellowbush ~oad. It. was _suggested he get a maten~ls
back lo stale courl where il was first filed.
CounFil adopted the 2000 village .budge! and w1ll hst along w1lh the pnces smce 111s poss1ble thai the VIIThe appeals court on Monday sent lhe case back to Ms. Gaughan wilh
submit it to lhe county budge commission for approval . lage could h~re a ·couple of people and mstall the J1ne..
orders lhal she return il lo Cuyahoga COunty Commo~ Pleas Court in
The budge! contains the· following amounts: general
Continued In 'Racine Council" on page 3
Oelieland.
·
· Jack Maistrosra lawyer for Hagan
and Coyne, said he is pleased thai
the lawsuil will be given an opportunity in the stale court Defendants
had lhe case moved into lhe federal
court.
.
The lawsuit, againsl out-ohtate
tobac~ manufacturers and in-state
tobacco wholesalers and retailers,
altempts lo recover money Ohio
spenl on medical treatment
Ohioans whb suffer from lobaccorelaled ailments.
,
Hagan and Coyne did not
lhat lhey are addicted to tobacco or
had any physical injury from it.
Ms. Gaughan ruled lhal the two
lacked standing to bring the lawsuit
Lotteries
on behalf of the state:
The appeals court upheld lhat part
OHIO
of her ruling.
Pick 3: 6·0-1; Pick 4: 5-1 -8-9
Last year, Ohio joined other slates
Buckeye 5:2-16-18-19-26
NEW YORK TRIP DONATION- The Meigs Middle School Team 7 racelved $500 from the Rut·
in
a $206 billion settlement pf
W.VA.
land
American Legion Ell Dennlaon Poat 467 for Ita recent student trip to ~aw York City. Shown
states'
lawsuits
against
the
tobaceo
Dally 3: 6-7-7; Dally 4: 4-6-6-0
are,
from
left: Legion Post 467 Commander Gene Fink, MMS teacher Charyl Halley, OESG repindustry.
Ohio's
share
of
the
settleC 1999 Ohiu V1llc-y l'ubli:~h i ng fo.
resentative
Ellla Myers, MMS teacher Julie Randolph, Legion representative Dennia McKinney.
ment is $9.8 billion.

by northeast .

'

Good Afternoon

. Despite t~c rapid response, however, any defense apainsl the hacki~g

program may prove nee!ing thanks 10 some aggressive tactics taken by the
tool's authors. an irreverent group named Cult of 1he Dead Cow, or CDC.
. The hacking tool, called " B02K," can enabl" someone to gain control of
a c.o rnrutcr or nclwork from a remote location. B02K is an abbreviation fo r

a slightl y profane variation of " Back -Office." the name of a program in '
Microsoft's Office 2000 suite of business software .
The CDC and other hackers atte1idi ng the seve nth annual '"DefCon " con·'
venti on m Las Vegas charged that MiCrosoft has stubbornly refused 10

address a multitude of gaping security holes in Windows.
By cxploiling those vulnerabilities. hackers hope to force the world's
largest software company to repair them . And, raising !he ante anmher
notch . !l)e CDC is also re lea&gt;i ng the software code for B02K - mvi ling
!llhcr programmers to create mutations that would frustrate efforts to immu·
nile computers against attack.
But that vigi lante-type " hauivism " was rejecled hy Microsoft and feder·
a l oiTicial"i. induding many· who attended DefCon under cover- at least

unul they were unmas ke~ during the convention's popular " Spot the Fed"
~.:o nt 1.·~t.

(

(

I

..

I

\

·.

Prosecutor Lentes called to testify as Priddy hearing continues

·'

By BRUCE MEYERSON .
AP Business W~iier ·
. ·
·
· ·
.
.·
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Compute~ security companies updated their virus,
peteclion soflware on Sunday after the in-your-face launch at a hackers convention of a new tool designed for steallh invasions of networks operated by
Microooft Windows.

All-Star festivities, Page 5
Problems with long-distance love, Page 6
Time out for ·tips, P~e 10

Todt~y:

safety net for kids

For some children, Social Security is not just something thai
their gran(lparents get. It is something that they count on right
now to help pay for schoolbooks. school clothes and olher
important •stuff' that' s a part of grow ing up .
There ate some 3.8 million' children who receive Social
Security benefits as the survivors o( parents who have died or
dependents of paren is who are retired or have become disabled . They receive more than S I billion a monl~ in Social
Security benefits. !p fact, virtually all c hildren under. age I 8
would he eligible to receive such benefits if a parent dies . .
retire s or becomes disabled.
·
About 890,000'disabled children receive monthly payments
under the Supple m'ental Security Inc ome (SSl) program , a pub lic assistance program. administered by Social Security wilh
~eneral revenue funds.
The children who qualify Social Security oe nefit s may be
the beneficiary 's biol og ical ch ildr en , adopted chi ldren .
stepchildren or even children born out side of marriage. Grand children may qualify under ce rta in circ um stances. Note that
even if lhe parents di v.orce, the c hildren 's benefit right s are not
affcc1ed. ·
·
The an\ount of benefits payable may range up to 75 percent
of the worker ' s benefit for the survi vi ng child ·of a deceased
worker, to 50 percent for the dependent of a rei ired or di sa bl ed
worker.
A family maximum is generally reached with a parent and
two children collecting benefits.
A child who joins the family after benefits start (through
birlh, adoption or the beneficiary' s remarriage ) may also qual • ify for benefits -'
If the child is I he beneficiary's new Slep-child, however, th e
step-relationship must ha~•e existed for a year before benefits
can be paid. · Also. stepchildre~ and some adopted children
must meera de~endency requiremenl.
·
. The .benefits cont,inue until the child marne s, reaches age
i 8, or 19 if he or she i ~ still a full-time high school student. If
the child is disabled before age 22. benef&gt;ts may cpntinue as
long as he/she remains disabled .
'
}
The role !hat the benefits play in the lives of these c bifdren
vary, depending on their circumstances. For !he average family, the monthly benefits help them maintain their lifestyle after
lhe loss of a parenl 's earnings. For low- income larger families ,
the benefits may mean the difference between staying together
as a family or splilting up .
It's important 1o be familiar with these rules if you are•serious about planning for the financial secuhty of your family.
Social Security benefits .should be a base for YPIIt planning .
You can gel an estimate of how much your chil.iren could get
from Social Security by calling 1-800772 - I 2 I 3 24-hours-aday. Ask for a Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement application form .
·
"
.
.

July 13,111118

Weather

.

'

..

Set fOr JUly 27-30
A
homeowner
education
co urse will be offered by the Gallia -Me igs Community Action
.
Agency ..from July 27 to July 30
from 6 lo 9 p.m .
J he course, offered free ~f
&lt;;harge, follows the Fanni~ Mae
Guide to Homeownership.
Classes' · will cover various
types of moqgages, obtaining a
mortgage, closing, budgeting;
report! and home maintenance.
Guest
speakers, includin'&amp;
cred~t

~ insurance

a ttorneys, . bankers,

agents, realtors, extension a.g ents,
conl ract.ors, housing aul~orilies,
Adult Basic Lite-racy Education,
JTPA and olher ageqcies will present information pertinent to anyone interested· in purchasing· a
home. .

.

&lt;#

•

·: "The course is designed lo benefit anyone "interdted in purchas'ing a home regardless of age,
fa'mily situation or income level.

Seating is lim-ited, and reservations can be· made by calling
CAA al 367-7341. Famil .ies are
welcome at lhe class, and refresh ·
ments arc provided.
The agency's housi.ng pro·
gram, along with Ohio Valley
Bank, are offering the course in
conjunction with a project which
will construct six stick·buill
homes in Syracuse, .and four .in
Galli polis.
The homes are affordable lo
both mpderate and low-income
families, according lo Housing
Director Julia Houdasheil.
·
Participants who graduate
from the course are eligible to
purchase a new home with interest rates as low as four percent
for 30 years, wilh no down payment required
·

:

�'

Commentary

1\leelllly, , . ,.. 11811 -

Death Notiees

Reaping·
_
b
ig
rewards
for
bad
choice~
The Daily Sentinel

By JoMp11 Pertdu
trayed themselves as victims of tile nefarious
There's no telhn&amp; bow m~y dca_ths ee llllri~
Way back in 1964 u.s_ tobacco industry. And they went to court seekina ut.ble to overuse, or downript m~. of preSurgeon General Luther
• payment for _the choices they !&gt;lithely rnade. ,the sc:ripli~ &lt;;tn'l!'· ~one can _hardly w~l to heor..:f
Terry issued a landmark
. risks'they freely took.
some SCJen~fiC stu&lt;!y MCnbing 10 many~ ,
report in whicll he concludRosenblatt and his Jellow trial lawye~ were cases of arten~leros1s to fatty, fast-food diets.
ed !ha~ based on medical
\'f\IY too happy to urge them on, to sian·them up
The ~ 1ndustry ~as been an easy !UJcl
studies, smoking could
1o their massive class-action suits ogainst tN: The gun 1ndustry only shghtly less so. But other
cause cancer.
tobacco industry.
indUS!Jies ought not to be smug. bec•n~ t~y too
Lest ,the nation's smokNot because the trial lawyers truly believe that will eventually find themselves ~tandinf 1n the
ers fail 1o get the message,
the 500,000 Florida plaintiffs were duped into .dock_i!' _Miami or some o_ther CJty _stanng at a
federal lawmakers required
smoking by. Joe Camel or the Marllx1ro Man, but multlbJih~-dollar class·IIC!Io!' .lawsu1L
.
that every pack. every carbecause the massive cla$8-action lawsuit n:preIndeed, 1t's not hard to cnv~s~on, say, ~uto exco;s
ton, every container of cigarettes sold tllroughout sents as much as $80 billion in contingency fees try10g to persuade a J_ury that 11 s not the. IO~us~ ~
the fair land be emblazoned witll the famous'wam- (if.and when cigarette makers couah up tile poten- fault that so many drive_rs d1e on the nallon 5 hlghing -- "Catition: Cigarette Smoking May Be Haz- tial $200 billion or so in damoges).
ways and byways desPf:\0 aJr ~ ";nd otJ:~er sa~ardous to Your Health."
That's how perverse the civil justice system in ty featureS automakers 10~tall1n tileJr veh1cl~.
Fast forward 35 years to earlier this month, dur- this country has become. The oourtroom . is no
Nor is it har~ to 1mag~ne! say, beer ?' _w1ne or
ing whicll a jury in Miami declared that tobacco longer a hallowed place of justice. In some cases, liquor execs trymg !o explam why theJr Industry
companies are guilty of producing a "defective it's little more than &amp;casino, where plaintiffs, all- should not be held hable because so many people ,
1
•
.
product" that causes lung cancer, emphysema and too-often recruited by avaricious trial lawyers, drink themselv~ 1o death.

'£sta6fisflesf in 1948
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182·2158 • Fax: 0112·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlahet
DIANE HILL
Control....

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G•-•Men..-

ol,..

=•== ,.,.,.

n. Sentine-l ·
fo ,_ Nlfw lnMI ,...,.. Clf"'a "'-'1,.,.;.
1oe. Sltotf ,..,. poo wot* or "'-J t.w u. w ~ o1 , _ , pcsi,,..IN4.

J)tNd ,..,_ . . Pf•,.,N and •II...., H «1/ted. &amp;ch .,._., h::lude • ~
I 7 'W, 111W1 cM)timt plt«M ,.,.,..,.. Specify e dat. II fi'Mn 'a a Nfel•ac.to a,_.
vfiDrw.,.,. • ,.,_ 1111' to: LMMt-. ro fiN erMor, TJN ~ntinel, ttt Cowt St.,

7

O)J

.

Oltlo467fl; or, FAXID 1...,_1DZ1ST.

·WASHINGTON YESTERDAY: Hillary
·Clinton.and history's ~arp~tbag
By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
.A. .oclllted Pr... Writer
, \\(ASHINGTON (AP)- It was just a valise," a cheap and flexible travelers
bag stitched tQgether !Tom pieces of patterned carpet - in short, a tarpetbag.
But used as a symbol, the carpetbag. that homely and practical 19th century
satchel, has emerged !Tom the past to be&lt;:ome one of the more pungent jibes iri
. . American politics.
First ladx Hillary Rodham Qinton is said to be catrying one as she moves
from the ~ite House into the race for the Senate from New York.
She is, her critics say, a certified nonresiden~ an outsider, an unworthy opportunist seeking political power at the expense of IOj:a] politicians- a "carpetbagger."
"We don't rieed someone from Arkansas or Illinois, coming in and trying to
learn about our state in the hopes of ~l-ing sent back to Washington," New York's
.
1!lepublican governor, George Pataki, said Sunday.
,, · ,· The cry of "carpetbagger' !las been heard before in New Yoik politics.
' Both Robert F. Kennedy, a Democrat from Massachusetts, and James Buckley, a Republican from Connecticu~ ran as outsiders for the Senate from New
York. Both were called carpetbagger....Both won. In Kennedy's case, New Yorkers ignored sucll gaffes as being addressed as, "Fellow New Yorkites."
New York Times columnist and word expert William Salin: says " carpetbagger" was used originally lo describe itinerant bankers with meager means
who operated in the sparsely settled countryside in the years before tile Civil
'War.
.
.
·
The word likely gained currency on Deep So~tll railway platforms in the late
. 1860s when sllarp-eyed and resentful ex-Confederates observed lean and hungry-looking Northerners stepping off southbound trains with all tlleir worldly
good-! stuffed into a single bag, often acarpetbag. ·
. "The carpetbag was the symbc;ll of the man who traveled ligh~ ,and lienee of
the man on \he make," Safire wrote in "Satire's PoliticalDielionary."
As the victorious Nortll tried to reconstruct the defeated South after the Civil
War, the unweloome.carpetliagger was seen by many Southerners as ·!"' i~­
ment of unwan.ted change, an exploiter who left social unrest and financial corruption in hil 'wake.
·
.
l:Jut lo others, many of these Northern &lt;arpetbaggers were lleroes who put the
war-devastated Southern states back on their feet "!'d tried genuinely 1o llelp
newly enfranchised black citizens exercise their political right
.
The 19ttl century cartoonist Thomas Nas~ credited for creating bolh the
RepubliCll!l elephant and the Democratic donkey, was quick lo pick up the car~~
.
An 18?2 Nasi cartoon showed long-legged Carl Schulz. a prominent German-American newspaper editor and' Civil War general, carrying carpetbag'!
from WiscOnsin to Missouri to win a Senate seal One satchel carries the label,
"Carpetbagger South." ,
,
By the end or the 1870s, Reconstruction was over; white Southerners
n:gai~ed political power.. Aooording to some present-d'!y historians, they also
wrote much of the }listory of wllat !lad llappened, giving carpetbaggers the evil
eye in the process.
.
·
As far as the Senate is concerned, an o~t-of-state birihplacc h._.. never been a
disqualification.
.
.
'· · As the United States moved w~s~ many sen~1ors in newly organized swes
wen: born elsewhere. "II was·part o( the natural fl"bw of migration," said Richard ,
Bak_,:..~e Senate's histOrian
·
·

-

:T oday In·History
By The Aseoclated Press
..
Today is Tuesday, July 13, the I94th day ~f 1999. There are 171 days left
· in the year.
-' Today's 'Highlight in History:
• On July 13, 1974, the Senate Watergate Committee proposed sweeping
reforms to prevent anotller Watergate scandal.
''
.
: On tllis date:
In i787, Congress enacted an ordinance governing tile Northwest Terri-.
.

\ lo~

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.

The Oaily sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

.......\2

.

In 1793, French revolutionary writer Jean Paul Marat was stabbed to
death in his batll by Charlotte Corday. " '.
.
In 181i3, deadly rioting against tile Civil War mifitary draft erupted .in·
.
·'
New York C.ty.
.'
In 1878, the Treaty of Berlin amended tile terms or the Treaty of. San Stefano, wllich had ended the Russo-Turkish War "o t 1877-78.
In 1960, John F. Kennedy won the 0efllocra!ic presidential nomination at
!lis party's convention in ·Los Angeles.
In 1967, race-related rioting broke out in Newark, N.J.; by tile time the
violence ended, 27 people had been killed.
·
In 1977, a blackout that would last 25 !lours hit .the New york City area.
In 1978, Lee la"cocca was fired as president of Fo!d Motor Co. by chair(llan Hehry Ford II.
· ·
In 1979, a 45-hour -siege by Palestinian guerrillas began at the Egyptian
Embassy in Ankara, Turkey.
·
_ In 1985, "Live Aid," an international rock concert .in .London, Philadel~ 'phia, Moscow and Sydney, took place to raise money for Afri,ca 's starving ·
- people.
,
Ten years ago: Washington, D.C. attorney Thomas L. Root was re5Cued
·
: after ditclling his private plane in tile Atl~ntic Ocean ncar the Baham~; lle
: had suffered a mysterious gu,nshot \\'Ound. Cuba executed four military offi: cers for conspiring to smuggle drugs to the United States.
. Five years ago: President Clinton visited flood-stricken Georgia, where
: he announced more than $60 million in aid for Georgia, Alabama and Flori: .da. 'J'onya Harding's ex-llusband, Jeff Gillooly, was sentenced in Portland,
: Ore:, to two years in prison for his role in tile attack on Nancy Kerrigan. He
· ended up serving six months.
·. One year ago: Ajury in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., ruled tllat the Rev. AI Sllarp' lon and two others had defamed a former prosecutor by accusing him of rap: .ing Tawana Brawl~y. Four young cousins in Gallup, N.M., died after becom: ·ing trapped in a car trunk.
· Today's Birthday~: Former Housing Secretary Jack Kemp is 64. Actor
• Patrick Stewart is 5'/. Actor Robert Forster is 58. Actor Harrison Ford is F .
,; Singer-guitarist Roger McGuinn (The Byrds) is 57. Actor-comedian O!eech
• Marin is 53. Actress Didi Conn is 48. Singer Louise Mandrell is 45. Actor: director Cameron Crowe is 42. Tennis player Anders Jariyd is 38. Country
:·singer-songwriter Victoria Sllaw is 37. Actor Michael Jace is 34. Singer Ger• aid Levert is 33. Rllythm-and-blues singers Lovell and Laval Jones (Twice)
are 28. Singer Deborah Cox is 26.
Thought for Today: "There are people who want to be every·
where at once, and they get nowhere."- Carl Sandburg, Amerl·
can·wrl1er (1878-1987).
·
·

other related illnesses.
rr====2'1"~-~n~th~e=w~h~ee~l~o~f~~~o~rt~u~n~e=h=o=p=in=g=to=WJ=·=n=so=m=·===We==are=a=na=t=IOO:::t=h~at::h:o:l:ds:·=sacr=-ed_ou_r_n_;gh:_ts"las
The verdi~ in the first class-action
lawsuit by s!"okers to go to trial,
I
exposes cigarette makers to $200, billion or so in_damage;; to as many as •
500,000 Flonda smokers.
, If that .were not bad enougll, as ~ar
as the tobacco industry is concerned,
the Florida class action almost certainly will lead to copycat lawsuits in
other states as trial lawyers rush to·
reach their long arms into tile indus·
try's deep pockets:
'',!
But it's all ;;,- :ttl~ name of justice,
,,
said victorious (at least temporarily)
trial lawyer Stanley Rosenblatt, wh&lt;1
'!55Clts that the "tobacco industry has
clearly demonstrated a "rampant and
cynical long-st_and_ing pattern of

•

Alice Mae Luckett

fraud:"

·

,

Indeed, the six jurors sittifig on
the trial in Miami were persuaded that cigarette makers misled smoke(S
about the dangers or smoking.
Bu~ really, did those llalf-mill.ion
or so Florida smokers think that their ·
habit was. good for tlleir healtil? Did
tlley tllink that .federally required
-rarning labels on' cigarettes -which, again, have been affixed to
' every pack, every carton of smokes

·-

~~lfR
·

G119a118

•

.

The Via.g ra effect

But until last year, their efforts went largely
, When pharmaceutical executives introduced
Viagra to tile market last year, they probably had unnoticed. '.' ! ~ot a marvelous letter from one of
no idea tha,t their product would make some tile insurance companies," said Jeannie Rosoff
of the» Alan Guttmacher Institute, which studies
great strides for women's rights.
.As you m~y re_call, the anti-impotency drug reproductive health ii"u~s. "It said that to prewas the cause of great debate after it was scribe contraception would be like prescribing a
released. Insurance companies came under fire Florida vacation."
because tlj.ey wante,d'"to li"]it their coverage of · Viagra &lt;;hanged all tllat. Once men's sexualiViagra. Some capped the number ofdoses they ty came ·into. the picture, sex was no longer
would cover, otllers said the.{would only pay for viewed· as the equivalent of a seaside hollday.
50 percent of tile cos! of tile drug, as oppose~ to Sudden! y, it became an essential act, like .bn:aththe usual 80 percent. ..
ing.
.
.
. .
.
·
But no one seemed to question that the drug
Tile uncovering of tllis. hypocrisy has been
should receive some kin~ Of cbverage. The ques- great news for women and tlleir pocketbooks.
tions was ne•er "SHOI,JLD Viagra be covered?" After ignoring contraceptive coverage for years,
It was "HOW MUCI·-1 Viagra should be cov: .state legislatures are ·finally . passing bills that
ered?" A man's right .to an erection was a fore- require insurers to pay for birth control. Eight
gone conclusion. .
(
state legislatures -- New Hampshire,· North Car'' You'd tllink tlle· manllood of the nation was olina, Vermont, Georgia,' Connecticut, Maine,
at stake," Janet Benshoof, president of tile Cen- Hawaii and Nevada -- !lave sent i'pill bills" to
ter for Reproductive Law· and Policy, said in an their governor, and six 111,1&gt;re have passed them in
_interview last -year. "The insurance CQmpanies at least one house. In all, 30 state legislatures
don't touch women's health, .but when fllen can't have introduced such measures.
get it up, it's a national crisis."
•
"That little blue pill gave the birtil-control
Benshoof and ot~er.reproductive rights advo- pill that's been around for 40 years great credi·
cates had spent years lobbying for birth control bility as an issue, because it's so clearly juxta. coverage, pointing out that contriu:eptive costs posed," California "State Senator Jackie Speier
are the major reason why women of childbearing told the New York Times. "No one can really
age pay 68 pefcent more in out-of-pocket med- argue (against birtll control coverage) witll a
ical costs than their male counterparts do.
straigllt face anymore.:·

costs'

By PAUL.SOUHRADA ·
Associated Pre11e Writer
•.
CQLUMBUS (AP)- Witll the ink barely
dry on legislation intended to· restructure
Ohio's electric industry, utility re~ulators
already find themselves struggling with a
tricky detail lawmakers left for the n!!'to ljpndie: how much of ttl~ cost of old tnvestments
utility companies may recoup from customers.
Utilitles have six months to file their plans
lo recover money invested in expensiv~ longterm projects such as nuclear power. plants.
Under the legislation Gov. Bob Taft signed
lasf week, the companies can get 'the money
back through additional charges on utility
bills.
Tile issue also came up last week as officials witll FirstEnergy Corp. and Duquesne
Light Co.' explained their proposed swap of
power plants in Ohio and Pennsylvania to the
Public Utilities Commission of Ollio.
I Akron-based FirstEnergy s~ys the deal,
wllicb would give it complete control of two
nuclear and t~rce1 coal-fired power plants in
exchange for three other coal plants, would
benefit both companies.
.
FirstEncrgy woul"d cx~hange plants averaging 37 years old for ones averaging 17, said
Michael Hyrnick, managing difector of tile
company's business development group.
Plus, it would have lower fuel costs and
save money by consolidating rJ]aintenanc~,
purcbasing and other expenses at its existing
nuclear plant with tile other two.
·Pittsburgh-based Duquesne, meanwhile,
would be able to fe~ch a higher price for the

...

•I

Snow

tee

pry, increasingly warmer
·· weather set for this week
By The A8aoclated PrHS
It will be dry and increasingly wanner in Ohio through tile rest of the
week, the National Weather Service said.
High temperatures will climl? from around 80 on Wednesday to the
. , upper 80s on Friday.
··
No precipitalion is in the forecast.
.
The record-high tem~rature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 101 degrees in.1936 while the record low was 44 in 1940. Sunset tonight will be at 9:01 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:14a.m.
· Wather foftCIISl:
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows in the low~r 60s. Light southeast wind.
Wednesday ...Partly sunqy. Highs in the mid 80s.
Wednesday night... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower and mi~ 60s.
'
Emaded forecast:
· ~ Thursday...Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 80s.
''
.Friday...Partly cloudy. Lows in tbe, mid and ttpper 60s and highs near

By Sara Eckel

.-

The double-standard by whicll we !lave
viewed sc,xual activity -- as ·a right for men, a
luxury for women -- is not one that can entirely
be. blamed on state senators and insurance,exec-·
utives. It's just one of those residual biaseS that
many of us don't even realize we have until .
something uncovers it&gt; For years, I shelled oui ·
$30 a month for birth conirol pills without ever
· giving it a passing thougllt. It never occurred to
inc that my insurance· provider sllould pay for
the drug. 'If anytlling, I saw the whole thing in
reverse. Iff was going to be a bad girl, if I was
going to do the deed, well, I !lad better be prepared to pay this penance.
·
·· Similarly, many of my male friends -- very
, enlightened, feminist men :_ will still argue tliat
Y\&gt;U can't compare Viagra and birth control. Viagra, they cx.plain, corrects a deficiency. Whereas
birth control is a preven1ative measure. Wilen I
point out tllat the deficiency it's correcting is the
ability to hav~ sexual pleasure, they. nod in
agreement. We're not really taking about procreation llere --and if we were then we'd also !lave
to talk fertility drugs. ·.
The thing is, I say, you don't"HAVE to h"ave'

sex.

.

At this, they stare back, puuled. Yes, they
slowly admji; they don't have to have sex. They
guess that's. true. But that tllought had never ·
crossed t~eir minds.
'
· ·.

stu~p u~i'lity

regulators

. three coal-burning plants . because ' it" would
The tax-fro&lt; excllange of . asse.ts was
..own them outright, Hyrnick said, Duquesne is announced .last year and musrbe apprQved ~Y
getting out of tile generating business to c.q.n- federal regulators.
·
centrale on powerdistribu!ion.
.
' ~ •.
Pennsylvania regulatbrs gave the deal their
Criiic:~- including tfie Office Of the Ohio blessing in December.
Consumer's Counsel, municipal power comThe issue of whether the PUCO has any say
panies, consumer adv~cates anCI industrial in the miltter is still undecided. .
.. '
users - .worry that ForstEnergy ratepayers
In the meantime, the PUCO wants more
. will get stucl~ with a higher bill for tile costs of information about the issues raised by tl)e prQ. tile long-term projects, called ".stranded posed swap and has .scheduled anotller presencosts.' ' They- note that coal-fired plants have ' tation on the matter for Thursday.
,
been bringirlg higher prices on tile market,
Commission Chairman Alan Schriber said
while nuclein plants have been tough to several of the commission's five mem'bers
unload and carry high decommissioning costs. weren't famlliar enough with the issues ' 0
The bottom lin·e, says David Rinebolt, make a decision on the swap yet.
. executive director of Ohio Partners for Afford- . If the deal is completed, FirstEnergy would
able Enet!IY• is tha~ for the . d~al to be have sole ownership and control of the Perty
approved, tt has to be 10 the pubhc mterest.
Nuclear Power Plant in northeast Ohio and thel
, "While the company certainly sees benefits Beaver Valley Nuclear Plant in Shippingpo~t.
of consolidating ownership in potentially Pa. · '
.: I
lo~er costs,. there's ~o mechanism 10 pass
The three plants First Energy gives up are
th_ose _financial benef1ts on to ratepayers," !he A~on Lake and Niles coal-fired operatio~s
Rmebolt told the regulators.
1n Oh1o, and one in New Castle Pa.
"The~e·s clearly a questi?n as _to .~ether . FirstEnergy also owns and' operates tHe
there Will ,be a decrease m rclial&gt;ll'fty for . Davis-Besse nuclear plant in Oa'k Harbor.
rat~payers, .he added.
.
. Fu~tEnergy ~lso will. receive Duquesne's
. And ... shou!d Y?u approve th1s. genera· mmonty stakes 10 coal-fored plants in Stratton
!Jon swap today, tt w1l.l be to.the d*1mcnt of and Eastlake in OhiQ, and in Shippingport, Pa.
consumers be~a~se tlley will be force~ to pay
All three nuclear plants were built and
hundreds or m1lhons -1f not more -m add1- operated by a consortium formed in 1967 that
tiona! transition co~t recovery."
included five then-separate power utilities:
Nonsense, Hyrm~k says.
Toledo Edison, Cleveland Electric Illuminat, The values of the plants bejng exchanged ing Co., Ollio Edison Co., .Pennsylvania Power
are. comparable, he sa1d . ,
..
Co., and Duquesne Light. Since then, all but
That means the~e wont be any add1t1onal Duque~ne Light merged or were acquired 10
stranded, or trans11Jon, costs.
form ForstEiiergy.

•

VanMeter reunion planned
'The VanMeter reunion will be held Sunday, July 25, at tile Portland
Park. A polluclt will be held at 1 p.m.

Right to Life meeting set
A meeting of Right to Life will be held at Sacred Heart O!urch MOfl·
day at 7:30 p.m.
·

Man suspected in deaths of
four captured after standoff

By JAMES HANNAH
Aseoclated Prws Wrl1er •.
SIDNEY (AP) -A man 5uspected of killing three teen-age girls and
his Bibl~ study teacher surrendered
.'
.
early
today after a two-hour standoff
en 111111.- PIIN •en•
•
1ao11 ..._.. ...._, ot:~nuulle
..pet' hld.il, I , IUD
"'...;:_' ' ...........;wllcca .....
witil police at a gas station.
latwcutllld In._
1: iJIIIII Dlllh r1 11r
Lawrence Michael Hensley, 30,
gave up arouncl S a.m., · ending the
standoff in which a clerk and two
Alice Mae Lucken, 91, Albany, died on Monday, July l2, 1999 at Twin customers were held hostage .at the
!daples Nuriling Home ·in McArthur.
station about 35 miles north of DayShe was born in Nelsonville, daughter of the late Alvin and Jessie Cay ton, Shelby County Sheriff Mark
R
Sh
ho
ak
be f th p 1 C
Schemmel said.
eeves. e was a mem er, a mem r o
e car hapei •United
H I
h
d .h '
Methodist O!urch, and the Albany Senior Citizens.
ens ey was c arge wn 1our
She is survived by a son, Ennel R. Luckett, Sr., Albany, a granddaughter, counts of aggravated murder in an
Vera (Michael) Richardson, Chillicothe; a grandson, Ermel R. Luckett, Jr. appearance before Sidney Municipal
(Jenny), Columbus; four great grandsons: Wesley Ryan and Bradley Nichol- Judge Don Luce in a tiny jail courtson Luckett, and Joshua Michael and Zachary Allen o ichardson·, and two room. Luce ordered !lim to be held
"
on $1 million cash bond, an amount
special friends, Sue Turner and Paula Pickens.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband. Osmond Shelb,;t,County Prosecutor James
Luckett; a sister. Blanche Woodyard; lwo brothers, Harry and Earl Reeves; Steve n requested liased on "the··
and a daugllter, Phyllis Marie Luckett.
·
nature of tbe char,&amp;es" and !lis flight
funeral services will be held on Wednesday, July 14, 1999 at 11 a.m. at from the jurisdicuon.
.
the Big(,ny-Jordan Funeral Home ·in Albany with Rev. Edward Mingus offiHensley, !lis legs shackled and
.
wearing a blue bulletproof vest over
dating. Burial will follow at Alexander Cemetery.
··
his orange jail jumpsuit, said nothing
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
and showed no emotion. He was
fTeshly shaved around his goatee,
WASHINGIDN (AP) - Russia
Companies and steel workers in and had an icy stan:.
has agreed to limit shipments of Ohio and other steel-producing
Police ~aven't offered offer a spesteel to tile United States to avoid states have blamed low-priced cific motive forth~ killings. but the

United States, Russia sign steel agreement

aula parts factory worker was by
some accounts a troubled man. The
Dayton Daily News reported he was
convicted twice;.in four years for
public indecc.Cy, and neighbors said
he paid girls ·or young women to
watch him masturbate. His pastor,
the Rev. Ben Davis, said Hensley
had been involved ill' devil worship
but was trying to mend his ways.
No hostages were injured in
today's standoff. But Hensley was
considered a suspect in an appan:nt'
ly unprovoked shooting before 3
a.m. of a motorl·st on·1-75 less than

10 miles away from whe"' he •was
captured, Sehemmel said. A47-yearold man was wounded and was in
serious condition at. a hospital, the
sheriff said.
,_.
Four minutes after the highway
shooting was reponed, Hensley went
to the home of a churcll acquaintance
.in the nearby" town of Anna and
demanded lo be allowed irt, Schemmel sa1"d He ·was den1"ed entry and
··
left without i~cident, .he said.
The standoff began later after a
police officer spotted Hensley driviog erratiCally in the same purple
car he fled in after the shootings
Thursday, police U . R~Austin said.

MI-ddleport Councl·l

imports for bankruptcies at three
II • •
U.S. companies and for thousands ·
of layoffs. Ohio is home to 21,000
Continued from page 1
.patcher for the police department . ,
steel workers.
While U.S. officiids refused" 10 the police department from devoting
"In other business, ·Lawrence
..
discuss details of the agreement, more time at the park, and said that Powell· spo'Re to·council about.conRussia's Tass news agency quoted street workers and meynbers of the tinued ·drainage prqblems at his
90.
.
'
Russian Trade Minister , Mikhail public have been forced to intervene home at, Beech and Sycamore
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Lows hi the mid and upper 60s and highs near
Ftadkov as saying the deal would in re&lt;;ent problems. She emphasized Streets. Ppwell said tha:t he lla'a been ·
90.
..
preserve Russia's access to the U.S. · tllat criminal charges will be filed complaining about the ~roblem for
market.
againstthqsewh!'continuetocreate two years, with no result . Jean
problems.
Craig, president of the Board' or
_
The agteement represents "a
•
.
,
~There will be no more warnings. Public Affairs. said that she and
sufficiently difficult; compromise 1 don 't care how young· or old they water department personnel would
·
for both sides, but for :RuS$ia it pre·
.·
gateway , drug." Califano concluded,
are, warrants will be issued," v-isit-his hpm~ during the next rain to
.." $y JIM ABRAMS
serve'S an opportunity . to s~pJ!Iy
·
·
h
bl
d
•
.citing conclusions in the repi&gt;n. that
steel . 10 the American market," Iannarelli said.
·
mspect t e pro em an pursue a
, Assoctllted.Presa Writer •
· WASHINGro
. N (AP) - Young youngsters 12 1o 17 years oJd .who
Seve':") members or the public solution.
Fr..adkov was quoted as saying.
ded
people who smoke marijuana an: far smoke marijuana are 85 times ·more
atten
the meeting to make comCouncil members Rae Gwiazmore tikely tban nonusers to move on likely to use cocaine than those' who
plaints abOut police depanm.ent dowski and Beth Stivers, and Myron
to harder drugs, a substance abuse do nO!..
issues. Vickie Morrison reported Duff~eld of lhe Board of Public
~h group concludes in a n:port
The report, .whicb focuses on nona• •
tllat her son·~ .bicycle had been , Affairs, were appointed to serve on a
that opposes efforts IQ legalize or medical" u5e of marijuana, said the . ,
Contln.l.led from Pl9!l1
two-and-a:half 10 three days. He st\)len, and that although she had committee to review regulations for
· lleaiminaliZe nonmedical mariJ"uana. · drug is especl·anv danurrous for teens, } ·
{ .,_
ff
also reported that Hartley r~nstruc- · reported the possible whereabouts of· mobile homes in the village. ,
u
~1thout contracting 'tn an e ort to
'-'"'
th b"k
h f It h t
1·
h d
'
"Teen experimentation with mari- Impairing short' term memory, stunttion would be doing about 2,640e 1 e, s e e t a no ac 10 n a
Councilman . Robert Pooler
' 'J"IIIIIUI should not be considered a i_ng intellectual and emotional growth save money..
square-feet of concrete work.
been taken in an attempt 10 retrieve · reported that ·truck drivers for
Holman also reported tllat during
th b"ke
'casual rite of passage," said Joseph and ineteasing the likelihood of
e 1 ·
Rumpke, the village's refuse service
1
'•Catifano, chairman and /~resident of unprotected sex as well as lqding to June the weUs were pumped ~ ·
He· also reported tile Greenwood.
Sam Eblen, who complained provider, were speeding on back
' 'tbe National Center on Addiction aiKI other drugs such as cocaine or heroin. ho~rs a day With 3,383,000 gallons Cemetery Trustees want to require a about noise from ,stereos and loud streets ~nd inalleys.
; · • 'Substanj;c Abuse at Columbia Uni- . ' It said that of 182,000 teens and bemg pumped. ~p 411 •700 galloqs ..., pe!JlCtual care fee be required w.~en' exhausts at !he last couhcil meeting,
Iannarelli reminded . co~n·cil
1
:versity. /
·
,
children who entered treatment in fromLyMay.
d h
... fi
everan,)'.one purcllases a grave loi .at repobrtl ed . ~~~h the "noisfehwash still a meml!ers that a meeting of the new
:.; "T~ns· who smoke marijuana
1996forsubstanccabuse, nearly half,
~ns · report~. I e 7110, ml 11 or_
e the cemetery. He also reported ,the pro em'" t e area 0 IS" orne on Neigliborhood Watch group will
"plaYing-a dailgerous garne of Russian 48 ~rcent, were admitted for mari· levy IS up for renewal . . C:Ouncll trustees want to adopt a regulation Hudson Street. ~nd encouraged the meet on Tuesday at 1 p.m: at the
. 'roulette," he said.
,
. juana abuse or.addiction. .
:pr~ve? ~ re~lull~n r~ques~n, "the protlibiting the planting of shrubs on . ~:for~fmen~ka noiSe ordmance on• Family Life Center of the Middle'-, The center's report was released as
That compared to 19 percent fo• .·
ar o e ec lOllS o pace t e evy graves, and to remove flowers on
e VI age . •s.
port Church of Cllrist. She said that
- a House Government Reform ·Com- alcohol and a secondary·drug; 12"per· on the November ballot as a replace- certain dlites to facilitate mowing
Clara Riley spoke of problems signs hat;! been ordered and would
mittee lleld a second hearing toda
. yon cent for alcohol . alone, 3 percent for ·ment levy· so the village can, obtain before Memorial Day.
with noise in her neighborhood on . be placed throughout the village.
revenue from new construction. It
,
.
Pearl Street, John Fultz about trash
· 'pros and cons of decriminalizing · smllked cocaine, 2.4 percent for was noted tllat.it is still just a renewCour)cil recessed until Monday, 7 being left r:m curbs, bicycles on sideShe also said that the village
2
3
· drugs.
metllamphetamines and · percent al of an existing tax for fire depart- p.m. at the municipal building.
· walks, excessive noise in the down- would cpnduct a special trash pick•
men! operations.
·-.
,
town area near his Captain's House up service from .August 8-13. The
. T~ifying were former Drug for heroin.
Enforcement Administration head
The report ooncluded that decrim- . Holman also complained about
Also attending were council inn_, and qrlvecs runnin_g red ,. lighls. pickupS will begin in the upper end
of mariJ'ua- the litter left afttr ball games at the member·s Robert
Beegle' Henry DBISY Tay 1or of Ral 1roa d street near Fruth Pharmacy• and proceed lo
' Thomas Constantine and advocates of inalization or legalh•tion
.
"' relaJCed lawson marijuana use.
.
na would sun:ly incn:ase use among park . Councilman' Joe Evans said Bentz, Jolin Dudding, Henry Lyons reported that nOise was al~ a prob- tile lower end. of town . Residents .
that when he was involved as a and Bobbie Roy, and Fire Chief · !em. 10 her nelghborhooiJ . .,
.
may place unwanted items on the
"Marijuana stands conv.ictCd as a teen-agers and children.
.
.,.
David
Neigler
·,
C
R
6
t
R
b.
•
.
curb
for pickup. No heavy appli ' .1
coach, the !lome team also .took five
.
ouncl
d 1man
h 1' o er.
11 I o 1ln,?nh ances, gaso I"me or. other chemicals,
minutes and policed the'' grounds
sug~este . at .annare ~ mee wll. -paint cans. tires or batteries will be • ·
Sentin~l
after the games. John Pape, p}esiPollee Ch1ef Bruce Sw1ft to see. 1f· accepted.
S~ocks
·
(USPS ~!3-MO)
these problems can be •~dressed,
dent of the ball association, and his
Cammuall)' ~per Holdillllo hte.
Am Ele Power ..................... 36"1.
coaches·
are
be
asked
t
attend
the
and
counc1l agreed th~t Sw1ft should
Council also a-pproved the
.
'
10
6
Akzo ...................................... 42~.
CO.Uricil.
attend
_the
n~xt
meeting
to
diSCUSS
mayor's
repott Of fines Collected in
next
session
of
Publilhcd every afternoon, · Monday throvah
AmrTech ........................: ......71'r.
Frida~~!ll Cour1 St., Pomeroy. Ohio. by tiM
M
Sc
tt
tl"ll
rt'
d
th
the
reSidents
complamts.
June
in
the
amount of $3,551.50.
Ash 011 .....................:............ 42'1.
Obio ~ley PWiishina Company. Second ctus
0 .
1 re~ e
ayor
at
thru
•
An
emergency
resolution
was
"
P
resent,
in addition io Iannarelli,
AT&amp;T .................................... 56"1.
postage Pfitdat Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
Tow.
~
shlp_
has
fimshed
·the
'
passed
by
coum;il
settling
a,
past
'
Robinson,
Pooler,
Gwiazdowski and
Letart
Me..-.r: ' The AMociated Preu ~ tb~ Ohio
Bank One .............................. 58\
Chip
and
seal
prOJCCI
for
tile
VIllage.
.Dfxws
ope~~
At
l2:30PM
wage
dispule
and
the
payment
of
si'ivers,
were
Councilman
Roger
NeWJPA~* ~ation .
..
'
Bob Evans ........ ,....... ,........... 19\
Po.taatc~-r.~ addme aKn1cdons to The
,
Borg-Warner
....
.....
:
.............
55'!.
He
also
repo~ed
June
fines
or
$64
I
TARZAN
~
1:111,1:1,
5:115.
back
wages
to
Shirley
Tyree,
a
disManleJ::
an&lt;!,
Clerk
Bryan
Swann.
1
Dlily Sentinel,\ 111 Co\111 St., Pomeroy, Ob10
w1th $180 pa1d to the state.
..._,
Champion .................; ...... :......6';,
45769.
~
Cha1111 Shps ...........................6~.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES Hill said Total Tree Care would
-.,_ 7 ...:;.
7:21, 8111
By C.rrkr or Motor Route
City Holdlng .... ,.................... ,28'.\ "be in and do work on several trees.
~tems~bly~Yrrie
OM - L..................'..,.........J2.00
illm tbe. WaJrt ~ 111 nu..
Federal MoguU ..................... 53'!.
One Mon1h ............................... .~.70
He estimated the work wou\d -take .
1m l*nisal
!:'lannen
........
........
;
................
73'1.
. 1
One Year, .................................. $1~.00
Kmart ................................... 15"1.
' SJNGLt COPY PRICE
Kroger ................ :. ................. 29'•
Daily. ....................................... lS ~nu
Subscribers not desiriRJIO PlY the carrier may
Lands End ...................... ..... 46 ').
. \
remit in adv1nce direa to The Daily ScntioeJ.on
Ltd ......... :.......................... .....46\
\PR IIlGVA Ll [Y C lri W ~
"""
1 ahree, si:~ or 12 month basis. Credit, ,..,II ,be
1 1
1 1
Oak
Hill
Flnl
..........................
18'
h
p-ea eanier each week.
446-4524
: ~ ,v:' \',' . ~ '
OVB ...... :................................ 32\\
No ~Ubsaiplion by mall permincd in arw
(FRt 7/11-TUES 7/t3199
One Valley ............................38'/o
1 where home e.rrit:r arvK:e is IVailablc.
. , &lt;~I now have the &lt;'!'fion o{ pmtc'Ctlf1J.: ~"'" f,und; mcmr.-1'&gt;
hbJWier tcMTYCI the ript to adJl.IS1 rates du.r·
1ox oma WlU OPlll
Peoples ................................ 28\".
111 11M 5Ubscription ptriod. Subsaiplion rate
Prem Fln1 ............................... 14'.1
FOR
,_.aea may be implemented by changins the
12:30
PM
Rockwell
...............................
61'1.
a hu:&gt;U1eSS mrtn&lt;:r with !,lW-C&lt; &gt;i{ •
tklratioo of I he subscript ton.
--------.....
RDIShell .......... ,.................... 63~.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
Sears .......................... .,......... 46'!.
lftlideMftal C...aty
Shoney'a ................................ 2).
10- , .. 20-yc-.tr l~vd .term life
. 13 V..b. .......................... .$27.30
FlrstStar ............................... 28'1..
u w.eu ......,....................S&lt;J.8l
Wendy's .......................... ;..... 29'11
5% Woob .......................... .IIO'i.5&lt;5
insurance fn~,; A11tn -Ownen;
Worthington .. :..................... 14"1.
IIIla Oubld&lt; M.... c...IJ'
PHANTOM MENACE (PG)
I.J..,.u .......-···-·········... .$29~
7:00 I 1:40 DAILY
:II v..~ ................ :..........S56.66
.TAR WARS,.,,
1:11,m,1:15
12 MoU .........................JJ()t').72
MATINEES SAT/SUN I :00 • 3:40
Insurance C 111\f'my. tauU&gt; ~ &gt;r m.1re
(Scifi)
Liam
Neestll.
Em
~.
Natale Plmm
NO PASSES, NO IIARGAIN NIGHT
Stock reports are today's
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
BIG
,.~
1:tl. t1~ 5:31,
Rm dc r Services
detaib and a C&lt;ll1lfl'titive prup;,.;al.
Advesl of Gallipolis.

-Legalized mariJ"Uana 8 danger to
'·_
"young pe0p I_
e, report COne IUd 8S

imposition of punitive American
tariffs, U.S. officials said today.
The administration officials,
who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said the deal was signed
after marathon bargaining talks in
Paris.
tr an agreement had not been
reached by today, the United States
was set to impose the penalty tariffs, which would have resulted in
an even steeper drop in demand for
Russian steel in the United States.
Commerce: Secreiary William
Daley was "briefing reporters on
delails of the agreement later in the
day. ·

RutIa nd Co u nCl·l·

are

· J'he,Daily

..

Protect the iml1grtant
people in your life. ·.

1"1 '"

'

~lon P~ltcy

I

· O.r .... _ , . 1o1 1111 lllopos Is to bt
~- It ,.e IUMw llf .. tmOr ill •

DAIIIIY

1!;;;;;;;===;;;;;;;;--=;;;;;;;;;;!1

·-

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.b1
SNI. .b;! lblJ, (d! iipoAe, llJ!;n Spo.u.l!sle 11m

lUlU ltJT ,.~ til, t45, 1:1~ t41i

....,., ... lk - · - •• (7411) 99:1-

• JIIS, W. ....... 1fWr IRI'onUtllol

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li)ll. ~ Emi Wllit. !«&lt;iMo I Flllirl!oe lilt Cw Ill

. . . - . Cflt ..... ""'""".....

.vluiD-Ormtns ~
L•fe Home Car BuStness
.,.. ;',4, lio6&amp;o."llo4•

I:DD. tl, i4l,
~ .lmlllqjs.~ IWnp1. 1:11, 111:1&amp;
AMBIICAN

..

Other IIMDII

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

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.... 1104
"'''''"""'~
Cll ~ ;1 II 1 ..._ ....._..,"""'"',.. .....:::: ~=

0
I

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•

for the past 35 years -- were just a L~~.c~•~loloo=:CII;:,...._=:=·=·====;::::====::::===============;=:::.::::....~,.--:--_:J
fiction?
· --.
The fact is tllat "those Florida smokers knew multibillion-dollar jackpot.
individutls. However, far too many of us arc.
very well ''the risks of their habit. And they · It. matters no~ really, who the target is. Today, unwilling, apparently, to accept persQnal responknowingly and willingly chose-- repeat chose- it's ~igarette companies, breast-implant makers sibility when certain rights we -exercise -- io
- to gamble that tlley would not bec,ome statis- and gun manufacturers.
smoke, lo drink, to have wanton sex, whateyer:••
tics -- the one-half or lifelong smokers (accordTomorrow, who knows? The targets could cas- prove deleterious.
ing to tile Centers for Disease Control) who ily be automakers or beer companies or drug mane
No one forced the Florida smokers to take up
contract lung cancer, emphysema O( otller ·relat- ufacturers or fast-fooc! chains. ·
their unhealthful habit.
•
ed diseases.
For all of these consumer products pose certain
And while no one wishes them the ailments
-When their ~0-50 gambl~s turned out unfa- riskS. Indeed, there are 50,000 auto-related deatlls ' from which many of them suffer, they llardly merit
vorable, when they ·contracted putative smok- in America each year. There are ·more ·than a multibillion-dollar court award for the imprudent
.choices they freely made.
ing-related diseases, t~e Florida smokers por- 100,000 alcohol-related deaths.
.

'Str~nded

1-«&lt;'mm

0

11011~ fllr.

'The Eastern Athletic Boosle~ will meet wednesday al 7 p.m. at the
All parents of athletes, grades 7 through 12 are urged' to
attend.

·Alice Mae Luckett
·-~-&lt;%@~·
afVril!t

meet

hiah school.

••= ,. . .

WliLD a:

..

Map!~

Eastern bOosters to

-Obituaries-,

I KNEW
A lJN(()J .

TRQB.E

Alice Mae Luckett, 91, Albany, died on MOnday, July 12,' 1999 at Twin
Nursiog Home in McArthur.
· She was born"in Nelsonville, daughter of the late Alvin and Jessie Qay
Reeves. Slle was a homemaker, a member of the Pearl Chapel Unit¢
Methodist Olurch, and the Albany Senior Citizens.
She is survived by a son, Ennel R. Luckett. Sr., Albany, two grandchil·dn:n, and four great grandsons.
·
Besides her parents, sbe Wti pn&gt; tded in death by ber husbanjl; Osmond
Luckett; a sister, Blanche Woodyard; two brothers, Harry and Earl Reeves;
and a daughter, Phyllis Marie Luckett.
Funeral services w~ll be beld on Wednesday, July 14, 1999 at 11 a.m. at
the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in Albany with Rev. Edward Miogus offic:ialing. Burial will follow at Alexander Cemetery.
·
Frien~ may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.

WeclnMd8y, July 14

Announcements:

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520 W. Main St. -

E&lt;lle Kay 11-. Owl 181 Nilli'l L)Gft

Pomeroy, OH
Phone 992-2588

IUilliiOMI " 1:4&amp;,. 731, .1:15

214 EwrMain

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p.,,.,roy

(IWil Jellftlolls. T~ .tt~·. Qm,l'q&gt;e OM. Spm Till cat
. .llaliaH$~ l!H~
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES ....00 .

VInton - 388-8603
Gallipolis • 446-0852

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992~687

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The Daily ST~!~~l

Sports '

Tueaday, July 13, 1999

...;..,__,._--"'""rr· Meigs Legionnaires split ·
doubleheader with Westland

Barlow-Vincent, Federal Hocking win in Hubbard finals
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stefl Writer
The Bill Hubbard Memorial Lillie League
Tournament ended Monday night at the Syracuse
Municipal Park with the Federal Hock(ng Lancers

By DAYE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent ·
The Meigs American Legion
baseball team splil a Sunday afternoon twm b•ll wuh Columbus .
Weslland at Meigs High School. :
Westland won the first game 7-2,
while Me1gs held ofT the v1s1tors m
the mght cap 10.8,
Westland took a 2-0 lead in the
top of the second inning agains1
Meigs . Ben Rutan , who reached on a

This tournament's finalfour are scheduled to participate in the Kyger Creek Lillie League
Tournament, which will stan Friday at the Kyger
Creek Employees Club field between Addison and·
Cheshire.

featured the Badcats getting the 110~ Award. B-Y's
Ryan Smith winning the Offensive Most Valuable
Player Award, the Indians: Brandon Fackler getting
the Defensive MVP Award and Federal Hocking's
Nick Springer winnjng the overall MVP honors.

defeating Terry Pyles State Fann of 6-4 in the consolation game before Barlow-Vincent Badcats
downed the Pomeroy Indians 12-5 in the championship game.
Following the title game. the awards ceremony

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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE .
Badcats sent II hailers to the pialc.
In the championship game. Singles hy Welch and Gillilan scn1
Barlow· Vincent , ahead 3-2 after home the first .lwo runs of the frame.
three inn ings. executed a fivc~ run
A wild pitch during Josh Long's
breakaway in lhe fourth and put at-bat sent Gillilan home. Later.
more distance between itself and the bases-loaded walks to Dunfee and
Pomeroy Indians in the lifth en route Man Adams scnl Greg Johnson and
to claiming the tournament crown.
Smith home and hoo;tcd the future
In the opening frame. wild pitch- Warriors' lead to S-2.
e.s by Pomeroy , pitcher· Brandon
While the Badcats ballooned thei r
Fackler sen t Nathan Cozan , and . run total into double-digit country .
Daniel Dunfee home wi.th the the Indians kept chipping away.
Badcal&gt;' lirst two runs.
,Jeremy · Blachtnn's
sacri ficc
, In the second, another wild pitch grounder allowed Shawn Day to
' sent Greg Gillilan lionie . with Ihe score in the founh. Eddie Fife Jr. did
Badcats' third run. However. the same in the lifth to send Fackler
Fackler, who linishcd with 15 'strike- home.
outs and eight ·walks, !'Cttled down
The Badcats' pitching relay team ,
long enough to record nine strikeouts consisting of Smith, Cody Welch and
and limi! his walks to three in the Dunfee, kept their club ahead in pan
first three innings.
by whiffing five and walking none
. Fockl.er calmed down enou~h on 'throuJ!h five innings.
. offense io drive starter Ryan Smifh's
But their string of luck ended in
0-1 offering beyond 'the·· woOd-and- the sixth. when ·Welch surrendered
wire renee in right center for a two- .back' tO-back walks to Ross WCIJ and
run homer in the 'third. That slashed Jeremy Blacksldn . After Blackston 's
Barlow-Vincent's lead to 3-2. ·•
walk. Dunfee was called in from first
Breakaway: In the fourth, the

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CELEBRATION TIME comes for the Pom'eroy
Indians as Brandon Fackler (far right) steps on the
plate following his .two-run homer in the third
Inning of Monday night's championship game

Federal ·Hocking outlasts
State Farm 5..:4
Point Pleasant
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By,G. SPENCER OSBORNE

1he fi r.-.t fnun e when Rvan McCune
. The L(mso latinn l.!~t mc ~a " "'-·or·cd (In a throwm L! ~1Tnr to third
Federal H o~.: k i n g l~t·a~k a,__~ -2 tk with Oa.-.1.! hv first ·h41 s~c m :m ·Rohbic
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four rum. in the mHJJic mnnt~!'&gt; thai" Wil!iJm ~on. Later In th..: inntn!.!. thl':
helped the Lance r~ daun i.l fi ~~ \ 1 !.: 11 1 ~ L:m~.:cr~ went ahcnd 1~0 when .. Nick
ry over the l 'c!Ty Pyles Stat~: Farm Springer scored on A~ron Rl1pc's
team from Poinl Plcasanl. W V:~.
.;::J~.:r i fil:c grounder.
· The Lnnccrs drc w first hl ood
m
StJI.e F;.mn t1cd the game at.:!~~ on
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to cn'U the ~:ontcst.
~
. T~e re lay team finished with si~

strikeouts and. two . walks . Despite
all owing Pomeroy to send more than
four hail ers in three , of the 'si~
inni.ngs. Ihe . 1hird .was the only tim~
the Indians staged anything' resemblng a rally.
B&lt;!rlow-Vinccnt's hillers . were
' Smith (2-3)_ Johnspn (1-2). Comn.
Gillilan and Welch (all 1-3) ·
The Indians' hitters were Davi s
(24): Blackston . Fackler (both wcn1
2-4). Day. Eddie Fife Jr. ani! Daylon
Jenkins (all 1_.3).

FOURTH PLACE in the Hubbard Memorial Little League
Toumamenlbelonged to Terry Pr,les State Farm ol Point Pleasant,
which lost "to "'-daral Hocking n the consolation game Monday
night. In front are'&lt;Duslln Stover, Ryan Young, Richard Hurf and Nick
Stalnaker. In the .secbnd row are Jacob Gillispie, Robbie Williamso
and John Casey. In the third row are Ned Park, Scott Benson and
joel Hilbert. Behind them are cnaches Mike Young, Donnie Gillispie
and Bill Park. (OVP photo)
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Inning~

Badcats .................. 210- 540= 12-6-.1
Indians ... ................ .. 002-11 J =5-9-2
WP - Smith
LP - B. Fackler

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;: w .within 5.1--U( hut Detroit went on
~ a \0-2 run ~i1h Ndiayc sL'OI'in g (ivc
:: of lhosc poinl:" th take a t14-50 kad

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Jacoh G i lli ~pic and Smny Benson .
Th&lt; hits sc nl home Ned Park . who
n:achet.i nn an error. and Willamson.
who was wa lk ed.
Alkr a scoreleSs second. Federal

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Shock 76, Miracle 67
; : :· At · Orlando, Fla.. . Sandy
·:o. B.rondello scored 22 points and Val
~: Whiting grabbed 15 rchnunds 10 l9ad
::· bctroit ov~r Orlando.'
·
:,: · Astou Ndiay'c scored 14 poinls
:· and Claudia Maria Da s Neves added
:: II for Dclrnil. The Shock only shol
. ;• 39 pc(cOnl from the field hul w~; 6:: for- II ·from three -point range.
.
:~
Ny,kcSha Sales hit ·a three-pointer
~ wtlh K:27 rcm ~ining In pull Orlando

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Gowdy was injured running out a
f
· o 1· the
scanercd ivc hils. slruck ou1 16 and ground hall in lhe lhird innong
1
wa lked four. Rutan had J d.ouhlc and . . cL·o nd game a nd was taken tn
Gowdy wns the inning p1h.:hcr. he

In lhc Federal Hockine foul'lh . a tiipk to lead the winners . Rohde. Veteran- McmQrial Hospilal hy lhe
si nol
e cs by' A.J. ·Smilh an'd Jcrrod Crowe. Lewis and Hahc rmi\1 cat::h Pum..:roy E. M.S. wi th a serio us ankle
Willis
· h allowed Trevor Slusher
. and . .at.iUcd singles·.
., pram
Smil . rcspcL:tivdy . tn scorC IHC runs
Bcntlcy pid~.cd.up the los., g1'', 1ng
1 'II pulllS
·
M ci~s ·(7-X- 1 ovcral ) WI
.that Snm.cwhat cased 'the hurdcn on ·up rive hits. he walked onL' und 4-7- 1 Eldlth Dis.triL:'l rcco,rd on the
Ihe Lancers' pile hers. .
slruck nul seven. Healh Ro1hgeh had Iinc a1 .home Wcd'nesday againsl
, · Feder\11
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hf
··Hocking
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b f sa w.•Ba(nhan
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. . a dOU bl.c tlJl d !! Sl··n g 1c Hl 1end Metgs.
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pile our·mntngs core glvmg way .. llcnllcy. Wilhams. and. Baker added lnnin&amp; totals•lirst &amp;li.OM:
to Nick Springer. The pair comhinod singles.
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• West land .............. .020-11 0-3=7-6-0
to
strikc
.
out
13
and
walk
four.
r p k
h
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f
Meigs jumped out on top early in Meigs .................... 01 1-000- 0=2 -5-4
• ar · w o went I c lstance or 1he second game hy grabbing a 3-0
Balleries
the Wesl VIrginians. struck out cioe hl lead . Bentley and Rothgeb holh sin- . ··Wc \lland: Brian Gowdy (WP ) and
and walked' lhrcc.
gled, wilh Bentley moving 'lo lhi rd Many Dilello
On offense. Park sco red the nn Rothgch's hit. Jeremiah raced
Meigs: lcrcmiah Bent 1ey (LP )
game's last run. After huting a double home on a perfect squeeze bunt for a and Adam Cumin[,;
in lhe fifth ·that spelled the end of 1-0 Meigs lead .
,
Barnhan's evening on the hill . Park
·Adam Cumings the~ hi1 a shot Inning totals-second &amp;m!Jt
scored on two wild pitches and the over the · left-center f1eld r.cncc to Westland .............030- I00-4-= g-6-4
that hitters
followe&lt;l
each.
·
MClgs
· ~ . 3.0 1ead . west 1an d ''
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errant
-.• Thethrows
-·Lancers'
w~rc Willis give
,.,clgs.:.
............. 300-502 -x= 10.10.3
came back
tied the game a1 J-ail,· .
Batteries
(2 -3), Ryan McCune, Smith and Nick '" the top of the second. A w.al~ . and
We stland: Ben Rutan (LP) and
Springer (all went 1-3).
. smglcd . off the bms of Lewis. Marly Dilello. Kyle Kincade (4)
. State Farm's hitters were,Gillispic. Habcrmill, and Ju stin Toney 10 go
Mcill s: Heath Rothgeb (WP) and
Ne~ Park {both 2-3). Williamson ( 1-, along wit~ a passed bill I and wild Ad~m Eumings
I) and Benson (1-2). ·
pitch tied the game.'
"
Homers
lppjng !l!li!b
)• Westland toek a 4-3 lead in the
MEIGS-Adam Cumings-one on·
Lancers ............... .'... 202-2()(}.:6-5- 1 .. iop of 1he fourlh inning on a walk. a Lsi inning
, '
Slate Farm .. .... ........ .201-0 10=4-6-2 . Meigs error and a double by Toney.
' MEIGS-Adam Williams-thrce'onWP- Barnhal'l (Springer save)
llut the lead didn't lasI long. Jeff 41h inn ing
LP- Park
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Brown cloublcd, and Jamie Baker

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Stephan ie McCany's threc-poin!er
wilh 6.6 sc,·onds remaining. But
Chamiquc Holdsclaw hit .a pair of
free 1hrows to,.cxlendthC'iead before
McCarty's, potcnlial game-tying
threc -poinlcr w~s hlockcd by Muriel
Page W~.h two ~c ..:onds left .
'Page had . I I p&lt;linls and career. hi uh 15 rebound , and Holdsclaw
·added 22 ptiinls for Ihe Myslics. ·

Meigs football
instructional ·
period Monday

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WNBA roundup

Once Again, fhe Daily Sentinel II Have. A
Special Melg$ County Fair Preview Edition. This Year's
Edition Premises To Be One Of The biggest And Best Ever'!- ·
Look For This Special' Edition In You
Friday, August 13th Paper!

"N~w

,\ mnitan l.t"agu r
OAKLAND ATHU:.L ICS · Acuvated C Mike J
M....Y.1r l:anc: ln•m d11..· l.'i .J:.y d1sabkd lut. Opt 11,JO&lt;!d
C f\ J H1n,•11 hl VancOOVL'I of llll' PCL
1
SEATfLE MAR INERS: Agreed 10 ternu \l-ith
OF ShdJ,m Ful""' INF V:'lu ghn Sc hill and LHP

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.)ktmtt
loCharloH~:

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"CLEVELAND

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Western Conference

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Monday's scores
llo:trllll 76. Orl:lnJo 67

Call

Mtoem~ lW. U1ah YJ
CLEVRANO 67 Mlnnt:"M'It:l
W:uhtn~u:•n 7-l. Ot.ldflllt• 11

DAVEor KATHY

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Smnh

Bask•lball
National 8.askttball As.~ciation
· ORLANDO MAGIC: Si~wcd FCor.:;y Magp;C'IttNan~&lt;:d John ny O a\1~ asststanl co.1ch.
UTAH JAZZ Nan~eiol K1m Turner ~e mor duec ·

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lt1r nl haskctball n'k:dt:l rclanons and E1·nn Sthcm1an
dm.' O.: tflr 11f ll'lt!Jtu rdauons

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Football
Na1ion01l ruu1b11ll Lucuc
1
GKEEN liAY PACKERS . St~nt'd RB [&gt;.:Moun I

Par~cr

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NEW ENGLAND PMRIUTS St!!.n&lt;!d S M.'\l't:us'
wa~hlnf.ton
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PHILADELPHIA E,\GLE S Rt·!t!!lltd RB
Corey V..:~l~.-r In a o""' ·year L'OnUOL'I Rele01~J P 1
Harry C:unrdl
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ST

LOlli S

RAMS

Pwn wt,•d

La'&gt;~r,·th:e

/l.kCutdk:1lll to tllll'{'Wr 111 "":ouun ~
SAN FRANCISCO JlJI:RS St~nctl Ull\hdw.:l
M .1\nn

National tludlt .' Lu«ur
BOSTON BRUINS Re- n~rn:d G R\lD TO\Ila.\ to
o onc-ye;w rflnu;w;t
.
TAMPA A,W LIGHTNING St~n.-d LW k it'

Sentinel
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Hockey

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The Dai

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w.dn•sday's ~·m•
,\IJ ·S t;•r ~ :ml\' .11 Nc"' Y&lt;&gt;rl 7 ~. r m

at 992-2155
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::AL
. standings

).i..nndlll~
l.Jr:1h . .

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Transactions

Basketball
EnsCtm Oi,-i&lt;oion

BE SURE .YOUR BUSINESS
IS A PART OF THIS
YEAR'S FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

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Scoreboard

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IWo. Toi'iev had a single and double
tu le ad Westland . Tacken had a douhie. Kincade. Lewis and Habermi ll
eac h added a si ngle:
Wcslland slart·ing shortsiOp Brian

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Rockers defeat Lynx 67-55;
Mer.cury, Shock, Mystics win

•

I 0 h1ts . .stru( k out tw o. and walked

saen flce bunt hy Gowdy.
'·
RUian· d&lt;) uhled to score b01h run·
ners, he moved up and &gt;eared on a
pcrfcc1 squeeze hun I play by Many
Ditcllo.

The I0-day instructional period
•. · /
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·! with 3:23 rcm~ining.
·
Mystics 74, Sting 71
for Mel•' s Hi1!h School foolhall will · ~ ·
• &lt; '0:" .. ~-/
:• AI W:Jshing10n . D.C.. Nikki get und~; waY on Munday July I? al
·~ "•. i.~ ~~·~j:~~:--,;
·: McCray ~c ored 26 poi nt s t ~l lc~d b p.m .. act:ording to varsil y head
~#o~~"'J•.,lf'~:,~·
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·&gt; Washington over Ch·a rlollc. giving l:oa··.... h Ml.kc Chancey.
',.t"-o.•l\ · .·,
:· the Mystics hack-10-hack ·wins lor
Any Meigs High Scliool mhle1c '. ~:'-":"&gt;;..Si.·.· iirj ~:
·~ the first tim e in· their two-year histo- intcrcslcd in playing fomba ll arc
, ;·";.: ;·.&gt;·; ~~
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.r.y.
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asked to report to th e Y,;trsily locker
•,, i .:•••··r·
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·' Washinglon ·s fourth win in seve n room at lhe ,hi gh school.
;·
.,,.-,.,1 . -"" ···
, games spoiled the dchut of 'Dan
. il
,.
• Hughes. who was naJllcd lht&gt; Sting's SHS helmet-fitting
• interim coach Sunday atkr Ihe firing
'
session Monday
· ; of Mary nell Meadors .
!
' Vick( Bullctt and Andr0a S1 in son
Anyone intere sted in pla~ng
·s cored 19 point s apiece for
foolball
at Southern Junior Hi gh ~re
• Charlotte. whi ch matched a season
asked
.
10
be a1 1hc hi gh schoo l
; hig~ with its 1hird Slraight. loss.
Monday.
July
.19 at 6 p.m. for helm et
• The Mystics saw a IY,pomt. sccfitting
a1
the
foothall
building.
&lt; fmd -half lead , cut to 72 -71 on

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(Sec FINALS on Page 5)

CLEVELAND (AP) - Mcrlakia Jones sco red 21
points as the Cleveland Rockers noh;hed lhcir second
consecutive victory with a 67 ·55 win ov.cr Ihe Minncsma
Lynx.
,
. The Rockers got off 10 a fas t slal'l. shooting 56 perccnl
(14-for-25) in the first half and outrebounding Minnesota
· - 20-12. Cleveland's 38-2 1 halftime. advantage enabled il
to withstand a Lynx run midway 1hrough )he second half
Cleveland's biggesllead of 22 poinls came after a pair
of free throws from Jones. 1hc learn 's lone AII-Star ,represenlallvc. with 15: II remaining. Minnesota got back
into the game Ihanks to seve n second-half three-poi nters.
but never seriously threatened. .
.
Katie Smith, making her WNBA debu1 in Ohio after
three seasons with the now-dcfuncl ABL's Columbus
Quest, made four thrce- poi niers arid scored 17 points for
.the Lynx.
·
Mercury 80, Starzz 66
· AI Sail Lake City. Marlics Askamp scored a career·
high 23 points as the Phoenix Merc ury snapped a sixgame losing streak wtt h an 80-66 w1n over the Utah
Starzz on Monday.
With Jennifer Gillon, the Mercury·s leading scorer at
16.4 poi nts per game. held 1o four poinls. Askamp joined
Clari'Sa Davis-Wrightsill. who had IR. 10 pick up the
slack for Phoenix·.
SQUEEZED- Cleveland forward Eva Nemtiova
Phoenix (4- 10) used a 12-0 run 10 take a 26- 11 advan puts
·the defensive squeeze on Minnesota's
lagc wi1h 6:01 lcfl in lhc fir&gt;l half and led 38-1? al halfCharmin Smith during Monday night'!! WNBA contime. thanks 10 10 p01nts 'Irom Askamp and nme from teat
in Cleveland,. where the Rockers won 67·55. ·
(AP.)
(See WNBA on Page 5)

error. Both runners-.movcd , up on a

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1he strengt h of run-~corin g single:-; hy

· State
then
on. Farm never -~&lt;H d osc r from

Meigs error, advanced on a ground singled. Bentley reached on a field out and scored on a sacrifice fl y by ers choice and Rothgeb ~i ngled .to
Crowe. Dallas Lewis, who foll owed load 1he bases. Williams then his a
with a single, advanced on a passed grand slam ovcr the fence in left and
ball and scored when Milch Meigs went on lop 8•4.
Habermill singled.
Meigs added two more runs in the
Meigs came back in the bottom pf . si~th inning on a Bentley single, a
the inning when Adam Cumings Westland error, and a Williams
walked, stole second and scored on a ground rule double. It turned out that
Jamie Baker single to pull to within Meigs needed those runs as the
2-1 .
Cougars came back in the top of the
Meigs tied ·the game in Ihe third seventh inning.
. ,·
inning. Jeremiah Bentley walked and
Westland scored four runs in the
stole second. Adam Williams singled sevenlh. Robby Tackcn had a double,
10 tic the game at 2-2.
.
Kyle Kincade a single and a pair of
Westland took a 3-2 lead in the Meigs errors helped the cause.
founh inning. Rutan reached on a
Ro1hgeb picked up the win scatMeigs error and scored on an01hcr lering seven hits, walking three. hll·
Meigs miscue.· They increased the 11n~ a bauer and sl rikin g out four.
lead in the fifth. two outs laler RUian ,,. Williams had his grand slam, a
doubled for a 4-2 advan1agc.
' douhle an.d a single 10 lead Meigs;
Westland blew 1he contesl wide Bemlcy and Rolhgeb each had two
open in the scvenlh inning. ' Kyle jingles. Cumings had his home run:
Rohde singled and moved ur when Brown an double and Baker a si ngle.
Kyle Kincade icached on a ·Meigs .., Rutan . the losing pitcher, gave up

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·· Dunfee . despite seeing WcsiOil

Fife's lielder's-c hoicc grounder
aJ iow Bryce Davis to score. ·pitched
out of' trouhlc posed hy Well. anu
fllackston in scoring pmition by gettin g Fackler on a called lhird &gt;trike

AlJ(;lJSrf 16 - 21Sl'

against Barlow-Vincent. The blast pulled thl!
Indians to within a run, but Barlow-Vincent pulled
·away with rallies In the next two innings to claim a
12-5 victory..(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

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MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

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Badcats pull ~way for 12-5 '· ..
win over .lndians ·. in title game·

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and Adam Canaday. In th~ second row are Josh
Long,. Greg, Johnson, Dan1el. Dunfee, ·Mark Moses,
.. Nathan Cozart, .Matt Adams and . Cody Welch.
Behind th'em are coaches · Barry Smith and Bill
. Gillilan. (OVP photo)
·
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TOURN.f'Y CHAMPS - ' The BaJiow:Vincent
Badcats cl.a imed . the Hubbard Mamonal L1ttl.e
League Tournament title Monday night by bt~ating
the Pom11roy Indians 12·5. In front are (L·R) Kyll!
Welsh, Greg Gillilan, Jesse Hilv!!rding, Ryan Smith

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(Continued from Page 4)
Hocking went ahead to slay in the
lhird. Brandon Barnhart's sacrifice
grounder preceded Williamson's. hel met-ringing throw 10 the plate. ·
The ball bounced ·off Tyler
Chadwell's helmet as Chadwell slid
in al the plate . As lhe ball got away
from the armore~ Gillispie, Brandon
Bigley also came in 10 score and put
the Lancers ahead 4·2.
.
In " the · haltom of Ihe . lhird.'
Williamson drov e Barnhart's 0-1
pitch heyond the center licld wall.
The solo homer cu1 1he Lancers' lead

.
Hubbard Memorial -Little · Trevor Slusher. In the second row are Adam Tate,
· ;t:eague Tournament were the Federal Hoeklng Aaron Ru~. Nick Springer, Jerrod Wilils a.nd
-Lancers, who beat Terry Pyles State Farm of Point Brandon Bigley. Behind them are coaches Brent
:Pleasant 6&gt;4 in Monday night's consolatiofl con- Chadwen, Charlie Springer and Dave Rupa. (OVP
test. tn front are Ryan McCu11e, Brandon Barnhart, &lt;photo)
Tyler Chadwell, A.J. Smith, Kyler Torrence and

~

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

s~ ,· aht.'r

•

--.

'•

�•

••

•

Tuesday, July 13, 1999

70·

fhe Daily Sentine.

By The Bend

·

•

Page .

Dear Ann Landers: I have been claimed several pieces of my per-''' married to "Oliver" fllr more than 30 sonal belongings and has worn some
·years. Two years ago, we separated of my clothes. which stle found
so I could return to school and com- · hanging in my closet. Oliver's only
plete my degree. 1· 'ive with my response to my outrage is that she is
"a little strange." He refuses to diselderly mot~r 2,000 miles away.
cuss
it funher.·.
For the last 18 months Oliver has
·I
am
tom lietween divorce and a
been living with and -supporting
another woman. He says they are lifetime of separation. 'I feel Oliver
just goOd 'friends and he does not has gotten hi1f1self into a very twist·
ed relationship. and I am helpless to
want a divorce.
This woman is rather peculiar; to fix it. A divorce at my age might 'be
put it gently. Sbe introduces my pld- the wrong choice, and I am reluctant
~:.
· '
est son as hers and refers to my to risk it. ·
Ir I bide my t1me. do you think
l,:grandchildren·as her own. She has
'

1

'

,.

.

April Smith of Pomeroy _is one of
13 quilters invited to· participate in
the 6th annual Bob Evans Home·
stead In vitatio n~! Quilt Exhibit
which got underway on June 26 and .
will continue through Aug. I. It i~ .
held annually at The Bob Evans
Farm, State Route 588. Rio Grande.
Invitations to exhibit in this
unique,show are-extended to a select
group of quilters. Each exhibitor
selects from two to I0 quilts and/or
quilted items that best represent his
or her talents. None are·repeats from
previous years.
April has chosen to exhibit seven
full-size_quilts - ranging in topics
from "Grandmother's Fan" to two

A ·storytelling festival will be held at the D~iry Barn Cultural
Center of Southeast Ohio in Athens on Saturday. July 24. fron\ 2,:30
to 8 p.m,
·. ·
.
Sponsored by the Friends of the Athens Public Library the Fcs- _
tival is devoted to the an of Storytelling _and is modeled after -the .
National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tenn.
· ·
· Four professional tellers )'I ill _share' ·Stories of many. varieties ·
from Appalachian folk tales and Greek myths. to old Ohio folklore.
The featured storyteller, Barbara McBride Smith comes to Athens
from Oklahoma. She was a featured teller at the '98 National Sto~
rytelling Festival. Ric.k Sowash, Lyn Ford and Barry Weaver represent Ohio's storytelling community. For those auendees with their
,own stories to tell, a Liar's Comer will set the stage for impromptu
story-swapping throughoutthe"day.
·
·
Price of admission is $5 for 'adults and $3.50 for seniors. Chil.dren under ·12 may auend free. Price of admission includes· entry
into th.e Dairy Barn's Quilt National exhibii as well. The event will
be held outdoors urider ients. Those auending are ~ncouraged to
take a picnic lunch/dinner.
·
.
The festival is sponsored in part by the Dairy Barn Cultural Arts
Center llnd a grantlrorn the Athens County Convention and Visitors Bureau.
·
·
For more information residenJs may contact Kathryn Cooper
74(}.594-3350 or email: kcooper.(eurckanet.com. More detailed
inform~ion . about each sto~yteller is available upon request. You
may visit our ~ebsite at hnp://www.eurekanet.con\/story.

·.

••

"j..og Cabins";
a "Radiant
to
"Field
of Flowers".
Many Siar"
of her
quilts are scrap quilts. usi ng pieces
from other projecis. 1,\pril does the
piecing and has the quilts quilted by
someoAe else. Her daughter, Paige,
made the "Radiant Start" quilt and
.the two of them iogcther teach tho
techniques in this quilt to others
periodically..
April's quilted items join 93 other
items in this month long show. The
exhibit is in The Old Wood Home-

Middleport

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P ••, Inc

Stop In And See

Rutland, Ohio

Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

car

Truck seats,
seats, headliners.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

husband. I said~ ignored me until made, how your husband reacted inexcusably rude. insensitive and
it was time for bed. You said. and to what you attribute the ungracious.
"Accept him as he is, or leave him. longevity of your marriage. Please
Gem'olthe Day: It is a fact that
He won't 'change." And then, you write again. Sometimes, my readers a great many 'child.ren descended
added, "Ask yourself if you would can learn more from each other than from a lo~g line ... their mother lisbe better off with him or without from me .~
tened to.
him.'' I decided I was bener off with
Dear Ann Landers: For my
)Vhat can you give tlie person
him and would accept him regard· mother's birthllay, my wife sent her a who has everything? Ann Landers'
less of how good or bad our rela- beautiful piece of silver jewelry. booklet, "Gems," is ideal for a night·.
tionship ~as from that day forward . According to. family members who · stand or coffee table. "Gems" i_s a
Well. Ann. I thought you would were present; my mother tossed. the collection of Ann Landers' most
like to know that we just celebrated jewelry aside and said. "Why on requested poems .and essays.
our 42nd wedding_anniversary. Now Earth would they buy me silver
Send a self-addressed, 1oM;
that we are in our 60s and retired, we when ttky know I prefer gold?" I business-size envelope and a che&lt;:k_
get along better than we ever did. was stunned when I heard' .this, My . or money order for $5.25 (thj~
The kids are all grown, so we can sister says that at Mom's age, she's includes postage and handling) J!&gt;~ .
spend quality time togethc·r. Thanks entitled to say whatever she wants Gems. c/o Ann Landers. P.O. ~0(
for some wonderful advice. You are and we should not judg~ her. Is my 11562. Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. {('{
tops on my list.-- LANCASTER. sister right'' What do you say. Ann? Canada. send $625.)
: ~·
CALIF
'
-- NO NAME,, NO PLACE. NO ·
To find out more about Ann Lan-:
DEAR LANCASTE~: You're HOW ··
·'
dcrs and read her past .:olumns: visi~
welcome. I wpuld .lie interested in "· · DEAR NO HOW: Unless your ,the Creators Syndicate wchpagc at.
knowing what concessions you mother is senile. her com.ment was www.creators.com.

Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

40 742-8888 .

,ttl"~~~ 24 Hr. Taxi

JONES'
TREE SERVICE

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

Ml Delivery Service

1~

/

r,.~ws ppli(;y

No Emberrl81ment .:.
. You're Treated with Respect!

"

We deliver ALMOST anything

.,.,,"'

Call for details
..
.

• C:,\\111'9

Gti(\1\IC\9
20Yrs: Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

G&amp;W Pl~stics and Supply
.St. At.. 7

Tuppers Plains, OH

'.

740.;992-0038

Culverts: 4" · 48" in· stock
8' Gravelless leach

..

100' -1000' Rolk 1' &amp; 3/4' 200# Waler Line
Full line of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulolois Water Storage Tanks
'

.

WICKS
"fiOLI"G I"C.

POWER WASH
Trucks -lractor
Trailers - deCks -driveways

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 io
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agri~ult'f.ral Lime,
Mulch; Top Soil
(low Rates)

Equipment Cleaned &amp; Degreased

JEFF STETHEM

PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

FREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740-992-3470

In an ctl&lt;Jn to pr~vido o4r readership with current news. tho Sunday
Times-Sen1inel will not pccept wed•
dings pflcr' 60 days from th~ date of
the event. ..
Weddinfs submitted.aflor !he 60day deadlipe will appear dvring the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
tlalfipolis pany Tribune '
" All club meetings ancj otl'ter news
article~- in the sociely sectjon must
be submi1ted within .60 days of
occurrcnc,. All .birthdays must be
submitted within 60
of the
occurrence.

day~

H l

C'i!

"K

" h

11.:~;;;~~--.:-~p=z=e~r~~~~~!R=ic~.~·.:;·~e:e~p~ing:!~t;!:e~.~=::JI

TURNPIKE OJ_f GAlr~LIPOLIS
.

Business
Services

BuUdo•er

Septir. Sy.tem• &amp;:

Portland/R.~edsville

.
or 949-2439

t:

.

- CONGRATU~TES
A.my Carter a(ld Shan., Overby
'

,

BUILDERS,
INC.

. New Homes • Vinyl
·' Siding •New Garages
·; Replacement Windows
·• Room Additions
. • Ro(/ting

Lee Circle, Syracus.e
· - Wednesday Only
·
Jur
. y 14th
. .

,I

for their outstanding' sal~s
performance in 1L.fne.

~arter and Ove.rby
lfave shown exceptional_per.$01141
effort and professionalisPl in t~t,eir (lU(QPJQtive · 1
careers. This commitment-is apP,rreciatfd
by their
'
'
ml:my loyal ~ustorr~~rs ahll the 1urnpikti famlly,

Free estimates

NowRentin1

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storagt
~8795

Hiland Rd.
· fflmfroy, Ohio

,._,,,2-5232
· ··

. 6122199 1 mo.

COMMIRCIAL and RESIDEKTIAl
. FREE E~TIMATES
' 614-992-7643
(No Sunda Calls)

••..s•• ,.,~,llmn~.emn. '

SAYRE
TRUCKING

SunsatHoma
Construction
Now Con$1ruction &amp;
Remadotlng;,KIIchen Cabinets

VInyl Sldlng-Roof•Deck•

Goragel
Frtfe EJtimtttea
. !. 740-742-3411

Brya11 Reeve•

$,.ar1 R~e.,ei

.Moward L. Writesef

.. ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

..

Hauling. . ,

Limestone &amp;Gravel
Reasonable Rates

'· ~oe N. Sayre ·
:740·742·2-138
3/11/99 TF' N

•Roofing &amp;Seamless Gun!~ I
•Replacement Windows
· •C011crete
•Room Additions •Gmaae~
•Decks ~ Boat Docks· ·

Wanted To Buy : Used MatHi e
Homes. Call 740..446·0175. Or 1·

!

•

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm.leave
message. After 6 pm

FREE ESTIMATES

740·985·4180

949-2168
4!2 TfN

Thursdays

me do .i t for you.

Free Estimates

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates

40

"',;1

Backhoe &amp; Bulldozer
·. _ Services·
·
Site Preparation
Septic Sys1etns
RODNEY KELLER
, - Owner/Operator

' '~

• " ' t""'
~

•

l

&gt;

' "
f' .

•

•N.ew Homes
•Garages
•Complata
Remodeling
Stop &amp;Compara
FREE _
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

1-740-985-3949 .

.Mini-salf11lite dish. $59.
Lowest price ever!
This.weak only! .
1-S00:4!ijl-7357 nat·1.

mo. pd.!'

7rn/lln

Your

Connection

.STORAGE

25 yr•· eJtper.

-~

740.742·8015
877·353·7022

ST. RT. 7
10 X 10$40.
10 X 20$60.

(toll free)

.

Free E•tinwtes

992-171'7"
• Room Addttlc.na a Remodeling

• N- 0.1'11111

•'

• EteclrlCII • Plumbing
• RDoflng • Gutten
• VInyl Siding • Painting
• Pallo • Porch Decka

__

lllblt tor oonllnl. I
11ft/ ~ 01 ...... .,...,.. lbolll !hili
fell hwe to oontaet our SdMP I'IO'l M

.._

I

F'" E•tl,;,.,••

V. C. YOUNG Ill

I

;;11c:::::

-

loD-1
J'HI iCIMIIIC'II co•IWWfiTl'
~

740·992·6215
22 Y"· Loco/

Free Male P.uppy. 112 Beagle &amp; 11
2 Collie. Raccoon Road. 740·441-

0417.

.

Free lo· gocid cou111rv home, 1
year old male Golden Retriever.
shots, good w~kids, 740·992·

0155.

$800, WEEKLY

POTENTIAL

Complete' Simple Governmeni
Forms AI Home No Exper tence
NecasS:iuy CALL TOLL FREE ·
1·800·966-3599 Ext. 2601 .

ACCOUNTING CLERK
Temporary PosttJon Wi!h An In·
tern&amp;tionel, Growing Compan~.
Prelerred Knowledge Or Payroll.
Comfortable With ComPuter!.
p,·olocienl In E11ce1 And Word·.
Assoctales In Accounting A
Plus . To ' Ae cerve Conl1denh~l
'consideration . Mail Or Fax Ae·
sume On Or Before 7116/99 To;

1.

GalltpoltS, OH 45631
Fax: 740·441·3249

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
EQual Opportunrty
AH1rmatMt Ac1ron Eittployer

~V6N r, All Area.s! To .Buy or Sell
Shirley Spears, 3o4'·675·1 429.
,.(VON has a' place' for you! Join
the i1 beauly company! EnJoy'
your own busmess. Buy your own
products at cost Call 1·800·4· .
AVON or 740·594·4354.
A11on Products · Start your' own. In·
Home Business Work Flexibfe
t-:tours. EnJOY Unllmit~d Earnings.

1-889-561 ·2866.

Free to good hOme iMoo.rs. 3 mo ·
old gray &amp; cream cotor&amp;O. female Computer Use'ts Needed Work
kitten. Wormed &amp; litter tr.amed . Own Hrs S25K ·$80KI Yr. 1·800·
476·8653 X 7777. www 1~wp com .
(S0-4 ~58-221

s..

Houa•lfHplnfiL•~ndry

Aid•

Part·t1me . Var table Shills. Pomt
Pleasant Center/GentuiiS Elder·
care . State Route 62 . Route 1.
Bo• 326. Pomt Pleasant , wv
local Trucking Compa!'rf Seelclf19
Oualllted Truck Drivers . Good
Pay And Benefit&amp;. Send ~esume
To : Dover, P.O . Box 109 Jack ·
son. OhkJ 45640 . Or Call 1·740·
286 -1463 To Sche(lule An Inter·

view

BEINGJlFFERED
Need 7 ladtes To Sell Avon . 740·

446-3358.
Need someone lo hve tn home w/ ·
.elderly person. Free room&amp; board
• wages . Have separate 1Jv1ng
quartefs except kitchen . Call af·
ter 6PM Must have. ret eranees .

.(3041773-5048.
Need Some one To Stay W1th
Gentleman . No Lifting ReqUired ,
Reasonat114.:! Pay, 740-44t-0548

NOW HIRING
S110.00 PE,R WEEKIPT

· (GUARRANTEED SAL.ARYI
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone Operator Work For
LOCAL.RAOIO

STATION PROMOTIONS
' Day Arla Eventng
Shifts Available
• Full And Part Ttme Opentng
·No Expene i"'Ced Nee&lt;lectWe Tratn
Students Welcome

1\ppty In Person At .
11 Pine Sneet
Galttpolis, OH
Monday July 12m
Tuesday, July 131t1
Wednesday, Ju~· 14th
3:00 P.M_. llU 6:00P M. Only
Ask For Ms Hammo,n
OTR Drrver Needed . Late Model
Conventional . Compet1t1ve Pay
Phone . 740·441 ·0 607.
After
6:00Pm 74o-441.1J558
Part· Ttn"'e Sewer Needed For
Furniture UphOlstery ShOp. Ex·
perience fllecessar~ Ca ll For An
1
Appointment·. 740-446--3438 ·
Posta l J obs to $18 35/H r . Inc
BenefJfs . N o Expenence For
~pp . aM· Exam lnlo Call 1·800·
813-35 85 , EKt.8826. 8AM·9PM . 7'
Days fd5.ine:
"

POSTAL JOSS To Sll .35 I HR.
'INC . BENEFITS . NO EXPERI ENCE :· FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL t · 800 ·813 - 3585
EXT i4210 8 AM . ·9 PM 7
DAYS fds.•inc.
Prevention PosiiiO.~ - An 1\leohol
And Other Drug Counseling / Pre·
ven!Jon Agency Located In Gallta
And Jackson Counties, IS Se~k ·
ing An Ambiti ous IndiVIdua l To
Fill A Prevent1on Po sit1on Th 1s
Person W 1ll Wo rk With All Ag e
Groups tn Bolh CommunttJes. Re ·
sponsib ihtteS InclUde Cooreltnarion Of An At ·Risk ·Yourh Men·
tonng Program. Aw arer:tess Ac
!JvttJes . Educat ion Pro grams .
Tratnmg Programs. And Develop·
men! And lmplernenta!IOn Ot NeW
Grant ,PrOJects. Sencl Resume !Jy
July·· 16 , 1999 Tq · FACTS . 17 70
Jackson Pike. BidweU . Ohio 45614 ;,

Or FAX 740·446·8Q,I4 . EOE . Ml
FIH
SJGN-ON BONUS. OF SSOO
FOil AN POSITION ON 11 ·7
SHIFT Rockspr rngs' Rehab lilt a·
tton Center. a Skilled ano tnterme ·
dlate lacihty of 100 tlecJs . nas an
, 1mmedJaie opentRl.J for the rtght
c;andtdate We have an excelle nt
bAneltt pack'age . 401K and com·
pehttve salary ThtS 15 an e•ce l·
lent opportunlly 10 beCOrT'I(t. pan, of
a stable nurSmg team that ha s '&lt;l
. compltance h1sl o~,Y . O I. e~ c elle ni
surveys and care 1ssues Submtt
your appli catiOn to 36759 Rocl&lt;spnngs Ad . Pomer oy. Ol"no '
45769 Or cau. Caro\ Greenmg
DON at 740-992-6606 ' ~·
.

Kittens to good t1o111e . Long g·
Shorl Hair. vanety ·or ·colors .
(304 )576-23641576'~134 ..

Cosmetologist Neeoed , Full &amp;
Part Time Pa1d Vacaltons . Free
C.E U Hours, 740-446·7267

Male Ferr3u. 1 Yr. Old. (304)773·
6111 .

CounSelo r Pos1tton - An obtpa·
!tent alcohol and other drug agen·
cy located in Gallra and Jackson
Courqies. tS seekmg a qualiiJ&amp;d
person to provide alcohol and
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN
other drug counseling . Counselor
COU,NTRV. Call Now Tol l' free 1·
will work with al l age 9roups .
Knowledge or chem ical depend· · 800·339· 4204 O r t ·6l5·367 ·6 153
ency reQwed . Bachelors degree. · For Appot ntmftn t To Come To
Na s.hvllle. TN AM Audtt to n FQ!
CCOC . USW. anc:t lor LPCC pre·
Ma1or Recor d ProduceliS . V1s1t @
!erred Send rasume by July
www.wcm .ac
16.1 999 to . FACTS . 1770 Jack:son Pr~e . Brdwell, Ohio. 45614 or
Sonny's Bar &amp; Gr1ll ls.·Taktng AP·
FAX 740..4-46·8014. EOE,M/Fiti.
pltC!Jitons For Bart-eMer &amp; Coo k
Oay 8 Ntght S hllt A11 a11able For
DATA ENTR'f · Na!IOnal BHhng
ln1ormat ton See ,SonJ a At 856
Seek~ A Pull tPart Ttme Medical
Se con d A11enue . Gal!tpolls
81t1er. Salary At $46K Per Year.
Acr oss Fr om Ltttle caesers . Or .~·
PC ReQuired . No Experie nce
Call At740·441·0386
..
Needed . Wtll. Tram . Call 1·e8B·
251 ·7475 ·.
.
Vacancy lor M\Jitl·t'taMtcapped
Teacher . Submtt lener of Intere st
resume . references a.nd co py at
curren l certrltcate to John Co.S ·
, CONTINENTAL EXPRESS
tanzo , Supenntendent , At hens·
COL Class A With 6 Monltls
MeigS Ed~c.,IIO nal S,e rvtCe c~'n.
E~r . Onving School Grads
ter. 507 Rt cni~M A11en'ue . Sutte:
Considered. No NVC · Home
Athen s On10 45,0 1 Dead·
Most Weekends
II IS Jlr!IY 23. 1999
RegiOnal &amp; Long HaUl

Pallets To G rveaway, Plck· Up
From The Back . OutSide. Gallipo·
lis Oatly Tribune . 825 Third Ave·
nue. Gallipolis. tst Co me 1st
Sar11ed. NO .PHONE CALLS

PLEASEI1

60

Lost and Found

$100 Reward! lost HuSky -CMw
Mix, Male ~B,Iack ) Vamshed From
Kerr Road Area . Tuesday N1ght
6/2 9199 Should Respond To ~
"Pookre' 740·245·9372, 740-4461517. .
Found! Small 10 · 15 Pound
Vero; Friendly. Brown1sh Come
Middleton Est~tis Or '740·446,4814.
•',
· II
Found :. Female Beegle Dog ,

Concrete

.

CaD 985,.)831

~

1 Five MoniQ Old Puppy, 6 Four
Week OH:I Puppies To Giveaway,
740;446·0325. 74(}-379-2196

Beautifu l black and white long
haired temale kit'tens and cat.
740·643·5445.· -

aOIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

EXCAVATING··

3701 1-14.?8.

Borg:. Warner Automo!lve
AITN : HA Dept, /.A.ccntng Clrk
2160 Eastern Ave

Giveaway

4 Months Old Border Collie, Very
Friendly, Shqt s &amp; Wo rm ed . 2

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

· P~sture Management
Cattle Equipment'
Open House
July 17th
SHADE RIVER
9am - 2 pm .

Going Out Of Busmess Sale: 45%
Off Store Wide . Willon Cake
Pans. D . J .' ~ C rall Shop , 2390
Jackson P~-9, 7~2134.
Ne'l\j To You Tt'lt1ft Shoppe
9 West St1mson. Athens
'740-592-1842 0lJality clothing and household
1tems . $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursda~. Monday thru Saturday
1
9 :00-5:30. .
·

,_,,._

KCB

5, Box 1438 .1ANTIOCH , TN1.

1-an..89-4911

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS
Siding &amp;. Slllil

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1
7 40·949~:2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

AT6:30 P.M. ·_
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
P,aylng $80.00
per game .
S300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line. : ·
Uc. •oo.so
·:

$2 ,00a WEEKLY ! Mailing 'AOO

EMERGENCY 911
Reflective AddreSti Signs
Alummum 6' x18" ~

TOLl. FREE

Help Wanteq

B rochures! Satislaction Guar·
a·nteed! Postage &amp; SupplrBS" ' Pro·
vided! Rusr:t Seli-Addres\-ed
Slamped Envelope! GI.CO, DEPT"

Shipped COmplete $20.00

SELF HORACE
'

Take the pain out

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Clttanlng
Painting

. ,

.

Club Bingo

11 0

30 Announcements

CaiS. 740-25S:6056.• ·

'

of painting, and let

TONIGHT!

~oo-~A.NCE. ertension 9681 :

' Albany, Ohio

.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Stan Oaling 'rohight! Have fun

Coiitractors Welcome

linda's Painting
..:,.

304-675-59e5.

playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1·

HILL'S

1

Buying Standing Che.rry Hard"
WoodTlmDer, 740-256-6172. .

gles In Your Area _Call For More
tnlormallon 1· 800 -ROMANCE ,
Ext. 9735.

J

Tomatoe-pickers needed
BJSS~ll

2526

nue. New Castle. PA 16101 .

&amp;'18199 1 rna. pd

l•mei KHsH II ·
PH: (140) 992··277~

Thornton Greenhouses
' $5.15 per hour
Ages 15 &amp;' up
740-247-4334

.Antiques . top prices paid , River ·
ine Antiques . Pomeroy, Oh io.
Russ Moore owner, 7-40·992·

Hughes· Usselton' families.
Meigs &amp; Gallia eounlies . Please

w

I 0/20/llolln

AbSolute Top Collar · AH U.S S1l·
ver And Gold Coins . Proofse:ts .
Diamonds-.. AniK~Ue Jewelry. Gold
A tn.gs, Pfe·1930 U.S. Currency.
Sterhng, Et~ . Acqutsitions Jewelry
· M.TS Coi n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue . G8HifXli1S. 74()....446·2842.

Genealogical Search· "Lasley·

Personals

write with
inlormation to : A.n ·
drea Maxwell. 1 009 Dewey Ave·

Sareas S84.9S
SalisltKtian Guaranteed
2 room minimum
378-6438 992-0077
1-877-626-3693

Service• ..
Huu'"' &amp; Trailel' Si'lca
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

17401 992-3131 ~

Workers Needed

..

· :

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks , low Miles, 1995 Models
Or Newer. Smith Butck Pont tac.
1900 EaS1em Avenue. GallipOlis.

005

Spring Clean SpeciO/
2 areas $45.00 ·
3 areas S54.95
4 areas 569.95

EXCAVATING

Vtililie•'

Equipment Parts ·
Factory Auth&lt;&gt;ril!ed
Casil-IH Parts '-..

7 40·339-4160

Agricultural Uma,
Umestone • Gravel
D1rt • Sand

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET ClEANING

•Vin~ Siding

'
Shingled Roofs
Vinyl Siding &amp; Sofit
Professional work at
an affordable price

Or3Q4-773-5447.

Wanted to Suy '

Have Fun Meeting Et1gible Sin -

&amp; Siding

·CONSTRUCTION

ANNOUNCEMENTS

START ' DATING

Large

992-:-7834

DUMP TRUCK .
SERVICE .

.

scntation will focus on weight loss

·;·

CUISSUFIIEDSI

Chaster, Ohio

· Also riding lessons

REYNOLDS

TRUCKING.

985-4422

room of the Meigs Counly Senior
Citizen's Center. Becky Gruescr.
DTR. from Veterans Memorial Haspita! in Pomeroy. will speak on diet
ami how it affects arthritis. The pre·

If the 992 Excha,nge is a Free Part of Your
·relephooe Service, Then You Can Call
HQ,zer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Freel
·DIAL . _

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

R. L. HOLLON

267-5354.

Auction! New Load 01 Targe t
LPN POSrTION: Aockspnngs Re·
Mtrcha,,rse. Frl(lay, July 16th At
. hablhtatton center 1S now ac cept·
&amp;·OOPm. 241 Thl r~ Ave. GallipOlis.
ing application!i tor part ttme 'J)(lSI·
Bill Mood1spaugh Auctioneering
ti:On LPN We otter exOAIIent ~ n·
Complete Auclioneenng Ser11 le·
ehts 10 pan bn"te nurses. health mes . Consignment auct1on- Mtll
surance e llQlblllty. 401 K and va ·
Street, Mrd~leport . Thursdays
cation ttme . Th 1&amp; rs an ex cellit nt
Ohio License 17693 . 71140·989·
opporturuty tor the nght can&lt;:ll&amp;te
2623
tor persan,aJ and pr oless tonat
grOWTh: Call Carat Green1ng DON
Aick Pearson Aucuon Compat)y,
740 ·992 ~6606,or set"" res~..me lo
full lime aucltoneer. compl ete
Aockspnngs Rehabtlilal10n Cen·
aucllon
stf\dce .
LicensecJ
le t 36759 Aock6prings Rd . Po·
166.0tHo &amp; Wesl Vlr'ginia, 304·
m8roy, Qhl o . SIG'N ON BONU S
n3-578~

TRI·STAIE MOBILE

We Deliver

740-985-3813

Horse• &amp; Tack
,New &amp; Used Saddles

'

·

WORRYING!!!

Auction
and flea Market

90

Hoof Hollow Farm

SATURDAY
POMEROY
H1llside Baptist
Chur~h. SUit&lt;' Route 14:1:4. to I() p.m.
Saturday. outdoor sing. Vad.ous
gmups. Concessions availahle.
lawn chairs. 10 thC event of min. si ng
will he held in the church.

Repo • Divorced

Teena9trs) LMHn . Cook•ng
Clean1ng , Launor~ . Turntng AI
N~gt"lt SAlary, Room. Board. 614·

25550-EOE.

Yard Sale; Wed ., Thurs ., Fri.,
· 2221 JtftNIOn Ave. HousehOld
and Baby llems, Fvrntture. Btd•

Gallipolis. Ohio 740-379-2720.

PUBUC NOTICE
Btrillrd V. Fultz Law Office,
The 'innuoi report Form 111 1/2 Weal Second SlrHI,
11110 PF tor IIIli Kibble Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, dur·
Foulld"lon, Btlrnord v. l!'ll regular bullneaa hour•
Fultz, TrueiH, le ovollllllt "tor 1 period of 180 deye
tor public lnepectlon 11 aubHquent to ·publication

welcome .

Phone (740) 593-6671

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity .

ding. Rugs.

r=~~~~~~=:-r=~~~~~~=1~:::::::=~~~~~~~~~~
Notice
Public

in,'itcd tn altcnd. New partkipanls

r·

Tuesday. July 13·16, 715 Syea·
more Street. Middleport Beanie
Bab!ts. 2r Zenith TV, two recliners. Iampi · Home Interior.
spreads. curtatns, and mtSC

Wedemeyer 's Auction Servic~ .

, ·-';,i&lt;f:- :J~ommU:nitY, Cafe. ndar.___--.;...._-.__-_..,. .:;;. :. . ;

1 '~.

Larry Schey

1:00pmfrkllly.

80

IN QUILT EXHISIT
April
,Smith of Pomeroy poses with
one of the seven quilts she has
on dlspl•y at the Bob Evans
Homestead Invitational Quilt
Exhibit. The dealgn of the quilt
pictured he!;lt Ia "Field of Flowera."

and m~intcnancc. Those with anhritis
nr family momhcrs with arthritis

-

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

'•

TUESDAY
·
'',- 1.
POMEROY - Board . of Elcc- ·
MIDDLj?:PORT- Neighborhood tions. regular meeting. 9 a.m.
Watch mee~ing. 7 p.m.. Middlcpo[! _
Church of Christ Family t-ife Center. · THURSDAY
,
ALFRED - Orange Township
SYRACl.JSE - M.cigs County Trustees. spcdal I!ICCling to discuss
Chamber of Commerce monlhly lun- personneL 7:_30 p.m.. home ·of Osie
·
·
cheon mcet!ng Monday. qoon al Car· ' Follrod. clerk. '
leton School. Sno•akcr will he· State I
T
Rock '
ROCKSPRINGS
Representati ve ln"{' Carey.
Springs Beucr Health Cluh. annual
' J'OMEROY - Meigs County picnic . noon . home ol Frances GocHealth Department · imm~nizatmn giCin. Bring covcrCd dish. lHhlc scrclinic Tueaday. 9-11 a.m. and 1-:1 viec.
p.m. at the (\1cigs Mijftip~rppse Cen·tcr. Children must he a.:cnmpanicd FRIDAY
hy ~ pare~t or lc~al guurdinn with ... · POMEROY - MCigs County
Arthritis Support Group. Friday. Ill
.:opy ·of imtnuoizauon
rccor\1.
,,,
am. to I UO a.m. in the cnnfcrcn.:e

Ntcenary, Send Aosume To·
o-::-~..,..,-_,-_:..
cu.
1 478, c/o Ga!lopolif Da~ Trib·
All Yard lain llluat . . Paid In ~. 825 Third Avenue. GallipOlis.
lorn-. Otodllne; 1;OCI!&gt;m the OH 45631 .
dey before the td It to run, Housekeeper For Dr1at1tid PracSund•y • Monday edition- ticiOQ COlumbus Anorney (Plus 2

___

•

stead on the farm. It was huilt in ·
1820 an.d entered into' thc Nauunal
Register of Historic Places hy ·the
US Department of Interior.
Hours of the show arc from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. daily untif Aug. I
when the final day when the sh'ow
closes at 3 p.m. There is an admission fcc \lf $1.

Help Wanted

calton Preferred Exptrttnce Is

&amp; Ylclnlty

Tuesday, July 13, 1999

740.691·3290

-··&lt; :' _.·- il7-

110

GM TrainatJ Teehl)lclln N. .deel

LocaJ qui Iter exhibits-quilts
at the Bob Evans Farm

Storytelling festival
slated at Dairy Barn

.

.

•

Yerd Sale

~==~~;;;;===-!
.
Pomeroy,
For Local Ooolersh'l' ASE Cefl•l-

Long distance marriage· isn't Working - especially since hubby is living with another woman
things will work out? I would apprc·
date your opinion -- AT THE
CROSSROADS IN N.Y.
DEAR N.Y:: It will take morc
than "time" to fix this one, lady.
When a woman moves 2,000 miles
away from her husband to "return to
. school and finish ~r degree," s~
should not be surprised that ~seeks
company elsewhere. Gmnted, the
companion of his choice sounds a
bit daffy. but that is beside the point.
You need to have a fmnk discussion with Oliver and determine
whether or not you two can salvage
your marriage.
It sounds as if you need some
joint _counseling, which will not be
possible unless you live together and
work at it. The blill is in your court.
GoOd luck.
'
Dear;.Ann _Landers: Neatly 30
years ago. I wtote to you about my

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FlalrOC'

Ar~ .

(304)§75-7_
47&lt;

Found: male Beagle· puppy, vicini·
ty of Mai ~ Slr~et, Pome roy, 74·0·

992·261 3.
Lost· male faw n Boxer Wtth white
marlctngs : mintatllre female Bea·
gle; missing since 715/ 99 . 740·

985-:1428, 740-985-3325.
los t. Prince Tenn is Aaquet at
Harmon Park . $25 rewaro

1304)675-3352.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

3 Houses! July 14 &amp; 15, Railroad
· Street : Kanagua Off Burneu Ad
COill'll'y Ad. 207.

•

4 Famtly · 368 Green Terrace .
Clothes ; o MonthS To 6 Years.
Adult Clothing . MondaY. Tuesday.

Wadno&amp;day. 9-5.

AU. Y•rd Salta Mull
Be Paid In Ad~nce .
DEADLINE: 2;00 p:m.
the dly before the •d
1110 run. Sunday
edition - 2:00p.m.

Friday. Monday edition
~ 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

EOE
800-293·0700 Or 800-695-4473
D rivers / CO L Is A Musl. Be
H ome Every NrQht, We Guarrantee AI Least -40 Hou rs/ Week .
Full Ben&amp;lits Available In 3
MonthS. Stop By Our Olftce Bel·
ween 9 :30AM To 5 ' 30PM And
Apply In Person. No Phone Calls
Plea&amp;e l General Aeluse Servtce.
97 HJJbbard 'Ave .. Glps .. Oh .
45631
Orivera :. Free 3 · Week · coL
Training . Earn $26 ·$32.000 !1St
Yr. W / Full Benefits. No Exp . .
Needed . P.A .M . TraAsport Spe·
ctal Call Toll Free 1·877·230·

6002 Sun · Fr i. 7 A.M . -7 P.M.
www.pamtransport,oom
E1.ptrlenced cake decorators
needed . P ick up aQp hc atron at
Oa!ry Queen in Middleport. ~n· ·
10rs are welcome.

FILM fTV INOUSTRV, LOCALLV
HIRING . No E•perlence Necessary. Work Behind Scenes. Pro·
duction Assistant . Set Construc-

tion 323-857"954

'

Wanled· l teid workers and pack er. 740-24 7·3042

rO·

Wa nted Ael +aOi e Person
Wat ch 3 Children Preleraot,- In
My Home . Oayttme. Ser~ous Ap p i!Ca~ls Only 74().441·0493
'Wt ldhfe Jotls tol $21 60 /Hr Inc
Benei 1IS GameWarOMs, Securt·
ty, Ma tntenan ce . Park·Aangers
No Ekp Neec ed Fm Ap p ano
EKam Into Call 1·800·813 ·3585 .
Ext 8827 8AM· 9PM , 7 Oays Ids

,nc.
Wildlile Jobs to $21 60/ Hr ·Inc
Beneltts. Game Wardens . Secur·
rty. ¥a trHenance. Pa rk Range rs .
No ex p n_eeded For App and
Examl rnfo
Call
1·800 ·8 13·
3585.Ext 88 27. 8AM ·9PM: 7Days
ldS ir'IC.

WILDLIFE JOBS To 121 60 HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR ·
DENS
S ECURI TY.
MAIN ·
JENANCE . PARK RANGER S NO

EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EX'AM INFO . CAlL 1·800-8 ; 3
3585. EXT •4 211 g ~M ·9 PM
7 01\YS Ids me

•

�•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

r

· Tuesd.y, July 13, 1999 ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
110

310 Homnlor S.le

FlelpWanted

TDIIIOID pldlon, ogos 15 &amp; - ·
minimum WAQe. Cummins Farm,
7-2102 or 7~247-31155

Need A. Loan! Try Debt ConSOli·

1995 4br, 3batn. w ftreptace
16120 dedi. 9x20 Iron! porm, ..
eluded on 7 72 acr muet sell

Crechl 0 K Fee 1-800-770-0092,

$65,000 01)7~379-2643

daloon SS poo - $200,000 Bad
Ext 215

140

Business
Tnllnlng

1·800-21+0C52,

Schoola
Instruction

SSS OVERDUE BillS"' Consoli

clOsed And Pleponessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Tl;ou·
ble 0 K For Cuuenl Listing Call

SF~EE

""'"" . _... (3041576-2&amp;12

Phono CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1-300-964'1316

Do

B J • RemOdeling. Pa.ntlng , In &amp;
Out, Carpenuy Cement Yard
Wort[, Decks Clean.ng Free Es
Umalea 740-256-5827 Don t
Fuss. Clil Us!

E &amp; S LaWn 5ei'VtC8 Oes~gn. lm
plementatlon, and Serv1ce
Ava1lable lor Spnng Clean up.
fertilizing and planhng Free est•·
mates . Satisfaction guaranteed

Gn&gt;g Mi""'" 304J675-462B

Georges Portable Sawmill don't
haul your k&gt;gs to the 1111H JUSI

304-1175-1957
lntenor &amp; Extenor Patnttng Experienced. References Aeas~n
able Rate s~ For Free Eslimale
740-:188-00(1
Jims Drywall &amp;.., Construction
N8w Construction &amp; Remodel/
Drywall, Stdlng. Roots A.dd1
lions Pamllng etc (304~674

4623"' (30o416T4 0155
Medaca1d And Wa1ver lndepend·
ent Prov1der Program Nurse For
1 In Home Care
VISIIS, And
Cressung Changes In Local Area
l:.tcsensad. Pr:a~:trcal Nurse 740.
388-o822 To Leave Message
Shrubl Trlmmtd, Mulching,
Pelnllng, etc Cell Bill Leeve

CASH

NOW$ From

wea ttny Famlhts Unloadmg M•l
lions Of Donars To Help Minimize
Thetr Taxe• Wute Immediately

Three bedroom hou&amp;e lor &amp;ale ,

one and lr.i! balflo. fully lurn!SIIId,
camore

BANKRUPTCY $79• S10PJ Gar
n•snments ! 01vorce $99• Atso
Foreclosure Avoroance Pfog1am
Homeowner Loans FresnStart 1
888·395-8030 www lreshstartu·
sa com

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No

Ottice Vl ~ ll Necessary Up To
$500 Instantly Call Toll Ffee 1

(6771-EARLY-PAV
1S1
VANCE FREE! Le i cc70036

AD

In·
vestor Pays CASH NOW For
Your Seller Fmanced Morrgage~
Aeal Eslate Contract. Insurance
Annu1tyB Htghest ,r1ces Free
Quotes Why Walt? Call Rich 1RECC:IVING PAV MEN TS?

800-888-6o150

230

'

Prolaislonal
Services

State cerlilted daycare provtder,
will watch Children any ages Frve
Potnts ar&amp;a, cau 74Q-992..0,3,

lrtclan. W'v'025956

Est1mates

Aestdent lal
13041675 7927

Servlce·s

tor

, TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS17
No Fte Unless We W1nl
1-388-582·3345

Message

7~742

992 3041

:;:::::=:=:-:--:-:::--::----J
:j,20 Mobile Homes
lot Sale
1980, 14x65, Buddy by Skyline, 2
bedroom stove refngerator. un·
derpmmng new atr ,cond1tl0ner

$9 500 740-949-2452
1981 tra iler, 2 bedrooms balh

electrte, a-cfheatpump appt1anc
es 2 porches dtnerte sat SS soo

3Qo4 773 53 19 3Qo4-882 3398

1985 2 Bdrms CfA.. New Carpet
Furnace Underl)m[llng 2 Decks
tmmed1ate Posess1ont 740·446·

4793
1988 Crayron Clatrborne 2 Bad
rooms 2 Baths, Ail Electr1c, Ex·

oasl 740-256-6938

Wtll Stt with elderty lady 5 days

FINANCIAL
Bualness
Opporlunlty

A PILL TO LOSE WEIGHT? Increase Energy One Free 5ampl8
Wtll Prove Ill Call 1 -800·•44·
7521
"FREE 3 DAV TRAIL PACK"
Lose Weight. Boost Energy
Make A. Fortune From Home t ·

888 229 8542

•

INOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness wUh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have mvestrgated
the oflenng

Area COke lltp10n /Snapple
Local Route, $ Big Proll!s S Prw
en Macnlnes MUST SELL! 1·

800-ol40-2371

Ail real est~te advertistr:tg tn
tNs nuwspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fall Houslf'lg Act
o1 1968 whiCh makes 1t Illegal
to ~&amp;f11S8 "any Pf&amp;lerence,

48A. 2BA. S499 Down Assume
Payments or $239 mo (304)75~·

ltm1IBI10n or discnmrnalion
based on race color rehg1on
SI:!X fam111al status or nat10MI
ong1n, or any tntent10n 1.9
make any such preferenCe,
l1mitalloii or d1scnm1na!JOO •

Down Doubles Super Low Pay·
ments Limited T1me . Oakwood
Homiis Barboursville• WV 304

Thts newspaper Wtll not
kncrwlflgty acc:ept
advertlsemenls for real estate
whiCh •S •n viOlatiOn oltne
taw Ow readerS are hereby
mformed that all dwelhngs
actvenrSed m this newspaper
are a~Jallabte on an 8Cjual
oppor1oo1ty bas1s

REAL ESTATE

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Cralts,
Toys Jewelry. Wood Sew1ng
typmg Great Payt CAll 1·800·

795-0360 Ext, 1201 (24 Hrsl
liT LEAST $&lt;OK -$1 OOK IYRI
Top $siting COKE !HERSHEY
Vendtng Ale In

Galtipols. OH. Pomsrov OH
&amp; Point Pleasant WV

Vjark 6 -8 Hrs /Wk lnv Aeq
1·800-330-5602. 24 Hrs

-·

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 -20 Looce110ns $4K S10K
$4,000 +fMo. lncDme • ALl
CAS.-11 100% Ftnance A~Jatlable

HI00-380 2615 - 24 Hrs
CATALOG SALES -FULLE R
BRUSH CO - Looking For People
Who would Uke To Sta'rt Tnetr
Own Business NO INVEST·
MENT Gan Bonus OpQty Lrm•led
Ttma

800-477· 3855

Then

www luller comlinddtstnb10003hlm
Or 800-683-2002
EARN $1 poo WEEKlY WORK
lNG FROM HOME!'! No E11pert·
ence Required' Bonuses PAID I

5560

B-L-0-W 0-U-T
$499 Down AI! Slngl•s. S999

736-3409
Clurtnce Sale

3 Bearoom 2 Bath Rancn With 2
Car Garage And Shop 11 Miles
From GallipoliS Wtil Sell Wtth 2 ·3
Acres For $75 000 Or Wllh 16 11
2 Acres For $95.000 Call 740·
379-2635

3BR Home Large Room Eat in
Kttchen N1ca Porc h. AC 3! 4
Basement Lot Stze 50X90

1:12.000 !304)a82·3n2
TARA ESTA1ES 4 Bedrooms '3
112 Balhs formal LRJ1)R Ftn1shed
Basement Cu.§lom l&lt;•lchenf
Cherry Cabmetst Sunroom over·
look•ng small Pond ! $189,900
( 7401 441 ·5118 or more •mlo .
Leave Message Appl on1v1
5 Bedrooms 2 Baths 10 Acres
A1o Grande Area $159 000 740·

245--1217
5 room 1 1f2 batn laundry 300
river lronrage Syracuse full

Good setec!lon of use~ homes
Wlfh 2 or 3 ~edrooms Slartrng ai
$3995 Ou1ck d&amp;ilvery Call 7 40·

385-9621
New Bank Aepo s Only 3 Lei! 1•

800-3113-61162
New 38R S.t99 down, 5189
Month. Only Oakwood Homea,

New Ban.k repos only 2 left we
finance call304·722·7148
S1ngte Parents Program $499
Down Umtted Oner Call lor de

tatls

(~)755

7191

To Everyone Galha Mason
Metgs Area Stop By, See Pete
Peck -Vsew Our Beautrfut Homes
Beside Aulo Zo,ne Galilpolts, 7404o46 3093
Two

bedroom trailer tor Sale or

Lots

&amp;Acreage

For Sate 3 35 Acres. Corner of
Hang.ng Rock Road &amp; Carson
Road 1n Mason, WV 1304~882 ·

3460 or (304)682·2833
40 ACRES
Only

FRITO LAV /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING, ROUTE $1 ,000+
WEEKLY POTENTIAL All
CASH BUSINESS PRIME lO
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1-800731-7233 EXT. 2803
PREPAID INTERNET
Access Cards Hoi Item! •No
Competition ·Real ISS Maker •
llillflbulorlhip Slar-Up $499
~21-2371

DEPT. VI.

VENDING· lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours • Great Income
Priced To Sell Frte Brochure
(800~782

W'lll·'=stabllsned Proleuronal
Building wllh Barber Shop For
Sate By Owner Halls Bu1k1lng at
507 Main Slraet 4 Untta Rendtd
3 Additional Suites available tor
rtntll or expanStOn COntact Leoni Hill 809 Vllnd Slrtet , PI

Pteaunt, WV, or call; (S04)875·
3851

319-3323, E" 1709
CompleU!Iy remodelftd hOuse, 4
I&gt;Odraam. family room living room
kitchen utility room &amp; bath base·
menl with bath , new carpet
throughout, central •"· beauttlul
view or river call 740· 992·9012

apt&gt;OinlmOnl on1y
For Sale B~ Owner 1 63 Acre
more or tess Lots 7 8 9 River·
bank Rlght·of-way 2/3 BR. Full
Master Bath, 1/2 Bath &amp; Space
for WatherfDryer also Large
kitchen &amp; llvtngroom 2 Auto Ga·
ra~ Gas neated, BrJck bldg on
Lot 7 Puml)house With New Sun·
ken Wtll 75ft deep 'CitV water,
els(l Sewage &amp; rrash pick up.
Apple Trees Crapes, Pear &amp; Nut
Trees lot 9 large garden space
Lots 7 .8.8, "Wery prtvale proptrty
lined In with Pint Trees &amp; Hem·
lock Treet Sun by appt onty
Price set $65,000 Ms · Yonker

(30418&amp;2-3151

BRUNER LAND
740-441·1"2
Metga Ca.: Dyesvute. 10 5 Acres
With Stream, Great Gelaway Or
Remote Ltving Just $8,5001 Flu·
tland, Whttes Hill Fld . 11 Acres
114 ooo Or 9 Acres $12 ooo
Public Water, Danville Brtar
RIOge Rd 7 Acres $13,000 Of On

House for Rent in Country Partly
Fum~hed

(3041862-3970

Nk:::e twO bedroom hOme, batt't and
1f2 large yard located In Syra

cuse 740-992 2636 or 740 992
7014
for Rent

~ Between

Athens

ana

Pomeror. 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes. all
condtlloned $260-$300 sewer
water and trash tncluded 740·

992-2167
2 Bectrooms. $325/Mo + Ublities.
No Pets. Cenual A1r 7&lt;~0-446·
4313

2 Bedr:ooms, &amp; 4 Bedrooms S2751
Mo. Or $350/Mo Plus Deposit,
On McCorkle Aoad Gallipolis,
740 44~-6844
2 Bedrooms 2 Barns CA Srove

Refrigerator. Water, Trash Fur·
mshed. Very N1cel \ $350/Mo

DopasR, 7~3811-9686

440

Apartmantl
lor Rent

992-2218

1 Et11c1ency Apartment Fur·
msl'led Uflht1es Included. $2501
Mo , Atr Cond1t1omng. 740·367-

0611
1 BR AfC, Near Holzer, 1sl
Month Free W1tn 1 Yr Lease
Oulet Location No Pets, $279f
Mo Plus UUiities 740-446-2957
1 Room &amp; Bath Across From Col·
lege , $200fMo All Ulthhes Paid

888-840-ll521
2 Bedroom A.p.artmanl Across
From Rio Grande College S350!
Mo , All UlltiUes Pa1d Deposit Re
(lutred, Call Toll Free t-888·8400521

Deoos't No polS (304)675-5162

2bdrm apts , total electnc. ap·
phances furnlsned, launa(y room
facllllies close 10 SChool •n toy;on
Appi1Cal10ns avatlable at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992

3711 EOH
3 Room Upslatrs FurntShtd ,
Window A.u Ultllll.es Pa1d S285f

Me

~ ..

o.Posi1 7&lt;1G-+46-1340

Apartment lor renl 1n Middleport.
no pets, 740·992·5858
Appltcallons Baing AccaptEid For

Very Nice 2 Bedroom Apartment
In Country Stttlng Washer /Dryer Fng . Stove Dishwasher Wa·
tar A.nd Gamage PaKJ. Total EleC·
Inc . W lAC, No Pets , Non
Smokers Onty: 1-400 Oepostt.

$450/Mo 740-448-9585. 740·
olol6-2205 Ask For V&lt;gllli.l
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

460 Space lor Rent
Mab'le Homo Li&gt;l fal' Rent. Rofor-

encos Required, 740-256-1922.

Mobtle home lot In Mtddleport,
S100 per monlh 7 40-992-3194
Mobile home srle avatlable bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
7~385-4367

lines Or Leu To lnftrnarlon-

al Library 01 Pooliy, 1 Poouy ~a
za, Sul1e 11635, Owlngo Mils. MD
211 t7 Or Enter Online At
,.ww.poolry """'

Jersey Devil. Aliens. 8igbol, And
Mor~ See Them At www amber·
1ngs1cam Your Own Bus1ne&amp;&amp; AI
www IMcredlbleproductsmall com!
catatog2suift1908642

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapa'red &amp; Robuih In Sud

CIM Ron Evans, 1-800-537·9528

Kenmore Washer 160 00, Ke"·
more Dryer $50 00, G E Washer
S60 00. Kenmore Porlable Dryer
S50 00. Cal Allor 5 30PM.
Klrbv vacuum Cleaner. wtth AI·
tachments, Including Spray,r
Excellent Condition, Like New
$50 (304)458-221• Leave M~s­

MERCHANDISE
Houaehold

3 \ pracllcally new Maytag
Wathers &amp; New Electnc Stove

Neyer Used (;1041895-3867

Appliances
Recondittoned
Wasners, Oryers, Ranges. Retrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarahlae!
French City Maylag. 740 446·

Prlmeata,.. frn DlrecTV Summer

Promohon Call now 1·888 265 ·
2123
.. ~

SOCIAL SECURITY O!SA !TV
Cla1m Denied? We Spec• 1za In
Appeals And Hearmgs
EE
CONSULTAl'ION' Benelil Te m

740-446-9523

°

Graaous IMng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor an(J
Rivers ide Apertments In Mldtll•

pori From 1249-$373 Call 74D992-50&amp;4 Equal Housing Oppor11lnlllos

Lawn, Your locet J&lt;JI'ln Deer•
O.IIIH, Galllpoll$ Ohkl 740·4-46·

24 12 Or 1-300-594-1111
De•tra 01'"'' 3 Cy·
hnder. Three Pomt H1tch Lrve
Power High and Low Range
$3.000 (3041675-3824

Ford-Supef

720

00C1g0 112 ""- 311. PS. disc
brek•a. excellent cond111qn
needs some work, 194 7 Dcdge

See The New John Deere 200
Series Skid SIMr Loodtl's, 7 5'!Co
JOC ftnanc:tng, Ctrmlchatl'l
Fefm &amp; lawn. &gt;lne , · 800· 5941111, Gal..,., OH We ~

620 Wanted to Buy '

..Speed--

1958 fofd Trucll 8)1' Flalbod,o S
~
740-311 1056

1986 EICamlno

FL 33781 m--7408
Uvestock

5 Year 014 Registered Ltmouslne

IU (30411182-3239
AQHA &amp; APHA Ftlly's For Sale\
Excellent Bred Lme&amp;. 7-40 388-

9130
Freezer Beer. Butchenng Hogs,
Floasllng Hogs 740·388-9033 At·

35o

7~

Laying Hens For Sole 740-256-

•

ss. ~.000 acto-

IT'S .....,....

TRANSPORTATimj

j

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

710 , Autos for S.le
'9G OldlmObtle Della 88, baded,
•• 700 mllu, $15,000. 7~742-

198, Harley Oavtdson Super
bhde many extras $8500 740

1965 Plymouth Vallanl Race Car
340 Engme 7 80 In 8Th Mile,
Ready To Race Or Could Be P\11
0n
For
1~

15Ft Tn Haul w/85 H P Seats 16
Reat Ntc:e Boat $1500 (304)675

Washers. dryers, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
VIne Street. Call 740-446· 7398,

1-8811-818:0128
Monahan CBfpet Room Size Car·
pets Orlve"B·Little Save a
202 Clark Chapel Road, Parler,
1740~388-0173

(7401-4&lt;6-7«-4

Used Fur011ure !Appltancas Oft
Buiav1t1e Pike On Keeler Road

740-446-4039. 740-446-10.04
Call Any T1m•. Johnson's Used
Furniture
Washer Dryer. El&amp;etrtc Range

530

Everyone Welcome, 1·800·285·
3588

1!110·1MCARS FROIIIIOO

Washer $95 00 Dryer. $95 00. 'Pollee lrilpounds, And Tax
Electnc Range $9S 00, Hot Poinl Repo 's For LIStings Call 1·800·
Refngeralor S95 00, Roper Wash· 319-3323 Ekl 4420

or And Dryer 'Sol $300 OQ. 90

Day Warranty Kenmore WIO Set
1400 00,
IJprlght
Freezer
$300 00 New COmprBSIOf. t Year
Warrenly. Whirlpool AfC 14,000

1981 Chevy Truck Short Wheal
Base, 6 Cy! $1800 1986 Cuilass 2nd Owner • Mutt See
$2,000 (3041576-2753 Aller
BTU, $250 00 Skagg• Applianc- 8301'M.
es. 76 Vlne St • Gallipolis 740.
«8-7398

540 Mlscellanaoua
Merchandlsa
'HOST FAMILIES NEEDED!!!'
Exchange Student&amp; ,From Germa
ny, Japan, England, France. Auss&amp;a, Brazil Srudent&amp; Arrtve In Au·
gust To Attend Local H1gt1
Scnoo4s For Furrner lntormat1on

°

1987 Chrysler LeBaron Statton

w,terllAt SRectal 314 200 PSI
$21 9'5 Per 100, 1• 200 PSI
S37 oo Per 100 All Brass Com·
pression Flnings In Slack

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
JaCkSOn Ollie, 1-!IOO-S37-9528

550

Building
Supplies

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine A.nttQues
1124 E Matn Street On AI 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 1o 00
am lo600pm,Sunday100to
6 00 p m 740· 992 252EI , Russ
Moore owMr

Block. brk:k sewer ptpes, wmd·
owa nnrets e1c Claude Winters,
Rio Grande OH Call 740-245 ·

560

Pets lor Sala

3 AKC Registered Black Lab
Pups Have had 1sr shOts &amp;
wormed S21lO ea !304187!H046
AKC Regbtered Boston TerrMirs,

Now Accepting DeposUs 740-

38119325
AKC Regt&amp;lered Stfk Yorkshtre
Tamers Shots &amp; ,Wormed
We•gns
31bs fully grown

(3041675-33611675-4009

channels Ltmlted t1me offer, call
1·000-779-8194 '

Ftsh B1rds Pond Supplies
Sun 1t 4PM Mon Sat 11AM·
6PM Fish TankfPe t~ snop 2,.13
Jaeltson Avenue!Po1n1 Pleasant

1990 Gao G1orm $1 000, 1987
Mercury Marqu1s $600, 1986
F1f1f'l Avenue. $500 Ford Tempo
(Wred&lt;edl $200. 7~388.Q840

DOoouniMabllo Hams
Por111 &amp; &amp;opply
H"'l" I.-lory

S~rt"'l

Klts $299 95, 5 Gal-

lon Aluminum Fibered Roof Paint
S25 21, 5 Gil Whitt Aoor Pelnt
1&amp;7 19, Anchors $5; Doors &amp;
Wmdowa Gaa &amp; Electric Water

1998 Ford Mustang I I 00 lOBO
Seized And Semna Locally 1·

1100-'409-7511, E" 7704
Musical
Instruments
l&lt;tmball Organ Entertainment
Center, Loaded, Has Ptano Per·
tee! Condttlon, Must Be seen To
Be Appreciated! 740-446-9-tn

;,~~;;;;;=;~;:-:~=~=-

FOA SALE: Spinet/Con
sale, Take ,On Small Monlhly l'sy
tnents Must Have Good Credit
Can Be Seen locally, Can 800·

Ad

Fruits &amp;
Vegatablea

7~2511-1145

~ly 740.448-9416 lla11opo11s,

1998 Ponttac Trans· Am Fully
Loaded! Prrce Redu ced 10
$22,500 00 Great Graduation

Glftll (7401-446-4548

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

«11-6123

810

742-4510

Silver Grey, 6 Cytinoer 5 Speec~,
AJC. PS, AMIFM Cassalte, Bedliner, &amp; Malchirtg Topper. Hign
3383

HOG Dozer Recently Rebuilt
$8,500 Ftrm, 400 Gallon Tanks
on Rubber $500 Each, 740 ·446~
2359

Large Assortment Bolli
.E"Werything Must Go

~,-·c-- ·

1
4123.

Today (3041675-

..

HONOAS FROM $500.1 'POLICE
IMPOUNDS' ALL MAKES
AVAILABlE
FOR LISTING
CAll 1-800-319-3323 EXT A471
JULY 18. 1999 Porsche Swap
Mall, 8 A M ·4 PM Tweeka An -

null bent Hea Moved To New
Facilities In Etflngnam , IL Call

888-4TWEEKS (489-33571 For
Can-!lla11 lntarmalian

paddle
38 Actress
Gardner
40WICS.awake

Preposition
Atpa, e g
(abbr.)
Dines
Wings
46 Freshwater
porpoise
47 Maturing
agent

41
42
43
44

statesmen

"Keep

48 P[erra's
mOl her
SO Heston's

52 :\'.llrptece
53 Sick
0'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Cetebnty Cipher cryptograms are creautd lrom QUOlatoos Dy lamou&amp; people past ana
Eact1 leo~1r 10 11'\e clj)l'1er Stano&amp; I Of another TOGa)' 5 clue G equals C

,

' IV C R

Wh1ch contract would you and
your partner have reached on these
cards' If you would have b1d to SIX
clubs (or the lucty SIX hearts) .' well
done' If you would have stopped
shan Of s1x spade s, you 'a lso would
ha ve done well . But le t's suppose all
those h1gh-card' pmnts , and h1s part-

•

.

V L R R L H

I L S E L Z Z

.

'

' RVKS X
MF P L

RFICHE

M R L·T

DKHMR

RED-HAIRED 61RL DOWN
AT· TI-lE P~A'f6ROUND ..WE
I-lAD A NICE TAI,:K ..

SHE
SURE IS
COTE ..

· TV K Z Z K T M

'
THAT DAILT
PUll Ill

S©R4UlA-L£f.-tf.S" ::!:

_ _ _ ___;.;.,.._: 141.. 4

O Rearrange
~

ClAY I. POLUoN _.;..._ _ _ __

~y

letters of the

four scrambled worQs be·

low to form four 11mple WOtdt

T RE C EJ

C:.-'== :.~/.:;.,

I

N YH E A
,~

,

~-,..,.M_,_u
::-O"'T'"I....,...O---ll.;,'.
· 0 hard
u r son had worked long
5 ,16 I
_ and
te1 fimsh h ts college
1_

_

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•educatton I th1nk an educatio n

I

BAVLIE

L.-...1--~--..L--..L.-J..-.J.
,..

fli.E?

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•

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PRINT NUMBERED

8

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
fOR ANSWER
1
_

1ne cnucklo quoood ·

'by fdhng 1n the mtSI'"O words
you develop from step No 3 below

LETTERS IN SQUARES

I 1.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
Blouse - Guard- Pnce- Limpid- GRUMBLE ·
Granny gave .me a ptllbw wtth a verse that made me ·
smtle II read , "Home ts where we are treated best and
GRUt--1BlE most"

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

.

,..,...,.......~---"--:--::----, IS not reCeiVed It IS - - - ~ - ~ -- -

I

You'll build a big ntst &lt;u.when
I"" save wrllo lloe clossr(ieds

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "L1fe 1S JUSt a place where we spend ume between
games ~- (Hockey p!aver) Fred Shero
••

DID 51-!E SA'f
AN'&lt;THING

'

•

RVL

Y 0 R

SFRVKSX

L' EO(jCRKFS

present

SFRVKS ,X

ELDLCR1

K, M
- f

~ 1-::-7-r,-~,,r-_,.1-.....-,.,,8,..-l 0 Co~pleoo
LITTLE

JULY 131

Homa
Improvements
OV (CC)
Hours {CC)

Iabl~hed 1975 Call 24 Hra (74"
446-0870 1-800-287-0576 Roy.

ers Waterproofing

1

'
Appliance Paris And Servtee All
Name Brancts Over 25 Years Expenance AU Work GuarantMd
French Ctly Maytag , 740-446 ·
•

General Home Ma1n·
tenence - Pamllng vinyl s1dmg
carpentry, doors, wmdows baths
mobile home repatr and more For
free estimate call Chet 740·992

6323
L1vmgston's B'asemen1 Water
Prooltn g, all basement repa 11 s
ClOne, free estimates lilellme
guarantee 12yrs on JOb e11pon

erce (3041895-38117
M&amp;R General .Conlractmg &amp;
Electric Carpentry. Porches.
Trailer Set·Ups And Air Cond• ·
fiOnlng Atao Matntenance 7.. Q.
.41-Gl93
Relnbow Bullden
Bu1ld new or repatr Old, no JOb
too small or large MaJor cred 1t

cards

IWV029582

Ca ll

(304)458-1049 BP 1528-11092

840

Elactrlcal and
Refrigeration

Flesldentta! or commerctal w1rtng
new servlea or rtpaus Master Lt~
censed electrsclao RidenOur
Eiectncal WV000306 304 s75 •

1786

·-

ASTRO·GRAPH

Wednesday, July 14. 1999
Do not d1smtss your tnstmcts on
... commercial or career matters m the
year ahead, because 1hey could be
rather remarkable By lhe same
· ~ token. check out your h~nches berore
~ acceptmg them as ract
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
•Before volunteenng to lake on a pro--. JeCI for anolher 1oday, find oul whal's
·~ tnvolved There's

a good chance you

may nol be the r.ghl person for thiS
-Job. Cancer, trenl yourself to a birth' day gif1 Send the requ~red refund
fonn and for your Aslro-Graph pred•cllons for the year ahead by mall ·,
mg $2 and self-addressed slamped
envelope to Astro -Graph, c/o thiS
newspaper. PO Bo• 1758, Murray
H1ll Slatton, New York , NY 10156
Be sure to state your Zod•ac s1gn
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Sometimes tl works out that way, but today
your mate mtght have the nght
answerS ofa a dCCISIQn for WhiCh YOU
thought you had the solution Don 't
be too pro ud 10 accept what's best
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221 Concentration and/or patience mtght not

•

be m lhe cards for you 1oday, so posl-

tdd~y where you have to respond to

pone any tasks or proJects that requtre
either or both unttl you' re tn a bellcr
frame of mtnd

a dec:as1on before you get a chance l o

LIBRA (Sepl 23-0cl 23) Suddenly rcaltzmg you ' d rather be m the
company o l someone other than the
lnend you're wuh must be handl_pd m

a manner where you don 1 hurt your
f!al' s fcclmg s or the relallon!l;hlp
SCORPIO (0&lt;1 24-Nov 221 II
you do thmg!i. m fils and starts HJ&lt;lay,
you're very unlikely 10 fulfill any of
your e:q xc tatlons You must have
contmutty of purpose m order to be
effecii\ C

SAG I ITARIUS (Nov 2J-Dec
21) A sk tllcd mqulsnor who 1s anxIOUS to acqu1re some confidential
mronnntton she or he knows you pos~
sess m1ght get you to spill the beans
today 1f you ' re not on your guard
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 191
Should 1he greater burden fall on you
when teamed up with anorhcr loday,
11 w1h nol only be a bed of1homs. but
11'11 fall apart altogelher unless there

is parny
AQUARIUS (Jan

20-Fcb 19)

Don ' l kl anyone put you 1n 11 pos1tmn

think lhtngs through Chances are,

11 'II be a poor one
PISC~S (Feb 20-March 20)
Espec:tally tf you arc working on a
complex asstgnmerit, be careful you
don ' t put the cart before the horse
Usmg proper methqds and procc·

dures

Will

be extrf"mely 1mpor1ant

today
ARIES (March 2 1-Apnl 19) Even
though tt may be \lery dtsappomtmg
to you, bne tlie hullet and go along
wllh the w1ll of the maJorHy should
the soc1al plans get changed at the l ast
mmule

TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)
Don 1 get d1 scourag11oday should
an ObjeCtiVe you VC CStaJ:".Jtshcd ror
yourself turn out 10 be a protracted
ordeal mstead of an tn sl &lt;mt ·•lhlevcmcnl Tomorro"' 's another day

GEMlNI (MQy 2 1-Junc 201 Be
careful you don' t hecomc mtngucd
by a half brmn 1dea today and JUmp
m wnh hn ~ let.: 1 t"lclorc ynu learn
what 11 1s .11\ .1hout Sl ow lil'"n and

take ample 111ne tn thmk
lhrough

-

31 Lpng-runnlng
TV series
33 Did the dog

Uncond1ttona1 Ufe11me guarante-.
Local references lurmsned ES~­

C&amp;C

9 1 Ford Tempo o4 door. Buro.
runs e•cellenl, 70 000 actual
miles , •ce cold atr, 4 good tires ,
100% dependable CBr., $1 ,650
080
M&amp;J Auto 7&lt;40·388 9893 or 740·

j

Easl
Pass
All pass

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Doors Sit~Jer. Aulomallc, Loaded.
Like New, And IJnder Warranty,
Bought New In March 01 98
$16 300 Or Best Ollar, 740·992·

7102

PasS

North
4NT
66

SERVICES

TI95

Mileage, $4 800 080 74Q.446 -

610 Farm Equlpmant

,,

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

PEANUTS
I JUST SAW THE

cnan S40, !3041882-3659

1999 Pontiac Grand Am SE 2

CleaniSI, 81SI Kept 89 You II
Ever Stll 1989 Cne~,~y Plck ·Up,

Electrical~.~~~~~::.:~::~~
Ho&amp;.e Mach me, Parts

Heatera.
PlumbingMiller
&amp; &amp; Cole·
Parlt,
lnltr1htrm,
man Air ConCIIUoners &amp; Heat
Pumpt Btnnell'l Mobllt Home

car

740-992-7102

346-1n5

Don'l Call U1 We Bolh Lose!7~
446-6306, HIQ0-2V1-ooe&amp;

790

1997 Chevy 'ca\laher 2 Doors, 5

10-200

Beanie Babies For Safe $4 To $6

COndillon (:1041675-2()39 $5495
OBO Must Seii'Great Student

Speed. C/D Tilt, Cruise Power
Sunroof 43 ,000 Miles, $8 500

AMAZING METABOLISM

7402~~

3933 or 1-80().273-9329

1979 Sl\asla Camper 22Ft $8~­
Contatned $2500 Very Go
COnd•IOn (304j675-1879
,

2 Used Ltft Gl'latrs, Great CondltiOI"' 7.t0-446-2206

1982

New Replacement Gas Tankt -0
&amp; R Aula Fbpiey, WV (30413.72

1994 'Cavalier. 2 Doors 13 295
1994 Gors1ca 4 Doors, V·6 Au-

St Bernard flupS, -'6 months 3 f.,.
male $150 eactl 7&lt;10-992-2721

PEREI'-

Budget Pnced Tlansml$siQII s
and Engtne&amp; All Types Acc~s
To Over l 0,000 Transm•ss. t
eve Joints 740-245-56~7 ,..:

1995 Terry Travel Camper ~ !7
Foot Wt1n EJ!pando Completely
loartedl Call Alter 6 00 PM 740-

740-742~2050

YOU.

Excellenl Cond1t1on . w•fl run

,992 ShadOw. looks and runs Uke
rraw, 70K cold alf automatiC,
sunroof 4 cylinder, spotler. red
$3650 740-949-2045 ...... "VV

740-146-2221

eEA1EN

Body '"

t 973 Mon.tor 29 Ft , 4 new tues.
full Ded tors ot storage, awr.mng
sleeps 4 Ntca tns1de and o~t
S3 000 4 while aduondack

fOmaliC Wlfl"' Atr, 740-245-9234

IN A

RO\ol IVE

1992 Jeep cnerokee Sport 6 Cy
IInder, 5 Speed 1989 Chevy !roc
V·8 Aulomattc With Au 1985
Ponfl'c Fiero, 4 Cylinder Au -

1994 Geo Pnzm , Aulo, Atr, Sun
Rool 72 000 miles. E~~;cellent

ATTENTION • We'll Pay You To
Lo&amp;a Up To 29 Lbs (Or More)
87 People Needed lmmed•alelylj
rOHer Ekplres 7/26 Catl 740.441 ·

t 983 Renault Alita nee

•

W

3595

For sara - Jack RuneH tamers.

110 (30&lt;}675-1545, anor 7PM

Auto Paris &amp;
Accessories

760

t972 Coacnme11 Camper 24 IH
Newly Carpeted &amp; Parnted, Lo·
cated At Ga111a Counly Fairgrounds Lot 116 , $1 500 74j:l
441-IJ681 , Of 74Q-446 !5126
'

1991 Mercury Grand Marquis lS.
4 door, V·8, ail power options.
non.smokera, like new, 740·985·

13041875-2063.

59ferguson gehl 2170 9fl hay
b1rltt, 401 Ford mowing machine
76 112 ton .e wheel drtve,
restored, 2 roper air cond goes

•

needs some work tots or new

19 New Palla Windows, various
Sizes Sandstone In Color. $3,500
Between 8.00 PM 10 Ot&gt; PM

Pounds Easy. Outck , Fast
Dramat1c Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended. Free Samples CIH 7.t0-441·1982

togs 740.885-4!531

pans $500 l:n:o~V-~7-33-18

tomatic, Loaded 861&lt; $3,650 ,
Coole Motors. 740-446 0103

Breakthrough'!! Lose

25 Ft House Boat Wtln T(ailer
$5 500 304 638 4531 , Or t;ven

21 Among
22 Ports of
lassoes

ncr's vulnerable \l[eak · two opemng
(showmg a, good sax-card su11 and '
some 6-10 h•gh-d!rd p o mts). caused
North to ha\'e a surge of po mtcd·
black-sun adrenaline' '
•
The normal percentage play for no
spade loSe rs 1s a second-round
I mess~ c ash 1hc kmg Ihen lead ,low
to 1hc Jack_ unless East plays the
quee n HowCver, 11 East has queenthird of spades. "hY thdn t he con\
llnue w1th the d1amond at..:c at trtLk
tw o l o rctng dummy to 1ufl 1 He
knows from h1s partner 's fourth highest openmg lead that you have
another d1amond m your ha nd Don t
fall for 1t Play oil 1he kmg and ace
o l spades to drop West's queen
When unsuri!,~ow to proceed . try
to see lhmgs through yo ur opponent 's
eyes

1998 Yamana GP 760 Jet Slu
can Al18r 6PM 130418112-2243 . ,

Automat..: loaded $1 ,100 OBO
1989 Lincoln Continental Signature Series , AIC, PS. PB ~un&amp;
Good , LOOkS Good! ASktng
J3 000 740-367-7ol80

r--=%'".le ~\t\6 ~ Thl~ ...

5091

Wagon 56,000 Mites· ' Cyftnder,
7~256-1233

W~, \\'O..Xo\\, \(:.\(,!'.\ I O'.IE.f?

00'&lt;, ~\t:a '1'\1£

lor Sale

5121

1-800-765-4963

;,:a·jD~Iro;c~T~Y~:::fif~~:~l
$69 00. one

304-$75-5612

-.

11'.ff.E. 1::. ~'to\" N-~O N-~'e."nn~~t:

1998 Honda Valkyne, 3200 m1!fs.
$9900 7~992-6919 after 'J&gt;m ;

1970 Pontiac Lemans W1!h 350
R~t Motor $800, Call A.Her 5,

Tnru Fnday

~'(, tl\'(

Cruisef. Excel! Cond . Lots Ot'li1.·
tras $6,500 00 740446-4175 1

WANT A VISA CAR01 S1 2 000
•· Unsecured Bad /No Credh OK.

-e '""' can
Monday

,..

~nou w~no GO~ IW\1-1.\~.,

387-D104
'
1998 Honda
Shadow A C E

750 Boatl &amp; Motors '

s-•

446· 3310 Till 5•30PM

Pass

would you Conilriue'l

THE BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

Or 740 367 0466 AI·
18&lt; 5 ~ $3.500 DO OBO

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

PAG~A61NG ~

1995 Fool Rsngor 4X4. 5 ~.
AIC AMIFM Stereo 58 000
Miles. S9 00000740-379-9270 °

Top Soil For Sslo (3041453-6196

9742

ADS

•

CARS $100, S51lO &amp; UP. POLICE

8 Tropical tree

23- -bttty
24 Actor Aob 25 Angers
27 Ruas1an ruler
28 Shoul
29 Swirl

asSISt h1m to save h1s face Put yourself m hiS shOes-- so as to see thmgs
lhrough h1s eyes Avmd self-hghtcousness hke the 'deval -- nothmg so
self-bhndmg "
Part of that1s true m today ' s deal
Agamst your s1x spade contract, West
leads the dunnond four 1wo, king, I 0
East sw1tches to the heart Jack. H o w

. lrfA,_ &lt;-OL,.fCTO,.S
I'TEM. ,.,0 L.ON6flt
IN Ttlf OlliGINAL

G~d

740

have
~
11 Emulate an
art1st

7 Novelist Zola

36 "Certainly["
37 Nahoor " ' - "

er comer an opponent, and always

''MALt S'ffFS FEM.At.f.

o4 3 V·6 , PWfPUCrutse, AMw.M,

2S72

3SLAeHarvev-

~ home

13 However
18 Afrtcan nalive
·20 De -(by lew)

strong. 1f posstble. In any case. keep
cool Have unhm1ted patience. Nev-

P£RSON

v.s

co-

Wesl

some advtce for

oxcellonl condlhon, 740-992-68'/7

Very
l!l!l41675 5909

Iabrie

12 Bh)e Jays'

9 Wt\111 a rolling
slone doesn'l

'

By Phillip Alder
Ba"l Henry Liddell Hart wrote

Grand Cherokee late·
do. o4x41- Sill cylinder. 75k. loaded

A~r

6=k

5 "-

op-ponents

Je~p

Cassella, Cold

quanllty

4 Map ebbr

Reading the

vana &amp; 4-WDs

1979 J 20 '•4 Jeep Truclc N~e
tnsu:le ' &amp; Out
360
Auto Trans
Ouadratraek
(3041675-1564
°

maneuver ,
3 Small

Operung lead. • 4

For Sale 1~5 Kenworth Sefhl
Truck Quilled leather mter101 f3
mch aerodyne &amp;leeper w11h Bunk
Beds. refngerator. 460 cat en gine, s.~per 10 transmlss1on 3?0

06 High 7~251l-52o19
good tlktod unes, 5 mares 3 stal·
~:_~..;.=es are bred back ,

• J 10 8
•AK965
• J 2

a.-"

2 Airplane

GRAI~DI\IIA'S

1995 Dodge Dakola Spor1 Blaot.
65,000 M'lts. V-6, 5 Spd AIC,
CNIH. $6,700 00 1995 o...,.; 4
Cyl S Spd, CO. 37,000 M'l&amp;e
S5 700.00 740-2511-6346

Minllture Male Donll:e';'. 35 II')CI'I·
Registered mlntature hors.e,s

. South
26
5•

BARNEY

·MY

dayS or 7*'36NJ,9 Mmtngs ;

6 4

"Leave--

Vulnerable. North-South
Dealer: South

I

"'""II
$11,000, 740·446- 93!j7
Aller 4:30 PM

'94

?

• Q 10
• 9 8 '3

Allor &amp;PM

730

•

DOWN

20 AnchOr lor a
denUI Implant
23 Trily, In Latin
26 LAnnon'• 16""
27 Nautiel11 30 Hot ond humid
32 Prepared •
ulad '
:MUkeacoarse

9 53 I

•• ..,.. 305 va (3041675 3SZ1.

roars $44 000 !3041937-2836

51 Qualm
54 Aa11'111
55 Stk:lcer
56 Coarte heir

'*'1IINCiy

It F04-thlt

Soulb
aAJ · 9875

H~·93 Che11y Suburban Loatie'd

Old Motorcyctes. MotorJcooter.a
Motortcoottr Parts (Cushman
preferred) Contact· D Mllt:hell,
5568 lOth PI No P1ne11a1 Parle

1705.

... 3
• 9 6 4
tJ874 3'
• 10 7 6

--7&lt;().992~

Roogh ~ S750 oo 080
44e !982.

49&amp;nnalltokiM

57 Look 0119rlly

East

ntavy 112 ton, all oriQiJ'I&amp;I, rnns
great condlllon 19'7'"'0odge 3(4
"" dualy, IIIII bod, rough con9'tion, S3.000 for ••· OliO or &amp;fll

1e1e CMvy, 4 Wbeel Ortvt

lhenlfore--

lng

17 Tune

•AKQ7 2
• 2
•AKQ!H

1~

l'reVIciW-

45- Quentin
46 !think.

11 - -l.oclla,

a K2

Truck• for S.le · -

Beds Full &amp; Tw•n Llv.ng Room
Su•te NIQhl Stand Box Spnngs &amp;
Manresses, Walerbad, 7'0 US·

VInyl

Furnished, Upslalrs. Second
Avenue, No Pets, UUiilles Paid

On Compact Ullltty lJICior&amp;,
5210s. 53 tO's And Gators, Free
Oehvefy Carmteha•l Farm &amp;

~·-

~ eat 304-&amp;75-31011

Serv1ces. Inc Toll-Free 1·888·
836-4052

To Your Furnace C(lmptete Duel
Systmu &amp; Furnacts, Heat
Pumps Ctrtllled Installer It You

Of E - . 740-885-4!531

300'1, 1300 Olt 400'1 And Z·
Trak's, Flnancino As Low As
5 ""' fal' 36 Moni!S Of $250 Off

42 l.&amp;lncl1 or

15 nnwctlve

.....*

Well meinllined 9, Olds. U
114,000 ..... U.200 GrNI Iaiii'-

oiUI.Y 5 THIIU AUGUST :10
Lawn T""""" $150 Off On Lrs.
$200 Off LX's And GTI. $250 Off

630

14

I

n95

Country selling efhency apartment, completely furnished , all

ences Required, 304-638-4$31 ,

7.t(l-44 1..0171

FAIR SPEC'*' S

IMPOUNDS Honda s Toyota s
SeptiC Aera!Or Motor New, Strn In Chevys. Jeeps And jiport Utth·
Box $500, OBO 740-256-6270 ' . Ue! b..Call Now! 800·772-7470.
EXT 7832

Black Berries lt2 00 Galton A.lso
Hay SI 50 Bait Fnendly Atdge

Off U•l Price On Cull l!uysl

(304~253&amp;

12

1987 Astro Van 8 Passenger

Mausoleum. 2 crypt spaces,
Meigs Memory Garden Pomeroy.
Metgs County, $4150 Contact
Wm Snourter 107 Francisco
coun. Bav SSin1 Lo~as MS 39520,
phone 1-228-o163-9894

COOL DOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added

2 Bedroom Apartments, Unlur·
nlshed. Securi!Y Deposit Aeltr·

1!181 OOCigO 11¥CNt Shelly Nkit
Condtticn, High W1tes. 12.300.

lor 9 OOPM

EQual Housing Opparlurwly

utilities patd, P'tail call 740-992~

430 Coo• T,..tor. Ttlple Ronoe

sage

'

510

c1Uon Send One Original Poem

580

CaB NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Ftnanclng Info Tak• 10%

Slrlellons. S 15,000 (30418823n2

EOH 304-ci75-ll679

INTERESTED IN WRITING POETRY? POETRY CONTEST
So48.000 In Prizes Po.- PIAII•
20

710 AutOI for Sale ·

OrM S2SOO

- F:
-

40~

1-by

I Conlll:llr
10 Drove

610 Farm Equipment

1-80().

BIG SCREEN TV Talce over
small monthly payments Good
Credit feqvired 1·800•71 8·1657

~

Buildtng SUe 1 Acre

~apped

(:1041675-6693

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Regrtgerator Included 1 40·4462583

$14000. C'ly Schoclll

(1 4111302) MI&amp;On WV NO At·

sldlzed IPI. fOr ektlrty and hand·

Tired Of GQing To Ttte Laundry
Mat? Call Me For A Ftee WaSher
&amp; Dryer 1-800-3113-l1862

&amp; mov1u Call 740·•-46-2568

Prtmt

Twtn Rivers Tower now accepting
appltcaltons tor 1BR HUD sub·

0047

Gallle Co • Hunters!' Cto~e To
0tt10 Rrver Off SA 2t8 · Williams
Hollow 68 Wooded Acres
$40,000. Cash Price. Pubttc Water Friendly Rtdge Rd • t 5 Acres

Wat•r arid e•clrlc Reidy FOr

One btdroom lurntsned apart·
rnent tn Mkklteporl, call 740-9929191
c

A1r Condllloners Used 01llaren1
Siz..es Guaranleedl 740 886·

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Orlve
from $279 10 $358 Walk to anop

Hook-Up. N,.. Loll . ••.ooo.oo
eoco, con 304-773-51•.

Also Mouse For Rent In Town No
Pats. OepOSII &amp; Relrences Re·
qul(ed 740-446-9342

Goode

SR 325. 5 Acrol $1$000, Public
Waler

BUILDING LOTS
FDRSALE

One &amp; 1IYo 8sdroom ApanmeniS,

5162

2 Rooms &amp; Batn , S225fMo, In·
eludes Ut11111es No K11chen 1
Be&lt;lroom &amp; Bath Includes Utlllttes,
No Kitchen 740-446--2477
:

350

~0008

Clean mce 2 br basementfga
rage. ref !dep no pets 304-675·

Aepo Ooubl8wlde Save Thou ·
sandS' 1-800-383-6862

Btaul1ful brick 3 tlr home on
lov81y acreage must see 10 appreclale 304 273-9485

&amp; Bank Foreclosures Fmancing
Possible, For L•stings Call 800·

4 Bedrooms, All Eteclrtc A/C.
$500/Mo . Plus Deposrt. 7&lt;10,3677802

2 BR WID Hoolc-ufl Relerencesf

213-8355

Frn tnlormauon Package 1·800·
310.8745 e.. 21 24 Hrs

17401592·2678

rent, tn Mtddleport depoSit re·
qurred 740.742·2006

Ca!I74D-992·3537

Buy Homos From S10 000
1 5 Bedroom Local Government

ltlg Srove!Refflgerator Included
Call
between
9AM·5PM

1 and 2 bedrOOm apartments, fur·
ntshed and unfurmsned secunty
deposit requ1red, no pets. 740·

-

800-826·8523 US /Canada
www g~;as&amp;meehalll:-: com
EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page For.m We
Do The Aut No Dl1ect .Seiling

388-9948
3BR House tor Renl 2219 L~ncoin Avenue PI P1easan1 S350
Ren1 + $350 Doposll upon renl-

Homeo, Nitro, WY. (30417555665

Garage 69 1/2 Acres Will Sell
All Or House And Lot Me1gs
County Sl50 000 For lntorrnallon

7 Year Old 3 Bedroom Flancn
Horne 2 Baths 28x30 AttacheD

3 Bedrooms Basement 1 Car
Garage Rio Granda WID Hook·
Up. $325./Mo Plus Oeposi1. 7&lt;40..

S250fMo Plua Utllttles, For More
lnlormalfOM Call740-367-o219

EAAN 190,000 YEARLY Repatr
lng, NOT Replaetng long Cradls
In Wtndshtalds Free Video 1·

llasemenl 740 992 3860

Now Taking Appllcallons- 35
We&amp;t 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Aparlments. Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, 1315/Mo , 740·

Must Go OownPa"tments as low
as S4SKI. tnrerest as low as 1.19
ltm1ted ttme only at O•kwaod

$45 000 Great For Recrea·
t1on Or Hunting Mostlv. Wooded
Off SR 141 &amp; SR 233 can Ba 1);\llded Road Built To land Then
On Into wayne Nartonal Forrest
5% Down Llind Conlract wnn Ap
pro~Jed Credll Free Maps 1 800

GUARANTEED PROGRAM' 1·
31 0.669~952. Elll -c

28R House lor re.nt, New Haven

Al,l Displays

Nllro, WV, (304)!55-588!1.

31 0 Homes lor Sale

7~992-D165

14x70 2 B•drooms For Rent, In
BKSwet!, 7 40-446·9669

(304)682-2649

.

Dopasl, 74Q-o0ol6-3870

388 8335

-4 Acres , 1986 f·h70 Mobtle·
Home t M1le oil 33 on Slldmg
Hill Creek Road In Hertford

per week (304)882-3295

cessful C•mpground And Time·
shsro Rolalo ClunnghauSI con

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; !]PII"
Problema? NHd 1\mod? Call ,...
"'"""Ill' 7~

420 Mobile Homes

Heal Pu._,, 740-367 0565

GOT A CAMPGROUND MEMBERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? Wo'H
Take 111 America's Noll Sue

North Thtrd Avenue, Midda.port·
1WO bedroom flmshed aporlmlnl.
depolil and rererences required

1988 Redmond Danville 14JC70
Alsc;t. Has Expando, very N1ce.
Must Sell' ASICtng $14,000. 740
1997 Fleetwood Mobrle Home
14JI70 Heat Purr~Q, 740·367.0565
Or 740.820-3907

FUllY LOADED PENTIUM
COMPUTERS P9or Cradll 0 Kl
1-300-!520-ll36-l

2 8odroom Hams &amp; Rll1ri9'
tralot Furmshed, 733 Tntrd Avenue, Gallipolis $275/Mo , 1150

3 Btdroom 2 Baths, House For
RonL $31JOIMO_, 1-31lt)-383-6862

0

2443.

410 Hou-lor Rent

Kitchen Hardwood Floors, Large
Lot. 2 sneds $500 oo Monti'!
PIUs Oeposll &amp; Fletrences 740
...a-4794
•

Two bedroom houii th Mason
vtny! w1ndows and s1dlng, Lennox
neat pump w•th atr, large lot , full
Dasement , pnce reduced : 740·

Nice 2 Btdroom Apartment Appllancu and all Utilities Furnlahed 1375 00 per month
(304)1'15-4302.

hook-up, $200 080. 740-949·

pooll, ' &lt;o.e87-3516

3 Sdrms. 2 Bslhs Fully Equi!&gt;Ped

3039

Fleetwood Mobile Home For
14x70 Partially Furmshed ,

8PM·BAM (3041675-2617

210

Mlddleporl, call

Tn·level three bedroom two
baths hving room, 1am1ly room,
dlntng room, two garages. bas•
ment. big P.OfCI'I, asking $65,000,

Will sil with elderly male person
1

Stret~t

(3041675-5711&amp;

· 7oiD-388-eCl5a.

Flreplaee wrtn 010wer SIONt, and
pipes Everyrnmg Included to

Rooort- · -..4;!3-5SII7 24 Haln.•

Included
Electric HeatPump. S265 mo •
Deposit {304)773-5577 Leave
Message

niCe yard, close to part, •n Sy-

Largt 2BR , Unfurnished, Near
PVH $350 mo + $350 doposil

Na 2 blc:lloo.n apa bnenl k't Swr·
ICUH, $27S ,... ...,.,, $200 &lt;10-

Stove/ Refri gerator

7~77000

Approved Master Licensed Elec·

1740)-388 8421 or (7401 446

7~98H124

800-27().9694

-·•1304)175-7112.

Will do House Cleaning Have
References and Expenenc~!

Three Dedroom dOuble wide 1n
cnester wi'ln two bartll anached

"*Credit Carel DEBT" Debt Con·

No Credit Check • 0%APR Re·
qu~remeots 18+ US Cruzen Have
Checktng Account Phone ~\~)pro ·
val 1·800 737-0073 Iss ued By
MerT~k Bsnk, SLC. UT

RENTALS

Plant m Apple Grove Needa

garage air and neat pump. outbuildtng. senlng on two + acra lot

CREDIT r PROBLEMS? . VISA
CARD Gu~ranteea Approval

Anlllooy Land Co

Small 2 Bedroom House for

Wil\dlalls 847-A SECOND AVE
SUITE 1350, NEW YORK , NEW
'IOAK 10017
sollda110n Stop Collectio n Calls
Reduce Payments &amp; Finance
Chargn A.v01d Ban'kruptcy 1·

Wo Buy Land 30 -500 Aerts
Wo Pay Cash. 1-100-213-8365,

sale. between '"• Locfl;s &amp; Shell

Crmsty's Famtty Ltvtng, apart· Centrll Ajr Unit. Wrth Electric
men11. home 1. traite 1
Furnace, Will Ac:commodate
740·192-4514, epertmen1s """it- 1 28'150' Home Or Larger Use4
- · ,.._a """"""""
On• S.Oton $800 OBO $1 &amp;00

Nice t br apt kll furn W/0
hQokup. 1300 • damage dap
304-87~3100 or :J04-t75--55(Jg.

Reel Eatate
Wanted

Restored Victorian home 5ttualed
on 12 acres V11iage Mrddlep(Pfl.
uctuded and puvate , appoint·

For FREE Information Booklet

date Oebtsl

360

1 800-311 -5048, Exl3372

...... cal740-992·5e96

~.l ......

LAND
In Galli a, Jackson. Ross. MIIQI
And A.thent Counllls 5 To 75
Acre Tracts Far Rtstdenttal Or
Recreation Land Contract Avatl·
able, FIIEE Maps Ant~ Land
Co. l1&lt;1 1-800-21 :HI365

HOliES FAOII $5,000. Fort-

Saine Day Approval
NO APPLICATION FEES" 1-800863-9006 Exl 936 www ""lp-pavbilscom

Wanted To

""" _.,.. i3041882-34Y

12 Aerts

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DEGREE OUICKLl, Bachelors,
Ma1ters Doctorate By Cone·
~nee Baoed Upon p..,. Educotian And SI\Ort Slud'j COurse

MIICellaneoul
Merchandlae

8u1td1ng LOll For Sale New H.l·

ISS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Pa)lment&amp;
On Property Sold' Mortgages !
Annutllesl Sentemenla• lmme·
drate Ouolesll' ·Nobody Beats
Our Pnces • National Contract
Bu~ra 800·490·073, Ext 101
www nallonaiOOntt'aCI:IlP,'ers COf'f'l

Reg 19().05-127o18

180

350 Loti &amp; Ac:rwge

Land $55,000 No cens loU 5PM
(30&lt;1675-7235

Money to Loan

Grlljl liE c.wr CoMigl
!C... Clole To Halrel
caii"JOdaYI740 446 4367,

150

3 Bedroom House

540

-to

311 1'tiM ol bird?

ACROSS

thm!! ~

--r-- -----

-~ ----

--

------~--, ---

�'•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedpesday

Tuesday, July 13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Star Grange plans 125th anniversary celebration·

Time Out For Tips

Plans for the I 25th ann•vr&lt;'.lrY morr entertainment.
celebration of Star Grange on lui!
Cnntem were judged during the
24 and 25 were made dunn~ a meeting wnh the winners l&gt;eing
recent meeung held at the hall.
announced as follows : Ma&lt;ine
Anntversary aciJvities at II a . r~l
Dyer. first, Rose Barrows, second,
on Saturday will begm with barhe· afghan&gt;: Janel Morris, first , and
cue chicken. pork and beef plate Rose Barrows. second. embroider;
lunches. There will be cnt&lt;rl31n· Rose Barrows, first. Maxine Oyer,
mentthroughoutlhe da) indud1ng a second. and Opal Oyer. .third. for •
skit by the Albany Grange. a h"· the ra.hle .
.
toric presentation by the Gal ha
Rose Barrows. ·f1rSt , rock.-a-bye
County grangers. clogging b) the ' baby : Barrows. first. plastic canvas,
Midnight Cloggcrs and the confer· and B&lt;lrn&gt;ws. first. .wall hanging;
ring of an old fash1oned fir~t degrc~·. Jam~ Mat.:omber, first . Christmas
Sunday'.s aL"li\ illes \\111 include a dccrtration: Barro~· s. first , crib
breakfast. a memorial scrv&amp;cc. lmd 4uih .

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
F'amily and Consumer Sciences,
Community Development
·::
The old saying that "Life l&gt;egins at
forty". may. soon be replaced. with "Life
begins at sixty."
With so many people living longer these
days, relircment,has come to mean a time of optiop~ and opportunities, Many people' live 10, 20 or 3U'years afrer they retire.
What can ye'u look for'ward 10 during retirement'' It is a time
when you can volunteer, explore interests. learn. work and visit.
One thing that many retirees do is to volunteer. There are many
places thai look to volunteers lO help operate 11ven1s and activiries .
Senior citi7ens centers, 4-H . Scouts, church. communitY organiza-

···;,
.. ~.; .r
l.

''•

..

Last year, the United States impor1ed nearl y fbur times more

who wcr; sel f-employed wdh no company pension are more likely
.
to return I() work thJn 1hose who were not self employed.

. Senidr~ \V ith a ·lnt ·o r aearivity and who WC(e experts at their
. JObs may return as consultants to their fanner emplo)'ers Others
may Start hom~-bascd businesses, combining the &amp;r tnteresls and
hobbies into a financial c nte~prise.
The years a ft er . rctJrcrne!~l allow for time lO spe nd visiting and
talking with others. The fast-paced life of work and family has
·given way to a more leisurely gail. Friendships should be established 1n earlier vears. not only as couples, but also as individuals,
so that if a spoU~e d &amp;
cs, the reffiaining panner will still have social
contam. h is imponant 10 ~ave friends of all ages and interests that
you can share e&lt;periences and knowledge with both now and dur·
ing retirement. •
The rpircmcnt years a,re a time when one ~an expand them~
selves ari'd do the th·ings thai they never had time for before. The
"golden years'' can truly be a golden lime .
'

..

.

;.,

Cruise and Kidman get go ahead tor
lawsuit against Star newspaper

~

· Middleport,woman honored at party
· .. -A going-away party w:is·'held rec.ently for Aretta Brickes who has resided
in MiBdlepoq for 27 years and is now planning to move to Elkins W.Va. to
he nearer her children. , '
·
The evening was spent re.tlecting on the happy times and get-togethers
over the years. Refreshments of sandwiches. chips. relishes. and a decorat·
ed cake were served. Phyllis Baker. Hel en Williams and Twila Childs won
the door prizes. Gift cc rtificates'wcre present~d to Mrs. Brickle~.

Attending the party in addition 10 those named were neighbors. Nora
Rice. Pat Carson. Tina Baker, Ellen Batey, Katie Childs, Cindi Harris, Den''er Rice, and a guest. Carol Freeman of Rave nna.
· .."

. ·'

,,

•'

.
.
The new Charlet E. Hobet. Jr.,
~

.

Meigs County's

~l'afood

'

ByMARKBABINECK

Asrrx:llted P - Wrltllr

.

. HOI!STON (AP)-One of the most.mte~ manhunts
histo.ry of the Southwest ended wtth .a s1mple h~d·
. sh_ake' beiWeen a Texas Ranger .and ,a tattooed Mex1can
drifter.
.
.
.
.. '
. .
_ .Rafael R~ndez-~trez, s~ 10 a temfymg
senes of killt~ along r&amp;Jiways m three states, took htmself off the FBI s 10 Most Wan~ hst Tuesday by surrendering at an El P~ border stallon. .
It WIIS a puz:zhng move for an elus1ve r.tan who could
face the death penalty for.brutal slaymlll' tl!at began nearly two years ago. .
R~ndcz-Ranu~z, 39, w~o.faced a_coun ~
today.,._ cha!ged wtth ~ kilhngs ~suspected _1n five
more..~. surre~ was 31ded by family memlx;rs m con~.WI~~ roo~e Texas Ranger:
.
. .
This ts .m:;rut.the bes\.news mWetmar smce '!'e end of
\\brld War II, .w d.Bemte Kosier, ma~or of the tmy south
. Tex,as town where. Rev: Norman. S1m1c, .his w1fe, Karen,
and 7J..ye.ar-ol~ Joseplune Konvteka were bludgeoned to
death ~her this year:
.
·W.thm hours of hts sulTcnde~•. R~ndez·Rami~ was
.flown to Hpuston where authonbes mterrogated him for
nearly_e•ghl ~ours about the slaying. of two area women:
Noem1 Dommguez, a 26-year-oid school teacher, and Dr.
Oaudia Benton.
lA· the

than

'

By JIM FREEMAN

.

S.ntlnitl .._. Staff

:

State Representative John Carey '(RWellston) ·addressed memblirs of the Meigs
Olunty Otamber of Olmmerce at the
' group's monthly luncheon meeting·,Tues.day at Carleton SChool in Syracuse. , ·

..

initiativ~,

,
"

BREAKING " GROUND
grcJunclbi"Nkkng for the n In Mason,
W.y.,, Wll held Tueaday at the ltOre Site nur tha foot of the
Ppmeroy-Muon Bridge. The ltore will !It 110,329 square feet, ·
.with•a prGJIICted opening dlte of February 2000. Site preparation
wOrk began late Iaiit WHk. Pictured above, from 111ft, 11... Mason ·
· · cOuncil membe,. Brian Keame, Greg Roulh and Ray Varian;
Gary ,Jameeon, proJwct aupelilntendent for Shllnnon, Strobel &amp;
· ·_Wuvw of Auburn, Ala., general contractor for Wai·Mart; touncllwornan Uncia Blake· R~order Sarah Shlefda· Councilman
Gerlkl Glbbe; and Mayor .George Nichola. The
hill now
been polted with Mno treaRaHing" ligna· and vlolatora will be
proaecut~, according to council mllmbera. (OVP pho1o by ·
Mindy Kurna)

iru

medical services ma comfi&gt;rt.abie

~

· . lluq,.tienr piO«dutts and

.

..

personali..O care. Tht Surgery

surgery,' the Surgery Cenrc:r i; a

'

Caiter provides a•comlOrtable

joinceffim ofHolur Medical .

.
.
. wairins ll!Ca. allowing_ parienu to ·

~ntci and Haber C~ni~. The

. con...Utndy acceSs the facility-

~

~

.

s~~~f-rhc-an, tii,...•tory build·

•.·

"

.

- •. ,·' .

ing is d~igned sp&lt;eilically fur

~

fi&gt;r wairing family members

to £eclat ease.

.,
.I

.

,.

.

· Chark_s E. Holzer, Jr., MD. ·Surgery Cnitn' ttrr4 inuik you to tour .
.
the facility on Saturtltt.y, July 17thfro"!. 2 p.m. to 5P·rn·
Staffi:d by the area'~ leading
medical~&lt;a~p.,

Center is rhe ideal letting ror
Out physician.! tO

.

meet the SlOW·

ing resional demand for same

CLEVELAND (AP) - A compute~ c~ash at ihe Ohio Bureau of
Motor Vehicles prevent~d thousll~ds of motorists from renewing
'licenses, transferi~g li~ense pl~tes or g~tting temporary driving per·

'

'
day surgery. To aperirnce tho
"Holzer Difference:" in surgical
care, call Holzer Medi&lt;al Center
'

at (740) 446-5000 ol tht
Holzer Clinic at (740) 446·5187.

CHAMBER SPEAKER State R,e pre-

Hlllatlve John Cerey (R·WeiiSton),
111ft, Wll pr-nted an Ohio River
Bear Company belr Tuelday afternoon at the Melge County Chamber
of Commerce monthly .luncheon
mHtlng. H11 Wll preHnted the bear
by chamber Prel!lldent Stev11 Story.

Rutland Council seeks
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel ,._Staff .
Rutland _Village Counctl voted to seek renewal
of a ,two-mtlllevy _for current expenscs.when they
met m regul~ sesston .on Tuesday evemng.
Th~ levy is currently used to fund streetlights in
town; and was !'PP"'ved fow years ago- after the
village w~nLdark when a similar levy failed to get
the voters approval.
.
·
.
ln other business, rouncil approved the tax bud. get for fiscal yw 2000 as submiited by Oerk
. Roseml"Y Sno~den Eskew. The budget is avail·
able for review at the office of the clerk from 9 a.m.
unt.il 3 p.m. du.ring the week.
'
Eskew noted that general fond revenue will
likely decrease for next year due to the loss of tax .
revenue.from properties abandoned in the village's'
flood hazard mitigation progra/n.
That program will also' place a financial strain .

~vy

on tbe village's sewer system operation and sewer
debt retirement plan, since sewer customers willl&gt;e
lost due to the purchase o( flood-prone property by
the village.
'· ·
Mayor JoAnn Eads said that 15 customers hav~
been lost to the . program, resulting ·in a loss of .
$2,478 per year for debl retirement. She noted that
the amount·is nearly identical to the interest generated from certificates of deJX&gt;sif iiSe&lt;! .to pay on .
debt retirement.
..
·
· ~ds also re,ported that the state's audit 9f the
village books is completed, and that very few cila;
lions were issued. She and Eskew ·will meet with
·examiners for ari exit interview.
Donnie DeSilva was present. to •register com·
plaints about dog. running loose in the village, as
well as disturbances caused by barking dogs.
Several members of council said thai they, loo,
had noticed problems with dogs barking, and

renewa

advised DeSilva that the police department will
enforce ordinances relating to roaming and barking
do~ if a warrant is.signed, and Eads said thai she
would issue fines to those cited to court for violations. . .
,
Dan Runyon. who&lt;met with council last mOilth
about posSible timbering on ·village property, "
inquired as 10 whether council had given consider~lion to his proposal 10 purchase timber from the
property. Eads said thai two other timl&gt;er companics had inquired about the same property sinCe the
last meeting, and t'ttal bids would likely 1&gt;e sought
if lhe village chooses 10 proceed with timl&gt;ering 0 ~
the properly.
Council passed 8 resolution authorizing Eskew
enter
into a Joan agreement with Peoples Bank
10
of Rutland_for funds 10 complete the relocation of
·
·

ICOnuriliid llf"RIItlillld CGCiildlt on P!IJI.3J

Meigs Local Board ranks design firms for building project

·1999 .. CI1ester Shade Day set for.Saturda·y .

Sentinel Possibility of an

emergency tan•
scares passengers

a

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=;::¥ .

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The Meigs Local Board of Education Mon· $31,122,604 for the building project. The fund- and Jeff Way.land as a middle school .. pecial -·
day nigM ranked the Toledo design firm of ing is contingent on the passage of a three mill education teacher. Kellie Thomas was hired as
BMV's computer system was down all day Tuesday because of a
SSOE Studios Architecture &amp; SEM Partners, bo'nd issue on Nov. 2.
middle school volleyball and girls' basketball
problem with a four·mile main cjrcuit running from Ameritech offices
Inc. as the highest. of seven considered for the . The board considered seven professional coach.
'
,
in Columbus to the Stale of Ohio Computer Center, near the Ohio State
di~trict's building project.
.;·':aesign firms and ranked the firms based on
Hired as custodians · at · .the middle .school
University cam'pus.
, " ·
The board is pursuing the construction of a , competence, ,,ability, experience, past perfor!· were William Morris and Ronald Mullins while
Phone lines connect' the computer center with 218 deputy regi~trar . new middle school and two elementary ·schools mance and other services, l&gt;efore making its Wil.liam L.avender was hired as a substitute cusoffices across Ollie.
for the district. which wi)l . replace .the seven, selection. ,
,
todian.
, ·
The .problem occurred in a feeder line carrying a large number .of
existing elementary schools and mjddle school. ' If the bu'iiding issue passes, the board will
The board approved the resignations of
circuits between OSU and the ·. BMV, .Ameritech spokesman
Last month the board voted to request per- negotiate with the firm for a design contract. If Michelle Anderson, Stacie Nign, Tracy Wigal
Mitchell sai.d. The problem was fixed about S:JO, Mitchell said, but the
f!!ission of.tlre Ohio School Facilities &lt;;ommis· the board is unable to come up with an agr~e- and Larry Haley .
cause had not l&gt;een determined.
·
"
sion to participate in the Stale Classroom.Assis· men!, the second highest ranked firm, Schorr &amp;
The board also hired Judy Crooks. Lester
BMV officials could not say how many people were inconvetance '·Program, a program :which has helped Associates Architects, LTD. &amp; Jester, Jpnes, Man\tel, Judy McCarthy, Donna.Wolf and Darin
nienced. On Monday, the agency issued more than 12,000 licenses.
construct a new K·8 elementary school in East· Schifer; Feltham Architects will be considered.
Logan as summer tutors to assist students need"'This is unfortuna~ because it affected a lot of folks and our
In personnel matters, the board hi Led Janice ing assistance in passing their proficiency tests.
ern Local and is helping furid construction of a
thing is cust.omer service,'' Duke Hobson, chief of deputy registrar
new K-8' in Southern Local.
·'
L. Groggel and Mary Ann Neal as English
Present were Superintendent B'ill Buckley " .•
administrative services for BI\IV. told The Plain Dealer.
Currently the state i~ proposing to pay teachers, Donald Yost as a welding teacher, and Treasurer Cindy Rhonemqs, and board
About 80 drivers had been turned away by 1:30 p.m. at a Cleveland
$25,421,604, matched by a local share ·of James Bennett .as a high school science teacher, members Wayne Davis, Randy H.umphreys .and·
deputy registrar office.
.
'
$5,701,000, approximately 3 mills, for a total of Metra .Peterson as an elementary m~sic teacher Roger Abboll.
· "None of them are very' happy
campers about it," said l&gt;am Her·
man, deputy registrar of ..the
· Ch~ter Shade Day w,ill be held on Saturday,
deCorated bicycle, best float, and equestrian unit.
throughout the day, from 10:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. A, ·
Cleveland office.
with a day filled with activities and historical preThe Chester Volunteer Fire Department will display of historic artifacts, organized by Howard
sentations.
.
hold a fish fry l&gt;eginning al5 p.m.
Parker and Harry Lee Bailey, wiH be set up in the
The
events
will
center
around
!he
Otester
At
6
p.m.,
the
Third
Annual
Ohio
Harmonica
academy
building, adjacent to the Courthouse.
J sectl&lt;)ns • 24 Pages
Courthouse, which is under renovation, the Championship will l&gt;egin. The contest is l&gt;egin- Becky Edwards will supervise an art display in the
Chester Commons, and the Chester Firehouse.
ning to attract harmonica enthusiasts from across courthouse, and a genealogy booth, "Know Your
The activities will begin at 10:30 a.m., with an the state. Four contestants participated in 1997, Roots," will l&gt;e led by Dale Ollburn and Betty
COLUMBUS (AP) - There
opening ceremony. Child~n·s games will be held and 12last year. Those interested in participating Milhoan . Pam Milhoan will present a basket
were a few minutes of panic
throughout the day.by the South Bethel New Tes· in the contest may register on Saturday.
weaving . demonstration, Donna Davidson a rug
among the 80 passengers aboarcl
lament
Church,
with
special
games
and·contests
The
time
line,
a
dramatic
historical
presentation
making demonstration, and Dan Roush a stone
an Am~rica West flight from Las
being
held
from
I
1
to
12.
Face
painting
will
also
which
will
include
events
from
1790
lo
1890,
will
napping demonstration. A blacksmithing demonVegas to Columbus · after they
be available. .
begin at 7:30 p.m. Over 40 participants and 25 stration , ·chain saw art demonstration and a cov·
were told to brace ttiemselves for
Presentations
will
be
made
to
Meigs
County'.
s
horses
are expected to participate in the event, ered wagon display are also planned, as is a dis·
a possible crash-landing.
.
Finest,
the
oldest
man
and
woman
presen~ ·at which will be followed by a square dance at 8:30 play of 1800's-era. clothing.
·But the crew of Flight 2070
noon.
·
p.m., with music by the Happy Hollow Boys. The · . . Food, inc[Gding sandwiches, homemade ice
managed to lower a stuck landing
LesterV:
Horwitz,
authorof''The
Longest
Raid
time
line event is under the direction of Debby cream and baked goods willl&gt;e offered in addition
Lotteries
gear with a backup sy~lem and the
of the Civil War," will speak on Morgan's Raid Snyder.
.
to the fish fry, and several fund raisers willl&gt;e held
Boeing 757 lan~ed safely ....Jes·
OHIO
from 1 to p.m., and local participants will present
The (jay's activities will co~clude with an illu- lo l&gt;enefit the continued renovation of the courtday.
Pick J: 3·5·9; Pick 4: 9-3·8·2
Tales of Chester Shade, the enactment of true sto· mination ceremony al ·lhe Couothouse, under the house .
"We thought we were all going
Buektyd: 7-13-22-30-34
ries, from 2 to 3 p.m. Local musicians will also direction of the fire department. Anna Blackwood
Additional parking will be made available near
to
be dead," passen·ger Julie
perform.
•will lead the singing of patriotic songs during the the Courthouse, · and the Meigs County Public
W.VA.
Borovetz told The Columbus DisDally 3: 9-2·9; Daily 4: 4·2·1-9
Bruce Myers of Chesler has l&gt;een named grand service.
Library will provide van transportation from ' the
patch
for
a
story
in
today
's
edimarshal of the parade, to l&gt;e held al4 p.m. Awards
In addition to the scheduled events, a variety of Olurthouse to the firehouse from noon until 5 p.m.
C 1999 Ohto Y•llry Publishing Cu.
ti ons.
willl&gt;e given in four categories: walking unit, best displays and hist~rical demonstrations will!lo on Those attending;&gt;.re advised to bring lawn chairs.

Good Afternoon

the Sll!Sery

.

thousands of motorists

He said Mei!ll' Olunty Commissioners
and EcoQomic Development Director
Perry Varnadoe have been very visible in
Ollumbus, stumping for highways and
economic development funding.
Carey al'so mentioned some of his spon.s~ned legislation including the approval of

f~ ·~ ~~Cit'
effort~=
1
·;r·
•·

Carey briefly mentioned a rural job ere·
ation
a cooperative
.l&gt;etween the Ohto Department of,1Development and Human Services Department,
with the goal of creating 1,000 rural jobs.
· The job creation effort also has an urban
counterpart, he said.
Carey serves on the legislature •5
finan~e. humin services, transportation and
public ~fcty, and local government and
·township committees.

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Offering rhc: W..t in outpatient

S•n g l!' C op y . 35 C ents

Carey address~s Meigs Chamber .members·

a b~ rat1f1C of surgical aad

"

Hometown Newspaper

Pohce ~ked the man. Whose
statethathasexeculedmorepeople- bludgeoned to·, death, and fingerprints lin!(ed him to at
real n~e ts Angel Leoncto Reyes
180- that an~ other since lbe death least some of the crimes. Investigators have said' they
Resend1s - on a burglary charge
· penalty was declared coostitutional in have no idea what motivated the killin!ll' ..
hnked to Benton's death on Dec. ~7,
1976. Harris County prosecUtors have
The trail of terror started with the Aug. 29, 1997, slay1998. Ata h~anng early today, he !ned
sent 1119re killers to death row than ing of a 21-year-old cellege student in Kentucky who
to enter a gutlly pte~ but was rebuffed.
. any other in the nation.
.
.
was attacked along with his girlfriend while walking
~though he IS hnked to five Te~
Mike CQx, a SJX&gt;kesman .for the along the tracks.
.
slay mg. and ch~ ~n three others •.n
Texas Department of Public Safety,
The rest of the killin!ll' have. come since September.
Kentucky and llltn~ts, man~ expect
said he thought · the suspect might The most recent were lj10se of a 79-year-old man and his
h1m to face prosecution first tn Hous·
have feared bounty hunters in both 51-year-old daughter, found dead June 15 in Gorham', 111 .
ton:. ,
.
.
.
.
Mexico and the United States. A
ReSendez-Ramirez slipped through U.S. hands and
He II be In~ first 1n Hams Coun·
S_I2S.OQO reward had been offered for was released by border agents to Mexico on June 2 even
ty, beheve me, sald prosecutor Ted
hts capture.
though hew~ wanted for questioning in a murder. InvesWilson.
.
Resendez-Ramirez's arrest capped tigators believe he went on to kill four more people.
In Texas, a charge of capttal ~~
a massive six-week international
"We're hoping that everybody can start sleeping
. can only be filed whe11 there 1s ~VImanhunt by thousands of investiga- again, l&gt;ecause there have been a lot of people who were
. pence that. a .murder occurred dunng
R8fMI ReHndaz-Ramlrez
. t~ .and railroad authorities. The · not sleeping well," said the Rev. Ralph Lud~ig, who
the C?m~1SS1on o~ a. seiCl=( ~up of
_ .
.
fugtttve was thought to have traveled took over as inte~m pastor at Weimar United Oturch
felontC$.. Burglary ~s m&lt;:luded m that group.
.
by hoppmg fre1ghtlraJns, finding victims living near the after .Simic and his wife were found dead on May 2:
. , Resendez-R~t~.z.'s.. surrender a~ement i~cluded tracks; ... .·
.. .
.
.
· . . The case brokf .over.the weekend when Texas Ranger
assur~ces of farmly VISits, a ps~~o!ogicai ~~uab~ and
· ~lroad ,commumues were temfi¢. / .
, Drew Carter rece1ved a call from the suspect's s1ster,
prom!SCS that he would be safe 10 JWI, authonucs saiCI.
The stores around here sold out ·of .ptstols," Kosier Manuela Maturino, who lives in Albuquerque, N:M.·
The ~inent does not shield him from the death said. "That worried me, thinking. that some initocenl per· Talks eventually led to one of the most high-prpfile
penalty. Mex1co has refused to return suspects to counthes son might get hurl We're used to walking up to every- arrests in Rangers' history.
where they may face a death penalty, which Mexico does 6ne's house. Now, yo~ b7tter call ahead or you may get
"He stuck out his hand, 1 stuck out my hand and we
not have.
shot."
.
;
shook hands and then I handcuffed him and he was in
And Resendez-Ramirez surrendered himself to the
Most o(Resendez·Ramirez's alleged victims were custody," C.:n~r said.

.

and welcoming enviro'nment.

-Page4

FBI has alleged railway killer in custody

M.D. Slllll"ry Cel&gt;ter provides

'

Pedro Martinez
named All-Star MVP
in 4·1 AL victory

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volurnl" 50 N umber 28

By MICHAEL TIGHE
Associated Press Writer
HONOLULU (AP) - At America's largest 'eafood re staurant chain. the.
lobster probably comes from the Bahamas or BraLil: That shrimp ctK:ktail'/
Thailand. Those crab legs? Canada.
.
,
Red Lobster Restaurants has little choice but to depend on forcig_n fishermen to feed its 130 million annual customers: American flsherm'en can' t
.ineet the domeslic , demand for certain species. and the strong dollar and
lower wages elsewhere makes foreign fi sh less expensive.
.
" It's really become such a global market," said Andrew Dun. marketing
director for the 669-outlet chain. ·'There just isn1 enough here to meet our
needs. You have to go where the supply is. "
.

it exported last year. running up a record $5.88 billion trade dcticiL according to Seafood Markel Analyst, a market research and forecasting group. ·
That is 16 percent- or $800 million - higher ·than 1997 and marks at
least the 28th consecutive deficit in the seafood trade.
The fish shortage is so prevalent that restaurant customers orderins
regional specialties .- lobster and cod in New England, 'Ciab cakes in Mary·
land , salmon'.in the Northwest and Alaska - likely are served imports from
Canada, Iceiand,. Venezuela and Chile. respectively.
"These days in mainstream restaurants. probably more than half of the
· fish on the menu is going to l&gt;e imported," sai~ James Anderson. cdilor of
HONORED - Robert G. Beegle, center, was presented 11 SO..yHr SMA's Seafood Trade Reports. "We import more fish than we do coffee and
pin and certificate during a recent meeting of Pomeroy-Racine alcohol put together."
·
Lodge 164, Free and Accepted. Masons. There to make the presenThe United States'ltnported more than $8 billion in seafood in 1998,
tation were David Fox, secretary and past dist,rict deputy, left, and mostly from Canada, Thailand and China. That is Qpercent more than 1997
Clarence Molden, master.
and the hi11hes1 amount this decade.
·
Only Japan imports more seafood.
Thetopimports - byvatue - wereshrimpandprawns .alacomhined
$3.1 billion. Meanwhile, U.S. seafood exports dropped 1-1 percent last year
10 almost s2.2 billion. the lowest amount this decade.
·•
Anderson said the trade gap is widening because Asia's economic sluml?
LOS ANGELES (APJ- A judge has give n l~e green light to a lawsuit makh U.S. fish more expensive , American · fjshe[fllen aren't catching
brought against the Star newspaper after i1 reponed Torn Cruise and Nicole . , enough popular entrees li.k~. Aiaska sockeye salmon and New:England cod
Kidman had help from sex therapists in filming "Eyes Wide Shut:"
and flounder, and the American fleet can't.produce the right prOducts at the
.The actors, who ·arc married. are seeking unspecified damages. Phil Bun- rig~l time allhe right price for American consumers . .
ton. editor of lhe Tarrytown. N. Y.·based Star, saig the tabloid stands behind
"Year-round, ·high-quality, fresh , farl]led salmon from places like Chile:
its story.
.
• .
Canada, Norway and SCotland out.competes the ~easonal. mostly frozen.
The ~\.-!arch 30 article in 1he weekly supcrinarket tabloid was headlined: and often poorly handled salmon from Alaska," said Anderson, a visiting
.
" We had 10 teach Tom and Nicole how to make love." It claimed sex thera· professor at the College .ofWilliam and Mary.
.
Cheaper impons can mean beucr prices for America-n consumers. But
pists Tony and Wendy Duffield said they were hired to teach the actors how
to perform in love scenes.
,
.,
there are ripple~ beyond the dinner plate .
.
.
. The lawsuit said the Duffie Ids sign~d affidavits saying they were never
· For example, the handling and production practices in foreign countries
hired to coach Cruise or Miss j(idnran for the film.
·
may not be up to O.S. standards. · '
.
· ,,
·
The federal suit. filed April 22. also claims pictures ac.companying the ,
"Seafood eaters should be aware that fisheries management pradlces in
article represented commcrl·ial mJ sl.l ppropriatiori of Cruise and Miss Kid- ' foreign countries may riot be sustainable and that the U.S. demand, in some
man's names and likenesses'
,.
~ases, is ~Qntributing t_
Q environmental .degradation,'' Andcrso~ said.

Sports

July14,11110

.. WNBA All-Star game tonight, Page 5
Ann looks at wedding choices, Page 7
Baby Sentinel inside today

Tod8Y: P•rtty Sunny
High: 80s; Low: eo.
Tomorrow: P. Sunny
tilgh: 80s; Low: eo.

Empty nets - .u.s eateries turn
to foreign sources for seafood.

tions. hospitals and other groups always need assistance. Retirees

have the e&lt;perien&lt;e and the knowledge that allow them 10 take on

ing. In the stuffed toy contest, fin;t
place was taken by Manha Banley.
Eldon Barrow. legislative agent
reponed on the seat bell violation
cbecks which will be going on io
Meigs. Gallia and Vinton Counties
th1s week with violators to be fined
$50. h was also noted that back
license plates must have the bolt""!
visible with the county and cxpira.
tion date showing ..
·
Ne.t meeting willl&gt;e a fun night
and practice for t,he first degree on
Saturday. July 17 with potluck sup·
per at 6:30 p.m. followed by prac'
tic e.

.

.1

. these new responsibilities with case.
.
,
. The "golden years·· allow seniOrs the opportunity to expand
their interests and hnv~ th~ time for .hobbies and leisure activitie s
that were pushed asicll! during the work years'. They now do net
have the tin~c dcmo}nds that their careers and growi ng fam11ies had
·required·.
•
· "
· ·
There arc many dass. .·s, workshops and sC. minars of which older
Amcrk,ans L'&lt;.m enrull. Thc\' ~.:an de ro te the time to conL·ei-Hrate on .
learning nC'\\ 't hing !'&gt;. The~· usual!) have a deeper appreciation for
this ne\\ knm\ led ge , EH:rything from dance classes to com purer
workshops and th~ Internet to le1sure timt:: at the library is now
available ft'r thL' n.~tircd ~rson.
· Many retiree:-. return to work · 1n (act , one out of eVery three do .
Tile y m.1y ~t' hat:k to \\ork for extra income. as a way to sa"c more
·for later Usc ..or as a way to stay in toOch with people. Those retirees

In the young adult/marrieds categories, the winners were Janis
Macomber, firsts, in wind chimes
and plastic sculpture. •
In the art and photography categories
winners
were
Janis
Macoml&gt;er, first, abstracts and landscapes; Chelsea Montgomely, first
and Janis Macoml&gt;er. second. in
abstracts and landscapes : Linda
Montgomery, first , Eric Montgomery, second. and Janis
Macomber, third. in American the
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